HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-05-30 - Orange Coast Pilot,
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2 JV ounded in, Bla-.ing Gun Battle
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Nixon!>s Biding
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Eviden~e Grounds
For I111pea~h1•1~ntil
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DAILY PILOT
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Opponent Levels
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Coverup Charge
Against DA Hi~~s
on,
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THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 30, 1974
VOl. 67, NO, Ut. 4 SECTIONS,• PAGES
Jmpeaehi11g Bid eac .ers r1
Ni ;~ ~n Receives
1
* * * 'Wildcat'
I 'New Warning' l Walliout
WASHINGTON IUPll -The House
Judiciary Committee voted 28 to JO today
to inform President Nixon his refusal to
hm«' its subpoenas "might constitute a
ground for impeachment."
After an hour's debate. t he
congressmen agreed to S<'fld Nixon a
letter advising him they will feel free lo
conclude he is hiding evidence harmful to
his cause by continuing to ignore
subpoenas for Watergate t<ipcs and
documents.
The Committee also y.•as a>nsidcring
whettier to su1}poena more•-presidential
tapes and dqcUj'nents in _its-i!nJ>eachment
inquiry. Three subpoEl\as tiive already
been issued. Nixon ignored ··two JUid
released his Watergate transcripts in
Oppone1its Level
Coverup · Clinrge
Against DA Hicks
Malfeasance In office charges against
Orange County District Attorney Cecil
Hicks officially became part of the public
record Wednesday. ..
response lo lhe third. •
In their debate. the members revised
~nd somewhat softened a letter proposed
by Rep. Walter Flowers (~Ala.), a key ·
Southerner on the rommittee.
The key p.1fagraph in the adopted
version read:
"In meeting t he i r constitutional
responsibilities. committee members will
be free to consider whether your refusals
r<'quire the drawing oC adverse infer·
ences concerning the S\lbstance of the
---rAx-PENAL tY FoR'-N1xoN
REPORTED. Story, Pogo 4 --materials. and whether your refusals in
and of the~lves might constitute a
ground ror impeachment."
One Oeomcrat, Rep. John Qmyers Jr.
or Michigan. and nine Republicans voted
agalllst sending the letter. Twenty
. Democrats and eight Republicans voted
in faVQr. Conyers objected because he
wanted stronger action .
Speakin~ for the Republican opponents,
Rep. David Dennis CR-Ind.), called the
letter a "useles& gesture" and ~ .l.he .
committee would draw lnfetences from
Nixon's ooocompliance with the
subpoenas "whether or not we write a
letter."
The letter as approved by the
conunittee was essentially in the form
(See IMPEACH, Page Z)
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O.Hy P'lltl lltff P'htN
Mr. Flsla Fry
Bert Smith, 61, has run uie
Pepsi booth at Costa Mesa's
Fish Fry since the community
;.• eV<!nt began ·29 leers ago. He'll
be honored as 'Mr. Fish Fryl'
at this ftekend's renewal of
the famed fry and will ride as
a special guest in the parade
Saturday. ----------The Board or Supervisors . ordered
documents presented by I-licks' primary
election opponent William Hulsy of
MJsslon Viejo be filed with the clerk of
the board.
Hulsy's allegations state that Hicks
performed I m p r o p e r I y during
investigation and prosecution last year of
a Garden Grove traffic accident in which
two children were killed.
Hulsy will be In Superior Court Friday
to ask Judge Mark Soden to order
disclosure of a portloo of the accident
Three County Prisoners
Try to Shoot Way Out
JnvesUgaUon report allegedly covered up· By TOM BARLEY by police officials. ot "" Dlltr ,, ... 11att
'lbe youni. Lons .lle«cJ!,assistant ciJY Three Orange Coonty Jail prlsollen,
attorney clalma _ Ifie" d<iairl>enl'"Jhois -one of tlleol' a ""'~k:led .km,,.., toc!fY
Hicks may )\avo been lnvohred In tried lo shoot their way to h·eedom fn>m
"malieall!UJC• and mlsfeuance In office" 8 '-!ding cell In the ••nta Ana COW>ty durln& Ille aocldl!nt probe. •~ .,. ,
Hick• bas branded Hulsy's accusations • courtbowle. -~
a1 ''libelous and scandalous" and would A primer ldenlifled as Franlt Ian
not elabdra\e on the cue in qutstion. O'Hare, 25, of Anaheim, waa~repo ly
He said he waa reoponslble !or calling shot twice In th• chest as the trlo •fled
In th• CIJWomla Attorney General's aloca Santa Ana streets with olflctn In
olllce to ~I<: llie .,,.,. becaWle of s · pursuit. ''eonOlct OI lnle,..t" In the Dtslrict Al· O'Hare. !J listed In critical coodlilon In
torn!1's o111co. 0r11118e C:C:a Med1ca1 c...ter, police
The drtwr ol Ille eor In which the said. They the 01C1ped pr-al10
cblldren ...,.. i:l.uaa -ID Anaheim sul!ertd other IJllDor wounds durln& the
woman clolmed b7_ Hulay ta be dooely punull _.ltd wlih fllcU -wu u!Umately Police said an o(f-duty Colllomia
11111Jeaced to lour maatlll probotlqa and s ffllhway palrolman Who joined thom In
(See CHA&GIS, .... II Ille .......it W8I lhot In the orm. Ho ....
. f • ·1
not lmmedlately ldenuned.
Police said the J>Olrolman ts reported
In 11tislactory cmdllkln at Sanln Ana
ConullW>ltx Hqopltat '111ey said no other
pbllce -rs Gt~ were hurt In
lhe pursuit of the three prisoners.
O'Hare'• two com)llllloM hllv• been
tenaUvely Iden Wied u .Lawrence Eugene
Wileon, 80, of Loi Angeles Who Is
awaitlilg 10Dtenc1n& on flnlt degree
murder cilnvJctioo -and Prince Pico
Tarpley, 18, of Anaheim.
Tarpley and O'Hare are cumnt\y ..,
lrial befu'e SUpOrlor Court Judge
~ymond 'lbom)llOll Oft cblrlU of
armed rObbery.
ConOlctlog ropom by f..,. pollct
agencies appear lo """ up lo tllo fact tjlat the 1rlo _,..a ed a tiMrltf'o
aeput:f In ~=-of u. coonty !See 11, ,. J)
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hi Laguna
By HILARY KAYE
Of "'-o.ltr l"Utf Stiff
A sudden, wildcat strike by more than
half the Laguna Beach High School
teachers forced the school to shut down
to a half day schedule today, and some
students were dismissed as early as 9
a.m.
· The administration was not officially
notified of the strike, or of the teachers'
grievances.
Superintendent Don Woodingtoo said lie
guesses the protest was over ''frustration
with salaries." He said he heard
"rumors" of the w~out Wednesday
afternoon.
A~trators were unable to come up
with an official tally of how many
"'3chers had walked off the job today,
but said that 29 had either called in sick,
or taken "personal leaves for business
reasons."
The figure does not' count an additional
six teachers who were known to be Ill
before the strike began. The school has
56 teachers.
Woodingtoo also said he believed three
teachers al Thurston httermediate School
were participating in the protest action,
but said he did not believe it had ex-
tended ta .,he elementary schools.
"Our impression is that the strike was
caused by a general frustration with
salaries, inflation and so forth. Perhaps
Ibey feel they're oot beiag 'beanl," Wood--
In~ suggested.
ft is not known whether the teachers
plan to continue their walkout past today.
School Boanl President N o r m a n
Browne said Wday he is willL,g to sit
down with the teadlers and discuss the
salary situation with them, if they wish
ta. .
"I can understand their lrustratkln
when Ibey look around the county and
(See WILDCAT, Page 1)
Two Men Arrested
On Lewd Conduct
Two persons were arrested mi charges
ol lml conduct WednesdQ' night as part
of a C011Unalng Costa Mell vice delnU
lavelpUoo Into restn>om llcllvltlea ol a
bowllnC llley. .,_
llOlb ineo were arreslod 11 Kmia
Lann, :11111 Harbor Blvd., and lnken to
Colla Meta City Jail. Hood wu set at
llOO each.
Huglies Ignores
Court's Orcler
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Billionaire
Howard Hu ghes has skipped another
court-ordered appearance, failing to show
up for depositions at an attorney's office.
Hughes had been ordered to make the
dcpooitions Wednesday at the offices of
Petit, Evers and Martin, a law finn
representing parties suing Hughes·
related compallies.
U.S. District Judge Alfonso J. Zlrpol\
had ordered •Iughes to give testimony in
a suit relating to the purchase of Air
\Vest Airlines by Hughes. San Francisco
Superior Judge Ira Brown has ordered
Hughes to give testimony in a related
case.
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Docu11ie1i(s Shoiv
SLA '1'rusted'
Patty Hearst
By United Press International
A study of documents found in an
abandoned Symbionese Liberation Army
{SLA) hideout in Los Angeles shows that
Patricia Hearst was so fully trusted bY
her kldnapers that she was allowed to
stand guard duty alone, the Chicago
Tribune reported today.
The Tribune said the FBI believes the
SLA incleuded no more than nine hard-
PATTY HEARST EMOTIONALLY
INVOLVED -Story, Pogo 3
CLEVELAND ROCKED BY MAJOR
GUNFIGHT. Story, Pogo 4
core members end that in recent weeks ,
Miss Hearst was counted among them.
Among the documents found was a
notebook kept by William Harris, who
with his wife Emlly and MW Hearst
managed to elude pollce oo May 16 and
17 and have not been seen sinct. The
notebook and other documents, the
Tribune said, were reported to have
cootalned a guard ochedule for the SLA
members.
The newspaper said short notatioos In
the notebook refer to the members by the_
numbers one through nine. Other
scrawllng1 Indicate that the slafn leader
of lite small revolutionary baod, Donald
DeFreeze, was No. I and Mlsa Hears~
No. t.
Nm to a No. t were written the wordl,
"111 nlibt to light," """""' lold the Trlbun ..
Federal aaents seized the documents In
an abandoned apartment only blocb
fro111 the IC<lle ol a masalvo police
(See llEAllST, Poge I)
1)
60 Pe1·ce11t
Of District
Out I Day
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of ,,.. Dlllr Plltl Sl•ff
At least 60 percent of the teachers in
the Huntington Beach Union High
School District staged a one-day strike
today protesting unm et demands for an
<iulomatic cost of Hving raise.
The tea chers were scheduled to meet
at 4 p.m. today to decide if they should
continue their walk out.
Bruce Johnson, president of the District
Educator's Association ~DEA) said 550
teachers out of a total of 750 walked off
the job toda)l.
Or. Jay Settle, deputy superintendent
of the district, estimated the number at
450. Pickets. including some studerM.s,
marched in front of each of the district's
six campuses. Inside. su b s it u t es ,
counselors and administrators tried to
keep classes ruM.ing. ·
"We've opened the ca f et er i a and
library and asked kids to go there if they
don't have a regular teacher, Charles
Wtese, principal at Edi.90n High , said.
Wiese said he wasn't able to hire
enough substitutes to make up for the
100 absent teachef's. There were only 50
teachers left on the job.
A lot of students were going home
instead of staying at school, Wiese said.
(See TEACHERS, Page Zl
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll be cloudy Friday morning
but clearing le mostly sunny skies
by the afternoon along the Orange
Coast. Highs at the beaches 66-M
rising to 72-74: Inland. Overnight
lo-. tonight SHO.
INSIDE TODt\Y
Two men who often debated
over their dri11king obilitiet.
held a match to decide 011c1 and
for all who .,... tM/ champfon.
Tiiey both dfed. Story , Pope 4.
"'""' '' .... M. .. .,.. ,,
Callor*t 14 c-.. ..... ...... " ~ i: "' ..... ,._ .. ,
........ """' It ,.... 1MJ
fttl II ft .. ._ n --"
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2 DAILY PILOT s Thursday, May JO, 11174
l(iSsinger
From Page J
TEACHERS • • •
...
Cease-fire Pact Signing Sla ted Friday
"\\'e won 't a.Ive the man un e"'cuscd ab-
sence. There'll be oo ounlshmcnt. ''
Or. Settle aald the diMrict had been
able lo hire enough lllbstitut,. Io ketp
lh• schools open. l'A lllO l UPI I -Secretary of State
ilcnry A. 1\issi11ger headed home lo
\\lashin11ton todnr after the success fu l
ronclusion 1.>f his latest and toughest
diplomatic mi.s.s1oi1. '''inning agree.rnent
fro1n lsral•l and Syria to slop fighting on
thl' Golan llrii;hts and pull back their
annies.
Th(' hisloric agrce1ncnt Y.ill be signed
in Gcnr\a f'r1day by 1111\itary delegations
from the T\10 l'OWttrit•s It pro1•1d-.'S for an
Dial1rtes Trial
immediate cease fire on the Golan
lleights front Y.'hPre Israeli and Syrian
forces exchanged artillery fire for the
80th consecutive day today.
.I\. senior American official w11h t}l(•
Kissinger party said the United States
\\'ould provide high altilude"survelllance
to assure that all the pro1•isions "'ere
being carried out just as il docs in the
case of the 1sraell-Egypt1an disengage-
ment accord.
Fundamentalist Says
Ile Prayed for Miracl e
SA:'\ J~ERi'\AHOJ KO (L'PI\ -A
funda111entnlist nunister has testified I hat
he "asked God to \York a healing
miracle'' on an 11-ycar-old boy with
diabetes. but never said the boy Y.'as
cured.
The boy died after hiJ:i parents threw
out his insulin because !hey believed ,
diabetes "'as the "·ork of the devil and he
had been healed by faith .
The Hev . Daniel L. Padill21 of the
Assembly of God Church in Barstow
testifil'd \\lcdncsday at the trial of
Lawrence and Alice Parker r o r
involuntary manslaughter in t he death of
their son. \Vesley.
A pathologist confirmed in testimony
F ron• Page 1
HEA RST ...
shootout and subsequent fire 'vhich took
the lives of DeFreezc and five SL.A.
members.
\\'cdnesd.1y that lhc boy <lied Aug . 22 clue
to the effects of diabctt:s.
Padilla said he remembers the Parkers
bringing Wesley to him during a servlCe
at t~e ch~rch in Barstow Aug. 19, and
praying with them. But he ,...aid he has no
special ability to heal, and that faith
alone is not enough to cure a disease.
The Parkers "asked me lo pray \~'ith
them for \Vesley," Padilla said. "I looked
at him and saw he had tears in his eyes.
I ww; more concerned about his 1ears
than his illness.
•· 1 brought him cl()S('r :to n1e and asked
him if he felt God loved him. Ii.! said yes, ye,<;.
··1 asked alt three to pray and we
asked God to ~·ork a healing miracle."
He said he told the Parkers '"let's
continue to beJieve for a healing
n1iraclc ," but denied he told thcn1 the
mriacle had happened.
\Vhen \Vesley slipped into a corna fro1n
lack of insulin, Parker allegedl.v refused
to allow insulln to be administered.
saying it "'Ou!d be a denial of their f.illtl>
in Gocf".'i cure. lie said the diabetes ~s
caused by demons.
The Parkers and fellow believers held
prayer services at the boy's bedside until
he died, and later tried to bring him back
to life. singing. chanting. praying and
exhorting him to rise from the dead.
The sa~ official also disclOlf.d that
Kissinger was on the point or failure
llirce limes durin!J his marathon
negotiations with Israeli and Syrian
leaders. tic SJid Kissinger had pac~ed
his bags in preparation for departure1but
changed his mind because he was
convinced that failure would mean
renry,·cd \~'ar in the ~liddle East.
Kissinger stoppt'd off in Cairo to brief
President An\\'ar Sadat. one of his chief
allies in bringing about lhe agreement
bel"·een Damascus and Jerusalem.
Kissinger had helped negotiate a similar
Ct>ase-fire agreement between Egypt and
Israel on the Suez front in J anuary.
They held 312 hours of talks in Sadat's
private home in !he Cairo suburb of Giza
MIDEAST TRUCE FACES
CHAL LENGE. Story, Page 4
and later told a news bnefing they
l'l'achcd a_greement "to establish a joint
commission for cooperation between the
\l\o countries in various fields for their
niutual benefit."'
K1ss1ngcr's 1narathon 33-day Middle
l~ast 1nission ended a t 6:15 p.m. (8:15
a.in. PD_TJ when he left Cairo Airport
after a s1x·hour stopover in the Egyptian
capital.
The United States rc!easrd !he text or
the Jsra<'li·Syrian agreement today, along
\r1th a map sho\1'ing the cease.fire line
and the buffer zone to be matulcd by
Unilcd Nations troops in the Golan
Heights.
Also released \Vas the p r o t o co I
outlining the role of the U . ;.; .
dist·ngagement observer forcr . u·hich is
lintited to about 1.250 men and which "'ill
be stationed in the buffer zone of about
1.2 to 3.6 miles '¥\'ide to supervise the
agreement.
The lrxt and map provided fr\v
surprises. Jl provided for signature of the
agreement Friday in Geneva and an
immediate cease-fire in the Golan
I/eights upon signflturc.
It also provided that the details of
di sl'ng11gc1ncn! be "'orked out by Israeli
anti Syrian officers \Yilhin six days and
1h<1t the \\'ithdra\vals to agreed positions
be completed within a month.
Also included were provisions for the
immediate exchange of w o u'n de d
prisoners and the exchange of all war
prisoners ~ithin at least six days -24
hours after the details of t he
disengagement are agreed.
JOINS PROTEST -Robby Hassay rode his bike alongside picketing
Fountain Valley elementary teachers Wednesday as they protested
wage negotiations in front of school district offices. He said he had
a note from his parents giving hin1 permission to join the picket line.
Huntington Man Jailed
11fter High Speed Clia se
A ltuntington Beach man who allegedly
led Cos ta Mesa police on a high speed
chase through three Orange Coast cit ies
v.•as jailed today after his auto
disi ntegrated at an Irvine intersection.
Taken into custody on charges of
reckless driving, driving on the wrong
side of the road, speeding, nmning red
lights, and resisting arrest was Thomas
Job J eavons of 8122 Deerfield Drive in
Huntington Beach's Surfside condomini-
ums.
before coming to a spectacular conclu-
sion at the intersection of !\1ichelson
Avenue and !\tacArthur Boulevard in Ir-
vine.
Police said the Jeavons car struck a
curb at the intersection and that the
impact separated body and chassis.
Shortly before that, squad cars driven in ,
the chase by offjcers Chris !\1orris and
Neal Hewett collided with each other at
lhe intersection of J\tichelson Avenue and
Jamboree BouleVard.
From Page 1
Th~ diMrh.'l has offered the teachers a
nine percent raise.
The t.eacller8 want the nine pcrcent
raise plus an a utomatic cost-of-llvlng
boost tied to lnflalloo. If inflation rises
two to five percent in the first six n1ooths
or thei r contract, the teachers \\•ant a
raise equat to that a1nount in the last six
months.
If inf~ation rises five perrcnt or more
in !he first six 1nonths. the teachers wa9L
a five IX'rcent raise in the last half ol"1fte
year.
The board of trustee!. htrough Dr.
Sctlle. has turned do"·n the cost-of-living
provision.
The board last week d e c I a r e d
negotiations were at an impasse and cut
off the talks. 111e DEA Tuesday asked
trustees to r£'turn to the negotiating
table. When they agreed, the teachers
gave the trustees a struiding ov;ition.
But today. Bill Tizzard of lhC' OF.'\. !':aid
negotiations wrre again at :111 in1passc
after a \\lednesday session. !I C' and otl1t·r
teachers complained that SC'llll' said thry
didn't "have the backbone" to b:ick up
their demands.
Settle today denied ever saying that.
"I did say I didn't think lhcv"d slrikc
\\'ith the offer of a nine percent · s.1lary in·
crease." Stttle added. "Well, thrv did. I
\\·as wrong. I have to admit I'm Surpris·
ed."
Settle, who called the district ll'achrrs
"outstanding." claimed they're thr
higtrest paid In the ('(]unty. :imong-
comparabte districts. !Ir said 11K> 9
pcreent raise \11ould cost the district Sl.8
million.
He added the district c.an 't .afford lhc
co.st-of·living provision Ix-cause i r s
income is constant and is also hurl by
inflation.
The a1n1o.5pherc ouL-;ide the district
schools during the picketing this morning
was casual. At Huntington Beach High,
some students carried picket signs or
took coffee to teachers.
Several students apparently opposed to
the vralkout unfolded a sign: "We don't
give a damn." The picket signs read:
"We're UnseUled ." "Ha ppy Tcadlers
1.!ake Better Tea~ers and "Banish
Bauer Power," a reference lo Trustee
Ralph Bauer.
Other n1r1terials found \•:ere the
addresses of 15 apartments for rent and
a bro\lill paper bag v.·ith several Los
Angeles street nan1es v.·r itten on it.
Police and federal agents checked each
of the apartments but found no clues.
They could make no sense of the street
names on 1he bag. the Tribune said.
Invesligators said that a page in
Harris' notebook listed 30 numbers of
public telephones in the U:is Angeles
area. Other n1alerial indictated that cal!s
were to be n1ade to some of the numbers
at specified limes, the Tribune said .
Bremer Quits Saddlebacl{
Jeal'ons \\"as being detained today at
Orange County ~ledical Center where he
\\·as taken for treatment of minor
injuries following the early morning
incident.
CHARGES ...
A spokesman for the Costa Meaa police sinall finf'. Hulsy dain1s the sentence is
"Do I have to go to your class today?''
one Huntington Beach High 5tudent 21sked
his picekting teacher. "Well,'' thr man
ansv.·ered." I'm not going to be lhC'rC' ...
P lant F ire Quell ctl
Meanwhile, ttc American Civil
Liberties Union and the father of a dead
Symbionese Liberation Anny member
today dema nded a public inquest into the
six deaths.
Dr. L.S. Wolfe of Allento~·n, Pa., father
or Willie Wolfe. and other relatives of the
dead arc· asking for the inquest, the
ACLU said Wednesday. The father
planned to outline their demands later
today.
The FBI said it has no new leads in the
continuing search for Patricia Hearst
and William and Emily Harris.
"\\'e're stiU running out all leads," a
spokesinan said.
The younger Wolfe, 23, died of burns
and smoke inhalation J\tay 17.
Coroner Thomas Noguchi, replying to
the ACLU, said his office is "conducti ng
an in-depth study of the deaths. If at the
<:omplction of this study. an inquest is
felt to be warranted) it wil l be held."
Bu, he said, such an inquest is "not
contcinplated at this tin1c."
From Page 1
PRISONE RS . ••
courthouse.
Santa Ana police said O'llare ~·as shot
early in the chase and Wilson was
quickly recaptured.
They said Tarpley was the last to
be seized by officers as he Sprinted •
several blocks from the co unt y
courthouse and evaded his pursuers until
they reamed 17th Sl.reet in Santa Ana.
ORAMGI COAST " DAILY PILOT
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department said that two patrol cars unusually light in a manslaughter case.
y,•ere moderately damaged during the Hu lsy originally came be fo r c
chase, but that their occupants were not supervisors last week to seek their
injured. support of an investigation of Hicks'
The pursuit began at the intersection of involvement "'Ith the casf .. Supervisors
Victoria Srtect and Placentia Avenue agreed to lakr fndividual actions but a!!
Post in '.Reorganization' SA.'l DIEGO (AP) -Fire drstroyrd a
plant of Carlee Industries on ~1lsskin
Gorge Road ill. northeast San Diego toda y
and damaged the nearby quarters of :1
relrigerat.ioo factory. 111c damage ~·a.s
estimated at $100.000. By JAN WORTII
Ot fht D•I" l"llol Staff
Dr. frcd 1£. Bremer stepped dO\\"n as
superintendent of Saddleback College
\Vednesday in an action described by
trustees as "a reorganization of district
administration."
Board President Hans Vogel said
Bren1er has been relieved of his duties
"by mutual agreement bel\Vt'en him and
the board."
Bremer, 51, who has tv.·o years
remaining on a four-year contract, v.·iil
retain his title as president of the college
and be given special assignments by the
board, Vogel said. He will continue to
receive his salary or $35.000.
Mean\\'hile, the search for a new
superinterident is scheduled to begin at
once, with a July I goal for making the
final-decision. The salary offered the new
superintendent has not been determined,
Vogel said.
Bremer said he had "no comment, at
this stage of the game." aboul tile action.
Choosing the ne\V superintendent v.·i!I
be one of the first aclions facing a new
board of trustees. Three new trustees arc
lo be elected by district \·otcrs June 4
and a new board president will be chosen
since Vogel is one of the l rustccs being
replaced in the election.
"\Vith this happening just before the
elec1ion, people are having a grrot
opportuni ty to help choose a new
superintendent, Trustee Norrisa Brandt
of Irvine commented.
Vogel said the board has several
person! in mind for the superintendent.
But he said the position would be
advertised "state\vide, if not nationwide,"
f<?r at least two "'1eeks. NP A screening
committee including several board men1·
bers, a student, a faculty m embr, a pro-
fessional educational administrator, and
a lay member of the community is sche-
Juled to be appointed soon.
Bremer has served six years with the
Mesa W ait1·ess
Foil s Attacker
With P t1rse
A waitress on her way home from Y.'Ork
Wednesday morning. fended off an attack
by a graying ru.Uian with screams and
blows with her purse, according to police
reports.
The attacker. described as a thin white male with gTaylng hair, was hiding In the
shadows ot a doorway when Suzanne T.
LaPQint, 39, was returning to her
apartment at 23e4 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa shortly aner l a.m. Wednesday,
police said.
The. man swung a weighted sock at
her, striking her In the back of the htad.
She spun around, acrumlng and hitting
baci with her purse. He tried Io hit her
ltveral times wttho<tt -.. she
lutlod ·-ol blows With the purM. Allar .. lirW ""11bat, he turned and ran. < •
dual title of superintendent-president at about 2:30 a.m., went in to Hun tington ultimately sent the charges to the county
Saddlrback. He came lo the school as its I Beach, and back through Costa Mesa Grand Jury.
first Dean of Instruction in 1967 and \.Vas -----·----·-··--------~------------
promoted lo superintendent after the I
departure of the school's f irst IHE EH'S
superintendent .Jack Roper . in t968. ' ·~,· -, . -W .. Under Dr. Bremer's term, Saddleback t\M
College evolved from makeshift offices in cs• •AftS ~fission Viejo to a 200-acre site Offering .... A
some 500 classes to 5,000 students.
As the first Dean of Instruction, 1 2 CONVENIEMT LOCATIONS
Bren1er set up the college's first I lSOOW.COASTHWY. ~
original faculty.
1
HEWPOITIUCH < "€~ IH HfWPOIT,.ODUCIYILUGl
Pressure has been heavy on Bremer in PHOHE 642•7076 -r.>J~ -• -1 ~ 1•01 HEWPOITILYO.
the last year, which he has called the I ._,.,_,., ....... -COSTAMISA 642·9004
roughest in his career .
From Page 1
IMPE ACII ...
drafted by the commillee st a fr
\Vedncsday night.
TI1e President has steadfastly main-
tained he is innocent of any wrongdoing
in connection \\ith the Watergate scan-
dals.
Rep. C. V. "Sonny" "Iontgomery <D-
Mass.), one or his supporters who ac-
companied the ?resident on a cruise
\\'ednesday night, quoted him today as
saying:
"If I was guilty, I'd get the hell out
fast, but I'm not guilty."
The White House has insisted the 1
committee has all the Watergate
infonnation it needs to make a judgment l
and there will be no more focthcoming.
Gerald L. Warren, deputy press
secretary, said \Vednesday the Judiciary
Committee should i:iot draw ''an
inference of guilt'' by Nixoo's refusal to
turn over additional materials.
Fron• Page 1
WILDCAT ...
see higher increases coming through ...
I don't know if we can change anything,
but maybe we can," Dr. Browne said.
"It just shows the need for more
money in the budget, he added.
'ijle strike is not an organized erfort
Woodington said.
"It's not a product o! the Laguna '
Beach FacuJty AssoctaUon, or the
American Federation of Teachen acting
on their own," he said.
Science teacher Charles Reich, head of
the strike COJtlmlttee, was unavailable
/or comment tolay.
Teachen have been granted a five
percent pay hike lor 197t75, and wlll
reetlve an additional two pettent
Increase If the Jone 4 tu override
election 11 successful:
"I'm auwlnji that they feel the IO\'mt I
percent Is not enough," Woodlnilon
explained. / Tho 1uperlntendent eal6 Uie dlltrlcl ltt
going on the ba$b that the •triU II a
O!lMay sltlllltlon.
........... w-S,.Cialty ChHM. o ........... Party r...,. l c...,.... -c~
THIS WEEK'S CHEESE & DELICATESSEN FEATURES
, ,, .
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POU SH
SAUSAGE
CHEESE AT
AFFORDABLE PRICES.
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COMPAll ntil. SPICIALS
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MOZZARELLA
PROVOLONE
or TILLAMOOK Most cheese merchants are reluctant to
advertise cheese by the pound. in fear ol
drawing attention to their high prices. Not
Wine men 's our prices are keen ....
, I
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•V •-""""'• 189
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,: I ~If''~ -3_~-;t!h c .... ··~.: ~RICJ. 2.19 °"" ~ 'I
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~BUFFET CATERING SERVICE ,.,..,.. .
Have you placed your catering order yet for t~at wedding or grad uation? We're still taking orders
and YOU WOM'T IEl.IEVE OUR PRIC~I Let Wlrlemen's make it easy lor you ... Here's an example:
THE CAPT AIN'S tCHOICE $2.50 ,.. -
MEAT PLATTER: Boiled Ham. COmed Beef, Roest Beef & AU Beef Salami. CHEESE PLATTER: Cheddar, Onion. Sw1!is
& Muenster. RELISH PLATTER: Black Olivet. Scuffed Green Ohves. Sweet O'leNY Peppers. Pales. Mut lard & Ma-yo~
na1se. SALADS: ColeSlaw & Potato. CHOICE OF BREAD: Rye, Egg, Onie>n, White. Frel)Ch, Pu"°'*niekel -Any Two
ROSE' Ii:... Pariuglll
This PortugueM Rose Wine i$
similar lo lhe mo<e expensive Of'le
lrom Portugal lhal is very pepular 1n
America ...
THIS WHIC'S WINE FEATURES:
. "JUG" RED from California
Mo:St wine enthuataats we on the lookOu! for a good,
lnexPenslve wine for •V8fY day drinking. Tl'le pity of it
an ,.11 that sucn are hard to !Ind! W1nernerfs has hid
great tucceu with this one ... Reotdert are ll"lt prool
-many' top proleSSionals think tl'8're1 nolh1ng like
"DOUREM Rgi:; 14 9 ::mf
COMPAU OI' 11.tt
i~ .. fuA VIMO" JURGUHDY FULL 279 GAU.OH '
•
INCIDENT AL BONUS BUY
Gll.Sa Catalis for conveniera & 119g1nce when puring "Jug Winn" Of for that NIOlllllY Deca,,..,
llng ... Wineman'• NI Just WNt YoUW bMn tooking for. .... u '• OOtl. I HALF CARAFES ,,. OM.Y 69'... F LL CA s :t _, 7 ,70..
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-·-wr.-·1 ............ "'cAttM! --·~ .. -C:-loTMlyf
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Sup·ervisors OK
Beach Purchase
By WILIJAM SClfllEIBEI\
Oi 1111 0111, Pilot s11u
Orange County supervisors agrel'd
\\'ednesday to go ahead \~'ilh plans lo
purchase the old Capistrano Beach Club
Heru·ing Set
On San J11a11
Moratori11111
A public hearing on the proposed
moratorium on all new bu i Id i n g
app\lcations in San Jua n Capistrano \Vil!
take place J une 5.
i\lembcrs or the city council voted
unanimously Tuesday to adopt a
recom1nendation by the planning staff to
allow the cominunily to air views on
e1tlending a "deferral period"' Wllil after
the general plan and all of ils ordinances
are adoptl'd.
David J. Sn1ith, p I a n n i n ~ director.
foresees that this process· of general plan
adoplioo will take until t•arly next year.
Bi t he d()('S not believe the ban "'ould be
in conflict \\-'ith the recent Petaluma
federal court decision ¥:hich said citirs
did not have the rii;ht to l1n1it growth in
any "·ay accept through zonin_g and
market demands. Srnith said enough
homes have been approved to provide a
con1pctitive n1arket for .::1pproximatc!y
three years.
r<.Jrs. Leona Fitz!XJlrick, representing
the San J u:.in Capistrano Oia1nber of
C-Omn1rr<'r. s:ild the chamber believes in
a con1pclitivC" business system arid thnt
rC'Strictive legislath•c controls on
business should be at a n1iniin1u1n. "A
co1nplelc n1oralor1111n \\-'OUld b c
unreasonable .·' she said.
i\1ayor Roy Byrnes told the audience
that the June 5 1nt..""Cting of the cit_v
council v.outd dc\'01C a large block of
timr to the public heanng on the
drfcrr~J. lie askt:d that those \\'i.<>hing to
C'xprr ss iht..•lr \'1t•v.·s. subn11t them in
\\Tiling ahl'~d of t1n1t.' if \Xl'>:.Jlllc.
strand just south of Doheny State Beach
Park for about $900.000.
Bu t they delayed action for anoth<!r
y.·eek on a proposal to take up where the
state is leaving off and purchase another
'stretch of beach between the club straod
and Doheny. •
Supervisors \Vere told by llarbors,
Beaches and farks Department
Director Kenneth Sampson that it will
cost about $2 million lo buy and improve
both stretches or heach, which lie below
the Capistrano Palisades.
Sampson told supervisors it \Va.5 his
understanding that state park and
rccreatiQn officials had scrapped plans to
buy the middle stretch of beach as an
extension of the camping f~cilltics at
Doheny.
He said the s41te' was unable to push
the proposal through the Coastal l.one
Conservation Commission and was
unwilling to convert it to a dny use beach
because of limited access.
Sampson's assessment of the s1ate
plans v.·ere confirmed by Supervisor
Ronald Caspers, who urged immediate
purctrasc of the bcadi as •·a gold{n op-
portunity to increase our recreational
land inventory."
Bu t Sampson v.1as challenged by
Supervisors Ralph Diedrich aod Ralph
Clark, who said the assurances have not
been made by the state in "''riting.
"lf they are still \vill ing to buy this
bead\, I 5e<' no reason for us to do it."
Clark said. "l don't care who ov.'ns it as
long as the public can use it.''
Diedrich said he had talked \Vil h state
officials but "-'OUld not be satisfied
enough to go ahead unlil the matter is
put in writing. That letter is supposedly
en route so the board delayed action on
!he middle stretch nf lx!ach until next
"'·eek.
Sampson said he has been told the
st<ite "'·ants lo give the county $700.GOO
tov.·ard purchase of the middle stretch of
bC'aeh as a day use area.
The rounty has :ilrcady been a"'1arded
a $315.000 federal gr.int to be put tov.·ard
purchase of !he club beach, also knov.11
as Palisadl's Beach.
Sampson SJid the balflnCe or the
Palisades Beach purchase price \\iould be
budgeted next yea r as v.·ould any amount
nt'edl'd in exct~ss of the state grant for
the middle stretch of sand.
Irvine Water District
Paid $156,000 by EPA
The Irvine Ranch \\"at cr l)istricl has
be-en paid Sl56.002 by the red<"ra\
go\'ernmrnt for \\asle \\lltt:>r trra1ment
equipment Installed fron1 four to eight
years ago.
IR\VD General t.lanager \\"il!iam F.
Jlurst said today !ht.• district has bttn
1old it is eligible lo receive up lo SJOO.oon.
The monry is distributed bv the
Environmental Protection Agency -und er
a program desigocd 10 spur local agency
interest in pollution control sys1en1s.
The IRWD reimbursement "'·as fo r
part of the rost of an interc~·ptor st'\\·cr.
aeration sev.·agc treatment plant, effluent
pump st;1tion and force rnain.
"The district filed a clain1 for thr
construction \\·hich occurred bc>t .... ·een
July l . 1966 and June 30. 1970 as part of
Improvement District .J'\o. I of the
JRWD," J!urst said.
Most of the city of Irvine's developed
residential nei ghborhoods are \1·ithin that
di st rict along with Lion Country Safari.
Hurst credill'd Senator John V. Tunney
(D-Californial and Rep. Andrew Hinsha11·
(R-Nc11'J)Ort Beach) for having assisted
the IR\\10 "'ith the claim f o r
rei mbursable fund<i.
"\\'e heartily endorse such conce rn and
look foru·ard "to their continued interest
in our industry so essential 10 life and the
beautification of our environment,''
~lurst said. ------. ---------------
\
•• ,,.. .
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... {',.
,a; .,
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Sign Here
,. ,.
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Francine I. Nef! pracUces her signature after being nominated by
Pl'e!ldellt Nixon as treasurer of the United States. Mrs. Nefi, a
ru>publlean national committeewoman since 11170, would succeed
Romana Banuelos I! she is confirmed by the Senate.
• . (
•
Thursd11y, May 30, 1974 s OAILY PILOT 3
. ' •' ' . ' ' • '
Weed Says
Patty's
'Involved'
NEW YORK CUl'll -Stephen Weed,
fiance of Patricia Jiearst, says h e
thought the young newspaper heiress was
"intensely :ind c1no!ionally" involved
with hrr Sy1nb1onesc Liberation Arm Y
kidnapers. ,
"I've ceasrd making predictions,·•
\\'ced said \Vrdncsday night. "If either
the police or lhl' people \\'ith Patty ha\'e
any srnse of rationality, she'll be all
right.
··uut I 11<1\l' to n1akc the ass u1nption
that sht• is l'n1otionally and intensely
involved in the group," he added.
\Vced's rc1narks carne during a panel
discussion on kidnaping on ABC-TV's
Dick Cavett sho1~· being t.:1ped in Ne\v
\'ork. The progran1 \fH.I be broadcast
tonight.
PJaysicia1a, Beal Thyself
(The Associated Press quoted \Veed as
~<tying he did not b e 1 i e v e sex \\·as
involved in her conve rsion to lhe SLA. I
Santa Ana's Tip Top Tree Service is a bit etnbar-
rassed toda.y after one of its trucks tangled with
a hardy live oak. Driver Robert ?t1anning, 21 , told
police he swerved to avoid an oncoming car and
hit the low hanging branch. Corrective surgery on
the truck will be handled by· the insuran1.:c con1·
panyn.
Atlanta Constitution editor Regin<.iid
i\turphy. kidnaped and released by a
right-"·ing cx1re1nisL this .,.car, and
Burke Elbrick. former ambB.ssador to
Brazil taken prisoner five years ago by
the Hrazihan terrorists, \\'Cre also
panelists. Obsce1ie Caller
W c1s the La-iv
KYOTO. Japan (AP) -\Vhen a
23-year-old "'oman complained to
her husband of obscene phone calls
coming once or Iv.ice a day, they
devised a plan to trap the
anonymous caller.
Du ri ng his next call. she invited
the caller to a rendezvous at a
nearby park. The husband and
several other men 'n'ho accom-
panied her caught the would-be
masher and handed him over to
a passing patrol car.
Police identified the ma n
\Vednesday a.<> Susumu Bito. a
policeman station.id in the woman's
neighborhood.
o,vi1ers of Steps
In So11th Lag11na
Getting 85 Eacl1
Orange County \\'ill p..1 y eacl1 of the 489
l-O-Ov.11ers of the so-called ··1.000 Steps"
in South Laguna S5 to give up their title
to the stair"A·ay to the beach.
The Board of supen·isors \Vcdnesday
agreed to acquire the 10-fool-\\'ide, 2i0-
foot-!ong stain\'ilY piece by pil'C'e O\"er the
next si:< months.
So far, 25 of the "O\\Tiers in common"
have agreed to give up their deeds to the
crumbling steps in exchange for the $5
COflSideration .
Real Property Services D i rec I or
Stanley Krause said he has already bet-n
told that some of the oWTiers \viii not be
\\"i liing to give up their pa r t i a I
ov..11erships.
But, he said, the county \\i ll leave the
door open for six month.s and decide
"'·hat to do after thal if all the ovmers
haven't stepped forward.
The county has a number of options
open in the case, including condemnation
of the remaining shares or a t:-keover by
prescriptive rights because of long public
use of the stairs.
Supervisors agreed to a c c ep l
"quitclaim deeds" from any O\\'Jler \\'ho
comes forward in the next six months in
in exchange for the $5.
Liquor Store
Owner Murderecl
GLENDALE (AP) -The good life
ended on a bl~splattered liquor store
floor for Walter Ben;iard Strauss.
The 52-ycar-old fonner New York City
cab driver was shot in the chest and
killed during a holdup of his store here
Tuesday, officials said.
' Clutched in his right hand was $100 in
s ma 11 bills. left behind by the quickly
fleeing holdup man who escaped
emptyhanded. The cash register was full,
a spokesman said. '
Strauss' son said his rather had come
to Cali£ornia "(or a good life'.' after
driving his cab on the streets of New
York for 27 years.
152 Abortion
Bodies Found
SAO PAULO\ Brazil (AP) -The
bodl .. of 1:;: newborn babies, lhree boxu
of letllleS and two containers of bones
have been dlscovered beneath a cbarlly
hospital !or unwed mothers, according to
poli<e. J'ollce said Wednesday lhat all the
cadavers were sent to a morgue, but ne,,
excavations would be made to detennlne
whether more bodlet wm Interred
there.
Abortion is illegal ln Bmll, Wbldl has
the world's lar&eal Roman Catbollc
poplllallon.
----
Aliso Valley G1·ou11 Eyes
$500,000-Pool in El Toro
The men unanimously agreed that il
\\·as quite easy for kidnaped persons to
identify \l'ith captors.
",\! first I \o;ould get irritated \vhen
people suggested that Patty might
identify \1"ith her captors,'' Yleed said.
"But from \1·hat I ·have read since and
,,·hat I read no\v, ii v.·ould have been
truly <1mazing if this had not happened."
A $500,000 Olympic-size s"·immlng pool
for El Toro is the goal of -a ne\V
coinmunity organization headed by Aliso
Valley Homeowners Association vice
president Wayne Leonard.
The El Toro Community Po o I
Association, now meeting on a regular
basis, will attempt to raise $50,000 by
Sept. 1 to help pay for a 50-meter
Olym pic pool that will be suitable for
community as "''ell as school use at the
nev.· El Toro High Schoo l.
The high school, no\v under
construction at Toledo Road and Ridge
Route Drive, is scheduled to open next
Husband Slavs ,,
Friend of Wife
"-llLPITAS IUPI) -A Navy petty
officer was held tcxlay in the fata.I
stlOOting of a man he caught drinking
V,'ith his 'A'ife.
The victim was Frederick A. Knutson,
26, son of Dr. Joseph Knutson, president
of Concordia College. "-1oorhead, Minn.
Police arrested Romualdo Mendoza
Calpo. 37. at his home. Calpo had called.
reporting he just "shot someone."
According to investigators, Calpo came
home early from his job and found
Knutson drinking with his w if e ,
Carmelita. in the dining room of the
Calpo residence.
fall. El Toro High classes arc being held
aL Mission Viejo 1-f igh on double session
until the ne\v campus opens.
Th~ ne\v pool \vould be available for
communily use after school each dily, on
\\·eekends, and during the summer.
The $50,000 will be added to funds from
Orange Counly "'hich the pool supporters
hope will be forthcoming in county-\\'ide
allocations of federa l revenue sharing
money.
Total cost of the pool is estimated at
$500,000. Of the total, the school distric:t
wil l provide $150,000 for land and site
improvements, $100,000 will be provided
by the local residents fund-raising efforts
and from county service area funds, and
$250,000 is hoped for from revenue
sharing.
Leonard . vice president of the Aliso
\1a!lcy l·lomeowners Association said the
pool association was formed out of a
concern for rising delinquency rates in
the Sadd\cback Valley and a dearth of
free rec reation facilities.
"Candidly speaking there are no
community facilities for kids in this
area." Leonard said. "I know it looks
like a "'·ealthy area but the fact is there
is nothing available."
He pointed out that though there are
recreational facilities for. members of
community associations, monthly dues
are required and non-members are left
out. Jn areas like New \llorld in Laguna
Hills, few commun,ity a.s soc i at ion
facilities are provided, he said.
He also criticized police handling of the
flearst tnanhunt.
··1t's a prohl c1n of attitudes," he sa id.
"The question is not \vhat on earth
happened to !his girl.bul let's get her."
h'lurphy said. '"I expected to die and I
\\'Ould do anything. [ "'ould talk lo them
1his kidnapers), J \1·ould !ell jokes
cons!antly."
And in a taped interview used on the
sho\Y. Paul Getty. grandson of oil
magnate J. Paul Getty. said. ··1 \YOUld do
anything" to cooperate v.·ith h i s
kidnapers.
Paul Getty \1·as kidnaped las! year and
released several months later with his
right ear cul off.
Co1ivict Drops
.Maine Campaign
'THOMASTON, ~1aine (UPI) -Danny
Trask. \1•ho apparently found it difficult
to conduct a politica l ca1npaign fron1
behind prison v.·alls. has dropped out of
the race for governor of i\1aine.
Trask. a 36-year-old convicted robbc>r,
tried to get 5,000 signatures on petitions
so he could run in Nove n1ber unde r the
banner or the Poor Peoples· Party. He
had said he was having difficulty gellina
the signatures :ind called on srverai
occasions for volunteers on the outside to
circulate the petitions.
Trask did not give an official rCfl.SOn
for \\'ithdrawing in a brie f letter to the
secrrtary ,of state \Vednesday.
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•
•
-1 D41LV PILOT
J~si ~ Coasting ,~J Ci~veland W'facked by Wild Gunfight
with
Tom
arphine
._, : ~·i~; ..
Transportation
Bv the Thumb • UPCOAST. DOWNCOAST: Hitchhik ing
as a means of personal transportalion is
almost universally frowned upon by
forces of the law in our region. Our pl.'ace
officers can cite you chapter and verse
on it.
Officers can pull out books and recount
the murders. rapes, multiple assaults,
kidnaping. muggings or sex deviate
crimes \~hich have resulted to victims
who either sought or offered rides.
All this good advice aside. I thumbed
my way ·from Newport to LagWla Beach
last night.
This developed because 1 am in.' this
car pool. It is n1y "'eek to drive. I had
forgotten that I had a d en t is t
appointmeut at 4:30 p.m. Since I was
driving, and if I went off to sit in the
dentist's chair, how was the rest of the
car pool going to get home?
PONDERING ALL THIS about 15
minutes before I was due in the dentist's
hot seat, I struck upon a solution.
"You drop me off at the dentist's and
take the car on home," I advised my
sidekick. "I'll get there later somehow."
Later came when I walked out of the
dentist's office on Dover Drive near
Coast Highway and realized that now I
\\•as faced with the somehow of getting
down the road.
I studied that long stream of
ci utomobiles lined up for the Dover-Coast
Highway signal. one of ttle most frus-
trating crossroads in our entire region.
It \11as about 5: 15 p.m. and this was the
going-home gang. ''W hat a nice looking
bunch of commuters," said I to myself.
"W HY NOT JUST stick out your thumb
and see what happens?" So I stuck.
~Iy first ride was with a blue-jeaned
chap 'vith an older car \vho went to the
lroub!e of maknig a U-turn at Bayshores
in order to pick me up at the signal.
"You picked a lousy place to try for a
ride," he advised me as I slid into his
front seat.
He explained that he \Vas only going to
Balboa Island on a job and would
normallv turn off at Bayside Drive but
would 'take me to Jamboree Road
because I could hitch better from there. I
thanked him at Jamboree.
THE DISTINGUISl-IED 4 Io o king
gentleman at the Jamboree bus stop
advised me to lake the Orange County
'I'ransit District's BS bus for a straight
shot to Laguna. I thanked him and stuck
out my thumb again instead.
My second ride to the middle of Corona
del Mar was \.11ith a nice fellow who
,1·orks for Diceon Electronics, Inc. out on
Von Karman in Irvine.
"You picked a lousy spot for a ride,"
he advised.
Between .Jamboree and Marguerite
Avenue in Corona del Mar, he explained
to me how Oiceon makes the besl
electronic devices in the world. "We
build for qua lity." he declared.
Nice to find folks who believe in their
companies.
Whil e thumbing at !\targuerite, I think
T got honked at by former presidential
candidate John G. Schmitz, \\'ho \.Vas
turning off for hon1r.
THE SIGllT OF l\IE and my thumb no
doubt confirmed all his suspicions about
ne\vspaper people . . ..
"You picked a lousy spot for a ride.
said the young n1an in !he sports car 1~·ho
drove me to Laguna. lie 1vorks for Copy
Cats and makes blueprints for the Irvine
Company and others.
"lf vour son \\'ants to gel into drafting
he shOu!d go lo college." he advised me.
"]L's <i great profession."
\Veil. hitchhiking 1nay be chancy
transporlation. .
But there sure arc a lot of nice folks
out there.
Nixon Tax
Pie1mlty
Reported ·
BALTIMORE, Md. IAPl -President
Nixon was assessed a 5 percent
negligence penalty by the . Inler~al
Revenue Service in connection with
$467,000 he owes in back income taxes
and interest, a newspaper said today.
The Baltimore Sun. quoting sources
familiar uith the case. said the IRS
included the 5 percent penalty on April 3
\\'hen it assessed Nixon $432,787 in back
taxes, plus interest.
The Sun said the doH<ir amount of the
alleged negligence penalty couJd not be
determlned.
NIXON HAS SAID he \\'OU!d pay the
taxes, but the \Vhite Hollsc hus rcftised to
say whether a n~ligcnce penally was
involved. The IRS refused comment on
the newspaper report , saying it \l.'as
agency policy not to go beyond ,~·hat ;i.
taxpayer reveals about his own case.
A negligence penalty does not amount
to a finding of fraud. ll is made for
"negligence or intentional disregard of
rules and regulations," an l R S
spokesman said.
The \Vhite House has maintained th at
any mistakes on Nixon's returns 1rcrc
made by lawyers or accountanrs wh()
made out his returns, and not by the
President. ~1eanwhile. the \Vhit e House announced
\Vednesday that public don at ions
designed to help Nixon pay his back
taxes now mounted lo more than
$90,000.
NIXON HAS SAID he v.·ould pay the
back taxes himself, even if it meant
harrowing the money, and the White
l-louse is returning the donations. A
spokcsman said \Vednesday that the
$4,341 of the total donated has come
anonymously, and that this money \Va.s
being given lo victims of the April
tornadoes which hit 13 stairs.
.,
Rec11lls Cliildltootl . .
Bob Hope can1e "tfon1e" to Cleveland \\lednesclay n~ght for benef!t
dinner and to celebrate 7lst birthday. ~le recalled JOb at brothers
butcher shop: "l plucked the chickens and ground the hamburger
and \vhcn things were slo\v, I posed 'vith an apple 1n my mouth."
$130 Millio11 Satellite
For Ed11catio11 TV Lofted
From \Vire Services
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla _ -A $180
million satellite which \1·111 be,arn
televised educational and · h ca l l h
programs to isolated areas of the 11·orld
\\'as launched today.
A Titan 3C rockr! blasted a11ny fro1n
its Kennedy Space Center moorings at 6
• OEO Progrt1111s \lole1I
\\i ASHINGTON -The House has v9ted
to keep the Office of Economic
Opportunily's ren1aining major 1>rogran1s
alive. sidestepping: President Nixon·s
:itte1npts to do ;111·ay \1·ith the antipoverty
ngency.
·. [ __ 1_N_sn_o_R_r._ .. _)
By a vote of 331 to 53 on \\'ednesday.
the 11ouse di sbanded OEO but created a
ne\v administration \\. i th i n the
fJepartment of Health. Education and
\Ve!fare to run its con1muni1y action
progran1s at a cost of s~ao million.
a.m. PDT. ltftmg the Applications
~ _ , Technology Satellite 6 11110 orbit. .. ~ l ,i;; Initiall y, ATS6. \\tll be positioned
· slalionary orbit 22,300 miles above the
UPI T~lePllOIO
Facts lo Blame
CBS correspondent Eric Sevar-
eid blamed the problems of the
Nixon Administration on the
facts, not the news media. I-le
was addressing the 88th an-
nual con1mencement exercises
of Temple University in Phil·
adelphia. . •.
Galapagos Islands in the &astern Pacific.
From there. it wilt be able to "view" the
entire continental United States and
Alaska.
e Soviets Ainr at 1lloon
~IOSCO\V -The Soviet Union's first
unmanned lunar probe in 16 months fle1v
on course to the moon today and \Vestcrn
experts predicted the Russians 1~'ould
attempt a soft landing.
The Luna 22 craft 11•as launched
\Vedncsday to conduct ' ' s c i en l i f i c
research of the n1oon and space nrar tlic
moon from orbit," the Tass ne\\'S agency
sa id.
e Red Te<rm• lt'<rll< 0111
SA IGON -North Vietnamese and \1ict
Cong delegations to the n1Hitary team set
up to arrange and coordinate the search
for more than 1.000 missing A1nericans
\valked out of negotiations today, the
South Vietnamese command announced.
It s;. 'd the Communist delegations
\'Owed not to attend future deliberations
of the team. which also itlcludes the
United States and South Vietnam.
Plea By
e l'leu by Pro1es1u111s
BELFAST. Northern Ireland -The
Protestant Ulster Defense Association
(UDA l v.:a rned Protestants and Roman
Catholics alike today that unless they
learn to live and work together "The
;iltcrn a!i\'e is a bloodbath v:ith quarter
neither given nor expected."
2 Participcuits
Fall Deacl _4.fter
Dri1iki11g Contest
FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla. IAP) -
,\ gin-drinking contest between two men
\\'ho tried to settle a dispute over the ir
liquor C<ij>acities ended with both
contestants dead, police say.
Police Chief Tomn1y Ray \\redncsday
gave the follo.,.,·ing account of the deaths
of \Valter \Vade, 39. and Eugene Cole. 32:
Thunderstorms Cross U.S.
\V ade and Cole had long d~c;puted \\'ho
cou ld consun1c the most alcohol. The
oll'ncr of a tavern they frequented
clecided to end the argument by holding <l
drinking contest Sunday night.
A "limckeeper" was appointed and the
n1en began do\l'lling glasses of gin. The
contest \.\'as called off when neither man
could drink any more. Each had put ,,
:nray between 32 and 48 ounces of gin in
Fou Blanketinu Nortlieast,· Wester1i States Sunny I:':! e
less than an hour. 6
Cote was found unconscious on a street
near his home l\1onday morning and
booked into the city jail for public
drunkennncss. He was checked hourly,
Ray said. and when he could not be
roused at 3:10 p.m. he was sent to a
hospital where he was pronounced dead
II minutes after arrival.
Tenaperatures
Hl•ll Low re•. " " " .. 51 JO ·'° ~1 53 .M " .. u ~l .65 1t e1 .n
" " 9) 16 " .. n " 86 7J .01 a2. 61 9( 61 79 61 .6( 81 ,,
" a 71 51 .OS
!•7Jli1~1!oll
.DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of the Oany Pilol
is &ua•anleea
~ " ,. .. .i ~" ,., .. " u ..... Cll .. ,.. topy lid II .... II ,. Cals Mt U\tt llllti
~JI J& , s.*r .. SMIJ: I ft1 .. let rtttm
yes -., t u. Satdf. • I IJI. ~· .. 1 _. wl•lr11tM It ,. caa n • 11111111.a
T~s .
----,,,,.W-021 ----.. ,,,,, .. -ut.111G .. -.-.. ... ~ "'""'---... '-'-"",, al.wt
·1
New °''t•n• .. " New York .. ..
Olci.ttom• City " " ""'"" " " PlllY' klrll'IQI .. " JitllllMMll>l'lil n ..
l'tlotfll)I '" " irtt~I! g fl ~II ·~· chtnarlcl. a, ll "'-u·n ~':. City H '" .. 11 .f~ .. :ll." :l llllJIOll "
•
·" CaHlornia
Skl~~r soutMrn cr,11tornl1 1Mf: = owrt•) ~ W::," llfll 110011t ll Mr tdnttdl'f·
TfTirt ~·· Uttt. 11mDlfatur1 fl'"" ·" 1'fi 'l ~·~~Mint: l"r t't'. Pit ti .... ""' ,, r."'/;. R~t: · lkleJ WITI OUl't' "' 11 I mor no ~::r ~"win the
"' a111~, Ill I be ~;. >r,cp, ~" :r.m: r."':l "' ~Pit • It. It \II tlti ~i.lW9r•w,.c . WI ft:.''" ouatM ~ 3Q.m!lei oer :l! ~'i...'"io: 11tUR_•· H '~Md 102 I 0.1tr ""' r11Mlned II ltle
•
I ~
B4·9' r•rlC!e In the hi<1h deserl1, 1 The tie<lcl!eJ, alter !he norm&
marninQ too ar>d mi1!, we:re: Par!lv clear !n fhe aflernoon. Hl9h1 W'rtl in
"" mid 601 &nd lhere was a mcderatt
bree11 alono Ille ctiast.
Coa•tal Weather
M011IY tunny today. Ll9hl v1rl1lllt
winat 11111nt 1t'ld morning llo\Jn t>ICClll'I•
l"9 l!0'1tlwnlttly 12 to 20 111'10l• tn
afltr,_.,* tod1y tna Frldfly. Hloll ta.
day In llPI*' 60t. C:O.tllt ttMJ)fttturn
rll!Ofl from 62 to ff, lnltlld ltmpett•
111"" 'tl!Ot rrom '' lo ,.., Wt!tr temPfl'tl\trt 62.
Sun, Moon~ Tide.
TflU•SDAY
Stc<WICI 111011 .. 411-f p.m. S.S
'llOAY
FlrJt l'llflt ............ 7117 •·'"· 3.• Flr1t low .••• ." ........ 1:17 I .IT\. o.3 S.COl'ld ltlOfl ,. " ...... f!O) p.m, •.•
Sf<Ol'ld '°"" ' ...... 12..;SJ p.11'1. 1.3 •
1vr1 rltn J;d 1.m. sm >111 ""'·
Wade went to hi.8 sister's home after
the contest. When she could not rouse
him ai s p.m Monday, she took him to
the same hospital, where he died
Tuesday morning.
David Cassidy
Fan,, 14, Dies
LONDON (AP) 7 Bernadette
Whelan, a 14-year-old pop music
ran whose heart stopped at a David
C..'5idy concert In London lour
days ago, died early today at
Hammersmith Hospllal.
She had been unconoelous since '
the night o! the concert, during
which more 'than 800 fem were
treated for rnJnor injuries and
hysteria. C...ldy, 24, •en t
Bernadette a bouquet wh!le.obe wos
unconscious;
Moon rlMt Jll:J p,m, Sth 2:01 •·"'-L--------------'
(
•I
•
Group Served at Rites
For SLA's DeFreeze
CLEVELAND IUPI) -Thre< persons
were arrested early today following a
gunbattle with nearly 100 policemen in
which five officers and two other persons
were wounded.
Those arrested v:ere identified by
police as members of the Sunni Orthodox
Muslims, the group which provided
pallbearers for the funeral of Symbionese
Liberation Army head Donald DeFreeze
and which has vowed to eliminate drug
pushers.
Police said they foiled earlier an
apparent attempt by the three to kidnap
a suspected drug dealtt.
"I DON'T KNOW \\'hether these three
individuals participated in the Defreeze
funeral," Jennrichs said. "They said
their primary purpose is to eliminate all
drug pushers."
Cleveland radio station \V JW reported
that one o( the three 1ncn arrested said
they \Vere members of the group that
supplied pallbearers at DcFreeze's
funeral here last week. DeFreeze and
five other SLA mcn1bers died in a Los
Angeles shootout !\lay 17.
Police said the sequence of events
began Wednesday night when a n1an
tentatively identified as Andrew Jackson.
39, East Cleveland, was kidnaped by five
black men on Fourth Avenue in
Cleveland.
Jackson escaped, apparently \':hiJc
being taken to his home, police said.
"l\fY SLAVE NAl\1E is Craig Gregor.1·
Fowler," the suspect, who called himseH
Mujahab. told WJW . "We went after a
dope killer tonight . We're not afraid of
death. We went to get him. Nobody
innocent is to be killed."
TY:O of those wounded early todciy \\'ere
identified as John O'Brien. 19, and
Dennis O'Brien. 31, t1vo members of a
family held hostage by the group during
the gunbattle. Both had been shot at least
three limes and both were listed in fair
condition. police said.
Cleveland pa tr o Im a n Gerald
Schettei-cr. 31 originally reported <is
killed, was listed in critical condition at
Huron Road Hospital in suburban East
Cleveland. One other officer from the
Cleveland Police Department and t\10
East Cleveland patrolmen 1vefc listed ln
fair condition at the hospita l.
EAST CLEVELAND Police LI .
Richard Jirovat said "a prclirninary
investigation shows thal this (!he
kidnapingl \1•as somewhat related to
drugs."
He said two of the men then fled the
;1rr;1, and 'ihe other three forced their
1vay into the East Cleveland hon1e of
\.\1itlinm J. O'Brien and 'ntld the fam ily
hostage. The two men who fled remained
at large today.
lfroval said police began searching the
area after finding an abandoned
automobile apparently belonging to the
suspects. Once the suspects were
discovered and the shootout and tear gas
barrage began, about 100 policemen
from the tv.•o departments were called to
the scene, he said.
""'E DISCOVERED then1 tthe three
suspects) on a door to door search,,.
Hrovat said. "A litUe boy came out of
the house and yelled that someone was in
there. Police went for cover when heavy
gunfire began coming from the house.
Police returned the gunfire \1·hcn they
saw the suspects.
Seven Killed
By Lightning
111 Midwc~l
By United Press In ternational
A storm system which swept from the
central plains to Ohio has brought. death
by lightning lo seven persons 1n the
?-.iidwest.
Four young girls and a woman died in
the St. UJuis area Wednesday, and to the
eastward two mcn1 were killed in
lndiana.
Jimmie Hibbs, 19, \Vas standing under
a tree in Columbus, lnd ., and 1vas killed
by a lightning bolt. A 15-vear-old girl
standing with him \Vas injured. In
Spcnct>r, Ind., John Vaughn. 68, died
\Vhen hit by flying wood from a tree
struck by lighting, and tho fragments
injured another tnan.
Two boys found the bodies of the fottr
girls huddled beneath a tree nearly six
hours after a morning thunderstorm
passed through the suburban Manchester
area. The girls had been released earlier
than USU<ll fro1n the private Catholic
school because they had finished their
final examination.
The bodies had traces of burns but no
other marks, said Raymond L Harris.
chief medical exanliner for the county
medical examiner's office.
The girls were killed about the same
time two women were struck by lightning
that sp lit an oak tree under which they
were standing when rain interrupted
their golf ga1ne.
The won1en look refuge beneath the
tree on the fairv.•ay of the 12th hole at the
Paddock Country Club \vhen lightning
split the 7S.foot-high tree down the
middle.
J udgc Dismisses
Lewd11ess Cl1arge
For 12 i11 'Eros'
CAMBRIDGF.. Mass. I A P \
Cambridge District Court Jud g c
l.:1wrcncc J . Feloncv has dismissed
charges of open anci gross lewdnes.'>
brought against 12 persons coonected
\l'i!h the play "Sv.•eet Eros."
Chargrs of fornication against Lisa
Ingalls and Joel Polinsky. {1>,·o stars of
the show. \\"ere continued to June 19 by
Feloney .
The pair \\'as arrested \\-'ith the others
on ~tay 22 v.·hen state police inLerrup1rd
the pl<iy. following a scene in .,.,·hich they
;1pprared nude in a simulated se:t act.
lewdness charges, noted that children
had been excluded from the Ji.Id
performance and that Masscbuscus·
obscenity law had recently been siruck
doy,·n by another iourt.
Syria Under P1·ess11res
Cl1allenge See11 Turning
Truce Into Solid Peace
Bv WILLI A~f L. RY A \i
• AP 5Ptc:lal (OrA$11Cnd•nl
The Sy r i a n ·I s r a e 1 i military
disengagement accord dramatically
improves chances for Middle East
stability. And so Syria's anxious ally,
President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, can
begin breathing a little easier.
But his relief must be <Muted by an
acute awareness of how fragile such an
agreement can be.
BRINGING . SYRIA under
disengagement tent \vith Israel
( NEWS ANALYSIS
I h c
and
J
Egypt not only was a breakthrough of
incalculable importance, but it was
anothet minor miracle of the sort that.._is
becoming a specialty or Secretary of
State Henry J\. Kissinger, ll:jving
produced this wonder, h o we v e r ,
Kissinger now must apply h i s
legerdemain to the even m o r e
Impossible-looking job of turning truce
Into pe ....
Syria long has been the enfant terrible
or the Arab world. Her political leaders
are invariably under severe pressures
generated by the highly emotional
Palesllne issue, WJ!en Kissinger set out
to bring Syria inlO an agreement o! any
del<lriptlon with the arc~emy, It had
._ed be hid Jaken OD a bopelu ·1aslc!
' MEANTIME, E GYP T ' S President
Sadat, eager to get hl.5 natJon on the road
to economic health, must have had many
an uneasy momt11~ AD alone In his
mllilary, disengagement pact wllh lllrael,
' '
he \vas out on a long limb and looking
uncomfortable.
In Arabic, "al-~1isri" means "the
Egyptians," and in thi s case it had
seemed that "al-Misri" would have loved
company. Now, at last. he has it.
But had Syria continued to hold out fc1r
·long, Sadat could have been subject to
the same sort of difficulty that plagued
hint before lhe October war, when
intelleeturals demanded an end, one way
or another, to the situation of "no war,
no peace."
When Arab terrorists burst into the
picture so bloodily at a critical moment
in the Syria-Israel negotiations, it had
seemed all Kissinger's patient labor
would go down the drain. The terrorism
and consequent Israeli r e t a I i a t I o n s
generated so much emotion on both sides
as to make it seem all bets might be ofL
NOW TRE SCENE shifls Jo the Geneva
conference, and if the Syria-Israel phase
had looked tough, the Geneva one can be
much tougher. Peace, in fact, Is a long
way off.
The terror situation still can threaten
the fragile agreement, since there can
hardly be a secure guarantee against
acts by fanatical extrC!mlsts.
For Israel, security is the name of the
game. For Syria, it is "the legiUmate
rights ol the Palestine people," a
rhetorical demand that can mean many
things, even up to dismantlement of the
lsraell stale. Some Israelis tblnk the
Syrians mean JlL!t that,
Syria will continue d"""1ndlng back all
the Golan Hclg!rta aru It I081 ln 196'7.>bul
Israel wUI be lar from eager lo give up a
securl\y blr1i.tn-band !ct a promfae In tho'
bu1h.
I
•
Donatio11s
To Ni xon-
$90,000
WASHINGTON
Public donalion s dcs1i:ncd tu
help President Nixon pay his
•
Door Trouble
Microwave Oven ·
W arl'tings Looui
delinquent federal i n c o n1 e \VASHJ NGTON /UPI) -hinge latch or sealing surface
taxes total $90,000. the \Vhitt The Food and Drug ls damaged.
Hoose ha~ announced. Adniinislration has ordered THE OVENS, WlllCll have
The in one y , c x {'cpl . pl•nnancnl y,•ar11ing labels on been selling at a rate of nbout
300.000 a year, can grill a anonymous donations, is bring .all new 1111crowavc ovens. but steak in seconds or cook a
r<'turned to the senrlers since turnt>d down a consumer ruast in a fraction of the time
Nixon announced he will pay group's rt•qucsl to impose conventiona l oven methods
the t<ixes hi~elr. lighter safety rules on the require.
The anonymous funds , wh ich industry. Consumers Union, which
the \Vhite I-louse said come to The labels, which. would politioned the FDA for new
$• bcc-ine m•nd"'"ry th Is safety rules last summer, -,,341. were turnt'd over to the .v '" ow t ncfed th I k swnmnr. would warn the user con c c ovens ea
•
/ • ..irsday, f,1.iy 300q74 DAILY PILOT 5
~{~~!~ W oma11 Will Head College at Sonoma
. ·•·•· ~ \\ LOS ANGELES (UPI)' -
••• Or. Marjorie Downing has
j been named president of Cal
U P I T tlffflo1 t
State Sonoma by the board of
trustees or the California State
Universities and Colleges, the
first woman to reach that
l~vel in the California
educational system,
"Dr. Downing, through her
e x t e n s i v e experiellCt' in
academic administration and
notable scholarship is
especially qualified to con!inue
with the foresighted
development of CSC Sonoma,"
Chancellor GleM Dumke, said
\Vedncsday.
Rohnert Purk at the end of !he
1973-74 academic year.
Currently a professor o(
English literature al Scripps
College, Dr. Downing "'as
dean or the faculty :1t tht'
Claremont school for six year:;
beginning Jn 1965.
Prior to 1noving
Claremont 1n 1961.
Io
Dr.
Downing srrved as dean of the
college ;1t Sa rah Lawrence in
/'\cw Yot h.
DR. DO\\'NING had prcviou._ ...
tc·aching e x pc r le n c e a1
Barnard College and Brooklyn
College.
She received her bachelor's
degree in 1938 from Mt. &tint
Vincent C.:ollegc in New York,
her rnaster's from Catholic
L'n1vcr~ity i n \\lashington,
JJ .('. ;ind h<'r Ph.I>. fro1n
Y;d1· University in 1942.
IJr. Do\\•ning, 57, is the
vndowcd mother of two sons.
f',rancis, 18, and Nicholas, 15,
who reside \Yith her -ill
Claremont. -----
THE COSTA MESA POLICE ASSOCIATION
1974 BENEFIT SHOW F'edcral Disast<'r Assistance radiation and p-c hazards not to op<'r<1\c !he oven if v., Administration to aid viclirns lhci·c is .an object caught in ranging fron1 burns to FIRST IN STATE
of recent Midwest tornadoes. the door, ii lhc door docs not in terference 1~ilh etectron
1
• i~ __ o...::_ Marjorie Downing
DR. DOWT\'TNG succeeds
Thomas H. McCralh, who is
rf'tlring from !he presidency
of the 5,500-student campus at
Nixon requcstt'd this. close properly, or if the door pacemake.rs implanted
----'-------~=..:'--'-• · hPart patients.
~UlS VEGAS
'
deluxe rooms
on the strip
HUGE Poot
l[LEVISION
?4HOUR
PHONES
AIR
CONDITIOOfNG
COffll SHOP
~or 1 or 2 People
? Juub!e heds 1n
each 1oom
S? 00 C"och for
rxtro quesrs
~lloring VCM"
roorn,
Good all week· except Fri., Sal. and
Holiday Periods & Summer Months
When rate is $17.80.
~--~--~ ~---~~-LI MITED TIME OffER
RESERVE NOW!
TOT At PRICE,
NO EXTRAS!
For Reservations Information coll
(714) 533-6050
KONA KAI MOTOR INN
A f irst Goss Motel ... A Pacific Holiday Rewrt
Pot Pat~h , The group, 1vhich pu~lishes
·1he maga~in{' Cons um c r
Reports. had requested a
more extensive warnini; label
advising users to keep ovens
out of the reach of children,
avoid peering into 1hen1 while
in use and telling pacemaker
Slieriff Grows His Ou;n,
patients to leave the room. _ Johnston County Shcrirf
J'f ALSO WANTED tougher E\'Crctt Stewart has a small
TISHOMINGO. Okla. (APJ
testin~ slandards because, it s.:1id. pn·scnt industry tesls do g1.1rdcn adjacent to the county
not dupl1 c<itc even normal, let jail v.•here he raises a
<llone abnoriual. use that the nun1bC'r or items, including
ovens might receive in the nu1rijuana.
some people to think they
might be growing it by
mistake in their backyard or
pasture."
Stewart, an officer for 34
years, said he had about 3,000
visitors to the patch last year.
h.'lnds or consun1ers. Sixteen marijuana plants,
Last f1.1!I the Fl) A tested 200 now about three feet high, arc }7 !dS Like lO S t c_ I 197 4 microwave ovens in actual use in the patch, surrounded with U ep emUC'r •
:~nd~;;":, •• ~~'!iim~~~k·f:: a ~;g~,c~·;,~~~::;c;;, people A k A d ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
found that 89 of them leaked \\•ill knov.· what it looks like." S 11 )' for info call 963-50 I I
h 1 g .h c r -l ha n • 1> crmittcd lhc sheriff said. ''It scares ff#'H##H***'''"''''*'*'"'''''HffH' __ ,,,,,,,,, ______ .,..,...__,..,..
;11r101111!s of radiation \vhcn ---------------------'---------
:-,ubJct!cd to the test the Union
~u;:pl•sted. To Laqy Csonka,
wide man
. 5191 Las Vegas Blvd .. South, Los Vegas, Nev . 89109
A.\' f l)A SPOKESi\1At\ said
\\'1•dnescl:1y thl' lack of specific
lt·"t r1·quircn1L·nts in the nev.·
r1·gulations -\vhich were put
forth for a 60-day co1nment
period before becorning final
-did nol mean the agency
11 as avoiding the issue. The
"J)l)k{'sn1an said 1hc FD,\
intend<'d 10 continue policing:
industry !l·St n1cthods on an
lnfurrn;1] basis in a narrow world.
I
Super B
Kodachrome
movie film,
2os .. 01
149
G.E. Magic
flash cubes.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores;
FASHION ISLAND. Newport Beoch. (7") 644-2313
HUNTIJ:IGTON CENTER, Huo1mg1on Beo<h (714) 892-ml
United dedicates
'Frien ship Service.
e o ywide-bodies
to both FKand New
{Starting June 15th.)
:: • _..., :l'.c;,., """"'
~ .... -.,,,..,,.
For stretching out, leaning back and all-around
comfort try our 747 and DC·IO Friend Ships on lor size.
Another reason more people choose the lriendl y
skies than any other airline in the land.
Any man who spends his working days sq ueezing
through tight ·situations appreciates the roominess of
United"s wide·boclied 747 and DC-10 Frie nd Ships.
.#,
Check llllr schedule. Then call Uni1ed at
5:17-7521 for ticketing and reservations. Or sec your
Tra\'cl A!:!cnt.
And go wiJe. With Uni1cJ.
Los Angeles 10 New York '
Lv. X:45 a.m. (DC·lOJ Ar. 5:00 p.m . Jfl(
•
On board, there's extra space , Four Star dining.audio
entertainment. movies on some flights, even our lnfli ght
Service Supervisor to help smooth your way. Fri endshi p
J 2:00 n«m 17471 8:05 p.m . JFK
l:JO p.m. (DC·lO) 9:25 p.m. Newa rk (eff.6/15)
Service all the way,. The friendly skies of your land.
UnitedsNewYOrkers
Pannm in Travel with Wcs1em Iotemat\anal Hotels.
•
I
•
I
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6 D AR Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Help for
For years it haS> been apparent to people concerned
with higher education in South Orange County that Sad·
dleback College needs so me major changes in outlook
a.nd ad1ninistration if it is to meet its educational chaJ.
lenge.
With t.hree seats on the board of trustees up for at·
large election June 4, voters have the most significant
opportunity in the school 's seven-year history to have
a say in Saddleback's destiny.
The candidates recommended by the Daily Pilot arc:
\Villiam Dean in Tustin (Area One).
Dr. Alan Greenwood in Tustin \Area Two).
I...arry Taylor in l~ag una Beach (Area Three/.
\Vi.llia m Dean. an aerospace executive. ha s a proved
profes.s1onal record for working with goverrunenL deal·
~ng with people. and co ping with cost factors. f'urther.
in the campaign he has avoided si1nplistic rhetoric on ts·
sues to gain publicity. He acknowledges that the school
has problems, but says he wants to get directly involved
before making hasty conclusions.
Dr. Greenwood. a dental surgeon and educator. ha s
the right ro1n bination of matu1·ity and drive to help
pro~l_.lc'-.resul ~s at Saddleback. f-le has taken a strong
pos1t1on 1avor1ng federal aid -which has long been
needed. Jn addition, Greenwood has n1a.ny years' experi·
ence working with students as a medical school profes·
sor. He does not display a condescending attitude to·
ward students -an attitude all too common in the pa st
at Saddle back.
Until J\1icha.el McFadden anti Norn1an Cole dropped
out of the race in Laguna Beach, they and Larry Taylor
posed a difficu lt choi ce for voters. All three were good
c~ndidates. Ta ylor is the best remaining choi ce. f-li s
record of se rvi ce as a La guna school board president
and trustee is a good credential and as one of the origin·
Saddlehack
al planners of Saddleback ha s the historical perspective
needed now.
Many of the original ten candidates for the three
seats have contributed valuable debate to the campaiJ;n.
The discussion at various forums has been varied. candid,
and to .the point. All of those who ran should be conl-
snended for bringing important i~ues to the forefront.
The school is at a critical point. Good leadership
is needed. and good leaders are available in Dean, Green-
wood, and Taylor.
Maintain tl1e Quality
To insure quality edu ca tion in the Laguna Beach
Unified School District. La guna voters should support
the June 4 tax override.
A success ful election will enable the district to keep
pace with inflation and n1aintain an eclucational .progra1n
known for its innovation and individual student atten·
lion.
The election is necess<tf\' beca use state la\v ha s re-
1noved a l<i'rge measure of loCal taxing control from the
school board.
The law would automatically reduce the di strict's
tax rate this year 31 cents per $100 assessed valuation.
The override will restore 24 cents of that t:ut. and still
mean a 1974-75 levy of $3.20 per StOO. !About $320 for
the owner of a $40.000 house1. That's a lou1er rate than
thi s year, a.nd a \·cry IO\V rate con1pared with others in
the co unty.
Quality education costs . .1\nd. like bread. butter,
1nil~ and meat, the cost is goi ng up. But the dollars are
a good investn1ent in the future.
The Daily Pilot recomn1ends a yes vOte on the
school s' tax override.
\ ~._~\,.._,
.l't r..:1'>: • ..t1M"* I
s ''1 DO 1HINK JER!l.Y FORD 15 TF.YINu TO TE LL US SOMETHING'.'
Don't L e ttii
Too Heu 11ilv
In a Brooding Air, the Wolves Are Circling
~
011 the Cl erp;)·
( SYDNEY JIARRISJ
have ne,·rr k11own \\'hc!her to laugh
cir cry n1orc \1ht•n people v.•i th l'mO!ional.
n1arital, or ~l·xual problrms arr ;id\'iSL'tl
to "!urn to ~our doctor or clt•rgyn1;1n"
for c:ounscling and help.
The truth uf the 1n:1ltf'r j~ lhat n10Sl
doctors and elergyn1cn-in our socict~·. at
le;ist~arc no 1nore qu<.ili[1cd b.v lra:n1ng
or lrmpc1·:!n1f'n( ro
girc sueh coun~l'lill ~
than :1 µlun1bt1 r·;1 n
f j X '.l f~ll~!;l1 i;1;1n
tulw
ThC' ~U IL1d1· •• :1d
di\' fl r f• I' !';lit' 01
doe1ors. dt nri"I' and
othl':' 1\rolC'!'S;r,p;1I ..
IS higl1c1· 1h;u1 lt1;11
of nln1ost ·111\· n1l11·r
()('Cup:J!1nn · \..hi!r 1h::t of thl' m111i~lr\
\l'OUld tlt:uhti(',.; ht' 111lll'h )1ight~r lll<Jll 11 I'
if publ1t· opinion \ler~· nol Sul'h <t ng1(!
dt•!\•rn1111;H1t ol their ('llndul·t.
DOCTORS arr 1<1uglTI v1rtu;1!1y 11Qthu1g
about srx -CXCl'Pl in it :-. s!:<r~t'.,!
bi0Jogie;1l st11sc-in 1ne<11i.:a: :-chool. ;111cl
n1ost of thctn arc .~'I or;.::1nic;dly·orit'!l!l'd
th<lt tht'Y arc eilht·r l'll1h<irr.-i~sed 1u'
impatient 11·hl'n <'onl ront ing ob1·iousl~
trnotional or tunet10n;d u1,,i·ts.
(lC'rgyml'n arc a1 1ti1• nlhl·r exll't'il'"
so "sp1ritunllv·n1intl1·d" 1!1:11 thvy tend 111
turn PS.\ChOlog1c;1I prubh·nl!I u1to ethie;1l
Ont's. and u~u:1!1,\ propost• "faith .. n~
futilely as the ph,vs1ti;1os pruposc pills or
a sea-change'. Thc.v may offer more
sympathy than the doctor. hut syin patl)y
alone can no n1orc ht'ai 1l1c heart than it
can reset a broken leg.
lT IS precisely because of these
ob\·ious deficiencies in the medical and
1heological profl'ssions that 1nillions uf
Americans ha\'t' turnC'd. perforce. to a
1\ild variety of C'n1otional nostr tm1 s. fron1
yoga and meditation to transactional
groups and sensitivity training. People
are desperate for help in reconstructing
tl1eir lives. and are as 11•illing to try any
psychological cure in the same 1\•ay a
bald man \1·111 glve any al!eg('d hair.re·
storer a \1·hirl.
Some of these progr:nns C1rc more
reputablr and responsible than others.
but mos1 jof \1·h<11cve r persuasion! arc
under-tr<iinl'd and Hl-direc!t>d , faddish
or do1vnrigh1 latuous or even dangerous
to the st;_1bil1ry of the Pf'l'SOnJlilr. Alas.
there is no Fedl'l'RI Trade CommL~~ion,
no \'Crsicin of ll Pure Food and Drug Act,
to rrgulari· -Or inhibit these promoters:
nor is then· ;111y ratiooal 11·ay the can·
didatc can Pr;iluate the trctu1iques and
regin1ens offl'rl'd by a bewildering inul·
tip/tci1y of ~t·C'rs.
08\'IOUSLY, n1>I on ly tr:iinrd and
licensed JlS.\ c·hologists or psychiatrists
should he rq11ip]1Cd to handle these
problems; there 11 ill never be enough of
them . Medicin1' arid theology 01ust take
up the slack hy intorporating far 1nore of
emolion.1! and pa~toral counscllllg Lhan
arc !l0\1 in their ('urricula. The ave rilgr
doctor or clcrgym;:in today is barely able
to cope Y:H h his tradilional area of
dJscipline. much less to ad\·ise Gth1.•rs Ofl
the prrplcxitics and subtleties of psychic
realit~·.
Quotes
' June ~t. Taulbee, ~lountain View -"l
believe that fanatics ·and te.rrdrislS
: -flourish in a climate of d~sperulion. We
flfi-d to rt\'i\'l" our democrullc ,..acer.~.es
as a legili.mate .1vt'nue (If t:f(ecling
change. because lhat process has tak~ n
b<ating in rfl'<lll years."
I
•
Tl1C' '\'lute /l ouse i,~ noticeabl!I
~·111111/Pr Uiesc days. It's been set back
;u1·//1cr fro1n the street, Tl1e iron
or11/ccl fe11cP around it lias grouni
luulier, 1/10119/i. on<L the spikes atop
are lio11ed ru.zur sl!11rp.
Uccn..;;ionollu at 11iyl11 tlie olinnner
uf 11 sllnded light ca11 be see!/ 1hrour11J
q llolted si1utter. Sv su1nco11e still
11()/r/s Ollt 1vitlli11, /3ut tl1e f/l'iil!/il!(/
11·v/r~"~ are cil'cli11f}, circ/hig. And euch
cir1u lileu !Jl'OlV ever bolder.
* * *
'·People ah~·::i.vs said they didn 't like
till' son of a bitch but they didn't kno1v
11'hy." says <1 n,•porlt'r in the \Vhi!l' House
press rooin. "'.'JO\\' !he,v know \l"hy."
!Jc doesn·1 borher to 1011·rr his ,·oicc
1hough a presidential aide is passing b.\'.
Tih· aide's .~l1ouldC'rs hunch ror\vard . !Ii;;
ht·:1d duck!'. 111• k11rps going. s!:1 ring:
.;1ruigh1 :ih1·~d Sill'nt. Thl' other lll'\\S-
111t•11 \augh
De fendin g Nixo1i Just Isn't tlie Thi1ig to Do
You can 't blame the aide. Those fe11" in
this tov.'Il \l'ho slill openly defend th e
President. like Fa!her John fl.-tcLaughlin ,
the Jesuit priest on the \Vhite House staff,
are subject to instant derision. It simply
isn't the thii\g to do.
The \Vhite House press has been 1vr~·ly
critical in private of e\·ery Presiden t
since FDR. C:vnicism is issued 11·ith their
pencils and notebooks. But never have
they been so openly and fearlessly
hostile, never have their jokes been so
vicious nor delivered 1vith such relish. It
simply is the thing to do.
TllrS IS basically a Den1ocratic 101111.
The ne11·s11\en . the u pp er· cc hr l o 11
burec1<1er<J1 >. 1hC' ( ieorgC'lo11 n hoStl'g<\'S
1l•u~· 1•.h11 ~l'l lhr tone. 1·vck~ lh•·
llJOl'l(l. dl.'tcrn1inc 11hal is in and 1rt1a t Is
( __ A_R_T_HO_P_P_E ___ J
out -~ire not only predo1ni11;1ntly
De1nocrats. but inlt.'llectua\ Democrats.
Since the da1·s of Alger Hiss, they h;i\·c
been Nixon haters.
\\'hen th e Presid ent \\'<JS ut the heighl
of his po1\·er. they criticlzed him. But
the.v criticizf'd him for .being dull :ind
bcinal, and only among themselves. It
sre med a meaningless ritual they went
through to help them endure 1he eight
long years in hopes that Can1e\ol \\'OU!d
('Onie again. But no1v ...
".\s thl' President 11·ould say." :i
i)cn1ocratic eongress1nan loudly asked
the 1raite r in the House dining room.
"11·hat lhc.> (expletive deleted) is good
tod<1y ?"
A llEPUBLIC.\N colleague at the next
table looked over, sn1iled rul'fully and
sadly shook his head. ··Even the
Republi cans know they've been had .''
said the Democrat triumphanlly.
"Did you hear v.·hat he c<11!ed (Senate
Hepu blican Leader ) Hugh Scott?" said a
11111·ye r al a cocktail party. happily citing
an obscrnity dt>letl'd from the tape
transcripts, this tO\\·n's bt•st-scl!er. And
the other guests 1·icd to bring forth
plun1s of prt•sidentiul profanil.1". as
though prof:.:nit :,· \l'erc an impeachable
offense _
And you can·1 help reeling in this al·
mosphere of \'iciuusness. \'indict1\·eness
and jubi!anl relish that if the Prc~ident is
Ur1\en froin offit·c 1n tl1,.g1«ur 11 \1ill no1
bt'. so nn1ch for :1111 h1~li tT1n1 es u:·
n1isdt'lnt•anor:>o . h11t :-11npl: Je~-1 U~c 11'1'
to\\·n hates his i;uls.
* * *
)1rt Lnicoln slil/ brnurl.; 111 his ntt··
111111'/irl .\~ !1011 1111/1 11<1• 1 P1·111rs11I ·
1'(111111 .lr1·1111<". 1111• !/1:<, ·· I hro: 1•/•1
fly. lilf' !1rr111ir.· unrl 111· ,,,,,1/1/1· /111 111J·
lli\/.~ .~II// .~If(«!/ \[l'l""I ii ,I •'!11/111'/JH/.
Ai1'1 ,!IP!/ t/11.,1: 1/11\ 1:1111··1·//111/1 r1h1'll;I.
!iu!! 11·1// JlO ~~.
for (,'0111111/ /I r/I I> 1111/ 1, l.''1/11 l1i•1I •
t'( 11011', d1111/t' 1111'1'<' lf<1 /n1r1>11,t 1/11!/ /l)I •
1)11.~111[1. {! 'i 1/11•\l•'I' !iit'. 11'' 1/i(' )t•i -
l'/Cf$ ll'l!/1/11 t/11(1/l jqdll fl 1' /1j•J1i/•1
C'll/) of poll'l!I' 111/t'r ,. loi "I. /r1·.,1/
rlro110/tr .
!\HJ rll(/!ll1t1 tl1+ ·1· 1· ri1• \11·1 ,,.,.
1rl1u ll'\J/rli( ,.; , .1·,·, , , , , 1'/, •I 11'1 1,,
.\11r/ 111!!~//)(• (I ).,I/ /! C !.'••' "'i1'/l//l/1/11
1;; //tr 1'.rrr1u·11;t11111/11 1"111,111/ 1 .... r·1•·
uf lu1 r.:111u uur 111~·111 1'1•J11~ -:ca/rd /1111·1
to s1;1·.
Steam Cars: Great, But Are They Practical?
~-i. 1!,·• 1".J11n1"
I n·.1iJ •1i1h inh•rest !he arliclc in the
:O.l ar 2~ ll;1ih Pilo1 about 1hr 1h·li\'L'I'\' uf
111r: ~·ti·an1 ilo11ered <1\llOn1ubiles to· lht·
~1:1\c of CilliforPia at Sl.400.000 eaeh.
Asseinbly Speaker ~1oretti, accorrting to
h11n. is proud to ha,·r SJXlnso rrrt the pro.
Jt'Cf 11l1irh hl' purports "srts out to sl10\r
i)f':rolt ir's possible to cons!rucl a stci'lt11
running c::ir for urban use in n sl1orl
pc·riod of 1 inlt• 11'ith lilt le nionl'y."
I le s11eL·rrd~·d in p1·01 ing nonl' of ! ho~t·
contentions. l!c has ni;1df' 111"0 cars 11hieh
/J;-i\-c not passed any California !'\ah~
clean air ci>rtlfication lests. l\lore
irnportantl.v. the c<1rs n1ay not be
producible al any sort or a reasontibl e
cost. But, beyond that. the state has no
1vay of selling thcni.
A far bertcr use of !hat monrv 1\·ould
hare been to rnake it a prize for ihe first
p1·ivatc corporation ·which produced a
clea n cn1ission vehi cle for urban use as
evidenced by public acceptance Jn the
forn1 cif sales.
illr. fl.1orctti n1av next decide to build a
nonpolluting spac~ship '1'ith our n1011l'\-.
~'~'only hope. in that eventualit y, i.-; th;11.
he is first 10 ride 111 ii .
GEORGE E. fllLI.
.•• 11 J\·111111obile l11slend
To the Editor:
!n the o!d days 11·hen spring bi·okc il
11·as the · perpetu;1l niotion" invcntur~
1\~10 crowlcd out of their holrs and
convinced the: gullible to invest in tht"ir
great inventions . No1v it is the steam car
nuts \\'asting Our tax monry to attain the
in1possible. To HstL'TI to the great
pronout1ccn1enls of Bob J\lorctti. one
\VOuld think that the cnJ;inee.r;; 1.t
Caltech. Berkeley and at the Big Three
Dear
(; loo111 v
(;us
\Vhile cutting everyone else's bud·
get left and right. !ht Laguna Be:ich
City Council seems disinclined to
trim its o"·n oJ)(!ratlonaJ budget.
Apparenlly sauce Cor the goose
isn't sauct fcir the gander when
it con1es to m~ney.
R.C.~1 .
G!OMlr Ctit ""'"''"" •rt tlllli'l'Htttf llr 'tl(lfrl ttML llt Ml llt<tJMrlt, 11!lltc1 f111
Vlt•I fl ltl't fl4w11-r, ltlld ~f 1•t
l'ff'lf ft Ollom1 C'ilK. Diiiy 'lltt,
;.11110 rc~l'iJrrl1 \:1Ls 1\ere 11 ](Jt of
l'i1nplcto11s. and lha1 they a r c
dclibcratl'l.1· i111pcding progres~.
About all one can say in favol' of sh«Hn
cars is that they are quiet. Of <:ourse ;. ou
eould dc~ign then1 to burn c:-::J.-il. kind,ing
1o:oo<l or l'ven old nc1vspapers. but their
standard lurl i~ pelro!eu n1 like e:11·s.
esptC'ially diesel-driven ones. u~e.
,,.H ~:o.;ErER ~'OU interpost ' p:H\l'I'
tonversion uni1s like a stcai)l l;o1lrr
bct\.\·cen the fuel tank and !hf' ri·;1r
11·heels. you lose po\\'er and burn n1orr
fuel. t\nd you increase the 1vright of the
po11·er plant greatly, 1rhich takes n1orc
fuel to navigalt'.
About the only people fa1·oring :;lra111
arc those -....-ho ha\'e hnd Jiltle 01· no
l'nginecring education, like sornc gu:s 111
lhc Legislature.
Ste:1n1 cars burn \1 i1h <111 OJA'll flu111c
and are gL"llC'rally not ;l1Jo11cU in cars
'" i!l1 gasoline-driven en~ines. 1\ho~c
f11n1cs might Ix> ignited. The boil ers and
cvndensers they must have arc heavv. '
1rhieh n1can~ poorrr pcrfonnancC' ;iii(!
fuel n1ileage .. \lcchanic:-don't kuo11• ho1~·
to scr\·iec !hcni.
'f\\·o slcan1 cafs hare aUaill l·d 111::1~~.
flroduction and then had 10 be <1handonl'd.
Thf' tv.·o the Legislature spen! $Z.7j
n1il1io11 011 looked prt>l!.r : one co1ild nlJt i.::..~
:-1art.cd the second try. !he fir:;t 1vould11't.
!'!l:Lr! al all.
Tiil:: Tl ~IE has conic for us to con5idrr
~cn1cthing re<illy prac!iC'al like Ill\
in\'ent ion. thC' Klock E i g h 1 -D a :v
:\ullnobi!C'. which is silent, requires 110
gasoline, has no exhaust.
The nicchanical principles of the Xut ·
:\'labile are lime-tested and even' a child
cau understand them. Everybody kno1•.s
the reliability cif the cighl-<lay wind·up
clock. It runs for a week on one windin g.
The Nu t·J\1obilc runs on the santt'
pritK·iple except "'ith a niuch larger
rnotor .. Just wind it up each Sat urday and
off you go to a week of care.free nnct
expense-free n1otoring. If you arc busy
n1owing !he lO'l''ll let your wife improve
her figur(' by doing lt.
FRA;.;K KLOCK
1fatc11 the Watcl1el's
To the Ed itor :
I read with a great deal of Interest Dr.
Russel V. Lee's suggestion that public
officials whose "aberra!lons" cou ld cause
"public harm" be removed lrom oUice.
Jn a world where Olle superpower
already oat.gor1-some of Its vocal
lnterul OPf:M>l'lenls 8J "In.sane" and locks
them away In .. asylums'' I said to
myself, "This 8111 has ' got to be
ft
( MAILBOX )
Letters froni rearlers u.re welcome.
,vo,.m-0.lly, writ et;; sliu,•ld. con i.'ey !lreir
'!l1essages i11 30() 1curcls or li:~s. The
r1yl1t to condense letters to fi.t space
!Jr eli111i11otc /;b cl is reserved. All let.·
ri 'rs niust /J11·/11rJe signature ond rnnil·
n1 ri address but ·nanies 1nay be wiili-
/1c/rl on req11est if sufficient reason
'~ apoare nt. Pr1crr,11 ·iri/l n(lt be pvb·
lisl1ed.
kidd ing!" A carL•fu! reading, however.
<'onvinced inc thal Dr. Lee 'vas
delivering his idea \\'ith :1 prrfectly
straight face und n1eant to b~ t:_ikcn
seriously.
I have onlv one (]\l<'Stion !or Dr. Ll'C;
"'\'ho deter1nines the sanity of the
sanity-dete rminers·?''
GOROO~ \\'ILLl/\:'i!S
T/1e S/1 e r iff's .Job
To The Editor:
Tn response to ~·our editorial on the
~heriff candidates I think you neglected
tu tell the readers son1e i1n11or!a"4-f:1cts.
\\'hile it is your right to endorse
1l'huever you choose, it somehow does
not seem fair to single one other
c·nndidate out lo attack. Therr are si x in
the rac:e.
I 1vould like to point out that George
Savard has spent $21,000 to date {both
fili ngs) while Bradtey Gates has spent
~54,21 1 to date including both filings , If
:'\Ir. Gate~ can't run a well-organized
can1 paign on that money. then he does
have a problem. After all. 111oney can
buy just about everything these days.
AS A CITIZEN, I \\'OUld like to state
here why I am inlcreslL'<I in the sheri{I. I
live in an un lnccirporr\tL>d <lrea, In :i
con11nunity where the only I a w
enforcement Js the sheriffs department.
Crime has Increased each yea r alnce
1968 when l moved there. but, lhe sherlff 1
patrols still remain inadequate.
Orange County citizens have had the
same person ·as sherif( for the last is
ytars. Twenty-five years is too toni"for
the same person to stay in the same job
In the same location.
HU department shows it; it lw
become decadent.
When I learned lbe present sheriff
hand·picked one ol his men, Bradley
Gates, tq succeed him, my llrSt reaeUon ~·as one of fear. Fear that the prest.nt
situation will ren1ain or \\·orscn .
\Vh y? Logically speaking. a person
chooses ..anothC'r to succeed him for
several reasons. For exan1p!c, the person
agrees ·in philosophy and v.·ill carry on in
!he same way.
Orange County needs a change. It does
not need a jail facility that is the talk of
the state or a sheriff who ha$ allo\\o"ed
crime to increase in San Juan Capistrano
300 percent and a promise of a substation
in the South County that is a political
dream and Orange County does not need
a man who will follow in the footsteps or
the one who has propJgated that
detericiration either.
Let 's be fair and 'give another person a
chance to make this a safe county to live
and \\'Ork in: let a person who is more
qua lified and v.·ho can't buy the office
1rilh tricky high partisan campaigning
have a chanl'.e.
lla\'cn't "'c had enough of that in 1973?
CONSTANCE BENEDICT
Does Speed Kill?
To the Editor :
The Dail~' Pilot editorially has fot1011·cd
fio11crnor l\eagan's unsubstantiated lin e
!h<il the reduction in highway fatalities is
directly attributable to the Nixon
ad1ninistration's. nationally enforced, sa
m.p.h. speed limit.
•·Speed Kill s" headlined the ~lay 15
Daily Pilot editorial authored by an
anonymous writer whose expertise on the
subject v.·ill possibly also rema in
questionable; how c v er, in his
intemalional best·se}ler, "Unsafe At Any
Speed," Ralph Nader exposed lhe Traffic
Safety Establishment which has
apparently used that slogan "for
decades.''
Said Nader :
" 'Speed Kills' and 'Slow 0ol'm 'and
Live' are f:in1iliar (slogans) peddled by
the Naticinal Safety Council. But of lat e
th~ council. Which is hcavlly endowed by
the Auto1noblle Ma n ufacturer s
' tion, is underplaying t he s e
es, owing in part to the
asslng effects of the automobile
companies' promotional emP!lasis on
Isµ't It tl1e Truth!
I n.J. Is a splendid wiy ~y which
to re-discover ounelves when wa not
only have doubta as II) where we,re
f OinR 'but worry how we're going to
'get iihe. St.y homel ' . "If 4n ass go., trav<llno A•'fl 110<
c~me honit a llorse."
-Tho-Fill/tr, 1732
horscpo11rr. SJX'f'<I and rac111,: anrl
encouragingly enou~h -dllt' in p:1r1 111
!he result~ nf <i studr bi-!he Bort':111 of
Public Huad ~ Nr1t'f.'n11n g. thl' n·l;1t1un.sh1p
bet\\'een accidents and hig!l\1 ay spC'rcL
"Accident involvrn11.:11t r;lles 11re ;l! ;1
minimum at speed.~ bel \\l't'!l SD and i:i
mi!C'S per hour. As 1hr ~pc:ed .gors htlo11·
50 mil es pe~ hour or abo\·c fj miles 1xoi·
hour. lhe 1nvohl'nH·n t r:ite incrC'~:-""
rapidly .. 1and1 ... the 1w1nlirr of lllJl!l'lt'~
per \·eh1clt rnd 1·-. !1'rt\•·l1·d 11' ;II 11 ~
minimu111 111 thi· 'i"'td ra11i:1· or ~:i to -;u
m.p.h.''
BlllCE: S UOPP/."\;;
H11s Ride r s .\iclt•1/
_.1. To the E:<litor :
On behalf of •11· (Jr:rn ;.:•· f' '1111v Tr:in!'1!
District. I \\r,ulrl l•1 !h;•::· \'••ll for th"
exccl!i·nt ('n\• "1 " · :,f 1~1· !J;11I\ l'ilnL
ha~ pr'o \ 1dt d fo• '· .1· r.' \ tJ ~ .. 1·vi!'t'"
Thl1 f'cl1trir 1:_i) '"• ···.t. •: rl•·ar listn1g
ot the ni,11 '-1·r11·' .• .;·· .' ' hv \\'illia111
Sch.rt'ibt•r 111\I ;1 · .. ~t thrt\1· peO plc 11·hu
<lrs1rc to u~1· lh" t.u, Ir t<•kcs fron1 6 111
I:! n1onth s tr1 dcit·lflp s:itisfac:lorv
ridrrship on 111·11 routt·s and eontinurfl a~sistuncf.' fru1H 1hc f)ally Pilot \\'i ll help .
Air pol lution cont inues to blis.lJt our
con1n:iunitics ::ind the energy/ 1·risis
remains unsolv1..'tl. T!u: n1orc people \\l'
can get out of the ir aulomohilcs and int11 the buses. the better life v.·iH be in
Orange County.
BALPH B. CLAHI\
County Supervisor
OIANlil COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Vttd, Pt'°LL,ltcr
Thomas K eetJil, Editur
Barbara Krtibich
.Editorial Page Editor
The td1for111.l JN.Ille" of lhr D11ily
Pilot 6ttk1 to iniom\ and stln1ula.tc
rtaden by prqenUng on U1ls Pili«'
divente •commentary"on topic. of in.
tm:st by l)lndlcated oolwnnltrts •nd
cartooniils, by providing a forum for
readtra' Vl"'a and by prtff'nll!ll' ttiis
ncw11>3per'1 o¢niorls and l~a,, on
cumnt topics. ~ edltorllll opinions
at the> D&l:ty Piiot lPfN'!llt only in the
todltorlal column at the top ot ttie
pq:c. Oplnkms txf)l'tMC'd by the'ool·
. umnllltl and cartoonlllt• and le!tft'
writers m UMtt own .m .., tndort.r· ~: :.,r~ :=:..i."' ""'f llDi4'
Th ursday, May 80, 1974 ·
,;
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l hur~dciy May JO 1q74 DAILY PILOT 7
The Ultimate • Ill Planning
Ne ·w Sclieme 'fakes iri Almo.~t Everytlii1ig in ·Siglit
If you think the Warren.Reagan energy
control law is bad -the one that will be
dictating a lot or your comings and
goings -wait ti ll you get a whiff of AB
2iJ78. Assemblyman Paul Priolo's pro.
posed state land use planning law.
Thal little dooz.ey will really put you in
a box. To put it like il Is, it's a state wn-
1ng Jaw that v..·ould
tell I o c a I govern·
n1cnts \Y'lHt to do
;ind citi~ns \vhe re
lo go. .
Priolo lR·Pacif.lc •
J 'alisades) woul d '
,•stablish a Ii t a t e
co1nmlssion W die-
t ate planning and
land•use throughout
l'alifornla: Last week his AB 2978 clea rL'<I
the As!Cmb1y Plann in{l . Land Use and
EucrJ?,y Co1111nittec. 5·0.
Undrr the bH L lth· slate land U&' com·
n1ission \\'ott\d be armed \Yilh two big-
f1sted powers: firs1. control over any
:1re<1 that ll' considered or "crltical eon-
1'1·rn" to the state und. second , control
(lvl'r any so-called ··key fac il ities."
AREAS of criUc;.il concern v.'ould in·
t·ludt·. but not be confi ned to. ilood
pl:Hn.~. ca rthquakeie, (S<:ismic 1 zones,
rt•gions or scenic beauty. rt·crcational
'.irca~-•1nd , open spaces. ChN:k lhut last
i!l'rll : 01>t•n spaces.
1'he intent of AH 2978 is to establish
\)(11\'f'rS lhrough \Yhich the stale com-
n11ss1on could declare thul a certain
percentage of land in each county. or
"basin," v.oukl remain as "Opt.•n space"
..
RUS WA LTON , , , .. " ' ,, ' , ..
" -no matter wtii t the l&ndowne,ra:;) or
the local citizen1, or their governWl'cnts
might desire. An Gpen apace Would
permit 'nothing to be zoned above
agriculluraJ use.
"Key fac ilities" would ll\clude power
plahls, ah:ports, dams , reservoirs, and
keeway interchanges. There are sever.at
-thousand freeway in~ges in the h
slate's highway system, ll*r the Priolo
bill, these i nt e r c bao ges would
auton1atically become key facilities ; all
the land around them "A-'OU1d then be
zoned by the state. The beck \Yith the
local authorilies.
\VHEN YOU add the areas or <'rilical
concern to the key raciliti~s and the l:.nd
already owned or controUcd by govern·
n1cnt, you come up with a sizeable por·
lion of the state's land mass. Acco rd ing
to Chuck Hobbs, who rec:enlly resigned
from the governor's staff to open his ov.·n
consulting Unn, the state Office of Plan-
ning and Research already has those
consequences pretty well mapped out.
''They ha•e these f'{la ps over lhcrc
/showing are.as ot critical concern. key
facilities, and other controlled lands l. If
you overlaid a'll tho6e maps on top of
rach olher. y'bu'd ~tty ~ell cover the
\vhole damned st.ate. Tbat1s how far
things could ·go.'' .; .•
At:tually. in 1he pastifive years -and,
\l"llh few folks taking notice -the state
' has gotten into a tremendous amount of
fand use decision-making. This has haP"
penl.>d mainly through administrative in·
te rpretation of bits and pieces or existing
laws. The state resources agency and the
planning and research offioe have been
especially aggressive in that regard.
What Priolo has done with AB 2978,
basically, is to bring all those bits and
pieces ot law and administrative regula-
tions together into one biU. Then he
slapped a state land use commiss ion on
top of the pile.
FOR EXAMPLE, there is the state's
Coastal Conservation Commiss.ion with
its regional bodies, the Tahoe llegional
Planning authority, the San Francisco
bay area planning body !BCDC 1 -alt
going strong. Superimpose a state land
use commission , . . and there you go.
Iii. big brudder!
Suppose the state shoµl~ take your
land , or down-zone it or 11dversely affe ct
it through some ruling'! What abo.ut corn-
pensation'! So far the Priolo bill avoids
mention of that. AB 2978 simply states
that current methods will be used . But ,
watch out ! Read bet\veen those lines.
\Vhat lhe bill is saj,ing is thal right now
zoning is an exe rcise of police po\\'Cr at
the loca l level and that police power 1\lill
be transferred to Babylon. \Vham , ba111~
EARL BR IAN b" pos itivc· t lii11,i11 ~
~'l)lltl!! K.l'!)llblit·~tll \\'h i) \\'I ll \\ll /"~ l lJ
1n t'ft\l ~l' t he nation\, /:'11er.!.!_1' ~u p p 11~·..;,
\viii \VOrk for /11f /ati1J11 J<.ej(Jr111s th.II
111Jru.lat~ a /Jala11cetl 11111/::<'f and '' i II
()JJ/lUSC' Ji 'age tllt tl JJriC<' ('c111truls. 11~·
\Viii take tilt.:: IL·atl ~111U introdticL' /IL·attlt
l nsuranL·~ th:11 111:1i111 :1i11 "i til t! "/,.ee /fir
.'•ier1 •ices" c1 u1 rcpt. 1\11d. Il l· \viii "L'l·k
ft'dl'r:tl la\\''> it1 l't\:.1..,1n ~ .\"e11te11ces j<JI'
l'ri111i11als u:::.in~ ~un ~ in 1111:
1..:01n111i:::.~io11 of cr11nl.'...;.
EA·RLBRIAM
REPUBLICAN
U.S. SENATE.
M.D.
Whitman Reassessed
PRIOLO tried something like this,
last year. lie v..•as shot. do\\n. But. this,
time he has a couple of legs up. First.
(:Ov. Reagan h<:1s established the precl'·
dent for land use control by ~ibrning f\B
1575 ithe energy con1rol hill). And , sec·
ond. Priolo has an irnportant ally in Don
Livingston. the governor's chief for pro.
gram and policy. There arc times v.·hen
Livingiton sten1s to v.·alk• n1ore closely
\l'ith lhe Democrats than with his boss.
Left-leaning Livingston is the fella who
adrQitly guided the coercive and ccn·
tralliing energy control ! c g is I a lion
through to cnactn1ent. Thrit's the bill
(;o\'. Beagan apologized for. the other
d:iy ~~s he took hls JlCll and signed it in-
!u l,111·.
l';i,rJ lrH hv F"r1.-n1l~'ll E:11 I 6 11.in C<1n11••1t!<:<:! lur U.S. Sen;;te
208 1 Bu~111f''>\ Cen!cr Drive, $u1\f• :!JG, lrv111e, C.illf. 92664
l r1·,11url!r Auclv S.ntu1
-..
1·;d1!1'd h~· 1\rthur <ioldcn and published
h.v .\1cGra w-111ll Paperbacks in the
Contcm1>0rary St udies in Literature
~t·ril's. \\'all "'hltrnan !S2.251 contains
nint' erilical essays on An1e rica·s
hrl'alesl pocl by leading scholars,
1·over1ng !he wide range of his inspiration
and 11·ork . the 1nnucnccs that shaped his
si>ns1b1l1!.\', and his ov.n strong inOuence
on lhc d1rcrtion of modern poetry.
Tll~; GR0\\',..11 of Leaves or Grass
:1100;:: v.ith the atlt.·1npl to srparate lhl'
· s•·r1ous artist from the Public relations
llTI:lj:?.l'"' 1..; lil~CU SSt'd by {;oldrn in !he
l11trod11ct1on. Subs<:qucnt ch apter s.
d1\ idf'd into four parts. range from
\', hitinan 's beginnings to his influence on
sul'h other pot•ts as Dylan Thomas.
1;areia Lorca, Hart Crant'. and Allen
1;1nsberg ris di~cu~scd by Gay Yiilson
,\lien anti Janu~s E. :'\1iller, .Ir
~l1 scnn<·1·pllnns about the transfor1nut1on
of a h:it'k inurnah st in!n a g1·nial poet :in•
put 10 \\('\\ d1·servcd r"st.
Arthur Coldl'n. l'rofl'SSor of Engli~h Jt
Ly
Rcvn
Sh cf !c t
''le"tr to ._ ____ _.
bt G60M fltai i11 '°°"
co111po11y .•• " OliTw Goich,....
Hl·1ng of a n:i tur;Jlly
J,!r1•i.:ar111u .' nalurc. the
hun1,1n ;1111111;11 1~ prone to
~1·1·k out l'umpan1on!!hip,
hul th1•rt' art• 1n~la nccs
\\h1·r1• 1l 1 ~ h1•tt1•r lu hC'
;dont• th;1n 1n unde sirable • l"11n1pa11.1
( THE BOOKMAN )
lhc Cit~· College or lhe Cil.V University or
Ne\V )'ork is also edilor of \\'alt
Whitman 's Blue Book ;i~d h ;i s
contributed lo the Encyclopedia of \Vorld
Biography, P~1LA, Literature and
Psychiatry. and other scholarly journals.
ALONG \\'JTH hinl in this \'olume ~re
such scholars as Roger Asselineau 1\ho
traces \Vhitman 's gradual sh ifl from the
inno\'alive language of his early poetry to
a more traditional approach in his latt'r
"·ork: Slanley K. Coffman . Jr. \\"ho
analyzes the poem "CrossinA Arooklyn
Fer rv." and discusses \Vhil1nan 's
1m1xlrtant ··catalogue'' lectLnique: and
l·:d,vin H. r-.litlcr and SlPphen E. \\'bichcr
oHer close rradin,l!s of '"The re \\'as a
Child \\'en\ Forth'' and •·0t11 of the
l'r;it.l k' Elldlrssly Hocking.''
.JO.A:\~ DiLORENZO
\\'ht·n onr '' ;1lnnr ht"
1na'' ht• It· .. ~ p:ir11rul:ir.
lo · .. ~ dl•1nancl\n i.: 1n the
1·n n1p;1n1on ~ 111· a<'<'C'll l.'.
:\II too r1H1•11. Lhl' person
"'ho a1·1·t'pl ~ poor ;·om ·
p.11i~ .. an .1 1·nmpany ... to
mt'l'l th1· rx1J;?rnc~· of the
n111n1rn1 , 111111 ~ himself
lat1•r 1d1•11H l11·d y.·1lh Iha\
1·•1hhl'r ot p1·r~1n l>cs er-
1·l·dl~· or 1111\. h1• h1•rn1n1•s :1
111·11.1n 111 lht• "h1rd~ of a
fl'alht•r'· ~tarnp ;ind al a
f11sadvanla).!t' 111 atlrit!"l1ng
n1or1• ;1 cre11t:iblt• 1·om ·
pan1nn ...
~OVAL VILLA"
l\.1ndn1·~s nnrt un1l1·r~1 :111
0111.c art• rp1:.l11u·~ you 1·an
<·xp1•C't 111 uur cxpt.•rient'f'd
personnrl v.ho i1rfl ' at'·
1·11~\om<•tl tu :111t1c1pu l1ni:
t·vc·ry nl•Cd ut lh1• la 1n1J1c~
oSH€FF€K
MOK.T U.\.llY
• ' , ,1 1J t I I ' 1 • • "'· '
LI'' • ' .• r• ' ~1
.1 ' •
t;~· I rtf\•: •:l<
)111 NORTH a. ~~·,.i!f-O"Rf:AL
4~1 0•.:fl '
THE SUNNY FLOOR
THAT SHI NES WITHOU T WAXI NG
Solari an~
bv @ mstrong
Why wax your old kitchen fl oor again
th is afternoon, when we can be ins tall ing
your new Armstrong Solarian floor In·
stead. Solarlan's an entirely new kind of
floor that actually does shine without
waxing. And spills , tracked-in dirt .. -
even black heel marks wipe right up.
Com• •ff ua todar tor the Solarfan pat~
tem that'• right for your home.
SUNS TONE•
0 ••Y s1 o ~so
C0881.£
...... , ..
B' L1 A N KAAi' N s H I p
FLOORS
---------'---------------~
COME TO OUR CALCULATOR
COLLEGE
-.
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Rcprt.":.l"nt.111\"l' '.i UU\\ ni.i r. LJCron1.\, <..r.•1.~.
.ind T1.:x.1~ [r1.\trru 11lllll' \\1 111'( on h.1nd co hL·lp
~()U ~{;)l:l ( dll" 1nudt l hL:.I ~U llld tO }"O!l f lll"L~l~.
1\nJ ,.<.ho\1 you rht'!t n1.1ny ll~l~. Fr1J,1y. '.'IL1y ; l,
.2 .(10 p.n1.-,.,: ;11 l'·n1 · :-iuu rh C:o;1sr Pl.tt.t. S.it.
June I. J 1:00 ,1,111.-):(11) p.n1 .: .)Jnr.; An.:i.
St:iiionl'.ry
SANTA ANA
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
------
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Enginl'.l'.ring Cr.11µ ti I ~ l !11' pori
,d,fc· 0111<.k! ,,1kpl,11l•! fl.!{Ufl' 'lll!l
1dir nor.uuin, .ind ,1 1ulh ,1JdrL':.,1hlt
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1liJr_._:1:r/1\(" .1.l .l)'llr. 11,iJ,1,r h1il d1r
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1.itr11nix 1102 hand·hl·ld n1od..:I ()11
till' 111()\t·! l'.n10~· r!1t· ..:lhtil·nt )' 1i! flu~
"i-runt 11o n 1;d1 ul.l!1 ir .• ind 11' 1uc.d
pt1rt .1hd1t ~. '.'ll uh 1ply. ~ubtr:ht, ad ll
,1nJ 1l1 \1Jt, pl u~ u~t· ,1 rx:rt1.:nt key .
·r.1kc ic '' hL-rt·\1 r ~·nu like. Co1nL·:!o cum·
rll·ft' \\ 1d1 b<H!t'rtl ~. , •• , ••. J 9 .9:i
Ilo,vn1ar Brain ll"c fu nction M X-5 5
f1\'1:, that's tour plus pcrcenia~c.· key,
ha\'t "on1ni" consranr. \V'ith .tlgc.:braic
logic you r;1n tnrcr your problen1 in
the SJn1c· ~quencc ~1s you think 1r •
Adapccr, chargt·r ~1n<l ,·inyl pouch,
inclu(!ed in 'his price ....••. 59.95
.,
tw ef lrttkil •' , -tt1
2936 Rmdolph St.• Cosio MHa ,
140.2025 . . 140.7262
Shop Monday thn,t Prida1, 10:00 a,m, 10 9:30 IMIJ· I Bullo<,;', San1 a Ana. l f05hion Squ>rc, 2800 'N, Ma.in ' 6irctt, San" Ano, Telephone: '47.n11
Saturday, 10:00 uo. to 6:00 p.m, lluUock's Sou1h Coa1t Plaza, San Di<ilo Freeway at Btistol, Costa Mw, Tclephooe : ''6-o6ll
' t
••
' ' ' I (,'
,
i
•
•
•
ft DAILY PILOT Thursday, May JO, 1Q74 -WANTED-Trt1s(ee Dist 1·ic t 2
Harper , Paynter
See l{ Board Post
County, Anal1eim Team Up
To Buy Peralta Adobe Site
. ' DIAMONDS • GEMSTONES
....._.., ...... k ...... tw ••-•uh -4 ,..,,._
,,.. pri .... Mitw.of1 ........ " .. C-•1111 •••• i..11 .. Plll
•..ivotlN ~ w ••,.,.._ ttltM11 "ic•1 ,.1111. C4ll S.0.9066
10.t •Hy, ......, 104t., "-'-1 UIMll. eM Mr '*• 0..-
, .. , ., IM .........
ANAHEIM -Orange Coollly buill in aboul 1871 according Commission, said !he adobe iewels by 1oseph
By O.C. HUSTINGS
01 lti. Diii, Pllol Sl1!1
The county Department of
EdUcaiion is the intermediary
and the City of Anaheim will to reeorGs presented to has been vandalized., but, 'c
team up In an effort to buy supervisors. Jt was tbe second g~ne~r~a~lly~i~s~in~g:ood~s:ha:pe~. ~~=90UTll=~;-::PL;A;Z;A ;• ;J3;1S;ll1STOI.;;· ;<os;;n;A;MllA;;:•;,._~~~ and preserve the historic .of two · main headquarters ----·--·-~
Jtamon J>eralta Adobe . buildings on the huge rancho.
\Vith presC'nt lrustl'e Donald
Jordan retiring. '"'O men have
placed their 11an1cs on the
June 4 ballot for Orange
t 'ounty Board of Education
Trustee Arca 2.
John D. Harper. Jr., and Or.
ORANGE COUNTY between the state Department
of Education and local schools
and is responsible f o r
recording compliance of '--------~
sC'hool districts with state
lav.·s.
The County Board of SUPERVISORS were told
Supervisors has agreed to join tf>e--·village of Peralta once
the city in the effort which grew up around the old adobe
could ultimately coot more and existed w\lil al least the
late 1930s, when it was
HAT'L ASSN. OF WOMEN IH CONSTRUCTION
O.C. CHAl'TER 91
DREAM HOUSE MODEL EXHIBII
MAY l l -JUHE2
Da\·id fl. Pavnter, both
businessmen. a'rc trying for
1he $20 a month school board
spot.
lls main functions <ire to
coordinate the pr<lgrams or
school districts and to provide
services the districts might
not be able to individually
afford.
F e1Io,vsl1ip
Received
than $300,000. absorbed by surrounding ,,.
THE PERAi.TA Adobe is communities. (!outh-P.oast aza In his report to the board. cJ \I
overgro"'11 by weeds and the Orange County J1istorical ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!llllll!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~lll"":--hidden from view by an o\d,__:=...:_c_c:: __ "--------= "
Additionally. it acts as a
fiscal check on the local
districts and approves and
audits the annual district
budgets.
~larion Elizabeth Abbott, a care and service station left
UC Irvine senior majoring in vacant when the Riverside
comparative culture, has been Fceeway bypassed them in the
awarded a Dan for l h late l960's.
Frllowship for graduate study The crumbling structure is
leading to a PhD. one of the last tangible
TRUSTEE AREA 2 cove r1'
!he san1e area as the Scrond
Supervisorial District and
includes Huntington Beach,
Seal BeaC'h, Los Alamitos,
Garden Grove. St a n ton ~
Cypress and parts of Anaheim
~nd \Vestminster.
The district has 145,815
re.11;istercd voters.
\Vhile a !.ludent at UC I Mrs. remnants of !he giant Rancho
Abbott has been serving as a Santiago de Santa Ana, a
ORANGE COUNTY Grand student aide in the Educa-Spanish land grant that once
Juries in 1970 aod 1971 tional Oppvrtunities Progran1 stretched from Santa Ana
recommended abolition of the section of the Office of Rela-Canyon to the sea.
county D e p a r t m e n t of lion1 with Schools. The adobe was apparently
Education citin~ a declining1 -------------------1 The board of education sets
policy for the co u n t y
Department of Education and
aoproves son1e or the actions
of 1he elected count y
superintendent.
THE COUl\"TY board is the
appeals body for connicts
~voeen local school distriC'ts.
It also serves in a C'apacitv
similar lo thal of local school
boards in eovel"'fline: schools in
correctional institutions anti
countv schools for th c
handicapped.
le\•el of services.
On the issues of the race,
and what can be done to
improve the department of
education, both candidates
agree. They even agree that a
practicing educator should not
serve on the board.
The only apparent point of
disagreement is 1vhelher Dr.
Paynter is an educator.
Dr. Paynter, 53, of 9258
Royal Palm Blvd., Garden
Gr0ve. is president of Test·A·
(See BOARD, Page 9)
THI
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m";.;'';o;"m";.' _,,_.. LAGUNA HIC#UlL Folluw F•rbn le fllt ..... 1~11 •uilCll"'ll , •• lfl1tt
"' Sam to6pm
ntf URL·s
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,,.,.,,. >!;u!s •' r<l<I< "°'·"
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C36-C20-2 17657
Gen. Riley Recei·ves
Big Brothers A ivard
SANTA ANA -General
Thomas F. Riley of Newport
Beach has been presented the
Coulter Award for service to
the Big Brothers of Orange
County .
!..-~~~~~~--------~---·~~~~~,
\;',~''..'.:1d'.0 i:·~g:.!m;.~'. fJk, [J]a/J//~/'~tt/11.t:tJ'b,'(J
1
1
RfLEY JS executive vice
presi dent of the gr o u p ' s
rxecutive board :ind is serving
for the second time as
chairman of the a n n u a I
gourmet dinner.
Named for Ernest Coulter,
founder of Big Brothers. the
a1\·ard is presented annually to
the board member v.'ho has
done most for the
organization.
Peter Townsend and Dr.
~1aurice R!seling and to ladies Cultural Previe\V #4
auxiliary presidents M rs .
Wilfred Berls. J\1rs. Lloyd
Btounl and J\lrs. Newell Fait. t ''La Bo11t ique Fantasquc''
rrrTLCQ..FORD of Nel'rporl I Be~ch \1·as pr<'sentecl the II
c;ugg('nhcim award for service
hy an Orange Counly firm.
The Orange County group is
one of 220 Big Brothers
organizations in the country
v.·hicb match fatherless boys
11·ith Big Brother volunteers
and counsel family members
on the problc1ns or a one-
(.,"''' \lr~.1 !li ~h Srho•i[
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FRIDAY-MAY 31st
8 P.M.
No Admission Cha rge
Service awards were also parent family. '------------------"'
HAD ENOUIH! -SO HAS MODERATE REPUBLICAN
ROGER LANPHEAR
MAKE HIM YOUR MAN
IN
CONIRESS:
•NIXON'S IMPEACHMENT
OR RESIGNATION
•STRINGENT CAMPAIGN
REFORM
• PUTTING THE ENVIRONMENT
FIRST
•CONTAINING INFLATION
•ENERGY-SOLAR, GEOTHERMAL
FUSION
·coN&RESS
40th DISTRICT
ATTORNEY • Pl.ANNING COMMISSIONER • ENVIRONMENTALIST
NI 1ar llJU..W-111f C.-.-°"""""9t 0. oi.-1<-..i ~ a. ... i...,. Nfdl Qll MMt •
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1 IOJ Hewporf 11..i. ..::_ cMl1 -270 I S. ~. -S-. "'-.......
11120 1No""6 ii--· Ylllly 1443 W..ufli St. -599"""
..
(•"' rei111'1111ht VolL.y Plcuo) . (In Holll' "°'o) I~ '°' '"'' &iQ* lf41 A.4-A•t.-HUI .. ~• IHdl 114 S. Ca Js1 ae.t-S.. CS.•• '"Yo,,, "'•'e"bothood
6ttl w_._ A••· -11111110......... 13024 Htwport .. ,.!-T""'"
lOZJ2 c ...... ,.., l'llwy. -.._ """"' I Ult ""II n' ..;;., .. -Jlr
'44 H. PIClflc Com lfwy.-L '1'' ._. HA TAND'I COAPOAATIOM COMf'l'N1 p~rcts MAV\l.t~VATH40TVl0UAL STO"rs
r
"
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E1r1 ... '" Lan• 111 o ,." Chtl
with a!!ld M•m ·~·
Cl1r Olle
"' • Wm. lll•n Grill Lul'd F.dlt Sie(lf ... ". or•n
1974. Inter
o:ilre
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Com
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MITCHELL (;reoorv J. MlkNPll al Newoorf 8eatll.
Date o• dellh. M~v tt, 197,. Survived bY h>' 01•e,..1t. Mr & MrL Cl'larles R Mllcrieu. Se'""'' S.tu•dav, Ju"" I. It/~ i~1e•~:n1, ';.':c111c"t.~~!; M~~r1a1c~:i;:~ n"e~!e<;t tiv P11cl1lc View Morru .. rv The t~molv •ll<l<lflh don11llon1 llf m~de lo T"" r emllv StrYlct Auocl1!1<1<1 or OretlQe C:ounlv.
MOlllHIRO
JOI' ,vorlll!ro, resldtnr cl co.it Me"' OAre of o.etll MllV 21. 1914. ltu•vlVtCI llv "" wife Fumiko; Ont tOll. S!tvt Morltllro;
nauoh!tr '''"'' mother, .-,vQkoi t>roltle•, N-i~e: 1l11tr, Ros... tllof 1.01 Anatlt•. senilce• otndlf'ICI, 11111 8 r o 1 d w 1 v h'0<tu1rv.
JiiltOL Murlt l M. NlcDI. rt tlcl•nl al L..oune H!it1. Oa!e al d11111 Mev 21. lf14. 9urvl'ftd bv
her hutbtlld Ktlltl· ont ~· Ktltl! . A. N•col ot Monltrtv Park. Cel .i_ ftlolllhlll'. lth1•on It. Tvltr. LMl',1119 Miu.fl tour a•tn<IClllldrtn, Vtlt•\1 LYnnt Tyl•r, 1•111• l>.•ll>edM Nkol. John Allen TY1•r •nd Noelle Sorlno Nlcol1. StrY/<•S w(lt l)t Fr.nay J:OO PM, P•\ lie v l I w (h•oel,!nler..,.nl P1cUI~ V 1w ~morl1J P ,,k, N_DQ,. ll~~h. dlrecttd bv P1,itlc Vlf.v-MortulrY. Memorl,11 eon!rlbl/flOfts
,.., ... be "'"" 10 1t11 Mm owtr Ctn111'9111· l•INlll Church of LllNl'I• HlllL
O'CONIJOI. f dnl M. O'Connor ofleoun1 1111(1'1. Dale ot <Hllh Ml\I ?9, lr1.t. SurYlvld by t>er
<11uqht1r ICathl"n P1l..,.rl 91 San Francisco, C11111J 1i9!.,., M .Luclll J~oll. try1ne. C1ll1.1-. ~vier, wlll be 11:00 ~aturd1y, J1t111 l, 17(. P1cftit 1w l:ha~t. wlnltrl"t'l\I, P1cltlc V I e w Memortol Plrk, dlrec!ed DY P1clllc Vl1w f,'>OrtuarY.
MAPSON
J<1ck M•-· r11!cMoot ol' COiii ~M. 111'!
j j: 9:;:.{~,:r~ ~Yhlswll• Merv. two
1oni Jim MaoM>n o!Hunllnoton 8Heh I nd Jol>n MIDtofl of COlll Mew; 11\ree <t111<1h!lr1. lnlll Wold!, Si n Ol.ci.o, JoAnn
N<101on Ind (l rol M.lpM!l'I ol Coi!1 M111; on• or1ndd1uoht1r ICrlsttr, W~t, Sen ~~oM~~'°~~rJ~.~~h ~ o1~vn:?ll<I~,;
Bet(I\; -brOI"'•· Gereld M~oion cl Pala& Vtrdto. Gr1,,..,lde • • r v le 1 1 Tl'lur~IY, MIY JO, 197<1 11 IO:JO 4M. 'Cood Sl>tol'le•d Ct mtf1ry, H.11 . 11 ROW N <P,LO,..lAl MORTUARY d I r I c I o r I . V 11!1!!on /or !ht l•milY only, In 1;ew of llowtrl lht l•ml/fu'UOC14119' lrJ.r1ch mtk• me<norl11 contr Hons lo Th" C••• (ollna Rt~1bllll1t on C1nl1r, Pomon1, C~ll!.
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545.3433 -·-
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179.S Looi.ma Conyo11 lld.
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28831 Cam.no Con·itrono
So·1 J i"J'I Co1"',1ta~o
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MEMORIAL PARK
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r~e ... port e~och. Col,forn.o
6-:~ :"700 -·-PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
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780 I Boho A~ . Wes1m1n1ter
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Hun11ng1on 8ecx;h
!136-6539
PUBLIC NcrTICE
I t2:MJ
SUPll.101111 COURT 01' THE
STATI OP' CALll"OlllNIA POil
TMI COUNTY OP: Cl.ANGii
No. A.-o4f NOTICf OP HIAl.INO OP f'ITITION
FOi. Pl.OIATI! 01' WILL AND CODICIL
Al>ID 1101. 1.ITTllll TISTAMINTAllY
Esl<1l1 of AL.ICE REISE, Doc .. HCI,
NOTICE IS l>l!l.ilY GIVIN ll'lot
SECURITY PACIFIC JrtATIOHAI. llANK csucc.uor to security Flr11 N11MN1
llonk) N• llltd lwrtlfl • petltlOf\ 'W PrObllt el Wl11 and Codlcll n IOI ;
luu1nc1 of l1tttrt T"l•mtrrt•rv to '"' (191111-r ret.,.tne, to wtlldl 11 IMdl fbr
further pertlcur1r1, lfHI tllltl tM time Ind
pl11Co of 11t1rlnt11 tttt time 1111 bfflt NI
for JUM 11. lt74, •I t :)ll •. m •• In IM
cOIH"ll'OOf'l'I ol O.O.r1~ No. l1_~ 111d
cOlll'f. ti 100 Clvfc Clfltlf Drtvo., ""'' ~ 1111 c11r ot sent• A111. ~lllornta.
D1lld MIY 24. 117~. WILLIAM I , It JOHN,
Co\lnly Clerk
t.. c. oa1.11• ltu l.11Klle lllM41
Arc.lfla. Co. PlfM
Toll Ct'llt ....Ult
"'"'""" t.r1 fi'dtlllfttf P\lblltl'led 91:~ a.st O•lfy Pltot, Mty 2t, 30. eM June lo lf14 1td·1~
• I
•
ON JUNE 4 BALLOT
John D. Hi1rp1r Jr.
Lab, "'hich ronducts health
screening of school ch ifdrcn.
lie is also a director of Pacific
City Bank in lluntington
Bt'ach.
!IE IS !\IARRJED and has
ll\'O rhildrcn. lie holds a
bachelor's degree 111
philosophy fron1 \V heat on
College of Illinois and a
n1aster's and doctorate in
education administration from
use.
He has se rv ed as
superintendent of the Garden
Grove Unified School District
and the Simi Valley School
District and ha s taught at
USC, Cal state Fullerton and
Westmont College.
Harper, 40, or I 3 OS
Sandpiper Drive, Seal Beach,
is married, with two children.
Harper is a ch~mical
engineer and vice president of
E.F. Whitmore Company, a
manuract urer's representative
finn dealing in industria l
products.
Teacher Unit
Lai1ds Area
Educator
\\1ESTMINSTER -Dixie J.
Jordan of Westminster has
received the Theodore Bass
Memorial Teachers in Politi.cs
Award frorn the California
Tcach _•rs Association .1nd 11
State Asstmbly R u I e s
C om 111 i t I(' c re solution
ror111ncnd:ng her activit ies.
A .'1th grade teach('r r-.lea irs
F.lcn1en1ar\' School in Carden
c;ro\"e. she has served as
chairn1an for the campaign
which elected ~larlenc Barr('tl
lo the \V('stminster school
board.
She .:il~o developed the
Political Acti on Co1nmittce for
the Wcslminstcr Te a eh er s
/.ssociation and organized and
edited "Open Schools··. ;i
publication on e d u ca t i o n
iss ues.
She v.·as also active in !he
campaign to d efeat
Proposition I. thr~ · ' t .1 :<
limitation initiat ive," 1 as t
No\'cmbcr.
Ai rport Post
SANTA ANA -O ran g cl
County Airport DI rec tor
Robert J . Bresnahan bas been
elected to a t"·o-year term as
a director of the American
Association or Ai r po r I
Execut ives.
1
VIES FOR $20 JOB
Or. David Paynter
lie holds a bachelor's degree
in chemical engineering from
the University of Rochester,
New York.
HARPER IS a Conner
trustee on the Fountain Valley
sc hool Board, where he served
one tenn from 1964 to 1968. He
\\'as also a Fountain Valley
cil .v councilman from 1968
until 1972.
J[arper charged that "my
opponent in this race is
exactly the opposite of what
this board needs. Being a
professional educator, he will
bring to the board only a
narrow view of the educational
picture, and continue the same
philosophy the outgo i n g
member has represented, that
ol an educator.''
Paynter responded that
"Whil~l am proud of being an
educator, I have bien in
business for some time. The
county board of edur.tttion is a
peculiar job in that the board
member should be somewhat
knowledgeable about
education if possible.
"i\fY STRENGTIJ as a
candidate is that I have both
the education and business
experience. My opponent has
no strength in education and it
would take him a long time to
learn." Paynter said.
Both of the candidates have
charged that the county board
is not staying in touch with the
local school boards and is not
responsive to the needs for
services.
The board, they agree,
should hold meetings away
from the department of
education offices lo provide
more public access to its
proceedings.
ll igh on both lists of needed
improve ments. too. is a
s!rongcr leadership role for
rhe county office. particularly
in lh<' area of vocational
education.
TJIE COU!\'TY schools office
lh<'y said. should act a·s a
central liaison bet'"<' e n
bu sinessmrn. \rho do not have
lime to n1aintain individu:il
contact \1·ith the \'arious
dist ricts. :ind the districts.
"The county schools office
should be a leader in hclpin~
students have a salable skill
"'hen they get out of school,"
Pa,·nter said.
"Expansion of vocational
education is vital it V.'f' are to
scrre the majority of students.
not just offer lip service to
thrm," Harper said.
THE
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wtni dl11tmr111tl0ft 11 111
The D11nll!td Slmrtl• AlltnoltllY•
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•
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5-o .... .._.., --. ...... ..,
't'Z'
.. w,
\ •
I
1 hursday. May 30, 1974
Bai· Patron Gets
15-year Sentence
•
"•'6 Pol<tlCI! Adv
. jfor
~tatr
~rrasurer
ELECT
SENATOR SANTA ANA -A man ar·
rested near a La Habra bar
last Dec. 10 after he allegedly
used a pool stick to innict fatal
injuries on a fellow patron has
been sentenced to up to 15
years in state prison,
charges or voluntary man·
slaughter in the death or Jose
CUriel , 30, of La Habra.
La 11abra pclice said
Rodriguez was one of a group
of men who became involved
in a fracas with CUriel' v.ho
collap.~ unronsclous after
being clubbed with the pool
stick .
ALAN SHORT
ORANGE COUNTY Orange County S u p e r i o r
Court Judge James Turner
ordered the prison term for
David Pena Rodriguez, 24, of
La Habra, after the defendant
pleaded guilty to reduced
They said Curiel died a fC\V
hours later in La Habra.
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JO DAILY PILOT Thursday, May 30, 1974
J,./JJ. Bo11d
Cl1icago's Fit·e
Seco11cl of Day
This shO\\'S. how the nc11·s reports !oh<lpe hislorv. On O:ct. 8. 187~ .• Chicago caught fire. And about 300 i)cople
d11~d th_('rc .. 1 h:ll ~amc ~i~ht, the logging to1rn of Peshtigo ~\is .. likewise caug_hl flrc. As did th(' grcrit forest around
it.And about 1,150 died llK'rc. But Pcshtigo's telegraph lines
b~rncd down. So the ne"·s "'as late getting out. And "'hat
~vJth all lhc prtnt about Chicago. there 11•as little room lefl
tn the papers for stories on Peshtigo. Not one citizen in
I ~000 is a11arc no11• that the Chicago
fire 11·as lhc \essl'r of thal day's holo-
causts.
. Young lad y. the che1nical contents
in your tear'> var.1·. depending on 11hy
you ~hc_d thl·n1. Tt'<trs brought on by
onions JUSI art1ti'I the san1c as tears
: I turned loose in sorrO\\'. 1'hat has been • ~JI rc~rlcd, although the 11•hy of it re·
· . t!lains _a 1nyste>ry. But the medica l
boy_s a,re ~oing on \1•11 ~ !heir rcscnrch in this mailer. And
lhe1r _latest d1sCQvcry is that v.•ccping in sadness also tem-
porarily 3ltcrs th e chernicat makeup of the blood.
\\'A(;E
bo
Q .. ··rni 3ti. \Vhal v.·as the rnin in1un1 \\age \1hcn I 11·as
rn~ '
A. Just 25 cents an hour.
Certainly no single girl should forget the immortal
~l'ords of Clare Boothe Lute, as fo!1011·s: "\\fhen a woman
is ~lone. th~rc nrc four lhings she mu!>I do. Dress like
~~~'.~.act 11kl' a lady, think like a a1an , and \\'Ork like a
Sta_tistically. th at marriage lrasl likely to end in di-
\'orce. is bet1vccn the \1·ido1v and 11ido\\·cr 11·ho had been
married each but once previously. research reveals.
lnlcresting lhcor~·. thic;: Say your bank credited your
account every n1orn1ng i1·ith !i.4.JO. But it can·icd over no
b.a.tance to the n~·xt day. \Vhat part of that money you
f,11led. t~ use during l_hc day 11·as si1nply canceled out of
rour account.. You pr11d no interest !or the USC of it. But
11 . earned no 1nteresl for you. rilher. \\'hat v.·ould you do
"11th such a_ source of revenue~ Spend it dailv as complete~
ly ~nd a~ wisely as possible. no doubt. It's t.hC philosopher's
clau~ th,1t you do have such a bank c1ccount. Ca lled Time A~ if you f~il to ~pend the day's 1.440 minutes in a niftY
manner, you re doing so mething: \1'rong. si r.
, ~gain <~111 <1s k~'CI if !he nan1r of th.'.ll farnous dish is
\\elsh rabbit or \\c~sh rarebit It's rabbit. corrcctlv. But ~~c of chce~c. A_ Jrikc nr1111e. Like Bombay duck,· \i·hlch
is fish. And Culoniul ~oosc. 11hich is muLton.
A.rldrr s11 111111/ /u L .. ll. Cuyr/, P. o. f!o.r 1875 f\lcu:·
port Beach 92/ili'I. ·
\\ i1h thi ... f 0UUJ>e•n ~1111 "ill rt·1't•i\1•
20o/o DISCOUNT ON ANY
l\EEllLEl'Ol\T ,, ~ OJI Cl!Ell'F:f.
~ ,\FClll' STITOIEllY KITS ~
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JUST IN TIME FOR GRADUATION!
20% OFF
ALL GOLD JEWELRY
EARRINGS• BIRTHSTONE-WEDDING 'I -DIAMOND RINGS
\ EX~~h:~~J ! !!~~!e!!AIR
645-68,12 • 283 E. 17th St. Costa Me•a . . " , ~ . ... . .,
BARGAIN
BASEMENT
BOUTIQUE
Yi1.~! t_VJ:, ~ '! 'Afl ' '. ~j "I \, . I . . . '
HIGH FASHIONS
AT A
.
I . -..
' I I I I . l -"'\' NEW LOW PRICE!
WE FEATURE A HUGE SELECTION ' \ \ \ OF NATIONALLY ADVERTISED WOMENS •·J : \ I I \ > .• \
• SPORTSWEAR '1J ~-
• INTIMATE APPAREL
-1 i • SWIM WEAR
\ '.:? , ' PRICED AT ABOUT
Y2 OF RETAIL!
EVERY DAY IS SALE DAY
AT
BARGAIN BASEMENT BOUTIQUE
onH MOH.·SA.T. t :ll).S;JO
283 "D" East ·17th St.
COSTA MESA -PHONE 642-2850'
!NEXT TO BUILDERS EMPORIUM)
BAHll.AMCIOCARD \. l.IASTCRCHAl'IGE
642-4321 Direct or Collect
to subJCrlb• to the Dally Pilot
YOUR Hom•t-n Community Newspaper
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·the li ,stenables
LLOYD'S AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER 129.99
Reg. 149.95. A powerful and crisp-sounding stereo center ·with
AM/FM receiver. bvih -in ovtomoti-"" turntable, du st cover.
separate c ir-suspension speakers. Model M93 l . . ~
i r' LLOYD'S DELUXE 8-TRACK DECK 79.99
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Reg. 99.95. The deluxe S·lrock stereo tape corlridge recorder ond
deck from Lloyd's with walnut wood groin cabinet. Complete wil h
two microphones. ...
LLOYD'S STEREO PHONOGRAPH 59.95
Perfect for I~ child or beginning audiophile. Aulomoric
lurnioble wi1h built-in amplifier. volume control. dust cover •
separate speokers. lope dec k and l1eodphone jocks.
Stereos. Radios. 88
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MONOGRAMED GARMENT BAG
.Perfect for flying lime or 1hot weeke nd jaunt. Bill's "BogH i'...
polyester/cotton with your initials embroidered on it. If con
carry 6 .men's :.uils or 8 ladies' dre sses. In gold. navy. and
prne witfl coordinated embroidery color. All ow three
T
I
weeks for delivery.
Reg ular 45" bog. 20.00
Extra Long 66" bog, 25.00
Luggage, 33
Celebri'ty
Han~;out
'--
'Diriy' .
From Wire Serv,ces
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis,
J\·tarlon Brando, Frank Sinatra
and other celebrities just love
tht~ place.
But the Department of
lleallh says EI a in e 's
!'('staurant oo the Upper East
side of New York is dirty.
After a second inspection,
the department bas gtven the
Jrt-set haJ'!f;!-OUt until Friday to
t'lcan up or shut down. • ••
An inlemaHonal syndicate
including American actor
Raymond Burr announced In
New Zealand It will launch a
daily nc•,o:spapcr in Fiji this
Philip Harkness. managing
dire<:gor of the NC\\'Spapers of
( PEOPLE )
Fiji Ltd., and one of the th.re
major sharehOldets with Burr
and !\1iss Aw Sian, a
ne\\·spapcr publisher of Hong
Kong, said the "Fiji Sun" will
be published in Suva each
afternoon.
* Gen. Creighton Abran1s.
Anny chief of staff. is in
\\'alter Reed 1\r1n.I' Hospital tn
\\1ashington 'A'ith a "mild form
of pneun1ooia."' the Arn1y
s;.1id.
Abrarns, 59. cut short a
European trip and entered
\\'alter Heed last .,.,·eek. A
$pokesman said he is expected
ot re1nain there a few more
d3)S.
* TI1e University of Santa
Clar;1 announc-ed thal the
scheduled \·isit of Jozsef
Cardinal l\.lindzf'nly June 7-8
has been cancelled.
"I regret to annotmce that
his eminence has respectfully
declined to accept an honorary
degree from the university.
President Tbomasb 0. Terry,
S. J. said. • \'ice President Gerald R.
Ford \•:as given a copy of a
--~·rt-to-be rt'leascd biography
entitled ''Jerry Ford Up
Close."
The book \vas \\ritten by
Booth Newspapers writer Bud
\'esttil and will be serialized in
a number of newspapers.
* Attorneys for the l·louston
Astrodome have been in-
structed to seek collection of
$16,500 in debts illcurred by
the Denver-based Divine Light
~·lission last November for its
"Millenium '73" festival.
Contacted in Houston, Jim-
mie Fore, vice president of
Astrodome-Astrohall Stadium
Corp., said Vie mission's
response to r•1ests for pay·
ment "has oot been ac·
ccptable," and that the matter
had been turned over to the
company's lawyers.
Guru , Maharaj JI. the 16-
year~ld spiritual leader of the
mission, held the festival in
1 he Astrodome as part of his
worldwide movement which
reportedly has a t t r a c t e d
millions.
* Singer Vikki carr and the
J{t. Rev . Har-eld Perry, aux·
iliary bisliop of the
Archdiocese of new Orleans,
were awarded b on or a\? y
degree• by St. Edward'•
University in Austin , Tex. -
Miss Carr, tho oldest child
of a large, poor Mexican·
American fami ly, has helped
some 50 Mexican-Americans
attend college through the
.Vikki carr Scllolarship FOllJlo
dation Fund. e•labllsh<d In
1970, although she never went
to college henelf. ·
She received an honorary
Doctor of Fine Arts dcgrte.
Bishop Perry, Is the first
black appointed as a bishop by
the Roman Catbolle church.
'f'
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the bikini in
the t-shirt-knit
Sirena's leensy bikini fits
rike o dream. That's becouse its
in o I-shirt-knit. Holter neck fop ond
tie-side trunks. Sizes 8 to 14
in blue stripes. 17.00
AcliV"e Sportswear. 78
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. ' ~r : ~ ~ Wci.l Pi4J '*12t2
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super packable
coordinates
Pock lightlf wilh our troV"el-perfecl
match-ups by Campus Cosuols.
In a cool. sudsoble blend of
polyes.ter-silk. In stripes
coordinated with solids. Light blue
and pole sond. A. Srriped jacket, I 0-16.
27.00. Zip front, slitched crease
ponlS. 8-16. 20.00. Short slee;e
scoop, 10-16, nylon. 10.00. flozo
Sportswear. 65, Street Floor
•
~ROAD
is the Summer place
Thunday, May 30, 1,74
•
country bandana
print blouse
lody ArrO>N's red bondono print
-shirt lodks super wilh jeans. skirts..
shorts. You'll want if for
Summer fun. And it's practical, too
for ifs washable
cotton-polyester. S;zes I 0°16. 14.00
Sportswear Separates, 89
the short
shift
Speed through Summer in thi•
shill by Byer. Short enough for
o view of legs. Back-sashed.
Jn a voriet1 of prin.ts itl ocetole·n1lon.
S·m·I. 12.00. Not sho>Nn,
solid. cotton, 11.00.
flozo Blouses. Shirts.
66, Street Floot
'AY
lf.tllJG\'O>t llLICH owa. MAU.~~ mn .• ,...,._p,.1mw1 2la>N. r .... s.t.tP14l9'8olltt ..
9a t~AM..toUP.M."°°"YlltOUGHRllOAY, SATUiDAY tO AM. to 6 P.M. ~y 12NOON .,5P.M.
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DAILY PILOT JJ
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12 DAILY PILOT
Culprits
Caught
In Act
By DICK WEST
\\'ASH INGTON IUPJ)
National crin1e nev•s roundup:
* TINKER'S DAl\f, Ore. -
1'1rs. Millie Piercelobe was 1
sentenced to 30 days in jail to-
day after police caught her
Thursday, May 30. iq14
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71 Hunting.ton Graduates
Share $12,000 'in Awards
A total of 71 graduating
seniors received scholarship
awards worth $12,000 from
HWltington Beach Union High
School District trustees.
Some 400 parent~ a n d
friends watched students fron1
the district's five high schools
take honors Tuesday night in
the Edison High cafeteria.
reward 'the students.
The flllld is supported by
district residents and by
service <:lubs and businesses.
The only .specifi<: scholarship
announced was in memory of
Pat Perez, a counselor at
Huntington Beach High School
who died recently.
Thompson.
-ll unttngton Beach Hlgb:
Michael Courtney, ~1.ichael
Cowen, Debbie Crow. Sylvia
Fong, Alan Fronk. Kathleen
Gaulin, Julie HO\\', Anita
Kwan, Tina Lain!"!, Stacy
Mayer, Julianne Pascolati,
Steve Van Vaketis, Valerie
Ann Wachter and Charles
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SO. CALIF. SU~ fOOTIALL ST A.RS
Mc ALISTER, JOHN SON & BOOK ER BROWN
PUT ON THE PADS
Thi$ Sot .. Autoqrophtd Phofo5, 8rin9 'four CorMro
5outh Coast ?taxa -...,
Paid PoliUcal Advert1semenr
SPERO JANISE
NON-PARTISAN
husband wearing a shirt with ' ·
a ring around the collar. 1 \~
TR USTEE DENNIS
TJUS I~ THE 11th year ~or -Mangers said the school
the district. s c ~ o I a rs h 1 p counselor had chosen Svlvia a~arQs, which since 1963 have Fong for the award. ·The
given more than ~.ooo '? 396 amount wasn't disclosed.
White. . FOR
SHERIFF-CORONER Tn an appearance before ~ \
chief Magistrate Banebridge _ ,_
Flickelnurd. Mrs. Piercelobe
claimed she \Yas unfamiliar college_:-bound s~niors. . The 1 9 7 3 • 7 4 scholarship
.'J'.he $12,000 this year ~111 be award winners are :
-Marlba High: Ron a Id
Banfield, CaMandra Benson.
Terri Bergstrom, S c o t t
Borstein, Vicki Call, Raymond
Denos, Laurel Evans, Elaine
Lawrence, Jim Layton, Brad
Nelson, Rhonda N i c a s s i o ,
James Rock and Teresa
Schneider.
AS YOUR ADMIMISTRATOR , I will end ohusi•• polic•
rule on our strttts ond in jails, the wo•e of arnslt for
crimeless offenses, the degrodlriq tMdie•ol ~actic• of
handcuffin9, filM)ttfrintiriq and 11W99i"_9 of c1ti1et1s for·
petty offenses.
u·ith the washday product that
removes sucli rlngs.
But the judge told her that
ignorance of detergents \Vas
no excuse.
:l\frs. Pierc<'ltbe came under
suspicion after neighbors co1n-
plained to police that the laun-
\G HT~4 \> S IDE ·
dry hanging on her backyard
clothesline \\·as thre<' degrees
Jess than "sunshine bright."
Iler husband y,·as shado\\'ed
-for l\vo days before he loosen
ed his necktie at a bus stop,
enabling police to see the in-
side of his collar. The shirt
Y.'as seized as evidence.
* STJ\'KlNG HILLS, Mont. -
Police raided the brokerage
f i r m of Ploughfoot .~~
Pilferinorc todav and arrested
Stanley PilfermOre on charges
of failing to take the gentle
laxative that most doctors
recommend.
Pl\fermore was turned in by
his partner. Pliver Plou.ghfoot.
after he admitted reacting to
a period of irregularity by tak-
ing a harsh laxative.
"I don't know why I did it,"
!he gr aying. conservatively-
dressed broker sobbed as he
was led away in handcuffs.
His business associates said
he had never been in trouble
with the law before.
* FORT SNOWTREAD. Colo.
-Five students at the Fort
Snowtread Schussing Institute
"''ere arrested today in the
aftermath of a disturbance
rrowing out of their insistence
that all aspirins are alike.
The students had staged a
sit-in in the office of Dean
Berthram Haulash after he
suspended them for the re-
mainder 0 r the s pr in g
semester.
Haulash told reporters a
search of their roon1s in
Dagnab Hall turned up tu·o
OOttles of a headache remedy
that fails to reach the highest
pain threshold.
He said they admitted
buying plain aspirin despite
repealed warnings that there
is a difference in the time
aspirins take to get into the
bloodstrean1.
"I had no choice but to sus-
pend them." Itaulash said.
"They are out-and-out
troublemakers.''
* UPPER WROUGHT. Pa. -
Mrs. I.obelia Dashbluff was
indicted by the Clods County
grand jury today three weeks
after she confessed she was
unable 'to make a decent cup
or coffee.
The case arose from a Tup-
perware party at which ~frs.
Dashbuff served coffee alleged
by other guests to be deficient
in real perked flavor.
If convicted, she faces a
maximum $10,000 fine and up
to 90 days behind bars.
Clia1111 el 50
Applies
For Grunt
KOCE, Orange County's
educational television station.
has applied 'or a f>:Xieral grant
ol $272,953 to m a k e
improvmenls at its Huntington
Beach headquarters.
The application for funds
was made by Chancellor
Norman E. Watson of the c.oast Community c o 1 I e g e
District, operators of Channel
50_
Rep. Andre\\' Jlinshaw (R-
Newport Beach) acknowledged
receipt O(•tbe federal •id ap-
pllcatioo and said he hoprs tho
fwids would be approved dur-
ing the current fiscal year.
Trivia?·
lt'soreoson
to read the
Dally Piiot's
entertollliMftt
poge-ry
Saturday
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d1v1ded among the winners .
according to need and college, -Ediso~ High: J a me ~
after they enroll this fall. Gallear, Tl_iary Gust..'l.fson, Lor!
. Inman, Michael Johnsen, Patti
u,.1 Tt1e1111a1t
lllay Ret ir e
H a r v a r d economist
John Ke n n e th Gal-
braith says he will
probably not return to
the teaching job he
has held for 25 years.
Ph1li? Anthooy, m~yor of Kjonaas, Susan Lehto. Paul \Vest~m~ter, was pre.s1dent ~f Parker, Joel Peck, David
the district: scholarship funds Pickford, Steven Scott, Alfred ~rd ~f d1recto~. Sperrazw, Steven Thomas,
Tonight you JUst get the Joe Troxell and Carter YQung.
-Westminster High: ~1ike
Benavente, Kandi Bourgeols,
bebra Brown, Gail
Christensen, Elizabeth Corona.
Joe Jacobsen, Emilio Moure.
Bill O'Toole, Kathy Petrucci,
Rill Schonle, Debbi~ Srott
Kathy Shannon, Ed Starr,
June Yamada and Leslie
Young.
I Wil l FIGHT for tM awtomotlc su~nsion of felony sentHM:e1 ot tM f'nd of OM Y•Ol' of
good beha'fior, thf' conve-rsion of oU detmion cmers into .-otional institutions and for
statewide pri•afefy funded shf:ttff'I for impo•erished ••·inmates.
He will be 66 in Octo-glory,'' Anthony told the Fountain Va lley H I g h :
e Bailey, Kevin Baker,
Bent, Debra Brown,
ie Carter, Vicky Fischer.
hruiie Goodnight, Richard
eld. Timothy LindsAy,
n Miller, Ronald Morris,
Napp, Carol Pinkus,
I WILL MOBILIZE the Shf'riff's Dept. at once for a full scole war in tM swift destruction of
the na rcotics Mden ond pusMn who hove pl~ the county for yem-s. ber. students before they received
certificates from the trustees.
"But that's important, too." Good Deed !
make the scene ANTHONY SAID T H E
Sundays purpose of the scholarsips
was to honor the parents who
-
Joye
Chris
Dcbb
Jo
Hatfi
Kare Scott
I DO NOT indulqe In idle ritetoric as many of you a~ well aware. As o pri•ate crtiun, I
defeated the Poe. Coost Fwy., fOUC)ht Inept puhltc officials. narcotlc1 and many ifti1it1tiCf'I
that lhreotened indh·idual riqhh or the public al lorqt. Under my administrofiOfl. 0....-
Counfy will be a safe and pleasant atmosphere that we con all etijoy.
!'""' lor ~v SDet<l Ja.nise. ,,22 C;ipo;1<af"() Ave LllO]UNI ~""'
in the l·!·!lll~l!·JI encouraged their children to
excell in school as well as to Susa n Scott and Nanette
The \Yinners from
Wintersbl.try High School \1·i1l
be announced later, district
officials said.
That landau top won'I make Opel faster.
]I won't make the Manta tougher.in the
corners. lt won't really change the way
Opel approaches a slretch of road, in
otner words_
lt' s simply the kind of roofline a lot of
people like. And since we like to please
people, we're now offering a landau top for
our Opel Manta.
All we ask is that you keep one thing in
mind. The least i_mporlant thing about an
Opel Manta is what kind of top it has-
landau, plain vinyl, or paint.
Because deep down inside-where it most
certainly counts-Opel is a drive?s car.
After all, the Man ta was designed for
people who think a whole lot /-, .. r,i:---~
more of gas economy than t• ·
they do of chrome. For people {
who think great cornering
ranks up there with Wagner
and Beethoven. For ~ople
who:!hink a great suspension
is one that helps hold the
road ... not one that makes
the road disappear.
But enough philosophy. Let's
get a bit more specific.
., • j
\
• uc1n
Economical performance is a t the b otto m
of it all.
Th e heart ol on Opel's economy is a smell,
precision·built, l 900cc, cam-in-heocl.
4-cylinder engine.
Mated to th is~ standard 4·speecl Irons·
mission (although a 3-speed automatic is
also available). '
Front and rear stabilizer bars are stan·
dard, as is rack-and-pin ion stecrtng and
power front disc brakes_
NO .. ~onsense seating, instrumentatiol\.
Front bucket seats are designed for
comfort in turns as well as long
stretches of highway. They're upholstered
'"
in long-wearing, perforated
vinyl. And the _seat·
backs recline a t ,
the twist oi a knob.
I • ' nstrumentalior'l, ii)
best grand touring
practice, is a dis· • ciplined array of gauges,
l\ghts, dials, and switches,
all strategically placed
to be easy to read or reach;
depending.
ReclininQ' bucket ...,i,, atandord. _
.. i
au.
' '
A prov en best-seller.
We must have done something right.
Because Opel has been a best seller in
Germany for tltf' past two years. Drive the
Opel Manta Landau. at your local
Buick/Opel dealer.
J
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I
stfCK
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• • • • •
,.
Thursday, M;iy 30, 1974 DAILY PILOT f]}
I
HOURS OPEN:
MON. thru SAT.
9 •~•· to 6 p.m.
I CLOSED SUMDA YSI
: I
-~ . I CARVED MAHOGANY MOULDING GREAT FOR FRAMES I
L
IS LIMITED
TO STOCK
ON HAND
SALE
ENDS
Sat .. June 8th
48"x9& ... s;a" PARTICLE B9ARD •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s3!~
48"x521/4"x5/8" PARTICLE BOARD •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s I~!
4'x6'x5/8" PARTICLE BOAR'D • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • s 3~
4'x8'x7/8" PARTICLE BOARDus1M COATED lbothsidesl ., •••• , •• , ........................ S6~
2'16'x7 /8" PARTICLE BOARD RESIN COATED lbolh sides) ....... I .......................... s2~
SEVERAL SIZES OF PARTICLE BOARD SHEL YING AVAILABLE
4'x8'x1/4" ROUGH SA w CEDARsHOP ................................................... s5~
4'x8'x5/8" T&G SHOP EXTERIOR SANDER SHOP •••••••••••••••• , •• •••••••••••••••,, ••••• •••••• ••••• $ 75!.
4'18'x5/8" ROUGH SAWN REDWOOD IShopl MO GROOVES ................. ; .................. s75!!_
4·.a·1s/8" ROUGH si.wM REDWOODr-111 -4" GRoons ......... "" ................... s 1 05!!.
THOUSANDS OF SHEETS OF PLYWOOD TO CHOOSE FROM LUMBER
I ENTRANCE
DOORS
...... I ocft.
i 1·.4.. I Sc • • • • • • ft.
,
OVER 250
IN STOCK
UP TO 42" WIDE
AND
4' HIGH
•
4'18'1 '/1" RUSTIC CINNAMON& RUSTIC ST, cLAJRBIRCH •••••••••••••••••••••• s5~
4'11'•3/16" ROUGH sAw PREFIMISHED FIRrwo coLoRs ............ , "· ...... , , ", .... , ............. s55!!_
4'17'xl /8" MO GROOVES , I I I I,,"'"" i i, ... , ..... , ........... ,'"""''""'"""'"""•" s3~
4'x8'x3/16" REAL WALNUT PRE-FIMISHED-Y-GROOVE ....... I •• I ....... I"" •. " I ......... "'""' sa~
THOUSANDS OF SHEETS OF PANELING IN STOCK.
IOVER 25 DIFFERENT PANELS OM DISPLAY!
28"-32"-36"-1·3/8" HOLLOW CORErRE-RMISHED .......................................... S6~
'
PRE-FINISHED 1·3/8" SOLID CORE 30"-32"-36" ONLY "" ....... " ......... " ...... " ...... s 135!!.
PRE-F1M1sHED 1 ¥1" SOLID CORE 32" , 36" ONLY ............... " ............... " ........ s 1 55!!.
IN ADDITION TO SALE DOORS APPROXIMATELY
5,000 DOORS IN STOCK.
'
THOUSANDS OF PREFINISHED
CABINET DOORS
(
THOUSANDS OF OTHER BUILDING ITEMS
•
Al DISCOUNT PRICES -HARDWARE -LUMBER
ALUMINUM SHEETING -LOCKS -MOULDING, ETC. I
DRY
2x4·811
•••• 85~ ..
2x4-1011
• • 12~ ..
CAMPER
DOORS
WITH
KEYED
LOCKS
5 10~
2500 SOUTH MAIN ,~~ST. _IN' SANTA ANA
I PHONE -1714}· 546-1032 . '
Between Warner and Dyer on Sout)i Main In Santa Ana
• -• • • • \ l • .,.
' l \ ,
•
• .. ,, ::: . . . . • •
•
" DAILY PILOT Thurnl11, May 30, 1974 ---~~~~~~~~-::::;;::=:::::
Delinquent
Bovs Rai se
~
A Rurk11 s
LA HONDA (UPI/ -San
Mateo County Sheriff's
deputirs \\'ere called to San
Francisco's Log Cabin Ranch
for del in quent boys
Wednesday night following a
day-Ion~ p:-otest.
Nichnla~ Holoski. a ct in g
ranch director. said : ·'I
figurl'Ct 1 \1;1 s losing the fight
[_.,.,.,...B,......Rl...,...EF_S ....,,....)
and rd IX'1!er have a little
help."
Of the 6~ toys at the ranch,
21 v•ere bused 10 the Youru
Guidanc." Center 1n San
Francisco for the night.
Haloski s:iid all the youths
bad relused to attend classes
<ifler lunch and th'.ll he
l;)elie\'cd they were protesting
~'he tighti:oning or discipline
after he became a c l i 11 g
director a month ago.
e Teac•/1er ,'\lril<e
SHARES SETTLEMENT
Ex-s tar Jane Withers
Ex-ctctress,
T ivo W ido·ws
S7Jlit Awar<l
LOS A~C.ELES IAPI -
FonnPr actr<'Ss Jane \Vithrrs
and 1\10 other Los Angeles
;irc>a 11·ornen \1·ill share a
SC'll len1ent of ~I m i 11 ion
•
Protest· at Berkeley
Stude11ts Leave Barrica<led Library Rooni
BERKELEY ICPll
Campus pohcc issued citations
today to clear a Univcrsily of
California building occupied
by students in protest lo
proposals that the Sebool of
Criminology be closed.
Sgt. Erskine Se,10.1 s 11 i ct
the demonstration. \\' h 1 ch
started Wednesd11y, hat! been
without l'iolencc or des1ruction
and that s!udents 11· c re
escorted peacefully fro111 the
Haviland !tall sil·in
that admissions 10 the school
be increased and that tenure
be granted Prof. Anthony
Platt. -""
They also demanded a
commit.tee composed of at
· least 50 percent students to
choo~c a ne\v dean for t h c
school.
Platt's bid for tenure has
been turned do"'n for three
years.
1\vo f a c u I t y comntittecs
.-.piral Sllf!<'d
Whole .,,. Hnlf
... ,,=7 -
have recommended that thel ------
school be phased out because
HAMS
''So Good .. , It \\'ill
"lluunt" "You 'til lt's(:o11t•"'
"FOR A TASTY llU.KfAST
TRY out
EXTRA THICK 98c SLICJD BACON • • .. • • .. • • • • • • • • • • o.
OPIM Sl.MA YS fOI YOUI COMVIMIEMCI
• l••dy to SwT. wiHI MOMy ·~Spic• Gkl&t
• Spir"OI SUctdfrontToptolott-
• We l'•c•-.•SW,fr'CMllCH•lfoCood
• hill Srr•k• Mc·.te1'*!t
• Imported Chttse• and Wi111t1
• Cattri11q-A Sptciolly
)700 l. Colttf Hll)hwoy, Cor-del Mor -67)·9000
I illMl W.,tetlCN-••••--
1222 S. lroollhurtl, cit loll Rd., Arioh~ifll 6lS.2461
IN SO~IE CASt::S, students
and ,patrolmen 11·:ilked lron1
th e hall arrn 1n arm in
contrast to the \'iolenc1• 11hicll
lasted for years on the campus
in the 1960s.
CALIFORNIA its a <'ad e nl i c stanrlar~~
were less Uta1\ Wliversity
levf'ls.
Try Saturda)''s Ne,vs Quiz
By the time the r-.lulfon:I ,\cl
1\·as used to clear studcn1s
from the building, the number
taking part had d1vlndled to
about 150. At the height of the
den1onstration , 500 took part.
The r-.lu\ford Act pt!rn11t;.
Chancellor Albert l:o\1·kt•I' 10
exclude persons frorn the
c<1n1pus, but dO<'s not rC'~ult i,1
crin1inal charges or court
appearances.
Those excluded cnn appeal
and undoubtedly n1any will
sin ce next \1eek is the final
exan1ination period at the
univrrsity.
A Sl 'UDE'.'\T :,pokt'Sn1,1n
sai d the unJl"l'rsit~ h ad
thrC'al cncd to phase out the
~«hcol~ because of its
Jll"Ogress il'c po Ii c i es of
cinal~·zing poli!lral aspects or
crime. 1nclud1ng crunC's h_; I
gol"ernn1e.11t against citiLcJJ.5.
J)emo11s1ra1 ors ch:111andl·rf
SA\' BER:-.IARDl\'O t,\p1
-Teachers in the citv linificcl
School district ha\·e 'called a
one-day ~1rike Friday to
protest a stalema1e in a 11·agC'
dispute.
Jose Colmenares.
aii·<1rded for the deaths or--~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"iiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~~ 1heir husbands in a 1968 plane
crash, court officials said.
sokesrnan for !he California
Teachers Association. said the
strike, ca 11 e d \\lcdnesda.\",
would in1olve picke!ing at
dis!ricl schools and a ralt.\· to
dra11· at1ention to their "·age
den1ands.
e !ii11il'ide?
LOS A~GELES fAPi -
Police sa.v lht>y quickly shot
and kill ed ~ n1an \1·ho ,1·alkcd
into a police st;ition and
~enly pointed a fronticr-
style pistol at them. saying:
"Okay, here I am."
Officers said they learned
the man. \Vi!l i<1n1 A Ile n
Norman. 43. Los Angeles. had
only been armed with a pellet
gun Wednesday. It was
designed to look like a
We stern weapon, officiaJs
·said.
e Coplei· Cr"'''
LOS ANGELES (AP 1 -A
· \'Cte ran police commander
~·as killed and three officers
seriously injured 11·hen their
jet-powered helicopter clipped
a canyon ridge and crashed in
a ball of f\a1nes.
The \"ic1in1 1ras identified as
C1ndr. Paul Gillen. head of fhc
unifonncd services division.
and a member of the force
for 25 years.
e Pickei. lleld
OXNAH.D I AP 1 -Eight
more pickets have been
arrested in the area's troubled
stra11·bt.>rry fields. officials sa1'.
including the local uniOn
Jeader -aC'cuscd of httting a
Sheriff's iic!icop!cr \1'ith a
rock .
H.o\"ing banks of pickets,
estimated at up to 250 men.
111.'nt from field to field urging
pickers t.1 join the strike
called b~· !he Crsar Chavez-led
United Farn1 \\'ork£'rs.
e Sig•u 1'•1111111
\1EXJCALI. \lcxico IUPJI
-Search IC'<1111s in the Baja
Californin dc~t~11 \\'cdn£'sdav
found a pile uf rocks arranged
to point to\rard s the southeast.
believed k1ft by 111 i s s i n µ
California pharmacist J-~red
i'ilundy.
i'ilundy. 46. of Riverside. has
been mi ssi ng 12 da.\·s in the
barren desert since he bccan1c
lost during a motorcycle raei!.
A Sheriff's spokesinan said he
believes \fund\' is still alive
"but possibly ·irrat ional fron1
heat and lack of food .··
e P!iiA Fflrf! Ui1'e
SA.\ FHAXCISCO ( 1\P 1, -
The California Public Utili!ics
Cornm1ssion has appro\"ed a
7.E percc:it fare increase for
Pacific South\rest Airlines.
The airline has requested
the hike to offs£'t added fuel
costs. it said.
Los An geles County Superior
Court Commissioner \laurice
R. flogan appro1·L'Cl t h e
seUlcn1c·nt of a suit filrd by
the thrCe 11·omen in 1vh ich they
contend('(] Bass Lake Airport,
near Fresno. \vhcrc !he plane
crashC"d \Vas '"a dt'alh 1rap."
Under the !errns of ihe
seUlcmenL \1i ss \\'ithcrs and
her ty,·o chi!drrn 11·i11 recei1·c
$200.000 and $400.000 each 11 ill
Ile paid to the families of :\'eil
Johnson and Kenneth Glass.
The seltleme11 t was reached
by the plaintiffs y,·ith Pacific
(;as and Electric Co., Bass
Leaseholders Association and
four other parties y,·ho sharcW
in the ownership of the
airport, y,·hich has since closed
do"n.
Pa11el Okays
Reporter'~
Sl1ield La,v
SACRA\IEl\i'O (AP) -The
ne1~·s1nen 's shield \a\Y \YOuld
be ex1ended by legisla11on sent
lo the Scn:.lle floor hy a
unnnimous vote of the ScnJtc
Judiciar~· Cotnminee.
The bill by t' om 111 i t t e e
chairn1an Sen. Alfred Song 1 I)·
~1onterey Park!. 11· o u l d
prf'vcnt a rC'porter \I" h o
refuses to prOOucr his notes
and other u n pub I 1 s hed
material from being cited for
contempt of cnurt.
California la11· a I r <' a d y
grants repor!ers in1n111nit~1
from conten1pt of co u rt
citations in 1nost cnse~ for
refusing to d1 selose sources of
published stories.
Pi11c 'Irecs
Threate11ed
Brr. Bt..\R rL·r11 -/\
pr<'cious stand of Jeffrey Pinr
lrres nrar hl'rC is being
thrratenrd by s11·ar111 ~ of
'"nPedle rnini'rs," \1orrnl1 k•·
insects that feed ou pine
ncedl('s.
A spokC'sman for the Stale
Division of Fo rcslry said bird ~
llSU<lll~· keep 1hc in~l·CIS'
nun1bcrs do\1·n. but failed to
do so this )'l·ar. Poi~onou;.
pesticides cannot h<' lht·d
because the 4.000-acrc forest is
close to populated areas. the
spokesrnan aeded .
If the lnfcst:11ion continues
unchecked. n1an\" of the tre£'s
could \1•ea ken iind die. the
official said.
•Man Hunt~
Fres11,o After Custonier
..
FRESNO (UPI) -,feliofficers of the Fres-
no Police Department w gin arresting men
seeking 1he services of pros tes.
Chief H. E. Britton said Wednesday the women
would be on the streets in the near future. but he
would not disclose the exact starting date.
Britton said the decision wa s made after two
prostitution cases were dismissed in city court after
.defense lawyers argued that the cily discriminated
agai nst women, because men were not arrestetl for
sinUJar offenses.
The rulings were appealed, but Britto~said ii
the original decisions were upheld, it wou leave
prostitutes free to solicit "whenever an wher·
ever they pleased. 0 •
Brillon saip the wom~n offlcen1 would help
lessen the number of assaults and robberies . • fl< ............. ,. •
I
I
e
e
e
est e er,.
• a1n,
owest rice!
.,
" ' ~ . .\;......,\.
'-~ ct ..;
-· ..... -... r. .
·h Codon Nvi~n~Brus h S0tr~k;• ,
·Hi.Lo, l ip shear ed. SJ66 :,;.t
Sroric and soil resi~tont,
Twe!v,. ~ol•d c olor~. Sq. Yd. ~'i
INSTALLATION I PADDING INC\UDED ~ \•'
,. ~·· . • .-.J'f · ,~
' "
' •
All PRICES INCLUDE INSTALLATION AND PADDING
fl(( UlJMAT[S • YOUI MOM( • £.lST CIEDIT f[lMS .lWAIUll( • JG.&0.90 D.lT NO IMTlllSl .lCCOUlfS • USI TOUl 1.lNIUllllWO 01111.lSTEI tN.llS(
A Waret-oJse Full OF Carpel
(
I
The Largest Carpet Chain in the
2911 SOUTH BRISTOL STREET
Just Hortlt sf South Co_. Pima
SAMT A AMA • PHONE 556-8287
Open /EYtnlngs 'HI ' • S•*r 11.._,
•
1
'171' 9.!/..~{ ');(ll :-{//J,/.;"1 "/·,-·'1 ., i j.,. ,, :J'J'/.'.l,
1 , rl · · ,, · · ·,l · · f. "' ,. ,.., ·,,. j ' &',.•• 'f'/.'
.') " 'j ,. Hi-LO TWE D , ,,.. • ;_
for h i" rroft ,c ori::os. $ 99
Nylon 1 1 •. \/\ "'I lu:: 4
~h,. I ' <ll'l! B-.qh• .
h •q. yd . twe•· 1 t:>m 1nc11 ,"•b.
E~!r'i .trong nyl('l n W<1h
ci 11 . .i ,.bo cl. fiq ht
'"1tC•l1ng !weed color~.
!', .J ·r •· · •,. ·. ·.:.., .... .,, ... --*1".·~~t•.•" , ~ f.,._,. -· ........ ,. ,.~·. ~.-,.tf ..
l " , ... , t'f\r..,.~-• .,... . ;'.\·.,,.,.·, v •tr-... ...~..-_,,.y '"-•" .,... . ' ..... -... .... . ~ "I:°(,,~~,.
· ·.' ;iiiofuMLENGfH siiAG:i'~•.
Tht: 11 flon pile is cll'nse $699
!or (l')'"lri 1 -:.~l ~ •••
stur o1 i-r I.Jn ] ,., .. ir ,
Ava ilril ·' 111 br•::J'I Sq.Yd.
l•Ne"•i r-1.,r~.
Nylcri 1 iu~n shag "'''"'
rnOr« l 1)-'r to ti-1,. y ·p !
Twel,., ~~ .. don I 1.~··" l
Cut ~. l".'?I' \Qr,.•qn•<>rl
no 11,~rn , f 11r·1 t ,r•11
rolveq,,, ')oif>. f l··vt<ll
color combu•'l' '"'.
INSTALLATION & PADDING tNCtUDED ...! "• ·r r ., ,...,, .-.,.. ~·~~; .. _.;: . > .. ··:.·'"~~ ~ ... : . ·."I-~ : .... ~ .. ~_.,,..., ......... v. ~~. ~i1ei7H'f-i.~~~~':&t
Polv"''>T"/ ! I·• Hl !h1 rJccn s999
fo;' I t1 ""'.'/ ft/i>o>•j
C')'fl1yr!'1' • /,I•>:/
~110;.i ol cl·:~• l··'OU'/, Sq. Yd:
INSTALLATION & PADDING INCtUOED
~!I· ·~~.u;··ir·rr ,..,. , . "~c~~ i't!liil!: .-~:.i~[;/,~~ ..... • ' • .'. .... ~ :.~n;.--et.:.#,\.., .• ""-.,"PATTERNED SHAG .. :··:~•
An unu>uul potl<-rn at " "'"· ;;.\.,;l'l·
,(ulr:itur<>1 c,,• & I s1i 99 .,-::-1 ,., hr •1' I ···I~~~
J " I ' I , , 1 fl!) ,
n,,l-n 1 <.. Sq. Yd .
INSTALLATION & PADDING INCLUDED
There's much, much more! We've
listed only a few of th e
outstanding carpet values
.available in our Showroom.
REMNANTS & ROLi: ENOS
A huge selection at trem endous
savings! Excellent for throw
rugs, room size rugs, even wall
1o wall carpeting .
.. ,·
.. n ., .. -ti, f .
1
'
•
•
•
~-----Guadalupe Rac e ~· •
Off er~ 3 Cups , ·:r .. . ... ·~
BOATING
Intrepid
En Roi1te
To East
After a close series with her
12-mcter rival Coturnbia at
San Diego, Intrepid was taken
out o! the water ri.1ond ay to be
prepared for a truck voyage to
Newport. R.L, where shl' will
make a third bid to defend the
America 's Cup.
The two 12·tnelers tailed to
setUe thlngs with thl'ir in·
formal six·r ace pra<.ticc
series. Orflcially, Intrepid was
given n 3-2 edge, but two of
the finishes were too close to
call.
America's Cup defend c r
(19701 wa s sailing Colun1b1;i
and Gerry Drist'Olt \1·as al lhc
helm of Intrepid. Driscoll "'ill
skipper Intrepid in Ute tr1ul-;
starting June 25 ngainst !ll'o
new aluminum 12·mct~or
the right to defend the cup 1n
the official challenge up-
coming Sept. 10. Intrepid is
being campaigned under tht•
banner of the Sea1tlc Sailing
Foundation.
Three major lroPhies will be
at stake Saturday when 13
yachts set sail from Balboa
Pier in the second edition of
Balboa Yacht Club's 600-mile
Guadalupe Island race.
' Most coveted award will be
tile Endymloo Trophy, a
model of Donald Douglas'
famed schooner ol. the same
name for the first yacht to
finish. Endymion was the first
Yacht to finish the race when
il was flrst attempted as a Los
Angeles Yacht Club event in
the 1940s.
PlllZE FOR the f i rs l
lnlt!rnational Offshore Rule
(!Oft) yacht to finish on han-
dicap time is the \'i Couch
Me1norial. The late Viland
Couch was a stafr commodore
of BYC and an ardent racing
skipper. ,
Yachts in the Performance
Handicap Racing FI c e l
I PHRF I v.•ill be eyeing lhc
Oran~c Goa1;t Daily Pilot
Trophy for the division winner
on corrected lime.
In addition to the
!)erpctuals, tak!Hwme trophies
f 110M Fash ion Island
N ewport Beacl1
We have what you need to do tho job bener, faster.
And the prices are right\ J ust look at these values.
G·l i"Mf f'l1lt. 10".
Rell. 1.1$ S .1,.1.( !I').;
1•1 Pllttf'f,14~~10"
Reg. 2.19 ~ALL 1 119
151 Crume• Aeo. Mc SAL[ l!JC.
CI Stlt~ Pl1lf, 6l4•
P~q b9c f·ALI:: !I!><:
117 0 .. 1 s..,int:
tlC!"I. 2! Cl.
"""· I O\l l>Al..E l!l!Je
1!>2-l Supr wi!fl lil
R'll Olk SALE 7!il;:
r. ~D SouD. '1f!r.r,
R~'!J. 09c l>.lll ""'
11're1t You
Paneling
PANEL MAGIC.
Restores paneling to
its natural beauty ..
will be awardOO in each class.
Participation medallions will
lH.' awarded to each skipper
and jacket patches will be
given to each crewman.
THE RACE IS scheduled to
sta rt Saturday at noon. The
course will take participating
yachts around b a r re n
Guadaltrpe Island some 300
miles of the Baja California
coast. Rul'ers may round the
island in either direction.
Loasl C ua1·d
With Wr i..,hts " A mcn1bcr of the Lile
Saving &>rvicc. laler to be
incorporatf'd into the Coast
Guard, took the first picture or
a powered, rcavicr than air
machine in flight. Members of
the Kill Devil Hill Life Saving
St~lion near Kitty l!awk, N.C ..
1\•cre on hand to assist the
\l;'righl brothers on Dec. 17,
1003 when the pOOto was
taken .
• . , .
.~ .. -
' ~~:'"' .....
-~,"'~'~ -"',,._,
' . ... ,,
SPEEDY NE W CAT-The JU-loot Sol Cat, designed
and built in Santa Ana. is catching on with high·
speed sailors throughout the nation. The s loop.
rigged cat was designed by Gene Vernon.
~~~~~~~~~-
103
FM
STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
C·!Z Ctua1/Sou~.
!Z·or. R"~ .Ml<: ~At I •·...-
r. l ' i!0ti"d S11•Ln~ Bo~I . 40 01.
•!Ml 1 69 SAL! l • ·1
109 Rou"d Strv+"~
Boot!, 56 01.
R0!9. f 119 SALE 115
JIS But!tr D•~h "ilh ,,,
Pr~ 1 4'> -.11u t l'i
1•• Pl1t1•r lZ"'18'/,"
Rl!'liJ. 1 19 SALL I 'S
HARDWARE STORE
Check our Price/
20-Pc. CORELLE
DINNERWARE
Has the look, feel and 11ring•
of fine china-yet ii resists
chipping, heat, cold. Aour
patterns and white .
20/1/2N/4NH/5
Sell
Cleaning
Spray Iron 2oas
Flushes our dirt. lint, min~
erals at touch of button.
Sprays too. F110WH
KITCHEN
SHEARS 499
Cut open boxes. bags; other
parts crack nuts. open jars,
etc. Colors. KSR /Y /G
TreatYoar
Cuinets
Treat YoarseU!
Great Low Price
CABINET MAGIC,.
..
REGULAR $1 .98 AEROSOL
NOW $l~~~
Expanding Garden fence
Attra-ctive white d esign;
won't rust or warp. 10· h~gh,
expands to 1 O' wide. 31 OOP
•
HOURS:
MOM.· FRI. 9·9, SAT. 9·6
SUM. 10.4
• ••
.11ursdar, Mar 30, 1974 * DAILY PILOT l If
• Fast, Competitive
New Sol Catamaran Afloat
The IS-root Sol Cat is one of
the latest high-perrormance
sailing catamarans that has
captured the fancy of high·
speed sailors throughout the
country.
•
catamaran to popularity \\'ilh
his Hoble--14 (cat·rlgged) and
Hobie-1& (sloop-rigged). Later
to hit the market was the
Prindle--16 and more recently
the Sol Cat.
designed with JO fully tapered
bilttenl5 including ljdjustabl~
boom batten ror greater draft.
control through lhe IOOSl'·
footed n1ain .
TIIE \\'ATERUNE length is
18 feet on an overall length o!
' ' ,
..
The Sol Cat is manufactured
at a modern plant !ocaled at
1932 E. Pomona St., Santa
Ana.
Designer Geen Vernon says
the Sol Cat \vas designed to in.
troduce a catamaran that
\\'Ould be fast and con1petitivc.
yet responsive and exciting for
the non·racer.
Vernon says the Sol Cat's
symmetrically shaped bulls ,
daggerboards with carefully
shaped airfoils and sail plan
located 53 percent aft provide
the needed buoyancy for a
fine-entry hull design, !he
elimination of "pitch·poling"
and reduced wetted surface
for a boat speed greater than
other cats.
18 feet, three inches. The
beam ·is seven feel, ll inches
and the boat weighs 350
pounds lully rigged, making ii
trailer able' on a standard
upright highway trailer. Two
people can rig and launch the • ••
boat in a matter or minutes.
HOB IE ALTER was the
first to bring the small
The Sol Cat utilizes a high
aspect ratio sail plan of 22tl
feet. The 175--foot niains'I is
The firm is establishing ;r
dealer net.,..'ork and cla~~
associations throughout th~ ·
country.
'
!-IJnd, ;,,, •1>C'nsive.b.imbon
hlonrl~. (',1t< ll a little homcm~~+n~
rn.lf!U-.' 1. ,11c a n•a.l!<' 11LirP. •'1.h!f'
.1 l1.,f)p1·•,iHll·•1' \II"' •:>1.r·
\\ •111 11111•11 , ',, d.
'I •••••• • ••••••• \.'J'I ,'' ,, • .. • ••· • •• ••• .. ~'•'I
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: ' 1; •.... " •• -••.• -.·••l
hi'' b .•.•. ·-·--··· •• ,'l.'I~
lOll OUT /I. 111(1. llAF RUG. Lat~m1 ""11',
h4nd·"(I'"" from r•{P h•4ve~ in l~p•n.
J'x!t-". N~tu1JI , bound willl bl.ck. Or tol-
mf'd! PC•fUl~, purple, 4 gold. or.ngt or ~h.~i.,. 2.1 •J.25
• • '" 11 r•-Mi Im(;,,~
""''1 l)rf'am "P t ,,, ~,j,,,p--I•• •t.1 '<' \'"Ur
Ii r • II t• ,. ' ' r "''"' vr 111r
,, II '"lh •hl'• T' "I 11'<.~I.
"' ,.,.,. ti l!I ti><" f1'"1' ,.f
'"ill hut. Puof' h•·-t.·nl
' · ""' , h.,,m. 11" '' 1-n,.
' ' I r, .. ·' I'• ·I· r .. ',_,,,
h 1· r. t>' • 1 ;· m .11, n! rr>r.'d.
10.99
i ·, ir' I
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"'" A \\IUJ (AMPU~ !i<.f,,I. "'""~ \t>u•
·•1'.t1lnlt'nt "' <.11•1 p ''" ll•h "c·Hu1i;. Ao <'''"" 101 hfl~"I !O•l<>r•! !\,•I •I '1t'W W,111'
I Ir oh'f!""'' .I"\ <•lfl "'""· :i1u•ldll'~ b \ I• •••••••••••• '"', 2 49
(l\~1 lOUR Nil l'ITU IHI ~IA. I ,,,, ,
1,, .! ,,i 1.,,•u Tl'"'"'"' /\ I , •""I 1 •
I•" •1 .. 111-h •• 10(] ''"' lull, ! ,. • ;•i••I •
I•• 1-111 '""'' l'j'''. I'" nro . JlJ(~J~< ,-,t f,,n .11 I'" I. • . . . •• • 4 .C)(}
SUI' AllOUT 1:-.·
RflOY ~ r\ 11
lhoni: -.inG.•I-,"'"'
rllln •···~!-un(!f!
1.->ol { uli"'l'I '' 1,
1•·• "'t'·'I''-1 lt>r,ol "'
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l.1!<1Jt11,., .. ,i.
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:l.99
I
Shop Monday-Saturday 10·9, Sunday 10.6
Costa Mesa Laguna Beach
2710 Harbor Bl11d. •Phone: 540.7337 1294 S Coast Hwy.• Phone: 494.S1 Q1 (Comer HB1bor and Adam s)
l
)
Oranae Anaheim
City Shopping Center •'l>hone: 633-099!5 ~ E. Kalell• Avenue •Phone: 112·i412
Some lt1m1 not 1v1!11bl1 II all 1tores.
LONDON, PARIS, ANTWERP. ROnERDAM, SYDNEY, MELBOURNE, TORONTO, MOtiTREAL, VANCOUVER ANO PRINCIPAL CITIES THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES •
Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers ________ ,.
'
"
•
Jfl OAU.V PILOT lhwrsday , May 30, 191 ..
\
TV 'DAILY L.OG
Thursday Q'i.) Cltwna ll11ilul
G) ..... Ylfitti Sbow
Evening 1;30 m Merw 1r1111r1 ,...
NAY30
ail ..... /si-ts
•&t9 (D(j)CIS T•1r1f•r MM: CC)" (law:) ., .. atri&tlua "''HID mm m mw.0...... 11<.-111 <•oi ~"-Wil""' .... !11JCIJ@@(a@) 'clen, Yim Lbl, Broo* Fuller, Andr•
•au '°"nil. Whllt -K1llollln1 Ill [u·
M HtlM) HtrMs .,_ t\pt, • wuttlty widowtf end tus
. ltwrt; ttllltlilllel I )'Ollfll SDfl witness '" 1l1phH tcCI•
I IJi?liLI Dipsp DMdlc llvt te· de~ Ulal lilb Ille 1tmMpll11t ""1h
tlOll ind 1nlm1tt0n aNnbint lot 1 11diatioa. Thi man Is WYtd ir,
t<1n\UnPot1r1 mtdti,111 tnd rod op· :1wi~n1 undel'll'•ttr, but his )'Ollnl
tfl with ori(inal b1tllds. Oipsy-son ~ kl 1Mi1tiol poiso.
htir to Yank•• DoNle-Goodlts "" 1111 11il dMl(l9s ltuMmlL '
thlltcleu i nd $lorits In his m11er 0 @ Ci) !lj m llH&iOe "Friend
1m1t dood~anum inciudinr: "Wind· or f ot" (II) A liYt-pound p1eU1e of
w•ton Smith," "Tl!f Little Rtd her11ln dlSIHllts from police httd·
Hen,'' "W1Je fools or Gotham," and Quarteri and susplcloll lalls on thl
"Space Sllulllt MYtntu1t." l.:i~t 111111 to hindle ii, 1 lon1tim1 W lllod Squd lriend of Chirf lton.side·s. Ell D Pobl't "-i11tr ( 6 j Tiil lold Ont1 :2...f Mtrit: (C) (211f) "'TH DtdiH 0 (Hl (])al l11n1 T11 •tmptf
& f•H et A l lnlw1kllfr" (com) ·09 P•res of A DeK Book" (R) Tht
-Oon1ld Wolllt. Colin Bla~cly. pnc1 el juslite comes hllh when €D Hldpl*fp lodjc Ca1n1 ind 1 Tu•s l•wm1n hnd W $ptff AK1r lhern.vlves outside 1111 I•• Ind K·
5:30 (!) Dulet's Clttke cused of klUln1 1 min. Robtrl fcu· O Did' y111 Drlt worlh ind Slim Pic~tru 1111U..
~ ·Ac:ta .. p1n1me ll01 MefY '•lffin Show i W• l Pt1tt (R)
m
(17J ~~•'• tlertU JapanrM TY 'lflHlr
~lldo NKM •Clla ,,....., ru. 9;30 m-
m UttJt 1Wc:111 . • °''.. ·
1:oa!(j)Oo mm111ew1 10:00 F a.ljn1 ltr Oollars ., 6 M••i•: (Zllr) "Dre•fll Wire" 0 THE PURSUIT
tcom) '52 -C.rJ' Gr1nt. lkborah * OF YOUTH."
Keir. A XEROX SEASON
*
. ::~15:,ct11t? PRES~TATION
I lfltt "'Y 0 f2._j (j)Q]l etlN 1•1 Special
It T1USA nlef "The Pursuit of Youlh" A look 1t
(ill(!) I Dru .... • ol .lultfllie the oflcn lrenelic and inc1e1sin1
fl) tiittr Ame11c•n p1eoccu~hon w1lh stay-(2_~ ({) Dt"11lllt in1 youn1. ind the KOOOmic Ind
£ID PIJlt:J!ellO Todlf ·~ m· I rel$OllS 1111id11lyinl it. ModillctlJoll• Dr. 8. f. Skinner 41is-9 News
cusses the .IPJllitation °' bis lheo· rry MISOll
1ies in the education and !teatmen1 0 @@ (ll Strertt Df S.11 Fr111•
ol retud1tes, c11m101I• •nd tht cisco .. Tb• Ch•pel or lhe Damned"
mentally ill. (Rl A weallhy wom1n's diURhltr •S
( ;l9 (.! J lls1ie kidnapped and tht iirl's boy!uend
@I) Dflml is stronfly SUSP«1td.
(E) Tde·Rtvida Musiul CID Pr1iw the lo1d Club al Three Stooie1 · IO:lO i Jo u'"'' to Ad•t"turt 7:l0 6 Ouon Wellts Gied Mrsttiies Bill Co~J
I Ho1an's H•rtn LI Ciudacl Gritl
New Price Is RigM : Mtnomiflet The slOIJ ol a Wis·
Help TltJ ftei1hbcK consin lnd11n 11ibe's ~t1ugglc 10 r~-
OW.'1 Gi1l_1 (R) 1a1n their land and tribal Klent1ly. l•J CoftC.111trltio11 €D lu Di•s relicts
0 MutiN $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "A
lowly w,, to Die" (susp) '68 -11:00 0 0 0 €Il ID CD Hews
K1rk Dou1tis, Sylw1 Kostma. ' (3) (!) fi9l m ~~Ct) NtWI
(J(i Wild l lnido111 e l nl ., li11111tlle m l ttslldled (6) Ni1ht li1lleiy
U1) !]) Tt Tell Ute Tnith Q .Mnic; "The Dir Ille £ar1h
tJj@ W1W w .. 111 ot Animals C1 u1-t fl1lf" (dia) '62-ltO M~· ED Acdes CliclM Kefn.
f CIJ> Ji•_, Den Sii.. m MfuiM: lmpoulblo
•0111tklil Wlnttrs Show Q) Tiit lh1Uudi1"'1.
The l'r1tector1 (11) m Sfciel rile
TN libeul ~I D.{ 1fit Wal
1:00 u C®i 00> (j) The Wlt!OM "l he (~ OOI TN Piclnetrs
Gilt" (R) Seth Turne1 is 1nuous tof 11 :15 €Il Cine,., 34
~tilme ol ~re" so he un jo111 his
lalllei"s Gll,Untry & wester n band-1 11:30 f) (i;li' 001 (j .J CIS Ole MO'lit:
the11 learift he's dyinr o1 leukemia. (C) ws.,.tone l ehllld lhe Doo1,. 0 Qj@[Qj m/Up Wi I 11 R (dfJl:-•7(~11111ts Bronson, Ant/'lo!lr
Show (R) Tim Conlll'IJ, Rober1a P,frkin s, Jiil l1ellfld.
flldt i nd Bu1t Re1nold1 1uest. 0 QJ @ @I a;, Wnlllp C11mq 0 Mo•le: (C) (2111} "lto1.111d of tlle Gto1ft i:olM!I pesU,
h sUMUes" (mys) '59 -feHr 0 M..i.: "Tlil lonltie farbt
Cush int. Chtisloplt!T' tee. stol)" <•r1) "58-0crotlly Provine. 0 (1~ rn IID ABC News Close-li p (6) Tlllili111f lone
··1he Cu1tu1e Thieves·• ABC News 0 01i CV CD Did: C1rtlt S!e'lr•rl
1nvesli1ates the mounUna: llle1al Alsop 1uesls.
1r1lfic 1n valu1blt antiQu1lies -a ED Da1 at Nithf
~~~~!111:1:1~!.:':th~~~ •;:,1~h~ 12:00 r6) Df. lrtnr K1uarla
c1.,Jiztd pa!!. ~ Morie: "'o lor !ro-c'" {tom)
m
De1lel's Choice ~I-Van Johnson .
leiiRI from Ult Olrmpit m W1ndtrlust
Gonion l ;OD (3J 0 0 (!)ill @ fte•t 1261 Morie: (C) tzfir) "Menilrs M.. 0 (lg) Tomorr ow
raudtrs'" (adv) '62-Jeff Chandler. ED N1111 .. Mysteiy or the Antsazi" 1:45 IJ MOlie: (tj ''Tiit li irt Cln'I Help
A story of lhe search lor clues lo , Ir (com) '56 -J11ne Manshtld,
1he mrsle1ious dis1ppear1nce o1 thei !om (well.
west America lor maybe 8 000 years 2:00 m All.ftfs't Stusr. "'Clll'llJ' !tlMI," Anau11 Indians who hved 1n South I
then around IJOOA.O.,' v1nishtd ''Wasp Wo111llr," ueo111t Clean"
wirhout 1 trace. ; 3:10 8 Mmt: ''tevnt t•e Kovrs" (draJ €Il Jueve1 de G1l1 ~ ' '53-M1cd0111ld C11ey.
Friday
DAYTIME MOVIES
9:00 0 "EntmJ Ge nual" (dr•) '60 -
1 m "The Witch's Mi11or" (ho1) -! Rosib Artnas, Armando Calr'll.
~ 3:00 (J) (C) "Silwer City• (dra) '51 -
Edmond O'Brien. Yvonn1 Decarlo.
ti~ {C) ''Tiit Clsucks" (dra) '60-
(dmund Pu1dom, Gro12i1 Mall.
Van John~on. Je1n·Piene Au'llOllt. 1:30 1J "Tht list of i\drian Mnunrtr''
Dany Cauel. (m~l ·63---Gtoree C. Scott, 01n1
g;JD 0 "Flt Girl" (dr1) ·~ -Audrey Wynltr.
Dalton, George Bren!, CJJ "Sre How They Rlr"'" {adv) ·:i&
11:00 0 "Raw Deal" (mys} '4 B-Oenn1~1 -'llooald Shiner, Greta Gynt.
O"Ktefe. ·~1i1·• (my1) "49-Jo•n O (C) .. Picnit" Concl. {d1a) '5S-
H1ckSM, Bn,ict lts!er. W11ti1m Holden, Kim Hovak.
l2:00 W tC} "lt11 Wtn\.ed Men'" (wts) @(]) .. The Nlrflt Won't Jilk'"
·55 -Randolph Sr.ott, Richard (mys) '52-HJ Hilt~ John Bailey.
1:00 g:i(Cj ''!'he Tramplers" {wes) '66 11~' 1'61 (C) "Blee~ liold" (adv) '61
-Gordon Scott, Joseph Cotttn. I -Philip Carey, Diane McBain.
100 0 (C) "Soni ol Schehere11de" 4:30 (~ (§'"') "711 Oce111 Drift" COiier
(rom) '57-Vvonne eCarlo. Jean (dra) '50--[dmond O'Brien. lod~oe
Pitrrc Aumonr. Dru
KOCE. CHA~NEL 50
Orange County's UflF television station. KOCE-TV. has
sche::luled tbe rollowing special programs today. Derailed
listings ol Channel SO's programs are ca rried in the Daily
Pilot's TV \\'eek each Sunday.
l.00 CONHJE'S CLOTHING CORNER
!Cl "\larious way~ lo Sr.. A
J•(ktl or Co•! T~!her" -Lessoo n
J.JO O!MENSIONS IN CULTURES IC!
"World vi-·• -lruon 21 -O•t-terenc1s In ancltf'lt Greri.. and Eiayp-tian world vil!'W$.
,.00 FREEHAND SKETCHING (C)
'"Ana!omy" -LHion tt.
• 30 ELECTRIC COMPANY CC! ~ 00 SESAME ST REET (C)
i .00 OMNIBUS 50 (CJ
"A. Ctiorll Ftshval" -Two w"" n..-s of ltl• Golden West lnvlla11ona1
Chlwll COtnPtfllion.
•:JD FREEHAND SKETCHING ICI
LIGHT HOUSE
IYCOCHRANE
"Anatomy" -Lesson 71
7,QO ORANGE COUNTY REVIEW IC)
Ont !Ollie -Bitty Brooks wlll
<l•KllU 'It'll-defense ror Ill<! •veraiat
wom.tn.
7 JO CONillE"S CLOTHING CORN1:R
(C! .. Various VJay to Sew A JiKkfl
or Co.I T09e11>er·· -Les.,,,. 71
l ·OO CONGRESS : Jll?n DISTRICT CON·
TENDERS !Cl C.tndldalft are presente<r In h,fb,.
mal convtrwtlon wl!h membtrs al
th<! prH1 and th<! L••oue of Women
WOll1m F. luckt1y, Jr., Is "'°51 lo
• Hrles of "'°Whl-prayoklng ver-
bel 9"Counlers. !60 min.)
vo1..-1, with HOll Jim Cooper.
f :OO FUUNG LINE IC!
HOT
OFF THE
PRESS
16121 MATTY......,.
Sllct<I.
·•~-41 s I O.
in ls&
~'lliinlings
ART GALLERY
l 4ot .,,. °"" ............. --671-3213
CO. Tiit II Lido V ='---1
( '
*************"'*****•• Four IUD1Fata liti es Told . •
RICHMOND, \1a. (UPI) -thal no cause.and-effect 2.2 million women across the
* * MERCURY SAVINGS
and loa11 assoc!allon
* •
A major pharmaceutical firm r e I a t i o n s h i p has ·been country use the Dalkoo shields
has warned lhal four women established between use of Ule anQ about 3 to 4 percent of
y,•ho became pregnant whi1'! Dalkon IUD and the abortions. them become pregnant.
purportedly wearing one of its A spokesman said letters Robins, said it did not feel it
intrauterine coiltraceptive were mailed May 16 to more necessary to remove the
devices (fU D) have died or than 120,000 Ph Y sic i a n s Oalkon shield from t he
septic spontaneous abortion.. advising them of the reported ma rket. The shield was first * *
A. H. Robins Co. said abortiQnS and warning them to marketed in 1970. .*
Open Moii.-Thurs. 9a.rn.·4 pm, fr1 9' m ·6 p.m.
Wedncsdayilreceivedrcports remove lhc Dalkon IUD if' Pla n ned Parenthood's * "STATEMENT SAVING S"·PR ES TIGE Card
ot 36 cases of such abortions user becomes pregnant., national medical conunittec * *
h ho •· 1· ta bot' 8UE.NAPAAK MercurySav1ngsB!dg,VJ)lryV1ewdtl1ncol11 .... among won1en w o came .xp 1c spon ncous a r ton hns instructed its more than * "' pregnant while using i ts is a miscarriage not caused by 180 clinics to slop prescribing * t\UNTINGTDN BEACH Mercury savings Oldg. Ec11ngl'f a1 llf~cb *
Dalkon IUD shield. Four cases medication or instrumentation TUSTIN M~cury Savings B1dg , Irvine 81\·d a1 Newport Ave.
"resulted in ma tern a I and is associated w i th the shield and inrorm all * LA HASRA·FULLERTON Mercul)' SJvmgs Bldg, Imperial Hwy.a! Harbor * :_,'.:,·.~.\.'.:;:.:;._;,.:~·: •• ;~'.:.~;·'.~:~·.:.~:.~~-~::'~.:·.~.~.·.;0'.;f·.f~.'.~f-~.~:.:(.~~·.;;·~ !~a~!~~:n ~id. c 0 m Pan Y ~~~~~a~i~rd.the uterus, the ;;~~~ate~i"for i~ ;~e=~; : CARSON Meicury Savings Bldg. Avalon a1~d a1s~n01eg0 Frwy. : -··r · · ~ test if their inenstrual periods * BfX!1KHOLLS~rc~rySavings·Bldg.,LongBeach8lvd.atCarsonSt. *
_!l!!!!!'!!!!!!i!!!!~!!"!l!~~~~~B~U~T~T~H~E~~F~!R~M~~s~lr:ess~ed~~T:H~E~CO~MP~~A~N~Y~s~a~id~a~bou~t_.:a~r~c~l~a~te:·~~~~ * * * * * * * *' * * * * * • * * * * * * * *
•
GUARANTEE-
DAD
A.
CHAIR FOR
FATHER'S
OAY
BY ACTING NOWI
.
MONTH-END SALE
GIVE DADA
RECLINER
tor Father's Day
• 3 positio n Klngslze
recliner with .fitted strap
pill ow ar ms In look of
leath er vinyl
iuf01011A! QUEii $
Mao11 ~VEl111tE 10" 3~ be1ul/tu/ :,J''m1mJng In Dr n1.
Riviera's Super Bedding Buys
,"><I""" 'I·'"""' ,,,,.,,1, ,,. ,,,11-
1 ,_,..,. ,,,,.j l!•...Jl•o·Ud ~· ·l>o
,
• •
l oll""''~·'n•r' .. '"~•rl1I ,.,,.. •• ..i 11 .... 111 ...... 11 .... ,,
COSTA MESA
30 I 5 Bristol
Conttr Mlfot 9lid .._.
'}
I
HI-RISER CABINET BED Riviera Hi-Riser pulls out
end up to become Two
$Ingle Beds (or One Dou·
ble) s Ideal tor un expec ted gues ts.
Many cabinet styles
BUENA PARK
8531 Starllon A•e. c ..... Cf'flC*lt
s177
mlNll'"I. Clllll
All!Ulll
M NI .. '"'1l'td II )'(Ill _.. bt '5 ~
ot -.onino. • Oll!I. ctrr\ofJs ~ Wd -Oii ~111 Cl 911"' ~ cncllt ClllL
,
I
...
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t
t
, •
•
Lack of TV Exposure Hit Four From
Coast Win
Bank Casli • Jly TJIO~S D. ELIAll
All a....Ad Southern
C.lilomla 1hey go. visiting
Rotary cluhs, women's lun-
cheons and newsRaper editors.
More than 50 of them are on
the clrcult, seeking statewide
office...,
~d most spend the major
Portion of their time in the
Southland, because th a t ' s
\vhere the votes are. But if
all you did was w a t c h
television, you'd never know
they were there and that the
election is soon.
Y~Wlll•r and Schools supt.
Wilson Riies benefit from the
lack or exposure their op-
ponents are getting. So does a
longtime politician like Jess
Unruh, who already has a high
name-recognition factor.
But other candidates for
statewide offices be Io w
governor and even "minor"
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA FOCUS
candidates for the state's
highest office can get little ex-
posure on the Southland's elec-
tronic media.
,..
Soulhem Calif a w h e r e William Matson Roth Herb
candidates c count on get- . '
About the on~y I ge city In FOR CANDll>ATES Uke
ting televisk>n exp 0 sure ... ~fit and Jerome Waldie, run--wit.hoot paying !or it is San mng for governor, the p~ Four Orange COast students
Diego. ' blems are identlcaL were among the winner~ of
"For some reason television "In each race," says one Bank of America's 19 7 4
is more active ln covering veteran Democratic cam. Achievement Awards.
candidates there and In places paigner who has served as a Second place awards ot $750
llke Fresno and Sacramento consultant to the Roth effort.
th I he
were won by David Muhs of
an n t rest of the state," 0 the ~tltbem California radio
says Catherine O'Neill, run-and TV stations have chosen Marina High School in Hun·
nlng either first or second for the 'serious' candidate.s. In tington Beach in the voca-
the Democratic nomination for~ Northern Caliromia when tional arts area, Robin Buck
secretary of state. Roth or Waldie or' Hafi£ or of Laguna Beach High School
even Baxter Ward bas a news And Lynda McMillan of
conference, everybody covers 1tiission Viejo High School in
it. But not down here." science and mathematics. This puts the "minor" can-
Thursday, May 30, 1974
FOR THAT SPECIAL
GRADUATION G.IFT
SCHWINN
BICYCLES
SOLD FU LLY
ASSE MBLED
AN D ADJ USTED
"RIDE IT' AWAY TODAY" ... ~\~, •---~\~ \~\ r'7 ~· ... ·1 ~ _¥L}l .~ ~I ~\
~ -~ .. , .... '-,·~ . _, · ... . ' ,, \ .. ·.
I' . '~
HUNTINGTON VALLE Y
SCHWINN
CYCLE RY
PAITS AND SERVICE
FOR All HANOI
17071 MAGllOLIA
F OUNTAIN VALLEY
545,0377
•
DAILY PILOT 17
NEWSPAPERS, THE can-
didates say, do a "fair" ju'> or
covering their efforts. But
television coverage, on the
other hand, is sparse and
much worse in Southe1n
California than in the northern
half or the state.
TIIERE APPEAR to be !cw
excuses for this. l\.1any televi-
sion stations air f\\'O hours of
local and stale news every
week-night, often repeatinq
the same stories three and
four times.
EVEN SUCH a "major"
candidate as Ass em b I y
Speaker Bob Moretti, running
second in the race !or the
D e mo c r a tic gubernatorial
nomination, has complained of
the lack of coverage.
didate, who arter all could Stan Dorn of c.orona del Mar
possibly turn out to be a better High SCbool in Newport Beach oominee, in a difficult posi-took a third place award or\--==----,------------------·--------
tion. Because he has little T s d ' N Q • name recognition to begin $500 in the liberal art!i ry otur ay S ew s· UIZ
This doesn't really hurt
some candidates. Incumbents
like Atty. Gen. Evelle J.
THE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane
.. They'd rather cover a
fireman getting fl.frs. Jones'
cat out of a tree than come to
one or our press conferences,"
,_loretti said of the Southland's
television stations recently.
TV executives dlsoute this.
Bill Fyffe of KABC in Los
Angeles noted that " .. , it's a
real problem for us. The prob-
lem is trylng to present all
these candidates fairly ...
One of the reasons is that
ne"·s conferences are called
by a ca ndidate tfl use the
pre<>s rather than inform the
public."
~ms. O'NEIU. d i s p u I es
thi s.
with, his campaign mos! likely category. U
will never get off the ground. Tami Stricklin of Los
All candidates agree that it Alamilos High School received ~
. a $250 check for winning corn· w D y IS I he non·metropolltan petition in her zone and ad· e are OU
newspapers which are doing vancing to the finals. the best job of covering this ------------------------------------------
year's primary election .I
relative to their circulation
and range.
DESPITE TII E SURFEIT of
Watergate news and spec-
tacular stories about the
Zebra killings and lhe Sym-
bionese Liberation A r m y ,
most have carried extensivP
pre~lection CO\'erage provided
by the t\\·o major wire
services.
"The stations sav we're
Irving to manipulate them.
But thev create the manipula-lion because they'll onlv cover!------------------------------
"'' ....... . . •' .......... .
"Don't le! me win too easy, Daddy."
\\'hat i.s '\•isually interesting .' "
She tt•lls of one instance
\\'here she had held two news
C'011ferenccs ::ibout election
reform proposals in 111.·o d::iys.
with almost no attendance.
The next day she \\'ent to a
ccrernon ial mailing of three
\'alenlines to Soviet Jews by
Los Angeles residents.
;.EVery station in town· had
::i t:rew there \vatching three
\\·omen put Valentines in a
mailbox ." she says. __ ,,_ ___ _ ---------·
'Take Notes, Miss Fox'
Reporter With Sidecar Steno?
Okay, so tlus isn't the way Rudi Niedzielski, the Daily Pilot's man ill
Costa Mesa covers the Civic Center and the rest of his beat ... But
Rudi does ~wn the motorcycle and recently added the sidecar for
cruising with Chris (his wife)· for more go per gallon during th~
gasoline gap. A collector or classic motorcycles (he owns live), Rudi
thinks "everybody" ought to r ide a 'cycle. He's been a bike boost.et
since he was 8 and rode in his uncle's sidecar in Bayreuth, Bav~a,
where he was born. But, more important to Daily Pilot readers. Rudi's
r eporting is as quick and colorful as the ''scrambler'' who writes it.
He's one · of sever al highl y professional news writ ers whose
specialization in local coverage sets the DailY Pilot apart rrom all the
others in the world •
The One That Covers City Hall
DAILY PILOT
, •.
The gi rl? Oh, that's Paulette Fox and she's not a stellO at all. But Y.,..
can dictate to b" anytime you want to place a Dally Pilot classified
ad. Her phone number(atrlctly for business) la 642-5678
I
'• \
ttUNTINGTON
MACH
BUENA PARK
WESTMINSTER
STANTON
FOUNTAIN
J'AllE'f
YORBA LINDA
VllA PARK
On Moy 13th, Orange County Transit doubled the number cl ils buses.
Added almost twice the number of routes throughour Orange County.
And opened up Sou!hern Orange County. 'v\.'ith tht? some quality
bus service that the rest of Orange County enjoys.
Now you can ride around Orange County from end lo end. From
lo Habra to the Comp· Pendleton Gate at the outskirts of Son Clemenle.
Connecting oil the points in~twee'." Or grab. any of the other routes through
!he heart of Orange County. They've all been improved, Joo.
The only thing ihot ha5n't changed is the quarter lore. And free Jronslers. -
We not only get you there, but we gel you there
in style.With new bvses.Vinyl bucket seots,pockoge rocks,
ond air-conditioning.
• Send for your detailed, easy.to· read new bus
schedules. Ride OCTD. lrll get you there.
ORANGE COUNTY TRANSIT Ot9TRICT
I
lAGUNA
NIGUEL
MONARCH
'"
I------------
r.' ·~ ·"'olivn en bus sche.:i, les, send !his coupon 10 I l c,_ "l.' :-;"(• ... •((t'l'llerDrr .. ~\.\,SontaAno,CA92701, I
c.r ... u. ,71-l l 5-ll·OCO-l. )
I
. .\UDRt'.:.5 __________ ~---
(llY _~ _____ _llP=..--!'--
I Service oreolsl desired ________ _
I
I
I
I
I
I
L----------~J
I
\
' I
UPITllftMlt
ESCAPES MOTEL
Carl C. Bowles
Warden
Stayed
By Truck
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The state Department of Fi"1
and Game reports that one ol
its wardens almost went down
with his truck.
The sinking involved
Anthony T. Bauer, in charge
of a trout planting vehicle
from the Fiilmore hatchery in
Ventura County.
HE WAS PREPARING to
stock a load of trout in
Jackson Lake in Los Angeles
County lvhen his truck took off
on an unscheduled voyage and
sank in 20 feet of water.
"Bauer. v.ilo was standing
on top of the truck when it
started to roll toward the
v.·ater, kept his post until the
truck sank beneath him," the
department said.
"I kept thinking it v.-as going
to stop," Bauer said later.
, Wl!EN THE WATER
reacbed his chin, B a u e r
"decided he'd fulfilled the
requirements of tradiUon and
started swimming for shore,"
according to the department.
However. he was hampered'
by his boots and heavy
clothing and ,,·as havin11:
trouble staying a!loat v.·hen
Don L. Roberts of Huntington
Beach S"A'an1 out and helped
him ashore, a spokesman said.
The department later towed
the truck out.
Insurance Post
SACRAMENTO !UP I I -
John B. \\'eiss of Los Gatos
and l!arry K. Grafe of
Sacramento were named to
the st a t e Unemployment
lMUrance Appeals Bo a rd
Tuesday by Gov. Ronald
Reagan.
'Lifer' Flees Visiting Area
C1pllol News Service
SACRAMENTO -Law en-
forcement officers up and
down the We!l Coast are seek·
ing an escaped 0 r e g o n
murderer v.·ho \\'ent over th E'
hill while on a pas.s to meet his
girlfriend at a motel near the
prilll>n.
·Not only was Carl Cletus
!lf>wles serving a life :!entence
for murder or a rookie deputy
sherlft; rape; bank robbery
and kidnaping . bu! also
California had a hold on him
should he ever be released for
the alleged kidnaplng or
former state Finance Director
Hale Champion.
COULD AN ESCAPE like
this take place in California?
Not only is the answer
"yes" to this question, but
also several such escapes have
already taken place in 1974.
Two members of the black
,.
militant gang beaded by Ron ..
Karenga eicaped from San
Quentin this year while either
enjoying a family vlsitat1on
ou tside the prison walls or on
a conjugal visitation in a guest
NEWS .ANALYSIS
cottage. Both re convicted
of kiUing another black nlili·
tant at. UCLA several years
ago.
AN<mlER PRISONEI{ thl'
convicted murderer of a
Sacramento County deputy
sheriff, escaped late last year
only to be captured less th.-.n
50 miles away. He had stated
openly he would kill the judge,
attorney and witnesses in his
case if he ever got free. ~le
was also enjoying a conjugal
visit outside Quentin's walls.
\Vhat are the reasons given
for release of these prisoners
-many of them lifers -to
enjoy conjugal visits with
\\'ife, family or girlfriends~
Prison sociologists say the
"release ""'ilh a wo'llan Is
beneficial" to the prisoner's
rehabilitat ion.
THERE IS A NATURA'
fear that kept from the coo·
juga/ bed of their soouse Ot"
nien in our slate's prisons wt!'
turn to homCK~'\'.ttal itv r,.~
rel ease. Others believe that o(.
fer1 n~ men in prison somf'
cohabitation with their wives
'"Ill keep the famiEes out o'
the divorce court .
But. some criminologists
wonder just wherein the
state's liability ends when a
prisoner out on pass or who
walks a\vay from the guest
house commits a c r i m e
against another person.
~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
' ....... • .
Jack P. Vallerga
Issue One: Qualifications.
Over 22 years of experience. 1nclud1ng 5 yeo1s with the Stole Boord of Eouotizot1on
•as senior appraiser. 8 years as Ch1el Appr::user for Alameda Cou'hly, 8 years as
Ass1stonl Assessor ol 01onge County ono l-1 2 veers as Assessor al 01onge County
Addilronauv. Jack Voll~rgo hos been appo1nled lo 1he US.Commerce Dept. Census
Advisory Comm1llee. .
Issue Two: Programs and Polkles.
Equitable administration ol assessment lows. Yearly revoluotion of all prope11ies to arrive at mark et value. Continued development ot computerized oppro1sol
analysis syslem. Assessment ol all property al 25% of market value. Impartial lrealment
of all loxpoyers.
ls5ue Three: Integrity.
The in!egrlty ol the Assessor 1s the loundation or the enlire counlyfiscol program
Jock VoUergo's lolol dedico!1on lo !he ot11ce of Assessor and s!1 icl adherence to the
low enstxes lhot lhe Assessofs orhce 1s not used to influence planning 01 development.
nor is 11 in!/uenced by special interests. Jock Vollergo's prime concern 1s that each
1nd1viduol 1s assessed his Ion and proporliono!e shore of the lox bu1den.
. ,.
•
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•
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f .
MUTUAL
SAVINGS ....... ; ...
•
,
" • • •
5
•
•
..
'., ....
SAVING THE MARRIAllE ~ctress Shir ley Jones
-------....... -~-
Wateh Their Aet
By VERNON srorr
HOLL YWOOO (UP{)
Shirley Jones and J a c k
Cassidy are stepplng out of
the television tube to hit the
road with a new husband-wire
nightclub act that may help
solve their marital problems
as well as provide an exciting
new Las Vegas attraction.
The couple open at the MGM
Grand Hotel June 5, after try·
outs in Dallas, Tex., and Lake
Geneva, Wii.
BOTH WERE OPTl~fiSTIC
the other day in their Beverly
Hills home before embarking
on their tour.
"Jack wrote the \vhole
s!JOI\'," Shirley said proudly.
"•le coOrdtnated all the music
and costumes. E\·crything. I
think it's a stroke of
brilliance. It's unique ."
"What we've done is give
our act a the1ne," Jack ex·
plained. "ll't the good and bad
elements of marrlage -with
humor and music. It's more
than an act. Ours is really a
miniature sho11•."
TllE llANDS0~1E, blond
co111.,t1: are \.\-'ell versed in the
vagaries of marriage.
They ha ve been separated
and reconciled and suffered
marital ups and downs n1ore
publicized than most
J-lo\lywood couples.
''When I 11'as doi ng 'The
Partridge Family' series, J;h.'k
.
1\•ns back in New Yurk in tho
theater 1nost of the time,''
Shirley said.
"It's not easy keeping a
marriage together under those
circumstanees," Jack added.
"We've had more career
separations than any couple I
knov.·."
"\VE ARE GOING from one
extreme to the other," Shirley
said. "Firs!. 1ve saw too lillle
or one another. No1v y.·e're
together almost 24 hours a
day. And that isn't easy for a
marriage either."
Both. however, s e e 1n e d
pleased that their new act will
put a sto p to long separations.
Their inarriage had beller
be harmonious because Jack
and Shi rley sing iO duel<; dur-
inJ! the course of th~ <:.how.
Shirley also sings a medley of
"
UNIROYAL & pOL y .
OO Blt tillSS BtllBl
Cle1·ic's Wife Teacl1es Belly
Dru1ci11g-Not Su11day. Scl1ool
songs from her hit 11101 '" •~·••·~111 tits : nuisicals: ··Caro u s c I.·' st 95 C•1•• ,,..,~ 1o .. ,. 165/IJ
"Oklahoma" and '·The t.1usic i.;,;";;":;;'':;.' ::.";:";:"...:':.:':::".:;":...,~--==...:=;:..;.. _____ -I
J\1an·· anwng others.
DEC\Tl'B. li;1. IUPl 1 -
l·:nuna 1-; " prf·at·hrr's \11f1· 1111~~ t)l·l11·1 t"'
thi'rt is 1nor1· to li re th.in
h:Mr lu ng Sundal' ..,thuol or
11l!lying the 1·hurrh ori.:an For
h<!T. it's b1:lly dnnl'tng.
It ma~· bt.· shocking to those
11·ko bch1·1c the n1inistcr·s
\\ rfC' :.liuuld bc at the church
11·th·nt'1"r !ht· doo1s open . hul
:O.lr.... St;.111{01 ti 11 a11L~ thc
~ffttt I 11·n11t tl1e1t1
111 1~111111· tltt-fl n1·e
•• , •• b11p1itlfJ •••••• '
~
rOngregation 10 kno1v th:•I
1~h1•n tht1· hirt· ht·r hushand tti~·v art· 1iut hir111" hcr • 0
'·I ,\:\I ,\ BO\L:S t11 1hc
pa c k a g £'." fjt11p:)4·J rh•· ~1~ndcr. brov.'n·ha1r••cl 1 1\lr~
Stanford, 11·ho 1t•;:•·ht·" bell:-'
dan c111g at a loc:al \':0.H.'.A.
lll'r husband. ll1chard . ~1
fOrtncr Florida p:1role off1crr.
is ...,1nd1ng up ... 1urt1t·:i ;i! th(•
Co\urnl11a Th t o 1 o J.! 1 ca r
\t"n11nar~. 1(4~ prou d I y
:1ck r1011lcdgcs lu ... 11lle's bl'lly
d1111t·1ng 11hcn lllll·r11t•11ed by
t hurch cornm1111·1·~ !ur JOI>~
"Tht•re h,1\'e ht'l'n :iiJnlt·
poop!l' al thl' ~l'llllnary lh<tl
ha\'c rcgislcrrd 1hl•\r d1.sd:i111 !~' g11'1ng us the s1lt'tll
trratnicnt." said the l:itardcd
1n10 no real opp:>sition to hi s
111f('S hobby.
OTHERS AT THE serni nar y
:1ccrptN1 t.lrs. Starfrord's bcl!v
dancing. including lhc \\'il'l'S or
seven senior students y,·ho
rectntly took "secret'' lessons
from her as a present fer their
husbands' graduat~on.
.. One of the rcasoos one of
the girls v.•as doing it y,as so
she v.·ould have a tool for
getting her husband out of late
church meetings," said f..1-rs.
Stanford .
··u 11·ill probably be
l'lft·ct1 vl', too." her husband
rn ind m shape and ; n
perspective about where you
<ire." she said. It he lps you
be yourself to "" fTIOrc
!"{'laxe<l. It 's very freeing of
inhibilLOllS.
··Jt also helps the figure.
One girl has lost a half inch
everywhere, even her knees."
~!rs. Stanford, who has also
taughl her daughters. ages 1
zind 8. a fc1v rout ines.
disagrees v•ith those \.\-'ho find
the scanty rostumcs indecent.
"\\'E HAVEN'T \\'ORKED
1011ether since 1959," Cassidv
said. "And this new .tel 11·:-sn't
our idea to liegin 111th Th~
c:rand liotel offered us an as·
tounding amount of money to
put a sho1v together.
.. Shirley ·\\·as free lx>cause
'The Parlridgc Family' v•as
cancelled. and my o .,... n
television pilot didn't sell. \Ve
had the time and it sounds like
a profitable and happy 01>'
portunity for both or us."
Fc11' husband-\.1-•ife teams
have had lhe sex-appeal poten-
tial of the Cassidys. In the
paEt there have been Cyd
Charisse and 'I'ony l\1rirtin ,
Steve Laurence and Edye
G<lrme. Robert Goulet and
Carol Lawrence. and Sheila
and Gordon :\tacRae. nddcd. _ ~ _ -------The Slanfords agrce the·l,O _____ ..;....;.. _____________ "'""I
"Whal's pornographic about
doing something that's ~ood
for you and good for ~·our
n1arria ge'!" she asked.
~tcrl'Olypcd role of the prin1
111 111istcr's wife is arch11e.
··I AL ~I 0 ST FEEL
rt•bcllious about 11." said 1'.lrs.
Stanford . "l don't \\'ant people
to !eel that just tx:>causc I am
1narr11•d to a minister they can
t;1ke ad1•antage of me."
~he has taught Sunday
scho,)I 1n the past and enjoyed
11 and 1nay do so in the future
.. d I f<'Cl like it. Out I v.·anl
I henl to kno1v thcy arc not
IJuying me."
\!rs. Stanford and four oth er
Sl'lllln:iry 1rives began taking
belly dancing lessons over a
) car ago.
YOUR SUPPORTING
GIFT GUARANTEES
Ye• COii occ.ni• more monthly l11c.ome.
enjoy 1<1Mt•1ttlol to1 .-vhtl)I while
llorlpin lJ a lu1"'011ltorl11111 c.o•se thro1111h
So11tlri Co01f Cor11m1111lty Ho1pltol's
!MW "Llvl119 Tr111t P'rOl)rom." Write or
c.oll for dortoil1 todo.,.
CALL MJ. JIM HIND
499-1311
Ext. 600
SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
J1172 Cont Hi.,trrwsy, Solltti Let•n. C.llfonlla •2677
"""23 95 (78/14
(78/14
(78/lS
STEEL BEL TED
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135/13 145/12 5:20/12
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...... 11 •• ""·
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205115
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St;1nford, but s;.ud h<" hh."'.'':_'.'"~"''___:·:_i·1__'T.'_lll"_NK~__'l.'.T~~::e'.'ts'....!y/(Jo'.'_ur~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 1, 88
H!::: s99s
Heep beadership
(flfi{nrnia .\ra11• /Jirl'rfor of f1,"a1io11al D.A. 's
. I 1'111·i11ti1111
1 '' 7 J J 1'1llf 1•r1/1i11 ,.1 11·nrtl . /111cr11a1 io11al Police
.lt.\S/11 'ifl fiflll
I Jircr t11r. I lr1111 r.:1• ( i11111 t.v /Jar Associal ion
li-t·nfl'(l 1\ar1 ·111i1'.'I "/(1.~J.. /·-orce
Heep Experience
f)ra11t:l' ( ·rJ/1111,1· \-Districl Ar tor11r.v 70 yean
f Jro11~c: ( ·111111(1' \' /Ji.\·t ricl 1111or11l'y 's Office 16
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fJ11/1 · /J.,t. <i1111fitla1~· to i1roserr11e Felony Cases
11{ Ra111', J\f11r1/er. /~11/J/lery 0111/ B11rglary
I
ttarne
hld for by The Fricndtof C.cll HlcksforOrange County Dlttrlct Attomey
502 vi. 17th Stn<tt.Sanu Ana, C.llf. 92706.
Trwurtr warren Finley
' I
J
: ~~~::~s13•·s • S.:Z0 /14
• S.60/S.901
6.00•ll
lntl1dr1t~rtll•E1 ch1•E•ftl
Cl "'D" (l ltr< IOf II nc
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COid (I•\ & IO!IPlft Cl!!
Sl9~e•tr~ Oller oo1~1i I~ I~
REG.
S5.95 LUBE & OIL
CHANGE
• llKlllDU u, TO ' !If. or 30 WT ' CIUA•lt
''"'" 01 l • lUlll(All 411 llltlllo;5 UXCl,T Wllll l
110•111 01 ,lU,o;IOI
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u~ 11.tn 1111. ut~ 1'11111. l•·
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TUNE-UP SPECIAL
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
OPEN NITES 'TIL 9 and SUN .
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DAILY PILOT jf)
T•r••tone a\~l:o RADIALS .
WIDE 70 Series RADIAL V'
1st Quality WHITEWALLS
AN"! SIZE
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$ 95
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155 /12 155/13
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& many other
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8.F. Goodrich Silvertown
FIBERGLASS & POLYESTER
BELTED WHITEWALLS
C.71/lS '78114 $ 2 9 f78115 178114
£78114 C78/14
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e.r. GOODRICH
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COMPACTS to CADILLACS
115/13 195/15 ..
115/14 205/15 .
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205/14 .. SIZES 230/15 &
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3005 HARBOR BLVD.
lcorner of Balter and Harbor!
1714) 557-8000
•
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• '
QUEENIE By Ph il lnterlandl Sexual Ft111etio11s
I
"He's very depressed. He called a board meeting and
nobody showed up."
Jet Setters Meet
'
At Paris Chateau
Wives Can Collect-Court
HARRISBURG, Pa . (API -The state
Supreme Court has ruled that a wife may
recover damages ror the loss of her
husband's sexual functions.
Men have the right to collect ior such :1
loss in their wives , the court ruled , and .,.
th~ Equal Rights Antcndment lo the
state constitution in r..1ay 1971 extended
the guarantee to women.
The case involved a su it filed against
Hahnemann Hospital in Philadelphia and
two doctors by John B. and Lorraine
Hopkins. The opinion did not list the
Hopkins' hon1etown.
llopkln's suit charged tha•. through
negligence by the hospital and the
physicians, he lost the use of his sexual
organs.
~!rs. Hopkins filed a sepa rate suit
against the doctors and the hospital, bu!
Common Pleas Court dismissed her
complaint.
Superior Court reversed the lo\1·cr
court. ordered her sui t combined \\'ith
her husband 's suit and told the \011·cr
court to hc<ir the case.
Broadside !(ills Teen
PICO RIVERA iU Pt l Michael
Bohinsk.i, 17, died Tuesday night when his
motorcycle broadsided an a u t o •
authorities said. Sheriff's deputies said
Bohinski \Vas speeding and riding his
cycle \vilh the lights off \Vhen the
accidcnl occurred.
I
Siop 1l1e Dn111
sen. Sain Irvin Jr.,
1o.N.C.) won Senate
approval of legislation
that will block the Blue
ltidge 'Power project in
Gra.yson Cou nty, Va .
that threatened Ne~
River whic h act ually is
about' 100 millionJears
old _ the secon old-
est river in the world.
l'AH IS (llPll -~-Jore than
5tl0 intin1ate friends of
sotialitcs Dav id De Rothsc hild
1111tl O I y 1np i a Aldobrandini
g:Hhrred nt his tan1ily chateau
10 ct'IL·hrnte lhe couple's
1·11g:i11"en1en1. one of t he
no!ablc events or Ille
"Reautitul People" set for
l!li~.
Smaller photographs of the
co uple draped in flowe rs
decorated each of hundreds of
tables set up in the garden and
pa rk of the chateau.
\\'HILE T\VO orchestras
took turns pla}'ing. the guests
helped I h c rn s e 1 v es to
chnmpagnc. caviar. smoked
salmon and other food s
arrayed on long flowe r-decked
tables.
Joltl Wayne & Sheriff lim Musick
aren't tlie only people 1n back of
Brad Gates. (;uests chatting around tl1 c
buffr·t !able Tuesday night
included such intcrnatiooal
jet·Set me1nbcrs as Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis and her
sister. the Princess Radzi\vill:
!he Princess De Bourbon of
!'"ranee and other dethroned
royalty. a clutch of Paris
la~hion designers including
Guy Laroche. l\"larc Bohan.
YvCs Saint Laurent and Pierre
Card in, and the hairdresser
Alexandre.
Sli\CE T ll E Rothschild
f<11nilv is Oil(' nf the foren1ost
of Friincc. sC"vcral government
officials also \\·ere present.
guests said.
/\ huge o\·;il photogr:iph of
Oa\'id. 32. and Ol~·rnpia, 18.
Slll'fOU!ldcd hy f!O\\Cr-". \\';IS
hung in the ccn!cr of an
cnorinous slaircase in the
cntrv hall of tlv~ stone JC\h
tcntl1ry chatcau.
The chateau some 66 miles
south of Paris is the summer
hOm c of David's parents.
Baron Guy and Marie-Helene
De Rothschild. David, like his
father. is an executive at the
family bank in Paris.
TIIE HAl\'DSO~tE scion of
the Rothchild clan escorted
jct-set cover girl Maris«a
Berenson around Paris for
rears 11nlil he decided he
Ought to get married, hi s
friends said.
11c rhose a childhood friend.
J\·1iss Aldobrandini. of a noble
l talian father and French
n1other. \\'ho at 18 is just
finishing her s e co 11 d a r y
schooling.
They \\'i ll be n1arricd June
29 in a privalc. s n1 a I \
cercn1ony in the Norma nd y
\'i\lage of De H.eux.
•
Kiss-i11ger
Jle11rv Russes Golda ,,
Fro111 \\'ire Ser\'iccs
Secretary o! State 11cnr~·
Kissinger scaled his b~1rgain
on a Syri:in -Israeli troop
di scngageincnt \\·ith a kiss on
th~· chrck fron1 Pren1irr Golda
\h·ir th~ll n101ncnt;1rily
~11111nrd 1he 71}-vear-old leader.
"I didn't krio\V you kissed
11on1l"n. said i\lrs. ~Icir.
rrll't'l'lng to frequent press
photogr:1phers of the secretary
e1nl1rat'ing Arab leaders.
!\Ir~. \lrir and Kissinger
r.1.:ch;iTigcd v.·ords ol n1utual
;1µprl'l'iJ1IOn at a reception.
tollD11int: tile anno11ntcn1rnt
that l\1:-s1ngcr \1011 the long-
:-i1it1ght iJL,'Tl:Cllll:l11 .
* Prr~i1lt·nt \ixon non1inatrd
Fraritinf· :'\Pfl. ;i Hl'pl1blil'an
C()llJtnitlt'L'llOn1a n lrorn :\1..•\1
J\ll'>..Jeu. to be tn:a~url'r of the
l..__P_E_O_P_L_E_)
LnitL•d State.;.
The non1i11a11011 kl'Cps \1ith
1!11· tr adilion 1h:1! the job 1s
:Cl\l'!l 111 <I \\O!ll;Jn,
,, r s . :-. .. 1 r 4 a . o t
·\l\11u1ut·rriut·. hil~ hel'n a (;OP
11 :1 t 1ona! tdn11n111t·l·\11Hn11 n
~i ncc l~iO and \\"QU\d SUCCC'ed
ftoma1 H1 ·\co~ta Banuelos. 1\'ho
served frorn i)l'l'l'!nln·r. J9il
until Feb. 11. • T\liarni \letro ~la\or Jack
Orr sa~s hi :~ 1·nd1ng his
!'e vcnlh marr1:1gr. \1 hi ch
began jusl <i 1nnn1h at;n.
Orr. 5l \1]10 1~ bMng trc;-ited
for cancer. s;nd he <,ep<ir ah·ll
from his n1os1 rt·ren1 bride.
the former Pr icilla
t"'rykbojm, 31. and divort'c 1vas
imminent. 1itrs. Orr dcclinL·d
comment.
Orr's lates1 ma1·ri.1 ~e \1a s
April 23 in Arlingl~n. \la ..
1vhere he 1vas undergoing lcsts
for cancer. • Harmonica Virtuoso Larr~·
Dck•tablc.··
Adler s a id professional
actors \\·ill portray the roles of
those involved in the tapes.
··f'll probably compose some
music as background." said
Adler \vho has lived in L-Ondon
si nce 1!1~9 and is a \VCll knO\\'ll
composer as \\" e 11 as
pcrfor1ner. • The three surviving Dionne
quintuplets. Annette, Cecile
::ind Yvonne, celebrated their
40! h birthdays without a
fan1ily reunion .
All three live in the
1\lontreal area.
Annelle is married v.'ith
three children and Cecile,
separated fron1 her husband in
1!157, has four chi I re n .
Y\·onne is single.
T110 sisters nre dead. Emilie
died at the age o~ 20 from
pneu1nonia and l\1arie died at
the age of 35, leaving t\VO
daughters. • Catherine Jlearst. mother of
fugiti\"(' newspaper heiress
Patricia Hearst, underwent
surgery in San Mateo to reset
iJ broken \\Tist bone.
1\ nurse 3t ,\1ills T\femorial
hospit<J! said she \vas resting
rornfortably and "doing fine."
~lr ~. licarst fell at her
Hillsllorough home and broke
hl'r \1Tisl. f\lay 20.
Family spokesman said th e
tractu re \\'as not mending
properly .
* \\1th a handful of spectators
~1andi11.i:: in the rain, s~n. •
Ed11artl \I. Kennedy placed a
:,1ngle ycllt'J1v rose on the grave
of his brother. John 1•.
Kennedy. to observe the late
president's 57th bi rt h d a y
ann iversary.
~taj. Gen. Frederic E.
Da\idson, com man d ing
general of the Washington
~li litary District, also placed a
\\rea!h from President Nixon
at the gravesile. and Evelyn
Lincoln, John Kennedy's
persobal secretary for many
years, added three red roses.
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Jor SJienff
Brad Gates .... is a 12-year veteran of the
Orange County Sheriff's Department _ ••
worked his way up through the ranks to
hold top administrative positions in the
700·man Department ••• has administra·
tive experience in each of the Depart·
ment's divisions ••. has the training and
education to give Orange County the best
in Jaw enforcement.
Uate Brad liates June 4
Adlu and actor S a m
\Vnnamaker said Iii London
they will prodoce a stage
version of the N i x o n
transcripts June 16 under thtl
1entative title o{ ' 'Th c
Inaudible in Punuil of th<
In a brief ceremony at
Arlington National Cemcrtery, CTOMsMISQC~TISING
Kennedy placed an oth er
yellow rose on the nearby
gra,•e of bis other assassinated
brother, kobert F, Kennedy.
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PARTIAL LIST ,. 4
Writteo endor"!me11ts D""Fi filt.
at carl'i!)aogn headqu~ners.
' (
r
\
·.
• rar1es Just B·oo For s?
By LAURIE KASPER
or "" D1Ur l"llot $'111 ' One recent Wednesday, an elderly
woman went into the ~1ary Wilson
branch of the Orange County Public
Library and declared, "This is the
' l!wingingest place in Seal Beach."
Rather than wall-to-wall books. the
place was described as wall-to-wall
people.
The woman had happened into the
library during one of three week!)' story
h_ours when 40 to 50 three-, four-and
five-year-olds were crowded on the floor
in the front children's section. The
conversation of their mothers, who
congregated in the adull section where
coffee was provided. went unblocked by
the books and drifted throughout the
small building.
The librarians didn't go around to all
whose voices edged n bit above a
whisper, put a finger to their lips and
demand "sh-h·h-h-h." Although they are
reputed to demand peace and quiet in
their book sanctuaries, librarians seldonl
do that these days.
"The majorit.y of the people arc
alienated by that atmosphere," explained
Oakley Stephens, children's librarian in
the Seal Beach branch. ,.,..
"We mold the library to the people,"
he added, ··not the people to the library."
PEOPLE ELEMENT
People, rather than the books. came
across in cooversalions with Several
librarians as the most important and
altractive element of their business.
It's a business they reel will continue to
be of importance as society becomes
more technically oriented, more words
are published and people h&vc more
il'isvre tin1e.
Today, there are many, many more
books, some of which will be out of date
in just a couple of years because
everything in every field is changing and
movVtg so fast.
Although llbrarians reject the idea that
th e book will ever be eliminated, they
'
e
BEA ANDERSON, Ed;10,
Thurtcl•y, M•Y JO, 1'14 P•9t 21
• I
admit it may be losing some of its
importance.
Gaining in i n1 port a n c e and
compel'.lsating for the book's loss.
however, are an increasing nun1ber o!
periodicals, newsletters and a u d i o -
visuals, most of which are also available
through the library.
LEARNING CONTINUES
"School is something that you never
complete," said \Va!ter J oh n son ,
fluntington Beach city I i b r a r i a n .
"Leaming is .. something that has to
continue just to keep up with your fiC'ld.
Those who don't are left behind ."
1'he traditional purpose for librariC's is
to house and distribute the materials
needed for this learning. Yet there may
be much•more due to come to libraries.
Son1e of the things Johnson dreams of
for the new city library. due to open in
Noven1ber, would probably have boggled
the mind of any librarian. much less the
book·borrov.'ing public, just a few years
back.
He leafed tt1rougl\ a thick ~heaf of
yellow legal pad piper where he had
listed his ideas. some of which he would
I ike to fund with grant money.
Although grants aren't no rm a 11 y
directed to libraries. he said, "there is
rnoney available if you have some
irnagination in your approach."
He envisions a room in the new library
v.·herc people could take a Golden \Vest
College course on video tape and where
studen ts .could study with volunteer
tutors available to help then1.
BECOME PRODUCERS
But he also believes, "it's important
lhat libraries not only be the collectors of
material but become the producers of
n1aterial" so he wants to have video
camera equipment available for the
community's use (maybe to graphically
demonstrate a point to the city council l
and a studio where interviews could be
taped.
He'd like a place in the library \l.'hich
could serve as a "switching station."
providing community lnformat~~ and
directing people to the proper agufy for
help with their particular problem.
~le described a mobile unit which
would display n1aterials related to a
specific subject and an art-mobile, both
of which could go around to schools ao,d
other public places for the community to
""'· He'd also like to see one of the wings of
the new library turned into an art gallery
and another into a community theater.
And, of course, he'd like an automated
system of obtaining requested material.
All librarians talk of computerized
systems as the con1ing thing in their
libraries yet they have no fear the
machine \vill push them out of a job.
Sotneone v.•ill still be needed to help
patrons decide and define exactly what it
is they need and then tell them how they
can obtain th<it information.
BRINGS HAPPINESS
BesidC's, librarians consider their \vork
more as a con1n1uni1y scr\'icC', v.'hich can
be extended to bring h <1 p pi n es s ,
fulfillment and friendliness to 1nany
more people th<in thty :ire no\1' reaching.
Eats and balls ... as well as art di splays. films.
records, story hours, coffee klatches. classes and
con1munity assistance ... have just as n1uch of a
place in today's libraries as books. Above, Dick
Stanley and Doug O'Donnell take a break from
baseball to discover the latest in helicopters aud
airplanes. At left. Austin Clark, audio visual clerk.
1nakes sure Kathi Muhs knows how to operate the
projector before she takes it and films out of the
Huntington Beach City Library At left below. 95·
year-old Newport Beach resident ·a. Goedhart dis·
cusses his selection of books during daily visit with
Don Nicholson, reference libra.r:ian at the l\."Iariners
Branch of the Newport Beach Library. Below,
Yvonne Arrias. Tummy and Tim Hoppins. Charlene
,\rrias, Ted Bullington and Andy \Vinhip show they
can enjoy a film feature of the library even if they
haven't learned to read U1e big words in books yet.
Daily
Pilot
Photos
by
Richard
Koehler
I
One librarian refers to herself and her
associates as "fruslrated soc i a I
workers.''
Stephens talked of children's rights as
patrons, the importance of helping
children with their problems, proper
methods of discipline and teaching then1
how to care for books and to be honest
1 and return the books or admit \Vhcn
something happens to one.
"It almost sounds like 've're running a
guidance center here," he admitted.
Yet he believes he must continue his
interest in the children as people to
benefit both the library and the children.
They \viii, he explained, continue to usr
the library even \Vhen tticy don't have <•
report to write for homework and long
after they arc through with school.
"I like to turn people on to ne1v idea~
through books. in a g a z i 11 e s and
newspapers ... renll1· jusl keC'p pcoplc·s
1ninds acli\'e:' he s<.tid.
But he . ;ilso rl·1nPn1bers a n1an \rhn
took ;1n in1crt·sr in hln1 and bccanll'
S):K'Cial to hitn during his ynulh.
"If I can give these kids that Olll'
person the~' ('an remen1b£'r 11'ho's their
friend. if nothing else. that's i1npor!ant."
\\'OJlK \\'ITll PEOPLE
Nadine Ll'fflcr. director ol spcci~d
servicC's for lhe tounty librar~. decided
10 bccon1c a librarian bceause thl'
librarians she n1et during her high srh()(il
years \Vere interesting people. interestl'd
in the problen1s of vouth.
Being a~librariai;. she believes. is '":1
\vay to y,•ork \Vilh people in a satisfyin g
v.·ay ... helping people find information
and books they would like to help then1
\\'ith their problerns. ''
Her comn1cnt is echoed by every othvr
librarian, almost 8S though it is taugt:t. in
the professional schools most attended .
But then. it 1night be a requirrment for
entrance into their field.
Ronald Rice. Fountain \'alley brancl1
librarian, recalled when he applied 10
graduate school a friend assured hin1 a
"sure exit" if he said he \vished to
become a librarian "because I h<.t!l'
people and love books."
"Over the years. people got to kno\v
ours \Vas a social library," said Simone,
Leisure \Vorld branch librarian.
But this too is echoed by the othl'r
librarians. They all boast of the noise anrl
informality of their brcinch and
especially df the number of peoplC' \l'hil
('Onie inlo the librar\. often \1·ithou1
toking a book out . ·
LO:\ELY l'Elll'LE
fllany of th•· P''flJllt• 1n ~!s Siinone's
eon11nun1r' .111· y,1do1\<\ <.tnd \1·ido11·ers.
"Thev sorn~ rl(}f1 t gel to talk 10
anybodv ~!tu\ (nn1e into !ht•
Jibrar)." shl• :o..nd
But c\ en th.d 1:-11 t t11n t1ned to 1)11·
relircmcnl i'0111111u111rv for. as Rice said .
··There arl' ;1 lµL of loi1e!y people.'"
Judy Clark. hc<Jd of the count \'
system"s ext<'nsion scrvicl'S. c:ount's
''TLC'' 1 tender loving C<Jre 1 as the mo~t
in1portant clt•n1cnt in a ne11· prn.c,ra111.
called HELLO 'Handicapped Elderlv
Literature Love Offer). '''hich she hopl;s
to launch.
Although the program is 110\V "mos1 II
in my head ond partly on paper." shl'
v.1ould like to get revenue sharing fund "
so she can have l\l.'O small busl'S.
equipped witbj large print books and
materials for the blind and handicapped.
go directly to people in convalescent
homes, the handicapped. shut·ins and
others unable to get out to the Jibrar v.
Volunteers \vho read <Ind talk to 1!1e
people \\'ill be an important p.:irt of the
program because "frequently they just
v.'ant a \varm body. They just \Vant
sotneonc to sit and hold their hand."
She also has an institutional librarian.
lvho works in the county's correctional
and probation fa c i I i t i es. and is
helping the Easler Seal Rehabilitation
Center develop a library as a beginning
service to nonprofit private groups,
LIBRARIAN'S LA!\.IENT
Most people. \vhether parents ot
handicapped children or professionals,
are1i"t a\vare of the specialized material~
the library either has in its collection or
has access to, she said.
But then, all librarians lament that
loo many people just don't knO\V a[l they
have to offer.
To these folks. the library is just a
building, traditionally a part of every
tO\vn and city.
To Cli fford Cave. Laguna Beach
branch librarian. it is ·'very itnportant to
the town for education. recreation.
entertainment. for making mor e
responsible citizens, for p e r s o n a 1
grov.·t h .. ,
"It belongs to the people of the lo11•n."
he said. "It should be here to St!rve
them."
But librarians too are often miscast in
the "~larion the librarian" image of a
dowdy, dull old maid \Vho keeps the
library dull.
IMAGE IN TROUBLE
An associate "''ho fits this traditional
image would probably be in trouble.
admitted llice. because "Librarians
resent somebody lhat v.'ay."
Once, retired school teachers and
widows o( the town's innuenlial citizens
were given the jobs of librarian, often
as a form or assistance. But lhat v..·as a
long. long lime ago.
"Librarians arc n1ore and n1orc
adn\inistrators and more tcc hnicallv
oriented and more efficiency conscious,:,
Johnson said.
Paper work , reports, me n1 o s ,
committee announce1nenli: lists of new
books, professional publica(iona, budgets
and budgt>l requests, c1utter the desks of
most librarians.
··1 used to take pride in knowing If we
had a book in the library," said Johnson.
"Those days are long gooe .
• "You JuSI don't have time to read any
rnort."
I I
I
I
•
(
'
•
'> I 1.i.~1~ 1·i. ••. -·--Thursday. May 30, l'Jr ..
QUEENIE By Ph il lnterlandl
"He's very 8epressed. He called a board meeting and
nobody showed up."
----~----
Jet Setters Meet
'
At Paris Chateau
•
Se;rual F111actio1as
Wives Can Collect-Court
HARRISBURG, Pa. (APJ -The state
Supreme Court has ruled that a wife may
recover damages for the lo!ls of her
husband's sexual functions.
Men have the right lo collect ior such a
loss in their wives, the court ruled, and
the Equal.,..Rights Am endment to the
state constitution in ri.1ay 1971 extended
the guarantee to women.
The case involved a suit filed against
Hahnemann Hospital in Philadelphia and
two doctors by John B. and Lorraine
Hopkins. The: opmton <lid not list the
Hopkins' hometown.
Hopkin's suit charged that , throu gh
negligence by the hospital and the
physicians, he lost the use of hi s sexuul
organs.
Mrs. Hopkins filed a separate suit
against the doctors and U1e .hospital. but
Common Pleas C.Ourt dismissed her
complaint .
Superior Court reversed the IO\\'er
court, ordered her suit combined \\•ith
her husband'!! suit and told the IO\\'('r
court to hear the case.
Ilroaclsitle l{ills 'feen
PICO RIVERA (UPI) Michael
Bohinski, 17, died Tuesday night when his
motorcycle broadsided an a u t o ,
authorities said. Sheriff's deputies said
Bohinski \Vas speeding and riding his
cycle \vith the lights off \\'hen the
accident occurred.
,
Slop l/1e D11111
Sen., Sain Irvin Jr.,
tU-N.C.) won Senate
approval of legislation
that will block the Blue
Hidge Power project in
Craysoo County, Va.
that threatened Ne~
River, ,vhith actually is
about JOO n1illio11 years
old -the second old-
est river in the world.
'
P1\HIS IUPf1 -:.lore th;:in
~00 in!in1atc friends 0 r
sociali!cs Da\'id De llothschi!d
and Q I y 1np 1 a Aldobrandini
i.::nhcrl'd at his t:nnily ch;:iteau
to celt1hratc lhl' couple 's
t·n,Cal.!l'!11Cnl. one of I he
notabll' events or 111c
"Rcaut1ful People" S{'! for
]!lit
<:ut'sts chatting: around the
buffet !able Tuesday night
11H:lt1ded ~uch inlerna1ic.nal
JCl·sct 1nembcrs as Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis and her
sister. the Princess Radziwill :
the Princess De Bourbon of
France and 01ht'r dethroned
royalty. a clutch of Paris
fashion designers including
Ciuy Laroche. ~tare Bohan,
Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre
Cardin. and the hairdresser
Alexandre.
SnHiller photographs of the
couple draped in flowers
decorated each of hundreds of
tables set up in the garden and
park of the chateau.
\\'llILE T\VO orchestras
look turns pl3}'ing, the guests
helped t hem s e I v es to
champagne. caviar. smoked
salmon and other food s
arrayed on long no11·cr-deckcd
lahles.
The chatc.-1u some 66 miles
south of Paris is the SUITIJTler
home of David's parents.
Baron Guy and Marie.Helene
De Rothschild. David, like his
father. is an executive at the
family bank in Paris.
Jolll Wayne I Sheriff Jim Musick
aren't tlie only people in back of
Brad Gates.
Sli'\CE T II E Rolhschild
f;imi!v is Ont' or the foremosl
of Frilncc. s<'Veral govcmn1cn1
offitiats also 11·crc prl.'scnt.
guests said.
A huge oval photograph of
David. 32, and Olympia, 18.
st1rrou11ded by flowers. 11·as
hllng in the ccn~er or <in
cnorrnou s stairct1se 111 the
cntrv h;ill of !h1· stone l!:th
ccnt.ury chatcau.
TI1E HA1''DS0~1E scion of
1hc Rothchild clan esl'.'orted
jct-set cover ~ir\ J\.1ari~a
Berenson around Paris for
years until he decided he
ough! to gel married. his
friends said.
He chose a childhood f1iend.
f\liss Aldobrandini. of a noble
Italian falher and French
mother. 1vho at 18 is just
finishing he r seco ndary
schooling.
They ,1•il\ be n1arried June
29 in a private. s m a 1 l
ccrcn1ony i11 the Norm<indy
\"lllage o[ De Jtt:UX.
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From \\"i re Services
Srcrctary ot State llenr y
Kissinger sraled hts bar ga in
on a Syrian -Israeli troop
t1isengage1nent ,,;th a kiss on
the cheek fron1 Premier Gol~a
:\lrir that n1omentarily
..,1t111ncd the 76-year-otd leader.
··1 did11 "t knO\\' ~·ou kisst.'<i
1\0llll'll said r-.irs. Meir,
rcfl'rnng to frequent press
photographers of the secretary
c1nbracing Arab leaders.
!\!rs. l\leir and Kissinger
cxchaliged \\'Ords of mutual
appreciation at a reception .
follo,ving the ;1nnouncen1ent
that Kissinger \1on the Jong-
sought agreement. • Presldl'nl i'\ixon no1ninated
Francine Nrrf. a Republican
committec11·on1an !ron1 ~cw
l\lexico. to be treasurer of tile
( PEOPLE J
L'nitcd States.
The non1ination keeps \\'ith
th1· tradition that the job \s
gil·en to a v.·01nnn .
. \'lrs. i'.:t·ff. 4 8. ot
Alhuqucrquc, has been n I.OP
n a 1 1onal con1n1ittt•c11on1an
~ince 19i0 and 11·oultl succeed
Romana Acosta Banuelos . ,1·ho
served from Dccembt •r. 19il
until Feb. 11. • ~tiami \letro l\la~or Jack
Orr !-a~s he's ending hi'\
"l'\rnrh marrial!e. 11 hi c h
began jus! a month HC!O.
Orr. 5·1. 11·ho is hcing trca1t"d
fr1r cancer. s;iid h1· <;t.•p<1ral!•d
!rorn his 111ost rC'rrnt bndr.
t he former Pr ici ll a
Frykbojm , 31 1 and dil'orcc \\llS
1mn1lnent. ~frs. Orr declined
c:'QtnmcnL
Orr·i; latest marriaqc \\3S
r\f)ril 23 in Arlington, Va ..
''here he \\'as undergoing tests
for cancer. • ll:irmo11ica Virtuoso Lurry
Adler and actor S a m
"·anamnkcr said In London
they Yl'il\ produce a stage
version of the N I x o n
trnnscrlpts June 16 under the
lfntallve title ol • • T h e
Inaudible In Pursuit or the
Deletable."
Adler sai d professional
actors \\'ill portray the roles of
those involved in the tapes. ··r·n probably compose some
music as background." said
Adler 'vho has lived in London
since 19'19 and is a \\"ell kno1rn
co1nposer
pcrrormer.
as \\'ell as
• The three surviving Dionne
quintuplets. Annette, Cecile
and Yvonne, celebrated their
'10th birthdays without a
family reunion.
All three Jive in th e
l\lontreal area.
Annelle is married \11th
three children and Cecile,
separated from her husband in
1!157, has four ch il ren .
Y\'onne is single.
T1\o sisters are dead. Em ilie
died al the age of 20 from
pncu1nonia and l\1arie died al
the age of 35, leaving two
dau ghters.
* Calberine Hears(, mother of
fugiti\'e newspaper heiress
Patricia llearsl, underwent
su rgery in San Mateo to reset
a broken \~Tist booe.
i\ nurse at <Mill s Memorial
hospital said she was resting
comforlably and "doing fine."
fllrs. Hearst fell at her
llillsborough home and broke
her \ITist ~1ay 20.
Family spokesman said the
rracture "'as not mending
properly . • 'rith a handful of spectators
!'landing in the rain, Sen.
Edward 1\.1. Kennedy placed a
single yell ow rose on the grave
ot his brother, John F.
Krnnedv. to observe the late
pr'C'siderit's 57th b i r t h d a y
anniversary.
Maj. Gen. Frederic E.
Da,idson. commanding
geTieraJ of the Washington
Military District. also-placed a
wreath from President Nixon
at the gravesite, and Evelyn
Uncoln, John Ke nnedy's
personal secretary for many
years, added three red roses.
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w.u,.,,, ll. "'"'"
Jor SJienff
Brad Gat ..... is a 12-year veteran of the
Orange County Sheriff's Department •••
worked his way up through the ranks to
hold top administrative positions in the
700-man Oepa""1ent ••. has ad ministra·
1ive experience in each of the Depart-
ment's divisions ••. has the training and
education to give Orange County the best
in law enforcement.
Vale Brad liates June 4
•
In a b!Vl ceremony at .
ArlingU>n N:itiooal C<mertery, .'IOll.....,.......,TIS1NO
Kennedy placed an o t h e r
QMd ft. Whllt, T,_,,.
yellow rose on the nearby
grave or his other ::assassinated
broUle:r, Robert F. Kennedy. ..
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PARTIAL LIST.,.
Wfl1ten 'ndors,menu on f il,
ill t.1mpargn headquarte•s.
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• Just For Are ~Li~ Q rar1es
J By LAURIE KASPER
01 tllt o.i1~ Piiot s1111
One reeent Wednesday, an elderly
woman went into the Mary Wilson
branch of the Orange County Public
Library and dec lared, '·This is the
swingingest place in Seal Beach."
Rather than wall-to-wall books, the
jJlace was described as wall-to.wall
people.
1'he woman had happened into the
library during one of three weekly story
hours when 40 to 50 three-. four-and
five-year-olds were crowded on the floor
in the front children's section. The
convcrsa.tion of their mothers, who
congregated in the adult seetion where
coffee was provided, went unblocked by
the books and drifted throughout the
small building.
The librarians didn 't go around to all
whose voices edged a bit above a
\Vhisper, put a finger to thei r lips and
demand .. sh·h·h-h-h." Although they arc
rcpulcd lo demand peace and quiel in
lheif tiOOk sanctuaries, librarians seldom
do that these days.
"The majority of the people arc
alienated by that atmosphere,·· explained
Oakley Stephens, children's librarian in
the Seal Beach branch.
"We mold tht!: library to the people."
he added, "not the people to the library."
PEOP~E ELEMENT
People. rather than the books, came
across in ·conversations with several
librarians as the most important and
a.ttractive element of their business.
ll's a business they feel will con tinue to
be of importance as society becomes
more technically oriented. niorc words
are published and people h<1vc n1orc
leisure time.
Toclay. there are n1<1ny, many more
books, some of whith \.\'HI be oul of date
in just a couple of years because
everything in every field is changing and
n1oving so fast.
Although ilbrarians rcjee;t the idea that
the book wilt ever be cl1n1ina ted, they
e
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
T~~·~;iv. Ma1 :IO. 1'14 P•t• 21
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admit it may be losing sorn.e of ils
imJ)Ortanct.
Gaining Jn i m po rt a n <' e and
compensating for the book's loss.
however, are an increasing nuinber o!
periodicals1 ne\v sletters and a u d i o -
visual s, nlost or whii::h ar.e also available
through the library.
LEARNING CONTl~UES
"School is son1cthing that you never
compl ete." said \Va her J o h n son ,
fluntington Beach city I i bra r i a n .
•·Leaming -is .. something that has to
continue just to keep up with your field.
Those who don't are left behind."
The traditional purpose for libraries is
to house and distribute the materials
needed for thi s learning. Yet there niay
be much more due to come to libraries.
Sonic of the things Johnson dreams of
for the new city library. due lo open in
i\ovembcr. would probably have boggled
the mind of any 1ibr<1rian. much less the
book-borro1ving: public, just a fc1v years
back .
1-lc leafed througt, a thick sheaf of
I
~ '
yellow legal pad paper where he had
listed his ideas. some of which he would
like to fund with graqt money.
Although grants aren't norm a 11 y
directed to libraries. he said, "there is
rnoney available if you have some
in1agination in your approach."
tie envisions a room in t.he new library
"'here people could take ·a Golden \Vest
College course on video tape and "'ht•re
students could study with volunteer
tutors available to help them.
BECOME PRODUCERS
Bul he also believes, "it's important
that libraries not only be the collectors of
material but become the producers of
n1aterial" so he wants to have video
ca1nera equipment available for lhc
community's use (maybe to graphlca\1y
den1onstrate a point to the city council 1
nnd a studio v.·here interviews could be
taped.
He'd like a place in the library \Vhich
could serve as a "switching station."
providing community information and
directing people to the proper agency for
_help with their particular problem. ~le described a mobile unit W hfch
\voutd display materials related W a
specific subject and an art-mobile, both
of which could go around to schools and
oLher public places for the commw1ity lo
sec.
lle'd also like to see one of the wings of
the new library turned into an art gallery
and another into a community theater.
And, of course. he'd like an autornated
system of obtaining requested n1a tcrial.
All librarians talk of computerized
systems as the con1ing thing in their
libraries yet t'1ey have no fear the
machine will push th em out of a job.
Soineonc will st ill be needed to help
patrons de<"ide and define exact ly what it
is they need and then tell the1n ho"' they
can obtain that information.
BltlNGS llAPPINESS
Besides, !ibr<irians consider their 1vork
more as a con1n1unitv service, which can
be extended lo briTig h a pp i n es s .
fulfillment and friC'nd\iness lo niany
n1ore people than they arc 11011 rcac:hing.
Bats and balls ... as well as art displays. film s.
records. story hours, coffee klatches, classes and
co1n1nunity assistance ... have just as n1uch of a
place in today's libraries as books. Above. Dick
Stanley and Doug O'Donnell take a break fron1
baseball to discover the latest in helicopters and
airplanes. At left, Austin Clark, audio visual clerk.
1nakes sure Kathi Muhs knows how to operate the
projector before she takes it and films out of the
l-I'untington Beach City Library At left below. 95·
year-old NeY.'port Beach resident G. Goedhart di s-
cusses his selection of books during daily vi sit with
Don Nicholson, reference librarian at the 1-lariners
Branch of the Newport Beach Library. Below,
Yvonne Arrias, Tammy and Tim lloppins. Charlene
Arrias, Ted Bullington and Andy Winhip show they
can enjoy a film feature of the library even if they
haven't learned to read the big words in books yet.
Daily
Pilot
Photos
by
Richard
Koehler
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One librarian rcrers to herself and her
associates as •·frustrated soc i a 1
workers."
Stephens talked of children's rights as
patrons, the importance or helping
children with th!!ir problems1 proper
methods of discipline and teaching then1
how to care for books and to be hon est
and retum the books or admit \Vhcn
son1eth ing happens to one.
''It almost sounds like '"c're running a
guidance center here." he admitted.
Yl't he believes he must continue his
interest in the children as people 10
benefit both the library and the children.
They \l'ill. he explained. continue to use
!he library even 1vhen thl'y don·t have a
rl•port to y,·rite for homl1work and long
after they are through with school.
"! like to turn people on to nc1v idea ..;
through books. 1n a i,; ;1 z i n cs and
newspapers ... rcalh· just kel'µ peopl e's
1ninds activl' ... h<· s;iid.
Uut he tdso rl'1nc1nbcrs/;1 1nrrn \rhn
took an intert•st in hirn nnd bccan1e
s1x•ci<1I to hi1n during his youth.
"If I cnn give these kids that Ol1l'
person tht·y tan remember 11·ho's th1'u·
friend, if nothing else. that's iniportant "
\\'C)JIK \\'!Tl! PEOPLE
J\'adine Lerner. director nf spcci:!I
sc rviL·l'S fnr 1hl' county librar~. deci<ll'tl
10 bccOnlL' ii libra rian beeause lhl•
librarl<ins she niet during her high scho1i\
.vt•ars \Vert· interPsting people. intcrcslt·d
in the problenos of youth.
Bein g a librarian. she believes. is ":1
\\'<JY to \l'Ork 1vith people in a satisfyln~
\\'ay ... helping people rind information
<ind books they would like to help thc111
\\'ith their problerns."
!·!er co1nn1ent is echoed by every o!ht'r
librarian, almost as though it is taugt:t in
the profcssionril schools most attendt(J.
Ht.it then. it tnight be a requirr>ment for
entrrrncc lnto tllcir field.
Ronald Hice , Fountain Valley branch
librarian, recalled when he applied lo
graduate school a friend <1ssured hin1 ~1
··sure exit" if he said he \vished 10
becon1e a librarlan "because I hate
people and love books."
'"Over the years. people got to kno1v
ours \vas a social library." said Simone.
Leisure \\'orld branch librarian.
But this too is echoed by the o!hrr
librarians. They all boast of the noise ;:ind
informality of their branch and
especially Of the nurnbcr of people 11·h1)
eo1ne into the library, ofticn 1vithour
taking a book out.
LON'ELY Pl::OPLE
f\·J;1n.v of !he peopll' in f\!s. Simone·s
eon11nunii.1· arc 1vido1\s <1nd 11·ido11·crs.
"The~' son1rti111cs don 't gPt to t;i!k tu
onybod.v unle ss they con1e into thr
library." she said.
But even that isn·1 confined to Ill"
retirement co1n1nunity for. as Rice said.
"There are a lot of lonely people."
Judy Clt1rk. head of the cou111 v
system's l':>:te nsion services. counls
''TLC" ~tender loving care! HS the most
in1portant clernent in a new prograrn.
called HELLO 1 Hand icapped Elderl .v
Literature Love Offer ), ~vhlch she hopl·S
to launch.
Although the program is no1v ··most!\
in my head t1nd partly on pa()('r:· stie
\1·ould like to get revenue sharing fund..;
so she can have two smal l bust's.
equipped \\'ith large print books and
material s for the blind a11d handicapped.
go directly to 1:ieop!e in convalesl'cnt
homes, the handicapped. shut-ins and
olhers unable to get out to the librar1·.
Volunteers \vho read and talk to ti1c
people wi!l be an important part of the
program because "fr equently they just
\1'ant a \\'arm body. They just \\'ant
soineone to sit and hold their hand."
She also has an in stitutional librarian.
\vho works in the county's correctional
and probation fa c i I i t i es. and is
helping the Easter Seal Rehabilitation
Center develop a library as a beginning
service to nonprofit private groups.
LIBRARIAN'S LAJ\IE!';T
ti.tost people. \\.'hether parents ot
handicapped children or professionals.
aren't a"'are of the specialized material.!:
the library either has in its collection or
has access to. she said.
But then, all librarians lament that
too many people just don't kno\v a\\ thl'v
have to offer. ·
To these folks, the library is just a
building. traditionally a part of evrry
tO\\'Tl and city.
To Clifford Cave. Laguna Beach
branch librarian. it is ··very important to
the fO\l'Tl for education. rerreation,
entertainment. for making mo re
responsible cilizens, for p e r s on a I
grov:th _ ..
"It belongs lo the people of the to11·n."'
he said. •·11 should be here to serve
then1."
But librarians loo are often 1niscast in
!he ··~Iarion the librarian" image of a
do\\·dy, dull old maid \Vho keeps the
library dull.
IMAGE IN TROUBLE
An associate \\·ho fits this traditional
image would probably be in troubll',
admitted Rice. because ·'Librarians
resent somebody that way.''
Once, retired school teachers and
widows. of the town's inOucntial cit ill'llS
were given the jobs or librarian, ofh'n
as a tom1 of assistance. But that \\'as <i
long, lon g ti1nc ago.
"Librarians are more and n1ol'c
administrators and more tcchnicullv
oriented and more efficiency 1.:onsciou$, .,
Johnson said.
Paper work , reports, 111 c n1 o s ,
committee announcements. lists of nc1v
books, professional publications, budgl•ts
an~ budget requests, clutter the desks o(
most librarians .
.. , used to lake pride in kno.,.·ing If V.'C
had a book in lbe library.'' said Johnson.
'"l'bose days art long gone.
"YOU. just don't have time to read any more."
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22 OAILV PILOT Thursd,\1, M3J 30, 1974
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Photography Conte st
r1fa
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Focus on Father
Little ti1ne is left before the deadline of the Daily Pilot f)coplc sec·
lion's "Dads as Dads" photography contest.
Photographs of dad being 1J1n1sclf n1ust he 1n 10 one of the Daily Pilot
offices by \Vednesday. June:>.
\Vhile entries have been con11ng 111 s111cc lhc inllia! announce1ncnt of
1he contcsL the staff is sure !here arc rnany n1ore dad s along the Orange
~oast \Vhose pic:jurcs, tak en by 1110111 or one of 1he rluldren. arc deserving
of publication on Father's lJ~y. ~unday . .June 16.
The contest is the staff's ~i111plc "'ay of helping to honor dad on his
special day. Because the focus is on lhc subject. photographs will be ju(lged
according to what they say rather than photographic excellence.
In order to reproduce thcni. ho\VC\'Cr. pictures 111ust be clear. glossy.
black and white prints.
The father's name, address and phone nun1ber a~ \Veil as the photog·
rapher"s name. address. phone nun1her and relationship !and if a child. the
age) 1nust be wriUen on or attac:hccl ro 1/ic hack of the prinL
Entries may be sub1nlttcd in any of !he !Jaily Pilot olfiec~ or 111ade<I
to the People section. Daily Pilot. P 0. Bo" l:iGO. ("osta J\lcsa. ('.\ 9262li.
.\II photographs will bec:on1c the property ol lhc Daily Pilot.
Peering
Around
Betrothel Revealed
SERVIF\G on the hostess
committe:! for 1he Unlvcrsity
of Soutliern California
Associates' Garden P a r I y
luncheon 'rere 0 r a n g c
toWJlians. 1:1c ;itnlCs. Ga\ 1n
Herbert Jr .. Ja1· Heed. Donald
\\'. Starling 2n(i" Ernest \\' 1!.wn.
:'>Jr . .-ind ;iJrs. Tl1l·n•!orr IL
Trul'Sdcll of i\l'\1 poiri llt:~H h
h<i\l' announ c.·c1i the
eng;igcmc!lt of their daughter
Susan Truesdell to Charles
Ed~·ard \Vaddell II.
tt.Iiss Truesdell, a gradua1e
of Arcadia ~Jigh School. is ) pre~ently comple1ing h c r t
studies at !he Univcrsil .v or
L"tah in S._ilt Lake l'i1~· \\'hf'r('
she 1s majoring in sociology.
An A.drian model and 1970
debutante, she was presented
in Be\·erly flills at the f\fardi
Gras Bal l\lagn.ifique.
RECIPIENTS of $ I 0 O
scholarships from the Ba hia
Chapter, ~ational Secret.ar1es
Associa1ion, "'ere Su s a n
\Voodbum of \Vestminster and
Lorey Steppe of Corona del
~Jar.
llO~ORED during t h e
Her fiancc. son of the
Charles Edward Waddclls or
\\"1lmington. Del .. will recieve
!us PhD in June from the
l"11i1·crsity of Utah '''here he
also has been a teaching
SUSAN TRUESDELL
•
,\' 'l•moon With Eve a\\ards
lu!lcheon sponsored by 1hc
Mannequins Auxiliar y.
Aa:sistance L e a g u e o f
Sou:tbern California, was l\1rs.
aaudla }lirsch of llarbor
Island. •
fcllo1\· and resea rch assistant.
lie earned his AA from St. i\lar~ s Unive rslty and his BA
and .\IA from the University
of Dl·la"·arc. r----~~il----1
The betrothed are planning
to marry July 6 in the Olu rch or Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. Ne\\·port Beach. She rec.\:ived a gold Eve
dwm for being named one of
tile 10 llell dressed and most
~ in so uth ern/--R-U-ffELL'S
INl'J'L\~ lnlo Phi Bel•
KajlPl al 1kripp1 College June
1 wtU bo Mrs. Constine.
MIMelt, dlqliler cl Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Benjamin of
Cost• 11 ....
UPHOLSTERY
Whtfl Ye• Wnt n.. ....
ltlJ H.,~ 11'4.
Ce .. Me•-141·025t
LOCAL
SWISS VAULTS
PRIVATE STORAGE
.... , • .,,., ,• (itlld. (,,...i,. • """""""
1714) 835·764'
SAF(TY ANO 'llVACY
IN 0(( SWISS Tl.DITION
FUtl Y INSV,,rD
• ••
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Girls Groups Give
Girls-of-year
I from left)
Stephanie M rxer,
Dawn Urgo and
Zenda Leake
cook up fun.
Honors
Each vear the llarbor Area
Qirls ciub selects girls \rho
personify the club as girls-of·
the year.
Youngest of this year's
\\'inners \\"as Hope Iru•in, 7.
Grace Cottage, daughter of
:\Is. Rosemary Irv.·in. Costa
!-.lesa. a student at \\.ocdl:.P~d
&hool
Dean !-.larxers. Costa ~!esa.
She \\'as selected for l1tr
par~ipation in m:iny cl'.1~
acti\'itics and conlcsts. arts
and crafts, and because she's
described as "a friend to all."
Zenda Leake, 15, Teen
Center. would like to become a
Girls Club st.aff member one
day. A freshman at llarbor
High, she is the daughter of
the Kermelh Leake.!, Costa
f\tesa.
Stephanie !-.larxer. 8. :\lobile
unit. 1s the daughter of th"
Ten years of Girl Scout me1norics are v.1rapped up in the
n1emory quilt given to r.trs. Gene Cunningham of the Girl
Scout Community Association of Newport J-Jarbor. The awards
ceren1ony took place during a brunch in the l\1ewport Beach
ho1ne of ~Irs. Jan1es B. I-l ines.
Da11n Urgo, 12. r-.Iain Center,
,,·on !his rear's club cooking
contcsl ~·i1h her App 1 e
('ookies. and has bet:n a club
mcnlbcr for se,·en years.
She's an\Ong the most arlive
n1en1bcrs fro1n prograins to
cleanup. staffers report. llt·r
partn!s are the Donald L'rgos.
A star pile-her on her
freshman softball team. she i!I
an avid volleyball player a~
well.
Selection of the girls-of-the
year completed a 11·e~k of
acti\"iti~s al the c I u b '~
branches.
~ He Values Second Chance
DEAR A;-.;N LANDEHS: A 11hilf' batk
you asked teenage boys to '' nlc and tell
you how they felt aboul losing their
virginity. I laughed \1·hen r read the
letter because somehov..· one dol'sn"t think
of bovs as "vir~ins." Then I s!opprd
laughing and began to think sl'riously
about n1y first sexual experience.
I \vas 16 and lhe girl "·as 15. ! really
didn"t likc her verv much but I 1\·antcd 10
see if l could score because all the guys
in n\y cro'l·d v.·erc talking abo6t the
. chicks they \rere knocking off and I \\':ls
__ ,,_:J;i the only .one \\'ho didn"l have anything to
~;-niy credit.
' It 11·as a crummy thing I did. I lied
MARILEE ALLAN ;ind told the girl I had been crazy about
her for a long time - a real snow job.
Former
Resident
Engaged
.\l·iriler Jane All:in. a fourth
genl·r:ir1on {';ihforni<iri . and
Chr1s1ophcr Pierce \Vilson of
Oani.:n, Conn. arc planning to
n1arry in .Junr or ne:.t year.
The \\"hole •·affair'' lasted rive minutes.
I felt like a heel immedia!ely afler. \Vhcn
I took her home t didn't even kiss her
goodnight.
I never called her for a date afler
that and I'm sure I hurt her feelings
something terrible. I used that dumb kid
for my own selfish purposes and to this
day I regret it.
Sex '''ilhout love is lousy. 1 hope evPr~·
guy who reads this ,,·ill ren1en1bcr \1•hat l
am saying. It took me ty,·o years to get
O\ er that experience. The next time I
had sex. it y,·as \1·11h a girl I really ca red
about, and I married her. -KO l"\A:\tE
PLEASE
l>EA R r-..'O ~A~lE: Thanks for telllnp;
like it y,·as.
DEAR ANN l_,A~DERS : I am begin·
ning 10 1h1nk I ha\"c bats in the belfry.
Please tell me if you think I'm crazy.
\\hen I was in my early 20.s I en Joyed
n1cn n1y oy,·n age. ar.d I marri~>d one. \\"e
hntl n good marriage for eight years.
until Jin\ clird in a tragic ;ict:ident. It
!ook me a solid year to get O\er it.
\Vhen I once again began lo enjoy the
company of men, they \1·ere in their 30s.
and so 'vas I. N0\1' rm in my sos. I never
remarried hut I have several gentleman
friends "'ho are also in their 50s.
The point I ~·ant to make is this: \Vhy
do so many young girls run after men
\\'ho are 20 and 30 years older than
themselves? It's _got to be money because
1hese girls are not chasing older n1en of
inodest means. ll's all'1ays some rich
geezer. I call it prostitution no matter
ho\I' you look at it.
Don't these girls realite that u·hen the
glamour y,•ears off they'll be bored stiff
and stuck playing nurse to somt sick old
buzza rd? "'hy don't you tell them, Ann?
-SEEN rr HAPPEN
DEAR llAPPE~i: ""btn thty ask mf, l
tell 'em. But t\·tryone kno..-·1 of 1t lea'I
ooe tlctptloo lo which they Jltndlshly
point to provt you'rt all y,·tt. (I know a
few myStlf.) •
Going to a v.·edding~ Giving one? Or
standing up at one? E\·en if you're
already married Ann Lande r s '
completely ne"' "The Bride's Guide'' v.·ill
ans"·er questions about today's "'·eddings.
For a copy. send a dollar bill, plus a
Jong, self-addressed. stamped envelope
!20 cents postagcl 10 Ann Lan ders. P.O.
Box 3346. 222 \\'. Bank D., Olicago, Ill.
60654.
'fhc br;de-to-he is t he
tlnughtt:r of 1\ir. and '.\Its.
Hol~l·rt ~I. Allan ,Jr .. long-rime
1t'Sidl•nts of t\e11•port Beach
11011· rc~iding in Pebble Beach.
June Date
Selected
' P Or ' r-.·trs. r-.lary orcaro I Meet Bea Anderson
~liss Allan gradu:ited fro1n
Corona Gel !-.1ar lligh School
and is completing her junior
year at Princeton University
v.•hcrc she is ro-captain of the
varsity sailing tean1.
Her fiancc, son of !-.1rs.
Barbara Phair \\'ilson of
Darien and \Villiam D. \Vilson
of Kew York City, earned
summa cum laudc and Phi
Beta Kappa honors upon
graduation Crom Princeton. He
will enter Yale Graduate
School in the fall to pursue his
doctoral degree In American
studies.
Huntington Be a ch has
announced the engagement of1 her daughter, Cynthia Jane,
Porcaro to Mark I r a
\Villiamson.
Miss Porcaro is a graduale
of ~luntington Beach High
School, Orange Coast College
and Ca l i for nia State
University, Fresno where she
1najored in social sciences.
Her fiancc, son or the Gene
Willia111sons of Stockton, is a
graduate of Escalon High
School, Delta College and will
receive a bachelor of science
degree in civil engineering in
JWle from CSUF.
The betrothed will mari'y
June 8 in Our Savior's
Lutheran Church, Fresno .
I -
11,tSS "MCRICA -CALIFORNIA CC6BLE;;tS
Olt SCHO..L -BE~"J!DO
v.i~c~ CASU"LS -C"iRAS$~S
KlOS -~"GS -l-OSIERY Ed...:.di Slioe~ far o.idrtf'
"""' """ -c..c-i. -u.~ '°'" W•o Hi Pei'. -Sun~~
CCRRECTIVE Sl-CES FOR CHI.OREN Cllouio ~ ~·~WMl'i.. ~
225 E. I th ST. -COSTA MESA
• -•M(R!CAAD• • M'9n0,CH"'°' • 541•2778•
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' j
OniO{the
Daily Pilot's
Ro le
People
Editor or the section the Dally Pilot calls People crormerly the Women 's Settioa), Bea
Anderson h•s Geen with Ole Dally Pitot 1lnee 1962 and aed.lon editor since 1963. ?>t.111n1
her years or reporting loc•I events In the lives of her commQn.itJ'i women~ft!i Gthtr
people-Bea 6as seen the Dilly Pilot's -Women'• 1edion win manj awardt, TM eurnnt
1tafr h111 taken honors at the naUonal, state and.local Jevtls lhla put ye1r and, under
the new "People" banner will continut its wiri'nin1 ways, Yni. Aoderaon predicts.
[ Rople ] is the Daily Pilot's ·
Award-winning sectiov for.
women (and other peopie, too)
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Jlly, 111<1}' ](I, 1'174 DAILY PILOT 23
Parents Series Focuses on Special Needs
By AWSON DEEllR
01 tbe o.1'1 ,1111 11111
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Parentg play' a key part iri the good
S>cial and PtJYCbolagical adjustment or a
chlld with eoileJ)Sy.
Educatioo in J.he needs or the epileptic
child can'help the parent ease the way
for the chlld.
These are the rea51()ns cited. bY. the.
Orange COunty Epile1>9y Society' !or
beglrilting a · teries of meetings ' for
par«1ts of epileptic chlldren.
Dr. Glenn W. Fowler, a profes3or of
pedlatrtc neurology at UC, Irvine, Jlnd a
member of the society's profOBs1ona1
:.idviSGry board. sPoke at the first
meeting of the series.
Tracing the history of epilepsy. Fowler ·
noted that the group of symptoms that
define the disease have been noted for
centuries.
"Epileply'' he explained, comes from
tile Greek wonl ror "falling'' or "being
.. 1ze11 upon."
H•ltl'>ted that most people are aware of
the grand mal or convulsive type of
selture, but the petit mal variety,
typified by staring spells o!too mistaken
for daydreamlnji, often •o unrecognized.
CONTROL POSSIBLE
"[n half of the cases of epilep.!y,'' he
said, "seizures can be controlled
completely through medication. Another
25 percent can be helped. The re~ining
25 percent cannot be helped even with
cornbinationa of the new medications."
Fowler believes that effective treat·
ment of the symploms of epHepsy are
only a beginning in treatment or the
patient.
By dealing efCectlveJy and realistically
with the child's need$, by being well
informed about the medical and social
management of epilepsy. parents can
ease the problents for a child "·Ith a
disorder that is not well understood or
accepted by the general public.
Fowler then fielded questions from
parents. -
On spol'ls:
''Unfortunately, the American 1Medicat
As.sOciatioo took the position aboot six
years ago that the patient with epile1>9y
should not pru1lcipate in l.'flntact sports
"This had quite an impact on what
physicians told their patients."
Th.is position was disputed later by an
East Q>ast physician in I.he Journ:\I oi
the AMA, saying that a patient with his
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seizu.r<'S under control could participate
if he wished.
CONTACT Sl'OR11'
.F:owler feels that no child under 14
should participate in sports like footboll
because of possible permanent damage
tp bones and joints. That would apply
equally to the child with epllepoy, be
said.
"It would probably be wise to direct
hlm toward another sp<>rt, but if he
wants to play, and the physicia n !lays no.
it can cause more harm than good to the
doctor·patient relationship. 1
He nixed scuba diving for the epileptic
"because there have been no studies on
the effect of pressurized oxygen."
Swimming was okayed, "if you swim
with a strong adult swin1mer who is
aware of your condition."
On driving an automobile :
"I have seen more accidents caused
bv people with known heart conditions
tilan by persons with epilepsy."
Parents were concerned about telling
the school of the child's condition and
possible repercussions.
"If the child is under control, not
having any seizures at school. I y,•ould
not think it necessary to inform the
school officialS.
"Obviously, if the child seizures at
school, the stair must know about his
condition in advance."
A TI1TUDES DESCRIBED
One parent, whose child is subject to
the petit mal seizures whi th rescnl~lc
daydreaming, noted that often the child
was treated as a behavior ·problem. The
same applied, said another parent. to
controlled epi leptics whose behavior was
affected by their medication.
Hyperactivity was a common sick
effect. they said.
''We found that there is a vitaJ need for
infonnational programs for the familie~
of children with epUepsy," said Viola..
Miller, director of services for the COWltl\
society.
"\\le plan to use a round table
discussion fonnat and keep the situation
as relaxed as possible."
Parents and others interested ir.
epilepsy can attend the second session in
the serirs Tuesday, June 18, in th C'
society hcadq11<.1rtcrs, 2730--A North Main.
Santa An<.1. at 7:30 p.m.
A film on epilepsy \'Jill be followed by a
di.scussion.
Doesn't He • • • Curl His Hair?
By ERMA· 80.l!BECK
f'or the la st 10 year~ J've
\\'orked fro m my ho rnc and if
therc·s one thing l'\'l' missed
it's that great Axner1can triba l
custom called, "The Lunch
JJour."
At honl<', it·s nothing. You
open up the refrigerator door
and if it doesn 't attack you.
repulse you. run from you. or
multiply before your eyes. you
eat it and get back to work.
'H I ours
111 ::in office. The Lunch
Jfoltr dominates the entire day
beginning from the n1oment
you ;1rri\·e until you leave.
Jn1portant decisions I j k e
"\\"hat tin1c are you eating
l unch~" "\Vhere are you eat·
ing luoch:'" "With whom arc
you eating lunch?"
I once v•orked in an office
where \l'e arrived at 10 and
irrun('diatc!y reported for a
"Lunch Hour briefing." There
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Sandwiched
y.·ns a mukcshHt \1·ard room
contu1n1ng a map equivalent to
the one the English used in
\\'or!d \\'ar JI to keep track of
their ships. Only \\'e used
sn1all plastic people
representin g the office force
on a 111ap of the city.
\\'hen \1·e "'ere all
ass£'mbled. I asked for a show
of personnel. "Alt right, ho\v
many are eating I u n ch
today?"
AT
WIT'S
END
1'he two· on diets and the one i
who was going to have
somelhi ng brought in to make
a late afternoon d c n t a I i
appointment were eliminated .
fas ter than a croupier v:ho
\\·on for the house at Las
\'egas.
"All ri ght, that leaves
of you .. ''
Taurus: Be Practical ··1 v.·ant to go at 11:30 and
nvoid the rush at a new place
called. 'Sammy's .. " said Ruth. ~it.'
t checked my m a p . \~ft
"Sammy's is a JS.minute ride. 11'
That means you won't be back FRIDAY
MAY 31
BY SY DNEY O~IARR
ARIES (i\-larc.1'1 21-April 19 f:
Test, experiment. Put forth
ideas but don·t sign releases.
i'our judgment may be
sligh tly off bafie. It is best to
11·a1t.
TAURUS (April 21l-May ~I:
Be practical. ;inalytical. Lrove
the sho•,•:ing off to others. You
have proven a point -now
give it time to. bear fru it
GEMINI (May 21.Junt 2n ):
VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Sept. 22 1:
Don't spend on losing
proposition. Kno\v when to
finish, to complete project.
Dynamic, a g g re ssivc
individual cou ld be putting on
an act.
LIBRA !Sept. 2.1·0ct. 221:
Lunar cycle is high; take
initiative. Make neW starts in
new directions. Wear bright
colors. Come out or hiding.
Popularity increases.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2.1·Nov. 21):
Become fam iliar \vith fine
print.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21l-Feb.
IS;: Lunar aspect is such that
travl'l is stimulated. ~feans
your lines of communication
are open -be receptive . Go
plaees, study, become familiar
with a foreign language.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 201:
in time for your coffee break."
"Then I'll go at It."
'·So, I'll go at 12:30." said
Jean. "Marcia and I \viii go :
together." \.
"You can't go together. That ~
leaves the phones unmanned ."
"What about Sarah \Vho is
having something bro ugh t
in?"
"If Ruth is bringing me
lunch end arrives in time for
her coffee break, I 'll be in the
restroom eating."
"That leaves n e w c o m e r
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Men are becoming more
adventurous as they
visit hair salons
for permanent wives .
In big cities, they make
appointment• during
regular hours, but in the
1mall towns they are more
likely to make
after-five calls.
By PATRIC iA McCORMACK
NE\V YORK (UPIJ -Joe the grease monkey
won't tell if he does il. J\nd. probably, neither v..·ill
your meter reader, your banker, your preacher,
doctor, lawyer or dentist -if they do it.
You'll just have to look closely at their curly
hair and figure out for yourself: does he or does
he not get pern1anents in beauty saJons -or be-
hind closed doors at home?
Jn the world of beautifying in many places it's
so common for n1en to gel per1ns that the men no
longer have them done on the sly. The females in
the salons hardly notice.
The nlen had to ao something with their longer
hair, didn't they, when it became unmanageable?
But that's not the only reason for their trips to the
beauty salons fo r permanent waves.
New York stylist Paul Mitchell says he does
about 50 permanents a week on men. He attributes
the upsurge in n1en's perms to the \\'omen's Libera·
tion Movement. 11e says:
HGuys are n1ore adventurous since \Vomen's
Lib and th.ink if a chick can do it, so can I. Yet, you
won't find too many guys admitting their hair's nat·
ural wave comes from a perm."
Some men seek out permanent waves to make
their 'hair look thjcker. The permanents also help
an oil condition.
Mitchell said since most men have naturally
oily scaJps. the perm lifts the hair off the scalp so
it doesn't get greasy-looking so fast.
NATIONWIOE TRENO
The perm trend is nationwide, according lo
Rod Harmon, vice president of an East Coast salon
chain.
He estimates for the last year so'mething like
12 percent of the penns are for mM. 1'he percent·
age is on the way up.
The greatest nu1nber of male customers are
found in the Boston salon -a fact Hermon
attributed to the big student population there. Har-
vard and ~fassachusetls Institute of Technology,
in adjacent Cam bridge and all those Boston schools.
A ma jor provider of beauty shop suppli es
for the first time is including "techniques for curl-
ing men's hair" in its sen1inars for beauty opera-
tors.
A new method in permanent waving gives men
more natural-looking effects. One of these is uni-
~ ~rm, a system that utilizes heat to accomplish its
( cu,rling chores -similar to the idea of electric
rollers.
Some of the men go for the curling session at
the request of wife or girlfriend. At a Chicago
fashionable salon, stylist Vino DuPlesys reports:
"Our men customers come to us on a refer·
raJ basis from wives or other cl ients. They are up
on current styles but know the look requires care.
They have a body perm and keep their hair well
groomed."
Large
Sizes
38 lo 46
Give full play to creative
effort~. Seek ways lo better
express yourself. l\1ake ally of
family member. One "'ho has
been stubborn cani be co-
operative.
Go behind the scenes, get
beneath the surface. You have
nothing to fear . Know it and
act like you are aware of it.
F'ollow through on hunch.
Interest in occult is
stimulated. Yo u perceive:
your ESP works overtime.
Trust feelings. i n t u i t i o n .
Money is coming your way.
Know it -and plan r ·o r
remodeling·~· purchase o r
luxury ite1n.
Debbie. Cou ld you eat in the·---------------------
CANCER (JU11e 2~July 22):
See what rn11st be fixed,
corrected, in s talled . Be
tealistie. ApplieS especially
where safety m1asurcs arc
t'Oncemed. Don't depend on
"other fellow."
LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 221 : You
now have more freedom of
movement. Rekttive who has
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Shake oU lethargy.
Make new friends. You can
influenc:e poopi.e to cooperate,
even to put up money.
Socialize.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jsn.
19): Hard facts replace
speculation. You will know
where you stand. H a v e
necessary material at hand.
Review lessons. Check details.
authority will flash green ___ _
light. Get up aod go! ~-------,,--...
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IF TODAY IS YOUR
~IRTHDAY you are
independent, versatile. broke
from authority at relatievly
early age. May was extremely
important this year -in June
you camplete a project. Jn
July. you will be more
independent, creative and
more in Jove . You draw to you
persons born under Scorpio,
Leo and Aquarius.
company cafeteria at 10:30?"
"It's 10:35 now."
"So, take an extra five
minutes."
These briefings went on
every day for lhree years
when one morning the editor
came in and said, "Will you
knock it off with the lunch
hour plans. \Ve have a paper
to get out!"
It was the first time any of
us knew \\•hat they produced in
the building.
BRUSH ond BLOWER
SCISSOR STYLES
HOW TO DO THEM STEP BY STEP
Anvone c1n care for a Brust\ & Blower ~ir style, or our othtr curl co1•l ng , luss-free, lull funcuon11 SCISSOR
STYLES wti.k:h. are as easy to do as Jusl al'\an\pOO! Our lamp
cuta, linger tumble cuts, curli ng iron cuts, waal'\ IO'Nel dry,
bruSl'l ·n fluff cuta or slmple wast\ and wear cuts are SCIS. SORED. all take-care-or vouratll f.lylos. Good ror 1ny aoe.
1ny ti.a~r. No teasing. no rollers, no pins, no POLLUTING
HAIR SPRA VS. ALSO:
HO SIT HIMAHIHT WA,IS, l'OU MAY WIYM WANT
TO Slf YOW HA.ta ACJAIM.
JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING
~l'!:~h u1~"•N.
96a-353s 819-3863
I A.M..t.10,.M..'W.& S..t• lP.M.
wmtOl.lfl ....... TMIN~-'fCLUM I 0°/o OFF 101i1CA#'ITSTMAfW,lt.'f OFF
DO IT YOURSELF WITH PROFESSIONAL
EQUIP. -STEAM CARPET UEANERS
•IT'SEASYAHDIT'SSAFE
•IF YOU CAH YACUUM YOU CAHUSITHIS MACHINE
•THIS IS PROff5510HAL EQUIP. HOTS TORI RENTALS
• kEEP YOUR CARPETS «SEIM FRH, DIODORlllD • IAIY
S.t.FE .
• SOIL & OLD SHAMPOO RESIDUES REMOVID
•RESTORES COLOR TUTU RE & LIFTS MA nED f>ILE
•GREAT FOR SHA~S
PRICE INCLUDES:
PICK +UP I DELIVERY, CHEMICALS 0 IMSUIAHCI
• MACHIHI SIT UP & PERSONAL IH5TRUCTIOH5
Compore Our Prices -You Won't Believe Them
DWVIRY 7 DAYS A WllKt
CARPETS 541·5713 UPHOLSTERY
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Remember last year
when you waited until
July to get your
swimsuit and they were
al l picked over. Don't
let it happen again.
Come on in. The
swimsuits are great.
from S16.DO
Effa Nor'sHALF·SIZE SlIOP
FULLIRTON HUNTINGTON HACH
224 ONflt•l•lr Moll 14 Huntln1t~ Center
LAGUNA MILLS COSTA MISA
1•1vn• Hill• Moll 1 IOS Ne,wport 11¥4.
SHOii SUNDAY 12·1 (eacept(ottoMeto)
Ba.nkAmtritard • 1'1111er Char1e
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: I DAIL y PILOT Thu1~ay, May 30, ltJ74
MIXED SINGLES
8a</, A~rlOLD, DID l u;v~
A llAD D~fAM LAST NIGUTI
-TUMBLEWEEDS
. . . . .
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
by Tom K. Ryan
DOOLEY'S WORLD
NEVILLE!. ..
DID 11-\ElMA
DIG YOUR
·NEW IMAGE?
Dr. SMOCK
LOOKY WHUT I
FINPEP, SWfl'TS !:
I PON~ 'l70PTEI:> HIM AN'
A l!IAl!IY
TURTl..E!
I VO.~!-NAMEP HIM" ELMER
JANE "(CASf. HE MIT~ ~to UH1 ELMER
JANE' NEEl/S A
MUllJ!:R A VALJGH'fE'R) ! '
MUTT AND JEFF
MU:T"T, .,.
WHERE DO
WE EAT
LUNCH
TODAY?
HOW MUCH
YOU GOT'>
' ' .
FIGMENTS
,,.
WHEI\ lHE NOReE
CALLS ltXJ, JIJ5T 60
Rib/IT IN, 6ET lt<J~ SOOT Allll COME
R\bHT OUT!
NANCY
COME ON, PEEWEE,
LET'S SEE SOME
El<.PRESSION ON
YOUR FACE
PLEASE
TRY TO
LOOK A
BIT MORE
LIVELY
TDPAY'S CRDSSWDRD PUZZLE
Yesterday's P1,11zle Solved:
ACROSS 42 Game
birds l Tutt (J Pointed 6 Pan ""' company 45 Throbbed 11 Logger's <Ci Zinc and [OOI copper, 14 Former ',, Turkish <18 Lime t1lle 1ree: Var. 15 -·---49 Wear Rainer· away 1937 50 Werght Oscar OI • winner wrapper 16 Fort Wor1h 52 U $.S.R. univ. river ir Kind of 56 River ol min! Thailand 19 Go astray 57 Quite 20 Ga11 ordinary 21 Ex1slence. 60 N Amer. Prer1x Indian 22 Relocates 61 Expect 24 Lei droop 62 Culhvates 26 The very CIOPS best 63 Cati !or '27 One help acting as 64 Takes a ruler care of 30 Jeered 65 Indians loudly OI 32 Separately Canada 33 Lake DOWN vessel
-, • ' c < A T If II • , " ' ' ~OO H ti ll lllA'I
ST ~AITS NIA GA~~
SLEET fTA
TIEST(ll II A IS ' s s
'" -' l ' ' ' DIR. I £1•151 1 'ii" T A II S ' ' ' ' llHSfCll.11 ' v ' ' S T A N S
ruHfR.At . ' ' . ' K I S A II ~ A N C E
l °' E 0 U C £ ~ N I T
1-1 A N 0 0 0 I' [ 0 ' . '
5 -·-and 31 Unique thing
leather 33 Swee! food
6 Heave 35 "Ab1e·s !11.sh
7 football ----
play 36 M1gh1ily
8 Printing impressed
machine: 38 Propets a
Informal boat
9 Verb 39 Porous
ending 41 Skur;t
10 Social 42 Fellow:
insect Slang
11 Ship taders 44 Chealed
12 Real 45 Hammerhead
eslate par!
units 46 8111.s ol tare
13 Sausage 47 Helicon
18 ln1erd1ctory name
34 Moulhs 1 Financial contraction 48 Proceeds
37 Cause to advisers· 23 Undivided rapidly
unite Abbr . 25 Pismire 50 Fed.
38 Appraised 2 Swimmers'
39 Rooster's platform
sound 3 Commune -io F1ench near •
seasoning Padua
41 Card 4 Animal
game herder
26 Meat e.g. 51 Among
27 NFL learn 53 Uncommon ,8 F . . 54 Summll 011 s 55 Lack ol: rela\iva Sutlb:
29 Bile duct 58 Be 1n deb!
concretions 59 U.S. army
JO Oelested rank
I 2 l • ' • 1 • ' "I' " " .. " " .,
11 II I·~"• ,,
lO " " ll , . ' ,. " " ' "~ u ll " lO JI .. 'j< " " '· ·' • ' ~
l1 " " 1-.. " ~. • ; " .. (: " " ' " ,. :,I 1 It' .. .. 51 " " 1f
-I" " -"
~ ~ -
r _. "
-, ..
-r-_so
'by. Al Smith
•
by. Dale Hale MOON MULLINS
by Ernie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS
j
1 I f I ~
PEANUTS
ITP!Jf.<S..I' l<lESN'T W>ID WANTS'
HUH ANI/ MC«E TO 6ET
n<AN A l'l/NcH i"JNCHEO IN
IN THE N05€. THE N05E?
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
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by Charles M. Schul:z
THAT '-:7 l-IOW I JV06E" PAIN,
LUCILLE ... THAT'S HOW I
DECIDE WHETHER OR NOT l
!)i.ICXJLO 00 50.~lfTHING ...
WILL IT HURT Ni.O~E T~AN
A PVNCH IN THE NOSE DR LESS
THA'i ..>. P~'Ncti IN THE N05E ?
by Harold Le Doux
by Mell
'!l<A, VOIA "''y YOIA I< PAll:ENT? MAVE Vfl<Y
·CAff~!.At.J..Y POINTED OtAT ro ~ WMV If liS TME'I vUY
CAll:EF<ALLV
POINTE 0 O<.IT
'fMAT 1'M A
0
Cl
D
DICK TRACY
•
Y0"1 >IAVE NO CONF10ENCE?
o.~--r 'T">IAT WA-$ NICE 01' 'T">iEM.
Wf.iA'T" 0 10 'T">IEY 1AY
IT WA"' 'f'
I
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OOPE .,. [
c
by Chester Gould
-•AMP Win! MIS Pill ON
OUR Nl~I( PWS
TMf ®NCIC, MIS DAYS
ARI! NUM&l!R!O. •
1' ,1
•
..... _ ... __ -.......... ..
by. ROCJel' Bradfield
/II.MOST f'OSITIYE
J
-I
l
~
J
·I 'l ,
1 -l •
5-JO .1!30i"-D
by Geor«Je, Lemont
THE
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
MEoT
.JoHNNIJO,
MY
HOMING
PIGEON,
ll'DDY .
by Roger Bollen
11t.1 ~TIU. HA'll~G A
LITTLE 'TROUBLE
l\llT~ Mi,> SERVE -
---
''Now that the government is leaning ove r backwards to
get alone with Russia, I suppose I should make up with
Mr. Kallmeyer for sending us such awful lamb chops."
DENNIS THE MENACE
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Thursday Mar .30 1Q74 .. -.; ..
PUBLIC NOTICE l'UBIJC NO'flCS PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOT!~ PUBUC NOTICE
-~.=.,~,o,c,-=,.=-=,.=c~cACT'""'=o=H,--,1 -;QTic1 TO cOMTUCTOU _... --NOTIC• OP' INJtNTIOM TO INGAOf ,ICTITIOUI •UllNlll Over The Co1111 lf·r
IL, rarr CAlllNO "° tlDS' ., ,,. CAl.LIH ,. ,. • iner IN TM• tALl OP ALCOHOLIC "'"""' ITATl"MINT
MOTICI TO at•DITOAS S<frlool Dl1lrkf M1111tlngh>n lfKh Ulllolli St.Mell Ohltlef SUPf.AIOI: cou•T Ofl' THI!' llVIAAOIS The toHowltlg PfTIOf'll • • 001111
IU,llt\01 (0UltT OP THI Hltn khool Ol1trlct NEWl"ORT-MUA UNfPllD SCHOOL STATli CU" CAll•OltHIA l"O• M•V tt. HJt b111J11tu ..
ITATI OP CALl•OIHIA flOA o.toll,... ol l id• 11 Ot , .,._ Fhf.., OllTAIC:T THI COUHT1' 0¥ OllANOI 10 WHOM IT MAY CONCERN TED S tNSlAL\.ATION A~D Rl?PA!R
NASO L1sltngs for Wednesday , May 29, 1974
THI COUNTY OP OltANOI J11111 1 1t74 Bid ONdllM Ne. A.ntu $I.Miit<' lo lt6ulftet Of 'lie lltflUe •P Slill'llCE tS22 PeH1woo;id 0 r
Ne A.tHtt Pl«' ot l id ll~lpt1,. Hvllll"QIOl'I lffell ~ OO I k il.M Gii ~ti t d ot MOTICI! 0¥ MIAltlNO OP' paTITIOOI plltd tor not~ fl here!»' give!! ,,,,., 11\1 HIJf'll !'111\on lttcl'I Ctl I.>!' J~ •16'6 T
0..:-t•lMI 17111 Strtel Cat1hlrtn<t Tr.,.Utr Room 0 " pi.c:. I l id It I I CODICILJ AMO ,Oii LI! TT I It S l>tlltftQtl 11 1111 p<tm n1 dot Kr M(I 11 PelllWODll Or Huntl<111tot1 ChlCll I on,,I A\\CK di on ol y t 1~ e,,.,. of STANLEY ANOEll.SON IJtilatl HIClll School OISlfkl Otlk • ,..,, Jllf1t 1~7~oc ~I .,, ,io11 ,.111.0IAT• OP' WILL AMO ulldt,..lQ* P'OPOlll lo nil •k~hdlc Ttd F Ind Pt1rlcl<1 L Ct~ftltl trn ~':o b:"r..:·~~\~ ~J T7
NOT ICE 1$ H6REIV CIVEN IO lhe H~ntl19ton Bt~ Cl llf:>tnl• .,... lW of'lt\'.-tflfl:c",lli~.,.~ "Cost• MIM Tl!STAM!NTAl:T follow• 2000 Horth H""Pll'I Ulvd Co~le C•rllornl• 9'646 'Sf<."1 '"'' [)ta!tt\ ~Z";,n U ~
eo-tdltoo Of the JboYt ~med deClfdtnl B~6tl Nlgtn~htl~IGllOV=1m,,., .. V ~lfwtii. E11tte ~ I OWAAO H PHELAN Mr-C11!10r~l• I I I 1111 Tlll1 buSIMl~ I• cQndv<ltd flt a 11en1r•I 1 1 fl'4\ •nd all~•• 1 in, ~J! lhat ell,.._ !l'iui"" I 1 I ALL!Y ...... 1118 dd PtcMHd ur•uan D 111(h !! lfll Oii .,.flnerthlp I""°"" ~y 11"' ,,,., 1(00 L~h l Uld dtc .... I , ··• c 1 mi ·~Ill! 1111 HIGH SCHOOi.. SPltHrolKL!lt' SVSTi.M ~ ,Iii 'ftll N..OTICE f's HE RE I V 01\lf M t!w! ullCH•llQNd I epplylng 111 11'11 OtPlfll'fllnl Ttd F C•nlrell <ounltr !lit•~·• to o<, ,.~ 11
wHll 1~ ntctH~,t ~~ 'f 1:11 l~i"' AHO BASEBALL QIAMOHO PHASE 11 P 1011 laf,i NawpOrl hlCll, STEVEN STE'P'ANI Jilt lkl STEPHEN ot AltOllOUt BtverlQt Control for \1su111<;e Tiii• ll<Jllmlnt "'"' I led w 11 Iha t•(ll Ot""r "' o I p,..., e
vt 11\1 dflk of tht J:,,. rn~lll~ ~U~I ~: 1-l~ci~ S~~002~1 ll.A,S~B~l'i.J ~~;~EV ~:~•t=~~';!~t•llon NtMt $TEFANI 1111 fl ltd llff•ln • p1llllon lo, of ~l~~a:4:i::•'tf.:' ~t~" a'(E jl'llW Cc>un•y Clt•k cl Orengo Count¥ on M~y ~~ 1 TN! IE~~',:'1 .. " E m .. ~~n I
to prn.l'lt llltf11 W\111 !ht flt(ll$try PHASE Ill SOP litt ntrch and 0.Ytloi>mt~I Fttlllh p ,06tlt ol Wiii Ind Codltlh •nd tor pr WALTl!JI e 0 1)11.0 cN !4 191~ !Of\\ oa not ncl.,OP '"''0Y t ~outhlll'I to IN unc:h1r1lgnt<1 •t c/o PIAct Pl1n1 ,,, ori Fllf F•cllU1ri ~1tcen1l1 1111111nt• 01 Lellers Ti\ll?i.tiry to 1114 Publl11\ed Orinir• tcwut C•llv Pole! FlllU •1• 1 ""' •uo '"~ ' E4u 1 O • CHAii.LES CAlitAITV At1o•nly •I L<1w Pl•nnlno •nd CcnftrUC~ Oll!Oti Hlll'lllntl Pltce Pll nl l fl NI fflr PJl\tloner r11lertll(I lo w'hlc I• m~ 10!' M•'/ lQ, 197, 19,514 PuOll1t\t11 Or•MI• totol 0~ I• Pllc.t llcwn or comm' Et1 ~"' c
611 W 11111 ~t S""!O Anl C•tll0tn1I ten l tlch tJ!llon Hiatt Sct\ocl Olilrltt l'IQ7 llSI PJ.attfllf• A .... rllll Co,I• Mtl• Nrthtr Pflrtltul•rs. Ind !1111 lime •lld MitY 16 23 XI Ind Junr I 1971 116J ,, •,on t\e~nd ®. 1 "0 El"'" A 1
9210. wMch 11 tt>e Pl•ce of tw1l1111J ct 111' Slrt<'t Hunlll1t:lOt1 ate(ll Call! VlMI Cal 1ornl1 ltll•<t 01 l'lllrll\CI ll\f 11'"1 ' lllf!n 111 PUBLJC NOTICE ----t :nwcl ~ns c ""' E:•tu ~ ,
lht \lnde•llllllld In •II m"1ttr1 i>e•ltl,,lnQ Phcnt "6-t:Ul '&,1~ :uii ocW NOTICE IS HEREBY C1VEN tlwll tht lor JYl'tl It~ 197' 11 t ;Ill 1 m In lht PU8LlC NOrlCf~ INDUSTlll:IALS l ~(P
IO 11\t e1!1tr o1 uld dect<ie 1 wltllhl lour N~c;E I~ H~8V Gl\'E;M th1t Ille tbCI"" ntmld S(hool Dlllrltl o1 ()fllW'f '°'-lrtroom "' Oepartm.,.l No l ol 1•ld AHO UTIL,11'1ES ~~'on L~~ 1:
flC tn1 aller the ll r1t l>UOI cellon ol lfll~ lbov trr.td K tlkl(lcl' .,, Ot lnut (;ounlv CllOornll ec;Hng by ind t1vq119h <OUrl • JIO(M~ Ctnll'f D,lv1 Wrtl n PICflTIOl,ll IUllNaSS II Jl)'S W~lll'l'\.ChlY I•..., 0, ~
no!!tt (Ill Ctllfwnl ld!Ciir 11\',Jlfld through 111 Oovff'n(f19 Botrd Nrelnaflltr ~ t1141 CffV 0( ''"'' Ana C1Ufor1111 MA.Ml' Sf&TIMIHT NOTICI! TO CAl:OITO•I I ~, 2~ 91~ a L\~
Da11d M•v I 191~ lli Knh19J!OM~ ~IMfl&r r1!1rr1<1 to"'' OISTAICT wlll i.otl~ up !}ti! " W':t,a.IAM E 51 JOHf'o rlll tollowltlll PtrMlll ll doing l>ut neu SUPEA!Olt COUAT OF THE II Cl AO.• nq I
LILAS MILOR ~O MOC< IS I Ol~l'fcl.""'wlM Ntf111e Yp to but Ml MIM ft'lln ~--· tfete Coilltv Clfrk .It STATE OF CALIFO•NIA f'Olt Acy\"M 1
I t I '" E~""·"lrl• ot 1he W I! ot ncl lilt, lhiln !he •bo ...... Jt''" •I KILSIY .. l!TTEA,l!N W.tlLIOH 30Cl1 lledhlll "Sklg S Sulle I Ad M o 16 I C. pt 1 ....... me seai.d ~di tor !I'll 1ward cl 11 tonlr«I ltott ' r ,1 11 108 c 1 M C If tt 16 THE COUNTY OF OAANOE I Athrit C1> 1 1 t M f 1
lht Ibo~ n•ITll!<I dke-clenl 11ale<1 bla~ !er t~t •word ol con1'acll !or tor 1111 •DOV• prolt<I a.HM..,,:: C.ltw,:;M 01 • 11" '1 0•n a 1 No A"''' A e i a , ? 11 ,1 r 1 ,. 1
CHAllLt:S GAllilUTV tjwo al>Dveoflamtd P•O!Kll Bkh illaU be rt<:tlYtd In tl"ol pl&ee 1111n Ttl UUI IU-l1tl N~h~~elNtAW~~"i:~rn~alll~~~~Tif ~~ E~tate O! MYRTLE Ii: MILLS iii~ Ill~• A.. I 1 H>OO T ... 1•
Allornt '/lli• Bl<J, 111111 be 'IClfYed JI Ille tC1C1rri1 1111d •bo~I Mid ,.,,.ll 111 optM'd I nd kr>111natMVAlLE MILLS OeceaWd 1AI\ I" • 1<1' \f 0 •H w 111h .... , i~'.!ltlto ~•flAW (II\ Canter.net T•l lltr llUDllcly rt•d •IOI.ti "the t bCV• lllltd AH'1'MV for Hllllont• Piiot Ill' t>uslnen j~ conducted flY •n NOTICE IS HEJIEllV CIVEN ro 1M Al ~(j Sr· f ~'""
Sl+'tll A111. 1111<"11!1 '110. :T: G I and ~•II bt optllotd Ind tlme and p .. c• ,. Pu~lllMCI Ort1>11e CDJSI pa Iv 111 1' lndlvldu"I ,.., 0 c•td tors o! Ille abevt n•med dectde~r 1 •,09"0 ~" f <>n• [
T1ttllfl0111t I •I s.4t MH l)\/fl )dy ·~ •loud ., ll'le •btV••l•ll'd 1Mr• will " .... 1.111 .. _,, ,~ .. 'ttd Mir ll ~I JO 1916 Ch6 le' A u UD on II ' " ., ! I .... e ~ r • Mq AIMf-.Y Mr lf(Wltl1 llrm ind DI t lllt:i ........... .....,, --~ ---'7 Th' >11 eml! r WJ1 I led wllh rn• lllM a iiersonJ n•v "II (a m10 • fll am •P ' 7 ~ '>Cl
Pwhlltr.to:t Or<>rioe c 0,,1 o tv Pio! lrier1 wl 'be• SlOOO deposit raqulred ~": .. r•~~~ ,r,!1 e~yr~ =,.,..~Ill;:: PUBLJC NOTICE Counl~ Clerk ot O Jngt CC><Jnlv Cll """Yl'"ld Gecedrl'lt "re •e11urect ID
1111
llWm Am E p ll r or F<1L Mly9 1• n lO
1914 16151
tor tll:ll f.11 ol Od clot\lrnef\ll to ' ----J-11191• ltnlllenrceu1rywuc11e10 ln 111eo1Uc• Am Fri 1 fu< I g
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wllllln 10 d•YI l !le'l' I P'd Olllftlng d•lf Fl40'f ol Ille lie ~ ol Ille 100..e ~nt t ti! cour1 or Am r ~tn I o '"
-11 r•n N t r 'ltUtn In II 0 P Cl Eich bid 11 Ull CQnfotm end bt SUPt:IUOlt COURT OF THE Pu~! $l>e<I Or~n'lt' (~lil O 1 1.., I M ID preH'nl them w tll lht ~eres,a1y A,m Fu ~ • • IC.d n•
PUBLIC NOTICE
' ' • '
FICTITIOUS &UllNESS
NAME STATEMENT
ro11ow111g PO•~on ll dolrn;i
~~=..:'!f~~ st\len (7) d1ys aller 1111 •tspons!Ott 10 lhe conlrW dOc:vmenll STATE OF CALH"OtUlllA FOii M•Y lG. dn<I Ju"" 1 1l 2) 191• '\~4-1 l•I voucher) 1D the u!!<lt• ~ :<I nl hr cl eel•"• t. "~ 7 '' ~1~ l J
Eicll Old m"•I <-Ooo-,-.. Eicn bid slllll bt i ccornpanled 11'( 1111 TMf: COUNTY OF OR'4NOE al !'lb allotn,..y5 BARNcS S(HA" JC..HN ' ~ ~'' 1
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1~ • I~ .. T • ..,. '" '"" 11 f rd r 1 11\1! 1 1 "' A-MOOt I SON KENNEDY & CARL 'lN ()1~ "' t m ~ ' 0 10 co tp respan1!,..tol""contr•t1d0Cumen1,._ Mtcurv ''''' on coo••t NOTICEOFKEARING,OR .. ROaATE r UBLJC NOTJl:E Acnur Blvd PO Bo• 111'6 tlfw11<>•i '•~·w·,11 1 1 ""utn J• E1c11 bid shell oe tc:tomoanltd Irr Ille !l«umfl!ll ena l>'I" lht 1111 of pteposrd '"""u1 H l• """of' 1) security ftftrrtd IC ln Ille c~l,.,O iUbCDlfttl clO•I 01' Will ANO FOA L•TT,AS Btltll Calllornla 9'lMJ All l /l. Iv Apt!aCO 11 l) ~" B nd IJ builnen ,.., ~ Mr J~rnei M Hebllnd Olreclor TfSTAMl!NTARV 'ICTITtOUS &U~ltjC\S E nell 1 Scl\1111 Jr II n •Ille place A~ '"'' IO 1 ro , -· 1
Murnent1 11na by ft\e llJt ol pr0p0~ Est.JI• ,, E•E~ o o•HOP NAME ST•TEMENT ot t>u1l,1n cl tne •m~r 11n u a ii '·· "'' " ""~·· Ul.H:Olll •clori School F1tlll1fe1 M1ln1en1nc1 1nd Qoe11 "'' ~ l .... I• n sro~ e JAOE II.EAL TV •SSS W• net Avt T
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,, I tloni w ti mttl Wllh lhor.t pffMllli In Oece•srd Tiie-foUowtnw !II'''"' Of! U ng molt r• pefla n n9 to the ~>1 t OI l Cl I •ow H i. d S HI "< Fcon•~ n Vallff (~! tnri VllCll IMP ''ct re5l'rve1 the rlghf ta rt]ecl t~risttd In louring lht ,11, •I tlle Schaal NOT ICE s HEREBY CIVEN thal tf.!!n~1 <n ~cc dent w! h n /oyr no t"' •lie I e Av Ud & • 1 ~"" Md,,_• WdY"t F0t1<t 9'11 Hua ion Or ny or 1!1 tl!dl or le W<JIVe any Facll !lt l Q!Uct IDCll~ 11 921 Ba~tf Ct./l.OVS p BISHOP Ind EOWtN W ' F. PM HUNT COVI \ V d I t di r "1 I u~I tdt "" cl Ill• IC ~ Al'>O (<> d I 8 dl>n '><. , I
lluntn910n Bticll C•l lc n ~ q'/bf.1 rteii
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1!':_1!.:';1.,or lntorMalU tt ln •nY bids Strtel Celli Mes~ •I tl;lt) am Men TEMPL N II.Iii 111£<1 11tr~ n a Pf.l/llori i6rtnersh p 1101 Ed t I\ n /v~nua I Oated N~v 18 197• it.ti C.. LI 11 1/ ~y A<h I Tiii\ bulnt>' I\ condutlld by •nor n ,,. "' 11(1 ~~ Juno lO 1971 \~ ~ tor P obatl ot Wilt Jlfld 'r liiu•ncc IUIJI 20S O•an9e c .. !,r ( w. ROBERT E it.LLINGHA 1 •t s1~~ 1• 1) H (" Ch ~ ln<llv !lu• The Ohl•ld !)It delerml ned tilt g"ner•I 1'll4I Ol~TJlltT rue•vei .. ,lght 10 re. o! Lerte•J Te1tanwn ii; lo '"" Ptll EdWln J Eva I ll11 G lber! O Ive /l.~n n strator w!rh Ille w II ll~to 1 n ~ ~ • ><d~n EW 1
Way e l'On\j prt v• II IQ ralt Of per dl1m w1ge1 11'1 Ille tee! •nY or all O!di 0, 10 Wiii•• anv Ir llon•15 retere1>Ce lo • ch II made tor H~~~~,H~ ,',',',',',,,'",',torn,': Co•Oo :~~!;~~"~e1;e11:~~Jd!:n °1
!!IC ;~,~ ~o ~ 1~ "~"' <,q~t
Th, , ., 11 •n ., ,1 1le 1 "'lh the locDllly ~ which !Ills Wllrk Is to bl •tglllarlllei or lntormoll!le• 1" •nY oldi or turlller parl cu!<Jt$ •'1CI t the t m1 1na ~ ... "' , ~n ., ~ ,, ~ l 1 •~ o~ f> ~ toon ¥ Cle i..
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Ora ~e toun Y on M•¥ P" lcrmed tor each <rou er tvoe 01 In 11111 olddlno place ct ~e1r "II lhr s1rne h8t bffn ut Walk Lon11 Bedch Cdl le nla &AANES St HAG JOHNSO H ll~•• r~ 1~ 1 .., ..,1,,
1 191' wor>.n ~n needed tn e•tcore the tPnlr•cl T~ OISTll:ICT hll d<!lermlned 11\e !or Jm1'! n 1974 at 9 )Q a m n the Don.,d D MtCalla 11]12 Cd•a KEHNEDV & CARLSON I Bd own l & 8 >< , "
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Tne•e rotes are on Ille 11 the Olslrk l o•netal prev•Ulno rale of per d em wa1ie~ courlroom er Q.epartmwit No J ot ldld 1 iief-lft0l1 Torba L nda Callto n d 11Y Erne\! J St h•g Jr fl• • M 1 ~ 1 I" '11><' t~ 0 <e locdteCI 11! 1'°1 11th Stfff! cn~t at700CvcCt~l .. Dfl'leWrn In Oavld c; Mcca116 IJ!Jl llank>Ov OJS MacArthur Blvd fl~n• R~ I 1H •Hn~ LL
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Pyh •fled 0 ~ ~~ Coa t 011 Iv P ~1 Hun! nglcn Be"ch Call!o,nl1 916d CD!Jl~s In lhl locality !n wh ell lhe W<l•k 11 !o be the Cl!y of S•n!a Ana Cal!lo nla Gardtn Grove Ca to n :i P 0 Bai 111• 6~ "' l / l"O"I M•v JJ JO a a june & 11 !91' 18Jl>--7• mav "" cbl~ ntll en req~•l /l. copy al P•rlt>rmld lt>r each C at! or iYPCI ol Dtted Ml ai 19" _ This butlnt$I Is belno cono.lucled l)v • Newport lt•ch Cl llornlll '7Hl I~• ~\ • hir M • _ -r 1 wo kman netded To execu" the conlr"cl [ ' Tel 11141 t7' noo u~~ n Cp H"f~ t
l'UllLI( NQl JCL' ht"" •olt > sn~ll be POtlt'd <Jt 1111 lcb 1 le These rllltl l rt on Ille et Jir;l Pl•ttnll• WIL IAM E St JOHN !lmllld p.,r1 t 5h o '" ' AO ' 0 CT• ti.,n 1 L f i;, lhe toeQCl!!g KhedUI• of pe~ diem 1 Ccunty(terk Ellwl J Evan, orn111 or mn 1tra or 8~ Pd
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Wdges I> b••ICI UpOn a W<l<k rll! day OI Avtn~ Coltl M~sa Cop ·~tmay ~ ~O CATl ANO WILL Thll liL&lement I •d., n tne (oy tv PyOl>n!!d Oi1rn;it Co.l!I OiilY p QI llo>I Ldb ~TATEMENT OF AllANOONMliNT OF t ql'lt II) llcy ~ Tiie ra1e for holldav ona ~~':fdoeo~~r:'!, 1~1 ~~yslle tll•te 6 '' Allor.aey1 •I Law [ler~ of Orange tc~ntv nn MdY JI 1911 Mav JO and June 6 ll 20 191• l91>8 I~ !I tit> Co
US[ OF "~' t me wo ->h<Jll be 8t le•11 time .ona Tiit lor9llol"9 ltlledule ot per d em 101 NO!'lll 8r111d lll~d S11Ue olOO F140lS SQ Orn
FICTITIOUS llUSIN!SS NAME one Ill I W<J~I Is ba'eCI uPC)n a work no day of O!tndllt Clllfornla 91201 Publl111W Orang~ (oa1! 0d ly Piiot ~ o ~a~
Tne •o ow ng Pf. •:»1s htve •bAn(tDntd H 1hall be m1nda!''Y II~ lht eight !9) h(M.lr~ Tf'1'! ''" !Or holldav ;ind Tel Ull) 141-4141 M~y )0 And June 6 13 10 Iii• 19~9 ,. PUB! IC NO rll c ll .~ ';,";
tne Y'I ot hP 1 cl t ou• bu>lne" nd<ne ~"" a !or 10 wh<lm lf'1'! contr .. t t 1~ cvl rllmr work ihall be ~r ltdll lime and I Alloni1y1 tor Pt Ill Oftt•• ---U•oc • 09 1 COMPAQ 2116 [ Crd!I Hwy Co c~• tv arneo '"~ up0n any suoc:ontractcr onl!'h•tl PR 74f PUBL!C NOTICE NOTICE OF MARSHAL 5 SALE 81u en s ~ o~I M"' C;il 10,,. ~ 9 ~IS uriur him to P•Y not leH than Ille sad 11 lihlll be m•ndaloiy "!)On the CON Puollsllfd o anoe Co.t•1 OJ IY P 101 l n.otn•> oan c! Nev ''' 11nea to Ku llMA Co J
l ilt F <I cu Bu I rn °' tmt ~ ~ ~~ •De< t ed i'al~• to a I WDr~m.n emolcved TAACTOA IO whom lhl contr•tl 1 May 2.l 2( JO 1914 1t•l I' ---FICTITIOUS llUSlNESS ____ T~p I<, Pta ntl!! Vli Art hut M RdmflO I 6ot> E•0 1l
•o abo e wA> lod no ~noe Coun v cnlfl¥N~~":io; '~a~~~~~~.~: ~f~'~:t 1 •w•rdfd ano:i upOn any sul.H:D11lrac1orl -------NAME. STATEMENT 101:1er1dan1 No 125 W Flooth No 1B
AV9u•t 10 1~116 !F 2}1;1 c D I~ lt 1 Pl' Oii 01 to•lv 1 ve !'S) day~ etle the ..,00,, him to P•Y nol le11 lh•n Ille ~• d PUBLIC NOTICE Tht followhlQ ptrton 11 de !!II bu By v ue cf an e~rcullon 10sutil on ~ ~"<0 1 ~
Orn 01•' T~ •Y 1'71' H•moen L•ne I elate tel lor tllt 0 ,, 01 bid\ • ""'I ed r<Jlts lo 111 workmen emplored ___ __ ''
1
nt''1Apr 11 1914 t>Y !Ill Svofr o• Lu~ I B;.;;_',' c,~ 6 Hu~ !no on 8•~Cl'I (di forri d q'/64/ A pt n<;t flY them In tne exe<utlon gt 1111 tDn1fttl SLP 71214 FAIRWAY LANOSCAPE CO 9"S Jud')emenl tn trld SeP'dll ~tr I& 06• A 0'"" A
><arotd Keith 5ml" 111 C e:.ctnl ll•V .._~,,D•"llm~l,.,':'.",',.""1._'10o<,,'~'..m,1 ',"',', No Diddt, mtY wllhd aw Ill bid tor a NOTICE TO CAEOITOA• jC0<1n1y DI 0..a"ll~ Sttll OI Calllcrnla Bu<•I>" ~ ~ 0 L•ouna flt~ h C,.'1 I a 926S1 """'"' "'" ¥ P ...., ~v • Trenlon W1V CD•la Mes.a Cal klrn aluPOn a 1ud<1ment tnltrrd In t6v0!' ..it flue•·~ • ~
Sh 0 Ao'I 19111 8\. ~·; Hf II 10 '"" conlricl The pavm11nl bonct Jll<IU t>t perfod DI fcrlV llYI j~SI ":YI •II.,. Ille' SUPERIOR COURT OF TMI!' '2616 Tllcma• Oaniel Nt'W ltllGned ID !Curl & np SI I) u
8 11
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1 ' n ng n 1n t~t lorm 1rl lorlll In ll'le conlr•cl date ,.i lor Int cipe111ng of d~ STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOil Wllh1m R tlll•tt lleaulfeu 'l"IS Trenton Tpp kr • ludomenl cred!lor dnd aga nsl e..1 e• M 71 1.1 ""< " 11 ~ • 6• document\ A p1ymt~I bOno:I Ind I perlottn.111<;t THE COUNTY OJI OllANGE W).y Colla Ml!Mt ta11to•nla 97626 A lhu I/\ llimba 11 jucl<J,.1 I detrc; t" W! \v 11 76
lto1>e ' Ell"'~ o ~t •ncv 1 5 11 Govt nlno '""'' bond w u t>e reoulred prior lo ex1<.ut on ot No A 7"'7 This 001loe1J Is conc111c1til flY an C " >• " /.,\ nrw•Cln Ca~r• I.le•• Ca leori a '' ,.-,, ,-.,,," Ille conrretl Tiit' ....,,men! bond \h• I be '''''' '' LE•• M EC•E•'ON ••• 1no,., ng a net balance ot i5 61110 acluallv dm 'I y,. b 11 ieu fl """' .--~ lndlvld11•I I oue on sad judgmenl on lt>e d•tt of ih4! c .. non Ml 11 11
' U> '''"' wd' <on llC Y ' A\•liianl Supe•ln!flldtnl In ll"ol form nt h>rll\ n l~e tontflltl LETA M!LOAE O ECK ER SON OectuN Wiii am 11. 8t'aYI eu •iuJnCf c;t Sil o ~ll"wl Jn I h.J f I v ca Caymd~ 1 )
gtner I !1 .;: ~~ ~" "'Un O/\ ,d May 11 191• oocumtnh NOTICE JS HEii.EBY C VEN !O 1111 Tiil• !llltmenl WIS I led w II ne!uoon a I lht 1191\I 1 tie •nCI !11tere1t oil CC MOVg QI • \~
11
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S Puol ,,.eo O an111 Coa10t O• ty P 01 Ccver,,Jng Bna•d crPditart of !hr abeve n'mfil aecedenl County [le k of 0 ange C1Nnlv on May I s.i 0 udgmen1 aet>tcr ,, tile proiie 1y n (~~1 n t'6 1~ 1: l~, , ~t~ ~~t " , fd ., 11 ne Mftt 11 JO 91.1 1860 I• Bv OorctllY Harvev F •hi!' 11111 all oetsont nav 119 cl~ ms again•! th' 28 1914 Fl •lU 11e Ccuntv ct O•ange sra e ot C•I fa•nla I er~ c,,1 n • 17
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""'le '"' Y on Mdy Pu cna~ln11 Ag~nl p 101 Ill d detedenl ~re reciu red ID I le them de~{r t>e<t 1, to low! Cllmp Pt > 6
21
"" PUBLIC NOTICE P~11l 1MG Orange 01•t 0111¥ 1910 I• wlln lht nrce•$••Y vovchr • n 11\e atllct PYOI shed Orftnge (Cl t Daly I' u Let 62 Trld 43 \ •• per map recc•dtl:I (llance A 1 • 11 0~ Y ,P 11~~' --~ _ May 10 d!!<I June I lt7" _____ ::; ":r:;:~ ";~~ 1~v~h rn:;:.ltd n~°';~: .. o; M•Y .'.ID end June 6 1l 'Xl 9)4 19~ I• i" ~~~ ~o~~ge~ J9-4~0~~ of("~~c:-Y II ~.;;',, ~o0 1; ,!
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I> ~v 7l lil ~"a Jyne o 191~ l&~? I• SUPERIOR COURT OF THE YO..Cllert ID Ille undt r•IOned a lht Law Pl:JBLIC NOTICE c611tornla Ap No 119 .., OJ .-nd ~~ BX IO 1
STATE OF CALIFORNIA l'OR PUBLIC N01 ICE Oft ct ol TJIVCST/l.O & OOELL 1130 W __ __ ccmmcn v known ... 2~lf. S r~m cl ' c }I 100 THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Olvmp c Blvd Ste 311 Let Arn;ielt li I mtt Roal! Cc~•a Mesi Cal,.,..~ d [ c in\ UI 1~ ~I
No Ab 11217 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Ca tern a 9001S whkll 11 lht 1>l11ct ~I S.U .. ERIOR COURT OF THE NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN that Dl1 (ti u I\ 15 1•
CITATION 4AE STE .. PAllENT NAME 1TArEMENT DV• ntsJ ot the unoer~ Qned n dU ma11e J STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR T11e1<;tav Junr 15 1914 •t i 00 cc f>Ckl C ~ k M ?4 JS PUHi IC 1".0TIC.b:
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AOOPTJON) 1 ,.e tollow ng Pl .on 110 dclr>Q cus nei~ Pf laln ng lo lhe estate of •<Jld deceden! THE COtJNTT OF ORANGE P M di I on! of Cov 11'.0use Or~nge t vepl. 10 11
RESOLUTIOH OF TH E IO•llD OF In hr M11!ef cl tf'1'! Adepl on Pe ton"'' Wlhn tour monnt 1tter tne llttl HO A-ICI064 CouMy Hark>Or Muncp~I Court •101 C•• l • 8 l,..., e c o
EOUCAT!ON OF THE NEWPOllT O! GA~V LEE GOTTSCHl\LK <Jl'ld ALTA'!' I M P ORT E R S ANO l'Yblc111onof lhsnattt NOTICE 0, HIAAING OF ,ETITION JambC)ee lld (11y DI Nl'Wpc"1 Beach (cw CP ~ ME.~A U .. IFIEO SCHOOL OISTR IC1' CYNTHIA l(All EN co T T SC H A l K OISTRIBIJTOllS :JXtl 'i11rbc, B•~d No Oa ed Mav 1 1914 'OR .. AOllATE OF Will ANO FOii. Ccunh of Oranoe SJftlt cl Cal fc n <I cooe:; a
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OF Oll:ANGE COUHT Y CALIFOllN1A Aooot "II Pa tnl1 DI Co•I~ Me•a CetH~rn 11 9'1~26 JOHN R YOU NG LETTERS TESTAMENTAAY w JI tell a! PUbht •uctlon lo lhe h ghesl ~~~( t<.! ~ Mly 11 1t1' lo GARV LEE K!OOEll lhe lalhtf Cf (11 I O (;eo 11e 992S Atltr Cree E•ecutor of Ille W II DI e_,1111 of LILLIAN R LALIME flldde lo Cdlih n 11wtyl money ol 1he Ccmm C! ?
0" nc on n1 Mtmb<' Tnomas C w d m nor Pt<IDn na.....i l!! Petiti on Foyn!•ln Vi l ey Calltorn 1 '7171)1! 1111! abeve named deceCltnt Otctl!td U'lllrd SM1ei dll l he r QM 11 le ana Cml sn111 1• C~ t, d~ y 1~c~ndrd ""1 C* r ti! 11>e t>t "II TAMARA BETH 1(100£11 Thi\ 0111 nen 1i co...,udrd bV en 1'11:YG5.TAO A ODELL NOT ACE IS HE ii.E BY (;IVEN !~~I lnte es! ot '" U udgmehl doflto 1n Ille (., NI C,.., o •~I c"' "Q 11.,0 u ~n .... , .tllcP ti! llV 0•114'• ol this CoUt1 you a e twretiv !od v dv•I j UJCI W Olympic lllvd SI• l\J LORAJNE. JAMISON n•tnld " tile •bovt dl>t < De<! proptrtv Cf w mut'1 cni ... l P 11
WHEllEA\ •OPt•n 111t •ne 5 •ti clled and ttqul•td to •Pilf•r belcre 1"9 C• Io Ceo 11e l o• Anttltt. C1Jlfornl1 ftlOl! decldelll'• Wiii 1, Lor • mo Jamison ant1l 'llrre<>f "' may be ne(fU• ¥ c 1>11ll1tv (p1 t Auto
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llc•o ,. E *" tnl~ y :i.c11eo1 'le 1leq1llJuC1ge P rild 1111 Jn Deoattmenl 11 ol lhl Th 1 \tdttmtril "''' t td w 1n the I (1111 "II l06CI WILLlll.M JAMISON have fl~ hire n 1 ~aid e~ecyl on w In att !141P nl~re\1 Ind (pl v' ~e~• o"1 °';,. " ~d~'~' n"'9e':,to1 :;: e '.;: ~~ t:~;,""n~,"!: ~01,.,tsa~~·~~a ''c1:t10C n~~t icu7~r, Cltfk ot 0<1nge Counl~ on Moy "~:~~~for o'"::~·~na•t 0• ly Piiot :'.:~::;, :" L~~~'~.~~m":.::',,.:n;'o :: co~!1ca May 28 1911 • ~~~n ::~~ ~; •
ac ~• tn' ~Id e Ho,p '"' lri ermrCllttt ' ~ on Julv IS 1•11 •t 9 00 I m "' 11\1t Fl111CI M•Y 9 16 21, lO lt1• 1MI 1~ iietlt oner• relarer1<;e 10 ~ hlch 1 made tor Divis Cll HarflOr to a , t o ti.
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• •lonQ• f1> l l?~ io 1 II<'"' <.<> 11 •; MIJ<o•m ~ 10 M.td (,~ t•l'O 1 ot c on " ""'"" ,...,~ o ,.1111 dAY !Mn and tnert to •hOw c•11te f YOO Pua l1nM Orange ""~'' :la ly P 01 lurtner P•rllcut•rS end 11111 the time and DON E. RHE/l. Cou' n' o
md ~td f 1> 1 B <Cl 1 • ng of tl j""ve 'IY wllv •• d Pl'""" •t>outd not be ~~d June 6 n _"_l91• 1'-C~ 1•1 pl•ct al lletr roQ 11\e Jiffit Ills bttn stt l'>\trsh.11 Or1nge Ccun f lc•o\' Cc I•
n c r 0 "'" •0 ,, oria • ~ r on o• the ~doo!f!I and •'9.trd"" an!I t eitrd •• "" PUBLIC NOTJ CE l1or June 11 191' at ' lO a m n l~t fly Ma•lrnt l B o ~n 1 "' v C u1tn II I
l '"A'I~ ( """' a~ '"' 4 le Q • t c., I~ of Ille Pett CM• MtOrdlng '" lho PUBLIC NOTICE tcu troom of Oeparlmtnt Ne J of sa><il Norm1n E Rudolp~ Cu 1 No ~
<It' ~• on ~ •" l'<I iw t •o .,,.., ,. .o ••d Pet 1 on on J e he ~ n FICTITIOUS austHESS I courl ar 100 Cl~ t (en I er O ve We11 n Pl• nl 11 • AllO•MY 0.nl n!I 1
E n c 1 C 1 ccn• 't nQ e1 ~ n o<f ~ l~••I O~ted Ap l 1& l9l• FICTITIOUS IUSINESS I NAME STATEMENT the Cltv 01 S.tnl" Ana ,..al lcr 1 11) Gt1n1d1 Sift Clemente (11 to n I ~!~ 01i>!i !
1c ' J t na! "°" '"a * I N °" ntrdt:UI !SEAL NAME STATEMENT f"e !ollow rn;i person s 110 n11 Ou$ nen Dated M11y l1 lt74 91'11 D~~rn M l IO~~c~':~~~·--.... ocz :110\" ~:: \ .. .:,~ hA• ~;L;:I~::;. ~ ;1 ~~,H~e~~~f k n},n~,,.·~~cw "II "''~"' ~re Cle 'Ill ~-111.V NE ENV RO •M NT •Jill I t~t,.~vArle~ St !OH I ~~~ ~:~::tr C1I !Grn I tU1l &'~ ~ J?~ 10
o!le fd to OU th" e t• 11 ral,, epl!rlY to• HARPY A OLIVIR LESCOUL E MEOICAL SERVICES B re~ St NtWPC)rt Be•~, C.111crn.o• .·.~ •• '.'!,',~ ..• 0•• •• ·~ •• ''" ~p~~c ~ne;1,,d 0;:~:e6 c~·j~,,o .. ¥ ~ !0
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~n , ""d •< ~· 0,, p~ l>O>f• "'Int t>ll• ~ 1100 AV•l'llHI ol tllr Sl1n ''' "''''''' •o Ho IOI Now""'' 91(16!1 • '" • L I of '11 000 "'" A< • tor ~ ~ •tt Hosp •I S11lll lllS lle•cll Ca 1'7U.0 "" rv n• Pools Inc d C•I t r 1la cet 111 E•ll OhV• Avtn,,. ------(l ~"' t ••
! ~m•n •r s e •Jl \16 u.r • ,. Jr "e Los A"flltt CAUltrnll tot:M1 Aoue 1 E L•moe 1 l)Ol ,; no• Rd OD•U on •JOI Bl•th <1 NtwpOrt 8 urb1nll C•UlorRll tl SOl PUBLIC NOTICE I g ~~ ~~ s., ~ lto•r IAI nit mt!I llt • tc •ndl Ttl•P"-CJ!J) Vt 1100 Be~ ~ Cal torn a 916.0 A"orn1y for Ptlllloners ·-----~~~=~-------.,,,, • ·1;z~ ;'" n •~ l •2•M.rint •
-0 ,, NevrDO I Bto~1' Ca 97660 , [ ~ ,H6\0 pe A<~t > ~M11<>,•r c e Anorn•yl..-P•ltllor.tn ~vv A L L&'ml>rrl llOl IC lld n 1 ~u1ne" s tcnduC!ed b• a Puosned Or&ngt Coa•! Oaly P/101 SL .. 1'111 Oo Gt-n
T n oe El<"'~" v • r D OODltO lo De Puhl •llrd O•at"ll" Cw O~ ~ Piiot Newoo 1 B•ldtl Ct 91660 ng• co t>Qra! l)n M.ty 0 ll 11no June 6 191' 19•1 14 NOTIC• TO Clti:OITORS I Oona d•
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\JHEll eAS '~" , n ~c• nt 1 11 e• _ __ Tn I flu' tu h COndut rd by 1 <J<'nt a Th • 5l~tement v as ti ed w 111 ne PUBLIC NOTICE ~TATE oc CAL IFORNIA FOR "'·~ !• , " rn'1 ~ m y w I nl pa Me lhlp Cg,,..lv Cle k ol O .tno• ..... univ O'I M~· • '""-----------------------~-----"! ,. • ><• -~ Rebert E Lamlle 1 ,.,' ._v , • THE CO NTY OF 0 AHGE I ! Cn"' m~nl Ce<l• Sl'I: n" 6 d•"' PUBLIC NOTICE '"'' "'''monl wa• l ie<! .,th the 1' •T74 -----,,:o-.,,_ t-lo A1fS11 '" orio w n n••e A 1 .;in l c~"'I ___ ---FJJUS .. ,...,. •• EL M G 110 Ell ~ "" ~ """ on """ Coun v Cle k o! Orftnl)e Ccunly on May PublMhro 0 anqe C~d t Oa ly plot lsuPERIOA COURT OF THE STATE OF E•l•lt of ETH A N MUTUAL Fu N D""
l v r H ( R ! ' 0 II E llE IT ~p 1"21S ?S \97j ,,.,,, May!~ 2l JO ana June"\ 1V1• 1 •91• CALIFOANIA FOA ~oll!"de s HEREflV GIVEN to the 0
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co~oev )UPERIOll. COUAT OF TllE f'yol, ru o "n~e Co"" ~" tv p o J>UBLlC NOTICE No MOOf.l c ell !Pr• ol tno 1cove n•med uecwent l .. ____________________ ., ________ ..J ~ rn •oor 1, ta ~~ l V ti fo•! SlATE OF CALIFORNIA FD~ a~ X. ftMd June• 11 0 1YI• 191 I• N01'1CE OF HEAAING OF PETITION Iha! ~ll pcr<ons naong ct1rn1 agani I< II•~ ru ,u~nt 10 EOYCI ..,n (DClt $tel<~ THE COUNTY OF OAANGE FOii. PROIATE OF WILL ANO FOii. •ad decto<le'11 are requ •l'<I c t le tM~m N•w Vo k Fo
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,... "" ce ~ t~ n No A HSOI IJUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS LETTERS TESTAMENTARY " tn the nee~,,.. Y vcucn~ l n tne c f <t ow ng , d ,, ct o v L, b 1 onn• n~ ~ riAW•• on tn• !Ole"' "'I !t<ld t cnal E• a e ot EVELYN G MALONEY NAME STATEMENT Eliltte ol HORACE Cll.DE N Oecea•e!I 1ct the C!Ork OI the aflOve ent lrd <OY 0 Od ~nd ~'>•~d o 0 •' LA I Oii JOHN H•NCOl'">f" "
m l1 lh~ ou cn•i~ p 1,e 1,.a tK' OPCfd ed FICTITIOUS IUSINESS Tne tallow "II iie ~n• arr Cle n9 NOTICE. 1~ HEREflV CIVE N !Ir.it MAX lo ::iresen! IM•m with ht nect "a v te\ ori Mu ua ISO ~ ..,., Sn~ IU '
<•l<u • f'l UPCl" n~ <Otnrltllon of ~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ~ NAME STATEMENT flylness "'' FINK Ila' t led herl! n a pet 1 on !O 1 ~oucht•• 1o !he undtrJlgn!d at tne Law FuJld' a• ouot~d Oy l d C.Pnl ~ >0 ~ C.•w ~
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"" p 1 td ~"ct !hr• t~ ol tl<"O c , ol ~i aco•r n•m110 de t<Mn l'f.IE HAHGING SPREE • 0 I Prottalt cl Wiii and tor Issuance cl l011 c~ er AXELR/l.0 SEVILL/l. & ROSS 1~ NASO "< ~&E Mu l ll I '>\nA
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,,. 0 , ~· nnn nJ i:.. O• d n '"'" 1'1 llna al pe •Dnt hilvh"l!il ,1• m• 111• n•1 tl'H! Troe 1111 aw nu pe•Sllt'll arr de ng Pr "celon 0 Cot!a Meli& C•lllo nl<J Lt ter• Ttitamtn1a y to ~e i>el 1 cne 10203 San!J Mcnlc1 B vd Ste 400 Lei W•dnt•d•Y IE~'~N(, 1 • • • ; ICCE•••"•~'"E "'
Ari ~" 0.., ~ 1 ~ o~ncd "'In tne F • Iii d dtteden! ~ e lt<:IU •!Cl to Ille them flul n~s' a• 9?61~ •efrttr1<;t lo wh ch 1' milde lar lurlher Ang~ es C•l lorn d 90061 wMlch ' he Mlt• 1Q ;1• HOWAllO CY 1 1 1 ,..
"" t c•n T 11~ cornoenv sa 11 esc cw lo w th Ille necenarv vcucn• ' n 1ne J>ll';i,.~. H•~"ZAKifOpM.,';.AICN ~ANl~ c A~Ag l llu1~ E Fo•ger•on NIA 1106 Wiss p1rt!cul• 1 and rllat ll'le 1 mt and place P!"ce ol C"' nHJ of tne unoe S<gnfd n dill e d Ai~ Bil n Fd 1 j/ ~'?I (u 1 .,,
t>ot tomp~!Nl our nQ June \911 et 1111! oil ce of lhe Cltrk ol lhe ilOCvt enlllltd l?ll Weil F 11 Stree! S•~ta Ana St Tu't n C<JI tcrnl• q1680 ol l'lea Ing 111t iame ha~ been •el tor June mane s perlalnl119 lo the f lililf cf Jdldl •om Cw J 10 l <1111 GWln F 9 71 1n ~ Cr>! «I •~
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or•cl c~h • d•!c illl 111.e tDI' of cou•t or to pre$tlll !Mttn w ti\ I~ Cat fern 1 .,103 R Cllilrll K S mmon• .01 Pr nlrlOn 18 191~ •I 9 30 • m In Ille courtroom ol drcedent wllll n tour monlll• •lie ~ Adm l"t 111 l H ncme ~ •O ~ 91 tu t K1 ,,
'" euro .. nch;ll "II 1 tit lnturilrl(;' to ntce'" y voucher1 10 lhe \lnde••lgned /\I Edwin J Elllnt JJn G Ille 1 Orlv' 0 Colla Met• C1llfornl1 92626 De0trlment No 3 ot 1., d court a l 700 t r)I puOI C6!1on of 11111 "°'ct Aom In• I 01 110 Spec l F S ~I 6 Ii Cu•I ~) •
be -• d DY ht c >' !he LIW OH tt ot 0 MELVE NV & H nl ~ion llrich Ct lllcrn • T" S tws Ml•• I• COndlKle<I fl• a 111nt•1I C vie Center D• Vi' We•I n 1he City ot Oaled Apr I ?• 197~ ~~.v 'It!'~ ,'",; ', U •'o'", s'od
9 °" q Q{) CV'i! '> ~ l~ -OLVEO OO O 1~· MYERS 611 Wet! S xlO St LOS AoOtlej 11 '"Y pa ln~rill p ( IOI (llOCICEll NATIOHllL SANK and/..., na d .,... IO •l IO •l (u\! ~l Bf IT FUllf"Ell RES I "" Jolln H Peter111n Jr IS Cor nlhlan • 00 E F S•nla Ane • oml1 EDWIN LEWIS (;ARONEll: Atlna n 1119 11 •l Eq el GI 9 I~ IOC Cu I '>.o
(IP ., 01 tn 1 Ba..rll $n•ll ouol \h th s Cillllo<n a 90017 which h the pl6ce ot W I\ Lo 11 11 C••llcrn u o 'ltr'Son Oaild MIY 11 1971 •tul\I t I 6" I &• E 1un T 1 n •l llPo lo P••olyl on n 1 r 0-•nQt (Odll 0• ly flU\ln<'li• ot the "nderslgnecl In all malltti ~ I !lg t it C W 1• ( ,1 Tll S ~laltmtnl wa• lllrd w!ll'I 11\e WIUIA"'I E SI JOHN C<t-E•t'CUID I o! t"" W II ACE Fd • 10 , 11 Eme q , 'i~ p., d ,
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~~ .,..~~~ t tn "' "' kl r to Junr 11 put>I c II 0.1 ot lnls Miiier Oa~ill (; Mt 1 8 I a nCOw Fl3116 1111 WILSHlllE ILVO STE 7M 10101 S1nl1 Monie I &lvll Ste 400 AmCdl> F" l ~1 • 71 Fm Bu P 1 ~I I SI Lndm • 1 , ,.,1 on In ~, D \ r " once w tll ~ tour tnOl'l llll tllt r 11'1• fl••' ••mo or C 11 ll\J °"'R \I 1911 MAX FINK llCELAAO SEVILLA & AOSS I A C>"-t Fd ; •l 10 JI"• Id ~ o '/Q Kn• c.1n
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"~ J r t r n J• g cl >Jt~ Odl'd Mly l 197• G~ d£n (;rove (II t~nl" b Publ \~ed O•a"llf! Coa!I Oa ly Piiot a&Vt:RLV HILLS CALIFORNIA to21J LOS ANGELES CALIFOllNJA t0011 Am B lh q,, 10 I~ Ffd Rll~ II 'j/ LO Eo ~ ~• J 18 SI \ll EHLO G~
~ t fo~•~ PlllRICIA l VN MALO .. EV Tri S bUS neu ' be ng conclucled V a A av 16 23 JO and June 6 197, 116s 14 {JU) ll"l f1ll 11131 J/1 1110 A"' Ov ' I I• 8 'FIDELIT Y LE)( GAOUP ~YE ~ itEM8CllS "'m nu g ' v e ~ecut I• ot thew n Di Im tl'<I 01r1nersn D A 1 p 111 Allornt Y• tor c o E•ec .. 1or1 "'"' Eq11 4 OS '••1GllOUP I Co L•ll
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>< d t , 1 0 ,, th _ -~ , ., , Edw n J Ev•nt PUBLIC NOTICL' llOrMY or t tontr t>oot ·""ed 0,.,,e Co•\! Dd I" P 101 I AM E .I P•!SS Bnd a o 8 t• • ~1 c. ... 1n fi e CP•an dS~V 'n e ~ ..... ve n•n-= re tn 11111 litaltmenl I led w 1~ lhe Coun y c. Pub llMl'd 0 ange Cc•~! 0111 y P lo! '•0•0 Jl .,,, lYI• ' l~•l l • FU,.OS c ~oMI •tun R~ r<~
t.. >cl ! n S,.,. w.JOCI Thcmp 0 MELVENY & MVliltS (tr IO. of Orange (O\/nly on M•Y Jl l9ll ---M•~ XI JI 1nd JuM 6 197' 19591• M•Y ""' C•Olll 'I) 10 6 11\ Cont a • L I• n v
,.OL5 MEM•i='R~ Ncn• 111 W•ll SIJlh SI "' Fl402I FICTITIOUS llUSINESS l'll:om ,q 8 9 c~ SS<!< t I L "C CM> Afl~(Nf ME'.MllCt~ cne Lal An!lllH Callknll tooll Puollshtd O an111 Cot ti 01llv Plot NAME STATEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE ~';;.Im : ~~ ~~~I ~! ~ ~; ~~t'~~ ~TATE Of CALIFOA A l,1t~!~..:.7:, 1:!: li.J<tc•lrf~ M•v JO June 6 11 2n 1971 19~3 I• fne loUowlng person s oo!nu flu•lneu -------__ S1oc:k "11 e 12 e~ .. '>! ~ 11 10 &I Cdl> D•
COUNTY OF ORAN GE Puhl s~t'd D 1119' Co111 Oa IV Pl ct 11 SL,. 7413' PROPER TOOLS """' C lh • 911 < u Funcl 11• 1 6 Mu ~
1 M• en [ lie 9eson V lf P e1 den! May 9 16 71 30 1914 16'11 II PUBLIC NOTICE ANCHOR l TD 3'17 Peppy Ave SUPERIOR COURT OF TN& MAkE JOB EAS y llm ln1ln J llJ • 19 Pu In 0 ll ~' LORD ABR
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Cl• , ol !ht Board :f !c~u 1l Oi"trc~t ~~ C~=r de~ M:crc:111~;~!a p~~~~ Ave STATE OF CAt.IFORNIA FOii. :::: ,;~~1 ~ ~ i ~ ~ae~';;° F i l: 10 ri~ :~ ~fl Ne wgorl /Jle>~ u~ t e c I><> ' ''' FICTITIOUS aUSINESS ~~• THIE COUNTY OF OAANGE llmNt G 1 l!'l ? a FINAN[ll>L Bnd ~ ~ O•~nq" cc11n v C1<1ltarn!1 lie •DY''' v PUBUC NQ11CE NAME STATl:MENT Co ona del Ma Callfc n ii 92625 N&eootS ANCHOR GROUP PROGRAMS LUT~ElillN h~t tht ~oove Ind to ,gong Rt~I en SLP '''" The fol!o"'lng pei.ont are dong Thls bu• nest rot1ducted fly an NOTICE OF HEAAING OF PETITION (; w1n 6 b o S I' n D>n Ron J
6,11~ •l ~' du v ~nd •tUIJ\A V 6dDOled lrY M bu• ne•s ~' fndl~M:lull FOR PRDaATE OF WILL ANO FOii. ncom 0 JO I> 'lO F n rttl J O I~ B o n "d Bl)ll 0 I • eoulll mlltllnQ !hf f(lf NOTICE TO OflEOITORS AURORA c HA II.T E Rs 17571 Jlogll" F Morn LETTERS TESTAMENTARY fle>tfV 0 ]1 I JO F " In( ~ 10 10 a ~ u~ ~ti,i en oe 11~ dAV ol M~• 191~ •rid SUPERIOA COURT OF THE Shorflrook Tustin CaUlornla '7680 This 11alemenl wa' I ltd w tn Ille Eit<Jle (If Alll Ell.T II.ANO BALOWIN Sp0c! l 11 • 01 v~"! j i l ~ Mil.SS CO I>~ rd nv , nan """' •O e at 1 1 ne STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOA Kennell\ it. John"°n nsn Sile b•oa-toun1y Clerk ot Or<Jnge County on M•v U Oeceitld Fnd In• 6 ()8 •Mo \tFd Va • J1 • b& F r rr
m mbi'" ot ,4 d BCll'd T+IE COUNTY OF ¥-ANGE Tu• n C• llo•nl1 926-80 1914 f•••>> NOTICE JS HEii.EBY GIVE N Iha! toul; " Wa N~1 1a 11 1 O'I r~~S.T lnoo .. Wl•N~S wH••cOF I n~ve No Al,.11 ..,.. it.uda~ F SoJ 615 0 ,,',',o",,, ..,, .. o11~rd p StrGUd 1lt Wo!nut NeiNport R•Y Himmel h1s I led llere n a pelt an A.1£ ~MA SS h• •u'llo :iel y hlO\d •M ,,. "$ 2 !I EJ1dle DI ERNEST E VEHRS C"I lorn 1 91M2 Put>! shed 01ange Co.i~t Oal!y Pltol tor p olMte ct Wiii 1tnd fer 11011anc:e ol HOUGH TO°' C..th FO ~ J o A f""CL
<1avo,.Mav 74 Oece~1.td Jacill \/Intent 11~1 S•nt~ L•anQra May2J 30 anaJune 6 l) 197• 1•s11'Lel1rr1 Te10t•mtnlirv to lhe pettloner Fu"<I I> •Ol •Jll lncom JO 80.l M i..
MARIA"6 C BEil• l NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 the f'11Unli lnValtr¥ C.illtorna '770& reference IC which II m.tde lo• lurthe Fu"'1 A 02S O o Sia< F 6•1 1 M L
(ler"' of •ii d c rd'°"'' ol the •bDvl n<Jmrd dectaenl T,.1, ooslntH Is cond11Cl'1<1 by 1 oenerdl PUBLIC NOTICE p1rlltuldr$ 111<1 tl'lll !he 1 me anCI plate Sloe • S 10 SOB •I M~ 1 I M' D s1111 9 ot E<1uca1 on 11111 all oe•sont 11avlng dMql$ 1g1!nJI the oortnenlllo o1 IM••lnu lhe w me ,.., been sel /er June 6 r Sc l 'I l Q)IF" m SP .H 1 M(J•
PuOI '""' or .. nge Cc11• 011 y plot ••Ill dtce<lenr ..-e required lo Ille !him FICTITIOUS &USINES5 11. 197• ar 9 30 . m n !hr courlroom or RLC Cl'> ~ 1~ 0 01 FORUM Gl'IOUP Ill , 191 UIJ II win Ille n~\Jary Ywthl!rs. In rllt olllce Kennelh Jonnson R~O"'" q 28 o 1a
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100 f"d a " ....._,, i.. ~I n Jll .na J11ne • ' '" •• ',, '" ~'''"' I Tllll illlrmtlll W<J1 'lt<t w Ill !he NAME STATEMENT Dep1nn11nt No l al 11ld tQllrt ~, IOO ~ e., C( • 90 I ).I rn l'nd I '~ j n --D 1 c ... r e • our or CQ11ntv Cit,!< of O..angt Covnl'/ on Mtv Thi folio• 119 ptrlon 11 dDng tMlslrwss Civic Ctnlllf Orl•t Weil n Ille City of tJ Ray~ 'I • •l •ti.I Co um ~M'l , "
l'UBLIC l'\OTICE 10 1>•esent !hem 1111 !!rteu .. u Y 21 1911 a• S1n11...,,. Ctllforn!• 6't<ri HI 1 ,, •117 Funct •'-'>'I r 1
voochett to Ille U •' !I'll Law fl41U tJ S OIS Tll.IBUTORS EXCHANGE O•ltd MIV 2&, lt7' by TERRY GltAMT Rn., 6'olcon 8 11 8 11 Fdn G J i!Mt Rn"
011 c~ ol LEONAR D OLLAND 1l!.!o0 Publhhrd Or•~ Ccatl t')p ly Pllol ml N H1rbor 81Yd .. osh Mt M c1n WILLIAM E SI JOHN Be ~\h ) QI J,., FOUN0£RS M I f J
lilt A ll'OM Broo~htHSI SI Sle J Ct rdtn GroVi' and Ju'1f 6 ll 20 1tl• 19'11 71 fl.1,n a 92676 COUnly Clt,k 8orill•I• J 11 • UIGllOUP tJ. f G n sUPERIOA COURT OF THE C1 Uo n!a t16"0 wh th Is 1ne Ol•ce ot Mav JO Oan!tl Clfl\ton Ltl'ln'llll llt 920 Irv Ill LOUIS A AIJOl!T \\ h r 11 \Olli ( l11l tl 11111 Ill Bolt l'dn 8 18 8 9•1 c;.w1n • ~• n .MuQm al
5TA1E OF CALI FOR ti IA FOii: flll,lne•• "' lhl und'en!g"ed In 111 m•llert PUBLIC NOTICE BJIO Newpof'I Beatll C1lllornl1 91660 >Ill WILSNlltl! aLVO STE SU I\ • ti " "11 h I \J l 1 61own 1 ~~ 7 6) .. nc~m I Ill\
1,",J MuOm n THl COUNTY OF ORANGE P<!rfa n ng to 1111 esl1te cl s•lll decedent Tl'llt fl<1,lnen I~ tcndlt>Clrd by •ll LOS ANGELES CALl,011.NIA 900IO '"' B nhm i 11 8 &2
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AN KINS w lhln lour mcnlht 1ttrr lht 1Jr1I ndlvtd111I CllJ)*-4144 '(1 IPl 11 1 \!HI 11111 lh C•LVI NFU'IDS l'S0o r o q~~Mul Tr E t~te ot ll ETl'V JA'I H FICTOTIOUS aUSIM!SS Su Fo O 41 ! uf:Fo" 'o<1 f ~l 111"-'~ ~" • Oe! ~~d ouollc~t!cn ol 11'11• noHte Oan!tl Clln1Df1 Litt>mnn 111 Att.n11y tw PtlllilMr 11 I (1 tl\llH!" n h 11111 r (en fd q 11 o f>O FllA,.KLt N ,.AT SEC l'O ~
Ne• rt 11 h!reby gl~•n ID crl(I tors of O•ted M•Y 1 lt 74. NAME STATl!MEfiT Th 5 slallfM.nl wa1 lllrd w !h ll\e PuOlltl'lld Or•ll!le C~ll 0 1Hv Pilol I [ [ I I 0 • s~ 1 8~ l I ~OUP n~ ~"
the eoovr tamed dlect<Mril th•I •II BETTY MAY HARii.i~ Thr fcllowlng persons 1re do\1'19 (CunlY Clerk. of Orange (DYlllY on May May .)0 ]1 fod June 6 191~ !OSe 14 l 1 Ill HI f lll l 1 I It 1 Na .,d I•• 9 2S 0NfC O 1 6 I ~no S
peion• ha~ng clalm• io1ln1t 11>e ••d Admlnl•lr1trU{ol lht F.1t~reo! 11u11rw11 as 11 197' \)U hi.Il l lu 11111.1 d NY veri H99 •84 GWlh ~f bkl ~'~ D••"
dKtdent a 1 rl!'<lulred 1o Ult !hem 'wllll Ille 1bCIYI named dtctdenl EP,Nl ZIMM Elit COMPANY 1 I m ltd FlllM PUBLIC NOTICE 00 llil "II ,1 , 11 0 CG Funa B 03 8 ~ F ln(m •~ !14 P •I ":ol' !he nece!SarY volltMf rJ n he o!tlct ot Lt:ONAlitO R HCM.L.lND jlflrtllltfiltllp doln9 bin "MUI 11 LAKE Publlih!d Orl nge Cai•! O•llY Piiot 1 j " Cent Sh' Q&I 10~1 1
USC.v S q ll 1n7~ nonm
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-<lork 01 Ille ~bo'le tn!ltl~d court er le UJSO llreokh11r•I SI SI• J PAii.ii: LA HABll:A SOO SOlllh Palm La M•Y 1' 11. lO Incl J u.ne 1 197, \16+-J~ --------1 uniJd id\ 11 1 1. t t I C~al Inv I l• 8 D11 Ut I " l '>2 1 8& \10t.:• \ \ P
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•• I 1-o ··~ ~O<K~I .. G•rdln Grevt Ctlllont/1 t2440 Hl bf"I Calllorrtll 90631 __ ---NOTICI! 01' MA.ASHAL S SAi.ii. ,... 1 CHANNING l'ies C~p S II ~ l~ G ... n I
ROGERS q.RNE,S llNO PLOOSlElit AtlorMY tor Admh1htr1lrl• Hunll119tonl11th Ct!Uornl• PUBLIC NOTICE L ndJllY Otlendtnl NG 38 315 lll\ltli.! th ll ,..hl Ill Il l.; it.me• •• ~ l70F M O ~ O'>'>j~D<JIV 1 1~1' udll'
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lSllll s Pa •n'IOunl Bl•tl P1rGn cunt Puflll\htd Or•!!ll• c-t o.lly P lol John H Peterion Jr 15 Cortnlht.ll ------&y v1,111e ot i n ••ecullon lt$Uld en , 1,, ''' , •,, 111 1 3~dri<id 1117 : ~ FiH~s11~,.,P•J ~l Gr .. n " 1 ~ 1~:~
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~0es~11; !n~~111~"' ~'(":;;·•alike'' ol (JUI S1f lltl Edwin J EVl!!t 3312 (;llOl!rt Orlve, -Oonald B Ayres J r Pt!ntltf vs l O \l :JI LC'\\ 11f 1\1.:111 -.. 11 h l ! l'UHDS F.~s Cti~ ~ ?{ l ~l~EW EN CL~ .t l
(ii IC nli 'IOnJ whl'h !J the pl1te of M8V 9 16 23 lO 1971 J 16•1 I~ Walk Long Btttl'I Call lorn a ,ICTITtOUS llUSl°NESS Marci\ I 197• by lhfl MUnlclp•I Courl \ s " I Enl f G ~ l 6 90 ROUP n ;m • Un
hu\ n~~• ct lht unae" 9ntd In &II ma!t~r\ Oon1ld O McC•lla 17372 t1~1 NAME STATEMENT Harcor J Udld11 OISlrlcl County of ~ l ~ll l EQtv P 1 41 7 ~~ C<> nm ~ o N >1 '-' ~1 1 ~ 1 Ptl"1nlng 1otM •~tA!eal 11ddecrdenl PUBLICNOTJCI Hermosa Vorfl~Llnd" (lllllcrnl~ Tiie fol awn11 person1 •r• dolng o,a"ll• Stal• cl C1lll11,nl1 ""'°"a r1<11>.m ~11 b 9 Imo•~ o 3 ~• .. ~,,L • JUNOH \EliVIC wlhn •oY• months •llt the f •st O•vld c; McColl~ 1Jt'J1 11.anbClw b~1lne1sat 11udgmen1 cnteredl!!lavar ofDan.ldB \rt: )OU lllllt •ll lht t.wlh l ~l •ll lnC11> I ~()6 ~~u"'" ~/GROUP
pubt!c•tlon ol tlll1 notice -~ --Gardtn Grovt Calllo•nl<"I EPM ZIMMEA COM"'ANV a llmllt d Ayre~ Jr e1 h.ld11ment d~btcr 1nd 1goln10t rito n 6 OJ ~ 1q P ot ~ 18 Q 'l ,. o •l 1911 FICTITIOUS •USINES9 J11ndal H Zlmmtr 1731 W L1mberl 01rtr1or10hl1> 1107 E11~! Cl apn ~n Jove T O Llnchlev a1 ludomenl Clet>lcr d I r fl! f C n I ~ It " So--1 ~1 I'> G.11ew~ ~ ) I~ N" I~ 4 1 "
Oiled 11~~YE~T li:E lltVAN NAME STATEMINT AOld LI HaOrl Ct lllcinlt nur D••"llr (II lor~!• 97666 th<IW nlj ~ ntl bill~"ce ct i XIS XI att~ally h nHJ q.:cs I l]K' HI I j.: lllll c~As'E BO~tb~NI JI En S ~.'' 1
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Eu.culOt or the Tiit tallowlr19 perton 11 dOl"O ~1lnen This l>uslntH t1 btlng condutled bV 1 Efln J BE111n$ ci in ~llberl Dr ve d~ en 11ld Jlld9menl an the date ol lllt r u l 1-..., f)I fti rt 111 ~111 ~ Fna Bo\ & 06 6 6/ tn FA,., J~u • 16 ~~'1~ ~
WUI of wld de(edent '' llm!lrd partn1r1h!p Hunlnglon lltll 1 lorn• lnu1~1 ol 1,ld execution I t11v1 le'l<lrd I fron (!l J•S •12 ~ ln!I &~1 •6/0me<i•
11.00EllS CAAlllS ANO PLOOSTioR AOIERT E OEN'I ,. Edwin J Even• Jo!ln H Peterson Jr 7S Corlfllhlan up0n 111 1111! right I llt Ind lnlerat of (' 1s 1I \ fJ I iltllCrl 111 p U I~ nl ~~Tr lh 6 13 6 10 u~ d 1n JO 70 JOO N• tJ
ISIJf S P•rlmtvr<I alvd CENEJIAL CONTRACTOR ~hs tlalemenl t ied with the County Walk LQr111 B11tll Ci!Uornli itld jv<19ment llebtor In the prOPJrl'I 111 lhc 1.Joc:I' l1ltl g lll h1.lllr !.Pet •ll ••I AMILTON GA P One W 11~ .,, ''•
.. ltlrMVflf C:lllfOl'!lll "721 ANO OEVELOPEJI Clerk ol Oi1n9t CoynlV on Mev 21 1114 Donald 0 MtCtlli 17311 Ctw Counlv of Orange Sltll of CIUtonllt J Oifm Fd ! &• • •• F11ncl l I l &lOPPEN>tM 1'0 c ~ Alt.l'MYI fir •K""' ll:EO ENTEltPJllSES FMl13 Herrnot.I Vorbl Llna• California dlstrlfled •t IOlloWI pro t ecl1o n lo i.l 'A OU!ld \\l CHA "'ING FDS C..wlh I 71 ~ ~9 Orr A .... H ~ 91 nn
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·•illsl"olll Df"flltl Cotti Oelly Piiot lllS Slvlllt A•e .... O C o 0 II Plloi 01vid G McC1U1 13131 RalnbOw •oONo 2, of f t•t l No 6523 11 thbwn WI 11 h . il IC O ,. , <I I,, L llrlr J 91 4 ll lll{Qtl\ } Ol • 16 Oo l'nfl , ' 6 1 \t ... l•:l6h Publ r1nge OUI '" Ci!tenG C•lllO!'l'll L ,~ M.l.nhl lOOJl! "!Giii !l71llOoT""' I i I•"
MIV 9 16 7l 31 ~------Bllbol can1or1111 ~1 •• ,,,,, ••• Ml '/ 30 Ind J\IM ' 11. 20 191• 1t54-1' ' f ro~tz I en • ~p tKOrlltd n &.Ol>k ~~ p~ I od I th " !.<1'1 .. 1 F ~ 01 6 6J Hd , L• 6 11 b /~OTC S<-0 • ' I u ..,."~ Aotierl E DlnM 1111 ...., ,. L,linOI H Im...., 1n1 W LIMfll•I •7-30 lnc:lullv• 171 Mltctll11neovs Mai:is in r uce ~OU O C ul~tt S<hu So ,. 1 66•Heel<il! 118 Param 1 ~~ ,! [. PUBLIC NOTICE 11111o1 C1tllor11l1'26ll PUBLIC NOTICE A l.IH•br• Ci llfornl• rec:o•dl o1 Orange Co11r1tv Co1ltonil11 item s you should ~h~k 111 1 tMR A 1 o 661 r lge r b P~.., '"~· ,1 1 u~L,.l. F U,.0\
Thi' t>uilntll 11 <Ofld11tlrd Irr 111 Thi• bl/llne11 ll flllno collducitd by I '•'"" wllh <11 1n 1p.ourt.,.t "°" d 1 I COLONIAL HDr•ce 1S J\16•0PQif\U\ f 1 ., ~ u •" F ~ ,
-------lndlvdvtl ... --,, .. ,.-llmhed p.erlne<1111 P ucluilv• 111.1mtnl lor Ing~ •~o your m e I ClllC l 1l"l 'UNDS 1mortt11 l><t IQIPe~n ..,.1 , 1 8 F• ~n..i ~ 11.cbtl'I E OrllW _, l"dWl!l J Evins" f'"" "11<1$1 tllr0U91'1 LC.I 1'2 Ind ,on'M'1'IGl'lty ShopptTII? 10 t profc~"10n ti Con..,, I ~J 'JI Imo C.. \IS 6 'IPtn~ ~ 1 1 / (" m ~" 1 ·,~1T OP THI'. Thi$ 1t1t1~ WI $ ILllO lfl'llh Ille su .. 111:10• CO\lltT 011 THI: T"b 1latemenl w•• lllrd Yllll Ille l<nctWfl ., \11U Olklttt l•r>r lrv~no t u ..., ph:irm •Y n1 lkt s 111 I EDY Iv I~ 1 II In< Am ,, ""'12 14PI\ I~ fJ 'lo ) 17 VALUE LINE ros SUPt:ltlDA R Covnly Clef'k of Ot"lfl9t Coun!Y Otl MIY ST4TIOl'CALl,OltNIA,0A (<6unfy Clrtk of Ortflll' COllnly on MIY Cilllornl• ~I'~ Fyna •a.. •Min< 0o11 ~:i. Sl/p""", ( 1 o 1,1 ~ 1 _
sTATI 011 CAL!f'OANIA 'Olt 1"' COUNlY o• OttAMOI , 11 1t11 st1n11lng DI! ,1141 records "' rhl! ccun the d1rrcr~ncc G<"wtn ) cw ~ si '"° F•m 1111 '"'LGll iM GP J '•, TNaCOtJl(TTOPOl:ANGIE 1•1911 N•°A.U o 'Ml' OTl'IO OLJl>(llt' lncom 116•!111n\t'qon l •)IO!I Pf•n'I ~ Mt. ......,
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FUN' ty In 11>11 n1mt a m Js ! ._ O llet1lur ? ll l 1• Ill lnYe~I 11 le 19 }I Ci"M
ITITIO Puollihtd Orlll9f C6lst OtllY PllG! MOTICI OP Hl!AA.1110 0, PITITLON P@Uv..d ~ Or•nut t oa.i 0.llY Pllol •nd -4ftltlfy J UncllldV h"'5U Id •ftd ....h!-,A 1J 0 R ' () l It eo1un1 c; 10 Oil 10 QI tn~r~ G a 11 6 11 neon• •
HOTtCll OLll HIAllM_O °" P N Mai lt tt XI Ind J\/M ., 191, 11.,1• llOR PIDllAT• DI' WILL. AMD fOll May .30.,,.M ~-l ll tOt 1174 lf$2 1~ wltt Is lolnl tllll<lll. IAIVIVR l'.ttu PllU~~ t S COMMONWLTH l1~v to A 11 0811 1 p ~ ro o 16 ; "'l v.&.Hr• ,011 f'ltOIATa Oft""'l'"" ANO FOlt Ltnall TllTAM.lllTAl:Y NOTIC£ 5 HEJlt:&Y 0.VEN lhll '" 'f• """"'~ TRUST l~v Gu d • 09 6 O'IP no SI al 18 1 h 5,••0 0<0
Llnl!•S TIST.utllMT .... Y Eilett ol Cl.ARA Ao c: LA Ip E --l>UllLIC NOTICE Tlll*Y June tS. 191~ •' 2 lO o c1oc• '41\.Cn.)OU nctd u del!\ tr\ A & s 11 •l in~ 1nc1 < • 12 P n T • 1 or
E1t•ta of MARV ANH R£NSHAW PUBLIC NOTICE ANDEJISON 0«1tMd M 11 tront o1 cour111o1nt Or•• \\le .,.,11 deltver p.roni~th c 112 1n1t1~ Bo\ 1401011p10Nt ER ,o Otu•lld NOTICE 1s HERfi8Y Gl\l&H ll'lilt --'-eouiwv Hl,bl• Munh:olptJ court "®l l'til""-' ntra cha,go 1 Comp g sss •01~111vt:sT IP"" Fri •N • 'v •
NOT IC£ IS HEltEIV trv!,. th.II 1.AWRli~CE E AMGER$0H IMIS tllod flGTIT.tOUS U51HISI Jiml:lorM ROid Cll'I' ot Hl\llPOrt 8Nth ........... (omp [p Jll6 IJ) tJN,El P<>n I'd ••110~ v "
MARGUERIT E VIC.lt!RS f'Mi llle<t ,,CTITIOUS IUl!HEiS ~II • petlllOfl for Proo.II ol Wiii •nd '11AMI ST,lliTIMIMT CouftPr ot Ot•not SI~•· cl (..llf)r(lll I ~real Milt\)" people nh 1111 ecmp lld I l• 7 '9 C1p1m • II I •l p brll ' • 16 ,~ u
ritrtln 1 pellt!on tor Probl" ot Wiit and MAMli STATllMINT dOI for 11wtntt ol' Lllltrt Tet111""'111ry 10 Tiii fOllO•l"ll 0tr1P1"11 ••t dti!W will Mii Ill IMlbllC tllClldll IO Ille l\IQIMtl II:-. rnr their ht 11th n CL'(ls ~~dFd ~ ;: ~ ~J e:: ~ ! ;: ~ :~{;~i"~t:tO 1: ;~ 1 n 11,, I 1
IOI IJtulnct at Ltlllr• T•l1mtfl'llt'f lo Tllt 10li0Wlt19 per.oM •re 119 llW p1111IOMr rttft'lflU lo Whldl 11 !l'Wldt b\lllMSI 11 blddtt" !Of t tlll In .. w!UI rnonfY Ill tM \\i , '""'[ 0 \ Con\ Inv S SO • 00 -.l,! Tu t "? 6 "I VI 'J Ii< .. ll!O ptllllOMrr~ Ill which .. midi lnU llllll I S .. for twrlf*" P1rllt!' •fld lhtl ~~ ti-MISA VERDE AJIT CALLE~Y 1701 U11lltd ''"''"' •IL lhl rlont tlttt lt\CI c .... t m e re<1u~s s tor cn11n ljW 4 ii • 11 INVt:ST OlllOUP ,.lttCE llOWI! /,j s, tor Nrlhlr perlku\111'' 1od 1NI 1M lln'll HUMAN •EHAVIO'-A:tSOCIATES Ind PIK• Gf ntll'I IM .aamiollJ"I .bl So HtrbOt 81...U.. Cosll Mtw ,.,111111 of 11!d 1\ld9!'1M!!I cltbtOI' Ill 1111' ll c \)Ve f) Sc r \ I CC U u ii ton Mt In 6 •' I'' 1 OS Giii ' 11 C.•"' ~ !~ ti 1 71 \ ~ '
•'Id PIK• ot IMt,111111 Int u,,.,. IMJ bffn LTD Suitt 20• 500 CtOM'I LIM Ml tot Junt ll l'7 •• f 11CI l(l't Ill I~ C•IUor11I• ll>OYI dtt¢tlbtd f!l'OPI:''" or Mt n'll,tCh char.:c accOWll~ Colllrr c 10 ,, II Ot to~ NO ·~· ~"" lh(Ctn • 1r \ ' ,,.. ~ •
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111 foi Jlltlt 11 1914 11 t !lo • m In lhe NfWpllf'I ltktl C1lltot11lil '1..0. .....,.. ot O.Pll"lfNllf Irk. <I ot Mole! Vl"'IJhltt A 8!91low a w J11 tr.rtof "" iwiv tit ""''~l'Y to Mollslv CWn 0.11 '•r ~ u ~~Pi 1 ~ g:: ~ f~w er"' 10 11 10 1 WI L~· .. C.ION
cwrlroom ot Dtffrlmtlll No l of Mid Rl<tl..-d i McC•rtv Pl!. 0 iu ""' co.ff' It 100 Ctvh; ~lef'"DrlVi Wtll In Cost• Mn• C1Ufornl• Mid ·~ttvtlOll. wllll ICUlltd 11'111rh l Ind CWn p v • ,, 'll s.~~~ 1$11u1: Nw "" '. • ., GMOI• ..
C0\111 •• 700 Cl wk ~·-Orlut Wtll hi LI Cotla. ltn Ci.tntntt c.111orni. ,.,. Cllr ot ""'' AM. " ·~ ..,1111,. $ ""~" 161, c iwin-111 ,, cottt .1 .., g:~r~ lt S.97 St1•t1 • '(I • \I ':VF~ ~ ~ ; i:gl ~.:.;, ~ 1
; l. lht Cllv oi "1111 ....... ttftWnl t. m n Olli.it M•Y 2A 1t1• I _,. .,. Or•• c.n~1.. 01tld Ml1 ••f14 , ..... LIDO l'KAIMA.CY D•L.lWAlt V1r P•'r 6 ... 1 QI D'ld Ct 6 (IQ I •• MD!l'lll ' 11 ., Dti.d Mly 21 1974 Dari• L. McCtrly, M.lt. SU ~~~\.I Wl\.l.IAM L 6 --·\" Thi• M l""' ll cond\lt'ltd W e (ltMl'tl CM¥1tlon Hlf'MI' JS I Ho-... teed OltOUP Inv Rt~ ' ll ' .. lid 'I~ 1 '9 t ll lr1t ,\ • • t (.I
WILLIAM a, SI JfHH Cotte Siii Ci.mtnft CtllWl'fllt ~ County Clttlt Hfttltr'l.NP -DOH E AHIA ..,._ O.c11t I •I t t6 I $ I UTl'IAM \ 'o\'.th 1 Ii' \I 11 1
Co\lnl'I' Cltrk Thi• M llltM II ~-bY f ...,_., PAUL. MAf1'1 .. 0S. .IA°Moflltl(Y V&Wl\lti A •191IOW Mlrll'lll 011not Covn!Y frH Dll..y Otlfll F 1 17 I Ml Q.,_,11 4 II '.;l ,iUNOt WO '" t » '\I
HILM Lii MACICILV.• pt1rlftfflhl11 .... AMiii 'WlfAL.U.I. TPll:r st11tmffll w•• """ '*'"' 11\t fly Mar1f'llt I. Browi o.,p.rty Cltna T" ,~ , .. 1"'°'" COll'llf 17f10 14 W•l"'I" ••10'
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:.!6 DAILY PILOT lhursclay, May 30, 1'914
;Amusement Parks--@Fuel Gauge Report Impact Require111e11ts
Standards Hit •
'
Best Vacation Deal On Fuel System
By SYLVIA PORTER
There is r.> mistaking the
startling changes taking place
1n tradiliooal An1erican vaca-
11on p.itterns as we move
lo14'ard the peak of the , '74
su1n1nC'r holiday sea!:OO.
Millions or us <ire <;witching
to modes of tr11vel 111·;01\ ing
Oyldrivc. bus/drive. r 11 i I
/drive, etc., in order 10 nnun·
ta •n our n10-
bility h u I
slash our use
of gasoilne.
~1illions 0 r
others n re
p I :i n n ing
vacation"
practic:-il\y in
POllTER their "(l \V n
backyards"-meaning within
20()..300 miles of ho n1 e .
Attendance at spectator sports
events and participation in
sports close to home arc due
for an upsurge.
ALSO SHARING in the
vacation upheaval born out of
today 's murderous poc:kclbook
:>quecze. the spiral in costs of
p:as and oil and uncertainties
about fuel supplies is the
modem theme amusement
park industry -n u n i ri: u e
American phenome non whi ch
has grown into a national
institulion since \ralt Disney
began it all with the opening
of his l\1agic Kingdom..jn 1955.
Item: Th<-number o t
Arncricans \l'ho visit the
!heme p.Jrks \1·h ich now dot
!he U.S. landscape from coast
Robert A. Clampett of Hun-
tington Beach has been na med
presidcnl of Pacific Public
Relalloos. a di vis ion of Parker
Advertising in Palos Verdes.
He previously served as vice
president and director of
Botsford Ketchum public rcla-
11ons in Los Angeles. • Frank Garzino ha s been pro-
1noted to sates manager for
-the southern division 0 f
taliforia ~1otor Express, a
Delta California Industries
company.
lie and i1is 'family reside in
Cost.a J\1esa. • San Clemente r cs i d en l
Donald B. l\.1alm has been p~
1tioted to the
post of ad-
vert is-
ing man1-1ger
of Plus Pro·
duct.;;. ~ pro-
ducer of vi-
tamins and
n u 1 r i -
tiooal food
snpple-MALM
1nents.
Prior lo his neY: assignment,
ri.1alm served in the Irvine
based con1pany's marketing
department. ·
* George II. Smith has been
;ippointed northv.·est district
n1anager fo r Dasyn Interna-
tional of Santa Ana.
lie \\'as Jtiost recently \\'ilh
r..·lcmorex in Santa · Clara
\\ ht•rc he v·as product sales
nianager for Micrographics. • John IJ. Lov.Ty, assistant
111a11agcr for loans of the San
C l eme n-
te Bank of
Aml'rlca ·
hcis con1p!e-
tcd a 45-yca r _.
011nkin1, ca-
rct•r.
-
cd A s1; i ~~~ '.i. i
Clcmen ·tJS<; ~
le since 1!16.1. LO'NR'f ·
and assistant manager Jur the
past six years. Lo" rr bt·g;1n
his career in 1928 a~ :i n1<:S:<i'n-
ger at a do11·ntn11·n L<'~ 1\n·
geles branch of lhe hanl: • l~unt.ington Bi·:'lrh rcsidi'nl
Richard W. Linl(ane has tx.·en
elected second 1 ice prcs1dt•n1
LIBERTY
COIN CO
PURVEYORS
Of GOLD OOINS
srECJAUZING lN
MEXICAN $0 PESOS.
AUSTIU-'N IOO CORONAS,
AUSTRIAN DUCATS.
lMldEDIATE DEUVERY
CASH TRANSACrlONS
INST,\NT 1NFORMll110N
7l4•S48•i796
KJJ OOVE.R 01\.
NEii 'PORT 8llAOl. CA. 9""'°
9'6J WILSHllU! 81.YD,
lll!VERll' HJU.s. CA 9'>Jll
I
to coast has soared from
about 16 million in 1964 to
fTKK'l' than 54 million in 1~3
nnd \\-'ill reach 73 million by
1976, the industry forecasts.
lt'!m: A mon1!y-saving,
ti111e-saving fact is !hat in
several important a r ca s,
different types of pa r k s
c\usler together to cater to :t
variety of tastes und the
('l!tH·c· family .
TllE TllREE b:1.~1c types
an·: i1nimal or sea hfe parks.
such as Lion C.Ountry Safari
and Seven Seas; single-theme
parks such as Knntt 'i; Herry
Farm and Opryland: and
multiple-theme parks such as
!he l"'O Disnev f)ner.1tions in
California and Florida, first
;1mong them all in terms of
revenue. and the six parks of
Six Flags, headquartered in
Los Angf!lcs and fi rst ill terms
of nund)Cr of p<.irks and
ullrt1clions.
lt rm: Although there are
pnrks across the country now,
there are major cluster areas.
Southern California is one
such Mecca with Disneyland.
Japanese Village, Movieland
Wax l\1useums, Lion C.Ountry
Safari, Knott's Berry Farm,
the Queen Mary a nd
i\larineland of 1hc Pacific, all
\\'ilhin o fc\V miles or each
other. A fast-grow ing area lies
bel',1,'CCn Dallas and Fort
Worth and boasts Six Flags
Over Texas, Seven S c a s
J\1arinc. Life Park and Lion
<.:ountry Safari, rind !he home
of the Texas Rangers baseba ll
of T r ansamerica Ufe
Insurance and Annuity Com-
pany.
Lingane had been assistant
vice president for tv.·o years.
He joined the firm in 1970 and
\1·orks out of the Los Angeles
downtm111 center. • Appointment of Gerald I ..
Ttev.er s to the position of
~",~'~"'.. ,,•' ~
lions lur ir-/
I' inc Pacific 1...,. ......c. •
lll'\'CIOF-~ ~.
nH"1t Con~-•• .~· ~ ·
nan:; has .,,~~~ .···
been annou· i ,. ~ .
Peed l;\' the A
p.::rcnt 'r1~n1.~j,:,j .
1 '11! )r\'1!Je REWERS
Company.
Rewers had been director of
residential project.> fo r the
Irvine Company's residential
division. Before joining the
firm in 1967, Rev.·ers was a
civil engineering inS1ructor at
Loo;; Angeles City College. He
and his family live in Tustin. • James N. fo\\·ler, formerly
a nianager with P r i c c
\Vaterhouse and Co., has been
appointed \"ice president of
finance of Lion Co u n l r y
Safari, Inc.
lie joined Lion Country
Safari this n1onth at ils Irvine
IJJsed headquarters.
* James l\f. Utz has bctn
nanu•d director of training for
Far \\'est Scrlices, Inc.
The Garden Gro\'e rcsidc·nf.
\rorkt'd a~ a:-:"istant din.>c1or of
training for Far \\lest 111 19119. • .John \\'. Slagle has been ap-
pointed manager of the Tustin
branch of the First Notiona l
Dank of Orange Counly.
He was formerly assistant
manager of a second Tustin
branch of the bank . He and his
family reside in La ke f'orl!sl. • lrvine resident \\'illil:1n1 J.
'Biii' Lloyd has been named a
senior vice president of Jr,•lne
1\'atlonal Bank, aC<'Ording to
James Lynch. president of the
ten-month old financial in·
stitu11on .
Prior to joining the bank,
I .lo} d 1~ as J senior vice prcsi·
dcn1 of Crocker l'\ational
Bank.
J/1rre is
1111tl1i11q
/tl.'e fl
UX.l11/U ft·.~
to11ch
thl' 1110.~t
talked
about. men·.~ sl11/1st
t
... FAYHOLIDAY
For Appl. Call
644 ·1570
Tue. Thru So t.
10'Ttl6pm.
aslblufl Coiif ure
25<19 East Bluff Drlvf!
Newport Beac:h , ca11f. 92660
644-1570
team. Flor ida's attractions
r:1 nge from Oisney·s to anunal
ilnd sea-life parks.
ss,1--1
$.58p._--' Capitol Nen Service
SACRAMENTO -I" u e I
systems of all vehicles under
10,ooe,.pounda musl be abje \I>
w J th stan d froot-aniufar,
lateral movlng and rear--mov-
lng barrier colllsions 11c-
cordlng to the Insur~e
Institute !or Highway Traffic
Safety Adm in is tr at ion
(NHTSA J.
supplenM.'nlt.>d by "fi\'C·with-
overdrlve" as the fuel pinch
accelerates the trend . t 0
economy nuton1obHes. A (1vc·
spt.'Cd manual transmission,
with ovcrdril'e in top ge:ir.
makes Its appe!U'ance 11txt
yea r in at leR.st ant nlOdel of
donicstic sub-compact car.
,53,..__.,..
EVEN TDOUGll dollar for
dollar, q u a I it y 1hcn1e
amusernent parks may he
an1ong 1974's best vacation·
cn1ertain111ent values, you still
can enhance your enjoyment
and save money too if you
abide by some simple rules.
For instance:
If you plan to t..lri ve or flyi
d r i v e, bus/drive, rail 'drtVI.!
etc., head for one of the major
W-.--lli.56 p
In addition the new standard
specifies the amount and rate
of allowable fuel spillage
following both barrier crashes
and rollovers.
~NHIGHGEA~
amusement park nnd attrcrc-
tions clusters. You 'll get
the maximtnn variety for the
least gasoline. Get detailed
information about parks and
UPI T~
Believed to be the fi rst fi\'C·
speed manual transmission for
automobiles ever built in the
U.S., It Js the first ever to be
mass-rrOOuced in lht! U.S.
Borg-Warner designl'd I h c
transmission. allractions of interest by
writing directly to the park~
or phoning the local chamber
of con1mcrcc or v i s i ,t o r s
bureau.
Califor1aia's First
This is a weaker sel or re-
quirements than those issued
by NHTSA last August which,
in themselves, were attacked
by congressional leaders as
''unacce pt a b le," and
''consumer abuse by govern-
mcnt."
• Ford l\.1otor Company h11s
been selected to desib'll and
build the world's f i rs t
automatically e o n t r o l I e d
tranportation s y s t e m lo
cross an international bordrr.
'The system will span lhe Jdo
Grande River and connect the
Ct'T'llnll business districts of 1::1
Paso. Texas. and Juarez, Chi-
huahua , in Mexico. The sys·
tern will feature driverless,
rubber-tired Ymiclcs !hat arc
electrically powered and l.'Om-
puler controlled on about 1.5
mile!! of elevated guideway.
Check out the ene r gy
conservation pol icies of each
park. "Some offer reduced
This map released by the American Auto Club, shows the average cost per gal-
lon or regular (r) and premiurn (p) gasoline for ten regions of the nation. The
California1 Nevada and Arizona region show the highest cost per gallon in
the nation.
"THIS ENTIRE package is
technically inadequate and
unacceptoble as a consumer
protection measure," said
Rep. John E. h1oss ( D-
Sacramento I in a letter lo
Transportation Secret a r y
Claude S. Brinegar. Moss is
chairman of the House Sub-
committee. on Commerce and
Finance.
adm issions for repeat visits ----
during a given period of Lime
Just Add the Sau~e to encourage people t o
return," says Ned P. De \Vitt
11. president of Slx }<~lags.
'·Others have begun giving
discounted parkin g fo r groups
of four people or more."
Still others have instiluled
!heir o\vn bus serv ices from
central locations to gel people
out of their cars altogether.
This could be a real money·
saver if you come by train.
bus or plane and don't want to
spend money renting a car.
Cliesebroug1i-Pond 'Cookirig' Since 1870 The NlITSA issuN.i the
August proposals and re-
quirements after th c in-
surance Insitute's crai;h test
research sho"·ed dP.i:.ign defi -
ciencies th.at led to leaking
gasoline and fires, even in
crashes of moderate s~d.
CHECK 11\'TO the pricing
policies. Most parks ha ve <in
admission fee and then charge
additional for rides and
attractions. An increasing
number, though. are adopting
the "single-price" policy under
which you are allowed a full
da y's entertainment w i th
unlimited free acces..<> to all
rides and attractions. A single-
price admission park could be
ideal for the budget·mindcd.
To save energy And get the
By ~UL TON MOSKOWITZ
Clironicli: Feat11res
\Vhat do 1\a"gu spaghetti
s..1uce, Vaseline petroleum jel-
ly, \Vind Song perfume.
Adolph's meat tenderize r and
lfealth-tex children's clothes
have in common? Yes, you
prollably guessed lhe anS\\·er:
They all come fron1 the same
n101her corporation.
The company, one of the
oldest in America , i s
Chesebrough-Pond's Inc., no"'
based in the New York suburb
of Greenv.·ich, Conn.
most out of your park visit, .,.,,.,.l> ... "'"-SA 111an named
risit !he park on Sunday or on --..... ~~ R o b e r t
Tuesday through Friday, 'fhe C h e s c -
peak attendance clnvs incl11d,• brough. He
ri.1onday, Saturday and i., v c n t-
holidavs. Arrive t0',1,'ard late cd Vaseline
aflcrnOOn -1• hen the CfO\l'dS p c t r o -
:1 rt· tt11nn1n'~ out I he '$ \eutn j1·!l·:
temperature ~·1!1 be coole r and I a ~ d ht.•g<:n
the park "-'Lll be taking on the srlling 1t 111
enchnntment of cvi'nJnt;. Or if 187!l Hl' sold
~ou have 1·h1!(lren. arn\;C M0tKowiT it ;ill O\Cl'
1~·hcn the park opens. the ,1.orld _ and his con1pan)
SAVE !\10~EY on food t..v
planning ~'our snacks and rood
breaks to m:ike sure you're
nol on a non-stop eating
cxpcndition. .o\ s k a b o u t
children's portions, even if
there is no children's menu at
a restaurant. Bring you r own
lunch and cat in the picnic
areas.
Fie/cl Enterprise~, Inc.
Offsl1ore Oil
Drill Bids
Submitted
NEW ORLEANS (AP\ -Oil
companies headed by l\1obil,
\vhich said it couldn't pass up
I h e on c e -in -a -lifetime
opportunity, submitted bids
!f)\Jling $1.5 billion for new
drilling space on the
srabottom off the Texas coast.
Deparlmcnt of I n I er i or
officials '"ill stud y the high
bids 1oday and reach a
dc1..·ision soon on which one~ to
;icccpt on the 123 Gulf or
.\ll'xico tracts involved .
II R. llirsch of Houston,
sourlu•rn exploration ma na ger
ror i\tobil Oil Corp., said the
tracts v.·crc the best of the
Texas offshore ::irca rind the
SJ !e l\'a S an opportunity thal
,,·011·1 knock again.
"They may offe r more
tracts for lease. but no\v the
good stuff is gone." he said
when the bids "'ere sub111it 100
\\"ednesday.
?l-1obil beaded a combine that
y,·as the big buye r. with high
bids totaling $650 million. One
fifth of each bid had to be in
cash, and most companies
took out bank lo:1ns to cOver it.
Jlirsch said rthe margin
bet"',l,·ecn hi gh and low bids \Vas
(!xlensive, "more so than ever
before.
LEASING
I
prospered.
The present corporate name
came about in 1955 ,~·hen
Chesebrough merged \1·ith a
compatible mate, the Pond·s
E:i.1ract Co1npany, another
venerable firm which made its
"'ay in life through the selling
o[ Pond's cold cream.
The two were perfectly
~u1 tcd to each other. and lhey
:-oon produeedo ff spring.
Bet\Veen 1957 and 1962 they
tidded to thci:-happy
household the Pertussin cold
remedies, the l>rince il·lat-
chabelli perfumes. Cutex nail
polishes and lipsticks. Aziza
eye makeup products and Q-
Tips cotton swabs.
In 1969. they extended their
family agai n by acquirine:
lhe Ragu food bu siness. Last
. vcar they adopted He.'.llth·tex .
And this year they brought
Adolph's into the fold .
NOR DID TH'EY neglect the
international ntarkcls pio-
neered by Chcscbrou ~h. Com-
panies were acquired i n
France and Italy. Italians '"ho
brush their teeth ,,. i t h
Durban's or Chlorodent tooth-
oastes ::ire using Chesebrough-
Pond's produ cts.
\\'hat does it add up lo? A
company now doin'? bu<>in('ss
at the rate of a half a billion
dollars a year. And it nets $40
1nillion on that \'Olume. Little
did Chesebrou,l{h realize v.·hat
he was starting \Vilh his
Vaseline petroleum jelly.
C he s e b rou gh-Pond's is
kno\vn as a shre,Yd marketer.
Its most successful forav of
recent years -indeed in its
entire history -was its 1970
invasion of the hand and body
lotion market with Vaseline
Intensive Care Lotion. In two
years. It took over fir st place,
ousting the longtime leader,
Jergens. Jl holds 30 percent of
this $75 million market.
IT HAS ALSO d o n e
handsomclv with tht! Ragu
line, tripling its sales since it
I
became part of the family in
1969. Ragu now outsells all
other spaghetti sauces in the
mix well in the corporate
family? Ralph E. Ward. presi-
dent or Chesebrough-Pond's,
explains how:
* Ford has developed a check
insurance plan fo r ils U.S. car
dealers ~·hich provides custo-
mers lhe convenience of pay-
ing auto service bill;; by per-
sonal or commercial check.
Th e announcement fol lo1\'S
closely Ford 's in1roduction
last year of a national credit
cR rd program in which de;1l-
ership customers c11n use any
of five major cards for service
purposes -t.lastcr Chargr,
BankAmericard, American
Express. Diners Club and
Carte Blanche.
(l\tONEYTREE) "They have in conunon one
n1ajor unifying factor
essentially they are targeted
for the san1e consumer. The
\\'Oman ',l,'ho purchases
\'aseline Intensive Care Lotion
in Pittsburgh or San Francisco
more than likely is the same
buyer v.•ho serves her family
Ragu spaghetti sauce and
clothes her children with
iten1s from ~fealth·tex."
Because of NHTSA's delay
in issuing an Improved fuel
system integrity standard both
M~ and Sen. Joseph l\1. Mon-
toya (0-N.M.) have introduci!d
bills requiring the agency to
u se an upgraded
crash"·orthiness standard.
country combined. And in
Japan the Kikkoman soy
brewers are now introducing
Ragu spaghetti sauce to the
Japanese.
J{o\v can spaghetti sauce,
perfume and children's clothes
• "f'our--0n-the floor ." the call
of the muscle-car, is being
Complete Mid-day American Stock List
S' .. -'la 1": •..
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l•o-'lo '"' '• 10 •-· ;~
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P·E !lld\l Ld\I C,.9.
CoHe~T .JOq I l l ~ ,. '•
COIDl'l•al Cm I? s> ... '• ColwMtg wt • ~ 1 .. + '•
Comt111 tom 6 l f1· '' Comb EQu•P 11 11 1s1~• 1 .• ,
Cmnco 1.10.J 8 1 11'• '• ComGr.IOd 6 J~ ''• ~.
Com!Alli .30 T S /•, '•
Commodcr .. 1 ,., -'• ComP~ IOd l J 6 '• .,
CompU9ra B 1} ll'o · '• Comp lnv'I 8 J I'•-'• Coo!ho! 32<1 $ 7 I '• .. '-•
Con~Oil C.i~ 15 11 ~'• •-· Con\ Rel 40 $ s I '> •• ,
ConlTf'I wr~ 10 I Cool< In .20d ·2 21 ,,.,,_·.;,~
CookPotint 1 1 } 11"•-'1
Cooper J••• J } CordOn lnll 8 • }'0 .,.
CO!'fLab Inc l•l • 11'"-VJ
Corr&a .~Id ~ 1 16 '•• v. Cou\l~M w1 70 !
CreolePll>O S 6 U 'o•·;;
CrO\\AT &.! 1~ 1 39 'o1 l o Crystal O•I 6 10 10' 1
CSE (11 .t0d ' I IC -<.. Cubit C11 'lO I \ }" ...
Curtis Ma11i 1 l'•• 11 -DD-
0.tn•el .78Q ' 1 II'• .. "• 011.t Con!rl . J 110 ..
O.tt.t [)o( In ' 1 •O' of 'It
Oal• Prodo to · to~ 3', ...
O<trM/'I .10d 10 }J I'•• 1 • C>.Jyhn .,.,, t 1 -lo
O.t Libs .10 • 1 '" ... DnTIEl ,Hid j 9& to'•-\<1
0.POSil I l"8 j 1 18 •.• Ot\i9n J""I J J J"o , .•
Develop c11 l 5 s1. • "' OHJ Ind .10 l 10 T'• ~ V. Diamond M 10 IS J7 -t 'Jo
Ol()(ks In< 27 18 '\.!' ....
Oome' Pe1•o 12 Jl 1)111-V.
OrewNat Cp ~ 1 1't+ ''" O!.IPlt1tP ,40 4 J 11'« •..
Oynal<t .OW 11) 1 J' • •.
OyftfllE!c Si • 1 3~•-\1 -··-Eagle Cloth , • 1
[;HI Sc h ,36 5 11
E1nhA:e .lll I IS
E.tson0.10b 10 .IS
E1s!A Ow ~' J 1 Eo9111nOI St 1 10
EOO CO!'p1n • ]1
E9i1nMh .10 1 1
E"rtn<h .10 11 8 El<O (Otpln to 14
Elt<1 ASS•~I \ l EltcEn .Ud S 1
EltClrll Re~ •. 21 El T Int 6 4
E11koSll .1>'1 • '' Equ,fy Ndll .. 1S
Espey M!q 2l I
E1-Quore f?a J 1
[\Sf"W (hem 4 1
E11Llv .O'ID } l
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fl B ll'!du'1 t S J•1-~' VMOorn .lO 6 11 ''" R1E'11T 1.•0 11 • 11•1,-\lo V1ro lll(orp l II 2 •••
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I
Wednesday's
Closing Prices
New York llps and Do1vns
•
•
1974 S• DAILY PILOT
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Low s
Appear EYery Saturday
-,
l ' 1
-., .................... , ... .._..::,,, .. _____ .. -~ ,,~
Dow U11de1· 80()
NE\V YORK fUPI) -The stock market plunged sharply
and broad I} \\ ednesday 1n 111odcr.itc trading on lhe !\ew
York Stock Exchange ln\cstors ~ho.,.ed 1.:oncem o\er mter
est rates 11crcigc dropped 1893 points The Do1v Jont:s 1ndu~!11 I
to 795 37
J)cchnCS led <l<l\ fillC " IJ\ i)O t 3 three tO-Ollf mafgJn
Volun1c amounted to 1 uund l 1 100 000 :iharcs compared
\\llh IO 580 000 traded Tucsda1
Prices \\ere lower tn n1oder lie 1raU.mg on the Amer1
can Stock Exchange
During the 11C1;!kend the ~tdcral Rcser1e Board inch
catcd 11 \1outd ma1nta1n a trght money policy and many
analysts sud this could lead to further rises m interest
rates already at h1stonc highs
Addrng to tn\estor concern \\as a Commerce Depart
mcnt report that its llldcx of lending business indicators was
off O 7 percent in April the first dechnc of the Jl'fir
" • 11 ·-11 -I " -" " -" ~ ·-" -' ,._
~J,.
I)•-' -' ·-""' J6 -1 ... ",_ ,. -
e Can Recycle
OAKLAND (AP) -KaJscr
Alullllnum and Chemical Corp
has announced 1t will pay 15
cents a pound for empty
aluminum cans at Kaiser
rec) cling centers s t a r t 1 n g
Saturday a rise or 5 cents a
pound
\\e feel interested In
dlviduals who actively rec)lcle
should benefit !rom this higher
'aluc 1 R Davidson vice
president for Ka l s c r s
fabricated products s a J d
Tuesday Kruser has recycled
more than 17 nulhon pounds o,
aluminum since operung West
Coast centers four years ago
J
'
28 DAILY PILOT
\VICKS
H 1uitington
Man lf1i11s
Co111n1ission
Allen B. ~Jughes Jr., son of
l\lr. and J\1rs. Allen B. Hughes
of 4151 Calhoun Drive. Hun·
tington Beach, will be com-
n1issioned an ensign upon
graduation from the Coast
Gua rd Acadeiny in New Lon-
don, Conn., June 5. He will
also receive a bachelor of
science degree.
The 200-man class is the
largest in the Acadcmy"s !}8.
yea r history. I Hughes is scheduled
report to the Coast Guard C -
tcr Polar Star, homr:ported at
Seattle. for his first duty
assignment .
A 1970 graduate of Marina
lligh School.Bunting ton
Beach. he entered I he
Academy in June 1970.
•
'
Thursday, M_u 30, 197•
State Poll
Air Bias
In Media
SAN FRANCISCO 1API -
More and more Californians
believe the news media are
biased and unfai r in some
aspects of its Walerr,atc
coverage, a slale\vide opinion
~rvcy says.
"Furthermore." pollster
,
Mervin Field said \Vednesday,
1• a majority or the public now
thinks the amount of coverage
is 'too much.' "
DESPITE THE SIGNS ol
criticism, Field 's California
Poll disclosed that seven of 10
Californians ''continue t o
believe the news media v.•ould
\vo rk just as hard lo try to
uncover v.•rongdoing by any
president." or 1.029 persons surveyed
this month, Field said only 4~
percent felt the nc\\'S media
\Vere fair and unbiased in
\Vatergate· reporling. The poll
showed that public confidence
in ihe news media's coverage
sli pped 11 percentage points
since the last survey in
October.
4 1 T 0 A SIG NIFICANT
degree, however, attitudes
toward the press are
becoming polarized by
political party," said Field.
Only 21 percent of the 574
Democrats pol!cd said the
news media was unfair .
compared to 49 percent of the
307 Republicans surveyed.
RETAIN
CLEM M.
McCOLL OCH
E 1~····· )'.'
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p r I
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DIRECTOR
MUNICIPAL WATER DISTRICT
OF ORANGE COUNTY
DISTRICT 5
y
We. the undersigned , stand behind sound
and responsible local government by
supporting CLEM M. McCOLLOCH for
election to the Municipal Water District
of Orange County:
H_.., T. Sf'9"n"'°""
Poul A. A"drei.
Cort H. H~rnbtt'g
lltay J. leny111on
Mrs. Jeo"ne YanAlltft
f'ffrl llaplOfl
Robttt E. f\llton
1 ... ar Hci..son
Cris a. Bristol
TOltl HOfllriC)h..-
Mn. Coobo. Moni'
J. R. Le-sttt loyW
H. Yan Der'Vel*n
MithGtl Lofow.
Clair Oitto
Lowr~e R. Liao+tt
Dwiqht Challlberioill
Mory lofa.o
WolSoce L Mitdidl
G. J. "Pete" Copper
R.,-De YOIMIJ
Milo C. ICetc._.
~ E. Petifecod
WattffG. Ira
ICfftM'ffl C. f'rtc.
Mn. T. J. Medcnrl.
Cart F • .fi*r
C . J, SWI
RoOttt T. l•ie
H. W, Lintoft
Lpndon AufcHl'lkOlllP
Jock G. Raub
HUC)h T. Wolkf'I"
Frank F. Mtod
T. J. Meodowi.
Cr111lson Morrii.
tleith Oa-.,ii.
Ed Pankey
TornyH.Webb
H. L RtnNMrs
Williom D. N11nli1t
Louis E. Clem
Lorry Farquhar
G. 0 . Bixler
William H. Eppin9rf'
R. I. Lowry
Totn R. leouc: .....
R. H. Protht-Ni
Harokl M. MathiMW
Robttt L Aldrich
Lt. Col. R. R. rorttr
h'anlt 5. Wll>ar
Har•ey H. Kapkn
ROHM. ••her
Ha11ty H. Scltftcl
Jamn T. Merion ~
Lotto L. Matwien
Sftar'OR L. HewtliH
Dan I. lop
Chri1 K. leher
VOTE
TUESDAY, JUNE 4
•
a.EM M: McCO_LLOCH ~.
Paid IOI by C~tD~ Clem M. Me-
Colloc" l'I H Pro"*°'"'· L l'l~·CaeN.rma" ~QO.O A..._~ Llglina 11~t., ""
Ne,arly Everyone
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. • Drop forged steel with hardened teeth 299
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• Stanley's durable 1 /4" driver with plated
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• Easy-grip handle ••. heavy-duty model, #233H
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7 -Inch Circular Saw
• From Black & Decker ... 1 Y-1 H.P. motor
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• Choice of avocado , poppy or harvest
gald exteriors ... all-new white
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3'-!
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12" SIZE ........................... 5.49 v-~
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299 • Newwh iteTtflo1111 ' i11ltfio1 6 ,9 • Choice el ove(ado, peppy or
horve1t gold exttriar
• 7 redpe1 rep1odu11d 011 sides
Glidden House Paint Special!
• Thr1• of Glidden'1 most pop11lo1 paints
• Giv1s superior w•ariter preleOion ... sp1eodt easily ond e•enly
wilh lt1111h or roller
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HOUSE PAINT
SPRID
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10-ln. Electric Chain Saw
• Utfitw1i9ht, ltuth11ilt lo 'tak1
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• oa ~.Mi..i ,1,. <00M<1ioo 4 s 88 in1htded.#tllO ..-;
Reg.5'.95
COSIA
MESA
I I
•
•
Losers Jipcho Hot, Angels Double
Runs 3:56.6
Shelved ·1n Pro Meet
•
i
As 'Valentine
' ' All In all, If l"I S a tosl' evenlni !or the
Calllorola· Angelt. ' '
They lost tbelr composure, a right, a
baseball game and tl)eir left fielder, not
necessarily in order of importance,
Wednesday night.
George Scott boomed a three-run
homer to cap a four-run ninth inning as
the Milwaukee Brewers reared from
behind lo topple the Angels 7-5 at
Anaheim Stadium , taking possession of
fi rst place in the American League East ,
a halt-game ahead of the Boston Red
Sox.
The game ~·as marred by a fist-
swinging fi r11t inning duel between
California outfielder Bobby Valenti ne and
Milwaukee starter Clyde Wright. a
former Angel.
Valentine suffered a dislocated left
shoulder during the melee which emptied
both benches and will be lost to the club
for two to three weeks.
Both Valentine and Wright were
ejected from the game.
"He coukl have killed me,1' Valentine
said. "ll I hadn't ducked I ~ould have
A11geb Slate
All OM!ft Oii KM .. C 171tl
~Y 11 O.!roll al C1Ulomla J.-1 O.lroll al C1Ulorf\l1
June 2 Detroit •1 Ce lltoml• Juiw • C1Ulorril1 11 MllwaullH
7:ll o.m
6 ss o.m.
I :ll O·'"· S::lS o.m.
been hit right in the face . I couldn't get
back into the box and give him another
chance to hit me in the head. l had to go
fight him."
Valentine dropped his bat and strolled
to the plound after Wrig ht's first pitch
sa iled over his bead. The two exchanged
words before Valentine lashed out with
his right hand .
Wright countered by putting a headlock
on Valentine a1lfl nipped blm heavily to
the ground as pleyert from both dugouts
and bullpens spllled onto the field.
· "I busted him In the eye end hk him in
the jaw but lt'1 no consolaUon," aald
Valentine. Of the injury, be commented,
"It's just a dislocated shoulder. Wbat the
heck. I've had worse."
Wright denied throwing at Valentine, a
player with whom be exchanged verbal
da rts this spring wbeo Valentine labeled
him a troublemaker and Wright tenned.
Valentine a poporf •.
The Angels built a 4-0 lead after three
innings but Milwaukee got a run in the
sixth and then John Briggs unloaded a
twi;run homer to chase starter Frank
Tanana in the seventh. It was Briggs'
12th of the season.
Sklp Lockwood carried a 5-3 lead into
the ninth but young Robin Yount, Da ve
May and Don Money produced
consecutive singles for a run and John
Cumberland replaced Lo c k w o o d .
Cumberland fanned Briggs and Dick
Selma was brought ln to face Scott.
Scott drilled his first . pitch over the
centerfield fence to give the Brewers a
sweep of the three-game series.
"We've seen most of tbe other teams
and we feel we can finish first," said
Briggs. "We never give up despite the
score and tonight was a good indication."
tockwood, I-I, took the loss. Eduardo
Rodriguez. who pitched the fmal 2;3
innings, got his third straight win.
Lee stanton returned to the Callfomla
lineup for the first time since April 23
and lashed three hits to lift his average
to .413.
MILWAUKEE CALl,.OllNIA
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Morley. lb 5 1 2 1 Ch1lk, '' Brigg~. u ~ 2 1 1 McCraw, Oil
s,ott, lb ' l 1 l Vat""tlne, II
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CMoore, c J O I o l.ahoud, If
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Travers
Spra<.1ue
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Cumtierlal'ICI
CLYDE WRIGHT WRESTLES BOBBY VALENTINE TO GROUND.
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Strino·s Edo-e ~ ~
R9yals, 24-23;
Emerson Wins
BUFF ALO CAP) -Karen Susman and
Geoff Masters scored a 7--3 tiebreaker
\'ictory In mixed doubles Wednesday to
gi ve Los An geles a 24-2.1 triumph over
Buffalo-Toron to in World Team Tennis.
The Strings, who now lead the \VTI's
Pacific Division with an 8-4 record.
overcame first-half Io s s es in singles
competition to win all three doubles
even ls. Meanwhile. Roy Emerson of Newport
Beach had little trouble defeating Dennis
Ralston, 6-3, as the Golden Gaters took a ~26 victory over the Hawaii Leis in
Oakl and. The win was EmerS(fl's eighth In 10
matches in the WTT. Emerson and Frew
McMillan also defeated Ralston and Ross
Case in doubles , 6-4.
lM Altll ... 1(, Blrlf1i.Tonl!llO 23 Wornen--OvertOll CB-Tl bHt lll:tdondo (lA) 6-l
111.., -Okklr (B·T) bell Alt K•ndolr ILA) 6-2. worn..,•1 Dollt»9 -SUimarH-leri.r ClA) beat
Owrton-ll:ot90llm ta-Tl 6-1. Men't C>ooibln -Al•Klnder-Masten (lAI rieat
Ql!.kl'f'·Fl1!chtr IB·Tl 6-3. Mixed -S-l'l-Mlt..,._ l LA I bHI Estep.O•Ntlll
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Ml,...le 'Jl.Datr'llt 17
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TurnbUll (M) 7... , M..,'1 C>ooibl11 -Oavldto11·Htwlll CMl Mal Deni·
$1-(0 ) 64 . Mlx~1rrl1·S!Ofll (D) bait 1'urnbu1J.Qavld111n IM)
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fllOl'1 .. U ...... Jt.flrt.lt w--Mflvlll• \Ill bMI Orubb 1FJ ._. M.., -D::=I• IF bHI Rtid (Bl 6· • WorMn'I ft -MllV ll•Bllllrorn (II) beet
F1l•Fl1tn no CFl 6-1.
Dodgers Rally, a•2
LA's Super Penguin
Ends St. Louis Jinx
ST. LOUIS iAPl -Ron Gey . the Los
Angeles Dodgers' stubby ' ' Supe r
Penguin," smiled ruefully_ in con~ideri.11g
the pitching of the St. Louis Ca rdinals.
The S..foot-10 thi rd ba seman. who hit
.167 against it in 1973, atoned for part o(
the frustra tion Wednesday ni ght with a
three-run homer us hering his tea m to a
Dodgers Slate
Atl Gama .. KAIC tno}
S.-2 National League victory .
ll:2S 1.m. 11 :10 1.m 7:2~ om.
11 :10 1.tn.
"l didn ·t even know about all the
troub les I'd had with them until 1 read
about it this winter," said Cey, who
keyed an II-hit Dodgers att ack .
"But that really doesn't mean much,"
he mused ... We play only 12 games a
year against them. It's what you do over
the course or a whole season lhat
counts." j
Cey's homer, his fourth, made a
wiMer of left-hander Tonuny John, 3-1, woo pitched 6lf.i iMings, a~d a loser m
the Cards ' struggling Bob Gibson, 3-5,
who was protecting a 2-1 lead.
"l don't think I'd have gotten that pitch
if it'd been at any other time of the ball
game," he reflected of Gibson's sixth
inning fast baU.
"It was up and in," he noted. "I think
he was just trying to get out ln front in
that situation."
Ahead of the blast the 38-year~ld
Gibson bad had the better of the 6-foot--3
John on the basis of Reggie Smith's run--
scoring double and Mike Tyson's run-
producing single.
But hot-bitting Steve Garvey nicked
him for a two-out bit in the decisive rally
and Joe Ferguson followed with the
Dodgers' seventh hit.
Gey strode to the plate end had barely
squared off ll\ the batter's box before
hopping on a delivery be drove 385 feet
over the inner fence in leltrc:enterfleld.
Sharing offensive honors with the 26-
yeer .. ld C.y was !lhortstop Bill Russell,
wbo poonded out tlree singles and a
double leading off.
"It's a new role for me," observed
Russell, wbo usually bits eighth.
John toiled fDltll Jim IIlckman walked
and Ted Sizemore singled In the Cards'
seventh, then gave way to Mike
Marshall.
Ntw YORK -Ben Jlpcbo, the
remad<Jlble loog distance rwmer from
Kenya, ra the-fourth-faste!lt indoor mile
In ~.a 1pertdlng 3:56.6 In the fine!
running event of the !nlernational Track
Anoclatkln's 117( seasoo Wednesday
night.
The durable prison officio!, cheered
every step or the way by a Madison
Square Garden crowd of 16,621 -the
largest to attend an indoor ITA meet In
the circuit's two-year blst.ory -was
provided with a fast early pace by Chuck
La.Benz.
The indoor mark of 3:55.0 was set
earlier this year by Tony Waldrop, the
Universlty of North carolina senior. Jim
Ryun, the world record holder ht the mile
with a 5:51.1 cloci.lng, and Tom O'Hara,
formerly of Loyola of Chicago, have the
Qther Indoor times faster than Jipcho,
both with 3:56.4.
Rywt was a bitter disappointment
Wednesday night. He never was in
contention, fmishlng a dismal fourth in
4: t0.9, behind J ipcbo, Keith Munson and
LaBenz:.
Earlier, Wyomia Tyus, the only winner
or two consecutive gold medals in the
women's 100.meter dash at the Olympic
Games, equalled the world record of 6.5
In the 66-yard dash.
• Pulford Signs
LOS ANGELES -Tbe Los Angeles
Kings ot the National Hockey League
announced Wednesday that coach Bob
Pulford's contract had been extended for
an additional three years.
The team said an option on Pulford's
five--year contract had been exercised,
e1tending It to three more years.
Tenns of the contract have not been
e N_, Commissioner?
PHOENIX -The search for a
replacement for National Basketball
Association Commissioner \V a I t e r
Kennedy has narrowed to two Los
Angeles attorneys, the Phoenix Gazette
'8ld Wednesday.
Sports editor Joe Gilmertin said the
names of Alan L Rotbenbe<g and Henry
steimnen will be submitted to the board
of governors at a meeting June 17 in New
York.
Steinman, 41, a former UC L A
basketball player, is a member of the
Jaw firm of Latham and Watkins.
Rothenberg, about 36, has been
handling legal matters for Los Angeles
sportsman Jack Kent Cooke.
e Hoacard AUi"'
GREEN BAY, Wis. -Former major
league baaeb8ll slugge!' Fr8nk" Howanl,
now playing In Jepen, enlered a hospital
here Wednesday for surgery on his right
knee.
Howsrd said be didn't know il he will
be able to continue as an active player in
Japan, where he earns $80,000 with
Taiheiyo Liorui of Fukuoka.
e Walton Surgery
PORTLAND, Ore. -Fonner UCLA
superstar Bill Walton, who recently
signed a multi-milllDD-dollar coolract
with the NBA Portland Treil Blal.ers,
underwent surgery Wednesday to remove
a piece of cartilage from bis left knee.
Dr. Frank B. Smith. an orthopedic
surgeon and chief physician for the
Blazers, said the 00-minute operation
went as planned with the "loose body
removed through a small opening in the
left knee." He said a plasler splint was
placed on the knee and Walton was
expected to remain In the ho,,pltal for a
few days with a short convalescent
period enticlpated elsewhere In the
Portland area.
e Simpson Signs
LOS ANGELES -'!be L<ls Angeles
Rams Wednesday announced the signing
of Bill Simpson, a Michigan State
defensive back, to a mltiyear contract.
Tenns were not disclosed,
He was a second round drart choicP
SimJl'flll, 22, is H and weighs !BO pounds. -
e B119ner in TKO
COPENHAGEN -Britain's Joe
Bugner soored a lecbnital lmockout o..r
Pfermarlo Barum of Italy Wednesday
night to retain his European heavyweight
boxing title.
Bugner cut the challeng<r's right eye
In the eighth rounl end Benml was
lncr ... lngty bothered by tile c u I
throughout the ninth.
'i hv1Sd01, M'1 XI. 1974
I UCI CATCHER TERRY STUPY COMPETES IN NCAA TOURNEY. ;
~ -' "' ~ U~I Catcher
" .,
:e ' "
Stupy Pulling Less ' • ,
" " J
... And Hitting More ~ r ~ " '
~ By HOW ARD L. HANDY Stupy has thrown out about two-~ ~ °' 111e o.11Y ,1i.1 s111t thirds of the players attempting to
~ They'll break up that old gang at UC steal this season. ·;i
... Irvine at conclusion or the NCAA Being a starting catcher, how does ~ playoffs and a rebu ilding program y.·ill he feel about the UCI pitching sta(f?
.;, set in for the 1975 baseball season. "\Ve ha\'e some very good ones this
Jeff l\1alinoff. Gary Wheelock. Ray yea r in \Vheelock, llumphries and
1• Hwnphries. Keith Bridges and Dave ""'-to.laras and v.•e have a good nucleus for ·~;. Lyons are all starters and graduating iltxl.year in the younger players.
seniors. ''\V'tieels has dropped his ann a little
This would be quite a nucleus for this season and he has been a lot more "' ~ any coach to replace. But coach Gary effective. His ball seernbl . • to
1
sink and M
Adams faces still another problem. our opponents are ttmg a ot more ~ .
Three other members of the team ground balls." .~~.·
will reach thetr %1st birthday before Playing summer ball w 11 h ~ ..
the winter dmft by prolessional Chapman's Pat Curran and Clay ~
baaeball tncllldlng Jerry Maras, Rod Westlake of Arizona State, did be keep
Spence and Terry Stupy. In fact, any kind of book on them for the ;
' Spence is 21 now and eligible for the collegiate season?
il;.1 June draft. "I think we had a pretty good book
~ stupy, the team's front-line catcher on both or them."
I for the past two seasons after playing Curran didn't get a hit in a ,
right field and alternating at catcher doubleheader with UCI near the end of ~
as a freshman, was drafted on the tbe regu]ar season and Westlake went t~
seventh round as a high school player ~for-16 against the Anteaters. Last ~i
out of Los Alamitos High. He's a key summer Curran hit 23 borne runs and r.1
figure in UCI's defeme of its national Westlake 20 and both were among the i'i
champlooship this weekend i n top hitters on their teams. ~
Springfield, Oblo. Wbat altout the pitcher• returning to ~1
"As far as J'm concerned right now, UCI next season? ;
I'll be back at Irvine next season ," "Russ Johnson Is a freshman and f·
Stupy says. for a first-year man , he has a lot of '":
1
SFor mostthof the curren1eadt ca1 mpah'ign. po,i,seMi"k N h OOd uf! .~ ,. tupy was e Anteate rs ng 1tter e onnan as as g st as ~!
~ and concluded the regular senson with anybod y on the staff including ~
a .354 mark, second only to Malinoff at Wheelock. ~
,362. "Bob Goodyear, Mike Hickman and tJ
Thia: is well above his previous tv.·o Tad ,Davis will all be improved with ,~'.
lea.SOil& Has be dooe things different· this year behind them. l don't think .
ly this year? you have to worry about the pitching
"I think the big thing is that I used next year with this group plus Mar•• ·~
to try and pull every pitch. Now I wait returning." ,
a Utile lroger and try to go with the What about the team this year
out...lde pitch to the opposite field. compared to last? ;1
"It was just a matter or making up "It's a lot better than a year ago. ~
my mind to it. I started doing this last We, have more players back and we're 1 i summer in Boulder, Colo. and I hit hitting a lot better this season and ·~
·,it .364 with nine Mme nms." we've only lost seven games." ~
~} As a hlgh school receiver, he had a Stupy may have been caught in the ~ strong arm but la st season he middle of the road as a freshman
appeared to have trouble getting the trying to play on a regular basis and
ball to second base in time. Things as a result, moving from the ouUield
have changed egaln this year and !or to catching on e revolving besis. ~
what rea'°"l But he certainly Isn't caugbl In the
• "Cooch Adams has taught me about middle this season and has been tbe
framing," he says. • team's ~teadlest hitter and the
"When I played right rleld as a quarterbaclHor the pitching staff. He ~·.
freshman , my ann motion got all could be dratted high in the winter . •
screwed up. I'm back to taking the phase next January and UCI rould ~
ball to my ear and snapping it on the lose a top-night receiver. ~
throw to second." ~that's another season.
lh..,, .......... """"' ... ;C.''..a.1':' ... :<··#M5hi:t<"(5:':"~~-...:-..i..·~c. .......... ,;,;. ... ~,~
_., !'..1'ibltl -DrYMlalt<ox' IF) beat Tlrl•~·
1'1ylor IB ,... • Mhtld -"utlb-<Oll (fl O\'ft' 1'1rlec-9ostrom (Bl,
for"Mll wMn &ot!on laf'I court ln dllpll!t OVtl' c1ll.
A -Not IMOU!Kld 11 Mi.tnl.
Diii..-U, New Y9" 11 Womtn -OVrr (0) llNI WelNI tNVJ M ,
Milfl -ll«he IOI l:IHI Pille (NYl 6-2. '
Nastase Advances
To Third Round
ROME -Romania:S Ille Nastase
repelled e challenge from India's Vijay
Amritrej to •<!""°"' to the third round of
the ltalltn 'Opell tennis toumamenl bere
Wednesdty.
Marshall set down Smith on stril:es and
Ted Simmons on a bouncer to quell the
uprising, then worked past a '10-mblute
rain delay and two singles In the elghlh.
"Marshall's been great," J oh n
acknowledged. "I kmw ii I wu the
manager I'd consider my job easy. All he
has to do Is get siJ: or aeven lnnlnp out
~I bis starten, and Mike finishes. up."
Rangers, Indians • Ill Brawl
w-·· OWbltt -Durr-Kemmer (0 ) DMI 6'" .... Wettll (NVI .. 2. Mll'l'I DouQMt -lt«M4"1ttl-(0 ) bell Plllc-
S.1111"' (NV1 f-1, Mlll'ICI -1'~tril (HY) Wat Pl ltlson-
'""""' fOI .... A -1,IZI •I l)Mvtr,
Nast.Me split the first two sets with
AmritraJ, theo took the metcb with a 7·5
victory ln tbe'third round.
In other matcheo. lmleil El Shafe!
downed Zeljko Franulovlc In three oets,
and RUll!la s Alex Melrevell downed 33-
year .. ld Clw~ Pasarell of Los .Angeles
In stntlght sets,,":'! M . .
In women'• ltnsJOo, the top oeeds bad
already advanced. Russia's )II-year old
standout, Olga Moror.ova advanced with
a 84, 11-1 victory over Gall Chanfreau of
France to•blgbli&hl ~ i:ound play. =r-= • .... ,., .. "'·m" ·=· .. ,t'~ lflt p.i,.1_" -· •'f A az•I;., 1.S. l;ddte Olbbt 4't. I 4i_!'1·
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St. Loult DOI 100 --t e-cn. ~ LOtlt '· ~ ~ 2, $1. UUll)I. ~t. a,~ 2.M•••a.
llel!l. 111:.,....... t1--..C.r (4J, ........_w..,. -. -. -· ... " ....... ~ ..... ~· •11 61/i ! I t t I ..,...,_ 1111 • t t I Cfblollll.~ 11/J M I J t J .... ...... tn•••t• o....-1 • • • • ..... 1 t • • • • llw ..,..,.... m. T_,:lf. """"1J.W,
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Fans Pour Beer Into Cleveland Dugout
ARUNGTON, Tex. (AP) -Texu
Ranger manager Billy Martin 11!1"1
looltlng forward to liken! beer nllht and
bel nlgbl In CleVeland noxl -k.
Not after Wedoeoday Iii I ht ' I
''bl>tlllnw1° ln wbJd> he WU -..S twice dllrlnl 111 elghtll 1nnlnc fteo
• fllllrCkc flurr)' ii Tew downed~ )ritllm 3-0 Oil Jaale Brown's •
Dill«". . 'D..il be mod at me. In Cl
....... •Id Martin. "l'l!l ...-~toll"' .... <i flltl miplod In the eighth
• ._Rudie laltldown. bunl
• ilhow at Clenlllld Jlldtor
....... WU-trle4 lo -the -'ti's s lint -JoltD 1211z • .,
'
JIU1lptlY tacltled Randle and both
-traded . punches. . M.artJn was downed. twice in a
......wng matdt with Budd Ball of the
Indians. Steve Foucault and Ferguoon
J-al Ibo Ran8'fl brought a...i...I mt111qer 'Ken Aiplomoate
clown fl'am, bolllnd aod Jllmed blm.
E1lil llld "I don't tlilnk thtt was too
pr<>(~ of Randle to run at Wlkol'..
Nobody ,_ II ooe of OUT pitchers Uke
lblt end ... ·-wltll It. For • 'llblle
thert -...... agalttat ZS. ..
Ellis ttlll "llaildle -mad -W1lailt -beblnd blm bat II 1'1111't
-...••• There wu DOtblng betWeen
"" 111111 .... bul the plllDe."
nits --ll>O aUrtlDI Cleft1ml ,..... ""° mllend "' third .. la ... -.i.w..., ttld "I bet Raadle WCll"I do
l
l •
that on the road ."
'!be Rangers meke a ntnc lllto
Cleveland next -k. TIJEodly nl&hl Is 111-
cent beer nigbl. Wednesday night la bat
nl•ht. r.Ob. Lord/' said Martin. "'lbat's jtlll
iltiat I need. But 111 tell you lids our
teom was beUllng and that's the 'ffft/
they'll be all ....... "
Wilcox said "! wasn't trying to tlJrow
•I Randle. I WU aolnK to throw the boll
to lint and ool 111 him bul be n>allJ bil
~good.''
Durtng the bnwl, _,al f ... on U.. al~lnes pourtd betn Into tho Clnellltd ~· illfurtalina catdler Dave Illl!aq.
There WU -flll1 ""' 11111111 l>I• bad 10 been, bul I -'t Ill lo hD."
aid lllw, ""° -_ ..... r.-..... llllo u.. -by ... !• z•r
•
\
,
Thursday , May 30, 1'174
•
,
PV Topples Tars for .4-A Cro~n
By HOWARD L. HANDY
ot lllt DallY ,llel ttltf
PALOS VERDES ESTATES
-They played it ck>se to the
vest Hn4 a winner wasn't
determined until the final
singles match had be e n
recorded In the 4-A CIF tennis
championships at the Palos
Verd es Tenni! Cfub
Wednesday afternooo.
The match b e tween
Area Prep
Athletes
Honored
Dave White was named
Edison High 's athlete of th e
year to highlight a heavy slate
ol awards banquets f o r
Orange Coast area h i g h
schools \Vednesday night.
White, a thre e·s port
standout for the Chargers this
season, was the schoo~s hall
of fame selection in football in
addition to being chosen as the
top athlete . White
quarterbacked the Chargers
football team. played guard
for the basketball team and
was a standout pitcher m the
Edison baseball sqoad.
In other banquets, C.OSta
pcrenniaJ powers N e w p o e t
llarbor and Palos Verdes Hi gh
schools was knOttcd at i31fl·
11\1 mid way lhrollgh !the
floals slngle matdl.
When the final soore was
po ste d , Palos Verdes
maintained its edge over
coach Pat Wilson's Tars, i41h-
1~. capturing the coveted
CIF crown. While the team title slipped
lrom the grasp o! the Tars,
tllere were plenly of hif!hligjlts
to remember,
Mare Roy battled Greg
Eisenbrand for 90 minutes in
the longest singles match of
the afternoon before winning,
!Hl. Peter Perkins then sent the
match to the final
confrontation bet.ween
Eiscnbrand and Steve Marosi
with a win over th e PV star, 6-
4.
E J s en brand, apparently
sensing victory, moved quickly
to a 3--0 advantage, breaking
Marosi's service twice in the
first three games. He went ~
front 5--1 and bad the contest
at match point three times in
the seventh game before 'a
determiDed Mal'05i pulled it
out.
Vni' s Dream Falls Slwrt, HB Hosts
H d W. 3 AN r· l Volleyball arvar ins -et it e T · · ourney
By HANK WESCH
01 IMI D1ftr Pllol Stiff
The yellow brick r o a d
University High's tennis team
trod to the CIF 3-A finals
lurned lnto a quagmire
'Vednesday as the Trojans lost
to defending champion
Harvard, 18-10, at Fullerton
College,
University had pulled olf a
pair Of upsets on the way lo
the tournament f i n a I s ,
including a near·miraculous
victory in the semifinals over
Miraleste last Friday,
But no miracles were about
to unfold Wednesday.
~ victory which set
momentum rolling for
winners.
the
the
With few exceptions, the
pivotal matches went to
llarvard the rest of the wav.
though University rallied to
keep things close for awhile.
Standouts in an otherwise
bleak day for University were
No. 1 singles player John
Faltenneir and No. 3 singles
player Mike Tunstall.
Faltermeier totally
dominated all four of his
opponents with an awesome
serve-and-volley game v.•hlch
featured several incredible
backhand volley putaways of
what appeared to be strong
service returns.
Tunstall, meanwhil e,
dominated the bottom half c:i
the singles lineup by making
good ~e of a strong forehand
and several well-placed angle
shots.
University coach Gary Sisel
was philosophical defeat.
"It's nice just to be in the
finals and I can't help but feel
that with six of eight players
returning next year, we'll be
even better," Sise! said.
Cdl\'I Doubles T ea111
Top-flight g~ts volleyball
action en the hijj;h schOol level
will take place in the
Huntington Beach S c ho o I
District this weekend when 29
teams participate in the fourth
annual U.S. Volleyball
Association prep nationals.
The tournament gets under
way at 5 o'clock Friday
evening at Marina, Huntington
Beach, Fountain Valley and
Edison high schools.
Teams will be divided into
pools with seven teams in
three and eight in the fourth
pool. Top sseded in the tour
pools are Banning ard
Da!IY PilOI Stiff Ptlal•
' Mesa's Paul Desmet and
Newport Harbor's B r i a n
Theriot were named most
valuable on their school's
track teams, while Dana llills'
Steve r-.1ik1os am University's
Tim Wallach werEi baseball
honorees.
With top-notclt player Chris
Lewis showing the w a y ,
Harvard took nine or 12 points
in doubles and was still more
than a match for University in
singles in rolling up the win. Top-seeded in T 011rn~y Marymount in pool one:
Marlboro and MlTilkan In pool
tv.·o: Santa Fe and Bishop JILL CALDWELL LEADS A MORNING RUN IN TRACK CLASS.
Mile Title, 4:55 Clocking ..
Goal of W estniinster Gal
By STEVE BRAND
DI ti. ,,_Uy PllGI Sflll
If you had to pick a favorite
for a state high school track
and field title, \\.'ho would it
be?
Others have run the 880 as
fast as Tom Lloy of Edi so n.
Newport Harbor's Bria 11
Theriot could win the 440 hut
he's far from a sure thing.
Eric Hulst of Lagun1.1 Beach is
the fastest sophomore 2-miler,
but a senior from DeLaSalle
has run faster.
No, if you were look ing for a
sure thing, you'd have to go
with Westminster High's lone
state qualifier.
Her name is Jill CaldYtelL
When Jill steps on the
Bakersfield College a 11 •
weather track for the girls
mile run Saturday night at
9:30. she'll probably take a
quick look at her opponents
and Jess than five minutes
after the starter's gun sounds.
be waiting for the field at the
finish line.
Her 5:05.1 mile in winning
the CJF Masters Meet v.·as a
record. It v.•as five seconds
faster than any other ~rr:t1on
qualifies and eight sccorids be-
hind her best.
It was 10 seconds s\o\\1er
than she'd like to run Saturdav
night. ·
f
"F'irst I \'lant lo v.·in."
admits the 95·pound 15-year·
old v.-·ho shys away fron1 being
compared with America's top
880 runner, ~1ary Decker, with
v.·hon1 she trained for four
years.
.. r like to run against good
competition," ~a vs the
West1ninster lllgh freshman.
··~'hen I ran 1:57 it was in :.1
losing:effort against Canada's
Thelma \Vr lght. But she only
beat me tiy two secdnds."
If Jill runs 4:55, she'll claim
the national 14-15 age group
record.
Jill survived a morass of red
laJX' to make the state meet.
She ,.,.enl out for cross
country in the fall and ran
\rith the b0ys le<1m. Jn the
sprlng, however. she was told
if she ran iu (Inv meet.<" with
the boys, she'd ·have to race
against them in the CIF meet.
There is no girls track teilm
at Westminster this vear
although there will be one. next
spring.
Continuing to work out \Vi!h
the boys as v.·ell as the
Lakev.•ood International Tr<1ck
Club, she was told she could
n1n u n a t ta ch e d in a
JI u n t ington Beach-Laguna
Beach gi rls meet.
She did and then \\'as told
b<>causc she had done so. she
Jack Upton (baseball) and
Steve Reiland (1.rack l received
top honors at Fountain
\1alley's spring awards
banquet.
The awards rundown by
schools:
Costa Mesa
Tnick V•nlly CaD1aln; Paul 01!"5mtl: Mast Valuable· Curl El!eflbertll MG s I lmorovNI : Larrv Falke: Ma s I tn•oi ratianal' Jae K()l•r. Junltl' V1n.ltv Cao1ain · Doo Wrlohr; Most Valuat>I'' Neil Gitfard: Mast tmaraved: Jim Archamwau; Most lnsoiratianal: Le~ Sterret1, FnKll·SCIPll Caa!aln: Gre<i Heiden; II. o ~I
Lewis and his partner,
Bennett Davis, were easy
victors in all four of their
doubles sets, but the key
victory v.·as rolled up by
Harva rd's No. 2 doubles team
of John Meyer and David
Nelson.
University's No. 2 doubles
unit, Steve Antti and Larrv
\Vitt, fought their Harvard
counterparts even through 12
games of the first set before
Meyer and Nelson claimed an
rvtary J ane llouse and Liz House Is an emperienced Montgomery in pool three:
Ogden of Corona del Mar High singles player in the CIF _ and Mira Costa and houisville
School have been seeded as ha ving reached the in pool four.
!he No. 1 doubles team In the quarterfinals two years ago Out-Of-state tenms from
CIF girls bad m Into n and the semis last season. Independence, Mo. and
preliminaries to be staged ArN •"'r•nt1 Chicago, plus stx teams from
Saturday at Ontario J1igh N"'f")rt H1roor -O•M F1rm•r Nor1hern California are l1ln<;1~1), Ctltl1tlt ()e., •nd K1lhV School in Chaffey. &u•ns <&twtil••l. entered in th\! ~vent. son c11m1n1-K1r.,, wanori •nd Orange Coast area tea-· A total of 55 singles players sui•-c11rt• c11oubltt>. "'"' and 44 doubles combines wilt w • s 1'" 1 n '11 r -we-r.<1v HortCMI entered include Westminster 1t1n<;11e1J. d ~••--·th Los A · participate in the prelims with cast• MtH-H•l'ICY tt•rt 1111191"'' an ~· WI . m1gos action going to the semifinals M~ 81t.r1n1 1nd Glnnv Frt9Gll High the Cllly other Orange !dOUblH). ,..~·-._ .... in d 0 U b } e S and the Corana Gel Mlor-COM!• Polltosk• \.NWltf eni..rCJ.11~.
quarterfinals in sinaJes. Final And Lil ()gdtft (doublell. Each team will play an .. ~ E•t•ncla-Ol an" G•lldentl hl119!n). Whe action will be at the c1Mv e11rd and La u•• WMr" others in its pool twice. n
Unhwn.11., 1111 c101 Hllrv•rd ~tanhattan Beach Badminton td;ub1"]· 1 this action !:; concluded Sinqlt• Cl b h f ount• n v11 •~-Wendv Staplt!Cfl Sa d 1n the . h J. Falle•mtltr (U) de!. Ullcn, 6.1, de!. U I e Ollowing Saturday. (sl119let ). M&rcy Hale •nd Chti5 Smlln tur ay even g, e1g t ~~:~~~~~·1.~~· de!. Rene, 6·l, aet. House and Ogden recently (~~f~~V!vlan Oldme" (sl1191tsl. quarterfinallsts w i 11 be
v1e1r1 tu) 1011 '"· 14, won 1.1, 10,i captured the doubles crown in Ka1hv oavld and c1lhv WHI (doubler.>. determined for &mda,Y'S play .
5•7• the E st an c ,. a 1·nv1·tat1'onal Marina-Llnc1.11v Let ts111111"'1· T•rltl All Sunday ga--w1·11 be at Tu~s1a11 (Ul I~! 14 1-6, wan i.~. 6·4. flenMr 1nd WendY Young (doubles ), """" V~lva111e· Holden; Most lmoraved lom Ellli; Moil lnsairatlcnal: Tim Hayes !U) 1011 1-6, )-6, 24 J--6. tournament despite limited Laguna fleact.-S~lltV Co• (r.lnglesl, Marina with quarterfinals at Ooubl•• I Sonov Mfnter and P~gy Knapp
Dana Hl
'lls e. F11terme;Pr·P.den cul 1os1 10Lewilo-pay together in double:i. (dOYblesl. 10 and 11 :30. The semis are at Peterson
Otv!s. 1--e, 2-6; oef. Mever·Nflsan, 6-M' '" ....,.,
11
4, 6·'· 'Ibey are the top, 'iiingles '15'°" Y•ela -Mary Olamor.d 1 and the championship game V•nil' An1H-witt (UJ 1011 0·6, J4; Jc.I •·e. 1. players at CdM -d ,11.,5 IW\Qlnl, C.nidll DuroNrdt and &tc~y 1.5 al ,
Masi Val111bl1: .. SWve Milc!os~ MOii '-~·-· ~-------~-_:c._:_ ___ :._.:__-_'_'.:_' ____ ,,~ll~"~(~ .. =··~·~··----~----------:_·Y~ ff
lnsolr1Jtonol1 :.l." Sprln<iman; Most I lmara~~: Biii tfl<lttls.
J "" Vartltv Most Valuablt: Rick erawnlnc1.
Edison
Ttnnls V1nilV Caa!ain; John Elfl,r1 Most Valuable · Lerav 5c!'lle1; Moll lmnraved: Kur! Lvnott; Coact.•s award: Glenn Ruud. Junior Varsity (llotaln' Peter Fr!ss: Mos! V1luab!e: Tom Mo!\<,
Ford Courier durability starts with a box·seclion
frame reinforced with seven crossmembers. An
independent front suspension features big coil
springs and a stabiliz6r bar. Long, wide rear springs
have six leaves. Dual cylinder brakes
have 2 brake cylinders at each wheel.
The all-steel box is all-welded. And a
Courier easily carries up to 1,400 lbs.
of payload and people.
AITN. Baseball .Standings
TOYOTA
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3t ""°' 0 E.L O.A.C. • WE HAVE ONLY * 15 * 74 TOlOTAS lffT
AT THE otD PRICISI
C..lil _ _.SA ..
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
w L Pct. GB
Milwaukee 24 19 .558
Boston 25 21 .543 1;~
Baltin1orc 22 23 .489 3
Detroit 22 23 .489 3
Cleveland 22 24 .478 31,~
New York '" _, 26 .469 4
\\'cs~crn Division
Oak.land 26 21 .553
Kansas City 21 22 .522 ] I~
Chicago 21 21 .500 21 ~
Texas 2:1 24 .489 3
Anieis 22 26 .458 41~
f\1inne~ta 19 23 .452 4''
Wtdntt4'r'J G1~1 Oa.kland 4, Oelral! I MolWdUk~ 1, AftffiaS J lc•as 3. Clevela"d o B~l·imo•e 10, K.Jn1-Js Cily ) Cl!k~go al New York. ppd,. rein Mln~so!a $, Basten ~ (ll lnnlllSIS)
TOIMly'1 Olll'Mt Ne gamEs $Clled~led
Frldlr'i C01mn 111Uwavlcee &T Oe~1 .. nd Oetrai! at ""\''' Balllmore at ••as New York at "'lnnt!.Ola Kansai City 11 Clt~tlalld (tlltl!IG •I 8o&lon
I
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division
w L Pct. GB
Philadelphia 25 22 .532 •
f\.Iontrea l 20 19 .5 L3 I
St. Louis 23 22 .511 t
New York 20 27 .426 5
Chicago 17 24 .415 5
Pittsburgh 17 26 .395 6
Western Division
Dodgers 35 14 .714
Cincinnati 26 19 .578 7
Atlanta 26 22' .542 8\1
San Francisco 26 24 .520 91}~ '
• ur1er -.
Houston 23 24 .SIO IO
San Diego 18 35 .340 19 ' I•
Wffnftdar'I 0.mff Housto" 5, Montreal ) Pl!tsburo~ 13. San Olegc 3 sen F•B'll;IK.G 5 c111r=:r, 4 A!IJ"ta 1. Phlliidel~tl!a , 11 Innings Dod,trs S. SI. l..GU s 2 crnt 11na1i J, New Yark 2, 10 Innings \
TOlllr't G•l'MI San Fr1n<ltc.0 (B radl•V 5-4) at Ctllt'f<' (flanllllm 3.
" Hm>111an (Osletn S..) at Mon!real CMCAnaUv :J.41 OlllY oames xllt'<luled
• Frldar't G1m1s Allan!• 11 Morltreal Haus!an el M~ York Dodgtn 11 en 19<1 San Francltca II Pl\ltldell)llla San Oleoa 11 s1. LGlll' Pll!tl)Vrpl\ 11 c 11tlnnatl
•
• . ' ' ' •
See your local Ford Dealer ..
'·
•
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(OoltllN '"'" Poi· 31)
c-., er... MeWMIYI~ ""°'' Vt!wbM1 M•WfNYIJ Miii I~:
Mtrtr. "°'"' Miit ll!Ulr1Mtnll1 M.lk• W1H1.
Mo s t
M o 11
Area Briefs
Banquets Set;
I Spike Mark Set
El Toro High will fete its
athletes in its first Spring
awards banquet tonight at 6:30
at the ~tission Viejo Hlgl\
multipurpose room.
Players on the school's
baseball, track, tennis, and
golf teams will receive awards
at the affair.
Other banquets tonight will
honor the Costa Mesa tennis
team, Estancia baseball and
tennis teams, and Newport
Harbor gymnastics squad.
Costa J\lesa 's tennis awards
dinner will be held at the Sir
George's restaurant in Costa
Mesa beginning at 6:30, while
the Estancia banquet start at
7 at the school cafeteria.
Newport'S gymnastics
awards dimer begins at 7 at
1he school's cafeteria.
e Senior Rerord
Corona de! Mar senior
men's track club broke the
world record In the 880-yard
relay at the Mod.esto Rela ys
recently with a tim e of I :34.9.
During the past school year,
her RlLStlers AA t e a m
captured first place in the
Coast League with an 8-2
record and was third in A
action at 6-4.
e OCIR Racing
Big Jim Dunn will headline
this Saturday night's Orange
County International Racev.·ay
fumy car program.
An open , eight-car event, it
is expected ,to attract 15 fuel·
burn i n g e n t r i es fo r
qualifications beginning a1 2.
The first of three scheduled
elimination rounds will start
at 7.
Other e n t r i e s in clude
defending CX::lR funny car
champion Jake Johnston ; Sush
Matsubara, Bob Pickett, Dave
Condit , Smoke:Y Joe Lee and
Gary Burgin .
The weekend appearance
will be Dunn's first since he
captured April 's prestigious
AHRA Grand American.
Adu1t tickeLo; se ll for $3 ""'ilh
chi ldren under 13 aclmiUed
free.
~tembers of lhe t e a m
included Dave JackS011. Don e Asher Fifth
TARS •••
(Continued l'Am P•ge IO)
Eisenbrand came on strong to
win the final four points, the
set and the team match.
Newport had count e d
heavily on "'1rutlng all four
doubles sets but Palos Verdes
heroics by the No. 1 team of
TOJTI Evers and M I k e
Rodriguez, upset Mark Jones
and Cody Small, 6·4 in the first
set.
Had the match eilded in a
tie and games won been a
detennining factor , P a I o s
Verdes wa s substantially
ahead with the help or top
ranked junior star, Billy
Martin.
Martin breezed to 6 • o
victories in all four sets as
coach John Barr loaded his
team in singles play. Newport
was able to win only three of
the 16 singles matches against
the Potent PV lineup.
Newport's top d o u b I cs
combine of Brad Bauman and
Tony Stockman had Jillie
trouble dispo6ing of their roes
in straight sets, losing only
five games along the way to
victory.
This was the eighth straight
season that Newport has
reached the CIF finals in
tennis and \\'ith only four
seniors on the squad, it could
be another eight years before
the Tars are pushed aside in
lhe scramble for the CIF
crown.
Fish Report
Cheek, Kendall \Vebb and Costa l\1esa's Barry Asher
P Kn !. ' hcd f" h h Ebo · MEW~O•T IO•WV't Locker) -911 ercy ox. 1n1s ul in· t e n1te 1111111cr~: 1 narr11cu<11, 11 t.onuo, 111
The former record ,,·a s Yucca Valley \V este r n r.,~~~J ~~k.~~;1 ~ 75"",'!~:/-t>a\~~~
l :35.3, set by the Cd~t team in Regional Open bow 1 in g '°t~lf.dii~~~1H'1~·/IJ •1><1lef1: w rock
l~l loumamcnt -n]Jy coe1. J1 ~ss. 1 l'lallt>vt .•• ,,., -40 Wll " ,.,,._._., " l!'l<llt r\: 'bonllo, 1 t>aHI .U ~atlbUI. ·-·-who . retum'ng to SAM DIEGO (M11nic INll ~l•rt-Mf • All-A11ierica t\o:>sR:T, lS 1 anglers: 21 v~1owta11. '11 bol'lllG, JIO the la nes after a prolonged c•!lco bass, 17 ~loot, " barraoe\lde,
!. . hed ns rock cod. U>u Ann Terheggen. coach rest, mis with a 10-6 MO••o 1aY .f "''• L1Mli1"111l -is
•
DAILY PILOT 31
For Wednesday
INE CAR OWNERS --
Alaml.tos Results LEATHER, w ........................ 44 .,
WIDNlllDAY, MA"I' Jt, 1t7l Htd1 (W1uo111 1.0 1;~~~1J~F~£~~~·:·~·~·~·~·~·~-~~Q~j~f~j ~W~al~l~l~l~J~I ~lt~ .. ~IH~I~~
....... TUCK "" ,,_ -~" DON'T DISCARD THOSE ,,.n •ACI -~ Vlrd5. 1 y.ar AIMI ra11 -Fo. Frlllt r. Glide l lly,
"''· Clolml,.. P~M ""'· M•. C.~I. Miu '"""' "'· <•• OLD TENNIS SHOES I I \1111 O.tt (Tru1ureJ ID.BO 5.20 l.to Brltch111 • •
DH·Oeflff J"p tCirdOli) ~60 ~.4<! SIXTH RACI! -110 Yttdl.] Yllf w., .... -_.._ ... ..,,_, .. .ww..-I-• .......
o~i~"-R\:.'~; <9•11ksl 7.«1 n.oo o10• &. up. c11!ml119. Purw 11100. ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE
Alto ran -T1tle•1 Go Go, 011 8•bY 811111 T1nk (Ward) 5.lil l.10 l.IO
I••· l 11t Of Trtl Lint. P111'1 O•lld~. ClaUY Rocket (llpll1m) •. 20 3.'°l~~~·~w~·~·~·~C~l~lf~·~·~~~·~ ... ~·~··~·~oo~·~·~·~·~·~IO~Ngll~Wl~~·~·C~Oll~~ONg•~Dl~l~M~-~u~~~ Ml Flrt. Cl1111y \1111dy, Super Moollh Ml Pll (H1rll 3.00
Timi -~ll
12 l'XACTA f.V•n Otrl & DH . J• Also r111 -Con K11r. Ft'! Eddlt,
O.tlr1 Jff;, ••llf t71.litl Ol1mo'ld Bars, P1p1'1 Cfllc, Rock
11:!!,:.~:~•s:i~.:' 01" & OH · ._111"Y Meellno. DOES YOUA CAR IDLE ROUGH?
OH·O.adMl l SJ EXACTA 2·•artle Tll!k & S·Cl•HY ST"RT H··D? •Kkll, P•ld 1'9.00 .,._ -
WE
CAN HELP Sl!COND ••Cf. -.uo YiHd,. J year
Oki$ lo 1111. Cl•!mlng. Purw 11600
Joyous V•l111llne
IW•rd) .0.60 1.60 ~.60
OH-Cold T•o !Ad1lrl l.00 3.60
DH·HI Clllf ITr••surtl 3.00 3.90 11 .... -21.SJ
AIMI <•n -6 l1ck MOOd, FrrSn(I OC'Ck
CMl•Ot· Jilov•• S. Vee••· A11m11os Srep
No ..c:rat~Ms
DM·Dt•dhr•I
THllO •ACI -3SO YArds. 2 yHr
Oki•. Cl•lml~. Pur•e $1600
llltla Above (W•1d) s .O 3 70 2.80
Mr. Spetd C11unt (Adalrl 3 . .0 l.OD
(hlk1r1 CK"'11t11l J.OD
Time -11.!l
Also r•n -Sori11g~ First. Mils
Qu1rtz HUI, Jil ulh'• Moon, T~.-o Cent
Pl1ln, K1ndv Maller. Tre.isure Seeker,
Go &lg John
"ou•TM IACE -3.so v.irds. J vear
olds A uo. Cl1lmln11. Fillles & mare•.
PUfM i:lOOO.
G1y Number (Walker) '·'° J.80 J.20
Tri• Otck (Adelrl ~.00 3.70
Arl1on1 Gold Dusi (Oreverl •.&O
Time -18. 1111
Also r1n -Riic:kTn' Lady. Sll1mi11.
Ml•s Wl11 Moore. Kk 111u Queen
Fl .. TH RACE -•OO V<trds. 3 year
olds. Altowance. Pur:i.t i7000. The
Alt•ander 1111• Co.
Myrl'i Ch1ri;rer (P;tge) 1.10 •.OO 3.60
Dupe's Robin Ann IW<trd) 7.20 .o . .io
GIVE POOR MILAOI? Sl!Vl!NTH •&Cl -lj() y1r111. l ya1r .... "· '"'m'"'· '""' mco. "" THE CARBURETOR SHOP Httllnda Hciti.eme11.C0<r1I 61.
$pe<!t l Nolle• 1942 HARBOR 81..VO . COSfA 1,1[$.\ '4Z.az1•
ITrN sure) 16.'D f ,40 6.«I AllWorlc G-iw.ecit _,..,Dtl ,OOO ri.,.._
M0<•11• llocket (Ward! 11~ 1 . .01~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Town,m1n s1rl11 (C111otrl "-'°
Tlmt -17.•J
AIMI r1n -Jil loht On 6 rothtr, Chick
Doolin, Spltl TH, FIHI COPY Homr1,
County F1tt1om
EIOHTH IACE -'® Jltd• l ye1r
olds & up. C!1!"1ln11. PurM tl?OO
lf\mln's Leo 1.,,o
{LlprwmJ i 'o .o.oo 'llO
Good Capy (W"td) f 60 1 (Ill
Pallto'' Bar fR•c~•rd~l l.00
Tlrl'le -20.ll
Al5CI r111 -De" 6•r'i lf'lf9f. Bid
W~o. Oon'I LDD~ 81c~. S~m·, Wall(!er
M111, 8atl'1 Bar 'End
" EXACT& l·l11man'1 lH r ... & J.
G.od C09~, ~Id 11".SI
NINTH RACE -MIO yards. 3 vr•r
olds & up. Clalmln11. Puri.e SllOO
Rocket Mick (Ward) J.80 •,00 ) •o
lorDll's Call !Lipham) ~.20 •.IQ
Qul'k Chit !Tre<uure ) 6.80
Time -10.65
A.Isa ran -flatHer. $u•e As Al.
Palrlck 8cb, whe'1 TaYl11r Mild. Vafllly
Vfildl
IS EXACTA 2·•ocMI Mi<k & 5·
ZIH"bll'I C•ll, plld UJ.lt.
MAY SALE!
We need your Trade!
Premium pncEt'i paid.
EXCELLENT SELECTION
Immediate Delivery
NABERS
~
OP(N IOAYS
Please Call 540-91 00
2600 Harbor Costa Mesa
"NOW OPEN
~ COMl ltt-•KolSTH fOI CKi•
llGo DlAWltfGo-'IALUAILI NtllS '---;jjjijijiii.jjii;iiiil-;,~OO~O~•~OI P~"s
• In Many. ~any
adidas
S!y1es & S•le~'
PLUS:
The largest
Selection in
So. C..lifomia
Every Model
Available
PLUS:
210 E. 17th, Costa M•sa, S41·ll2l
I I H,llQri>n SouJrr ·Hour~ 9 30-6 Dail~.
of the women's voll eyball record and 5 ,~38 pins. That ~r=1 ~·;'i'V !~k:~ ~Of;~'~o<i.1~~~
team at Golden West College, was more than 200 pins behind 1-~·~~·~'~"~·:::_'.'....'.:::::__:._::~~~'.:===========-I_.'.===========~~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~ has been named to the United San Lcandro·s Cliff h-1cNeal y
Newport Barbor
/tlerinc
·~· Mail V•lffel!:..,o;,;. •at11i;J11; Most
l111olra"(ll'l.tli.. I rr> HtNlrk lr.1 "''"'' tmorawd: 111klr. Melh-IO•'H ~apl1in:
GI,.,. l lumeJ ..... V•nll'r
MOoff Y1h111M: lrllfl $chlosH<; Mos I '°"""'•It~: JqM . G•n:!1I /'/.a11 '""'"W<I: Jlcic Gotod ; CtPll 11: loi:ld
llUftlll"I', ,,.,,,.,.....
M0tl v11y1ble: John Chubit: "loll tn111lr1llot11 ; Jcror ~laan; M o• I lmot'OW'd: !Clrll Pl1!1: C10!1ln: J,m
•111kl11 1tld Dan &~ter.
V•nlrv MO'tl Yaru1bl~: Tl"! Jacob" Mc11 lrnora..N: l(lrt TMr11hlU; Mos t 1~oalrt!ton1I: Martv Kc n d r 1 c 1r; Capta111: Xlftdrlck..
Westndtuter
T-
V1rtltv C1rrl1l11·i 0.... SllCYl MMI V1lu11)11 •r.:f'lfl': am ShfrltYI Molt V1luablol
f tkl: Da t f~¥1rWfY
CIOlllll' Jtff Jolln~onl Me.I Vt!utblt tltr.lnt'it lt•ndY Htni.on; MoJI V1lu1blt
f eld: le!Mrd11~t:it
States VOileyball Association v.tio collected the $1,000 top
All-America team. prize.
A second team selection in Irvine's Farrell Hinkle was
1972, Lou Ann competed on the 22nd at 2.051 , \Veslminster's
Little Dippers team that took Tom f\.litchell 30th at 2,003,
runnerup honors in the USVBA and San Clemente's John Law
tournament in Knox vi 11 e, 63rd at 1,861.
Tenn. recently. -~;;::::::::;:::::::::::; In 1973 she competed in the I
World University Game s. POOL
CIF Baseball
J..A "U1ytth
Lamooc 3. 6urt>111t O Nac11!H •. El StQundo J
LEASE A '74 61 D
W AGOH $9'.H mo.
+T••~mo0£L
COST A MESA DA TSUH
2145 HAUOllLYD.C.M.
5411-4410
TABLES
$395°0
....,,~-:-...;.,; and
up
CHUCk'S ~~:a.-=
275f M•rW" lhd.
C•la Mete _, ..
Cnf1l11: Ion Orv; Moll V1lu1blf l uN11r : llol> Jilam nt; Mosl valu11!11 -;;;_;_ __ ...;-;;-;;-;;"-"-;_ ___ ..;;;:;;;.. __________ •
Field: Dt11nl1 ~i t
v1;;l'rv Ma.I l-lr•llon1t; Jtlf C1Ylord; ~~I Vw1bla : M.lrk J 0 h 11 IO 11 l
C1gt1l11: •r;:i.:~~":,_i\y
f.l.Cl\I ll'!'IOlfl!lon•I· SAi 0,.11,,l•I; ll'J!'.'
V1luallle: Mlkt M1llull C1p11ln: Jt"
(1pl1l11.
fJaitieralty
• l ,.,
Sl'ECIAL LECTURE OH
MIND CONTROL®
.+.HD
ESP.I
~-----~
. ''"'-,. . '"""
OVER 300.000 GRADUATES
Tiit KIRKI Of Toaonow-TDDAT
•-Y •Wl.::MJ
·~ft,lflOll ·-1111(;
•(IU) •t•uca
YOU •uo t90Ufn .,,
• .. ODUnfYITY •!UP • un
• U~MSll• • MUOlCllD • Nl-U
... O.....,lYIJI(; • M>•n • NtnoNAl owawp
L;•"~:::;;":_ _____ _J : :::::::~A.
• lllWYOll ,_
• lOI A~'il.D twd
• lllSll..C:fONl'VSt
• lAWIM~lGDllllf
• llANJ OTlllll
ATTEND FREE Sil VA MIND CONJ"ROL LECTURE
INTR()OUCTORY i lCIUflES
lUESOAV. M•Y 18. 130 llM. Hit TOH INN· FUllEAT()N l!>OOSo ll.1y~l1tRo_..FWfi
WEOHESOAV, M~y 29, 3 Md 7 300"': ROY.lL INN Oi SANTA ANA
1£.00 L II.I St. 12 blk. W o4 S..-.1• Ana Fw(.
THl.IASOAY, M;ry JO, 7 30Clrf'I, HILTON INN . l AGIJNA HILLS 1!>Xf.oL•P•zRa (..,Slfl ~f..,.I
f~IOAY, M'Y 31. tJO I>'''. COSTA M(SA HIN ->~ HMbOf at.id. I"! S.. Deto fWf I
CALL 494-2757 Howwd lrfft9. 125 , ...... ,. ...
~ IHcll. Celf. 92,i I
•
2fl&lacllllyto s.a.,,.._
Or go with the unofficial state bird to San Francisco. Come and
get 'em.Call yo!Jr travel agent or PSA.PSApapu •lift.
•
•
'
FOR
OUR NEW
WELL-ROUNDED
LOW-COST PLAN
FOR SMALL
GROUPS
Company N corT1i:
Blue Cross ..
Our new Small Group
Plan cares for health and bud-
gel too. II is for growing businesses
with up to 24 employees and its cost is as
low as the lowest-cos I comparable plan
around. Yet protection is very comprehensive,
even including $300,000 Major Medical ,coverage.
(Underwritten by Heallh Service Inc., an underwriter
wholly owned by the National Blue Cross
Association.) Find out all about this new well-
rounded package of good benefils. There·s
no problem in making a simple phane
call to 835-3855 or there's nothing .. ' square about sending in • • our coupon.
1 • •
> l
•
..
OAILV PILOT
1' h l" \Vestn1u1stcr Co1n-
nn11ut,11 Theater t1rr1\ cs at th('
t•nd t . the rainbow this
\l'l!l·ke11d as lhe doors of the
group 's brand ne1v playhouse
oilCn on the \\1oody Allen co1n-
cdy "Don't Drink the \\'aler."
MOW THltU TUESDAY
"CONCERT AT
BANGLADESH"
phn
OwAH-Tlmr
Mod P'op11hv
S..rfiri9 Filrn
"P ACIFIC
VIBRATIONS"
"CONRACK"
"Popi" IPGI
A. "Dirty MC1ry, Cro1y Lorry'' V "Lo~I S..mmer" IPGI
"POLICEW0ME"'4"
"THE TEAC HER" !RI
S.A. FRWY (MANCHESTER E X.
G .G. FRWV (CITY OR . EX.)
.I;,., "DAY OF THE DOLPHIN" V ::TME REIVERS" tPGI
"lARDOI"
"Slouqhlerhou~r-S" !RI
"THE PAPER CHASE"
"Clr1dtorrlla Liberty" IRJ
A "MUTATIONS'' uu V "li9hlnit1q 5.,.Md of D~oth"
Sprc,.1 p.,,, 12:30 to 2:00 p.m. {except Sun. &o Hoh.) $1.00
Open Daily 12 30 pm
iltean11hi1e. South Coast
!{epertory also gO<'s on the
boards with it s latC'.~t prlr
duction . .John Guarr's "Thr
I louse of Blue Lea ves."
The new offerings from
'Vcst1ninster and SCR will join
an already healthy schedule of
season<loslng shows at the
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse,
Huntington Beach Playhouse
and San Clemente Com1nunity
Theater. Additionally. I he
always-busy Sebastian's 'Vest
Dinner Playhouse and Foun·
lain Valley' Comm u n i ! y
Theater continue their cwTcnt
attractions this weekend.
DO RIS ALLEN, \\•ho stnrrcd
last sun1n1cr as "'.\lan1c" for
the 'Vcs1n1inster playrrs. is
directing "Don 't IJrink the
\Vater " as the nu1iden sho\v in
the nC\\' quarters for the 13·
yl'ar-old theater group. Sam
Brandon hend s the cast as a
caterer caught in a Coin·
111unis! country. his second
pcrforrn:1nt:(' ill the role.
Jo Srott portrays Brandon's
\\·iJe 1 fer the third tin1eJ \\'ilh
Denise \1cCan1es playing their
HELD OVER !
EXCLUSIVE AREA
ENGAGEMENT
A VERY FUNNY
MOVIE'
ONE OFIHE
YEARS TEN BEST
LA TIMES
"THE TALL
BLOND MAN
WITH ONE
BLACK SHOE "
Hilarious Co·Fea1u1c
YVES MONTANO
ROMY SCHMEIDER
"CESAR AND
ROSALIE"
Program Rated (Al
W0'6MER M.Y. OR.A.MA ClitlT\CS CIRCLE A.WA.RD
"Eto!CHAHTIMGLY UMY .. THOROUGHLY OllGIMAL
FARCE ... , •.. WALTER KERR. M.Y. TIMES
"THE HOUSE OF BLUE LEAVES"
by JOHM GUA.RE
Of'EHS SATURDAY • JUNE I 5 WEEKS OHL Y
~ JOuth Coa:)t Repertory
bwrYaham.: 646·1161 •al ...-i.
"Benefit For Youth" Performance
THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA
EUGENE ORMANDY, CONDUCTING
Friday, Moy 31 , 7:30 p.m., Crawford Hall , UC Irvine
Supper Danc e immediately following
Jewel Court, Sou th Coast Plaza
Q,,., .... , fra,.,k f l 1~" ':>upO•" b1 I.log·' Po~ C•~P""t' f ~~d "' bo·n.,fd
• " .:,. ,. ,• (o~n•y P~ ~"""0"' ':i<>'·~•~ > h• •' '0·1<:lu>!\ '""".'" & Hor:><;
I•'·.,, , '""'P•IUI p, \'.J...,•• r), '"'•I'' .... ~;:, 1.m,1 ~d n""''·'·' "'"'n I nc..•
, ,., • 't 1 • ,.,,. Q Nl Y, tJ' SI 0 o~u•lrotJ;P o! Ph,1!1.,,.r.on1c ofl<t••, ~ .H \'(. (,;ou .I
t1 ,.., , ri ..... 00•1 B~c" h p,,.,,.~ o~o 0.111 o• 0.1? ai32
. '
''THUMDERIOLT
AND UGHTFOOT" lRI
'THE GREAT GA.TSIY" IPGI -"40CA.RATS"
''liRD0I" IRI • '"PAPIUON" IPGI
"THE STING" lf'GI
~
"C HARLIE VARRICK'" IPGI
"DIRTY MA.RY, CRJ.lY LARRY"' lf'GI • ''TEACHER" IRI
"THREE MUSKETEERS"
"I 2 CHA.IRS ..
l
• . . . .
Intermission
Tom Titus
d ri ugh t e r and J . D.
Reichelderfer the bu1nbliJ1g
a1nbassador's son. Others in
the 'Vestminsler cast incluQe
Jerry Flynn, Dftk Taylor,
Craig Henry, Jimmy Hart,
Lou Kosoy, Nancy Smith,
Sherry Scott and Jim Laurent
''Don't Drink the Water"
opens Friday and will play
four weekends. Fridays and
Saturda)'S at 8:30, in the ?le\V
'Vestminster Com mun it y
Theater. 7272 ~taµle Ave ..
\Ve s ttninster. Reservations
893-8626.
A SATURDAY opening 1:>
scheduled for South CoasL
Repertory's new project. "The
House of Btue Leaves,'' \\'1 th
~lartin Benson in the dirl';.'·
tor's chair and Hal Landon Jr.
returning to SCR to play the
leading role. The a ct ion
revolves rather loosely around
th.c visit of Pope Paul to New -'
-Z OF Tl* IEST-
STEVE DUSTIR
mcQUEER HDFFmAn
PAPll.l.DR ®ii
Plui
CLINT EASTWOOD
"MAGNUM FORCE"
\ _____ _
York City.
~tajor roles in the play are
taken by Mimi Smith as Lan·
don·s balmy wife, He I en
Hodnett as his nti$tress and
1\tichael Hume as his son.
",
IRANOON LAN OOH
C~111plcting the cast \\'ill be
:\ancy Johnson, Gary Bell.
Hochellc Savi\!. Barb a r a
Leva, Pam Krumb, Jake
t;ardner and Andy Virscik.
"House of Blue Leaves·• is
ticketed for a fivc-\11eek run,
playing \Vednesdays through
Sundays at 8 o'clock in the
Third Step Theater, 1827
~e\\·pori Blvd .. Costa ~1esa.
Reservations 646·1363.
125·Sa11S...n'MOn 1•1230
Ptltr FOftda ,,
"Dirty Mory, Criny Larry'"
& "Vanilhi!WJ Poi.t"IPGI
00.MUt\I Of UllN(,,10
•C~i\~I Sun Mon M~lO
Sltwt McQutffl
Ovslin Hoffman
"PAPILLOM"
Aho tPGI
"THE CANDIDA.TE""
NOW!
Al THEATRES & DRIVE·INS THROUGHOUT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
THERE'S NOTHIN' THEY WON'T TRY!!
' DllliV ~VUlllY. CRllZY LllHHV
[PG;® COLOR e·r DE lUXE"' ~
ORANGE COUNTY
COSTA MESA. UA So MISSIOM YIEJO C1nem'l v ... ,,, 11•-Bmr;-;o
Coast Plaza 714·S40·0S94 ORANliE FOUNTAIN VALLEY Orange Mall Cinema 714·637·0340
fountain VaUey Cinema 714·839·1500 DRlHliE fOUNTAIN VALLEY Stadium Orive-ln :J 7 l4·639·7860
fountain Valley Drive.In 7 )4.962·2481 STANTON Stanlon Cinema 7!4·894·1413 ·
.. '·~ ...
AG!Ql!Gf. !DI '11.l llM
ml&TIN6
PERFORMANCES
MCI'!· TVES·Wl!O-THIJllllS: 7:15-1:20
FRI: l :•S.f:00-11:00
S•T: 12:00-2d .. •:M·l:•S-t:2G-l 1 :15
SUN: 12:00.2:15-4:»-t:U .. :20
. ············n -
_ .. _
(PG)
: .... · ... ' . .'~'
•
'
TltE COSTA ~1esa Civic
Playhouse swings into the se·
cond weekend oI its wacky
coinedy , •·u. T. B. U.,"
translated into "Unheallhy to
Be Unpleasant.'' Pati
Tambellini is directing a cast
headed by Stanley Wlasick and
Ron Moeller.
Cast in various character
roles are Helene Briggs, Olive
Riches, Susie Scott. Shanna
llollida y, Catherine Ames and
John Almy. "U.T.B.U." plays
Friday and Saturday at 8: 30 in
the Community C e n I c r
auditorium on the Orange
County Fairgrounds. Reserva·
tiom 5.56-5300.
··rmRD BEST Sport ..
enters its third of five
"'eekends at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse under the
direction of Stuart Elliott, \•:ith
Lois Farah and Hank Sorkin
heading the cast of the con1-
edy set at a company con·
vention.
The supporting players in·
cludc Randy Keene. Nick
Filie. Stephanie HumC', Bill
'.\loreland. Sharon 'Vilson, Paul
Sullivan, Liz Snyder and John
Phillips. PcrformancC's arc
Fridays rind Saturdays at 8:30
in the playhouse. 21l0 to.lain
St.. }!w1tington Beach.
"TllE SU DDEN and Ac·
cidenta! Re-education of Horse
Johnson·· continues to be :i
mouthful at the San Clemente
Con1munity Theater ,.,. i l h
Richard Andersen playing the
title role. Hazel Burrows is
directing the cast. \\'hich in-
cludes Mary ~lodiano. Da\·id
RebaL Bevi BurrO\\'S. \lichal'l
~lc~'iullen and Eric Su\ttcr.
Performances arc g i v c n
tonight through Saturday <.it
8:30 in the Cabrillo P!avhousc.
202 .i\vc.nida CabrillO. San
Clemente. Reservations 192·
0~65.
ENTERTAINMENT
E1nmy
Amazes
O'Brien
NEW YORK I UPll -Pat
O'Brien, the screen's tougb
talk ing Irishman, sat quietly
in his Los An geles home
\'latching the afternoon Emmy
a\vards. He had b e e n
nominated for best actor in n :
television special, but didn't
the cast. think he had a chance.
Final perfonnancts are "All of a sudden I heard nly
tonight through SWlday at the name called," said O'Brien in
dirmer house, 140 Avenida a telephone interview. "I \\'as
Pi(.'O, where "Dames ~t Sea'' startl!!d. I really didn't expect
will take up residence next it."
Wednesday. RC6Cf'vatlQl1S 492· O'Brien, 74, \\•as chosen best
9950. ' actor by the American
Academy of Television Arts
ALSO ON THE OOards this and Sciences for his pcrtrayal
weekend is the Fountain of Doc t-.1iller, a physician in a
Valley Commwlity Theater small Midwestern town, in the
comedy "The Pe a cock ABC-TV special, "The Other
SE-a son,'' directed by Jay Woman.''
Conklin . t-.1argaret Bo Y c r . Doc ~1illcr advises a \voman
Joseph Damroth. Sylvia Lt'C about the problems of having
and Ken Smolka head the casl an illegitimate child in the
of the mystery comedy. town. The show itself won ri n
The curtain goes up at 8 Emrny for best afternoon
o'clock at the theater. 18280 dramatic special. ~lt. Baldy Circle. Fountain\ -----'-------I m Valley.
* CALl..BOARD -Auditions
for the first local community
theater production of •·r-.tothcr
Earth." created three years
ago at South Coast Repertory.
\\'i11 be held Salurdav and Sun-
day at the San CleniC'nte Coin·
n1unity Theater. 202 t\ven ida
Cabrillo, San Clemente. \V;1r·
ren Deacon is directing Lfie
rock musical \'lilh a n
C'COlogical theme and tryouts
arc carded for 2 p.m. both
days \\'ilh a July 18 openins.
* BACKSTAGE -South Coast
MANN
THEATRES
Repertory has extcndt'd the
deadline for its surnmer acting
conservatory an additionril
\l'eek. through June 7 ... the
course runs six \\'eeks. fivl'
days a week. froin 9 a.m. to 4
p.m .... call SCR at &46-1363
'\'lt\Oil"\G UP a four-\vee k for further details ...
st int at Sebastian's '\'est Di11·1-;;:;;::~-~--~-:;-:;-:;-:;-:.:-:-:;-:;;;;:;-:;-:;,_;-
ncr Playhouse in Sa n w Clemente is the l\\.'()-{tlararter • 671·6260~
comedy "The Q\\'l and the ~ ......
Pussycat." \l'ilh John Ferzac· ••
ca. who doubles as directer. n os £111 Cout Hwy.
_a_nd_Le_e_1_M_u1_·p_h_y _r_onlp:tsing ~ co11 0NA 0£1.. M•R
Sptci11l mati11tt w~ oNy SI.
IP·""
Cont in. Sol & S-. 2 P·""
I st Rvn Orllll'IC)lt C-ty
Burt Loncinl~
The most loscinaling
murder mystery in years.
, . . . -"
A ROfRatic llockbvsfff'
SiREISAND
&REDFORD
TOGETHER I
THE
WAY
WE
WERE
phn
GOLDIEHAWH
EDDIEAUERT
"BUTTERFLIES
ARE FREE"
CA.LL THEA.Tllf
FOR SHOW TIMES
--'TM f'a,-ChcrM"
~1 &1 1
"C..,.irloLAlrty" ..... SU'-' CONNUl
ZAROOZ 1•1
"~ BARBARELLA
•
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ElJ!N !.J51\N·W.X 1()-l SllX)ll·llf Jcal !lllYWtlH'{lll~ l'Kl'-
PERFORMANCES
MQN<fUES·WEO.·THIJllS: C>nN At S:OO SHOW AT 7:0IM::llO
fAI: l :&er-1:20-ll:IO
5-,1, 2:00.-:20-l:~l:JO.H :W
SUN: 2;00-4:2CMl:SG-l::t0
•
l\OBERI AEiifOKi::;mA ff1AAOW
• DAILY PERFORMANCES
CARATS DAILY 7:00 & 11 :30
GRIAT GATSaY l :SS
SAJ. SUN •• CONTINUOUS
'
40 CaTI'ltS
li1· l'll••n GrM ltllv U•·ard A!Mrt Billie Birla
AUO PlW.,... .,.
"MUTATIONS"
'""'°' ---.. . . . . . . ' . : ... . .. . . . ..
-
CUM IAlftUOOD
'TllUftHRBOLI
an•UCllllOOI'
... th9!f hrJoe _.,
-mi!\\Mi
lo 9'1 ri(.h
·~f. & WM • .(OHflNUOIU quiri<! .-2 -tH-·-
, ... ,wm ... ., ----, .. IT~Hl"llGMf
-&U.IN
"llHNt'"
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Thursday, May 30, 1974 "' DAILY PllOf
l:·G~e:n=e~re~l~R~.E.~~;;;l:00::;;2Gen;;;e;r•;l;R.;;E.;;;;;;;;;;1CIO;;tl~Gene===r;•;t;R;·E::-::;;::;;;1002;";;0;..,.;;'~';;;R;.E;·;;;;;;;;;1;002;;i;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~~.e;n~o=r1;1;R;·;E;·::;;::;;;l002;;;1 ,;G;e;n1;::r•::;;R;·;E;.::;;::;;:;;;:G;•;"";r;•;l;R;·;·;;;::;;;;002;;1 GeneralR •.
THE WINDMILL HOUSE MESA VERDE'S BEST ' LIKE RENT
FAMOUS LANDMARK ON BALBOA PE-JUST LISTED lUXUR·Y LIVING ONLY LESS N~NSULA POINT. s Bedroom family home, Executive 2 story, 4 BR, 3 ba home. Lux· ~~:~ ~rro~~~y. aom;:o~~ ~1th 3 story windmill tower that will de-uriously appointed with expensive plush In Big Canyan, one of the most luxurious & 11pprox1n1Jttc>ly s:~ prr
11gbt yo~r younestexs . ''Dutch" shingled ex• crpts ... beaut. drps, wall paper, mirrored be'autlful 3 bdrm .. 3 bath homes we have 1non1h rnjoy your ov.·n
ter!or. Surrounded by large shade trees. In· wall11 & rustic used brick patio. Lg pool size ever seen! Thi s exceptional townhome is i;parklln~ clj·on, tre!ihly
ter1or Is designers dream. Remodeled last yard with manr. trees. Best location -on located on a quiet cul de sac. with a real painii·d, 2-btory home· year by bite t/ F · I Of ed $67 950 H 't h ( h t.lr1\e )-'Our hout or campt·r Ii . ar.c . c owner. eatures large quiet st.ree . er at , . urry, won pa rk-like setting! Enjoy t e security o t e rij.!ht <>n 10 thi· lot. Thi!'l
tv1ng and dunng room both with fireplaces. IN HARBOR HIGHLANDS last al Ibis price. Call 546-5'80 guarded entrances. $145,900. 1ov..iy • a1< home '"'' 11 n11 New kitchen with everything including self · convenlen<.-e lo Mopping,
cleaning micro wave oven. Jacuzzi tub in Tho UNIQUE FHturH Of This Home Are: COLLEGE PARK-POOL HOME ,, __ .,i,1£1:~~~ "h • • 1" ,. h u r.· h ".
master bath. Pebble conc rete patio with tree It has hardwood floors, a spacious kitchen, POOL SEASON JUST AROUND THE CCR· ~ OUR i!55''""'V;:,;•i;A;i;;, _____ "' Comrnunlly pool e.nd park
shaded redwood benches. Separate boat copper plumbing, a massive double fir&-NERI Beautiful 3 bedroo1n, 2 bath featuring EA lu
11001 ~ All for 539·900·
Stor .. ge yard. I d 40' I' I H bo HI hi d It di PI V d t 1· I BA" AND B CH I Cn!l 546-:r.llJ. · .. p ace an -a poo . n ar r g an s, an ou s an ng a o er e s one 1rep ace, -I OPEN"" ,,. '"' ro """""
PLUS-PLUS-PLUS Newport Beach and anxious to move. This remodeled kitchen with new Dooring and tile 675-3000 ~ · • ~ ? Bedroom guest cottage presently brings is a good buy at $79,950. counter tops. Home centers around very pri· 2407 E.CDAllT HWY. coRONA DEL MAR ·
1.n over $4000 yearly income. First time of. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 676-6000 vale pool area \Yilh many fruit trees, block . '1
fercd, home and guest house $210,000. Call wall , and covered patio. Walk to all schools General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 . .
for appointment 540.1151. 2443 E. Coaat Hwy ... Coron1 dot Mor and shopping. CALL 546-5'80. ;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I
General R~E.
Corona del Mar
TRIPLEX
ERITAGE
1002
EXPENSIVE IMPORTED TILE
... in entry, breezeway, kitchen and rear
yard of this exquisite Portofino home with
view of 1'"'ashion Island. FEE land! 3BR, 4BA
-j bonu s room AND 111any more custom
features, all for $96,000. ·
NEW RED CARPET, REAL TORS
"FASHION ISLAND"
567 San Nicholas Dr., Suite 103
CALL 641).8672
LISTINGS NEEDED
General R.E . 1002 General R. E.
BROADMOOR
TURTLE ROCK
1002
~-. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
546-5'80
Open Eves.
__ *:..:__B_a_lb_o_a _B_a,_y _P_ro_,_p_ert~i-es--'-*"=--, Going-Goiilg-Going??
BALBOA COVES
General R.E. 1002General R.E. 1002 Like new! Pier privil.
I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I Trade for uni ls
! 8f'YCR~ST ~REA I \\hert' rould you find a 5
4 BR .• f1 JllC ~n mstr. I ho.'(hoon1 home with ramily
\ LoveJy S\\'JffilTI Jng pool; 1 Jl'!Olll for only $:~.500? See
greenhouse f o r the 1111-. no11h Co:.ru 1\.!f'!l'.a
botanist. \·Valk to all I hcJuty! Jmnia .. uhth'. big
EASTSIDE BEAUTY
The ideal family home on huge lot on cu.I -
de-sac. Features 4 bedroom, 18x:22 rumpus
room. 2 Fireplaces. Fruit trees. Storage
shed. Fish pond and MOREi Call for ap-
pointment to see ... only $48,950.
MESA VERDE SPECIAL '
Come see this large, immaculate 3 bedroom
& family room home in a choice neighbor-
hood. ~·Jany custom features including front,
fenced patio, small guest house and hydro-
ponic greenhouse. Priced right at $41,500.
~21 1797 ORANGE,
COSTA MESA
$129,900. Call 675-7060 ·I I ,6•950 642 7,911 la\~!l aren, autom11t1c ~c 100 S. · ;>, • ~., , s prinkle r s, n1a~~1vc
---------l \vA·rERFRONT 2 + r 1r1·p lat'(', l'l"<iutifu l . . • h;ir1h1ood lloor.; Oen, pier & sllp. Corn er . COATS
JUS l"THE SPOT i lot. Owner most an-I ~ &
. . XIOUS. $107,000 . '""--I w WALLACE
For a lge. famlly; m p E N J NS U LA PT....,,, · REAL TORS a 1uce neighborhood. 4 · · BR ., lam. rm., study & Brand new .4 BR. 3 ba .
1
-541>-4141-
pool $46 900 ssi;.8800 Be st locat1on . Asking (Open Evenings)
. ' . . $149.000. 673-7420. ',... .......................... 1 m REALTORS m ,
1
'-sw1NG A MOP
L..I:::! S local Offices To Serve You SAVE A LOT
General R.E. foo2Gerleral R.E. 1002 l-'1\11:: BEDRO<.l:\!S
ALL TJ:o.:tl.:\·IS
'You bargain hunlf'l'S had
hc1 tl'r get out your mops,
l>roon1s, and burkrts and
1·;111 us on tlus one. Do a
httlf' clean u1> and you'll
have a hon1e that you'll b<>
proud of. Call 00\~' and ask
<>.bout hsting No. 9-\01
WALKER & LEE
. ..,,
!UIJT1110 ...,. , ···.1 5 .. a.:I ~,~~·•i·1•t
R[~llOR~ down
A small price
1Dpay
1D move in1oa
Delightful home w i t h
CUSTOt.1 S PAJl KLING
P O OL . fr es h p a int
lhroughout. PROFESSION-
ALLY LANDSCAPED. Spa<.'-
iuus livlni: room. }o"onna.I
dining roon1. Qi('('ry kit·
chen. Huge master suite
ith sepanitc den. WALK TO
SCI IDOLS. Loaded with
l?'ood il's -must see -call
842-2535.
f
Make an almost immediate move. Newport Crest
is the exciting townhome community that
overlooks Newport Harbor and the ocean. Big,
bold spaclou!'l homes. Residents' Swim and Tennis
Center. EXterior maintenance provided, Come -
let uashow you how you ca n't afford not to live at
Newport Crest. 2·3-4 bedroom residences .,,eWom$93,000
Q
From Pacific Cout H~hwtr
and 811P.rior Awnue
lnt9fltcllon, drlw up
Superlcr to f\ltwpOrt Crtat entrance. Seit oftlC:e:'
.#12 Robon Cour1. Open
deity 10 A.M. to Sun1tt. (714) &45.fo141.
•
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( • I
I
Lachenmyer·
Realtor '
$41,950 will buy a 4 bedroom
home on a great <.'Orner lot
in great Hunt ington Beach
location. flu.ge m a s t er
bedroom. Large efficient
kitchen. l>1uch more. Call to
see. ~7-6010. ,\~t.
/.Jn NIG[[.
BAILI Y f,
AS~UC I AflS
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34 D~ILV PILOT Thursday, M11 30, 1974 ,..-.,-~-,_==.,---,,..-~-_,=,..,..--.,,.-.-,--.,.,..,,..,..,.,_.-=-.--=="='"--.-:--.,.--:====-.r:==~":atlOOD.':ri:J.h'W.:t.i'.,iiiiil ~C~o-ron-a"'dTe~l~M=.-r-~I ou=~c-o-ron-.-d~.~I ~M~.-r_.:.;.~1~02i~.:.,I H~u-ntlnglon llttch 1040 I ~L;;•;gu;;:n;;:•;;:B;;:e;;:e;cli;;;;;:;;';;:04;;;;;e ;;L ... ;vn;;::•;llel;;c;;:";;;;;;;;;;.;;1;i4i;; AewporriOICJI 1069 Newport .Buell 1069 lncoll>t Property :lllllO R.. E1tete Wntd. 1900
TIRED OF LOOKING?
THE THING TO DO
CALL
UNIVERSITY REALTY 673-6510
\\ .<\N'r a neat cottage I blo<'k fronl Big
Corona? 2 Lidnns., 2 btlths , $74,500
OR. a 4; fl . H-2 lol . Cape ('od{'h 3 bdrm ..
:! bath . ior1nllt din .'! . . . . . . . . . . 574 .500
\\' . .\LK to everything, modern doplex? 2
13cdruon1 plu s 3 bcdroon1 ........ $79,500
Un. a larg e :i bdrn1 .. forn1al din .. on Lark·
SJlllr '! 4U Ft. l~-2 lot . . . . . . . $89,500
11: vou l'H ll f111d 281 1 Otean Lane. vou'IJ
buy · it~ 3 13dl'Jll., \'iC\\', vie\v ...... Sli2.500
, Price Reduced
1
• 300 YARDS WESTCLIFF TRIPLEX ~:1~·~.=~ 0:::1.!
I $2,400. TO BEACH ~~.~.~.:l&hl~,J'.n; NEWPORT will .xc11ana• !l!,tXXJ ·oo!Jd ,_ d 2nd T o. at dowtl p&¥ment. 2 Bdrm. + Pool -•ruction pmt,.. Ex«. Ju.t olf Newport B1' . • Call . 646-r.IXl Mon·Tuc•· cuaton1 tiomes ln v.· e 11 Cood aroeu to Newport -Wed $22 600 tslabll3hed neighborhood. Coit& Mesa -San [)lego>1.,:~·'='==,.-,=""'"" ' Each bome • BR. 3 ruu Fwy. C.ntral Mesa location. RF.SPONSll!LE party want•
\'ou 1·11.:1 ;.•::...\ .olOO'I rno!'f' th:ln baths, fonn&I dininK. lg. Ownen wtit bal 3 bedroom• to bu,y hOmo for· low down
. thl.! for 11 nl'\V unit or ~:or tam nns, wot b&r, sunken _ diillna: room -family paymtnt. 513-1679
' <'Rn bu1 my upgraded uni1 IRVINE COVE co nvl'r S•tlon pit, room_ orchid room -a
I lor $2,000 below replace1nrn1 Ramhllng 5 bedroo1n, 4 bath r'V1Ch style + many fabulow; featul"l!I. 'lteplacea • l.ndoor BCQ • 38'
1 t:t)sf. ! ~'lr2ad tHl a 1f.i acre. Benni ceilinl!'S, St. Tele. ~223$ for appnt. patio clrcled in \\'l'Ouahl Iron
2 lidrm ronclo., <les11-ab!e · ( · 1 & l I • J -2nd p.1Uo -plus K'Of'Ceou5 !?round Jcvl'I f!oor plan. 1~~ 11 '1: t:s kitcnen ... rnas er su le with &· Newport Htlghts 1070 more! Both other unita arel'iiiiiiiiiii
ye<i1-s new, Freshly Painted l'\17.Zt. .. z BR -patios -e.nclosedll
••llh '"'"l"IJy pnn.le<1 and GRUBB & RLIS CO CUSTOM Cape Old. 3 BR, 2 •• ,.,,..,, All this for only Hou111 Furnlahtd mlrrn"'" I.vine. room, plu"' • bwi .. 2 frplcs, 2 <at' gar., By !IYI tlown . J"" '"'lac<d.1 --"'------3-1-02 \•:aUpapcred dining area, 67•
7
•80 o..vner, 64&-4500 or 646-0383 No11· only $71,j(J(I. Cal 1.,G;;.::.e;,;n,;.tr;..•..cl_.,.... ___ _ ~hai:: l'arpets & custom REAL TORS ~ v 5 cl t 1076 7~1700 r ~.~~~'·cu~~~sl~: ~~1 '1"rv~1"'n"•"'"""'""""'""'"1"0"4"4"1"L"e"u"'u"n"•'"8"e"•'"c"h"""""1"04""'a 0 ::.Y•m•n •1 ' Bil lum;si'Milll\~I •:;~~IE'[ia;!1ch~12 !~~ ~ An1e1 cart .• _.. . , , Laguna. lops, i.hake roof, near e""''Tner nr ...-.u l'OOl'SC BR rr 1
FABULOUS Ont,y $3&,500. A'!Su1n11.ble _ 1 deck, v\l!~'. g~rage, Laguna. Hunting.on Center, swi~· 8~i'o loan. !192-4121 Bkr. 1' s·~-UTIL Pd,, .... 1 BR hse,
-
i;1·h,)Ofs. 11·a lklng d1slan,,.. to I !F' • ov • • $1!(>.UTIL Pd 1 , Pc,
n1ini;:: pool and mRny part: y E ~ -•
Coron• dtl Mar 1022Coron• del Mar 1022 l 11.reas. No1v $2001 below cost IR IN San JUln cestrn. 1078 1'1 blk beach, Ucriut. view,
1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;; . now. IP r in" p" 1' only TU"ru' ROCK I Newport B-y Towen PRESTIGE AREA * * Pitre'• Your NUtgu'".v""1-Ew RENTALS I' nl1•asl'.'l. Cilll tOOav K Air Conditiolll!d 1 It 2 BEDROOl\J . *. PROUDL~ WE OFFER._.. * l -__ 847·3~5 --·-J B~~~~~~1 .!::'l~;~~rkl1!o~~' . $34,~ 1-'ull :ii(.-e =~~ HOl\IES 1:,~ hofi: fo~~.:i:~~ ~~ * t ;h;h:'R';»G~~tct 67'.~l030 or 4~248
4 t\e\\ 1Jst111gs-Quallty Duplexes-QuaJ1ty renters 5 BR TWO STORY I Klas~. ii•allpa!'l'•'. u1t:;t·1ttk'li I Tins bcauliful 21 ~ _yeor old Boat Slips within Rn l'slatc l'Omn1uni1y INVESTMENT FOR ~~11~:~1110~1~~bim~i 1~11 ''IY hu1111· in q u i et ff'ntu1'('s and a !ll{'f' ran11ly I ~inr Sflarkles hkr new. Full Security Hi,ghrise with irs o11o•11 7. acres u( YOU 111111111
22S-22511\ MARGUERITE-$84,500
42"'47,6Y2 ACACIA-$78,950
600-600V2 ACACIA-$79,500
718·7181/i ORCHID-$79,500
I r11·ii::hborhootl f 1•n t u r lo I! 1 y,ho has ouii::rov.·n thi'ii' I N "11 sh a C: ca r Pe~ s Steel ~ ~n~ construction recreolion lacililil's, :.ur-. . BR hie, $135, Laguna. 1 BR
hrl11d th·~. ~·uston1 drps i hornt'. A chancP 1o bu\" J\01v thrO~l!lllOut. Ct>nlral a 1 r I Private Balconies l'OWKll'<i by Ire: parcels ol ~ U~ts + pool $149,9CX.I sep. 11lorK.', N1?w1JOM dplx . l
through 0111, .... rp. ~U£'!;1 .1:n1. ~nd h;ivc :1 lo11g i·~t"l'O"'· LF"Ondll 0!1,[nf.• al~! .a ~'eat ':! 1;.1rage: Spaces for most undeveloped land. llor~ ;> Units C.l 11·/trplc Sll~.000 BR ocean view hse, Cdl\1. v./pni'. oo., floor 10 C't'lhng $69 jQI) I II .\ 1 ~ •• van 11 1th wuts. .. cots·aJ 011 your 2/Jacre lot. ..J Pie:-.: under constr $105,000 ,\180 beach Ba.ch',,; Units
/ircplact', all (•let". h!iuis. · p:1yn1er~1~ or S2'l0/month Root tor suodeck Well pl11.nncd ho1ne 11ith Near the. beat'h . s1urth11: $100. Act • .t't.>c, F · l I JI fornv1.I d1nt11g ro o 111 . RENTALS I JUSI 11·a1.t1.ng to be assun1cd. L'11usua. Opportunity to spaclou!i 1uon1!i thruout. 111 lfuntingion Beach 9'ffi-iW30. ~-~-~--,=
• 01' app l 0 see, p ee,se ca : Situated 011 ~n U\"l'l"Si"ll'(I l(ll. I . I &tier hun-y ond call. Purchase Be.yfront Property Covf'red patio & 3 Cfil" gal". AND WE HAVE ·-3106 RACHELLE ROBERS REALTOR 152,000. A cho«'<' 3. bed>oom ""''°"''I WALK ER & LEE in Newport Beach. Allfoc $76,300. OTHERS II Balboa Island
, Call 9ti3.-l:i·l3 n1odel v.ilh_ carpe11n~ ttnd · . . 310 .rernando Rd., N.B. CALL. 493-1124 Don't ntiss ou! a;:1'tling one of \\'ATEH1''RONT Avail. July
3333 E COAST HIGHWAY I scrt.'t'oed 111 at r 1 u n1 · 1 Hl.'<1I Estate 67>8551 Ct1pistrano \lo.Bey kealty ~·our \"hOk'i'. Cnll. . . . . 1,1 10 J"ly "?th, .,~ 1,.,
• C•therlrnl ttii;ng•. h<caulllnl 545·949 I Th R I E 1 t F I " '" ~
CORONA DEL M &.,, 75 • I" SUPER "E" Santa Ana 108,0 e ea 1 a e a r wk. ·I BR. 2 bu•. bit-I"'. 2 .... 6 .2373 I .~.,, ,,,.... ""'•1" '"1°'''· . . . 536-2551 .3, 6133 $380. OR n eozy 2 bcrlroon1 I Million Dollar View ON FEE or • 1·ar giu·. 1luck, Priv. l1ty. I ~.,...,..~~~"""""!'~""~"""'"~""""""""""'"" J\>IOVING South, niust scl 1,1 .,..,...,..~.,..~~~~ .... ~1 :.H3-61!2-1236
1 __________ 10_2_2 I Costa Mesa 1024 1 Squui·e. rl~se to r1·f'r~thi11g, hon~l' 11·i.111 tt ':"-·riutif;:i l•P1·;111 dr<1nu1.tiC' roll us about this rni 2 ha, 011 ivlde c:orricl" 10 UNITS Cost• Mesa 3124 Corona del Ma-,---------niodvl iu altral..'ll\"I.' \\"nlnul IVf'l".I' p1'i\11!e:; hdr111, 2 ha1h If you ha\·c n flair for thl! Shake roof, 1·ustic, 3 & fa111!' ~--~-----~~
I I :11r (;On<l111ont•rl. $:!10. :\NU .~ C<i1ullna \"11'.'11. hi:..: .h.1u1· ..;enNi.tionnl prope11y. lt"s $145 000 ''THANK YOU'' Country Club 111'.' h~tl't' luls uf Ut•aeh I pl:11.1 11irh fn1nii) r • •. 1he s.1ught alter ·I BR across front'fubutous park ,1;; , E·SIDE 2 BR FURN.
T1.xl<1.) I i1ar1t iu ~l•.'t lh.1.nk Community rt·ulals loo! i t1rcplae£'. Dining '"""i i, Fa1nily ltooin ·~·· Plan in ~;s ~(!:;~~ f~~1~iy1:·~~~:1cC'or~f'Ou~ gardf'n. Sf'tt1ni:;.I Water & gardentr pt1id.
,,1u 10 th£' ,l!tr.tl 1,..1 ~u11111,1 , .. Mother·in.Law's Suite iro1:ksli.J1> & ofli<.'i:'. · "l''H the 8\uffs highly upgraded ' . :incl !fl sha1·11 u1u1s. &s1 1$295/ 54s..o228
111111 ll•)l'k 111 oui C<ll"On;; i.J,•j /lus !::irt::e home g1\·es a \\'ith its 011·n kitchen & barh l Cnll 67~7?i;, lti1t• lhc pool. Pri\.,\ · 11·1111 l'ff(!('tiv.~ use of ch£'n, CO\'Cl't.o\I _P~llo 111 11 "11·! loi..1ki11· pl:u·<' 1111 tht' hl0<.:k.. mo. ____ ~
'.\lal' uf f1•·"· Tl1t•v ui'' ;1 ft·elini,: of priv;icy fru111 th1.· 1 in this 1·an1bling ra11 ch slylt• l11•;u·h . n~·rr£aliflrL f:ir11i1 1 n1i1Tvrs. ~hutt<'rs, top gra<lc ~I ~u.i'den. $l:.l,m. Oi•·ncr. "1"1101 111.· "1ut b11ilclin~s Lido !sle 3156
bl1 urt uf agrs. tcill'.'nls and lin1£' yuu eatt-r !hf' enl·losf'd ho111e. 3 full baths & lots (If I :a·:~llabll'. $8'1,900. L';1ll i~I-1·;.1 pct and 11•a.ll (."Overiogs. .>J7-6031 I l1h'l•llli'.' :SI ir; l'l'I' ni·11.1t!1.~ ----------1>er~11:ihtl1· ... and lhl'y art· 1·ou11 y:ird until you h•li\"e 1 vth1•r 1wo1 for your fan1ily. !IOf!J If you e111e11a1n tl1is is your South Laguna 1086 C;u·a!ll's. U111t!•1· rs anx1to11."l·J.ll>u l:I VING . 2 13R, :i B1\.
•·on l!" n i ..1 [ • 13 I L I. It .1 )ears t1(•\1-, 4 bedrooms I It has <in as:oun1atile lo\1• l hcnne! ! Prin1e l0t.•atiun. C<ill nu11 .\1 .111 :--ununrr. No Pl'l1'. Fl::l'~."\,\;o..1.JtZ 1.., a finf' 1111h n1as1cr do,1·nstairs. inl<'1"t'st rate loan, so hurl'y. I
11
( TA~ftllil!ll0 I ] Only S87,500 r ec -AT OCEAN-752--1700. ! Cull i213• 793-0427
r1111.tur1· hroklz. "nd 1'"" 1hc ·'°"'Pill"<ilc dining:, l a r ~ e S39.!l(J(). I "-Dlf..... &l4-72l l ;>,..,\rrh-llay-2 Lots & 2600 t;q. INYE$IMI:NI DIVISION ·Newport Beach 3169
11·orkccl under. ,\ L J (' E garage door opc1K'r. All this f1nn quil'k sale pr 1 c cl ' ' 1!1.,.t hrukt'r uur o!fui." £'1'<·r f;un1ly 1uom. EI cc tr 1r 1 Christiana Realty ft. i\lonlc-rcy. Reduced 10 [9 !
CLARKE ,\.,IJ BOB and vrry Jo1v vard 6916 Warner I Sl:>!J,500 , , ,j 2 BEDROOM
II O LUE It IF T II. h 11h rn•iinl('nancc at S 6 l :~ j 0. at Golden West I , TURTSLE ROCK 1920 !oi. Co.ast Hir)".. L.B. C ~Y~N!AI{~. Jlli:\LTUI'\ / .~ 11 Lh1th, f11-eplRl't'. i.::art1.qf',
1'.\JX'r1{'111·1·1l t1n1kl'1,, ,,u·h 6 Hi-71il 714: 842-7486 BET BUY RANCH STYLE 33;)j-V1a Lido· NB --101el) y;iul. $300 n1011th .
.1u1nt·d ou1· 1.'.\t·lu~11 •· 11 11ll1of11 OPfN rlL 9 . ITS FUN TO fJE NICE• 213· S92~SS68 J~1~t ~<'duccd to S.."19.900 Lovely, ne11 2 txtnn., den, 2 l.S7l-fhtrbor 81-C.~I. ~ A PAIR OF FOURS-N11o·p1. fight~.
d11llar t luh lu ... 1 lll'•·li.. I ' ~ · 't 11.n:lud1ng. land! JQ,.; <lo\1'n ~·I 1~1. ll(lnle in ii """'l•y a<'"°, 00-2991 R M C di R It , LI.. ® 1 ""' ., ~" \\'on't <lo niurh in a IJ<lk••l' oy c ar e ea or ,-. · . .\.\ l0tll"li!ILJ."\ 1., Ui<' 1 01vner 11·11 L'ftrry 10',i-on !hi~: Bnght kitchen, 1rood nrs. in
h1i·i·lv :-;ih•..,l;idi· 1 1 . ., ni 1 , 0 ON PYMN'fS sharp 3 bdnu., 2 bath hotne; I rll'll. bcalll ct'il. in liv. rm. ~<tnlc hul this pair of t'UL'H 1810 Newport Blvd., CM
''
. II . I I I I . r. I~ PLEXES ('till rlo it Int fc11" • 5••7729 , 1•.\11 ·0. 11a ;1111111111t1!1c Rt>al Rustic <'Ountry ~!~I r top ocat1on, across fron1 !lug£' n1str. bdrm. Oct>an & BEST BUY! -Homt! -c~.,,1 I ii I 1 , k & I y · I 11· ,_, _vour f!lans for a :-l'1'Ut'Cl '~~"""""1'!~""!\"!~"l"'I "'·i1 ... 1 1 11~1111 1.·) •· :-. , l_,_ hoinl'! L'ulf' and roly 11.Hh par · poo. if'11· o ro 1ng canyon viev.'s. $7..J,900 ,.....
N1\!JJ'.'ll·: 1'.lC:~: 1~ 1:11 · rrackling stonefireplal'f'. ;; hill~: 1o\·rly carefree This l'hoi~ home on 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·l;i;.;;: financial fullU't'. l'<'rfr1.·lly Houses Unfurnishtd l111rd11·orkin~ s ;l I ('~ I ;od I'. Owner Desperate! hr's. 1 b.1·s, copper kl'l1il' Jodsepg. r.::arly occupancy ?l.larinrr"s Drive is nricert to w 1 i;uiteri for .;ii·ner 0t·1.:upancy 1 --------~:;.;..-1 11·ho.~c l111.~h;u1rl 1~ n·l11:,.,1 ."\(•('ds an in1n1cdiat~ sale on 1;ournit'l kitchl'n, has 11.ll th'' a1·a ll. sell. Gracious 4 ~diuom MoDilt Homes' or l~vestnient. $il.j{)() •·iu•h, General 3202
!1'0n1 a 1111Jt1H1"y 1·ar•······ and I his ~1·n.~atio11;il Eastridge latest ff'aturei;: Big back I homl'. Close to schools, park for Hie 1100 low ltl<.,1n1es thlll c11.11 1•11s\l,v1-----------I
is also !lfJ11· HI 1·1·.1.I ,·,1:i1<•. ::!-sl(ll)' Big flour plnn ivilh yard v.·ith ponrl, a \1'<1 ll'rfo!I :'REAL and library. $57,500. _;::.:...;:.:,:::_ ___ ..;.;.:::1 be raised lu $i10/nlu. 9'; ALA IENTALS
'.\L\llY '.\L\~l;L':'I! 1~ lh1· l. bdrn1s, :{ IJ;i!hs. I-'or1nal I and l'O~(' gardens. Dbl£' g11r cau 6T;i;-7225 20 x 44 PAR.fu\-IOU~l', ll(!\\'I 811'. loan possible· or?"! Sold
J:: r a,. 1 nu" i:11I f\'<1111 d1n1nj! rwn1, chef's kitchrn. J for Dad. 1\o ilov.·n 10 Vet~. l'PtS, drps, a11·n1~ & to~1·1hcr or srparately. wt S11C1•1111 IN U •Ylt:I Tro11rs~l'f' \Iii \1•11 Ytu'k, J•an1ily 1·00111, sc1~ing rooin./ ,lu~t listed, better ruo on 494-656/ skirting, \\';1 !k !O ~Ul}l-'r/ Call &H-7211
v.llOM' e.\l(·n~l\f' 11·;1v('J ~·11,,plrtl'C. s:J7,:J00. 01vi1er This onf'! Bkr 962-5.'lll i\lkt:;. A,,lEltJC.\\'., j,i4-~:: .. J
l•J!f'lll'Y i'.'\"1~·r·1r111·1 h;1..~ ~:11 ••11 11•1111~ ;u1 offet': C ii J I /Jn N IGEL
IJAILE~ &
ASSlJCIATES
I I I Bayfronl Pk, l .. u··0'l' ..! lir, nc11•
pt'Orlr. ,\:\N ·'.\1c11:1 'rz. 0111· • · . a _g . crpt, blln:-., I-'A h1·at, r.u·t' 11•r ;1 V\"t' v 11 011 1111h ~l llrl i~lfl I $23 000 151 'n'estern B nk Bid
lll"llf'!-1 tll!.'•llll!•r t"•llll•·~ fr.un TflflBElL. Rr~t lluntinglon B {'ii I.' h 0 UnL\'{'55~ roooark. lrvN!neh buy!. $12,9j(). GL;'..~'-'-"-·-~1 ___ -=-o""':;:::;:::;:;::==-1 NIWll'Otl" l UY. C.M. •42·13ll •.·-.,,, ,.,.,.,,,,.,,,.,, .••>•I 1,.,, •I•·•• Jo1::llion. •1z;o. total do11·n , ays • 1g ts Rf''llT O••' N -ll t •]"· ·' ' •' 3 BR Ou1standing "rove views" of Acrtane tor ..ale 1200 48 UNITS '-' · ' IC·-•11· 1 ~ ·"' h1·au11f1rt ··111 ·,. ··11a1 ;1hn1.11 ~ ~ taxi's · 111.surant"e. · ·· Swaaning Bay Vt'ew • rurn ~ ut1l p<l·HUll!lY! · I o 11 1 l ! r Jk ' I 1he Lagunn Coast l ine. --r-h(•r ... C'll,\l!Lll·; ·"'ll.\··1-:H. . -la. rnc osei !>•• w, 11·11. • ----------· !-\auna. Cool .'?.: 1'Vz.v patio Fanlastic viev.· is yours 11·ith Red Carpet Exclusive5 ASSUME 51;2 0 10 LUTI~;~ 1 l~r rl'u r h"f' SlJO 1h1• \(JUI!'.' £', _ :'II ,1 r 1 11 , h.• n111Jor sh<i11µ1ng l-cnter I If Game's Your Fame I · 1 BBQ 1 1 u · \ 1 · G · f t st1·/rrf-c·lo~1' to OCl-:A'.'l'. --Xl 1 11·111 ,IHll1c;r11t11"t'yof lJS 1 Ul1ent1.c eor.:1<u1 DUPLEXES f",1plo1111 11111! 1\11 .'h·•!,,1-.1 2>.i.•.![;111Jut·Bl\d. · nl st.•i1ei· lOnie clon"t hesilall! lo S('(' this h1·1ck. S11ace for \'irrory Colonial l bilrn1, ..J W.th PHl'llf': l.OCi\TIO': :;;1\·r··~ .. "\I ('~; Lacuna Tri-I hr SIS."i
ft\nll l11s 111.·toH" 1•1 \ 11.111;11•1 _ lo"!;. ;\h·~a 'If 1 .1.t!l"alll\e I bdrrn. honie I garden in thf' yard. Has :! honie. \Valeriront h 0 111 e S::S,7j(} 2 hl" I h;i, 1 br I !Ja I.., L .. n·d£'n 111\lt .... 1.~'U•ll" 111• •I '"r p.•1 .t, 1·h1l1 !. h:•~ rn.idi• " hi illi.o nl .~1.111 I * MESA VERDE ! 1 111th fantu~11e gan1e t\JOnI I de<·ks 11·i1h 1·ic11·s & 'a 11·et 11ith den. forn1al dinin;; S·Kl,.JOO :.t br 1 lu:i, 1 br, 1 ba :i 1 ~· • Trust J).·,•d. ~·ulJ \· !\E.\T 2 hr Sls:.i ha.~ gar.
i1 ith u-. ,\11d Ll.\I J l.'\ I. * I HZ..4471 ( -1 54M ind i111n Ul'C!.I b t 3000 Mt b,11". Si6,9:i0 room. !' fireplaces. Prh·aie $-10,jOO 2 br l ba, 2 br 1 ba rt'ntcd ... \[\ :. U.·Jrw111 . i·" ~n1a11.,ix:r .~ s11~glt'~ ok.
<..;\'\10."\IJS, Ulll .. ,.,•11 •1,1.1·1' 1 ·\ lot•.t!Jl~' ,, honu· for ll\'lllg I '"" 1011 ft r r !I . ,'1, ~.• I : ; I bettch & fp.roe boat dock. S..JJ,liOO 2 bl' 2 ba, I br 1 ba ba1hs. ;ilnl•JSI 11ru sq. fl. ...... ,. 0 B<..l'. 'l hr i::a .... tslde $\SO.
I 1 It ~hJ1111g Pnol Coun1J"" ·l b 0 u Y c.lt fllll"'u lllng ~ -• '"~3b 2bu ''b 2~ ,.. I & hill \\&D "" 1 11• IC'.iut1 u f""l'l-nn ' ', ~ <: u _ I at'f'il, 1.•xqu1sllc la11d~cap1n~ Ii Con1pletely furni1"'ed, SLlOO ....,a,VVJ l' • • r .,... unit. t:.arns Si:t~: ;'l('r n1"n1h_ 1"?U.V 1~ ~ ! · · · ~ar.
i1 hu'-1· f't'l'-"'•n.1111~ ;..:11t-" •)111.· .1 11i1?"I'~£'~"· Call lo -""c il •. ; VA OF[.jERiN' G 1 i1 i1h i.:01·cred patio nnd a . 0 l'I H niooth. Call 644-ST:iO.. 4, 5 &. 6 UNITS \sk ,,. onl. s--· ru » Ii 9 Sf::~. :\011·. 4 br 2 bM. s~.
II'''" II•··· .. , .. •'I .,',, 11"11 sj ! 1,1() ' ..,,,,,, •10 .,. LB • t I .. ··~ I . u ~ ~ .11.1, • .. ""!In ? ... ,,, ,,,,, & ,,..,, " ,-',, . ' ' · .. ~ , .. ' n-rn1 Pndous <r ,. ,, e•b " I II RE .. ,,.,,., .,. ir ,, un (' ' 1 I QL' v · ~' · · ·
· · ' 1 1 · -\nytmf' can qp;diiy for 1wf1ll(JJ1. an! OSt'Oll llHs IM TAABElL S-'6,500LH<t-lln'.ibd Thkt' advanl.i..'•·. 1·.1U $:\j(I 1 f"''· l &. "4101l'th1n~ r .... 11 "' th•'ll\ GEM 3.4 .b00iuon1 Jft1CS for ~.1.lt•. I t . c . ·, .. ., ' AL ESTAJE ( J ·. . . . c:ross. ·"'11' a(" ''1 !'a 1·~ "'· t\1-:\\"l'OHT"S Hi's! 3 BR.
as !ht' .P'"l"Sl•ll 1'1'11 I ~·c1'' 1" I'll-" 1-,,,,." Ai·". N.". I ' . , · 1-:<' one 1>ri 1:ed at S6i.;i00: , 1190 Glcnll(',l"rt! St. S79 JOO C'.\I 6-1 br Llxi -c·i.1·00 · lf'ani, ·11'""1·• pc hf' 1ht'u· 111;1:1:1;.;11". f :-:1.1 c " .. • 0 th c ~ r comp e ..,r I~ CALL 5 II ' · 1:i~ 1 . 'ngl~ ok
"[h;inh: \Ou·· H ~:.\l.Tnns 6-12-11)23 refurbished ho1nes with us I 52·7500 <\94--!117:: j~9-{).~16 ~ 28 UNITS Coit• Mesa INVtm~R'l\~i li1 1!(i;~11'us ('117'1 4 hi' s;·
HA. L BUTTS --BY OWNER 1 1111!11 n~ -~i50. do11.·n. l,011 ' • VISION • _ . l::xt•ha1~gc !or n1fg ?r Ind"! ~-: i : 1:1:11·11.!1• hrnl'h·nll ap1111 ·~.
\I \' 1 'I "I l closi11i:; rn~1 s. :i() tn rhori:-:t· I TEMPLE HILLS 600 N ttll'On1r prove11y It•• \1.1111· 1•i 1.1.~t ·Cull Us G7j.-722j · 1t'~;11 . ~l"11,~,"'+M'1:a llllll<ic .. ;I 11·1•111 . Contacl \',\ appru\·ed • '. BEAUTY 1 ewport Center Drivt> OFFICE BLDG. • ·, , \\"1• st'l'\'1c'c nll th<' hea1·h
., '·" ..... ·ni -rni,"" 1 R d H II R I TRADEWINDS ' l~c baek~:in.ls, Quiet ·I Sal1•,; Bn:~k;r. e I ea ty I Four brdroon1s 21 ~ baths on J>alin Springs $59,500 \1·111:1 .~'·!!~!!!!!! l'l!ir~ !.: lnl:init Ornni;<' Co.
lKJUSl' l"UI de sac. super C;.r.ll 963-4a~J. REALTY REALTORS I a cul -de-sac. Super r!can Trade1vinds Lane, heautiful take trust deeds and notes 1S LANDLORDS! $
LAto U!o t OR A I Hll lSToUU\ 0• ••Ull.
loc<1fion .JIG--92313 Univ. Park Center, h'l•inr I assumable \rA loall 81.~'k. Haycrest; prestige honir. ~ as do11'Jl. --FEE t'REF.: Call Us Todav
BLUE RIBBON Oeean ,·i1.•1\·s La.gi1na. Beach. bdrms., fani ily rni., t11n . LANO DANA POINT ALA Rentals 642..a383
BONUS $3000• ' $6619j(). Call &J6-i7ll rn1., 2 baths; chnn11 ing lo :i.~19 ncrl's, Escondido DUPLEXES
Sh:11·1> and clf'an ·IBR/2BA, evrry 1\·ay. Sel' this brforc /\. large file ol multiple nod Fabulous Ocean Vi£''olS ~r11v ,r,, s1111n elccl bll1n kitch. I I b • s·g = 8 N ''-·r t D I C1·£'d!t to buyt'I' as decorators yuu uy. • ·"""· other broker's lislings too. 1 C'w °"auu u up cx~·s
\'ALI,~~,.
RL\LI\
a DU<C. £"IUIP1t•St
... ( R•C• .. SIOC• f ~c ..... <.r ... u ... ~AIH 1 YR WARRANTY
• HOME J:I~~~(: ~j;;_i;~~ nr. So. Coast alloy.·ance. scllf'r forced 10 W lk & l CALL Q. •4•·l 414 Let us look for you or hst $61,9;iQ to $i3,950
CALL 968--Hll in1n1ed1~te sa:"· La~c '1 a er ee ~,, !or you. f{ed Carpet lnve•t· ri:on1 $8,300 Do11o·11 . LIVE HERE'
Sl•l.!l."l(}-$73,!lj(), Ol.1-•an 111.•11~ * C t R lty story, .; BR, .; B.\ ('Ondo llt.t.l 11,.,,1 4'Hd*'7 01ent Di1islon. 979-2550. Off1CT' Dpf'n Dall) l·.i •
::);n"I.' s:m.ooo 10 $."Jll,000 U\l'I" ~s ea . VACANTI . \\"Ith fOl"llliil dinlll'.!. hU"C I----••ALT''·· ~ Weekends J0·6 i.Tt , h · lk . -40 ., ... ~IJ BEAUT Wooded ac~s. Oil 33861 Co La l .· I (' nt'll ·~ Coron;• dl'l ~tar pri1·1•s. illESA N , 11 • Ba H· bo · 1 H.u_s11r Ramhlrr, isolated family & 2 firepl<ices. No11• 1 OFFERED , • • • N11r N1•,or1 Peil Offict county road w / r iv c r ,196_34,1 A P1pcr 111!!",'. '""" 2 hr.-Cdf\1-culc S..1.JO
s Nl-.:\V Dt.:PLr.::xi::s
Dana l'o1nl
F. ll'.'1' Apprt'1.·i;itH>11 . 1 • r ar !, 11·111l1'r ho111t' of pro a1hlet{'! ,·acant -i mm{' di at c ! ... by huilder. Lovely 3 f •.• 50 I ·• · g · .,.. -t:>UJ 3 Br ·Univ Park S..'Wl ,\i;-t, :t:::-:61 Copllf'I' Lantern !000 !-'.I· fl .. ~:ieganL ..J BR, -I Farn1 ~tyli'.' kitchen plus I posse!i~ion -S{i2,950. Call I txlrn1., 2 bnrh sunny ho1ne: BAYCREST ronlage, • .,,., per ac, Da.~1 Harbor Income Homes :i I ··Cdi\T~ · S400
'
-. ·-.·Jl.",t. u .. ,,.,, 1'0•·111 B1\ ra111 tni, !pie, ~aut •run1nus. rf'ra111it• Ii I c ' ~1,•. ll,"na '·t -·-~42' <l•·an>"I<'·· "nl-to •• ,~,p 4/5 Bdnns, Pool o~ner, ~ ·, b"· fl ' oo"''",, s•.·~ '"' -"-----l<1111l~l"fl\'. ('Or lot , Sll1.~'0ll. , .. ,,,;1-ers d 11< . d " " " " .., o .. I " ~ ~-'Jd k '"'" ~ ------ ----. r.-ar r lC\V .. ,,,
ASSUMABLE 801 Bki : .. is:iill, cvc:o. ,;:,f-·llil 7 ;in 1 11", 1n oor , SouthCo, Realtol·s. 1\·. r in., spac. cc-. custon1 Dining-rm, ·ani·nn, kitch£'n APPROX 5 bcautllul estate 4 APT Units on J~.GOO sq n 2 i>r.-!oihort'<'lifrs Sl.50
10 -----l:lundry, brick firepl ave. j . • . • 1·eran1ic tile \rork. S43.500. 11·icating area, 3 bas., Utility acres olf Ortega H\V}'. &in lot -Zoned C·2 Nf'1\-pon:: hr.-R:iy-sli1} S-193
nuplt•\, Sn. o( 1111). \\"Ith AS::ilJ:-01. \',\ Joan, I Bl{, H1dd£'11 S!iill"CllSC In 23>i2:\ I ~ARGE. LLgh'. ~ .Lr1\ely, N:11 I The bt'st huy in beaut!iul rm, 2 lrplcs, Spneious Juan Capistrano. Zorlcd E·l. Blvd., c .r-.1. $3-10 n10 income. 4 hr.-Bny-dock $800
S."iOO n1oothlv 1111.·111111•, !is11•d ru111pu<; nn + pool in a i.:a11u• roo111! Only $212. pt-1· 2 BR, 2 ba, l niiei-:;ity Park, La1,'11na! For fu11her in· backyard It big inviting Dial Really, ~LL'"J3. Good for com 111 er c ia I 4 br.-Lido-Bay Si<IOO
:11 only ~l~.;;!IO. Ll't u~ :ohu11· ."flOl.I luc11.!1on or C.'.\I. As'· 1Hu11th PIT! \1·heu ,\Ull S.W,900 .•• 1.nel!idl's hind. Ry ~ lorn1Htion St: .apl'l. sho11·-pool. t.tarincrs Sehl areu. d 1 t S 6 · Call 6~ -"'" "' 2--0-:16 Commtrci~ Prply 1600 ev<' opn1en. ,1, o oo. ·~r~""
_y11u 1111.~ 0111.·~ ~11.i. :tlti-!J:i:!t. 1\gl. I ;1.ssu1nr ti', V,\ !0;1.n! ! 011·ncr. aJ 1· 1ng, call. Fee land, $J02,000. By J~';;;~';;:~;:;:-~·::,;;-c:::1,c;o~"~~~er~·~B~m~k~e~r,~&~l2~--0~"9tl~.-' .. ' " . .., . ""
MORGAN REAL TY S:O:,OOO lJn S::!fi·I l1)0 f"UI:~ PR!Ct: :-:2,9:;o. Bkr. TLl!l-TLEROCf\ Tf::HHALE * 49-1--0."lO~ .* oivner 646-5288 1 81..K to heh. Xlnt com· Mount'n Desert
67J..6642 675-6459 .. Hn 11./frp!e s:i pct I t I 962-.XJll "60' Plan • 4 BR. 'lnd ll'l"l'l Sci11!hcoasl Pacific Corp. 1ne1icol lot. 29,500 sit rt. 100 R ,· , \.\I J . I· '
Ii I \ I. I \ "C~o-s-ta~M~.-,-.----~10~24 "20JO i\lont\i\!'a .-1. • n '' Assume GI Loan I vie\\·. 5120.000. 83.1--8719 I 10o/o DOWN SOMERSET MODEL ft frontage on Carlsbad ~.r ____ ....;;_c;;;
Dana Point 1026 $6;i()O. 1'ota\ l'<1Sh n1ov{'·in! 1 Laguna Beach 1048 illove into brand new ocenn 5 bedroom, 3 bath, large Jot Blvd. 100 fl frontage on side CRASS V/\.LLEY: Sil'rra
BY O\\'NER·l~t. 11k. Prin1r
1 ~lc~H Vcrdl· l1.1c. 'l yrs. ne11
GAH:Dr-:N JI0'.\1E. E\t'C.
I Bil :~ B,\, F H. forn1 :tl
D/H, lndry/R, L/R 111th
Ju~h vaulted 11·ood l11•an1
1
1.'l'il. .~. drl'Or:.ilor fpl. I !1~h
1·<1ultf'1I ccitin~s tlu'Uout -~·
Jn.: air)' ""i11do11·!; t-r(·:11l'
hl"ll!ht, i.:hc>cry atnio;;. 2 lrJ.!.
·"''P· back y<ls. prof. lodscr1 I QL:!ET ~ hsf' 1· u Id ~, ..
1'111:.hly upj..'l'ad<>d .t· 1111rn,u·
:'-011· SQ;:,900. TfCti1 yuur~il
and SL'l' this onl'. ;;4fi-~l:._IJ)1
l~a~~~lt~;!~; ~?~~
n£'1\", 3 Bdrm, 'l bn. fo n1 nn.
I 11·/sto11r fr ple. 1\s:.un1c 7':
I
f'"A Joan. S260 a 1nonth. UJ1\·
do1111 011·111.·r 11 ill carry
scrond. Call 61:r-6ti~6
./(' PR€1TIG€ I HOMES
' :'JlO '.'.. r-;"t•11f)r1rl Hl , ); B. -----
1 A re You Fussy!?
IThl:'n hf' SUit' to lll!'ojK'C'I 1!11s
~par 1ou" 4 lxlrni. ~ hath
· hon1t• tO<ltl.1' \\'1.rh f,1nuly
I t\1(1111 ,t· fu'l·pl1H'I'. Bu1ll-1ns,
d1sh11·Rsh1·r. d1111n~ roon1 j l'lu•h 1••n·pc1s. rl1· n ll rs .
I' ,1 I 1 fl . l.<i11 -nlillllll'llltllC'f' j 1:1.nd~c·aping. S·li,000. C1Lll
;i..J0-1710
~'AflBElL.
~
'' .. , 2 Story, J bedroom, :.t bath.! 1·i£'\I" rnuhi·level home, & poo8!,,· 'l~ollllN,993T·E.REST street. Old but good shape foot hill gold <.'Ountry' 38 '2
)j NE\\" DUPLEXES fo1mal dining, J<1rgc faniily I IMMACULATE!! bt•an1ed ceilings, new decks, · hsl! on rear ooml!r. of pro-acres of it v•/ R trout l--,:--::--=-=-.,===o--I
ocean \"!t'11·~. Slil,950-$73,9::.0 1m., gourn1€'t kitchen, ga!i 12 Bdnn.. 2 bath ho111t>: master suite, niirrored HARBOR VIEW perty. $79,~. By cxvnr, II stream $1 295. per acr. 15'/fl
. .,, ,_ '. . . •, .. , ·'•.
33861 Copper Lantern bltns, walk·in pan1ry, in-I landscaped, \r1th !gr lrcrs ! l'lost>t!i, dran1Rlic enlry. HOMES no con1n1. involved, (TI~J down or \\"111 trade for home
,\gt. 4!16-3431 I door laundry. $<13,500 & hru:k patro. Closr lo nf''v Red Carpet, Realtors REALTY 833-0780 729-5821. equity. Lcl!i talk about it. \Ve Speclallze in NewpoZ-:
4-PLEX .. Dclu.xe. Harbor & ~ BRASHEAR RE. AL TY_ ,","s"361na.~f.lurry on thi,;: one 497·1761 .,,...,...,...,...,....,.,...,...,..~I COAST Jlwy fronta ge. Bob Harrison bkr \714) Beach •Corona del Mar •
0 '21411 E 968 1 ~ -NEWPORT SHORES · 0 '0 1001 & Laguna. Our Rental Ser-Oec1:1n V1<'1~ .. $110,00J. Pru1 I o-i • ves. -·131 1 .. L.ig_una Hills 1050 $80.000. Trade & linancl!. O'tO-viet> is f'REE to You! Try
only 711·8-l'l·.IB9'.!. REPOSSESSIONS .:Q: ,.,, tlw~ ·3 Bdm1s & den Glantz ltcalty Servi c e NICE 2 BR house in Yucca Nu-Vil!w!
Fountain Valley 1034 1 . . ( ~ m»&~ LEISURE \VORLD CO-OP. \Valk to J l."rl289 Valley. Ceramir tile sink, NU.VIEW RENTALS
tor l11form.at1on and loco lion , ' : I Unusually cared for end Beach, pools & tennis Condominiums cvap. cooler, 11·alk to stores. 573-4030 or 494-.3248
:; + Bonus rocnn honie in of t~cse r 1-lA & VA hon1cs, , I unit. 1 story 2 BR 1 !:I ba, $46,500 for silt 1700 $ I 7 ' :i 0 0 . F o r io r u . ' .. IU:NTl::lt.Sl'"
(;IT('n \'aJll'y. Bonus ruon1 I t.-ontact • '494·5~71 _499.2100 air. cond. $28,500 incl. CAYWOOD REALTY 17l,l)S33--0S2.i 1 • KASABIAN f ·r ou c;~·t 11.11 The 11ouscs t:;in br 2 rnorc bt.·droon1s. I 1 ONLY $33,500 channing custon.1 furnlt~. * ~1290 * ASSUME 5Vi•;;, FHA. Double CABIN, Big Hear ,\rea. available fur rent in OUR
U,;" of 3 pools, clubhouse
1
Real Estatt 962·6644 3 bf'droon1s 2 bath~ nlodcm ilnmed: possession. $195.83 BY OWNER: Must sacrifice garage, 2 bdrm, 3 bulh Xlnt $7(0). terms. Aft. 6. HULLt:'flN "PDATED 3
and playground. $~7.000. / kitchf'n. Kice r<t111ily hon1e mo. Prtn. Only. OI~. For my love ly condo in Bluffs on location $26,500. 54;;...J857 8-12·2015 tin1Clif\\'ttk.
Agent 962-it56 or 531-5800 WALK TO BEACH in Costa ~lesa. Near appt. Call 83i-1081 o r quick sale basis. 3-BR., din. ASSUA1E 5~~% FlL\. Ddtible Out of State Prpty. 2600 Homefindtr1 * 642·9900 J~li\lACULATE :i BR, 2 Ba. 1''E~ 3B~l2BA, shag 1.'l'pl:· 1 shopping. Oivner v.· i 11 6T:r7I l:i room, custom cork & garage, 2 bdrm, 3 bath. Xlnt 132 Cnbri!lo, C.f\'I.
F:un rtn, bl tins, crp!s, blhns, hrcpl., all dclu~(' Pxehangf' for ranch. Cail _L_a_k_e_F_o_r_e_51 ____ 10_54_ Van-Luit papers, huge deck location $26,500. 545-3857 22 ACRES N_o. W c 11 t .t'REE .t"REE
rlrps, fi:ri yd, xlnt loc. & fe!1IUl't"'S. SJR.9JO. I 1101v &.IS-7711 overlooking canyon & bay. -0 I /U II Arkansas, part tillable, ner1r e Prol•••'•onal 0 __ ,., _ •
1.'ond. 673-0062 eves & \vknds. Gerald S~~fs Really ~--
1
7°;. Assume bit Loan Owner/Agent. 644-6808. up txes n I lake stream"' & river. ...,.,, .. c ..
Harbor View Hills 1()38 EVES: 5."l6-:il09 ....... 3 BR. 2 ba, I yr ne"' hon1c in HARBOR VU GEM for sale 1800 S24,5oo. 545-3857. *L~NDLORDS*
W l'"k & l <'nunrry si<le. $10,800 cash to R I E t t E h 2800 Homef1ndtrs * '42·9900
BUY A
WARRANTY HOME
PALERMO!
OWNE!l 111ovrs. Shal"p :1 a er ee I "7',;" \'A loan. Prine. " Beller than new. Portofino, 4-PLEX ea I a e xc 9• C/\lifornln'll l..argeRt
bdrn1, 2 bnlh home. F<1n1il) ~••~ tST-'T• inter. of only $187. per mo. many Olst Xll'as, 3-4 BR, 31; Clos" lu Tal'·"rt •Nowland. BALBOA BAY CLUB •Rental Scrvicel e rm, frplC', l111il1-ins. Shak,• OPEN SUN. l :30-:iPM. For ba, spacious fam·tnl, lgc '-= • roof, sprinklers fnJnl .~ ~ONARCH AAY I appt. 17141 a R t-0 2 7 0 , game· r1n, 20 x 30 patio, full r:ni.:h Unit is 2 8f'droon1s, 1 t'ONDO -Lurg" studio 1l'ith 11.B.-Sludcnts or Sngls! l B1-.
1'€'111·. l:Jril"k & rc-d11 •. iod ,\ spnriou~ JiHl'dcn honH· 111111 ('uri·nnd Realty Co lndsepd, fee land, 11r Sehl,,;. 13a1h 1vith Patio and hl!ns. l,;n~urp;i~~•'tl di•s1·11 Sl~. Vncanl. Read¥ today!
1n111 0. $42.000. Bkr t:.111 1 s.:n•at prii·al'Y· \\"00tk'<l 1,11 -'d 1 I & Shops 644--0786 or 979-4191 Carports. 0\l'ner n1 a Y llvhu.: <tdj. Jndu~n '\'1.'lls LAG. Bch·See This l br,
s..i·1 2561 1 o st 1056 NEW LISTING e:";change for IRrger unlt1. Cou111ry Club. N c \\' p 0 rt $17:-,, ~i,i\k to bch. Sngls Dk. Pl'rhaps U1r n1osl bcau!iful 1 --· · 11 Ith 1•10111 fur pool. :i ,~::;:c,;:;;,;; ____ __;"'--' Ott red tor ~m 000 Call C i\f "1K l I d nt J
hon'" '" all of H·•bor y,·,,,, 1 OllN<'R on•lou" A•s"n'' 1 Bd_rn1~ .• 2 baths, dining rn1 wa-rfront Duple• e • -"""'' · B<'11ch hns"d priva1c club al · ··~·g cs or s u e s. .._ .... r:. " .., BALBOA PE~INSULA 3BR. 646--0565.. JtEDUCED i\lt:il1BERSlllP l:lr $160. Fncd for kids too.
and c r r la inly the I 7' '. l~'ln. 3 bd1'lns, 2 ba_1h11.1 $9i.OOO. 'ow· l'ena.nts will pay the ·cottage, steps to best betu;h-for O\\oTters. (h·erlooki1 pool, Homefinder1 * '42·9900
ou!sfanding location and Jot./ Bu1lt-1ns. Shag carpeting. TURNER ASSOC. bulk of the bills. Owner's Priced to sell, $59.500. 6 1
Uni11ur roof line, all 11·ood Lush greenery. $37,950. bkr 1105 N. Coast H11y., Ll:tguna apt., 2 studio apts., 3 bdrms. COAST PROPERTIES, clu~~~~s!. ~~.~~t· ,e:~;~n~ Balboa Peninsula 3207
t•xtcrlQr, gracious 41Call962-5566 I 494-1177 ea. Leasehold $160,000 Land 6/'.,....5-JIO Orange County property. 2 Bl{. 11 2 hll. 2 car gar.,
lx'<in.-1111 t"1> ii tor Y · liunt. Harbour 1042 OCt:i\N v 1 r. \V hon1e can be purchased. THE BLUFFS $28,900. stepti 10 beach &. park.
tkaut1fully dccor_ati:_d in \\·/POOi. ~:sclusivf" a~u. 3 , Start Summtr Right BeAUliful up-graded house A: Century 21 * 642·1771 A\•all. June t. $.115. nio.
1iut1un nc'i"ilo671'!· ... ~·!00· BR 2 b:t, din. r1n. fon1. rn1 1'rlp1t'x, Three 'l·bdtm. itpl~. patk>. 3 BR, 21,;i bas., lge VIEW ll.lltlua.lty 545-6713
a J-J4w ,,. • liki'.' nc"· ?llany f'Xlr;:is Stemi lo beach & tennis Ct. Farm kitchen & formal NEW BEACH .f.PLEXES • ' .,.HH., I S g 9. 5 0 0 "4 9 7 -2 :; ·1 71 SJfjj,fKXl Dining~rn1, $79.900. OPEN 2 blkl lrom Jluntington 2 Bedroom hld~-way. on 40 Corona dtl Mir
.._.,. 011•11(•1·/ctgctif Ba Ibo• ThiirJ., & Fri. 10 to Dusk. Harbour & Yacht Buln. aCcresnt, lowHer R 1
1v1•1r 1
1 id e w·-·:o _...., I N d' Id 1 S.'\2Cancha.64Q-.ll89 NW tor Wamttl:Sinunl ou y. Ill! ut l es . "'~'i:o ..J BY O\\IN ER: 3 BR 2 ba fan1 ""'"· a J8.ten u P c x l's· Ope. n' 8 . .:. I< Mon ··~ pmm:. Exchange for units Orange * USED 8RICl$S *
3222
I OCEAN VIEW I rm. SUPER OCEAN v'IE\\'. \\'Mlf!r oriented. Sll0,000 3 BR, 2~1 ba ·& f.am)Jy room. Dolphin iieRlty <213)3"764484 County. 870-4564
29,;."i /-fnrbor Blvd. Wave w.nt~hlng Crom )'Our hu~ bckyrd. $ j 6. 9 0 0 Ea.ch. ==~."'on thruooycret~: Income Propt!!f 200Q B•r!~!f .~~lty CHAR~11NG lkaeh Cottage. Co~la t.1<!58 dining room. Girl 'l'.•atchlng ~4'=94"'·-'95280,'-'-,~--~~~ ".::"'Vin PH· _,. .... ,11 .. or _ --• 3 DR, a Ba.,Yrl)' lee. July
3 Bit, + dining rn1, big hll.ck from your deck. Magical FOR SALE by owner 3 BR, 2 =~ · u•~ llOUSE PLUS 1WQ Rtal Estate Wntd; 29dd JS, 1375. -~~. • 67S-7G59
1 DBQ moments matC'rlalzle before ba, ocean view, nssuniable ~ i .... _ '/ yard ~·/fru t ift'ef'1, the lire in your martini pit 'T';ii VA loatt. S 6 5 • 0 0 0 • BEAClf HOUSE ttil~ Uve In new 3 BR. 2 BA (01 I mwll 3224 art-u, cov. pallo. Only ~'OR SALE by owner. 3 Br, I lconvcrsaUon srea) All thi~ 979--l6.U or lf9f-9:894. N1wport 8N~h 1069 Prt · Ola' et .,.. CA U::. l'loule an4 rent TWO 2 BR, 2 PVT. PARTY W~ TO 1
$28,900. Assum. Joan. A!lk Seabury, 1700 sq. n. 7% VA for $26,500. wllh payments 0::;r·tnfo & ':pp~'·645-'89l4. BA, 11.pta. , FrPI~ j>B.liot, HOME t>IRECI" FROM FOR. lea1e 3 BR, 2 BA Mega ~:~~:i:&a. 11 . ~~· J~~-H':· ~~tr& ·~~o~~ llkeCh~i~~1~: 'Ru:ity c:,~~~ w:~~l~oci!}~~'. 543-0!Jia or <71() :ris-3233. !me~. la~~ e:::i4. ~ PTY 539--3961 ~t~r0r-"1M~:~le-A&t.
1,.,.., 4 BR. 2 BA, l.1><3J rov 21342 Sand Dollar 118. You can Cliorg• I T•o bed"""", .. tlo in ~~UITS condo. 3 BR. 11' + JO 1 UNITS', C0$1'A llESA. Tlte tutO!ll drtw Jn Ult W.ot. EASTSIDE
patio + Mnd Q LI I e .k 4-BEoROOMS, 2 ~l/ba1h. 3 6916 Warner DAILY ,t10T luxury park $1,,500.,6«-fi(tll3 ,; bft. Er)d urut; beaut. AU 2 BedroomL frlnclpals , .a Dft1ly Pilot ClltMltled 2 BR Unlurrl. StoYe, rd
l)("(.11py. $ <f 4, 9 t O. Bkr C{ll' .w;11r .. Jlxl8 bonus room. at Gofdtn Wt1t ClossJffed Adi UDO Sandt. '3 Bn, 2 ba + rrrecnl>Qlt; Xlnt c on 4.. l only. S151,500. 613-'19l0 Q\Jkloor tPOrt• lost It 1 S250/tM. m ~St. 548-ml, eves~ 557-'6\7. frilc , 2 111 mtles t.ct ocean. I 714: 842·7416 / plat nn, 1ludy, pool, ten. 640-Im aoPtalt Sell )'OUl\equlpmentl-'-~--...,..--'-S.11 tdlt item• ~llh a o.ny $43,90'J. Agent 213· 592 5561 642 •5671 nls. By ownr, $1 ,:;oo. Oualllod Adi Call W..5671 MY daJ i..tr.e BESr DAY ID wlih • low"<Oll O.Uy Pilot Put )IOtJr btldftl bacll on
Pilot aa..tJl<d ad. 60-5611 5.1t-:l800 or 962·24"6 ..,....,....,,.· !!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~======::=!. ~64;.:2-:..11161=:..· ------"'totlai'=c:.'------7-""' ao tdl Doo't dtlay. • Cto..tll<d Adi f14H811, Ult track • · • S01l Idle llem1 =-==='-="'~~~~~~~-:c:;g;
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-Thurid<)', M•y 30, 1974 DAILY PILOT 35 "°"'" Ull Hou ... UnfOrn. -., onclot Uh • . . : ~~JI··· .u' urn. i Apor1mtftll • urn. nl1An1 3 80 Rant1f1 w.;;;a 4'00Rent•I• Walit9d 4600 I Money Wantlid 5030
Costa Meta 1,..1ne :1244 ON BMch. Avail June hi. 2 Cot11,.... l•t 3824 ijifnfiCnq1H'o1nLBeD1R1cl!~NlMo BEAUTIFUL INEED 1c;,!XXl 2~1 TD
4 Bedroom + 0.n ~BR~ .: .. $223/mo lM !:t:OO,U"·.1~::.: ·~m '""""'"""I" & 'h"'rtu1. * SMALL DOG WANTS YARD * ~Sh<>~ ~imr':'!~:
2 bath•. n~phH.'f. A·l con·' 3 ~~ ~= ···· = :·~~ =ruc,M~nJur:·r ~ ~~ N£W and parents love the ~~~~! g~:;· ONE Bedroom hou10 or dupltx for disabled Prine. ooly. ~.
dlUon. ~1e~.a Vtrde. $.)()(). 3 BR llJme. .' ;3Qo. US S335 re Ip on I I b I e peraon."l. large, ..1p1cl0Ut ap1(1· ! • 2 blk.tl frorn S C Plau f I h-, W~ Mort, Trust Deeds J035 vtr µlOllth, gardener in· 3 BRHomeA $360·$3'15•..,_ STh-13.,.. daays 493 1329 B b ·•Recfncil.t.,.luh"'Au~" ma1t1r, garage or carport, urns .u. 1t ...... t"'l":
eluded. 4 BR Homn :.m·.·-·. := •.J : • I 1 2 & 3 BEDROOM ments it 1 n u ry ' '"' ..,. or without utllltles, low rent, near shoppi • LOANS UP'TO 909/. 1
Roy McC•rdl1 Realtor HANOI R£AL'TY .,._, eves. ' Cro11. :
2r~J~~R$~7l;o'.)() peis 541-1731 •fter 6:00 P .M. 1 TD l
lllt Ne-t Blvd •• CM * ii.11-2000 * WEST NEWPORT BEAOl "r.hlld·en 6 & >uun.,r PARK PLAZA II st olns · 541.772f RANCH REALTY Ne"N 3 St)t, 3 BR, 2~' BA. Split Level Apt1 Unf, n state llC""rt::Nl pi-c sch! '"!!'~~~~~,.-.......... * 556'6800 * FrPlc. I&!! pr1v. patio. Gar, .. Chlldl'f'ns piny urea 805 \V, Ste\'l.'n!I • Vacation Rent1l1 4250 Bu1lness Rental 4450 2nd TD Loans
'sHARPI 3Bll -• TUSTIN RE~LTY d1hwhr, n<or huge OCCUPANCY JUNE 1 • l.arg, 2 & 3 en"'"· : ·'Off Suufluwe.-l I
Y•itl tor kldl' "~Gar, h'& * 8J2..51U * ' gr~T~b·~l~~da°Y1 • 2 Rrlult rec. cer1!t•1-s : Santa Ann s.t;i-1121 3 Bit CRbln, Crestline, TV. NOW LEA.SING
DESlRABLB f uR,
2
BA ITUllTLEROC'K 3 BR 2 ba or S'l'3-07.66 eve$/w)<ndA 1'~EATUR1NC: • Eusy acc:ess to rnost t>n1· · Apts Furn/Unfurn 3900 fri>lc, ncer lake. $50 wkend, VIE\V. ~l Obu;po Road, low•st r1te-..Oran9• Co.
$185. 1'cahouJi:(', Ci1r. l'i•t ok: 1 l<'hl'<'. s:.i_1a. ~no. ~'. . _ _ . • oloy.ment ai'<'~ . Sl.15 l\'k, 2 wk~ l$100. 3 "'ks ! Dana Pomt. 2 s1vn'. olf1(..<eS, Sattler Mtg. Co.
HUllRYt 2 Bit $ , • ('· . S:t1-19'n or dro card at THE BLUFFS, Outltandlng , Loft Bedroon111 • F'rplc !I • ! It N'r. ~hopping i.-lr'\\ys. • $250, 4 wks $300 89-l·l602 suitable for . do c tors, 642.·2171 545-0611
Lrg . I f ~ IJ.). ..11, '!Ill P·110:ro &>go~ I new tennis club villa, 3 BR. I Certimlc tile kitcber_; l:. F.x-1. frorfl $165. n C\('!! dentists, ~httect~. Cli'., SC'rvlng l(arhor atta 24 yn.
ynrc. e11('c for kldii. :.. _ '" vio . _ ~ cpt'd & (lrpd. conv. tp pool, 1 poled &am Ceiling• • En· I ~e store11, boullqu<'s. 1.-.xrlus1vc
Homeflnder1 * 642·9900 t:IDH hu1ne-io Turtle Rock. Out1ide main!. incl. $:)50, ·~ P~os • f'uol .t: ·BANBURY CROSS LK. Amm·hrad: rent or lr.e. llO 11 compc 1 itive ai'f'a. $3~,0CX) lst TD on oommer.
3 BR. 2 Bil, DllJ gnr· 1 l1u11 rsu. cUt1 nn.. 2 'ba. nr 1no., ht & 18l!f & de~J .. l~"'f!Y .ct«ht\r '~nicnl-<el!. l {Near Bt!apb'Blvd ti \l/arner ) I Con1p. furn. tiJod. cabin, Occupancy l'nd uf lBl.J. site . do1111tov•~. San Juan
near l~lh & Phu.'l'nlHt. ~ ! ~ii & park-, ~"'-1' nK>, 644-1846 e\les & wknds, ':" , '.Adtd, tll <anlJ.1 . .,,, • !6761. V ii-~\\' POINT L . .\~!F. I !lee~ 8 TV. 3 Br, 2Baa 0 w n e r /Broker (TI·l I Capistrano. $3.lO. per mo.
feel cornor lol. 0 .1\, lor boat "''U-2708 1 '~ NR. Back Bay, Pri .. ·ate lB')l .. i . ft . , e 842-6604 e j BIG' I Clpi;e to lake & VIiiage. Ph. 642-0590. ' , includ. gt;;. dur 2 )-'T'S. 10!/{
or R.V. 1"t)l'N;-CI /\Ir, t 'rpl<', 'fUlt'~L1'~ROCK. 1rurt 4' Plan Family nn, 2 1.S BA. t)"p1c'. ~ NAY L"'-fJ .ftTS. ' -" -iTCTT -• • f'\r8
:
171 '41 646-ll07• TOP Loe J:: 1 ~ h S discount !"ii I) lt:t-1210.
crpts, drini, .\lru cli•un. $.100. a\•inl 18741 PalleO Cortez, for 2 car aJtacbed ~ ... rage.!, , :._ff1 UNDER NEW ' DEL I G •1 T FU L C 0 n-Cl\!. rm ~~~l. A~ fro~~ $.1,550 No1y_ & TD for . ~It'
1110 + ~<'<". ih·p. llefs ttq .. :1111>1. &M-468&, Tb-4029, !"~wly _deccra ted $3-W 111~. l8l ·AVOC•DO MANAGEMENT • dom1nlun1s, Lake Tahoe. 3 Safei..,ay, Thnfty, Alpha $2.84-0. $3.ij(l, 1)\0. lfr: int 3
g:&.-3473, &1;Mi l81' j :.lll-6M-2l9:1 ' ·· 54.~85. 11 r 2 UH. Blt-ln11. Ne ·w I y , & 4 BR, Day, Week, r.ionth, Bela. O\\ner. :>-1S-M1 or yr~ due>. 83:,..1103. a16-9~. Nl-~WPO«T IU\liM'•1. eu1, .. Laguna Beach 32.C8 I PARK WOO, N.B. 3 BR. :v~' C0~0~3ESA clrrora1ed. J-;ncl i;tnragl's. r Al Oak\vood Gaiden Apart· Call n4-639-QOO or 639-6'l'03 E1·ps .'t-18-6562'. Announcement• 5100
free lh'1ng to\\nhoui>e. al ~ I hll: $325. mo lease. Oay!., E(•;-:u11!1ll Jandscapint:. Lll: I m<'nts. Renta,lt to share 4300 Br, 2~ii &. puaclt'fl den, frpl , ., $~NICE 1, Br .. JKI, •Cfld . ~~36. eyes. 6 4 0 -8 8 0 6 ti1on-Thurs 5:*7:30 pn1 11!1.1y ht'l'l.I· R child's clrc11n1?. YOH. LE,\SE Retail Store. 2! :'11~.'\IBfJl~ll lP, I i ni I t I'd .
l1hn11 y,·ashf'I' ~-·•·. N,, ! \\11lk to bc>at·h & to1111. eves. 6'1'3-141'1'. Sia.t-Sun lB4. Dill (1ri~1· lo shopµinf:: & S<:hls .. , GREAT RECRCATIO;>.; ~:. n-x. l6 !n l'l~o11p1ni.: cen1e1· .~1.:1 .~l:nl ·-;1 ·rurtri ('1·n1ur1an ' ,.,.. "'"l'r. l V. 1 11'~1 BR N "' •·-· I '' m<"9 ,, .. ~~· h"'''" ,.,, .. \"0'1•" lo"""-I•• i"'n1' f l<llt '' C'I 5°~ -crpts&liii)lr;.,J'ro1.·c1uhhsr, '?:'" , o.f'h1.1,n,r."""c1. DuplexesUnfurn 3600 E;; C'hildrt•n v•clcomc. Plt: "• .......... "'-" ""· ·v "'·'" ......... 0
"' •· 11 ,·.13·--0· l,~·6_-~--0'o:.' 11 ,c.,.,1S70:'11.ru11 1FltS25.
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'''· "~ . .,,,~ "'""', "'" ., .•• ~. f\1ds/pe15 11-clconlr. I -::i5G-4 150: if 00 ans, K~T-7:tll. t•ilhards, !£-nn o•J & rro in C.i\1. Mesa Verde area 1111111 1. "' 1J 1 •, 1 i\e 28' 1 1
.,...,., Vt.r-IUll4i ,,.. ........ ~ ..... $21 D-UT!l Pl 1 B bl! * N * z_hop,goilciri11nu r..,·1.,;,.,i ··:~ S:l.i 1o1k \1·/all honif' b4.>-·11·i0 IX'r ir.' ,,.. nioorloniP,
llul(R'''· ' BR .• e· nso I fr I· ·' .. , ' I r, ns, BR.Al"ID Ney,• !'.1edite1Tanean ,,.,.,·.,.,~.,·. 9 ..... "'HtJ n ,. ~ . $10 l'•·'r day. '10' ~al'hl, , ~ " p c uf'l srn pct ok I Du 1 N<i: H 3 BRANO NEW ro::im.etc ·e. l:>-VLv 1600 SQ. FT. C.M. $1SS LHPaz & Tah()(' condos,
Yard lenct.-d fo r kids. . S:.!25-2°81', 2'Bi1 apt lrg 0deck ' 2Bxe;· arvport r7~ DB\~· i VILLA INOS DUPLEXES ruN ACTIVITIE S r ul!·IHl'C 979--jl~'i II 2 pl'I. fll]S. ti-'6·2130 llllll'h Jl101'(' . ."1:»-7W8 or
SJ::!:: Tl lIS! 2 BR, Sl 9'.>. "Yard 1,)(';lul view, nr. oc'arh. '! . ' c C~-· · · d.rcc~Of , !rec Su:"IJ,.., t r11n 1 O~ \\'aler~an Vu J bi· '1 ---- -8.~2 1112
fncd ro1· ku.Js & 1><:1. I s:100-\\'()()0SEY -~ ~eluded 3 Sl:iO mo. 616-2666 I HUQl'!l'{IO:l L ••• ~11 2 & 3 I BBQ S, lr ,p~. p ar'.l "' ~ r. { "' 11.1. Straight rnale p1~t I Industrial Rental 4500 _. =--
\VON 'T Last! 2 Bl{, $18.i B1, 2 Sa hst•, La~u11a Ca-Cd~1-LRG DELUXE front 3 2 BR, 2 BAAPTS iic·•acni:., s~;.-1 $325·1 8EAUTIFUL1\PART!,'[/...!O S :'(('('k,~ sanic. $200/nio. -· ! ~
Gur, ynrtl fncd, ktcls/fh~l !\\On. Br, 3 Ba. Con1ptetc bit-ins. I .Su~r-~o:ortabll'-Quict ~.· 1 ,. ''VJ a cl'· dish1;"1sht-r, I S:nglcz, 1 & 2 bedroom·, 962-2-l:iG I l\OUSTH.tAL I J[S]
Homefinders * 642·9900 $3:l".r3
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MESA VERDE--i;:nr, nc yr · " iss · Apartments Furnished C;!.ll 1i\-l 1::1:::;...sli00 bc lY.f•en S I r • '·•1~. l'Ylodcl;. CPt·n a;, 11 \0 lo shure 3BR house. large "' -· -$500·3 BR, frplc, pool,, • l'llo. 1·er1tals •Sl90 !O S:.!00. -r fen-ri ,.~. l<lq. '"lll o,11,1,, .lui· il'HSI' 111 rholCf',
3br 2b. I I I• ·r· 1 h' Children Welcome 11n1&~1 pni ,nskforSaur!y. 1 lu 1 Jurry,nopcts orc111idr.:in. ...~ ...... u. "' .. ,1 V 1 , , op oca ton • 1n11gn1 1ec11 \\' itf' "'alet \•u! I Balboa liland 3706 Ana CM , "1ssion 1eJo C1rcu . L1U1ll Lost & Found 5300
Water & Gardener Paid NU-VIEW RENTALS 1 232-t l::lde11 Ave • 8:s3-2l.'i0 -Beaut. Garden Apts. Oakwood ,__..!... 1 t1;11· acv•·:.:. ,., A 1· 1· 1· v -----'-----
$425 Lease, 545-0228 671-40::10 . 01· ·19-1-12~8 l NJCELY furn bal·helor yr r1·11·alr patio~. 6 1~"-'1~. R00~11P.1ATE. Bina~e "r l l' r'k v.n y · 1: •'I\ I t n 1· • •• C C , -,----;--·-;-----.--·-, * $32S MONTH * I round. 1 adll, O\f'r 28. Non s<1u11:1S, jacutil, tt"'nni~. 2 ' Garden I feni1;1 £', n1•ar roa way & ' p;irllcip;•tion so Ii l' 1 t 1• d . .\LIF. A~!:'ll 1\J. 0:-..·1 hOL
f ll1:1f. I°'··· ~.11,.~l'l<l1•. l.Q1·t>:, . snioker, 110 studcnl , $l l0.1 UNUSUAL i':ll' ]ll'k'~. Rik r 10 beach. A t t !'t'r11port Blvd. $100 1110. t(::ll-1100. J lh1nun..:ton Rf'a1·l1 ~h1·\1c•r
ly '2 Ult. IJ1'n, 2 ua .... $3:!.)_cu~l"!ll built 2' hdrn;. hon1c . :.!J.1: 2'\1-0:i.w I OPPORTUNITY 1 ·.~1111.~J:;:-i. l»Hi--023.!. pa!' mens 6'1:!-6!l.'rS11fl 7P:'ll I ''1'..:l l·.d1.~un '1. ;,.,1;.~ .• \\ rno. · \\I\\ 1.:arp1.'ts, hr~plac<', 1. . ---------Newport Bea ch Nortll r ! F 1·01Jn1 n1at•· l\l NOW LEASlNG 'B<•i·k 01 lhini:uii· ~x·i•·ty \
f,";."}-lii.';O I l~P. dt't"k 11·11h ot1.'tttl vi1•11·. 2 :.! BK , f\lt!Jo, fi-i.il c. 1" IJl_~ ~. thi~ BH, U.1 WALK TO,...BEACH , ~:~;~:.;~ • i UP1!n)(ln1 aJ)I n1 H t ' t B h .l.\l:'l!.\l. ,\~:'ilST !.E.\GC!::
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AISIJ ~Bit l.1111 1111, i.n,..J': o1 i\llSSJUN HEALT)' -l!}l--073L 'l'URN IBJ< I "earl. for atlive f){'l'~on. .., "I II' ,1-"=7 o I \\".\\TED 1•1a1un' !<lr;11i.:l1 1 ~-IU .-.;.rt.~ Cr> A:\l;\\,\l.S l:O.\P1)L'!\Dl-:D fa1n1hf'~ JIU /\~I ~c" ·· ------I ap ' .. ), THE V NDO E :,;;.iS!i7." •J• '"""" r I Newport 81ici So11UI nial\· 1v ,.Ju I t.1 11~1· .I.: u11l Jlauu.lton ..V \e\,l.1r.U :il. Tf'rrn•r n11x, pup, BIT. F,
9i9-s.l:W. · · · ~f-:,\:'\: fo'R<?NT 3 ~rl·h Bay.: trrlc, p4tio, ~A· d!~i~g rn1, E M IGlh atlrvirle Cl tu lx:h HU. Sl05. 962-~. 960-1970 ~h•·r n)1x pup, l!/T. 11·111.
AS I (.on,;cons 3BR. ) r!y l!<l'. $350 per mo., 'l':'>-i:?!!i. I 1$4.J Auuh1•iiu (:\I -:\L,l':-2.B'LKS TO BEACH i 642·8170 ~·E :\I ALES 11ish 1 -2 room-I Coek.;1-poo, Ulk C'rl'.iln, }'
E TSIOE 1 $i50. 1110. NE\\"ELL R.I::. Coron.a del Mar 3722 • _,_..~ &-S--:--·: · -I, 1. ,\ :1 Br. Orx•n for • Rents from $160 nititcs share apt ,1 blk h-on1 1 NE\\'-BLDG I l\!-1.l~ sq ft Collie. !\lcrlc, rnal•'
2 Br, wat•r &. gordener ~l-6.l~l I ~W . pa,CIOUS 111~fll l'l 1•J11 ~un & :\Ion. N. __ tic.ich. 11.B. j36-J.S0'2 I Sl76. 2100 :sq. ft. $"5. 2'20-3 Shf'p rnix pup, Tan/Gry, ~1
pd, $270 IH. 545-0221. J BR \\'/ POOL, Wbi\C'l\"al\'I' I SPACIOUS !BR panoram1e It · 2. & 3-~ blt:-1Tlfi. [X.l(Jl \\ ' wn"1· \\"arnrr le Sin1!'. 1 RA )'l\C h 1 1 ·e 2 ph fronl uffi(..'1.' l:l'\fl:. lrg Collh' 1111...:, Brn·n, fcin. Col[ EGE PARK _ 3 \"il'11 . Catalirut vie1v. 800 . \!1e1\' ol oc'€'an &'ha~·. S:!.JO. & ' ~ec. ch·. F'r.¢200 to $37."1. 1 lr·11 •11 ltt·<ll~i_r~l:;i:,;L.:\l~-I B NO NEW BR :~':""~~ts ~~st~ s ~i~sa , r<'<1r rloors. ,\nahc1n; & f.:L"t'shnnd , gry/Rlk
Br, 1 Ba, water, gar-Canyon \1C\\. 497-1:,.12 $~. .l f~'_l'IN. .t tH\\"fN, .. ~E~ ~O~T ~IL~A l ilr..Z OHU I'll' rs ii/fenl. 61.T-1557 aft <I. Tl'1 n1111;1l \\"a)-, C.~I. Days
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dener p<tid. $375_ Laguna Nigue1 3252 -.r:.~al!CJ~ '· h0~l-til l l ~,11;1 ~fJ.~\:,11ua Al.:c., C . .\I. ~1:. i .\II 111t;• v E RSAILLES 646-J0:.:3 or f'1·1.:s 6..\6-0081 ~ha1tb'1' Ten·1cr. Blk \Vht, i\I.
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__ M_E_S_A_ V_ E-ROE :\,,',;•l·t "! 11;1 \"ll::\\,·. !1',·,,,',,",;, I soo, fll·"41~: .. ,~t1·I~ fu1 T1., uti.I:. ! ·,, ('Ji'll_ ll:~'nnENrf \\·,J·Lf.O~fl', 1,.,_.;.,·11. :..:u-u:l::ti. ON TllE LAKE I W OU SES "'", ~-~ft_ .. ~!.e_~l' 12'0 \lp11 r.l Pi1 Rull nu..: pup, in,11(' t
;u ·,·i•, \qi,., 1nr () .1· .. ""I 1\~1·11t. ·. r: L o T'l'Jll( l. :"<'111>0r1 __ 3_844 At Sc uth Coast Pi"'"· I MINI AREH 1 .. ~1.11.:."", •:i1·;;~ . 0
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11 I I 1;11" $::~.1 nni 1~1. in·I ,\· ' ~ A S 0 l 'HOL E 2'00 II' II \VI I ] ~:.~ •·•.~:•r.14'!1•'1" .\1•1. A b d I ---------· PT 1 ··,,,,,,,,,·11, .. l.,\.li'll•'"•>l"'il.·•~ rnonth. : \\'AR:. 'S' sq. ft. {111(1', 111 r .. r11n L' i."•1•11 A1 t11 1i· it 1 m -ssa or ~n Ft~n 111<1\i111u1n vr1,·<ie1.· ~1·t·. · • " ... ,JU • , 1· 1· 1 •1.11ll' J"lll. n1· S·•11•h r·,,;,.t ' • -· ·" · · v. •1 CluUhou.<;e ·G n1 Saun· Han1i!lo'l & N"c:wla nd St. JB 1 Jot :i<lx3j7. Pai.·i ff'Uct·d $600. \ 1•1 111araner 1111:., ,1·y, cn1.
l'la1.r1. s.;io 1110 , 1:,r r•·q, l~h-• .Jl 1 BRANO NEW •1u1 1 BP. Lnf1 up!~. s;1 :~ _\family Apartments To!al Sec;u··~,Y ' .t, ALLSPACE ' ' t\vail:Oct. liUiL<l~tinaCan· Sp1:1nit•l mix. Bl'n/\Vht . !\1. V l~\ I", Laguna Nigu91-= ~252 $J4.SO & Up 1111·1'1!.! uril, l'('fi 1..,:. c>111 1 ~,,,., ~ ,l>l :. l 1..1t11h no1v a\•:ulablc I J nnnedittt~· cii·cupant·~ 960-1970 yon, Lab"Unll Beach 658·081i~ Trn·1e1· ini_x pup, Brindlc •··-nn~.· ,.,11:-, '· ,,
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,, 1, '" SINGLE STUDIO APT'' .liWJ~c. ,\till!.~'-nll 1r·1~ \u 1l°O' 1 ~:..".!5. On Cul\'cr Drive. i ADULTS R-E''T . ,1 1 1,,,-,,., ...,,.,, Tc>1T1rr n1Lx, B!k/B!ondc .., "'"'~{frl)Ctl.c;,.,.. ::W • Hau111...in, L_i:bl vii ~i•ll JJil't:O frwv. f , STORAGE Ga rage for Rent •~ new~ 1 -• .:.vv-~ SI. B1•1'Tlard , Tn. 1111tlc kid~ .. ~1iddlP ;,·~t'<I <·pl 1•1 •'~· .~-SEA TQR4CE _ Si '1'.l 1 \I. \\ 1.El-\J.Y !'..•I t::S I r);Li ~4l 1 -~ ':tl. .. 1 Ht kiiit-ll' Ln. :-i:-i2:g-100 Sorry, No Pels , 1959 ritaple Ave., No. 5 1 sq. It. ~1 d)..1$.160 111 on t h Poo<ll<'. \\lhitc>, f('in.
_!!9:1 •. ,lS--01011 _ \Vhill' i\:\g.., bt.,UJI 1 n•.. --:~.=·1!1!"lrt)l'}r Hhil ·-·1 ~ · • ._.........._,_ · -;---• --~ --~ Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br s. Coi;l.a r.1esa , 1r ofc. 2950 \\ · Ccnt r~!~ ~·~· Tcrnc·r n1ix. Gold/\\'hl , 1\1.
1 lilt 1:a~t1·d. ,11r;,.,r $225 o1001h! 1vlli1"' •·in~. J·.1\·1.1 · f'u~1:1 :'lh's:1. 611......\~lO · .. ~'.~1~J, J.Jtt:~r~1~.n,pi· _Caauna.Be~ch · 3848 from $175 per mo Robert ;"1-luller R.E. £7..-ro.,91 HH~'"1t lirn/\\"ht h·111 .,... "' ~ ~.. , _________ .... r~4"t>11 pa\lia, tpu::1 ..... 1 111r .......... -• ** STORAGE sp ace . _· · . · ·
1110:11h. t'1tll .1f1, r ti I '\I. l h~n}:. ,1 f11tnih l"oo ld 1J\·~u·1·. L-11 bl B 'f I ,{ ~·To SIK},_ -~all;..t.11 lan! Spec:tac.ular, New Santa Ana Jj'x::.O', 217 A\·ocado s1.: INE\\I ~1-1 l~()()..5000 ~ II .silo~~ \\1•unarHllC'I', ("ray, n111h' :11{.:~::.,,.; ~·1ilrd1•4I t'llll:~-!.!-llC, l>t·Hrh Unge •va y eaul1 u !, .Q.K.· 1'1•a, Irvine" Jndusu·ud Oc•an Vu Townhouses 3700 Pl za Dr Co~ca :0.[l'l'a Call 64;)-j71-t & offlC'!S. ,\mpl prk;.t. 2\Jll .. 1\t'l't'l•·r' 1111\, 1_./\\. l'\1.1\c ~=~ µHl'k111~ Rl'rl"l'<iHUll 1•l11h 11 \ ,\l. l) 1.'l'.:-!E (;;,~·rl1 -·1 \;11, ai·f';•, .'i:li ·'.!llll. \\"alk. LO bcarh, "/. BH. ilt•n Q • -. phnse p11·1·-u·ash St'('., :-.ln1f!,.•n11 S/11, Ill.th• * :\lt:S .. \ \'t:!?DI : U>H~:.1~;-~-J~•·I. c"1111i,_ :-,,.11 :.urat·thf'· .\•hil•·-·ll'' 1,..1.. r 1 "v. ,. r ~ __
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HuntingtOn Beach 324 --.. --·
" , .• Rf,, .!BA. lpL 1;an1e rn1, floii1'l'. ~; .. ,·t. AdltN, no pets. ~1.u. r;.:. .. ·• ua. ,oo 1l'\'"· EN Selll-'J , 11l 111 !;;irk Bav. fnt«I 1d. 1111· la"'" r•111·t>. S350 -----OIJ-...:s!"l6J. 1tar. North End. l~~l-7\IZ!I. Leasing office space .\l'T or llouse-!11 ren( (•1 1 i·i :\lti; :!lih !'all ',~
H1\Hfo: ~·11ut' 1;1:. ~HiO.
Lrg yard !•1!' 1,uJ, :. po ·I
$1 10. 1111. o;. Stlj turn. ;...i: ... :-:Jit! $!Oil ti!O. Afiull O\ \'I' :;u. No XE\\'l::R 2 B , · ti fir. Li•• lido Isle 3856 CALI, ON-SITE tilANACl::R huu!'e !<ll hy nllddl···<l:..• J 1d1 ni1f · ti I b -IJ 7 ·' ,: or . . . , ---pcts. 2037 \\"('stn11n~h·1". ln11. · r g:in " .,, i1l·ll"'2-3W~-t."'6 lt';i~her ''-llh111 p1<1\1n111~I n-.,"'~' \ll~ r l'ri··•'' I Hit.
\';•··;111: f.:1.t~ nk 1 ....
·I i!I C .. 1:.\. ~~·i.> . " I ;jj .
l"ll'I uk Mlss'on V1010 3267 1 2'" s· k c 'I roorns. l blk hvinc. Shar" ..,... ~ ,... ;11 ;,.-.,.., ..., 1er s. -••. · .. I n;B -v ----' of Jrvu1r Ln11. l.'0111 1111••1..:.---~· ---
I lock garage, No l'hiltll'l'n, I}() Lfl?O ISl~E Draina.ti:· I 1 FREE i'\ ro 1n..o I t l Ill 11 LRG Ba.chelor , !iv r n1, st•p. pet-;. Ref's ...,,.,_ 839-ll!lO. I 1·.1e 1v -\\a l t>rf~n1 101.. '[I St , 8'0. Junf' 10 cn<l uf Jul.1. Fu1;111-t -~"" : .;u ~l-' '1 ~' .I.:
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4BR/:!B;~ :1ir·conrl. hnn1ac. ~ klt chcn, bath. \\'tr pd. l'oo~. • • ., condo. Apt. S37;i 1110 1110· ~ • , 1 ·\!3 rtbm l£i t c 1 ii J a I' r a 11 !; ~·in,. n I sf "-"""'1Y on Di i!<T•il :SlrCCI, lU~llll drµs & c r pt . Actult, 110 pee. $1-Kl. &l5-8965. I • EL~! GARDENS APTS. I Ulll!i. No pets. Bv 011 Ill'!'. "di:~ nir ~ndu~~~ I 11··;0\lalJlc. \\ l'lh': I u ~·IS · c.:0~1•1 ·'h'"•'· ,. n , ,\J;i.1, ll~h.
\·., .. ,,, .. 1'>'° nto ~~1 • R , lhlfun1 1 BR . $15:! t;p. ,-,-.. .1·=~• · 2 BR. To1111nouse. frplc, .,h 1•1 In•·"''""~~ Di· p, •• ,,,.,,., l'l1'1•~·· l';ill ,, l1(•1111fy
~ar. B11:1r i,:.-1h'. h:id ..
Homefinders * 642-9900 ·-:<~t~Ll: s1111.trn!~! :! H .. , ~l :~a
,1.1 . ..,_;i . ~ $11:t-$12.; IB Tr;iilf'I'~ ' . ...-VJ.)~ f ~·!"".l'l • s19· NE'wport 'a<:8.ch neAr .uo ..... ~~ ., .... ,, "l)i-{i:l"'' ·11 '. J':\I L111dlt·~, .;·;~-!10:'. or !lfi::-1()8:3 ' nicely furn., ~dulls &lj-l,;3(j -u! "!dutt 5eefio_n: . I BA y VrEW nr.pvt bt·;11·h. rom ··---I_ Bi.. ft'Onl ;i. Shops. 510 sq, ft. tMO Ca 9 l 1 0 3 o I' ..: a l l ~____:_......=...:-' ,-1 ·' , ·---Ne~port B-eacli----r269 131 \fest \\'ilson 11 ' E. 2'bid.&. 6::!2-.'\61.i. ~hr, 2 ba. Lg lv rtn \\/ ll'fil. Pool, lt'nn~s. l'Or!IJncn~lll n1onth. Call Ney,·port "Place 213-i9J--0:)4J. 1 1.0~ ;;-old ",,nake" ring
-L-G-<' fURN ! "I<-.-;;-,,,,., I • TROPI, C1\L POOL . '"" L Ad 1•· ,~-.,.,.,., b1.·c.<1kla:.l. ~pa.rate_ fau~ily ll Really 67~3600 Io ,.R Cd'.' 11-1·d,11I d-11·,,,. 1 I 11· /ruby e~\'S, lo~t un beach· u u o _, ., BR 1 b 1 ,,,_J se. U •·"· •·l-·MJ"~ i<cc t1un. Close to ~hopping 0 • '"" '""' nt:'ilr ll•>ll'I L:1•·una HE-
LUXL'H IOUS I! 0 !\[ E. \\'I .\}'/\\', drps. pool. Adult~. no I ¥ ' ~ a~... Spll:a Mesa Verde 3863 & fine bcai:h. &I l-26U OfFICE SPACE r~ 0 R ' BR ground !Joor ii pt \\",\Ro Oil\"•' 1:!1"'.';i 9Sfi.om
l<.ul .. & IH."I ok.
\\",\!.h: TO H,h' " 1.u:. $:'!."· " 1Jtil pd. Sngb, kkb ,\ lk'I "k
SUHt'Elf.S I Ult $1 1..i.'i. \\',,Jk
lo h(·h.
gorg('OUS \'lel\' of p1't..,,t!gou~ fX'l!t. $185. 642.!JJ;!(J. I st;aircase, fl'plc. P!lllO· .:-:ud, Ri::NT. Costa l'\Ies.1. lfarbor • \\·/gar ., Cdi\I. Reasonabll·.1---" ! Santa ,\11<1. (.()ati1k"): Club. ~ }"URN ISHED Ba ch l' 1 01,. \\ater & Gas pd, :)48-1168_ e 110:\IE AT:'llOSPHEH.E ll --THt: EXCiTL'\/G--at Adan1s. B ca u ti I u 1-1 Eves 6 7 3-0 7 3-1 u 1 'L 0 S T-Fcn11a1c Boxcr-Tan
BK, ,3 B,\_ Den, hbt'<U')',. 2 Gentlenuni only 111. l?th ~ 2BR, 2BA, ~ean \!1c11·. Uelu,,c 2 & 3 BK. Rt'utal Ole PALM MESA APTS. n1odern. Air, mus i c, 213-6 71 -J 3 12 : da)S l\/11hite C' 1l'SL Ke11•port .t
!rplc s. ganiell<'r. '',.a 1 I
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-he $1Zi •61j...-O',.;·t Dshv.·shr. rcfng, "t pt~, :tOO:l l'lfi:H·c A\e. ;)-16..J03-I l'll lNlITES TO NP1'. BCIL janitorial, Cla.~s A. Wal~rr I :!13·618-42-12 :'.\Ir. Backus. ~-a.Jr. Re1,·ard~ 6<11-1-159 alt.
I June 1J. $19Jft.f0. 821J-ll'9."1. ~ 1'1 • JlllO., · dl'ps. S']3j JBH lBA. ~111 -·---------"" h 1 ,. 2 BP. r s ·1 ~ Lee Bldg. c.·a 11 Gene Hill, $SO REWARD '
H • Be h 3740 1 .,,. Newport Beach 38691 ..... c · "' •· 1ur.1 1.J _. ----------I
Homefinders * 642·9900
\\",\Ll\ '" beach 3 Be, lam
rill. !\!bl. $190 util ~I.
suu::h"·/fan11li cs. Also i Br
ht•acJ1. \·:1l'ant
I ;--BRAND Ni-.:\\-' 1'0\\'N· unt1ngton ac nµp 's. Slou. 979·J099.____ A<~ults, No Pets. ,JJ7--0136 or 6~2---0200. I !or infornia!iun ll•ading 10 the> FOU.\"D. CeL"nn1 n Shepherd
1 HOUs r:. :i BR, 2'~ tm. \iC\v. · Y/£--~--i 2 BR, 11/2 BAS COUP-1.i61 l'llesa Dr. FOR LEASE rental of a_ 3BR houHc L1~. 111;dc, black \\·/tan I F.nd unit on 15a<' greenbelt. LOW E _KLY ~ATES LES ONLY. $175. 610 CHANNELFRONT ~j blks tro:n Ne1:•porl Blvd.)1 ~11!(1 -+ sq ft office in prinu·I \\ilhin <1 7 rni le radius oi tlla~·king~-· Vic: ~Irvine ·
1 Enl'I patio, ·<'l'pls,. fl rpi<, Executive Su1t•1 •JOANN APTC s.8-9S73 2 BR., 1 ba. Roon1 !or bo:lt :i46-9&>0 hx:. Crpl~. diiis, pv1 I Costa i\ll·sa. Under S22;i Tu11lcro1k aren, 8.~l--06:12
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bltins, fr]Jh·. SJGU. 6-ll·l<Wl n7 Yorktown Blvd. '----' • . • $.1i:l Unf., yea rly. COllQ~,\ DEL i\1,\H, Lgc 11 t'f'litt'00111. ttir-co nd. FA ht. n10 .. 6·l2·:>&44 or 646·836:!. FOUND : 2 fen1ole PoodlCio; 1 ~UPER 4 Br 2 ~~ b<t, l:1ni, I BeaL·h Bll'd. a1 Yorktu"·n e DELC~E 3 Br, 2 Ba, all WALK TO BEACH BR, 1~"/beaul. J>IL'I\ of Ol.'<'<111 1 Ulil's 1nl·. $400. 1110. Call black & l Chnmpnignc col·
ri . I b / 1 $"'" 536-0411 ! bltns, fl pl_e. ~:11·~ _ lhlUl. 3 Bdnns, :! baths ~ ha,1. No fX'lS · $300. 49:'.-1121 ~ or. Hunt. Beach a rl·a.
1n r in, c u "' poo. ""'"' f 1 S3"' ij'2 II -I )
1 inl."ld gai'd.Cllt'l'. &l·l-'lllltl. I STUDIOS & 1 BR'J. i\{ u ts . _;'-· -~ ~1-· __ )"en rly leaSf'. $32j ~lo. · 67:)--2698 19.1111~·:1'.10 \"; lll'; Realty. ~inancial • j.lO-(ljS3
: r.:.\STBLU1'"Jo", J sG·riii ~. 1 • Full kitt·hcn J B.R. --~hEd ._ok, no pet5", CORONA DEL MA~, 1 NE\\;, lar;:e _l sn. Utils. * 1 ~10. F'REF. Rt:NT. * Los T: San1oyed/Gcrn1an
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drps, bit-ins, pool. Tl·nni:<;1 •.f-lealed pool S17J., 1J .. :S~irr~'.1r, 2 Br, l ~. unf, yr!)'. S:li;i. Jlll'I., pool. \\alk_to h<'ll~h.1:\u lc>asc rcq. Dix. off1ces.j 1t , =1 too· XT '?d w Shep. n1i....: i\lalc. \'Ll'. C.l\I.
n\·11.r-by. No JX'IS. s3-;J. 1110. • ••La\.Lndl'y lal·lh11l'S 645--0'76a 1 I ~an Cl~~-Sllo:J. 1~-0616 11clJ. ,\1rporlf'I' llotcl. :l5c Sq. l:iusinetl Oppor SOOS 6 n10. \\'ht fal'l' brn body.
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6U...57il or 61-i-~ 1 • Frt'e utilities , LnG 1 BR. Ulil Pd. Bltn~. I , Rooms 4000 Fl. in..:L ,\/C. lull scr,·iccs. ------til'l-'i!HL
3 Hr. :l li~~ lrg ')Td, _blli~. ~,..1 : ~:.·~~ :n~1n~d M'I'\. Al ail. relrig. $150. Ado Its, no pels.
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I 2li2 DuPont nn: 8 ' FARGO LUST: Bill\' ,\: 11 hi t t' ly lse $j.j{l/mo. 152-1 Alul a
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• &r·B-Quc l 2013 Charle St. 6-16--0112. SLf~EPI.\(; J:.00111. rcfl•ig, 83.1-3223 t9 hi noon) SANDWICH SHOP Parakrct, 1-1c ,\llanla &
; Ln. fo'o r appt, 642-1121, evl'S _•Phone Sl'l'l i•·f' 2°BI~. quiet atnio~phcre, 110 1t·ec5, L't'.11.y, PL'i~·· t•n;r·:oi-:sK space available S.iO /\t"<1r 0. C. A1rpor1 Ne1\·lanc.J, llu111111glon Bc>ach.
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. GT. ... ;:..W-1 . 1 • 1 nlile to IJl.'1.'.iu ~t~. SJ IJ. rno. Gentl~man. Rel S;_~ ~.N °1 u10. \\'ill pt'0\'1de furni.lll.re 0(X'n 9 to 3 ~~ljjiS. ______ _
-96S-SOGI PARK NEWPORT s1nok1ng. S\20/rno. 61 .. -a!ll. at $.l. 1110. Ans v.' e r 1 n g j Dar 11·C'ek ~-OUr\D: Sanioycd, niale . SO~IERSET j sr., 3 b.1,. a.a~GMderi"'Apts. -----APARTM' ENTS Fl.iHN l'Olllll 11·/ pnv ba & S{'l'\'iCC 111·allable. 1'1'87 5 Stf'arlybusiness,tern1s.
1:i111111· pool, tcnni~ Cl1!'· 1~1\'ale • pitlius, 6 Pl)()ls, N"l'.:\V :! BD~t. ADUL1::5, ~· , . I OOIL'Oll)'. $25 v.k. & up. Beach Blvd., Huntington I RIVIERA REALTY Dntoiin l=~~on Beach. ~~90. nlo. 64lHlll or 6aunus, jal.'uiii, ti:nnis, :! ~U Cll~LDJ!E'.': !JR PEl':). B ... che\01 l or 2 Bedroonis b-.J Seaviev.·. Cd;\i. Beach. li~2-4321. * 642~7007 * . . -----
.i.JZ..7800. l"lll' prk'~-Bikl' to beach., &l.rS720 * I an~ TownhoUSE'S . FANTASTIC view of bay on -----------J.OU:\O; ?<.l itll' H!k & Tan
Nt\V 5 BR. 3 Im hoJ1w. I ,Fro1n $13.i. S-lti-U:!.'1!:1 !::'\Ira Lar;..e ~chrlo~··. ~1 !0 ~pa· SL9t50 Open 9-6 Da1~y ROO:'llS $2'0 "·k up. il"ith \1·nter, highrise priv. office I LfnuoRRARsroE RFEI NOO Gi.'1"n1."6h~~;,, ~~:_¥t' dug.
I V1f'\\', romm. pool &. cennis 1 3769 1110 uttl pd. Nr acc. :\o .., Pools Tcnnis kit:h~;~.?'· 1\k_ up96~pt. "/ rt'<'t'PI from $225 to "" . rangr . .....,..,,,"".' eris. 6-l-l-l 4SI. ~Newport Beach pets Call 9i9-0l31 1\l'ross U'Onl Fashion lslar.r:I ·1·1 · 1.JJ or &l.l-3. : ~1~. · 556 76.:;g . County ro.'\st llN!a. Hca\")' FOUND · f('nl l~,1•1n Sheri
I Newport Heights 3270 ' $3.li \VK UP. 1 Br. '.! Ua & D P . t 3826 1 at Jamboree on San Joaquin ; L,\JtGI:: rocun pri1·a1e bath &i S3J~-1.1f.r n10. . o1 trallic. Qualified bu.1·E'rs Blk & Sil01\·, \'ir~1ni~ Seat:h ana 01n Hills Road. entrance i\Jcsa \~ c rd e .1 only. H.A. Barry, bkr. tags, Ml}--058.l I 1 Bttl'h. Color TV. 1na1d Sl!I"\', 1714) 644-1900 I * WATERFRONT * 644-0151 • BIG YARD I \)()01. IJ"HE ?.1ESA. ··lfa N. DBLUXE 2 BR, 2 BA :1pt.' I einployed 111an. ;Jt,j.-2822. . , · ~·ouND : Cot, ft'111nle, Jong
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,_BH .. 1 ua. Otild & pet Ok . :.1 ~e11 port Bl, NB. &16-96St '!•fw 1 r[I! idl r o o n1 ~ . , LO\'F:LY Qulel sl rf'ct nr , Room & Board 4050111:11111'. 1~~"·~;~e~~:!;r,1J~· l e COICKTAILS & hair blk &. "·ht. H.B. Florida 4:i 2426/ 64&-3928 decking. pa11oran1lc vii·11· 11r si·hools, \\'cstcliff i;hopp1n~., .xl'l.u. n °. · ' "• & 011·en". 960-2113 afL 5 .
• > i-" i San Cl•~tnte 3n6 bf'ach & constlinr. o~h\\hl', & Cliff Dr. Only S21:i pt·r 1110 f:LDERLY PartiaUY bl ind 1~rt bar, private bu!~-· ) DINNERHOU$E F'O~U~N~o='"r~,-111===-=c.::-1
San Juan -· dbl 0\11'!1, /HU'>, ~f\1'11!::•' fOl' 2BR 11·/rirh·atc patio & ' \\"Olll n. l\31l l:c-! .('Jdetty 11'0-l '~Iirundy IUtr. 6•5-6161 Seat~ m Sl'),000 do1111 I \V I a~c SianlCS(' cat l --C~•~p~i-•_lr_•_n_o ___ ._3_2_781 2 Bit,. den, also 2 BR.I both opener. Adults onl~·. no \)CI S. gar. _ISOO Clay_~~-_6_i":l-:ii'.11._ I 111an fo l.' ""· n'pru1in11sl.•.fp, OF~'ICE.s. rronl.it1).: on HOL'LAND B_USINESS !'le .• ,9 a nu sq. Ca
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I \\'/"'hl!C \\'ntc.r v e \\I' <l'l"l"/ I --' 111 I I ' 7 a:ll-;>I ..... I Lr:ASE Village San Juan. I llel\lt c.J pool, c ar,, 0 r t ' _;;:.""1:re9-l' Ilk). Oil case. ' s~:lfi-llie: 2 BR 11r Ol.'t';Hl. 1'1:M•lll & kl!. J)l'L\', }te~~.~-~.~·(' ~r11·1x1t I . I Vc1, \\ ~a !I < 6Ta-41 0 SALES M0-0608 FND 0-.,-.. --,-a-b-by-.-.-1.-,,
· iicw 3 Bit 2 ba, nh· lndi)'fBBQ 8J'ea!I, close 10 ...,........ 1. 1 Shng, 1i.•f, rng; no pt•t/chld :.l Ult apt. c.:il. ~·"':,!<l, ..'.'.;v, nu1su1' yout oor . ·:-• : '. ge, .. .
SUPER ' Bil. APTS•. , 311·3!ilh St·. <\\I. l.i 1·. ilJrs. :'llc:1J 01· :i-1~,.,]. 61}-00)6
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. BEAUTY Salon, prestige 'loung ial. \ 11 . _Highland
condllionrrl, rli sh \\'D sher, heh & pier. 492-4700 k Dr & 11 ... ·Jnc NB 548-7427 s e \ f. c I e.u1 in g O\o'Crl. I A.u.rtments Unfurn.. Great VlC"\\". 'Thon1p:-:.on : 6+H:l40 Jai· "1<' __ ;\;ICE ,\fC one n1an oUiee. area. 8 Sta. 9 Opl'1'. Gr · · -
drpl!/cpts. cleet. gar. door 2 r-1 Maruigemcnt Corp .• 493--0141. I * SHARP 2 BR 2 BA one Summer Ren1al1 4200 hnn1ahntf' o cc up an C' y . : $7:\I.+ shopping ctr. Tern1s 1'""'0UND: Puppy, Tri-color
1·ur gn~. Fent't'd Y rd· 1Balboa 'P ~I I 3107 I Huntinnton Beach 3840 level EaslbluU.' Pool. $295 , ~ , Corona ~l'I ~tar. $ 7 j . ' ~I~~. handles, &»-08'1:= 111alf'_. :; n1os. Vi<': Ho.'\~ Con1n1un1ty lake .I:: ~ , T • , ~n-~ I , ~ f\10 833-16;)3; SJl.89'1-t. . _OCEA!l'.~RONT·N.B. G73-t80 1, 54S-29:l!I &:12-.:62.1. llosp1t11l 6-12--0288, 6..\;,-7786
in1.:I gi.rdnr. $295. 831)-j146 • a•, i t; w ls .r, $149 2BR CPTS t Lt:XURIOli:-3 Bl', 2 Ba i I I 0 • 5015 1 -.O~N~D~~u-.. ----. , F , Kt:. I • tu · LARGE IBR1 on Bay, great loii·cr duple-.:. Frplc .t: ROO~!· Sepern1e enirar;~c. nves pport y U1 : "','.'i:k Bay Dr. :?
. NEW 38Rll_;1RA, crptl,
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: 1_: ... BhY> No. 3. Qi.IL dra:pu, pr, pool. Spacious 3 viE.'lV, PJol , ne"' ronclo, lull I ~hy,·hr. Stil/11. k. June, "01'k1ng girl or n1a n. N_1ce ! !lt!'· 11o):s. I,. ~lk 1 drps~ pool pr1v. 1 Ml frm'j "'l 1 , BR.,, $199. M2--03.S9 or I security; $-l50, 6T:ria20 673-9-199 or 982-l'.?l4. location. ~lrs. DA v kt , ~t:NERA.L 1'1gr., ~mpetcn~ B < ~, \l'hilc !':HS·26.~.
I marma. Harbor LM~. ! Ci Istre &etch 3818 SU-4504 i • 642·914-1. I u1 selling consun1e 1 LOST. Bloodhounci ma le
Ct!fltury •. 493-lt:.'6 1 "'.f ,, nq • . 2 B"" n .. h 2 Br' 2 n-: Sin Clemente 3876 12 BR. lrplf', 2 BA . Nr. park, LARGE Off" _2700 t.: Coast pi;:ictuct!I need~ a.11 pa~nl'r bhu·1' s, t ;• 5 i, Brook'. I -U\lO to 011"8C ' • ~. • ..-·---beach ,t; bav $200 1~·k. :l606 ICC I ' ~·11h II\'() 1 n \' (' n I I\!(' '
S1nt1 Ana 3280 OCEAN VlE\V 3 BR, 2 BA, Like Ne1v. Fncd pti v. yd. NE1\[l llC\\' extra latgc, 2 Park Ln. 57J.o-r r:. H"·y, Cd~t $120 n10. Call 1 enginC(!rS \\'ho ha\"e S\lperioi· hursl SL Hl'1'·1u·d, 963-:Z~l_ . I ~k.'Ony, c:rpls, dfPll, bltns. OtUd ~-:"lo pel11. $ZL nll>. BR, 2 ijA. d~ h \\'!'hr, ENT ur 1 in o;;tj"" 61~~111. prodliC!s. $hiire &. Jhvcst F"".SD : Blk n1a1c 001: "'/1\hl
Lat'lte, IO\t'\y 3. ~'(!rm, 2 ba,; Washer/dryer. 6-12-nss. , Avall June 7. ~ tlfl J . palio/gardl'nS. s;rio. Adults R"·~k :r n'I0'3: Phone ) COAST HWY., loc. All util. eQ\lllily up to $5,lm. Reply \r on l'best. Appro...:. 8 mos.
hike '" 110\\.
A~t. t°f'•'. !J";9-1n ::(I.
!Wc:E :;-sn--:-ipll', .. u1· p11tio.
<A•nlk IO lfC'hOOI & ~nrk . $3:-.IJ.
Ask h>r KEITH SNIOF:H,
!162-4471. • 3BR1/2BA, 'Ci'Pts, drps. DI\\',
gnlnr & ;io.•ater pd. S310.
ll!lZ-l~il2/5.16-1&19
IBR, niirldle ~gcd muplc. ~o
llf'!?'i. G" • ;.'Drtl. Ph:
:i.16-8214 or 2JJ ... 43.1--0891
Hunt. Harbour 3242
ELl::GANT 3 Hit. !am m 1,
rormal dinlnfi: room hoDle.
New crpls, xlnl landl>capinfi:.
Voct1nt $.'125. 1110. \"J'!'C . l~e.
Christiana Really
6916 Warner
at Golden West
714 : 842-7486
213: 591-5568
Irvin• 3244
Bradford t>l.oloe -Sruita AJ1;1
3 bdm1s. 2 ha. •••••••• S27f1
California Homes .., Irvinl'
3 txfrms. 2 hR. F.R .•.•. $.1:.'0
The WlllO\\'ll • Irvine
3 bclrms. 2 bn. ........ $29j
Grt'enlrcf' l kllll('~ . Irvine 2 bdnns. 1 ba. Jo'. R ..•.. S:tr.I
Vllh1~e I Univ. )>11;rk -Jrv.
3 bdm111. 2 ba ......... S.1'1'.l
2 bctrnu:. I b8 ......... $300
Villn~e JI Univ. Po1'k • lrv.
:\ bdnns. 2 hn .•••• S400/$425
Vllh1ge lll Univ. Park -Irv.
3 bdrm. 213 b\1 ••••••••• U5(]
3 lidnn. 2 t-:i .......... , $l.;o
GRn:lcn Jlo111c11 -lr~·ine
3 lxJmi. :.i IJFI. $33.""1 .. s.m
The Terrl'ICT' • tn·lne
2 Br. 2 I.la. flCll', rurn .•. S360
3 Br. 2 ba. new •• ~1'0/$400
1'trtle Rock -Irvine
adult condommiuras. Soifll t Corona del Mir 3822 ! NEW APTS • \VA!K . TO David WAiter Rltr 49'1·1'790 6'i.,....i4·l-i incl. ex<X'pt phone. $83 tilo. Box 87, Dally Pilot, P. 0. VIC', N. r<"S1!1 ;\lesn ,\j'l'-1615 r~~·~~-o~-mo-NE\V, IUper ~. extra ~· 2
1 BEACH. 1 .l ~2 BR'1 b'om N!.\V, extra la~e 2 i,111., 2 Vacation Rentall 4250 C. Thoma.5,' IUtr. ~ ~3i 1560, CoalA 1'1esa., Ca. LOST -c;at. blk n!ale; N11.n1e.
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BR dtn;. 2••' M lltci>wn $115 lCt $235. iqa:RAS. 8.). pool, Ffxe•IJ ~ty & DELUA.'"E, Paneled, showE'.l', Sam. Vic. 49th & Nt:'ptune, 3 bdcn 2 ba. F .R. $!25/$450
CALL 551·7500 •
•.VISION • \
· Rtd Hill Reqlty REA~TV 1 REALTORS
UnlV. P&rk Cent .. 'f, lrvJDC
TURTLEROCK. 4 BR, ram·
rm, Alrlum, elr con(t .. Igo
)'ti, 1475. IJ)O. m.t114.
NEW 'ooi'IOO, 3 Br. ) 1#: Pa~ f\11lc:, w/'\et-~r,
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ut ag-Un• "'·ei ba.r Wiice" maker· 538-2519. . ban vlfwt~. 6. ·TAHOE CABIN for Rent, by Air rond Wllh 13 x 24 11.or-\VANTEO aorneone "'ho has N.B. 642.-3783.
OCEAN VJE\V 3 Slt t:dmc ff'PIC. leoodr.Y Lot'a 0'1 EXTRA Lrg 2 br 2 ba dlx l DELUXE 2 r ~ 1~ J3A. I day or "'ttk. Ni 'lh Shore ~~Dched. c.ri1~~ money . ' wanls ~· LO.:.:::S'f::..:=s::;i::•::m_•_•_c __ -,-,.,-,-,-
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prlv. com111-. Rec. Ceht~r. clmiit'iil Aat. &75-$726. pool."lkle apt D' be•c.i\. $16$. \\'alk to tuwnlbettt"!'· Ocean . Lake Tahoe. CompletE'.ly 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB I lnVl".ltt '"re~them Cahl. s i;at-Vlc. Victoria Beach.
POOL, TENNIS~ JAC:0Z2I DELUXE 3 , aR, 2,t ba, I ~ F\orida St. ~-vlew. Adul.1.1. 498-()S36., tumlshed 962<-'1'408 ~5.tm.2300 llf Ml-5032 ~b tail o "'t l e t . Rrwit.rd 491-2662
W•lk bcuc~. tmmed yon. Frplc. 2 ~ blks to beae:b+i3.B._R.~ Child"i~• pet! SanJuln LAGUNA, ~ew tum 2 BR. 2 Buslne;ss •n~il 4'50 Money to loan 5015 FOUND k1ttcn. Black
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_0wner $4l0/mo 49).52'.lT , Lewie.no' J>iitJ. J!jO. frlO· ,OK. 9'fY" Lynn Q\.. Call C!plltr•no 3878 min. lo ocean, $* wk. 1v/J01l.Y· V\c El Toro lLake
\ c d Un.tu 34i5 ' •673-n27 1 I --~ I . ' Sleeps 6, 673-1)255, slJccESSFUL location 17th 9i1 % }'f'ol'f'lll) ~l-079'1
• 011 °' · rn. l I BRAND New. iO of iiwJ. 2 i ...._ip>l\M., J?,09ed garaae. ~~10Jflo~ lo ~uyp.r~' l QIM.,,July. Aug &: Sept. 2 Br, &. Nt-.l!Qrt. tn Co&ta Mesa, 74 ~~ouxo: Bnseball 1tkwe llt
I UNlVERSITY 'PARk f BR. 2 BA. Frplc. SUnc1eci:k.. \..ruld or amau ptl 0.,11. $UP •Wile• 0 pu~ ' .. 1 Ba . Nl,y f\tm . s.soo mo. 1100 3(1, tL Pa.rkln&. Tus!I~ Pfl.l'k, C.M. c-u and
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I.arw>. brnnt1 ·..,,, 2 ~· 2 $350. ~I'll or 61M274. * Ml-8149 * ~"'; P~ / ~:\iw~:,i,;"''~:: Mu!<a only. m..1'!&2 CORON>). .~I Mar. rioh""' MONEY AVAILABLE lt1'n!lll'. 548-1858. .,M.•. Condo. wet .blf, NUB NEW 2 BR. DELUXE <\BR.-fpl. cloeed /lridy fat:U. fk!ll am -nrlCABIN for mtt. Blc BcM. oUlce 1U1tt,'~/Montb ~For 2l'ld T.O.'.s on Sl,.;1«' FOUND .. ParakM. ~
-Jacuut, pool, $3lS. 1 Bltn Klicl\en. Llah! I< -· iaondry. ;1'11!. Oona Mlrlna. $». Sips 12. $!;, Por day. !LIO. ,~l.ONO~UCS. lamlly,_ Duplex••· unilO up lame, MAie -lrvlne -Nr.
!117-67111 • Airy-Piii 6#-4674. ·--IG-'ll!7 4QS..;W e 483-2011 wk. Em. Ml-821!0. llRO"""' S1W100 101L nW»-llO!I. ~n.y. 551.-. -
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:Ill DAILY PILOT * lhur~i\J, May 30, 111"14 • fiOO
Poraonols 5350 I Electric a l 603ITTopSOil 6092 . Help Wen, ....... F 7100 Help WontOd, MIF 7100 I Help Wonlad, MIF 7100 Help w •• ,;;i. M&F 7100 Help Wonted, M&F 7100 H t lp Wonted, M&•
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SPIRITUAL RF.ADER El t'C.TR ICli\N -LiN:"nM· * TtH~ sou. • CCl\lPOST Delive S d O I RtOR
l)pon 10 AM to 10 l'M I No: '3:1108 Smull Jobs. • M~L(11 ... r<,"Dll'OOD • ASSEMBLER ey_; un ay n y GENERAL OFFICE INTE
A<h-ice on all maltel"!' 111111111 & rl·p;11r ... ~>4~5200. r.tl1 5,111 .... s:nn AU POSITIONS AT .OF DAILY Pll.iOT TO CARIUERS RE-Goldm oppor. to work In CLERK, ~12 N. t;I Camtno ltf'a..I I G d ,
6045
T S · 6093 • pN'5l.lgt' co Avr typl~ £XJ>l'r not n.•cfd. Neal & DC"
San Ot'n1entt'. 1''or Appl. a r 1n1ng -'" orv1ce 4 day work week, 10 QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA· ability. Top ;wary, ;Ul':l~Y lm1.1011a11I. ,
C.ll m-9034 '-""'lJ6 MOW & EDGE 1r.>:>: SEHVIC'E. 1..imm'"'" AAMES houn.por day, 4,30 P.M TION WAGON OR VAN . CONTA CT MR. Juon Best Agtncy r1.EASC: CONT~CI
VASECTO?i1Y "w1:;:.:r l'RIC'J·:s 1011r111;; r'\nl!'l\itl of hy &1 3 AM nd Llf BENTON WILLIAMS, 330 WEST BAY 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly Gt"f'g fNAf••o\'blM.
Conndt<nllrd In I o.r n1n t 1 nn ,/ BEST :'EH.\'IC'I< •hn1h-i r:o~1·r 1(rt-~i:.xm __ + to 1 (l 1" tl on STREET. COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE Suite 213 9GH7T.i Sank o mor ica
-.'OUnsehng & r('fem11 c a·:OHC.~~ ~,.1!}.~'fll."i I ~-.-;-rOl'SOll~• CO\IP<l:-iT , temporary basis, Fae-642-4321 FOR APPOINTMENT 500 Nr"•po11 (\'nlrr ~PCARE. Jn('Orp. ,\ Kon· -- -* ~ll:LCI! • lll-:1)\\0UO Bureau of tory experience helpful , · GIRL FRIDAY Fu:-1h1ill1 lsluttd
Profit Ai;rl\C'y., 6-l:?-4136. _ I ~~~oJ~l>l~·-'~~; 1~~r1:::;1npl l".1ll ~"i-1,!1:;{1 1 ~rn1iloyrn<'nt Agen<'Y but not necessary. $2.00 An Equal Opportunity Employer Qll(' girt o[fi(.-e in F!tshion 836-3505 1 r
MASSAGE & SAUNA f"'c rst. John '."l l&-:ll-IG I Tutoring 11094 per hour, plus shift dif· Htlp Wanted M&F 710o Help Wanttd, M&F 7100 l11lf'. Need good ge~rol ufc J-:11u;il 01ipo.r ''
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Clean roon1s, plt'11!lant 1 -,._.1,-,.1,11_NCf·u J --100% FREE ftrtntlal. Apply in per· ' ..i. -background. SUtrt $600. AP-NVOICING atmosp~t'l', TV & lowll(l', · ··" ·-... ·. ' · . npnni·~r LO\\' Clt.'\llJ-;,-;: ~u11111u't l son. BOOKKEEPER. Leackr In Ot.:CTVERY~ p C' rm., ply 610 Newport Cent<'r Ol', I
Call DonnR at iit\3-1247 : ~arct~~r )'a~ .. mr11n!l'n.1111·l· i rh•nlt."iloi:o tut<~rlnJ:: .• 1-.:.'l;pt•r. 0 service type business has p/limc. Early n1 o r n N.B. Suitt' 515 SHIP5i1'ING CLERK
8839 Adnms Ave, lint~. B<'h.' ,1~~-t~~p-~3-1020__ lt·;u hrr. C1tll ··vr~: li13·S-l!.1Ci.1 PRIMARK im1ned. opening for ex~·r. newspaper dehv. to N.U. GRAND~IA·Rcllrt'<l lo hvc·in Sn111ll .. 1t•clroJ11lt• \VlLl'l'IMiu~<'.
J>Jlf.(iN,\NT? -il!O\\' .I<. £0\'";r; t•:q)('rt 1 I ~-;--d -Cl .-i,098 , Co's Pay All full charge bkkpr. At· hon1es. App1\)x. 2 hrs. $:l00 & C(LJ'{' for 5 yr old boy. Pul Elccl1'fln1ct-, 1 1 I! 2 0
Caring, C'
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I rl1•pf'ndnhli-. ('nll for pl't)n1pt "!'•n ow ea~tng 1 trHctive ~a.lary & v.•orking per 1no + r,:as alluw & 1..:ves/wknds lN'<'. 61'.l-1017 \\'1•s1t•n1 AV•'. r. ;1 r d 1' n
couns<'hnt;: & r r f f' r r a 1 . frt•1• l'llt. Jnhn ~h)-?.4·M.i. • ·"l ':\:-\l\l~I·: \\C'lHKEJ:S • Agency Fns p111D1fUCTS condi.tions in \\'~mtnstef" bonus. 642--4800. ~ aft 6pni. fin""· ~1-:~:111.
i\bortion, ltd 0 p I i (l JI & FINE EDGl·; I lndu,t11al. fl'"ldl.'n11.1l I n vu ~111:rr· Su~m6t re~~e to DELIVEnY MAN, e Il l' l y 1-IAlR.!:.iYLJ~,,s p,, i Ill l'. IN\'OIC'E t'l1•rk. 1nnluf'(l, kecpin~.
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Y:.l'I ~l 1u11t•nant·I.' SCr\10·1· 1-'r"'' l'~I !i1'!·fi'r:1 Dear Secretary, ) co \\?~1.11 .erj , 926sJ x 426• morning 11n1eis route, No1·th lklyfl'ont sulo~ Ba I bo il A/H. know'! of hkk11ni,::. A.;k
A PC ARE c~~'.l-4 1::6 Cleanups/Haulini;:. :,.;~ .... "!il.~ ! Sc hools & { 1111' !'l'.ltlfll.ln~ i~lklooklng k'for I l s OUT\$ C'I, . I 'Costa 1i1 CSH, 1'.1usl ha\'l' l s land 673-7438. for l\lal'y. li1:Z-2t:~; INCREASEyout'bu~tlinf', J.J (;.\H.IJEN Srr.1<·t• c·Jt>an UP'·I I t'o n 7005 ! uu 1n!1v. w <'Swor 111i:: • BOOKKEEPER dl'pcndable car, good pay. . . WA.NTED JR SECRETARY cup llizes 111 2 "''ks. 1101 planlin''. 10,,,, rt'llO\•allun, nstruc •. _. u1alwa~m'\\•plu.~holl!t·1· Develop1nent/Construction 51G-l780or54f;;...O.l27. HELP , ,' I ·· 11 IOll'r n · k "' ,..., I 1 1 rl 111 lhe heaullfol 2620 S. Susan : ~ ~ , , Perni. p/tin1e job dellverini.: ~ t't' I 1:111. 1• .iu1.
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• " ', • e:'ll:ercisa, pad~ or g11nn11c ·s lrN' est. f:xpcr. 96.1--1072 I !>HG\~ l F>;~'.':S ~·OR 0t·• l' _ I l{•<i"''''.billt•."S , •• 1 .. ,1 e , DEN, TAL ASSIST AN I , I.A T••••··· 10 honte< .~-~"I'. ofc-. ( ._1\•,1t sl.tl·"·"' .. "'. 111') ALSO Custorn f1111ni:. . • . --1 '' ···· ·· ll1'filll!t' ('o. airport tin·a. S t A C l'f l ·~ ' "".. 1 d [·"I J ·~ ·"'""'''
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, SP ftlN KL1',lt HPpa1r 1wu1nnl'r~. :1 1 n1y 110111~'.I r, ... ~t skills Poll'ntial for ana na, ••· A/H, AJP, P.a yi·o lJ,I c,1a1rs •. 1e, w. 1,n1.e 1n. in 1111, ltvitK'-N.B nf't'n. f{lr _m.111\ ... ''.".•_!1ni::. ," erssw1mv.~ill'. ua ··Pl· r & <.:IP 1 '\"''"'"I' C!·k ' · ·· I {BetweenHarbo & Ne11port Centcr Xraylic 1 11 J 111\11 liocl S32-4Zl'
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• an ing n 1 u 11 ~ ,, ... -"' \Ill\ ar . _ ul• 1, .. 111,1:;1·nt!'nt. r ConSll'JJCIKln pro.)eCt acl·lg. • · ' Ear111n)!S S'.l:ifl 11111. '.~·~:lO:tni. S!'c· 'f' '1 111 ' , ·
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~:..:ix·r & n.e;j~. C<1 I l L & XXX 1 Fairview, south of 1 & preparation of _financial ~~· ~Hll ~l 8 & 11, ~luu-J\lusl hi' dt·iici111ahlt' ."-l h;•I'(· r.)11111;.: ,\ htf'. ~.h salur.v ,1
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COUPLl:S. ladiC's, I in t'~ t f~90S. I ove Warne r ) ! rt'Jiul1s. Stal. typing \\llh t-ii, 640-&IW ri•htt. 11.1111,,11. C.111 ~~u;.....>:!I.~. S•~l(J. 1\1..;o• ~" •1111 "'· C.ilt ~;:h~,:~~~~~t"wf~:~~~d~'.1 1~~~:1~~~ c~~~ :i ;~~~~1; ' [ Employment I[ i JI AAMES I An Equal op p o rt uni 1 y ~~~~e~:~~~~·ar~t~~~~ ~~:~1 ~S:1:1l:.~a. ~:;1.~~ -H-EL P-WANTED--~:;~~1~\. i·~~.~;iu~r;:.1 ~'.'n;·~:
E.x1K!t'1cncrd ludy. 042-1271 • 'Il11 Bluebird Cir. ('~!.I Dear Typist, I Employer M/F Phone 97~ Business Salury open. Rep 11 es 1"ull & P/t!rnl' l '\!C-----~---c= * PAL1'1 & CAiio Rr':ADt-:H 1 J.lJ....7072 I J b W 1 d M I 7025 1111,.1 naiioudl ac-rounlLn'= firni
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hours. t."Onfidential. 8~ll30. METRO CAR WASH J,\NITUll C111· uf!1t·c l11tli:
'0/llt'DUCTIO!\ ... 1 o an e • a e u O 0 K KEE p E' R t' ii .... :ztJj() llarboa· Bl\'il I Cull " · · I t-:UROPEA~ Garden 1• 1·. I 1.; l u o king r 11 r 1 u , , u -1 DE:NT,\L As~t chuia-sitlc :-.-C ,1 •1,. ,.1,,1 ni.11111. p t111u•, l'\t'~. 10R~1 REACH Bl vn I t. P· • I ~· . . ' • . osra ,. ('~\ " '" . !0("'\....~7·)11 " · , ~: .·
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t.l:un1rnan1•r .... Land~r:ipin,.:. · \!DTI· L .\1 \\.\{;!·.It . \l11t1ld ou1..:1nrl1n~ person \\ 1'\l'Qtll: 1 1 t' ld1-ge. all· Lnlt':_ ~.1 1·a)'. Nou.sn1ok\'l'. Prcfc1·alll) ---· ·" ·' · -----
__ S'fANT~...:'i'.li·.i U"' l'r!'C r c 111 ova I . \ll'r) !iki· 1ri 111,,1111..,:1· 1n()tl'I, k\·(·r--1~11lni.: 11h11itie : to ulso a~·t 1 ASSEMBLE RS 1ntc1v~~l~Pt.:a~l .p7_:!~"i3 under :to. 644-lJJll. i"!ELPr:H. lot' eld£'rly l\'1)1nan. b'.ITC'!l l·::\ l!Plp••r , 111.11llt'\' ~1AL1':, Ca11ras1t1n, 2 :'.,, IT'a~onabh'. 612-i129 t'Vl'S. 1111~1n•''' 1111. !L1\t' !'•'l's. :1~ l'l'L'{'!Jt. i BOUTIQUE:, Sales ~lanagl'I', lJ!'..:NTAL chRirsidc assistanl. 11'l'•'kf'nds, &it ani·:'iun Pill, 1111111:111 ~l•'-::1 \',,r<lt• ('tuiv
sinct'N'. ~t>k<; n1cr i::irl, HI· T\VO i.:u~s lll'l'll t:lui-m:crn-:-1~, C:dl 1l1.·..,17•11 l•I' 1;11;..:1(;:;2. Love & XXX cxper. only. Pre(l'r 2j-30-ltt'Cl'HI t'Xll l1P1.:cssw·y. Sal Li ve Ln. 67~>--l'~i:lS Hll.'I" !il,il Lc•nh•r :-;'.t, C ~f.
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, ., f~! . ~,'·SJ,1.111111·1..,gt'. 1 .i·our g'an!cn1ni::. NJ; :11·,.a He l-p W a nted -M&F 7fOO AAMES ~ach ll.l'Ca. Rcpl~ 1 o unly :1~,.'1-lSU77 llOSTl·:s.>; ,\· C:1shi<'r. f/l'.111" _::-.1~··~~.-._. ------=~
r1 r .,.x on.. .... I l{lih 642·!'>\R!I, J\likP ti"l l l"".J.1 ' Vntu· <la) \l'urk ii'r t•k, 10 Class1f1cd 11d no. ltiO c/u iJYNT 1 A-. , . , ,\ppl~ 111 Jlt't·s,1n 1oa111·lr111 LEGAL SECRETARY Ll1''1'~ o~ UE!'-Tl l: IA'! n11r 1 General Services 6046 ~ hour.: P•'J' day. HAL\! in' UC1.ily P1lut, l'. 0. Box 1560,1 ·.A, :ssi~tunl, l'X!Jd 11t•ekda\~, C1:-1'0s 11•·~1 1 1 !(II babJf'S llVC'. f ornllf'rnf1t1vr~1 ! Dea r Bookkeeper, 1::1.0Pi\1. l·:xn.·riC'lli.'l'hrl1ir111., Cosl!I i'.ll'sa_ ... Calif. ~:!ti:lti_'. I ~;11",'_1.1;_',!.~~t·, Nci\pol't Ccnlt'I', ~lll(ll r'11111'! \'illagf'. l'i•Sfl\lll~I' ,. llOSl I I "' ..,. ... ~ 1•1·11111u·1ly li.-111k r11p1.<' Y
10 A.BOR1'JO:-\ ('HI! LIFI·: I llAL\'J)Y\1,\,\· ,\<"nllll!ll!\'.! r11·r!.:" Iii ~!f.~ \t'\11\f' fl(t' llt'('d' ('IC't'~!ltl \\/.! hill llU1 lll't't·s~11ry. $2.00 jJl'l'' BOY~ & GIRLS -. ". ... . !IUU:iEl,El':Pl·:1:. \t\'\'·111 r.11' a1l 1n 1111..:1 r :1 I IP!I . t-r.:1 '
LINC'"ll"•" 241tr' I J11dll~f:\,t.-t!1 ~-!l~l' s1::k'. l'!llHl kllO\\ll.'Cl"t'{l\ 1:1·~ nr hc1ur ,.,.,. ..• , ... ,,,,, .. ,,,.I N r·~ . D.J..i\l,\LAS.SfJ~:>.ilOJ'U.t\. I I I ,. '1·. -11 ·1-.. ,-r:.:..I' ~ .... ' :_·_~ l[()\J~:s .~·AP'!>: " ,.. "' ·. '-''~"'. u ".· ('\\'Sl)llpt'l' ..... tr1e1·s. i'.1111.1 ..... ,I ,,,~'"""' ll'k 1· !l\Ol ll'l'l''-~ 1011H'. ~I~ p:u•k1r11.:. !, '' '·' .. 1. :-;, '·.v HkklJI' lo ~'ll~I ('<l!lSll'lltt\on. St•lf .~t:iJ'h•r Ll'lll'fl\s l'·ud h "dlh ll l!' "" 1 .~ U".)\)\l\J IH :s ' I ,-I • ----BES'T l\1ASSAGl:: IN l\.B. l'fl:"l~CIE:-;TJOL':-> S~t;:, I ·· ' i;, • 1 11gl' lU. Lido Isle, BaJooa 1··iliii!lf'10..l:.?N . ~1'' .~ i-:11' ·' ~·r..: 11 .ii.:•· 1f.\7\1--.'ro'l 11\ Y·1un·•. 3400 lrvinr Avf'., ~u1lf' 10:'.ll. I CR/\FTSl\IAN. 1;0.11 l\.11•rhf\)1f'~"I " i1h" 1·1u1 tHk1· u I' L' r 1nsu1·:111cc, vucalions & sll'k !·1·ninsula ,\: Uall>Oa Pouit. ~--·-"-' ---~n. l\lu~t th'11i•, :'111· .• Jo l1 n , j '/ ; ~\' t , ;IJ I 1ph1111~
Open 8 Al\!, illon. \\'t•d, ~·ri, I • ij<Mj..J .\61 • l·'fl' H•Mtkk('<'P1·r Sl\l~I loi~ikkt•t'f)lll\.: rhol't'~ 111 srnall lt•a\'I'. l Conlac:t J\lr. Bat~!>l l'Olll .it DI SHWASHER l;i\':in!> 71·1 : 8-l1i-li!(J:i Pl':.'\.:. ~!::.m.:1 ~·~ 1~1~111° ('1·1~!,''r.
A ~"'7 ""'~!! l'<11 p 1.;, S1••··.v h1 ~ :! p•'t"l'!ll offwr. I •tL\' I' WT I "f'/2-2Qi{I nn .• IJ """""· J~ & w f\IAINTENA N!'r 1 . ,11. ,\t:..:1111 St·•·\• tri SG.'l/1 Love & Kisses 1.11~' .~;· • , ,1,. ~~: i·.il ,::-1 1 "r 11 .7 .«hilt l>E:"IN\"S ~i. · -l -D oRC LERK--CO'"GRATULATIO!\S · 'I · 1 I 1 I AAMES i\pply Jn l't'rSOn &12-13 .... 1 & Je.ue applKa!1u11. 1,1 .. , .. l"ll \N'r· .. 1•0 11 .. 1.... IQ " {_jen nia1n " c t'<'. [l Ulll li!l:,: s d··--\If:.: S!'1··~ s1:~1 .. u. , . " l '
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uul NS PECTOR I '.111 ~11111' I'\ l'!l\1lt:~ ,t· 11 "l'k· DAN R0!\.1AINI-: l\IRh:" \.\I I .~ paintini:. Nn jnh !•~• ~ u·lil Claun." i\dJU~1rr ---BUSBOY Bl\ll. ( .:-01. I ,.1111~. 1 .. ,. 1 1·1·f,1 ,~1 d. lh•·r
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I ~~1 111 11,:,-,"',,:_-~iN1~:·,· .. cD·.s.~1 llORlt".' 1,,:~1.:;1~~';;;~~·:;::\ ::: ~~fH; Dea r F /C Bkkpr, PRIMARK 1~ct·~~~1
... 01~i'~:t~ut~1':s1a1:~1~.'.~: 1 »un~~1;~. ~~~~:-~~1.:.l~~~;~\ 1~:[ DETAIL 1.-~~~~~:1: ~:-;;:,1~·:;n ;.·; {; ... 1
"" :-; •. ,. ~ T1lll' E"''l'll\ lo• s·"MI Tht'.~C' ~UP('I' 11iL'f' proplc> ;tl't' PRODUCTS co a \\lll iug:ness to \\Ork. A11pl) Jauu!JL' 11/yacht l'. l u 1.: ('.dl
Swwk;es and Jt'1»irs ,\Jl 'J'yprs of r:,·1l:l1r-. i\la;.: Cart! T~ pi~I 1•l Y'l!O 111 n<'''d of fl hookk•'1'1"'" "h<i I • 1 1 11 p ~r s on . 1' o n 1 u :s Jll'!k'L'l.'llure. ,\duh <.'Ulh·i;1" :~;;~~\\;; '"1111~ 1
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J Smiill Joll.~ our Spt"<'ially c; llf! l!i·1'f'1ll l•J i:;f;ri() r1!~o·h.1~ po1sp ,t Jll'l'.~nnal11y J~e:staurant 210 Nc11 1XlrL »IU\i~·nt UK. Call illr. Sl•1111 MACHINE _ l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~ I C'o;ist !l(Jf'!lf' P.1·pa1r 6r>--s1c1j r: .. 1·1•r1t1olll'I' I·· i'~' IH d1'al II /lhC'ir l'llt'lll'< :!G20 s. Su,.:;111 Ctr, i\lU. t>4-1-:lli01. I [or a1111t. 673--tll:l'.l. l.\ \ ' \\,u•I ('\ .. rl; !I :1
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llO\!F l'FP\I!' 1, 'I'S,,,··~, 1 .. .,r~i IJ•\•·l,\ 1.111111~ :11111osphl·L'•' ~1111a l\na. ('11hf. I BUSBOY J){f\L'T-~!~K tJ{. "' , 'l··,.1 \"·n1 .. 1'•n1\ lh·~p.bGl
ccoun 1ng I · , · · ' · 1,/11h!t• \.ol'1l'lv 1if 1!uti1·~. •Ul'111·w11 l111rll<1r ,\:: · PARTS l\'111t r \'\I ii"-:.:~~~, Ca1·pt•n1ry.·. l'lun1h111'° ('\LL Tl:!..:I[ !lll!'10:l.~" LOve & X X X ~·:111 1 i"''. 1·!1.l>l:l l'ri:fl·i· Aili ,1. l"i! it'll ' lk.'r1e111·1•1l. p;irt 111111•. I'll. ---
i\CCOUNTL"lG, bookkcl'.llUl~. _JJc•C'lne:1I l[P;i~. ~d~l-llllN .I Ll~ltl \\'II ITTtt-.IUH ~; Soulli nf \\',irni·r 1 ·~~!l~l~h or SP a 11 \ ~ 1; ...:>?-"-1~.~'i_'ul.!_ Pi\!.:_ __ l \ \ \lnch•111 l'nn\·;1lt•sL·C'nl p:i~"?il, la:-Ol'S fnr t'tls & Hauling 6051 mYINE PERSONNEL AAMES I ~P..'llk1ng. Salary ~tt'l'l..!l'<.iln}.! lX>O lti'.],\;>., good pay L,1ll 1~i :-;iurt ;.:i.::11 1 ·ll1•·i•11:1! 1~l1v:1dual.~. ~~~I .Notary
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S<"f".IJ(.'(' Co. i!O.j..! N1•11por1 LOC'At. n1nv111i.: S: h;iul1n1-: hv 1 SERYlCES*'AGENCY Dea r A/Clerk, En1 plO)l"r nl/f I ,'\:. ·1..:0 vu1 Han1burgt·1·' Jini. ::rd Shilt I 1:;
Hl1·d, Cos!a t.1t'S<I. lil:r-06.'i::. i !<!ud('nl. Largl' lruek. !h•:1~. 0•1l•land111;.: OPJl\ll!Ulllt~ flH' I l\a111ll'l, l:H5 Adan1s, c~1 1-ELEC ASSEMBLERS-t:\O.· Shill /'r.•111111 111•
Babysitting 6008 1. Bnrry, :i:•.1-12J."1 "r :i:J9-CJ1:1s:.. • 4.~l!_E. 171h Sl t:it h'\'inrl l'\1 P, r, ,111 \\ I c·n 11 1, ~ ,. A~k fnr l\lr. Hag1•n. \
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---I !,\\_'LING ~HJ S: 111• ;\]n\·\11:.'., Suite 224 642· 1470 !i.u·\.i!!rnund in nc~·ntullin>' tu ,1s..:>.''1 IBL\' '1'1!1\l"''l'."S CASHIER ' lirg1•11tly 11t't'dl'tl. E:-.p. 111 J1i..11••r1 ~!!unfold~. J •1,11111•.
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"ISITTINGIVll [ '1 · -"' "'" """" \\luh1!\' ll11111c ~~11u;tJ'Ul'l l011 Slt'1'\<'"· (.'r:1n\,, S. '\l1nlu11•1
Leading Valve
Manufacturer Needs
DRAFTSMAN ·,I~] l . · 1
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l':il'l' r"' I \•ll'd. garai.:v 1·l1;111u11. [),• ~ ll,1111 .t~ ,it·i·nunl.u\!, :! Yr,, '.'<0 t:XPEHII::."llCE: NEC. S:?. Rl'licl fur lt>Od ,\;. hl'"'l'1;1g••. l'l11'1t. •'Piil,\' 111 llt't".~Oll f\i1'1" T;1 1:1n,.;•ri11I' ,\. I· 11t I
c 11 r ~en Ill ni.v 1on11• "01' j11,11d.dllt'. hl2· lll:;l 111:11 !•llll'''l' 111·1·1n1111 111 ~. hr. D:1y .~· Nii.:ht Shift. i'.l;1tut't", rc~p & dt•pt•JLd;i hl<'. 1 GOL -N WE T "·ork111>:: molher!'l. Ai..:rs .1.!J I -_ • • , Love & K isses Ut:: S 111;.111·r11•1u J :•·porl~. l ~!" .\11 dur1n:.:sunltllt'l'lt10nll1.~. ~· .. [ Moving and Hauling ,\ ·;,\c LEODS 833·1!l:t! Sonil' lite llkkp•~· p llll\l'. MOBILE HOMES l11:.p11·tun1 ]l;111d ·1-. .. 1~. :-;1·1-1[-'\p•l' II I oh•· •l•"•l~T1.
n1ore info, 673-7·1:"19 alt. 6:30 Sl O & up. '* %:i·61"12 ACCOUNTING AAMES 1 Assistant Manager ' .Sl'l' r j'rwnnel l\Ianug<'r, 19:?9 i::. s1. ,\ndl'C'\\' l'I. s.A. 1.u·f• P\:,I!" :-'uu· B:1 r ,\· \l:il.·· p1,,1h1• 11 .. 11 1 ... 1u." 1 .. 11·1·
eves J\10VJN C, ll:111ling. ~xpt•r • Arh~'s ltoa~t Bt•cf. :O.lu.~t hc l ·i·~a,bo~ ~ay .~lub Engin&er~Wan"te_d_ ll1111 S<'l·l·I'' 'J ,, C'hc'• I; .. n., .... ,1 nr'. J.,hr• d1•r:1 1I
BAB YS I TT I NC in nl.Y Bc·hH blt· He:
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.;,:in.il11L" fl'l'•' * Dear Gal Friday, I 111athen1at1cally in<·lint•1L 1 _l--1 \ · Co."\:sl l !\I~ .. :\.B Parl~ lh1n l11')ll'l'lL11
rl 'f•-. I~ •' .. 11'1.:, d• · 111 fn1n1 !.•}· CLERK 1 . !:: ! 1JnlCJ'CSt<'LI Ill a :.!nd llll'Ull1<' Ht·•1•111·1·1!.1lt.d .. 1;111•:P~ll !.<,,!• \)~11 l~·n··llT-. llon1C'~ Ft'nri~I ynnl ,~ +'S!. S.';2-7i'>l'I. 1 UpJ111l'IUJl1I\ 1u run >llUI' u11n l'L'"P· avrii 1111r..: " t n,v~. I :O.!.u1a:,:c111~·nL C.lll G:.;~12:;. i) Rrf1•1't'!l('t'~; Cos!:t ,\Jr~a'1 JAULINL; ,\• !\IUVl:"IG. 1:1~1 shO\\' 11i1hi!'> ~U pt'I' 111<·c l r,11[ Roh !!·17-!!~'IJ:I. I CARPENTERS I --~.-1.:..11
. 1N'a. 641-0311~ I low t·11~t s1·rv1C'f'. Lxt 617, A n~·c·1•1\ ol1h· t'\l:n·r. u1t lud· ~ I.(•~-nra111s an~ a 1'·~·1 y ,,1e,T,o,.~tOTl\·1: I <'N..-d expcr. carpcntcrs lui '1-;~~·tj~~.~~j:\~-~·;'.:;, J~'.:;~.~1';:;~; Good Co. Benefits
CLA-VAL CO .
\r!LL 1111 infa11t 11r ol1lcr ar ·191-100:1, 5 1:)-().187. u11 1(Jr1:·nt 1'<''1'11l'f'nlPl1 1"f l: · · _l'Onlr;irt J.! 1r1 I quality sailboat 111anul. J 1 .. ,. Xln'I Work•'ng Conds 111..: ha1 ul11n1.! 'nll1•1111111~ .I. I I I I I , 1 u ·~l'•lt'LUU'-, 111 \\ ullll't' n1y horn<'. Ht>frrc111i''· ,Gl'r;. r T 111' rnan I\ 10 """'' 11 f<"P· ·. :-; V 1', r 1 enc£'< s a r Uay \Ilk. Xln't benefi1s. 1 l I ,
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"L!'>S"'" 1e10 a..ea. "" I Tree .'i.: _s!u·uh. 1n_·.".1 or ~-IJ 1" ' • • I ' ·.. Drop hy for an iuten·1t•11 1 ·19.;.JJ".!~ !or t'UUlllh·1111.1! 1.i-581-22'18 ;..i 1\.µ 111. HI n.t'.)o dl C'L :.. . ., rli•c·1 ... 1n11~ 111\1111u1 !'<'ln1r<irlj,' 0'1!'1111. 811-1.,00 ~10, 11,"_.,1, .. -, 9 ,·••t>·' P•t>.
rt'nioval. Esl. 5-12-94.>.. Yr,1r» t'\!K'l' al11a~' 1t'lling lh•,·1n \\hat to " ~.. ....., " t•·r\'lL'\I .. ~==-~
B,\BYSITTINC: rvcn1ngs my I YA R 0 garai.:t-=-~le:uiu!J" \. · I Westsail Corporation
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home 111 Costa i'.1t'S<I. aft1:r ' · i· .. 11 For ,\1111• 'J. AVON !"'~ Pl CC"I C 11
3 .. 30 P-'''· •I" m. •. · I ren101·e !n·e~. rl1r1. t\'.\', Love & Smackers 1 u"" a ia, ·· · h11u:.ct:h' .• 1111z1g. Ht•1t1cn~\'"· """',,,,~ ln!lu~1nal !{••l,111ons c!r1V f'\1•av~, stun1p~.1 AAMES c.1ll;i1.,·ll1I ..
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BERT EA
CORPORATION
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'·,.,,. r I hi 1 :-;., l .1!..'1t11.1 l\tATURr: \\"Oman \\'ill cnrt' I S47-2fi6ti. · 17141 494•9401 Asks · · -~--1:::0...I ----for children S L~ per 11·k, n1y ~IO\'ING? L•.1t ,i! Pl!ICF:~ AP.r: COl~G L'P. c.-.\HPE::-;TE:H for fr;1n11n~. 1 • '!::It. S:ilt'.~ JA.'l'wu l•Jt'I
home 54i-5272 i.:t•11. hauling. ~~ ~~1.rnfur\'i.' I TELONIC Dear Ord Dsk Clrk ~JI {) L: L fl :"II, T \'():_·r! I Part lln1<' :\sk for ,J('rry 4·;,; t~auty supply ~ho 11
Business; Services 6009 \flrl. C.12-0j::.·1. lnd11·1du ;il w/stroni: 1ph••nt-1 ~',\\111.Y i:-;cOi\tE' Y .. u: /\l'c. Arlena, San ("lcin<'n!t· 1-'-"'~:1°''·'·~~~~~~ 1 MAIDS
GE."lEl-tAL !lauli~. T1•1••·1 INDUSTRIES l"·rsonah1ythatca11do:;o111\' t·.111 ht>lp hy e;1rn1n,,: rs1 r.~ CASHIERS F)C BOOKKEEPER 18001 Von Karman !-/t1n·· .,, l":·«•n11•! ~.1 ~r
BOOKPC, typinl!, rilin ~. 'l'rini Sc R l Frl'C' \i1r• ;tccurall' 1yp1ng: ha~11!1o~t·y n:• ;:1n A\'~~ F.1Jl ('h<.tl'"C' !hru T. t~. Irvine, Calif, 1·.I··• 1:,, Cl11h
N!!ed hel p' Cati Roxannl's, Esuni,ili'~ ,-,3e1r~~~.· La guna Beach <>ppor1un\1y t•l join lhi~ l '. l·.P l!r,S F.NT.ATI\I.,. ~ J1.1~rull (~1' ~n1.1 ll uff1r.-. 8JJ.J424, axt 294 I'''' I' i\,, 1 1!1.1, :.;1:.
Bus <-·~1v. Rc·a!" l'all'S.' . !:ir"eOran2C'CO.f'"llipmt'1!t l ~lestblr hours. Ill l'"illnl, · ou leasl _lSyrsold, l°""Hllllul if)('l'\!1011. \\cul.. or SJJ.1425 , 1, · ~ ., H I 6054 ' ., I t d' C 11 11 ii \!.\ · 1 !.:\.\.\( l· .. n:in. p:trt 5."17_2827 C'l'<'S. I ous;ec ean1ng , Criual Opfl\,ll'. Euipluyer ! l'O. Fururc aptitude 1~ y0u. n!rre~ e . a l c, nc111 111 appc.11· 11/cu111ru rr trt·a~U ll'r C" 11111,., 111 ,11111',., 10 1,11rk S.d, '.',,.~, .•• ,,.,.. 1 5-10-70.11 . I «nee. cnjo.v 11orku1" 11··np,,.. P")·" 1 ~Ill ft'<' & r1·1n1liur."1'~ Equal Opp. Employer
C I 601
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__ '!rDf',Te! 'l I Oerlic~ted Clear._.. I Love & Stuff p!l' & vut~1dl' in tl:e fJ1 • .... 11 ·; 111 !Ml rl•t:t:.. All'>'1 f 1·1• -~ ~"'J -c ---J b l ' J I l c I s·~ ;.· ... s:! !'.o P•'I' hr. Ca.JI,
'PATIO-, •·c-& :~;,ti';-• \\'E IX)_ ~VEP..Y1.·1_1IN1: • ACC()UNT LERK AA"rS 1 aABY Sl11'1:lt for suniir.•'r. ;u;·: II ~o. 1vt' 11a111 tu 1·11k •1
'· • l rtt;, 111 1•r. ...., ~·· ., -"~ ~ ... 'I•'"'" l' '>ti• I' I' ''''•I INSPECTORS .-"-'"''·"·-"' 'I'""'-''-''·" I Custoin &iflll'O' ex ,,
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l'~fs i·1~'f'f'~t.,till:)~:,1_ INTF.RMl:DIAT .: nii.:h st·hi\Ql ~tr!, 1'Cl11iLl1• r tuyoua.-,ut""Ulb .1t:11sh1t ~ J ·uuJJ, r'' ·1·1
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Wlilt. rrere.,,tiniato-. !I f ·.i;rc:...E.,\-Nf .'1 c; -Cun1r:111 pn,111cn. J!n:!•' 0 G 'I Of . . \I 1 1 '..1. 646-7:'>93 S4G-94fl J I 1,, prrirrh'<•rl 1:,·ft'l'f'rl<f' 1 lll'l1•'[11s. '.! Yr' a(·t·nu11\u1~ e a r en C, 011n tr:•n!<. :i.)l-lj6S all :1:?.0 ·"1;11111113· Y 11"~·• st·ii·i.i -, MAN'r.ER •0c..,7~~==~--'.cc= I!'·• 1 , u .. ,,.,..... "'"''I'. T.tPlll" 50 11.,11.111. 1,,1~ of \';1ri··t~ ,11J1·n ~nu ,,.1.111,. .,,.,,,. full .1: P tnHt' p1·upli· 1111-F/~-B.JOKKE~EPE·R-2nd Sh
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Craftsml,n.remodrling & I • .... ... Coast Community Lilt• 1vp1ng-. proces!'\ purt·has. B,;\B\ :-.JTT~.lt·:'.fOll lhru ~ 1 r. I Hunt. &ac4 .. Fnr intf'I'\ jO'\\ lJktipl' II /full ··h;u·.:·· 1111~1' 4 d ay work week, 4 : 30 ro~1N•cs
finillti w 0 r k gllllrR.nfCf'(i. CL1':A:\'ING s:i.ou h "'.l I . ; nrdcr~ ans phOn('~ .r... do I ,·~n, I •0 s,:.m. loi ivn ,1 ~~~-kl I 1·all Harbara, (2J:11 ~11:~u1 :\, t': Ill'\, t It u "t.1 It' Ill ,. 11 I ~ PM I J AM 10 h 'I rul u . P"'rtt Estim~ 4!'9-3!0"
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ninrn11~1·C'11' -.:ood. \\r111· College District · 1 1. 11 1·h11 ren.I !\C l ·Ag:l' ~\1•·. ii/J•'. :\lit 111,1,.11 ,.,1, ,.,1 • .,, o , our
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. · · ' P .O. Mx Gl:l, Costa 1'1c~a. I r:70 Ad;i111s. Cn~ta l\k'sa Sl)nl<' rccep · \\·or,;: "5 111' · I O:tk \7i<'IV &J1ool area, JIB.' CASHif:R Io r rlr11·1--Thr;1 " " d ' r·F.NCl::S-(;AT4':S-STF.P.c;; Ca 92!127 F:11u;•I f)pf~)r, En1plo\'f'l' I Love,! ::1 11-11'1'.?!l ;if1 5:30 PM. t photo .<;hop, J1uril. Bch l'u·I ' l'k·,.:-.1.: t:~ll :'~r~. i l.111~11 .• 11 per_ a y, on temporary Full ~ p/t;me I ; RA1 LJ NG S-DE'CKS-E'1'C. I !_ ----.---·-AAMES I lady o\·er 45. 0\1n tnin ... p. 1<lh {( ... ~·.1lJJ 111· "''l'\ll basis. Factory e xper•· 1111 .. 1·\ 1• •1111~ '.\01\ i"r
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£'VCS 1 J ,\PA1-.;1::"s~-: Hou.o;f'('lcan111r: ACL:\T!; ri.~:l:h t:'l;fK'r. in I HAB\'SITTER for 1\·or1>111i.: 962-4353 J"t·su•nc nt C'.\Jk.·r hi P.O. Bil\ ence helpful but not po~11 ... 11.. 1•1 1n ,111i.:•· l'r> 1
· 1 lady. l::xf)l'rienCf'd. 01\n I'·' .1.ihI1 ", n•t'1'1\·;1hle'. t molhcr 7 ;im to 6:30 prn. CHIEF ACCNT :..lfii. s1 .• 11ton, ~··· ~ An necessary $2.00 per
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ADD, _1~'.nodl•I, ;,il~cr, rra n.~e I tran~. &12-71196 , p11,1 , .. ,11. 1:1•111 1":11 c ll•ric,1l 1 Dear Receptionist, 121:11 111-lOOj a fter 5pn1 .
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6073 1
dnlu, ,\ltr.u•li\o' ,alai") ,\· ,\[f'l't &-wcct eliC'nt~. ansii'('r l -SuJ?t iv, 1 .... •I~ ., }IS l:'P· FOOD & BEVERAGE hour, Pus s .• t I er· 1 :u:' .~ 1111.l'h••rh-. 1 ;,1 1,, ·l u·
homes. 962-1961.
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a1n 1ng aper1ng 11 vi·kni·.: 1·uiHJ111nn" 1nj phonC's ,'{,,do "f'nrral oHicr Bank 1 E:xrcs nll 1•a rly :ms CONTROLLER ent1al. Apply 1n pers on.1 T•" \l,1 1 i..,11 ,11 ,.,1 ~.,1111r
l'.:XPERT CARPENTP.Y EXTERIOR ONLY I \\,,.,1111111.;1..,r. l1111•r.11•11<: liy 11 nrk. Su!J"r "'nicr ro. 10 I 1833-9770 * 100°/o FREE ' , I r"I ·;ih•" "111 • r1 .... ,
Cabinets -Ccnrr;il Rcpai~-. , ~ . 1..:!_~J~I ~11.~.~11 '!Jl .. li~I_. _ 1 11 ork fnr. Lnt~ of vartc!y .'I: 1 Experienced C;,1sl~ Personn~I ,\;,!'('llC.Y I"." OrJ;igc <;:0· fu·n.1 lil'~in ·~ PR IMAR K fTI41 R'::1-7 lli
RC'asonable I'll\('.~. r~1~!!l'J.1 I Lied., lnsur£'d, F rC'C' r .. ~r. ,\CTl\'ITIFS l)IRVCTOR I people lQ 1)1('1'1. ·IOJ!J \\L"Ste rly, i'\.B. No. 10! 11, 11 C.'l;µC'r ii. • ~ood ;\:) Ffll' [n(•Wlll,tllllll
I' ·I d 9-n ??"" f ' • • • • K ' New Accounts Pl -· Coll f ' . u I . i ('"era i,; l' cunt I' Ollt'l I Gl::NERi\L c,\llPE~TltX I ,)(I~~ 4,.,.... ... ~,;) . l-.\pC! .. r_rl•f d. t/l~in,l' ... , ' 1sses , I e~.,., " OJ ll'CC IOllS 1v/IR!'g{' hotel or rcstaurarJ! PRODUCTS I TIC TOC SYSTEMS CU~l\1 F!NIS!t \\Ofih_ PAlr->flNG S.: Rrpa1r. :r1 ~r~ LUU\. !f'.>,p11:tl 61 .... ·0'Jlli AAMES Clerk C!.l::A.~ Up & dehvct)' boy, I ba r·kground. S<'nfl rl·sun1t· & l.1p1.d t 1prrw ~.111 plo~1.·r
Small JObS ok. 11114-4 . .:i. .... "I \l'Ork111an!>h1p gu;u·. 1·ak•' -,\L"l'l\'JT!l-:S IJ!!:1:r·T1JI~-I run lime. apply Jn person.I :sftlrtry iJl'l:ill'l,'d tu Cla~s1!1vtl
Carpet Service 6016 ~L9~'!"!~gc nr n1y c x P 1 l·:,1wr. pr.•f d. )"/liilu' Dear Clerk UNITED llutcheson's, l·IO Indush'inl • Ad no. 1 ~17 c/11 D111ly Pilul. co
.i36-iOJ6 !Cnnv 110~11 .i,d 1.ti-0·1~S ~ ' . I CALIFORNIA BANK \Vay. Costa !'l'lesa. I'. 0. l:itiU, Cos1a ~!es.i: l11
JOrlN'S Car pPt & Upholsten' F IRST CLASS EXT. INT - ---------I t•ison y,·/sornr I 1 g u r " ! '126'.lf • . ' ' ' ' • .\\,-;\\·i;n1i\i.q s CI: V l CI:• k1io1\J,,dgr 1.o,rtJo L'an run 111 CLERICAL 1 -'·---------
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I 11 /GS ) r •)Id (·o. R"ha, 21· l6.
I h ;.:11,11'11 111:in l;Hly \I' cur.
.\Ir. l.t•\'I, loij(j .:~t.:'~. ----MASSAGE TRAINEE ~r• ardc; ham &0,0 • . I So~ PAl~T.JNG,. PAPE:RllANG·, 1 l'lt'Jlil"1u'. Full "1 1•.111111· k•'Y adder \\'il l Also be rloing 222 Ocean Ave., Imn1ed. Assignn1ents. T·1p .J.'H.AJ\llNG lorentan able to 2620 S , Susan ail' C.'fll~;11~~il!hlc~':?:~se&s iO ING, ,. re~7~·;\1;~1·111's 1 \\ill t1 .1111. :1 ! 0 -J 7 i 7 "'1111r· 111•• po~1111g-. Lots ut La guna Beach SSS. Long or short lcrn1 . la kt' •·onipleLe c h a r g c · Santa Ana, Ca lif.
minu!C' illl'nch for' \\'hilf' I .-.. I ..!.~~;\I~:\' l't10111 for ad111ncrmen1. (714) 49US46 C<tll 5-10.-i-lfil. * l!J2-.'!."i6X• (Between Harbor & Ynu11l! larly 1 JX-281 r o 1
carpets. Sa\'C' ynur 111011{'y : P~OF. pam.~:r. hones_!. 11·~rk, Al'ABTtllE'.liT n1;1n;1:.:o·i·. fl\f Love & Luv , NEYER A fo'EE AT TEillPO I ""_ .. ._.., .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiii I lr .. 111111111•' rull t 1111r ro~1!1011.
by !<civin~ mr l'Xlra !rip~. I 1 e;is. l~1t : ~:·' tree 7sc1.?1.1tc. :?2 11nil~ 111 1 111111111~11111 AAMES .\n Equal Opportunity _TE;\IPO Tempol'ary Help * GARDENER * Fairview, south of :\u t'"P 1u·1·1·so;11'\'. 1\'(' SC'nrl
\V ill t·lran hvir1c;_ r 1n .. rlininl.! I ltcfs .. il8·21::.!l. 642-.l~\,,,
1
Bcac·h, rn;durC', s.ilC's pt·l~flll· I Eniployer COOK~TRAINEE Be yo..:r O\\'ll boss? Par1 or W a rner) I 1'1 .~1 l1n•11. ··ai 11 '11·h1ll' you 1'~1;, & hall $1J. ~ny _rrn~ ])J-:.O F .• \\flllc_o\'cr1ng-, ."1:11<' nlily. hu.;h,in1I h;111• ~n1n •· SPECIALS _ Salary according to exp, {/1111lC'. Your 011T1 a re••· ,\ii Enu:i 1 Op""rluniti· I h;irn. Apply any :i rtrri1(11)11
3:1.50. 1'0u1:h $10. Ch.11r Sa. \.J IJ1.:. No, 27[}Jl4. ln~tll'. ,ii[ ktl'J1\lc1l(!t' uf n1a1nl, apnrt· , Prefer no students:. Expcr. 1111.!h lnc·rinll'. Guaranteed ·1
'rJ "I' l'\t', 111:! llarhor Blvrl.,
yr'S. exp. 1s \\'hat rounts ll•ll type<> papl'r. 714/842-4::.~6. ni t·ni +. riG0·!7!itl 6 1li-j~fil VIC Bkkpr -nol HANKING pn>l'd .. but "·ill train. Apply Cu:o;10111er., ~:a rn l\O\\. Pttyl::::f.:"0'':;1:':Y':'::':':":.:::l _i ·_,,_,t;i_.\l_i·~ac·==--~-I ~~f.15.~~--0~~J1:k n1ysC'l f. t }INI OT!EXTC P-AJl_N~!~~~~ I ,"r",',;,.,,,."T .. , . . -~~,'.-,';~ti~:~('{'~~"'' ~t~ i NUEWNPIOORNT BBAEANCKH ~\~~~~g.~;:::~~:.::ict.P · 1~~~ i..51j'~~7187 or SJ4.3144 INSPEC-TOR MATERIAL
L&R ~Cl , .. ,,,, ... I \ 1.ini;e o. llll1,,,)-.. J.l"I' .•. "' tll.\11.IL:l111{111, ,. "" ., C'l .. r ' .._,.,t nrs. ,SC' ..... 1. ---C 1, •.. 1. , 11 1. 1 ,;,., ...... 1ui"V 1:1·~, II 2 0 . Cl . 1 nc an1s, 1•. A~ .. or l\ll . Rm $4 Stm hse S.'m~ Sof;1, FRl';t: EST. PROF'. oupl ""~1.~ .111 u~ J,1111 . .. -,.,. ;is pen1ngs cr1ca 1'1agt'n HANDLER $14 95. 'cuar 77~:>170 . PA!NT!r->G. I'.l/T .. EXT. I 111.1111!. V. lfl' l'!Lillllll~ .~ utrh·•' BookkC'<'p<'r ~;.·i0 Positions. . COOK t c,_\BUE~ :-\ho1> Assistn.nt .', · * ~,,17-4'.!7·! * r1•l1Pf, snliH)' + apL ,\/P ~.lrrk ~..on PROOF OPR 1nu111•1· .1 da.}'· St.2.1 lo 1st Shift
Ce1lin9s 6018 1 • I i!J2·~Mi:.'2 In~. 1,1llrr s1::-11 1 Top Broiler l\lan , ~tan. "rrll:.'11.
• 10' ~ DISCOUNT * 11, tl<Tlll,."'T 11 . -----:-:-..........,;;, , ,\cco11n11nc: C!rk $GOO I CREDIT VERIFIER Apply In Per~n I -GEN-ER_A_L,::...,O~F=F~IC=E-AIC'l't, <iqJ:rC'~~!\'C pcn:on
111th l'XperietlC'l' 111
chC'C'kU1;::-rnarcrial t 11
slan1!1trrl~ '11 1n l!l'OC'('.,~.
1'.!J parka~<' gooci~. o:n
c·11~tn1nrr s h 1 rm 1·n 1 s
IO:xrcl lt'nt IX•ncfils, 1'111cl
1i1•r1lth. hf" in s u r;i 11 ct', ,
1·Ac·o tions & sie'k !rnv£'.
NIGHTS
* \VILLARD PAl~Tl:"llG * ' \\'a!lpaper iru..: ,'I; Painl1n~ I' 1 ' '" 1 "11·•t:t 1 '· :•." G· J ~i·uk1v ".."1:!:i \"f'l\'CI Turtl,. Rest. New Acoustical Ceilings .... 'Frrc> fo-::st. l':dl :,::6-ff.~IS L'r111..;, G:u'<h.'n r.r,,ve. t "IX! \'~R Cl ·k S+~llflll C.oort af)prarance. >.1n't \1·ork· 59 r~ashion Island. N.B. :'-lu:sl h:1 1r ~oorl typ1n~ skills
repairs. Dcywa.11 ,i;, \i·all I ---·,~;1r:.,1",:,, i ! ·I -S •I G -~ 7 2 i. lf-lt'rk f'I ~:it)fl I 1ni::: <'Oruls. 1 ,\. l1curr 11p11turlt.· 10 han!l!e
1
. !'i\!NT .~· :;,\VE , ... ,. ,v PJrn~r Apply Jn Person COOKS helper for approx :'Ji nrd"!" ,(. to1lli11;: on ~·ndt·n
text, pfltch p aster1ng. No. f;OQD i\!,\T~:R!,\L ... ...:.. ' ---NCR Proof :'!17:1 , hrs. per \1·k. Apply at Sh:ul; 281038. 642-577:1. , ('.\/J, 11.\LPH 1>4.!-1'.!:i!'i . A/RECEIV~BLES ,Typist_ ~[~! Tri Dons l\l1tchcll l ~1and Yacht Club, aft .1.I •·•)1HJH1!1•r \\tll tr 11111. -I f I' i ii 1 [ I ~• o f< I 1 S i~" f,JO Nc11·porl Ctr Dr, NB Ph·11~nnl 1~11rklll~ 1·otul~
C enl/Concrete 6019 ' . i •1• ;11c .. l':lU I u n1vuf' TI C'CC'P ion1s ,J11 "~"-"280 1099 Bayside Dr., Ne11·""rt em J Plaster/Repair 6077 : oft• 111 vn .~llion r~l:•nd . Gi·••a! ! 1 . """., Beach. ..~ Good l'O. paid bcnC'llr,.
CEMENT & Block \\'nrk ('l \\H!'k1•rs & uu1.~1a 11d ing 1 DMINISTRATIVE I l:.qual Oppor. En1ploycr , • Tapmatlc Corp
II
, ·'I
1
. . 1 lk PATCH PLASTERJNG IM 'lll'fll'. S:d11ry 1c1 $:1~~). I A , . . COOK_, f/t1me _ I 1..,,Jl J\cllcrinR. 1i·v111e
'lu ~. pa lOS, ~ir ('\\'ti ·~.I All types. fl'l'C esti1natcs llAR1 I-NI ER.1'.:SS C II I GJ2 r.t c. Byhr.orjob.6\G-691!1. Call fl40-682.'i .\I"· I·•'" .Joh,,, Call Sl1lly MALE DIVISION I ,, l ..: . .' exlplehf·· onv. ospila '·0.1!1S 1 979-6080 . !l;1 r1, ~1 10...{ilt:i:t. f'•1n«ta l .... 1 o~y. Must ....... re a . c, COUNSELOR JiECEPTION·l>iiiiiiiiiiOiiiii""""""iiiiiiol C~MENT: . Pa tio .. drive,, I Pool Service 6079 Prr-.r1t1n1 I 1\g'.·n1·y, 2 7 f10 ' Aceounlnnl s.~·'l!: fnf"n1!ly & dC'!U["C steady ]Ob. IST-tl1atu.re. 0 u r ~ 0 i 11 J: I 11alks-RC'~1r~. ~a111 & 1 _ --, llin·h,,1· P,li·d. ( ,\f ICnst AlTnl Sl"K Call J'\8-!ll•lli b111-· !tarn & ii·onrin lo assist patron" in rcmov~. trrr est. ,i l.J-8!¥.1!_ , QU1\LITY pool ·"'rv1ce fri·1· AltTtCr,ofl-l•'<il'h(·t ~. 1,11. Off1t'f> ~!gnll Sl '.I~ _:irrn. ,. lf'Rch~g fig~~e salon. C1\i.L I
CF.l'i Er T \Vnrk or :: It I ,.,1. cl1'an1ni! 0~1ly. rchRhlC' I 1111"'1. n1X'11in~. /)()ll·rlr.grt'rd-' ~1(!ml I J'Ullll'4' S~b; BJ::AliT'i' 0 p ER AT 0 R 1\42-3630 I
GUARDS
1\pply In Person
PRIMARK
PRODUCTS
1 n .1\ \\"llrk 11r1•k, 10 hour.;
p1•1· 1l:i~. \:::()..:: A.l\I. f\n
h'1111111r;1ry hns1~ M ust
hin·r• fork l1fl t'XJX't'1l'/1N'.
1/1-.11·~ 11r1111-.; r:xccllC'nt
IX'nct1t ,,
PRIMARK
PRODUCTS CO.
2620 S. Susnn
&1nl11 Ana, Calif. f1'270 1
2620 S. Su:o;an An C'l'JlHll Of)pol't11nlly
Santa Ana, CAiif 1•11111\oycr mtr
Near · 1-tarbor & \\'nmcr l •--.,..,.,....,.,..,...,,..~I kint:t,:-,; !lCtl'iOll<lhl~·. fl'('{' t"I. I 1~urkm:1nsh1µ ;\c],1ins Pl.,,Ji l'!I (JI\. 6 l.i·7.l:>7, 1.s:1trs s1.1r: AS.17.j!ST,\NT fl,1ust ha v t' mULD you use extra $35-$50 I, S.\~.~.2:1 I .<.;c1·v. li:i"-1661 Tolii"l'O ~ls Sl'.!J, Calif. rosmotologi:<1ts he. Laguna Ho'll> a rea &
Cl I SI SI L' \Vk? Pi t eves & S.."1.!Ji. P1'Cf. I
CONCRETF, Pa1~1s. P;ili<J Roof'ing 6087 1l'm1:_a · s ~·~ l\1'.:N' TEl\l,P~N l lAIR I S 0 C i\vl'. Covl'rs. Quality \1·orl<. Rra. .... I ASSEMBLERS Rook S.•lrs S!H~ STYLIST, 00.&57. cinprcl. l\tr. Levi 846--54~. , r ange o. f714) f>.1()-4020
;\IATURI: l..11dy for nurst·~
Rl<l(', :i· 1 \ flhifl . ~<1\.1.')'Cfli
(.;u1•!1\ J-fn1ne, 646--6716.
LiCC'n!l'd. fi.$2-8514. 1 ·~·~1\lt<" •• 11 !,Ill•'~. H.•'il'. Phurnuu·cutical s1, ~\OK I Equal Oppor. Employer I · · · · . 1·11;1mm s"'" SIOK BOOKKEEPER COUNSELOR Full & P /Time .JES$ Crnient Contrarlor. l-t'f'C' ··~1. L11· d .• \~k for I Paper ~al<'!'! Sl:lK lmmcd. opening in our 1 ::-:0::li\i:li\i;~ ~n·;C1!1\NIC t'ort'ign can, 5
Or1ve\\·ays, side \1·a I k ·"'I \::_111. 7'11-1::.~.i:;, ,,·;o...r11.r:n . Elf'clro1111 In" 11· um r n I Prod C trol Sl~K Young, fnsl ~ro"'in~. Costa beautiful ofc for a sales I I Trnin1nc: Proviclf'd I INSURANCE SALES rlny i1·f:'i•k, •·IC'l111 11f'\V op,
iin!los. 5.)1-17?'>. , Sandblasting 6083 1 111.1nuf11ttlll'l'J 111.fds ex per. 1 cu~I ·~':!:•IN' si5i.: I tl1r•:i based C.P ,\. finn mindccl, selr m 0 tiva 1ed
1
., HC"tired pC'r8Qns ok a ll Fringe be 11 el Its . a-..,rn1t1t('r-for p1.-.clul llOll ; nC'erlS 11,1tgJ'CS.<;IVC', r I c ' XI Beautiful Newport Bench
Contractor 6021 I \\'000 TC'\I . Bid!.(~. housr~. I <ll'J11 , f1n.1 I a:-;srn1l1ly, PC ' C1gn11•He SI~ $71\ Bkkpr 11•1th n1in1n1wn 2 yrs indl\•\dual. Salary guarantee n'I npportunuy "* I o C' a I ion . Call Sale11 I 1~i:irfl !-lllrk·nn.:. Full-li rni' I I pubhc bookkeeping exper. ..._ <'Omn1 + bonus. Exper. for college sludrnl s NC) {'\'fl fl('('., t"Arn whlle you 1 1 1 rvio .[)('siron -lkmodcl -Addi· l_V);I!~, p;H10~. ~11 Hn _pool,«. I 1 pref'd. Good location & , ,,/Time ,t. •t for 0\',rtl<tt• Jo,,m. P">'I 1,·mc. «-. • Mnnrui;f'r or n e w. " 1·n1pl(l~ 111f'n!. Son1C' 1r11 ll<'I' '.}<l()...ft,(15 ._ " "'" .,A~ .,,n ,
lioll!'> -Paint. "lluildinl: I Shl'Jf• }Vrd c~nL'lllr·r 11emo;, f"~llions opt'tl. i:;,c·(•\l('n! 556 1100 . . trJaffic. B a-I ./ Ca.r & pholle rctflJhl.'d \\ lo1ds, lull tinic \\'~. n qu11ll·1 .~ ...... ~ ......... !!!! .............. 1
HN ii it v.·erc oul'li''. 11.funor
1
Vu_ ll'k ·'''.1 o. 1116-4296. 9~0 ,
1
_ ason est "Vtncy rit>d ~-11 1111 1 C M s.il;1ry ,i;, !IC't1"flt s. 1:1 ~1111 I V1 WELLS FARGO • M"~!ANIC CI a•' • "-"''su11ction l.Jc •2507JI. · 1 ~ , · rsa. fmrn S[lnta Ann. I , J7400 Brookhursl, l'". y. Fnrmeni Insurnnce Group .o:A.r • · '" c:~~°' & Son Bid~. I Ti1ev i5fo;-R8 pair 6090 I Call ,.,or ,\p111. i Trivia? Sullc 213 96.1--677~ GUARD SERVICE Ed ~nl * ~mt !~:~rt::~~~:=~
Conrr. Add, ttmod. SI. lie T.\' .-"itr11f'in!:;. sinc<' 1947. · !ndust r lnl Relations ) DECK IiAND fo'r private Insurance Girl Trne ?\In!'. .
B 1 _ 1 1 4 3 2 1 • 6 7 3-6041 . $12 9.1 ..., parJ.o; IOlttl. IUnle$11 I Zi06 lfnrbor Bl .. Suite 207 It\ a reason l"portflshlng boflt. Ye at
54
9-
2170
. ~ht1p ii"Ork' Fl('f'dt!rl/ Rerond, ( 714) 494*9401 Costa lt.lesa to read the at~. Exper .. n·e cc 1 s. Div. n -kor Prolt!Clo've •·rv. (Commercial t.lnea) Must MEDICAL Assi&tanl, back ·r 1· d ~~ be •t • w lltl _. havt penonal lines ex'l)er . &: otfict, gl'.'nc~I practice.
JACK T8ulane, p a t Io !I , · · ~. gua.9 ntcc , T ONIC Dally Piiot's ~ ne •• 1 °' aaei. 15.12 W. Common\Yealth xln't typing akll ls. $&.lary Sal,...., 0 ........ S48--9303. add
269072
rR,\f\'K SCHROTll T.V. EL 600 No. Euclid, Anaht1ln1 Send resume to Cl311altled t'uljt1·ton open. call (n4) 645-CMI00,1 ,::::::;!r;;;"-~=~.::,,;··-"-'-".:;;;,~-~;~~Y eo: Ui:,.~1 83'. w. """ C.M . c118·::386 INDUSTRIES Call 776-Slitl ontertalnmonl ad no.' 159 c/o D•llY Pilot 17141 SlS.Ul6 .,k for Ginny. MtM CJotltlng • l'ancy Tile 6091 j pane every P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mcu;a, E 1 0 M E 1 PreiMer • E x perienc e
R A
"ltion All Lio • ~-11r 92660 ~ua p.,.,r. mp oyer 1__. ........... .. ~-oom uu 1. tta n.1. SaturdCI}' ""° · · Outdoor gportt loll If a l't'q\11'-"'• r~·t""\.lme. ""'" 1
U ". Rl'llable. Free F..Jt, Jay CERA.i\IJC TILE NF.\V & Laguna Beach 215.\> Jta"'1horne Wvd. DElJVERY.HOUSEWIVF;S, appeat1-sellyourrspment Avll~ &+Ml:»t John~1011 &O--t403 ~m<idel . r r,.,, ~1 im11tr" I 1 p1ttme. Spilt shift. DtntaJ 111•1 la brefte ..•• 1ell )'OW' Wlih a ~ DI PUot Phelp1/M••1•r
Cl.ASS SELLS -6-t2-Ml$ Sm jObft. •"Clron1l'. ~·2 12)) I €qu&I Oppol'. Emplo)'tr I, leb. C.11 646-5068. Ad. Call ~. Cludned Adi No. " Fuhfon Ta!and-N.D, , •
• , I,
. I . ----
,,
--------------• • •
T~1,1r5day, May 30, 1<.174 DAILY PILOT _37
H~eiilopiiwi;•;;;n;;to:dd'"i, Mii&i:Fi171"1oo;n;1 ;:,;H:;•l~p"W"'•"'n.,.tod..,.., "M"'&"'F"'1"'100,.,.."'R'"'e'"lp...,W""""1nt;d-,-.,.,..,M"'i"'J!"7"i"'o0=·Ha=1p-W=1°"n1"'1Ci"',-.Mi=F.-7"'1"00""'°~=-;11"'a""nc'°'H,.,.----i;o"'·~;;Dr;F;:r::•::•-;T;:o:;Y1:0:::u--•8D4""'s"G;:•::,~.,::.:"50..:;:,.::--1aoss 1 Miseollan .. us 8080 ' m =rzz·-v z
MOTEL MAID R EAL ESTATE FREIGIIT DAMAGE SALE, AroHAN I Sheepdo0 t ype NBPD AUXILIARY -Pt.ACr::R gold fn ""'"' ! ... ~l•of'd onl lftt l F.:*EC'UTIVE SUl'l'ES MANAGER St<:retMY THE BRGADWAY new Hol ['olnt Ref •lg -mix. grl'llt w/kll111. CaJrn ANNUAL C.\.R.AGE & I form . For lnlormatinn call I Equiprn
536--0411 FASHION ISLAND, IOR 1 Huntington Beech eraton, Waahers, Dryen &: tempeorarnrnt, hou.1cbrokcn . BAKE SAU.: ~6-75.18, MOTEL MAID SEN I Now tntuvlewinJ For Oishwubrre, New War-646--9288 SAT. JUN£ 1. 8 ~o 4 , · c•~P~IN~8'0cc,U..,--~M-cA~Cl~l"IN">"c -c*-General 9010
1967 Newport Blvd, C.M. NEWPORT BEACH SECRETARY CARPET SALES '"""'· Cr<dlt, II of A, 30"lJ AL As KAN ~IAt.AMUTE. ll94 llofsc wa;:. CM 51(>.<)~!J Wilfianu Magic City gnmc.
64G-4?07 Mnj(>r frunchlse. Must be 6g. _ 'W. Wlltner. santa An11 , near mixed puiiplt!:s. To i:d Ho~schold Goods. fi tt by It \•:ork3. $250. 642-70&1 · LEARN -===""";;;cc.,~--, I<:rcss:lv._., knowledgabte and Experience Prtfen-ed Harbor. m.m1. horncs equ1p1ncn1. plants, lawn-, -1 MTST OPERATOR uulu:-:irious. Fully slaflc.'<1 Will aupport the Rtgtonal Xln't Employee Benefits I BANKRUPTCY • hol llW · 9ii2...1956 "'™'f't'S, anlique11, clolhJng, Mi t e. Wanted 8081 BOATI NG SAFETY
4:45 to 9 p.m. Abllity to .,..,,)J'k i off11·,., 11!1 lx-nt•lit~, chnilcng-Sales Ma.nactr. lnchldlng Apply Pt>rsonnel lO-noon w, e e roys & games. I SAIL Olt PO\\l:"rt unsupervised. Call Diane In/.( uppOl'hlllllV. Rcplle-11 customer UaliOn, maintain nn Edinger H 8 prlt.<ej, new C?lor TV II, 5tart 6 WKS. old, Black & (rwted ~ G s •ORI ENT AL RUGS• Jo'ftr:J·: ( 1.Af;SES ~70 ' n.•nr!dt•nlnll anlt only by rucords of aalcs bookings Equal Oppor. EmpJ~~ $225, stereo K starl. $56, allxed t>reed pup p 1 e • UMMA E ALE Prlv pa1•ty 11el'ds s1·vcn1l By Halt.ion Po\\'l'1\ &tuutlrnn
NEED 1-esponslble rnature mu1L 'A'rhro Clai;silled ad and co,JTeGpondenc::e. Will gas ning~s. diS~\\'Oshen, Av&il1Jble to (,.'O()(i homes. Nt.'\Vport . ~lu~bor ,.ch~ r ~ h usr<l 111•1·slnn . & Ch~~\'':" s1.1rt J\.1011 .• Jun1.: 3, 6:30 pn\
pert time housekeeper froni No. 13!, !J;1\ly l'ilol, P.O. also handle typing 0 'I * TRAVEL AGENT * Side by &de rtfr1g. Guitr-6@.3165 ot Rl'hg1ous &:u~ne.., ;,111 1 rux~. & h1pl'slr1t•s, fi44-a.\~f, ~t'\IJJIJl'l Jl·u·IJOI' \'ritht Cluh
2-9pm, \~1kdys only, Hntg. [:a:~ .1r!l,i0, Costa f\lcsa., Calif. reports for the ControUer as lllGHLY QUALIF1ED antee, cash only. 546-0lM. l'~REE to good honie 4 C<'ntt•r ~t .. C'.~1. Sa t., Junr.:.2.: \VA' lT TO f!Ur--' 720 \\. Uuy ~t.
Harbour area. Motherlt'l(." .:'~. v.·cl~ Id CO!TeS.,IOndence. SALARY OPEN. 552-0004 BUILT·IN type e I ee t r I<:: nt 0 nth old pa r 1 Horses 8060 PLATE BUH.NEH anti {.'1111 ft-18·!1.li~
home, 3 teenagers, cur ltL:AL I::.STATl: BROKE!l ' \Ve n..... ~ .......... 1 .. ""''""-double oven, dishwasher. Husky / ShephCI\I. ill ale. ~ MUL1'1 tany ('-OndJ. fi)r <l"c~l ;,1~11~,~----I nece..'I. Refer. l2J''J (Jft ASSOClAT~' l...'..:-ti"...-'.. a......,~ol·-. URGENTLY l'Qtlgt', inlilpecl at 1679 842-0ZW Jl.1AJ~f. gentle, Y,'l'll * s..14·3·117 * '!)!-.-,-,-.11/t~ cu~fl'lll1 430-7820. " i" 1 . . -company located neat Plal'entla, CM. . nlannt•n·d. 2{) years old --- ----~ '. : . '. . : • , ·I ~1 t'S ,?P<'nlng '"· . es fol' \Varner Blvd. and Harbor . . FREE to good home, choice su11t•r \1•ith kids $150. Son1c \VANTI-:D ,,, huy rlectru· SPOR I~ t:-,lli;:lt • Dlt:.c ,
NEW FACTORY 1•:-..pr11c111·r1l l 1 c ens e e. Blvd. Good fringes and FRIGIDAIRE ~trig. 11 . cu of 2 sml dogs, mixed Ter· tack. typ('\Vl'ilt•r !Bi\! pf'f'f~'1'r('d. ft11ly t'f[UJµL
Branch outli•ts ju~I opt•ning Nt'W!JOrl ~·ut·h, Costa ~e!ia salary commensurate with NEEDED ft. 2 dr top freezer. \Vh1le, tier/Poodle & 1. 842·6478 642-5563 .180!1 ,\pt K South Jo'lu111•t\ • 6·11·72:.!.!. G l''.\1 *
in llN'ft nc-eds U1t• fotlnw!ng: ,i:._ Irvine 1.Jrt•a. Srnall lirn1 • 1 experience. Send reswne or xlnt c;oncl. $75. 839-8~7. 1080 alt 2:30 QUARTER horses 4 tlld I Santa 1\11a .H.'i-!lli.-.::1. Boats, Marine E-q-.-9-03_0_,
l\.1b'fl'lt T-nc $1~.j 1vk 1~·lr.1.Xt-(t , 11 t m 0 s Plier e 'I apply: ASSEMBLERS REW.FR!btGSEt.R, SApTO. 2GRl./SF.A. ADORABLE longhail• Blk & mare, ·~oo. Yearlingrt;lll)', 1 \VANTED: E:Ll:C. 'J'R,\J'\;S, Servmcn ''' •.·,· l•t· Ou1stan<l1ng bonus 11 I' "'1 Tl'f " 1 kl tf k t t ' S da d reezer wht fem cat, spayed>-to $450. 493-3791 t'ves. Std. gauge, An1t>t'. Flyl'r, .~ , t,, iu(· (·~. 1.til' s, ~· ~
Salesmrn C)p1·n 1 ncgotlaic your 01vn co111· tan r 2 dr. no frost, Gene r til niature person w.7768 1.5 H h Id Good 8065 Lionel. 546-S620 (•/ 1ni,,.c·. r1g~in;..: 11urd11;1n·
All bcnt'fits. cArPC'I' potdUons, I 1111sslo11 plan. Plcai;c call for M • I & E
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ectric. 2 yrs old. Make pnJ. ' ollse O S Mus ical lnstrum'ts 8083 1:.!t;r 1:n-~J770 ur 1:!1 ::1
494-1(164 ~1pp!. 54.J....S-12-1, Sc.iuthCo. emor1es. nc. 0 er 8.1(J...6189 eve -.9~-.·1i.::?N ,.,,----~~"'-~--I H.1~a11ors. ·di f -• FREE KITTENS CE Washer. $100, \\'hirlpoo\ ~~ ·• ---~=~---Nii·c lactil'.'> 11• ant •• d A Subsi ruy 0 HEAVY duty K e n m or c Cal1 5-10-"'''"'' diyl'r $75. lrg vanity, $50. 1 'l NE\\' Shure nu..:rophont·~. 1 Ill' Sli:1\GU LL {l/H :'IJ.,1°1r
.._ n111 \\11r ·. i lrg: cedar chesl $50, Uphol. nev(·r uscll, J1<11d SltlO d I :\lnl !'{Hid. i;1· Uu111 ~1 ~~·(. for part ltm" t -d k APPLIED ?tlAGNETICS PACKERS washer all cycles avoc•do -t t
Exp unncc<•sSaJ'y. $2. hr Real [State 8 Dk ! 2221 S~A~~ St. i green like new $100 cash. 2 aJTE Gray Kitlens. chrs, $30 c<i .• cabinet S20. I piece: seU $100 both., s1.·l(). X::X-781\1
Apply in person only. ,\I; r ers I Santa Ana, Calif. 927M I VOLT 963-6488 F.V. Call alt 11 AM 1vo.rk_ be~ch.& ~·.ise, SU! . .Slat 13':l-75i0. -Boats, Power 9040 1
Ba ba l\1otel. :l'EJJ Ne\1'port I 1 Rent Washers/Dryers 673-8963 beneh $1J 642 699 Of F & E 8085 Blvd, C.M. Chrlslinna Com panies nct'ds Ins tant Personnel I LABORADOR GEnr..1AN ' · ... c. urn. quip. '----------. Jr An equal opportunity $2. Wk. ruH maint. .: Jewelry 8070 ' -------~-·-~o· 11(1 :-iporl L.111<·r. !!1i tu·,,
NURSERY \Vork<"r. o\·1:r :.11,, <Li,:g1'\~s:-.1ve se ing n1nnager employer J\.Iajor Medical Plan * 639-1202 * SHEPHER~ PUPPIES. --1 OKS $15 up, C:xec . s1\'\'\ l'hl's 1X>l ~h·1·<· l'u•l.h (';d11n,
?.tale, 6 days wk, Son1t• f'\P fur lheu· new l!untington Te~~i:r~ryvai~~~c.-e • * REBLT "l'asher, dryers, .&ia-5122 _ INDIAN JE\\'.ELRY, PnvHte , S\;}f25, Secy c 11 rs $1!/~t ! \!II"' 1 ll".
0
h,n1 1.11;1-. i..:.111• ~·
nee., plant niiun!, loadin~.1 13";1"1,1 Henliy. office. 3848 Campus Dr. Suite 106 dsh/wsh. $50 & up to 1 yr TICO & ~llla must hnd new par1y n1ust sell. Squash 1 1~1crc:l' liti1 \\' 1'.l, t'!'ll, i!ii;,l l .. 1ri., ski ··qu11, 11 ,,!-.1 1·
etc., $3 per hr/up, La~un11 I , C;~ll : O. :Sl re~tloi~ , 1 *Sec'ys, Bookkeepers I Ncivpoi1 Beach ' 546-1741 g<i". 54&-5218 or 839-7620. home~ imme~ w 1old~r cou· Blossoms. Zuni, NavilJu. ' 6-12·:~8 I I'll'., 11 )\RU ll('ll .v 1 ... 1t\
JUlls Nursery, 1':! Toro. 71·1. 84b·!'ll41 21.l: 502-21Hlll tlave too many to ilst £qua! Oppor. Employer GAS STOVE in Good con· pie. Fox Terriers. &1~·0217. H~~11 and n1~ny. sn1~lle~·' \\'ALNu·r Secretary dcsl,, ! ('roiitpl. .._~,\'\'!' ,\· 111H11,1
831).:1653. ---l Llz Reinder's Agency I ' d ition $25 2 FREE kittens ~l Slanlt'Sfl pit <:~~ . ?f, l ~a~~~l~~"()_ru1 • 1 l;\\'IVCI chair .v l1ll11g ;;ab111l'L l"\lf';I~ r~:-..<"c'I l'lll ~tl., S7 l'•)
NURSES Aidl's, fl!inll' 7 :, RECEPTIONIST · 4020 Birch St., Suite l04. 1 "-'"·2'.lZ3 1,3 Russian Blue. 3 mo. <1uoisc JCi\e 'Y· ti"IJ""'VU J $!75. 4~10.H attt'r tJ:W r iill l~H-1.'t.l!l :di h
'If . • I New,rort Beach 833·8190 UPHO' ~ERER 'd fuft 'N L' t k 8075 --------· .>' • n1atur1". (':\Pt'I'. lll't•f'd. l·l'I' l';ud. ~ood typing: skills D•'•I A Job 8'' "'55 ~· exp • ' Dl'YEIJ Beautit'ul 494-6941. 1ves oc p.n1. lUi''.! ~';' Tho1np~llll 111 .. •l',c:l:-.~ uut..:oing persona ity N h To You 1922 Hru·bor Bl,•d, C.M. Xlnt cond, noo. 'GREAT DANE female PRIV TE bo t JI 1 ·1 Peti I .:iflSTL'.'.l '{'of SlOI'<' !Tlll"!'l'. Will train. &-1'2-lllll, ' . f ,,_ time, lop .... ·ages & benefits.' KENMOllE GAS • • I 8087 l k f t
NURSES ;\1dc ,r.: Oi·di•!'ly. 7. ,·ould put )OU in the front ° C arge ' A . x ~a· s ---1 l·ull\ 1•q11111, .\h·t't· l/t1 3. l::xpcr. pref. Jnt1•iv11;;1 11!•:-f.. 1:1.'L'(U>.C: ''i~irors 111 Ei.talJhsucll 1965 ;»18-0?59 968-l320 548-4l47 aft. 5 opened Ul G inos. Costa f1L\L1\S!A.t~ Oller. 61no:.oltl, INwi(1•d 111 /\l'1\1••t'I ll;1rl><,r.
Mon-I-Ti. Me~a Vrrdc• Cnriv. ' 1111" tw:1utilul Ure 111 /''ashion I ---SECURITY ___ ; Auction 8015 1''RC:E Adorable Kittens. 8 ~csa ar~a. . By aripnt, I 111ale, g 0 o cl d1sposituJ11 , 1 .~b.•111 Tra1lr·1· ;,\·:111. J 1.1! •
11osp. 661 Cen!cr SL t::0.1. 1 1~1:111d . 1\l.)(J. i''l'I.' J_ol>s. t:al! I GUARDS • JRAINEES \\'ks old, · 2--8679. EVcs. · Ll'aStl & box 1ra1ncn. ,\11 •fl · :1.:1;...::11'11). E \ t' s I\\' k H tis
548-55&5. I :->ally Hart, ;,.IO·li05.1, C:0.1:,;tal 1 Need 67>3600 \\ll::LSll Puito, L1 hands, i ll'r is not JUSt anulht:l' p..•t, ~.O-~•HI !
OFFICE GIRLS I ]'t'l'MJIUH'i ,\gC'llCY 27!10 1 ' Full & p/Lnne guai;ls i . •AUCTION· KITIENS 3 Flu!fy females E11g. & \VesL: l'>/tuc:k. si:,ii.· lliey ;1rC' play1ul, :11111.illil' I -!---. -~1:~1tl
J l,u bor Ulvd CM ' or Orange Co. area. f or ' Will train dependable peopl(' t ood h ' Days 644-8270 645-5710 .'>: happiesL 11. plcil!v 01 \1·-~ C •r~~ l.
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11. ' 1ntC'rv1ew Call (2131435-8!:15~ 10 bcoon1e p!asllc 1n.tect1on' 0 g ome. l ~ u r \\ii . JI 11'111. JU ~ '(oa-.I
1 ~1" LEADI NG Tl1•al f.:-;talf' Coin· Hl::Ci:l''l'IONIST LaY.Tt'ncc Security, Inc: niold;ng operators. Must be tJ.15.4763 Miscellane ous 8080 C::,~~ •1·0 a"~ 10~nic~ s1~. \1 /tl'lr. S175. 111 ·11'.. 2(1 lip
p:uiy rll'i.'lls guls lot l•"•slllh f111· il~Hll lubtly nior!~,iht' Long: &ach. abl<' to stand enttrc shift , 1f 1-MENS Store Fixtures FRJ::E SWEET TI G J:: J{ Cail Lyl~ 544-731U days: I ~/bl'~. $IOO. hki: 11"'11
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offil'f's in ~:ini:i i\ 11 :i • 1°.tnka1i.: fi rni. PI cu s an l necessary. Openings on Jst 2· BUILDING in Santa Ana Kll'l'Y, !ema.Je, 6 1vks, * AUCTION * 4;14-2S'..:4 t'\'~·~. h·l·!-6490
Orangt• & Annl\0·1 111. 'I\ p· SlLl'l')llJlding .~ \V 0 r k !n g SEJ\11 rl'tJrt;d man for gol f "h•'ft , $2.15 to o,·tnrt. 2•tf to be _,, "-An """'., * FRI DAY 7· 30PM * ~, ~.c,,-,-J~~,~ .. ~,-u-inK nct•dl'li. l'rdl ,,;uh ~ I 1·angc. Also for gocart "' " " mov.,.,. .,..,,J.),,J..) • . KIT'TE~S· 6 \1·eeks old -L :-ir. a('· ~ · P•'!l
Uaut'r, ~:11~.:'.:~t~i('is.dut~'.~. tJ;~>i~~sa~ track. 1-'ull or pllhn<'. . shill. $2.29 to start. 3rd 3-DESERT Land, approx. DAISY DOCS,-nl ale , Many Repossession ~ ne<'d a good honle. Evenings 1T\Hsl'I', lo1v hrs. Sall' p 1111
Industrial Broker s Inc. ; Jiho!ll! voiCl' ft'(]. Nr Oralll,:L' t~~r~drs, c~.u Range, II ~i~~~;:46 to start. Raise in ii;~nl~~r~~ :~:~cr~uction fe1nill:· n1alc pup. 638-8'242 ~~;~~~ ~~es~f S:Jre;,~~' 151;,-1101 ·-111~~~-l~)ss .or 1ra1..: do11·n
!U.1·85.ll L'.c1un1y turporl area. call: Furniture 8050 sets, dinettes, applici_nces. Pianos & Organs 8090 1~~-... -CltUJZUN. :;u· x !l'
2 OFFl"E GIRLS 'l'l!r: 1\J1•,,\jj{:S Cvnlp. APPLY c I RF B e I n1attresses. Partial !Js!1ng --~~ ,JU \,, '.!Ulii j\J1t'lll'lson Dr, Irvine SENIOR ... Orange Coast Plastics . 0. . • y r y CH,lNJ\ cabinet, Drexel tomorrows paper. lll'<!Jll. sotuid hull. good cng ..
NEEDED ' 7l l-llJ'.~-l!J.·JO 850 \Vest 18th St. DIVERSIFIED Interlude style, mah ?.g. MASTERS AUCTION • PIANOS I in:iny xtras. $4950.
Radlo tt>lephon•· <11spatl·h 1 RECEPT, $4 75 Costa Mesa, Calif. AUCTIONEERS w/n1<>d walnut fin. $25~ ... 20751; Newport Blvd., C.l\i. • O~GANS ..... ti75--6ill6 l'ves & "'knds 11.1usl~1y:J.5.1nah~~,1~:;:ri\'l' I J r·· J'111d/,\lro Fee Jobs CLERK . W,\ITRESS & coo Ks NATIONWIDE !:i~~~h. ta~~air~11$~~ .. & ~ ~8686 ~ 83J..962S Rentals fr $5 "~ruit~~VN~~~ys E ~ P ~,:cl:;
YELLOW CAB CO. 0l)J1t' -.-L B•·autifl1l oles I HELPER. r~xp. not n£'c. LICENSED -BONDED-wooden desk $50., xlra lrg Open 9 to J, Closed Sun. I sounder.
186 E. 16th, Coi;la ~lt .... :1 WESTCLIFF ! \ \"ill train Pr!'f over 21 INSURED rect mahog coli table SCRAM LETS !S.'~:>!J 6--IG-11000
Ol"FICE g-irl. l\1ust 1.1 111• !~!;i rk Ill C<'nter' :-.on1vi~ngene~·aJol1il'eskills, T1.11,0·" Pizza, 49a-a20l Lag.i AUCTIONEERS ASSOC. comp'tn1t. Ptl: 11·kends or ee ., · 5 .
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30 S 12·5 ~!li\HP ;{2' Lwllrs !H. F/H,
_ !'i·r:-.onnt'I Ai;•'IK'Y , \\'e need an experienced per· I ' . . . .' ; ., · MEl\1BER OF NATIONAL v.'/walnut ltn & re<.-ord • Q n Night 'til 9 ·" ' .. -.
Youni,;, neat r11•p~·:ira111·" lWl I::. Ed1n1;1-r, S.A. includi:i;; typing, calculator, Niguel. I 610 s. BROADWAY, S.A. aftr. 6 PM wkdays, 552-SS\f.1 !>a t~ fll • ' un. d1~"'.:'I, fbgl~. i\!a.n;, __ ~:'l.ti·a.~
l'art lune, rr~ul:ir hr..:. :1 11-~.:i, ;111dt1ling ... n1ustbcg(K){I WAITRESS 558-2899 or835-2228 S W h ANSWERS *Pianos & Gr ands* I Sl1.500.01vnt•1'.ti-12-:u.'l.i. ~lust h\'" u (' L ;1 u·i~·rl HJ<L'.J:.l'1' . ·r\'l'IST for high \11th Jigurcs . . . Prefer I & l!OSTESS Part Time um mer are ouse I Balthv1n -C..ililc · Ch1ckeru1g i'R' GLASSPA!t I.O. \roh'<)
/i)'{'a. $2 !tr. Call 11111111iri:..:~. 1vlun1n oU1ce lll Laguna someo.nt' Y.'iU1 produelion Cooch's Corner, So. Coasl Clearanc:e Neru•hy -G1;n1y-Opera -~ 1''1sehl'r -ha\vai .. h'.iinliaJJ I l'n~. ·I eyl, full C;lll\':lS, :'1.llll
5."6-Rl81. :>.i.;tu'I. .~:Jl-::'Ol:!O I matenal control cxpcnence. \ Plaza. S.16-7955. *Col. R.F. Byerly* Over 600 Sets Beauty Rest Likely_ ENERGY I · hnabc -rl-l:t_on & llan' 1 • conrl. $l3()(). 4~J:~J~IG. Uood lringe benclits. Cro\vth . . , & ASSOCIATES M.a1tresses & .Box Springs. One look at my kid's rooni l\lussett • Sohincr · Steu1· ----------1
ORDER DESK llcal J::stlllL' :sall'sinan. 11·hy opportunity \.\'J th dynamic, W ~ L'.l' RES S· Ex Per · Diversified Auctioneers Give away pnced at $19.~5 and 'Ou \i·ill knoiv thal he 's 1vay -Storey & Cla rk . \\ 111· , DUFF I ELD 20. _
"-lust nave goof\ math ;op~ 1 not 1vork in the hotte:>l arl'a, SU<.'C"eKsful l.'Ompany. Please 11 /cocktails & food. Ca 11 set. Dealers \\felcome. bee > ervin ENERGY ter . \vrulllzer. Yainalla l·,leC"t. bay launeh. &16·11;.1 1,
titurlC' .t u..;(' c,J h(•a\·~ ! lltu1llugton l:kach, Fountain apply, 548-9146 btw. llam &. 9pm. LA~~~Q~E, 646-~ or 833.9615 1 ·' ~o~~'.15 g l\ew Spinets i. ........ ~J~ 1 dys; night, t:i7}-.J7.4H.
phonl's. U<',1utlfu! 11!'\\' u!c~ \'allt'y·; Let us train you. WAITRESS, expenenced.• NATIONWIDE Costa Mesa ---Used U'tom ............ ~~J ' 13 ' BOSTON WHALER
!11 Irvin" 1'0111plt'.\. C:dl l ';dJ etul t.h:i\an1ec 96J .. [>ti7 Standard Apply Ben Browns, 31106 S. Licensed, Bonded & Insured MOVING, Mesa v er de , BARTLETT i~lay<rs .'.' · · · • · · · •· • ~~~~ Custon1 bul'kcr seals. (•onsoh· Coa~Llll Per~l'/nn{'l .\i.,:»Jl•',\', i7v~l •uranr M . I Coast_!!v.•y,_ Ms. McCI~ Member of Nation a I Bn.in~wick P~I table, side FLOOR COVERING I Lirantls ··· ···· · · · · ~3~J s!eC'ring, 3;iHP C'nf:, ver;r
5:J0.-6(15.j, '.!iW ll <ll·bor Bl. • J OLLY ROGER emones, nc. , e WANTED e Auctioneers Assoc. by side retrig, sofa bed. 788 W. 19th St., C.M. *ORGANS* !toud eond. lii:l-1~:;1 ~~;U.:.INl; 1 L.1;.;:una &nth i\ subsidiary or • CABINET MAKERS 610 s. Broadway. S.A. \\alnut table & 4 clll'S, Qualit)'. cust.01n. f~oor l 8'-"ldv.u1 · ~unn · liau1n1ond • :\r-aif{JS !'.it-;-::ik~l;
!AJl .~tlt•i1da11I. COOKS .!\PPLIED l\1AGNl:.:TICS 3 Exp'd, store fixture cabinet 558-2899 8~2228 Walnut dresser & chest, covering. f'enturing; Nafc:o, I Kawai· l\.U~ball • ~wrey · \i'f~e\VJ.IOl'I slip. 1...\tras
bt.•rH·hfront · 11.r>. 1":01•h'11r 1
1 f . D COHt'. ONIQ Misc. chrs. 9xl2 Belg1un1 Armstro•g & Co•gof•ut>•-Jtoti ... ers · lnun1as · .111·, 11 , ,,7_0~3 1 tl:n•aklast s11 t &. innc1·1 tnakers Full tin1c Co Paid 8' I VYA '' '' '" \Ur ~· ?ttiddl1· ;1i,:t'<I. I 't·~·l··r r{'11n· ASST MANAGER : :!~Zl S. 1\nnc SL · 1 p "6 f 1 1cyc es rug, Marble coffee tble. 3Hl4 Guaranteed installation & I aha · \\'urlitzer. '
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or scnu f"{'!l!vd . :. ''n • . t ··' 1 11 Santa Ana, Ca.11/. 9'270-4 ~:iu~rng_ n!.~d ~anyr ext~a I ULTIMATE 10 ....M Cape Verde Place, Daily performant~e. Over 30 yrs. CJptJgan ................ Sl:,O :t:!'. .BART1'..:NOEH. Cab 1 11 drinkrr. $:! p!.'r hr. Sca,.,1111,il ~1u~i h" i•xp l · l,;OI'."--' puy, x. n ,, sl""~"' new aft. 1 pm. exper. Lo\\'l't'Y Spinet •..•• ,,, ~1~5 1 Cruiser. V-8 PY.T, soundl'r,
job tlu11 J,.;1IJOr IJay. ,\pj•l> Pl•111~ •• ,\pply in person An Equal Opportunity fringC' IX'nefits. 23XX Chrcscd-entdMo~csh ~ .. ark MOVING, must sell 2 beaut. FREE ESTIMATES \\'urlitzer Spinet, new .. ~-IW <.:01npass, $:!850. &16·9000.
Sunn\·'s Sn<1l'k l~ir. :illi 111 , 4110 :-,. lo:1,.,11iy.•y. /\Ir. llo11l'. i:;111ployer ,\tired bl. Gordon Designs an ma e m w""'en * W N FREE * (ll'raiifront. !!uni l~i·h. _.,:: 11 ·l'.1!·:11::-1 540-2860 16 l,bs. stainless steel frame'. lrg,. blue-0live brocade call 640·144'l I . '16'. lJ~L~ Cabin . Cruiser.
or Sun nioi·n. Ask for i\lr. -SJo..:HVIQ: ~c.ltion man ! 250 f'ischer, C.~1. Only 1 on West Coast until s .... ·ivel rockers. Xlnt cont!. **ATTENT ION** O~GAN LESSON!t t1~·1i1 1'\VC Gl\1C d1e~e.is.
sininis. R N, R e li ef cxp'tJ. 1.1ar1·ied. Goud \\',\NTED LXPERIENCED 1976. \Vil\ take trade. $575. $'lO ea., ~r or sep. _l lrg o~f We have discovered a Sn1all F ULLERTON MUSIC $lti,JOO &46-~ --p~· J b I Cv111·. Jlospital &t.l·Oj93 \\'ages. 6 days. in Ladies Ready to V.1car. I 67l-3584, Pvt pru:ty, CdM. ~ b~~~e Broyhi~ cha~r FeinaJe Mother Cat & 4 kit· 181!11 t.uclid,1-ouututn Vulll·y Boats, R ent/Char. 9050
Flcxibl:r ::Ou':.e lh~pitahl~ •;,\Ll.'.S -J\lcn ·~ \\'Ont.an,~full 0-<\SS A Mechanic. TW>C up Sales .Pls & ~lanagement \10 SPEED 24" Schwinn c~ed1~. so~$6o. Z]agd tens. approx 4wks old living S!>l-4H.>b ...
liost ss St·r.·•c"'
111
, eds i,.r P<-il1·1Lnie. Net·d c;i.r. t:arn & carb. work .. Fully exper. potential, full·hme. Orange I Varsily $7S al ~167~ behind our house. Ii you are 42' NE\V Chris·Cl'aft I e. , lhO 11 s ~JO "'' · 1 · 'l'k \\'ork Apply Reilly's Arco, 19th & County area. 646-5388 ";8-7408 qu · :) . nllssing a beautiful shortish 122 N. Haroor, r ulleiton NO SKIPPER IF ln1rlli<>e1lt. \\' 0 111 \' 11 "' ., ( • ,.. I \l' • ... c 'I ~ K!NGSIZE ~. '" finn •71 1 •u5 ., ..,,l1t!u·1·n lJrangt' Cty. Great •~cv.'pot1, "' · \\'ANTED Attra•tive mrJ to . ""'" • xu.a • haired gray MaMa cat··· u • u I YOU'RE QUALIFIED ll'l'leon1e 1\1'\\' f,i1n:l1(·~. \'i·u " 0 -BICYCLE built for 2 mcl 1•··•0 box ·1 d h ~~~ "l'INrtwuues. No exp SERVICE STATION l\1E· deliver parts for ne"'' cars · new, • ma"'"'""• or i you won er w ere her WE'RE DIFFERENT Fly·8ri<lge Sp<irt F1sher1nan
i1ill ne\•d :1 •·•r .\ n_t·.-11'\L Culli~_·a_n \\'a 1er ] CHA_ N ICand,\l~I'i::NDANTS,1 '"'"'Y-Pf•onc ~rike Schwinn. $9!}. springs & frame. $165. kittens are! PLEAS!'.:! call d . ' -,,, h ~· H ! ire i f It I_\ ""\\'rlll'r (';ill :i17-:lu.r, for '"' • 30 I """alf 51n .,~...,, " Call 1)44...444.). (worlh $ 3 5 o) Qu=nsize "·'" 2178 ft 6 30 V J{egar less ot U1c ··r d1ltus11c us · -" u e t'C in cs, u ,~ c .. 11i11'.1on1n.g. :J:~;, P~. J::x per1enced, neat. r·uu 04.llU v-""w · .... """. a er : pni. ic: !-rices" that one reads I galley. shower, e re.. For
h1!cr.·11•\\' :qipt. _ __ _ e;111 :<.,1-~i.*i.l or 4!:15-tiOJO; ti-::J
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time, days. fOUNT~\IN LADIES 26" Standard Bike, $145. Inc. delivery. Usually Albert Place in Costa J\ol('sa. about, the fact 15 1.i;il t.:h<UlCI' Uy day vr \ll'i:'k.
f',\lti-;:-Tt:--11.: B ,\H .\1 ,\ l I 1 • p111, "all ·l:!J-S-ltJ. VALLEY 'f!'.:X,\CO Brook· Good con~i_J.~o~~.,S315. home 832-2488. BARTLETT t·on1~tltion keeps J,Jr i. ,_., r 1sh. l'ruise. <·ocktatl, ch:
fl\'l'.fl ·.i i LITTLE -~ ---' WHO WANTS TO \VORK? I 0 ~~ S HHI F NITURE "" 0 2 .s ,\ L J:: s ;o.1 ,\ ;-.; , Orange hw'St & Carlield. DRIVE A CAB! , H UR FLOOR COVERING al>oul lhe sa111c "'lll'Jl'1v1 i_. .. 1-:t.wu, ~; •• • ;)UJ Sunday J~,\\';\J~.~~~lf;'l * lounly s h1q . .(l'St s a fc ty t2J SERVICE Sta. nien, 1st CHOOSE your hours, work I GIRL'S Stingray 1ype Bike, AT WHOLESALE! 788 W. 19th St., C.M . you shop. \\l' lo:;e v<·ry !t'1. enl;,'-c _______ _
t•qu1p. supply. Must ?e-Class. Top v,:ages + comm. tor yoursell. be your o11·n Good c.-ondilion $1~. 894-2020 Pc r sonalized Installation. sa.Jes by being u11ut•rs,1ln. t::JUCSON 2ti" sloop fl. l 'q[JI
PAR'f·TIME. r <' 111;1 l I'. 1 <1ggrl'sS1\c k enthusiastic. Apply Ray Carey Chevron boss. Men or "''<>men. Can 646-5870 Nanie Brand. Car Pet \\'e'1·e different becaUSl' our ~Jps. ~ Charter d<1/wl-..
Telephone Soliciting;. Sa.lacy JutJustr1u.l sales c x pc r. Station, 604 s. Coast Hv.)'., be slightly handicapped. Cats 8035 COUCI-!, Herculon hide-a-bed, Guaranteed. Over 30 yrs. I saicsuien listen Lard tw pr/ply. 81\6---041.'S + C.Omm. Vi{'. Jl:irbor & net'ded. salary & car exp. to Laguna Beach. Neat • Oenn Appearance. c.'Of table & hexlgon lable in exp. 1 \\'hat you say, !hl'y l'L: 9060 \\'ilson, c.M. 833-1662 si;i.rt. 90 day trauu.n~ then SILK SCREENERS Vts., retired. Age 25 to 70. FREE TO YOUll pecan 11'0od, 2 brn match. FREE ESTIMATES sensaive to whal you reauy cl'lo=•;_l•:;•_S;_•_i_I ___ _;__"'-
PART·Tifl1E. Ins. office·. ~t::. car. !'llr. Berge, 892-4438. Male or Fomalc, experience Supplement your income. Very homely eighl·week old lamps. Take it a!I for $150. CaJI 646-1412 ~~:~to~ t~y n~1::~ :~~ :;I' BLOC!< Island Ketch
Appro'. 12 hrs \\'k. !\.lust Uc s ,\Li,: s L ,\DY , n1ature, Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a kitten. PH. aft. 6 PJ\il. 67:>-5256. ~f ff u r -I d $1200 " 1 .bl, \\ n needro required. 541--5119 ACCRA· day. Apply in oerson, per1cct match be l 1v e c11 · u . n 1n1s 1e . or
h..-XXI typist. 833-1-195 , rt·~ponsl e 'On1a . . POINT ARRAYS CORP. Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. lGth 549-4338 after 5. DESK $25., sml antique chest I BUY!! Organ & Organist, Piano & ' best offer. !2131 '13!J.9770
--A-E-UP-ARTTST-lot' pleasant sales position. 1538 East Chest.nut, Sectlon $100., French Prov. dbl bed, Pian1s1. lf you a.re thinking I or (213159~·582S. p ST • I Xlnl \1urk1ng t'Ond. & how·s. E St., Costa Mesa. PERSIAN Kittens, CFA, box sprngs ,I',, mat S45., Good, used 11.U'Jl.lture & b k tJ 1
t''/tin1e in;·h1chni:: Sais. Co. I· ~!List be bon<lab!c. Apply in • Santa Ana WOMEN NEEDED f Black, Red, & Tortie. · f JJ lJ 1 a out a · e y oar t 2 3 ' H I rt 0 ND £LL E
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SMALL GROWING Compa·y or "'"l887 brass !pl fix $20. &1~378 app 1anees or 1v1 se or you tnsLi·u1~1ent, gi_\·e us a 111_ -. • C,,,0,,.0• ·t>. Ca,. c 1 r",
b1.·n<'fils. , f> p y .> .) fll'l':.On c \Vor ote " '--·~-•earu'ng ,.-bs. CALL ~ MASTERS AUCTION \I k If ti t I " " '
f I C'f c ff I Co H in °-· Me"" needs ,.~.....,r •aN.:rCU SPANISH sofa & loveseat, c. cnm Y_ou agree la cn1ising. Sleeps 5. Like Tl(>\V Nev.rnnrt n V(. " a Laguna, 431 S. ast wy, o..vi.1t1. .... , ._._.... Robbt'es Rag-A·Mop 0 •• •7,·7 "'-• 8040 '" "'" 83'9625 ""' •" 1ftlf•1•nt
64z...J8Ji. l..i,.:una Beach. oriented person to take over ......,...... -.... $250. Exec. office desk, S175. ~or ~ "" c coi\sT Music I ~"~"''-"'-5~100=-~~~----
Tof
, l si•.n expanding accounts pa.yable WOMAN to live in & care for e PUPPY WORLD e Both perfect. alt 6 or ~-.1day, N•ii·pot" at Hru·bor, c_,f. . HOBIE C,\T 16 \l'/trailer
P B:\ OPJ-:H,\ '-S.\Lt..S. ~l'gLnncrs 10 ,JV. dept. ~-,, to assume o'"--elderly invalid lady, room, * 493-7700 * &39-011 .• · 5--J.3050 · 548-6349 '" ' · k <-ti < 1 k 1 41"' u""" Watch dogs Gennan Shep-64&{):.!71 ~ No. 3900. Xtras. Xlnt 1.'0nd. Tclepho]l(' a!lS\\<'t·1ni.: Sf'r.'. , lit'l' . .-1 iv ·. ·1' '. J 1" c e r o lated respons.ibilities. board & 58.lary, 842-6113 or • WALNUT d. · tab\ 6 DECORATOR'S Mistake -s~kh .. -t at ·1--.fbot·t, 1·v I $149.i Uays :H741iIB,· eve,· professional ex ch an It(' , t'ruuucts. ..arn as you 0 u ts tand ln g company ~2862 aft 7pm herds, Chitulahuas, Tin y . in1ng . . e. '"" ... ,, ,,,,., "7"33 I -1=-3!'1.
ra.slli.on Island. N.B. f)(Jl('l',I lt'arn. Jta1-1ul ad\'ant'Cment bcnelits. Call Mary or Poodles Pit Bulls Cocka· chairs. An1<-'r1can ol Sheer natural L i nen """-" ""'~:..::c"=-~~~~=~-onl y. Top pay .'i..:. ht•nrf11 :,;"I 1~nt•:t1. S.!li.0'.~:!2 Robin, J56..-0320 poo Old English Samoyed Martinsville, good cond. $75. draperies, 4 panels, Each f Flipper ivith dolly ~17J. or
Call &14-706'..l. S.\LJ·:S person. !'.:xper. \n I 11~1 Da~hsbunds, Hus'kles, Pugs'. Dog house $5. 5-18-2958 95'' \\Ld<' by 96'' long. lJO co NT IN U Ou S FRJ::E I best offer. • llllrdwdlM ·. 100 MIXED PUPS! Stud LIVING, Dining & Bdrm yds Sea Foam Green nylon j ORGAN CLASSC:S 1''UH.I 642-1821 Pl'tES~'.\li\N, t•xp'd 011 rt•1:11I ~iii :.Lun• a nlUSI. Sr. Project engineer 1 . Service Most Breeds. Open Furniture. Drafting table & plush carpet. SupC'r Buy! ADULTS E T d ----------1\l l · 1 11:1\':<, t•ves & 1>knd~. Buggs Indus prod. develop $l9K ' , · very ue~ 1:1y · 1 S !'.: T SO L C ,\ 'f :111~~~d.a &or l\t;J;11~ i~)ft~~~~ !i11;Tn•il1unnl. 2tH:I \VC's1c!11f Bkkpr, &c'y/Con~u· to $700 Eves. J31·5027. tile cabinet. Call aft 6 PM & &12-2255t 5--18-1654 I 7::1Up1n .. Start any week., CA1',\I'•IAJ{Ai\; llliLLS, nc1v
plates. Call Oa\'I'. t;io.,-::\IJ u 1·. !\1•11 JIOL't J;cuch. General Office to $47G Antiques 8005 BEAUTIFUL little Yorkshire Wknds 963"'6131 CABINE'm for Kltchen & Tcom, DMiete~t ichComt L:~:rgc. ' S:JOO. 642-5.S:fi Clerk Typist to S:.00 Temers. 8 wks. old. Sired GIRL'S Con1plcte Bedroom Bath I Oa.5 us c s a : .csi\. HcvcBcf~C~f~l ~--,-----
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. SALES G IRL SC'c'y to pres. tu $700 SALE THURS/SAT. by AKC CH K 1 r n el ' s set, Xlnt <.'Ond. ?11us1 sell U11fin1Shed ?refinished Newport uH~vd.,.1at Haioor. , equip.. t:nrH ~::~~~· 11·:~~:;~~ ~l~~:.i'\b~d 0 ie~e l~ao 1 1~1; Fun shup. Serendipity, 3810 Legal Sec corp RE $i!Otl I 12 llalltrt'es $50 to $195. l Buckaroo. Males & Fentales immed .. days 833·193'.!, alt Counter Tops also .:.1.-.. isJ 1 xlnt c-oiicl. ss;10. :J.l.i-:17'.t'l.
·. . . . l'l;iza l)l', ::;. Ana. Call Secretary/Legal $700 , Oak Sid<'board, leaded glass for show or peL 497-1684 6:00. 644-6.591. HARDEN ENTERPRISES ~ coordinauni:::. <'a r P ct s. , ·-_.,-112 Purchasing Sec'y to $650 1 front 1 Carver 0 a k . eves. or Sat & s un. WANT "D 815 w. 18th St. C. M. 1 CUL8llAN:;Q:-.i Pa r ago n ·12· DART Sailboat. 18il h1-.
drDpcrics &· \\•allpapcr Part 1 ·1•11 -1 ~· St t Ty · S500 I 1 l:: 642-2842 I Oq;tan, Harp, !'l'laruuli:•.1 $3Q(). time G4:i 2'!:-; . SALES GIRL I a p1st Sideboard. Oak Sideboard GREAT PYRENEES puppy, *USED BRICKS* Cllin1es, Piano, r~ull U1·.:r1111 Phone ~';';J._2526
• -.i. . . Rec:epti<.nist SJOO i \\'/beveled ml r r ors. 21 9 mo's. AKC reg. Name 870-456.t MUST Sell~ ltl o vi n g e. ~-_:_c::::.:.~~==-=---
PLASTICS con1pany ne1·ds 1' /tinic for dr;ss shop, Escrow Customer Coordin· flt ah o g. Sideboard s "Royal St George" Must . overseas. Nr. new dlx Pre-Set. Lesli~ Speaker.' lZ, ~~· Snipe \VI pipers.
techniciun rot· Qllflli!v con·, Ne\\IXll't Beach. !l4S-53&l. aior (Brea) $Sj() v.•/bcveled mirron. 1 Oak & 11 d I Askin FOR SALE: Table & 4 chall'S Tefri•', port. dish11·asher, \Ya!nut. $l.575, :)'18·7.JIJI'!. I Trailer, 2 n1au1S, :.! jib, fast.
trol v.·ork, L;\r11.·i· i 11 • ~\Ll-.S C~ll Jeannie Sisco Brass Barber chair. 2 Ice Sse""~ "'~~1542° move. g $25· 4 c: a.irs $5. b 1"1 JVA'fE PARTY \\',.\NTS I • •~n_ lf.B. :i~" ., I:"'. -· s ·d H ff Bo 100 odd "-'-M. ""·.,...,,... 49'12840 \vasher & dryer, king bc'cl, .n.)IJ .;oor..,. "" \\'l'ighint: .~ 1111-..: 1 n..: E X PERIENCE & 1 o nuin . X<'S. Cn11JJ.-.... JSC. d !Om · stereo equip & ~l 1 s c . ·ro UUY PI,\J'IO 1''U l{ 1,.,1., .. No. ti«•. 0,, ... ,,.1.,tll ndhl'~ivt·s helpf\11. ~Ju~• I"·; • ED NEWPORT p1tlno benches. MALE Keesho~n . onths ELEGANT iten1s son1c au· <,:,\SI-I. i;, "'"' "' able t<l kf'<'p fH1.'!'lsr rt't"n·d~ NOT NEED P I A ne OPEN 12 to 6 old good '"1th children. tique Priv party Ansv.·cr 5:"i7-3.J99 or 673-3121. 1 * .,_,,7 0 .,. * 1 raeu1g gear & boal & n1ru.l · · ersonne ge Y Tf th s Shets s·~ o· best !fer · · ·NA\ Eb f s·t·· ·' .,...J't .. :, I · ~0'vt s-0,·~1 & 1rork. y.·/1ni11. :.U])\'l'Vl~IOll. i-'{:!;1 JI.I in. to $2400 1nor1thly 1 83J D 0 N B 1u~. . ru at. r. JV 1 0 • ing Service. Call 49.f-8984 · . 1 • 1'<111( · ,1 1 ~n1nn s , . ., r l_,o_v~-~-,-~,"~c'~-~-c'~~-~~
sahiry rk'p£'nd~ nn 1•Xpl•1-. guaruntet'<I. Coniinission if l over r ., • • J~lOI V1ctor1a, No. E. .'1'18-3730 , . , Saniples. 11·~1ole~.a l C'. g,~B;' Gi~d pi.nno-.\\~111/~\1.1 L!UO 11. riailt:'l . Satl~
Applications Ml\' b t• in C qualified. Con1p1u1y velucle, 642a3870 ! t;osta Mesa. 642-9187 , DOG OBEDIENCE CLASS Q ~ EEN~J~E H1~e-n-~d . S\l'<':•ll'L'S, l<nit sh 11· t:.;, fu~1. ~· S79.>. 01 best t.: l'n1tiµ!t•I\' . \·.'\r\'l!(•l1( r<1c1ni.:
1nkC'n. Ca11 ·c7110 550-4170. repeat business, v.·cekl>'. & , I ANTIQUE I TO start Wed. June 5, In the ~~9~ :re::est ~Je~~7:1~~1:1g ~o~~le·knil .. pants. b:lt,h\n~ I :-;<J j-iJ5?7· , l't'L:Ofl.l. S\100. ti .. ·:;...:tJ~O
PLUMBING • Sl?\\'cr and ! inonthly bonuses. Dayume START t:JO'Y· SHOW & SALE Newport / Irvine area. Call __ --suits. Mens s17;ed n1l'd1u111, f Sporting Goods 8094 • FL\J·:J{-L--;l'Pl·:H.-.-
draln men wanteri . RI'· work. No eves. Local n1eat Local AmW&,1 distributor of-100 Exhibitors 546-4928. GRANDFATHER boys 16, call 642-9735 • -. .. _ J ~· Sailboat
uiremenLs, over 18, O\\'ll Y.'h('llesaler: !ers oppor. tor good earn-1 Long Beach Arena TOP Afgha . CLOCK ~!INK COAT, full .length,I L!.Kl:: ne1v ~1g1.io1,_s 1 -~.1 ~£50. 6·16-!lOOO ~ck, hand tools. 537_1538 Ml' J\lartin, 213-77()..854.l ing~. You pld:t the hrs. We Ocean & Long Beach Blvd Champ. s~, e~o~l~~l~: 6'19-26~ narl hlk cross n1111l: \\-Sal<!mon 505 •. b'.n~ini;.s, Slf:?. · K ITE ~595.
::..:='-"'----'------,-. FACT IS tram. For mtemv, call I May 30 31 J une 1 & 2 personality. Sensibly priced· PECAN m c diterranean n1atch Pill Box Hnt. Cus11n ~l!<E ne\v t1slhc~ V·j()U \\
E E t M t 54(M)9'l8. Th Fri' : ' 0 made. 1/73. Pert. c 011 d , .,;tlurnon _ 404 b1~~111gs.:. 5100. veryone a s ea r u • Sat l·l pn1 terms, 6.f&.2235, 642·5885. cocktail trible~, 20" x 65" like $22?5, apprsl. Sac. $900. 1 Call aft a. Toni "->2-~j2.
Printing SALES FUNKY NATURAL ! STUDENTS work p/t now, SekSuufn>_cdhay IP2--Srodpumctt'on GOLDEN RETRIEVER I Ill'\\'* 493-9509 * 552-lm alt 6 PM. j \\rALTER 1-IAG,\N Go If
PRESSMAN F~Ds Ean• $150/wk or lit Swnmer. Neat. reliable. !RISH SETIER · LO\'E'EAT & I t I Cf •· · ·vv rir Rl hdl'd 846-5455 . puppies,* ' .':i so a cus om CRIB/Kant \\'et n1auress u.,.,, irons, \\'oods, in largl' OOCK SPACE. Xln! loc11·
Boats, Slips/ Docks 9070
I 1norc as distributor in ' · c 8• ' Fu1·111t~, milk glass , $15 each. 5 \vks. old. n1ade • very gd qua!. never used for one ('hild . hkc Ill'\\' I bag,_ all \\'ell cared fur. uon. $2.50. fJCl' ft. X-13·270-1
Minimum ol 2 years \'>:pi'r· L.1guna Be." ch, :;an S \VI TC H B OARD-Recept. depression gla_si;, buttons for 831-1743. used, usually hm. 968-7910. S:lJ. 979--8123 933 Canintion I 5-IS·G895. I \1-l't•kdays
icnce on Multi, A.U. J)1t~k , Cle1nC11tc, Mission Viejo Vf'ied d&uties.lf Must -~ ~lffl~tto•rsbl'c,,_ c Buyrf 0
8'p pf&, BLACK G,ERl\.iAN_ Sl-IEP· G ar a ge Sale 8055 A_ve. Costa 1\1 c:-s a -1875 \\'estlcc Rinharrls Shor· SL!~' ~.:;-p,-c--".-'.'-,-.,-,_t-111-,f-"---,,-,.,-n-n-1
Or Davidson presses. nrca._ Must. have c x p . re iablc we groom .. ,.. "" .... f-lEROS 6 k S f\ol ALL G b k H ·~ I f S f \\'tirkin"' retail food stores or Mon-Fri. 8:31).5:30, Ca 11 1 847-5883 or Sat & Swi 10-• \\' s. teen roo on1es gun. 'f>N· , ocat1on. ti • :ii Ol' po\\t'r.
Permanc11t JX»tilion \\'ith ('!~·
pl~ benctitit nvnllnbl(l fnr
1:1tcady, reliable workl't'.
Apply In pcn;on
MARTEC
REPRODUCTIONS,
INC. '
1> Ml'3. Cameron, Bau erl 4 7672 Anita Ln HB BREED. $25 or ? STEVE. ~10VING SALE: G:eat TRIPLE _._,,.,r niinxir 2 Call 962-4;>,.~7 . ti73-00l)i i;clling to retail 11tores. Use i Bl ' • · 645-4563 values, Household items, . u'" .. · · O\\fn tar or van. Call George, Bulc:k, 292S firu-bor vd, PAINT & v ARN I s H · garden tools. clothes, toys, rught stands, headboard · ~ps 8096 : UP 10 'ZS'; 11<1tt'r :u1d
r·unk 1vkends or weekday Costa MNtl, 979--2500 aft Removal. Antique Furniture POODLE, Toy, pvt Par,tY & Misc. Fri. Sa l Sun 10 to 5 \'lhlte $60. 979-8123 !ll1 -electric. N. B. SI() nio.
evenings (n4) 832-&d.I & 9:~ AM. our Specialty. Free Est. I must sell. Female, 6 mo a. 2331 H e a l h ~ r Lani', Carnation Ave. Costa ~lcsa LATE niodel organ & r 64'l-!XH2 or 6T.r.:>tiiti
541..002'1 Telephone SalH 557-2736 Cllll &1().-410'3 Nev.rnnrt 548-1331 . Greenbrook Hom<-'.~. ,rhylhmodnl111ker.,..,f('al for Boa ts ~Speed & ski9080 ,.-· J\!e n1 e van uY-4610 I • S~1L~~1~· P~.;~1~~: r~~ ~~~ ! Coste Mesa Area Appllinces 8010 P~~:· F~1~.Sih'er Grey, Gifr~~r~. S:h1~~.~io~I~~'. TIRES _ TV, Radio, HiFi S'°t8098 12' ~llNI Sport. ilh'rl" 40. 3
i11vcs1n1ent, •10 cleltvery, SS. Work From GAS stove. Xlnt cond. o.Can. 89'l.f;i927 vacuu1n, asso11cd hou~hold 5 .Delta 10-60 x l;> oHKmttel I -:--yr~ old. sell for $HKX1 .. or
$10 per hour, for Interview, Your Home $40. ,..._,1 ·•1-. IR. Setter, PUps. AKC, lte1ns, 2627 \Vay Lane. ,urei;,!:,'tl•tl&fooJhij;:hv.·nyStl•"oo· s,;~~~~;:!~R$25u~~c~~I \\'ill! hexcha111g'1'h for ... ~1t~
call 840-1000 893-61~ T C · I Ion , "°" ~ '160 Ch St k Th•~ rin/ China Cove CDi\-! Fri & us .. .._. ne1,· . · we R t, sn1n .p. 11vt1t .11 • • op omm 11 1 ' amp oc: • ....,e 8 Sal • · ll7>1345. 130 .rn1s .,...iltt F"t stereo : niotor + caiih. Ev cs 1571 Plaoentia Ave. 891--0436, 894-1445 * ~'13U * MAYTAG <1t Kenmore auto. Varagon Lln@. R~u. 842-851 · • , , receiver model 8 9 O O A ,, 673_1805 NewpOr\ Beech, caut. SALESMAN needed to 11tll wuhen. $50. ea. iTte AFGHAN Puppies A.KC NEIGHBORHOOD Garage Charl11 s Trading Post w/walnu.t Ctule $275. P.l'. I"'-'-"'=·-~~~--! new gaA saving device tO be *TELEPHONE dellverly A: guar, !WIHl812. •how qU3111y. MIF'. ' Sale. Homema~ High Fired 4M·l629 C.S.M. studio monitor $pkl'!I U' • Lov.man, 3.'1 H.P. elcc
M ::1f~r:1fl>' ' advertised on TV by Gordon SALES * ADMIRAL troet tree tefria. m..2552 615-4911 St0neware, Pottt?ry • Planl'I WE BUY, \\'E SELL 12" WOO(Cr, 5" midtangt. \\'((.'Qntrnl$. QuickMN-ea.sy lo;=:;~;;;;~;;;;.;l Cooper the as.trOoaut. Over 21., part Ume ewt 5-9 2 dr, xtnt oond.. $125. Call C'REAT DANE • F\trntture ·Bean Sap. Antiques, Met.ala, Junk 2~9" tweeteT, ported Mi l car 101> load~r. $47 :>. I: .t96-3Tl2. pm. Good f:,· Students 53&-1981 pl;ppt£S AI<C Sat•SUn. Corner of Narcls.cius 'f'Rt • Sat. 1•5. Chests o( ~uency mponse, 1valnut 518-1291
_ PROF NEEDS NANNY SECRETARY, Executive; 10 9ftlcome. Cal ews ~ WE BUY REPRJG'S 55t..$n & 3rd . CdM. 675-86'77. drnwen, deSk, Camp equip. ~&~~al ~~f{i -1r1_f_oo_t_lt_1f>\m_n_I_, ch-ev_:l83_w_hh
U... ln molhenCS11'omo own Corporate pres ld .. 1. TILl!PHONr--WORl<INQ Oft NOT F .,. y_.., IOCS MOVING. Sale Frl/S.I ~/al Set aitertl!t Ucdowns. 21116 w/l!:mptr. ~EX ·artrldi:< trailer .SlfXXl. •
n>om w/prtv. _ ttotlt, 2 o"""° County. Coll>Onte SOLICITORS * ~ * , .. ,o "611. i '? 5 PM, 31164 Kiili<· Myron Dr. CM $125. All oqulp. ~ ,~u undor ' _ __!12_·5."21) ___ _
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chOdml. nteclf tom e Sccretarill t" x pe r t enc e Sf!t 1eedJ tor our $t11esmtn. 'llt-4cu rt ndrtgerator. Good fREE kit~ broo!: i.n, Costa Mesa. TEL tPl{ONE An.~ing facl. w&JT, A11 J!lsl bottght The fnst~l draw 1n Ur Wf!!lllt.
EMallab. fm.-3517. helpful. S&ta.ry op m. Earn lqp P4>'· Afternoons. c:oadldon, dll 83M'fl allCr ADORABLE Se-JI kile .lttmt1 wllh a Da.11)' machlne1 All bta.nd•t...~"t In Jl\n, of 1974. AU pri~.s I ... a Daily Pllot ClllSllftfd
CLASS SELLS --i n~l54.l "111 trsln. 516"1(7, !>PM. --Clll 645-6109 Pilot a ... motl o,c1. -prl<ts In c.Iflon\la, ..... :ns .,. COii. tle-2342. I Ad, Coff 642-1678. •
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Thursday, MayJ0,1974 -~~~~-;;;;;;;;:i::::::'.T.:'.:"\lt:oC:--~-;;,..,.,.,.c:".':::Z,...-~~~~..,,,,.,.-,.,.,,.-::~~~~~~...,,.,..,.,.,--~~~~~~-;:;...-,..,.,....~.....:~~~~-..,..-,;;:;~~~~~"'"'.f;l~\' ~~~~~~4~Wh~n~l !D~r~lv~ .. ~~~5~rB~W 9712 Morcedo1 Benz 9740 Toy••• '765 1 Volklw•n f710 Camero '911 Cougar ti» Pinto M 1
)[•) '7' JEEP CJC>. ,;off.lop, lock· HERE IS ,74 JOYOJ 'Tl VW DELUXE BUS. Sun 'Tl eam.ro, po, auto .. .;, '68 XRf, Powtr A air, d .. n. 71 PINTO 11' •
1nJ,1. hubs, roll bar. he.'!.\) •uTII. lt&lll fO• YOU C A roof, recent rebuilt eng. 60,0CX) ml. Runa perf. Very top condJtJOI), tow ml. aU.-tl bo 3-c1 I
' dur:v 1001\n~ & ~UJ>JJeni>ion, BAVARIAN . R HANCE , 831-2040 Dir. cll'fln. U)OO, $.2494 belted radials. Under book. \'ollo~.u~a'~' ai:·condJ. 1
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Cim-rs, S.lo/ I ihii\\· hat, hllt'h, flux. pltij!s, M 0_ · I to make an outstandine I "-st Deal '70 V\V Bug. Auto. U'llns. & Chevrolet 9920 673-'IJll. tlonl .... , l'Rclio, hcnter, o.nd I -rear fire n1ount, xlnr ShfllJe. O ,, pun;hase of a Beautiful UC new val\l'ei. 831-2MO Dir. '61 CX>UCAR, n~a bod)' an o'ul11tanding vah.ie! (ll.9-
Rent 9120 j $3350. 673.fi0711 aft. S. ~1at ado r red l 9 7 4 A h I warili. u~i.e offer.
1---------oo=oc=E~Po-.-.,-,"'w"'ago-n-."'19"1"3,I T Jl,1ERCEDES BENZ 450 SL I nyw ere. '65 vw. 74 teblt eng,• Nu WANTED to buy 196 5 '00 642-3378 010). 8
'67 ~ Ton Fo1'tt, 4 spd., a· T Piclru 12 000 I D at thousands ol doJlat'S LEASE OR BUY c·lutch, Porsche chrome Chevelle Malibu 1 1 at Io n Dodge' Only $148 ' on, p, , 1n1 rs, rln1s & carb. Radials. 67 99311: pickup and 101~· cabovrr 11· c0011~r shell, auto, P '· R below replacement pri(.'('. All Models! 1 wqon. Must have good ·-V-XI d ~2350 .-~ Th. 1 v nyl aesta. Tac. Many ex· bod & .....M in ior Call ~ 8AWWIC,K [)AT\UN can1pc. . nt l'On . . p/h, posl trac!ion, Loaded , 1.s out.stand ng automobile lras Exceptlonall Cherry Y •"""' ter . •
556-1309 11.fr 6. i1•/xlrfls, li1us1 sell ininit'C.l, BUY or LEASE is loaded "'Ith every extra f\ftfllat L1i1a.:t Sac11flce BIO o~r $890: after-t pm. ~971. '70CHARGF.R, RT440, lo-ml,
\\'HEEL Cnmper, 1970 $1200 .. s~.000 Firm &i;;..1100 e\: lll NOW'. tllld option and has less !hall -WA WIO '71 CHEVY Vega. Lile blue 2 full power, A/C $1600.
Good d SI 6 SI 3.000 miles. ShO\\rn lly 1' TOYOTA "6-12"""-<42=~'--..,----"7 cir, auto trans, rad i o, 979-«llO t.'Otl · eeps e·-• o:e 1 '71 CJ.f> JN"p, "'ldt' rinis. lire Beat lhe price lnl'1't'ase appointmenl . '65 V\Y, need[!; engine "·ork, heah•r. Jo nii's, $1195. Call
33375 CAM1HO W!STUHO
Lt.II JUAN l;ArtSfUNO ,......, ___ ,_
4U-ll75 °' lll·ll7l 11·/oven. lc.'f' cooler. J56-7t::il I & can rack, ICM' bar, goorl & sin·t•hargc httS new brakes, el{'., as 10 Set> it lhis Y.'eel."Cnd. Ford 994Q
MoStorcycles/ 91 SO ~r;::· $2500. 6.t2-~30 afr XLNT SEL£(1'10N OF' j8;'.@•V 1966 Harbor c r.' 646-:.: 1'3 is, $250, See at Palisades 644-6500. 640-5070, 644-234.2. '72 FORD c.-~uJre !.I pass. Sta '7'.i. PINTO \\l'D;gon, IOD coaters 1 NEW 1974 BMWs ..,.......,.... · · ~ Union Service, 1476 S. E. JO.t • • mileage auto. 1Ur. A real · 1 Trucki 9560 , 1 1 .., . • • • LEASE A BRAND NE\V 74 Bri!it<ll s A 38,IXXl original miles, '63 Wag. PIS, PIS, fl 1 r, • hc-•uty'' S5l-0099 wknds & e SPRING e -_ 111 pre·r~'a uea e,. prit'es TOYOTA 1200 Corolla Sedan =~=·-'o·=·=----7 In1pala V-8 auto, factory AM/FM stereo. lug rack. I." •es · (
Llf:llT \\'EIGHT 71 TO''OTA pit' k. up , ,-...,..._.,, ~...,_..J Jllm:I Bench BL, 'Ylestmlnstcr for only $61.26 p.!r n10. 36 · '67 V\V BUS, home-inade ·11.tr, looks & runs Kttat. Ofig O\Vnr. 673-4573'/eves, , 1 · , 0 4 .vi 25 fl.fPG '
• SALE • '
' i\.i\l-Fl\J, ""'"'· Y:ide 11,~·s, :KA~ 892-&iSl ay.2500 11105, open end lease. I camper, rblt eng. 4 mo or 492-9(13.1 or 492-9136 4M-2n2 73 PINT , s..,..., • 4Cn> mi ~'arr. 725-7381 7:30 1'1uke oUer! \\'(' scrvu·e 11hat 11'l' lirll. eHn1ri shi·ll. t·scf't 1~lnd. MGB 9744 1 4 "" '65 EL CAMINO '72 FORD LTD S<1uire l-493-918!1
I 11895 "-I ff '1 I Al\1 to :.w Pl\1, Dully. W l PS PR 10 Huy no11 11h1lt• good 1.e ert1on · _rJr urs " er. "us ~ ....._ Jnimacula!e cone!. All nl.'\v agon. a r, , i 9960 1s ~till a ·aihible! I sell. 64::>-7768 ~ KA-'65 l\"IGB w/roll bar, '69 V \\'. Sunrf. A~1/Fli1 runnin~ gear. Must see lo pass. lug. rack, AM-Fr-it .P~ly~m:;.cou;.;cl~h------I
HARLEY-DAVIDSON '73 Gi\IC ll~ ion Sic r rt' . ~402 Marguerite Parkv.•ay Toneau & Top, radio, Rr-blt Pngin('. Runs & A.ppl't'<'inte. 673-7774 stereo. Orig. o 1v 11 er I -
of \\'es1n1inster A/C, Al\1/Fl\I tap.-dC'l'k. l\1ission Viejo 557-9818 aft.7 looks ext'ellent. $llOO. or "·1~o~c=·1-1E=.v~M~al=ib=u-.=v=_,~, =,-d~,. _m_S-'5 __ 1'_1_4"_-271_2_· ____ : ATLAS
!l30ti Bolsa, \Ve~tminsler j auto. Xlnl cu11d. $4.iOO. Call USE AVERY P\\'Y EXIT. Opel 9746 oUC'r., 646"2170 aft 6· eulo, PS. alt cond., Good ·n FORD LTD Sq u i re I
BPt11 n Brookhurst & ~1agno!ia , aft ~pn1, 53&--0430. 831·:in4ll e 495.4949 l"d!l66bl V\~ Bug. Very depen-cond, 45,00'.I mi., 8J9...5fi6.t Wagon, 10 pass ... air ~· Chrysler/Plymouth ~~'lti:!il :1: ~:•10 1 ·07 1~ T. G.\IC. Huns xlnt. ___ ___ '69 OPEL RALLYE Auto. a r . .,1ust SC'll t!~ill ~·uek. lug. rack, radlO, M1C'h. Open Dnlly& Sun. 'til lOPM
AWARD i\Tusl M"ll tl11s \l.'C'Ck. '1973 B?-1\\' 2002: ll,SOO n1iles lrfl~s .. ,ne~ paint. IO\v n1iles, '71 Toyota 1600 I SSOO o1· orrer. Call 673..fi885. '65 CHEV. Caprice.. 4 dr. radllll tires, Very clean. 2929 llarOOr Blvd.,
MOTORCYCLES Call 673-6.i\S.l. an11fm 2."1 n1pi:: Ii skin,, & XW"IT in &: out. 831-~0 I" b -" I Volvo 9772 Excel Motor. Alr oond. $2,cro. 5.52-7120 Costa Mesa $5 150 I' · 67--IG99 " Dir 1.e~' rakes. t1r'C'S & uRtL Bargain $550. 646-lt:i6. Hondu. Triu1nph. Yarnahu 1972 CHEV. Luv PI U · · ~\'C'nings ::i· • I l\0111 sh()(·ks. Dyno·!uncd · ON1'E c t 1 · '70 LTD Wagon, lo nilleagc, 546-1934
11>:.o ~r11·porl Blvd, Cosla O si2r·d 11hl~ ,{ 111-cs. :\ln1 Capri 9715 Peugeot 9748 l..01v rnilcnge. l\l,1ny c•xt! ns 1 70 .M . ar 0· c C'~n, a/c, pis, p/dlsc brks. Jui::. -----=~==~
rond. $1500. /!4(}...11173 , I Orii.:. 01\nrr Pr1. pc111y I '74 VOLVO inu.~t !1!r: low book, Sl650. rack, new tires, $1850, '72 PLYMOUTH DUSTER '.\!('.~;, · 642-4l4S .73 C\PHr \.6 . If 62 PC'Ug'.t.'Ol 4dr, Gas Saver Best oflf'r ti-lj-''34'' Cail Si::i-6116· 1 842-0051 16,IXXJ 1nilt'!'I, 1•x<.'l'lil'nl, 2
'60 FORD Trurk, vciy 1 ' , 1 1 ·':, ''~~ o00 27~lPC:, Good n1echan1cal Anyllnie -• '6.1 !~PAL;\, 2 cir. ~Int •74 FORD Ran hero f'illy Door H.T. Au!on11Hic, power
..-:: l!t.:SKY 450 D t' s r r 1 ';i;;~1r· g~l 'l;~~rk ll'uck, :;~1~~~'. ~~;.1~~~1 ~~~;;i, i3iso. rond. S-125 5-10-0K'i.) --I · Best Deal 1 l'un111ng t·or~~ n. H, gd llrcs ' equlp·d. One o~ii£>r: SI~"'" slt>ering, .i>00·cr ~1r11kcs. nlr
_\!a..,lel'. liken ·11 . Ex!rcnirly 1111· · a.. · ~J&.-0~93 p h 9750 _ __ I · .. ~ brakrs •. $3.'iO .• '. 73--0227 hy appl only, B33-8320 ronrlltl.0~1u1g., vinyl l'OOI.
r1•!1ahle. 5" cu1'nu1ts $9.iO., ·1.i C~LJCA ~ilver, 111·,air .. a. 1 . . orsc e ·..-.~TOYOTA CELICA Cf>l" Anywhere! 69 CHEV. l\ingsy,,00,1 , !965£.'(XI. S2675. Johnson &
fi')·7i'>2S 1 sh•i'('f) radio, \'inyl lop, 9.000 72 .C,\PRI, LI1 :O.l1t.~:1ge, ),tick PORSCHE Auto. traJ1s., air, land:n1 I LEASE OR BUY ii·agon. Top oond., 101,. inilc. 72 RANCHERO, ~ e I us c , Son •, ~nroln/l\Jrrl'ury, 2626 ·o I' . h I . I• I nillc·:<. !1i:~·::i.105. sh1!1, a i'. sunroof, rlcl'Or ·7~ 91' 20 roof, ma)!s & SUPERB O\'El!Sf·.·,\s Dl''.Lf\'l·-fl\' ', Jlll11st sell 11.0:J(). 67!>1i09.l m~!..;, L54l~e,,!'.,e2w8. x1r_1! t"Ond.1 lfarlj(I'· Bl ., Co\!. ;~w.56:m. 1'\ -•en11er e me rs, gc, group &16·5669. . • 1r·1 20-10 DI -5,,.11JU .rvoo I c='-'o==c.-~-~~~ likl' nP11·. $2.J ea. Call Vans 9570 ' ' F'ullv lu.."ury equip p e cl .! " -r. SPt-:CIALISTS 'CllEVY ·10 i\talibu. \'·fl, lo · nm ;i pm. 1 'TJ ousri::n, ::·s1xl, 6-cyl,
liifr8li6 ' Datsun 9720 cornplete. NE\\'. save like '69 CORONA, .i llr, ,\Fl'. I lllil('S, xtra elean, R/11,. '65 FORD Galuxy 500. J.!•'IS 2-1 ffiflg., \'l'l''Y clean.
·-1 ~OHTO~ COi\ll\IA!'\DO, ·117 ~'flHD V11n, 6 cy!, 3 s(XI, crazv. Black on Blaclc. I Xlnt t'Ond. 51200. Aft. 5 .~ 1
91'18•11 L1111~1 nuro. p/s, 51680, 1146-2-'121 j 61SJ_Cf)j;,;, 11,.:{IO n1iles. Or~ly ~rive.n by ~11,neii·'. .. fi .. mill's, t'Oinpl) pan£"lrrt 1r IX'd. Un<ler 73 DATSUN . $769.i I '1kcnds -552·80:t!. lUc,.u.n. ~Ml i<it;-F! C 11 rt 6 \rife to 1\·ork. $119.i Pr1vat~
.. 1ioiJIX"ll, shaiii. :iil-662S , :IJ:'\!, S!XJO. l\lus1 s c 11 . 1200 SEDAN , l'hQne 5.:'lll-1000 D.~R. '71 .T?:OT.~ .1.~ ~pc .. Lo11 VOLVO ;.1;;n1~1, a~\~~1~'8
4 a s;~ ·71 LTD Squire \\lagon piu1y. :>SI-:1Jj\.
'i.\ llondas 730 8.· 5~ 1 G7:r:i?:i2 Gl'eC'n auto111atic tr11nsn1is· 72 :-ILVER Tar1;11. ~.4 !HIT I 1111!ra&e. f.\:io.:1. tnnrhtuiu Sl~-fl\67 or .\:·12-5..q?JI PIC;11.P~~~<' a~;..,~.1.g~7_2167 19i0 ORAi~Gl:.'. Ha1Tdt'U<la,
Xtras, $195<1 & $1700
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.53 INT SC'hool hus. J>;n1 sion,' "!he n11l~agt> rhan1µ· 2A . S11tx:1: rond. }"or infor. S\j95. s:r~-. ...,~lll' !~lli!i IJarbor. C.:'11 (;\[\'1!0::\ (h--I -v111~l 1011. nu·, lrtpl' deck, gd
·19S..ffi.19 l'On\'1·11, 1nos1ly Jl"!"•;rrtP<I, ion." lh1rd!y use>1!. only l'allJill-.H l3. '71 TOYOTA, RTl!:l. I ril".'I•l7J\'Ol\·o l1''s" I' .hfir rys er 9925 'TI TORINO Xlnt n1rl'h eu11d.n1ak1•0ffl'r
'G'.• -,,,0 NORTO.' SS j ~·uns ,, forcvt•r. ~ l 0 0 0 .1 1 l,00.J 111ill'S. (2'24JF,\ 1. '71 !JJ.J PORSC.11E, :-.!nt rond, auto, lo1v n1i., Be\011• Book. · . LI! . ~. ' j" ·. • 1t 1 · '.'. .(' ,_ , I eond SllOO. Ask for Alr. e 4.IJ2-i'..!!17 e
• , 0 d . I .i IS-1 .• 3~. 0 I $2388 'sk' s~ non 0 . GT'-"07-I ~14-.0 -r 7"-G ! II II~ llll., Sp< . IJ ,Ul);;., I i2 TO\VN & c 0 un tr)'' Ol~nl, 673-3450 \\'eC'kf!nvs ' . ' ' ~ Con1manuo. uls1an HlJ:: ny . . ''.: 1:1g:._..;_.-i HYS .>.l I, '... ;:i.-.... .• i J1L•\1· 11r('S, SIC'l't'tl·l<tjl•' play· Chryslrt•\\'~n 31.000n11,H1t'I;-,, ~' ' '. ·I bS \,\J.J,\~T s~!nl 6, lo
t'Otlrl. S."IDO. 979-06-IS 1 ·n.~ DODGt.:: Vun :i.4 Ton ~ 61" 2·1~1(1. I Triumph 9767 c•t". :wooo nu. One 011nt•r. 1'0nd. p 111ndo11s. p S(',11, I 7• I INTO Runabout 2000 Pl nllll•s, CL'l-.AN. S1:io
Spor1sn1an 10.'l. V·S nu10. '6ti PORSCll!'.:, 9!2, ~' :-pd. ll('aut. rond. inside .\: nut. ant frn stPrro, 111 xln!, I'll!! 4 ~pd 11ans ~/II. A/C 5-l."-2.-.;-,3
HONDA CL :l(J<l. 1974· Only $1200. ti.iG-752!1 S29.-I(), ·1;r; Tr:J. ~111t fir1·. 1!:1 nl .~· ~·J!t' Bl'~I orf£>r CJ\'l'I' S'.!S;,(t, l~J,t. l'Ond Best ntf£'r buys cnr I ,Pi·!\'. Pl)," Sl9T:> 64&-7214 11!!7! DU!)!ER, st1ek. 6 l')'I,
Hi92 rni's. \\'ind<>hield ,I;.: 1 '6-1-01 V " bl 6 33375 CAMINO CAPISTRANO 67:i-1Sfl6 tnp + 1nn11P<11t. Cood l·On· """n f 71 R \~CllF.'HO GT 1 ut, l'a<"k. S7!f.i. &12-30i3. 1 {0 ,\",re lC'ng., ~•N JUAN C A,.STIAMO d •1.0•1., ··1-·-1'0111 pri1ate par!y · ~ · '• 1 '• l'A(hO & ht•fller, gnnd ('t'on .
1·yl. runs J.!OOd. S SO 0. •. ~ • '""""~·-··---Fot S;.i!l' 61 Poi·sl·he ·Super _ olUltl .>-~ i i.. ·;u \'CIL\'0 Hil air, lil~--021<1. PS. PB. our l'Onrl illus! SC'!l, ~·,.'\il'll' $1200. 642-.ll'j,)J
·7o CB 750 Honda. Extras. 673-:iiW,1 aft. noon 493-3375 or lll-1375 I 00 · e:tbt'nlat j Volkswagen 9770 S:.'ifllJ. f\r Offcl' 'GS CHR'l'f'LEB. \\'i\GON. S.l!OJ. IH:1-.'ID:>o -, Pontiac 9965
Sl,03Cl. -r-ilakl' Offet'. ! '&I c: 1· 4 .....i 6 1 1::6-17'~ 6.1!!-:i62S aft .t I..oadt>d, Full n.11vc1'. VACA-I Mustang 9952 1, ----------1 :~16-1918 afl ~ PM rono lne :<1"" <'Y' 1971 DAT3U~ :110, 28 ;\!PG , . , . . • ·:'6 \'\\' Bl'G, dril'<' lrain. o-~101orcvcle Rentals eompl ~it. !\lags: L1n1e av~. ~ dr. :iuto, A~l/Fl\1 , G!l. POHSCllE. 911.T rbh enq. xlnt body ~· int t·le·in S·l''j AUTOS USED TJON SPECL\L. Cared fnt· I --'li9 GP. A·C, P/S, P/B, Llav·\~'i-t•k·tl1on!h. g]'('en. S6.'lll or B.0. ::i36-7797 fronl/t\•;u· spkrs. t'l'Clin. :.1.1chel111.~. hon1 s A~lffl\I ! Mus{ &>II! j;~2-i~i!l7 ' · • · sin1·e-fll'll', ~7063 01· ijj ~!us!. 21\!l, Buill. ~ i::pd, ~:k.-.A1~1·Fn1 .. N~1 t:l't's ! \\lf.~TI::ri:-.i (.l'CLt: 671-34'1.i '71 DODGE Van. 6 cyl. Good hu<'kl'I~. !'hm1lll' 11hls, S11'el ~:i:ioo. lin111;ic. '19-l-1S66 ·. r 1 , AMC 9905 1-&16·9797. j fasl, mags, air sho('k~. ne11• · 187 · 5 ."'' ,1111• • n l'OI , . , . ·-. I con<!. J\·lake offer. l\'u brake, rarli01ls, s1.·h1·0 •'' hit us 1 , Subaru 9762 I 67 \ .\\ · Bu\.!, 11~11· cht!~, Continental 9930 radinlor, stC'rro casscttE' $ 5· · Z.H3:m.
jj(){'c h'.A\\ASKI, j2, xlnt nia~ & 1i1-es. 6i;)...:?3J1 01'11! 011ru·r-. u11nt c_'Ond.. -1 nf'<'ds v,il1·l' Juh, S41J. ' deck. 111ust dri1-<' 10 ap. '6-: FIREU!Hl> 1~1n1·ert.
conrl. .6, FORD Ecooinl•'n", .,,,.,,
11
Sl~lill. f!.10-87:\~I ~~'4li32 l%I RauibllT .~l<ltion \\'agon. ·-3 co 'T 'E --:--; prreiall', b r nut 1 f u I Mn-$975 or HC's! off .. 1· Call 67.>-Mi~ , .. I TOP DOLLAR ( ;n!X) r·Pn(tinun S '.! 5 ll I 1• . N IN l\'T,\L !\If\ I\ I
1 . , _ gas mileage $~50 <lr b<.'!>t 'i3I)A1'.SL'.'\21U" Blar"k.Slilt '71 \'\\.Bu:<.,\:'.! F,\I. .'\Int .'i l!l-Ol!I\ RC'~).'.r 11/h1'011·n l~alhC'r in· ~litio_n,. $900. or o(fl'r.1 -li7J-'.!.l:l:? ~9. llONDA :Jj{), Good con-offer 494-8811. Ullllf'I' l\;'\IT;'lnt~. J\:O.J.}''.\J , FOR ('Olld, &1l'J.: r.1ld do11n -trnor. \'lrll'l rop. E\·ery F'=· .rlil-:>S12 'ti~ l'Of\'T. Bn11/H.'l'illc,
d1t1011. Lo\v nult•agt>. l\fust Aut Want d 95901 l'adio. Air. 111<1~~. rally I SPORTCARS I t'.11l1flC'l' brr!. !16~-2..-0.1. Buick 9910 ll'il. \'ou ·Could fnl<t!:1n<" '69 l\IACH J, :>!,COO nil. 4 sixl s:.100.
sell. l-~h: IWn aft~. R9-l-2'llli. os 8 1n1t•1u1". rroni .'. rf' a 1 1 ·i.i_V\r c_ unip<'I'. xinr.runnl.ni:: . . . I :!0.000 n11. $6750 ofll't'. La•. sti<"k. Sl29i ~552..f.021
l'.'9 HUc.'K\' .. ~ CADILLACS 'poilC'l'S $:>900. 59~· l!l..\j 1Jf1crl All rnodels .'::. _vears ,, Cl R I I 191:9 L1':; \Hl\E. :! dr hardtop. O:GKK,'.Dlr. Gl.",--02.~1 I &lfi.JS&i ""' Ex··~ I N " ~ II 1 . 11. 1111. ean . .;JIL:l"l')I }uJI r)' I'. air. Best ofl et". .,.., ; ""-l(TVk:40r.,A/C.
ASI<ING S47J. 5 11 eekdays, a ilay runni::1· SEE US FIRST! Bike l'nl'k. S2000. !i~:.1-ili7l. l'al! aft. ti: 61.1.0171. I Corvette 9932 Oldsmobile 9955 P/S, Pta. F..xe1?ptionaJly
,,,,_,,977 Largest Select1'on \\'Cckenr!. 11° 11~ rn -" •t * \'\\' TIJING. Ttadio .. -.,-.,.,.L-\l(l~C-ONVERT I ·'-an. ="· ......,...~ 72 HONDA CH 4'-" In Orange County WILL BUY YOUR • 1 ' '-;s, '. ' ' . \\'II.I. l'AY TOP DOLL,\R ~ales I. SP:vtce :'c---'--"'-""-'='°-=99=74
.I<' _ ,.,,,..,.,..._..,""'"'""Y-• I Rollr·a,i::e, 5100 n1ilt'K S2SOO. !BL",,. "'' 1-nd Xlnl i·und 0 I 0 DSMOBILE Veg• EXCELLENT CQt.!DITJON Coupe DeViller -Sedan De· DATSUN TOYOTA
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..,...,.,_ !JtiS-IJO'j .. 0 .• , ·:. ·-· ·' F R ''OUR VETTE dll'., L -~--------! • .~llot~••~;~~;<~;.';;a , b~::i-1Xi6 or &I>' l l;,7 j Hol"-&~ 1 S9:i0. 557·!l1i5 Vil!~" -E' Oorados • Cor OR VOLKSWAGEN 1965 VW $300 -. · · • -GMC TRUCKS ''72 \'EGA 2300. Xlnt c.'Ondi· ·~~1~~yz~~('I, o;~~L1·1~\ l~i~~ ~;;~~~l~~d:~J~~ ~~:.;~,her r;l~ ~~ ~L~~: ~:~tt Toyota 9765 ~t't'tls 11·ork." 612·01XZ ·~:~d:~l:cDO n AD o . ~l~I~ Cougar 9933 : UN•~~~~~TYA(;LDS 1 1ion~:-~~~ ()~ri~1.:2
i.<'a\'lng Stah· 91i?.-5:1fr1 l\:E:NT ALLEI\:. j.ltJ.Q.t.I:?. \"\\' SQBK '1\9, aulo. :~7.nlO ~9 COL'G ,\ft Xl~i. ct! rond. I '7'J. llATCilBi\CK. -•·f"<'I ",O 'fO\'OT,\ CORO",',\ 1 1 SI •9· "'ilPog1·. lo111IC'ct. ! Ii.> 'I .1 s1· ·• ...,...11 H bor Blvd ~ ' '69 2~ BUL'fACO ,.,.,.._ ... ,,,.1 I ,~ nut'~. n11t1t'I". .. J. fJll"-:. o11nt'l . •h.i "°"" &r , l~11nl. "ill ;1rl'~'fll old!'r rur
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Motor Homes, 1 FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS Only $1799
Sale/Rent 9160 Call or eome In to see us. BARWICK DATSUN
e VACATION e
/\T YOUR O\\'l'i PACE ... NEWPORT
IMPORTS
IM•OO• • O~C
33375 CAMINO CAPISTRANO
$A.f4 JUAM CAPISf-AMO '"'°"A ••o."<I~•~.•~•''"• 493.3375 or 831-1375 Choo~e f1'0n1 So. Citlil.
··Largest Selection.''
t01'C'l' 40 ~1inis -~ '.\1.11.'s). DALES 3100 \\1• Coast J.I""')'., N.B. 1972-240 Z. 642-9405 LO,\lJED. ,\\UST ~IOTOR HOME S.\CRIFtCL
RENTALS TOP CASH. !or clean u.~cd :0:-16-3111'.!
Redhill t: S:111 Juan, Tustin Cl:ll'!i aud tr ucks
171 ·11 83.li·ct-IOO H d Ch I t D,\TSUN 210 Z·'.'1.WU n1L I=~=~ OWGr eYrO e Jo~\:tral<. Ul'st offer. PH:
SHARE WINNEBAGO ;\h1c1\rthur A.nd J:;mtx>rec ~~16-33..al
20',i interest, use 10 \vteks a Ne1vport BC'arh -.,~,-D~A-T-SU_N_P~i-,.-,-U-p-·
year. Phone 640--0482. 833--0555 i\lu.~1 Sell • $1·!;io.
1973 27' '''lNNEBAGO niotor-\VE HUY * !'>11·3-117 *'
hon1e, has everything. Reas. t Il\-IPORTl~D AUTOS '1'1 o,\TSUN, 2402, auto, air,
ralcs. 002-4587. I BEST PRICES PAIDI 11,000 mi .. l\lust Sl'll.
Trailers, Travel 9170 j Dean Lewis Imports * 6i~:l r:\,..~. *
I 1~65 Hr l'l.xlr, C.l\I. 6'16·930::: '70 510 \\'flg1n1, 4 spd, r;uJi:1 ls.
'i:'! 11.\RDTOP tent tl'lr. sJps \\'ANrf:-0-to buv l 96:i ~lrrt cli•a1i. Sl:!!l:.i. C11ll
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{;],\'.I ,\111" Sall': J\IA!'\X
SH. 9 S!~ kit '.\J,\i\:\ Bug·
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1no rngt 'tili \'\\' 1no r1u;.1 I
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a~k fnr Jnt>n.
TIR~E~S~--
546-7070 G~.-.-.-,.-1~----~9"°701 'i3 !!ONO,\ Civic hatchbuck.
au!o, must sell. Best offer
ABAHTJ I: l!Mi<l Z A g a 1 o ...:.,"3,17--0_29.\_._. ~--~--\Jonza ~-ifll eng. Xln1 ('Ond. '7 1 HONO.\ S«tan H.eblt cng:.1
~!lOO 846-11173 1nags ~lakr offer 4!14-260'.2
Audi 9707 c;ill aft fipn1 11l'1.0kdays 1
i1 .\LTJI 100 L..!;). ,\1r, auto., I Karmann Ghia 9735
,\)l/F:'ll i:!cr{'(l, sunroor.! , ·---·,
.\.Q.11 til't's & shnrks. LI l\·li. 71 KARMAN GHIA
5 Del1n H~rn1 \ 1:1 nf!-road pt"I' cal. :'.IUS! ~rll! s:1.ooo F:\:eo•l\ent 1..:ondltion. N1•11·
lirc'S, rittf'd fn r hii..:J11ra~ U'•'. J.jf,-0211'9 E\·es & l\'ft'krncls tires &. pain!. li-15--::i:ll Ol'
4 USC'd ,\• 1 ue11. SIOO. 96&--0.'i63
675-134:). '72 .\U!>I lOOLS i\ut<l. tr1111s .. 1-~~------=o
I ~==.,----c--"7.0: 1 su11r1~1r, .~ iminaculate in & Mazda 9738
1962 !'alco11 au1~ 1r<1ns. s.10. · out. s:n-zo.io Dir. ----------
Engine bloc·k S:1. plu'i 1n1s1• I , ., . 1974 t.U\ZQ,\ R.'\·4, A~l/f'~f
parls. Call after 4 P'.\!. 1,, AUDI L.c;JOO, aut? tran~, stereo, viJ1y1 rool. Like ne1v.
968-49il . [ 2 dr, s~_nroof, 13.j()(} nu, 4 door sedan. .586-jJ.13
1001 ECONOLINE 3 spd. S45.fffi. >IS. 7286. 11nyllme.
trans. $1:>. S!aMt'r Sj. Call BMW 9712 ·72 l\~f7A=z=o7A-. ~i:7x=.,~. -.,-,,.-. -s,-,-rro-.1
afler 4PJ\I. OOR-4!171 I ORANGE COUNTY'S ll'nlhl'I" vin) I roof. {'lee.
U.S. l\1ag J"{in1s . j hn,.>:<. 1111ll'nna 8:.1~~"~'°~· --=~I
E'=cellcnl cond. 1 !"". 1\1<k1ni:: OLDEST Mercedes Benz 9740
$100. Call 530 6340.
Roe Vehicles
Johnson and Son 21st ANNIVERSARY
CAPRI
SALE! ! !
the sexy
European
DISCOUNTS ON EVERY
CAPRI IN STOCK!
AUTOMATICS ..• 4 SPEEDS -::;;:;;.
V6s and FOUR Cylinders ~~
OVER 50 TO CHOOSE FROM!
SA VE $ HUNDREDS $ ON EVERY CAPRI
I
hnson and son
Home of the New Car
"qolden T ou "
I ,
Costa Mesa 540-5630 •
•
I
·'
' • • •
San (;Ie111enie Today's Final .
f;apistran~ EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 67, NO. 150, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANG!: COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 30, 197'4 TEN CENTS
Saddlehack Coll ge Chief _Bremer Steps Down
By JAN WORTH
Of tfMI DAiiy l"I ... ll•lt
Dr. Fred H, Bremer stepped down as
superintendent o( Saddleback College
Wednesday in ail action described by
truJtees as "a reorganization of district
administration."
Boord President Hans Vogel said
Bremer has been relieved of his duties
"by mutual agreement between him and
the board."
Bremer, 51, who has tv.·o years
remainlng on a four.year · CQJ1tract, will
retain his title as preaident of the college
and be given special usignmoots by the
board, Vogel said. He will continue to
receive his salary of $3.5,000.
Meanwhile, the search for a new
superintendeflt is scheduled lo begin at
once, with a Ju ly 1 goal for making the
final decision. The salary offered the new
superintendent has not been determined,
Vogel said.
BrcTner said he had "no comment, at
this .stage the game," about the action.
Choosing new superintendent will
be one of the rim actions facing a new
board of trustees. 'lbree new trustees are
to be elected by district voters June 4
and a new board president will be chosen
since Vogel is one of. the trustees being
replaced in the election.
"With this happening just before the
election, people are having a great
opportunity to help choose a new
superintendent, Trustee Norrisa Brandl
of Irvine commented.
Vogel said the board has several
persons in mind for the superintendent.
But he S:<Ud the position would be
advertised "statewide, if not nationwide ,"
for at least two weeks. NPA screening
committee including several board mem-
ber'I, a student, a faculty membr, a pro-
fessional educational administrator, and
a lay member of the community is sche-
Juled to be appointed soon.
Bremer has served six years with the
•
dual title of superintendent·president at
Saddleback. He came to the school as its
first dean of instruction in 1967 and was
promoted to superintendent after the
departure of the school's r ir·s t
superintendent Jack Roper . in 1968.
Under Dr. Bremer's term, Sadd\eback
College evolved from makeshift offices in
Mission Viejo to a 200.acre site offering
some 500 classes to 5,000 student s.
As the dean of instruction .
Bremer se t up the college's first
original faculty.
Pressure has been heavy on Bremer 1n
the last year. which he has called the
roughest in his career.
Tustin residents initiated a push to de-
annex from the Saddleback district, a
move which would take away up lo 1,000
students and cost the district at least a
tenth of its yea rly budget. Tax increases
to ren1aining taxpayers could go up 16 to
tSee BREMER, Page Zl
S Ill .....,..Ollll
---Domo.cvs 0 ' .'·; ..
Customers Reddin Group
Help · Grab Police Probing
-.: -
Gunman, 17 _____ 0 !\_' ~ J;lI ~~~!1-~.!! ______ ii
A timely intervention by two customers
saved a Dana Point liquor store owner
$300 Wednesday night and led Orange
County Sheriff's officers to lodge a young
gwunan in juvenile hall.
Deupties said the 17-year--0ld l\1ission
Viejo youth had already pocketed the
receipts at the Party Time liquor store.
33210 Pacific Coast Hi~\vay, after
menacing the clerk with a loaded shotgun
when the two customers entered the
premlaet.
Both men prompUy backed against the
wall when the youth told them: "Get in
here or I'll blow your beads oft."
Deputies said the clerk took advantage
of the lnterr\Jpllon to grab the youth's
weapon which went orf as the two men
struggled.
Officers said the two customers then
jumped in and helped the clerk to
overpower the gunman . They said no one
was injured in the shooling incident.
Deputies, who said the )IOUth has a
prior criminal record, staled that he will
race juvenile court action later today.
San J11an Council
Urges All-year
School Studies
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen
voted unanimously Tuesday to ask the
.school board to reconsider t h e
controversial all-year school cona?pt.
"We're not advocating any particular
plan," said Councilman John Sweeney.
author of the resolution. "We'd like to
see school facilities used on a year.round
basis."
Tbe resolution, which will be forwarded
to trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School District, urges the board to
implement some program for the "year·
around utilization of school facilities."
It states that traditional nine-month
sQ>ool systems were established in an
agi'arian setting to meet the needs of the
times, to provide a labor force for
harvesting. But llfestyles have changed
and growth pressures have accelerated
the need for construction of new school
facilltles.
"'Ibe cily council believes that the
present calendar with its nine.month
scboOl and three-month vacation period
is a remnant of our agricultural society
and an anachronism, especially in light
o' the overcrowded conditions prevailing
at many of our schools, particularly
those within this city," states the
re90lutlon.
It continues that tradition and custom
shouldn't st.and in the way of practical
needs and urges that the district "take
ld\medlate steps to plan and lo move in
the direction ol calendar revtsion 80 that
lbe11 costly, but essential, facilities can
be atlllwd \hrt>ughout the year."
Joe Wimer dtrector ol admlnislrative
ocrvictt for i!.e achoo! dlartlct, decisively
defeated the 11>15 p I a n and
overwhelmingly palled a bond issue to
build more ochoob.
"The Iii-II plan would have incrtaoed
Ille cepadt)' ol each ochool," said ·
Wimer. "The main objection lo Ille
plan wu tblt parenlJ with large families
aiJ&b\ have hod dlrferenl chlltlren on v..O..U... at dllferent Umes."
lie 111d lbe plan ha• been OJ>'lratlng ~ In many other dlllrrilJrbut ~ llCll believe thla district was ,....iy to
try It.
OU..DIN!n Sweeoey, wbo IOMd on
(lloe SCHQOL, hp II
'
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of ti... O.ity P'Utt ST•tf
San Clemente Mayor Thomas O'Keefe
said today that the City Council already
has delivered a deiiniLive order that a -
total examination of the pol ice
department operatioo be conducted by a
consulting firm headed by former Los
Angeles Police Chief Thomas Reddin.
San Juan
Eyes Dropping
Consultants
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of ti... D .. ly P'lltl Staff
San Juan Gapistrano city councilmen
took a long. look at the beefed·up public
works budget \\'ednesday and mulled
over a proposal to phase oul the
consul ling engineer.
.• Jack Kuhl>ta, who has been on contract
with the city for 12 years, told the council
that retaining his firm would not cost the
city any more than "in-house" engineers.
' But City Manager Donald G. Weidner
said engineers Wlder his control would
better serve the public.
"A ronsulting firm in anything has to
constantly retain its own integrity and
philosophy," said Weidner. "It can't
change colors like a chameleon. I think if
\\'e want to retain our uniqueness Yoe
nt'ed in-house engineering.''
He said as long as the city continues to
contract with consullanls, the city will
not reach its optimum efficiency because
the center of gravity, the center of con-
trol, will not be in city hall.
''One ol the most disorienled,
stumbling, bumbling areas or govern-
ment bas been in pu~ works," said
Weidner. "When I c&rrre ltere this place
was a zoo. Nobody talked to each other.
"Now things have smoothed out"
He said things would be even smoother
if the city moves to its own staff of
engineers, using consultants only for
special projects.
George Madsen, who ls the consulting
finn's employe who war.ks directly with
san Juan Caplstraoo, outlined the
advantages of having his firm, which ls
now called Woodside.Kubota, retained.
"One advantage ls ·you can get a
specialist wben you need one," said
l.iadsen. "We have 22 people and et
times there might be 15 of those people
working on a city project. We try to
(See CONSULTANTS, Page I)
Thief Can Catch
Up 011 Reading
A llgbt~ingered tble~ .Probably wn not
etpecUng Ille yield he got when ho !Hted
tho lbopplng bag of UC Irvine 1tudent
James H. · lackoon ll'onl a South Coast
Plaza bus 11op bench Wednesday.'
JackaQI/, 20, left Ille puce! on Ille
bench and went Inside a store •to buy a
pack ol clpreltes, police ~Id.
When be retumed the bus and the
people wilting for It bad gone, aloni with
bis )!al!kage.,
Police said the bal contained a
brlclcase and several b o o k • :
"Disarmament and BrtUlh PoUUcs,"
"Basic: Spanish," 11Spanlsh Handbook,"
and "Origin of the Cold War."
•
O'Keefe conceded that the fonnal
action by the council in a closed session
Tuesday morning "might better have
taken place in regular session."
But he added that because the entire
matter focused on sensitive persoMel
items, the fonnal motion was still
privileged .
The mayor declined to discuss the
specific ;...,.. or mqtivatioll ol .. Ille
council In hiring !lie firm of Law
Enfon:emeot Consulting and Research,
Inc., but said Ulat Public Safety Direct.or
Cliffonl Murray agreed lo the total
exaumation fll the department.
Serious morale problems brought forth
by several key members of the
department weeks ago in private
conversations with city councilmen
launched a series of private council
sessions that resulted in the consultant
hiring.
Since Tuesday's session, the onl y
official public discussion of the entire
matter has amounted to a one-
paragraph release from City Manager
Kenneth Carr to the elfect that he had
been authorized by councilmen to work
out the terms of. the Reddin project.
Talk.s took place between Carr, Reddin
and former Highway Patrol Commission-
er Harold Sullivan (a Reddin assistant)
Wednesday morning.
Today, carr had absolutely nothing to
say about the meeting.
Within the police department, officers
have been ordered not 'to discuss any
elements of. the issue which focuses on
Murray's reported insistence to superiors
that morale is not a serious problem in
his department.
Although O"Keefe said Murray agreed
with the Reddin project, the chief thus
far has not met formally w i t h
councilmen to diS<:US.5 the situation.
The panel plans yet another executive
session Friday moming, presumably to
hear from CarT the results of the ~ion
with Reddin and Sullivan.
The fll1TI specializes ln full-scal e
evaluations o( a department's
perfonnance and problems and lben
makes specific recommendatK>ns for
corrections U the staff of experts
beUeves they are needed.
A similar project concluded recently in
the city of Carlsbad resulted in
recornmendati011!! that the chic! be
(Sot POLICE, Page 11
... ...
. ·•
0 10 ..
•
MIDEAST PLAN -Line A marks cease-fire line between Israel
and Syria forces. Llne A·l shows bulge Quneitra to base of three
overlooking hills that will be demilitarized but controlled by Israelis.
Line B marks other side of buffer ·zone.
l{issinger Returns Home
After Mideast Peace Coup
CAIRO (UPI) -Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger headed home to
Washington today after the successful
conclusion of his latest and toughest
diplomatic mission, winning agreement
from Israel and Syria to stop fighting on
the Golan Heights and pull back their
armies.
The bistoric agreement will be signed
in Geneva Friday by military delegations
from the two countries. It provides for an
immediate cease fue· m the Golan
Heights front where IsraeU and Syrian
forces ex.changed artillery fire for the
80th consecutive day today.
A senior American official with the
Kissinger party said the United States
would provide high altitude surveillance
to assure that all the provisions w~e
being carried out just as it does irf1he
case of the lsraeli·Egyptian disengage·
ment accord.
The same official also disclooed that
Kissinger \Vas on the point of failure
three times during his marathon
MIDEAST TRUCE FACES
CHALLENGE. Story, Page 4 -·---negotiatiom with Israeli and Syrian
leaders. He said Kissinger had packed
his bags in preparation for departure but
changed his mind because he was
convinced that failure would mean
renewed war in the Middle East.
Capo Beach. Resident
Paul O'Sullivan Dies
Kissinger stopped off in .Cairo to brief
President Anwar Sadat, one of hls chief
allies in bringing aOOut the agreement
between Damascus and Jerusalem.
Kissinger had helped negotiate a slmilar
cease-fire agreement between Egypt and
Israel on the Suei front ln J anuary.
They held 3~~ houni of talks in Sadat's
private home in the Cairo suburb of Giza
and later told a news briefing" they
reached agreement "lo establish a joint
commission for cooperation between the
two eowttries in various fields for their
mutual benefit."
Paul Eugene O'Sullivan, . a pioneer
resident of the C&pistrano Beach
Pallaades with Ille cWllncllon of having
beeu oae of Ille colony's II rs t
homeowners, died Wednesday In San
Clemente. He was 7t. ·
Mr. O'Sullivan, a rf!)denl of 26601 Via
CalK.nu., .... Vele1;$R ol World War I
and had been a lon(l-lime Mil estate
-er and contractor along the 51JUth
Orange Coa.!I. • • •
Besides alftll•tiona •.with ve~· =. lie wu "'"-.itJve.member of Ille
of COiumbus and !\" Holy Name Ill. ·Old 'Miilion San Jlllll\
. ~"'Ills ...w.... Gladya: three
..;: .. ol Palo Alto, Paul of
~--~ ... Jomeo of c... M.._ -
• • ••
other survivors include th r e e
daughters, Maureen Latham of San
Clemente, Sharon Little of Pacheco
Peak, Ariz., and Sheila Askih of Goleta ;
IZ grandchildren and two g re a t •
grandcbildreo.
Roary wlll be recited lonlght at 7:30
and Mass of Christian Burl31 Friday at 1
p.m., both In the chapel ol St Edward's
Catholic Church In Capistrano Beach. ~I wm follow Frldly'a rites and wlll lie" In Holy Sepulcher Cemetery In
Orange. ' Lemetdd Mortuary II In charge of
IUTllllOffi .. ts, and friends who with may
make donltloat to Ille sL F.dwanls b&>IJdllti !Imel, In care ol tj>e church, or to
the C R. 8raille Foundallon, P.O. Box
Itel,-
•• t
Kminger's marathon 33-day Middle
East mission ended at 6: IS p.m. (8 : 15
a.m. PDT) when he left Cairo Airport
alter a slx·hour stopover In the Egyptian
capt tar.
Tax Delinquencies
Absent in San Juan
Tazpayers In San Juan Capistrano m
dohia their fair sharo lo lill the clly
coif en.
Finance lltttctor Jobn O'Qlllivan
rei>0r1ed thla week that for lhe first lime
since Incorporation tho dty ha! no tax
delinquencies. The city WU lnco1porated
LI years ago .
·; ,.
--
2 Wounded
In P1~isoner
Escape Tr}'
By TO~f BARLEY
Three Orange County jail prisoners,
one of them a convicted killer, today
tried to shoot thei r way to fieedom fron1
a holding cell in the Santa Ana county
courthouse.
A prisoner identified as Frank Allan
O'Hare, 25, of Anaheim, was reportedly
shot twice in the chest as the trio fled
along Santa Ana streets with officers in
pursuit
O'Hare is listed in critical cooditlon in
Orange County Medical Center, police
said. They said the escaped prisoner also
suffered other minor wounds daring the
pursuit.
Police !18id an off-duty California
Highway patrolm an who joined them in
the pursuit was shot in the ann. He wa s
not immed!ately identified.
Police said the patrolman Is reported
in satisfactory condition at Santa Ana
Community Hospital. They said no other
police officers or deput ies were hurt in
the pursuit of the three prisoners.
O'Hare's t"·o companions have been
lenatively identified as Lawrence Eugene
Wilson . 30. of Los Angeles who is
a\\·aiting sentencing on first degree
murder conviction and Prince Pico
Tarpley, 18, 0£ Anaheim .
Tarpley and O'Hare are currently on
trial before Superior Court Judge
Raymond Thompson on charges of
armed robbery.
Conflicting reports by four police
agencies appear to add up to the fact
that the trio overpowered a sheriff's
deputy ln the holding tank of the county
courthouse .
Santa Ana police said O'Hare was shot
early in the chase and Wilson was
quickly recaptured.
They said Tarpley wa s the last to
be seized by officers as he sprinted
several blocks from the c o u n t v
courthouse and evaded his pursuers unt il
they reached 17th Street in Santa Ana.
District Picketed
LARKSPUR (AP) -Aboul HO
teachers picketed the J\.1t. Tama1pais
School DW:rict today in a one-day
walkout protesting ,the board's offer of a
4 percent wage hike for next year. The
teacherai.. members of the California
Teachers Association, are demanding ~
15 percent increase.
o.range Coast
'
Weather
It'll be cloudy Friday morning
but clearing to mMtly sunny skies
by the afternoon along tilt Orange
Coast. Highs at the beache> 66-M
rising to 72-74 inland. Overnight
lows tonjght SUO.
INSIDE TODA\'
Two ~n who often debated
over their drinking abilititi,
held n match to decide onct and
for alt who wa.s t~ chan1pion. Tiie~ both died. Stor~. Page 4.
....... II L. M.. .. ,, 11 c....... ,.
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• ..,..TITllR'l I I JI p....... »1J *"''··· J::I ... ._ " --..
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•
2_~Y PILOI ~l..
Pickets Set •
'
For 2 CHP
Locatio11s
Pickel lines "'ill be formed l\londay
morning around the t"'o California
~li gh\1·ay Patrol offices in Orange County
as part of a statrwidc effort to get higher
pay for the CHP.
Off-duly patrolmen and their wives will
carry signs from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. in
support of Assembly Bill 3801. sponsored
by San Francisco Democrat \\'illie
Bro\vn.
Officer Joe l\1endez said today about 30
to 50 pickets are expected to demonstrate
in front of the \Vestrr.instcr office at
13200 Golden West St. No one at the
Santa Ana office, 2031 E. Santa Clara St.,
knew how many \Yould appear there,
though they guessed at least 20 to 30.
Mendez said it will be an
''informationa l picket" designed to alert
the public to the need for passage of the
bill . The picket line wlll only be manned
by off-duty personnel and wives. and t.hc
CHP's normal operation \1·ill not be
hindered, he said.
Brown's bill, according to Mendez,
·would make the pay of Highwa y
Patrolmen equal to the average of the
five largest police departments in the
state.
Those departmC'nts would be San
Francisco, Oakland, San Diego. Los
Angeles, and Los Angeles County
Sheriff's Departm<'nL
"We're the second largest police
department in the state," Mendez said,
"and we think our pay should equal the
others."
He said the picket lines would be for
'just one day. and there should be pickets
at all CHP offices throughout the state.
San J11an Course
May Be Speeded
W1tl1 Loopl1ole·
A loophole may give San Juan
Capistrano its second golf course withoul
its developers having t~ go through
lengthy city plan reviews.
The regulation IS-hole course, which is
ptop05ed for 77 acres of the Bathgate
Ranch, will be built in an agMcultural
zone. Because a golf co1:1rse ls a
permitted use in that zone it does 11ot
require city review of its design or ifs
associated facilities -dinner house.
clubhouse, and miniature golf course.
The privately owned course, to be built
by Golf Properties of Newport Beactr,
will be located at the extreme northen1
end of the city between the San Diego
f'reeway and the foothills to the west.
Included in the project, according to
Chuck Schoos. spokesman for the
developers. will be the a par~l golf
course approximately 4,000 yards in
length: a 36-hole miniature golf course
which will be lighted at night; a game
room, plus a complete clubhouse,
practice range, and restaurant.
From Page 1
SCHOOLS ...
the district's first citizens' comm ittee lo
study all-year school, had originally
suggested that the city place all-year
school on a municipal ballot to get an
"advisory" vote of the people. Other
members of the council suggested that il
might be best to ask the school board to
reconsider the measure. rather than
putting it to the vote of the people in one
city alone.
The legality of having a school district
measure put on a municipal ballot at the
suggestion of a municipal body was also
· questioned.
· The city council recently asked the
1 school board to reconsider its stand on
•• .
"
' . ' " . . '~ ..
•,' •. ' •
' I
'
high school attendance boundaries, but
the board took no action.
OIAHGE COAST SC
DAILY PILOT
T~ Orange Co1<1 O.oly "1!0! .. ~h ,.n,ch I\~
.. ,,.,., I .... Ne"•"'""$ ,, °"O''>t>to<I ~I"" !>1"9'1 ea.!! Pu~l•l"•"Q (.r'1'(11)"Y Sena< fie e<11T....,, lt8
IP'Ul>I•>"~· ~ono,, rllrO<JQn f,,,yy to• eo.!1
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S.n Cl•.,,~nJ•IS1n Mn Cl"'"'"roo A or<>QN!
•"'!<Of'~• nd ''~" ,. l'Ull'·'""d S1•utll1,,.,. •"IJ s.,,,._
M>• '"" l>"'""•llill ""Dl"n n, o<ao1 ,, "' 330We~
B•Y 51,eet c.o,11 M~'~ c. .. 1.,..n o ·n~2'.
rc!::.-1 r~ 1.veod
'°'""""'I ·~n PuDh>i>et
1, ~ ~ (._,•~ ..
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'l•<l P'e' ,,,,.~, IM G11.....,1I "''''°°"'
fni;,.-~r ~ '~'~'l'lC.
~·,.,.~.no td-t""
~ H (..,,., R chord P. Noll
Au •>11n• M•'lli9·"'l[~,!orl
S•" Cim.llfe Off'tC•
JO!i t-k,.:n b (um1f\O '-t.11
OtMr Offictl °"!• 1i1eu 330 11e" B•1 s1,_ ~r1 811c~ :UJJ -1'<'1 bovlf\'111'
H\lnhng!Qn 8etC~ 1181\ 6'>.oi:~ &o<llf>¥1••
La.1j-8eKI' 2~2,lrrll>l"'ve",,.
'
'
•
l hursday, Mily JO, 1'11 ..
Dailt Pilot SliU Plloto
1'liniat11re Battle111e11ts
Carole Laidlaw. coordinator for gifted programs in Capistrano Uni-
fied School Dis1rict. surveys replica of renaissance castle created by
yo ungsters at Richard Henry Dana Elen1entary School. Display is one
of scores of special projects on display in district headquarters over
pa.st three days. The exhibits. \Vhich ended today, were most ener-
getic show yet of youngsters' \VOrk in state-funded progra1n caJcu-
Iated to bring enrichment to select group of pupils.
Student .. Representative
L4pproved by Saddleback
A non-voting student representative for
the Sadd!eback College board of tru stees
\\'as approved unanimously by the board
\\'cdnesday.
The decision reverses an earlier one
and \\'as brought up for reconsideration
by Trustee James !11arshall"-\\'ho had
originally voted against seating a student
represen tat ive.
After the decision \\'as made. Board
President Hans Vogel called for a
separate table for the stud en l
representative and a nameplate provided
at each meeting.
The representative should be chosen by
the Associated S l u den t Body
organization, the board agreed.
"My only word to students is please
support your representative, and if
anything on an issue of concern is left
unsaid. don't be hesitant to speak up,"
said Trustee Donna Berry of ?llission
\'iejo, \\'ho htid originally opposed the
student representative proposal.
She had contended that a greater
variety of viev1points \vou!d be expressed
without an official student board member
Hoffrt Record Delay
\\'ASHJNGTO~ (AP1 -A fC'deral
judge today granted the \Vhitc l~ou5e a
delay until Monday to produce records
and documents concerning the
conditional clemency granted ex -
Tea1nsters President R. Hoffa. U.S.
District Judge John H. Pratt permitted
the eX1ension after the government
notified the court that President Nixon
needed more time to decide whether to
comply with a subpoena from Hoffa 's
attorneys or claim executive privilege.
Diabetes Trial -·-------
than if !he board attcn1ptcd to feed
student concerns through one person.
Marshall. former president of \Vayland
College in Texas, said at the first
consideration of the proposal that he had
never heard of student representatives
on a board and had been advised by
educators and fonner educators he kne\v
to nvoid such an arrangement.
But he said he has learned since that in
fact students do sit on many boards in
the area as non-voting n1embers and
have contributed to good boJrd decisions.
i'ro1n Page 1
POLICE ...
rcplact'd. The council in that city south of
Oceanside carried out that suggestion.
Tn San Clemente. council sources have
confirrncd, concern centers aroWld
chronic n1orale probleins evidenced in
some res ignations from the force.
Seven officers on the 49-member force
currently have applications filed for work
\l'ith the county sheriff's office.
C.Jrr has . said the project in San
Clen1cnte would take about five v.·eeks,
and Reddin said that he planned to
personally direct the efrort.
The decision lo hir e the firm at a
reported cost of about $7.000 is closely
knit "·itb discussions between Carr and
the Public Safety Einployes' Association
as negotiations for higher wages and
benefits reach the final phase.
Discussions of alternatives to the
nss erted morale problem arose in those
sessions many weeks ago and the
possibility or Reddin being called in were
mulled over even in bargaining sessions,
sources confirTned.
Fu1idamentalist Says
Ile Prayed for Miracle
•
SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) -A
fundamentalist minister has testified that
he "asked God to work a healing·
miracle'' on an 11.year-old boy with
diabetes, but never said the boy was
cured .
The boy died after his parents threw
out his insulin because they believed
diabetes was the work of the devil and he
had been healed by faith.
'The Parkers "asked me to pray with
them for Wesley ," Padilla said. "I looked
al hi1n and saw he had tears in his eyes .
I was more concerned about his tears
than his illness.
"I brought him closer to me and asked
him if he felt God loved him. H; said yes,
)'C.'i .
"I asked all three to pray and we
asked God to work a healing miracle."
Residents
Angry Over
Land Fill
Residents of C3pistrano Heights off Del
Obispo Road, angry over loss of views
and cut·and-£ill operations in an adjacent
tract. will have to wait until the next
Planning Com1nission n1eeting to get
action.
But it may be too late to resolve all
their grievances, because the tentative
map for the Holstein Development
Company has already been accepted.
Members of the Hom eow ne rs'
association at the last council meeting
asked that cut-and·fill aperations be
investigated for possible violation of the
city's hillside ordinance which limits
grading. They also ask that two-story
dwellings which abut their f"act be re-
duced to one-story homes.
·'t hope something can be done to
attenuate the two-story development,"
said Mayor Roy Byrnes.
City Planner David J. Smith said at
this point it would be difficult to make
substantial changes. He added that
representatives of the homeowner group
have been present at the last two
meetings with the developer and have
been invited to any future meetings. He
said he will make a presentation on the
tract at the June 5 Planning Commission
n1eeting.
Smith added that the grading does
comply "'ith the hillside ordinance.
Jim Dc~1arco. allomey for the Holstein
Industries. said his client Wlderstands
y.·hat the homeowners want
"They want us to move or C'liminate
\hr recreational vehicle parking area and
niove or eliminate the two -storv
d"'ellings,'' he said. "\Ve want our fln<it
map approved : "'e believe we have
complied Yt'ith the law-.''
He said public notice was given on the
tentative map and homeowners did not
object at that time. He added that the
map act says the time for plannlng is
y,•hen the tentative map is approved.
He said !he government code says that
a pub!~ body cannot disapprove of the
final map if it complies with the
tentative version.
"I hope the public realizes that the city
coui1cll -n~ liffiited in v.·hat ir din dO," he·-
added.
Bo1nb Suspect Freed
SUPERINTENDENT STEPS DOWN
Saddlobock'• Fred Bremtr
Fmm Page 1
BREMER • • •
19 cents on $100 assessed valualion.
A further complication has been the
case of Trustee Alyn Brannon, who was
charged with bookmaking in late 1972,
pleaded guilty early this year, and
resigned.
Brannon is now serving out a three·
month sentence in Orange County jail
though he is technically still a trustee
until Jl!Ile 4.1
Last suifimer. Bremer received a
critical \eLter from the Orange County
Grand Jury because of a letter he \\TOie
J-iobbying for high-density c o a s t a I
de'velopment along the coast in
Capistrano Beach.
The land involved belongs to former
trustee and board president John Lund.
"'ho said he asked Bremer to write the
letter.
Two other resignations in the past
eight months have undermined Bremer's
once-solid support on the board: charter
trustees ~fichael Collins and Hans Vogel.
Collins was replaced by Norrisa Brandt
or Irvine, y,·ho campaigned that changes
nee(lecl..!2 Qe RJl!rt~_J11 the .c!i§.trjct's.~aQ.·
ministration.
Accomplishments of B r e m e r ' s
administration include full accreditation
for the college, construction a n d
occupation of the school's first perma·
nent building, a library-classroom com-
BANGKOK. Thailand (AP) - A plex, and founding of !he. extenled cam·
miJitary court acquitted fonner }Xllice pus program.
Lt. Somchai Chaiyasut loday of charges Prior to coming to Saddlcback , Bremer
that he. planted a bomb that killed his 1\·as dean of liberal arts at Santa Ana
daughter, his girl friend and 79 others College. He also served as chairman of
aboard ~ Cathay Pacific jetliner two the Education Department at Chapman
years ago. A four-judge panel said the College and \\'as superintendent of Mc·
prosecution failed to present enough Cook City Schools and McCook College
evidence In the U~month trial to convict in Nebraska.
the 31-year-old defendant. 11e and his wife Evelyn live tn Tus11ft. . --·-----· ~ .
WIHEMEH'S
CELLARS
¥ From Pagel
CONSULTANTS
p10vlde flexibilKy and continuous. wor.~· ....
An in-house enalneer i.mJ Interruptions.
He pointed out that the consultanls
charge a set fee for work in various
categories. Included in this fee are
salaries and overhead costs. May0< Roy Byrnes ..,ked how large •
city should be before it provides its own
engineers. Madsen answered ttiat ~tll
Mesa waited until it had a population of
55 000 and that was too Jale.
ilymes also asked if slower ~rowth
would reduce y,·ork for the engineers.
Madsen answered that the last l\1'0 years
there has been a great deal ~r
engineering acitlvity because of rapid
growth, Projects approved "'ill keep thr
esiginem busy through lhe proposed
"deferral period" fmoratoriu1n on new
building applications) and \Vhrn the ban
is over (in Febn1aryl the deparunent
will be hit with n1uch nC\'I \\'Ork .
In his remarks to the council. Kulxll<1
said the sta ff of the city has changed and
he senses a new direction in c11y
attitudes.
"In our brand of engineering we are on
par with the salaries you'd hc.ve to pay
in·house engineers," said Kubola, whose
firm also serves other public a.gencies.
"I respect what's been said by your
management, but l think \\'e can in1provc
efficiency and respond to your needs." .
Councilman Douglas Nash said he is
less concerned about In-house versus
consultants, than he is alxlut ho\v the
engineering is done.
•·r-.fany things have been done in 1hl'
past that I don 't approve of,'' s.1id Nash.
"WouJd you find it difficult to shift in !hf'
saddle ?"
Kubota said he has 1vorked 11·i1h five
different councils in San Juan and has
tried to reflect their vie~·s.
"We're professionals ." he said .
"Clients like San Jaun Capistrano kef']l
us shaped up. \\"e r(•flect t he i r
philosophies and goals. The tail docs not
"·ag the dog. If we can't refl('('t the goats
of the poople ~·e are serving, 1vc should
step aside."
Public Warks Director \V i 11 i a n1
~furpby, who is a registered engineer.
told the counci l there are some
advantages in having engineers in city
hall.
In-house engineers can provide counter
service to citizens \'lho walk into cit~'
hall , can keep track of developments and
conditions in tracts. can do special
council studies and ran provide public
infonnation and coordination with the
planning department, ht said.
r-.tayor Byrnes asked that sevC'rnl
com binations·'be·dra'tl'TI uv; usirrg-both·tn~
house and consulting engineers, for the
council to study.
Budget study sessions \1111 take place
on June 10, 12 and 25 at 7 p. n1: in the
council chambers.
Plant Fire Quelled
SAN DIEGO (APJ -Fire destro)'<d •
plant of Carlee Industries on ~Ussion
Gorge Road In northeast San Diego today
and damaged the nearby quarters of a
refrlgeratkln factory . The damage was
eslimaWd at l100 ,eoo.
'
rf'l!li
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
2500W.COASTHWY.
MEWl'ORT IEACH
PHONE 642-7076 _ .. _,, . ........._ ~-·-~ IH HIWPOU ,RODUCI VILLAGE
1601 HIWPORTILYO.
COSTA MESA 642-9004
THIS WEEK'S CHEESE & DELICATESSEM FEATURES
I • I I IL-.....l
PASTRAMI : COTTO SALAMI '
, .. or '
CHEESE AT
AFFORDABLE PRICES. . .
Most cheese merchants are reluctant to
advertise cheese by the pound, in fear of
drawing attention to their high prices. Not
Winemen·s our prices are keen ...•
~~--......... .. .. ' " ... ,. It~'. 1~; T> .._ J
• ..\.
I '\
'. MORTADELLA · !
"" OMLTf 98per ,• ,?~';u!:~~ .... :~l; ~ j,.•,,
COMPAIE THISI sPICIALS
.. ~:~ ~ ,...._ ·WJ'T.TI""":T:" ' ~--~~~-----~~·~~A·~lru;"~-J,I~
l.i !I MOlZARELLA , ,, ··~ 1., " PROVOLONE ~'/i'
• • • , 1.! or TILLAMOOK · , ;..:. .. • .~ • I •; •
·.,:..,,J '~"'._ y ... ewc.1•• 1,~ ;/ &~~ 2.19 °"" ~ '!i i ~ ~~~~~ .... --~,
~·BUFFET CATERING SERVICE .......... ~ ... .,_...,
Have you placed your catering order yet for that wedding or graduation? We're still taking orders
and YOU WONT BELIEVE OUR PIJCES! Let Winemen's make it easy for you •.• Here's an example:
THE CAPT AltfS CHOICE $2.50 .... -
MEAT PLAITER: Boiled Ham. Comed Beef, Roast Beef & All Beel Salami. CHEESE PLATTER: Cheddar. Onion, Swiss
& Muenster. RELISH PLATIER: Black QllV.S. Stuffed Green Olives. Sweet Cherry Peppers, Ade.las, Mustard & Mavon-
na1se. SALADS: Coleslaw & Potato. CHOICE OF BREAO: Rye, Ego, Of'llOn. White, Frenc:h, Purrc>emlckel-Any Two. '
Coti ....... S«W:e A•..W.-,.,_. Ctl Utt Ir 1'tlllt Wllf! We ..... A ...... Y.W, Of?•• ... , ,,,., ..... ...
ROSE' ffroM Porlugall
This Portuguese Rose Wine is
similar to the more expensive ont
trom Portugal tNI Is very popular in
America ..•
,.
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES:
"JUG" RED from Callfomia
Mott wine enthusiasts are on lhe lootloul for 1 good,
lnexpensrve wine for every day drinking. The pity of it
111 .is lhal sucn are hard to find! WJ.nemen'• Na had
great success with lhls one ... Reorders are the proof
-many top professionals lhink there·, nolhing like
'
The Rev. Daniel L. Padill& of the
Assembly of God Church in Barstow
teslified \Vednesday at the trial of
Lawrence and Alice Parker f o r
involuntary man:daughter in the death or
their son, Wesley.
A pal.hologist confirmed in testimony
Wednesday thot the boy died Aug. 22 due
to the effect.I of diabetts.
Padilla said h<! remembers th<! Parkers
bringing Wesley to him during a .. rvlc•
at the cburch in Bantow Aug. 19, and
praying with them. But be .. 1d ha has no
special ability to heal, and that faith
alone is not enough to cure a disease.
He said he told the Parkers "let's
continue to believe for a healing
miracle," but denied he told them the
mriacle had happened.
When Wesley slipped Into a coma from
lack of insulin, Parker allegedly rtfuSed ,
to allow Insulin to be admlnlotered,
saying it would be a denial of their faith
in God'o cure. He said th<! dlabeleJ was
caused by demons.
The Parkers and fellow believers beld
prayer servlc .. at the boy'11!0d1Jde until
he died, and later tried to bring him back
to life, ainging, chonting, praying and
cxh<!rting him to rise from the dead.
1'.··iEW. VINO°' IURGUHDY FULL 279 GALL OH
"DOUREM lg;t 14 9 :1nu
COWPAUOfS).lt
INCIDENT AL BONUS BUY
Glm CtrafM for convenience & elegaf'ICI when puring "Jug Wines" « tor that Nect.a,Y Oeeln-
tlng .•. Wlnemen·1 has Just what YoUVI been looking tor.
HALF CARAFES ~1 -v 69'... . FULL CARAFES ·~ -v 99' ...
.Una•chlf: "S11ctorsdw 1ot•1n W.'1 -wa...'t brHb ,,tw __. • uMrMt
_.,.... -s... • to 40'-dlrl119 .. • -91 'Wloo:mo'1 -C-lt: Todlfl
'• •"
\
\
Thursday's
Closing Prices
New Yori.: lJps a1ad Dow1as
I LOSERS
Vil 'lO O 1 Lib Lon 1bfl 6'4-1 8' Up 1ta lfM!lnv 6ld l -, n
UP 16 rl ' A CflMt ~Sil ' 1-011 Ull lll S f'•lne(ll I JO 9 t-1 Ort uo, '' J ' De.Soto n 60 1 •-.\II 8" u 12 s 1 {llV Inv WIS 1 ~-v. If UP 10 0 I NoCnAlrl wl 1 •-'I 011 Up ti 9 weanpt 6Jc o •-'• 011 Utl 9 I 10 HPlh'I A Ud 19 -I"' Olf Uo ts 11 A J tndustrs 1 'r-' Off
Ull 91 111 C•v Com Co 1 -V. 011 'I uo 13 ConMto 411 l -Olf Uo 1 l l' Or1vtu1 80 6 -i'I Off
Up 13115 S•vfn8 ,Y.(fl l -O!f Up 8.3 16 AlberlOC 36 ' ,,.__ "' Otr U1> ll lf RtOUbllc{ll l'•-llOfl UP I 1 II l(.r•ttco 1 91 37 ,_ ~ 011 UP I b It 81!\Slf pr I'll &~\--VI Off
Uo 7 t 20 LfYlll Furn ,,,_ 4 8"
UP 7 t l?i (lt Wl!SI Un l\t-•• If
Uo 79'/2MoPb$ l'D 1~ -8" UO l' fl ID.SU!! l Md 15tt-I • fl Uo l ' IV lnU CP A 32Vt-2~ Off UP J O.mon CP 21"'-l~ Off
Up 1A
OAINEltS
1 UnlTt! wh H + l~ 1 Ta!cOll Ntl t\,t-I
J At1sk1 ln!U 1 • +1'11 •81cht lOd l• +, s Loral Coro l ,. ~ 6 Avco (p wt• I l+ i . J Reomn Old ~ 1 I USLIFE 19 1111+ 1~, 9 CMI Inv (11 n·~ +1 •
io Al ffn 1ncr 21" +14
11 '"''cl•Mln '/ ttV'I t"• 19 2 Lvlle Yq~tn 6 .,.
13 COflORQ 2S<I 16 +t 11 Gn MHI Ind 1 lo+ • Ii Gron..,. 10 3• + • 16 qRftdntl (O 1.\9 + 1
l 7 Slq(ODI 2 20 .U +/" 11 Su~illllf 4 11"' + ~
1t tmotrl1l '{f t\'I +•
20ColwM. 12d IO"f. 21 l•ii.sOl1 1 lOV. ~
,, ~"·~ )0 1 l't 2JrM tftl $~~ '' eool r 1'0 ru + .... JJ HorNnlJ .20 1V. +~
New York 15 Most Actice
I
I
•
· 1 •
lhursday M11y 30 1CJ74 SC DAILY PILOT 27
• •
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows
Appear Eve ry Saturday
"'I Low,10,r <:n1 • I ..
" " . " . " ' . ' . it.
' .,
" ' . . " I '* ·-• " ' 0
'! Dolv l11dex Jumps
• '
' '·-" . IJ •
,, ..
" I
n l ._,_ 'I ' . 16 • )I •
6 ~ I • I
19 •o • I ~ . ~ ·-I• t U • ' . , , " . ' ' ' ' 16 l6 • • . " 10 '10 16 I~ '/, 11 . ' . " ' ' 11 • ll ' , ' . " ~J 9) " ' " ~ • ,, ,
,. • ,,
'16 • 1~ ,
" ' i i '
.I
Bacl\: Above 800
~E\V \Olli<
n1ode1 ate tr u.Jti1 g
Exe hringe
IUP IJ -
Jhu1sd1\
J111ccs t.:losed h1ghe1 111
un the i\e\v l 01 k Stoc:k
l ht!1c s nu 1cil !lC'\\.., 111 tile backg1ou nd to
spa1k the 1 lll) one a111l\..,t s i d Thete tlefu11lely
i.OU!d be ~ome bai ,...1111 hunt in
rhc Uow I JH.:' 11 dt "'1 11 average \vh1ch
plunge d 1no1e th tll Ill Jl( 111.., \\ <'d ne ~d<1v gai ned
8 21 points to 803 GH \\ rdnc..,da\ 11 ch opped below
the 800 Je,el \vh1(h 1nann \ 1nal)sts call a psvcho
lor,!1ti\I ba111e1 l)ut 1huisda\ s 1ebound ''.as ton
~1de1ccl enltllll t ,..,111 ~
1\d\ ances louk a. nat 1 O\V le 1d o\ e1 declines
an1ong the in ntc th 111 1 700 11;suc s t1oss1ng the tape
Tur110\e1 <11nountcd to nround 13 400 000
sha1es ron1pared \\tth 12 JOO 000 \\lednesda'
J)11 res dcc:l1 ned 1n n1ode1<1te It 1<1111 ~ on the
\n1c11 can Sto<:k f x<:h n1..,c
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lQ l'l.o&t Ac;i1:e
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e 1Hattet Report
'•
1 OS ANGELES t \fll
Stockholders of !\1altt:! rnc
the nations largest to~
n1anufa cturer hav,, bo " fold
1he firm expects lo improve
11 :. performance O\Cr last
\C<ir \\hen its overall loss was
S5 4 n111\1on
The ailing companv b 1sed
1n suburban Havwthorne \Vlll
e1nphas1ze g e n e r a t 1 n g
maximum ca s h resou1 co.:s
said 1'\1att~l'president Arthu1
S Spear \Vednesda'
e U'l1lttaker Corp.
LOS ANGELES 1API
\\ h 1 t ta k er Corp said
\\ t:dnesday that earnings for
the lhree months ended A.pr1I
lt) ro<:e to $2 84 million or 13
cents a share from $626 000
01 2 crnts a share a year
t:;irl1e1
Sri lo.: s increased to $202 87
1111111011 from $167 76 m11l1on
l or the six months ended
April 30 the COlllflllllf ('31 llt!d
~::> 32 rn1lhon or ~~ cent:. i
sh:ire compared v. 1th $2 I
n11lhon or 8 cents a share .a
year earlier
•
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28 DAILY PILOT
WICKS
~-------
I-Iuntington
.ii/ a1 t lT1 ins
Co1n11iission
Allen B. llughcs Jr., son of
~tr. and Mrs. Allen B. Hughes
of 4151 Calhoun Drive, Hun-
tington Beach, will be com-
missioned an ensign upon
graduation from the Coast
Guard Academy in New Lon-
don, Conn .. June 5. lie \\"ill
n!so receive a bachelor of
science degree.
The 200-man class is the
lnrgest in the Acadcn1y's 98-
ycar history.
l·lughes is sehedu!ed to
report to the Coast c;uard Cut-
ler Polar Star. 11on1r·ported .-it
Senttlc, for hi-; first du1y
assignn1ent.
/\ J9i0 graduate>-of ~larina
lligh School, l·l u n ti n g ton
Beach . he entered the
Acaden1y in June 1970.
Thursday, May 30, 1974
State Poll
Air Bias
In Media
SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ -
~1ore and more Californians
believe the ne'>''S media are
biased and onrair \n son1e
aspects or its \\'atcrgate
coverage. a state\vide opinion
survey says.
··r'urthermorc.·· poll!';ler
!\ler\'in Field snid \\'edncsday,
.. a nH1jority of the public 110\\'
thinks 1he amount of coverage
is ·too 1nuch.' "
OESPITE Tiff: SIGSS of
critiC'isn1, Field's California
Poll disclosed that seven of 10
C<ilifornians ''continue to
believe the nC\VS mcdi11 \\"Ould
\1·ork just as hard to try to
unco"er \Vrongdoing by any
president."'
Of L029 persons sur,·eycd
this n1onth . Field said only 4.\
percent felt the nC\\'S media
\l'Cre fair and unbiased in
\V atergate reporting. The pol\
sho\1•ed thal public confidence
in the nC\l'S mcdir1's covtr:1ge
slipped 11 percenlagt• poin1.s
since the last survey in
October.
' ' T 0 /\ SIG r\IFICA:\T
degree, ho,vevcr. <1!1itudes
to\\·ard the press .:i r c
bccon1ing polar i z cd by
political party." said Fi(·ld .
Only 21 percent of the 574
Democrats polled said the
nc1~·s media 1vas LI n f .:i i r .
comparrd to 49 percent of the
307 Republicans surveyed.
RETAIN
CLE·M M.
--McC:OLLOCH
Er:--
Xu
I p \' "
I
N
T
E
G
R
I
T
y
/ \ E
R
I
E
N
c
E DIRECTOR
MUNICIPAL WATER DISTRICT
OF ORANGE COUNTY
DISTRICT 5
We . the undersigned , stand beh ind sound
and responsible local government by
supporting CLEM M. McCOLLOCH for
election to the Municipal Water Di strict
of Orange County:
HenryT. StCJttitrom
Poul .A. • .A.ndrtJ
C1:1ri H. Holm1>«9
Roy J. Btrryrnc111
Mrs. Jt1:1nne Vm1 .A.Utn
Pt>Or'I kapl1:1n
Robtrf £. fultoa
1 .. or Han,on
Curti' R. lri1tol
Tom Homril)houwn
Mrs. Coalson Morri'
J . R. Lttltr loytt
H. Yan Dtr Ytldtft
Michotl Lofaw
Clair Ditto
Lawrt11ct R. Limffeo
Dwight Chambftioin
Mary Lofa10
Wallact L Mitchtlf
G. J. "P'ttt" Copptr
R~De Yowiq
Milo C. Kttctt-
hgfftf E. Ptt1ltcosf
WaHtrG. lro
Kfftflfth C. Prk:r
MrL T. J. Mtdows
Ccrl f . Fisfttt
C. J. ShrH
Robtrt T. lti1t
H.W.LinhM
Lpndon Aufdenk~
Jac:k G. Roub
H~T.Wo,.~ Fr F. Meood
T. MtodoWJ
C l10n MorriJ
kt Da¥is
E Pankty
Tortty H. Wtbb
H. l . Remmtr$
Williorn D. N11nli't
Louis E. Cltm
Larry Farquhv
G. O. li1ltr
Williorn H. Eppiltqef"
R. 8. Lowry
Tom R. lt04'C ....
R. H. Proltlero
Horakl M. Mothitet11
Robtrt L Aldrich
Lt. Col. R. R. rorhr
frank S. Wilb_.
Hor.,ty H. ICOfllan
Rolf M. Rthtr
Ntmey H. Schmi•
Jantts T. Morion
loffa L Mathilfl'I
Sharon L Howk.ini
Dan I. loyff-
Chri1 IC. Rthtr
VOTE
TUESDAY, JUNE4
CLEM M: McCOLLOCH ~
P.00 lot bot CO!t"'•!le* 1q Mntf (,-...'" M Mc·
Q:lllOO~. A I< J'<C1"811ri1 L i;,.,,.,,,.,.~
~ 6ll0'0 A'lf-~ ~ lfl!I"
°" ...
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
. . '
.
;
; ' ,,
:1 " '
' ' ' '
•
ln-Sink-Erator
Garbage Disposer
• Easy to install ... do it yourself and save!
• lifetime lubrication ... quiet running
• U.l. approved. Model #333 31ss
Right/Left Basin
Wrench
• Use on basin nuls, ballcocks, etc.
• Con be use d in either direct ion
• Drop forged steel with hardened teeth 299
Ratchet Screwdriver
• Slanley's durable 1/4" driver with plated
melal fin ish .~
• Easy-g rip handle •.• heavy-duty model, #233H • 3ss
7-lnch Circular Saw
• From Black & Decker •.. 1 \14 H.P. molar
• Adjuslable for depth and bevel cuts
• Sowdust ejection chute for better visibility
of cutting line
• Combination blade included. #7301 1999
Cannister Augers
• Makes reaming out plumbing a lot easier
• 1/4" x lS' galvaniied wire inside handy
head #T·l112 369
. . .
u "
~CL.~k.. liDI RANGES
• Chef-Styled
Mirro:i!l Saute Pans
• New white Teflon II "' infer ior ... no
stick, easy-dean
• Available in 3 useful sizes
• Choice of avocado, poppy or harvest
gold exteriors •.. all-new white
inferiors
• Non·slick cooking al its prelliesl·
3'!
10" SIZE ........................... 4.49
12" SIZE ........................... 5.49 v-~
Levitron :,:,:I] /~i:,:~~.,s.:.:~.~hh }: j dims lighls from 0 to •oo
:.:: walls
... · .. ~ · • lnsloll l rosily, likr on
·ord inary wall 1wil1h Mirro '' Fry Pan
(j ()
'Pentrex'
Plant Food
• Germain's all-p11rpa'e fool ...
101 lawns, shrubs, tree s,
flowtrs, vegelable'
• 1-gallon site tov111 4.900 sq.
h.
299 • Newwhiltlrllonl\' inlrrior 6 49 • (ltoi1r ti avo1odo, poppy or
hc11vrsl gold t1lr1iar
• 1 recipts rtprodu1rd on sidrs
Glidden House Paint Special!
• Three 11! Gliddtn'l mosl popular points
• Gi•rs 1upr1ior wealhr1 prole<lion ... spreads ro\ily and f~fnly
with brvsh or roller
• In oll tilt newest colors
SPREO SPRIO SPRED
HOUSE PAINT Gil-FLO lAllX TRIM
10-ln. Eledric Chain Saw
• lightwtigh!, •u1 •uilt t• "tu•• a· • Pot41t in1tlatt• f., spftty
• 0111v ... 1 ... ,1 ... ,. ... ;,, 4 5 88 MKIN1•.1tllO
R19.St.IS
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Laguna Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 150, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1974 TEN CENTS
Laguna N arco Agents •Highest Paid~
By JACK CHAPPELL
or .,.. o.iry 'n"' st.tt
Overtime wages pald to Laguna Beach
police narcotics detectives have made
those police officers amoog the highest
paid employea of the city. Re<!Ords show:
-In im. Police Sgt. Neil Purcell, head
ol. the city narrotia ~uad, grossed a
salary of $19,743, about $2,000 less than
the chief of police. Purcell's overtime
amounted to $7, t 16 for the year.
-In 1973, Narcotics Det . Anthony
•
Smith earned $t8,322 and of that, $5,534
was in overtime. During one month,
Smith earned more than $1,000 in
overtime.
By way of COOlparison:
-Det. Ales Jiminez, assigned to
burglary investigation, earned $1,347 in
overtime during 1~3 .
-The average individual monthly
overtime paid in the patrol bureau is $92
a month. The average lumps patrolmen
and supervi sors together.
Police Chief Frank Schopen said he
saw nothing to surprise him about the
overtime amounts rolled up by his
o(ficers.
He said narcotics investigation was
especially subject to large demands on
officers' time just by the nature of the
work itself.
Purcell, now a patrnl d i v i s i o n
lieutenant, said .during the I 9 7 2
crackdown on narcotics abuse and
traffic, IS.hour days were commonly
worked three days a week b y
investigators, and 20-hour days were not
uncommon.
Records show that in 1973, Detective
Smith was granted SJ hours of overtime
during one tw~week pay period.
This year, the Laguna Beach Police
Department will spend an estimated
$42,900 in overtime salaries. There arc
presently 34 S\\-'Om (badge-carrying)
personnel in the department. That in-
cludes the chief, !tie captain. four lieu-
•
tenants and three sergeants.
Of the total overtime allocation, an
estimated 60 percent ($25,800) v.·ill go to
the six-man detective force, detectives
receiving the lions' share, according to
Norm Croy, head of the department·s
services division.
The Laguna Beach City Council
recently questioned the amount of
supervision given the overt i m C'
allocations noting that the amount of
!in1e put in as overtime by a detecti\·e
\\'as ""•hat he said it v .. as.'·
Chief &hopcn said that before
drawing up the 1974-75 budget now under
revie\\' by the oouncil overtime rnoo.ey
\\'as not individually identified according
to police department functions .
He said the departm('flt is now
"breaking out" the individual sections
overtime expenses to show specifi c uses.
lfc said \\1hen the analysis is complete. it
\\'ill indicate whether the amounts
!Ste NARCO, Page ZI
S Ill oun
Recrfjuion
Spending
Sparks Row
A re\•iew of the proposed Laguna
Beach Recreation Department budget by
city council members Wednesday nigtit
produced the only rancor heard so far in
the extended city budget studies.
The council was told that of the total
department costs or $103,000, some
$45,000 is returned in self-supporting
recreation activiUcs.
Councilman Jon Brand appeared to
take a hard line on r ecreation
department lj)ending.
"Kids can play on their ov.TI," Brand
said,
Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney
supported the department and said
recrealion was •·a necessity for young
people and said the rrcrcation v.'as just·
"one more function a city must provide."
She noted thal Laguna Beach has a
very high percentage (lf single pa rents.
"I'm not sure ifs the responsibility of
city ta1payers to support single adults'
children 's recreation," Brand retorted .
Mrs. Sweeney !aid if the money isn't
spent for recreation, it will end up being
spent on "jail."
"That's something other t h a n
recreation, that's morality,'' Brand
answered.
The council was cool to a request by
Recreation Director George Fowler to
hire ariother recreation department
employe who would also work as a Girls'
Club supervisor.
The council has ordrrcd 18 positions
trlnuned from the entire city work force
and some or the culling will result in
layorfs of long-t ime city employes.
The recreation budgft proposed is
down about $18,000 from this year's
spending plan . * fl
·--
Laguna Teachers Out
Strike 'Prob(tblv to Co11tinue' -Tectche,.
By fllLARY KAYE
01 the D•ll' Pllol $1111
A sudden, wildcat strike by more than
half the Laguna Beach High School
teachers forced the school to shut down
to a half day schedule today, and some
students were dismissed as early as 9
a.m.
The administ r:i.tion was not officially
notified of the strike, or of the teachers'
grievances.
Superintendent Don \Voodington said he
guesses the protest was over •·frustration
with salaries." He said he heard
Shoestring Annex
v
"rumors·· of the walkout Wednesday
afternoon.
Administrators were unable to come up
with an official tally of how many
teachers had walked off the job today,
but said that 29 had either called in sick,
or taken "personal leaves for business
reasons."
The figure does not count an additional
six teachers who were known to be ill
before the strike began. The school has
56 teachers \Voodingt~ also said he believed three
teachers at Thurston Intermediate School
Sycamo1·e Hills Plans
Suit Agai11st L~tguna
A massive legal action against the City
of Laguna Beach has been prepared and
is being evaluated now by the owner of
Sycamore Hills, a 522-acre site in Laguna
Canyon tied to the Art Colony v>'ith a
shoestring annexation.
Long-rumored. the legal challenge
could include the following actions:
-Leg,111 action against ind i v id u a I
Laguna Beach city councilmen. planning
commissioners and city staff for alleged
denial of the property O'A-Tiers civil rights
to develop the land.
-An inverse eondemna!ion suit \l:hich
\11ould force the clty to buy the land at
fair market value. Worth of the land has
been pegged at $6 million at city hearings
on development.
-Dcannexation of the property lying
between Laguna Canyon and El Toro
Roads.
Attorney H. Rodger Howell, C<lunsel for
the property o"-ner. dcclinrd to :dentify
which course \\'OUld be taken.
Howell said he had prepared a step.by·
step plan for legal action and said the
landov.'ller \Vas currently evaluating the
decuments.
The proper ty is owned by Palos Verdes
Properties. a corporate child of Great
Lakes Properties. a subsidiary of Creal
Lakrs Carbon.
v.•ere participating in the protest action ,
but said he did not believe it had ex-
tended to the elementary schools.
Science teacher Charles Reich, the
strike leader, said teachers will probably
continue to strike until the school board
takes specific action. or show ''good
raith" on their demands.
Reich said that the teachers want the
board to meet with the faculty to explain
their budgetary priorities, the trustees to
re-examine budgets and a direct say in
how allocated salary money is to be
spent.
"We're upset and dissatisfied ·with the
board's priorities decisions. They bave 't
included staff <lr students in their
decisions." Reich said.
"We have an inadequate salary
schedule ·with in&dequate compensation
for inflation. Jn fact , v:e're the second
lo111est in Orange County." Reich
continued.
The strike organizer also said the
teachers do not want trustees to decide
hO\\' to spend the salary money.
'·People on the top of the pay schedule
have been paying for it for many years.
\Ve 0d like to give these people more
money. The bottom end of the scale is
high-paid, but iJ•e have very few people
on that encl." Reich criticized.
If there is an immediate good faith
sign from the board, Reich said the
teachers will be back in their cla~rooms
Friday. If not. the strike. or sick-in. \\ill
continue.
Reich emphasi7.ed the teachers are not
actually "striking.'' since by taking
professional leave they are being docked
pay, which is not illegal.
He said the protest action \\'as
"spontaneouS-0
' and did not come fro1n
any org-anized group.
School Board President Norm an
Bro\11nc said today he is \\'ill: 1g to sit
down \vilh the teachers and discuss 1he
salary situation with them, if they \\'ish
to.
Council Cuts Off $30,000
Jn an appearance at the Laguna Beach
Planning Commission Tuesday night.
Hov.'ell said time had run out for city
planning actions on the site.
The commission was e v a l u a t i n g
u•hether to hold a study session on three
options for city-initiated plans for the
area.
"I can understand their frustration
when they look around the C<Junty and
see higher increases coming through ...
I don 't know if we can change anything,
but maybe we can," Dr. Browne said.
From Chamber Request
The Laguna Beach City Council has cut
nearly $30,000 from a Chamber of
Commerce request for city advertising
and promotion funds.
The action came in a budget study
session Wednesday night during which
the "community assistance a n ft
promotion budget" was pared by SO
percent (rom a requested $93, 775.
The Cliamber o( Commerce had
requested $48,82S in funds to be used in a
program of promotion and advertising for
tile city.
1bat amount was in e.xcess of all the
monies the city had aRotted for all
.._.i of community groups and
cultural organliatlot>s.
The Olamber of Commerce will get
111.500 to cany on flnimOlion and adVerllalnl for the clcy.
Judge Acquits
I Murder Suspect
' ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (APl -One of
ftve Cllllarnla m.., on trial In the
mutlla..., lla)'lnl of a UQ!verslty of New
llaklo ltudent bu .been laeqttltted.
lllliritt Court Judp William Rloidan
....,.... 1111 !llrtcted verdict of acquittal,
1/dl•jriY for Arlhur Ray Smith after :,,-.J'f,' of l<lllmoey. Tbe five a.. of '"Ill• _, Ille! murder In
the 1111111 of wiw.n Yellen Jr.
lllordlll --Ille lrlal to ~ forlbe.....,. loor.
A cut was made despite the pleas of
Betty Myers, Chamber manager ; Cy
Nugent, Chamber president~lect; and
Larry Hunt, Chamber president.
Nugent said if the city expected to
bring in tourist dollars, it had to fund an
adequate promotinn program.
Mayor Roy Holm said he felt thf;
Laguna Chamber of Commerce was
applying city funds to duties nonnally
undertaken by Chambers of Commerce
which do not receive subsidies from
cities.
He pointed out that the Chamber had
Cllarged a 11,000 lelophone bill to the city
account,. and had paid only $550 for
, telephone service trom its own coffers.
Olamber apportionment of M r s .
Myers' salary Is also derived from city
funds.
Two. crlUCI ol the Chamber S\lPllOrt
voiced opposition to continued city
funding.
Resident John Gabrl•l1 said tt the
business community '!anted to maintain
a dwnber of commerce, it lhould be
wlllin( to underwrite Its costs.
"Let them pay for It amongst
themselves, 11 Gabriel aald.
• BMJOe Hopping. a fl'equent council
observer, called Mn. Myers "a paid
lobbyist."
lie 14id It was only acting u a
~motlon and advertislni contractor.
• Ma)'Or Holm said the aeparatlng lin•
between dwnber 11\d city bua1-•Ill
bluny.
"We mainl1 'truat you beeaUH we ,..ara l""" 11 lrll.!lwonlly people," the
11\11Weald.
Howell reminded the commission that
it had been 845 days since the city first
clamped a building moratorium on the
property with the avowed purpose of
planning for the area.
The moratorium has since died, but a
2QOO.unit housing development planned
for the Sycamore Hills area was
prevented by the city council which found
the project's environmental impact
report unsuitable.
Howell said the property owner had
paid $189.000 in taxes on the property
while the city planned.
Howell suggested the commission take
the old residential projecfs impact
report and "repair" it before embarking
!See SYCAMORES, Page ZI
Turner Fraud
Case Mistrial
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)
A fed<ral judge declared a mistrial
in the eight-month mall fraud trial
of supersalesman GICM W. 'l\Jrntt
and seven associates today when
the Jury wao unable to reach a
venllct.
District Judge Gerald B. TJoOot ,
ruled a mlstrial after saying the Jucy was 0 deadlocked on every
count 1galn$t each defendant."
· H• scliedulod the start of a new
' trill !or Au • 5. -J.i listened tu :1!11 .nia-wbo gave more than '*·* ~ of te.dmooJ.
"It just shows the need for more
money in the budget, he added.
The strike is not an organized effort
Woodington said.
"It's not a product of the Laguna
Beach Faculty Association. or the
American Federation of Teachers acting
(See \VILDCAT, Page Z)
Two Customers
Disrupt Holdup;
Suspect Seized
A timely intervention by two customers
saved a Dana Point liquor store owner
$360 Wednesday night and led Orange
County Sheriff 's officers to lodge a young
gunman in juvenile hall.
Deupties said the 17-ye81'-old Mis.sion
Viejo youth had already pocketed the
mtlpts at the Party Time liquor store,
3.1210 Pacific Coast .. Higt>¥1ay, after
menacl"ll the clerk wl!Ji a loaded shotgun
when the two cus tomers entered the
~mises. -· ·
' Both men promJllly backed against the
wall when the youtli lold them: "Get in
~ I'll blow your heads off." • o.:pqt1eo said the clerk took advantage
of °.'!11ntemipUon •fo grab the youth's
wea~ which went off as the two men
•tn<gKJ~.
Offfcers .said the two customers ..-then
jumped In and helped the clerk to
overpo'."fl" the s:unman. The aald no one
WU lDJUrod lo l!Je ohooUng De!>atleo. wbo Aid the youth bu a
JriDr ctlmlnal r«ord, stated thAI lie will
f ... J~ coart ocllon loler today.
•
SUPERINTENDENT STEPS DOWN
Saddleback1s Fred Bremer
Bren1er Resig11s
Supjerinten<lency
For Saddlehack
Bv JAN \VORTH
01'111t 0111, "1'-' Stiff
Dr. Fred H. Bremer stepped down as
superintendent of Saddleback College
Wednesday in an action described by
trustees as "a reorganization of district
administratinn. ''
Board President l~ans Vogel said
Bremer has been rrlieved of his duties
"by mutual agreement bet\\'cen him and
the board."
Bremer, 51. 111ho ha s two years
remaining on a four-year contract. \\'ill
retain his ti!le as president of the college
and be give n special assignments by the
board. Voge l said. He will continue to
receive his salary of $35.000.
~leanwhile, the search for a new
superintendent is scheduled to begin at
once, with a July 1 goal for making the
final decision. The salary offered the new
superintendent has not been deterntined ,
Vogel said.
Bremer said he had "no comment. at
this stage of the game," about the action .
Choosing the new superintendent will
be one (lf the first actions facing a new
board of trustees. Three new trustees are
to be elected by di strict voters June 4
and a new board president will be chosen
since Vogel is one or the trustees being
replaced in the election.
"With thi s happen ing just before the
election, people are having a great
oppartunity to help choose a new
superintendent, Trustee Norrisa Brandt
of Irvine commented . I
Vogel said the board has several
persons in mind for the superintendent.
But he said the position ~uld be
advertised ''statewide, if not na~wide,''
for at least two weeks. ~screening oommlttee including several d mem-
bers, a student, a faculty m br, a Pl'O#'
fessional educational ad.mi trator, and
a lay member of the comm ity is sche-
luled to be appointed soon.i Bremer has served six yea with the
dual title of superintendent sident at
5addleback. He came to the 1 as its
.,. first dean of instruction in 1967~ was promoted to superintendent a er the
departure of the school's f Ir s t
superintendent Jac.k Roper. in 1 .
Under Dr. Bremer's term, Sad eback
Cfollege evolved rrom makeJhJft o ces in
Mission Viejo to a 200-acre site offFing
some soo classes to 5,000 stud<nts. '.,_ .
As !lie dean ol instruct' Bremer set up the college's firs
original faculty.
Pressure bu been helvy on Bremer In
lmyear, wbfcl> hthas cilleiltliii
n111gheat In Ill• -· Tustin residents lnlllaloil • puab to de-
(See Bl\E&IER, Pip I)
,
•
2Wounded
In P1·isoner
Escape Tr)'
By TOM BARLEY
01 Tiit Otll~ l"llot Still
Three Orange County jail prisol'lers.1
<lne of th em a convicted killer, today
tried to shoot tbeir way to f1cedom from '
a holding cell in the Santa Ana county
courthouse.
A prisoner identified as Frank Allan
O'Hare. 25, of Anaheim , was reportedly
shot twice in the chest as the trio fied
along Santa Ana streets '!Vith officers in
pursuit.
O'Hare is listed in critical condition in
Orange County Medical Center, police
said. They said the escaped prisoner also
suffered other minor wounds during the
pursuit.
Police said an off.duty California
Highway patrolman who joined them in
the pursuit was shot in the arm. He was
not immediately identified.
Police said the patrolman is reported
in satisfactory condition al Santa Ana
Community Hospital. They said no other
police officers or deputies were hurt in
the pursuit <lf the three prisoners.
O'Hare's t"'O companions have been
tenatively identified as Lawrence Eugene
Wilson, 30, of Los Angeles y:ho is
awaiting sentencing on first degree
murder conviction and Prince Pico
Tarpley. 18. of Anaheim.
Tarpley and O'Hare are currently on
trial before Superior Court Judge
Raymond Thompson on charges of
armed robbery.
Conflicting reports by four -police
agencies appear to add up to the fact
that the trio overpowered a sheriff's
deputy in the holding tank of the county
courthouse.
Santa Ana police said O'Hare was shot
early in the chase and \Vilson was
quickly recaptured.
They said Tarpley \\'as the last to
be seized by officers as he sprinted
several blocks from tbe c o u n t y
courthouse and evaded his pursuers until
they reartled 17th Street in Santa Ana.
Disti·ict Picketed
LARKSPUR I API Aboul HO
teachers picketed the ~tt. Tamalpais
School Distrlcl today in a one-day
walkout protesting the board's offer of a
4 percent wage bike for next year. The
teachers. members of the California
Teachers Association, are demanding a
15 percent increase.
Orange Coast
•
Weather
It'll be cloudy Friday morning
but clearing to mostly sunny skies
by the afternoon along lhe Orange
Coast. Highs at the bearhes 66-a&
rising to 72-74 inland. Overnight
lows tonight 53,60.
INSIDE TODA l'
Two mtn who oftn1 debated
over tl&tir drlnkino abilities,
held o match to decide once a11d
for au who was the champio11.
Th•y both died. Sloru, Poge 4.
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• '
:1 :1
LO
Cit y Plans
Department
R ev amping
A possible reorg anization or the entire
city departml'nt or Planning and
D<:velopment could be required unde
Laguna Beach budget curha<.'k or the
type no\v planned for fiscal 1974--75.
That 1\·as the gist of an extended
presentation to 1hc Laguna Beach City
Council \Vrdne sday night by Plarming
Director \\'ayne titoody.
A conlinoous thread running through
the budget study session was a repeated
expression of ?-i1oody of the desire to get
out of the administrative end of the
departmeotand into actual plaMing.
"What this city really needs -like the
city of Irvine has -is a planning staff
that really does planning," City Manager
Al Theal told the council.
Planning department staff members
now are involved in building rode
enforcement checking of plans for
upcoming construction projects and
inyrlad duties not directly asrociated
droartmC'nt and into actal ph1nning .
He said trials of being an adminislra·
tor. coping \vilh public complJints, and
responsibilities were getting in the "',.ay
of professional planning.
!\toody has recently 1aken to \\'hat he
calls "work brenks", periods of isolalion
v.'hrn he is "not in" at clty hall and not
available to the public.
Somc"'•hat facetiously, Councilwoman
Phyllis Sweeney said that perllaps the
administrative duties could be lifted
from !\1oody' shoulders, "if Wayne is too
jntC'rested in a salary cut."
!\1oody respondedl ··it might be worth
it to do planning."
No firn1 plan for reorganization has
been prC'sentcd by the city staff.
The city manager said there are a
number of alternatives for
reorganization. !'ome of which include
hiring consultants to do special jobs
u'hich place extra den1ands on the
planning staff.
He said he did not support a shift of the
entire nonplanning operations of the
department to the Public \V o r k s
.Department.
''Where we have a very good public
works department now, add this and it
gets out of conLrol." Thea! said.
Under the budget restrictlons imposed
by an across the board cutback cl 8.6
percent, the deparbnent of planning and
development would lose two people.
Moody selected two positions not related
to planning.
The department has also lost ttie
services of several Public Employment
Program j PEP) personnel who
performed clerical jobs and were funded
through a federal grant.
The planning department's fiscal 1974-
75 budget is $20'2,240, down about $12,000
from this year's current budget.
Moody said that while demands on his
department are increasing through
greater citizen involvement, and by
requirements for preparation and review
of environmental impact reports, he is
being cut in dollars and personnel.
Fron• Page 1
WILDCAT • • •
on their own.'' he said.
Teachers have been granted a fi,·e
percent pay hike for 1974·7$, and y.·ilt
receive an additional two percent
increase if the June 4 tax override
election is successful.
"I'm guessing that they feel the seven
percent is not enough," \Voodington
explained.
The superintendent said the di strict is
going on the basis that the strike is a
onc--day situation.
Aliens Arrested
VAN NUYS IUPI) -Police arrested
28 suspected illegal aliens during a raid
on a home here \Vcdnesday night. Eleven
·v.:omcn were in lhc group. which police
said came fron1 El Salvador.
• I •
I
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Thursday, Ma1 30. 1974
Del/W Plitt Slaff P'holl
QUI TS UCI DIRECTORSHIP
Social Ecologist Binder
lf Cl Professor
Soci'ill ·Ecology
eader Q~itting
By GEORGE 1.EIOAL
Of Ille 0-111 PU~! Stiff
Dr. Arnold Binder. founding director or
UC Irvine's nationally rec o g n i zed
program in social ecology, said today he
is resigning.
Binder h~avrs next \l'eck to begin a one--
year sabbatical :is a St'nior Fulbright
scholar 1:1t University College, Dublin.
His resignation was to have been
effective in June 1975. but Binder said
today faculty mem~ have urged him
to stay at UCl one yeat following his
return from sabbatical to help in the
search for his replacement.
"Informally I have resigned. Formally
I have not," Binder said, noting that
official paperwork had not been flied.
"I am sick of this adminlslrallon, ·•
Binder said. ''The sheer harassment on
an innovattve program iJI Incredible ...
"I have told Chancellor (Daniel G.}
Aldrich the only way I'll remain at Irvine
is lo make the program a school."
Social ecology draws faculty from a
va riety of academic disciplines such as
socioloiY,_, psychology and olher sciences.
Sl'tidents enrolled in the
interdisciplinary program may learn
from faculty in any or all of the
"schools" at ucr ranging from biological
sciences to social sciences.
Un1ike traditional schools, soc I al
ecology students do their research in the
community working as ju v e n i I e
counselors, as assistant planners, or
other assignments.
R~CEIVED $19,743 SALARY
Lt. No ll Purc•ll
• f
JUSTIFIES OVERT IME
Police Ch ief Schopen
No Lmiger 'Victi11i' Binder's goals for social ecology most
nearly match a concept Chancellor
Aldrich brought lo UCL fro1n his
experiences in agriculture \Y he r e i n
From PfJfle 1
NA RCOTICS AGENTS • • •
Ho1nosexual Filh1g Suit learning in the field of agriculture is allocated could better be spent in hiring
shared with the farm community through of additional personnel. New computer
!he university's agricultural extension. controls on overtime wages arc no\v
Purcell said rc>g:irdle~!'i o( ovl'r1imr
amounts received. "you're away fron1
home a hell of a lot."
Aldrich once envisioned an •·urban
For Secu1·it y Clea1·a11c e extension" program at UCI. planned. Croy said.
Binder joined the UCJ faculty in 1!166 lfou•ever. Chief Schopen said th;it in
leaving a professorship at New \'ork the area of criminal investigation.
University. In 1970 he launched the frequently the nature of the \\'Ork
The new police department budget for
fiscal 1974-75 has cut in half overtime
salaries from last year's amount.
SAN FRANCISCO IAP) -A m~n who
contends his public admission o f
homosexuality no longer n1akes him a
"JX15Sible blackmail victim has filed suit
FMm Page 1
BREMER • • •
annex from the Saddleback district. a
move which would take away up to 1,000
students and cost the district at least a
tenth of its yearly budget. Tax in creases
lo remaining taxpayers could go up 16 to
19 cents on $100 as~essed valuation.
A further complication has been the
.case of Trustee Alyn Brannon, who was
charged with bookmaking in late 1972.
pleaded guilty early this year, and
resigned.
Brannon is now serving out a three-
month sentence in Orange County jail
though he is technically still a trustee
until June 4.
Last summer. Bremer received a
critical leUer from the Orange (.ounty
Grand Jury because of a letter he v.Tote
lobbying for high-density coast a l
development along the coast i n
Capistrano Beach.
The land involved belongs to form('r
trustee and board president John Lund,
\\'ho said he asked Bremer to write the
Jell er.
Two other resignations in lhe past
eight months have undermined Bremer's
once-solid support on the board: charier
trustees Michael Collins and Hans Vogel.
Collins was replaced by Norrisa Brandt
of Irvine, who campaigned that changes
needed to be made in the district's ad-
ministration.
Accomplishments of B r e m c r ' s
administration include full accreditation
for the college, construction and
occupation of the school's first penna·
nent building, a. library-classroom com-
plex, and founding of the cxtcnlcd cam-
pus program.
Prior lo coming to Saddleback, Bremer
u•as dean of liberal arts at Santa Ana
College. I-Jc also served as chalnnan of
!he Education Department at Chapman
College and was superintendent of ~tc·
Cook City Schools and McCook College
in Nebraska.
He and his v•ife Evel}TJ live in Tustin.
SYCAMORE • • •
on a ney,• study.
Sycamore Hills moved into the Laguna
Beach picture in 1966 when the A. E.
Hansen, developer or Rolling Hills in
Palos Verdes came to the city with an
elaborate idea for estate-type residential
development on the virgin Laguna
Canyon Land.
The developer sought annexation to the
city. even though the triangle shaped
acreage was separated from Laguna
Beach property by several miles of
county territory.
At that time, the city eagerly eyed
development as an ex:pansion of it s
property tax base and arranged with the
Irvine C.Ompany to effect the annexation
through a s«ondary annexation of a 2QO.
foot wide strip of land alongside Laguna
Canyon road from the city limits to
Sycamore Hills.
On Aug. 1966, Sycamore Hills became
parl ol Laguna Beach.
The city ioned it for; a special
residential hillside development, a zone
tailor-made for the Hansen development
Then the bottom fell from lhe
residential financing market and plans
were &helved.
1n the interim, a growlng ecology.
t'Oflltrvation movement ipawned the
Laguna Greenbelt concept and lbe region
ha.a bttn the center of i n l e n s e
controversy.
In 1970, lbe property aloo was tile slle
of a "Christmas Happening" • galllerfog
of 20,000 youngster• wbo moved In on the
gmn slopes for tbe three-day rock
festival lhal rocked Laguna Beach as
well.
seeking the restoration of his secret
.serurity clearance.
Allan Lewis Rock , 45, or ~·lountain
View filed the suit Wednesday in federal
cow1 against the Department or Defense.
Rock charged the revocation of his
security clearanct this month violated
his constitutional rights of due process.
equal protection. privacy and frcedorn of
associalion and expression.
The American Civil Liberties Union
brought the suit on Rock's behalf. It said
he is deputy manage r of Electronics
Defense Laboratories Reconnaissance
Organization, (GTEJ Sylvania Inc. at
!\fountain View.
ln response W questioning by Air Force
investigators. Rock "freely a n d
voluntarily affirmed on Jan. 25. 1972. that
he had engaged in homosexual activity
u·ith consenting adults in private,'' the
complaint said.
The Defense Department later i!'sued a
statement saying his sexual activity
"might subject him to coercion or
pressure (i.e. blackmail)."
Earlier this year, Rock admitted his
homosexuality at a news conference and
contended such admission freed him of
any threat of blackmail.
His s~urily clearance was revoked on
the basis that his conduct allegedly
violated certain sections o( the California
Pen.al Code.
program in social ecology. requires that one man start, stay with,
Next year, while Binder is in Ireland. and conclude the investjgation.
800 students will be enrolled in the "\\'hen you find an ex:pert, you utilize
program and be taught by 27 social him," Olief Schopen said.
ecology faculty members. Until his promotion to chi('f last
This year, only 11 faculty positions summer. Schopen was the captain in
\Vere authorized for a registration of 5.50 charge of the detectives division.
in the program. The chief said overtime requests arc
Binder noted that the faculty.student reviewed by the detective's immediate.
ratio ,.,.ill drop fron1 thi s year's 50 to I to supervisors, and are then reviewed by
an improved 30 to l ratio next year. I-le is the next higher supervisor .
grateful for the help, but notes that of He said if the supervisor doesn't feel
"25 teaching assistantships granted to the overtime requested by the ofEcrr
UC! for next year, social ecology got only is valid, it ¥.'on't be approved.
one. Jle said some of the examples of •·ucr is striving for a TA to student rcjl'cts v1ould be outside s pc3kinR
ratio of 45 to 1. In SCK'ial ecology it is 300 requests and narrotics investigation done
to I. at the request of other police agencies.
"I think I have been abused long but with no direct benefit to the city.
enough by the petty haras~ent around He said a lot of officers' time is spent
here." Binder said. in court. He said if nighl·time stakeouts
If social ecology is elevated to "school'' are required, often an offictr's daytime
status, Binder u·ould be eligible for hours will be adjusted to preclude
administrative help program directors overtime payments.
are not allowed to have. The chief said he believed past
As a director. Binder said; "I do all amounts ol paid overiime v•ere required
the work that a chairman docs and all to do the jobs required of the ofricers.
the work that a dean and am not allowed "' Lt. Purcell said that detectives arc
to take off any teaching time to get it all required to "give" to UM! city an hour
done." and a half for which they are not paid
Deens of schools a1so have associate overtime.
deans to help u·ith adn1inistrative duties. He said frequently, detectives work
'"I really have to laugh u·hcn I call a hours for which they do not charge
dean in ari afternoon apd 3!1) told '1¥!'s overtime, iil!d that on trips fro;m UJe city, .
DOI in, he is in his laborataty dohlg detect~es are·pakl for ao eigbt·hour day
Wildlife, Art
Topics of Mee t
A double program featuring a color
slide lecture on African ~·ildlife and a
demonstration on Chinese' brush painting
"111 be held Tuesday al 7:30 p.m. in the
Neighborhood Congregational Churrh.
Glenneyre and SL Ann's Drive in LagLtn;1
B<-ach.
The public is inv ited to the frr1'
program. sp:>nsored by A r l -a· t' a 1 r .
Caroline Reel Schultz, artist. illustrator
and lecturer. is art director of 1h•·
Southern California Chapler of the Ea~~
African Wildlife Society of :\a1rob1.
Kenya.
In the fall. 1'1rs. Schultz \\·iJJ lead th4 · nrst safari for artists into Africa.
Ning Yeh of Taiwan will demonstrate
Chinese Po Ho brush painting. Ning Y<'h
concentrates his painting on I h e
~1ongolian pony.
Plant Fire Quelled
Oppo1i ents Leve l
C,o verup Clinr ge
Against D.4. Hicks
research.· " regar~f how long they work. 1-~----
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Fire dC'slrn\·rd a
plant of Gar\ee lndusLrirs on 11,1 i~~10!1
Gorge Roa d in northeast San J)icgo tod.i:.
and damaged the nearby quarters of ,1
re£rigeration fad:Or)'. The damage u·a,,
estimated at $100,000.
· rf · h · I ~lalfeasance tn o ice c arges agamst
1
Orange County District Attorney Cecil
Hicks officially became part of the public
record Wednesday.
The Board of Supervisors ordered
documents presented by Hicks' primary
election opponent \Villiam Hulsy of
!\1ission Viejo be filed \\'ilh the clerk of
the board.
Hulsy's allegations state 1hat Hicks
performed i m proper 1 y during
investigation and prosecution last year of
a Garden Grove traffic accident in which
two children "'ere killed .
Hulsy will be in Superior Court Friday
to ask Judge Mark Soden to order
disclosure of a portion of the accident
investigation report allegedly covered up
by police orticials.
The young Long Beach assistant city
attorney claims the document shows
Hicks may have been involved in
"malfeasance and misfeasance in office"
· during the accident probe.
l1icks has branded Hulsy's accusations 1
as "libelous and scandalous" and would
not elaborate on the case in question.
He said he \vas responsible for calling
in the California Attorney General's
office to prosecute tine c~ ~e because of a
"conflict of interest'' in the District Al·
tomey's office.
The driver of lhe car ill Y.'hich the
children "'ere riding -an Anaheim
\\'Oman claimed by ffulsy to be closely
associated with Hicks -\Vas ultimately
sentenced to four nlonlhs probation and a
small fine. Hulsy claims the sentence is
unusually light in a manslaughter case.
Hulsy originally came b e f o r e
supervisors last week to seek their
support of an investigation of Hicks'
involvement with the case. Supervisors
agreed to take individual actions but all
ultimately sent the charges to lhe cowity
Grand Jury.
Wilbur Glass
Rites Slated
Memorial services t1re schedu1ed for 2
p.m. Friday al McConnick Laguna
Beech Chapel for Wiibur o. Glw of
Laguna Beach who died Monday.
A 15'-year resident of Orange County,
Mr. Glass was born In Krui.sas. He Is
survived by his widow, Verna H. Glw: a
aon,Marlln_GJw of Lquna Beach: and
a bn>lllcr ol Sacramt11to .
2500 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT IEACH
PHONE 642·7076 ._ .. _,..,_
WIXEMEX'S
CELLARS
2 COHVEHIEMT LOCATIONS
~-·-~ IM MEWPORT PROOUCE YILUGE
1601 Nl:W?ORT ILVD.
COSTA Ml:SA 642·9004
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America. -•
OHU J 49"1 "DOUREM ROSE" ·IOTfU
COMPAU Of SJ.It
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES:
"JUG" RED frolll Collfonda
Most wine enthusiasts are on lhe lookout for a good.
inexpen~ive v.1ne for every day drinking. The l)ily ot 11
all .uo that such are hard 10 lil"ldl Wlnemen·s has had
oreal success with this one .. Reorders are the proof
-many top profeSSlonals think lnet"e's nothing ltke
''.,i ·ELU VIMO" IURGUMDY FULL . 279
Ci ALL OM
INCIDENT AL BONUS BUY
Gtasa Carariis for convenience 4 elepnce when PUting .. Jug w1n .... « klt 1t1at Neoassary Oeca~
ting .•. Winemtn'1 ha JuM what yOu\ie been looking tor.
HALF CARAFES ~ ~' 69¢..._ FULL CARAFES 11'1 _, ~ ...
Mr. Gia.,, an ape11m<nt house / -1119' •s,.ctocolw 1or•-591" --·· ......, prico bwttr ao ....,.,.
"""''• had lived In California 10 years. \-... __ .,: .... :,:~111= .. ~-~s.~w::,• ::i•:,1o::,:40'll.~:,:•:::1wt1.:••::,z":•:1~··:.:•:"~"'~wt=•:•:·~··~-;,,:c~•:•:.!:'"~'~ta.-~_.) Burial will be In El Toro cemti<JJ.
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addlebaek Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
EDITION
VOL. 67, N . 150, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ·ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1974 TEN CENTS
UCI Social Eco}o,gy Mentor Dr. ijinder Quits
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of lflt Dilly Jtllllf Sl11f
Dr. Arnold Binder, founding director of
UC Irvine's nationally r e c o g n i z e d
program in social ecology, said today he
is resigning.
Binder leaves next week to begin a onc-
year sabbatical as a senior Fulbright
scholar at University College, Dublin .
His resignation v.·as to have been
effective in June 1975, but Binder said
today faculty members have urged hin1
Dr. Brenier
to stay at UCI one year following .his
return from sabbatical to hel p in the
search for his replacement.
"Informally I have resigned. F'onnally
I have not," Binder said, noting that
official paperwork had not been filed.
"I am sick of this administration."
Binder said. "The sheer harassment on
an innovative program is incredible ..
"I have told Chancellor (Daniel G.)
Aldrich the only way I'll remain at Irvine
is Lo make the progra m a school."
Top Saddlehack
Official Resigns
SUPERINTENDENT STEPS DOWN
S.ddleback's Fred Bremer
Tliief Can, Catcli
Vp ori Readirig
A light.fingered thief probably was not
expecting the yield he got when he lifted
the shopping bag of UC Irvine student
James H. Jackson from a South Coast
Plaza bus stop bench Wednesday.
Jackson. 20, left the parcel OR the
bench and went inside a store to buy a
pack of cigarettes, police said.
\Vhen he returned the bus and the
people waiting for it had gone, along wilh
his package.
Police said the bag contained a
briefcase and several books :
"Disarmament and British Politics,"
''Basic Spanish,'' 1'Spanish Jtandbook. ''
and "Origin of the Cold War.,.
Valley Chamber
Hear Talk By
Demo Leader
Richard O'NeHl, chairman of the
Orange County Democratic Central
Committee and owner of one or the
largest undeveloped ranches in Orange
County, will speak to the Saddtcback
Valley Chamber of Comfnerc. Friday.
The breakfast meeUng is scheduled !or
7:30 a.m. at the Top of the Royal restau-
rent tn El Toro. O'Neill and his sister Alice Avery have
the, controlli.ai Interest in U,000 acres of
5oatb Orange County-an area larger the
tlle city of san Francisco. They sold 4,000 aom to Iba Mlalon Viejo Company and
T/Rl more art optioned out to the
developon of Miaslon Viejo -
O'NIUI .Ull lives on the ranch In an
b<Ml<d complex east or San Juan
capbtrano.
More lnlonnatioo lbotJ\ the bruk!ast moetfna II 1vaUable by Cllltn& 11'1-4753.
By JAN WORTil
01 I~ 0.llY Pllol $11!1
Dr. Fred H. Bremer stepped down as
superintrndent of Saddleback College
\\'edoesday in an action described by
trustees as "a reorganization of district
ad ministration."
Board President Hans Vogel said
Bremer has been relieved of his duties
'·by mutu al agreement bctv.·~n him and
the board."
Bremer. 51 , "'ho has lYl'O years
remainjng on a four·year contract, v.·i\I
retain his tiUe as president of th e college
and be given special assignmenL<; by the
board, Vogel said. J1e will continue to
rcrei ... ·e his salary of S.15.000.
l\fean"·h1le. the search for a ne\~·
superintendent is scheduled to begin at
once, with a July l goal for making the
final decision. The salary offered the ne\v
superintendent has not been determined.
. Vogel said.
Bremer iaid he had "no comment. at
this stage of the game." about the action.
Choosing the ne\v superintendent will
be one or the first actions lacing a new
board of trustees. Three new trustees are
to be elected by district voters June 4
and a new board pres ident y,·ill be chosen
since Vogel is one of the trustees being
replaced in the election.
"With this happening just be.fore ttf
election, people are having a great
opportunity to helP choose a new
superintendent , Trustee Norrisa Brandt
of Irvine commented.
Vogel said the board has several
JX'fSOns in mind for the superintendent ,
But he said the position "·ould be
advertised ''statewide, if not nalionu·ide,''
for at least two weeks. NPA screening
committee including several board mem·
bcr~. a student , a faculty mcmbr. a pro-
fessional educational administrator, and
a lay member of the community is sche-
Juled to be appointed soon.
Bremer has served si :rc years "'ilh the
dual lilie of supe rintendent·president at
Saddleback. He came to the school as its
first dean of instruction in 1967 and v;·as
promoted to superintendent arter the
departure of the school's first
superintendent Jack Roper . in 1968.
Under Dr. Bremer's term, Saddleback
College evolved from makeshift offices in
Miss ion Viejo to a 200-acrc site offering
some 500 classes to 5,000 students.
As the dean of inst ruction.
Bremer set up the college's first
(See BREMER, Page !I
Pancake Breakfast Set
By County Fh·c1uen
The annual pancake breakfast of the
Orange County Fire Department is
scheduled for 7 a.m. to noon Sunday in
the Burroughs Corparation parking lot in
Mission Viejo.
Pam:akes, sausage, milk, coffee and
juice will be sold and a fire show will be
presented hr the firemen from stations
across the county. Proceeds will go to the
Firemen's Benevolent Fund.
AIM Trial Ruckus
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UP!l -Supporters
of Americen lndian Movement leaders
Ruuell Means and DennJs Banks
surrounded the federal courthouse
Wednelday In an erfort to 1'arrest" an
FBI a,ent who escaped through
conneclmg skyways. The agent, who
testified In the Wounded Knee trial
against Mew and w1<r,ne11-t11rough
the pasaages connecting courthou!e
bulldlnp. ai !ellow agenu ecutned with
AIM IU]lllOl1er1.
Social ecology dra~·s faculty from a
va riety of academic disciplines such as
sociology, psychology and other sciences.
Students enro ll ed in the
interdisciplinary program may learn
from faculty in any or all of the
"schools" at UCI ranging from biological
sciences to social sciences.
Unlike traditional schools, soc i a I
ecology students do their research in lhe
community working as ju v e n 11 e
counselors, as assistant pla nners, or
other assignments.
Binder's goals ror social ecology most
nearly match a concept Chancellor
Aldrich brought to UCI fro1n his
experiences in agriculture wherein
lea rning in the field of agriculture is
sha red with the farm community through
the university's agricultural extension.
Aldrich once envisioned an "urban
extension" program at UCJ.
Binder joined the UCI faculty in 1966
leaving a professorship at New York
llniversity. In 1970 he launched the
program in social ecology.
Next year. while Binder is in Ireland.
800 students will be enrolled in the
program and be taught by 27 social
ecology faculty members.
This yea r. only II faculty po sitions
v•ere authorized for a registration of 550
in the program.
Binder noted that the facullv-student
ratio \viii drop from !his yea r's 5o to l to
an improved 30 to l rat io n('Xt year. !·It! is
.......... our
Central Irvine High School
Community Park
Bryan Avenue
Community Park
Harvard Ave. Community
Ball Park
Deerfield Community
Park
Culver Drive
Community Park
--·
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University Drive ~-.. ,-0.:-,:-:.lC,,--
Community Park .
• • 1" . • • \ ..
• •
• Commun•!)' Park with ma1orMullo·USI!
Recreation Cenler Bu•ld1ng
Commun11y Park ""•th small Mul!1·Purpose
Aecreatoon Bu+ld1ng
Facllltles Location Map
lrvi1ie's F11t111·e Pa,.ks
"
.. ,.-'
UC.I.
_, .. ,
; : \ • •
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• •
Jeffrey Road
Community Park
Turtle Rock
Community Park
Irvine Town Center
Performing Arts Center
and Senior Citizens Center
. .... .. .. =--
I
Voters will decide Tuesday whether the city or
Irvine will buy nine park sites and develop six of
them with parks, cultural and activities facilities.
A $16 million bond issue -Proposition D on the
ballot -will pay for immedif te acquisition of all
sites and a four.year improvemel}t program. J\1ap
shows where money is to be spent if two-thirds of
Irvine voters vote yes on D.
Opponent Assails Hicks
Liriks DA to Police Coverup iii Official Cliar,ge.'>
tifalfeasance in office charges against
Orange County District Attorney Cecil
Hicks officially became part of the public
record Wednesday.
The Board of Supervisors ordered
documents presented by Hicks' primary
election opponent Will iam Hulsy of
Mission Viejo be filed \•:ith the clerk of
the board.
Hulsy's allegations state that Jticks
perfomied i m p r o p e r I y during
investigation and prosecution last year or
a Garden Grove traffic accident in which
two children were killed.
Hulsy will be in Superior Court Friday
lo ask Judge Mark Soden to order
disclosure of a portion of the accident
investigation report allegedly covered up
by police officials.
The young Long Beach assistant city
attorney claims the document sho'A'S
Hicks may have been involved in
.. malfeasance and misfeasance in office"
during the accident probe.
Hicks has branded Hulsy's accusations
as "libelous and scandalous" and would
not elaborate on the case in question.
He said he was responsible for calling
in the California Attorney General's
office to prosecute tne ct.;e because of a
Irvine Nein-teachers Ask
15.6 Percent Sala1·y Hilie
Non-teaching Irvine Unified School
Di.strict employes, opened negotiations
for 1974-75 salaries Wednesday with , a
request for a 15.6 pereent hike.
There was no Immediate response
from the ochool board.
Spoltesnen !or the cfassi!ied employ..,·
group based their request on tl)e
Increased co.t or tlvlng, which, they ••id,
the raise Wllllld counter.
The sn>up alao asked !or incr<Bled
frinle benefiu, Including total payment
by the dlstrlct o! employes medical
tnsuranoe co\oerage, lnltead of 1he
preJGnt ti.II percent d!atrtct ccn-
tribullon. Thlt would ct:t tbe district
an additional f!O.D per employe per
• · I •
•
year.
The district contribution to employe
fringe benefits, whlch include medical
and dental lnsurance, would then total
$93.llS annually.
Allowable vacation time, the group
saldr should be Increased !rem the
present 15 days a year after five years or
service lo a maximum of 20 days after 15
years or service.
Longevity pay, they said. shculd be
Increased from the present 110 per
month granted each yeer alter the
seventh year of service to a maximum of
l$O a month. 'l1loy asked that > new rate
be set at $15 a month lncrtase eedl year
alter the sixth to a mulmum ol l'/5.
"conflict of interest'' in the District At·
tomey's office.
The driver or the car i.1 which the
children "'ere riding -an Anaheim
.,..·oman claimed by Hulsy to be closely
associated wilh Hicks -was ultimately
sentenced to four months probation and a
small fine . Hul sy claims the sentence is
unusually light in a manslaughter case.
Hulsy originally came before
supervisors la st week to seek their
support of an investigation of Hicks'
involvement with the case. Supervisors
agreed to take individual actions but all
ultimately sent the charges to the county
Grand Jury.
Carpenter Kidnap
Meastires Okayell •
SACRAti1Ef'o<IO (AP) -Trust and
corporate funds could not be used lo pay
kidnap ransom demands u n d e r
legislation approved unaoimously by the
state Senate.
The two bills, which Sen. Dennis
Cari>enter said he introduced in response
lo the Patricia Hearst kidnaplng , were
sent to the Assembly on identical 26-0 votes Wednesday .
But Carpenter did not ask for a vote on
a third bill which would make ll a
misdemeanor for perSOns such as
recipients or the Hearst "People in
Need" food program lo accept the orofits
of extortion.
Clarpenter (R-Newport Beach) said his
purpooe "la to take the profit out or
kldnaplng, particularly the MllUcal typo
aucb· as the Hearst case." r-
gratl'ful for the help. but notes that or
··25 teachin~ assistantships granted to
UCI for ne.«l year. social ecltlogy got only
On('.
··t;CI is striving for a TA to student
ratio of 45 10 I. In social ecology it is 300
to I.
··1 think I have been abused long
enough by the petty harassmen t around
here." Binde r said .
lf social ecology is elevated to "school"'
~See 811\'DER, Page 2)
ouse
3 Priso11ers
Flee Jail,
Capt11recl
8" TOM BARlE'."
Oi lh• D&ily Piiot Slilff
Three Orange County jail prisoners.
one of them a convicted killer who was to
be sentenced later today, overpowe red
their guards in a county courthouse
holding cell th.is morning and fled to a
brief freedom. guns in hand.
One of the trio. Frank Allan O'Hare,
25, of Anaheim, was shot four times in a
gun battle that erupted as the three men
fled from the base ment holding tank and
tried to commandeer a passing car.
Ironically, the car was driven by off.
du ly Californ ia Highway Patrolman Jim
Paul. 26. 11·ho drew his weapon and took
on the trio in a gun battle .
It ended ,.,.ith O'Hare shot in the right
chc('k. ri ght arm and twice in the back.
He is list('d in critical condition in
Orange County Medical Cente r.
Police said Paul was shot in the right
:irm and shoulder. He is listed in
satisfactory condition in Santa Ana
Community Hospital.
Santa Ana police said convicted kill er
Lawrence Eugene \Vilson. 30, of Los
Ange les and Prince Pico Tarpley, 18. of
Anaheim . then left the t\\'O wounded men
and ran in different directions as the
police pursuit gathered momentwn.
Tarpley ~'as arrested moments later as
he soug ht refuge in a home near 10th and
Parton streets, about four blocks from
the point of the escape.
Santa Ana police said a local youth who
no1iced the armed fugitive dodge into the
house told pursuing officers who
promptly entered the home and grabbed
Tarpley without further incident.
Wilson. reportedly carrying the .357-
n1agnum automatic he took from
patrolman Pau l. was next seen on 17th
St reet where he entered a store and
inquirl'd about welding equipment .
Police said the ru se failed to deceive
them and they caught up Y.'ith \\'ilson and
di~rmed him as he <1uestioned the
suspicious slOre owner.
Sheriff's deputies said Tarpley and
O'l·fare were currently being tried before
Superior Court Judge R a y mo n d
Thompson on five counts of armed
robbery stemming from incidents in the
Anaheim area.
Deputy Dislrict Attomev Pat Br ian
the prosecutor in thal trial, ,.,,as with
police and deputies today as they sped
along Santa Ana streets in pursuit of the
trio.
County jail oflicers have identilied
O'Hare and Tarpley as the l\\'O men who
OVCf1>0wered two bailiffs in the basemenL
IS.e PRISONERS, Page 21
Orange ,Coast
Weather
It'll be cloudy Friday morn ing
but clearing to mostly sunny skies
by the afternoon along the Orange
Coast. Highs at the beaches 66-68
rising to 72.74 inland. Overnight
lovts tonight SS.00.
INSIDE TODA\'
Two mett who often deba ted
over tlteir d7i11ki11g abilities.
11c/d a match to decide once a11d
for alt 10/to was th{: cltampio~.
T/1ey both died. Story. Page 4.
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2 DAll,I PllOI Thursday, Mar 30, 19741
~ Pilot Logbook
2 Political Newcomers
Ru11 Similar Campaigns
Uy Wit.LIAM SCllREIBER
01 1119 O•llr l'llel $1111
T\\'O \'OUSG l\lE:i~ from Mission Viejo have burst onto Or&.nge Cowity's
palilit al scene :imidst a nurry of charges leveled against the incumbents they
arc challenging 1n the June <I primary.
Until the primary elcclion [i\ing deadline rolled around, Oa'vid Gubler, 32,
and \\'illi:im S. Hulsy, 31, v.·ere living relatively obscure lives Jinked only by
the fact that they are good friends. ~ •
Now Gubler, president of an employment agency for executives, and llulsy,
an assistant city attorney in 1..-0ng Beach, are in the thick of cold, hard politi-
cal infighting.
Gubler has challenged 40th District Congressman Andrew Jltnshaw. llulsy
is battling incunlbenl county District Altorney Cecil lhcks.
EVE~ TllE f\10ST casual observer of the local political scene "·ould find
distinct sl milariti<•s in the can1paign taclics being used by the ,.,.,.o challengers.
In fact, the blueprints could have come out of a Xerox machine.
Both are making every effort to capitalize on !he year of Watergate and
the scandals that have fQ.Stcrcd public dislrust in incumbent government.
GUBLEJt IS CHARGING l-Linshaw with tnisusc of poy,·er during his terms
as county assessor. He claims l-linshaw used public employes and equipment
on his <:ongressional campaign.
lie has also charged that Itinshav .. and his lop aides may have been in-
\'Olvt·d in casing up on assessments of big campaign contributors.
llulsey is charging his incumhcnt fO<' \Vith ''malfcasoncc ancl mi sfeas-
ance in office" for allegedly innueneing the investigation and disposition of
a Garden Grove traffic accident in which two children "'ere killed.
Closer examination of the Gubler and Hulsy campaign reveals another
common denominator -John Schmitz, noted county John Birch Society mem-
ber unseated by llinshaw t~'o years ago.
ROTll GUBLER AND llUI.SY worked hard on the Schmitz campaign and
Schrn ilz admits to being a 1notive force in botb campaigns as an adviser and
fund rai ser.
Jn a rccrnt inl.('rvic\1·. Schmitz said Gubler was e\·en prepared lo step
asidt• If he !Schmitz) wantl'd to try and regain his old seat. Schmitz declmed
to run to concentrate on a new business enterprise.
THE CONNECTION with Hulsy's efforts is some\\'hal less clear but bc-
1•omcs obvious 1vith a liltlr logical thought.
Schmitz is still markt'dly upset over his loss to Hlnsha.,.,•, but he appenrs
1norc disturbed that the incumbent district attorney has not mov<'d fast
cnouJ?h in a probe of alleged misconduct by Hinsha1v y,•hen he "·as assessor.
Thus. his support of llulsy -the man who would press lhat investigation
to il'> logical conclusion.
And yet. another siinilarity bet\\'een Hulsy and Gubler campaign tactics
tends lo belie those hopes of an intensive investigation.
I
JlliLSY SAID IF he: loses in June, he probably wouldn't pursue the allega-
lions against Hicks "because my heart ·wouldn't be in it."
Asked the same question, Gubler says he probably Y.'Ould leave his in·
vesligation to others if he is defeated.
If nothing else, that pronounced lack of dedication flies in the face of the
sincerity bolh 1nen try lo project.
Nixon Requests
Tape Dispute
Run Its Course
WASl11NGTON (UP[) -President
!\ixon today asked the U.S. Sup~me
Court to avoid a "rush judgment" and
Jet his dispute "'ilh \Vatcrgate prosecutor
Lcoo Jay.·orski over subpoenaed tapes
lake its course through the lower courts.
Nixon said fu ll consideration by
appeals court judges would prove his
contention that the doctrine of executive
privilege "remains alive and well" in
iq>ite of repeated challenges h y
Watergate and impeachment investiga-
tor.I. .
In a brief filed in the high rourt. Nixon
ansY.ered Jay.·orski's plea that the court
waive the normal appellate process and
rule directly on the dispute over
JaY.llrski's subpoena for 64 presidential
tape recordings.
Jaworski argues speed is essential lo
resolve the issue in time for the Sept. 9
trial of seven former While House and
campaign officials on Watergate coverup
charges. But Nixon's brief said Jaworski
failed to show either the administration
of justice or the rights of the acrused
would be harmed by allowing judicial
review to "run its orderly course."
Plaut .Fire Quelled
SAN DIEGO fi\Pl -Fire destroyed a
plant of Garlee lndustries on ~1ission
Gorge Road in nnrlheast San Diego today
and dan1agC'd the nearby quarters of a
refrigeration factory. 1'hc damage \vas
t>stin11l!cd at SIOO.OOU.
011.t.HGIE COAST is
Fram Page 1
BREMER • • •
original faC'Ulty.
Pressure has been heavy on Bremer in
the last year, v.·hi.ch he has called the
roughest in his career.
Tustin residents initiated a push to de·
annex from the Sadd\eback district. a
n1ove which would take a\\'ay up to 1.000
students and cost the district at leas! a
tenth of its yearly budget. Tax increases
to remaining ta:\payers could go up 16 lo
19 cents on $100 assessed valuation.
A further complicaticm has been the
case of Trustee Al}1l Brannon , '>''ho Y.1as
charged ~ith bookmaking in late 1972.
pleaded guHty early this year, and . ' resigned.
Brannon is no.,11 serving out a three·
month sentence in Orange County jail
though he is technically still a trustee
until June 4.
Last sum1ner, Bremer received :i
critical letter from the Orange County
Grand Jury because Or a letter he Y.Tote
lobbying (or high-density coast a l
development along the roast i n
Capistrano Beach.
The land involved belongs to rormer
ln1ste€ and board president John Lund,
11·ho said he asked Bremer to write lhe
lellcr.
'J\ro other rcsignalions in chc past
Pight months h:ive undermined Bremer·s
once-solid support on the board: chaner
trustees f\1ichael Collins and Hans Vogel.
Collins was replaced by Norrisa Brandt
of Jrvine, .,.,,ho campaigned !hat changes
needed to be made in the district's ad·
ministration.
Accomplishments of B r e m e r ' s
: ' ·•
DAILY PILOT administration include full accreditation
for the college, construction and
occupation of the schoors first perma-
nent building, a library·classroom con1·
plex, and founding of the extenled ca1n·
pus program.
. '
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--Nofle'lt-11!\#r"'-·~ ... ,.. -~~''*'" ,...,. '"'' .. -loll .__.ll* ..... -r11CCllll"'<Oft!O---. lifOOfllJ .._ ~ --~ M-. Qllib--.._. .. 81'-f3 att-, "'fllMI M OO~"llllW¥ ... _li.DCI_..,
-
Prior lo coming to Saddleback. Bremer
11·as dean of liberal arts at santa Ana
College. He also served as chairman of
the Education Department at Chapman
College and was superintendent of ~1c·
Cook City Schools and McCook College
in Nebraska.
He and his v.·ife Evelyn live in Tustin.
Fu11ding Okayed
For Coun seling
l'nder an agreement accepted by the
Jn•ine Unified School DI s tr I ct
Wednesday. the Coastline Regional
Ocoupaliooal Program (ROP) will pay
lhe diltrict $50 for each lludent enrollod
In the work experienc.J program.
The money from the program, which Is
sponsored by several Orange Coast
school districts, will reimburse lhe
district for extra guidance and
coun eling services the participants
requl e. \
Th~ funds could be uoed !tr tesUng,
carttr · form.allon nfatertats, oounsefing
person I, facllllles or equlpmenl uoed lo
111ist partlclpallng studenlS.
•
Teachers Out r Customers
Wildcat Strike Help Grab
At Laguna High '
Gunman,17
By HILARY KAVE
01 I ... Oall~ Plltl S!•ll
A sudden, wildcat strike by more than
ha.If the Laguna Beach 11igh School
teachers forced the school to shut down
to a half day schedule today, and some
students were dismissed as early as 9
a.m.
The administration was not officially
notified of the strike, or of the teachers'
grievances.
Superintendent Don \Voodinglon said be
guesses the protest was over "fruslration
with salaries." He said he heard
"rumors" of the walkout Wednesday
afternoon.
Administrators were unable to come up
with an official tally of how many
teachers had walked off the job today,
but said that 29 had either called in sick,
or taken "personal leaves for business
reasons."
The figure does not cotml an additional
six teachers \\'ho were knoy,·n to be ill
before the strike began. The school has
56 teachers.
Woodington also said he believed three
teachers at Thurston Intermediate School
were participating in the protest action,
but said he did not believe it had ex-
tended to the elementary schools.
Science teacher Charles Reich . the
strike leader. said teachers Y.ill probably
continue to strike until ttJc school hoard
takes specific action. or show "good
faith" on their demands.
Reich said that the teachers 1\ant the
· board to mC('t 1'>ith the faculty to explain
their budgetary priorities. !he trustees to
re-examine budgets and a direct say in
how allocated salary money is to be
spent.
"\Ve're upset and dis<;atisfied with lhe
board's priorities decisions. They ha ve 't
included staff or students in their
decisions." Reich said.
"We have an inadequate salary
schedule with inadequate compensation
for inflation. In fact, .,.,,e're the second
Joy,·est in Orange Cow1ty," Reich
continued.
The s1rike organizer also said the
teachers do not y.·ant trustees to decide
how to spend the salary mor.ey.
"People on the top oflthe pay schedule
have been paying for it for many years.
\\'e'd like to give these people more
money. The bottom end of the scale is
ttigh·paid, but we have very few people
on that end," Reich criticized.
If there is an immediate good faith
sign from the board. Reich said the
teachers \viii be back in their classrooms
Friday, If not. the strike, or sick-in, will
continue.
Reich emphasized the teachers are not
actually ··striking," since by taking
professional leave they are being docked
pay, which is not illegal.
He said the protest actim was
"spontaneous" and did not come from
any orf:anlzed group.
School Board President N o r m a n
Browne said today he is will: lg to sit
down with the teachers and discuss the
salary situation wilh them, il they wish
to.
"I can understand their frustration
when they look around the county and
see higher increases coming through .•.
I don't know if we can change anything,
but maybe we can," Dr. Browne said.
•·11 just shows the need for more
money in !tie budget. he added.
The strike is oot an organized effort
\Voodington said.
"It's not a produet of the Lagun.-i
Beach Faculty Association, or the
A1nerican Federation of Teachers acting
on their own," he said.
Teachers ha\•e been granted a five
percent pay hike for 1974-75, and will
receive an additional lwo percent
increase if the June 4 ta1: override
election is successful.
"l'm guessing that they feel the seven
percent is not enough," \Voodington
explained.
'rhe superintendent said the district is
going on the basis that the strike is a
onc-<lay si tu~tion.
Lagu11a Hills
Faces Increase
In Water Bill
The 4,900 Laguna Hills households
receiving water rrom the Rossmoor
\Valer Company 1~·ill face a 4.5 percent
incre:ise on !heir next bills.
A spokesman for the California Public
Utilities Commission {PUC) said the rate
increase, effective li.tay 26. 1vas approved
to offset increases in electricity,
purchased ~·at.er and property taxes.
According to PUC statistics, since
rates y.·ere last set for Rossmoor in
September 1972. the cost of purchased
po"'er to the utility has risen 66 percent,
purchased water five percent, and
property taxes 19 percent.
A PUC spokesman in Los Angeles said,
even with the increase. the utility's rate
of return on investment (seven percent)
11·ill stiU be below the 7.4 percent
considered "reasonable" by the PUC.
D1llr P'lltl St1U P'h1IO
QUITS UCI DIRECTORSHIP
Socia l Ecologist Binder
\f'rom Page 1
BINDER ...
status. Bind<'r \1'0t1ld be eligible for
adn1inistrative help program directors
are not allowed to have.
As a director, Binder said; "I do all
the work that a chairman does and all
!he work that a dean and am not allowed
to take off any teaching time to get it all
done."
Deans of schools also have associate
deans to help \vith ad1ninistrative duties.
"I really have lo laugh y,·hen I cal\ a
dean in an afternoon and am told 'he's
not in. he is in his laboratory doini;:
research ' ··
··1 gal'e up my lab three years ago. I
don't have tin1e to do research." Binder
said.
Binder says his chief complaint is the
fact that the struggle to innovate which
is an uphill fight to begin v.·ith is
complicated by "petty adminislrative
harassment."
He notes there is sorne "sibling
rivalry" between social ecology and
other academic wii!s.
l\Iajor clashes leading to h i s
resignation involved the deans of social
sciences and the graduate school.
The resignation "occurred under
conditions of rage when the adrenalin 1\'as
flo.,.,·ing," Binder said, "but I haven't
changed my mind. I am concerned about
the future of social ecology, but I think it
is best I go through y.•ith it and resign."
Cha ncellor Aldrich y.·as not available
for comment on the resignation today.
Aliens Arrested
VAN NUYS !liPJ1 -Police arr~ted
28 su.spected illegal aliens during a raid
on a home here. Wednesday night. Eleven
women were in the group, v.·hich police
said came from El Salvador.
A Umcly intervention by two customers
saved a Dann Point liquor store owner
$300 Wednesday night and led Orange
County SherUf's officers to lodge a yowig
gunman in juvenile hall.
Oeupties said the 17·year-old 1'.1ission
Viejo youth had already pocketed the
receipts at the Party Tinte liquor store,
33210 Paci!i'c Coast lligt\'1ay, after
menacing the clerk with a loaded shotgun
\.\·hen the two customers entered the
premises.
Both men promptly backed against the
wall when the youth told them : "Get in
here or I'll blow your heads off ."
Deputies said the clerk took advantage
of the interruption to grab the youth's
y,·eapon which \\'ent off as the t\\'O 1ncn
struggled.
Officers said lhe t~·o customers then
jumped in and helped the clerk lo
overpower the gunman. They said no one
.,.,,as injured in the shooling incident.
Deputies, who said !he youlh has a
prior criminal record, stated that he will '
face juvenile court action later today.
Students Set
Rocket Lu11nch
Et Camino Real Elementary School
fifth and sixth graders will launch model
rockets they constructed in a rocketry
class Friday at 9:30 a.m. at the school.
Between 15 and 20 scale rorket s.
purchased and assembled bv the studenr ..
Y.iU be fired, their teacher. Joe Sclu1e1d-
er. said.
Because of the high level of interest in
rocketry, Schneider said, what began as
a "mini-course" became a to I a 1
classroom activity.
The rock ets \'.'.lry in slylc ;ind
complexity and include so1ne \\h 1ch carry
cameras in !heir nose cones to take
mo,·ies of the flight.
Plane Lands Safely
LAS VEGAS (AP) -An airplane Y.'ith
42 persons aboard made a safe landing
\\'ednesday after circling the field for
1,,.,·o hours when a passenger th>ught he
saw smoke from the landing gear area
on takeoff', officials said. The F·27 plane,
owned by EG&G Aviation Co .. circled lo
bum up fuel before making an
emergency landing at f\1 c Carr an
I nternaUonal Airport. Brokerage Firn1
Quits Busi11c ss 1----
SAX DIEGO <CPI) -Roberts, Scott &
Co.. Inc., Y.'i\tl 19 branch offices in
California and one in Phoenix, Ariz .. is
giving up the Ney,• \'ork Stock Exchange
seat it has held since 1938 , President
Jack 1\lexander says.
The firm 's board of directors decided
lo go out of husiness because of
''declining revenues and an unsta blC'
securities market." Alexander said
\Vednesday. "No client's S<'cunties or
cash \\'ill be enda"ngered by this move.''
No date \\'as fixed for termin;i ting
operations, but lhe company's brant h
offices and its NYSE seat y,·ere up for
sale, Alexander said.
Di-. Ro senbau1n
Last Rites Held
l\lemorial services \\'ere he I d
\Vcdnesday for Dr. Bruno L. Rosenbaum
of Laguna Hills, who died Sunday.
A native or Germany, Dr. Rosenbaum,
a physician, spent 30 years y,·orking for
U.S. Veterans Administration hospitals in
Texas, New York, Jllinois, and
\\'ashington.
fie is survived by his widow, l\iariane,
of Laguna Hills. one daughter and two !
grandchildren . Dr. Rosenbaum had lived
in Laguna Hills for !he last five years
since he retired.
t 'rom Page 1
PRISONERS. ••
hodling tank while the prisoners \\'ere
being assembled for today's court
calendar call.
They said Wilson, who app..1rently y.•as
not included in the original escape plan,
joinc:'d the two men in their dash for
freedom .
Officrrs said O'Hare and Tarpley each
held a gun taken from sheriff's officers.
Jail officers-said no shots v.·ere fired in
!he holding tank or in the immediate
vicinity of the courthouse basement.
They said the first shots were fired
\.\·hen the three prisoners tried to
commandeer patrolman Jim Paul 's car.
Jt is not clear to officers at this time
who fired the first !hots in an encounter
th.al left O'Hare seriously wounded and
the patrolman slumped in drtver's seat.
Field Opens Later
SAN DIEGO (AP) Port
commlssioners: say tbey will shut down
Undbergh Field In Ill< early·mornlng
hou1' for aix months, otarllng Ibis
summer, The aNIOWICtl11enl Wedne.tday
caught airlines by surprise.
... WIXEMEH'S
CELLARS
2 CONVENIEMT LOCATIONS
2500 W. C:O.lST HWY.
NEWPORT IEACH
PHONE642·7076 ........ _.,. .. ___. ~-·-~ IM NEWPORT P'IODUCI 'llLUGE
1601 HEWPOllTILVD.
COSTAMESA 642·9004
THIS WEEK'S CHEESE & DELICATESSEN FEATURES
I .1 ,
'
OMLY I 79per
f!' Roq. 1.98 . pound I ' , i' Li111it 2 lbs. witti c~,. I
'~ ·' .. _,_ w:
CHEESE AT
AFFORDABLE PRICES.
, , ..
• .. .. PASTRAMI .,
''· : '
OHLY ., 79pcr ,,;
i!'' Roq. 2. 79 pound J ,
~· u~•, ....... c-,. \.~,.,::,_ . .· ~-~~--= I . . "' ~ ·-. _. ---,... . i: ..
\
' .
;. cono SALAMI '
MORT ADELLA
.-,,· OMLYI 98 per ~~;~!:~·~-c=~-·.' \J" I
COMl'•aE TMSI SPICIALS
l ·' . ' ~~--"' r71il11·"1·J3"1!.1.r.IU-..:..:r,i!!C;
I
' .. ••
MOZIARELlA
PROVOLONE
Mosl cheese merchants are reluctant to
advertise cheese by the pound. in fear of
drawing attention to their high prices. Not
Wine men's our prices are keen ....
or TILLAMOOK
'·"' Yow Chok• f 89 j
,, •. Rog, 2.19 """ :::;... ,; I
~ ~ ... , Ulflit l ~ rill c_,... ~~
.. ~ ¥ ·-• -C?1lr.' ,,
Have you placed your catering order yet for that wedding or graduation? We're still taking orders
and YOU WONT BWEYE OUR PRICES! Let Winemen·s make it easy for yo u ... Heres an example:
THE CAPTAIN'S CHOICE $2.50 ,... ,.._
MEAT PLAnER: BOiied Ham. Corned Beef. Roasl Beef & All Beel S.lami. CHEESE PLATTE~: Cheddar. Onion. Swiss
& Muensler. RELISH PLATIER: Black ouws. Stuffed Green Olives. Sweet Cherry Peppers, Pid<les. Mustard & Mavon-
na1se. SALADS: Coleslaw & Potato. CHOICE OF BREAD: Rye, Egg. Onion, While, French. Pumpern1Cke\-Any Two
COA~ Sfnk• ..... ,.....,_,,... .. Cal U.1 ly n. 'Wftff. w.,....,.. A~ v..wy Of o..,1p11 A•ellcitW
R 0 SE' I"'°"' Pom.goll
This Portuguese Rose Wine is
similar to !tie more expensive one
from Por1ugal that is very p0pular 1n
America ..•
OHLY J 49PU "DOUREM ROS£" ·IOnu
C:OMPAll Of SJ.It
'
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES:
"JUG" RED from California
Most wine enthusiasts are on ll'le lookout tor a good. inexpensive wintt tor every day drinking. Tht pity ol 11
all .•s that such are hard 10 l1nctt Winemen·s has had
greal success wllh 1h1s one ... Reorders are the proof
-many lop protess10n11s think !here'• nothing like
i~'iEw. VINO" IURGUHDY PULL 279 GALLON '
INCIDENT AL BONUS BUY
Glass Cara1e'1 tor oorwenletiee & oleQlnte wNn purlng "Juo Wintl" Of fol' !hat NeeellllY Otcan.
ting .•. Winemen·1 hta Just what vou\ie bltn tqe>Klng for.
HALF CARAFES tt _, 69'... FULL CARAFES ~ _, 99' ...
,1
i '
I
DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Help for
For years it has been apparent to people conc~rned
with higher educatioq lo South Orange County that Sad-
dJeback College needs some major changes in outlook
a.nd adrninistration if it is to meet its educational chat·
lenge.
With three seats on the board of trustees up for at·
large election June 4, voters have the roost significant
opportunity in the school's seven-year history to have
a say in Saddleback's destiny.
The candidates recommended by the Daily Pilot are:
\Villiam Dean in Tustin (Area One).
Dr. Alan Greenwood in Tustin (Area Two).
Larry Taylor in Laguna Beach (Arca Three).
\Villia1n Dean, an aerospace executive, has a proved
professional reco rd for working with government, deal-
ing with people, and coping with cost factors. fo~urthe'r.
in the campaign he has avoided simplistic rhetoric on is-
sues to gain publicity. IJe acknowledges that the school
has problems. but says he wants to get directly involved
before n1aking hasty conclusions,
Dr. Greenwood. a dental sur~eon and educator, has
the right combination of 1natur1ty and drive to help
produce results at Saddleback. I-le has taken a strong
position favoring federal aid -which h·as long been
needed. In addition. Greenwood has many years' experi-
ence working with students as a medi~al school profes-
sor. !·le does not display a condescending attitude to-
ward students -an attitude all too common in the past
at Saddleback.
Saddle hack
('
Many of the original ten candidates for the lhre"'
seats have contributed valuable debate to the campaign.
The discussion at various forum.s has been varied, ca ndid,
and to the point. All of those who ran should be com·
1nended for bringing important issues to the forefront.
The school is at a critical point. Good leadership
is needed, and good leaders are available in Dean, Green·
wood, and Taylor.
Props. D, E: Ye~
On Tuesday, Irvine voters \\'ill have two chances
to determine the extent of the new city's co1nmitn1ent
to preservation of open space for the enjoyment of
present and futµre residents.
Ballot Proposition D sets aside $16 million for pur-
chase and development of six con1111unity parks and ac-
quisition of land for three more.
Teenagers. senior citizens. tennis buffs, perform·
ing artists and their audiences. swi111n1ers, picnickers
and ballplayers of all ages and types will benefit fro1n
facilities the bonds will provide. Parks planning recog-
nizes the probability that 100.000 people will call Irvine
home by 1985.
Proposition E reserves another S2 n1illion for bi·
cycle and hiking trail development. Off-street paths will
link all future park facilities and other city land111arks.
The issue calls for 28 miles of bike trails and 10 n1iles
of hiking paths.
Together, the ballot n1easures will increase city
taxes on a $40,000 hon1e by no more than 542 in any
of the next 25 years. That's about 12 cents a day for the
typical homeowner.
•
."I :~ l'\......i,M-....,
Until Micha.el McFadden and Norman Cole dropped
out of the race in Laguna Beach, they and Larry Taylor
posed a difficult choice for voters. All three were good
candidates. 'faylor is the best remaining choice. tlis
record of service as a Laguna school boa.rd president
and trustee is a good credential and as one of the origin-
al planners of Saddleback has the historical perspective
needed now.
The Daily Pilot recon1n1ends a ··yes" vote on Irvine
ballot propositions D and E.
SB ''1 170 THI NK JERft.Y FORD IS Til-Y INu.TO TELL US 50Mt THING:
Don't Lea1i
Too Heavily
In a Brooding Air, the Wolves Are Circling
•
On th e Cler.~)·
Tlie \Vhit.e llouse is Hoticeably
x1naller these cfuys. It's bee11 set back
further fro1n f/1e street. T//e iron
prillrd fence oro!lud it has nrou111
J-i r1/11•r. rhougll. rntc'L llie spik·es arop
11re lu;11etl ra~ur .~!1urp.
( SYDNEY H •RRIS ) Occosiollal/y Ut niglit llLe glim1ner
:"' u/ o sltuded ligllt ca11 be see11 tltroug/1 , -/n bolted shutter. So sorneone still I holds 011t within. But lite griunin[I
I have llE'V('r kno\in \\hc.!her lo laugh 11·11/rcs (Ire circling. circ/i'ug. A11d eacli
or rry mor!' \lh<'ll pl•opll' ''"l!h emotio.na!. (/u!J tl1cy yrow ever bolder. rnarit;;il. or st•xual probll·n1:o; arr ;id\'1~1·d
to •·tuin to ~our dortor ur tlergyn1an ..
for counseltng anr! help.
The truth of tht· n1:Htcr l" that mo.."t
doctors and clcrg~ men-in our society. af
l(':ist-an> no 1norc 1,ual1f1l·<l hy tra1nu1g
or !rrnor-.•r11·11\ to
gl\'C' SU('h ('01111 v!111:.:
than J plu1•1l:1•r c:111
f I .'\ '..L l-:11.,.l ;11 11 1,,11
tub<·
The .-.u1t 11it"· •• nd
* * *
.. People al'"''ays 'said they didn 't like
the son or a bitch but they didn 't know
11hy." sa.vs a reporlrr in the \\'hite House
prt•ss roorn. ··~o'"'· they know v•hy .··
lie doesn 't bolhrr to lo11·c r his \"Oit'c
lhough a presidential aide is pa~ing by.
'!'ht• aide's shoulders hunch for\\·;ird. His
ht'ad ducks. He keeps going. 1 staring
:-tra1ght <ihcad. Silent. The other nt1\"S-
1nt·n l.iu~h.
De fend i1ig Nixo n Ju st l s1i't tlie Tlii11 g to Do
\'ou can't blame the aide. Those f('11• in
!his fo\rn \\'ho still openly defend !hr
President. like Father John f\.lcLaughlin.
the Jesuit priest on the White House staff,
are subject to instant derision. It simply
isn't the thing to do.
The \\'hite l~ouse press has been 1vryly
critical in pri\'ate of every President
since FDR. Cynicism is issued \\'ith their
pencils and notebooks. But never have
they been so openly and fearlessl~1
hostile. never have their jokes been so
vicious nor delivered \\·ith such relish. It
sin1ply is the thing to do.
TlllS I ~ hasicall~· a Dt·mocratic I0\111.
The nt\•.~111;.;n !he upper-cc h •. 1,, n
bureaucrats. the Georgcto\1n hosh.:S-.l'"
--1ho~~ 11110 -.et thr ton<'. t•vok(' 1l1t·
n1uod. dc!t•rrninc \1·ha 1 is in and \\hat i~
(..__A_R_T_H_O_P_P_E~J
out -~irt· not only predom1nantly
Democrats. but intellectual Den1ocrats.
Since the d;i~·s l}f Algrr Hiss. they ha1\•
hrcn Nixon haters.
\\'hen the President 11as :'.II the height
of his po\1·er. they criticized him . But
th<'.V crilicizr<I him for being du il :ind
banal. and only among themselves. I!
...,(•emed a meaningless ritual they 11·ent
lhrough to help 1hem endure the eigh1
lon6 years in hopes that Can1clul 11·ould
coine again. But no11• •.•
"As thf' President 11·ould sa~·." a
1Jt1nocratic congrcssrn:in loudly askl'd
!ht• \\"Jilrr
"\1hat 1hc
today·.'"
in Pie ~louse dining roon1.
!expletive deleted ) is gO?<l
A llLPCBLICA;\ colleague at the next
table looked over, smiled ruefully and
sadly shook his head. "Even the
Republicans know lhey've been had,"
said the Democrat triumph<1ntly.
"Did you hear what he called ! Senate
Republican Leader) Hugh Scott?'' said a
lawyer at a cocktall party. happily citing
an obscenity dt•leted from the tape
transcripts. rhis 10 .. ,·n·1; best-seller. And
!hr other gue-.ts \ i•!d to hrin~ forth
plU!llS Of prr:;idl'nt1<.1\ profan1t~·. <IS
though profanity \IC'l'c an 1111pc;ich:iblt
offense.
And you can·1 help fcclin 1; in thi s at-
mosphere or viciousness. vindictiveness
and jubilant relish that if the President is
dr1\'en fro111 office 111 disgrace. it will nol
be so znuch for anv l11gh crimes or
n1isdcmeanors. but si mply because !hi!->
to1111 hates his guts.
• • * YPt L1ncol1i stiU broods in his ml'·
11/(Jl'ifl/ As YOIL U'a/k (/111vn Pe1111.~yl
rrn110 r\Ve!IUe. tlie flags still bravel!J
fly, /}1p 9ra11ite and !lie n1orble b111/d-
111g.~ suit stmtd s1roi1g a11d e11duri11,1.
A11d you tlzink this lynch-mob aberru-
1io111v1lt poss.
For C'npaot fli/l is noticPobly l1i9l1-
er 1101.1.·. dontl' 111ore do111111a11t a11d i111-
posi11g. 11. 1s 11ois1er, loo. ns the rer·
elcrs witlli11 quaff fron1 tile //eacl!J
cup of power after n long, l011g
llro11011t.
,\11d nu111bc tl11?rc is 011 Arc/11tcct
1rl10 1ra 1rl1cs urci· u!1r 1le1nocrar11.
\11d 111aybe u11!ut 1oe ore 1111dergoi•1(1
is lhe excruciati11gl u 11a111ful proce.~s
of J1uui11g ou.r inslit1•11a11s scaled bacl:
10 si;:e. d i ,. o r f' ,. ra!t· o/
doc·1or s. fll•n!1·.1, ;ind
olh(•1' profl'""H;l':J(-.
l" higher 1h:1n 1h 11
of nlrno~1 ·111\· 01l1v··
ol'cupatioll: \1h11t• th ::r of 1h1• 1111111-.tr~
\1ould duuh1l r-..., he 1n tie h hil!hl'r tl1an 11 i"
if public opinion \11~rr not· such a rigid
detl'rn1in.in1 of !heir conduL1.
Steam Cars: Great, But Are They Practical?
DOCTORS arc taugh1 virtually nothing
Jboul S('X -excl'pl in if<; <;!:1rf.;r.~1
biologitnl .sense-in 1111·d1c:al ~rhool. and
111ost of lh<'nl :1rC' !'>!) org:111icJHy-orit•111l•d
that thl'Y arc cithi•r 1•mbarr<.1ssccl or
1mpat1cnl \\ht•n t'Onfron!ing ob\·iously
c1not1onal or f11nt"l1onat upst·ts .
Clrrgymen arc al the o!ht•r rxtrr1ne
so "spirituall~·-r11111ded" 1hat they ll'nd tn
turn psycholo~ieal problems into ethical
on<'s. and usually propose "faith'' as
futilely as the physicians propose pills or
a sea-change. They may offer more
s~·mpathy than the doc.1or . but sytnpat~y
;ilone can no n'IOrc hcal the heart than it
c<in reset a broken leg.
IT IS precisely because of these
obvious deficiencies in the medical and
lheological professions that millions of
Americans have turned. perforce. to a
"ild \'ariety of emotional nostrums, from
yoga and meditation to transectionaJ
groups and semitivity training. People
are desperate for help in re<.'Onstructing
their lives. and are as willing to try any ,
psyd'k>loj?ical cure in the same way a
T0 lh(' f:·E1or :
l r,·:id 1\·ith interest the artic~ in the
~la~ 22 Dail~, l'i!ot about the ileli\·rry u{
111·0 stca1n po\verl'd automobil~ _ to the
Stale or California at ~1.400.0fO each.
Asse rnbly Spe.iker Moretti. acC'OT'ding to
hini. is proud lo have sponsoreff. 'the pro-
Jl'('l 11·hich he purports "sets out to shO\I'
De•roil it's possible lo construct a steani
running car for urban use in ;'I short
period of time with little money:·
He succecdrd in proving none of those
contentions. He has madr l\1·0 cars '"''hich
have not passed any Cal1forn.ia state
clean air certification tests.. ?\lore
importantly. the cars may not be
producible al any sort of a reasonable
cost. But, beyond that, the slate has no
way ol selling them.
A far better use of that money '"'·ould
have been to make it a prize for the first
private corporation which produced a
clean emission vehicle for urbai use as
evidenced by public acteptanOO in tbe
fonn of sales.
pronouncr111cnts of l!t b \lcrelli. O!ll'
would think that the cni:;ineer . .:; <il
C:.iltech. Berkeley and at the Big Three
auto research labs \\'ere a !ot of
simpletons. and that !hry arc
deliberately in1peding progress.
About all one can s.:.1.v in fa\"or of stc-a111
c•u·s is that they <ire quicl. Of course you
could dt>slgn then1 to bum coal. kindiinl'.!
11·ood or even old nc11'spapers. but their
standard fuel is pctroleun1 like cnr.s.
especially diesel-driven ones. usc.
\\'llENE\.ER you interpose po\•:er
con,·ersion units hke a ~l('anl Lo1lt·r
bet\1·een the fuel t..1nk and lhr rc:ir
wheels. you lose po\ver and burn n1on.'
fuel. And you increase 1he \rei!!hl of 1hi>
power plant greatly, \.\1lich takes niorc
fuel l.o navigate.
About lhe only people favoring stean1
are !hose v.·ho have had little or no
engineering educalian. like some guys in
U1c Legislature.
[ l\1AILBOX . ).
Lttltrs from rt1dtr1 trt 111tlcomt. Nonnttl't'
wn1tr1 -11ovld convtr theor mn11tts in lOt wonll
or i.u. Tlte ri1hl In conoenS4' 11111r1 to Iii 1p1ct
er tllmlntlo llkl It re1c1wed. AU ltf11r1 mu•I In·
elude 1ltn1111rt ond m•ilin~ 1df•tll. bu! nlmt•
m11 bt wllhhtld on •1~11111 it 1111/itltnl r11son h;
IPPlrtnr. P1>1trr wltl nol bt 11ubU1ht<1.
ln!ernal opponents as "insane·· and locks
lhl'm a\\'a,\' in ··,isylui:ns" I said to
1nrself. ··This guy has co! to he
kidding~" A careful reading, ho1~·cver,
convinced me that Dr. Lee was
drlivering his idea with a perfectly
straight face ;u1d incant to be taken
seriously.
T have onl.1· one question for llr Lt·l'·
'·\Vho detcnnines the sanity of !ht·
sanity-determiners·.'·•
GUHJ)QN \VILLIA,\l~
chooses anolhl'r to succeed him for
several reasons. For exan1ple, the person
agrees in philosophy and 1.1•ill carry on in
Ule san1e way.
Orange County needs a change. It does
not need a jail facility that is the talk or
the stat~ or a sheri!f \1'ho h.ls allowed
crime to increase in San Juan Capistrano
300 percent and a promise of a substation
in the South County that is a political
dream and Orange County does not need
a 1nan who will follow in the footsteps of
the one who has prop~gated that
deterioration either.
Let's be fair and give another person a
C'hancc to make this a safe county 10 live
and work in: let a person who is more
qualified and who can't buy the office
\vith tricky high partisan campaigning
have a chance. -
Havcn"l \\C h<id enough onflatin 1973?
CONSTANCE BENEDICT
ll11 s Ride r s A i1le d
To the Editor:
There is no doubt that the price tag for
such acquisition will rise in the future in
fr\·inc as inflation and the pressures of
development encroach. Moreover. as the
City develops and the assessed valuation
increases, the cost of the acquisilion
should decrease yearly on individual tax:
bills.
Permanent open space s e r v c s
recreational, ecological, aesthetic and
psychological needs. Yet in our County
open space is disappearing at the rate of
10 square miles per year -an area the
approximate size of Laguna Beach or
Placentia . As urbanization increases, the
nee.'<! for co1nmunity parks and bike and
hiking trails becomes more acute. All loo
often. however, the opportunities for
acquisition have been missed.
\ bald man will give any alleged hair-re-\ I \storer a whirl.
Some of these programs are more
reputable and responsible than others,
but most (of whatever persuasion) are
under-trained and ill-directed, faddish
or downrig1Tt fatuous or even dangerous
to the stability of the personalitv. Alas.
there is no Federal Trade Commission,
no version of a Pure Food and Drug Act ,
to regulate or Inhibit these promoters:
nor is there any rational way the can·
didatc can evaluate the tedlniques and
regimens offered by a bewildering n1ul-
tiplicity of seers.
hlr. 111oretti n1ay next decide to build a
nonpolluting spaceship \Vilh our m"nt'.V·
hly only hope. in that eventuality, is that
he is first to ride in it.
GEORGE E. HILL
Stcan1 cars burn ''"ith an open narne
and are generally not allo,ved in cars
l\'ilh gasoline-driven engine:-. 11 ho:. ...
fun1es might be ignited. The boi!rr~ ;111d
condensers the~· 111ust have are hl':l''Y·
which means JlOO!'Cr pcrformanr~ :•nd
fuel mileage. ~lechanics don't kno\1· ho"
to service then1.
T f1 e S#1 e r iff's J ob
To The Editor :
In response lo your editor ial un !hi>
~hcriff candidates I think you nc~lectcd
lo l1·!1 the rt"adcrs soine i1nporlnn1 facts.
On hchalf of the Orange County Tran sit
l)1slr1t"I, I \\'OUld like to thank you for thl'
excellt1nt coverage that the Daily Pilot
has pro\'id1.'<i for our new bus services.
THE LEAGUE or \Vomen Voters of
Orange Coast is commilted to the
preservation of 1x·r111anent open space to
provide for lhc health. safely and 1\·c\l-
bcing or the County's prcsenl and future
residents. Furth'-'rn1orr. the League has
long been an :1clvocate of decreased
reliance on the aUton1obile f o r
1ranspor1ation. The City of Irvine has lhe
1.:hance to provide these amenities. It
cannot afford not to pass these bonds.
I OBVIOUSLY. not only lraincd. and
licensed psychologists or psychiatrists
should be equipped to handle t~~c
problems; there will never be enough of
them. Medicine and theol<>gy must take
up the slack by incorporating far more of
emotional and pastoral cowiSt'!Hng than
arc now in their curricula. The average
doctor or clergyman today i~ barely able
to cope with hi.s traditional area of
dlsclpJine, much less to advise others on
lhe per:plex!Ues and subtleties of psychic
reality.
Quotes
J11ne M. Taulbee, ~lounlain View -"I 1
bdr•ve-u.at ranaucs-lil>Ot mrim
llourllh In a cllmat• of desperation. We
need to revive our democratic procc&.."t:!!
es a ley111·"""' a~ue of elfectlng
change, bf"• , 1·.1f procest has \akeo a
, bMtlng ln ,;ars. II
'
••• A Nu1111oblle l11s le od
To the Editor:
In Ule old days when spring ~roke it
was the "perpctµal nlOtion" inventors
\1•ho crawled out of their holb and
convinced the gullible to invest Jn their
great invention!. Now it Is the st*m car
nuts wasllng our tax money to attain the
Impossible. To llsten to th•! great
Dea1·
Gloonry •
Gu s
Won't It be fun watching Irvine
fi.gure out how it can responttl to
the state attorney gcn,iral'1 task
force demands for ,,ore. low to.1t
housing while s~te air retOUrces
boinl officials soy new devl!!op-
ments In.the 50\Jlh Coast Air Blain
can't be built unle;s cities prove
bouseCan41Cifa:Oon-i cause. more
omog, A.G.'
........ Ollt (Mltl•llft art M""'flM fW ,....,.. "HI • •t ..._.!¥ nft«t fttt
'1'1... .. ---· ..... ,..,. "4 ......... ......, .... ~,. .. .
'f\1•0 steam cars have artc1inrd .,,~t~s
µroduction and then had to be ab:.i ndoncd.
The two the Legislature sµcnl S2.7S
million on looked pretty : one could not be
started lhe second try, the first 1Yould1i't
start at all.
T HE TlAJE has con1c for us to consider
son1ething really practical like ui.'"
invention, the Klock E 1 g h I -f) a y
:\ut1nobilc, which ls silent. requirl'S nu
t;Hso linc, has rn:i exhaust
The n1cchanical principlrs oi' the :'\ut-
:\lobllt ere time-tested and even ;i chilfl
can understand them. Everybody knov.:;
the reliability of the eight-day \.\'ind-up
clock. It runs for a week on one "·inding.
The Nut-Mobile runs on the lWn1e
principle except \.\'ith a much larger
motor. Just. wind it up each Sa1urday and
of.f you go to a week of care-free and
e.pense-r .... motoring. rr you a"' busy
mowing the lawn let your wire improve
her,iligure by doing It.
FRANK KLOCK
W•tch the 1l'•tche r s
To thjo Edi •
Tmowitb a great deal of interest or.
Ruuel V, Let's "'li••tlon that public
ornclals whose "ahmTalloos'' cou:d cause
"publlc harm" be r<mOlied from oflloc.
tn 1 world where ooe superpower
alreaey cat.corizea aome or Its vocal
\\lhile it is your right lo endorse
ll'hoever you choose. i1 son1rho1•; dnt's
not seem fair to single one other
cnndldate out to attack. There are six in
the race.
I would lik{' to point ()U\ !hat George
Savord has Spt'nt ."21.000 to~datc tboth
filings} whil t' Orar11f':V Gates has spent
,fl54,2lt to date including both filings. If
ri1r. Gates can't run a well-organized
c-ampalgn on lhnt money. then he dor.~
have a problem. After all, money can
buy just about C\'erything these days
AS A CITIZJ::N. I would likl' lo stall'
here 11·hy I an1 interes!cd In \h(' sherilf. I
live in an 111'1in(·orf)(lrat.f'd aren. in a
com munity \.\'hrrc lhl· only I a "'
enforcement Is the sht'rlff's department .
Crime has incrcnscd each year since
1968 when 1 mo\'ed there. but, the sherHf
patrols stlll remain inadequate.
Orange County citizens have had the
snme person as sheriff for the last is
.vcars. T'1.'Cnty-flve yeiirs is too long for
the aame perm to stay In the same job
in the same location.
His department shows It : It has
become decadent.
When I learned lhe present sheriff ~
hand-picked one or his men, Bradley
Gates, to succeed hlm, my first reaction
was ooe of fear. Fear that the preM!nt
situation will ri:maln or worsen. i
Why! r..og1.-iy speaklDC, a person I
The editorial comment and clear listing
of the nc\1' services in articles by Williatn
Schreiber \\'ill assist those people \Vho
dcslre to use the bus. It takes fron1 6 to
12. n1onths to develop satisfactory
ridership on new roules and continued
assistance fron1 the Daily Pilot will help.
Air pollution continues to blight our
con1munities and the energy crisis
remains unsolved. The more prople y.·e
can get out of their automobiles and into
the buses, the better life \\'ill be in
Orange County.
RALPH B. CLARK
County Supcr\'isor
lrt•i11 e's B u 111ls
To the Editor:
On June 4. ttte citizens of the City of
Irvine will be asked to vote on 1"·0
Important bond issues: ( t) Proposition D
-lt&,000.000 ror the acqulsklon or land for
and constnictlon or community parks and
recreation and cultural facllltlcs: and 121
Proposition E • $2.000,000 for acquisition
c.f land for and conitruc:tion of bicycle
and biking tratlL
THE CtTY or Irvine enjoys th• abltily
to acquire ill park: .and trail lands a
today's prices, to purchase undeveloped
property and to plan for Its Mure needs.
Other cities In our area are force:I to buy
devl!!oped land at lnr!ated prices or to
buy whatever land is available because
Thus the League of \Vomen Voters or
Orange Coast urges a YES vote on
Propositions D and E on June ~.
JUDY SWAYNE
President
League of Women Voters
Of Orange Coast
o •AHGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N . \V,ed, Publislltr
Thoma1 Kceuil, Editor
Barbora Kreibfch
Editorial Page Editur
The r<tttot1a\ page of 1hl' Da ily
Pllot attks to inlorm and stimulat~
readen by presentinc on U1ls pq:e
dlvtrw·cvmmtntuy'm topie1 ol ift-
tm!st b)· syndlcattd oolwnnilta and
cutonnlsts, by JM"ovkfirc a forum for
rttden' vlt'll'• 11.rt<I l)y pnu1enting this
new1eei~r·1 oplntorni a.net idl"aS on
curT't!nt toptca. The tdl!orit.l opinmia
ol the Dal\r PUot l\JIPMf Ol'\1)' tn Ike tdltof!a.t column at ttJe top elf UM
Pa&'.t:lti~ !Cwd J!1 lhe t'CM· u.mm e: lt1• •ncflill«"
._Tlten an thtlr own and no ~t
mmt of their vin'I by 'tht Dalt,
Pllol"""1dbolnlend.
Thursday, May 30, 1974
they could not or did not plan ahead. ~ ._ __________ _..
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Donatiovs
To Nixon-
$90,000
Door Trouble
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Rohnert Park at the end of the Downing served as dean of the Vincent College in New York .
Dr. Marjorie Downing has 1973-74 academic year. college at Sarah Lawrence in her master's from Catholic
been named president of Cal currently a professor or New York. ' University i n \Vashington, '
Micr.owave Oven
\VASHINGTO\' (APf
Public donation~ dt'S1g11ed 1u
help President Nixon pay lus
W ar1iings Loorri State Sonoma by the board of English l.ilerature at Scripps O.C., and h<.'r Ph.D. fro1n
trustees of the California State College, Dr. Downing was DR. DOWNING had previous Yale University in 194Z.
Universities and Colleges, the dean of the faculty at the teaching ex p erience at Dr. Downing, 57, is the
rlfSt woman to reach that Cla:e~t.school for six years Barnard College and Brooklyn widowed rnothcr uf two son~.
del inquent federal i n co tn l' \\ ASlll:\'GTON r L'PI 1 -
taxes total $90.000, U1c \\'hitc The Food and Ur u g
Hoose has announcfti. Adn1inislr1..1lion has ordered
The mo n c y . ex cc pt tx·rmanent \\'am111g labels on
anonymous donations. is being all new 1nicro\11avc ovens. but
returned to the senders since turnrd dO\\'n <1 consumer
Nixon announced he v.ill pay grouµ·s r1'que~t to in1posL·
the taxes himself. ligh!er i;:ifciy rule'<; 011 lhl·
The anonymous !unds, wl1irh industr~
the \Vhile llouse said come to The l.1l~ls. v.·h1ch \l'Ould
$4 ,341 , were turned over to the bt..--con1e mandatory I h is
Federal Disaster Assistance swnmer, v;ou ld warn !he user not to oper.:it(' the oven 1f
Administration to aid victims there is an object caught in
or recent f\iid"·est lomad()('s. th e door. if the door dOi'S not
Nixon requested this. close properly. or if the <toor,
~~~-'---~~~~~~--~
~LAS VEGAS -
deluxe rooms
on the strip
l\GPOO.
TELEVIStCtl
24 HOUR
PHONES
AIR
CONOITlOOlt.JG
COffEE~a>
Fix 1 or 2 People
2 double beds in
each r001T1
52 00 eoch '"
e~lroc;;l1!!sls
!".f1oring your
mim.
Good all week· except Fri., Sat. and
Holiday Periods & Summer Months
When rate is $17.80.
~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~--.
UM I TEO TIME OFFER TOT AL PRICE,
RESERVE NOW! NO EXTRAS!
For Reservations Information coll
\ (714 l 533-6050
KONA KAI MOTOR INN
A first Cass Motel , , . A Pacific Halidoy Re'°'1'
5191 Los Vegas Blvd , South, las Vegas, Nev. 89109
h1u~c latch or sealing surrace
is da1naged.
'!'H f~ OVENS, WlllCll have
been selling at a rate or about
300.000 a year, can grill a
:-ilenk in seconds or cook a
rQa st in a fraction of the time
eonvrnllonal ov<•n 1ncthods
rt·qu1r<.'
Consumer.i; tnion, \vhich
pt.!tillonl.'d the FDA for new
saf{'ty rules last suinmer,
conlended the ovf'nS leak
radiation and pose haz<i.rds UPI TtltfMI•
ranging frorn burns to FIRST IN STATE
intcrfrrencc \rith electronic Or. Marjorie Downing
p<1ccmakcrs implanted i n --
Jevel In the ca 1if 0 r n i a begu_uung 1n 1965. College. · Francis, 18. and Nicholas, 15.
educational system. Prior to moving to She received her bachelor's who reside \\·ith her in
"Dr. Downing, through her Claremo ___ n_t _in __ 1_00_1_, _o_r_._d_e.::.g_re_e_in_t93_8_fro_m_M_1._s. __ in_t _c_1a_re_m_o_n_1. ___ _
ex t ens ive experience In
academic administration and
notable sc h olarshi p Is
especially qualirted to continue
with the fore sig ht e d
development of CSC Sonoma."
Chancellor Glenn Dumke, said
Wednesday.
DR. DOWf'l.'ING succee<!s
Thomas H. McGrath, v.·ho is
rrtiring from the presidency
of the 5.500-student campus at
COMING SOON
THE COSTA MESA POLICE ASSOCIATIOM
1974 BENEFIT SHOW
hrnrt patients.
The group. "h"'" P''""'h" Pot Pateh ~ i the rnag::izinc Consumer i
Rrports. hud rcqu<·stcd a ._.
n1ore extensive \\'arnini; label i ~ advisin~ users lo keep ovens S/1.er:f·f Gro·ws H;s o ... ,t r;');'Or1::1-l L t out of the rca<'h of children. " " 1111 ~...:7 i l (I ";_ :
a\'Oid 1>ecring in1o then1 while (.)(.)';) .., ._.
in u<;e and telling pacemaker TISJIO;\ll !\GO. Okla. (AP) so111e J>CQple to think they ~ ·iJi;l/ -f ~·
p;-i1ients 10 lL•nvc the room. ~ Johnston County "' Sheriff might be growing it by I .----~ ./.,__
1 ,i
IT ALSO WANTED tougher r:verell Stewart has a small mistake in their backyard or ~
IC'sting standards because. it ~ said. present industry tests do garden adjacent lo the county pasture."
not duplicntc C'ven normal, let jaJJ "'here he raises a Stewart. an officer for 34 I .:!'.::=========LJ
alone abnormal. use that the nun1ber of items, including years, said he had about 3,IXXI ~ ,.. i
O\'rns might receive in the marijuann. visitors to the patch last year. ~ ~ ~ i
h;inds of consumrrs. Sl.'ilCC'n marijuana plants. i
L.-i<;t fall thl' FDA tested 200 llO\Y about thrC'e feet high, ;ire Kid t•k l t
n1JCf0\\'3Vl' ovrn<> in actual US(' in th<.' patch, surrounded \Yith s I e 0 September I. 1974 ~
1n homes nnd quick-food , high chain link rcnce. A .... AHEIM co1i..•vE1i..1T101i..• CE ... •TER i
vending cstnblishments and ··1 !rt il gro"· hrre so people A k A d 1"11111 n n 1""11111 .... :
found th:1t 89 or them leakrtl \\·in know "·hat it looks like." S . II ),. ; for info call 463 5011 ~
h i g her -th an -P ern1itted the shrriff said. "II scar<.'s • J,,,,,.H••••••.:=•••••••••••••••c•••••••••••••••••:•••••••••••••••••••••c••••.d1••••;;
iln1ounts of radiation \\'hrn.---~----------------.---'---------------~---~1-------------
suhicc!l'<lto the t<.'st the t;nion
SUJ.:J.:l'!i!Cd.
A'.'11 FDA SPOKESMAN said
\\'c<ln<.'SdJy the lack of specific
trst requircrnrn-ts in the ne\\'
rl'gul:1tions - \\'hich were put
forth for a tiO-day con1n1ent
period before becoming fin~1l
-did not mean I.he agency
\\!IS a\·oiding the issue. The
!'puk<.'sn1an said the F'lJA
inlcndcd to continue policing
indus1r~· tCst ml'thods on an
inforrn:.i l basis.
•
,
•
To Larry Csonka,
widen1an ··
in a na1·row world.
149
Supers
Kodachrome
movie film ,
2os,001
G.E.Magic
flash cubes.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P. M. at the following stores:
FASHION t'LAND, N"'wport ~och, (714) 644·23 13
HUNll~GfON CENlER, Huri11ngton &>ocli (7 14} 892:m 1
\
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for stretching out, leaning back and all-around Check our sched ule. Then call United at
comfort try our 747 and DC-10 Friend Ships on for size. 537-752 l fo r ticketing and reservations. Or sec your
Another reason more people choose the friendly Travel Age nt.
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Any man who spends his wo rki ng days squeezing Los Angeles to New York
through tishhituations appreciates the roomille$ of Lv. 8:45 a.m. (DC-10) Ar. 5:00 p.m. JFK
United's wide-bodied 747 and DC·JO Fri end Shi ps. 12:00 noon (747) 8:05 p.m. JFK
On board, there's extra space:. Four Star dining, audio 1:30 p.m. (DC·IO) 9:25 p.m. Newark (eff. 6/15)
entertainment movies on some fhghts,even our Jnlhg~t
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Service all 1be way.. .
UnitedsNewl&rkers
Putners in 'Iia..t with wawn I01e1111tlonal ffotds.
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Huntington Beaeh
Fountain ·Valle
Today's Final
N.Y. Stooks •
VOL. 67, NO. 150, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1974 TEN CENTS
on eac ers
DlllY PftM Stiff ,,,_..
STRIKING TEACHERS, STUDENTS MINGLE AT HUNTINGTON
Hi9 h School Instructors Flex Muacln In Pay Di1put1 -----.. -------------
End I-day Walk.out
Ocean View's Teachers
In School After Strike
By KATIIY CLANCY
Of ... [)Alty l"lllt 11.n
Teachers in Huntington Beadi's Ocean
View School District retrmed to their
classes today ending a one--day slrike, the
fiVt in Ocean View history.
ln a unanimous vote Wednesday, 485
teachers agreed to return to work . a
spokesman for the teachers said today ,
but they voted to consider a strike again
after next Tuesday's sch e du I e d
negotiating session.
' Ocean Vie\v School District officials
reported 280 of the districts 's 568
teachers were off the job Wednesday. A
teacher spokesman said the number oo
strike was 329.
Meanwhile, picketing teachers in the
Founlain Valley School District are
becoming more angry over the contract
impas9e in their district. At a 4:30 p.m.
meeting today in Wardlow Park,
teachers will decide what action to take
next -flOS!ibly a strike or "sick in."
Teachers in the Huntington Beach City
(elementary) School District also are
angry over what they claim are delays in
contract talks. Administrators in the Seat
Beach and Westminster School Districts
say negotiations ~ far are progressing
smoothly.
About 150 Fountain Valley teachers.
joined by a few parents, picketed district
offices Tuesday and Wednesday.
They were particularly angered over a
Jetter mailed by district officials to
Fountain Valley parents this week. It
urged parenls lo send lheir children lo
school in the event of a "sick in" and
promising "there would be rxt ·retaliation
towanl the children ol parenls who are In
the ochoo)s during lhe work stoppage.'"
"I think this is the lowest . thing they
have put out yet," said Judie Lowman
presldent ol the Foantain V a 11 e y
•
Pare11ts Get
'Strike Line'
An lnform1Uon line, designed lo
let porenll llnow lhe current .U.tus
of leacber negotiatlolla, was put
lnlO openUon today by ilie Ocean
y1ew Sdiool Dlstrtct.
Dlslrk:t olflclalJ aid pilrtnll
may learn of 1 llrlkr 11tuation, or
unlllUll (IOlldltlollS at •Ill" ICbool, by
dla11D1 117-ilel. Callen will boar 1
nicorded m-ge and IDlormatloll Wfll. be kept up lo date, ICbool
olllclall aid.
Education Association. ·~To insinuate to
parents that there would be retaliation
against any child is really hitting below
the belt."
Fountain Valley teachers have asked
for a 14 percent pay raise for next year,
plus reduced class size. less paper work
and additional tea cher aides. The district
has offered no pay increase and declared
talks at an impasse, turning negotiations
over to a board of review.
Teachers in the Huntington Beach City
School Distr'ict have asked for a pay
increase based on the increase in the
consumer price index, June I, 1973 lo
June 1, 1974, and a teacher dental plan.
The district board has offered teachers
(See OCEAN VIEW, Page II
Oppon~nts Level
Coverup Charge
Against DA Hicks
Malfeasance In office charges aglbtst
Orange County District Attorney cecn
Hicks officially became part of the public
record Wednesday.
The Board of Supervisors o_rdered
documeni. presenled by Hicks' primary
eleetlon opponent Wllllam Hulsy of
Mlsolon Viejo. be flied with the clerk of
the board. (Related column, Page 3.)
Hulsy!1 allegaliona slate that Hicks
perfoniied lmpioperty during
lnveslflatloll ahil prosecalion last year of
a Ganl<n Grove traffic acclctent In which
two clllldn!a Wen! kllJed.
Hull)" wllt 11e In Superioi:-Court Ftlday
to Ult Judge Mark Soden to order
dllclooure of a portion .of the aceldent
lnvest1:1,8Uon· report lltegedly covered up
by police offlcla'b.
The young Lol1fl ·Beach a11lslant city
attorney clallm the document shows
Hicks may hive been Involved In
''mall ....... and mllleasance In oUlce" c!urlnJ the accident probe.
lljd<! 1\11 brlnded Hulsy'a 8CCU11tlons
as "llbelOlll and ......WO.." and ...wet
not elaborate on the ... In ~. u. llld he ............ llbl. ,.. ealllnc
In the C.lllomll Attctney Gelieral's
offico to pnlle(.'Ute tile coe bealuoe of a
'icaimct ol lntelut" In the District At.-
!om<y'a oftlco.
.11le.. drlftl"_ot tbe car In Wblcll !lie
chlldnn ..... ~ Alilheim -dalJned bJ: to be dotol1 (See awillD, II
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of ftit ~Ir Plltl lltff
At least 60 percent of the teachers in
the Huntington Beach Union High
School District staged a one-day strike
today protesting unmet demands !or an
automatic cost of living raise.
The teachers were scheduled to meet
at 4 p.m. today to decide ii they should
Continue their walkout.
Bruce Johnson, president of tile District
Educators Association (DEA) said 550
3 oc
teachers out or a total of 750 walked off
the job today.
Dr. Jay Settle, deputy superintendent
of the district, estimated the number at
450.• Pickets, including some students.
marched in front of each of the district 's
six campuses. Inside, s u b s i t u t e s .
counselors and administrators tried to
kee p classes running,
"We've opened the ca f et er i a and
library and asked kids to go there if they
don't have a regular teacher, Charles
Wiese, principal at Edison High, said.
Wiese said he wasn't able to hire
enough substitutes to make up for !he
100 absent teachers. There were only 5(1
teachers left on the job.
A lot of students v.'cre going home
instead of stayirg at school, \Vicse said.
''\Ve v.·on't ~ive the 1nan une'\CUsf'd ab·
sence. There'l l be no pun ishment."
Dr. Settle said the district had been
at-le to hire enough substitutes to keep
the schools open.
Prisoners
The district has offered the teachers a
nine percent raise.
The teachers want the nine percent
raise plus an automatic cost-of-living
boosl tied to inflation. Jf inflation rises
two to five percent in the first six months
of !heir contract. the teachers Ytant a
raise equal to that amount in the last six
inonths.
If inflation rises five percent or more
in the first six months. the teachers want
I See TEACHERS, Page % )
Officers • Ill Gun
Engage
Battle
Patrohnan,
h1mate Hit
By Bullets
By TOM BARLEY
Of tt1t Daill' Plllt lt•tt
Three Orange County jail prisoDen.
one of them a convicted killer who was to
be sentenced later today, overpowered
their guarda in a county courthouse
holding cell· thi5 morning and fled to a
brief freedom, gwu: tn hand.
One of the trio, Frank Allan O'Har,,
is. of Anaheim, ~·as shot four times in a
gun battle that erupted as the three men
fled from the basement holding tank and
tried to commandeer a passing car.
Ironically, the car was driven by off-
duty California Highway Patrolman Jim
Pau1, 2S, who drew bis weapon and took
on the trio in a gun battle.
It ended with O'Hare shot in the right
cheek, right arm and twice in the back..
He is listed in critical condition in
Orange County Medical Center.
Police said Paul was shot in the right
ann and sbtulder. He is listed in
satisfactory condition in sant.a Ana
Community Ho.spital.
Santa Ana police said convicted killer
Lawrence Eugene Wilson, 30, of Los
Angeles and Prince Pico Tarpley, 18. of
Anaheim, then left the two wounded men
and ran in different directions as the
police pursuit gathered momentum .
Tarpley was arrested moments later as
he sought refuge in a home near 10th and
Parton streets, about four blocks from
the point of the escape. .
Santa Ana i*iiice said a local youth who
noticed the armed fugitive dodge inlo the
house told pursuing officers w b o
prompUy enlered the home and grabbed
Tarpley without fUrther incident.
Wilson, reportedly canying the .357-
magnum automatic he took from
patrolman Paul, was next seen on 17th
Street where he entered a store and
Inquired about welding equipment.
Police said the ruse failed to deceive
them and they caught up with Wilson and
disanned him as he questioned the
suspicious store owner.
Sheriff's deputies said Tarpley and
O'Hare were currently being tried. before
(See PRISONERS, Page I)
f Dllll' Pllft Sllff ,.._
INWSTIGATDRS CHECK BLOOD-SPLATTERED CAR AFTER SANTA ANA SHOOTOUT
Jail PrisOners Tried to Comm11nd•r This Vehicle Driven by Off-duty Highway Patrolman
House Group Warns Nixon
BULLETIN
\VASHlNGTON (AP) -Tbc House
J udiciary Committee I s s u e d a new
subpoena this afternoon ordering Presi·
dent' NiJ:oa ta turn over 45 more Water-
gate tapel and sent blm a letter warning
that faJJm:e to co~ply c o u I d become
grounds ~ Impeachment.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House
Judiciary Committee voted 28 to 10 tOO:ay
to inform President Nixon his refusal to
honor its subpoenas "might constitute a
ground . for impeaclunenl.''
After an hour's debate, the
congressmen agreed to send Nixon a
letter advising him they will fee l free to
conclude he is hiding evidence harmful to
his cause by continuing .to ignore
subpoenas for Watergate tapes and
docwnents.
The committee also was considering
whether to subpoena more presidential
tapes and documents in its impeachment
inquiry. Three subpoenas have already
been issued. Nixon ignored tvro and
released hls Watergate transcripts in
response to the third .
In their debate, the members revised
and somewhat softened a letter proposed
by Rep. Walter Flowers (D-Ala. ), a key
Southerner on the committee.
The key paragraph ln the adopted
version read :
"In meeting their constitutional
responsibilities, committee members will
be free to consider whether your refu.sals
require the drawing of adverse infer-
ences concerning the substance of the
TAX PENAL TY FOR NIXON
REPORTED. Story, P1ge 4
materials, and whether your refusal s in
and of themselves might constitute a
ground for impeachment."
subpoenas "whether or not we write a
Jetter."
The Jetter as approved by the
committee was essentially in the fonn
drafted by the committee s t a I f
\\'ednesday night.
The President bas steadfastly main-
tained he is innocent of any wrongdoing
in connection with the Watergate scan-dals.
Rep. C. V. "Soony" Mootgomery (f).
Mass.), one oi his supporters who ac-
companied the President on a cruise
Wednesday nighl, quoted him today 11
saying:
"If I was guilty, T'd get the hell out
fast, but I'm not guilty.''
The White House has insisted the
committee has all the Watergate
infonnation it needs to make a judgment
and there will be no more forthcoming.
Gerald L. Warren, deputy press
secretary . said Wednesday the Judiciary
(See IMPEACH, Page :J
Huntington Man Jailed
~
One Dcomcrat, Rep. John Conyers Jr.
of Michigan: and nine Republicans voted
against sending the letter. Twenty
Democrats and eight Republicans voted
in favor. Conyers objected because he
wg~e:~~~e~~~~bllcM opponents,
Orange
After High Speed Cliase
A Huntington Beach man who allegedly
led CO.II Mesa police on a high speed
chase thro~ three Orange Coast cltle;
waa jailed loday alter his auto
dlslnlegraled at an Irvine intmectlon.
Taken Into custody on charges of
reckle11 drlvlog, driving on the wrong
side ol the road, Speeding, running red
ltlhll, 11111 ....tlliog arrest WU Thomas
Job Javooo of am Deerlleld Drive in
HuntbJcton ~<!l's SUr!Jkle condomlnl· .....
JeoVIJlll WU beinl delalned loclay II
O... County Mfdlcal C.Oter wbm be •u !Ma lot treabueol of .U.. Ill•• t.llo.rin1 thl -..rly ........ 1 ..... ..
,. ........ flrllle~ ... pope.
•
•
department said that two patrol cars
were moderately damaged during the
chase, but that their occupants were not
Injured.
The punuit began at the int~rsee:Uon of
.Victoria Srtee\ and Placentia Avenue
about 2:30 a.m., went into Huntington
Beach, and back thmugh Costa Mesa
before coming lo a spectacular conclu-
sion at the lntenectloo of Michelson
Avenue and MacArthur Boulevard In Ir·
vine.
Polico said the Jeavons car struck a
airtJ al the lnlm<cllon and that \h•
Impact sepmled body and chassis.
Shortly before tho~ aquad oera driven In
thl cbue by olllcera QIN MorT!s and ~l-U-t collldod wttb each other II
Ille lnterloctJoo ol ldldltbon Avenue Ind
Jamboree Bou!evlnl.
Rep. David Dennis (R·lnd.), called the
letter a "useless gesture" and added the
committee wouJd draw inferences from
Nixon's noncompliance with the
The Streakers
Join .Strikers
Four streakers joined strikers
Wednesday at Vlllage View School
la Huntington Beach.
Principal Claude Beasley said he
spotted the four aa they strealted
across one end of the school yard
durini the lunchtime ......._
He aid the f~, towels ,.,..Piled around their b e a d s ,
climbed • f....,., ltrtaked a ollort
dlllanco, thon dluppwed tllrouaJ>
I pit. •
'
Weadler
It'll be cloudy Friday morning
but clearing lo mostly sunny skies
by lhe afternoon along lhe Orange
Coast. lllghs at the beaches 6"8
rising lo 72-74 inland. Ovemlgbt
lows lonight SUO. •
INSIDE TODA\'
Two mtn who oftm dtboted
over lhllr · drinklnp abUitiu,
held a match to decide once and
for all who .,... the champion.
They both d(ed; Sto'1/. PQJle 4.
...llM IS L. M, .. ,_. 11 c ... ..,.. 14
CllUI... ... ._... " c-.. .,... Mll'IClll ' '"'..,. ,. ... .., • ,,,.,,, ... 14... • ·-.... 6-1 llFI II ... .._ . ...,,.... .
d
I
•
-.. ,..... ..... .
N•"9MI ..... t ., ... ClllimW .., --bh'll,.... • -.... ·--........ ·-.. -. -. _.. ........ --.
•
..
·. .,
..
1 9 OllLY PILOT H Thursday, M1y 30, 1974
•
Tax Override •
Foes 'Traditional'
'nlC opposition to the June 4 tax
override in the Jlunlington Beach Union
High School District is by 1radittonal foes or hi&fJer laxes.
A group caJled the Council on Scnsiblf'
TuaUon (COST), has fought every tax
election in the high school distr1et-in lhe
past five years.
1\\·o of its members. Ltt Rayburn And
Pauline ~loen, have signed the ballot
argwnent against the proposal to add
17.8 cents to the district's current rate of
$2 .82 per $100 assessed valuation.
1'le chainnan of COST is Claire Kelty
of Huntington Beach. a member or
Taxpayers Anonymous. a group which
believes the federal method of collecting
Signing Friday
income tax ls WlOXl.Stitutlonal.
The override -II passed by a majoMty
of the \•oters next Tuesday -would raise
'14.5 million to build and furnish a ne\v
high school In the 52.square mile district.
District officials have said thev·u build
on a site already owned by the district at
Golden \Vest Slrt'et and Warner Avenue.
COST argues that the override isn't
feasible now because the district faces
"possible dissolution under plans of
unificatK>n which will be decided at tbe
polls in November."
The Orange County Committee on
School Oisrtict Organization recently
approved a plan to divide the district into
five K·12 unified districts along exisling
Ki,ssinger Heads Home;
elementary district boundaries.
The committee "'1t the plan to the
stale Board or F.ducatlon, which will rule•
on it in July.
All nev.' unified districts -JC approved
-will be obligated to pay tor tile new
hlgh school , COST Points out. but the
!7.8-cents override will be binding only on
the Ocean View District, \Vhere the
school will be located.
The other districts \~·ill have to pay out
of their general operating funds, COST
s.-iid.
District officials ansv.·er that any final
unification plan is a Jong way off, but the
need for more classrooms is here now.
There is permanent space ror 14,700
students, but 19.600 students have
already enrolled for rail elasses, they
note.
There is current legislation expected to
pass v.'hich would make the 17.8 cents
npplicable to aU successor districts, said
Dr. John Hunt. an assistant superinten~
dent in the high school district.
The override opponents also contend:
-The $6 million reserve now in the 'M. . A z · h d llrJlh School district budget could be . lSSlOU ccomp lS e ,,.. ~~ dJ l'ertcd !Oward th• cost of. new
Dutr1ct officials argue th at the large
f'r\1•' is needed for operating costs
CAIRO (UPI\ -Secretary of State a .m. POT) \\'hen hC' Jcf! C.11ro Airport :n1<:.e of inflation and tsn't enough for
Henry A. Kissinger headed home 10 after a six-hour stopo,·er in the Egyptian a .sc:Ehoot I . -cm("ntary school enrollments are Washington today after the successful capital. . decreasing in parts of the high school
c:onclu,,ion or his latest 11nd toughest The United S1ates released the ll'x:l of district, meaning fe"·er students in the
di plomatic mission, wiMing agreement lh.e Israeli-Syrian ~greement today, a~ng future. The Westminster School District
from Israel and Syria to stop fighting on V.'Jth a map showing the cease-fire line has closed its 17th Street school. ·which
the Golan Heights and pull back their 3~ the ~uf.fer zone to be manned by could be converted to a high school.
armies. Un~ted Nations troops in the Colan District officials say independent
The historic agreement will be signed Heights. projections put their 1980 enrollment at
in Geneva Friday by military delegations Also relenscd \\'as the Proto co I 25,000 and the number of e\cmentarv
from the two countries. It provides for an o~tlining the role of the ~ . N_. stud~nts is stable or increasing in ail
immediate cease fire on the Golan disengagement observer force , v.•h1ch 1s districts exce,t Westm inster.
Heights froot where Israeli and Syrian limited_to a~ut 1,250mcn and v.·hich will The 17th Street school. high school
forces exchanged artillery fire for the be stationed in the buffer z.one of about of!icials said. has only 15 to 20
80th consecutive day today. 1.2 to 3.6 mllcs \\'ide to supervise the classrooms. A high school needs 96 . And
A senior American o!ficial with the agreement. an elementary school doesn't );ave Jab s
Kissinger par1y said the United States The text nnd map provided fe\v <'r shops needed by high school students.
would provide high altitude surveillance surprises. It provided for signature of the they added.
to assure that all the provisions were agreement Friday in Geneva and an
being carried out just as it does in the immediate crasc--firc in the Golan
case of the Israeli-Egyptian disengage-Heights upon signature.
rnent acoord. It also provided that the details of
The same Official also disclosed that dlsengagement be y,·orked out by Israeli
Kissinger was on the point of failure and Syrian officers v.•ithin six days and
three time.!I during his marathon that the withdrawals to agreed positions be completed within a month.
MIDEAST TRUCE FACES Also included were provisions for the
CHALLENGE. Story, Page 4 immediate exchange of wounded
--prisoners and the exchange of all war
negotiations with Israeli and Syrian prisoners within at least six days -24
leaden. He said Kissinger had packed hours after the details of t h e
bis bags in preparatioo for departure but disengagement are agreed.
changed his mind because he was
convinced that failure would mean
reflewed war in the htiddle East.
Kissinger stopped off in Cairo to brief
President Anwar Sadat, one of his chief
allies in bringing about the agreement
~n Damascus and Jerusalem.
K6:inger had helped negotiate a similar
cckfire agreement between Egypt and
Israel on the Suez front In J&iuary.
They held 31,~ hou~ of talks in Sadat's
private home in the Cairo suburb of Giza
and later told a news bri efing they
reached agreement "to establish a joint
commission for cooperation between the
two countries in various fields for their
mutual benefit."
Kissinger's marathon 33-day ~1iddle
East mission ended at 6:15 p.m. (8:15
Tliief Cari C<1tcli
Up 01i Reacling
A li ghl-fingered thief probably was not
expecting the yield he got y,•hcn he lifted
the shopping bag or UC lr\'ine student
James H. Jackson from a South Coast
Plaza bus stop bench Wednesday.
Jackson, 20, left the p3rcel on the
bench and went inside a store to buy a
pack of cigarelles, police said.
When be returned the bus and the
people waiting for it h>1d gone, along with
.bis package.
Police said the bag contained a
briefcase and several books :
"Disarmament and British Politics."
"Basic Spanish," "Spanish Handbook "
and "Origin of the Cold \Var,'' '
OIAMGECOAJT "'
DAILY PILOT
1"~0.."QO'C.0.o r()&.''~""' ~·· ~"· h,,0..,,...
o-""CI ,,,.. "'~'"' r.~ ' e, """-...~·~,, '"~ °'•"ve
Coo•! P"~'''"'"Q C.~n; ''"~•'•'" ""''''~"" ... ov~h"'"0 !~on~,,y 1"' ""'" '"'"' 'Gt I.· ,,
........ ~.NP~(""' 6~ .... h """'"'"''"' ll•'> "·f cu'>-
f.t,n Vail•, ! •q,,no !i\f',I(~ '"'"" <;1!Xlt"i'..rO 1ncl
San '''""''"'"· ~ .. 1' Ju .. ~ C~r··.·r•"O J\ ""9'0'
f911IOtllil ..ci~.~~ Pll°"'' '" ~ '"""'Di·• •"<l """"
dly<; I~~ ~"nt11'MI M •• ~'fl<!~·•~•,,•' l)O W .. I
lll1 Slmf!I (<>'i. ... _ C..1 •-,.,..,,. ••;hJb
>'.,biY! M N.,, I r, ,, . .,.,.. 11'!1 Pu111"""'
I'](~ ll ( _,1~y
\.'<t~ "'••oG•~ -c..r-...1 .... , ''1""'
l..-m? ,., M·1r' "!
~·•"'tll•"9l•'0t
~H Lon-. ~ "">'.iP.Nal
"'U•11•fll~J"Ol0~00'•
ll!<rt C°"""' we..iOro"QO!C-,la· ....
H1111tiMJtof! kK~ OHkt
!7f.i7S ~~·S.-..,~ • .,.j
Mo "~ 1'. :Jd-f',·, P 0 Sc.. 1'1). ?:ib"8
Ottwr Offictt l~u~i 8elCll Ill'°"""'~ .. ,.....,. r.o.r1M"' ))O~a..~·wt ,.......,.,e_ :l.'\U~....,_.,4
!;lil\Clll-Mt :IO'NOrfl'l(!~Rt.i
From Page 1
PRISONERS. ••
Superior Court Judge Ra y mo n d
Thompson on five counts of armed
robbery stemming from incidents in the
Anaheim area.
Deputy District Attorney Pat Brian,
the prosecutor in that trial, was with
police and deputies today as they sped
along Santa Ana streets in pursuit or the
trio.
County jail officers have identified
O'Hare and Tarpley as the two men who
overpowered two bailiffs in the basement
hod.ling tank while the pri.90ners were
being assembled for today 's court
calendar call.
They said Wilson, \\'ho apparently v.·as
not included in the original escape plan.
joined the two men in their dash for
freedom.
Officers said O'flare and Tarpley each
held a gun taken from sheriff's officers.
Jail officers said no shots v.•ere fired in
the holding tank or in the immediate
vicinity of the courthouse basement.
They said the first shols were fired
':."hen the three prisoners tried to
CT1n1mandeer patrolman Jin1 Paul's car.
It is not clear to officers at this time
\Vho fired the fir st shots in an encounter
1hat left O'Hare seriously 1A-'Ounded and
the patrolman slumped in driver's seat.
Frotn Page 1
IMPEACII ...
Conunittee should not draw • 'an
inference of guilt" by Nixon's refu.sal to
tum over additional materials.
In another dt>'elopment U.S. District
Judge John J. Sirica today refused to
pass along lour White House Watergate
tapes to the House Judiciary Co1nmlttec.
saying if impeachment investigators
\\'ant then1 they will have to seek them
directly from President Nixon.
Sirica said he was powerless to grant a
committee request to be permitted to
hear full recordlngs of four presidential
C'(lllversations originally subpoenaed for
the \Vat.ergate grand jury and now in the
court's possession.
The recordings in qucrtion cover two
presidenlial conversations on June 20,
1972, and one each on June 30 and Sept
15 of that year. The conversations took
place between the President and top
aides.
Clianiber Goes
To tlie Tli.eal'cr
Tickets will be on sale at the door of
the Huntington Beach Pl•yhouse tonlghl
for lhe aMual chamber of commerce
"night. at the theater."
Curtain time Is 8 p.m. and tickets cost
14 !or lhe · production, "Third Best
Sport." Re!reshmentl 1fter the pl1y are
included In th< admllS!on prl<ie. The !healer la located at 2!10 Mo!n St.
Profitl from tonight's perlomwice wlli
go to lhe chamber,
i'rom Page 1
TEACHERS. • •
a five percent raise in the last half or the
year.
The board or trus1ees, htrough Dr.
Settle, has turned down the coot-of·living
provision.
'l'he board last week de c I a red
negotiations were at an impasse and cut
off the talks. The DEA Tuesday asked
lrustees to return to the negotiating
table. When they agreed. the teachers
gave the trus1ees a standing ovation.
But today, Bill Tiz.zard of the DE:\. said
negotiations were again at an i1npassc
after a Wednesday session. He and other
teachers complained thal Settle said they
didn't "have the backbone·• to back up
their demands.
Settle today denied ever saying that.
"I did say I didn't think they'd strike
with the olfer ol a nine percent salary in·
crease." Settle added. "\Veil, they did. I
was wrong. I have to admit I'm surpris-
ed."
Settle. who called the district teachers
"outstanding," claimed they're the
highest paid in the county. among !
comparable districts. He said the 9 I
percent raise v.•ould cost the distri ct $1.8
million. I
He added the district can't afford the
cost-of·living provision because i t s
income is constant and is also hurt by
inflalion.
The atmosphere outside the district /
schools during the picketing this morning
v.·as casual. At Huntington Beach High.
some students carried pieket signs or
took coffee to teachers.
Several students apparently opposed to
the walkout unfolded a sign: "We don't
give a damn .'' The picket signs read:
''We're Unsettled," "Happy Teachers
J\fake Beller TeactJers and "Banish
Bauer Po\~·cr, ·• a reference lo Trustee
Ralph Bauer.
"Do I have to go to your class today?''
one Huntington Beach HiF:h ~tudent asked
his picketing teacher. "Well," the man
ansv.·ered," I'm not going to be there."
Frnm Page 1
CHARGE S ...
associated \\'ilh 11icks -v.·;is ultimately
sentenced to four months probation and a ,
small fine. Hulsy claims the sentence is 1
unusually light in a manslaughter case. ·
1-lulsy originally came be r ore
supervisors last week lo seek their
~upport of an investigation of }licks'
involvement with the case. Supervisors
agreed lo take indivldual actions but all
ultimately sent the charges to the county
Grand Jury.
Hulsy came back Wednesday asking
t.hat his documents be made an official
part of the public record/ open to
investigation in the clerk's office on
request. That action was taken by
supervisors without commenl after a 21)..
minute executive sessmon.
Several supervisors said after the
meeting that the charges are still tn the
hands of lhe grand jury and that no
further action is conterr.plated by the
board.
In Friday's court action, Judge Mark
Soden is erpected to ask the City of
Garden Grove to show ctU5e why police
records and reports connected wlt.h the
case should not be made public.
Moat of the police report flied In the
accident 1$ open 10 public ICnltlny but
Hu!Jy saya a oupplemenial rePort J8m·
Ing Hicks ""' been held bock. Hulsy bas oamed Garden tltove Pol!co
Chio! Ivan Robinson u the rupoodeal la I
his cast. ·
'
•
Ot lll' P'llol Still P'hol9
Huntington
Has Job s
For Youths
Summer jobs will be available this
year in Huntington Beach for 148 youths
from low Income families.
The city has obtained a $104,960 federal
grant to pay the wages for disadvantaged
young men and women , ages 14·22, from
June 17 to Sept. 5.
Both fulltime and part-time positions
will be open, according to B o b
Cunningham. the city's man power
services ditector. City govenunent will
absorb 50 fulltime worker' and 20 part·
lime employes itself.
Other agencies, such as !he VP.JC,\.
local Sfhools and non-profit
organiza)lons, have also hem allocated
various numbers of summer workers.
CuMingham said the youths will all bf
paid $2 an hour, \Yith the federal grant
covering their sala ries. Nr.ither city
government , nor the agencies using the
young workers pay any part of their
wages.
JOINS .PROTEST -Robby Hassay rode his bike alongside picketing
Fountain Valley elementary teachers Wednesday as they protested
wage negotiations in front of school district offices. He said he had
a note from his parents giving hiln permission to join the picket line.
Applications for the summer jobs are
now available at the city's man power
services office In the old city hall, 520
Pecan Ave. (near 5th and 1'.1ain s!ree!s).
Cunningham said exact delails of '4'ho
is eligible for the summer jobs have not
been determined, but the jobs will
genera!Jy go to disadvantaged youths who
are residents of the city. Frona Page 1
OCEA N VIEW ...
a lump $337 .000 to be used hov.•eve r the
teachers \Yish. Teacher spokesmen say
most of th is amount v.·ould be used by the
automatic pay raises teachers receive
for additional years of service and
education, as well as starting the dental
plan, leaving teachers \vith a pay boost of
only one percent.
offer, he said, "I 1A-"0Uldn 't expect any
For further information on the
program .-phone Carol Launier, 536-
2.521, coordinator for the summer job
project.
difficulty." .
Bryan Dllon, a Westminster district
admlni!trator. said teachers in
Westminster have asked for a 15 percent
pay boost.
Only one negotiating session has been
held so far and district officials are
trying to cut budget Items ln an effort to
find an agreeable salary figure , he said.
Girl, 8, Victim
Of House Fire,
Dies i11 Hospital
~luntington Beach teachers also \Vant'
the district to reconsider a mandatorv
seven-period day for junior high student.S.
leaving it at six-period v.·ith an optional
s('venth class (or students wanting it.
Teachers also have asked the district
to start a district·\\'ide art. music.
remedial reading and physi cal education
program to replace a current plan
leaving these programs up to individual
schools.
Dog Bites Bo),.;
Dad Files Suit
An 8-year-old girl who was pulled from
the smoke-fllled second s1ory of her
buming house in Orange Monday died a1
Orange County Medical Ce n I e r
Wednesday from the effects of smoke
Seal Beach School Di s tr i c t
inhalation.
A Fountain Valley couple has been Firemen pulled Elizabeth Janacek. 8.
llle.d for '100,000 in damages by a local and her two sisters. Stephanie, 7. and Superintendent f\.larx Dressler said
teachers there are asking for an eight
percent pay boost While he refused to
comment on the board's-possible counter
father who claims that his young son was DoMa, 5, from the upper story of their
badly bitten by a vicious dog while burning house at 141 S. &tavia, Orange.
visiting the defendants' home. at 8:30 a.m. l\fonday.
Gary Brookshire names Steven and Their parenls and broth<'r had esca]l('d
Nonna Watcher, 17650 San nafael St. as from the house. Attempts by their father.
Field Opens Later defendants in the Orange County Edward, to rescue the girls v.cre blo(.'krd
Superior Court lav.·suit filed on behalf of by the intense heat. firemen satd.
his minor son, Robert. Elizabeth was given a r 1 i f i c i a I
SA)I DIEGO (AP) Port It is alleged in the action !hat the respiration at the sce ne and \\·as n1shrd
coinmissioners say they \\·ill shut down
Lindbergh Field in the early-morning
hours for six nlonths , starting this
slim mer. The announcement Wednesday
caught airlines by surprise.
\Vatchers did not posl signs indicating 10 the medie;il center. but she nevrr
that there v.·as a ,·icious dog on the regained conciousness before she <hed ;it
premises. The ani m::il. it is stated. 8.45 a.m. Wednesday.
attacked and bit the Brook5hi re boy last The two other girls have been released
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Thursd•Y. May :lO, 1974 H DAILY PILOT :J
Docu.ent,-Shows Patty Trusted bySLA
By United Pre11 IDterudonal
A study of documents found in an
abandoned Symbionese Liberation Army
(SLA) 11"!eoul In l.<>s Angeles shows lhat
Patricia llearst was so fully trusted by
her kldnapers that she was allowed to
stand guard duty alone, the Chicago
Tribune reported today.
The Tribune said the FBI believes the
St.A included no more than nine hard-
core members and that in recent weeks,
l\.1iss Hearst was counted among them.
Among the documents found was a
* * * Weed Says
Patty's
'Involved'
NEW YORK (UPI) -Stephen Weed,
fiance or Patricia Hearst. says h e
thought the young newspaper heiress was
"intensely and emotionally" involved
with her Symbionese Libera!ioo Army
kidnapers.
"I've ceased making predictions,"
\Vee<I said Wednesday night. "If either
the police or the people "''ith PJtty have
any sense of raUonality, she'll be all
right.
"But I have to make the assumption
that she is en1otional\y and intensely
involved in the group," he added.
Weed's remarks came during a piTtel
discussion on kidnaping on ABC-TV's
Dick Cavett show being taped in New
York. The program will be broadcast
tonight.
(The Associated Press quoted \\i'ced as
s.:'lylng he did not be 1 i e v e sex was
involved in her conve rsion to the SL.A.)
Atlanta. Constitution editor Reginald
Murphy, kidnaped and released by a
right-wing extremist this year, and
Burke Elbrick, former ambassador to
Brazil taken prisoner five years ago by
'the Brazilian terrorists, were also
panelists.
The men unanimously agreed that It
was quite easy for kidnaped persons to
identify with captors.
"At first l \4-'0Uld get irritated ,,·hen
prople suggeSled th<lt Patty might
identify with her captors." Weed said.
.. Rut from \\'hat I have read since and
v:hat I read now. it would have been
truly amazing if this had not happened ."
He also criticized police handling of the
Jfearst manhunt.
"It's a problem of attitudes." he said.
"The question is not what on earth
happened to thls girl. but let's get her."
ti.turphy said. "I ('Xpe<:led h> die and I
\\'ould do anything. I wouJd talk to them
(his kidnapers). I would tell jokes
constantly."
And in a taped interview used on the
show, Paul Getty, grandson of oil
magnate J. Paul Getty, said, "I \\'Ould do
anything'' to cooperate · "'ith his
kidnapers.
Paul Getty \11as kidnaped last year and
released several months later with his
right ear cut off.
Cory Ends Gifts
From Oil Firms
After Cl1arges
Assemblyman Ken Cory (Q-Garden
Grove) who has been billing himself as
"the man the oil companies fear most"
ln his campaign for state controller, said
toda y he is not taking any more
campaign CQ.nlributions from o i I
com~s.
"The oll companies will do anything
they can to discredit me," Cory said.
including making unso:ic:.~d conrtibu-
tioos to his campaign.
Two or Cory's opponents for the
controller post, Democrat Robert
Mendelsohn and Republican William
Bagley, have condemned Co r y ' s
~levision and radio campaign as
misleading,
• At a Newport Beach press conference
last week, Bagley. an assemblyman from
Marin County, listed 23 oil company
executives who had contributed to the
Cory campaign and said only five were
fl<lly identified in campaign disclosure
reports.
Mendelsotm, a san Francisco County
Supervisor ,labeled Cory's line that he is
"the man the oil companies fear most"
as a "gimmicky, Madision Avenue line."
notebook kept by William Harris, Mio
with bis wffil Emily al)d Mlla Hearst
managed lo elude police Oii May 16' and
---·-----
CLEYELAND ROCKED BY MAJOR
GUNFIGHT. Story'. Page 4
' 17 and have not been M.tn 1lnce. ThC
notebook and other docUments, the
TrlbWle said, were repOrted .&o....have
cootained a guard schedule for the St.A
members.
The newspaper said short notations In
Pilot Logbook
the oolebook "fer to the membert by lhe
numbers · crte through Dine. O!ber
scrawllngs indicate !bat the alaln leeder
of the small revolutklllary band, Donald
DeFreeze, waa No. l and Mila Hearst,
No, 9 ..
Ne1Ho a N0t i were written Ibo words,
"all llisht 1o light.'' source• told the
Tribune.
Federal agents seized tbe docUmenl$ in
an abandooed apartment only blocks
rrom the scene of a massive police
shootout and subsequent fire which look
2 Political Newcomers
Run Similar Campaigns
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of I'* Diiiy P'Jllt Stiff
TWO YOUNG MEN from Mission Viejo have burst onto Orange County's
political scene amidst a flurry of charges leveled against the incumbents they
are challenging in the June 4 primary.
Until the primary election filing deadline rolled around, David Gubler, 32,
and William S. Hulsy, 311 were living relatively obscure Jives linked only by
the fact that they are good friends.
Now Gubler, president of an employment agency for executives, and Hulsy,
an assistant city attorney in Long Beach, are in the thick of cold, hard politi-
cal infighting.
c;ubler has challenged 4oth District Congressman Andrew Hlnshaw. Hulsy
. · is battling incumbent county District Attorney Cecil Hicks.
EVEN TlfE MOST casual observer of the local political scene would find
distinct similarities in the campaign tactics being used by the two chaHengers.
Jn fact , the blueprints could have come out of a Xerox machine.
Both arc making every effort to capitalize on the year of Watergate and
the scandals that have fostcred 'public distrust in incwnbent government.
GUBLER IS CJIARGING Hinsha w with misuse Of power during his terms
as county assessor. He claims Hinshaw used public cmployes and equipment
on his congressional campaign, ,
}fc has also charged that Hinshaw and his top aides may have been in-
volved in easing up on assessments of big campaign contributors.
J-lulsey is charging his incumbent foe with "mal£easance and misfeas-
ance in olfice" for allegedly influencing the investigation and disposition of
a Garden Grove traffic accident in which tv.·o children were killed.
Closer examination of the Gubler and llulsy campaign reveals another
common denominator -John Schmitz, no ted county John Birch Society mem-
ber unseated by Hinshaw two years ago.
BOTR GUBLER AND HUI.SY Y«orked hard on the Schmitz campaign and
Schmitz admits to being a motive force in both campaigns as an adviser and
fund raiser.
lo a recent interview, Schmitz said Gubler was even prepared to step
aside if be I Schmitz) Yi'anted to try and regain his old seat. Schmitz declined
to run to concentrate on a new business enterprise.
TllE CONNECTION with Hulsy's effo1·ts is somev.·hat less clear but be-
comes obvious v.·ith a little logical thought.
Schmitz is still markedly upset over his Joss to Hin shaw, but he appears
more disturbed that the incumbent district attorney has not moved fast
enough in a probe of alleged misconduct by Hinshaw when he was assessor.
Thus. bis support of Hulsy -I.he man who "·ould press that investigation
to its logical conclusion.
And yt't, another similarity beh,·een Hulsy and Gubler campaign tactics
tends to belie those hopes of an intensive investigation.
JIULSV SAID IF he loses in June, he probably wouldn't pursue the allega-
tions against Hicks "because my heart wouldn 't be in it."
Asked the same question. Gubler says he probably wouJd leave bis in-
vestigation to others if he is defeated.
If nothing else, that pronounced lack of dedication flies in the face of tbe
sincerity both men try to project.
Strike Looming d_
Retail Clerks ..,,-awing
Teamsters' Support
Food industry retail clerks. including
11,000 in Orange County local 324, are
still at an impasse on wage negotiations
with store management and have picked
up support from Teamsters for a strike
that 1nay begin within the next few days.
The strike, whlch could involve 54,000
clerks in .nine Southern California
counties, was initially set for June 6
Co1ivict Drops
Maine Campaig11
THOMASTON, Maine (UPI) -Danny
Trask, who apparently found it difficult
to conduct a political campaign from
behind prison walls, has dropped out of
the race for governor of Maine.
Trask, a 36-year-old convicted robber,
tried to get 5,(1()(1 signatures on petitions
so he could run in November under the
banner of the Poor Peoplrs' Party. He
had said he was having difficulty getting
the signatures and caJled on several
occasions tor volunteers on the outside to
circulate the petitions.
unless an agreement was reached. The
union discarded the deadline Wednesday,
however, and threatenel to strike sooner.
In a meeting Wednesday,
representatives of the 165,000 teamsters
in the Southern California food industry
expressed hope that an agreement could
be negotiated.
But Pete Kurbatoff, president of
Teamsters Joint Council 42 in Los
Angeles said, "In ttie event of a strike,
however, the 165,000 Teamsters in
Southern caJi!omia will support the food
clerks."
A spokesman at Orange County clerks
local 324 said that a 15 cent an hour rift
still stands between union a n d
management offers.
The union wants a 50 cent .,rock
bottom" wage hike above the present
$4.68 an hour paid journeymen clerks.
The management group, the Food
Employers C.OUOcil, however. said it will
not go above its 35-<:ent offer.
Meanwhlle, a federal food industry
medlation group in Chicago, set up at the
suggestion !Jf the Nixon administration to
try to settle such disputes, is working to
find a way to avert the str•
•Asked for a Miraele'
Minister Testifies in Boy's l1isulin Deat1i Trial
SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) -A
fundamentalist minister has testified thal
he "asked God lo work a healing
miracle" on an ll·year-old boy with
diabetes, but never said tho boy was
eur<d.
The boy died aller hla par<nts threw
out bis tnsultn beca""< they bcltcvtc!
diabeles was the work ol the devil and he
had been healed by faith.
The ii.v. Daniel L. Pad!U1 o! the
Assembly or God Cburd! in Baratow
tes!Jli<d Wednesday at the trial of
Lawrence and Allee Parjcer Io r
Involuntary mansllllJihter In Ibo death of
their llOll, Wesley.
• A paibolofl'!I oonlinned In te&tbnony
I
Wedilesclay lbat the boy died Aug. 22 due
lo the effects or diabettS.
Padilla said he remembers the Parkers
bringing Wesley to him during a service
at the chureh 1n Barstow Aug. 19, and
praying wilh them. But be .. id he bas no
special ability lo heal, and that !aith
alooo is nol enough to cure a disease.
The Parkers "asked me to prlJ with
them for Wesley," fadilla eald. "I looked
at him and saw be had tears In his •)'el.
I -more concerned about his tears
than hi• lllnes.!,
"I ~ghl him doe<r to me and alll<l!d
blm U he !elt God l<Wed him. IL said,...,
yeo.
-"I "'5ked all tbr .. , to Pr•Y and we
asked God to work a healing mlraele."
lie 18ld he lold the Parkers "lei's
continue lo believe for a healing
mlrac1e," but denied be told them the
mrtacle bad bat>t>elled.
When WesJey's)lpped Into a coma from
lack ol imulln, Parker allegedly rtlustd
io allow lnoulln lo be a<lmlni.stOred,
saying It would bo a dtnlal ol their faith
In God'a cure. He said the diabetes """ cauoed by demOOB. •
Tbe Par!cen and ltllow belieYen held
pr~._ at the boy's bed!lde until
be died, and il~r !tied 1o brins him bac:t
lo Ule, sln,m1, chanU.J, pnyjna and exbotlbJ& him to rlae from the dead.
the lives of DeFtetze and five SLA
rru:.mbets.
Othef'materlals found were the
addttsses of 15 apartments for rent and
a brown paper bag with several Los
Angeles street names written on It.
Police and federal agents checked each
of the apartments but found no clUes.
They could make no sense of the street
names on the bag, the TribWle said.
lnvestigators said that a page In
Hanis' notebook listed ~' numbers of
public telephones in the Los Angeles
arta. Other material lndlctated thal calls
wer6 to be made to 50me of the numbers
at gpecified times. the Tribune said.
hfeanwhUt, ttie Ame:ican Civil
Liberties Union and the father of a dead
Symbionese .. Llberallon Ar1ny men1ber
today demanded a public inquest into the
six deaths.
Dr. L.S. \\'olfe of Allentown, Pa .. father
of Willie \Volfe, and other relatives or the
dead are asking for the inquest, the
ACLU sa id \Vednesday. The father
planned to outline their demands later
today.
'nl~ FBI said it has no new leads in the
continuing search for Patricia llearst
and William and Emily J-larris.
.. \Ve're sliU running out all leads," a
spokesman said.
The younger Wolfe1 23. died of bums
and smoke inhalation May 17.
Coroner Thoma! Noguchi. replying to
the ACLU, said his office i$ "conducting
an in-depth study of the deaths. If at the
completion of thi s study, an inquest is
felt to be warranted. it will be held ."
But. he sajd , such an lnpuest is "not
contc1nplaled at this time."
Fast strike lJCI Prof e~SOJ'
Hits Schools Social Ecology
In Laguna Leader Quitting
A sudden, wildcat strike by more than
half the Laguna Beach liigh School
teachers forced the school to shut down
to a half day schedule today, and some
students were dismissed as early as 9
a.m.
The administration was not officially
notified of the strike, or of the teachers'
grievances.
Superintendent Dori Woodington said 'he
guesses the protest was over "frustration
with salaries." He said he heard
"rumors" of the walkout Wednesday
afternoon.
Administrators were unable to come up
with an official tally of how many
teachers had walked off the job today,
but said that 29 had either called in sick,
or taken "personal leaves for business
reasons."
The figure does not count an additional
six teachers who were known to be ill
before the strike began. The school has
56 teachers.
Woodington also said he believed three
teachers at Thurston Intermediate School
'"ere participating in the protest action,
but said he did nGt believe it had ex-
tended to the elementary schools.
Science teacher Charles Reich, the
strike leader. said teachers will probably
continue to strike until the school board
takes specific action. or show "good
faith" on their demands.
Reich said that the teachers '''ant the
board to meet with the faculty to explain
their budgetary priorities, the trustees to
re-examine budgets and a direct say in
how allocated salary money is to be
spent.
"We're up5et and dissatisfied ..-.·ith the
board's priorities decisions. They have't
included staff or students in their
decisions," Reich said.
"We have an inadequate salary
schedule with inadequate compensation
for inflation. In fact, we're the second
Jov.·est in Orange County," Reich
continued.
The strike organizer also said the
teachers do not want trustees to decide
how to spend the salary mor.ey.
"People on the top of the pay schedule
have been paying for it for many years.
\Ve'd like to give these people more
moocy. The bouom end of the scale is
tligh-paid, but we have very few people
on that end.'' Reich criticized. ----
01 the Diiiy Piiot Stl11
Dr. Arnold Binder. founding director of
UC Irvine's nati onally rec o g n i zed
program in social ecology, said today he
is resigning.
Binder leaves next ·wcrk to begin a onc-
yea r sabbatical as a &nior Fulbright
scholar at University College, Dublin.
His resignation \\"as to have been
effective in June 1975, but Binder said
today faculty members have urged hhn
lo stay at ucr one year following his
return from sabbatical to help in the
search for his replacement.
"Informally I have resigned. Formally
I have not," Binder said, noting that
official paperwork had not been filed.
"I am sick of this administration,"
Binder said. "The sheer harassment on
an innovative program is incredible ...
''[ have told Chancellor (Daniel G.)
Aldrich the only way ru ren1ain at Irvine
is to make t}le program a school."
Social ecology draws faculty from a
variety of academic disciplines such as
sociology, psychology and other sciences.
Students enrolled In the
interdisciplinary program may learn
from faculty in any or all of the
"schools" at UCI ranging from biological
sciences to social sciences.
Unlike traditional schools, soc i a 1
ecology students do their research in the
community working as j u v e n i I e
counselors, as assistant planners, or
other assignments,
Binder's goals for social ecology most
nearly match a concept Chancellor
Aldrich brought to UCI from his
experiences in agriculture wherein
learning in the field of agriculture is
shared with the fann community through
the university's agricultural extension.
Aldrich once envisioned an "urban
extension" program at UCI.
Binder joined the UCI faculty in 1966
leaving a professorship at New York
University. In 1970 he launched the
program in social ecology,
Next year, while Binder is in Ireland,
800 students will be enrollt'd in the
program and ·be taught by 27 social
ecology faculty members.
This year, only 11 !acuity positions
v.'ere authorized for a registration of 550
in the program.
Binder noted that the faculty-student
ratio will drop from this year's 50 to l to
an improved 30 to l ratio next year. He is
grateful ror the help, but notes that of
Ala• ~~ fl . I
\ •
QUITS UC! DIRECTORSHIP
Social Ecologist Binder
"25 teaching assistantships granted to
liCI for next year, social ecology got only
one.
"UCI is striving for a TA to student
ratio of 45 to L In social ecology it is 300
to I.
"I think I have been abused Jong
enough by !he petty harassment around
here," Binder said.
If social ecology is elevated to "school''
status, Binder would be eligible for
administrative help program directors
are not ;i.llo\ved to have,
As a director, Binder said: '11 do all
the work that a chairman does -and all
the work that a dean and am not allowed
to take off any teaching time to get it all
done."
Deans of schools also have associate
deans to help with administrative duties.
'·J really have to laugh when I call a
dean in an afternoon and am told 'he's
not in, he is in his laboratory doing
research.' "
"I gave up my lab three years ago. I
don't have time to do research," Binder
said.
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' '
Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVO.
Thurs. & Ffl. fYM:"-CElS'FA MESA, 6Al:;l i';,
{ DAILY PILOT lllursday, May 30, 1974
Cleveland Wracked by Wild Gunfig4t
Transportation
Bv the ThunilJ • UPCOAST, OOWNCOAST: 1-litchhik ing
;.as a means of personal lransportalion is
·· almost universally frowned upon by
forces of the law in our region. Our peace
officers can cite you chapter and verse
" on it.
Officers can pull out books and recount
the murders, rapes, multiple assaults,
kidnapin g, muggings or sex deviate
crimes which have resulted to victims
'lvho either sought or offered rides.
All this good advice aside, I thumbed
my way fro1n Newport to Laguna Beach
last ni ght.
This developed because I am in this
car pool. It is my week to drive. I had
forgotten tha t I had a dent Is t
appointmeut at 4:30 p.m. Since I was
driving. and if I went off to sit in the
denUst's chair, how was the rest of the
car pool going to get home?
PONDERING ALL THIS about 15
minutes before I was due in the dentist's
hot seat, I struck upon a solution.
"You drop me o{{ at the dentist's and
take the car on home," I advi.~ my
sidekick. "I 'll get there later somehow.''
Later came when I walked out or the
denUst's Office on Dover Drive near
Coast Highway and realized that now I
was faced with the somehow or getting
down the road .
I studied that long stream or
automobiles lined up for the Dover-Coast
Higbv.•ay signal, one of the most frus-
trating crossroads in our entire region .
It was abollt 5:15 p.m. and thi s was the
going-home gang. "What a nice looking
bunch of commuters," said I to myself.
"WHY NOT JUST stick out your thumb
and see \vhat happens?" So I stuck.
My first rid e was with a blue-jeaned
chap with an older car who went to the
trouble of maknig a U-turn at Bayshores
in order to pick me up at the signal.
"You picked a lousy place to try for a
ride," he advised me as I slid into his
front seat.
He explained that he u·as only going to
Balboa Island on a job and "·ould
nonnally turn off al Bayside Drive but
\l.'Ould take me to Jamboree Road
because I could hitch better from there. I
thanked him at Jamboree.
THE DISTINGUISHED • Io o king
gentleman at the Jamboree bus stop
advised me to take the Orange Co unty
Transit District's 85 bus for a straight
shot to Laguna. I thanked him and stuck
out my th umb again instead.
My second ride to th e middle of Corona
dcl l\1ar was u•ilh a nice fellow v.-ho
works for Diceon Electronics, Inc. out on
Von Karman in Irvine.
"You picked a lousy spot for a ride,"
he adv ised.
Between Jamboree and l\Iarguerite
Avenue in Corona dcl l\1ar, he explained
to me how Diceon makes the best
electronic devices in the world. "\Ve
build for quality," he declared.
Nice to find folks who believe In their
companies.
While thumbing al ?-.Iarguerite. I think
I got honked at by former presidential
candidate John c:. Schmitz, \Vho v.·as
turning off for home.
THE SIGllT OF l\1E and 1ny thumb no
doubt confirmed all his suspicions about
nell.'Spaper peoplr.
"You ~icked a lousy s1>0t for a ride ...
said the young man in the sports car ,,·ho
drove me t_o Laguna. He \Vorks for Copy
Cats and makrs blueprints for the lr•·ine
Company and others.
"If your son \1·ants to get in1o drafting
he should go to co!l!.'gr." he advised me.
.. It's a great profession."
Well, hitchhiking may be chancy
transportation.
But there sure arc a lot of nice folks
out there.
Nixon Tax
Pienalty
Reported
BALTI~10RE. !\Id. (AP! -President
r-;"ixon ~·as assessed a 5 J>('rcent
negligence penalty b.1· lhe Internal
Re\1.'nuc Service in connection 11•ilh
$467 .000 he owes in back income taxes
and interest. a newspaper said today.
The Baltimore Sun. quoting sources
familiar '11th the case. said the IRS
included the 5 pet"C"ent penalty on April 3
1\·hen it assessed Nixon $432,787 in back
taxes, plus interest.
The Sun said the do!1:1r an1ount of lh1.•
nlleged negligen te penalty could not be
determined.
l'\JXON HAS SAI D he v.·ould pay thr
taxes. but the \\'hite lfouse has refused to
say ~·hether a negligence penalty 11·as
involved. The IRS refused comment on
the newspaper report, saying it \las
agency policy not to go beyond v.·hat a
taxpayer reveals about his 011'11 case.
A negligence penalty does not an1ounl
to a finding of fraud . It is made for
"negligence or intentional disregard of
rules and regulations." an l RS
spokesman said.
The White liouse has maintained. that
any mistakes on Nixon's returns •rere
made by lawyer.i or accountants \1ho
made out his returns, and not by the
President.
Ateanwhile, the \Vhitc House announced
\\'ednesday that public d on a t ion s
designed to help Nixon pay his back
ta:ices now mounted to r11 orc than
$90,000.
~TfXON (IAS SAJD he 1rould pay the
back ~axer himself, even if it meant
harrowing the money, and the \\'hitc
House is returning the donations. A
spokesman said Wednesday that the
$4,341 of the tota l donated has come
anonymously, and that this money 11·as
being given to victims of the April
tornadoes v.·hich hit 13 stales.
UPI TtltPhtll
Reealls Cliildhood
Rob Hope came "ho1ne" to Cleveland \Vednesday night for benefit
dinner and to celebrate 7lst birthday. !·le recalled job at brother's
butcher s hop: "I plucked the chickens and ground the hamburger
and when things were slow. I posed witq an apple in n1y mouth."
$180 Millio11 Satellite
F 01· Edi1catio11 TV Lofted_
f'ron1 \\'ire Serl·ice~
Cr\PE CANAVERAL. F!a. -A $180
million
televised
satellite \l hich 11-ill bean1
educational and he a I t h
programs to isolated areas of The '1orld
1-1·as launched toda y.
A T11an 3C rocket blasted a11 a.\" from
its Kennedy Space Center moorings at 6
e OEO Progr11111s Voied
\\',\SHl\"GTO'.'J -..Ji41c House has \'Oled
lo ke<'p 1he Office of Economic
Opportunity"s rcniaining major programs
ali\'C. sidestepping President Nixon's
attempts !o do a\\·ay '''ith the antipoverty
agency.
-·~~ ( IN SHORT... J f a.111. PDT. lihmg the Applications
B~· a l'Otc of 331 to 53 on Wednesday,
!he House disbanded OEO but created a
nc11· adn1inistration \\' i th i n the
Dcpartn1cnt of llealth. Education and
\\"elfare to run its con1m unity action
programs at <l Lost of S380 n1il\ion.
..... Trchnology Satellite 6 into orbit
~-'· Initially, ATS6, \\'ill be pu~i!lcth'd
UPI Tllt~he!e
F11cls io Bl11111e
CBS correspondent I::ric Se\·ar-
cid blan1ed the problems of tile
l\1xon ,\dn1inistratlon on the
facts, not the news n1ecila. lie
was addressing the 88th an·
nual commencement exercises
of Temple L'niversity in Phil·
adelphia.
stationary orbit 22.300 miles abol'e the
Galapagos Islands in the eastern Pacific.
From there. it will be ablt to 1'\·ie1-1·" the
entire continental Vnited States and
Alas ka.
e .'iocieis Ailn al 1Hoo1t
,\IOSCO\V -The Soviet lnion's first
unmanned IWlar probe in 16 months fle\v
on rourse to the moon today and \\'rstem
c'<perts predicted the Russians v.ould
auempt a soft landing.
The Luna 22 craft v.·as launched
\Vednesdav to conduct ' ' s c i en t i f i c
research cif the moon and space near the
moon from orbit."' the Tass ne11·s agency
said
e Red Teams W11lk ()11i
SAfGO~ -7\"orth Vietname se and Viet
Cong d('legations to lhe military team set
up to arrange and coordinate the search
tor n1ore than 1.000 missing An1ericans
\1·al kcd out of negotiations t.OOay, the
South Vietnamese command aMounced. '
It said the Communist delegations
1·ov.·cd not to attend future deliberations
of the team. v.•hich als_y_ includes the
lniled States and South f1etnan1 .
l'll.'a Uy
• Plen by ProlesfaHis
BELF.\ST. Northern Ireland -Tiie
Protestant L:lster Defense Association
1L"OA 1 11·amed Protestants and Roman
Catholics alike todav that unless lhcv
learn to Hve and i·ork together "The
allcrn;1Ul'e is a bloodbath u•ith quarter
neither gi1 en nor expected."
2 Particip<uits
Fall Dea<l .4fter
Dri1iki1ig Co1itest
FORT WALTO~ BEACH. Fla. (API -
A gin-drinking contest between two men
\l'ho tried 'lo settle a dispute over their
liquor capacities ended with both
co n!estants dead. police say.
Police Chief Tommy Ray \Yednesday
gave the follo"·ing account of the deaths
or Walter Wad1?, 39. and Eugene Cole, 32:
Thu'!id~rstorms Cross U.S.
Fog Blanketu1g Northeast; Wester1i States Sunny
\Vade and Cole had long disputed "·ho
could consume the most alcohol. The
owne r of a tavern they frequented
decided to end the argument by holding a
drinking contest Sunday night.
A "timekeeper" was appointed and the
men began downing glasses of gin. The
contest was called orf wheh neither man
could drink any more. Each had put
a~·ay between 32 and 48 ounces or gin in
Jess than an hour.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Oelr1ery of the Dai~ ~~t
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Coastal Weather
MOOlllV •IH'll'IY !Wey. L'9ht v1rl1W.
wl!Mb 11lthl •!Id ,,,,.,.,,,"' '*'"' ~ 11111 _.,_,en., IJ to :to trl'I0!1 111
1"°'1'1oOM le.Hy 11\d '""''' Hi.ti t• dly 11'1 UOPI' .0... Coe1tel ftmper11\lre6
,,,.. fr61'1'1 '' to .,, 111111'>11 ternoer•·
''"'" ,,.,.. ''"" '' to 1•. Wet.r ,.,.......,"'" •t
S11n, Moon, '.l'Wea.
TM11l,D4Y
S«Olld high '. •~M p,m, f.J
,llDAY
Finl ~111'1 '""'""" 7:11 •.m. J,, 'lf1.I low , .. .. ... ..... 1111 •·"'-u ~ ................... l:O>•,fn. '·' ,_,.. ....... U•"~"" ,. '"" ri11t J:CJ •• ,,,,, .... 7:11 tt.m..
Meot1 fha J.111 "'"'° k41 l 1V •A
Cole wcu; found unconscious on a street
near his home Monday morning and
booked into the city jail for public
drunkennness. lfe was checked. hourly,
Ray said, and when he could Mt be
roused at 3: 10 p.m. he was sent to a
hospital where he was pronounced dead
11 minutes after arrival.
Wade Went to his sister's home after
the contest. When she could __ lfC't rouse
him ai 5 p.m Monday, she t~ him to
the same hospital, where he died
Tuesday morning.
David Cassidy
F a1i, 14, Dies
LONDON (AP) -Bemadelle
Whelan, a l~YffNlld pop music
Ian whose hear\ otopped al a David
C...fdy concert In London !oui
day& ago, died early today at
Hammenmllh l!oopflal.
Sbe bad been llDCO!llldous since
lhe night of the concert, during
whk:h lllOl'O than lllO ' fans we"'
trealed for minor lnjurles an4
hylter\a. Cusldy, 24, I e ft t
Ben>adette I bouquet While ahl WU -·
•
Group Served at Rites
For SLA's DeFreeze
CLEVELAND (UP!) -'lbtte persoos
were arrested early today following a
gunbattle with nearly JOO policemen in
which five officers and two other persons
were wounded.
Those arrested were identified by
police as members of the Sunni Orthodox
Mu.slims, the group which provided
pallbearers for the funeral of Symbionese
Liberation Army head Donald DeFreeze
and which has vowed to eliminate drug
pushers.
Police said they foiled earlier an
apparent attempt by the three to kidnap
a suspected drug dealer.
"I DON'T KNOW "W'hethcr these three
individuals participated in the DeFreeze
funeral." Jennrichs said. "They said
their primary purpose is to eliminate all
drug pushers."
Cleveland radio station \VJW reported
that one of the three men arrested said
they were n1embers of the group that
supplied pallbearers at Defreeze's
funeral here last week. DeFreeze and
five other SLA members died in a Los
Angeles shootout l\1ay 17.
Police said the sequence of events
began Wednesday night when a man
tentatively id entlfied as Andrew Jackson,
39, East Cleveland, was kidnaped by five
black men on Fourth Avenue in
Cleveland.
Jackson escaped. apparently while
being taken to his home, police said.
··~tY SLAVE NA1\fE is Craig Gregory
F.owler," the suspect, \\'ho called hin1self
Mujahab, told WJW. "We went after a
dope killer tonight. We"re not afraid of
death. We went to ge t him. Nobody
innocent is to be killed."
Two of those "·oundcd early today \\'ere
ident ificd as John O'Bri en, 19, and
Denn is O'Brien, 31, tv•o members of a
family held hostage by the group during
the gunbattle. Both had been shot at lea st
three times and both were listed in fair
condition. police said.
Cleveland pat r o 1 ma n Gerald
~hetterer, 31 originally reported as
killed, "·as listed in critical condition at
lluron Road Hospital in suburban East
Cleveland. One other officer from the
Cleveland Police Department and fy,·o
East Cleveland patrolmen y,•ere listed in
fair condition at lhe hospital.
EAST CLEVELAND Police Lt .
Richard lirovat said "a preliminary
investigation shows that this (the
kidnaping) v:as some"•hat related to
drugs.··
•le said t"·o of the men then fled the
area, and the olher three forced the ir
\\'ay into the East Cleveland home of
~'li!Hnm J. O'Brien and held the family
hostage. The two men who fled remained
at large today.
Hrovat said police began sea rching the
area after finding an a b a n d one d
automobile apparently belonging to the
suspects. Once the suspects v.•ere
disco\•ered and the shootout and tear gas
barrage began, about 100 policemen
from the two departments were called to
the scene, he said.
"\1lE DISCOVERED them (the three
suspects ) on a door to door search,"
Hrovat said. "A little boy came out of
the house and yelled that someone was in
there. Police went for cover when heavy
gwlrtre began coming from the house.
Police returned the gunfire when the)'
saw the suspects.
Seven Killed
By Lightning
In Midwest
By United Press lntemuUonal
A stonn system which swept from the
central plains to Ohio has brought death
by lightning to seven persons In the
l\·lidwes l.
Four young girls and a woman died in
the St. Louis area Wednesday, and to the
eastward tv.·o mem were killed in
Indiana.
Jimmie Hibbs , 19. was standing under
a tree in Columbus. Ind., and was killed
by a lightning bolt. A 15-vear-old girl
standing with him was injured. In
Spencer, . Ind., J ohn Vaughn, 68, died
v.•hen hit by nying wood from a tree
struck by lighting, and the fragments
injured another man.
Two boys found the bodies of the four
girls huddled beneath a tree nearly six
hours afler a morning thunderstorm
passed through the suburban A-fanchester
area. The girls had been released earlier
than usual from the private Catholic
school because they had finished their
final examination.
The bodies had traces of burns but no
other marks, said Raymond T. Hanis,
chief medical examiner for the county
medical examiner's office.
The girls were killed about the same
time tv:o v.·omen were struck by lightning
that spli t an oak tree under v.·hich they
\Vere standing v.·hen rain interrupted
their golf game.
The women took refuge beneath the
tree on the fa irv.·ay of the 12th hole at the
Paddock Country Clu b when lightning
split the 7S-foot·high tree dovm the
n1iddle.
Judge Dismisses
Lewdness Charge
For 12 i11 'Eros'
CAMBRIDGE, Mass . (AP )
Cambridge District Court J u d g e
Lawrence J. Feloney has dl.smissed
charges of open and gross lewdnds
brought agai~ 12 personJ o:mect.ed
v.ith the play "Sweet Eros."
Charges of fornication qalmt Lisa
Ingalls and Joel Polinsky, two stan of
the sho"-', ""ere continued to J\Dle 19 by
f eloney.
The pair was arrested with the others
on May 22 wheri stale police lnt.mzpled
the play, following a scene In which !hey
appeared nude in a simu1ated sex act.
le\1-·dness charges. noted that childml
had be<ll excluded from the paid
performance and that M~tts'
obscenity law bad recently been struck
do'Ntl by amther iourt.
Sy,.ia llttdel• Pressures
Cl1allenge Seen Turning
Truce Into Solid Peace
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
AP 5.-Clll C.,.,-""Mtnl
The Syrian·Israell military
disengagement accord dramatically
im proves chances for Middle East
stability. And so Syria's anxious ally,
President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, can
begjn breathing a little easier.
~ But his relief must be diluted by an
_.ac ute awaren ess of how fragile such an
agreement can be.
BRINGING SYRIA under I he
disengagement tent with Israel and
( NEWS ANALYSIS J
Egypt not only was a breakthrough of
inCl1culable Jmportanct, but It was
another minor miracle of the aort that is
becoming a specialty of Sea<lary of
State Henry A. Kissinger. Having
produced lhls wonder. ho" ever ,
Kilalnger now must appq. h I •
legerdemain to the even m o r e
imponlbfe.tookin& job of lurnilli truce
into po1a1 •
Syria long lw been lhe enfant terrible
of the Arab world. Her polltlul leaders
.,.. Invariably under · 10vere pres&Ur<I
generated by Ille billhly emotional
PaleaUne l1111e. Wben Kllllnger aet oul
to bring Syria lnlO an .,....., .. 1 of any
deocrlptlon wllh lhe ardHneml'. It had
...m.d be hid laken 111 • hopelll la&I<.
MEANTIME, BG Y PT' I Pl'esld<nl Sodl~ ...... IO Jtl hll llltlan oo lhe nod
10 economlc hoollll, mull blve bad msny
an uneaty -· All al&llo In Illa mllllarJ -...-pie! wttb lsncl,
•
.,
he ~·as out on a Jong limb and looking
uncomfortable.
In Arabic, "al·Misri" means "the
Egyptians," and in this case it had
seemed that "aJ-Mlsri" would have loved
company. Now, at last. he has It.
But had Syria continued to hold out for
long, Sadat could have been subject to
the same sort of difficulty that plagued
hlm before the October war, when
intellecturals demanded an end, one way
or another, to the situation or "no war,
no peace."
When Arab terrorists burst into the
picture so bloodily at a critical moment
in the Syria·lsrael nef>Uatlona, Jt had
S<emed all Kilalnger s paUenl labor
would go down the drain. The trrrortmt
and consequent Israeli r e t a 11 a t I o n s
generated IO much emotkm on both sides
as IO malte it seem all bela mlghl be off.
NOW THE SCENE •hl!U LO lhe Geneva
conference, and U the Syria-Israel phase
had looked lough. Ille Geneva one can be
mllCh tougher. Peac., In fact, ls 1 long
way off.
The terror •iluaUon &llll can lhrtalen 1
the !ragll~alll'ffl!lent, llnct !here can hardly be ltCUrt ponnlee against acta by I cal' eitrtmlala.
For Israel, llClll'l\y 11 the name of lhe
game. For Syria, II I& "the leglUmat<
rlgbta Of lbe Palestine people," •
riielorlcal demand lhal can mean many
lhlnp, evm up IO dlsmanUement of the
lntll &tale. Some Israella think the
Syrlanl ~ "'" that Syril 1'lll oondnue ~ back Ill
the Golan Hellhla.,.. ti loot lri ltl'I, but
!mt! will be far !rem .... r to tllve up •
oec.wlty blnl-fn.hand for a promlae In Iha
bulb.
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8 DARY PllO'I: EDITORIAL PAGE
-school Board Choices
T~e Orange County Board ol Education is a little-
understood but often-discussed body. Two recent grand
juries have recommended abolition of the county schools
office con1ptetely, so poor is its record of service.
Voters In two areas of the county have an oppor·
tunity in next Tuesday's election to help turn that di·
rection around. They can vote for promising candidates
who show qualities that could restore to tbe board a
leadership role in c6bperative educational services.
In Trustee Area, 2, which includes part of J-funting.
ton Beach, the need for imaginative. progressive lead·
ership ~uld be met by Or. David H. Paynter, a business-
man w"ho has learned the ropes over a 27·year career
as an(educator.
In Area 5, which covers the south county and har·
bar areas, John 0. App, a young businessman, has the
qualifications of professional skillS, energy and the view-
point of a parent of school-age children. He is aggres·
sive and dissatisified with the status quo.
Paynter and App represent a forward step both for
the county office and the local districts it is supposed
to serve.
It's Worth the Cost
Inflation and fuel problems have affected every-
one's pocketbook, but son1e causes are so important they
trenscend the cost -particularly when the cost isn't
really that much. The June 4 tax override in the llun-
tington Beach Union High School District is such a ca.use.
The new rate would be used to raise $14.5 million
to build a much-needed sixth high school campus to re-
lieve the overcrowding throughout the district. 'l'here
is permanent housing for 14,700 students, but about
19,600 students already have registered for fall classes.
The !ive area elementary school boards, high school
teachers and non-teaching personnel. several parent
groups, the city of Fountain Valley anCI the J.eaguc of
\Vornen Voters are among those \vho have endorsed the
override. Now the voters should do the sa1ne. \i'ote 'Yes'
on Proposition H on Tuesday.'s primary ballot.
Finding tl1e F unds
On the surface, it appears 1-luntington Bea.ch City
Administrator Dave Rowlands has trim1ned about as
much as possible from the proposed 1974·75 budget -
but it still comes up $2.5 n1illion short of raising the
revenue needed to run the city.
Rowlands plans to hire less than a dozen new mu·
nicipal workers, though the l'ity now has a new civic
center and will shortly have a new central park and Ii·
brary. 'l'he budget. total of $31 .4 n1illion is only 1.9 per·
cent above the 11173.74 fir,urc. but the operations sec·
tion of it {~22 tnillion) is 15 percent higher.
The administ rator says inflation and recession have
combined to thwart the city's ability to control the ris·
ing cost of govern1nent. And councilinen. 111 a 12-hour
study session last week , could find litlle to criticize or
cut in Rowlands' proposal.
The override would add 17.8 cents to the district's
current tax rate of S2.82 per $100 assessed valuation.
f'or the owner of a $40.000 home, thjs would meai1 pay-
ing $17.84 a year for 27 years -less than a ni ckel a
day.
It now appears counciln1cn will be busy the next
few weeks judging various methods for raising new
revenue. Public hea.rings \viii be held in June, and since
the money will come from public pockets, residents
should make every effort to learn the city's financial
picture.
\ ~ ... \::::>...,.._. .~ r.i-I'\. .... n M\,,,;,
Don't Lea1i
Too Hea11ilv
•
011 tli e Clerg)·
( SYDNEY HARRIS J
I have never knpi,•1n .,..·hethcr to laugh
or cry nlore \I.hen pt"Oplc .,..·ilh emotional.
marital, or sexual problrm.s are advised
to ··tum to your doctor or elergyman"
for counSt."'ling and help.
The truth ')f the mall<'r 1~ that mosi
doctors and clergymen-in our society, at
least-are no n1ore qua lified by training
or le1nuc~Jn1rnt lo
~ivc ~uC'h couns1·1in~
than a plun1hrr l':ln
f 1 x :1 Eu~t1r:h1;i11
tul~:.
Thl· su1t:1il1· and
d i \'or <' t' 1·;1!e uf
doctors. denll!'-1.> and
o!h£'r professionals
is higher lhan that
of almost sny 01her
CM.·cupation: u·hile that of the ministry
\\·ould doubtless be much higher than it is
1f public opinion were not such a rigid
detenninant o( their conduct.
DOCTORS are taught virtually nothing
nbout sex -except in its starkest
biological S<'n,!;e-1n medical school. and
1nost of them :.ire so organu·ally·oril'ntcd
that they arr either etnbnrrassl'd or
1mpalirnt \\'hen confronli ng ob\'iously
£'mot1onal or functional upsrts.
C!rrgymcn arr at !he other exlrem<':
.o;;o "spiri!ually·1n1ndcd'" thal !h<'y tend to
turn psychological problc>ms into ethiral
ones. and usually prop<>&! "faith" as
futilely as the physicians propose pills or
a sca·change. They may o(fer more
s~·mpathy than the doctor. but sympal~Y
alone can no more heal the heart than it
can reset a broken leg .
IT lS preciS<'ly because of these
obvious deficiencies in the medical and
theological professions that millions of
Amt•ricans have turned. perforce, to a
\\ild variety of emotiona l nostrums, from
yoga and meditation to lransactional
groups and sensitivity training. People
arc desperate for help in re<.'Onstructing
their lives, and are as willing to try any
psychological cure in the same way a
bald man will give any alleged hair-re·
storer a \vhirl.
Som<' of lhcse programs are more
reputable and responsi ble than others,
but most 1of \~·hatever persuasion) are
under-trained and ill-directed. faddish
or do\vnriglrt futuous or even dangerous
lo the i;tability of the personalitv. Alas.
there is no Federal Trade Commission,
no version of a Pure Food and Drug Act,
to regulate or inhibit these promoters:
nor is there any rational way the can·
didate can evaluate the tedmiques and
regimens offered by a bewildering mul·
tiplicity of seers.
OBVIOUSLY, not only trained and
licensed psychologist1 or psychiatrists
should be equipped to handle these
p-oblems; there wtll never be enough of
them. Medicble and theology must take
up the slack by incorporating far more of
emotional and pastoral counseling than
ate now in their curricula. The average
doctor or clergyman today is barely able
to cope with his traditional area of
discipline, much less to advise others on
the ptrplexitles and subtleties of psychic
reality.
Quotes
J• .. M. l'lulbee, Mountain View -"I
betlevo that fanatics and terrorists
llourUll In a cl tmate of clesperaU... We
need IA> r<Yi•• our democn.Uc ~
11 a 1ec1uma1e • ...,.. of elledlng
chance, because tha t -has tak!n a
beating 1n reoent years.."
•
I
H ''J 1'0 THI NK JEl1.f(.Y FORD IS Tf\YJN u TO TELL US SOMETH ING'.'
In a Brooding Air, the Wolves Are Circling
The l\'!1ile !louse is noliceab/11
s11u1/ler ll1ese days. /L's beeu set back
fflrtlif'r from the sireel. Tl1e iron
r1rill1•1l feu"" arouud it l1fls grou·n
luyli cr, though. and !he spikes atoµ
ure lto11ed razor sharp.
Occasionally at "11ight the g/itnnier
of a sllnded liallt can be seen throug/i
a bolled shutter. So someon.e stilt
holds out within. But the gri1111i11g
wolves are circling, circlhig. Aud eqcll
day they grow ever bolder.
* * *
"People always said they didn't like
the son of a bitch but they didn 't kno"''
\\'hy." says a reporter in the White House
press room. '"No\V the y kno\v \\'hy ...
!Ir docsn"t bother to IO\\'C'r his voice
though a president.ial aide is passing by.
Thr aide 's shoulders hunch fonranl. His
h<·ad ducks. He keep,!; going, staring
straight ahead. Silent. Th~ other news·
rnrn !<iugh.
Def en<l.iu g Nixon Ju.st Isn't tlie Tlii11 g to Do
You can't blame the aide. Thosr fc1\' in
this tov.11 ""'ho still openly defend the
President, like Father John l\.1cLaughlin,
the Jesuit priest on the White House staff,
are subject to instant derision. It simply
isn't the thing to do.
The White House press has been "·ryly
critical in private of e\'ery President
since FDR . Cynicism is issued with their
pencils and notebooks_ Bui never have
they been so openl~· and fearlessly
hostile. never have their jokes been so
vicious nor delivered \1·i1h such relish. II
sin)p!y is the thing 10 do.
THIS JS ba sically a Dl'lllOCralic \O\~ll
The newsmen . the u pp{' r. l' c h t' I on
bureaucrats. the r.corgcto11·n hosh•:-:-t-.c;
-!ho~e \1·110 sC'I ?hl' ton (·. 1·1ok1• til t·
1nood . dL1l'rminl' 11 hat i:-11l ;111d 11 h:1t 1:.
( ART HOPPE )
out -arc nol only predominnnlly
l)emocrals. but intellectua l Den1ocrats.
Since the days of Alger Hiss. they have
been Nixon haters.
\Vhen the President \1·as al the height
or his power. they triticizcd him . But
1hcy criticizrd him for being dull an(I
banal, and only among theinselves. It
-.eemed a meaningless ritual they went
1hrough to help !hem endure the ei i:;hl
long years in hopes that Can1elot would
t"Otne ngain. But no,,,,· ..
'·As the r'rl'sidrnt 1vould sa\." a
Dcrnocratic l'ongrcssman loudly 'asked
!hl' 1\-;u111r in !hr House dining room.
"11ha1 the 1cxpletive deleted! is good
H>da~·?"
A REPLIBLICAN col!C'aguc at the next
table looked O\'er. srniled ruefully and
sadly shook his head. "Even the
Republicans kno1v they've been had."
said the Democrat triumphantly.
"Did you hear what he called tSenate
Republican LeaderJ Hu gh Scott?'' said a
lawyer at a cocktail part.v. happily citing
an obscenity delelccl from the tape
transcripts. this to11TI"s best·seller. And
th<' other guests 1·ied to bring forth
plums of presid('nti:il profanity. as
1hough profan1t i 11 l'L\: <in 11npeachab\c
offense.
And you cu11·1 hcl11 fl'eling in this a1~
nlosphl're nf 1 i<'iou,;11c ss. vindichvencss
and jubilant reli sh th:.it if thC' Pre:.ident is
driven from offi ce in dii;grace, it 1vi\l not
be so much for any high crimes or
n1isden1eanors. but si111ply because 1h1s
t01i n !1atcs his guts .
* * * Yet Lincohl still broods iii. his ntc·
111orial .• <\s you 1valk down Peunsy/.
i·ani(I 1\venue, tlte flags st ill bravely
fly, tf1e granite and tile marble build·
ings still .~!mid strong and end11riu!J.
A11d you think this lyncli·mob aberra·
tion wilt p<1ss.
f"or Capirol Hill is noticeably lzig/1·
er noiv, donie ?nore don1inant a11d 1n1·
pos111g. lt is 11rJ1.~icr. too. o~ !lie ret'·
e/ers witllin qriaf/ fron1 1l!c llrady
c11p of power uf lcr 11 l•11!r/. /0·11y
drougl1t.
A 11d rnaybe there 1.~ 1u1 . \ rc/utect
ir /10 tvatcl!cs 011er u11 r tl('n1otracy.
1'11d 111c1ybe 1«hri! trc 1 r1· 1111•lerooi11f1
is the cxcrt1c1n!lu!Jlll pun1)!1I prucf'.~.l
of lu1i;ing our 111stn1it11 n1 s s1.:aled burl:
to si;e.
Steam Cars: Great, But Are They Practical?
To the Editor·
I read .,..;th mteresl the article in the
twlay 22 Daily Pilot about th<' deli\·cr~· of
t\\"O steam po.,..·ered automobilC'S to the
Stal{' of California at ~l.4Gil.OCKI c:it.h .
Asseinbly Speaker ~1oretli. arrorrlin~ to
hi111. is prood to have sponc;or('rt !he pro.
Ject \Vh1ch he purport s ··s.;:ot~ u11! to s.l10·1
Detroit it's possi ble lo conslru{I :i 1'-!r<1111
n1nning car for urban u."e in rt short
period of tim e \Vilh ]itl)e nione~·.'"
!Ir succeeded in pro\'ini:: none ol those
contentions. He has 1nade 1\l'O cars 11·hich
have n:>t passed any California stall'
clean air certification tests ~tore
importantly. the cars m<iy not he
producible at any sort of A reasonable
cost. But, beyond that , the slate has no
way of selling them .
A far better use or that money v.·oold
have been to make it a prize for the first
private rorporation .,..·hich produced a
clean emission vehicle for urban use as
evidenced by public acceptance in !he
form or sales.
?\Ir. A1oretli may next decide to build a
nonpolluting spaceship with our monry.
My only hope, in that eventuality. is that
he is first lo ride in it.
GEORGE E. HILL
••• A J\1111t1101Jlle l11slead
To the Edllor :
In the old days when spring broke it
was the "perpetual n1otion" inventors
\VllO crawled out of thei r holes and
convinced the gullible to invest In their
great invenUona. Now it is the steam car
nuts wasting our tax money to attain U!e
impossible. To listen to the great
pronout u1entJ of Bob Mcretti, one
would think that the engineers at
Caltech, Berkeley and at tbe Big Three
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
I never thought of teac~ers as hard
hats beforo, but with all .Ille ptckel
1igns floallne around Hunt.lngton
Beach the lm11e seems IA> be
chan8ing.
H.M.M.
auto research !abs \1·cre a lot of
simpletons. and !!lat thry a r c
deliberately impeding progress.
1\bo11t all Olll' can sav in favor of stcan1
cars is that thr~· arc q"uiet. Of courSl' you
could dC'5ign thcn1 to burn cval. kindi1ng
\rood or r\·rn old nr\1·spaprrs. bu! thei r
s\andrtrd fuel is pctroleurn hkl' curs.
e,!;peci:11ly diesrl.cJri\'cn ones. us('.
\\'Ji ~~E\"ER ~OU inlrrpose POii'(')"
eon\·crsion units likr a i:tr11111 Uc1lC'r
bct\rcen the fuel lank and 1he renr-
\1'hecls. you lose po11·cr and burn mo1·e
fuel. And you increase the ,,,,·right of the
power plant greatly. \1·hich takes 1norc
fuel to navigate.
About the only people favoring ste:in1
arc those \\·ho have htid liltle or r~o
engineering education. like son1c gu.\s 111
lhe Legislature.
Stc:im cars bum \\'ith a11 op,•n fla1 11C'
and arc gencr:i!I.\· not ;i!lo1\·•d 111 c;11·s
\l'ifh gasolinc-<lri\·rn en£:11l'!!'.. \\hO~l'
fum rs might be ignirrd. The bci't r:-:111d
condensers they n1ust ha\'c arc hea1·\·.
\rhich n1cans poorer pcrformanc•' ;11;d
fuel 1nileage. :\lcch;inics don't kn:l11· ho1\'
to sc?·vice thr1n.
'f'\\·o stcatn cars hn\·1· al!;dl'r:I •11as:~
produclion and then had lo IX' abandoned
The tY•o the Legii;l<iture ~pent $~.75
n1illicn on lookl'<i pretty ; one could not be
slarled the sc("()nd 1ry. the first 11·ouldn't
start at all.
TllE Tl1'\-IE has come for us to consider
something really practical like 111y
invention, the Klock E i g h t. Day
NutmobUe. which is silent, requires no
gasoline. has no exhaust.
The mechanical principles of the Nut·
~lobi\e are time-tested and e\'en a child
can understand them. Everybody kno11·s
the reliability of the cighl-d&y "''ind·up
clock. It runs for a week on one Y."indin g.
The Nut-Mobile runs on the san1c
principle except with a much larger
motor. Just "'Ind ll up each Saturday and
off you go to a week of care·frec and
expense-free motoring. Jf you are busy
mow ing the lawn let your .,...·ife improve
her figure by doing it.
FRANK KLOCK
Watch tl1e"Watcl1ers
To tilt Editor:
I read wiJh a great deal or intere1t Dr.
Russel V. Lee's suggestion that public
oUlclala whole "aberraUons" could cause
"public bann" be removed lrom office.
lira -Id-where-one 111perpowor
llrM41 .. 1egor1us aome of Us vocal
lnta'nll _...,ll u "Insane" and lock•
them away In "asylums'' 1 said to
myself, "This guy has got to be
(....__MA_IL_B_o_x_ ....... J
I.etters froni readers ore welconie.
f\·ormally, wrirers should convey tlicir
111rssages i11 300 11:ords or less. Tllr
right to condcllsc letters to 111 spare
ut eliminate libel is reserved. All /el·
tcrs 1nust i11clude sig11at11re (J!ld 111ail·
/Hf.I address but ·names 1nny be 1vi!l1·
l1e/d on request if sufficient refl.~O?l
'" apparent. Poetru 1vi/I. not be pub·
/is lied.
kidding!" A careful reading. however.
<'onvinced nlc that Dr. Lee was
delivering his idea .,..·i1h a perfectly
straight face and n1cant to be taken
St•rious\y.
I ha\'C' onl~-one CJU<'Slion for Or . L1•1·
"\\"ho detern1ines 1hc sanit\' of thl' :i:o111ily-delcrn1in('rs~·, ·
GOltD0,\1 '\"ILLIA.\lS
Tl1 e Sl1 e riff's Job
To The Editor:
In response to your editorial on lhr
~hl'riff candidates I think you neglec1ed
to tell the readers so1ne important facts .
\V hilc it is your right to endorse
whoever you choose, it so1neho\v d()Cs
not seem fair to single one other
candidate out to attack. There arc six In
the race.
I would like to point out that George
Savord has spent $21,oon to date (both
filings) while Bradley Gates has spent
$54,211 to date including both filings. Jf
~Ir. Gates can't run a well-organized
campaign on that money, then he docs
have a problem . After all, money can
buy just about everything these da ys.
AS A CtTlZEN, I would like to state
here why I am interested in the shcrirf. 1
live in an unincorporated area, in 3
community \,·here the only I av.·
enforcement is the shcrirf's department.
Crime has increased each year since
1968 when I moved there, but, the Sheriff
patrols still remain inadequate.
Orange County citizens have had the
same person as sheflff for the last 15
years. Twenty-five years is too long ror
lhe some penon to stay In the same Job
In the sarpe location.
His department shows It; lt has
become decadent.
Wh•n 1 learned the presenl sheriU
b3DCl-plcked one ol his men, Bradley
Gates. to suected blm, my lint reaction
WU one of rear. F .. r that the proscnt
I
•
situahon will remain or \\'Orsen.
Why? Logically speaking. a person
rhooses another to succeed him for
several reasons. For example, the person
agrees in philosophy and \Viii carry on in
the S.1/JlC \Vay.
Ornngc County needs a change. It doe s
not need a jail facility that is the talk of
the slnt,. or a sheriff \\•ho has allo11·ed
crime lo increase in San Juan Capistrano
300 percent and a promise of a substation
in the Sout h County lhat is a political
dream and Orange County docs not need
a man who will follow in !he footsteps o(
the one \\'ho has prop::igate<I that
deteriorat ion either.
Let's be fair and give another person a
chance lo make this a safe county to live
and \vork in: let a person who is more
qualified and who can't buy the office
.,..·ith trirky high partisan can1paigning
have' a chance.
H<J\'rn't \1·c had enough of Iha! in 19i3?
CO\STANCE BEi\EDICT
t:r er11011e lle lped
T11 the• Edito r:
I 1\·ish to publicly express niy
<l llPl'l'<'1at1on to lhe City 0£ Huntinglon
Bl•;11·h for giving me the opportunit~· to
serve ;1s the chairperson for the 5th
AnnuJl Citywide Festival. Allhough I
have lived in l·luntin glon Beach fnr over
JO years. I've never had 1he occasion to
\\'ork \Vith the people \l.'ho run our city I
wish everyone could have the ~xpcrie"n~e
l"vc just had.
S0;\1ETJMES I've heard negative
remarks about City Hall ; consequently. I
feel compelled lO tell the other side.
Every member of the city council was
terrific. I doubt if I would have been as
cooperative had the tables be en
turned ... whipped . tarred and feathered,
put in stocks, \\'Ct .sponges in the
face . ~ .amazing.
From the' City Ad1nin1s1r:itor·~ office 11
traffic. police . public 11·o~ks. lir(n <;111~.
park and recreation. librnry. grlitµhics,
nnd public informaOon de1)artments. I
was trea ted courteously and given help.
\Vith PDlience they taught me correct
proced ure. I didn't even know \\'hat a
"'ork orrier was ·when I started. nor did 1
realize perm its were necessary and
Insurance coverage mandatory,
The fair proved tluntington Beach still
has n •·small town " feeling and people
who care. •
LAURIE HILL
Voss CllaUen9ell
To lhc Editor:
In a letter to tho editor p11blisbed by
the Daily Pilot ~lay 3. Fred V055 urged
voters lo vote down a new high school for
the Hunt ington Beach Union High Schoo!
District. I attended a high school Board
Candidate Night iDme years ago when
the san)e Fred Voss dramatica lly
pleaded his ,!:incerl' desire to help all of
the children \l'llhin the 52 square mile
district.
After failing to be elected to this high
school poi;ition, !\Ir. Voss \Va s
successfully seated as a trustee in the
Fountain Vallev School District. He
prcsl'nlly substfrute teaches at Marina
lligh in thr 1-funtin gton Beach Union High
School District. How can Mr. Voss face
the :\larina High School students and
parents after his public plea to reject the
June 4 tax override u•hich would build a
badly needed high school for lhese very
same people?
It \\'ould definitrty rC'ilcrc many
housing problems for all of our childr.cn
in the 52 square mile area
I take a vcrr di1n \ 1cv. of \Ir. Voss·s
negative stand. on !his. and his constant
attempt to mok(' !hi s and unifi cation
fight_ing issues or 1\·h1eh only one should
survive.
As parents .,...c can nourish our
childrC'n 's. brdics. instill f;:iith and morals.
and give the111 the vcr.1• bl·~t educational
oppo rtuniti('s. These things don't have
district boundarirs. f\ VF.:.; vo te on
Proposition H is a Yl~S <1·r.tc to beltl'r
prepare our young n1cn and wo1nen of
today to be O~lr leaders Of tomorrow .
(
JA~ WtLHEUL
OlANG-1 COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \V1.ed. PubUshtr
Thomas Ktt1'11, Editor
Barbara l\rtibich
Erl itor1at Po9e Editor
The rdito11 .. 1 pJe-f' ot t!)I' D•lly
J•1io1 11("1•11:>1 h1 1nfv1111 Md stJ1nula1c
rt'tldtn b),• prt•~t'llllfll[ on tl1ls pare
di\·•r1t •commtn1ary·on loPlcs of 1n.
lt't!1t by .,..ndlcat!'d rolumnl•ls and
Cat'toonlstt.. by pr.;i\>Wflnit fl fon1m for
t'tRders' vi~·• and by prt1l'ntlnr l\'I ~
ne'llr'tp&ptr"~ opinion• and ldt>a..'!
c;urn,nt topia. Thf.' «litorlal opl•
ot thP Dal.I)' Pilot •we•r only 1,
editorial mlumn at I~ top ol
Pt&e. Opinions exPftSlt'l'J by lhf
wnm1t1 and canoontsta •nd let
writm lll't' 1btlt own and no """""-" """t .. ...It v1<u .. ,,,.
l'tlol -be -•
'l'bunday, M~y SO, 1974
I
•
•
• •
.
.,Jrsday, May 30, 1974 DAILY PILOT 5 .
Donations
To Nixon-
$90,000
Door Trouble W omru1 Will Head College at Sonoma
Microwave Oven ...... , <1111
•.•, LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Rohnert Park at the v>d al the' Downing served as dean or 1he Vincent College in New York,
'• Dr. Marjorie Downing has 1973-74 academic year. college at Sarah Lawrence in her master's from catholic
W ASlllNGTON rAPl
Public dooatlons designl'd ru
help President Nixon pay his
delinquent federal I n co n1 t'
taxes total $90.000, the \Vhi!c
Hou se has announced .
Warnings Loorrt
been named president of Cal Cllrrently a profeaor of New York; University in 'Ya shington.
State Sonoma by the board of English literature at Scripps D.C., •and her Ph.D. from
trustees of the California State College, Dr. Downlng was DR. DOWNING bad previous Yale University in 1942.
Universities and Colleges, the dean of the faculty at the teaching experience at Dr. Downing, 57, is the
first woman to reach that Claremont school for six years Barnard College and Brooklyn widowed mother of l\\'O sons.
The money. except
anonymous donations. is being
returned to the senders si nce
Nixon announced he .... ·ill pay
the taxes hi~f.
The anonymous funds, which
the White llouse said come to
$4,341 , were turned over to the
Federal Diul(<r Asslstanc<!
Administration to a.id victims
of recent l\o1idwest tornadoes.
Nixon requested this.
\VASHlXGTO~ it:Pll -
Th e Food and Tl rug
Ad1nin1 s1rnt1011 ha.:; ordered
p<'rn1:lnen1 \1·arn111g !:ibcls on
all new m1rr0\\'<11·e ovens. but
tw·ncd do11 n ;1 consumer
group's r<'qUl'St to impose
tighter Sflfe!y rul e'> on till'
industry.
Thi.' labels, v:hich 'vould
become n1andatory th i s
summer. \\."Ould wam lhe user
not to operate the oven if
there is an object caught in
the door, if the door does not
close properly, or if the door,
LAS VEGAS
deluxe rooms
on the strip
Hx;EPOO.
THEVIS<~
24HOO!
PHONES
A<R
COMllTl<l<lNG
COfFEESIO'
for l or 2 Peop!e
2 double bed~ in
. eoch room
S2Jl0eoch fa'
extro guests
sharing your
room.
Good all week· except Fri., Sat. and
Holiday Periods & Summer Months
When role is $17.80.
~-----~ r-,,.,,,--,-~--. UMITED TIME OFFER TOT Al PRICE,
RESERVE NOW! NO EXTRAS!
For Reservations Information coll
(714) 533-6050
KONA KAI MOTOR INN
A First Ooss Motel ... A Pacific Holiday Resort
5191 los Vega s Blvd . South , Los Vegas, Nev . 89109
hin1:c latch or sealing surface I · r · beginning in 1965. College. Francis. 18, and Nicholas, 15, !:t~~a~~~ys~e~.1 0 r n 1 a Prior to moving to She received her bachelor 's who reside with her in is d:in1agcd.
'fHE OVENS, WHICll have
been selling at a rate of about
300.000 a year, can grill a
steak in seconds or cook a
roast in a fraction of the time
ronventional overt methods
"Dr. Downing. through her Claremont in 1961_. _o_r _. _d_:cg,_r_e•_in_I_938_' _r_ro_m_~_n_. _sa,_i_n1_c_1_ar_e_m_o_n1_. _
r0quire.
Consumers l 'nion, wbich
pcti!ioned the FDA for new
safety rules last summer,
contended tJ1e ovens leak
radiation and pose hazards
ranging from burns to
interference 'vith electronic
pacemakers implanted i n
heart patients.
U,.l Tel .....
FIRST IN STATE
Or. Marjorie Downing
extensive ~xperienr.e in
academic administration and
notable scholarship is
especially qualified to continue
with the foresighted
development of CSC Sonoma ."
Chancellor Glenn Dumke, said
Wednesday.
DR.. DOWNING succeeds
Thomas H. ~fcGrath. who is
retiring from the presidency
of the 5,500-student campus al
The group, \\hich publishes
the magazine Co n s 11 n1 c r
Reports, had requ('S\ed a
more cxtrnsivc warning: labe l
advising Hii<·rs to krcr ovens
out of UH• n':11·h or «hildrc·n.
:1vo1d pe1.1r111i.: 111!\1 lhern \Vhile
Pot Pat~h
Sheriff Gro1vs llis Ou;n
in u:;r and lrll111g pacrn1aker T!SIIO:O.llNGO, Okla. (API
pn1lcnts !o lc<l\'t· lhe roorn. _ Johf!s1on County Sheriff
IT ALSO \VANTED tougher Everett Ste\vart has a sm;ilJ !ci'11ng :.tnndnrd" because. it s<1id. prt•St'nt industry tests da garden adjacent to the county
not dupl i<"aU· l'\·cn norn1a1. let jail '''here he raises a
alone atl111Jrn1al. use that the number of items, including
orens n1ight receive in the marijuana .
hands or ronsumers. Sixteen marijuana plants.
soinc people to think lhcy
1night be groll·ing it by
mislake in Lheir backyard or
pasture."
Stewart. an officer far 3~
years. sald he had about 3,000 ~·isitors to the patch last year.
Kids Like to
Ask And)'
~llll'##lllllllllllllfl#llllCICl##llll#lll#lllllll .. llClllllllCllllllllClllllllC11f.
COMING SOON (
THE COSTA MESA POLICE ASSOCIATION
'° l
1974 BENEFIT SHOW
September I, 1974
ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
for info call 963-5011
Last fall the FDA tested 200 00,v about three feet high, are
rnicrowa\'e ovens in actual use in the patch, surrounded with
in homes and quick-food a high chain link fence.
vending establishments and .. I let it grow here so people
found that 89 or them leaked \\'ill know \\'hat it looks like ,"
h 1gher-than-permitted the sheriff said. ''It scares amount.~ of radiation when __ _:__:_ _ _:_ __ _:_ ___________ __:_ ______________________________ _
<:UhJ('Cted ln the test the Union
~u r~~t·'>ll'd .
A\. FllA SPOK.ES!\.IA~ said
\\'t1d11esday the lack of specific
tt-,i rl'CJlllren1C'nts in the nc\\'
rc·g ul;it111ns -\1hich \\'Cre put
for1h for t1 tiO-driy t·on1mL'lll
period before bt'Con1ing final
-chd not n1ean lhe agency
\1·:1s :1vo1ding the issue. The
spokC'sn1an Stud the FDA
intL•nded !o continu(' policing
indusiry 1cst. methods on an
informal basis.
To Laqy Cso a,
widema11
in a narrow world.
United dedicates
Gfriendship Service.
e only wide-bodies
to both Kand New
{Starting June 15th.)
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Kodachrome
movie film,
20s, •• ,
G.E. Mag ic
flash cubes.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores:
FASHION ISLAND, N<wpo•t Beoch, (714) 644·2313
H.JNTll~GTON CENTER. Huntinglon Beach {714) 692·ml
For stretchin~ out, lea~ing ~ack and all·aroun'if
comfort try our 747 and DC-10 Friend Ships on for size.
Another reason more people choose the friendly
skies than any other airline ih the land.
Any man who spe nds his working days squeezing
through ti~ht situatinns appreciates the roomi~e<is of
United's wide-bodied 747 and DC-10 Friend Sh 1ps.
On board. th ere's extra space. Four Star dining, ~udio
entertai nment , movies on some fli ghts, even our lnfhg~t
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Check our schedule. Then call Uniled at
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Trave l Agent.
And go wide. With Uni ted.
Los Angeles to New York •
Lr. 8:45 a.m. (DC-10) Ar. ):()0 p.m. JFK
12:00 noon (747) 8:05 p.m. JFK.
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The friendlyski~of yourlaod.
UnitedsNewl&rlrers
Finnen in 'Ihtvd with Wcstem International Hotels.
' '
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Today's Finni
N.Y. Stocks
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VOL. 67, NO. 150, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY '.10, 1974 N TEN CENTS
Birds Versus Boats in Bay Bridge Argument
By JACKIE HYMAN
Ot "" OallY , .. ,, ,, ...
About 100 people turned out ln Newport
Beach Wednesday night to express their
views, sometimes heatedly, on the height
of the proposed new bridge on the Coast
Highway ovcr Newport Bay.
At one point during the Bay Crossing
Committee's public meeting at ~1ariner's
Library, audience debate was marked by
outbursts of applause and an gr y
grumblings.
The argument eru.pted b e t w e e n
boaters, who advocate a bridge at least
32 feet high to permit sailboat.'! to pass
underneath and environmentalists, who
advocate maintaining the present bridge
height of 13.6 feet to protect the Upper
Bay wildlifi;: sanctuary .
Although committee member Richard
Clucas reminded the audience that "this
committee is not just concerned with
birds and boals" but also with such fac-
tors as safety and cost, public comment
centered on the environmentt\l vs.
recreational issue.
U.S. District Court Judge Jesse W.
Curtis of Dover Shores spoke for many
boaters When he said, "I do not believe
the Upper Bay will remain closed off for
a bird sanctuary because of the high land
value."
"If development opens up there , "'e
will be compelled to put in a high
bridge,'' he said. "Constructing a low
bridge now would be a waste of money ."
The opinion of many environmentalist!
was expressed by Orange County
Harbors, B e a c h e s and Parks
Commissioner Frank Robinson, also of
Dover Shores, who said, "I believe it's
against the will of the people to develop
the Upper Bay."
"That kind of thinking Y.'2S prevalent
in the 1950's and 60's, \\•hen we destroyed
about 80 percent of the state's natural
estuaries to make marinas." he said.
;,Once we make a mi_stake like that, we
•
can't undo it."
Most of tile speakers recognized the
need to widen the bridge, which currently
has substandard narrow lanes. !\lost also
agreed that they .,.,,ant to discouragc-
additional people from 1noving to the
area.
Irvin Chapman or Bayshores providl'd
a moment's humor when he said. "S:ltnt
people here don 't \Vant more pcoplr 111 .
\Veil, r think it was a nice ()lace bcfort'
some of these people ca1nc. · ·
Sue Ficker of Balboa a Balboa Bay
Club mernber. said she is afraid of high
bridge will lead to more and more boats
cro"·ding thC' Lower Bay as v.•ell as the
l 'pp<'r Bay .
J C. HC'nry of Balboil Island. an
instructor at Orange Coast College,
addrd. "If \OU ~!low another LOOO boats
into the ba;•. you mey not have to lov,rer
~our n1ast to get under the brtdgc. but
,\OU nu1y not rven be able to get out of
tSec BAY BltlDGE, Page ZI
S Ill __ oun
---·----------
Nixo1i 1J'arned
Judiciary Panel
Orders 45 Tapes
BULLETIN
\\.ASlflNGTON IAP) -The llouse
Judiciary Committee i s 5 u e d a new
subpoena this afternoon ordering Pl:esi·
drnt Nixon tn turn over 45 more \\'a1er-
ga1e tapes and sent him a letter \o\'arnin~
that failure 10 comply co u I d bccomt:
grounds for Jmpeacbmen1.
\VASlflNGTON fUP l l -111e House
Judiciary Commi!1cc \·oted 28 to 10 todciy
10 inform President :\'ixon his refusal to
honor its subpoenas "might constitute a
ground for imJ)l'achment. ''
After an hour·s debate. I he
congressmen agreed to send Nixon a
Neivport Police
Hold Tra11sicnt
For Robberies
Ne~·Port Beach police said today they
are hold ing a man suspected of
committing two armed robberies early
\Vednesday morning and a restaurant
burglary last week. ~
Police deterli\'e Samuel Amburgey
said Jack Ray Stewart 21. a transient, is
being held in the robbt:'rics of Michael
Eugene Pr1rfitt, 23, of 416 North Newport
Avenue. and of Harold Llovd Dickerson.
46. of 307 Catalina Drive. ·
No property v.•as taken in ei!her case
but both victims were threatened by a
man wielWng a shotgun. Amburgey said.
He said Stewart is also a suspect in
last week's burglary or the Swiss Chalet
restaurant at 414 North Newport Avenue,
in which $400 in food and beverages was
taken.
Amburgey said there is also a warrant
outstanding for Stewart's arrest from the
Sacramento area. but he has not yet been
informed of the charges involved.
S t e w a r t 'A'as apprehended early
Wednesday morning after Dickerson re-
ported that a man \vilh a shotgun had
attempted to rob him.
Dickerson, who suffered a one·in~h
gash on his forehead, told p o I i c e th'!
armed man . wearing a mask made from
two tea towels, rang his doorbell about
3:30 a.m.
ltlter advising him they v>ill reel free to
conclude ·he is hiding evid<'nce harmful to
his cause by continuing to ignore
subpoenas for \Vatcrgate tapes and
documents.
1be committee also v.as considering
"'hether to subpoena more presidential
TAX PENALTY FOR NIXON
REPORTED. Story, Page 4 --tapes and documents in its impeachment
inquiry. 1ltrec sut>Jx>enas have already
been issul'<I. Nixon ignored t"·o and
released his 'Valergate transcripts in
response to the third.
In their debate, the members revised
and some"A·hat softened a Jetter proposed
by Rep. Walter Flowers (D-Ala_.), a key
Scuthemer on the committee.
The key paragraph in the adopted
version read:
"In meeting the i r constitutional
responsibilities, committee members will
he free to consider whether yuur refusals
require the drawing of adverse infer-
ences concerning the substance of the
materials. and whether your refusals in
and of themselves might constitute a
!See IMPEACll, Page%)
Carpenter Kidnap
Measures Okayell
SACRAMENTO <AP). -Trust and
corporate funds could not be used to pay
kidnap ransom demands u n d e r
legislation approved unanimously by the
state Senate. (Related Stories. Page 3.)
The two bills, which Sen. Dennis
Carpenter said he introduced in response
to the Patricia Hearst kidnaping, were
sent to the Assembly on identical 2&-0
vot~ Wednesday .
But Carpenter did not ask for a vote on
a third bill which would make it a
misdemeanor for persons such as
recipients of the Hearst "People in
Need" food program to accept thie orofits
of extortion.
Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) said his
purPose "is to take the profit out of
kidnaping, particularly the political type
such as the Hearst case."
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D•llr f'llll Sr•ll Pllcl!•
INVESTIGATORS CHECK BLOOD·SPLATTERED CAR AFTER SANTA ANA SHOOTOUT
Jail Prisoners Tried to Commandeer This Vehicle Driven by Off-duty Highway Patrolman ------------
Sign Law Draft Seeks
Short Removal Deadline
Newport Beach businesses w h i c h
violate the city's ne\v sign ordinance
\\'Ould hav<.' fi\'e yC'ars to remove or
change their signs. under \vording now
proposed by city planners.
The draft \\'as presented \Vednesday
afternoon by Ne\,Vl)Ol'I Beach Senior
Planner \Villiam Foley at a meeting of
the Sign Con1m ittee. con1poscd of realty
board members. environmentalists and
members of the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce.
The first draft of the ordinance had
rontaincd no provisions for s i g n
amortization .
The maximum five year limit in the
new draft is half that in the rerently
adopted Costa Mesa sign ordinance,
Foley said.
"Because we have had sign ordinances
in Newport Beach in the past, we don 't
have the large expensive signs that Costa
Mesa does," Foley said. "We feel a
shorter time is adequate.''
The amortization schedule provides for
replacement or alteration of
nonconforming signs in from six months
to five years after adoption of the
ordinance, depending on the value of the
sign.
The amortization schedule. ho\vever. is
still subject to revision by the Sign
Committee and lhe City Council before
the ordinance is adopted.
The new ordinance. \Vhich Communitv
Development Director Richard V. Hogali
sa id was drawn up because of sign
clutter in some areas of the city. strictly
(See SIGNS, Page 2)
Services I~'ri£lay
For ~Ia:x Hunvitz
Memorial services for Newport Beach
attorney f\1ax Hurwitz, who died last
Thursday, wtll take place Friday at 9
a.m. in Dept. I of Orange County Superi-
or Court.
Judge Robert Banyard Y.'ill preside.
Friends, relatives and members of the
bar are invited .
Mr. Hurwitz, 59, was one or the first
attorneys to establish a practice in
Newport Beach. He came to Newport in
1941.
Girl's Pare11ts
File $30,000
Dam.age Claim
The parents of a 14-year-old girl
arrested by Newport Beach police Feb.
12 during a melee at a Beryl Lane beer
bust have filed a $30,000 claim for
damages against the city.
The girl was cleared of aggravated
assault charges by Juvenile Court
authorities Tuesday but found guilty of a
lesser charge of resisting arrest.
"How can they do that ," Mrs. Gibbons
demanded to know. ''We defended her
against the first charge and then at the
last minute the police put in this charge.
\Ve didn't even knO\'I about it," she said.
Mrs. Nancy Bunn, the girrs attorney,
said the move by police was legal but she
called it unjust.
City councilmen Tuesday n i g ht
routinely rejected the claim filed on the
girl's behalf, setting the stage for Mrs.
Bunn to file a lawsuit.
The girl was one of nine teenagers
arrested at the party at 1924 Beryl Lane
in what police at the time described as a
"\vild me lee .. ,
The claim for personal injuries filed
last week by A-1rs. Bunn states, ''C!airnant
was thrown to the ground and sat upon
by police officers.
When Dickerson ans\vered the dlXlr. he
said the man pointed a shotgun at him
and demanded money. Dickerson said he
grabbed the gun and scufned i111th the
robber, suffering the head injury when
he was struck by the butt of the gun. Reserves Face Dismissal
"Further, she was bit with a billy club
and thrown against the police ofricers'
car in such a manner that claimant
received injury lo her eye, firm. and
back as lvell as severe cmolionill trau-
ma."
Policemen subsequently searched the
area and found Stewart nearby in an ivy
patch. His height, coloring and build
matched the description given by
Dickerson.
A police investigation showed that a
suspect had unsuccessfully attempted to
start a Rolls Royce in Dickerson's
garage before approaching the house,
Amburgey said.
·Midshipmen's Exa1u
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -Almoet
1,000 midshipmen retook an exam in a
navlgaUon course Wednesday at the
Naval Academy, but on Investigation J1
conUnulng Into alleged cheating on the
first t.,t. Most academy llOphomores and
a few Junloro were onI....i to cut short
p...,.aduacon week r .. ve and return
here !or tho second exam all<: academy
officials Ito,.,... that ..... mldsh(pmen
, had prior ilMw~a al tho oriiJnal U•
lm!nat!on glmi ~:.ey 21.
Fair Labor Act May Halt Hiring in
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of tM DallY Plltl Sl1H
Newport Beach may have to do away
with its police reserve program because
al a new federal law requiring that
reserve vohmleers be paid.
The Fair Labor Standards Act, which
look elfect May I, sUpulates tbat all
governmental employ., are subject to
civil service la\YS and must be paid for
time worked. · ' '!'he 22 Newport Police reserves had ,
been donallng about four houri each per
Police Chief B. mes Glavas told week. ~
councllmtn the y requirement may
force the de to do away wllh the
reserv ...
"With a minimum reaerve force, juol
lot the free time they're pu!Unfl In, ll
will cost about fl,000 a monlh" !or tho
I '
reserves. Glavas said later in an
interview.
"I don't have tha'M:i.nd of money in the
budget and that's just a begiMing cost,"
he said. ''ft doesn't reflect the paid lime.
This is above the part-time pay we
provide for," he said.
Reserves are no\v paid d u r I n g the
lllmmer for parking and traffic control.
City Manager Robert L. Wynn WU not
as f)eflSimlstlc as Glavas about the future
ol the program, He said there may be a
way out.
"We pay the reserve~ '4 an hour over
and about their volunteer time, 11 he aald.
11Well, we don't have to JJaY them that
much."
"We could lower tho hourly salary to
offset the cooll of poying thorn lot all ol
Ille lime -·" Wynn said. GlarQ Indicated that lhls might not be
Police Program
satisfactory in that certain reserves who
worked during the summer as parking
and traffic control Officers are dependent
on the present scale of pay.
Glavas said a decision will have to be
made !IOmetime after the summer Is
over.
"'!'he problem Is that without this
donated Ume we cannot keep them
abreast ol departm~nt policies and
cannot keep them trained," he said.
"We have to be oonstanUy in a training
program ~nd an updating system. It isn't
like our full-time penonnel."
Glavas said abou~ lhe only way to keep tbt progr1m wouSd be for the new Jaw
'1to be thrown into the uh can."
'!'he cllllcl •IJ>lalned thal many ol lbe
re •er v e s have w.U·pax!ng Jobs and
simply participate In the procram u
(Ste RESERVE, Pop I)
Preside1it Hosts
Potomac Cruise
WASHINGTON (AP) -President
Nixon has taken a second batch of
coogressmen on a Potomac cruise
aboard the presidential yacht "Sequoia."
The House members are "a group or
friends the President wanted to have
dinner with," a White House spokesman
said Wednesday night. A similar cruise
with congressmen took place earlier thi$
month.
Those aboard were Reps. Omar
Burleson lD-Tex.). Barber Conable Jr.
(R·N.Y.), Dan Daniel (().Va.I, Ed-d J.
Derwlnskl (R·Ul.), William L. Dickerson
IR·Ala.), Craig Hosmer iR.Callt.), Dan
Kuykendall ( R-Tenn .), G. V,
Mont&<>mery (0.Mlss.), O«o E. Passman
(O.La.), Robert L. F. Sikes (0.Fla.) and
John W. Wydler ift.N.Y.J.
3 Prisoners
Flee Jail,
Capturecl
Bl• TOl\1 BARLEY o·t , ... Ollly Pilol Stiff
Thrt:'e Orange County jail prisoners.
on<' of them a convicted killer ·who ~·as lo
be sentenced later today. overpowered
thei r guards in a county courthouse
holding cell this morning and fled to a
brief freedom . guns in hand .
One of the trio. Frank Allan O'Hare.
25, of Anaheim. 11•as shot four times in a
gun battle that erupted as the three men
fled from the basement holding tank and
tried to commandeer a passing car.
Ironically, the C'ar 1\'as driven by off.
duty Californi11 llighv.·ay Patrolman Ji1n
!'aul, 26. 11·ho drc1v his 1\·eapon and look
on the trio in a gun battle.
It ended with O'Hare shot h1 the i:J.ghl
cheek. right arm and tw ice in the b?lck.
He is li~ed in critical condition in
Orange County Medical Center.
Police said Paul was shot in the right
arm and shoulder. lie is listed in
satisfactory condition in Santa Ana
Communily Hospital.
Santa Ana police said convicted killer
Lawrence Eugene Wilson. 30, of Los
Angeles and Prince Pico Tarpley, 18. of
Anaheim, then left the t~·o 'A'ou nded men
and ran in different directions as the
police pursuit gathered momentum.
Tarpley was arrested moments later as
he sought refuge in a home near 10th and
Parton streets. about four blocks from
the point of !he escape.
Santa Ana police said a local _youlh who
noticed the armed fugitive dodge into the
house told pursuing officers w ho
promptly entered the hon1e and grabbed
Tarpley without further incident.
\Vi!son, reportedly carrying the .357-
magnum automatic he took from
patrotn1an Paul, \Vas next seen on 17th
Street where he en:ercd a store and
inquired about welding equipment.
Police said the ruse failed to deceive
them and lhey caught up 11'ith \Vilson and
di~rmed him as he questioned the
suspicious store owner.
Sheriff's deputies said Tarpley and
O'Hare were currently being tried before
Superior Court Judge R a y mo n d
Thompson on five counts of armed
robber y stemming from incidents in the
Anaheim area.
Deputy District Attorne.v Pat Brian.
the prosecutor in that trial. was \\'ilh
police and deputies today as they sped
along Santa Ana streets in pursuit of the
trio.
County jail officers have ide ntified
(See PRISONERS, Page 2l
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll be cloudy Friday morning
but clearing to mostly sunny skies
by the afternoon ak>ng the Orange
Coast. Highs at the beaches 66-68
rising lo 72-74 inland. Overnight
lows tonight 58-60.
INSIDt: l 'ODA \'
Two rnt1• wlto often debated
over tlltir dri11kl11g abilitif$,
held a matclt to decide once a11d
for all wlto was tll.e chon1pio11.
Tlle'JI both died. Stor), Page 4.
f '
Z DAILY PILOT N
'Accusations
Fly as Rac e
~ea1·s Wire
By lbt Associated PrtS$
New accusa11011s fi r"' in all direction~
today as the race !or the IJcniocratic and
Republican nornin<itlons for governor
entered its final days.
And the candidate:; then1selvcs flew off
In \'arious directions Wednesday with the
five top gubernatorial contenders logging
more than 2.500 miles of travel up, do•rn
and across California.
Among campaign d C' v e 1 op n1 c n ts
\\'ed nesday, the Den1ocratic and
Republican front 4 runners -Edmund G.
Brown Jr. and Houston Flournoy -
agreed that if they win Tuesday's
primaries they "'ill debate each other
this summer.
And four tcsscr-kno>\'Tl candidates for
govemor got together in Los Angeles for
a raucous ntws conferenre highlighted
with shouting, singing and accusations
that the press \.l.'85 unfairly ignoring
thl'm.
TI1e quick agreement on a Floun10~·
Bro\\'n debate \\'as something of a
reversal for both. Each has bt·en
reluctan! to debate his rivals in the
primary.
llere is \\'hat gubernatorial candida!l'S
\\'ere doing and saying Wednesday :
REINECKI<: -The lieutenant governor
said if Republican voters nominate
Flournoy, they risk tainting California
politics v..·ith !hi' \Va tergate scantlal
because f'lournoy's campaign spending
reports v.•ere \\Titl('n on stationery fro1n
the Committee to Re-El~t the Presidenl
(CRPI . _
"[ don't think the Republican party in
California wants to h.'.lve anything l.o do
\\-ith CHP and what th<'Y did in 1972,"
said Heinecke, who himself is awaiting
tnal on a perjury indictment issued by
the \\la!crgate grand jury.
BRO\\'\ -The Democratic sccrctarv
ol state nccuscd Flournoy of being ··a
privalt' Santa Claus for giant oil
companies" in his actions as chairman of
!he State Lands Commission .
In appearances in San Francisco. Los
Angeles and Long Beach, Brown said the
Lands Com mission under Flournov's
direclion has lost to the oil companies $84
million to $250 million in oil lease profits
\\'hich should1have gone to the state.
FLOURNOY -The GOP frontrunner
called Bro·wn's allegations "false and
politically motivated" and said Brov.·n
"is trying to use me as a crutch to avoid
talking about lhe other Democrats and
yet make headlines every day."
MOREITJ ·-The Assembly ~peaker
f'Ondemned milk price hikes in San
FrancisC<l, tuition at Santa Barbara and
Brown at Ventura.
In campus appearances in Santa
Barbara and Ventura he said the next
governor has "got to have guts" and
suggested that Brown does not._
ALIOTO -The San Francisro mayor
covered the most lerrilory Wednesday,
campaigning from El Centro near the
i\1exican border through seven cities and
about 1,200 miles to Eureka.
At Fresno. Alioto accused ~1oretti and
Brov.n of being too soft to handle a tough
crime problem such as the Zebra killings
and defended his O\\'n controversial
handling of that case.
"If peopte like Brov."TI and ~foretti v.·cre
in charge of that JX!lice po\\'er, those
killings v.·ould still be going on. Thank
God they 're not." he said.
ROTll -Democrat \Vill iam ~1atson
Roth said \Vednesday !hat he has filed
formal complaints \\'ifh the Federal
Communications Commission against l\\'O
California television stations \l'hich
refused to let him appear on panels
where Morett i. Alioto and BrO\\'TI were
'invited.
Rot.h demanded equal lime from
stations KNBC in Los Angeles and KOVR
in Sacramento. K'.'SBC's Bro'l1:n-A!ioto-
. Moretti show is sla1ed Saturday. A
Moretti-Alioto debate was taped Tuesday
by KOVR, \Vhich is O\Vned by ~fcClatchy
'Broadcasting, an affiliate of the only
major Cal ifornia ne\1·spapers to endorse
Roth.
OltANGl COAST •1
DAILY PILOT
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'-.ifll•"'O!Oft 8•1(1' , ,tr~ &o..,~h.·• .,.,
s.~~~·• 30$'-•!•c ........... ~.
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ca..H'lff .4d1'friiMftg 642-54 71
~. ,., .. ¢rl"OI' ec. ... "'*"""'~ c:.on--
f*"" --"-~"'*'"'--...... ~ .. .. ...n-""" .... ~ ""' !.--.....,...,.,.,_ot_,,,i-
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Thursd•y, M111 lO, 1974
. ;.· ...
0 •O
-·-. MILES
MIDEAST PLAN -Line A marks CJ~e-fire line be!ween Israel
and Syria forces. Line A-1 shows bllJ,Ge ~neitra to base of thr~e
overlooking hills that will be demilitanzed bu\ controlled by Israelis.
Line B marks other side of buffer zone. ·~
Jlro111 Page 1
IMPEACII ...
grolU1d ror impeachment."
One Deomcral, Rep r John Conyers Jr.
of Michigan, and nine Republicans voted
against sending the letter. 1\venty
Democrats and eight Republicans voted
in favor. Conyers objected because he
y,•anted stronger action.
Speaking for the Republican opponents.
Tiep. David Dennis (R-lnd .l, called the
letter a "useless gesture" and added !he
committee \•:ould draw inferences from
Ni:<on's noncompliance with the
subpoenas "whether or not we write a
letter."
• The letter as approved by the
committee Y.'as essentially in the form
drafted by the committee st a ff
\Vednesday night.
The President has steadfastly main-
tained he is innocent of any wrongdoing
in connection with the Watergate scan-
dals.
* -tr * Ni xon Requests
T~e Di spute
Ru11 I ts Cours e
\\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -President
l\ixon today asked the U.S. Supreme
Court to avoid a "rush judgmer.t" and
let his dispute \vith \\'atergate prosecutor
Lron Ja\\·orski over subpoenaed tapes
lake its course through the lo\ver courts .
Nixon said full consideration by
;ippea\s court judges would prove his
contention that the doctrine of executive
privil~ge "remains alive ::ind "·ell'' in
spite of repeated challenges by
\Vatcrgatc and impeachment investiga-
tors. .
In a brief filed in the high court. l\ixon
answered Ja1\·orski 's plea that the C<lurt
\\'aive the normal appellate process and
rule directly on the dispute over
Jav.·orski's i.11bpoena for 64 presidential
lape recordings.
Jav.·orski argues speed is essential to
resolve the issue in time for the Sept. 9
trial of seven former \Vhite House and
campaign officials on Watergate coverup
charges. But Nixon's brief said Jaworski
Jailed to sOOw either the administration
of justice or the rights of the accused
\l'Ould be harmed by allowing judicial
rev1e\V to "run its orderly course."
From Page J
BAY BRIDGE • • •
thl' ~lip."
In addition to audience ~)X'akcrs. thC'
rnt>eting heard fro1n Newport Beach
iraffic engineer \\'illiam Dame![. \\'ho
s!resscd the need for building the bridge
<is soon as feasible.
Darnell said t.hat in 1973. there were
162 accidents on the Coast Highway
betv•een Dover Drive and the Reuben E.
Lee Restaurant. the area where the
bridge is located .
\\'ally Knudson of the California
JJepartment of Transportation, which will
build the bridge. told the alXlicnce tbc
sta!c has made no decision yet and will
p;1\'e hea\'y consideration tQ the city's
\1·ishes.
Knudson said that' if the city
rrcom1nends a tunnel, the state v.·ill also
r.onsider that. He said however that
because of cost -$30 million for a tunnel
as opposed to $5 million for a 40 foot
bridge and $2.5 million for a 13.6 foot one
-such a tunnel "would not get built
before I retire."
The Bay Croasing Committee will
make its recommendations to the
NeY.'port Beach City Council next week.
The council will then refer the matter to
the planning oommlsslon for further
consideration.
The council ia expectM to make its
recommendation to lbe •tate In lbe fall.
Bridge constructlM Is not expected to
b<glii before early 1977, accordlnc to Bay
Closslng Committee Cbainnan Robert
Silt I ton.
Harbor l .eaders
Slate Tribute
To Jack Barnett
More than 500 Harbor Area business,
civic and political leaders will gather at
the Balboa Bay .Club tonight for a
testimonial dinrler honoring Jack
Barnett, who is retiring after 16 years as
executive manager of the Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce.
Newport Beach busin.essmen , O. W.
"Dick" Richard and Les Steffensen will
be joined by KeMeth Sampson, director
of !he Orange Couniy Harbors, Beaches
and Parks Department, as masters of
ceremonies.
Among the guests will be U.S. Rep.
Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach),
State Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R-
Newport Beach) and Assemblyman
J{obert Badham (R-Newport Be.ach).
Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers, a Lido
Isle resident, and Newport Beach Mayor
Donald A. Mcinnis '"°·ill also be present.
The dinner v.•ill begin y,·ith cocktails at
fi:30 p.m. A program highlighted by more
1han 11\'0 dozen presentations v.•ill follow
the 7:30 dinner.
Jlrona Page 1
RESERVE ...
volunteers ''in order to return something
to their community."
He said he doesn't Know how he will
cope Y.'ith the reduction in manJXlwer if
the prog ram is canceled.
"I can't increase the size of the force .
The council has indicated that it will not
even give me the money for the
personnel I requested," he said.
He noted that City Manager Wynn had
previously vetoed several ne1v pclice
positions during his review of the budget.
The JX!lice depaMment y,·ilJ get 16 ne\V
personnel under the proposed budget. I
Seven• of these will be traffic officers
paid for last year by a federnl grant and 1
fi1:e \\'ill be jailers required at the new
police facility . One is a police clerk .
Glavas pointed out that the size of the
Ne\\'port Beach police force, which \\'ill
total 176, is at the lo\\·est point since he
has been chief "in terms of manpowe r
and the size of the city."
The li6 total includes all police
department employes.
Glavas had requested nine additional
officers that were rejected by \Vynn.
Jlrona Page 1
PRISONERS. ••
O'Hare and Tarpley as the t\\'O men wOO
overpowered t\\'O bailiffs in the basement
hodling tank while the prisoners were
being assembled for today's court
calendar call.
They said \Vilson, \\'ho apparently was
not included in the original escape plan,
joinE'd the two men in their dash for
freedom .
Officers said O'Hare and Tarpley each
held a gun taken from sheriff's officers.
Jail officers sa id no shots were fired in
the holding tank or in ~-immediate
vicinity of the courthouse basement.
They said the first shots were fired
when the three prisoners tried to
conunandeer patrolman J ln1 Paul's car.
ll is not clear to officers at this time '
\Vho fired the first shots in an encounter
that left O'Hare seriously wounded and
the patrolman slumped in driver's seat.
Pla ne Lands Safely •
LAS VEGAS (AP) -An airplane with '
12 persons aboard made a sale landing
Wednesday after circling the field for ·
two hours when a passeaaer thought he
saw smoke Crom the laodlng gear area
on takeoff, olllclals .. Id. The F.fl plane,
ownec!_b)l_.EG&G A.i.lloo Co,. cl~ed to
burn up fuel before making an
emergency landlnl a~ Mc Ca rr a n
lnlemaUonal Airpoil.
'
l(issinger Heads Home
....
Cease-fire Pact Signing Slated Friday
I
CAffiO (UPI) -Secretary of Stale
Henry A. Kissinger headed home to
Wastunaton today alter the sucet$[u1
conclusion of his latest and toughest
diplomatic mission, winning egreement
from Israel and Syria to stop fighting on
the Golan Heights and pull back their
armies.
, The historic agreement will be signed
in Geneva Friday by military delegations
from the two countries. It provides for an
immediate cease flJ"e on the Golan ------------
-
MIDEAST TRUCE FACES
CHALLENGE. Story, Page 4
Heights front where Israeli and Syrian
forces exchanged artillery fire for the
80th consecutive day today.
A senior American official with the
Kissinger party said the United States
would provide hlgh altitude surveillance
to assure that alt the provisions were
being carried out just as it d~ in the
case of the Israeli-Egyptian disengage-
ment accord.
The same official also disclosed that
Kissinger was on the point of failure
three times during his marathon
negotiations with Israeli and Syrian
leaders. I-le said Kissinger had packed
his bags in preparation for departure but
changed his mind because he \\'as
convinced that failure would mean 1 renev.·ed y,·ar in the Middle East.
Kissinger stopped ofr in Cairo to brief
President Anwar Sadat. one of his chief
allies in bringing about the agreement
bety,·een Damascus and Jerusalem.
Kissinger had helped negotiate a similar
Girl, 8, Victim
Of House Fire,
Dies in Hospital
An 8-year-old girl who was pulled from
the smoke-filled second story of her
burning house in Orange Monday died at
Orange County ~1edlcal C e n t e r
\\'ednesday from the effects of smoke
inhalation.
Firemen pulled Elizabeth Janacek, 8 .
and her two sisters, Stephanie, 7, and
Donna. S, fro m the upper story of their
burning house at 141 S. Batavia, Orange,
at 8:30 a.m. Monday.
Their parents and brother had escaped
from the house. Attempts by their father.
Edy,•ard, to rescue the girls were blocked
by the intense heal, firemen said.
Elizabeth was given a r t if i c i a I
respiration at the scene and was rushed
to the medical center, but she never
regained conciousness before she died at
8:45 a.m. \Vednesday.
The t\\'O other girls have been released
from the hospital.
cease-fire agreement between Egypt and East mission ended at 6:15 p.m. 18:15
Israel on the Suez lron.t in January. a.m. PDT) when he left Cairo Airport
They held 3~~ hours of talks in Sadat's after a six·hour stopover In the Egyptian
private home in the cairo suburb o! Giza capital.
and later told a news briefing they The United Slates released the tcxl of
reached agreement "to establish a joint the lsraeli-Syrian agrec1nent today. along
commission for cooperation betw~n the with a map showing the cease-fire line
two countries in various fields for their and the buffer zone to be mannrd by
mutual benefit." United Nations troops in the Golan
Kissinger 's marathon 33-day Middle Heights.
Huntington's
Instructors
Stage St~·ili:e
By CANDACE PEARSON
or tti• 0111v ~;1o1 s1111
At least 60 percent of the teachers in
the Huntington Beach Union High
School District .staged a one-day stri~e
today protesting unn1et den1ands for an
automatic cost of living raise.
The teachers were scheduled to meet
at .f p.m. today to decide if they should
continue their walkout .
Bruce Johnson. president of the District
Educators Association IDEAi said 550
teachers out of a total of 750 walked off
the job today.
Dr. Jay Settle, deputy superintendent
of the district. estimated the number at
4~. Pickets, including some students,
marched in front or each of !he district's
six campuses. Inside. subs it u t es .
counselors and administrators tried to
keep classes running.
"We've opened the ca f et er i a and
library and asked kids to go there if they
don't have a regular teacher, Charles
\Viese, principal at Edison High. said.
WJese said he wasn't able to hire
enough substitutes to makl' up for the
JOO absent teachers. There \\·ere only 50
teachers left on the job.
A lot of students \\'ere going ho1ne
instead of staying at school. Wiese said.
"\\'e Y.'On't li(ive the man unexcused ab-
sence. There'll be no punishment."
Dr. Set.tie said the district had been
able to hire enough substitutes to keep
the schools open. ·
The district has offered the teachers a
nine percent raise.
The teachers \\'ant the nine percent
raise plus an automatic cost-of-living
boost lied to inJlation. If inflation rises
two to five percent in the first six months
of their contract, the teachers want a
raise equal to that amount in the last si:<
months.
If inflation ri5es fiv.e pt'rcent or more
Tn the first six months, the teachers v.·ant
a five percent raise in the last half of the
year.
Also released was the p r o t o c o l
outl ining the role of the U . N .
disengagement observer force, which is
limited to about t .250 men and \vhich will
be stationed in the buffer zone of about 1.t to 3.6 miles wide to supervise the
agreement.
The text and map provided fe\v
surprises. It provided for slgnature of the
agreement Friday in Geneva and an
immediate cease-fire in the Golan
!!eights upon signature.
It also provided that the details of
disengagement be ...,.orked out by lsraeli
and Syrian officers within six: days and
that the withdrawals to agreed positions
be completed within a month .
Also included were provisions for the
immediate exchange 'of v.· o u n de d
prisoners and the l'Xchnnge of all \\.1r
prisoners 1vithin at least six days -2-4
hours after the details of t h 1·
disengagement are agreed
From Pagel
SIGN S ...
limils the size or signs.
A oommercial sign may be no mon'
than 10 percent or the size of the
building face up to 500 square feet.
Jn the revised draft, O\mers of larger
buildings are allowed an additional one
percenl or sign area for excess building
size over 500 sq ua re feet.
Foley stressed that permitted siie is :1
tolal for all signs. He said a store
pennitted 50 squa re feet of signs could
have a 10 foot projrcting si gn and a ~O
foot ,,.,·all sign. no! t110 50 foot signs
If !he building fronts an l\VO strerts or
on a street and on Newport Bay. it can
have 50 square feet of signs on each
front , Foley said.
The ordinan('(' also restricts !hr
number of projecting and pole signs :ind
bans roof signs.
One WlUSUa[ pro\'iSiOn of the nC'IV
ordinance is that it permits "spectal
signJng districts" by approval of the
Planning Commission. In this way,
merchants in areas such as Balboa
Island or Fashion Island cou ld establish
design criteria for signs in their are<1 .
Foley said the main philosophy of the
ordinance is that signs are a n1eans of
identification. not advertising.
Tile committee ..-.·ill meet next wetk to
discuss temixirary signs such as theatre
marquees and real estate op<'n house
signs.
WlKEMBH'S
. CELLARS
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
.ZSOOW.COASTHWY.
NEWPORT IE.A.CH
PHONE 642·707' ~-·-~ IN HfWPORTPRODUCE VILLAGE
1601 MEWPORTILVD. . ...... ....., ..• _. COSTA MESA 64 2-9004
THIS WEEK'S CHEESE & DELICATESSEN FEATURES
... I·' ,
' I • I
PASTRAMI
1 I L-4~~
:. COTTO SALAMI -::.
' " • OMLY.l 79por '; MORT ADELLA
R19. 2.79 """'"'I :,
U"'H 2 "'-wfttl C.... '., '
. :-'' -,~'--::;~.;."';);l3:,.~~ ~~ -~~
..,, OMLYI 99r-
'i' ·. R;\I!,;~ ffH. w"' c=!~, ,~. . . ---
' • I '
CHEESE AT
AFFORDABLE PRICES. • •
' \
" ..
' .
COMI' •I THISl Sl'ICIALS
MOZZARELLA
PROVOl..OHE
or TILLAl:IOOK i"I . '
' Most cheese merchants are reluctant to
advertise cheese by the pound. in fear of
Orawing attention to their high prices. Not
Winemen's our prices are keen ....
: .... :Ji •+ . .. '-" Yow Choic• 189 .
I,._ R19. 2.19 ONy ~ ' . . ' • ~4 . ~IMH l lbl. wHfl Co.-" --:
·---t:t• ~~BUFFET CATERING SE~VICE .
Have you placed you r catering order yet for that wedding or graduation? We're still taking orders
and YOU WON'T BELIEVE OUR PRICES! Let Winemen's make it easy for you .. .Here's an example
THE CAPT AIM'S CHOICE $2.50 ,.. -
MEAT PLATIER: Boiled Ham. Corned Beef, Roast Beef & All Bet:lf Salami. CHEESE PLATIE~: Cheddar, Onion, Swiss
& Muenster. RELISH PLATTER: Black Ofives, Stuffed Green Olives, Sweet Cherry Peppers. Pickles. Mustard & Mayon-
naise. SALADS: Coleslaw & Polato. CHOICE OF BREAD: Rye, Egg, Onion. 'White, French, Pu""*1'tici<el-Any Two.
' Cow .... '-Swr1a ..,.,......_ ..... c.I &hf Ir 'nit W..,t We~ 4 W9t Y.W, Of Cl ; J a • ....._..
¥~ .. • ~, <.11 "!lrol.>11>4lo. -' _, -.-... - , •· ··~
ROSE' lfraw Portugal!
This Portuguese Ron Wine ia
simller to !he more expensive one
from Porlugat that ts very popular in
America .•.
"DOURIM Rg;!.1 ~ 9.::m.a
COMPAll Of SJ.It
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES:
"JUG" RED from Clclllfontla
Most wine enlhusiasts are on Che loottout tor a good,
ineJCpens1ve wine for every day drinking . The pity ol 11
all .is thnt such ere hard to find! Wlnemen·s has had
great success with this one ., .Reorders ere the prool
-many too l)tolewonals think there's nothing like
''.-,i ·ELL.A VIHO" IURGUMDY FULL 219
GALL OM
INCIDENTAL BONUS BUY
Glaas Clra~1 for convenience I elegance Wf\tn puring "JUO Wines·· 01 tor tl'llt NecesMr;' Decan-
ting ••• W.inamen'a has Jull what you've been lookfng for, ,
HALF CARAFES ~ _, 69'... FULL CARAFES •1'1 _, 99' ...
'
Aw ••io,: "s,.•._ ml• -.....i.-u.~ -Wl-'t · -,oleo -"" cobenofl
I • I
•
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l
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6 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
•
School Board Choices
The Orange County Board of Education is a little· ~n~erstood but oflen·discussed body. Two recent grand Jllr~es have recommended abolition of the countr schools
office co1npletely, so poor is its record of serv ice.
Voters in two areas of the county have an oppOr.
tunity in next Tuesday's election to help turn that di·
rection around. 1'hey can vote for prbmising candidates
who show qualities that could restore to the board a
leadership role in cooperative educational services.
Jn Trustee Area, 2, which includes part of Iiunting·
ton Beach, the need for imaginative, progressive lead·
ership could be met by Or. David H. Paynter, a business-
man who has learned the ropes over a 27-year career
as an educator.
In Area 5, which covers the south county and har·
bor areas, John 0. App. a young businessman, has the
qualifications of professional skills. energy and the view·
point of a parent of school-age children. 11e is aggres-
sive and dissatisified with the status quo.
l)aynter and App represent a forward step both for
the county office and the local districts it is supposed
to serve.
Thanks, J ack
Newport Beach bids fare,vell to Jack B.:irnett to·
day.
But lonighl. before they let hi1n go. the Newport
Beach comn1unity \viii say. ·"rhank you very rnuch,
Jack."
!\lore than 500 persons are expected to attend a testi·
monial dinner for the 1nan who for 16 years has served
as executive manager of the Newport llarbor Cha1nber of
Co1nmerce.
fro1n a position that he had made very in1portant in the
lfarbor Area during those years.
Since he began his successful revitalization in 1958.
Barnett has guided the chamber to a point wlJere il is a
n1ajor political force in the co1nn1unity.
But n1ore importanl. il has beco1ne a cornerstone
for the business comn1unity, a willing particip<int 111 ~·orn·
1nunity affairs and a generous benefilctor of c-ivit
causes.
And that is a fitting testilnonial for a ruan \vho has
n1anaged to stay astride of a con1n111nity \Vhero indi·
vlduals and their timely if not whitnsical ide.:is can so
often lead one down a pa1b. of frustration and discourage·
n1ent. r -\
Barnett's tenure has extended through six n1ayors.
four city managers and more than a dozen cha1nbcr
presidents. '
lie was successful berause of his concern and hi"
tompassion for the people and the con1111unity he
served.
It \l.1ill be a fond fa~revvcll.
Larcnz the Choii·c
Jn special dislric·t elections 011 the .J11 nc 4 ballot
forn1er Newport Beach Vice i\layor ll anii J. Lorenz is
seeking re·election to his Di,·ision 3 seat :is a director
of Coastal ~·tunlcipal \\1ater Distril't.
Lorenz has a \\1ide range of experience in \Yater
n1anagement as well as Newport Beach municipal affairs.
He has served eight years as a director of the coastal
district with the philosophy of litniling the district to
its assigned role as a water wholesaling agency.
'
I
. I\ ; ;,. I>, ....of\ tld\.W They'IJ 1nark the occasion of Barnett's retire1nent
lie has represented Newport Beach well on the
coastal board. \Ve recomn1end Lorenz be re-elected.
N ''1 ~O THINK JE R.F-Y FOR!> IS TRYI NG TO TELL US 50ME1HJNG:
Don't L ea11
Too H ea11ilv
011 ·ti i e Cler,~·.)·
( SYDNEY HARRI S J
r h01\t• n('\lr hu0\111 11h(•thrr to laugh
or cry n1or1' 11h1•n p<.>0plC' 11ith C"motionaL
111arital. or lll'.tuat prohlt•tns arl' ad1·isC'd
to "tum to ~our\.qoc1or ur tlcrgy1nan"
for e11unscling and lt•IJl
The truth of thf' n1n!tl·r 1~ that most
doc1ors and clt:rgytnen-111 our society. at
ll'a.~t-arl' no n1or1• qu:il!fied hy training
or ternn••';)t'n·tlf 10
J!ll 1· ~11ch l'V\i11<..~:lu11.~
lh;1n ;i pl11111l-.·1 1·,•11
f 1 \ :1 El1.,la\ '11:11i
tubt·.
1'111' ~Ull'1d1' '-lild
cl 1 1· o r r (' rah· of
doctors. drn! l'>I' and
other rrorl";~.01'al=-
1s hight•r th;in that
·of al1nos1 ·111v othl'r
otcupation : i1hile thnt of thC' min1~1ry
"'Otlld doubt lt·ss be 1nuch higher than 11 l<i
if pubhc opinion v.cre not suc h a rigid
determinant of their conduct.
DOCTORS arc taught virtually nothing
t1bout sex -excepl in its star~est
ti1ological sense-in n1rdical school, and
n1osl of I hem nrr so or:;anirally-0r1enttod
niat thry <Jt'l' either t'tnh11rrasst'{\ or
11npatiC"nt "·hen C()nfronling obviously
en1ot1onal or functional upse ts .
rtc·rg~·mC'n arr at 1hc other rxtrcn1e :
so "spiri111aJly.m1nded" tha! Liley !end to
1urn psychologic:1l problems in1o ethical
on<'s. ;_ind usurllly propose "faith" a~
futilC'ly as the physicians propose pills or
a sea-thangc. TI1cy may offer n1ore
sr1npathy than the doctor. but sympat~y
alone can no more heal the heart than it
can reset a broken leg.
IT IS precisely because or these
obvious deficiencies in t.Jic medical and
theological professions that mi\lions or
Americans have turned. perforce. to a
\\lid \'ariely of en1otional nostrums. from
yoga and mcdilat1on lo transactional
groups and sensitivity training. People
arc despC"ratc for help in reconstructing
their Jives, and are es willing to try any
psydlologica\ cure in the same way a
bald 1nan \\'ill give any alleged hair-re-
storer a \\'hirl.
Some of 1hcsc programs :ire rnore
reputable and rt•sporsible than others.
but most 1of \\'hatever persuasion) are
under·tr:iincd nnd ill·directcd. faddi sh
or dO\\TiriglTL fatuous or even dangC'rous
to the stability of the perso:ialitv. Alas.
there is no F'cdcra\ Trade Commission,
no vctsion of a Pure Food and Drug Act,
lo regulate or inhibit these promoters;
nor is there any rational way the can·
didatc can evaluate the lectmiques and
regimens orfcrcd by a bewildering mul·
tiplicity of seers.
OBVIOUSLY, not only trained and
licensed psychologists or psychiatrists
should be equipped to handle these
problems; there wiJJ never be enough of
, them. Medicine aOO theology musl take
, up the slack by incorporating far more of
cmotlon:il and pastoral counseling than
l!lrc now in their curricula. The average
doctor or clergyman today is barely able
1 to cope v.•lth his traditional area of
• discipline. much le!is to advise others on
' the perplexities and subtlellcs or psychic
reallty.
Quotes
' Jw:ie at. Taulbee, Mountain View -"l
' bctieve that Janatlcs and terrorists
floorlsh In a climate o! dl'tperatlon. We
ne<d to revive our democrallc procflieS
as a leglllmate """"" o! o!fectlng chance, becaulO that p...,.,:u hAs token a
bcallng to rectnt years ...
\
In a Brooding Air, the Wolves Are ,Circling.
'1'111' \l'l1irt' 1/uusc i~ 110/1cr(l/J/11 .~n1u/ler' ll1rSl' d1111s. lt'.~ been .~er b11ci:
/11r"lht•r ll'ulU tl1e slrrel. Tl1e /!'OH
!lfllli•rl f <'llf(' nro1111d H has gro•r11
/11r1li1·r. Ll1otj(lli. 011d the spikes utu11
al'c lionecl ra:or s!1orp.
Occasfonally at 111ght t!1e glimnier
of a sliaded lig/1t can be seen through
a bolitd sh11tter. So someouc sfill
l1ofrls out 1rif/1in. But tl1e orinnill'J
11·0/t't'S 11re t·1rc/1ug. c1rc/h1g. Aud coc/1
duy lh<'!I tJroiv ever bolder.
• • •
"People always said they didn'l like
the son of a bitch but they didn't know
v•h.1"." says a reporter in the White House
press roon1. "No11t• they krlO\\' 11·h~·-"
lie do(':-;n't bothl'r to !O\Yer his vnic:e
though a presidential aide is passing by.
Thi· ;i1d('.!\ sOOuldors hunch ror11'ard. H i.~
hf·:1d duc:ks. He keeps goin~. s1·1ring
~tra1ght ;ihead. Silent The oth('r n1111·s·
1nl'n laugh.
Def e11<l iug Nixo n Ju st Isn't tli e
You can't tilame 1hc aidC'. Those f('\I' i11
!his tov.11 ,,·ho still openly defend the
President. like Father John l\.1ct.aughlin,
the Jesuit priest on the White House staff.
are subject to instant derision. It simply
isn't the 1hing to do.
The \\'hitc House press has b<"en \1·ryl.1·
rrilical in pri\·atc of every Prcside111
since FDR. Cynicism is issued \1·ith their
pencils and notebooks. But never hare
they been so openly and fearlcsslv
hostile. ne\'er have their jokes been ~o
vicious nor deli\'ered 11·i1h such relish II
sin1ply is the thing 10 do.
THIS IS basically a Dc•1noerJt1c lo\111.
The ne\\'smen. the upp e r ·t' r hl' I on
burl•auerats. I hl' c;t'ort:cto1111 ho~!!':-.M':<.
t.io&· 11ho ~t·t ll1t• tO'lt'. 1·10:,., 11 1•·
11Hi1id. detcrrnl11l' 11hat 1s 111 and 11hal I'
c ART HOPPE )
out -:ire not rinly predom1nanll y
!Jen1ocrats. but intellectual DC"n1o<Ta1s
Since the days of Alger Hiss. they h,1l 1·
been Nixon haters.
\\'hen the President 11·as al the hC'ight
of his po11•er. they triticizcd hini. BuL
thl'\' cri!icizcd h1111 for b.'1rig du>l ;ind
b<1nal, and only among the1nselves. 11
Sl'e1ncd a n1eaningless ritual they \l"tnt
tl1rough to helo 1hen1 endure 1hl' l'l;.!hl
1'1ng yC'an; in tlopes that Ca111elol 11ould
c·un1e again . Cul no\1
"r\s llH' Prc!'idenl 11-oultl .,:.i~." ~1
Uc111ocrat1c eo11gressn1u n loudly nsked
Tli i11a Lo Do <...
!h1' 11a1tl·r in lhl' House dining room .
··11hat the 1explctn'e deleted ! is good
tod<t~";"
A REPL'BLICA;.J colleague at the next
table looked O\'t'r, siniled ruefully and
sadly shook his head. "Even the
Hepubllcans know they·1·e been had."
said the Dcn1ocrat triumphantly.
··Did you hear v.·hat he called (Senate
Hepublican Leader) Hu gh Scott?" said a
!a1\'yer al a cocktail party. happily citing
an obscenity deleted from the tape
transcripts. !his to11·n·~ best·seller. And
1h1· other J;)Ul'sts l'icfl to bring forth
plu1ns or pre~1den:1a\ profanity. as~
lh\111•!li pro/a111l1 1·.l'ri.: ;111 in1pc<1chab\c
Ofll'll~C
And you ~«111 ·1 hl·lp ll'l·lin!:! in this ;,1.
n1osph1'rt' nf 11t'i1111s111•ss , rin<licli\"eni·s.,
and jubilant rcli~ll 1hnt ii the President is
driven from office in d1~grace, 11 111ill not
be so rnuch for any high tritnes or
1111Sdcn1t'anors. but s1rnpl} bc1:;1usc ttu:-;
!0\111 l1a1t·~ his guts.
* • *
)'el Linco/?i still broods iii llis mt -
nrurial. 1\s yoit 1ua/k doirn Pe11 11sy/.
va11ia Avenue. t!ie flau.~ sllll bravely
fly. tlie yrrluite and tile 11rarbte buitct·
i11ps slil/ s1a·11d slrOll!) n11d e11d11ri11y.
:\ud yo11 l/1111k t/11.~ /yucl1 ·/11ob aberra·
LIOll u·11/ /)IJS.<:.
fo,-G'(lp/lol 1111! 1s 1/ul/ceably Jiiql1 ·
er 1101v. don1c n1ore do11111u1u1 and Hll·
posing. It 1s uoisier. ton. o~ tile rev-
elers u1il/1in r1uaff froni rl1<' liencl!J
c11p of pu1uer uflcr o /1111y. /ony
droiq;/1/.
1\11d 111011be 111<·1'(' ;, 1111 :lrcJul1•ct
!1 110 111r1rfn!.~ ut'l'!' u.·•1' drn10«1·or11.
.\,1rl 1Ho11be 1(•/10( u·e 11,1' ''"'l11 rr1oinn 1~ 1J1c <''xcruci•1l11q/IJ1 1111111111/ p1:0,·1·~·,.
of lioriug 01u· i11.~tH1d111'llS s<:a/ecl Voci.
ru si.:e.
•
Steam Cars: Great, But Are They Practical?
To tilt Editor :
I read 1~:ith interest the ar1 icle in the
!\1ay 22 Daily Pilot about the delirery of
t11·0 s1enn1 powert'<I au ton1ubiles 10 The
Stair of C<ilifomia at Sl.400.HOO e:ich.
1\sst·1nbly Speaker !\1ore11i. arcr1r1tin:-c to
h1111. is proud to have sponsort•fl !he pro-
JC'Ct \Vhich he purports "set~ 0111 t1J ~· .. 1·1·
fk>troi! it's possible to eonstruLt ;1 Stt'i''11
running ear for urban u~t· in :i i.liort
period of 1in1C" \\'ilh little 1110;1t·y.··
H~· succeeded in pro1 int: none ol iho-1'
con1e11t1ons. I-le hns rnade t11·0 cars 11·h1ch
hnve n:-it passed any Cnlifornia st;1IC'
clean air certirication tests i'lurl'
importantly. the cars n1a~· not Lle
producible at any sort of a rcasonablr
cost. But, beyond that. the state has no
way of selling them.
A far better use of that monev "·ould
have been to make ii a prize fOf' ihe lirst
private corporation Ylhich produced a
clean emission vehicle for urban use as
evidenced by public acceptance in till'
form of sales.
!\Ir. Moretti may next decide to build a
nonpolluting spaceship 1\·ith our money.
:!\fy only hope, in that eventuality, is that
he is first to ride in ii.
GEORGE E. \llLL
•.. A l\'11l111oblle l11 s le atl
To lhe &lilor:
In the old days when spring broke it
was the "perpetual moUon" inventors
who crawled Out of their holes and
convinced the gullible to invest in their
great inventions. Now It is the steam car
nuts wasting our tax money to att11in the
impc&ible. To listen lo the great
pronouncements of Bob Moretti, one
would think that, the engineers at
caJteeh, Berkeley and at the Big Three I
Dear
Gloom v J
Gus
The Newpon·Mesa Unllled School
District seems to be shoving prin-
cipals around, without regard to
their pttJcrences. t5n't it about
time the top men wbo make theAe
decision• be shu!Oed too, !or the
good o! the district!
J.L
)
auto research 1~ubs ,,·ere a Jot of
simµletons. aJJO that they a r c
drlibcralrl~ in1prding progrl'SS.
,\bout ;111 one ran say in /a\'or or .~tt>an1
cars 1s !hat 1hr.\· arc quiet. ()f cours(' ~cu
could dl'~ign thr1n io burn c.:ial. k1nd11n:::
\1·ood or e\·en old ne11·spapC'rJ.. bu! thl•1r
~t<1ndard. tuel i.~ pl'!roleu111 i1kl' c;1r:;.
especially dicsel-drhl'n ones. use.
\\'HE~E\'ER ~ou interpose p:>11er·
CO!l\l'rs10n uni1s likt• a ~te~1111 l;uJlt'r
ht1:\\Cen the fut'I lank and 1hc t'l·:ir
\l'hcC'ls. you lost:'-po11·cr :ind burn n1ort'
fuel. And you incr('nSe the v.'eight of lht
po1rer plnnt greatly. 11'hich takes n1orc
fuel to nayigate.
About the only people favoring stean1
arc those \11ho ha1·e had little or no
engineering education. like sonic i;u.1 s in
the Legislature.
Steam cars bum 11·i1h ;111 opt'n fla111('
and are gcnrraH,r no! a!lo1\-t•d l'l car~
11•ith gasoline-drh·cn enQine'. 11110~.·
fumes n1ight Ix_> ignited. The bnik·r~ ;1•111
condcnsl'rs the\' n1ust have are hca,·1•,
11 hich incans 'po::irrr pcrfornH111ce a1id
fuel n1ileage. \ll'Chanics don't kno11 ho11
to ser,·icc the1n
T\\'O StC'arn ("Lt':'! h:!I'(' ;it:ain··;I 'll:l~~
production nnd lht>n had to be nbandoned
The !v.·o !he Legisl:i!ure ~pent S~.7j
111illio11 on lookc<I prl'll~: une could not L·c
sl artcd the sccoud tr~. lhc rirsl 11·ould11't
st art at all.
TllE Tl:\TE has corne for us to consider
soinething really practical !ikc rny
invention, the Klock E i g h l -Day
Nulmobi'c. which is silent. requires no
gasoline, has no ,exhaust.
The mechanical principles of the Nut-
li1obile arc time-tested and even a ch.ild
can understand them. Everybody knoY:s
the reliability of the eight-day wind-up
clock, It runs for a week on one winding.
The Nut-Mobile runs on the sa1ne
principle except with a much larger
motor. Just wind it up each Saturday and
off you go to a \1'rtk of care-free and
expense-fr~ motoring. 1 f you are busy
mowing the 18\\"n let your wife improve
her figure by doing It.
FRANK KLOCK
U'atr fa t he tt'afrf1e r s ·
To the Editor:
I read with a great deal of interest Dr.
Ru.s&el V. Lee's suggestion that public
officials whose "aberrations'' could cause
"public harm" be removed from orlice.
Jn a world where one superpower
alru4y Clltgorlw oom°" o! ltJ vocal
tntornal -tJ os "Insane" and locka
lhem away In 11aaylums" 1 satd to
m)'leU, ''This guy has got to be
tk!dlngl" A cartful reading, howtYOr.
( MAILBOX J
l.t•ners front readers arc welcome .
,\lurmal/y, writers sl1ould. convey thf'I/'
•111•ssa9es in. 300 1vonls or lt'Ss. 'fl1e
r1:'Jl1t to conricHsc /etrers to fil .~pnct'
or Fliniinate /1b l'I 1s resC1'1"t'd, ,\I/ /Cl·
11·1·:-: nn1st iiic/rrtle si1n1n11n·c 1111(/ vi11ll·
111r1 !Jdrfrcss Ill'/ ·1uone.~ 1nnu br 1rl!l1·
l1e/cL on req11e.~& if s11fficient rcnsn11
I~ 11.JJIJQTCllt. POl'O!J Ifill not be pub·
l1.~l1ed.
1·n11vinred n1c th;it Dr. Lee \Vas
1lrlivering his idea 11·ith a perfectly
s1r:1ight face and meant to be taken
seriously.
I have onl.\' one question ror lJr Lt·<':
"\\"ho deterrnines the sanity of thl'
s<111ity-dclern1 incrs·.•··
GOHDO~ \\'JLLIA.\IS
T/1 e S/1 e riH'.• J ob
To The Editor:
In response to your cdilorinl on !he
~heriff candidates I think you negll'c1 ~·U
to tell the readers son1e important facts.
\\'hile it is your right to endorse
1,1•hoever you choose. it son1cho\v drx:s
not seem fair to single one other
candidate out to attack. There are six in
the race.
I would like to point out that George
Savord has spent S21.000 to di!lc (bot h
filings) 'A'hile Bradley Gates tia s spent
$.S4,211 to date including both filings. If
t-.lr. Gates can't run a v.'e\1-organizcd
ca mpaign on, that money, then he does
have a protlem. After all, money can
buy just about everything these days.
AS A CITIZEN, I v•ould like lo state
here why I am interest('(! in the sheriff. I
live in an unincorporated area, in a
co1nmunily v.•here the only I a ,,.
enforcement is the sherirrs dcp..1rtmenl.
Crime has incrt'ascd each year since
1968 \vhen t n1ovcd there, bu1, the sheriff
patrols still re1naln inadequate.
Orange County citizen~ have had the
same person as sheriff for the last '!5
years. Twenty.five years Is too long for
the same person to stay in the san1e Job
In the same location.
His department shows it; it has
become decadent.
When I learned the present sh•riff
hand-picked· one of his men , Bradley
Gate~. to succeed him, my lirst reaction
was one .of fear. Fear that the present
1ituaUon will rtma1n or worsen.
\
\\'hy? Logically speaking. a person
chooses another to succeed him for
several reasons. For example. the person
agrees in philosophy and \Viii early on in
the same l\'ay.
Or<ing<' County n&'ds a change. Tt does
1101 nl'ed a jail facility tha! is the talk of
the sl;11•• or a sheriff \\ho has allo\1·ed
crime to increase in San Juan Capis~rano
300 percent and a promise of a substation
in the South County that is a .. political
dream and Orange County docs not need
a 411an 11·ho 11'ill follow in the footsteps of
!he one \1·ho has prop:igatel\ that
deterioration either.
Let 's be fair and give another person a
chance to make this a safe county to live
and work in; let a person who js more
c1ualificd and who can't buy the office
,,·ith tricky high partisan campaigning
have a chance.
l-la1·en't \l'l' had enough 0£ that in 1973 ?
CONSTANCE BE~EDICT
Does Speed Ki//?
Tll !hC' Editor:
Tilt' D:iil~, Pilot editorially has follo"·rd
liO\t'rnor Heagan·s unsubstantiatl'd linr
ih;i1 1hP reduction in high\\'ay fatalities is
"J!'l'l'tl~· at1ributabte to the Ni\on
adin1111~trat1on·s. nationally enforced. jj
111 .p.h. sprcd li n1 it.
"Speed Kills" hradlincd the ,\lay Jj
J)aily Pilot rd1torial au1horcd by an
anonymous \-\Titer 1\·hose exp!'rtisc on the
subject \~ill possibly <1lso remain
questionable; how e v e r . in his
international best·sellcr. "Unsnfe At Any
Speed ," Ralph Nader exposed the Traffic
Safety Establishment v.•hich h a s
apparently used that slogan "for
dl'Cades."
Said Nader:
.. 'Speed Kills' and 'SlO\V Do\-\·n and
Live' are familiar tslogansl peddled by
the National Safety Council. But of late
the council, \l'hich is he<tvlly endo.,l'ed by
lhc Auto1nobilc i\I a n u fact u re r s
Association. is underplayin6 1 he s l'
mes.sages. 01,ing In \).1rt 10 lh"
c1nbarrassing effecl$ or O'H! :iu1on1~b l ·
i.:cmpanics· promolionul 1 rn1pha,,is on
horscpou·cr. speed and racin" and -
encouragingly enough -due in part to
the results or u s1udy t;y the Bureau of
Public Roads concerning the relationship
bctl\'een accidents and hlgh"'ay speed.
"Accident involvenlent rat's (lre al a
minimum al speeds between 50 and 75
miles per hour. As the speed goes below
50 miles per hour or above 75 miles per
hour. the Involvement rate increases
rapidly, 1nndJ ... 11..-number-of lnjuri
per vehicle mlles traveled is at its
minimum In the speed range o! 45 to 7tl
ffi,p.h." I
BRUC!i: S. HOPPING
H elp f 11r Dance
To lhe Editor :
On April 26 your paper publishl'd an
article about a night to be remembered,
the spring prom !hat \-\'as held at
Fairvie111 Slate l lospital for the mentnl ly
retarded.
\Veil, the <lance Y.'<IS a tremendous
success, a good lime was had by all. The
reason it 11·as such a success \\'as
because of the con1bined efforts of many
JX'ople behind the scenes. I feel the need
to sar :1 cicnuine thank vou to 1hes"
individunl People and orgaTiizations "'110
offered their assistante: and it \11as an
orfer. nothing was requested
These people heard of our r!lort~ to
have a real formal dance for the 1nL"n .:ind
v•omen and responded \1·i1h enthusiasn,.
So. thank you: Ken \\'alkins. Orange Co.
Floral Association. llollistl•rs .'\ursery_
Broad\Yay DepL Store. \·lrs. Beebe. The
1.0.0.B.. Island Guitars. \1 am n1 a
Jn1nn1as. Joe Church and Thi• l'l<11!y Pllo1.
1.l~D\ L.\\\'LFSS
\\ ard :11
l .ila!., II Dtu·/,
To thr !'.:<litnr
;'\lay I l'XP!'<'~S a l\nrd 11f !hanks In
11·hn1ne\'l'r nr 11'halt•\'CI' is rt•s1>0nsiblc for
the darkness of strt't'I l1~hts in \\'est
Ne1\'Jl0rt '!
It has <'nablecl us OtH'l' ;.1ga 1n to enjoy
\\·hat a night is supposed to be. .dark.
TO;'\l HE NNl:\'GSGAHD
OIANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \V,td, PubUs/1,r
Tl1ornos Kee11i/. Edilor
Barbara K rt·1!>1ch
Erl11ur1at Puu1• Editor
TN< rrf1101i~I J!·•"f of 1hr Dail"
P1:01 ·""l'li~ tu 1nf011•1 and ~1ln1u!<1t~
ri•11drrs l'oy v1·~~1·n11ni.: on 1111 .. pa,1:t'
di\'ent ('(ln1n&itnry on ropli·s vf 111
lf't"esl by sy a.!C"d columnishc an•l
('artoonl~ts. b prov!cl1n1t A ron1n1 (()r
rtadtrt' v~"""• 1.rwl by iire~rn1lng flus
nc11.'SpaPfr'a opinkm~ and 1dt>a.s on
current 1oplc1. Tnt-edltfH'tAI ()pfnion.s
of lbt Dally Pilot "'Pl'"'&r only in the
tdltorla1 mlumn 11 1~1· r9p of ttit
PQt". Oplnibns e.11;prtsse'd by tt.P l'OI·
umniMs and cartoonl~t' and letttl"
.. Tlter. an: lhrir °""' tnd l'ID M\dorsf'-
men.1 of thiir \iffiv.· by !Ire Dally
Pllot-br-
Tbursday, May 30, 1974
Donations
To Nixon-
$90,000
Door Troultle
Microwave Oven
WASHINGTON f Ai'I
Public donations <lc<;ignrd 1u
help President Nixon pay h1~
Warnings Looui
delinquent federal 111 ,. o n1 c \\'1\~JIJ\(;1'0~ 1t.:PI1 -
taxes tolal $90 .000. lh (' \.\'lut e Thi• Foo<! nnd l> r u ~
lfousc has announced. Adn11ni,!r<.1!1on h;1.; ordt'rt·d
The 1n on c ~· , c x t' l' p I pcrnuinl'nl \1·arn1ng labl'ls •)n
anonymous donatio111o. is 1,..111g <ill n1·1v 1111rr1111·;n c O\'l'll<. but
returned to the senders since turned do1111 :.i ton~um1·r
Nixon announced he \\'ill pay group 's re£iucst to 1n1po"e
the taxes himself. tigh!cr ~aft·ty rulr" un \11('
The anonymous funds, which industry.
the While House said come to The lnbt·ls. \rhich ,1·ould
$4,341, were turned over to the become mandatory I h ! s summer. v.1ould warn the user
Federal Disaster Assistance not to operate the oven if
Admini!tration to aid victims there is an object caught in
of recent Midwest tornadoes. the door, 1f the door docs not
l'Jixon requested this. close properly, or if the door.
-~~-'--~~~~~~-
LAS VEGAS
deluxe rooms
on the strip
IUGI' POOl
TflEVISl()J
24HOUR
PHONES
AIR
CONOITTCJllNG
COHEESIO'
for 1 or ?Peop!e
2 doubl•_' beds in
rochr~
S? OOeoch foc
r.;tro guesls
~honng your
room.
!1u1•!t' !;Heh or sealing surface
1-.. diunaged ,
Tiil'.: OVENS, WlllCll have
h"l'l\ selling at a rate of aDi.iut
~110.llOO a yrar. can grill a.
:,trak in seconds or cook a
10;1-..1 !11 a fraction of the 'lime
con\'rnttooal OV('n tnethods
1rrp1i re.
Consumers t:nion. \•:hicb
1}('ti11one<I the FDA for new
safely rules last sum mer,
contended the ovens lea k
radia!Lon and pose hazards
ranging from burns to
interference \\'ilh (']cctronic
pactmakers implanted i n
Peart patients.
The grou1J. \1 hich p11t•li . .;h{'s
the rnaga11ne ('on :; u 111 c r
Report s, h:1d r£'qt11•stcd a
ITIOl'C (•Xl(•tlSI\ L' \\;1rn111g label
all \'1Sin~ ll~l'rS 11) kt•t•p O\'('llS '
out of tllt• l'l'<H'h ol childrt'n. 1
:noid pr1·r11~~ 111tn 1111:111 v.'hilc
111 u~(· :ind 1t·l1111g j):1cen1akcr
p;iricnts 10 leave the roon1.
IT ALSO \\'A:'\TEO tougher
tcsl!n ;: ~1andards because. it
s;il(L pn·s1•n1 industry tests do
not dupli t:l lt• ('\'Cn norn1al, let
alun1· :1hnnrn1 a1. use that the
O\'Cn.s 111i;.:ht r('rri1·e in the
hands of eon'>UlllC'rs.
Last fnlt !hr Vl>A tested 200
, u,ursday, May 30, 1974 DAIL V PILOT 5
..•.• , ...
•••••
Woman Will Head College· at Sonoma
Vincent College in New York,
her master's from Catholic
University in Washington.
D.C., and her Ph.D. rro1n
Yale University in 1942. '
UPI Tlhloltolt
FIRST IN STATE
Dr. Marjorie Downing
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Rohnert Park al lhe end of lhe
Dr. Marjorie Downing has lfm.74 1cademic year.
S
bee
101
ne Sonamnoedmaprebyslldehenbot 0
8
frdea
01
r1 ·currently a profmor of
English literature at Scripps
trustees or the California State College, Or. Downing was
Universities and Colleges • .the dean of the !acuity at the
first woman to reach that Clar~t.scbool for six years
leve l in the ca I i r or n i a begl~n1ng in 1965.
educational system. Prior to n1oving to
"Dr. DQ.wning, through her Ch1remont in 196!, Dr .
Downing served as dean of the
college at Sarah Lawrence lo
New York,
DR. DOWNING bad previous
teaching eiperience at
Barnard College and B~klyn
College.
She received her bacl\i!lor's
degree Jn 1938 from ~1t. Saini
Dr. OOwnlng, 57, is the
widowed mother ol two sons.
Francis. 18, and Nicholas, 15,
who reside with her in
Claremont.
ex t ens Ive experience in ----academic administration and ,.. _________ .,. .... ,_..,.,,. ... .,.. .... ,_..,. ......... .,..,__.,. __ "!
notable sc h o 1 a rs hi p is
especially qualified to continue
with the fore s ighted
development of CSC Sonoma,"
Chancellor Glenn Dumke, said
Wednesday.
DR. DOWNING succeeds
Thomas H. McGrath, who is
retiring from the presidency
of the 5,500-student campus at
COMING SOON ·
THE COSTA MESA POLICE ASSOCIATION
1974 BENEFIT SHOW
Pot Pat~h
S/1,eriff Groivs His O-ic1t
'J'lSJIO~IJ~GO, Okla. (APl
~ Johnston County Sheriff
Evert'lt Stewart ha s a small
garden adjacent to the county
jail 1vhere he raises a
number or items, including
marijuana.
sotnc people to think they
1night be growing it by
mi stake in their backyard or
pasture."
Stewart, an officer for 34
years, said he had about 3,000
visitors to the patch last year.
t t •
S!xtrcn marijuana plants,
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Today's Final
N.Y. St oc k s
VOL 67, NO. 150, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1974 c TEN CENTS
Mesa High Adopts New Report Card System
Beginning with the start of the 1974-75
school year, students attending Costa
Mesa High School will be bringing home
a different kind of report card.
For parents who want to check on how
their youn~sters are doing in school, the
new grading system developed by a
committee parents, students and
teadlers should be easier to understand.
Students will r~ive a report card
every six weeks, just as before. This
feature was retained because committee
members felt that frequent grading wa s
needed to apprise parents oI the progress
of their students.
New is the method of giving credit.
Next school year credit 'Aili only be given
at the end of each semester, instead of
every six weeks as is the case now.
School authorities say this will prevent
students from changing classes every six
weeks and that they will therefore ha ve
to make better decisions when choosing a
class.
Further, students y,·ill be graduated
only on a semester basis "'hen they have
completed class requirements. instead o!
every six weeks. Thal, plus the change lo
five credits per course will save on
paper.,.,·ork. clerical and counseling tin1e,
according to school officials.
The grading symbols will be "A", ;'B '',
and ''C " along with "I" which means
''incomplete." The worst mark a student
can get is ''NC" which is equal to a good
old-fashiooed "F".
Replaced by the "I" and "NC" marks
is the grad e of ''NM" (no mark) which
had been given for several years for a
variety of circumstances inc 1 u ding
•
incomplete y.·ork , failure, and difficul!y
in assessing the student's progress.
Members of the Costa Mesa Hi gh School
conunittee said th~ "NM" grade was
ambiguous and that the new systen1
more clearly differentiates between
failure and incomplete v.·ork.
Starting next year, all classes each
student takes will be figured into the
grade point average. Previously a no-
mark was ignored and physical education
\\·as not counted. As of this fall all grades
and all classes will count equally
Committee members say that students
\v ill oot be penalized und er the new rules.
Students will still be allowed to make up
classes by repeating the class or taking
summer school.
Grade point averages meanwhile will
be a combination of the old and the new
until three years from now 'A'hen the new
grading system is fully implemented.
S Ill ~oun
--------
Nixon Warned r
Judicia~y Panel
Orders 45 Tapes
BULLETIN
WASIIlNGTON IAP) -Tb(' llouse
Judiciary Committee is s u e d _a new
n bpoena this afternoon ordering Presi-
dent Nixon to turn over 45 more \\'ater·
(ale tapes and ~nl him a letter 'A"arning
that failure to com~y co u Id becomt""
grounds for Impeachment.
\\TASHINGT01'1 !UPI! -The House
Judiciary Committee voted 28 to 10 today
to inform President Nixon his refusal to
hooor its subpoenas "might constitute a
ground for impeachment."
After an hour 's debate. the
congressmen agreed to send Nixon a
letter advising him they v.ill feel free to
conclude he is hiding evidence harmful 111
Two CHP Offices-
To Be Picketed
Moriqay .~orning
Picket lines will be formed !\1onday
morning around the two California
Highway Patrol offices in Orange County
as part of a statewide effort to get higher
pay for the CHP.
Off-duty patrolmen and their wives will
carry signs from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. in
support of Assembly Bill 3801, sponsored
by San Francisco Democrat Willie
Brown.
Officer Joe Mendez said today about 30
to 50 pickets are expected to demonstrate
in froot of the Westrr.insler office at
13200 Gclden West St. No one at the
Santa Ana office. 2031 E. Santa Clara St.,
knew how many would appear there,
though lhey guessed at least 20 to 30.
Mendez said it will be a n
"informational picket" designed to alert
the public to the need for passage of the
bill. The picket line will only be manned
by off-duty personnel and wives, and th(
CHP's normal operation will not be
hindered, be said .
Brown's bill, according to Mendez,
would make the pay of Highway
Patrolmen equaJ to the average or the
five largest police departments in the
state. .
his cause by continuing lo ignore
subpoenas for \Vatergale tapes and
documents.
The committee also was considering
whether to subpoena more presidential
TAX PENAL TY FDR NIXON
REPORTED. Story, Page 4 ---tapes and documents in its impeachment
inquiry. Three subpoeoas have alread)'
been issued. Nixon ignored two and
released his Watergate transcripts in
response to the third.
In their debate. the members revised
and somewhat softened a letter proposed
by Rep. Walter Flowen (0-Ala.), a key
Southerner on the committee.
. The key paragraph in the adopted
version read :
'·Jn meeting their cqnstltutional
responsibilities . committee members will
be free to consider whether your refusals
require the drawing o{ adverse infer-
ences COllCi!rning the substance of the
materials. and whether your rerusals in
and of themselves might constitute a
ground for impeachment."
One Democrat, Rep. John Conyers Jr.
of ~1ichigan, and nine Republicans voted
against sending the letter. Twenty
Democrats and eight Republicans voted
(See IMPEACH, P11e ZI
~
Carpenter Kidnap
Measures Okayed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Trust and
corporate funds could not be used to pay
kidnap ransom demands u n d e r
legislation approved unanimously by the
state Senate. (Related stories, Page 3.)
The two bills, which Sen. Dennis
Cafl)enter said he introduced in response
lo the Patricia Hearst kidnaping, were
sent to the A&sembly on identical 2&-0
votes Wednesday.
But Carpenter did not ask ror a vote on
a third bill which would make it a
misdemeanor ror persons such as
recipients of the Hearst "People in
Need" food program to accept the profits
of extortion.
Carpenter CR-Newport Beach) said h.is
purpose "Is to take the profit out of
kldnaping, particularly the political type
such as the Hearst case."
DlllY P'lltt ll•tf .......
INVESTIGATORS CHECK BLOOD·SPLATIEREO CAR AFTER SANTA ANA SHOOTOUT
Jail Prisoners Tried to Commandeer This Ve hic le Driven by Off-d uty Highway Patrolman
----· -------
l(iss inger Retur11 s
~i\fter Mid east Peace
Accuscitio ns Ji'l)·
As G
ttffi1P--Bope uls Tr ave l
CAIRO (UPll -Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissing er headed ho1ne to
\l/ashington today after the successful
cooclusion of his latest and tou ghest
diplomatic miss ion. winning agreement
from Israel and Syria to stop fighting on
the Golan Heights and pull back their
armies.
The historic agreement wlll be ~i gnecl
in Geneva Friday by military delegations
from the two countries. ft provides for an
immediate cease fire on the Golan ---.------------MI DEAST TRUCE FAC ES
CHALLE NGE. Story, Page 4 . -----
Heights front where lsraeli and Syrian
forces exchanged artillery fire for the
80lh consecutive day today.
A scnioi-American official v.·ith the
Kissinger party said the United States
wouJd provide high altitude surveillance
lo assure that all the provisions were
being carried out just as it docs in the
case of the Israeli,i)gyplian disengage-
ment accord.
The same official also disclosed that
Kissinger \Vas on the point of failure
three times during his marathon
negotiations with Israeli and Syrian
leaders. He said Kissinger had packed
his bags in prepara1ion for departure but
changed his mind because he was
convinced that failure \vould mean
rene\ved war in !he l\1iddle East.
Kissinger stopped off in Cairo to brief
President Anwar Sadat, one of his chief
allies in bringing about the agreement
between Damascus and Jerusalem.
Kissinger had helped negotiate a similar
cease-fire agreement bet\iveen Egypt and
Israel on the Suez front in January.
They held 31 ~ hours of talks in Sadat's
private home in the Cairo suburb of Giza
and later told a news briefing they
reached agreement "to establish a joint
commission for cooperation between the
t\vo countries in various fields for their
mutual benefit."
Kissinger's ·marathon 33-day ~1iddle
!See KISSINGER, Page ZI
Two Men Arrested
On Lewd Conduct
Two persons were arrested on charges
of lewd conduct Wednesday night as part
of a continuing Costa Mesa vice detail
investigation into restroom activities of a
bowling alley.
Both men were arrested at Kona
Lanes, 2699 Harbor Blvd., and taken to
Costa Mesa City Jail. Bond was set at
$500 each.
By the Associated Pres1
New accusations flew in all directions
t.oday as the race for the Democratic and
Republican nominations for governor
entered its final days.
And the candidates themselves flew off
in various directloos Wednesday with the
five top gubernat<rial contenders logging
more than 2,500 miles of travel up, down
and across California.
Among campaign developments
Wednesday. the Democratic a n d
Republican front· runners -Edmund G.
Brown Jr. and Houston Flournoy -
agreed that if they win Tuesday's
primaries they will debate each other
this summer.
And four lesser-known candidates for
governor got together in Los Angeles for
a raucous 'news conference h.ighlighted
with shouting, singing and accusations
that the press Was unfairly ignoring
them.
The quick agreement on a Flournoy·
Brown debate was something of a
reversal for both. Each -has been
reluctant to debate his rivals in the
primary.
Here is what . gubernatorial candidates
were doing and saying Wednesday:
REINECKE -The lieutenant governor
said if Republican voters nominate
Those departments wouJd be San
Francisco, Oakland, San Diego, Los
Angeles, and Los Angelea County
Sheriff's Department.
"We're the second largest police
department in the slate," Mendez said,
"aod we think our pay should equal the
others."
.Police Reserve Pay Queried
Flournoy, they risk tainting California
politics with the Watergate scandal
because Flournoy's campaign spending
repcrts were written on stationery from
the Committee to Re-Elect the President
(CRP).
"I don't think the Republican party in
California wants to have anything to do
with CRP and what they did In 1972."
~ said Reinecke, who hirnseU l.s awaiting
trial on a ~rjury indictment Issued by
the Waterglte grand jury.
He said the picket lines wculd be for
just one day, and there should be pickets
at all CHP offices throughout the state.
Body Located
J1i Baja · Wilds •
•
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The body ol an
American druQlat wbo lost his way
dutlllg a motorcycle .race May IS was
found today In tho Baja Calllomta desert
about nve miles from his abandoned
vehlcle, ...,.....,. 11kl.
A rpokaman aald Fred Mundy
apparmUy walked U to 15 milu a>UUJ
llld UMn beck -w...i u mu ...
How lq .... bt clled In tbe ICOtdlinC
beat wu oot lmmedlately known.
'
Mesa See ks Clarificatio1i of Neiv Federal La'w
By RUDI' NIEDZIEUIKI
Of tlle Dlllr ,,.., SllH
Costa Mesa city officials are trying to
get clarlflcaUon from the federal
government today about whether use o[
reserve police oWcers will -more.
A new federal law wltlcb went Into
efftcl this month Jeave1 the queslla>
ambiguous. U s II p u I a t c s till
governmental emp!oyes aro subject to
civil service and must be paid for time
worked. ,
l!eoervllta nonnally donate , mOll of
their lime, althcMgh Ibey arc paid for
apectaj aS1~m..,l!. The troublo 11 Colla
M-olfklals dOll'I know 1'bethet tlielt
25 t1Mn'e offlceni will be allowed IO
continue donating their houra.
' ,.
Wllllarn Todd. personal officer for the
city, said the Fair Labor Standards Act
"could be Interpreted either way."
He said a check with 1 o c. a I
representaUves of the U.S. Department
of Labor indicated that the practice may
conUnue, but inquiries have meanwhile
betn made In Wash!ngtoo to be
aboolutely sure. Todd ypecl! an answer
by tho end of June. •
Newpon Stach Police Chief James
vu has Interpreted the law to moan
,....rvlsts muat be paid for Ume put
In tho Job, Ill expenae which he
den proiul>IUve.
Qlavu said lhe law could mean the
end of tho Nelfpci<t Beach reserve force.
Colla -dty olflclala Rt1! boldlnl ttpt. "We 11rt11't 1<>!ng to change
• •
anything right now,'' Todd commented.
He added, however, that loss of the
reserves could be of far greater
signlflcancC in Newport Beach than
C.OSta Mesa because Newport Beach
relics heavily on its reserves for
manpower dmring the tourist influx each
summer .
Colla Mea Police Chief Roger Neth
said be secs no problem with the. new
regulations. He btllevea that reservist.!
will be able to conUnue as volunteen
and that the main difference will be that
reservists muat be pokl overtime If Ibey
put In more than IO houn I ... t.
0 We bave no planJ whatever to do
away with ""' _,..,, fon>e. 'lllil .. m
not affect our oporatloll u Ii II," llld
Neth;
I
BROWN -1be Democratic 9eefetary
of state accused Floo.moy of being "a
private Santa Claus for . giant oil
companies" In hls actions as chairman of
the State Lands Commbsioo.
In appearances in San Francisco, Los
Angeles end Long Beach, Brown said lhe
Lands Commission under Floumoy's
direction his Josi to the oil companies $84
million to $250 milU<!n In oil lea,. profits
which should have gone to the state.
FLOURNOY -The GOP frootrunner
called Brown's •ll~atloos "falle and
~Uilcally motivated and lal4 Brown
'lt-tfY\lll. to use me u 1 crutcli ao evoid ta1kJni 1boul lhe oilier Democratt and
(See PRIMARY, "•se II
3 Prisoners
Flee Ja.il,
Capturecl
Bv TO~I BARLEY oi ,,,. oair., P'11t1 stiff
Three Orange Coonty jt1il prisoners,
one of them a convicted killer who \Vas lo
be sentenced later tod ay. over1xnvere'd
their guards in a county courthouse
holding cell this morning and fled to a
brief freedom . guru; in hand.
One of the trio. Frank Allan O'Hare.
25, of Anaheim. was shot four times in a
gun battle that erupted as the three men
ned from the basement holcling tank and
tried to commandeer a pes.!ing car.
Ironically, the car was driven by off.
dul)' California Highway Patrolman Jim
Paul. 26. \vho drew his weapon and took
on the trio in a gun battle.
It ended with O'Hare shot in the right
cheek, right arm and twice in the back.
He is listed in critical condition in
Orange County Medical Center.
Police said PauJ was shot in the right
arm and shouJder. He is listed in
satisfactory condition in Santa Ana
Community Hospital.
Santa Ana police said convicted killer
Lawrence Eugene Wilson, 30, of Los
Angeles and Prince Pico Tarpley, 18, of
Anaheim, then left the two wounded men
and ran in different directions as the
police pursuit gathered momentum.
Tarpley was arrested moments later as
he sought refuge in a home near loth and
Parton streets, about four blocks from
the point of the escape.
Santa Ana police said a local youth who
noticed the armed fugitive dodge into the
house told pursuing officers w h o
promptly entered the home and grabbed
Tarpley without further incident.
Wilson, reportedly carrying the .357-
magoum automatic he took from
patrolman Paul, was next seen on 17th
Street where be entered a store and
inquired about welding equipment.
Police said the ruse failed lo deceive
them and they caught up with Wilson and
disarmed him as he questioned the
suspicious store owner.
Sheriff's deputies said Tarpley and
O'Hare were currently being tried before
Superior Court Judge Raymond
Thompson on five counts of armed
robbery stemming from incidents in the
Anaheim area.
Deputy District Attorney Pat Brian.
the prosecutor in that trial, .... ·as with
police and deputies today as they sped
along Santa Ana streets in pursuit of the
trio.
County jail officers have klentified
!See PRI SONERS, Page II
Qraage Coast
Weather
It'll be cloudy Friday morning
but clearing to mostly suMy skies
by the altemooa along lhe Orange
Coasl lli&hs al the beaches 66-68
rising to 72.74 inland. Overnight
lows tonlgbt 5MO.
m S IDE TOltA Y
Two mtn who often debated
ovtr 'heir drinking abilities.
held a match to decide mice and
for au who toal the champion.
Thew both cited. StoTJI, Page 4. •
IMtlttt ,.
L. M, llY• II c......... H c'"""" -.a ·-.. ,__. ..
OM9I ... "" • Nl'-ilt , ...... ,
•11W1teta141t » ·-...., -a AAu..t II --.
•
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DAILY PILOT C
l!ront Page l
PRIMARY ...
I
yet make headlines every da~ ...
' MOREM'l -'Ille Assembly speaker
condemned mllk price bikes in san
Francisco, tuition at Santa Barbara and
Brown at Ventura .
Jn campus appearances in Santa
Barbara and V~ntura he said the next
governor has "got to have guts" and
suggested that Brown does not.
ALIOTO -The San Fraocisro mavor
covered 1he most t{'rrltory 'ildnesd3y,
campaigning from El Centrl' near the
f\texican border through se~n cities and
about 1,200 miles to Eureka.
At Fresno, Alioto accused fo.1oretll and
Brown of being too so(t to handle a tough
crime problem such as the Zebra killings
and defended his own controversial
handling of that case.
''If people like Brown and Moretti \\'Cre
in charge of that police power, those
killings would still be going on. Thank
God they're not," he said.
ROTH -Democrat William fo.fatson
Roth said Wednesday that he has filed
formal complaints with the Federal
Communications Commission against two
California television stations \\'hich
refused to let him appear on panels
where Morelli, Alioto and Bro"'" were
invited.
•
Roth de1nanded eqU<ll time from
slat.ions KNBC in Los Angeles and KOVlt
in Sacramento. KNBC's Brown-Alioto-
Moretti show is slated Saturday. A
Moretti-Alioto debate was !aped Tuesday
by KOVR, winch is owned by McClatchy
Broadcasting, an affiliate or the only
major California newspapers to endorse
Roth.
Mesa Waitress
Foils Attack el'
Witl1 Pur~c
A "·aitrcss on her way home from \\:Ork
\Vednesday morning fended off an attack
by a graying ruffian \Vith screams and
blows with her purse, according to police
reports.
The attacker. described as a lhin v.•hitc
n1ale with graying hair. was hiding in the
shadows of a doorway when Suzanne 'J'.
Lapoinl. 39. was returnin g to her
apartment at 2364 Harbor Blvd .. Costa
~fesa shortly aft er 2 a.in. \Vednesday.
police said.
The man swung a weighted sock at
her, striking her in the back of the head.
She spun around, screaming and hitting
back with her purse. lie tried lo hit her
several t.imes without success as she
landed a seri es of blows v.·ilh the purse.
After lhe brie f combat, he turned and
ran.
TONIGHT
~tAY CHORAL CONCERT -Orange
Coast and Golden Wesl College Choirs,
OCC Auditorium , 8 p.m. No charge.
RABlES CLINIC -~1ain Parking
Lot, Orange County Fairgrounds. 7-fl:3U
p.m. $2. Costa f..lesa dog O\vners may
also obtain dog licenses.
UCI LECTURES -•·Learning to Lire
with Money." Room 167 Steinhaus Hall. 7
p.m. '·Adventures in Folk Expression:·
Room 161 J.lumanilies Hall. 7 p.n1.
"Photographers on Photography,'' Roon1
100 Social Science Hall , 7 p.m.
FRIDAY, ~1A Y 31
UCI LECTURE -U. S. Se n. John
Tunney. "Law and the Environment,"
Fine Arts Village Thea ter, I p.m. $2.
0 RC II E ST H A CONCERT
Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by
Eugene Ormandy. UC I Cra\\'ford llal!.
8:30 p.m. Tickets 646-6411.
COSTA J\1ESA FIS!! FRY -Costa
Mesa Park, 6 p.n1
U.T.B.U. -Costa f\lesa Civi c
Playhouse, Co n1 mun it y Center,
Fairgrounds. r~ri. and Sat. 8:30 p.m.
MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING
-Fairgrounds 8:15 p.n1.
ORANGE COAST c·~
DAILY PILOT
Tr>e 0.l<>Qf' Co•'·' 0• '• P,1 ' "'''~•"•Oh"_,,.,,. Do...., !~f' NB'*• Po~>l "fl<lbl, "<"1 ~y I"" 0 .. "?lt
C-.: Pi;cii"~'~O ~ MN<1<10 KM«t. ~•
1>11blll~tn Mn~~" '"'°'Ill" ~ndl< lot C,,.•1 MftA. ,..,.l!O', b""'" ...,~••"'11ot> &o.oc;n'f'o..n
IM<I VillltY ~~Yn• S..0<.~ '"""" ~do .. ...._o I'<!
Sall 0.m .. n•~IS•n .i.,,.n C.."'•"fr>O lo. ••"!Ii•
""9""'11 to:ll!•°" "t>Jtll""'..:I Nh,,a•n 1"i:I s..~· !!In TN l>(lroc:~ oo~"''""'l P•l>I ,, •' JJO W•"
~yS1reet. Co''" Mfi.11 c.11bn••. i2e~~
11.c-be<t N v.•,,,. I "··-·""""bl••-
ll'C>I" 'l\ lo, I.' II"' '"'
M1""9'"0 E~~Cot
Ga'e\H Looi >.,1-,.d P tl,:):I ot.u .. 1.,.iM11\6g•"'1 (0~<I'>
CO'lt. MaM Offlc t
3J0"'•Vb :Jl'e<"
~J~fl'~ 0.J Boo Sta, '12~i~
~OlfkH H""'°"'lle.KI' UJJ_&?o,.,,,.,1 ~•.,.9N<;f> 1n,_,.,_
~~floo.c" ,,.,~a.-.otl'!louo"" .. ~
'""'-"'• JOiHal~L.-:...-1 ....
•
On Strike
8)' CANDACE PEARSON
Of tr.. Dl llY .. llDI Still
At least 60 percent of the teachers in
the Huntington Beach Union •ligh
School District st:.igt'd a onc-Oay strike
today protesting urunet demands for a.11
automatic cost of living raise
'The teachers were scheduled lo met>t
at 4 p.m. today to decide if they should
continue their .... ·alkout .
Bruce Johnson, president of the District
Educators Association (DEA) said 550
teachers out of a Iola\ of 750 \l.'alked off
the job tod ay.
Dr. Jay Settle, deputy superintendent
of the district. estimated the number at
~50. Pickets, including some student s.
marched in front of each of the dist rict·s
six campuses. Inside, s ub s i I u t es .
counselors and administrators tried to
keep classes running.
"\\le've opened the cafeteria and
library and asked kids to go there if they
doo't tlave a regular teacher. Charles
\Viese , principal at Edison lligh, said.
Wiese said he Wasll't able to hire
enough substitutes to make up for the
100 absent kachers. There \\'ere only 50
teachers left on the job.
A lot of studenlS were going home
instead of staying at school , \V icse said .
''\\'e won't J!:ive the man unexc11sed ab-
sence. There'll be no pun ishn1ent. .,
Dr. Settle said the di strict had been
able to hire enough substitutes to keep
the schools open.
The district has offered the teachers a
nine percent raise.
The teachers "''ant the nine percent
raise plus an automatic cost-of-living
boo6t tied to inflation. If innation rises
two to five percent iri lhe first six months
of their contract, the teachers want a
raise equal to that amount in the last six
months.
If inflation rlses five percent or more
in the first six months, the teachers wan t
a five percent raise in the last half of the
yea r.
The board of trustees. htrough Dr.
Settle. has turned dov.•n the rost-of-living
provision.
The board la st week d e c I a r c d
negotiations were at an impasse and cut
off the talks. The DEA Tuesday asked
trustees to return to the 11egotiating
table. \Vhen they agreed. the teachers
gave the trustees a standing ovation.
But today, Bill Tizzard of the DEA. said
negotiations were again at an impasse
after a Wednesday session . He and other
teachers complained that Settle said they
didn't "have the backbone" lo hack up
their demands.
Settle today denied ever saying that.
"I did say J didn't think they'd ~tr;kc
.,.,ith the offer of a nine percent salary in-
crease." Settle added. "\Vell , they did. I
voas \vTong. I have to admit T'm surpris-
ed."
Settle. who called the district teachers
"outsU!ndin g." claimed they're the
highest paid in the county. among
comparable districts. lie said the 9
percent raise \\'Ou!d cost the district $1.8
million.
He added the dis trict can't afford the
cost-of-Jiving prov1s1on because i t s
income is constant and is also hurt by
inflation.
Fro111 Po.ge 1
IMPEACl-1 ...
in fa\'or. Conyers objected bceause he
v;anted stronger action.
Speaking for the Republi can opponents.
nep. David Dennis tR-lnd .), cal!C'd !he
letter a "useless gesture" and added the
committee \\'ould draw inferences fro1n
Nixon's noncompliance with the
su bpoenas "\vhethcr or not v.c v.·rite a
Jetter."
The Jetter as approved by the
rommillel' \1·as csscn!ially in the fonn
drafted by the commil!ee s I a I f
\rednesday night.
The President has steadfastly main-
tained he is innocent of any wrongdoing
in connection "''ith the \Vatergate scan-
dals.
Nixon Requests
Tape Dispute
Run Its Cours e
\\1ASHINGTON <UPI) -President
r\ixon today asked the U.S. Supreme
Court to avoid a "rush judgment" and
let his dispute wil h Watergate pr06CCutor
Leon Jav.·orski over subpoenaed Wpcs
take its course lhl"Q\lgh the lower courts.
Nixon said full consideration by
appeals court judges would prove his
ronfenlion that the doctrine of executive
privilege "remains alive and v.·ell" 1n
spite of repeated challenges b y
Watergate and impeachment investiga-
tors.
In a brief filed in the high court, Nixon
a11.5wered Jaf.orski's plea that the court
\\'Olive the normal appellate process ond
rule direcily on the dispute over
Jaworski's subpoena for 64 prtildentlal
tape recordings.
Ja~·orski argues speed is es.w.ntlal to
re~lve the ls.sue In time for the Sept. 9
trial of &even tormer \Vhite House and
ca mpaign officials on \\1atergate <.'OVerup
charges. But Nixon's brief said Jaworski
failed to show either the admlnistraUon
of jusllce or Ille rights of the accused
would be hanned by allowing judicial
review to "run Its orderly course .••
---'
•.
... ; .. •' o'
'
Huntington .
ManNahhed I
' '
-.; -• ' ''·t,•Souo !/-... After Chase
... ... ... ... A't 1973) -... -r.f/ ISRAlll • ·.
~ SALllNT • ••
A Huntington Beach man who allegedly
led Coata M"" pollce on a high speed
chase through three Orange C098t cities
was jelled today alter his auto
disintegrated at an Irvine intersection.
... ...
0
Taken into custody on charges of
reckle.s.! driving , driving on the ~g
side of the road, speeding, running red
lights, and resisting arrest was 11\omas
Job Jeavons of 8122 Deerfield Drive in
Huntington Beach's Surfside condomini-
"'""· JeavoM was being detained today at
Orange County Medical Center where he
""as taken for treatment of minor
injuries following the early morning . . ' incident.
A spokesman for the Costa ~1esa police
department said ·that two patrol cars
were modera tely damaged during the
chase, but that their occupants were not
injured.
• j ' • < .
• ' ' , , . ' O•llJ P'llll Si.fl ll'ht~
ltlr. Fi•h Fr11
Bert Smith, 61 , has run the
Pepsi booth at Costa ~les~i's
Fish Fry since the co1111nun1t y
event began 2.9 years ago. llc'll
be honored as "Mr. 1-~ish Fry"
at this weekend's renewal of
the famecl fry a.nd will ride as
a special guest in the parade
Saturday. -------
MIDEAST PLAN -Line A marks cease-fire line between Israel
and Syria forces. Line A-1 shows bulge Quneitra to base of three
overlooking hills that will be demilitarized but controlled by Israelis.
Line B n1arks other side of buffer zone.
The pursuit began at the intersection of
Victoria Srteet and Placentia Avenue
about 2:30 a.m., went into Huntington
Beach, and back through Costa Mesa
be fore coming to a spectacular conclu-
sion at the intersection of f\.tichelson
Avenue and MacArthur Boulevard in Ir-
vine.
Opponent Le·i:els
Coverup Char ge
Against D.c1 Hic1;:; 28•D Oc·ea1i J'ie'l v
Teacliers Retur1t
To Class Today
By KATHY CLANCY
01 th.t 01111 P'llDI Sl•ll
Teachers in Huntington T.lcach's Ocean
View School District ret. rned to their
classes today ending a one-day strike, the
fir st in Ocean Viev.• history.
In a unanimou s vote Wednesday. -185
teachers agreed to retu rn to work. a
spokesman for the teachers said today,
but they voted to consider a strike again
alter next Tuesday's sc h e d u I e d
negotiating session.
Ocean Vie\Y School District officials
reported 280 of the d.istricls's 568
teachers "'·ere off the job \Vednesday. A
teacher spokesman said the number on
st rike was 329.
Meanwhile. picketing teachers in the
Fountain Valley School Dist rict are
becoming more angry over the contract
impasse in theiJWlftistrict. At a 4:30 p.m.
meeting today in Wardlow Park ,
teachers \\'ill decide v.·hat action to take
next -possibly a strike or "sick in."
Teachers in the Huntington Beach City
(elcmen1aryl School District also arc
angry over what they clalm are delays in
contract talks. Administrators in the Seal
Beach an d Westminster School Districts
say nC'gotiatlons so far are progressing
sinoothly.
About 150 Fountain Valley teachers,
joined by a few parents. picketed district
offices Tuesday and \\1ednesday.
They .... ·ere particularly angered over a
\ell cr n1ailed by district officials to
r~ountain Valley parents this week. It
urged parents to send their children to
school in the event of a ''sick in " and
promising "there \\'ould be no retaliation
tov.·ard the children of parents "'ho are in
the schools during the work stoppage."
''l think this is the lowest thing they
have put out yet." said .Judie Lowman
president of the Fountain V a 11 e y
Education Association. "To insinuate to
parents that there would be relaltat ion
against any child is really hitting below
the belt."
Services Slated
For Earl Ellis
Of Co!'ta ~1 esa
Long-time Costa l\1esa resident and I
businessn1an Earl G. Ellis \\'ill be buried 1
Friday following funeral services at I
.Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints
Church. He died Tuesday at the age of
56.
f..lr. Ellis, a natlve of lngle\Yood , came
to Costa Mesa 20 years ngo and operated
F.arl's Automoti\e at 2076 Placentia
Avenue for 15 years. Prior to that he
owned the Knotty Keg on Harbor
Boulevard.
Funeral services are scheduled for 2
p.n1. with Bishop Robert J . Stone
officiating. Jntermenl ...,·ill follow at
11arbor Rest l\1emoria\ Park, directed by
Westc liff Mortuary. .
~1r. Ellis is survived by his wife
Evelvn Ellis, 2042 Anaheim Ave.: a
daughter, 1\1rs. Lana Lindsey. and three
granddaughters, all of Costa f>.1esa .
Services F ricla y
For l\fax Hur,vitz
Memorial services for Newport Beach
attorney Max Hurwitz, who died last
Thursday, will take place Friday at 9
a.m. in Dept. I of Orange County Superi~
or C'.ourt.
Judge Robert Banyard will preside.
Friends, relatives and members of lhe
bar are invited.
Mr. Hurwitz, S9, was one of the fir1l
atlomeys to establi•h a practice In
Newport Beach. He came to Newport In
1941.
Frnm Pagel
KISSINGER. • •
East mission ended at 6: 15 p.m. (8: 15
a.m. PDT) "'hen he left cairo Airport
after a six-hour stopQver in the Egyptian
capiU!I.
The United States released the text of
the Israeli-Syrian agreement today, along
wit h a map showing the cease-fire line
and the bu ffer zone to be maMed by
t:nited Nations troops in the Golan
Heights.
Also released \\'as the pro to co I
outlining the role of the U . ~ .
disengagement observer force, which is
limited lo about 1.250 men and which will
be stationed in the buffer wne of about
1.2 to 3.6 mile s .,.,.·ide to supervise the
agreement.
The text and map provided fe\Y
surprises. It provided for signature of the
agreement Friday in Geneva and an
immediate cease-fire in the Golan
HeighlS upon signature.
It also provided that the details of
disengagement be worked oot by Israeli
and Syrian officers >within six days and
that the withdrawals to agreed positions
be completed within a month .
Police said the Jeavons car struck a
curb at !he intersection and that the
impact separated body and chassis.
Shortly before that, squad cars driven in
the chase by officers Chris Morris and
Neal Hewett collided v.·ith each other at
the intersection of l\1iche\son A venue and
Jamboree Boulevard.
From Page 1
PRISONERS. • •
O'Hare and Tarpley as the l\\'O men who
overpowered two bailiffs in the basement
hodling tank while the prisoners y;ere
being assembled for today's court
calendar call.
They said Wilson, ..... ho apparently \\'as
not included in the origina l escape plan.
joined the two men in their dash for
freedom .
Officers sajd O'Hare and Tarpiey each
held a gun taken from sheriff's officers.
Jail officers said no shots were fired in
the holding tank or in the immediate
vicinity of the courthouse basement.
They said the first shots v;ere firl'd
when tbe three prisoners tried to
commandeer patrolman Jim Paul 's car.
It is not clear to officers at this time
"'ho fired the first shots in an cncoWltC'r
that left O'Hare seriously wounded and
the patrolman slum ped in driver's sea l.
WIXEMEX'S
CELLARS
Malfeasance in office charges against
Orange County Distri ct Attorney C('(:tl
•ficks officially became part of the publu."
record \Vednesday.
The Board of Supervisors ordrrt.'d
documents presented by 1Jicks" primary
election opponent \\'illiam llul sy of
rvlission Viejo be filed v.•Hh the clerk of
rhe board . j Related colunm, P:ige 3. l
Hulsy's allegations slate thnl ll itks
performed i m prop e r I y durin ~
in \·estlgation and prosecution !;1st ~·ear ur
a Garden c:rove traffic accident in \1 hit·h
\\VO ehildren "'ere killed.
Hulsy will be in Superior Court Frid;1~·
to ask Judge f\1ark Soden 10 order
disclosure of a portion of the accident
investigation report allegedl y covered up
by police officials.
The young Long Beach assistant city
attorney claims the docun1cnt shov.s
Hicks may have been involved in
"mal feasance and misfeasance in office··
during the aceident probe.
Hicks has branded Hulsy's accusations
as "libelous and scandalous" and would
not elaborate on the case Jn question .
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
2500 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT IUCH
PHOHIE 642°707& o .. ., .. _,.., a..--c ~l-•-~ IH ti4EWl"OIT l"IOOUCE VILLAGE
1&01 HIEWl'ORTILYD.
COSTA MIESA &42-9004
THIS WEEK'S CHEESE & DELICATESSEN FEATURES
,. • I I L.;.;"-1\l!ii
POLISH
SAUSAGE
CHEESE AT
AFFORDABLE PRICES.
, ...
I
. .
....
I·' . '
COTTO SALAMI ' ..
MORT ADELLA
" OHLYI 98 per
I ·. Re<J. 2.58 pound ;~, ~"""' ...... c_.. -:-·;
~ I
'
,, ..
COMPARI THlSI SP'ECIALS
MOZZARELLA
PROVOLONE
or TILLAMOOK
·<I.' Tow Oioke 189
; '
Most cheese merchants are reluctant to
advertise cheese by the pound. in tea r of
drawing attention to their high prices. Not
W1nemen 's our prices a re keen .... •••
~2.19 -::... ' :: UMlt l lbl. wftt. C...,oi. .... --.~ .. . -t;~;
~BUFFET CATERING ·sERVICE •.
Have you placed your catering order yet for that wedding or. graduation? We're still taking orders
and YOU WON'T BEl.lEVE OUR PRICES! Lei Winemen's make 1t easy for you ... Here's an example·
THE CAPT AIM'S CHOICE $2.50 ,.,. -
MEAT PLATTER: Boiled Harn. Corned Beef, Aoast Beef & All Beef Salami. CHEESE PLATIE~: Cheddar. Onion. Sw1s:s.
& Muenster. RELISH PLATTER: Black Olivet, Stuffed Green Olives. Sweet ~ry Peppers. Pieldes. Mustard & Mayon-
naise. SALADS: Coleslaw & Polta\O. CH01£:E OF BREAD: Rye. Egg. OniOn. ~ite, French. Puirwmlckel -Any Two
c .. ..._ s.r.k• .,, • ..,..:·-~ c.11111 •r n. w.;.. w. ~A LArtt .,.....,. Of e u ; • .,,._..
,:S.. ,,
ROSE' I"""" Portugal!
This Portuguese Rose Wirie is
s1rn1lar to lhe more expensive one
from Portugal th.at is very popular 1n
America •••
THIS WEEK'S WIHE FEATURES:
"JUG" RED·-CalHondo
Most wine enll'luslasls are on 11'\e IOOkOut lor· a good.
inexpensive wtne for every day drinking. The ~11y ol 11
all .,is 1n11 such are Nrd 10 hndl Winemen·a has had
great success witt'I this one ... Reorders are the prool
-manv top profflatOnll• think !here 's nolh1ng lik8
"DOUREM R~t ] 49.:.n. 1~•itLU VIMO"•Ul~DY •FULL 279
COMPAll Of' P.lt G.t.LLOH
. INCIDENT AL BoHUS BUY
Glass Car11M tor oonwnlenoe I ti1eo-~ when purfng "Jug Wi~s" '!' ~ that Nece&sll'Y Otcan-
tlng. , .\Vlnemen's NI Just whit youW beef'! !ooklno for.
HALF CARAFES ~ -T 69'... FULL CARAFES ':t °"" 99' ...
• I •
l
•• I
8 DAU,y PD..OT EDITORIAL PAGE
School Board Choices
, The Orange County Board o! Education Is a litlle-
understood but often·dlscussed· body. Two recent grand
juries have recommended abolition o! the county schools
office co mpletely, so poor is Its record of service.
Voters in two areas of the county have an oppor·
!unity In next Tuesday's election to help turn that di·
rection around. They can vote for promising ca ndidates
who show qualities that co uld restore to the board a
leadership role In cooperative educational services.
In 'I'rustee Area, 2, which includes part of Hunting·
ton Beach, the need for in1aginative, progressive lead·
ership could be met by Dr. David 1·1. Paynter. a business·
1nan who has learned the ropes over a 27-year career
as an educator.
In Area 5, which covers the south county and har·
bar areas, John 0. App. a young businessman. has the
qualifications of professional skills, energy and the view-
point of a parent of school-age children. lie is aggres-
sive and dissatisified with the status quo.
Paynter and App represent a forward step both for
the county office and the local districts it is supposed
to serve.
Sn1oothing tl1e Flolv
Good news for the Harbor Area ca1ne out of Sacra·
n1ento last week. A vitaJ. missing link in our local trans-
portation syste1n. the first stretch of the Corona del l\1ar
r~reeway, is going to happen after all.
For a while it appeared the section would be 105t
in a money battle as freeway funds began to shrink and
shrlnk. Then unexpectedly last w~k. California High·
way CommJssloners transferred $13 million to their
1974·75 budget which . along with $6 million in federal
funds. will complete the three.mile stret ch of free\vay
as well as the NewporttCorona del ri-1ar f'reeway inter-
change.
It is good news indeed for the business con11nu111ty
and for motorists who have been inconvenien<·etl by this
c1itical gap in the freeway systen1 serving this area.
To be sure. other Orange County project"i -notably
Lhe proposed Highway 39 freeway and the La;::una Can-
yon Freeway -have lost so 1nuch priorily they prob·
ably never will be con1pletecl.
Lacking tangible local ~upport. and faced \.\1ilh fund
shortages. con11nissioner:-; hatl no alternative but to de·
lay them indefinitely.
Undoubtedly the u11ilcd llai·bor 1\rea effort to up·
grade the Corona de! l\1ar Freeway played an important
role in getting it 1noving again.
\r otc for Patrick
;\111on g the special di st r i('t elections on the June 4
ballot. \\'i llia111 JS.. i'atrick will be seeking re-election to
his seat on Coastal ~lunicipal \\later District represent·
ing Division 4, V.'hi ch covers roughly half of the city of
Costa l\;tesa.
-
r-r :...,,
~·.
•
Ever since construction of the Newport and San
Diego 1'.,reeways. an unfinished triangular link connect-
ing the southbound San Diego with the Newport Freeway
at Bristol has jammed up a logica l traffic now.
Patrick has served well on Coastal, the water whole-
saling agency ·which serves Costa l\tesa County \\later
District and has kept C'f\tC\VD directors \Veil infor1ned
of Coastal's activities. lie has been an excellent liaison
111an between the two wat e \agencies. .l't :"' L. • ..i:M\.W·ll'lll"'"
c
~ . I l'O !HINK JE l\~Y FOl\D IS Tl\YIN.J TO 1ELL US SOMETHING.
Dori' t Lea1i
Too Ilea'vilv
In a Brooding Air, the Wolves Are Circling
011 t1ie Clerg)·
( SYDNEY HARRI S )
I h:J \'C nC\'{'r kno11n 11hrthcr to laugh
or l"rY n10t'l' y,hen people 11·11h emoiional,
1nanta1. or St•xual problems are advised
10 "turn to ~·our doctor or clergyman"
for counseling and ht·!p.
1'he truth of the n1atter is that most
docto rs and cll'rgymcn-in our society. at
least-arc no n1ore c;ualdicd by tra1n1ng
or len1t>C'":'l11ent to
f:'.11'1' such eounsc·ling
than a plurnbt'r ran
f I x l EU<;ltll'ill:tn
tube.
T/1c \\'l111e 1'/ousc is 11oticeub/11 ~n10//1•r tliese days. It's been set bock
/111'fl1rr fro111 tl1e slreet. The irou
uri//e<! fence around it l1as gro1cu
J11pl1rr. tl1011g/1 , uud lhe spikes <llop
fll't' l1u11t!d ra~or sl1urp.
()ccnsional/y at 11igl1t tl1e glhnn1er
uf 11 sliaded light cnn be seen llirougli
cJ IJol!crl. slnit ter. So son1eoue still
/10/tls out will1i11. But the gri1u1i119
1ru/l't'.~ are c1rcliug, circ/h1g. An<l cucli
Uny tl1ey urotc crcr bolder.
* • •
"People al.,.,•ays said they didn't like
the son of a bitch but they didn't know
1\'hy." says a reporter in th.e While I-louse
press roorn . "Now they know \\'hy."
He rlOC'sn't bother to lo\\·er his 1·oice
though a presidential aide is passing by.
The t1idc·s shoUlders hunch forward. His
head ducks. He keeps going, slaring
st raight ahead. Silent. The other ne1\'S-
1nen laugh.
Defending Nixon Ju st Isn't tlie Tlii11 g to Do
You can't blame the ai<le. Those fc11· i11
this to\\·n 11 ho still openly defend the
President. like Father John il:lcl..au ghlin.
the Jesuit priest on the \\lh ite House staff.
are subject lo instant deri sion . It simply
isn 't the thing to do.
Th~ \\'hite House press has been \\'rYl.v
critical in private of c\'ery President
since FOR . Cvnicism is issued 11·ith their
pencils and riotebooks. But never ha\'e
they been so openly and fearl essly
hostile . ne\'er ha\'e their jpkcs been so
vicious nor del ivered v>ith such relish. It
simply is the thing 10 do.
TlllS TS basically a Den1ocratil' 101111.
The ne"·smen. the up p e r-e ch t' 1 on
bureaucrats. the Georgeto\\'11 hostesse<;
-!ho~c 1r!H1 sc:t 1l1r tone . 1·1o~e !ltc
n1ood. detern1in~· 11/i<lt i)i in and 11ha1 is
( ART HOPPE J
nut -ar~ not only predo1ni11;intl y
llcrnocr:its. but intc!lectu.:il DL"tllot'l':lls
Since the d:i~·s of Alger Hiss. lht•y h:.l\i:
been Nixon ha!ers.
\\'hen the President was at the heigh!
of hls po11,·er. 1hey criticized him. But
rhc.v criticized him for being dull and
banal. and only among then1selves. It
seC'med a nieaningless ritual they went
through to help them endure 1hl' eigh1
long year• in hopC's that Camelot \\'Ould
co1ne again. But nov,o ..
"As the President 11·ou!d say.'' a
D:::mocratic congrt·ssn1an loudly asked
I IP· 11·aitt·r in ihP House chn1ng rooni.
"11 hat the lc-:plicrive deleted• is good
Inda~··· ..
,\ f{El'LJBLIC.\N col!c:ii.:uc at the next
t:1blc lookc<l 01·er. s1n1lcLI ru efu lly and
sadly shook his head . "Even the
H~publicans kllO\\' thcy·\'c been had."
said the De1nocrat lriu1nph;1111ly.
"Did you hear \1·hat he c;11led ·(Senate
flepublican Leader ) Hugh Scott?" said a
lttW}'er at a cocktail party. happily citing
an obscenity deleted from the tape
lrariscripts. this 10.,.,·n's best-seller. And
the other gue:.1s 1·ied lo bring forth
p!llms of prt•.<i1tlcnliat profanit y. as
t~ou11;h prof:1•Hly 11t·1 L: <ill in1peachab!c
Offl'llSl'.
And 1·ou can'! hl·ln fl'clin~ in \his ut-
n1osphCre nf l'iciousness. \'in diclive11css
and jubilanl relish !hat if the President is
drh·en from office in disgrace, it will not
h(' so n1uch for an~· high crimes or
n11sdemC':inors. but ~in1pl~ because tl11:s
1011 n hates his guts.
• * *
YI'! L111coh1 stilt broods in his tne-
H1t11·1<1/. As yuu 1~·11/J: do11111 Pe1111 s!fl-
i·onia Ai;c nue, Ille j/af}S still bru i;e/y
f/!J. the yra11ite and tl1e 111arb/e builf/.
i11ys still sta1id stro11!J I'll/Cl end11riu9.
AHd yon tliiuk tllis /y11cli-n1ob uberru-
fio11 11·11/ puss.
f or Coµitol flill-is 1101iceably 1119/1-
cr 1101v, clonte rnore dorni11a11t auc/ HI!·
posiug. II is noisier. too. <1~ tJie rei;-
elers 1oithi11 quaff fro111 the llefldy
cup of power uftcr o /11119. /u·ug
drought.
And 1naybe tliere i.~ vn :\rclutect
1cl10 u;atcltes over t1111· cle111ocr<1f!/·
Aud n1aybe u·l1u1 ire cire 1uulerr;o111g
1s the e.rcrttcioU11gl!' pai11ful proCl!liS
of having our i11sti11•11cr11s scult>d b11cl~
to size. The suit·1de an d
d i v o r cc rate of
doctors. dentists and
01her profcssicrals
1o; htghrr than tha1
of almost 111v 01her
occupation: \1,hile thnt of the m1111.!try
.... ould doubtless be much higher than 11 '"
if public opinion were nor such a rigid
determinant of their conduct .
Steam Cars: Great, But Are, They Practical?
DOCTORS are taught virtually nothing
about sex -except in its starke st
biological sense-in medical school. and
l'nost of then1 arc so organical!y-oricntcd
that they are either cmbarrassl'd or
impatient \1'hen co1lfronting obviously
etnollonal or functional upsets.
Clergymen' are at the other cittreme:
so "spiritually-m inded" thal they tend 10
turn psychological problems into ethical
ones. and usually propose "faith" as
futilely as the physicians propose pills or
a se a-change. They may offer n1ore
s~mpathy than the doctor. but sympat~y
alone can no more heal the heart than it
can reset a broken leg.
IT IS precisely because of these
obvious deficiencies in the medical and
thrological professions that millions of
Americans have !urned . perforce, to a
.,.,lid variety of emotional nostrums. fro1n
yoga and meditation to transactional
groups and sensitivity training. People
~1re desperate for help in reconstructing
their lives, and are as willing to try any
psycOOlogical cure in the same way a
bald man \Viii give any alleged hair-re-
storer a whirl.
Some of these programs are more
rC'pulable and resporsible than others,
but most (of whatever persuasion ) arc
under-trained and ill.@.reeted, faddish
or downright fatuous or even dangerous
to the stabili ty of the perso:ialitv. Alas,
there is no Federal Trade Commission,
no version of a Pure Food and Drug Act ,
to regulate or inhibit these promoters;
nor is there any rational way the can·
didate can evaluate the ted'lniques and
regimens offered by a bewildering mul-
tiplicity of seers.
OBVIOUSLY, not only trained and
licensed psychologists or psychiatrists
should be equipped to handle these
problems; there will never be enough of
them. Medicine and theology must take
up the slack by incorporating far more of
emotional and pastoral counseling than
ore now in their curricula. The average
doctor or clergyman today Is barely abl~
to cope with his traditional area of
disclpllne, much less to advise others on
the perplexities and subtleties of psychic
reality.
Quotes
To 1he Editor :
I read ·with interl"St the article In the
~lay 22 Daily Pilot about 1hc delil't•ry of
1v.o stram po1\·ered auton11biles to thC'
State of California at 1'1.~G:J.000 e::ich.
Assen1bly Speaker lwtorettL 11rcorrling tu
hirn, is proud to have spon~rt>d the pro·
JC'CI \\'hich he purports "SC''S out to ~i10·.1·
Detroit it's possible to construct a stean1
running car for urban use in a short
period of time \\'ith little n1ont•~' ...
He succeeded in pro\ ing none of 1ho:.e
contentions. He has made t1ro cars \\·hich
have not passed any California state
clean air certification tests. More
lmportantly, the cars n1ay not be
producible at any sort of a reasonable
cost. But, beyond that, the state has no
way of selling them.
A rar better use of that monev "·ou ld
have been to make it a prize for ihe fir st
private corporation 1vhich produced a
clean ernisslon vehicle for urban use as
evidenced by public acceptance in thl'
form of sales.
Mr. Moretti 1nay next decide to build a
nonpalluting spaceship with our money.
tity only hope, in that eventuality. is that
he is first to ride in it.
GEORGE E. HILL
••• A /\'11t111obife Instead
To the Editor:
In the old days when spring broke it
'>l.'as the ''perpetual motion" Inventors
who crawled out of their holes and
convinced the gullible to Invest in their
great inventions. Now it is the steam car
nuts wastlna our tax money to attain the
impossible. To listen to the great
pronouncements o{ Bob Moretti, one
would think that the engineers at
Caltech, Berkeley and at the Big Three
Dear
Glqomy
Gus
June M. T1aJbee, Mountain View -"I
believe that ranatics and terrorLsts
'flourish In a climate of desperation. We ,
need to revive our democratic processes
The Newport-Men Unified School
District seems to be shovinc prin·
cipals around, without regard to
their preferences. Isn't it about
tlme the top men who make these
dectllons be sbu!Oell too, for the
good of the district!
J.!..
es a legltlm1te avenue or etrecling
change, becauoe that Jll'Ol"'SS has taken a
boating In recent )'<Ir&."
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auto rcse:irth labs \1 ere a 101 o!
sirnpleton:-. and )flat they a re
deliberately itnpeding pro~re~s.
About all one can say in Jal'or or stea111
cars is that they are quiet. Of course ~·ou
could design thC"n1 to burn coal. k1nd;i11~
\\'ood or even old nc1\·spapers. but !he ir
standard fuel is petroleun1 hkc cars ,
especially dicsel-dri1·en ones, use.
\\'llE'.\,;E\'ER you in1L•rpOSl' PO\l'Cr
con\'ersion units like a !'leani LoilC'r
bet\\'een the fuel tC1nk and 1he rear
"·heels. you lose po\\'er and burn more
fuel. And you increase the \\'eight of the
poy,·er plant greatly . .,.,·hich takes niore
fuel to naviga te.
About the only people fa voring stea1n
are those \\-·ho hav e had little or no
engineering education. like sornc guys i11
the Legislature.
Steam c;:irs bum 1\·ith <111 o::.cn fla111e
and are ge11cr:il!y not atlor.'l:cl in cars
\\'ith gasoline-dri\'en e11<;1ne•. \1 hoE"
fun1es ni ight be ignit ed. The lxd!crs and
aondenscrs they 1nust have are hear~.
11,hich n1eans poorer perforn1ancc and
fuel mileage. :'l·lccha'tlic s don't k1101~ ho\1·
to service thcrn .
Tv.·o steam ears ha1·e al!ain:.':1 -mass
production and then had to be abandoned .
The two the Legislature spcnl $2.75
1niilion on looked prelty: one could not be
starlcd the second try. lhe firsl wouldn't
start at all.
THE TL\IE has come for us to consider
something really practical like niy
lnvent.ion, the Klock E i g h t -D a y
Nutmobile. which is silent, rcciuircs no
gasoline. has oo exhaust.
The mechanical principles of the Nut-
Mobile are time·tesled and even a child
can understand them. Everybody knO\\'S
the reliability or the eight-day wind-up
clock. It runs for a week on one winding.
The Nut-Mobile runs on the san1e
principle except with a much larger
motor. Just wind It up each Saturday _and
off you go to a week or carc·fre c and
expense-free motoring. If you are busy
mowing the lawn let your wife Improve
her figure by doing it.
FRANK KLOCK
Walch tlae H11ttcl1ers
To the Edltor:
I read with a gre~t deal of il\,terest Or,
Russel V. U..'1 suggestion that publlc
o{llctals whose "aberrations" cou1d cause
0 pubtlc hann" be removed from office.
lo a world where one superpower
alruidy categorizes some o! Its wa
tmal oppoaente as "b:Jsanc» and locks
t.btm aw1y bl ''uylumat• I said to
myteU, "'t'bls JUY bas got to be ·
kkldtngl" A careful rtadlng, however.
[ ..... _MA_1_1B_o_x_~J
Letrtr1 trom re1d1r1 ••r wt1com1. Horm111v
wrl!tr1 lolloulll con~tV lhlir mHYtH in :MIO worC11
O• llH. TIM rl•lll lo cOIKlenw 1e111r1 to Iii IPICI
or 1llmlllilll Ubll 11 r111rv~. ,\II tell1r1 m111! in·
<111<11 1Jrn1lur1 1nd m1ilin' 1<1<1r..,1, lllJt n1mts
mlt ltt wlltlhtld on requesr II ~11//l(ltnl ·~~wn 1'
IPPltl'lll. Pa.Irv will nol bl PUlllishtd.
ronvinced me that Or. Ll'e 11·as
delivering his idC'a '''ith a perfeetly
straight face and nicant to be taken
st•riously.
I have onlv nnt' quC'stion for Dr. Lee:
''\\lho detern1incs the sanity of the
sani ty-detern1 iners '!''
GORDON WILLIAMS
Tlie .'!i lieriff".• Job
To The Editor:
In response to .1our editorial on the
sheriff candidates 1 thiuk you negle1'l"d
to tell the readers some i1nµor1anl facts.
\Vhile it is your right to endorse
\Vhoever you choose, it son1cho\v dr1l'S
not seem fair to single one other
candidate out to attack. There are six in
the race.
I would like to point out that George
Savord has spent $21,000 to date ! bolh
filings) while Bradley Gates has spent
S5~,211 to date including both filings. If
tilr. Gates can't run a well-organized
campaign on that money, then he does
have a problem . Arter all. money can
buy just about everything these days.
AS A CITIZEN, I \\'OU!d like to state
here why I am interested in the sheriff. I
live in an unincorporated area, in a
community where tPe only 1 a w
enforcement is the sheriff's department.
C.'rime has increased each year since
1968 when 1 moved there, but. the she'fiff
patrols still remain inadequate.
Orange c:ounty citizens have had the
same person as sheriff for the last '?5
years. Twenty·fivc years is too Jong for
the same person to stny in the same Job
in the same location.
His department shows it : It has
become decadent.
When I learned the present sheriff
hand-picked one of his men , Bradley
Gates, to succeed him, my lint reac1ion
was one of fear. Fear that the present
situation will remain or worsen.
Why?~ I..ogically speaking, a person
chooses another to succeed him for
several reasons. For example. the person
agrees In phil030phy and wlll corry on 111
lhe -same way.
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Orange Count.v needs a change. It does
nft need a jail facility that is the talk of
t~e stat~ or a sheriff 11·ho h:is allo\1·ed
crime to increase in San Juan Capistrano
300 percent and a pron1ise of a substation i ~ the South Count:-.r that is a political
drea rn and Orange County does not need
<i man \\'hO will follow in the footsteps of
the one \rho has prop:lgaleU that
deterioration either.
Let's be fair and give another person a
chance lo make this a safe county to live
and work in ; let a person who is more
qualified and who can't buy the office
"'ilh tricky high partisan can1paigning
h<Jve a chance.
Jiaven't we had enough of that in 1973?
CONSTANCE BENEDICT
\\111111l1e Silence?
To the Editor:
Th<1t 11·as excellent editorial t·o111n1en t
"Citizens \Vant Facts." Daily Pilot, May
22. \\'e Costa 1'-1csa \'oters have been
follo\ving, lhe McFarland dismissal 11•ith
C'ontinuing interest and find it eitlren1elv
cllrticult to understand our ELECTED
rity officials' continued silence, Turn
nbout is fair play. Shall \re voters remain
as silent at the polls in the next election?
MRS. SUSAN NORVILLE
• Help for """""
(I'o the Editor:
On April 26 your paper published an
article about a night to be remembered,
the spring prom that y,·a:; held al
Fairview State Hospital for the mentally
retardt>d.
\Yell, the dance was a tremendous
success, a good tin1e 1\•as had by all. The
reason it was such a success 'vas
because of the combined efforts of many
people behind the scenes. 1 feel the need
to say a genuine than\.: you to lhc~e
individuAI people and organi:!::ilions \\'ho
offered 1hei1· assistance: a!1d it \\'a.: an
offer, nothing )'.'as requcs te:I.
These people heard or our effor1~ to
have a reAI formal dunce for the men and
women and responded "''Ith enthusiasm.
So, thank )OU: Kt'n \Valkins. Orange o.
Jo'loral Association. Hollister~ Nursery,
Broadway Dept. Store. Mrs. Beebe, The
1.0.Q.D.. JsJand Guitars. M a mm A
Jammas. Joe Church and The Dail}' 1>1:01.
LINDA LAWLESS
Ward 31
Does Spe~d Kill:'
To the Editor:
The Dally P '·~ l'<illorlull,v hns tollo•cd
Go\•emor Ret ,'s unsubstnntlnted llne
that the reduction in highway latahtics is
directly attributable to the Nixon
administration's, nationally enforced. 55
111 .p.h. speed limit.
"Speed Kills'' headlined the May IS
Daily Pilot editorial authored by an
anonymous writer "'hose expertise on !he
subject will possibly also re1nain
questionable; h o w e v e r , in his
international best-seller, "Unsare At Any
Speed," Ralph Nader exposed the Traffic
Safety Establishment which h a s
;ipparently used that slogan ··for
decades."
Said Nader:
" 'Speed Kills' and 'Slo\v Do\vn and
Li,·e' are familiar (slogans) peddled by
the National Safely Council. But of late
the council, which is heavily endo\Vl'd by
the Automobile r..t a n u fa ct u r c r s
Association, is underplaying t h cs e
mes.sages. O\\'ing in part to the
embarrassing effects of the automobile
co1npanies' promotional emphasis on
horsepower, speed and racin;~ and --
encouragingly enou~h -due in part to
t~ results of a slud.v by the Bureau of
Public Road s concerning the relationshi p
between accidents and high1vay speed.
"Accident involvement rotes arc at a
minimum at speeds bcl\\'Cf'll 50 and 75
miles per hour. As the spt1cd goes below
50 miles per hour or above 75 n1iles per
hour, the involven1ent rate increases
rapidly, iand J ... lhe nurnhC'r of injuries
per vehicle miles tral'l'led is at i1s
minimum in the speed range of 45 to 70
m.p.h."
BRUCE S. HOPP!:\~
OIAN&I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robtri N. \Vf'td, Pub/Js11c r
Tlio•nas Kec1·il. Editor
Barbara l\rc1fnch
Eri ltoricrl Pane Ed irur
Ttif' tdlto11;il p<iCC' of thr O.a1ly
Piiot :iCtk5 10 lnk1n11 and s1ln1ulatt
l'('adtrs by preM!nUl\i on this page
dlvene 1commtntw)'on. topiCll of ln-
terrst by syndicated ("()]umnJslg and
cartoonl.sts, by Pl'Q\·!dlng a forum f()t'
ttaden' \'lt\,·1 and by prc~tlnr th11
l'ICWS~pe-r·11 opinio.ni. and kt.u on
current top!CK. The edl!Ol"u,ll oph\Jona
ot I.ht Daily Pi.lot •war onl)I in the
tdltorlal columll at tile lop o< the
pact. ()pinions t."iprmc'd by the f'OI.
umntata and cutoonlstt •nd ltttrr
----vltern.nrtnelr ... and-no~
mrnt of tht.lt 'Yi~.. by 'the D&iq
Pito<-btlllltmd.
TI1ursday, May 30, 19H
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Donations
To Nixo11-
Door Tro11hle
Microwave Oven
••
.• 1ursday, May 30, 1974 DAILY PILOT 5
Woman Will Head College at Sonoma
Vincent CoUege ln New York,
$90,000
·~·· ... \•·· ... LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Ro~hnert Park at the end of lhe
Dr. Mar~ie Downing has 1973-74 academic year.
Downing served as dean o! the
college at Sarah LawrenCe ln
New Yo rk.
her master's from Catholic '"
\\',P\SlllN(;TON I APl
Public donallo11s dl·s1gncd to
help Prt•sidC'nt l\'ixon pa.\' hi~
Warnings Loorri
del1nriuent f('dcral inc: o n1 c \\.\Slll \'CTO.\ 1t;Pl1 -~ 11111;.:(' l:dch or sCaling surface
la xes totnt S!"I0 .000. the \\'lute Thl' Food a11d Dr u g b damaged.
lluusc has annou11cl1d Atln1i111s1ra11011 h:1s ordered TllE OVENS, \\'lllCll have
1' h c in on c ~, . c x c £' pt p~·rniancnt 't'arning lnbcl s on been selling at a rate of about
anonymous donation s, is ~ing al! ni•w n1icrQ\\J\e ovens, bul 3oo.ooo a year. can grill a slt•ak in seconds or coo k a
returned to the senders since turllt'<I tlov.rn J consumer ronst in a fraction of the time
Nixon announced hl' 11·1!1 pay group's t"t'qucsl lo in1posc conventional oven methods
the IUXt'!'! ),HT?Se]f. lighlcr suft•ty rul rs 011 the
1'hc anoi~~ n1011s funds. whirh industry
1he \\'hite lfouse said come to TI1e l1.1bels. \1·hich ,1·ould
S~.341, v•ere turned over to the bccon1c m;indatory t h 1 s
require.
C.:onsumcrS" Union. which
petitioned the r~DA ror new
safety rules last summer,
contended the oven'> leak
been named president of Cal Currently a professor of
State Sonoma by the board of English literature at Scripps
tnistees of the California State College, Dr. Downing '!\'as
Universities and Collegt>s, the dean of the faculty at the
ftrst woman to reach that Claremoot school for slx years
level ln the C a Ii r o r n i a bePrg~g ln 1965.
educational system. 10r to moving to
"Dr. Dowliing, through her Claremon t 1n 1961. D r .
DR. DOWNING h~d previous
teaching e xp e r ience at
Barnard College and Brooklyn
College.
She received her bachelor's
degree in 1938 from Mt. Saint
University in Washington,
D.C., and her Ph.D. fro1n
Yale University in 1942.
Dr. Downing, 57, is the
widowed mother of two sons,
Francis, 18, and Nicholas, 15,
who reside with her tn
Claremont.
~---~-----e1t e n s lv e experience in_ academic administration and ... ...,..., _______________________ ._..., .... .,.
notable scho l ars h i p is
especially qualified to continue
with the f oresighted
devek>pment of CSC Sonoma.''
Chancellor Glenn Dumke, said
Wednesday.
COMING SOON .
THE COSTA MESA POLICE ASSOCIATION
F··• al 0-•• A . 1 sun1mt'r. "'ou!d warn th e user l-'\.ICr JSas....,r ss1s ance not to operate the ov en 1f radiation and pose hazards Ul'I Tt1...ito11
ranging from burns to FIRST IN STATE
DR. DOW~'TNG succeeds
Thomas H. PifcGrath. who is
retiring from the presidency or the 5,SOO.student campus at
1974 BEMEFIT SHOW
Administration to aid victims there is an object caught in
of recent !\lid"·est tornadoes. the door, if the door does not
Nixon requested this. close properly, or if the door ,
interference \1•ith electronic Dr. Marjorie Downing
pacen1akers implanted i n --- - -
----'---------'--c _ _:___ ---
LAS VEGAS
heart pati<>nls.
'fhc group. \1hich putili:;h,.,s
the nlagal1ne. Co 11 s u 111 c r
Reports. had requested a
1nore extensive \1·arninh label
advisin g U'"iCrs !o keep ovens
out of !he rr11ch of c:hlldren.
avoid peenng inlo 1henl v.'hilc
Pot Pat~h I t
Sheriff G.rows His Ou;1t • t
deluxe rooms
on the strip
in use and tc!lin)'.; pacemaker TISH0~11NGO. Okla. (AP) so1nc people to think they
mighl be growing it by
mistake in their backyard or
pasture."
patients to !eave the roonl. _ Johnston C.Ounty Sheriff
l'r ALSO \YAi\'TED tougher Everett Stewart has a sma ll
flJGEPOO.
TELEVISION
24HOUR
PHONES
AIR
CONDITIONING
COffEE SHOP
fiY 1 or? People
2 doubl" beds in
eoch room
~?OOeoch for
P(t/o quesls
' ; IUI U'l!J your
room.
Good all week· except Fri., Sat. and
Holiday Periods & Summer Months
When rate is $17.80. ..------r-----U M 1 TED TIME OFffR TOT Al PRICE,
RESERVE NOW! NO EXTRAS!
For Reservations Information coll
(7 14) 533-6050
KONA KAI MOTOR INN
A Fir~! Clos5 Motel ... A Pacific Holidoy Resort
5191 Las Vegas Blvd ., South, las Vegas , Nev. 89109
~·. ;
Super B
Kodachrome
movie film,
209reel
testin g standards lx>causc. it
s;1id. presl·nt industry tests do
not du pl1t:atc even normal. let
alone abnnrma!. use that the
ovens rllight receive in the
h;1nds of consu111crs.
!.;1st fall the FllA tested 200
n1icro11 ;1\(• ovens in actual usc
in hurnes and quick-food
\1·nd1ng t'stabli~hn1cn\'i iind
found th;1I 89 of them leaked
h 1 g h c r ·th a n • p erinitted
;imnunts of radiat ion \\'hen
:;uhJl't"!l.'d to the lcsl the L'nion
~at:gt·~tcd
1\S FDA SPOKES.\IA'.'i said
\\'(-<lncsday the lack of specific
test rcqu1 re1nents in the nt•\\'
rl'g1da t1ons -\\hich were put
forth for ;1 60-dav eon1111c11t
pen0<t before becOmu1g final
-did not incan 11lc agency
\1·:1s .1\·01ding th e is~uc. The
spokv-.n1an said lhc FDA
iritrndrd to t'Qri!inut• policing
1ndu.~tr\· !r~t n1r!hocls 011 an
111111ri11;d ha si~
149
G.E. MagiC
flash cubes.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores:
f ASHIQN l~l/1Nt~ t-.J~Npcr1 Bt-•vh. {714) 64'1·?31 3
HUNTlf':jGTON CE"'ltll:. H•J11:1r''I' •1 1 .. o·h f/14) 892·777 1
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garden adjacent to the county
jail where he raises a
number of items, including
marijuana.
Stewart. an officer for 34
years, said he had about 3,000
visitors to the pa tch last year.
September I, 1974
Sixteen marijuana plant s.
now about three feet high, arc
in the patch. surrounded "'ilh
u high rhaln link fence.
"/ !ct it gro'v here so people
\\di kno"' "·h;il it looks like."
the sheriff said. "11 srarcs
Kids Like to
Ask A11dy t AMAHEIM COMVENTION CEMTER
• for info call 963-5011
10 Laqy Csonka,
widema11 -in a narrow World.
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Gfriendship Service.
e only wide-bodies
to both FKand Newark.
{Starting June 15th.)
For stretching out, leaning back and all-around
comfort try our 747 and DC-10 Friend Ships on for size.
Another reason more people choose the friendly
skies than any other airline in the land.
/'tfl y man who spends hi s workin g d~ squeezing
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United s w1de·bod1ed 747 and DC·IO Fnend Ships.
On board , th crn's extra space, Four Star dining. aud io
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Service Supervisor to help smooth your way. Fnendshtp
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Check our schedul e. Th en call Unit~d at
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Tra,·el Agen t.
And go wide. With United. I
Los Angeles to New York
b . 8:45 a.m. (DC·IO) Ar. 5:00 p.m. JFK
12:00 noo n 17471 8:05 p.m . JFK
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The friendlyski~of your Janel.
UnitedsNewYOrkers
Pinne11 in Travel with Western lntemationol Holols.
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