Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-06-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-· . , Fin,.l Orange Connt;Y Vote B~turns1 ' • Con.nty Voters Ba~k L~~al Candidates; Battin Defeated • I Nixon!>s Brothers ~ake Appearan~e Before Sen. Ervin ' ·.~ --:-·-- --r -·---. -----~.'------- WEDN,ESDA Y AFTERNOON, JUNE 5, I 9H YOL. 61, NO. 15" 1 SECTIONS, 111 PAGES Caspers In -Without A Runoff Incumbent Fifth District County Supervisor Ronald Caspers won election to his second term Tuesday, brushing aside challenges by three opponents. It had been thought Caspers might be forced into a runoff. but, when all the votes were in, be had about 54 percent uf them. Caspers: 54,488 Marcia Bents: 18,666 Nolan Frlzzelle: 7,363 James Thorpe : 17,177 As in his· past election effort. Caspers waged a big money campaign to retain his seat. He raised more than $150,000 in his re-election. bid and spent just under $100,000. • His t hree cij:iponents aU -~ceded he probably cou!d not be beat.en in the primary but merely forced into a November ruiloff. Between ·ihem, his apponenLt rai!led and spent about $40,000. The Fifth District race was marked by a pact among the candidates not to spend more than about $93,000 each -about 50 cents per reglstercd voter in the district. Caspers' chief opponent, Mrs. Bents of Newport Beach, charged sever::al weeks ago thal Caspers ha~ already ex~ed that limit and hit $120,000 in his spend.mg. But top Caspers aides said the (See CASPERS, Page 2) Oraage Coast Weather Night and mo~g low clouds clearlng to hazy afternooa sun- shine Thursday. Warmer inland with highs in the mid 70s. Beach b.ighs in the upper ~. INSIDE TODAY Pat and Richard-Nixon .... we-re marriea tliere. Humphrey Bo- gart boozed there. Terldy Roose• Vt'lt slept there, and now the A-1i1sion Inn is backdrop for movie about a Holl ywood leye11d. Scor11, Paoe 16. • Al Yffl" ltt\'!Ct J IN!lllt II '-• M, .. ytl 1J C1Ulor1111 l •J CINtl' C-t II C llHllld 4Hf c-1c, .. c ... ••Wff'll .. 0t11t1 N.tlttJ U 1Edlltt111 ,.,. • 1Ellltt1tl11ll'ltlll l+.U ,,..._llC9 21·U P"tl' lfll llKtl'll 11 Htr.tt.t11• JI """ 1.11111en JI ' MilllloK t MOVltl H•H Mvt ... 1 Fllllf1 U N1tle11o1t Ntw• H cw-(1111111 lJ ·~, .... ,..,,... 11 "'9th 1)-tt Ot'. SltlllC...rtll U ltK• MM'lltll n ·lJ Tllffltto tt.U Tt'cvltllR H Wtlt!Mtr 4 w1fc1m1 A-..rtl :IO Womt11'1 N..-. ~ World Nt "o 141 CLARK RET AlNS COVNTY SEAT Orange County Board o f Supervisors Chainnan Ralph C1ark or Anaheim won his second tenn as the Fourth District repreScntative TU~sday, defeating his lone foe by a 4-1 margin. _ Fina.I vote totals sho\\·cd Clar"k with 50,743 and Garry Nelleson with 15,137. Bnker to Face Foe in N o·ve1nber Runoff Election · Incumbent Supervisor David Baker, a three--tenn veteran on the Orange County board, faces a November runoff election against the top vote getter of his two Tuesday primary election foes Larry Schm it. Wltll all · the county's t,849 precincts reporting, the seco nd supervisoria! district totals are : Baker: 30,074 Larry ~hmlt: 22,217 John T. Dean : 14,349 Dick Ruiz, Baker's top aide, said today the runoff came as no su rprise and was due primarily to a strong Schmit vote in Garden Grove. He predicted Baker should win the runoff handily. Schmit and Dean campaigned against the so-called "incumbency" factor which holds that the longer a man is in office, the less responsive and honest he becomes. Schmit ran against Baker four years ago and came within 6,000 v o t e s of upsetting him. That was about the closest Baker has come to defeat in his long tenure as a supervisor. Schmit and Dean said during the campaign thal Baker has gro wn unresponsive to his district and has not pushed hard enough tor a share in funding for recreational areas. Because of the near disaster in 1970, Baker raised and spent a large war chest on his campaign this year. His spending wasn't even approachl'<t by both his opponents combined. As expec ted, Baker ran a strong race in !he cities of Huntington ·Beach aild Seal Beach but ran behind Schmit nnd Dean Inland communities such as Garden Grove and Westminster. If Baker wins in November, he will be the. longest winning-elected offl<'ial st ill in or flee In Orange County . Scualc Sa\'CS Beai.:les \VASlllNGTON (UPI ) -The Senate Tuesday voted to prohibit the Army from testing poison gas on Beagle puppies and told the Pentagon not to spend nny 1noney that ~·as added to the defense budget just to prime the evonoinlc pump. rown, ourno 0 President's l\.ii1 Make Appearance WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon's t\l'O brothers appeared before 01.ai rman Sam J. Ervin and Senate Watergate committee aides t b d ay. reportedly in connection with a $100,000 gift to the President from Howard llughcs. A committee source said no questions \Vere put to the NiJGOOs at an hour-long morning session in Ervin's office because of dilferenccs between lawyers for them at]d the committee. - The two. F. Dooald Nixon of Newport Beach and Edward Nixon1 had been interviewed under oath previously by conunittee investigators on the West Coast U,.I °T91tfl'bolo TREADS DAD'S PATH Democratic Nominee Brown CARRIES GOP BANNER Nominee Flou rnoy ~--- The brothers were asked to return in the afternoon for questioning. They raised so me questions or fairness and the scope of the inquiry, said one source. Battin ins in County "They have not refused to ans~·er any questions, but they tcel · they have complied with· our subpocruis as full y as they can," he said. Bu,t Loses S tate,wide The Ervin committee is known to be in vestigating the c i r c u m s t a n c e s By DOUG FRITZSCHE surrounding Hughes' 1969 gift to the 01 1111 D111r "'"' staff ~=·~~=gh. his close friend , C. G. Orange County voters supported local P.1 an hi! the H J d . . statewide candida tes Tuesday, helping to Co~it7ee eis cons~e~ing u cal11i~g1 a r Y' senrl Democratic Assemblyman Ken ex-Cory or Garden G r o v e to the fSee DON MXON Page %J November state t'Ontroller's race. About H E LEAVES HOME O VE R TELEPHONE The Dail y Pilot sincerely hopes that Its ads won't drive you from your home. Bui here's one Bet JhRt did jtrst tlf!lt to the Newport Beach man who placed II : 52 percent of the cou.nty's voters wenl to the polls. 1rvine City Councilman Jfenry Quiqley polled 54.979 county \!Oles. but appJren1l y lost the statewide race for t h c Republican nomina tion for s t a t e treasurer to John T. Kehoe. '7ll CHEV. HorlWll. 24 Ft . pwr. s~-'4 ,bra.kec. JS~OOO mi. Comp. self-contatned. 110 generator. air4Ctlnd , Supervisor Robert B.:itti~. while he took ian-etlsy-majority of-county-votes.....42.688. 1osl the 1 statcw ldc race for h c Pe~atic nomination for lieutenant • ovep10r to l\·lervln Dymally. ,.. -· · c.ory.,.too11;.400 c..'OUlllf Yarns as ht! grabbed the lead in the Oe1nocralic slate controller's race. In the same race. f'idel (ioni.alez of Westminster took a sctlnl bike rack. 1io1ay trade/offer. (Phone No.) The ad 90Jd the mot or home olmO!lt hn- mediately after the paper c?rr.e out and then \\'eat on to produce so many Inquiry calls that the advertiser left home to get away from the phone. Test a Daily Pllot ad for the results )'ou ~·ant. Dial the direct line: 642·5678. 6,S32 Orange County votes. . On ballot propositions. the county rc£1ccted the statewide rosullS. passing all initiallves except Proposition 7. defeating it by 180,406 to 1~7.602. County returns. wh ich the registrar of voter! predicted ~·ould not be in until after noon, were available al 7:27 a.m., rive hours ahe:id of schedule. In the governor's race Edn1und G. Brown Jr. took 67,634 votes In the Democratic primary and H o u s t o n Flournoy 111,258 in lh e Republican race. for lieutentant governor Republican (See COUNTY. Page ti Bod y Dracr cred .. ~~ By Hit and Rtm • Lt~IA, Peru fU Pil - A hit-and-run driver dragged the bodf of a n unldenliried man t~·o miles along a high- speed expressway. then calmly stopped his car, det.1chcd what was ;left of the bodY :rrb"1 his 'rron~ bumper and drove on. authorities said. Peruvian police said they knew what car to look (or In the death of the victim, ''ho was about 25. Judging from the trail of human nesh and blood left on the north.JOuth Lima Expressway. lhc driver being sought dragged the body along while rrlction \vith the road surface cut off bolh legs .'Ind the lerl side or the torso and face. The driver then pulled over to the sid(I, dump<'CI. the rest nnd drove on. • • California • Turnout Belo'v 62% LOS ANGELES (API -Ca lifornia's next go,•ernor will be either Edmund G. Brown. 3&-year-old son of the state"s la st Democratic governor. or Houston I. F1ournoy. a Republican beneficiary of \Vatergate. Both won their party's nominalions by comfortable nlargins Tuesday. as palls predicted, in a surprisingly low vi>ter turnout. Bro\\'n led San Francisco ~-layor Joseph Alioto 1.023,059 to 505.589 v.·ith 9~ percent of the vote counted. Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti \\'as third with 452,268. Flourney, 44. v:on a landslide victory over Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, who wa s the front-runner before being indicted April 3 by the \Vatcrgate grand jury. lie pleaded not guilty but failed to get a trial da te before the primary. Fl ournoy had I,073,000 votes to Reinecke's 515,498. Voter turnout fell y,•ell below lhc 62 percent predicted by Brown. the secretary of state. Candidates blamed it on \Vatergate-caused apathy. Bro,vn. who led the fight for a controversial political reform measure, told supporters that he and ~·1ournoy would have to work harder in the fall because "the people arc skeptica l of the political process.'' He said he expected a strong race from Flournoy. whom he described as "an intelligent person and an articulate spokesman for his cause.·· Fl ournoy predicted an ··interesting and exciting campaign" and added, "\Ve are going to have a united Republican party." Brown who shrewdly publicized his office and stressed political campaign reform, led the polls from the beginning. A fonner Jesuit seminarian. he had a considerable adVlllltage as the son or Edmund G. Brov:n, governor from 1959- 1967 . Flournoy, conversely, was an also-ran with three percent in polls a year ago. He moevd to front. runner, \Vith 44 per- cent lo Rcinecke's 27 percent a week be· fore the elt>Ctio11. Reineke is accused or lying lo the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1972 when he denied he advis'ed the U.S. Jllstice Department and then-Atty. Gen. John N. ~fit~ll of lnt.emational Telephone & Telegraph Co. 's offer to help under·write the Republican National Con\•enlion . Hclnecke's trio.I is set for July 15 in • ... . ·' •" !See GOVEf\NOR, Pnge %) • ... 2 DAIL'I' PILOT S W~ntsday Junt 5, 1974 ' -Ed11cati011 Race Paynte~, App Win '~asily' ln the. non -partisan county Board or Education race Tuesday, second trustee area candidate Dr. David Paynter and fifth trustee area candidate John 0, App defeated their opponents by v.1de margtn.s. Unofficial final results in Arca 2 v.·erc : Paynltr 34 ,014 John D. Harper 24,671 in Area 5; App 31,768 Ernest G. L3ke 23 ,929 Lynda T. l\foss 2-1 .349 Incumbents in both the 2nd and 5th trustee areas. which correspond with the 2nd and 5th supervisorial districts, decided not lo seek re-election and the campaigns had a reform character. The uniform charge y,·as. that the county Department of Educalion and its board of trustees was out of touch with the local school districts And it was not provicj.ing the kind and level of services it should. In Area 2, John D. Harper Jr., a former Fountain Valley City councilman and Fountain V:illey school board mem ber, charged thal his opponent, Paynter, ""'as a career educator and would not adequately represent the interests of the citizenry. y,·ith a "vested interest" in the office since he was the only one with school age children. lie was also."hc pointed out. the only non-educator running for the Jay office. If elected. App s..1id . hr \\'OUld atten1pt to determine Yi hether services of the county office could be in1proved and, if not, would recommend abolition of the department. ' \ T elepht;>ne Gable Cut- In lV,ewport Edison Compa ny contractors Tuesday -5evered a major underground ltlephone cable by accident Tuesday while 'digging ne.ar the intersection or Jambo~ Road and San Joaquin, llills ~d in Newport Beach. Telephone service lo about 900 Pacific Telephone customers, mainly bu.s,jpesses In Newport Center, was cut otf from 9:45 a.rn., when the accident occurred, until 3:30 p.m. Prefixes affected were 8.13, 640 and 644. A Pacific Telephone s po k ea m a n explained today that it took 12 men almost six . hours to splice lhe cable because they first had to dig a .p!t .!JO they coold ~·ork on the cable buried 10 fret underground. '" He said it \\'as then necessary to splice each of the 900 pairs o( copper wires individually inside the tw~inch diameter plastic cable. The spokesman explained t b a t ac(.:idental cuttings of telephone cables occur from time to Ume bed'use contractors don't contact Pacific Telephone's cable locating crew before di gging. ··we'll be happy to show them where the cables are located if they'll call us first 21\ 633--0811, 24 hour& a day," the spokesman said. I Fro111 Page 1 A Hot Car -' Costa Mesa Fire Department experts today were f,roblng cause or blaze that destroyed station wagon n faculty parking lot at Orange Coa.st College Mon- day. The imported vehicle. registered to Robert Jones of 308 Poppy Ave ., Corona del A1ar, was a total loss. No one was seen in immedate vicinity ·when flames erupted. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Santa ~i\na Mayor to Face • Fro1n Pagel DON NIXON. ••• Paynter, formerly superintendent of the Garden Grove Unified School District and now president of Test-A-Lab. a bealth screening service. responded that, while he v.·as proud of his caceer in :ff:je~:~~aL:~~;~~~f:a~~r1:~ / · COUN TY . . . Ex-prisone1· Ul November :;b:lyti .. ~I apai~~rt· ~olha;.l:~.':.·!:E~~ John L. Hanner polled 109,671 votes. ~ .,, ..... , job&th the Area 2 candidates se t goals of In the secretary of state Democratic milk produce.f oontri~OflS to the 1972 improving the county office's role in / prima7 Orange .~ty bucked the Santa Ana ~.fayor Jerry Patterson will clearly dominatlXI. the field with \vhat Nixon reelection campaign. • voca~onal education and holding _board WINS NEW TERM HANDILY ~~\~d~~~n g=giw:~e SvoJ:~~ confront f~rmer Prisoner or \Var David . some obsef!'ers called a '· G_o ~: The impeachment panel ~ll use a new mee~1ngs away from .the county offices to Fifth Dis tr ict's Caspers !han to ;.,arch K Foo "'"ho ~-on the Rebm~r\ 1n a Novem.~r contest !o ~ mothe~ho!;Ml. flag a~ apple p 1 e report fn>1n the Senate Wat,rgate provide gr~alcr public exp:isure. . 'nomination. Eong · polle~ 24•731 countv v.·ho will sue~ re11nng 38th District campaign. ~luch,. of ~ supp:irt came coffimilitee conlradicting N·i x-o1l, a _ _ . l~ft.rea a__...JlllSJ..tlCSfilP.an.,APJl-W3S pllte4---.. _ ---__ -== _ _ --•ole} ;=Iri]M ·BP.pi~cmi: aci..£bti ·ldt ~~n-R1chard--T.. .. Hanna._ ._-:_--dr,om. thoae-sympathctic _t.o..-Jbe-bt:...ol-----=--~ifiitlr.i-:lha~~ ... ~...-.....,..-~-11--:=1 ..... -_..,~~m,_~..n·Q col~~~"·..Jk.~~ -·---:--------::-_:::-:-:=:-----~·inner·Brtant1::-V:rn~Pcarr1ed~~ma~f8f:HOt"-ffie:DefilOcratie-Party-"eteFW~riO-J?OW.a.----. iai....1~uu~u .,.. ,¥d lli,Wss. ~ , counl "'ith 50 afi7 votes for the secreta are : • Clemens, ~{rs . Neugebauer and Risser supports m H111 because ol congressional All ~ree_ S?Ught to improve the of sJte nomi~ation ry PaUerson: 21 .657 failed to generate the same kind of pressure. t;. communications betvree~ t.he county In the Republi can· controller's race the Howard AdJer: 16 753 support Rehmann got from the 75,000 The Senate committee staff raised the office and local school . ~1str1cts and to county supp:i rted statewide w 1 n n er Leonard Holland: '5.739 Republicans !n ~he .district. question whether Nixon lncreased the strengthen. the leadership role of Ute William T. Bagley with 91,716 votes. Albert Nasser: 2,309 ~re are mdi~tion.s he could ~6 supports In return· for a pledge of $2 count y of~ice. . In the treasurer's race. the county Republic.an totals are: ~ ~1rst Republican in the Democratic million from the dairy industry. , App said he was the only candidate supported Democrat, 1 Jesse ~f. Unruh Rehmann: 14 .099 district elected to Congress In , many Col.son, who pleaded guilty Monday to ""'ilh 70, 268 \'Otes. Joy Nellll:ebauer : 9.838 years because 0~ strong ~sw~lls of obstruction or justice tn the Ellsberg Graduates Told To 'Be Proud' AlR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (AP) - Vice President Gerald R. Ford told the Air Force Academy's 1974 graduating class today "you should understand the attitude of the \.\'orld toward the United States.. and take pride in being . an American.'' In a commencement address. Ford said the Egyptians, Syrians and Israelis looked after the Octobe r ~iideast war not to Russia, France or Britain for riegotlations, but lo President Nixon, "because they knew he could get the job done." Simon Assails Tax Reform Bid WASl:ilNGTON (UPI) -Trearury Secretary William E. Simon urged senators tOOay to drop their plans for a tax reform package -~·hich includes a tax cut -on grounds it could cause an economic slov.-down. Simon said tax refonn should proceed slowly and carefully in Congress' tax· writing commillees, not from a series of amendments on the floor . L~,\ Convic t Killed TRACY (UPI\ -A 29-year-old convict from Los Angeles was stabbed to death Tuesday in a maximum security cell at the Deuel Vocational Institute. Ivan C. Knox. who had only been at DVI since April 30, died at I.he prison hospital. OU.NGI COAST " DAILY PILOT l,,. Or•"?' tout o.i., l'rlol. *""-.., 11..,.... ""*'""" ,.. ... ~ .. Pl>'*-&or .... °'.,., Coo"~~·~~,~, .......... ..... P<llll>,,,•d. ""<>!Od•• '""'-'II" '"""•· too ~. ........ N...-lleaU'>. -•"Ui<Wt ........ ~_.. ta1n Valley. lo;u'I S.""" i-,....~i..;, o-.1 Stll ~S.o ,,...., Q_....., II .,._ .......... .a~..,... " -·-s..-... •"" s... ... ,,.,.. Tiie I>"~ °"°'I~ pla"' 11 .t l:lDWM! ea, su ..... Coot• ~ Qh'°'""· •n1'11. h ;l l!..(ll'ley VQl'ttt"!...,-0..,,..al "'ana~ lf·ort":r.K",J Ed""' • l'<'""IO' A M,,..c:J.ne "'•'W'")ld~OI Qote,H.l~ R.c~P.Nol A>111ta"'~l•4ott OffkH Coll•"'"" :IJ'JW1'11.&avSll8L ~8wt .. tJ):)N-~ltlf l 09""• o.""' 1~1 , :!'• ' ....... , ... '"'''"no!"" IJ.ooc:" ' ,,,,!low<'• 8'>..> ..... ~ ~•('• .... "•.YltO."'"L ........... ~ ... Tde,h-17141 &42·4l21 Ct.s&ifitd A.lhtrihlflt &4J·5t71 1.,,...Cot,.Jl"'-~°'~-h .... 4tZ·44JG f"'"' No<tl> c>...,..°"""'~· ... 140.IJJG ~ ,,,, ~ ONtl ~ (qo. -No--141 ....... __ lll .. ,,. ... -·-·-... ·"'~ ..wf>ou! "'*"•J --o'"*'"""'- ~ '1"" PCl'!lll"' l*lltt C.1 lll•1t1.Cl"b ---tbl-ltf-•iDO.....,...,.IWINll •t,QO 11\0A!N',, O\fl1_!.,.. -IMI-tl 00_,, Ol!llY 1'1111 Sl•ll l'l'lole FORCED INTO RUNOFF Second District's Biker From Page 1 C~~SPERS ... supervisor considered the ceiling to run from the date he officially filed as a candidate and would not include money spent before that date. ~1rs. Bents charged late in the campaign that Caspers and his aides had "strongarmed" big rompanies into making large campaign donations. She said Lhey fearOO decisions on projects needing county approval would be S\\'ayed if the money wasn 't given. Caspers labled the charge "ridiculous." Caspers' other l\\"O foes, Dr .. Nolan Frizzelte of Newport Beach and James Thorpe of San Juan Capistrano, \\'aged active campaigns but spent lin1itcd amounts of money. Optometrist Frizzelle slumped around the district. stopping al centers and other public areas appealing for votes. Thorpe. the former mayor of San Juaa Capistrano, concentrated in the south county area, \\'here he is best kno"11. T oucli of Ol<l Soutli in Seattle SEAITLE, \Vash. (UPI) -At the breakfast buffet line at the National Governers' ConfcrenCi!. 10 \"ailresscs stood staring at a dish they \reren't familiar 'vilh . "\\lhat is !hat stuff ?" one ask('(I, i\londay, perplexed . ·•1 don't know . It looks like Farina," another replied. Finally, a kno\,·lcdgcab!e waitress solved the mystery. "Jrs grits," she said.-"and you can't run a national convention without 'em . ., Suspect Surrenders STOCKTON <UPIJ -An Army veteran Rccused or kldnaplng t"'o women at knifepoint and driving one of them to Texas voluntarily surrendered ~1ondey lo a police dispatchP.r at a Fort \Vorth suburb. The man was tentatl\•cly, ldentlfled as Jerry ~lartin, 27. who lives on a houseboat in \l.'tuskey Slough near Stockton. • , ' In the attorney general race Democrat Beau Clef!!COS:. 3,739 support among voters of partie. break-in case, will be interviewed by \\lilllam A. Norris took 82,695 county J. F'rede;ick R~sser : 2.91 1 , impeachmer!i invstigators as a prelude to voles and unopposed Republican Evelle All canchdates 1n the race fo.r Hanna.s possible intem>galion by the fut l J . Younger 169,144. ~at appeared lo be keying . thei r Handyman Faces judiciary commit!~. In the U.S. Senate primary, incumbent campalgn.s to the successes and f~llures· -Nixon's fonner special counsel \\·as an Democrat Alan Cransn carried the of Rehmann, who was the favonte all Administration liaisoo \.\'ilh spec i a I rounty with 122,911 votes in his party and along for tbe GOP . nod: Tn'a} 1'n Dea flt inWrest groups and helped solicit the Republican H. L. Richardson got On the Democratic side, the contest dai ry donation pledge. 110,!52 votes from his party's faithful . appeared to be clOBCSt between Adler, ' The President has no renson to rear Patterson, the mayor of Santa Ana. Of Young ~'lar1"ne Colson's testimony said Nixon lawyer Adler based his campaign on his 1,. James O. St. a&ir' Tuesday, and woo.Id : su~ from ,Hanna and .Pledged to include listening to two tape rea>rdings cootmue Hanna1 pr~_1n·<?:mgress. Los Angeles handyman Eldon Peter or presidential conversatiom it got from From Pagel GOVERNOR. • • \\'ashington. Flournoy told cheering backers early today that he wouldn't go along with a suggestion by Brown for a mQfatorium on campaigning until September. "I don't believe in that~'.' he !aid. "I believe the people of this state should have an opportunity to examine the is· sues." Brown told supporters that in both his O~'n victory and that of Prop. 9, "The vote or the people is very clear, for re- form and against corruption." (Related story, Page 4). The p:ilitical campaign measure, de- scribed by supporters as the stiffest in the n11tion, limit contributions, requires identification or all contribuUoos above $50 and creates a po"'"erful commission '\'ith a $1 million annual budget to ad- minister and enforce the regulations. In addition, public officials are requlrtd to periodically disclose their assets and out· side income lo prevent connict-of-interest problems. Jur y to Receive lloax Evidence HALLANDALE, Fla. (AP) -A federal grand jury will soon get evidence tn co nnection with an alleged extortion hoa1 In the case of a banker who claimed he \\'8S kidnaped and held for ransom , police say. James Longo. Hallandale chief of p:ilicc, said Tuesday the FBl had told him that the case of Albert Dantzle,, 43, '\\'Ould be presented to a grand jury in Fort Lauderdale this week or ne1t. 5,000th Pair To Be Spliced June brides make thls the busiest month of the year for Orange County Clerk William E. St John and his marriage t>m'9ll" v.'Orkers. but St John took time out Tuesday lo honor one young coople thal look out a marriage license. Chri~tianne fa.1arie Hardesty, 19, of Tustin, and Jerry Carl Farasalll, 22. of Fountain Valley, rot the VIP trtnlment . They arc lhe 5,000th couple to take out a n'lan1.age licen!'tf In Orange C°'uuy this year. St John marked the occaslon with a special cere1nony in his office. Jerry, a night dub singer, and Christl!Me \\'Ill be m a r r l e d S.1turday. The newly· !onned distnct JS. some-Dearth '>''as ordered late Tuesday to face lawyers for Ralph Nader, who filed a ~'hat wiusual . m Orange County 1n that trial Sept. 16 in Orange County S1ipcrior civil suit in the case. it has a considerably l_arger n~m ber .of Court for the murder of a young Camp Another tape, the June 20, 1972 Den_Mxrats than Republicans on its regis-Pendleton A1arine. recording that contained an 18 111-mlnute traNllon rostendrs. lloll d 1 1 t Judge James Tumer set the trial date gap, was deemed Tuesday to have been asser a an ran ess po eI_1 for Dearth, 47. and ordered the defendant purposely erased. campaigns than the t\\·o Democratic returned to tbe co'urtroom July 12 for In a final report on the missing frontrunners. . pretria.l action on the capital charge. minutes. a panel of experts told U.S. On the Republican slate, RehmaM Dearth is acc\}sed of killing Marine District Court Judge Jolli J . S!rtca the Dale Artbur Erlewein, 21. He is held In snme thing it said in a preliminary Nixon to F ill Post county jail with bail set at $250,000. finding, that someone erased the tape Erlewein's deterioriating lxxly, covered between five and nine times. \\'ASH INGTON (AP) -President Nixon soon will nominate a replacement £or Donald E. Santarelli, the Justice Department official who resigned after a burst or criticism of the President. Deputy White House press .secretary Gerald L. Warren said Tuesday that Nixon will move quickly to f i 11 Santarelli's· job as head of the Law Enforcement Assistance Admin istration. ""'ith a canvas tarpaulin was found last "This report draws no inferences about December in a ravine near San Clemente such que&tions as whether the erasure High School. and buzz "'-ere made accidentally oc Police later recovered the weapqn used intentionally, or when , or by what person to put a bullet in the dead man's head or persons," it said. and linked the revolver to the arrested But the lawyer for presidential Dearth. secretary Rose J\fary. \\'oods said the Police believe that the body or Erlewin report Was "worthless" and charged that had lain in the ravine for about a month the \Vhite House. Sirica and Watergate before it was found by the dog of an off· prosecutors were plotting to Incriminate duty policeman. f\'liss Woods. I ~ ~·nm Lynn Hort HART'S Jo hn Hort SPORTING GOODS BICYCLES-f'ARTS-TIR ES-ACCESSORIES •i MAM I .~ 1JmTTTll'*illlr ~ ........ v .. ,, ~ 538 CENTER STREET .:...COST A. MESA.-646-1919 CLOSID SUHDAY • ¥.!ilsll F l:GF Baseball Shoes All Purpose Shoes Soccer Shoes Tennis Shoes Warm-Up Shoes Football Shoes Wrestling Shoes Tennis Dresses Mens & Boys Tennis Shorts Mens & Boys Tenn is Shirts Warm-Up Suits Hats & Visors Mens Tenn is Sweaters - .._ ••• , Ill Tennis Rackets Wilson -Davis -Bancroft Dunlop -Yoneyama Ra-~cq=-u-.etooll~acquets & Balls Handball Gloves & Balls Table Tennis Paddles & Balls Squash Rackets Baseball Mitts -Balls -Bats Softball Shirts Softballs & Bats Volleyballs Basketballs Soccer Balls Slant Boards Weight Sets Bike Repairing Bike Parts -Tires -Tubes , ' ' ' ' 01('~ WtdntMiilp Junt-5, 1974 s DAILY PILOT :I Sheriff's Ruee Sewer I I . Projects .Gates Defeats 5 SupenJis ors Narrowly E1·1dorse-Facilities " Wl"IA'I SCllREIBER which means we must havl: the mouth of Allio Creek . • ,y °' ~ O::,., 1tijo1 ,, • .; .approvals by no later than this the new treatml'Dl-plant, ta be built A divided Orange County Doa,rd of rnonth," Kymla said. along Aliso Creek. would cost jbout ':8·6 Supervisors Tuesdoy hesitantly endorsed lie su.ld it appears tbe huge project million , _the outfoll anothe.r $2.76 million County Ho·p_ef uls ·~ twc massive south county sewer projects could be entitled to as much as $19 and various new transmission system:. despite fears \they wilt Induce runaway million In grant money through the another $7.4 million. population arowth a.nd heavy air Environmental Protection Agency and Leyden Delaney, an engineer ror the pollution. the Callfomla Water Quality Conlrol state 'Nater quality control board, told ' Supervisors voted 3·2 ln favor of Board. supervisors the new fa cilities are needed resolutions supporting constructlott of Kymla told the board the ultimate immediately. nearly $40 million in sewage treatment growth AWMA Is predicting for the 57,000 "The problem Is critical right now and and lrnll!mifiion racllltlcs by the Aliso acres it serves has been cut to about these groups have banded together as Water Manunlcmcnt Agency (AWMA) 190,000 by the year 1995. Current AWJ\1A to prevent the critical problem Bradley Gates, a 34·year-otd sheriff's lieutenant from Capistrano Beach scored a resounding victory over five opponents to claim the Orange County Sheriff's seat being vacated by the retirement of long tinle incumbenl James l\1uslck, Final totals arc: and the South 1.-:ast Regional lteclama· population is about 77,000. . from becoming a crisis problem," he lion Authority (SERRA ). · But Supervisors were con<:erncd with said. (~rge Savord: 37,960 Officials said they needed the board another quoted figure of 250,000 over the He warned that any delay of tM!lr l'lltl' ,,.,, ,...,. l\farshall Norris: 36,319 Catts: 234,451 endorsement to v.·rap up flna l stale and next 20 years in the area. Kymla said the construction would neccessitate almost WINS RE-ELECTION EASILY -J~rry Lee Lawrence : 12,453 federal approvals for the projects, which final population figures are not set but in lmmedia1.e crackdowns on roning and Diitrict Attorney Hicks Gene Vinlove: 8,560 wlll affect ho111e and business owners any case, the coWlty would have the new <jevelopment in the area. from Irvine to San Clemente. power to review any and all new The project was opposed by l\fayor Roy Spero Janise: 5,906 The resolution the board \l'&S asked to development in the future. Holm of Laguna Beach, who sakl his city c l H , k '"1e margin of Gates' victory came as approve stated the projects v.·ould Both the AW)tA and SERRA projects -which is part of AWMA -favors the eci lC S a surprise to many veteran· political ccntribute to air pollution jn the area but have gotten stroog endorsemen.t Cr6m lhe regional approaCh to the problem but observers who thought Savord \l.'Ould were of such signifjcance that the air San Diego regional water quality control fears the massive growth and air pollu-make·'it closer. pollution restrictions had {O be exceeded. board during plaMlng c 0 mm Is s I 0 n Uon croblem it cOuld stimulate. 'I ' D . The resolution also reserved the hf;arings dating back as far as two ye~~s. Oa e ~ord, spokesi_nan fo 1 r t'he counedty n . espite ~t first tiie_race_ to fill the slleriffs right of the county lo clamp zoning and The latest hearing was last week , wuen Environmental Coalit100-;-a so-opp:>s seat was a close matchup between Gates building controls on development In the planning commissioners. heard both lhe pacakage for similar reasons. "The and Savoro, a former Cypress police two agency areas that could be spurred agencies ' make a presentation. ~hey question is whdether tdhis_ l?OdY whaants to111 Scrindal Case chief highly honored in Jaw enforcement. by the new facililles. forwarded the packages to supervisors make the Ian use ec1sions I t w t.A Supervisor Ronald Caspers added a for action this week. afff:!Ct the future of the county or But a series of rrrors by Savorcl's further stipulation in the final version of Kymla said the project had to be built delegate it in a de facto sense to other campaign lenders eroded much of his the resolution. lie said the board by July of 1977 at the latest to meet agencies or a group of land owners," Orange County District Attorney Cecil support and Cates surged into an endorses •·a project" -not necessarily requirements of the state and federal be ltaid. Hicks was returned to 'oUice by a acknowledged leadership position. the one being considered by the two government for effluent water quality. ·He sald the environmental impact landslide Tuesday despite efforts by his Gates ran a smooth ca1npaign, agencies -that "'ill solve current water He sald the key problem is putting in a Report prepared for the project is chief opponent to • generate scandal \\'ell oiled by contributions from top pollution problems. new deepwater sewage outfall at the inadequate in its discussion of air Republicans in the county. He was · nd h t t. I charges against him. Caspers calh ... >d the proposed projects pollution a growt po en 1a s. virtually hand-picked for the job by "overkill" but said they had to be Supervisors were told by Kymla that With all 1,848 precincts reporting, the retiring Sherif( J ames P.1usick. approved in the inter.est of solving M w· most organized community groups in the count was: t Norris, a superior court clerk defeated current problems in the 'SOU!h county. -a11gcrs IDS area suppon the plans, including the Hicks: 212,079 by Musick four years ago, ran in third During the hea ring, supervisors were Sadd1eback Area Coordinating Council. \Villiam S. Hulsy: 83,142 spot . behind Savord all through the told the new facilities would Increase lhe DemOCI'ab'c Nod The SERRA proposal is similar to the Max Sturges: 36,970 campaign. His chief concern_ and that capacitv or south county se'vage systc1ns AWl\tA plan in that both are eligible for Sturges, a Newport Beach lawyer, of most candidates _ was \\itll alleged enough. to handle a maximum population huge grants. drew 3 surprisingly large number of poor conditions in the county's brand new of 600 000 people. ~Currently less than F A mhl SERRA's project, consisting mainly votes in the contest _despite a jail. J50,QOO, people live 1n the enhre south ~OJ• SSC yman of a new 30 million galton-per-Oay outfall virtually non-etJ.stent campaign. V~nlove, a Fullerton bar owner! waged county. . · . offshore froi:n . £:!ana Harbor, would cost The District Attorney's race didn~ a llin ited campa1~ because his hnanc1al The ai r pollution . ..fears ~te ,. ~_trecil!---Edocali01!3!._---eonsuHant --D:.e n n.i.&---~~~llio~--~-.~ _ • ~:at.up ~l~h:e 1-Wuf ew _w.~~ e le d -suppor~ was ·mtilliifat:-• / REPLACES JIM MUSICK New Sheriff Gates Janise, a Laguna Beach resident. tried late in the race to pick up the pace o( his campaign through hea'1' advertising but t.he effort ca111e. loo late. The final candidate in t b e race. Lawrence. "''as a self· proclajmed "herb dealer" from Costa Mesa who is facing felon y charges of s e 11 in g mar!iuana._, __:_ ::=:...=. ·-, ------;~~~~~n ~ ~U:r~~~~gm:~fi:;.h an'Ct the ~1an~ers defeated . Hprospcril'y _plan" w~~~I~ g~~~~p: 0f:d~~1~01;_!~~ "~afr~f~c~ an~ misfea~. in office" ·~~.. (ijcct._is,.....lh mas.l..,.. candidate A-~-Vkn_P~tcn~ ~~!XJ!l_ I~ e&lle~~~~u1.i9_~~-:--.. cb:at£es._a~~ . ·--11--.!--blUou P:_ -· --~ ·-~~AS®mbly :--Ulsfrlcr--1n ...--Tue KymJa sai\1----W.~tened -resolution Hulsy claimed Hicks exerted .undue. m- •i:;gcn_c:· Chairma_n Carl Kymla . told Democratic primary for a chance to run passed by the board wo.uld still s~it the ~:;:;n:i ";:.;!~n:=e :r,,:,a~v:;:t!J:; Bona;llalliiford Winners • supervisors th ere is alre~dy a cr1t1cal against Republican incumbent Robert purposes of bot~ agencies. He sa1df the personally involved with. The woman water pollution problem Jn Ule AM\VA . plans a re not final a.nd coold con o;m . . · volved in a Garden area, which enrompas~ eight in~ividual Burke in November. . ~ore closely to 'desireable population ~~~n:rri: ~cd~nt that killed two • waler a~d sewage s~r.v1ce ag_enc1es. Burke, unopposed 1n the Republican figures. . children. • He said the $28 mllhon pro1ect AJ'MA primary, polled 30,337 votes. Superv1~rs Ralph Clark and Robert flicks ehemerllly denied the charges, In 34th District Races is plann ing -whicll includes a new Mangers' 14 130 votes I 0 pp e d Battin said they want ~ clean up. the daiming his personal life v.·as not at treatment plant, several main sewage , ' water but both voted agamst_the pro1ects issue in the campaign. He said be handled lines and a huge dccpwater outfall off VanPetten s ll,l98. . because of potential gro~th inducements the case properly by declaring a conflict South Laguna -is eligible for huge st.ate VanPetten, who has run 111 four past without concurrent plfilfting. of interest and turning it over to the and federal grants. Congressional Primaries, campaigned on California Attorney General for Long Beach Assemblyman Bill Bond streaked past Long Beach C i t y Councilman Don Phillips in the 34th Congressk>na~ District primary Tuesday with 21,697 votes to Phillips' 16,163. 1 \allies lipped the balance for Ftanaford.: In the uncontested Am e r i c a n Independent race James Alanis of \Vestminster took 57 Orange Coun ty "'But we are on this year's priority list llis book, "The Prosperity Plan," which prosect.ition. . outlines a 8ix-point plan of political and Jke Disliked Hulsy, a 31-.year-old ~offitor m the So1neone Knew A Just Cause ME XICO CITY (UPf) -The wedding party for l\1aria Jos~ Lasso. daughter. of Spanish singer Gloria Lasso, was going full blast "'hen a woman burst into the room and ,;creamed: "Cornelio is my husband!" Cornelio -the bridegroom -is Cornelio Guillermo Sandoval Castillo. also a singer. The shrieking woman identified herself as Mulenta Cortes Sandoval. She said the groom marricd her on May 21, 1971. The bride, stuMcd, picked up the lrain of her white wedding gown and ran from the room, followed by her mother. Police led the bridegroom away to jail. Nl.~ONS PASS President Ni~ and his wife P~t are registered voters in San Clemente bul they did not take out abi;entce ballots for Tuesday·s primary election, the ?ra":ge County Registrar of Voters office said. economic reform. Mangers, 33, of Huntington 'Beach, vice president of American L e a r n i n g Corporation, promised to be an "outspoken and aggressive spokesman for the environment." He also campaigned on improving the quality of education. Nixon P1·oposed For Peace Prize Montgomery, Says Author LONOON (AP) -An upcoming book quotes the late Gen . Dwight D. Eisenhower a.rs. sayin g Britain's World War 11 commander, Field Marshal Lord "tontgomery, was a man who "just can't tell the truth." American author Cornelius Ryan said the late president and \Vorld \\'ar II supreme Allied commander in Eur~pe gave him an interview with the promLSe BEffiUT Lebanon (AP) -A Lebanese ii wouldn't be used until after his dealh. columnist 'today proposed President ln "A Bridge Too Far," to be published Nixon for the 1974 Nobe~ Peace Prize in September . Ryan quotes "for setting the l\fiddle East on the peace Eisenhower as saying of ~fontgomery: pa th." . . . "lie got }i(I damn personal to make ·'He deserves 1t for creating an image sure that lhe Americans, and me, in of a new, even-handed America, striving particular. had no credit, and nothin~ to to lead warring Arabs and Israelis to a do \l.'ith 1he war. that I eventually Just just and lasting peace," ft-lichael Abu stopped communications with him. I was Jawdeh wrote in the newspaper An not interested in communications with a Nahar. man that just can't tell the truth." "He also deserves it for braving Montgomery, nov.· 86, has been in P?Or immense security risks and deciding to health. His brother, Lt. Col . Brian make a trip to Middle Eastern capitals J\.1ontgomery, said the two had a bitter many of which have long been dead-set quarrel over strategies and both had against the United States:··_" ______ be<.c..:.n__:_pa_rt_l.:.y_r..:ig:.ht_. _______ _ Cigat•s 11re Kid Sttiff Two-yea r-old Bobby Wright of Sterliog Heights, f\'tl ch., enjoys a good cigar 1as well a,s the next fel- low 1\t left he gots a Ugh;t from his grandfather, Dori Henderson. then takes a puff (righf). His ful)llY • allows him a few puffs per smoke, and then only about once a month. Bobby picked up the habit fro1n a 5.year-old cousin in Tennessee. } ' ( Long Beach oty attorneys ice, never campaigned oo his own background. Hicks coolinua!Jy char~ed Hulsy w,as .not qualified for tbe district attomev s job. Hicks has been in the district aUomey's office nearly all of his legal career. He has been Orange Olunly district at10mey for eight years. Meany Expletive Wasn't Deleted Amoog the 34th District Democrats, LakeWood City Councilman M a r k Hanaford polled 14,689 votes and defeated a fi eld of contenders led by Dennis Murraf, 12,449 votes, wht. ran against retlrlng incumbent Rep. Craig Hosmer two years ago. With no incumbent in the newly-fonned district, which is split between Orange and Los Angeles counties, 18 candidates filed in four parties. Orange County votes mirrored the UJs Angeles County returns in the Republican primary but among the Democrats, votes. John S. Peace and votes. Donohue, the unchallenged Freedom candidate, look 18 Nostande Seizes Republican Nod In 70th District ..,.... '""O Hanaford polled a scant 798 Orange Republican Assemblyman Floyd L. ~flAJ\fi BEACH {UPI) -Ar IJ-',,I County votes compared to P.1urray's \\rakefield , who 1novcd from South GalE;? President George frol\leany,"~' at nonga~ 3,849. for a primary try in the newly fonned deleted expletive m '-'It:: a er Los Angeles County unofficial final northeast. Orange County 70th Assembly tapes to punctuate an .attack °':1 ~th the District v,.-as handily defeated Tue~y domestic and foreign pohcteS o f 8 N d by political. ne~\'comer. nice es tan e 1.n President Ni xon. ITALIAN TJ/JEVES a field of five Hepubl"•n contenders. fl.1eany's sudden use Tuesday of the nd five-letter word brought a gasp from ,.,.. Republican results v.·cre : Nesra. c. delegates to the JntemaliOM! Ladies WA NT PUBLICITY t3.286; Jim Beam . ti.Jn; \Vakehetd. Garment Workers Union convention at 8.175: \\'illiam D. Ehrle, 1.344 and John t•-FontaUJ. bleau Hotel. Pl) '"H com \1• Lynch, 1,520. •...:: BRINDISI. Italy (U -O\V e h" Speaking about an upcoming s.cheduled bo the Democrats Donald Endresen won . ts You didn't print anything a ut Sal z I th meetUl. g between Nixon and Soviet leader 1 · ed lb 70th District race against ~va a v.·1 robbery we pulled off?" comp am e . ~" •--·id Brezhnev. Meany asked if the two ll J I.217 votes to Zava la s 10.1.Jll. ~~· k bou anonymous telephone ca er. to a r· td· v.·ould find a common topic to ta! a t. newspaper Tue.s;day. "\Vhat kind of a_ Four term assembly1nan \Vakc .1e s ;,Or will they sit around and talk about pro death penally, aiiti-busing campal!l!1 what an exciting prospect· it is to s--pa,re~:;0~;ked into the ca.lier's ment l\l.'O legal setbacks. He lost a suit their enemies, to use their institutions to 1 $3S 000 chall•nging his claim to incum_ ben_cy to ,., M story and found that more t 1an . "" h intimidate tlleir opponents. eany worth of furs and high fashion dresses Jim Beam and another attacking is use asked. had been stolen in a burglary which had of the term ··re-elect" lo opponeflt "I don't like those bleep bleep words Ellr!c. ~b'.'.ut~t~h":ey~·~re~in~~~he":~tr'i'ansct1~~-~p=t·~·~~he~~~dd'."ed"':_. ,-..'no~t'.:bee~'.'"..'r~epo""'..rt'.'.ed'.'...'.to'.'...".po'.'.'.l'.ic'.'.:.c.:._ ____ _::;c_.:c._ ___________ _ GEM TALK 41 · ' . TODAY by BIRTHS TONE FOLKLORE l-fad You ·li ved in <:1ncie nt limes. here are some things you would h ave be li eved about birthst ones: January's garnel brings h ealth, cheerfulness, fidelity; Fe bruary,'s ameth yst, ca irn : Marc h s aquamarine or bloodstone preser· ves love: April's diamond cures slec pv.:a lking; May's c m ei"ald n1 ea ns immortality: June 's peurl preserves purity, a nd m oonstone 1Jrotc<:ls rrom Qanger. \\'h y not? \\'hr not enjoy .lht.' lnta l con· vl'niC'lll'l: ot a v.·rist :1Jarm. Plus the COii· \'t'llll'lll'l' of a lull,\' aul11r11a\1l' \\'ilt1 ·h. (~l'\l'I" nt·l'cl~ \\•ind1ni-:.1 1\nd ;1 t·;ilt·n· tL1r. ((.'h;ltl.l.\t.:S <iuln n1o.t L1 c.:;t I ly :'1t n11dn ig ht.l 1\ fl 41 l h l' h a 1 r I i u c p1't•r1 •.iun Pt·r· !01·n1an1·c of lh(' S11• is.,·,. I' :i r! t•d .J a i' f.! t' r · I. l' C o u I 1 r 1· n1ovc111 cn1. ,\11 in on e "·11h th<'!Sf' hand · son1(• :'l lc n101Q\: v.:itcht·s. ,July's ruby gtv·e-s m en t~-1 - h calth ;,incl peace : Au gust!> pcriclot protects a~ainsl m ela n· <·holy: the s ardonyx of Augu~t i;rants sclf·control~p.tcmbcr s 7 -~==============""'----------­sapph'tre-,,rotects a~rnnst envy . ;ind fraud ; October's opal clears the brain: November's top;1 z c.alm s. .ang_e_r. (!f;1ses '''orrLl __ ...... l)eccmbcr's turquois.t~ <'hani;:~s ('O\or \\'he n its O\\'ner i~ in µ<>r1I. ~i nd thnt month's zircon ;:ittracts J~ C. .J/wnphrietJi_a__ ·,e.wefer!J t823 NEWPORT BLVD COST A MESA CONVENIENT TERMS riches. 27 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCA'TION 8;:inkAmf't1c;ud -Md!;IOr Ch,1rgo PHONE fl 48·340 I ., - DAILY PllUf Watergate Influences Election LOS ANGELES (AP) -Californians hBve rendered their O\\'n tough judgment on a Watergate-clouded political system. They demanded it be changed. Prop. 9 Wins Overwhelming Approval , . . I LOS ANCEL.ES (AP J -.California volers Mve O\'er\\'he.ln1ingty passed a campaign financing mea!ilU't th l'I t backers say will spark a national push for post-\Vatergate honesty in politics. The inltlath•e which was sponsored by the self.styled nonpartisan 'jcitliens' lobby" C01nmon Cause, drew opposltJon from both the C&IUomla Chamber of Corrune.rce and state .i\.fl,,CIO, Business and Labor groul>' said the restrictions "·ould destroy their ef!eclive expression. Besides ·being ba nned from spectacular test of the po:st-\Vatergute Tbe legislatufc hid rerused to place mQO<f ' ••• the las&-stand for the boys Jn._ ... the measure on the bllUot, and CorMlOn the back room." Backers c n t I e d Cause Ind other supportjng groups y,·ere · forced to collt'Ct more than 325 000 · Proposition 9 a model for other states. slgnaturt.S to quality lt. ' ''Tbb-1 Is a victory of enormous Many ottiar states have recently proportions," Mlke \VaWl. chuinnan Or -passed poUUcal reform lealslatlon, but California Common cause, said ln Los Proposition 9 Is one o( the moet A.!1.gelet. "It looks to me' llS if we had c:ompreheM.lve. spoken out and throughout. lbc nation." Clllifomia voters also approved a bftllot hlghway constructlou. • Sponaora of the {ll.easure f,-similar to the one which faUed in 11110 :..... 'Said it 1 succeeded in part becs:use of less opposition from-the-oil compjnles, which previously have fought anv aUeropt to divert lbC runds.,.. ;,i__ -.. All but one of soven other ballot mea!W'ea Were headed toward victory. 1 '11/hUe \Vatergate itself was not a direct is!ue in Tuesday's primary election, its effect was strongly evident vthen the voters marked their ballots, or protested 'l'he measure. Proposition 9, limits the amounts that ca ndidates and supporters or initiative petitions can spend and prohibits lobbyists from m a k i n g campe.ign contributions of more than $50. \\litb three.founhs of the state's precincts reporUng from Tuesday's primary, Prop- osition 9 was carrying by better than a 2·1 margin, 2.357,880 to t.017,525. cootributing 10 compaigns, lobbyist:; arc limited to $10 a month in what they can spend on any one state official. ComnlOO cause Chairtnan J 0 h n Gardner called lbe O)easure "IJle most Jack Conway, nat10081 presidt!llt of measure tba\ allows some gasoline t4x Commog Cl!tpe, said.. •JQur motto front revenues to be used on rapid transit now on ls JEastward li'o. "' Proposition 5 repealed a .1938 section Of The meA!!Ure takes e!fect Jan . t, 1975, the sta.te ronstltution which forbade the un!CM delaytll by \1)1Jrl challenge. gas 'tai lrom going for anything but The only po>pOSitlon facing defeat wa$ No. 7, a Uttle·publici7.ed measure that would have exempted l'rom Civil Service status the ch1ef .admlnistrallve of!lcer and flve deputies of the Callfomia Post <eoondary Ed....,tlon ConuniSSioo. ~ staying home. - ( Beginning today, Ca lifornia has ~·hat rs assert is the nation's most prebenslve 'political reform law, a word reaction to "politics as !fSUal." I PASSAGE OF Prop. 9, spclllSO\'ed by m mmon Cause as a model for natklnal orm, w~s O\'erwhelmingly approved in e of an historical tendency of ifomia voters to rejec t long. involved ot measures they . don't f u 11 y lloderst.and. : They were willing to take a chance 4gainst arguments that it was an qverreacUon to Watefgat("_and _in §pile Qf, or because of. the unlikely marriage .f big labor and big business in ogpo&tion ~o Prop. 9. I ln picking a Democratic candidate for 'Qvemor, the voters Opted for the 'romise of _political integrity from a ( NEWS ANALYSIS J Riles Scores Lttndslide; U11ruli's Back LOS ANGELES (UPI) -California Schools Chief \V ilson Riles, the fir st bl ack to hold statewide office. has won re~lection by a landslide while former Assembl y Speaker Jess Unruh completed the first slcp tOY.'ards a Political comeback. Tuesday primary election for statewide offices saw two other victories by minority group members in addition to Riles' win. Black Sen. ?ifervyn M. Dymally of Los felative novice in government over the Angeles captured the Democrat i e-- ~ of men ''"'ho claimed the state nomination for lieutenant governor. needed the experience of pr o v en problem.solvers. Assemblwoman hfarch K. Fong of The nominee is Secretary of State Oakland, who was born in the .back·~r a Edmund G. Brown Jr., 36, who read his Chinese laundry, picked up th e • COUNTY VICTOR Ken Cory ' ' . .MINORITY WINNER March K. ,fong IN CLIFF-HANGER 'Pete' McClo5key ,, McCloskev Triumphs by Hairbreadtli LOS ANGELES (UPI) ·-Beating back a fierce challenge, Rep. Paul N. "Pete" McCloskey has scored a hair .. breadth victorY In Republican primary \vhile voters In a special election apparently sent a Oemocr.at)c assemblyman to join his brother in Congre__.ss. _ Despite new districts c"reated by reapportionment ~nd the w1certainty ol \Vatergate, .the. other 21 incumbents challenged in the 'primary w e r e renominated Tuesday. A.-fcC1oskey, an antiwar firebrand from , Menlo Park who mounted an abortive 'campaign against Preslden~ Nixon's 1972 re.election, clung to victory by a scant 876 votes over mlllionalre Alberton businessman Gordon Knapp, according to unofficial final results. victory, and the passa.ge·of Prop. 9,_ as a democratic nomination for secretary of vote ','for J'#orm and a g a 1 n st state. . THE TOTAL WAS .McCloskey's 29,371 corrupt10n." _ A hl ¥ 0 ti to Knapp 's 28,504. ~EV .... VQt~D-~f~ re!onn. ·a~--st=~n:-~A=~~~~~r~ -ssem .. y~--.. ~t7era. B' s---:. ~us·-.. -te· -·~ -ch~len~~:.~~~::skef~~fo;d.-~!~.-aga1nst con'Uption" althOugh ·Cal1fom1a . . , . . '-...!• · ··real" Re bit • for years has develoi>ed a reputa~ion as Davis 1n t~e Democrnhc primary for ~ _ . _ -• • _,.. _ .,. pu can. rhaps: th mno:t 5,.. and a 1• 1 re e state treasurer.. ·A special e1ectiorr in San Fran~lsc<t,- ' • pe -e_ -""" -!'-----·-· ----oyma!Jy,ill face Republi can Serr. -..._ •~ ---held in conjunctio n with the statewide ' government of any ma10r state. · . · · "" prima d ·ded b · Republicans, in selecting their John L. Harmer of 91endale m the LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Freshman ASSE~I BLYl\IA'N JO IIN P. Quimby (u-. R~rt "Buzz" Pauley, sQn of millionaire ry, was ec1 y an even nominee, apparently were not willing to November general election. . Assemblyman Mike D. Antonovic h has Rialto ), "'as unseated by Terry Goggin, a oilman· Ed Pauley, and Compton City slimmer margin. take the word of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke Harm~r defeated J?hn Veneman in the defeated veteran Assemblyman Newton former a·rde to u·.s. Rep. George Brown , Councilman Ross Miller Jr. in the 28th Democratic Assemblyman John Burton GOP f l t n t governor R R 11 b 18 t · was the apparent victor for th e seat heid that he indeed was "absolutely not pri~ary or ieu e an · · usse Y voes m a rare see-saw in San Bernardino County's .6 '6th dis.J;riot. by a Republican for 21 years. ·He guilty" of the Wa tergate grand jury Veneman is a former assemblyman who duel in Tuesday's primary election which Assembly District . h. . h bl '·d amassed 73408 vot-to -.~I for his perjury charges against him. most recently served as undersecretary ousted at least. four other incumbents. T 1rtyooC1g . t assem ymen 1l4 no ,,... '" .,, Rer··-ke has a reputatr·on among of the. U.S. Department of Health r · I od ho ed h I h All BO Assembly seats and 2Q .of the primary contests, including Joe A. seven opponents combined a lea~;--Democrats as \Veil a s Education and Welfare. con:v:i~!~n:tnfun!iiJ.i g~me~~ ~~f a7 Se~ate's 4.0 ,seals were up for election. Gonsa!Ves (&La Mirada), and Bob difference of 74 votes, according to Republicans as a well-meaning man of Dymally downed Sen . Lawrence \Valsh votes while -Russell. a l()..year· veteran, Fifty lawmak ers bwlecde!un~pt~sedn'~hdir.:e • .4\cLennan IR·Downey), wbo will collide WlOfficial results. character and integrity, although he is of Downe y and USC law professor received 16,139 votes in the1 4\st ne\\·comers scrt:1m e or~ ope ;,.-ill the Novembet-election in the 63rd Burton needed 50 percent plus one vole seemingly naive when it comes to the Howar? rt1illcr, ~ho had leveled char~es Assembly District. tricts created \vhcn legislators retired. district. to avoid a July runoff and immediately tough infighting of politics. of perjury and illegal use of campaign ran for higher office or "·ere forced into join his older brother, Pttillip, in funds agai!J.st Dymally. The tv.·o law1nakers found themselves rAces against other incu1nbents. In the Assembly, wher e Democrats Congress. The unofficial fmal total was in the same district following last year's Assemblywonlan Pauline Davis -(D· hold a 49·31 edge, a dozen lawmakers -50.02 percent. Election officials. ~i!l Jhc IN lttOST YEARS, a conservative such as Reinecke might have v.•on easily over state Controller Houston ' 1. Flournoy. v.-ith an image of a moderate and progressive, in a GOP primary. RILES RAN UP more thii.n 2 million votes in his runawa y victory. His closest rival had about one·tenth that amount. reapportionme nt of legislative districts Portola), and Assemblyman Ray E. including. speaker Bob Moretti -ran for results would be routinely rechecked. -ordered by the State Supreme Court -Johnson (R.Chico 1• easily \von their other offices. Assemblymen Harvey that threw many lawmakers into new . primary races and will clash in a classic Johnson (()..El Monte ), and Bob Wood A.trs. Fong. who has become known for her legislative efforts to ban pay toilets, will contest Republican Brian Van Camp in the November general election. Van unfamiliar territory. battle in the November general election. (R-G reenfieldl , also are retiring. Th e Senate now is controlled by Democrats by a 21·18 margin with one Reinecke failed to achieve t h e preprimary court trial he said would prove his innocence and · the voters registered their verdict al the p:11ts with a Flournoy victory that neared landslide proporti011s. Reagan Expec~s Republicans 'f o Close Ranks LOS ANGELES <UP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan said today that RepubHcan ,·oters in California ~·ill join ranks behind their candidates for November's general el~ion. "There \Vil! be no difficulty in the party uniting behind the primary winners to keep the state moving ahead," the governor said in a statement issued from his Pacific Palisades home. "We had a spirited primary." Reagan added, "But the Republican Party could oot Jose in the election because it had such an outstanding slate of candidates. \\le can be proud or the way our candi· dates coo ducted their campaigns." He said he \\'as "delighted" Y.ilb the caliber of the GOP nominees v.·ho y,·ere elected. ''They are all men of unquestioned integrity and principle and they ha ve the experience and vitality needed to provide California the leadership it will require during the di fficult times abeed ," Reagan declared. • Camp was corporations commissioner µnder Gov. Ronald Reagan. Losing to Mrs. Fong were Assem· blyman Walter Kar ab i an of Los Ange les and Los Angeles educator Cathy O'Neill'. Van Camp had little trouble wi th his riva l, Michael A.-lontgomery, a South Pasadena attorney, ANOTHER REAGAN appointee. John T. Kehoe, former state consumer affairs ·director, will be Unruh's general election opponent. Kehoe defeated H<:r.ry Quig- (ley. an Irvin'! businessman. 1 In the controller's race, Republi can Assembl yman William T. Bagley of San Rafael -who was worried rival James L. Flournoy ·would \\'in votes from citizens con fusing him with th e incumbent -triumphed over the Los Angeles at tomey. Flournoy is not related to incumbent Houston I. Flournoy. ASSEJ\.f8LYJ\.1AN KENNTH Cory of Garden Grove, who campaigned as •·the man the oil companies fear the most." convincingly won the D e m o c r a t i c nomination for controller with 94 percent of the precincts reporting, Cory had l .059.758 votes to 781 ,664 for B. lt-fendelsohn. He defeated San Francisco Supervisor Robe rt Mendelsohn and former state treasurer Bert Betts of Elverta. Republican Attorney General Evelle Younger faced no opposition in the primary election. ASSEJ\.1BLYJ\.1AN FLOYD \Vakefi e1d, who was forced into a totally new Orange County di strict. \vas runnin g behind banker J im Beam or Orange who campaigned on the theme of being "home grown." 'l'wo other assemblymen v.·ere unseated "·bile Sen. Peter Behr (R·Tiburon), ~'as the only incumbent in the Senate with serious trouble. With 198 of 766 precincts report.ing, Behr had 1 IJ65 votes and Bob Theiller of Santa Rosa gathered 7 .644. Assen1blyman Walter W, Powers or Sacramento. a 12-year veteran and chairman of the water committee, was trounced by Sacramento C o u n I y Supervisor Eugene T. GualM for Democratic nomination in !he 5th Assemhl.y District. DAILY PILOT ' DELIVERY SERVI CE Dei"'er.,. of the Do<ly Pilol 1; qlJO'onte!!d "'OrMll1"F1>Gl'f II"°" oo "°' fllvt VOu<' -Dy ~-30 p Ill., ca!l l"<I )'Q<lt °""~ ""'be broug/11 IO )'QU. Coll• '" !•~•n ~"'" 1·00 p "'· So!urcay Ir<! Su,.,IY II y<llJ 00 ""! •OC9'•9 'fOUI Ol>PY by 9 Im SITurO.y, Of e Im S...M•~ """ llld I C<>Dy Wiii ~ brougN IO )'QU C.111 .... l>l<•n unl•I 1()1"' Toit~l r,tolf Or11'>9l' Coi.nty "''"' , ~k<in1"'(ll'On 8t1cn Incl WHll'»,..I, , .. , • Sin~"'•· C,,g.•!rano 8tacn Sin Juan C..""'"1111<>. Dina Pooni. Soul~ l.ago.N. Lagu"" ,..,,,.1 , . . • . . -· _,. (924'20 Storms Lash Dt<ep South JT1inds, Tornadoes , Hnil Raise lla,voc in Area Coastal Weathet' H~1y w n1hlr>e too~v. light varl1blt w!nd• night Ind mornlrig llour1 Ile· (Qm!119 we$1erlv 111 ta 1' knat1 In 11111!'· "°""' lod1v •Ml l1Wri.t11v. Hllh 100.v In upper .o-i.. t1M1l1I ffmper1turtt r.in11' !ram 60 to 6S. t~l•lld tem(Wra- 111rts ••1'111• from '° 10 ,., Weltr torffper•lurt •~. S1111, "loon, Tld.,. WlDNE$0AT SI!<-~lgh .. . .... •:~1 11.m. s.t SKond IO)llf • , •••••• .i:~l P.l'!I. 2.2 THUR.sOAV FlrU Mell ......... ll!jt p,m. 3.6 First law ........... 5:11 •.I'll. -o.r SKOMI nrgll . . 10:30 p.m. s.1 $tc:ond tow ... . 4:1• p.m. 2.i Sun rlns $;c;1 I .I'll. Se11 •:Ill l).l'rl. Moon rl1n l 1S1. p.m, Stll 6:11 e.m. •• J0.00 , \It! WI llMll 1010(.AU C> O•ht• II~•• ct lllvndtrshewt•\ •-.ii !tom NQr!h 01~ot1 IO 1(1"•~l AT"' ' 1on11 !ht 1•1tt•" Gull to•' 1. 11t1•"''"••· 11,. w .. r.ot~td ~v "'°'' '"•" • ., ll'l(h of ,,1 ... MOii ct !ht rtrn•lnOtr Of !ht n•tlO!'I w•~ ur>d1r ti"' Of M•tlr ~•Mv 1•111, 1111'11-uO~ • CCIII !Ian! k'I ·~ ~•cl!lc NOflll""'' orod\ICl'd ••1n ••om tr.t (IMU ~ lht norlhtr11 1lll(l\lt1, SEN. RALPH C. DILLS (l:tGardena ), survived a bruising camp11ign wa ged by Inflatio11 Issue vacancy. Cra11ston, Richardson Swam.p Senate Rivals ' LOS ANGELES 1AP) -U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston, easily winning renomination to a second term. headed today for a Nove mber clash with a conservative Republican state senator. Cranston, a liberal, piled up a lopsided margiTI Tuesday to beat two political unkno\vns for Lbc Dem o c.r at i c uominalion . State Sen. H. L. Ricl?ardson, a form- er em1lloye of the right·\ving John Birch Society, defea ted hi s nearest cha llenger l>y more than 3--1 to win the GOP race. With 17,874 of the statc.'s 24,082 precincts ~rep:Jrting. Richardson had 756,330 to 210,694 for 'Earl Brian, a former director of the s1$te·s Hea lth and \Velfare Agertcy. James E. Johnson, a former undersecretary of the Navy, was running 86,973. third in the GOP race with CRANSTON HAO 1.688,299 votes, compared to 238,915 for hi.s nearest opponent, Hov.'ard L. Gifford, a Patterson engineer. Frank Kacsinta. a Sun Valley aircraft technician, ran th ird witTI 95,284-_ "I'm delighted by the results from my primary;' said Cranston. "I'm of course very grateful that I've had no serious Democratic opposition." Richardson 's victory pitted Cranston against · a conservative·· Republican for the second time in his senate career. Cranstcin pulled together a coalition of Democrats and moderate Republicans in 1968 lo defeat state schools chief Max Rafferty. He said he would draw similar Republican support this year. 1'1 EXPECT A great deal of Republi can support in November," he said. "I had a lot of it six years ago against Rafferty .and I expect it again," Both Richard90ll and Cranston said that inflation should overshadow ·Water- gate as an issue 'in November. ~ "I don't tbilik that the only issue in this • c@q{paign 1$ Watergatt;" Cranston said. "l'lhlnk the economy, runilway prices, unemployment, the thraat of recession are quite possibly more imporr.ant issues , to most people than Watergate." \l,t Tl ... Mlt WINN ER -Democrat Wiiiiam A. Norlss has Won right to op· pose Attorney General Bvelle Younger in November by de- reating Los Angeles Vincent Bugliosi. Ri chardson , who campaign hard on inflation before the primary, 'Promised to "solldl!y the purchasing power o1 the American dollar" it elected. "J will protect the buying power of the average American," he said. Richardson , be!t known for his support of tougher prison ·regulations, had led Brian and other Republican challengers in two pre~lectlon polls conducted by pollster A-fervin Field, one of the Field surveys showed Cranston easily defeated e i t h e r Richardson or Brian. Cranston probably lost his touahesl opponent when former San Francisco State University President S. I . J.layakawa was forced out of the GOP race. l!ayl'lkawa. ~·ho gained fa me in hfs struggles with campus militants, was le.ft off the ballot because he had changed parties within a year of flllng his decla_ra· tlon of candida<..7. ·~ BURTON, A FLAl\1BOY.ANT liberal and advocate of impeachment. campaigned on the then1e that this was likel y the last spc<:ial election before the lfouse could begin debate on an impeachment vote. Ranking California Republic Rep. \Villiam S. Mailliard quit the seat for an ambassadorship, He was one of three RepubUcans and three Democrats who chose not to seek reooClcction. \Vith Burton's apparent vict o ry, Democrats increased their par~isan edge R~pubJ!cans in the Califomia delegation to 24·19. · A to tal of 251 certified c"andldates battled for nominations to Calif om la's lar~est-in-the-nation congressional dele-- gat1on of 43 members. SIX REPUBLICAN incumbents and eight Democrats were w i t h o u t challengers 1n the primary. 'IWo of the Democrats -Rep. Robe rt L. r;eggett of Vallejo and Edward R. Roybal of Los Angeles ·-ha\J no ballot opposition through Ule general election. Jn the open districts, those without in· cumbents. Assemblyman Henry Waxman \Vas tbe Democratic victor in the 24th tlistrici. of Los Angeles, vi rtually assuring his election in November in the heavily Democ ratic area. Water Measure Narrowly Al1ead LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Southern Cal· ifomia voters apparently v.·ere giving an apparent approval to the so.called ''water proposition." The proposition, with about M percent in favor with mostly Los Angeles re· turns in , would give the Metropolitar1 Water District authority to issue revenue bonds in six Southern California coun- ties . The measure led l ,~,162 to 828. ~. i ' Such revenue .authority would n1ean the lttWD could decide on future water users rather than going to the •;oters for. a go-ahead. Jud ge Older .4ppear s 'In' LOS ANGELES ,!AP) -Judge Charlel H. Older appears to have won reelection with ease as he v.•it hSlood chAll~gc.s from two candidates for hls Los Angeles County Superior CA11rt seat. Retu rns 1\JC'.sday showed Older , with more. thnn 60 percent of the vole. Older had been criticized in some quarters for hi!! hondllng of the William Farr cnse in Which he found the Los An gelt..'I Times reporter In contempt of court for violation of a gaa order during the Charles P.1anson n1urder tl'lul . , • • , , ' ' Wtdnrsday, Junt 5, 1974 DAIL V PILOT /I Testimonv • l' A Cliief Relents • t -Winds U1• On Hughes Ex-49er -Tdp pled HEDWOOD t1TY (UPI\ -Bob St. Cia:lr, form er nil -pro San Francisco 49er offeraive tackle, was defe&ted In bis bid for re- e_Jectton to :tbe San Mateo· Count y Boa rd o f Sup:rvlsors. 3 Killers Believed Involved Jeremiah to Return Hom(\: L.OS ANG ~LES t UP I I -In l'<irk View Junior High School Joimston was scheduled to question about whether tl)e I life. no l h i n g kept John in La11caster. who we re bt reburied there Saturday in bones should be moved. ~ 1 ''Liver Eatlrig" Johnston out surprised to learn U:om a a ceren10ny attended by said J1e did oot want the VA t\ I of the mountains -not bea rs. history teacher that t It e Wyoming llistorical Society be involved in a "commercial blizzards or Crow Indians. And outdoors·loving Johnston Jay representatives and eight of operation" and that a ~1ontana I though he's been dead for 74 bur·ic·" next lo a bu:<,y Los the st udents from Park View, congrcssinan, Rep. John D: From Wire Sen iCt\$ LOS ANGELES -8"bod A. Maheu rested his $17.$ million libel suit against lfoward Hughes Tuesday. clearinR the way for the bi\llonnire's rebuttal in the 15-wcek-old St. Clair, 44, had held the position.since 1966 and blamed bis defeat on the adverse e ff ects on incumbent s of the Watergate scandal. SALINAS (UPll -It took ns many a~ three killers to overpower two younJt men nu:t a girl and bl.udgeon thcn1 t" death during an outing along a smnll creek In the Arroyo Sooo Gorge, autltoritles say. years . the Veterans :u to be flown out by \Varner !\!elcher,f orwardl?dcom- Administration was no more Angeles freeway. . Brothers, who made the n1ovie plaints from Red L 0 d g e-. trial. successful. After 50 yea!'s of roaming that began it all. .\lont ., that it was also in j .Johnston, whose life inspirf'd. the Rockies be£ore and after TI1en \\rllson issued a '·stop '"Li ver·Eating's" Qld stamping ~faheut a former FBI agent ~·ho headed Hughes' vast Nevada empire from 1966 to 1970 Is suing the recluse over his publi c stat.em~nt tbal The three were all killed by heavy blows OJ1 the head with a heavy weapon not yet found. The Monterey County dleriff's office said .. it has no suspects the movie ' · J e re 1n i a h the Civil \Vcir h u n 1 in g order" halting the planned grounds and might want o ~~~~~·~~s1::~~ home to the trapping and ,fi~hting Indians'. l·-l'ehW'ial, _saying there was a claim the body. The victor Was John M. \Vard , 33, a high school teacher. Maheu "stole me blind," '----------..J and a motive has not yet been u,1 ~i."'1010 uncovered. Abduetlo,. VA Administrator Rufus H. J o h nston dic;:t at the Vi\1 CHAIN Wilson, ~·ho earlier ordered hospital in 1900 at the age ofl that Johnston's p I an n e ti 74. No next of kin were listed , 1·eburial be delayed, relented so he was buried in the' Tuesday and gave permission hospital cen1etcry. U.S. District Court Judge ( ""State ) Harry Pregerson excused the jury after ~!aheu conclud ed his marathon t4-day appearance on the v.·itness stand and Hughes' attorney Nobe.rt Schiel was to start his rebuttal case today. Messag e_ '.f'rorn SLA' D.elivered The assailants slashed the l\lona K. Ellington,. 19, thrQat of one or the victims was one of two women a11_d_gQYg~d hi s eyes out. reportedly kidnaped in The victims were Wyatt S. Stockton last week. She !Ian.son, 17, Patrick lfill, 18, was released but com- for the mountain man's body ]·le ls reme1nbcred in the to be dug up today or \Ve.stern history books for his Thursday from a VA cemetery IS·year persona! \var 0 f for reintcrment outside C.od y, vengeance on the c r 0 w W)'O. Indians. who killed his .,~:ire. and Terry McCort, 18, all of panion allegedly was Sa linas. _ forced to drive man, THE MOVE JS the fru it of a Investigators said the two identified as GeraJd six month campai gn by fHE STUOE!\TTS. inspired • boys apparently went into the lifartin, 26 to Texas. seventh grade studen~ at ~y the movie starring 11obert scenic Arroyo Seco gorge in.----'------_Redford last year, began SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Los Padres National Forest lobbying the VA as a cl ass Police say a nlan "silnulating south of Salinas to swim and B ' E • T ld project to have themselves dem""de<I entry Jo KBHK-TV Miss McCort went 10 Jhe same •~ next ol kin so they could h3'c a gun" in his po c k e t pass the Sunday afternoon. oy ., XOrClSJ.11 0 declared Johnston ·s honorary late Tuesday night and general • area with another him reburied someplace more e Kidnaper Dies delivered an e':lvelope whose party of tee~age::rs. SAN BERNARDINO (UPll the manslaughter and child suitable to his preferences in LOS ANGE LES A contents contained a message . When her group left, l\1iss _ La}Vren~ Parker claimed abuse trial of Parker. 34, and life. SAVE ON CHAIN UNKFABRIC 50°/oOFF* FABRIC WHEN . JMSTAl.LED BY WARDS . ........ ,..... ......... ..a~ ........ _._ - ~ ... pric•1. Cal fw free ""-11 tod9y! kidnaper was shot to deatb by en "Symbionese Liberation l\lcCort decided to stay with . His wire;Alice, 29, sa'iCIJJar er Gliiaed by teacher Tri one of his hostages early Army stationery." The text Hanson and Hill , whom she hi! performed an exorcism on told him he cast a demon out R.Obinson. they found a ne\.\· Tuesday as he tried to flee out 1vas not disclosed. knew at Salinas High School his 11-year-old diabetic son the of the ailing boy. The youth, home for John ston's bones at WOOD A.MD "!I OUGHT llOM ALSO AVAIU.llE HUNTINGTON CENTER the front door of an San Francisco po I ice before the tv.'O Youths dropped day the boy di.ed from a lack Wesley, died last Aug. 22. and Cody's Old Trail Town, a !Ill apartment. operations Sgt. Ant hony out some months ago. of insulin , a witness at the prosecutors maintain the frontier museum collect ion of The kidnaper, described as Balzer said Ted Bonner, trial of the boy's parents has Parkers withheld insu lin fro1:1 cabins, a stage station and HONER PlAZA Id ., t ·~ T J St Th e k i 1 Ii n gs were testified. Jhe bo bel. · h. d other buBdings from the late r.& :I. • s-.._.,., • ......,.so.. being about Tl years o , was secur1 y n1an a U.\I' ay or ., reminiscent of a series of y, 1evmg 1n1 cure &· ._ ~ _,0~1 ,,,,...,,...._,._, "'-H1.Ull not immediately Id entified. where the TV station is mass murders in the nearbyl~;C;•r;l~D;lc~k~e;rso~n~,~ te;st~lf~y;ln~g~a;t~b~y~p~r~a~ye:r:s.liiiiiiiiiia~--~J:tMJOs:·_.11Wii\Nitii~~;~=~~i~~i===~=====::= Police said he carried an out-located, toOl<-Ui~ man up lo Santa Cruz. area. Wi th the of-state driver's license issued the station's master control on conviction last year of Herbert r lo Richard Geiger, 20, Silver the third floor where the w. Mullin , the remaining fit the one Oil th e li cCllse. tall, 170 pounds, about 27 --c=,,---,---..,o-c,,------i None of the kidnap victims years old and wearing a dark Kids Like to Spring, ~1d.. but that the-envelope was delivered. · unsolved slayings in that area s kidnaper's descriP.liOn did not Balzer said the man, six feet were cleared up. -e·ars \Vere injured, officers said. overcoat, warned that he was ..----~= ~==-. _arroed and, 'litspla;'ed l!Jc Ask-Andy~1-1::::::====-===-====:::r1--.• Ter.111 neeef~~e.; Sh~pe ol a gun in lifS pocket. SAN DIEGO "-A man who .Where Thrift Is Always ·'" Style tried to extort SHl,000 fron1 the Randolph A. Jlearst fam ily bv offering information about the kidnaping of t h e i r daughter was sente nced Tuesday to five years lo life Locat!!cLon the L9wer Level · - in state prison . Superior Court J u d g e George A. Laz:.ir heard the trial or Samuel L. McGraw, 24, without a jury and passed sentence. e Sel1ool .'ilr.!~c _ PAS"AO"ENA --The first strike in the history of the Pasadena Unified S c h o o I District apparently had little effect on the operation of classes, but some high schools suffered large student absen· teeism. The · one<iay walkout Tues.day was organized by the Pasadena Federation of Teach,rs and school oficials said fewer than 20 percent of ail classrOom tea chers took aprt. Teachers said they were protesting recent actions of the school board including the dismissal of 171 probnlion;iry teachers. e Guard Scl::cd HOLLYWOOD - A security guard has ·been arrested in connection with the death of a man whose body \l'as found stuffed in a plastic tarpaulin in Burbank. Author ities arrested Burleigh T. Jewell of Los Angeles on Monday. He was accused of shooting Ronald Lee Kessler, whose body was found in a trailer Saturday. Kessler's widow, Marianna. was arrested Sunday night in connection with lhe murder. e Embezzlc1neJ1t STOCK T ON -Paul Shepherd , 63, convicted or embezzling over SI00.000 while treasurer of the Knights of Phythias Grand Lodge, . has been sentenced to state prison . llRllDUll TION '74 a gift of jewelry Authl'nlie .\mPrkan Indian Hings in Solid Sil\t'r Wha1 better way to show your apprec iat ion to the grad Ll.!_le t~a!' ~1th ~nuine )!arn!:crafte_!f American In· dT3n Turquoise ring" A ve ry special purchase of these genuine sterlin g si lver and turq uoise rings allows us to of· fer 1hem to )'OU at 4or; off the reg ular prices that they are sold fur by the trading posts in Arizona & New ~!exico. Al:,L HINGS are genuine sterling silver with genuine 1urquo1se, eac h was hand rashioned by lhe Navajo or Zuni tribes . All other Indian jewelry in our stoclr. a l si milar ~a vlngs . ••• ~po·c1.il group 01' 111\g)-m~ style' arid •it.~" .ill ,1crling ~,1,,.cr arJMenu1ne 1urqt101;,· -Regular $14 NOW $8 "Prt•JI gruu11 01 11rig' <na11v 'ii le> .ind ~1t1·, .ill '1c1ling "ll·~·r & g~ni.11nc rurquo•>l' Regular $29 NOW .$17 .. to,vc BEACH,<13 13At1D11tl.,A11. •SANTA ANA, 20/ti N.ftlain • TORRANCE, 24455 Hawl /tQl'nrBl • \VlllT1'1f:R, I 29J 8 Pltllad1/phia SI. •NEWPORT BEACll . I 7 Fu1h, Sq. • '/'OR RA NC1', f)~I Auu> f'od1lon Sq , • Rt;DONDO Bli:ACll,S. Bay C<:11/1;, • ORJ\NGF.. Thr,\lallo/Ora11~<' • ;\N,\lfKl l\I, ,\nalurim Pla•a • I.OS A,VGE:LES, A 'co Plaza MASTf R CHARGr • lAMICAMfRICARD • SOS (llDI! l"lAM J flfglits dally to San Francisco. . Or go with the unoff1c1al state bird to Sacramento. Come and get 'em. Call your travel agent or PSA. P$A1lvesyou alltt. ,'\_ ,.. ., · ... Misses' Nylon Bikinis Only! Scoop them up! All nylon tricot with elastic waist- bond. Long weoring . In sizes 5, 6, 7. 3-way Convertible Bra Seori Price 197 Wear as criss~cross, halter or regular bra. Nylon tri- cot. Contoured, Sizes 34 and 36 A, B, C. Other sizes available. . . ' Non-cling Formol length Half-Slip / 1-97 Mode of Antron» Ill nylon so it's non-cling. Smartly trimmed. Sizes S, M, L ....... :Ill • ._!. ~ • • • $4 .. • • .. -.. I Ill, •' ,' ,,· '* • i'1. \);,.>># Prices Effec,ive through Saturday, June 8 ·' ·j ·'' {,~~ ./ • ~.~ 'r·· j-· . ... \' 'I • I -~ ( ' 1" . . ·~· ~ <I>-/.~ ~ ·__: l,. ' \.:~ I • • -. party dresses . for juniors ... high -in fashion low • • 1n price 88 Gre~t styles in the long Ieng!~. Bore-backs, sleeveless, short sleeved and scoop neck looks . In fashion fabrics and colo'rs . Junior sizes. g... . ., . ) .... ~~·,•"/-I,_ ·.;,.. 1·~ -· .. , . ..... ·..:-.. r ·,. I, \ ~.............. .. I . \' ""' ·-' . . .. ..... ':::i ···1 .~" ' '.-; 11 '-'....:·.'•· \0 ' ' • ::-..-.. :·~y ... ' ... .. . .... ... ' ,, . .... ........ . .. I.. ...... ' "'-I' All-Nude Ponty Hose 69~· All-she~r from heel to toe, Mesh knit nylon. One size fits 95 ~lo 150 lbs. Fashion colors.'. Ute Sears Re110/vin9 Charge I · I So. Coast Plaza ~ears 3333 Bristol st. Buena Park Orange Stott Ho11n 1 Mondov th111 So!w•dov 9:30 A.M. lo 9:30 ,,M., SuMav 1 l Noon 10 $ P.M. 8150 lo Palma Ave . 21 00 N. Tustin Ave . "11 A•i..•Ol•ucK~:<ocn. Phone 540.3333 Phone B28-4400 Phone 637-2100 ,, " I • ·' "· .. -. •• l • 1~ • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • Unwarranted-Strike • • 'rhe sudden strike by some teache rs of the Laguna it see1ns 1nore ap propriate to look to the future-which Beach district will be viewed by n1 any a.'i an lrresp0ns· c·ould be so 1nuch brighler lhan the past. ible and unwarranted action. It was a 111ove based tnore t~ solid step in that dlrec~ion caine l.fonday with on frustra tio n U1an on a reasoned approach 10 a real --....._ _!iClcctt on or two e.'{cellent retired superintendents to problein . -11etp locate the best possible talent for a new superin- A r h'gh h I l b d' . r· I . I tcndcnt. group o 1 sc oo cac crs 1ssat1s 1e{ \VI\ 1 proposed s&lary in creases negotiated by the ir own La· .A well -rounded screening comn1ittee re1>reseJ1ting guna Beach Faculty i\ssociation struck independenlly. a c1·oss section of the sthool and comn1unlty has been taking n1atters out of established channels. breaking selected to help. 11'he enthusiasn1 a.nd concern under- com1nunication and nauntlng their des ires ove r th ose lying this process is positive and exciting. Perhaps good of other fa culty meinbers. lendership \\'ill arter all result. It was no way to win s<:hool boarcl support or publit support on salary issues. '!'he strike can only dan1age that. Jf any good at all can come or the strike. it will only be that the school board recognizes a sn1all group or frustrated te~chers can stir up so 1n uch n1ischie£. Impact or the strike on the tax election is hard to judge..1 but coming as it did-immediately-befere voting, it only served t.o confuse or anger voters who would like to regard teaching as a profession and teachers as pro· fessionals. ,) Saddleback Looks Al1ead After months of hard times, criticisms, and crises, there is not much more to be said about Dr. Fred Bremer. who resigned last week as superintendent of Saddleback College. The head of the school for six or its slorn1 v. eccentric, formative years, Bremer has do11e n1any thin gs to get the schOoI on its feet and has taken the ra p. sometimes unjustly, for situations which have given the school a reputation for repression, exploitive politicking, and damaging conservatism. But rather than dwell on Bremer's stepping down, Bette1· Beach Use lt appear s that the Ca lifornia Depart1nent of Parks a.nct Retrea~ion and the County of O.range a.re close to f1nal}y solv1og the vexing problems or the old Capis- trano Beach Club shoreline at the Coot of the Palisades. Supervisors in recent weeks have approved a plan for dcvelopn1e11t of the strand as well as a portion or Doheny State Park into a major, new day-use beach. Such a plan would serve more beach users on a .portion of Doheny wh ich bas had the least a1nount or use. I.t al so n1.ean.s that frequent threats or private com- 1nerc1al explo1tat1on or the Beac h Club property will end. . For years. 'vhile the public used the vacant beach. chverse plans leaked out for hi gh-rise development and otl1er schemes. Joint developn1ent of the beach means that beach- goers would finally have approved parking, lifeguards, cleanup cre\VS, restrooms and the other amenities which make it more pleasurable to visit the county shoreline. It also means that several acres or valuable vacant beachfront will become a legal recreation area for the general pubLic. ' s .. ~ /~ ., .. .- Feminism in Art CaIIed-'Hogw.as&-'-=-- No More l'iet1aa11as To the F.d.itor: As a v.·orking artist of sonfe 50 years experience. the ~fay 24 page on "'Omen artists made it difficult for me to keep my supper down. Such a Jot of hog"·ash I have never seen in print before. IF TIIlS is an ell:ample or the new breed of v.·omen artists God hel p us. All this female . . . feminist neuter bit .• L Ugh._ To say that smiling. dressing prelty. etc. has anything lo do with making it seems to me to be about as shallow as a statement can be. You call that net and fabric thing sculpture? 1 HA VE known hundreds of women painters: some were good looking some were not. Only one thing matters. You have to be able to paint. Some years ago Beverly Hills High School invited people from all professions to speak to the students about the prospects in their particular profession. S. 1.lcDona\d \Vright and I spoke on art a5:'a career. We were told afterward-that we \\'ere lhe only two who recommended our field as a rewarding career and 1 have always considered · it the best MSSiblc for a girl. I stlll dO. THELMA PADDOCK HOPE llos p ilal Historu To the Editor: Aft.er years or beholding ''Camelback .. ~fountain from my kitchen window prior to living in California. I recently became cog!Uunt of another equally descriptive mountain. TllE NEW hospital in Laguna l:lills renders a spectacular view of this peak and derives its na1ne "Saddleback" froin this unique elevation. As I Y.'llndered the corridori; of this new n1edical facility, endeavoring to coovalesce from surgery, the mountain·s n*7iesake, the hospital, received n1ost of my attention and Is Ci!rlainly "'orthy of cc.rnment. TlUS l\tODERN edifice is both beauti- ful and efficient. The nurses. technicians. and other personnel are hardworking, dedicated to serving and meld their efforts toward cx<:i?ptional teamwork for the good of the whole. In addition to this remarkable staff and others not mentioned, are the Pink Ladies. who despite the age of retirement, tirelessly volunteer their se rvices. \\'hen I rc\'icw my recent experience and remember the eicce\lent care and consideration J received at this pince or hei1ling, I feel sure that "Saddlcback" lflcl<s 'Shalom/' I ( MAILBOX J Letters f'rom readers are welcome. Normall y, wri ters should co11vey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to conde11se letters to fit space or elimi11ate libel ii Teserved. All tet.- ters mu.st include signature a11d mail· ing address but 11a1nes may be toith- held on request if sltfficint reason is apparent. Poetry will nqt be pu~ lished. Hospital, like its counterpart, will al so make history and it too, is here to stay . ELINOR DAVIS C11111paig1i C11rhs To the Editor: Developers are major contributors to the--political ca1npaigns of the Orange County Boord of Supervisors. H0~1EOWNERS w e r e ridiculed bv Supervisor Baker for seeking to preserv'e some of the beauty of our hills through pro-pEr control of hillside development. Homeowners were turned down in their quest for a hillside ordinanc~ !Baker, Dietrich. Caspers ), an adequate local parks ordina~ (Baker, Dietrich. Clark). a resource managmenl ordinance tBaker, D>etrich, Clark ). and the retention of the agricultural reser.·e status of the beleaguered Anaheim Hills (Baker, Dietrich, Battin). BAKER ·s p l a n n i n g commissioner, Roger Slates, bragged. at a party that money was pouring into Baker's war chest rrom lhe largely undeveloped 5th district. Clearly, our supervisors' campaigns sh o u I d be: 1. Publicly financed. 2. Limited ln duration . 3. Limited in scale (more, smaller districts). A democratic statewide fund mailer raised less than one-hair the oost of one mailer for an Orange County Supervisor. GENE ATHERTON. M.D. Chairman of PARKS. sponsors of Coun ty Local Parks initiative Erosion of Righi• To lhe Editor: Rull Walton's article (May 28) on how Americana' rights are being eroded by governments. city to federal. was the first article I have seen that br ings this problem to light. There has been so much more ror the public but less for the individual lately. that it is good to S4..'e the defense of property rights for a change. Thc property owners. Ukc the free enterprise · sy!item. arc the backbone of this country that made It lhe gre•ll nation that It is. Now hired city planners and aµpoinlcd committee people have gotten the po\vcr to tell the substantl3l people how 'and what to do with the things they have earned. If \1.'e continue to allow Governments to dictate our lives, tnx us bcrond \Vh.'lt govemnlcnt services should be and give this cxlrn mon<'y to liberal mlndl'd do-goode~ lhnt have nt·vcr nvmed 11 hnuse or met a pay roll. we \\'ill soon lose our :'lbitl ty to pay tllOSC! lairC!. As Mr. Walton ~ys .. Governme:nt ls no longer the servant : ii Is the mast<'r -of plaM, per'°ns, :ind properly." LA:t's 1ry to bring back the sclf-de1erm ination of the American peo ple nod 1101 rall Into lhe trllps or the 90Ci11ll~tlc counlr\cii. GO L.IJLE JOSEPll Dear . --Gloo1ny -C-andor -on l:ommitmen-ts -·~-- Gus.- The United So uth Orange Coast Communities. formed some time !Jack lo coUnter the big-city atti- tude of the county agencies, a~ pears to be adopt ing the cloak of the opposition. Go to a LISOCC n1eeting some time. J.l . ~~-way-~DOeJi-· ~-· ---• ,,;,__... -n1EJassmGE1r..,goli~l!!V ~rmed truce he h.as soug~t m the Mideast RICHARD WILSON the killing of Arabs and J ews. They have long for Henry K1ssmger,. and IC the • ~ had a purpose above and beyond stopping 1s at hand there is yet still much that he been intended to reduce to the minimum n1ust do. He must do wl_lat he promised the peril of armed conflict. by chance or GIOOl'lll' Gus cornmtnls ,,.. sltbmit!H bl' ''"'n ,.,. Oo Ml 11Knurlly retlKI lhe ~1..... of It. MWSPiPtr. S•l'MI your ,,, PftVt i. GloOmJ Gin. Olil't Pikll. Wo1ne1i of Literature Star i11 Quiz ( SYDNEY HARRIS ) This fortnightly \vord-quiz centers on ,\·omen. Identify the "'She" in tile following more or less famous lines. Forty percent. is a score even \Vomen·s Liberationists should be proud of. 1. "She hangs upon the cheek or night as a rich jewel.'' 2. "She moves a goddess, and she looks a queen." 3. "She stood in tears amid the alien com." 4. "She gave me of the tree, and I did eat." S. "She dwelt ;91mong the untrodden ways." 6. "She had a heart-how shall t say?-too soon made glad.·· 7. "She is a v.·insome·wee thing. she is a handsome wee thing." 8. "She makes hungry \vhere most she salis£ies.'' " 9. "Though she bends him , sbe obeys him, though she draws him, yet she follows." JO. "She is coming. my ov:n, my sv.·ect ; v.•ere it eve r so ai ry a tread.'' It. "She was a child and I was a child , in this kingdom by the sea." 12. "She came to pro\'e him with hard QUC!lions." 13 ... She had a bov.·I of lilacs in her roorn. '' 14. "She twisted lier hands behind her; but all the knots held good! •• ANSWERS: 1. Juliet. as desc ribed by Romeo, in Sh11kcspeare's "RomeO and Juliet.'' 2. Helen of Troy, in l-lo1ncr·s ··nnad." 3. Ruth. the Bibllcul daughter-in·law of Naom i, In Keats' pOem ·'Ode to a NlghUngalc. •· i. Eve, as accused by Adam, In l\1llton's "Paradise Lost." s. Lucy, In one or Wcirds\1·orth's fi\·e so-cnllL't'i "Lucy Poems." 6. "My l..ciSl Duchciss·• by Robert BroY.'ning. 7. Hobert Burns's poetic praise of his ~·ife. · 8. Cleopatra. as described b y t~nobarbus, ar the opcnlng 0 f Shakespeare's "'Antony and CleOpatra:· 9. l\llnnehahJ. in t o n gfe lln w 's narrative .. The Sang of lliuwatti.1." 10. l\tnud , in Tennyson's poem of the !l:'lme n1unc. · 11. Annabel Lee. in Edgar Allen Poe ·s poen1 of tbe same na me. 12. The Queen of Sheb:>, CiJnfrontlng Solomon, in 1he Old Testament. 13. 1'Portra lt of a t..ady " by T.S. EUot. 14. lkss .. lh u landlorcfs daughter, In AlfN.'<I Noyes's narrative '•The HlgJ1waynlnn. '' lo do at the time Pre.s!dent Nixon~ or-design. between the .United States and derecl a world-wide military alert, but many l."Ollfidi!fiUal discussli>ns on the the So\'iet Union al the most critical did not. Mideast truce and America's role there point in the world where the interests of Then. Secretary or State Kissinger henceforth o( the kind President. Nixon these opposite forces come into conflict. asked ~his country to accept on fajth the ~or~~ n~sa~~·the h:!t~~inJ An interesting study of t h a t ~ecessitr 0! Pres-the pre s Iden c y. White House confrontation of two decades by Dale R. 1dent N1x,on s ~un-conversation! on national security have Tahtinen for the American Enterprise ter. · Soviet actlo!l, ·been recognized in the courts as having a Institute shows a rpther di.scouraging v.·h1ch brought i\'ar different character from discussions result . The Stqlply of arms from :r.1oscow too close for com-.e, ;;;::-'"'hich might be considered evidential in and Washington resulted . at least until ro.rt •. and later he, l ~ the commisskxl ol felonies. recent events. in a military balance of K1ss1nger, would ex· power heavily in Israel 's fa\'Or. Recent plain in detail. SO mERE Is not much likelihood that events shook that balance and Israel's Kissinger's words until many years from now when it will government came tumbling down, but on that occasion are make no difference, anyone will know the Tahtinen's general conclusion is still \VOrth recalling. For nature of the confidential and 8eCl'et valid. The presence of vasi 1~ts of once he appeared to negoUations which President Nixon and arms supplied to both sides ~snot been be angry. He resented a questioner's Secretary Kissinger have been carrying stabil izing or created a stand-off, as implication that the alert was no more on with notably devious and unreliable Kissinger's dogged efforts illustrale. than a potttical move a few dar,s after leaden in the ?\1iddle East. 1 the ''Saturday Night 1'1assacre' by a It is a time now for candor beyond HE. NEEDS to come ba:~k no~ and rattled President trying to divert public other times, lf on1y because pubUc expla1~ In the . most ~xpltClt detail his attentlon from Watergate wallowing to confidence in the reliability of American comm11ments, if any •. 1n these h~eds the critical tum In world affairs. statesmen Is at a low ebb. How deeply of hoW'S of talk with the President, SUCH SUSPICIONS, Kissinger said, were "a symbol of what is happening in this country," and added that the Watergate "crl.sls of authority" may have influenced Soviet threats lo introduce military forces in the 1'fideast. The "crisis of authority" is even more severe today tllan in October, 1973 and It has been heightened, in part, by public disclosure of the kind of discussfons that take place in lhe Oval Office at the White House. Kissinger and the President have held the President and Kissinger have gotten spokesmen of the Soviet Union. of the the United Stales involved with Egypt Arab states and Israel. and Israel will not be much illuminated The public-~ Congress deserve, and by expected statements that there were must have . a better comprehension of no secret deals. "'Ila.I is involved.than \\'88 had during the Of rourse not. There never are. And formulation of Vietnam and India· yet the Pentagon papers showed that the Pakistan policy. For it is no longer to be Johnson adminlstraUon was going lar taken for granted that the secret beyond public perceptions and expects· negotiationS of the administration In tiora ln its development of Vietnam polj.. power, however well-intend~ or }ogically cy. The un authorized disclosure or secreL supported, ne~rily serve the meetings on the India-Pakistan clash re-continuing interests of the United states. vealed Nixon policies of which the publlc That old-fashioned idea just istft was only remotely aware. practical anymori:. .., The 1'wo Most Dangerous Leaders \VASHTNGTON -The world's two most dangerous and irresponsible leaders, in the opinion of worried intell igence eicperts, are North Korea 's Kim 11 Sung and Ubya's Moammsr Khadary. The isolated Kim, according to intelligence reports, is Itching to resume the Korean War, which eOOed 22 years ago abouL v.•here it started. a Io n g the 38th parallel. He is depicted in intelligence reports as a leader, out or touch with the \Ot'Orld who would plunge Korea Into another \var, against the ad· vice of hls Soviet nnd Chinese mentoni. He is quite capll· ble or plotting a wild, daredevil incident, such as a paratrooper attack on Seoul. APP1'RENTLY, Kim began unification talks wtth South Korea~in the tnlstaken belle! that North Korea was economically superior and would be abla lO dominate a peaceful, lDllfled country. He believed his own propaganda, apparenUy, that Ule South was wfferlng under oppression and 11;1 people were starving. Instead, North Kortan delegates CoUnd th< e<OOOtnY booming and the people far more prosperous than ln the North. Kim was reported to be furious at his repmentaUves for bringlng b a c k cameros. trinsiston and olher consumer ilc111s as !!Ouvenirs. LLE ARRUP11.V dropped the dialogue \\'ith the south And began making warlike moves. lntelllgence reports as9ert he has concluded thllt the only vaiy Korea cnn be united under hi.a leadership Is by rorce. ' JACK ANDERSON His gunboats sank two uth Korean fishing boats and abducted a third. He has resumed the 11tandard Communist tactics of fomenting class antagonism . consolidating antlgovemment factions and fomenting united fronts In the South. "We will render positive assistance to the revolutionary struggles of the South Korean people,'' Kim has proclaimed from Pyongyang. But lt Isn't the infiltration and ag1tation tl\lt worries the intelligence anal ysts. They are far. more conooiled that the unpn.dlctable Kim may re110rt to hot acUon. EVEN l\tORE mercurial 11 the Llbyan strongman, Moammar Khadll (y, who Is constantly stirring up trouble in the l\1iddle East without much thought for the consequencts. Intelligence reports claim. ror instv.nrc, that he has armed terrorist group.c1 \vit h sophlslicated wet1pons, I n c I u d in g shoolder·nred Soviet mis.'!lles. Thorc is apprehension in the tn te 111 gc n c e community that extreml~t groups will get their bands on even n1ore dan~rrous weaporu1, now that Llbya has concluded a new anns agreement with Moscow. Kll1'DAFV is a\llO accused of stirring up plots lo overthrow neighboring Arab leiders who have rejected his calfs for a "peoples' war'' against Israel and the United Slates. Ile is clamoring to use the oil embargo, terrorist attacks end other wild measurea, which his more nloderntc Arab neighbors wam could backfire. Llk& Kim II Sung, t.toammnr Khad.:Jfy is also ~apable of irrational .and irresponsible acts. Footnote: In South Korea, President Park Chung Hee has taken emergency measures, which intelligence experl'J privately concede are justified. In the l\.liddle East, there is talk o f "eliminating" the fiery Khadafy. One secret report tell s of a discussion betv;een a CIA agent and oil company official about putting up $50 million for Khadafy's assassination. High officials have assured us, however, that the $50 million talk was nothing but barroom banter and ha1 never been givell serious consideration. DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wt.ed, Publ.tsher Thomas Ktevil, Editor Barbara K1'tfbich Editorial Par1i Editor · The c11!torlal ~" ot 1~ Dally Pilol .Jif"IC" to 1nlom1 Md s!Jmuh1.1e l'f!lll.iL"l'!I by pl't'!!!nlint: oil this page <liVl!l'I(' comn1entary ·on toplC'I ol, in- 1rre1r1~ndicfllt!d t:Oltinn11l11 and cartoon1~L~. bv pr.1vidlntt a forum ror rtAdtt11' \•l~l lll'l.I h)' prcsnitlnK th l!i ncwspt~'• opinion!. and klf>M on cumtit topks. ~ tdllorial oplniom ol thct Daily rnot 11rv ar only In 1hc tdltorial t'Olumn Al I~ 1op ol th., pqt . Opinions t'XprtlMd by !he ~'91· umrtilts. and c11'1oonist11 ind ltflt:r writft'S are thtir own •nd no~-~ mtnt of their vlC"Yo-1 by lhe Df.lly Pilot shoukl ~ int~ \\7edncsday, J une 5, 1974 • Dri\fr Mus Pa }' Sch!ling Parents Slugging It Out With Feminist Big Guns MIAMI, la. (AP! -A Judge has ot •ted a niotorist convicted o~ rwullng a red li ght anc.l klll~g a mun to help 1>;1y for the liege education J: of the vlctl 's two chlldren. In an o r made public Tu esday, C1 It Court Judge ' Sidney We er ordered Richard U to pay Sl,500 a year for the l!Xt five years so Gregory Po~h, 2, and his sister Sabrirl. 6. can go lo <.'Ollege. The sentence Is an a\~erMW.ve t five years in prison. 1•1 DECJD D TO help the vicUm's t~.small children who have left without a father," Wever sa id Tues- day. Urso plea~d no conlcsl to manslaughle charges f\.1ay 8 in the dca of Jtaymond .......... JOINS BATTILE Gloria Steinem 'Do-gooders' Halt Bare Pageant • ' BENNINGTON, Vt. (UPI) -When Mrs. Ni c h oll e Woodward found out the book "C:O Ask Alfce"Wi"Srnthe Mt. Anthony Union High School library. she had her student daughter check It out for keeps. "Go Ask Alice" is the diary of a young girl who was a drug addict. "I threatened to burn it; I stlll have it in n1y possession," ~-trs. Woodward said, though she paid back the school and the library bought another <.'Opy. NOW A1RS. Woodward and i group of parents here_are taking on Ms., a national magazine which specia lizes in articles on the w o m e n ' s liberation movement. T h e group says the magazine borders oo .Lhe obscene. · "We just feil that type of thing Is not necessary to have in the school, that the tax mooey that was spent on it could be better spent on other He objects only to one issue of ~is.. the October 1973 edition, with an eii:cerpt from Erica jong's novel, .. Fear of F'lying," "F.very book or magazine on the library shelf has a unique purpose," Pelk ie explained. "Ms. is to explain th c won1en's movement ln America, and I support lt 100 percent." He said the language and descriptions of sexual matters in the Jong article "would be a little beyond" what he would like to see 13· or 14-yea r-ol ds "sad" the America n Civll Llberties UnJon has stepped in to defend the right of children to read 1.1s. The ACLU says It may take the case to court if necessary to protect the stude nt s ' constitutional rights. "You have your liberals on one side with their American Civil Liberties Union that has the money to fight for them. Right~ work both ways," she said, "but apparently the American Givil L i b e r t i e ! Union only wants them to work their way." reading at Mt. Anthony. But T If J=: C o i\1 i\1 O N many of the objecting parents .,.,·orking man, she said, cannot w ant the magazine afford to fight the library s u b s c r i P t l o n cancelled system as effectively as allOgether. bigger, better-financed groups "MY REAL POINT," said .!i~~t for their side _-~ Mrs. Joanne Dunham, "Is that I thin~ the school is usurping the pcl'Ner or the parents in having some control over literature their children ore reading." Mrs.-·Dunham has a child in the fifth grade. Mrs. Dunham said it was 'WW11 yow w...t • c:• i11 EUROPE c:a11 EURAUTO Lt•M • lllY • Awy Mokt .. , ..... _ 673-4550 ''::~..:_..t Pough Oct. and was placed on probation1 COLTON (UPI) -The 1971 Miss Bare state pageant. which got cold shoulders In seeking an arena over a period of months, was fmally caJled off. ed ucational material," she,--------------------1 "The monef will be set up in a trust fwd fOl' the two children," Wiaver said In his I order. "As mch one reaches the age ofl 18, it will be available fortheir education." The latest obstruction was a Los Angeles County ordinance said. The School Board meets this week to decide if Ms. should be taken off the shelves for good. which prohibits a nude show MRS. WOODWARD and her where food and drink can be served. supporters are up against some big guns. G I o r i a THE $7,SOI FUND will be Nada O'Conn el l, Steinem, publisher and deposited in pn i n t e r e s t • spokeswoman for the pageant, founder of Ms., has taken a bearing acco1nt. said Tuesday it was the last personal interest in the case. Urso,~· isthe father of two straw. "the purpose of Ms . ,---------------1 I A . H WEINERT I __ Fine Jewels •Fas hion Island • I I • ·" 1st SALE I ~' EVER! I x.~UPTO 1/2 OFF s""':111 childrti. and works as "m E OO-OOOOERS did us Magazine is to allow women of acting supeN1sor ol a post in." she said. all ages to tell the truth about office annex1 H~. car.ns ~bout The pageant,-With about 25 their lives -the whole, joyful, 1w, ....._...,.. Ai St% 1•K, 11K Y.t.G.W..,. . At 50'1. I Wedntsday, June 5, 1974 DAIL V PILDT 7 ~·'2..,,r­ .:\~ l\-v I , \, ' Make a date for an individual seminar with the Geminesse-Max Factor . beauty experts Bullock's South Coa.~c Pl.tL,1 invi tt·s rou to make a date ro a1u:nd the Gcn1incssc-~(ax Factor Q.A .D." beauty hour"' (Questions, Ans\\·ers, Demons[rations). D uring the \VC:t·k of Jun(; 10, the Gcminessc: bca ury cxpc:r1s ,,·ill b1.: hL·rc: 10 condu ct I hour individual sessions en1phasiLing skin care, 'vig styling and rna kc-up ... just right for rou. Included in each session is a versatile gifc to!e, '"i1h any Gcn1inessc pu rchase. ~lake reservations at a convcnic.n! hour by phoning 566-0611, ext. 21 1. Cosmetics ' $11.500 a yeil;', said his wtfe. women aged 18 to 30 fully diverse truth," Ms. 1•K11a111i:Wa1eMt At ?O% R•W-IS.,,W.. A1 JO.,.. ---'":Llbink...it.~ a..1otall~i11tereflrwa,s--booked-at....t:bc-Ste.inem -&a.ld~L..is_it:H:f'l">G-.-.i,. ... ,.;;~~~ -::;~:;;:do• ""~:_.r.'_'°"',,,..ttTt-----; : completely froper sen tence. Roger Young Auditorium for about this truth that a handful ,.....sa.,,~ AtS8% OtiJed1olArt A1 ?0"- ... withoul rcse~ation.'' defense June 30. The po Ji c e of Vermont school officials ~ ~ 1.1 30% 1..a..Jewc&r,-_ _Al-10li> \I >--01---~lawyer P~ C.rlton said c o~Ji j o n saWidLJtlhbe;o,:·__.!andM...1par~enl!!ts~lfuindl!l_t!,1Jh~rea~tel!!ni!J' 41'::::':::::::::::=========='=:;~:= ti+--~· 'l\Jesd4y. 1 auditorium had a food and enough to suppress?' ' TRUL y ----~--------------- He said the idea was drink license and canceled the Mt. Anthony P r In c i p a I ~ I accep~ed by J'ough's-22-year-event an Official division of Clarence Pelkle, who has a ! SOME FANTASTIC old W<dow, lJnda . the Miss Nude World Pageant child enrolled at lhe school, ONCE IN A LIFETIME BUYS \,_,, II or Canada. filed a romplaint against the . 1'THE DEQSTON MAPE by Miss O'Connell said time magazine ar an jndividual ' ' ' Judge Weava wa s a wise and ran ou t. The f o 11 ow in g citizen. f T '::._ / I usetulonc,"widPoughfamily weekend is the Jong July A .H WEINER J~incjcwc-/s .... , · SO UTH COAST PLAZA attorney Na r vi n Ross Fourth holiday weekend , and "I HAVE NOTHING against f 32 FASHION ISLAND Sorry Nol..a yav1ays t -~-"'_r~_~r_,pu_a;_~_,;._·~_.'._~in-~-~~-~-m_a_~~--~-~ro_":_,r_o._~ .. _a_~~-'-isth_:_~_h~_he_"i_~_"_:_t _~_:._te_~!_o:m_£_,f_;_·~-~-1~-~:-~~,i~~h-·_t~-e'.._!l'."""'.N'."-"'.E::':"'.P::':"'.R:-"'.T:B'."~:A:~~::·:~:"'::~:04::-:o:-=.-:'':'SaJ:-:":.:.:"'::_:':-=.l!...'... __ B_"_11_oc_k_·"_So_"_'h_C_o_"_'_"_1._"_'·_,_·.1_n_D_'_,""_·o_Fr-cc_·_·•_Y_'_'_B_'_''_'°_1._Co_s[a_M_'_"_·_l_l _6·_0_6_1 _1 _ Are what you'll find in our · Health and Beauty Aids department. Bufferin Tablets 100's gge ,.-"'"'"f~•--------... ' ........... . 00 I ~-· HK•:c·t.;· ...... ,.,, .. , - Breck Shampoo 15 fl. oz. gge Choose from our own • • • • ~ rea.sury · Brand and save! 'i' .· . ' Treasury Shampoo Choose from ca stile, egg extra rich and herbal. •• • .. \ Treasury Disinfectant Spray nt.wt. 59e 16 oz . • lal11zaa1 lltVUll-......... ""'wr. .... -a:::::: -........... 1 ' l l0 .. 1'~ • "'"""""" .. ""y jll()ll(l1 i:!I ..... _,_ ... ~ '""•· .. ~-· • a.-.1i·MINO . 1111'-_ .. ,_ ~ "-~· ... •· 14 ..... .. , ..... . ...... , Crest Toothpaste nt. wt. 7 oz. Right Guard Foot Guard nt. wt . 6 oz. gge Barnes-Hind Wetting Solution 2 fl. oz. 129 Coppertone Suntan Lotion 4 fl. oz. gge Efferdent Denture Tablets 40's Gillette Trac II Cartridges S's Spectdl Pf •tt~ good thru Sundav. J une 9th Wt rt5trve rhe r19h1 ro l1m11 auant1!its. BUEMA PARK It.ch et Orettqe"-'Pt 0,.11 Dolly t.lO to f:lO P·"'· ~ltfty t 0 to 7 ORANGE City Or. et G11rdl11 G-rovt l ltd. Opt~ IO·f p,.-, Oolly S11ndey 10 to 6 SAMTA AMA JfOO So. lristol ·Ho. af So. Coad "••• Opt11 I O·f p,M. Dolt., St111day I 0 le • • • JO DAILi PlLO f \Jedntsday June 5, l ,., Hoel• To9ether? Edith and Clifford Ir- vutg say they are 'dis- cussi ng alternatives to a divorce,' after being reunited in New York over the weekend. They both have completed jail tenns for parts in li oward Hughes auto- biogr aphy hoax. Night Shift Horror Strikes UALLAS tUPI ) -It ~·as a quiet 1ughl for patrolnlan Bobby "1yd 1open as he "orked. the II p.m. to 7 a.nl. shirt . lie logged the lin1c al live liC'C!l:se with an address on And \Vychopen cril..'d ocross 111inuh'S past n1 i d n ig ht. 't'yler Street. And they found a the roon1 to hil supervll!Or, Tuesday. bo11.·1ing .ball In the car. , Sgt. D.W. Yoong, who hurried to his side. And th en he listened to Uie • 11 begun to seem horribl y "Sarge, I think my \\'ife has police radio channl'l. A "·onion r:tmiliar to \Vychopen. been killed in this wreck," he was dead . !fer car sn1ashcd He asked an officer at the said. into a telephone pole. stene for the license nwnber b-1rs. Lynn Wychopen, 24, 1\\'0 officers at the scene of the \\'reckl'd car. He died ol internal injuries. VIiii• Siate Joseph Ca rdlnal Mind .. zenty, ex:·Catholic Pr!· mary of Hun gary, is 11<heduled to vl!it So- noma County vineyards planted by natives of ~ Hun gary a century ago. He began his Northern: California visit today. began the search for the next checked it In the po I ic e She was I.AA mother of the of kin. cu1nputer. The fatal car was couple's 3-)'br-old t w I n ~---------- At the radio in the Dallas Police Deparln1cnt·s comn1u- iCDtions d Iv is ion, the 26- ycar-ald dJspa tcher got :t trouble call and sent a patrol car to the scene of a car wreck. They found a driver's registered to him. daughters. ~--==--=-~~~~~-=::::!~~~~~~~~~~-,-~~~-'----'~ Kiddie TV .4ds flit B y FTC -WASHING'l'O:-.' fUP l1 ?\lmmm. Kemo S..1bt-c' Nr more Lone Ranger rings or silver bullets? That's right. Tonto. l\1.:iybe no ntore Captain V id e o Q.l'Codc rs . Oa' y Crockcll T- shirts. or Sky King turquoist' rings either. WlLL1Ar.'l TELL O\·crturr in the background -nnd the scene shifts to \Vashington . D.C .. where !he cause of thi s conslcrnntion is revealed. On i\tonday. Le"'is A. Engman. chaimuin of the F'edC'ral Trade Comn1ission, proposed banning kids' t e I e v is i o n comn1ercials in \\'hich prizes are offered for se nding in box tops . "t am 0011• prepared to conclude. as a matter of la11·. that the inclusion of premium offers in children's television ad\'ertising has no place in American marketi ng and -as I read !he law -is a violation __ __of _ lbe. _ Eedttal _,,_.\A''-"llc CommisSion Act," he S3id in a spttch to the Amer ic an .Advertising federation. ---~f- TO 1'1El\18ERS OF the Tonto gcnera!ion , thnt might sound like enough of a sQCi.:il revolution for one day, but En gman "'as just warn1ing up. "I also have concluded that, under some circumstances at least. the use of 'hero figures' in children's ad \'ertis.ing may constitute an unfair practice •. :· he said. "The use of hero figures - \\'hethcr sports f i g u r c s . e nlcrtainment pcrr.->nalities. cartoon cha racters or fi~utes from the program itself - may further ser\"e to redu ce the child's poy,·cr a n d inclination to discriminate." THAT APPAREf\."'TlY could mean that neither liank Aaron nor ri.tighty ~1ousc could endorse cereal. Jn addition Engman said . consideration should be given to stopping commer-eial s ror vitamins or ove r-lhc--counter drugs aimed at children, as ·well as pitches for dangerous toys or •·other pr o du c t s ha:r.ardous to hen lth or safety." COSSUl\.fER G R 0 U P S ·which have been pushing both the FTC and the Federal Communications Commission to do someth ing about kidd}1 commercials for years y, ere happy. Girls or Boys age10to18 Vacation Sewing Classes ** 8-21A h[ lessons, 1750 (only 98¢ hr) ** Make a garment in class ** EnterStylemaker Sewing Contest Prizes $15,000, 45 sewing machines ' ' and 2,400 Nore/co Hair Untanglers . . Call your local Singer Sewing Center now! For eddrtst cf 1hi .Sll'lger S.Wif1oQ Ctnter n1tftSI you, set.White Pagn undtr SINGER COMPANY. • • ~~ a smash. Sound sele~tions for giftin' & goifin~ 15.88 Rig. 19.97 His SIMI racktl. For the average player. Features black-cross nylon and leather grip. Ladies' tennis dress. ... ••• !a .. .-' Machine wash poly-__ _,,_, __ _,,_~stentout:Jre'ii;fifr. PANASONIC 39.97 Portable cassette recorder has push· button controls, built·in condensor mike. (~03095) SOUNDESIGN 29.97 . . Matching panties. Wh ite with triQl." Pastels. too. Misses' 61014. 19.88 Reg.24.97 Men'• and women's we~upsull. 100% stretch nyl on, machine wash. Zipper Iron! and pocket. In navy, burgun dy and· powder blue. XS to XL . Cassette recorder / with mike, earphones.~· "'f..o::-J~~ Operates on AC or ·batteries. (7612) PANASONIC 29,.88 FM / AM portable radio has "A-Frame" design. Slide rule tuning. (RF563) I.I''· . : .... '~ .. ... •i. • .... ·;::.' ~ _. I, '--.:.: . .. " -. -.c f' •• BUENA PARK ltacheto.,........,. Opoll DoMy t :)O to t:lO P."" S..., 10 to 7 15.88 Reg. 19.97 H•r sleel r•ckel. For the better player. Features black cross nylon. leather grip. Grip sizes 4 '11 to 4 Y•. GENERAL ELECTRIC 39.97 GENERAL ELECTRIC 24.97 General Electric AM/FM clock radio has Snv(..zAlarm!I, lighted clock lace. AFC on FM. (C4506) PANASONIC 69.97 I I AM/FM radio/tape ( recorder has con-• denser mike, line cord antenna. AC/DC. (AQ432$1 ORAM GE City Dr. et Chr4tlt ... , 11•11. 0,.11 10-t '""'Delly s.•r 10 to' --t 34.88 Reg.41.97 54.88 Reg.66.97 . , Men•s sterler NI. Set irlCl udes 2woods, 4 lrons and 1 puller. Right or left hand styles. Golf sel for men. Includes 3woods-1,3,4 and 8 itons-2 thr u 9. Carbon steel shafts, laminated wood heads, forged chrome·plated irons. Rig ht or left Fland.slyl13s. . I SALE. PRICES EFFECTIVE 4 DAYS ONl Y. SANTA ANA JtOO So. lrhtol ·Ho. of So. Coetl ''••• 0,... 10.t '""' D•lly S¥ttde~ 10 to 6 . .. • Ile'• Running ' Former. Detroit mayor Jerome Cavaugh says he still will s ee k Democratic nominatio n tor ,governor of Michi - gan although be recen~ ly underwent surgery for removal of cancer· ous kidney. Wedntiday, June S, 1q74 Sta11d Up ~ She r-re lls Parents BERKELEY , (U PI I Ad vico to Jlarcnts who fe('I thei r teen-age children <1re toking over the plact:: fight back. Adults st'('m to be losi ng all their righls, but remu in stuck with all their obligations wwards adolesci;nt offspring. says , Diana Baumrind . :t University of Californ ia psychologist who hJJs carried out extensive research on the patterns or pa r en t ·c h i 1 <l n;Jatio nships in A1ncric:1. DESPITE TllE glor1flcation of youth cnlture ;ind tl1c Jow1:rlng of .the voting ;igc, psychologist Baumrind ~ai~ youth today is 110 betll~r than ru1y previous generation of ad olescents. Young people 5el'n1 "more self-a pprecia tive of their own age group, and m o r e outspoken <ibout their dis.,atisfactions \vilh I h I.' i r 1>a 1't'nt~· ccncration ," sh1· said, lu lh1· VnitC'd S tale '\. '"l'ur1:nts tend to be cast in the role ur vilh1ins. 11t1d chl!dl'tn i11to the role o[ l1apless vlctjms," she ~ui<l, ''This 1>eculiar inversio n o( power in whi ch p:1rcn1s 1:1rc exhorte d to he con1e enlightened at the knl'e of thelr teen-agers has in rHer:t deprived the child vf a res p ons ibl e parent,'' SO :\1 ET I ~t ES \\'llt.:N Baumrind sald . adoli!scents are laking drugs If young people are or dropping out of school , midguided today, she S<'lid. "II ('Qu nsclors go to the pnrcnls is because their n at u r a I and :idvisc the parents to guides, their parents and change their life-styles lo teachers, have abdicated their please the children. authority." ---- UNT IL RELATIVELY recently. a son owed his parents his labor until his 21st birthday, she noted. "The situation is no"' re\'erscd ." she said. "Par~nts huve few rights in rclalioii. to their adolescent children . f:lu t tb~y stlU assun1c m a a y obligations. "This generation of youth is neither nlOrc cntightencd nor more victimized than any previous generation." --- , ' DAILY PILOT l ll , ~-For Moms, Dads, grads, kids. Don't miss 'em. UPI T•WoP'-1• i\' 1111. t 11 R1rn Sister !IIary Anne Guth- rie. 47 , a l~oman Cath- olic nun, has announc- ed as a Democratic candidate for U. S. House of Representa- tives in Tennessee. ' • 20°/o OF,F Men's walk shorts 3.18 'ro 5.59 Reg. 3.98 to 6.98 Polyester and potyestef/ cotton blends In poplins. knits and doubleknlts. All no-Iron. '8::::=~ ·Solids and patterns. Waist 30 to42. ' ' Sile pricn effective . .,. .. ,, 123 4 ~6 799 0 9 CHARGE IT Boys' tank tops Polyester I cotton no-irons. S,M,L,XL. I • 9 9 Re<j. 2.49 Boys' camp shorts No-irons of cotton/ polyester. 8to16reg.slim. 2.63 Re9. l.29 :t!ilh your JC Penney Charge Card. 'Tr you don t have a cha1ge. . just see how !~st we can open up yQur n·ew accoun1 ---./ BUENA PARK . k.ch cit Oro1111•tllor,>e ORAM GE City DI-. ol G¥<R11 Gfo•t l hd Opt11 IO·t p.111. Dolly S1.111do1 10 lo • 0pc11 Doily t :lO to t :JO p.111. S11ndoy 1 0 lo 1 • Toddler girls ' sunsuit Easycare polyeste r/cotton . Assorted halter styles . 2 to 4T. 1.88 Reg. 2.29 SANTA AMA 20°/oOFF Softside Luggage Rayon canvas in Black Watch or McPherson plaid. 15.18 21 "corryo11R~ 18.91 16 .79 24" coinponlOll Rf9> 20.tl 9.58 Tott Rtg. 11 .91 23.18 54" fro!IM' drnlbog. "'9-21.tl -----·---- 3 i11 Ga11g Se11tencecl For Rai•e SAN LUIS OBISPO (UPI) - Three men who pleaded guilty to kidnaping and ra ping a )'oung woman motorist last ~1arch have been sentenced to prison terms or three years to life. Four other men. including 17 .58 ,____ t"·o juveniles, also were '4Z" 1,_, ,_.1...._--1..-l hfl----_.-4_,c,,ha,,c_.ed'>'l--w"-"ith,,,,ki,,.dn":a~Bing,._,t,.he,_,,22"--- lllDt ww-111 year--0! woman from a van, taking her to a remote area 41" '"ii bo9, no frome, l•t· 7.tl 7.18 S4" dre11 bog, no fro rn e. "'•·I.ti (nol 1how n) 18.38 26" co,,.po11ioft. leg. 22.tl 23.18 29" coinpo11lo11. "r<r 21.tl lnol W.ow11I and repeatedly raping her. SENTENcED P.I 0 N D A Y were Arthur E. f.1unguia, 20, and his brother, \\'illiam Jr .. 23. both of Fontana, and Thomas Munoz. 21. Santa f.laria. All pleaded gl!illy ID one count each of kidnap and f~rcible rape. Still to be sentenced are Joe NWles J r., 18, Nipomo, and Javier Zapata., 20. Oceano. Nunez '"as convicted on 14 cow11s last \\-'eek by a Superior Court jury 1,1,,hile Zap al a pleaded guilt y earlie r to one rount each of kidnap and forcible rape. The two juveniles \\'ere prosecuted in J uvenile C.ourL THE WOMAN AND her boy friend. Lon Cathey, 30, or· San Francisco, were en route from San Francisco to Los Angeles earl y March 5 when their van broke do\ln and they pulled into a closed service station near Nipomo to spend the night. Sheriff's offictrs said rour of the seven suspects forced their way inlo the van, beat Cathey '>"·ith a tire iron and kidnaped the v.·oman. She was taken to a remote area where she was raped repeatedly and then released, officers said. 'S ly' Hou r · Late for Lice nse NE\V YORK (Ul'I l Sylvester Stewart, the "Sly''. of the rock group Sly and the Fami ly Stone, swaggered inlQ the marriage license bureaq more than an hour late anq asked for .1 marriage license. · "It's no hassle, man," said the ~year-0ld rock group: leader, clad in an irridesccn' multicolored suit and yello\11 boots. The city clerk agreed-to keep the bureau open beyond the nonnal 4 p.m. closing thne Jong enough to grant a license to Stewart h\'O da ys before his planned wedding today at :r.tadiron Square Garden . The Oride-to-be, Cathleeq Sharon Silver. 21, who described herself as a ri actress, wore a low-cut blacK hal ter and sla cks, nung her hair in petulan ce as photographers recorded her filin~ the license applicRtion. "We ~·ere delayed i n traffic." an e n tou ra ge member told a reporter. "An hour from 60th Street'!" the reporter asked. "\\le drive safe. man, .. the press agent said. Give Your Wife ••• SECURITY , wi!h (Ir> t lec:ironk QO•Ogt door ~ ~II out DISPLAY tOOM 324 N. Newport Blvd, JtOO So. lrh tg!, Ho. of So. Cood Plot• Opt11 IO·' P·'"· Dolly S..11doy I 0 lo • NfWPOllT lfACH PHONE 642-3766 -. I J% DAILY PILOT Wed~y June 5, 1~74 THE FAMILY CIRCUS · By Bil Keane Bot11lis111 Death Bo11 Vivant Soup Will Be Spilled NEWARK N J (AP ' .. )-Cowtt The Bon Vivant Soup Co has movi!.; ~ by .an earth· agreed t · ~oe. machine and bu led 0 gover om e nt under dirt and r destruction of l.5 mill io cans "I hope \\ilen :bag~. of soup reca lled n.... \\·on't t ke . y do it they ... ..,ee years a pictures and put a~o after a New York m them in the paper next died from botulism present~~ s!arying t;hildren -:~ a ~an of the company's vich ·-v.on t ';llld~rsland," said ~~a so1sse. } P~tl, vtce president or: Bon . ~n VivanL said it \i•as Vivant. \\ilo has claimed that ~11\g up efforts to recla im if:re is no~g wrong v:ith ex ___siu_p ....he.cause_J_t._g_~ soup. rnses were too high ...... "an lbe.300p ~-as recalled-from es imated $100,000 aceordin thouSands of ., r . ._ __ _;to One"source In add'!' g arid the'D~ v~ y shel\'CS ... tnrr -. I JOO, the . uuu 1vant fa..t,_ •. sallf""l?F!Ml}r,.,f<lt1., July· l.9't'o1l·'iJ':"'~"""f.;;;~-~·~,mLJ.---4 average 50 ' ".an r.wJ. · llll.J\W.. be ccn ls a can. would .....,... .. ran of Bedford N. y 1 the ~g~l1d f~~:.n even i~ it won :',,~-e d:.1 ~~an~il_ch,ys~i:s: paralyzed. brleriy ~ur II \\'as • \JOST' OF TlfE sou will lre taken to a dump in ~udsoo 1964 Queen To Divorce Politician AUSTI!\'. Tex. (APl - Donna ~futscher ~1 i America or 1964 , .__ s s f • ut1S sued ~rn1er Texas House Speaker us_ Afutscher for divorce :ryie1r marriage had beco · '1nsuppo 1 bl me d. r a e because of iscord or co .n · :Jlities." she ~id~t Cl( pcrson- s1!~~tscDh_cr . \\'as ordered by 1stnct Court Jud . 111E GOVERNMENT Vi~ediate1y recalled au .Bon 1vant. products. Under federal condemnation =ures, ,the soup bas ·beeo under s eal In \Vatehouses a r o u n d the country. The sou"p no ·11 be destroyed . W WJ . . in the areas where it IS stored. The largest batch some 25(1,000 cans stored i~ th NeWj!.rk. \Vi.JI be destroyed ~1 e Hudson County dump. " . Boo Vivant was reorganized in December 1'72 under the name ~1~re and Co. The ~garuzation took p I a c e use of ·bankruptcy. The soup cans over \Vhich the ~rt ~ltle was fought were c on V1vant's sol · . assets. e remaining Jim Aleyers not I d. gc o 1spose of any of the ('()Up\c's pro w· fnnd ~_appear at a court ::1~ IDS Degree g .nday, the couple's fifth '\\'eddmg aruuversary. Cathy Egli. daughter of Mr The former !louse speake and l\lrs. Norman Egli of was convicted ft.larch 11 19~ C011ta ~lesa, has received ~I conspiracy to accept abnbe bac!Jelor's degree in Jl'~ S~n1 Houston promoter Frank . ~ from Sy.•arthmore Col- rp. T~ case is on appeal ge U:-Swarthmore Penn Mrs J\.fut sche · She lS a ad ' · \\'est .Austin ;pamrto"dtinto a de! Mar HJ~ C'~!:,of Corona fall. men last 6'' ~ ........ THE I~ her divorce pelition she ~ s cu~tody of the cb~ple 's Y child, Gus Hurl i\lutscher 3 . r e y his father. ' now hving '\'ith J\.trs. J\.ilutscher 32 I a daughter b , a , a so .has marriage. y previous • OPEftSlOCl fUlWlRl 11"""" ""' 8 s l P1tl. Ult D1,,r_t0. \ ~o• itd, . tor \ \II""""'" st s1 I "l Ill '~ '' '"' l•I· '' DE&O\\AlOI\ Pl&lUl\ES P\AQUES STOii HOUltS: Oec01ator pieces in oMs 'n end:> to bngtiten vou1 tiome UP lO • ', PAlll\1 and \\\l&\\EI A&&ESSOl\\ES RI ass- . .... ' ' ( -· '"--- ' • DRUG & SUNDRY PRICES SLAMDI • <Ol•<ILA8'S ASPIRI• 250'• ··•·1•· .....................•........ 391: ;::.~~~L~·~"~ ~~~~. ~~~~~~~-~.~~.·. · · .111: C:OUNC:ILArS Y1 l•I-S"9Mp•• 88 er C:r•M• l lM• l•I· "' . . . . . . . C VOS 16 ••· llAllSPIAT .. •••. 1.12 ............................. 111: AIM TOOTMl'ASTl 4.6 •I-t •••. ~ .............................. 44 ~ 2 tlAI~ ,, .. ~ ! . • · ' I ••1.s1c .............. ' .............. 31111 PllfUMlD SOAPS ' "'' t• SO% 1•¥i11t•· STO(CK ' UP NOW " • :Al SAVINGS! . . 10AM ft 9 l"M DAILY SATURDAY IOAM 1, 7PM SUNDAY 11AM t• SPM COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. USE rou• ClfDl f -CAID •IM WIMOllOI • F ......... a i ' -.. Son Dlfl)o Ftuwoy at lriifol • lllSTtl tlllllM: CUI • ~ g " a llSl Ill (°""M1(1'1 tl(11T HIMS '· t • • _, I DAIL V PILOT J IJ • ~peaclunent lrviI1e F ou11dation Donates Coverage, l ' Deat1is Elsew1iere Hosmer Backs Television Cash f 01· County ';relescope LOS ANGEi.ES (UPI) Funcr•l ae~~• will b e conducted todat lor l!omer J. Stelny, 83, 1 p e t ro l eum englnetr v.·ho wu . actlve 1n 11lumnl nffalr1 of Stanford Unl'frtlty. Stejiiy died Friday Of Full House Hearings The James I rvine Foundation , .tias conlrlbuted SJ0,350 to the'Orange County Astronomers for development of lhe largest permanently mounted poblk: tcleSOQpe built by amateurs. Los Angeles houses a 12·inch rerractor. on the Uutrument. at Ka1 .. ,Hospltal a r I q r By 0. r.. HUSnNCS sufferlhc'-an appartnt Itron. ·i " °' "'' 0.1., ,...., '''" ·• -<f . .~ !111)at'1 wrong with lellln& DECATUR, Ca . iUPll> -· the publ ic see ror 11.!elf what'1 F uneril s er v Ice' were going on In the \.1.S. House ot scheduled today ~Or ~,Jte,., · fRepresentaUVes?" Coogreas· Patrick G. Miiier, , . man Craig H06mer a1ka. 1nodera_,tor of,the Pre .. )'te ~ .fie raised the queaUon after Churc~ of t~ U.S. and • key, the declsloo ol the Houle fi gure 1n ~velopment Of the Judiciary Com m l t t e e to church's 1\lrtlon,al m Is s Ion pennlt televlsiop coverage ot p~ram the ,P'lil t"'O decades. its impeaduneot p::oceedlnp, Miller, 74 , died }.fc!nday_nlf'I l're"'1t House rulet pennlt after an extend~ Ulne&t. t e J e v I s I n g com mittee -proceeding.,, but prohibit 1uch MODESTO ( U P I ) broadcast. ol House """""· Funeral services will be held Hosmer, who has Introduced today for Walter C. Hucock, legislation to permit televising 56, St.an,b.laus ~ty's flrt the proceedings of the House, public detender. HaDcock di noted that • c omm 1 t tee here Sunday after suffer! coverage is permitted "for the head injuries In a rfall at bis education, enlightenment and home Saturday. Information o( the general · l, public ... " MEXICO CITY (AP) "Th~ being so," Hosmer Emma' Hw1ade JUver•' J. said, "it makea no 1en1e to \v1dow of Mexican muralist exclude the cameru from the Diego Rivera, died Sunday of House chamber. cancer. The la.st or Rivera's three wives, she was a former journalfst and originated the tourist magazine "This Week in J\1exlco." LONDON (UPI ) Sir Arnold Luna, 86, a pioneer of 1nodern Alpine skiing, died Sunday. I He received knighthood io .1952 for "services tQ. skiing and Anglo-Swiss;eJations." * NEW LIFE ta belnl pumped into the Orange-.Co u n4 y Co n servatlve Coordinating Council, which was a political fore< in the COUlll)' during tlie 1960s. Former COQgl'mlDlll~John Schmitz has been named chalnnan ol the rt-aetlvat<d ca:. Dea11t Notices Four Take ___ ,,_,_ ___ _ Board members include Llrry O'Doherty, commander of the LllUlll RUio Military Order of World Wars: Jim ToWTltend, pubUaber of "The f;ducator" ln P'Ullerto«u Rob- ert Bartholomew, a TUIUn ' nurseryman .1nd a membe r of Ille Tultin Unill<d sc!lool boanf, and Mr1. William Jores ol Lido We. Both Sdiinlls and Bartholo- mew are avetWJd mer1bers ol. the •rch-conservatlve John Birch Society. The CCC's: O'Doherty says the organization v.·as in st ru· mental in first getting i\J>M!m· blyman ROOert Badh3m 1 R· Newport) elected in 1962. * JJ~t~IY WHET~tORE is still thumping the tub f o r musicians In the Legislalure. This time it's unen1ployment compensation, which 'M'OUld be exteded to musiciaru unde1· a bill sponsored by the Buena Park Republican, a former bandleader. ORANGE COUNTY Ilis SB l:Mlf passed the Sen· 3tc unanimously and is a1vait· ing action Jn the Assembly. Last year, \Y he t more spon!IOred new legislation that make s club owne r s responsible for rnusical equip- ment left on their premises by bandsmen they hire. The si ng le girt makes up the majority of funds being raised to complete the observatory al an elevation of 3,000 feet near the village ot El Cariso near Elsi nore. By y ca r's end the lfuntinglon Be a ch· ba sc d organiiation hopes lo open !he obser\•atory con tainlng a 22· inch J!);Ultipui:_pose telescope BY C01\1PARISON. the Griffith Park Observatory in presenting a really big shoe sale ' • ' \' ' There are about 300 rlear nights per year at t h e observatory site, above the 1narine layer vo'hich banklcts urban Orange County three or four months a year. · About an hour drive from Santa Ana. the site is remote enough to be free of light and smog pollution, as 'A'ell, a club spokesman said . The El Cariso obser\'atory \\'Ill be used by members of the association, classes and youth groups from b o I h Orange and River&ide coun- ties and individual acientiric observers "'ho will lease time < ' ONE NIGHT each month \viii bl!: set aside for public use and educational channel SO, ! KOCE I will be invited to use the telescope for broadcast o (' astronomlea l events such as eclipses or eomeL!, according to the group 's spokesman. Construction of the telescope is under 'A'ay. A building to house the two-ton mount for the 22·inch telescope is in design stages. The public is invited to a diseussion of the observatory project set for 7:30 p.m. June ti. =-~~-'MQ()JI L------1----ll!llm l'.·M-•. 0.11 01 a.1th J11111 n T p • .. vlv.cl by hh IOl'I, WI t 11'1'1 f'. M-. ol 1n1u1•lv1nl1; IWO 1htv1. Mr1. Aile• 14, WI$ I rtlldenl Ofir.11 Mt! .. , (lllf, op nzes :c,..1:~ .• ~:'.::~::· T~:f: ..... ·;&c"te<ln --,.. ..... ---~--1--------1- ·ll BrGldWIY (ll1~l Will! IM RtY. n ogans ute l(urrle fltllcl~tlnci. lnt1trf'll1>I ,lrl\1Vtll MtlllOl'lft Plrk qlrtc1N bY tll BrOl(JWIY Mf'rh•~ry, ow~ '""Yle,,. Hl'll•n , ttlldtnl of 1ntlnq1on '!:"I Cll I. 0111 flt clnth oe l , ltt~. 11r~ 'led tw lier 'on j•m11 B1lboeJ 1llf; 14'1oF ort!l(k:~I dr~nJ• otner. 011ph Haer, of Tltwsvllte. D<ldt: Ill"" Fr4rw; I MHMn. loc"'4 1ton'-Flord1. S.rv1<11 whl bl 111111::io ~ l hlKldlY, P1~~ \tltw ~ li>el. :'i::'~'·,.:~l~c "'J::i"::f.~~ P1rk SHA NON 11 M, SIMnnM. 0.11 ol clUI~ Jlllle l. ·~. WI ' 11 rHhMn of Collt M151. ••IYed l>Y lour -·· A.M. S1111111on "" ~·• Mn•, .>or.n J, 5J\IMOn 4 Dv-n• 111"°" of IDWI I nd J.,,_ of T11:1t111, 111.; 11..., 0o>11111111r~. Mev lt!IY, S1nr1 •· M1•l!H' Wt~. l"alm 50•!1'11111, Tn11>1 111~ of OJ•-, c1111 .. Pll•lci1 Lor>.n, BUENA PARK -FOUl' Orange Coast high students were among the wlnners and sem i-f i n a l ists of the Americanism Educatkmal League 's 1974 P•lriolic Slopn contesl First prize, $400, went to Mater Del High S<:bool student Debbie Abrams or Orange for the slogan, "J\lore ~Stars and Stripes-and Less Gripes." OtkO!I .. ~Din 5"-nl>Oll flt WIK.I >llier Mlkt lhc~·r '"" •l•it•, Gerlruck 1'~... of Sa. Dlkotl. twt1>fy MY.., •l>dcN~n ,.., ,,,,,.., a r e • 1 Larry J Katz of Huntington 11\dchll ..,,, RMtrv Wedllfte'IY IYeftlM • • 1::io P s1. Joa<nlm'1 en""'" M~~• Beach a 1ttarlna High School 1.1r1cl1¥ :OO AM. 51 .Juclllm'• Cl'lurcn. ' ~"--MllA ____ ... ''~ t'll'.llv Seau!d>t• c ..... 1.,v. eetl lJtudent, took we ....,.. -.:ut:JU 0~tz.., t\OIJ~W lll•Kton. \ace award with, "Preserve :~~~~. :.r.~-:.L" .. •0• .ff. I ~our Fretdoms ... or Forfeit !d M011C11r, M1v ii'l~~-si.nna ftW<! Your TOlnOllOW!." loll of 1111" Ute ltfC05t1 Mn1, Ctllfor-f F in 110t1. • • ~ , ' 1 Karen S. P.torse o ounta , .... 111 movt"" ~ l'il'l'lll•'• lflrw v.1•1 V II La Quin'• '""" o. Siie w11 t!M wkfloN of 1!M \t i. Dan. 8 ey, a ... •"6Q S1ev1n1 100 11 IUrYIYltd Ii'! • d111911t•r School student W0D ID honor cl OOll•!n·llW W . l.1Mri. Rlctwlrd L. ' lll7'..--.r--f cier of Beltl~Plir...,, ~W1111lnq!on1 r..r certificate with, rri;:cuwn 0 tier, Mr.S.E. rnutroSICI OI Mlnourl1 1 Cho' It' Worth Def·-•· ~1~tr. Mr. G -~. Arr.,sironci of ice -S ~ ''oorl• 1 11111r • .Mr1. a.11v B&rf'ltl .ol f ing n 111 Cov!n1, 't1llloml.t 11'11:1 • 2 , • '""'~lldren. " .. -1 f' I' •· Inc I u de d 'ner11 se•vlcH wire ~onductltd tw '~uu· tna is .. 1ve••rld D1vl0 Nllso~ Frl01y. M1y 31 •• 1 ... ume Niemi of Costa Mesa lD:OO 1.m. In :GrMto1cr11 M-l•I l ~ Ith "A •~ or~. Servin•' 11rloer 1111 dlrtcllon of Jfiih School, W 1 .>WVnl G1•1 F11n1r11 Home, ?'•rnct111, W1sr.. America is a Free America." 1100 • --·--Kelly H. Sm!th of San 4:27 f. 171h Sr., Colla Mei.o 646-4888 -·-IALTZ-ll~~ION fUNlllAI. HoMl Corono del Mar 'l.'.;;osro ~eso BILL llOADWAY MOlll\IAllY 110 Brood.....,y, Co~1\l Me;a M2-9 1!il -·-DILDAY'UOTHIRS MOITUAIY l 791 I Beoch Sl.•d. ~lun11ng10<1 Beach 842°7771 244 Redondo Ave. long Beach (213) 438-11 45 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA llACH MORTUARY 1795 log11110 Cnnyon Rd <194-9415 -·-McCOIMICK follSSION folOITUART 28832 Comorio Cop•slrono Son Juo11 CopL11rono .:9.s.1n6 -·-PACIFIC VllW 1'11MOllAL PAIK Morruo_ry Chopel :1500 Pocilic View Dri"e Newport Booth, Colilornoo 644-7700 -·-PHK·fAMILY COLONIAL fUNllAL HOMI /80 I Bo I so Ave .. Wi11mfn~1er 893-3525 -·-SMITHS' MOllTUAIY 621 Main Sr. HunhnglOll &!oth S36-b.S39 T i s' ~ r ~1 , ! ""'' lvery S.lurNy In the DMIN~PILOT J Clemente High School went into the semi-finals with, "Ring Your Own Freedom Bell." Scholarship checks totallinl $1 ,050 "'ere gh'tn tbe top seven entries. Employment f ·acility Will Ope11 CARDEN GROVE -A new California Employm ent t> e v e lopment Departriient cent.er will open here Monday. The center, 9738 Garden Grove Bl vd:; will provide unemployn1ent Insurance, job information and tr a I o i n I information to the half million People Jiving in Garden Grove, Huntington Beach, Stanton, Cypress. Los A1amitos, Seal Beach and Westminster. The center will provide daily computerized job listings for both the Orange and Loll Angeles County areas, the <:enter's manager, Robert Tomkinson, said. Fann Unit Gets Chief PLACENl'lA -Placentia citrus grG\\'et Jack O. Christensen has been elected president of the O r a n a: e county Farm Bureau. Christcr\Sen has served as a men1ber or the callfornia State Citrus Research Adviaoey Committee-and Is a past chainnall of the Orange 'County Farm Bureau citru• seotion. ' ,-• • liie ~lride NATURALIZER • •ll••t•r oa•t of favorite branda! • dalleo deb•, ~a velat iona, man.y more! • apactetore, lot• of dre••Y ahoe•! • a uper •andal•, caauele, even tenniee! • big variety ehow of colore, aize•! . • leathera, patent•, oanv••• etc., etc.! • 521 $24 naturallzare, 16.99 • $20 524 li fe atrldee, Joyce, 14.ss • S15 $18 aportivo moda, aandale, 9 .99 • $23 $25 panaljoe, 18.99 • not every etyle or •ize In every etore! • hurry In for beet aalectlon! ' LfieOROADWAY AN~f!IA 444 N, f,lo(,~!714)!il~t2l "" 4 ·~ )"'l 11, fl~ I •• CE~RITOS • iOOlo~(e•No~ Mal llll) '600411 <.;,,•I' dl AM • o '' ~" '.I , 4" I I • • ·- J -1 DAIL V PILOT , .. ' •'. ·. -... . . •-o" ·-o· ,,; 0 . Do11 't Let · Ha ndicct.p S top You By JOYCE L. KEl"NED\' DEAR JOYCE: ~·fy son \Ya s inj ured in an aut() aCcidcn1 as a small child and has lost the use of an arm. \\'hat careers "·ould be suitable for hin1 ! - T.K .. Pittsburgh, Pa . A nev,r book. '·Your Handicap -Don't Let 11 llandicap You." has just been published by Julian l\1cssner (1 \V. 39th Street. New York, N.Y. 10018: $6.25 L The author is the well-kno"'" guidance consultant Sarah Spliver. I've (Career Corner] ' held off dealing v.•ith questions such as the above because I Wtd"fMllJ, Ju~ .5, 1974 PILOT-ADVERTISER 4 BIRJHDAY ·sALE I ' EXTRA SAVINGS IN ALL DEPTSI:-. --~ ~ ALL STORES JOIN II WITH TAKE YOUR PICK PRICES SLASHED! SAVE $60 LIQUOR SALE .---, BUYOUT Wf BOUGHT OVER 22,000 DOZEN TO •1...111£:,..,. c::>a O ~~1 -..-C. s,..J-...... _ Bf ABLE TO SELL .. I PANASONIC I I .T-HE-M::-AT,,..T_H•_s P_R•-c£_1 _ ' a andJ 2-0unce CORNING GLAS-SNAP TUMBLERS ~---'-k<>ew--this--book was hltf----'"--- preparation and it ·,vas \\'Orth waiting for -it 's must reading forh and i cappe d students and their parents. As Dr. Splavcr says : • "Today. persons w i l h physical ha nd ica p s are employed in every broad category 0 r occupational endeavor. There are a great variety of jobs they can hold. jobs they can do. To partake or the opportunities opening up for you. you must J? et a q u a int e d "' i I h th e occupational \\"Or\d and v.·hat is available to you in that v.'orld ." That's v.·ha t this book is about FIFTHS BRADLEY'S JALT A CASTLE RICORO BLENDED VODKA GIN IJ~M WHISKEY • Jolto Vodko -light os o whistJef', m;,>llow 05 summe.-. ~,flfu1y produced • Costl.I Gi11 -rnort.,i e~pert's first cho>te Ve.y dry, lone flavored, • Rlcoro Rwm -H'flPOl1ed hom W~1 Indies! Choice ot L'Slnt or Do1k. • lrodl•y's Wh isk•1-qvolity blend aged lo ful( mor..,,1ry, /,ne flavor. ' 3 REG. 995 -· 2988 ,· .. . : . _:. -.: .. ~ -~ EACH -. . .. >·. ·: ·,~·,: CLOCK RADIO-RECORDER or RECORD CHANGER H,, ... , _, ""'~•l'•on 1! tr:o ..,1 •·ulv-·c; (or ~ou ·• from notionufly 1.AOWn l lov1b '. Allrl'I M -,olid <,folt• 0.•1,101 rod" ,.... th i J•· "'" •un,n.1. ((.rmvl•·Ti• lll'''"!I•· r·-corJE'< ;.,, w1rh all occe<;!.Orte~ you need .•• l>0tle1ies, ACodoo rc1, , o•:·h·lrll·. t !, 1n~· cu~.,,,11~-. l•l"~ fr>'><' J ~!)<'(_'(j rt:•o• j ch•1n0t.'f l:ISR outomtthcimcinuol plt1s dusl cover. A( DC. I •"'"' •• " I 49.~ WINE STEMWARE BY LIBBY f"Of degom rntertoining you'N w171t Libbey's line quality glosw' ot this low s.ole ptice! Choice of IOY:i-or . red wine glosws, 6~ oz. wMe wine glosH"S & 51'! Ol. chompogne gAo5se$. DEAR JOYCE: Since you seem familiar \\'ilh medical books. I \\'OUld like lo know if you could help in locatinr. a book published for I h e preparation or the l\1edical College Admission Test. I understand there is a course and series of books whicb are part of it -the ''Kaplan Course." Do you have any idea v.•here it 's located or·\1--:-==----.:::C:::=========~I where 1 can find books? - A.?i.t. Houston. Tex. ' REG. 68 ' REG. 66' SALE! 396 THE ASSOCIATION o f American 1'1edical Colleges did a study on those students who cranuned or repeated the test. The range of scores is 200-800. Those '11ho took the test the second lime ( and it's much the same test each limel. improved their lest scores only by about 30 points. 1-Towever. if you v.·ould feel more confident v.·ith a book of • preparation tests. there are several , such as '"1\1edcial College Ad1nission Te s t '' (Arco. 219 Park Avenue South. New York. N.Y. 10001: $4 ) and "Preparation for the ~1edica\ College Admiss ion Tc st '' I Henry Regnery. 114 \Y . Tllioois. Chicago. Ill. 60610: $4.45 plus 34 cents pootage). The Stanley ll K a u t a n Educational Center ( 1675 E. 16th Street. Brooklyn. N. V. 112291 offers prep courses in 14 cities. DEAR JOYCE: Do you knov.• or ;iny booklets that rxplain pension plans? -S.Q., Bethesda. ?i.'1d. "KNO \\' YOUR PENSION Plan." 34 pages . ·is available for 55 cenl s from I h c Superintendent of Documents. \Vashington, D.C. 20402. The booklet's stock number is 2900- 00186. T housand s or disappointed men and wom<'n ha11c written to the federal govl'.':mmenf con1plainlng that lhey did not get !he pension benefits lhey had b c c n counting on all th rough thei r working lives. This booklet v.•as written 10 help individuals avuid this disappointment. Send questions for th is column 10 Joyce l.Al!n Kennedy at !his neW!'!pnper. Sorry. no n1a il replies cti n be given. ' 'I OUTDOOR SPECIALS 47c 49c 96c REG. 4.99 3-SHELF METAL UTILITY TABLE REG, 2.98 VELVET & SHAG ZIPPERPlllOWCOVERS POLORON 'h GALLON PICNIC JUG .SALE 1 09 Unbrtoloble hi-impact paly with •us1proal. ~hoc~ •cs•~ Toni OUTc< 1ocket 11 19(6 COMPACT FOLOING WOOD CAMP STOOL 1s9 Costa Mesa Santa Ana MR. PlUMB!R DRAIN OPENER REG . 1.79 139 VAPOR!TTE FLEA COLLAR --~-- (0}[~ ··---- Fountain Valley ' zj3 f , I 7tll SI. 1406 W. Edi.,-& lrislol MOCJ!Ollo at T olbtrl Costa Mesa Santa Ana Fount ain Valley 2lOO Hcsbor ot Wll-Jl25 lrlotol at MocArtttw 16 141 Horbor at fdl119"" VAPOR!TTE INSECT STRIP Work s lo 120 Doy~' Jorge 20-.1 5.,.30" si~c wi1h U l . OPPfOVed rlectrieol card r;ct. Eosy-•oll I \~•· co~ters. Sale price. El Toro Hoovv quolity velv!!!S !!. roe;h fur. ~ke shoqs in dec0tot0< colors. 20~ 27", Zopper end. You sa•·e Sl.00. BUY- OUT! 01 9inally Sold on TV for s9·5 196 ' GARB-A-SEAL GARBAGE BAG HOLDER El~lt'5 gorboge con & Q(l•bogf! odor'-Arl1usls in wid1h & heoQht. • 30 Rcploct'f't'lcnl Bog~ , , , . 79c CABLE CAR SUGARLESS GUM Huntington Beach Huntington Beach El TDl'O at Roclrfitld '861 AdcllM at lroollhor.t 211 JI leoch ll•d. ol Aff'"" • Westminster Huntington Beach Huntinc)ton Beach Westminsttt at Goklen West '5 I lta1tlt'910ft c ..... surwrir I • \ 5 PILOT ·ADVERTISER J Unbelievably Priced!~· • FANCY KNll?~ DRESS $H .. 1~.TS FOR ·DA~·;[ ~ these outttond~,stWts to o~ selling for ~ m:n! Potyntet oncf cot1ori jocQUOrd knits with long ~. big PQll'lled col- m 2-button cuffs, chesl pocket. Pottems golore! S-M-L-XL t .sh.rt S.... F~7 Kith' $hi~, reg. 4.71 ............. MOW 3.5 Costa Mesa 233 E. 17th St. ' Reg. 541 Reg. 21" "SAMSON" l'.11dnt~ay, Junt S 11)74 BIRTHDAY ' Yo.'1 be omozed ot the values~ Neve< before "ave you~ such ~tity .. o vast :ielec:tion inc.luding WHne line imported fabrics from Switzerland. Fronce ond holy os well os popu!or polyester. A variety ol new patterns ond designs i" ohost1;1I f1;1shiorl tolors Thritty'~Mt neck~c1;1llection! SCHICK STYLING DRYER .. ,. 3.29 J99 SCRIPTO VUTANE CostoMesa 2300 Horbor at Wilson Santa .Ana Fountain Valley Westminster Huntington Beach 3325 lrlstol at MacArihur 16141 Horborat Ediftgtt' Weshnlnstt<atGoldtoW11t 95-lft91onleach Huntington Beach su1w ...... ' -.. • DAILY PILOT J:i ANIMAlogic1$ ~ ''""" '"'·" ~ :., ' "! 'fi.l1~~ Vif Si'OU~O ~~VE 'f14E : RIG~T" 'f'OCHOOS! WMlf~ER Wf WAi.Jf fo HA.VE. SlJNN1~S.K1ffEN$ - CR P16't.E'f5 -" Surgery Requires Thought By DR . STEINCROJIN DEAR OR. STEINCROJU'\': I kno\1' that son1etimes things happen that prevent a patient from having any choice on "''hether or not to ha\'e an operation. For example, I \\'ould be a fool 10 say, ·'Lel's wait. J don't feel like an operation" if the DOCTOR IN ' THE HOUSE doctor had made a diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Besides, the pain and the nausea would be strong convincers. l\IMt people don 't argue .:..aOOut an op;eration .w~-ari apPfndix kicks up -or when •a kidney stone or gallbladder I predul'eS unbe&f"able pain.-----! But isn't if different when the hy sterectomy operation is under considerat ion'? Doesn't the pAtient ha ve a right to say, ''Let's wait and see"? Take me, for example. -On a recent visit to n1y gynecologist he suggested that I have my uterus out. I asked him why and he said ... I can't go into an entire mt"llical explanation. All I kllo1v is that you'd better have it out soon as possible.'; Tu·o weeks have gone by. and I've \1'orried myorelf sicker than I want to be. Indecision is making it \\'Orse. Don't you think I have the right to know "·hy I need a hysterectomy? I'd be willing to undergo surgery if T knew 1 really needed it. -l\1rs. V. CO~l~IENT: You have the right to another medical opinion . To remove all the indecision -and to play safe -I suggest that you seek cow;ultation as soon a s possible. Every patient has the right to know why surgery Ls necessary. Years ago hysterectomies used to be perfo r med v.·henever a fibroid, was discove red . These day s doctors suggest that you come back a few times a year to make sure the fibroid is not getting larger. If it stays small , urually an operation is not undertaken. But if the tun1or, or tlimors, get larger suddenly, or begin lo bleed. then hysterectomy may be the treatment or choice . Did your gynecologist do a Pap smea r? If it was positive and he has found evidence of prccanccr or cancer, then operation should not be put of[ for long. Hysterectomy is a must -not a choice in this case . I can understand your indecision. ~1rs. V. ~lost woinen dislike the idea of an operation on the uterus - as most n1en dislike ·thc prostate operation. But if you \Viii talk to any, of your friends v.·ho h.a\'C had the operation. you \\'ill find that fears of its consequrnces lha\'e been exaggerated in the past. Hysterectomy dOt's not cause premature aging. or other drcl'ldful hangups which terrify so many Y.'01ncn. • * * • Indigestion may be caused by conditions out side the stornnch that nerd treatn1cnt "·arns Dr. Stcincrohn In his booklet. '"\\'hal Yo11t Can Do f'or Slomach Trouble." For a copy, write hlm at this paper enclosing 35 cents and a STA~IPED. SELF-ADDRESS· ED ENVELOPE. Just a few words in the right place ... Daily Pilot Clcnslfied Ads Dial the direct llne 642-5678 I \ \ 1_6 OldlV P1L01 M .• ISSIOn Inn Boffo Raquel Welch Also Big ,in ft1 ovi.e By BOB THOMAS RIVERSIDE I AP) -It seems like a San Simeon South. a · concrete c a s t t e incredibly orna te, set dov.•n in the midst oC this sunny Southern Caiiiornia town. Pat and Richard Nixon \\'et<' married here. fru m p h r e Y Bogart boozed here. Teddy Roosevelt. Charles Lindbergh and niliny more of this ~­ century's celebrities slept Rt • the Mls.slon Inn during its colorfu l histo ry. and now the aging hotel is providing the backdrop for a movie about a Hollywood legend . A FA'r COl\·1ErlY star of the silent screen gives a \~ild party. and the night ends in presented the script, met with her and showed her our fihns." !\tiss Welch agreed to do the fil m, making the usua l movie- star demands for chauffeur. priv11 te r eside n c e , etc, Merchanl ag_reed to some. ta Ked -ner agenfs out of others. "It's inipartant on a picture like this not to have an i m b a I a n ce.'' ren1arked !\lerchant. "Titcre \must be a spirit of c:;ooperatiOli. so 1.hat everyone ts a star, not JUst one pers0n. '' ~1iss \\'e lch is staving ;J'l Ho\vard Johnson's during the six·week filn1ing, olong with ev~one else. tragedy. The bare outline of · J!,; the new movie. ;,The \\1ild ~ ~..d<· .. ·.i-$ THE CASTJNG OF Jolly Party." sounds like. the Fattv -~ ,t>I Grin1m's Holh'\rood castle Arbu. ckle story . The ""median· AT was as vital 8.s the hu1nan '" HOWARD JOHNSON 'S 1 starred in the biggest film P a.Ver s . Someone scandal of the 1gw3. facin~ Raquel Welch remen1bcrcd a Life magazine trial three times in the rape lavout that Included th e death of a starlet before his James ~, who playe d Mission Tnn amonl! America's acquittal. S:incho Panza in ''?-.fan of La dowager resorts. The inn had Appe arances decei\'e, sal's ~tancha," agreed to play the fallen en bad ti mes -it i.~ Ismail ~'ferchanL the Bomba·\,. role of Jolly Grimm. The other being" operated as a residential born producer of "The \\1ild major role was Queenie, the hotel -but refurbishinit and ' ' ' ·.4 lcohol ) .4spirin-- Bad Mix? \\1ASHINGTON (AP) As pirin n1ay p rove Jl *dangerous remedy for an alcoholic hangover, medical experts have told the Senate n1011opoly subcommittee. ~1edlcal Prof. Ste\\'art C. Harvey said Tuesday that aspirin breaks down barriers 1in the stomach that, when not \'•akened by ' alcohol, ~ normally pr~vent s~a ti acid front damaging e stomach itself. "ADDJNG TllE insult or as pirin on top of the insult Or overindulgence in alcohol is unsafe,'' said Harvey, a pharmacology professor at the University of Utah College of · l\Iedicine. Dr. HG"'<trd Spiro, Chief of the gastrointestinal unit at the Vale University School of l\1edicine, said. "Alcohol adds to th e harmful effect of aspirin in promoting eros ion in the stomach. Party." comic's mistress. studio props n1ade it the "The resemblance to the perfecl model or a movie llARVEY ALSO said that Arbuckle case 1s 0 n I y ;'WE ~1UST IIAVE seen mansion of the 1920s. the use of an antaci d superficial." remarked the 37. from 300 to 400 actresses." ;,\Vhen we saw this place \\'e containing aspirin ro combat year-old ~1erchant. • ' J 0 11 y said the producer. "Then one were overwhelmed," said the stomach upset caused by spicy Grimm. who is the fat day I sa\v Raquel \Velch producer, gazing at the foods mi;iy turn out to be comedian in our oicture. finds promoting 'The T h ree ti.fission .Inn's profusion of damaging. his career is fadin~ \\'ith lhe ~1usketeers' on the Today tov,:ers and turrets. ''We Harvey recommended that coming of talking n1ovies. He Show. "Her 0¥/ll personality started rewriting the script to the word "antacid" be re· makes his O\\'O niovie and came through, nol just the fit the fabulous rooms we n1oved from the label or any shows it one night at. his ·picture of a movie star. I found here." aspirin~ntaining product., fabulou5' house in Hn\lv\\·001.t ~;.;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;:-;;.;:;;;;:-;;.;:;;;;-;;.;;:;;;;-;;.;;:;~~;;;;;;~I Penney ... 1 Now299 Polaroid C~lof p1_ck ~~· 81 film 1or Square Shooters \ry. Now~99 \ Polaroid c,olo\,pack type 108°lllm. · '.·fo·r-a \Limite Time. ' . . G:ive us your old -. . . Polaroid and ··we _will give you a liberal discount - \ It is a fail ure . and thl'. partv • ends in not one death but thtee. ·1 TIJE IIAl\1DSO:\-t F.:. kinetic WOODBURY UNIVERSITY ... • . ~~c=.:.c_. ~~~?=.,..""<~oel~·-=-=AR_: ~-fte'A1 -e. A~----17~~~~~ • 9USN'5 MANAGEMEm • NIERNATIONALaU"NESS u . -u . "" -.., • --rrunantSttie man-who-brou!!ht the half-hundred film makers to the Mission Inn. He relatl'd how he put toget her "The Big Party.'' and his narrative provides a case his tory for •. ------·N!EltNATIONAr~ss~---A ' l'c~eloc. et Scie•ct Oe1rtt i111:ll4i~1 tW fie1-s 11: · • -• ACCOIJNTING • INTE~ DESIGN t· .. ;:;.:···I . -• • llUSNSS ECONOMICS • INIEl!NATIONAl BUSINESS • -• MAN,t.,GtMfNI •MARKETING ' • COMMf l!CfAl Al!f •OFFICE AOMNSTRATl()N • COM M~A.TIONS •TEACHER EDUCATION • I A5HION Of.SIGN ' tod ay's movie deals. It all s!arted \\tih a narrative poem 'vritten i11 the 1920s by Joseph :\·loncure. one· time editor of The NC\v Yorker. ~1erchant and director James Ivory. \\·ho have rombined on such films as "Shakespeare \Vallah" and "Savages." acquired the poen1 and assigned \Valier \larks 10 write a script, Just flip down the· p.enel to convert to e tubular 'free arrri' perfect for in·tlle- round sewing of rMClclin•. s1- inwu, w11i1tbancb, •l1eve or leg cuffs. circular trims ... for app1ica1ion of patches and ap· pliques wi1hou1 opening seams. ,.f ,.., ,,,.,,, & ' ,~\ .. ~··· ' .• !1f •'""' s.,. ... I•• I'~""'""' .. 1 t..lu• "''"" 1~1•''''"'11 .. 1· \,.,,., .. ,, ""~ '"' I H•·" F.t.LL QUARTS!. Of'EMS SEPT. Jrd 1; ... 1.11,.~nl••I Sl101lo•nt• 'l ••,,. hon~·• lc"'"l"d •• ,,, uHy ;<1u<lo·n1 .tl•io•n"'d U"""•"''·" '"11 ,,,1.,,,,-0,,' r•fllt~r Put.time r.'"'~"'" le '""~t Col flt t•Pt~$tl ,. ... ,.,..,•.~~•••••"' •q •d••"•""'I A" f<o.•a'""' laJo,o• ... """'cll~n9 o, • ...,,. '• •· •1••••1 """"'•· '""''""9 I••'""'''~ l•oal (.,.,.,,..,, ol I"''""' -"~~'"'""'• .,, , 1•~· , $,,..~,. M"''' •·••q '"'"'"Mo :o~-_, ,.,., ....... .,.,. 0•! <• ""'"9''"'"'· o,.,, "''""' r ... , "' ' • •··~•"""' ••'"''" •• r.cl" "''"''""'' •••' I ·-·~"''' Mo·•~ l ....... . '"'"'"""' •d"'''""'·'·••· !,(,, \.o• ''"'""9 c,.,,, ""'' ••09••"' on I.e ... ,. I«"'~'·•"· 'utcialt 11 ArU Ot11tr it 's~rt!1ri1t Mmi1lstuti• 1027 Wihl'llf~ 8oulevord-lo' A"90lle' 90017-~82.S.91 PlEASE SEND INFOllMAllON l(} CMOC ,.,.,,.,~~-~--~-~~~~-~ Addte~••---------------- Ci•y• _______ 5to!eo----Le•---- Converts instantly from Qat to tubular sewing without changing position or ports I To m or row's sewing machine ad· vanccment s ... here tod ay in the vcr~a t ilc Fu tura II !.CWing machine \Yith 2·way ~wing talents! Other in· ""'.___._,.,WC.Ji!, nova1ive fea tu res includ e: •Exc lusive one·step button· holer that com putes bu tto n siLe ;ind ma kes buttonholes ' acco rdingly •Excl usive push·button front drop·i n bobb in •Exc lusive ~e·thru bobbin window and more~ See it demonstJated now ! 0 SPECIAL-EVENT SPECIALI FASHION MATE ' zl9•zo9 Singer celchrall'S the Fulura 11 ~,, • / " scwingmachineintroduc;t ionby ..:( ··~~ tCducini.t this Fashio n Ma te m.i· ~~- chine with quick change ~nap· too•~• ... • , , ~~ho"' O on pr~ser loot, more! "'°" ·~-.. _ Cor1glng <ose ot <abit\el ••ho I YOUNG PEOPLE AG E GROUPS 10 TO 18 ... LEARN TO SEW IN A SINGER• SEW ING COURSE THIS SUMMER! Only 98c hr. (8·2'A hr. l11sons, $17.60). Enrollment entitles 1ntrv in thr Singer Stylemaker Contest. Pritts indudt $15.000 cashl • Sewing Centers and participating Approved Dealers For store nearest you, see the yellow pages under SEWING MACHINES. SINGER Sinitt h•s • liber•I tradt·in poU~y. Aho,~ C..•tdl1 Pl•n i~ avAllJb!t Al S1n1e r St""'"' Ccrltfh •rid m•ny Approved Dtaltrs. •A. T1•demark of THE SINGE R COMPANY Coi:iyriKht O 1974 THE SINGER COMPANY. All Rfll'lls Rtjt1\'td Tl'l1011gho11t ll'lc Wo1td, v ' t '. ' I ------------~--------- (With working trade·in Now 104g5ot Model #180 See table below for other models) Polaroid SX·70 Land Camera. Just focus and press the red electric button. In less·than 2 seconds, the picture is ejected from the camera and you can watch the vague image gtadually develop inlo a crisp, clear picture. No•_..--, mess. Nothing to throw away. (Without trade-in 159.95 ) '~---------- In store appearance! Saturday, June a, the Polaroid girl will be in the JCPenney camera depart- ment ·from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. She will be demonstrating the new SX-70 as well as otfter Polaroid cameras . Now1588 * Polaroid Square Sh·ooter 2. Makes colo r pictures · in a minute ... uses economical type .. 88 drop-i n pack film for 31 12" X 31 18" piclures. Elec- tric eye and electronic shutter automatical ly give correct exposures. Built·in rotating flash socket takes standard 4-shot flashcubes. 18.88 (Wilhoul lrade-in) .~!"Jcµ,g • SX-70film. 5~~•"'· Now2588 * Polaroid's Minute Maik:itr "Kit. This set gives you everything you need to catch the fun instantly: a camera, a pack of film, 2 Sylvariia Blue·Dot flash· cubes and a earring case to hold everything. More instant surpris·es from Polaroid. The Colorpack Gift Set. 28.BB (Without trade-In) •with working trade-In on Polaroid Swinger Trade up to a modern Polaroid. If camera is If camera ls Clean and Clean and works , get works, get Bring this tradti-in Bring this trade-In model# value model# value 180 $55 102 $12 450 $45 103 .S12 440 $30 CP111 $7 430 $22 CP11 $1 420 $17 SuperCP $1 360 $30 SS $7 350 $25 SS11 $7 240 $25 Big Swinger $3 330 $22 Small Swinger S3 320 $14 All roll·Film Type S4 250 $17 Palhtlndtr $17 220 $15 110A $19 210 $12 1108 $28 110 $12 Big Shot $3 101 $12 Shop Sunday I I a.m. to 5 p.m. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND. Newoorl Beach 17 14) 644-23 13. HUN TINGTON CENTER , Hun1ing1on Beo .;h 1.714) 892-77 71. ' f ,. I~ I ' -----==~=-,---,--------- \ [ \ \ . . , . Wed11tsday June 5, tq>74 DAILY PILOT J 7 Fans Riot: We Could Have Been Kill ed-.;.Ump CLEVELAND (AP) -"It's the closest ~ I've evor aeen anybody come to getting killed in nly , more than 25· years in baseball," Texas Rangers manager Billy Martin said. "We could have 'gotten killed out there very easily," said Nestor Chylak, the chief umpire. The Cleveland Indians and the Rangers tried to play bascbaJJ Tuesday night. but the fans ran on !.he fleld ....... lhre.w beer. bottles, firecrackers, chairs, wielded knives and started an unwntrollubl'-' me.lee in '1the ninth inning. • 11le Indians forreited the game to the Rangers. The serond game of the three- Almon No. I Draft Pick By.Padres NEW YORK -Shortstop BUI Almon of Brown University was the opening choice by the San Diego Padres in pro baseball 's free agent draft today as e~pected. Soon after Sa n Diego took Almon, Texas sel~ted Tom Boggs, an Austin' lfigh School pitcher. Mid way through the second round, the Rangers announced they had signed Boggs, a right-handed pitcher, to a contract. "' First round choice of the Caltfomia Mgels was shortstop MJchae1-'MUey, a switch-hitter from Loui siana. The Dodgers ~elected right-h anded game series le scheduled tonight. It was IO-cent beer ,night at Municle1.11 Stadium. The Rangers came to town )'Ith the memories of a player brawl that took · place ln Texas lasl Wednesday. Some 25,134 fans turned out on a w o ~·1n lakerront night. Early in the game young rans .started running on the field in bcty,·een Innings and were cheered by the crowd. .OCcaslonallY a-fir:ecracker.-wenLolf. Jn sixth iilni4 a streaker was applauded. The number or people rwtning on the field increased each inning, and the Indians kept narrowing !he Rangcl.\s >-1 lead. In the sixth Inning the1 Tribe nmde it $- 3, and P..1artin removed 1hls bullpen crey,· lrom the right field area because ot the 11umber of missiles being thrown . F'lrecrackers were thrown lnto the Rangers' dugout and ~1artin ·paced 'back und forth with rage on his fa~. ln the ninth Inning the Indians tied the score at 8-6 and had bases loaded, when fans again pour~ out of the right field stands. and s~.\~ hara.ssing Ranger outfielder Jerr ~roughs. "They g abbcd ~t my glovei took my hat," Bur ugbs said. '11 \fled to call lime, but no y he'ard me. l was getting scared be use l felt lhe r i o t psyrhology." • Tbe IUlngers came orr the bench brandi3hing baseball bats and headed for rlght field, led by Martin. "I know it y,•as sflly for us to do that ," ?vtartin said. "But Jefr y,•as out there all bv himself. I saw knives and chairs and oiher things. We just couldn't let our ttammate gel beat up." Aft.er the Jlangers left the bench. the" Indians came out of lbe dugout to help thl'ir baseball opponent$. "You have ·to realize that the only thing I had to defend T,yself with y,·as my fists ," Burroughs saitl. "I was' happy to get some help. And I thank the Indians for coming out to help me." 'fhcre \Vere skirmishes all over the field between b:illplayers and fallll. "I'll say one thing," fi1artin added. ''That fan we got a bold of out there got the hell kicked out of him .". Chylak was hit on the head with a chair a11d had his hand cut . "\Ve were so scared out there we had made plans for our escape," Chylak said. "It was SOO.to-one odds. and we could have gotten ki!IOO out there very easily," Olylak continued. ''I saw weapons out there, anc( I'm sure the only other place you w-Of1d see something like UUs happen would oe in a zoo." Chylak said he waited until all the baft. ! players were off the neld before calling it a fo1·fei t so none of them would be , jeopardized. The forfeit gave the It.angers a 9-0 victory, but all the records coun1. "I lhink 1he police did a good job in trying to control the crowd,'' Chylak said. "We tried to take the path of least resistance to get out of there, but we didn't know what it was when the thing started." · Chy.lak was ra_ging in the un1pire's dressing room. "I can't judge. whether it was beer ISt>e RIOT, Page 18J _411.teaters Fall , 7-6 Wheelock Pitches For UCI Tonight Special to the Daily Pilot wildness caused an early departure in the second inning. Ray Humphries followed and Russ John.<;0n finished up. Between them they issued nine walks , three \Vith the bases loaded to force in SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -UC Irvine's hopes o( a second straight NCAA college division baseball championship rest on the strong ri ght arm of pitcher Gary \Vheelock as the Anteaters and Louisiana runs . State of New Orleans meet in the tit!e The walks, coupled with tour UCI he · errors, gave LSU four unearned game re tonight. markers. ritaras .,~:as the loser as U.CI fell After Winning seven straight in the behind 2--0 in the second and could ne.,·er national tournament over the past h•10 catch up. _. years, UCJ fell victim of its own Every batter in the U,jl. lfftreup mistakes in losing lo LSU Tuesday night, contributed a ~it including home runs by 7.fi, in one or its poorest played games ot \Vhe€lock and Steve \Vhi tehead as the the season. Anteaters outhit I.SU, 11·10. But the \ pitcher Richard Sutcliffe, Jr. of Kansas •---<Ur-.the,Ja.t..rouruL ... _ _,~.,..,.--;~~ LSU had reached the championship difference y,•as the nine walks issued to series by defeating New Haven (Conn.) LSU. • -_____, ~.eacli.e~~¥.:-io2"'!'·· . · --~n.rA1ter faJlinf!>eniiid-'4-0::ucrscor&1 ns-USC's Richarrt Dauer, a hard-hitticg third baseman from Colton, was taken by Balliniore to cooclude the fJ,f!fround. ~·Gary T-emPfCtOn: a shOrtStoP for Santa-- ' Ana Valley High was picked'~y-st. Louis on the first roood. i...-e •r• the tlrst round picks: San Dlt90-81U Aimon. shol'li;IOP, Brow11 Ul'llvtrally, "ft•aP-lom 8ovQ1, p!lclMH', Aus!l11, Tex. Phll1dell)llla-·LDnnle SmUI!, oulllel<11r, Complan, Cl1vel1rod-Tom Brtnnen, p!ll:Mr, ~~lewn, Ill. Allanta-011e Murphy, c&lcl!er. Pon111n<;1. Mllwilukt~la<ldt EdlJt, pl!cher, $Kr•"""'"· Chiu~ WM!e SO•-Lerry Monroe, plldwr, Ml. Prowecl, Ill. Mor>!rtal-RO<Mld ' S-y, third llaM:mln, 01~ O!'l~:111om1•-Mlc111tf Miley, lhorlStgp, Loubl1n11, Pll1•burv~oo Sturr~. plrclltr, Spfl'ks, Nev. N•w Yor• Yfnk~Oennl1 S1!1rrUt, W>ortstw, VP'I TtltPhOMS The game was forfeited to Texas with the score tied ."Wheel~k. UCl 's p1tch1ng ac;e this fir.I)\ run in the tltird. as Keith Bridges season with ·a lS.2 record .and an e.r.a. was sale on an error, stole second went 'tlnder-t:OO;--pitched· the sen es-opener on to third-On a bcifk -ana SCorOOOOterry-- Saturday. He should be well rested for Stupy's sacrifice fly. tonight's, title battle. . . ,, 1 Jn the fourth. Rod Spence was safe on "I don t know how to expla in it, a U:CT an error and \Vheelock belted a 4~foot co,ach Gary Adam.~ said following the drive over the left centerfield fence . game. . . Dave Lyons singled and Bridges tripled •·a1aras couldn't throw strikes but his for a tw0--0ut score in the sixth with ann felt good .. OJ: pitch~g had a another coming in the seventh when Jeff letdown and our f1eld1ng wasn t the best. fitalinoff doubled and scored on an error Bui don't take anything away from LSU. after LSU had scored three in the top of • They have. a•good t~am ~d t~ey coµJd the inning. compete with teams in Cahfornia. Whitehead's blast in the eighth brought Miami. S1. Louls-G1rv Tem1:1leton, sl>o!'tstop, Sllnl1 An1. Mfn"f.Ol&-Tfd ShlDlt, .$1\of'ISIOP. Cllillll~. Houston-Kev in Drakt, oulflel~r. LomPo<;. Oe1ro!l-lanc• P,..hl!, lnHekltr, Diamond eer. New York M"s-RQl>erl SPKI, pllcl!er, B11vtrtan. CLEVELAND CHAOS -Texas players run toward dressing room from dugout as fans erupt from stands during game with Cleveland Tuesday night. at 5-5. "\Ve've been No. I all yea r and T fe~l UC! close at 7.fi, but the Anteaters were -""-I> Y.'C have earned it. We hope to prove it held scoreless in the ninth to send the tonight. Wheels should be in good shape scrie.~ into a final game tonight. Ore. Kin••• Cllv-Wllll! Wiii.On, OUl!leid&r, Summit, N.J San fr1ncbto--Terry Ltt, H<:Ol>d blltmtn, Sin Lu!• ObllP!I. BmtDn-Edwtrd Fc•d, 'horhlCll, GrNI ?,Itek. NY. Los A"!leles-lllcllilrd SulCllUe Jr., pitcher, Ka111.•1 (Uy. 01kl1ncl ..-Jerry JOl!nscn. calt/lfl', Au1tln, T••· Ch>cinna0-$1-Affd, pltcl!tr, Fl, Wey,_, Ind. e1111mor._Akh1ra caul!'I', third ii.wnan, Co!IOl'I. 'e Tup le In Open SAN FRANCISCO -Alan Tapio ol Newport Beach fired rounds of 72-72-144 lo gain a spot in the U.S. Open golf championships here Tuesday. His 144 was two over par. e Sealtle In NFL NE'V YORK -11le Na tional Football League voted Tuesday to expand to Seattle. adding a 28th franchise for the 1976 season. Con1missioner Pete Rozelle announ<:ro lhe decision which adds Seattle to the NFL. along with Tampa. which was awarded a franchise in April. ·"The conditions.are the same as they were for Tampa," said Rozelle. That includes a record sports franchise price or $16 million. e La Verne Wh•• ST. JOSEPH, Mo. -La Verne fl:>llege, behind the six-hit pitching of John Verhoeven, stopped Sam Houston State or Texa s, 4-2,, Tuesday night in the semifinals of tbe National Association of lntercollegli:lte Athleti cs b a s e b a 11 tournament. The two clubs will tangle again tonight, •Bnd the wiiµier . will play tewis •University of Illinois Thursday night for the cbampionslUp. i e K night W i 111 EPSOM, England -Snow Knight led .all the -way in winning 1he 195th running o{ the Epsogi Derby today. Snow .Knight , a 50-1 outsider, finished 'two lengths ahead of Imperial Prince, 2().. t. Giacometti, who went off as the second chOice of the beltors at S.2, was third, a length behind Imperial Princess. ··Mills Reslg11s RICHMOND, Va. -Lewis Mills, basketball coach of the year in the Southern Conference this past season, has reSigned from the University of Richmond to become assistant athletic director at Virginia Comnuinwealth University. e Deeall1lota D11 el AUSTIN; Tex -Bob Coffman of Southern California and Ronald Backman of Brigham Young tied at the end of the first five decathlon events in the ~atk>nal Collegiate Athletic Association track and field meet here Tuesday. Coffman swept second place in all five sports -shot put, long jump, 100 meters. '400 meters,_and high Jump. Backman took first place In the 100 meter and tied for first in h.lgh jump, then took third in Jong jump ;:ind sixth in the $hot put and 400 meters. e Aue11d a 11ee Vp SAN FRANCISCO -National League baseball attendance through ~fay was "4 ,295,857, an Increase of 376.314 over the tota l ror the san1e period last season. Attendance tn ritay was: 2,156,107 for 161 games, an Increase. of 2601851 oVcr last Moy, the league office said Tuesday. IN JURED PLAYER -Cleveland relief pitcher Tom Hilgendorf holds his head after being struck by a flying object' during riot in ninth inning. The fans erupted onto the playing field, charging Texas out· fielder Jeff Burroughs. ' Ryan Fac~s Milwaukee After Angels Tunible MILWAUKEE (AP) -; Tom Murvhy figured he was lucky but he'll take the odds anytime his sinker breaks as it did against tire Califomia Angels. l\turphy. who came in to pitch Y.ith the bases loaded and one out in the eighth inning Tuesday night, smothering an Angels' rally by throwing a double play ball to rookie John Doherty. Murphy then retired his ex-teammates in order in the ninth. for his fifth save as the Brew- ers broke a three &-me losing streak, 4-3. ln the second game of the series tonight Nolan Ryan, .!i-5, goes-for the Angels against the Brewer!i' Jim Slaton, 6-6. It's on radio (KMPC, 710) at 5:25. The Brcwet'S rallied from a 3·1 deficit, hunchin.j: four of their seven hits off loser Bill Singer, 7..f, in a ttircc nm seventh inning. Dave May singled home the deci· slve run as the Brewers rtmalncd one game behind first place Boston in the American League East. F'rank Robinson and .Bob 011\•cr opened the Angcls eighth with singles off wiM"-r Ed Rodrigues, +o. and~moved up on a sacrifice. An irttentioool walk to Oiarlte Sands brought in riturphy, who retired the side when the pinch batting Doherty hit the second pitch -a sinker -on the growxl to second baseman Pedro Garcia. who salrtcd the double play. ~furphy said he knew nothing about Doherty, who had batted only twice in the majors since being caJled up from Salt Lake City last week. CALllllOIOl'IA MILWAUKEE a• r II rllf AIVt\'$, (f ~ 0 c 0 Yount, J$ Chalk, II • 0 1 t T John!ICln, IS SIBnlon, ,, • 0 0 0 DM•v. •f FAoflln!ICln. 1111 • o 1 o -kotl, lb i:i:onver, 11:1 • 1 , o Br!g.g1, 1r McC~8W, lb 0 0 0 0 Por••~. ( L<\hOUll, ti ' I 2 0 H.....,n, tlll ser1•1I, 3b ) O I 1 Cotucclf. cf Sanon, Ith 0 0 0 0 G11r<;la, 11:1 Aloll'Wlr1 3b 0 0 0 0 VUkoY!Cll, .1b EIRllrt111, c 0 l 0 1 Kobll, p DDlltMV, Ith 1 0 O 0 EdR®'J, p Eo1n, c o O O o TMvrplly, b ODoyte, 7b J 0 0 0 ~l,,.l!l,P 0 0 0 0 ID r II ..-1 J 0 0 0 1 0 0 I J 0 I I 3 0 l 0 l 0 0 0 • 1 I o • , 1 (I 1 I 2 1 J I 1 1 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totlli ;II) ) 7 J TCll•ll '' • 1 • C•lllO<nl• GOii on OQI)... J Mllw•ul<t& 010 000 3f!ll-. • OP-Mllw&\111 .. t, LOll-<11lfornl1 I, Mll""'ftU~"' J. 16-Lal>O\ld, Ht91n. SO-•orrtr. S-0. Oovlt, v,,_ •ovich, l.91'1Nd. 5F-ElRdroez. If" H JI: t:fl II JO Mnot• It... ,_.! I 1 • • i • Kobtl S))J •J EtlRdgtr :W, •'91 l 1/l ~ o 0 1 J T.Mll"ohV tt/J 0 0 0 O I S.~T. Murphy (S), T-2:10. ~.«II. Lutz Top ple<l In First Ro11 r1 d PARTS -San Clemente's Bob Luiz was eliminated from the French Open tennis tournament today when Egypt's lsmail El Shafei came through with a 7·5, 6-2 victory on the center court. Lutz rallied in the first set 10 tie it at S- 5 before the Egyptian broke ser\'ice again . Lutz fell behind 0-4 in the. second set before he managed to hold his service. Erik Van Dillen also gained the set'Ond round with an easy 6-2, 6-2 victory over Italy's Pietro Toci. Van Dillen, ranked No. 8 in the United States but unseeded here, was the first of 21 Americans in the tournament to play on the red clay courts at Roland Carros SUtdlum in the $200.000 tournament. An1ericlll\I Bill Brown, Tom G-Or1nnn , Marty Riessen a.nd Brian Gott(ried also woo first round matches. to pitch the final game. I hope he is · uc 1rv1111 !6) • ha l llr llrtol •b r hr!>< because y,•e don t ve any more 8,111oe~. ,1 s 1 1 1 w1111e11ead. 1• l 1 i 1 . h. " Bl!llKO, rt 5 0 I 0 LYDn•. 311 ' I \ ~ pile ing. ~tupv, e , o 2 1 Mara1, P o o o o Tuesday's loss snapped a string of 32 ~1~~:11.111b ! 11 ~ g 7~~~.1":· 0 g g g g straight triumphs for UGI and brought wt.«1oC1<. dh s 1 1 1o111s 31 • 11 > the season record to 47-8. Alldtrson. 211 3 s~oJ 11°r llllll!!!ls ned th d but L5U (NllW Orte~nll l1'n 001 000 -1 10 3 Jerry Maras ope on e mOW1 uc irvrne 001 201 110 - 6 11 1 L A Tops Pirates Dodgers' Yea1· Reflected By Paciorek Pl1ilo soph y LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tom Paciorek says he 's changed everything. but most of all his philosophy. "No\v," said the Los Angeles outfielder, after his base-loaded triple spurred Tommy John and the Dodgers lo a 5--0 victory over Pittsburgh Tuesday night. "I'm just going out, swing the bat, lhro\V the ball and have fun. "I'm just not going to worry if I get a hit or if I don 't get a hit." Used primarily as a platoon outfielder. Dodge r s Slate All G1m11 In KAIC 17"} J~ne 5 Pllhburo;Jh al Lo• Angelei. J:~> 1:1.m. June' Pl"$butlfh at Lo'I Angeles 1:25 p.m. Paciorek went into Tuesday night's game hitting just .240. But he banged two of the Dodgers' 10 hits to make it easy for John to become the National League's first nine-game \vinner. He 's 9·1. The shutout, John's third and the 10th this season by Dodgers pitchers. kept Los Angeles 61,~ games in front of second place Cincinnati in the Western Division. John now has won 14 of his la st IS decisions over two seasons and by shutting out the Pirates he extended Pittsburgh's string of innings 'vithout scoring an earned run to 28. But he maintains the Pirates still are among the better teams in the league. "I can't belleve they're in last place," he said after his five.hitter. "To beat a club like that you've got to have good stuff and I had it tonight. _ "~1y arm was strong and I just 111ent out and threw." Besides Paciorek's t\\U hits, Dave Lopes collected three singles and slole three bases, once swiping third. "Dave Lopes," maintains Dodgers * * * JllTTSIUlllGN LOS ,f,,HGELES lb t "'~; 5191'111111, :ill • 0 I 0 LQ-, 1b $anvullln, c • O I o R""en. •• AOUwtr, cl • O O O W~nn, ti S!~•9ell, II • o o o Garver. lb list, ti 3 o 1 o ''"'~~. rl , 8ltoti.rt1on, lb J 0 0 0 Cey, )ti 6ev1cq1H1, )b 4 o I o P~cJo,.k. 11 Tavera,., !II l o I o Ye1ge<", c ltetiH, p 1 0 0 0 JOI!~. 0 le11u1v1,p O 0 0 0 POOO¥k:h, pti• l o o o Glusll,p o 0 o 0 10 tllr~I J 1 J 0 • I ) 0 1 1 I I • 1 1 0 7 I 1 I • 0 0 0 • 0 ' J I 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 Tol&1' ll 0 ) O Tol•I• !I $ 10 J il'lll$tlutgll 000 000 000-0 LOI AflOtlh llDJ 011 GOii-S Oil-Los ,f,,nQeltl I. LOll-Pl!hll!if'Oh 1, LOI A.-.. !t l1• •. 2ll-11•Mltll. Fervvt.O!'I. Zilk. l8-Pi1,IOff!I, 8-lolla J. '-JOl\n, SF-Wynn. IPHltt:ll8tSO """'' iL. •·•) T1•ulY11 GllBll Jor.n (W, f.l) l-l:TI, A.-Jl,•12. . • 1 • • • 1 t 2 1 1 0 1 210000 tSOO JS coach Tommy Lasorda. "will be the most ·exciting player in the league,.The way he runs he ei.'tites everyone.'' Lopes fired a potential first inning rally, \vhen the Dodgers loaded the bases. Bu\ they failed to score. Again in the third they loaded them, on singles by Bill Russell and Jimmy Wynn and a walk to Joe Ferguson. This time Paciorek scored them all. with his line drive triple down the rightficld line. In the fifth inning a single by Steve Garvey and a double by Joe FerguS<!n scored the Dodgers' fourth run and chased Jerry Reuss. \vho absorbed the loss. The Dodgers made it 5-0 in the sh:th vrhen Lopes singled. slole second, took third when Russell got an infield single and then scored on Wynn's sacrifice fly . John pitched out of one tough spot. the fifth when the Pirates got runn ers to second and third with two out. He escaped. preserving his shutout, when !llanny Sanguillen groun.ded out. Strings Host NetB Tonight LOS ANGELES -The Los Angele:s Strings tan gle with the Cleveland Nets tonight at 8 in the Los Angeles Sports Arena in World Team Tennis action. Tonight's confrontation is the first of a three·night stand y,·ith Florida (r~riday) and Philadelphia, vo'ith Billie Jean King. (Saturday). TutMl••'t WTT 1t11ut1u OtftVer 11. T-IO•llUllll~ n Womtn·Overlgr, fT•8 t be.II Durr (0) 1.f, Men·Dk~I!-• (T·8 ) be~! P~!!i100 (QI Ir'. Women's doublet -Durr.l(tnner (0 ) be•f Ovt•TOn· O'Ntlll (T·8l i>-1. Me.n's doubte.1 -Pa!!!JOn·Roth' (01 beat Okkcr· E1lep lT·ll ) ~. Ml•~ -Rixl!e.·Kneoner !.\u1lln IUb!.lih,1llng) ii.•• Ellt P-O'Ne!I! 8 •· A -2,64ol M Torontc. Mlt1nt10l.1 U, ••Jrimol'f' "1 Wa.mtfl -JOlltl (M) !><Ill Hun•<' tB) &·3. Mtn -Hewl!! (M) !>ta• C8•mlrh8~1 (fll &•l, Wom1t11'1 dC>ublt1 -5!1v .. Hum1 tB1 bet! Turn~ S~h&ll8u 4Ml •.O. Men't aoubl!J -O~vld1ori·H•wh1 tMJ l\SAI Cr0011eno11"lltrlr•m (II) l·i. Ml~fd dou:>I~ -Jonfl·Ll~yd lM ) bt•I ~l<l~t· CarmlehAt! Ill) •·1. A -1,113 •I 111oom1no1on. N.lnn. " ' I • . • Wtdn~lmt 5, iq74 /' • • Scribes-Tab North Cagers by Four __ nnd the i!1'ida gnme or ti·5 Jelr We1si-I and &-.a Bill August glvc the Yankees I the edge, although th-0 South appears to have the edge in depth, ' ' • !(! ,,., . ' ' ; " . ,, ~ • D1llf l"llol $1111 l"llOll JPPONENTS FIND BILL SEARLES TOUGHEST IN FLOOR EXERCISE Searles Pt•efers Meets Ry Rot.EH CA!t l,..'\ON 01 "'' O•ltr Piiot 11•11 l\1ark \Vulfen1cyrr. Jl'ff Welshans and the rest of cooch Nash Rivera's North sqund have been installed as a t"our·1l0int fa\'Orilc to end the South 's three-game 'vin streak June 15 tit Orange Coast College In the ninth renewa l of the Ort111gc County All -star basketball ganle. 1'hc Yankees were tabbed by four points by sports\1'tlters at the annual pre. gan1e luncheon at the Costa l\1esa \\"omen's Club Tuesday which featured speaker John Vallely, who \dvised S1111dern1a11 N:n1e d Me sa CageCoacl1 Larry Sundern1an has taken over the varsity basketball job at Costa Mesa High. the Daily Pilot has learned exclusively. SWldcnnan replaces Bob Sorensen, \rho hns assumed the head coaching job <it Foothill High as reported by the Daily Pilot two weeks ago. Sunderman has coached at Costa l\-lcsa 11igh for tv.'o years and the 1973-74 junior varsity captured the Irvine League championship. Prior to coaching at Costa Mesa the 30- year-old Sunderman coached under Doug Stockham at Ramona High and Buck Sn1ith at Inglewood High. His playing expe rience includes Morn- ingside High \\'here he was a baseball and basketball star. His teams at Ramona. Inglewood and cOsta J\tesa have compiled a 115-63 record. ·-Lkins~Gp11nastics Stai; -Aclmits ~Practice Boririg Sunderman received his collegiate ,--· -education-at~~mino..Gollege and C.a , State (Long Beach). ; ··ft's a real oppOrtunity' and a eha,Jlenge ---with· no one come·coming back from last season'S varsity," says Sunderman. By STE\1E BRA!'\D 01 l~e D~llY Piiot 51111 for the 1976 .team but by 1980 · I should have those three events do;vn prt'lty Listen lo Westminster High 's Bill good." ;ea rles and you'd S\.rear here is a lad If he works at them like he has the Nho hates his \\'Ork. {ree exercise and long horse, it might be "It really isn't much fun ." says the .$00tler than he thinks. ~i ons gylnnast \\'ho rceently defended his r~ Proficiency hasn't come easy. 'loor exerci~ and long horse titles in C!F ; "One of my tricks is the Arabian, one :ompctilion'. · and a quarter.'' explains Searles. "You "It's a lot of ~ard ;;·ork that becomes . do 11 round off, a half tum and then a J 'i Tionotonous after a \vhile. 'You do the front pike. I landed on n1y head a lot ;ame thing over and over four hours a \vhen I f1tst tried it. lav. Basicallv . it's boring.'' That's half-the story. There is a bright "It gave me a lot of headaches.'' :ide. 1 He's.one. of just three gymnasts in . lhe ·'The meets are fun and. of course. CJF to be able to do a double l\vist. A'hen you IDla!l y get somet hing dov.'n the \•av you v.'ant it after mont hs and nOOths of \\'Ork. it can be very 'c\varding." he s:t.\'S. . For the J8-yeas-0ld senior. it's a time '·Keeping yourseif under control is the hard pei:t," says Searles. "If you do a ooe and a half. If you again land on ~ur bead. You have to get up but under control. o look ahead. not back. Behind"him are back-to-beck CIF titles "I had to practice a lot into the crash n his two favorite even1s and ihc thrill of ' pad to get it down." 'flining v.ithin hundredths of a point of Searles is excited over th c 1av ing his school dov.11 perennial power; improvement of gymastics in the c;IF. ..:ikcv.·ood. "It v.·as mueb tougher winning this Ahead of him are the mastering of yea1' lhan last," he says. "There is more hrec more events to become an all depth and a lot more interest. ound threa t and possibly a c.'Ontender for ''At the CIF individual finals \\'e had he 1980 Oly1npic Games team. 1.400 people in the stands. At the slate ··Jf I had tried to compete in the rings, meet last year t~re v.·ere 200 at 1nost." hr side norse and the high bars this year Because of the small crov.·d at Cal ny scores · \\"Ouldn't have e v e n State (Fullerton 1 a year ago, there is no ('gistered." says Searles. state competition this year. ··But I'm going to Golden \Vest College But that's looking back again. his fa ll and during the suinmer I plan to ":Things won 't be quite so boring llO\'I.'' tart \vorking hard on those three events. says Searles with a laugh. "Not v.'hen '·J doubt l'll be ready to even try out you're learning three new events." -------~ "But I expect our teams to continue to play a man·to-man defensive style and if ,1·e get a running opportunity we'll try to take it. •·Jt figures to be a young tea m \l'ilh perhaps a sophon1ore and a couple of juniors 4n the starting lineup." • Fuel ,i\ltered Dragsters Vi e A total of 21 entric~ have been received for the Fuel Altered Sweepstakes at Orange C.OUUty In ternational llaceway Saturday night. making this the largest field of fuel burning altered roadsters ever seen on one program in Cali fornia. A wheelbase restricted to the original specifications of the 1920s makes these cars among the most difficult to handle. They are fi bcrglnss Model T replicas that develop upwards of I . 6 O 0 horsepower. The insertion of a supP.r- c h a r g ed. 500 cubic inch engine into a chassis extending 92 inches between 11·hcels. qualifies a fuel Altered for coinpetition. ,\ Wp fuel altered, by comparison, uses an identical pov.·er plant but enjoys a \l"heelbase of 225 inches or more. Although handling difficulties are uearly always predictable, 6.80-second bursts at 215 miles per hour are commonplace wherever. th~y appe~r. Time trials and quahf1cat1ons begm at 2 o'clock for both feature categories with the first of four Fuel Altered elimination rounds to follow at 7. AITN. TOYOTA OWNERS Baseball Standings A.1\<1ERTCAN LEAGUE East Division Month of w L Pct.' Boston 28 23 .549 May Special 1.111"·aukee 25 2'I .5.12 Cleveland 24 26 .400 Baltimore " 26 .400 GB I 3\i 3'h J\'ATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia St. Loui s r..tontreal Chicago East Dlvtsiou W L 28 24 :m 23 :?2 21 19 27 Pct. . M 8 .531 .512 .41 3 GB Ii I '.~ 6 Oraiige County's 1974 edition lo, "Get yourself hungry." Both squrids returned to practlce thls week with the South, Wlder Marina High cooch Jlm Stephens going through Its paces tonight and Thursduy night at 7 ln the Vikings gym. Rivera's Yankees practlce tonight at 6 at El Dorado High, then trek to Fullerton College to practice Thursday at 3 and to scrimmage Fullerton College Friday a' 3. Both coaches promise a hlgb scoring ga1ne with emphasis on a stepped up tempo. 'lliere'JI be no 30.second clock invclved, but us Stephens related, "We've both agreed there u·lll be no slowdov:n tactics in thls game." Stephens coached the South to a 117-93 rout over the North in 1971 aod says this year's squad Is b e t t e r although it appears to lack the .overall height.. · "We lack some physical slt.e," says Stephens, "but don 't let that fool you. Our kids aru doing a good Job on the boanis ancj. it should be a quick teippo." Wulfemeyer's outside shooting ability "1'hill tea1n has surptt:Mllld my expectations at this point," says Rivera, who formerly coached at .Mater l)('i Jligh ~fore initiating the program at El Dorado eight years ago. ~ ga1ne features two 20-minute halves and dunldng is allowed. Tickets are $2 esch and can J;lc obtained at thti box office . Sunset Leag11e Golf Champio•11> D4111y Pl .. I 11•11 Pi.t. C0acb John .Goodman's A1arina High Vikings won the Sunset League golf title for 1974. From left -l\.1ark ·\Viley. Tim Jacobs, Marty Kendrick, Bob Beckett, Kirk Thornhill. Bill Taylor is not pictured. ~~-~-~~-~~~~~~-~ RIOT • • • ' (Continued From Page 17) night or the fight in Te.W that started the whole thing," Chylak said. "We didn't even know about the fight In-Texas. We were in California at the lime. All 1 know is that everything that happened here tonight will be told In full to the commissioner." American League president L e e • J\1acPhail said there will be no more beer nights in Cleveland in the foreseeable future. The Indians had three more planned for the season. A meeting of India n executives was scheduled early today to discuss the situation. Police said five persons were arrested. Hospitals reported seven fans were treated for minor injuries. No bflllplayers injured s e r i o u s I y , · Indians' pitcher Tom Hilgendorf was hit on the head with a chair, but Indian trainer ·pauJ Warfield said it did not appear serJous. · The last forfeited major league game was the final day of the 1971 season in Washington, D.C., when the Senators were aout to move to Texas. Indian Pitcher Dick Bosman, who came on in relief in the thlrd of Tuesday night's game, was a member of the Senators at the time. "There '"ere more people on the field in Washinfflon. but lhe crov.·d \Vas not vicious,'' Bosman said. "They were just looking for souvenirs and mementos. They picked up lhe ba ses and home ph1te. Area Stars Do~riinate South Baseball Roster A dozen Orange C.Oast area prep baseball standouts are listed on South coach JerrY Sedoo's roster as the seventh annual North-SOUth Orange County AJI-' star baseqan game looms JWle 21 at Anaheim's La Palma Stadium . Assisting Sedoo will be San Oememe coach Marshall Adair and Corona de! lllar coach Tom Trager. Sedoo will run his troops through two practices-June 15 at 10 a.m. and June 18 at 3 p.m. In c I u d e d on the South roster are Mission. Viejo stars Dave Patterson and Rick White, Mater Dei's Jim Gardea and Dave Najera, Edison's Mike Selwood and Jeff Nichols. Newport Habor 's Morgan Abbott and Costa Mesa's Dennis Delany. Also h1arina High 's Gregg Foster San Clemente's Joe Janton, Dana Hills' Steve Miklos, Estancia's Steve 11orton and Westminster's Tim Richards. The balance of the squad includ r:s Foothill's Greg Adams and Joe Durey, Garden Grove's Scott Borle1 Santa Ana Valley's Marian Easley. Santiago's Curt Etchandy, La Quinta's Dave Hanks and Garden Grove's Ron Johnson . The north coach is El Modena High 's Glenn Luckenbill from the Crestvie\V League, as is Sedoo. the outdoor basketball facilities. Registration will be held June 17 with each session running from 9: I~ to 1 p.m.- • SC BaHquet San Clemente High's sports award banquet honoring the Tritons' track and golf teams will be held tonight in the school cafeteria beginning at 6:30. e Yellowtoll llltling Yello\vtail showed up on the Big Mac, operated by Carl J\JcC.'ullah of Huntington Beach out of Belomnt Pier Mooday. "\Ve caught five of them and had a lot more get away while fishing in the Hcdondo area," Carl says, ''Another boat in the same vicinity caught about 80' with more passengers." McCullah an n o u n c e s start of lhc twilight special this Friday night at 5:30. The boat will return at 10 with a $6.50 tab. This weekend. however. rates arc half-fare on Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings. ,.,. For reservations, call (213) 433-004.5. sz~~HT Detroit " 26 .400 3\i New York 25 28 .472 • Weit Dlvlslo11 Ne\'/ York Pitlsburgh 21 30 18 29 West DlvfiiOn .412 .383 ''Tonight 's display was disgrace[al,'' 7\':: Bosman said. "It was absol utely disgraceful." e Dolpfdns F~led Dana Hills Higb's track and field teams will be honored with a sports award -banquet tonight at 7:30 in the school cafeteria. Verm.eil Featured At Uni Banquet o•T ..... .- 6,000 and 12,000 nw S...i<H WITH THIS AO • NOW YOU CAN LEASE '74 VOLVO 164 4 DR. Automatic, ai r cond .. 6 cylinder, genuine leather interior, sleel rad ial tires. Salety-Economy-lu:.cury. For onty MO •. 3~ Mo.0 £.L O.AC • WE HAVE ONLY * 15* '74 TOYOT~S LEFT AT THE ()Ll)l.PRIC'ESI Oakland 30 22 Kansas City 26 25 Chicago 23 23 Texas 26 25 Angels 24 28 riliMesota 21 26 T111M1••t 01""'" • Ot~l•nd ~·1, Drtl'Olt O.• Kan••• ti!/, !, B111lmc-. C To~•• 9, C •veltr>d 0, fof'feJI l~llwl1>kH •• A"tril 2 801!0!' •· MlnnrM>ll 3, 11 lnnlngl Cnlcago 9, New York 1 Tt11l1nt'1 0 1m11 .577 .510 3" ,, .500 4 .520 31h • 462 g .447 6~1 Te..,s llllbbv 1·61 at Cltv11an.11 fJoh11iOll ,·7f 1C tn1~• Cl•v 'O~t Canton 3·lJ 11 111nmor1 u .. cN•llv •·•! Oa1<.l,ond w)blue •·If al Oelrol! IColrm111 i.JI A11ttl1 !Mytn J.!) •• Mllwavl<H 1si.1ton HJ 8<»klrl ir t.n1 6·Jl 11 MlnM'°" tGcltr l.Ol New York !Tl,,row •·J) 11 Chlc-vo (Pllloc:I< '.0) TfturM!il1'1 Otmtt Aft9tl1 11 Mllw•ul<e-e Tt~•• al Cl1veltlld New 'l'otll •' Clllca(llO Dodgers Cincinnati Atlanta Houston San Francisco San Diego 38 15 30 20 28 24 27 26 28 27 19 38 .717 .600 .538 .509 .!'109 .333 Martin called Tribe Manager Ken Aspromonte five minutes after he returned to !he dressing room to thank Aspromonte for the help the Indians gave lhe Range.rs . Aspromonte said the entire team was disgusted with the action or the crowd , and he speculated that the attitude (lf the club might suffer because of it. "Cleveland may have lost a ba1lclub tonight," Aspromonte said. _,\ll·sports A,vard Won by Ne,vpo11 Newport Harbor •ngh's Sailors , v.~th varsity championships in t r a c k . swimming and tennis, came from behind to nab lhe All·sPorts award in Sunset Lca~ue w:irfare. Its ·the third straight title for Newport Harbor and this year's coolingcnts posted lO championships in all as opposed to Marina 's seven and \Vcs1n1insler's livt. Other varsity titles for Newport liar· bor were football and water polo. Newport finished with 2001; point to ~1arina's 1 8.~1,) and Westminslcr's 180. Others include Loora loOl. i-lunti.ngton Beach (1291h ), \Vc!1crn (81 ~),Santa Ana (0011 ) and Anah<lm (79 \il- e Polo T~11rne11 ·' The Huntington Beach Aquatics Club, under coach~ Topper Horack Marina High) and Les Cutler (Estancia High), will be competing at Saratoga in North- ern Califoml1 this weekend in a .water polb tournament featuring I~ other Northern Ca liforia AAU teams. Included on the rosters are Marina standouts Doug Fabian, Sean Buckner, Bill Story, Bill Hormell and Jim Rock . Estancia's contribution to the team includes Bill Lee, Tony Sawaya, Steve \Vyatt and Ron Smith among others. The team leaves Friday w I th competition slated Saturday and Sunday. e Vallel.y Cllnle Fundamentals ot offense and defense will be stressed in the fourth annual John Vallely basketball clinic which runs June 17·21 at Orange Coast Olllegt . 'l'he clltiic. for boys eight to 1.i exclusively. w111 feature instruction by Vallely, the ex~ det Mar ,High, OCC. UCLA, and professional player with Jtouston and Atlanta . Joinin g Vallely will be OCC cage coach Herb Livsey who guided the Pirat~ II) a 22..a record la st season. The OCC facilities, including the weight room, will be ust'd as will the four gym c .. ourts and i \ UCLA head football coach Dick Vermeil heads an impressive list of sports celebrities who will be on hand for the University High' athletic awards banquet Thursday night sponsored by the Exchange Club of Irvine. Venncll will be the quest speaker for the· event, honoring University High athletes, set for fl 7:30 start at the Airportcr Inn, on MacArthur Blvd. In Irvine. Other • guests at the diflner include f\1arlin McKeever of t'he 'Southern Callfornia Sun football team, Joe Scibellt of tbe Los Angeles Rams, tr:.:k· phenon\ l\fary Decker, fonner Los Angeles Times spor ts editor Paul Zimmerman and Olympic decalhlon champion B i 11 Toomey. Ti ckets are priced at fa.50. 'fritons Ho11ored . . ·- ' ...... ~ lllcll a1u.11 ·--· -·· :OURNEY WINNERS-Fred Patterson, le(t, o! Santa Ana Country. Club and Floyd 1180" We&\:'er of Jrvine ·Coast Country Club won the 16th annual member· guest golf t;ournament at SACC last weekend. Patterso11, Weaver Retai,n SACC Crown Fred Patterson of the h06t club and guest Floyd "Bo" '\leaver of Irvine Co as t Country Club became the first repeat wi11ners in the 16·ycar history of the member-guest tournament at Santa Ana Country Ctub this week. Pattersoo and Weaver won the tournament in 1971 for the first time and came tbrough with a 61-62-123 score for first place this time around in the better ball of partners event. Finishil)g one stroke off the pace were Dr. Jack Van Rossem and Dr. Bob Irwin of Friendly Hills Country Cl ub with 124. Canyon Countrv C1ub of Ne,v- port Beach included ~tr. arid l\-1rs. Frank Fargo. f'..eorge Short and ~targaret Blnnken· ship in a t'\\'O loW balls of four- some event at 122. In a partner's better ball · event scored .on a nassau basis, Ben and Ken Rizzotto came in with a 29 on the fron t nine, 30 on the back and 59 total score. Mr. and ~trs. J olin Ho1ten teamed with Mrs. and Mrs. Harry Boand to win a l~nv ball or foursome event with 53. Jimmy Jones, Bob Clinard, Dr. John DuBoise and Charles Mathewson fired a 197 to win a three low ball of foursome event. Top Athletes Honored By Pirates Orange Coast Coll ege's athlete-of·the·year will b e selected Thursday ni ght at Bob Burns restaurant in Newport Beach. The five athletes nominated include: Tony Ciarelli, football and track: Tom Crunk , basketball , Jeff Noon . wrestling; Duane Waltmire, cross country and track; and Mike Yarwood, water polo and Jiwimming. This 'marks the 25th year that the top OCC athlete has been honored. -Pete Johnson and Ralph Dion of Yorba Linda CC were next at 125 and Rex Grissom with Ron Barrow of El Marero CC finished at 126. Tim Bandel, a football lflile Sq11are player and wrestler, was last Glenn Garman. the men's club attorney at Fountain year's winner. ~andel is no~· Valley }.1ile Square Go If wrestling at Utah St at e Course, fired his first hole-in· . University. Signups are under way for the .exclusives tournament f o r players with 17 and over handicaps. one recently on an outing to Ciarelli was the football Big Ca11go11 Witmers of touraments for the past two '"'eek3 at Big Fish: Report .. AllAOISE COVE -n 1rialtrs: I h1llbul. so t•llc~ 1>.t11, 4XI tock cod. SAN PEOllO -37 11M1!fr1' 1 bllrr.clld•. 1 bOlll!o, Ill cll!Co i..u. 2 ,and bttt. 10 •DC-COd. \:t2nd St. L1IHl!riaJ -107 11ncilf!'J: .it ve IOWl.t!. 2 berraclldl, Jiit c11lto blls!, 26 wnd bett. 190 bl!H! best, 11 1>11Ubul, 71 m11ckt rel, l.O rock cod. Olttonwood Country Club in the San Diego area. Gannan used an eight iron to sf.'Ore his ace on the 13~­ yard sixth hole at Cottonv.•ood. D11ve Sheff, an assistant pro at Ptfile Square, played in the U.S. Open qualifying in San Francisco this week. Senrllff The annual pro derby at HunUngton Seacli ff Country Club drew a total of 10 tea ms this v.'eek. One team was t!li minatell each hole in the event that team's leading receiver (22 catches) and .set a javelin record of 225-9, placing second in the state meet. - Crunk guided the basketball team to a 22·8 record and was nanled the county player-of- the-year. Noon won the state 150- pound w r e st I i n g title, Waltimore set the c r oss country and three-mi l e records and YarwotXl was a standout on the water polo and 1iwinln1ing teams. SCl.L aEAC"-71 angltn: 154 rock cod, 10 u nd beu. 1 .~11llb11I. B1rge-j\ 11nfll&rlj• 36 bon!lo. t ti.Its, 27 llffllbvl. OCEANSIDE -19 •llClltto: '9 wrr11cllds. 1 bOlll!o . .t09 ca11co l)llH, 1 wllllt !rlll blln. 3 v•Howt1 I, •• rock fea tures a pro and amateur .. ---------...,11 partner hitting alternate shots. '"'· jiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill MARINA OEL llEY -110 1nol11rs: [ j ...,;2 tatlco bau, l' berrltudl. 11 bOrlllo. , 11 ... 111iu1, 1 wh ,, ... tlltl. LONG alACH (ltlmlfll Pieri -!1 '""l1r1: 110 t•llr. b1111. lhallbu!, 303 )f~at~~·~~711~~I c(;i,25 111>11leri: , NEWl"OllT (D1v.V•s \0<ktt) -32 1nql1r1: • D.lrraclldl, bon110, 103 ctlko 1>111. 20 rock cod~ 1 llallbu!, 3S mtck..-el. 1Ar1'J l1ftllln•ll -31 ;,119ttn: fO bOnlto, ~S »...cl blu, ~I Wrr.clJdll, 102 rock cod. LEASE A '74 610 WAGON $'9.89 "'°· + Tt•311mo.O.E.l.. COSTA MESAOATSUH 2145 HA•IOllLVD, C:.M. 540-6410 ,----~~;,~~~;;;---, Fine Jewels• Fashion Island I 1st SALE EVER! ~UPTO 1/2 OFF IWtt.aMt.llllCll 14l • 111' W•tehl ...... s. .. -·-~Sl"'a.tu. . -- A1 SO"° At JO"lt At 1111"° ··-"' 50.,. "'JO.,. TRULY SOME FANTASTIC ONCE IN A LIFETIME BUYS ·~ A .H. WE:INE:RT F'ino }••-els ! ., .. 32 FASHION ISi.AND SorryNoLayawoys L:~~R~B=~~~::_:::::_ IT'S . VACATION TIME I • •• Oott't ........ to cNclc ),,. hoofs, rt:cr•atlol'lol •thicle• o•d tro•tl In· 1WonCt oltd CALL Ut. WIG MORE -~ t..,~ INSURANCE 2t5J Herl/IOI 11•4 .. C•tto "''"' . 979-2555 ' ' Wtdntsd<ty Jun~ 5, 1~74 DAILY PJLQT 19 For Tonight For Tuesday Alamitos Entries Saxons, Lake,vood Alamitos Results C:&tllf', Tr•ck 111,1. "nt PffJ 714' 11.m. tt IJICll llh-ol Ill( .. ff 1~1(111 iTll, tlll AINI Nlfllh 11111T RA.Ct. -l!iO v11n11. J v••r ol(IJ, Cl1lmlng. Pur11 \tool>. (J1lmlt19 Prl~t USO(). P111!ttn'1 OallCIY (Gtru) Pon °" Bt• (MVlfi! F11mlly FloM (R!tNrdl) Tullv Ml•• lWarCI) Get l1•11P• IW•rlOll) l(tlll Gold (Knlollll O•fldV'I Exprns (TllllllKI) Mal11tic C~k CMorr!1l Mumble BH !Pftle) Go C0<on1 (H1rtl "' "' '" '" '" '" "' "' "' "' SECOND llACI! -UO y1rd1. 3 ~ear otd• & vp, Cl11!mlng. PV<"M 11100. c111m11111 Prlce ~­S11r• Al At (HodO!ll) Gar~l11 County ISmUh) R,,vmm Ma~ IMorrl1l Slid Eve !Ctrdora) ST. Ptll (Wtltonl Petk•b.11• (Llpll1mJ GOid li!om11n cc1,.rltsel Qark H 011ndt' (Hern Ptlrltll,. BOb IRkll1td1I ,,. "' '" m "' •• '" '" 'n THIRD RACE -J5CI y1rd1. ' year oldl. Clalmlng. PurM $1600.' Clalm!nfi prkt 11.SOO. N~t fKPFlil {1(11lglll) W•nd• Wl!(ll (Lipham ) Perr Te (Mylel) Pa1d1 lit9d (Ballou) J11v1 R111• CMorrll) Ro.ev Jld /Herl) Kn/gilt Of G!Dry (Smith) Gtl 'The Mot>ey fC11•dOlJ) Llmlll llrl,IC.Olf fAd1lrJ '" '" "' "' '" "' "' ". "' Olcll .. llP. A11ow•nc•. Clll!•l)rff, PurM MOO!'. TM $1. MM"Y't Holl)li.I G11lld, ~ Ff" 111111 ((:11rdoZ1l 11, lllotlt>Y a!oti !MOHlo) 17:2 Thr .. Ht111 CAdtl•I H1 811r~l't Plttol (Paet) Ut R1111,11 Olin II ITr11wrt ) 119 '8•mtlo! (l,lph11mJ lit M1rbl1 M111 {Htrl) 11• Color MO Pink (ll1nll1l 111 ClrtlOl\tttt (Artl11J 111 Min~ Silo.I !W1rdl IJt f.IGMTH It.ICE -«XI varas. ' ynr Oldl .. up. Cla lmlng, P'-"11 SIJOO. Cl11!ml1111 prl(I $2$00. Ttrrlt>I• T!n~y (W11<d) lit Midnight SPHd jWal1<1nl llV Bunn~'• Gold (Cllrdoi•I '" l<fl•lutln lWrlontJ 111 Sun Ooo OKk IAll•lr) 1'7 A(M.rgtr fPitllOl 122 A~Ull>Olllt IG1rtal 172 APrll Coun\tll (IC11l11h!J 111 ftrlev Ch!' (Rkha•d•l 112 Moort Ft1S Crl ... r) lit "''!" II CE -3~ v1ro1. J ve•r old• 111m1no ... u ... UOOO. Cl1lrnln11 !>l'ICI $3J.O(l. Deadlock Clt1r. T•tcll (1'111 Ft•5T llA CI! -l~ v1~1, l v11r oldJ lfld 11P. Cl1lrnlnfl. PurM 11000. Sir Tffple J~. C<ltN! Apa9. I SS l!••cll -6·'Tl1 A c._y & l-D11'"'' lltYln Anft, Pi hl MCll,SO, Flffl Rulllfl CClrdoll ) i.«I 3.00 7 BO SEVENTH RACE -lSD ya•dl. 7 l"i' •~ool kt'ds 1·n t•· Lakewood so co tco-''' old1. Allow1nct, Pursa wooa. Tl>t Jft ;J\.1'1 II<; HQ~ 1r11• .... ,.., . 1.IO [}e(k. I and North Torrance areas met Gold SP1"l11111 lMo,.,11J 3.oo CMch•Jet i•.uirJ l.ta l .20 2.IO Time -11.M. I the milkman on his 'A'ay to Aho ''" -1>19111 C11<h, G11ud Ctndv ouoli'"" !l.lpMml s.• s.:io G•••M, Fl•-· !lli<k 1'\mMI, Jo PINd To Rultt (Htrll •.IO work this morning as they , , , " ,. , , t il'l'lf -11.1•. urrtu. tr (0, 11n I ll'IOU•• · Aho ra" -Dusty !la L•dy, C!rcle returned \ home from a u E••cl• -,.f1H1 •~111~ a. 1-r1 .. ,, G••nct o.o, 01•11"" M!ii, N•wr prolonged ·stay at Anaheim's 51"'l c•••••· ••Id n1.M. ,.~ t.eno. B. A Tu da . h I 5f.c'oND llACE -3J.O Y••o1. 1 vear lil GHTM RACE _ UG ,,,01_ 3 retr 1g es Y lllg t a ter old1. AllQW•n~•· P11•i.-tll(IO. olot a. 110, Cl•lm!nQ. Pur:ie $!i00. I V.'atChing the CJF 4--A Am.ieur "llOM IAdtlrl 16.IO 6.10 •.1':1 V19a1 Cu1taln !G1r11J 11,IO ~.00 •.•O OQ-Ou11tt1 t.o Mlsmo championship baseball game «T•t•i11rel 3.IO 3.60 s,•rnoi. IMorri•I 7.10 4.00 th ded . In "'" ICltrl.-•O •.•• •,•0"._0N•_ra~. (.o'o'. n~I) 1.l<O at en 1n an 11-ning ... "" ... - I d di k Timi -11.3'. Alr.o •on _ 7~ &Ynd!c1tt. Clfrlt• S~re e5S ea 0C at 11 :45. A Also, rtn -CllllY Lll>t ll•ri. Chic. Go!l'i L!mlt, JU<JV'I /Mn, Don crowd of 7 ,240 sat in on the Rkan~ Gr•v Lltdv, Oun A t.aoy. 1.1n11 IC•••· tMlv CaPl'I, Jt!J Ll!llt Udy, Sc•altlled -Gallantmear, Ar("~ game. DO .:.. Flnltlled llru, dii.qua1i!IM 11nd Cail>, MOd PuPP•· Lano.,~n Sir. , When action was conclud pia~t<1 wton<1. is E.••u -•·V•;•• c1p11111 a 1. TM lllD ACE -3>0 y11rd1. 3 yltr okl1. S1mo11, Paid J1(M.00. \ alter three hours and 18 'f\11ow1r.c .. Pu••• 51000, "ltHTll RACE -.oo v•rd•. l Vt&• o'ennVoue cMorr111 OUtil 7 ll••oo (Wilson) Marl l~r CH1rl) · t •·-f Cl'-~ ~Kil IWtlson) 5.'° ,,.,, 2.60 old$, Cl1lml"o. Purle $7000. I m 10U ~ o=8 USC, 0 3 l' Midt1lrt (Gttia) •.olG 4.70 f irs! Bo IWa•""') 11.IO S.00 ?(I 112 rulin~ hat prohibits start of ou11 Miu io"vtr! 3.olG Miu oe1rrnd1 tP19eJ J.10 '·"° 119 an iMj g .aher 1 ~30 a string Tlmt -\1,14. Rebel Satin CAdalrl 4.7!1 Mtltsllc Jr (KnlgllO Valley Beau (Wt rd) Cetse To Wonder (l,ll)llaml llannon Oec~ tC••aiterl Spor!lnv AnQe! (Orev1rJ H•POY Eno11gh rcardotal Cut• A1 Ever U11ek1 J 11' . AIM> r11n-Go Sc.i1w1v, G•tal Time -20.~. II' Of goose eggs had en posted P1•1n1. Smool~ I! Ovtr, Dtlt1, Also '•11 n -Mr. Wfll"le, Mvr. Cult llt On the board and each team $1.irp•IMil, 6rllches, True Moon SuperJQji, llltle l11 FOUllTM llACI -3>0 v•r!U. 1 •tlr OuPt'. Oici<tY O&nt>er. Un And Onlv. 112 had six base hi ts. old•. Allowance. Pu•R s1600. u E~•"• -l·f ir1t aa a. 5-Mhi 111 Lucky Pat Bir !Pa;e) • . .O J.1111 3.20 O.trllndt. Paid h i .Of. :~ The . game v.·asn't v.·ithout Flu Butrercup· (WtraJ 10 . .0 1./IJ ;:::..=====--=====. " scoring threats, especially in Miu "••timer \Or.,.erJ n . .o Time -1'.U. the late innings after starters A•w r•n -Oi~key'J Fl~ RIP., t.ov-MAY SALE! N T Tim O'Neill o( North Torrance lw, MDr!tl lock, Sir Runsmore, Cht•g t N Turt, OeM!rl Caperi, To My Valen-~OUllTH llACE -t10 vard,. 3 Yt•r e ourney and Greg Herman 0 r Title, olds & up, Cl11!ml1111, Pur ... $1000. c111m1119 price $1600. Lakewood began to tire. Fll'TH llACE -s.ot vtrdt. l year We need vour Trade! Premium prices paid. EXCELLENT SELECTION Immediate Delivery • Ll1tlt Rtld Tl<lt !Smith) 119 Lakew~oaded the bases old1 & up. Starterf 111owtl'Kt. Pvrse PllPI'• Chic (Morris) 122 s s I -11900. Clanv Rocket !t.lphaml 121 et aJLlr( ay in the botlo of the 10th ·with P11m Gold fC1tdOl1~ U.IO 6.oo 4.20 Fantv wmow !Richards} 1}2 , two outs but a sharp ground P1po1 Wins !Mvlesl •.10 3.6(1 AllmllOI Phil CCre•gerJ 119 Winnie Lou 01iltll 5.00 L11110v1n sir !Tre1wr11 119 ball to second ended the time -21.~. Yo Qlero 1H••H 111 l\.1ore than SSO entries were threat. A•oo ,.n -D<Hp Torno. Mr. Mars GJrnn19 ll•r 1&11111<1) l lf fil d f th C t M llar,Famll• Alf•lr. Al'° E11111111 e or e ;os a esa CIF officials were uncertain UXTH 11AcE -lSO y1rd1. 1 vt•r 1':ys1~~11l::11tJ..1rd> :J: Tenn is Club tournament which about whether the game V.'ould .~~.~-. A~i,:·~~1~1u"' J.~·v.2G •.~ BIO Spy Clllck11l 119 kiCkS orr Saturday at three be replayed in its entirety Or D~Pt''• l!Ol'J( Ann (Wlrdl S.llO 3.00 Ga11anTnw1r !Wright> 122 different locations. whether if would be picked up 01~\~'t G~m1J.i;~•aerJ 2.60 FIFTH 11.t.cE -.wt raro1. 3 r11r Competition in open and C at the point it was stopped late Aho ·•~ -Little 11"v Go. Roma NABERS ~ OPEN 1 0 ... YS Please Call 540-9100 2600 Harbor Cos!a Mesa old$ & VI>· Allowance. PlltM! $2800 >"" \fl Vel in both singles and Tuesday no·ght. Jet, lt..ri.I Causll<I Him, Mr. ~p MUG, ~~."'~1':':.t:,•11 cward) 122 J doubles for men, women and Jn an early game for the 3-A --,-;;.;-;;-;;;;;;=;;;l1._o:;,,E.-~C;;-A;-;R;;--O;;~W~;.._.~,E;;R~S;-;::::::::::;;;- ~';.'.t;ouR~,J~•t1J...i'°"' ~~ m ixed doubles Yl'ill be held crown, Lompoc held on to win " ...... """'' MOon (Llpllaml 119 starting at 8 a.m. at Estancia a 4-3 verdict from Nogales LEATHER Werid'1 filtnt 1.N11.r & V-,. c ,...,.,. Sir Dlckll lTreasur•> 111 High. Costa. ~fesa lligh. and High: LIFE . .. ......... _.. ...,ew-or ull IJIJI St6-lttl s1xTH •Ace -.oo v1rds. 1 vear the tennis club. Lompoc scored a pair in the o!d1, Allowanct. Pvr11 '3200. t-;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;; want• Go 1c11rdo11) 111 Five rounds of competition first on one hit and added I ~!~" P~~~:. 'f~~.;r> ~:; are scheduled for Saturday single tallies in the second and Everett Jet 1P1111> 11t and Stmday with the finals set fifth. · DOH YOUR CAR !DU ROUGH? WE ~;:~ ::~j~1~1fl~trdi . ;:;-!-h~ following weekend at the ~-'Nogales had only o-n e START HARD? GIVE POCMt Mll:ACIE? CAN liELP ~::~ ~Trl:"~C'.!~11er1 J:~ -cl ob. scratch nit through f i v e That Other Man !llan1<1> 111 The public is invited to innings be,fore scoring a pair THE CARBURETOR SHOP Tak• A. oKk <Ae111r1 122 watch the four days of in the sixth and one in the !EVENTH IACE ~ lSO y1rds. l w:•r competition;--free of char3:C':-' ·seventh. -. FOR OUR LNEW WELL-ROUNDED LOW-COST PLAN FOR SMALL GROUPS z,p Phone Blue Cross . Our new Small Group Plan cares for health and bud- get too. It is for growing businesses with up to 24 employees and its cost is as low as the lowe st-co st comparable plan around. Yel pro tec tion is very comprehensive, even including $300,000 Major Medical coverage. (Underwritten by Health Service Inc., an underwriter wholly owned by the ,.National Blue Cr oss Association.) Find out all about this new well- rounded package of good benefits. There's no prob lem in making a simple phone call lo 83 5-3855 or there 's nothing squ are about s ending in our coupon. llM1 >WIBOR SLVO , CQSTA "'ESA 64Z .. Zl6 "11 W<lr• G-_•m-6 -""' "' e.ooo "''"" • :· •• :· I • ii ~­·~ ' . . ·. :-:: ~ .. ,_. -, :· --·-•. ::. ~ .. -· I' 2fl DAILY PIL01 Wedn11dny June 5, 1q74 a Cha11~e!' Franfe JI County Skippers Power Boaters Vie. Bicli's Tea111 Readies for Arn eri ca:s Cup Trials MILl'ORD. Conn I AP\ - Bruno Bich figures hi$ F'rench salling team has al least a , one-in-five shot in Y:resting the America's Cup from the United States (his year. "[ think "''e have a 20 per- cent chance to \\'in the 1\mer· ica's QJp this year l'Lnd n1aybe more," said Bich, spokesn1an for the Association Francaise Pour La C-0upe De L'America. He is in the United States making arrangements for the ZS.member ~rench entoucage that includ t'S a cook. doctor a.nd masseuA Bich. 'l'l. is the son of Baron '?vlicbe\ Bich. who heads the French syndicate for the An1erica ·s Cup. The French tean1 plans to arrive at Newport, R.I .. July 15 and stay throughout the so1ne "'as scheduled 10 nrrivr France I was dnrk blue and races even if its 12-niet cr in Providence, R.l. the fi rs t of had a different shaped bow f'rnnre is dcl'ented by the .Jul~" nut she will not nrri\'r \\'hen it lost to Awtralla's Eleven Orange County fro.m ?1-femorlol Day thM.l&h Squadron: J1unesGross1Costa A1L<>tralian c 11 a I I en g e.r . ljretcl J l in the last Cup skiP.JM!:rS are among the 42 Labor Day, pt·esenling up to Mesa, OPS; Jerry llellrung, s 0 u the r n Cross. The until July 16 bl>e:luse of a Vruted States Power Squadron the minute and on-thc·spot Newport Beach, Bl1S; Charles elltniuation races bet w e{! 11 problen1 in shipping fro n1 l'Otnl)t•tltlon ln 1970· The lxw.t \."Olunteers participating In the wind. sea, chaMcl and harbor L<'ibcck, Costa Mesa, BPS: France o.nd Australia are F'rauce,'' he s~iid. now is llght blue and has a 17th yea r of KMPC Omnncl· conditions from the Mexican Donald ~cLean , Irvine, BPS: scheduled to begin Aug. 22 orf shnrpcr "V" shaped bow, Blch watch which began ~r the · border to the Ve11tura·Sa11tn Ted Nay lor. Oanu Polnt, Dru1n Newport. "Although France I \YUi be S<'lid. Mrunorlal Dey weekend. Barbara area and fro 1n Point Squadron. The f 1 n at best~f-se\'cn leaving fl little later, it \V lll I-le. also said his father's BOATING KMPC ChMnelwiltch is a CD.tollna and other offshore Othc1·s are Chad Ohanian .• series for the America's Cup give us some more !ilnc lo sail Sy\idicate has s t fl rte d "---------' public serVlce by the 'i,adio islands. TusUn, BPS: N c v i I J t' is scheduled to begin Sept. 10. the boat orr the Riviera v.•herc <'Qnslruction ol a n ew station for South c r n Orange County s kippers Radcliffe, Hun tlnston Beach. "\Ve art' readv\ to give this \Ve have been sailing the bo:it defend the ~p with a new California's thousands of participating ere Ernest Beck, Lo11g Beach Squudron ; Boh . . · A · Cup ra ;.1lu1ninun1 l 2 ·meter in pleasure boaters. It Is aired on .Costa Mesa. Balboa Power Temple. Irvine, BPS; PauJ ~~~rn~t . t~!e~c~: tr a 1 i a ~t!: regu\arly since i\1arch I." he Pontarl iers. f'ranct. • ·Ou r aluminun1 I meter in 1977," the hourly newscasts each squad r 0 n ; Bob Elms, Wilson, Huntington Beach, evervthing ,ve've got \ . , to added. i11te111iou is to challenge or he said. Saturday, Sunday and holiday 'Vcstminster, Long Be a c b Pas~dena squdaron. ,,·in ·the honors of rac~g ·ror -«""'"r-=-===:.:===:;:=_:.::.::============t:===========··',:-;:'::'::-::'::'::'::'::-:-:-:'::':-:-:-:-:'::'::-:':'::::::::::::::"'_:::::-:':::::::::-:., the cup against the Am~rican def en der ," Bich said \Vednesday. ··our plans v.·ere changed slightly. France I, which has been rcbuil-l and redesigned SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY THRU SA TORDA Y ONLY! Se habla Espanol ' WESTMINSTER SANT A ANA FULLERTON 120 £..FIRST ST. J.T CYPRESS . PHOM£ 547.7477 15221 BEACH ILYD.-l'ho .. 8,93-8544 1530 S. l;IARIOR ILYD.-l'hone 170-0iDO * * * * * * Aussie's Black B,Jx ,MOHDAY THRU FRIDAY ,., ••• ,.. 8:10 A.M. • t P.M. SATURDAY ................... .'8:)0-A.M:. 6 P.M. SUHOAY ............. :. .. t :OO A.M.· SP.M. . ' MONDAY YHlU fllDAY •••••••• l :lO A.M •• t P.M. SATURDAY •••••••••••••••••••• t :lO A.M.· 6 P.M. SUNDAY ............ ~ ......... f:OOJ.Jr.4 •• S P.M. MOHD A Y THlU NIDAY •. , • , , •• l :lO A.M, "; P.M. SATURDAY ... ,,,,., ...... , ..• l :JO ).,M,. 6.P.M. SUNDAY ...................... t :00'.4..M." 5 P.M. Cu,p 'Sec,.et Weapon' PERTH, Austraila (AP\ - Millionaire yachtsn1an Alan Bond revealed today the secrets of a little 'black box that he hopes will win the Americas Clip in yachting for Aust.ralia. Puff Wins Voyagers Flats Race The box measures tl\ree feet by two feet. six inches and contains a computer to givl' the cre\v of his ve ss el Southern Cross i n s ·I a n t infonnation. It will help them make snap decisions in handling the big yacht. Bond told newsmen. He said the computer \Vas battery operated. It provides the navigator with the angle the yacht is sailing to the wind as \veil as distances and location of the next-mark. It also tells th/ yacht's BLACK TUB(lESS SIZE 1-~ B78. J 3 HM '°'"''l"N''#CI • oa'11 VOLT BARDAHL STOP & TAIL IAIOMIL MO. 1 LAMPS ........ f""''• 0 00• •i1h, ... ;"•'• o •d ,.,,.,.; .. '~"' beild• •P 1. '•e• 'r"""''· Cloo•• .. ~1 o r•• d·•··· - -"';... --~---~ _., ---~speed-relattve ~to ·-maximum -og: 13 . Puff, skippered by Dave J>E;rformance and w ~e t he r Stone of Bahia Corinthian wind change requires the Yacht c Ju b was thC yach.t.Jo ~ tacked whei;i Performanc.e Handica p Class beatu1g to windward. A winner · last Sunday in Bond.. who . heads . an ''~yagers )'acht c 1 U b · s Australian syndicate. 1s the lluntington Flats race, the youngest man ~ challrn ge for lhird featlire of the l\.tassey· the .Cup. He said IJ!e .Southem l\·Iidget Series. Cross \vould anruhilate t~e Class B \\'inner ,..,as Bob French c~all.enger Franc<; in Koll's Columbia, Voyagers the . prehm1na~ s e r 1 es Yacht Club and the ~fidget beginning at New}Xlrt, .~.! .. Ocean Racing Fleet v.·inner Aug. ~· and .he added . 1:hc \\'as Aeolus, sa iled by Jack Americans "'tll need a fine Kelly. Balboa Yacht Club. boat to beat the Southern Cross." Su mmary: PHRF·A -11 1 Puff, Dave Stone, BCYC; (2l Argonaut, Lorin \Veiss, BCYC; ( 3 ) Li1maran, Bill Rohrs, \'YC: t4l Ransom, Dave Delo, VYC: 151 Scorpio, Bill Filsinger. BCYC. PHRF-B -( 1 I Columbia. Bob Koll, VYC; 121 Sundance. Jack ~1ayer, CBYC : 13) Sa il Le Vie, Don DuBose. VYC: 141 Gat's Pajamas, Carl Last. VYC: f5) Charlotte. Lee Painter. UC Irvine SC. l\.10IjF -(I l Aeolus. Jack Kelly. BYC: (21 Charis1na, 13\ Good Times, Jerry Sn1ith and Skip Crane. BCYC: ~"'' Fairv.'eather. B. Fainveather, SSSC : (5) Aloha II. Glenn Reod, SSC. UCI Hosting Top Wornen In Sailing UC Ir vi ne Sailing association will be host to \vomen sailors from 1-t major universities starting today for the National \Vo m c n 's In t e r e o l le g i a Le sailing championships to be sailed out of the Sailing Center on Coast Jlighw..ay. The regatta v.•ill be held under the auspices or the _.--1 n t e r c o 11 e giate Sailing Association of North America. Schools represented \\•ill be i\llT. Boston Coll e ge, R<1dcliffe. Princeton. Will iam Smith College, Corne 11 Uni~·ersity, University of Southern Florida . F 1 or i d a State University, University of Texas. U n i ve r sity of \Vashington, Ohio St ate , !\·lichigan State, Den 11 i s University, University of California, San Diego, and UCL Westlake Race Set Saturday· \Vestlake Yacht Club's third annua l \Ves tlak eCup Invitational Saturday \Iii! be fleet race type re g a t t a featu r in g Coronado-I5s, Cyclones, \Vinard Sabols. 470s. Lasers Naples Sabots and Lidn-14S. A minimu m of five boats v.ill be required to establish a class. \Vestlake ~farina is just off the Ventura Freeway, 38 miles north\vcst of tlov.'Iltou·n Los An geles. t-.1ai1ed entries lo establish a class must be received by the \Vestlake Yacht Club by IHonday, June 3. Registration for established classes may be made prior to the skippers meeting oo the da y of the races. The Westlake Cup is awarded to the wi nnin g skipper in the largest class. The first \Vestlake Cup Regatta in 1972 honored Bill Ficker of Newport Beach for his 1970 defense of the American Cup. It featured :M boats competing in six classes. 1st Lighthouse The first lighthou s e constructed and used in the Vn itcd States \\'as the Boston Light. erected on L i t t I e Brews1er Island in 1715-16. In li19 the crew or the" Boston Light fired a cannon at · rei;ular interval s during heavy fog, creating the first fog signal. Ya~l1ts1nan Dies Fretl Bosbysltell lf'os 84- Fred "Hi Dee II o ' ' Bosbyshell. fwi·loving pioneer S·ou th e rn CaJifornin ~'achtinan died ;..1onday nt I..os St.>ren3S Sanitartun1 in Los Angelc..s. He 1\'as 84. l\fcmorl al services '"i11 be held Thursday at 10 a.n1. al lhc Turner and Stevens f"uneral Home ln Alhambra. Bosbyshcll was the No. 1 member or Los Angeles Yocht. Club. No. 4 oo jhc Cali fornia Yacht Club roster and was 11n honorary commodore or the Southern California Yachlin1; Association which he served a~ secretary for many years. He wa$ also a member of " I Santa Barbara Yacht Club and the Tran spaciric Yacht Club. Other :l ffiliations Included the American Leg ion . Jonathon Club and Lo s An geles Athletic Club. Bosbyshell could li\>t:n up any 1nceting. regardless of how formal. \\•ith h I~ vociferous "and il hi dee ho" on entering or leaving any gathering. A eo11firmed bachelor. he "'llS 11 dl>d icated yachtsn1l'.ln both on his Ov.·n boat . Windward. aud ai; a popular and capable crew on other _yachts from Newporl Beach to &anta Ba rbllra . --"1 . 30-MONTH GUARANTEE Ttlf Pf P 'Ql S (",l)APA'>i lit (QD~•!l l T IP(~ fQR A ~P!C "ll O NU,,r!P 0 , ,,Or-<ltl~ .r.c;1,1"'>I Al l P0 A:l l•A}A~l«> 1rJ NQ~. "A l PA \~.!N (,fP •At IJ~I l•AMA<,l :1 l •if ·~'\I ~~~~~~113 Bl ~IP tA (.ft1 'h'l !H ,w n ~A l l [! .. (lN l .. l T AOHJ\[/<'!Nl r ><A ~!•! B A ~ll1 j 1N P l \.Ul J.~ .'ll\IN(, ~P1f l 1'1 'lolf O f PUt(~•~f , A70·13 WITH RAISED WHITE LETIERS O•ou •PYO•< <o,'1 wh•oh '"'" ol.l, 11110 r ••••o•·••. ei •• ,i. '"''~ <o~to"'' oJ .... ,5. ~~ ... 36-MONTH GUARANTEE FOR PICKUPS PANELS & CAMPERS BIG SELECTION Of SIZES 1.00/1 JS•l4 T.OO~lS 6.S0•1 6 18" 1911 20" 1u11a TY•r TUl(l[SS ~Ill lUllD rwr IUllO ITPI HEAVY DUTY BlACKWALLS---i 670•1S 7.00•\S 0 70•1~ 700~16 2253 23" 24 .. 26" ~l'IT JU•ro IPl l lUUO ll'l!I UIH US ~Pl•!UllD 7.oo.is 11.so,.10 TWIN SINGl( 10·16 s ~ 2955 29'1 4518 • "' l~~ro I Pl! !UtfO .,,,,,,,I»'"' •11':•• ~,., '"'"''~ ,,. 1,:,, ~,:·. J95 Sll f ~_:;~-::'" 1995 SIZ( ' ' TIRES IOR VW's TOYOTA 'S, M.G.'S, OPfl'S , DATSUN'S AND MANY OTHE• FO•EIGH CA•S S.60x1S !~~"· 21 MONTH GUARANTEE js.011s$12s.sj js .20113 $J322j I 6.00 11 2 $1444 I Js.60xl4sl398j Pt~, fod t .. To• of i t.•O to i 1 8• do11olldlftq-O" ,?,t TOUI OlO fl•I ACClll'TIO tlGAIDllSI Of CONIMTION. All PllCli PlUS flDllAl lltCl!ll fAlt a OlO fltl. N4TIONAUT Delco AOVll11HO . UW/f FURNITURE JOI CAI 01 •••• RE· WEBBING ~· TIRE .. AIR SHOCKS COMPLITILT AIR ADJUITABLI SIGGIST STOCIC IN TOWN • I'<, ton HU UIOCl •llORIC.111 rOll •ll lllf[I l•O lllOOllS Of ,lUIKill Cllll, CUIP(lll, ll lTIOI W.IOOlll, Ullll lll!ICCI • Tll&IUll • ~.1,, "'tt•••o:o """'" 1 .. 01 ,,Jo • ( ............... ..,, .......... t••d"'t•• •••• 1 ... , '" ·····-· ·~ 1 •••• ·~· INS1-'ll-'110H AVAh.Alll DEL CO AIR SHOCKS 3 3aa ANO COMJllETE HOSf l(IT, PL • KIT .. ~ •,w;, o:..... PU MP I ----~ lY• INCH IY 15 INCH SIZE ''~'"' ~ .... 1 .... , , ... , .,1.~ ~.,b ,,., •••• ••bl>•• •••• ••d ti••! ....... ~ •• , ••• l• ,..., •o• 119 • SUP JOINT PLIERS • '"· , .. , .r.uacl.01 00,;11 '" "• c\ ..,;,. ,0 .,. Soo ol! lh• •OOd will. oGM. FOR ADDED SAFETY 8 llf(K .... 69c 99c ~oop• >1"•"' .loo" .. •P"'"""9 '"'001h. 11 •••••"" l>otdon• '"9 l 1h<•"""9 ol ;;·'·· 44c fl. oz. , .. WAX TllATID 66c 8 TRACKCAR STEREO ~ fOR CAI, TRUCK OI IOAT '~· .. h··~··I •• 1 .......... .. r.1 ..... i.10 ............. 1 ....... -.: ......... 1 .~ •••• 1 •• 1 ... ; •• , "" 2288 ,, ....... $ COLOR TV. AERIAL FOR AM-FM-UHF-VHF ALSO !DIAL FOR BLACK & WHIT! RICIPTIDll W~dn(sd.iy, Jvn( 5. JQ74 DAil Y PILOT 2 I Madis~n Ave. W ooirig the Mi n gles For tl1 e Rec Qrd OOfHIELLEASE l!JIMBUrlliiJ I , ... , C'.,, 1--=r- " C....,,eJ .. 1:•111t OHier SHOCKER N.0. 1 New '74 .... H11tcllllHtclll number o( un1nnrricd f.'OUplcs 18840 ''"MONTH Jiving together Jn the U.~. has The ,....,, 1111 .. Lie. Ofll 1.w. G1"ll sk)Tocketed by n1ore than 2A Mo. o.a.1.. 800 percent in the past deeudc CDNNILL CHIYlOLn ' t 10 . ' 1 1121 HAllOI ILYD. as agatn s a percent rise 1n CO"TA MISA S••·llOO households of married couples. ""'=::'="'=--~=-=-===1:.-~Whlle the overall total of "mingles" o word to describe !hose living with non- rcl:1l1ve!I in a single household -is still relatively small , the implications of the minglcll rno\•cmcnt could be r a r • reaching:. Sl~OCKE!l NO. 2: Tho I B I 1 enz : I I l Free Brochu~s ! : l House Of Imports 8862 Manchester Buena Park, 90620 I I NAM PHON .I I ADDRESS CITY I L.s!~~SJ~-~lu~~J-~i~~~l<l---J I ... • "singles" phenonienon h11s now reuc:hcd cOQrmou.; pro· portions. The young sinGlcs segnient of our population is expand ing nwre th11n five limes as fas t as the notion as a whole. During the past llcca<lc alone, the single a nd dlvor<:ed ag1.'<i 20 IG 34 zoom ed 52 parcent an 11 toda.,., t h i s group accxiunts for more t h an one • fourth \o r our 48 \niltion sing· le adult s. ~"""""'"'. 51{0CJ\ETt NC>. J: Am-1'011T11• ong the under-30 s~the divorce rate is spiraling upwa rd at double the rate of a decade ago . Then these divorced a rc staying single for a lonJlcr pe· rlod y.•hile the single -young v.·01nen pa rticularly are marrying laler . SHOCKER NO. -I: As a result of all this, households headed by singles under 34 jumped 55 percent to 2.7 million just between 1970 and 1973, w hile all units headed by singles rose 16 percent to 14.000,000. In compa.rlscn , reports the Census Bureau, !he traditional family arew by only 6 percent in the same per iod. '"\Vhe ther \Ve like It or not. !he tra ditional household unit \n this country is unde r going J ar·reaching changes." says <:rey ~tatter. the priva tely circulated 4 O ·y e a r old pub l i cation of Grey Advertising, fifth I a r g e s t a dvertising agency in the U.S. Proof o( tht> Impact of si ngles-ming les on ' the rn.arketpla ce is on every s ide: the establishini nt of dwelling eonlplexes for singles only, such social organizatinns as ''Parerits \Vithout Partners," spec ial singles~ly to u r s , cruises. social events, eating and drinking places, country c lubs. cclc. "THERE AR E le r i o u s questions among the young, particularly the better- educated, about the validitY-or fa m i I y -<>r ientation." adds ln~ 1mGt>o•e ., •• ong1,,•ll1 t>rou~M 10 C11"orn,. lr om 11a1y. No., C•l1fo •n,.11ro,..s 99% o! 1he· 1'1kho•e• "' Ame"c~. Th~ large~1 ~.owiPl!'I c.t<>!tf n Ci1•l10..,l<t>, Ca~l<><"•B 'l,111Nf 1S f 1llf )l\r lllf 1f 11~1l IN (;1\JJil~f)llNI1l. SA.VIN«IS Gll()l'r Bl(l(ll~ll J\'I' (~JU.Il~()lll~lll l'l~ltl~RiU •• Gt --....... ' • Nation's Larges t Federal c onsider the artichokes. California grows more of them than any other state. They thrive in the perfect California growing climate. Your savings thrive, too, with our California FederQI 2-Account Plan. It gives you a passbook account wlth a 5V• % current annual interest rate acid easy withdrawal privil~ges-plus a certificate account for long term investment at very high, guaranteed interest rates. Start a 2-Accounl Plan and gel your money growing. Open a passbook account with any amount and a certificate account with Just $1 .000 or more. You'll like our free services, too. California Federal Savings and Loan Association • Assets over $2.3 Billion The Perfect Cllmele for Savings Growth. Costa Mesa Office: 2700 HARBOR BOULEVARD TEL 546·2300 OPEN SATURDAYS, 9 TO 1. CLIFFORD M;'flESDORf , Vico ProsirJcn' & l>faflllr;cr Low COit property Improvement 101n1 are av1ll1bla for pools, rtmodt llng, mobile homo.a, end od'llr UH S. • FINANCE social researcher D ani e I Yankelovicll. In co n t r tt' I . fa m ily-orientation "is a key value for the rest of lhe population." "Sing!ehood has emerged. a~ a n intensely ritualized a nd ne1v!y respecta ble style of American life." en1phasizes Ni,:ws week magazine. "The discovery that Am e r i c a 's unmarried population wields a n annual s pending powe r of $40 billion h as spa wned a s an explosive growth i n d us t r y aimed at sat isfying th e unwed's every 1vhim." This 1s a g ro 11'i n g subsegme nt of our society which "marketers a cannot af(ord to ignore," \vam s Grey ~tatter, for c ompared to the total population. the singles· mingles tend to be: 1'fu r 1°iHge Jjic ei1.s es .&PlllL 1 tldLLEl·ANORES -Mlf~<>el i;.,w.,d, ;~, 9SI! Er11rlne, HU,,llt19!0tl 8~~·~ ~~a Ao:t<itr>M B•llt. 11, 1 1>~1 S!~orl Orlv•, Aot, 7, C.OrdO"\ G'~Vt>. IV•<:.0-NA.N llOVT -lltut• rl'f~~·· •~. l\IS P!o~entro, Ao• ~. (~!l <• • ""d F•4ntfl fltlt,.11, ''· '11 P!,,~enli•. A(!t }, r;!I" Mo.~. ECClfS rONf ~MITH -Joy M•;h nl. n. lhOI E!f!~I, •rv .... ...., .,,,~ •l ~YM, 11, 1:>0' P•'ttl0"1• An1 \ 1, T~•hn HENDRICKSO!>!·FERO -R 4 p" ~ I (••I, )6. '!~2 Ola Miii ~·, lr.,no "''" El•irie P••t•,).Qfl, •1, .<161 Old /~Ill S••e<I lrvrr.e BA.LOER R.t..M.A, HI -MA.GANA. B•~r>O. !?, 1109 S•lono1 Ave .. '<>I• Mll\O ~n~ L>"1:11t, 19, 7!~1 L~ Pl~(•, Woitm•nl!or NA.U)U~4EVNOLD~ -11.0tl"ld 8•''• )9. l~SI Por! Cna•I•• Place. Ne,,rn·• 8totll and Ju~y Lvnn, J:, '/[}'I S••brcoi.. S••I Betel\. HITT ·GENORON -Ret>erl WTll>•m, 3,, 111~ Porl S•l;nno P!•c•. NewoorT Be"<" ""a Rolltr!& M•rlo, ll, 11~ Pott s11.i,n11 Pl•<e. N~l)0•1 B••·~ GRIOER•Jl:tQMAS -Miti...el 8 t 1K1, l1 , n~ll'J El Mio Lone, Ml,.lcn Vle10 d"" Denhe '""'• 1!1. 1180'1 El Mia Lone Mi~oll)li \lleio FR!ZZELL-JfNK;li'IS -Br1,1co Po!rlt,, 1Q, 16S)I W~eeltr Clrd~, HonHn~!On lleatn ""d Tonl Annt 19. 1e2l1 lnal•n R<Ycr, Founl<ln Vollsy WINSOR·WHI TE -STtp~n Pnolip, ?1. ll11·12"<1 S•.. 'iewpO•I Be,.cn ~n~ 011<1;11 Earle,,., ll, ~l' W, 5Ttvtn1. A~t. B, Sont• A.n• COWEN-HCWA.RO -T~omo~ ll~n1an, JI, 1061 W•llace Ave,, Ant. J, Co11• l~t\;, anti J.,n!ce Morlt , 1), 1081 W•ll•ct Ave , A.pl J, Co,To Mt•• OLSON , JR,-STONER -llobe,1 Alaon. JC.I, 22111 Nt WPOrl, Sp~cc 92. Colton and Snl•ltY ne~n. 14, 1(211 Etlwtrd" Apt !J, We•!mln•!er ECKEllT·llLAC«8URN -Fr1n~ Gav. JI, 8jl~ El Arroyo Orlvt. 1<11nhng1001 Bo•cn •nll Po!rl(IO Anne, 16. B.<16 El ,Orroyn Or1vt, HuntinQ1Gn Btecn OOllllEN·G!LLESPIE Mo" 1 • Fr~derlc~. ;?, Sii Lo"'ll<"dy, Lagund Beo'n ano;t Su•~~ Clar~. lol, ~11 LomO••dv, L•Quna Be...:~ MILLER-GALE -E•nH! Pa!rlc~. ~1, 16191 M•l.g• L•ne, .:.pt. E, Huntlng-1on Bede~ and Sally CeciH•, •O l~'';~ "l\fORE AFFLUENT M~l•g~ Lane, A.111. B, Huntington Bea en J1ighly mobile .. Very self-GILLIM.AN-COLWELL -Mithatl con c ern e d ... Oriented to .G•enn. 19, 9111 1nn•~•uc~ Drive,, Hunhn;1on B«it~ ~nd S~a ron Lee, 19. immediate enjoyment vs. Ion~ ~S!l 1nnsD•uc1< or1.,.. Hun!lngton term concerns • ., F ash ion and Bea'"· APRIL 2 appearance conscious . . Hous ri:iN·JO~Es -F!'"" Euqene. 'lo. •M h " h.,>h • J'(p_c:t>.11~ ,;;i~.l lllS! 8i9 Sur, ~on& Palnt ond JyOllh ~~e ""'---~~ ~!t-l~;t:~; . ..!.-~~;o,°'ms.t._JllE"i;.·O_,;':?';k . I · "ts" O!,('IOC-T S!;';A ·-'Rml!'t awar eJSUre purSUI • Fre,,I •. OD. 111>4 Cho•le Orlve, Cos1a 'Vllat might this profile of N-..sa and Aty Hen•lc a. 5a 'l92 ~ler•• h . I . I s1 .c,..1aM~w t e sing es-ming es tnean to BA~KEN·BURKHART -Steven Eric. }"OU ' American busineSSll1en ~3. 11>9:12·"~ S• .. ~unse! Beact. ~no '" . J '> Cal'1e,.no Den•••· lD, 165Si KelUt• and women in many f1e ds. La..,., ,..unt•n9t~n Be:.ch. Bui Id i n g and home c~~~T...;~:0~0°, ; 1~a~1;:,, ~!~"·Ju~3~ furni s h i n gs : Smaller Caplstr•no ind l(onv Mlcl>el!e. 11. h h Id moa n m 0 ' • C )'Jill~ Aveniaa Ct Ii Vis!&, San Juan OUSe 0 S Cap!l!rono apartments a nd condon1iniums COOPER-G1011D~N1 -James 11,11yn. 15. ~1•1 W~rner, ,t.pt, 21-G. and few er homes. mo r C' Hun1ing1on s~ach """ T~e'"'~ oawn, Practical furniture SUitable for !9, !91\ Glrnaolt, We•tmln•let POLICE:, JR.-IRVI NE Wll l•am apartments. A.n111onv. 3J. u212 Hoovor 51 .. Apt. 1•1. W"!mm1lor •nd Connie L~, 2~. Autos: Smaller was the key n1s1 Eowaras, We$1mlnner here long before the ener"V MILLEll·KAS/l,BALI II I c n a' d '>· Mlth•el. l!. 6111 J~en Orlvt. c risis h it. But w ith emphasis Hunling!on Be6ch dn~ Jan• An.n, 1~. on S""rlV s tv Jing and p!en\v of to?Ql ED~owaltr Lan•, Hunt1n~ton r' • • -Beacl'I. pleas ure-oriented options such as: stereo. GM, Ford Seek Dela)'S 0 11 .A.ii· Ba g~ 'DETROIT (UPI \ -Despite more than 64 million m iles of testing, the nation's top tw o ·auto makers are pushing for another d(!]ay in making air bags mandatory s a f e t y equipment on 1977-model cars In briefs filed with the National Highway Tr a ff i c Safety Administration th i s week, G eneral i\1otors and Ford as ked that custome r s be allowed to choose between iiir bags and safely belts. Gi\1 estimated motorists will h ave to pay an additional S2.6 billion a year if air bags become standa rd. As originally p r·oposed. the passive restraint syste m s were supposed to becon1e s tandard Jan. I. 1973. After many delays, inc luding court fights, the gove rnment has set September 1976, as the ne1v effective dale. The air bags arc stored beneath the dashboa rd on the passenger's side of the ca r and in the steering wheel to protect the driver. \Vhcn sensors determine a frontal impact is severe enough. the bags are inflated at a speed fas te r than the blink of an eye. VC I Graef John P. ConUon , prosi· dent of the National Allian ce of Bu siness· 1ne n, will r eceive his d octorate in ad1n inis· tration from UC Irvine this n1onth. ~le is corp· orate manager of urban a ffairs at Rockwell In- ternational Corp. Piltsbur~il. m --~ f!'l(lm•'· 14, 2<10 fl••MI, Ao•. 2C1, Co•l8 Mt•I ..... 'tl'bi<'.• Jsr.~, 2f, ""1 r.;;1,.,.1 L••n•. AO!, B. Fulllr!Ofl 111·~~1.C:l(A~"IES P•tr l c ~ ll()l)+n1on, 1(1, 13' N l~~!ln jl,v• .. N••··o1•t qt••h ~"" Lvnn •nr>. 19, 1'1;0 't F•~··!~ 11"•0, ! ft Ml•~do C-llO.i.TTl0$PIELMAN -Mir, 31, t oo.ii, J Cto•lli, 30, A"d Su11'' Mo• ~p!thh~n. lS, l)ol~ ot Ntwpert hit~ • H"'Ll·HA.LL -A.pr 1, Robwt "•II. ~1. ot Ao111e Vdll•v. """ 8•t'fl F, Hill. 11 0 C""<>'1ft <!•I Mftr, FLETCHER -GUILD --AD.I, R-1 r.1an Flrtc n•'· n. of FOoJ .. ln V•ll1v. 1"d J\Kly C~•ol Guild, n, of Say.oul. /~A R ~l<IONOO-TOTlEll -A.pr. 1. Vinuint Mic-! Ma.,,toiondo, ,1, ot l"~ .><d f\ea,h, ano Beverly LoAnne Tonrr. i1, 01 Albuquerµue. NM. "'"fONNELL·FINLEV ,-Aor. l. !.lf»•n L~w•enr• MCCOftflO!I, 2C, f:I O&nA Po,nf. ario Maqa Marla Fir.It~. 11. d Lagunft Beach. SAT(HA-G•JEl!INI Ao•. '· Franle Pic~~•D Bolcna, ?I, and Mar!aft..e ll~1e C~erini, l\, be!~ ol Sin Clemen!t 7All~ JONES -AP• ~. James ,t.11~ l o'!. H, ot Hyntlnqton Bo1C11, tntl 0A~~ Je•n Jo .... i. 18. DI oln•f>elm, PE:OEllSEll·PINCREE Apr !, 1~.e~o·~ Aldn Pedtf>~n. •2. "' Ne ... POr! 8ea~n. ;>ntl JOY Ju•llne P "O<fe j 1 ot Ga•aen G•ove. WE:ISSMAN·GEORGE -A.pr. S. P~te Weh•mon, 29, anti Vic~le Lynn "'"""" l!, bu!n OI Co•I• 1-'t••· RE}IVES-LONG -Aor. J, Mervi" W. lle~v"" 51. of w,..tmin~1er, ond Wdnd• l cra, Sl. ol An•nelm. WELC[<·BAlll -Ao< 6. Jame~ l(enneln Wtltn, Jr.. U. •ti(( !iandri J~an Beir, 11. boTn !;If Co1i. Mo11. CAl!LTON-RE!O -Apr, /,, Ed'I I!. (~riton. S1.. 56, of Norco, end !It&''''" Rood. I), of Cos•d M•••· COl~ER-ULLOA-1\p', 6. Cn4rle• All•I\. Co•~e•. '" er We11min.ie,, and Yvomie Vito., l3. ol CtffllO• BllOWN-JUSTtJS -Apr. t,. l1ar1iv Thl>mts Brown. U . ol f!vn!lng!on 8t•cn. ind M&rtna Allee Jus•~s • .i, of ,On~nejm. SMIH·<·PORTER -.&i:>r. ~. Rlt•1 f , S"'Hh, 1•, •nd Joyce Ltt Porrer. 1•," 1>o1n of We,i ml n!!er. . • HODGES-RONSON -Apr 6. Willer A. Hll<lgts, Jr., 28. Intl C•rol S11H11 Rons.on, 3.<. tx>tti of Newoof! Beach. OOOIER ·ROCHER ~ A.or. /,, Lr<'I lllt~t'd Ooaier. •I, ario Loui•• M. Rc<t.er, olll. DOtn 01 We•!mon11or ESC/l,LERA·SEGURA -Apr. 1. G•'Pd' 6a•ron Elt•l"a, 31. ot Co"• Mtst, •nd Naomi Frarn:es Segura. 38. ol L<>'1g Bt~th. LA.WLER·FOllOVCE -,&p~. I, cnarlfs VI, Lawler, 1\2, o! San Clemonte, aod N~llltan Fo•a1ct. S7. or L1gu11a N1ouel SPIERING·Sl(A.lllCA. -A.p<. 7, Oon11d E. ~pier1no. 48, or WnllHor, and Mary Btlle S~adca, 45 , of We11mln•ler, OONNELLV-LA.NCASTER -Apr. 7. Sna ... n Oo11<1elly, l1, of Orarrge, ind Georgia M. l...nc••tu, lJ. 01 Colt• """"'· ' DALLAS·JAVIER -""'· 2~. Date .CJUlcrd .D.llllaA,_ . 10, ,.0/ r Hu"n!lng,1011 ~ttt"'lmlt1'.liil"i!f"~a11er, 11. · ot /l,onttroy Parle, ME EVUTHl-t;QROON -,t.or. 18 Cna!Y9n! Me-evu!hi, 11, Qf Huntington Bo•ch, and Mv•n• J. Vordon. :n, of ~n1a Ano. Dissol11ti ons of M arri age En!eflld jl,pril 11 Zoll, Chery l o. •nd Wllli~m f . Otn•more, Ma•v M•rg1rer an fl Ritlldrd. Wort1en, ~nni• a. "nd Robvn J. Carl•" Lilll•m Flo'a and R1lpn Lincoln. Cutler, AIO.'! o. anti Sallie, Millordln, Car<>!vn AM •nd Ronald JQWph, Caruther1, Sally A. ona Doogle1 Jam••· Ev tns Lorn• \I. '"II Willl1m o Will;aml. Jo ~nn J, iftd Jamt1 P: N<cn<>11, SnTrley Jean and Goorgt Le~lle, Git>r.a,,.· L'~!h Galt and Laun• Franci1. Hi!vard. JuOHh L . .i10 l<~r>n•tn 11,~ Sw•rlo>g•n, Mary A.nn ano Sam P. Grimsley, Jonn W•yno •tl'ld Sustn F!oY!ltl!e, Ene11 •• Carolyn o;ane and Milton J. OM'f)n, Floyd W. Jr. and Anna L. lloederer, BOtlnle,L. •nd Rit"aro E: Krumwiede, Lll'lda Lee •ntl Mlcna•I H~n"'. Mercado, Uno" J. and Rl(h1rd R. BarQuer~. Aiko E. •nd Raymond Rivera. Horgan. Oonn.t J. anti Cn1rles E. 7nall, Olai>e Joan Cray• anti RMriey Roland. M~:;on, Sherri A.r.n a<><I Merl< Antnon•. Perrone. Biiii• Joan an<I JoHOh 8ernard. Mendo11, 5Ttlla and John B. Hoa,, E:v•rT HO\' and Paula Marit. Ntl-50fl, Harlann1 Raglne and K•"netn Geno. Hol\i~I•, Kath leen and Wllll•m M. McO:eoo. Cnarle\ B. and Hlc~ie L. A.noerson, Marla arid Oo,,ald Le Roy. Ouffan1e11a. Earne1tlnt G. and s .. verio " Bawling, Jlldllh Ann ""d Ricnt•d H_ Gnum•n, Slld~•Ytan S. "nd Vic!cl L. Oymond, Oenny Wayne and Terr i L~. Shttk, Sandra J•ne aP'ld l(lrby D&lt. l(rau•fel\11, N.fntY G. a'ld Klr'Hltlh Alon. Pittmon. L;ntl• M. •"1:1 Wllll•m E. Cl;>t._, I("'"" M. •nll Ell)erl L 6r~nw•ner, Lll"'r1,,ce Fred •nd Jayce LVnd1 , D•lley. B&fbd" Geflt!v• and Oan>tl Cecil, llr•dley, L•ur• and 0•1• Mirh~tl. Sand•. Roo.rt L and Morci• G. Bowle1, Sherry G. and Ltw<S H. !lorry, 8Yrl II. and lmtlOa. \/au11~n. G·"Y Leo ""d Jydy Ann. Frar>kaws~I. 6e!h C1role and A.dim Stdnl~v. Rutledge, P~•rlda Ann dnd Jay Lynn. Eniertd .i.prlt U Oovl1. Judith Ann ond 6r~t• A.rnold. V~n Schindol, Mary Julie •flt! wllt!orn Ma,vln. Ven Schullte, S~t•on Ann •rid Pcrtr George. Oiolko, Slo~en P. end Be·•~• Lee. Jon••· Rose Marie and !loo.rt C~a'1''· Allen. Tlloma5 James and Ma•old Kay, ~Imps.Of!, M~lt~w •nd H e It "" Veronlta. Sandero, Jone! L. and Lawrence W. Brown. l(alhy r:oy and Richard Anlnonv. lll'en, John S. dnd E!lnor J. Grinde, JC)Sf!ph Jr. and N1ncv Marie. Pa .. cms. llu$10eU L. or>d Ht+en K. Ehre!, Bttty A. •nd H~rold J. Ho!Derl, OebOrah ftnd Oon1ld Jeft'fl'f. Slmmo111, Lo.,is arid Joyce Bernice, COOP!'•· S!ewaf! A, '"a Carolyn M. H~dson, s1even 0. arid Oonna S. Sa~ldftn, Jane! ""° Wl!ll•n Ltt, J•nkln•, LTnda and P~ul David. H•ll, Floyd Cllf!ord Jr. dnd C.•rle Ellff!". f rdnco;s, Po!~r. Binnie L~e ~nd Aflll10llY 5,1u110. Shirley •nd Vl•gll .&ngelo. C•!tro, Rev Morr is dnd Brend~ LDll. Rvtn, Matlle LH •ntl Myron Oel•no. SP•IQUC!. Holly Arleno "nd Terry Ltt. Kincn. Cvnthla A.nn •rod Jurgen Ku!· ~eln< Her!bor!. ~rhoe~neld, Ger•ld t., and Norma J. Butord, Sreven A., and Gwenette Lean. lldndol~~. Wondd M~~ine an~ Corl. Schr~er, Marv A.nn •nd Bill1 K. Hdll, "'le~~"arl• "nd Ter•r1te C, Sfhorr., Jimmy D•I• ""d WelCO'r'\ Carol !.:!. M~'lln, Lvnll• ~nd Oougli•. • Stew~d . s~r Elllf' ft•d OtU•• G•lf • Wal•••· Donn~ lrent and Don A1lh~r .Y~rlln, ~enM•n ana M~rit cn1c~. LorflOY Joane!le tnd O•vid L''~• Cn.vall••· WJl lrtd J •nd V••• L. lo;noNlr,, Ttinmos Alltn and K•rtn Jo•nr B•••· D<trcthy .. 1. •I'd WllbUf c . Co•. J~mfl LP!tn dnd Pal rtci a Je1n. • WOOll•ull. Robin Gdylt tnll R1odall Wl~Pf Rivera. Tlmo!nv Mktidtl and Rll• F. E•l«n, Ld~rellne J•an and Barrv Scott. "'lo f lNAL DECREES • Enllrtd MIV 6 L'l~Qul~t. J~ne RoHMlnt Ind Seo!! "'" Burhant. '\Ison C. tnd Nov~ T. G~•llV. Jl(~lo L""n "<><I 0,,vill Jowph w1111n11ham, Samuel M. arid lhelmt L. Webb, Aull•IY L. alld P~!U!P P. Soren1en. lngt B 1nt1 HtmninO T....,riy. Patricia A._ 1n11 w11111m " E~0.1teon, C••llll A.h><1rta •M Matlllt M(l,.ughlln. John l(tVlll Ind S"'rrf AM lttOMy. ViG<>I 8u•110(lo. •rid Wl!!l•m J, MeYlr, M6r9~rfl Thtrtsf Ind Q1!0 W. IGds Like to As k Aud y ., ·• ' I DAILY PILOT Over T he Counter MASO Ll•H"'J'forT•.,day,J.<4, 1974 Surviving Change Full Clttle Inflation Really Scl&ool County's To}J E:tccuti·ves Back • Ul S,166,h~ ,., Ill' "'' By STEVE ~tITCHt:U. 0t IM DtllY Pl .. 1 \!11! You·ve been a successful executive for 15 yea.rs. You've handled tough 1nanagment problemslor the better part of yoo r profession11.J lire. \Vhat's the next st~p on the way to the top? Go back to set100I. That's the advice of UCI Executive Associ ation presiden' Jay llaas, a·n alumnus or the 1 8. \V e e k Executi\'C Program of the UC lrvtne Graduate School ot Administration and University Extension. "WITll TllE lechniques and scil'rfces de\•eloped the last lS years in the managemen t field." ~!aas said. "you can't just be a 'natural born leader' and get by anymore." Nowadays, the name of the REELECTED TD POST Consultant J•y H1•s game is lbe science of Ford and the Irvine Company. manage111ent, according to the Other members i n c 1 u d e 4-t·year-old business consultant presidents of small industria l \\'ho \\'as recently re-elected firms and em p Io y me n t presidcnl of the program's · agencies. offshoot organization, l he "UCJ did a marketing job in Orange Cou nty-UC! Executive 1972 to see if there was Association, interest in a program like The UCI Executive Seminar this," Hails explained. Program feted its secood The plan, which brings graduating class last \\'eek in a ca d e m i c i a n s and the ceremonies at the .i\irporter practitioners together iQ a Inn. Com pletion of the IS.week l learning environment, worked session automatically entitl~ better than expected. the executives to membership "There was an a d d e d in the executive association -bonus."' Haas said. "When we an alumni group also in its got 40 high-poWered execu. second year. tives together in the same TRE LATEST group of room ~·ith management ex· perts. the learning experience \1·as incredible." avallnble to hls own buslness. The university brought In mana£en1ent s~ialists from all over the state to conduct the session.,, l n c I u d i n a: n1nnnge1nent consult.ant Peter f'. ~rucker and UCL A n1:ina~ewcnt profes&Or Harold Koont . • "The environment of the exetutlve's y.·orld I.a Chang· Ing," Haas explained, "and the oblllty to d 1ange Is t~ ability to survive Change in that new environment The program stresses employe relations, acoording to Haas. "You con get a college degree in administraUon, but that just leaches accounting and how lo structure a company," he said. "This program teaches the human element. ~tanagers have to be awa re that their employes are human beings. They WQn't take treatment dished out to them 35 years ago. Executives have to complement this new knowledge \\1ith that gained over the years as k e y members or an organization." llAAS SAID the executive association was formed at the end of the first session. "\Ve hated to see this thing go to the four winds, so we elected otficers and patterned the clu b after a similarly suc- c e s s f u 1 organization at UCLA." Besides meeting socially on<:e a month, the Executive Association is aiding the university in an internship program. FINANCE Star Lauds Oil-'tvater Separato1· ATHE NS (UPI ) Hollywood star John Wayne in Athens to promote an otl· water separator s y s t e 1'1 combating sea poUuOon, found time Tuesday to defend President Richa rd Nixon. "He is being victimized by the liberal press," Wayne said following a news conference. Amld questions about his future motion picture plans and reminiscences, the buke told newsmen the separator was the best equipment to protect the seas from oil pollution. Has It 'Wired' I ) DA~ Tex. (APJ -The ed along, mulllpled by mlddl•· baling wire that holds the hay men. that feeds the t:t1N that The baling wire , 1horta1e .began about a year ago when provides the milk in a steel companies tiµ-ned Mt shortage-wee.ry nation Isn't more profltabJe ventUrts than there anymore and that may baling Wire be<:e.use of fedtral mean higher prices. . , controls that held prices to $11 Baling wire seems quite to $tf for a standard 96--pound mWklane. But ranchers say roll the shortage, combined with • gcarcitles of fuel {ertlllw' still, there wa.s a backlOI nd . could ~ beet arid and firmcrs 1n lll6 big hay a gra1n1 producing areM of th e m.llk pnces spiraling b Y Soulhwest and Midwest made wi~ House Agriculture COm· It lhroui~ 1973· But by thh mlttee esllmatea nearly on~ year, the Inventory wu gone, third o1 the hay grown 10 and prices doubled and then feed cattle thb: year won't be tripled. The wire now t'OSL! u baled beca~ of a lack of much u ~ per roll -- \\ire. bine Is an alternative. \Vhm It's available. but italsols inshortsupply. Federal and s tate ' governments have tried, lvllh WtmOUT BALING, be,y only marginal suceea, to flx left In open neldli soon rol.3. A Ille problem. With the prl~ tanner who does not have hay freeze lifted, a handful of to Jeed hi1 cattle in winter companies are back I n must either sell them on lhe productioo. market· at a loss or find more expensive feed . That in turn ABOUT SS PERCENT of all affects families In Houston baling wire comes from the and Cleveland and Los An· Colorado Fuel and Iron Co. geles, because the farmer's Since Feb. I, the company has financial burden "'ill be pass-b e e n in round·the-cloclc production but it still won't The separator is produced by Separation and Recovery Ac,nus' -1• ti' on Systems Inc. of Irvine. in 'J. - catch up tor this sea.son. Nor ~'ill the other plants produce enough. which Wayne is m a j o r TI\ere are other sources, partner. At Fl price googers who charge up The equipment, be said, was llOr IA> 16$ a roll. Most ssy tbey'll idee.I for use by tankers when •11K11t i. n. oeu~ .iiot tum to them only i n UP i9,1 Up 11,1 UP II 0 Up IS I Up-1;.0- UP U ,i UP U l Up U ) Up U I Up U.• UP U.I Up 1l s Up 12,S Up !l.S UP 11.S Up 12.1 Up 11.0 Up 11.0 Up 11.1 UP 11,l Up 1!.I Up 10.3 Up 10.0 Ull 10,0 UP ,,j graduates brings lo 70 the number of executives. sponsored by their. companies and organizations, belonging to the exclusive club. The list of "students'' is impressive. It includes vice presidents and officers of Orange County's bi g g est b u s ine sses, including ~f c DoMell·Douglas, Philco- Graduates or the School ot ,THE [QR.MA'.J'.... fer _the_ Administration are placed-in program is threefold : provide jobs by members of the challenging material, select assaociatioo for management instructors \\'ho are.authorit ies training. • 'L !:i, clean their emptied LOS ANGELES -F1uor desperation. t h e . . Corp, announced completion of . An . example . of -..... __ _:sel J>a!'alels the ..oil hland..I • the transtction tiy wJiittr Fluor .. inflationary; trellJi is the cAle uMUme s 1t or reUJe, w e Ired p· Se . , & of custom balers -farmers allowing only water to pour acq~ . . tooeer rvice ed who hire out their baling into ttie·sea: Eng1neermg Co. and renam . · he 1 in their field of specialization. f and provide a fo rmat where each executive can practically apply the most rece n t management knowledge Wayne timed tus promotion it Fluor Pioneer Inc. machines to, ol r armen . bid ifi Greece to coincide wit h Floor president M . A . rn Texas lasi year, a custom EPA Assura11ee 011 111.l Oii 11.1 Ott n.s Oft 11.1 Oil .. , Oii 1.1 Oii 1' Oii 1.1 Access to Lead-free Oii 1.1 Otf 7.1 Oii 1.1 Oii O.I Ott •.0 Ott •. o °''"' s.• Oii S.I Fuel Certain by '75 g:; t: ViASlUNGTON (.\P) -The g:; t~ E n v i ronmental Protection otr s.J &:: ~:~ Age n cy says fed eral g:: ::I regulations will iMure that I lead-free gasoline is available I MUTUAL FUNDS ~~;os.:.~'m:~i°n :rs•im:hi~~ must use it. Alan G. Kirk II. EPA's Ntw y.,,., -f o1 DltlY1'US G1t1> J""us Fa u .12 u.a:i v1s10 F 1.os 1.eo assistant adminislrator for 1DWl1111 1, • 1111 o1 O•r• Fa ~•1 1031 or>nstn 20·11 :10·11 R"0'•9 F f·~ ;·~ enlorcement,saidTuesdav the D.0 ilOO ilslltd pr•· Eq l Fd 3 •1 i ~ JOM" H•NCOClt e"''" F s'a s:w I ct1 on M111...i Ory L• I I t7 1 11 91111 Fii 11 f>l 10.20 eve•e ...., I 1· · a b o u t Finis •s a..o1e-o "' °''' LA 1o.oo . G.r w•" ~ 31 • n '"' E<'I •.t0 1,)ol regu a tons require t~NASO inc. Sp 111em •,s1 71l s;!l"•,•0 ,,1'01 l.~>etec:o G s.u 1·'° 111.000 service slatinn" to )fa (.en1 1.14 • y K'l'YS : CUODElt f'DS: . .,,.., T ....... , E&E """ J '° J Ill c"'' a1 11.s1 11.31 1"'' 1n• 1i 1 <11 gin selling unleaded gasoline JllM •, 197• E.t11lt Gr 641 7.1» Cull BJ 11'S19M !lllMit 13.1'13.16 1111 Aslr EATON .t. Cust B• 1.15 I.OS Com l .SL,l-l:-1'1)y July I. Adm G"" l .•S 4,00 NOWAllO: Cu~t It! •.11 •.11 !>pooc•t 21':3i2 Allm Inc ltJ l!.i e11n Fd I.Qt .... C"'t KJ 4,'9 S.14 Lev '·°' •.U """" 111i (Ot 1'11 C.wlh F t.~ 10,u CU!ol SI 11,lt 20.01 ECUlllTY l'DI: AdVii'I" }:il(J .:111 lncme S.43 S.'l'J c~si SJ l.U 9.S1 f~ ~·:: t~ Ael ..... Fd •.'3 I.II Sc:oKh F s ...•. .a c~ SJ •.11 6.18. u"•• F s'll •at A'1M In 11.JI IJ.Sl Skk Fii t.'1 !0.211 (U!J Sot J.Oll l. <I · • Aluture 1.11 1,11 E01E So 17,1111.n Apollo l .41 J.JS ELECTED l'D\: AGE Fd 4,11 4.}I EOl'ff Gt 10,10 10.'lll Pol;"' 2.16 J.02 Am Stir 6.!.i 6.!.i •lhl•le •,TQI0.'3 Ertun Trt 11"1 .. ttt>Kk• s.n S.IJ Oc>P~f..d, 1t~1(:~ •lflh.I Fii t 11 10.12 E""''ll l .66 J.M Kn~• Gtll S."1 •·411 S9I "'" """"~ F 1:9s 4.32 Ene•11y 10.•• 10.4'1 Lnllmr• S.41 S.'19 f!liMI 9.J.J 10.U ... .,, Blrtn ,,n JO.Ill""'' d •.• r I.SS LO Ed>f lJ.11 U,03 ry F 11.11 11.14 Am Ov~' J 12 1.H Fm 6~•• 1." 1.1'1 LEX G110U": r::~~MLD3.fi11~_i,;. ... 1" EOIY 4.11 4,YFed RRi 6.66 ••·QI Ledr J J2l'M Entrpr 4.11 S.16 AM EXPllES\ l'IOELITY al • ' f let Fd l.Sl l.IS l'UNDS: GllOU": C'><wtn t~'.H 1~:~ tt•rbt 6.U 119 ~Pt•I S.91 •• ., 6nll Oto 1.1111 ~ m Jlu.r<f! s.n 6.21> 1.e911 L S.IS 6.11 lncom I.SS I.JS C.ptil 9 4l IO.JS !.•It 1"1v S.tl 6,15 Ptce Fd 6,M 6.16 lnvllm t .•l I.SI (Diii•• l .•I •.• Lil'!( c~ IHEAllSON FDS: 5-<I t.41 I 01 Cv ss.ec .... . .. LOOMIS ,. "THAT TR.ANSLA TES into about one out of every two service stations nationwide and two out of three in urban area5," he sa id. Kirk said add itional stations 1n rural areas will be required to sell lead-free gasoline by the end of this yea r. From 90 to 95 percent of the to reach a lead·free station. HE ADDED THAT repeated use of leaded gasoline in one of the new lead·[ree cars would only ruin the pollution controls, possibly forcing the motorist to replace them at his o'vn eXpense, l\IJ:eanwhile. the American Automobil e Associ ation reported that the nation's supply of gasoline remains generally good this week, with fe\\·tt than 2 percen t of tne stations surveyed out of fuel. This refiected little change from the fuel situation last ~·eek. Automation's Earnings Up SlocO. Jf1 6:t1 ~ii S I I •• SAYLES ""'re U,"11 •· Eu• 6.. C.p 0¥ 10.~ 10,511 tN;om ll."111.411 ....... "''" S.1' s . .-i • 1o'u 11.01 Mo.llUll 11.IM U..14 1n-..•I I.IS 9.6I Am 1"'1n J,N (.]( Evertt ll 0114.ll LORD All: Sf! ~·II lJ.14 ll.l• Am Jnvtl •.J1 (.JI ~ I.II ,,ll Afl•l•I 6.1s •Jos s.oe Fa 6.'3 1.11 .-.m Mut 7.)4 l.l4 itn f J.•J l.IS ,t,m 6~ l,ll l ... SIGM,t, l'UNDS: .-.mNI C.r ..... 1.1• ~~'.:," l•.7• 11.60 61111 d•O ,,114 '·· '""' Stir S.8J 6.ll 1975 cars will cont a in General Automation Inc. of antipollution devices or englne Anaheim anno unced record mo dificatlons necessitating ll5e of unleaded gasoline, the results for the third quarter ;~g~~ .. =~N~Nllci~\: L~.1:Ef~•N,,:s·~:F ~~~l !::~ 1Jl C.rwlh !"1~ ~·'IS fin 0 111 J.4S J.4S l!ro Inc lt.S' •.lt ,ve;Mu• 6.M 7.1• k~:.':'v 1o·u 11'31 Fin lnll 3 . .., J ... Bro US '·'I 10.10 Sm•lh II I ." l.•I SOW< 3·90 416 F+n inc l ll sa MASS co· Isa 1&.C.• •.n '.JJ "'"° •r11~ •l• 6·1o1 ven• '.n J:11 F•eem · •.S• 1.11 So GenF 10.n 10.10 W• "''" 10'3111'n htFd V• ,,:w, 10.U Ind~ f •.•• I.IC S...st In~ 6.38 •. 'Ill ' ' '14 ~·11 l'lllST Ml~S F ,,SI 10.<I SW 111v G (,9) S.ll Aud•• . .. INVESTORS: MASS l'N(L: sovr !" '·" 10.11 I.ICE Dl'K Fa •.01 •.J9 MIT •.n 10.69 5"<1•• • l.J,, J,11 HOUGMT0..110 .... G<tn Fd }.ij6 6.Sl MIG 10.1111.115 .. P 1110 S.S1 s.n ~::::: : 6:)11 .. '15 lncom 1.)1 1 01 MI O 11.11 ltM STATE IND GR .. : k S )3 s'13 Slot~ f 6,14 l.J9 MFO 19.t.ll 11. Com Fd •.01 4,lt l':: Sci l : .. •'oo \ti Mun; 1.14 1.14 MCO 11,1912,11'1 Olwtil 4,JS •.IJ l!lC Gtn 1,1 ti1 flm e ... '* 1 . .., ~ltl t¥ 1.ss 1.ss Pr11<1n Jr' ,•.n,, 8 9 ti '.i l'OllUll'I GllOU,.: ~-· l .M l.Jll 51 fr C.r J. I . -s'sJ 100 Fnd l .61 l.61 Mid it.m •.ll 4.61 SI Fr 1 .. c I.IS I.IS lliyr11e ~~ itl 101 FM I .JI I.JI Morty Fa .... , ... s.t•t• SI• ll.ll Jl.61 :::~ ~~ 1: .. 1'1.11 Col""' /,)t l.lll MS6 Fd n .•111.•1 ITEAOMAN FO\: • OS ·~ 1.li Fi;nd s so s.so Mii l!nG l .1S .. ., ,llm lnll l.•s l,•S =~ 3:11 3''1'J Fdn Gr J It 4,14 MIF fd 6.tt I, -~Ml fd 1,o;J 1,03 S-~~-J,M i1c l'QVNOER\ MIF Gro l ,SO J,11 l"wt! I 11 111 Bau Fdll 1,)1 '" llOU,.; M"°"' 9' •.00 ·~ ()(e... s ... S,19 6 1 H i•t (;<wlh 4 I) S.11 MuOm 111 l.'6 1.t STflN llOl !"DI: .r.:::. '" .... ln(Om 10.11 II.It Mui sn" lt.36 1'.ll 8~•;on< 16 M 1•3' CALVIN l"UiilOi• F Ml..... l,'4 .... Mull Tr' I.Ii 1.71 (•Olli 1 11 I II tlvll Fd 10 11 1'1 ti F *'" t 0& 9.'17 NII l""'u I 31 1.:11 '>IO<;ll 11 Sl 11.SJ COi"! Fd ' .. to'IO Four\q F I •1 '4} NAT SE( l'D\! SIS GllOUP: 0/'11 "" 1'01 i~ l'llANKLIM (l.olitnC 1.M l.:tt (;<WI~ •S 11 s.n N•tWd 1'1J •..is ltOUP: l!Oftll St •.ll 4.IJ IMom 'll I.Cl'! NV Vt" ·~I ,"3 ONT( 6..0 /Ot 01v11tn ),11 J.• '>mmol 1 40 I .II CC. Fu.., I JO 1't1 G•t~ Sr 6.11 •.14 P•tl Stll }.16 6.0ll l «!'lnl S.11 6.1' ""' s~· ~' ·12 1o·n ~. 1"'"' 1 11 1_11 111<om •.is •.M \u•wr F e.JO • 01 (!\ti 1n':. f .O 1'11 USGv S ,,Jl 10.lO SIOCO.'>r 6,01 6SI l~ C. IU I~! (MANNING . • Vloht~ J !.i l II c.n.tt> S.40 ),90 T•..., (IP '·" 1.-l'UNDS• RttC., 1JI Sl2 MEWENGL': ff4v1E~ IS0 9 31 i~i~ ~~5 ti ~~~~N C~PE 1~:2 t? ;i:fi ;til ~!}J lli i~~ (QI P< J 41 111 ROUP: NEI, Mt I.II l,'f.I Urntu""' 6.11 6,i'I EPA official said. ended May 4 with net income Un d er the federal ~ up 93 percent over the regulations. il \\'ill be illegal comparabli! period one year for a service .station to put leaded gasoline into "lead· free" car. However. Kirk noted. a motorist who rWlS out of fuel where unleaded gas is unavailable can put a few gallons of leaded gasoline into his tank himself -just enough r.here 1s r1otl11r1g like a u:omari's lot1cli tllP 1nost tatfied ago. Lawrence A. Gosho rn , chairman anct chief executive officer, said net inc om t reached $1,089,000, or 43 cents per share, for the current period, compared with $564,000 or 23 cents per share, last year. Kids Like to . Ask Andy f rtd~ ,t,m ••I / 01 Cotnm 1.21 1 'IO l'OtU Cenl • 64 4.M UNION SEllVl(I: 0~•'6::: ;·~ :~~ ::1r ;j~I~.~ ~=~~ 1::~1;:~GB~~~"iv 11 l•U.10 A CALLS .. (I I ... '"° PllOI 6 ,. /,:N N• fter\ IJ.16 14.•~ N•n ·~" 6 JO 6 8t L ~Iv• •. 1.1 ,·"' ~tt•t ).J I S.I• New Wiii 10.0111,Cl v .. C•J)t I~? &611 ·i . . (M,\Sf . E S·{, P ll qs 21.'ill Ni,~I" 10,SJ 10,JJ Vrnotl tn 10.I~ II II aboul rnen 's st11list ••• ,.A Y HOLIDAY .OS-YON : n FAK ~·:~ :·n ~ l•lr I)·:: 1).;1 U~~TEO f~~N~~ formerly 01 41; C ~;:, ~ ~·~ t!: ~~n 111'd 11:1J 11:11 o Nefi Id 1~:11 1t:1: O,.,,,u~d 1 io 1.u M 111m1 Beach 2 •ttetl sP>lr 8~ 1 ·11 6 _, uord 11.~R )1.11 O~ Wiii U.tO 1J,9(l C01'1 P,w t '' •71 • Be"e•ly HollS -••olt UM•_•·-"··· S-•I<• ~1 1 c IJ s·11 AMIL TOM GllP: DPPENNM l'D: Con! n<. R.•I '" • rn --... c.ntm Fol l 'O ,IJ f\nl(I l.•I 3" Op ,11lm l .tCI •.11 ltKOITI 10 •0 1111 "'-1.. C .. fw ..-.C._.. ANI (NA MNG O\•. G•w1n ).Jl,,,111 Op Fl'!d 1.t1 •.41 St'"" SI& t J1 , f Appl Call -~, -J.,ll)rlf 4 ~.'... ln(.Otl'I S.IO t .lol OP ,,.... ),'1 s.• V.ma<I • •l s 01 or . lftOflthly , .. , -s. Fr...c.IKO M~nn• l 10 i 71 '•" ~1n •.•• 1.u ore S.t ,.3'10.2C us,11•· c1 1" 11.1• 6•4·1570 , ,__, •••l--Sc.hu~ F 6 J.11 t~ '11 L¥ I 01 I.a:! PM•ml !,ti 6.41 US GvtS ~.ll q~ .....,. $("" So 6 >11 t •i _ 1 )Ii P ... 1 ....... , ,, •.« V$LIFE FuNos: Tu('. Thru Sat. The Teltphone Company fMA .. •n •lit •rliOt . I l l . PQllutF Jll •.I~"°"'',. •IJ •Sl 10 'T1l 60.m . coLoM1•i.. iQ•lt• u" u 11 ,._ M1 '* 1.116 a•i F...i • tJ '., Of Caf1"fomt'a l'UNDS1 1...,prl Cp I 64 I .JI '°'"n liQ 6 19 t .HI COii" lilt •.•1 10 IS (Ollwt• 1 ~· "» '""' G• s a. '., ~11 Fd s 1' s.11 v•i..uie L•NE l'O\; 2549 East Bluff Or 1v e cq11+ty 1!J J.M IM •m 11,.Ul'"'-••C l lJ t.tt; v.i i..ne ••• \lJ B h '•Ill 92660 lOOl •t41111.c.M. Fu"" •1 1a:11111(8oil 1 111 s n PILGlllMGP: V•llnc: JIO•lt Newl)Ol'1 eac ,...o . t7t41979·12l4 °""'" l' jt.i !nd F.6m j' P11 F•m 10 M !I .._,., C-.t~ I.~ S.jll 644 1570 IN;O"' .11 .Sl nl..... l ,il l ,)k Cflpl•I J 1$ 1.111 11•1 '>P< l.~ I 11 I ~==::=~==·=====--==-~====-::====::::::::'.'j Vtnh,ol' ,. .. 1'11 II 1 ..... ~1 11 1 1•.• IMtfl'\ l .Ol .. ,. V•NCE I· ~Olutn G 10•• 10· .. """'" C. I . 1.llO PtlO Fd t.lS 4 .... UNDEll\: OMMDNWL.tN ' nw(o ,11 11cJ 1J.49Pl,..-St tlr' •.11'1 tn"tt . I ll t4l 11uir1 nw Gu.a 6 1' I" Pin T~ 111 , . VS Com t '' t IJ A I I •t .. ~w IN'ht 111 PIONllll f01 i.-,1 ) "1 ._,, c 1 U 1'.11 nv llM t 1110.CD Pion f~ ! 10" t n v....,,011 JI• '• "•• CQl'nJI qr 1 '3 1 1S MVll\f PW)ll Fii 1 JO 1 1.~ VMIOr°' I 0t (Ofl'!PCP )•I iJS Milt. "-tt t 1e l(l,1 V..,,tl* l" '°"' 6 ru .:i. ... 16l ll'l•Md ••• V.woed I 16 J ~ c ..... : ,,: .... 1,. , II J IS PLI C.110 10,WI n '.• v ..... 11 C.• ' JJ • C'o'ltlll I II 1' t ~II ..... •I' PLI Ttn 6 ll .. ., W•llSl OI' I•' 6. c-,_ I JS t'H .,_ •Jf ~llOU,.; "fllCE ROWl: W•>ll Mw 10..1111 1J (n,1~ 9w it) i" I~ C.111 1.lJ c.t•ll'I 10./f 10.1• W.ko.o ~q 1.10 I .I'll ffiMI In t •t 66' I NO t 61 ) 111 tl'ICOl!I 9.St 9.Sli WllllNDTON 1, C 106011 .. I Pr J 11 J I' Nw fr• 10HIO.~Gfl0U,., i... S.:os 1 n lo\wlu.tt I j} '.. "'"' HO<' 1.01 101 E•PIOf 1• ,, 71 ~ D•v 1•1 )~ :\;!KIO ,. ! 11 ).f Pro fd 6.1• .. n IO'fl\I I •I 1.10 O.Olt•\ t•J k •llKI I t lt l"fOY!dl l •S J I/ MOrllA t.0 10.ll o,,,,,1111 •fl' '-O'i .,.,, P,, I I r )I ~ 0 1 / 03 1., r,,,,~1 • >0 10 • DELAWA•I ~v flt\ t • M Pl'vd 5!P I•$ '·· Wfl>'Y 10.ll II W •llOtlP' ~I P UTM,\M W..lltn 9 Jt tO I\ 0.-c•tr. I 11 • )1 Gtwtn 4 u • n l'VNDI: W11..... • )1 IQ,lt ~1 .... F 1'11 '" lflCOfn l•I •M con ... , ••l lO:r! Wil'O\• t,:IO ,~ l>oU• f 1·11 '·~ t•ti UI l.«t , [Q\l+ly 1 11 JM: f)I Ind JJl ,,~ o.v...,. ) 1•u 1"1"' 110.0JI GH•o "»'i""N1flaG{i •• I Or.ti 01 :6t ·f •ltl F11d ~t.~ '!to c,,,,.1r. •II" l] _,,...,,,.., '·'1 i I O.OOC-1 .. 0 M ,,., ,vnd 6 OS 01 IN:Om I 11 I '"'If' t ~ t.40 t>;..;.1 E 1:0t 1:111 · ,. O.tll 1,0J 1' 1' '"'°"' I-Al -ll~·<h.,Uhnd, I ' , MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS -MERCEDES BENZ - Sales • Service • Leasin9 28701 MARGUERITE PARKWAY '95-1700 MISSION VIEJO 8'1-1740 S.. °"1-hoy. k 4 '1'.,., Pl-.y. erit. ript Olli M•....,t .. • "THESE STUDENTS are grad uates seeking t h e i r masters or doctora te degrees" Haas explained . "Giving them temporary employment in the field for which they are training allows them lo gain eq>erience not possible in a classroom environment." the shipping exhibition of Ellsworth sa id that in the baler charged abou t 27 cents Posidonia which will be .trans<Jction Fluor issue d per bale, wire included. visited b). most Greek and 2QIJ,908 shares of Fluor Series This year it costs 28 ~ts if foreign shipowners. B preferred stock for Pioneer. the farmer supplies the wke: Greek shipowners have the Fluor Pioneer, as a wholly 38 cents if the baler supplies largest neet of tankers In the owned subsidiary of Fluor, cheap wire, and up to 50 cents world, totaling 2.1 million will maintain its headquarters if the baler supplies top tons gross. in Chica go. quality wire. Complete .Mid .. day American Stock List S.ltt Net S.ltS N1I P·E 01d'I Ulii C/111. P.E ~l U lt Cflll, -• •-CO• Obit 13 1 Iii. ••• •AV CO .2S ' I S\11_,. .,... Cre•liw MQ 1 S CVlo ••• A&E Pl.st• 4 6 2\:o + \" CraoleP 2.66 S 21 lSW-'I• Au ne Html S 1 21h-.,... Cre1t Fo.m • 1 2 • \\ Ae11is CO.pn 6 6 ,,.-1·16 UOUAI .&I ~ l •21,(, t-\IJ Ae•Odt~ Inc 1 IV._,. V. Cr# CP .2Sb l 2 21 h -~ AlllldC.P Si "' 1 1"-.. . Cr~ttl Oil 7 S 11 -"" Alt Hoi.p .'111 1 1 (ft+ If• CSE CP • ..0. c 4 101'1-\It •ttllPbl , 16<1 S I I~ • • • Cl,iblc Cp .2<1 1 • )'t , . Aller Six .10 • I l \IJ ... -0 D- Al,...lc• .JO I• 36 101fJ+ ~ OllllSM 011 ,, tt 2~~ ... Al•n Woods ' • 1l:V.+ ~ Olnl•I '2111 10 110\/1+ "" Alai-• Al<I 14 S ...... ~ Olt• 00C: 111 9 2 (2 -'l't •ntoh Ai r!~ I S 1'4-~ Oll.6 PrPdtt i U l\'o ... ,11Ull!d Ar1 1'11 6 1 2 -'·'I De~Mn .IOd 11 JS • +. ~:. A!pM In.Sul ' ' I~-V. Olylll'> wtli .. 2 \~+\It Allee COrp •• 12 •.io-t1·16 Cott Lltlli .JO S l 6\h• Vt Alie( Cp wl •• 1 \It ... Dottin fd .S<I 9 2 101/t -t 11, AIUll pl l~O •. 1100 (S\11--T OnTIEl .IOd 5 3 6>,;.+ \lo :::;~s;":~ .~ 3~ s,3;,7·~ 8:!t1" .. Jtc! 1 J j~ ::: "'"' A11rorim • 3 v. ~ ~• OHJ lnd ,1'0 3 I IV,• ""' ,11 CnMtll wt • S·16 ... Dltn!Olld M 10 S 11:V.-V. AmC..rd .1• 10 1 IS • 'h 0'-1; l"c: 1S 4 1't.• V. Amlsrli .26e 6 21 711>• -\~ Dlwrwy ,,. • 1 10\:.-V. AmMI 1.3'd 4 I 31'1:.-\It OIIl'fll COrp •• t ,..,._'lo "'"' MOI 11111 1 16 s + Vt come Pt:lrP 11 ll 21 + v. A Petro 1.SO 1 n J3V. + •;, Donk•ny .JO l s lh -v. .-.m RU .ofOI 6 1 •~l-V. OOwMy .2S J 1 71,\+ V. Am RUy WI .• 1 7·16 ••• 0r .. N11 Cp 10 6 11(, ... Am JlecGrp 11 2'1o ... 0..•U I.lid I ll""+ V. Am S•lel •O. 4 I •~:. •.• Ofll Ftir .~ 'j 2 S'lo .. \1t Am Tit .1411 ~ 1 S';'•-~'lo OUnk)o, ,Old I II/lo• i,.,, •m T••hino •. 12 l .. '"' Ourtle•P .40 _s 2 ll -ill AMlCCp .06 7 4 ll ~'lo-Vo OuroT~ .?19 I 10 1 -W AnQto c .11" 1 2 l ~'t-\fo ov ... ict .OSd 11 l J V!+ \Ill AA!l'IOny In°' . 1 S . . . -< E- •q11ll1ne .JO 12 . 1 1•'" • "1 E.1111• Clo\11 1 Ar1C'Ld . IOd I l 14 -Vo E.Jlr1 $(11 .~ t 1 Arrr .. c Ent 1 3 S"-• '1it E1rtnRe .36 1 S Armin C.Orp 6 I 131-t + "' E.Jlst.I. Ov Si l 1 "'"°'"' EltCI 3 1 • • . • ECOdJT'I' Cp 10 l ArundtCp .s.11 ' 6 7'-'t• Vt EdgntllOI Si 3 S •rwood Co S l ''-•-\~ Ed~ .Oln 1 S As.tmer• Co 13 6l • -'" Et:IO CO<pln ' 2 ASP AO .(()I! J 3 1-l't •. ' Ed .. 1rd1 .N s 10 ,ll\l•I• fllC • t 1""+ 'A E0111Mll .1'0 6 6 •111'"'' .n s 1 I ., .,. Efco eorp1n • *' •Uc0Mt11 wt , . I I~ •. , Elcor Oltm 2 •11Cn 6 ,)Jd S S• 16"1 ... Eitel .CUiist ·_s J A1Alc111d •I 20 U•,r.-14 Ete<tr" .IOQ ' l Aug,at In .11 23 II 2l -,,,, Epll;oSll .UI • 1 A11str1I 011 IS t I ll>'•+ \'II Eq11ity N1tl ,, 20 Aulp A•Olo 11 I 3V.+ ~~ 'ElOC!Y Miil 23 S A11to Sw ,11 14 ) (411.i + ~ ESltX Cl'lem • 2 A.,.mco . 1' 10 • 3 , • • Ewt11SVU ~le 10 s AV)( Corp111 11 1 li'I• .•• Eic.clone 31 16 I -··-_,,_ 6ncran .61" 14 IJ'h -"' F1blen .•OD 6 • 81111s1t r Lt II ''' I -I Ftlr Ttx Ml t 2 ll<l•ne' Eno I l '°" ... f1mi1y O SI I I 81rnw"I 111 2 6\'11+ '-' FedMtl ,&OQ S 1 61rry RC. ~; t S S~•-"" Ftd Rei.ou• •• S4 B.urywr .~ 6 1 6 + \ft Felsw11y .32 • • 81rutn Fo~I S l \!o ... FIDrtOcl •U t 6ltrwlc1c 11111 'S 1 1l\+ v. FkUco 1.s2d 'j 11 Bttlll Poltrl • IJ ,.,_"" f ldtl<o WI' ' 8•y•DC .•1d J l l-o ... Fllm•r· llK 'j 1 Bill Ind .OI ' IS lh• I,\ FillrO! .Olb • 16 BltlKOI A •l l 1 ,,,,,_ 1"' Flnc:I 8 ,1'0 • 1 llenetStd "" .. 1 I ... • \'o l'l11Ge" .17d ' 16 llenr"' Cp , • 31\ • • . FlnGnA , 11d 20 61111 Ent lie •. I ,,,._VI FsO.n 1.390 ·.: 6 O.r1111pf LlS 1 10 Fst ~nv "'' 2 O.rtu01111! 'i 2 ll" .•. F~ Rll[ Inv l 7 e.rot1nC .10 6 • J\:o • . Fst sa. .• ' 1 llellllhm (p 10 I 1.\-t-.... F1IVMI .l4d ) I eewr1, En! ~ 1:i... \Ill F\11111rlc ,14 s I 61c Pol" .11 I 3 I~•-I/I F119'!.11f 0 • 2 Ba&t1r 1.11 s l 111. • v. Flock ll'ldlll 21 10 6f9 V ST;i S II 4°" • \.. FttRclc , IOd • • 8111ksM . $ I It~-\~ flu•• JOl'I ii I 1 Binney S . t 1 •~+ ~1 FlyTlotl' WI II 6•0 o,,,,..,, 10 I• '"° • \._ Fo• Sftn .J6 I • 61oun\ .OI 6 I tlo\ . ,. Fr•nkR ,Old • I 811..ebird In S • J'MI-.,. fl'~ll .IOll 1 '' 8"1\tck Cp 11 I •Yo -1111 F•I~• 11111 .. ~ 3 2 Boll 6trne• • I -.,. Frloltronlc 22 s Bo• V•ll ,10 •1 17 21\11• V. Fr!li<M ,30Q 1 3 1',r. ... '\.lo + ,... 1•1.-\le , -· ' -•;, 22 -'II 11/to ... J'A.-., .. •:ii.. ..... l~ ••• Jl~ •.• 1~1 ••. 1~+"' !I'll+ \II , ..... \It I~ "' l 'lot •.• 3:V. ... l 'n-~ ·~-Vo ~~· ·"" ' .. l~V. + ~ lV. ... J.\1-.... "' ... 1)V.-""' , ..... _,,.., l V.-,... . -· ·~-.... 6~-\'o 6fl+ "' 11 .... ~-'" ... ]t.-1--. 11~~ t-v. . -· 11/ti-V. 1i· ... '" 1 ~·-v. s~-111 16~ .... .,, s~--v. ,.,.._,,.. "' , .. 21-. .. v. 2~-v. 13 .,. l \fr+ \, S\t-\ .. 1'\ .•• 8owmlr lni 3 1il 11'--\,'I fronlltr Air ' II Bowne C .JO e 11 SVt ... FrOfllAlr w5 . • 1 8•<1CI A•91n 6 111 lllt ••• --G 0- D•H Compl li ' 12\/'r-lfJ Glbrlelln Si ' • •~•--~ 6r111tn Ind I I lVr+ 1111 G4it;in 111 .31 I 3 I ••• 8t'111+tl WU 4 11'i.-111 Ct.ll"'Or St!! l 1 l:V1-.... ll•fl<oll'I 1g ·,l •J 16\'o-v. C'..e1rhrt .l• I 17 10 •.• ll••unEn .n ' 111/i• \, Ciotl't Cine .40 ~ 12 II"'-.,. Ort,.,..r( .•O t IJ l•'AI-\• GnEmp ,Ollll ~ 1 11/1 ... 8ra0•rl Ind l 1'.i. • V. GI'! Re~rtc11 t ;' 1\o ..• aroo-5P .16 'j, 1 i -.,. Gen Jlesour 1• 1\11;-"" B•awnCo WI 6 )¥.-"" Clttill\lfC 1.. ' • II -v. BrwnFpl .40 .. 1 S .,. GlentF .sao ~ l If.ft+\/;, 81U fl'>gine If I ,, ...... Giant'fl ·'°" I) 211 !Siii• " Bulldt• .24 l I ll• , . . G<lbtrl inc • , I 'Ito •• , Bundy( IOI 1 I 11\lo,• "' Gl.l(IOlno 2k J 20 2"9 ... 6urllf'' Ind I 1 2 • ·• Gll\f'O(~ Pr 6' 1 21h+ lo, 811r'"lnl .llO ' S ''-• ~ Glltlltr 1.10 1 1 11 -Ill Bull•• ...... 1.1 1 J •1•1-.... Gitnc.r., ,)0 l 10 s -~ 6u11tt C..t 11 IJ 1'"• \.:I Goldtll•I ,Je. I I 4~ ••• --C C-Cioldn C~tl• 12 SS 17~+1V. C&lt Petrol 11 1 ti~-\It Goldlltld (p I 1 .... -"" Ceblf'COfll ?• J 1•1 • \It OOOdLS , t011 'f '' I + ,,_ C.ldor 1Sc! ) ' t 4'• \• Cloodrlc.h wt ,, I •4 ,,, VII COrnD't 1 10 t1'!i-\ol Ciot Rupp .90 1 I lS\\-'4 C.n'llO l<KP 'l 2 • -\ .. t..uld In .'2 n ' Jyt-,... l;lfnpe Ollb 1 t l·lt•>-lt GrtA Ind wt l • -W (•ll'ICI II'> IO l I ''•-~ Gt! IH' Ptt 'l 11 t\lo-\' Cdn Ea C..t 2m$t0m0 G4 UOI ,1t 11 31 ,,.,. , , Eo ... p 11 J int-,. 0t1.-n s• n to •~· \._ C.omlnc. I' 14 I 11 11 -1 Gr"'°H .OSd S I •lot ••• '°""Gr .10tl • ' • • •• (ittil ·* • ~ !~) ... comp, ,IOd r 11 l.lt ••. c.r1111c .2'tld • ' vt ... ro:::P$ 1 61 1 J 11 -I.lo Q RICo ,10 10 11 I' !Ito !NOY" I ,', l 't• \It Gr~IMI~ .SW .. •1 111•-~" tompucir• I ltlio-(ito. C .sici It 1 Wt ... (etn(hm 10_ ' I ... ,.. G f I (Of~ 1 \ 1_,,-.. OWicrd f'•b IJ I I''• .,. Qu,t'd'C • 1 • tlit• 1~ C.Onntl lJ C11 10 l )• 1-I• Gull A•pl' S 2 4\ii + \t1 Con\Olt C.•\ I~ IJ ••• .• . (iull\trm Ld t I 10\o-Wt (on) I'll! .40 ) I l \10 -M M-""'lne t P I S S .,. ..,let Gorll'I I ~-\e Con1 ti WI) . , ,, 111 "• HilllsMOl A• ' I t -I',. Coo*' El ,(0 ! ' • .. . 1-W""tO • IW ' 1 I \, .,. (OOll IR ,10d I tl\.t-I~ HMnp!Ol't 11'> •• • 2~-\1 .;o,11on lfllt ', t I -"' tt.nt• Pl-n t J 6\i + \• tmtoln ,llh J J"ii ... ""~ .JS • 2 ' -\'I S.ltli NII S.1t\ Nel S.11' Ntt P·E llldsl Uil Olg. P.E IP!OSl l.Ait c~. P.E 111c1Sl I.Ast~· Htr1tlld .II 20 IJ 111,r. New ldr Mn n 41 '1'11-1·1• ;.rvo COr11 2• · 1 3~-lie Hffllh Olm S I • + '\,\ N9wMe1 Ar JS I• IS -V. >G Sec .lib .. J 14'1 ••• Hel!M 1.3M S IS 1 .. t-'It New111rtr; 11 I I 11h• \It >GSc pf 1,~ •• 1 l'\lt ... Ml Slier .JJd 1 , 12~ . . • N9w Pr .20d I 2 I ..... ~ iOLlnd .osa s 1 41,\-.... HIDOlrn .osa 11 I S"'-+ "' NYTll'l'le .to ' 1l4 12'1.--i.;, >lle11rlli ·°' .. lJ l ... HOl'mt11 llld 4 I l fo-VI Nlll!IFrS ,26 S 2 6~-\lo >1W11 OH C11 12 a 12"°+ V. Holl'( COrp 1 l I~ • .. NJ8 P 1.SSd I !\lo .. • il'ler'#d Med 1 I 13~ ... Horn01• .SO 17 s )I + ~ NO Am c.v l 1 '.'•-'"' il'KIP'l"tll In 21 3 2~-.,. Hcn.Mlg .'rid 4 J 1\11+ \l<i NOAM\11 wli; .. t \\lot \11 :or-bOt .80 5 I ""''"\'I HOSll Molnl'> ' s 1~ + v. No Arn Royt o l 9'1-o-" iicn1c:n .70 t 1 6\io + 'I'• HOlflv l.G4<i S 21 t -VI NN(;Mot) I 2 I~'-i,~ )lmonS ,10b e. 2 l~-V. HouseV~ .Jt t 2 (l1 , .. N111;le1r O:t " 2 • -v. S!tkln St!w1t • 1 2'1t-V. Ho1ntO .~ 1• •J 41ll. t-"1 N11n11c OllG 22 I 12'1• ••• )kyCltyS Sk S 30 6 -'·' Howen 1ndu l 1 1"'9 ... ~-.(I o-SOlltrOl'I .OWi •• ll 211 ... Hud8Y01 .eo lJ I 30 ..• Off~· co ' 2 1114 ..• ,,. Sondr 8dc:'1 ' l .'~+ ~ Hutlmn .20d s 1 1v.-VI on Stt lY .)Cl 1 1 '""• + v. SOtoP• ·* l .. -·• H~•rot .lD 6 ' 16\r; , , • OKC COf'p I 4 13 20 -.... !.DurldCp .40 4 12 1'#-~ HYC:t ll'IC:P .. , J \e ... on Lint S~s 11 1 29~·· '·"' SCEdlll 1.10 I •1 ... -I I-O O•'· '°" > •<00 04\1 S<:Edpl 1.30 •• I U t'e+ V. IMC IM9Cp 6 S I _,. V. Orlot;"'H :lOd l ' 1~:+ 'V. SCEdpt 1,0I .. l500 12*-V. lmoc:o GIWY 14 13 '"I •.. Orl'lllnd 1f'!d SI ,J 1 , •. SoAor•I ·" 21 1) 31~-611 lmper•I Ind J l S~-V. 0...rl'!dO .40 I ll 11\li-\le S(»delty R • 2 3l't+ \It lmperOU .eo ,, .... ~V.-'Iii 0¥er"' Sec •• 19 l l't ... Spft(l()pt ll ti I 21• ••• 1....,.co ,XI I 11 1,.._ V. O•Flrst .ISi'! I 1 ]\._-"' SClltnttl' Cos S 2 2 •.. lntctlffm A 1 10 .... ,... Or.trkA .osa 21 s l Y:-.... U P tlld ,}( s • 6!'1-.,.. llld Hefd wt J 41/i• V. -· •-SldMel•I t p S 16 • ... lnDle• Corp Ill' 1 ]I'< .•. P8.F lllOust 11 l IJ·U .,. SIMo\Pr .•2 • l •Vt-'4 111\lrUn\ s.,~ 1 IS ·-· 'i• PGE pl 2,°' .. ' 21 ... -Vo St.JrrelH .lO • 1 l'h-.... In 6tnkroll t "'°-~--POE pt l .31 2 26'4-\.'• St1trwim Ins U 11 IS ••• t~'r...":~ '.~ : : ir:-·v.; ~~EC.~~P~.j ~ ~!:n-'i,4 ~:~~.~I~ ! ~~·.~ l"U Strtt(n .. 1 1 •. PG Sr.lt 11AI S u •.. SlepMtC .Mo 10 S 11-'t+ * lnllSysl .IJd ll 1lstl l6'1J• V. PGE A 1 i~ I 14V. ••• Sleorllrwol Ele S ' 1"•+ !19 111\e•W•Y CP s ' 1•~-"" PGE tot 1'1> ••. l u~ ... SltrtPrt< Sil • 11 1''1 ... lnv5IOI Ftl 11 12 1"t-I.\ ... cHold .:W • ·~\-"' Sttnwl11t .12 1 J •W ••• lnvOvA 1.IO S I 191• Ito Ptt /llW l.12 ' l llb-V. Slorml>f .32 .. 1 14~+ ~li lnvOlv 8 ,4S ' 4 Sli. ... PKSvL.n .?9 6 11 1' + V. STP Cp .2'tld IJ ll ·~'I• lnvfnd . \Sb l 2 1 -~\ P1lom Fll'IC:I 2 10,:. 5"'I City .JS S 2 ~--V. l11¥Al\y .•Sd ' • •'h+ v, P11om ,Jld 'j 1 lV.+'i~\SuperFd .1• t 11 s._-lllo letni(S ll'KP IS 1 10 -Vt P111 Ckn OU lOI JI 11 -\II SUp Surtc•I 6 $ 71,(,-.... 1rOQUOh .12 I I 1•.-.-v. P1rtdfl 6rd 1 J 2 -.... S<.i$q pt ,}Sc •• 3 SYI-v. l•vln lnduil S 6 ]v;, ••• P1rlllM ttoi. I l 11• ••. SW Ind .60 5 2 lS .... -V. lSC lndu .lO 6 I S'' ••. P1t•oon .J(/ • s l 'I•+ Vo SyNll<ty "' s ' 2,. ... l'fEL Corp 6 J ••r. ... P1toGd ,2Qb ' 61 t tt+ 1-. S't/lte .. c ·'° 11 636 •s ..... 1111 -J J-P11ri(ll ~t 1 2 71'tt .,.. -T T- JKtvn .1'4 ' 2 s• ..... Pe-E ·'°" ' • 1 ... T«ll11 Ootr s I •I.It+ V. Jtc:OCIS En9l II 1 12•1.-"• Pemc:or In( 4 I 2'1J ... 'Tie<MI '·~ ,. I ll•lt-1·16 JtlrOfl!c: l11d ' 1 tV.+ Vt Pe1111 Di• "'1 1S 1l\• Yo Tt<lln+trol 6 • 2\\-1.<. JotinPrd ,10 tl 11 1l~•-"• PennE .60Q ·s 11 1>.:..,..,., Tecsrm..cp 1• 2 .1 ••• --l( •-PeA1Es 1,1~ I 31' •r1-V. Te lefle• SI ' It ,.,.._'lo Ktl~rt .IOd J s I Vt .••• Pentron Ind 1 •n ... lell!I• Corp .. 2 111t-i..- Ktl'1• Inc ll J I :. , PerlnlCp .30 • 36 6:;i, .-v. Ttnwr CO•p S 2 2~-V. K•neMIH wt .• ' •'h-•;, PnllTe1 .541:1 • 21 e•1t-V. ftrld.,nt In IS 1 21 ~~-V. K1nebSrv 1 11 2 1~\lo-v. Photni• SU 6 l 'I•-"• f HOroP WIS •• 72 11'1<+ .... K•yCOrp .20 1 ' 4V.-V. Pledm11t .?4 • I 1\'o-'"*' Ttll lnll (o 11 11 1 ... K•w•"" ••• 7 210 11~. ... P!UOMo .IO n 2 1314 •.• Tt1111r SJ 3 s l 'A ••• Key CO .20 t 2 '2'1o--V. Pltlway .llO 10 I 11'4 f t wlron wls •• 2 •'I•+ '4 Ke"' Incl ,)0 s I s~ ... Pllr•C& "'"' ,, 2 10\.lt-·;,,; T Fl l<KOl'P • 1 l "-T '" l(ll•mb .lSO • l 1¥.-V. Pltct 1,lil ' 10 2~+ v. Thriltm .OS<:I 1 11 • .,.._ \'1 KIUt•rn Pr 10 l + \lo Pltntronic f 2 11 -YI Tlmptt ,20d • 20 t l,li-~• Kii'> Ark Cp ii-U 1 -14 Pita (,rup l l'I .•• TMCM l.9'1d • I 1S1itt-\lo Klt'llJ Oplkl 10 J l -'" Prleunw. Cp . i S Sll:r-lrt T0pp~ G .1'0 t 1 I •• • KlrigRI .Ud 1 1 11'4 ,,, Poloron Prd I 1''4 ••. Torin Cp .SO S •' 10 -\l;o Klt'llJSllr. . " s l l¥.-.... Polr<nro ~ s 2 IV.-''· TOl•I Pelrpl ' 1 I \" ..• Kl\ M II CO •. I 2 Potklr Instr 2 3\IO ... TOlllPpl .10 2 1eft ·-· Knicker Tor s 16 u . .. Pr.it L•m 1 6 •• ,,,,,._ v. TrMp1 Poot > lO 1vo-~1 IC-Tel lnl 3 J J""-IA, P.,tnH•H .tt 10 10 \I'll ... l •N d .. ., •• s J JV. •.• Klllll'ls K ,10 l 4 S -~ '"510fl .10 ' 11 ll~t-\lo TrlSIMOI .«I 6 S ' -\~ -<.•-P.,ntMt .10(! S I •I.lo-"' Tub Mx .23b • 4Jl·16t-Vt Li lltr')t In 7 I 2 PrOltr In! I S S \8 . , . Tuttco COJp Ul 3 2~-\'f '"'l Jl1dl0 ( 1( S -'i,i PropCT .lld 6 2 I t-11;o Tllf'llOC:IYM 2S I S'4-\It L.Aigon Apr .. 11 l .. '.~ Pr""C..s .IO \ 6 ev,-~• fvrner 1,l'O S 16 IS Like Sl!rM" ll '' ·~ .. '-PSA Inc -.~ • . 1 1l:t-I,\ Twill' F•lr 4 4 S L.6 ~vr ,3' t I JJ.;, , , , Pl.Ill HO""' 42 2 2"----U U-L.6ni:lmk Ld S 10 21;, t-\\ Puf'tpc lib 11 1 7 UI P Cp ,Ole S ' 1'• UPo!nl1 .1'0 .. 2 ]I,(, ,., --<I 0--l.ln.6Ml I.OM 3 II I V> L.6r 11111 ,6'0 6 t. I OutbKor I 2 lOV. Un•l•P . .eot • ! tV.+ \e LA.-RI wt .. 10 ~16 .. •. -· It~ U..Brtnd WI •. 20 1).16--1,\ L.6Totlf'I! I'd 1 11·11-1·11 R1r,:r 011 73 11 lt -1 VnCoFtl ,,S I l 12'h-Vt I.CA Cp ,4S t 2 7VJ-~ RI Am WI .. S l "" , • , IJn fOOds 111 S lt 2\._ ••• LCA CO wll I I -V. At 11 Plt kq l 1 4''o+ ~" Utd N•U Cp 4 2*+ 'It l.e•lll a. ,WI • 1 '"" ... R a tni:lu1t s II l\lo+ '4 IJnNtll WIO ' \~ ••• LH Enl .J6 I I 12~t-V. R111nTr .lld I 3 IO"i-'Ao LtnNtll wlN .,. 4 S.16 ••• L.ff NIU Cp 6 1 l:\lt ... R4!t rlonC 11 ' ff J8 ~ 'h US8ftc: l.1Sd 1 ll~t+ \.11 LH Plltrmc 11 J 10 .. , R1!rl11Tr .11 I I ''ii-'" USFllltt .1'0 1 lS , .... _ If• l.llllOll Pr1s S I ·~ ,,, AtUlnt .21d 4 l \'o + 11. USLt•s .'Md 10 I ll lh-""' Ll!Oh"' .~ • 4 6 -YI Reill pl 4,JI , , I '°""'-~. VS U QR WI .. I '¥. ••• 1..tlwr1 Tee J JO 3\11 + ~ Rel Gp ws ,, ' J•,;,-\1 US N•I R•l 3 12 2ii.-I,\ LtSlltfl .~ 3 10 4'1<-YI Rlfft ,t,f ,IQ I I 11 -t '\ US Rldlum I 2 l _,. \._ Ltwh8F ,p 1 13 e _,. V. RepHou~ .16 •. 1 2:i. .. ,,, U~ R•duc:ln t 2 14l\ ••• LIMoln "''" ID 10 ~·~ . . • AIKCOll .OI 1 l•I I -v. Un\"' Coro 10 s l•:U.• \;. Uovds Ell< l 1 61'1.-\'II Re"vOll .10 6 3 ,,,._'la Un vRtl Cf. 31 I Ji"-\' Lot•STh w1 11 I~ ... lttwrtlnU A 2J 16 1111 ... Unlv Svq1, 6 6 2 '"t V. LTV CP "'' I t~ ... RtSl6 ... ,$0( •• 1 1:io.-.,,, URS corp s 1 1\IJ ••• t.91K1I corp 11 3 1:t. '" R•, Ntco 2k .. l 1113 ••• u v llld w" s S:Y. ••• -M-lblftl Prod 1S 17 2'A • . • -V V- MIUorr Rd ) V.+ \,'I Ri,Mord I~~ ' l\lt+ "-VlllnK • .O I 6 IF -~, Mlrntll Mrt •• 6 I\\ "' Rltlllon Intl •• l IV.+\,\ Vth.oe l hlf ., •1 liit ••• Ml•il'ldllQ 8 ,, 11 ........ AlkerM pfA .. I \it ... Vtt<Olll' .n ' ) l :W.-V. Mf~I lfld 4 \ S t -. Rll1y Comp 4 4 11'\lo-V. "'"'nl .. ( ' <I 1'" 1M11t1' In< I I 2'-+ Vo RloAIOO M l 1 1 11'11.+ \ol ••· ' p "' ••• 1Mu18to .io J 2VJ+ v. iun.,."n ,2, 13 3 '"' ... viewl•• Inc ,. 1 I i.ti ... Mc:Cr n Wll l 4YI , •• Aoblno Yd 3 11 1h-~ V l N COrp ' 1 a11\-V. MtCull<h 01 ji 4) SYl-V. ltoblnlK ll 11 ltl (l'l'fo•-. -WW- Mc:K111111 "" l 10 , .. _ .... Roblln llldu •• 6S 2 • •• WtbMl9 .ID s 11 s~-""' Mt.,.1 FW I I ' •r.-.... ~O(kw Ntll • I \lo-.... W•lnoco 011 t 1 3 -'Iii MlcWU1t . .0 S • ~~ Vt ~I Crp 10 S ll~--W1ICCIHI .«I I 2 14 •,. Mt«• ,lw!, l 2 ,.,., .. • \ofllr'IS 1111n1 ,, I '~ • .,,, Wlnb Inc I 1 ,.,... ••• MMltK<t . u •· 10 s~ .• . 0 Telep • . ' 1~-.... WtrnpfC .03 10 31't-v. MlditGfl ,Ml • 26 20V, ••. ~\fl'!OI' Co ) 4 ll't+ \la WI Poll ,)ti •i 14 n • '4 Mlm c.o .n ' I '"" .. • to""*' w1 .. 1 l. .. . WllKO Inc ) ' ,.,,, ••• ••<tftt ''"' I 3:W.-\' ,_ .II II 11 n . .. Wei-co n " 1\'t-~ Mllnl Grett .. • 1a1-l.'ll fowllld Int iO • 11•-\~ WitldH Tub l IS 4~ "" MldWilll ... I l 12V. ... ff,1111' .8 .. S 1\lo ••• wtslOIP ~n ' ,i I,._ Vt MllQO Eltrn 6 21 11 ~ i,., loyl P B<11 4 l IC..-\o't W.i11!e "'' It 1 2~ .,. Mllltf!f $0f! S It lVa+ \t tvt<e 1nchn. •& J IS·lt •.• ~I (>lt.611• 11 2 1"'-"1 MHIOl'I• • 10. 4 :JO I~ "° l\i~I C• ''° t J h -.. wt'll P:ln ,10 J I 1~-I• Mo8tltf .Jld 2 11 ll'h• !,Ii t~Cr1t .1111 1 I ;\~ ... Mlf'.MI wl ) 1 -~ MOK.6nf U! .. II 10\:0-\.4 .,.... H .•U I l 11 -'-Wfll•tfl'f ... ;~ I n ..-'Ii MllClll EnO"t 10 ' ro ••• , .. ,..., H1y 1J ~ 11e-V. Wll~ICblt ,)4 1 1 511o+. . Moly Cp Wh • I •\~-~ S-W11ilttll' "" • t't-,_. MODo l11 .?SCI S 1 t J.e!l'l()O\ llU 20 U 16\lo• 14 W11<1tG .O)CI ·,s ' llllo •" MIQ GI ,tOG ~ :JO • ••• i'!'OCllO t .M •• no i°' +1 Wi1SfW• .10d 1 6 -.... MOr~S .l1 s l l l..:1-~ if!OplG 1.20 •• 1100 n .. , wtl"' 8r .JO • 1 lit+~ MPI Cp tll $ I t l\-111 ~111\. $« •· I ----1·1• WIMlon M" 4 .) l t11 M~ ll'>lr11I •. XI '' ... _.,.Ollll Ind •• 4 1'• •• Wrlolil MtQ 110 1 +). Ml.l'tlArr! .l'O 1 J 6~J ..• ~vOylfld I~ •• lt 1'.. ••• WTC Air .10 l l -Ii __.,. N-;c;nfck lllC .. I 1'4t '1' WUI '"~.IO ·; S4 IOl"t • Ii NtOi,lr .OW S 1 ''--\.\ j.Olitll' ll'ld I l 2 .... ,.. YfyltUb .20 • S J~ N•tl Mtlltll ' ) 1•1-lt k 6111t I .Oi 10 I •'t +"' W'tllh!i lflfl ' 1 I ••• N•!l ll'Hf Wis ij 1 .. ;curry Rtl~ :t9 I 221~ • \._ W'llfll'!llM Co t I 2i.o. ,.. I I ·:t W11tclro j n 21·,-~ • Hiii 11 -1 .\\•.,,, itlf\ (p ,)0 I S ,._,,1' f\ -X'l'l- NIMd Ei', .! l l S Jl~t It kU•:l,'il' .60 ~ ,1 ~l ''•' Yll*' 1111!\I' 6 I lf!l-N11!oil'ff ,10b ) i j~_·i.-itn'l 11 ~• r ' ' r.ro 1o110 1 1 ~ ••• Htoft9• ,Q) 4 1 n VI I Tuesday's Closing Prices New l'ork Ups a1ad Dow11s 1•74 s 0,t.ILY PILOT NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Y ea!''s H igh-1.i'ows Appear Every Saturday ' • .: • Marlcet Records A11other Aclvm1ce NEW YORK (UPIJ -Stocks posted broad gauis for the sct0od consecutive 11ess1on on the N~w York Slock Exchange Tuesday buoyed by bopes interest rates may be near thcir peak Tumov~r "as moderate The OoVli Jones industrial B\Crage gained 7 43 pOlnts to 828 69 With nearly aU groups JOUling the upswing oulllumbe.red dechne.s almost roor lo-one among than 1 787 stocks across the tape advances the more Turnover totaled rough1y 16 million shares at 1hc close compared with 12 490 000 shares exchanged ~londay when • the Dow advanced 19 O'J points its biggest Jump rn nearly three months Traders apparently were responding to news J.1onday that F'1rsl National Bank of Chicago reduced Its prime lending rate -tha t charged on loans to lop-rated commerctal bor· ~ rowers -lo I I 6 percent from the record 11 75 percent After the close ~fonday a smaller bank Soulh11est Bank or St Louis lowered its prime by lf4 point to 11 y, percent , ~I ti Nt! P e h1b! M gh Low c o'e C11g • s. ,, "-' Pe (hG' Moh Low crow'"" A111ericot1 10 ~lost 4~ti ve A t11er1c o11 S ole-¥ \.'ol11111e 24 DAILY PILOT TONIGIIT'S T\7 IIIG HLIG IITS ,, ABC 0 8:30 -"Blood Sport." 1'he press ures of high school football provide the theme for this excellent TV drama stal'ring Ben Johnson, Larry Hagma11 and Gary Busey. KQET Ip 8:30 -Hollywood Television Theater. 1 A zarly comedy about an eccentric family, "Nourish ~1 the Beast." stars Eileen Brenna.n, John Randolph, ' Will Lee and John Beck. NBC 0 9:00 -"'The World of . Henry Orient.'' ~ Peter Sellers is a concert pianist pursued by a pair . -.J I • TaleL l l'aste d Toiii ght '· •• :· An Ode to Bobbie Gentry Uy JAY SHARllU'IT NEW YORK IAP) -CRS i• showcasing the efforts of Bobbie Gentry, a fine"' singer: ~~rank Peppiatt, a .!ikilled \11rltcr, and Jack Elliott and Allyn Ferguson, two very gifted arrangers tonight at 8 o'clock ou Channel 2. her "Ode to Billy Joe" n fc"' writing nncf pace, htis done helter of songs in the &rbta yeurs ngo. ,.,.:1y, wny better, ditto Mcssr!I. Slreisa11d tradition. Elliott and l•'cr11uson, who for l'""•ard'·g the s <'con d She's ulwa ys struck 1111· us n D "'"; u• good pei•former who'd be 3 U10 UIOSt parl burled Miss Point, t.-11.ss Gentr)' always bas great one If she'd only ju~t Gentry in ovc1•nrrangen1cnls. sounded her best at u volu1ru: consider the virlut!.:i o l just above 11 whisper, dolrlg ·r1nNK TllE ma\ n 1 So ti th" wllh sin1plicily. her su try u 1ern 1ng Alas, simplicity Is nowhere problem is thnt nobody secn1s thi• aid or no more thao 11. µresent ln tonight's show. lo rcalii'.c Miss G. is uc!thcr "uitar and maybe ti string r of adoring hi gh school gi rls in this 1964 comedy ~ i; with Paula Prentiss and .r\ngela Lansbury. 4 -·· ~~ ~""'"" ~. ..~~ ~~Jto..t\..,1'.(',Q'J~:'llCC..1'UAnl..t.l!tL\ • _ CBS calls their collaboration "Bobbie Gentry's Happiness Hour." Wrong title. This show is a wretched, overproduct.>d mess .that so1nchow manages \Vhich. roa rs in like a garish 1 ::1a:)=a=co:m=e:d:lc:n:nc:,:·~°'=l:b:/:o~l~~':"":l:ion=.=======:; rugitlve from the m~in room of any Las Veg<is hotel, complete wllh bl arlnc: brass, gaudy dance nurnbers and feeble patter. • OoTho .tlt:S I JV. DAILY We dnesda y Evening JUNE 5 S:IXr .a o o-® mm m "'•' l3JJ21J.tl!J.n~(~(JJI News O Bon1nz1 l•) Ho11n'1 Heroes \ht obst ssiv1 a bitions cf Ills lather •nd his 1ootbal coach, to Sil'le him· salt du rin& final weeks al a champion$hip season. Ill Merv Grillil1 $11ow Morie: (90) "'Fr .. ..-(tom) ·~Donald O'Connor. ,_, Ntwd fftu.-. '"''- -c TV REVIEW ~) to waste the consid~rable talent..S of all concemeCI. The first or four ens variety series scheduled this summer, it'll be with us · four weeks. If tonight's san1ple is what Miss Gent.ry & Co. have in mind, July will cumc nonC too soon. TO ADD INJ UH.Y to. insult, Miss Gentry sings noticeably O~t 'vhen doing a fc\v bars of lhe Carpenters' "Y~terday Once l\1ore" as a prelude to unfunny skits aboul the 1950s, rock 'n' roll and teen·agc life. Robert Goulet and \\'ayne Newton ar~ on hand for addifjonal music and comedy support. but desp ite thei r old-college-try efforts. nothing ever jells. It only p~blums. P•11inwlo 67)-8350 NOW PLAYING! PlTEI FOHDA SUSAN GEORGE ' "DIRTY MARY CRAZY LARRY" .... DENNIS HOf>Pllt "KID BLUE" Regulars · Var!i Bromfield. Michael Greer and Ear I PROGRAM U'GI comedy skits, but they lose, loo. 1884 Newport (o\lo Me\o S48-ISS2 ~IRST RUN! HOW SHOWING "NEWMAN'S LAW" + "SSSSSSSSSS" EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUHTY " I 8t'l't1ty Hillbilli'f Mission: lmpessiblt Mod Sq111~ El Pobre G'llf'lt1l1z Qj, Movie: (21u) "Si1vf/ Cit(' (adv) '51 -[dmond O'Brien. Yvonne De· Cirlo. Eli) Holl)'Wood Televisiort Tlle11t1e (90) 0'Nou1i~ the Beas;•· Steve Tesich's zany comedy about 1 most 11nu1ual and en1ating family lull of kooky and end11ring chlr;Jtters. Sta1s are Eilatn Biennan, John Ran· dclph, Will lee, Jolln Beck, P1mela Bellwood and Randy Kim. (I:} P•no1am1 Nowtla 'GOOD TIMES' STAR DOESN'T PLAY FOR COMEDY Esther Rolle Trained in Se rious Theater I HEREWITH cross my fi ngers and hope the program Improves, if only because I've always admired Miss Gentry both as a singer and as a songwriter ever since hearing Pomerantz join in somel 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~; Peppiatt. who as the shpw·s. WIMMER M.Y. DRAMA c1mcs CllCLI •WAID producer was in charge of the -::-f,l11 1'\T1:-•:1s~A.\1· ·n1u11<11;•:i11su1u•:r1;,o.1.t·.1~..:~'."' w~1, .... i.: .. r.NY.TiM ." ''THE HOUSE OF BLUE LEAVES" ·' f!l Ho61epod1e lod&e ED Speed Rate1 6:30 (i) Dealer's Choiu 0 Ditll V•n Dyke (igJ MIN fOrilfin Show (1~ ~~f1•n's lttroes I The Pionetrs Nm Little R•suls l owlint 101 DoUari , • 7,oo!mo·om.•N• !:OO l)(~(j))(IJ C11111to 11 .. Night Fli&hl lo M111de(' (R) Clnnon ii hired by In ins1111nce compiny to lou!e a miuint airtinu containing three million dollars In 1ecurilies. Q Q)' ({) €D MIC W1dn11 d1r Mofle: (C) (Zllr) NTbe World .t Hen- ry Olienr (R) (cGm) '64 -Peter Sallers. Paula Prentiss, Antela lans· blll")', Tom Bosle~. The lilt ot a con· tert pianist becomes t(lmplicated when two prep sc:hcol girls develop a crush ~n him. 0 Blltr·Crtkllfl Alitoni'Crvuck (!) Tiit Bold Ones · No ' ~~,-.,-,~~,,.;by0!.7J~OH~M::,.:;~~UA:;;:,ll " Co111ediene Esth er Rolle Brings Re(tlisrn to 'Goo <l Ti1n es' .£1)1TOR 'S NOTE: J;sther p)11y th_e_trJAUtof_the Uri~. and _ rich P.eOPi!l_-=l!Y necessity. ___ _ Rolle left a Broadway hit if the line is funny it will rome "When You're poor you don't . out.'. cry all day Jong. In fact you · AT THEATRES & DRIVE ·INS THROUGHOUT SOUTHERN CALlfORN ll • Movie: (CJ (2hr) -..eptollt'$ D1111htc1" (com) ·4~[slhe1 Wll. Iiams, Ricardo Montalban, Red Skel· Ion, Belly Garrett 1Journe1 · Whaf s MJ' liM? I l~e LVCJ It f1kes A Thk!f QQl Movie: (C) (2ht) "'Hone1moon .... M1chint'" (com) '61 -Steve Mc· Queen. Paula P1enliss. Q) C111nln1 · -a:> Cl trOMI del Mundo 9:l00 Nnrs (() D••ma for the glamor of a televz· '·Good Times" is abo ut a don't have time for it. Some sio11. screen test. Now slie's blilck family that's ·'l!'~irbtft ;111 ~antlered why-tatk: !lie star of "Good Times ;, a ' uot out. The comedy romes about a family that's poor in . . " from their refusal to be put such an affluent country. I comedy series which .she dO\Vn b y pove rty, said we'd find more lays straight. "If the line is unemployment, rejection or sympathetic ears for such a "To n1c beJ!!g on Broadway wa; ;s-big a·s you ~go: 1 didn't \\'ant to cofue OU~ \!ere and be .a Hollywood maid . I SaVoreH my pos1t1on as a-.~-+-­ actress in a leading role on Broadway. !!1l [])I Dream of Jeannie m [smerald• iJ:f 00 Dr11net tI) The French Chef li.>t0~~.""" ol S•mnl BlllJ Gnltam Ati1on1 CrllMllt A.u on Ber1er Sbtw fh1ee stoo1es 10:00 IJ (~ (j)) [j) Koj1k "The Ci rt in tile River"' (R) Koja~ lears thil the biz111e stranc~l.ihon cf a youne wcman may mean the 1eeme11ence of a ps)'tllOpithic killer 'fl'ho look the lives ol seven 'fl'Omen two pars e11lie1 1nd therf disappea1ed. Wmm 3 " .. ' l'euy M1son 1:30 B New Detin1 Came @CD Q) Doc Eliot "The Run. (~ Hocan's He1oes ner" (R) A troubled, motherless . § lnntr Spate letn1re boy slr~ules lo establish Help Thi N1ipb11 his identity while slfivin1 lo prove Lers Mike A Deal bis wortb to his ovu demandln& (!) Btbbr Goldsba10 Show lat her. Sam Bottomi alld Mora,an 0 Million $ Mowle: (C) (2tir) Woodward 1uest. "frlil•stt1 al l 1lllfltr1e" (advl '53--EID llnlwenlty of Chic.Ip JIN!ld~ [noll Flynn, Beatrice C.mpbtll, An· tlblr "The Middle East; fl"obltms lhony S!eel. Yvonne f ur11t•u1. & Prospects'" ~ Nw Price 11 Ri&it a;) Prabe die Lord Cfub Tbat Girl ~Ta Tell t11t Trvtlt J0:30 0 Ja11JJ1ey lo Adnlltare OJ I~/ Cosby 12;1 Hollywood Squa1ts ,....... La Ciudld Glftl Em.Store!~ ~ '~Ci)) retke Sw1po11 U> Tell·Co11im (D ~lebrilJ Bowl1nr. 11:00 e OP" m Q) lfews tl) fhe Ghoul Ganr. (1) (J) (jg) f'U CI! Jkw:s ,.._ _ , ~ kit ol roucM 1:00 IJ (I} l'Jl[MIERE Bobbie GientfJ'~ (• NIJht GallrlJ H11ppin1ss Hour Miss Gentry is sur · Movlt: "M1jor llrb.1" (com) hostess of her own mini·stlies th&I '41 _ Wendy Hlller Rei HarrlSon, llfill air for the ntll lour Wednes· Robert Mo11ey. ' clayi in this Ume period. Guesls will m Ho1111'1 H1rots include such st.us as Jim N1bon, Q) Thi U11la11thlblr' Glen Caf!IJ!:bell 1nd Wayne Newton. (Ui fl) Slcilt fUe D Q}(JJ@) m Ch ase "G I nt tlf fiit Sal•t War" (R) The Chase unit inliltr1tes W Jllftt Wl)'nt {R) lflO warrinc 1anes to learn how both (31 ({))The Pionee11 are .beinr supplied with stolen 11110-tJ·tS ~ •• 34 mat•c weapons. . ll:iil ,..nem1 0 I S•tt1Al i A Wondelful Bird 11:30 fl (~({)) (i)CBS Ult Marie: Wis the l'elican A lllmed report (C) "Bombers -i-52" (du) '57 - about pollution in our Gce1ns, 1ive1s Karl Malden, Ehem Zimb1list J1., and she1ms whith trippled aMd fhlalle .Wood. killed the California pe!it;ins. PesH· 8 ID(!) ®J it' lobllf Corson cld es in the w1!e1Ways caustd the f11c\111ed Flic•c11 peliuns e1:1s lo term 'fl'ilh very thin (!1 TwiliJl!t Zon1 shells !hus p1rventin1 the birth ol O (J1J W CD Wide World If En· lhe youn1. Eddie Albert n1rr1tes. tertlinment "A St\t!t 19 D11ryl F. 0 @ Ci} al Tiit Collboys "Tht 2Jnuck" Walte1 PiOgeon, Red But· filp" (A) Mr. Ni1hUin1er lith\s des· Ions and Rodd}' McOowall ho$! this per11ely to save the hf& ol Jimmy, salu!e which hi&hlithts Darryl F. fouMd near de1t11 two d1ys afler Zanuck"s h1ll·tentury iM lilmmaking. bein1: c1ught in a co~ote trip. I!! Alhtd Hilcht0tk Pus1nts I Dealer's Choitt D•J 1t Nltht S.l1ri to Adventure tz 00 O M . "Dn'I' H 1.,_ (d ) Esle Meiico Nueitro ; , avrt: 1 s O I w1 ra .. -..i Mo-ie· (2hr) 'l ite Genltt Rain'• 3G-thncy Carroll. P1ul Lukas. -, ~ • ,.. . ...., G l lfl DM Step lt)<Dlld (dial ~..-..hos!o..,.er eorge, yn. Moille · "llo ,.._ (" I '54-da Day • 1111 ...,.. 1 fD_W;i;hinrton Conntct!G n Robert Jay!ot, Janet L!lgh, Ctor&I CQ!! (])) Billy G11h1111 Amona Cru-~1Wtnderlust sade it) Ch1mpionltli' ~1111lin1 1:00 rn Q fJ OO@CiJ ""' {B J1p1ReSt la~&Ua&t rrotUfl Q [fiil fl11tOffn •:JO 0 Q.1' (1J m AIC Wecln1sd1J Mo-1:45 IJ Movit: "lrttlltn-in-l1'11" (com) Vle: (C) (90) "Blood Sport" (R) '57-TtHJ Thomas, tan Carmfchael, (dra) '73-Ben 1'hnson. Lauy th1· !/! ~ "'"· G•"' Buse,,.Bi!l luckina, Val 2:00 All·Ni, .. t Show: ''The Man In· '' dt," "lilt Fou1·Poster'' Avery. Seeint Ont of his tti1mm1tes deit1oyed by pressure 1nd pain, a 3:10 I) Mtwie: "Cc:rre1·Up~ (mys) ·•9 !11th school boy stru11les asainst -William Bendi•, Oenf!is O'Keele. Thu rsc:!oy DAYTIME MOVIES -Mich1et Callan, Terry Thomas, Lionel Jettrles. m (CJ "Rlnro I His Goldea 'lstol" (wn)·166-M1rk Oal!!On: -~· --- !:DO O (C) "Hostile G11n1" (wes) '67- CtGrge Monlaomery, tab /i!lnter. Y'll)nne OeCai lo. 3:00 (!) (C) "The SolM'" (CGm) '67 - Pe1er Se111u, Britt Eklund. @J (C) '"r11111 Sprin2l Wtellettd'" (tom) '63-1107 Don1hue, Connlt Stevens. f1m11y," she says, ''It'll come out." By JERRY BUCK WS ANGELES (APl "People who play for comedy bore me." That seems an o d d statement from Esther Rolle, star of the hit comedy series "Good Times." But s h e explains: "I don't like romedy with neon signs flashing, 'This is comedy, you must laugh.' I've never been able to appreciate it. "I guess I'm too much of a realist. It doesn't tic kle my fwtny bone. That's a great art form, but it's not my taste fo r do ing or watching." prejudice. show than 10 years ago. "\V e may be jXKlr. but we're not losers,•; she says. "If 'When 11ou're poor you do11't cry all day lony. fH fact, you t ittte do1a't 11 ~ v e f or it.' you've •got love you're a winner, and we've got love." •:m E ENERGY eri s is !howed a lot of white middle· class people what it's like when you want to work and can't find a job." Miss Rolle was born not in a big city but in Pompano Beach, Fla. She v.·as brought up on a farm "'"ith her 17 brothers and sisters. '" After graduating from high school in Miami, Miss Rolle set out to be a writer and enrolled in classes in New York City. When she performed with a f e 11 ow student in an o·r i.g-i·n·a-1 dramatic sketch. a proressor suggested she should be acting instead of writing. She promptly switched to "I'd never looked at TV. I had never considered myself film maLerial. But the screen test sounded so glamorous it was my chance to find out what il was like." ----- HELD OVER! 2nd BIG WEEK! °CONCERT AT BANGLADESH" .... Our Alt·Time M~il Popular 5urfi11q Film "PACIFIC VIBRATIONS" It is not that Miss Rolle has anything agai nst comedy. On the stage. she has been in such comedles as "Day o f Absence" and ' ' H a p p y wending." IN THE SHOW, Flotida lives in Chicago with her three children and her usually unemployed husband, played by John Amos. In provate life, Miss Rolle has no children and is separated from h e r husband. dramatic classes and later ._ _________ _. "I THOUGHT t was the great heavy," she said. "People ,told me I was funny, but I thought of myself as a very serious actress. t played it for all I was worth. but I guess that's what brought the comedy out. "I still don't approach my work as a comedian. t "I think it's very, very much of the reality af ghetto life," became one of the original members of the Ne g r o Ensemble Theater company in New York. she =· "I have quarrels "I WAS RAISING hell on '\'ith a few · gs. Usually, "'e Broadway in 'Don't Play Us can straight n them out. Since Cheap' with my $14-0 take this is supposed to be a home pay when I was asked to comedy, some people said. try out for 'Maude,'" she 'How can you talk about such said. depressing things and hope to ----------- make people laugh?' "l tried to explain that poor people have more laughs than approach it as very real, and .----------- if there's comedy in it I hope it comes out of the sincerity. I Family Twin Cinema 111~1 ll~OO~HUR\T \l rounloo"Vall•v -1~117411 CINEMA I • PUILIC Df.MAHDS OME MORE Wilk! llST ACTHSS GLIMDA JACKSOM "A TOUCH OF CLASS" w .... ••• , SvppotffllicJ A.ct"'' TtlM 0 °MMI "PAPEll MOON"_,,.. CINEMA II 2 ..... _._ALi Wl.iiDiHY - .. AMc• I• Wo .. ck:rtand" • "Charlie ond the A!llp4" lPGI ar\'I• .,, .. ,. .• ~ms !!!;,., ~ C:ORONA OEl. MAiit where the lilies ·bloom ll n1ted Art1sl1 ALSO 'Jeremy,, Uiil U111trd Arl1!:I~ HELD OVER! EXCLUSIVE AREA ENGAGEMENT A VERY FUNNY MOVIE! '"ONE OF THE YEAR 'S TEN BEST .. L.A. TIMES "THE TALL BLOND MAN WITH ONE BLACK SHOE" "' "" WALTER MATHAU •• ' -T...etdoy, City & South Coost LADIES & SlH. CIT. soc 111 2 .. CONlACll" .. THI llHVlll;S" l'G • ..Dlriy Mtry. Cnrsy Ltr"t'f" "LAST SUMMlfl" PG • "THI LAST OETAIL" "'TIH< Mt• c..w.;...,, .. I S~c11I '"" 12:30 ta 2;00 p.m. l••c•pt Su". & HallG•v1I St .00 S.A. FRWV IMANCHESTE fl EX.I 0.0 . FRWV (CITV OR EX.) "'MlWMAM'S U.W" l'G '"The1 Shotl Hon1t" "¥tl•rr• Thi UIW• lio-" . ~JfllMT"' l'G ''THE LA ST DITAIL" Ii '"Pretty Mold1AllIto 1 la•" $1>9CLll Ptict 12:30 ta 2:00 p.m. I••~ Sun. & Hal!d•v1I Sl.00 9:30 0 "lohnn7, You're W1nted" (mys) ·ss-Jo~n Slater, 3:30 e (C) NUntamed" (adv) 'SS -0 "M WtMDAlS •:•5 i'Jicn1 Po,.u. S11s1n M1)'Wa1d. Hieb-.,.4111<11 s.,y .. _._.,,,. ·1, CAi.L THI A.DE FOa I ()p,,.O,u\~ 17 Hl1••n "l(QTrJ.i" IPGI Jl:OO O "Ridln1 on A lfainbow" ("e$/ '41-Gene Autry. (C) "Tiit firer At· Uc~s" (dra) '61 -Lino Ventura, Rottf Hanin. ard E1an, Rit1 Mcru10. H~~;rg. ~O::C~ _ . SHOW TIMES • (})(CJ "Bittle H1mn'" (du) '51-l~~~~~~~~~~~".t..:::==========-l~=====::::::::::~!_-----------1 llor:~ Hudson, Marth a Hyer. 0 (C) "Pal Joty" (m us) '57-Funk SiM1!11, Kim NOYah, R1t1 Ha)'Worth. O"ll (~ "l1w al the Ti111btl" (1dv) '4D-Monte Blue. Marjorie lltynolds. J'z:OO m "B1ttlt Slllia rn" (1dv) '56 - JGhn Lund. Keele BraUl!llt. 1:00 ,~ "Dellh al A Scoundrel" (dra) '50-Georae S~ndeis, Zsa Zsa C11!Gr. 2:00 0 "You M111t Be Jokln(' (com) '65 4:30 (~~ ClJ) ~Gild1" Par! I (dra) '46- R1t1 Htywort h, Glenft fOfd, KO,CE, CHANNEL 50 Orange County's UllF television· station, KOCE-1V, has schejuled the !ollo\\·lng special programs today. Detailed listings of Channe.I SO's programs are carried in the D~ily Pilot 's TV Week each· Sunday, J:OO lftlrtC:hlCllOll 1e , "wt 1 c . I o..,r1pl'lf IC) ''G 1ot 1'11rrn.11 Ener9v" • Ltnon •• ):20 F,..t11111d SI t tr h I fl I IC) "U!Ultttlot1" • LtltO!l ~ 1100 (ot1nl.-t Clo!Mnt Con1tr tel "61Jttol\llOl11 tnd ew11an1" • l••Mlfl " •1:it Elt ctrlc (tFl\,lflV cc I l tOO S111me Strttl !Cl 6100 l'11!1!1V ll ftk M""*''"""' I() "Pt•,Ofltl l,0.1 ,llftf\lll9, Ptrl 1" • lt~JO!I :it •1• Dlmt11tlon1 In Cwrtwrtt ICI ··~111nro11Q109y fodlY: A Dl..CW$110f\ \Ol\tfl Or. Ml'"1111~ ~.\<!" • Dr. MlfOlfl"tl Mt.Id drtcusttt lht flttd ol IMllrOllOl~v -"' ,,.,,. P•tMlll, •t>d Mv••, Litton lO. 7100 lnlrMllC110fl .. , II' I I e I I O.otrtpl'ly CCI ''G t o lll Ir l'fll I E'lt'gy" • LtUOll •• 1iH Ftmllv flltll Mtnt,.n'lelftt !Cl "PttJOfltl LOii P!tl'l'lf19, Pt tl I" , l.tHon 2' .!.. ~tltf,.Kt T kt I I t t (C) "UPllt!rt, Oownti.ro" • fphodt ElOl'lt~ Ov• ol !flt lvt rv.....,.rt · Ellitbfllfl brlfltt n.r H!t'Qltl!Nlt <l'lild l\Ornt IO Ett!l'I Pltct . t:ot Tiit l.lfttl O•trtll fCI "OVttJel In F MINI!", Opw• 10, NO. V" f1)f Ol-tl-111 Clfllll'tt IC) "~lllNOllOlllQv TC)f4y; A .itc:u111«1 w11n or. M•rot•t! ,t.ltH" • l.t»Cn ' • ' I- "THUMDEl:IO\.T AMO UGKl"fOOT" Ill ''THE GltEAT G-4TSIY" l,.GI ''WHIJI E THI LILIES ILOOM" IQ.I I ..,APIU.OH'" INI "THE STltol<P" (PGI -"CH41Ll f YAllllCW" IP .. t "DllTY MAIY. caAIY U.llY" IP'GJ I "'l'tACHll" Il l ''THJl lE MUSMITEERS" -"'l l CHA.IRS" I ., "FORGOITEN ISLAND OF SANTOSHA:.' Att IMredlbly fiM twfilMJ odvet1hl"e for •vtryOM who "'••t the oceian and the odvcnhn of tra••I-filmed oro.id tfte world. .. •••• , ,,'. ~··~--'* . --HOW SHOWIMG -OHE WEEK OHL Y SOUTH COAST THEATRE I 56 S. COAST MIG-HWA f, L4GUMA. Ill.CH Showtime• 6·1·10 P.M. • 494·15 I 4 I ' DHliY MARY 1:111zv LARRY E Jo co'9"' av or tuxE ~ • {ii)-~ - O RANGE COUNTY COSTA MESA UA So. HfW,OllT I EACH 1. .. Jool.l 8J!D ·: Coa!I Pl1ra 714·!140-0S94 ORAHGE •• FOUNTAIN VAllET Orange M~ll CinemJ 714-6J7-0J40. Founta in Valley Cinema 71 4-839· 1500 OllAN;[ · ••• FOUNTAIN VAlLET St1di11m Dr1vt·ln .:3 714-639-78S0: ·' • founta in Valley Ofit't·tn 714·962·2481 STANT ON Stanton Cmem1 7J 4.894-t413 LUCILLE BAU .:'MAME" . Doily: 7:J O & f :4S Wfd.Sot-S..: 2:DO.S:OJ>.7;JO & f:4S li'll1flll 'IMIWAY WEWBIE ...._,· .. ="~ ·~ .......... illl!!!1!'!!~ ~~J~ ~ON~ ·~l;! ~lib<?" ft~ (qj«& ll't1~•· iltOli O•ily -1·10;41 S1t./S1111. -).';41·10:25 ' I • • ind Fe11lure ,..,1 ... - 1. "JUDGE ROY BEAN". D11tr-l :JO Sot./S1111.-lo4:4M1JO >; .. .. .. .. ... :·: . .. ·. . · . . . . ·' ·= . ". + . .. ' ~ • " \ OCC Orchestra Retains Qualitv II i3 not cnoui.;h ror thls crltlc lo congralulate !he Ora11ge Coos\ C o 11 e g e Co nt 1n u n l t y Sy1npho11y Orcheslrn ror yet another highly entertainlfl& concert Sunday and the t;omplctlon of ·a solid and isuccess!ul 1!173·7•1 »eason. :·For It should be noted, in this final analysis. that the OC'CCSQ ugain rtached the pinnacle it unrnilinRIY acllleves while weathering a l{~ition from. reg u I a r conductor Joseph Pearlman , w!to will 00 back next y~ar, ah6 guest conductor Alberto BO lilt. Men oL music will tell you that this Ill no mean re11t. And this writer can not rt"Call from hi s personal experience over the years any ensemble that toOk so Jillie time lo -adapt to the demands of its new maestro. TllE SECRET lo th is r:ipid and sweet transition lie8, mainly, in the character of the affable Alberto and the ease and sv•iftness v.·ith which he came to know and \\'Ork 1vi th his ne1v charges . Their rapport Sundav in th<.! QC~ auditorium waS n1ost ----- 1 t~·S..1/SuniMDn l ~iXI l'tftr fondo 'tOlrty M•ry, er_.; L.?y" . Alto ~· "THE L ... ST DETAIL" Ill TOM BAR~EY Halverson . \vhosc gloriously dell verL'd "1'he Call" will live in this writer'$ memory for a long !!me 10 con\C. 'Jl1e music was, ol eourS<>. all<1p1e<I to George Herbert's poelry in settings t ha l receil•ed full justice u n d e r Sotufer's sensitive direction. clearly audible in his solo passages in ull phases of the v.'<>rk aod then!. Is many a bnrilono around today who wl:shes that the !aflli) could huve been said or him dur ing his dclJ very of the V11ugh3n \\'i!Jian1s work. JI e a r t y cong ra tu lat i ons to nll Music Box obvious in a fluent , absorbing reading of Johannes Brahms' Symphony No. 2 ln D major - u work Ideally suited to the temperament of an on.'tiest ra that has 1dwa ys loved lo aim high and which has invaralblv crowned its endeavors with success. A h!ghly .D. p p_r e c La ti v e audience Sunday showed what it thought of lhis utterly romantic. sweetly interpreted Brahms and the efforts fron1 the podium of a man who has come to be greatly admired by all of us who have watched tilm v.·ork with the OCCCSO. MAY THIS critic add his best wishes to those extended to him Sunday by our own local orchestra. It has been 3 v.'arm. happy and fruitful association and, most importantly, it has produced some magnificent music. Traditionally. the Synwhonic Chorale joins forces with the OCCCSO In this finale to the connt.-cted with a colorful und seal!!On and there have been A "'ORD here. too. for the Slllendidl y delivered finale to many occasions over the years splendid support of I he our loca l concert season. Have when this writer has on1itl~d orchestra throughout t ·h e a good sunvner, OCCCSO. any reference to the choral 1noving work. Halverson was Vaya t.'00 Dios, Senor Boh!I. portion or the program. ---'---------:.:C...:.::.:....::.:::::..:=.:::_::=~1 The reason , frankl y. was because this analyst felt that the choral segment of the program "''a.5 very .D.1Y£b. below the level one should expect of the ensemble. Far better in the nonprofessional offering to say nothing rather than loom like a Nen1esis over some yoWJg, struggling artist . I.ET IT be noicd quickly that such was most cert ainly not the case this year. The chorale. under the immensely capable guidance of 0 r . Frederick Sloufcr, gave us a men1orable and m o v i n g rend ition of Ralph Vaughn Williams' "Five l\l y s ti c a I Songs." They were n1ost splendid ly led by lha,t fine baritone, Keith ROBERT REDFORD""mlA FARROW • FRIDAY • 8:30 MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW ' THE GREAT GAT/BY (PGI o screwball canedy remeTba them? ...110 SAowifw;i Geo~ C. koH Foye Dw!.woy "Oklahoma Crude-" :f4f!!!!~ 12~s.1 S..n..Moll..1'12'JO ~ ~ -"WHllE1Mf ---~.-~0_!,.,~ .. LILIES l&.OOM'" ni •w .. JEREMY'" ll'GI IN ;) • ~~~~1tr"~l!S"·UP.---J..-:- •, ,..,.,...,~ • WMlll 1"1 llllll ' llOO .... LUI wam. WMm llAtN• • l>o<?" \!i1LUAM PElER BLAlTY> THE EXORCIST o .. ,,,d i,,\!i1LLIAM FRIEOl:IN 0 f rom Wlflllf 6roi §, STA RS MAX VON SYDOW ELLEN BURSTYN e LINDA BLAIR JASON MILLER e LEE J . COBB P(ltfO•MANClS Mon.· Tuo~. ·Wod.· Thurs. 7:00.9:30 fri ... :S0-9:10-11 :50 Sol. -J:DD·4:JD .. :.f0 9:20-11 1.fD 511n.·2:oo.4:20-t:SD.9:l0 RIDIM' ROPIM' WRANGLIM' COMEDY CLASSIC and all that WESTERM BULL ' I IPGI WINNER 7 ACADEMY AWARDS Mo11 .• f11tt.·Wtd.·Thuo. 7:15-9:20 Fri.·6:4§..9:00-11 :00 Sot.· I Z:OO-Z: I S..4:l0.6:45 9:21).11 :15 S....· 12:00·2: I S..4:J0-6:45·9:ZO CllMEAllWOOD "IHUftDIRBO&I '&ICHltOOI" ... they have exactly seven minutes to get 1ich quick! ll6UN19 Jiii BRIDCll ... CIORCI BlftftlH .. ""'. Wtllntsday, Jurtr 5, \q74 OAILV PILOT 25' ~: ,, CUM IA/TWOO.D . "THUftDIRBOLI AftD LICHlf .. I " ........... ,. ... ...... ,, .... ~. GtOfr:;E C. S(. 'O fT • \UM. 'IClkJI~\ THE OA\'~O DOLl't-llN ;, • ,,.<:, IOlERl l\€DfOl'I) fliA FAMOW ..... , rtlfCNl1'4..C:U Clll•-· CIUOI 1.11 JI t l l 4l <041\,11 I.II COOfllHllO'lt. l•I I ,._ \llllllO Hl•olw lfl •CC._._. u_..._...,,, ..... '"'°"'" .. " • .all(l llttO- Gtoltl C. KO" •·11-..... --oi. .... _. tlVDf" ··~-'"~"" • ,,,,_, C<*l" MAJOR IPGl~-i~~il.~ STUDIO ..... CO•ll Hw1 ,..,.C •ll'HUll l'llf¥1EW ..... , .. MEWl'Olll CIHlM ... Fill •• t.-7 1:)0 l'.M. • \ I' . . . ).t ·~ ,, • .-.L ---Wl..U 7 ACADlM't' AWAllOS~ (') P.wl ROBlRT .t NfWlll~ RlDfORO i ROBlRT 6HilW ' ' 1-1 PUTWf u a•\O\CAl ...... I '""'"' o·,..,..l , .. ,..,W:f !~0 mo•! IDKIMlillQ ~-i.rv .. ,.on, ...,._ .... ' R .C:l'o .. . • ' ' ·"· DAILY PILOT 'Comhatting Tragedy Gandhi Israeli Forces Leave }0011 Ke nnedy's Reo£ly Lough Scorce No'tv WASHINGTON !AP) \Vbcn she settles Into a laugh. It stnrts with a perk of :ohoulders and then n snllle trttps up her cheeks to etch little creases around glittering l'ye.s. And next it explodes -a full . intense belly laugh fro1n a voice otherwise soft and gentle. Si lver Hilt f"oundation In New Cauoan. COnn. Even b e f o r c 12.year-old Teddy Jr. 's plight \\•as knoYr•n, 1itrs. l\cn.nedy spoke about lhc changes \\'rough! upon !he fan1ily. particularly the two assassinations which n1nde her husband bolh the leadrr of the fantily and a potential presidential candidate himself. Throw11 By Horse From Wire Servlctll Prime !llinister I a d I r a Gandhi fell off a horse and cracked a ringer while riding througti an oak fore st in n o rth er n Simla, h.er secreta riat reported. Hei.ghts; Pact Signed . Through n1ost of her 16 fears as the V.'i fe of Sen. Edward riot. Kennedy, 37-year- old Joan Kennedy has been knoY.TI -and envied -for her NAl\'IE in lht" NE\VS tcmarkable capacity 1n find 'Spontaneous joy in even the sma llest thing. AND SHE SHO\\'S litlle restraint in expressing ' it. •1•hether it be that Infectious laugh. a sudden hug for one of her child ren, or a gleeful cry of recogn ition fo r a friend. Yet, for all her outward contentment and h a p p y con1posure, she has found her life to be one of groy,·ing pressure. Once an cnt hu sias ~ic cainpaigncr for John Kennedy, then brother Robt-.rt, as well as her husband, she has preferred in recent years to stay at ho1ne - a handsome. rambling house in a wooded section ol ~tcLean, Va . -, even though""""1lie senator ket'ps -- up a busy travel schedule. SllE STILL ENJO)'S sailing for a weekend at Nassau or skiing on another al StoYr·c, Vt.. but these are generally private moments spent mostly \\'ith their three children and out of the public eye. Born Sept. 2, 1936, Yirginia Jor.11 Kennedy rem a i n s striking -tall and radiant , her features rme and forever ta nned,· her silver blonde hair thick and tumbling. PHYSlCALL Y FATIGUED Mrs. Edward Kennedy and while he \\'ltS still a student al the Vnivcrs ity or Virginia Lay,• School. They .... ·ere married Nov. 29, 1958, by the late Francis Cardinal Spellman. Thc injury ~·as not ser\ou! and the 5&-year~ld prhne niinister planned to ronlinue a \\'eek's vacation in the Indian lUll Station. 175 miles north of Ne\\· Delhi. 1'1rs. Gandhi, who often rides horses ~·hile on vacatiln, is ..stariJ:ig at a 19th centuo• mansion once used by British vicerovs when they wanted to escapi New Delhi's heat. * A July 15 pretrial hea ring is scheduled in the suit of a-Salt Lake City insurance man who con tends th at singer Frank Sinatra's friends beat him up. Frank J. Welmtock of Salt Lake City has sued Sinatra and others for $2.5 million in damages over an incident he alleges took: place ?\fay 5, 1973 at• the Trinidad llotel in Palm Springs. \lleinstock sa id a member of the singer's party made advances to his wife, Conn.le, The daughter of a staunch Republican a d v.e r t is in g executive in New York. she was a shy girl. Her fam ily was interested in the arts. and Joan began playing the paino when she \\'as 5. PEOPLE Kara Ann. l.f. is tlfe oldest ( of their three children. Patrick Joseph. 6. is the youngest. SHE !\tET TED Kennedy Once. y,•hen asked directly '---------_, \vheo she \\'a.S at !\1.an;1at· about the possibili1y of her tanvil\e College of t iJ e husband running fo r president, on behalf of the singer· Jl.l RS. KENNEDY, H~ said. Sacred Heart in Purchase. she said : ·'J can·t say I'd urge ~Veinst~k claims that when "ha~ been under contin~ous N.Y .. majoring in classical him to run ... anyway ifs his fie obJected, an argument strain because of the serious music and EQglish literature~ decision. not 1ninc." ensued. And the latest incident, young Teddy Jr.'s fight against bone ca:icer. \\'as followed by her o w n hospitalization for \1•hal a family si>okesman said \1·ould be "a romplete and pro lon ged rest" because of mental strain and physical fali guc . -;;J\lness or the Kennedy's-older ~-.::::::::=:.:._:.:._=-':_c_::__ __ _::_ __ ~--"· 0-~-~-~-~---'W!tnstock '31\eges ~t-ti at son Edward Jr.. w h I c h Sinatra then snapped his req~ired the amputation of his . fingers and said, "Okay, Dy United Press InternaUonal Israeli force:s bcg1u1 pulling out tieavy Loqulp1nent fron1 the Golan Jlelgtils b.ittUefield today under tern1s ol an agreement signed earlier in the day in Geneva wltJ1 Syria. An Israeli military source saw troops have begun destroying bunkers and other Installations. The Israeli National radio reported heavy military traffic on the two-lane blacktop roads leading from the heights into Israel, with trucks bringing out such eqLIJpment as .prefabrica ted buiid.~gs erected during th e 8l~ay war of attr1tlon with Syrta . Tbf: pullout, which does not. include weapons or troops, came as Israeli and Syrian generals meeting In Geneva signed agreements for a three-stage withdrawal of forces on both sides from the plain where they fought the 18-day October war. The signing occurred on the seventh annive~ary of the Six Day War, a date lsrael marks warlly. The n at Ion tightened its security like a tortreis! under &legc as a precaution against an Arab guerrilla attack. 1'1illtary government a u I h o r I t I e s warned mayors in ,the occupied West Bank of Jordan lo prohibit all demonstra· lions. Police set up barricades around Jerusale m, virtually sealing it against guerrilla infiltration. Leafiets were found distributed in Nablus and otb\i· West Bank towns calling for a general strike in sympathy with the Pale.~tine L I b e r a t i o n Organization, the umbrella guerrilla group. The Israeli pullout coincidOO with the arrival ol U.N. Secretary Kurt Waldheim to discuss the U.N. role in policing the ltlilitar · cease.fire and lroop disengagement agreement wlth Syrin. lfe 11Jc.'ligt.od full U.N. assistance. Secretary of Stair. I·Jcnry A. Kissi nger has told O:ingress ihnt up to $\00 mllllon in U.S. aid could be provldc.>d to Syri~ for rehabilitation of the battle scnrred Golan •!eights. Arguing \hat the administration 's proposed $4.2 billion foreign aid progrM1 is vital to assure peace in the fl.1iddle East and Indochina, Kissinger said Tuesday the aid for Syria could come - with Congressional approval, -from a $1 00 million special requiremienls .r~ .. Kissinger leslified Oil the Fore1~ Aid Bill and then v.•ent into private session to inform the House 1'~oreign Affai rs Committee about his reccnt Mideast trip during which he negotiated the Isra..e ll- Syrian ceasefire and troop dlscilgag'.e-- ment at the Golan Hei~ts. Bolivia Crushes ' Coup Attempt LA PAZ, Bolivia (UPI ) -The Bolivian ·go'v-emmenl.:announced .it totally--crushed a coup attempt today led by a small group of army officers including the ... '"gale but 15 minutes later they were -~Y tl>e.-Q?lorados Rcgiment._whicb __ serves as tJie guard regim~nt at the palace. leg." Another aide disclosed O..U..E.ENlf._ ~ Phil ln te r1andi boys," after v.:hich about 10 '-·---she-was-hospitat?ttd-at the --------·15lrsons a·d m I n i sT'n"'l!"'d'11 · ~~,A--JJ'eutenao~cespoDsilihrufa•-'<fm:~-11thll•'---.c:;;-;,:,;-;;--,.,,, capture of Cuban revolutionary Ernesto .$. J 00,000 0 f fer .. . : OCC Flight Service Graduatio11 Tu·enl y-h\·o students \\'ere graduated from Orange Coast College's flight se r vice tr ain i n g program in t.'eremonies held on the ace campus. The OCC graduates are: Costa Alesa -Gina 111. Kendrick. Pamela J. ~1urdock, Linda K. Reid. Fountain Valley -Gloria M. Eades. Roberta R. Edwards. Kathrvn Ann Sellers. Garden Grove -Terri L. Isaacs. Valerie Long, Jeanette .\.. Riouicr. Huntinj.?ton Beach -Teri L. Coste. Cheryl L. De Luca. Debra L. Hataluk. Nancy J. --· { , .. beating to the insurance man. "* Author William Brndford Huie says he did not believe a lawver coerced .James Earl RaY to plead guilty to the assassklalion of Dr. l.1.artin Luther King Jr., but is glad the U.S. Supreme Co u rt cleared the way this week for a nf'\V tr\ al for Ray. "The Supreme Cou rt has prol:>ably given me SS0.000." said Huie. v.'ho wrote the book "He SleW-the Dr.earner'..'. about Ray. "~tomentarily. sine" I own his fRay'sJ portrayal rights and l am in the motion picture business, I am delighted ," Huie said. * Liberia's President Willlam R. Tolbert Jr. has heen se· Jected for the 1974 "F'amily or ri1an" aw<t.rd by New York City's churches and businc:>! leaOers. Nelson. Mirian E. Rczende. "Boy, I'd g1 vt= anything for a lo bst<'r trap right no\\·," The selection of Tolbe rt. a descendant of f o r m e r American slaves, represents a change in the tradition of honoring only top American figures. NeYr·port Beach -l\·liria'Tl ----------------------- Van Orden, A nit a T. Santangelo, Ronald L. Tobin. Santa Ana -Ca rol A. Davis. 1'1elody \Voods. Westminster -Deborah L. Jackson. Linda ~1. Lopez, Rhonda J. Parrish. ' 7tl1 Grader Wilis Bond Greg Ci mm a r ru s t i, a sevcnt~ grader at Harbour View School in Hunting!on Beach. has received a S25 savings bond award fron1 the American In s t i tu t e of Aeronautics and Ast ronauts. Greg. son of l\lr. anti :\\rs. l\1ike Cimmarrust i. I 6 9 8 1 \\'estport Drive, earned the a\\·ard for his entry in this year's Orange Count:; 5~icnce Fair. 1'he entrv, \\'hich Yr'On third place ln Uie county, \\·as a jl't machine \¥h ich rides on a one-inch cushion of air. Law Stude111 Michael D. Hughes. son of 11Irs. Vera It. l·fu ghcs of Newport Beach, will graduate third ln a class or 129 law stu· dent! from lbe Unfver· sity of Ulab June 8. Co11su11-ier Groups Battle Aerosols \\'ASHINGTO~ (UP!I Aerosols. so popular y,•ith the public and manufacturers that three billion spray cans were turned out last year, are caught in a consume r - govern1nent crossfire with no arn1istice in sight. The altack ranges froin the risk of injury from exploding cans. to the chanC<' of death or serious illness fron1 long·term exposure to the fine particles of chemicals sprayed in the air and the gases ~·hich propel them. THE DISCOVERY t hat vinyl chloride. a suspected cancer-causing gas, \Vas used in some aerosols pro111ptcd the government to move against hai r sprays, pesticides and other products. The Consu mer Product Safety Commission . ha s banntd lhe chemical from any household Items unde r its jurisdiction. The latcsl group to join the critics is Consumers tnion. the nonprofit r e s e a r c h organization which publishes the magazine Consumer Reports. In the current is s u e, Consumer Reports rtaders arc ~·arncd to be selective ln Ulling aerosols. and those with heart problems, chronic bronchitis. emphysema and asthma nrc urgl!d to avoid t h e n1 <iltoge thcr. THE Rl::PORT SAID one big problem is thal cllen1icals offered for sale in other forms Hre oft.en not retested wtl~n they arc put In aerosol packages to dete rmine their impact. on health. Inhalin g is the fastest way -outside of an injection ln the vein -to get :1 chemica l into the body. and the tiny particles in aerosol sprays ca n easily be carried to the bloodstrea1n, the article says. The same basic arguments were made this year by the Center for Science in the Public Interest. a research group. It petitioned th e Consumer Product S a f c t y Commission for a broad·scale investigation of af:rosols. TllE co~-1~11SSION held hearings and has compiled a lengthy stack of teslimony. but still h.as not decided whether it will put forth any guidelines or restrainlS on Lhe industry. 011e 1»n1mission mcmber said the be'\ ad vice to consumers in the 1nc11ntime is to use only those uerOsol producl"i which are absolutely necessary. or which are unavailable in other form~ - basically !he same advice Consumers Union gnvc ils readers. T II Jo~ C 0 ~T ~11 S SION'S hearings product'd testimony l:i rgely related to Immediate injury problems, although l.fle commin ioners a p pea red interested In the long·trrm health effecl'!. 'nle aittncy's own fii;lures show the.re are &bout 12.000 c1nergcncy room cases every year caused by Injuries Involving a e r o s o r· producls, lnclud!ng cans that explode. Tho· Industry claims th11L user abuse is th e mal11 tulpr1C In those C::l:ISCS. Tolbert was described as lhe 1 ea de r of Africas' most progressive republic and a promoter of tribal and cultural unity through his program of integrating tribal groups into the national ecoodmy ' and political system. * Julie N I x o n Elsenbo~·er received in behalf of the First Family the initial copy of a cookbook featuring recipes from friends of President and l\trs. Eisenhower. The President's dau ghter. wife of the late c h i e f execut ive's grandson. received the book from Mrs. Bob Hope, wife of I.he romedian, in a ceremony in the White House kitchen. Proceeds from a special sales program will benefit the EisenhoYr·er Medical Center In Palm Springs, sponsors said. * ; California's highest court has rejected fonn er l\1ayor Sam Yorty's petition I o in va lid ate Los Angeles City Council subpoena or h I s personal records in coMection with the city 's .land swap wllh Occidental Petroleum Corp. Ph'il Silver, Y or ty 's attorney, said he will ask the Cali fornia Supreme Court to re<.'005ider ll.s ruling, and U ft refuses. Yorty will "definite- ly" appeal to th e U.S. Su· prcme Court. * Adm. Noel Gay I o r. com· mandcr in chief or U.S. military forces in lhe Pacific, was awardt>d the Philippine l..egion of llonor for hi~ help in modernizing the Philippine armed forces. President Ft"rdinand E . ~tarcos prese:nt~ the award at a ceremony in l\1alaca~ng Palace. * Sen. Stuart Srmln~ton ([). ~to.,) entered 'Bethesda Nnval llospitt1l in Maryland ror surgery to repai r a hernia. Symington was expCctcd to remain in the bospilal for five lo seven days. "Che" Guevara in 1967. The ornc1a1 version. which did "°' To 11u;, ... 0 ,. Fund report any bloodshed, was issued by the ! 1 .,.,,... ., ... ministries of Information and interior a fe~ho~~u:~e~ft~e ~~~fof~:~as Tol Ll by Post .::::'.: not clear other than that they were ., Victory Smile considered "rightists," but it was the WASHI NGTON (UP I) -A drug most serious military uprising in three company executive so close to President Senate candidate Leo Thors· years and 10 months .since President Nixon that the ch.ief executive calls him ness, fonner PO\V, of Sioux Hugo Banzer overthrew the leftist his "honorary .father" offered a $100.000 F ll SD · · and government of President i.Juan Jose ~am.paign donation in 1972 on behalf of a ~ s, · · wir_is pri.mary_ Torres three years and 10 months ago. friend in exchange for help in a C\Ule \VI.!!. ru~ _a_g~1nst ~ncum~nt -·~ two m.lnistries sald~tbe rebels before the FOOeral Trade CommiS:SWn, --Sena(or G'eorg€¥CGovern tliiS 'i;r-~· belonged to the Tar.!lpaca annored the Washington Post sa id today. ·. fall. regiment, considered one of\ the most Elmer H. Bob&!., 89, honorary chairman powerful In the country with and chief stockholder of Warner-Lambert British Earl, Wife Kidn<tped By 3 Gunmen • DUBLIN (UPI ) -Troops and helicopters joined the hunt. today for the masked gunmen who kidnaped an elderly British Earl and his wife from their luxurious estate in the Irish Republic shortly after midnight. The three men escaped by car in the direction of Dublin with the Earl of Donoughmore, 71. a former member or the British Parliament, and his wile, Dorothy Jean, 68. Police threw up roadblocks in the area around the Earl's mansion at Knock lofty. 110 miles southwest of Dublin, and on approaches to the border with Northern Ireland. Police said they were investigalijng the possibility the kidnaplng was connected ,)Vith Irish prisoners who have been on 1lunger strikes in British jails. One of the strikers died Monday. A police spokesman said the burned-out shell of an automobile, believed to be the getay,•ay car, was found about 60 miles northeast of the kidnap scene at Baltinglass in County Wicklow. Police said that outsi de the mansion they found a woman's shoe , handbag and gold earring apparently belonging to Countess Donoughmore. headquarters In ~ Alto, 10 rrijJes from Phannaceu tical Co .. wrote thcn·Attom~y· the capital. They we11 I by~-Cols. General John N. ~1itchell on Oct. 13, 1971, Raul Lopes Leyton .and Gai;Y Prado . thai "one of my close friends .. ·'!~ld Salmon. Gary Prado was the of{\cer that come up with $100.000 for the '72 fray" if conunanded the company thlit •~ the FTC's top officials showed ''any and captured the Argentirle -born evidence of a more favorable attitude'/' Guevara. The Post said Bobst may have befn The official account said 'that arpund relerring to 8 long and politically 2:30 a.m., Uie rebel officers riding in 10 sensitive antitrust case regarding the assault cars entered the Plilza Murillo in the Certer of La Paz and halted in front merger of \Varnei:-La mbert and Parke- of the governmental palace. · Davis, Inc .. in 1970. The case is still be- One of the cars smashed down the iron fo re the FTC. door of the government palace, opening and partially destroying tt in the process. 'Ibe rebe ls entered through the Jini Mereditli In Runoff JACKSON, ~1iss (AP ) -James H. Meredith, who broke down racial barriers at the University of Mississippi a decade ago, was a surprise leader In a five.way Democratic congre.ssional primary ln Mississi ppi. He faces a runoff electio n June 25. Meredith's opponent in the J une 25 runoff will be Jackson television executive Kenneth Dean. The winner will face Republican Thad Cochran in the fall. Early l\lorning Tremor Shakes St. Louis Area BELLEVILLE, Ill. IUPI) -An earth tremor shook the St. Louis metropolitan area for about 21h minutes shortly after 3 a.m. today, overturning some lamps and shaking residents awa ke. It caused' no reported injuries and little damage. - The Seismograph at St. L o·u is Universit y measured the tremor al 3.5 on fhc open.end Richter Sca le, a reacting ttfal generally indicates a minor earth· auake. The epicenter was tenta t ive l y pi~poinled about 21 miles to the cast- solitheast of St. Louis, in the Belleville area . Nixon , Defends Policy A1nerican Isolationism 'Threat to the World' ANNAPOLIS , Md. t AP J -Prcside11t Nhcon told graduallng Navai Academy midshipmen todAy that "a new wcive of isolationism" po5es one of the greatest dllngcrs fa cing America. Defending his policy or detente, the isolation could easily lead to global destru ction.'' Nixon said that the United States cannot retreat Into isolation from world responslb\llties because. he said, the alterrnative to detente is a runaway anns race, a rctum to con!tant confrontation and a "shaUerlng setback to our h0pe8 for building a new s1ructure o! peace in the .,.'Qrld." But ht1 ca~'oned that detente does not mean the U itcd Slates should bee<>me lnvol\•cd in c domestic alfairs of other countries. Nixon said: ""'::~d not welcome tho inlcrventlon o~eir ~ntrics In oor • • domestic affairs. and we cannot expect them to be cooperative when we seek to intervene dir~tly In theirs." ··we cannot gea r our foreign policy to transformation of other socicliea. In !he nuclear age, our rirst responsibility must be the prevention I)( a war that could destroy au aoclettes," he saMl. Nixon Is seeking most·favored·naUon trade treatment for tha SOviet. Union, but Congress is balking 1n I\ dispute over Soviet emigratrion policies t o w a r d Jews. In prepart"d remarks for t h e commencement itnd e o m m i s s i n J ceremony for 920 Nava l Academy graduates. Nixon talked also of hls trip to the Middle Jo:;.1st bcglnnln~ next week. The journey, ~ said, ' will provide an op1:iortunity to explore with tbt le3c:krs of the nations I shall vlelt ways in which we can continue our proi:ress for pennonen t pence in thnl area." I 'Critic-al' f'or1ncr "111iss \Vorld " ~fai;t Wallace, 20. '' In critical con· dftfon In Indianapolis. Ind .. suffering front a potential lethal dosage of a sleep·induc- lng drug, dorldcn. She had been ro1nantically linked \Yith American ra ce drive r Pcte.r Revson. killed earlier fhis year- g t a e n rt y· I, d if y n y e h n 3 d s n g h· y I· le .· " • .. .. . tl'Ew BOAT-Crnft de· Signed to get cruisin g sailor where he wants to go-safely and com- fortably. l1idiuns Sensible OnNanies Too many boys grow up with names they don't like. Believe the Jndians had the right idea. They ga ve their offspr ing temporary names. To be c h·a-n ~ ~.d - for morP sat is· fac tory moniker:; af- er 1ncy'a prove d t . hemselvc.:; in thei r teen year~. Crazy Ho!·se, fQr e x a mJ)le. started out as Curly. And Sitting Bull began as Jumping Badger. . What's so dangerous aboul that deep sea diver's ailment 'known as the bends is said diver tends to feel all is ,,..·ell inhch in the manner or a t}appy drunk. When afnicted (L.M.BOYD) ' that way, the victim gets a bit stubborn about t a k i n g guidance from topside. it's reported. The pain comes later . Q. "\\1here did the avocado originate?" A. Probabl y Jamaica. TOWERS \Vhat the archeologists 11 ere trying to Cigure out for a long time wp the purpose of t"o towers in the Peruviarl Andes. n1e'y stand ato p opposi te hills of a high pass. And clearly were built many centu ries ago. Fin ally. the hi!l!Orinns concluded f ro m add itional evidence that they were put up by. primitive tribesmen who hung a gigantic net between them in an effort to catch the SU(<. Statistically today. b o t h parenL<; can be expected to live at least 14 years after the marriage of their last child . Pflds are one parent will live another seven years after that. Just 7S years ago, chances v;ere one parent \\'Ould have died before the Jast child got married. IN BED If you read in bed, a librocubilarist ls what you are. friend ... There's a foot-long frog in Africa that I\' e i g h s about as much as a fox terrier • ; • Yes. it's a medical fact 'u.at ~'Olllen tend to perspire ~~ more ·hea vily when :~tp!ctlng ... Tn ~fissouri, I~ '::,a,he of mumblypcg 1 s : :o:o:t I awed on Sunday, ~= :;e;.Qembm" .. , Not less but ·;~than half the Americans, ::~rding to the pollsters, ~~lain o f intermillcnt lrtiofunla. ... :Nearly all the banks of India ·~. many years displayed · :itumerous metal boxes fU\ed ..:~Ill rupees In the~ windows. • J\t)Qut the same w a y -: c1~\'>artment stores her e ::c!~tay clothes to passer-!lby .;4loftg the streets. TlM>se lndlAn ·'bankers said their depositors ·,Wouldn't belleve ther hAd the money, ii it weren 't in sight. Those suirga:r:ers In debate With cynics like 10 point out thitt the famous financier J.P. MOrgan admittt?d ht often got stoCkmarket tips from n noted ast.rologt:r by the name or Evangeline Adams. Addres., ?Mlt lo I.., ~I. 80¢, P.O. Bo:t 1875, Newport Beach 92680. . • DUPONT NYLON TRI-COLOR SHAG Co111fo1•t Afloat WtdllfW.tt, JYnt ~. 1974 * ~~~~~~~~· ., DAil v PILOt • T I P ri.mc1· Av aila ble Boats-Desjgne{l .for Today 's Sailor Ecology " ) I .. Dy AL.\10N LOCKADEY East Yi'Chta, incorporated for 0.11, .. lltt 1 .. n!"I '"'• the t lpressed purpose of .The modem racing .. uor · bulldlng fast. cocntort.able • d1sc~rses loud .~net long about seaworthy ·crulsuig yachts the hull speed of his yacht. using modern n1ate:rials and lie could care lesi •bout the technoloay. crt11ture OC!nrorts as long as The boats "·Ill be 0 r the boat goes fast. fiberglass, powered by modem Out there l! arlOt~cr bret>d diesel engines and designed to of n1odem !lallor u n t 11 sail well to weather. according recentl y an1ong the silent to Bob Poole gen c r a 1 minority, wno I! m o r e manager. ' coocerned abo ut comfort "Long Lhe missing clement anoat, OOt s~lll llk~s a ~t in sailing," says Poole. is a tha t wlll get him to his ravonle cruising man's auxiliary that gwikholc rui quickly anti ~s sails well oo all point!, yet safety as possible. He. is provides !he livability below. known as the cnils.lng sailor. and the ' · sea. k ind l y ' · It Is. the I n c r e a s I ng performance on long cruises population of cruising sailors that is necessary." that a new boat building con1pany in the Tr v ln c co1nplc.x is turning to for customers. TUE NEW FIRM ~ -~ POOLE KNOWS about high qualit y, rast 11ailboals. A racing man himself, he spen t . several years with Columbia Yachts iii t hief enKJnce\' 1n charge of prod u~1 development and q u a Ii 1 ~· control. Jfti recently te igned from Columbia 10 develop the crulsing yacht 1n tr11ditional schooner, ketch nnd sloop rigs. 'fhc ne\V oon1pany is being financed by locnl yachtsmen and a sclccl network of de<i!crs is being established with the i ntention of ~·orldwide nl a r k ct l n g . !lt'.1,.'0rding to Poole. THE FIRST BOAT to be launched -in aboul nine months -"'ill Oc J traditional schooner. Poole secs a gron·lng demand for st~1ooners, but mn.;t nf those in existence arc old \\'OOdcn ya ehl5. Poole says UK! [)o•i:nu<i<:.I ~·achts will IJc sin1ptc in design, a one-piec.'e hull with Inside ll<illast. There ~·111 bt no ct:n1eril1Y1 }<lints as in most \\'hen tooling is complete, t/K: flrrn expects lO produce nbout rour hoalS a mon th, says Poolt. The flnn is located at 11:1~2 Uarnincti St. in the lrv1ne lndll!trinl Complex. Further informHtion on the Downeast }'HChts can be obtained by con· tacting Poole at P.O. Uo:< IOI!>, ~cwport Beach. 926&0. Wine Position SAN F'RANCISCO fCPJ) - "The \Vine Institule, a trade a!\'\OCia tion, has named Robert ~!. Ivie. prcsidont of Guild \\"incrics ;ind Di.atilleries, as ch<1nnan of the board. Caplk>I New Service SACRAMENTO -The thin! edition or the Primer on l r; n vi ron mental La w In Califom!11. publi!hed by the offli;.'t of Atty. Gen. Evelle J. Younger, is nvaU;ibJe to the public without cost. The 56-page publication was P.rep.1rcd by Yo ung er '11 1 EnviJ-onn1ental Unit, an d contains ref e rences to envlronn1ental la" publications and ageocie! to contact rega rding l eg a J. enforcement of environmental : law. Coples may be obtained by : \\"rili ng the unit at 555 capitol ~1a1J, Sacramento, 9MI4; 800 Stnl.e Building, !..(ls Angeles 90012 : (i(l(lll S1<1te Building. San Frjncisco. 94102: or 5006 State Building, San Diego . COMPLETELY INSTALLED OVER LUXURIOUS 1 99 FOAM PADDING DUPONT NYLON HI.LOW ---1-~00%UJNT!NUOUSTILAMENt NYl:ON l'll[--· _so.,m __ - INSTALLED SAYE $3.00 NOW SALE PRICED .. COMPARABLE RETAIL .. ~$7.99 • lST QU ALITY NAME BRAND CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICIS 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. RICH, DEEP DURABbE • SHAG IN NEW THREE.COLOR DESIGNS. • SILICT FROM THI IARGIST CARPET INVENTORY IN THl'WIST •!VERY ROil OF CARPET IS MARK ID AND PRICID FOR YOUR NOW SALE PRICED •.• COMPARABLE RITAIL ••••• $5.99 SHOPPING CONVINllNCI •All LABOR UNCONDITIONAUY GUARANTUD ALLllD NYLON IHAG COMBINES LATEST STYLES WITH MANY COLORS. r -:1,ci.~;~ ... -f lhl .. ,... ,; ,a'A'[lt.:..~r /~K BB SALE PRICED • • • i1.oo COMPARABLE RITAIL.$8.99 _____ ... __ .. ,_ 1000's OF REMNANTS LARGE SMALL SIZE SIZE SAYINGS UP TO SAflNGS UP TO 60%80% Cl.ELANESE' ~RTREI: PLUSH 100% FORTREL •POL VESTER PI LE. A LONG WEARING. LUXURIOUSLY DENSE PLUSH IN STUNNING MULTl ·CO LORATIONS. N'bW SALE COMPARABLE RETAIL ..... $7.99 -·-·-"·-· PR ICED ... HIRCULON~ ICULPTURID HI-LOW - 100% HERCULON• OLEFIN PILE IN A TIGHT LOOF WEAVE FIBER THAT RESISTS STAINS AND WEAR. LAR GE SELECTION OF COLORS ·AVAILABLE. • •••·•·•••• ••••••••• o• "''"'"' . ., ••"'""""" ...... , •• ••• ,., o"""""' NOW SAL£ COMPARAB~E RETAIL ~ ••• $7.99 PR ICED ... HERCULON11 WOVEN PATTIRN 100% HERCULON• OLFEIN PILE IN A TIGHT LOOP WEAVE THAT COMBINES BRIGHT DECORATOR COLORS WIT H A UNIQUE DESIGNER PATIERN. 0 "'"'' "" O to•O••••• Y• •O °''"' • ••< w '" •<'~• al ', .... •O• '" 00 '"" "01 • COMPARABLE RETAIL •••• $8.99 Cl.ELANESE"~RTREC SHAG NOW SALE PRICED ••• 100% FORTREL •POLYESTER PILE. DEEP, LUSH SHAG DESIGNED FOR COMFORT AND LASTING BEAUTY. AVAILABLE IN MANY COLORS. NOW SALE COMl'ARABLI RITAIL ••••• $B.99 -·-·-"·-· PRICED ••• BB SO. YD. $AYE Sl .00 Bl SO. YD. SAYE Sl .00 BB SQ. YD. SAVE , .... BB SQ, YD. SAWl $l .OO DUPONT NYLONIHAG 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. EXTRA DENSE. LOW I I PROFILE SHAG IN MUL fl.COLOR COMBINATION S. NOW SALE PRICED ••• SO. YD. SAYE s•.oo COMPARABLE RETAIL.; $11 .99 INDOOR OUTDOOR CARPETS 99 KITCHEN CARPETS byt,,;,r;, 99 DO· IT-YOURSELF . CUT AND CARRY· 100% POLYPROPYLENE. IDEAL FOR PATIOS, POOL AREAS, PLAYROOMS. AVAILABLE IN MANY NEW EXCITING COLORS. SQ. YD. SAVE $2.00 NEW DECORATOR DESIGNS WITH HI-DENSITY FOAM BACK. EXCELLENT FOR KITCHENS, RESTAURANTS. OENS, PLAYROOMS. SQ. YD. UY! $2.00 . NOW SALE PRICED •••••• ~ ••• COMPARABLE RETAIL •••••••••••••••• ; $3.99 NOW SALE PR ICED •••••••••• COMPARABLE RETAIL ................. $5.99 ______ ,,, 7007 Lo\lrel Conyon l lvd. -912·2:!00 W. LOS ANGELES 2501 E. Main St. 64l·S041 TORRAN,CE 15911 1: Whittier l lvcf: 90.016! 300I l•llflower l lvcl. 421-1934 2526 f , Wo~man Ave . 966-4471 PASADENA CANOGA PARK MONTCLAIR 2640 E. Colorado l lvcf. 4tl9 Hott l oulevord sn.uoo (714J '26-3St7 \ 32 0 El Camino Rial SF (41 S) •t2.2ss s SAN CARLOS 15945 Harbor Blvd. (7141 119·1700 CAMP BELL 1122 VIII ST. •62-6232 I - • , .-' \ DAILY PILOT Wedn«day Junt 5, 1974 BRAND NEW 1974 P I NT 2 dr. Sedan. 2000 Cc '1.·V 4 cylinder,' :speed, front and rear bYmper guards. etc. (4RIOXl92579) 5446 $65'55 PER MONTH ONLY IMMEDIATE DELIVER Y ''"ii 10 .. 1 dft. pvml. Wl.U Is tol•I mo. pym1. lnct l1•, '1• lictttM &.111 li"1nc1c1Mo•9fl011111J1r,crtt1ll lor • "'°'· o.terrN p't'f'lf. price UUJ.CI Incl. 111 IW..nu a--eei. I••"· '11 lie--It ,.... preltr to ~'t' usn, full ~price I& 12111.11Ind.Mies1111. '11 lie-. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 1 l.ol0% New' 4 L TO Covntry Squire $1366 Bran -New •73· Ford Covrlor "Working Man's. Special." A C:Ylinder, au· · /.!.3 246 tometticrrad""1-faetory'..elr--c--ct. ws-W tires-~--- wheel covers, liberglasS tonneau cover. Keep • all your valuables under cover. _l.G.TANK397151 2412 l'lu1 hi• & ll~nM Bran~ New '73 Ford ''Yellow Bird Special.'' 4cyllnder, automatic, radio, factory arr cond .• tinted glass. ext. decor, stroppe stripes, mags & w/o tires, Western lon .. mount mlrron, sttp "tM.lmper. (5GTANK36957) 2'17 p ........ ...... Courier BRAND NEW 1914 MUSTANG II 2 dr. Hardtop. 4 speed, bucket seats, tach., Instrumentation, steel belted tires. front disc brakes. (4R02Y19"519) ONLY $-55 PER MONTH IMMEDIATE DELIVERY "" Is 111111 011. prm•. 111.u 11 to111 mo. prmt. Incl. ''•· ·1• Uc-• 11111-• c,..1'9" on •PP'". cn<1ll 1 .... 41 "'°'· 0.lwrretl P'f'MI. prlc• ""21.a lllCI. 111 lllllnC• 'l'llf'911.o ll•H, '14 llc_,H IN" II )'OU pr.-.. IO Pol"I' ''"''full C.Sll prlc• 1$ 13171.M Incl. H ltl Ill, '74 lie-. ANNUAL PEJlCENTAGE JlAl'E 11-"l"io Brand New ·'74 Galaxie 500 4Dr. . 351 V-8, radio, air cond., tinted glass. wsw lires. {4J5'Hl476671 .50.51 DISCOUNT . . sa2a BRAND NEW 1974 CAMPER SIMILAR· TOAS SHOWN .. Pia{ AND --WUlllBAM CAM PER. lllllLLI NEW HANDY DANDY SPECIAL "Baja Special." A cylinder, A sPffd. Com-i3188 pletely converted for the desert. Roll bar. _bike rack. driving lighls, tacoma wheels, _ _ PICKUP -Full factory equipment. Make your own conversion and sfroppe stripes. floatation tires, rear bum--SAVEA BUNDiE.fF"8RUA9S33) 5429 ----- pers, exterior decor. (SCTkNE'890J) 2425 -~-· ... • llcenM 'Brand N ew '73 Ford Courier $ "'Arctic Speclal."' A cylinder# •utomatic. $ 3 2 9 9 95 FULL P.RICE piu·s tax & license radlO, factory air cond., tinted glass, exterior decor, wheel covers, wsw tires. Go north to Alaska with this one. (SGTANE.528.51 l 2.US , '74 MAVERICK Grabber ' Small v.9, auto. trans., pQWer steering, s 3 I 9 9 radio, heater, whitewall tires, wheel covers. Almost new. Save. #243.SA '72 PINTO cpe. A speed, radio, heater. Dix. mlles, exlra clean. #723ETI; chrome, lo $ 899 ~70 DUSTER cpe. Small V-8, auto.· trans .. power steering, radlO. heater, whitewall tires, vinyl roof, $1 79 9 wheel covers. A real cream JXJ!f. #9S6AGD ''72 CHEV Con<Oll!'I St. Wag. Small V-8, auto. trans .• tM:tory air condl· t ionlng, power steering, power (disc) $2499 brM<es, radio, heater. Luggage rack. A very sharp Intermediate. 1snETF '72 TOYOTA MK 114 Dr. A speed, factory air conditi~. radio, heater. Sharp thruout. 1319FTA '72 TOYOTA ·St. Wag. Auto. trans., factory air conditioning, radio, heater. A real beauty. #312FYD I $1899 .A speed, radio. hea~r. Excellent condition. 1060BNN '72 Pinto Runabout Automatic, heater, pqw~r (disc} brakes. factory air conditioning. whitewall tires. wheel covers, vinyl int. #339FAF '72 FIAT· Sta. w. s1399 Auto. trans .• factory air conditioning, Lug· gage rack. Immaculate condition. Like new. $2 199 167SFZG '72 CHEV V2 T. Pickup V-8. auto. trans .• power steering, radio, h••"'· Gem top compe•, doek bumpe•, $26 99 custom cab, sharp! #13324K '73 FORD V2 T. Pickup 6 cyl., stick shift, radio. heater. Like new. save! #03271 R '73 PINTO cpe. 2000 engine. .C speed. r1tdlo, heater, whitewall tires, tinted glass, ·wnee1 covers. Dix. In t., dlx, chrome. Special cust«n pain!, must see! 11 .. 2HMA • I ... • BRAND NEW 1974 .MAVERIC 2 dr. Sedan. 250 CID ~ c;yllnder: front and rear b~mpe,. C4K91Ll9984il .536.5 ONLY $ 06 PER MONTH IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • 51" l1 tot1111n. p"fml. S7J.Oi l1 to111mt.pymt.111<1. t••· .,, lkenw .. 11111,..ni;tct..rve1on1w. credl! fOI' ., rno1. Dele<red ''"''· prlc11J11$ •• l11CI. 111 ll1111•c• ""'°'II"• '74 lk.., .. or H you prtttt lopeyc1W1, hill ptlcl II UXM.SI Incl. win 1111 •• ,, ·~-ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE II."""" Brand New '74 Gran Torino w"'°n Squire. Tilt steering wt"tffl, air cond./temp. control, am/fm .. stereo, really k>aded. (4H.iilA1S8156) 4735 DISCOUNT s1042· . . Brand New 'T4 Ford Covrior ···oo IT YOURSELF SPECIAL."Acylinder,4 /i._ .. _....,l.:tacbtt.v..eQl.!1~ ... Le.lxo.vr...caoscie.nce~ be your guide, ISGTAN06091) .5370 ew '74 Ford y, Ton 4x4 ''MOUNTAIN GOAT SPECIAL.'' Power steering. 360 V·I . speclal paint. AM/FM stereo, 1000x165 traction tires w/tKoma wheels. One on ti at this price. (Ft I YRT7137.5) ...., s4995 ~-.. •&Ii.... Bran New '74 F-250 '!O Ton P.U. "6 Passenger Family Special.-" v ... auto. trans., power steering, & brakes. slkllng _w.indow,_super _cooling-A real Mrd to-find Item. Take advantage of a caFKelled order. s4995 IF2.5XCU10254) .5382 ri-... & lk9ft• Bran New '74 Econoline v.an SHORT SHOT SPECIAL. Would yotJ ·belle~ cylinder, stick shift. Check out this surfer speclal with real economy. (E14BHU276.53} S480 $3688 '73 PINTO Runabout ' Auto. trans .• pQWer {"disc) brittc.es, radio. heater, wtlltl!Wall tires, tinted glass. wheel covers. Regal red, low miles. llke new! 1231GNR '69 BONNEVILLE cpe. V·8. auto. trans., factory air conditioning, poWer steering, vinyl roof. Extra sharp tnruout. Full price. #IOIKJX '73 1 Ton Super Camper Special v -8, automatic, radio, heate r, power steering, ~ factory air conditioning, low miles, llke new. 3 9 9 9 Save. '~'S6P '71 CHEV Townsman St. W. v.a, auto. trans., factory air conditioning, power steering, radio, he1ter. whltewall tires, wheel covers. Luggage rack. Beautiful famlly car. #P19J '70 MA VERI K cpe. • • 6 cyl., auto. trans .• radio. heater, whittwall tires, wheel covers. Dix. chrome, special $ '1169 9 c"'lom pelnt. Mu•I •eel #P208A ·---'.__f- 170 VOLKSWAGEN 4 sPffd. Low miles, llke new thrvout. IOSOASM -~1599 FORD· ' J : . :· ' .... : ' . .. . .. I Keep Track of Prices - ' I I· ' ' I e By LAVRIE KASPER 01 , ... o.ll'f 1"11• ll•H This year's harvest is expected lo be good. Its yield should be enough to erase existing spot shortpges and make It me of the better production. years in recent history. Those attending the National Canners Association convention In Anaheim should have been pleased with the ouUook. They know also that as consumers oontinue to stretch their budget!, they are moving, more and more, toward the use of canned goods. BEA ANDERSON, Editor CAROL MOORE, Food Editor But another shortage, or a aervlce the consumer seldom thinks about" and the producer seems to have taken for granted, threatens the food industry this w ............ ,,_ .. 1tJ4 ,_ 2t • v Reputation In Puff of year. • The problems now will be i n transportation, explained A.P. Davis, vice president of the Carnation Company. Railroads, especially, will have an increasingly critical impact as the industry goes into its peak production period. The rail system, he explained, is the ''backbone of the · food distribution Goes Up Goodness ~' )'Our family a light, featbery the. bowl, ~tinuing until dough beaimes · ~gg glaze: Beat togethe.r 1 elll' yolk br.iOOhe ~wa~ trom~..he·oven-and· your springy and lS no longer st~~ky. • ·and J tablespoon ~mir1C "' · rtputa.lion as a chef is made. · Place dough in a buttered bowl, cover T h ·nd· ·d al hrioch . o· Id ···-· ingl k ... _,... r h I --· l . . . 0 s ape I IVI u es. IV e system" because it can move the largest amounts over long distances at the least cost. RISING COSTS Freight costs have been "escalating dramatically" and will result in a ''rather staggering sum that will be passing on to the consumer this year,'' he said. In 1972. food accounted for the largtst contributions to the railroads , aboUt $1.5 billion. R2tes increa!led four percent in 1973 bu~ this year increases of almost eight percent have been authorized. The higher rates, he said, amount to mo mllllon wtthollt taking into account the increased volume since 1972. Since fuel , labor, crossties, everything the railroad!! purchase are a 1 s o increasing in OO!lt, he warned it woold be naive to think there v•on 't be more increases in 1975. But the rising cost isn 't the only problem facing the industry, "The service we are buying has been and is deteriorating," he charged. F.arly this year, he explained, the food industry faced the worst freight car ........ .,. ts y easy to ma e, u11:::1t: yeasi 1g t Y auu et nse m a warm place until chilled dough into & portions Pinch off I/, ,__._._,,bre==•d~'. are a16 tradlt_ional J!yof!~-in._ dQubl~_iJ!~t 11/z Eours~ Stir dC?f~· ~-oleactl..pottion..for_topkno~Sbape.as..flor..---~ ··f!~h hOWlenoras-wfieif good cooks cover witn ji18sfic firm anOre ngerate large brioche. -I lrisist WI the best Ingredients -fre,,h for about 8 .~or ove~i~ht. . Place in well buttered 4'h·ioch brioche creamery butter and eggs. For large bnoches, d1v1dc dough. rn pans. Shaped dough. will rise in a.Dout t \!i Briod>et may be served immediately half: Return on: half of. the dough to th.e hours. Bake in 425 degree oven for 21).2S or frozen , to have on hand w h e n the refngerator while shaping the other. minules. occasioo demands a quick, but elegant With floured hands, pinch off about 1/5 menu. . of the dough. Shape the larger por1ion For the busy homemaker, this version into a smooth ball , puU~g the surface or permlta two.step preparation. The dough the dough to the ~erside. . Is mixed and ·allowed to rise one day, Place, sm?Oth side up, 1.n a w~ll then, ptaced In the r e fr i g e r a t 0 r hl:1ttered brioche pan 8. inches in overnight, to be shaped and baked the ~iameter. Roll the smaller piece of dough next da rnto a teardrop shape. . y. Using a marp pointed knife. cut an X Brioche may be served w~rm from the in the center of the larger portion of .. ~ with butte!. af!d _Jam, £or_~ dough. \Vith. the floured kn ife tip, poke tiiiakfast. Or, try it for~ or supper down lhe 4 points \li'here the X intersects. as the base for a creamy rich seafood. l~old the smaller piece of dough by its BRIOCHE sides and put it genUy, pointed end down. -% ~p milk into the hole. J tab&espooos sugar ·SJip the Oat side of the floured knife l\i ~ salt around the top1tnot to nest it in place. % envelopes active dry yeast Shape remaining.half of dougli in the 1/4 ~ wann water same manner. Let rise in a warm place 5 cups WU1ifted all-purpose nour until doubled, about t hours. t cup (2 slicks) soft butter Brush with tbe &laze. Bake in a 350 5 9 degree oven fOr about. 45 minute! unti l Ea pt.e well browned, and a long "\vooden skewer Scald DiUk; stir tn sugar and salt. Cool comes out clean ·when inserted near .. __ center. to rocm.111c111perat.ure. ,.,__, . ..._1..,_ · ks r In the large bowl of an electric mixer. V.IU1 m uo.iw1g pans on wire rac or stir yeast and wamt water until about 15 minutes, then loosen edges and dissolved. Stir in 2 cups or the flour, and remove carefully. Makes 2 large, or 8 the milk mixture. ?>.tix to blend, then beat individual brioches. in butter. CRAB A>/D SHRIMP FILLING 2 tablespoons butter 2 green onions, while part only, thinly sliced 2 tablespoons flour If~ teaspoon salt Dash each pepper, nut~eg, and cayenne 2 cups half and haU (light cream) I egg_YQ!k .2 tablespoons shredded Parmesan cheese 1.2 pound naked crabmeat 14 potmd cooked tiny shrimp 2 tablespoons dry sherry (optional) Heat butter in a saucepan. Saute onioos until soft. Stir in flour, salt, pepper, nubneg, and cayenne until bubbly. Gradually add half and half, stining c:oostantly. Cook, stirring until thickened and SJJ'KlOth. Beat egg yolk slightly in a small bowl. To tt add a little of the hot sauce. Return egg mixture to pan, and cook over low heat Wltil thickened (do not boil). Stir in cheese, crab, shrimp, 3J)d sherry, then cook just until heated through. Makes 8 servings. Mix in remaining flour alternately with the eggs, adding them one at a time and beaUng thoroughly after each addition, until dough is soft and sticky. BRIOCHE: a roll baked Beat at medium speed lll'llil dough is shiny and elastic, about 10 minutes. U dough becomes too heavy for mixer to handle, cootinue mixing by hand as follows: Pull doogh oot of the bowl willl floured harm, then vigorously toss it back into 'I . ! ,, - ) ' . - ' from I ight yeast dough rich with eggs and butter. - • I ,. shortage ii has experienced since World War II. Although it wasn't so lhreatening then because inventories were sh~rt, he predicted It will be critica l in the next few month s. Since lrains are 20 times more efficient than trucks in terms ~ energy C01isumption, the energy crisis only added to the load of railroads. "It's frustrating to me that there are not very 1nany viable alternatives.·• Davis said. UNWILLING TO KEEP UP ·Davis · claimed the shortage has Noting that it takes three tractors and resulted because railroads h 3 v e three trailers to carry the load of one generally been unY:itling' to keep up with railroad car, he emphasized "the fact is, the grov.ith of business. tbe canning industry is very dependent Since the mid 50s. freight cars have on the railroad· industry. decreased 48 perttnt. canned goods, "Looking forward lo the future doesn't however, have increased 20 percent. give a very rosy picture either." A3 a result , ~ predicted the canned Because so many railroads have gone goods v;ould exceed the avallablliry-of-bankrupt he sa\d the . ~oblem . wtll-ha.ve railroad can this year and ''Thbse of you to be sc:ilved on a pol1t1cal _bas.is. I~ will , shipping frozen products are in for a he predicted, take "a massive infusion of particularly bad time." taxpa~ers' dollars '' to keep them The additional shortages of locomotives operating. and yecrs of delayed maintenance For now, he sa id. "the challenge comes aggravates the car shortage problem, he to each of us as v.·e attempt to get our said. Some trains back east travel at a product to market." niaximum speed ru eight miles per hour:. He urged the canners to load. and 1be situation won't improve this year. unload the cars given them promptly so he said, because repairs take cash and they could be used by others. "cash is something the railroad industry But he also urged them to "forcefully" is not long on." make the ir \'iews known to Congress. Sip Coolers When Weather's Berry Hot For hot day treats or dandy des;erts in a glass, these slppable cranberry concoctions are easy to make in a flash . Cranberry juices mix v.·ith fruits. ice creams and sherbets for summer blues chasers. CRANBERRY CITRUS 4 cups ( l quart) cranberry juiet' CClcktail chilled 4 cups orange or apple juice. chilled 2 cups lemon·lime soda, chilled Combine all ingredients. Serve at onet' in 10 tall glasses with ice cubes. CRANAPPLE CREA~lER lfz cup cranberry-apple drink 2 scoops ice cream or sherbet Soda (any na .. 'Or). chilled Pour cranberry-apple drink into tall gloss. Add Ice cream or sherbet. Fill to top with soda. Serve \I.1th stra""· Other cranberry-apple drink combina- tions: Ban~na Bash. add banana ice c r e a m and orange soda; Oranr.e Blossom, add orange ice and quinine w:1ter. CRANBERRY TAmns 2 CUJllll ti,,. pint) cranbcrpY juice ~cktnlL chilled J cup strong tea. chilled I cup pineapple juice, chilled 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 cups ginger ale, dli.lled Superfine sugar to taste Combine all ingredients, add sugar to taste. Pour inlo 6 tall glasses and add lee cubes. GRAPEBERRY FLOAT 4 cups (I quartl grape-cranberry juice- drink, chilled 4 cups (I quart I cherry soda, chilled 1.1 cup thav.·ed concentrated undiluted orange juice 1 quart lemoo sherbet Combine grape-cranberry juice-drink, cherry soda and orange juice. Pour Into a punch bowl and top with scoops of lemon sherbet. Serves 10. I CRANIU..A FROSTY 2 cups (I pintl cranberry juice cocktail, chilled 2 cups (l pinl l vanilla lee cream 2 cups cherry soda, chilled 11,i; teaspoons lemon jui ce Dash salt 1 Combine. ingredients nnd whirl lri blender at top speed ror 30 seconds until s1nooth. J>our Into 6 tall glasses and sen·" al onct. ' ~ fj DAILY PILOT Helpline Evaluates First Year By JO OLSON' OI lM Oflly P'llel llf•l A yur ha s gone by and nearly a thousand pe0ple ha\·e dialed the ABC Line of Htlp at 14$-2222. It's time for the voluntee~ lb sit back and evaluate their first year and uk them~h't'S lr it's all bttn worth it. They believe it has. Pat ~fcfarland, a volunteer y.•ho has worked th e entire )'ear, and Carol ~lt>y, a nt'w •recruit, too~ a tew moments end compared their ,·iew· · ts aboot the helpline v.·hir h •--ii';'-;;sporuiored by St. t\Qdrev;'s • byterian Ctiurch in N~,11- lp.rt Beach. I • "We have a great dt>al of ~atisfaction," remarked ~1rs. ~tcFarland. ~ Janice Giiiespie, 24, traded high f•shlon clothes for oversiie ( tennis shoes •nd clown makeup. Now 1h9 performs with pachyderms •nd te•ches circus childrwn 'IS"wtff;-. -- She-adtru1t1"d that at first lht.•re v.·as skepticism 1n the church ilboUI the need lor ha\·ing a helpline and the s~ss u "·ould bring. There "'as no n'IOlltY in the C'hlrth budget so advertising had 10 be kept 10 a minimum. Xov.·. it is a pan of the general budget and I h e congregation, wh ile curloos about the ministry. offers more support. she !hid. The chu rt·h even had an ABC Sunday rt'Cefltl~· '\'here in· formation about the sen·ice \\"as included in the church Oiilfetin aftcl 10e lielpline was discusscil by the pastor. church and community, the \'Olunteers are aln1ost 1norl! enthusiastic abOut what 1he 1raining in listening ha! done for them personally. ?.lrs. !ifcfarland said her O"'ll life has been changed "radically" because or her new ability to listen, gained from her AOC training. Before her instruction. she admitted she y,·ookl .. right away think of ho11; I would ans...,·er a question.'' Now. she fo!Joy,·s through y,·ha t a person says by "pafroting'' him and en· -couraging rum fo elaborate on his thoughts and in essence sol\'e his 0 .... 11 problem. PERSONAL BENt:ITTS \\'h i.le beneficial for This technique is valuable the for parents ~'hose children UP'I T•i..tlof• • h3\·e p r o blems , Mrs. ~tcFarland noted. really Ustened to when lbe was working full.time as a nurse. "How neat Jt would be io give nurses a course io this," ·she said. 'lllqb It may seem usy lo answer a phone an4 Uaten to someoqe \a.Ile , lt is not I slm\}le tut. lhe voluntem said. homea, peop\e who have Jost thelr support or ptOple whole ptl"IOOa) i'elaUomhips have become stralned, M r a . McFarland said. NICI!!' TllREATENS Ntpl ealls .,. often more ttaumaUc because problems become more thrtatening in tbe dart ( vokmteen: are on .A. p.1rent might rective a no1e from a teacher saying his child had a problem, for e:\:amp~. Instead of being immediately hostile toward the child , the trained parent Ytt>Uld s a y , "Sometbing's happened at school," then listen lo find out what the probleni is. Tiie people who call weigh <all ti"' ! p.m. "I'll take eolls heavily on their mlnda. tbt: . at lane). . HELP ON JOB ~lrs. Bowley. a registertd nurse y,·00 is planning to go ba ck to wort part·time soon. said she thinks the training and experience will help her as a nurse. She thinks 'i\'ith regret of all the paHents she could have ' l'Olunt.eers said. 'lbelr only How do the vCll&deerl View frustration la that they never tbelr helpline in relation to the get to ftnd out l¥)W problems many others which have wert nieolved. spruna up in Orange County? The calls are from lonely lt ls valuable, they believe people who slmply want to because "everything that is talk, whether they be mothers, happening in the comnnmlty lathers , children or meets a need." Evidence of grandmothers in n u r s l n g this is simply t.he fact that the Job's Just for Laughs By GAY PAULEY "They need help y,·ith the UPI w-·• 1E1111., transition," she said. "1 do a ~'E\V YORK (UPI) lot of theater for the kids, What's a pretty girl who used acting out cis 1 talk.'' lo be a model doing in a The clown ls not a certified funny·face clown costume with teacher: her help to the tbe circus? children is voluntary and Having the time of her life began when the Gennan·bom making people laugh and trainer of bears asked her to laughing at herself, that's instruct his hvo young ones. whal . .says Janice Gillespie. She has bad some teaching 24, one of the few women experience, however. In her clowns in the workl. junior year in college she ran "Clowns are just people an office of equal oppor· laughing at themselves," she tunity summer program for said. "As a model, I was very deprived children Jn Long ~elf-0:>nsci0Us. ~ a' c!O'M'I, 'Branch, N.J .. not far horn her nothing bothers me." home town ol Oakhurst. C!o'tlt11ing is an unusual h!s, Gillespie has one mor.e career for a girl; there are semester to com-plete for a ordy ~IX womerr1n~1Wlf'*'bleli'eJOts-aegree1ReoociUOO circus units Ringling Bros. and the.ate.r at New York Barnum ~ Baily now has on University. Just when she'll the road. One tmit is at find the time to finish she's ?dadison Square Garden. not sure. Circus life means What further sets ~f s . Cross<'OUfltry travel all but six Gillespie apart is that she is weeb of each year. also a teacher of several of \Vhen modeling began to the.circus children on the road paU , she applied to and was with· their parents, many or accepted at Ringling's Clown whom are foreign-born. College in Venice. na. "I'd telephone keepa rlnglng. £vea lf ll..tmply mearu that people will be trained In 11'tenl!I& t<dmlques II Is lmportant, the WQCTI.en believe. "It Is an 111blbilion ol caring,"' Mrs. Bowley said. "Christ ll1opped and listened to everyone who talked ." "1be ntoed ls there for love and compaulon," ~f r s . A.tcFarland added. "You have to meet them (the callera) whm their Med ~-I 1 .. 1 happy that n are where we are." She lamented that more =~~~~~~~~~ -people do not know bow to listen. "U everyone were trained to listen," she said, "We perhaps wouldn't need hotllnes." A emorrs SPORTSWEAR WE SELL TOP-OU AL I TY •FOOD •MEATS •PRODUCE A,_.D WE STIU. DWVlll COAST SUPER MARKET WI DlLIVY: EVHY' MOH., WED~ Al. • TAl'UTIUES • STITCHF.11.LK~ • Jt.CClSIOlllU • DESIC.t;5 • llta;~ Junt&i·llOnly' 2BJ E . l'ilhSt., Cost;;i )h•sa~2·9100 ....................... _~"'' The children usually speak always wanted to be a English, but their parents performer," she said. want them to learn reading She jDlned ''The Greatest and ~ting and mort about Show on Earth" in January, Amertean customs. l!m, and oow is a featured PLAZA• WESTCLIFF l'Uli•WESTCLIFF PLAZA• WESTCLIFFPLAZA• ti: :i ~ ? • ~ "' "' ... Loved Ones Will Suffer, Take Blame ~ Have Dad try .·on 0 !: :ii ... e • DEAR ANN LANDERS, l am a fairly attracti\•e woman in my middle forties. To the outside world I appear to have eveeything a woman could want -a lovely home. beau1if1.1I child re n, a successful husband . and I've even exceUed in sports and have won some trophies. l'io one. y,·ould suspect that I've gone through per>ods of severe depression and about two years ago 11-tte.mpted suicide. J have something important to say to the readen: of your column y,·ho may have at any time contemplated ta k i n g their lives. The information I am about to pass along for free ?""tost me $3,000 in psychiatrtc bills. The next time you look longingly at that handgun. or rhat bottle of pills. or a bridge or v.·indow you bel ie\'e will put an end to yoor agonies. remember the husband or v.·ite TIHTTO?S TO ADULTS JUHl 30-AUGUST14 For 1nlormat1on and broucnure. call 714·540-5953 JUST IN TIME FOR GRADUATION Wl~S s5 NOW ALL CASCADES s 1 0 NOW COOL · COMFORTABLE • CAPLESS ELURA WIGS MOST STYLES AMD COLotlS NOW onl $22.50 EXPERTS STYLISTS to SERVE YOU malAej 2500 Eoll 17111 Slrttl WIG AND BEAUTY SALON Hlligrtft s~. Co1to M•H I or children or parents you l\·oufd leave behind. No matter how blameless they may be, they y,·ill always think it was their fault that }'OU killed yoursell. AJI the rationalization in the world won't change it. They will carry to their graves t~ thought that something they did. or £ailed to do , caused you lo take your life. , Do you want to place such a burden on your loved ones'! If you commit su icide you'll surely do it.-THANK GOD I DION"!' DEAR FRIEND~ The impact of any gil·en letter Is. of con~, an unknown quantity, but I can tell .yo11 for certain tbat your I e t I e r prevented at least oa e suicide someDlace in the l''orld t.oday. Thank you for writing II. DEAR ANN: I ho~ you v.·on't think this is IOf.l far-out to print. but ( n~d an answer. ~Ty girlfriend confided in me that since her husband rl!tumed from a trip up north their sex life hao; imOf'0\1f'd 100 percent. The ".;ccret." sh<· said. is something he bou l;hl for Wl a ha lf pound-no"· de"cd mountain·PQ"lt horn«. lie mixes a half teaspoon of • .._I '4::..;;_•__;.4i;::_~_· --.i.~ the stuff with a glass of water and drinks it just before he goes to bed. She claims it has perlormed miracles in the1r bedroom. I asked if she 'could spare a liltle, because my husband has been "too tired" or "too busy" for the last six wee.ks. Yesterday when I suggested to Amie that be try it. he laughed in my race. How come it v.·orks for my friend if it's "phony" as Arnie insists? Please chi?ck "'ith yo u r e:\:perts and let me know.- COLD FEE'!' Dear Feet: 1'fy "experts" tell me that once the borna are off the goat they are use· less, e1cept u nJI deeora· Hons-il yoa like Chat sort of thing. "I.Ave pedoaa" baw: for centuries Produced • neat income for bvctlten. Since sex activities begin in the mind, anything a person believe! in coo.Id bring abo1lt tht deiired results. 1( you ca11 • sell Arnle on the 1tuf1 it might ~ work for lilin, loo. But be ""' ... tounds loo smart for socb ..J bogwasb. DEAR ANN LANDERS' The k!tter from the teenager whose dad wOuldn't let her drive the car for six months because somebody dented the fender (and there y,•as no insurance) made me realiz.e wha.t a difference there is in fathers. 1, too, bad just gotten my driver's license. It was a rainy night and I lost rontrol of the car. I hit an abutment and our 1973 sedan was nearly totalle<i The repair bill was about $2.000. My dad said one thing to me : '"l'tiank God you are all right. I can always buy another car, but I could never buy another daughter." - LUCKY ME DEAR YOU: Double lucky, you mqn. Tbanb for a bean. warmer. .. ,. yellow pink I'"" flgj.t bluo white bo<>< '·-~ our Food Gift Paks for sizel ~ ~ Wow ... what an Inflation stqpper! Mike It happen with these dreamy porcelain p1stel leatherwndals. Thry'vegot somuch c;lass for so little cash! ••g. 15.00 1290 •15 F ""''°" ltltfld. Ntoo'POl I 8fl(h • Ollotlf! 8'• . tt 1 ! -""""''-"·~-.... ~· "' ~ 0 !: :ii ... e • • • •· Golden Memories . Allene and Julius Chrlstenson celebrated lheir 50th anniver- sary with 150 friends during an open house in the First United Methoilist Ch u r c h , Costa Mesa. Residents of Costa Mesa for. 27 years, they have three children, Mrs. Jean In· man of Liberia, Costa Rica, Gary Christenson of Costa Mesa and Mrs. Wilma Myrehn of Prescott, Ariz., and eight grandchildren. Wedding Bells Ring , OAILY PILOT :J f Your Horoscope Tomorrow ~Gemini : Take Inventory · . THURSOA Y SCORPIO !Oct. 2.1-No,_ 211 ' JUNE Postpone journey, if practical. 6 Heservations, communications By SYDNEY 0.\1AHR could be misplaced or missed. ARIES (March 2l·April 19); Relatives tend now to be Hold up ; go slow . Review. argumentati ve. PISCES (Feb. 19--~farch 2Q l: You make dlscoverie~ \11hich verify past lessons. You are completing cycle, assignment. SomE come to you with tll!tir problems . ARE YOU FAT? OVERWEIGHT? ODRINEX contains the most ellecltvt ftducln1 1ld 1v1lhble without pr1scdptla n ! Ont 11ny ODRINEX 11blet bt!Ole m11'1 11'\d you wan! to t it less · down 10 your caloues -down IOfS your wt11ht J Thousands ol women llom toast to toast 1eport ODRINCX 1111 helped lhem lose 5. 10, 20 pounds ~n 1 1ho•t time · so can ftlU. Get rid or ualy lat •nd llve lon1er ! ODRINEX must utlsly or ~our money will be relunded. No 11uMtion1 asked. Sold with this 1u111nttt by Ooo't rush, insist, force or SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22· cajole . Thost> in authority may Dec. 21): Spending spree be out-of-sorts. would not be ad\'isa ble. You,.., ____ ...;;;;;;;_...;;;;,;;;"'-------'=-"---~ TAUKUS (April 2G-~1ay 20): tend now to misplace ju<lg· 2 d ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS Ocgani1.e. Get facts, fil es in men!, coolidence. lmougurnte 0 order. u ti Ii z e experience. a more \l/Orkable sa vings pro-I JUST IN TIME FOR GRADUATION! Take nothing for granted. gram. Consern!. !~:l 2QtJ1~ OFF PreS!l'Ure exists -you can CAPRICORN IDcc. 22-J an. OHL'f'! 7fJ handle ii If patient. 191: You know finally what i1 ALL GOLD JEWELRY GEMINI (May 21-June 201' is you want -but ob!aining it Not. so good for buying -could mean hurdling ot>stacJes. instead. do some Che<king . Refine techniques. . EARRINGS •BIRTHSTONE-WEDDING comparing and rigui"ing. Take AQUARJUS (Jan. 20-rcb. in,.ntory . 18)' Certain rul es. cegula"ons \'/ / . -DIAMOND RINGS CANCER (JW1e ii-July 22): may be incon\•enient. Hide ' I dch. k_ 1 Jewelers Lie low. Play waiting game. 1,1rith tide . There 1,1•ill be a 'tO 't :1 Defer 11> wishes of partner, relaxation of res trictions. I EXPERT W A TCM &: .JEWEL.RY REPAIR male. Accept 'esponsiQility. f.45-6842 • 283 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa Take conservative co u rs e. L--------'':::":;":l".l!"':::-:· -::,•!;:•-:::::;::-:,_ __ ".'.""'""'.==~ Stick to familiar ·territory. -r;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:;...,:;;.;.:;..:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22J: Avoid needless tension . Secret doubts. fears could come to rorefront . Be rational enough to take one step at a time. Confinement is but temporary. BELLY DANCE CLASSES Coast Couples Exchange Vows VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Emotions tend to dominate. ri1ember of opposite sex Ogurcs prominently. Change routine. Accept so c i a I V ideo l ape equipmen t i s available lo re cord student progress . You learn qoickly' We have excellent facilities and smal l classes[max 1mum 7). LEUENBERGER-GREELEY In the Flrst Lutheran Church, Long Beach, Terri Lynn Greeley and rt.lark Alan Le utnberger e x c h a n g e d nuptial vows and rings. ' ' Kath y Lebe rt , P atty Karpinski, Gena R h o a d s . Beckie Berlo\do and Sheri lrferrill. Doris :P.filler of Drake, N.D. and Vern Wl>jte or Minot, N.D. The bride is a graduate of Corona de! ll.1ar High School and Ca lifornia State University of San Diego. The bri<iegroom received h i s degree in .engineering from Northwestern University and invitation. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' Job, career. aspiratKlns are subject to change. This ne.ed not be cause for alarin. You are growing, maturing. de cidi ng and making judgments based on additional information. IEGIMMIHG -INTERMEDIATE-ADVANCED PROFESSIOHAL-TUCHER·TRAIHIHG CLASSES ST ARTIHGIH JUNE See ow loclt Co.try El)yptiH o-ff's ot tt.e OrOft9t C_.ty Foir, F-ridoy, .tuty 1 l ot I ,. .M. CALL NOW: 545-1088 COSTA MESA The Rev. E. H. Schroeder performed the ceremony for the daug!iter af the Ja<>k ' Greeleys and the son of ll.frs. Celesta Leuenberger, all of Besl man was Gary Russel, and ushers were Willi am Rhoads, Michael Karpinski, David T\1aldonado anJ Mark Kelly. Dii.ml)11 Leber! was the ring bearer .• The bridegroom is a is a JI.fay graduate of Harvardl_r~:;::=================================~==.;~.::__:_:_ Law School. __ tfuptjpgton Bgach. __ : .. ~ Honor attendanl'\ w e re Debbie Hendrix and Paul Leuenberger. Others in the bridal party t were Aloha Terry, Mrs. Jaekie Greeley, Cheri Greeley, Liz Taylour, Linda Hendrix, Misty Houchens, Josh Sisler, Gary Greeley, John \Volters, Pifike Hickman. SCotl Crawford 3.nd Kim Hunter. graduate of Palo Verde High -~~!, Tucson. ·-·~-·#· _ -;;;;;;:::;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;~===<I JOE CARLOS . -. y;tiow WHITE-GOULD lime•"'" MRS. LEUENBERGER PLUMllHG CO. Neila Naima Gould ex· Lw;. ~2~ ch an g e d marriage vows 548-5558 v.1th Douglas ElOOo White 1675 Supenor during ceremonies in the Costa Mesa garden of the home of her mother, Leota Williams Gould, l•~_:,--t in Laguna Beadl. o... S,.c:iotty The bride is the daughter of "For A w .. ff' HHJft". A 1111. d . the late H. Jay Gould and the chff or A 1crtti M Styk - unog ceremonies conducted bridegroom's parents are Md MM-RMI 91iick 5"-•k• soft pink hot pink purple lilac orange bone white black patent "d navy soft blue Tue-~- If you love feeling free you'll go for these fun lovin ', nothing-to-hide, a!l learher. dressv low h~cl toe-thongs from Ital y .... lantast•c color selection_ O~ly 1200 -·- 'Ibe newlyweds, who will reside in Huntington Beach, are graduates of Fountain \1alley High School. in Tucson. Gi•e "Joe" A Dial" Their parents are the ____ -------~=========~~-·"-=----==-=.,....==--=====:=--:::::".::-::::::=:-=-~~·~-~·~·~-~~-~~·-~-~=====~---\\'illiam T. Kleins and l\1anuel ·------------- -MALDONADO-KLEIN -YOnner Harborite Sandra l\Jein became the bride of Jerry An l hon y Maldonado l\laldonados. all of Tucson . The bride. a Costa Mesa lligh School graduate, was attended by Diane McKay, - annf:\rrmfino ~U\l\.U ll " Uil 50% OFF SALE I 00'• LHN1 .................... so-;. Off 14111 llllY/G ...................... S0%0H ""Slfrft. hit k lde1 •...•..••.. , SO"/e Off ,... Slt'fw ••r ca.ills •••...•....••. srr, OH Ldn'f'/G&W/GOW-.-IMip .... l0%0ff Ledin Y /G bierdd liMjs .......... lo-le Off Lecle1 y ,,. • .., IJIM.p ••••.••••••• ' .lO"!. oft t..hsY/GS..,wnliNJ .......... 30%0ff lalh1 Y/G O,.Ri19 .. , ........•.. lO-/e Off I i i M111t I WeddiiitlMIJ'1 ...... l0'%0H 1411111 M-1 L8cle1 Wotc:lle1 •. l0%0ff 1 ..... 1 A.1ttHolri l'tftn ............ 10% Off O~h et Art .................... lO"tO. Off Al Metil J•Wriry ......•• , •. , ...••• 10% Off ....._. hwffry ... , ................ I°"' Off E.-ri ..... I ,._...., ................ I 0% Off Cioldlrec:t'let,O.-ICtloifl1 .... 10"!.0ff OUR FIRST SALE EVER· REMODELING S ALE A.H. WEINERT PINE JEWEL.~ 32 Fashion Island Newport Beach. Cal. 92660 AT Somt Fantastic Onct-ln-A0 Uff. Timt J.Wtlry Buys. STORE HOURS: 1<>-6:15 Oa1lv lexceo1 Sundavl Mon.ti Fri. 10-9:15 Master Cha~• Bankamericard SO"Y All Sales Final -No L.ay Aways , As seen 1n Seventeen C.,,.'CN • 1 .. 1 ., I• ....... -·-.... . .... ...,, .......... ... Use your Master Ch~r~e or Bank Am!'•tt1rd FASHION ISLAND. Newport Beach; HUNTINGTON CENTER . Hunlinglon Beach; FASHION SQUARE. Santa Ana; SOUTH COAST PLAZA. Costa Mesa. "" .:, •. ' \, < · I QUALICRAFT°' SHOE STORES \ ' Our c.upboard is bares! A grcut summer cac he of thong s to hang out 1n. Cutouts. stripping. buck.le-on str<ips. a toehold on a pJinted wrJp. For fun ways to play footsie. w e're where. sunthings. 5.99 &, 8.99 ., '.'4 • < . ... --'" I .. - .. 3 •> DA11. Y PllOf . -W~dnesdar June 5 1q1. Clubs Choose Off ice .rs, ~cholars, Winners Alu mni Club John ~fcKay. athleti c director and head football coach of the University or Southern Californa will be honored by the N e v.· p o r t Harbor Tro)an Alumni Club at a banquet at 7:30 p.m. Jo~riday, June 7, in the Balboa Bay Club. ABWA Newport Beach Chapter. American Business \Voman's Assoc i a tio n presented scholarships to Cathy Dolan who will attend the University of California, Chico: Debra Dillingham, UC Irvine; Linda Sue Dillingham. Orange Coast College, and Nanette \Villis, University of the Pacific. Dusty Wings hlrs. Rudolf Haassmann is the new president Df Orange County Dusty \\'lngs. Also on the board are the ~fmes. William Kiper, Robert Clarke. Robert Baedeker. Jame s Hilgers and James itoroney. 'The club's annual a"'ard for outs tandi ng achievem ent was presented to P.frs. C. \\'ally Grigg, with special awards going to r-.1rs. L. Douglas hfcBride and :\1rs. Hilgers. WOTM f\frs. Paula Criss was insLalled senior regent of 1he Costa ~1esa Chapter, \Vomen of the ?!loose. Also installed were Dorothy Best. Essie Kaai. s81ly Gisriel. Plfargueri te Lester. Bet t y Kingsbury. Dianna R eese . Patricia ()n!.·ick. A·largaret Bumside and Audrey Jessee. ---_ .e.t.RP HWl!ington Beach C hapler. 857 of the An1er ican Association of · Re ti red Persons. Inc. will spohsor a luncheon Saturday. June 8, at I p.m. in li1urdy Community ~nter, Hwitington Beach. Alumna e A Las Vegas Party has been planned by the Gamma Tau Gamma Cha pter ol Alpha Chi Omega for Saturday, June a. ~Ir. and l.trs. James Weaver l of Costa \lesa will host the 7 p.m. f\'Cfll, 10 ""ilich husbands ha ve been in\•ited. Pan hellenic r\e"·port Harbor Panhellenic \\'iii sponsor an informal ~1olhcr-daughter inforn1alion parly at 2 p.m. Saturda\', June 8, In the Ne\l·porl Btach home of fifrs. Charles Vandervort. Harbor Area coeds plaMing to allend a four-year college or un iversity in the fall are invited to attend . Student s from surroundin_g <'Olleges \\ill model appropriate campus \\'irdrobes. Achievement a.ward y.•inners from 1he four J'\ey.·port-~lesa hii;ih schools \\·ill rect>h·e their scholarship 3\\'ards. and the l\linerva Awa rd \\'inner . Rebecca Jean Bee. "'ill be- honored. New officerr; of the group are the ~rm es . Ted Burgenbauch, president. and Goori?e Coon. Roman .J . DumbroY.'. Leon FT\·. John Zweers, Robert L. KOt"hler. Ceor1te Carev. Arthur Patch and Robert \\"ood. _Tiara St ring Along \\'ilh Us will theme the installation brunch planned by Tiara de Ninos Auxiliarv of Childrcn·s flome Society for Saturday. June 8. The 10 a.m. ,.,·en! will take nla('(' in the Nei.vport Beach Tennis Club. SeatM as 01"PSident will be 1'.frs. Don Ellison. On her board are the l\t mes. Robert Ohland. stephen Vol m. Wil Heibert, Alger Clark. James Creath. George Ri\'adenevra, Ronald !\filler a1-1d ·\\'allace Torkells. Recit al -~-·--· -Chlldren ·s Ho s o i ta I nf Orange County \\'iii benefit from a dance recital Saturdav, June 8. to be presented by Swanson's World of Dan.i::e. The 7:30 p.m. program in Los Ainii;::-os High School. Fountain Vallev. will be titled In a Little Red Schoolhouse. The Fountain Valley studio will sponsor a gymnastlcs program under the direction of Carla Deninger, a former member of the SCATS, at 1 t ' . p.m. Sa1urday. June 15, in the studio. LB Ebell l\trs. James Agnew \\'Ill receive the gavel when the Laguna Beach Ebell Club meets in the Crown House restaurant, Lag una Niguel. Saturday, June 8. Ser\'ing y,·ith her for the 42nd club year \\'ill be the }>•lmes. Arne Youngtn3.n, John L. ~ludge, 1-farro 1'.J. Groettrup and Louis Zitnik . Under P.trs. Oa\'id Young. outgoing president, the club raised $3,000 in scholarship funds for six Laguna Beach High School seniors and contributed funds to a dozen other conununity projecb. SC Juniors llusbands v.·ill be honored \\:hen the So u I h Coast Junior \Vomen's Club meets at 7 p.m. Satu rday , June 8, in the Huntington Beach home of the Gene K.akowskis. • Happy Days Were Hlgh School Days ~·ill theme the evening of fun. The club also . is organiz.ing a publicity drive for the ne w Youth Em.pklyment S e r v I c e of Founta in Valley. Located in the city hall , ii Is open from 1 to 5 p.rn . ?\fond ay through Friday. are Gloria Mct l vaJne , chainnon, one! Oler)ll Jenkin, Ll.sa Newberry, Kolle Bird, and Debbie Kim, b o a r d meni>ers. IMt will gather in lbe Dlaneyland Hotel Saturday, June I. Members ma y write to Ezcels.lor 49, P. O. Box 49', Bellflo we r for more lnlonnatlon. ORT The Fountain v 111 e y Hadessah Community Center will be the Newport Beach Chapter of Jelt!Jlg .Jor ~ C e I e b r ! t_y Hadassah will install office.rs Auction 1 planned by Orange during a Sunday, June 9, County West Olapter o f brunch in the Balboa Bay HB League Women's American ORT for Club. New officers will b e Saturday, June a. Ulllan Kamph 1s the new installed by the Huntington FesUvitles will be&ln at a presldenlt and other offictrs Beach Assistance Le a g ue p.m. wilh a social how'. Aue-are Joy Niefield. Blanche during a brunch in the league tioneer will be Burton Rich-HUTls, Esther Yank, Jl'1ottnce house Thursday, June 6. ardJOn, a disc jockey. Upeoo, E\-elyn Gurin, P.11tzie Mrs_, Louis Lapthome is the J acobs, Claire Meodtlaon and new rresident and on her Reunion Julia Match&. board. are ~~ Mmes. Richard t.lembers of the Excelsior Entertainin& will be Ellie Ludwig, \Vtlliam Arndt, John Union Berliner. Damm, Immanual Matthews,-·===================-Elhel Berdelman and Richard Crouch. Provisional members Y.ill be honored during a luncheon in Huntington Seacliff Country Club Saturday, June I. New officers of ,\ssisteens ~-------------1 USDA CHOICE FRO MT 85~ ..... GROUND ROUND PATIIES USDA _CHOICE SIDE 95~. ..... -PORK LOIN ai CHOPPING BLOCK SPECIAL! ·9 Lbs. Chicllfli---. ---~ 6 Lb,, 7 lone Roa1f l Lb1. lo•ele11 Stew Meot l Lb1. GrOUMI hfl l Lb1. Pork Chops l Lbs. lor M locoit 5 Lbs..,.......,. Jot. Hot DCMJI • $2895 MARANATHA MEAT CO. ISOOAct.MA••·CostoMtta ,,,. __ Mod toC.-~ 546-1196 OpH Se•m Davt. -9 a.tR. to 6 p.m. ........ ..;;. .,.........,~........, While Supplies Last! n.... .Me 6 tin Wod., .Me 12 FRESH SALMON : ....... $1.49 FRESH LING. COD ~~ .. $1.25 FRESH . . ft---:-----tto<-.., ROCltCOD .... -1 ...... 9 FRESH -:-S-A-ND o:tss .... . ..... s 1.39-· COMl'All rtllCH THIHCOMITO ••. THE FIS-H MARKET "C..,.. Ow Lew l'ric.tt.!" 145 l .llOADWAT44'-SJJJ c.. ..... Jim and Sandy Cammer WICJ • for a Las Vqas Gall for members of the My1tict Krewe of Konws at 8 p.m. Saturday, June I. ) New olflctrl will b e Installed by the Orange County C hapter , Wo m e n in Comnwnlcationl, Inc. durtn,g a News CNise aboard the Se mina r Pavilion Queen. A seminar entitled the New As the 1roup sails from the Creative W e d d I n g and Balboa Pavilion at 1 p.m., a Marriage will be preaented at •OUMnet-lunch-wlll-be-served-. -1 p.m. sarurday;--Jun·e·a, In th<f Accepting the gavel from Royal Jnn Anaheim by Jean HaUiburion will be Wayne and 1Kathleen i.:,.'mont. Cirolyn Fisher. Other new Discusse(l by the Lamonta offlcers are Catherine Reade, co-founders of the Earth vice pr e s I d e n t: Bar~ra Chu rch of the Pacific, 'frill be Machado and Gail Sharrocb , writing vows and a ce remony, s e c .re t a r I e a . and Ann choolllng a legally ordaltled. McKinney, treasurtr. person to perform t h e c e rem o ny .and-laying Mysfick Krewe groundwo rk ror a marriage of P.tr. and lttrs. Sherwood King mutual enrichment a nd will open their Fullerton home growth. ========::::::::::~~ Now you can get genuine ~erman Style Salami !hat's made rig ht h~re. . Te9dertY. blended with natu ral spices, . then delicat eliy: smoked and cured in the O ld World manner. Serve Schirmer's Salami and yo ur reputation as a hostess will be even harder to live up to. 5dtinntts the Sociable Sausage In tt.e Delk1testm seclion o4 all ALBERTSONS MARKETS I Dress Yourself • 1n . , ......... , .-..is DAILY PILOT Maybe you think you haven't got a thing to wear. But DAILY PILOT advertising representatives have ideas in all sizes, shapes and colors. We'll tailor a program to fit your needs. And we'll make it fit your budget, too. ' Come in today and browse around the shop that produces the best.,dressed newspaper in town .. It's a fash ion show in pictures and print. And your product, goods or services will be displayed in the mpst respected showtase you eon find. ' • Call 642·4321 -We'll send a Fitter* I I • •Ad Representative l:J PILOT ·AOVERTISER N Spup Hearty Combo Soup 'n sandwich rans \\•ill love th ls hearty, nutri tious _dish th~locs both.__soup _ and sandv,.lch in on!! bowl. It's economical and can be reody lo serve in 30 1ninutes for lunch or SUflJ)l'r. Busy cooks can even 1nake the "soup'1 ahead and gcn1ly re- heat tt. The hot soup is toppr.d with a "sandwich" made of Freneh bread chunks layered with cheese and savory Norway sardines. And the whole dish is slipped under the broiler to lightly brown. Nordic Rarebit is s o col"p"le that all you'll need to1 serve with Ir ls a crisp tos.sed, green salJ>:d and a light lresh /n'il des,.rl. , I'fORDIC RAREBIT 1 in. cu pg chicken broth 1 cup dry white wine L ~love ·garlic ~ ~na Sw iss c h eese , siredded l envelope instant SfUP Nutmeg 1 tablespoon cornstarch. Qisso lved in 1 tablespoon water Four thick slices French ibrea~·cut In large cubes I can (3-\li ounces) Norway sardines. drained 2 tablespoons g r a t e d Parmesan cheese Rub heavy saucepan with garlic clove; R ·at broth-and wine with garlic just to simmering point. D isc a r d garlic; add 1h ot the ·Swiss cheese. • - ~ Cook over IO\I' heat. $tirring consta nll v. until cheese is melted. Gradu ally stir in onion soup. nutmeg and cornstarch· water mi xture. Pour soup Into shallow heal· proof casserole that will fit under broiler. Cover surface of hot sou p with bread cu~s. Sprinkle bread with hair or remaining Swiss cheese and arrange sardines on top. Cover .sardines wi!h remaining Swiss cheese and Parmesan. Slide casserole under broiler until cheese is bubbly and golden. Ladle into 4 hea rty servin gs. Vegetable Treat This Dish A Natural Gardtn Fresh Vegetable Sandwiches go a long way toward providing a child or adult ~·ith the U.S.D.A.'s recommended four servings per day of the fruit and vegetable food group. Start with sprouted wheat bread spread with butter or margarine mixed with minced scallion end curry powder. Add fi ve rows o{ raw and crunchy vegetables shredded carrots, mlnced celery, grated radishes, grated green cab- bage end minced green pep- per. A sprinkling of cnimbled bacon and a dash of garlic salt over the open-faced sandwich will add extra taste appea l. GARDEN FRESD VEGETABLE SANDWICH ES 'l cu p butter or margarine 2 tablespoons m i n c e d scallions ~i teaspoon curry powder I package (10 oun ces) sprouted wheat bread 2 cups grated green cabbage 2 cups shredded carrots t cup grated radishes 2 cups minced celery I cup minced green pepper 8 slices bacon, rrled until crisp and cr um bled _ ( optiona1 ) Garlic salt Jn a bowl mash butler until soft. S!ir In scallions and curry. Sprea d mixture on one skl e or the slices of bread. Arrange rows of vc~etables on each sa ndwich. Sprinkle with crisp bacon and garlic salt. Serve at once as open face· sandwiches. litakes 16 sandwic~es. VarlMlons: Shredded red apple, chopped peaches. sliced banana, sliced strawberries. halved green grapes, !lprinkle with lemon juice and sugar Chooped sea 11 Ions. r a w caullnowerettM, sliced pick· Jes. chopped pimiento. shred· dcd raw beets, spt'lnkte with celery salt. Diced honeyde'' me I o n . diced peeled oran~es, chopped red cabba'te. choor>ed ra\v whltt turnips, sprlnkle with g<irllc snit. • Wtdnndty Junt 5, 1974 Wtdnt~•Y. J~11t S, 1974 •. DAILY PILOT :JS . . , . ~ . . B_ig family sa·ving ·s on our fresh deli_t_ates ·sen treats! Hal£ Gallons 0 111.0 \llO\ lllllllC I: Ill!\' 90°GIN HAlF '1'' t:iAllONS EA. DRY LOOK : CIHEllf 7.oz HAIR SPRAY : Gill El IE ANll-PERSPIRANI • SllVER (51.7~ VAl ) • RfCiU\AR • •0 •" $]09. l fXTRA HOlD • • (Sl.S9 Vo\\Uf ) J EA. : • • No\T _ SCENT ag~ • • POWDER ¥ : • UNSCENTEll EA • 6 . .S-Ol · • • SYLVANIA • POLAROID FILM : : FLASH CUBES CO<OR . , .. ,.. : : (""}3 :99c '"") s4s 9 : , VALUE • \ VAI UE , . ............................... . AVOCADO DIPS JANE ANDERSOt::! 8-0Z. • W/ONION • REGULAR . • W/BACON • HOT READY 59c 10 USE EA. PICKLES · OR KOSHER ICICLES CLAUSSEN 32-0Z. ('"""""') 98 c 37 Ol. EA 7?c • --Wisconsin Natural JACK CHEESE MONTERE Y TYPE 99' Quart Jar MAYONNAISE IN So 0. "'-""""' 9 D P E-LF AM •....... ·:~' .... 4 ' D ENGLISH MUFFINS .•.. :·~·.:-~"·.'''. 39' ~TOUHt~> H •;• 01 f~OI!"• • D SIDE DISHES . _,,, ., .. ._,, .... , • '""'' 51 ' "'C1Juo1~ •v -.~~""'"~.,,..c .. ~:)uu.t U. Fine Quality Meats at Low Prices FRESHtY ~MADE -ECONO -P"' PAK • 3 lBS. OR MORE f0~TEll 8~AN0-15·0Z . PKG. Chuck wagon Patties .•..••••• • Breaklast Tre ats• •Discount le•food • • Steaks to B·B-Q • • Boneless Beel Roasls • llO••lli'>' I 'I ,,., ••• , ••••• ,,~ 1101 ,,.,. •' ''' Rock Cod .. ~'!~~ .. $1.39.1. CID Steats .. ' ' .. .' .. Sl.6811 Clod R11st . '"ou.°'" . 1 ... t• • Slice~ l~on ~;..: ;...;.;~ l.07 P1cific Tnito• .'~-'! .. l l .4911 Fl!Rily S111k1 t?;."t ~~; SI .59l1 Chuck flout ~:~~ .Sl .3311. : SIJIOklt L111ks •10~-;:c.. 98c o~w•r Solt ... .'.~!' .Sl.79ll Alf1 Rfks . '.a:•'. ~·.•.'I .. 45CLI. SltW '"' •1::-~.1!'." .. Sl..491t .• • All V111 Sl~~s~ · ·0• -1111-0979 1.1. Grovp1r S11 llu ••. \Sl.911.1. 7.._ ANll ~·..:iw.:n• llCll I'll ANSI .. •.u.'.":.''.~'.'!.Sl.59 11 • • Can Dogs ..... ~~.. . 11 """"-4" c.•11" • ,, '° c1 • · · • · • • • · J9< • • BvrrilOl .''.".'1• ~)-: c;~ ."'.~· 75c frash Shrimp ..•.•.. Sl .19 11 D·lon• Aa11t . ~~r:i:. 9k l•. 9011i11t l•I . ~!'. ~1~:1•• 11. • •••................. , ...••••...•••.....••...•.••.....•....•...•..•. SLICED: • SWISSl CACHE 5 . ti VAtlEY : 7-0Z. • • ~.~ ..... 4· gc : """'"Ill..'·-• • • • • • • Margarine . ..................................... : • O GALLOSLICEOSALANE ................ Sl.17 D PRECIOUiMOUARELU .... .'!~'.'.".". . .':'. 11.49 • : o OSCAR MAYER BOLOGNA .': .. : .. ; .. :. :~~'. B9c D RAINBOWl MARGARINE ..•.. ~~ .'~~'.' •. : '.'.. 59c ~ : o OSCAR MAYER VARIETY PICK : .. . . 11.26 0 IMPERIAL SOFT . : :• ..... ~~:·:•: :~'-~:~·: •.. 69c : • D OSCAR MAYER BEff BOLOGNA .. • ' •.. .' .... 91c D PARKA! SOFT ... !' .... .':. :·. '.' c: ."?.''.'.' ... Slc .• .•............................... ~ ....••••..•••••...........•...••. 1,;,1'" '•" D Q.T: SUNTAN LOTION : :.":':•.·:~. '1" .. " 85' D KOSHER TOMATOES ......... . D SOLARCAINE ?'.":: .... ·:· ... ·: '1" Fresh Produce Thri£timart Coupons For Guaranteed Savings! • 270 I Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa • 1308 W. Ed inger, Santa Ana • 5858 W.arner, Huntington Beach • 23811 El Toro, El Toro • 13922 Brookhurst, Garden Grove • '• I • • I. • :J DAILY PILOT VJtdntsday Juflt S, 1 q14 HARVEST BLOSSOM GREEN GIANT LISTERINE ANTISEPTIC ENGLISH OFLOUR OPEAS I En,;ched-All-Pu•p••• WhHe . MUFFINS Cream O' the Crop· ''Fresh '' Tender And Sweet Flavor Mr1. Wrlght'•·Heat And Serve Pkgs •• . Bag if L •;tjf lNi1(HlO'flOu1 ,,_$ Cans of 6 PIEDMONT MAYONNAISE Creomy-Smoorh Texture ' ' 'II". :ou .. ·-. · · : Jar ' I ' ,: .. -. l.. , --.../ • Pric•1 l ff•cti.-e in lK1n·1ed Sol•wo~. Champagne • Spor"ling Burgundy oColdDU<k s189 ,._ Maison Blanc -----Fihh Table Wine la Meta (Except Port) -Gollo~ 199 ORANGE JUICE , ~ STC'.:'~~ 5.~ .. $1 ~' on-C.n1 t, :\.' _ centrote :"·:~... J ...... -~.-.,;;., " Ii KLEENEX ,, TISSUES Soft, Smooth And Absorbent Pkgs ••. of ' 200 SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS! :-'•i<•• flfecti>'•f "lic1n1ed ,Sofewoy1. · · ~ Ii.Vodka or Gin "'G . w;""'"•Cup $699 'l'JJ61 Distilled Half SO-Proof Gallon MacNair's Scotch s529 Imported Scotch-86°Proof Fifth FRENCH FRIES ~-5 $ ;;} '-~' · Bel-I t>\f'' air · ~~~ i !" .,· Poto to., .... . ' ..... . ... '·· : ... c~~!M SANDWICH - luce•ne 5 I C ,., A Tasty Treat! 1, Poc k of 6 ~.-; 95' French Green Beans ~~ •:;;:59' 3 ~\:: s1 Mixed Vegetables 801·•;" .... 47' Winter M1• ""•· .. .. .. U.S. No .. 1 White Rose 0CORN Tender, Sweet, Golden Ears. Ideal to Boil or Roast ( 1 0 ears 89') c Ear Fresh Mangoes Juice Oranges Hoyden Vo•i••y 3 9 ( Tropical Fruit each Valendo 8 -tb'.·$1 09 Variety , lat SAFEWAY QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRICES! FRESH FRYERS SKIN.LESS FRANKS Sterling-Flavorful & Juicy c I-lb. ~·smok-A-Roma" Brand ·· . Savory-Smoked In Flavor! ~p!h.!l~od~~~~dc., 1b$1 l 9 ~!',~!~.~~.~~.~~! •·••···•~I 39-f.~!.~.~j~,f.~!,~ ..... n.!.l 29 !~P!!,!1,!?.!t~l~M;~~!i3 49 ~P!!!~~~.~ .. ;.1cu1 .. ! 129 -~~~~!~.!~ .. ftl5..3t~ s3 99 PORK SAUSAGE fa•m.,John 1-lb. 79c R,egular or Hot Roll BEEF SAUSAGE McCoy's Beef J.fb. 69C Regular or Hot Roll LUCERllE CONCENTRATED MILK ftj I = ..... __." ---'"-..---' 1 Quart -3 Quarts o! Carton -Whole Milk l lKlfM c ... c"'trwte4 Milli IJ MW, rMre ..... e't'•, • p•I nl•. S.•• I' a 1/11•n lty .. 1aln1 • 1h.,.IH wlth 2 ,.,,, el <.W ta, water. A n ..... , t• ,.,.e "'"'' " pw f.mlly1 mini Wiii. la)oy".oMI· al1e enj.y tfte lft'httt! IN OUR DAIRY CASE ... !~!hS.~~!.~!~!t~, .. ~~:.~ 189 Captain's Choice Fishsticks :;; 59' Perch Fillets o.1;~~~!0!:d~~10 ... 1~.99t . Oscar Mayer Bacon ..... :::st 09 Danola Cooked Ham ~... ::;69 c Beef Plate':".' 59c (Bfff Chuck Short Ribs lb, 99') .• lb. . Dial Very Dry A Ant;. 5 .• ,,,,( JillL. Perspirant Con Aqua Net Hair 1J-oz.56c Spray Can Safeway Toothbrushes \ '. \'f Butter Alka-Seltzer Tablets '.))' •• 58* .... \'.~\i' shodyl••• 1.1b.75c COLLECT ASET .... \';;";,,. Goode "AA" Ctn, STAINLESS FLATWARE 4 -TH1rw11Ks OFFlr - Lucerne Salads " 4 5c SALAD ""'"M' · 'l '"''cho•• ldeol For Outdoo, Cookout1 Ctn. • 'Ill THI WllOHT 49 • Ill THI "'"" FORK /; , I TWO OISTINCTIVI " Egg Sllbstltute h • ..... ·--~ "· 89* ' "'"'"' ' 1 ...... "''""°"'"' i.u uch SAFEWAY GOOD BUYS' Tender Vittles :~;:~~ol11 12°01. 4 5 ( • Cat Food Pkg. WHITE MAGIC DETERGENT Heavy Duty 69 ~ laundry · ~ Product 49•0 t. Pkg . ~~~~~~n.~!~.'.ss.1.m; 4 5c • Oli¥• e Pickl• & Pimi.,,10 6-.i.f'irt. Cure 81 Hamsa'!~;.~'.$ J89 Fully Cook•d· 4 to S·lb1 lb. Pure Buffalo Steaks''<'::!"':..; 75* Smoked Pork Chops C.::;;" .... s1 39 McCoy's Chili Meat :.'!79' Swift Ham Patties ;;:s1 59 !~:-,~.!!.!!. ~~-°-~ ...... lbs 179 FRESH BAKERY BUYS ' BARBECUE . BUNS .r-~-c or Hot • Dog Buns Mrs. Wright's Pac~age of 8 @Bread s~~=~~~~::: '.:-49t @Mrs. Wright's Donuts ::t-45' SAFEWAY MONEY-SAVERS ii Baby. Diapers ... k $149 Truly fine Disposable Daytime of 30 !.~!,!!~!. ,!!~e '=.'. ,.,7 9c !!~~~!. !~~!r !t~!!sft8C Tomato Catsup ·-··-"::"·38' Nature Valley Granola ·~·79' Pork & Beans "···-· >t::·51' look for these 11gs: They mark tempor1ry extra uvlngs 111 over the store. Stock upl Fresh C-untaloupesA~;~::cylbl 9c Crisp Carrots I Yellow Onions Grapefruit -~4 Peanut Butler ~·t 3 ... 49c u.s...... 1 Oc whit•M• .. h· a.1b.79c ~::!!~::... •. h 3-•b $159 -':":· ='='~ ... -=--:-:--~-'".""'""."""~·••..;••_,1il•:_lt..,. . .,.__,...-':;,":;,dl.;;,•";.__ .. .:_• -~ . Ideal Spreod Jor ·-Te -..... .... , .... , IHwtlt• -. .... 1f74 .. LM AllteMt, ,_._' ....... ~ (11 .... C......) · • 24, MOflOr'Ch lay Pino, S°""' Log.ta • Saitta Ano ,._eewey at Lo Pai. Ml11loft YJeio • 1000 loyside Dr., N•wporl Beoch • 6l6 H. Coost Hlqhwor. L09WM Beach • Wil.on & Folr,lew, Costa M11a • 211 E. 17th Stretf, Costa Me'o • 801 E. El Camino R•al, Son Clement•• 144 I 7 Culver Or. ol Walnvt, lr•lne 1 • 2402 Mor~rito Dr. Parkway ot Trabuco • J;J PJLOT·ADV ERTJS(R S Wtdnt$day J11nt 5, iq74 DAILY PltDT 35 YOU AL ~YS SAVEi WITH STATER BROS. LOW·LOW PRICES . IANNATTAN SLICED LUNCHEON \ MEATS COIMllNA !ION · ~NOWICH l'l(.~Ll & 1'1lilttNl0 OUVl tut OR cono ~ALAMI lltl 0« RIO t0t.0CN"-" Ot.llCH-HUO CHtUl 5-0Z. 33' PIGS. Hf.f.T & UT PERCH . SOlE. coo age IEIF BREADED FISH ., .. -.............. LIVER IJUOGfOAO ••7 SI.ICED • 59$ SKINNED COQKED HAM ........... ,,.o, 69, OSCAR MAHI $189 ~· ;:;..;;_;'~'·---=:;.;::;,;:: HAM STEAKS ........ .. . "· OSCAR M.f.Yl~ • 12.oz. s119 ITATIR BIOS. VARIETY MONEY BACK GUARANTH . ROUND DR SQUARE............ ON QUALITY MEATS OSCAA MAY[ll s107 " SLICED BACON lVEIY,IECIOF#EAT li .................... LB. IJMCONOITIONA'1Y OUAUNHIO OSC.41 MAYER SLICED $107 TO,llAW: YOU •.. 01 YOUll MONEY WAFER BACON Will IE CHlEIFUll y llfUNO(D .............. 12.0L '-------~ """"""'"""°""'"'"' 95 C FARMER JOHN VALUES 7·BONE ROAST ..... _.... SLIUD BACON ' iouiJ"ii°"io'NE ROAST -I.I. 85 c POLISH SAUSAGE • """"""'"''"'"'"' $ J 39 WIENERS 1---•-.SIEWING-MEAI . u.--~-•. _79 "' NISHftOZlN 99c YOUR 9 • TURBOT Fl.LLET .................. CHOICE . LB --. . $1" . HALIBUT STEAKS ........... PORK LINKS ~:;~ ············'·°'.39' iiicFT 7.DuiNGNER ____ 26 c • • . GRAPEFRUIT JUICE~_,.-51. c CSUC1UMBE.R0 UCHIP$ __ 83 c ciiiPiiLL SOUP . 66 c CLOfiET1 z 1CLEANSER. ____ 1 9 c_ CON1FiADET 24NAPKINS __ ,_ 7 8 c o SHELL $163 NO PEST STRIP -EACH SOFT PARKAY MARGARINE ........... ll 59' GALA PAPER TOWELS :-:~~ ........ -. 49' ~eattJt & '8~Au&. ~ 7·UP CANS 612-0L 99c ltGULJ.1 ' SMAit fill SURE ALKA SCHICK DEODORANT SELTZER BLADES M&MCANDY .......... iJAClltAGI Of 6 -•IU • ,..OS J "\61.1111•~ 67c ............ ......... ...,, (()ooo.Q ......... 1NC .. ,.o<:. ... l•THON ~,. ... 79' ·-:.·:.°' 83 c ·-· 59' llfO"IHTIO ··~ -· ....... PEPIOOENT UL~·llN 5000 PREPAUnON·H TOOTHPASTE DIODOUNT OINTMENT ·~~· 63' .~93' ··-· •111 ... •lllN MllS IRIAK SINl·AID VITAMINS HAIA SPRAY TABLITI N• ....... .C: -·(; No!\OIWI HIO+u ......... ,°"""" •• ...,, .. <. KOTEX ""°"""'' 58' .. « ... 69' ... ·~;.·$1 99 "''" . ""'"' 46 c or" OLD ENGLISH LYSOL • FURNITURE DEODOllZINO CLEANER • ~ec~~~~Ol CAN ... -........ 7 9 c 40~UNC[ $1 11 GROUND BEEF 6-TH RIB & 7·TH ROAST FRESH e DELICIOUS ANY SIZE PACKAGE BEEF e STATER BROS. CERTIFIED e GUARANTEED c s 19 POUND l·STTMIUS.TMlll LI.SIA! BEEF • BLADE CUT STATER BROS. CERTIFIED c HAM SLICES ROASTING CHICKEN $ H U e IONlllSS SHOUl.Dlll s 1 39 ROLLED ROAST .. ,-............ . IHf e ST Alli MOS. Cf.TlfllO • GUAIANlllO 8 9 C CHUCK STEAK ........................ . Iliff • SlotOUlD(I CUT • TENOEI $1 39 FAMILY STEAK ................... La. llEf •SlAlllllOS.C.UTIFltO e GUAliNllfD $139 BEEf_ RIB STEAK .............. . IM Er •llll.CuT •GUAIANTt(D $1 59 CLUB STEAKS ................. . io00UNi>'uiiK ION·( • .-" LI. $1 27 MANDARIN ORANGES ~~~;< ... , 27' MUSHROOMS ::t:f:" •• , 29' BERTOLLI OLIVE OIL ____ ,,., '1.65 BERTOLLI OLIVE OIL --· ,w, '2.17 ELBO·RONI ::·~~~--~-3u.89' STEERO INSTANT BEEF •.... ,,,, ... 45' LO-CAL DRESSING :~"""'--·'°' 33' LO·CAL 1000 IS. 55c DRESSING KRAn,...,L RAGU . .IOE SAUCE 14.S·OUNCl ICED TEA MIX UPTON 12..0UNCl KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP --""' '1.23 " CHUNK TUNA ~~--_ . ;::: 45' JAN·U·WINE SOY SAUCE __ W> 29' t DINTY MOORE $1 23 Bllf STIW ...... _.,...,,_ JAN·U·WINE NOODLES _,,., 39' TERIYAKI SAUCE ,~, ... ____ ""' 55' SWEET & SOUR ~'.'."·-···--···"•' 59' JAN·U·WINE DINNERS .,,, .,., '1.17 FIDDLE FADDLE ... __ ,., 38' LIPTON BLACK TEA _ , ;, '1.65 BUTTERNUT COFFEE _,,. '1.07 TASTERS CHOICE ~'""""'""·-•-OL '1.45 KNOX FLAVORED 33c FRUIT ROLU--·--·-· , . .,. SAFFOLA MARGARINE " 57' KRAFT AMERICAN SINGLES .. ""' 99' · BISCUITS ~~;.:.,""" _. -'"' 15' VITA PAKT 75c ORANGI JUICE .-"""" r ' ., " ' \'.' 3 LBS. CENTER CUT SMOKED GRADE-A POPPY BRAND FRESH FROZEN 69 c POUND LB • llU •U ... ,,.,,o, Cflltf•tD•GU ....... NTUO rs 1 27 RUMP ROASTaoNE-IN ....... IUf • GUAIAHIHD • YOUI CHOICE $1 69 SIRLOIN TIP STEAK OR ...... LI. lllf e ST•tll MOS Cll llflU)e GUAIAHfllD $1 89 CUBE STEAKS .......................... . lllf •WILL Tll-lD e ttNOll e GUAIAN1tl0 $1 83 T·BONE STEAK .................... . PORTERHOUSE0sTEAK ..... LI. 51"89 _ . llU e STATll llOS. (ll11fltDe GUAIAHTl[0 •209 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK .......... LI. ·-· 45' ll'"OS"lllll• s1• SPAGHETTI DINNER •• CHEESE PIZZA ___ . _ ,,... · ' '•..ootl -· 43' Jl,NOS "lnt!A '1 n BUMS AND FRANKS ... •• SAUSAGE PIZZA-.. ,.0 , MOS lflQ••S .. !•DIO s31s l!MIT 9"' FANTAIL SHRIMP ~ _ ,.~, FISH STICKS·--·---·"'"' if. " • ..,..r """Ifs 111>Dfo gn. "'°"'°"' •S!>l:»ltO '!IOt YUL PlnlES ...... ,,wi ;;i CRUii PIES .. • ... •~.JG w .... 1s1 1101 sh 26C. ,.JNU11 .... c 17, ORANGE JUICE.-..... -·"'' LIMEADE . -·--.. "'" JlfNOS l2.,AK $113 •' CHEESE Pl.Z.ZA ..... __ ........... .'.~;~~: , "'~ 80 BREAD DOUGH _ .............. J."i'.'o~.~ c "-UNI JfMIMA s s c FRENCH TOAST ................... -.... ~;~~: AUN! JlMIMA s 7 c CINNAMON SWIRL ............ ~.~.~~: VINE RIPE c LB. NABISCO OREOS .... .. _ _ ... o, 75' LOMA LINDA PROTEENA ,.., '1.09 LOMA LINDA DINNER CUTS ... , '1.09 1 LARGE sw1n YlllOW MIAT JERGINI ~::: 118' •ATM SOAP ··M·--• .. •M• ':.~~ SOF·SPREAD IMPERIAL :'.:~.':i~'-·· 61' WOOLITE LIQUID .. . --"'"' '1.94 SCOURING CLEANSER ... ,., ""' 17' PINE .. SOL ~:.:00..cll ..... •~-____ ,,.or 4' ~~!~HES ............................................ La .. I CORN EXTIA FANCY ··-···••• ..... 3 22 9 c SMAU FANCY WASHINGTON · . uAPPLES lltc1ous ....... _. __ 31.99c .S. NO. I SWEET TUNA CAT FOOD ,.,~··· -•• ,-J.7q' ~ DIXIE PLATES \;•;:.;;_ ,,,93·~z=~==~ I • ' J .. . "\ .. ' ... " " . ... . . " .. Wtdneosday Jur1e 5, 1974 • .. • • • . ' .. ' I. • ... ' • .., tt. • "' -Bread Repla cement . Scones Served With this easy, thrifty recipe \'OU can bake a fu ll dozen fnuffin·scones made especially good "'Ith cannro crushed pineapple. Bake these tender mini· breads plai n or Yl'ith a spicy orange or chttse topping. Serve them piping hot in place of bread for a nice change. or v.iRl a cool springtime salad. Tuck them into lunchboxes and bro\\'n bags. " pine~pple. Stir into flour mixture, mixing witil all .of flour is moistened. Spoon into 12 greased 2 1 ~· inch muffin pans. Bake in 400 degree oven about 15 minutes. until nicelv brOY.'ned. • • \Vhile muffins bake, prepare Orange Cinnamon ·Topping. Let muffins eool in pans about 5 minutes, then turn out and dip tops firs t Jn .::!lied butter. .then i n orange-cinnamon sugar. Orange-Cinnamoo Topping: PJNEAPPLI!: !\I U F F I N • J\lelt 3 tablespoons butter and SCONES keep warm. ~lix together 3 'fted· ail pu,,,.,.-tablesoooouY&a<....UWlll>Qil .• fl cups 1 • grated orange peel and · 1fl our teaspoon cinnamon. · I tablespoon sugar Cheese Variation: -em i I 4 te.aspoons b.iking )>01\'der Orange Cinn amon Topping. I teaspoon salt Before baking. sprink le each 1:1 cup butter or margarine n1uffin \vith ~:teaspoon grated 2 large eggs, Jigh1ly beaten or shredded Parmesan cheese. 1 61.1 ounce can crushed pineapple Orange Cinna.inon Topping Resift flour "'ilh sugar, baking powder and salt. Cut in butter until mixture reSembles coa rse meal. Scone Variation : Sp r ead batter in a greased 8·inch round cake pan. Brush top wi th I tablespoon milk. and sprinkle wi :h I tablespoon SU· ga r. Bake at 425 degrees for 25 minutes, until browned. Cut into wedges and serve "'arm Combine eggs i!1ltl undra ined "'ith butter. Favorite Revised Cereal Baked New version of an old favorite. sugar; remove from heat: cool 5 minutes. Beat in eggs and vanilla. SAUCEPAN BU'ITER ~CH BARS Thoroughly stir toget her the flour, baking powder and salt; add to butter mixture in saucepan: stir until blended. 1, cup butter or marga rine 1~4 cups packed light brov.'11 Stir in cereal. Tum it into a greased 13 by 9 by 2 Inch baking pan. sugar 2 eggs JI~ teaspoons vanilla Bake in a preheated 350 degree oven until a cake tester inserted in center comes out clean -25 to 30 minute~. C.ool CUI into 32 bars. I cup Wlsifted flour. st_ir to aerate before measurmg 2 teaspoons baking po"·der ~~ teaspoon salt 2 cups JOO percent natural ready·~at cereal In a large saucepan over low heat, melt the butter; stir in The cereal called for is a mixture of rolled oats. brov.'Jl sugar, whole v.•heat. almonds, coconut and honey .) . , PERMA-STOR JUNE STORAGE SPECIALS • ••• Hard Red Winter WHEAT 100 lb . $12.50 ••• STORAGE CANS 5·G al. Size 3 f or $4.50 ,\lake ro11 r 1)\\'n btt•:u.l in OUR i\t 1tl and i\hx. Only IS minu1c:.;. SEE 1-10\\' E1\SY IT I~!!! (ZSc per luJf). (Unng ~our"'' n hrl·ad p.•ns) PEKMA • STOR FOODS 2960 If arbor Blvd . Costa Mc$a, California (7 14 ) 556·7290 (Open 10·6 Mon.· Sat.) . ' "' I I I • COP'l'RIGHT . 1974 \ FRESH • CANTALOUPE ~ '. • CALIFORNIA . ORANGES~ *· • . . -· . . , Mini-breads * are filled with crushed pineapple and have texture between , muffin and r sc:ane . ......... ; .. DELANEY BROS. RECIP ~! Remodeling Specials - 1 Pinch of spring clean ing , odd fresh and tend er loving core, mix well with friendly o~d helpful customer service and serve for your pleasure and enjoyment. FRESH PETRA LE SOLE "'I· 2.29 lb. CUBED BEEF STEAK ?*M~ MAllCET BASKET BURGER-PRO • MusH-. 88¢ IOu'iD ,,~.. 79¢ ROOMS .. • • • • • ... <AKE •••. .'."! •••• 1·0¢ ........ --..... Al¢ :t..:::" • •" •.. I =~r:.,:~T"' •'•IA~ PITTED ,..... 49¢ EGGO . !l! ,, .. , 4 9¢ DATES •••• ~'!..... WAFFLES.'!~ •.•• 3 t,1 Wlllll llOflOlll !l! 19" """ : f ORANGE ,.... y MANGOES . .. • • JUICE ...... \~". ... ,....... 39" ... ,_ !l! 39" CHILI y FROZEN ,.... y PEPPERS •••• "· TOPPING •• \'~• •• ~ / I J. 'ii.'•iifiNA!l!l 7¢ JERSEYMAID 74¢ PENS .......... IA. 1un11 ...... '::.~ lltNWIYI llAP,PY ll'S GSA JllSITMA• ....... STYll59;. PANTY !l! 'I' conAGE ..... 'I' HOSE ..••.•••• '"• CHEESE .•.• n-. .. cos·sAcK ~ $Q99 C:'iilisiFooD !l!99¢ 1~, Hlll~RES1 "·G:~ lARCi; VODKA .. S?.:°.... SINGLES •••• •:. ... • , u.:::~~:~:E-~J~-~~~~ ~~ 'l iiiii:!~i~:-.45* b .E:=;~:~~~J I i: .... ,, ... 72~ ~------------------------·- THIS COUPON WORTH $2.00 OFF tllepr1cflot ' Austria email 3"12 QT. COVERED CASSEROLE St."PRICE 'YtlU $2~COllPON VALUE • PAY $1.M WITHCOUPON 12..01. CAllS , ·-... ·•l... -........... "'"'". _, ... ,_ •111 ....... ,.. .... , •-'"-...... __ l_!_,_ $111 _,_kl.,.. $ ~-·..--·-·· .. •• ,,. t..m:: frlHwlt ••• .,. .......... 62• ........... ''"" ......... $' .07 , ................... ' , .......... "-· ....... so• ,,.. .. , ........... M.47' , ....... -............ H•M• • c.tt .................... _M,, 3.27 ... ..., ................................ • • I. • ' . . . ... . . Use Noodle, Nuts Mushrooms Menu ·Fancied or f cans (6 to 8 ounces each) sliced mushrooms I I~ cups butter or n1argarine, divided Neighbors black pepper. Cook and stir lilt.ii thickened. Stir i n parsley, sherry and reser.ved Jauteed mushrooins. of each. Yield: 12 portions. BLUE CREESE STUFFED P.1USHR00~1S sou~. stews, etc.) In a medium bowl beat together cream and blue cheeses until well-blended. • • Wrdn~sday, June 5, 1974 DAILY PI LOT 3 ' • • I • As gas prices rise and people stay home 1n o re , they're boconllng m o r c ncighbot'ly. "Block p.i1rlies'' are the lhihg. Ncighhorh~JOtl ramilies mccl ul one family 's llome, -bring potluck dishes 1 u cup minced scallions 1,y cup all-purpose flour I quart milk fresh mushrooms or drain c;i.nned mushroom.I. Jn a large skillet melt I/, cup of the butter; ndd half of the 1nushrooms; 11autc u n t 11 golden, about 5 minutes; set aside. Gently blend Jn salmon ahd eggs ; hea t until hot; set aside and keep 'il'arn1 , Cook noodles as package label directs; drain. Stir in remaining 1h. cup butter: 3 teaspoons of the salt and 11~ teaspoon of the black pepper: stir W1til butler is n1elted. I po u n d medium·sized mushroo1ns, (about 201 I package (8 ounce) cream cheese, softened Sfir in chopped walnuts, parsley and \\lorcestershlre ' 1, ~ .... 'llll'it": sauce. Spoon about 1 rounded I I ' I J. • and ho1nc11Jade Ice crearn. Good talk, bJch football and taped music supply the run. So does a nieal~in·a-dish as mushroom-rich 11nd tempting 1.1s Mushl'l?J>m and Salnlon Filled Nood~ Rings. J\IUSllR00.'1 AND SAL!\10N f'ILLEO NOOOLI!: RINGS 2 pounds fresh mushrooms •EllMADE 01 COUNTRY CLUI NED HAM ~: 99 ~ sir GRADE AA .,;E EGGS ~ ~ 4 teaspoon$ salt, divided Vi leaepooo ground black pepper, divided ~! cup chopped parsley 1'1 cup dry sherry (optional) 2 cans ( l pound eachJ salmon, flaked 6 hard~ked eggs, sliced 2 pounds-mel!lum w!Qtb egg noodles Rinse, pat dry and slice • Repeat using I/, cup btlt.ter and remaining muShrooms. In a large saucepan melt '"' .cup of butter and re main i ng mushrooms. In a I a r g e saucepan melt 1,z cup of the butter; add scallions; saute until tender, about 2 minutes. Add Oour; cook and ~tir for 2 minutes. · "Blend in milk , 1 teaspoon ol the salt and ~~ teaspoon o( the Spoon noodles into 2 v:cll- buttered 6 to 61,z cup ring molds, pressing n o o d I t: s lightly. Unmold onto a large heat.ed platter . Spoon mushroom mixture into center ' JELL·O '"'L 'I' 7 ·IONE !fr y Allfl. flAYOOl ii! 10;. IUF <•UC• <EOTll CIT 79" GELATIN .. ~~... ROAST ........ 11. i'A1 RIECUE .'!!. 37¢ jliA'MY DEAN 79¢ SAUCE •••••• !~. SAUSAGE •• .':O~f JA•'"--lllf ,_ •••99;. ,_, ... lllH• n11 ''""'" ~]39 or CHICKEN •::.,L y BEEF y CHOW MEIN.~ ROAST ............. . HEINZ •~L ·47* in;" ~ *279 KETCHUP .. !~L,.... TENDERLOIN."'· All 320·01. ~4 65 V.!~~ =~~~~:'"'· 89" .... r Meat or Beef 'I' DETERGENT....... BOLOGNA.~·;:~ Niil'iis 1,_., ·21~ ::s.:.:~::. ·~ ... L59¢ CORN •••• ~~· ••••• , IHf Franks •••• "''· lllCM .. IT SYIAlllll 9" BABY ,.,.,, ~ y FOOD ••• '!~ ... ~ ..... . WILllM'I Cllflntl MfAT 01 Uf499 IOLfftu., SH•, tUYf .. - PK•LI LIAf H MAC. & CMllll COLD CUTS. ~::... · PA.-IYI ~ 72 J. <LAtsll• W-111 ICKLI 79" LIQUID ,,,.L y KOSHER ., · y DETERGENT .'!\. PICKLES ..... !~~. nrs UHlAI 12* •n•··-fHlU iii! 79* ~==D .:·~~: .. ~.. :1\l~:S~~~~~ .. TRASH ,.,,, y CATFISH · !i y JMAl,ll.. ~ 99" flll·--l.. 89" BAGS ... ~:...... FILLETS ......... . ~a cup blue cheese, crumbled teaspoon of cheese mixture Into cu.ch mushroom cap; spread smooth. ¥.i cup chopped walnuts Top Vlilh walnut halves. Serve cold. For hot stuffed i:, cup chopped parsley mushrooms. brush outside of I tea.spoons Worcestershire filled mushroom caps with oil ; sauce place on a baking pan; bake in About 20 walnut halves a preheated moderate oven Rinse, pat dry and remove-(350 degrees F.) for 1% stems from mus hrooms: set minutes or until hot. Yield : capis aside {save stems ·for about 20 stuffed mushrooms. • " -,.;.__• PIKES 1rNmYI wn .... s T•Olll MS., JIM II, lt74 OHKIAl 11.s.1.•. JOOI n._. ., __ .. tit _ .. _ ............. _, oo•--'••- ~,~cf' LEAN TENDEI IONELESS IEEF CUBE STEAK * 59 . il! ' , 11·24-LIS. .,._.. -_,~-""'"....... -•-M•H-•••IM••••-· _ .. •"*'·''"'· 45' •• ..,._ ...... ..,., ... ,, .. 65 -..... • .-$1 s• ,--, ... ·* -,,. ,-:-.. -, , .. < ···h·"' ,.. ::~ u .. 9" .. -.2•· ........................ ~ ....... fl.$1 .7t c •• -......................................... l•· ''"" ..................... • .... '" 111 ............... ""'"""""' • ·-•.. • • -........... ,· n t W" "'""""'"""' - r ... .. . ( • .... Noodle ,;ng /;lied with fish and mushrooms makes satisfying fare. -Microwave Gptional--- There's no question that just pieces in the corners and about the most efficient user smaller pieces in the center. of energy is one of the most Combine remainin~ ingre- modem of appliances, the dicnts; pour over chickP.n. ~licro\!1ave Oven: C o o k microv.·ave or electronic O\'en. uncovered ror 5 minutes, tum Ir you ha\"e one. you are and baste. Cook for 11·14 already a\\"ilrc of i t s minutes longer. Let stand 3 \·erS<1tility and COn \'tnienL-c. n1inu1es l:..:forc scrt·ing. ~I an \', if no l nt o s I · Con\'en tional O\en: Bake converitional recipes can be unCO\'ered. at -100 degrees r . adapted successfully for use in for 30 minutes. Tun1 c_hicken the micro'll'ave oven. and continue baking for 30 Take ~these de/icK>us and 111inutes or until fork fender. si1nple' recipes. for example. Baste \\'ili1 pan drippings once They are equally delicious or t\l.·icc. Sen'es 4. cooked by microwave energy or the COO\'entional gas or LE!\ION POTAO STICKS electric range. 2 teaspoons fresh grated F'rcsh lemon is the key lo !cn100 peel the flav::ir, and ease of 2 teaspoons fresh squeezed preparatio;1 is the key to le1non juice greater s11mn1er leisure. 2 teaspocns butter or niargarine, melted . SLl!\1 n !\t BAKED CHICKEN J large pota toes, quartered 4 chicken l~s (drum J table s poons grated stic~sJ Parr~~~an cheese 2 chicken breasts, split into 11 !cas poon pap rika hal \'e:i c:ratc peel and set aside. t teaspoon garlic salt Coni binc lemon juice and 2 teaspoons paprika butter. Brush on cut surface of potatoes. Combine lemon 11': teaspoon ""'hole oregano, peel. chee!>e and paprika. crushed ' SpnnkJe over potatoes. '.~ teaspoon fresh grated 1\11cro"'a\·e Oven: Place in len1on peel shallow glass baking d i s h . ~3 cup fresh squeezed Cook in micrm,·ave oven for lenlOII juice approx imately 12 minutes. Let \i cup .,.,.~lter sit 2 minutes before serving . Season chicken pieces \\i th Serve with lemon "'edges. garlic salt, rubbing .,.,·ell into Conventiona l Ove n: Place on the nesh. Sprinkle with cookie sheet . Bake at 400 paprika. degrees F. for 3D to 35 miqutes Place in shallo\1' baking pan. or until easi ly pierced with a (gla ss for n1icroll'avc 1 skin fork. Serve \Vilh lemon \\•edges side down, placing larger in 6 po rtions. =::::::::=::;;:;::;;;;;::;;:::::=:::::-- An inexpen ~ive, ca~y·lo·fix n1e:il1 irnt · friend. Serve \vit h s.1uerkr.1u1 or chili beans for a meal your family \Viii lov1'. It's Schirmer':, delicious Bee( Kna(k\vLir~I \vilh J delicate touch of garlic 1h,1t gives a flavor boost to the mild . frankfur.tcr se asonings. Al re.irly coo~cd - just l1cJt ,1 nd serve. 5chirmers the Sociable Sausage THRIFTIMART MARKETS t \ ' 1 ~3~8'--DA_IL=Y_P=ll~OT~~~~~~~W=•d="~=d~:'.....:Ju="='~·~l9::_:74 Fat Facts , Fads By BARBARA GIBBOf\'S Have yo u s1vilched fl'om butter to n1argarine to "save ca lories?" Do you buy "non-.dairy" ('rca1ner to cut your cholesterol .eount? Do you think a high-fat diet can help you lose weight, 1nake your hair shiny or keep you v.•ann in a fuel pinch? You need the "fat Facts!'' FAT FACT I: Buller is NOT less fauening than margarine. Nor does "com oil'' have son1e n1 i r a c ulous calorie-saving advantage over other salad oils. !\1ost fats have coinparable calorie counts: butter and margarine are 100 calories a tablespoon. All salad oils are between 115 and 125 calories a tablespoon. Lard and solid shortening arc about 115 calories. FAT FACT 2: Diet margarine is half the calories because it's half the fat. In fact, ifs half water. You can THE SLIM GOURMET n1ake your 01\'n ' ' d i e t n1argarine" or "diet butter" by whipping it with equal parts ice water. FAT FACT 3: "1\"o butterrat" on the label doesn't necessarily mean a fat.rree product. Frozen w h i p p e d • cream . substitutes. spray-on I o p p 1 n g s , thaw-and-pour creamers, dried c o ff ee lighteners, sour dressings and mock sour creams frequentl y contain vegeta ble oil in place of butler rat and the caloric count may be comparable. FAT FACT 4: 'I'hc vegetable oil in some non-butterfat products is highly-saturated coconut oil . chosen for its long she lf life. But coconut oil is a poor choice for anyone on a low-cholesterol diet. If you're on a special diet be sure that the products you buy provide full nutrilional labeling. Any manufacturer whose pnxluct is low-calorie or low-fat won't be afraid to put the full facts on the label. FAT FACT 5: "96 percent fat-free" on the label doesn 't necessarily mean a product is non-fattening. Other factors may boost the ca lorie coont. Sugared-up fruit yogurt, for example, is double the calories of plain unsweetened yogurt. Look for the calorie count on the label of any product that tries to imply it's calorie-wise. FAT FACT 6: Greasy foods won't keep you warm during a fuel pinch. One h u n d red calories worth of fat 1von 't keep you any warmer than 100 calories 1vorlh of protein or carbohyd rate. The only fat that keeps you wann is your O\\'TI personal body f a t . Wouldn't you rather put on a sweater? FAT FACT 7: Greasy foods won't give you shiny hair or a supple skin . Your complexion and coiffeur probably will be better helped by low-fat foods such as fresh fruits and vegetables which pro v i de vitamins. minerals • . . and regularity. FAT FACT I: Simply adding extra oils to your diet won 't lower youf cholestero l count ..• unless It replaces animal fats (butter, meat fat, dairy cream, fatty cheese, etc.) FAT .~ACT 9: Edling fat y:on"t make you thin, despite the promise of some fad diets . . . unless you somehow manage to cut calories at the same time. Ounce-far-ou nce; fat has 2~~ times the cnlories of any other food basic. fo~AT FACT 10: Everybody needs a minimwn of fat in tticir dally diet to help the absorption of vitamins. so a totally fat-f~ diet would be unhealthy . . , and almost in1pos.'!.ible. because fat goes Mnd In hand with almost all animal protein foods. which we also need to cat every day. FAT FACT 11 : Few America ns nl.'Cd to concern lhemseh•es nbout ge t t Ing enoug h fat in U1eir diets. Their real concern Is just the opposite . . . too n1uch fat. The average An1cricnn diet is 40 percent fat •.. too much. • • Enriched AOIM' _, ....... .- FRESH MED.IUM GRADE "AA" EGGS PUREX DOZEN BLEACH FULL GALLON BOLD DETERGENT GIANT SIZE AUNT JANE PICKLE STICKS • iKOSHER DILL ' • GARLIC DILLS• POLISH DILLS SPRINGFIELD SALAD OIL GINGHAM PEAS FOREMOST ' • ' .. 24 FL. OZ. BOTILE #303 CAN COTT AGE CHEESE PINT CARTON YU BAN COFFEE I LB. CAN $1.15 HORMEL SP AM SPREAD1 GOLD MEDAL ALL PURPOSE FLOUR 3 LB. CAN ' . ' JOZ. CAN 5 LB. BAG FRYING 43~ BEEF ROAST CHICKEN BARM BONELESS ROLLED HAMS USDA CHOICE BONELESS USDA CHOICE $149 CHUCK LB. STEAKS USDA CHOICE 55c ( HEY KIDS!! RETURH·A·CART >' -TO BARGAIN BASKET ., ~ RETURN I SHOPPING CART-GET A HICKEL RETURN 15 SHOPPING CARTS • GET ONE BUCK PLUS A PICKLE CARTS OH SHOPPING CENTER LOT DON'T COUH U.S. NO. I WHITE ROSE ·' ·~POT A TOES 5 cl!~0 59c NEW CROP ITALIAN SWEET RED ~,~ONIONS . 10~ ~~ BARGAIN BASKET SCOTCH TEQUILA LA PAZ EXTRA FANCY ITALIAN SQUASH 19~ LARGE HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE 49,~ , ~A. OUR RfG. LOW PRICE 1.)9 16' PROOF--+IALf G.4.LLOM FULL QUART s109s ··~ MARGARITA MIX FULL QUA.RT BAR M SMOKED Store Hours 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. PORK CHOPS 89 BARM C SMOKED ft8C BRAUHSWEIGER7 LI. LB. FARMER JOHN 89~ BACON Doily lncludinq Sunday Prices Effective Thursday thru Wednesday JUNE6-12 WE GLADLY ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPOl:IS CLOD BEEF ' ROAST BEEF $149 $16! BRISKET .J 'La . HORMEL RED LABEL SLICED 69C BACON LI. EASTERN ROLLED BARMBULK 89 BONELESS LEAH WIENERS c PORK R.OAST ·98~ STEWING $139 FA RMER JOHN 89·~ BEE·F LB. WIENERS LI. COSTA MESA PLACENTIA 19th and Placentia 710 W. Chapman· . . -- ' I • ' \'l'ctnt\day, Junt 5. 1~74 DAILY PILOT 39 Whipping Up Salad Easy With Blender Your ek!clric b I ender and process at high 1peed Just needn't stop wtlh milkshakes until vegetables are chopped. tor lhe kids -or other typtll Tum into $-or kup mold. of. beverages tor t h e ChUl Wltll firm. if'OWl\Up!J! I CUEES'' This appliance Is almost like HAM AND C: a !bird band In your kllchen. LOAF Use lt to dissolve the gelatin 1 ai,\•eolpe u n f I a v o red and blend ilkl tuna and gel•Un -_.__ ·--····--·-···----· 1 ~l cups cold water, divided v, teaspoon salt v, cup vinegar 1/4 cup chopped celery I/, cup choppt>d sweet pickle 1 cut shredded Anun'ican cl\eese I ti.IP diced cooked ham Sprinkle gelatin over cold water in saucepan. Place O\'er low heat ; :stir urtu gelatin dis.wives. about 3 m1nutes. Add renuiining o/, cup \\'ette.r, salt and vluegar. Chill Wllil the mixture is the consistency of wlbeaten egg whJte. Stlr in celery. pickle, cheese and ham. Tum Into 3~up nM>ld; <.-hill wttil firm. Unmold on to crisp grecn:s. l\1akes 4 sc.rvings. EGG SALAD MOLll I ~velope unflavored ge latin 21~ t.~p oold "'ater \~ teaspoon salt ! tablespoons lemon juice • teaspoo n Tabasco peppe r sauce I cl.Ip 1nayo1111aise or salad dressing I cup finely chopped celery 1/1 cup Hnely chopped green pepper ~', cup diced pimiento 4 hard.cooked eggs. chopped Sprinkle gelatin over v.·ater in saucepan . Plal'c over low henl; stir c:onst .. ntly lUltH gelatin dissolves, about 3 minutes . Remove from heat: stir in salt, lenlOO juice and Tabasco. Gra du al l y blend into 'mayOMai~. I Clhilt, sti rring occasionally,I unlit rnlxture n10Unds slighJlyl when dro1>pcd from a spoon.1 Stir in remaining ingredients, I 1'urn Into a 3-<.i..Lp mold. Ollll until firm. Unmold and garnish 'A-ilb salad greens.1 Serves 4. vegetabk>e in thll heolthfull----------------------------------------------------------------- salad. If your children are big on tuna sandwiches (and wbose aren't?), swiriae them with something different one of these suppertin\eS. Creamy Tuna Salad is quick and easy to put toge<h<t-in just a few steps. Make it up in Ule early al!<mooo ; It will be chilled and firm In 4 to 6 hours, or time enough for supper. UruOOld oo a Watter ringed t,tjth fre!lh lettuce l~ves. Serve "'·ith tomato slice6 or small \\'hole cherry tomatoes. The old familiar ham and rne.se combo" lo probably America's favortte ad u It sandwich. Give it a new twist and a new taste by turning !he ln&redients into a ham and cheeoe gelled loaf. It's a 11""1 \Vay_ to use up leftover hapi. A nice variation on popu]ar egg salad 11 to mold it. If you're having a simple small buffet, )'"'OU might serve this molded salad as a side dish accompaniment to cold cuts. O\EAMY TUNA SALAD 1 envelope unflavored gelatin ,,. cup cold \\-ater 1 v, rup111 bolling water 2 vegetable bouillon cubes 1 teaspOon lemon juice ~!\ cup mayonnaise . v~ small on ion t rib celery, cut into 1-inch pieces PURE VEGETABLE REAL MAYONNAISE GIANT WESSON OIL ~ VONS VALUE ~GROCERIES Ii JELLO "'"'"""' 2 3 GELATIN P..Ol. P~(; • BEST FOODS BOLD DETERGENT ~ VONSVALUE ~GROCERIES ~VONS VALUE ~PRODUCE ·Ii SWEET, JUICY NECTARINES -_..!..!!.('•'.lJ~l'J~'P ... 35 FRESHLY CIRCLE "C" GROUND BEEF CENTER CUT BEEF ROAST SLICED BACON CATERED PARTY FOODS AT SUPERMARKET PRICES • ~VONSVALUE ~--........,·-··MEATS Ii USDA GRADE A 3 5 fi~~~1~~10 ~YERS,. • ''" . "' ....... ·-......... " .............. , -~-...... _ ... .. . . ......... -.... ~. ·-..... ~'""'"..---.. -' :,iftt.:,: ... ~==: 1v' NS . '._, " ..... "' , .. ··'• .. " ... ~. , , ...... ·-·· ,... -lj l. "" ...... '"•" .i· :.~,----~ ~~ VONS VALUE ~MEATS · liusDACHOICEl 29· ~!!, .. ~!.~OAKS HI • 3 sprigs parsley "'3. plmlentO"stilf'tt(t-otl\'es -:25--Jersiyllllid Or11g,..Jallt-.~-'\'. :69-:fresh·lnllJrrSquash-· ..... ~·~• -"-·2"'9'--Fr1-slrPOrt1IDIStr "•,·,~~iJ.~,_et• • s-.5g- .t, H"l"JCl)t USDA'Cholc1aub ~1takf o;:·;~r .. 1.69 -~- 1 can (S~i or 7 ounces ) tuna in vegetable oil, drained Sprinkle gelatin over -cold "''ater in blender container; allow to stand w h i I e assembling other ingredients: Add bolling ¥later; cover and """""' at low spe«l until gelatin dissolves. Add bouillon cubes with remaining ingredients. Cover Not T-tifling ·- Dessert Delicious One or the best or modem British food writers bas this to say about that famous English dessert. Trtne: "The word 'trifle' ooojures up a hldeous picture of stale cake flavored with rum extract and covered with packa&ed custard. It need be no such thing." JEil. Y TRIFLE Vanilla Pudding, see below 3-oollce pa<:Uge (12 double) or 12 single homemade. ladyflngen. ;• cup raspberry jelly Y.l cup sweet sherry '1. cup heavy cream v, cup slivered toasted al moods Prepare the Vanilla Pudding. If ladyfingers are packaged , separate them and spread each hair with 1 teaspoon of the raspberry jelly a n d reassemble; If ladyfingers are homemade, cut each in half lengthwise and spread each ha!£ with l teaspoon or the raspberry jelly and sandwich together. Sprinkle top side o f ladyfingers with a little of the sherry; arrange arowld the sides of a round I to 1 'f.z-quart serving dish -preferably straight-sided and g I a s s . Sprinkle remaining sherry over ladyfingers. In a small mixing bowl beat cream until It holds soft peaks: fold into v a n i 11 a Pudding; tum into ladyfinger lined dish. Cover with plastic 'AT&p: chill until M:rving time. Just before servlng, sprink1e \\tith almonds. !\fakes 6 to e servings. VANILLA PUDDING 1.~ cup sugat 3 tablespoons cornstarch 1,1 teaspoon salt 2 cuµs milk 2. tablespooru1 butter or margarine 2 teaspoons vanilla In a 1 'h-<!uart saucepan. !OOrougflly stir together tile .sugar, cornstarch and lllL Gradually atlr In milk, keoplq smooth. Cook over medium heat. sUrring constantly, u n t 11 thickened and bolling: boil I mlnutt. Rtmove from heat. Add butter and vanilla; ltlr cently to combine. Q)vcr tlghlly with plasllc wrap and chill. Makts 2 cups. ¥0111 Frllll Gr1d1 AA Butter :.:~ .75 Sa1p E Tom Coctlail ·1~· .23 Flmid• VIAllll W1l1rs 'l.'f .33 Ii CARNATION COFFEE MATE .89 PIHleri Cocktail P11nu1s Wl1bb1H 11111111 Dressing •"c: "" SunswHI Pined Prunes ·~;:; O•akll' Oats 0\.1( ~O<· •EGUl~~ • •&·O.: ..... .73 . 71 .42 IGLO~EA·1 NOODLES "· .39 Pin·A·litter Blls ·;~~ .69 Vons CoHH iu~ oo;~~'f.:"D'I~ .95 Ii DEL MONTE 1 0 !~~~TO SAUCE 0 Clorox Dry Bleaeh .63 Cling Frn Fabric Sollener ... 89 "'' . •• W .iu•.•noJ;.~t 65 Olfln rap 100-fOOIAOll • 0111 Bar So1p n~~~;~!~t .14 Ii HAMBURGER .. o, ·49 HELPERS "' btl!~C::l>OC~[A A~~·ovAAllln:S • ~WINES & SPIRITS MILLBROOK a 29 ~~SKEY Mr~~o • Gallo Spanada Wine Italian Swiss Colony ..... (••A~t•S ~\:¥• (.,C'; 0()<1"'"~ "~l• (;>.l 1.99 2.39 l1 Paz MargirllJ Ml ~ ""~;,;::r-" .79 P1bsl Blue Ribbon B11r .,·;:~" 2.39 liJOSE CHAVEZ3 99 TEQUILA I~ PROOf "' f" • • • I Je111y1111ld aunwmllk ··~'.::" .59 Kings Fancy frieslone P11Ch ::;:J· .43 Fruit 'N Honey Fruit Cocktllt '/;~:· .33 Ii LIBBY'S ""~' 24 PEAS tiOU'IC~ C•N • Kraft Vllviet1 Cheu• Spread ;:~ 1.42 Krift M1rshm1now1 ·:;,; ,36 011 Monti Dill Pickles ~;, ~-.;;·'" .45 Vons B1v1r1gas A~~;.~;·,-.~~" .12 Ii MRS. FILBERTS 43 MARGARINE I lO ttu • • Polaroid 108 Color Pak :;;;:";~·, 3.99 Granny Goosi Pollio Chips ·;.:; . 75 Hills Bros. lnsllnl CoH11 ·~;';· 1.39 d1fl}_ BAKERY Ii POWDERED 49 22tl~'lTl~N i r· • Raspberry Danish l lCo"l Or<ll•! h~ .59 J ... PAC~AC.l Klondike Rolls " '• r ~•, t• .49 \'"'' f;~ .... Bran Muffins t,<O!ST AN[J tl~t • .59 ~P•C~ ~~ -~ FROZEN FOODS Gr11n Glanl RICI ASSOl>T[O v•a•[!Ol$ .44 •l·OZ ~•c. Kerns Strawb1rrin ·is: .33 Ii SUNSHINE STATE 1 0 LEMONADE 4-0l C•~ • Downyflakl King Size Waffin ;;g' .43 Ort ldt T1l1r TOI$ '"•(;.:a'~!t,Oll(0 .59 Ctlnl1 C111n1 Pim ~o.· P~(, 1.39 Save folding money on folding ful'!IJlure lubular sleel c0tts1•utto0n, wo\11 padded vinyl chRlf se~I• 8rod labltt 100. T~ 11.lndMITTIB lurnilurt Is ..... ~•Ille It! 1WO •tylet: 1i1"1tf-l>fC1111e lr.1mes wllll WOOdgr•>n vrnyl up. tTOISltr)', Of gQld-lonllll ff•mes wlttl blxk v1n1"1 upl!Olltl'ry. You Ufl !I'll!. • l•ble ID< jU1t Se 99, •nd '""'' 1t Sfi 9t •a ch _ •fld you 1;1n bu)' Dflt poect tor -V $~.00 JTU•CMK II ~ \_ \ v~. '"-U.:,. 40'8 Dlt on 11e11 piece wllll $5.00 ,ur-ch111 • • .. . Fresh Mushrooms Sw11t Red Onions f·"''"'" ·~ ~t<>(,><t ··~ .'"!10 •0.!~•.•[•\:S. Californl3 Avocados 1:1~~~~; Ii FRESH SALAD LETTUCE Fresh Firm Cucumbers . ' '·· ... "'· 77 ie.15 ... 39 IA .19 Rip1 Wat1rm1loM "~""·~·:"~ .u •. 10 Juicy Sunklsl Valenelas .".~:~; ... 19 D1hll11, Pelunias or Marigolds · 'i!.47 l\i ~g~E~~ERLJi~ :.:;~;~ 12 ~ VONSVALUE '--.Y{/ DELICATESSEN Dubuque Sandwich Him :1: 4.49 lascco Shrimp Cocktail '.ii .40 Ii ~EEO~~:k'l'.9.0~,); 43 ~'U ••·l !-1\'0R~lt'~op,,. Mild Cheddar Cheese v~~~~~~~~:. 1.39 Wilson Meal Wieners ,, "t. I~\, .59 Knft Squ1ez1·A·Snak •s;·b~ ~~~110~s .55 Bobs Bleu Cheese Dressing t'~ .55 ~ ~~~sJ:~~!P;:;"".0020 ASSOll1lOrtA\IOI'~ ~o: rtu Oscar Mayer Biel Bologna ~~r .. :~ .61 Hormel Smoked Frinks "~':{;':::" 1.29 ri KRAFT "•'".''°"''W"~''°98 t '"! .•[ 'L'U0 CHEESE SLICES 1: 0/ !"M. • .,., , .. , ... COUPONS 'J:fr "1pt<1~ Poli loin Rib Chops ",·::• "1.29 Fresh Pork loin Chops ""::~:··• ... 1.39 Fr11h Poli Shoulder Butt Roni ... 89 li~K~~~~rBs:~.L-~.1.09 Guaymas Frying Shrimp ",:ii.:.~·" 1.79 C1rtl Frn~ H1llbul ·~;1 .. ·1::" 1.09 ~HEALTH& :1 W/!P BEAUTY Ii GLEEM II •~L .. ~, 64 TOOTHPASTE 10Z Tui( • P1psod1nt Adult Toothbrush ::,6"": •. 38 V1s1lfn1 Hair Tonlc"'··ci 5r/~.~i0~:~'''°''t~96 Schick Super II Twin Blad11 ;;ci .96 Excedrin Tablets .:~·~·./.~;.~~' :;L 1.07 LISTERINE .. ""'"" 99 MOUTHWASH 10 Ol 6Tl • Fool Guard Deodorant ':';,·:~.:· .99 SI. Joseph Child Aspirin Tabl1ts i.',.':28 J&J Biby Shampoo •;,~' 1.28 H1nal Ess1nc1 Cr1m1 Rlnsi ;c,:;-:~ •. 89 Ii PRELL '"' "'" SHAMPOO "<l:Bll .88 Ban Lotion Deodorant 1~~,0;~;~s;;l .64 . Conlldet Sanitary Napkins ;,; .88 Ii SEA & SKI 69 ~~.~!AN LOTl0"1, USDA Choice T-Bone St11ks ;~~,;~, 1.79 USDA Choice Por11rhou11 St11k1<o1.B9 Boneless Round Steaks "-.;:~;:;-•., 1.29 USDA Choice Family St11ks '8;i',. 1.39 USDA Choice Top Round St11ks "1.59 Sirloin Tip or Cube Sl11ks "0.':;",','1.89 liaoNELESS 1 19 ~,t',~~.K ROAS~~· 0 lean. Meaty. Slewing B11I "1.29 Shoulder Cod Roasts i:,~l~~.~~~~~£ la 1.29 USDA Choice Rump Roast •;:·· .. 1.29 Boneless Round or Rump Roast .. 1.39 · ii USDA CHOICE 69 ~N~~.~J~c•STEA~~ • Farmer John Ham Farmer John Ham Slices ",'!]," ... 1.39 Hormel Black Label Bacon ;:1:1 ... 85 Farmer John Boneless Ham ::~::. ... 1.29 ;SELF BASTED ;.,• ,~49 TURKEYS ~0cl"~ .. ¥o~is-.s IO!OJ•lB A\IU Wl f<l()lUI [8 . Cerll Fresh Fish Stlclcs .58 Carnallon Cocktail Shrimp ·; .. ~' 1.59 Ii SILVERBRITE 1 59 SALMON Pllt!S ("( .. 1£A.SL~·t.· ·~~ 1a";«-. o!; • I l>fll(ll'l"1"""'' , .. \1 •• nr•uwtD. -· ,,, •t WI 11t•1n1 "" ..... , '' •• ,\ltltlll TOCOM .. lllC!Al Ol•l t•• ••O ... Olt l Alt•• Ill ITlllll IND ... IC •• "°' IN ••••Cf IN ••• OtlOO CO\lllN Clll llf.l-•D• lOCl"llON 01110111 -···••t rou. CAll C<Kll''" tOl.l·· ORAL B TOOTHBRUSH Oscar Meyer Variety Pmck 12.oz. ..... __ • __ ,,_.. 1.2S Oscar M•y81 Wttl'lelS l·l8.8El' ·"--·-· ., __ .. lll AT _ 9• Osc11 Mayer Smokie links 12.oz. ,,_,._ ..... _ ............. 1 07 ULTRA BAN 0£0DORANi 3 1·0Z. t .7 8 HAIRCARE I . NEETSPRAY MISS CLAIROL GET SET LOTION C·•~'O'"'"''"~"c.io.""11'0 -........ l..11 l>lt•lr~ (• ... !'« St.1"'000 l~·OZ • . ... , 1.Mi a.oz. 1.21 ,,~,, ,.,., s111~y ,,.oz , , .. . .. 1.99 e.oz. REGULAR UNSC. OR POWDER ••••••••.•• 1.38 !i00Z. REGULAR OR UNSCENTED ................. 99 Oscar Mayer BOiogna 12.oz ···-·· ···---···-·-···-··-···-.91 Puff M.n. BlltPet FOOdALLf'\..t.YORSf>'rOl,., .............. 20 ADULT 140 Or160 , 6 8 • .. , 0 t 11 Adams Avt., ot Brookh"':'t, Hllllffngton B~h 5922 Edinger Avt., ot SprlllCJdolt, Huntington ltach 21082 Btach Blvd., Hlllltlngton ltocfl 34011 Dohtny Part! Dri•t, C.opistrono ltoeh LocJuno Hiils PIOJO,_B Toro 17950 MOCJnolla, Fountain Valer ' • I • • .f0 DAILY PILOT Wfdntsd11 Junf 5, 1974 ---'Wednnday, Jvne-S;-1'974 -PILOT-ADVERTISER J J Barbecue or Bourguigon? Actor Follows · His Mod .el Cook beef quickly in hot oil-degree F. o\·en for 4 minutes. !\iean"·hilc, brown pear I onions and mulhroomJ ... 1n salt pork fat until browned on Remove casserole from oven onions in 2 tablespoons butter casserole JOHAi~NESBURG -"!\ly all sides. Season to taste Yl'ith to toss meat with fork; return in saucepan with a litUe sugar. Skim iat olf aauct. Cook wife is a gourmet cook. You saJt and ca"'~ .. ,,,1e •· oven •· -ast 4 Add . . Jn Co should talk to her," actor pepper· _.._. 1i&1 .., ... remauung w e. ver sauce to reduce in volume to Bradford Dillman said, sipping lieat Cognac or brandy: minutes longer lo form crust cook over low heat until oruoos about 2'rii cup. Jt sauce ta ttio Cognac, looking lonesome for pour over meat in casserole. on meat. are tender. Keep warm. thin, cook looser to thicken, his model-actrcsS·\vife, Suzy Ignite, let flames burn a''ay. Reduoe oven temperature to Saute mushrooms in remoln· until it will lightly coat a Parker,andtbeirslxchildren Remove beef, set aside. 32S degrees F. Md 3 cups ing 2 tbsps. butter nnd few ..... •l>OOl)nsln. Tgasst.e to eorre~t back In Santa Barbara. Brown carrot and onion In wine, and enough beet broth to drops lemon juice. Keep same faf. Pour off excess fat. barely cover meat. A d d wann ~ur sa -ove t and He was just completing his · ni u...., r mea acting stint, the 0 n 1 Y Return pork and beef to tonlato paste, garlic and When meat is tender, pour vegetables. Garnish w It b American actor in the all-star casserole. Sprinkle flour on herbs. Stir to blend. contents of casserole Into parsley. Serve in t to s cast of "G<ild,'' the adventure beef to coat tightly. Cover, return to oven, cook colander, reserving l 1 q u Id. Portions With small boiled Place uncovered casserole about S b::M.irs or until meat.la Wash cassero1a . tvd .... .....,, butle ed oodl film being made in this ~ l"""""''''" r n es or By JOHNA BLINN Bradford Dillman 1ay1 hi1 wife is a Frenc~-cook while he'1 in charge of breakfa1t. ., , • ' • in center rack of preheated t50 fork·tender. ,,.. Arrange me•t, vege'·bl•• r1'ce beautiful Afrkan setting. ~--;=--~~-~~~~~--::-'--::--:;~~--~-:--~-'-"..:...-"'-~~~~~::::.~:;--'~'~:::-----::::;-~~i""-'::"---::~~:::;;i:J:-::::;;:::::::::c---=;--=::::--~~~~--::-~--c!i:'.1 la primarily a Fnmclt, I~ ~' • ~ ~ ,-~ ·~ -.• · "I guess you wtiuld call her ~ rr· a Julia Child cook more than · QOO, anything. She does marve\otJS ""'.J' j , things, often dishes t h a t require 24. hours to prepare. "She makes pot au feu llnd i great boeuf Bourgajgnon." ~ When Brad eatS llOllle of Suzy's French di•1 he "can just sit like a trencherman and put' It away. '1'he kids go to six different schools and there are five different car pools. So Suzy weathers the , car: pools in addltloo to the kitchen department." he said. Since rMmings are hectic in the Dillman ~eqage, Brad . helps out .. "l am the brtakfast chef In our house. That's the least I can do for my wife -to get the breakfast out for all the kids. "I'm a short order cook: eggs, bacon and all that kind of stuff. U I were to gtve you a recipe, it would have to be lot hamburgen. "I love Roquefort hamburgers. I just t a k e Roquefort cheese, pul i t betWeen 1ayers of meat.-and ,.- grill in such a v:ay that the cheese mens. It's terrific ":r\M: rest of tvhat I Ox is Hmited to being a barbecuer. I stand out there In t h e backyard and do things like strip steaks. I don't do the marinating because Suzy does e\.erything like that." The Oillmans prefer living in Santa Barbara because "the aJr is better tl)ere than in Los Angeles." "Wben_we flI'st lived there, "" bought a beaut~ul hilltop home overlooking Che canyon below. It was wonderful to be able to see the rmuntaiml in the di5tance, but it never • occurred to me to ask a bout such prosaic things as filled- ciirt hills. "One day alter a terrible rainstorm, the entire back· yard disappured." 12 mushroom caps Lemon juice 1 tablespoon minced fresh parsley Saute pork in olive oil in oven-proof casserole until Ug'htly browned; remove to side dish. SUZV PARKER DILLMAN'S BOEUF BOllRGUIGNON V.Z cup salt pork, diced I tablespodn olive oil 3 pounds lean top round or rump roast, cut In 2-inch pieces 1 carrot. peeled, :>!iced I yellow onion, peeled. sliced Salt, freshly ground black pepper .f tablespoons Cognac or pepper 'At Tablespoons Cognac or brandy, optional 2'1.t tablespoons nour 31,~ cups good dry red wine: Beaujolais or Burgundy About 2 cups beef brotb I tablespoon tomato paste 1 large C'IO\'e garlic, pressed Pinch thyme I bay leaf, LTUrnbl ed 14 pqrl onions. peelt'd 4 tablespoons butler Pinch sugar Meet Any Occasion Serve hot Cui'OOid"it'ays;·Coid. ·· when it's bot · PEPPERED BEEF BRISKET 4 pound! lean beef brisket ~2 cup SO)' J3uce \1 cup red wine 'V\negar I tablespoon tomato paste '' teaspQon ground cardamon 'ii cup coarsely cracked black pepper Trim fat from brisket. r.farlnate beef in 90Y sauce, vinegar and tomato paste IZ hours or longer. Drain off marinade. Coat all surfacts with card~mon mixed with pepper. Place In baking pan about same size. Cover ck>stiy (foll will do). Bake in 300 degree oven 3~1 to 4 hours. Serve hot, To serve oold cool In pan, chill and cut Into thin slicts. Serves 8 or rmre. ' , . There's ~mething extra fresh about the flnt apri.,;,tS of the season and Ralpha, as uaual, ha• the pick of the crop waiting for you at a cl'elidous low price. Dlacover the Q-·----Ftieslt . ·~ Fryers · 1 •• 36 Sliced Baton ..... es .... leefChuck-Ctod Cut Boneless Beef Roast-lb. 1.29 lb 1.29 lb. 1.89 '8..t .. lone In -Full Cut Round Steaks ·1Mf-T9JI: RM!ndJ!: Sfl'loin Tip Boneless Sfeaks 11Ht--lbtn Ci.it ' Bottom Sirloin leel-loinCt.11 Braising Strips le•n S.el Cube1 Stewing Beef Fre11'1-Whole or Point Cut Beel Brisket '°"'Loin-Meety Country Style Ribs Center Cut Loin PorkChops Fre1h-Skinl111 Beel Liver Fun, Cooked Wiler Added Ham Slices M111in1 -Reguler or Hot Italian Sausage Links Hickory Smoked-1 Lb. Pkg. Ralphs Bacon lb. 1.89 lb. 1.39 lb 1.39 lb. 1.39 lb, .89 lb 1.39 lb .• 89 lb 1.89 lb. 1.39 ... 78 super way to save week after week now at Ralphs. Ql 0 SriperDeli lultennllk or CCNntl")' Styt.I Pllbll'y ---BiscuitS-..... 1-4-- lb .• 89 A llENOOF" 8EEF ANO SOT ,AOTf:tN CONCENTAATf. Appl1 V.Key-Gr1d1 A -froien-10-22 Lb. A'tg. Young Turkeys Sm•ll Sit•-Ul'Cooked Shrimp On,11r11tickt or Thigh• CaDf. Fryer Parts Youn1-M••IY 01'1m1tk:k1 Of Turkey Wi11,95 C1Ulorn~-Whote.;,Fre1h Stewing Chickens ... 49 lb. 1.29 lb .89 lb •• 49 lb .33 Super Spirits L1k11hlre Gin or Sandra Vodka S1ve .20 "~~ 3.89 Old Gl•nwood-6 Y•1r Old Straight Bourbon Sindy M1cAHiSl•r-S1v• 1.00 Imported Scotch """ ••• g1Uon 3.89 9.98 Q;~;Sauvignon r1nn 2.49 Swltt-C1nned , Sugar Plum Ham l••lor Meet Ralphs Bologna Cl1u111n Kosher DiU Pickles Moft1wtl-Ov1I . Canned Hc!m 21b. 3 98 4 0L I 10 oz. .... .89 .89 Sib. 8.89 P1rll1y-2Tub Soft MarQarine ' lb. .55 A1tph1-A1lrif1r1t1d Bleu Cheese Dressing "•• .89 Mrs. FHIMlrt'1-1 Tub Soft Mar:gilrine , .. .55 Gr11l lor S111d1 • Imo Dressing .,.; .49 Rlc:h & T1ngy • Ralphs Buttermilk '"" ;29 Supe' Bakery 8utt11mllk-H1rd1r1 -Cricked Wh11t Ralphs . Bread R1lph1 -With S.11~ S1ed1 Hamburger Buns R1tpt11 -Fr11h Biked • Cinnamon Rolls R1lph1 -Chocol1t1 Chip Tea Cakes ..... 55 '°'"'' • pkg. ... .... ... eec:h .45 .55 .83 Super Produce flr•t of tll• l•••on lll'ge,Julcy Apricots W•• .. "' Iceberg ~ Fr••" AH Ractl1he1 or . Green Onions Ffi1ti, SiHCI Q"fe1n • - Cabbage Swee!, Mild Bennuda Onions T11ty frealt Italian Squash 1Wi.~ ·~'..29 bunch ...... Ptftb, p1r lb. .29 .10 .10 .10 .29 Super Flowers T11111to Plants •" -Hinging or Upright Fushla Plants ..... 47 "''" bunc:h .47 .97 Sheer ltocklft11• by Dlanne-.71 V.lue Popular Shades Knee Hi's A110ft9d De1lflns-10 PIQ11 Photo Albums Multl·Colored -Aluminum Patio Chairs S~are Orlddle1-T11 Kettle• 10" Fry Pent with l11kel Pounty Cookware .. 1,.39 ••tll ••th 1.89 3.98 '"" 3.97 P,r_1c_e_s_e_tt_e_c_1_1v_e_J_u_n_e_&~th_r_u_J_u_n_e_1_2~-~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, ASSll'ted HiC Drinks ... ~~ .28 Health U Beauty Ralphs-Frozen Orange Juice 6 01. ''" Frozen Food .21 Assorted Banquet Dinners Ralphs Everyday Low Prices E1c1p1 l11fo1 H1'" .41 -.o1-.11~. ow_._.,"!'"!'-.-... -•• ,,._ " •~-'-" .. .,..~, Gleim Tootnp•ste t: .ee Orenge Jutce • u,'!"~ ..45 S•ltlM Cfackers ,::: .53 V.nM1• W•fers ·~: .42 S•IH Dfesstno DeodarlZlng Lysol Cle•r ., .... 99 bonl• Pantry Fillers llor. 29 c•11 • Hor. 49 boltl• • 14"01. 37 I" • ·~ 39 -· .. ~ 73 ...... ~~; 2.97 _,,.,,_....,.,......, .. c .. ,_ Ice Cre1m Toppin9 ..... -. .... c_ ·---•-,., .. , ..... •·••'"•••• •-··--Yi11l~s l~uld ~ 1.09 ... emoni. "•:,; ,55 S•IH 0re;slng .!:; .41 8oull~n c';;bes ::1; .21 M"';s, Ofs1i Soup Mixes ._ .... __ ..... 179 .....,___ .,.,..., __ .... w.-I II ··--·.--''111 ··- .::. .42 ~:;:.11 ~.37 ·.~ •. JI ..... e.-. Siled Dr•••ln9 ...... -............ 0-Ground Coffee .. ~ .42 ~·.79 !:O J.27 Secret Sprey · • .... • H•cWock Dinners "..,'":: 1.19 S~id light Tune :;;. • Ground CottH ••~ • Bosc<i .. ...,_c_. 1.~~ 1.24 t-'·-·---· --.-~ .. ,.,.,. ··~ .73 -·-,., ,.,.....,_ Vlt11is Dry3 -H11ibvt,Vlet1 !!; 1.11 • St,1wberryPre1erve1 -• ShOrtenirtg .. ~ 1.91 •Pti•rH11ve1 'Asterisked items not available ....... -JOOJ ......... , ... -••••• ,... .... 0000~.,,,...... , ..... _.. ... *'°'-·" , .......... ..i"·~· ....... -, ...... ,... .... ,s"l.w"'"" • th f II • C-olo lCIJl lOll"""'llo.-1 ••••-·-"'--""'" lH .... oloh1Mllol•11 ,., • .,.,.,,OliN~~"""' tt•• ..... oo,<IO!ol"'t-10 e o owing stor_es: -·-,,~,~ ... ·-............. ; ..... -..... .............. ... ........ ,.... • ......... '1'"''M> ""'"""" .............. p, .. ,,....11>oc;o. j' w...,..._ •r.l!N Wn,_• ---•11:1••"""' .. -'""' lto A ...... o.)ol)6W 1""4~'"' ............ (hll ... ().o• _,..,., .. ,,.~,_.. .. __ • r---·e&1 ••-., r·--i«•·---., ... ; = ...... , ... ,,,c~-. • ; ; PIOlbii-Yc--' ; HOPE ~ I Detlrgent ::..~ .39 I I FIU' t:; • 75 I SUNDAY; I UM1t o.. .._ '"" o.. i:ov"" """ c.,.._., I I l.111111 OM """ "'"'OM c:1:' ,,, c~ I ! -·~ ............... . Hormel Bacon •-.. ..ioo••· uu.._ .. , -.i ,..., ~·.'flL•l •...,.i.o -... ... c .... OllJ_l .. f c--·"'°t "°'"'-"·• .......... •:'t~· "'""-..... ... -.... ,.,., ,.., l ,,_ I .. ... L" C°'""'~~.~t"''"'"''12 .... L" C•llPO'l~~N1v.NM11 .I --------------------RAl.f'llS STORES ARE LOCATlD AT: 380 E. 17th ST .. cOsTA MESA 9901 ADAMS BlVD .. HUNTtNGTON llEAOI 241 67 PASEO OE VAUHCIA. IAGUHA Hll1S 1726117th ST .. TUSTIN The lw!!!' nwloet with !!!Mril!P ll'lwi 15471 S. llROOKHURST, WESTMINSTtR STORf HOURS: 9-10 Dolly, 9-9 Sunday 401 N. LOW. ANAHEIM 6942 WARllER, HUNTINGTON 11EA01 " , I , , . • 4 ... I 1 ~' I .. i _, ' coking utside oday? Adherence to a few basic. rules can guarantee any outdoor chef ~an enviable neigbborhood repu~lion for beef cookery. First, since steaks o r hamburgers broiled outdoors taste so much better, it's ,important to allow_ for seooOOs when buying-the beef. Choose steaks at least I i,:i_ irlChes thick -or shape the hamburger patties :v~ inches or more thick -for they will be much juicier th<in the thinner ones. To insure addOO' '•Jlavor. marinate steaks for ·~ev.erla hours in a refrigerator' before broiling. Prepared 1~ 4,a~ ad dressings like Italian, ·French or garlic make excellent marinades. Ot tryi tii~ magic ()(,.these mariaMles th& next time you barbecue 1yoir steaks. GARLIC AND SOUR CREAM MARINADE I cup dairy sour cream I tablespoon lemon juice 2 cloves garlic, crushed ~l teaspoon wtiite. pepper :i.~ teaspoon celery salt If.! teaspoon salt 1h teaspoon paprika I teaspcm -. Worcestershire sauce I , Combine tingredients. Pour over steak. Refrigerate overnight ~fore broiling. MARINATED STEAK. •• 1 thick Steak _1,~ .oup~wioe.-v.inegar -- 1 cup olive oil Salt and pepper I clove garlic. crushed 1 tablespoon ketchup Choose a , tender steak, at least 1 'h incl}es thick -and marinate at least 4 hours in the above sauce. Turn the stea k several times while marinating. f\IANDARIN l\tARJNADE I cup soy. aauce . • l I cup orahge 1narmalade ' 2 cloves garlic, minced I teaspoon ginger 11, teqioon pepper Combirle a·J ·l ingredients. P "« our over meat apd let stand several hours or ovei-night. Brush meat with remaining n1arinade during coo k i n g . Yields 2 cups. KEBAB MARINADE 1h cup salad oil 2 tabl~.lemoo juice 'A wp chopped OllOn 1 teaspoon dry mustard in: teaspoon garlic sa1t li2 teasPo<D salt II teaspoon pepper Mix tog!!the,r all 'ingredients. Marinate ml:at several hours or overnight in mixture. CombUle beef cubes with chunks of • tomato, green pepper, . mUshrooms and onions ai /skewers. Brosh meat wfth remaining marinade during c o o k l n g . Yields 1Ai ru~. Barbecue Simplified Individual feast is easy feat STEAK AND SWEETBREAD KABOBS 1 pound b6ne1ess beef cb~ck 1 pound sWeetl:ireads . 1 q_uar.t water I tablespoon lemon juice ~ I teaspoon salt 4 strips .... bacon, partially cooked 1 Tarragon Sutter Cut beo,! into 111-indl chunks. Cover sweetbreads with water;1add lemon juice and sai l Hea\ to boUing then si mmer 15 infnutes. Drain Run cold ~ water o v e r sweetbreads to c001 them, drain and pull off any visible white membrane. Cut into 1 to l 11-inrtl chunb. Cul partially cooked bacon into I-inch lengths. Thread beef cubes, bacon a n d sweetbread! on s k e w er s . Brush with Tarragon Butter. Cook over hot coaJs about 10 minutes or untll dtne as desired . Brush occasionally w j lJl Tarragon Butter 11 ~ cooks. Pass r&nalnlni butter , on side. Malrei 6 acrvtngs. TARRAGON BUTTER : Combine ~ cup butter,!~ tablespoon EACI\ lemon juice and minced parste1. l teaspoon grated lemon peel, V.. treaspoon onion salt · and 1,2 teaspoon crum'bled tarragon. ; Heat breiefly~ until butter, melts. --· Rib Roast Lorge End Uncondillonolly Bonded ···' Anv Sit• Pocko!Je . Un(ondi!ionoHy Bonded Beel tf:•.,.111• 1U04lll101t ·79! ' Chuck R~ llod• Cut 67 ilo ·~··""'"'"' ~ lond.d Ifft - 1-IONf llOAST IEfF CHUCK •• lk LI EX. LEAN G«. IEEF • .i •l.11 LI f RIB ROAST SMALL EN!> BEEf .• 1.38 l l . Ho.usebold Items •. • • FTOzen Foods ..•. oA Kimbies .. Diapers ....... ::~;~:1" oA Diet Lunches .... ~:c:~·;:::·::-;;::";74: oADix.ie Cups ........... :::~!~.-::.13_• _ ~ Jpin'!c~ Souffle . .. . . ::::::;5~3 oA Baggies Bags ................. .';~:;56C oA·J~no's Ch.eese Pizza . '.''7.';:;;:1 c ~Cascade Detergent ..... ".'.-:.::::96c oA F11hstic;~s ·· · · ·.. · .. o:::,·::93 c , ~WoolitaClealier ..•...... ~':'.~:::1" ~~arshburn Carrots ... '.·;::33c ~ s.O.S. Scou~irig Pads ..... : .. ·:~;33c o-4 Birds E{i Awike ................. 33 c k d G d. oA!=•I Fame Juice ................. ~7;::43 Pac t"e 00 s • • • · Pet Foods .•.. ~Harvest Day Buns ....• :::.-:..:33• ~ Pillsb~ry Cake'MiX:::.~.-;:87c oA Nabisco Oreo Cookies ..... ~:;75c Z k S ' s. .. --...... -38¢ r::1"" on er ...... ., .....................• ,. •.•• , ~Batter 'N Bake Mix .......... '.~:;24c I t t B kl I ,_,_,, ... nc r::1"" ns an rea as ........ r-1110.- M h t R-·-~~2u r::1"" a a ma 1ce ................. ,~ .. .. B. ' ·t M' ·-·&0• fJ"' ISCUI IX ....................... •o••• oA Recipe For Dogs ....... ::;::;::28c ~Purina Cat Chow ......... '..''.:."."::45c r:t""Gaines Dog Food ....... ~~,-.~:::::204 Dairy Products , , . . ~Lady Lee Yogurt..... . . .. ~;;;;20c ~Lady Lee Ice Cream ...... '.~"~:89c f1"4Chiffon Margarine ........... ·.~82c . Melons· SWEET HONEYDEW ...... . Sweet .... ~!?.~~~~.~. L811 ¢ ., Radishes .. c. 12¢ Green Onions g2.~~~······· ... ~· 1 o~ FRESH PICICEO •.••• , . , ... IUNC:H Wtdntsday, Junt 5, 1974 DAILY .PILOT 41 1 Mother Earth's Recipe Bur_ger Idea Sprouts Mother Earth's r re 1 h mushrooms and bean sprouis naturally rail In place with Callrornla ground beef. I ~) pounds ground lean beef chuck Soy sauce Freshly !roWld pepper Onion ro Is Fresh bean .sprouts Marinated mushroom slices Lightly shape ground beef lnto t patties. Brush both sides generously with soy sauce and sprinkle with pepper. Grill or pan fry to desired degree of rareness. Split onion rolls and rill with beefburgers and fresh bean sprouts. Garnish with m u s h r o o 01 slices marineted in mixture of 2 tablespoons le1non juice and I 1 1 cup olive oil. Season with salt and pepper. ' To prepare fr esh. ~an , sprouts, \lo'ash and remove the ·1 olive colored jacketli, if any, 1 rrom the pale yellow heads. I Place In a rontainer of water and refri gerate. \Vater On sprouts should be changed daily. I r1 -. Frying Chickens Full Shank HaH Ham So. fry•r• •· Whol. lody IJSOA > Grod• A I FllVING CHlCICfN .cur.up .. "~'LI 36~ lorteo.l•r lrOnd 49 tlo USDA Git.A.DE A .,. 16·:J'..I Lb. • ' ... fully Cooked H~k Removed 69~ ., CORNISH GAM[ HfN BUTT PORTION OF HAM FULLY COOKEO •• 69t LI USOA GRACE A,-20.0Z , , 9Bt EA Canned Foods .•. oA S & W Beans .......... ·~:.~.~:~;::25c Bean Salad .... ,. ... -... 49• ~ ....... _. ................ 0.10• oA Deluxe Mushrocim1>-• .:z::32c G I ·1J . ' ·--·49• oA rape ru1 .. u1ca ................ . oA Lady_J..ee 'Apple Juice ...... ~:.:89• oA Apple Cider ...................... ~:::::97• oA Swift Vienna Sausige ....... ::38• ;,..orleans Shrimp ................ ~111 oA Spaghetti .Sauce ............ ~~~·:~46c oA Salad i;>ressing ........... ~.':'.'::';::::.39• oACHB M1yonnaise ............ ~.::77• ~Wesson 011 ......... : ................... ~:.:1"' C m ... _ Ch' ~-···-29C o"" ucu .,.r 1ps ................ o., .. oA Lawry'sSeason ·SJtt .......... ~:.:83c ~Coffee Mate .................. '.:'::'.~;:;:79c r:t'4 Milk Amplifier ............... :~:ao• ~Lipton Instant Tea ......... '.::1°1 ~ Nestea Instant Tea ........... :.::91 c r:t'4 Planter's Peanuts ........ ~::;:89c O""' Beverages ............. o;!-::.·i,•:.~~::93c ~ ·LOOK fOI THI Kl'f ~UTll "Key luys'" ore ••tro iovlngs mode ) pottible by monuf11et1o1rert' tern· porory pfomotlonar alto.one••· .. , Deli -Items . . . . Sl .tced Bologna .................. 59c ~-....................... "".'• Oscar Mayer Salami .... "~:::·,c:,·;:;79'- Sliced Ham & Cheese .. ~~;;.·;:;89c P·1ckle &,'P·1m·· ento' ............ 73c . .......... ,"-•O•••• Lake To Lake Cheese .'.':'.::.~:.::~;89c oACl1ussen Pickles .... J~::;;;:~:~::ilsc'. Mor.re If Bologna ........... !::·:.::·.i::·;::93~ . ' Cream Cheese ....................... ..i..66• • •••••••••..••... 0.-101 , .. Leo's Meats , ................ 52• .•. \ •• • . .'.,, .. Tot .. J, C•'< .. •101 O•t oA"Cheese Spread ............ :-.:::~~~·ol.~::: 75ec BeV8111g!$ Biid Spirits ••. Franzia Bros . Champagne .. ::1tt Go.Id Seal Vodka .................. :::::::739 Tuborg Beer ........... . ......... :;:::131 CAYAIAal AT Olll t TOftS WITI UlllOJ Din.) Health and Beauty Aids . , . <>"Right Guard ........ ~~'.·.~~~'.'.'.'.~'.:.;-~:69c , r:t'4 Foamy Face-Saver ......... ~:87• _...Ant· Persp·ra t .......... , .... ·117 v-. I-I n .......... tHtOol ... •f Crest Toothpaste .... ~'.~~·~-:::.~a1c .. Dial ShampoQ ................. :::99• r:t'4 Demure Packettes .......... '.'.~.~99• • These Items are AvaHable at Discount Centers Only ••. ' . c. '"'-' I , • I I ' ·-........... '-.;_../) ' ' .. A. Dress Shirt Pemioneiit prM• tho11 •!Mved, top fothio"' look• IA w-"' 1trlpe1. All ir\ 65% Oocron ~l•r/35% cotton. Mochh'le 411 wosllobl•·d~obi.. Sit•• S·M·l.X\. Knit Shirts (No< Sho••l SM111 1le .... ed eo1y co•• 1oov, poly•"•' pique lll!Ch with 4 b111ton plockel lront, Hol ·o flop ~ket In tolld1 with color 591 motdl•d buttonl; Slt.1 s.M:l·Xl. B. Hawaiian Shirts The vr"'••I (OllectlOl'I of oulhent!c Howollon prlntt ln bright IOMt ond 101011 pollernt. Mochlne wothob1e. dryob'9 In 511 • 100% polr•"•'· si. .. $.M•l·Xl . , C. Tank Top .. 96 !OLID COl.OI Tiii ••• 3 ldeol Item lo w90r CCltlit011'f with swim .,Vfltlt, walk 1ho111 or co.uel,,....,.. 'A colhttlol'I ol 1olld1. 'lrlptit cmd to~ with 278 con110,t tl'lm1. Sit ff l-~·l.h. Tlltrt'I A •• Nt•t. lou J.Jll.IMI!• • t10 S., llflO C"1tit ll•'- a11a1111•. )tG •, t• , • .,.. '"•· •tlrl•. 11l I. c.••1-'""' fAlOW!ll •All , 11'40 It-• 11•4, IUlllll rAll • l o'" A It ... .,. l•t. (lllO~• , •••• 1124 "'" ..... . COSIA MUl • 111111 ......,, llof, W. tOVIMl • ltio"'"" 5/o9f•lloti (10. OOWllll • UJO l'lo-t1lt•t ti.t, GllDll <ilDVI • llO)l IMM It, 'AtOll MDVI • 110111111.,,,t111 It. GUIOAll • lllJ JI.. '"'•N,lf.t, GUllOlll i,. ....... ''""'"' a .. . lll(ill\AllCI ...... ,. ....... . 11u11t11DTO~ uac•·· ttil ....... •••· lllHITl!tGTtll llACll , 1..00 ltlM C•lt• SI, ll GUllA llllU •$trl 0 ...... , ... Ii ru u MJt•o• . u. .... ,. "°""'"'' c1~. U•IWOOO . U., .. , .. S..,~ (It. l•fl110All . IH\I I•. lt .. kffie l h4. ' C•'• hordened comb/notion orwt tholn with plo1tlc 697 co11ellf19 . 1121•1 Safety Light Strop·on with 1ofety ... , .. ~!Of, ll~tw•lghl. ,, .. ,., Chrome Mirror H~t r•o• 1efl9'tor. 97 ¢ nn .. , ,11iti1 "IOMI •••I• •"•• UllWOOO • IOIJI Atlllllit In, \OllG M•(ll • 6JU I. ~ It. I, lO. •Ila.till · 1 .. J I, tttt1IT• ho, M011tt¥1i . •n w. ""~i;"'"* o.; •• M011nttl10 • ''' ••· ••k•• IMlf••u • 11t1t '""*' ti•t Ot&llG& • 11'9 I. (H-• •••• Pump 1 S" chrom•. with Clll)l to oltoc:h IO ' blcy<I• frol'llll. 2119 lt401oJ Bag COTf'Y ... 11. id.•ol- for co1 rylr19 ortide1 .,.hH~ ~11..ing 184 or h1k1n9. • 1102M ,u.0111• . out .• .,,,, 1 ... ,, ,1(0 l tVll• . •Jll ·-~''" l!of. lll>I Al«IS 00 Ito! c,,,tto t lo01100 llACI . 1111 A11•t~ 11.1. 11auo • 11.a w. ••"'• 11.4, IA~ tlttut Ol!IO • UJ'tJ ltfO~o h . t. l&ll (illllll • tU I. IH h .. t fl•f. Jiii 'IDtO . ltll Ulll 1t. / • Inner. Tube • 20"" • 2.125" "Mkhtgon lnnor tubm. SulM( ino~ lutyl llllbber for 147 1upitrlor t1re1191h. ,, .. ,., Black Tires '10" • 2.12S'" "M!i:hlgon"" red line blod1 tire s. mode ol noturol rubber for g•eater 'lrength ond duroaility. 237 IJOl5.0 Number Plate Molo·Cro11 wilh two numbers ond !i••· 189 12901·1 Headlamp ChrolM 2·b\llb 11ltor double beom loinp comple1it ,...11h Urod1et lot .osy ... ,.,,,,.. 211 11•24-6 Derallhiur Shimono Reor '."Eogle"' s.S. detollleur ..,th 8g7 built.In de1o!ll eu1 pro!etlor. #Ottl.J SAlllA All• · U" \t. trll!ol UlllA MOfl1(,1 • 2•1' lio t•lot 11•1. smtlf9h . '"' ~ ........ SOUlll Glll • lJ\I l~tl!t,. llof ltttlllC I • ftJI '""!'(•II 11~1. ffltt•llCI • »M '°"''"'' 11-1, IUIUll'A • •I• lof!-M1 1!•4. tllSllll • IJUO ltt•ptti Au " lot 1•. ENJOY ONE-STOP SHOPPING CONVENIENCE e .WHrl11t· A,,.rtl ·e lodit1' liftttri1 • lodi11' HisierJ . •Hou•••••• • ll111k1t1 & .llntns e 1 H•dwtr1 & /lint • Auto, llM1 rlc:af & Plumlliin9 Acc111orie1 . • et.deft & Pltl.o Ne1d1 e H"1th & ltlllly lld1 • loJ• I. Gom11 • s.11 App/11nct1 • Much, Much, Mortl 'lllU(ll/'111 1101 ll!ol.tto 11,f. 'lllUMlllSTlt llOrl \J,,,,,,.i, 1•. WIUM1111111 lflll '1111!•"•1!•• •11111111 • nois ,.,.,. •• •·• Wllllltlt • 11110 I W\~h., llof, •llMlllGIO~ 1111 llt. A•t "' WOOttAllD lllll1 n:uo Y«t .. , ..... stotD 0'11 Al l a• ' • ' . 4% DAILY PILOT Wtdnesday June 5, l q14 I i Wilda Schmidt, Costa Mesa Charlene Collett, Fullerton Dolly Guyton, Pasadena - Meet the finest checkers of them all-Alpha Beta's Checker of the Year award winners! Chosen from a corps-1800 strong-of those wonder people who speed you throu gh the checkout line with accuracy •.. and a smi le. Their service means a lot toyou.-lt means a lot to us too. So each year at Alpha Beta we have a big company banquet to honor all our checkers. And we select and reward those who have achieved highest records of excellence in accuracy, efficiency, friendliness, courtesy and service. Amidst fanfare, suspense (the envelope, plea se!) and tears of joy, our chain-wide Checker of the Year is crowned, along with winners from each district. This year o),lr "'numero uno"' was Vada Riley of our Rowland Heights store. And if Alpha Beta customers miss seeing Vada at her usual station these days, it's probably because she and her husband are living it up in Rome, Paris and London-enjoying her all-expenses first prize as the Checker of the Year! Alpha Beta's Checkers of the Year awards. Because when our people provide extra service for you, we think they deserve something extr~ from us. Vada Riley (Checker of the Year), Rowland Heights ':t '.ll..,:Mi;",. Pa t Arrington, El Cajon i<,· Gerry Scarbrough, Buena Park • --,------.--.------··· - Betty Randoll, Bell Peggy Jensen, Burbank '"' Ruth Hughes, Ontario Alpha Beta's checkers. · One more reason yoia'll like the total better at Alpha Beta. t'JCopyt1ght 1974 by Alpha Ekta Compeny. ~II 1ights reserved. HUHTIHGTOH IEACH-214JI l'°°"holr\t. COSTA MISA-241L17th St. FOUM'TAIH Y•LLIY-lltO WWfltf' I f ) • . . ' .... · . . . . . . . . .. . . . '~'•' •• _, ~~--'" ...... •. t," ................ "'-••.• ' ' • ) ' " STORE HOURS MON-FRI : 9:30-9:30 SAT: 9:30-8:00 SUN: 10:00-7:00 NATURE'S FRESH PRODUCE :'. ·J .. · ...... . RED RIPE • WHOLE .WAT.ERMELON . BRUCE 'LEACH PRODUCE DEPT. HEAD BALBOA BLVD .. AT RI NALDI IN GRANADA HILLS EXTRA FANCY ITALIAN SQUASH 19~. GARDEN FRE SH 29c BROCCOLI LB. c LB. LOA.OED W\lH JUICE VALENCIA 8 LB. 98 ORANGES "". lf;IOPICAL TREAT PAPAYAS OR MANGOES .39 .. THESE PRODUCE PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 6-11 THURS.,-WED -6rocery ~-. Double Discounts AUNT PENNY • 10 5 OZ. CAN 23 WHITE SAUCE • AUNT PENNY • 10 5 OZ CAN 40 HOLLANDAISE SAUCE • 46·0Z. CAN • GRAPE •STRAWBERR Y •CHERRY • ORANGE • FRUI T PUNCH G!ORGIO • 4-QUNCE CAN MU SHROOM STEMS AND PIECES .29 12·QJJNCE BOTTLE • CHAMPAGNE • RED • GAR LIC 29 RE GINA WINE VINEGAR • .16 ORTEGA.• 10 OUNCE CAN RED CHILI SAUCE -- Wtdntsday, Junt 5, iq74 DAILY PILOT .j:J TWO MORE REASONS WHY. .. You'll eto I : ' ..... '!'!······················ -...... ,.,.._ '.•.{ :•-;·:!t~ iC'l . l ' ' 4'\...~ I r, .. •.,. ...... "C; :~N . ' -~ c LB. ?~ •..• '~~ " -U.S.D.A. GRADE A WHOLE SOUTHERN GROWN FRESH FRYERS c LB. BOTCHtR'S Paint IEEF BONELESS BEEF ~ 129 CHUCK ROAST :' LB BONELESS ,'lif~ ·139 flAVORfULLY SMOK£0 • HB. PKG. PENNY WISE BACON c LB. SE A SNACll •FROZEN• 1·0l. PKC. COOKED & PEELED SHRIMP .85 u. CHECKERBOARD f AR~S • FROZEN SLICED TURKEY l .79 a. ' GRAVY ~NC(S BOTCHER'S HIDE BEEF PATIIE MIX , BUDGET TOM PITTACORA MEAT DEPT. HEA D . BURGER . HAHBORBLVD IN GARDEN GROVE !RH ARMOUR YERIBEST SUlCHER'S C PRIO[ RlCIP[, PORK CttOPS LB. M~•OARIM FAMILY STEAK LB. JIMMY DUN • 11-l>L ROLL 79 BEEF CHUCK STEAK 1:.~" .89LB. PURE PORK SAUSAGE • 24 OUNCE ROLL 1.ss BO,NELESS ;~:·::,~~"''' 118 LEG OF PORK • LB. IH[SE MEAT PRICES fHE CH'.'£ JUNE &·12 THURS·WEO. • -: ----·-·-WHAT'S IN STORE I I I T.L.C.• BARBECUlf'(G \\'ithout (l\lt'S tinu. tl u• :1n•a or thl' s11pt•nnarl.:l•f \l'hCrt' lhl' shop1>1·r ias lh1· ll·.i~l eonfi<h01K'<' i11 t'hoosi11g: p11r- t-l1:1St•s is nl lhc• r1u•;it tl1·pnrl1111•n t. Li.•l's f11(1• it. \1't• ull 1·au 111:1k!' 1nbl:1kt•s iu our 1·l1nit•t•s. and th1·11 11't.'n, 1H~. :1ppoiut1·1l 11i1h lln• n·~1111.~. , There nre so 1n:111y f;11·tor~ in\•oh·c11 in makinp; :i 5clcctio11. Hc~idc.~ the nurnt'rous ,·ariclies 4lf 1nc:il, 11ouhry, nnd fish, thcrc :ire d91~ns of cuts from \vhich ~ , lo choosc. So1nc nrc IJCttcr for n ipccifie 11ur1>0se than ;;. ii~.' '~i others. . For h;1rl11·c·11it1i,!, hct'f is tl it• HlOSf popular t•hoit'i', nut !'>i11t,• it b also :1111011~ tht• 1nuo;t 1•spt•11'(i1·1·. earrful shop11ini;:: is in1por1:111t. ·rh:it's 11·h~· I a'(k1·d nur nu·at 1111"rrh:11nli\1·r. Hill \\':ulc, ahout tl 1l' hi.-~t h11•f h111-s for ~111n111t"r ~1arl111·11i111'!. · lie· fxii11 t1·d nut th.it 1111• numhcr of M'T1•ini;::s per pound shoul(I IK• 1·011!'>itl1·n·1I, ;1Jo11i,! \\"ilh 1l1t• prit-r. l\11yi11i.: 1111·:1! \lill1 littk· \\";tsh· is oftt•11 111or1• 1•111nnrni1•01I than t·l11•a1Jo·1 1·11ts "itli J.1ri.:1· a1nounl:c nr ho111• nr f;tl. I l1•r1· an· lllll's r11·11n1111t·1~clatious: Least Expcnsivr -B1ul1-:1·t lluri.:t'T. Ir~· it 1111 tl1~Jt:rill. 11.H• s.inok 1/:1\"or 1·11ha11ti'S tlli" hr(•f.\1·ith-sor·11rult'in pru1!11t·I.'' (l·h·lprul hi11I, t·nok a~ s1H111 ;1f!1·r p11r1·h.1s1• as 1101ssiOl1• for i..·st n•s11l1~. Jr it l1;os lu h1• lll"ld for a f!'1\' 11.1ys. Hud.c:t'l Bur_c:cr ,,·ill frrc•z« 11·1·11.) E<'onornieal Steak-"Onr hone!(·~-.: f:nnih· ~t(·ak (1·111 fro111 1!11.• t·hu1·k) i~ ;111 1·~c·4•lh ·nt 11111·. I 1t·111h·ri1~· it \I it l1 :1 11u-.11 111:1rinadt'. folln11·ini.: tlu· 42.:.0Z..CAbLt..CH!CKW..CHOW-ME.IU...... • BEEF CHOP SUEY itNRuWir;'t olN'ilrns 1.15 RAGuuJ0£Js:lucE .37 SEVE N SE AS • 8-0Z. BOTTLE 41 ITALIAN DRESSI NG • B·OZ. BTL, •CREAMY RUSSIAN .42 B·OZ. BTL. •GREEN GODDESS .4) SEVEN SEAS • B·OZ. BOTTLE .fl VINEGAR OIL & VINEGAR o"l OSCAR MAYER • 12·0Z. I 26 VARIETY PAK • MAS FILBERT • 16 OUNCE TUB SOFT RAINBOWL MARGARINE 16-0UNCE PACKAGE SAFFOLA MARGARINE .56 .54 rA:RM'tR iailfr WIENERS .89 .33 ilirrt·lin11s uti tht· tl:il-k:ii,:1-." · · Elc11a nt S!cuk -"I n ·1·u11111u•n1l lop ~irlniu l'nr loJ).(IUalitr t•atin).!. ·rht·h· is \"('r\' litl lt• \\"l1Sl 4'. silllT it", al111nsl :111 IP;1 11 11\1•:1t. ·n,i.~ i.~ OJI(' or ' 1h1• uul5t 11]\«'nrfnl. 1t·nd1·r l'nls.'· AS-OUNCE CAN 43 HAWAIIAN PUNCH DRINK 1 M1srv ccve. ~oz. CAN I 47 SNOW CRAB . • Hill r1·1ni11t1l·d uu· th:il tlit• 1011· 11ri1·c~ 011 chicken 111uk1· it :a JtrMxl ' 1~1oit'i' f11r s111n1111·r h:1rl "'l.'ni11.c:. al~u. ·rli1· 1u·11· 1·l1it·k1·11 1narinr11ll' found 11t '~:::.::~;:'~~:: .. :·::,;""" "'"'" ""'"' ~ ;":"" ";;:: . ·- 1-:~tlH•r C:r:un1.·r • ))in"t.·lnr 11f r:1111\llllH:r Alf airs • 777 Sn. I l;1rhor 111\'cl. L:1 fl,1hr:1. ('.A !XMl.11 BOX OF 24 • REGULAR CONFIDETS NAPKINS .84 t[xlz"E°sPRAv"&L WAsH .88 Frozen Food ~ 3 6 OUNCE • PACK OF 100· io'oo'ist.i.Nil"o8EsslNG .42 All ALPHA BETA Stores are ' a official FQOD STAMP i!'i~ IUlllJ · Redemct1on CenterS* c ..... , Double Discounts ' { ' WEIGHT WATCHER SUGAR SUBSTITUTE .67 MARY ELLEN• 10·0Z. JAR .38 5 OUNCEJAA ... scon ·s • 1s.oz. CAN LIQUID • 37 GOLD I I 10·0UNCE.CAN SNAP·E·TOM 32-0UNCE BOTTLE \QUART ! 20..0UNCE CAN DOW BATHROOM CLEANER .22 .69 ' • MINT JELLV ~-- !>-OUNCE BOTILE A· 1 STEAK SAUCE .40 1().0UNCE BOTTLE ... Non·Food Double ·Discounts .69 ·-S OUNCE AEROSOL .67 OUNCE N•SAL S""AY • ii 99 DIAL VERV ORV ANTl-PERSPIRA.NJ NEO-SVNEPHRINE 1/2% ·· . . • MrulcaulKRFlifsT AID sPRAv '!!!'@' 1.33 c'Hoc~s'Bucis".'8uN'N'tvlTA'M1'Ns 1.63 ' -r" ! 3 OUNCE TUBE ;.._<:~ .79 32 OUNCE BOTTLE 1.33 PRELL CONCENTRATE SHAMPOO LAVORIS MOUTHWASH -.59 8 OUNCE BOTTLE 1.27 1 S OUNCE MENNEN SKIN BRACER = SECRfT ROLL·ON ANTl-PERSPJRANT ' ~63 5 OUNCE TUBE .63 9 113 OUNCE AEROSOL • ORY STYLER E SCHICK MEN'S HAIRSPRAY GLEEM II TOOTHPASTE ' 16 OUNCE AEROSOL ' • 1.59 2.S OUNCE STICK .77 BOOV ALL DEODORANT OLD SPICE DEODORANT ··-.. . 1:19 1.49 4 75 OUNCE BOTTLE • REGULAR OR LIME FOIL WRAP PACI( OP: 72 OLD SPICE AFTER SHAVE ALKA SELTZER TABLETS . taY1Hl-lt04j Cli•er.Uwl•mftt'hitt • • oow0HANDiWRAPC WRAP .48 GLADO WRAPLASTIC WRAP .35 PACKAGE OF 110 38 GLAD SANDWICH BAGS • PACKAGE OF 15 68 GLAD KITCHEN BAGS • GlAD • PACKAGE OF 75 7 7 FOOD STORAGE BAGS 1 PACKAGE OF 160 •ASSORTED 39 GALA NAPKINS • k1clrt · oaGRF'oao" STEW 28 c'HovtMEIN 5 NOODLES .39 JAN U WINE • 5-0Z. BOTILE 29 SOV SAUCE • 2B Ol. Jar -Hiclorl-' sac S.:iVfl 16c: 10-0Z. BAG 33 ALPHA BETA WAFFLES , .32 BIRDSEYE • 10-0Z. BOX PEAS AND ONIONS B·OZ. •PEAS, POTATOES & ONION SAUCE • PEAS IN CREAM SAUCE .32 BIRDSEYE • 12 OUNCE CAN AWAKE ORANGE JUICE 32 DRINK • Delicatessen Double Discounts Mio(i'E''f "sALA"MI . "0 ' I .38 32·0Z JAR • BARREL CURED CLAUSSE N'S WHOLE 96 KOSHER PICKLES "'~~es • OSLCAR.MAYER'WI ENERS .89 PRICES EFFECTIVE IN ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ALPHA BETA MARKETS SOUTH LAGUHA-30122 $. c ... 1 Hltft_, " 1 ' D'R'Y'0R'o'As't5f>£ANurs'R • 5 9 · 1·0Z. JAR • DAY ROAST CASHEWS .ff Everyday Discount Prices REGlNA'wiNE°v'mEGAAci 54 'S·LB. SAG COLLIERS BRIQUETS tO·LB. SAG 10·0UNCE JAR FOLGER'S INSTANT COFFEE . ; - .59 J1 1.84 J-OUNCE PACKAG E • WHITE TURKEY LE'O~"s'l1c rn MEATS .53 s'RP."u'N'scllwEiG'E'R TUBE .47 12·COUNT BOX • FROZEN IMITATION .57 FUOGSICLES 12·COUNT POPSICLES ... S 75 OZ. DEMI BOX .13 BRIDGFORD BREAD ALPHA BETA •\I OUNCE PKG 49 APPLE BUNS • ALP'HA BETA •I PACK .39 .HAMBURGER BUNS 1 S OUNCE BAA .12 ABBA ZABA BAR HUNTIHliTOH llACH:-11611 H. !4"' St • , -' • \- Prices in rff<'Cl 'I'hur. Jun<' Ii Throup/1 Wed. June ll Open daily 9 lo 9, .Sunday 10 to 7 . 'Vo .~all's lo dealer"' ' - The weather is warming ••. the evenings are getti11g longer ••• and J::l Ran cho ·s ualues .11re so enticing! J::11joy California . . . liuing • .'. cook-out, eat out ••• but let it all begin at J::l Rancho . , • 'cause th ere is a difference!. ;.......--Ground 1111/f-. ' . .. ·-.,...... . . ' .No ~·. I , ....... ALWAYS FRESH •••••• 79c .. : 1 l,ifu,. bu.dge~°priced .groond be"f , •• always fresh, a/1uays fla vorful -and economical! ·Bulk, ,,Ottfe!. . . No. ·2 ........ LEAN cR1NO ••••••• 99c .. chooSC eit11er bulk or prerii,·io11 shaped pa tties. Either wilt be so flavorful ••• and really fresh. • Sliced Bacon • • . • 79c. E l i:tanr ho's .t hic ker 'ranch style·!- Ground lamb •... 79 c. ~ Sausage OLOFASllOIO ••• 79e • ~-.... -N' . 3 . $109 o·. -... .. ; •... EXTRA LEAN ........ ~-•-+-- f'i.J,;h is for tool;.out.~. tuu,' Fresh Silver_$169 SALMON :"Jr ,.; Center Cu! Salmon Steak .. , 1.89 lb. Pacific Whiting • • • 39 i Skillet si ze • U to 8 oz. average! Headless Fresh!~· ~round , •. fr esh do1ne.~1ir lun1b'. Ground Veal .•.. 5169• · Fresh . , . and extra lean quality' MEAT LOAF 99~ Our O\\'O mix. made \\•ilh fres11' Pggr;~ Mad~ fresh, right i_n our shop~ Sausage ITllWI sm1 ••• s 1°9• Made by an Old \Vorld recipe! HAM LOAF Oven Read~·~ Ham , pork , fresh eggs! Our mo.~·t "'popula r !!rin d •. ·.just enougl1 fol ta make tl1e flavor come through.' Bu lk ur Potties. .~-----=-... No. 4 ........ suPERLEAN ••••••• s1 1' •• Offered to you in bulk or in Chopptti Steaks -uniformly shaped to barbecue so beautifully! lo-Cal Grind .••••• 5129• Chili Grind ••••••. 99e. Beef, as lea n as we can make it! Coarse grind, for a hearty dish! Turbot Fillets . . . . s1 o? }'rom chil led "·aters of Greenland: T-lono Sioak U.S.D.A. CHOICE Cooke~ Shrimp ••• 524! 7-Bone Roast • • • • 99~ ('huck cut of U.S .0 .A.'Choice beer. 0-Bone Roast ••• : s10! Perfect size for ~hrin1 p cocktail! \\/hat a "·onderful ~~eak to serve 10 )·our favorite people'. Lean. tender; nalurally aged! Beer Loin cut. U.S.D.A. Choice beef chuck-so tender: Port1rhous1 U.S.D.A. CHOICE FRESH s129 PERCH n1.ms ~- }''or the oven or the l'killet! .Ju st the name conjures visions. of thick, juicy tenderne~~! OUr nging-rnakes it so! Loin cul of beef! Beef Roast lllllllSS ••• s 1 7~ r:nglish cul choice chuck .•• rolled! Chuck Steak •••••• 79°. Center Cut! U.S.D.A. Choice beef~ Grocery Spec ials! Frozen Food' Delicatesse n! Potato Chips .. ~~~~~ER's. 59c ORANGE 23c JUICE '".., Beef Franks SPRINGFIELD •• 59c . "l'he big 9 ounce pillow pac k, in regular or dip chips! ,\ cook.out mu:-t! Put 'em on t.he griddle and let the sizzle whet t,heir appetites! 12 oz package. ·-. Treesweet from Florid11! (12 oz: .•• , 45t) Egg Beaters • . • • 79 e American or Swiss 89° Salad Dressing ::. 55e Sliced cheese rood -Kraft -t2 oz. .f'ishennans' \Vharf, no preservatives! 8 oz. . Fleischmann's new s.ubstitute! Pinl , \\'henever, wherever people get together -Coke should be there, t oo! Apple Pie 10111CK •••• s1 19 Baby Gouda • • • • • 98° Cheddar Spread • • 79c . _, Apple Juice .. ~:~~:A~t~N. 39c !"1•r\I· i1 11ver ice and see how \Veil it \\'il l be received ! Great any time! Tide ..... :~~~ ........... s 139 . -' ~:1\1 •·n 11., big 11ize! Another reason you'll be glad !Or 'Ef Rancho: ~in<'. 25c off. la bel) . . Bean Salads s , w. • • 49c ·B-B-Q Sauce Clllls, PITT'S 49e Mixed. :--.1{'xil-1t· or Garden! No. 303"glass Reg .. Hot, Hickory -big 23 oz site! Family Napkins , • ·. 39c Heinz Ketchup ••• 49° . Gala, in 1h1• hi, :1 0 ct. pkg. 'fhe-thick, rich one! Big 26 oz btle! Miller's Beer 12r1C11 •• s249 Soft Drinks W0011Tw11aos 12e Famous "High l.1:1• ~ -12 oz cans! )'our choice of na\'nr"! l'L oz ~an 'Bilked Bea ns s1w •• 33e Sweet Pickles • • • &9e They belong on yo1.r 111f·nu·! 16 oz can Hein z. , . crisp and Oovortu l! 24 oz. Margarine son SPijJI • : &Jc Alka Seltzer Piie. OF l& • • 98° 'Imperial, for favored l11nr1r ! J lb. In case they eat. tuo much! Sanka nwum • • . • • s 139 Prell Shampoo • • • 89° Four ounce jar (8 oz. si ze ... 2.'49} Conce ntrate in fi ve ounce 15jze: Max Pax CGfralllllCS ••• s1 1' Toothpaste coo.un . . . 79° Ten rings -Regular or Elec1'r11 Perk!· The 7 ounce family i;ize tube! KRISPY 39 CRACKERS ~ WEBER'S 49c BUNS -· Sun11hine'1 fl aky saltine~! 1 lb. pkg. Pkg. of 8 .•. hamburger or hot dog~ Mrs. S mith makes 'em so big, so g~! Chicken Dinner • • • 59c S"•anson 's origi nal l 'V dinner! Fish lunches w:s • · 69c \'our choice of varieti~! SPINACH SOUFFLE Stou(fer'S - spinach at its best! 12 oz " •' .. :;..>". . :,,:;.r·~-11 ... ( . ' . ' From the l,aughing Cow! 8 ounce Sharp cheese flavor from Kraft!.8.oz:. Liquor Dep't Valu es Gi-n • • • • • • . EL RANCHO'S sgs9 • • ••• REDUCED $1.00! •••• Here's 90 proof gin at a sensational price for the half-gallon! Old Forester •••• s599 Vodka -1111.1 •••• s299 Save 50<: on straight whiskey! 5th· Bottled just for El Rancho! 5th Save 30c Liebfraumilch •••• sisg Spaetlese Wine •• s29a J oseph Friederich , vintage 1972! Finh Joseph Friedrich Zeller Schwan Kati 5th Super Fresh! frosh Corn II! Large eari! Tender kernels bursting with sweet navorrul goodness! Florida limes . • 3 '" 29° Large size for mort' yield in zesty juice! Fresh Orange Juice 49 ~ El Rancho's own! Nothing added! Grapefruit .. ,.: ... 4 for s1 · Large, 'il.'ith that uniqut fl avorful appeal that comes with famour; Ca1ifom in fru it! LARGE 39· "PAPAYA·$ CH =~:fAl29C f'rt'.'sh! Rushed here from H1twaii! U.S. No. 1 quality! All purpose onions. ARCADIA: PASADENA: -SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACH : 171: •·•io" Blvd '"' Sunset and Hunlinglon Or. (El Rancho Center) 320 Vies! Colorado Blvd. Fremont and Huntington Dr. Warner and Alionquin (Boardwalk Cenler) 1551 [aslblull Or. (E a1tbl ull V1ll•R• Cenler) .. l ' I.'·'"·~-···-~"-(.~ •'1 . . i STILL J'.OSSllLE! MESA VERDE STYLE Th:it s hudy s trt!eL Mature, :>eulptur1..'d lll,nd· sca1)ed. ·Solid. Sel:ur1.: l'Ommunity. Best · st'h?'Jls. Con,\'enienl s!_lop11.in~. c~urches. Jo:it • .' per1cnce llus une. S11uc1ous hvtng room.· Jo~umily fun roo1n 011posite lhat cooks deliJtht k1tchl!n. Opens lo broad backyard for out- door entertaininii. Lari,:C 3 b1..-drooms ar)d 2 b:iths. You'll want it Ill $39,9SU. By uppoint· mcnl ~6-23l:J. EXECUTIVES! OR BIG FAMILY? Elegnnt. fl·Jeredilh Gur.dens. Loads or space. f:111er1a1n lhem all ! M<1jc~lic cnlry. t::nor· mous livi ng roo111 . Sl!11aratc formal dinin g. 1l'uisine kitchen. Great fan1ily roon1 "'ilh • huge slone fireplace. U11believeably hroad .... c.~-Y.~r.i.;d_P..<;1.\i9.JOC. ping .pong,_pool, "''hate.\'tir .. - You <:o~Jd enlertain the "'hole compil.Jly. 2-100 sq. (\. 1ncludcl! large 0..'drooms. 3 baths in 2 :>lorics. By a11Pointmcnt · 5-16·2:Ha. COUNTRY CLUB COMMUNITY This r~rge home has privat'y from the time l·ou e"ter the (•nr.los~ courtyard until you ea\'C ll.,3 years new, 4·bedrooms. Separate - dining, large family room. Alt thi!i and very low yard maintcn<111ce at 561,450. 646-7171. ASSUME 6°/o LOAN ON DREAM HOME f'anta:i1t ic ti', loan -owner rlc:dble on finant'tng - llf'.: SAYS lit: CAN llt:LP. Super horne on cul-dc- sac strcel. Prcsllge entry. l\tassivc rir<:11lace. GAil· J)t:N LIVING. Briilht kilchcn. llui;c be<lroomi;, !\lust i;ee. (Jail Sl2-2SJ5. ASSUME 7°/o j.OAN - Only $193 per rnonth -Cozy 3 bedroom home orr ,. al ua blc Cosl.i l\les1.1 H ·2 Jot. Only S32 .950. 646· 7171. CAR EER OPPORTUNI TY EARN WHILE YOU LEARN This extensive tr<.t11un g progrum is held monthly for professionally minded individuals \\'ho possess in· tegrity and enthusiasm. Our hi gh l y s ut:ccssful manage ment team offers th i's tr<1'inin g . . . . No obligation . . . . . . ..... . Next training program bef,!i ns June 10. Call Jlandy "!\lc:Cardle today Jur enrollment. Phone 752-1700. SUMMER'S COMING Oelii;:hlful home wi1h Cl'STf).\I SPAHKLl'.\'G l'IJUJ.. frf~sh paint lhroul(huu t . l'H()ft~S­ SHJ:'\ALJ~Y l..Ar\DSCA l'Ell Sp;it·111u:. J1\·1ni; rooni. Formal dining rvo111. l'h\•crie kit l'ht•n. lhigl' llli!!i ll'r suite \\'ith s1•µaralc den. \\'ALK TO SCtlf)(JLS. Lo;;d1..1.I "'ilh guud1e:.-01ns1 sce-t•all 8'1l·2iiJ5. PARK HUNTINGTON INVEST!!! JUST LISTED HOME OWNERSHIP TWO STORIES AND INCOME TOO' SUP1':R L'PGltAOEO! formul enLrvv.'a\' lar"e 0 . ·. · ·. 1 • • li\'ing rooin Floor to ·r g r 1·. ·eo· "' v.ner s unit 1s huiit>. Th1 :o> ~upC'r fuurpll·:1: h:i~ built-in kitt'hen Fornl·W \~11,',·~ , irep u1'1'· 1 unt_rly three 3·bedroom units and onl• ::!·ht•droom. E:1:tras · ' ").! rooin , ugc ;uni v includt> rccre· t" n ·I · I .. J th · • room. 4 ,i;:i;uit bcdrvoin~. :i halhs. FJ:XISll Vi.> .1 10 ro1~n1 . 1·nl o:-.t·r ~ .. n . "'" I'·'. 10 i--"1Hr--:·::-:-::-:·-::-:--,-----------t------------·~-------<il<l~tt10'.l1 . 1•1ns""'hl:~f'Ut"emmm-pOm-.TIJr--W-~.:U!.P-·J~~~-~e\.I •11,ii (;;,11 HUGE SHADE TREES garage. l'all now . !!li:l-67tii . t>-l 1·U.WO for n1urt· 1nlurn1ilt1011 ;-$27,500--IN C.M. : 1-lurry '.-t11r&· 6e<!l'Mm ho~mc flt th IS pricl' won't i1.1~t long. &16jl71. SECLUDED PRIVACY IRVINE T.ERRACE In the hub of all th:it j!ives speci11I meaning to "Newport". Near" ~ach · rcslauranl . ·Fashion -lsl:1nd ·Golf cours1:! Spurkling JJOOI. · 3 l:ir~e bedroon1s. &•par<tle Jaundr~'. ~cw carµcts. ''ou 'll buy it at ~.51JO call 346-!.113. TRIPLEX AS$UME 7°/o VA LOAN• • Exr.t•llcnt rental area.,. •All I story 2 t>edrooms. • 1''an1il.\' rooms too. • Enl·losl-tl ga ra~es. Thi~ one "'011'1 Ja~t · l·ull 540·2313 . 300 YARDS TO BEACH 'rh1.-; hc-ach hon1c in Ne"'IK.lrl JS ever.vthing you ('an imal(ine. Kig • nc"·ish ilnd 1-;.z parking · 3200 sq. fl. 4 hi~ bedrooms, fornutl dining. big brt>akl\1.~t roori1 and kitthen. \'erv large f<imil.v roo111 plus full-sized billiard room \\'ilh ""l't h;1r. lli,l!h h1•an1 reilings · t·hann <111d elcga11('e, L;1rg{· pa!ios illld ~Un· dl·l'ks . Isl ti1111• ach·t·r1 1zr•d . <In t11.·u Juts . You Ol'.'n the lnnrl. ~7.fllJO. u.11;.1111 EXECUTIVE MANOR Sunken li ving: room. lluiie scpanHe family roon1 . Triple Jla rall,e. i'olost sought after loc;ition. Prited under markel al Sti0.9SU! Cull lo,view · 847.00IU. $36,500! LOW.$ TO ASSUME ;.a•,f,; cxislinJ,! loan! Creat floor plan in· clut.lt!S huge hon1cm:1ker kitt•hen "'ith <"UJI· bo;1r<ls galnrl·~ Pl'in1e ll1.111tin!:lo11 locution. Hurry -cull H-li·fiOIO. $32,900! DOLLHOUSE This r utic is in move·in Mndition. In a price range you (•a n 11fford "·ilh t•asy lcnns. L>orl'l miss i~ tall IU7-liOJO to s1..'t'. -jj_!.~50_ HUNTINGTON BEACH 'Darling tle<"ornlor item! 3 bedt-oon\ j usl right ror young cou11l c. Great communily racBities for lols ol run ! Call to ~ce · 847·0010. • Nt:WPORT BEACH 1700 N...,... IMI. '46-7171 J)on 't Jl.<IY tor somNne else·~ pro!)Crl~. Fo1 ;11l 11roi.;in1all'I~· $.100 11cr mor11h l'llJOY your oi\·n . .S.ll•trkhoi: l'lean, frcshl~· µaintcd, 2-slor~· huint . :\lovt• ~·our lxlat or {'a n1per right on lo the lot Th1~· lo\·cly ,I UH . humt" h;t~ it all -l'Oll\'l'llicnec to shop 1•i11i:. schools. 1:hurchcs. Communitr pool and park to bo•1t ~ AU for S:J9,YCJO. Call .'>46-2313._ BIG CORNER LOT! LARGE FAMILY ROOM! HUGE MASTER SUITE! E1ht·il'nt Jl11n1c1n:•kl'r kitl'ht•n'. Prime location' S-ll.!150 '. iM7 ·Wl11 3 REASONS TO BUY ;:-:.,;1,; t, ~ ·t,r , v .. • ..,~ ,,,.,~...:..~:~ MESA VERDE CUSTOM 3.">00 Sq . F't . A builders Ot.1 n honl\' ·1 or;; !1<.·1 l ri><Jm~. llUAc li\'ing room + fttrrnl~ n.l\Jlll 11111~ run1pu~ roon1 or hilliard room. 3 baths. :1 <·ar !!<•n1t!l' A wo1·1t1 of rcaturcs & elegance lJnly 2 years Ill'" &l\l.950 - 6-IB-7171 ,_,., '*. ~~ ~'""".,.,~. CLUBHOUSE ROAD MESA VERD-E POOL HOME PAIR OF PLEXES 10°/o DOWN LOVE MONEY -, The rharrn and suphi~litalion of :\lesa Verd~ al ics delightful best. Distintli\'c 2 stOr\' .1 l~droon1 lle:n·r shake roof. i\e:.!IC'd in n1atu;·t• lrt't·~. t:ntr~· to y;ide lh·ini: roo1n \\'llh r:•ist'(! hearth l11·eplur~:. Spa('1ou~ 0 11cnnt·.~s to t·s1,and 1;1rni]\· rnurn. Entl'rt il iners' dt•lig hl l"ur l:u·µt' c roup~· Urwn Sat. and Sun. 1·5 p.m. Rci1t lhe cro1\d h~ ;1pp1.. t'ilil ON GOLF COURSE 2 duplexes on 11rime location of golf eourse. PH.OVID~S t-:XCELL~NT RETURN. Tremendous v;1lue in today's m:irkcl only $107 ,000. Take advantage -call IJ..12·~. BEACH You'll 1.0\'}o; th1!' di' luxe 2-stor\· lot·att-d elose to the 01:ean. F:1 n1ity s11.t· lron1 liii: ·1:1mily. rwm to four kingsizt' bC'droon1.~ and hu i.!t• lut. ,\\ S-19.!l.'10 il"s a bargain. Call nu"'· ls-li-GOIU $k).23lJ. Pr1tl'. SW.~1;:.<J CORONA DEL MAR SELECTIONS WANTA BIG VIEW?? ~~ Of t·an~·on. ot·can & CaJ:ilinu? \\.'c h:l\"C a key to this dcli~hlfuJ J bcdroon1, 2 bnl h gem in Corona Highlands. Uciiuti1'ully deeorah.'d, lo\'t'ly l'ar· pets and draperies a nd C\'en a char-broiler in 1h{• kiltht•n. He;1r yard lar~e enough for pool. Call ti73·8550 to Sl'C toda~-. CASTLE BY THE SEA "'ith unobstrurtl'd breathtaking view of the Corona del ~h1r jell~·. bay and oce11n rrom the ri<·hly paneled li ving r oom. forni;1I dining room. beautiful garden kilt·hen uud ~p:H·u111~ !iun deck. A -rami\y-room with "'"I L:.or 0 11d "'ine cellar fit ror the Kin~ and Quet>n or th•· c:istle. Quality const ruction throughout iu· eluding ropJ)t'r plumbing and spat•iousness ~"11 wou ldn '\ IK-lit'\'e, Priced a l s.?96.000. }t'or an ;.11· pointmenl lo insJlloel. ple:ise eall 673·8S$0, LOWEST PRICED HOME IN IRVINE TERRACE Ir ,\'OU \\'Hiil to th'l' in Cnnina del 11.lar's rine~I ;1rea, lhi'n let us shn,1· .\·uu our llt'I'.' listin.ll priecd lu sell at 011Jy sus.1100. It has :l Uedroon1s. a den and 2 h:11.h~. You r;on ~cc th<' nighl li~hts ;it rashlon Island and 11' rou t.1·ant ;1 pool there is space a 11lent~· in tht: larp:e pti\'iilC yard. C;ill tii3·tt~ ror dctnils l'M A FRIENDLY LITTLE COTTAGE l"ht~erful 2 l>('droorn i:l.ltie in old Corona de l rilar on H·2 lo!. \\'arn1 friendly fireplace \\'ith doublt> i:arai:c stre~sed. for £tiest unil. Call 673· ti.'i.50 lo see for yourself. Only SGS,000, • HUNTINGTON HEACll R·2 POTENTIAL OLD CORONA DEL MAR l'utt• 2 1.Jcdroom honu• "'ith l1r1•pl ;u·t< and tile roor (•n 01·cr~i~e1I 11 ·2 lot onh-J' · hlll\·f;:-l'r11n1 the hl·a<·h. Grea! add on p11tCnu11I. l'all 1u,11 1o ~c<· only Sli!J,500, li73·li.'i5l l. "BEST 8UY" DUPLEX SOUTH OF HWY. CDl\l'S br~t buy . t'ronl unit split lel't'I :1 bedroon1s. 3 baths. patio -Ht•ar 1u111 ~pllt l1~1·t•I. 2 bed!QOTils. 2 b:iths. patio). 1\11 of this and only one blot'k to t·it)' park. rlOM' Ao ~hoppln~ llnJ Sl'hool. 896.500. C111l 1101'.' {;i~l-l(S50. COSTA ~IESA 27'0 H-lhd. l7tl1 '-h lhL ZlOJO lrooklMint 6014 w., • ., An. CO RON!\ Dt:L ~l .\H ... lJZ M•rtuerlte '7l·1550 S46°ZJ1J 14z.2ns ,n.ou 147-6010 OAJL Y PILOT 4,'; NEXT TO BEACH JUST LISTED ASSUME Stroll to beal'h. l..:ir~,. t1:rrato rorrn.-.1 entt\'. Pri\'a\t• li\'111g ruorn 11.ith 11rt'J}li11:l'. Formiil dining r_o1Jm , lslilnfl k1tehcn . L;1r~c family r?O•n "'llh hugt• !'lune firc111<1 ec. ,I fumily- .".il~.cd bedroom:.. Co\'ercd patio. Pool 5ize; \\'ailed y:1nJ. ASSUl\IE 7·~4 '• loan. \\.'on 'l la'sl · call 963-tii67. $1500 DOWN $29,950 SJ:'JOU clown. Hard to !'ind at S2H.!()(). <\ huge b{•drooms: 2 balh:._ l.;1r;,:e kitchen !\'t'I'.' 11aint. Corn1:r lot . FORt;ST OF' THEES. Uoul gi1tc. l'atlo. Don"t "'Ult· :i6.1·6i67. ' B,{LBOA PENINSULA 3 bedroom 2 bath home plus bachelor rental. Built -ins. fireplace a nd patio. $61.000. 646-7171. 4 PLEX/BEACH $50,000!!! Today's appreciation for YEST ER OA Y'S PRICES. 11 's true. 850.000 4 plex nc<ir the beuch. Good inC'om~. Exrellent finanrin)! i1V<1ilab1e: O\\'Nf:R \\"ILi. !I ELP Fl.~ANC 1': ;-if-r('tfllirt'd. 1AK"'f.: Al)T'J\'XTJ\'GE! -C',\LL &12·253:1. --- SPANISliJ BEACH! POOL ~1>a111 sh r ;inf·h~ Clo:.l' l o hL•;.,•h. '.'\[\\' c r sTO:\I POOL~~ lti.lr~KI o:nlr~. L:u i-!L' for· Olill li1"1n g roon1. St·par:.ilc f<rn1i l.1· n .H1n 1. Hun1cmako:rs kit1·ht•n . llea!t•tl l'U.~to1n 1MJ<i! ·"'ilh s"·e1~11~ ScL·ludL-d ma~l l'I' su1le. Faruily si1e bedrooms. \'ER'' l'.LUSt; TU Bt•:,\<:11. \\"hy \\ ilit · Cid I !l(,J.tjjtj7 JUST REDUCED PRICE 5 BEDROOMS 3 BATHS Price redu{·ed $21.i(JO . .J lar~l' bedrooms. f~X­ THA LAHGt; t',\,\l/LY BOO~! t.1'i!h \\'Cl h~1r. Hu):!e mirrorl'tl firep]a{'l'. nvcr 2100 .~<1. IL of lh·ing area_ IJun ·l delii.\' ·tall 003·67ti7. HUGE LOT WALK TO BEACH !lu).!c lot. ha\'{• yo11r Ol\11 fa niil.\' µ,:1rdcn. \\-alk 'to ;1ll sth1111ls ;uul bea!·h~ Spal·1011-; entr~'. llui.:c li\·inµ l'Huni. lll<i. Bit; VA .\111.\" H(){):\I '. r urn1;d IJl :-\l~ti_ lluµ•· l1l'dn10n1~. IJ011'l wail -t'iill !ltj:J·ti'itiO • 5 BEDROOMS + FAMILY ROOM Jlugl' t•arly ,\ni,-·rit·an ~tyl(• hnnH• ~llu.i[(•rl on t•nd of t·ul-lic·sa« ~lrt·t'l with O\'t'r~11ed "l'it'- .~haped" Jul. -'••11 dl-;hw;1 ~h1•r. ·'··11· µ:11nt. \'ery ~h;irp. \'(·r~ u11iqu1·-<":ill now-11-12-:!SJ:J. $6,500 TO ASSUME FHA LOAN S6.;.o(l to as~urne 11r niaytie le~s <"ash. 011•n•·r Sil."~ hr lllli,!hl ht<h> llnanrC'. SJ!~ Pt:B r~h). P,\YS ALI. ll\\lll'I' lr;insl'1·n·1·d l'l"llllt' :1rl•;t, 'J'<ikt• ;11h·:inlag1•-eall ~12-2.-,:r .. NO DOWN TO G.l.'S $26,500!! Co~.\' IH1n11· 1n r't11·11ee ar1•a . ('lo<>t' to s1·hoo1s <ind shupp111t:. Il l'(;!'.: honu.~ .~11.ed \'ard. 0\1'nt•r 1ran:-.lt'1Tt·d T:1k4• :ul\';inta)...e. ·Call ):1.1::!·2.-~l.'i Act ASSUME 51/4 LOAN Existing FHA loan "'ith pay ment of $154 per n10. 3 bedroom, 11 ~ bath, built-ins. lush . c:•rpet. l a rge yard, CO\'e red pal10 a nd charming playhous<·. O""·ner sa\'S Si;>ll! sell ! Price only S.14,000. Crill 5-l6-ri1:1. IN\'EST~lllN'fS 18662 Mac.Arthur llwcl., Suite 1 OJ 1 .. 1.. 752-1700 I I ~ MIXED SINGLES -r~e</Ve AGKeD ALL OF us F'l10Fo55 tONAL Al~ter<s 10 PUT OUll FAVOrllT6 ~ECIPfS IN A coo~- ~ 600K, KELLY 1 ',.--..J I --:, a/M~1'5 If 6'01~G iO 8t CALLED. ilqO.tlf~? ~ . ' . by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson , . DOOLEY'S WORLD -r11Cr<E ! ... 1'\.11\l' OUC1JllA K~fP N~VIU.6 l Q!ill-'1' 16H1'1 : =--~,...,1j <' J !~~~ I . ' . ' ' • • Wednesday. June 5. 1974 OAtl Y PILOT · --· by-Roger Bradfield- AH,1HEJ..IM,MV lC)'/~ ... HOW 'BOUT A Lli'fLE MIDN ffC llEND6:ZVOUS ? -MEii'!" M£ !lY MY SIDI EN1'RANCEO I TUMBLEWEEDS ·~· l'IJIU'•••.> '----'"'-..U-....... Dr. SMOCK , HI, PCE ! I FoEL GOOD1 MAN! ... NOTHIN' i LIKE A FEW VAYS OUT IN 1llE 616-LONE· I j SOME 10 UNWINV AND RELAX A 6UY ! H AH, YES YEESSl.r<'. NO M.O'Re WAl"flNG IN ·t.-INS A"f' A S!Si:::i!VICe S1'Ait0t-.I F!OIZ. 01.-' POC t..Ll.r<'CM .' Ji .-;:-;o't;.T.7'1 j U.:41 ir..?;t!!~ MUTT AND JEFF by Al Smith ' \ ' I ' ' GORDO SORR.Y, LADY. I'lt... HAVE TO GIVE YOU ATICKET!rt I SAW YOUR CAR PASS A RED LIGKT! WELL, MAKE IT OUT TO MY f-\USBAND - IT'S HIS CAR! TAKE ME:-NOf lbET PL.ACE:& WliH Ma• -· .. ;;? FIGMENTS .. ,..... .... i.,-. ..... NANCY YOUR HAND SHOOK LET ME THE LAST TIME AND TAKE YOUR THE PICTURES WERE PICTURE ~"-~· BLURRY TODAY'S CIDSS\VDRD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Angler's accessory 5 Cali's partner 9 Rascal 14 River ol Brazil 15 Latin wings 16 Nile desert region 17 Certain deers 18 Mild cllmt le area: 2 words 20 Author -·- Harte . 21 Greek. 1euer 22 Speaks publicly 23 Onslaught 25 Detroit wMe alepl'wnt 27 Bedouin 29 Ad]e<:llve sulllx X) Baby carriage 34 Fortlly J6 Sacred text 38 Oueen ol Bibllc:a l ruler 39 Agents 42 OeatNctive wind• Q Put Into words 44 Norlh AiMrican ""'' 45 Poems '46 Notice 47 Young salmon 49 The -··'" Prayer 5 1 Endures 54 Electrical machine .... 58 Spanish coin: Abbr. 60 Coin bl Iran 61 Ve11.at ion 63 Spanish river 64 Dogma 65 Au1hC>r unknown· Abbr. 66 Spill Yesterdafs Puz?le Solved. American disguise evergreen: 34 Jason's ship 3 words 35 Learn from B New book s Zealand 37 Attribute to parrot 9 Become 38 Baseball '"gled play over 67 Stenog-10 West 40 Legal ma\ler rapher Indies 41 Elect. un•t lnlOfmar island 46 Bird 68 Edomite 11 Assisi 48 Least king 12 1,609.34 common 69 ····-1-meters 49 G I k 13 Slrokes ame 1 e tete llgtitly Keno DOWN 19 Mr. 50 -··--pigeon I Swedish· Coward 52 Old Playlog born 24 Conllscates card actress 26 ---·-53 lncllne 2 Type of Monica upward SQuastt 28 Cattle 54 Poses 3 Merchllndis.. genus 55 Waste • ing 30 Greek gimmick : le1ter allowance 2 worc:ts 31 Capable ot 56 Compo a er 4 COfrue>l being ol "'Judllt,.. 5 IMOcenl turned 57 ····Shan: peraon back Asian range 6 Raise the 32 Cain"s 59 Colnol lnd1a spirits ol bro!her 62 Restaurant 7 Nonh 33 Means of clmck ' ' J . ,. " ·1 1 • "IE' " •· . ' " " 10 n 11 11 ' "' ' J l• ·-•• -~ " " " ,. " " . " "" l7 ' ~ " " . " ,.;,;. lO )I Jl ll . " • ., ~ .. • ' ' ;i ., •• ' , ,. . " " " " " " " " " .. " ., • " . .. " ... ' " ,, :.· .. .. ---- 1, ..... -· • MOON MULLINS Mooll, IM~ETTY PROVOKS'C> ABooT ')l)UR BROAl>CA5TING AL!. CNERTOWN ABOUT MY MP.RITAL PIFF/CU~TIE5 . . ·- ® by Emie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS ., . ,, ~ ··~ .. ....... ·' PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz °71'1:'NV~SE ~ ;JinE oocr~ Will SEE \{OV f\.).IJ.lVC iLLE C< - WH{ OON'f {O'J GO FIR'ST ? 1-l..\V!i\'.G OUR EAR5 FIERCED WAS l.{OJR 1~£..\, LUCILLE~ THE DOCTOR WH~ DON'T IS WAITING, \fOU GO FIRST? LUCILLE.. !'M NOT gfA[)(( ... HOW CAN i.{QU NOT 6E R:Ao-t? M~ EARS AR.EN'T WARMED LJP! 1\-rJ~ JUDGE PARKER STRANO HERE HAS ASKED TO SEE ME TWICE NOW, HAVING TOLD Tl-IE WARDEN ON BOTH OCCASIONS THAT ~~~-.,--11 ' HE HAD SOMETHING TO TELL ME! ~ .'_'"~·N HAVE YOU ANY IDEA ... MISS PEACH ~ YOIA'Vf DECIDED 1'0 BECOME A witrrfl<' J:l<A ? W!t..L, YOU'D 9E~i GeT < ~OM f !.IFE·EXPfl<IENCE. ; GO OIA T AND FACE 50ME t ' DANGE!.!l" ••• i r--.v-::JJ~r : . DICK TRACY WHY HE WON'T TALK? -5UFFfl< PR'IVA1'10N~, HUNGl!.lt1 F~AFC1 1'01 1-AND F!nA?Tll'ATlON . 'rHAT~ WHAT ALI-THE . Wfflfe/1'5 AICE WtllTING ABOUT 'fHE?E DAY5. by Harold Le Doux LEFTY, TELL TI-IE 0.A. THAT I"M TAKING THE RAP FO~ 50METHIN(;r YOU DID ... I WASN 'T WITH IN Fl'-'E M ILES OF WHERE YOU KILLED THAT WOMAN. WAKEMAN ... AND YOU KNOW 1T! • by Mell <S°Ho'-ILDN'T *'ME80PY BE COVs/l'ING, LIKE, FUN AND GAM6~? by Chester Gould ----r--.,., RADIATOR CAPS MISSING -ANO.A &USTEO FAN 8ELT. • by Geol"Cje LelllQllt 'fM6 GAS GAUGE:i ON MY CAR !S S'fOCK O~ "FUL-L.".' -· by Gus Arriola rrS Al.L. mo FAMILJAli? GROUNt>! TH•T15o BECAUSE: ON A &'.JS Sl&H EVf.R..., 5EA-r!s A BACI<. $AT[ by Ferd Johnson WELL, HEH.Al> iHE EYS',MOON ... LADY P. ONL.Y ADDED A -rouCH OF by Roger Bollen M"---=-SU RE' GLAD I lllEJ.ll °'E FEl\l E><T'RA BUCKS /IND GOT' THE CAMPER MOD.E L! THE ~IRLS "Guess what, dear, you no lo'h gc r have to go to my rlub fund-raising dinners-starti ng today, ea<"h member is holding one for her hu.sband right at humc.'0 DENNIS THE MENACE • ' -- • • . . . . ... . .... -. . . . . ' * Wtdneutay Jul\t. 5, 1974 Real Estate ........ 1000-2999 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast Rentals .......... ~99 Business. Investment & Financial ......••.. 5000-5049 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Announcements, Personals, lo•t & Found ...... 5050-5499 Services & Repoi11 6000-6099 You Can S~ll It, Find It, [ 642 •5678 1 Trade It With a Want Ad __ ---·-------- One Call Service Fast Credit Approval 1002 Generai R.E. 1002General R.E. 1002Geno rel f!.E. 1002 General R.E. General R.E. \ 1002 Gener~ R.E. • ' EASTSIDE BEAUTY ERRORS. Advertisers should check their ods dolly & ,.pert errors immedi•lely. The GINNY IS BACK!! BAL~OA ISLAND ' \ OAILY PILOT enumu lloblllty for the 11111 · " HO"\E PLUS INCOME -for under $10 .000 incor rect insertion only. After An Extended Leave of Absence! BalbOa's shlirpest 2 bedroo1n hon1e + l bell· ~ __........ --~.-.......__.. room apart1n ent. J ... 1ke ne\v inside ~nd out. Employment & Prtpa!atlon . ·~· .. _700().7199 Mtrchandi,. ...... llOQ0.8099 Boats & Nu>ri.._ _ • Equipment ........ 9000-9099 Automobiles & other Transportation .... 9100-9099 1002 ctassmed INDEX ~-illlng r '·· 1,:;;;;[ ="·""=''"'="' ;;;:.:;:]~;;:;,,,;;;;;[ -='=''"'="' ;;::,:;;;1~;;;:1 Extensivel y ren1odc lcd \vith quality mnterial \i:.,. \vorkn1anship last year. Tastefully decor· atcd and gre~t locat ion. T\vo blocks to beach and steps lo shopping. Call no\1·. 546-5880 'l'he ideaJ family ho1nc on huge lot on Cu.I· de-sac. 1'""eatures 4 bedroom , 18x22 rumpus roo111. 2 Fireplaces. Fruit trees. Storage shed. Fish pond and MOREi $48,950. 1797 ORANGE, COSTA MESA [ -........ I~ HOl,lltl IOt 5t'9 . .. , ., .1000 Mobll9 Homt• for •tit ..... 1100 Aereqe tor 11i. .• 1200 Ap .. ,l .... nl1 10< .-It . . ... llOO 8u1l..-s1 ProClft'h' ... UOO Cen-.ettry Lo11 • .(ryplt 1W. :_;_ Q_tnera_r R.E. :; 1.002Gtneral R.E. 1002 MESA VERDE'S BEST JUST LISTED 642-1771 . -. ,- OUR BUSINESS IS HELPING PEOPLE LIVE BETTER ATTENTION LARGE FAMILY llopula r 4 bdrn1. & family rm. home in liarbor Viev.' 1-lill s ... upgraded thruout ... also, Lite landscaping has been profess. done. You own t he land ... not leasehold. $102,500. BE THE FIRST OWNER . & enjoy the benefits of faster tax \\'rite· off, on this "SUPER" duplex . . 3 bdrms., 21fi ba. & 3 bdrn1s. 2 ba . Convenient loc .. So. ot the ll\\1y. Onl y S123,000-1ve have the key. BAY AND BEACH 675-3000 2407 E . CDABT HWY. CDRDNA DEL MAR General R..E. 1002General R.E. 1002 * * CAMEO SHORES * * • NEW LISTING • -S-"1eeplng0Ce3n'Vie,v. excep ionaUy-1g e. patfo area i.deal for enlertainfng. Call for app't. lo view. Offered at $1 14 ,000. .... -~ ..... ~"" •. GINNY MORRISON CO /ITS & WALLA CE REA L TORS is proud to announce that she will he associated \l'ith them. GINNY has been the recipient of many a1vards. and the n1ost recent was the Top- Li ster·Unit Sa les for 1973. a nd she only 'vorked five months!! She is ready to serve you again in her conscientious and profes· sionel manner. Call GINNY at 546-4141. COATS & WALLACE REALTORS 1 Executive 2 story. 4 BR. 3 ba home . LU:<· uriously appointed \Vith expensive plush crpts. beaut. drps, 'vall paper, mirrored \Vall s & rustic used brick patio. Lg pool size yard \V ith many trees. Best location -on quiet street. Offered at $67.950. Hurry. won't last at this price. Ca ll 546-5880 .,.~HERITAGE • -· REALTORS 546-5880 Open Eves.:., G00 .. 1 R.E. IN-LAW SUITE P1·lvall' entt'i\lll't'. 11. dl7.Y {irl'pb1<.•e, anlJ elegant bRlh nmkc 2 ge1M:rallons nble to I!!""'""'~:!'-'"-~'"-'"-"-!'!!""~""'!""""'-""""""'""'""~".' I Uv<' undt'r lhe Sflm<' root General R.E. 1002 GeneralR..E. 1002 t•astly. LAR GE 4 bed1wn1, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;I 2 balh houic with luxul'if'i> COSTA MESA A FOREST 11lui; -call for 11ppni111Lllt~l\I. t!I02 10°/o DOWN 9112 °/o INTERE$T C.D.M. . Look at those terms!! rhcy nlay be hls1ory !IOOn so don't hcsUatc. Jf you '''ant nn Pxtra sharp 2_ BR 2 BA POOL home in CORONA DEL MAR on a big 60x100 lot \\•ith private con1munity beach access. Only $69,500 Call 644-rllJ mm FOUR.PLEX 01 ,...,.., c'""" lhi< 10,.,.1, $52,500 546-4141 Call U!i 111Jout ! his "Cute As A Bug" 3 b<.'droorii I 1491 SAKER COST A MESA ( h;ird-IO"'find in v es I 111 C'n\ '!. bath hon1e 11·ith COZY I 1 .. ...,..,,..,,.,....,..,,.. ... ,....,~·.., ... ~..,.., ... ~.,..1 Op!JOrlunlty in 11 lX'ltcr FIREPLACE. fainilv roon 1• ;,ene,•I R.E. 1002General R.E. 1002 \\'CSWl:le locnlion backin~ to lO\'C'ly patio 1vith · buillin 2211 Newport It ~.:a&11 -u golf roursc. S610/rno BRIC!\: Bnr-B-QUf:. Anr ... IN MESA VERDE The...UNIOUE-Fe11tiures-Of-T-his•Home-Are1- ll's clean and sharp! 2 stories. 4 bedroon1s near the ne\V park and gol f course \Vith rough spacious family roon1 and deli ghtful land- iuconie rould be rnore I gu<'5ll u.·hat BRAND NE\\I lo1,·-lo1\' vacanl'Y on I y u.·all to U.'(11\ i;hap; car pcling ~£j,500 & BRAND NEW dra11Cries ca.II 64.J-ntl I h roughout . \lacanL lmn1cdiate occupan<.')'. Full Price just $37,95-0. Sun/Eves. 646-5855 IRVINE SPECIAL Uc COATS -& t"ORlllAL DINING ROOl\1 NEW LISTING Triple:-:. ju.~t steps to thr occnn or buy; on fee land. 2- 2 BR.. 1-BR. units. Xlnt rcntnl nrea! Good condition. SU5.IXXI Call: 673-3663 642-2:153 Eves. t ·AA<'C .. E~--.~""Ml1tt'l.._.IOO.,_..--f- R EAL TORS I ASSU!llE Vt\ LOAN associated BR OI< EAS-REAL TOll:S 1011) W 811lbo<1 A7J ·JAt) -54'"4141-II This bcaulHul. home ha~ ii _,_ _ _,_Qetn Ev•nin sl fl!I. Up~aded cnr1w.'tin:••~· I '!':~'!""'! ... ""'""''!"'""'"'" I Slt.\'Re--"'l'MI. C0Vll't!<t .. 1111uo. ;ind niuch. niuch nlOre. All $28.450! H's a de<.'Oratol' B LUFFS C6NDO-itcn1! Owner cnust sell this uf this i.ilus an ai;suinal.Jlc g!'·at 3 bedroom lo\vnhonic THE F~NEST! VA 7•ft, loan. Bt'ller hurl')' no"·· Excellent location. EXPENSIVE Special end unit. G-Plan and c;•ll. Cnll lo sec. 847~to. Agl • \l'ith 4 1xtrms.. rorn1a1 WALKER & LEE IMPORTED TILE dining, <lrama1ic decorating WHEN YOU PAPER OR . ,t· 0 p e n be 11. 111 REAL ESTATE J>AtNT A ROOM. \ITite UlC I. · in cnll')'. brceze\\'a)-. .1. . 545·9491 un1ount of pnper or pd.int _ kitchl'll and renr yard or l'CI 1n~. Large private patJo __ .1 l k •--!. 1 . 1 Omtu scaping. P resented at $85.950. IV' CORBIN·MARTIN INC. UNIQUE HOMES R~altors. 546-5990 "'21 ' 2850 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa 1002 to display vour gartlcnin•1.........., -- - ---1 oo uo:1n11 a pie ure. I this e>stru1s11c Po r 1? f 111 o 1 $79 Ooo :.. I NEWPoiTHEiGH-TS; Then ncxl 1in1e you order, home 1.1th \JC\\' or foash1on la cnls. · · r you'll know exae1lv hov.· HIGH ON A HILL-Island ~'EE land ~BR. 4BA C. F. Colesworthy I ?\\'NER \Vl~L f>'INANCE . _much mnterial yoo;ll need. ~ REAL TORS 644·7662 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. General R.E. 1002 Gen1ral R..E. 1002 i·iC'ii' and all li s prei;tit:;c. 111orC' 1·uston1 leatures, all ea ~ s . hsterl 4 hcd~rc1. f11n11ly Rmlass Hill ivich a forever + honus rn1 rind mony R. It r 640-0020 I N~\\'PCll'1 f-ll·i~hts. N cw! Y J'ni a BRA.ND NE\V listin<>, !or $96,000. I S.12.900. Dolll'lousc bu1!1 for room Rnd d 1n1 n g roo1n N•cd lpOrfl Sec how spacious 1 am. "'1 .CALL 64o.8672 you~ So sharp nn~ ~lean you 1 I: >rnC'. Lilrge yKrd-alley ha\'{' rnoin.s for e\'eryone. LISTINGS NEEDED 1 <'a.n m?ve r1g~1 1n. Bui. a ~ ayt·ess ~nri. ~m f~~ l'C('rf'R· c4ufpm.•nt f ·-~~~~·-~~~~ EASTSIDE 4 BR /3 BA Newport HeiCJhts Harbor View Homes Corner lot \\'/lrg boat i:ate 1 :'\l'ar Harbor Hi. Assumable VA loan. Immaculate 3 T\1·0 story 4 l>edroon1. 21;1 bedrm. 2 ba.. B 1111 5 , bath l'l'Sidenre. Generously fireplace, ne11• cpl , drps. upgraclPd a 11 II tastclully Ohle gar. Lg<' yard. landscaped. for f u m i I y 646-3928 or Eve. 548-2426 living and t.: r a c i o u s includin-;,: a huge master !hrs pr ice you d belier paC"k r~nnal \Ch11les. \\tll carry mute. Call for appointcnent. S29.500! Super Huntington r~i\'!. Call agL to Sl'l'. 1 hrs! •rusr deed at 81~'1. $159,000. Bench home ii; sharl)('r 1han li4?-60lO. PETE BARRETT Lot<; of patio tlla..ssive used brit•k fµI. t n1mac lds1:pg. 2 ~Ts nc\\ 0\1•ner 1nxious. priced 10 a n1odel? l beclroon1~. 2 Any dav is !he BEST DA'l to\ -REALTOR-I h11!hs. rlo~e lo ocean. I nin a, ad! Don•t roelay .. \\'ON 'T LAST! C<1!l 11gt. I "D11ily Pikir Class ifiC'd Ads 1 1 642·5200 sell fa~t. S.~~.900. I/URRY, won't l3SI. can PRESTIGE HO;'l.1 ES, 6-15-6&\6 entl'rtaining. Convenient ro grecnbell and schools, on tt quiet street. $84 .9;)0 . Including land ownership. 817-6010. 642-5678. t~~ Lachenmyer General R.E~ l ool General R.E_ 1-002 Da na Harbor View- Fix und SHVC'! HUKe c:oi:•><:U· 1i\·e ho1ne. Ciani cul-dc·sac Jot. 4 + lan11ly roo1n + formol dining. Clm;c to Re.i h or 644-7270 640-1120 beach. $49,!}j()~ Call 847-6010 Put your Duaget back on Investor's Dream down A:;!. the tntck , . .'Sell ldtc i1e1ns 90' OF f>'"RONTAGE on \\'Hier ~:: Acrl'. dircc1ly in back'! . . Have son1elhlni; )'OU \\·11nt to \\'ilh a IO\\'-<'OSt Daily Pilot \\'ilh 46' !Joni dOC'k. 4 Bed-of nC'll' officl' huildinq. Pro-· sell? Classified ads do it Cle!lll!ficd Ad! Call 642-5678 roo1n, 2'¥ bn1hs, 2800 sq. rt. [>('rly in lront tine n{ 1!1•vel- 11·ell -call NO't\I 6-12-:J67S. today! O\l'ncr 11·ill help fin ll ru.:e. o~inient. !'resent } ~1 (' o n1 e j Gonerel R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 !!3.1,:,00. :0[:·1;':""''. SI~~ All I A small nriro ~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii ~21 · C.M. l!W i J-'& •""""' MACNAB ~~1 --:i 1opay 1RV 1 NE ~G···~,.1 R~.E. ~100;;;;;;;2 G;;;;;""";;;;;'I R.;;;;;E. ~1002[ 1o moye in1o a -------•-------.. EXCLUSIVE BAYFRONT LIVING-•I c ldwell B ~ I 100· on BA /~~~t~~' :O~~L~:ne remodel-~ES1DENT1At SllOKERA~n .. !! j ed in '71. Lou is XV firepl ace in living DREAM HOME LOCATION roo1n . Antique walnut panelling incl. !ire· \Vell located vacant Lido Isle \ol. Near ten· place in library. Superlative vie\v from master bedroom & 1nost other rooms. nis courts and sandy beach. Plans avail· $385,000. Walter· King 644-6200. (Y58) able. Asking $70,000. CONVENIENT LOCATION 4 bedroom home near \Vestcli!f Cente r. 14x24 paneled family room w/fireplace. Well landscaped. Pool size lot. 854,900. Loi s Egan 644-6200. CY59 ) LAGUNA VIEW HOME Outstanding coastal view! Newly decor at· ed. beautifully landsca1>ed 3 bedroom hill· side country home. Separate guest house. Extreme privac;r. Sl l0,000. Paula Bailey 642-8235. (Y60) SPANISH "VtLLA " IN BAYCREST- $91,500 Dramatic sunken living room for gracious Jiving-lovely courtyard pat.io-4 bedrooms + family & breakfast areas. Secluded & •qu iet. Walter King 644-6200. (Y61 ) IMPRESSIVE BAYCREST Unm istnkenly Ivan \Veli s. 5 bedrooms, 3V:i baths. dining room, family room. sciv· ing room . island kitchen, pool, 3 patios. out· standing landsca pe. $119,500. BAYSHORES WATERFRONT 50· frontage on sheltered eastside location wilh spectacular view or bay! Pier and slip ror 65' boat \\'ith additional anchorage space. Specious 1ivin~ room and dining room 4 bedrooms. den, dark room. shop, and game roon1 . $350,000. EXCEPTlONAL CONDOMINIUM Choice ~lonnco 3 bedrootn model Big Can· von. Exquisitely decorated in soft colo rs. Br ick terraces with a view of 10th and llth rai r\vayS. lli gh ly upgraded. $160,000. BUY IT WHILE YOU CAN ! Lovely f111nily hon1c. Top c."Onrlition ~ :i BR., 2 full h11. + bonUl! fill. $65.000. -GEM- 120.r Tustin Ave., N.B. REALTORS 642·4623 SYi.:i(}()! Low C'ash lo assun1e I 7n.;7; ('\!Sting loan, Prime llunringto11 Beach locnrlon. Supr'r rtoorplon. C:ill nnw. _Hi7~10 cAi~'·~-_,~-,,- For Clw ified Ad ACTION C..11 A DAILY PILOT AD.VISOR '42·5671 OCEANFRONT DUPLEX Paint & MAKE THOUSANDS. Two 3 Bec!room Units. New list· inCJ. BITTER HURRY! C o 11 645-0303. FOREST E. OLSON INC A COLDWELL BANKER COMPANY 2299 HARBOR BLVD., 645'0303 VILLA IN THE TERRACE Everything you'd '"ant in a dream ho1ne. This sun drenched vie\v property bas a garden dining room-2 Jiving rooms for entertaininJJ-niagnificent Roman pool '"/ tiled fountain-radiant heat-terrazo Doors -5 bedrooms. ~215,000. Barbara Aune Lovely 4 bedroon1 beauty on spacious corn- er lot in Cameo l·lighland s. \Ve recon1mcnd this hi ghl y al $85,500. CALL TO SEE JT TODAY ! LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT \Vhere do you park a 70 ft. boat? Right in front of this graciou s bayrront residence! Three bedrooms, maid's roo m. 3\12 baths. den. Located on a 40 ft. lot. $300 ,000. . TOWN HOMES I I I I' I I \ 642-8235. IYB2) BA YFRONT-NEWPORT BEACH PIER & FLOAT Superb Hayfront view in Newport Beach. 1:ull y rurnished 6 bedroom + family room at s:ti5.000, incl. land. Jt adiant heat in mag· nifieent muster bedroom w/attached sauna & private patio. \Valter King &44-6200. ( Y63 ) Irvine . M•cn•b·lrvl M .... n,comp•"' I OI Dove' Orlv1 142·1235 1144 M•CArlhur 144·1200 N1wporl l11ch, Cellfornla 121 13 • DRAMATlC OCEAN AND- Canyon Vie \v, 4 bedroo1n 3 bath. family home. 2 cozy !ireplaces. 3 car garage. Ca· thedral ceilings. Gourmet kitchen, private courlyard. Offered for $96,750. J US T IN TIME for spending summer on Balboa Island. Char1ning duplex with 3 bedrooms each unit, \\'alk to shopping, bay and beaches. Only $l09.000. DIAL 644-1766 2161 San Joaqu in Hills Rd., N.B. A COLOWELL BANK E R CO. J ' From Pteifle Coast Highway tnd Sup1rlor AY•nu• intersection, drlYe up Sup1rlor to Newport Crist 1ntranc1. Sate otttce: •12 Aobon Court. Open dan, 10 A.M. 10 Sunsel. (714) 845-8141. I~ 1~ convwn•-1 lll\l<ltlf19 tH JC n•• loiffl C•ll> prife Ill Pl.fin I. ~.000: IOt~I d0*'1 PArl'ntft• of lllj(l,Oll; M .._'"'" lltf'Mftll et bM.t• f~-lmll l!'ltlrnl)t 1n,i t nd 11.ol•ellon Int N01tlt1t,.lo 11.1)~ ANNUAL PEl.CENl• AOa I.All. '' · I~ i 0 I1 i· I f I S UG!E I' I I I I' . I LYEGOU I · I I I I' I 8 Pl11NI N~ltEO IEJTEllS t Ill qi!SE SOU.A.~E ! • I Commtrcltl P..-fl~ .. 140U COll<!Mllt>lvmt lot .t..it 1100 Dvplt•ts·UnU1 sale .. 1100 Hou ... ro ~ movtel lfOO hlCO<M PrOPtrtY . , • 2000 11\0VJ!ri..I PrOPerlY .. 1100 Lot1111< ..-ie . . .... ~ Mobil•-Homt • TrtU~r P•~• noo MCNllltln, [)fl¥t, Rewn , '400 Or111f11 Co. Pr-riv HOO Out of Sll1t P•-•IY ....... HOO 1t1nc,.es, F1nnt, GrO'l<!I . 7'00 lletl E1t111 e iclltl'IV9 ........ 2IOO ltttl f1ltl• Wtntltd , .•...... HOO ~·"_··~!~ Ho111~1 Fur"l•l'll'd ..... 3100 Hou111 Untur"!ahtd .••.. , 3200 Hou1<" Furn or Uni , ... 1)00 COl>domlnlums Furn , .. , , , . UOO Condomlnlum1 U11lurn , , , ... , .)05 Tetw"hous•• Furn ..•.....•. 3SOO To-hOUffl u"""" .. H7~ Oupl1•t1 Furn .. ,;.ssc Ovplt••• U"turn .. )60C AP11•lmtt1l1 Furn ..• noo APtfl,,....,11 Un/urn )ll)O Apt1 Fum Ot Uni • ltaO lloom1 . • .• olOOO lloom & B<Hnl . • 41150 Ho111 •• Mot111 •100 Gvt1I H-, •150 Summe• 1t1n1tlt , i7il0 V1<tr!on lltf\1111 4UO lltnlals lo shire .. OClll Gtrt~ for lbnl .. 4lO Office Rini ti .. 0 00 BllllMtl lttfllll ... "50 lndu1trltl lltfllll . . 0 00 SIOttQt .. ., , ... 4HO llenltls Wtnled . , .1iOO Ml.olllnlOUI llat>ltll ...... ~ !1111IMU r!Vn ty Bu1!ne1i Wented scno lnY111tment OpllOl:l'Y • 5G1S 1nYt •lment W1nreo ~ Mon•Y to Loan i.112S -v~W•n..___ .•. -· M» Mortg1g11. Truil On dl )QJI Announcements ]~ Announcem•nll . 5100 Ctr Pools ' S1S~I Lev11 Notices "'' Lott and FOINI 1[g]r LGtt & Found "" j Per.on.lie I~ Ptrwrwl• . "" Socia! CIVbt , .. TrtYll •• Servi<• Dl•KICl•r ... ln1truction I ~ Stl'lo(lls .. lnstr1Kllon . " 100j Emplo,!Mlrt )[Ill Job Wt'1jtd. M•!t ~· Jot> Wenttd, Fem1ie ... Jobi Wtnttd, M & F ICllS I HllP W1"1td. M .. F . ... ' [ ..... _ I~ An!lQIHI IQGI AppH1ncel .. ec10 Aucllon . toll Bicycln l!l'IO Bulkll"'i! Mtle,11!• . IG2S c1..,er11 ,. Eqvloment tolll C1!1 to'JS Ooo• . li;.IO Frn To You l(MS Fvrnllure .. ..~~ G1••g1 51~ . &OSS H«lfll . . . . .1060 HOUllhold Goodt .. I06S JeWt!!ry 1010 Ll¥1>10C~ , , • .9075 Maclllner' 101a Ml&c.t111MOlll tolO MIKtlle"e0\15 W•nlfil 11)11 Muslt1I ln11rvmtnt1 , .toll Ollle1 Furnl!vre & Eaulp .illlll Pet1 • ...... .. I081 Pltfl,O~ .. Orgt"s . , IOtll Stw11111 M1chln11 . . • . . .!OllJ Sporllnll Good1 . . . . . ICl'U !tori, R111tur1nt. 81r . . •. !Oii' Swtp1 .. ... . .. . ...... @09$ TV, A1dlo HIFI, Stnr10 . ..~ti [.._-_·""_I~::'_,,_,__,. I~ Gtllfftl 8oel1. Malnt ... 51r~lc1 Boel1, M1rl1>t Equlpmtnt 80llls, p-... .. . 8NIS. ltt nl/Ch ... l•r Boe!s. Sall -l o.ts. SU pi, Doctt , • l o.ts. Soetd t. Stl . lo.ti St0tt"Qt . ~'" ... ,. ~· ~· ~· ""' ~· ... ... ~'_· .. _-_ ... _ ... ~I[ ml Airer tit ~r.'i~c;,~1·: .. ~~n.• Moblle Hom11 Mot..,..cy<;l 11 I SC:ool 1 r1 Mo!or Homl'I. St l•·ll•nt l rell1r1, Tr1wt , . Trall1rs, Ulllltr Auto Sll'vlt• & P1rlt •. • 9110 . nxr . fl)ll t1•G .. ~ .. tl&O ..t17G '"' . .. .. ~...... l§J G1!fttr1I , .......... t5~0 AntlQIHt & Clau!tl , ,. ... mil lltc:re11fon1I V9'11c!fl . • .• ''30 $oor11. lltte. llods ........... t5'0 I Wheel Orl¥tl .•• , . .. .. .• ~ Tnit~I ... t)a(I VttU '570 A~to Lttsln(I . . tllO Autos W1nt•d . .. "90 •utOI. lmf!O•tld t1llO Aut111, Ntw flQO AUl(IL. Utl'd f'KID Trivia? -••~ a recuon to r•ad the \_. Dally 'llot'• entertainment page every Saturday .. Jfj PILOT.AOVEJl:TISER Wtdllf.Kl.tY Junt 5 1974 WrdntM!ay, Junt 5, 1974 OAILV PILOT 1J9 Gener• R~E. 1002G1ne;:;fR.'e•-.-'--""•1•00"2"'i•G'-1::n"1-r•',.1"'R'"."'E'".--"'100=21;c1o;r10-n;•f~d;•1;M;~•;•;;;1~01~2~C~o;•;on;•;~d""1;l;M;§•;•;;;1~01~2-H-v_n_t-. H~.,-bo-v-r--10<4~2-L_•_g_v_n.-B.-,-,-h--1048 Newport 106 \Income rojMrty 00~ * B lb B p I * SAl.f: 01\J LEASE, ' Bil, ) IMMACULATE II • BAYCREST TRIPLEX • a oa ay ropert es * PROUDL y WE OFFER . • • * "" •"· ,,, ba, N .. 1, ""· 2 lldrm ' ' ba•h home; • on ' ilOltMS .. POOi. ' '.• BAYCREST AREA 4 Ne\\· Ustings-Quallly Duplexes-Quality renters C~ 10 11i•nler, 8J3...9l69 h1ndicc111pi1l, "'Ith lac. lrt'i'll Olnlru;:·rm, t·iun•nn. kitehcn 1Rt·MI j)l'rt of r.1(·§11• Vf'!)k•, COSTA MES 4 BR I , lrvlnt 1044 & h1·h·k P41!io. Cloi;e to 11("4' w1e111tlnK arca 3 bt; Uulity o111111 ndlnl!' i~n<'r !lo ~41 A ., rplc Ill mstr. RELAX 22~225112 MARGUERITE-$84,5')() ~t11r.:N1. Jlurry on thi~ one rm., 2 lrpl~9., S~i·kiu:c Hur~ on .l~lii one jnd 2-2 Bdrrn hon1cs Lovely swimming pool; on • Rodv.'Olld Dct·k or 414-4261h ACACIA-$71,950 at S:lfi.500. bl.:::kyanl & hli.: invil111.11 '11.'lkl ~n uffei 1 I' \VIJ1 trade green~ousc r 0 r lhe JU?i1P Into a Luxurious 600-600112 ACACIA--$79,500 FRESH PAINT mtlw~ pt-.:il. &huinerl fo;l-h1 llf('I\. •AAIN STREET $-l5,000 Cn!J 675-7000 !Jotauist. \Valk to a11 Pool . ENJOY!! An t•xquilf· 718-7181/i ORCHI0-$79,500 QUIET LOCATION ,..,_,_..,..Tkhd t't.>e land , $IO'l:~· Pi1n. ou11111111dln1; IOl:ullon for an w :,chools. $65,950. 642-7491 Jte yard that nJUll bl' l'+'Cn RECENTL y ~·'1" only. By owner &)6..:.288. "olfi1-c l11n1lo 1'(1n1plt\:" An elegant Jo'an1lly llon1c r~or app't to see, please call: REDUCED BY O\VNER: t.tust sacriJIL~ Coopcrathe O\\'tl('_r "'Iii ~111 \VATERFRONT. 2 + dlJnci tn 1wu~111 d~1w111or •9"4·1t71 499.1100 myloYClycondo lnBlutrson Un&nt'l". llelghl 11nd dt-n11I)' Oen, pier & slip. Corner 1one11. 5 £k.'<lnxnni1 or Den, RACHELLE ROBERS, ~El\LTOR ~~~~: ~;: ~ow1ri':!u! B'i O\VNER : 3 BR, 2 BA, qulck salt basis. 3-BR., din. llnill.'i 1n1•y t ... ex<~led. JUST THE SPOT lot . Owner most an· 3 Bftlhs, 1'"'an1Uy Room, 3333 S 1 A 1 1 • fan1 rm. SUP~;R O<'EAN rooni .. i:Witoni cork & LAGUNA . · '107 ronnul DlnlnK Room, 2 E. COA. THI HWAY IO(Hyl ppre<:alc ti; Vl~:W.h•--bc.k.,.·cl 1'7.!IOO. Vwi-1..uit1l4Pfl'&,hug1·U('Ck,.....A ,, , • ·-XJOUS • ., ,000. F'l (IU!tlity ft>nturC11! Buy It for '''-""'"' -~ J ' · "\''''lookl"g "•">.O" & "'>'· .,, ... Ir(' h\tl\r un1t11 ;.ii tlol'th For a I~~· Jn 1nily; in a nice n ghborhood. 4 Bil., lam. rm .. slu!l y & l'tlplrH .. 'C"· lil'umt.'tl CcUin111> CORONA DEL MAR 675 2373 ti ~ 500 .,.....,.,.. v " " " " " p EN INS U LA PT. tn ·rcrrnzo 'l'ilL'tl Entry 1 .. °' )' • · . Ov.•nl."r/Ag<'nt. G44-68u!I. 1•nt1 ol L.oi;:unu. No VtU'lln Brand new. 4 BR, 3 ba. View or Ct1nyon11 on<i ii s Laguna H1ll 11 1050 NE1 LISTING ~~~!:1.~;:~.1~:r~1~1"indlt!Ort 1U1d pool. $46, . 556-8800. Best locat ion . As k ing Wutcr. Superb Coro1u1 dl.'I Co1t1 rn"a 1024 4 BR 3 bu. au· c:ond. \.\.'<'t l>or, BAl.llOA }ENJNSUl.A ~BFt. SUBDIVISION Mur al't'n. 0 ~ E Y 8 A 11 prof, lw1dsca1>t."'!I. !IJir\11kler (:Ql111ge, ep~ to bt'KI bl•tich, $149,000. 67~7420. \\'ARltANTY JorHuyt•r. Otll i;ys1t•n1, Assuri1ablc 7 ~ Prlct..:I 10 ~u. $59.~. ~fully h111>n:tved lot~ r.UT1"d REALTORS CB G4G-O~. 492-71141, 581-2116 C 0 AST P!tOPEH.TIES, for . n1 obllc honu.•s 11.n<l l:.! . ' ' ... .. ' Lake Forest 1054 GTJ-5410 nrld1tlonnt Jots £Oned !lnd tsl \\1c1>torn Bank Bldg. · • BIG CANYON f 0 r tn .._. r en1:l.11cl•rcd. U!OOO' mll'l, ~~.l'. Local Office5 To Serve You University Park, lrvinc 701o Asl5umable Loan Hroodrnoor Model home . 4 i\loli\"~ted ~cller .,.,.111 give Days 552·7000 Nigh ts 3 Bit, 2 ha, 1 yr nt"w honle in Br, Fam·rn1., \\'el·lwr, c<isy inlf'J'eli~ onlr tl'rms. \\I.I.I-:\ . General R.E. 1002 CORO NA DEL MAR HOME WITH INCOME-Cozy 3 BR, 2 ba, with flre~lacc + .. new 2 BR rental over ga·· rage. Priced at $90,500. For a dditional in- forn1ution CALL 540.1 151 . BETWEEN BAY & SEA LI VE ON BALBOA PENINSULA POINT- P restige locat ion, near ocen, b ay and ten- n is club. 5 Bedrooms, 31h bath, family r oom, TV room, bllli;i.rd rooin and wet ba r . $114,500. CAL~ 540.1151. ERITAGE REALTORS General R.E. 1002 General R .E . 1002 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Ill \I I \ ' . " .. -' .u • • ~ ~·-·· THE BLUFFS 11lE PAJU<Lll\£ ATP.IOS- PHERE WIU. ENCllANT YOU. OUll AVAILAlll.t: IN- VENTORY JS SLJBSTAN· TIAL. 2, 3, 4 & 5 .BED- ROOJ\1S, SOJ\1!!: \\'ITll BAY VIE\VS, POOLS, DENS, f'ORt.tAL DlNlNG & 1''AJ\1· !LY ROOP.1S. PRICED f'ROM $46,000. CALL FOR A PERSONAL REVJE\Y. HARBOR COMl"ANY llEALTOltS SINCE 1!:144 67~00 Balboa Peninsula 1007 ALL EWI ----------1 "1'.t" VA 1011n. l'l'inc. & 6~()...82<15 t..:iu11tty Ii.Ide. $10,SOO cash to beaut c:ond . By Owner. ll Call 675-7:!2'5 3 Bedroom -2 bath townhouse. \V:.ilk to everything you need. Pri\oate palio. JJool & l<ec Roon1, Al l !or a lov,,. $38,500. YOU CAN AFFORO this ~·uston1i~l'd cu ti~ 11 ith its l lld!'n1s., 2 ba1h, b1'C'ak- f11~1 blO', utilit)' rooni \\'Hsh· er and di')ler, It has IOI.Ii ol sto1'&1::e and is Io t· a l c d a(!n'.ISll from park aotl pool. Only $32,900. l~tcr. 01 only s1x1. per n10. HAR.~B~o=R~V~U~C~a-rm_e_I fo or nppt. 1 71~1 58l·O'l70, '·' Cut·i•u ntl 11.('fllty Co 3 Bit. 2 Bn, f<i m·rn1, Bt>~t o7:C.C=:'-'"=:c..:=·-=~ loca!IOn on itJl:en bell.I Lido Isle 1056 Owner $72,990. Alt. 6, j.1~ . Waterfront Duplex BIG CANYON c .c .1---=~"-c=--GRUBB & ELLIS CO. REALTORS 675-7080 ) our lcnants ~·1U pity I~ t>eau\•Ule. 3500 Sq. fL 4 Hr, TRIPLEX bulk of t~ billi. O....·ner s 3 Ba., Spectacular vie"''· NEWPORT <1pl., 2 studlO apti;., 3 bdrms. Slj!l,300. 6 4 4 -8 t 2 2 or e&. l.e!iM'llold SI00,000 Land 642-ol950. by OV.T•cr. Just oil Newport Blvd. c&n bt> purcha~. Good 8(.'CeSS to Newport Corona del Mar 1022 Huntington Beach 1040 CALL 552·7500 •VISION• SOPHISTICATED' You will recognlz.c that this ii',~ ru;suma.ble loan is a bw'gain! ln\'itlng duplex, So. of liwy., surrounded by l'X- pl!'nsivl!' properties, on a quiet Sl!1'e\. Your il'lvest- n1ent will be prote<;letl. Take a look! You'll be happy you (lid: MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 '. 675-6459 Price Reduced Start Summer Right HA.RBOR VIE\V H0~1ES-Cost.a rilesa -. San 0L£'Ao , • , , , , .. r-.tonac.1"! model 2BR & ck>n, to. .. y Ce0 •-• >I-" loc•l•.o>• $2 400 R d H'll R I Tnplex. nuce 2·b•h .n .. 1pl~. 2BA l\lamy xtras Xlttt or.. . ..u.·(U ....... , "·~ . 2 Bdrm •• + . Pool e I ea ty St••ns to beach & tennis Ct. (.1lrki • I 6 9 '; ·, 0 . E. .... ""'"d~~ unit hllll "" ,roo*!',' RE.· •LTY REALTORS $!"'· 000 · , " • · • · , -1n1ng 100111 -u1n1 Y ''" • ..,.,, 61·1-1371/Days: ~170 roon1 -orchid room -~ Uni\'. Park Center, Il'vine Balboa $22,600 CllOICE 0 -•• ,,,,., 1 1'--fireplacl'!i ·indoor BJ:Q · 36' New, &djacenl d up l r x cs. .·. ooyuv ... oca ""'• i'ou can pay ~2000 nlore than \\later oril'nted. JllO,OOO s1n.gle wide n\Qb1le .honie. patio clrt:lcd ln wrought iron 11 f 1 Each Tho bedroom, patio 1n -2nd patio -plus gorgeous 1. ls or a IP!\\' w1\t or you LOVELY spacious 2 story . lu.-<ury pnrk $17,500. f3.l4 ... 13023 more! Both olher units nre can buy n1y upgraded unit hoine \\'ith rustii: v•OOIJ 2 BR ... put!~ ... enclo!M.'1'1 fo1· $2,00J bcJ01\' 1'l'pl!U.'l'n1cnl f'Xterior, 4 bedroo1n, forinal LIDO Sands, 3 BR, 2 ba -+ garages. All this fot• only l.'Ost. dlntng, family room, all play rn1, aludy, pool, ten-t(Y,:. do\\'ll -Just rcducl!d. 2 Bdnn condo., desirable elecrric kltcllen, brick nis. By 01\'n1·, $47,fiOO No1v only Si2,~l()(). Ca I l 8 NE\V DUPLEXES ground level tloor pla.n, I ~ fi['('place, new shag carpets $110,000 &12-70&1. 752-1700. Dana Point years new, Freshly Painted thruout. 3 Car garage. Quiel Price just reduced I o r B!'.:ACtl HOUSE $51.500 INVESTMENT DIVISION EXECUTIVE HOME $61,95(}.$73,950, ocean views ';:i~':;Jc~~?,.'=~ed. pl~ £~S568•1t1-ee1. $54,500. Bkr. s4·obdnnnune1· ~balo. hCle1nn &1 h1!i;h Pr1v~cy. Character CALL 1·-· ! By n. .. ..,. .. , O.Oice Balhoa Sa\'e $30,000 to $50,000 over _,, . .,.. .,.,.,.-.. 3 t , amJ y rtn., 01vn£:<1·, 1nCo & appt ~14 v-.-Co d I u ... ~ · 11•w.ipa·~--' dining """· 2 I I "· 'Pl!'li Point. 2 Sto.-v, 4 Bi·. rona e ,....., pnces. I""".... , ·---------rp n. "'J--e. suru1y patio 5-is.-0918 or !TI<ll 328-3233. I ', F I A . . sha~ carpels & • custom I ' /BBQ ~ ·-I D<·n. Din-rni, cu.~\ Hit ~er ppreciation . "' . ..,., " ot Agt, 33&il Cop'''"" Lantern I nr.lpcs, ovf!l'Sized pantry 1----------h w/loads of xtras. 50 Yds .,..... aren, cuslClnl tile counter UNIVERSITY Park, Village: OWQR() lows on jrz. r·· l~ --lron1 Boat l&unchi.ng l'amp 496-J.131, Dana Point • !ops, sh&ke roor, near I, ·~or sale by O\vRei'. -. Realt.oq lloblttiomM lilP A PAIR OF FOURS & bay bench 3 Blki; from Costa Mesa 1024 schools, .,.,·all<lng distance lo beautifully upgraded, 31,JR, 3~!6 Via Lido 67:>-1562 \\'on'! do much 1n 11 pnk1"'I d TE>nni11 Oub. Pt•inc only. Hunting:On Center, swim-2 ~~ ba, fam nn. prmc. , gan1"' hut lhis pnir of FOUi: Lin a Isle Waterfront 671-7310 Eastridge Special ming pool &nd many park only, S57,51Xl. 552-83i3 or Linda Isle '1059 Mobile Homes PLEXES 1.:an do a IOI for Custo1n 4-l>drm., 4 'h bath home on lagoon . L+:. 4 Bt, den, nr. Racquel 01\'ncr ~an immecliatl' areas. Nmv $2000 below co!;! 673-2043 *SY OWNER* for sale 1100 your plans lor a Sf'Curi· F ully equipped island kitchen, waterfront Clll, b&y nunp. $97,500. ~le ~n this beau 111 u I ne\\'. <Pr i n c i pa 1 s only RACQUET CLUB . nnanciBI Cutu1·c. Pt"rfi-t·ll) 1 _~l:':"':·i~ly:_:r:o:o:m2,_:b1:'1:li:ar~d:.,:r~o:o:m:·:,.:·~·~·~·~·~·'~2:5:0~,~00:::,0.'-·~0~w~o~ec5/~og~e~o~1T.ffi~6;;0>-i;i'l600i",.j Eastridge ~tory. Featuresl~p~l•~·~·~•)~.~C~a~li~lod~oy~~~~ ~~~ Linda Isle ~teal, $199,900 CllAM1ING l BR + sujtl'd for c\vner occup~ni:~ r c: . --4-hdrms,.-l-baths.....Ferma.I ·rn== , ----2ll:-~-2S·ll~ cabana:--T~Pa . -Oi".-inv.csltnl'nL .S71,,, W..£a<"4----l 70 LINDA ISLE DRIVE · ap1if?i"'no BeacO 101 dining room, chers kitchen. Popular 3 Br, 2 ba, all elec., TI4: 847·6175 714: 548-6037 beach. See to apprec. \\'k: lov.• inoo111l'S that can l.'a.o:.:!;. Pri1ne 45 ft. lagoon lo t -"150,000 ' F'amilY room, Sl'v..'i ng rooni, a,ir cond. ~aut. landscaped. Mesa Verde 1063 das. $8,750. 6i5-Ua5, \Vknds be raised to S730/n10, 9·'" I °" CUSTO~r 2"BR, 2 BA, ~uge fin>plat-e. ~,500. BRING .p;ERRI~'""' ~,o,11.!!~1ln lne. By _,pwner. -67~ • ....,o ·80';~ Joan possible or?? SoHJ • lam rm. stone frplc, l:i1rch ALL OF~ , Crul ··'"17'"' 11 "'-' :i ..-.a ...-...oo F'or Complete~nforJ11ation r"' . ;)'fv' ~l( • Mesa Verde Delight 'IOBILE llO'IE d I .• lob"ether or separately. ' cab11ts galore, 2,00'.I sq f1. • ~ STORY-iORTLEROCK; Tran-.ferred B 0 . • " .... . " • ua WI f', Call 644-72ll On r*'ll Homes & Lots, Please Call: Palisades. [ m""nElL.J '::6 Q\\'llCI' n1ust scll 4 BR 21 y \\'ller. Lnrge 48.H, :!BA. 20Xxi, !n hea11 or Newpo11 . 26931 Calle V£'rano IUJ $54 000 has. Lge rahi.-' 2 plus bonus roon1. Ne11· plush Beach, 8E1yside Village. 2 mm BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR $.)1,950 4!1:Hi670 ~ 1 Din-'.nn, atriuin, ;.l~. ~~ Ac<irpct th,ru-ouL See 111 BR. 2 ha. Xlnt. Ph 675-3;L1!l. . 1 , "" Corona del Mar 102,2 W\S.JIMU'9.vu<!J :, ... _:, -h "h1 .. ~0,.~·. 6~. BBal~·,1h·,1."b~•~ pool, park. Many xtras. ?.~rcclall!'_. ~nder niarkcl B<tyl1:u111 Pk, Large 2 bi·, nl!'w I . • 1 '::""3"4"1""B"1~y~si~d"1""D"r".,~S~v~it"e~l", "N","B"·~~6"7"5"-6""1~·~·, I ....... ~ v.... ~ "' $69,500. incl land. 833-9208 p1 ice $39,950. 979-TJ20 -crpt, bl1ns. FA heat, rare i ' 1: 2955 l!atbor Blvd., C.'.\1. colunlly kitchen 11·ith fire· LARGE L' h!&Lo I N Newpo•I Beach 1069 ~b~ .. ~·J1~1.2~9~~~6~'~".~""lli~:,;::1 ~~~~~::~~~~·1 Genera l R .E. 1002 General R.E . 1002 P see, \'aolt{'(I c:ci1ings, sep. , 1g ve )', e1v ;" ·· • ""· ....,......,,,.,. BEAUTIFUL arale sc\lo•ing cen1e1" cove1·-:l BR, :l ba, University Park, SUPER "E" Acreage tor safe 1200 60/0 ASSUMABLE BUY A . WARRANTY 'llDME MAGN1f1CENT! The view from this prope11y of the bay, «>tan and peo· nisula is unhelievahle. Gra· c.iouli, ovf'l~izl' h1·0 bedroom "rondo" on the bay wi!h slip availabl('. Out of &r£'a BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB 011·ner wflnls 1111 offer! G.reat view of Fashion Is land from this POP"' DUPLEX ular Broadmoor model. Expensive c ustom Rare •·01d Corona" inro1nl! drapes & cplng, \tan Luit \vallpapers. 4 proJJl'rty consisling of 111·0 individual doll houses. Both Bdrms, FR, DR & 3 baths. Large Jot. $159,500 iu"t: IMsed to \\'Cit qualified WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors ~snki~~s ::.S:r~itha ay~11:ci 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road T.D. av&ilnble. NEWPORT cENTER, N.B. 644-4910 PRIVAn BEACH I'!"""""""'!!!!""""""""""""""""""~""""""""""" l111is lo\'ely 1hree bedroo1n <ieneral R.E. 1002 General 1':E. 1002 hon1c enjoys the osc of pri· 1----------vale beaches, sccl uded COSTA MESA RANCHER $28,950 FULL PRICE Rambling Ranch str('(!ts find has a spcctaC'u· tar OCl'IHl view. Sho1l'n by 4 + Family appointmc·nt only, $80.500. $38,500 LUSK TWO STORY ASSU!\IE VA 7 1 ~·;, L~. S194 /J\10. T 0 T PAYJ\IEN'rS A L You ban::ain hunters hail bl·t1er ta-ke a JiOOCI look at this one. 3 hdn11s, 1~ baths, area fan1ity 1"00n1, lon·<'d air heal, huge k>I, built-in gas range and oven and a groat loan that anyone can take o\'cr. For furlher Informat ion plensc ask about listing nun1bcr 95i0 WALKER & LEE REAL ESTATi'.: 545.9491 $4J .!l50 1>.•itl buy a 4 tx-droon1 hon1e on a grt'fl1 corn£'r lt1t in great Hun!ing!on Bcaeh location. 1-tu~e 111 a RI er bL'Clroon1. L.ilrgc effic ient kl!ch<'n. l\.luch 1i1orc. Ca!! to sel'. R·17-6010. Agl. You'"" Charge DAILY PILOT Classified Ads 642·5678 SEEK & FIND" rrx 'N SAVE. Just a liH!c paint and clean up. Prime locu tion. 4 bedroon1s incJud- in~ hide·a-,vay mster suite "'·ith p1ivate balh. Large living rerun with f1001· to <-eiling fireplace. Gourmet ki1 chen and spacious family roon1. P.1agnificent park like grounds. JUST lJSTED. C.1.11 645-0303. lllRISt L 01 ~O\ '" P£A LTUN) A COLDWELL BANKER C..'0~1I~ANY 2299 Harbor 645-0303 NEW LISTING Nc.,.,')Xlrt 1-feighcs area. Super 3 BR. 2 b.1s., Family or Dining -nn hon1c wit h custom detailing lhru out. Located olf Irvine ave, So. of 171h SL GIB WALKER REAL TY 675-5200 &II idle ilerll~ with a Dnily Pilnl C\assiCied ad. 642-5678 ~feat By·Products U T'liit:l\\I \Tl! l'll'E;o..TUf. L'.-'~'-L,-'-1 I' I' E !'< 'I I· \I .., II I' I. 11 E '/, II \' 1: \ \\ II 'I lt I ll II n \ J \\ II I: 1' II 'f 11 !\ n J: '\ \ \I \ I. 'I I' II \1 H I I ·1 It I' L II I· I! \ II .. I. T I. t.. It \ I \I I ! ! \I II , ' I I I I I\ ~ \ \ " I ., 1' '\ I, '\ '\ •· .. K II I·: II " 1 " -T 11 i: " 1· 1·, 1·. n :oi '\ II 'I I. llUl'l'Cll ~ r. \ " F 11 l 1: M F \ I):' ·r II t.. L '\ II II \ I. (. L '\ I. II 1. 1: T H F C L n ~ 1 U T I I " , \ I. \ ~ II I\ I~ t: It o t 11 I, '\ I •. II I . I'. :i \\II I· H T 'ft 1;1\lllll.\Jl·,'\l'l l\ 11\IU\I ' ' I. \I \ " .\ II 1n,011<ll(1n~~ 11,.· h1JJ,n ••II•·' h 1,111.ln'll •rp.~t hHl'•l•I, l>.1 ! 'liihl. llf", 1k"'"• '" J1•"•"l•ll\ 111 1h•· ,'llttlo.. I 11111 ~,,11 h~tJ, n 11 .. 11r •nJ 1~''-11 1n t> ..t11·v.11 90NI {;L\tl fOMAS ll AIRPINS BONl"'U'·AL .... C ttOfftH-f'IF.F.DbES ORNol.M ... NTS lt1TlOl'J! fl'RTILli'.l'R l'IPE.S'l'F.MS ll\t.SS Ml_,'I/ C .. 1-ATI~ STOCK FEl::OS Tornonow: l·•l!IOlll ~11lp111~l , . • • The absolute rock bouon1 priccd home in Harbor Vif:'1v Hills. Like new condition, spacious f.lillshoro niodel. vie\VS in alt directions fron1 Spyglass No. One. and fee land. Only $107,500. Call 67S-72'l5 ' ' ' ' ' ' L f, .. , '' " ' \~\LLE\ RI \I.I\ • '" ''• '< '~ ' .,., '"' ... ,.,,, .... ~. OCEAN VIEW PRIVATE BEACHES See thi~ comer loc111ion 3 bcc\ruo1n, li11nily r o o n1 hon1e. l'lip;hly upgraded. Enjoy the placid pool or use 1hc privale he11ch. A su1.oer largt• lot. A truly best buy at $92.500. 644-7270 """""'~~~ TOP-O·THE HILL \Vith a dramatic 180 deg. plus ocean view, a beautitully decorated 3 BR & De.n or <I BR cus1om built hon1e with huge game roon1, formal dining, 11.nd luxurious ffi6Ster t;ulle. Outside is rx- tensive "atiO d CC k I, big trees and a l\ol pond, All al the end ol a quiet cul-de-sac. A top vah1c at $159,SOO Call &14-Tll 1 em Priced for Quick Sele! Oupif:'1' on ·11 l ovf:'ly, tl'('t'-lincd l!lreet. On !hi!' Sou1h 11idc of Con 111 llli,:hway. l~l\'C 1t1 o~ unit & renl lilt' other or rent both! BC>autlful vil'w (If tlK' ocean &: rolling h\1\1. $i-t.~. Call 614..sr;il. (~·] UNIVERSITY PARK l'd p<itio and lush JarulscaP. $44,900. Includes land. By ing. Unique vl'getable gar-ov.Tier. 552--0736 ON FEE $417,000. Loan • no Cees, c•a11 den. Quiet cu!.Je·s11c street. L B h 1"'8 If you have a flair for the \\•rap-arouncl on pr i c <'. 3 large bedrooms w i t h upstairs family room. JlL<;I reduced 3,000 fo1· quick salf:'. Sl'I on corner lot for extra privacy 11·ilh Greenbelt in ~our front yard. Ca 11 ;,so...~. Walk~r & Lee REAL . ESTATE EASTSlDE fi."l:er. Perteet starter home. 3 Br, den, dining mi, 1 ~~ Ba. Chee_ry kitchen. Lot size alx179 w/lots of trees. There's room to add. Don't wait call now. \V. T. Miller, Realtor, &12-1811. PRIME LOCATION ... near Sou th Coast Plaza. 4BR/2BA. fil1'pl , COVl!'t'ed patio. CN.·nC'r an.x i o u s . $42,900. CALL 968-4441 * Crest Realty ?11ESA NORTl-1 · Bar Harbor 2001 sq. ft. Eleganl 4 BR, 2 BA fam rm. fplc, beaut landscpe, cor lot. $46,200. Bkr 543-7TII, eves. 557-4617 COATS aguna eac ""' draniatie call us ilboul this Sl.t2:i,OOO. -Incl. Bldi:::· 7S\4 scnsationnl prope11y. ll's sq. ft.-6.:11 A.·3 NET l$E:. In & WALLACE R~ALTORS 962-4454 THE ONLY WAY TO GO JUST LOCK TIIE DOOR & GO. Some one else will take care of all exterior "'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. \ ma in I c nan ce, gardening, • elc. Thal's what you get in Mother-in.Law's Suite \\'ith its ov.·n kitchen &: bath in this rambling ranch style hon1e. 3 full baths & lots of other roon1 for your family. H ha.s an assumable 101>.• interest rate loan, so hurry. $39,900. Christiana Reolty 6916 Warner at Golden West 114, 841-7486 213, 592-5568 BEACHWALK CONDO 2 Bedroo111, I ~ b.1lhs, he:1111 i- fully upgraded thruout. l\lir- rorcd cloors, Sl'lf-clf"anin~ oven, nt>-1\a." noorll. S47,900. this n10S1 desireable own your o.,.,.n. in a 15 unit <.-drnplex. \Vell designed 2 BDR~I. FU>OR PLA.'I, FEATURES NE\V \V/\V CARPETlNG & custom draperil'S thru-out. Front Jiv. rn1. AFFORDS A ~1AGNIFICENT VIE\V Of' THE OCEAN. Located in \\'nods Cove section, LESS Tit.AN :NJ0 YARDS FRQi\I THi'.: BEACH. the M'.!Ui;ht alter 4 BR V 3 A Ravtheon . Ch as . Family Room 'E" Plan in Almaden alley Quintanl, 612-29!Jl the Bluff5 hii:::hly upgraded R h D I L f I "'00 "'ilh eHectiVt~ use 0 I anc or eve OP 1 -·~·-·-•_r_·~·~·'----·~·c.;;1 mirrors, shutters. top g:ade 694 ~crcs. within Ille City o AN A POINT·Rcsidl'nlia! carpel and "'.a.Ji ~·~nngg. Um1l!I ol San Jose. Close to lol. l\larina Ar(' a. Ot.>ea n 1 If yo~1e11\ertain Uus •!your Goll Course, Reservo~ and vie1\', N. ol Coast li"'Y. t.I hon1e .. , Hlgh\\-OY 101. Spnng.fed D"Ystal L..1ntern. , $15,000./ Dn1y $87,500 Fee Stock Dams and Home on 50'; dn. 12lJl691-J293 644-7211 the Property. OWners may ~--~.=~'--=-- exchange. $2,082,000. Call Mount n, Deser t, 646-0555. Resort 2400 • ~. '. CRESTLINE AREA I ., ' '"" -••• f ' ' ..... " ••c<•l 3 BR. 2 ba, yC"ar l'Ollnd hOlll\'. TRADEWINDS &cludt-d. al! ulil. 17!1 1/ 581·02711. Currand Jlc1;1l!y Co., CABIN, Big: Behr Arca. \'.\LLI·:\· · RL\IJ'\ crest area: p~stlge hom.e; $7!XXJ. tcrnis. Afl. 6. :l lxlrn1s., fan11ly rn1., dut-... S.\2·2015 ing 11n., 2 ba. & laundry APPROX. ;:. beaut. estale rn1. Gourniet kltch. ll'/Rll acres off . Or1cga .Hwy, Sa n Orange Co. Prpty. 2500 blt·ins; lovely frplc. Covered Juan Capistrano. Z?n<'d E-1. , . pn!io. Oi<trminu in cv('ry Dial Realty, 493-1153. GARDEN GR 0 V E. ~ \ .. S79 ~~ ., A t f S I 1300 O\VNEH. 1\•1Y· " · P s. or a e 1112r;~ int. No fin. chgs. Shnl'p •!ii" ·~·'"""'~I 4 .. lk'C ~, '-' "'""•NGl '·O~•·N~ Cool Tradev.•lndi; Lane, Bay· CALL "=" '46·1414 12 UNITS.10.2 bdrm, "2·3 BP.., JBR, 2B(\. ~ fpl's, cusl~1 9 '91' ~ 2 btt, c11rports & gar's. hon;ie. 20 x24 fan1m1, l'O\' d MNCIAfls S20,000 m:oss inc 0 me. p:1110, t'te. Cul-dc·sac. (il 11 REALTY $108,400. Tull. $20,000 dv.·n. -"""~~"~'-'--~--=~ l'OLLEGE Park. A chance to buy a lot of house. 3 Br, Ontu I ll S.. Avail. middle oc ~IV21 end of June. Ask for Liz or .,, Ken, Agents, :>16-9521. I lltESA VERDE -1950 Sq, 11. S1epsaver kitclien has BUILT·IN RANGE & OVE~. DI S H\\'SHR., REFR IG ERATOR, & BREAKFAST BAR. This ne\lo·er unit is immaculate ,11,i,. neat as a pin thru-out. You can search cvl'ry\\'here in "THE VILLAGE", but you \\'on't lint! anything to <.1"!n1pt1re "·ith it. for only $37,500 FULL PRICE Nt1r H't•Dort P11t Offlc1 2nd negolible, located in R:eaf Estate Exchge 2800 TWO STORY "'.ictorville. N<_> trade, priL-e , . EXECUTIVE firm. (714) 24~2497. 32 J\10TOR &uler & l st Super spacious 5 bedrooms Commercial Prpty 1600 T1250""000 1"1Ncii•por,i 1"1°~000"' $56 PER MONTH . ' . I . ' . n(_'(lllle 0 '"""'' !n N£'\\'Jl0rl with forma chn· 1 BLK 1 heh ,,,. 1 eall bkr, 67J·73ll 1ng roo1n. Plu.-,; large fa1nily . 0 · •' n tl"''--~~_cc~c..c~""'"" l'OOn1 and \\'et bar. A beauty. con1me:c.·1al lot. 29,500 sq. Real Estate W ntd. 2900 beaut 4 BR, 2 BA, 15."33 l.'O\' 536-7542 l'll1ys taxe~. ext. n111int .. patio + lanai. Qu ick ......... .ii.ii.iiii.iiiiiiii .. I inMsur1"s"s'1'0· Nh' cRabEl,A, L'T"Y· occupy. $44,990. Bkr ~8·7711, eves. 557-4617. $23,000 Best Huntington B t'a t' h l0<·ation. $1250. Iota! tlo11·n + 1axcK & in~urance. 3 RR ., 11 ~ b;1, cnclost'(t patio, \\'alk to rnajnr shopping L~ntcr. Xln1 starter hon1e. !IS;, So. Coast H11y.' l..;1~Unf1 Phone (714) 494-0731 C, JI "-"' ~7Ll rt. , JOO fron1age at 2770 a ll0\1' IO Sl'e. U'W'I Carlsbttrl Blvd & ] 00 ' NE.iVPORT Beach {~lndo 01 h'On!eg(' on ~ Cedar St, single rcsidc11('(' 11•nntl'd. 0\VNER. Mesa Verde. Sharp J BR, l ':1 bas, Fam-rn1. 2 frplcs, ne\V cpl, Prin. only. $13,90fl. j.10-3058 $2,000 Dn. 5264. 1no. 3 BR 1v/Crplc. 8* pct. Int., 2030 r.1onrovia ., 1llage Real Estate '62·4471 l r.::.1546-8101 OCEANFRONT Spectacular Views ft' om lovely 2 Bdrn1. 2 balh, own your 011•11. Fireplace, bl l·fns, pool, putting grel'n, 1valk· 11«1Y to sandy beach. An excellent lluy at $87,500. Carlsbad. Cal1C. Old hut will l'.ttchangf' $18,000 110lirl W lk & L good shape house on n•a.r 2nd T.D. :.is down IJll) men! a er ee <.1"!rner of Pl':Jpe11y. $i9.500. C:ill <H&-i5.1:l illon:f°}i<'s· ~1•l 111ar1 By ownr, 1! no ti>nun. \\'ed. --WESTCLIFF Involved. '7141~21. 1R,~F.=.s=PO=N~s=·1=s-L=c-,,-"-,,-.-,-,c,,. . COAST Hwy fro n lag e · to buy home for IO\I' do\1'n 1201 .~ 1207 Mighland DR. $1:l(),000. Trade ,t,; finance. payment, 673-7679 Prt>serytly . under Glantz Really Ser\' ice . , , construction prcst1i:::e Ex<.<.". :>.lfr.IZ89 PVT. PARTY \\ANTS 10 f\.1ESA VERDE 3 BR. l~f. ba. fam-r:m, frplc, co1·ncr lot. By o\vner, S4l.~. 556-89i6 I"""'"""'"""""""""""""" Eastblvff 1030 5 BR Single Story custom hon1cs in .,.,·ell BUY H0~1E DIRECT established neighborhood. Condominiums FRO:\! PVT PTY ~139-396:.! Ench hon1e 4 l:ITl. :1 tu!I for sale 1700 ONE OF F..aslllluH's finest ~ BR. homes. Big famil~· dining rm. Ne"·ly rode(;. $70,500. Balboa Say Properties 2846 . E. COHst Hwy. Qrona de! i)lar &10·848'1 Fountain Valley 1034 Assume 7°/o Loan l lu~e 2 story, 4 bedrm on ovl!'rslzed l.'Orner lot "'ilh boot gat~. NIX'ds ron1(' TLC. Payn1ents only $235. PlTl. $41,900 842-7411 Eves: 963-4062 (BRASHEAR) REALTY . **Assumable 51/4°/o VA Loan!!!! . . . SlOO. P.ays ell!!! J Bcdmom home \\i fh slat!? entry, f111nily r o o n1 , J:l)Urllll't lood ct'l1!C'I' "'ilh bn·11k1<1st OOr. hanlv.'OOd lloor!I, on llU'gc cul-<iC""'5flc lot . Call The Real E state Fair 839-6133 or 536-2551 B~ O\\NBR. Gmcnbi~ Grnnada !iBR. 3BA, fully upgrad ed,· B eing t r 11 n11:rerred. $6.1.900 . !lti_V.~1(;(1 $45,500 E.ttc.'Clll!'nl 1x•sidential loc•a!ion <·lose to :\il·Donnld- Dougl11s. 1\ll bl1us., stone fi rcplat1', f l1 n1 i I y roon1, play y11rd, '.! baths aod frC'l!hly p,1intrd inside and out. Call ~1r. RisS<.'r, 545-s.124. SoulhCo, Realtors. SPRA \\'LL'l'G EXEC home features isolfl ted m&sler suite, children's wing, gar- den gourmel kitchen, with ~unny breakfast room vle....·s 15'1:30 s11arkling pool! 4 Lll.rge BR's, l'Oll ring fif'f'place, no \\'l\X flooring! Just block11 to ~an. Still shiny as ~v 111ul only $45,00'.I lull price!! Bkr 002...;]511 REPOSSESSIONS For lnlom111!lon and locatlOn of these Jo'llA & VA home11, contuct • hAths, ro1mal dining, lg. l !!!lllllflllllflllllflllllflllllflllllf~lllllf~I fam rrns, 11·c1 bar, sunken THE GREAT ESCAPE I I~ conversation pit, Your O\l"n park + pools. Rent1ll ,,6J + n1any fallulous fealu1-es. golf. badminton. LuxurioU"i';;;;iiii••iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~I Tell'. 645-223il for a11pnt. 2 BR, 2 ba. coston1 blrlns.11 REAL 494-il561 OFFERED .... SOMERSET MOOEL b b ·1d Lii' j 3 5 bedroon1, 3 hath, large lot El~ct doo.r ?~r1£'r, lig~ti•d Houses Furnished garden. $36,500. Open !'.!Un. ----------1 Call Denison Associales -Ge neral 3102 ... y u1 er. \'e y 673-7311 1---------bdnn .. 2 bath sunny homl': & pool. $111,99.i dramatic entry 1o step.up s•', IJ,, JNTEREST ASSln.1E 51r.';'i rHA. Douhlt' $16.'rBACll nr. IK'<tch. Pat11J. liv. nn., spe,c. detk, custom HARBOR VIEW g&rage, 2 bdrm, 3 bath. Xlnt pet uk. Laguna. r l.~l'atnic tile work. $43,500. HOMES location $26,500. ~~3857 $195·UTIL Pd, I BB.. ~pie . Tl ·~ b ' ~ ,,. I p 2000 dt>ek, \'I('\\', !i:Ur, U1gu11a. U:~,~~1 F~~ 1~rthearu :~. 0_;R,;,:E~A~L~T~Y,;_:•3:3-:.:,07~80::._1 :':"~'~o~m~1:.;.-:'o~peC:r~t~y-:'.:=':.:.:1s:Qo-UTIL 1Kl. Su111n1<.'T'· or fornu1 tion & u11t't. shO\I" C M U . ycal'ly. Lrg I !:Ir. Vi<.•11· ing. call BY ~ Id I n I osta esa nits hOUSI'. I~ !ilk b (' a·c h. ~, 0~1 \.l\Vtll!r, ea oor P an, -1 . . · 11 · 1 Ltl!;lHl'I * ··~..._-.., * newly det.'Orllted in a anlasllc units 111 l'Xi'l' 1•11 • • S South<.'Qast 1,a('tf\c Corp. oul, rnarbll' cnlry hall, hog area. R()Oin lo ad~ l 111011'..' .. ~U~YI EW RENTA~. MONARCH BAY liv rm. frpl 1.:, 4 II!:' bt". 2 !!le All 2 bedrnon1~ '1:1rh lOl!I of11i1 .. -10 .. 0 0~9 1--:t.!lil A hundl!Omt ~tonH'rt'Y style hsl, step saving elect kitch., pi1vac~·:. Ciill kn llJJpt. rni$90·1 BH Hou~. kid~ ck. hon1e. Lge. l!\'ing rn1, '~·irh r1·pts, ch·ps. rii•rfccl l'8rd, !Sct'. SllJ.000. . Sl{(i-1 Bil l\lob. C. l\I c1pen heuni 1·11!hcdr11I eciL: 3 pluntel"$, fn1lt 1recs, $75,000, 6 ont> hl>dlvoin Ulllls, nll foi· $1Ll(i B111•\11•lor. 1\11lk 10 hd1·rns .. 2 bit., S\Vin1n1i11g 645-089-1. $7!1,50(). lll'Ul'h, HH. 2 Bil llOll!>!., puol, tlle roof. Oversir.l'd ADORABLE 2 units on onr lot. $·13.800. Cd~!. S:lOO vt1c(1n1. Agt. f ee-. yard. SI l&,000. • • • Give us a •:all. \\'e'1~: Ol)('n 919-84;\0. TURNER ASSOC. 3 Bdrni .. 2 blllh, (,11mcr evenlng8 and \\•cekends.C ~=,~.~Mi':-e----~3~1~2~4.1 )l(lme. l:kst pril'e in Harbor Red Car pc 1, lt1vestmen1 · ~·~•'---'~''------I U05 N. Coo~t l111·v .• Laguna Hi hi ·" ••9 ~ C ii l ....,, """'' 1 • 494-1177 g t111us. ~ ,>l'W & or Division. <>4'1"i'MI· E-SIOE 2 BR FURN. ·1uror1nat ion · Q\\'NER dl!'spcrate. !'harp 3 100/o DOWN 640-4050 HOUSE Pl.US T\\'O Wa ter &. gardener Raid. bdrin. Assume i~;. loan! ~10\'e inlo brnrKI new ot'l'An HUG HOMES Live In new 3 BR, 2 BA $295/rno. $4s.p228 KASABIAN 962-6644 Reef Estate !Ins -~Mg en r p e t I n • , -------~--I house And ren• T.,.,·o 2 Bit. 2 ---vt('w mulll·lf'\·cl home, B F J 1· H t ' t B h •140 Bulll -tns, fllsh\\•&Rl1l!'r. F1 e BAYSHORES e A, apts. rpc. pa ios. un 1ng on •ac •. beamed <.1.'ilin~'11. ll{'\\' det·ks, 1 nd $...1:16 OO'I h('at, ramily 11n.•a. 2 btilhli. master suile. niirron .. "Cl 0\\'nt'r de5fK'1111t' lt":'l\rlnR garages, au I')'. ' · Lak "· 3 BR ' Ju<;l 2 yr!I old! $37,950. brk N!fl 4 8 3 '00 den &t 8~~~. Buildl'r s:i;...'-111. Nf.:AR · £' 1'111!' ~wn· 42-l'lt~e11i, d11un11llc entry. :'1. • r, · • · n1er only? Sol?:!. U11t.: Inc. Cnll 11 2:'JG1=·-----Red Carpet, Realtors $69,900. Make 0 11 f! r • 4 A.Pr Units on 19,600 sq fl 5.16--0.121. E\•f:>o;. only. ' O\\'Nlo:tt li11. Assum<' 71,;ir; 642-.'W~t !Qt • 7.0l')('(I C·2 Nt'""'P'1r1 c.'--~~~= l"an. Vt'rv prelly 3 bctnn, 2 497·1761 BY OWNER mvd., CM. ss.KI nio l11ron1r. Laguna Niguel 3151 bal.h homC. Has f/\ hcuting. * La9una Charpier Harbor View Monaco Good !or e 0 "1 ni ~ r chi 1 BEAUT. 3BR. A\·1111:1.hDi 'tll K11rh<'n bulll-in11. ~'Amll'y .. wi!h deli11;htlul, modem 2 Uft. + df'n 2 b11. 3 doors devt!lopment. $6;:._.000 . Ndv. 1st . $.17'.i mo. NE'\Y-(:'itlj·~l6("C. $3?,SOO. bk r lntertor. by dlstimwl .. !1ed fron1 park, Pool . r. cabana. Owncr·Broker, IH~..;_ ELL, Rlt1· . .\9~-659-1, - llUC:F. f:lm 'rn1 lookinll: ou! al ttn:hilf'ci. Ne11r l<1"<n, be11.ch. I $69,000 F'ec. G44--5569. 10 UNITS, COSTA .l\t~. l ido Isle 31S6 f,'tl'llAGIJL.\TE 3 RR. 2 ({11 , f'nm t1ll, bUinii. crp!s, 1 rlrps. fed yrt, xln! lor. I.· corn!. G73-006'2 f'\'('!11 & 1vk1111.~. riiitlni bit pool. liv rm 2BDRr.1. YOU 1''1U~"T SEE. a 101o; I.OT • All 2 Bedrooms. Pr1nc1pt11"l ::::;::,..;.:;;_ ___ _;;.;..;~ \1·/rh1·11 j!hag erpt, h!lln~. $.~.500. NEWEt.L ASSOC.I · PROfl.lONTORY BAY onl.v. $157,500. 613-7910 12 UR. 2 IL\. SumfTM!'I' or !lRll. 1'·1any xtra.'I. Nr hench, l -A~T=f~·:s~··=·~~~l-6!=5~9~1.-=°""=-Ftt, S,ler1ficc $115,000. •\lly day Is lt'le Hf'~ i)AY !Cl y1"11rl~· l't'ntnl. A\a\l. July s:m.700. 002-tm ~Cl~·~'~"~'~'~f:L:e:l.S:o.:-~"2~~-56~78"'-_: __ ~0~·~·o~"~r~·~"~·!IG!<::::· ''---' .,111 an fl.ti] Oun't dr<l/lv .. , C111I ~~l:ll m:Hli4!7. I ·' •• , . . .... . . . ~ -· • PILOT·ADVERTISU Wedntsday J11ne 5, lq74 Wtdntsdl)', June ~. 1q74 '"'<==:-ir.;;r:::=r.:r:::rr-o:cou" .. ::c:,01u;:n>'u:':r::n:r.i10::•,-u.::u1ea nfurnlah Ap1r1ment1 furnl1h Apartments n urn. pirtmentt Unfurn. ant• An• 3 umm•r R1nt1 1 General 3202 Founleln Valley 3234 Newport Be1ch 3269 Coron1 del M., 3.722 B1lboa Ptnln1ule 3107 Huntl-ton BMch 3MO BEAUTIFUL 2 •R ln•lc 2 BA . Nr. P"rk, INDUS1'RIAL 1-;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I -... be•ch A b;.,,. I~ wk. 3606 t'OMMERCIAL I• 3 DR. , 1, eA: bonus mt, LUXURIOUS 11 0 l\t E. "'I SPAClOUS lBlt. p&OOrl\mic BACHELOR, $16S. lat&: la11. CHILDREN 1urroondlJ1l:'11 ' cheerful· Pnrk Lil. 6f3..0.173. orf'ICT. SPAC'£ !O 560 F'r11lr, PAii<>. dbl &II.I', lndry 20t'ECOWI view ol pre•llli:OU~ view of ~an & b&)o, $250. I: Y)$ E. Bay, No. 3. Call 1paclaua aptJ;. Rr-""" ho ln v~"" lw• for lcue In 1.ilOlcc rn1, fem-eel )'d. S350. per mo. Santn Ana Country C1ub. 3 S2SS. JRWIN It lR"'lN, 21~·1f96. Ind JNrenh love the e Adults Only w';k ;urmoii!hte Pho'.;' ... .,,,. Mlllrilcm Vil'jo •n:•. Good Reier. req. 6'>--5565. BR, 3 BA. Den, library, 2 -"'-'-"-"'-· &>_l-0~1_1_1 ___ Capistrano &each 3111 l•rt•• tpeclov1 IJN'1· • 2 blk1 from S. C Plaia ~'4.-lrv.·y il<.'t'eU at Av fl r Y ,A.LA l.!NTALS wt \l't(l,UUI 1H UltVoCt f Huntington Beach 3240 trptc·1, a:llf'd e:rw•r. Av u 11 1 BR. 1i Blk ti,) Ol'can. mtnts 1t I• n bury •Rec lttell A clubbou!ie Pr k way . It cA 11 o r • <~ HOUSIS JWle 15. $>1~/?110. 82S-+\~. SlTh/AIO, Util Pd. No Pets. OCEAN VIEW 3 UR, 2 BA, CrosL • 2 & 3 Bll.SOn')I, no pet• Vacation Rtntal• 4150 ~rUelpe.lioo s 011 c I I e d . •. KU ~~~!5. v~-:lt\' SPE:CIAL-lmmac. 2 TERRIFIC 3 BR 2\1 S,\' .,,-=~"'c,',.'~·ll'~·~"~C_d_M,.. ~= ba.1<.'0lly, crpta, drp&:, bltna. • Oilld"erl 6 " younl(l!r • FRPOA~R!Kl190P{LMOI. II D}; ~I G JJ Tr UJ.. 'c...o n· ;::;•c;-1"<00""'. ===~-- sty hotne. l inl. from beach. Park Udo TownhOWle near 1 Co1t1 Me11 .,.. 1724 Wl'llhC"rfdryer, &42-11.\1. 0 S1t1.fe lic1ru:ed pre 1ch1 A A do i 1 Lake T hoc J INDUSTRIAL f:jlWPOIJ 'U.'f. C.M. •42·1~1J l BR. 2 % BA. + buae In ' .. • ~11•-· 1 805 \Y Stewns m n Wllll, & • 3000 ft & UP bonut room & atrlurn. llOttg, bultt 111tel'OOn1, Corona d Mir 3122 ... n w=lB PR)' alX'a ( Off sUnno""tr l &. 4 BR, Day, Wtek, Month, sq. ~~,../1~;~;~ !9;~~\~u 1:t~h. fonnal <tining nu, Ro1111n Stereo, p.Xll antt inuch nM>t-e Ambassador Inn •Large 2 le 3 BR 3pt1. Santa Ana sis..1121 Call 639-6700 or 61J.J.262 LAGUNA NIGUEL I b I•~ .1 ''"'''' iub. "'•te• ., •• , •• 3 only Sli5/nt0. 6#-7211 ~· VIEW·VIEW·VIEW • 2 adult rec. C*ntt·a EvH. 2'1002 aunlno C.pl11tnino AS JS! U•!lft Ill 1 I' UN, Uti " • lUl ' • E••v &ccl!flS I l e W I lfff 31"' nd. }-In '"'' (lk, 00\\'! rar gar. \v/auto opener, • BRAND NE\V TO\\'N· BRAND NEW Ot>lux•· 1 Br, b'plc, 1un deck. --0 nlOll in· es c "' Rentals to shire 4300 Sa.n DJrao Jo'l't!('W_fl:Y '" NICES'r 1 hr In 1-:. CM $160. \\"el bar, dMrk room, trplc, ltOUSJo;. 3 BR. ~l,i ba, vie"" $34 50 & Up curport, storaa;e arcu. 110ft ployment area• Avt.ry Piu·kWay Turn Oft fur11-pool-sn1l ('()11111\1>..x. i;:us BBQ, &. much more! End unit on 1-51u: greenbelt. SINGLE. STUDIO APT ~·atet'. Adulh1. ~/?\.10. e Nr. 11hopplng & fN"Y•· NE\VLY n.'df'1:., 3 BR. 2 beth t'EMALE' Roommate ne«icd 831·1600 2 on LOT! 2 br $170 SA ehlld $~75/P.10. incld!i garde~. Encl palk>, crptl, drp~. , ti46-47'J l or 67>1567. e from $165. Tow6 "2h~~· Pool. $295. n10. l~r nice .. 2 BR Apt \\'/coinpl:;:;:=::::::::;;;;::.1 '~7 ""o'? blti s l""lc $360 6J.l-1480 SPECIAL \I/EEK.LY R1\TES 7:H '"" eve#. l . . n-k .~ Jll'I. h:I.'> )(11rngl'. . -.ooo • II • •r . . . rm liarbor Blvd. BRAND New 2 Br. 2 Ba. sun BANBURY CROSS I A t F /U I ---recreation lac 1Jtle11 10 QIAC PATIO 2 Hr SUG, 11:aragc 3 RDR1tS-Garage. Kidl &: BLUF1''S CON00-3 BR, nc"' C ,. • ., ·~·" deck. frplc, bltn oven, ntge., (Ne<u•n-och,Blvd&W..n•••) PI urn n urn,.""' Blly Ill-ca . Call [)(>bbl, NOW LIA.SING C' I k I d ' osta1tesa.~·ro DI h d -~ -61'"'1 ~1 230 I H ti t •·ch ~1v/r1.'f, · ·lJ. sr11 Pfl o , petic \velcoml'. 4-plex. decor. n l·ins, crpt.11, tt>Oi. '"''!!!!!!~~~~~~!'!!!!!!I s 1\V r, crptg, rps, gar. 16761 VIEW l:>OlNT LA~lE ""'1<Jo,} •......-• : or eave un ng on -• UN JQUJo:! 2 b1' $210 E. cr.1 1'Rl-~€.HOUSE + 4 Br. Kids priVtlte patio. Pool k tenni11I' $30 WEEK' l UP $3.'i0/~10.67J..4174orGW·61l4 e 842~ e • 11i.:P1JKe. NEW M-1 Wc0•.~?:1. ",'~l•"•"· 1~•.•,.,',· .. ~ar1:....,, & pets fine.1• k 11enr !;,Y· ~.?. lfmts. $3~/MO. • Studk> & 1 BR Apto. Costa Mesa 3124 I i~e "c"n"n"1sr""'1"'AN~. -,,.,,.7at",....,.,.,.=1u"'·vc· 940 Sq. t"l. A VP " .... " ...... , M>J SINCU::S-K us, pels o · 3 675-{i,JUi: Vrr-v · I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 --:~:;::;;-:-;:::;::;--atUtuele mah!, O\\•n room, HamUron & Newland St. frH.-rt, kids & pets, 2 CIU". l3edroo1n, SD>/mo. NEAR Beach, New 4 BR. 2\.1 •TV & fl,f!Ud Service Avail 11 UNDER NEW Jo'urn/Unfrn. 1 Blk Ocean. 960-1971 COOL !'iununl'I'! 4 br/2 ba. Homefinder• * 642 -r nJ I t •Phone Service -I-ltd. pxil I'~ 113 u II I Cdlll ~n-bft, ov.· iouse, ,. P c • •Children•-Pet Section NEW MANAGEMENT ...,, t 1 or I'll. ·1---------•I S2tV, ktd$/J.IC'hi. S.i\. fUver. 4 BR 3 -•n~cto• pool iennl• • 67".>-'tNV\ SEE ~O\\ ! <\ l)r/2 bti $295. BEACH Area! ' BA, '-" ..-•• • . 2376 Newport Blvd .. cr-.t 2 BR. Blt·lns, N c \\'I y G' ·~ 1,-,,..,-.,,.,,----:=== C&O, fncd for family, gar. SZ3S. Vac. Lt"2 yd. Kid.'I ok. Avail. in1n1ed. $-l50. n10., MS-9755 or~ clecortttcd. 1'~11cl gnra~es. Bl Tl DY, straight I cm a I e LE ASE 0 FF J C E Too l.llll\Y to List-CAil Us PETS &: Kids! ( Br. 2 Ra, 645-1658 TIRED ot• THE "BIG 1 2 & 3 BEDROOM Be1tut\ful landscaping.o Ltg de-alre!I tllUtie. Share holw WAR£JIOUSE 2800 aq, ft. ~·e sei'Vice all the beach $300. Nr new. \Valk bch. 3 br/2 be., I~ yd, bltns, yrly CO?o.IPLEX"'!' QWet, lge, 1 , play arra· ft child's dreani~, • + 1i Utlh1. Nr. Bench. $135. lot 50x377. Part fenc:c.'d $600. cilles &· Inland Orange Co. \\'ON'T Last! Pri, 1 BR. Ise $550fnio. 1524 Anita Ln. BR. Eastt1ide apt. Util pd. S C.10!IE' 10 ihopplng & !!Chis. n10. 64a-23t4 alt 6 Av1dl. Oct, 18::''16 Ltlguna Can· $ LANDLORDS $ $130. Car. Vac. Ap~'s incl. t·or appt, ~2-1121, evea $\iS. ~31 art. 6 p.ni. plit Level Apta Unf. Children \ll!'lcorTie. p h ; \\'OMAN \\•/d1tug~ter 16 de· )'Oil, Laguna Beach 6S8-0tl69 t'EE 1'1tEF. Call us Today Homeflnders * 2-9900 675-346~. 3 BR. 2 BA. fpl, garne, rm , OCCUPANCY JUNE J 556-llj(): lf 110 ans. &17-rnt. Al Oakwood Garden Apart· 11h-es IHdY ~3:i to llhr rent, RENT new M-1, 1200-2640 ALA Rentals 642.8313 RANCHO LA CIJESTA Newport Shores 3272 med yd. Inc la'ol.·n c_ure. $350 ' m&nrs. <.'Ondo, (w/no children) own sq. ft. $170.$360 month I ~~~~~~~~~~ I Beaul. 4 BR, 2 BA. Cll)SI! --'-------un. or s-125 furn. ~3182. SHORT "'ALK TO BEACH GREAT RECREATION~ swlm· rm "·/prl ba, 5'&3-S396. "'/olc. 2950 \V. Central, S.~ 1 · IG the beach. 1 yr let!M. UNIQUE 3 BR, 2 bu, h'plc, APT. l\lANAGER for ·12.2 ~~EAnJRING : 01'and new I, 2 & 3 BR. ( ming, sauni!.s, hcallh clubs, Sl lAH E 3 llR lfOlL'il.', S.W. Ro))(ort !\fuller R.E. 67J..TO, LIVE HERE! 1st & last'!' $4Z> 1'.10. patio, COi"-"'· pool, tennii, 2 BR furn units. No lntnled. occupy. Open for 1 t:1il11ards, tennis, pro & pro Sanla Ana. Frmolc only. NEW M·I 14~ sq n ahop ' 2 br. -like 962·2'73-i. car g11-r., \Vlllk lo Beach. children-pets. Live in, SS.'i Loft Bedrooms • Frpl<:'• • bu;pection Sat/Sun 10.6. shop, golf diiYlng range, pa11v Priv. R.rn, lge yd. $75. mo + &. oHIC<?s. Ampl prkg. 208 3 ~i rtlll.E to Beach, 3 BR, 2 646-2'!19 oH rent. Alin. duties. Prefer Ccnunlc tile kltcher.J. C Ex· N.\\'. comer Warner &: 1oom, etc. share llsekeeplng. a.5'?--9239 phase pwr-trtulh ser., x.lnt shin,glcs 'l br, -Cd r.·I • cullc 3 br. -Cd~t -new • 3 br. -Bay -slip 4 br • Perm. Bayfronl eau GTa-7225 ' ' • " I " 1 • '-\ ', \ L l. E \' RI \I.I\ • ~.'" t ~·" " •"''" ·~~ ........ ' ..... ~. LANDLORDS! \Ve Specialize in Newpor: Beach • Corona del Mar • &: t...aauzia, Our Rental Ser· vice ls FREE to You! Tl')' Nu·VIEtw! NU-VIEW RENTALS 673~ or 494-3248 "RENTERS!!" You Get All The lf~ available lor rent in 0 U R BtIU..E."TlN ··poATED 3 Hmes/\,·eek. Homefinders *· 642·9900 ~arbruro:-nr~- FREE FREE •Professional Service • 1--~.ANOl.GRO!i+---i Homefinders * 642·9900 Calilomia's Largen •Rental Se.rvice! • 2 BR.01 $175, 2 BR HB, $165, 1 BR·NB, $155. 2 BR, Cd~1 $200. 3 BR, Seal Beach, SlJ(), Si ngle s , familil'S, kids/pets. Agt. FeC', 979-8430. B•lbo• lsl•nd 3206 \'EARLY rental "'anted for family. 3-4 br house, avail now or Sept. 213-373-7528 College Park 3210 BRANO NEW; 3 BR , Fam-rm, Dc:>n, fonnal Din., cpt'd & drpd, com pl. lnd!M.'JXI, $395, 5 5 1-6 3 41 Eves/Wknds Corona del Mir 3122 ~VM"TE'D * USE D Blt!CKS 1't 87().4564 3 BR. 2 BA. frplc. lamily room, cn>ts. drps. $400, per mo. 6'5-0367 Costa Mes• 3224 ba, fam-nn area. Super San Juan n1ature v;oman. 642-9520 alt Jmed Bean1 Celli~ • En-Sln1s.. Dolphin Re a It y FUN ACTIVITIES: Full·tlm.e RESPONSlBl.E Roommate loc, nr. S.D. frwy. 646-1%i2. Sharp $38.i: mo. 1st & last + C•pistrano 3278 5 P)l. closed P&lios • Pool & 1213)376-3484 direc1or. t1ee Sunday b1unch, to share Park Newport or M-1 SPACE . COSTA MESA sec. dcp. 1 yr lease. 962-1493 SlOO l\10. Adult over 39. No innny othl'r Conveniences. Beiut. G•rden Apts. BBO's.11ips, parties and more! equal acconunodatioru;. 1200 sq. ft. LOGAN ST VERY nice 4 bedrm, 2 bath, LEASE Village San Juan, pets. 2037 Westminster. lnQ. Adulls only. Private patios, 6 pools, I BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: 67;;..5513 83.'io-!WOJ O"'flCr 64G-l2a2 644-2223 cpts, drps, bllrul, 2 car gar., ~~diu~nJ.~1 Ji w!:<'sh e ~~ 240 Sierks, C.l.J. HAY lOfJ APJS. &'luna.!I, jacuzzi, tennis, 2 ! Sing les, 1 & 2 bedrooms. STRT. prof. n11tle seeks 10c PER SQ. FT. ~~!~~~~~· $200. Ask: for 5 e 1f.c 1 ean in a: oven, IBG Bachelor, Uv rm, sep. car prk'g. Bike to beach. I Furn. & unturn. Wilh au the Mme. 3BR, ocvu, Lag. Bcll. 3600 sq tL 41JOl Birch NB drps/cpts, elect. gnr. door 2 kitchen, bath. Wtr pct. Pool. Jol'om .$135, 846-0259. o,11es. Models open delly 10 hnic. 494-2761/493-6960 eve. Bauniga."rdntr. 541•5032 3 BR Vacant House, $210. car gar. _F"enced yrd. Adult, no pel. SlfO. 645-8965. 2U AVOCADO ClfEZ ORO APTS lo7.Sorry,nopotso1chlld1en. Garige• for Rent 4350 Storig• 4550 Also 3 BR's util pd, $210, Community lake & POOL. LGE fURN 2 BR. Bltns. COSTA MESA 8234 Atlanta Oakwood ~~~s/pets ok. Agt. Fee. inel. gardnr. $295. 830-5146 \V/,V, drps, pool. Adults, no 64$.0143 1.2 & 3 BR. Priv gar., pool, MINI WAREHOUSES \VAREHOUSE for rent on RENT/LSE new 3 br, 2 ba. pets. $185. 642-9520. f.Ion.Tiiurs 5:30-7:30 pm washer, dryer. Close to Garden STORAGE Coast Hwy. N.B. $.% per HUGE 3 BR, fplc, cov patio, Bltns. Carden pat, upgraded Dina Point 3726 Snt·SWl 10-4 pm beach. 536--0336. Ap~-•--nts No I\tove-ln or MovtH>ut monlh. \\'&lk to school & park. $325. th t 2 • 1 ~ ..,,~ cl F 17 M '" """" Ask for KEITH SNIDER, ruou , car ga, ·• poo • NEAR new 2 & 3 BR w/ 1a.n,:es. Nn\ ,Jll per 6'"1CllJV 96~4n ~~~~~~ alcove, 2 utJ1,~~ i-~~ed. F~Ji &:.~1f 8~~'1t~pts. ~:'. NQ ~Pf· ~786, N1wport l tacb Norlk 1-i:~o,, & N..iwland St., HB Rentils W•nted 4600 4-B~R-. ~,~ .. -. -.,-w~1,-d-eco_ra_t_ed_, 1 960-1142 or 4!11Mll95 545--0160. lrvi64'"5-0"o'so161h ALLSPACE nr beach, no pets. lease, ba, upgraded thruout. Pvt incl. util, relrlg, encl gar, NEED 2 or 3 BR turn tell· sgts ok, $3lO, 962-4471, patio, bltns, 2 car gar, pool. Huntington Buch 3740 storage. Adults, no pet s. $149 2BR CPTS Rtnts from $155 960-1970 idence June, July & Aug. ·~~~~=~---~ j j$2SO;';;~· ~<9&-0738'i';;;;;;;;;--32iii O E S NH'o .1w at :.._r1b ,,~~ !;11 393 drapes, gar, pool. Spacious 3 ''" Newport garage. 1 car PI"l't. Newport, Olsla Mesa ,:: South Ligun• 3286 L WW EKLY RATE ann ton, '-'' · '""""" · BR $199. 842-0389 or MtWl!Ort lnclil So1ti space. $18. per nlO. 673-4:i08 P.1ax. S300 mo. 675-77~ REDECORATED thruout, 3 ---~-----Executive Suites Cl-llLDREN \\'ELCO?>.IE SU-4564 -16111 al trvinl or G'F.rl972 BR. l % ba. $275. mo. lease. OCEAN VI E'V 3 BR home 727 Yorktown Blvd. 3 Br, 2 Ba condo. Nev.-port -~------~ 1 ....... =~"~2~·3~17!o:iiiiiii01~~~~t~~~~~[====!!'~li!"lll!!"lll!~=;!"lll!1G~I B' .r, No fee, sro.1351. priv. romm. Rec. Center. Beach Blvd. at Yorktown Riviera. Pool, kNnge &. _lrv_l_ne ______ 3B44_ Rents from $160 Office Rent ii 4400 1 ~ Hunt. H.,bour 3142 POOL, TENNlS, J ACUZZI, 536.o411 pavilkm. Llke <OOntry clob PARKWOOD tnan."' I • Ownew,.Jk !' .":','!'.1hmo. lmm. 49~··~1'" STUDIOS & 1 BR'•· Uv;ng! $325. on 1 yr bo. BRAND NEW NEW OFFICES l\iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili;;il ELEGANT 3 BR. fam rm, ,F_,., /U f ~300 e Full ldtchen \Vm. Toru !\11ller, G42-48ll. New Adult & F1mily IN LAQUNA NIGUEL 11 rormal dinin~riroo~m!'.i"°fiii""'~· :;H;;';e;;':;:;;;";:;rn:O:::n=u:r::n:::::; e Heated...J1£C!I .. v:RYrt~ct> .. ::_.!~1'n·~ faml A~s. -VERSAI LlES _O,,ly..J2c_per_sq.Jt ... 1;B;;·"';;;i;;;•;;";;';;;;;E>ppo:;;;;;;· ;;';;~;;.500;;;~~1 ew crpfs, xln P -91.iUnarY1acmUes i~.i,......_...,w,,..,-.~ -"'' w w -1'.JlJR'S Froiii .$1'85/n:io,lf. · • · 400 ft. & UP. All util Incl. ~ V t ••O• y l . crpts, drps, laundry rm. 2 >n -'ge go_o_ dis-·' C . acan ~ ... mo. rs. se. SANTA ANA Country Club e Free utllit1es cai: garage. Adults. $300. • ... , • ... ""6"' , ... ,., .... , 111ts, drps, 8lr. \\1etbflr. Amusement G:hr,istiono Realty Home, Unfurn. l Br, Den, • Free linens Ref's. 642.--1163 aft s Pl\1: dshwhr. Deluxe shag crpl'g. I . ON 11-tE LAKE , 27992 Camino Capistrano "nundry rm/washer, front e T.V. & maid serv. avail. Draperies. · At &.uth COatit Plaza. _ Sa n Dll!gO Fl'\vy to -691"6 Wirner porch, oak floors. $2'7S. mo. e Bar·S.Que 1 & 2 BR.. unf. garden apts. 17560 Jordan Ave. 552-0900 Pool • Acapulco Aqua Bar Avery Jlarkway turn o[f at Golden West NE\V COTTAGE, 1 Br:, un-• Phone sen '1ce Garden patio, trplc, dshwr. Legun1 Beach 3848 & Jacuzzi. Spectacular 8 831·1600 VIDEO GAMES 714: 142·7486 furn. $175. mo. • 1 mile 10 ocean $180 To $200. Small infant Acre Lake w/Towering 1 FREE 200 O.K. Near Irvine IndlLo;Lria.1 .... OCEAN VIEW 2 BR ~ F I •' ••ttl' Doti St mo 213: 592-5561 COTTAGE, furn., 1 Br. S . Beaut. G•rden Apts. ,. • • ounta ns · 111 "' ion a.r • mo. Private pati01l, 6 Pool.s, area. 557·2841· * No pets. LRG POOL. * Clubhouse, Gyn1, Sauna., Deluxe 3 room office. Carpet, All relecoraled. 141 ?\.1esa Dr. saunas, jacuzzi, tennis. 2 I..JtG 2 BR, 2 Ba, din rm, $260 lse. 61~4.'i Total Security, drape&, alr conditioned, In Costa I\lesa. Or call l\lr. cpt/drp, stv/re_f, p oa I . TERRIFIC Ocean VIEW,; ln1mediate Occupancy Newport Bt'ach near Udo Irvine Steven!, 6·15-500) Ext. 438. ~~r:r~;fs. ~~ beach. Adl1s, no pets. $1 7 O. Ll'g. 3 BR 3 ba, Roof dttk, • ADULTS Shops. 520 sq. ti. $240 2 BR, 2 ba, den, new •• $325 ~~~~~~~~~ &15-8965. gar. North End. >tM-7929. Sorry, No Pets month. call N~'J)Ort Place "The Electronic 'Vi d eo 33 "BRR.22~ ~~.furn ......... ~ CONOO 2 Br, San Juan o~~;!r?ra~ilit1!' A~:!f~~ -•'""E"'Lll""'t"'G"'ARD="EN=s'"APT"""s,.... Lido Isle 3956 Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br'•· Realty 675-3600 Gb•1n1e·._1s ~u!et, verylnp~ll- 3 Bn ' 21-ba~.00 •·•• ~~ Capo. Poolside, but private. $~mo. 675-7373 days or Uufurn 1 Bl? .. $155 Up. from $175 per mo. OJo'FJCE SPACE FOR a1 e ";°, is &eewn 11 5 ...,i;1 ..._, ., nus •••• ......, Patto. Security. \l.'shr-dryr. 5.J6-ll04 eves. in Adull section. UDO 1Sl.E .... Dramatic Santi An• RENT. Costa btesa. Harbor P a<.'CS. * * a trec1 3 BR, 2 Ba ••••••••••.• S380 Child, sm pet. $235. 495-63461-''-'-='-"=----177 E. 22nd St. 642-3645. view-Wat erlront JBR. 3700 Plaza Dr. at Adams. Be au ti f u 1-Journal lront page March 3 DR, 2 ba., new .••.•• $400 alt 6 I: wknds. Hunt. Harbour 3742 • TROPICAL POOL Condo. Apt. $375/mo inc modern. Alr, mus I c, 18, 1974, 4 3 BB~ .. 2 2 baba •1•• •• •• •• ••• ~ Condos Unturn. 3425 2 BR, 11,S bas., spiral U~l!;_~.!"0 pets. By owner. -;;;;;;;;;;;7;;;1;;;4-;;;S;;;S6-;;;;;0466;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=I Jani& , ~n.IBld, •Cl· "'call A.GeneWall<erHill. "The t.otal take from all the '""• " um •·••·• ...._, "--'-'-------ACROSS PCH trom ocean. staire.Me, frplc, patio, yard, ..,6,_·~~=·=--~--• 5.S7:-0'136 or MZ--O:im machmes now In play Is ("I 111\([ 11'!\i l. 'J 1 I ---. ·1 1·11 lur 1st \Vestem Bank mdg. Unl\.1!nity Parle, Irvine Dey1 SS2·70DO Nights LAGUNA Hills Le Is u re Studio, frp\c, jacuzzi, water \'later & Gas pd, 548-1168 BAY VIEW nr, pvt beach. \ ~-f1~ · es1.hnated at niore than $900 World. N~ deluxe extra pd. nss. (2131 427-4182 CLEAN 2 BR apt. Wall to 3 Br. 2 ba. Lg Iv nn w/ frpl. ~ • l 1\10. FREE RENT * miUion annually." * Tilne large 1 BR, 1 ba. Secure Irvine 3744 .,1.-all cptg. Built· In strive. 157 $325 lse. Adults. ~ DCJTIK 1£W COICt:PTI No lease req. Dix. offices, Magazine, April t. 1914. carefree living included. Vicoria, Cl\L 646-6355, 4-Mesa del Mir 3861 AOOlT 1.AKWDE UVlltC adj. Airporter Hotel. 55c Sq. $325. Cal] ownr beti\TI 7. SUBLEASE 16R apt. Park 9PM iMAU PllS-'"lf'JIO Ft. incl, A/C, full services. This can be :your own buK- 9pm, 673-&32. "'est July l thru Sept. 15th. I 2 BR .. l BA., blt·in&. Refrt. la h tort: 2172 DuPont rm. 8 lncS!!, with oil of your UNIVERSITY PARK SW mo. 552-0726 LARGE l BR, adlts on y. gerator. Upper. Adults only. • c e 83.J..3223 19 ti! noonl profits in i;ash immediately. Large, brandndo new, 2 BR, 2 Lagun• 8Nch 3748 r~·Aft/~V"'~~11', ~.mb: Sl70 mo. 838-7350. :2 1 BBRR,&28 0 1 1501 WESTCLIFF DR. ;f;j'~r;:~t:.proor of poten- bas. O:i · v.·et ba r , f -~--------1 •=-:=:-""°==-:o: MUii Verde • 3863 en NEWPORT t'lnanclal Center J--·~ 1 s-0 3 BR, patio, Children ok. F $ITS 5485 '"'.......,• poo. ,).l.J, STUDI , util's pd, No pet!'!. Sl95/MO. + deposU. Nr. bU! rom "" Leasing Office Sp,ce Jn\•csln1ents !ro1n $2200. Call 547~791 Single adult. $150. NEWELL 546-0857 e H0?>.1E ATMOSPHERE CALL ON-SITE MANAGER u.>1 collect f1'0nl 9 AM·S P~T 2 BR Condo ····si;5Js& ~ -LN~ .. -11-'°""'--.-,-B~R~+-e-xp Rltr. 494-6594 & OCC. 4-plex. ~ · Deluxe 2 &: 3 BR. Rental Ofc Mesa Verde fast & Adams 17141 642-Jlll ext 246. or fotward your inquiry to ......, • drps, garage. $195 mo. DESK space avallable $50 1 Tl b w 3 BR Homes . $300, $325, $335 3rd BR. Dbl gar. plush TV., Utils pd. Wkly $.'i5., 548-l309 or 675-l.MS. Newport Be1ch 3869 mo. Will provide furniture mpany, sc ay, 2 3 BBRRCoCondondo's ·.·.·.·.:~i:: '"-$215 living rm, will convert lo BACH. at Crescent Bay. Col, LARGE 2 BR, 1 BA. Crptii, 3095 Mare Ave. ~1034 \;~·~iiS~4~0~-~1~8~0~0~iiiiiiii,\~~~~~~B~~ NCoationa 3031 Entertainment 3 BR Homes. $360,$375, $395 Xtras. $325. 493-5148. r-.10. $100. up 4~2508 3 B 2 Ba all at $5. mo. An swering San Jose, California 95.128. i , _________ 1 4BRRANHo~CHes ... REAL$335,S39.'iTY~.$425 BLUFr""S, N.B. 4BR, 2BA. 2 NewportlHch 3769 • DEL.UXE r, • *vliWEEdKSIFMREE * ..,, service available. 17875 Cill Tuts/Wed I ,. •. u = Qwne bltns, trplc, gar, pool. ta re "'..,,. Beach Blvd., llWllingtoo MESA VERDE ~ 551·"""" .. car gar ...... ase: _,.,, r . Adults •'>"I<: ,. ... ··~:: s e esa I Collect·. I "' ,w<JU " 644-1512 $35/,\'K UP. l Br. 2 Ba. & · ..-... ,,....-........,, Tl Beach. 642-4321. 4 Bedroom + Den RANOl REALTY Bach. Color TV. maid serv, 2BR APARTMENT, close In. ADULT GARDEN HOMES !"'. r. ~$. NL~\YPORT BEA~! loc., 3 Mr. Art Davis ' '· "-th•, fi-pla·-. S•t7"· ""·' * 5."J6.S800 * 3 BR, El Niguel goU course, r -·t '1 A all bl Jul JRVINE AREA AT l\1ESA /,., -" "' ""~ (714) 13'3311 .... '" '"" ... •-· $300 tb La Call pool TiiE ~lESA 4l5 N ....... ~a "esa. v a e )' · ~ Rm office +hath & shov.·er. ~ month, gardener Included. TUSTIN-B.EALT'i ,. •• '191· m7on • guna. N-;...._ Bl NB 646......,.,., · l . $165/mo. PH: 49-M534. l\tove In w/deposlt only 2 BR. Townhouse, lrplc, Prlv. enl•., & 2 .. ,, ,~-.i~==~~==-::==:: Roy c •r e ea tor " o.u-OCEANFRONT 3 BR, Child ok, 00 pets, MJU m $..,..-. 1. BR, from $195. Utils incl. $400. mo. M C di R I • ~sw * ........ . ·-....-·· . . . ;JIJCII. I BR. 1190 2 Br. ,~, fro """ • .. ·"61 1810 Newport Blvd., CM TURTLEROCK lovely 3 Br, Duplexes Unfurn 3600 2 BACH ll~ -53 Shal' Day & Nl11:ht Security, Pool. Pool, teM1s, c:onUnental 67J.6210 FARGO 2 ba, 1rg tam rm, tennis & Apts. Furn. $160. a mo. Year io., • ~· Jacuzzi, Rec. Bldg. w/exer· breakfast. Scpill'ate famUy • . S 541-7729 poot $42S 673-J.235 3 BR, 2b8, like ne~r. Priv. round. lncld all util. 673-1531 else rm , billiards, color TV. section. Close 10 &hopping Of-f"ICES, fronting on ~~~-I~~ A~~p 61~ 5982 · or yard le. gar. $245, mo. 8122 Apartments Unfurn. Extra Lari,c ,Bachelor, $140 Ea. Apt. has dishwasher, & fine beach. 644-2611 Nev.•port Blvd. w/boAts & Open 9 10 3r-~ · !\1ichael Dr., Hntg Bch. C9.IJ nio. util pd. Nr. occ. No relr\g, shag cpt & pvt patio I !]!!JI! bay outslde your door . 5 k 3 BR-Kids, Singles. Fruit TURTLEROCK. 3 BR, 2 ba, -;84<;7:;-3541.::;::;::;;:;o;;;:::;;;::::; l ;:G:;e;:n;:er:,:•:;l ____ _;3::B::0::2 ··"'<,;;:''o,·,;Cal'=l"m-Oc,;."l"-34".~~~ or deck. I i 6 •77"'606'=""'=~~==~~ DAY""" trttl'I. $25()/!>.10. le<tse. $37..i. mo. ~. A F • h-..1 ~ i::•:: •=:: Ocean Vu 1 Br Uni......,.. •'>'>n A-1 R p 0 RT AREA-OU' Sll'ad~ busineS&, terms. $1~2 BR. Kids & pets 833-l9'17 or drop card at f)llrtments urn1s ..u 717 \V. 18th St., C.r-.1. lBR,,iiiiiiiiiii~iio;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;., Fi'Urn &" helor ..,....,.J ice RIVIERA REALTY \v'elcome! ! 501 Paseo Segovia. DELUXE unftllTI 1 BR • patio, stove, refrig. $140. I' k:itch ~i::/ ' t ~j p space. 45c: It. Full service. * 642~7007 * $l»4--Plex . Sing 1 e, klds Bllbo1 l1l1nd 3706 Garden Grove, tree laundry Call 962-8936 CHANNELFRONT en,., .. ~ mo 0 -mo !\1ullan Re111ty :WOO Irvine i--~---~~-· 1 TURTLEROCK • BR •A-. se'tVice, Avail now, 1115, ~=~~-----1 2 BR 1 "· "-m !or ~-t Balconies, Pool. Adu.Its, no NB •~2960. ' ··---------·I ok. · • .Lil.Ill ·g.;2444 UPPER 2 br, cptJdrp, rnge, " lHl. n.vv ........... • pets. Yearlf Lease. ~. raneled, shower, 1- Homefinders * 642·9900 ';d.' ~~.wni00~~71~: lge 2 m~~· ir1:S-·S3~~= ~~~ o~O n:!Sh~iln':..~~· $3.;Aulk Y.fQ')),EACH LAS BR SAS APTS Alr co11d With 15 x 24 stor· * WANTED * MESA VERDE l.G new condo. $325. per or unr. 673-7178, 1·728-2749. Have something you want to 3 Bdrm1., 2 baths 5515 River Ave, NB age attached. c .r.f. 548-9766 ON & OFF 3 b 1 b I . 2 BR Ea.stsidc. Garage 64• •su r, a, top oc1t1on mo/ 2 BR. 2 ba, oountr)' kit Sell idle Items with a Dally sell'!' ClaasWed ads do it Adults, $l6S/P.1o. Yearly lease. $325 Mo. s.·s. ,_ 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB LIQUOR LICENSES Water & Gardener P1id & pool facil. 551-1194. PUot Claasiflcd ad. 642-5678 '''ell· call NOW 642-5678. 642-5000. OYmer/Agt. CORONA DEL MAR 5'1:'! 1200 2300 s/f 541-5032 !llkve di!poslt check I $425 Lease. 545-0221 L•gun1 8e1ch 3248 Co1t1 Mesa 3724 Coit• Me11 3724 2 Br, 1 bA'. unf, yrly. $275. THE EXCITING '' ' HOLLAND BUSINESS -"---------·I XTRA LARGE 3 Br, 2'.~ Ba. PALM MESA APTS. NEW Plush ofttce Bldg, 2 to 64~4170 SALES 54CJ.060S $250-3 BR. Kids ck has $1;,Q..NICE lBr. North end . Studio, 2 sty. $225/MO. No MINUTES TO NPT. BCH. 6 RM suites. Conference bat-be-itue Walk to beach & town. pets, 54a-43S4 or 546-922:2. Sn.ch, I & 2 BR. fro1n $157 Rm. Xerox copier. Near GARAGE $190. 2 BR · $185· l BR. North end. Nt'ar Wh f h ~d Dini Poinr 3826 Adults, No Pets. O.C. airprort. 8.13-3640. PRIVATE! 1.ieach. kids/pct \l"elcome. OS t @n@W 1561 Mesa or. Business Rent•I 4450 GOOD Area!-4 BR. kids & $225-lITIL pd. Chamtlng rear NEWER duplex, 2 Br, (5 blks !rom Newport Blvd.) ii." wolcome. Spoc~uo! rottag•. irpk, l"~ly "'" 2 Be, bltn1, grdn patio, 54&-'*"1 NOW LEASING e HAMBURGER STAND Est. II Y1'11· S. steel equip. No <."Ompcli1ion, Ind. lll't!a Try $10~1 Down HOLLAND BUSINESS &15-4170 SALES 54().()60ff omefinders * 642·9900 S~·2 BR, bllns, frplc, deck, h bl ck? encl g1r. Adults. $210. PARK NEWPORT NE\\', large 1 BR, Utila. VIEW. Del Obispo R:o&d, 3 & DEN. 2ba home nr back 1 blk beach. on t R 0 49J..5936. 33962 Sliver APAR.TMENTS Incl., pool. 'Valk to beach. Dana Point. 2 SIDI')', offices, ~::. ~=ftl:~n~t ?! ~~ ~~.N~:~tl;s\o~rVi;~1c., C • Lant.rn: D.P. Bach= i:Jio~!°°m~ ~emente $185. ~ ~~~~~~. :-Chll=t;,to!t:.: fbr appointment to sec SUn $350--2 BR, 2 BA. all bltns, SUPER 2 BR, APT& Fr. f194.50 Open U Daily I S stores, boutiques. Exclusive1 ~~~~~:;~~~~1 June 9th 548--8796. 11:or. yard. Vi<'Wt B s s AD 0 R N N Great View. Thompson Spa ~11 Tennis SLEEPING Room, rcf.l'lg, non c om Pet ilive aren. RARE FIND COLLEGE PARK -3 $.'"i00-3 BR. lrplc. Po o I. A M A I l\1anagement Corp., 493-0141. Across from Fu.'llon Ialand trees, cozy, prlv. e'ntr. OccupMcy end or 1974, LJQUOR STORE. n..., ... ,.c Br, 2 B•, witer, gar· l\lagnUjccnt \\'lllte \Vater Eaatbluff 3830 at Jambol'l!e on San Joaqum Gentle-man. Ref's. No 0 \V n er/Br okcr, tn4J, County roast area. 'i{;.1~-y d 'd $375 View~. E ENT S 8""'0 NEW · Hills Road. smoking. S120/mo. 673-5221. &t2-ffi90. tntfflc. Qual ified bu.Yen ener pa1 • • NU·VI W R AL rum UNUSUAL 2 Br. 2 Ba, sep. (714) 644--1900 FURN. ROOM. "'ilh young TOP Location. E. lTth St, only. If.A. BerTY, bkr., 54~28 673-4030 or 494-3248 din nn, [rplc, pool. adults, N & S w CM m 11 A f 64µ}151 f,3_B~R~2~b,-gar--f,-,-"""'-..,l_y_m" NE'V 3 BR .. 2 baJI., hou!ie. ... c••••••• s34so" .... U"":P::::O:.. t:'.>5 ~10. 848 Amigos Way. " 9W paclOUS ~l~de ~::tsMeJ_r ~ Saf~ay sq.Thru~ssA:;~i 'l--t~·Op--t~.-~50=15 wat~r pd.' nr 'sou•h Coasi BeRutifut ocean view fron1 ::::';.,""'.::";; 497-1977 or 644-0906. 1. 2, & 3 BR. ~t-lns, pool 0970 ~t Spm Bela. Owner. 5'18-s.s4l or l_n_v_e•-~~po_r _.Y._ __ :;]rtw:;$310 nlO., Ref req, ~Jy";!!':~:~~~ L $425. :=..':'.:' .. "' 'Fount•in V11ley 3134 RNe~·.Q;J¥3~olFLA ROOMS S20 wk up, \\•Ith Eve-~ 5\ls.6562. WANTED 50mrone who nu OE."l.UXE rondo. 2BR/2'BA, • kitchen: $30, wk up apt. FOR LEASE Retall Store 21 moncy . & wanti more. 3 BR, vacant. $215. n'IO. 1st &: NO. 1...ACUN1\. Pl furn 2BR ',__ ...__,..._. s~-~--· pool, blt•'ns, -·-a. Of( 1549 Pla~ntla Ave., N.B. 548-9755 or 64.'l-3967 x 46 In •liopplng center 3.\1 Jnvesl in SOulhem Call!.'• J C U I 6 hse nr bdl & stores. Leese/ ~ • ..-.. -..;_... • .. -... no1:: · 714-&t2-23.i7 ' largest retnil o u 11 et . as!. n a ter pm, arllt!!, USO. 673--3!59 llh:lwflfeclNtMt...... ttntMroot Brookhur~ & SID Fm')'. GENTI.EMAN. \Vlk to ocoesn, E. 17th SI., CM. $300. Ill 894~13 &J&.6317. w.-..it_,.u.tr.1 Jecimi $290/mo. Daya: 833-8160, NEWPORT CREST Vic: Bench & P::ir.lfic C.08.111 '™!nth. 673-0140 675--0707, :'.~~,-,---~=I COLLEGE Park 3 BR, 2 ba,L -;;09=•;.;n•;;...;N.;.1.::gc.uel.;.;.._-"3;;.2S;.;;2 Wt-t"-' .0.1 119-s Eves : 6-15-4155 • H"'Y· TV/re.frig, 5.'16-8518 64:r24SO Money to Loan 5025 t N i t -New 2 BR, den, 2~ tm. am.. rm, ew crpt, pa n ' PACIFIC Isle. Vlllagc. Yrly T••IMM ••....,_ •tc"""°" .... Huntln9ton Belch 3140 o~nn vu, pool. tennis, $395. !\1agniliccnt view. Room w/ SHOPS, Surf & S an .d ' Vl'.:NTURF. CAPITAL S3Z>-MG-6299. 772·9700· lease. Ne'" Condo .. l fir .. 2 Dtrtctchl ,.._.,...... W•*r & Ol'J'"' .. tlil. 962--1015 pri bl\ & bncony. $35 wk ~una. Ideal for gift, to ex111tnd or sturl n husinc~'I. EASTSIDE BR 2 bo v· Pr' WAl.Ktobeach,new,largc, &up.t'.iOOSeavlew,Cd!\1. liquor storr. NEWELL A bu 11 incss plan 2 BR Unfurn. Stove, yam 1• '· ci"wb, •,v. WATllFAU-STllAMS-LAGOOMS upper, deluxe 2 BR. 2 l.ARGk: lBR, on Bay. great BALBOA ISLAND ..,5 wk Rltr. 494..(i59.J. iin.:•sentalion a mus!. B.n _ air um entry. u pr v, Adults $2$0 mo A 11 view, pool, new condo, full . ~ . BEAUTY SALON 1 1 8 · 1 n •~"'°='~'"°-·-"-~~25-'"-·~--Ag!., 4!13--03.11 utU itl~ fltl ld, 8.38-292i l«!C\lrlty, $450. 675--faXI 11wnmcr. !\1an, quiet, non· or eal'.e poc1al st. Ven ture CspltuJ 2 BDRM, 111nnJI yard, cnC'I. FOR LEASE: 3 'BR 2 b.." 2277 HARBOR BLVD. smoker.Sharebath.675-361.l on or about June 15th. For Sourt.~ list l ree w/ U.P. garage. ?ti & t chUd 01\. home, nice yard, brick 21llks to Beach. 2 BR. 2 BA. OLK to ~~an, 1 BR. yrly. lnfonnation call 548-1050 77Z..Zl21 Anh. Cpts & drpt. Sl $5. ~7506 patio. S33illmo. ~1779 COSTAMISA Llk@ Nev." t"ncd prlv. )'T'd. $175. lncldlng utll Avail 7/1. Summer Rentals 4200 ST'ORE/Otrlce nr. Newport Money Wanted 5030 READY July '?. 1974. 2 BR. 2 645-4840 Chlld ok. No pet1. $215/PttO. 675-6048 alt Spm. BAJ. B 0 A I I I a n d Pott Office. 322 Sq, Ft. S!IO -~~------! ba. children OK, Lg. fenced MeH Verde 3263 ""'~II Junt 7. 968-06S2 att (. DELUXE 3 BR. 2 bo, 2 fitt· WR1trt'ront•Avall July 181 to l\ft>r'l!h: Ag'Cnt 646-2414 NF.ED Sl5.000 2nd TD )Id, 6(5.(ll2'l. 3 BR. 2 BA. lrpl, game nn, ON/poolBEAclCllbbo2 Br mud~ placell' J•ulpt. ~t >':!1"Z:~ .. Js , July 200!, $300 per wk. 4 600 SQ. FT. C.M. $155 M!C\!Do MShoby D~f, 4.'Qlllly, I .• d I I S350 "'' , u u11e, SA.una, • ava • y ~ , 01~ BR, 2 "", bltn• 2 ,.... .. gor., w/2 ,~ mt•. .,.2130 \.'tt res L>ftJ mt hOmf!. 3RR llOu9C, 1.11n pd, $210. Al;,o ncu Y · ne awn, care. I Adul $335 "" ., "... ,.. .,..... Prtn I 3 BR llB $210, gin11;le1-, fa.ml· un . or S425 furn. 5-G-3182. ~jM·or sas!1R1CM eve. mo. S.n Clemente 3176 d ock. Pr I v . PI Y . Ind t I I R t I 4500 c. on y. 64:z.M83. lits, l\Q'l. f'"ee. 979-84.'lO. Minion Viejo 3267 2t:Hi82-1U. us r a en • Mort, Tru1t Deeda 5035 3 BR, $250. Oiildrtn &: pell NE\\', C:\1n llU'gc 2 BR, 2 RENT our hon~ in KonR. NEW DLEX; 1 M·I. 13)0 M1 f1 - D.n• Point 3226 $32S. 3 BEDROOr-.t, bth, OK. 16002 l.ynn St. Call BA. pciol, ExcHing city le 2 BP., 2 DA, big l11.n1tl k S1'76. UOO sq. ft, $3M, %26-3 LOANS UP TO 90% DEACIT llOUSf; 3 BR (klwo family room. \\f/\\' cpts, ~l. ocean view. $240. 400-0616 gt1.rdtn, CIC*"' to beach &: ph. tront otrk:e. etplg, lrg 1st TD Lo'ans l'O·Dt1n• Jfarbor, l..ell!IC o"'. drpt, 1•¥ yard. 4!Q..0596 2 BDR.'1., ck>lcd ~. NEW, extra ~BR, 2 Jt016..!_:. •• ~Y "·k or month, reM doort. Anaheim A ,... Child or tmRll If o.k. $165 BA JJOOI. Exd cit)' & •..........m T · &J W C P.I n..~ Sl3.;, c195-o1486, 4!$.ll31. Newport Be1ch 3269 ... 0 •1 •1 9 • oc-an v•-· 12~ 16 M'ltlll'I ay, ' ' ""Y"' 2 d TD L El Toro _3132 1 ~==·,,~~~7"',-'--,.. ·" •~· ~. . W. NEWPORT, J blk °""'"· -or""' 646-<1681 . n oans -------~-NF:W 5 BR, 3 ba home. 1..ARCE 2 Br .• hH·IM, crpls, DELUXE 2 Bk. 1~ BA. pool. Sips 8. XIT'RS. &Z IDEAL LOCATION for small Nf.W 2 1ty rondo, 4BR, 2 ba, vf,.w, C"Omm. pool &. 1cnni1 df'Jlt, pr. Ne pelJ. Coo\-en· "'!Ilk to town/bea1:h. Ocean prkg. lmm:f~ ~1R,s_u. Call Bu st n es•-Pttech:'lnleal, lowtst r1te1 Oran9t Co. b\tins, crpts, dr'pl'I, 2 car crts. 644-1481. lf'Tll IOClltlon, !168.0712 v1E'\\'. Adults. 4!)8.-0.)36 ~2-8768 or ...,.,...... ''''" Radlll.IQr il r!c, ).(Jc;;alcd Jn Sattler Mte Co J:&t, rec Ct'lller "'/pool. No NE'V Somerset S Br, 3 B:1, -"'c.,3-B=:R".'°'>"•1'-"bR~,~. "11"°115.--l l..A RCl': 2 BR 11.pr, In S. Snn LACUNA BcBrb, oceanfront l'C!l'lr or Jo;ARL'1. DODY 642 2171 'u•'~ll f»t.-"· s.i·in nio., GT.ri250 comm. pool, tl!:nnls fTf!I, $000 ™1 l":lllt, Apt D, CIPmtn•c. Vlt.:\VS. Sh!!£ 1-2 BR 11pts. $151).up 'Aeekly, SJIOP. on Placenti•. Call • _,,...,. flri)'ll.J>r 96Z..1022 e~ mo. 640-41 14, s.'12-1800. ,. I '::=================~~I ____ ,_.,_·26_71___ rptsflatJndry 4!l6--2619 f!\'e. fl.'J6.()32t eves onll'. M.~797 al1 12 noon. ~Ing ffn rOOr lrfl4 2" )TS • I \ . ' I - . . 21 PllOT ·AOV!'JITISER Wedne$Cki~ Juns ;, 1974 loll " Found 5300 P enon1 l1 5.uu E lectrlca l ~I Ple1ttr/Repair 60771 He lp Wentoo,MiF 7100 At"t'IVJTIF:.'i DlRECTOll Expcr. pret'd. f/thne. CAUi". ANIMAL CONTROL \\11'fNESS . lo 1·111 Ii: ftun Jlunl111s,.1011 UtNlch Shtl!et· needt"(]. Npt . Dd\, '7 O 8!i21 E:dJJon St S:lJ..Zill \'1!lio"' VW, 1..tc. 164 BNJ. £L£C'l'RICIAN • LIL1'n!W No. Zllllll. Snmll Job•, nua.lnf"& rfpnlrs. Mi-5203. JlA'f'CH PW\STEJtlNG All typell. r·1l.'.e etl1111.iilei'I Call 540--08'.li <Baek of Humnnu Soclttyl \'Ii Motor<:r,~·le 011 6/17/72, O•rdtnlng 6045 6079 ANIMAL ASSlbi'. l..EACUE llpprox, M fl.!. $50 Re"'IU"d Adopdon, a Pity Ing & 101· irtro, 89M2l7 or Atty'• Ncutcr\fl.i intoi·m. ~·~ll nr1. 117~1010 tt!cDcnnott. TWO &UYi need cbP.llCC to do PR 0 FE SS l 0 N AL. Pool ANIMALS IMPOUND )'Our ,11'.u.rdonlnr . NB tui•. Scrvh:e & t.lnlnte.11rul(l(•. -r;o MALE :\1, lll!Cks remnle Bob 642-5489. Mille 644·1851 Efficient & Jt e 11 fl b I c. Shl!'J). pup. Olk &: &ti, t.1. c1un1.11u11vn for cumplng I.rip .t."'u.e!oi· p J s I Dalmull.tu~nb:.-BlW, m11Je in J1.1ly1'0U 'need~fl tove-or -Relleble"Gtrden lng----~]$ 00 c r v c e · Pekf'., Brown, rcn1. nntut'I', Reply with phone "Indoor Pott & Planl.I" • Colden Retr., fcnt. N t Cl lflcd IN ~.. \\'h•lo '-'r.es 646-1072 QUALITY pool llCrYIC~ lrt:c \vi" T'~cr, Bl", m0 I... o. o fUli ac o. 1""'• ,-,,. I . I I"· 1-i-1 A .. ,-Jo D lJ Pll t p Q n.... t'llt. c canU\i' on ':f, rt wble I Gtrm. Shep, BIT, ma.ko c· n y o ' ' .....,,, EXP. Jll1mne~. Apt. Bldgi. workmaruihlp Nel1101n~1 ool Leb rttx, Blk, mult 1560. Coltt\ fl.f~titl, Ca 926a) ~.~~~~lean up. J<"rec -011t. Se:rv. 842-1661 T<.'ITl*mlx, trl. fcnl. GUY nt."t'dil auractlve ant on-.r"""" Samo , White, nu!.11" p:i rlner for swlngJng double UANDSCAPE, sod, 8011 cond. Sa ndblasting 3 P>llie./ ep, Tun, nUL!e ii1.1te11 Pft.rll e1. Write Box Clean~p. sprinkler 'repair. \VOOD 'f<'xt., Bldg:i, ho le!J, ' O:ick·l'fXJO, Brn. i t. No. 1B ' c/o Dally Pilot, P. t~pet . 646--4908. botlt1, patios, swim I "'is. L.e.b, Hb:l.ck, mWe O. Bo 1560, Cosio. fl.1esa. M-.. EDGE "'' t errier mix, Cry/Tan, :f. Cn.clif'-!"'"'26;::,J,,--;:-;,,.,=c-"'" Shop for smaller It n1!'l. lrlah Settt>r, Rt-cl, male -ffpJi. U L READER .,/ WWEST PH.ICES Quick Sitnd CO. 6<1G-t296. 9<10 Conv. HM)'l'ilal 642...()593 AIRPORT Cenl.1·111 Orllnge Co. a\i·pol't l(icu!lvn ftir llharp _J?(!1"1ion wtiO TIXt"i 10-00 her ov.·n- thina. Sn1all t-o~enlal ufc wl\<itll ol activity. Bufy Mlell ore of lat1;ftr c.'Orp. 100% FREE 556-llOD .,.,.,_,.,,,_,...,.,===-.,..,....,,,-,,...,...,.,.. Wtdnesday, J1111t S. 1974 DAILY PILOT !; . • H•I ~ W anl t d, M&F 71001 He lp Wo nlod, M,.F7.100Hole Waoted, ~l.F 7100 H•lp Wa ntod-;t;l"F 7100l ".,.'•'"" .• TELLER * Delivery-Sunday Only ""'I· 1s"'., "" Mu.t "'"" cl.Ir . R!JOpplnic for toed lo PM<T TIME OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-«TM<i_"._f.a.<>Jn~L'-7Mi lmn1cdlu1c opening tn ~ta QUll ,, GROCERY PEOPLE M~"" fllll«. &win"' '""' !ES TUE USE OF A LARGE STA· t.oo.11 01· bunk ~DClti"nl>t 'rlON \VAGON OR VAN. CONTAC'r MR. ~·1.1!1 & 11/unu" \VlJJ tru!o. pl'('rl!rl'fl•l. Must be wUllnl' BENTON \l/lLJ,JAMS, 330 \VES1' BA y r.JuMt be-maiurc &: dert'1111· in \vork Sa tu day 11 • STREET 'OS'l'A '!ES TELEP! ONE nbll•, Apply In pc:r,;on, $ £> , C " A. ~1 "· ~'m't llJo>r,~ 'd> Mi ,_, {~~dli'fo~ ::J'1t:Y~11 (~r\'f~ 642-482-t f'OR-1\Pl'OlNTftJENT. --ArlH.11\!I Or pe111ung111n. ~!R ICAN SAVINGS An Equ•l Oe portun lty Employer 3110 Brl:stol St, Co5tn M(i;a He lp Wanted, M&F 7100 Help W anted, M&F7 100 ~Jr, Huizenga 97S-!ll\tk>I;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;. _EXl)ER.. 5tcm:I Lcchnician &1u1d Of1portunlty· employer COUPLE F'ull (II' parl tlni;., [,itwrHI fl1/l" Mla.ry ll.lTMa:~mcnt11. 179 ~;. BEAUTY 0 p F.; RAT O I\ Mlddlf'·ll2t"<l. E'xperJ1,11cu1I !Or 17 S C , m,1,,1'"" -I I th .t. OSlll. ,.1c11n, ASSIST ANT Musi hn v l.' ..... nl-.c-o a r {;'. e 615-2442. Cali!. r.osinotnk>Kh•I' Ile, llf1£tl1n1ent h•1u1;1" Ne"'po1·1 """"~-----~-I l<EN Tt::ti1PI..t:J'ON J-t.AIR Bear.h. Lh·1 .. ln EXPER. woman to work' 1n STYLIST, &12-&157. Ca ll 494-1268 i<Por1!1 .... ·ea1· shop, Full l illl!', GUARDS L1 9un1 Hills a re• & S. Orang e Co. Full & P /Time Lab mi."<, Tan. mll.le Op.:•n lO [l.M lo lO PM .,/..BEST SEllVJCE V.'. 18th St, C. M«fl Tettlpoo, \Vhite, male Advlc1 on all matt<'r•. GEORGE M!J.2015 Television Re pair 6090 BEALrl'ICIA.~. Te I Ix I 2 MO licerused, to a:ciiist owner. IT poo, m . gry, em. 31 N. El C1tmlno Real W & EDGE expert + Ot Employment Agtnt.-y IW"----'-"'7 -AAMES Bureau The Span Nook, ·1:ili E. Jjth ~t .. !.Cor~el' ol l!·vine1 } r.t ,/ •rr111Jiln;.: I'n1vldcd ~-'CP!::l<I1'.~CED w:'.tltre~:;e~ . ./ lll·lll'cd p!•l'sons ok Turtler mix, BIW. ffim. Son Clem4.lnte. For appl. dependable. Call for prompt T.V. Servicing, alhce 19-17. 2706 HtU'bor Blvd .,---~ O Cocker mix. Blk, ff'1n, Call 492-0034 492-913$ (rte est. John 546-3446 $12.95 + pa.rta total. !Unless Suite 'lfYl Cosltl fl.les11. Boa t Repairm a n Coldtn Rctr. Reod. pup VASECTOfl.lY r<.iOW & EDGE (Xperl + shop \\'Ork ne:eded) Recond. tifust be neat & responslblc Pointer inlx, \VIB, male Confidential Into r m.11 t I on dependable. Call for prompt ·rFVR,AN'•, K•"'SCH''3 "j,_ecOTdH. T.V. All Shifts Open • \\'Ol'kcr. Need watertront Poodle mix, srry/Wht. preg. couruiellng & referral, b-ee eat, John M&-3446. VACATION $$ r1xpcr. Blackic's Boat Ya.l'd, CREDIT MANAGER Poodlo mix, Blk/\Vht, fC'n\. APCAHE, Inoorp. A NOil· S'J'.' \V. 19th. C.ttt M&-3386 NC\l'J)Ort Sch. Samo)'('d, White, mn.le Pre.flt A~en('y,, 642--4436. FINE EDGE T ile 6091 PART-T IME B OAT·SA IL <."<Hnm·riggini,: (Or ange County) Pood1e, Whitt!, male Y:i.rd M:Untenance Service WEEKENDS k Ex CATS MASSAGE & SAUNA Cle1L11UP11/Haullng. 5-18-862.l CErtAf.1IC TILE Nl.iV & Immediate O~nlng1t r or :~·ip11.y. ~foo,1~~~· y~ Gro\\·ing c I c r: 1 ,. o 11 l c :s Gray, Blk, White .. S/H, M. Clt•an roonts. p I e 1t il an t MOW & EDGE • monthly rc:modcl, Free c:stinw.tl'l!I, Security Guarus in O.C. 6r.rl39S mn .. nulacturr•r located in ·Apply in per!1on. Ciu'J'O\•/.• ./ Xln t opporlunlty ltestaurant; 620 A\>e J,100: lrir coUc~e ~ludentii' ~"SC~====~,,.,--~ 1 ./ Tltlic &. 1,~ f.or ove.rrin1c EXPERIENCED back (1flll'P ./ C.:111· & phone l'C(fUircd aui!1tii11t for urology •)ffit'f'. Mw.1 be x-ray 1·1'.'r1illc~I. 644-8722 mornings only. EXPERIENCED 1"oyo1a mechanic , v.•anled (or ai.:ency. 494.750:;, WELLS FARGO GUARD SERVICE Cray ~ hair. male almoi;phe~. TV &: low1gc, mallltenance ·yard cleanui> Srn jobs, wf'lcom~" 5:{6·:!·126' nrea. 11)....4(1 HrA/wk. $2.25 • Orru1i.:i: County rcqu1re11 AAAOrt Kl1ten11 & colors Call Donna al 963-1247 &-hauling.~. 548-6142 Top Soil 6092 hr. No exper. nece!lS. Call BKKPR nt:eded fro'!' 6110 Individual ·with r;: 1 r 0 n g , ·---------I Div. Baker Protecti\'l' Si'iv. AND OTHJ<::RS 536-2513 8839 Adams Ave, Hntg. Bell. 4-6 p.nt., 546-9571. thru 6/'17, pegboar(~ liYSleni, !Jackground in collections. 1' FASHION ISLAND 1532 \'/, Conunonwcalth LOS'f/ Boxer Mix, Fem, a PREGNANT? STUDENT cpl. will mow, * TOP SOIL * C'OMPOST ~l~CUP.fTY SERVfCES CO. no ~ finan reporl.'I. Salacy Cl't'dlt experience desirabl1> Fullerton mo1 red/brown, white Caring, con f ide n t i a I ~rio3 ~~ e~tl~. Lo rates. * r<.IULCH * REO\\rOOD APARTMENT management, y~n\niensurate w / ex P ' Salory comn1ensurate wi1h (714) 525·2386 · mw.de & eheS1, lthr L'OLI counseling & referral. Call 586-.£930 ' Couple Assistant. Husband :i.:i6-4l70 cxperie11ce . Degree tifeet & grN.'I in i,.'tlJ'gl'Ous Equal Oppor. Employer I Needs. medication, Coir.t~ Abortion, adop t Io n & EUROPEAN GAROENEB,. T S , 6093 1 main!. wUe cleaning & offii:e B 0 0 K KEEPER, Full· prt~fe111'.'rl, mlnlnmm or 2 ofcs ovrrlookin~ Balhoal---------- 642-9582 or 646-2877. APCARE "•" •• .,,. reasonable. 642-53..?9. 842-9622 in terview appt. call 557-7883 resumo to: 11 an · erso~ s IOU a\'P. GUARDS Mcsa area. Rewar d . keeping. · .Landscaping -.lrte service ree erv1ce relie!, salary + npt. chru·ge. Pa11-U1!le. r·ol' years co llege required. Send l 1 d 1) 1 ld h I ~ TREE SERVICE, trimming, ""'==·===--,.--~ l'.'.1i:pcr on .. usy rotdlr.ss , LOST medl}lm size white INCREASE your buatline, 1·3 GARDEN Service clean ups, topping, renioval of Ivy & APAllTMENT Managers, 98 BOYS & GIRLS PBX. Busy busy boat·d, lot~ ?.1cn & \\'omen, full and p11M· n1ale dog, hte tan streak on cup sizes in z wks, no planlln&. long renovation, shrubs. Roger 495-5289 unl!s. Garden Grove, expd Newspaper Carriers. .r.lin. Standard of c1:11ls roming in. 1-Tont thne Uniforms rurnisht•cl.; bnck & ears, short legs, exercises pads or gimmick• free est. Exper. 963-1072 * TOPSOn.. * COfllPOST t:ouple, 7 14 _ 8 4 6-3 1 2 1 , age 10. Ll<lo lsle, Balboa desk spot. fan ta 6 l I c TOP Benefits. GUARD: stoc~ built, answers to ALSO c Uston1 t 1 t t Jn a. EUROPEAN G a rd e n er . * MULCH * RED\VOOD 1 ~832-;;;9;1;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o Peni.n~ula & Balboa Point. Memories, Inc. benefits & salary. !\WU{, INC. 909 N. Scpul: "Corley". Talbert & Beach halters/swimwear. Juanita, Maintenance -Landscaping. Call 586-6930 1• contact !\1r. Bat·ks trom at A Subsidiary of vada Blvd.. El Seguqilq! Ave,H.B.Phone842-941S. 832-4272. Tree r e mo v a l . Very A/REC CLERK theOAlLYPIWTor callAPPLlEDMA CNETICS 100% FREE 1213J640·01!6AnEquaJ OP;. ~"'OUND -approx. 2 yr old J,;'O~L~I~C~E~M~AN=-~.~~W~l~l~e reasonable. &42-5329 ~ves. Tutoring 4094 Fee Pald. Top salary for 642-4311 & Jea\•e application. CORP. porlunity En1ploycr. ;\ !emale Irish Setter Vic. nvailnble for House Sitting, General Services '°44 Window Cleaning 6098 posting cash receipts, type BUSBOY 2221 S. Anne SL HELP Raleigh & Wlll!On. Saturday sturting 7/1. Protect Your li1 e OO!Tt'spoodence. Large Exper. Prefer Amer. citizen, Santa Ana,. Ca!JC. 92i~ 556-1100 THE FAhtlLY BUDGET ! night -June 2 548-3177 aft 6 valuables, call 968-1316 1-IANOYM/.N: * SUNSHINE \VORKERS * well known co, Plush oles. Engli!ih or spa 11 i 5 h If you have 6 10 8 hrs, 1~ . .'r pm. *PALM /CARD RF.ADER* HOMES&: APTS. Industrial, residential Also Fee Position .. .;, lipcakin~. Salary according An equal o p port unity week,.,.,'<! \\•i!l show you l'tO"' t FOUND -Sm. blond male AD/REDUCTION · CONSCII:NTIOUS Fi'?(! est. &42·6931 Jason Best Agency to exprr, Apply betwn 2:30 en1ployer AAMES Bureau to e.s1ablish a 2nd lnconie·-[ TelTicr nr C.M. PMk 10831 Beach Bl., Stanton. CRAFTSMAN. Schools & 17400 Brookhunrt, F . Vly. & 4: W pin Hamburger I -;:~:;;;;;::'.:'.:'.:'.::' 0•,·.0r6 ,!n.,t;~9iew, call U.16-5.100,I wearing red collar. Sweet -527<MOO .. * 646-1461 * 7005 Suite Z13 963-6775 liantlet, 1545 Adams, CMI; • ...,.. .,,, But can't keep! 645-7724 aft LlF~~E=,~,-o=EA=TH~·. -,~.,-our-B & W MAINTENANCE lnstr(.lction Ask !or !\1r. Hagen. DE~IVERY _men P e r 111 · · Ot Employn1cnt At:ency HELP WANTED 5 ~ ~-'I . I I I b' A/REC CLERK p/time. Early morn ''7~ 11 bo Bl" · babies live. For alternatlve!I V<>n main" e. ec-.. p um ing WAIHINANO'S BUSBOYS newspaper deliv. to N.B. ~ 110 ar r Vu t"ull & l,/titne LOST black dog, part Lab, to ABORTION call LrFE :mr~· r:tis. ~~ POLYNESIAN fee Paid. Beautiful 1nodc1·n English not necessary. homes. Approx. 2 hrs. S200 Suite 207 Costa r.lesa METRO CAR WASH n1alc, blunt talf. 2 slit.Ii ria:ht LINE 541-6522, 24 hrs. ofcs in Fashion Island. Good See Personnel Manager per mo + gas allow & 29;.() Jlarbor Blvd C""M· VRlc. R.edh~~ ~Fisher. siiE;5ST;r->MAi:<sSSSAMGG'EEUIN'i'NN:,:iiac. 1 .!HH~·B0~.ME~1145-~·~21N~l3;;EDC~.ci;SM"'.==~ di!tAN1roCmE HCaLwA.,.s, .. S1~1Sy:., phonhe ~~t1cc & t0.20kl"y 1t.iy Balboa Bay Club lxlnu1>. 642-4800. F /C BOOKKEEPER Costa :\!esa 546-8191 . . eward 55~91 alter 3400 Irvine Ave., Suite 1038. E WORK? ...... ... toue . ...,.. ary lo $J . As" 1221 W. Coast Hwy, NB DELIVERY MAN, r~urniture f'ull charge thru T. B.. HOSTESS 5 pm. 0....,n S.O losed Thurs Ann All Types of Repa1r,; tcttching experience, te;iches }~ce Jobs. Call Sa 11 y payroll Jor small office. I' r-• c ' ' SmaU Jobs our Specialty ancient & modern Jiula. Hart, ~. Coast a I CAMERA TRAINEE store, txmdab!e, g O O d beautiful location. \Vol'k Denver t.1ining ,OJ. ~~~.Wh~~d~~~uilth~'. 55R70.ffi3BE9·D C HA! Coast Home.Repair 64&,8197 Tahitilln, Maori. Rcgistra· Persormel Agency, 21 9 o Full time position for young driving~7z;d. l4tll for \\·/controller treasw'er. Co. 719 \V. 19tn SI, 01 I _ -approx.-45 _lbs.--Y.:I c ___ 1:i> T ,_ ~~-DK'.5-Handy..,.Man -5cn1ce lion Sat., June 8, 1 p.rn. at Harbor Blvd. CM person. No expe r ience appl., pri.ys, 1.~ of Jee & rein1burses 64.~2343 · Creenbtook tract, Newland \vhereve1· you are call qualified in repairs or all DOi'Olfiy Jo -oance ·-siudlo. Acs=s=E=M=s=L=y~,-.,,-,=,-1-,,-,.-srn-a-11•1-ncceS'!'lw but helptul-:-Atter D"E NT A 1 .. -assistant:()r.rt 1'Z in·-90 ~-Al!O Fee HOSTESS I & Ellis F.V. Call 963-1443. (415) 98~5463. kinds, el~an-ups, also some 2515 E. Coast tlwy., C.D.~1. M!g. nr. O,C. airport. ~<;.ining to become Dept.I surgery office. Over :0 )'f's. ~ •• caJ~ ~t:yp Cutleri Part·timc. Apply Oclltnl'y'i;,I LOST gold "snake" ring electrical installation. Call Clas5l'S are limited. 673-2·120 \Voman, 35 _ 55, 4 .to 6 hrs/ •. .,., •. Apply in person, Ask ="=>-o-=25~21~H~·~B~. ~---~ ~. 27o90ast t>rsonnc 2.W35 El Toro Rd, Lagun~- w /niby eyes, lost on beach· David-K 673-5333 -PlANO l:u;truCtof' h ws 5 days a \\'eek. 5.i7-7283 Jor ?ttr. ~i~RT DEi'llTAL Assistant, exp'd Agency, Harbor Blvd, Hills ' near Hotel Laguna. RE· 1 ·~ ... _. I~ HOME· REPAffi openings now !or summer ASSEfl1BLY TRAINEES -·chairside, Ne\\'J)Ort Center, Cl\cl . J WARD Dave (n 3) 98&-0279. --Carpentry, Plumbing schedule. June 17th to Aug NO EXPERIENCE NEC. $2. m> Harbor Blvd, e.ro.t. _&!'=t-=24~55=~==~-F~'crn!,?Oe~~.EE!e~ial HOUSECLEANIN;. ~o f•mal• St. Berna~ v,·". Electrical. Reas. 549-1004 10th. $4.50 1h hr. Mesa hr. Day &: Night Shift. CASHIER DENTAL ASSISTANT -\:J ~" ... " •u .... Verde area. 5.16-..1932. .,_,. 1 I lood & •· c I N' · _,, records. P/time 1 ~ii hrs ror •0 n1a Ana ~..... & H1ullnn 6051 A • IAC LEODS 833-1932 n.r 1t' or ut:verage. onlro 1 une. molivatL .... , -~ • "' A t' 6001 "• READING s · 1 · Mat"--& d d bl ,. t 11 · t h 4 days.or 6 hrs for 5 days. Join lhe nation's l1lrge" pro-Broadway in Santa Ana. ccoun 1ng p e c I a J s t ASSEMBLERS & packers. .....~ .... op. epen a e. n e 1 gen ' a pp Y, ~1 t I I book C II 543-4257 I 5 HAULING Y-~ w 0 r k available !or tutoring-has Some lite bkkpog. P/time. ('.Ii: per ienced, individual :• u l.1 P e set 0 s vider Of housec.leaning i;e1·· a a I pm. . ....... • No f!X""r. necess. Apply tn"I din PR AIR AIP . f . ACCOUNTING, bookkeeping, cleanup. Odd jobs. Reas. own n1aterials. Ca 11 : 2026 tilcl:: 1 . See Personnel Man ager, \\'anted fo r progressive "u g • • · \'lees er pnvate home5., LOST: Ladies BuJova watch. payroll, taxes for l'O's & rates. Call Ken aft. 6 PM. &45-3979. • a\\', rvine. Balboa Bay Club dental office. Salary open. gen'I ledger thru T.B. Create your ov.·n \rork \veek.: Go Id mesh band individuals. L&M Notary 752--0232 "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~ ASSlSTANT Ma n ager , lZll w. Coast Hwy., N.B. c'='""o.:·~1~0-==~~--Sa la ry comm en S\irate \Vork the days & hours vf! wldlamonds. Reward. C.M. Service Co, 205l Newport . f trainees, counter girls, fry ~ v.·lexp<'r. Send r &sum e your chok·e. 66-2206 Blvd, Costa Mesa. tWS-0683. LOCAL moving & hauling by I ,., ill cooks, days, nights, grave CASHIERS wanted. Gulf DENTAL ASSiVf. Lagunfl w/l't!fs to P.0.Box i180, I student Large truck Reas ' ~ment ard 1i·fn 0 full & self·serve. 6 days/v.-eek. Hill. F;I Toro area. Exper. Newport Beaeh, Ca 92663 Apply !'lfon. thru fri. LOST: Female Irish Setter , 3 Add·A·Room 6002 i:z.,,_, ;..,! 1235 • .;.9438 · Y Ii 1 · pe, Full Hme. $2.25 •taru·ng· chairs. ide. Salary. open. 9 ant·!'. noon & '" 1,., yrs old. on Fri. 5/31. Vic. .......;:,,o#-J oro#-J.,.. · parttlme.ApplyJackinthl.! Re F /C BKKPR $700 .., '' " C Re A_, GENERAL Hau!'~~. Tree Bo 385 E 17th St Co 1 p!ly, Applicants over 50 plies con1lde11ual. 831}1130 I Westside, .M. w .... u. PALOMBO Construction Co. "~ Job Wanted, Molo 7025 x, . .•. s a ll'elcome. 1010 S. El Camino DENTAL RECEPTIONIST ;) Fee Paid/Also Fee HOMEMAKERS 645-3}j7 · 1923 Qual't .... Trim & Removal. Frte Mesa. ,., al SC Developer/Beach Area suice · 1 Y wo.,., E11t1m.11tes. 531-3743. i .e! : • Exp'd, computer bi I Ii n g. UP JOHN FND: Owl. Injured foot com p et itive prices. ~""~~0'=7."=~--IMOTEL inanagel' looking Ior ASST. Mgr.·Relired couple CHILD l O Id p,.1 YI"" niature 0 a WESTCLI FF II ·~ ~ (") v· m('fllherBBB 962·1961. MOVING, Haullng. Ex....... Lite duties. Nice apt +. care, one · yr 0 ' '"'· \\' m n. p I A w eau..,r rap • IC. ,~ small or mediqm motel to girl, Utt.> housekeeping r-.1on Gartlen Grove, 534-0109 (~."",,,"',"11 C"~Cl10',',' 330 Y.', Placentin Nc\vport Beach 645-~3! tEntr Placentia.~ Flai;shlp l Bushard. Hamilton, H.B. Business Services 6009 Reliable. Reasonable, Free manage. Keeps business UJ>. ~~. C.fl.1. loc:. Call thru Fri 7:45 to 4:45. Would DENTAL ASSISTANT lull " -"'"'" 968-aa;t est. 832-7581. Have ,referenccs. 645-1791 or consider 4 days v.·k . O\\•n or part time. Experience lSJl E. Edinger , S.A. FOUND: Be4utilul male BOOKPG, typing, t 11 in g . HAUlJNG & MOVING, fast 646-3632. AUTO SALESMAN trans preferred but not necessary. 644-0683 1 ........ ~54>-::;;:8836:::::~iiiiiiii•liili!&ii;:;;::;;; ..... ;:;;::;"":I Seelpoint Siamese, vicinity Need help! Call Roxanne's low cost servk.-e. Ext 617, E x perience Not req'd. Mesa Verde area. DENTAL Cl 1 . X £ W f HOUSEKEEPER. Li ve in, Marguerite, Corona del Bus Serv. Reas rates, 4M-1003, 545--0487. Neeosiory ~3995 after 5 'pn1. Ray 1.,_,~,.18_!°q!"d.'N'".'a".tc. ,·11· ffGUR ff Z help 11·/children ages 12 & M cannot kee 640-8068 y BOAT SKIPPER; 15 yl'S ,_,_ "" '" 15 for \\'orki11g n1othl'r. ar. p, S..17-2827 e.ves. ARD, garage clelL!lups, exp., need fWI tin1e position. ON THE JOB TRAINING (.1-fAlR side asst, wanted, 644-9Zll. Room & board + ;;a lury, pri· FOUND: '612 Sm. Blk & Carpe:nter 6015 remove trees, dirt. ivy, Exp'd. mech. & elec. Sell Bo!h New and Used Cars ruil time. :'t1ln. 1 yr exp. J..o:cal Irvine n.E. co. is in rni, Nc\rpoit Bell\'h, h~I• for Brwn Fem. Dog. Pt. Peke.I--'--------d r l v e w ay s, s t umps.1 ~~=-'=1~3-39-72-<6'='="~7~=~ Excellent Bene{Jts Start imn1ecl. Salary open.1----------,I <lire 11e('d of a Bookkeeper Jnckil' /\rchl·r 675-~liW or Huntington Hati>our & Coast C AR p EN T Ry_ Master 847-2666. Job Wanted, Fmale 7050 Paid Vacation 64N;_i~r1t Beach are a. DESIGNER who know·11 v.·hat 10 clo in a 6+l-?8S:'I Hwy area. 846-U62 Craltsman-remodeling & Gen. Hauling-Moving·Trash --Insurance .....vuJ sniaJ! ore. Located rfghtl·H_O_U_S~t~l-.E-,E-'P_E_P.--1-. -. r oUND : H .B. area finish wo r k guaranteed. Tree & shrub trim or TEEN-ACE sisters App1y inperaononly, next to Nc11·pon f'rn·y. . \ •· ive-1t1, Doberman, rnal£,._ nt 11 d removal. Est. 545-5475. Interested in summer v..'Ork Ask for fl.1r. Roberts Grell ! boss. Super chances bcauti!ul _ Hunt, . Harbour tempered, well trained Free Estimates. 499-3105 d such as housecleaning. ATLAS CHEMICAL P .C. BOARD LAYOUT !or nl0n~1ary reward. Lllst hon1C". J\Iust dnve, h~ve Identity 1-714-&17-2820 Car pet Service 6016 Moving •n Heulina babysitting, typing, etc. in Chrysler-Plymouth gal there 5 years. ~i~ ~·:J::of~prr. & rcls. 10P r o u N D : Ha nd some , SlO & UlJ. * 963-&452 Meira area. 545-4240. 291!1 Harbor Blvd. (Orange County) debon&.ir cat wishing to JOHN'S Carpet & UpbolsteI')' HouseclHning 6054 you NG E n glish/Swiss Costfl Mesa I.AB \\le need an experienced, top· adopt a loving iamily. Call ~ri ds ha) m f>e0 0 • (So~ T\VICE AS FAST _ TWICE Mother SHik11 part time job. Auto Si les nolch Designer in high ~~~~~ New 10 s pd . all~1:1tshrighte~~ 10 AS EFFICIENT ~r;;;A·a:~~no~s~d i!"m~:c3 Theodore Robins TECHNICIAN ~fr~~;r 1~1:Uts:n~e. di!~«'~ . m inute bleach far \\'hite 2 Ou1stian college girls will yrs. office exp. 557-0i69 FORD d · · Sch\\'inn Varisily, vi e . carpets. Save your money do l ight housekeeping. yna n11c, growing , Orange Grove & Walnut, by saving me extra trips. Floors & windows extra. $3. Jobs Wa nted, M&F 7075 Needs new l. used car Sll!es-\Vilh experience in analysis successful rompany \\'Ith a Irvine, 5.51-5738 Will clean living rm., dining per hour each. 548-0869 nicn. Call sales nianager for or Electro-plating AOlutions small, stable design section. FNO: cat, blue.gray long rm., & hall $15. Any nn. 10am·3 pm. \ PR E·DENTAL HYGEINE intcrvie\V. or related processes. Some Salary rommensurate \l.'ilh haired. Vic. of Newport $7.50, couch $10. Chair $5. 15 EXCELLENT ho I . student, desires to V..'Ork tu-s 642 0010 college preferred. Send cx~rienr.c, excellent fringe \Vest or ShoT'e Crest HB yrs. exp. is what counts not 1 usec caning in N. B. Dental Office. • resume or apply: bent'fits. Send i•esun1e to: 963-1455 method. I do \\'Ork myself. done by lad,y w ex fl· Wants to learn. K im, Good ref. 5.1l~lOl. Dependable, ov..·n tran s. 673-JJ.15 LOST: While, male, German 847-3637 Shepherd. limps. Vic. Hunt. CARPET CLEANING E;,XP""E"R°'T,-C"l,-ea.,.n"in"gc-. ~Loe.,.,,a'l I Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Bch. 646-0835 lOc sq ft. No xtra chg lo' ref's. Your house, a pt:, or -•-•--"-FOUND: Cat, female, Jong spoting or removing furn. boat. Newport Beac h . ._.........----.---.....--- hair blk A wht. H.B. Florida Also, windows & floor care. 673-9186. Accounting Clerks to $468 •~ Ow ~2ll3 aft 5 Reduced prices for empty ao ens. """"' · · Dedicated Cleaninn Indus/Mech Engr $13K apts. Dutch Maint. Service, ··• FOUND female Siamese cat. 537.1;J08, * WE DO EVERYTHINL: * Sec'y/Bkkpr lo $000 Vic. Walnut sq. C a 11 Hefs. Free est. '646-2839 Boat Mech/Diesel $S65 s.;J-5449. L&R Opt Clnrs. 1-lse $24.95. ~H" ... o~u=s=E~C ... L~EcA~N=r=N~G--1 Cpl mgr \\•ine cellar $800+'1. Rm $4. Stm hse $39.~. Sofa FIC Bookk"C""O !llOO """'D: Orange tabby. Male. ex p erieneed. Reference. ... ,,~ •" . Hi 11 ld Sl4.9S. Guar. 776-5170 Corp Ex Sec'y to $800 Young cat. Vic: g 1 at II 6018 $3.50 an hour. N.B. area. Sales/Mfg Sec'y l7'•l Dr. &-Irvine NB. 54S-7427 Cel ngs &1•~3 """'~· · Field Claims Adjuster FOUND: Puppy, Tri.color * \VILLARD PAINTING * WINDOWS, Ors, c r p Is Trne, degree to $723 male., 3 mos. Vic. Ho11g New Acoustical Ceilings + c l eane d professionally. Sec'y'Title Escrow to STOO Hospital 6@-0288, &45-1786 repairs. Diy.vall & wall 496-&'118 fer free estimate. G. Ofz/Recepl 10 $600 LOST, Keys. In 16th & text, patch plastering, No. I ;Re"""'°"''~•1~'~'·..--.,---=,. Receplionists to S550 superior area, on plain 281038. 642-5775 Painting/Papering 6073 ,;i,,, ring. 64>3967. Cement/Coner•t• 6019 EXTERIOR ONLY roUNO -Watch by Orange Coast College on Fairview. CEMENT & Block \Vork. Licensed, Insured, Free Esti· 540-34TI \Valls, patios, sidewalks, mates. Richard, 979-3335. LOST vie Harbor Lanell. dr l 4.l!C. By hr. or ;lob. 646-li915· PROP. painter, honest \\'Ol'k, Obispo: 4 yr old n1all' Irish CEMENT \Vork of all kinds. reas. I n t I ext . , free setter. Reward. 400.Zl70. Rea!IOnable. free Es t . estimate. Reis. MS-2759, LOST: Very lrg lN h Sl'lter. 63&-3325. &12-3913. Vic Dana Point. 6.18-1415 CONCRETE Patios. Patio FIRST CLASS EXT./INT. IRVINE PERSONNEL SERYICES•AGENCY CAIL TRISH HOPKINS JERRI \VHlTIEMORE 488 E. lith St lat Irvine) CM Suit e 224 642-1470 • l\llf-~w•·~A-\-••••~• AUTO carrier, n ogisl~r Newspape r , Att1/Pr-.t. pc.rmanent, part time work. Ideal for s t u den!J<, housewives & retire d persons. 54Q...:lJ06. Woody. AVON Asks ••• PRJCES ARE GOlNG UP, S l l OULDN'T YOUR FAfl.1lLY INCOME? You can help by earning extra money as 1L11 A V O N R EPRESENTATr\'E. Flexible hours. I'll train you. Interested! Ca 11 54(}.. 7041. BADY Sitter, 5 days a week, 9 lo 5. Own transp, Good rmy. c.r.1. 834-39R5 0 r 546-S45G eve~ & w·knds. BABYSrITER your hon1e two boys 5, 8 wt'ekclays prefer Del Cerro tract Paularl no, Bristol 919-5144 BABYSITTER, full time, 8 to 6. r.1on tltr11 Fri. Cnr * REWARD $50 * Covers. Quality work. Reas. PAINTING, PAPERHANC· FOUND: Male G('r n1. She1> Licensed. 642-8514. ING, Free Ettlmntcs ACCOUNTANT necessary. Start June lt Huntini;:ton Beach 1-1 i g h Call aft 6, 54fl.06.13. Blk & Tan. 'Vic Turtlerock CDIENT: Patio, drives, 919-5294 ~2. \1'tllks--Repairs, aaw & H O u S E p a i n t l n g d remove. Free est. 544-8998 in!'l!de-outside 'WOrk guar. FOUND lg. white male og Vic 16th & Newport, C.M. JESS Cement Contractor. alao any kind of odd jobs, 6'16-S702 Drive.way!!, ~ id e wa I k s , 1 ='~"=·~-~Ci'· 7--,,.,-,,..,-,....,,..-cc FOUND cat female, black & patios. J5.1-tttl PAINTING & Repair. 35 yrs while. Vic Mesa Verde. PATIOS.DRIVE\VAYS.SIDE workrnttn11hip gunr. T a k e 557...0719. WALKS·BLOCK WALLS. Advantage of my exp • 64.H1'20 • 53&-7006 FOUND: Back Bay area. 2 ---~~~--=I small dog-1. 1 blk fem. & 1 Contr•c tor '°21 INT/EXT PAINTING blk & whlte male. 548-2688. All Orange Coi Jim ~3559 FOUND small nib:ed breed Desl!rn -Remodel -Addi· FREE .EST. PROF. fem11.le dog In Costa Mesa, tka, _ Paint. "BuUdlng PAINTlNG. INT.· EXT. area, Call anytime, 897·2257. os"irit we~ out'!I". ~tanol· * 551-4214 * rND: fml Dalmauon Vic. Construction Lie •250733. PROF. w11.llcowrlng, slat€' School District is accepting "a~AB=Y~S~m=E"'It~.-;L7iv~.-..,~,,,-=., appllca1ions for: CHIEF A C COUNT ANT. Starting bch, HB. 5 children nil sch salary $1213 mo + xln't ~lom~"·n rm & TV. bcnetits. Application <lead· line June Ulh, Phone BABY Sitter: hvc in. Priv. 5?.&-93."\1. t'Xi. 2.11. Equal rm. l Boy , 8 yrs. Call Pl\'l's OJlpor1uni!y Employer. 84&4620 ................. ~ ....... ~IBABYSfITER, 5 days a ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE \\'CC"k for 4 month old. BOOKl<EEPEH. Refercnce11. 645-6217. Pcgbourd experlc11cc only. Call for !lppoin1mcnt. 540-2720, M.rs. Gibbrons. tt11SSION BEAC!iCR.AF'T OrangC' County Airport. BABY Sitter nec~ded. 5 \\'k, j to 4. 0\\'11 lran~p. CA 1t &12-9302 da. N.B.. Irvine _ f>.10.7858. lie. No. 219514. trtsur .• all &44-6254 GER\VICI\ & Son Bldg. tYJ)('s PApt,:r. 1141842-4.186. ACCOUNTANT JR. CAJ\ofERA found in San Contr. Add. remod. St. lie PAPER HA N G I NG & Gencrnl nll<.'COUntinl~ funcRtJoni; Experienced New Accounh Clerk UNITED CA LIFORNIA BANK •-B 1 1u3 21 6 1 • •••1 paint!""· 21 .,..., Ha.rbor for sn111 n1~1n11 . <-o. <'i<f· Clemente. Plense descrivo:: S4~2tTO. • ,,,_,,.. • area. ·n~fll. rum ... ~. lS328l . for payroll & p ti y r o I 4~1677 6424356 n ·ports, f}udit nccountinw:; WST: Silver (imy PO<Xlle. JACK Tttulane, p a t \011, ~~~~~==~--1 mi1chln1· rt.11t~, rrrepaJ'(' Vic, \Varner & G<lthard, remod, odd. Uc. ~I 260072 • 10% DlSCOUNT * journal cntry8. Ahle 111 H.B. Reward. 842-T"a&'J My \Vay Co. 642-4703. \VaUpaperif1.M Ii Painting ll ~ii, ls I a cc o u n I i 111·1 Diceon Electronics Inc. ClassifiC'd Ad no. 158 t'/O Daily Pilot P .0. Box 1560 Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 An Equal Opportunity Employer DISHWA SHER 18:i22 Von Karman lt'vine. Cali!. 92662 3·11 or 11·7 shirt. DENNY'S RESTAURANT, 3li0 Harbor An Equal Opp o r l uni l y I3lvd. C.~T. Employer l;o~17c"l'=A~R~Y~.~H7o_u_.o~k-,.~.-.-A~i~d-e. il1atUl't'!, depend, sn1. !acil. c=,-.. 7.ic-"17.-,~M~od7i~c-.~I~. ~°"~.,-al~-1 Xln't wages. 642-2410. WE NEED YOU: DRAFTSMAN-CIVIL ./ Denial Asst. S500 Min 3 yrs expcr. Good oppor. .,/ r.ted. A&l!IS. to $600 \\'/new fll'm. 979-5195. .,/ filed. Ins. Biller 10 S$JO ./File Clerks to $140 DRIVER '.NANTEO .,/ Cen'I Ortice to $450 Shuttle bus driver for one. ol .,/ L.:ogal Trai.scrlll' $155 Orange County's leading .,/ Typists 10 S1i0 Ne\v Car Oea,erships. lJNDA ~FORD Exct"llent opportunity, Se.:- El\TPLOYMENT ACENC'i" Vic Snyder 17305 Brookhur!!t, F. Vly. ATLAS 96.1-71111 or a.r;T-586.1 ~hry sler-Plymouth C.'OMPANTON fen1 . for Sal & 2929 Harbor Blvd. Sun. ti-rust drive. N 0 Costa Mesfl S.16-193-t srnoking, HB. 962-5224. Driver, p/I \l.'/class 2 lie. COOK-TRAINEE for to wheeler._exper prcf'd, . ()ld1;r man ok :i36-6974 Salary acco1·di11g to exp, ~'-"""'""""'""~--Pref<'r no srudents. Expel'. DRY CLEANING pt'('l'cl., but "'ill train. Api>ly C?u.nt.:or Help between 2:3014::~0 p. 01 • F1n1shcrs Hllmburgcr H.irnlet, 15'1:1 ?ttanagl.'r. . . Adams Cllil Ask !or ?ttr Por new & ex1in1ng plants. Hn"rn.' · · \Viii h'ain·EXP. prtl'd. "' CaU 641-0893. Top i:e~ ritnn ELEC ASSEMBLERS Apply Jn Person Urgrnllv ncc(fcd. Exp. in Velvet Turtle Ri'l!L Mob\le Home (.'()ni;rruclion 59 t'ashlon Island. N.B. ~q 'd. App!v in (M'N!On COOK-GRAVEYD GOLD~N WEST t;XPEH.'0. Nce<ll'd J1n1ned. MOBI LE HOMES De nny's R es t•urant 1929 E. ~t. Andrew Pl. S.A. 3170 iial'bor Bl., ~I. ELECTRONIC A.<tSC":n1bl<!r, -="-""=""'~"--='--I F.xp nee. Sn1l company wl COOK i1w'J'Qundi11g$. Nr the oeea n E:<per. only Ill'<.,.! apf)ly in Nf'\\1l01'1 Bench. Apply nt Dl'nvcr hHning Co. Nrv.·port tttnrinc, 10nm·4pm, 719 \V . 19th St, Cr.1 501 Superior, ~·2622. 61·""'2343 t1.0R,\L desi.encrs. Full & COOK. C'.Xp'd, full llntt~. Ap-pnrt 1ln1e. t.tln. 2 yrs crprr. pi)' Slew Keith:>, Adiuni. nl \Vork rcler. rnqul1'Ni. f'honc li11rbol' <nc.xt I:> Thrlfllrnllrt\ 962-37.~ ror ~ppnL LOST; Fem. Jrl11h Setter Rnom Additions. AllernUons. .,.c>~,,..O'i~E='"~·~C~al"i-I ~53&--0548~='-7· I 1upi•ni 1!Ur. Knowled11,c o puppy. Vic. WaUl\ce & Ll'!. Reliable. Frtt Est. Jay * W1llpaper Ha nger"* cun1puter 11y111C"1' csstintl;il. !{an1ili on, C.M. 5'13--1!1""3 ew John~ton 642~1403 C. Rebko &16-2.i49 549-.3041 222 Oeeon Ave., COOK, I /time EXECUT°"l"'V"'E-- Laguna Beach Conv. Ho11pl!al 642-D.'l!lll SECRETA RY LOST· M1tl€' Trl11h Scltt!r mix. D rivtw 1 ys 6021 *WALLPAPERING EquAI Oppnr. £n1ployer 613 Btk eoll11.r, vie. Bf'llCh A No lV t " M ""'"1444 \Varner. Nds mcdlcatlon. 0 R IVE\VA\'$ M!SUrtattd, as e ac ;rtQ-APPLY fRON-ON TAPE 'I:'() 842--5783 fKltthed & slurt)' seaJ~d. Bill-paying Hme? Sell "Don't troU9el'!I art' new. Thi~ 1,1,·\U Exe <'llent v.."'Otkml.nthlp. need11'' ru t and easy with relnfflr~ Ute pocki>ts nm.I Pilot CIAJ:slfled ad. &lZ-5678 ) _-~~·~------11. O:illy Pilot OaWfled Adl l~si-n lhl' chnncc ol holt'* ' ' + ,, (714) 494-6546 Tum yuur aou clubs Into ln!l"lllgent, m o 1 Iv :1 t e d, a JlCrt.'O. &ill !hem with dynrunic indiv!duRI \\'nn11.'d An Etiun!'OJ)p(!Munl\y a DaJlf Pilot Clas.sifled Art IQ nvinflge, snu1ll fa&t f:rnplo3'·cr tind u~c the money lnr a gl'O\Vlng prof, Office. ~!JU')' """"""'""'""'""""'""'""'~I s1ert0t Call 64U;Gi8 Today. oprn. ~l234 10D% FREE 556-1100 AAMES Bureau HOUSEKEEPER needed to hr!v take care of sick i\lothcr, snutll l'hildrt'n & 1-lous.:.-cleaning .. 8:30 AM to :J Plil 1vet·k days. Must have 1i-dn~p 968-9359 II O USEKEEPER want«l.I Bi~ Canyon. Exp'd, maturt' lady, :, clays \\'i!ek. 10 to 3. Rc!s. rr.c(d. Call 644-4618 I Of Emplorn1cnl Agency 2706 Hai'bol' Blvd HOUSEl.;:E£PER·Live ~n for Suite 207 Cosla ttl!'sa n1otht•rless hon1e. 2 eh1ldrcnl ;'i & 1 Cat! 1tl't 5 wkdys, -.. -:H6-SGJ:I. F inancial Analyst HOUSt~J\EEPING, Llte, a Deg major a<X!tg w/some aJtcrnoons a \1•cek. ?itust aet.'OUnting t'.J(p in a 1nig have 011·n car. Top pay. firm. Lrg stable comm'] 6,\4-569'1 rnft n1ovlng corp cfcs lo No. HOUSEKEEPER. Aid c . Orange Co. Free/also Fee. Mature dc~nd. a sn1all A.ngus Gordon fa rllity :\ln't wag c Personnel Agency &12-:ZllO 3.t1 E, Jith SL, Unit l.) 101~1 o~u=·s~E=\V~l~V~E~s~=r=,,-,~ho-,-., Costa h1esa &.lz..6720 Toy Co. needs party·plan FOOD & BEVERAGE supe1:visors. Free tl'aining. & CONTROLLER supplies. Call or 1v1·1te Dorothy Cotler, P.O. Box An Orange Co. film desires 2().12; Al1ahein1. 9j&-O.l:i2 an expcr'd. Food & H OUSEl<EEPER Ncedccl Beverage Controller 1: 1. . .1; "'liarge hotcl OI' re!:taurun' ng ish not ne1.'ess .. Bc\.CI ~· background. Send rcsuml' & ~1.nno~. Conv. ~1osp!tnl, 340 salaty cleSU'{'d to Classified VtctOlla, c.~1. &!2-0.~T. ~ Ad no. 1Zi7 e/•) Daily Pi\01, INSPECTOR P. O. 1560. Coi;ta r.tj~~·i: Ca , 92626. Requires lndlviduaJ \\' I FOSTER f'IU·:EZE·ironuut strong r lt>Clronic & elccllii1 part tinie. Apply 899 \V. 19th meclian1cal inspect, ion , C background . ht u s t be :St., oata Mesa, capable of passing NASA CAL.<; to help .,.,·/expnnd hus. .';O)clering sthool & be \\'t'll full, pit. Top $$. C1ir, versed in the coordination Phone. ~Ir: L;.·ons 8'111-54:).i of qu;tlfly docuntenta tion. * GARDENER * ~Xcl'llcnt .rrin~e bc.nelits; Be yo·.:r own boss! P:trl or .l Weeks \'.acatlon fltime. Your Ol\'11 a1'en. Pnld ~lcchcnl. Denial 1-figh tneon1e. CuarnntE't'd ·~ ~tfe lnsw·;u1('C . . CUstomeni. Earn Now. Pay f 111d .Lo~g Tern1 D1sah. ins Later t\ppht;al1on' nccrpted 5~7187 o r 534-3144 daily, APPl.Y ... Gon'I Ole $425-$450 0. C. Airport a11'11. 1'ypln11. ODE TICS, INC. 1$59 S. ~1a11chcstcr ,\r\(lhCin1 E1111nl Oppor. Bn1ployt'I' files, vru•\ety. P1'C'f~'r r11at111·t" •. 1 appliennt rc·cntt•rini; the lNSt:P.A.NCE . \\E ,'lEP.D YOU! JOll nikt. CLER\\ TYJll~iS to $~70 R~cept. $450 FILE CL£RKS to S«O TYJ?f! 45. \\'Ul tnUn i\11·1JchllrJ. 1\£Yf'UNCH OPK to $312 0. C. Airport area. INS lilllL 1\'/bkpru::: to $.i;.<l ' 1\nw;1u; Gordon f"lELD UND\\'R, S.D. are.a Personnr:I Agc1K·y J<'llt£ Pl\G UNl)R\VRlTER 3.1.1 £.. 171 h St., Unit 1r, UNO~\ F'OR D Costa tt1r~11 6'12·672'1 l':.\ll"LOY~IENT AGENcy' li::o;, Brooktiun:1 , f . Vly llti..l-i~Jl OL' ~i--5863 GENERAL OFFICE Insura nce Agcy G irl Bui;y moving & i;tor;11tt c:o. '·\tll / I D . Ill 1· needs accurate tvpist \\'/lltl' r or P 1 me· 111' "i ITII bkkpng <'Xpcr. • G r 1• a t or , hon1t'IJW1lt'I'$ n x p 1• -r , ~tarting !l8Jary & tood rpq d. ~lust be l!_OO(I 1yJ1i1t. benen1~. &'ll!try open. c.:an ~~cm. J ason Best Agenc y 1,~;='c.'--"!\4~llO.c·~~~~~~1 17400 Brookhun11, F. \lly. Thr l1tsh•11! d111\\' in thr \V~st . Snit' 21l 9G:Hlii» ... a Daily Pilot Clnstificd ' . ' ,\,J. C':iU 1~2-M-:'8. ------- r I ' ' ' ·; ..... :52 DAILY PJLOl Wtdntsday June 5, 1974 11 Help want .. , 1111ar 11w1 Htlp n anttta, m&F 7uAJ ! Help Wanted, nuaF llOOHtlp W•nted, M&P" 7100 ., INSURANCE J t.1AIJ<J engntvcr·lrotlbkl & 1 0.ta P:nlry opera1or . l!(tm<! 1>l.nte1. Son1e e."<pt>r.. PCB BOARD KE'ypunch n.ptr. h1·1etul. Age 20-3.), nea1 1tppe1&rttnet>. Salary open. Good fr1ngll Sh•ady em PI o )' 111 ci n t . ,,. ... a,.. eon .. " .,,._ 6-16-3141. PRODUCTION RI c bard 1 on, En1pirc AIALE & fo'E"m. \\'anted !or ln1ur.:-:e Co. mr.66. f\111 It p/lime. App I)' IT'S AAtAZING. , .... lTOW ott"n youc'" natural ability l.11 carlni: for people hi\1 been overlooked. 'DON'T OVERLOOK US1 ! \VE NEED YOU!! IPrectlc1I Nur1e1 /Nurse. Aides IConvale1.\ AldE • ./Visiting House others I /New l~fant C rt ) \Ve offer you 1u1 opportunity , to do fi0n1eth~11g s1~lt1.I in I the home ~nlth care field. G ive us 1u1 opportunity lo I discuss our progrllm \vith YQU. AU \\'ages paid \lo'ttkly. I Apply ?-1on. U1ru FM. 9-12 & 2-4 HOMEMAKERS UP JOHN 1.'IO \\I. Plaet>nlia Newport Beach SQ.-5531 !Enlr Placentia & Flagship) E XJ>er. in valve design, ; pl"oduclion 1001lng, loler- '.anccs & fits. r lake deta il : d1"1nrlng,; di~lly from lay· ...,..outs. Xln"t bene!irs. CLA·VAL CO. •. 17th & Plat'entill, CM Xln"I lx>ncfils. Free life & '.n1ed ins. Paid absence & i ~~c!'loQ~·por ~:'n~tplo~~~rlng. , lmmedlate openlngz for jour- i-ncyman machinists 1st & :2nd shifts. Prod~ oriented ,t.'O. Xln't bencflls include paid holidays, V8CI Ir. group •JM. Contact Jim Genlry, ~OROTEK CORP. '" 1~ Knoll Slreet Carden Grove 898-~ MACHINIST [)ogan turret la the operatnr. Aleo machine shop lrai11«'. Lok-Fast Inc. 864 \V. 16th. :Newpn11 Beach. • MACHINISTS Tbp pay for skilled general n1achlnlst11. ?-11.1st k no\\' punch p1-ess setup & die repair. Costa ll1esa. 642·8080. MAID -TOP SALARY +. tn11ny xtraM, fN right l'o1airl, I \·1ofon.rri. 8:30 10 3::i.i1. every olhcr Sli t. half dll,Y. ,Local refs req. \V r l I e Ch1..xlfr.d 11d No. 173, !)ally Pilot, P . O. Bo11 1560, Cost& ~1eM, Ca. 926~. l MAIDS II LAUNDRESS wanted. Toe> !-'I.CCL Newport B e 8 c h !travel Lodge. W \V. C-oMI J-IM'. NB. «KZ.8252. 1 MAIDS F.'/Ume, See' Pmlonnt1 l\lgr Balboa B•y Club b?t \V. Coa.'lt llwy., N.B. 1'="''-& rem. wanted fOt' Kentucky Fried Chicken, 2929 E. Coast H11y, Ctll\1. l AIAl.E help ~·anted full ,(i ! p/!lme. Apply Kenlucky I F1icd Chickc•n, 695 s. Coiu;t Hw)', Lat:. Bch. Maintenance Supervisor Ortng• Coun ty Our hospital staff relief pro. gram (;811 provide a mean- ingful opportunity Jor You to dL"<:OV('r a NE\V \\'AY TO \\"ORK!!~ ARE YOU ..•. e Ready f'-or A Olanre 0 1 Pace? e Ready To Cl'eale Your °""" Work \Veek? e Ready To J\li."Cpt A l\lillimum $2.60 per hr? \\'E'RE READY JF YOU ARE!!! Apply S.12 & 2·~ l\londity Thn1 f-'rltlay HOMEMAKERS UP JOHN 3.'IO \\'. Plaecnria Nf!\\•port Beach &15-5'."i..11 (E11tr. Pla1:c111ia 8: Flagsl1i11~ NURSES Aide & Orderly, 7· 3. E:<iper. pref. lntt'rvws Mon·F'ri. Mesa Verde Conv. 1-losp. 661 Center St, 01. 5-18-5$5. NURSES Aid~. 7-J. WAHO Clerk 7.3_ \Viii lrain . .1'.tcsa Verde Qmv. Hosp, 001 , Center St., CM. NVRSE.S AIDE.5. EXPER. Prerd. 1\11 gh!AJ.. Beverly Manor, 24432 VW Estrada, l..quna IHlls. NURSES AIDES. F'tlll·limr, 1-3, 3-1.1, malta'e, exp!!l'. 1 prerd. \\1111 in.Jn. rH2-21lO 2 OFFICE GIRLS .NEEDED ($ TOP DOLLAR $1 We are look ing for: e EXPE RIENCEO LEAD IN TOUCH-UP e EXPERIENCED TOUCH·UP PEOPLE LICENSED ••• Immedia t e openings + free h1gh -inten s 1ty training program. We show you the way to success. MEET ... and chat with suc- cessf u I salesmen and independent CE NTURY 2 1 broker-owners. If you are one of the many thousands of Americans from all watks of life who are clinging to rhe secunty of a JOb that ne11her gives you sari st8ct1on nor rewards you linanc1alty, then you should senousty · consi der a career with CENTURY 2 1 Real Es1a1e. • Stotinq limitrd. For reHrYcrtions. $8Z5 1'.1\n. to S2400 monthly inJ4M1nfetd. Com1nlssion "'if qual\fi<.'<I. CM:a1)11.ny vehlc.le, l't'peat business. \lo-'Ctkly & monthly bonuses. Dtytlme "\\"Ork. No eves. Local meat wholetMller. Mt. Ml!lrUn. 21'.r'770--85-13. FACT IS Everyone Eat1 M•at ' Office Overload TEMPO'S Dial-A-Job! If Not You Owe II To Your1elf To • I ~ 1<-"""-= ..... -._.,.-, ~ . ~ ~41Nt11tJ@'~ m ~:..r A CONV£Ht£t<IT SHOPPING ANO -~-.::fl. S£WINC GUIOf: FOR THE --.._/f CAL ON THE CO. ..A...eii"ilo::.'·---· For an 1d In Call Mary Both Seamed-To-Slim ~~ ';.J5.' 9242 10)/).20¥2 ·' In, 11f.,.; ... 11fw.T~ Wom1n•s Ytorld 642-5678, ·""'· 230 Tunic or Vest! "W'°l\r It nlnt1t1M"OftT'~rtl -·lnnka e:~wn ""llf•! 'l'utn 1~1ntt., 11klrt1 Into ot1I~ lils with thl1 1unlc. Crochfll F.n.toy a llghter loo k 111 wr-lu PM~~ •tn•memorl1e l~tt'lrii S~;A.MEIJ • 'l"O • SLl~I. l;o.ty. ~!h('I! U( ~·PIT Clniccrlni; Trtrn. 11kln1mln~ 11h1q.e-. 8<-<W ll lnni: 1'11!11'1"11 ~~I~: lllaics' li11:!'11 or 11hor~ -chooa•• rrri111 rour 111.lf! lnelu!ll'cl, nccklln()tl. OroHH In knl!•'. 75 Cf:NTS for cnch pattern. l'rJntl!d P11 ~te1·n 11=•~: Add 2.~cent11ror~aehp11Uern Jlult ~bus llJ'.~. i =~· 11 1~. forfirst ·cl:.~11m11.il andapeclal J6!;. l ~h.20\t."ltt>l ~\~ (b11el h 11nd 11 n i:: otherwt1e 87) 1ak"ll 3% yd11. t;0•hll'h. th"·" I d I we need an experienced ~r-1n1c 11~!1' cl very will tllko '"' ~nd $1.00.'nr t!llCh pattern. lhN,'t week11 ot more. Send to son wilh genenil ofuce Ilk lls, VOL Add 25 t!t!nlll ror e11ch p<ittcrn Allee BroukM. JM, the Dilly tnchtding typing, calculator. T ror(i r1t·<'l11s mail:ntd •PC<'111I Pilot, Necdlet:ral\ Dept., Ro• REGISTER WITH and filing , . , must be good I n1tant Per1onnef h a n d 11 n ll : o l h er wi ll c 1 163. Old Chel11ea statiOn. Ne" \vlth figures , , . Prefer 1'.111,jor 1'.fedlcal Plan lhird·~lla.11.11 tk-livcry will take York,N.Y1lOOll.PrintN11mo, thre.!!·weoekaor more. Send to • d d ZI " &0moone wilh ptodix.:tion Now Ava llable •1 I " r e1111 , p, 1·iitt1rn ,., I I ,., T ~-.1 ".ar an Jl.lllrli"t._ 442, the U:.iily .Number. male a cnntro expe ence. emponary ~· ... ,cri Pilot. Ntw ! 1$0 lltOllt pop11111r dt-1 Good frinJtt benefl!~. GroWlh 3848 Cwnpus Dr., S1.1lle 106 1•11t111rn 04-pl., !'! '\'ttt i~th 'll:n• ln our tt74 Naedlicr•lt opportunity v.•ltb dynamic, Newport Bea.Ch 546-4741 i;t., :>:r'I· ''11rk. :-;. Y. 1r.n11. ~1a1011 ! All cnrt1! THREt: lllK.'Cdl!if\IJ company. Please l•rlnt N..IME, ..IOORESS, ZIP. Ftr• de11l~ll!o ln~ldt ----75f apply We h~ve. complete pACkRge SIZE nnd STVLt NUMBER. :s~w! Stw +Knit B091c - • of empfoyee be~n1.s. Wt o~~: ~·ut:t:l'A'M"t:u~ .. r,· .. u~ has eu1e Ttuu11 rauern.11.21 5~-,..-rd ~ lop wage.. All ofllct: & f'h.,(f:" "' "'''"' r"t, onr ,,, ... I ~"""! Nt1dt1poln1 Book 11.00 nlfl1il'lil • industrial ildltl are needed. IWlll •·rn ln~]dl' :SP.\\':ol.1'111 ~(!· :Saw! Flow1r Croch1tllklt.OO M.morl.• lac. ~-·ol ~-. Empk>y•r ~1-)l)lt:u l'A'H~:ns C.\'rA· Halrplr1 C'9Clt1tBook_lt.OCI -. AA01Y v .,,,,... J.()'1. )flll 11t)"INO. 111 11ix .. ~. ,,.,.,. lntt•nt Croclt1t look -11.00 A subsidiary of , 1"111,.,,1 Mlll"O"· f;f'nd ;;o(' nnw. lnttlnl Macr•"'' l"k -11.00 SALES, .\rt In I e re • It'd APl>tJED l'lfAGNETICS A DAB OF P!:I'R0LEU?t1 .SEW+l<NIT U0.1k "'l11t li.o~I•• ln1t11'lt "''"''' 10011 --11.00 ma I c If em a I c, ~fJ). CORP .r£U..Y Apfllicd lo tile t1J•1uo• 1~1tUot"11 •••• ,,. ,, (f.:;. Compl1te Qlft lo,;k .... -11.00 , full & p/ll1nc. A p p I y Kentueky >'tlett Chicken, 54.122 Pacllk Coast Hwy, Dana Pt. Radio telephone dispa1ch 1'.lusit be ~ 1tbUi. to drivt: APl'll In Pcnon YELLOW CAB CO, 186 E. J6U1, Coi;:ta l\lestt Call Frodde, 558-8921 II ••-L ••. ar energelic, r es p on a I b It 2221 S An~ ~ ~ads cf ~I pollsh ll'l1t•nt F.11h l11n "1Ml~ ·-·'' j}cl Complete Afglt1•11 •14 --11,111 • 1 "'Xlm\ler1~1o-ir,inrk n p ..... '-~ .. ,..,.....,, . ...,; __ ..:.,_. and p !n'l! .. ...bo•••~wlU a,....,._ ll'lllAl'll &twlnt Jloait. Hh•fl.Otl ~~ Prl•• Alt"•"l •12--IOf ,_.., '"'"& r--~., .... 1~1tt • ._...u .,~,~ .. u.t --"14" . OO.k.e.fJJ.Q11IU..,S.l_IOf..---mllkinit shol) In So. Coast ' · the lids tl'om s lcklng. Try Mut•u'" Quilt look •I '°' Villa~. Must like retail An Equal Ql')f'J()rtunity a Dally Pilot Cb.SJJtted Ad The tMte1t draw In the West. ta Q111111 tofToda,. n ::.: 1o, Cla.J&lfied Adl lodny! \ I~ I , sclllfll. F'un almosphc.re. Empl.,,,er 10 buy, _.. or r e nt • • • a Daily Pilot Oa.ul!led n1111k ot 11 Jiffy ~11e1 ··-ao,: ~C.~ll~R~u~g~cr~a~f~IOTl~~~&-<J~~~c_·.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,.,_!'°"'~'~'~~l•rw~-~~~~-l1iAjd'mCi'ifl•~i2-5618iiim'O. ................ ,. .... .. • ( I • Wtdnelda~ J1111t S, 1974 -'ur-'n"-t-'u'-'ro'---~'°;;.;;50 HeuMhOid GOOdS iiiiS Ml1eed....0..1 i6iO Ofc. Furn. & Equip. 8085 \ttdntsdflf, June 5, 1974 _ D!!l Y PILOT 53 TV, Rado, HIF St. 8098 f ~~ ~~·· __ ..;...:-i 150 WATT STER E 0 21' UK6 t .l-: • .i.;J, reblt twin A111PLIPHl£R 4 Ir u e I 120 JIP M1Jn:ruiller1 lu11K raKAtlle. FM Tuner, AR r:in1te ltlll.-d In f'rt'sh WNh.1r Tumlnblc, 24" high spkn, S6500. 40Chm Pianos i Org•ns ioto Helpl I Overstocked Warehouse. tee. trpl. dJ'fflt'r/chetlt, or l1ote. dbl. 6oor 3 dwr. Amolre ChHt. CHOICE MOVING to •Pt: mi.wt tell et SCRAM LETS \VAJ..Nlfl' Sccnotaty desk, WE'RE DIFFERENT % prlc.e.r A.lmo1t n aw • 1w!vel chtlir &: filing cablntt nc1.?onlleu or the "F'unta~llc Tru--1e11. ~tee mower. 2 50-rt $175. 496-1034 after 6:00 PrlCt"a" that orte reads l~thl 3-wlre ex.ttna.lon ANSWERS p.m. libout, the flt(,:! la lhu! cord, $50. »-n a I u. m l;D~F.~.SK"°"s~.-.,,.-~d~bt~,-.... -.-.. ~,-.al (.'()mpt:tltion kffpt prk.-es SJOO, 830-7400 ! '73 SKIP Jack 21), OPQn ZENITH 11'' COLOR T.V. cruiser, luw hn. Sale/part. Brand new, \\'Oil 111 prizo. nen1hlp or lr'Bt..~ down. or srYLE & ex1en1loo Jaddcr, $20. Uacd Glance _ Aided _ Gu.15e :JO''X~" v.'OOd deeks. $35. about the qme wherev1·r COLOR.. once, round BBQ, hood &. _ £u..1......., _ ENGAGED. ea. 962~4 • )'04.i flllop, \Ve lose vtry !cw $99.QS thit week. •pll, SlS. Sm.I id whetlb&.r--..... Mica b~ being undersold. &U-9625 646-i6ll6 J'O'#f, H L GdJ G-ft wood 1tep What'• thllf The n1~h11.oh; 01..D Town CDpler, 11.11.nd & \V•'ro different becauae our ?.taJce offer, 1nus1 iielJ, 1·493-9188. ~alera welcome, saw, 1ave. ladtlt'r, $10, 493--0700 tOOfmtl"my car~ riruc~. •uppU.et. Alli: for l..e llltlt!'1nrn li1ten hard to 6l>-18"9 .,,-.,.-.-..,--,----Motorcyclas/ Scoote rs , • I -70 l didn't know-It WM ENGA-*** ~7500 ivhot you Alty, they're t'OLOR TV. 25" RCA ron.10le MOVING • Mu.I Sell 11 1/3 .,ewe ry -GEO. Planas & Organs IO'IO F.XCF.'LENT CONDITION. ' ... r1.. ., ~n~itlvc to wh&t you really .., ...... COil. " pc, De n ~t. INDJ•" JEWELRY band BARTLETT-•-----~---~·ant & th<'y huve the Sl75 842-!H30 wormy cheltnuttantlqu.e .... ~ • PIANOS in "°'"°'"'"'=~-,,,,-.,,.--.,-wrouaht Iron. '8" round· n1ade by Navajo and Zu.nl, FLOOR COVERING v<'ntol'y lo make rhe COWlt TV Console, Spunish, extend• to 72 .. Larae very reuonable. 831HS15. 7U W. ltth St., C .M . • ORGANS perlf'Ct match b l.'t ween 9 mo. old. See to npprec., M " Organ & Or&!niJt, PllLOO I. $350. 6'&-ll00/96l--6601 ~ chtfltnu.t 1uede saddle big lsce aneoDI I080 Quality c11111001 f Io or R ntal f $-5 \ P ia:n!st. It you are lhinkln1ot ch11.lr, qua.lit)' oon1tructkm. co~rtng. Fecturlng Nalco, e $ r ,. b 0 u t a key b 08 rd 2:1" MOTOROLA color TV, Ailee I ta~le lamp with 6 x 9 KARASTAN Gold rua:. Amultrong A Congoll}um. !nl)trurnent, give us a try. S50; Puna.!IOnlc 1tereo, $7J; 1---------·I Free To You ' IMS shade/ 642-11"J) Good condition, trl.n~ $40. Guarantttd \Installation & Open NI hts (n 9 We think you'll agree lhat Phone vale!, $50: 642-3672. WESTSAIL CORP KINGSIZE bc!d, Kira tinn. 6'4-5l99. ~.,.~•,"". 11.nce. Over 30 yrs. Sat: 'ti, S:30, Sun. l2...5 we're different. ADULT couple only. 7 yr. new, ind. m11.U"flu. !)(Ill: MOVING • Barga.Ina! P.Usc. ,... C.'OAf.'1' r.1us1c I HAS OPENING'S male-white. ..W.est Highland aprlng:a & In.me. $165. household & decorator FREE ESTIMATES *Pianos & ~rinds* Ne\\'port at Harbor, C.?.I . lottt Incl II• )f ] · ..U:rge boat builder need11; Terrier. LL Col Capwell, fworth $ 3 50), Queenalu Items. Furniture, antiques. call M6·14'12 &.ldwin ·Cable· Chickering 646--0'nl Mam.EQllipfNnt . Y. 9150 -& SUMMER SALE • HEW 1974 * KAWASAKI '{.Carpentel'A 837...(660. $145. Inc. dellvecy. Uliu.ally June 6 & 1. 440 DeSole. TetT, • Fl5eher • Kawai· Kimball Orookhurst at Talbert, 1'"'V /Cablnet Milkers IRISH SETTER/ LAB, honM!: 832--2188. CdM ·Koo.be · M:< on & Han--",· 96:~3..1 "Electricians "BOX TOP" ?.1 tt Soh SI · 1.-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiii General 'Engine llllltalier11 Pupple1, 6 wks old. KING sz BED. $75. Herculon DECORATOR'S Mistake-*CAMPER PARTS* usse St . & m~~k :':JI· CONN Seranade. bu 11 t . I n IOOCC GA 9010 '53()01) .. ,.,. ..... • 540-8254 Sola-""-.. , $175. Span\"' Tu\ Sheer nayural L I n e n way • orey • m-l Plumbers """ d r1 ls ch Belo DI I Ra ter Wrulitzer Yamaha spe11kers, Blonde \\lalnut. \\'A.'l'TED -Slip for 35' Sa1l- Company expansion hu 2 YR fem. Cock·a·poo &: 4 ehn., $115. 9 Drwr •95~~1d!·b~ r.~.ea150 Sinks, =1,,0n1ce:e!: New.Spinets L: ." ....... $595 Su!tain .~ J>no. Like ne\\', boat . Prefer Balboa lsl<incl IOOCC G·3 7SOCC H-2 '430" 1168500 ' ' -• nJ f tMT!er Xlnt w/chlldren Dre.uer, $125., '11 Scuba lndow U--• f s= $1 ,150. Newport Or,uns, IM6 or Bsy&idc Dr Al'l'.'a. ten. .,... Qpe nga or carett ' · Tank, Hawallan back·pa,k, yds tan nylon Hl·Lo shag vents, w !I, ports, skin, l>C'J rorn,, • · · · • · · · • .. • '"' P-·• tJo mlndf!'d people. Apply Now. Lt. Col. Cap-.llt!ll, 831-«M. S buy1 642 u I l Play<n 1895 ...... uc n Plate, NB. 675-6485 eves 1974 BMW '1&38 Ptaeentla Ave., CM ADORABLE kitten free to 01oi70,,· ~>l&-0"7~"~1~·~"7· 6i-""p.~m~·,...,-r ~,·=<A<>~ · - 0 000 ~~ee ~13 Grand3 " .'.'.".'.".'.'.'.'.: .-.. B M · /S-~90~2~0 s0FA &: matching Chair· _., ~ *ORGANS* ..,.,,, oats, a1nt er. FACTORY 1---------•i good home. v .• -y modern-overstuffeded. CO?.fPt,.ETE dta1ting outfit, Sporting Goods 8094 I --~------I DEMONSTRATORS CaU 581...(}791. Ital. style-d1trk blue w/ 4'x6', knock-down tbl, stool, Baldwin· Omn -Hammond -~-~"--------BOAT Bldging &: rcp;dr; ONE OF EACH ONLY WIN $500 student grant. s HE p I c A y. a TE · v·-•-•t•-ma~'-, BARTLETT Kawai • KJmbaJJ -Lowrey . SKI RACKS. roof & trunk Tooling, ea r pent r y & ·Earn l Olis Su.nuncr. l1'ull, nux red piping-$300 833-9193 .,.,......, u.aa.. ..... ,_,,....... FLOOR COVERING fb Ill I & E 750CC R75/6 '230()00 ·fL'·r:.A~~a. t, re.Ila. Mr. Levi puhomPP.,' ... •..,A~ll.,2!.&Jes, lo good dayi, MS--8101 ev~s.. Da.ior lamp, Templates, Rodgers -Thomas --ln · type. Fits most c<irs. $15. ~A~~~; nt. x t. .,..,....ro.w ......,....,....,., "'°'~~..,,,~.,.--::~-I ('Ompa&s, etc. Complete $200. 711 W. 19th St., C.M. aha • \Vurlitzer. ea. ~ .no-v'1\IO. 900(( R90/6 '245()00 KITTENS I old PIANO. French Prov . 548-9418. Peraonalized lnatallatlon OpUgan ................ Sl!iO PRO Set Golf Clubs. Valu1.> B~o-.-.. -,~M~.-,~in-e~E-q-.-90=30~ ~ • • WOMAN to llve ln & care for ' wks canopy bed R t, cabinet bed. MINK COAT, full length, Name Braocl, Carp e i Lowrey Spinet ••••• -·. $195 $250. \\•sale price $125. Incl. tWw ''74 IMW a7S/•. ~klerly Invalid lady, room, ==,-,=963-4=7388,._,,..,-,..,-,--Dri1•1nt1al .. ~k /s.""'1n Is I dhl-nat'l bl.k cross mink Guaranteed. Over 30 yrs. \Vurllt2er Spine!, new •. $499 new $35. bag. 54;;....7977 RADARS. 16 mi. Bend be. ••01• ·board.& solary. MU113 or FREE, Adorable K 1 t ten . ne e u= · w g ntac · w/match Pill Box-Hat. e~. * WIN FREE * ---lL'lVAC only. $700. Set.-in & ••o sport .AYeiWM ·~2862 aft 1pm. Needs loving home. Eve1 675-4361 att 3 pm. Cuscm . made. 1173. Pert. FREE ESTIMATES ORGAN LESSONS TV. Radio, HiFI St. 8098 operation. ALSO 15 mi., For •-cMtt Dfty_, aft. 6. 6'1~1701. ~fOVING, Must sell. Hying eond. $2225. appnl.. Sac. Call 64&-1442 • SENNHEISER open a I r RCA complele & operation~ Choice Of S... [ ll~l HAPPY healthy kt t t e n 1 rm furn incldlna co}qr 1V, $900. 55J--l.Zl7 aft 6 PM. SURFBOARD & WET SUIT FULLERTON MUSIC headphones $25. Sherwood \\•hen n-m~,".,~26•35S}OO. & L.,... T .. • ' MerchlndlN •• we!IM!d & train@d. Call 1•lso dinette 1et & dbl door DINETTE, blk wrnu.ght iron, Bing Swallowtail, no dings'. 18191 Euclid, Fountain Valley 1~ rms wall FM stereo ~--.-"~"-'='---=~-I • MEW 1974 * L 548-4615. Frlg. Also niany &oodles. $110., Mirror, 21 x 31" w/3" $40. Sea Sult, Longjohn, 557-4836 receiver model 8 9 0 0 A, Boats, Power 9040 ' 1 ;;~iiiiiiiiii~~ii:jeEAGLE Cocker, 11 mo 848-0809 or 841-5692. Maple frame, $25 .. Smith-new. $25. Both for $60. 122 N. llarbor, Fullerton W/\\·alnut cnse $275. Pr. --~-------1 * NQRTQN * I' mal hort hair has holl AIR COND for s 11 d Ing Corona Typewriter, ptbl, Revelle Muter Trumpet, lk 871·1805 C.S.?.I . .studio monitor ~pkrs lfl:lO CrtUIZON. 30' X 11" • Antlq~I I005 ~· !tchlldren'. ~28 ' v:i.ndow, $85; 4 drawer chest $60., 642-6244 ncw,.w/casc. $10. Humanlcl----------12" woofer, 5'' midrani,:(', li.~am. sound hull. good eng.. One Qnlv -Blue Aoad~ler $45; night Ii~ $15; table Ch I' , T di p I Sid Booll, all plastic, brand!----------21~" t1vceter, ported lull n11111y xl r<is. S4950. * NOW OPEN * FREE to Good Home-Black lanip $M; 80 It chair $50; Ir•• I r• "I OS new. 5t ioi~. $50. or best CONT IN u o us FREE frequent·y response, \11alnut 675-6706 C\'CM & v.·kn(l!I 850(( S19Q5 GARY DORRIS Lab, feml r spayed. 3 yn old. &12-3672. . ' 494-1629 offer Aft 6 645-0341 ORGAN CLASSES io~oR cabinets $250 pr. Plon<'er :lJ' I.0\V~1AN !-.: " Pre ss 1974 ltd & bl.ell c-•Rda ANTIQUES Great Pet! C8.Jf~. WE BUY, WE SEU. .. -. . ADULTS Ev Tu sd PL-120 professional tw·nt bl . · · . ·. . . . SHHHI FURNITURE Antiques, Metals, Jwik 2l"RCAColorConsoKibitze.r · ery e ay \\•/Entpire 6SPEX Cllrtridgc e1·u1st'r. Qirys 6. radMl,I OY~•l•hlt for 1111111ed11te ·lallring Jn: FREE to good home-Daisy AT WHOLESALE I ="""""'-'""''="'°"'=~-r ·chalr, padded bench. 48 x 7:30pm. Start any week. Sl25. All equip. is still under ~under. . 1 dd••try. :Americana dog, 3 years old .J loVes RARE Dads Gift CU.Stom 18, Drapes 46" long and 98" Tom Dieterich in charge. fact. \\'arr. All ju:i;t bour;:hr S.'Y!50. 646-9(00 1 s7z95 rlmlll.e children 979-8123. TERMS, TOO! made brushed full leather ....... -, el-. -"-r, ,..,, .• 1 Coast Music Costa ?.1esa. 1974 1 · 1 ._ BELL •1. · sk· •• 11 p I -•2020 I I (44) T __ .. w....., · ...... ........ N BI d llarbo in Jan. of . 1\1 prices ·~ "1n1-1, '"' · .. KITTEN 8 .. ~-td Mal -•~ ront er coat. op 1.vuu. m,,-43 .. x 62'', 2 •Ix -. ewport v . at r. .,..A., •1 1 E 1 Period Furniture -"""" 0 · e. Movie background. $50 cash, ~ lh2-:l851 are 1..'0Sl. 645-.w-u. "ere., e cc start, xc:e · 100% F1nanc1ng jlnd accnsor1eii. Big eyes. White w/beaut. DINETTE Set, Like new $50, 613-4845 place settings Int. Silver.I----------25,. COLOR ZENITJ-I T""""Ji. cond., Cost !2,IXXI. Sacrifice Available O.AC. Optn Wed.-&:!.!., 11_5 markings. Funky. 645-2342 baby Jum, Colonie! couch, · Rhaplilody, new. Golf cart. CONSOLE. Guar Picture I c$6,c25~.~-~""'"7=-,..--,,. 602 Paclfic C.oast llwy. Jo~REE female Siamese cat, $50. Matching cbain, $3). NEW AMER. Custom drum'">l\Hl97~~~·;_===---11::::-.::-:~~::::~~:"'~ Tube. 28· EDDYCRAIT. family H.B. Aft. 5, phone approx l '-,1 yr. Likes dogs&: Full sz. box Aprings &. matt, set $200., New Gilan 10 spd. I BUY!! HR.40 HAM.~ONO Tone Excellent condition $250, cruiser. Slps 5, man Y 63&1295 ss.1·5704 children. 847-1890 $25. 919-23.Jl. bike $l00., retrig $35., cabinet, w/Stereo Amp. & n·• COLOR RCA CONSOLE extras, ne~·ly painted, ready , 8' WHITE oouch, 1 custom butcher's .scale $35. PH: Good, u.sed lumiture & Re\'t'rb, $250. NE\VPORT G p· T bo \I ""9573 • ORANGE COUNTY KIITENS 7 wks old 3 maJe .... ., .,.,.,"'/'•• l703 11 .11 111 uar 1cture u , exc:e ent to go . ......,.... . CHAMPION MOTORCYCLES 1•10 H.txr lt•d... • • • • made low chest. 1 : 6. UU-.->J.,...,.... aMApp """"'sTER.'s"A' u"'cT·1'0N"'",_a_R_G_AN_s_. 645----1530_. ___ l'Ollditio n. $200, PhofK! aftel' 22' BARTENDER ca hi n I *ANTIQUES* 2 feml .. Gf!Y &: black formica top coffee tbl. Rl::FRIGERATOR. washer, •· 3pm ~ 0~0 E 1st s Sa A tiger stripe_ 5'16-5392 Reasonable. 6I0--0889. dinette table, bedroom set, 646 1616 o r 133-9625 I 54~ 139· Cruiser. V--3 J>u·r, soundeL", 642·231 I .,...... . . t., nta na FREE KITTENS · I •-d .. ~--'." J 1..'0nipass, S'850 646·9000. Stµ.lned glallS, roll tops, G•rage Sale 8055 singe"" s, w~r. comer aft 6 or £..::iday. PfJVATE PARTY \VANTS SACRft~ICE l\I 1•lli•iiiliiilili••· Codo Mewi Id Uoard bl ~ 979--5573 !bl & lamps. All xlnt cond. &19-09":"-J • r:.-~~3050 • fJ48.6"A9 TO BUY PIANO f'OR ~ 1 a g n a \:ox 0 \\'£i\'S XL 19· Inboard, \.\'Ith ~.a:h sta!ts &ni::ii n~C::. Furniture . 8050 SCHWINN ?.1olo cross bike, 642-5322 -CABINET~Bafothr Kitchen~ -cAStt~ Y?.9445 * coo~i~~0li1 tr"~lo!Fe-r~~~;~~~~~~X-fnt l~==.=~ -.-----·-= =-- Open dally. Low prices. ----------beaut ·Wood bar, furn., DELTA 10-60 x 15 OU·Road I--=='"'=~=~~-phooo \\'lute }Tench prov. EXCELLENT SELECTION 1.-IU~ SELi:. all living rm & orange couch, \1!hl chr & Tires, led for high"·ay Unlinlshed Prefinished UPRIGHT PIANO Perl cond. Orig. $1200 Sell 46' DBLE Cab in Cruiser 1 The fastest dra~· 111 the \\'est. ANTIQUE FURNITURE. BR furn. New dinette set, ottoman. SuzulO 50, 3 spd use, good .cond. 5 for $85. Counter Tops also good condi!ion J.r:J(). r11·in 1-"\VC 1 ;~1c dies.:ls. . .. a D111lyP1lot aassWed Roll Top desk & Briw Bed. TV & odds & ends. Very bike, old .. Coke & popcorn "6_75-_134~5-~--~~'=-I HARDEN ENTERRISES $250. 496-6365 , • 492-9662 * $16,!)00 &16--9000 I Ad. CiJll 6~2-5678. HOUSE or STUART ('heap. 496-6.549 machine. old !healer snack hfAPLE Bunk beds $50. 815 W. 18th St. C.M. Comet 9927 Comet 9927 Comet 9927 Comet 9927 326 Main St', Hu ntington Bch 1'\VIN BED, CHEST $50. bar, x1nt cond. & misc. Best Studded snow tires F 28 x 14 · 6'12--2842 ------ PAINT & VARN 1 S JI DESK $15. MfRROR $5. offer takes any It em· $40. 1250 Adams Ave, li-103, Removal. Antique Furniture AFTER 5 PM \VEEKDA YS. 847-39'15 Cl\f. our Special!:)'. Free Est. .~56--08ll~-7:'"'°-.~~--~~ MOVING sale, girls blktt, loy 1973 ELEC.'l'RJC typewriter, c55~·7~-~""c=-----="'IKING Size Bed box spring &: chett, loyi, gamei, bridge SC'M. Brand new portable Appllances 8010 frame included $40, Sgl tbl & chairs. Phonoiraph $150 or best oHer. 870-3441 !"-'-"-..--'------bed, $10, lrg dresser, $15. n~ ~r d~Ss tabl., PLACER gold in natural FREIGHT DAritAGE SALE, 642-3281. c ' ' form. Jo,or information call "Jle\V Hot Point Ref ·lg· G~EN=u=1N~E~~ •• -.-,-he-,-~,ottn-.. -IMOVING Aale : Thurs, Fri, 536-7548. eratol"!i, Wa!lhcra, Dryers & chair &: ottoman, 2 comer Sat. 11)..5, ciiU<:h, chair, hide-"p-OQ~L~T~ABL~~E~~,-,~cro=~R~Y~! Oish\\'ashenc, Ne\Y "rar· ,.,...,~L-, ~. ea.,,...., .,........ a-bed, dinette set. washer, 1 Credit B f A 3623 ... ., ..... ,.., ..,,,, u • ...-......... , dryer, numerous it e rps. Save on tables. lamps.. cues, ran y, ' o ' WANTED 17372 Enctno. H.8 >84"1...mGS Plchinkos! 541·3338. \V .\Vamcr,Sant4Ana,near *USED BRICKS* RE.PRO., Old English HRrbor. 979-2921.. 87n "=" J\.fACR.AMt. pottery, pla.nts, 1 .,.......... sofa, ha.by 1tem1, clothes, Grandf.atht:r Clock. $100. 5 YR auto Kenmore Washer, 8, SO"A ~ 1 d-~ ~·-junk. 3442'2 El Molino. ~2620 $50; 2 yr. Whirlpool gall r • ......, .. u ........ ...,...., dryer • S"fS. A v J • 7 I 2 o . vinyl, 1 yr old. Coll! ~· Thurs-Sat. DOG HOUSE.S, nev.'. remov- h!OVING sale. Sacrifice. Complete hshld furn, Incl King size bed, comp, $85. sofa & lovesea.t, $ 1 2 5 . re[rigfrzr. nr·ne\V, $150. l\tust sell by June 6. • 492-9662 • AQUARIUr/I hood, 30 gal, show tank. 1tand. all acc. Never used. Best oUer. Ph. 963-6"201 Misc, Wanted I081 \\'A"IT TO BUY; PLATE BURNER and ?ot\ULTI (any cond). * s.14-3417 * 837..ffiSO. Must sell $350. 66-4852 GcARA"""~GE°""'-~SaI-e-~W-ed~. -th~ru-1 able cover. $17. &. $32. cau . R I Wooh /D COUCH, wrought Iron, &I.ass Sun. 14' Sail boat. Oreuer, 540-5.153. WANTED to buy electric en ..,. ryers 1op coffee table. dble.J>ed, shelves, .loola &: much more. LOUNGE pad S6 24'' bbq 1 · IBf\f ferred $2.; Wk. f'ull malnl. ......... 2840/962-~"'"' , 979-f.068. 2978 Mllbro St. CM 1' •.• 19" p TV ype\\T1ter pre . * 639-120'2 * iJU'r" ...,.... $8., tab e ra IO · Ort. 3800 Apt K South flower, CONTE?.tP. 9' sectional sohl. GARAGE SALE June 4 thru '\\"Orb good $27. 646-1525. Santa Ana 545-9685. \\'B BUY REFRIG'S $150. Big Canyon, Call 8 ()(Ids and ends. 30!KI AQUARIUM, 2t:1 pi. incl 1 NEED SI. Augustine grass \\'O~K~~R _:rrr 644-8188. Murray Lane, 12-5 540-5988. pwnp & filter. $1::.. sod. Please call 646-6715 DINlNG room table & 6 Horns IMO M5-8088 or 645-fll89 after 5:30 pin. MORE Auto \Vasher, chairs, dresser &:. chest-of· (l{ESf freezer $31, single WILL Bu.v IOOV Air-condi- $40, NORGE Ele~ct Dryer, dr&\\'ers. 962-4974 ~1AREf gen t I e, v.'eli bed $15., corner' table JlO. tloner. Mu.st be ln good -$35. guer & del. 546-8672 2 TWIN beds. Trundle type. mannered, 2t:I years old 644--5010 after 6 Pm . condltlon. 893-3503 HOTPOINT Retrlgerator, gd Fab'ly new. $27.50 each. ~u:r with kids $l50. Some HARD , Rock Maple dinette Ofc. Furn. & Equip. 8085 working ..cond. Crc.::.s·top Call 96&--4378. a -· 642-5563 set $40. Trailer elee. water freezer. Aft. 5 pm, 752--0688 •-""UJ=VES==EA"'=T.:-&,..-,.-fa~cu-st-o-m heater $10. 6'12-5666 IB.M. SEl..ECTRIC, w/full FRIGIDAIRE Refrigerator. made e very gd. qual, never Olll!lfled Ad! Call 642-5678 The fastest draw in the West. service contract. 3 Yrs of "'/bottom freezer, 18 cu ft. used, usually hm, 968-7910. loday! •.. a'Daily Pilot Classified lite use. $475. 54&-2817 \Vhite, $65 642-48()9. 1-~EE PICK UP REFS. A_u_1o_s,:_,_N_e_w ____ 9IOO_;._A_u_1_os-',_N_e_w ____ 9_BOO __ ,A_u_t_o_s,c.N_e.w ____ 9_BOO __ A_u_lo_s.:-, _N_e_w ____ 9_800"'-'I APPL. & SCRAP ?.1ETAL * 6T>525& * LARGE Refrigerator \\'/ k:ernaker, bottom freezer, $145. 541).11'69. Auction 8015 * Col. R.F. Byerly * &. ASSOCIATES DiversUled Auctk>nttni LAND, TURQUOISE, AUTO'S & ETC. NATION\VIDE Licensed, Bonded & l n~ured Member of Nat io nal Auctioneers A!lsoc. 610 S. Broadv.'ay, S.A. 5.)8.2899 8.15--2228 Blcyclos 1020 10 SPO Bike, good sh1tpe $50. Sj&-4169 aft 4 Cats 8035 ·-------SIAMESE Kittens, female, CFA reg, shots, Chocolate ·or Lilac point. =s.11-fi359 THREE red Pel'!llM kl11ens for sale, $50. each. \Vith or v.'1thout papers ~!l!)(ij _ FREE. Adorable K I t le 11 • Needs loving home. Ews aft. 6, 6'15-1701. Dot• - e PUPPY WORLD e \Vatch dogs -G e r man Shep herds. Oiihuahuas. Tiny Poodles, Pit Bulls, CockRpoo. Old En RI is h , Sa m o y e d • Dnchshund.~. Hiiskles, Pugs, 100 J\11XEO PUPS! S1ud Service-MoMI Breeds. Open Eves. 531-5027 BEAUTIFUL little Yorkshire Terriers. 8 wks. old. Sired by AKC CH K lrnel's -Buckaroo. Males & Femaltts for Ahow or pct. 497-1684 cve11. or Sat & Sun. GREAT DANE PUPPlF.S. AKC 5'1-$17 C 0 L 0 E N RE:T'RIEVER.c:;, AKC Reg. 4 wkll old. 1 feml, 4 males. Call 64fr84Q2. PHAROAii Houndg puppies. Rat'O. 12131 691·R'ifi6 BEAUT. AKC Cock~r Spaniel puppies, Buff, 6 wks. $125. e11. 543--9172 DU fim""SlfE' P tn'.!1t D , An.C reg. 8 wk11. Shot!'l, 2 fen1. left. s.qs, Plf: 536-4028. . ...,_ • • 0 Home of the New (or "Golden Touch" only Johnson and Son has · ''Golden h'' touc New Lincoln-Mercury Cars at Substantial discounts. too! Check our selection and prices TODAY! Hot'l'ln of the New C0r ''Golden TOuch" 2626 H~ ll•d. of Cars Costa Mesa 540°5630 • Over 29 M.P·G. . JUDGED BY THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY TEST DRIVE YOURS TODAY WE ARE ORANGE COUNTY HEADQUARTERS FOR HONDA SALES-SERVICE--P ARTS • -·- . ' • • •• •• ' ' . ) 1 f ' . I I ' I ..,. .. ' • 54 DAILY PILOT Wtdrit'sdar Junt 5, iq74 Wtdntsday, June S, 1974 PILOT·AOVERTtSE R ~ Bcu.ts. Powtr 9040 I ~oats, Power 904o~"'e~.-.-1,·.-s~.-11----90=60'"""B""o_•_fl_,-s""11'"p-1/"'D""oc_,.k-1"'90~7~0....,M~o-to_r_<_r<_l_11_/ ____ ~M-o-to-r-cy-c.,.le-,"'/-----Mo~t-o-r-H'"o-m-•-•·-Tiiilers, Travel 9170 ~utos Wanted 95 25' BERTRAM ";68 I ·r;;1 11\'DIH>·S\VIF'T. IXcD v t ·R-A_N_G_E_R--,,-. -T-un-,--for SLIP Spnt'f' uvullablc, Pl'ime Scooters 9150 Scooters 9150 Sele/Rent 9160 '71. GOLDF:N Nugget ,;; CADILLACS Twi la! litere 110 2 w 11 I hull, n1('(.'h. xlnt. Corid xhn. l'l'\dslog, ti1UI" lor rating, lc>ctttlon. 16' &tll oi· powt'I'. 1'\\10 Prt:mler hclmrl)l, lgc, e VACATION e 32'. Jde11! for bench ol' L 1 S I ti rad 1 0 , fa 1 h 0 11; ~ti' 1 1'.·, 1~11· hr~ on t.1011.1 t't1J.:. •'"'-' rcul' thhi boat l'l'ady, priced to 67:\·Gf.OO like nt".v, $2S ea, Call AWARD A'f YOUlt ciwN l"'AO; , , . n1ou111nln t'flt1lfll. Soll·l'Onl . argal 9 ec on : dit~tiona.I t'flngl' rlnder .. 'net. $~. o1 bt':r o~li:'r, .. !It'll. &14-5662 all 5 CllERHY CovE°':"°>'"100-,7'io-.~1'"or 6'f5.817G MOTORCYCLES Choose frorn So Calif Gas o1· ol<!el. rctttg. Air In Or1n9e County ' oulrlgget'tl bait h1nk "'tt!t'r i\lui;t ~< ll. r Dys ;,31-13~; VENTURE-17 DelWi:o.-.Mauy Le ttst>. 19;-1. Avt1il, now. 1·,~t\C..'iN::O'-'RC,'l'O=N'"·~CO=M~>71A~N~OO=· , lloncll~, 1'rh1111ph, Y11n111h11 "1..w-gc•t Selc~tlon,", , cond_.__Rlyi~rll 110_!iL.J4l!r.i. Coupe DeVUlt.~ • ~De-~:__ te1np. gi;uge, nu10. fire _!;'_~ Glt-tll!)J. l'X!re.s ineludlng tl'lr & Call 213-573-!)()22 ttll new, "0" mites. l'Ol'lllliY 16&1 Nc.wpw.•t Blvd, Co6ta tOv~1· 40 f\!111\11 K.: tit.H.'$). 111•H ~~7! days, (2l3T VlllC1 • E' ()(litldoS • COD : extings. ll<'ad & gallry. :\Int Boats, Rent/Cher . 9050 n1otor. S2JOO. Rlv<)rsidt, I NE\V ll(}(·k\~\"-,'~' ~N~'"-,.,,.-.. , c'hOJ1!1ed, sharp. Ml-$.28 J\1esn. DALCS 886--81't"'a9 aft ?pm. verUblc11. lilac> nuuiy uther ' 1..1>nd . Sl3,SOO. 8·16-160-I _!._7l·U G&i-4231 Pi)ii·c-r •~ ... 1 t() ,10 .. l2." 6 642-4345 MOTOR J.IOME Trailers, Util ity 91 80 ilCl~:t Cad:Unc Tl'ade·lni1, , 42' NE:\\" Oi1·li;.Ci·Aft _. C vvu oN l\A\VA&\Kl, 250 STREET RENTALS 20' J/O Spo1;f Lln1·r~ ll!i h~-ii, 1 NO SKIPPER IF 1~,'T~~L:~i'yA "·~'~::'~r:.~1• froc11. S75._n_1in. 675-12!13: BllIB. NE\V engine. He\lnct '!).'$ IV\\\'AMKI 350 twin, • . JEEP tnillcr, gd l().ply tlt'Cs, 1~ ?.1ert.'. Cuddy c-obin, YOU 'RE QUALIFIED si,••. Day• &t' 7305 Boats, Speed & Ski 9080 Included. $300. IW:H195 -:1-& 1t·expanstnn ctti.·m~n;. -lt.odhlll-.1.San.J uan,..'fU'tui b1'11.kt'1( Xlnt t<ornl 1 1~~~;~~~~~ Vl-fF, Df', bnit tttllk, ~ull~·y, ""'' ._.. 13 Very cleHn. $.'\50. llrrn. QI.II (714) 838-0000 * 498-9'250 • duu.1 batt .. ski ~uip. \\alsrr. 1''!j'·l:lrich;c Sport Fi11hern11u1. E\'es :15?-8965 ['72 Ski ,I',, ~~ish. 1;; rt tr hull, u~cr !~::, 1~~'m1. aft !">pn1 , &IZ..17~:t 'r.2 Paco Al'row .11', 3300 tlll. Aulo Ser & Pirts ~~ , t.rlr., \\'/111u11ch & load. Jlush. l<'Ull eleclronlcs, full I Sl-:T SO L CAT 75 JJP John!>On oul\xmrd, $900. 962~14·16 ,,.0 Y"tAHA i\., CC . Roof air & storage • ~ I Co1nv!. eovers & nncny gall(':.', ~hower, t•te. For CATAi\tARAN HULLS, new cus1on1 trallt>r, covc-r. & ""'Scrao'","', XJo't -:'.·"., ~~·. ~nerator, ate1'00. Xl.nt co1J D~LTA l0x60 x 15 OU-Rood TOP DOLLAR PAID ~ ('Xtras. Exet'I. cond., Si.195. t•hurtcr by day or we<>k. S.100. 6·~ i-oa~! <•u~i·d ('(\ulpt fur only 1973 250 1'1X YA1'1A11A. Like " . ....,...., _,., SSMD 11 S~8T 1 c 1111 4!»-4849 aft 6 1'"1sh. l'ruise>, ('Oektail, etl·. .. 2 New. Ca.II 64$--00U eves; ;.•/heln1et G7J..'1033 aft 9 ca Tlfe11;-ri\ted fOFntghwtY -1MMEDIATEk-Y--:... -r 64:,..tm, 962·2301 Sunday HOBIE 14. 2 sails, rating $l'iOO cnll !>.'i?..ffi)() . 641-1597 days. Pt-1. \VANTEO: lo.totor l:lon\e. 21' use·. Good cond. 5 for ~.FOR AU. FOREIGN CJ\R9 '73 18 1:t' RIVJER...\ tSc11Ri\y only. et1ui11.. c1:1.r ritck incld., l.e<l0~!,;IO;,N"D2A~l'°50c-, -.,-, 3-0 y .70 HONDA 350 CB or I~ 511 , 1'~ u 11 y 67:>-1345 Cali or cotne lit to see u : :~~~~. 301~5• ~ ~1~1~1: EXPLORE ISLANDS xlnt l'Ond. $850. !>43-5735· I~ extrllB, xlnt oond. $950. S:,00 01· offer ~ll<o('Ontluned. Prlv. Ply. U.S. ~1ag 1tim11 • 5 lugs. l full canvas, k'C l'hesis Sail on beautiful 57' Krlrh. lJ i,• Snipe w IP i P ers. ~iiiTi"iii"""iii'i"i""iiiiillldiliil l -~~,...06<0--07"c.o;7;c3'1;..,.~~ • 646-7269 * &12-0870 . -Exet'tlent cond. 11''. Mkina • I ' i.ncldlng lTir. S4900. Pn. Pty Excel rat<'s: days 01· ,,·cl'k~. Trailer, 2 mains, 2 jlb. fnst, · '74 Honrlas 'f'JO & 550 lll73 SUZUKJ. lS;l Enduro, St. SHARE WINNEBAGO $80. (.'811 5J0.6..l40. '1 \KG9716l At! 6, 66-2969. Hc-servations req'd, Box 316, $-150. H.B. 536-349G, I I Xtr!ls, $1950 & $1700 lE>~n.l. 300 ni t , $600. 20'1:· Interest, use 10 \Veck1 a '57 CHEVY, all or parts, 4.11 DOLPHIN Ocean or Rivt'r, Balboa Islr. Cu. 92662 or • fl:\l::R-UPPER • Campe rs, Sae · 498-0539 6TJ-4187 year. PIX)ne 640·-0-182. rear end. I JOO hp Johnson; Ell-ctro-<'All S?a..8344 ~,;:,~.11. 2ti' Sailboat 646-900() Rent 9120 '69 SUZUKI, 250 Tu•in, gd e '70 YA~WIA 360 ti1X, xlnt 19TJ Ptu .. 't' Arrow 20 fl sleeps Call 548-8779. matlc 70 gnl bit-in gas. 8" E:RICSON 26" sloop fl . eqpt. .,.,..., cond. nds tune up. Best cond. Loi. of xtras. Koni ti $150. week + 5ccnt1 mile, '69 V\V engine ~for dune Beam, 2 blinks, full rovl'I" sips. 5 Chan<'r da/\\•k. RACING Sabot, fully rigged, 101·ii CABOVER·Cllinl)Cl'. for offllr over $250. 499-3992 shocks. S400. 838-4169 pvt ply. 540-1058 b1"•gyJ? Beot oJ!cr ovei· $275 -A"U""T"O'"S"'IM""P"O"R"T"E"D""· 8" " & $2 a4 Ton Trk only, $60 prr wk, "" . w/trlr. Xln1 shape. 64f..5881 f)r/pty . ...,...,.t2S t>xtr11 niast rudder. 50. 2 11·k niin. 642·1497. 1969 HUSKY 250 Motor Homes, Trailers, Travel 9170 1~'~"'-~~Jl~<~O~~~~~~:l ~~~~====!E~I Boats, Sail 9060 C'.!\JI ~9'~-29n ASKING S475. Sale/ Rent 9160 ---------General 9701 13' BOSTON WHALER ,---------SLEEP£R. Sleeps ·I, likf' ~~1 ,,...,., ---'-'--,-'----'~ ', 20· B·LION ·c~r. i\l \ n I ne1\'. Panclll'rl, gffi?n plad "" ...,",' -i1· SANTA FE. tfas 11bout I 1§1 CUstom bucket wats, t..'-Onsole 1970 !SL.\NDF:R 21'. 18 eng, cond., Sl450. w/trlr &-inl<'r. S.iT.I. :i~i-'l3fti. '69 250 BULT,\CO, vrry g(ll.XI RENT th!' best! '7:{ eve.rythlnK. J\lust SE'll! Auto1fot~le ~ ABAH.Tll: 1000 Zagal o steering, 3SHP en~. v!'ry N<'\1· 1n1int. Co111p. equippo..--<I. lrapf'zC. 645-3861 Days cond, Xtru.s, S375 01. best Executive, 25', all xtras. $600. 642-3605. ~ Ncwport,1 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'miii:I ~1onza. to'!11t eng. Xlot <."Ond. good cond, $8:iQ. 673·'n:f·I. $9975. firn1. f>4G-:iS.U. Selling anything wuh n Daily 1_ol_fe_,._. _fil_"-""'_'_._,_,,_·'---F'rec nii., 97S-9056 5 to 8 Pf\f Cr.t SP. 45 II S900. 846-8173 GRAND BANKS 32. 19i2 The fastest drnw in the \\'est. 12' DART Sailboat with sails, Pilot Cl11ssif!cd Ad Is a 1973 27' 'VlNNEBAGO n1otor-14' SH;\STA. Sips 6, slove, General 9510 Audi 9707 J\1INT CONDITION! Lots of ... a Daily Pilot Classified 197·1 Li.:., $300. simple mailer . just Any day ls me BE!:i.-r DAY to home, bas everything. Reas. :oink. ice box. hook·ups, $600.1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1~;::7;;;-;;-;7:;;-;;:;;;;:;J Extras-S.'W,950. 833-™o.• Ail. ran 642-5678. Phone 673-2526 t·ull 642-5678! ~n wi: ad! Don't delay. • rales. 962-4587. details, 837--0a50. O A '73 AUDI 100 L.5, auto trans· Auto_1, New 9800 Autos, New .9800 Autos, New 9800 Autos, New 9800 Autos, New 980o Autf'5, New 9800 A-Fu"to"s"", "N"'e""w="---9900=0 1 71 TOY . T d~, sun~f, 13·~ mi, $4,liOO I--'-'-'----------"-----------'--------~--"---------~----------'------"'-''---"'""''-'-"-''-----· 1000 engine. New brakes, o1. bes t oflet 675-7286: \ 1~7237811 BRAND NEW 1974GMCPICKUP Tonled W<ndowr., ll•SC llra•iis.'V8. au!o u~ns... soort"!.eal. wnecl cover!i. radio. wfllle s111e wall'$ 1Ser '1926641 't $l'i77 '2877 $3977 OffMAMUFACTUIMS STK:IM Pl!Cl IMMEDIATE DELIVERY C. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '71 FORD LTD A•r. vtny! IOP. P/51eefln(I. P1~rake~. t<Kloo, ..r.w !>re~. 42!>6E TW) TAKE YOUR CHOICE '64 OLDS F 85 '64FORD SPT. CPE. '64 98 CPE, Loaded '70 MERCURY MARQUIS Vo!'l'fl too. ril\l•o. a,., ~~m., P/.,.on!lows, P/s.eal. wsw. (5426ENI • '72 BUICK ELECTRA v.~y! top, a" p1,,,"1'.!om <<l~•O. "'""' t•re~. 3681? m"es 19fQ£1(AI s1977 s1777 s2977 UN-USED USED CARS PLEASE CHECK THE MILEAGE 4' 1974 GRAND PRIXs. loaded I • 1974 FIREBIRD 2 • 1973 GRAND PRIXs, looded 3 • 1973 MONTE CARLOs. loaded .4 • 197 4 CUTLASS SUPREMEs I·· 1974 MALIBU CLASSIC I -1973 98 CPE., loaded 2 • 1973 88 HDTP SEDANs 4 WHEEL DRIVE CENTER ANOTHER FIRST FO.R UNIVERSITY THE ALL NEW TERRA-YAN ..... . I • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY "Home of the Ground Hocj'' • Contempo Van Conv~rsions Authorized Soles & Service THE FIRST . 4 WHEEL DRIVE IMC YAN OFFERED FOR . SALE IN THE U.S. ' l ' : • CIVIC I • Ures & batl. Koni shoc·ks. H1ggr.d Ior sml boat. · Dyno-tuned. Low 1nilcage. '72 AUDI 1001..S Auto. traru1.: h1AN.'i EXTRAS. 0 rig , sunroof, & ln1mnculate In & O\vnel'. Private party; Best out. Sll-:lHO Dir. ... I otter. anytime 645-2342 Aust in-Healey AUSTIN HEALEY NEEDS WORK " Antiques &-Cla11ic 9520 SJ&.4671 -·: CL::::A~SS::!.:IC::.:.'>l~:..::C~ho=vy:::::~w~.=.,~.1 ·e"M°"w..---'=-;;cc'--,9701>1•1f :· Great Shape, all orig, $650 ·73 BM\V 2002 TIT, mei. , : or best offer. 641--0356 1111.lnt. AJ\1/f.i\1 & a~ •; Rec Vehicles 9530 831-2040 Dir. · ,_, ~~------.=1 WifJ.. BUY YOUR RECRE-BMW 9712. ; ATIONAL VEHICLE PAID,_-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-. --"'.i.I FOR OR NOT. CALL US1 • .1 FOR BES ~ PRICE. OPEN .t.Ulll OfJ.Ll'll ffll ' :~{,1 i~~ 1!!:c~ ~1et.. BAVARIAN : 842-,,.,. M~R &' "' i ,: . :;;:' 1972 ECONOLINE 300, V-8, Ra1·Avai1 conversion. PS, PB, Loaded \\'/xtras, Only 15,000 ml., Like new, $6500. Illness forces sale, 675-7672 4 Wheel Drives , ,550 BUY or LEASE ' DODGE Power \\'agon, 1973, NOW! ·. • % Ton, Pickup, 12.000 mil!'s, Beat the price increase ·:. , l 8' Camper shell, auto, p/s, & 11urchatgt . ' . , pfb, po&i traction; Loaded, XL!\T SP.:LECTION OF ·.. j wtxtras •. J\fust sell immed. NEW 1974 BMW1 ·~ : $4,000 Fum &i;,..1100 ex Ul at pre-revaluated prices ' ~ Trucks 9560 ~-: '72 PLY~fOUTH Satellite l = :1 ! Sta, Wag. PIS. Power disc _ ' • : brakes, power rear window. , Fact. air. Needs auto. trnns. . ' • Beautiful car. Asking $1950. · 968-4971 afl 4PM 2'HO'.! Marguerite Parkway. •: '67 DATSUN. Pl k AA., Mjssion Vi:'.!jo : : ' c up, n .. ~s USE AVERY P\VY EXIT. ' brakes, $700. 831·2040 e 495-<1949 546-8672 ·73 DATSUN P /U, m11gs &1~=~=~====· I \\'his. Xlnt cond. $3,000. Call ORANGE COUNTY'S eve!i 556-461.J OLDEST 'TI Cl!EVY PU. Custom cab, p/s, p/b, camper shell, 30,000 mi. 968-2991. & 1972 COURIER. one owner, , \\'/shl!U. Excel. cond, new ~'. ~ l tires. S2100. 556-70::.0 , ·oo RANCHERO, "''"'w 1974 BMW's ·: motor. brakes, & prunt. in stock ready for immedla $400. 536-7430 delivery. Excellent 11avinQs 1972 CHEV. Luv PI U . on remaining 1973 inodels.' 0/sizcd \\'his "& tires. Xlnt SALES.SERVJCE, LEASING cond. $1500. 846-8173 OVERSEAS DELIVERY _v•_•_• ____ ,_s_10 1 ROY CARVER, Inc:. '61 FORD ECONO, reblt ROLLS ROYCE BMW eng., w/3400 ml, 6 cyl, 3 sp 234 E. lTth St. trarui. (just rebltJ new gen, Costa Mesa • 54&-4444 cacb, luqc-up, ,...,. "'"· CREVIER BMW clutch, brks, muffler, Mon· Sal e Se · • i..a.1n, roe shocks mag whls & es :vice g tires door ;ssen1bly & han-208 \I/. 1st, S.A. ~3171 dies, storage space in rear. USED BMWs Ne1v gm. crpt. thru-oul, I '71 2002 new upholstery, curtains. & ./ ;10 2002 panelling. BONUS/8-trae. I 69 2:m !al)C deck v.·/tapcs. Gets 20 ./'-"''7,.l_B_a_,_.,._i_a __ -o=;I mpg. Jteal!y a Per f Datsun 972,Q invcstmrnt at a pert timc.1-------...C.'-'";1 11500· '"h. 64>-2981 73 Datsun 610 :' '66 DODGE Van, w1ndo...,,s, E "• clean body, Int. New cn1dnc, ( XECUTIVE . CAR).: 8tJOO 1ni. $1200. 497.1947 or Rect with automatic tran 494-2427 Dave. mission & still in Iacto1fi '67 FORD Van. 6 eyl. 3 spd, paneled w/hed. Un der SOM, $!00. Must s cl I . 675-5752 '63 FORD Econolinc, good gas mileage 5'150 or best offer 4M-8811. '65 CHEV. V·R. mags, gd. body, runs good! Sl600. Ask for Mark, 539-5'179. warranty! 1542.J.FA). . .. ~ Only $2888 BARWICK DATSUN '~'~" '~ 33315 CAMINO CAPISTRANO 5.t.N JU.t.l<I C.t.l'ISTl:.t.NO ... .,.,~ ...... -s....1- 493.3375 or 131-1375·· 71 DATSUN " * 1972 CHEVY 20 VAN 1200 FASTBACK ,., ; Priced right -no rcn1'011able Gold, 4 speed & a i:ood lllf)'.' ' oU!'r rrruwrl. 4!13-5247 with style & economy, too~· '69 CHEV. Van. $800. t4IJCXLl, New tir!'s & elutch. Only $1688 " Xlnt cond. 556-7000 '73 DODGE Van, 100. custom t.'Verything, See lo apprec., Call Steve, 6'12-a769 BARWICK DATSUN -· '" ~ PILOT·ADVERTISER W1dn1sday June 5, iq74 \V!(lnfida)', Junt S, }q74 DAILY PILOT 55 • 9 27 Toyota 7 S C1dlll~.-c----~99=15~c~h-.-v-ro~1.-1----,m=o~D~od'"'"'"9-e ----~99~3~5~F0rd 9940 Mustang --------------9952 p;.,,----..""'s1.-..P1.--rm""ou"°'AJ hTLAS mo ·I~ '13 HONDA Clvlc hatchback. CADILLAC 1968 '69 CllEV\' SS. Alr , vln)I '70 ()()D(;t·: S11lnJ.'<'r. G ~·yl. 'Tl f'OJtU $itulrt !J p<w. l'Jta ti~~1uit llell. °'11 oflcr '71 T t 1600 COUl'E OE Vil.LE l'OO(, vinyl 111t.,, rur llv, IH.000 1111. Likto ttt·~·. set• to Wllj(. PIS , P/8, a t r , '67 ~IUSTANl.;, t:.\~·t•l. <.'Orul.. 72 PINTO . oyo a raclory Bir l'Ondillooing, full heat~. & ru..11)'(' \ol'hf.'l'l~. Bclil'\'I'! '370 Oraru.;e:, CM . AM/1"/o.I ¥letto, Jug ratk. Karm ann Ghia 9735 New brakq, tlrei &: blltt r'°""~r. vieyi top, full lt'!Oh• C462fl<Dl S8!l9 .Cli.ioh '"' t..7Pl'i1 OriM; u"·nr. 613-4$TJ/vv~1. lk'W nuiu 1r111U1 PS, lill\.11.ll V-8, ~lr~'Qnd. Belit oiler. Brown wit h aulOfnuUt• trun~. tiTl.mil mlsskin &.. nuiiu lAMLElL -Chr-ysl•r-/Plymoulh , Ko1tl shockl. Dyno-tu.ned. er lnlt•ri<>r, tlll & tclt'lk'OPil" lin1111C.'e 646-4~·16~·~0~1r7.~--'6~1 OODGJ-: Dart. nccdl 1~2712 · 71 KARMAN GHIA lA'N 1l1lli'llJle. f.1any ~tn1J1. M1\'I.'~. All the l::Xll'lifi '(;;, COltVAlft ?.I n u i 11 engine "'Ol'k. $00. '70 L11>"°'\~V~a~..,~.~.~1o-m=11e~"'~.=-,, l!.fl; t'Oltl) f.IU1-i"TANr; I "pc!, \.\' I/Ip!!, !IOOETl>l. Drive It 0J)('n rJ11lly & S11n. 'Ill 10 PM :l)i..'l \'·.!j. <tie, xlnl ,,,nd, r1t'\.\ & .)'Oll'tl bu)' ii: 2929 lfiy'b::ir Hh·d., J.:X:L>ellent C'Ond!Oon, N1•w Ori~, 0"'1Wr. Pri, ~y, 1Str. •W ll. 1'l'lf1vc-rllhlt:, l!:Vl.lll t\lnthliun, til:l.-1 11.o u/c, p/s. p/disc brk!I, 114: llttll & pnlnl. Se-3731 or Bel offer, l.i ·15-3 4 2 $1'99 xlnt lnulsport~tion. CBU '59 DODCE OAJff~.-,~.,-,,-4 ruck, ne w tin'», $1850, p111n1. rnaki• ofr, ~:l,...,olT.i2 Only $ 1688 Cot!tir. hl l'lffi Old;;;;obile -99SS 546°1934 -~~. , ...... = n·_..:._ -,,~-1;•;":";'m~•:·~~~~~:-ll (i11Aiii11iiE1SiiSiCJ~A~Dll;iiWLAAC°"1 ;)1Q..-062'3 il.llk lor Plill « ,.pd, Eiu .. -.JJt'flt eontt., s::ioo. SU-l!051 _ --I· Mork. 673--0161 Ask for lix,1 '62 r o nn Cntr-y Sq uin.· Slllcs 'S.-:'Vlce '70TOYOTAf.1ark2.4 door, •.AAR.tt.+-rllwtlb '65 EL CAMI NO Ford 9940 \~'a;._'Un, G~ut run n in i;: OLDSMOBILE ·7.t-MERCEDES 450 SE Ex· automatic· '-"00(1 oondiOon.l ~~--:!::_!M~M=•~-~~t!!I~ fn1nu:iculate 001~1. All ne lumily transp. , S 200 , GMC TRUCKS BARWICK DATSUN ·-· . ''" 33375 CAMINO WISnAMO SAit N~ CUISflA!fO ·---... •llo<Oo ........ '73 DUSTf::R, 3-11pd, 6·ryl, get11 2-1 m()C., very ('lenn. 11,;,cKI 1niles, Only 1lri\·('n hy 1\Ue iu work. $2195. Pri11ate llal't)' J.ll-fil5l. 4tl-ll75 or lll·ll75 et:uUve Cur · ont OnJy l$(or. $1150. f.1 ust MU. Phone! ruutllng geMr. f.l u1t ~ 1972 [ LTD. all pwr &: air ., c&~llh3;6!'"""===-===c-=;;: HONDA CA RS lat ~o. OI714U. Fully equip-~ ""~·~··~«~·Ta;=!!"'-~' ~~~l:h~J't=.~'~=;:E'tl ~I c:ond ooo. w-ncr ·1·1 -Ro •· "''' IK.'<.I. $226.43 mo. lease for OPEN'"SUNDAl" -:::: $1700. 641).!3lil!fJti.1.·t~i01 __ • P"' • .,.nCJK>ro, .Y UNIVERSITY OLDS '71 l'INTCJ. I i.pi•<.'tl. n1 .. ri;s. r.s mClfj, 01-~L + T&:.L. Why Triumph 9767 • 7 3 EI.. D 0 n AD 0 Chrysler 9915 cqul11'd, One OWT\CI', Shown r11otll(I, ht.'(llcr, lull' nlilcs & I~,. < Y'1 I-on olhe,. . \V IE X TR AS, Ml"""' 'GS MUSTANG Cu11v. '1'01, by appt only, 833-8320 2850 llarbor Blvd. One ownrr! GREAT Gi\S 1-----------1 Pontiac 9965 ~" You pay·~ more for '66 TRI. Spitfire. Hard It .:oft CONDITION! J6ooo. C~I '611 CHRYSLER \\'ACON, condition. $1200. .72 HANOIERO. D cl u x e Coatn Mesa ~·9640 SAVER. Sl•l9!1 or b.!~t otrer. 'li9 801\'NEVllJ.E: 0 n I y co I •,•,o,lon+ ... ~~IJI"':,~,•.· Good con· ='~3:>-~3"~1~0-----=~ Loo.lied, ~'\ill l)O\\'Cr. VACA· 6 16-3-l_l_'~~~ null. I.ikt" new. Xlnt cond. l!Jlil 01..flS, f'.l!Oi. Grf tire~. Ca~h or fl nun<X'. &IG-14.iti 43,00J n1i., New brak('li & I(~ YT t!l&llt! with u~. .ri .. -u. '!'ION ~Pf:CJAI .. C¥t·cd f11r .... k & t ,, DI sh<H.•l\i;, f'ull 11111', ulr-c<ind., "' J( SI C 9917 '7'J. LTD illOOJ;dll'llll. :l!h', fut! $~. r>-15-4i.1!82 8 an1.:i Jlrll. nc11• l\uvr• 'I • 171! lutor, !;u r. 'f . m •mons Vol"•w•••n ma ama ro )lit'll,!O new, 540-70(;3 or I• ... ,,, I top i:as 1nll~1u.:•' XJn! eond. •p~,--.,.h----="' 01)(' Qll'llPr, $119:\. 67~1 9J7 I ;.:::•::::.:•!!::::.... __ _:.:.:;:1::-::-'"'"------. 6-16-9797. P"'1" n " y Y ' l'Ul4· '7:Z Ford LTD, 4 dr, xlnt * 4\ll.i-:J:Z:i11 * ymout 9960 l:Jli;, P<.1NTIAC-T~;;:-4 :... Imports "12 vw De luxe Bus. Ne .... · '71 C11miiro. ps, aulo., lllr, ·""=~-~-...,--tont poin1 1• t'h1' w3ver!I. cond. Aulo trans, air, pwr ,....,.--~~---:-,,:, ---~,--------'" ,•. '1301 Quail engine & only 32,000 m!les. 60,00J 11,'i. Runs l)l'rf. Very '72 TOWN & Count 1' >' New litMNI· .Ii'~~,' SJ.;.~ sir. Original owner, $1900. Pin to 9957 '72 i'LYf.'IOIJTll DUSTEH. 6rz~7:;;;rc11t vnll·e job. $100. N .'I-~" DI•. clf'nn. S'J.000. 49!J-24S.1 Chryiiler .Wljl:, 31,000 n1i, f1ir milcJ. ul ~'OnU. MJ:r.•, GT.H!l6l 1 ~--,--------116,00l nilles, ci.:L>cllent, 2 ewport Bcuch """' • l'Ontl, p/w1ndows, p/seat, ~429 day~. t?:>-4362 t'Ve11 I~~==~-~~-.,,,-'ti Pl\:Tf} \\'11~1111, iup Door 11.T. Au!tUl\11 th•, JM)11.·r1· '68 E:'\EC\.:TJVE 4 Dr., A/C, 833-9300 ·70 V\V rebuilt engine & Chevrolet 9920 an11r1Y1 SH.'t"t.'O, in xlut COflTINA •70, c ·r \Vagon. ·~~· •·01~~ c;ra;; To1:ino St;,, 111ilP;1i.::". auto. u.11'. ,\ real sll"Crl11g, p•\11.cl' hnik<·s. nir r1~. P/11. t-:xc1•pt ioiutlly ENTER FROM MucARTllUll 11 u t omAtic transmission oond, prv. pty. G1~·0238. E :cl cond ~ IXKl i" i.;n. 11, P 1, air, on1:. l11•;1uty• ~il-\1'.r.>9 v.kn!I~ & t~nc\it LOning, vinyl roof. rlt•:.111. Sltf.6. 54'.>-:!003 OVER 8.'ll·:lW.I Dir . 00 Che!\'Y St<11ion \VaROn. 9933 }:"l:'.°t , oil"'" ··,,.n,.' 17 ·~10'.· 0\\'11Ct'. 552-862-1. ('It's. t965EXXI. $267.i. J vhnson & · • Nll'Kh; '14 plHtcs, best offer. Cougar '" ..... ~-. .. Vega 9974 '70 V W SQUAREBACK, Good lranli. 548--IDXI after 6 5-1g....(£79 '71 LTD Wagon, 10 pass .. ai r, '73 Plf\TO \\'agon. flad1o, ~1n Lincoln/l\lf'rcury, 2626 35 USED AM/FM w/tape deck' llfll. '6S XR7. Pow11r &· air , clean, 1970 Jo'ORD Ranchcro, 1 PIS. rack radial tires. heatl'r, low nil, $2300. Priv. Harbor RI., CM. S-Kl-5630. MERCEDES new brakes runs good ~ top <."Ondl lwn, lo\\' n1i, steel O\.\'ner, air t'\ind, radio, Clean. $1%0. 552-?l'J.O. p;u1y. f'r1ll ~26-12. ·c;.~ PLYriiOUTH f'ury Ill. VF.GA l>.T. '72. 1 l.·100 n1i, A:\l/f ,\I. ,\/C:. & truck. E.'I'.. 1'<Jn1L .~2100. j;l:->-117.it "'" •116 ' · · 1965 Corvair for sule $100. bC'llM f'J.dilt.ls. Under book. '"'=" , M 9950 .• , p · l' ··" t l'/"P/s' \ ., .....,.,..... 1·all after 5 11n1, r. heater. $..:;;;..., J I 0-7 3 3 7 , e rcury ,;, 1,\ f(I, .i !>Jiii. 'lj ritPG, ..i,.,., cone· ,,.. . ' ir. -ON DISPLAY n73·7311. .....,, ~-\l k fl • hranrl new tin'..a 1 700. •' ~10VING , 111~1 liCll. 'G8 6-l>4791 .,... ""''' . :1 r o rr. -,,., 1021 '•lo<• 61'.\l '72 \'~.;L/\ C;-r S!fl \\lag., f'ly 1'<11id. Sl.79~1. Ev~s: tfouse of Imports ' 523-7250 '71 MBZ 250 &'Clan Auto, tnms., air, All.1/J.'!\.f, I.Heh. ~ radlaJs, & low miles, 831-20-10 Dir. '38:.MERCEDES Bciu l90SL Restot<allon, !IT, new paint, tires, eng, clutch, etc. $3250. fi4S.-2442 eves. '65-ZIO SI... Mint, J\J\1/F'f.1 8 Irk, !<.Uchel!n, $ 4 , O O O. 968-870\ CV<'!!. Opel NEED 1967-68 or ll9 Opel body nnd frame only, Call 1175-6527 P9rsche PORSCHE '74 914 2.0 9750 Fully luxury e quipped. ~mplcte. NEW. save like cN.ey. Bladt nn Blnck. ' 176$ ·Phone 558-llXKI DLP.. '&I. PORSCHE. lnt('rior xlnt. (\('W radial tin!l'i, xtras. Nds ~ng. or will option W/n'blt 'Si Super 90. CU!:i'rOMS BY ~LI. ~Superior, C.f.t. '6-J. PORSCHE 356 B new Pfllnt, new brakes, good ltans. Runs good. 675---7700 au 6 ''g STLVE ll T11rga. 2.4 911T 214. Sul)l'r co11d. J•or infor. cllll 644-5713. ·~ PORSCJ-IE 911T rblt t>ng, Mlchelins, Konl'~ A!\.t!FM $5300. lrnn1ac. 49-J-11166 ~ubaru 9762 TOP DOLLAR •· FOR SPORTCARS All models & years SEE US FIRST! Toyota 9765 '74 TOYOTA Int Deal Anywhere! : LEASE OR BUY All Models! -~w.lbOi& . -TOYOTA. 1.966 Harbor, C.1'f. 646-~i•3 LEASE A BRAND NEW ;74 TOYOTA 1200 Corolla Sedan 1or only $61.26 p~r mo. 36 tfios. open end lease. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 e ~gchBlul. 841·85!>!> HUMTlH C.TOM 8f ACH 'TO 1UYOTA CROWN f,gon. 7 pass., 4 speed. & conditioning. 831·2040 r, '00 TOY OT A rm. Radials (;ood condition. 30mpg, $000. ~23&1 t:ve., (2L'l) 300-3461 C'll:f. 582 days. 'il TOYOTA, l\t&rk 11. Club :cpe. Vlnyl lop, rl\t stereo, 4 .11pd, air, radials, Pvt. Ply, $.1650. 5.16-5741 TOYOTA 1969 4 dr. lo mile, 4 speed xlnt. oond. $950. can loam-lOpm. 847-1746 ·~ TOYOTA Corona. Good oandition. SHOJ. Original Owner. Call 6'ffi....81S7 ·ii TOYOfA Corolla Sta. Wag. Luggage rack. 18.000 ml. $80 494-8339 Sell idle item~ with R Dally .Pilot ClaYif'cd ad. 642·5678 V.\V. Vtul, nC\I' engine. llll'\I' • 'G9 COUGAR. Gd corid .. air-Outdoor 1port1 !OSI 1111 'Tl ,,10NTEGO J\1XB, Gold 1-193·flljjJ5 ,,.._,... "' ... ht.ti., gt'ncrator, i!lc., ritake lfav(' ssimethlng you 11.'Rlll to l'Ond, P/S. SlXIO. Call eves. ap1.eal? Sell your equipmf'nl \\'/brwn vinyl roof, auh), The las1,.~11lr;1w 111 th" \\"~I. Don'I gi\'(' up Ulll shi 11! lii~:l~1IX Qlf('r. 551..{IR'18 c\•t•s. sell ? ctnsslficd nds do ii a.:.6-4614 with a Jow~t Duily Pilot air, xlnt cheap. $2000, ... 11 1Ja1ly Pilot Cla~ifil'tl "l..1st" it in classified, Ship 1972 Yellow VW Bug. lmmac:. well · cull NO\V &12-5678_. _ CLASS SELJ..S -642-5678 Classified Ad! 642·56i8. 645-26116 or 66-2482 1 Ail. C:11l ~2·~ifiTit In S/mn• 1l1•sulrs! 61i-5tii8. &·II 1dle hl•ms wi th a O;uly Pilol Ch1s.~iflerl ttd. 642-5678 Autos, New 9800 1..-ond. Low miles. A;o..t /F!\.f Autos New 9800 Autos, New 9800 Autos, New 9800 Autot, New 9800 Auto5, New---~9~8~00° Autos, New 9800 radio. Radials. S 21 5 0 . --' -------------------6~. '67 VW BUS, home·made can1per, r-blt cl1g. 4 mo or 400l n11 warr. 72':',...7381 7:30 AM to 4:30 P?.1, Dully. FOR Sale, '69 VW, in good 1..'0rKl. Best offer. G.1Z..3508 ntt 6pm '69 VW Fastback. Xlnt cond· ition $139:.i. Prlv. Party. Call 979-6434 • '61 VW, very clean, Reblt engine, xln't cond. $850. Call 645-6149 BAJA Bug, Coivair po\\·ered, comp. sci-up, never u.'ICd. Best offer 673-3263 '61 VW Camper, '65 engine., =nt cond., $~00. Volvo 9772 '74 VOLVO Best Deal Anywhere! LEASE OR BUY OVERSEAS DELIVERY SPECIALISfS ~w.Leuri& W YOLYO 1966 Harbor, C.l.,1. £46·!1.Vll '70 VOLVO 164 &!clan, 4 speed, air, Xlnt ConditiOn 493-9337 ·n BUG, xlnt ran c:ond. Gd tires, »mi. Standard shift. $1700. ~7761 aft.5 VOi.VO '69, 164. , 4 dr sed. 4 spd.. R&H , Oean, Extras. $2.ll>O. 494-9837 VOLVO. '70 • 142 S, fm/am, al!IO '68-145 sta. \\lig. air, ('()nd . Cit.II eves S.'17-4662 AUTOS USED Buick 9910 '74 BUICK Riviera. Sliver wl black vinyl r o o f . Loaded! Low ntlleage. Private party. $ 3 , 15 0 . PH:~.. , 1969 LeSABRE. 2 dr hardtop. Full JT.lf, air. Best oUer. CBU aft. 6; 644-0472. '72 SKYLARK CONVERT- 1BLE w/air conrl. Xlnt cond. 645-0062 or 645-3457 . '69 El Dorado. 46,CkXI miles. 1 XJrrt c:ond, Loaded! $2-IOO. (10\V book) 642-49Q5. Cadnl•c ~ 9915 CADILLAC 1973 EI. DOR.l\00 LUXURIOUS CABRIOLET Factory air con., full pov•er, plush leather interior, lilt & telescopic steering, stereo, door locks. all the Dix. xtras & showroom fresh. t:ii6GVI! . $6899 aeJ OPEN SUNDAY CADILLAC 1972 CPE. DE VILLE Jo'iremist lac...'<IUt'r finish \.\'Ith v/top & leather i111. Full pwr., fact. air, tilt·tele., AM .lf'l\I stereo mulllplex + 8 track tape, etc. 139.> Ef!KJ. J Theodore Robins Ford 53rd ANNIVERSARY SALE WE'RE CELEBRATING 53 YEARS OF DOING BUSINESS IN ORANGE COUNTY UNDER THE SA ME OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT WITH SUPER SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT CHECK OUR SERVICE SPECIALS PARTS SPECIALS TIRE SPECIALS ASk ABOUT OUR USEO CAR W ARRANTY IMSURAHCE' fUll Pl ,.0 ,..f>l COYIGA(;I WITH MO MILEAGE LIMIT~ '71 PINTO COUPE s1453 RDdoo, he&ll!I, • woed. e•lr.t clean- 192•£LUI '72 VEGA WAGON ~1822 Aaoaoo. helll!I. • 6PM'd lral'lSINMIOJ\, Sllatp. f718EBB1 '72 CAPRI s2549 Rat110 h11al er 4 5111ed. air co01· <llllOn"'g t031E0ll '73 PINTO WAGONS s2590 ?000 El'lgu'Mt. raoot>. heate<: auiom.111;_ t~1it<:k 1213.JES!low•~···· '72 AM/FM, au1omar1c. PQwe• ~1eer111g, s2913 power b•a~es, ''' c o11d1tto111 ng. (0f8El.VJ '7.4 MUSTANG SAVE Rall•o. hea1e1. ••• collll aulomatoc. P.S . P.8 .• 2,300 mtlM. Ul16KEJJ '71 TOYOTA MKll s1815 FIKhll. heB!&r. 4 ~ lf""!Slfti$$IOll. I " cond1TlllfH"(I 15:'.ll GWl(J '71 LTD BROUGHAM s2475 Rall•O. healer. a" co110 . power SIP9t<1>g•b11k--'rldows~at' {9770- 'Cl '73 CHEVY NOVA s2550 • Ooor. Rad111. tl!!atet, 1vlomahc. ilfl" co"rrno0n11'1g 12i!OGIVl '71 T-BIRD s2914 AilO!ll, hea!ef. wtO<NhC, P.5. p B. low low moles. (9.220MA) '73 COUGAR XR7 s3175 AM/FM. au1oma11c. Ptl'W'l!r s!eenng, 111"'11 rool IClOGJC Oj '73 CAM ARO s3575 l OilC!ed w11h FM n•thO. autom.;i!oc, P S, PB "' colld. ,,.,...,1 root. (929GXJJ NOBODY UNDERSELLS US! '70 '72 '72 '71 '70 '71 FORD VAN s2099 Wtndrlw v8n 6 Cvlinck'r. 3 ~ lrnn· $ffi!$6IOJ\. hea!llf (2BOBSTJ DATSUN PICKUP s2199 R,1d10 and hell1tr, " i;peed t11nsmos- :,tllfl. 181!9!>81 FORD COURIER PICKUP s2299 Radoo BJ\11 hle3!er. • 5DIJe<I t1ans.mis- SIOll (982GNMJ FORD V1 TON PICKUP s2399 VII t'A91ne. rll<llO. t1e11e1, au1oma1o<: !tal>9'l•&S1t1n IB2?27JI BRONCO WAGON 4x4 s3099 Wain hubs r;tdoo. heltl'C, ~ny oH"'f09d P>lrU. Onty 20,000 ""1115 {3!>!>001 DODGE CAMPER VAN $3699 ~'~ ' ' •. 11, ...... All you need is o valid dri¥er 's license to fill out tM simple drowin9 licket ft.of COULD wtn you o NEW '7 4 PINTO FREE TOU HUD HOT l l r l l SEHT TO WlH. EXO.USIVE AT THEODORE ROBINS FORD! NOTHING TO BUY -NOTHING TO DO -REGISTER TODAY! 300 '74's AT 53rd ANNIVERSARY DISCOUNTS HEW '74 MUSTANG II HARDTOP s2995 HEW '74 TORINO 2 DR. '••C..1'---····· ,,.,.,,,,,.. ..... p_ ... _,.,,~ .... , ..... .,. .... ·-....... , ""''~'"'" ~<11 ., •• NEW '74 FORD COURIER ONLY$2699 NEW '74 FORD BUBBLE TOPVAH ONL Y $5588 NEW '74 FORD FIOO CUSTOM STYLESIDE PICKUP HEW '74 MAVERICK 2 DR. SED. IMCt. AutOMATIC n AMS... AMO~ STllllMCi ONLY $3150 HEW '74 FORD LTD 2 DR. HDTP. ONLY $4246 HEW '74 FORD RAHCHERO 500 HEW '74 FORD ~HDERBIRD :._ -ONLY$6195 '"'' ·•~• "'" ''"" ''' '"""'"~"' ''""'" n·-"'" "'"'"'' ' ' M••• ONLY $3399 ONLY $3769 '•• ' .. , .... -.......... .,,~ .. ~ ........... , ......... ~ .... ,. . ., ' " ,. ' ""'"" .......... '""" , .... ,.. ·' V• ,., • .,.,,,~ .. _..,.,,, ...... ,,., , , • , ., •-. . ' ..... "' ·~ ••'< lnclullos r.•u•M!OmahC 1"1ns WSW !1t1n fltl'We• S!e('ror19. dose .. ,~, ": :~,'.~ ~ .. :;.;-;..:."":.:-:,;,"';' ..,":':;."": ~· C:..a~~. AM tlldlO. holea 91~;s lelt ~Jrn:I m1tror, "''"•el covim • ., • '"" .... ...... -t ,,, .... ~"-< ..... '"" ........... ' .......................... , .... , ..., ........... ~ ....... , ...... , ••.. . ' ',,,,,__ .......... , .. ,,._, .................... ··~··~~ . ......................... ' .. ,_ ... _ "I'' .... ..-""'' ........ .., .. --., , ,, ,. , .. ,, .......,, •·~•, ~~ ...._ ..... _ & heavy outy ~aP'ltllong suspen~oon. St~ • 106~. Ser, -"" '" ' .... , ...... , ,. ..... "'"' , ..• ''~" ........ .,,,.,.,.,. #4,1\471-<160~26 • A I 0 SPEED BIKE FREE 59450 ~= WITH EVERY HEW PINTO WE SELL FROM OUR STOCK DURING THE MONTH OF JUNE! IT'S OUR WAY OF SAYING THANKS FOR 53 WONDERFUL YEARS IN ORANGE COUNTY. ALL S°"lE PR•Ct R [fF[OflV[ fOH f? H0011S ~ ____ ... _..,, --- II IJ.UI llrf llOlllll1 I••·• I"' M••··•tl.1 1 •..,·I,... '-!·_1_10 -·~I"" - r •l l\ lll•IU 1tt1Ull1 1 .,,.,,.,... Mo~.1 1 .,,. .. ,... fMo • .ftl ••Ill 11'1. OHIT1 I .,.,\ .... 1 ... • ' • • 1 §8 DAIL V PILOT Wrd~ay June 5, 1974 .HOWARD ··Chevrolet • 1n • PILOT·AOVERTISER !6 • I • . • -~ Newport Beach I •' BOTH WAYS! ~ii ---------------------------------~--~---------~-------------------4 · Want To Hold Onto That Cash? · New '74 Monte Carlo Coupe! :~ There's NO DOWN PAYMENT on~ Ji NEW '74 MONTE CARLO! NeW'7iMOifu(<:O ~ § 4lf't I With aulo. trans., air cond .• V8 engine, power steering •: J With power steering and brakes. air cond., auto. trans~ tinted glass. VB engine. radtal wh ite walls, heater/defroster. radio. BU l19hls. etc. No. 443117/3003. Only $118 7.7 mo. On appro¥ed credit on Che¥rolease for ·only lhirty-si:il months! and brakes. tinted glass. wheel CO'lers, white walls, •• heater/d.erroster. radio. HO radialor, decor pkg., etc. No. With swing-out slrato bucket seats, tinted glass. power steering and brakes, :• 450824/3l26. heater/defroster, radio, VS engine, synchro--mesh !rans., BU light£. etc. No. 426181 J28.f9 :: Only $104 17 mo. ONLY 53899 · MOW! On appro¥ed credit on O'ie¥rolease !Of only thirty-six · months! • • :: . : " . " :: :· :: " .. .. CAR BUYERS SHOULD ALWAYS COMSIDER CHEVROLEASE! New '74 Two Door! " •• .. • •' • New '74 Vega Hatchback! With hnted glass. rad10-_ automahc !'rans., dht. bumpers and guards, whil e wal ls. air cond .. GT eQulp., heaterJdefroster, wheel nngs. l11ters. mirrors. etc. No. 262982/3048. Only $ 8928 mo. On appro¥ed credit on Chevrolease for only thirty-six \ months! 173 DUSTER 6 cyl., automatic. power steering. brakes. fact ory air. rad io & heater. Only 17 . .00 mlles. immaculate. (837HEV). ONLY ' s2795 . '72 CAPRI ~ VS coupe, automatic, radio & heater. deluxe interior. new rad ial \ tires. low miles. sharp. (852FNIJ . •• ONLY 52795 '73 VEGA Estate wagon. Automahc. power steering. ladory air cond., deluxe interior, premium tires. AM/FM, low m11es: hke new.· (434HAV), ONLY 833-0555 OPEN SUNDAY New '7 4 Chev. Pickup! With tinted glass. lleetside box; au10. trans .• radio. heater/defroster, step bumper-. gauges. HO radiator, HD shocks and spnngs. mirrors. etc. No. 140940/30 15. $9895 Only mo. On appro¥ed credit on Chevrolease for only lhiny.six months! 171 COUGAR XR7. Automat ic. power steenng, brakes, air conditioning, vinyl roof. leather 1n1er1or. extra'n1ce. (313KELJ. ONLY 171 BUICK SKYLARK Hardtop coupe. Automatic. power steering. brakes. factory air, vinyl roof. premium !ires. immaculate. low miles. (834EVZ). ONLY 52595 172 PINTO . Runaboul. Automatic, laciory air. ¥1nyl roof. delu•e interior, radio & healer. only 14,000 miles. Like new. (091FLX). ONLY 52495 ' . ·: . . ·: .. . " . • With air cond .. linled gtass. neaterldelroster. radio, tour-speed trans., Whitewalls. dlx. bum- pers and guards. liltef'S. mirrors. etc. No. 341983/3196. ONLY 172 CAMARO Automatic. Powef steering. brakes. air conditioning, radio & heater, reflects excellent care. Good mites. (1819AJ. ONLY '73 IMPALA Custom coupe. Automatic, power steenng. brakes. air con- d1t1on1ng, ¥1nyt roof, radio & heater, low miles. Sharp. (827FZH)_ ONLY 53195 ONLY '73 SUPER BEETLE 4.:;peed. air cond111oning, luggage rack. good miles. "A lil!le J~l."f1 1901 ONLY 5.3095 NOW! • 1 73 VEGA Hatchback cpe. Automa11c, radio & heater. extenor decor ae>- Po•ntments. low. low mdes. immaculate. (948JOH J ONLY '64 FORD , · 6 cyl. 'h Ton pickup. 4 spd . rad io & neater. ready lor work or • pleasure. (N47183). ~ • ONLY 5795 .· . " '73 CORVETTE : Stingray. Au1orna11c, power steenng. brakes. power windows, .~ air cond11ion1ng, lilt wheel, stereo radio, 13,000 miles. Like new. (544TEVJ. . .. .. ~ Act Fast! ., Newport Beach . , Prices ~ "'"'Mon:: Juno 10fi! . . . . SAN DIEG -·- FREEWAY .. • • • . . • ·CHEVROLET . • •• • • •• Psi• Dt pl . . O,.• Set. . -.;.,. ' if Dove and Quail Sts . NEWPORT BEACH .Near MacArthur, Jamboree and Bristol 833 0555 ... ~~ Half-mile South of Oran;ge~C~o~u~nt~y~A~i~rp~o~rt~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~----~w:::':!.::'~ .. I -I II ,): 27 PILOf·AD\IERTISER _w...c''"-"__;'""-' J'-""'-''5'-1:__'7_4 ____ __::DAIL V PILOT_:)7 I ' TRUCK LOAD SAVINGS! NEW 1974 COMET 4 DOOR SEDANS $ FULL PRICE {585491 1 TREMENDOUS SELECTIONS . NEW 1974 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL TOWN CAR $2150 OFF OF PR~ PRICE RISE WINDOW STICKER (STK. #31DO SERIAL #822454) BEAT THE PRl,CE RISE! · HEW 1 ~74 COUGARXR-7 5. I 000 ,;~~~~SE STICKER S1k. "35s11s2s294J BEAT THE PRJCE RISE! -.1- YOU 'LL GEJ THE HO. I DEAL FROM THE HO. I DEALER, AND WE HAVE BEEN HO. I IN ORANGE COUNTY LINCOLN MERCURY SALES FOR OVER EIGHT CONSECUTIVE YEARS . !A CTUAL FACTORY FIGURES!. BRAND NEW 1974 MARQUIS BROUGHAM . VISIT PANTERA LAND! GOOD SELECTION, HEW-USED SAVE s2200 TODAY! 'THE $12,000 PERSONAL SPORTS FOR THE DISCERNING DRIVER !. 1 -• • '74 CHEVY 1973 DODGE ' TRUCK LOAD SAVINGS! FREE GENUINE FORD FACTORY I 'AIR CONDITIONING WITH ANY NEW CAPRI IN OUR TREMENDOUS INVENTORY! Ho Exceptions -Ho Hold Back s, Make Your Choice And The Air Conditioning Won't Cost You One Cent! NEW '7 4 MONTEGO 4 DOOR SEDAN 400 2 V engine. solid slate ignition. auto. trans .. p/steering. p/brakes (disc). wsw tires. bumper prot. group. ale .. tinted glass. radio. remote control mirror. deluxe whee l covers and more. Stk. 3396 (533013) BEAT THE PlUCE RISE! 1970 JAVELIN HOYA 6 Cyl. auto. trans. pawer steenng. radio. heater. vinyl roof. 1.900 miles (485KLR) I CHARGE R VS. au!o trans Tact a•r rw.·1. stPer owf . 01!.r """" R3H. m w ""''•~I 'Bl6H"' $ 3099 _ 2 doo1 V8 auro I rans po1·,Pr s1f>Pronc: radio hea1r-r 41 20· NM $158.8 1969 FORD ONCE A YEAR SALE ON COMPANY AND LEASE RETURNS SOME HAVE AS UTILE AS 8500 ACTUAL MILES '73 Pl YMOUTH DUSTER 2 Dr., 6 cyl .. aulo trans .. factory air cond , pawer steering . radio. heater {434JFO) LTD Wag. V-8. auto rrans., factory air condilioning. . pawer steering, power fdiscl brakes radio, healer, whitewdll tires, linted glass, wheel cove'rs. TREMENDOU.i $AVINGS. MERCURYS -CAPRIS - STATION WAGONS - LINCOLNS -MARK IVS EXAMPLE 1973 MONTEGO MX 4 DI. V-8, auto. trans., factory air conditioning, power steering, power (disc) brakes. radio. heater. 169HSY $2988 I 1974 Pl Y. Fury Ill 2 dr V8 auto rrans lac!ory air oower s1eering & Oise b1akr-s. R & H. wsw 111nyl root. 1 l .000 miles (312HMX1 s3288 '69 TOYOTA Corona Deluxe 4 Door Seda11. 4 cyl au10 trans air COnd radio, tiea1e1 . radio. whttewau tires $ 1388 wheel Clf\'ers. (ZKZ4221 \ ZS HS5' S 1488 '72 MERCURY Colony Park wagon VB aulo trans taclory air cond . lull power oowcr steering power disc brakes radio tieater wtille side walls tinted glass wheel covers' !409FLZl '69 DODGE Z DOOR s3288 6 Cyl . auto trans . oower steenng. radio. lieater IYPZ9961 $1488 ,,...,.. IAT l 1J0.7st0 SUN. 1M100 • • ... . -. I 58 DAILY PILOT EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS ON '73 & '7 4 Low Mileage Chryslers & Ply mouths MOST CARRY EXTENDED CHRYSLER FACTORY WARRANTY 1974 VALIANT 4DOOR VB aulomat•c radio. heater. cower s1eenng. power brakes. white wall tires. lactory ai r .cond1t1on1ng. vinyl 100. low-low mileage tnc1·ude::; ..f:xtended Chrysler Faciory · Warranty . '73 CHRYSLER WAGON '73 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE Cuslom 4 door Town & Country 9 Passenger • VB. au loma!1c. radio, heater, power steering. power brakes. power windows. power split seat. WSW, lactory ai r, root rack. INCLUDES Extended Chrysler tac!ory warranty Low. low Mileage (290483) VB. automatic. radio. heater. pawer steering, power brakes. white walls. factory air cond1!1on1ng. INCLUDES E)(tended Chrysler lactory warranty. Low. low mileage. (421HWK ) s BEST USED CAR BUY OF THE WEEK 1'173 PLYMOUTH FURY d heater. pow<'r ve au1oma1i{.. ~~a~~~ w-.;w 111es. lac- s1eenng. powl'f ,, 191 /GNN: 1orv ;11r cun<l1\1onu 52195 1/ s '72 MAZDA RX·Z 2 d1. rotary. 4 sPd. radio hea1c1 power brakes . wh•!e Sode wall~ l877FEK l $1895 '72 PINTO STATIONWAGOM Aut·1m,1t•C. rad•O. fl<'a1er. !actorv J1 • ror,! r,1c i... custom 1nt<'11or & 1.,1,..,,u, Flt~"d wn1te lener lire!> 1 33901~1 $1995 '70 FORD MAVERICIC 2 Oon1 6 cyhndPr engine '.l ,Of'f'C1 tr<1n ~m1 '.;~1un . r;,tJ1 0 .ind l1<';itPr (399A0X l $895 II '10 PONTIAC J SEAT WAGON Vi!. ,uJtomn11c. 1<1d10. heater power ·.1 .~" n n g ~or ake:.· wt ndow:>·S(' .il s. VJSW factory aor cnnd1t•on1ng, vonvl 1001 & roof rack 132280CJ $1695 '68 DODGE CHARGER Z DR. H.T. Vb <1u1o ma11c. radio. hf'aler. PQwer .1Cf>rt nQ OOWCI brakes. W S W. 1,1{.tr;r' air vinyl top. buck.el seals. c0no;ole. radial hres !WTZ719J $795 '70 PLYMOUTH FURYGRANCOUl'E Vil .111toma11c rild10 nea!er pow• r IPPflfl'j oowPr bfilkf'!> W SW li!Cl<l•V .iu c.ond1t1nn1nq vinyl 100 /336AUC.1 $1095 . ' Wtdn!sday, June 5, 1CJ74 -----PILOT·.ADVERTlSER_28 1 HUGE SELECTION BEST PRICE-S,!'-. -. NEW 1974 GET 'EM UP . SCOUT NEW '74 SCOUT 4 WHEEL DRIVE. 6 cyltnder. radio heater. 3 speed . lolding rear seat. e!c Ser. No •<>:asooGD32276 HERE IT IS ••• VB. automatic. trailer towing package, nower steering oower brakes. AIR CONDITIONING. WSW. cus1om 1nler1or & extenor. !11! wheel. cruise con1rol. AM/FM radio. luggage rack Ser No. 4H_l_H~O::_O_HB::_3~4:.'..;"~-..,,"~ ptsCO P11C<'S plu s ta~ and hce nse are valid 111 10 p m June 9 Vehicles :-.ub1ec1 to prior sale uNT] Fully lc1clo•v <'au1ooed, $Pr No <IHICODH837209 • OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE , I 29 PILOT·AOVERTISER \Vrdnt>sday Juflr 5, }q7 4 W_•_d'-"-°'_Y._J_unt_5_. l_,_74 _______ DAILY PILOT !{9 YOU'RE 1'11E WINNE AT VICTORY -- ECONOMY? -YES! COLTS IY , CHRYSLll COIU'O.RA TIOH -SPECIAL ~---~ •• ,•-.:, ~l .-r, ..., __... DELtYE · ~~ TAKE YOUR CHOICE . BRAND NEW '74 COL TS SPECIAL-4 TO CHOOSE FROM Wl33 (Ser. !16L21K45304016J 4 $peep, radio. heater. custom paint stripe. greenw/wh11e interior. IMMEDI ATE DELIVERY # 144 (Ser. 1'6L21K45305502). Yellow w/black 1n1er1or. 4 speed. buckel seals. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. ii145 (Ser. #6L2 1K4530541 7}. Spice Metallic. 4 speed . bucket seats. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. 1i130 (Ser !t6L2.1K45303921 l. Sotce w1th 1ntenor. bucket seats. 4 SPeed. IMMEDIATE DELIVE RY ALL ARE EQUIPPED DIFffllENTLY YOU TAKE YOUR CHOICE FOR ONLY ••.. OR IF YOU P'RUU: 52518 ~~~~E 57 62J. C...4!11f-_;.-t-JJ-,e .. :t.......-•,..__ •219 \iij,,,, f1111W·_.~il'ICf'-l'lr"M ... 1air'llf1,,_ II'~• 19 Rgll.,.._ -llPA 1• l!O'lo.. ALL MAKES ANO MODELS TO CHOOSI FllOM THE WINNERS '74 .o ~-... -DARTS 'fAKEYOUR CHOICE BRAND HEW '74 DARTS SPECIAL-4 TO CHOOSE FROM lfj..l41C4A 163710 Aulomal1c. 225-6 cyt· carPflts, bnte bmPf. grds . radio, d!)(. wht. covers, WSW. tMMEDIAtE DELIVERY 1!LL41C4R1 56649. Bench seats [vinyl). carpels, au1oma11c, bnte bmpr. grds, radio. dlJC. whl. covers. WSW .. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY, LL41 C4R1 53990. Power sleering. automa11c, vinyl bench seats. carpel, 225-6 cyl. radio. di)( Wheel covers. WSW. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~LH41C4R 112999 Cuslom Split back bencn seat. merch pkg. aulomahc, 225-6cyl . v1ny1 roof. vinyl side mldgs, WSW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ALL ARE EQUIPPED DIFFERENTLY YOUTAKEYOURCHOICEFOROHLY ... FULL PRICE ALL MAKES & MOD~LS TO CHOOSE FROM • JOIN the CHARGER ENERATION SPECIAL ---BE A.CHARGER NOW!! TAKE YOUR CHOICE BRAND NEW '7 4 CHARGERS SPECIAL-4 TO CHOOSE FROM 'J.3014 (Ser. JJ.Wl21640135434) 31 8. Auto !rans . bench seat. red wit h black. interior. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY #30El9 (Ser. ifWL 21G461 35435J Red. 318. Auto irans bench seat IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - ~3005 (Ser WWL21C46 120054) Wh11e V·B. auto. trans . power steenng radio. heatar. vinyl !OD. w+re wheel covers. t1111ed glass. v1n~I side motdongs IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. . ;tJQ19 (Ser =WL21646102407J Solver wo!h black 1n1enor V-8. auto. Trans. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ALL ARE EQUIPPED DIFffllEHTL Y YOU TAKE YOUR CHOICE FOR ONLY .... AU MAKES & MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM . LARGEST ' SELECTION ·oF 4 WHEEL DilVES • V2 & % _.'TON PICKUPS· VANS BRAND HEW '74 MONACO Nol Stripped LOADED '74 DGE VAN SA1'E PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE 7111 73 CHEVROLET '74 DODGE<\ p PICKUP $988 0 ·100. Power di:s.t brakes. aulomalit . Tint. w:s.hld .• 60 amo. al:., 70 amp. ban , HD. suspension. Power stee11ag. used 4 8 miles . mu c h m o1e IQ1 4AT 4S03728AJ ORIF YOU PREFER $3881 PER MONTH -• .. z 11:1 < -"' -... -c g :Ill g .: 73 PL YM . FURY Ill ..... -~ <u Automatic. l aclory air power steeri ng. tu!I wheel covers, much more. l 109FYT) Aulomattc. radio. heaier. WSW. much IW're 1372HN01 PERMOHTH S: Only S64 30 lor 36 mos. wi!h $299down. Full cash price t.2004.28 incl T &L. De!errcd payment p11ce t.2613.BO A PR. 21 05~ ·!' ' - ~ ·-.. :: . NOT SATISFIED WITH SERVICE? Try VICTORY "You're the Winner" SfR't'!Cf HOURS Mo11d•r 7:JO M •• t:oo p1111 T.w1.•Fri. 7:JO-hl i :OO pM We accept all Worranty Work on All Chrysler Product s DODGE • CHRYSUR • PLYMOUTH Motor Home-Servko Tool 'WE NEED YOUI SALES & SERVl~E BUSINESS! J • ' - ' • ~-.. , .. " ... • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . . $ $ " V-8, aulo. trans .• power steer- ing, power (disc) brakes, radio, heater, whitewall fires, ~.._...vinrl roof, tinted g lass, vinrl inter ior. l4G21H191176) 1974 PINTO RU NAB OUT A speed, radio, heater. luk- urr decor group. low m iles. License 1182KAP 2300 cc, 41 cyl .• 41 speed, A18x1 3 whitrNall tires, tinted glass, m etalli c finish. /AR \1XJ66l01) . v. SUP ER '73 VAtUES" ALL WITH LOW LOW MILES. '73 FORD P up· ' ' ~: . · v.e, auto. tr~ns .• factory, ~-1!1.CondltSC>nlng, powrtr , Slf8rinQ, r&dio1iw...-:. . N0..:11""1-' .t'~ t ·:!} v~~!'~'~"'' pow" ... .,, ... ,..~.$1 oa· 8 heater, (638BZYl 1.l Li!re ' crl., power sreeri ng, 1-;.;;;.;;;.;,;;;;;,;,;.;.._ .... __________ ""'!' __ _ :~~~' ~::~:~· ~::::· ,~::::17~'. '69 CHRYSLER ~ 1 0 8 8 front & retr bumper 9uards. .4 Door, V·I. a uto. tr•ns .• factory air conditioning, l•R07Yl9033.t ) pawer steering, power brakes, radio, heater, 'linrl roof, tinted glass. cvxw m1 · '72 PINTO 2 Dr. 4 speed, AM /FM radio, heater. Lie. No. 777ESE $1488 a~:~0 1974 MAVERICK '69 FORD VAN IMMEDIATE DELIVERY .$ 2 DOOR 1SO 6 crt.. solid state ignition. l•K91 Ll99857JJ IRAND NIW 1974 GALAXIE Z DR. H.T. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . ' ., I VI, ilUto., trans., factory a ir, l)OWt'r steering, power disc brakes. heater, radlal whitewalls, tinted glass 455851291341 Auto. trans. Real workhorse. F14327. f71 PLYM. Wagon Suburl;lan. V-1., auto trans .• factorr air conditio~ing, $ pawer steering, power brakes, radio, heater, ltnted gla ss. C92•JAQl :~~ ~I!~~.~~ v~.,c~!'!~~~ .. , $ · 1 Radio, heater. H.D. eqpt,, Western mirrors, step bumper. License No. St•A9S :~~ ,!,~,~~~~~.~~long wheel baH $1 (S2488P I '72 CHEV. Pickup Radio, hea.ter. extra low miles. (11200Ul FORD ' " ' • s·as " 988 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' .. '74 FORD PICKUP AND CAMPER THIS PI CKUP' TRUCK & CAMPE R IS READY FOR · YO UR PE R SO'NAL .' -'HIUC H .-~ . ----......... ~'Custom S1y1esi0e, J60 VI, .gauges, .-?r· solid 1t•I• i9nition. cruise+matic · "' tr•ns .. option•l r•tio rear axle, Power steering, r•dio, tlnltcl 911ss, Ylnvl &$· .·· ,..1 IFIOYRT"5!6l .. ~a .. , ' ._,,,,. 4 sJ)ttd trans., heate r, whltewalltires. vinvl in- 1 e r i or~; tool kit . (SGTAPY09760) BUTH UNITS BRAND NEW '74 FORD VAN IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Adi . pass seat, gaugn, solid state ignition, sliding cargo doOr, extra cooling radiator. low mount swing look mirror . CE1 4B HU2S08SI &JIANO NIW '14 FORD F-250 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY r • t " 3/4 Ton PICKUP F7SB RUA2S1 READY FOR WORK OR PLAY • • • • .. . • • ) • 7 I j f 1 II I I \ I ' \ • 7 I l ' ~ • San (;lemen1e Today's Final f;apistrano \ EDITION N.Y. Stocks '* ,VOL. 67, NO. 156, 7 SECTIONS, 116 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1974 TEN CENTS U.S. Obscenity Ruling to Swamp OC in Smut? By L. PETER KRIEG Of "'-OlllY Pllft llllf A ruling Tuesday declaring California's obscenity laW unconstitutional m a y mean Orange County wlll be swamped with dirty movie houses and "adult" bookstores, a spokesman for District Attom~y Cecil Hicks said today . Law enforcetnent and j u d I c i a I authorities throughout " the county were aghast at the 'ruling, but most declined -{lny immediate comment. A three-judge panel ruled the Jaw is a unconsUtutionally vague in failing to derine what is obscene. The 21-page decision was based on lhc .screening of "Deep Throat" by Buena P,a r k ' s Pussycat Theater. Assistant Orange Cowuy District Attorney Michael Capizzi said a decision will have to be made whether to rewrite the law or appeal the ruling directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Capizzi said the probable move will be lo appeal and he said he Is optimistic e How You Voted --==--_ ........... .....,,... --- Here is the final tabulatlon on all election . results for Orange C.Ounly and local races on Tuesday~s Primary ballot.: _ SHERIFF-CORONER Brad Gates -234,451 Spero Janise -5.906 Jerry L. Lawrence -12,45.1 Marshal Norris -36.319 George Savord -37,960 Gene Vinlove -8,560 BOARD llF SUPERVISORS 2nd District David L. Baker -30,074 (Runo(f) John T. Dean -14,349 Laurence J, Schmit -22,217 (Runoff ) flk Dillr1cl . Ralpll IL ~ -5017"'1 .. Ga1'1"Y Nelleaen -15,137 Ith Dislrlct Ronald W. C11per1 -54,480 Marci.a M. Bmts -18,188 Nolan Frizzelle -7,s63 Jim Thorpe -17,171 ASSESSOR Jack P. Vallerga -229,139 Raymond Preston -103,847 AUDITOR Victor A. Helm -291,26.1 LOCAL MEASURES D. lrvine Parks Yes -5,%13 No -·t,937 E. Irvine Bike Trails Yes -4,972 No -2,001 SADDLEBACK COLLEGE BOARD Trustee Area No. 1 \\'llliam E. Dean -32,671 Sleve Mueller -13,372 Henry M. Stanley -!1,271 Trus&.ee A~a No. 2 Robert C. Bartholomew -25,SIS Jeffrey S. Du Bowe -10,912 Alan H. Greenwood -14,558 Trustee Area No. 3 Norman Cole -9,584 Ron Kreber -16,575 Michael McFadden -5,814 Lawrence W. Taylor -17,825 COUNTY SCHOOL SUPT. RGberl Peterson -201,842 Donald D. \Voodlngton -118,751 COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Area No. z John D. Harper -Zi.,671 David 1L Paynter -";I4,014 Area No. 5 John o. App -31,766 Ernest G. Lake -23,929 TAX COLLECTOR-TREASURER Robert L. Citron -281li·'66 CLERK William E. SI John -2.87 ,639 DISTlUCf ATl'ORNEY Cecil IUckt -212,079 ..... William S. Hulsy -83,142 ~1ax A. Slurges -36,970 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR James Helm -285,442 RECORDER J. Wylie carlyle -280,155 WATER DlSTlUCfS ~1unlclpal Water District HE LEAVES HOME OVER TELEPHONE The Daily Pilot sincerely hopes that its ads ~·on'L drive you from your homt. But here's one ad th.at did just that to the Newport Beach man who placed it: '70 CHEV. Horizon. 24 Ft. pwr. steer & brakes. 1$,00> mi." Comp. self-contained. 110 genc~tor. air-amd, bike rack. May trade/offer. (Phone No.) Tht ad sold the motor ho1ne almost lm- mcdl:ilc.ly alter the paper came out and lhcn v.·cnt on to produce so many inquiry calls that the advertiser left home to get away from the phone. Tust a Daily l'ilo( ad for thC resulll you want. Dia\ ~ l.be direcl line : 842-5678. - • • • --= Of Orange County Divlskln l Fountain Valley, lfuntington Beach, Seal Beach, Costa Mesa: Davkl K. Jones -28, 186 Stephen T. Tucker -17,240 Division 2 Seal Beach, Westminster Gerald E. Price -26,269 Harry D. Bentley -6,882 Gordon Gleason -14,439 Division 3 Harbor Area-South County Cle m M. ~1cCollocb -36.522 William D. Fenton -8,043 Sterling S. Sharrar -6,723 Coa1tal MIUliclpal Water District Division 3 Newport Beach ltlns J. Loresai -3,986 Winton M. AsbtAlll -131 w. A. Coleman -6a5 Ed Vanden Bosscbe -663 lslon 4 M.,.a William K. Patrie 3,493 Gene J. Adams .:._ 1,7 Tri-Ci.des MuNclpal Water District Division 3 San Clemente Richard 1\1. Learner -617 Don CoA.Cad -438 Division 5 San Clemente W. ~I. l\1ac Kay -909 C. Thomas Dahl -421 II. lluntlngi<m Beach lligb School District Yes -26,a36 No -31,ZGI L. Laguna Beach School District Yes -3,571 No -3.9'11 o. Rossmoor Service Area ZI Yes -Z,83C No -1,207 P. Orange County Street Ugbtfng District I Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, South Laguna Yes -3,139 No -3,40t V. Orange County Street · Lighting District It El Toro, Mission Viejo Yes -3,07$ No -3,329 ~ Z. Orange County Street Lighting District 14 Los Alamitos, Rossmoor Yes -2.190 No -2,242 W. Metropolitan Water District Yes -118,1'3 No -154,614 DD. Los Alamitos Street Lighting Yes -8t6 No -848 RH. Sunset Beacb Street Lighting Yes -129 No -219 U. Orange Counly Street Lighting District 10 Irvine, Tustin, East Tustin Yes -3,421 No -2,933 X. Orange County Slreet Lighting DIAtrlCt 1% Bay View Yes -144 No -129 Y. Orange County Street Lighting llbtrld 13 El Toro, Tusti.n, East Tustin, Irvine Yes -2,627 No -2,717 Financial Woes WASHINGTON lUPJ) -Government ortlcials havt warned I.hat the nallon's Sociul Security system's trust funds may go into the red as earls a111970, Jttmcs B. Caldwell. Social Security con1mlssioncr, wamtd Tuesday of possible serious Jong· term financial problems ror the system because or falling birth rates, larger numbers of relired persons and Jnnauon. that the nation's highest court will overturn the ruling. But watch out if it doesn't, be said. "Just look around at the bookstores that are trying to exist now. Look at some of the newstands on the street "If .there's 'no law prohibiting smut then I guess your imagination is the limit," he said. Tuesday 's decision was handed down by a panel composed of U.S. District Court Judge Warren J. Ferguson, Judge \Villiam East of the District Court of Oregon and 9lh U.S. Circuit Court Judge \\'alter Ely. The decision was unanimouS. Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron K. ~1c~1illan was obviously upset by the ruling .. '·You jusl can't tell these days," he said. "I went out to Buena Park to sec 'Deep 1'hroat' and I thought it v.·as obscene and I said so. Apparcntlv the federal panel disagrees and tliat's the end of my interest in the matter. The panel ruled that the California law "does not specifically define the sexual activity which Is prohibited." The lawsuit attacking the state la\I: was brought by Vincent ~tiranda, president of 'Pussycat Theaters of Hollywood, after Orange C o u n t y authorities confiscated the sexually explicit film "Deep Throat" from the Buena Park theater in a series of raids last November. Prosecution of Miranda and a dozen other cases was halted pending the ruling, and Capizzi said the others may now be in jeopardy. "\\'e'IJ have to research the law to determine the effect on other pending cases." Capizzi said. Capizzi also disclosed that his office V.'il\ investigate ·the poss l bi Ii t y jurisdictions !hat local may now enact their own anti-smut ordinances. Local lav>'s \Vere forbidden before because they were pre-empted ·by the state Jaw. "But if there's no state !a,v. ii 1nay ix' possible for local governments to enact their own," he said. " . • r10 e ecte .. ' TRUSTEE AREA ONE William Dean· TRUSTE• AREA TWO Robltrt Bartholomew TRUSTEE AREA THREE ~awrence Taylor ~~~--~~~~~--~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~--·~~~~~~~~~'---~~~~ Caspers Wins Re-election Superviso r Capt!1res 54 P ercent of Final T<tll y By WILLIAM SCH~EIBER Of IM Dail'J Pllol Stiff Incumbent Fifth District County Supervisor Ronald Caspers \\'on election to his second term Tuesday. brushing aside challenges by three opponents. It had been thought Caspers might be forced Into a nmoff, but, when all th<' votes were in, he had abou\ 5<I percent of them. Final resuJts are: Caspers: 54,480 !\-1arcia Bents: 18,666 Nolan Frizzelle: 7,363 James Thorpe: 17,177 As in his past election effort, Caspers waged a big money campaign to retain his seat. He raised more than $1SO,OOO in , his re.election bid and spent just under $100,000. His three opponents all conceded he probably could not be beaten in the primary but • merely forced into a November runoff. Between them. his opponents raised and spent about $40,000. The Fifth District ract! was marked by a pact among the candidates not to spend n.u, ""'' St•tt Pitt!• WINS NEW TERM HANDILY Fifth Ol1trlct's Caspers more than about $93,000 each -about 50 cents per registered \-'Oler in the district. Caspers' chief opponent. i\1rs. Bents of Newport Beach, charged several weeks ago ·that Caspers had already exceeded that limit and hit $120,CKXI in his spending. But top Caspers aides said the Peterson TC1kes Superintendent Post Once Again Tv.·o-term incumbent Dr. Rob e rt Peterson easily defeated Laguna Beach School Superintendent Donald \Vooding· ton in non-partisan county Superintcn· dent of Schools balloting Tuesday. Unofficial final ~suits ,.,.ere: Pelerson: Z-01 ,842 \Voodington 118,751 . • The campaign revolved aroung tv.'O central issues: incumbent Peterson's eight year record in office and challenger Woodington 's mobile 28 year career in education .• Woodington charged the incumbent v.•ith losing touch with the local districts the co1Ulty office exists to serve and v.·ith leading an office that v.•as providing a dc<:lining level of services. Peterson called the chllllcnger a "job hopper,'' citing the five different adn1inistrallve posls \Voodington has beki in his 28-year career in education. \\loodington resigned rrom a nine- month old rontract as superintendent or me Laguna Beach Unified School District to seek the $34,MO a year county post, an act which Peterson ca\led a breach of trust. Woodlngton's answer lo the charges wns that if no one broke a contract to cnmpaign for county superintendent. no one rould ever run. llis background , which included tv.·o years as slate commlssloner of educa1 ion In Colorado. Woodington said, g:'lvt him n tro3dtr background and s u p e r i o r qualtficntions. County Board of E:<lucatlon candidates In the Second and FIJ1h SupervisoriAl Olstrtcts also canipalgnt.'d largely on critlcifll'I af the current operation of the counly schools office. supervisor considered the ceiling to run from the date he officially filed as a candidate and \\'ould not include money spent before th at date. ~frs. Bents charged late in the can1paign that Caspe rs and his akies hlld "strongan'lled" big companies into making large campaign donations. She said they reared dc<:isions oo projects needing county approval would be swayed if the money wasn 't given. Caspers lablcd the charge ''ridiculous." Caspers' other two foes, Dr. Nolan Frizzclle or Newport Beach and James Thorpe of San Juan Capistrano, waged active campaigns but spent limited amounts of money. Optometrist Frizzelle stumped around the district. stopp ing at centers and other public areas appealing for votes. Thorpe, the former mayor of San Juan Capistrano. concentrat(,'d in the south county area, where he is best known. Handyman Faces Trial in Deatl1 Of Y ou11g l\'larine Los Angeles handyman Eldon Peter Denrth v.•us ordered late Tuesday to race trial Sept. 16 in Orange County Superior Court for the murder of a young Camp Pendleton J\1arine. Judge James Turner set the trial date £or Dearth. 47. and ordered the defendant ret urned to the courtroom July 12 for pretrial action on the capital charge. Dearth is accused of killing Marine Dale Arthur Erlewein, 21. lie is held In t'Ounty jail with bail set at $250,00>. E"rlc~·cifll's deteriorlating body. cove.red ~·ith a canvas tarpaulin was found last Dceember Jn a ravihe near san Clemente lligh ~hoot. Police later rct0\·ered the v.·eapon used to put a bullel in tht? dead man's head and linked the revolver to the arrested Dearth. Police believe ihAt tile body or Erlcwln hl'ld lain in the ravine for about a month btfore it was found by the dog of an off· duty policeman. • • I j Tustit1 Duo, -Lag~a Ma11- Net Votes By JOllN \'AL TERZA 01 11141 D1Uy Piiot Sl•ll Voters in the Saddleback Community College District Tuesday elected tv.·o Tustin men by substantial margins and a Laguna Beach candidate by a thin edge to positions on the Satld\eback Col!c~c Board of Trustees. The new members selected to fill seats on a board suing by many resignations are Robert Bartholomew. an avowed member of the John Birch Society in Tustin: fellow Tustin resident \Villiam Dean and Laguna Beach locksmith and veteran school trustee Larry Taylor. The tallies showed these results in !he polling: -In Area One. north Tustin Dean \\'ilh 32.671; Steven Mueller, Jl,372 and flenry Stanley, 5,271. -Area Two. South Tu st i a , Bartholomew, 25.515; Jeffrey DuBowe, 10,912 and Dr. Alan Greenwood, 14,558. -In the Laguna battle. Taylor garnered 17,1125, and Ronald Kreber was close behind with 16,575. The two candidates who withdrew siphoned key votes away with Norman CAies 9,584 and ~fichael i\fcFadden with 5,814. Trustee-elect.· Dean is a vice president of North American R.ockwell"s space division and the program manager for the fum 's space sbutdc project. The 44-year-old resident of Tustin snid his interest in the district v.·as \\'helled relatively recently when he v.•as asked to sign petitions seeking the withdrawal of the Tustin area from the community college district. He said the apparent uncertainly and lack of definite opinions about !he college in the minds or his fe :l!ow residents was another nioti valing force in his candidacy. ''We have to cause residents in the Tustin area to gel !o know their community college beltcr."' he said. He predicted no miracles in Tuesday's election, but deemed it an excellent start if he were to be elected. Trustee-elect Bart ho Io m ew. a dedicated and avo1ved conservative is a nurseryman with prior experience as a lrustee of school districts. Bartholomew has served on the board of the Tustin Unified and High School districts. He believes he has "a feel" for (See SAODLEBACK, Pate ZI ·' Orange Coast Weather Night and morning low clouds cleuring to hazy afternoon sun· shine Thursday. \\/armer Inland with highs in the mid 70s. Beach highs in the upper 60s. INSmE TODAY Pat a.11d Richard Ni xon wtre married there. fluniphrey Bo- gort boozed there. Teddy Roose· velt slept there, and now the ~1issioll J1u1 is backdrop for movie about a HolL)IUJood legend. Story. Paye 16. Al 'l'llH' Sff'llc:1 J ... ,1"' • L. M. lo'(ll 1' C11llltrt111 t•I C•l'='f CtrMt U C ... »!Htll u ... C1mlt1 .. Cm1"'tt1 4' 0.1111 HOflc11 U Eotltwill P .. t 6 E.1111rt1llll!ltfll 24-lS FlllllKI 21•ll F.. "" llKt1'11 11 MlimtOH 21 A1111 LIMI" • ,! DAU,Y PILOl SC WtdneW!a.)I June S, 1CJ74 -----------'---- Flom·no y, B1·ownTops h1 P1·in1ary LOS ANGELES (AP \ -Californio's next governo r \viii bt1 11ither Edmund G. Bro\vn, 36-yen r-old ~l)l'I of the state's Inst Democratic govcrn01', or llouston r. Flournoy. n I~epubllc<ln beneficiary of \fatergalc. Bolh won their party's nominalions by comfortable margins Tuesday, as polls predicted, in 11 surprisingly 10111 voter turnout. BrO\\'n tl'd San Francisco '-1nvor Joseph Alioto 1,023.059 to 505.589 witti 94 percent of the vote coonted. Asseinbly Speaker Bob ~1ore!Li was third with 452,268. Flournoy, 44 . 111on a landslide victory over Lt. Gov. Ed ltrinecke, who was lhe front-runner before being indicted April 3 by the \Vatergate ,grand jury. He pleaded not guilty but f<1iled to get a trial date before th e primary. .. F!o"urnoy had 1,073,600 votes· to l~einecke's 515,498. Voter turnout fell \\'ell belov1 Lbe 62 percent prt'Cl icted by Brown, th e secretary of state. Candida tes b1amed it on \Va tcrgate-causcd apathy. Bro1vn, who led the fig ht for a controversial political reforrn measure, told supporters that he and Flournoy ·would have to work hard er in the fall because ''the people are skeptical of lhe political process.'' He said he expected a strong race from Flournoy. whom he described as "an intelligent person and an articulate spokesman for his cause." Flournoy predicted an "interesting and exciting can1paign'' and added. "\V e are ge>ing to h'1ve a wt ited Republican party." Bro\\·n \\'ho shrewdly publicized his • office and stressed pe>litical campaign "'-=----reforin; lcd-f:hei)Olls-from-t-he-begfnning~ A former Jesuit seminarian, he had a considerable advantage as .the son or Edmund G. Browrt, ·governor-from ·1959- J~. ~·Flournoy, conversely, was an al~ran \\'ith lhrec percent in polls a year ago. lie mocvd to front runner, \\'ith 44 per· cent to Reinecke's 27 percent a v.·eck be· fore the elt'Ction. Reineke is accused of lying to the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1972 when he denied he advised the U.S. Justice Department a'tid then-Alty. Gen. John N. Mitchell of International Telephone & Telegraph Co. 's offer to help under-write the Republican National Convention. Reinecke's trial is set for July 15 in \Vashington. Flournoy told cheering backers early today that he wouldn't go alon g with a suggestion by Brown for a moratoriu1n on campaigning until September. .. I don 't believe in lhat," he said. "I believe the people of this state should have an opportunity to examine the is· sues." · Brown told suppGrten • \hat in both his own victory and that of Prop. 9, "The vote of the people is very clear, for re- form and against corruption." {Related story, Page 4). The political campaign measure. de- scribed by supporters as the stiffest in the n11tion. limit contribll!ions, requires identifica tion of all contributioos above $50 and creates a powerful commission \vith a SI million aruiual budget to ad- minister and enforce the regulations . In addition, public officials are required to periodically di sclose their .wets and out· side incoote to prevent e-0nflict-of-interest problems. Jury to Receive Hoax Evidence llALLANDALE. Fla. (AP) -A federal grand-jury \\•ill soon get evidence in conn ection with an alleged ex tortion hoax in the case of a banker '''ho claimed he was kldnaped and held for ransom , palice say. James Longo. llallandale chic! of police. said Tuesday the FBI had told hhn that the case of Albert Dantzler, 43, \\'ould be presented to a grand jury in Fort Lauderdale this 11:eek or next. . OlA.HQ.ICOAST sc; DAILY PILOT T"9 a....,, C,,.•<! (lotol1 p...,. """"~ .. -i.nea ,,.. N ..... ,, .. , ".....,._er'"'" o.,,. c;..,.Put>ov·""~"" s..-.o1.-.,,...,. t>u()l,....d, Mo..,•Y '"''"""" ~""''· tor Co"• l.!tM. Nu.._, ~ "'° ... "'91 .... 8"1d<I"°""' !;iofl ... , ..... ~"'°" ... ONr" 1 ..... ,,., s--· •"<I ~ c-~1. ~n ....," c.,.u. • ..,, A ""'jl• '""'°""'VO•''°" " lillf'I»-St!~~' Ind Su" a..,.. '""""""'""1 -·•~•non1""'""1mw.­ed1S11H1. Co.!1 "4-Cl~IOI"'' i21l'6 1· '"''"• •11.,._J Prt•""1~ .. "Cl P..orol"'!f Jy,r(<1•v II•~• Pfe1..,.o: •NI~.,..,, '-'-~ r ..... -, " 1.1"1'""- M•-•"lll ~d•(>I s ... C"""""• Offkt '.)) Non• l• L(J!"W'o F .u1 OthwOtfktt °"'""'""' i10wi.w....,."'"'' .. ...,.:>',114"ft ''IJJ_..,_ .......... ,._~l:Mllt• 1,.,~ .... ft-..... ~ L._0....,. ~1''°"'.t """- Ttltph-l1141 l42:·4lJ:I Clei•lfltd lt.dYn-tiMnq l4J:·5l 11 S. Cltml'flft .t.• Otpo'1111t11h.: Ttlt,i.-4f2-4410 ~. ,,,. Or~ .... Go.,.,, """•""'O c-. , .. .., fllll"'l"'•"-.1o ............. _,,,._ "' -·-"'' ~ .... n ,..y r.. ~H Ml"'M_I _ _.,,.~- ~ o •• , -· ..... ,, Coll• ~.t.I Cai.ll'O> "ol &.-.,mn 11y.,.,.., M OO .......... .,, ""~ l"00-~.""'"...,"""'""1-•)00.ftt..,.111, Battin Wins Education Race In County, Loses State. _, Paynter, App Win 'Easily' I l>•llY l'llcll 51f+I ""'"' EYING SECONO TERM 40th District's Hinshaw Hinslicr-w Ea~ily Defeats GOP Congress J'oes incumbent 40!.h district Congressman Andrew Hinshaw, President Nixe>n's By DOUG f'RITZSCHE 01 .... o.1iw "''"' ,1111 In the non-partisan county Boord of Ort1ngo County YOters supported local Eduootion race Tuesday, second trustee s~atcwlde candidates Tuesday, helping to area candidate Dr. Onvtd Paynter and _ ~end Democratic Assemblyman Ken fifth trustee area cnndldote John O. App ~ dcleated their opponents by wide Cory of Garden G r o v e to ·the margins. November state controller's race. About Unofficial final rcsulls In Area 2 were: 52 1percent ol the COWlty's voters went Paynter 34,014 to the polls. John D. Harper 24,671 Irvine City COuncilman llenry Quiqley In Area 5: App 31,768 polled 54,979 county votes, bu\ apparently Ernest G. Lake 23,929 lost the sl.atewide race for the Lynda T. Moss 24,349 Hepublican nomination for s I a t e Incumbents in both the 2nd and 5th lreasurer to John T. Kehoe. o.ny '11tt Sttfl "'" trustee areas, which correspond with the WINS FULL TERM Supervisor Robert Battin. while ht took C A 2nd and 5th supervlsorial districts, ounty 1M1sor Vallerg• cteCided not to seek re-election and the an easy majority o( county votes, ~.68&. campaigns had a reform character. lost' Jhe state1,1,·lde race for h e 'Ibe uniform charge was that the Democratic nomination for lieutenant Jack Valle·r~a· county Department of tducation and its governor to ~tirViii rlymaITy. · .., board of trustees was out of touch with Cory took 95,301 county Votes as he ~ the local school districts and It was not grabbed the lead in the Democratic st.ate Wins Election r::l~g the kind and level of services it controller's race. In the same race, Fidel In Area 2, John D. llarpcr Jr., a (~onzalez of \Vestminster took' a scant A ronner Fount.a.in Valley City councilman 6.332 Ornnge County votes. As ssessor and Fountain Valley school boaro On ballot propOsitlons, the county member, charged that his OJ>IXlnent, reflected the statewide results, passing Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga Paynter, was a ca,eer educator and all init iatives except Proposition 7, \\'on his first election to the job he was would not adequately represent the defeating it by 180,406 to 147,602. interests of the citizenry. congressman, easily won renomination in County returns, which !he regiS1rar of appoinled to in 1972 by a 2 to I margin Paynter, formerly superintendent of the Republican Party primary Tuesday voters predicted would not be in until Tuesday over his lone opponent. the Garden Grove Unified School District and will face Den1oc rat Roderick \Vilson after noon, \\'ere available at 7:27 a.m., Final totals arc: and now president of Test-A-Lab, a of Oceanside in Novenlber. five hours ahead of schedule. Vall 229 1 health screening service, responded that, Jn the governor's race Edmund G. erga: · 39 while he was proud of his career in Republican \·Ot<: totals in the 40th Brown Jr. took 67,634 \'Oles in the Raymond Preston : 103.847 education, he was a businessman. All three sooght to Improve the communications between the eounty offlct and local school dlstrk:ta and to strengthen the leadership role ot tilt county oUlce. App said he was the only candidate wllli a "vested interest" in the office since he was the only one with school age children. He was also , he pointed out, the only non-educator running for the J11y office. II elected, App said, he would attempt to determine whether services of the county office .could be improved and, if not, would recommend abolition of the department. . CLARK RETA.INS COUNTY SEAT Orange County Board o f Supervisors Chalnnan Ralph Clark of Anaheim won his second tenn as the Fourth District representative Tuesday, defeating his lone foe by a 4-1 margin. Final vote totals showed Clark witb 50,743 and Garry Nelleson with 15,137. Betker to Face District are: Dc1nocratic primary and Houst o n The large nwnber ot vol.es polled by The educational experience. Paynter Hinshaw: 52,263 Flournoy 111,2.5810 lhe Republican race. Preston swprised sOme 0 b servers said, made him more qualified for the • ... Earl Carraway ' 4.483 For Lieutenlllnt governor RepubUCllJI job. Foe •1• November David Gubler : 13.106 John L. Harmer polled 100,671 votes. because of the ex~mely low-key and Both the Are& 2 candidates set goals of " " Roge:c.::r:t :. 5,500 • ta the secretary of state Democratic poorly funded campaign he ran. improving the County office's rqle in , _,,,. --.-.61!1Mr!-the ... ~tric1 ~pr1mar,~Otang~County_llJoked.-tbo.--The-prlmlll')' was adually • the r.,,t--vocational-educatioll-<Uld holding .'board -Ruiiof f -Euction--- - are: slatewide trend g.vmg more votes to time incumbent VaDerga ran for office meetings away frorp the county olh~s to · ' John Graef: 11,970 \Valter Karabian and Robert S. Jordan H . led t the AA> tw -· provide greater public e,:posure. Wilson: 19,%42 · · than to··March-K. Fong ·who -woo-the-~ .!V~-.a~in _o. ~. 0 ears cea.5,.~lJiessmail...App.was pitted • .. Incum~t_§!J~bc?r Davift Baker, a Hinsha.w's chi e f critics in 'the nomination. Fong palled 24,73l county ago wberi former assessor Andrew against two college pro£essors, Dr. Lake three-tenn veteran on the Orange County primary race were not the Democrats \'Otes . In the Republican race statewide Hinshaw was elected to Congress. and Dr. Moss. • board, !aces a November runoff election vying to face him in November. but \.\'inner Brian ft Van Camp can-ied the Valle.rga proved to be a powerful, big· against the top Vllle getter of his two rather the Republicans trying to take his county with 50,867 votes for the secretary money campaigner whose lead was hard Tuesday primary election foes Larry seat away. of state nomination. lo overcome by Preston, a Cal State } • V le Schmii. Gubler, the s e 1 f·fpr 0 c I aimed In the Republican controller's race the Long Beach home economics professor. rVllle 0 r8 With all the county's 1,849 preclncts "walking candidate'' from Mission Viejo. county supported statewide w l n n e r Toward the end of the campaign, · \ reporting. !he sec ond supervllorial waged a campaign based on his charges \Villiam T. Bag1ey with 91,716 votes. Preston hooked his wagon to Lbe 20th A T district totals are: that Hinshaw misused his former office In the treasurer's race. the county District Congressional campaign being pprOVC WO Baker: 30,074 of cowity assessor. supported Democrat, Jesse M. Unruh waged by David Gubler against Hinshaw. Larry Scltmlt: ZZ,217 Gubler brought forward signed a([i-with 70, 268 votes . Gubler's charges of misuse of the· p k } John T. Dean: 14,349 davits he said were from current and 1n the attorney general race Democrat olfice by Himhaw were extended to ar 8S tleS Dick Ruiz:, Baker's top aide, said today former employes of the assessor's office William A. Norris took 82,695 C'OUDty Vallerga by Preston. He said Vallerga the runoff came as no surprise and was under Hinshaw. -votes and unopposed Republican -Evelle accepted dc:matioas from big companies Irvine voters continued their love due-primarily-to a..strong Schmit-vote in The depositions stated Hinshaw used J. Younger 169,144. , . whose assesSments depended on him . affair with their new city and approved Garden Grove. He predicted Baker should county employes and county equipment In the U.S. Senate primary, ,mcumbent Vallerga sak! Prston 's accusations two park bond ls.sues but voters win the runoff. bandlly. in his 1972 Congressional campaign and Democrat Alan Cransn earned the were "preposterous" and he pointed to a elsewhere on the Orange Coast dealt Schmit ani:i Dtan campligned against also gave favorable assesmen ts to big rounty with 122.9ll votes in his party and series of. court ad.ions uphc~ding his death blov.'S to financing measures oo the so-called "incumbency" factor whi ch campaign contributors. Republican lf. L.. Richa~ got pradlces. Tuesday's ballot. holds that the longer a man IS ln office, Hinshaw denied any such practices U0,252 votes Crom hls party's fa.itbfuJ. Before his appointmen_t, Vallerga was Laguna Beach Voten rejected a school the less ' responsive atd booest be ever took place and filed a $10 million chief assistant a.+~ lk eipt ,Y~ tax override while H11ntm,ton BMch becomes. libel suit against Gubler. voters said they didn't want to spend Schmit r.M--againat Baker four years The s u i t lvas b 3 s e d on From Pqe 1 $14.5 millk>n for a new central high ago and came within fl,000 v otes of statements from Gubler conta ined in LE CK Touch of Oltl school. upsetting him. newspapers and scores of press releases SADD BA • • Both Irvine measures won easily. That was about the closest Baker has he issued. Proposition o , which sets up a $16 come to defeat in his long tenure as a bl S J ' S l mi!Tion park fund that will include supervisor. Gu er was supported in his campaign th e residents of Tustin. OUt 1, f,Jt eatt C · I Schmit and De.an saJd during the by John Schmitz, the John Birch Society Ile had promised that if he were financmg • or a 15-ecre athletic £acility campat'gn ••at Bake •·· be ted b H. h v won by a vote of 5,293 to 1,937. 1.11 r ,..., g r own mem r unsea Y ms aw two years elected to the Saddleback Board he would SEATn.E, Wash. (UPI) _ At the Irvine residents also voted to spend unresponsive to his district and bas not ~go. H.insha,~'L,oth~ Republ~a~. f?1~ resign his position on the Tustin Unified breakfast buffet line at the National another $2 million for bicycle and hlkillg pushed hard enough for a share in arr;,way an mp ear, \vag 1mi Boa rd. trails. The vote was 4.'12 to 2,001. Both funding for recreational areas. campaigns. The Democratic race \•as The Wydming native came to the Govemers' Conference, II) waitresses ded t third jorl I Because of the nea< disaster in JMO, almost non-existent in terms 0 I of bl t measures nee wo-ma t es. 1" communily in 1927 ; one s wo stood staring at a dish they '.l'eren't Laguna Beach school board members Baker raised and spent a large war chest campaigning with Wilson, Graef and children is a graduate of Saddlebaci. familiar with. \\'ill meet tonight to try to figure what to on his campaign this year. His spending Hare running low·key efforts. Bartholomew said he joined the do without the 1271,000 that would have wasn't even apn~ched by both bis Quigley Beliind In State Race- Won 't Co1icede Irvine City Councilman Henry Quieley refused today to concede defeat in his bid for the Republican nomination for the state treasurer's race against Democrat Jess Unruh in November. Republican vote tallies with 74 percent of precincts counted statewide, are : Quigley: 4-03,639 John Kehoe: 500,348 Results for Democrats arc: Unruh : I,088,44" Gray Davis: 534,834 Alan Short : 529.IJ92 Two Los Angeles television &tations and two radio news broadcasts predicted this me>ming that Quigley would carry the state. however. "I remember that in 1966 HOU!ilon Flournoy gave a speech e-0nceding defeat and later had to come back and say '\Veil, t guess I really Yt'On, aher all'," Councilman Quigley said today, "It looks to me now that Kehoe will be lhc Republican oominc-e for treasurer, bul I'm not making any final decision until the ballots are 100 percent counted. "Win or lose we sure made a horse race out of it." lhe second term Irvine councilman said. "The whole idea of running was to show people I ceuld be a serious statewide cnndidate and it looks · like \\'e've done Uwt ," Quigley said. Cri1ninology Bid Denied for UC BERKELEY (UPI) -T!tc Univ<rslty of California's Bcrgeley C a m p u s chanctllor has dec icfcc:I to phase out the school of criminology dtspile protests from students. Chancellor Albert Bo 1,1,· k er . in or.nouncing the closing Tuesday, said the scllool's 11rogram was too narrow nnd fai1M to m-ake u!ll! of some of the "n:i1ton's finest scholars working In lhis field on· I.be faculty hert." · I s · h Soc' t · 1~ • .. t "What is that stuff?" one asked, ,....._ controvers1a ire 1e Y m l!VU, ""'"' been raised by the 24 cent tu override opponents combined. has declared that his membel'Ship in Monday, perplexed. that received 3,971 no votes and 3,571 As expected, Baker ran a strong race the group has never confl.icted with bis "I don't know. It looks like Farina," yes votes. Only a simple majority was in the cities of Huntington Beach and role as a school trustee. ~ replied. needed. Seal Beach but ran behind Schmit ..nd !le has deemed the deannexation issue Finally, a knowledgeable waitress Huntington Beach Union Hlghj School Dean inland communities such as gripping Tustin for months as "a Di&rlct voters turned down the pro-Garden Grove and Westmimter. manufactured issue to further their solved the mystery. posa1 to finance the new high school ll Baker wins in November, he will be (proponents') political aims." "It's grits," she said, "and you can't through a non-profit corporation with a the longest winning elected official still In He believes the ~n s er vat iv e nm a national convention without 'em." no vote of 31 ,261 to a yes vote ol 26,536. office in Orange County. educatiOna l policy of Saddleback is excellent, and has said the school has made progress in its early years. Taylor, the victor by the slim margln in the Laguna trustee race is a ;l.)-year resident of the Art Colony and a veteran of years on school boards there. Active in the earliest days of the formation of the Saddleback district, Taylor said his close attention to the development of the district would be his strongest attribute as a trustee. . "ll gives me an edge over the other candida tes," ~ said during the recent campaign. Taylor is a locksmith and the father of four children. Graduates Told To ~Be Proud' AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (AP) - Vice President Gerald R. Ford told lhe Air Force Academy's 1974 graduating class today "you should understand the atlltude of the world toward the United Stalf.5 and take pride in being en American." In a commencement address, Ford said the Egyptians. Syrian11 and lsraeM.s looked after the October Mideast war not to Russia, France or Britain for negotiations, but to President Nixoo1 "because they kntw he could get tbe job done." Nixon on Potomac . WASHINGTON fAP) -Pmldent NiX'on has spent anoi.htt evenina: on the eutomac aboard the presidenUal yacht. ~uola.. Nixon dined aboard the ves1el Tuesday with White HOUSt Chier of Staff Alexander ~1. Haig Jr., Secretary of Stale I lenry A. Ki ssinger and a Kissinger aide, tirlg. Gen. Brent Sconcroft. A spokesman $aid the group discuued the Mideast silua!i-on and Nixon's upcoming trip to l\ilnseow. Baseball Shoes All Purpose Shoes Soccer Shoes Tennis Shoes Worm-Up Shoes Football Shoes Wrestling Shoes Ter:inis Dresses Mens & Boys Tennis ·Shorts Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts Warm-Up Suits Hats & Visors Mens Tennis Sweat&!'\ ' . ' Tennis Rockets ., ---., 11F·' • CLOSID SUNDAY Wilson -Davis -Bancroft Dunlop -Yoneyama Racquetball Racquets & Balls Handball Gloves & Balls Tobie Tennis Paddles & Balls Squash Rackets Baseball Mitts -Balls : Bats Softball Shirts Softballs & Bats Volleyballs Basketballs Soccer Balls Slant Boards Weight Sets Bike Repairing Bike Parts -Tires -Tubes I • Wednesday's Closing Prices ., • _w_ .. _'-""...:".:..:..J"-"_5;.;._1_97c.4 ___ _;SC:.::_ __ _:o_AJ;_:•._Y_Pc.;lL;_:D_;_T_,,i,,.3 'tS NEW )'.'"O~J{ STOCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows Appear Eve'ry Saturday J , -· • Prime Rate Hint Boon to Stocks • NEW YORK (UPI) -Sloe.ks staged an afternoon re- covery follo.,.,ing early weakness on the New York Stock Exchange Wednesda y w1t.h buying sparked by a leading bank spokesman s opt1m1sm that the prl.l!le rate will fall sharply by the end of the year Trading was moder01te The Dow Jones 1ndustr1al average gamed l 49 points : to 830 18 At the height of lhc recovery Ute blue-chip 1nd1 cato .. was ahead more than eight pomts but eased there after l • • And vances led decli nes b yabout eight to-five among the more than t 736 issues traded Sales at the cloSe totiiled roughly 13 500 000 shares com pared with Tuesday s 16 lMO 000 \Yalter Wnston chairman of First National City Bank of New York said he foresees the prime lenchng rate thnt charged on IOHns lo top-rate commercial borrowers falling to 8 to 7 percent by year-end Stocks on the American Exchange also recovered u1 hght tradLng. A111erica11 10 ~lo•t Active e Ampe.T Hike REDWOOD ClTY (UPI) Ampex Corp has announced price boosts ranglJlg up to l2 percent on IDpes and disks for computer systen1s T h e company cited increased labor' and materials costs as the reason ror the mcreases. whtdt go Into effect 1mmed1 atcly e Capital Pla11s WASHINGTON (AP I -'The Co1nmcrcc Department has reported American business has trimmed Its capit al spending plans by $750 mlflioti ... since last month s survey of 1ntentlotil: The report said the steepelt dechnes 1n capital spending plans v;ere among electric and gas utlHllcs and mining an~ conunun1catlons companies : I f <f OAIC V PILOT WtdntSday June 5, lfl74 ~; ( TONIGHT'S T\1 IDGHLIGHTS t ABC O 3:30 -'"Blood Sport." The pressures or ltlgh school football provide the theme for this ~ exre!Jcnt ·rv dra1na starring Ben Johnson, Larry ~ 1-lagnian and Gary Busey. !_ J{CJ·:T EID 8:30 -ll ollywood Television 'fheater. /\zany cornedy about an eccentric family, "Nourish the Bea~!." ~t:irs Eileen Brennan, John Randolph, \\'ill Lee and John Be,·k. .'\BC' O 9:00 -"The \Vorld of J-Icnry Orient.'' Peter Sellers is a concert pianist pursued by a pair of :idoring high school girls in this 1964 comedy \\:Hh Paula Prentiss and Angela Lansbury. .. r .. TV DAILY LOG W ed nesday Evening JUN[ 5 the ob,tuive 1mbitiom of his tallier flld h1i !ootball coach, lo savt h•~ ielf 11u1l~& 1110 final weds ol ii championship uason. m Merv G1ltllft Sllow m Mol'ie: (iO) "f11nci'" (eom) '50-Doni!d O'Connor. &:oo do o ...... mm CD New$ lJ }Q.!l l:t..1.J .!..(~.,!.)Nt1n O Bon1nz1 • • ,.,. Ht wt111t11r1 P'MIO l 6 ' Ho11n's Htrot1 O Btvt!IJ Hillbilllrs m Minion: lrnpou1blt Ql Mod Squad ED El Pob rt 'on111t1 :)6 Movit; (2111) "Silvt1 City" (adv) '51 -[dmond O'Srltn, lvonne Dt· C11lo. ED Hollywoad Television Th11ll1 (90) "Nourish the Be1st" Sle1•t les1ch's zany c.omedy about a most unusual and enga1ina larnily lull ol ~oo~y and endea1ing ch1ratte1s. Stats 111 Eileen Brennotn, John Ran. llolph, Will Lee, John Beck, Pamela Bellwood and R1ndy M.1m. (S r1no11m1 Novtli 'GOOD TIMES' STAR DOESN'T PLAY FOR COMEDY Esther Rolle Trained in Serious Theater Taletats Wasted Ton·ight ·. An Ode to Bobbie Gentry Dy JAY SHA RBUTI NEW Y6RK (AP ) -CBS i~ showcasing the efforts of Bobbie Gentry, a fine singer ; Frank Pepplolt, a skilled \1rriter, and Jack Elliott and Allyn Ferguson, two very gifted arrangers tonight at 8 o'clock on Channel 2. CBS Calls their collabora.tion ''Bobble Gentry's Happ iness !lour." Wrong title. Th is show is a wretched, overproduced mess th3t somehow manages (TV REVIEW) to waste the considerable talents of all coocernl'd. The first or four CBS variety se.rles scheduled this summer, it'll be with us four weeks. Ir ton ight's sample is what l\1iss Gentry & Co. have in mind . J uly 1\'ill come none too soon. I HERE\\'ITII cross my fingers and hope the program im proves, if only becau$t'! I've Rlways admired Miss Gentry both as a singer and as a song·writer ever since hearing her "Ode to Biiiy Joe" A few yt1ars ago. She's always struck nli1 as a good perrorn1cr \vho'd be a Great one if she'd only just consider the virtues or shnplicity. Alas, simpl!cily is nowhere present in tonight's show. "'hich roars in like a gurish fugitive fron1 the 1nain roon1 of any Las Vegas hotel. co1n plcte with. blarin:; br:1ss, Kaudy dance nun1bcrs and feeble patter. TO ADD INJURY to insult , :\liss Gentry sings noticeably flat \\'hen doing a few bars of ·the Carpenlers' "Yesterday Once fllore" as a prelude to unfunny skits about the 1950s, rock 'n' roll and lt't'n·age life. Robert Goulet and \\'oyne Ne1vto11 are on hand for additional tnusic and con1cdy support, but despite their old-college-try efforts. nothin~ ever jells. ll only pablun1s. I Regulars Varli Aro1nri~ld. writing and pact, h11s done w11v, way better. ditto flteu rs. F.tJlott and 1'"crguso11, \vho for the m05t purt buried Miss Gentry in ovcrarrange1ncnts. TlllNK Tl l•; in a in problem is that nobody seems to realize J\llss G. Is neither ia) a cornedlenn c, or tbJ a NOW PLAYING! Pf:TER FOHO.t. SUSAN GfotlGE "DIRTY MARY CRAZY LARRY" ... DENNIS HOf'PU "KID BLUE" belter of songs in the Barbra Streisand tradlllon. Hc~arding Uie s e c on d po int, Miss Gentry always hft.!I sounded her best .at u volu1ne just above u whisper. doing httr' sultry Southern UUn1;t w,lth the aid Of no n1ore than · '1 guitar and maybe a strlgg section. trt:s .1 1884 Newport Costo Mesa S48 1SS2 ~IRST RUN! NOW SHOWIHCi "NEWMAN'S LAW" + "SSSSSSSSSS" EXCLUSIVE OA.A.HGE COUHTY ~1icha('J Greer and Ea r I PROGRAM ll"GI Pomerantz join in so1ne 1 ~==========~~==========::'. C()medy skits. bul they Jose, 1. too. Peppialt, v.•ho as lhe show's produce r was in charge or the WIHHlll. M.Y. DlA.MA CRITICS CllCLI AWAlD •• · i,;...:c11,1~,-1,1: r .'r'f. ·1' ,. TlllH<ffl ·;au.\' 0111H1:.;.-1. r',111r1: .. -""'"' ~~rr. N.Y. Tl"'" "THE HOUSE OF BLUE LEAVES .. &ty JOHH GUARE • • €D Hodtt!IOdit Lod&t (fl Sctetd R1tt r 1:30 (6) Of a It r's Clloict O Ditk Van Dyke rub Mtl'f Griffin Sholl 9:00 0 ('2j (]))Ci) C 111 I In '~l1hf fhr.hl to Murder" (R) Cannon is h11ed by 1n insurance compaftJ' ID loute a mining airli11tr con~1ning lhrte milhon dollfn ln ucu11tits. O Q300 €l:)NIC Wt~n esd•r •orie : (Cl (2hr) .. TM World ol Htn- fJ OrWnr (RJ {CQ!n) '64 -'Ptter SeUt1s. Paula Prentiss, Anr.da lans· bury, Tom Bosley. The lite ol a con· cert pianist bKomes comphtated when t..,o prep sc.llool 1111s develop a crusll on him. •Florida!! ·No Comediene . m[l7 ~~\:::~:t ff Hots Ntw1 Utut lhKals i :OO iJ QJO 0 fl) News O Bowline tor Doll111 O l illJ liul1.u11 Ariton.1 Cnrsaft Lt) The h ld Ones (}2l MllYit: (C) (Zhr) "'Hon1111oon M1dl!nt" (com) '61 -Steve Mc· Queen, Piula Prentiss. Esther Roll.e Briug·s Reali.~11i to 'Goocl T. ' i1nes EDITOR'S NOTE: Esther play the truth of the line. and Rolle left a Braa.dway .ltit ~~:~line is funny it will come for the glllmor of a televi· Mch people -by necessity. "To. me being on Broad,vay :.• NOW! AT THEATRES & ORIVE·INS THROUGHOUT SOU THERN CALIFORNIA I (~ M<Wit: (C) (2hr) "'Nt pl•ne's D1u1btrr" (tom) '49-[sthu Wit· Iiams. Ricardo M1tnt1lb1n. Red Sktl· ton, Btt!J Garren, -_.....__t•Jltvrntr-L-- 1 Whit's MJ Lint? I love Lucy _UJ lt!mlol---a!) CurUKI dtl Mundt "Good Times" is about a sian scr~iv i_~sUow ~~e';__ -~!a~k family that's do~_but the sta; of "Good Ti1nes," a·· not out. .The comedy comes "\V}len you're poor you don 't. was as . big ·as you can go. i cry all day long. In fact you didn't want to corne out here don't have time for tl, Some "'and be a J1oll)"vood maid. I P.f:9pJe ~on~~red ~w!Y-t.a~avorett--ft1r'pos.ltlon as. an about a fanuly that's poor 10 . · such an affluent country. I actress In a leading role on =JHEREUOTHlr-1HEfWOft'f111Ylro-:·1"~I II T1kt1 A Thiel (!1) (1) I Dream or Jt1nni1 EE Esm1r1ld1 tl i (!) Dr111net f.tl Tht frtnth Chrf I;,(})) World ol S111viv1I Dr1m1 l iUJ Gra~m Arirona C1115Me A11on 81r11r Sllow Tllrtt Stoe1es ;,Joe Hew 011i"1 to1me Http TllJ Nti(llW 9:lOQ Ntws a> Or1m1 10:00 0 (~ t})) CIJ Koiik "The Girl fn \ht ll1~er'' (II) KojilJ.; lrars that the b11aue stranguli1!1on of a 1oun1 "oman may mean lhe 1teme11enc1 or a psychopa1h1c •mer who took lhe liYes ot seven women lwo ~ilt:i. ea1lier ind then di~ppeued. Dm(i)@ Nns l6J Pu ry M1so11 0 @ (}) tl) Doc Clliot "The Run- 11t1N (RJ A troubled, motherleu teen111 hoy s11un1n to est1b lW. IM011n's H11oe1 tan11 SP-KC 11-----Ltfi.-11ab.A..Dt·~---~ C•J labbJ &oldlbof1 SJI• hlJ identity •hile strivina: to prove hi~to.--11is____amdcmi1ndin1 tathtr. Sam Bottom:i. and Morpn 0 Million $ Mnie: (C) t?ln) ''M1sti1 of 111\inlut" (adv) '!>3- Enoll nynn, 811\1ict Clmpbtll, All· 1t1ony Steel, Ywon111 furne1u.t. ("iOJ ft'ew l'liu: Is Jl&Jlt m Tiil! Gill [!.1) QJ To Tell lhr Truth (2}(6)Holl_rwood Squut1 t!) Sto11frenl (at ()J) ronce Sur2ton CD Celebrity Bowlin& {E lht Gho11I C1n1 Woo11W11d guut. (ID Unin11ity ol Chiuto Jowid· l1 blt '1he Middle Ust; Problems & Prmpeets" (S rr1ise t1tt LOfl Chrlt JO;lO 0 Jo urney-to Mrtntvre W l ill Cosby fl) LI Cludad Gritl W T1Jo.Co111lcos 11:00 e 0 0 Ell ED m News ~J (U Q.9) fl) [D 00 Ntn D Best ot Grou'211 1:00 6 (fl PlEMIEllE lob bit '•ntry's (6j fCi&hl C1lltry Htpplness Hour Miss Gentry is stir 0 Mo~le: "Major llrhrs" (cDm) hostess ol hM own mini·st1ies th1I '41 _ Wendy Hi ller, Rtll HarriM!n, will 1ir lor !ht next lour Wtdnes· Robert Mo11ey. 1!1ys In lhis lime pe1iod. Gutsts will m Ho11n'1 Hlfots include such st111 IS Jim Nabors. 0) The Untoudliblts. Glen Campbell and W1yne Newton. (ll:l (1J Statl file Q QJ(])®)a;)C h111 "G1n1 Qjlht Saint Wu" (R) The Chilse unit ln!illriltes W June W1J11t IR) two w1rrina: 1ana:s to lt11n how both ll!i (.!))The l"iontt1s ue be1 n1 supplie d with stolen auto. t CY! .. , ... rnatoc \lltipons.. ;1 :JS ua w1111m1 "" 0 11,ICIA\I-. WOfldtt1ul Bild 11:30 D In(!))(!) CIS Lite Mowie: W1$ the Pelican A 111mtd 1epor11 (C) "ltmberi 1·52" (d11) '51 - 1bo11I pollu!1on 1n our oce1ns, 11vci$ Karl Ma!den, £1rem Z1rnba1ist J1., ITid strt1m1 ... 111ch crippled and Nalahe Wood. •oiled the Cllilornia oehc1ns. Pt11i· 0 fH 00 (LO)€?:) lokny Cll!.Oll tldtS in the Wlltrw1ys CIUM!d lllt Q flldUitd flid;e11 . pelicans e11s to form with Y&f)' thin (6) Twlli,tlt Zone shtl!s thus prevtn1inr. the birth 01 0 (l1J Ci) fl) Wide Worirf of ln· the younr. Eddie Albert n1111tes. h rt.alnmtnt "A S~''J!t IQ Dilrr7t f. 0 (!zl Ci) CD Thr Cowbors "Tht Zanuck" W1lttr Piageon, Red But. Trio" (RJ Mr. Ni1Mlinrt1 li1Ms fits · tons and Rolldy McDowall host this pe ralely to save lht hte ot Jimmy, salule whoch hiRhlighu Darryl f. loulld neu death two ll1ys 1ltt1 Z1nuclt's hill·tentury in filmmaklnr. btin, caught in I coyote lr1p. ID All1td Hitchtotk PrtHAtS m Oealtt's Choice ED Day at Nishi Safari lo •dwcnlurt . O .. ,. . . Estt Mtiico Nutstro 112.0D , Mo11t . Dtw1rs Kolrda(' (dra) a~ Mo ·t · (2hr) •The Gtnt!t Rtin" JO-Nanty Cauoll, P1ul Lukas. -, vi • C l (~One Sttp Bryend (d11J 66--Christophtr eorrt. yn Mol'ie· "Ro ui Cep" (d<•) "5'-lla Day. • I tD Washing1on Conntcti11n Hobert T 1ylor, Janet Ltlgh, GeOfge ~~ 001 lill' Cr1h1m Atllona Ctu· ~'Windtilult eil Championship IVrtsUin1 1:00 CI) Q 0 @ @@News '1) Ja p1n111 lln1u111 r rognm 0 llgJ TomorrlN' a:30 0 (L1J (}) m Alt Wtdfle!d,. Mo-1:4S 0 M"ie: "l rathtrs-i11-ln" (com} 'it: (C) (90) "l ltod S,Ort (RJ '57-Trrry Thomas, Ian Caimichael. (dr1l '13-81n-Jfi hnso11, l111y tt11· z:oo ma11.ffi1ht Show: "The Nan IA- man, G•ry. Busty, Boll lock•n2. Vil sillt" "Th I r·Posln" •~ery. Ste1n1 one of his tt1mm1tes • e ou dtsl1oyed bJ pre,sute and p11n, 11 3;10 0 M01it: "CtMJ·Up" (mJ1} '49 h•&h s.c:hoot bo, llluul11 a11insl -Wilham Oendii, Dtnnis D'Keelt. Thu rs day DAYTIME MOVIES S:OO O (C) "HosUle liu111~ (wts) '67- Gtoret Mont1omt1y, l ib Hunltt. Yv1:mn1 OeCa1lo. -M1t11iel tallan, ltlTJ Thomas, Lionel Jdlrles. I!) (C) "llin1t & His '4ikltn Piilll" (wes) '66--hhr~ Damon. 3:00 rt) (CJ '1ht Bobo" (tom) '67 - Pt!U Stlltls, Brill [-lund. 0.Q) (C) "P1tm Springs Wtek1111f" (com) '6l-Tror Donahue, Connie Steveni. . from their refusal to be put comedy series winch Sile down by p o verty , said we!d . find m 0 re Broadway. sympathetic ears for such a "I'd never looked at TV. I show than 10 years ago. had never considered myself lays straight. "lf the line is unemployment, rejection or prejudice. /irnny, ··she says, "lt"ll come out." By J ERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP I "People who play for comedy bore me ." "\Ve may be poor, but we"re not losers," she says. "If film material. But the screen '1THE ENERGY · c r is i s test sounded so glamorous it shO\ved a lot of white middle-W3.s my chance to find out class people what it's like what it was like.'' ~ when you want to work and1-------·· ----· That seems an o d d '11'hen 11011're poor you don't cry all day long. In fact, you don't h ave can't find a job." Miss Rolle was born not in a big city but in Pompano Beach, Fla. She was brought up oo a lann with her 17 brothers and sisters. After graduating from hil?h HELD OVER ! 2nd llG WEEK! statement from Esther Rolle, stuor Ule"-fiit corned)' Wie5 "Good Times." But s he explains: "I don't like comedy with neon signs flashing. 'This is comedy. you must laugh.' f'1·e never been able to appreciate it. ~hool in A1i!i.mi , _Miss Rolle ~----------i set out ·to be a writer and enrolled in classes in New York City. \Vhen s he performed with a f e 11 ow ''I guess I'm too much of a rea list. It doesn't tickle my funny bone. That 'S a great art form, but it's not my taste for doing or watching.·• you\·e got love you're a winner, and we 've got love.•· IN THE SHOW, Florida st udent in an ori g i n a I lives in Chicago with her three dramatic sketch, a professor child ren and her usually suggested she should be acting unemployed husband , played instead of writi ng. . "CONCERT AT BANGLADESH" p/u, Ollf'All·Tll!ll' Molt PopwllN' S..rfi"9 Fil111 "PACIFIC VIBRATIONS" It is not tha t Miss Rolle has anything against comedy. On the stage. she has been in such comedies as ··Day o f Absence" and ' ' H a pp y wending." by John Amos. In provate life. She propiptly sw1tchl'd to 1\fiss Rolle has no children and . dramatic classes and . l~ter.l_'==========::'. I i! separated from h c r became one of the or1g1nal husband members of the N e g r o · Ensemble Theater company in "l think it's very, very much New York . of the reality of ghetto life." she sai d. "I have quarrels ''I \\'AS RAISING hell on ''1 THOUGHT T was the \Vilh a few things. Usually. v.'e Broadway In 'Don't Play Us j!Teat heavy," she ,s a id . can straighten them out. Since Cheap' with my Sl40 take "People told me I y.•as funny, this is supposed to be a home pay y.1Jen I was asked to but I thought of myself as a comedy, some people said, lry out for 'Maude,'" she very serious actress. I played 'How can yoo talk about such said. it for all I was V.'tlrth. but I depressing things and hope to:;::;;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;:::::::::;1 guess that's what brought tile make people laugh?' I comedy out. "I tried to explain that poor "I still don't approach my people have more laughs than work as a comedian. J ------------ approach it as very real , and .-----------, if there's cotncdy in ii I hope it comes out of the sincerity. I Family Twin Cinema 171~10R001(HUll\T\T Fo..,,t<11n Y11ll~y -9~2 1248 CI NEMA I PUILIC DEMANDS ONE MCIE WEEK! BEST ACTaESS GLENDA JACKSON "A TOUCH OF CLASS" w .... Its! Syt1Jt0f'fift9 Actrt11 T oltt11 O'HHI "PAPER MOON"w.tN1 CINEMA II All WAlTCMSHlY "Alice In Wondtrland" • '"Chorli• oM HM' AIMJfl" IPGI m\'I• ........ ., Ym.~.~!~ ... ~ COllOI•"• DEL Ml.It where the lilies bloom United llrhsls ALSO 'Jeremy" HELD OVER! EXCLUSIVE AREA EHCiAGEMENT A VERY FUNNY MOVIE! "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST" L.A. TIMES "THE TALL BLOND MAN WITH ONE BLACK SHOE" IOI ..... T11tld.y, City I S..tlt CMd UDll:S I 5f:H. CIT. 50c 'ti 2 • "Dif+t Mllrf, Crwty Urry~ ''LAST SUMMll." rG-• ''THE LAST DETAIL" ''TMHewC .......... t~lt Sptei&I rrlu 12:30 ID 2:00 '"'"· !1•'"'1 Sun. a. HolM:l1¥•) SI .00 S.A. FAWY tMANCMESTEA EK.I O.G. Fii.WY (CITV OA. EKJ "Hl:WMAH'S LAW'' 'G "TheJ S~D•I Horwo - "WMrt TM Ulito ai-" "JEltlM'f~ l'G 5:30 0 "Johnn,, YtM'lt W1nte4" (m~s) ·!6-klhn Sl1lu, ~iJ lJ111 lrd llrhs r~ WALTER MATHAU lo 3:30 (I (C) "Uft l•mtd"' (Id•) ·~s -ON~ W'U:110~'1 ~... .. l1ront Powt1. Sus1n Hay11111cl, llich· ,._.,,..u ~''"-'"H 11l(OTr.uu $pKltl r rlc:ot 12;JO ID 2:00 P·'"· {1actpt Sun. 6 Holld.IVI) S1.00 l)1i•" IJ nl1 11' UI I''" ll:OO O "llklin1 011 A lltlnbo11"' (we~) '41-Gene Autry. (C) "The Ti1tr •t· tac~1" {dri) '6l -lino Vtn!ura, Rot.tr Han1n. trd £gan, Ritt Moreno. .. ,~~~:.':c-"1 IPGI !V (Cl "Battle H1mn" (dra) '57 -1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~===========~ l~==::====~~=:'_[_ ___________ I Hoc~ Hud,on, Ma rtha li1ei. JZ:OO W "l ittle Stations" (1dv) ·~6 -O (CJ ''P11 Joey" (m~s) '57-rr1nk S1n1tr1, K•m No~~k. Rota Hayworrh. John l und. l!etle Brantllt . fl 71 l3J "l•w of Uit Timber'' (ldYt 1 :00 ~6 "Death ot • Scoundrtl" fdr1) ·•0-Monte Blue, M1rj0r11 lltynotds. 'S"li--Gtar2e Sanders. ZiA Zs1Gabo1 1 4:30 I#> (t,l "Gildf• Parl I (dll) '4.,_ 2:00 0 "Yov Mwil St Jok/111" (com) '6~ ll11a Hayworth, Glenn ford. KOCE, CllANNEL 50 Orange ' County's Ullf" television station, KOCE-TV, has sche~uled the following special programs today. Detailed listi n11 of Channel SO's programs are carried in the Daily Pilot's TV Wet!k each SundaS'. S:• lflWMllKtlM II ,. II y I It It °"9r1Jf!Y IC) ''0 10 1111rm11 EllWI¥" -l•-4t si• l'rHMMI 1-11111 111 1 CCI "UllnL1tl1111" • """'°"" '° 41tl COllllll't Clllll/111 Cer,.., _fCI "l11ttonno111 -a1,11tll0'!1" -LnM11 " t i• •lldr1c c"'"•"' 1c1 S!tl IHllN 11 ... 1 (Cl t i• 1'1m!IJ lll1k Mllllflftflll tCJ ' "P'1rton1I LO.I Pl1nnloo, .,,,, 1" · lt\IOI\ " t :at Dtmet1ll1nt 111 C111!11r11 !Cl "A"'tif'oloolctr lllll•r: A Olttunlon wllll Of. MtrOt•lll Melld" -Ot M1r~1r1t MIMI 1111(111111 tr.t 11.it of lllll'IOl)OIO'jtt -111 !Mi!, prt11nt. UICI 11111,,..1. Lenon 30. 11• 111l•ldwc11111 " "ll••l r•r °"'r .. llJ !Ct ''G t el II tr m1 t l!llel'IY" • \,lt1'0ll l• J;)I l'1mrrw 1111• "''""""'""' CCI "PtrlOf\lt Li»t f>l1nAh'f, Piii l" · l111on H l:M M1lt1r""' T 11 t1 Ir I tCI "Upst1lr1, Dcwn111J•1" • Elli..,. £It~'' Olfl cl '"' llw rv""""' . l!l•11ix111 11r1"'1 11tr u...,i11m11t chllll "Omt '" E1t<111 Pl1r1 t :OO Thi Ll llll Ouer11l ICI "Oll'tfMI 111 F MlllOf, ~111 10, No. V" t i)I li>lfl'll11tt111s In C11lhlrtt fCI "Antllropo!OfW TOclay; A lllKllll!Oll wllll Or. M1r11r1t Ml!lll" • U iton • "THUNDUIOlT Al"D UGtmOOT" fll .,.HI GllAT GATSIY" IP'Gol "WHUI 1HI UUIS ll.OOM" 161 • ..,AN..LOH"tNI "THE STING" UJGI -.. CHAILll Y.t.111.tCk" IPGI "Dll TY MAIY, Cl.UY LAll.IY" ll"GI • '"T'U.CHll" lll "THRl l MUSttl TllllS" -''12 CHAIRS" • "FORGOTTEN ISLAND OF SANTOSHI\'.' A.11 lncrl"dlbly flM wrfilM) odwfn....,. for ,t•tryon• who lo•t f ffM OC.IM and tf'lt od•tntw• of tra•f l -fl~ oro.nd Hit ........ - HOW $HOWJHG -Ot<4l WfEk OHL Y SOUTH COi.ST THEATRE IS,S.COASTHIGK'#AY,U.GUJUHACH- ShowthMs 6-t -10 fi'.M. • 4t4-1514 ' mmv MARY CRAZY LARRY . [PG]O cot.Olt 8YDElU~E· ~ ; ORANGE COUNTY COSTA MESA UA So NIWPOlf lfACHl..J.,C/WIJ~ -. C<lasl Pllll 7 ]4.540.os~ DUN'[ •• FOUNTAIN V•ll(Y Orange Mall Cinem1 714.037-0340-: •• fount1inV1lleyC1ntma 714.839.JSOO O~•N&C -:·.- rOUNT•IN V•ll(Y Stadium OriYe·ln :::) 714,Ji.3~18&0-: : Founl1i11 V1Ue1 Otitt·ln 114·962·248! STANTON Stanton C1nemrlf(.894·t41 ~ ~ LUCILLE BALL ..''MAME" hily: 7:]0 & 9:4S W .. W.S..: 2:01).S:OIJ.1:JO & 9:4S 11m•-...... Tiil SllUll.All Ell'l£1$ ~ C-1 Film f..1tiY .. l td Scrt111 .,., Awft , ~!~ ",.... Qlifiill ·~r;r ~Db<?' TICMlllCOLOll @0 W11~•• &'DI" • 0.lt,-r .IQ!4S s.1.;s .... -J.~4J.10:2s Ooii -7 & 10:4S S1l./ 1111.-J.7°10:4S • 2nd FealuM ,..,.,...._ • "JUDGE ROY BEAN" 0""1-1;.JO S•l./S.... -l-4:4M:l0 ~ .. . . ... ' . - • . . . . . . . . ·> ,. . , I I ) I l I 7 . . .Laguna · Bea~h EDITIO N VOL 67, NO. 156, 7 SECTIONS, 11 6 PAGES Bartholomew, Dean, 'TRUSTE E AREA ONE Will l1m Dean - TRUSTEE · AREA TWO Robert Bartholomew TRUSTEE AREA THREE La wrence Taylor Taylor By JOHN VALTERZA , Of tM Dllll' l'llot S11ff Voters in the Saddleback O>mmunity College District 'l\Jesday elected two Tustin men by substantial margins and a Laguna Beach candidate. by a thin edge to positions on the Saddleback College Board or Trustees. • . The new members selected to fill seats on a board stung by many resignations are Robert Bartholomew, an avowed member of the John Birch Society in Today's Final N.V. Stocks TEN CENTS • New Trustees Tustin; fellow Tustin resident William Dean and Laguna Beach locksmith and veteran school trustee Larry Taylor. The tallies showed these results in the polling, -ln Area One, oorth Tustin Deao with 32,671; Steven ~fueller, 13·,m and Henry Stanley, 5,271. .:.... Area Two, South T u s I i n • Bartholomew 25,515; Jeffrey DuBowe, 10,912 and of. Alan Greenwood. 14,558. -In the Lagtma battle, Taylor garnered 17,825, and Ronald Kreber was close behind with 16,575. The two candidates who withdrew siphoned key votes a\.\·ay with Norman Coles 9,584 and 1i-Uchael 11lcFadden with 5,814: Trustee-elect Dean is a vice president of North American Rockwell's space division and the program manager for the firm 's space shuttle project . The 44-year'i!ld resident or l\Jstln said his interest in the district was whetted (See SADDLEBACK, Page ZI Laguna Schools, Override Lo.ses Dow Yon Voted-Taylor .Tells __ z~amg M~•t0""'"'" • Sciddleback Laguna Mulling .. - ·Measure . _,.. . Narrowly Defeated Here is the final tabulation on all election resu1ta for Orange Co\Ulty and local races on Tuesday's Primary ballot: SHERIFF-CORONER Brad Gates -234.451 Spero Janise -5,906 Jerry L. Lawrence -12,453 Marsha1 Norris -36,319 George Savard -37 ,960 Gale Ymlovf -8,500 BOAJ!D r_or IVPDVllORS fadlllolrlet David I. Baker -30,07' (Runoffl John T. Doan -14,)49 IA""""8 J: Scllmit -21,217 (Runoff/ ,.-JUl(lll B. a.rt. -IG,743 Garry Nelle~ -15,137 5111 Dlslrlet RoDlld w, C.1pen -54,480 Marcia M. Bents -18,866 Nolan Friu.elle -7,363 Jim Thorpe -17,171 . ASSESSOR Jack P. V1Uerga -229,139 Raymond Preston -103,847 . AUDITOR Vidor A. Helm -291 ,263 .LOCAL MEASURES D. Irvine Parks Yes -5,!93 No -1,937 E. Irvine Bike Trails Yea -4.,17Z No -2,001 SADDLEBACK COLLEGE BOARO Truslee .U.. No. I William E. Deu -32,671 Steve Mueller -13,372 Henry M. Stanley -5,271 Tras&et Arta No. Z Robert c. Bartholomew -25,515 Jeffrey S. Du Bowe -10,912 AJan H. Greenwood -14,558 Trustee Area Ne. S Norman Cole -9,584 Ron Kreber -16,575 Michael McFadden -5,814. Llwrence .w. Taylor -17,825 COUNTY SCHOOL SUPT. Robert Peterson -~1,842 Dooald D. Woodington -118,751 COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Are• No. t John D. Harper -24.,671 David H. Paynter -34,014. Area No.' Jobn o. App -31,768 Ernest G~ Lake -23,929 TAX COLLECJ'OR.TREASURER Robert I. Cl--280,:68 CLERK Wlllllm E. St Jolla -2.87,639 DISTRICT A'ITOl\NEY Ce<ll Hieb -212,019 , William s. Hulsy -83,142 Max A. Sturges -36,970 HE LEAVES HO ME OVE R T ELEP.HONE The Daily PUot sinctrely hopes that its ads won't drive you ((Oft\ your home. But here's one ad that did Just J.hat to the Newport Beach man who placed It : ~O CHEV. HO<izoa. 21 Ft, pwr. 11teer & bt'akes. 15,000 mi. Comp. sell-contained. llD generator, alr-eond, bike rack. May !radc/olfer. (Phone No.) The ad sold the motor home almost im- mediatt:l)' after the paper came out and lhtn went on to prOduce ao many inquiry c11ll1 that the advertbt':r left home to get away from the phone. Test a On~ly P lot ad ror the results you -want. Dial the direct u•" 642$13. • ' PUBIJC ADMINISTRATOR James Heim -285,442 RECORDER J, \\'ylle Carlyle -280,155 WATER DISTRICTS l\1unlcipal Water District Of Orange County Division 1 Founlain Valley, Huntington Seal Beach, Costa Mesa: Board Goals Trustee-elect Larry Taylor of Laguna Beach today briefly outlined h i s immediate goals as a new board member for the Saddlebaclt Community 'College District. Longer 'Freeze' By HILARY KAVE 01 1"41 IMU'f 1'111:11 Stiff Davkl K. Jone1 -28,186 Si.pi>eo T. 'l'lld<er -t7,2!0 Dlvilion Z Stal Beacb, Westm.insle.r Gerald E. Priee'-26).69 Harry D. Bentley -f,882 Gordon Gleason -14,439 DtrislGn 3 Beach, ""Ta y1or sald 'ttia\ \e felt the' most important job now facing the board was the election or a new dist rTC't superintendent io fill the gap left by the resignation of Dr. Fred H. Bremer1 He added that the present board was rushing the selection process and said he would "make waves" in attempting to temper the haste of the project. By JACK CHAPPEIL Of 11111 OMIT l'illt "lff • The Laguna Beacb .... fity ~ii will coolldeoan eli)rt-mo~ -otlhe controversial mu It 1-fa n1'i 1 y mne moratorium as a part ol its public hearing agenda scheduled for 7:30 to- night at City Hall. F.nacted ea an urs:ency measure, the freeze took effect 4Umedlately Feb. JS and sparked an immed1ate furor among the town's teal estate industry. Harbor Area-Sooth County Clem M. McCollocb -36,522 William D. Fenton -8.043 Sterling S. Sharrar -6,7211 "The most important thing is that we ., get a good man ," he said. New corutruction in the R-2 (medium residential). R-3 (dense residential) and C.1 (lighl commercial) T.OOeS ~'as barred except at levels one hair to two- thirds that previously permitted. Coastal lt1amlclpal Water District Division 3 Newpo rt Beach Hans J. Lorent -3,986 Winton M. Ashton -838 W. A. Coleman -655 Ed Vanclen Bossche -663 IMvlsion 4 Costa lt1esa • W1Uiam K. Patrick -3.493 Gene J. Adams -1,785 Tri-Cities Municipal Water District Dtvl1ion 3 San Clemente Richard l\f. Learner -617 (See COUNTY, Page 21 P ete rson W ins S uperintendent Post 3rd Time Tii."O-term incumbent Or. R o b e r t Peterson easily defealed Laguna Beach School Superintendent Donald Wooding- ton in non-partisan county Superinten· dent of Schools balloting Tuesday. Unofficial final results were: Peterson: 201 ,842 Woodington 118,751 . ' The campaign revolved aroung two central iss~s : incumbent Peterson's eight year record in office and challfilg~ Woodington's mobile 28 year career in education . Woodington charged the in~m~nt )Vith losing touch with the local d1str1~ts the county, office exists to serve and with leading an office that \l'as providing a declining level of services. Peterson called the challenger a "job h<tpper," citing the five different administrative posts Woodingtop has held . in his 23-ycar career in education. . Woodington resigned from a nmc- month old contract as superintendent of tile Laguna Beech Untflld School District to seek the $34,!KKI a year county post. an act which Petetson called a breach of trust. Woodington's an.swer to the charges was that i£ no ooe broke a contract to campaign for county super intendent. no one could ever run. HL'> background, v.'hich Included l'>'-'O years as state commi.!Sloner of education In C.Olorado, \Voodlngton said, gave hi!" a broader background and s u p e r t o r qualifications. County Board of Educati on candidates In the Second and Fifth Supervir.orial Districts al$o campaignl'd largely on crificlsm of the currmt operation of the county schools oCrlct. He added that the three new members of the board would be seated onl y 18 days before the presently set dead.lint ol July I for the naming of a n e w superintendenl "I aon't think that July 1 is a hard dale. It it takes until September, we've got to get a good man," he said. Taylor said he would try to open up the board meetings and establish new lines of communication lo high schools and all school districts within the territory se rved by Saddleback. He said he also expects to take a hard look at the college's building and finance program. Boy Shot in Back ROSEl\.1EAD (UPI) -A 15-year-old boy who was sitting in front of a house v.•as shot and killed by a group of youths Tuesday, police said. Police said when Mitchell Fraijo was approached by the youths, he ran to the rear of the house and WJlS shot in the back. The issue led to a write-in campaign during the March city council election in v.itlch the write-in candidates polled a .significent number of votes, but were not eleoted. The council enacted the Freeze to allow time for the city planning commission to redraw the city zonil)g laws and provkie for lower density in the multi-family wncs. City officials maintained that a recycling of Laguna land was replacinc: old single homes with apartments <>r condominiums. This <>Ver-building was c r ow d i n g existing neighborhoods and creating traffic, circulation, and de n s i t y problems. Although the city council ordered the planning commission to place a top priority on the drawing of the city zones, the rommission is still studying the matter. The extension is recommended by Supervisor Cas1le1·s Wins Easy Victor y in County /1 WINS NEW TERM HAND ILY Fifth Di1tric:t'1 C1sper1 I . . .. .. By WILIJAM SCHREIBER 01 tM DMIT l'l .. 1 Sti ll Incumbent Fifth District Co u n t y Supervisor Ronald Caspers ""'on election to his second term Tuesday, brushing askle challenges by three opponents. It had been thought Caspers might be forced into a runoff, but, when all the votes were in, he had about 54 percent of them. Final results are: Caspers: 54.4H ~farcia Bents: 18,f,66 Nolan Frltzelle: 7,363 James Thorpe : 17,In As in his past election effort, Caspers waged a big mooey campaign to retain hl!I seat. He raised more than $150,000 in his re-election bid and spent just under 1100,000. Hill three opponents all CUICeded he probably could not be beaten Jn the primary but merely forced Into) a Nove.mber runoff. Between them, his apponents raised and spent about $40.000. The Fifth Di.,trict race was marked by a pact among the candldataii not to spend more than about $93.000 each -about 50 ctn ta per -regl!tertd voter in the district. Ciupen· chle.f opponent, fl.frs. Bents of Newport Bead\, charged 11everal weeb ago that Casptrs had already exceeded that limit and hll 1120,000 in his spending. IS.. CASPERS, P1ge ll . . . . . . . ~ Wayne ~loody. planning Wrector. "This should give ample time for the council to receive the p I a n n i o g cmvntssiOll's reoonunt'fldationS,-hold the required public bearings and wait the required 30 days for any new ordinance to become effective,"M'ooQy said in his staff report. Regulations cllm!lltty In the planning commission bopper gene<ally permit' -In R·2 ' one dwelltnf unit per 3,000 square feet of lot area with a minimum· size lot established as 6,000 square feet. Existing subdivided lots oC less than 6,000 square feet are alk>wed home or guest house per 2,000 square feet. -In R-3: one dwelling unit for each 2,000 square feet or lot area with the minimum size lot being 4,000 square feet. -In CI: residential densities not to exceed those permitted in R • 3 • Residences are to be designed as an integral part of commercial development. Dwellnig units are considered by the city to be living areas equipped with kitchen or cooking facili- ties. This eliminates OOl:el rooms. * * * Lag una Council Studies A rch Beacli , R anch Laguna Beach voters. by a slim 400 votes, rejected the school tax override measure designed to bring $271 ,600 into- the Laguna Beach Unified School District Tuesday. The countywide turnout \.\'as S2 percent, but Laguna voters -perhaps moli\'ated by the controversial tax measure -made a stronger showing at the polls. with 68 percent Voting "'no" on the override v•ere 3.971. while 3,571 voled "yes." Capt. Gerald Linke, one of tv.·o lrustees who \.\'ilhdrew their support from the measure just one v.·eek before the election. said today, "We'll just have to tighten our belt and go to ~·ork." Llnke, who was satisfied with the election results, added, '·The district has got to realize that money just doesn 't grow on trees." Linke said he has suggestions for reallocations in the budget and will bring them before the board at tonight's llleeting. ' Another trustee, Jane Boyd, who backed the election to the end. said she \\-'as "deeply disappointed in the results.•· ''I feel we have a long, ilifficult road ahead or us -both this year and next year. There are certain people who just didn 'tsee the situation clearly. and that 's 1 where the fault lies," f\1rs. Boyd said. Supt. Don Woodington, who also lost in his bid to unseat incumben t Robert Peterson, county superintendent of schools sald he, too, was disappointed today. · "I really thought all along the override . . v.·ould win , although I thought it would be Arch Beach Heights, a »unit hous1"' lose. \\'hen the board c a I 1-e d the tract Oft Park Avenue, Laguna Beach ~lion, ii said, in effect. that it 'vould Lumber Company street improvements, ;i'" the public what it wants to do,'' and the city position on development <>f \Voodingfon commented. the Moulton Ranch will be weighed by "Well, the public answered and said the Laguna Beath City Council tonight. not to raise the revenue limit. but to The matters will come up on the reallocate. Now we have to restructure council's public hearing age o d a ~he budget .o~ the current lev~ o[ scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. tnco~e. and 1t s ~olng to be tough, the The council will also con.sider a supermtendent said. nonrecommendation by the city planning Ruth Ann Wittman, who together with commission on the affect of the $26 (See OVERRIDE, Page %) rilillion Aliso Water Management Agency system on the air quality or the south county area. The commission decided the matter was so complex it could not make rccommendaUon to the council. Under Arch Beach Heights, the council will give final approval to the specific plan ' for the area which like zoning regulates constructk>n and density in the hill top community. Laguna Beach Lumber Company owner Richard Jahraus has asked the council to determine if he has to put in street Improvements at the area or Arroyo Drive whcr ethc new site for his lumber operation abuts. Jahraus said his understanding "'·as · that by relinqulshlng rights of ingress and tgress on Arroyo, he v.·ould not have to put in the curbs, sidewalks and gutters. If he hat to, he said ht wants to be able to use the road just like the rest of the public. Some 10.000 acres of the f\foulton Ranch behind Laguna Beach are planned ror development with an e s t I m a t t d population of 57 .ooo persons. Hearings on the rtloulton plan will be held at-tile County Planning Commission meeting at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Santa Ana. The city has in the past been highly critical of portklns of the plan. However, formal opposition by the city of Laguna IS.• COUNCIL, Poge !) ' • I --..... ·-..... .._ .. ---· .... Orange Wea ther Night and morning low clouds clearing to hazy afternoon su.n-- shine" Thursday. Warmer inland~ ... with highs in the mid 70s. Beach· - highs in the upper 60s. • ,. INSIDE TODAY Pat and Richard Nixon were~: marritd there . Humphrey Bo-4 {l(lrt boozed tl1ere. Teddy Ri>ofe.· vclt slept there, a11d ndw the • ~J issio1i l11n is backdrop for movie about a Holl ywood tegemk•, Story , Page 16. "' ,,_ ''"'(' , ..Iii.. to L. M, .. f11 U (1lllWlll1 t-$ (•-(WMt' 1' ( 1.Ht!llH '~" Cimlu .!6 (~,, ... ,. 4'- 0llltll ""'~'' n Ellll"111 ..... I l!Mttfllllllltllf 14•11 ,._. Jl·H ,.., ""' ltlC.... ,, Ho•-t JI .fJlll Uft4•~ • 1 ' . ·~ " DAIL V PILOT LB Wedne~d)' Jun~ 5. 11174 - U.S. Obscenity Ruling to Swamp OC in .Smut? lly l.. PF;TER KRl1':C unconstitutionally vague in falling to 0• tM 0•1" '11t1 J1•11 define "'hat is obscene. The 2l·p11.:e , ./\ rulu111\lcsday declaring Olli(o rnia'.s dl'Clston was based on the scrl·t·nln& of o&oeni1y t!"· unconstitutional m a 'I "Deep Throat" by Bucnll p ;1 r k 'ii rht'an Orrini;1• Count~· '''111 th~ SYl'an1ped with dirly n1ov 1r houSf'~ n11d ":'lduh " Pussyca t Theater. booklitores. a SiX'kesrnn n for District Assistant Orange County District Attome)' Cecil flick~ said todtty. Allon1e)' MiC'hael Capizzi said a deti1$ion L..1w cnf-Ort'<'mt•nt and j u d i r i a 1 ,o:Ul have lo be made \Yhcther lo rewrite :iutlioritl,,s through<lut" the counly \\t'n.• the hnv or rippcfll the ruling dirc-ctly to aghast at tilt' ruling. but 1nost dt't'l!ned th~' U.S. Supreme Court. . 3ny 1n1me<l.la tr ron1m1•n1. Capizzi s:1id the probnblt• n1ov<' will be ;\ thrc<'1ud gc panel ruled tbe In v• 1s ~peal a.nd he said he i! opti mistic Tearl1rrs Volv To Picket Board l\leet Although rounnt' inaltt'rs rill tonight"s agenda of the Laguna Beach Unitied School Uistri rt, :in unsch e duled appearance b~· plncard~:irrying teach ers prob:ibly 1vill n1ake the 1nreling a few Qegrers h(ltrer than usual. Jiene1red sal:iry negoliations \\'tre c.."pec ted 10 begin today bcty,·een the Ctrtiflcated Ernployes Council (CECl. 1f1e teachers' official b:lrgaining group and dis1rict ad ministrators. Teachers vo\\'ed lo return 1onight to 1he 7:30 board met>ting and picket ir the negotiat ion results rrorn the afternoon \\'ere not sntisractory. said st rategy commiltcc leader Jerry F:iir. a teacher at. lhe gistric1 's continuation school. Pair said the teachers y,•jl\ remain a the dis trict offices tonight until an agreement is reached. He said he cxper!J more than 100 tt!achcrs lo picket today :ind tonight. -· The picketing comes on the heels (lf a one-day s1rike held by teachers last Wt:ek -organi?.ed by a militant faction unhappy • \\'Ith the 1974-75 s a I a r y S<'ltlemcnt. ~ - The board offered teachers a three ~rccnt hike in Jl,J.;;irch. and the. La~una 'Beach Unified Facult v Ass oc 1 at 1 on jLaBUFA) did not · lake any further action to secure lhe seven percent boost ori~inally requested. Disgruntled teachers, mainly at the high school. organized last week's protest. and fu rther actions this week, in an eHon to reopen salary negotiations. The te.'.lchers are now ask ing a seven percent increase -and angrily cite the discrepancy in the administra1ors' P3Y· a.nd 'ttachcrs· salaries. If the teachers do attend the mttting. a representative y,·ill be able to speak to '1he board early in the meeting. during the portion of the agenda, "suggest10ns and comments lrom ,·isitors " Bes.ides the ,·isit bv Ult> teachers. board members will mcStly handle routine items. However, at one point in the evening. 1rus1ees will discuss the failure of Tuesday's tax .ovc:i-ride elfllon, and its effect oo t.he d1StrJ!c. From Pagel C.A.S PERS ..• But top Caspers aides said the supervisor considered the ceiling to run from the date he officially filed as a candidate and y,·ould not include mone y spent before that date. r.1rs. Bents charged late in the campaign that Caspers and his aides had "strongarmed"' big companies into making large campaign donations. She said they feared decisions on projects needing county approval would be swayed if the money wasn·t given. · Caspers lab\cd the charge "ridiculous." Caspers' other t1\'0 foes. Dr. Nolan F'rizzel!e of Ney,•porl Beach and .James Thorpe of San Ju:.in Capistrano, waged active campaigns but spent limited amounts of money. Optometrist Frizzclle st umped around the district, stoppin g at centers and other public areas appealing for votes. Thorpe, the former mayor of San Juan Capistrano. concentrated in the south county area, "'here he is best known. · OIAHGECOAST t i DAILY PILOT Ti. 0.•1'9'1 t<>o I 0.."I F"'U: """-ft" (f>-..,...., 1.,,, w,...,,..,,,.., .. _ . .,,...rr,1""°'•"l" """"' """'''~' ·1 tuo>N•o """'°"'~ -'°"' M• _.,,_, 1,1 ""'I ,,.~~ ''""'Y· to. Cm•• !,I•.. N.,_.PO'I O..-.~ """'">OI"" IMotN,"""' 1,' '1•11«; 1 ·~~"' (M..-h 1 .... ,,,..5-1.11<oi..<.• •"" :••' c,,.,,~~·~ s ... "'"'" c.,,.,...,,.no " . .,.. .. ,, . ..,_ •O·•·on" ~-::O!"'(I'" .,., "• n.,~ '"" .,.,fl<:,Pfll fl'•!!'•\fl>""I DO ... I " •I JlJ •'•C' r;.o.,s,.r~• cn1••~'0"' °'~"""'• (ll'f)f, ~.-~n•f ! '#, .. j .. , ... .,.,.,1.1,.. .. ~ ....... , .. ,.,..., ........ lfi...-1,. Mu/,i,.,.., ""•""1"0Eaio Q.,.r,,. H l <> 1 P~P 1111 An< !""'1.l.t""Y'Q(!t'.11'\ L..-.ltechotflct 22' laf"J .-...~ 1.u ... "l fvb...,, PO. Bo.M6. m s1 °""'°""" ("l'.lt.'•Y lXI_ .. ,._ tu-.. ...... f'•'«~ ~-...._,, """" ....,n" .. ocr> lltr.IS.-eo.-.w ~no.,,... .. "°"......,~uc-11..,. T1i.p11-11 41642·4J21 Cl11tlft14ll .&d l\lttg 64:1·i671 l.991"1• h .U 01,..m.nh.: ,,._. 4t4-t466 ~"' ,~,. o. .. i.....i ~ ...... ~ ,...,.. ,..,,..,.,..~10,,,11 ......... Milot'"'""".., QI .-..... ,.,..," ........... , Do '-"·" ........... ~ .. !Ofl'_ol_'9"'_ $o.:o.., <ltn l»tf-'DW,t! QWa "''• Goh!Dt- "• iu0tc'1111-.l tw-1300 ""'r--.""'" t•00-~~,.,..~1..,"""""'1-lOO "'Oftl'llr From Page I COUNTY ... Don Conrad -438 Dh•i!i&n S San Clemente \\', ~I. ~tac Kay -909 C. Thom as Dahl -421 II. Jlunlingkm Beach lllgb School District Yrs -26.536 I No -31.261 L. Laguna Beach School Dlslricl Yes -3,571 No -3.911 0 . Rossmoor Ser\ice Area !l Yes .-2,836 No -l,207 P. Orange County Street Lighting Olstriet 1 Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, South Laguna Yes -3.139 No -3,404 \I. Or~nge C.Ounty S1reel Lighting District II El Toro. ~1ission Viejo \'es -3.075 No -3.329 Z. Orange County Street Lighting District 14 Los i;\\amitos, Rossmoor ·ves -:?.190 No -2..242 \V. l\letropolitan \\'ater District \"es -188.143 :-lo -154,614 DD. I.As Alamitos Street Lighting Yes -896 :-lo -848 llH. Sunset Beach Street Lighting Yes -129 No -219 U. Orange C.Ounty Street Llgh1ing District 10 Irvine , Tustin , East Tustin Yes -3,4!1 :\o -2.983 X. Orangt County Strttl Lighting District 1! Bay-\'ttw \"es -14{ No -129 )1, Orange CfiuDty Strttl Lighting District l:I El Toro. Tustin, East Tustin, Irvine Yes -2.627 .No -%,iii From l'flfle l S.IDDLEBACK • • relatively recently when he y,·as asked to sign petitions :seeking the Y.'ilhdrawal of the Tustin area from the community college district. He said the apparent uncertainty and lack of definite opinions about the college in the minds of his fe:l\ow residents was aoother moth·ating force in his candidacy. "We have to cause residents in the Tustin area to get to know their ·community college better,'' he said. He predicted OQ miracles in Tuesday's election. but deemed it an exce\lcnt start if he y,•ere to be elecled. Trustee-f:lect Bartholomew . a dedicated and avO\Ved conservative is a nurseryman with prior experience as a trustee of school districts. Bartholomew ha s served on the board or the Tustin Unified and High School districts. He believes he has "a fee!" for the residents of Tustin. He had promised that if he were elected to the Saddleback Board he would rtsign his position on the Tustin Unified Board. TIM! \Vyoming native came to the community in 1927; (lDe of his two children is a graduate of Sadrllcback. Bartholomew said he joined 1he controversial Birch Society in 1960, but has declared thal his men1ben:h lp in the group has never connicted with his role as a school trustee. He has deemed the deanne:ratloa issul' gripping Tustin for months as "a manufactured issue to further their (proponents') political aims." He believes the conservative educational policy of Saddleback is excellent, and has said the !Choo! has made progress in ils early years. Taylor. the victor by the slim margin in the ~guna trustee race is a 35-year resident of the Ari Colony and a veteran of years on school bo;irrls there. Active in the earliest day:;: of the fnrmalion of the SaddleM ck district, Taylor said his close auent1011 to the development of the district would be his :stronRcst attribute as 11 trustee. "ft gives me an edge over the o~r candidntes," he said during the recent campaign . Taylor Is a locksmit h and !he father of four clilldrcn. Nixon to Fill Po t WASfUNGTON !AP l -Presidrnl Nixon 500ll Y.'ill nom inate a replacemt'nt ror Donald E. Santarellf. the Justice Department orriciAl who resigned ofter ;i burst of criticism of the 11-esid<'-nt. Oeputy 'Vh itc !louse press S('CfCtary Gerald L. \Varrtn said Tuesd3y lh11t Nixon wlll move quickly to f i 11 Santt1n'lli'.s job as bead of !he Law Enforcement Assistance Admin ls1ratlon. f • lh:it the 1¥1lion's highest court will overturn the ruling. But watch out if It dotSn 't, he said. "Just. look aroWKI at the bookstores that are p-ying to exist now. Looi(. t some of the newstands on the atrttt. ''If there's no law ptohlbltlo& amut then I guess your imaginiUon ls the limit," he sa id . Tuesdtly's decision was handed down .bY u panel composed of U.S. DIWlct Court Judi;te Warren J. Ferguson, Judge \VU1i11m East of the District Court of ~llJ .. ilet Sl1lf P'Mlt EYING SECOND TERM 40th District's Hinshaw H iuslta w ~asily · Def ea.is GDP ·- Congress .f'oes lncu111bcnt 40tll district Congressman Andre\\' ~inshaw, President Nixon's congressman, easily l\'On renomination in the Republican Party primary Tuesday and will face Democrat Roderick Wilson Oregon •Rd. tth U.S. Circuit Court Judge Walter Ely. The decision y,·aS unanimous. Oranse County Superior Court Judge Byron K. Mclt1illan was obviously up1et by tM ruling. • • "You just can't tell these days,·· he sakt ••1 went out to Buena Park ll> see 'Deep Throat' and l thought It was obscene and I said 80. Apparently the federal panel disagrees and that's the: end of my Interest in the-matter. The panel ruled that lhe California law "does not apecifically define the sexual Quigley; .'Will Not Concede' Irvine City Councilman· Henry Quiglev. refused today to concede defeat in his bid for the Republican nomination for the state treasurer's race against Democrat Jess Unruh in November. Republican vote· tallies with 74 percent of precincts counted statewide, are: Quigley : 403,6311 Jobn Kehoe: 500,3{8 Results for Democrats are: Unruh: l ,088,444 Gray Davis: 534,834 Alan Short : 529,092 Two Los Angeles television stations and two radio news broadcastS predicted this morning that Quigley would carry the state, however. "I remember that ln 1966 Houston Flournoy gave a speech conceding defeat and later had to oome back · and say '\Veil, I guess I really won, after all'," Councilman Quigley said today. · ''It looks to me now that -Kehoe will be ·the Repu6lican nominee for treasurer, hut I'm not making otn.Y final decision until the ballots are 100 percent counted. "Y,:in _Qr . lose. ~~ ·~ur~ m.M,I]__~ hor~ race out (lf It," thl! second renn Irvin councilman said. ''The whole idea of running was to show people I could be a serious slatewide candidate and it looks like y,·e've done that," Quigley said. FN>m Page J OVERRIDE. •• of Oceanside in r\o,·ember. ltlary · f{outs analyzed the proposed Republican vore totals in the 40th school budget and decided -the election DL~trict are: was unnecessary, said she believes the Binsbay,·: 52.263 district will be able to "make it" without Earl Carraway: 4.~83 the extra funds. Oa\·id Gubler: 13,106 '·J can't think it'a the disaster part of Roger Lanphear: 5,fJOO the school board thinks it is," l\lrs. Democratic vote totals in the district Wittman said. are: She said that she feels programs can J•lm Groer, ll~70 be maintained, •"'I fl:oals fullGiled, Wilson: 19,242 without charging the taxpayers any more !-linshay,·'s ch i e f crities in the money. primary race "'ere not the Democrats Mn:. Wittman, a parent who has been a vying to face him in November, but steady visitor to school board meetings 11ctivity which ls prohibitod. '' The lawsuit attacking lhe state law was brought by Vincent Miranda. president ot Puuycat 'Iheat~ra of .Hollywood. after Orange County authorities confiscated the sexually explicit film "Deep . Throat" fron1 the Buena Park theAter In a series of raid!! last November. l'rosecutlon of Miranda and .a do:tcn other cases was halted pending the ruling, and Capizzi said the others niay now be in jeopardy. Ed11catio1a Race "We'll have to research the law to determine the effect on other pendl.ng cases," C<lplr.t.1 sakt. Caplul 1!10 dlaclosod that hb ornce wlll Investigate the p o s s I b 111 t y jurisdicUons that local may now enact their own anll·smut ordinances. Local laws were forbidden before because they were pre-empted by the state law, "But if there's no 1Jlate law, it may be possible for local govemmenls to enact their own,'' he said. " • Paynter, App Win 'Easily' ln the non·partisan county Board of Education race Tuesday, second trustee area candidate Dr. David Paynter and lifth trustee area candidate John 0. App defeated their opponents by wide margins. Unofficial final results in Area 2 were: Paynter 34,0lt John D. Harper 24,671 In Area 5: App 31,788 Ernest G. Lake 23,929 Lynda T. l\loss 24,349 Incumbents fn both the 2nd and 5th trustee areas, which correspond with the 2nd and 5th supervisorial districts, decided not to seek re-election and the All three sought to Improve the communleations between the county office and local school districts and to sb'engthen the leadership role· of the county office. App said he was the only candidate with a "vested interest" In the office since be was the only one with school. age children. He was also, he pointed out , the only non~cator running for the lay olfice. II elect..i, App said, he would attempt to determine whether services of the county office could be Improved and, if not, would recommend abollUon of the department. campaigns had a refonn character. L R The !lniform charge was that the agunan eports ty De}Sal'tfuenrof Education anti its . d of trustees was out ef touch with -.....!*'~I school districts.and it "'as not Sl!L@.A.nw_ork prov1dlng~c tn~viCFs 1r-' -- sholnuldAr. 2 Jolu D H J Two paintings valued al $1,900 were ea , l • arper r ., a ported stol Tu-~ f the bo former Fountain Valley City councilman re ~ ~ay rom .me and Fountain Valley school board of Samuel Weiner, 165 Woodland Drive, member, charged that his opponent, Laguna Beach. Paynter, was a career educator and Weiner told officers he had been gone ~·ould not adeq~t;ely repre3Cllt the from the residence for about two months, mterests of the ettiZenry. and ~--be ed .1._ · ·· Paynter, formerly superintendent or . ~1~' return u...:: pa1ntmgs "''re lhe Garden Grove Unified School District mJSSmg. and OQW president or Test·A·Lab. a One painting valued at $1,200 i! an 18 health screening service, responded that. inch by 20 inch watercolor of an old while he was proud _of his career in bui.JA;.,,.. .,..11 , tal. · c I bad b education be was a businessman-:-----~mum !l in ar s Y The ed~cational experience, Paynter artist Ken Beacky. The lte<.'Ond Is a f100 said , made him more qualified for the 16 inch by 20 inch media pelll!ing ol &hips job. in a harbor by artist Woodauhl. . Both .the Area 2 candidates set goals ~f Police found no indication of forced 1mprov1ng the county office's role 111 vocational education and holding board entry. meetings away from the county offices to provide greater public eiposure. In Area s. businessman App was pitted against two college professors, Dr. Lake and Dr. Moss. 'Charlotte Dahl Last Rites Held rather the Republicans trying to take .his during the home stretch or the tax 5Cat away. election, said she p!ans to continue Parking Query Topic Guj)ler. the s e 1f-fpr 0 c I aim c d attending meetings while the trustees Private memorial services have been ""·a!kirig candidate" from l\fission Viejo, decide how to refigure their budget. held for Charlotte Kienast Dahl, 89, a waged a campaign based on his charges Of La!!:UDa Cha1nhe1• Laguna Beach artist and •Titer. The thal Hinsha\Y misui;ed his former office l v deceased will be taken to her nati"e ! From Page o county assessor. Switzerland for entombment in the Gubler brought forward signed affi. COUNCIL "\Vhadderya Doing About Parking?" is da\·its he said were from curren• and family grave in July. • ,. • • • the topic of this month's Laguna Beach fornie r employes of the assessor's office Airs. Dahl first came to Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce, breakfast at 7:45 under Hinshaw. Beach has not yet been voted. in 1951 and moved pennanenUy to the art The depositions slated Hinshaw used A request for approval of a !inal b'act a.m. next Wednesday at the Hotel colony in 1958. During her stay, she county employes and count y equipment map will be made by developers David The chamber calls the parking query wrote artiCles about Laguna l 0 r in his 1972 C.Ongres.sional campaign and l\11ller and Associates for a controversial the "most often asked question in nlso gave favorable assesments to big subdivision on Park Avenue. The tract Laguna Beach" and notes that some publication in the Swiss newapapers. campaign contributors. was the obi·ect o! a law su1't by tbe She is survi\'ed by her son , Frani ans"•ers are now available. Reservations K' t f s " land d ht v Hinshaw denied any such practices Temple Hills Community Association 1enas o Y,·1tzer , aug er, erena ever took place and filed a $10 million \Vhich alleged environmnta1 decisions had are necessary and may be made through Kit'flast of Laguna Beach and three libel suit against Gubler. not be adequately made. the chamber office. grandchildren . The s u i ( \\'as b a s e d on 1 ~~;;:~~;::;;,,~;,;.iii;-::;;;;<-"'::-;--------:--:-:-;;;;::--:--;;---.;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;,;iiiiiiiiii,j statements from Gubler contained in '~ - ne\\·spapers and scores of press re leases he issued. Gubler was supported in his campaign by John Sctunitz. the John Birch Society member unseated by Hinshaw two years ago. Hinsha1v's (lfher Republican foes. Carr~way and Lamphear, waged limited c:impaigns. The Democratic race 1.;as aln1o~t non-existent in terms of campaign ing with \Vilson, Graef and l!are running low-key efforts. Lag'l11llt Firenien So ug ht for U11it The Laguna Beach Fire Department is sl'<!king applicants for a Top of the \Vorld volunteer firefighting unit. Anyone from the Top of the World area ma y apply for the positions. Applicants should call the department at 4!l7·1708. The department will accept applicat ions (rom '"omen, \'oluntct'r firemen an.· pa id expenses and y,·ill nlt<.'nd training and drill st.SSions n1onthly , • Stereo Gear, Plants Stole n in Laguna Stereo equipment and two sword rems valued totally at $SOO have been stolen from the home of ca.rllon Parker, 679 Canyon Viey,· Drive, La guna Beach. Parker reported lhe thetl Tu esday. Otrletrs bt'llcve the crime occurred late ri.1onda)' or early Tuesday. There wa.s no evidence of forced enlry. The .stereo equipment Included a rCC()rd player. nmpllfler and speakers. The two sword ferns \verc In pots. ' L """ .... • . . •i 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA--646-1919 ~= j ·-··-· _t: . Tennis Rockets l Baseball Shoes l Wilson -Davis -Bancroft· All Purpose Shoes Dunlop -Yoneyama Soccer Shoes ·1 Tennis Shoes .;, Racquetball Racquets & Bolls ' Handball Gloves & Bolls Worm-Up Shoes Tobie Tennis Paddles & Bolls Football Shoes Squash Rockets Wrestling Shoes I . Baseball Mitts -Bolls -Bots . Softball Shirts Softballs & Bots Tennis Dresses · · Volleyballs Mens & Boys Tennis Shorts . Basketballs Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts Soccer Bolls . Worm-Up Suits . Hots & Visors Slant Boards I Mens Tennis Sweaters Weight Sets . . Bike Repairing Bike Ports -Tires -Tubes . --- • I I j 1 . . . 7 • • • • Sadalehaek EDITION VOL. 67, NO. 156, 7 SECTIONS, 116 PAGES _ l'R_USTE11 ,ARE4 ONE William l>e•n TRUSTEE AREA TWO Robert Bartholomew Dean, TRUSTE~ AREA THREE Lawrence Taylor • Taylor By JOllN VALTERZA 0 1 1114 DlllY Pllot $!Ill Voters in the Saddleback Community Coll~ge District Tuesday elected two Tustin men by substantial margins and a l...aguna Beacn. candidate by a thin edge to positions on the Saddleback Col lege Board of Trustees. The new members selected to fill seat s on a board stung by many resignations are Robert Barthqlomew, an avowed member of the John Birch Society in Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS New Trustees Tustin: fel\o\v Tustin resident William Dean and Laguna Beach locksmith an;I veteran schoo l trustee Larry Taylor. The tallies showed lh.ese results in the polling: -In Area One, north Tustin Dean \\'ilh 32,671 ; Steven ~tueller, 13,372 and Henry Stanley, 5.271. -Arca Two, South Tu s tin , Bartholomew, 25,515; Jeftrey DuBov.•e, 10,912 and Dr. Alan Greenwood, 14,5511. -In the Laguna battle, Taylor garnered !7,825, and Ronald Kreber wa s close behind vdth 16,575. The two candidates who \\'ithdre\I.' siphoned key votes away with Norman Coles 9,584 and Michael ~tcF'adden with 5.814 . Trustee-elect Dean is a vice president of North American Rockv.•ell's space division and the.. prograrn manager-for the firm 's space shuttle project. The· 44-ycar-old resident of Tustin sa id his interest in the distri'Cl was whetted ~See SADDLEBACK, Pa~e 21 Irvine Bonds Win $18 Millio1i to Prov«.J,e Parks, Trails By GEORGE LEIDAL Of the oa.uy Pilot Stiff Irvine city voters overwhelmingly approved two bond measures totaling $18 million which will provide for purchase and development of nin~ city parks and but had no idea it would be such an The financing measures needed at least overwhelming victory," the mayor saJd. a two-thirds yes vote in order to pa~ She praised efforts of the steering The park bonds received a 73.2 percent committees which presented the issues to favorable vote and the bike and hiking . trails measure was given a 72.3 pc1t.~t voters with a standafd of "integrity and okay. . 25 miles of bike and hiking trails. honesty" ~trs. Pryor said contributed to Brady said no city in Calfiornla w1m a . the successfu l vote. population of less than 50,000 has ever COif111111111fy-SCtt ices Clffif111 iS s i'O-~l"ge=t5al'k!-~--_ Chainnan Sally ~1iller was not available The bonds finance a city system or -~---o-~ .c-=--~ •· --..:::..-=-:::::." .;,r-~ .... "7--~_-=----'-.::....::::;:-:'.:.....o.-=-----.-Piilal"Vfijffiillies='ari:' Vo4ed A p l ProposiUoo D Park Bond" 5,293 yes; --------How You-, Here is t)Je final tabulation on · all elect.Ion results for Orange County and local races on 'n.l~day's Primary ballot : SHERIFF.CORONER Brad Gates -234,451 Spero Janise -5,906 Jerry L. Lawrence,...... 12,453 Marshal Nonis -36,319 George--8f.vonl-37j960 -- C-. Vmli>ve 'I 8,5111 llOAJl!l OP llUPllllVISORB fad Dtslrld David L. Baker -30,074 (RUDOfi) John T. Dean -14,Mt Lauren<e J. Sdlmit -22,217 (Runoff) .. i-tet Ralpla B. allll -50,713 Garry Nellesen -15,137 1111 Dlslrld Ronald W. Cnpen -54,480 Marcia M. Bents -18,666 Nolan Frizzelle -7,363 Jim ThorfC -17,171 . ASSESSOR J1ck P .4'allerp -229,139 Raymooii Preston -103,847 AUDITOR VlclOr A. Helm -291,16.1 LOCAL MEASURES D. lrvine Parks- Yes -S,m No -!~31 E. Irvine Bike Trails Yea -4,972 No -2,001 SADDLEBACK COLLEGE BOARD Tnisiee Area No. 1 Wiiiiam E. Dean -32,671 Steve Mueller -13,372 Henry l\.1. St~nley -5,271 Trustee Area No. 2 Robert C. 88f&bolomew -25,515 Jeffrey S. Ou Bowe -10,912 Alan H. Greenwood -14,558 'l'na:tee Area No. 3 Norman Cole -9,584 Ron Kreber -16,575 Michael MCFadden -5,814 LaMence W. Taylor -17,825 COUNTY SCHOOL SUPT. -11 Pele--201,842 Donald D. Woodblgton -118,751 COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Aru No. l John D. Harper -21,671 David H. Paynter -34,014 AffilNo •. Jolia 0. App -31,766 Ernest G .. Lake -23,929 TAX COu.ECl'OR-TREASIJRER Robert L. atroa -280,...:M - CLERK WIWam· E. St Jobn -2.87,639 DIS'IRICf ATTORNEY Cecil Hicks -212,079 William s: Hulsy -83,142 Max A. StW'ge:1 -36,970 HE LEAVES HOME OVER TELEPHONE The Daily Pilot sincerely hopes that its ads won't drive you rrom yo~ home. But here's one ad th at did j~ that to . the Newport Beach man who placed it: '70 CHEV. Horizon. 21 Fl, pwr. steer & brakes. 151000 ml. Comp. selr~ntairied. 110 generator, ait-cond, blk .. rack. May lrtdeloller. (Phone No.) 11le ad told the motor home almost lm· mediately after the paptr came out and then went on to produCe to many INJulry calls thet the advert.Iser left home to gel iway from lhe phone. T<ll a Dolly Pilot ad for the results you want. Dial lhe dir«I line: 1142•5678. " pp, ayn er 1,937, no. • • Proposition E Trail Bonds: 4,972 ves ; 2,001, no. ' PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR County School Irvine Mayor Gabrielle Pryor said .the James Helm -285,442 vote represents a "victory for opt1m1sm RECORDER • and for hard work. J. WyLie\l~:~I~~ -;;(~~~ Board Victors "I was fairly confident they would pass Municipal Water District Of Orange County IMvision 1 In the non-partisan county Board of f.ounta1n Valley, Huntington Seal Beach, Costa Mesa: ~Vlei IC: _,_ ~ 11.11M1 St~ T. Tucker -17 ,240 llhlslonZ Beach-. -EducatlorrraceTuesday;-second--trustee~ area carldidate Dr. David Paynter and fi fth trustee area c~dldate John 0. App defeated their opponents by wide Seal Bncb, W111minster Gerald E. Prlee --Harry I>. l!eoUey ...: &,!ft Gordon Gleison -11,439 Division J Harbor Arca-Soulb Coonly Qem M. McColloch -36,522 William D. Fenton -8,043 Sterlbig S. Sh~rrar -6,728 ~tat MwUclpal Water District Division 3 Newport Beach Hans J. Loren:i -3,986 \Vinton M. Ashton -838 W. A. Cole.man -655 Ed Vand en Bossche -663 Division 4 Costa Mesa - William K. Patrick -3,493 Gene J. Adams -1,785 Tri-Cities Municipal Water District Division 3 San Clemenle Richard M. Leamer -617 Don Conrad -438 Division S Sao Clemente W. M. Mac Kay -909 C. Thomas Dahl -421 H. Hunttagion Beach Uigb School District Yes -26,536 No -31,ZCl L. Laguna Beach School District ve11 ·-3,011 NO -3,971 (See COUNTY, Page %) Irvine Voters · Approve Two Park Iss11es Irvine voters continued their love arfair with their new city and approved two park bond issues but voters elsewhere on the Orange Coast dealt death blows to financing measures on Tuesday's ballot. Laguna Beach voters rejected a school tax: override while Huntington Beach voters said they didn't want t-0 speod $14.5 million for a new central high school. Both lrvlne measures won easily. Pr0f'05ition D, which sets up a $16 million park ftmd that will include financing . for a Is.acre athletic faci lity won by a vote or 5.293 to t,937. Irvine residents also voted to spend another S2 millioO for bicycle and hiking trails. The vote was 4,972 to 2,00L Both measures needed two-third majoriti~. Laguna Beach 5Chool bOa rd members will meet tonlgbt to try to figure what to do without the 1271,000 tha t would. have been raised by I.he 24 cent tax override (hat received 3,971 no votes and~ yes votes. Only 11 simple -majority-w<a ne<ded. Huntington Beach Union Hlghj School District voters turned down the pro- posal to finance the new high school through a non-profit oorporatlon with a no vote of 31 ,261 to a yt s voU! of 26.536. • •• margins. UnoWcial final results in Area 2 were: PayUa-31,0U John D. Harper 21,671 In Area 5: App 31.768 Ernest G. Lake 2:1,929 Lynda T. Moss 24.349 Incumbents in both the 2nd and 5th trustee areas. wl;lich ~rrespond with the 2nd and 5th supervisorial districts, decided not to seek re-election and the ca mpai gns had a re fonn character. The uniform charge was that the county Department of Educalion and its board of trustees was out of touch with lhe local ·school dislricts and it was not prov iding the kind and level or services it should. In Area 2, John D. Harper Jr., a former Fountain Valley City councilman and Fountain Valley school board member, charged that his opponent, Paynter, was a career educator and would not adequately represent the interests of the citizenry. Paynter, formerly superintendent of the Garden Grove Unified School Dist rict and now president or Test-A-Lab, a health screening service, responded that, while he was proud of his career in education, he was a businessman . The educational experience, Paynter said, made him more qualified for the job. Both the Area 2 candidates set goals of im proving the county office's role in vocational education and holding board meetings away from the county offices to provide creater public exposure. In Area 5, businessman App was pitted against two college professors, Dr. Lake and Dr. Moss. All three sought to improve the communications between the county office and local school districts and to strengthen the leadership role of the county office. App said he was the only candidate with a "vested interest" in the office since he was the only one with school age children. lie was also, he pointed out. the only non-educator running for the lay (See BOARD, Page ti 1 ruine Hunting Snakcna.pers A dragnet was out today in the city of Irvine. ror Killer and his girl£riend named Gerrrudc. Killer and Gertrude, both 2 yea.rs old, arl!! two-foot gopher snakes stolen In a •40 burglary Tuesday at the home of Marguerite Butler. 4621 Sierra Tree Lane. Officer Bob Arnold sa id ~lrs. BuUer told him several of their friends who also fancy the brov.·n· and·black serpents have had theirs t.iken in recent burglaries. Kil\er and Gertrude w e r e. abductCd from a. cage and did not Slilher away of thelr own froo will , pollce emphasized. , ,. J ,. t k, /1 WINS NEW TERM HANDILY Fifth District's Casper• Caspers A voids Runoff, Wall ops 1'hree Opponents By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 Ille 0 •111 l'llot Sl•fl Incumbent Fifth District County Supervisor Ronald Caspers won election to his second term Tuesday , brushing aside challenges by three opponents. It had been thought Caspers might be forced into a rwioff, but. when all the votes were in , he had about 54 percent of them. Fin al results are: CasJ)ers: 54,480 Marcia Bents: 18.666 Nolan Frizzclle: 7,363 James Thorpe : 17,177 A" in his past election effort. Caspers waged a big money camp<iign to retain his seat. He raised more than $150,000 in his re-election bid. and spent just under $100,000. His three QPponents all conceded he probably cou1d not be -beaten in the primary but merely forced into a November runoff. Between them , his opponents raised and spent about $40.000. The Fifth District race was marked by a pact among the candidates not to spend more than about $93,QOO each -about 50 cents per registered voter in the district. Caspers' chief opponent, ~1rs. Bents of Newport Beach. charged several weeks ago that Caspers had already exceeded that limit and hit $120,000 in his spending. But lop Caspers aides said the . supervisor considered the ceiling to run Crom the date he ofOcially filed as a condidat~ .and would not include money gpcot Mrore that da\c. " for comment today. A family spokesman parks. recreation and cultural faci lities said she is "on cloud nine." to be built ove the next five year~ Community Services Director Paul The first two parks -the Hanard Brady said the bond victories "once Avenue athle tic facility and the central again demonstrate the willin~ness of the Irvine high school community park - Irvine electorate to support the needs of may be completed in the next year and a the community at the polls." half. (]11rt1f1 ·De111ocrut Wi111aer Quigley Trails in Close Race for Treasurer Nod State Consumer affairs appointee John Kehoe appeared to have defeated Irvine City Councilman Henry Quigley Tuesday in the race for the R epubli can nomination for state treasurer. With 96 percent of all preeincts in the state counted today, the Republican race results are: Quigley: 428,161 Kehoe: 528.520 Stan Jones: 374.518 Former state Assembly leader Jesse Unruh became the Democratic candidate in the November treasurer's race leading the field of fo ur candldates with 45 percent of the votes. With !Hi percent of the vote in Democratic results were: Unruh: 1,128,492 Gray Davis: 555,596 Alan Short: 546.785 Complicating Quigley's decision to concede were broadcast media reports in Los Angeles which predicted he v.·ould overcome Kehoe's vote lead when the final six percent of precincts were counted. \Vhen one third of the .results fron1 those late precincts were tallied, however, Kehoe gained a plurality increase of 3,000 votes to lead Quigley by 100.000 votes. ''I remember that in 1966 Houston Flournoy gave a speech conceding defeat and later had to co1ne back and say ·•'\\'ell. I ~e~ 1 really won after all "," Quigley said today. "It looks to me now that Kehoe \vi ii be the Republican nominee for treasurer, but I'm not making any final decision until the ballots are 100 percent counted. "\Vin or lose we sure made a horse. . (See QUIGLEY, Page!) El Toro .Housing Plan Undergoes 1st Hearing By JAN WORTIJ 01 li'lf OaUy l'iltl St1fl Issues of noise. traffic circulation, and density took the rorefront Tuesday in the first public hearing on a plan which could bring 16.500 new residents to a 4,20Q.acre section or north El Toro. The hearing before t~ange County Planning Commision was the first formal presentation or development pro- posals on Rancho Serrano. Rancho de los Alisos, and the Glenn Ranch. The three ranches surround the 2.769· acre Whiting Ranch, which has already been approved ron development. of housing for 6,000 people. Conunissioners took no action on the El Toro proposals, setting the second hearing on them for July 23. The planning commission is scheduled to make decisions on a number of large- scale development Plans over the next several months. Next Tuesday hearings are set to begin on the 9.000-acre Afou1ton Ilanch in the virgin hills between Uiguna Beach, Laglma Niguel, Irvine, and l\Hssion Viejo. That plan calls for 50,000 new residents In the. next 15 years. The cul'nulalive effect of the proposed developments on traffic. ,air i;iollution . water treatlncnt and school s m south Orange County has prompted an air of cau tion among county officials. Cotmty lrv"in Schattsman, coordinator of county revi ew of the El Toro plam, noted that densi ties proposed are niuch Jower than what hi!~ betn pre\1iously suggested for the area. "lfO\\'ever, one. of the most significant issues before the Plannlng Comn1isslon at this time is whether any additional commitmenl to grov.th and development should be given at all.'' he said. The three El Toro ranches were planned without regard to property lines (See llEARJNG, Page .2) Orange Coast Weather Nigh t and morning low clouds clearing to ha zy afternoon sun· shine Thursday. Warmer inland with highs in the mid 70s. Beach highs in the upper 60s. INSIDE TODAY Pat and Richard NiXon we re ninrried there. Httmplirey Bo- gnrt boozed there. Teddy Roose- ticl.t slept tlie re, a11ct now the ~fis.~ion Inn is backdrop for 11rovit abou t a liollywood legend. Story. Poge 16. At Y•vr s.rY!t• l IOI lint JO L. M, .. y. 11 C1Ul•nlll ,., CarHr Ct"'*"' 14 ClflllilltG •l·.O C11111cl '6 CrMtnr• 4' 0.1111 N~lictl U &dltl)l'lll Pitt ' lnt1r11lnt'lltt1t 24-U FllllM.t 11·1) "" l1'e ltKll'll 11 Norote-II AM Ltndtrt lt M1l«loJ1. ' M1vl11 :M-U M11l111I Plfflll1 t t N•lkln•I Htws ,, Orant• Cownt-; 11 Sy!Vil Ptl'ftr l1 S"rl1 11•"-or, SlelM,.lln IJ si.c-Mlrllll1 tt·U Tlll1ltrt M>U T1'.Vvl1lon J4 Wtllfltr t Wt!"''" AbMN • 'l!Omtll'I Nnn """' Wlll'Ml NtWI • ( .. ' • fJAILY PILOT IS 1'o Face lt'ilso11 Hinshaw Easily Tops GOP Foes • lncun1bcnt -ICkh dilit rict Congre-ssinan Andrew Hinshal\', President Nixon's congressman, easily won renon1ination in the Republican Part~ prin1:lry Tuesday and v.ill face Dcn1ocr11t Roderick \Yilson of Oceanside in November. Republican vote totals in lhe -10th Distri ct are : Hinshaw: 52.263 Enrl Carra\v:iy: 4.433 David Gubler : 13.106 Roger Lanphear: 5.500 Democratic vote totals in the district :'Ire: .lohu Graef: 11.970 \\lilson: 19.242 J!insh:iw's ch i l' r critics in the Peterson Wins Su peri11 te ndent Post 3rd Ti111e T\ro-tern1 incumb('nt Dr. Rob e·r t P£'tef'S(Jn easll~· defr:ited Laguna Beach School Superintendent Donald \Vooding- lon in non-partisan rounty Superinten- dent of Schools balloting Tuesday. UnofficiRI final results \Vere : PetCrson: 201 ,8~2 \Voodin gton 118,751 . ' Tht• campaign rc,·o]\'ed aroung l\.\'O 1---<entral issues; incu1nbent J:eterson'~ eight year recofd in offic-e and challenger \Voodinglon's mobile 28 year career in education. prl1nary race were not the Democrai.s vyin~ to face hinl in No\"e1nber, but rather Uw Itcpublicans t.rying to U1ke his seat n"•ay. Gubler. the sc I f. proc la i :n e d "walking candidate" fro1n f.lission Viejo. waged n c11n1paign based on h}s ch1frges th:tl Hinshaw 1nisUl)ed his forn1er office of t'Ounty assessor. Gubler brough! for11·ard signed aUi- davits he said \l't're front current and forn1er employes of the assessor's office under HinsblH·\'. The depositions stated Hinsha"' used county employes and county eq~ipment in his 1972 Congressional campaign and also gave favorable assesment s to big ca1npaign contribulors, Hinsha1\' denied any such practices eve r took place and filed a $10 million libel suit against Gubler. The suit \\'as b ase d on statements fron1 Gubler contained in nev>spape.rs and scores of press releases he issued. Gubler \\'as supported in his campaign by John Schmitz, the John Birch Society member unseated by Hinshaw two years ago. Hinshaw's other Republican foes. Carr.11way and Lamphear, \\'aged limited ca1npaigns. The Democratic race "'as almost non-existent in tern1s 0 r crunpaigning with \Yilson. Graef and Hare running low-key efforts. Fron• Page 1 HEARING ... \\'oodington charged the incumbent by the Irvine finn of Chapman, Phillips., with losing touch with the · local districts Brandt and Reddick. · lhc coonty office exists to serve and with RancOO ... Serrano. with 268 acres, is !e"ading an office that -v.•as providing a o~'Oed by S&S Construction Company. declining level of services. ~to.stJy flat · Jand. it is most conducive to ---=-"Petersorr-ea!Jed. the-challenger,..;1.-!'job · i:levelopm-enf.of ttie 1hree pa·rcels aria "the· lmnper," citiilg the five different '--· l d ·1· · ••· II I ~inistrative posts \Voodington has held ,,....av1es ens1 Jes In uK:" overa pan are found here. in his 28-year career in education. It calls for a total of 1.070 units and a Woodington resigned from a nine-population of l.735. One section of 12 month old ronlract as StJperintcndent of acres is proposed for a density of 18 lO 20 the Laguna Beach Unified School units per acre. District to seek the $34.800 a year county The overall density of the proposals for post. an act \\'hich Peterson called a the three ranches is 1"2 units per acre. breach of -trust. Rancho de Jos AJisos. o\vned by \\1oodington's anS\\'er 10 the charges Occidental Land. Inc., is p\aMed for "'as that if no one broke a contract to 5.ioo Wlils and a population of l2,652. campaign for county superintendent, no Some 1 472 acres are proposed for one .could ever run. . . permane~t open space. llis background, ~\'~ch included l~o Another feature of the Rancho de los 1---~rears-as-state-ee~missione:F-of-~\to~rsos-pla:n;-10fflieflY called Canada in Colorado. Woodington said, gave~ a Foothills, is a lOO..acre indus U-ial park to broa~~r ~ckground and s u P !! r 1 ° r help provide employment for many of lhe quahficat1ons. ranch res'dents . CoWlty Board of Edu.cation cand.ida t.es The GI~ ~ch northernmost of lh 1n the Second and Fifth Superv1sonal ii.-..; • . e Districts also campaigned largely on uu'j ~eels, calls f~r 530. L_IDJls and a criticism of !he current operaliOn of the popu ation of.t.860. It~ env1s1011ed as .an, t'O:inty schools office. " equestr1an-onenf8:1 , pnvate Cl'.lmmwuty • 1 ~ and plan.! show 1t as 54 percent open ...A~ i:r ..A. space. H w Overall, ·the new school students From Page l produced by the development v.·ould be 900 in the GleM Ranch, l,000 in Rancho Serrano, and 4,000 Rancho de Uls AHsos. Ali sos. BOARD ... office. Jf elected. App said. he would attempt to determine whether services of the county office could be imp roved and, if oot, would recommend abolition of the department. Frotn Page 1 QUIGLEY ... race out of it." the seeond term Irvine councilman said . '"The whole idea o{ running \\':lS lo sho\v people I could be a serious st:ll<'- \vide. candidate and i! looks like v;e\'c done tha1 ,"' Qulglcy said , ··Th erl' is no question about ll that in two or four years we'll be al it again "'t!h a _more urga nlzed campaign for Mn1c office.'' Quigley added. ltl' bl ;imt•d his ~arrow victory an1ong Orange County primary voters on Gov. Reagan's popularity in the county. Kehoe \vas appointed ;o his .state office by Hcagan and came ""'!thin 4.000 vo tes or tying Quigley_ ORAHGECOAST " DAILY PILOT The plan provides for one high school , one intennediate school, and s i x elementary sthools. One of the major problems facing the new development may be the noise factor. A total of 1,400 acres in the ranches are under the h65 CNEL" zone. FederaJ regulations prohibit C(!rtain types of development. including single family detached homes and schools, und.er that noise Ie'vel. A representative for the Orange County Airport Commission, Nor mEvers, told !he plaMing commission Tuesday he felt any deeision on the north El Toro proposals should be delayed at least six months until a pending a i r po r I co1nmisi;ion study is released. Also appearing at the healing were Dale Secord of the Environmental roalitlon and \Vard Thompson , president of the Saddleback Area Coord1natlng Council. Thompson also urged caution on the airport Issue. A former off icer in the Air F'orce. Thompson said commissioners should bear in mind the dangers of airpla ne crashes over residential areas under a flight path. He also complimented Chapman , Phillips, and Brandt for their use of open space. 0.11, Pl .. t Slltf l'Mlt WINS FULL TERM County MMtsor Vallerga V allerga Big Wi11ner in ,4ssessor Race Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga won his first election to the job he was ... 'ttppoin ted to in 1972 by a 2 to I margin Tuesday over his lone opponent. Final tota ls-are: • v'allerga: 229,139 Rayn1ond Preston: 103.847 The large ntunber of votes polled by. Preston surprised some ob s e r v e r s because of the extremely low·key and poorly funded campaign he ran. The primary was actually the first tline -ilfCuJhber1t-vaJrerga rah for offiCe:"" He was 'appointed to the job two years ago v.·hen former assessor Andrew Hinshaw ~'as elected to Congress. Vallerga provt'd to be a powerful, big- money campaigner whose lead was hard to overcome by Preston, a Cal State Long Beach home economics professor. Toward the end of the campaign, Preston hooked his wagon to the 20th District Congressional campaign being 11.•aged by David Gubler against Hinshaw. Gubler's charges of misuse of the office by Hinshaw were extended t-0 Vallerga by Preston. He said Vallerga accepted donations from big companies whose assessments depended. on him. Vallerga said Prston's accusations v.·ere ·1preposterous" aqct be ~ted to a series of oourt actions uphr .ding bf! practices. Before his appointment, Vallerga was chief assistant assessor for eight years. Street Naming .,. Porno Glut? ' Obscenity Law Overtur1ted By L. PETER KRIEG 01 n.. o.iry Plltt Sl•ff A ruling Tuesday declprlng California's obsci!nhy law unconsti~ution1tl m a y mean Oranse County will be swnmp!..'d with dlrty 1novie houses and "adult " book.itores, a spokesman for District .Attorney Cecil Hicks $/lid today. Law enforcement and ju d i c In I aulhorlties throughout 1• the cowity were aghast at the ruling, but most declined any immediate con1 ment. A three-judge panel ruk.'CI the law is unconstitutionally vague .in failing lo define what ls obscene. The 21-page decision was based on the screening of "Deep Throat" by Buenll P a r k 's Pussycat Theater. Assistant Orange County District Attorney Michael capizzi said a declsioh will have to be made whether to rewrite tl\e law or appeal the ruling directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Capizzi said the probable move will be to appeal and he said he is optimistic that the nation's highest court will overturn the ruling. But watch out if it doesn't, he sa id. "Just look around at lhe bookslores that are trying to exist now. Look at some of lhe newstands on the street. "If there's no law prohibiting smut then I guess your imagination is the limit," he said. Tuesday's decision was handed down . by a panel composed of U.S. District Court Judge Warren J. Ferguson, Judge William East of the District Court of Oregon and 9th U.S. Clrtult Courl Juda• Walt.er Ely. The decitlon was unahtmot14. OranRe County Superlor Court\ Judge Byron K. f.tcMJUan was obvlouslj upset by the rulh1g. _ "You just can't tell these days." he said. "l went out to But'.!na Park to see 'Deep Throat' and I thought It was obsct•nu aud I ~aid !IO. A,pparently the federal panel disagrees and that's the end of n1y lntere11 ln .tho matter. The panel ruled that the California law "does not specifically define the sexual nctivity which Is proh ibited." The la\vsuit attack ing the state law v.•as brought by Vincent Aiiranda, president or Pussycat Theaters or J-lolly\vood, after Orange Co un ty authorities confiscated the sexually explicit film "Deep Throat" from the Buena Park thealer in a series of raids last November. Prosecution of Miranda and a dozen oll~er cases was halted pending the ruling, and Capizzi said the otl:i,rs may now be in jeopardy. "We'll have to research the law to determine the effect on other pending cases," Ca pizzi said. Ca pizzi also disclosed that his office will investigate the p o s s i b i l i t y jurisdictions that local may now enact their own anti-smut ordinances. Local Jaws were forbidden before because they were pre-empted by the state law. "But if there's no state law, it may be possible for local governments to enact their own," he said. " . Bro~ Flournoy Handily Win Governor No1nination · • LOS ANGELES (Ae) -.CaliI9roj~'$. e!ocmJ.~ the.J.lll!.ls Crom~ ~giMing.:.... next governor will be either Edmund G. A former Jesuit seminarian, he had a Bro\vn, 36-year~ld son of the state's last considerable advantage as the son of Democratic governor, or Houston I. Edmund G. Brown, gove rnor from 1959- Flournoy, a Republican beneficiary of 1967. Watergate. Flournoy, conversely, was an alscrran Both won their party's nominations by "'ith lhree percent in polls a year ago. C<Jmfortable margins Tuesday. as pclls He moe vd to front runner, with 44 per· predicted, in a surprisingly low voter cent to Rei.n('(ke's 27 percent a week be' turnout. fore the el ection, .Brown led San Francisco Mayor Reineke is accused of lying to the Joseph Alioto 1,023,059 to 505.589 with 94 Senate Judiciary Committee in 1972 when Percent of the vote counted. Assembly he denied he advised the tr.S. Justice Speaker Bob Moretti was third, with Department and tben·Alty. Geo. John N. 452.268. f.titchell of lnternaLional Tel epbone & Flournoy, 44 , won a landslide victoty Telegraph Co. 's offer to help under-write over Lt. ('.ov. Ed Reineeke, who was the the Republican National Convention, front-rW'lner before being indicted April 3 Reinecke's trial is set for July IS in by the Watergate gr~ ilfY· He P:lead~ w hln not guilty but falled 1 tb~gtt a trill liale as gton. 1 ' • before the primary. Flo urnoy told cheering backers early Flo~ had J.07J,600 votes t-0 toda y that he wouldn 't go along with a Reinecke's 515,498. suggestion by Brown for a moratoriu1n on campaigning until September. Voter 1urnout fell well below the 62 "l don't believe in that," he said. "I percent predicted by Brown, t h e bel · h I r th. ho Jd secretary of state. Candidates blamed it ieve t e peop e o IS state s u have an opportunity to examine the Is-on Watergate-caused apathy. sues." CLARK ·RETAINS COUNTY SEAT Orango County Board o f S\lpervlsors Chaimlan ~lpfl C.1ark of Anaheim ¥.'OD his second term as the Fourth District representaUve Tueadty; deleatJn& hil loot foe by a 4-1 margin. Final vote tolal1 &ho'l'-'ed Clarie wlth 50,743 am Garry Nelleson with 15,137. Fro.,•P .. e1 • SADDLEBACK •• relatively recently when he was asked to sign petitions seekin g the withdrawal of the Tustin area from the community college dii trlct. Ile said the apparent uncertainty and lack of defin ite opinions ·about the college in . the mlnds of his fe ;llow residen ts was anOtber moUvating forte In his candidacy. "We have to cause resldenta in the Tustin area · to get to · know their community college better," he aald. He predicted no miracles in Tueaday11 ·election, but deemed it an excellent atart Jf he were to be elected. Trust~lect Bart ho 1 om e w, a dedicated and avowed conservative ii a nurseryman with prior experience as a trustee of school districts. Bartholomew has served on the board of the TusUn Unified and High School districts. He believes be has "a feel" for lhe residents or T'iistin. He had promised that lf he were elected to the Saddleback Board he would resign his position on the Tustin Unified Board. The Wyoming native came to the commlDlity in 1927; one of his two children is a graduate of Saddleback. Bartholomew· sald •. he jliried the _controversial Birch Society Jn 1960, but haS declared that his membership in ¥the. groupJlas::never...canflict.ed..With-rus_,. ----. role as a school trustee. He has deemed the deannexalion issue gripping Tustin for montM JS "a manufactured issue to further their (proponents') political aims." He believes the c onservative educational policy of Saddleback -is excellent, and has said the sclml has made progress in its early years. Taylor, the victor by the slim margin in the Laguna trustee race Is a 35-year resident of the Art Colony and a veteran of years on school boardJ there. Active in the-earliest-days--of...th&-fonnation_oLthe SaddJeback district, Taylor said his close attention to the development .of the district would be his stfongest attribute as a trustee. ''It gives me an edge over the other candidates," be said during the recent campaign. Taylor is a locksmith and the lalber of four children. FromP .. e1 COUNTY .•. Brown, who led the fight for a Bro1\·n told supporters that in both controversial political reform measure, -his.own victory and that of Prop. 9, ''The 0 . Rossmoor Strvlce Area %1 told supporters that he and Flournoy vote of the people is very clear. for re-Yes -!,836 would have to work harder in the fall form and against corruption." (Related No -1,207 The city of Irvine street naming because ''the people are skeptical of the story. Page 4). P. Orange County Street Ucbtlnl advisory committee is n ea r ing pohtical process." ' The political campaign measure, de-DUtrlct l Report Readied completion of its recommendations and · He said he expected a strong race from scribed by supporters as the stiffest in Capistrano Beach, Daoa Point, South expects to present a final report at the Flournoy, whom he described as "an the nation. limit contributions, requires LagWla Jul y 9 city council meeting. intelligent person and an articulate identification or all contributions above Yes -3.139 City Planning Director William R. spokesman for his cause." $50 and creates a powerful commission No -3,40t Liv in gsto ne said the draft Flournoy predicted an "interesting and • with a $1 million annual budget t-0 ad-V. Orange County Street UghUnc recommendations have been submitted e"citing campaign" and added, "We are minister and enforce the regulations. In Dt1trtct IL for comment by county agencies which going to have a Wlited Republican addition, public officials are requi red to El Toro, Mission Viejo continue to serve the city on a contract party.'' periodically disclose th eir assets ~nd out -Yes -3,075 basis, the postal service, Irvine Company Brov.'ll who shrewdly publicized his side income to prevent e-0nfl ict-of-interest No -3,329 and community and h o m e o w n e r lco<i[[~ic;::e;;;;;andji;iiisiiitr;;;es;;s.,ed;;ipoi;,;;;li;;ti;;ca;;;lg;caiim;ipa;;,ign;;;:-•:__':-'b';l:;cm__:_s. __ -;:~~----:;:---Z-. _o_ran-'g~e;<CoiCiuiinty~SiitilrereiiliiUiiglrtiaiiO~l;;;;;;;-associations. ~- The com mittee draft i n c I u des suggestions for pollcies governing both street naming and numbering and the final drart .may require renaming some streets, Livingstone said. LA Convict Killed TRACY (UPll -A 29-year-old convict from Los Angeles was stabbed to death Tuesday in a maximum security cell at !he Deuel Vocational Institute. Ivan C. Knox, who had <()nly been at DVI since April 30, died at ~he prison boSpital. •· Tennis Rackets ,."" (IQ~ Co••' °"''' "'"" ... ,~ ""'"" .. OD"'-"'""" tr>11 tJ~..,.P,e.,.. ~ _,,_ 1>y t"" 0•"9" Coit.I P,,,bl"""'~ """""''lV s.Watt .., • ....,. ••• (JIJllh~t<f i.!Qt>O•V ,._,." ~ .. dilY. lot C,,,,~o t.<il .. N~w1><>r! l!f-~ft Hvnl•"Qlll<> 9eoc:h/'FO<•""" lo<" V11i~; l.Jogu~I 9ooc;•, IM,._l~IO'l>o<:• •r><I !I•" Ci.t-"1"1S..-. .._ ~o.~!rono A ""II'~ •~q'°""'I ""'''O" ""''"''"""' s.o ..... ,.., o'>fl ~"· '""' r~ 11<>'\e'flll ~·•rlltl(j ~•nt., •• :uo w,., llooV!ll•fM,Coilo "1-C.~!ol" ... $2$15 Santa Ana Mayor . to Face Ex-prisoner i11 November " • Baseball Shoes All Purpose Shoes Soccer Shoes Tennis Shoes Worm-Up Shoes Football Shoes Wrestling Shoes Wilson -Davis -Bancroft Dunlop -Yoneyan:ia Raequetball Racquets & Balls Handball Gloves & Balls Table Tennis Paddles & Balls Squash Rackets !''*""'~ 'l.'t:""fJ ""'-·/IQ ~- Jodi!. Wley 'l/,9f..,..Wii....,Get.MM._ J~,K~.l £0<:111 ~H l o:xx J11clodP. ~ ,, ..... ~"'-'-<-a 'Ed>IGI• Offlctt Coo!t M __ 3XIW~ lloly!l""' ,......,.," &.•<• ,m ...,....,.,,, llo),j,..,.""" llllt<"ll'.4-1,1,0NV ~,. .... k """'(lll°"'8"0Cfl 1/'&,~111<~~­~G!-M~ 30~-·fl~J't~ll Tthph-17141642·412 I Clc111 lfltll AdvtrilsllllJ 642-56 71 S. Cl__. AllD~tt; TtltphoM 4fZ0 4420 ~. 1., •. 0... C.! l'lltl!IO.llo<";i C-PI"" NOM ... '10l'H'll.-•'10t!OI .., • .,.,.,,..~,. "'.~...,·-"'·""""""";too ·-.-;«! ..,,_._,_i""'..-_Ol_!J!'Ot_ ~ Cl'" -II~ llf•., I! (oolt ...... C:.•-,_ .. -..111~111''*"""' 1300_,.., e.-... 1 t•l)(l-.rHV:MoMa,-.-. ... t-t )OO-. Santa Ana ri.tayor .Jerry Patterson will confront former Prisoner of War David Rehmann i11 a November Cl'.lntest to see who will succeed relirlng 38th Dt9trict COOgressman Richafd T. HaMa. Final totals for the Democratic Party • arc : PaUerson : 21.657 )Iowan! Adler: t6 ,753 LeonJ>rd Holland : S.739 Al~t Nasser : 2,309 ltepubUcan totals are.: R~hmattn : 14.0!l9 Joy N'eugcbuuer: 9,8.18 Beau Clemens: 3.739 J. Frederick Ri?>Ser: 2,911 AU candidates in the ract for J.lanna's scat appeared lo be l<eying their ca1npa1gn& to lhe sucet!Mes otnd failures of Rehtn..'1!ln , who 11.·as Ow f<ivoritc 11U along for the c;or nod. Qn. th e Den\ocratlc side. the t.Gfll<'s1 ;lppeared to be cl~est betv.·ecn Adl<!r. Patter~. the mayor of Santa Ana. A!11er based hi!j: citmpalgn on his support from Tianna and pledged to continue 1-lanna's programs in Congress. The newly • formed district is some- what wiusual in Orange County Jn that It has a considerably larger number of Democrats than Republicans on its reg.is· I tration rosters. · Nasser and Holland ran less potent ca mpaigns than the \V.'O Democratic frontru.Mers. On the Republican slate, Rehmann c.lcariy dominated the field with what some observers called a ''God , motht'lrbood, nag and apple p I e ' • campaign. Much of his support. came from 1hosc sympathetic to the plight of veterans and PO\Vs. CIC:mtM. bf rs. Neugebauer and ltilSC':r falled to generate too stime kind of support llchmann got from the 75,000 R~publicans in the district. -rhere are indlcatloru he could beeomc th~ fi!'!I Repub lican in the Democratic district elected to Oxlgress in many 1ears bttau.5e of strong groundq.-etts ~f support ::imotig votcrt of both partic. Tennis Dresses Mens & Boys Tennis Shorts Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts Warm-Up Suits Hats & Visors Mens Tennis Sweaters Baseball Mitts -Balls -Bats Softball Shirts Softballs & Bats Volleyballs Basketballs Soccer Balls Slant Boards Weight Sets Bike Repairing I Bike Parts -Tires -Tubes DAILY PILOT EDITOWAL PAGE Bridge Needs Priority Officta1s•trom tha\c.it~ of Irvine and Fluor Corpora· tion agreed last week \to coopertae to seek early com· pletlon of a Sl mil~on bridge across the San Diego Creek. Fluor intends to complete a $55 million plant on a 105-acre parcel at ~11chel.son Avenue and Jarnborec flGad ln the Irvine Industrial Complex:. It is to open Jn 1976. it scerns n1ore appropriate to look to the future-which could be so much brighter than the past. A solid step in that direction came f.1onday with selection of two exeePlent retired superintendents to help locate the best possible talent for .t new superin· tendent. \ . ) '·· / - . . ) ' The property fro nts on the San Diego Freeway . But. with out the Michelson Avenue bMd ge, all of Fluor's 6.000 en1ployes would be forced to use Jamboree Road freeway ramps to enter and leave the pl ant. A well-rounded screening co1nmittee representing a cross sectio n of the school and community has been selected to help. The enthusiasm and concern under- lying this process is positive and excit ing. Perhaps good leadership will after all result. (, ___ , . . :1 ··' '\ • !~;~.··:J·.,11 Many or the 5,000 cars expected to be parked .each day will come from Irvine homes and would benefit from the bridge link to residential neighborhoods including University Park, Turtle Rock, Quail ~!ill and Woocf· bridge Villages. J ... ow-cost Housing • l, • ,. •••• ••• '• 'l'he rouncil decision lO urge county hig hway plan· ners to speed up the Michelson Avenue bridge project' seems appropriate in view of lhe potential {or serious traffic jams and energy wasting roundabout routes its absence would otherwise force. SaddJehack Looks Ahead After months of hard times, criticisms, and crises. there is not much more to be said about Dr. Fred Bremer, who resigned last week as superintendent of Saddleback College. Irvine Alayor Gabrielle Pryor hils advanced the most interesting proposal yet considered by city officials ..;is a way or encouraging provisio n of n1odera1c cost housin g. During the continuing \Voodbridge Village zoning he~rings, h-1rs. J>ryol' proposed the city allow the Irvine Com pany to increase density of the future villtage. In· stead of being allowed to build up to R,500 dwelling units, the zoning would grant atuhority fo r 8,900 units. The increased opportunity for profit carries with it a restriction. however. · ln return for the additional 400 units &trs. Pryor proposes to require that at least 10 percent or all the \Voodbridge homes-890 units or there about-be of- fered at prices moderate income families ca1t afford. The current definition of moderate income is $12,000 a year for a family of four. ... . ~·,, . ~ ., ,. J " ' ~·,:.;I •'r' ~~~ }~ .:. 1\j ·,, ! f ' ~•J "' ·'. >•/' '.. ' I .1 . ' . ' \'l' • '' ! ' I 1 I . I : ...&J \ ~ /\.""I oA.,..... ....... ~ ~ ,.._. The head of the school for six of its stormy. eccentric, formative years, Bremer has done n1any things to get the school on its feet and has taken the rap. sometimes unjustly, for situations which have given the school a reputation for repression, exploitive politicking, and dama gi ng conservatism. But rather than dwell on Bremer's stepping down. The catch of course, would be in continuing to control prices in the event of re-sales. And perhaps the only answer to this would be a requirement that a per· centage or the homes be reserved for lease or rental to moderate income families. with liUe held bv the developer or by son1e other corporate authority. · SB "IT SAYS,'YOUQ NE1.T MISSION, SHOOLD 'ltlU C~OO\E m ACCEPT IT, WILL BE IN NO~THEQN IRELAND '" ~ Feminism in Art :,_Calle.d __ ~ ~Jl9gwa.sb_:_~ ·ro the Edilor : As a ~·orking artist of some SO years experience. lhe i\lay 24 pa ge on women ar1ists made it difficult for rne to keeµ my supper down. Such a lot of hog,vash I have never seen in print before. ( ___ MA_IL_B_o_x ___ ). IF THIS is an example of the new L•""'"' frllm , ... ,, .,. "'•tc...M. Nomi.Hr breed Of WO!Tlen artists God help \JS , wrll•~ llloul• tlllYl'f' lhtlr lllt"•lff Ill JIM W.rdl ar ltH. T~t rl.iol l<I <OIOCllMI "'"" It flt YKI All this female . . . feminist ... 11,,,1111111 ""' 11 ,...,..,.,,. "" ''"'"' '""" 111- Dear . Gloo111y Gus The United South Orange Coast Communities, formed some time back lo counter lhe big-city atti· tude of th e county ilgenci~. ap· pears to be a~opting the clo..1k or the oppositioa. Go lo a l1SOCC meeting some time. J.L. Glellr.\• Ovs comme11t1 •tt 1ubllllt1"' ~• •••Otn Ind .. ""' lltn'IUrllT rt+l.CI "" 'tlws or the -"""r. s1n0 rtoh "' -¥• to Gloom• o~ O•ilY l"llot, No More · viet1ia111s Candor --\\!ASHINGTON--!fhe .. "'ay:..has: bee.n long for Henry Kiss inger. and if the armed truce he has sought in the Mideast is at hand there is yet still much that he must do. He must do what he promised to do at 1he time President Nixon or- dered a v.·orld-wide military alert, but did not. Then. Secrelary of State Kissinger asked this country to accept on faith the necessity of Pres- ident Nixon's coun· ter • Soviet action. on Commitments ..,111E-KJS~GE_!t _negotiations.._ ~~ve had a purpose above and beyond stoppmg the killing of Arabs and Je\\'S. They hav~ l;een inll•nded 10 reduce to the minimu.n1 the peril of armed conflict by chance or design. betv.·ecn the United Sta~s and many confidenlial discuss ions on the the Soviet Union at the most critical ~tideast truce and America's rol e there point in the \l'Orld \vhcre.. the-interests of henceforth of the kind President Nixon these opposite forces con1e into conflict. has called the frank. hard-h illing explorations necessary to the conduct of An interesting study of th a l lhe pr esi dency . \\'hi te House confrontation of two decades by Dale R. conversations on nation:il security have Tahtinen for the Arncrican Enterprise l b.t Ugh elude 1l1111h;rt •114 rn1Jllnt addrt$1. WI ""'"' neu er 1 • • • • • • ,,..,, " w11111t11• 111 '"11911 u "'111t11111 r.•wft i. To 581 that smillog. dressing pretty, '"'''"''· ,...,,,. wiu llOf " J1Ublllhtd. -etc. has -anytttia~ ... do ·wlttnTiaking it~ seerm to 'me to· .• ~~" tis shallow ·as a \\·hich brought \var m~' ==~==-=fE------'"'too -elosa--for-COm· »' omen 0 fort . and later he. been recognized in the courts as having a Institute sho"·s :i rather discouraging different character fr 0 m discussions result . 1111: supply of arms front ~'IOSCO\~ -~i;;::" r.--wm·ch--might-t>e-ronsidered-evidential -in _a.ncL\V.ashin~ult~r-&Ueast-unu.~-- the commission or felonies. recent cven~s. ~n a military balance or I pov.·er hea\11\y lJ1 Israel's r.-ivor. Recent statemesil can bt.~1 "' , You 'l'CfiJI th3l 'Mt ind fabric t.hli1g SCl.llpture? I HA VE known . hundreds of i.vomen painte~ 1!l0me wiiJlrW'good taoking' some were not. Only one thing matters. You have to be able to paint. Some years ago Beverly liills High School invited people from all professions to speak ' to Ute students aboutl' lhe prospects in their particular profession. S. ~IcDonald Wright and I spoke on art as a career.' We were told afterward that "'e were the only t~·o who recommended olir field as a rewarding career and I !fve ill"°'ays considered it the best iJ!ssible for a girl. J still do. , ., THELMA PADDOCK HOPE . ' Uo•plfal Ul1fory the Editor: Arter years of beholding "Camelback" untain from my kitchen window l'rior to living in California, I recently became t..Ognizant or another equally 'descriptive "'ountain. TIIE NEW hospital in Laguna ~!ills renders a spectacular view of this. peak and derives its name ''Saddleback" from this unique elevation. As I \\'3ndcrcd the corridora of this new medical facility , endeavoring to convalesce from surgery, the mountain's l\Pmesake . the hospital, received most of 1ny attcnlion and is certainly worthy or qim1nenl. ' , THIS TtlODERN edifice is both bt'auti· !ul and ef£icient . The nurses, technicians. ahd ()!her personnel are hardworking, dedicated to serving and meld their efforts toward cxCi!ptional teamwork for the good of the whole. rn addition to this remarkable staff and others not mentioned, are the Pink Ladies, who despite the age of relirement. tin!lessly volunteer their servlc<?s. \Vhen I revie\v my recent experience and remen1ber the excellent care and consideration I received at this place cf healing, I feel sure that ''Saddleback" Hospilal, like its counterpart, will also make history and it loo, Is here lo slay. ELINOR OAVIS Bikes 011 Bal Th lhe Editor: In two monthly newsletters, the Balbo;i Jslnnd rmprovert)Cnt A s s o c i a t I o n expressed COMiderable pride • a n d pleasure at the omission of Balboa Tsland from tht Bike Trail segment of lhe Newport Be.11ch Master Plan. They stated \hat' the danger to ()Ider people WQ\l\d be cravt, and that the Island 3nd the Perry wonld be unable to bc:i:r the Increased bkycle traffic. Along with the trail, would be the "dumping or blcycles onlo the alle.ys. streets, and bayfronts." In a time y,•hen ecology nl1d energy preservaUon arc neces!itlcs rather than pastimes, I find thtsc com.. ments: selfi~h. unreasonable, and un- founded. FIVE JIU~ORED coll<'ge students !Ive on Balboa lsland, many of them o"'ning bike~ RS their contribution 10 energy const>rvaUon . And each time they ride on the Island or across the bridje, lhey t!sk physical injury from the hundreds of L • te t cars which visil the isl31¥1 ev~ day. l ra ure Bicyclists have safety .rul . ~nd ·1 ; i"egu!adons as much 89 1Ut6s do antt .. One~ .. '" .~ • would think that lh• elderly would "" Star zn Quiz more fearful of ·a Uncoln ConLinental than they \vould Of a ten speed Schwinn. ilf tacycle ra,cks are provided in appropriate areas, the island can be as.sured that 'there will be no "dumping" of bicycles anywhere. Bicycle owners take pride and care in their bikes and have no reason just to leave thc1n scaUered about the Island. AS FOR the traffic problem, just take a look at the Irvine Compan y's Promontory Point with greater than 800 family units and see what ii will do to the already crowded and jammed up Island and bayslde traffic. Why not eliminale auto traffic from the rsland altogether and fill the streets and alleyways with flowers? That would seem to be the best beautification program the island could ever follow. Students are also struggling to pay their bills and most ol them 3re working their way through school. For them, riding their bikes may also be a \vay to save money, as well as the environment. I hope that in the future, the association will try and consider the student "minority" Jiving on the Island. I urge them to contact students and to change this position on the bike trail. Interested parties can \\Tite t h e Association at P.O. Box No. 64, Balboa Island , California . LEE H. SOLOW Vice President, Associated Students. UC! President, Balboa Islanders l 'ampalgn C11rbs To the Editor: Developers are major contributors to the polittcal campaigM of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. JIOMEOWNERS w e r e ridi culed by Supervisor Baker for seeking lo preserve some or the beauty of our hills through proper control of hlllside development. J lomeowners we re tumed down in th eir q~t for a hillside ordinance (Baker. Dietrich, Caspers). an adequate local parks ordinance (Baker, Dietrich. Clark), a resource managrnent ordinance (Raker, Dietrich. Clar k), and the rtlention 0£ the agricultural reserve status of the beleaguered Anaheim Hill s (Baker, Dietrich, Battin). BAKER."5 p I a n n i n g c0mmissioner. Roger Slates, bragged at a party that ~y was pouring iric:o Baker·~ w11i chest from the largely Wldcveloped Slh district . Clearly, our ~pervisors' eampnign!i ,. ho u Id be : 1. Publicly nnanecd . 2. Umlted in du.ration. 3. Limited In scale (more. smaller dL'ltricts). ~ democrat ic stptewlde fund mailer raised Jes:s than one-hnlf the COS1 of one maJlcr for an Orllllgc County SUpervlsor. . G E ATllERTON. M.D Chainnan of 1' ARKS. sponsors of Counly Local Parks In!Uatlve , ( SYDNEY HARRIS J This fortnightly ~rd-quiz centers on \\'omen. Identify the "She .. ·in the following more or less famous lines. Forty percent is a score even Women 's Liberationists should be proud of. I. "She hangs upon the cheek of night as a rich jewel." 2. "She moves a goddess, and she looks a queen." 3. "She stood in tears amid the alien com." 4., "She gave me of the tree, and I did ea t." 5. "She dwelt among the untrodden ways.•· 6. "She had a heart-how shall I say~-too soon made glad.'' 7. "She is a winsome wee thing. she is a handsome wee thing." 8. "She makes hungry where most she satisfies.'' 9. "Though she bends him, she obeys him. though she dra"·s him , yet she follows." IO. "She is coming. my own. my sv.•eet: were! it ever so airy a tread.'. 11. "She ""as a child and I was a child , in this kingdom by the sea." 12. ·"She came to prove him with hard quutions.'' 13. "She had a bo~·J of lilacs in her room." 14. "She twisted her hi1nds behind her; but 1111 the knots held good?" ANSWERS: I. Juliet, as described by Romeo, in Shakespeare's "Ronll'O and Juliet." 2. Helen of Troy. in Hon1er 's "Illiad." 3. Ruth. the Biblical daughter-in-law of Naomi, in Keats' pocn1 "Ode to ti Nightingale.'' 4. Eve, as accused by Adam, in Milton's "Paradise Lost." 5. Lucy. in one or Wordsu·orth's five so-called .. Lucy Poems." 6. "My Last Duchess" by Robert Browning, 7. Robert Bums's poetic praise of his wife, s. Cleo patra. ~ described by Enobarbu8, at the opening of Shakespeare's "Antony and Cleopatna. ·• .9, ~1innchaha. in Longfellow's narrative .. The Song of l-lta1\!t1thri." 10. ~laud . ln Tennyson·s poem of the same na1ne. I I. Annabe:I Let. in Ed~ar Allen Poo 's poem or the same name. 12. The Queen of Sheba . confronting Solomon , In the Old Te,1ament, 13. "Portrait of n t..ady .. by T.S. Eliot. 14. Bess. the landlord s daughter . in Alfred Noyes's narrative • 'Th t Highwayman.·· • • Kissinger. would ex· plain in del11.iL Kissinger's 'vords on that occasion arf! v.·orth recalling. l''or once he appeared 10 be angry. He resented a questioner's implicaLion that the alert was no more 1han a polilical move a rew days after the "Saturday Night Mas.sacre" by a rattled President trying to divert public attention from Wa tergate \\'allo~·ing lo the critical tum in world affairs. SUCH SUSPICIONS, Kissinger said, were "a symbol of what is happening in this country," and added that 1he \\'atergate "crisis of authority" ma y ha \·e innuenced Soviet thre ats 10 introduce military forces in the Mideast. The! '·crisis of authority" is even more se\·ere today than in October, 1973 and it has been bcighlened. in part, by public disclosure of the kind of discussions that take place in !he Oval Office at the \Vhlte House. Kissinger and the President have held SO THERE is not much likelihood 1hat events shook that balance and Israel's lllltil man y years from now when il \\'Ill government came tumbling do,vn, but make no difference, anyone will know the Tahlinen 's general conclusion l:s sll!I nature of the confidential and secret valid. The presence of \'BS' amounts of negotiations 'ft'hich President Nixcn and ar1ns supplied to both side~ has not. hecn Secrc1ary Kissinger have been carrying stabilizing or cre;1ted a stand-0ff, as oo ~·ith notably devious aod unreliable Kissinger's dogged efforts illustrate. leaders in the i\fiddle East . ft is a time now for candor beyond other time&. if only because public confidence in the reliability of American statesmen is at a lo"' ebb. flow deeply the President and Kissinger ha\•e gotten the United Slates involved with Egypt and Israe l Yt'ill not be 1nuch illun1inated by expected statements !hat there were no secret deals. Of course not. There never are . And yet the Pentagon papers sho11•ed that the Jolmson administration v.•as going far beyond public perceptions and expecta- tions in its development of Vietnam poli- cy. 11le unauthorized djsclosurc of secret meetings on the India-Pakistan clash re· ''ealcd Nix:on policies of 1Nhich the p11blic \Yas only remotely av.·are. llB NEEDS lo com(' bark now and explain in !he 1nost ex plicit detail his eon1mi11nents. if any. in these hundreds of hours of talk "'1lh the President. spokesmen of the So\•iet Union. of the Arab states and lsraeJ. The public and Congress deserve, and n1ust have, a better comprehension of 1\hat is involl'ed than was had during the forn1u latlon of Vietnam and Jndi<i· Pakistan policy. For it is no longer to be 1akcn for granted that the secret nl'gotiations of the administration in JlO"'cr. hol'<·e\•er \\'ell-intended or logically supponed. necessarily serve th e con1inuing interests of the United States. That old·fashionl'd idea just isn·t praclicat anymore. The Two Most Dangerous Leaclers \\'ASHJNGTON -TI1e world's l\\'O most dangerous and irresponsible leaders, in the opinion of v.·orried intelligence experts, are North Korea 's Kim II Sung and Libya's l\1oammar Khadafy. The isolated Kim. accord ing to intelligence reports, is itching to resume the Korean War. which enl'.led 22 yea rs ago about. where it started a I o n g the 381h parallel. He' is depicted in intelligence reports as a leader. out of !ouch \\'ith the v.-orld ~·ho would plunge Korea into another l\'ar, against the ad- vice of his Soviet and Chinese mentors. li e is quite cap,.. ble or plot.ting a vdld, daredevil incidcnl. such as a paratrooper attack on Seoul. At>PARENTLV, Kim began unification talks \Vith South Korea tn the mistaken belief that North Korea was e<::0nomicalty superior and would be able to dominate a peaceful, un ified country. He believed his own propaganda , apparently. that the South was suffering under oppression and its people: ·were starving. Instead, North Korean delegates found the economy booming and the people far more prosperous than in the North . Khn \1•as reported to be furious at hl!i representatives for bringing back cameras. transistors and other consumer lte1ns as souvenirs. Ill:.: AHRUPTt.Y dropped the dialogue v«it.h the South and be(:(an making warlike n1ot•cs. tntelllge ncc reports assert he hns concluded that the onty ~·ay Korea cnn be unilt'd under hi~ leadership is by force . His gunboats sank tv.·a South Korean fishing boots :'Ind abducted a th ird. He has resumed the standard Commooist tactics of fomenting class a n t a g o n i s 111 . consolidating antigovem1nent fa ctions and fomenting united fronts in the South. "We will render posilive assistance to the revolutionary struggles of the South Korean pcoµle .'' Kiin has proclaimed from l!Yongyang. But It isn't the infiltration and agitation that worries the intelligence analysts. They are fa r more concerned that !he unpredictable Kim may reS-Orl lo hot aclion. ' EVEN \\10RE mercurial is the Libyan !!lrongm::in. i\lo.ammar Khnd3fy, who is constantl y stirring U\l trouble in !he f..liddle East \\'ilhout n1uch thought ror the consequences. Intelligence reports claim. for instance, tha't he has armed terrorist group!i 1vl1h sophisticated weapons. i n c 1 u d i n g shouldcr-fi~cd Soviet missiles. There is apprehension Jn the i n t e I l i g c n c c con1munity that extremist ~roups \1·il! get their hands on even more dangl'rous weaµons . OO\\' that Libya h!IS concludtd a new arms agreement with !\Iosco"'· J\IJADAF\' is also accused or stirring up plol s 10 cveri hro\v neighboring .\tab let1deri; "'ho ha\'C rejeci«l hls calls for a "pooples· 1\•ar'' againi;t lsr<i<'I and the United Stal<'s. He Is c!amorlng to use lhc oil ~barl{o, terrorist :11tacks nnd otl)s.r "·ild n1et1sur{'S. v.·hich his more nlodt'rRtc Arab nt'lghbors "'Rm could btlckflr<'. Like Kim 11 Sung, ~1oammar Kh:ld.11y is :ilso' capable of irr~tional and irresponsible acts. footnote : In South Koren. President Park Chung lice has taken emergency meaSures, \\'hich intelligence experts priva1ely concede are justified. In the ~litldte East. there is talk o t "etin1inallng·• the fiery Khadafy. One secret repo rt tells or a discussion Uetv.•een a CIA agent <ind oil company official :!bout putting up $50 million for 1\had;ify's ass;_issination. 111gh officials have assured us. however. that lhc S50 million talk \\':'IS nothing .but bacroon1 b:inter and has never been given serious Cilnsldcration. Ol ANG-1 COAST DAILY PILOT Robert iV. \Vl"efi. P1•bLisl1 er Tho111as Ktevil, Editor '"' Harb(lra 1('rcibich Editorial Pa(1c Edicor The ~ditnr1al page ol tll" Dally T'1lot jttks to infom1 and gtlmul1uc 1'('!tdtt'! by p~nting on thl.'J J)agl' d\vl'!ne c:on1n11•nfRJ)' ·on lO!JlC'I of In· tercsl by synctlcn,t~'{I coltatlQists and rtrtoonisr~. by pnJVldin1t :i forun\ for rcfldr~· \ !rw!. 11nd by pretenrinG" this nr\\'Sp&pt:r'ir UfWniotu• ;ind i<lt'AS on currr111 toplr.!.. Thl• M.1!<1rl11.I opinion., of 1h~ D&l!)· 1'!1111 Afll"'lll' onl)' In the rrll!(lfial l'Olumn al th.-lt1p of the pagr. Or1n1cns 1n.pn"m-d by !he cm. urnn111l.'i 11nJ 1·ar1nonis15 •nd lctler- y, Tflm '-N' the Lr ov.·n and no enOOne-- mcnt nf lhrir 1•ic\\·it by the 03.lly Pilot !lho\!ld be Int~ \\'cdncsday, June 5. l!J74 DAILY PILOT S Testimon v 3 Killers VA Chief Relfttts l • Winds Ui, E:r-49er To1)p,le<l Beli eved Jeremiah to Return Home,! On Hu ghes From '\\1lre Ser,•ICt!ii LOS ANGEL.ES -Robe.rt A. ~laheu rE>stcd his $17.5 n1lllion libel suit against Mo\i'Ord llughes 1Tucsday, clenrin~ !he \\'ay for t he billionaire's r('buttal ln the 15·11•eck--0!d trial. J\lahcu, a lorn1('r' FBI 8$.:E'lll \\'ho headE'd Hughes· 1·nst Nevada empire from 1966 to 1970 is sui ng the recluse Ol'<'r his publi~ statemen! that HEO\VOOD CITY (UPI I -Bob St. Clair, former all·pro San Francisco 49er offensive tackle. was defeated in his bid for re· election to the San ti.tateo Co unty Board o( Su pervisors. St. Clair. 44, had held thl" ixisition since 1966 and b\31ned his defeat on the adverse effects on incumbents of II~ \\'atergate scandal. The l'ictor \\'as John :0.1. \Vard. 33, a high school teacher. Involved SALINAS (UPll -ft took as 111any 11~ three killers to overro\.\·er tvto yoonl( men nnd a girl and bludgeon thcn1 to death during.an outing along a snuill creek in the Arroyo $c(() Gorge, authorities say. L05""NGELES tUPI J -In Ille, no l h Ing 1te1n John "Llv~r Eating·• Johnston out or the 1nountalns -not bears, bllnards or Crow Indians. And though he's been dead for 74 years, the Veterans Admlnistrali<>n was no 1nore successruL Park View Junior His;h School Johnston was acheduled to in Laneasler, who we re be reburied there Saturday ln surprised to learn from a o t.'t~roony. attended by history teacher that t h e \Vyom~ llistorical Society outdoors-loving Johnston Jay ttpreae tatlves and eight of burled next to 8 bu::;y I the st cnts from Park View, to be flown ooL by Wamer Angeles freeway. Brothers, who Made the movie Alter 50 years of roami g that began It all. .Johnston, \Vhose life inspirf'd lhe Rockies before and after Then Wllson issued a "stop lhc movie ''J eremln h Johnson ," Is golng hoPle to the the Civll \Var, h u n Ii n g , order'' halting the planned Jtockies he loved. trapping and fighting Indians, ~b~~I, saying ~he~was a VA Administrator Rufu s 11. Jo hnston died at the VA \Vilson, who earlier ordered · hospital in 1900 at the age or .CUAIM :\!aheu ··s1ole me blind." '----------~ The lhree were all killed by hcavv blo11.•s on the head with a heA\ly \.\'eapon not yet found. The ~1ontcrey County sheriff's <>rfirc said it has no suspects and a ntotive has not yet been uncovered . Ul"I ,..._010 that Johnston's p I a n n e d 74. NG next or kin were listed, Abductio11 reburial be delayed, rel.en!ed so he was buried in the :JI :~ 1 r \~ U.S. DIS1ricl Court Judge ( Stat e J Harry Pregerson excused the jur~· after ~lahC'u concluded his marathon l~-<iay appea rance on the 11·itness stand and Hughes' attorney Nobert Srhlei \.\'as to start his rebutt al cas& today. 1il'l essag e 'Fro111 SLA' Delirered The .assailant s slashed the throat of one of !he victims and gouged his eyes out. The \•ictims y.·ere \Vyatt S. Hanson, 17. Patrick Hill. 18. and Terry t.1cCorl , 18, all of Salinas. Alona K. Ellington, 19, Tuesday and g~ve permiSSJon hospital cemetery. ror the mountain man 's bod)\ H · · was one of two won1en 10 be dug up today , or 1 e .1s r.emembered 1n t~ reportedly kidnaped in Thursday from 8 VA ccrnttery ·~eslem history books. for his Stockton last week. She !or reirUerment outside Cody . , 1.Soy~a&: personal war or was released but com· w 0 ' • vengeance on the C row panion allegedly was Y · llldians. ":ho killed his wife. forced to drive man, THE t.fOVE IS the rruit or a· -· · · • Investigators said the l\\'O identified as Gerald six month campaign by , 1'Jq: STUDENTS, inspired bo)'S apparently went into the fwlartin 26 to Texas. seventh grade students at .by tbe n1ovie starring Robert scenic Arroyo Scco gorge in --'--·------: Redford last year, began SA ~ FRANCISCO (AP l -Los Padres National Forest lobbfiilg the VA as a class Polire say a man •·si niulating south of Salinas to SY."i.rti and ~ to have themselves a gun" in his p 0 c k ct pass !he Sunday afternoon. Bo)·' s Exorci·sl'.n Told ' decliiied Johnston's honorary demanded eril'Y lo KBHK·TV Miss McCo't went to"'' same ' • • next of kin so they could ha" .SAVE ON CHAIN UNKFAIRIC 50°/oOFF* late Tuesday night and general area ·with . another him r¢>uried someplace more • liidllllper Dies dl'li vered an envelope \\'hose party or tcen·agers. SAN BERNARDINO (UPil the manslaughter and child suitable to his preferences Jn LOS ANGELES A contents contained a message bu t · t r p k 34 d life FAIRIC WHEN ' IMSTAUID IY WARDS \\'hen her group leit, ~tiss -La\\Tence Parker claimed o sc r1a o ar er. . an · kidnaper \\'as shot to death by on "S.vmbionese Liberation hi ·r At · 29 ·d " k G ·d d b t ch Tr. l\1cCort decided to stay \\'ilh h r ed · s w1 c, ice. 1 sa1 .-ar er u1 e y ea er 1 quesUon about whether the --should be moved. ~ said he did nol wanl lilt VA ti be Eolved in a "commercial oper llon" and that a Montana cona: n, Rep. John J;>,.1 Melcher, forwarded COl1li~•! plaints from Red Lodge,~1 Mont,, that It was also in I "Liver-Eating's" old stamplng, grounds and might want o claim the body. ' one of his hostages early Armv stationer;." The tcxl e per onn an exorcism fln t Id hi h t d 1 n .b· the r d Hanson and Hill , "·horn she o m e cas a cmon ou •w 1nson, y oun a new Tuesday as he tried to flee out \ras ·not disclosed. his ll·year-<ild diabetic son the r h ·i· ~ Th h ho ' J h • bon WOODAMDWaou.HTllOMALSOAYAU.U knew at Salinas High School o t e a1 mg U<Jy. e yout . me 1or o nston s es at the front doo r <>f an San Francisco po 1 ic e da.v the OOy died from a lack \V te died t t A 22 d Cod · Old Tr ·1 T !Ill HUNllNGTON -before the h1'0 youths dropped es y, as ug. . an , y s a1 own, a _...,s" apartment. . operaUoos Sgt. Anthon Y out some months ago. <>f insulin, a witness at the prosecutors nuUntaln th e , Jrontier museum collection of 1'"'""'-:.!fl ..-. The kidnaper. described. as B.1tzer said Ted Bonner, The k i 11 i. n gs "''ere trial of the boy's parents lias Parkers withheld insulin frq1n •Cahirui, a stage station and HONEI PlAZA being about 'l1 years old. '''as security man al 420 Taylor St.. reminiscent or a series or testified. the boy, believing him cur-ed other buildings from the late rl. -.i p"""' s--.111111..,....., not immediately identi fied. where the TV station is ma!!I murders in the nearbyl·c-~Ca=r=l~D=ic=k=e~rson=,~l=e=st=if~yin:.::_g~a~t_:b~y~pr=ay~e~r=s. ____ _:"'.........:._:1800s::::.=·--------_'.=:a,====""=========-=:":,_='===~ Police said he carried an out· located. took thi man up to Santa Cruz area. \Vith the of.state driver's lictnse issued the station's master control on conviction last year of llerbert r to Richard Gelger, 20. Sih·er the third floor 1rhere the Yr Mullin. the remaining Spring. ?<.Id.. but that !he en\lelope \\'as delivered. unsolved slayings in that area kidnaper's description did nol Balzer said the man . six f~t fit the one on the JicenSt'. tall , 170 pounds. about 27 _w_er_e_c_le_a_r_ed_up_. _____ 1 . None of the kidnap victims '"ll years old and \.\'earing a dark Kids Like to \\'fie injured. ofrictrs said. O\lercoat, warn~ that fie was armed and dosplayed the Ask And)' e Ter111 Ret.-ei ved ,_s_ha_·,._o_f a_gun_i_n_h_is_poc_k_et_. -----------1 SAN DIJ!;GO - A man \\'ho ·-tried 'to exiort-s1n.ooo front the Randolph A. Hearst family by offering inforn1ation about the kidnaping of I he i r daughter \\'as s e n t e n c e d Tuesday to fi\'C year . .;: lo life in state prison. Superior Courl J u d g e George A. La 7.ar he:ird lhe trial of Samuel L. 11olcGra\\'. 24. "'·ithout a jury and passed sentence. SRlllUll TllN "14 a gift of jewelry .-\ulhentil' ,\nu·ritan Indi an Hin gs in Solid Siht'r Sears - ., Misses' Nylon Bikinis • ~,~m.ed.~th~ .Lower Level,~·=----- party dresses . for: juniors .•. high .. I, I '• l----e.s .. 1t .... i~'tl·rike What b<'tter 11.•ay to show your appr~ialion co the _graduate than v.-uh a genuine hand-erarted American In· d1an Turquoise ring"J A very specrif purchase of tliese .i:enuine strrling silver and turquoise rings allows us lo of· fl'r th('m to ynu at ~oc; off !he regular prices that they arc sold for by the trading posls in Arizona & New !olexico. ___,"' _ _infashion- low • . I PASADENA -The first strike in the history of the Pasadena Unified Schoo I District apparently had little effect on the operation of classes. but some high schools suffered large student abse!l· lee.ism. The one-<iay w a I k o u t Tuesday was organized by the Pasadena Federation of Teachers and school oficials said fewer than 20 percent of all classroom teachers took aprl. Teachers ~id they \Vere protesting recent ncfion'i of the school board including the dismissal of 171 probalion:iry teachers. e G11ord Sei:ed l~OU.Y\\'OOD - A securilv guard has been arrested iii connection with the dea th of a man \\'hose body u·as found stufred in a plaslic tarpaulin in Bu~k . Authori t i es arrested Burleigh T. Je\\·ell of Los \ Angeles oo l\1ooday. He \.\'as accused of shooting Rona ld Lee Kessler. \\'hose body was found in a trailer Saturday. Kessler's widow. !\lar\a nna. \\'as arrested Sunday night in connection \\'ith the tnurder. e E111be::le111e111 STOCKTON -Pau11 Shepherd, 63, convicted of l embezzling over $100.COO while treasurer of the Knight s of ! Phythias Grarxl Lodge, ha s been sentenced to state prison. ALL Rl:'\G S are genuine sterling silver \Oo'tlh genuine turquoise. earh .... ·as hand fashioned by the Navajo or Zun• lribt-s. AH •ither Indian jewelry 1n nur Sloek at similar sa\·1ng s. ••• ~Jl"''dl group CJI ring~ m•ny •Ivie, ~nd .;i1P~ ~!I ,(4•rhpg ~1lver ;ind genuone IUlfjUrJo,1· RegulaT $14 NOW $6 'U''' o~I i;rvur> t•I r1n~· m•nv ~1) 1 .. , ~nd ~llC'~ ,11 •ll'•l.n~ .,1,,., & genuine !urqu o"'' Regular $29 NOW $17 • LONG llF.ACll, 4313 A1lo .. ticA•. • .~1\NTA ,\NA, 2015 N. 1\/ai11 • TOR R,\.\'CE, 24455 llawll!or1111 Bl, • l\'l/11'Tl£H, J29J8f'l1iladt/phloSI. • s1-:w1•011r 111;11c11. 111-· ... 11. Sq. • T011R A NC:1':,Dd,\mo f'o•hin"·'>ll. • HE /Jfl.\'DO REAl'll, S, nay Cc.,t.·r • OllA.\'Gf.'. Thl'MallafOra"Jt. • A.,.,\llE/,\/. A."ahl'im Plo~a ' 1.0.'i 11.'VGELES, A.re<> P'4ia MA$fll (HAIGI • IANKAMlllCAIO • SO (llOIT l"lAN RINNINGBI GO • Only! Scoop them up! All nylon tricot with elastic waist- band. long wearing. In sizes 5. 6, 7. { I 3-way Convertible Bra Sean Price 197 Wear as criss-cross, halter or regular bra. Nylon tri - cot. ·Contoured. Sizes 34 and 36 A, 8, C. Olher sizes available. Non-cling Formal Length Half-Slip 197 Made of Antron® Ill nylon so it's non-cling . Smartly trimmed. ·Sizes S, M. L • i lo 't , ~· i ~ ~. r·-~ .•·•i ) i ""· .. •. ·~ I ·• • " " • Prices Effective througl-i Saturday, June 8 ' • ' ' t ' .._,, •. IS I So. Coast Plaza Buena Park eafS 3333 Bris1ol St. 8150 La Palmo Ave . Phone 540-3333 Phone 828-4400 • . . -1n price 88 Great slyles in the long length. Bare-backs, sleeveless, short sleeved and scoop 'neck looks. In fashion fabrics and colors. Junior sizes . All·Nude Panty Ho•e 69c pair All-sh~r from heel to toe. Mesh knit nylon. One size fils 95 to 150 lbs. Fashion colors. Use Seors ~evo/vi"fl Char~ Orange 2100 N. Tustin Ave. Phone 637-2100 Stote M...,n;i ~r 1hrv S.wrd•r 41 JO A.M. to •1JO ,.M, wnc1., t2 ,..,. to i P.M. ..,,..-~- •: , I ' . ! ' l(untington Bea~h Fountain Valley 0 • VOL. 67. NO. 156, 7 SECTIONS, 116 PAGES • - ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks WEDNESDAY. JUNE 5, 1974 'TEN CENTS eac • ers oised to tri e 6th Straight Loss Huntington Scliool Fi1it;tncing Dies By TERRY COVILLE Of lllt 0811Y 1'11111 $1111 Chalk up six litraight losses for the. Huntington Beach Union High School District in the voter support category. Tuesday's fin.al result in the 17-8-ccnl tax override election was : Yes -26,536 14S.9 percent) No -31,261 (54.1 percent) it was the sixth time in as many yea~ that voters have refused to raise taxes in order to build another high school campus in the badly c~owde<i di:>lrict The first five cll'ctions were all bond issues requiring a yes vote from lwo- thirds {66.6 percent ) or ttme casting ballots. . 'l'his time; district-supporters thought a simple tax override, requiring only 50 percent approval from voters, would Pass. It didn't. . ~1cmbers of the school board blamed the IOSI> on the teacher strike. battles ' over unification , and a general rebellion aga inst higtier taxes. Thef said they don 'l know what the next .step will be:. "We "'iii have to analvze what happened before we make 8ny more decisions," School Board ·President Geilrget:Agan said -tooay. "J don1Hike· morning after commentary, because if you say what you feel, you'll probably an1agonize a lot of people." Logan did say he believes another (Set OVERRIDE, Page %) . ..... -· -- --~H-o~~00 --~o-te~~~oµno-Del~ D1l1J Pill! Slfff f'Mte Here is the final tabulation on all election results £or Orange Count y and local races on Tuesday's Primary ballot : SHERIFF-CORONER Brad Gates -2.14.451 Spero Janise -5,906 1 Jerry L. Lawi-ence -12,453 ~1arshal Norris -36,319 , ____ ,George-Savord~S? .. 960_ Gene Vinlove -8,560 BOARD OF .SUPl!RVISORS Znd District David L. Baker -30,074 (RUilof!) John T. Dean -14,349 Laurence J. Sc:hmil -U,217 (Runoff) ft& Dltlricl Ralph 8. a.rt -50, 743 Garry Nellesen -15.137 $th Dlstrkt Ronald W. caspers -54.480 · Martia M. Bents -18,666 Nolan Frizzelle -7 .363 Jim Thorpe -17,177 ASS'"..SSOR Jack P. Vallerga -229.139 Raymond Preston -103 ,847 AUDITOR Victor A. Helm -291 ,263 LOCAL MEASURES D. Irvine Parks Yes -5,293 No -1,937 E. Irvine Bike Trails Yes -4,97Z No -2,001 SADDLEBACK COLLEGE BOARD Trustee Area No. 1 William E. Dean -32.671 Sleve ~fueller -13,372 Henry ~1. Slanley -5,271 Trustee Area No. 2 Robert C. Bartholomew -25,515 Jeffrey S. Du Bowe -10,912 Alan ·tt. Greenwood -14,~ Trustee Area No. 3 Norman Cole -9,584 Ron Kreber -16,575 Michael McFadden -5,814 Lawrence W. Taylor -17,825 COUNTY SCHOOL SUPT. ROOert Peterso1 -201,842 Donald D. Woodington -118,751 COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Area No. % John D. ~larper -24,671 David H. Paynter -34,014 Area No. John o. App -31,766 Ernest G. Lake -23,929 TAX COLLECTOR-TREASURER Robert L. Citron -280,·;a& CLERK Wtlllam E. St John -287,6.'19 DISTRICT ATI'ORNEV Cecil Hicks -212,079 Wlllinm S. Hulsy -83,142 ~lax A. St\irges -361970 HE LEAVES HOME OVER TELEPHONE The Dally Pilot sincerely hopes that its ads won't drive you from your home. But .here's one ad ~hat did just that lo the Newport Beach man who placed It : 7Q CHEV. Horizon. 21 Fl. pwr. steer & brakes. 15,000 ml. Comp. self-contained. 110 generator, air~d. bike reek. ~lay trade/offer. (Phon< No.) The ad sold the motor home almost Im· mediately after the paper came out and then 111ent on to produce so many Inquiry calls Iha.I the advertiser left home to get away frotn the phone, Teti a Dallv Pilot ad for the results you wont. n1ul the direct line : 642·5679. PUBLIC ADMlNlSTRATOR James lleim -285,442 RECORDER J. \\'ylie Carlyle -280,155 WATER DISTRICTS l\funiclpal Water District Of Orange County Division t fountain Valley , Huntington Beach, Seal -~ach, Costa Mesa : Da\'ld K. Jones -28,186 Stephen T. Tucker -17,240 'Division ! Seal Beach, Westminster Gerald E. Price -26,269 Harry D. Bentley -6,882 ·Gordon Gleason -14.439 Division 3 llarbor Area..SOulh County Clem l\f. l\lcCollocb -36,522 William D. Fenton -8,043 Sterling S. Sharrar -6.728 QlastaJ l\-1uniclpal Water District Division 3 Newport Beach Jlans J . Lorenz -3,986 \Vinton M. Ashton -838 W. A. Coleman -655 Ed Vanden Bossche -663 Division 4 Costa l\lesa \\'illlam K. Patrick -3,493 Gene J. Adams -1,785 Tri-Cities ~1unicipal Water District Division 3 San Clemente Richard J\.f. Learner -617 Don Conrad -438 Division 5 San Clemenle W. i\I. 1\-lac Kay -90!I C. Thomas Dahl -421 H. Huntington Beach High School Dislrlct Yes -26,536 No -31,Z&l L. Laguna Beach School District Yes -3,571 No -3,t71 0. Rossmoor Service Area 21 Yes -2,836 (See COUNTY, Page Z) Ligliting Issue Tastes Def eat In Sunset Bencli Sunset Beach rcsi?Jents refused to rai se their taxes Tuesday to pay next year's street lighting bill. They tumed down a tax increa.<ie proposal 219 to 129 in the Sunset Beach Slrect l..ighling District. County officials say the estimated electric bill in 1974-75 /or the 92 street tigbts in Sunset gbeach is $9.039, nearly $3.400 more than the 1973·74 utility bill. The district's tax rate of 15 cents per SIOO a.'isessed valuation won't cover the lncrensect cost. so the county "'anted voters to increase the rate to a maximum of 24 ccnt!I. 'Will the lights go out if the bill can't be paid? • Buck \\"eaver. an orficlal in the coonly road deparf.ment which handles !iUCh dislrlcts said he doesn't know. Count y isupe.rvisors can ask the state controller for pcnnission to ra.ise the necessa ry taxes for one yea r but they would have to make tht! same r~uest <'9.Ch year unless voters J)3SS a higher lax. Weaver Mid he l~n·1 11ure what ~upervlsors "'ill do. The Sunset failure was just one of several similar tax defeats ror street Jighling dislrict.s all over the county. • Due in Countv " As Law Falls? TREADS DAD'S PATH Democratic Nominee Brown Turnout Low CARRIES GOP BANNER Nominee Flournoy . By L. PETER KRIEG OJ it.. Df!IY f'llot 5111! A ruling Tuesday declaring California 's obs~nity law unconstitutional ma y mean Orange CoWlty will be swamped with dirty movie houses and "adult" bookstores, a spokesman for District Attorney Cecil Hicks said today. Flournoy, Brown Sweep Governor Nominations · Law enrorcement and J ud i c i a I authorities throughout " the county \Vere aghast--at the ruling, but most declined LOS ANGELES (AP) -California's any immediate comment. next governor v.·ill be either Edmund G. A three-judge panel ruled the law is Bro"'"· 36-year-old son or the state's last unconstitutlonally vague in falling lo Democratic governor, or Houston I. defi.n~ what is obscene. The 2!-pagc Flournoy. a Republican beneficiary of decision was based on the screening of \\'atergate. "Deep Throat'' by Buena park 's Both won their party's nominations by Pussycat Theater. comfortable margins Tuesday. as Polls Assistant Orange County District predicted, . in a surprisingly tow voter Attorney Michael Capizzi sakl a decision turnout. \Viii have lo be made whether to rewrite Brown led San Franc,!sCo l\fayor the law or appeal the~ruling directly to Joseph Alioto 1,041,JW to 514,030 with 96 tbe U.S. Supreme Court. percent of the vote counted. Assembly Capizzi .said the probable move will be Speaker Bob Moretti was third with to appeal and he said he is optimistic 460,573. tbat the nation's highesl court will Flournoy, 44 . won a landslide victory overturn the ruling. over Lt. Gov •. Ed Reinecke. who was the But walch out if it doesn't, he said. front-runner before being indicted April 3 '·Just look around at the bookstores by the Watergate grand jury. He pleaded that are trying to exist now. Look at not guilty but failed to gel a trial date some of the newstands on the street. be!ore the primary. . " ';If there's no Jaw prohibiting smut Flournoy had 1.104,945 votes to then I guess your imagination is the Reinecke 's 531,610. limit," he said. Voter turnout fell "'ell below the 62 Tuesday's decision was handed dOl'.'n percent predicted by Brown , the by a panel composed of U.S. District secretary of state. Candidates blamed it C~u~t Judge Warren J. ferguson , Judge on Watergate-caused apathy. -"Brown 's Wilham East of tbe District Court of office said the turnout was under 50 per· Oregon and 9th U.S. Circuit Court Judge cent. Walter Ely. The decision was unanimous. Bro\\'Jl. who led the fight for a Orange County Superior Court Judge controversial political rerorm measure. Byron K. Mchtillan was obviousl y upset told supporters that he and Flournoy by the ruling. would have to work harder in the fall "You jw;t can't tell these days." he because "the people are skeptical of the said. "I went out to Buena Park to see political process." 'Deep Throat' and I thought il "'as He said he expected a strong race from obscene and I said so. Apparent!v the Flournoy, whom he described as "an federal. panel disagrees and that's the intelligent person and an articulate end of my interest in the matter. · spokesman for his cause." The panel ruled that the California Jrnv Flournoy predicted an "jnteresting and e1citing campaign" and added. "We are going to have a united Republican party ." Flournoy \\'On the endorsement of his landslide victim. Reinecke, today as the GOP immedia tely moved lo unite for the fall campaign. "I'm here lo endorse him," Reinecke told a joint news conferen~ wit!l Flour· noy in Los Angeles. Brown wbo shrewdly publicized his office and stressed political campaign reform, Jed lhe polls from the beginning. A former Jesuit seminarian, he had a considerable advantage as the son or Edmund G. Brown, governor from 1959· 1967. Flournoy, conversely. ,,,.as an also-ran with three percent in polls a year ago. He moved to front rwmer, with t4 per- cent to Reinecke 's 27 percent a week be· fore .the election. Reineke is accused o! lying to the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1972 when he denied he advised the U.S. Justice Department and then-Atty . Gen. John N. Mitchell of International Telephone & Telegraph Co. 's offer to help under·write the Jtepublican Nationa l Convention. Reinecke's trial is set for July 15 in \Vashington. Flournoy told cheering backers early today tbat he \vouldn't go along \Vith a suggestion hJ' Brown for a moratoriu1n on campaigning until September, "I don 't believe in that," he said. "I belit:!ve the people of this stale should (See GOVERNOR, Page 2) "does not specllically define the sexual activity which is prohibited." The lawsuit attacking the state !aw was , brougtil by Vincent ~liranda. president of Pussycat Theaters of Holl~1wood. after Orange Co u n I y aut horities confiscated the sexua ll)> explicit film "Deep Throat" from the Buena Park theater in a series of raids last November. Baker, Sch1nit i11 Runoff For Second ~t1·ict Seat Prosecution of A1iranda and a dozen (See SMUT, Page Z) · 5,000tli Pair To Be Spliced June brides make this the busiest month of the year for Orange County Clerk \\1il1iam E. St John and his marriage bureau \\'Orkers, but St John took lime out Tuesday to honor one young (.'()IJple Wit look out a marrlage licenst. ChrlstlMne ~1arl~ Hardesty , 19, of Tµstln , and Jerry Carl Faragalli. 2', of Fountain Valley, gol lhe VIP trea tment. They ore lhe 5.000lh CO\ipl~ kl take out a marriage license in Orange Counly this yel'!r. St John marked the octasion wllh a special ceremony In his office. Jerry, a nlg'ht club singer, and Christlanne will be m a r r i c d Slturdey. ' Incumbent Supervisor" David Baker, a three·term veteran on the Oran~e Counl y board. faces a November runoff election ~gainst the top vote getter of his l\\'O Tuesday pfimary election foes Larry Schmit. • \\'Ith all t~ county's 1,849 precincts reporting. the second supervisorial' district totals are: Baker : 30.074 LalT)' Schmit: 22,217 John T. Dean : 14.349 Dick Ruiz , Baker's top aide, said today the runoff came as no surprise and.. was due primarily to a itrong Schmit vole in Garden Grove. He prt'dicted Baker should win the runoff handily. Schmit and Dean cam~igned against lhe RO-Called "Incumbency'' fa ctor which holds that the long~r a mon Is in office, the leM responsive and honest he bceomes. Sdimil ran aga inst Bnkcr (our )•ears ago and came within 8,000 v o t c s of u~tting him. That was about thP. closest Baker has come to dereat in his long tenure as a supcn.·lsor. ·schmit and Ot!an .said durin g the rs.. BAKER, rag• •1 O•llP f'lltl 111" ,llOlt FORCED INTO RUNOFF Second Di1trfct'1 B•kfr • h1tensive ~ N egotiatio11s Break Down ll)' KATHY CLA~CY 01 In. DM1Y f'!lol SlaU School officials, parents and student.~ today fa ced the prospeet of para\yting teacher walkouts in three Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley elementary school districts. Teachers in Huntingwn Beach's Ocean View School District slood ready to walk off the jol> on a moment's notice if round· the-(\ock wage negotiations break down. _Teachers irr_Mae..city~er_elemcotary system, the Huntingtotl Be a ch Citv .School.--:::0.istricl ... re.jected-=o three.-diilereni:: __ wage offers Tuesday night. And in Fountain Valley. tea chers were \\·earing black armbands I o d a y ' ' I o proclaim the death of teacbers' right~·· there. Founta in Valley elementary teachers plan to march on school board meetings tonigbt and Thursda y to demand that \1•age negotiations be reopened . If the board refuses, teachers say they \v ill walk out Frida y. Local school administrators admitted that. if teachers in all three districts strike at the same time, chances of hiring enough substitutes t.o keep thr- schools open seem slim. In a meeting Tuesday , Ocean Vie1v teachers voted to allow their negotiating team and strategy committee to call a strike al any time negoations re::ich an impasse. Tbe vote was 350 In favor with one abstention. teachers said. ~feanwhile. teachers in the Huntington Beach City School District rejected three salary offers Tuesday that would have given them 5.7 percent, 7.25 per~nt or eight percent pay raises with various fr inge benefits in each plan. Teachers will negotiate again Thurs- day. They want a pay boost equal to the cost of living increase. About 150 Huntingtoo Beach City teachers picketed during the ncgoliating session. and they plan to do so again Thursday. A spokesman for Ocean View teachers sai~ today li!lle pro~s was madC d:r1ng an a11 night mechat1on session that adjourned at 8: 15 this morning. Teacher!! and board representatives met with a mediator from California Conciliation Service and were to reconl'ene to discuss salary demand~ al II a.m. Si1non Assails Tax Reform Bid WASHINGTON !UP[) -Treasw-y Secretary William E. Simon urged senators today to drop their plans jor a tax reform package -\vhich includes a tax cut -on grounds It could cause an eoonomic slo"·down. Simon said tax reform should proceed slowly and carefully in Congress• tax· writing committees, not from a series or amendments on the noor. · Orange Coast Weather Night and morning lo1v clouds clearing to hazy afternoon sun- shine Thursday. \Varmer inland with highs in the. mid 70s. Beach highs in the upper 60s. INSIDE TODA. Y Pat a11d Richord Niron 1Dfl'C n1arried there. llun1 pl1.re11 Bo- ga rt boozed there. Teddy Roose· uelt 'lept th ere, and 11010 the f.1 i3sio11 l nn is backdrop for mo·vie about a Hollywood lcge1ul. Story, Page 16. At Ytv.r 1trvlc• a .. atlftf " L. M. ...... >1 (tfii.t-111• 4-$ C•-C.,""° 14 Ct.nllltl tJ. .. Ctfl'llCI .. (1'911_. .. 0.1ttl NOllCtl U •lllltr'l•I f'•M ' l•ttrt.>l•ntfflf l"H ,.,,,,_ 11.n f'•t Ille llKtrf 21 ..___ )I A•• u ... n • ·' M•lltlel a Mlt'lkl M-tS Mw ... •I l'INlft 22 N•llt1111 N•w1 M ().r-c .... 111Y II SJIYl• hrter ti S•l1S 1'•111 o.r, Sli!ltltnM lJ lftottl Maorl1tt1 n ·n Tllt•ltn tt.ff Tt ..... llotol '4 ,,, .. ,~., 4 WtfC.IM A!>ffMI )t w,.,,...., Ntw1 tMt Wtflll NIWS ti I ~ ! 2: DAILY PH.OT H Fron• Page 1 P COUNTY ••• No -1,207 r. Oraogt C.OuDty Strttt Ughtlng District l ' Capistrano Beach. Dana Point, South Laguna .: Yes -3,139 No -:t,to. ' V. Orange County Slrttl Lighting Dlstrll·I 11 I F.1 Toro. ~lission Viejo Yes -3,015 No -3,329 Z. Orange C.o11nly Street 1Jgh1lng District 1• l...os Alamitos. Rossrnoor \'cs -2.190 l\o -2.242 "'· ~lc1ropolhan \\'attr Dirtrict Yes -188,143 No -154,61-1 DD. Los Alamll05 Strett Lighting 'i'es -896 No -8~8 lllL Sunset Beach Strett Ugbting Yes -129 f'lio -2}9 U. Orange County Street lJ&bllng District 10 1r.•ine , Tustin, Ea st Tustin ''es -3.421 • t-.'o -2.983 X. Orange County Street lJgbling District 1% Bay \"iew Yes -141 No -12\! \', Orange County Street Ugbting Distrlrt 13 El Toro. Tustin, Ba st Tustin, Irvine Yes -2.627 No -Z,717 -Dr. Peterson Easily Tops Woodington T"·o-term incumbent Dr. Rob e r t Peterson easil y defeated Laguna Beach -&hool-Superinte~ OonaltFV.'ooding.. ton in non-partisan county Superinten· dent of Schools balloting 1\1 ~~day. .. • ' .. . , Llnofficia\ fi nal r('sulLs \\'ere: Peterson: 201.842 \\'oodington 118,751 . ' The campaign revolved aroung t\\O central issue s: incumbent Peterson's eight year record in office and c:l.'l!lenger Y.'oodington 's mobile 28 year career in 'ed ucation. · \Voodington charged the incumbent "'ith losing touch with the local dJstricts the county office exists to serve and with leading an office that was providing a declining level of services. Peterson called the challenger a "job . hopper," cillng the live different administrali\'e posts \Voodington has held in hi s 28-\'E-ar career in educalion. · \\'oodiniton resigned from a nine: month old contract as superintendent of me La1una Beach llnjlied School District fo seek the $34.800 11 year county post. an act which Peterson callf!(I a breach of trust. ' Woodington's ans\vcr ta !he charges \\'as that if no one broke a contract to campaign for county superintendent, no one C(IU\d ever run. His background, which included two years as slate commissioner of education -in Colorado, Woodington said, gave him a broader background and s u p e r i o r qualifications. County Board or Education candidates in the Second and Fifth Supervi90rial Districts also campaigned largely on criticism of the current operation of the county schools oHice. Jury to Receive 11 oax Evide11ce l·IALLANDALE. Fla. IAP! -A federa l grand jury \\'ill soon get evidence in connection \\'i!h an alleged extortion hnax in lhe case of a bank ('r who claimed he v.'as kidnaped and held for ransom, police say. ' James Longo. Hallandale chief of police. said Tuesday the FBI had told him tha t the case of Albert Dantzler, 43, would be presented to a grand jury in Fort Lauderdale this .\\'eek or next. Ol4HGf: COAU ;.e DAILY PILOT rr .. 0o~ ..... ~r-~ *"""""'""- "'.....i '"" .. ~ •• ~ ..... , " "''"'"""""' ... "'~°"'I'll" c._.,.., p"" ''""Q"' ~""' "~?<••·~ Oii!•'"""•'" r>ubl<l...,a """""""-"Aft ln!M~ IC< C..0.10 MPl.a tlu~l"'•1 il>•.U. ,. ..... ...., •. ~ 11o. .. ~ 1 wn 1a.n V"''' , l•O~no !lo>• n ""'"" l>#la~ ' •M :;.,. 0-'"" "'" !l.~ Jou~ ft•"'l"•""' 1" ••"<!IOI f<!O<J ... , ·~·'""' ............ "'! ~ .. .,.~.,. ,..., .S..•· ,,.,. '""Pl"'"'""' r • .i;<,,~,... fl'•"' .. •• ~10 w.,1 O.,S.,~! c.c.t.1• ~~· .. C.•·V"'• ~21lH ~ 1 I .-.• t J v.1~., j ~,,,._,14ndPU1>•l"f' J.,., II C11ioo1 Vote P•t-nlf..,C..ntfll "'""'"' '"""""" '"l'I'' l ,_ 1""""'"11 "''"'~ "'•ri.oo"ll[a,IO< ()lalc1 H Lor" Pit"'7d P. Nd! AUIOI•"' M•fllqo"IQ to~on l ..-., Co-"" W"11 ()llO"Qll tll.r~ t.,,..,, MIMt"'tf• k.U Offic:ir !Tll ~e,.,... &-.,...·>':! Mo .r~A~7 .. I:'.: b.i•'Y...~:~48 O.._OHK.111 l•O~ ,Q. . .,..• »1•0t~1 •,•-, .......... »o·.-...iS.o'!;<, .... """"t'''' II•• ~ ~t~"l"" 0. .,.. ••• 1 :,.,C:••"''"'' llO!llo:.<'!• uc.-..,111,.ai T1leplloflt 17141642·4lll Cl91tlfi11iji Ad'fWti 641·$671 ••-"'Ol'l~O<•flll"~""'' on S40.IJ10 (;oeyi>t"' 111• o._ c--.i l\ltl'>•"'f"'I ca.--. -No...,""''!Ot'"" ~"-"""''°"'·-1 """.r 0t --"" -l"lllY !.-'•"°""" ...,.....,....itlt<'--ol .......... ,_ ... ~ U"' _,tll" 119"1 .. (:qi.I• ....... e,.1, .... Ml "'DK<!lllloflh'........, 1)0C-Y,f/f""il 1•00-, ...... t~-1f1111-l)Oil""()••"''' I Battit1 Wins First Jtfotaager In County, Loses State Valley Chamber Budget Boosted Paynte1·, App Take School Race S·ivift .Leading In Guadalupe Lead bo411 In lhe !00-mllo Guadalupe J1land race w e r e 1lruggling towards tho finish lino today In mr<mely light a1n bctwttn Newport and San Diego. Out front with 44 fnile11 to go was !he Newport.-41 Swift co-skippered by Cayle Post and J a c k Mallinck~U . S\\·lfl wa11 the eh1psed lime winner Inst year. B)' OOl!G •"RITZSCllt; 01 ltll O•llV f'llol Slfl1 Orange County \"Otcrs supported local 'stn!l'\l'ide candidates 'fut•sday. hl•lplng to ~C'nd J)('mocralic Assl'!Tlblyn1ar1 l\l'll Cory of c:a rdl'n G r o \. C' lo the NO\'em~r stalt' t'Ontroll('r·s r11 C<'. About 52 percent of the C(llUJty's \·o!ers \\'Cnt to the polls. lr\ine City Councilm:in 1-lenry Quiqley polled 54,979 county vot('S. but app::irrntly Jost the statev.·idc rac.-c for th c Hepublican nomination foi-s t 3 1 e treas urer to John T. Kehoe. Supervisor Robert Battin. Yt'hile he took an easy majority of coun ty votes, 42,688, lost the state\\'ldc race for h c Democratic nomination for lieutenant go\'emor 10 ~lervin Dyma\ly. Cory took 95,301 county Vot es as he grabbed the lead in the Democratic stare controller's raCt"'. lr1 lhe same race, i'~idc\ Gonzalez of Weslmin sler took a scant 6,332 Orange County votes. On ballot propositions. the county reflected the stalev;ide results. passing all initiatives excepl Proposition 7, defeating it by 180,406 to 147,602. COunty returns, \1.-hich the registrar of voters predicted would not be in until after nooo, were available at 7:%7 a.m., five hours ahead of schedule. In the' governor's race .. F.dmund G. Brown Jr, took 67,6.14 votes in lhe Democratic primary and ~I o u s t o n Flournoy 111,25.8 in the Republican race . For tiecrtentant governor Republican John L. Hanner polled t.09.671 \.'Oles. Jn the secretai'y of stale Democratic r·ounluln Valley city c o u n c i Im en boost<'<I thr chainber of commerce budr.:ct to $30,651 ·rutsday so It can hire Its first n1~nager. Thr $16,051 increase -from $14.600 µropos!'d by the city budgel conun lttet - \\'its onlr $3.000 less than lhe chamber's original re(lut'SI. o.llJ 1"1191 Slt lf !'MIO WINS FULL TERM County Asuuor Valltrga 91'imary Orange County bucked tile . sra.te:wide. trm_ giOOg--1lli>J:C:,,_,'iOtes 10 __ y;11z-er·g/Fr ·Bz" ,,,,_ \l'alier Karabian and Rober! S. Jordan t ) :i . t.' ·:.'; than to March K. F'ong \1·ho v.'on the {../ nomination. Fong polled 24,73 1 county "·otcs . In the Republican race state\\·ide \\'inner Brian R. Van Camp carried the coun1y \\ith 50,867 votes for the secretary of state nomination. In the Republican controller's race the C(IUnty supp:trted statewide w i n n e r \\'illiam T. Bagley \\'ilh 91 ,716 \'Otes. In the treasurer 's race . lhe county supported Democrat, Jesse M. Unruh with 70, 268 votes • In the attorney general race Democrat \\"illiam A. Norris took 82,695 county- votes and unopposed Republican Evelle J. Younger 169 ,144. ln the U.S. Senate primary. incumbent Democrat Alan Crans n carried the rounty \\'ith 122.911 votes in his party and Republican H. L. Richardson got ll0,252 votes from his party's fa ithful. .4ssessor Race Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga won his first election to the job he was appointed to in 1972 by a 2 to 1 margin Tuesday over his lone opponent. Final totals are: Vallerg_a: 229.139 Raymond -Preston: 103.847 The large number of votes polled by Preston surprised some o b s e r v e r s because of the extremely low-key and poorly funded campai gn he ran. That and other t'hangt>s increased the budget fron1 $5.25 1n\1Uon to $5.29 million before the council approved ·lt Tur.sday night. The proposed budget carries a tax r;ite of SJ.IS per $100 assessed Vi'l\uation, no change over this year. drspltc an increase In expenditures over this year's $4.S million. Other changes mnde by councilmen In a budgel aess1on Include : -Additional• $32.000 payment to allow construction ol a &roffic signal at Heil Avenue and Euclid Street in the 74-75 fiscal year insftad or the 75'-76 year. In the non-par1isa11 counly Board of F:duca1 lon race Tuesday. 3eCOnd trustee nre11 candidate Dr. David J>uynter 11nd fift h lrustce area e>1ndldatc John O. App dcftah_>d their opponents by wide n1arglns. Unofflci:il fina l results in Area 2 v.·ere: Paynter S4,0J~ John D. Harper 24,1171 In Arca S: App 31,768 Ernest G. Lake 23,929 Lynda T. M08S 24,349 Incumbents in both the 2tld and 5lh -$3.900 more in the parks and recreation budget to rund 8 yeaf"round trustee arell!, which correspond with the leen center at Fountain Valley High 2nd .and 5th supervisorial dl$1rictl>, Sctv>ol. decided not to seek rc-elecUon and the "We need to work and ·spend tnore campaigns had a refonn character. money in lhe teenage years," council· The unilorm charge was that the man Bernie Svalstad said. l'.fayor C(IUnly Departm~t of EducR!ion and its George Scott agreed. board of trustees \vns out of touch with -$3.8&4 increase lo give teen-age 1he local school districts and it was not volunteers \\'Orking in r ec r e a li o n i>rov iding the kind and level of services it p1·ograms a ra ise ft·on1 $1 an hour !o should. $1.25 an hour. In Arca 2, John D. Harper J r .. a -$3,614 for a comparison microscope Conner Foun tai n Valley City councilman fo r the pollce department. Scot! pu shed and Fountain Valley school hoard ror the item. used in analyzing bull~ts member, charged that his opponent , and other evidence or crimes, \vhich the Paynter, was a caree r educator and police have been borrowing fron1 _ "·ould nOt adequately represent the Huntington Beach or county I aw --interests of the citizenry. enforcement. Paynter, formerly superintendent of -$400 for the Fountain V a 11 e y the Garden Grove Unified School District Community Banet an increase ol S200 and now president of Tesl·A-Lab, a over what the city budget committee health screening service, responded that, te<'OIMlended. Councilmen said they while he was proud of his career in "'ant to hear more of the band's music. education, he was a businesmia0-- -A S!0,000 reserve for a legal costs by The educational experience, P!1ter City Attorney Tom Woodruff. said, made him more qualHied for the Svalstad suggested it and Mayor Pro job. Tern Al Hollinden said it's necessarv Both the A~a 2 candi<1:3tes ~t goals of because the city is a "sitting duck" for a imp~ving the cc_>unty orttee·~ role fn lawsui ls froril ''anybody "'ho trips on a vocat.1onal edu cation and holdin g . boa rd side"''alk anU¥here jn Yte..city.~' _ __:_ -·,,; n!ec l1ngs a~\·~y from the _county ~!~~es l~ A lso in 1he Oudge t -but not discussed pro\'rde greater public-exposure. Tuesda y -is the fund ing of :.i fi re . '.'~ Area .5. busrnessn1an App \11as pitted department paramedics program. Three ;iga1nst t\\o college professors, Dr. Lake firemen will be hired and $8.000 is and Dr. f\.1oss. . budgeted for special medica l equipment. All t~ree. sought to 1mpro\'C the The ooly mention of the paramedics cor:rimun1cat1ons between l~e coun ty v;as by Hollinden, who objected that the offi ce and local school ~lslncts and to co uncil should make policy decisions on st rengthen_ the leadership role o( the such programs -and on things li~e the county of~1ce. ' . chamber manager -before S('('ing them App said he was the only candidate in the preliminary budget. \1:ith a "vested interest" in the office The one-year trial for the chambe r s1~ce he was the only one wl~ school age manager reprsented a victory for Fred children. He was also, h~ pomted out, the Roberson, chamber president. only non-educator running for the lay Roberson argued at length for the office. . proposal, which he said would start the If el~, App said, he wouJd attempt chamber on the road to independence to det~ whether services of th.e and would bring in more sales tax to the county office could be Improved and, 1f city. oot. would rC<:Ommend abolition of the "I feel we should plant this seed dcpanment. money·," Councilman Roger SUJnlon said." ... enoujh to get !hem started." Howard Stephens:, city controller, sa id f'ron• Page 1 Running in second place w11s Aqunvlt and third wo~ Ttlllsn111n . Other5 \\'ith di.stan ce to go are Pele. 8$; . Superior Star, 85; Nereid, 122; Yo Ho Ho, 127 Topaz, 132; C-Ountesa Theres3 Bem11dette, 133. There was no report from either Afatangl or Dakar. From Pate J BAKER ... campaign that ·Baker has grown unresp:tnsive to his dlstricl and has not pushed hard enough for · a share In funding for recreational areas. Because of the near disaster in 1970, Baker raised and spent a large war chest on his campaign !his year. liis spending wasn't even approached by both his opponents combined. As expected, Baker ran a strong ra ce in the cities of Huntington Beach and Seal Beach but ran behind Schmit -nrl Dean inland communities such as Garden Grove and Westminster. If Baker wins in November, he will be the loogest winning elected official sill! in office in Orange County. .- Sl\IUT ... other cases was halted pending the -ruling, and Capin.i said the others may now be in jeopardy. "We'll have to research the )a\v to detennine-t~effect on-other pencrmg cases," Capizzi said. Capizz i also disclosed that his office \Viii investigate the poss I b 11 it y jurisdictions that local may now enact their own anti-smut ordinances. Local laws were forbidden before because Ibey were pre-empted by !he state Jaw. "But if there's no state Jaw, it may be possible for local government.a to enact their o"A-n," be said. " • Cri1ninology Bid Denied for UC Frona Page 1 Th e primary was actually the first time incumbent Vallerga ran for office. lie \vas appointed to lhe job t\\'O years ago when former assessor Andrew Hinshaw was elected.I to Coogress. · the city expects to get more revenue from investment interesls th an initiall y GOVERNOR. • • BERKELEY (UPI) ..... 1'ie University of Cali fornia's Bergeley C a m p u s ch<::nce!lor has decided to phase out the school of criminology despite protests fr:>m students. Chancellor Albert B ow k e r , in ar.nouncing the closing Tuesday, said the school's program \\'as too narrilw and failed to make use of some of the "n:ition's finest scholars working in this field on the !acuity here." OVERRIDE • • • election is a possibility in either November or April. Dr. Ralph Bauer said he might also personally support another tax override effort, but said no one has really talked about it. The override \\"OU!d ha ve raised $14.5 millioo to build ooe new high school campus. The last successful election to build new schools v;as a bond proposal in 1963. It paid for FAison and Fountain Valley High Schools. Without a new campus, Bauer and Trustee Dennis l\1angers suggested, the district "''ill be looking for more portable classroom s, perhaps more night 1>ehool. the possibility of using some empty elementary school classroo ms for high school fre..shmen and other measures. The di strict 1\·ill have about 5,000 students next fall for which ii does not ha\'e standard classroom f a c I I i t i e s available on a regula r schedule. Disease Kills 25,000 NEW DELHI <L"'PJ) -The wur\d 's deadliest smallpox epidemic since the tum of the century ha s killed close to 25,000 persons acros.s India O\'Cf 1he past six months, health 0H1cials said today. Va!lerga proved to be a powerful . big· money campaigner whose lead was hard to overcome bv Preston, a Cal Slate Long Beach hoine economics professor. Toward the end of the campaign, Preston hooked his wagon to the 20th District Congressional campaign being v.·aged by David Gubler against Hinshaw. Gubler's charges of misuse of the office by Hinsbaw were extended to Vallerga by Preston. Re said Vallerga accepted don ations from big companies \\'hose assessments depended on hlm. Vallerga said Prston"s accusations 1,1·cre "preposterous"' and he pointed to a series of court actions uphr '.ding !Tis practices. CL.4 RK RETA.I NS COUIVTY SEAT Orange County Board o f Supervisors Chairman Ralph Clark of Anaheim won his second tenn as the Fourth District representative Tuesday, defeating his lone foe by a 4-1 margin . Final vote totals showed Clark with 50,743 and Garry Nelleson with 15,137. ' Santa _t\i1a ~1ayo1· to Face 1 Ex-priso11e1· i11 Novemhe1· i Santa Ana l¥layor .Jerry Patterson \\'i!l confront former Prisoner of War David Rehmann in a November contest lo see who will succeed retlrlng 38th District Congres.unan Richard T. Hanna . Final totals for Uk Democratic Party are: Pattttsoo: 21 ,657 Howard Adler: 14,753 lieonard Holland: 5.739 AJbert Nass.er : 2,309 Republican totals pre: ltdmton: 14.099 Joy Neugebauer : 9,838 Beau Clemens: 3.739 J. Fredrrick Ris.o;cr : 2.911 All candidates 1n the ract for llanna's scat appeared to be keying t~ir campaigns to lhe suctCSSts and fa\lur rs of Rehn\aM, \\'ho v.·A.!; lhe favorlle nil along for the GOP nod. On the De.mocr1111c side. the contflst appeared to be closest hctwetn Adler, PatteNil:)f'), the mayor of san111 Ana. ~dler based his ca mpaign on his support from Hanna and pledRcd to C(lntinue llanna 's programs in Congress. The newly fanned district is some· \\'ha t unusual in Orange County In that It has a considerably latKer number of Democrats than Republicans on its regis- trntion rosters. Nasser and llolland ran leM potent camp..1igns than the two Democratic fron trunners. On the Republican s•att:, Rehmann 1 clearly dom inated the fi eld wilh "'hat 1 80me ob.<;frvers called a ' 'G od . motherhQod. nag and apple p I e' ' campaign. l\luch of his suPPort CRIJlf! from thoS<' s)'mpathttlc to the pllg ht of \'('lrr3ns and PO\\ts. Clrmtns, Mrs. Neugeba1.1cr and RIMer r~ilrd 10 11eneratt 1tx.-snme kind of support Rehmann i;ot from the 75,000 , Jlrpublicans in the district. TheN! are indications he could betome the flrsL RepubUcan ln the Democratic di~trict elected to Congress in many years because or strong ground.rwella of support a:mong voters of both parlle. l predicted. He had estimated the re\'enue at $378,825. Tuesday he said it \vould rca<'h $417,461. City Manager James Neal said Fountain Valley's tax rate ranks 19th among Orange County's 26 cities and predicted it would drop in the listings after oLher cities complete their budgets. LA Convict Killed TRACY (UPI) -A 29-year-old C(lnvicl from Los Angeles was stabbed to deat h Tuesday In a maximum security cell at the Deuel Vocational Institute. Ivan C. Knox. who had only been at DVI since Apr il 30, died al the prison hospital. - have an opporttmily to examine the is· sues." · Bro\\'n told supporters that in both his own victory and that of Prop. 9, "The vote of the people is very clear, for re· rorm and against corruption." (Related story, Page 4). ~ The political campaign measure, de- scribed by supporters as the stiffest in the n.11tion, limit cootributiorui, requires identifica tion or all contribut ions above $50 and creates a powerful commission \vith a $1 mijlton annual budget to ad· minister and enforce the regulations. In addition, public officials are required to periodically disclose thei r as~eti'i and out· side income to prevent conflict-of-intert·st problems . Suspect Surrenders STOCKTON (UPI) -An Army veteran accused of kidnaping two women at knifepoinl and driving one or them to Texas voluntarily surrendered Monday to a police dispatcher at a ' Fort Worth suburb. The man was tentatively identified as Jerry l\1artin. '!1, who lives on a houseboat in \\'hi skey Slough near Stockton. I tj . ~ ··~ CLOSIO SUHDAY 1 Tennis Rackets ! Baseball Shoes Wilson -Davis · Bancroft All Purpose Shoes Dunlop · Yoneyama Soccer Shoes Racquetball Racquets & BOiis Tennis Shoes Handball Gloves & Balls Warm-Up Shoes Table Tennis Paddles & Balls Football Shoes Squash Rackets . ( Wrestling $hoes '1 I Baseball Mi~ -Balls -Bats I Softball Shirts Softballs & Bats Tennis Dresses -Voll.eyballs Mens & Boys Tennis Shorts . Basketballs Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts Soccer Bans -Warm-Up Suits ' . Hats & Visors Slant Boards Mens Tennis Sweaters Weight Sets Bike Repairing I Bike Parts -TI res -Tubes 'I • ' - • -' I I ~ L D~w County Yoted llcre are Ule llnal result!: for votlng In Tue5clsy's Primary Election ln Orange County for 11•1< and port!Jan ornces: l.UI Pree1Dct1 out of 1,841 GOVERNOR Democ::ratle John Abbott -3!i2 Jo,.,,,h L. Allot<> -27,878 Alex 0. Aloia -1,338 l'~Uecn Anderson -334 Joseph ~'. Brouillette -170 Edmund G. Brown Jr. -67 ,364 Raymond G. 010le -2U llerbcrt Ila.fir -4.979 Bob MoretU -29,325 Chris Musun -183 Russ Priebe -36 Jooepbum s. Ramos -2U Conie R. Robertson -864 William M. Roth -13,151 George H. Wagner -502 Jerome Waldie -7 ,626 Baxter Ward -10,962 Jim ,Wedworth -615 Rc!pnbllcu Jlouton I. Flournay -111,251 Glenn D. Mild>el -2,'27 William J. NeJson -2,16? Ed Reinecke -·65,963 J. F. Stay -2,979 Jam~ A. Ware -3,859 America• Independent F.dmon V. Kaiser -1,102 Peace llDd. Freedom Lester M. Rigby -99 Elizabeth Keathley -123 Trudy Saposhnek -42 C. T. Weber -611 LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR ~ Democratic Robert w. Battla -42,688 Mervyn M. Dymally -2.S,093 F~I Gonzal<z -6,332 Cy King -2,185 TREASURER _ ___Ptmocr1tlc Gray Divis -4MO$ Charles C. Haskins -16,788 Alan Short -26,762 Jease M. Uarub -70,268 Republican H. Stanley Jones -38,172 R. Cyril Kay -14,278 John T. Kehoe -ro.884 Neary Qulgley -54.979 Amtricen ladeP'ndent W. Wayne Fortner -1,131 ATTORNEY GENERAL Democratic Vtncent T. Bug)iosi -64,179 WWllm A. N<>ni1 -82,1195 Repablkan Evtllt J. Yoanger -169,144 STATE BOARD OF EQUALIZATION Zllcl DISTRICT DemocraUc Jolm W. Lynch -611,685 James R. Covell -4,~7 Thomas W. Crago -2,747 Mary c. Helsing -24 .651 Frank Manzo -25,116 W. G. Sloan -5,856 Bernard Wocher -4,953 Republican Frank A. Smith -64,578 J. Jack Templeton -83,188 U.S. SENATOR Dtmocnitlc Al.Ill Cnnsloa -122,911 Howard L. Gmont -23,8l6 Frank KAcs!nta -9,502 • RepW!lcan Earl W. Brian,_ 21,636 J ..... K.-Johoson --11,lel Thomas A. Malatesta -6.1137 Willi.am H. Reinhol1 -12,967 H. L. Rlcardsoa -110,252 American IDClependent Jadt McCoy -t,173 Peace and Freedom Gayle M. Justice -285- U.S. CONGRESSIONAL 34tb District A. Jotur ~ferlo -3,169 ~loward Miller -23,911 Lowrenc. jValsh -31,761 · ----'-tl1iloeth s. w&,gan<i-:.-1a;Mi Rc!pnbUc1• == ---= -~ -.:. -......Jleineeratlc Wallace Edgerton -4,106 Antonio F. Gigliotti -2,791 .- John L Jlarmer -109,671 John G. Veneman -fl,681 American IDclepeBlleat Alberta M.1 Procell -1,186 Peace and FrtedDm William Darling -rT Marii)'I Seals -258 ~TATE SCIIOOL SlJPl'. Wilson Riles -215,755 Everett T. Calvert -33,5.17 Mariana A. Hernandez -11,581 Haroid G. Jindrlch -18,159 \Varren Linville -32,291 Ken Lloyd -21,828 Cornelia M. Meyer -7,495 STATE MEASURES 1 Recreationa.1 Land Bond! Yes -192,433 No -145,1'14 1 Clean Waler Bond Yes ~ 223,088 No -112,988 3. Veterans Fann and Home Aid Yes -235, 715 No -104,898 C. Property Tax Rea...._,enl Yes -265,472 No -81,147 5. Public Mm Tra11.1lt Yes -'JJ11, 832 No -143,842 5 .. Publk Proceedings Yes -256.854 No -74,89.1 7. Civil Se.n-tce Exemption Yes -147,&0'l No -180.406 I. Sacramento Consolidation Yes -487,643 No -120,178 9. Financial Campaign Disclosure Yes -251.749 No -108,081 SECRETARY OF STATE Democratic Bruce E. Brant -9,293 March K. Fong -24,73t Robert S. Jordan -9,MS .. Walter K1rabtaa -54,118 Cathy O'Neill -47,720 Herman Sillas -71866 Repabli<an Willard G. Fonda -J6.908 Wendell Handy -23,353 1'.tkhael B. Pi-1ontgomery -41,805 James L. Shinn -26,312 Brian R. Yen Camp -50.867 American !Bdepeod<nt Charles C. Ripley -l.074 Peace ind Frtedom Israel Feuer -171 Kaye McGlactilln -149 CONTROLLER DemocraUc Bert A. Betts -12,998 Ronald B. Cameron -9,839 Kcm1etb Cory -95.031 Robert H. Mendelsohn -3l,834 David T. Rees -4,691 Repabllc:H ' , William T. Bagley -91.711 Jame! L. Flournoy -43,539 1'.-larlan W. La Follette -41,7« American Jndepended Kevin Scanlon -l,197 Pttct Ind freedom: Cofey 0. Cassanova -238 'GuJag' Coming Out I PRAtS (UPI ) -Sov1et a u t h o r Alexander Solzhenitsyn's first hook since th~ Sovtet un;on pushed hlm lnto exile in February will be published this week, the publishers YMCA Press said loday. The book Is the ~ volume o f Sol1.henltsyn's description or Soviet prison camps and police methods, "The Gulag Arthipolago." Mark W. Hannaford -14 ,689 Qinrad Housley .-3,091 Dennis Murray -12,449 Wallace B. Rodecker -3,509 Russ Hubley -5.~ Robert L Sassone -6,060 Henry Sdlultz -1,422 Jared Sloan -2,1&1 ll<pabllcn BW Boad-21,697 Don Phillips -16,163 Bill Semeraro -825 John P. Sousa -6.383 Gil Sleveos -3,385 Americaa hdepe.den:t James Manis -57 Peace and Freedom Jolm S. Donolwe -18 stlb Dtstrict Democratic Jtowant Adler -16,753 Leonard Holland -5.739 Albert Nasser -2,309 Jerry P1ttttson -21,657 Republican Beau Clemens -3,739 Joy L. Neugebauer -9,838 Quigley Defeat In Treasurer's Race Confir1ned State O:>nsurner affa irs appointee John Kehoe appeared to have defeated lrvine City Councilman Henry Quigley Tuesday in the race for the R e pub l i c an nomination for state treasurer. With 96 percent ol all precincts in the state tounted today, the Republican race results are: Quigley: 4U,161 Kehoe< 528,sro Stan Jones: 374,518 Fonner state Assembly leader J~ Unruh became tbc Democratle candidate in the November treasw-er's race leading the field ol four candidates will> 4S pen:ent of the votes. W'rth 96 percent of the vote in Democratic results were: Unruh: 1,128,'92 Gray Davis: 5.55,596 Alan Short : 548,785 Complicating Quigley's decision to amcede were broadcast media reports: in Los Angeles which predicted he v.·ould overcome Kehoe's vote lead when the final six percent or precincLs were counted. When one third of the rcsulLs from those , late ~incts Vi'Cre tallied,· however, Kehoe gained a plurality increase or 3,tm votes to lead Quigley by 100.000 votes. "I remember that in 1966 Jtouston Flournoy gave a speech p>needing defeat and Jater had to come back and say " 'Well, I P.Jes8 I really won after all ','' Quigley said today. • .. It looks to me oow that Kehoe will be the Republican nominee for treasurer, but I'm not making any final decision unW the ballots are 100 pe:n:ent counttld. "Wln or l06e we sure: made a horse race out or tt," tbe second tenn Irvine cotmdlm.an said. . "The whole k:lea of runnlng was to show people I could be a serious state· wide candidate and ii looks like wt!'ve done th3t.'' Quigley aa ld. "There Is no question about ft that tn lwo or four years we'll be al il again with a more organized campaign for some office,'• Quigley added. He blamed his narrow victory among Orang~ eouniy primary 1.°olers on C"r0v. Reagan's populartty in the county. Kehoe was appointed to his slate offk:e b)• Reagan and came wilhln 4i,OOO votes -Of tying Quigley. Oavkf Rehmann -14,099 J, Frederick Risser -Z,911 Amerlcaa lndtptadent le< R. Rayburn -387 Peace tad Freedom Lorry D. KAiienberger -82 31111 llbtrlct I Dtmocrallc Douglaa Dovld..., -6,877 WUJfam E. Farria -16,841 Kenneth Perkins -5,099 Jerome Sheiliblum -3,082 Conrad Tuohey -11,712 Rtpublkaa Charles Wlginl -40,968 Robert AshleY. -7.212 Thurston srunn -8.898 Amulcu !Jtdtpeodtnt Pat B. Scalera .-:SSl ... District Democradc John F. Graer -11{096 Casper Hare -7,388 Roderick Wilson -17,617 RepubUcan Andrew IQ.nlhaw -49,741 Earl H. Carraway -4.267 David C. Gubler -12,3<H Roger C. Lanphear -5,221 American Independent Grayson L. Watkins -282 STATE SENATE 36111 District Democratic Frank P. Barbaro -39,009 Republican Dennis E. Carpenter-72,259 American Irtdependent Ger•ld N. Bogarj '°' 289 • STATE ASSEMBLY• l!tb Dlsbict Democratic Jack K. Mandel -20,734 RepGbucan Jolta V. Briggs -19,042 William E. Schmidt -8.330 -Amertcan~Independtnt Albert S<ilomon -177 . . -·--· -·· ~.,Iii~ lllififll - Democratic Dould W. Endresen -11,217 Sal Zavala -10,136 Repo.bHcan Jim Beam -11,377 Wllliam D. Ehrle -t,344 John V. Lynch -1,5ro Bnlce Nestande -13,286 Floyd L. Wakefield -8,175 Americaa llldependeol A. Neal De Gaston -324 71st District Democratic Gilbert Arbiso -3,529 Paal B. Carpenter -8,80& Gray Davis -3,110 Paul J. Erskine-2,146 Otto J. Lacayo -8,430 Richan! P. Swanson -1,893 Republlcan Robert Bart -11,002 Charles E. Thomas -5,848 .American Independent Donald J . Swenson -199 7!nd Dis&rict Democratic Orbry D. Chamblee -1,074 David N. Hartman -4,500 Richard Robinson -8,260 Harry K. Yamamoto -5,631 Claude E. Young -3,073 Republican Reece Ballard -2,734 John W. Hill -4,830 P.larlin P.tcKee\·er -10,180 John C. Ratterree -2,221 American Independent Richard C. Adams -229 73rd District Democratic Denlrls J\fangers -14,130 A. A. Van Petten -11 ,198 Republican Robert Burke -30,337 74tb District Democrat.le Sawule C. Lewis -15,859 Republican Rebert E. Badbam -40,487 Nixon Brothers Testify Before Ervin Committee WASHINGTO N (UPI ) -Pre~dent Nixon's tv."O brothers appeared before Olairman Sam J . Ervin and Senate Watergate committee aides l o day . reportedly in connection lli th a SI00.000 gift to the President from llov.·ard Hughes. A COtnmittee source said no questions tvere put to the Nixons at an hour-long morning session' in Ervin's office beca~ of differences betll'een la.....-yers for them and the committee. The two, F, Donald Nixon of Newport Beacti and FAward Nixon, had been interviewed under oath previously by commlltee investigators on the \\.'est Coast. The brothers v.-ere asked to return In the afternoon for questioning. They raised some questiom or fairness and the scope of the inquiry, said one source. "The.y have not refused to aMv.·er any questions, but they feel lhey have compl ied with our su bpoenas a.s fully as they can," he sa id. The Ervin committee is known to be invCfitigallng the ci r cu m s t ance s MT'Olllldlng Hughes' 1969 gift to lhe President through. his close fMend, C. G. "Bebe" Rcbo7.o. ·- ' J WINS RE-ELECTION EASILY Dllfrict Attorney Hick' Cecil Hicks 'In' Despite A lleagtio11s Orange County Dist ric t Attorney Cecil llicb v.·a.s returned to office by a laodsJide Tuesday despite efforts by his chief opponent lo generate scandal charges against him, With all 1,848 pr ecincts reporting, the eount was: Hicks: 212,079 William S. Hu lsy: 83,142 fl.fax Sturges: 36,970 . Sturges, a Newport Beach la~1er. drew a surprisingly large number of .Yotes in lhe contest d e s p i t e a virtually non-existent campaign. The District A!!orney's rac:e_didn.l.rea.J._ IYhc.at up until the last few V•etks of the campaign , when Hulsy 1 e v e I e d \'i~dn~iday Junt 5. 1974 f, DAILY PILOT • Sherill's Race Gates Def eat·s 5 I County Hopefuls Dradlcy (;ales. ~ 34·year-old sheriff's lieutenant from Cap1slr.11no Bench, scored a reM01.1.nding viclory over five opponents to claim the Orange County Sheriff's scat being vacated by !he retirement of JQng· time incumbent James ?t1usick. Final totals arc: Gate s: Z34,4Sl George Savord : 37,900 r.tarshall Norris : 36,319 Jerry Lee Lawrence: 12,~ Gene Vlnlove: 8,560 Spero Janise: 5.906 The margin of Gates' 1 iclory came as a surprise to many \•cteran political observers who thought Savo rd ~·ould make it closer. Al first the race to fill ·lhe sheriff's scat was a close matchup between Gates and Savord, a rormer Cypress police chief highly honored in law enforce ment. But a series of e1Tors by Savorcl's campaign leaders eroded n1Uch of his support and Gates surged into an acknowledged leadership po.silion . Gates ran a smooth campaign. v.·cll oiled by contributions from top Republicans in the county . He ~ras virtually hand-picked for the job by retiring Sherif£ James f\1usick . REPLACES JIM MUSICK New Sheriff Gates Norris, a superior court clerk defeai.cd Janise, a Laguna Beach residcn l. by f\fusick four years ago, ran in third tried late in the race to pick up the pace spot behind Savord all through the campaign. His chict concern -and that of his campaign through hca\'y of ffi()f;t candidates -~·as \\1th alleged adrertising but the effort came too late. poor conditions in the county 's brand new The fina l candidatr in t h e jail. race, Lawrence , was a self · procla!gll.'<i Vinlove, a Fullerton bar owner, wag('d '·hrrb dealer" from Costa r.oiesa who is a limited camPaign beeause his financial facing felony cha rges of . s c 11 i n g support-was minimal. -marijuana. - -'.'.Jnal(eaaanee_and -misfeasanee·in offieC '-'=--M· --- charges agaiqst incumbent Hicks. esa Hulsy claimed Hicks exerted undue in- fluence on the outcome of an investiga- tion and trial invol ving a woman he was --- persona.Ur Involved witti. The v.·oman v.·as dri\'Ulg a car involved in a Garden Grove traffic accident that killed two children. Hicks ehemently denied the charges. claiming lW pe!'S003.i life was not at issue in tlle campaign. He said he handJed the case properly by declaring a conflict of interest and turning it O\'er to the C8lifomia Attorney Genera] for prooecution. Hulsy, a 31·year-old prosecutor in the Long Beach city attorney's office, never campaigned on his own background. Hicks continuall y charged Hulsy was not qualified for the district attornev's job, Nestande Seizes Republican Nod In 70th District Republican Assemblyman Floyd L. Wakefield, who moved from South Gate for a primary try In the newly forrtli?d northeast Orange County 70th Assembly District was handil y defeated Tuesday by political newcomer Bruce Nestande in a field of five Republican contenders. Republican results y,·ere: Nestande, 13.286: Jim Beam. 11.377; Wakefield, 8.1 75: William D. Ehrle. 1,344 and John V. Lynch, t,520. Democrats Donald Endrrsen \ron hi s 'iOth District race against Sal Zavala v.·ith l i.217 votes lo Z!lva la's 10,136. Four term assemblyman Wakeficld·s pro death penalty, an ti-busing campaign ment two' legal setbacks. He lost a suit challenging his clai m to lncumbency lo Jim Beam and another atta cking his use of the term "re-elect" to opponent Ehrle. ~ 4:>-,.. GEM TALK TODAY by BIRTHSTONE FOLKLORE • Jlad )•ou·Uvcd in a ncient times. here are some things you would have believed about births tones: January's garnet brings hea lth, cheerfulness, fidelity; f~cbruary's am e thyst , calm ; !\·l arch 's .. a quamarine or bloodstone preser- ves Jove ; April's dia mond cures sle epwa lking; l\'l ay's eme rald m eans immortality; June 's pearl 1>rescrvcs purity, and moonstone protects from d a nger. ' July's r uby gives ment al h ea lth nncl p e a ce : 1\u g u s t '~ pcridot protects against melan- choly: the sardonyx of Aui;i:ust grants sclf·conlrol: Septe mber 's s apphire protects Hgai nst envy a nd fraud : Octobcr'i-opal clears the hra in ; November 's l OJlB7. cal m s a nJ?cr, era ~es \\101'\~': Deccmhc r 's turquOiSC' <'hani;::c:- color \\•hen it s otvncr is in pt•ril. a nd that monlh"s zircon ~1tlracls riches. Charged in Embezzling· A trio of suspects y,•ho all quit a Costa ?tfesa car agen cy on the same day a month ago today £ace charges of embezzling $75,635, a major share of Y>hlch authorities allege financed high living and hon1es in lluntinglOn Harbour and Palm Springs. The former manager of Dean . Le\v\s Imports and two ex-secretaries appeared in Harbor Judicial District Court Tuesday a.nd were released on bond. Charged in the case which allegedly spanned a period from 1\.farch of 1973 unti l virtually the day they resigned together are: -Jerry Willirun Erwin, 37. of 16902 Baruna Lane, in the Huntin gton Harbour section of Huntington Beach. -Barbara Louise Btoxom, 30, of 24621 Ridgewood Circle, El Toro. -Shirley Sunset Craig, 38, of Buena Park. Bail wa10 reduced from a recommended f'-'>.000 for Erwin and $10,000 for Mrs. Bloxom and ?tlrs. Craig to $10,000 and $1.000 each respectively. Costa f\1esa Police Department Fraud and Embezzlement Detail Detective John Stoneback said arraignment for the trio y,·as continued until ~1onday. Jnvesligators claim the case began 10 unfold when Dick Lev.•is, owner of the import ·car agency at 1966 Harbor Bh·d .. began to disrover financial discrepancies. A fu rthe r clue developed v.·hen clerks at the Orange County Tax Assessor's Office reportedly questioned payn1ent of taxes on Erw in's marina ho1ne \vith a company check. Only the head of the agency wa s authorized to sign checks individually, Detective Stoneback ex plained and the property tax check had allegedly been signed by another company officer. Inves tigators claim it was a forgery. ''The largest check we 've come up with is for $311,000," said Detect ive Stoneback, adding that \\'as to close escrow on Uic Huntington Harbour home occupied by Erwin. a longtime employe or the agen cy on auto row in Costa !\!esa. Mangers Wi1is Den1ocratic Nod For Assemblyman Educational ronsultant De n ni Ii 1\1angers defea ted "prosperity plan" candidate A.A. VanPetten Tuesday in the 73rtl Assem bly District in the Democratic primary for a chance to run agaiMt Republican incumbent Rober t Burke in November. Burke. unopposed In the Republican primary. polled 30.337 \'Oles. .\1angers' 14,130 votes to p ped VanPelten's I 1.198. VanPette•, \\'ho ha s run in fou r past Congressional Primaries. campaigned on his book, ''The Prosperity Plan." which ou!lines a :::ix-point plan of political and .. econon1ic refonn. i\tangers , 33, of Huntington Beach, vice president of An1eri can L e a r n i n g Corporation. promised lo be a 11 "outspoken and aggress ive spokcsn1an for the environn1ent." lfe also campaigned on improving the quality of education. Be Alarmed! \Vh y 11o l ? \\'hy not Cl1JOY .t h(' IOlill <'nil· \'t'IHf'lltc of .1 1\'r1;.t ala r n1 . l'lu:-! ht' 1•011 - t'l'n1 r nc·c of a IUIJ,1· OIUltllll;llll' \\'~tl ('h , !Nf'\t;I' llC'cd:-\\'tnding ) /\ncl a 1·alt'n - d;1r. (l'hanj:?.l'S aut 0 111 ~1t 1 ca lly ~t n11d night. I A n ti I. h t.' h ;1 ir li nc preci s 1011 pc·r· l'orn1ancc of the ~wl ss·c rnttc cl ,J:.il~~('r. L cC.:nul trl' movemont . Alt 111 on e "'~t h 111 ~~c h :111d - :-omc· :\1 cn10\ox \\.'.Itches . J. C. ..J/.umphriej Jewefer:J , 18?3 NEWPORT BLVD .COST A MES1\ CONVENIENT l [RMS B3""Amn11r,,.rd-Mil$ll'r Cliarge 21 YEA.RS IN THE SAM E LOCATION PHONE 511B.J401 J • OA1L.V PILOT Watergate • . Influences Prop. 9 Wins Overwhelming Appr(>val I Election LOS ANGELES (AP) -Califomia vot<'rs have over\\'heln1i11gly passed a canipalgn financing 1neasure t h a l backe rs say will spark a national push for post·\Vatergate hoMsty In poli~cs. The initiative which w11 sponsored by the .. u .. tyled nonpartisan "dUuos• lobby" Common Cause, drt)V opposltloll ~ both tho California O..mber of Conuneroe and state AFI.rCIO. spectaculnr test of the post·Watergate rnood ••• the last stand f« the boys ip the .J>lci . room." Backars c a 11 e d Proposlti0n 9 a mode) for other states. '"'Mlb is a victory of e,oorinous proPOftioos," Mike \\'alsh. chalnnan Or Callron1la Common Cause, said In Los Angeles. 11lt looks to me~as if we had spoken out and throughWt the nation ." The l<glllawre had rdusnd to plae< 'the measure' on the ballot, and Common Cause And other supporting groups were for<ed to collect """" than 125,000 s.ignatures to qW1llfy tt. -...--_ It i'1,0S ANGELES (AP) -Catifornl<ins h·3ve rendered 1hclr Ol\'O tough judgment on a Watergate-clouded political system. 'l'liey demanded it be changed. ~While,. Waiergate itself was not a direet i$$ue in Tuesday's prirhary election, ils elfect 'v.·a$ strongly evident when the voters marked >their ballots, or pro tested la ylnt home. ginning today, California has what SOfli. assert is the nation's most prehensive politlcal reform law .. 3 oro.kord reac tion to "politics ais 'f ual." , J PASSAGE OF 11op. 9, 5p0030red by IJ)mmon·carMt('as a modal for national riform, was overwhelmingly approved in sJ>ite of an historical tendency ol. Qalilort1}a voters to reject lon1, Involved lot,. -<t~asures they don't r u l l y derstpi>d;., They~ were willing to take a chance ainst · arguments that it was an erTtaction to Watergate and in spite o , Or because of, the unlikely marriage big . labor and big business in position to "Prop. 9. 'Jn picking a Democratic candidate for ' vemor, tbc voters opted for the I tomise of political integrity from a The measure, Proposition 9. limits !he amounls that candid<t tes and supporters or iniliati\'e pe titions can spe,nd and prohibits lobbyists frotn ma k I n g ca1npaign contribut ions of ntore than~. \Vith three-fourths of the state's precincl3 reporting from Tue:sday's primary, Prop- osi tion 9 v.·as carrying by better lhao a 2·1 margin, 2,357.680 to 1,017,$25. Riles Sco,.es L<11id slide; U1.11·uli's Bcick -. . LOS AKGELES /UPI\ -California Schools Oiief \\'ilson Riles, the fir st black \G hold statev.·ide office. has won re-election by ii landslide "'hlle former A.ssembly ~aker Jess Unruh completed the first step towards a political . con1ebac};.. Tuesday prin1ary election for statewide off~s saw t"·o other victories by 'NE' WS ~ u ALY SIS minGri~Y. group members in add ition to l, .ALl. Riles' Win. ., Black Sen. ~fervyn 111. Dyma!ly of Los rt lative novice in govemment over the . Angeles captured the Dem o c r a t i c rlcord oI men v.tio clai med the state nomination for lieutenant governor. needed the ex perience of Proven Assembl~man r.tarch K. Fong of problem-sol vers. .The nominee is Secretary of State Oakland, \\'ho was born in the back of a Edmund G. Brown Jr., 36, v.•ho read his-crunese laundry, • picked up the \"ictory. and the passage of Prop. 9'. as a democratic nomi~Uoo for secretary of B~iness •nd Labor groups said the restrictions Y.'OUld deslroy tbelr tlfec:Uve exprtss ion. Besides being b a n n e d from C011tributing to compalgns, lobbylst!ll are limited to $10 a nlOllth in what they can speOO on any one state otfldaJ. Conunon Cause Chairman J oh n Gardner callee! the measure ''the most . COUNTY VICTOR Ken Cory Jeck O>mvay1 notional , president of Comrnon Cause, snid,'"0Ur motto from no\v on is •Eastward ho."' The me.1s\lre takes effect Jan. 1, 1975, unl ess delayed by a cow; challenge. MINORITY WINNER M. rch K: Fong 1.1any other st.ates have rectntly pa~ polltlcal retonn legtslatlon, but ProposltJon 9 is one of th6 Jnotil comprehensive. California voter! also approved a ballot 1neasure that allows some gasoline tax revenues lo be used on rapid transit. Proposlllon 5 repealed a 1938 section of the slate coll$titu0on whlch forbade the gas tax from going for anything but IN CLIFF·HANGER 'Poto' McCl01koy vote »'for . reform and a g a 1 n st state. corruption.' ~UH BEAT SEN. Alan Sborl •f Assembly Veterans o ·usted TI-IEY \'OTED "for reform and Stockton and Los Angeles attorney Gray -. . <1gainst CGrruption" although California Davis in the Democratic primary for ---. -. .. , for years has devt>lopcd a repu tation as ~!e ti:eMIM'er. .,. _ _ _ _ .-""·-~.._ ' perhaps-the-most-sc-&n d 8 I-fr e.-e:o-· · OymalJy v.·ill -race ReJ)ublican Sen. -• government of any major state. John L. Harmer of Glendale in 1he LOS ANGELES (UPI'! -Freshman Republicans. in select ing their November general election. Asse n1blyman f\like 0, Antonovich has tJornince. app._'l rcnily v.·ere not willing° to Harmer defeated John Veneman in the defeated vet eran Assemblyman Newton take the \\'Ord of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke that he indeed v.·as "iibsolutely not GOP primary for lieutenant governor. R. Russell bv 18 votes in a rare see·saw Veneman is a former assemblyman who duel in Tuesday's primary election which guilty"' of the \~~t.eriat~ grand jury most recently served as undersecre tary ousted at least fou r other incumbents. perj~ry charges ogainst him.. . S De f H 1 h Reinecke has a reputation among of the U. · partment o ea t Final returns todav shov:ed that arch· leading Democrats as v.'ell a s Education and Welfare. • conservative Antono\·ich garnered 66.157 Repu blicans as a \\'ell-meaning man of Dymally downed Sen. Lawrence Walsh votes \\'hi le Russell. a 10.year veteran, character and integrity, although he is of Downe y and USC law professor received 16.139 \'Otes in the 4\st seemingly naive \\•hen it comes to th!!-Ho1,1•ard Miller, who had leveled charges Assembly District. tough infighting ol politics. of perjury and illegal use of campaign The tv.·o lawmakers found themselves funds aga inst Dymally. in the same district following last year's IN l\10ST YEARS. a conservative such reaTVV1rtionment of legislative districts · h h ·1 RILES RAN UP more than 2 million r-r-as Reinecke m1g t ave ~QO easi Y over _ ordered by the Slate Supreme Cour1 - Con II II t · r Fl umoy votes in his runa\\'ay victory. His closest state tro er ous on . o . that threw many Jav.•makers in to new. · h · r od t and rival bad about one·tenth that amount. \\·11 an image o a m era e unfamiliar territory. progressh·e, in a GOP primary. ftlrs. Fong. who has become known for Reinecke fai led IG achie\·e the her legisla tive efforts to ban pay toilets, preprima ry court trial he said would v.·iJI contest Republican Brian Van C.amp pro\"e his inndefloce and tbe ~ ~-,.tte November g~eral elect!~ .. Van registered thei r' verdict.at the polls Willi ,'tamp "'as corpOrations comn11sa1oner. a Flournoy victory that neared landslide under Gov. Ronald Reagan. proportions. ~ Losing to ~!rs. Fong were Assem· blyman Walter Kar ab i an of Los :Angeles and Los Angeles educator Cathy Reagan Expects Repnblica11 s To Close Ranks LOS A~GELES <UP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan said today that Republican \'oters Jn California "'ill join ranks behind their candidales for November's general election. '·There ·will be no difficulty in the party uniting behind the primary v.·inners to keep the state moving ahead." 1hc governor said in a statement issued from his Pacific Palisades home. "\Ile had a spirited pri mary.'· Reagan added. "But the Republican Party could not lose in !he election because it had such an outs!andlng slate of candidates. \re can be proud of the v.·ay our cand i· dates conducted their campaigns." He said he \\'as "delighted" "'ith the caliber of the GOP nominees v.·ho "·ere elected. ''They are all men of unquest ioned integrity and principle and they have the expe rience and vitality needed to provide California the led'der.ihip it v.ill require during the difticult times ahead," Rea gan declared. O'Neill. Van Camp had little trouble "'ith his rh·al. fllichae\ ~1ontgomery, a South Pasadena attorney. ANOTHER REAGAN appointee. John T. Kehoe, former state consumer affairs director, 1\•ill be Unruh·s general election opponent. Kehoe defeated Her.ry Quig· lev. an Irvine businessman. ·in the controller·s race. Republican Asse mblyman \Villiam T. Dagley of San Rafael -v.•ho was \vorried rival James L. Flournoy v.·ould win votes from citizens confusing him with t h e incumbent -triumphed over the Los Angeles attorney. Flournoy is not related to incumbent Houston I. Flournoy. ASSE~1BLV~1AN KENNTH Cory of Garden Grove, who campaign ed as •·the man the oil compa nies fear the most," convincingly won the Demo c r a ti c nomina tion for controller \vith !l4 perccnl of the preci ncts reporting. Co ry had 1.059.758 votes to 781.664 for B. r.lendelsoh n. He defeated San Francisco Supervisor Robert 1.1endelsohn and former state treasurer Bert Betts of Elverta. Republican Attorney General Eve.lie Younger faced no opposition In the primary election. AS.SEftlBLV~~ FLOYD \Va ke!icld, \\'ho was forced inlo a totally new O~angc Cowrty district, "·as running behind banker Jiin Beam o( Orange v.·ho ca mpaigned on the theme of being "home grown." Two other assemblymen were wiseated v.'hile Sen. Peter Behr (R·Tiburon), \\1as the only incumbent in the Senate v•ith serious trouble. \Vith 193 of 766 precincts rer-orting . Behr had 11.765 votes and Bob Theiller of Santa Rosa gathered 7,S44. Assemblvman Walter \V. Powers of Sacramenfu. a l~year veteran and chairman of the v•ater comm ittee. was trounced by SaCramentG C o u n t y Supervisor Eugene T. Gualco for Democratic nomination in the 5th Assembl.y District. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Deil 1er, of tl,e Do / ~-ot '\ qvoroNeed lololWl'1•frlfla1 i!Yl)lj<IC""'~• .. 'l'CM'f NDetl>!'530 p"' e.a.111"" ~·roe, .. ,u tia "'°"II"' to"°" c..111 1te l1k1n u"''' I 00 p m S.t""clty lllCI Su ....... It~ 00 Mt reo;1,.1e VIKI' tOllY by 0 I "' !.ot<.<ooy. Of I~"' S...M•y C..11 lllCI I OOPJ """Ill ero,,glll IQ"°"'· C.111 .. t llk.,,unhl IC 1"' "'°""'"''" ........ ,"111()<1 lllt••n ..... .,,.'"""' ... .. s.~ ei-ttt• C.i:111tr1"!1 liltld'I s ... J\#1> CU.Sl•ot>O. 0...1 Poilll, .~1120 Soulll llQUO'OL LIOJf\I N""91 . , . , . , ... , . , 41)"'410 Storms Lash Deep South Tf1i11ds , Tornadoes, Hail Rciise l/a,voc in C'oaslal Weather H•iy Wfllll!!\e tod1y. l ltM Ylfl•llle wlNS1 rilot.1 Mid mor11jng llo\o" tte· comlf19 welle•ly lG to lJ knoll 111 -''•'· .._., IOdf)' II""' l t.lit501Y. Hi9~ 1004Y In Ullll'tr 605. C11<1n•I .. ~pe•f!U•U •1noe fl'oril 60 to •t ln1al'ld )elY>IM,•· hlfli r .. ioe fnlm .0 ID 16. Wlltr llmpetl!Vte M, SHn, ,'10011, Tide• WIONISCAY SICOl'ld 1111111 ,,, ,. t,JJ p.m, Jt $e<Gn4 low ..... , .,. J;•L p.m. t.1 1"HV•ICAY Flnt l\lgt! ..... ll:Jt p.m.. l' Flt&I low .• .••.•. .. J;O 1.m, -Cl 1 kconG lllQll .•.•• 10;:11 11·'"· ).7 $«ond low . 4:11 p.m. 1) ~"" rltu 1111 f-"'. Sell 1:01 p.on, MGM rlMS l ;J1 jl.IPI. kls 1:15 f .m. • 011•• !ifttl of Tl\-··-.. ·•-d ''°"" Non11 01-ou 10 K111w1 •"<I 1ton<1 •t>t •l•lil'" Ovit Co1 11 . T1ll1n1uee. Fl1., w11 -~tel ty rno<t 11\efl 111 lflt ll el tltn. fm t•1 M~~MOW '77"':) ... ~1• ~\lf()W1 t\ . ., llOW MM! ~ Ille rt mflnffr cf !Pit ~1ll011 WI\ w~., 'let• ot ll<l•llY ''°""y 11111, 111~11 1 (Old If~! I" tl>t '°Kiiie N0ttll-1! PfO!lllCH .. I'! trom !Pit tot•1 to Tll4I nor1ntr11 !tot-let.. - Area C'alllor11la ., --__.._ '. ASSE~IBLV~1AN JOHN P. Quimby (0· Rialto l, was unsealed by Terry Goggin, a fonner aide to U.S. Rep: George Brown. in San Bernardino County's' , 6 6th Assembly District . • All 80 Assembly seats and 20 oI the Senate's 40 seats Y.'ere up for election. Fi'fly lawmakers were unopposed while ne\rcome rs scrambled for 21 '·open" dis. 1ric1s created when legislators retired. ran for higher office or were forced into races agai.nsl other incum bents. Asse mblyv.·oman Pauli.De Davis (0· Portola), and ~semblyman Ray E. Johnson.\.(R-Chicol. easily wori their primary races and y,·ill clash in a classic battle in the November general election. SEN. RALPJ{ C. DlL~ <0.C~ena). survived a bru isi ng dampaigrrtw<iged by ,, Inflation Issue Robert "Buzz" Pauley, son of millionaire oilman Ed Pauley, and Compton City Coundlman Ross ~tiller Jr. in the 28th district. Thirty-eight assemblymen had no primary contests, including Joe A. Gonsalves (0.La ?.1irada), and Bob McLennan (R·Downey), who will collldt in the No\•ember election in the 63rd di strict. In the Asse mbly, where Democrats hold a 4!J.31 edge, a dozen lawmakers - including speaker Bob Moretti -ran for other offices. AMemblymen Harvey Johnson (0.El l\1onte ). and Bob Wood 1R..Crecnfield ), also are retiring. The Senate now is controlled by Democrats by a 21·18 margin v.•ith one vacancy'. ,. Cranston, Richardson Swa1n,p Senate Rivals LOS AXG EL ES (AP) -U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston, easily v.'iMing renomination to a second term . headed today for a NGvcmber clash with a conservative Republican state senator. Cranston . a liberal, piled up a lopsided margin Tu~day to beat two political unknO\\'ns (Gr the D e m o c r a t i c nomination. State Sen. IL L. Richardson. a fomi· er employe of the rlght·wing John Birch Society, defea ted his nearest challenge r bv n1ore than 3-1 to win the GOP race. ·\\'ith 17,874 of the state's 24,082 precincts reporting, Richardson had 756.330 to 210.694 for Earl Brian, a former director of lhe state's Health and \\'elfare Agency. James E. Johnson, a form er undersecretary of the Navy, was • \ ~·' Uf'I T.-...ie WINNER -Democrot WiUIAm A. Noriss has won right to op- pose Attorney General Evelle Younger in November by tle. !eating Los Angeles Vincent Bugllo•I. ' running third 86,!173. in the GOP race with CRANSTON HAD 1,688,299 votes, compared to 238,915 for his nearest optx>nent , Howard L. Gifford , a Patterson engineer. Frank Kacslnta, a Sun Valley aircraft technician, ran third witn 9~.284. "l' m delighted by the results from my primary," said Cranston. "I'm of course very grateful that I've had no serious Democratic opposition." Richardson's victory pitted Cranston against a conservative Republican for the second time in his senate career. Cranstori pulled together a coaliUon of Democral.!J and moderate Republicans In 1968 to deleat slate schools chief P.1a1 Rafferty. He said he would draw similar Republican support this year. "I EXPECT A great deal of Republican support tn November," ht said . ''I had a lot of It six years ago against Rafferty and 1 ex~ It again." Both Richardson and Cranston said that-inflation should overshadow Water· gate as an lssue in November. "I OOn't think that the only issue in this cam.Paign Is Watergate," Cranston said. "I think the economy, runaway prices, unemployment. the threa"t --of rcci!Sslon are quite possibly more lmportAnt issues to most people than Waterpte.11 Richardson, who Ca.mpilgn hard on infiatlon before the primary, promised to "solidify the purch.11ing power of the American dollar" Jr elected. "l will protect the buying power ol the average American." he sald. Richard,.., belt known for his support of tougher prison regulations, had led Brian a.nd other Republican challengeai in two prHlecUon l'lls conducte<f by pollster lt1ervtn Fiel . One of the Field surveys rhowed Cranston easily defeated e t h e r Richardson or Brtan. Cranston probably lost. his toughest opponent when former San Francl1co SUite Univtnlty Pre1ldtnt S. I • flayakawa was forced out of $t: COP race. Hayakawa, who gatned fame ln his slruggles With campus militants, wa11 left off the b11Tlot btetluse he hAd changed panics wtthin a year of tlltng his declara· tloo of candidacy. hlghway "'"'truoii"'· Spoo90ra of uio,measure -slmllar to tho one wblch lolled In 1970 -&old It ~ed in part be<ause of Itta oppoolUon fr1>m 1he oil componleo, which preViously have fought any attempt to divert the funds. All b<Jt 0<10 ol 'ibon olh<r ballot measures were headed to\llard victory. The only prop<)SiUon facing defeat was No .. 7. a little-.publlclzed measure that \Vot.ild have exempted from Civil Set'vloe status ihe chief adm.lnl.strallve officer and five deputies of the CalifOmia Post secondary Education Commission. McCloskev ,, Triumphs by Hairbreadth OOS ANGELES fUP!) -BtaUng back a fierce challenge, Rep. Pauf N. ''Pete" McC!oskey has scored a hair· br~adth victory . Jn Republl~an primary v.'h1le voters 1n a special election apparently sent a Democratic assemblyman lo join bis brother in Congress . Despit~ new districts created by reapport ionment and t'nc uncertainty ol \Vatcrgate, ,the other 22 incumbents challenged in the primary w e r e renominated Tuesday. McCloskey, an antiwar firebrand trom Menlo Park v.·ho mounted an abortive campaign against President Nixon 's 1972 re.election, clung to victory by a scant 876 votes over mill ionaire Atherton businessman Gordon Knapp, according to unofficial final results. THE TOTAL WAS McC!oskey's 29 371 to Knapp·s 28,504. • '. rn a year.Jong camp,qign, Knapp challenged McCloskey's record as a ''rear• Republican. A. -special . elec~ion in San Francisco, he!0--1n~con1unction ·wltb Uie-sUitewlde primary, was decided by an even slimmer margin. Democratic Assemblyman John Burton \\'as the apparent victor tor the seat held by a Republican for 21 years. He ~massed 73406 votes to 72.974 tor his ·seven opponents combined a clilference of 74 votes, according to unofficial results. Burton needed 50 percent plus one vote to avoid a July runoff and Immediately join his older brother, PPliillp, in Congre~. The wiofficial final total was 50.02 percent. Election offlclals said the results 'l'.'oold be routinely rechecked. BURTON, A FLAMBOYAN'f liberal' and advoca te of impeachm.tnt . campaigned on the theme that this was likely the last special election before the House could begin debate on an impeachment vote. Ranking California Republic· Rep. \Vi\liam S. Mailliard quit the seat for an ambassadoi:ship. He was one of three Republicans and three Democrats who chose not to seek re.election. With Burton's apparent Yi ct or y . Democrats increased their partisan edge Republicans in the California delegation to 2.J.19. A total of 251 ccrtiCied candidates battled for non1inations to California's largest·in·ltte-nation congressional dele- gation of 43 members. SIX REPUBLlCAN incumbents and eight Democrats were wit bout challengers in the primary. Two of the Democrats -Rep. Robert L. Leggett of Vallejo and Edward R. Roybal of Los Angeles -had no ballot opposition through the general election. In the open distri cts. those .without in· cumbents. Assemblyman Henry Waxman \\'as the Democratic victor in the 24th district of Los Angeles. virtually assuring his election in November in the heavily Democratic area. Water Measure Narrowly Al1ead LllS ANGELES (AP) -Southern Cal- ifornia voters apparenUy were giving an apparent approval to the so-called "\\'ater propOSition." The proposition, with about 54 percent In favor with mostly Los Angeles re- turns in. \\i>uld give the Metropolitan \Valer District authority to issue revenue bonds in six Southern California coun· ties. The measure led 1,034,162 to ae , 600. ,. Such re\;enue authority 'vould rncan !he ~1\VD could decide on future ,\·ater use rs rathtr than going to the ·1oters fo r a go·abead . Judge Older .4ppears 'In' LOS ANGELES CAP! -Judge Charle's H. Older appears to have tvon reelection 1,1·lth ease as he "'ilhslood ch'allenges from two candld3tes for his Los Angeles County Superior Court seat. Retums Tucs<ia)' snowed Oldtt wi th more than 60 percent of the vote. Older had been tritlclzed In ~me quarters tor his htindling of the W\1lh1m Farr ces.e In which he found the Los Angelu Ttmcs reporter 'in (Ofl!empt t>f court for 110J1tlon of a gag ord r dur lng 1hc Cbarl cs A1an10n murder trial. • ' ' I I ' I l \ ' I ) r, • \ DAILY PROT EDITORIAL P AGE t • ' A Time Troubled Umes have •truck six school districts In \Vest Orange County as teacbera and school boards have cla!hed over new teacher contracts. Teachers in lhe Huntlnaton Bt•ch Union High School District and the Ocean View (~emev.tary) district, each went on one-da.y walkouts last Week. Otean View may go agai n this week. and so may the teachers In the Fountain Valley (elementary) district. Salary battles ar• also looming In three other ele· mentary districts -Huntington Beach City, Westmin· ster and Seal Beach -though they may not approach tho tra.umallc proportions of the first three districts. It's difficult to pinpoint ~ single cause for the wide- spread u.nrest, because each district fa ces different prob- lems, but some generalities are evident. Tbe rapidly rl.s.ing cost of living ls pushing teachers to demand mu'ch hl'gher pay raises.than they ba\'e in the past. But while inflation makes living more expensive, It does not necessarily increase school distric t revenues. It is also evident the California Teachers Associa· tion (CTA), despite claims to the contrary, has launched a concerted effort to gain more power for teachers in the local area. And outside CTA trouble shooters have fo\.ind some or the local districts fertile grounds for dlscon· tent and they aren't shy about exploiting the soft spots. On the other hand. some school bo;ill'ds sce1n more than happy to ask for a fight. Jn Fountain Valley, for example, trustees have offered no pay raise to teachers. With soaring inflation you can't expect anyone to be happy about that. Even five percent offers made in Ocean Vi ew and the Huntington Beach elementary district are not overly generous, considering the economic times. The mood is calmer in the Westminster and Seal Beach districts, where exact offers have not been re- vealed and discussions may even be setUed without any strike threats. for Reason High school u.achers did settle for a nine percent pay raise after their one-day strike last Thursday. The · nine percent was what the district had offered -the best ofter in the area -but teachen; fool they won '"a 1>0int on principle because or the manner in which the raise will be granted. 1'hey get six percent across-the· board, and an additional three percent if the cost of liv· ing increases by more than that amqunt lhe first six n1onths of the year ta pretty sure bet). They were fight· Ing for a cost-of·livjng clause, and feel they won it, even though the cash a1nount is the i;;ame as was offered. '!'here are many side issues involved such as the number of students in a class, teacher aides. curriculum and other educational questions. but the real point or much of the fi ghting seems to be how 1nuch power the teachers will have in running the schools. Obviously power cannot be disseminated through hundreds of teachers. Somebody has to be on top. and that's where the administration stand s. But most dis· tricts could make a better effort to involve their teachers In the decision-making prOcess. As for the teachers. they might inspect their own behavior in light of some of the recent pickets and strikes. SQme members of the teaching profession have displayed co nsiderably less than .professional qualities in their actions. A few, a minority we hope. act more like campus revolutionaries'lhan educator's trying to take an honest stand. Maybe they think strikes and pickeL lines are just a game. but the bitterness developing between t.he leaching and administration ranks is going to leave a bitter taste long after the slo gans have disa ppeared -a bitter taste that will be shared by the citize ns. Each issue must be tackled one point at a ti1ne . but a warning to both sides. do it rationally, calmly, without vindictive emotions. Even contract negotiations should be an educational process. • Ill Art 1 Feminism I ' - H ... . ~ .. ,,.,. .. •J·. ..... ' ' ! .. ' \ ... ' . ~··, ) \ /\"'\ .ci...... • ._; ._::.... ~ ~ "IT SAYS,'YOUQ NEXT MISSION, SHOOLD 'itlU C~OO)E m ACCE PT ll WILL BE IN ~ORTHERN IRELAND."' No More Viet1aa111s 1· +Calle4 'llogwa~h' l Dear Gloo1u y Gus Teach('rs and school 3cmlnistra- tors in \\'est Orange County arc beginning 10 sound more like lhe toddlers lhey teach than the cduca · lors they oughL to be. The current strife is an education for all of us. Candor \VASHINGTON -The way "ha.s be€n •long ·-for Henry Kissinger . and -if the armed truce he has sought in !he Mideast is at hand there is yet still muclt that he must do. He must do whal he promised to do at lhe time President Nixon or- dered a \1-·orld-widc military alert, but did not. on Commitments , _. ·-----RICHARD WILSON THE KISSJ~GER nqgoliat.ions hR\'e had a-purpose~bove-and t>C'yOOd stopping · the killlnp; of Arabs and Jev.'!I. They have been intended to reduce to the minimum the peril of artned conflict. by chance or d('sign. between the United States and the Soviet Union at the most crilicat point in the '''Orld where the interests of these opposite forecs come into cooruct. j ~To the Editor : ~-----------...,) I As 3 working artist of some 50 years ( experience, the May 24 page on women MAILBOX ' artists made It dUficult for me to keep my supper down. Such a lot of hogwash I have never seen ill print before. ..._ __________ _. IF THIS Is an example of the new breed of "'-omen artists God help us. All this female , . . feminist ... neuter bit ..... U&h. To iay that smllln&, dressing p_retty. etc. bis anytbiir<to do with making it seenw to me ~Jil .atiraut as shallow as a statement c.an be. Yoo call that net and fabric thing sculpture? I IIAVE knoili hundrodl ot womeo painters ; 90me were good looking some we.re not . Only one thin g matters. You have to be able to paint. Somo years ago Bever!}' Hills Rlgll School invited people frtirn all professions to speak to the students about the pros~ in their particular profession. S. Mci>Oiiald Wright and T spoke on art 4as a career. We were told afterward that i wc were the ooty two who recommended our field as a rewarding career and I I have always considered it the best ~ble for a girl. I still do. THELMA PADDOCK HOPE ·~ ~ Campaign Curbs lJ To the Editor' Developers are major ~lributors to the political campaigm of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. llOi\fEOWNERS we r e ridiculed by Supervisor Baker for seeking to preserve 'some of the beauty of our hills through proper control of hillside development. Hom eowners were tumed down i.'l their quest for a hillside ordinance (Baker, Dietrich, Caspers ). an adequate local parks ordinance (Baker, Ojettlch, Clark), a resource managll)ent ordlnM.ce (Baker, Dietrich, Clark), and the retention of the agricultural reser.·e status ol the beleaguered Anaheim Hills (Baker, Dietrich, BatUn). BAKER'S p \.an n I rtg commissioner, Roger Slates, bragged it a party that 1 money was pouring 1.nto Baker's war • chest from the largely undeveloped Sth district. Clearly. our supe.rviso~· campaigns ,. sh o u Id be : 1. Publicly financed . 2. Limited in duration. 3. Limited In scale • (more, .!Jmaller districts). A democratic f statewide fund mailer raised less than ~ one-half the cost of one mailer for an f Orange County SUpervisor. I GENE ATHERTON, M.D. t Chairman of PARKS. S sponsors of County i L«al Parks Initiative " • PoUee or C1djure To the F.dltor : • , I would like very much to refPOnd to the article on the 12-hour siud,Y session between Hunt Ing ton Beach city departrntnt beads enc;t our glorious COWlcil apeciltcally Matney (May U. 1974). ThO c!Ullc stalemenl thaflhould haunt P.tatney Ls "culture and llbrariel are not ml highest priorities." lt nukes one wonder wfiat Is hl11 highest prionty. F"rom reading the article it appears that eslablishing a poll~lty could be. Why else docs he want more police when even City Administrator Dave Rowlan& says !hat "~"t 'vc added 66 people lo three yt?ars" to the police department and further stated that even If more are •ddcd ")'00'1111111 have the problclJl." PRll\IARJLV people are the products of th4!ir culture. When culture is Lftlfl"I '""' rffClert ·~ w.+(otM. Honn.tllY wrlt~ 9lleuMI c..,w, !Mir llMfMtH In ,.. W9ffl .. IKa. n.. l'lthl-19 ,....,,. 19fttr• " flt "'"' ... fll"'IMf1 111111 II ......,..,, All .. tlff1; "'"'' 111-ClllCll sltlillllffl •1"1 MalM... •dolrHI, llot;I MIMI ""'' liit ~ llfl ..-t If llllfl<IMll ,... .. II II ....,..i, '"'1y Mn Mt M 11Ullll111M. • overl<d:ed as it is by the Matneys of the 'l\'orld, problems of society become evident. Instead of focuajng attention on lhe n>ols ol the proj)j<£,, the ~eyi beliew that a mighty-police f<ree'ta the answer in solving these problems. r believe that councilman Shipley has a more commendable viewpoint of 50\'.icty when he stated that the "mark of a civilized community is a library!'' The city has needed a new library for years and is only asking for 16 ne~· employes to open the new libtary and give proper service to residents of Huntington Beach. When the police chief asked for more men , !\.1atney was inte rested enough to establish a feasibility study. To the library he simply says no. Or, like· the effective businessman be ~1 he wants annexes closed and those personnel , relocated to the new library (which would still be far shorl o! tho requested t6). 1 AAI NCTI' suggesting that the police are not needed. But more 1han enough is too much. There should be more ol a balance between culture and protective reaction. 1 suggest that Matney gel his head out ol the clouds and visit some libraries and become involved in some citywide cultural events. Libraries are, among other things, storeho~ of retrievable lnfonnallon that can be used by everyo ne : businessmen, s t u d e n t s , housewives. children, and even councilmen. Libraries and culture in general could be so much belier if not given such low priorities by people like Matney. Budget hearing• for the public are coming up. Once again It is up to the people or Huntington Beach to let themselves be kno~'TI. You pay your money and they take your chances. RON HAYDEN Erotfon ot Righi• To the EdiU.-: Rus Walton's arlie:le (~1ay 28) on how Americans' rights are being eroded by governments, dty to federal. was the first article I have seen that brings this problem to light. There has been so much more for the flt.lbllc but less for the Individual lately. ll;lnt it ill good to see the defense or property rights for a change. The property owners, like the free enterprise system, are lhe backbone of this country that ma·de it the great nation tha t It Is. Now hin!d city planners and appointed oommittce people have gotlen the power to tell the substantial people bOw and what to do with the things they have earned. lf \1-'e continue lo allo\V Governments to dk:Ulte our llves~ tax us beyond \\·hat government services should be aod give this extra money to liberal minded di:>-gooders that havr: never o'll'tled a ~ or met a payroll , \\·e "'Ill soon lose our ability to pay those taxee. As ~1r. Welton a.ay1 "Government l1 no longer the servant: IC Is the m•ster -of plans, persons, and property.'' Let's try to bring back Lile sclf-det'-nnlnatlon of the Amtrican people nnd not hdl into the traps of the socialistic oountMe:s. GOLDIE JOSEPH f ' P.R.T. GIOlrny GUI CGmllllfttl ••• • .. ~llled ~, rt111tr1 1nd do ,.., n•tn~ril't rellect IM YitWI ti IN --·· S<llMI y.ur , .. "9¥1 lo Gl!iloniJ O<n. Olil't PH(ll, Wome11 of L i terature •.:,~ "' .~ f Star i11 Quiz ( SYDNEY HARRI S ) This fortnightly \\'Ord.qu iz centers on women. Identify the "She " in the !ollo,,.,·ing more or less famous lines. Fort y percen t is a score even Women's Liberationists should be proud or. I. "She hangs upon the cheek of night as a rich jewel." 2. "She moves a goddess, and she looks a queen." ' 3, "She stood in tears amid the alien corn.'" 4. "She gave me of the tree, and I did eat" 5. "She d\\'ell a1nong the untrodden ways." 6. "She had a heart-ho'v shall I say?-too soon made glad.'' 7. "She is a winsome wee thing, she is a handsome \\'ec thing." 8. "She makes hungry where ntost she satisfies." 9. "Though she bends him, she obeys him, though. she draws him, yet she follows." 10. "She is coming, my ov.·n, my sweet : were it ever so airy a tread." 11. "She was a child and I y,·as a child, in this kingdom by Lhe sea." 12. ''She came to prove him with hard questions." 13. "She had a bo"'I or lilacs in her room." 14. "She l\1-'i~ted her hands behind her: but all the ~~ld..goed~-.. ..: ANSWERS' t. Juliet. as described by Romeo, in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet." 2. Helen of 'I'roy. in Homer's "llliad. •· 3. Ruth , the Biblical daughtcr-in-linv of Naomi. in Keats' poem "Ode to a Nightingale:' 4. Eve. as accused by Adan1, in Milton's "Paradise Lost." 5. Lucy, In one of Words,rorth 's rive so-called "Lucy Poems." 6. "~1y La!it Duchess"' by Robe r! Browning, 7. Robert Bums's poetic praise of his \\'J!C. a. ctcoeatra, as described b )' Enobarbus, al the opening o f Shakespeare's "Antony and (.1eop.11r11 ." 9. P.1lnnebaha. ln Long re 11 ow ' s narrative "The ~g of Hia"·atha," 10. ~laud. In Tennyson's poem or lhc same namt; 11. Annabel Lee. in Edgar Allen Poe's poem of the sal'nl.' name. Jt 1'bt Que(!n of Sheba . confront ing Solomon, in the Otd Testament. \3. ''Portr,lt of a Lady" by T.S. Eliot. l•t Bess, the landlord·s daughter, In Alfred Noves's narrative ' '1' h c Highwayman.·· Then. Secretary of State Kissinger asked this country to accept on faith the necessity of Pres- ident Nixon ·s coun· ter -Soviet action . \11hicb brought \var too close for coin· fort. and later be, Kissinger. would ex- plain ln detail. Kissinger's \\·ords on that oceaslon are "·orth rechlling .. For once he appeared to be angry. He resented a questioner·s implication that the ale rt \vas no more 1Mn a political move a fe\\' da ys after 1hc "Saturday Night Massacre·· by a r attled President trying to divert public attention from \Vatergate \.l.'allo~ving to the critical tum in world affairs. SUCH SUSPICIONS, Kissinger said. \\'ere "a symbol of "''hat is ha ppening in this oountry," and added that the Watergate "crisis of authority" may have influenred Soviet threats to introduce military forces in the Mideast. The "'crisis of authority" is even more severe today th an in October. 1973 and it has been heightened, in part. by public disclosure of the kind or discussions that take place in the Oval Office at the White House. Kissinger and the President have held many confidential discussions on the .11.fideast truce and America's role there henceforth ol the kind President Nixon has called the frank. hard-hitting explorations necessary to the conduct of the presiden cy. Y.'hite House convers.1tions on national security ha\'e been recognized in Lbe courts as ha\1ing a different character f r om discussions \\'hich might be considered evidential in the commission of felonies. SO nrERE is not much likelihood that until many years from now ~·hen it Y.i\l make no dilference. anyone will kno\\' the nature of the confidential and secret ncgotialions "'·hich President Nixon and Secretary Kissinger have been carrying on \1-'ith notably devious and unreliable leaders in the Middle East. It is a ti n1e now for candor beyond other timt's, if only because public con fidence in the reliabilitv of American statesmen is at a low ebb. How deeply the President and Ki ssinger have gott en the United States involved "'ith Egypt and Israel wi ll not be much illu111inated by expected statements that there y:crc no sec ret deals. Of course not. The~ neve r are. And yet the Pentagon papers shO\\'e<I that the Johnson administralion was going far beyond public perceptions and expeeta· Uons in its development of Vietnam poli· cy, The unauthorized disclosure of secret meetings on the India-Paki stan clash re- \'ealed Nixon policies of ""'hich th e public ~'as only remotely a11·are. An interesting study of t h a I confrontation of '"'O decades by Dale R. Taht inen for the Aincrican Enterprise Institute sho"·s .'.I rather discouraging result. The supply of arms front lt1oscow and Washington resulted. at least until recent events, in a military be.lance of po'4·er hea\'ily in Israel's favor. Recent events shook that balance and Israel's government came tumbling do"'n, but Tahtinen's general coocluslon is still valid. The presence of \'&st amounts or arms supplied to both sides has not been stabilizing or creatt!d a stand-<1ff, as Kissinger's dogged efforts illustrate. llE NEEDS to come barlt now and explain in !he most <'Xpllcit detail his co1nmitments. if any. in lhcse hundreds of hours of 1a!k with the President. spokeSJnen of the Soviet Union. of the Arab states and Israel. Tile public and Congress deserve. and must have, n better comprehension of \\'hat is in1'0l\'ed th.'.ln was had during the formu lation of Vietnam and India· Pakistan policy. For it is no longer to be 1aken for granted that the secret ncgotialions of the admi nistration in po"·er, ho\\·ever well·interxled or logically supported. necessarily serve l h c continuing interests o[ lhc United States. That old·fashioned idea just isn't pra ctical anymore. The Two Most Dangerous Leaclers \\'ASHJNGTON -The \l'Orld's t\\'O most dangerous and irresponsible leaders, in the opinion Of \l'Orried intelligence experts. arc North Korea·s Kim II Sung and Llbya ·s l\1oammar Khadafy. The isolatl'd Kim . according to inte lligence reports. is Itching to rt"sun1e the Korean War. "'·hich encled 22 years ago about "'here it starte<I a 1 on g the 38th parallel. He is c!epictOO in intelligence reports as a Jeadrr. out. of touch 1•,1ith the \1'tlrld "'ho 11'00111 plunge Korea Into another \Var, again~1 the ad· vice of his Soviet and Chine!\C mentors. lie is quite r..'.lpa. ble of plotting a wild, daredevil incident, such as a paratrooper attack on Seoul. API)ARENTLV, Kim began unification talks wlth South Korea In the mlstakrn belief !hat North Korea \\'SS economirally superior and would bf. able to dominate a pcacerul. unified country. He believed his ov.'fl propaganda. Jpparently. that lhe South y,·as suffering under oppression and it:1 people y,·ere starving. tnstead.~North Korean delegates found the economy booming and ttie people f:ir more prosperous than in the North. Kim was reported tO be furious al his representatives. for bringing ba ck can1eras. translstors and 01her consumer ltcn\5 as souvenirs. HE A.8RUPTL V dropped !he di11logue "'1th the South and began makin~ \\'Brlike moves. Intelligence reports as.1;ert he has concluded that the onl)' "'llY Korea can be united under his leadcrshi1> Is by force. His gunboats sank t"·o South Korcoin fishing boats and abducted a third . He has resumed the standa rd Communist tactl~s of fomenting class a n I ago n i s m . consolidating antigovcmmenl factions and fomenting united fronts in the South. "\\1e 111ill render positive assistance to the revolutionary struggles of the Soulh Korean people," Kim has proclaimed from Pyongyang. Bul it Isn't the inflltra\ion and agitation that \Vorries the intelligence analysts. They are far more concerned that the unp rediclablc Kim may resort to hot action. EVEN !\.IORE mercurial is the Libyun strongman. A·loammar Khadn{_v. who is constantly stirring up trouble in !he Pi1iddle East \vlthout much lhought for the consequences. Intelligence reports c\ain1. ror instnncc, that he IU:l~ am1ed lf'rrorist grt'l11p)I \dill sophi~ticatcd "·capons. in c I u d in I! shoulder·rtrt'd Soviet missile:!! The1·e i!'l apprehension In I~ int r 11 ii.: i: 11 ~, r· comrnunlty that cxtremi~I ·11 11u11~ \1 'J get their hands Ol'I even 111uri• d1r"•1•rou.~ "'·capons, now th11t l.lbya ha' conr.ludi.:tl ii new anns agreement '>'Ith ~loscow. KJIAOA .. V is also a«used or stirring up plols lo O\'Crthrow neighbor ing :\rab lcac!t>rs who have rejected hi~ calls for a "peoples· \1·ar .. nga ln!I Israel and lhe United States. lie I!! clnmorlng 10 ust -the oil emb11rgo. terrori st attacks nnd other ~1ild mca~ures. \.\'hlch his more moden1te Arab nclgh001·s 'l''arn could backfire. L.lke Khn 11 Sung, i\1oamn1ar Khnd;1ty •• is :.ilso capable of irrational and irresponsible arts. Footnote: rn Sout h Korea, President Park Chung Hee has taken emergency n1easurr.s, "'hich intelligence experts µrivately conct'de are justified. In the ~l iddlc East. there is talk of '·tJim inatlng" the fiery Khadafy. One sec rcl report tells of a discussion bct\\·ccn a CIA agent nnd oil company official about putting up $50 million for Khadafy's assa ssination. High officials ha\ c assurt'd us, l10Y.evcr. th :'lt the $:,() inillion talk "'as nothing but barroon1 banter and has never been gilcn serious consideration. OltANGI COAST ·DAILY PILOT Roberl N. \Y1Ttd, P11blishrr 'fhomos Kee11i/, Editor R(lrbara Kreibich Erl itorial PaQe. Eclitor T11r •.~!Jori.it 111~1· of lhr D111ly 1•1:nr "•·ks t•1 u1(11rm. a.nd Ktln1ulatc 1••1irtri·< by pN':rt•nr\llu; nn thi'i Pl\ie 1J11 d°~' •'On1mt•nt;..1';'>' nn hipl!'• nf 1n- tt>l e~t tY '-)111t1r11t•·•l 1'0lumn1J<:ii; 1'1wl ra1·to.Jn,,t:;.. b1 llhll 11h n:.i: 11 f\>1iun 1~r r1•.1drr~· "''"'" 11.t'l!I b> prest>nilni: lhls nc,1·9paper'9 OfllnlOIHt and klt•:ll.• r1n cumn1 t~ 1'llt:o fd1tor1al opin~•ns nt lhl' 01'1~· P1\llt llPl'"'l'r only in ll w t'duor1~ rolumn •t Ilic top of th<1 p11;gr. Op1nion1; t'-PN'S.~ by llw-L..:'li- 11mn1sti; 1tnd carioonl~t• and li!!lttt 11Tltttt att tnt'lr own and no endor1"" mrnt ot rtw1r VIM\11 hy the Dai~v Pik>l itl'IO\lkl ~ IJU'm'l'd. \\'tdncsday . .June 5. 1974 • ' ' Testimonv ~ Wind U1• On Hughe s From Wire Sen 1ccs LOS ANGELES -Robert A. !\1aheu rested his $17.5 mllllon libel suil against Ho,vard Hughes Tul'sday. clcarini;: the way for the blllionnlrc's rcbultal in the 15-weck-old ttial. !\1aheu. a lonuer FBI np:cn t \\'ho headed Hughes ' vast Nevada etnpire fron1 1966 to 19i0 is suing the rec!u.sc O\"er his public sta tement that E:t-49c r Toflplcd HEDWOOO CITY I CPll -Bob st. Clai r, forr·ner all-pro San Francisco '19er offe.nsive tackle, wa s defeated in his bid for rc- t•lrctkm to the San !\tatro Cou11 1y Board of Supcn•isors. St. Clai r, '1-t. had held lhf' posi tion since 1966 and bliuned his d~feat on 1he adverse effects on i ncun1bent s of the \\'nterga tc scandal. The victor ,1·as John '.\I. \\'nrd, 33, a high sehool ieachcr. 3 Killers Believed Involved fi+1aheu ;'stole me blind .'· '----------~ U.S. District Court Judgr ( State ) Harry Pregerson cxru~ed the jttry after ~laht'u concluded his mara l hon 14-<iay appearance on lhl" \\'ilness stand and Hughes· attorn<'y l'\obert Schlei v.·As to start his rebuttal case today. e Kltlt1t1pe1• Die .. LOS ANGEtES A kidnaper \\·as shot to death by one of his hostages C'arly Tuesday as he tried to flee out the front door of a n apartment. The kidnaper. described as being about 'll years old, \\'as not in1med iately identified. Police said he carrit'd an out· of-state driver's license issued to Richard Geiger. 20. Silver Spring, ~Id.. but that th e kidnaper's description did not fit the one on the license. None of the kidnap victims v.·ere injured. officers said.. e Term Rereil'ed SAN DIEGO - A man v.·ho tried to exlort ·j)Jl'l.000 -frofl,. the Randolph A. Hea rsl"family by offering inforn1ation about the kidnaping of t h e i r daughter Y:as s ent e nt:c d Tuesday to fi\'e years to Jif~ in state prison . '· Superior Court J u d g e George A. La~:lr heard !he !rial of Samuel L. fi+lrG taY:. 2t 1-vithout a jury and passed sentence. e Srhool .~tril'e PASADENA -The first strike in the history of 1he Pasadena Unified S c h o o l 1 District apparent!~· had littiel l'ifect on the operation of classes. but some high schools suffered large studcnl abscn· ICPism. The one-day w a I k o u t Tuesday was organized by !he Pasadena Federation of Teachers and school oficials said fe1rcr tha n 20 ocrcent of all classroom leachers to<ik aprt. Teachers ~aid 1hey 1rere protesting recent action~ of the school board including lhe dismissal of 171 probationary teachers. e Gttard Sei:ed HOU. Y\\1000 - A security guard has been arrested in connection Yl'ith the death or a man \\"hose bodv \\"<'\S found stuffed in a plaStic 1arpauli11 in Burbank . Authoritie s arrested ! Burleigh T. Jev.•cll of Los Angeles on ~1onday. 1~e \\·as accused of shooting J~onatd j Lee Kessler. v.·hose body v.•as found in a trai1er Saturday. Kessler's widow , \larianna. v.·as arrested Sunday nighl in con nection with lhe murder. e E111be.::-le111e11t STO C KT ON -Paul Shepherd . 63. conv1ctl'd of embezzling over $100.000 v.·hile treasurer of the Knights of Phylh ias Grand Lodge, has been sentenced to state pri son . 1,f ess c1 gc 'Fro111 SLA ' Delii·ered . Whal better way lo show your appreciation to the graduate lhan 11·11h a genui ne hil nd-crafled American In· dian Turquo1~e r1n,1:' A very special purchase or 1hese i:l'ntune ~terling !>d\·er and turquoisi.! r ings allows us 10 of· 11.-r th,.m 111 you at 10•; nff1hl' regular prices 1ha1 lhe:.-art' :i-nld fur hy 1ht.-1rad1nt.i posts 1n Aritona & :'\rw ~l ex1co. ALJ, BISGS are genuine sterling s1h·e r 11·11 h genuine 1iJr1;uu1~e. e;,ch was hand fashioned by lhe Navaju or Zuni 1nbe~. ,\JI <>lht•r Indian Jl'Wl'lry in our slock al similar .•a\"101:• 'P•'CIJ! grou1l ol ring~ many -r~·le, aod 'Ill'~ ~II >lc•l<r1).! ~river and genuine 1u1Quo1 "' Regular $14 NOW $8 "!•I·• .di g1<•u1• ••! ••Olj• nldtl\ •Ill"' 4nd '"'' ~II •l,.rl•ni.: ,.i,i·r & 111·nu1n•· Tu•f"IU "" .. Regular $29 NOW $17 • l.O.VG llI::ACJI, .f:J 1.1 A tf1t"tic.A "· • SA ,VTA ANA, 2015N.Afolri • ·r onuA Net:, 2'1455 llou1tharrie Bf. • l\'lllTT/£/l. 12918Phllode/phiaNI. • .\'l<:IVl'OHT flf,"ACll. I 7 f'1uh. Sq, • TOH HANCJ-;, Dr.I A mn '1-·o•hinri ,'lq • Hf:oo.v oo 81-,'ACll. s. BoY c:,_ritcr • ORA .VG,:, T~e ,\la/I a/ Oraritr • 1\.V1\ 11£/.lf. ,\ ,.oh~im Plaza • I.OS A..VG£L£S. Arca l'lo;;a MASTtl CM.1.IGI • IAHll.l.Mlll(.l.ID • SOS ClfDlf f'LAH RINNINGBI GO J flights dally to San Francisco. Or go with the unofficial stale bird 10 Sac:ramen to. Come and get 'em. Call you r trav el agent or P~A. 1'$Atlves you allft. ' Wtdntsdar, June 5, 1'974 DAILY PILOT !J VA Chief Releats r Jeremiah ·to Return Home11 Sears __ J.c:i'ated.ooJhe_L~weT_Le'l.eJ · . _,_ .. • • -. Misses' Nylon Bikinis Only! Scoop them up! All nylon tricot with elastic waist-. I bond. Long wearing. In sizes 5, 6, 7. . 'l j .:.r7f, ' ~. ··', .. ,,J,.·,~ 3-way Convertible Bra Seort Price 197 Wear as criss-cross. halter or regular bra. Nylon tri- cot. Contoured. Sizes 34 and 36 A, B, C. Other sizes available. Non-cling Formal Length Half.Slip 197 Made of Antron"' Ill nylon so it's non-cling. Smartly trimmed. ·Sizes S, M. L. • .* \~ 1t?~ " • • • ·llo " .. I •• 411 ! • ... .+ • • <II •• .. ,, .4 .. ~ -. • •• •' , Prices Effective throug~ Saturday. June 8 , ' ·l. , • ~ IS I So. Coast Plaza ears 3333 Bristol St. Buena Park 8150 lo Palma Ave . '•'-~•~.~0t.•u"' ..... nc.o;1. Phone 540-3333 Phone 82B-4400 ' " ,t I party dresses . f~rjuniors ... high in fashion low • • 1n price 88 Great styles in the long length. Bare-bocks, sleeveless, short sleeved and scoop neck looks. In fashion fabrics and colors. ' Junior sizes . ''. All-Nude Panty Hose 69c pair All-sheer from heel to toe. Mesh knit nylon. One size fits · 95 to 150 lbs . Fashion colors. Use St-ors ltevolving Chorge Orange Stott ~tt: Mof>doy '"'"' S.wrtlo" 9·JO .t..M. to '130 P.M,, 2100 N. Tustin Ave. , Phone 637-2100 • I S..Mo" 12 Neo1t M .l P.M • . ' ,, . ' .., ·~ " .. l :':l "' " " .,, I• ., " •] ! • • . • " i .. 'I' " .. "' ,, " ' • 7 • --' ·-•• Today's F inal N.Y. Stocks • VOL. 67, NO. 156, 8 SECTIONS, 128 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1974 N TEN CENTS Brown, Flo·urnoy Ro.mp by Healthy Margins TREADS DAD'S PATH Democratic Nomlnff Brown LOS ANGELES (AP) -Califoml<1's next governor will be either Edmund G. Brown, 36-year~ld son of the state's last Democrat!t governor, or Houston I. Flournoy. a Republican beneficiary of Watergate. Both won their party's nominations by comfortable margins Tuesday, as polls predicted, in a surprisingly low voter turnout. Brown led San Francisco ~1ayor Joseph Alioto 1,041,120 to 51 4,030 with 96 percent of lhe vote counted. Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti was third with ' 460,573. Flournoy, 44, won a landslide viclory · over Lt. Gilv. F.<l Reinecke, who was the front-runner before being indicted April 3 by the Watergate grand jury. He pleaded not guilty but failed to get a trial date before the primary. Flournoy had L.104,945 votes to Reinecke's 53 1,610. Voter turnout fell well below Vie 62 per<..-ent predicted by Brov.·n. the secretary ol state. Candidates blamed it on Watcrgat~aused apa thy. Brown's office said the turnout was under SO per- cent Brown, who led the fight for a controversial political reform measure. told supporters that he and Flournoy would have to work harder in the fall because "the people are skeptical of th,e political process." He said he expected a sLrong race from Flournoy. whom he described 8$ "an intelligent person and an articulate spokesma n for his cause." Flournoy predicted an "interesting and e1citing campaign" and added, ''We are going to have a united Republican party." Flournoy v.·on the endorsement 0£ his landslide victim, Reineeke, today as the GOP immediately moved to unite for (See GOVERNOR, Page !l Caspers Avoids Runoff Coast Supervisor Easily Beats Challengers By WILUAJ\f SCHREIBER Of 11M O.tllr Pl .. t Slaff Incumbent Fiflh District Co u n t y Supervisor Ronald Caspers won election to his-second tcnn Tuesday, brushing aside challenges by three opponents. It had been thougHt Caspers might lie forced into a runoff, but, when all the voles were in, he bad about 54 percent of lhem. Final results are: Cas~rs: 54,480 Marcia Bents : lt~ Nolan Frizzelle: 7,363 Jame! Thorpe: 17,177 As in his past election effort, Caspers v.·aced a big mon~y campa!gn to retain his seal. He raised more than $150,000 in his re-electjon bid and spent just under $100,000. His three opponents all cooceded he probably could not be beaten in the primary but merely forced into a November runoff. Between them, his opponents raised ... and spent about $40,000. -The Fifth District race w~9-mar-ked b.~-­ a pac;t among the candidates not to spend P1lty Plltf Sr.it l't!tla CARRIES .GOP BANNER NominH Flournoy How You Voted-more than about $93,000 each ""'"' about_50 cents per registered voter in the district. Caspers' chief opponent, Mrs. Bents of Newport Beach, charged several weeks ago that Caspers had already exceeded that limit and hit $120,000 in his spending. · Por110 Deluge Due in Co11ntv Here is the final tabulation on all election results for Orange County and local races on Tuesday's Primary ballot: SHERIFF ..CORONER Brad1 Gates -234,451 Spero Janise -5,906 Jerry L. Lawrence -12,453 ~tarshal Norris -36,319 George Savord -37 ,960 Gene Vmlove -8,560 BOARD OF SIJPERVISORS Znd Dlttrld David L. Baker -30,074 (RunoU ) John T. Dean -14,349 Laurence J. Schmit -22,217 (Runoff) ltll Dilirlct Ralph 8. Cllrk -50,74.1 Garry Nellesen - 15.137 5tb District Ronald W. Caspers -54,480 Marcia M. Bents -18,666 Nolan Frizzelle -7,363 Jim Thorpe -17,177 .o\SSESSOR Jack P. Vallerga -229.139 Raymond Preston -103,847 AUDITOR Victor A. Helm -291,263 LOCAL MEASURES O. Irvine Parks Yes -5,W No -1,937 E. Irvine Bike Trails Yes -4,97 2 No -2,001 SADDLEBACK COLLEGE BOARD . Trustee Area No. 1 \Villlarn E. Dean -32,671 Steve Mueller -13,372 Henry ?-.1. $tanley -5,271 Trustee Area No .. % Robert C. Bartholomew -25,515 Jeffrey S. Du Bowe -10,912 Alan H. Greenwood -14,558 Trustee Area No. 3 Norman Cole -9,534 Ron Kreber -16,575 Michael McFadden -5,814 Llwrence W. Taylor -17,825 COUNTY SCHOOL SUPT. Robert Petenon -201 ,842 Donald 0 . Woodington -118,751 COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Area No. 2 John D. Harper -24,67 1 David H. Paynter -34,014 Area No. John o. App -31,7€!6 S'tvif t Leading lit Guaclalu pe Lead boats in the 6(l0.mile Guadalupe Island race w e r e "ruggling towards the finish line loday in extremely light airs bctWeen Newport and"San Diego. Out front with 44 milt! to go was Lhe Newport-41 Swift co-skippered by Gayle Post and J • c It 11-iallinckrodt. Swift was the elapsed lime w\nner last yea r. Rtmniog In second place was Aquavit and third was Ta\lsman. Others wilh distance to go are Pele, 85: • Superior Star, 85 ; Nereid, 122; Yo lio llo, 127 Topaz, 132; Counle!ls Theresa Bernadt?tte. 133. There was no report from either l\tatangl or Dakar. Ernest G. Lake -23,929 TAX COLLECTOR·TREASURER Robert L. Citron -280,·i66 CLERK William E. St John -287 ,639 DISTRICT ATTORNEY Cecil Hicks -212,079 William S. Hu1sy -83,142 l\fax A. Sturges -36,970 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR Jame& Hdm -285,"2 RECORDER J . Wylie Carlyle -280,155 WATER DlSTR!CTS Mwlldpal Water Dlstr:lct Of Orange County IHvlsJon 1 Foun tain Valley, Huntington Beach, Seal Beach, Costa Mesa: David K. Jones -28,186 Stephen T. Tucker -17,240 Division Z Seal Beach, Wethninster Gerald E. Price -26,269 Harry D. Bentley -6,882 Gordon Gleason -14,439 Division 3 Harbor Area-South County Clem M. McColloch -36,522 William D. Fenton -8,043 Sterling S. Sharrar -6,728 Coastal ~lunlclpal Water District Division 3 Newport Beacb flans J. Lorenz -3,986 Winton M. Ashton -838 \V. A. Coleman -655 F.<l Vanden Bossche -663 Division 4 Costa Mesa William K. Patrick -3,493 • Gene J. Adams -1,785 Tri-Cities l\funlelpal Water District Division S San Clei:nente Richard 1\1. Learner -617 Don Conrad -438 • Division 5 San Clemenlc W. At ~tac Kay -909 C. Thomas Dahl -421 H. Huntington Beach Jllgh School District Yes -26.536 No -31,261 L. Lagu.na Beach School -District Yes -3,571 No -3,971 0. Rossmoor Service Area 11 Yes -!,836 No -l,ZOi P. Orangt' County Street Lighting District I Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, South Laguna Yes -3.139 No -3,41M V. Orange County Slrect Lighting District II El Toro. ~lission Viejo Yes -3.075 No -3,:m z. Orange County Str«t l.Jghtlag District 14 Los Alamitos, R~moor Yes -2.190 No -Z,%.U "' W. ~1etrapolltan Water District Yes -18811'3 - No -154,614 OD. Los Alumlto~ Stret't Llghll11g Yt !i -896 (Stt' COUNTY, r age ZJ • D1llr Piiot Slfff PllolCI WINS NEW TERM HANDILY Fifth District's C•spers P•llV PllClt Sl•ff Plllllt FORCED INTO RUNOFF $,econd District's Baker Baker, Schmit ili Runoff F 01· Seco11d District Seat Incumbent Supervisor David Baker. a three-tenn veteran on the Orange Counly board, faces a November runoff election against the top vote getter of his two Tuesday primary election foes Larry Schmit. With all the county's 1,849 precincts reporting, the sec ond supervisorial district tota ls are: Baker : 30,074 Larry Schmit: 22,217 John T. Dean: 14 ,349 Dick Rlliz, Baker's top aide, said today the runoff came as no surprise an d was due primarily to a strong Schmit vote in Garden Grove . He predicted Baker should \\'in the runoff handily. Schmit and Dean campaigned against the so-called "incumbency" factor which holds that the longer a man is in office, the less responsive and honest he becomes. Schmit ran against Baker four years (See BAKER, Page Z) Ex-Newport Helicopter Pilot l(illed 1n Crash The former chief Ne\\-port Beach Police Department helicopter pilot and his passenger were killed Tuesday when their chopper struck a powerline strWlg over C&rquinez Strait in the San Francisco Bay area, disintegrated and plunged into the water. Divers were seeking the cockpit assembly in which pllot K e n n e t h "Scotty" McG regor, 35. and a passenger were trapped. ' f\:1cGregor. chie f pilot for the California Parks Ser.vice C&lifomia. in Northern was Oying Ranger Paul George . 2.1. on a training and patrol night v.•hen the crash occurred. Eyewi tnesses Indicated chances of . either man surviving were extremely poor. ACt'OW\t.s indicated ~fcGrtgor. a veteran helicopter pilot cited many times for land and sea rescue heroics on the Orange toast, struck a hanging wire with lh~ tail rotor. "There was an explosion in the engine area," said a law enforccnicnl ofriclal Investigating the crash. "That blew the tall section off and Into pieces and the cockpit' ren straiiht Into the "'ater. ·• Invel'ltigators today \\'ere attempting to dctcrmlnc ju$l what caused the helicop- ter to hit the wire, which h• strun g from (Stt COPTEl\1 Page 21 • KILLED IN CRASH Helicopter Pilot Mc·Gregor " But top Caspers aides said the supervisor considered the ttiling to run from the date he officially filed as a candidate and v;ould not include money spent before that date. l\1rs. Bents charged late in the campaign that Caspers and his aides had "strongarmed" big companies into making large .campaign donations. She said they feared decisions on projects needing county approval would be swayed if ~ money wasn't given. Caspers tabled tbe charge "r~. '' caspers' other two foes, Dr. Nolan Frizzelle of Newport Beach and James Thorpe of San Juan Capistrano, waged active campaigns but spent limited amounts of money. Optometrist Fri.zzelle stumped around the district, stopping at centers and other public areas appealing for votes. Thorpe. the Corrner mayor of San Juan Capistrano, concentrated in the south county area, where he is best known. Irvine Voters Approve T,vo Park Bond I ssues Irvine votm continued their love affair with tfiCi1' new city and approved two park bond issues ~ut voters elsewhere on the Orange Coast dealt death blows to financing measures on Tuesday's ballot. Laguna Beach voters rejected a school tax override while Huntington Beach voters said they didn't want to spend $14.5 million for a new central high school. Both lrvine measures won easily. Proposition D, which sets up a $16 million park fund that will include financing . for a IS.acre athletic facility won by a vote of 5,293 to 1,937. lrvine residents also voted to spend another $2 million for bicycle and hiking trails. The vote was 4,972 to 2,001. Both 1neasures needed tv.·o-third majorities. Laguna Beach school board members will meet tonight kl try to figure what to do v.·ilhout the 1271 ,000 that would Mve been raised by the 24 cent tax override that received 3,971 no vote!! and 3.'i71 yes votes. Only a simple ma jority w::is needed. Huntington Beach, Union High School District voters turned down the pro· posal to finance the new high school through a non-profit corporation with a no vote of 31,261 lo a yes vote of 26,536. HE LEAVES JIOME O VER TELEPHONE The Daily Pilot sincerely hopes !hat ils nds won't drive you from your home. But here's one ad that did just that to the Newport Beach man v.·ho p\1tced it : 'iO CHEV. Horizon. 24 Ft. pv.·r. steer & brakes. 15.000 mi. Comp. self-contained. 110 generator, alr-<:00d . b11c P rack. ti1ay trade/offer. (Phone No.) The ad sold the motor home almo!t!. Im· mediately after the paper came out <'nd tht!n \\'cnt on to produce 80 many Inquiry calls that the advertiser left home lo get away from the phone. Te!t a Dally P\101 ad for !he results )'()U 1vant. Dial the direct llne: 642·5678. > I -' • i\s Law Falls? By L. PETER KRIEG 01 1!>e O.ity Pilel Stiff A ruling Tuesday declaring C3lifomia's obscenity lav.· unconstitutional m a y mean Orange County will be swamped with dirtv movie houses and "adult" bookstoreS, a spokesman for District Attorney Cecil Hieks said tod ay. Law enforcemenl and j u d i c i a I authorities lhroughoul " the county were aghast at the ruling. but most declined any immediate comment. A three-judge panel ruled the law is unconstitutionally vague in failing to define what is obscene, The 21-page decision was based on the screening o! ''Deep Throat" by Buena PB r k 's Pussycat Theater. Assistant Orange Coun ty District Attorney Michael Capizzi said a decision will have to be made whether to rewrite the law or appeal the ruling directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Capiui said the probable move will be to appeal and he said he is optimistic that the nation 's highest court will overturn the ruling. But watch out if it doesn't, he said. "Just look around at the bookstores that are trying to exist now. Look at some of the newstands on the street. "If there's no law prohibiting smut !hen r guess your imagination is the limit." he said. Tuesday's decision v.'as handed down by a panel composed of U.S. District Court Judge Warren J. Ferguson, Judge William East of the Dist rict Cou rt of Oregon and 9th U.S. Circuit Court Judge Walter Ely. The decision was unanimous. Orange County Superior Court Jud ge Byron K. Mcl\.lillan was obviously upset by the ruling. "You just can't tell these days," he said. "I went out to Buena Park to see 'Deep Throat' and l thought it was obscene and I said so. Apparentlv the federal panel disagrees and that's the end of my interest in the matter. · The panel ruled that the California law "does not specifically define the sexual· (See Si\1lIT, Page Zl Orange Coast Weather Night and morning low clouds clearing to hazy afternoon sw1· shine Thursday. Warmer inland with highs in th e mid 70s. Beach highs in the upper 60s. INSIDE TODAY Pat a11d Richard Nixo11 were nl()rried there. ll un1phrey B°" ga rt boozed tltere. Teddy Roose· velt 1lept tliere. and now the 1\lission 11111 is backdrop for movie about a Hollywood ltge1u1. Story, Page 16. Al T-Stni(f I leaUrtt :It L . M, t1'1'4 H C1Ufo,,,la ._. C•-CH-" Clau.lfltol U·M C1'"l'1 q c,.u_d 4t Offltl N1ll<t1 ll Ed,l1rl1I '''' ' E11ttrl~l11'"l<ll 1'·U l'l""'flC:I 21..t) ,.,, 1111 RKoroil 71 HOfll~fft JI Allll Lilfl<l9,. ll • M1F1111t1 • Mtvlel 24-11 M11111al l'llnOS al HalleMt MIWI • Ora1111 C-ty 11 SrMa Pll'IH '1 ,_.. ,, __ Or. S!flll(1'9flll I) St.di Ml ... tl• ft.ft TllN:ltn :M-a T1..,.vlt1111 "' W11tR1r 4 Wfl(llM Akt ... 11 Wlmlft'I Htn 1t-+I WHloil NIWI If ·t ' .. ~ ., i>AILY PILO T N V alle1·ga's A Whiner ~111 1st Race Or•ltie County Assessor Jack V~llerga won hil first election to the job lie was appointed to In 1971: by a 2 to 1 n1argin 'Tuesday ovt r his lone ()p\lOflent. Final totals are : Vallersa: 229,139 Raymond Preston: 10.'l,a.47 .• The large number of \'Otes polled by ·J>reston surprised some o b s e r v e r s pee.use of I.he extremely low-key and poorly funded campa ign he ran. The primary WIU actually the first Ume incumbent Vallerga ran for oUlce. He was appulnted to the job two years aao when former asse110r Andre w Hinshaw wa1 el ected to Congreu. Vallerga. proved to be a powerful, b\g- money campaigner whose lead 11111 hard to oVercome by Preston, 1 Cal St.ale 'l.ol;lg Beach home economies profe110r. TOward the end of the campaign, Preston hooked his wagon to the 20th t>iltrlct Congressional campaign being . ~yaged by David Gubler against Hlnaha~·. .-.. • Gubler's charges of miluse ol the lPtfice by Hinshaw were ex~ed to :Vallerga by Preston. He said Vallerga , acctpted donation! from big companies ~·hole assessment.! depended on hlm. Vallerga sa ld Prston's accusations were "preposte.rolL'I" and he pointed to a aeries ol. court actions uphc :ding Iris :pracUces. From l'flfle l ··GOVERNOR .•. ~ the fall campaign. · ' "I'm here to endorse hlm," Reinecke told a join t news conference ~'itfi Flour· noy in Los Angeles. Bro\\'n ·u,ho • shrewdly publicized his office and stressed political ~campaign reform , led the polls from the tiegiru$g. A fonncr Jesuit semin~ian. he had a considerable advantage as the son of Edmund G. Brown , governor from 1959- 1967. Flournoy, conversely, was an also-ran wilh three pe rcent ln polls a yea r ago. He moved lo front runner, "'ith 44 per- cent to Relnecke's 27 percent a week Qe· fo re the election. • Reintke Is accused of lying to the Senate Judicia ry C-Ommlttee in 1972 \•:hen • he denied he advi sed the U.S. Justice 'Department and then-A tty. Gen. John N. Mitchell of International Telephone & Telegraph Co.'s offer to help under-write the Republican Nationa1 Convention. Reinecke's Uial is set for July 13 in \\'asbington. • F'loumoy told cheering backers early today that he wouldn't go along with a suggestion by Brown for a moratorium on campaigning until September. "I don 't believe in that," he 18id. "I believe the people of this state :r;hould • pave an opportunity to eumine the is· • ' sues." Bro,vn told supporters that in both his own victory and that of Prop. 9, "The vote of the people is very clear. for re· -. form and against corruption." (Related · story, Page 4). The political campaign measure, de- scribed by supporters as the stiffest in the nation. Hmit contributions, requ ires identificati on of all contributions above $50 and creates a po~·erful commission \.l·\th a $1 million annual bod8et to od· minister and enforce the regulations. In addition. public officia ls are required to periodically disclose th eir a5sets and out· side income to prevent conflict-of·inlert st problems. ··s uspect Sur1·euclers • STOCKTON (UPI ) -An Army veteran sccused of kldnaping t"·o \\'omen at knifepoint and driving one of them to Texas voluntarily·surrendered J\1onday to a police dispatcher at a Fort Worth suburb. The man wa1 tentatively identified as Jerry l\1artin, Tl . who livex on a houseboat in Whiskey Sloug h near Stock Ion. 01 ....... COAST N DAILY PILOT ,,. °''~ c.o. .. Oa.11 PllDI .... ~ •hld'I .. -.,.._ .... ,...., .• , .... """"","9<1 tr., .... °'•"9" c.o..r: ............... l'Q ~ S--•~· .:u.,.,. .. . PllOl•-0 ~·~-· 1... ' '"Ot• ..... C.0.1' "'ea N-D<>rl .,..,. " "-·•iflql"" 11otoc..,.....,... ,.., v.u.. l-liotold'I. i..w..ts--""° S.On °""'•••9111• .lull" eoo .. 1,1-.. • .,ngi. 1'119'0ft'°' ""~-.. --s.i..,,,. .. """ s., ... u .. '~""~:'IN! _,.,,."O Dil'I!" •• 3)0- a..a1...i. Coo1• ¥-0..1-. t i1t7e P--1-MW ...... -j "'"''"""' .,.., PUOI •"ff QolffH.ltiQ\ R>-lodP.t*ill ·-! .... "'•""9<1111 , ..... .... ,.,. ..... Offlc • l JlJN...oorr~ o\l<~·11M.~e~P.O.lb 181~. ~1b61 O......Offk11 Conl11,1.,... 3)0~ Bi-,S!·r"' ~ ....... liorael' "''ll"ftP•-H.,,,.,,._°"' •""1'C'I' 11'!1'11191'~ ... ,...,..,4 &Mc-tli. ~,..,,,..LIC.-Ao~ y,...._17141 642·4121 Ci.tllflt4 A""wtW.0, 641·16 71 Coo'trll!" ,,,. Or-Olwll l'lb>t""'I c-- -NOl'lf"'~""'°""-_.,-~., "' .. ..., ... ,.,."'. -....., "" -a -.....~..i.,.._or_.,,"'_ hCOo'IPil e41" -lOQI ,...., .. Coo•1 Wu C.•\)I" .... ~llt!bOt'I ~ _..., l~O')_,iN, ~· "'"' l'.Oljl_M,,11111<1~-'"''"'""'3 Clllil-•~, ' .. Wednesd1y June 5, 1974 Ed11catio1a Race PaynteF, App " • Tel ephone Cabl e Cut Win 'Easily' • In Neipport Oallf 'li.t 5t•ff PIMle FOUR MORE YEARS School Chief Peterson Dr. Peterson Easil y Tops Woodin gton Tuu-term incu1nbent Dr. R o be rt Peterso n easil \' defea ted Laguna Beach School Superiiitendent Donald \Vooding· ton in non·partisan county Superlnten· dent of Schoo1s balloting Tu:?sday. Unofficial final results were: Peterson : 201.M2 \\'ood ington 118.751 . ' The campaign revolved aroung t~'O central iS!ues: incumbent Peterson·s eight year record in ollice and c~llenger Woodlngton's mobile 28 year caree r in education. \Voodington charged the incumbent ¥.'ith losing touch with !he local districts tne counry office exists to·1erve and wit h leading an· office that ~·as providing a declining level of ser\•ices. Pet.erson called the challenger a "Job hopper ," citing the five different administrat.ive posts \\'oodln gton has held In hJs 2&year career in edu cation. Woodington resi gned from a n!ne· month old contract as superintendent of Ille Laguna Beach Unl fied School District to seek the $34,800 a year county post. an act which Peterson called a breach of trust. \Voodingtoo's ansy,•er to the chargl's was that if no one broke a contract to campaign for county superintendent, no one could ever run . Hi! background, y,'hJch included tv;o years as state commissioner of education \n Colorado, Woodington said, gave him a broader background and 11 u p e r I o r quaHftcations. County Board of Education c.aodidates ln the Seculd and Fifth Supeniisor\a\ Districts also campajgned largely on criticism of the current operation of the oounty schools office. In the non-partisan 1.'0unty Board of Eclucation race Tuesday, aecond trwtee or ea candidale Dr. David Paynttr and fifth trustee area candldatt John ,Q, App defealcd their opponents by wide marglm. Unofficial final results in Area 2 wen: Puyntrr 34.014 John D. J-larper 24 ,671 Jn Area 5: App 31,788 Ernest G. LaKe 23.$ Lynda T. ~toe.s 24, Incumbents in the 1nd and Slh trustee'-irea ; which correspond with the 2nd and 5th supervisorlal di1trictt, deci ded not l-0 seek re-electk>n and the campaigns had a reform character. The uniform charge was that the county Department of Education and its board or trustees .was out or touch with the local school districts and it was not providing the kind and level of services it should. In Area 2. John D. Harper Jr., a former Fountai n Valley City councilman and Fountain Vall ey school board n1ember, charged that his opponent, Payn'f'Cr, y,·as a career educator and 'would not adequately represe nt the int1~rests of the citizenry. Pa ynter, formerly JUperintendent of lhe Garden Grove Unified School District and llO\\' president of Test-A-Lab, a heal th screening service, responded 'that, while he was proud of tti.s career in From l'flfle J COPTER ~·.· steel towers on hillsides at either side of the Carqulnez Sfralt. The cockpit carrying J\fcGregor and · llllo George plunged Into 80 fett of water about 1.5 miles from the Car· qulnez Bridge. 'Mle Carqulnez Strait 11 the waterwa y ¥.'here San Francisco Bay meets the Sacramento and San Joaquin rtvera. Investigators said McGregor, who lh•ed In Alameda, had jult taken off from Buchanan Airfield in Concord 11.·here he and Goorge refueled for the patrol mis- sion. They were to fly over the O>ntra Loma al\d Polnt Pinole regional parkl. McGregor, who Ieavea hla wife, Fran, plus a son, l\flke, 11, and daul[hter Sharon , 7, left the Newport Beach P°olice helicopter detail. ' He had joined the Newport Beach force in 1966 and worked in both patrol dlvl.Jion and crime tcene lovestlg1UOD before being appointed to be.ad Oil department's hellcopterdetail. · ' Santa ~i\na Mayor to Face , Ex-pri sone1· ht November Santa Ana }.!ayor .Jerry Palterson \\'ill confront former Prisoner of \Var David Rehmann in a November contest to sec who \\'ill succeed retiring 38th Dist rict C.Ongrusman Richard T. Hanna. final total! for thi:: De n1ocratic Part y are: Frona Page 1 BAKER ... ago and came within 6,000 v o I e s or upse tting him. That was abou t the closesl Baker has come to defeat in his long tenure as a su!)trvlsor. Schmit and Dean said during the campaign that Baker has gr o wn unresponsive to his district and has not pushed hard enough for a share in funding for recreational areas. Becatae of the near disaster in 19i0. Baker raised and spen t a large war chest on hill campaign this year. Hil spending wa!n't even approached by both his opponents combined. As expected, Baker ran a st rong race In the cities of HunUngton Beach and Seal Beach but ran beh ind Schmit _nrl Dean inland communities i;uch as Garden Grove and Ylestm inster. If Baker wins in November, he will he the longest winning elected orflclat still In office in Orange Count y. Tou ch of (Jltl Soutli in Se attle SEA'ITLE. \'1115h. IUPJ) -Al rhe breakfast buffet Hoo at the. Nationnl Govemers' Conference, JO \\"ail re.-ises stood staring at a dish they \l'ercn 't familiar with. "\llhat is that stuff ?" one 1~sk<'CI , Monday, perplexed. "I Oon 't kno14'. It looks Ilk~ Farina .·• another replied. Finally, 1 knowledgeable \,l,'Hltrcss solved the mystery. "It's grits,'' she said, "Hnd you cnn 't run 11 natlont1I convention without 'cm " I Pauerson: 21.657 Hw·ard Adler: 16,753 U>ona rd Holland: 5.739 Albert Nasser: 2,309 CLA RK RETAINS COU l"TY SEA T Orangt County BoRrd o f Supervbora Chainn.an Ralph C11rk of Anaheim y,·on his second tenn a.s the Fourth Dl!trlct represtntaU\le Tue!lday. defeating hi• lone: rot by • 4-1 nuirgtn. Fin:il vole totals showtd Clark witti 50,743 and Garry Nelleson with 15,137. I, I ' educ1U9'1, he wa1 a business n. 1l)e educational experience, l Paynter said, made him more qu31ifi ed for the Job Both the Area I candidates set i::oals oC lmi>rovlna: the county office's role in vocational education and holding board mee tings away from the county offices to provide greater public exposure. In Area 5, buiinessman App was pitted aa:alnst two college professors, Dr. Lake and Dr. l\foss. All thne aought to improve the comrnunicationl between the .county office Ind local school distrlcis and to itrengthen the leadership role of the county o!fi«. App said he was the only candida te with a "vested interest" in the office since he was the only one with school age children. He wu also, he pointed out, the only non-educator running for the lay office . If elected, .App said, he would attempt to determine \.t1hether services of the county office could be improved and, if not, would recommend aOOlitlon of the department. From Page 1 SJ\IUT ... activity which is prohibited." The lawsuit attacking the state law y.·es brought by Vincent l\tJranda, president of Pussycat Theaters of Hollywood, after Orange C o unt Y authorities confiscated· the sexually explicit film "Deep Throat" from the Buena Park theater tn a series of raids last Nllvember.· Prosecution of )i.flranda and a dozen oJher ,cases .was .bal~pendlng the ruling, ·and Capizzi Aid-the Others ma y now be In jeopardy. "We'll have to research the law to detenntne the effect on other pending ca11e1," Capizzi aald. Capizzi 1lao dlaclosed that his office will Investigate the p o s 1 I b I 11 t y jurlsdlctlons that local may now enact their own anti-smut ordinance•. Local laws were forbidden before because they were prt-empted by the state law, "But If there's no state la\v, It may be poalble for local governments to enact their own," he said. " • Frotn l'flfle 1 COUNTY • • • No -1148 HH. Samet Beacb ' Street Llgbttng Yea -129 No -211 U. Orange County Street District 10 Irvine, Tustin, East Tustin Yes -3,421 No - 2,983 Lighting X. Orange Bay View Yet -lU No -129 Colnty Street Ughting District 1% """ 9 to 6 -" Otll'f Plitt lleff l'IMt. EYING SECOND TERM 40t h District's. Hlnshlw Hi11shaw Tal\.es Easy Victory F Qr Congress Incumbent 40! h district Congressman Andrew ~linsha\\', Presiden t Nixon's congressman, easily won renomination in the Republican Party primary Tuesday and will face Democrat Roderick Wilson of Ocean side in November. Republican vote totals In the 40th District are : • Hinshaw : S2,263 Earl Carraway : 4,483 D4vid Gubler: 13, 106 Roger Lanphear: 5,500 Democratic vote totals in the-district are: John Graef: 11,970 \Vllson: 19,242 Hinsha\\r's c h i e f critics in the primary race were not the Democrats ''Ying to face him In November, but rather the Republicans trying to take his seat away. Gubler. the s etf -pro c lal:n e d '·walking candidate " from Mission Viejo. y,·aged a campaign based on his charges that Hinshaw m1sused his fonner office of county assessor. Gubler brought forwti.rd signed affi- davits he sa id were from current and fOMT1er employes of the assessor's office under Hinshaw. The deposiliQfl5 &lated Hinshaw uSt."<i county e1nplo}'es and county equipment in his 1972 Congressional campai gn and also gave favONble aasesmenta to big campaign contributors. Hinshaw denied any l!IUCh practices ever took place and flied a $10 mi llion libel suit again&t Gub)er. Cri111inology Bid Denied for UC Edison Compwiy contractors Tue5day uvered a m1jor underground telephone cable by accident TueSday wblle d1ag1ng near ihe intersecilon of Jamboree Road nnd San Joaquin Hlll.s Road In Newport B(ljcb. Telephone service to about 900 PacUlc Tel1ph0ne cuttontera, mainly buaine11es 1n Newi>art Center, wu cut otl trom t :45 a.m., \\'hen the accident occurred, until 3:30 p.m. Prefixe1 affected were 833, 640 and 6'4. A Pacific Telephone 1 p o k e Am 1 n explained today that It loot 12 men almott 1lx hours to 1pllce the cable beeau.. they nm bad Jo dlf a ptt ao they could work on the .,ble burled 10 feet und.,..round. He 11id lt w11 then neceuary to rpllce each _of the 900 l!'lr• of ·copper wire! individually lnllde I.he two-inch diameter pl.astte cable. Tho 1pokesman explained· th 1 t accidental cuttings of telephone cables occur trom time to Ume becaU&e contractors don't contact P 1 o I t I c Telephone'• cable' loc1t1n1 crew before dig Ing. "We'll be happy to ahow them where the cables are. located If they'll call us flr1t at 833-0811, 24 hour• a day," the spokesmall N!d. 5,000th Pair To Be Spliced June brides make this the bwleot month of the year for Orange County Clerk Wllllam E. St· John and hl1 .marriage bureau . \.\"Oriers, tiut St John-tooi Ume out Tuesday to honor one young couple Uiat took outa marrrage·ucti'IH. Christianne Marie Hatdesty, 19, ot Tustin. and Jerry C&rl Fara1alli. 22, of Fountain Valley, g<>t the VIP treatment. They are the 5,000th couple to take out a marrtaa:e llceme In Oranae County Utl.s yelr. St John marked the occa.slon with a special ceremony Jn hi3 <iUice. Jerry, a night club •tna:er, and Christianne will be m a r r i e d Saturday. Philip J. Burton Rites Th11rsday Privale beral leTVICft \rill be held Thursday for Philip J. Burton, a 22-year resident of Corona dt1 -Mar. He died Saturday at the 1ge of 80. J\.1 r. Burton, a California native, was an engineer for Los Ana:eles Q>unty Flood Control for 38 years before reUrllli to Corooa de! Mar. He belon&ed Jo the Jolly Boys. Survivors include his wife, M:!ry Burton, of Corona de! Mar; a daughter, J\.fary Burton Fussell of La Jolla, and one grandson. Baseball Shoes Tennis Rackets Wilson -Davis -Bancroft Dunlop -Yoneyama Racquetball Racquets & Balls Handball Gloves & Balls Table Tennis Paddles & Balls Squash Rackets • All Purpose Shoes Soccer Shoes Tennis Shoes • Worm-Up Shoes Football Shoes ' Wrestling Shoes . Tennis Dresses Mens & Boys Tennis Shorts Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts Worm-Up Suits ' . . ' Hats & Visors Mens Tennis Sweate rs . . l \ Baseball Mitts -Balls • Bats Softball Shirts Softballs & Bats Volleyballs Basketballs Soccer Bolls Slant Boards Weight Sets Bike Repairing Bike Parts.-Tires -Tubes I i /1 j ! ' I I Ii • • • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Newport Oil Dilemma • \Vhen Newport Beach residents adop.ted their cha~r nearly 20 years ago, they made il expllcit there was to be no oil drilling within the city limits. . 1'hey have not since regretted that deci.lion . Jf there 11 a.a n1ucb oil under our ..city as some experts believe, it ia doubUul any other prohibition would have with· stood pressures to all ow drilling operation~. The problem, of course, is that oil wells a.re a acar on the l•ndscape and often produce liquid blight as well. . But now th at section or the Newport Beach charter IS open tor review-and for a good reason. A.n official or the Calllorni& Division of Oil and Gas 1aid natty last week that West Newport is never goin4 to rid itself or the problem of seeping oi l unless the 011 that's underground is pumped out. He said the city's pentUng plans to abandon and vent the half dozen old oil weUs scattered U1roughout \Vesi Newport likely would provide a temporary stopgap. But, he said, the oil underground ls under extreme pressure. And that soil is laced with a network of cracks and faults. The pressure, he reasoned, will eventually force oil to the surface through one or more of those crevices. The experts haven't any .idea where that eruption might take ploce. It more than likely wouldn't be throu'gh one ot the capped wells. It could be in somebody's back yard, or, conceivably, In the bottom of Newport Bay, they say, City fl.1anager Robert L. \Vynn is wisely seeking as many expert opinions on such possibilities as he can. lf most of l he other experts contacted disagree with state officials, then the city probably would be safe pursuing its own capping anCI venting solution. oll drillinl! opera tions j ust above \Vest Newport. Jlow they might affccl drilling operations wtth ln the city is nut known. Because of the charter provision. lt will take a public vole to amend the charter before the cliy could begi n to pump oil. ' If that becomes the only apparent solution. the probl em will be to draft the charter change In such a \Vay as to keep any municipal drilling strfctly Umlted. The bri ght side of the dllemrui, IC It comes to that. Is that th is might provide a good piece of revenue for the t·ily, which co uld translate Into so1ne tax relief. . Home for Paramedics TI1e parade of supporters was impressive. There was a letter from the floag Hospital board of directors and endorsements by medical staff representatives. as well as officials of the Orange County Heart Association. In swift order, Newport Beach councllmen agreed with them that lheir city sboutd have a paramedic progra.in . .Par~n1ed ics will be. costly-about $130,000 a yej\r- but 1t already ls established that they will save li ves. The only decision apparently remai ning-one which rests with Orange County health officials-is where to locate a base station to serve Newport Beach. Counciln1en said , it shouJd be at lfoag 1tfemorial lJospital. ~1eanwhile, Costa Mesa councilmen al so are weighing a paramedic program and at least one Council- man there strongly wants the base station to be at Costa hlesa Memorial Hospital. / ./ I • Buf If most others agree that the procedure would Indeed be only temporary, oil drilling is going to ha ve to be considered. If it's necessary, the cJty Is going to have to ap- proach It cautiously. There is already a series of lawsuits dealing with Response times to the limits of the area to be served and particul,arly to the probable areas of heaviest inci: clence of service will be a key consideration in basing the paramedic unit or units. Hoag Hospi tal does offer the advantage of newer and more extensive back-up facilities. N "IT SAYS,'YOO~ NE1J MISSION, SHOOLD YOU CHOOliE TD ACCEPT ll WILL BE IN NQ~THERN IRELAND.'" Feminism in Art -~~llecl 'H()gw~eh' To the Editor: ~----------';.s a \\'ork ing artist of some 50 years ( J e:q>erience, the May 24 page on women MAILBOX aJ:7.isls made it difficult for me to keep mf supper down. Such a. lot of hog'A·ash I have never seen In print before. '------------" IF nus is an eXBfJple or the ne w treed of "''omen artisll«iod help us. All this female . . . feminist ..• neuter bit ..• Ugh. To say that smiling. dressing pretty. etc. bas' anything to do with making it seems to me to be about as shallow as a statement can be. You call that ne.t and fabric thing sculpture? I HA VE known hundreds ol Yt'omen painters; some were good looldng some "'·ere not. Only one thing matters. You have to be able to paint. Some years ago Beverly HUii HJgh School invited people fron1 all professions IO speak to the students about the prospects in their parlicular profession. $,.McDonald Wright and I spoke on art ar a carttr. We were told afterward that WJ were lhe only two who recommended otr field a.a a rewarding career and I bfve always considered it the best i.sible for a glrl. t still do. • I TIIELMA PADDOCK HOPE ( ErosloH of Right• Tt the Editor: .flus Walton 's article (May %8) on how Afi,ertcans' rtghts are being eroded by g6".•ernments, cily to fed,r&l, was the first article I have seen that brings this pr¢1em to light. r1bere ha! been so much more for the pW,Uc but les!! for the indivldu1l lately, ttilt it is good to eee the . defense of ~rty rights for a change. The pfoperty owners, like the free enterprise sj!l;tem, are the backbone of this country tJPt made it the great nation that it is. ~ow hired city planners and appoloted C$nmittee people have gotte n the JJ0"'er ~. tell the su bstantial people how and t to do with the things they have If we continue to allow a.vemmenta to dictate our lives, tax us b4)•ond what government services should be and give thls extra money to liberal minded do-gooder1 that have never o~ a house or met a payroll, we will .. 5obn lose our ablllty to paJ those taxes. As f.tr. Walton says "Government 11 no kiger the servant: it ls the master -of pllns, persons, and property." Let's try to' bring back the self-detennlnatlon of the American people and not fall into the traps ol the socialistic countries. GOLDIE JOSEPH Bikes on Bal . To the EdiWr: In two monthly neWllctters, the B.1lboa rsland Cmprovement A 11 11 o c I a t i o n expressed considerable pride a n d pleasure at the omlision of Balboa Island from lhc Bike Trail segment of the Newport Beach t.1aster Plan. 'l11ey :stated that the danscr to older · people wou1d be grave. and that the Island and the Ferry would be an.able to bear the inereased bicycle lrAftl c. Along with tho trail , would be the "dumping of bicycles onto the! alleys, streets, and bAyfroota .• , In a Ume when ecology and energy prescrvat.ton ire necessities rather than ua•Um~ find thele com· menl! seJrlsh, unrea!ONble, and Un· founded. Fl\'E 11Uf\1JKKO oollege 1tuden1s ll~·e on BalbOa Island, many of them owning blkes as their conltlbullon W energy ~rvalion. And eich time they ride on the Island or acru!s the bridge, they risk I Ltll.,1 lreM nfftn tr• w11c._. Honn.ally wrl,...., 9111111• con'" tMI,. l!lftn ffl In M ,..,., Of leH. Tiii rltlll to ~ letltrl I• flt ll'KI tr lllll'llP11t1 Hiit! II ~ltd. All llltwl fttU11 111- ct.... .i.utu,.. 1114 m1lll11t Hdr1t1. 11111 um11 m1y IN 1111"""""" .. ,,_,, It wlfldtnt re-It •~f'Mf. ~,., wlU Mt IN 11111111111tc1. physic.al injury from the htmdr~ of cars which visi t the island every day. Bicyclists have safety rules a n d regulations as much as autos do, and ooc would think that the elderly would be more fearful of a Lincoln Contlnenlal than they v.'Ould of a ten speed Schwinn. If bjcycle racb are provided in appropriate areas, the island can be assured that. the re will be no "dumping" of bicycles anywhere. Bicycle owners take pride and care In their bikes and have no reason just to leave them scattered about the Island. AS FOR the traffic problem, just take a look 8.t the Irvine Company's Promontory Point with greater than 600 family units and see what it will do to the already crowded and jammed up Island and bayside traffic. Why not eliminate auto traffic from the Island altogether and fill the streets and all ef\\·ays Y.1th flowers? That would seem to be tile best beautification program the island could ever follow. Students are also struggling to pay their bills and most ol them are working their way through school. For them , riding their bikes may also be a way lo save money, as well as the environment. I hope that in the future, the association will try and con.sider the student "minority" living on the Island. I urge them to contact students and to change UM position <ln the bike trail. Interested parties can write t h e Association at P.O. Box No. 64, Balboa Island, caiifornia. LEE H. SOLOW Vice Presldent, Associated Students. UCI President, Balboa Islandl!:rs Campalg•• Curb• To the Ed itor : Developers are major contributors to the pol!Ucal campaigns of tho Orange County Boord of Supervtsors. lfOMEOWNERS w e r e ridiculed by Supervisor Baker for seeking to prese rve some of the beauty of our hills through proper control of hillside development. Homeowners were turned down in their quest for a hillside ordinance (Baker, Dietrich, Caspers), an adequate local pttrks ordinance (Baker, Dietrich. Clark). a resource mnnagmcnt ordinance (Baker, Dietrich, Clark), and the retention of the agricultural reserve status or the beleaJnJered Anshelm Hill s (Baker, Dietrich, Battin). BAKER'S p J a n n i n i; commissioner, Roger-Slates, bragged at a pt1M Y !hat money )Vas pouring into Baker's wor chest from the la.rgt\y unde\·elopcd 5th district. Clearly, our supervlso n;• campa ign s s h o u I d be: I. Publicly flnanced. 2. Umited in duration. 3. Li.rnned in !iiCalu (more, sm aller districts}. A demottatic 111tatcwlde runc:1 moiler raised less than one-half the cost or one n\41.ilcr for an Orange COunty SUP"rvlsor., GENE ATHERTON. M.D. · Chalrman of PARKS. .spon:tars or Qlun1y Ll>c.':11 Parks lnlUath·e Dca1· _ Gloon1y _Gus I hear that Pat Nixon is going to have a rose named for her-Pity Pat. Doesn't she have enough thorns in her life already? s.o. OIMmY G~• ""'''""'' •rec IUbml!ltd .. ,. '"°'" tN • Ml ftKIUlr11'( rtlltd HI• 'lllWI 1t "-_.,.,.. 51114 rour Ht _,,, fll Gloomr GUl. DlilY Pilot. Wonien of Literature Star in Quiz ( SYDNEY HARRIS J This fortnightly "''Urd-Quiz centers on women. Jdenlify the "She'' in the following more or less famou s lines. Forty percent is a score even \Vomen's Liberation ists should be proud of. 1. "She hangs upon the cheek <lf night as a rich jewel." 2. "She moves a godde ss, and she looks a queen." 3. "She stood In tears amid the alien corn." 4. "She gave me of the tree , and I did eat." 5. "'She dwe)t among the· untrodden ways." 6. "She had a heart-how shall I say?-too soon 1nade glad.'' 7. "She is a 'A'insome wee thin£, she is a handsome wee thiog." 8. "She makes hungry where most she satisfies." 9. "Though she bends him, she obe~·s hlm, though she draws him , yet she follows." 10. "She is con1ing. n1y own, my sy,·eet; were It ever so airy a tread." 11. "She was a child and I was a child, in this kin gdom by the sea." 12. "She came to prove him \Vit h hard questions." 13. "She bad a bo\\'] or lilacs In her room.'' 14. "She tY.'isted lier hands behind her; but all the knots held good !·· ANSWERS: 1-Juliet. as described hy Romeo, in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Julit!t." 2. Helen of Troy, in 1-lomer·s '·I Iliad." 3. Ruth, the Biblical daughter-in·law of Naomi, in Keats' poem .. Ode to a Nightingale.'' 4. Eve. as accused by Adam. In l>.tilton·s "Paradise LoSt." 5. Lucy1 in one of Words\1·onhls five so-called 'Lucy Poems.·• 6. "My Last Duchess'' by Jlobcrt Browning. 7. Robert Burns's poetic praise of his wife. 8. Clt!Opa tra, as described b y Enobarbus, at the opening or Shakespeare's "Antony and Cleopatra.." ·9. ~tinnehaha, in I.on g f e 11 o w ' s narrative "The Song of HiRwatha." 10. ~laud . in TcnnYson's poem or the same name. 11. Ann:ibel Lee. in F...d i;ar Allen Poe's po<>m of the same name. 12. The Quttn of Sheba. t0n!rontlng Solomon. in thC! Old Testammt. 13. "Portrai t of a L&dy" by T.S. Eliot. 14. Bess. the landlord's daughter. In Alfrl!:d Noyes's narrative ' •T b c fllghwayman." No More Viet11a111s Candor on Commitments \VASKINGTON ;:.,;;. The-v.'ay has-been-_, --'· ~· long for Henry Kissinger. and if the ~ "'med truce he has sought in the Mideast RICHARD WILSON is at hand there is ye t still much that he mu st do. He must do what he promised '------------ to do at the time President Nixon or- dered a world-wide military alert, but did not. Then, Secretary of State Kminger asked this coun try to accept on faith the necessity cf Pres- ident Nixon's coun- ter -Soviet actlo:-i. "·hich brought \var loo close for con1- £ort, and later he, Kissinger. y,·ould ex- plain In detail. Kissinger's 'vords on that occ8:sion are "'·orth recall ing. For once he appeared to _ be angry. He resented a questioner's Implication that the alert 'A'as no more than a political move a few days alter the "Saturday Night Massacre'' by a rattled President trying to di vert public attention from Watergate \\:allowing to the crlUcal turn in world affairs. SUCH SUSPICIONS, Kissinger said, v•ere "a symbol of what is happening in this country," and added that the Watergate "crisis. of authority" may ha\·e lnnuenced Soviet threats to introduce military forces In the ~Udeast. The ''crisis of authority" i.s even more severe today than in October. 1973 and it has been heightened, In pa.rt, by public disclosure of the kind of. discussions that take place in the Oval Office at the \\'h.ite HOU3e. Kissinger and the President have held many confidential di5CUUions on the r'.\fideast truce and America's role there hencelonh of the kind President Nixon has called the frank. hard-hitt ing explorations necessa ry to the conduct of the pres i den c y . White House co.nversations on national security ha\·e been recognized in the courts as having a different character f r o m discussions v•hich might be considered evidenli<tl in the commission of felonies. SO 1llERE is not much likelihood that until many years from no w "''hen it "''ill make no difference. an yone \fill know the nature or the confidential and secret negotiations which Presiden t Nixon ru1d Secretary Kissinger have been carrying on with notably devious and unreliable leaders in the it1ddle East. It is a liine now for candor beyond other times, ii only because publlc confidence in the reliability or American statesmen Is at a low ebb. How deeply the President and Kissinger have gotten the United States involved with Egypt and Israel will not be much ill uminated by expected statements that there were no secret deals. Of course not. There never are. And yet the Pentagon papers showed lhat the Johnson administralion was going Car beyond public perceptions and expecta- tions in its development of Vietnam poli- cy. The unauthorized disclosure of secret meetings on the lndta-Pakis1an clash re- vealed Nixon policies of v•hich the public was only remotely a"A•are. TIIE•KJSSTNGER negoti ations have had a purpose above,.and beyond stopping the kill ing of Ar'abs and J e\vs . They have been inten ded to reduce to !he minimum the peril of armed con fl ict, by chance or design. between the United States and the Soviet Union at the mos t critic?.! poinl in the \1·orld where the interests of lhese opposite forces come into cooflict . An interesting study of t h a t confroolation ol t'A'O decades by Dale R. Taht inen for 1he An1 erican Enterpri31:! Institute sh0\1's a rather discouraglnl! result. The supply of arms from titoscow. and \Vashington resulted, at leut unt il recent evenlS , in a military balance ot poy,·er heavily in Israel's fa vor. Recen~ events shook that balance and Israel's government came tumbling down, bu: Tahlinen's general conclusion ls !till vaJid. The presence of vast amounts oi arms $.lpplied to both sides has not been stabilizing or created a stand-off, as Kissinger·s dogged efforts illustrate. llE NEEDS to come back now and explain In !he most explicit detail his commitments, if any, in these hundreds Cf hours or talk \Vith the President, spokesmen of the Soviet Union, of the Arab states and Israel. The public and Congress desenie, anC must have. a better comprehension o~ \\'hat is involved than was had during the !orrnulation of Vietnam and India· Pakistan policy. For it is no longer to be taken for granted that the secret negotiations of the administration in pov.·er, however well-inlended or IogicaJly suppo rted. .necessarily senie t h e coo1inuing interests of the United States . 111at old-fashioned idea just isnl practical anymore. The Two Most Dangerous Leaders \VASHl NGTON -The \\-orld's two mosl dangerous and irresponsible leaders, in the opinion of worried inte lligence experts, are Norlh Korea's Khn ti Sung and Llbya's Pifoammar Kha dafy. The isolated Kim, according to intelligence reports. is itching to resume the Korea n \\'ar, "''hlch en<.ied 22 years ago about 'vherc it started a Io n g the 38th p..i.rallel. lfe Is depicted In intelligence reports as a leader. out of touch .,.,.Ith the "'or!d n·ho \l.°OUld plunge Korea Into another "·nr, a(l:alnst the "d· vice of his Soviet and Chinese mentors. Jie Is qui te capa- ble of plotting a wild , daredevil incident, such as a pnr!lrooper attack on Seoul. APPAREl\'TLV, Kim began unification lnlks \\'ith South Korea in the mistaken bcllef that North Korea was economicallv superior and would be able to dominate a pcactful , unified country. Ht believed his OY.'n propaganda. appa rently, that the SOuth waa su ffc.ring under oppression and .its peopll!: were st<l.rving. Instead, North Korean delegate) found the economy booming and the people far more prosperous than in the North, Kim "·as reported to be furious at his rC!presentatlves for bringing b a c k c~meras, 1ranslstors and other conswner Items as souvenirs. llE ABRlTPTI.V dropped the dialogue "'1th the Soulh Rnd begAn mnking v;•arlike 1noves. ln telllgence reporl.s ai>sert he hns concluded that the only way Korea can be uni ted lU'lder his leadership ls by force. I' llis gunboats snnk t"·o South Korean fishing boa ts and abducted a third. He has resumed the standard Communist tactics of fomenting class a nt agon i sm. consolidating antigove mmen t ractions an d fomenting united rronts In the South . "\\1e Ylill render positive assistance to the re\'olutionary struggles of the South Korean people." Khn has proclaimed from Pyongyang. But it Isn't the infiltration and agitation that y,·orrles the intelligence analysis. They are far more concerned that the uu predlct.ablc Klm may resort to hot action . EVEN tifOllF~ mercurlfll Is the Libyan strongman . illoanlmar Khada ry. \\'ho is constantl,.,.. sti rrin g up lrouhlc In the ~liddle East ·withou t n1uch lhoui;:hl ror the conset"1uences. Intelligence repo rts claim, ror Instance. that he hns armed lcrrorl st gr1'll!'3 w ir l1 sophisticatL>d y,·capons. In 1 I 11 d 1 n 1;: shoulder-firl'd Soviet missiles. 1'hcr1· i" apprehension In the i n t c t Ii RC n 1· c con1n1un.lt)' th11 t extrcmh!t ;t1 n1n•!I 11 1!1 get their hands on even n1orc d:~1'i;crous Y;eflpons. no1q thiit Llb~·n has eoncludl'<i a new arms agrt.>emcnt Y.'ilh llfoscow. KJIADA•'Y ls also accused of sti rring up plots to ove11hrow neighboring Arab leaders "'ho hnve rejected his calls for 1' "peoples' wnr'' aga inst lsrAel and lhe: United Stales. l~e is clamoring to use the. oil embargo. terrorist attacks and other wild measures, which his more mod erutc Arab neighbors v.·am coold backfire. Llkt Ki1n 11 St1nR. l\lo11m1nnr Kh:nl:1r\ ) i~ also copabte of irralional and il'rcsponsiblc acts. Footnote: Jn South Korea, PresldCJ1t Park Chung Hee has t:i ken emergency n1casures. which intelligeace experts privately concede are juslined. In the r-.tiddlc East., there Is talk of "eliminating" the fiery Khada(y. One secret report tells or a dlscwislon between a CIA agent and oil company official about puttin g up $50 million for Khadary·s assassination. 1-Hgh orflcials have assured us, ho\~·cver. that !he S50 million tal k "'BS nothing bul bar roo1n banter and has never been given seriOWJ consideration. DAILY PILOT Robert N. \VPtd, PublUher 1'.homai Kecoil, Ed itor Rnrbara Krcibic'h Erlitori.a l Pape Edttor Thf' Nlilonal llAll'C> er the Dnlly p,;rit 1'('CKlt to inf0m1 and s11n1ulate 1'Cll(len: b) prt'M·ntirv.? on thl$ Slalil'.e d 1\P(51• 1..-,n1m1>nlAT)' 11n top\C!t tJf 111- 1ent~• t,~· ~n·U~nti·rl rolumnls111 a11J car11JOni.!l);. toy 111 rnold ing " loru111. fur rttdm ' vi~·s •nd b)' Jln"~lln~ thh• nc"~pcr·• oPlnk>ol !1-nrl ld~M •t.i currrnt l(Jpi(:s, Thf. rdlloriJJ opinion. .. ol the Dai ly ?!kit APJlCM' only in W1e ('(!itvrial column at lh(' 1t1p of lhe pq-~. Opintcms CXPl'l"S!ltd by th(-e»I· u.rnnist11 And c111iooni~• •rtd l~Her wrltm art their ov.'n and no ~fl. mrnl of thtlr vl1..,,.11 hy the Dail.v Pilot should be lntt'fm.L \\'edncsday, June 5, 1974 " l'esthnonv ~· Winds U1• Ex-49e1· To ppled. 3 Killers Wednesday, J1111e 5, 1'174 DAIL V PILOT f VA Chie f Relents On Hughes ltED\VOOD CITY 1l.Pl) -Bob St. Clair, for1ner all-pro Sln Francisco 49er offensi ve tackle, w a s defeated in his bid for re- election to the San f\tuleo Collnty Board o f Supervisors.. Believed lnvo},red ' ' ]f1rell!iah to Return ll~mf\1 LOS ANGELES (UPI) -tn Park View Juni<r High School Johnston wa1 acheduled 10 question about whe1hef' the I lire, nothing kept Joltt in L..tncaster, wtio were be re.burled there Saturday ln bones should be moved.~ From Wire Senictt LOS ANGELES -Robert. A. f.taheu rested his $17.S million libel suit against Howard It ugh es Tuesday, clearing the v.•ay for th e blllionalre's rebuttal in the 15-week~ld trial. · ~1aheu, a forme r FBl agent \lo'ho headed Hughes' vast Nevada empire from 1966 to 1970 is suing the recluse over his public statcn1cnt lhat St. Clair, 44. had .. held the position since 1966 and blamed his defeat on the adverse e ff ec t s on inc umb ents of the Watergate scandal . The \'ictor was John hf. \\1ard. 33, 11 high .school teacher. SALINAS (UPI J -It took as many as three killen to overpo"·er t\\·o yowui: men :i.nd a girl and bludgeon then1 to death during an outing along a sinall creek in the Arroyo Seco Gorge, authorities say. The three v.·ere all killed by heavy blows on the head with a heavy wea pon not yet foun d. The l\1oritei:ey County sheriffs office said it has no suspects "I 1ver Eat1"'"" J-•-~on ~ •-did ~ VA " u'6 Ulll,I~ surprised to leam from a o ceremony attended by said UI::' not want 111e of the mountains -not bear histOC'y teacher lhllt h c Wyoming Historical Society be involved ln a "commercla bllzzaNh or Crow Indians. An! outdoors-loving Johfiston lay representatives and eight or operatioq" and that a Mootana though he's been dead for 7 . the 5tuder\ts trom Park View, congressman, Rep. John-TD ye a r s, the ~Voteran buried next to a busy Los to be tlown out by Wa~r Melcher, forward e d comi I Administration Was no mor Angeles· freeway. Brotllen, who made the movie plaints from Red L 0 d g successful. Alter so years or roa ing ttwt began it all. Mont., thnt It was also ift I John,.,ton, whose li re inspirNI the Rockies before and a ler Th~~ Wilson t~ed a •·s tQp "Liver-Eating's" _old stampfu g the movie , , Jer e m ia h the Civil \Var,, h unt ing ,, ord~ haltlJ_lg lhe planned ara:unds and might want • =~·~~sl~:~~ home lQ the trapping and fighting Indians, ~burial, saying there was a ~~e__body. .,,. ~1aheu "stole 1ne bllnd." '----------~ and a motive has not yet been 1,1p1 ~ .. WlCOvered. A bd1cctio11 VA Admiri.istrator Rutus H. Johnston died at the VA \Vllson, who earlier ordered hospital ln 1900 at the age of that Johnston's p I an n e d 74. No next of kin were !isled, reburial be delayed, relented so he was burled in the 1\lelday and· gave permission hospital cemetery. CHAIN U.S-. District Courl Judge ( S tale J ~-------' l!nrry Pregcrson excused the jury aner i\laheu concluded his mara t hon 14-<lay appearance Qn the \viln~s staod and Hughes· nrtorncy Nobert Schlei ~·as to start his rebuttal case today. e Kldou1pt>r Dies LOS ANG ELES A kidnaper was shot to death by one of his hostages early Tuesda\' as he tried to flee out the ri-ont door o( a n apartment. 'The kidnaper. described as being about Tl years old, \\'BS not immediatelv identified. Police said he cci:rried an out- of-slate driver's license issuOO to Richard Geiger. 20. Silver Spring. ~1d.. but that th e kidnaper's description did not fit the one on the license. Nooe of the kidnap victims 11·ere injured , officers said. llf ess oge 'Froni SLAJ Deli vered The assailants slashed the l\lona K. Ellingt6n. 19, throat of one of the ,,ictlms was one of two women and gouged his eyes out. reportedly kidnaped in for tile mountain man's body He is remembered in the lo be dug up today or Wes lem history books for hls Thursday from a VA cemetery IS-year personal war 0 r for reintennent ootside c.ody, vengeance on the Crow Wyo. ¥ans, who killed his wife. The victims "·ere \Vyatt S. StocktQn last week. She Hanson, 17. Patrick Jfill. 18. '"'as released but com- and Terry f\tcCorl, 18, all of panion allegedly was Salinas. forced to drive min, THE 1\fOVE IS the fruit of a · Investigators said the two identified as c;.'rald si x month canipaign by TllE !ITUOENTS, inspired boys apparently u·ent into the l\lartin. 26, lo Te.us. seventh grade students at by the movie starring Robert ·scenic Am>)'O Sero gorge in Redford last year, began SA~ FRANCISCO (AP) -Los Padres Naliona l Forest lobb)•ing the VA as a class Police say a nian "simulating south of Salinas to swim and B ' E. • · T ld project to have themselves a gun" in his p 0 ck e t pass the Sunday afternoon. oy " x' Ol"C"' "nt 0 decl ared Johnston's honorary demanded entry to KB HK-TV Miss McC-Ort went to tho same •'> · ""' n .. t ol kin so !hey could have !ale Tuesday night a n d general area ~·ith another him rjlburied son1eplace mo re SAVE ON CHAIN UNKFABRIC 50°/oOFF* FAIRIC WHEN . IHSTALLEll IY WARDS de.livered an envelope whose party or teen-agers. SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) the manslaughter and child suitable to his preferences Ql contents contained a message \\'hen her group leit, ~fiss _ l.a\\Tence Parker claimed abuse trial of Parker. 34, and life. •a ... i.poth.l.,.....flttMtt_.••••sn._.....,..,_. on '·Symbionese Liberation '.!~-~ dec•"ded to stay .. ith rf ed . hislt ,,Alice. 29, said Parker Guided by teacher Tri __._lew-'u'"C .. ferfirH ........ '--' I t. " Th 1 1 " \."'-N• ~ .. he -pe orm an exore1sm on h Ro . •.. 1 d ,.~ r• -,. Arn1y s a ionery. e ex Hanson and Hill, ~·horn she told e cast a demon out b1nson. t•ll!Y oun a nC\\' \\'3S not disclosed. knew at Salinas High School his 11-year~lddiabe.ticson the of ttfe .illling boy. The youth. home for Johnston 's bones .at WOODAMtWIOU.HTllOMALIOAYAMA•I -.... San Francisco p o I i c e before the ~"O youths dropped day the boy died from a lack \Veslpf, died Jast Aug. 22. and Qxly's Old Trail Town, a !Ill H~!fGT~ ~n oµerations Sgt. Antho n Y out some months ago. or insulin, a witness at !he pl'OSIC\ttors maintain the frontier n1useum collection of .:.,...,...r\= Balzer said Ted &nner, trial of the boy's parents has Parkers-withheld insulin from cabins. a stage station and HONER PlAZA security man at 4!0 Taylor St.. Th t k i 11 in g s were testified. the t,py, believing him cured other buildings from the late i :1, ~ I · ._._,,., . ..,....., ... "'here the TV statioo is remi.nisoendet of . a ... ~ries rbol;,_~ea'::'rl~Di~-~ck~·e:r~so:n~, ~te:s~tif~y:in~g~a~t-b~Y~""':-~yer~·~'~---~---_:_-__ 1~800s=~---------~==-===~~=~;:====-=w:':-=' ==~ located. took the man up to mass mur rs m l.lft: nea y r-.:- Santa Crui. area. \Vith the ....., the station's master control on conviction last year of Herbert r ·tt: the third floor!. v.·here the W. l\t llllin. the remaining envelope v.·~s de 1vered.. solved slavin<r.::. in that area Balzer said the man. sti: feet un -"'-tall , 170 pounds. about "!1 _"'·ere cleared up. years old and wearing a dark Kids Like to overcoat, "'arned that he "'as Sears armed and ~layed the · . Ask Andy e Te rm Rerelred 1_:5_ha_:_pe_ol_a_,gun:__m_his__:poc_k_et_. -------;---I SAN' DIEGO -,\. man who lried to .extort ~111,000 from the Randolph A. Hear~fan1ily by offering infonnation about the kidnaping of t h e i r daughter "'as se ntenced Tuesday to fi ve ye.'.lr.~ to life ~ .., . Where ihrif!=f!-~ys.Jn,,5.t~le--~ ~ci!,!e!::gn tn~L_c>_~!!:_~~v_!I_. __ , in state prison. Superior Court J u d g e George A. Laiar heard the trial of Samuel L. f\tcGrn\v. 2.f. v.•ithout a jury and passed sentence. e Srhool S trike PASADENA -The first strike in the historv of the Pasadena Unified S c h o o I District apparently had little t:ifect on the operation of classes. but some high schools suffered large student absen- teeism. The one-dav ~, a I k o u t Tuesday "'as oi-ganized by the Pasadena Federation of Teachers and school oficials said fe"·er than 20 percent of a!I classroom tea chers toc.k aprt. Teachers 3<1id they "·ere protesting recent :lctions of the school board including ihc dismissal of 171 prob;llionary teachers. e 611ard Sel:'ed HOU. Y\VOOD - A security guard has been arrested in connection 'with the death of a man "'hose body "·as found stuffed in a plastic 1arpaulin in Burbank . Author itie s arrested Burleigh T. Jewell of Los Angeles on ~tooday. }le was accused of shooting Ronald Lee Kessler, whose body was fowld in a trailer Saturday. Kessler's widow, Marianna, was arrested Sunday night in connection with the murder. e Embe:':'leme Ht STOC KTO N -Paul Shepherd, 63, convicted or embezzling over $100,000 while treasurer of the Knights of Phythias Grand Lodge. has been sentenced to state prison . llRllDUll TIDN •74 a gift of jewelry Authentic .\nu·riean Indian Rings in Solid Sih Pr What better way to show your appreciation to the graduate than \l'ith a genu ine ha nd-cr arted American In- dian Turquoise ring" A very special purchase or these genuine sterling silver and turquoise rings allows us to of- fer tht'nl to ~·ou a! 40'f off the regular prices that lht'y arc s(Jld for by t ilt• trading pwot s 1n Arizona & New ~l ex1co. . ~LL Kl.\"G S a re ~enuint' stt:rling sih•er with genuine turquoise. t:a ch 11·as hand fashioned by the Na\·ajo or Zuni tribes. All other India n je\l·elry in ou r stoc k ar 5imilar !fa \ings. ~per1~r ~rour1 of rings manv s1ylc' ~nc.I >•le.' JU s\t:r!1ng ~dver and genuine 1u1quo1\<' Regular $14 NOW $8 "Pf'l•dl .;rou11 111 ""!!' 111dny ,1 ~lt:~ ~ntl '''-l'' .!ll ~lf'finli; "l~PI & 11<-nu1ne \UfQUOI"' Reg ular $2 9 NOW $17 • I.o,vy Be.A.CII,4313 At1antieA .. • .'),\NT.A. A N..\, !JOJS ,V, lrl11in • TOHRANC£, 244551J11w lltornl!BI. • u·111·r r1f:R, 1!l918 Philod111p1t1ast. • .'llt:Wl'OllT tJf:ACIJ, J 1 P11d1. Sq. • 1'0RRANCl:.",DdAmt11"11•hlonS<1. • Rli.'DONOO 81':ACH ,S. IJuyC11nl1~ •ORANG£, T'/t11 ,\J11U t1fOron1l~ • 1\NAIJEJ,\l,An11hcl"l l'lui 11 • L.OS A,VGEL.£5.J\~r:o Pla;:11 M.\Sffll CHAllGI • •aNKAMllllCAllD • SOI Cl lDlf PLAN .. Misses' Nylon Bikinis Only! Scoop them up! All nylo n tricot with e lastic waist- band . Long wearing. In sizes 5, 6, 7. t • f l 3-way Convertible Bra Sean Pric~ 197 Wear as criss-cro ss, halter or regular bra. Nylon tri- cot. Contoured. Sizes 34 and 36 A, 8, C. Other sizes a'voilable. Non-cling Formal Length Half-Slip 19~ Made of Antron11 Ill nylon so it's non-cling. Smartly trimmed. ·Sizes S, M. L • •• ~ . ~. Price' Effective throug Saturday, June B • .: • . ' I I ' , party dresses for juniors . .• high in fashion low • • 1n price 88 Greet styles in the long length. Bare-backs, sleeveless, short sleeved and scoop neck looks. In fashion fabrics and colors. Junior sizes. g.,, . ~''-'~l~~ ~ , ~~rt _fl /,I ~ ...... 'N ~~.~t ..... -1 '::~1 , __ '~,, .. " All-Nude Panty Hose 69c pair All-sheer from heel to toe. Mesh knit nylon, One size fits . 95 ta 150 lbs. Fashi on col ors . Use Sears Revolvin9 Chorg«" .... --.. ' . -·~ .... ... !\, •• , ... •. .. ' " i ) .. 1 ... • '. ' \ J fllgllts dally to $an Frandsco. I or go with th e unolfic ial stat e bird to Sacramento . Come and get 'em. Call your travel agent or PSA ~1lves~•lltt. rc::::l So . Coast Plaza Buena Park Orange s ...... "°"''l ,,...,.,; • ., 1hru Sotind•y ~30 A.,M, le t rl O ,,M, S11nd.'I' 12 Neon .. s ,,,.., I \' ~ 3333 .Bristol St. ·~\,llOLIAAK,.l'ior.o. Phone 540.3333 8150 La Palmo Ave . 2100 N. Tus lin Ave. Phone 828·4400 Phone 637.2100 . . • I l I 7 ' I '(oclay'.li Final N.Y. Stocks '• ' VOL. 67, NO. 156, 8 SECTIONS, 128 PAGES ' ORANGE COU.NTY, CA~IFORNIA s. c TEN CENTS BroWn, Flournoy Romp by Healthy Margins LOS ANGELES (APJ -California's next governor will be either Edmund G. Brown, 36-year-old son of the state 's last Democratic governor, or llou~ton I. Flournoy, ·a 1iepublican beneficiary of \Vatergate. Both won their party's noo1inations by e<1mfOrtable margins Tuesday, as Polls predicted, in a surprisingly low voter turnout. Brown led San Francisco A1ayor J06eph Alioto 1,641,120 to 514.0~ with 96 percen~ of the vote counted. Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti was third with 460,573. Flournoy . 44. won a landslide vicuiry over Lt Gov. Ed Reinecke, who was the fronl-runner before being indicted April 3 by the Watergate grand jury. He pleaded not guilty but failed to get a trial date before the primary. Flournoy had 1,104,945 votes . to Reinedte's 531,610. Voter turnout fell well below the 62 percent predicted by Brown, the secretary ol state. CaQdidates blamed it oo Watergftte.causcd apathy. Brown's office said the turnout was under SO per- cent. Brown, who led the fight for a controversial political reforn1 measure, told supporters that he and Flournoy would have to work harder in the fall Decause "the people are skeptical of the political process." He said he expected a strong race from Flournoy, whom he described as "an intelligent person and an articulate spokesman tor bis cause." Flournoy predicted an ''interesting and exciting campaign" and added, "We are going to have a united Republican party." · Flournoy won the cndor!ement of his landslide victim. Reinecke, today as the COP immediately moved to unite for !See GOVERNOR, Page tl ; Caspers Avoids Runoff Coast Supervisor Easily Beats Challengers By WILUAM SCHREIBER Of ,... Dall\' "llft S!•lf It had been thought caspers might he forced into a runoff, but, when all the votes were in, he had about 54 percent of them. Final results are: Caspers: 54,480 Nolan Frizzel\e: 7.363 $100,000. James Thorpe: 17,177 His three opponents all conceded he As in his past election effort, Caspers probably could not be beaten in the 011,., ,-1191 511tt """'• waged a big money campaign to retall primary but m~rely forced _into .a 'CARRIES GDP BANNER his seat. He raised more !pan $150.000 in November runoff. &tween them. his . . . ' TREADS DAD'S PATH Democratic Nominee Brown -'---~- Incumbent Firth District C o u n t y Supervisor Ronald Caspers won election to hjs second term Tuesday, brushing _ asid~.__ challen~ by tllre~ oppo~:. ~1ar~Be_n_ts, "1"8,"666~-------his re-election b~~ s~t 'll.$t under JW!U)en1Lca__ised aod..speut:ati®l.$:40.000. .... -~~m'M! Flournpy .. The Fifth District ra~-was_J!latked t)y__ _..,, =- How Yon Voted Here is 1he final tabula tion on all electi-On reSults for Orange County and locaJ races on Tuesday's Primary bal,lot : SHERIFF-CORONER Brad Gates -234,451 Spe-ro Janise -5,908 Jerry L. Lawrence -12,453 Marshal Norris -36,319 George savord -:rr ,960 Gene Vmlo!e -8,560 BOARD OF SUPERVISORS Znd Dl1trl01 David L. Balq!r -30,074 (Runoff) John T. Doan -U,319 Laurtnce J. SdunJt -22~17 (Runoff) 4111 Dlltrict Ralptl B. aan -50,713 Garry Nellesen -JS,137 ltlr Dlltrkl Ronald W. Caspers -54,480 Marcia M. Bents -18,666 Nolan Frizielle - 7 ,363 Jim Thorpe -17,177 ASSESSOR .. Jack P. V1Utrga -229,139 Raymond Preston -Hl3,847 AUDITOR Viet.or A. Hehn -291,26.1 LOCAL MEASURES D. trvine Parks Yes -5,!13 No -1~37 E. Irvine Bike Trails Yes -4,97Z No -2,001 SADDLEBAClt COLLEGE BOARD Tntltee Area No. l William E. Dean -32,671 Steve Mueller -13,372 11enry M. Stanley -5,271 Trustee Area No. Z Robert C. Bartholomew -25,515 Jefluy S. Du Bowe -10,912 A]an lL Greenwood -14,558 , Trustee Area Ne. 3 Norman Cole -9,584 Ron Kreber -16,575 Michael McFadden -5,814 Lawrence W. Taylor -17 ,825 COUNTY SCHOOL SUP'f. IWbert Peterson -201,842 Dooald D. Woodington -118,751 COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Area No. ! John D. Harper -24,671 Davtd u. Paynter -34,014 Area No. John 0. App -31,766 Mesans. Can Lose All Tlieir Tr.ash On Friday Haul Costa Metnns wbo nonnally JX11 out their trash for collecUQn on Fridays will have a chance this Friday to get rid or Junk, too. Items oat normally pickei up by the trash collectors will be picked up this week. - All resident• have to do Is to drag them out to the sidewalk. There Is no limit, except weight. Two 11\Cn have to be able to c&rT)' t.ach tttm. rhe special trash pickup Is 11 one-lime only service. offered by the Costa ?it~sa BeauUfiCBtion Commlll<!t ln cooper11Uon with the city council. Residents: on the ti.Jonday truh pickup 11chtdule will get •their tum June 17. Other dates will ~ announ ced. 11 • Ernest G. Lake -23,929 TAX COLLECTOR·TREASURER Robert L. Citron -ZBO,.~ CLERK WIJLipm E. St John -287 ,639 DfSTRICT ATTORNEY Cecil HJcks -212,079 William S. Hu\sy -83.142 ~fax A. Sturges -36,970 PUBLIC ADl\UNISTRATOR James Hehn -285,442 RECORDER J. Wylie Carlyle -2\ftl,155 WATER DJSrRlCI'S l'l1unlclpa l Water District Of Orange Coun~ Division I Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach , Seal Beach, Costa Mesa: Davkl K. Jones -28,186 Stephen T. Tucker -17,240 Division Z Seal Beach, Westmlnster Gerald E. Price -2.6,~ Harry D. Bentley -6,882 Gordon Gleason -14,439 Division 3 Harbor Area-south County t1em I'll. l'llcCollocb -36,522 William D. Fenton -8.043 Sterling S. Sharrar -6.728 Coastal l\1unlcfpal Water District Dh:ision 3 Newpo rt Beach Hsns J. Lorent -3,986 Winton 1'11. Ashton~-838 W, A. Coleman -655 FA Vanden Bossche -66.1 Division 4 Cost. l'l1esa William K. Patrick -3,493 Gene J. Adams -1,785 ni-Cttles !\tuniclpal Water District CNvtslon 3 San Clemente Rlcbard l\t. Learner -617 Don Conrad -438 Division ~ San Clemente W. ~1. l'lfac Ka y -90!I C. Thomas Dahl -421 H. H~tingtot1. Beach High School Distrjct Yes -26,536 No -31,261 L. Laguna Beach School D'IBtrlct Yes - 3,571 1\10 -3,171 O. Rossmoor Service Area 21 Yes -%,836 No -l,20i P. Orange Couoty Street Lighting District t ' CapiStra.no Beach, Dana Point, South Laguna Yes -3.139 No -3.40.t V. Orange Counly Streel Lighting District 11 El Toro, ~1\ssion Vie}o Yes -3,075 No-3,3t Z. Orang" County Strut UghUng District lt Los Alamitos, Rossrooor Yes -2,190 No -2,242 \\-'. ritelropolltan \\'ater Dl_.trlct \'es -188.t43 No -1$4.614 DD. l.a§ Alamitos Street Ughtlng ''es -196 ~Ste COUNTY. Pngt !) -j TP•ct amoog"tlie cand1dai;s oot"WSpelllt' -· more than about $93,000 each -about 50 p D } 01111 ,Utt Sl•lf l"llcttt WINS NEW TERM HANDILY Fifth Distr ict's Caspers FORCED INTO RUNOFF Second District's Baker Baker~ Sch1itit in Runoff ' For Second District Seat Incumbent Supervisor David Baker, a three·term veteran on the Orange County board, lac~ a November runoff election against the top vote getter of his two Tuesday primary election roes Larry Schmit. With all 1he county's 1,849 precincts reporting, the sec ond super\'isoria! dislrict totals are: Baker: 30,074 Larry Schmit: 22,217 John T. Dean : 14,349 Dick Ruiz, Baker's top aide, said today the runoff came as no surprise and was rluc primarily to a strong Schmit vote in Garden Grove. He predicted Baker should win the runoff handily. Schmit and Dean campaigned against the S1realled "incumbency" factor ·which holds that the longer a man is in office, the less responsive and honest he becon1cs. Schn1it ran against Baker four years (See BAKER, Page 21 Ex-Newport Helicopter Pilot l(illed in Crash The former chief Newport Beach Police Department helicopter pilot and his passenger were killed Tuesday v:hen their chopper slruck a powcrline strung o\'er Carquinez Strait in the San Francisco· Bay area, disintegrated and plunged into the water. Divers were seeking the cockpit assembly in which pilot K e n n e. t h "Scotty" l'l1cGregor, 35, and a passenger were trapped. ~tcGregor, chief pilot for the California Parks Service California, In Northern was flying Ranger Paul George, 23, on .a training and patrol flight when the crash occurrOO. Eyewitnesses indicated chances of either" inan surviving were extremely poor. Accounts Indicated AfcGregor. a veteran helicopter pilot cited many times tor land and sea rescue heroics on the orange Coast. struck a hanging \.\'ire with the tall rotor; "There was an explosion In the engine area." said a law cnforccmenl ofrlclal investigating the crash. "That blew the tail section off and into ptece' and lhc cockpit ren straight into the water ..• lnvestig11tor1 today \.\'ere attempting ro detennine ju!t what -ti.used the hcllc:op- ter 10 hit !tie wire, which Is st run& rrom iSCf OOPTER, Pago ti . • ,I ' ' KILLED IN CRASH Helltopttr Piiot McGH90r cents per regist.red voter in the district. or110 e uge Caspers' chief opponent , Mrs. Bents of Newport Beach, charged several weeks ago that Caspers had already exceeded D • c l •hat limit and hit 1120,000 in his spending. ue Ill Ollll V But top Caspers aides said the .,, supervisor considered the ceiling to run from the date he officlally filed as a As L F II ? candidate and would not include money aw a s. spent before that date. Mrs. Bents charged late in the campaign that Caspers and his aides had "stronganned" big companies into making large campaign dooatlons. Sh< aaiil they feare<j cieclolooa on P!'flject• needing county approval would be swayed if the money wasn't given. Caspers tabled the tjlarge "ridicu!Ous." Ca11pers' other two foes, Dr. Nolan Frlzzelle of Newport Beach and James Thorpe ol San Juan Capistrano, waged acUve campaigns but spent limited amooots of money. Optometrist Fi"izzelle slWTiped around the district, stopping at centers and other public areas appealing for votes. Thorpe, the former mayor of San Juan Capistrano, concentrated in the south county area. where he is best kll0\.\11. Irvine Voters Approve 'l'wo Park Bond Issues Irvine voters continued their love affair with their new city and approved two park bond issues but voters e\sev.·he re on the Orange Coast dealt death blows to financing measures on Tuesday's ballot. Laguna Beach voters rejected a school tax override while Huntington Beach voters said they didn't want to spend $14.5 million for a ne\v central high school. Both Irvine measures \\'on easily. Proposition D, which sets up a $16 million park fund that will include financing . for a t5-acre athletic facility v.·on by a vote or 5,293 to 1,937. Irvine residents also voted to spend another $2 million for bicycle and hiking trails. The vote wa s 4.972 to Z.OOJ. Both 1neasures needed two-third majorities. Laguna Beach school board members will meet tonight to try to figure what to do without the S271,000 that would have been raised by the 24 cent tax override that received 3,971 no votes and 3."i7l yes votes. Only a simple majority was needed. i·luntington Beach Union High School District voters turned down the pro· posal to finance the new high school through a non-profit corporation with a no vote of 31,261 lo a yes vote of Z6,&36. JIE LEAVES HOME OVER TELEPHONE The Daily Pilot sincerely hopes Iha! its ads won 't drive you from your home. But here's one ad that did just that to the Newpcrt Beach man whb placed It: 70 CHEV. Horizon. ~ Ft, pwr. steer &c brakes. 15,000 mi. Comp. sclf~ntalned. 110 generator, air-cond. bike rack. r..1ay tradetolfer. (Phon• No.) The nd 90ld the motor home almost Im· mediately after the paper came out Md then went on to produce so mrtny inquiry calls that the advtrllse.r left home to get .11way from the phone. Test a Daily ruot 11d for the results you want. Dial the direct line : 64%-5671. • • By L. PETER KRIEG 01 ll1t D•llr l"ikll St•ll A ruling Tuesday declaring California 's obscenity law unconstitutional m a y mean Orange County wll\ be swamped with dirty movie houses and "adult'• bookstores. a spokesman for District Attorney Cecil I-licks said today. Law enforcement and j u d i c i a 1 authorities throughout " the county \.\'ere aghast at the ruling. but most declined any immediate commerit. A three-judge panel ruled the la1V is unconstitutionally vague in failing lo define what is obscene. The 21-page decis ion was based on the screening of "Deep Throat" by Buena P a r k · s Pussycat Theater. Assistant Orange froWlty District Attorney l\fichael Capizzi said a decision uill have lo be made whethe r to rewrite the JaW or appeal the ruling directly to the U.S. Supreme Court. Capizzi said the probable move will be to appeal and he said he is optimistic that the nation's highest court will ·overturn the ruling. But v.·atch out if it doesn't, he said. "Just look around at the bookstores that are trying to exist now. Look at some of the newstands on the street. "If there's no law prohibiting smut th en I guess your imagination is the limit." he said. Tuesday's decision was handed dO\\'n by a panel composed of U.S. District Court Judge \Varren J. Ferguson, Judge \Villiam East of the Dist rict Court of Oregon and 9th U.S. Circuit Court Judgt Walter Ely. The decision was unanimous. Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron K. ritc~fillan v.·as obviously upsel by the ruling. . "You just can't tell these days," he said. "I went out to Buena Park to see 'Deep Throal' and I thought it \\'<IS obscene and I said so. Apparentlv the (ederal panel disagrees and that'S the end of my interest in the matter. The panel ruled that Ute California la\" "does not specifically define the sexual (See Sl'l1lIT, Page Z) Oraage <:out Weather Night and morning low clouds clearing to hazy afternoon sun. shine Thursday. \Varmer inland . wilh highs in "the mid 70s. BeaCh highs in the upper 60s. INSIDE TODi\ Y Pot a.11d Ricllat;d Nit:on were married there. Humpllf"tl/ Bo- . oa-rt boozed tltere. Teddy Roose. uelt slept 1tltere. attd now the A1i$sion Inti is backdrop for movie about a 1-lolllfWOOd. leoe11d. Story, Page 16. Al Yew Senkt I e.1111"' H L. '4-llY' 11 C•ll'-"'1• W C•~t Ctntt!' 14 Cl•nlllld ., ... Ct,..,la .. c_,,..~ " Dteltl Nttlttt IJ E~l,_,..tt "'"" I •• ,.,.....,_, 114-ts ,IMMt 11·U ,.., "'-._. 21. "°'""'-11 .. • ., LtMcif'f • I M•lll•ll t M••ltt ,._21 M~'MI 'lHMI• t2 N•fl1111o11I """' ff Or'l!IM Cou111, 11 Srlvl• hl'Pfr 21 '""' 11·10 01. SttiM.nM ,, '"dr 111W11trtt n .n Tllfftwn ,._b TtltrilJM Joi Wt•IW t w.._ ,...,_...,. w_,t "'""' ~ W•loll Nftll lit ' DAILY PI LOT t INllf Plltt lll tt ........ FOUR MORE YEARS School Chief Peterson , I>r. Peterson ' I , .~asily Tops :.: ;~Woodington :· Tu·o-term incumbent pr. Robert Peterson easily defeated Laguna Beach School Superintendent Donald Wooding· ton in noo·partisan county Superinten· dent of Schools balloting Tuesday. Unof£icial final results were : Peterson: 201.842 Woodington 118,751 The ca mpaign revolved aroung tlli"O central issues: incumbent Peterson's _ei.ght year record in office and c!lallenger \\'oodington's mobile 28 year @reer in education. Woodiilg.tOO 'Charged the til~mbcnt \rith losing touch \\'ith ll)e loca l districts the cotmty offic(' exists to serve and with leading an offi ce that \\'as providing a declining level of serv ices. Peterson called the chall enger ·a "job hopper." citing the fh.-e different administrative posts \VoodinglOn has held ·in his 23-year career in educ.ation. \\"ood ington resi gned from a nine· month old contract as superintendent of ,. ttie Laguna Beach Unified School ,J>istrict to seek the $34,800 a year county :,j>o&t, an act which Peterson called a Jx'each of trust. • Woodington 's answer to the charges r was that if no one broke a contract \0 campaign for county superintendent, no one could ever run. His background. y;iJ.ich included ty;·o years as statt commissioner of ed:t<;ttion in Cok>rado, Woodingbi'shld, gav4Jrun a broader background and s u p e r i o r qualifications. County Board of Education candidates in the Second and Fifth Supervisorial _.9istricts also campaigned largely on • ~iticism or the current operation o( the co:.inly schools office . • • 5,000th Pair To Be S pliced June brides make this the busiest month or the year for Orange County Clerk \Villlam E. Sl John and his marriage bureau Y.-Orkcrs, but St John look time out Tuesday to honor one young couple that took out a ma rriage license. Chrislianne l\'larie Hardesty, 19, of Tust in, and Jerry Carl Faragall i, 22, of Fountain Valley. got the VIP lreatment. Th ey are the 5.000th couple to ta ke out a marriage license in Orange County this year. St John marked the occasion \Vith a special ceremony in his office. Jerry, a night clu b singer, and Christianne y,·ill be mar r i e d Saturday. OIAHGI CO.AST CM DAILY PILOT • T""Or-~0.,,...P'*" ""'"-~nee.,. -,... ,,..,.,..,.,_ ---.. """o--Coo• -~..., ~ Seolnle ""~'°"' .,. ~MUl'tf Mo'>Orf 1M:>u9n ,_, '°' G<.•t• -,,,._ &ooc;~ --.oo &.""""°"~ II•~ V-> '-"'IU'V !i.oc:P -~· .... g., 0..--1&1$JI! J<1an c.t>o"-a"O A ""'11'- t<W)!O'\ll --.. -....a s.... ........... g.,,,.,. ....,.. J""r><<~C"""""""""'""pi..,..".,JXI Wt .. B.11 S!IMI. C.OMI ... .U Cl~kwlliL 11141:'6 .c •• .-~~. llO lhav b 51-!k'f Mo.Wig Acb'm· 11.::: 8ao X<l. '2b21i °""'-l<t-'fl•llV »»~~ ~~,•S-.a tn~~--,,,,,_,., ~ ...... ?'" .... ..,. ·~') .. -~­~=--· J05-~~~. T~,i.-l7141642·4J21 c-..tHW Alh-trff""t 642·5671 ~ ''''· Or8l'IO* Clll!o! ..._ ........ c;o... ,...,.,, .......... ---ltfl-9d<!Ot .. 11Nn .. .. _,~. ,._ .... ¥ Dt ·~ ...,.~--fl~- ._,., ~ -'191 """' It Cot!• -Cli.lat-.,.. $\!Mtf!llllO" bJCM-1300...,,..N,;WIN~ 1100-1'11¥ .... u1rr~-·~oo_., I Ed1acatiota Race Paynter, App Win 'Easily' ln the non·partisan county Bo.1rd of Education race Tuesday, second trustee area candidate Dr. David Paynter and filth trustee area candidate John O. App defeated their opponents by y,•idc margins. Unofficial final results In Area·2 were : Paynter 34 ,014 John D. Harper 24,671 tn Area 5: App 31,768 Ernest G. Lake 23.929 Lynda. T. ~loss 24,349 Incu mbents in both the 2nd and 5th trustee areas. which correspond with the 2nd and Sth supervisorial districts, · decided not to seek re-election and the campaigns had a reform char a cl er. The uniform charge ~·as that the Su:ift Leading In Guadalupe Lead boats in the 600-mlle Gu adalupe Island race ..,,. er e ;truggting tov.·ards the finish line loday in eictremely light airs between Ncv1port and San Diego. Out front v.·ilh 44 miles to go ~'as !he Newport-41 Swift co-skippered !:ly Gayle PosJ and J a c k ~rallinckrodt. Sv.1ft "'as the elapsed time winner last yea r. Running in second place "·as Aquavit and third "'as Talisman. Others \\'ith distance to go are Pele, 85; . Superior Star, SS; Nereid, 122; Vo Ho Ho, 127 Topaz, 132; Countess Theresa Bernadette, 1-33.-There-was ho report froiTl- eilher Matangi or: Dakar. Smiles Return; Mesa Residents Assured of Park A delegation or dlsgr11ntled bomeownen left Costa Afesa City Council chambers with smiles on their faces this week after they learned that a park, planned for their neighborhood, was not being abandoned. Rumora had spread in the north Co.sta Mesa area Lhat the Wakeham park site oil SunlJower Avenue was not going to be purchased even though it was Included in last September's open space bond election. 'The site had not been included in tbe escrow agreement city councilmen and trustees of the Newport-1ttesa Unified School District entered last month. leading to this speculation, according to City Manager Fred Sorsabal. Raymond Schnierer, business manager for the scbool district . explained that it was financially advantageous to the school district not lo dispose of all of its surplus schoot sites in one year and that's \\'hY the Wakehan1 property was left out. ~fonday Dight Schnierer and council members sbort-circuiled the wh ole problem by agreeing to plaei! lhe \\lakeham site in escrow and leaving out the Fairview elementary school property adjaa!nt to Estancia High Scbool instead. Sorsabal further assured north Costa Mesa residents that developmenl or their park \\·as included in next fiscal year's budget b egi n n i n g July J and !hat a land scape architect would be hired to design It June 17. LA Convict K illed TRACY (UPI ) - A 29-year-old convic t from Los Angeles was stabbed lo death Tuesday in a maximum security eel\ at tbe Deuel Vocational Institute. Ivan C. Knox, wbo had only been at DVl since April 30, died at the prison hospital. county popart111eot of Education and Its board ~ trustees: was out of touch with tbe local school districts and it wa.s not providing the kind and level ol services it llhould. In Area 2. J ohn D. Harper Jr., a fonner Fountain Valley City,counclJman and Fountain Valley school board member, charged that his opponent, Paynler, was a career educator and \\'Ould' not adt.>quately represent the interests of the citiienry. Paynter. formerly superin1endent of the Garden Grove Unified School District aild now preside:nt of Ttst·A·Lab, a health S<;reening.service, responded that, while he was proud of his career in educallon, he was a buslnessman. The educational experience, Paynter Said, mad~ him more qualified for the job. Both the Area 2 candidates set goals of in1proring the county office's role in vocational education and holding board meeting s away from the county offices to provide greater public exposure. Jn Arca 5, businessman App was pitted against l\VO college professors, Dr. Lake and Dr. 1'1oss. "" All tbree sought to improve the communications between the cotmty office and local school districts and to strengthen the leadership role of the county office. App said he was the only candidate y,·ith a "vested interest" in tbe office since he was the only one with school age cbildren. He was also, he pointed out, the only non-educator riinn.ing for the Ja y office. If elected , App said, he would attempt to determine whether services of the . -cowuy-office could be-improved--:and, if- not, would recommend abolition of the department. ~ llrom Page l COUNTY • • • No -848 !DI. Sunset ll<acb Str..t L!pllllg Yes -129 No -211 U. Orange County Str..t Upllllg District II Irvine, Tustin, East Tustin Yes -3,421 No -2,933 X. Orange County Street Ught!Dg District 1% Bay View Yea: -lit No -lt9 Y. Orange County Street Ugbtfng District 13 El Toro, Tustin, East Tustin, l rVine Yes -2,627' No -2,717 llrom Page l COPTER ... Santa ~t\na Mayor to Face E~-prisone1· in November Santa Ana 1'-1ayor ,Jerry Patterson will confront former Prisoner of War David Rehmann in a November oontest to see whcl will succe<!d retiring 38th District Congressman Richard T. Hanna. Final totals for the De.mocraUc Party are : PIUenoo: 21,657 Bowar<! Adler: 18,7S3 ~ Hol!Md: 5,7J9 Albert N"""r: 2,309 Republican total• are: RHIUDD: 14,099 Joy Ntueebauer : 9,838 Beau Clemens: 3,739 J. Fredt:rick Risser: 2.911 All candldatts in the race for ll anna·s seat appeared to be keying U~lr campaigna to the successes and failures of Rehmann. who was the' favorite all along for the QOP nod . On the Democratic side, the contest apJ)l"artd to be closest between Adler and Patterson. the mayor of Santa Ann . Adler based his campaign on hJs ' support from HaMa and pledged to continue Hanna 's programs in Congress. The newly formed district Is aome- what unusual in Orange Coun ty in that u·nu a considerably larger number or Democrats than Republicans on Its regis- tratlon rosters. Nasser and Holland ran lets potent campalgn:i t111m the t•~ DomocraUc frontrunners . On the RepubJic.an sl1te, Rehmann clearly dominated the field with what some observers called a ' • G o d , motherhood, nag and app!e p I e ' ' <'a mpalgn. ituch of his Sllpport came from those sympathetic to tht plight or vf!'terans and POWs. ClemcN, ~1rs. Neu.ge~er and Risser failed to generate the $aJT\e kind of support RehmaM got from the 75,000 · Republicans in the district. ' There: are indi<'ations he could become the flr st Republica n In the Democratic dl!ilrict elected 10 Congress In many years bceaiusc of strong groundswells of support among voters of both parties. • ' Valle1·ga's A Winner 111 lst Race ~ -···cl&' ca\81' .. TONIGHT NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular nlectlng, Costa hlesa City Ornngc County Assessor Jack Valler ga Council Chambers, 7:30 p.m. won his first elce lion W the job he was COAST COMMUNITY C O L L E G E appointed to In 1972 by n 2 to 1 margin BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Tuesday over his lone opponent. Adams, 8 p.m. - Final totals urc: '' ALCOHOLISM-AN ADDICTIVE Valler11: 229,139 t5ISEASE"-Or. Robert Se h m I t ~ ---Ra.Ymood-Pre&ton: .Joa,847 lecturer, Raleigh Hill• lloapltal, 1507 ------,,a,M 611rStllet:-Newporl-ile&Ch, "5- The large nwnber of voles pollOO by 5707. Preston surprlsed some ob se rv ers "lfOUSE OF BLUE LEAVES'' _ because of the extremely low·key and South Coast Repertory Theater, (bro.ugh poorly funded campaign he ran. Sunday, S p.m. The primary .,.. actuallr the l~st UCI LECTURES -"World ol Plants," time i.ncumbent Vallerga ran for office. Room 167 Steinha111 Hall, 7 p.m. hl.Jfe DtllY Pl .. 1 """ l"llell EYING SECOND TERM 40th Dl1trlct'1 Hinshaw lie wa.s appOinted to the job two years and Death of Fatherhood/' Room 101 ago when Conn-assessor Andrew Pbysical Sciences Bldg. 7 p,m. "Coping .... with Death," Room 17f COmputer Hinshaw was elected lo Congress. Science Bldg. 7 p.m. "Southern Callfom.Ja Hinshaw Takes Vallerga proved to be a powerful, big-O>aslllne," Room 17! HumanJUes Hall, 7 money campaigner whose lead was hard p.m .. lo overcome by Preston, a Cal State THURSDAY, JUNE t Long Beach home economics profeasor. SENIOR CmZENS CLU B Toward the end of the campaign , Communlly Recreation Center, 12-3 p.m. Easy Victory For Congress PreslOn hooked his wagon to the 20th LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Fllnu, District Congressional campaign being 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. waged by David Gubler against Hinshaw. UCI LECTURES -"Leaming to Uve Gubler's charges of misuse of the with Money ," Room 167 Steinha'us Hall 7 office by Hinshaw were extended to p.m. "Adventures in Folk Exprelelori,'' Vaherga by Preston. He said Vallerga Room 161 H anJ I Incumbent 4CM:h district Congressman Andrew Hinsha\•.', President Nixon's congressman, easily won renomination in the Republican Party primary Tuesday and will face Democrat Roderick Wilson of Oceanside in November . accepted donations fr6m big companies um t es Hall 7 p.ni . "Pho<ol!J'aphen on Pllotol!l'•~." Room whose assessments depended on him. 100 Social Science Hall, 7 p.m. Vallerga said Preston 's accu!alions were "preposterous" and he pointed lo a . Republican vote totals in the . 40th District are: Hlllllbaw : 52,263 Earl Carraway : 4,483 David Gubler: 13,106 series ol court actions uph< '.ding his practices. Sl\IUT ... Roger Lanphear: 5,500 activity which Is prohibited." Democratic vote totals In the district The lawsolt attacking the state Jaw are : -·-· ~-~ · • --~----v.:aS:-bi'Olfg'llt by -vme-Cf'it PtUranda. 11.....,.P .. eJ GOVERNOR. • • the fallpmpmgn. ''I'm here to e~ hlm ," Reinecke told a joint news cooference wltti Flour- noy in Los Angeles. , · Brown who shrewdly jiubliclzed his • Jobn Graef: 11,970 pre&ident of _ Puss~at _Theaters oL Wilson: 19,242 Hollywood, after Orange Co u n I y office and stressed p01itJC:al calnpalgb- re!orm, led the polls from the beglnnl.ni .. Hinshaw's c h I e f critics in the authorities confiscated the sexually primary race ltere not the Democ.rats explicit film "Deep Throat" from the vying to face him in November, but Buena Park theater in a series of raids rather the Republicans trying to take his last November. seat away. Prosecution of l\11randa and a dozen Gubler, the s e If.pro cl a i =11 e d other cases was halted pending the "walldng candidate" from Mission Viejo, ruling. and Capi.1.zl said the others may waged a campaign based on his charges now be in jeopardy. that Hinshaw misused his former office "We'll have to research the law to of county a~essor. determine the effect on other pending G 1 br .. 1-. f rd · ed. ff cases," Capizzi said. ub er ou&.,t orwa sign a 1• Ca pizzl also disclosed !hat his office davits be said were from CU?Tent and former employes of the assessor's office will investigate the poss t bi Ii t y under Hinshaw. jurisdictions that local may now enact their own anti-smut ordinances. The depositiom stated Hin&.b.;i;w use<l L<>cal laws were forbidden before county employes and county equipment in his 1972 Congressional campaign and because they were prHmpted by the also gave favorable asse.smeDts to big state law. campaign contri~utor,, "But if there's no state lalv, it 1nay be Hinshaw dented ahy "'·•h praclices possible for local governments t'o enact ""''1' their own," he aaid. " • ever toQi place and filed a $10 million libel suit against Gubler. Philip J. Burton Ri!es Tl1ursday llrom Page l BAKER ... A former Jesuit seminarian, be had a considerable advantage as the aon of Edmund G. Brown, governor from 1959-- 1967. Flournoy, cooversely, was an also-ran with three percent In pol11 a year ago. He mo''ed to front runner, with 44 per.. cent to Reinecke's 27 percent a week be· fore the election. Reineke is accused of lying to the Senate Judiciary Corrunittee in 1m when he denied he advised the U.S. Jmtice Department and then-Atty. Gen. Jobn N. Mitchell of International Telephone & Telegraph CQ. 's offer lO be.I~ Wlder·wrile the Republican National Convention. Reinecke's lrlal is set for July ts in \Vasbington. Flournoy told cheering bickers early today tlfld be wooldn 't go alq with a suggestion by Brown for 1 moratorium on campajgning until September. "I don't believe in that," he said. "I believe the people 'of this state should have an opportunity to examine tbt t,s.. sues." , CLARK RETAINS col.JNTY SEAT Orange County Board o f Supervisors Chairman Ralph Clark of Anaheim wen his JeCOnd tenn as tbe Fourth District representative Tuesday. defeating his looe foe by a 4-1 marg:in. Final vote totals showed Clark y;·ith 50,743 and Garry Nelleson with 15,137. Tennis Rackets Baseball Shoes All Purpose Shoes Soccer Shoes Tennis Shoes Warm-Up Shoes Football Shoes Wrestling Shoes Wilson · Davis -Bancroft Dunlop -Yoneyama Racquetball Racquets & Balls Handball Gloves & Balls Table Tennis Paddles & Balls Squash Rackets ~ I ,.... Tennis Dresses , Mens & Boys Tennis S~orts Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts Warm-Up Suits •j \ Hats & Visors Mens Tennis Sweaters Baseball Mitts -Balls -Bats Softball Shirts Softballs &-Bats Volleyballs Basketballs Soccer Balls ' ' Slant Boards Weight Sets Bike Repairing Bike Parts · Tires -Tubes f\ /I i 11 I I 11 l I I I • 6 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Billboard 'Privilege' Having recently enacted a s.lgn ordinance which some urban planners .consider the most progressive in tho state, the Costa Mesa City Council is retrogressing bY, allowing the continued blighting of it.s streetscape by billboards. Despite continuing palaver about the need for a billboard ordinance, councllmen on a 3·2 vote Jast week gave Pacific Outdoor Advertising permission to n1ain· tain a billboard on Newport BouJevard for a period of up t~ one year even though its zone ext..-eption permit ha& ex· pircd . 1---·~---1No-&u<'h courtes.y~was exOOndecWo-anothe~illboard company earlier this spring. That firm was told its per- n1lt would not be extended because the city was ln· volved in a visual cleanup campaign. I I f : ' ' I Such equivocation on the part of the council can only lead to the feeling that some billboard companies en/'oy special privileges over others and that you can ge what you want in Costa 1r1esa if you know the right people. For example, llfayor Robert :Ptf. \Vil.son, who voted to appprove Pacific Outdoor's extension, derives income lro1n the firm lor a billboard which exists at the place of his business in Santa Ana. City Attorney Roy E. June has ruled there is no conOict of interest involved. Perhaps so, but consider· ing the delica cy of the issue an abstention would have been in order. Every backward move on billboard removal serves only to lead citizens to question the sincerity of council· men who say they are really supporting sign and bill· board cleanup. weekend to score the most successful gain In the 29-year history of the charity affair. The gross receipts are expected to rise to more than $93.000 by the time all the money has been counted. Last year's gross count was about $10,000 less. What really counts. however, is how muc h profit the Lio~s Club made to tun1 over to charitable organliations. Ind1cation s are that profits from the f'ish Fry will total to $33,000. Last year's figure was $28,700. ' This was accomplished despite an astronomical 50 __ Jlerc.eo.Ll\ike,_ill_Lhe _casLof fish ancLcost lncr:eues..Jn_ other food products such as hamburger, soft drinks, and corn sold at the Fish Fry. )l was evident to those who visited the three·day affair at Costa 1r1esa City Park that considerable effort had been expended to improve the Fish Fry anrl that these improvements doubtless were reflected in the cash box. The carnival' was much improved O\'er last )'ear. offering bigger and more exciting rides for Llcket holders ~hlle at the sa.ine time setting a new standard for clean- liness and mechanical reliability. - All of ·the activities were· kept on the park property for the first time, leaving Park Avenue open to the residents who live there. Park Avenue !orrnerly had been blocked off for the carnival and the relocation of the event, no doubt, was a good public relations measure. One particularly attractive feature or the Fish Fry was the price of the fish dinners-still the same $2-a real bargai n meal for the 11 ,000 people who bought them. .· . ' .. -'~ .- ) ~ • I•, ' Fish Fr)' Bounces Back After skidding financially last year, the Costa l\1esa· Newport Harbor' Lions Club Fish Fry bounced back last The 1974 Fish Fry succeeded on its time-tested formula of clean fun and good food, and the traditional parade, ~.rawin gs1 beautx and baby contests. \Vh1ch goes to show ttte community still enjoys a good party for a good cause. c "IT SAVS,'YOUQ NE.'J MISSION, SHOOL D 'itlU CHOIJCiE TO ACCEPT IT, WILL BE IN l.JORTHERN IRELAND."' - Feminism· in Art -cat:ted-'llogwaslr'- I T9 the Editor : >As a workinii ortlst of some 50 years eiiperience. the l\.1ay 24 page on \\'Omen al{iists made it difficult for me to keep ny supper down . Such a lot of hogwash I fave never seen in print before. IF THIS is an example of the ne\r breed or "'Omen artists Goel help us. All this female . . . feminist ... neuter bit ... Ugh, To SI)' that smiling, dressin·g pretty. etc. hE!' anything to do with making it seems to me to be about as shallow as a slatement can be. ( MAILBOX J Ltllt,_ !rem ,._,. Mt •tk-. Mtrm.ill' "'"rn $111t1114 ""'"' ttwfr ma....-Ill • .,,.,,.. or It». T-. rlthl tt ~ HllllM'I It flt .. tct or tllllllMlt llMI It ~. All Hll'ttn _, 111- <I.... llllflt f\lrt tMI 1111111,... t 4tlreu. IMll """'" ""' IN wllt!Mlf Ml 1"114111111 If 111!11ci.tlt rM-II tpJM1111. "-'" wrn 1111t M •MllJllH. Dear Good Lord! They're going lo do some more v.·ork on Fairview Road in Costa f\.fesa again this summer. That road's been repaired :norc often than the Ho Chi f\.1inh Trail. J.S.fl.!. GIM'"Y 0111 Cl ftlfMllh airt $UMnlnN bV reaO.n. lml • llOI -Ullril)' l"t41KI IR1 ¥1twS .. ''-_,,..,. s.M ""'' "' -~• i. OIMm' G"" CUl!r •11ot. Wonie1i of You «II that neJ and fabric thing sculpture? I HAVE kno"n hundredt •of w~en painters: some were good looking some \\'ere not. Only one thing matters. You have to be able to paint. physical injury from the hundreds or cars which visit the island every day. Bicyclists have safety roJes an d regulations as much as aulos do. and one would (bjnk that the elderly would be more fearful of a Llncoi.n Continental than they would of a ten speed Schwinn. If bicycle racks are provided in appropriate areas, the island can be assured that there will be no "dumping" or bicycles anywhere. Bicycle owners take pride and care in their bikes and have no reason just to leave them scattered about lhe Island. , Literature Star i11 Quiz :;iome years ago Beverly Hills l·ligh School inviled people from all professions to speak to the students t1bout the prospects in their particular profession. S. McDonald Wright and I spoke on art nSrt:a ca reer. We 'f\'ere told afterward that \\:f were the only l'f\'O w.ho recommended o!t field as , a rewardifig career and I t always considered' It the best ible for a girl. I still do. THELMA PADDOCK HOPE ! Eros ion "' R lghls ithe Editor , us Walton's article (!\.lay 28) on how ericans' rights are being eroded by emments, city 10 federal, was !he t article I have seen that brings this prbblem lo light. There has been so much more for the p~Jic but less for the individual lately. tit it is good to see the defense of p p~rty rights for a change. The p perty O\Vners, like the free enterprise s~tem . ore the backbone of this country lift made it the great nation that It Is. ~ow hired city planners and appointed - c~' nlillec people have gotten the powe.r t tell the substantial people how and u . ,at to do with the things they have ed. Ir we continue to allow emments to dictate. our lives. tax us ond what govemment services should and give this extra money to liOO'al m\lded d().gooders that have never owned a house or met a payroll, \Ye will soon lose our ability to ~y those taxes. 1's fl.1r. Walton says 'Government is no 10,ger the servant: it is the master -of plf.lS. persons, ond property." Let's try lo-bring back the ielf-dcte.nnination of lh\ American people and not fall lnto the trips of the socialistic countries. ! GOLDIE JOSEPH 1 Bike# 01• Bal T the Editor: ln two monthlynewsletters, the Bnlbo:i lsfl,nd Improvement As soc I at Ion expressed considerable pride a n d pleasure at the omiASion of Balboa Island trom the Bike Trail segment-of-the Newport Beach Master Plan. They staJed that the danger lo older people Vl-'Ollld be gr8ve, and that lbe Island and the Fe.rry .,.ould be unable to bear the Increased bicycle traffic. Along '"ilh tho traJlf would be the ''dumplng of blcycl~ onto the alleys, street.s. o.11d ba}•fronlJ . ·• In 1 ti~ wMn emlogy and energy preservaUon 11re ne«'$Sltlei ralher than pastlme1, I flnd these coin· ments sclnsh. unreasonoblc, and un· founded. • FrvE lltJ~1>RED college students li\'e on Balboa l.5lnnd. mAny of them owning bikei. as their contribution to energy conservation. And cAch lime lhey ride on !he ls\and or across the bridge, they risk . I AS FOR the traffic problem, just take a look at the Irvine Company's Promontory Point \.\ith greater than 600 family units and see what it will do to the already crowded and jammed up JsJand and bayside traffic. Why not eliminate auto traffic from the Island altogether and fill the streets and al\eywa)·s 'f\.ith no\\'Crs? That 'f\.'OUld seem to be the best beautification program the island could ever follow. Students are also struggling to pay their bills and most of them are working their way through school. For them. riding their bikes may also be a way to save money, as ·well as the environment. I hope that in the future. the association will try and consider the student "minority" living on the Island . I urge them to contact studenUi and to change this position on the blke trail. Inlerested parties can write t h e A8SOCiation at P .0. Box No. 64, Balboa Island, CaUfornia. LEE JI. SOLOW Vice President, Associated Studenls, UCI President, Balboa Islanders .. Campaign Curb• To the &iitor: , Developers are major conlributors to the political campaigns of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. ROl\fEOWNERS w e re ridiculed by Supervisor Baker for seeking to pre;erve some of the beauty of our hills through proper control of hillside development. Homeowners were turned ·down in their quest for a hillside ordinance (Baker, Diet.rich, Caspers). an adequate local parks ordinance (Baker, Di!!!lrlch, Clark), a resource managment ordinance (Baker, Dietrich, Clarkl. and the retention of 1,he agrlcu1tural reserve status of the beleaguered Anaheim Hills (Bakerc Dielrich, BatUn). •BAKER'S p I a n n i n g commissk>ncr, Rogtr' Sla~. bragged at a party that · mooey WM pouring Into Baker's \\'Br chest from lhe largely undevclo]l<d 5th district. Cltarly, our supervl!Ors' campai~s shout d-lie: t. PubUcly financed. 2. Umlted In duration. 3. Limited in sc::ale (more, iDlAllcr districts). A democratic statewide fund malltr raised less 1h3n one-half t.bf!: cost of one mailer for an Orange County Supervisor. CENE ATHERTON, M.D. Chairman of PARKS. sponsors of Count)' Local J>afb: lnltlatlve ' ( SYDNEY HARRIS ) This fortnightly u'Ord-quiz centers on 11•omen. Identify the "She.. in the following more or less famous lines. Forty percent is a score even Women's Liberationists should be proud of, I. "She bangs upon the cheek of night as a rich jewel." 2:. "She moves a goddess, and she looks a quet!n." 3. "She stood in tears amid the alien com." 4. "She gave me of the tree, and I did eat.'' 5. "She du·elt among the untrodden ·ways." 6. "Sill! had a heart-ho'v shall 1 say?-to8 soon made glad." 7. "She is a winsome wee thing, she is a handsome wee thing." 8. "She makes hungry where most she satisfies." 9. "Though she bends him. she obeys him, though she draws him, yet she follows." 10. "She is com·ing, my own, my s"·ect: were' it ever so airy a tread." 11. "She 'f\.'as a child and I was a child, in this kingdom by tbe sea." 12. "She came lo pro\'e bim \\'ilh hard questions." • Ii "She had a bo"'I of lilacs In ber room." 14. "She twisted lier hands behind her; but all the knots held good !" ANSWERS' I. Juliet, as described by Romeo. in ShakeSpeare's "Romeo and Juliet." 2. Helen of Troy, in Homer's ''l\liad." S. Ruth, the Biblical daughter-in-law of Naomi, In Keats' poem ·•()de to a Nightingale.'' 4. Eve, as accused by Adam, In t.tllton's "Paradise l.<ISt." 5. Lucy, In one of Wordsv.·orlh's flvc so-call~ "Lucy Poems." 6. "My Last Duchess" by Robert Brawnlng, 7. Robe.rt Bums's poetic praise of his wife. . 8. Cleopatra. as described by Enob3rbus, at the opening o f Shakespeare's "Antony and Cleopalra.'' 9. ltlinnehfha, in Longfellow's narraU\'e "The S_on£_Q..f llla_watha." 10. Maud, ln Tennysoo's poem of !he same name. 11. AnnRbel Lee. in Edgar Alltn Poe's poem of the same name. · 12. 11lc Queen of Sheba, confronting Solomoo. Jn the Old Testament. 13. "PoMra~ ol a Ll!dy" by T.S. Ellol. 1•. Bess. tbe l~ndlord'1 daughter, In Alfred Noyes's narrative ••The Ht&bwayman." ' No More l'iet1tu111s Candor -nn . Com-mitments \VASHINGTON' -The u·ay has been long for Henry Kissinger. and if the armed truce he has sought in the Mideast is at hand there is yet still much that he tnust dO. He must do '"'·hat he promised lo do at the time President Nixon or- dered a world-wide milltary alert, but did no1. Then. Secretary of Slate Kissinge,r asked !his country to accept on faith the necessity of Pres- ident Nixon's roun- ter -Soviet action. "·hich brought \1•ar too close for com· ·~ rort .. and later he, Kissinger. wouJd ex· plain in del~il. Kissinger'g .ards •• On that occasion are worth recalling. For once he apptared to be angry. He resented a questioner's implication thnl the alert 1vas no more rhan a political move a few doys after the "Saturday Night 11-iassacre" by a rattled PN!sident trying to divert public attention from \Vaterga le v1allO'>'ing to the critical tum in world affairs. SUCH SUSPICIONS, Kissinger said, v.·ere "a symbol of what is happening in this country," and added that the Watergate ·"crisis of authority" ma y ha,·e innuenced Soviet threats to introduce military forces in the Atideast The "crisis of authority" is even more severe today than in October. 1973 and it has been heightened. in part, by public disclosure of the. kind of discussions that take place in the Oval Ofrice at the White Ho~. Kissinger and the President have held (rucHARD WILSO~ many confidenlial discussions on the :-.lideast truce and America's role there henceforth of the kind President Nixon has called the frank , hard-hitting explorations necessary to the conduct Of the pr eside ncy. \\'hite House conversations on nationol security have been recognized in the courts as having a different character r r o m discussions wbich might be considered evidential in the commission o{ felonies. SO THERE is not much likelihood that until many yean from now y,·ben it will make no difference, anyone wUI know the nature or the confidential and secret negotiations which President Nixon and Secretary Kissinger have been carrying on with notably devious and unreliable leaders in !he fl.1iddle Ea.st. It is a time now for ca ndor beyond other times. if only because public confidence in the reliability of A1nerican statesmen is at a low ebb. tlo\v deeply !he President and Kissinger hove gotten the United States in\'O\Ved \1•ith Eg_vpt and Israel will not tie much illuminated by expected statements thot there were no secret deals. Of course not. There never are. And yet the Pentagon papers showed that the Johnson odministrati on '"''as going far beyond public perceptiOM and expecta- tions in its development 0£ Vietnam poli· cy. nie unauthorized disclosure of secret meetings on the India-Pakistan clash re- vealed Nixon policies of v.·hich the p11blic \\'85 only remotely a"·are. mE KISSINGER -negotiations have had a pur\X)Se above and beyond slopping the killing of Arabs and Jev.·s. They have been intended to reduce to the minimum the peril of armed conni ct. by chance or design, bet~·een the United States ond the Soviet Union at the mo6t critical point in the "·orld \\'here the interests of these opposite forces come into conflict. An interesting study of Iha l confrontation of tv.·o decades by Dale R. Tahtinen for the American Enterprise lnstilute sho"'S a rather discouraging result, The supply of anns from fl.1oscow and \1lashington resulted, at least unlil recent events, in a military balance ol po'"w heavily in Israel's favor. Recc,gt everus ~k that balance and Israers government came tumbling down, but Tahtinen's general conclusion is still \'alid. The presence of vut amounts of arms supplied to bolh sides has not been stabilizing or freated a stand-off, as Kissinger's dogged efforts illustrate. JIE NEEDS to come back now and explain in '1hc most expliclt detail his conun.itments, ir any. in these hundreds of hours of talk v.'ith the President. spokesmen or the Soviet Union, of the 1'\rab states and Israel. The public' and Congress deserve, and must bave, a bel!er comprehension or 11·hat is invo\\led than \\'al' had during the formulation of Vietnam and Ind\a- Pak.IS!an policy. For it i1 no longer to be taken for granted that the secret negotiations of the administralion in po""·er. hov•ever ..,,ell·intended or logically supported. necessarily serve t b e continuing interests of the United States. That old-fashioned idea just isn't practical anymore. The Two Most Dange rous Leaders WASHINGTON -The ~·orld's t"·o most d3ngerous and irresponsible leaders, in the opinion of worried intelligence experts, are North Korea's Kim 11 Sung and Libya ·s Moamn1ar Khadafy. The isolated Kim. according to intell igence reports. is itching to resume the Korean War, which ended 22 years ago llbout where it slarted a Ion g the 38th parallel. lte is depictOO. in intelligence report! as a leadt'r. out of touch with the world \Vho woold plunge Korea Into ano1her \\'ar. against the a9· vice or his Soviet and Chinese mentors, He Is quite capt1- ble of plotting a 'f\.i ld. daredevil incident, such as a 1:iarRtrooper attack on Seoul. APPARENTJ,Y, Kim begnn unirlcation t.1lks with South Korea tn the mistaken belltf that Nor:th Korea was economically superior and woold be able to dominate a peaceful, unified country. He believed his ov.11 prop.aganda. apparently, that the South was suffering under oppression aod Its people '"ere starving. In stead. North Korean delegates round the economy booming and the people fo r more prosperowi than in the Norih. Kim -was reported to be rurious at his N!prese:ntatlves for bringing b a c k cameras. transistors and olhcr consumer llcnts os souvenirs. Ill!; ABRUPTLY dropped the dialogue v.·lth the Solith and began making Wl\rlik:e 1nove.s. Intelligence reports assert he h11s concluded that the only way Koren can be united under his le'1der$hip is by forct. .. (JACK ANDERSON) His gunboats sank 111·0 South Korean fishing boats and obducted a third. tic.has resumed the slandard Communist ta ctics of fomenting class antagonism·. consolklating antigoveniment factiOns and fomenting united fronts in the South. ''\\'e u·lll render positi ve assistance to the revolutionary struggles of the South Korean people." Kim has proclaimed from Pyongyang. But it isn't the infiltration and agitation that worries the intelligence analysi s. They are far more conce.med that the unpredlctable Kim may resort to hot action. EVEN l\IORE mercurial is,the Libyan strongman, ~·!oammar Khndnfy, who is constantly stlrrlng up trouble in the 'ri11ddle Enst without much thou ght for the consequences. Intelligence reµot1s c::lalm. for instnnrc. that he has armed terrorist grou ps wlrh sophisticated \.\'Capons, i n c l u d i n R s{iooldcr·fired Soviet missiles. There is apprehension in the Int e 111 Sen l c eommL!,nlty that extremist ::roup~ " ti gel their hands on even niore: d 1nJ!<rnus \1·eapons. no\\' !hat Libya has Concluded a new arms agreem~t ""'Ith ~toscow_ K.llADAf"V Is al!IO accused or slirring up plols to ovl?rthrow neighboring .A.rab ltadcrs who h.1ve rejtcted his calls for a "peoples' \.\'ar'' agai nst Israel nnd !he United St~tcs. He Is ctamoMn~ to u~ the oil cmborgo. tt rro risl :iua ckit 1111d other u·lld 1neasures, \\1hich~is niorc mod erntc Arab nclghbon: wam could backfi re. Like Kim U Sun~. r.toammar Khndary is also capable of irrational and irresponsible acts. footnote : In South Korea. President Park Chung Hee bas taken emergency measures, which .intelligence experts privately concede are justifit'd. In the fltiddle East, there is talk o r '·eliminating" the fi ery Khadafy. One secret report tells or a discussion between a CIA agent and oil company official about putting up $50 million for KhadaJy's assassination. High offi cials hnve ass urL'd us, ho"'ever. that the S50 1nlllion talk ""'as nothing but barroom banter and has never been given serious consideration. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Veed, Pwb/.i.sher Thoma.1 Kttuil, Editor Barbara Kreiblcli Eriitoriol Page Editor Th(' c..iltQ,rial Jlll~1.· of t~ Dally p,;n1 A('('llS 10 lnrorm aJld stlmulate rt<a'1t-r5 h)' pn:-s..•nt1'\: .on U11 i1 page r!1vt-rM! l't111n1V\1ary on top1C1' of ln- te1"'~' b\· ~)'Nl1£>Al,.fl oolumnl11~ 1tnd fAttoon1~t'. by p1,l\·i&nit " lonin1 for rt:iders' \ !!""''' 11nri IJ>' prt'st'ntlnJt this ntw9paper'll opinion!! and ~M on current topics. Tht t'diton11J apifiil'lns ot !ht Daily Pilot appear on1¥ in 1~ ('drtoriAl column at ttw< 109 of the paae. Opinkm.<1 e.11prt1wd by tht rol· umn11tll ;1.nd cartoontsta •nd ltlll!t" \\Ttttts art' their own and no~~ m<"nt of tht lr vit"4·1 by 1hc Dally 'Pilot 1lhauld be inft'md- \Vednesday, June 5. 1974 ' I • • Testimon v ~ Winds U1• On Hughes l'"rorn \\'ire Stniets LOS ANGELES-Robert A. 1.1aheu rested his $17.5 million libel suit against J{oward J{ughes Tuesday, clearing the V.'ay for th c billionaire's rebuttal in the 15-week~ld •trial. 11faheu. a former FBI agent v.1ho headed •lughes' vast Nevada empire Croin 1966 to 1970 is suing t~l use over his public staten1~nt t6at Ex-49er Topplecl H.E0\\1000 Cl1'Y (l~rt i -Bob St. €lair. former all·pro San Ffancisco 49er ! ·offensive tackle, w as defeated in his bid for re- election to the San 1'-tateo · County Board of Supervisors. St. Clair, 44, had held the position since 1966 and blan1ed hi s defeat on the ad\'erse etfeCts on inc umbent s or the \\'atergate scandal. The victor \\'as John 1\1. ' \'lard. 33, a high school teacher. 1.1aheu "stole me blind." "'--"---------' U.S. District Caurt Judge · Messnge ( State J ~---'Front SLA' Delivered 3 Killers Beli eved SALINAS (UPll -It took as many as three killers to overpo...,•er l\\'o young mcil and :t girl and bludgeon them to death during an outing along a sn1al\ creek in the Arroyo Seco Gorge, aut horities say. The three were all killed by heavy blO\li'S on lhe head lVlth a heavy "'·eapon not yet round. The ~1onterey County sheriffs office said it has no suspects and a motive bas not yet been ,..· u,.1 ~· uncovered. A&duct.iolt The assailants slashed the Mona K. Elling~on, 19, throat or one or the victJms 'las one of two 1 women and gouged his eyes out. ~ reportedll• kidnaped in DAJl V PILOT j r 1' A Cl1i.ef Relents :f Jeremiah to Return Home\1 LOS ANGELES (UPI) -to llfe, no l h I n g kept John ,;liver Ealing·" Johnston out of lhe mowiens -not bears, blizzards or ow Indians. And though he's dead tor 74 years, the Ve t e ran s Administration \\'as no nlQfe successful. Johnston . \\ilOse lite inspirf'rl the movie ''J ere m ia h Johnson," is going home to the Rockies he loved. VA Adminis1.1·a1or Rufu's H. Wilson, who earlier ordered that Johnston 's p I an n e d reburial be delayed , relented Tueeday and ga\'e pennlMion for the mountain man's bol;ty to be dug up todsy dr Thursday from a VA cemetery for relnterment outside Cody, Wyo. Park View Junior Hial1 School Joho!!!ton was scheduled to questkln about whelher l in Lancaster, who w e re btl reburied there saturd4y in bones 5Tuld be moved. surprised to learn lrom a a ceremony atjended by said he did not want the VA hi story teacher tha t t h e Wyomlng Historical SOciety be involved In a "conune1'iel outdoors·loving Johnston lay representatives and eight or operation" and that a Moatua the .students from Park View, an Rep J"'"n D 1 buried next to a bu.>y Los congresam • · • '"' • to be flown out by Warner A1elcher, forward e d COftk,, Angeles freeway. Brothers, who made the movie plalnta from Red Lodge: Alter 50 years of roaming that began it all. Mont., that it wu al90 jn I the Rockies before and aher Then \Vilson issued a ''stop "Ll vcr-Eallng's" old stamplpa, the Civil \Var. hunt in gi, order'.'. halting the planned grounds . ai:i<J might want o ... trapping and fighting Ind ians, -reburial . saying 1~_:_ w~~al!n the body. •· J ohn sto n died 111 the VA hospjtal in 1900 at the age of 74. No next of kin were listed , so he "'as burled in the hospital cemetery. He is reme mbered in the \Vestern hi story books for his 15-year personal war o L vengeance on the C r o w Indians. who killed his wlfe. CHAIN .. The vldims "·ere \Vyatt S. *ockton ast week. She , Hanson, 17. Patrick Hill, 18. wa s released but com· ·and Terry McCort , ta, all of panion allegedly was Salinas. · "'" ·· forced to drive man. THE 1tlOVE JS the fruit ot a .~. THE STUDEl'\'TS, inspired Investigators s3id 1.u111 N.·o identified as Gerald six month campaign by by the movie sttUTing Robert Harry Pregerson excused thA jury after 1ilaheu concluded his marathon 1~-day appearance on the \\'itness stand and Hughes' attorney Nobcrt Schlei was to start his rebuttal case today. boys appan!nt1y ·went 1Dto the ?.'.lartin. 26 to Texas. seyeotli grade sttidenls at Redford last year, began scenic Arroyo Seco grjge in .. -. ----' -----SA.N' FRANCISCO {AP ) -Los Padres National ,-orest , • lobbying the VA as a class Police say a man "sitnulating south of Salinas to S':"tn .azid :B ' E , T ld project to have themselves SAVE ON CHAIN UNKFABRIC 50°/o .. OFF* ~e1n~~~·~ ~~1r:i~o k:}f:;~ Mi~! ~~~or~~~~r 10a;t~~:~ ~ oy s xorcis1n o ~:~a~~ki;0:~~:;sco1:0h:~~ late Tuesday night and general area with • other him reburied someplace more • Kidt1aper Dies de\i \'ered an envelope \l'h~e party or teen·agers. 1 . SAN BERNARDINO (UPl) the manslaughter and child suitable to his preferences in LOS ANGELES A contents contained a message \Vhen her group left, Miss. ;_ Lawrence Parker claimed abuse tria l of Parker, 34, and life. FAIRICWHEH . IMSTAWD IY WARDS . ...... ,..... ............................... ... ....... le'!f pricH.c.llfwfrff......,....,. kidnaper was shot to death by on •·syrnbionese Liberation !\1cCcrt decided to stay \vilh r ed . his wife, Alice, 29, said Parker Guided by teacher Tri one of his hostages early Am1y 'stationery." The text rfanson and, fill\, \\'horn she he perfonn an exorcism on told him he cast a demon out Robinson , they found a new Tuesday as he triOO to nee out \\'as not disclosed. kne\v at Salinas High School his 11.year-old diabetic son the of the ailing bpy. The youth. home for Johnston's bones at the front door of an San Francisco po Ii c e before the t\\'O 3!'0Ulhs dropped day the boy died from a lack Wesley, died1Jast Aug. 22, and Cody 's Old Trail Town. a -nn·· " .. _ apartment. operations Sgt. Anthon y out some month$ ago. _ of insulin. a witness ·at the prosecutors maintain the !rontier museum collection of ..:...nwf~ The kidnaper, described as. Balzer said Ted Bonner. The k~if,l·ings were trial o{ the hoy's parents has Parkers withheld insulin frotn cabins. a stage station and I ·HONU PLAZA · ~ being about 27 years old, was security man at 420 Taylor St .. remln.lsrent~ o( a series ol testified. the boy, believing him cured .other buildings from the late l :1. a;:: • sm.:::,::=..._ ... not immediately identiHed. where the TV station is mass IT)Uriiers in the ~byliG~Ca;r;l~Di;·c~k~e~rso;n,~l;cs;t~if~yin~g~a~t ~b;y~pr~ay~e~r~s.liiiiiiiiiiiiii:~--~l=800s=.liiiiiliWnMiiU~~;==~~i~~i=========:::~ WOOOMeWIOU.HT liOHAUOAY''*MI HUMTINGTON C9ITH Police said he carried an out· localed. took !he man up to Santa Cruz area. \Vi~ the ,. 1 of-state driver's license issued the station's master control on COO\'iction last year of Herbert r to Richard Geiger. 20. Silver the third floor \\'here the \V. ?llullin. the remaining Spring. !\td.. but • that lht': envelope was delivered. wisolved slayings in that area kidnaper's description did not Balzer said the -man. six feet \\'ere cleared up. fit the one on the license. tall, 170 pounds. about 27 -----------i NOOe of the. kidnap victims years old and wearing a dark Kids Like to \rere injured, officers said. overcoat, w~ that he "'as Sears . . . amled and displayed th e ·A. sk A . .J!rl,)'..,~ ---•·Term Reeet.,ed-_sb_ape __ o_r_a.gunc_c. __ in_h\!_pock_e_L _______ -:::--1 SAN DIEGO -=-A man v.•ho tried to eXtort.Sl0.000 fron1 the Randolph A. 1-learst family by offering information abo_ut the kidnaping of th e 1 r dau~hter "·as s e n I e n c e d Tuesday to five year.~ t::> life . Where Thrift Is Always In. Style Located on the Lower Level . I in state prison. Superior Court J u d g e George A. Lazar he!lrd the trial of Samuel L. AfcG raw. 24. llr'ithout a jury and passed sentence.· e Sclwol Slrlke PASADENA -The first strike in the history of the Pasadena Unified Sc h o o I District apparently had little effect on the operation Of classe!. but some high schools suffered large student absen· teeis m. The one-day walkout Tuesday was organized by the Pasadena Federation o f Teachers and school o!icials said fe\\·er than 20 percent of all classroom tea chers toc.k aprt. Teachers said they '"ere protesting recent :iclioo'i of the school board in cluding the dismissal of 171 proh.1tionary teachers. e Guard Sei::ed HOlL Y\\'000 -A security guard has been arrested in connectkln with the death of a man \\'hose body "·as found stuffed in a plastic tarpau1in in Burbank . Author it ies arrested Burleigh T. Jev.•ell of Los Angeles on 11onday. He was accused of shooting Ronald Lee Kessler. whose body \\'as found in a trailer Saturday. Kessler's widow. l\larianna, \\'as arres lOO Sund ay 'light in connection "'ith the murder. e E111be::::/eme11t S TOCKTON -Paul Shepherd , 63. convicted or embezzling over SI00.000 while treasurer of the Knights of Phythias Grarxi LOOge, has been sentenced to slate prison. llRllDUll TION "74 a gift of jewelry Authentic .·\mPriean Indian Rings in Solid Sil,·1·r What beller way to show )'Our apprecl allon to the graduate tha n 11tilh a genuine ha nd-crahed Americ:an In- dian Turquoise ring? A very special purchase o( lhese ,litenuine sterling silvt>r and turquoisi! riags allov.·s us 10 of· fer them to you 31 't<;. off lhe regula r prict>s tha l they are sold for by ihe trading pos1s ln Arizona & New ~l ex1co. AL1. Hl:\'G S are genuine sterling ~1 1\'e r with genuinr 1urqU01se. each v.·as hand fashioned by the S111va jo or Zuni lr1bes. :\ll o\.her Indian je .... ·elr y in our l'llOck at simil ar :>3\'tng~. 66•. :>pec.1,il grou p <?f nng > many ~tyle, o1nd "'<.:~ .ill ,1~·rlong Mlver and genurnP. !urqu11",.. Regular $14 NOW $8 ~pec•al group r,t ring, m.inv <.l~le.; •nd ••l l'~ .ii! >terlln.: ~d\Cf & genuine 1u1quo"" Regular $29 NOW $17 • LO.VG Bl:'ACll, 4313 ;\/la11t/r A. w. •~,\;\'TA. AN A., 20J5 N,J\la1" • '/OH fl,\NC1';, ;1,145s Jla111thlN'nr. Bf. • l\'l//1'1'11-:11 , 12918f'hll11d<1/phla81. • ,\'f:\Vl'ORT 81\,t C/f. I 1 Fa~h. Sq. • TOR I/A NCf:, Drr Anon 1''<1•hl<>n Sq, • 11.f:OON OO 111':At.:ll •. 'O. Boy Cr"'"' • OR,\VC.'1'. Tl'l~o\lall ofOTQ11f~ • ,\,\' All J:.'1,\1, ,\ 114/'lrim f'la:a • 1..0.~ ,\S(;f;1..f:s , A rro f'la:a M&STll CH&IGl • •ANICAMlllC&IO • SOI CllDIT PlAN J lilalllts dally to San Frwlsco. or go with 1he unolficial state bird to Sacrame nto. Come and get 'em .Call yo.urtravel ag ent or PSA. P$A1fvesJ0Ualftt. J I " ., Misses' Nylon Bikinis Only! Scoop them up! All nylon tricot with elastic waist- band. long wearing. In sizes 5, 6, 7. {~ I ,_._.,•' . 'l. . 3-way Convertible Bra Sears Price 197 Wear as criss.cross, halter" or regular bra, Nylon tri- cot. Contoured. Sizes 34 and 36 A, 8, C. Other sizes available. ' Non-cling Formal Length Half.Slip 197· Prices Effective throug Soturdo'y, June 8 Made of Antrori® Ill nylon so it's non-cling. Smartly trimmed. Sizes S, M, L. rc::::l So. Coast Plaza ~ 3333 Bristol St. Phone 540.3333 Buena Park 81 SO la Polma Ave. Phone 828-4400 - ' ' parfy dresses for juniors . .. high in fashion low • • 1n price 88 Great styles in the long length. Bare-backs. sleeveless, short sleeved and sci>op nec k looks. In fashion fabrics and colors. Junior sizes. -... ... , ••• ~-:., ,._ 1 ... -., .. ~: ,.,, -,•·, :f :1 ••• •:t •.· ,, ' 1----------·-,· "'\~ All -Nude Panty Hose . ·69~ All·sheer from heel to toe. Mesh knit nylon. One size fits · 95 to 150 lbs . Fashion colors. Uu Seetr• lfevolving Charge Orange 2100 N. Tustin Ave. Phone 637-2 100 Stor41 Mo\.fi.t Mefteler lhfll Sotvrfty •JO 4.M. t• t:JO P.M,, Svfldoy 12 Ne.it ,. J P.M. I •., ... .. ,. ' . ' . • ,<{ I I I