HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-06-06 - Orange Coast PilotI
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DAILY PILOT '
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THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 6, 1974
VOL. '1, Nt. fJ1, J SECTMNCI, G ,AO•I
a~her Power __ _
' o.+tr ""'' ,,,,, , ... ,. SPREADING 'tHE WORD -Teachers ol, Laguna Beach Unified
School District, who recently ·staged a wildcat one-day strike, fol-
lowed by a large newspaper ad to air their salary grievances, con-
tinue the campaign by picketing. They appeared in various locations
about town Wednesday.
Boy, 12, Hangs Self;
'Didn't Like Baseball'
CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP). -Yo~ng
Richard Blust Jr. told his mother his
arm hurt and he didn't want to go"to
baseball practice' for the St. .Catherine
Roman ciitholic Churc h team. ·
Atrs. Blust told her son he had the
ri!sponslbllity to show up and tell the
manager. The boy vanished , and !\)a
parents spent the night looking · for him,
ill vain . · '
On Wednesday, the body of the 12.year·
old Was found banging in a wooded area
neer his Cincincnati home. A baseball
·lRViNE CAPTURES
BASEBALL CROWN
SPRINGFIELD, 111.-Gory ll'h<elock,
Jt.ff Mallnoff and Keith Bridges paced
the UC lrvlne ba~boll team to a repeat
performance Wednesday night •s NCAA
college division champions.
For detaJl1 of the OMI ga1ne, 100
today'• •Port.! section, page 29.
glo\•e was nearby.
"Fm not sure he really liked sports. at
··IMst not baseball .'' said the tea1n
·inanage'r, Carl Buschbaohcr. "He wasn't
that enthusiastic about It."
"He \Vas a starter on the team . but
several \Vceks ago he . began missing
practices. Then he didn't show up for one
ol our 1ames and I started someone else
lit hi• place.
"I v;ondcr if I pushed him too hard?
I've been asking 1nysel! that over and
over again since It happehed and C'.ln
honesUy say I don't thlnt l!Q."
· "His father has a very responsible
posl tJon as athletic director tor the
church. He coordinites our entire sports
program, \\•hich has a $10,000 to Slt,000
budget. But he didn 't push him that bard
eilbcr."
Sister Paula, principal of lhc school.
said fhe ~vcnlb grader was a Boy Scout.
served t.tium and bad a paper rou te In
addition to playing sports.
"He "'as always cheerful and good
humored ::ind perrormed his duties at
?.1ass very faithfully.'' she said. "He was
thi! kin~ of boy you never thought thls
~ould Mppen to:"
1'
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Gr~d Jury
Asks Drunk
.
Driving W a1·
By WULIAM SCHREIBER
ot n.. c.i1r l'llot st1tt
The Orange County Grand Jury urged
the Board of Supervisors Thursday to
wage all-out war on drunken dri ving in
the county.
In a thJ't'e-page report to supervisors.
jury foreman A. E. "Bill " Gazlay said
the county recorded 125 alcohol·related
traf(ic deaths last year.
"And it is estimated the cost or
aloohol·related motor vehicle accidents
approached $7 million ," Gazlay added.
The main thrust of the jury's
rCCQmmendation \vas aimed at gett ing
the board to coordin3te a comprehensive
program designed to reduce the number
of deaths, injuries and property damage
caused by drinking drivers.
· Gazlay said the problem is getting
V.'orse instead of better despite work by
several county agencies and lhe grant
programs to solve it.
Referring to a)'08dside survey made a
year ago in Huntington Beach. Gazlay
sakl one out of every four drive rs on
weekend evenings had been drinking and
one of evl'f')' 25 was legally under !he
innuence of alcohol . ·
"A comparision of this and other data
suggests that an-~ls occur in mly one
percent of the occurrences or driving
under the influence." Gazlay said.
Of !hose arrested. Gazlay said 60
percent a.re classified as problem
drinkers or alcoholics in need of
treatment and the other 40 percent are
labeled "misusers" who need education.
Among other things, the j u r ;y
rerommends:
-A public alucation effort to solicit
public support.
-A specialized education. effort aimed
at drinking drivers.
-A cooperative program bety,·ccn
criminal justice and health agencies to
detect and intervene in bchavorial
patterns of problem drinkers.
-A referral center acting As a hub for
all processing and refe rral activities.
-A means ror evaluating t h e
!See DRINKING, Page tl
BASE1tIENT COiUES
V P IN THE IVORLD
LONDON , (UPI) -Th< D a i I y
Telegraph said today It spcilted a sign In
a Hampshire store reading: "Durlng
reorganization. the basement will be
round on tM tU"st noor."
.... '
' r-----------------------------i'
Newport Vessel
--swift~ Swiftest
In Guadalupe Ra~e
·-
Thais Get Man
So Sotry-Hareni Not Per1nitted .
BANGKOK (UPI) -Police have arrested a Japanes1;? business·
n1an and accused him of maintaining a harem in northern Thailand.
Police said they charged Toshio Tamamoto, 41 . al a Bangkok
hotel after hi s return from the northern city of Chiang A1ai.
Tamamoto was first arrested in January 1973 and charged with
keeping six girls, aged 8 lo 17, al his residence in Chiang Mai, 350
miles north of Bangkok. A 13")'ear-old girl told police she had been
kept against her will and raped on numerous occas ions. After his
arrest, Tamamoto was released on bail. whi ch he jumped.
At the time. he said he had paid the traditional dowry for the
girls at prices ranging from $250·$500. '""·
Police were tipped he returned to Thailand in A1a y when a taxi
driv er said Tamamoto was ac ting suspiciously. The driver told police
Tamamoto was wearing a wi g when he delivered him to hi s Ban g·
kok hotel.
Swift First to Finish
..
011 Sales
To Youths
By KA THY Cl..Af\CY
Of It'll DlllY l'llot Slltl
Si:i:ty·four suspec ted narcotics pushers,
aged 13 to 42, "·ere arrested late
\Vednesda y by \\'estminster police in a
mass crackdo"n on drug sales ~
teenagers.
T'he arrest roundup clima xed eight
months of police investigation involving
200 undercover drug purchases valued at
$-'.OOJ, police said. ·
The crackdov.·n was similar to one
made last ITIOlllh by Fountain Valley
police where 62 suspected narcotil'"S
pushers \\iere arrested and one in la te
April in Irvine \Vhere 130 persons were
arrested on suspicion of various drug
In Guadalztpe Isle Race
.r-1'hargcs.
r ( Sgt. J\1anue l l·finson. coordinator of !he
\Vestminster pixljcct. said unifor1ned
\Vestminster officers set out at dusk to
arrest \Vcs!mins!er susµccl s.
By ALl\10N LOCKABE\'
IOlllMI Editor
S\\'ifl. a Ne~'port-41 coskippered by
Gavle Post and Jack Mall inckrodt ol
Baiboa Ya cht Club, slipped across the
finish line at 4:50 :15 p.m. Wednesday to
capture elapsed time honors in Bnlboa
Yacht Club's 600-mllt> Guadalu pe Island
race for the second straight.year.
Swift's e\api!led ti me was four days,
£our hou rs, 50 minutes and 15 seconds.
•
Roof er Plunges
To Deatl1 Fro1n
_Building To,ver
A 24-year-old Laguna Beach roofer
plunged 1"4 stories to his deatn. Wednesday
from the top of a condominium to1,1.·er
being erected in Laguna Hills Leisure
\Vorld wtien a ronstruction lift failed. Ro~rt Nichols Of 662 Oak St.., was
catapulted from the root while trying lo
brake the caged hoist assembly which
was attached to the gide of the structure
on ruMers.
A spokesman for the Orange County
Coroner'!! OUice ~aid the load of
materials being lilied by the hoi~1
was too heavy and \\'hen Nichols applied
the brake. the hoist Y.1'1S ripped from the
building, one of 1-v.·o under consttuclion.
The entire rig and load plunged to the
earth below, crushi ng the vicitm \\'hen It
londcd.
ltt Wl\S rushed to Sad d l e ba c k
Community llospitRI, hu1 was declared
dead oo arrival of massive head and
Internal lnjurlcs.
Police in Fountain Val ley. Garden
beating her las t
than two days.
year's time by more Grove, Santa Ana and Huntington Bea<:h
assisted by arresting suspected pushers
As elapsed time winner, Swift wins the
Endymion Trophy, a model of Donald
Douglas' famed schooner of the same
n."'\me dedicated ~y Los Angeles Yacht
Club. She saved her time on the other
t~·o international offshore rule racers lo
~·in the Vilan C.Ouch rt1emorlal trophy.
Second boat to finish was Aquavit. a
Morgan.-42 skippered by !\1ilt Baehr,
Galifomia \'acht Club, at 4: 17 a.m.
today.
Bob \Villiams· Lapworth44 Talis man,
BYC. finished at 6:38 l'!.m. and is the
possihte winner oC 1he Dally Pilot trophy
for besl corrected tin1e in th e
performance handicap racing' f I e e I
di vision.
lier closest competition was the
lslande.r-37 Pele skippered by Jim Emmi,
Bah ia Corinthian Yacht Club. At the 8
a.m. roll call Pelc was off Dana Point
and ~·as expected to fin ish sometime
before noon It the wind picked up. She
hod until 10:38 a.m. to save her time on
Talisman.
The rest of I.he II-boat Dee l was spread
out from :.> to 8 miles from Newport
and experiencing extremely light air.
2 'So ught in Slayin gs
•kCOIL\UCK . S.C. ( UP l I
Authorities wert> searching tod~y for
"two hippie types" in the slaying of three
F't . Co,.don, Ga. soldiers whof;e mutilated
bodies \\·ere found near a reservoir
Sunday. Police said compo&itc drawings
htid been made o( two persons who may
hnvc been Involved In the slaylngs.
'
in 1heir cities.
Police had "·a rran ts for 27 juveniles
and 48 ad ul!s. all charged \Vlth sales of
narcotics. Hinson said. Officers today
~·ere conti nuing to search for the nine
remaining suspecls.
F'orty-tv»o v.·ere rrom \Vest minstcr, one
(See PUSUl<:RS, Pa ge !)
OrA~oast:
Weal her
Lo\\' clouds and fog nig ht and
mor ning hours wilh hnzy sunshine.:
In the afte1·noon Friday. Only par·
lial clearing on the beaches. Slight·
\y v.•armer inland. Highs upper fiOs
at the beaches to low 80s inland.
INSIDE TODA l'
TJ1e 1oedding of Sly of "Sly and
f'arthly Stu11e " 1vas atte11ded by
23,000 fo1u 011d ii was o huge
.!VcCe.!S. POllce arre.sted 13 per·
so11s for trespass, six 1vomen
fninted. n11d fis tfigli ts broke out
sporodica llu. S1C1Ty, Page 4.
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z DAILY PILOT ' Thuriday, J1111t &, 1974
I~peac4ment P~~el Probes ~Nixo,n's W~retaps
\\'ASl·UNGTON l UPll -The lloUM'
J udiciary r on11nlttee studied e\idl'ncc
todAY to see if there \\'Q:s in1pcarhab!c
misconduct in 17 "·iretafl5 1.'0!1dfcted on
President Nixon·s orders fron1 1969 to
1971.
Although Nixon has cited nat ional
secur11y as justificat ion for the \\'iretn ps,
so1nc CQmm i!lec n1embers said the
lnformation ga thered had nothing to do
With securit y,
Reports on the results of lhc "'iretaps.
according lo Rep. Hobert Drin<1n 11).
Afass. ). "show nothing in \' o l vi n g
Fnisnl's B1•otl1er
d!sloyBll)' or n:i lional security , ·but lhings
about their personal li\·es that were
degrading. They had no busine-ss gell ing
JURY 'S VOTE NAMING NIXON
CONFIRMED. Sto ry, J•ge 4
that kind of stuff .. ,
llep. Joshua Eilberg (0-Pa. l, said
\\'hile House documents presented to the
comn1ittee in a closed impeachment
session sho"·ed llenry A. Kissinger
suggested 1he nomes of the 17 wiretap
victilns iii his role ~ Nixon's national
President Holds
Talk With Arab
By ll ELEN THO~I AS
\\'ASHI:\"GTO~ (UPI l -President
Nixon conferred for 45 mniules today
Arnbia. one of 1he five nati ons he v.111 be
vi.Sit ing on a S\\"ini;: lhrough the ~liddle
East st arting nc).l \\"ttk.
Sccrl'tary of State ~lenry A. Kissinger
joined ~ixon in the Presid ent's O\'al
office for the 1nceting "'il h Fa hd, half-
brother c;,( Saudi King Faisal. Fahd plays
a major rote in maki ng Saudi oil po!icy
l>ecci.use he is the nation 's int erior
minister and second deputy prime
1ninister.
Fahd came to \\"ashington 11·ith other
senior Saudi officials to discuss 11·ays 10
·Cle01:k .Sc t enzus, ...
S/1,ot tn Death
LONG BEACH tAP l-A 72-year-
old great-grandmother scream<.'d
and then was fat.ally shot late
\Vednesday in the small grocery
siore "''here she v.·orked part time.
Long Beach police said Dorothy
Janicek may have lrightened a
potential robber \\'ho panicked, shot
the "·oman and then fled . Officers
said no money was taken. and that
they had no clues to the assailant 's
identity.
~trs. Janicek, shot in the
abdomen. died at a hospital 1112
bours afler being shot. . .
Suspect Chorg-ed
,(n Three So vl1ge
~a11ipsite Deaths
;:SALINAS (UPI ) -A 23-year-old
~linas man "''as arrested today and
•diarged "'ith the murder of three teen·
·4gers Sunday at a campsite in Los
;P.adres National Forest.
" The suspect was identified as Stephen
llc1mmack.
·, 1Authorities declined TO gi\·e any details
of the in\'estigation which led to the
west. Hammack "'·as picked up at 8:30
il!m. by ltiontercy County sheriff"s
1feputie'i.
• :He "·as accused of the bludgeon ~urders of Wyatt }lanson. 17. Patrick p~ll. 18, and Kathleen McQlr\. 17.
• ifhe three young persons were viciously
beaten to dea1h and their bodies dumped llJ tv.·o rivers Sunday night. One of the
,\'1ctims had his eyes gou ged out.
; "The killing look place in the scenic
YIJ:royo Scco Gorjte south of Sahnas
where the teen-agers had apparently
Booe to relax and swim.
. IJ'he bodies of the two young men were
thrown into a creek at the campsite. and 1pe. body of fl1iss ~1cCort was dumped in 'pc Salinas Ri\"cr 30 miles north.
"
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expanding economic and technical
cooperation "'ith the United States. Fahd
also spelled out Saudi Arabian military
defense requirements.
The conference preceded a v.·orking
luncheon in the \\'hi te House with about
100 officials of both nations invited.
\\'cdnesdav the President laid do"''n his
strategy for \\'Orld p e a e e · at
commencement ceremonies at the U.S.
naval academy.
He rebuked members of Congress v.·ho
ha\'e demanded changes in So\·iet
domestic policies as a price for detenle
and said the United Staes. must not
inlervene in the internal policies of
other countries.
He "'arned that detente cannot be
• taken for granted and said "11·e cannot
gear our foreign policy to trans-
formation of other societies. In the
_!!.UC!~ge.i. ~r first ~PQnsibHit:t.,!"USt
be ·the· preven ion 0 a wa Wat coura-
destroy ·all societies."
After returning to \\.'ashlngton. Nixon
met 11·ith a delegation of American
Jcv.•ish leaders and reaffinned to them
the Administration's pledge of c:>ntinu ed
economic, military, and political support
in the ~lidd1e East.
r-;ixon begins his good"'ilt tour or the
~tiddle East Monday. fl ying first to
Salzburg. Austria for a two-da y rest stop
before arriving in Cairo \Vednesday.
Egyptian leaders are expected to tum
out cheering lhrongs for ~ixon, v.·ho will
be "'"elcomed as the first American
President to visit Cairo since the Big
Three conference attended by Franklin
D. Roosevelt in 1943.
The President also •.'ill make overnight
stops in Saudi Arabia, Syria, Israel and
Jordan before returning to \\'ashington
June 18.
Ni1on will spend about a v.·eek bark
in the United Stales before taking-off
again June 25 on the first leg of his
i-ummit journey to the Soviet Union. He
"·ill make a rest stop in Europe before
arriving in Moscow to begin his talks
"'ith Soviet Communist party leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev, J une 27.
The President. according to administra-
tion officials, may make a brief stop in
Japan at the windup of his stay in the
Soviet Union and will then go to San
Clemente for the Fourth of July.
From Pagel
PUSHERS ...
from Fountain Valley, eight from Garden
Grove. nine from Santa Ana and five
from Huntington Beach, Hinson reported.
Officers .,..•ere told in a pre-sweep
briefing to arrest juveniles by 10 p.m ..
and most of the other 'E!rrests were
completed by midnight. ~linson aaid,
noting the oper ation "went smoothly."
The parents of each ju\'enile were
given a packet ,of information about the
arrest, HinsM said, includin g a special
telephone number where officers were on
duty to provide additional details.
He estin1ated about 50 calls \Yere
handled throughout !he evening. Office rs
on !he phone lines had copies of all arrest
reports and were able to explain arrest
and court procedures, Hinson added.
\Vestminster police started t h .e
narcotics crackdown because of
increasing drug traffic in the city,
particularly around teenage hangouts
and Westminster high school campus,
Hinson explained.
Police said they did not use any
undercover agents on the high school
campus.
Included in the drug purchase:3 were
marijuana. hashish. LSD, heroni. co-
caine. PCP, amphetamlnc.o; and seronal.
Jlinson said marijuana sales "·ere the
most frequent.
Irish Brewery
Workers Strike
DUBLIN (UPI/ -Irishmen tod•y
41faced the prospect ~ a thirsty wetkend
.,..,ith supplies of draught Guinness beer
drying up in the LH!ey-Side Brewery's
fi rs t strike ln 215 years.
Some, J,700 tmployes walked out for
hiJ::hcr pay l\vo wetks ago In the !lrsl
industrial shutdov.·n of Iha bre"'·ery slnct
it was founded by Arthur GulnntM in
1m.
Stocks are starting to run out, pub
O\\'ntt'!I said, not only of Guinness porttr
and slout but nlso of rival draught beert
because the Guinness brewery Is also the
source of the aas cyllnder':g; used 10
dispense thtm.
security .:idvlser. lie has den I e d
propo!il'lg 1he ~·iretaps.
Rep. Jack Brooks (D-Tex.), sal~
K.iWnger, JI . R. Haldemtn, 1hen White
Jlouse chief of staff, and Alex.ander ~f.
llalg Jr., then Kissinger'a assistant,
suggested the wiretap plan io Nixon.
The victims · iAcludea White •rouae
personnel, State Department olfl<:lals and
newsmen , u number of members
reported.
"It seems lo me a serious question v.•hy
they 1vere putting wiretaps on people like
Joe Kraft," Brooks said.
Krall Is a 1yndicated columnist.
Some other names ha,'e seeped Into
publk: •knowledge. William Safire, a
former presidential speechwrit.er, and
1'forton Halperin. then an aide to
Kissinger., were among them.
atcmben of lhe Comn\ltlce fouud little
stomach for trying to make a.n
' impeachable offense out of ' Nixon's
acceptance of a '2 million campaign
pledge from milk producers that
ooincided With presidential adion worth
milliom to them.
No member emerging from a closed
'
da)'-long con lderation of the milk case
Wcdne.!Sday "''as willing lo charge that
Nixon·s order to boost 1nilk price
supports, contr.:iry IO tbe advice of his
SL'Cretary of Agrlcullure, waa a quid pro
quo for the dairymen's contrlbotlon.
Rep. Wiley Mayne CR·lowa), said he
took tbe opportunity to complain that the
lmpet1chment inqiJry's legal sta!f had
not pointed out thnt hair a mUllon dollars
in dairy conlrlbutions fl owed in 197~72 to
congressmen ·urging the 111,unc actlo11 as
Nixon took ..
Mayne said "the concidenec of timing"
Di ll, l'liet Ili ff l'M lt
in 'Nixon's cast "wns not enough to
su!ltaln an impeachable offense."
The members. meellng Wednesday for
!heir 10th day bchlnd clMl'Ci doors, heard
three tapes about the cootrlbutlon from
1nitk pl'oducers' COOJl:eratlves, including a
50-minute 111ceting bcl"'ecn Nixon ruJd
ofrlcials of his adn1lnlstration and 18
representatives of the dairy Industry.
At that meeUng on March 2.'J, 11171 ,
Nixon thanked the dairymen for the.Ir I
"support." Later tha t day, al a n1eetlng
with seven advisers, he m::ide the
dccisk>n I() boost milk price supports 10
85 percenl of parity.
Vets Ret1tr11
To Beaclies
Of Nor1nr11tdy
0~1AHA BEACll, Nonnandy, France
(U PI ) -Thirty years a(ter thei r longest
day, Allied war veterans led by five-star
Gen. Omar N. Bradley, 81, returned to
the D-Day beaches of Normandv today
and paid tribute to falle n con1rades.
At Bayeux, American old soldiers were.
jOJned by a French delegation led by
Armed Forces Minister Jacques SoufOet
and walked in solemn procession to the
~femoriaJ of the Liberation to lay
wreaths.
At Omaha Beach, where Ameritan
troops landed . there was a religious
service at the U.S. cemetery und another
wreath-laying at the f\ationa t Guard
Monument which "'as specially erected
for the 25th D-Day anniversary. Furtlier
ceremonies took pla ce at Point Du lloc.
where the Rangers stonned. ashore and
climbed an in1possible cliff.
The 90th Division "'as honored al
Carenlan and Gen. l\faxv.·ell Taylor's •
air.home troops at St. l\fere L'Eglise,
\\'here a pri vate first class once dangled
by his parachute from the churc h steeple
and watched hand·to-hand fighting go on
in the square below.
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO FIREMEN TRY IN VAIN TO REVIVE BULL DOZER VICTIM
Grading ChKker At New P•rk Wis Crushed To Death Beneath Heavy Rig Wednesday
A total of 130,000 men la1.Jed on the
Nonnandy beaches June 6, 1944. Thrc.rc
"'ere 9,000 casualties, including 3,000
dead.
It \\'as history's biggest seabome
operation, commanded by the then
General of the Anny Dwight D.
Eisenhower, and proved the beginning of
the end for Adolf Hitler, funnelling
eventually onto the shores of France a
body of human beings larger than the
population of Pittsburgh.
CdM Students Protesting
Heavy Smok~ it1 Rest1·oom
Bulldozer Kills
Groding Che~ker
In Cnpistrono
Among · the American veterans who
came to Nonnandy to re-live the day
"'ere Bradley. Taylor. Gen. ~1ark Clark,
Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Gen. Ira C.
Eaker and' i-epreserltatives of seven U.S.
Veterans groups. Smoking may really have become
l:lazardous to the health of students at
Corona de! h-1ar High School. Newport-
h-fesa school trustees v.•ere t o I d
\\'cdnesday night.
"Non-smoking kids are being driven
out of the .b.al hrootns by Ufe: smoke."
complained Michael ~fessenger. the
school's student representative, during a
board session.
?ifessenger, a senior. said he represents
a small committee of students who arc
trying to find a solution to the problem.
"There's only one bathroom on campus
now that hasn't been taken over by the
smokers," he said. He said aboul 15
percent of the students smoke.
Trustees listened but said they can't do
much about it.
Apparently neither can school officials.
~1essenger said security checks of
bathrooms are ineffective because the
smokers maintain a lookout. He also said
that tiller and damage from cigarettes
somet imes force the school to close a
bathroom for repairs.
Messenger said his group believes the
ooly solution is to have a special area set
aside !or smokers so they won't bother
the other students.
"The administration has re jected this
proposal ," he said.
Messenger urged the board to support
passage of Senate Bill 71. which calls for
designated smoking areas to be set aside
in high sdlools. subject to the approval
of individual school boards.
"The on1y problem with SB 71 i! that it
requires parental pennission a n d
therefore creates :in e n f o r c e m e. n t
problem," ltlessenger said.
"I don 't think it ll>ill pass without the
pa_rental pennission clause, howev.er," he
said.
From Pagel
DRINKING . ••
effectiveness of the system.
-A fiscal an-angement for !he
operatioo of referral aM treatment
programs. A $25 to $40 client fee is
suggested.
Gaz lay suggested that all efforts be
cOOrdinaled by the Alcoholism Services
Position o! the Department of llfental
Health. The jury also s u g g e s t s
appointment of an interagency advbory
committee.
SHE'S A REAL
~
FL l'ING TIGER
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A lemale
Siberian tiger Is geuing a free airlift -
by the Flying Tiger Lines.
The airline donated its ~rvle<!s In
order that the tiger, named Sedova, can
be moved FrldBy from lhe San Diego 7m
to !he Fleishacker Zoo In San Francisco,
where i;he will provide companionship
for Temujln, a yw-old male Sibtrlan
tiger.
,
As~ if girl 3'udents have •. the sall\C
probl.-n in their bathrooms. Met:senget
said, r'Girls have a v.'Orse problem.''
He didn 't elaborate.
'Easy' Judge
Loses His Job
S,\N FRANCISCO (UPI) -A
judge who gave an easy sentence to
a rapist wrui defeated Tu~y in
his bid for re-election to the bench.
Judie Bernard Glickleld ran
behind Assistant District Attorney
Robert J. Maurer and attorney
Edward L. Cragen, who will meet
In a November runoff for the
judgeship.
Glicl&feld sentenced a rapist in
1900 to 52 weekends in jail and w11s
censured in 1971 by the state
Sup reme Court for ' ' c o n d u c t
prejudicia l to the administration of
justice." He had called the victim a
"horse'i> ass.'
2500 W. COAST HWT.
HIWPOIT IEACH
l'tf0t4E 642-7076 ...... __,, . .__
A SS-year-old grading checker at a
major San Juan Capistrano parks project
"'as crushed to death beneath the track
of a bulldozer shortly before noon
\Yednesday.
Ephraim B. Pectol or Anaheim,
suffered major head and chest injuries
and was declared dead at the scene of
the tragedy on the grounds of the new
Junipero Serra Park, coroner's aides
said. '
Workmen Who witneseed the accident
said that Pectol had ·been making sure
that grades were dooe according to plans
in the westerly portion of the park and
was · standing cloie to the path of the
bulldozers and dump trucks working the
site.
A dozer operator who was not
identified made a sharp right turn while
descending a slope and the blade or his
tractor' caught the grading checker,
throwing him beneath the left track of
the heavy machine.
Witnesses said that because of blind
spots from the driver's seat, the driver
thought nothing was amiss until he saw
the victim's hard hat roll from beneath
1he tractor.
U.S. Ambassador to France. John Irwin
was among them.
Rusted metal skeletons and an
occasional slab of concrete poked
through the twirling sand. the last
vestige of Hit ler's fortress Europe. Past
rows of white crosses. lhe nearby fields
of Nonnandy bloomed with spring
flowers.
Greeks Honor
Big Jolin Way ne
ATIIENS (AP ) -Athens' 5-foot-2
Mayor Dimitrios Ritsos had to
practically stand oo tiptoe in presenitng
the key to the Greek capital to Hollyv.'OOd
movie star John Wayne "'ho stands over
six feet tall.
Here to promote one of his California
antipollution business ventures, the
Newport Beach actor hea rd himself
eloquently extolled for his acting,
especially for his Western roles.
"Thank you, mayor,'' Wayne replied.
ever the epitome of the taciturn
outdoorsman.
IN NEW'Ott l'IOOUCI VILUGI
1601 ~ITILYD.
COSTAMfSA 642-9004
CORNED BEEF
OR
"IUOH GUSTO"
. :~~~:1
SCHWEIGER ·~
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES
EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAINS from BORDEAUX
If .,...,.. • c.....-r SAUVIGtfON '"' ........ c•'t ...... lo
-'•• fM IOIDUUX SAU ... °" .t WIHIMIH'S NOW! " ITALIAM SALAMI '
Re9. $449
' 3.98 .... ,.. '
s1•• lb.
lb. ~Q;iil~~~~~f,
lMS WllrS CHHSI RAMIS
:~Jc™~~~ LONGHOR~
• DOMESTIC SWISS < '; CHEDDAR -~
Yow $179
; Choice lb.
"'~i.itlk Witt.C...-' . -~
R•CJ.
1.99
r-• anc.-• s•l£ l'f>T<:C ,,. l;ll;)lllt r. r.>U'*
IARGAIHS UMDEtl SJ l'9 IOmE
~Ag.y' s29s 1967 CHATEAU TOURTEAU s31 s& ;>r -tSt. George, SI, Emillonl
IARGAIHS UHDEll SS l'9 IOTTLE • ~..£ 5495 1967 CHATEAU laFLEUR S5J46 }l/1;;i _ BECAOE (Haut·Ml!OOcJ
-. -~ 5495 191ocH•r••u rnoNouor-ss346 ~ ;;J LALANDE (St Eslephe)
IARGAIHS UHDEll SI PEtl IOmE s59s 1970 CHATEAU BATAllEY 56426 15th Grow1h, Pao1Uac)
< • ~ 56 95 ' 1967 GRANl>l'UY·LACOSTE SJSD6 ;.tQ'-' /IS!h Growlh·Pau1Uacl
COWOM IXP1W WIO, 6 12
~~"i .~ SJSO 1966 Ch~:a.,,u~:~":~re .sgi 00 ,......JCS";;JV (Grand Cru-$1. Emihonl
~· •
I)
At--You~
Service
A Sunday, Wrdne5day and Friday
lo'c111ur•
Of the 011Uy Pilot
Cur (1 probCt11n? 'fllc11
/lat D101n. Pa'
~letl1n11e Energy
your
DEAR PA1'; I know you've had column
items about solar and wind energy , l'n1
interested in bo!h and also would like lo
look into powe.r from metha ne gas
energy. Has anyone pub Ii she d
information <ibout all three or lhesc
potential energy sources?
T.V., DANA POINT
Banlam Books ha11 published "The
fllother Eortb News Handbook of
llumcmade Power,'' which gives P'ans
for sun, wind and methane energy
11roduclng devices. The $1.95 book can be
ordered fro m Banta m, 161 Fifth Ave.
New Vork, N.V. 10019. In addition, Issue
No. 26 of Mother Ea rth News describes
an unusual S.rotor wlndmUI being studied
ht Callfor11la. The Ne ws address Is P.O.
Box 70, Jl endersonvllle, N.C. 2.1'1l9.
Arel1ilecls I/Hit
DEAR PAi : As an architect's wife and
a new C31ifornia resident, I'd like to find
out if there is an organization for
architects In Orange County. Both my
husband and I enjoyed belonging to a
group of fellow archilcct families in our .
former sta!c. .
G.N., FOUNTAIN VALLEY
1"be OranAe COuoty braocb ol the
American Institute or Architects is
loca ted a1 •ooo Westerly Place, Newport
Hench. Telephone ~73 for Inform&·
lion about mee tings and activities.
Lndyb11g• Needed
DEAR PAT : My aunt's plum trees are
infested with aphids. I've heard that
ladybugs and praying mantis eat aphids.
Where can I get some for her so she
won't have to spray the trees with a
chemical pci:1icide?
A.ii., FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Contact the Bio Control Company.
10180 l.adv Bird Drive, Auburn, Ca.
9?603. Both. Jadyhugs and praying mantis
cluslers are ava ilable 111 va r y Ing
quantities 11nd delivery is vii air mail.
l'nssparls at Pnrks
DF.AR PAT : I'm o. regular reader "'ho
enjoys your column immensely, but you
made an error recently. A1though Golden
Age passes ~·ere given to senior citizen
postal patrons at post offices last year.
we arc no longer the sales agents. We
still sell the Golden EagU! ~port for
$10, but Golden Age passports now must
be picked up at ll'te National Parks.
11.S., NEWPORT BEACH POST OFFICE
Thanks for the co rrection.· A check \.1'as
made for updated information on tbe
passporls, bu t Incorrect Information W8ii
gi\-·en by aootber post office branch.
·Golden ~Julie
DEAR PAT : \\'here can I get an ap-
praisal of old sheet music? I have 50 or
n1ore popular songs by famous conipos·
crs like Irviag Berlin, publishC'd from
about 1915 lo 1930, plus plain piano Jes.
sons. I would like to sell them, but have
no idea of their ~·orth.
11.W., LAGVNA BEACH
The A~ricana Collectors Shop. Sa nta
Ana. specializes In all varieties of "pa-
per·• A111ericana, Including sheet music.
Its mana~cr s:1ys most posl·l915 music
sheel music has little current value
($1-lo-$2) unless the cover Is ve ry col·
nrrul or rc:itures a picture of an old-time,
f;1mous t•n tcrtainer, soch as Al ,Jol~on.
A1ner/car1u will apuralse and buy your
music. ir ynu wish. but ;vou'd be wiser
to hold on lhe sale for a rew years until
the \'aluc increases.
(.'1Jtl-'C11111er Probe
DEAR PAT: J read recently that the
Fedcrol Trade Commission is
investi~ating itlea and i D v e n t i o n
promotion comp.')nies. Can you provide
furt her infonnation r' out this and m-tere
I can wrile to complain about sueh a
company "'ith which I almosc got
involved.
E. A., El Toro
The FTC's industrywlde ln\'estlgatlon
or cbtse companies wl>I check, among
other things, .,.,.hcther sach services
really bring economic benefit t o
custon1er11, lhe extent of their contact
'"'Ith maflufaet urcrs, the validity of their
evoluallons and the qualifleatlons of
personnel to conduct such rtudies. The
FTC estlmBle11 that lhcR firms do
buslne!l!I in ex:ce!ls of $100 mJllion
unn1u1lly: Con11umers1 commenU on Idea
and lnvenUon-pra moUon c o m p a n I e s
iihould be mailed to Richard C. Fosler,
Bure11u of Consumer Protecllon, n'C,
Wu~blngton, O.C. %85,88. •
Q11ile fl Q11iUet'
DEAR PAT: !lope I'm not too late to
~cl my n.."tme to the rcadtr who rcetntly
requested someone to do quilting. I Mvc
00..-n making quilts ror myself and my
church gro1111 slnce my gra ndmother
taugh t nlc In the J!l30's. Now I would
11ppreclotc 1hc opportunity to make or
fin \i;h quilts ror Individuals to help !lllp-
plcmcnt my rellrernent income.
111.L. rt11d•·ny City
A.I. "111 be contacting yott t6 complete
htr quilts . Olher read,rs can arran11:t
qnllllng Ii. be dnnc for them by \\'tiling t6
~1.L., 3502 \\'ashington Ave., !\tldway
City, Cn. 9'.ZUS.
r'
•
IRVINE IS .•. DANCERS -Young Irvine dancers
will entertain children of al l ages again at 11 a.m.
anl1 2:30 p.m. Saturday in University High School.
Members of the Young Dancer's ~orkshop will re-
peat performances of "Snow White" set to original
music composed by Thomas Whitney of Irvine. Pr~
gram is pa rt o( Irvine Is ... arts festival evenls to-
night through Sunday.
-'-~~~~~~~~~~
Arts S~hedule
'I rvilie Is . .: . ' Fest Continues
Irvine Is . . . arts festival prO(rams
continue tonight through Sundav. liere is
a schedule of events for the remainder of
the second annual citywide cultural
potpourri:
TONIGHT: Program of music dance
and art by Irvine students, 7 p.m. at
Universily ·High School. gytmasium.
AdmisSion free.
FRIDAY: Irvine Communily Theater
preview performance of a nostalgic, SOs
era comedy "llarold," 8:30 p.m. in
Humanities Hall theater, UC Irvine.
nckets are $2 at the door.
SATURDA V: Art Sale and show at
University Hjgh School from JO a.m. lo 4
p.m., admission free. ·
Renaissance Faire, from noon t.o 5 p.m.
on the green at University High School.
Culver at Campus Drive. Costumed
guests admitted free, others 50 cents.
Queen's Processioo, 1 p.m. at Uni High
RenaiMance Faire.
''Snow White" performances by Young
Dancers Workshop at 11 a.m. and 2:30
p.m. in University High School Little
Theater. Tickets are $1.25, at the door.
"Toud:I Me! Feel Me!" exhibit of art
viewers may fondle from 7 to 10 p.m. in
University High School multipurpose
room. Admission free.
Irvine Master Chorale, roncert by
Europeoh touring company at 8 p.m. in'
University High School multipurpose
roo m. Tickets at $2.50 are available at
the door.
SUNDAY: Art sale and show, Uni High
School from noon to • p.m. with
continuous entertainment.
Musical fantasy for children. programs
by pianist Robert Monzingo at 1 and 3
p.m. in choral room, Uni High School.
Parking Meter Forest
'Robin Hood' Gets OK
To Continue His Deeds
METER FEEDER FREED
Miiwaukee's Bruce Vanier
Hammer Slayer
Seized in India
NE\V DELHr (UPI) -Police have
mmounced the arrest of a young
rickshaw driver accused of killing more
than 100 persons with a hammer.
l\OLWAUKEE. Wis. (UPl) -Robin
Hood rides again -through the
downto\vn forest of sturdy wirklng
meters.
Milwaukee's modem-day Sherwood
Forest rogue, Bruce Vanier, resumed his
self·appointed mission o( s a v i n g
motorists from parking t i ck e t s
Wednesday after the city attorney's
office could find no reason to slop his
philanthropy.
Vanier, 23, began his rescue work last
week, pedaling his JO.speed bicycle in
~ search of expired parking meters. When
he spotted one, he plunked in a coin and
left a stamped. self-addressed envelope
under the windshield wiper.
Inside the envelope was a note: "You
have just been rescued from a $5 parking
ticket by the Robin Hood Public Parking
Aid." The notes asked the motori st to
send Vani er $1 to help him continue his
"public service."
However, police caught up \vith Vanier
and ordered him to appear in the city
attorney's office for possible charges of
using a restricted parking area more
than once a day and "throwing a missile
on a vehicle."
"Bruce can continue his opcralion,"
Assistant City Attorney David Felger
concluded after Wednesday's meeting.
Felger, after conferring with an
attorney provided Vanier by the Legal
Aid Society, agreed the ''missiles"
ordinance was too vague, especially since
police also throw "missiles" in the form
of parkirig tickets.
As for putting coins in meters for
someone else, Felger said no ordinance
~vers fhat situation. lf anyone was
violating a law, it would be the motorists
for ovcrparking, he said.
F'elger's interest in the case spurred
him to extensive research, including a
lrip to the library to read ''The EnglJ.sh
Rogue." publisht'd in 1665 'a n d
purportedly lh,e origin of the Robin l-lood
1egend .
Soccer Signups
Slated Saturday
On Soutl1 Coast
Registration for South Coast area boys
and girls interested in joining teams in
the America'n Youth Soccer Organization
YI ill be held on the ne.1t · t~·o ~ at
10 schools In the area.
J_\n estimated &00 youngsters are
predicted for· this year's season,
spokesmen said.
Registration this Saturday and on June
15 will be available at the entrances of
the following schools in the Laguna
Beach, Saddleback and Capistrano areas.
Viejo, Crown Valley, \1arco Forster,
San Clemente High, Thurston Junior
11igh in Laguna Beach and El Morro
School, also in Laguna.
Hours al each school will be from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. and at least one parent
should accompany a youngster wishing to
rekister ror thi program.
ATI teams \\~II be made up with the
idea or retaining neighborhood identity.
and divisions exist , for youngsters
ranging in age from 7 lo 15 years old.
Leather SOFA
... Available in
63" 84 " and 96 " ' . Si zes
s DAIL V PILOT 11
Hughes Do1aation
Nixon Brothers
Won't Testify
\VASlllNGTON (UPJJ
Nixon's two brothers,
Edward, have balked
-President • committee Investigators who traveled to
Donald and the West Coast recently to interview the
at an~"A-·ering Nixons. '
. . The co1nn1ittee. which is due to Issue Senate Watergate Co_mm1ttee uest1ons ••. its_fiual-rf!JlQCL.Jwie . .30, .is.Jn.'l:'.esJigatin£, .. _ •• _
about the mystl'nous $ I O 0, O O 0 the 1969 llukhes gif l to Nixon and what
contribulions to !he resident from happened to it. c.<;. "Bebe" llebow. the
billionaire Hov.·ard Hughes. Presiden!'s closes! friend, has les1iticd
But what l~ir refusal m testify means he accepted the money from Hughes as11
-even their whereabouts -were a campaign contribut ion but returned ft
mystery today. Their lawyer said he unlouched lhree years laler.
didn'I know if they '"'ould return to the But the COl'nmillce was reported to
comm.iltee and couldn't say ...,·here they have heard other testimony recently that
.... ·e:e staying, except that il wasn't al the part of the $100,000 "''ent to one of the
White House. president's brothers and to his secretary,
The Nixon Brothers mc1 briefly with Rose r-.'lary \\ioods. committee Chainnan Sam J. ~rvlrl and
committee la\.\'}'ers Wednesday morning
and were scheduled to return for an
afternoon of queslioning by s t a f f
members.
But they never appeared. and Sen.
ltenTian E. Talmadge (D-Ga.) said it
was his understand ing they had gone to
court seeking to quash their subixicnas.
Did that mean the Nixon brothers
might be risking contempt? "No,"
replied Talmadge, "Not at the moment."
But a search of U.S. District Court
dockets in late afternoon showed neither
of the brothers nor their lawver, Elmer
Stone of l.cls Angeles had filed a
subpoena-quashing suit .
Talmadge told reporters t h e re
appeared to be "some disagrcemen1 ...
some misunderstanding" over t be
longstanding subpoenas for various
records and documents held by the Nixon
brothers. Stone said he believes they are
''in full compliance," but declined tQ
say what the dispute involved.
He stressed they already have given
"extensive ·testimony " under oath to
Musicnl Group
To Aid l1ulinns
Three musical groups will perform in a
special benefit concert to help causes
related to the American Indian in a
program sponsored June 14 by the
California School Employcs' Association.
The groups performing in the event
geared to raise funds for the Danny
Davey F'lIDd "''ill be "~1agpie,., "La
Luz." and "Touchstone.''
The performances ""'ill begin in the
Dana Hills High School ?-.tall and Porthole
theater at 1 p.m. with a donation of $1.50
per person.
The fund which will benefit from the
proceeds Ydll be used to aid Indians on
the Navajo reservations of Ariwna,
. :iipokesmen for the sponsors said.
Lag·u11£t Unit
Tables Baiid
U11ifor11i Bid
F'aced v.•ith more than 100 picketin#,
teachers at \Vednesday 's board meeting.
and lhe realization that more than
S300,000 needs to be cut from the 1974-7~
school budget. Laguna Beach Unified
School District trustees refused to
approve a $6,520 bid on band uniforms.
Dr. Norman Browne, president or the
boarc!,, suggested tabling the item unlil
the next budget study session, set for
next Tuesday.
Representali~es of I.he m u s i c
department. ai d one other teacher
who were all at ihe meeting participating:
in the mass teacher salary protest -
criticizccNhe board's move, and said thq
money should still be spent ·on the
uniforms as previously planned since i~
was from th ls year not next Yeir.
Ro11 Ross, a math and sports teache&
at the high school. added that the mone~
could only be used for "community'
services," and that the trustees should
not "prelend " they could channel it int
teachers ' salaries. ,
Browne explained that even though the
money ~·as budgeled tor lhis year, iC
affects next year's budget becausi;i it
could possibly be used in the endiag
balance which carries over to next year. r
He admitted it C'Ould not be used for:
teachers. but said it could be used for
other community services. thus freeinq
other money to be used elsewhere. •
Trustees unanimously agreed witti
Browne's proposal. and wiJI reexamine'
lhe band uniform request next week
\Vhcn the entire budget is studied Jh
def ail. . ..
Special Saving of 20%
on Schafer Bros. Leather
for Father's Day
.. ~.·
Make Your
Selections from
5 Colors of
Glove Soft Leather
).
I
Sartkaraia . alias Ratan 1..al, alias Black
Decembtr, has confessed murdering 70
persons in tho lhtte Indian states or
Rajasth&l, Punjab and Haryana the past
18 montM. Rajasthan state pollc:e said
"1Mnc9day.
Felger said If anything was needed lo
pin a rap on Milwaukee's Robin llood , It
vtas a citizen's comptainl
your fcivOri le ae.!igner will be happy to assist you.
"He alv.·ays struck at nighl And
allacllod lonely people sletping in the
open during the summer," !{ a i d
Rajasthan police Inspector Gtncrol
Ganesh Singh.
, "Arter killing thcnt with a hammer or
a similar h~vy i~tn1ment , he took tho
vietims'"belongtng!I," Singh said. "Ht is
quite sane and took pleasure In killing his
vittims and later robbing them ."
But Police had none. In fact, all lhe
written evidence was in Vanier's favor -
notes he'd reeeived from motorists
saying, "I hope you get off the hook" and
"God will bless you."
So Vanier pedaled away a free man
and Immediately began r e s c u in g
overparkcd motorists. But, like his
legendary namesake, Vanier c:ouldn 't
elude the long arm or the law completely.
Before the day was over. po Hee
ticketed him for riding an unlicensed
bicycle.
•
H.J.GAl\1\ETf fURNITURE
PROFESSIONAL Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVO.
INTER IOR DESI GNERS Thurs. & Fri. Eves. COSTA MESA, CALIF. . . ·~··0175
-
• ...
.f DAllV PILOT
Jury's Vote to Name Nixon Co~firmed
~ights 011t
For Co1111ty?
UPCOAST, OOWNCOAST: Your
tyeballs are tired of reading all these
a(ler-election political pundit analyses,·
right? Tuesday's late eledioh has · been
over-analyzed and under-voted. Despite
this, I have a starlling election analysis
flash for you:
htore than half the voters made it clear
1hfy don't give a harig or a hoot \llhether
O(ange County street lights keep burning
o~ go dark .
fhere. Now admit it, you di dn't cull
that enlightening bit of intelligence from
Tlfesday's returps, did you?
~egardless, that's what the vote_
in4ficated. Here in Orange County. we
hte these special street lighting
d~ricts spread all about.. Property
owners in them get ta1ed. The taxes get
spent to keep the street lights on.
THUS rr DEVELOPED that in recent
tlmes, the cost or electrical juice began
to outstrip the amount of tax money
coming in.
In the past, this would have been no
Cause for heavy alarm. Some bureaucrat
·\\'OUld have figured out .a way to simply
increase the lighting tax and thus keep
the streets illuminated.
Now, howeve r, we have this Senate Bill
90 in effect. It freezes all property tax
rates unless there is a vote of the people
to up the ante.
Thus it became necessary to put 19
Orange County street lighting district on
last Tuesday 's ballot and ask th!!! people
living underneath the street lights to
boost their property taxes on the average
of 12 cents for l!!ach '100 or taxable
properly value.
APPARENTLY IN 10 of th06e 19 3:re3s.
everybody had a street light shining in
thtir bedroom window. They rejected the
tax increase.
fdany of these anti-street light votes
ca)ne right here in our coastal region .
Sunset Beach. for example, turned do\\11
a _.p_ine-cent street light tax hikl!!. Laguna
Htus and Laguna Niguel voters nixed a
Io>cent boost.
Like"·ise t-.1ission Viejo , a section of
ci6ta Mesa, part of El Toro and a sector in: Rossmoor -Los Alamitos put the
k$Ck on higher taxes for street
illpmination.
• 'llE ONLY BRIGHT SPOT·loh, that's
aJful\ came in the city of Irvine where ttf citizens voted 3,421 yea to only 2,983
"•ls for a ltk:ent boost to finance me
stftet lamps. ,
~ou suspct maybe they have a large
nlllnbcr of prov.•lers out there in that
Jrtine neighborhood.
"nyway. if you look al the v.·hole
C!IDIY picture. 10 street light tax
e~tions got flatoul rejected while only
n e passed.
ficials up in the County Seat
• ,mate this means that ''·ithout !hose
t boosts. some $770,000 v.·ill be
a ilable to pay street light electric bills
ling $1.4 million.
ven I can figure Out this isn't going to
k.
they will just flip the switches off,
1?
ROBABLY WRONG. It is expected
Board of Supervisors will ask the
te for emergency po\ver to boost the i' t taxes anyway .
he governmental reasoning is that to
those lights off would b e
angering the public "health, safety
welfare."
II of which makes you wonder why
y held the election in the first place.
1f/ell, a lot of people are asking that
tljay about the rest of the Tuesday
tillot, too.
UPI Ttl ...... ,.
SUSPECTED SNIPER WHO KILLED POLICEMAN AND WOUNDED 10 PERSONS LIES DEAD
Omah'1 Gun Battle L~sted Five Hour5 as Angry Blacks Harassed Officers
Policeman, Sniper Killed
OA1AHA. Neb. (UPI) -A sniper killed JOO persons. dispel?ied but only af1er
a young policeman and wounded 10 other a \\'Oman \Vas shot. She "·as not tie.
persons during a nearly five·hour gun lieved seriously wounded. Anderson ."Said
battle that ended early today when he he '"'as unccn.ain '"110 fired the shot.
v.·as gunned do\vn by officers while. flee-Throoghout the incident involving Carr,
ing a burning home filled "'ilh tear -gas·. pollce "·ert:"openly harassed by blacks,
Police Chief Richard Anderson said several of \vhom f\aUnted police barrl-
officers opened fire on Elza Carr Jr. 33, cades and y.•alkecl with in firing range
after Carr came out of the home onto a of the sniper, \\'ho \Vas holded up in
closed-in porch and fired n sholgun at the upper story of a two-storv .. house
:he officers crouched outside, wo•Jnding near north Omaha y.·here he had a room.
one po\icem;in. Patrolman Paul Nields; 29, a five-year
Carr's bullet-riddled body fell out of police veteran, \vas shot and killed by
the door onto·lhe steps belo\\'. A Douglas Carr. who was standing on the stairv.·ay
rounty sheriff's deputy recovered a shot.. as Nields attempted to enter th e home
gun on the porch floor inside. "" y.·hiie officers fired tear gas into it.
Angry young blacks, \l:ho had v.•atchP.d Andehon said he authorized Lt. James
the drama during a night flilecl Aith Perry and Sgt. Oiarles Parker to fire
sometimes heavy thunderstorms. surged the tear gas into the front of the home,
into the combat area obje<=ting to the \ray but no one v.•as authorized to pnter it.
the poTice had gunned Carr doy,•n. liter-Following Nlelds ' shooting. Omaha Ma·
ally jerked his body off the st.cps :ind yor Edy.·ard 1.orinsky. on the scene with
dropped it on a sidev.•alk. his public safety director. Richard Roth,
'Ille crowd, estimated at more than told Anderson, "l don't want any more
t __,..._ . .LI ... .. ... _ W '-
!' •• J
Sly Weds-Wow
Good Time Had by All-All 23,000
NE\V YORK (UPf) -Fir.st came the
slinky dancing girl~ -waving big palm
branches. Then came a.bishQp in no\ving
robes. And finally, Sly, leader of the rock
group "Sly and the Family Stone,"
danced onto the stage and married the
mother of his }'oung son.
The 23.000 \1;histle-blo"·ing, a is I e ·
d a n c i n g , hand-clapping, tambourine·
banging fans at !\1adison Square Garden
\\'cnt v.·i\d.
The preacher. Bi.shop B. R. Stewart of
the Church of Christ and God in San
Francisco. asked, "Do you take this
\\'Oman. Kathy Silva, to be your la\v!ul
wedded wife?"
Sly responded , "I do,'' aod the entire
stadium roared.
But before it '"'as all over, 13 persons
y.·ere arrested on trespaSI\ charges, six
y,·omen fainted, and fistfights broke out
here and there throughout the stadium.
DESPITE THE antics, Sly's mother.
Gracie Stewart. a big woman with a
trombone-like voice, stood in t h e
spotlight and told the crowd. "this is a
~lemn ceremony."
She tben introduced her 12·year-0\d
neice Lisa Davia to "sin~ a small song
for Sly," and into the blazing lights came
a skiMy girl "'ho threw back her head
and belted out an old spir-itual:
"I don't know about tomorrow, 1 only
live tor today. but I don't worry about
the future for I know what my Jesus
says."
The audience became i;ilent for the
first and only time of the !light.
Afterward, the beat of a rock tune
began and grew louder and louder.
SUDDE~l.Y FROM back;tage, 11 long
lovely ladies, all dressed in slinky black
go\\'ns with silver bangles on their arms
stepped solemnly onto the litage waving
big fan palms like an Egyptia.n honor
guard.
t-.1embers ot Sly's group, dressed in
sparkling gold and black , waltzed onto
lhe stage and finally Sly himself danCed
out of the shadows in his floor-length
sequined cape and took the ha.nd Of bis
20-year.old bride, who lvns dressed in a
glimmering silver and gold gown.
Sly then took off his sunglasw;, smiled
\vickedly at his fans and slipped a ring on
the finger or his Hawaiian-born bride.
Sly, 311 said the marriage was "the
only fair thing to do, for myseU, for
everybody else." The couple have a 9·
month old .son Sylvester Jr.
Sly's real name is Sylvester Stewart.
patrolmen shol" •
Roth, former head of the secret Serv-
ice in Omaha, added, "We ear{ always
'"'!!:it until morning. He's got to come
out." ,
Anderson said authorities will "pro~
ably never ·know" what prompted Carr
to open fire. Anderson said Carr )'las con-
victed of two felonies. a bW'glar; in 1967
:ind auto theft Jn 1972.
three people in the home, Mr. and l\.lrs.
llarry Owens and James Solman, man-
t1.ged to sescape while Carr was inside.
Anderson said just how they escaped
'"'as Wlcertain but they weren't harmed.
The night -~ong ordeal started when
Carr reportedly shot and "'Ounded his
half brother, Jesse l\1cDorul!d, «. lt>.ss
than a block from the rooming house.
Bystanders reported, Anderson said,
that Carr fled do\m an alley into the
rooming house where he shot tv•o police-
men and a bystander from windows.
' ~..!*-·r;r .
.. '>' .. -.
Man, 70, Drinks~
Wl1iskey-Takes •
Off on Streak
JONESBORO, Tenn. (AP) -Sevenly-
year-o\d Jim Smith stood in court
dressed in overalls and T·shirt and
admitted. "I dtunk a little too much
whisky and 1 was streaking up near the
ootmty fann."
"But there weren'l no v.'Omen up
there," he quickly told General Sessions
Court Judge Stewart Cannon. cannon considered this momentarily •
then announced the charge of disturbing
the peace against Smith was amended to
omit any reference to streaking. He fined
Smith $20 and costs for p u b I i c
drunkenness.
"He insists he was streaking." Cannon
snid. "But I don't think anyone saw him
and it's hardly a crime for a person to
streak privately. Besides, at· his age, it
\Vas prqbably more like 'snailing.' "
Patricia Hearst
LOok-alike Held
HILO, Hawaii (UPI) -A 27-year.old
Patricia Hearst look·aUke arrested here
last weekend on drug ~rges bas been
re-arrested and reldentified by Hawaii
police.
Heavy Rainfall • Ill Gulf The woman, identified es Pamela
Hoysler, was dlarged with grand theft on
a warrant Issued from Citrus Municipal
Court in Los Angeles County. She was
held on $25,000 bail pending extradition
procedures. £ Tornndo Touches Down in Ce1itrcd lilississippi Area
Coastal Weather
'
FIUDA'Y'
Fllll h!Ol'I , , . , U::)f t .m. l.$
f lnl low ............. S:U •.m . .o.s
SKOo"ld ~lllh .......... H :OI p.m. S,•
St<OM 10'0!' ........... •:57 p.m. l.S Su~ ri!IH S:U 1.m. Utt 1101 p."1'.
MOCIOI rlMS ,:41 1.m. Sell 1:(111 t.11'1,
Temperatures
Mltll LW Pep,
" " M " .. " " " N " " • .. '" ,, • ·~ r. II
.n " M
" n • .,
M M
"
-·
" " 3
" " • M
" M
" " " M M " ..
l " N
ll .. .,
" 4 ~ " ..
... ·"
.a ~
" ... . .. ·''
·" .u
·" ·" ·"
'
Police originally identified her as
Barbare Ann Thorson, 23, of' Los
Angeles, but said the new identification
was based on a "dlstlnctivet blrthmarlr,"
and was "belleved to be po,slti~e."
South Koreans
Blast Copter
SEOUi-. sOulh Korea I AP ) -
South Ko~an antiaircraft gunners
fired on a United States Army
helicopter nying O.Ver St:oul today
and wounded two Officers, the U.S.
Anny said. The Korean defense
ministry said the chopper had
vkllat~ the caplt1l'4 restricted air
!>pact and that It had rl'fu~d to
hted several wAming shots.
The U.S. Army said the UH-10
bellcopter was on a "rooline
orientation night" and wa:i; flylng
"in the vicinity of the restricted
nigh t zone'' over Seoul when South
Korean stcurlty forces opened fire.
St. Clair Reveals He
•
Was Told by Jaworski
WASHINGTON .IUPll -A Federal
grand jury voted last February to name
~PreJtdenrNlxon-ararrwrindtrted to·
conspirator In the Watergate coverup, It
waa dlsclosed today.
The President's impeachment lawyer.
James D. St. Clair. told reporters he \\'as
informed of the development three or
four wef.its ago by special prosecutor
Leon Jaworsld.
St. Clair made the comment after the
Washington Post and the Washington
S~~ews said the grand jury named -
but did n~t f!ldlct -the President and
others in a scaled indictment returned
March 1 against seven former White
House and Nixon campaign aides.
THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, which
first reported the grand jury wanted to
name Nixon , said Jaworski persuaded
the jurors not to menUon the President
even as an unindlcted c»conJplrator.
Asked about the reports, St. Clair said
v.·hen Ni:icon was told that the gi'and jury
wanted to name him, the Preskient said.
"They just don't have the evidence and
they are wrong."
The names of the seven persons
indicted, including top former
presidenlial advlsers H. R. Haldeman ,
John D. Ehrllchman and John N.
Mitchell, were revealed P.1arch 1. No
names of co-conspirators were disclosed.
LATER, THE GRAND jury turned
over voluminous materiel it used in its
investigation, indudlng any evidence
relating to Nixon, to the House Judiciary
Committee for its Impeachment Inquiry.
' The newspapera cited unnamed·sources
a~ the bas1S for their reports. ·
The Post and Star-News 611.id the jurors
actuall y wanted to indict the President.
but named him as an unindicted
coconsplrator instead after Jaworski told
them there was some question whether
they had power to indict a president.
As an uniildlcted co-conspirator, Nixon
v.•ould not face criminal penalties.
St. Clair said today, "the President
Weddl119 Plans
Actor Elliot Gould's girlfriend,
actress and model Jennifer
O'Neill, has confirmed the pair
will marry, probably after they
finish a film together in Europe
this fall. It will be the second
time for Miss O'Neill and the
third for Gould who was once
married to Barbara Streisand.
2nd Volume b~t
' said they just don 't have all the evidence\
and they are wrong." Interviewed 81 he
t1rri'!'.~.12L a closed session 'of the
judiciary commmoo; sr.-cJilf"iial : . ··--
Hf DONT TIDNK the evk!ente
supports It It wouldn't be the first time
a grand jury was wrong -and It ha1 no
legal effect."
Last Mideast
POWs Given
Wild Welcome
By United Pre.11 InternaUoa1I
lsrael and Syria gave their last
retumina: prisoners of war tumultuous
v.'elcomes today in Tel Aviv and
Damascus and the Israeli military
command said the fi rst o( its troop.'!
began to pull out of lhe Gola,n ijelghts
disengagement ione.
Joyous friends and relatives crO\\'ded
around the international Red Cross DC6
airliner carrying returning lsral!!lis back
from Syria and forcing lhc 58 POWs to
struggle down the landing ramp and
through a crov.·d that broke -through
police lines to get clo.er to them.
Former Prime Minister Golda Meir " -
joined Israel's current government
leaders in welcoming the returning
soldiers hom,l but go v e r n m· e n t
ceremonies were d!Srupted by the riotous
welcome . and she was almost knocked
down b:Y overjoyed ramillei racing to hug
returning sons.
THE SCENE w&s even wlldtr in
Damascus and 500 police used water
hoses to disperse a chaotic mob of 20,000
spectators who surged around one of the
two Red Cross-chartered jumbo jets
bringing back 382 POW1 from Tel A,vlv.
Witnesses said It took polite 45 minutes
to clear a passage for bW1es to drive to
the plane steps· and take the 'returning
prisoners aboard. The celebration was so
great that a aecond plane with Syrian
POWs was forced to park at e remote
spot on the airfield.
ISRAEL SENT 382 Arab soldiers back
. to Syria-fil a simultaneous sw11.p for the
56 prisoners it got back. The exchange
came eight months to the day after Yorn
· Kippur, Uie first day of the 1973 Middle
East war.
'nle exchange s<!t off a 20-day
disengagement process that is to
conclude with a United Nations buffer
force occupying territory evacuated by
Israel on both sides of the 1967 cease-fire
line In the Golan Heights.
DAILY PILOT
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YOU C•ll)•tt l•~rnlllllol I OO p.m.
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S•nJu•n (•P'>I••"°· OM• Po.nl Soul~ L•qun•, Lagu"" NoQ\;fl "1·••10
Lei;iin Sfarted Gulags,
Solzhenitsyn Charges
PARIS (AP) -Alexander 51117.heititsyn
charges in the second volun1e of his
"Gulag·Archipelago1' that forced labor
camps were a part or the Soviet !t&tl!!
fron1 Its very Inception, .and not a later
invention or Joseph Stalin.
The new i¥tallment _of the exP.los\ve
doc."Umen tary thus lays the blame fol' the
vast Soviet .labor camp system at the
very feet of Lenln, the hallowl!!d founder
of the Soviet.Union.
Official Kremlin policy has been to
·term -the camps as an oiborrltion
stemming from Joseph Stalln's "cult of
peJ'«lnality." But Lenin bu rem11ned
inviollte, · Md 1ccus1Uons 11 i e
Solt.henUiyn's v.·oukt be tantamount to
sacrllea:e in tht official view.
TflE UPROAR. ovtr lhe publication in
Paris ol the first volume IA.st Dectmber
led to a vlck>us campaign ln the SOVlet
media agaJnst Solzhenitsyn and to his
exile in February. He now lives with his
fAmlly In Zurich, Sv.•itzerland.
The new 650-page volume In Rusaian,
which goes on sale here neJ1t week,~
cootlnues the exllcd writtr'4 det&Ued
d(lcumentllry account of the v111t forced
labor camp system ln wtllch he spent
I •
eight years of hJs life.
Sollhenllsyn asserts thal 66 million
persona passed through th!!! system
between 1918 and 1959.
'lbe first CJmp, he says, was a
converted ciarlst prison on the White Sea
island of So)Ovkl north of the Arctic
Circle. Unknown -thouJBnds died in the
early camps, wh.lch were intended to
k~p inmates alivl!! -and working -ror
three months at most, he writes.
TllE PRISON system was "a cancer
which started at Sok>vki end apread II$
growth all ovet the country,''
Solzhenitsyn says •
the system began under ~nln, he
says. But it was perfected under the
dlrection of Naphtali Frenkel, a gener•I
in the NKVD M!Crtt police and one of
Stalins' favorites. Frenkel hJmaeU, like
many others of St•lln's cronies._ perished
in the camps he helped create.
Solzhenit..yn says the camps were fl\led
undtr Lenin w\1h PQlltlcat prleoners
regarded as hostile to the Soviet sy1tem .
But under Frenkel 's auldanoe, Stalin
Cf\anged them Into an lnslruml!!nt for
keepinl lbe crumbllng Sovlet economy
on Its l~et wltll a mll'llmum of forelga
old •
•
I
•
. '
,,.,r..r y Jun!'b 1114 ' OAll 't' PILOT ,i
Nixon Gets 'Gator,'· Soul
-I
Shake at Naval Ceremonies
•
Mo rt Gets
Hi s Kicks
Aid for Mayor
Mia1ni Frie1uls Seek F1uids
DON'T DISCARD THOSE
OLD TENNIS SHOES ! !
w ••• ,.._ ·--ol• ,,,.,.,. w--1 . .._ -
ANTHONY'S SHOl SlRVICI:
•WIS1'Cllff ,lAZA •4 100 •JitSHION 1$lAND •COflONA DIL MA.It , ..
ANNAPOLIS, MD. (UJ1J) -think he was surprised." airplanes, one landing at
TOKYO (API -Po!ic't?
arrested a 25-year-old
bartender for a minor
theft and found h.is JO-foot President Nlxnn ~ot a couple Tal)en aback for a mo ment. ,Nixon's feet. " • 1 square apartment cram· of surprlsci $h&klng hunds tfle, ~resident laughed and NlxOl'I" slgoed one of tbe med with about 3,00Q
'"'Ith grudu11:1ing mld.!lh!pmen wiggled the rubber alligator dollar blll1 given to Ens. hCll\11 of burgled booty -
at the Naval Aeaden1y. One for a cheering crowd or 21.000 Stephen D. Edwards of AltkCn, including fou r teJevlsl?Jl
slipped a wiggly rub b er midshi pmen and 11pect1tor11. ~tlnn. by fellow jtl'aduates for sets, I ~ camer?s, 40 suits
alligato r Into his
---· • Another~-gavr ·hill
handshake.
' ' ' ~~-~-han d . · "I JUsl wanted tb let him finishing Inst m the class and He said his "greatest
·"-· llOVl --·know--there-a wa1--.a-~Y-4f----a.1..k.e A._.l h IL~..l.S: .. i!,{l..~.'!l.Y. ~.tbl'-Ul-Wa! to admire aOO
A<nptlng the commissions
Wednesday for his middie
corn pany, Ens. Ric bard C.
ltlckcox of Valley Cottage,
N. Y. !irn\Jy grasped Nixon's
hand and gave him !he • alligator.
l<WE'RE CALLED t h e
'Gator Company,'" Hickco:1:
said. '"That's wily I did it. I
R:l NGO SAYS
HE'LL BET
blacks ~ere." said Ens. Owen suptrlntcndent. Vice Adm. enioy my lo'lt'·' and he
D. ~r~1n of.Petersboro, N.V., Will ia m P. ~1ack , to give it to f'Ottldn 't bear ro ~rl with
erpla1n1ng his ,.greeting Edwards when he came up for It.
tlfo; E A RN E D TJIE . his commlss1on .. ---
handshake by finishin!l in lhe
ton JO percent of his class, Ule
onlv black to do so.
"He said thank v<iu.'' said
Corpin, who \\1ill · bei.::in his
military career a."I a 1nlnl'lr;1y
N!Cl'.Uiting; officer in N•~\\' Vr>r~
Citv. "Tl was a wonderful
feeling."
The prac;ualing clas~ of n~
incl udinq tour r 0 r eign
nalionals. sat politelv throuiih
!ht'! ceremon ies an d Nixon's 25-
minute speech. Then the fun
s1artcd.
ONE GRADUATE g a v c
Nixo n a so u veni r
shoulderboard. ;ioolher a
THE FAMILY .CIRCUS
'
By Bil Keane
M I A~fl (AP ) -Last month,
Dade County Mayor Jack Orr
learned he had inoperable
cancer. Last week, h e
separated from his seventh
Y.'\tt>. Today, fr iends say,
l\.1ayor Orr Is broke.
So Vice ·Mayor Edwa rd Fogg
Ill end other associates have
organized a benefit soccer
game for !he 54-year-oli:t Orr
ln hope or raising $50,000 to
1100,000.
ORR, WHO EARNS $6,000 a
year as mayor and $42,500 as
L'flUOS"I for a land development
firm, has virtually no financial
assets , F'og11: said.
He sakl. the June 28 benefit
at the Orange Bowl is to raise
enough rr:oney "to give him
peace of mi nd, and strength to
fight this thing to a successful
conclusion without having to
worry about financia l
problems.'' '
Doct-Ors say Orr, who is
undergoing chemical therapy
that leaves him physically
exhausted, has not responded
favorabl}' to the treatments. .
FRJENDS SAY Orr was
l'lrtn1ilted to Cedars of Lcba.uin
Hospital Monday a f t e r
s uffering nausea and
breathing diflicultie1 over the
v•eekend.
hi~ thi rd and fifth wif~.
everything he had \.\'hen he I
di11orecd her for the seeond
time in January 1973.
That included their house,
v.'Orth about $fi0,000 at th<'
time, about $65,000 worth in
real estate and $20,000 in cash.
He also ls obligated to pay
t.11ss Cooper nionthly alimony
of at least $500 until 1978 ;ind
$50 a month in alimon y to his
second \vifc, Virginia.
FRIENDS SA 't' IT i•
believed that Orr e.'ihau~tl'dl
his group insurance poli,..-•. 1h'lt
pays a m:i ximum of ~lj ()';11
So Orr's friends caught up!
the benefit. to featur e th .I
J.linmi Toros an1t tho Haiti
more Comets or the i\orih
American Soccer I...eaguc.
"He's a la"'Yer," Fogi: sairt
of Orr. "And \\·hen it conic~
to the la\v he's a i.ircal cine.
But he's just never undcrs1rr:•J
money. lie's one of tlw~ 11 ho
always thought i! 1ves r:rr!n¢ r '
be there when he needed 11,"
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LONDON (AP) -Ringo
Starr h(\s offered to bet $2,400
that the Beatles never pley
togethe r again. I-le talked to
11ewsmen at London i:ii rpc)rt
Wednesday upon his arrival
fro m Los Angeles.
"I'll bet anyone 1,000 pounds
that Vt'e don't play t-Ogethcr
again this year or. for that
matter. ever," said the forme r
member of the famed quartet.
small American f\a~t As he
left th" platfQrm tnc Prr~idcnt
carried under his arm a
fT'lidS:hipman's hat ret rieved In
the traditional graduation hat-.
tossing.
Orr, once described by a
rriend as hav ing "lh·ed •o the;·'=========-'--
"We are iii doinM our o\rn
thing and. apart from
anything else, v•e 'lre all too
busy lo get together again."
One con1;ir.ri.y unleashed
pigeons from beneath their
chairs. Another t h r e w
Frisbees while others waved
their r!ght shoes. One gn::Np of
new ensigns threw balsa wood "Soy when "
hilt." is being sued in Circuit
Court for 1nore than $6.000. the
M\ance on a $17 500 loan
taken out in late 1966.
He also i3 paying alimony !o
at least t\\'O ex-l\'i•1es.
ORR HAS TOLD friends
that he gave Roslyn C.ooper,
10 Larry Csonka,
wide man
in a na1~row ·world.
For ~lretching·oul , leaning hack l)nd all-around
comfort, try our 747 ond 0~10 F,tiend Ships on for size.
Another reason more people choose the friendly
skies th an any other airline in the land.
An y n1aii \\'ho spe nds his \\llr king dnys ~ueezi ng
through tighl si 1uu1inns ap1>recia1es the roo~1ryess or
Uniled's widc·hodied 747 and DC·IO Friend Ships.
On boarcl. thcre·s 1.!Xlra space. Four Starclining. ~ludio
enterta inment, nlOvics on son1e flights.even our lnfl1g ht
Service Su pervisor 10 hdp smoo1h your way. Friendship
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Check our schedule. Then call Uni1ed al SJ?· 7521 for
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And go wick. With Un ited.
Nonslops lo New York IEffcclivc 6/IS ):
Leave Arri\'C
.'~:45 a.I'll. t OC-101 .'i:OO p.111 . JFK
9;."\0 a.111. .'i:Jtl p.rn. Ne\.\ ark ti·'· 1 uc~
12:001100111 7471 X:U:'l p.n1. JFK
I :JO p:n1. ~ OC-10~ 11:25 p.111. Nc\.\·ark !eff . fl ' 221
Nonstops IQ Chi cago iEllectivc 6/151 :
l.ca,·e
7:~ a.nl . 1i.f71
~:00 a.m.
tQnlllrl<•I
10:21'.) a.n1. (0C·IOI
10:20 a.n1.
1()nr:u.~1
r\tri\'C
I :J:' p.rn.
l :J~ p.111.
4: 10 p.111.
.':~.r.. p.n1.
I.CU\'('
r HI p.1n. 1 rx -1111
4:tXl p.n1.
!'-:-'~ p.nl.
l~:.l:' :i.n1. t''-'11
Arrhc
7:f0 p.m.
4:-':' p.1n.
11 :~l p.1tl.
6: 15 a.n1.
The friendly skies of your Jand.
United to Chicago and New York
P:Jnncrs in Travel wilh WC!ii1em h.,ema1ional J~a.els.
INNOVATION
A Great Leap Forward for Savings Depositors
PACIFIC SAVINGS
Inaugurates It's New
PHONE-A-TRANSFER
(PAT) Account
You can authorize us to transfer
Money from your Pacific Savings
Passbook Account to your bank
checking account by simply calling
us on :the telephone.
Save lots of Gasoline, Time and Energy
YOU CAN MAINTAIN MORE OF
YOUR MONEY IN YOUR
SAVINGS ACCOUNT EARNING
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ON EVERY DOLLAR -EVERY DAY
Available to Everyone, including
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No Minimums Or Maximums As
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Never A Service Charge
OPEN A PAT ACCOUNT TODAY ..,.,
AT ANY OF OUR BRANCHES
Jn Additioit to Passbook Accounts, Paci fic Savings
Pays These High Rates o n Certificate Accounts
ANNUAL YIELD A1'1NUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
7.79%
6.98%
6.72%
5.92%
·1.50%
6.75%
6-50%
5.75%
$ 1,000.00
$ l,000.00
$ t,000.00
$ t,000.00
Sy F«k!.ra.1 reQulAtion, a. substantial pt>nalty is
required for urly withdrawal.
(Jlma.lty Provision ck:M;-s Not Apply to PAT Accounts)
•• 21;
1or2"
90day5"
Our Free Services for Qualified A~cou nts include:
• Sale Deposit Boxes ($500 Balance)
• Money Orders
• Traveler's Checks
' . • Trust Deed Note Collection
ARCADIA
41 E. Uve Oak
BELL GARDENS
5740 E11t Florene• Avenu1
'CANOGA PARK
on th• mall in Topanga P1111
Shopping Cenle1
'CERRITOS
On tH mell In Len C1rr1101
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On tM mall Jn Soulh Co111
Plua Shopping Centi~
DOWNEY
10000 Lakewood Blvd.
IE••cutiwe Ollic•I
i211 E111 Flr11ton1 Blvd.
BRANCHES
(2 13)•45-0550
(21 3) 773-5011
LA CRESCENT A
2621 Foolhill Blvd.
LAKE FOREST
In the Like Fores! Villag1
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LOS ANGELES
(21 3) 113·1550 400 -N. Vermonl
5401 E. Whillief 8 !vd.
•MON TEREY PARK
'~ 210 Norlh Garlleld Avenue
(2t3) 1115·6 "1 *ORANGE
On the maH in IM Mall ot
Or;ange Shopping Center
(7 14) 540·4061 •sAN BERNARDINO
o n th~ m•ll In lnl•nd
Shopping Center
f21 J) 92S·9601 WHITTIER
(2 13) 162·11 94 11215 E••I W•lhington 81\IG.
(2 13) 24S·S120
(714) 516-0900
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(21JJ l i2·0S51
•offices open night and day and Saturdays
ASSETS OVER $390,000,000
P ac '.ific-. ~ cl''it1g~
• • ' .. ' . • ' ~AND lO AN ASSOCI ATIO N
"
"
"
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" J
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s DAILY PILOT EDITOllIAL PAGE
The • Voters
The overwhelming voter approval of Proposition 9,
the ca1npaign rcfonn la,v, in Tuesd ay's election was
clearly predictable, despill! son1e less·than·clca1· t'Oll·
structlon of the word)' law. •
Califortlia hAS enjoyed a reputation fo r relalively
scandal-free slate government. but this year even Cali-
forruans are susplcious•of r.oliticians of all persuasions.
So they voted 2 to I 'for reforn1 and aga inst cor-
ruption," and carried the day, despite opposttlon from
business and labor groups and some probably valid
fears about proble1ns Prop. 9 may generate.
No¥: It's being predicted that the measure will
serve as a model in other states where voters are suffer-
ing from similar post-\Vatergate suspi cions.
Also reflecl irrg current voter attitudes was the
approval of Proposition 5, to pennit voters to release
some gas tax revenues. formerly reserved for highway
use. for development of rapid transit.
A sin1ilar nleasure failed in 1970-but that "'aS
before car-happy Californians began to have second
thoughts about freeways, traffic jams, pollution, gasolin.~
shortages and similar plagues.
No doubt about it. the mood ·of the voter is chang-
ing, he's speaking up at the polls. aqd it's time for the
u•ise politician to take nlore pains than may have been
necessary in the past. Lo get out of his city hall or court
house or capitol building and listen to 111ore of t.he
constituents.
Comp11terized Campaign
On his way to winrung his second term Tuesday,
Orange County's Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Cas·
pers dropped a snowstorm of "personal'"' mail on his
voters-possibly enough to put the U.S. Postal Service
in the black for the first time.
Caspers' computer.written missiles could be di·
•
' Spe i k Up:
rected 3Jmost any way a voter could think. There was
one Inviting you to a party. If you attended, there was
one thanking you for coming. If you didn't 11Ltend, there
was one saying sorry you couldn't make it.
'!'here was one for Democrats. one for Republicans.
lte told you in Costa 1'1esa what Caspers had done for
Costa l\Jesa. He told you in Laguna. what he had done !or
Laguna. I-le told you where your polling place was.
In one1 Caspers said he and his wife, Anne , hoped
to make it by your house before election, but if they
didn't to please vote in the great American tradition.
Caspers and his computers did the trick. He won
aln1ost 55 percent of the votes cast fot the office.
Presumably the only way to bea( a Cagpers type of
campaign is to match or short-circuit t.he computers.
Bike Trail Boost
Orange County Supervisors have agreed to release
the first $435,000 annual installment of a fund estab--
li shed for cooperative bicycle trail de'velopment in the
26 county cities.
Even though the cities had already presented the
board with a priority list of trail projects, several board
members nearly succeeded in scuttling the all<fation.
Their contention was t.hat the trails put forward
by the cities were not of regional significance-one
major stipulation of the fund ·sharing program.
The map of proposed trails tended to support those
misgivings. Many of the proposed trails were isolated
and limited to small. local areas of the county.
After discussing the matter, supervisors arrived at
the best possible compromise.
Thev told the cities the first year's funding alloca·
tion ~ould _be met~ but issued a warning: that all pr~jects
i-ubm1tted in coming years would be closely scrutinized
for regional significance.
MY SERMON TODAY IS ON THE SINS
OF THE WHITE HOl,JSE TRANSCRIPTS.
V RILY I SAY IT IS MORALLY WRONG
T USE EXPLETIVES DELETED
EN COVERING UP HIGH CRIMES
A D MISDEMEANORS.
''
THANK YOU FOR THAT GUIDANCE,
BI LLY.
" '
History Re1leats . ltseli: Nixo11 Courts Conservatives
'
New StaterDef icit Looms
Re1nember hov.' things "'ere back in
.Januarv, 1967, \\·hen citizen !{onald
Reag ari took over as governor? Stale
government was in a financial bind: ~at
Brown's (arewell gift v.•as a $600 mtl hoo
deficit and the first thing Gov. Reagan
had to do was push
through a "'hoppins
SI billion tax in-
crease.
Well. it's almo~t
eight years later and
here we go again.
Independent fiscal
experts. not behold·
en to th e Reagan ad-
mini s t r n t Ion or
either political party, arc ready to
predict a 1974-75 state deficit of about
$600 mlllion. That is, if thjngs keep going
as they are now. In other words. what
Pat Brown. Sr .. did lo Ronald Reagan,
Gov. Reagan may do to either Patsy
Brown. Jr .. or Hugh Flournoy.
Few paid attention. back in mid-!\fay,
"-hen Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke raised the
first warning. People were too busy
che.,.,·lng over that 1rumpcd up perjury
charge against him to heed the Lt. Gov 's
dire prediction :
"If \1'e do not tighte n our belts on
govemmcnt spending -immediately -
and the innation figure holds at 10
percent for 1!174. as \>redicted. we will
have a SI billion deficit in the state
budget in 1975."
EXPERTS SAY Reinecke was on the
right track but that his estimate was a
bit high. 1\nd, they say, it's not just
inflation that may force another giant
tax increase it's an expected down -tum
in the nation's economy and the wa y
these birds of Babylon keep spending
the public purse. Also, ~rt of the loom~
ing dcOci l :;:terns from SB: 90 itfic 1911
Reagan-Morelli tax shift i. That little
blockbuster con1n1itted the state to SWJ6
n1illion in increased expenditures. l~i~
( RUS WALTON )
through 1976, above and beyond the
"ne1v" tax revenues it generated.
Those are some of the irritating, but
realistic, projections and data to be pre-
senled in the near future to a -joint ses-
sion of thc Senate Finance and Assetn·
bly \Vays and P.1eans l'Ommittees.
The independent experts in1·0!,·ed con-
tend tha.t ecoopmic and revenue projec·
lions made by both state finance djrec-
tor Verne Orr and Jegislativr!' anaJyst A.
Alan Post are "O\'erl y optim isti c" :ind
•·far out of line". Orr, for exampl e. talks
about a booming economy and ringing
cash registers but some or the nation's
~op ~ancial seers sec a dark da y dawn-
ing.
Albert E. Sindlinger. one top market
research analyst. who has correctly
forecast economic trends over the past 18
years. predicts the sha rpest decline in
the U.S. economy in a generation. Ho
cx~s things to hit bottom this autumn
and last for about one year.
TL\1E l\tAGAZINE'S board o f
economists recentlyt came up \\'it h the
gloomie!'t picture yet. They see a
sustained period or t.,.,·~flgure tnn ation
t 10 percent or more). a savings outno .... ·.
light money and rising unemployment.
Time's concern is echoed. in a way,
here in some halls oJ Babylon. One major
nightmare bugging state hea lth and
v.·eUare administrators is this: .,.,·hich will
bust the state first. inc r e a s in c:
unemployment compensation demands,
or the soaring costs of Medi-Cal?
lif"tfie. face-of these dismal prospects.
the Reagan administration balloon s the
state budget by $800 nlillion ($9.J billion
ihis year, $10.1 billion for 1974-75) and
• Dear
Gloorny
Gus
Now \\·e know why 1\1!'re paying 70
cents for a half a gallon of n1!lk ...
N. C. E.
a._,,,, GuJ ltrnm9ftt• •r• t11IH!lltTHI w
FIHirt 11111 OI Ml ,...CtH.ar\f'r refh<I ttlt otftwl If I• ,.....PIHr. Slllf f911r HI
Hl"I ti G"'°"" Gus. 01Uw f'ilOI.
legislators keep pumping out spending
measures as if there were no tomorrow.
The estimated total cost of spending
measures now in the legislative hoppers
is Sl.5 billion. Obviously not all or those
\1·ill become law but each one that does
will add to the threat or a deficit.
Th! prospects or $600 million in red
ink are not relished by the two
Democrats who v.·ould have the job or
pushing ' a tax increase through the
legislature next year: senate finance
chairman Randy Collier and .assembly
ways and means boss Willle Brown.
Brown will no doubt succeed Bob Moretti
as Speaker of the Assembly.
TIIERE JS A way to forestall all or
part of the deficit, a way that is foreign
to the tax-and-spend birds here in
Babylon. It's \\'hat Reinecke meant when
he called for immediate "belt-lighten-
ing '':
-first, hold the 1974-75 state budget to
Gov. Reagan's original request of .$9.S
billion. Bite that bullet, now.
-second, refuse to fritter a.,.,·ay any so-
ca\led "surplus funds" and either hold
them in reserve against the deficit. or
return them lo local governments to help
lhe cities and counties weather the fiscal
tornado headed their .,.,•ay, and
-third. take all those money measures
kicking around Babylon, stick them in
order of priority. and make it clear that
for every bill that is passed an equal
dollar-amount will be cut from some
other area of the budget.
Tt's either that or slap Californians
with another giant tax increase In 1975!
Nuclear Crisis Plan Told
\VASHINGTON -People don't like to
think abo ut or talk about the bo1nb, but
perhaps their attention can be dra\\'Tl
back to it by some quite audacious
policies which are under discussion in the
Ni:ton administration.
Think first about this one point: the
[)e(ensc J)eparllnenl wishes lo dC'VC\Op
crisis plan~ (or th<.'
relocalion Qr n1:inr
millions fron1 253
critical largcl nrcn~
to approprl<tte host
11reas as f;ir out of
harm''! way as po~
~iblc. Dc!fc~ Sccrc-
lary .Jarn c11 Sch!cs·
in~cr Is qulle ~an ·
guine about I h t s
noting the va~t
population movements in and out of
Manhalton cvefy day.
Emphasis Is also returning lo fall-«it
shelters after the nntion\\•ldc .'iCare or J
few ye:irs Ago and lhe census i;urveys
showing tha t running lo the b.1scmenl
would be no good.
IT CLEARLY cnu be stcn that high
authority iis lrying to h~ad pubhc
1hlnking txick to the lhcorelical plausibll·
lty or a nuclear auack on this country
lOldcr ctrtaln clrcumstancts, There ~
hell lsh and lnvoluttd Ingle invoh·C<I as
there 111 In a ll things nuclear.
If the Soviet Uni'on can be-1nadc to
believe lbnt lhc UnitOO State.11 hlls
developed a ptan for limited nuclet1r
aHack on mllltary u1rgets, ooc "'•Y lo
(rucHARD WILSO~
persuade them of this policy ch:1nFe
1\'ould be preparal ion~ to suffer the
probable consequences of doing so. Thus
1\'l' gel people ready for m.1ss relocation
and running to the f<ill-out shelters
(\\'hk·h is \\'hn t th'? Husslans do also) to
give credibility thut we just might use
nuclear v;eapon~ i11 so1nc degree. and
thal \\'ill provide an additional deterrent
·to Ru sslo n gambles.
The con1mon \\'Jsdo1n up to now is thnt
uny use of nul!IMr \\'Capons will mean
the \\•hole shehnng and the pl~net will be
done with as a livable Abode.
But Dr. Schie.singe r and tho s c
associated \i1ith hln1 '1ave a diffe,rcnt
Strangelovc sctnarlo. The crcdlblllty of
our use of weapons against. military
targets with pinpoint precision will make'
ii all the Jess llkely Iha! adventures "'·ill
bt> undertaken br our :i(hcr5-<trfe5,
nuclear or othCT\\'lst.
CllOU E'.1\-LAI creates the imprr~sfon
lhaf all Peking .,.,.111 go underground i.lnd
st nkl' back if Chlnfl Is allackt'd ;u1rl
pcrlodlcally proves it by showing 10
visitors the subterranean nrtwork .,.,·here
tilt Chinese wi ll take refu ge.
Perhaps it is ii big bluff on all sidt'~
Intended to have a bearing on tlw: SALT
JI agreement on nuclear llmltatlon Bnd
Presidcnt Nixon's forthcoming trip to
~1oscow.
Bluf! or not, the policy Is going forward
and will undoubtedly be very expensive
In the end. The planning for mass
relocatM>n and surveys or fall-out shelt.ers
\\'ill cost relatively little, but upseta
congressmen \\'ho do not will\ to
comprehend nuclear celestial mechanics.
J\taking missiles pinpoint accurate will
cost a great deal and the whole
relargcting process \VOO 't be cheap, but
\'IC have the technology to do It. It Is
estimated that as a starter $250 million
ca n increallt! acc uracy, focus on military
targets. and put into effcc1 llr.
Scblcsinger'!l'new strategy.
TUEORETICALLV. this backs up Or.
Henry Kissinger in hi.$ dealings \\11th the
Russlan.i;, but Kissi np;er seems to be a
litUe nervous about the whole thinR and
there are r('Cllrrent rt!porU of his
d!Efe.rt:11ces .,.,.lth lhe Schlesinger doctr ine.
Jt Is probably a differenct In em phasis
more than anything else, but actually the
cost will mount up to the billtons in due
lime -\\'hich may make it appear thAt
nuclear agree ment Ydlh the Russians Is
DOI a budget 83\'Cr. ,
Or. Schlesinger ls not loo well
unrierstoocl, as may be sugp:esttd by \'Ice
Prr,;ident ('.e.rald R. Ford 's stated
inclination to replace him If F'ord ever
becomes president ~ttu~ he think s
Schltsinger's congressional relatkms art
not good. This Is a common fat e of
brainy men \\·hlch Kissinger himself h11s
not r:ntlrely c.K'aprd, e~n \\'hile riding
high In cnYled C.SlC'Cm.
..
A Cruise on the Potomac.
WASHINGTON -Over brandy and a
cigar aboard the presidential yacht
Sequoia, President Nixon appealed to a
dozen conservative congressmen the
other evening to take a st.and on
impeachment.
"If you believe I am innocent," he
urged, ''vote against impeachment in the
House. Doo't pass
the buck to the
Senate."
He reported l y
fears many repre·
scntativCJ may try
to gr:t off the hook
by casting a proce-
dural \'Ote for im·
peachment. Th e y
COl,lld explain they
didn't 'mean to judge the President but
merely wanted to brin g the case before
the Senate for a decision.
1lllS RATIONALE could produce an
ov-..rwhelming House vote in favor of
Impeachment. The psycbologlcal impact,
he\ Is said to Ieel, could influence
senators to vote to remove him. from
office.
So as lhe ~uoia cruised down the
rain-swept Potomac, !he President asked
hl1 conservative House friends to settle
the impeachment Issue in the House.
lie assured them that he has
cooperated as far as he could with the
llOU5e Judiciary Committee. wh ich is
inquiring into impeachment. lle couldn't
release tapes and documents, \\'hit;h
might damage U.S. relations with other
natk>nl, he said.
HE EXPLAINED that ht had had a
number of private conversations with
other heads of state. It would seriously
violate International protocol, he said, if
these convtrsetions should be divulged.-
The President's shipboard dinner
companions were too polite to ask how
these co n versatJons could be
compromised by release of t h e
Watergate 'tapcs. Presumably, be .didn't
discuss his ,Watergate woes with other
world leaders. .._
The President, ooviously cheered by
the succts.s or peace negotiations in the
Middle East, was In a bantering, buoyant
mood throughout the three-hour dinner
cruise.
He joked with his guests about TU.Ming
Secretary of State Henry Kis.slngq for
,the Senale. Kissinger could be groomed
ror the seat of retiring Sen. Norris
Cotton, R-N.H .. and a bl pa rt is an
campaign could be organized to make
Klulnger chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations . Committee, the
President speculated gleefully.
-irs SUGGESTED that the resourceful
Kissinger, as a Senate cbalnnan , might
even be able to negotiate peaceful
relations between the senate and the
\\!hltc Jlouse.
The President gloated over the dereat
of Sen. J. Wlll\an1 Fulbright. O.Ark.,
which will remove him as Senate Foreign
Relations chalnnan. M next in line, Sen.
John Sparkman. 0-Ala .. would have to
give uj) the Senate B a n k I n g
Chalrmanahlp to take over Fulbright's
chair.
Quotes
D1\1d C. Ahlm1n. J\tonterey, on polls
showing CongreM gtltlng Jo"·er 'good
job' ra ting In poll! than f'iixon -"We
have bec.!n hearing lhe call for fTI'sident
Nixon's resignation : why sh o u Id n 't
Congrtsa re.sl8JI? It dOl'S not have the
.!Upp!)rt Of ltiith or the American people.
It do<• not provide 8dequatt t .. der>hlp.
It does noL act quickly on passing
legislallon."
The President said he hoped Sparkman
will choose the Foreign Relations
chairmanship, which he has now said he
will do. And th15 would make Sen.
William Proxmire. 0-Wis., UM! new
Senate Banking chainnan.
"Those bankers are b e s i d e
tbemselves," chorlled Nixon. "The
bankers don't want Proxmire."
Speaking seriously, Nixon told his
dinner guests that t\\'O days before the
Syrian-Israeli truce, "I wouldn't have
given a ~ chance of an agreement."
• HE TOLD of the dramatic cables
Klsalnger had sent from the Middle East.
Turning to his staff chie! Alexander
Haig, the President cracked: "If those
cablea could be published, they would
make quite a book, wouldn't they?"
He was optimistic about his
forthcoming summit meeting with Leonid
Brezhnev ia Moscow. The President said
he would have more nexlbiHty to
negotiate than would Brezhnev. The
Soviet leader is far more subservient to
the politburo, said Nixon, than 1nost
Americans realize.
On the other hand. he said, the
Fowiding Fathers had given t h c
American president more "maneuvering
room" lhan other rulers possess.
Earlier in the evening, Rep. Gillespie
P.tontgomery. 0-Miss.. asked Nixon
magnanimously: "~tr. President. what
can we do for you?"
The President responded to this offer
by urging his conservative guests to
support his veto of "irresponsible
spending bills."' Government spending
was spurring innation. he said. which
could become the n:ition's biggell
headache. 1
RE ALSO admonished them not lo let
the Pentagon sell thern a military force
superior to that of the Soviets. •·AH we
need Is to be equal," said the President .
"don't you guys let the 1nilitary push you
into superiority."
Footnote : The President serve d
chateaubriand. with musht'oon1s, peas
and a spaghetti dish . He also passed out
Sequoia matchbooks, w h i c h he
autographed. This was the second lime in
two .,.,·eeks that he has taken conservative
congressmen on a dinner cruise as pa rt
of his effort to· gain support against
impeachment.
Time for a New Antherri
I have a constructive, not to say happy.
proposal to make to the people who are
already planning .the U.S. Bicentennial
celebration in 1976, when our nation will
be 200 years old.
_One of the most worthy .Jl!Ojects the
committee could undertake-which woulet
gladden the hearts
of millions of Ameri·
cans, and sadden no
one but tonc-de11f
patriots -would be
to open a compeli·
tion for a new na·
tional anthem to re-
place "T he Ster-
Spc:ingled Banner."
It Is probably the
worst nation al
anthem any major country has been
burdened with. The words a r e
hysterical, the tune ts unsingable, and
the whole thing Is just a piece of cheap
jingoism unworthy of the founders,
framers and forebears of our great
nation. (The tune itself, actuaJ\y, comes
from an old EngliBh drinking song:)
THERE IS little tradition to be violated
here, since "The Ster Spangled Banner"
has been our national anthem officially
only since 1931 , when It wa5 50
nuthori.7.cd by C.Oniti'ess in 11 bu rst of
posslonote idioCy.
Musicians ond sln~ers have comp!aincd
nbout Jt ror years; the public has mutely
accepted the Indignity of rising and
pretending to mouth !he words, but the
\'iolenl change of key toWllrd the end
defeats all blK the most ra~ly
Insensitive.
Our anthem leeks the brio or the
"Mar8Clllalsc," which has sustained the
French s\nct 1792: or the ll'andeur of
"God Save the Quefn," whleh "'e have
adopted trom 1he British as "~I)' Cot1ntry
'Tls d Thee": or the mar\.elous old
Aus1rtan anthtm, v.'hlcb \\'as 1ctu11!1y
composed by Haydn.
PQl-.,.S. lyrlds~ ond com 1> o s er s
C\'Cfy'l\'her<i should be encouraged to
cfevise a new anthem that . both in mt>lody
and in words, v.vuld symbolite what the
Unlted Slates stood for at Its birth and
\\'hat It shollld still stand tor tOd.Ay. A
s.ibstnntia:l cash prlr.e should be awarded
' '
( SYDNEY HARRI S)
to the \\'inner ; but more than this. goes
the glory of having authored an an them
honoring the first two centuries of our
existence as an independent state.
Feeble efforts have been made. from
time to time to seek a more suitable
anthem, but they always found ered for
lack of concerted support :ind 1he unc11sv
(if ir rational ) feeling that ii · might
somehow be considered "unpatriotic" to
dethrone Francis Scott Off.Key. But the
U.S. Bice n ten n I :i i offers an
unprecedented opportunity to m11ke a
clean sweep of it under lmf)l'CCable
auspices.
Our country represents a lot more than
bombs bursting in air. and a verse
rommemor&ting the \Var of 1812 is
scarcely large or important l!noogh to be
memorized by millions or schoolchildren
who don't even know ll'hal "r,1n1parts"
are. The \\·orst desecration of our flag
consists in the song \\'~ offer up to it.
OlAN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Vtr:d. Publ.ithtr
Thomo1 Ktr:vil, Ed itor
Barbani Krr:ibich
.Editorial Page Editor
The..tdltorial 1pqre or Ill!! Daily
Pilot 6ttkt to Inform and tllmultilt"
~aders by ~tine on thiii JW\Rc
d1vtDC cornmenlaey·on loopil"' of in-
ltnn by .yndlcaled f'Olumnl•t" •ml
cartoonbtt, by provldin1 a fon1m r,,r
rtadm' vlt..-·1 •nd b)o pttlt"nllnir 1h1:c
~"llpapcr's (lf)\nlon' 11'111 kfeL, cm
curt"'M\l lop\CJ. Thf' f'd!torlll opinion,,
ol tM Dt..ily Pilot appear only In the
editorial oolumn 1t lhe !()JI of Ott!.
pq,, Opinim• t~pnsltd by the-col·
umnlst• and c•Tloonl!'lir fnd ltUtt
wrltm 1rt 1htir O"A'll and no rndon"'
mrnt ()f their vi'°" t:iy t}lc Dfllfy
Piklt lhoukl be lf\ftn"l'd.
Thursday, Juno 6, 1974 •
I
Ot.JLY PJLOI 7
How Labor Monopolies Gouge the Public A .;,-;;£~;;;;--!
Fine Jewels • Fashion Island f '1
•
I
WASHINGTON -They say that when
It comes to labor unions, all you have to
do "1tn "°""" old Ubtra!J It "111Slle a bot
of "Joe Kill" and you ctn tell 'em to
walk 1ero11 the Grand Canyon without a
( VON HOFFMAN J
ropt. That's a bit or
exageraUon. Th e klcltJnc around that
some ~'110'1• have ~ blacks and
other minorities hall
made old Une ·libs
wonder Jf every un·
ton aod every strike
11 an unalloyed good.
century: about 10 percent of all· Uie
dollars spent for goods and services in
1900 went for ·wages, and roughly the
1a.me percentage 11111 does today. Since
the diltributlon ot Wealth hasn't changed
much ei ther, the contervatlves may be
right whtn they II)' the portions are the
same, It'• )ult that tha pie ~ bigger.
'lbo6e who've es-
ettped belns: victims
d this form of dogmatic sentimentality
may want to pick up on a recent speech
by Federal '1"11de Comissioner Mayo J.
~. who has been trying to trace
exactly what unions accomplish in the
lig!F of today's economic problems. It
may be time for some new legislation.
BVT THE UNIONS haven't been
setting a larttr piece for all working
people; Instead, in Th:lmptan's words.
"They hive 1UC?Ceedtd In ptHng larger
sharea for their own members. Roughly
1' percent of the_ c<>unlry'1 tolal workers
belong l.o a labor unkm . . . workers
belonging to some of the more powerful
uniom receive waec1 aS m..ich as 20
percent 1boye UWJee they would be
receiving in the absence of the unions ...
ii is obvious that those organizations are
simply 'tran.sfming' money from one
group of workers to another. Union
Mr. Thompson begins by remarking
tha t the division of income between
capitaJ and labor hasn 't changed
lignlncantly since the turn of the
Life in .a City Commune
'
How ~o people relate to each other in a
commune? What are the rewards, the
baaale1, the tensions, the joys? What arc
the aexual undercurrents ln such a way
of life, and can they be acknowledged
and de•ll with openly? Do ~he values of a
life 1hlred with ottw;rs compensate for
the IOll o( I private eJtlstence? .•. The
anawtn to qu11tlclll such as theae -and
many more -are aupplied honestly and
candidly, an the basis of pertonal
experience. by a ronner joumall.at,
Michael Weiss, 1n Uvtnc Together -A
Var in tile Ufe of a City Com.mane
(McGraw-HUI, $8.95).
WEISS, his wife, and their eight-yea,r-
otd aon shared a house ln Phllade$hia,..Jn
communal r lifestyle, with two other
women and four other men, one of them
gay. 11ley were from dlrrerent back·
grounds, with different p r o f e ~ 1 I o n s
includinl a doctor, 1 teacher, an
archeologllt, a medical 1tudent. an
organir.er for a radical health collective,
a group therapist, a mleroblolngtst.
All acknowled&:ed a mutual need for
community and were willln& t o
experiment ln Wring I n c o m e s ,...,..
poue1Sloos, houMhold reapon1ibllilies,
and , more important and much more
dlflicult, eome measure or thermelves.
Michael Wela Vo'as fonnerly a reporter
for the Bllttmort News American and
BalUmore San. Several of his articles
have been published by The Village
VoiCe. He lives with his family -and ·
members of bis commune -in San
Frant:iaco.
VICTOR de KEYSERLI NG
Hathaway's Golf Classic
keeps him cool on the course ...
right through rhe 18th hole.
This cotron lisle short sleeve
shirt has a placket front and
comes in a rainbow of summer
colors. White, light blue,
yellow, tan, orange, sailing
blue, canary, red, burgundy,
brown, green, champagne.
S, M, L, XL, $17
Men's Sporcswear
SANTAANA
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
members' wages are. In effect. &ubsi-
dlzed out ol IM peycheck• ol the =·
try'• noo·Wllan employtt.'' There ls nothing intriMlcally wrong
with that. In all western societies -
capitalist, socialist and communist -
there are sliding pay 11ea\es a\I of which
arbitrarily assume workers in some
occupetionl lhould be peld more than
workers In others. But could the
Inequality I of compensa\ion t h a t
Thompsori pointg out here be elimina ted
by unionizing all workers? It's doubtlul,
since the results would P'robably be not
higher pay but more infl&Uon.
This brings us to the nub or
Thompson's :irgumenl : He believes th.at
labor monopolies gouge the public penny
for penn y with business monopoile!I. It is
estimated that monopoly capital steals
about $40 billion a year from the public
so, if monopoly labor does the same,
\\'e're talking big money-money enooch
to be a significant factor in our ever·
hemorrhaging inflation.
little harder to avoid doing something
about them. But the indica~ are that
in certain industrits pay r a i !i. e s
conslstenUy outstrip inflation a n d
productivity.
Why woold management pennit it.self
to sign 6uch wage agreements? Because
in an industry y,ith a labor monopoly the
manqemmt doesn't have to fear a non-
union competitiX-paying realistic wages
and charging lower prices.
The best situation for both is when
m<>00poly capita l cari embrace monopoly
labor. You see that in the automobile
business. Henry Ford lectures us about
free ent.efl)rise, but if you had a free
market, he couldn't raise his prictS when
his sales drop. That's \\1'1at they've bc!en
doing in the car business.
1st SALE
EVER!
~'UPTO 1/2 OFF ...... .,,.,.
"' ?0%
"' l0'1. At SO-_.
A1 l0"!.
141',llKYel.G.Wftl . AI Sl'JI.
........ ,....... AIM.,_
M••"'•"'•~ At~ f,.tllt &. AKlto• Pltt11 ".I JO'll,
OhJctll of Ari Al Jt'Mt
ldla• Jt,.elry Al 10'11.
TRULY
SOME FANTASTIC
ONCE IN A LIFETIME BUYS \
A .H. WEINERT Fine /ev;e ls
32 f ASHION ISLAND Sorry N•'-"Y'•'Y•
NEWPO RT BEACH, 644-2040 All Sal"'""'
l
I I
I
FE\V STATISTI~ are collected on lhis
touchy 5\lbjcct, preswnably because if
we knew the facts it V.'Ollld make ii a
Apparently 'l unioo can be used a'I a
device by management lo gel around the
antitrust laws. Tha t seems lo be the case
in Ull:' steel industry. ""here you have a
number of ostensibly comp et Ing
eompanies v.·ho can use the mechanisms of industry·w1de collective bargaining to ___ • ________ -1
rig prices and run • ..:.the:c:._.:.ca_rt_e_J. ______ __.: ____________________ _
CHRIST LUTHERAN SCHOOL
760 VICTORIA STREET
COSTA MESA
Quality Christian Education
Kindergarten (Fu1~0.-.-1 lhru Grade· Eight
Enrollments Accepted Now
A. G. Ahltrl, Pr111(1pol 548°6866
Nearly Everyone
Li-stens to Landers,
' ' : l ' i.
I ' " ' I . •
_JL_
II
Gift ideas
for the world's
best Dad! ~11__]
If< I Pd <o•lo.•r rt'W 1top~ boule·~n•ni: p•o-
hlem• No mnre torn o• b•o~en (Qrk_\! .,.
brilll uom hilly WQ<kl w11h !Inc•~!'. lnd• to••·y w•n ......... · 1.99
Pl>r£1'1•i"
mou~1 .. che mugs.
l ~tylt''·
Reg. 2.SD Now 1.79
Give Dad a mouatache mug.
P1r•te'1 he•d.mou~t.Khe mug. Now ·
he c.1n d rain t•nk.11d~ oj g1ug
wi1hout gelhng hi~ whis ke11 IW'I!
Cr.ilted ot ten.i<:o1t.i qnnrw•rl' with
gla1ed ft•.itures. 4 ~r.1 1'1Yl'f t.1re\ to
choo~e. Ide.al lo• d«nr.111n11. Un
~.ale now tor fJlher·~ U.1y~ lll:'g. l .00
Now 199
GAOGf l~ JOR IHI l'ftfECJ IA•TtNUUI.
Choo-io trnm d "''"" J\•nflmfnt nl bit
• ..,,,..,o••"" I<,. r .. n/(•. bonle Opl'f>t'<>, 1•11·
):~"· •lr.1<n"'"" m•ny 1110!<:. 2.,,,,
0
off
Helplu1 ~~di:•·•····...... u-1c
~'.
\
' . t\'1.
I I ·.~\~~
Treat ~/?
to a Bola day!
I 111 J 801~ skin ™11 "'''h rh1ll0·rl '""<" !'tl1<t' ~ f"'nch brt'•d •n•f
'""•.,.e. H,.•d '"' th1• h•~h r()vn!f)•
11.,1~ •kJn IMi:' t1om ~I"''"· I"'' I•~,. !ht' on"' u'f'd l:t" gn.,ht:rd'
"' 1h•· P•.-"'""'..,· Bu! hn!'d"' 'th IJlf'Y.
In• u1IW ,.,,h ropt:, w1hry'ret il>Y
..... lfJ!('.
3ss
Put your Dad
Jn the director's seat.
Pier l 's filfl\OU\ r.inv•~ barlo;. All
Hollywood! Colo1ful' ~lid wood
fra)'l'1e. Jlu>l·re~•~lilnt hinge~. Heavy
J!ilU!tt'CilOYa~ b.ic• ill'ld S< JI. Ckoose
from yellow. blu•·. 1ed • .ivocoldo.
orange . fold!> up for fil•y Cilrrying.
Pool. p<cnic, iutio -if'~ handv lo
h<tYc •long. Crr•1 w•y lo :.et lhc:
~ltnc for your Dad! 24ss
Shop Monday -Saturday 1G-9, . Sunday 10-6
Costa Mesa Laguna Beach
1294 S. Coast Hwy.• Phone: 494-8101
~ShopMooday ihru Friday, JO:OO a.m. ro 9:30 p.m. , Bullock's S:i n1a An:i. I Fl!Shinn Squa.rc, 2800 N. Ma in ~rrctt, Santa Ana, 1Clcphnnc'. ~ 17·7211
Saturday, 10:00 a.m. 10 6:00 p.m., Bullock's South C=t Plaza, S•n Otego Freeway ll Br•tol, Cosca M<Sa. Telephone. )56-0611
2710 HarbOI' Blvd •Phone 540-7337
(Corner Harbor and Adams)
Orange
City Shopping Cen1er • PtiOne: 633-0995
Anaheim
509 E. Kattlla Aven.ue • Pnone: 772·2'72
• • , .
I
11
• ' ... '. ' .. ..
._i . . -·a ...,...,..
New New
' , ·. . Lets Yoc.c.
INTERI O R LAT()('
. ~I Gloss ENAli!Et ...
&AL.
'
LATEX ---·~cRY.LIC
lnLuior/. DAINT DUR £xwcor rn PRICE
•1-HOUR DRYING 99
.&AL COMP, RETAIL 4.98 ·~==~~·{~.·~·· .. · ... :~'~·::~~~~:::~
•CLEAN·UP WITH WATER
•SCRUBBABLE •GOOD HIDING
Exterior
lnLuior
Le.ts You
C/ean.-UJ,
Willt. Woh!r
•FAST DRYING
•WASHABLE
WHITE & COLORS
~I •1 • I
Lasts;
8Year$
C:K-t~i.M
/rrt£rior
GAL. '
1'i f •,· . • ·1!; . . .
'
\ ,q ~ ~
X ACRYLIC 'l . .1· '.~, ~;,
PAINT \ -.Y
STUCCO· MASONRY PAINT ' LAJlx AC~ ~
I ,.r.e,.;o,/£x:terio,. OUR PRICE ·1. ~·----r-
COMP. RETAIL 6.95
,
JiY I I ' ' "l
' ; I .,
•NOW IN 9 NEW COLORS
• 1-HOUR TO ORY
•CLEAN·UP WITH WATER
•BRUSH OR ROLL
•GOOD HIDING
COMP. RETA IL 4.98
,,
1 0%Pure
T+epored
HOUSE
PAINT
•OIL BASE
--""""'r-•· --w-r-49 !-' .• '
'-r ~~,
. . P~REST W-:~;;&
GAL AN ARRA Y OF COLORS'
·oltu¥a.-"f'
With.
·WobY
E~iot
Lo.tex.
X:lpiM lat.ex
ARN& FENCE
PAINT
•GIVE ALL YOUR
EXTERIOR WOOD
. THAT NEW LOOK
•CLEAN-UP WITH
WATER
•BRUSH OR SPRAY
•FINE GRADE
•SOFT GLOSS
OUR PRICE
99
OUR PRICE 69 •30 MINUTES TO DRY
•CLEAN-UP WITH WATER
eSCRUBBABLE
~-·~
OUR PRICE •FINE QUALITY
•TOUGH & DURABLE
olDEAL FOR ALL
BRIGHT WHITE
& COLORS OUR PRICE 1·HOUR DR Y ING
CLEA N·UPWITH WATER
GAL
•BAl:JSH Of\ ROLL
•EXCELLEN T HIDE
•750,000 GALLONS SOLD
LAST YEAR
•STUCCO·MASONRV PAINT ,
PURE WHITE & COLORS COMP. RETAIL 8.59
peclrum. m~~+
2000
• CUSTOM~" ..... H
C.OLOR
VINYL-
COTE
"
OUR PRICE fRE.E CUSTOf\1 MIXING TO '"1ANV COLORS
.
8• •CLEAN-UP WITH WATER
•FOR MASONRY
& STUCCO 9 •BRUSH OR ROLL •SCRUBBABLE
•INTERIOR, EXTERIOR PAINT 6Al , MASSTONES PRICED HIGHER
• COMP. RETAIL 9.45
EXTERIOR WOOD
•PRE·MIXED, USE
STRAIGHT FROM CAN
WHITE & COLORS
COMP. RETAI L6.95
r HE FIRST '
TRULY DO·IT·
YOURSELF
£x:Uriot
MOBILE .
HOME
PAINT
e ESPECIALL V FORMULATED FOR
USE ON ALUMINUM •NO PAt,.1ER
REOUIREOOVER PRE -PAINTED
$UR FACES •EASIL V APPLI ED WITH
BRUSH OR ROLLER •SATIN FINISH WILL COVE R MOST
COLORS IN l ·COAT
WHITE & COLORS
COMP. RETAIL 9.45
95
&AL.
OUR PRICE
9
&AL.
•FAST DRYING
•USE ON INTER IOR
WOODWORK,TRIM,
DOORS, ETC
•EXTREMELY DURABLE
COMP. RETAIL 6.75
e CLEAN-UP WITH WATER
SCRUBBABLE OUR
• FOR STUCCO, MASONRY AND PRICE
WOOD•SELF-PRIMING
•INTERIOR •EXTERIOR
.. URE WHITE & COl.ORS
COMP. RETAIL 9A5
95
&AL
&AL.
SCRUBBABLE OUR BRUSH OR ROLL
FOR PLAST ER, BRICK PRICE
& STUCCO ·
WH ITE & CO LORS
COMP. RETA!L 6.79
OUR PRICE
COMP.
RETAIL
89C "" 1201.
CAN
•HIGH GLOSS •FAST DRYING
•EXTREMELY TOUGH AND
DURABLE FINISH
•PERFECT FOfl FURNITURE.
MACHINERY, ETC .
WHITE & COLORS ·'
.
,
&AL . ,
.major
~ . ..., .....
..... ,, ....
Sta,ndard Brands OPEN 7 OAYS &·S NIGHTS ·MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 8 A.M. TO 9 P.M.· SATUROAYS,8 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M. ·SUNDAYS. 9 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.
Santa ·Ana • Long Beach -
Paint ·& Decorating
C t Sn convenient en ers ., locations in the wes.t
, BLK. si·~.·~;.~~r. IOELHll Hunt1n~ton Beach 240.1 LONG BEACH BLVD.
TELEPHONE 11141~591 1Y1 BlKS. SO. OF WILLOW
6800WARNER AVE, EAR GOLDEN WEST TELE,HONE 12131421-3761.
Anaheim
CORNER OF LINCOLN & LINDSEY
1 BLK. EAST OF BROOKHURST
Tf.LE.'ffOHE f714J $J3.1507
TELEPHONE f7141142.J686
863sP.2!~'-Y
AT LAKEWOOD BLVD.
Tf.LE,.,ONE 12f3J llf-1111
La Habra
CORNER WHltTIER & IDAHO
2 BLl<S. E. OF BEACH.HACIENDA.
TfLEPttONl l213l ltl-5IOI
•
i
.•,
I
OZITE ®
INDOOR
Now ·
10~A.
~-<---~
•6 & 12 FOOT WIDTHS L-~ :~~:r~YROE~~;~~;YNTHETIC CAi(F;ETIN I
OUR LOW 99 •FOR PATIOS, OECKS, FAMILY 129 PRICE ROOM, BOATS. CAMPERS, O~R
TRAILERS. ETC L W
SQ YD •MANY COLORS P ICE so. MAOEOFPOLVLOOM . ;: •6 FT WI DTHS vo.
''
61> X 13 IN.
OUR 79 C; ~f~f:~oT PRICE '•AtNT OR
' ' _ EA. STAIN
," COMP. RETAIL 1.10··
9•31 IN....... , .2.79 EA.
9•36 JN........ . ...... 2.99 EA.
9•48 IN ................ 4.39 EA.
10•20 1N...... .. .2'.09 EA.
10•24 1N .................. 1.39 EA.
10•26 tN ................... 2.69 EA.
10xl9 IN ................... 2.99 EA. 7•20 IN ..................... 1.!'ig EA.
10•32 IN ................... 3.19 EA.
10x3G I N ...... , ............ 3.39 EA.
12x20 IN ................... 2.49 EM.
12x24 IN ................... 2.79 EA.
12x26 IN .................. 2.99 EA.
121t29 IN ... , .............. 3,&e EA.
12x32 IN ...........•....... 3.99 EA.
12•36 IN .................. 4.29 EA. 121<40 IN .................. 4.79 EA.
121148 IN ................... 5.99.EA .
1211~>4 IN ................... 6.59 EA . 151124 IN ................... 3.69 EA.
1°5•36 IN ... ~ ............. 5.79 EA. 151140 IN .................. 5-.99 EA.
15•48 IN .................. 7.39 EA.
15J<54 IN .......... ~ ....... 7.99 EA.
7•241N ..................... 1.89EA.
71126 tN •••..•............... 1.99 EA.
71129 IN.......... . ...... 2.19 EA. 71132 IN ..................... 2.39 EA.
71136 IN ..................... 2.79 EA. 7":·•40 IN .................. 2.!19 EA.
Rx20 IN.... ..1 79 CA.
11"74 1N ..... 1.99CA. 81176 IN.. . ........ 2. 19 LA.
81129 IN.. ... ..7.39 EA.
81132 IN ~· .... 2.~9 EA.
81136 I N .. 2.99 EA.
91110 I N. I 99 EA.
9•24 IN... 2 19 EA.
91126 IN 7.39 EA.
91129 IN. 2 ~9 EA.
All STYLES SHUTTER HARDWARE ALSO AVAILABL
Vi· l
UPH013TER
. r .. , QMATERIAL ? ~t •48 & 54 INCH
""" , ... ,. '···· \ ,·/J .WIDTHS r~"-': '·:;;:.." 4 Y / f •EASY TO CUT, ~-~ .... ~-r-·-.., SEW;TACKOR .. \ f ·»' P,ASTE
. " OUR PRICE ·e9c • RUN.
'I'" .Yo.
ART SUPPLIES
PICTOR ®ARTIST'S
OILS&
ACRYLICS
YOUR CHOICE
·~~~OHR& 3 I c
SOccTUBE ,
CQMP ' E RETAiL eoc, A.
' t-..;;.uiri
) •1 , . TABlE EASEL
ii· .. ""'."/ ~-:\ ~uc~~~1cE 1 BEA.9 ~ RETAIL 2.25
, .
DO·IT· YOURSELF & SAYE
VINYL ASBESTOS
.L FLOOR TILE COMP.
--• I J OUR PRICE RETAIL ,,~' ~"~~-, 1,2-C 12 xc f2 ,-~ '~-""' INCH ·""--. •·•;_•"'._"i·. •MARBLE PATTERN ·~ ·-~ '"" .,. ·• ... ~-•DECORATOR COLORS
·.:~,•GOES OVER WOOD OR CONCRET , . .
ECONOVINYL
Vinyl Swfa.U.
FLOORING
•1 2 FOOT WIDTHS
•STYLISH PATTERNS
•A PERFECT WAY TO SAVE
SO.
YO.
COM P.
RETAIL 1.60
SALE
COUNTER TOPPING
•'FIRST QUALITY •NbN-STAINING
• 47l4 X 99'/o INCH SHEETS
•ALCOHOL"& WATERPROOF
•WOODGRAIN & GREEN.OR GOLD COLOR
.. ~ ·-... -.. ~ . ' 1 ••• '. ; . f ;· .. i
' '
OU,R PRICE
c
SQ
FT.
'
OZITE ®
•USE THR OUGHOUT
FASHION
TONES
• ~~~~~~~ERING CARPETIN
•MAINTAINS APPEARANCE
•SMART COLORS & PATTERNS
•FOAM BACKED "'· c:,.-r
•12 FOOT WIDTHS !'
OUR LOW PRICE
99
so.
YD. 100'\, C.f . NYLON PILE
WALLCOVERING
• PRE ·TRIMMED
•ADDS BEAUTY TO
ANY ROOM
•DO·IT· YOURSE L F
& SAVE
•GIVE ANY ROOM AN ALL NEW LOOK
•GREASEPROOF •W4SHABLE
•LARGE SELECTION OF PATTERNS
COMP.
RETAIL l'lt
ROOM DARKENING SHADE
OFF.WHITE
-
. · ~p RETAIL~'" ,36'-IN ........... 1.49, COM . ~
~ FLORAL PRINT'VINYL SHADES
3 COLOR STYLES
36 IN ............. 1.49 COM~. RETAIL-t.iG..
ON SPECIAL ORDER DECORATOR ITEMS
SUCH AS:·
•WALLCOVERING . " .
• FLOORCOVERING ~~ ,
•WINDOW SHADE~ -: ; • · '
•PANELING ' \ ·· 1 ,
-\ . ~~" l ,,.~. FOR EXAM PL E;-··-::.~~....:
•SAVE 3.00 PER SGL. ROLL ON ALBAO!I
NYLON FLOCKED WALLCOVERING
•PRE-PASTED •WASHABLE
~~~E 595 iitc OOMP.RETAIL 8.96
ALL WALLCOVE.RING SOLD IN 2 ROLL BOLTS ONLY
'
'•
COPYRIGHT 1914
MIRROR SQUARES
e BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED TO ENHANCE ANY ROOM!
e All MIRROR SQUARES ARE GflOUND ANO POLISHED.
e 1.4ASTIC TAPE l~CLUDED fOR EASY DURABLE MOUNTING.
SALE •FIRST QUALITY
12112 IN.
CLEAR
Venetk.m
OUR PRICE c
EA.
COMP. RETAIL 85C
SpecioLFlueliate
DARTMOUTH ®
CARPETING .•··,-~, :·''
.;.:::.,,
. ;.
55% C.F. NYLON PILE 45'% HERCULON OLEFIN PILE
SPEf:IAL ORDER OUR 3· 99 •Hl.-DENSITY FOAM BACK PRICE
•1 2 FOO T WIDTHS
•MEETS FH A SPECIFICATIONS so. VO.
•AN EXCE PT IONAL CARPET co~1P.
VALUE FOR THE ENTIRE HOME Rl TAIL S.9S
•SPECTACU LAR CO LOR COMB IN ATIONS
PLASTIC BLINDS
•In.door •Outdoor
WHITE MATCHSTICK STY LE
3FT. X &FT. 4 FT.X &FT.
COMP. RETAIL 3.30
OUR SALE PRICE
COMP. AETAIL 4 .40
~g~~~R S2ALE 9PRl9CE ~g~MER 199 • PRICE
~ EA.
PRI CE
·~ EA.
• OTHER"StzEs AT OU~ flE{iULAA LOW PRICES :
5X6FT ...•....... 4.89
8X6FT ......•••• 6.49
10 X 6 FT......... 7,99
12 X 6 FT .•......• 10.69
F Ovall:'1kif,oStyl.e
".! X 6 T ........................................................... 3.99
4 X 6 FT ....................................................... 5.69
6 X 6 FT ........................................................... 8.49
8 X 6 FT .......................................................... 11 .99
10 X 6 FT ......................................................... 14.99
•ALSO AVAILABLE A COMPLETE LINE OF FANCY WOVEN
Bl.INDS Ii BAMBOO BL I NOS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES I
QUl~BRIK
PACKAGE COVERS AN AREA 6 SQ.FT.
•LOOKS AND FEEL LIK E REAL BRICK
•MADE OF FIRE·PR OOF MINERAL FIBER
•EACH BRIK 7~ X 3:1.i IN.
•SO EASY .TO DO·IT-YOUR§E LF
YOUR CHOICE OF TWO STYLES
-li.JL •
, .:.j ~L·~f,~~~:~, 352 lfll l"ll I COMP. PER ,q 0.: RETAIL 4.99 PKG.
!I -...... ~ •
... i _ /i ~-'°'f',·f~•USEDBRIK 4ao
! ~~'.4\ "'"1 OU R PRI CE PER ..-;,,"J:) ~ _,.._ COMP. . ~~16.">'!' __ RETAIL6.99 PKG.
llficlBll MASTIC MORTAR
11>>--L A ND FINISH :~~'f SEALER ..
..,....., .. AVAILABLE AT ---· ............. ow. p
I-land Cral'ted
WOODEN BEADS
ADOS A STYLISH TOUCH
TO AN Y ROOM!
STYLE 101
8 FOOT
COMP.
RETAIL
1.20
OUR PRICE
STYLE 203 STYLE 2048,
AN0 1i01 211.233 &234·
8 FOOT 8 FOOT
COMP. COMP.
RETAIL RETAIL
2.(>0 • 3.00
OUR PRICE OUR PRICE
59c 1.65 1.98
&
' I
PLASTIC BEADS
Sok I •ROUND BEADS • OUR FOAMtR
OUR 199 COMP. PRICE SALE RETAIL 2:59 60 FT.
•WHIT£ ONLY PRICE 50 FT. 3.95 ,
e SINGLE COLOR 1•SINGLE COlOR •2 COLOR ROUND BEADS CRYSTAL SHAPE OIAMONDSHAP(
OUR PRICE " OUR PRl~E OUR PRICE
259 COMP. 279 COMP. 315 COMP. RETAIL RETAIL RETAIL ~FT.J.95 50FT.4,95 ~Ff,1.98
11
---
10 DAILY PILO T Thursd~Y. J11nt b, 1974
New Ltlo lt
Work men at ~tain
Beach Park in Laguna
Beach achieve cobble-
sto1ie effect in concrete
by forcing down steel
forms. The 1,000 lineal
feet of park between
Pacific Coast Highway
and ocean ha s been
called Laguna's window
to sea. Project, an Art
Colony dream for 40
years, will be dedicated
June 22 .
ca~eras et cetera ~~ s'\~~AS & ACCESSORIES ·STERE D & SOU ND EOUIPMENT ·PHOTO PROCESSING, ETC.
SAWYER
SLIDE PROJECTOR
MIRANDA
SENSORET
-PETRI
COLOR 3SE CAMERA
• !'100 W1U Qu,tlt H1loc1n L•mp
e 100 Sl!a1 Rototr1y Slide Tr1y
• Autom1tlc 11po1ure
• Autom.llc 11111ltrinc
• super-sensitive , fully
111tom1tic e1posu1e conllol
e A11tom1llc Foc:u' Ou1 Rec. 131.95 • flecllonlc 11'111U1r • A11tom1tic 111111 system Ollr R1r. 1t.9S
e Rtmote Conllol 99.86 • R1nc1 finder locusint 77.53 • F1 1l Plltl 12.1 40nllll ltns ·
• Pforramed shutter 5 9 8 7 • '" F/3.5 Lt ns • Aulomalic fl11h system
• Po~UI) Ed itor •Quick loaidlnt sy1ttm •
1002
MOVIE CAMERA
• Fast I 1.7 ten~ ioom fro!l'I 6.SllVll
.,..idt anitt to '5mm close up
• Eltc110-F1dt ltts you ladt SCIUS
In or out
• CdS automat ic •ltctrfc ,,., wilb
m1n111t o'ltnidt
• Slow or acctllrattd !l'lo!ion cont1ol
• Bantry r1c11ari1r lncllllftd
?" "''""" 2 30.6 7
~· 2588Z m MOVIE PROJECTOR
• t I ~ Zoom L1n1
• Fo1 '11 11d, Rtvtrst , Fast fo1ward ,
Automatic Re.,..ind
• Br lChl New Still M.l .P. S1 29.95
• Auto 01!/0n Room Light Ou11e1 86 _95 • 150 Watt Bnll1ance
• Carrying Case and 400" Reel
ST 802
MOVIE CAMERA
• ASA Rance 16'25G
• Fast 1/1.7 LAn1 Zoo'"' 110111 7.5111m
• Wldt An11t to 60111111 Ttlt plloto
e A11t0tn1tlc CdS El1c11lc Eyt 1'1"illl
Manu11 Ov1rr ld1
• Eltctro•f1dt l1t 1 You Fadt Scents
In a. Out
, ~d/1m:ir. Metal
· '•[;1I Attache Case
I
• 5110111111ttal
1 1 (Olll ltucUon
Vista 40 RC
Electronic Flash
• ,_, ttcond 11cyc 11
• Nitild battuy
• GN 40 1'1"ilh ASA 25
• Bullt-ln rtchar111
2680
SLIDE
PROJECTOR For Father and
the who le tami ty
• 1/3.5 PTtcl sion Lins
• 500Watt Bfllll1nct
• Po~lll) Edi101 lor Stldt Prt'litw
• C111yinr Cast and GAF lOG Our ft•l· 72.95
Slldt Tray · 68 35 • Remote Control
• Forward. Rtvtrse. Fot ui •
CANONET 28
with case
•Precision 11n11!1nd1r locush11
• Shutttr s petd• to 1/SOOO st c. Out R11. It .ts
78.87 • CdS t l•clrlc •Y•
• Fasl 1/2.1 ltns
Bauer E18A
Eleitronic Flash
e Guhl• N11111b1r 45
l0t Kod1cluo1111 II ASA 25
• Comp11!11l1tlf \.l&ht Output VJ • Ll&lll1'l"tl1h!
k2050 o ...... '"' 38.87 ""' ...... " 19 .83 Ow''" O .!S 36,83
~· Velbon ME3 Tripod
~\, • Mt1v1 duly pan htad
• Rt¥trslblt rubbtr ind
spi~e ''''·
Prinz 135m m 11.8
Telephoto lens
• f"our ltnt tltmtnl
•. Fltld 1n11t 11
• Sm1llt1t 1111rlllf t 1/22
/(,,a,;,;,,,_
Tour Bag VI
U1l'ltw1l1ht, d1111blt
lh1111d bl1t k V1n1hld1
Soll lttllltf look
•
I·
I
•
10.62
CALCULATORS
A Fathers Day gift ho will
use year attor year!
P'"'" mount 39 67 Our Rec . 47.50 •
!2052
O• "'· ""' 48, 97
Soligor WIDE ANGLE and
TELEPHOTO LENSES
C1ait 4506 with c11t lo AC ld.tpto1. ••••• • ••••• • 79.95
Ci.ii~ 4501 Kl wUl'I ClSI, c h•1111, b11t1r l11 ••••••• 57.95
crai& 4$09 wlll'I c111 & AC M.J plo.-•• , •••••••••• 49 .95
Canon L[ 11 Calc u11tor •••••.••••••••••••••• , 49.95
Bo""'" MJI: ~5 Calc11l•I•' •••••••.•••••••••• &9.95
So H1or 241111111/2.l aulo Wlclt An< Uni .•• Ouf Rtl. 112.SO 93.81
Soli&DI' 21mm 1/2.111110 Wldt An< Ltn• •.• Our Jt•I· H ,50 71.li
Sotlcor 13$1111111/2.1 auto Tt ltpllOCo L.tn1 •• .Ollf R•l· ii.JS 11.47
so111or~ 200mlll l/J.5 ~ut• Ttttphol• LAn• • , ,Ollf Rtl. ,l,15 84.11
Solfcor JOOl!lm l/J.5 auto Ttl1phote-L1n1 , •• Our R11.111.ID 13.52
SoJl&or '0-2JO auto zoo111 Ttlephtto Uns •. Our R•I• 117.50 141.1!
Tti!Ol.lnt .' .••...••....... , ••. , , ... 0111 Rt&.12.95 11 .26
""0 10 STUDENT and PROFESSIONAL DISCOUNTS
Wt t••• A 211'•dltt0Ulll on .t ll DARKROOM PAP£RS J"' CHC Ml,TRT •nd ,,
10"•-10-. discount on •II OARllROOM Ml'.RC HAfllDISE t1om our 111111Jt 1tll IJICt 11 q11tl llltd l nd lwhl~.tlt .
Pf icts tlltctl.,. ltr1wr11 SIH!day, J1111t I,
SOUTH COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA
BRI STOi. AT SAN DtfGO flWT -.i'iiOitf '19.:s:IT3 MONDAY·FRIDAY: 10.9 SAT: 10-6 P.M. SUN: 12 (noon) 5 PM.-
•
J(issing S tnrs Pucker . V p
CHICAGO (UPI) -At least
a doten pair ol lips will be
united and rtmaln that way
al"-t llQflStop for fivo days.
mo=lonl.,-Whtft t ft 0 fll•t•I 1r1nd n a t I o n • I kialoll 11i11 letw$y,
'Ill< ki""lf cllamploouhipe. •
promotion for a re c o rd
company. will be held at what
is bi.lied as the world's largest
indoor shopping c e n t e r •
Woodfield mall, In suburban
Schawnburg.
THE ~1ARATHON ,
originally scheduled for the
Memorial Day weekend, was
delayed until all t h e
competit ors could be
assembled. organizers said, THE ONLY REUEto• from
thereby allowing b r u l s e d. keeplng lips pressed together
senlifinalists time to recover will come tn fi ve·minute:
i*eper puckers. brtak! pcnn!Ued ench hour.
Kissing champs from New Jlersrud s a I d . Contestants
York to San Diego will be must remain seated -during
flown In by lhe Warner Bros. their togetherness, he said.
Affiliate, Casablanca Records, Although there were 14
to begin what a contest finallsts cro~ned In the f'tvtMI"'' "''*'
spokesman predlcted would be contest, Henrud said there "" c ....
l:ARl.'S
a rive-day contest, possibly probably would be only 12 or TI""' ...,,.
I ·--onger. 13 oouplcs competing for the '-"""•·fNllttHU "" °""" David flcrsrud, the Chicago prize, which is an eight-day 4f 6·0401 642·171J representative ror Casablanca, paid vacation In Mexioo. I'--=-'-'"--~~.-~
said, '!This thing'll last atl-;:=:;::;:==::;;;;:;;;:;;;=======:..:===::;
least 100 hours. That's based
on performances at the klssoff
oompetitlon held in major
cities last month."
WHEH YOU WANT A C.4.R IH IURO~E CAU.
EURAUTO • 673-4550 ·BAY LIDO 81.DG. ....... .., • ..,.... 2700.._,.,..., ...... ...,.. ....
,, LET ME MAKE ONE THING PERFECTL r cuAR • • • A•our
* PIC·N~SAVE
A roTE FOi fj!J Pie rr SAYE 111a GET rou EYEIYTNING 1r 40% OFF
(AT LEAST}. OFTEN AT 70% OFF (ANll ll/llltl. NEW /TIMS Ill/YE lf(EKLY.
EXCIT/11& TNlll&S FOi EYEIYltlDY! 111111£ SELECT/I/NS. FJ/tTJST/C /llltJ/llS.
.......... \ .......... r ·· .. .. .. ~ . ~-~ ".\ . ··;··,·~ .:,
~-·::__::~
HUNT SNACK PACK
BEAN SALAD
De!icious ~as-is" or mi1~ info yovr fa'lori!t 1~s~
u l.Jds, 'tc. Great !Of l)ICINCS. I) bai 11 tor lu~hes.
• ~
'
SIZES
4-eX
15.9
,
Pll 11111
SELF-STICK
PLASTIC SHELF LINER
M.My -"""" Dolt'tt ol •wt BKli'lt US ~~ to CUI ~
lor 4earllkl1.
'" l(lll \11( .. ,
J 1!9..h~il
DECORATED GLASS\VARE iijv11.~llJ_G"-•• -. s.!'au!!.AA::l--1]"9
15.00 ,. 129 4.PACK SET OF GLASSES
• I OZ. GLASSES .....••• 59C
• 12 OZ. GLASSES .•.•••• 69C
• 11 oz. GLASSES ....... 79c
17.00 91'"•GW' SQUIJI[ •
19.00 91'" SQUN!l l.19
DECANTER-42 OZ.., ••••• , 39c
PITCHER-80 OZ. .•••.•• , ••. 88c
• ClttlP sun SAUCE Mil • CllJW Mllll SAIJCI Mil
• l:HINlSE Mt!Slllll
• PIUA SAUCE Mii
-i GIRLS' SLEEVELESS
BLOUSES
' I
I
I ,.__
I
Neat trim rroral prints with dainty I ror.rnde~ collars, lxltton downs. etc. I
Permanttlt prrss. Clloict of colors. f
Siles: 4·10. I
I
I
IL'"' I TWO-PIECE TERRY
SHORT SET 1
C•sual playwell" In macililll! wn~8'1e J
1ooi cott0ti ,lerry clotft. Choice tt I
colors wit~ wN1tt 111Hrts.
llZES 4-eX 1.59 JI
llZES 7-14 1.7'
u·11ii•rr LUGGAGE
I Gt LIGHT! Go Sltl.l.Rl ! GQ 1" style with 1hi1 1!1r1tt1¥1, OU.lLllY !u1~111
I wit~ 1 sliin PflC!. V1rtially 1nOU!r11Ctlbl1 ore J•ltt !1amn. Tou1n &r1u\f~
w!nyl. ilm'y duty tlJIPlll. Built I01 l1u111y .lNO loliP wur,
I I • TOTE BAQ •.••••• 4.95
I • 29" PLAID PULLMAN •••
I 12.95
I •.26" PULLMAN .•••••••••
I 15.95
I • RIGID FllAMI! CAR BAG
I 22.95
AU JS UJCATIONS Al£ CELEllATING OU/I GIAllll llP£NINGS IN Cl/STA MESA Allll lll't.AND!!
WESTMINSTER
14200 ...... ll•d.
COSTA MESA
175 E. 17111 st.
.. Mowpori 11•4:
SANTA ANA
Bri1fol & MacArthur
Nwtti .. s..-c ..........
OPEN WEEKDA VS 9 TO 9-SUNDA Y 10 TO 7
.(
I
' ' I
• i hur~ay, Junt b, 1 q74 DAIL V PILOT J I * * • • * * • • • * • • • + • • ~ • • • •
Baker .Weighs Suits Against Opponents :
T. Dean, son of the man Baker watch )'OU1' ~!let." the campaign literal.Ure over plan.s "ll vig(lrou~ canipa!grJ
MERCURY SAVINGS
arid lo:r ;s~or111t1v11
• • •
Dy O.C. HUSTINGS
SANTA A~A -Orongc
t:ounty Supervisor 0 avid
Baker , forced i n I o u
Novcrnbcr runofr election, Sthtl
Wednesday he may !ile li bel
suits ag11inst his two primary
election foes fol' Issuing "fal se
oind vicious" ca 111 po i g n
li1 Pra ture.
first driealcd for I h e Baker said tlttre I! no doubt to hh1 attorn('\', !~Core Kr11 C'm bcr." \
su1"1ervlsor's )ol> 12 years avo. tht lasl-minute attsek harmed "Should 1nv allorntvs feel
13uker 's chief turgct ls Juhn
Spendlove's
Ope11 Space
Talks Set
Of all the orange groves,
untouched hills , and open
rlelds remaining in south
Orange Count y, which will
stay and which will be
developed?
HAKER GAVt: newsmen
t·u1>les ot l'Omputtr lclters,
rximphlets and telegrams he
.~Hid were sent to voters in Ilic
Second Oislrit..'1. by Dean and
another candidate. 1. or r y
Schmit. Schmit \Viii oppose
Baker in November.
An1ong other things, the
literuture calls Bilker "il
thlcf'' and "a pilferer" and
sctys the incumbent "ha~
feathered his own n e s l
financially" through his public
office .
The literature brands Baker
a s a '· W a tergate-style" poli~n and says "qavid Bak~ 'tmiy not belong in jail
but he dot>Sn't belong on the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors, either!''
A statement in the pro-Dean
literature says to elect Baker
MAY FILE SUITS
Supervi1or Baker
to another
"would be
professional
four·ycar term
like asking a
pickpocket to
his tHmpalgn seriously enough libel i~ JnvoJ\·ed, I will s1.'t'k Iii'.: SAID lus campa1~n will .,
to force the runoff wht!n he 1>unltivc und rcnl damapc:~ for l;c [lhnl·li tit "'akln1.t IN'lfllC
only managed to win 46 hurling my ca 1npalgn and nwar!' of ttk• \1ni•:ir tut·th·s his •
pel'<'cnt of the volt'. attacking my rcpututl in, oppont'nls rl'S!lrtctl tu. "A •
hQnesty t111d intc•grity," Boker person in publtc office real ly •
sn~~· . . has no d !f!nse agxinst th 1.i, • "THIS WAS purely an
aUempt to discredit m y
cai;ididacy and me
personally," Baker said. "I'm
surprised so many people
apparently bought il even
tlmugh it Is a IJlalanl Ile."
fhls enllre thing 1s based kind o! thing," he sa1<1.
on innuendos, blatant lies and ---I '
~J~~~ding sta1 l'n1c nts," he Kids L.ike lo :
• •
.. STATEM EN T SAVINGS ... PRE STI GE Card
IUE NA PAAIC ,,1rrtury :;a 1ir,,1. =~ \JI•,\,,., ,+I L•/\Cclri
HUNTINC.TON 6EACll l~~rcv1:.~. • ;~ ~· -'J r1 ··~· ~t [leach
TUSTIN ~·~1r.~1 )av1MQ) E.:~g 'I .·'lC b .~ 31 '11,.oor1 Ave.
LA HABllA·FUlLEllTOH "tTtJIY s~. I~ c~ I• •:;l'1d' Hwy. ill Harbor
CAllSDN Me•cJry'lav11~· f<l~1 :., i·.= t~·~Le~~F1wy,
BllBY KMDllS ll.t""'f s~,,·~· ~;r, • l ; t:•1t' 9 ol ~: CJr1~n S1
•
• • • • • • • • Baker denied charges by
Dean that he {Baker \ is
involved in business dealings
in Los An gele!! that amount to
a conflict or interai:t,
Baker s aid he is
disappointed In not winninR l'C-
clection ou1righ1. l>ut said he Ask And ,· • * • * • • * • • * • • • * * * • • • ~ * ~
He said he ne\'er h1:1d an
in!rrest 'in lhe de r u n cf
dev elopment firm of Baker.
Dillon and Associates.
"I neve r invested a nlckle in
it or got a nick\e lron1 It."
BAKER said he has turned
Orange County Planning
Comn1issioner Bart Spendlove
will try to supply part of the
nnswer In u preS('nlaHon from
9 a.m. to noon Saturday at Los
Allsos Intermediate School.
$7.3 Million Recreational al the comer of Newport Boulevard and \'ia Lido
The program. tit!erl "Orange
. county's Suburban Last
Frontier.'' is the last In a tG-
v.·eek scrie!\ on the historv and
ecology of lhe Saddlc°back·
Capistrano area sponsored by
the UC Irvine Extension.
I .
Fund Due to Orange County
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER ' per capita basis.
Of Ill• P•H1 Pllft $1111
Joining Spendlove, who will
focus on plans to preserve
unique natural features and
open space. v.•ill be Forest
Dickason. former 0 range
County planning director; Jan
Nichols, chairman of the
science department at Los
Alisos school. and Dale Secord
or the Environmental Coalition
of Orange County.
SANTA ANA -Orange
County stands to receive at
least $7.3 million o! the '250
million in recreational bond
.moiley endorsu;l by California
voters Tuesday.
Of that total, roughly $2
million ·can be spent on
regional and co u n tywide
projects, with the balance to
be distributed to cities and
unincorporated territory on a
THE COUJ\'TY Board of
Superviso rs has appro\'ed a
tentalh'e priority list o f
projects 10 be funded with the
regional share or lhe mone)'.
At least three Orange Coast
recreation areas are consid1•r·
.ed top priority projects.
They include development of
~file Square Park in Fountain
Valley. development of
F'airview Park in Costa ltfesa
I
----------
FRUIT T~E,E • P~!c~C IA L .!!<
,_ •FIG e GRAPE -)l
GOOD THRU
JUNE l 2tl1
•NECTARI NE
203 OFF ~ MARKED PRICES
. LARGE SELECTION •
VERONICA ~
PURPLE ~
JUNIPER SALE NOW IN BLOOM •
eTAMS
eBLUE
PF IT ZEA
5 GAL
$ ' 2 .79 {1'16fNSTANTLAW.
FLOWERING \ .;('.
• PLUM \
•TIFGREEN $1 .62
•'SANTA ANA S 1 62
•KENTUCKY
PURPLE LEAVES
s3.95
5GAL
STOLONS
HYBRID BERMUDA
1 SANTA ANA
1 b~ARF$4.49
1 TIF GREEN MOST
NlJAS.
PER BUSHEL se.oo
WES · CA L 'S . SUll
BURST
GAZANIA
BLUE s 1.62
££ LANDSCAPE
~KETC:~:: ANO
CONSULT I N G
MONDAY THAU FRIDAY
500 106 30PM
BRI NG tN PLOT PLAN SCA LEO
1 0 118 •1 '0". SNA P St;iOTS
EXTRA WEEK
DAY SPECIALS
65' t GAL .
(THURSDAY)
BEGONIA white flowers
(FRIDAY) 1GAL 65 ,
AND ALL JACOBINA
GROUNDCOVE RSI-~~~~~~~~
IN.FLATS (MONDAY) 1 GAL 6"5'
FREC~LE FACE
~·
20 0f_OFF (TUESDAY)1 G•L 65' _!. . -fU . SHRIMP.PLANT @ v ' r
(WEDNESDAY\ t GAL. ~
WONDER ING JEW 59<
~ ~.a~ll~t~yp~e~s~~~~.::...:.._,
.... ~, .. ·:·NURSERY
!i:""'"-1~1 15640 BROOl<HURST, WESTMINSTER
[ 0~7~ ~ ~ '""""~ Phone839 ·8400 8AMto6:30PM .1'
~~~~~~~~
•
and development of nev.·
stretches of Capistrano Beach
below the bJUrrs.
Counlv llarbors. Beaches
and Pai-ks Director Kenneth
Sampson t o 1 d supervisors
some mon'ey could also be
used for development of the
Nike site park in Garden
Grove. Los Coyotes Regional
Park development and
aequisitons along I o we r
·SaJ\tiago Creek.
THE OTJIER priority Item
on the li~t is restoration or
county historical sites such as
the old Borden Tin !\fine in
Tr3buco C;inyo n.
The Recreational Land Bond
Act also could pro\'ide as
much as $10 million from !ht'
state to be used toi.1·ard
preservation of U p p e r
Newport Bay as a "'ildlife
sanctuary.
Sampson said it is doubtful
any of the local shares would
be used for the Upper Bay.
WATER
GAUGE s~
Works like the weatherman's
tool -measu re s water
ground receives. TTG20
Black& Oeckar•
LAWN EDGER
& TRIMMER
'J.999
Swing·open blade guard for
easy cleaning. Double-in-
sulated. Big 6 X.~ blade cuts
%" deep. 8214
Deluxe Edger /Trimmer
Big a• blade cuts ~-'" deep.
8220 ............. 39.99
WE 1RE ALREADY HERE
.
J)ISTINCTIVE FOOTWE,\11
AN D ACCJ::SSOH I ES
3404 VIA OPORTO 675-5454
LIDO VILLAGE-NEWPORT BEACH
' z:w4 a
, .• for bountifut w°"""' whoo"'
11 cwt obo•~ tM r~lf!
SIZES 38 to 46
121/2 ta 261/2
hard·t~find 14-16-18-2 0
THE UNlqlJE IOUTIQUE FOi llGGEI GIRLS
3477 YIA OPORTO -LIDO VILLAGE -
673· 8530
OUR VERY BEST
"''°"'' "!-4CrO VIA OPOfffO, /\'fWf"ORr 'BEAU/, C-AL!FoRNIA ~Z(,.f40 I (71,,, )t;,. 73-0). 3 'Z.
0""''~"1' ·-;."~· ...,.,,, .... ,,.1<1"f'.a.' :c 01.,)\.(IS,.1.,. .... ,"
M/..lYS, MfN'S S"ftJff,£rc..
•
NEWPORT'S NEWEST
ART GALLERY
,,.-f,,.:h< ~, • i rils f:~
·' 1· ~ ....._~ a1ni;1ngs
ART GALLERY
3408 VIA OPORTO -673-3283
LIDO VILLAGE -NEWPORT BEACH
HARDWARE STORE
LATEX HOUSE PAINT
J,Art:X
HOUSE PAINT
•' -···-·~ -~tt' ....._ i;,r1\\ •. ;·~
··:::Z ,. .. ·:--~, .. ~
1Y,
LB .
•
ij#.~
GRASS 99~
SEED
Economical way to build
up your lawn! Fast-grow-
ing, crabgrass -free . 48786
I>l \·i •~
Camper's
BLUE ICE
149
Reg. 9.29
Custom Colors
Slightly Highe1
~ I_fll ~·~ , ..
• I "",?'--~ ·• 11
-~-;' I
:-·~-.'~ ~
•, '::! .~:;yp,
SPRINKLING -·599
METER
t-.1on itors sprinkling of a pre ·
set volume. shuts hose off
when it's done. TTJOOP
* Unrque 01l -En1uls1on
Formula. * Protec1s 11ke an 011 paint.
goes on latex-easy. * Resists weather, smog,
stains mildew and
b11ster1ng. * High-hiding Fast drying
24 Jamesto·Nn Colors
or White.
50-Ft. of %" 9sa
Flexogen Hose
Flexible-spiral kn it resists
kinking, bursting. 4440-42
75 Ft. 4440-44 .... 12.88
23 " Te xan 5495 KETTLE
GRILL
Big enou~h for roa:.ts. fowl.
Black BK710
I
19" Servess
Rotary Mower
HOURS
MONDAY-FRIDAY 9·9
SATURDAY 9-6
SUNDAY 10·4 -.... 11ro -
. '
:·
. . . • • • ' ' ~ ~ ~ ~ ·:
. . . . .
·. . .. .. ·.
I 12 DAILY PILOT r ~ Deatli s
El se·1.vli.ere
RIVERSIDE I UP I I
F\lneral services "'ill be held
t'ridaf !or fomlcr lllO\'iC
studio publicist Charlrs E.
l\lcCarlhy, &1, v.•ho dit.'<i of a
heart ailment Tu es da y.
~1cCarthy served ri~ publicity
and udverlising director for
Para1nounl and 20th-Century
Fox studios and \Vas Cl'cculi vc
vice president of the Council 1
of ~1otlon Picture Organiz:t·
lions.
De nll1 1\"01 h•e •
COEN TM liltvt rl'ncl Ft!Mr L111rtnct, bo•n 1o • , ...... lite Jun• 3, ,,,,, MI H F•ld•Y·
J\int 7, 1:00 PM. SI. lil i!I'·• C.i1><111c
cnurch, Slerr• M1<1r1, ol!icltfll. M••l.
Mon<11y. June 10, 11:00 AM. SI. C1!ll<>rlt1e '1 c u11o1;, Cnurcll, Av11on. C111lln1, olllcl1n1 Ft lntr Thom••
SChneloer. lntermtn!. A.vt lon Ct metf>,v. Survlvnr1, JOM ~ Jac~lvn K<"rr lrt<I JOl\n, Ptut 11\d \lttll!ll• K•••· In Uau o• ll~wc" or memor el m•n11, ton!rl1>ullcn• mav lw wnt 10 Ho.g M•mD!'ldl H'>'pllal,
N•-1 Beath, C1Ufr 8Dlll·Bfr11e•~n
Co.11 Me•a Mort~'l''MclSflc tCl!'1.
Marv Ev1lvn. J11.,. J. 191,. A11e ». Re•ldent Of L•oune Ni11u~!. Su•vi•ed bv Hu•b•<ld ROber1, ·l aaugn1tr Mary l..e\' li1rm1 & moll>e• Alml T. Jonn,ion. AU ot l....iun1 N!11..el. Pd va1e servlc•1 & in!erment were neld. Sneller l..1ouna
1111cn Mcr1111r~i'~!rti'f~·
~~'.'°'i;1~~· K~~~I~~~·, O~rle ch~:'"·p!Y~~
~urv!l'fll bV wlte, Lean II. Klndl ytn. 1 '6~':n1~n1,Mi!..~1. 8~'i.~1~~ne K~~n,, :\
Tustin. Parents, Mr. I. Mrs. Nlkoliiis
KIMJleitt c4 HC>I SPrlngs, Ark. 2 1h;Ttr1,
Mrs. Anne S19e ol l..ilkt Forni, lit., M ...
Barbara "Turlilp, 1ho Of Llkl Forts!, 111.,
Ro•arv. Frid1v, 7 PM u MtCormit~
\Ml""I ae1cn CNoel. R11uiem MIU. 1turd1y, 11 AM 11 r. Cllf>er lne
C1t110Ht Cnurcl>, l..1ogun1 8111;1>,
lnlt•menl AK...,•lon Cemel•rv. In ll•u ot flow«•, 11one11on1 m1y bl-.... 01 to I.es
Ptlilfl, Fl..,,. Cllll<lrett's H-Soclelv. D So . .Syt1mor1 ST., Sln11 Ant, C1UI.
"~' MITCH•1..1. o.lwood 01101G 1w1y June '· 197'. .Services r>elldll'IQ, Sl'letlt r L.tcHH'll Btacn Mortu1rv Direclors. '9'-Ull. MOUNT Alk.t C. pal»<! 1w1y June '· 1'1'-A;e II. llti.IUnt of LllllHll Hllll. Privalt
Strvlc•• -• Mid. s111u...-Le<1un1 Beach Mor1u1rv OlrKtoni"lrle
JOMn G. Plrl1. 0111 ct dell'!-June '· 191' 11 El Toro. Re•IUnt of El 1oro. Survive(! by Wllt. Miry M Pirlt. l Mins. J1me1 Pi rie, Columcu .. Ohlo1 Merk Plrlt . Akron Ohio, ind Ooulll1s P+rlt of El Toro. Orlt Bro!her, Altx Pirie o! Norrn Medlson. OP!io, -si11er. M r1. 1,......,ard Pellon ot Gtftev1, OMo. Requitm Mau S..lu•dav, lD AM ,, H~y Family C1tf\Otk cnutCll t uy1MQa Fath, OP!lo. FollOwO'd tw ln!trmenl In Geneva. Ohio. 1..oc11
1rr1ngemlflh by McCormlt~ Ltgun• Stith Mllr!Ulry. S,EAltS
Don1ld M. S11t1r1, 0111 of dtltl!. Junt ~'"· 1t7•. RH lclent of LIQ\lfll Bt<1Ch, C1., Survlv~ cv Piii W!le, L.011 Speir•. one
Son T110tT11s Sptlrl of G1rdtn1, C•.• -
Dluori•er, Mri;. OC>nn1 Alllson or Selem, Ore., one Step.Son, E. W1vne Moss, of
GarcMn1. one St.,,.OtUllh!«, Mr1. (l~
Elllotl ol Iii-, Nevac11. lt Gr1nc1t P!lldrtn •nd 7 Grtll Gr1naclllldren Fu,....al Strvicn. FriOly, 10 AJA II ll>e CP!urch ot Je11111 Chrl1! l..1Utr O.Oy S1inh In Lt aun1 lle•t"-ln1erm ... 1 I PM FrlCltv. ltKlll'WOOd Park Cemetery. McCormick l..1911111 Btlth Mor1u~rv. OlrKtD!'S.
VANAUSDEI N
lilu1n M1rQ, PIH.f<f 1w1y June '· 1916. Strvlce• oeMJ!nQ. Shelter l..IQunt llt K h Morluary DlrKI01'1, '96·UlS.
ARIUCKLI & SON
WISTCllff MOllTUAJlY
427 [. 17th 51 Cosio Mc•o
646·4888 -·-BALTZ-BERGERON
' FUNERAL HOME
Co•ono dtl Mar
~o~•o Mt~ -·-
673·94~0
646·2424
IELL IROAllWAY
MORTUARY
, 1,1 drc,.u ,:iw.;v (< JO 1.le
6-42 ·II ~ -·-DILDAY BROTHERS
MORTUARY
179 11 Beoci. Blvd
Hunl•ng •on 6'locri 842-777 1
744 ll~ndo Avt
Long 6e0<~ !~IJ) 438 1145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1195 l o g uno Ccrnyon 11d.
494.94 1 ~ -·-McCORMICK
MISSION MORTUARY
i 88 32 G.om<n<> (np.~lfono
So n Jvon (npo~rtono
495.17/6 -·-PACIFIC VllW
MEMORIAL PARK
r,,orruory
J~OO r .,c;1 v, .. w D<""
Newpor1 a,..,,..,. Lololo•n1n
f,J.j .100 -·-PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
780 I Sol so Aw-, Wesim•l'!S!et'
893 3~2!1 -·-SMITHS' MORTUARY
6 ?7 Moon Si
Hun11nQ1on IM!od1
j J6.6.)39
Dial Direct
642·4321
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covers your
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DAILY PILOT
•
Th11rMta~, Junl' b, 197ll
Co111ity Drn11ia Ji1dge Order s Test s on Slain·' fufant
Captu1·ed l(ille1· SANTA ANA -Jennifer
Dabney broke down and v.·ept
in lhl! ('OUrt room Wed11esdoy
as a Santa Ana municipal
court judge oroere<i a 24·hour
delay in the burial or the
eigh l·month-old 900 she is
accused of kllHng.
the courtroom that coroner'11
officers are calling for X·rit ys
thut will reveal old wounds
and brain damago and arc
also probing scars a n Q
cigarette bums on the body Of
young Jtobert Dabney.
111.s falher. Sgt. Dennis
1-~ugene Dabney, 2-1, stood
behind his wife in th e
<.'Ou.rt.room while Judge Ph ilip
~hwab ordered 1he couple lo
return to hi.s courtro'cn1
J<~riday for further action on
their arraign1ncnt.
murdered child. I! now a ward
or the oounty and is being
l'Ured ror ln the Albert Silloo
Gi ve11 Life Term liome. '
BRIAN SAID the child
Mows evldcnci: of wounds,
nuu1y of the1n sirnllRr to those
suffered by the dead child. and By TO~l BARLEY
01 1111 0111¥ ~llo! "'"
io.·ledlcol Center authorities
today reported ttiin doing w~ll.
Barred frorn attending the
Las Vegas funeral by the
setti ng of $1bo.ooo ba il, Mrs.
Da bney , 20. learned that the
delay will enable investigators
to probe more deeply into the
nature of the Injuries that led
to the child 's dea th last
\\'eekend.
It is alleged by, t h e
prosecution that a seri es of
beatings administered by the
accused woman over a period
or time created . the bl:tal
injuries.
OEPl,lTV DI S TRICT he Is being carefully exiun lned
Attorney Pat Brian, who has al the Sitton facility. Pt1ul Is expected to IPovc•
Santa Ana Comn1u n ity
Hospital this week a ft er
lren tment for arn1 and
shou lder wounds.
ORANGE COUNTY · taken over the prosecution or1;:==-~-=-=-====:::.:.::; lhc case, said Dabney faces
chnrgcs "Of felony child neglecl
and abuse. He is now free on
THE
NEPTUNE SOCIETY
C1rnpfete CrttMtllio S•rvk• his promise to appear. win. 111M111t1111111M 11 -T~t DltfllH .. llfrli!Ht AllM&llff Br!an said eight·mon91~ld T• '" C•rtlJ 111 .... 1vM1 Mlttvln
John Dabney. the survl ving ,_," c1-11rv sy11M1
SAl\"T'A ANA -Convicted
killer ~ Lawrence E u g c n e
\\lilson of l4S Angeles was
~cnt lo state prlson for life
Tuesday jus1 fi\"e days af\er
he and 11110 other Orange
County Jail prisoners grabbed
their jailers' gu ns and fled to
a brief frrCdom.
BOTll \VI LSON and Tarpley
\ve re s~i\y recaptu red as
police and sherirf's Wlil s \\'ere l--------~-~,__1T---'._w_•_s_co~ti\1Ef\'TED in
called in 10 scour the area for
Robert died In Chlldrens
Hospital of Orange County
after his initial condition
worsened during treatment at
the El Toro l\1arlne Corps Air
Station dispensary. twin brother of the allegedly 24 H••r s.mc. 7l4·'44·74J1
SUPERIOR COURT Judge
Jrrrold S. Oli\'er ordered the
life term for \\lilsoo. :Ml, who
"'as found · guilty of first
deg ree murder by a jury in
the sa me courtroom .
\\lilson "'as .fle<idcd fo r !hat
courtroom ~lay 30, hut got no
fariher than the holding tank
in the basement of the wunty
courthouse.
F'reed from his handcuffs
11•hen armed robbc rv
defendant s Prince P i c 0
Tarpley. 19, and Prank Allen
O"Hare. 21. overpo\l•ered a
guard, \Vilson folloY.·ed !he
pair as they opened the
base ment door and broke into
the street.
The trio ran a few blocks
from the counhouse aJJP made
the mistake that iorpedoed
!heir escape when the y
surrounded a p.11l-ked car and
raised their weapons at the
driver. ·
OFF DtrrY Ca Ii for n i a
High.,.·ay Patrolman Jim paul.
26. la!er told Santa Ana police
from h~ hospital bed ttiat he
"'as shot in the arm and
shoulder by O'Hare a n d
promptly returned th e fire.
O'Hare \Va s shot in the rig4l
chee k and arm and t"'icc Jn
the back. Orange Cou~ty
the t\\·o g u n · w i c Id i n g
prison<'rs.
\\rilson lcame~ Tuesday 1hat
he "'ill be returned to Orange
County from state pri:iOn to be
tried on n1ultiJ>le charges !hat
will include escape. armed
robbery ond assati\t \\'ilh a
deadly weapon on a peace
officer'·
"As things··stand, he could
be paroled afte r nine years on
the first de~ree m urder
convictio n,", Deputv Districl
Attorney Jay l\1 o s e I e y
explained.
.. IF I CAN ~et p c~n ;•iction
on these addilional counts I
\VOuld ask that the11 be served
eonsecutivc!Y with. his current
conviction and then he "·ould
J(e! a tn1e life sentence."
l\1oseley added.
\Vilson was convicted of
shooting a Connertir-ut
businessman to death last
September in Anahl'im.
O'Hare and Tarpley were in
the second . week of their
Superior Court trial on armed
robbery charges v.·hen \Vilson
joined them in their breakout. ..
JUDGE RAY 1\f O!llD
Thompson has set ,June 11 at
the date he "i ll deride \\'hat
further action is to be taken
against the pair.
w~
~--. .........
, .. ,ft*
' ~ M<H FOR THE PARTICULAR MAH .,., .. ' WE CARRY THE LATEST
Wll -IH SPORTSWEAR HUT NAI SAMC
"~ lrvi11e Firm .4warded
,.,_, -----MAHY FAMOUS IRAHDS --••• ""'"-' . "I I A I ATll-
.... ' ll'IOl'l'llt SHOt ""' cusr-· \•Hiil Tonlli'llll 979-0760
lllAlill ~
Bid for Flood Study
~ ,.
557·5030 --
-, I . _I
CUSTOM STEREO
FURNITURE C~:re1'Sei '""'! 'F· I '.I"" ,. • ,._.. AMl!o Ca-.rQ•1.tt
All concerned local. state J -1 .. • : = -:.=.
and fede ral agencies will be GIFT SHOP 1 , ~:~~ct~~ bio11:N, ;,~r~: ' 11000 1: '£>.lpf'.i ("''""'•4'"'"
information regarding lhe past ~ ... ~... ,_ •• -BRISTOL · .. ~ .:...:.,. · .2.u1t,111. & dltt 'tf}al Liu
history or· flooding an d ., ....... -°"~'l PL.a.T E& TOWN & COUNTRY \ w MARAN~. ~EM~OOD, T£AC. ~OHY ;/
,MU. -0"'
FI NE MENS WEAR
IOI A•UILllA Sl6-7,i4
IT AUAH & GREE!! CUl~INE
I,.----. GIW SrlCLt.LS OH SUH DAY
-. . ..--,. I"",' ""
.... $41.
'""· t• , .. -·· '""'.' ""
4 PM • f PM • .$2..65 • 1-. c.+el "'
Lw!MoM -1 l:JO -2:JO .;,;.:; ....... Fri. .,.,• VTN Corp. of Irvine has TC·
('t'ived a contract horn the
Federal lnsural'k.-e Ado1inis·
tration of the Departm'flt of
!lousing & Urban 0e.ie1op·
ment to accomplish a nooct ir.· ' surnnce study for all unincor-
!)QratC'd areas in Or:i.nll:I? Coun-
ty, and the cities of Fullerton
ar"l Camn:ntrri::!.
c oordinati on will be 5577099 nlaintained wilh th e se J---------_;;,:.:_".:.;:.:..:, __ -ii.:P.;;A::,H:;;A:,:5,:0::,H::,IC:;_;• D:,:U:;A;:L~·.;G:;A;:R::;Ull:::;D;_• P:.;H::;O::;H::;E:.;5::5;;;6-;.;6;;;66::,IT------------==="'f
agencies during the study
process. The company also ' -\1•ill perform hydrolo«ica\ and /. 1 e e • •
hydraulic st udies to detiQeate .:. =
areas subject to Ilooding. -
,:fmtrif &,
@v~'lltne INTI• CORI, INC.
The $269.633 agreement was
signed bellveen the FtA and
the VTN subsidiary•' VTN ·
Consolidated. according t o
com pany executive v i ce
president Kenneth \V. Carlson.
TI1e data resulting from the
IN CONCLUDING its work fA ST BECOMING THE LARGEST
for HUD. the con1panr \\"ill fAIRIC CHAIN IN so. CALlfORNIA _,.. _. --1 ............... QC:UllMI.' .. """
prepare for the FIA a se ries of CRAFTS -FABRICS -YARNS • STITCHERY Fl_NE JEWELRY . GIFTS . LIMITED EDITIONS ~:;.rc;l='· u:11r1. " .. =.:'\~~ .. "':~
PATHWAY TO THE SUN
MBl'S A.HD WOMltr.S:".=-
lMPOITID FASHIONS
mapf; following c ar e f u 11 y u...-u ....... c...,.~,...-.w.n.
prescri bed details outlining 1 ___ ,,.. __ .;;S.;5..;6::.·.:7;..:.7.;l..;7 ______ ~------9-7_9-_2a_3_s ____ _._-il--....;.s•_...,_._...,. ___ ••_•_JU_•_•_c_•_.,_sn_•_HO __ -t I I-month study will be utilized
in es1ablishing flood insurance
rates in the ar~as ex'!mined.
patterns or potential flooding. ,.
These maps \viii be filed with ~' 1 A
!he FIA and be available in U°LU'"
CA RLSON soTEtf 1hat the
stud y is being inade in
accord ance with pµbli c \a\v
"'hich calls for such studies in
kno\\'n flood areas i1 order for
com1n unities local~ there to
continue to be eligible for
federal funds and funding
fron1 federallv supe r.,.ised
lending institutions!
review and referenct. • the local areas for public !fi' ~
VTN is a highly diversilied
en g incering. architectural./ M~ planning and envlroninental
design firm wllich e1nploys 1
about 850 in 22 permanept G t 5 b • Sand iches oinces ;, the uo;ted Slales OUrme U marme W
and Central and So u th ( 10 Vorietie1 )
REG. '39"
An1erica.
Hifdi !s c!J>/a}}lkin~
-
ANNIVERSARY
SALE
FRl.-SA T.-SUN.
JUNE 7-9 ONLY
s299s
r·-9-----1'1. ·I '· .;.
I've crawled
up the ladder
I've slid
down
the
'· . .;;:'.''"'" ~lide
And now·, ;-~ .•
that I've "n,
done that
I think I'll sit here inside .
ThelndoorGym House.
',,.."' .er~tW.Playthings
: r/v?YOu is /o~·d"'~whe.n~u.'l/ere a k1d. '*"" Ctffti•t ,,.,. .. ,. Sptc.i.&
Mini·Kitchen "'l•-• ._'·''BOTH FOR $39.95
Doll House u.•l•• ... .,. ~ u1 BOTH FOR $34.95
Double Easel "·"'"".,... "" BOTH FOii $19.95
' .. "'-~,<:Jo. '~']:!''!;I :: ~~, -F ~ <t:~'·· 't' ' ... "•. \,;:;" ~ ...... ~··· ·~ ....... cA • .,, ~ -.. ~ .• ;?(
i' ('I' , ... • • ,.
world't lcrgtst
soleclioo of
G'AMES
ADULT GAGS
MAGIC &
ART SUPPLIES .................. -.. ---_, ... ~Mll-t:
-I 1-1 --·1.U-Mll
PicaJ;f fy /J.uli'ju•
~-----UNIQUE l"ASHJONS -----.,
BOB IOWGHI ...;.. 557-4623
• ~ ..
-~ -NCO.. "'f" '.
..:'i ........ .. ..,_
""'
SOUTH WEST
TROPICAL FISH
()°"""' C()ftty t lorqMI l!llec.t>On
ol irop.c.al ond 1(111 wctlet f,lf.
U•t~··· laas .... s..tAcc.....n.s
556-1994 ....
"
11111
·<GIFT SHOP
fOI: YAL&a· (KIAUTY
SELICTIOtl· SU:'flCI
557·'524
OPENING
SOON
•WES KOHTZ. JR.,--Ol'TOMmlST
•HAM'S COUNTRY KITCHEN
•CENTER MEATS
•HADIHE'S IHnRIORS
•VAH'S IELGIAH W·AFFLES & CREPES
•iRISTOL COffEE GAUERY
LEASING INFORMATION can be ob--
ta1ned at the adm1n1strahon oltoces tor
the center at 361 O Bnsrol Street. Santa
Ana, Suite !!101 Phone (714 ) 546-
2856
.,11.1 • · -DISCOVER A Ul41IXIE ~/,.'!i:':cl i'~·~ • , HAWAIIAN DRESS SHOI' l FOR MEN I. WOMEN ,, ;; : f'i I< i:1k. e.
'~ ri1ShiOnS
-, ~·A \"" L :t'... \-·-:t' · • -556-4407
SWENSE~
ICE CREAM
&
SANDWICHES
979-8815
-Tho Lusll Life-lncloots!
t N' TWINt
,\ Pl•nt Boatlqae
. ~-. stoneware -macrame
/".. dt corator Items
pla nt partle5
556-6644
'
..t.Jd'u
ant•vw.tional §allnia
Pcr1ion •nd Oncnt.il Rusi •
557.7972
QI\# llXM06 -1..--. !.-.., \bo:b.. '"""'"1-'_ ...... ,,. __ .... _..._.
GRAND OPENING
lllSTOI. TOWN a COUMTllY OHtC:I
lfGISTll HOW FOR Riii Tll, TO HAW AU
Jalra b.(yde -c~vel
S4l-t lll CRANCE COUNTY'S OLDEST
.. o ... 1.n 1
111. I P.N.
s .. r. 11 ..... nu J ,,.,
tS'"'41!1 ...,.
l ri•tol T1-a C-"'f'
I ltl•. N. So•t• C•etl .....
KING SIZE
FOR llG & TALL MEN
J,,4 llJSTOl ITOWN AMD COIMTIT CINTllJ
S.t.l'fTA AHA, 117~,,J, IM MOM.• NL 11 t.
ALSO: KINGS CUSTOM TAILOR SHOI' ...._ ..... w-· ........ -. .......... .-n ... ...
IAICAMHtcAlD ICING-S CHARM MASTiaCHAlM u DISCOUNT ANO ADVICE
0 . HELM UT'S"
111/111 BEAUTY SUPPLY
• Horbor s.hopplflf C..rittr, C.011o Ml10
• ltoo~hut•I ofld KomiltOft, Hvtit.,..toi> '-"
• lrhi.1 T-" -ct Counlry, Sotite Ano
• ltl11ot orwt Mo.Arthi.tt 'l"'°'iM ti.t hy)
WEDDING INVITATIONS
t:~.~~ 100 for $1095
'FREE "::':."' ·-·--' r-'°"'NOIM • A~Mtdl -··
M•S1IO --151·10U
t1NM1
~st Av•. Malt
332 Forest An.
~·to<h
.,._,.s.t. I O;J0.5
--.,12.4 bristol to\vn and l'ountry ce nter SANTA ANA/COSTA ·MESA
497-2210 ' '
' I ·I
Count11 Voti1ag
Parties' Central
Pa11ellsts Listed
SANTA ANA -,. Here is how
the voting for party centiral
committee members went in
Tuesday's primary election in
Prange County.
I ~e~varlous political f)llrties
tlect central committee
tnemben from A s s e in b I y
tllstriCts. Six members are
~lected to each party's central
committee from each or six
distrlc!J ~n the county.
The names of the winners in
eath district appear fn heavy ,
~lf<k type.
PloyUl1 J . McKowa ..... 11,m
~orman J. Meyer ...... tl,111
Im Bentson ....... , .... 17.ltl
Andrew T. Cbandler . , .. 15,717
Rtpubllcan
Herbert A. Moss ........ 18,431
Carlos E. Galindo .... , . 1%,IM
Thomas E. Blackmon .. 19.W
Stephen F. Holden . , . , .. IS,115
Wesley R. Gi'anger ..... lt,431
Judith A. Risk .......... II :fJ3
D. Tom Hile ............. 6.346
James E. Howard ... ~-.tt'.423
Jane II. Broughton ..... 17,475
Rodger D. Slates ....... ~7 .092
William J. Teague . , .... 11,t&O
7'TH DlSTR!Cf
, In several districts, there
were no candidates this time
~ the DemOcratis> o r
Amerlca:n I n d e pen d e n t Republican
~rtl~s. In ,the·1tst: Assembly · • • 9istr1ct,, there were. only five Ed Ward · · .. '. .. · · .....• 2f,t3t ~idates on the Democratic Alan R. Klofkom ...... 4,975
le.le.'' r'f'lm!>lhy L. Strader ... · .. 11,tM
Theodore S. Wentworth .. 8.943
~. 9Tfl Dl&TRict ·Marlene C. iSumbera .... 7,225
Dtmoc ti Marvin E. Cron .:. ...•• ·2,144
, t ra t Lowell S. Johnson ...... 1l17M
Walttt J. Chaffee , , , ... 14,979 Patrick B. Bonner ... , .. 10,299
t1alrlef L. 'Ruby ...... 1%,Z!J Betty Rungaltis ..... , ... 8,375
Maljrlce F. Meysenburg_ lO~a3 Roy E. Gordon .......... 5,sa,I ~enct Smith" ...... ,.1,,:t\l3 Alexanclec ~wle ........ ·11,111
atBry B. CDpd,evtelle. ~.tt,741 WilburnT.-Dial .......... 2,589
Betty I. Vion ., , ....... 9.470 JVichntor C. Andrews ....... 8,555
»eten K. Rueda ...... IG,409 o N.'Swartley ........ 4.437
Grt1ory B. H.lidley .... 1!1,9!1 Robert Rotstan .......... 3,618
Nol GibbOns .......... 12•759 1, Janet Button ........... lt,IU · Kennelh. J. Bates . , ...... 4,244
Republican Jay Pini . .-'" ... -:-.......... I 32$
Wiiiiam E: Oanneme)'er 16,300 George W. Brokatt ... , .1•;.
Ceorg:e E. Delahaety ... tS,911 Coalson C. Morris ....... 5.149
Cart N. Karcher ....... ts.ot:i Miles E. Peterson ...... ·S 139 l',:ber1 F. BeavEr ....•.. 11,!IZ Larry "'A-. Denna ......... 4:780
ls ~rg .......... 11,374 Jolla A. Hopwood ....... it,711
f'.nn'lt ~ Wblle .......... 11~1% '
Ronald Fox ............ -.9,502
Chprles K. Yorck ...... ,. .. 9,077
pean .C Davisson ...... 14,536
70TH DISTR!Cf
Democratic
Frankie l\11ache1ter .... 1%,690
Wylie A. Alt ten ........ Jl,569
Jeri ·Manslleld.. . . . ...... 9,637
Les Francis ......... ,. . I!, 757
PllU Bird ............... 1%,%71
Patrick J. ~fcKenna .... 11,
I faul Philips ............. 8.448
Carl D'Agostlno ...... .-11,451
Republican
Joanne Coontz .......... 18,0Z7
William L. Anderson ... 13.525
Thomas N. Rogers ....• 11,m l;iui .. J'. Knobbe ........ 16.610
1*banl F~ Evans ...... %0,%43
W&rrelfFinley .......... 14.230
Ralpb' J . Carrel ........ · .9,387
WOiiam A. Dogberty ... 18,599
John A. Prete<1lt ... , ... 19,776
Andrew Alberti ......... 15,483
71ST DISTR!Cf
Democratic
Ethel Gowa ............ J 1,518
BUiie McPeek ........•. 10,6%0
A..E. Arnold ............ 15,t06
Ray R. Jleybrucb ....... 11,09%
Lo~tta \Yalker ......... l!,%18
Republican
Davkl L. Bates .........• 9.277
Constance 8. Bleick ..... 6,910
Robert D. Simmons ..... 4,922
Philip A. Seitz .......... ·4,344
Howard Rowan .......... 7.811
Oelno G. Kanode ........ 5,680
W.E. Burrell ............ &,6lt
Bob Harvey ............. 7 ,%70
Phyllis J. Steiner .......• s,563
E. Doug Hawkes ........ 4,697
Alice J.. Franklewlcb .... 8,139
Mildred A. Spence ....... 5,560
Harris J. Shapero ...... ·5,000
Rensey L. Durham .....• S,9~
72ND DISTR!Cf
Republican
Tboma1 A. Fuentes ....• tl,037
Janice Boer ............ 10.14!
h1ickey R. Conroy ...... 5,653
·William T. Rogers ....... 6.977
Lee J .Hasenjaegcr ... ·.I l,318
Wade Herrin ........... 11,815
Richard H. Adams .... .-8,151
C1R. Marsh . ; ............ 9,333
J.S. Fluor .............. 10,147 w11ns J. Clemons ....... 11.l;OJ
American JDdepeadtot
Tmhomas C. Rehmann .... 195
Charlie A. Briley . , , ....... 116
Dale R. Fergutoa ......... %95
Lottie ~\. Briley , .......... llZ
Jane Malott .............. ·157
James H. Rose ............ 193
Ray l'tt. Fields .. ,,, ... , .· .. 151
71RD DISTR!Cf
Democratic
f\farvin Lehrer ... , ~ !1, 15,668
Alan R. Hipwell , , .. , ... IS,761
Morton A. Baum ....... 17,5,7
Exceptio.nal
. .
Kids, Teens
Houl Dance
A special dllJlce for special
people is scheduled June 14 in
Costa Mesa. All Orange Coast
exceptional children a n d
young adults are invited.
The dance, which provides
an -evening out for persons
who are handica pped by
mental retardation or physical
problems, will be from 7 p.m.
to 9 p'.m. in the -Community
Recfeation Center near the
west gate of the Orange
County Fairgrounds.
There is no charge for the
dances, co-sponsored by Costa
Mesa and-Santa-Ana-city
recreation workers, bu t
reservations should be made
by calling 556-5300.
CdM Senior
Appointed
Di1nes Chief
SANTA ANA -A Jim Garn.
a senior at Corona del Mar
High School, has b e e n
appointed to the California
March of Dimes Young Adult
Council.
Garn, son of ~1r. and Mrs.
Foster N. Garn, was
nominated for the position by
the Orange County Chapter or
March of Dimes.
He is president of his
school's Key Club and co-
chairman of the 0 r a n g e
County March of Dimes TA P-
CAP Council.
Apartme11ts
.Host Indian
I
A ce remoni'cal A p a c h e
Indian dance tiill highlight an
auction of Indian jewelry and
artilacts Frldiy. at 6 p.m. in
the Spa at Park Newport
Apartments in N e w po r t
Beach.
The auction, open to the
public, will feature je\velry
made by Ind ians in
Farmington. Ne\11 Mex. A l~cture on turquoise and
silver will precede the auction.
Additional information is .
available by calling the Park
Newport Spa, 644-4664.
THI
IAllL'S
Complete Plumbi!J, Heating
and Air Condltionllll
HIW LOCATION
f1llM'QAAll.-Yl
"Do it Yourself Store& ..
27 601 FOltlH RD. HO. 2S • -,,;'~"::a:;";o• -.... -U.•UHA HIGUIL '"" ,.,... .. "" thlMlllflll,••tllttl
•I
I
,.. ......... ""' '-~--v0..r-•
ll:.'Wc: 495-0401 r·
"" 8 a.m. 10 & o.rn .
Mon.-Sat
Stal• Licenae
C36·C20-2!1&57
•
•
•
I
•
•
•
(
trousers
thot fit to
~J
!' J.
a ''t ''
"· A reolly beautiful
pair of pants tho! Iii
like a dream. From· College
Town in 100°/o polyster.
W hil e, ma ize, n1ouve. in
sizes 7 -1 3. 22.00. '
Junior Sportswear. 97
i
' ,./ ' -1,. /'
: .;, 1.lf '';f
"/ ..
" ;j
dressing
on
the dot
A lillle no5to!gio
from the forties' ... a
super look for sumn1er!
Hi9h shoulder, broid•lrim
edging. sch tie waist.
Red or block dots on white.
Sy El Joy in washable ocetole jersey,
sizes 5· 13. 26.00.
Young Junio r Dresses. 85
..
•
'1
Y1
' I
l
I. ·:
h .,
• ·\
;, ) \
•
' \I
" ·/' . '/i ·(
. I . ' ... . ...,
f/
'/ /1 ,,
:;.
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•" 1''
1; ! ,f:
. "'' 1·
; . ; .
Thur~ay, J11nc b, 1974
The growing thi ng . A new, hooded
l~On~ !Opper in soft Collon knit
tlower·power print. Jv~t like 0
sweors'11rt . only ~lier! Green
or pink !one s, Jr . sizes S-M·l, 12.00. Or
Choo~e on'-! in a solid cotor, 12.00
Hi .Deb Shop 5? .
•
'
halter
.a long
summer . .
Doy or night, •. for whenever
you're Ii red of jeans. The
bore bock halter. skirted
in tiers and appliqued in
!ace. Soft cotton leno
by Julie Of California .
sizes 5· 13, 40.00. Career
Junior Dresses. 64
•
•
DAILY PILOT 13
•
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"
J ..J DAILY PI LOT
QUEENIE "By Phil lnterlandi
.. lte·s a brilliant exec ; 'but he 's a hard·core old
meanie, and rate d 'X '."
Old Ad Clait1as
'011-sl1elf' Drugs
Get Seco11d Look
WASHINGTON (UPI\ -
Some non·prescription drugs
-Alka-Seltzer in particular -
may have tG start runn ing
adds confessing that previous
claims were "'rong. a Federal
Trade Commission official
suggests. .•
Such advertising may also
include warnings to the
consumer on side effect s. the
proper dosage and olher
cautions noY.' listed only on
product. labels. J. Thomas
Roscl'I, director of the FTC's
Hospitc1l
Directors
Pick Cliief
Willi.:im C. Edgar. a Leisure
\Vorld resident Y:ho served as
1972·73 pr'?sidcnt of the Golden
Rain Foundation of Laguna
Hills. has been c 1 e c t e d
president of the Sadd leback
Community Hospital board 'of
directors.
Outgoing president Bernard
lngram is chairrnan of the
board . Frank Schaeffer , a past
president of the board and
outgoing chairman. w i 1 1
continue as a board member.
AN A1iORNEV , Edgar ha<:
lived in Laguna Hill s since
1966 and served a full tl'rm on
the Golden Rain Foundation
board.
A supporter of Saddleback
Community Hospital since its
inception, he was c h i e f
negotiator for the transfer of
property and the Laguna l-lills
Pt1edical Clinic to the hospital
as a gift from the Golden Ra in
foundalion .
OTHER OF'FICERS of the
hospital board are Tracy
Stevey, first vice president:
Dr. Lydia Deane. second vice
president; J. Clynton S<"ott.
secretary; and Glenn \\'inc·
man. treasurer.
Other n1embe(s of the board
of directors are Dr. John
Allin. 1-1.\V, Anderson, Randall
Boyd, fr,·in Duhn. \f e r a
lloodyshell , Dr. Allan Howard,
G.H. Lodder. Edward Olsen.
Raymond Prothero, Jr ... , John
Sickenberger. Dr. Ch a rl e s
Anthony Stellar. John Tattam
and Dr. Floyd \Verge\an d.
Bureau of Consu mer
protection. said \Vednedsday.
ROSCH -TOLD a Senate
m o n o p o I y subcommittee
hearing that the F'ood and
Drug administration's review
of over-the'1'.!ounter drugs -
the antacid portion of which
\\'as completed Tuesday -
should make the products snfe
and effective. But there ls a
problem. he said . if consumers
go on buying non-prescription
drugs on the basis of old
advertising claims di sproved
by the F'DA re\•ie•v.
Erasing such e r ron eo u s
conswner beliefs. Rosch said.
is a matter "worthy of
substantial comm i ss ion
attention." It is possible. hr
sa id. that ''co rrective
advertising orders will be
requested in order tG dispel
public m i s imp r essi on 1
concerning the use of drug
products."
ROSCll SAID the re was a
particula r problem Involving
prod11 tls \.\'hich c o m b i n e
antacids and aspirin -Atka·
Seltzer being the largest
selling and prime example.
The new FDA rules say such
product labels must advise the
user to take them onlv for
upset stomach and headache
-not for upset stomach
al one.
Yet. Rosch testi fied . Alka·
s~ltzcr has been ad verliscd
hca\'ily for years as good for
relief of upse l stomach alone.
ri.·liles laboratori es. he
suggested \\·in have to
"demonstrate to the staff's
satisfaction ... that the claim
it ha s been making does not at
th is time linger in the public
mind."
Alka-Selt z er is te<:l·
n1arketing a second variety
without aspirin which meets
lhc FDA rule s fo r antacids.
The other major product in
the class. Bromo--Seltzer is
set'ond to Alka·SeH1.cr in sales
and probably would not be
invo\\'ed in any correcti\'c
advertising.
Navy Graduate
Michael W. I\·loran, !tOn o(
J.lr. and J.1rs. Emerson D.
J.toran of 6871 Spickard Drive.
fluntington n e a ch , was
scheduled to graduate from
the Naval Academy this
\\'CCk.
Smog Takes Sliglit
D,.op in Tivo A,.eas
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Smog
decreased s 1 i g h l l y in
Escondido and Oceanside last
year but increased i n
downtown 'San Diego. the
county Air Polluti on Control
Distr ict says .
The annual report showed 67
days In which national clea n·
air ~tandards y,•ere exceeded
in San Diego , compa red with
48 days in 1!172.
In th e San Diego Air Basin.
the national standard was
er:ccedcd on 202 d.'.lys in 1973,
doY.'n from 225 days in I ~72.
"\Ve've been im p r oving
gradually since 1968. but we're
not going to meet the national
standards bv the I 9 7 1
deadline.'' said Dr . J . B. A!-
ke_w. county hcal!.h ofricer.
-WANTED-
DIAMONDs • GEMSTONES
.ho...,.. lty lot•pfl i1 •-chi11t lot dl•1110fl11i1 01111 9e1111to11"
j,_ jll'lw!N &.ifhtldvol1 or>(.'''°"'· Co ... l!il e~o111l11otiotl 011.t
.-.. 1iN Irr -••pe•lt. "i9he1I prlte1 poll!, Coll '"°''°"
IM -.;1y, lotwifey 10.., $1111doy clo1ed, o•• ltN' #or, 0.11•11
Poll• -""· ....,..,
iewels by ioseph
SOUTt' COAST !'LAZA• JS33 lllSTOl, COSTA MISA • S40.90U
~-'
dad,
\then
and·
A-1 TOBIAS
TOPS & BOTTOMS
Yesterday's dads didn't hove
ii easy when it come to
cl athes:-T odoy's Dad does ...
because polye sre r doubleknit
separates g ive him comfort
with hi s style • a nd great fit.
The washable un -sui t look in
mo1ching colors. Twin-pocketed
jacket, 22.00. (,fled fla res, 18.00.
Universily Shop, 53
l he Po nt Shop, 9 4
DRUMMOND'S
RIB -KNIT
Mos1 Dads hove o f0vorite eosy
choir · ••• and o n easy knit shirt.
Here·s one •••. in Wint uk Orlon
ocrylic. wood~y bun on lrim.
Short sleeves, S·Xl. 13 .00
University Shop, 53
! ' ~· i •
H ., . .
;;' • i. 1; i, . i: i; 1:
if ! i f j . • ' ;
fi l i " ti ! f \'. ,. ., I• . . .1 :! ,, j.i . ;;
' ~ j
{.[ i~ • ' ' .
0
\
~
-.
-·· ___ ......
•• ...........
-
"
/
-......
ot~MAlLOfOAANGI' 2300N. IU'.1,,,~lj114)on&·1 31 1 .
5>0 IOA M.1ot'3()P,M, MCNOAYTHROUC)i FWAY, SATURDAY IOAM. to6 PM. ~DAY l?f\C0.110 sr "'
. , I
Register
your nome
in our
Ha ng Ten
Suzuki Motorcycle
Contest!
Entry blanks ore available
in the Univ ersity Shops ot
a ll Broa dwa y srores ••• ond
must be de posited by
June 16. 197 4. Three lucky
Grand Pr ize winners will
receive a Su zuki TC-IOOL
Blazer lro il{street bike;
Pl us! Our luc ky winn ers
and their lomilies will be
speci al guests al lhe
Hang Ten Unite d States
,Motor-Cross Grand PriX •• _
01 Carlsbad, Ca lif. on
Sunday, July 14.
No purchase necessary.
• ' I
.:
h. ' • • •.
,
' ·'
' ~j
.
•' .·
·:
•• .. • •' . .
.. . ..
• -
.. ..
~
•' !·
' . •
~ • •
• •.
' -~
' •'
• :: , • .
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;.
' •' . .• • ..
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• '
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-.
·:
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.,
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• •
•
1'icti11a llad P11l?
Cadillac .Sought
In Robb er.y Case
' A Lo.~ Angeles man who died had recently suffered u run ol
of a hcctrt attack while l>ad luck.
runnillg from Rn attempted He allegedly disabled a
robbery at the Ncwporlcr Inn Newporter IM credit n1anager
\
may have hud an acco1np1lcl', by spraying hlm wit h
1>0lice say. chemical Mace, then snatched ,
Newport Beach polir(' have a satchel containing $40,000 in
appealed for ald In locating a Memorial Day weekend
Wl11• De9ree
Afichael 611sion, who at -
tended Estancia •ligh
School and Orange
Coast CoUege. has re-
ceived his l\a.chelor of
Fine Arts degree with
llonors from the Los
Angeles Art Center
CoJlege of Design.
black. 1971 Cadlllac El Dorado receipts.
registered to \V 1111 am· -·--'----------=---=----'---="------------1
~:::~;'~ g~~wiy0d~~~~ I y 1111111111111111111111n
SOUTll\\IQRTll, 52, died
!\lay 2ll at Jamboree !load and
Back Bay Road aft.er the
aborled robbery.
H~ lived on a boal in the
!\farina dcl Rey a rea and
norn1ally drove the Cadillac,
which has n license of 927
A VK and a v.•hitc top. •
Detective Sam Amburgey
notes that it is presently
unkno.,.:n how Southworth got
to the Newnort area from
Marina del Rey or how he
intended to gel back.
I NV ES TJGATORS said
following the holdup attempt
that Southworth had no
serious criminal r~rd but
• • • • I •
Judge Nixes
Plea Change •
For Mag ee I
SAN JOSE I AP) -A judge
has rejected San Quentin
convict . Ruchcll rot a g e c' s
request to withdraw his guilty
pica to an agg ravated
kidnaping charge stemn1ing
from the Aug. 7, 1970 Marin
County courthouse es cap c
attempt in which four persons
died.
Judge Ingram announced his
decision \Vednesday in a 13-
page memorandum, saying
that ~Jagee entered the plea
f..1ay 10 ''k nowingl y,
understandingly 4JXI rreely."
• • • • • • • • • • • •
MY
GUARANTEE.
'" lllll>Ot "" " "" Jlt" I\ ll• """' 11111, _,.....,1 ... ~ ... , ......... ~ ..... -
UNRESTRICTED PUBLIC SALE!.
SAVE •
50% OFF !
EVERYTHING •
OYERIOUGHT •OVERSTOCKED •
J.LL MERCHJ.NDISE MUST IE SOLD! •
• MEN'S SUITS -50% Off •
Rubin B1os.-Mart1l--Phoen1x
• SPORTS CO.t.ST -50% Off •
Rubin Bros.-Mart1l--Phoen1M •
•SLJ.CKS -50% OFF • Rena1ssance-Aatner
• SPORTSWEAR -500/o Off
• FU~NISHIHGS -500/o OFF
• SHIRTS -500/o Off
Damon -Bronz1n1 -G1venchy
0.... tu O•I,;•( <l"O<'<"ICICO:!""" CW>fll ""9C"Ql"(y
C...e<I•! U'"' ""'ct'<)!t!Q-yQU l)Oy >Ur<:~
AL.L SJ.I.ES FINAL!
ES
flfagce lated riled a motion
to withdraw the p I e a ,
contending he entered it out of
rrustratlon with the handling
of his case.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
1 ..... , ..... ,.~ .. 111o •
lh h•ttl" Ill '""' SOUTH COAST PLAZA
•
1 ..... " •• ftltol "" ••.
Judge Harold Haley. two
convicts and an accomplice
y,·ere killed after hostages
y,•cre taken at gunpoint from
the courtroom in San Rafael.
1.-. v.., M•.-Fri. l~t (New wing-Lower Level) •
• "'"'..,..." ,......, ,,.. ·979.5907 or 9t9-5906 -
111111111111111111111111
BROWN JORDAN
PA TIO FURNITURE
Kailua
The Ka.tua lrame design teatures a unique
blending of the A-Form and sleigh-runner
legs In acld1!1on. !he destQn provides a siruc·
tural lorm contr1but1ng lo unusual s!reng!h.
and the sleigh-runner legs perm11 use of the
sealing pieces on grass and sand as well as on
firm surfaces.
Req . Price S438
SALE PRl~E S379 SAVE 559
'1
L. .• ' r j' [ ___ ; !
.... ,-··
ti 16 1-42
'-'-_J u
2123 NEWPORT BLVD.,
COSTA MESA
Corft.r of Victoria
~ATIO ~ho•t 642·41 03
•. NURSERY 6 46·l9Z5
•
Tamiami
Tamiam i featUres a fresh design .
Solid co mfort and the unique
.diagonal lining provides a special
took formulated for controlled
elasticity and durability.
Reg . Price S352 SAVE s53 SALE PRICE S299
Regent II
Regent 11 embraces superior desi gn reatures
lha1 resull 1n suoor1or c1urab!l1ty_ Stretchers
placed low on the legS' acid greater strength.
R•g Price S522 SAVE S6J SALE PRICE S459
I
STEEL BELTED
Choose Your Size!
135/13 145/12 5.20/12 s149s I L.ACI II<" UM
TUll,fll'I: f-11 t.... h•
.. ... TIUt 1111.1 ..-inu ·-· ........ ~h , .. .ii.,-...._.,,..,," -I •..t.-°"' --... o+of h•-(t1 ......... ollo ,_.. .. ) _,.,. _ """ .. -·111 1--. .. -...... ) ,..._ .. -._ .. __ .._C-ol l;.L (uo-.lln-
1•}_ .. _ .. ,.., ___ .. •'lifo••
orollll., ,,. ... (II -o,i;.of ,.ill lo •~• _,_, _, ..... -irr·•"' .. ,..-... ... , ..... ""' ......... -.........
$
RADIALS
18511• R70/14
195 1• fllJ0/14
20511• 11.70114
21511• •70114
205/IS fll70/1S
215/IS •1 II
225/IS
Ll71/IS
-
--. ~' ' ...
I' I> I •..J
I•'•
DAIL V Pl LOT I :J
SINCE 1924
MARK C.
BLOOME
MICHELIN X
STEEL BELTED
-
RADIAL TIRES
13511 3 14511 2 5.2011 2
STEEL BEL TED RADIAL TIRES
COMPACTS lo CADILLACS
175/13 .. 195 /15 .. "
175/14 .. 205/15 ·'·PMo.f
185/14 .. 215/15 ..
195/14.. 125/15 ' .... ,,,...
205/14 .. SIZES 230/15 &
215/14 .. • 235/15 AVAILABLE
h<~ •Slfl.,ll19ft' I•'"
.... , •• , .• ' "'""'d"" , ........ "' ., ' '"'''" .~ h., ... ~. ···''•''"" "~ .... ,. .• 885.60/15 .
l.35/14 ..
. l.75/14 .' I t•••<I;•••• n•J .J•••••· ·• • ••~"""" ,, , ·,., •·"••""lo• •O ()I.I(; M 1•1 •'• -• · ,
SIZE
S.20113
8.25/14 ..
8.25/15 ..
8.55/14 ..
.:~;:: s99s 8 8 ...,.·· .. ,,.',.,,".....,,,,,_-=""".::'-=i
•S ... llS 13'5 • S.S0/13
• S.20/14
.. S.60/S,90/
•. 001.13
• • WHllL DRUM or
2 WHllL DISC RILlltE
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I
J8 DAILY PILOT Thursday, June f>. }q74
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e
BEA ANDERSON, Ed it0<
'""\" .... M " "" •m 0
'I didn 't think women
were discriminated
against unti I
I took this class.'
Freshman, Westminster HS
Contributions of Women
Story and Pbo&os
By AWSON DEERR
Of tM Oalh' ·rllot $l1H
It was the day after the Emmy
Awards.
Cicely Tyson's "Autobiography of Miss
Jane Pittman," Maureen Stapleton's
''Tell Me \Vhere It Hurts," and Mark>·
Thomas' "Free to Be, You and Me" had
collected awards.
Writers, perfonners. prod•1cers and
directors taking home Emmys v.·ere
v.·omen.
In at least two classes at Westminster
High School, there was a feeling of pride,
Crom women , for women.
The classes, Women in Literature, now
in its fourth semester. and Women in
History, completing its second, are taugh.t
by Vivian Hall, a Vasaar graduate.
"A professor ~t Vassar in~i~ my
awarenesa• of rtbe problem;." said-. )Is.
Hall. When mo,.e'and rMre'WttentiOft was
paid to ~ IeJl'!.in}St ·movement, she wrote a ·course of· study ?or the high
school level.
"I was in the English department, so,
naturally I began with Women in
Literature. Soon, I fourn;l that it was too literature course, said the class gave her
much material for one Semester and we · a realistic picture or the -motivations
added Women in History." behind the feminist movement.
The history · course is open to all "We read and talked about the good
students, male aild female. Th e ,~ things the women's liberation movement
literature course begins at' the has done. All I had heard were the bad
sophomore l~vel. lhings, like women burning their bras.
NO PROBLE!\fS No one did that, but we read that they
"Getting the program start()(I ,vas no did in the newspapers."
problem. I wrote the cu rriculum and goL Kay Frantz was also looking for
all the cooperation-in the world from the something different. ,
school district a:hd other teachers.'' WO:\IEN's ACIDEVE~tE~TTS
Her resource materials and an exten-
sive reading list have beep requested
from school districts interested in initiat-
ing their own programs.
Motivation for taking the Women
in , , • classes is of infinite variely.
Freshman Sandy Coons was interested
in "something new, something dirfercnt . ''
a break from geograpny and math. "The
class brought out a lot of things I never
$',CW. ' ' ''We've learned , wnat women in the
past have done and what ~omen '>I.ill be
able lo do. We can do what we want to
do. be what '>l.'C want to be."
Diana Fct'flSira, a classmate ln the
"It's one of the easier classes I've ever
had, but I've learned a lot more than in
any other class. Women have done as
much as men have."
Graduating senior Maribeth Ackerman
had always been intrigued with women's
studie s. A transfer to Westminster High
from the South Bay Area, she did a lot
or reading on her own.
"But I had never had ai1yone explain
the feminist movement, women in
history, in deLail lo me, It dawned on me
that of all the social movements, women
were the only ·ones without a heritage.
•'\Vomen have no heritage recognized
'Women are the only social
movement without a heritage.
General history ignores
women's accomplishments, yet
they laid the foundation.'
Maribeth Ackerman, Senior, WHS
',-., "
•
by society. The general histoty courses
ignore women. A lot of kids don't know
anything about the ·\vomen's movement
and don't care.
HI think cla~ses like these help people
understand {hat women ncen'\ o~t to
destroy men."
Miss Ackerman found it ironic that
\vomen are n('t recognized for their
contributions a1though "the \\'Omen are
the ones '>l.'ho laid the fowuiaiions for
society. \Vhile the men were out hunting,
women developed agriculture and
architecture."
Another student found these classes "a
source of information to help me back up
iny arguments for equality for v.·omen ."
"I didn't tnink women were
discriminated against," added another
girl. "until I took this class. It was really
a shock to rind that women are paid half
as much for the same work."
Some students thought the class \vou!d
be an easy elective.
PAINTING SIGNS
"1 wondered v.'hat you could possibly
study in such a class. J mean. there are
no famous blacks, are there? There are
no famous 'A'omen. \\'hat could women
have done?" one student recalled. -
"NQw, I think it should be a required
course. for everyone, not just· the girls."
The students credit Ms. 'Hali for the
classes' appea1. .
"What makes this CJ.11ss for me is Ms.
Hall's enthusiasm. If it doesn't reach a
person, then something's wrong. She's•
more than an everyday teacher. You'd
have to be a real deadbeat to sit here 45
minutes a day and not get anything '~t
of the class."
Ms. Hall, after earning her degree at .
Vassar. worked for her MA in English at
the University of Colorado. ~he teaches
English and· social studie~. including a
Latin studies class. "We hav~ quite a few
Chicano students at Westminster."
A teacher for more than 11 years in the
public schools. 1he last six years at WHS,
she has taught all grade levels.
In 1970, she se rved as state president
of the Friends of the California Library
and was listed in "Who's \Vho in
American Women'' and "Who's Who in
the \Vest."
The Irvine resident also is regional
chairperson for th'e Cali!omia Federation
of Teachers, Women in Education.
Region VlII and serves on the national
Linda Canno, Andrea Smith
and Hope Serna (from left)
check Women in Literature
material with Vivian Hall,
who instructs in Women in
History class below. Montage
(fop left) was created by
DeeDee Smith and Lorrie Salinas.
'
.,
•
I
I
executive board of the National Women's
Political CaUL1.lS.
RESOURCES LISTED
Resources for her class include TV
programs -"Maude" and "Adam 's
Rib" and specials like "Free to Be."
The classes average 10 guest speal<ers
·per semester. Among them have been a
•United Farm Workers advocat.e. a
· refugee from Nazi Germany (tied to a
reading of "The Diary of Anne frank'" 1
police officers and NOW members.
Term projects have been as diverse as
a wall-sized montage on the roles and
images of v.·omen. papers on the aborlion
issue and journals observing the day-to-
day impressions of one st~dent on
'vomen's image in society.
Students v.'ho take one course. almost
always take the second as well. Some
want to repeat both.
fi1iss Ackerman, who graduates th is
n1onth, felt that such courses should
begin as early as elementary school, and
be provided for both sexes.
There ha ve been a handful Or males in
the Women in History and Women in
Literature ciasses. Some of lhe femaJ.c
students feel more comfortable discuss·
ing issues in an a11·fema le class. Others
feel having males offer their vie"'J)Oints
is also of value.
All students don 't turn into Instant
feminist s.
\VANTS PROTECTION
Said one. "I still feel that it is nice to
be under a man's protection. But now. I
know l can be a police officer if I want to
be. And , in this class, they don't laugh at
me as much as another class might H I
sa id that."
She added. "This class impressed me. I
didn't \vant to get involved, .but I gue ss I
have: It gave me a chance to really look
into everything, I've learned more in this
class than any other I've had about
people's true feelings."
A female st udent who admits being an
avid reader discovered that there arc
great women authors.
"I've read the Bronte sisters and many
others. I feel wonren authors have a
sensitivi ty to feeliitgs and emotions that
many men writers don't have. They can
touch you without a lot of sex scenes."
A male student. whose term project
was a look at th e image of women with
slides and a tape of Helen Reddy's "l Am
\Voman," took the class inilially as a
joke.
Now he's a student aide for ~ts. lla\l's
class.
,, There seems lo be a growing
a1vareness of women's irilages, women's
roles in society among these teenagers.
An excerpt from a journal \vritten by a
student last ran will illustrate.
"Today, I bought a pin from Ms. Hal!
that says: 'Trust in God. She \Viii
provide.' rvry mother liked it but my
falher told me tha• God is' a man and
always will be. 1 made no r~'rk.
Fathers can be difficult at times,
loveable, but difficult.
JOURNAL QUOTED
"Last night r watched the movie 'The
Cowboys' and it was pretty good cxcepl
for one scene where John Wayne walks
into the school room and asks the teacher
if he can speak to the boys alone. and the
teacher replies: '
" 'Then we (the girls) bow to the fa ct
that it's a man's world and leave you to it.' ,,
"That bolhcred me because women
considered the world as belonging to men
only. I'd hate to live back then."
About a panty hose commercial :
"Now everyone knows that men and
1vo1nen have legs. So why the big dea l
over pantyhose. named Leggs? Do women
•go around exclaiming over n.1en's support
socks?"
And, on women 's roles:
"Toda y my sister and her two kids
came over. Sharon was telling how hC'r
3•h·year-old daughter Kin1 went up to
her and announced that she would HAVE
TO become a nurse because her daddy
told her it wa sn't nice for girls to
become docto rs.
"My sister was in(uriated. She took
Kim on her lap and told her she could
become anything she wanted lo be.·•
: '
J8 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Junt b, 1974
Communication: A Risk Worth ··Taking?
,. By LAURIE KASPl<:R
OI 1!1t D•ll~ "lit! Sltlt
?i·tore people mi£hl be
communicntlng cont~rn about
.co1111nunlcation these days.
This ytar, for the first tin1e,
students ln ~1ona Coates'
SCK',jal 1»'0blt!n1s clas~ <1t
Orapge Coast College chose lo
study con1n111n icntion lover
racial \ discriln ination a n d
other usually popular topics.
And a nun1bcr or \l"Olll L'n
stayed through a one·tin1c
Communication \\for k s hop
&Yen though it \Vas held late in
tt\e afternoon u•hen mo st of
tJiem normally go hurne and
ptepare lo spend the evening
w1th their families,
"I think people a r c
btcoming more and more
a!"·are of ho"' we suffer by ~ot
,Golden
:~ilestone ,_ .
·~ ·Marked
t:lboa residents Hal J.
d Harriette Coo k
eeks marked t heir
*>th wedding anniver·
sery at a party hosted ~ their sons and their
Wives, Mr. and Mrs. !l. H. Weeks of Culver
City and l\1r. and Mrs.
R. J. \Veeks. Anahe im.
The couple. married on
June 3, 1924, have nine
gr,andchildren and two
g'reat grandchildren. A
third generation Cali·
fomian, Mrs. Weeks is
active in Native Daugh·
ters of the Golden
'Vest. The co uple
moved to Balboa in
1966.
~ -~. ·~~
=~ . "-'· . :~: :~: ·:S· :::::: •:S
c o ni munica1ing properly,"
explained :\1rs. Coalei, 11n
u1struetor or sociology at the
college.
Often. she explained, people
don 't gl't the satisfacl kin of
expressing their · feeling' nr
being listened to.
··often we're comn1unic<1t-
in,g l'l paradox." she said.
"We're feeling bottled u11
and hurting and lnthnidntcd
insidt', yet \\'e se1.1d a
{'0 n tr ad i ct or y rncssagc
outside."
The greatest feeling she has
r \'cr h41d, she continued. was
,.,.1~n she u·as hurt. expressed
it and was understood.
It's not easy to
Cilmtnunicate effectively, she
admits. In fact, she points out
that communicatK>n can open
one up 10 negative as \veil as
~~ ~Honors Announced .....
positive things.
RISK\' BUSINESS
The risk. she believes, Is lh~
reason most people C101l't
t'On1municate.
"You 're going to have to
t'Xpose yourse lf 1rhk•h 1r111.v be
pretty crappv." she cxplaint'd.
"One or the big risks in
comnuu1icatln1? effcrth·cly is
that you 1n ight ha\"c to
'{hnngc ."
Bul then too . she ndd s. it
OffC'rS !he satisfartion of
'·becon1ini:: knov•n lo yourself
and comn1 u n iea ting to
others ...
She d o r i: n ' I ncresl!a rily
bla1nc thv person for his or
her laek of co1nnlun icRtion.
~he explained. "f bf>lic\'e
cult ure, by and I a r g e .
encourages us to com1nunicate
Clubs Give, Receive
..
W idows
:: ~1.lrs. Sylvia Kaufman will
:· ume the presidency of the
:riety of ~lililary \V idoYt'S
• ~ ring ceremonies Saturday.
)<' $une 8, in the Saddleback Inn. • > • :11• Also seated during the JI
·-.m. luncheon meeting will be
• be ~1mes. Kay Van Hook, ~uth Cox. Thelma
.. irmingham. Louise O'Neill
:-'11d Gloria Alm.
Da ma s
Mrs. Jerry ' Andes was < •. •
of St. Jude Hospi tal, for the
hospital's linear accelerator.
Other new officers are the
~lmes. Cochrane Chase. L R,
\\iilhelmsen, Allen Hodges.
Allan Bridgford and Harold
rilestyanek.
• CM J uniors
A second place in
c o n s e rvation-ecology ,1·as
received by the Costa J\·lcsa
Junior Women's Club during
the 46th coovention of the
Junior Membership or
Califor-,iia Federation or
Women's Clubs.
Fed e ration
T"·elvc avoarrls a.nd two
honorable mentions Yt' er c
garnered by the California
fcderalion of \Vomen's Clubs
during the General Federation·
con vention in ~linneapolis.
Art League
ooly In the narrow <"Mflne11 or
stx role stereotype-s."
tilen are told to be hard.
rugged, forceful. independent
and aggresive. she said. They
don't show their hurt, softness,
ltndemess or pain because
"somehow they get U in their
heads it makes them less of a
111an."
But women, the instnictor
said, are taught to be the
o~ile . . . sweet, nice,
subse rvient and con genial.
During the workshop, she
discussed several ''myths"
\Vhich she believes
particularly hinder Yt'Omen's
communicaUon.
MYTHS 01.JTUNED
She opened the session by
having the women put their
arms around each other jn
forming a larg~ circle. She
asktd bow many of !hem had touc~ a woman in a geliture
of friendship recenUy.
Often, she claimed, women
don't touch or communicate
openly with other 'A"Omen
because lhl'y fear they would
be considered lesbians.
Also. she said, women lire
brought up wit~ the feeling
that ~ey have to compete
with other women for the
attentlfn of men around them.
\\'omen, she said, believe
they have to fll lhe "nice girl
imaR"e" as Yt·elJ a8 thr;1t of the ••J!OO<I nurturi-_g motlier."
They are the "helper" as weJI
as the "helpless," feeling their
sex appeal must feed the male
ego. \Vomen, she continued.
are considered "emotional"
·while the men are "rational ."
"We communicate t he
1hlngs that put us in a
subservient posjtion," a h e
claimed.
Although she contends
communication is a problem
with a lot cf people. she
admits It l! often unconscious.
i'More often than not;.' she
said, "the peaple who have
communication p r o b I c 111 s
aren't aw a r e of the
communication proctss.
SEND AND RECEIV E
Technically, that proces.'
contains two parts -sending
the message clearly and
receiving messages
accurately.
She advised women In her
workshop to "make ' I'
statements rather than 'you'
statements."
.,
Allhougb &he wamett "it
1IO\lods awfUUy bold to say 'I
want' or 'I btllcve'," she
urged them to 1tate bow they
feel react or think about
aoNi'clhlng rather Iha• telling
that othtr person how he or
she thinks. reels or react!i.
Qften. she explalned, a
pri\son Is told,'11You rnake me
angry.
;'Another person can't ll}Bke
you angry," she said .'1Vou
n1ake yourself angry because
you dldn'L like the wa,y you
reacted."
Messages can be
manipulative, she said. Often
phrases, whlcb she called "lay
ons," are used to blame the
speaker's feeling, on the other
person.
A woman. she said, might
tell her husband, "l'rn bored.
You never lake me anyplace."
"It you're bored," Mrs.
Coates said. '1lt's beca~
y~'re not st Im u I a tin I
yourself.''
BE CONG llUENT
She also urgt.od the women to
avoid aski11g quesllons when
they really want to make a
statement. ovoid name-ca lling
and to "~ congruent" by
co1nmunlcnllng what they are
think ing or feeling on the
''inside."
She also advtsed thern to
listen to what the persoo soys
without interrupting them or
passing judgment on thelr
commenl'l until they are
finished speaking.
"If you just listen ," she
said, "you might I e a r n
something about that person."
Handy Guide for Customers
them'ali up together. It breaks
I've been interested in the up lhe moootony or her da y.
letters describing rurlencss to (3) After rur bag is packed
sales clerks and vice \"Crsa. full with al the cans on the bottom. ask the checker if Having been a clerk in a she'd mind fishing out that No.
supermarket for 10 years, I 3 ean or coffee at the botton1
have drav.·n up a list or and putting it in a separate
'"he)pful hints" to make bag because it's for your
shopping more enjoyable for sister.
DEAR ANN LANDERS'
everyone. (4) \Vait until the checker
has 97 cents wort h of change
(l) Don't use a basket. Rush and a fC\v bills in her hand and
to the checkaut line with your then tell her you just happen
arms loaded with groceries to have a load or pennies you
and ask if you can go ahead of \vant to get rid cf.
the others because you are (SJ Wait till all the groceries
dropping things. They \\'ill fE!\!I are rung up and then start
sorry for you and say yes. digging in yrur purse for your
(2) When there's a big order checkbook and pen. When you
just ahead of you , put your c'an•t find your pen. ask if
few items on the belt and get anyone in the line·can lend you
them mixed in with the other thei rs. People Jove to do these
order. The checker won't mind small favors. It makes them
refiguring arter she's rung feel useful.
••
Peering
Around
(6) \\'hen you are shocked
senseless by the high prices of
some of the items. con1pla1n
loud and clear to the checker.
After all, you can't get to the
people who set the prices, but
the checker is right there, ·a
perfect target-so let her ha\'e
it \Vilh both barrels. -VET·
ERAN OF SUP~Rri1ARKET
' TANGLES
DEAR VET: While your lel·
tcr might be amusing lo many,
Election Re sults •
I can see why checkout peaple
grow old belqre Uietr Ume. I
marvel at their 1alntly pa·
Uence. ThaW for writing.
or Oilatin. I neve r even think
about my illness, because it's
been so long since I've had a tl••lll .. llllllfl
seizure.
DEAR ANN LANDERS'
\\'hen I read the Jett.er from
"the teenage girl v.·ith epilepsy.
I knew 1 had to speak my
piece. I've had 40 years or it.
Please, Ann. tell yo ur ~===:::::::::::::::::::::~ readers who are ashamed of
being epileptic that 1almost all
royal families have al least
one. -MRS. NO NA~IE
\\Then I experienced my
first seizure and my parents
leamccl I had epile~"V, they
"'ere so ashamed of it that
they never told anyone. not
even our closest relatives. I
was watched carerully and
instructed to give a signal if I
fel t a seizure coming on 50
Mom or Dad or Sis could take
Dear 1'tlrs.: Too bad you're
kee ping )'our Illness sucb a
deep, dark secret. People !luch
as you could do a great deal to
boost the morale of other
epllepUcs and help educate ~be
public. Come out or the clostt.
lady, and be of 1ervlce to
humanity.
SUMM[R ijUART[~
June 17 thru Aug. 17
Pointinq • l e 9 lnn inq1
Adwonced,Londscope ;
Drawinq • loslc, Flqure;
Wotercolor; Color ond
Desf9n: Prl11tmokln9: In·
terlor Dttl9 n: Jewelry;
Ceramics : Sculpture.
SEASCAPE WORKSHOP
w ith Bennett lradbury,
Aug. 19 thno Aug. 30. me into another room at once. I __ _..,,,__ _____ _
Several years later, when -RUFFELL'$ Appro"'ll fot v.+,r•M medication to control seizures R1c i•llY Nondi1c:ri,,,iMtory
was discovered, 1 was one of UPHOLSTERY Wrilt or phone for brocb11rl
the first to. use it. J must say WM.'" W•t (714) 494-1520
it "·orked wooders for m'". n. ... 630 L c Rd Periodic and ca r e full y 1•22 Hatltet lhocf. •IJU"• •1tyo1t •
regulated doses made i ,1~~~·~-;;::;~·~-:;:::::;;::;="~'=·'='=";;::;~~~L~a~g~•~ .. ~·~·~·~c~h~t~Z~6~5~1~~ possible to functK>n in a --·-----
completely normal way. Now I
can get by ~·ith a small dose
I OF IASlllOM
\VINNING first place in the
~t iss Job's Daughters Se''" and
Show rontest was l\Iiss Tami
Tuz, '>1.'ho serv('{l as ma?"Shal
of Bethel 157, Ne wport Beach.
She '>l.'ill compete at state level
during !he Grand BeU1cl June
25--27 in Oakland. Presidents Named
SELECTED "'ilh 1 t other
employes as Citizcn-of·thc
year for 1973 by General
T elep h one was Irene
Benavidez, a Huntington
Beach PBX operatcr.
She w<1s cited for her
involvemenl wilh Candystrip-
ers of Huntington Beach Ir.ter·
community Hospital 'Nbere she
Yt'as press c~irman and led
a walk-a·thon to raise money
for ctlildren 's toys and other
items.
New officers have been
elected by Parent-Teacher
units in the Newport-Mesa
School District.
Serving as presidents of
their PTA units are the Mmes.
Wendell Williams, Leonard
Balis, John Drew, Harry
Bcrbolz, Ralph Boegel, John
Po,1:ell, Thurman Brannon,
Jahn \Villiamson, Theodore
Tafe, Roy ritay, Donald Aloi·
Ilea and John Franco.
Others 11re the riI m e s .
~ticbael Gross, Roy Pfeiffer,
Gerald Fultz, David Tesch,
Nigel Bailey, Paul Hamilton,
Charles Stratton. Tony Abbott ,
Joe Goubert, John Scapple and
Kennlth Logan.
More are the Mmes. Paul
Dumain, Keith WiJJiamson ,
Joseph Hlmmelheber, Thomas
Elicker, Harry Finch. Frank
Pettita, Ronald Yoco+n and
Don Pacot.
Serving as leaders of PFO
units are the J\lmes. William
Grant, John ~1cGowan, Ronald
Robisan and WilUam Wille.
Dan Shepard3on also will
serve as a president.
FASHION IS LANO -·Newport Beach
ANAHEIM PLAZA -Anaheim
RIVERSIDE PLAZA -River1id1
TYLER MALL -R1.,.riide
CENTllAL CITY MALL -Son &.rnordino
FASHION VAtleY -Son DltQO
SUMMER SANDAL
staUed as president when
amas de Caridad members ·
thered for lunch in Los
.. oyotes Country Club.
Two club members will
serve as officers at the district
level, Mrs. Ronald Stenge is
president and. 1'.1.rs. Don Voyer
is hislorian.
Costa :O.fcsa Art League has
ay,•ardcd sc holarships lf, June
Board. Richard ritahen and
Pandara Richmond, Corona
drl ~lar fligh School seniors;
Herman Gilling and William
Wray. Costa J\1esa lfigh:
Da"·nelle Caste and Cheri I-;::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;:;--
'Vattace, Estancia , and Erik
Escher and Jane Fernald,
Newport llarbor High School.
,,. ·• Highlighting the event was
:die presentation or $20.000 to
· ·stcr Jane Frances, president ;.
A Seafaring
F11her"1 O.llgh1
Oullted Nylon
Sailing Shirt
S35
Waterproof Ziopered
pocket Trouser
S30
With Matching
Hot
58.50
& Be lt
S7.50
'fry· Satu1·day 's News Quiz
r' '
STORE CLOSE OUT
EVERYTHING MU~ GO!
Three Days .Unly
June 7-8-9
r we-;;;~ ~~s-;;d" oth-;;rl
1 store s and boug ht I
I their stock for this I
1sa le . Must se ll l
I eve r ythi ng . So me I
I item s below cost. I
I That's why we are cal-I
I ling it store close out I
I sale . I ._ __________ _,
ENTIRE
FABRIC
STOCK ·····*······ ······PLUS ~·············*·· SEWING NOTIONS
•Zippers
•Trims
•Ribbons
• Bullons
• Threod s
• Seam BindirHJS
• Seam Tapts
• Sewin9 Books
1
3oFF
PATTERNS VOGUE -SIMPLI CI TY
BUTTERICK -McCALLS Y2off
SOLOMON FABRICS
HARBOR CENTER !lock Matti 2300 l:fARBOR
COST A MESA PH: 549· 1834
A
'
Store Hours: Mon. thru Sat. I 0 A.M. 'til 5:30
90
REGULAR $24
WHITE • BONE • CAMEL
• BLACK PATENT
•
SLIMS
NARROW
MEDIUM
SIZES TO 11
BonkAmericard • Mo ster Charge
\
•
I
Amity
Bridges
The Gap
Miss Laura Judy, 96,
loves teenagers and
they love her. As their
graduation present to
the community, seniors
at Amity High School
in Oregon cleaned and
painted the house that
the former teacher has
called home for 82
years. Her involvement
with Amity students
dates back to 1903.
..
To avoid disappointment. prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy photo-
graphs to the DAJLY PILOT Women's De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time wil l not
be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more berore the wedding
date; otherwise it wi ll not be published.
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding and engagement stories. forms are
availlable in all the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Women's Section staff memb!!rs at 642-4321.
\
Large I
Sizes
36 to 46
It's coot inside
our breeze-wei9hl
sportswear. Lorsa
slim·filting shorts
and colorful tops
to choose from.
Tank tops.
sleeveless shi rts
~ in white and colors
an.d more. more,
more.
Tops·from sa~.
Shorts from s 10.
' '
~~'sHALF-SIZE SHOP
fULLIATON
224 Or•flt•t•lr M•ll
HUNTINGTON HACH
14 H111Ul"tt•rt C•nt•r
LAGUNA HILLS COSTA MESA
L9fW'• HIM•M.il 1 IOS N•wp•rt llv4,
SHOP SUNDAY 11.s (••r•111t (•••• M•••)
BallkAmerlc1rd • f\l111 er Cltargl'
I ,,
ANTIQUES
Featuring FiM Old
GALLOWAYS
410 list St. 675-2128
th•
WATER CLOSET l..c_,...... ..... o.,..,.
tfritltilt1l......_ .... ..t •CC tt!«it1. 4fl lh1St.•7~110l
UPI T•ltPlllll
422 Jln Strett
DAIL V PILOT f !!
Will Present Make Grade?
Dy £R~IA 80~18 1-.:CI\
Kltls 00\\'af/ays take all the
furl out of gift-gil'ing.
It used to be that \lthatevcr
you coul:hcd up c111nc as a
surprise. Not anyrnore. Las!
Christmas I \\'as prestnted
\\'ith not only a list or
suggl'stionl!. but the serinl
nunibers, 1hl' list price an<l lhe
store hours !hat handled thcn1.
A!J of It \\'<IS fl!I s1nntancous
as an Eastern Sunr is1·.
!\ot only that. but they seem
dea1h. \\hlche\rr conics first1
do part."
"You said that before ," he
grumhled. "It still doesn't
SQh·c \\ha t I am goiri~ to givl'
~~red for graduation."
"llow much money do you
ha\·e?"
"Thirtv-fi ve crnts and a
student ID card."
"That can get you iden1Hied
ltS a pauper."
"~1aybc I could ge t hiln n
new teru1is racket? A sporls
shir!? A hot comb? A can of
tennis balls?"
'·Jfow about a card?" I
asked.
''That's not much for a guy
~·ho has C\'erylhini.:."
"I kllOW liOITICthing h C
cloc-;n 't have."
"'t\'hat?"
"A need ."
AT
WIT'S.
END · .._ ___ _,'
IO h;l\'e no CQnception of \\'hat r-:....:=-_..;;-:._:-:;-_;-:;-:; ________ =====-=-=-:..::.:.:.:.::::.,
constitutes a gift nnd what
constitutes a "memori:tl."
Tii.ke Freel. He's a nice kid
\\'ho lives dO\\'O the street v.·ho
happens lo be graduating from
high school this ~ear.
··1 ha\'e to buy a gift for
r~red." said m.v son.
I sm il e d a t his
thoughtfulness. ''\\'hat did you
ha\•C' in mind?"
'·He wants a tape deck for
his car." fSC'rial no. 9176329.
Retail· S.S9.95. I
"And I want a motel "'here
you dial 4 and Robert Redford
appC'ars at your door with
ice."
"A guy only graduates
once." he said.
"If he plays his cards ri6h1 ,
th<l l's enough." I said.
"He doesn't need an)1hing
else." he insisted .
''Ridiculous," I ~ai<I . ''If you
got him a tape dPf'k for his
car. \\'hat \\'OUld his parents
gi\'C him?"
"\Vho do you think is giving
him the car?"
"That's their bu<:iness." l
said. ''But I personall\' believe
a car is like enterin~ ,, mar-·
ririge ... you go inlo it wl:en
you can promise to love and
support it from this dav
ror1va rd In overti1ne pay and
in gas shortages. in ~ood
mileage and broken dO\\'Tl·
!l'l'JtJsmissions ... in oil leak~
;1nd insurance pre:niurn-; ur>\il
adidas
"HAILLET" .
A great gift tor Dad on rat her·~ Day
A first class tenn is shoe, worn
by the world's best tennis
players. All leo1her uppers
Still only S 1995
rou and !he lean C<l'll!J:'lr.v (o"
I 052 Irvine • Westcliff Pima : l'Wwport lffch • 541-8684
IMPORTERS or EUROPEAN ANl'JQUES
FINE GIFTS&: JEWELRY
You art cordially invited to broww
. :· ,.'.;;
32nd St.
"31st St .
h St.
r~·~~c.~
~~~ ll~k ~'t+-J
ANTIQUES -GIFTS
PLAN TS • ART CLASS
.1hf' (&a 11:ne'l;i -:,...ff1.&la1;ia.11I
.J(J /fJ 'l!a/a,yell" .y/4;m1t1f' 114-615-5111
2817 Laf1yet1e
Al 29th St.
· 1continuinq
closses in nttdlepoint
~~¥f,:l~ "3011 Vi Ha Way, 6 75-2212
Bou tiqu e
675-7740
__ ,
~o1Gr•,
~nore's
.\\Tl()I • .. ~.ART .... , H\ITI 'flE
II :-11111: I ) I· ti! :-1 .~ rtll·'.•: f
1.:-~.11:1:111
DISCOVER
&-~
'D.111 frriu • &1lvtor'
Cu >lo111 ~'.c1rc tru '1.>ai9
J111r 71rt 8.Pfrinhie.s
2811 [ofo.~1t~
l f,wpert 1~to.C'I\ C<ilif
11;,. -6 '1>it.
cio,,,I 11~.l•lf'
3009 VILLA WAY Few th• &.""' Fon-.~
i,11 ,e.r, s .. ...,., b1~ 3140
.:,.;-~ ~
,,.f .. ; .. ~ ~~ •rf"i"t-"t
. 711-&75·11~
An11ques • Ob1ec1s Cl Ar:
Contemporary L1gn11ng •
Arch11ecru1al Elements
[_T~tE laon-1on l
,-----l;LZ , ~'-'--
:::-----t I SOON BON TON
COOKERY SCHOOL
SEAFOOD
MARKET
FRESH
FISH DAILY
GOURMET oftd COMTlMl'ORARY ACCESSORIES
42S 30th St. -675·6274
I ~~§~~~®,
•STAINED LEADED AND ETCHED GLASS. 1 CUSTOM DESIGN. SPECIALIZING IN
RESIDENTIAL COMMISSIONS.
2813 LAFAYETTE
Moore ~
PAINl'S
HARBOR
PAINT CENTER, INC.
wallpaper
floor coverings
& draperies
412 l 2ftd St. 67S.4040
·-
,. ~y..\----
' ' . ·. -. ·) .
~ --r-1= ...... :.-·.;:.,., .
~ ,
the WATERF'RONT ~09 2~ t.k 111. l'l~wpor t
,.;,Ji & ,,,., *' l 17· ,,,_> c.z;s'4t,, .;.
MARK DAVIDSON TRIO
I " I·
•
...
•
'
,20 DAil Y PILOT Thursday, Junt 6,, 1974
UPI Tlltl'l>alO
Mr.&. Edith Ruina (left) a nd Mrs. La ya Wiesner thum p
for new deal for girl~.
. You r Ho roscope Tom orrow
Equality Jus t Elementary
By PATlUCIA !\lcCOltMACK
~E\V von K (UPI ) -Thl'
\\'8Y it used to be you'd be on
the 111ark saying: gir!i will be
girls and boy~ ,1·il l bl• boyi;.
At least th at's the way it
\\'as before wom2n 's lib
brought up the dastardly
business of sex r o I e
stcreotypign from the cradle
to the grave -but especially
in the nation's sahOOls.
Today to be on sa fe ground
you'd better say -"Persons
\\'i ll be persons" and let i1 go
at that.
Sci role slcreotyping tends
to lead little girls toward
fe1nin inc careers -nursing,
teachin g. h ont cm akin g ,
motherhood .
• It leads Uttlc boys do11·n a
thorn-stre1111 puth toY,.ard hc-
man pursuits '..... rough an<I
tu1nblc sports and careers that
require superbra\\'n or
supc rbrain. Of course ,
fathe rhood. too.
The stereotype rs say that, in
the latter role. daddy brings
ho1ne lhe bacon.
But, of course. mothers do
that too.
Thumpin!( a nc"' era for the
nation's school girls are two
dist inguislwd \ron1:;-11 fron1
C<11nbr idgc .
i':dltti Ruina ;iarl IA!vu
\\'icsn'cr sj)t'ak enthusiasticaily
and ca rry a big report \vhe~
thl'Y thu1np for a 11e\v deal for
school gir ls.
~lrs-. \\'iesner's hu.>ba ndl
Jeron1e, is president o {
~h1ssachusctts Institute of
Technology, and .:id vised
President Keruledy on science.
~trs. Ruina's husband is o
professor at MIT. During the
Kennedy administration he
was head of the Institute for
Defense Analysis.
The report the tv.·o v.•01nen
talked about in an interview ls
based oo an ~11T v.'Orkshop on
;.\\'on1en in Science au d
Tedinology ." The \vorkshop
p.:irticipants. I ea d e rs in
scie nce. education and
industry. t a ck I c d this
problcn1:
''What to do about women
v.·ho are excluded from
scientific and technical jobs -
despite the rising notional
{leeds for tec hni ca ll y
Competent \VOrkers."
FINDING
1 One fii'lding was !hi~.
persistent and stereolyped
scx·role pcrccplions held by
p<J.rents. educator~. ernploy('rs
and even yo ng women
thc1nsclves."
"It v.•as foun ,"' said l\·lrs.
\Veisncr. ·"that son1e women
have been precl ed in science
und technology because they
made poor c rricu lu n1
decisions in high school."
Those dccisio s, according
to l\lrs. ltulna, often had their
roots in grade school.
"The girls were not given
!he proper foondatioo v."Ork for
science and n1athematics:'
she said.
The report stresses the need
for mathematical competence
-something children cannot
achiC\'c unless they take the
key courses in lhc,lower and
middle grades.
The tv•o woolen s a i d
workshop participants showed
relatively few gi rls carefully
consider their future C'arccrs
and the full range of options.
"Unless they do so, before
the end of high school, women
will continue to settle for
lower status and achievement
than men, and the situation
wi ll be worse for women from
poor fan1llies who have little
fornuil education,'' ?.1 r s .
Wiesner &1Jd,
Y ko ma tter what
educators do to Increase
career choices \ for \female
studerlts.'' said Mr.s. Ruins ,
"they .can and ·m u s I
consciously and a c t I v e I y .
encourage girls to challenge
the widespread and lit.founded
belief that they cannot or need
not learn to work with
numbers."
ANNIVERSARY
The conference was ;:i \1•ay
of marking the 10th nMiver·
sary of the graduation of the
first woman at ~1 1T: The
school now has 500 women
students, I~ percent of the lo·
!al. Next year it v.·ill be 20
percent -and hopefully 1nore
the year after that.
"Teachers and counselors
must learn more about the
preparation neces.!ary f o r
women in science a n d
technology -and the many
opportunities for them .'' said
Mrs. Ruina, coordinator of the
MIT project.
"\\1on1en contin ue t.o be -=-===================::;-! excluded largely because of I"' OUR SINCEREST THANKS
to
the U.C.I.
Capricorn Good Organizers
FRIENDS of
the LIBRARY
for this 9th
ANNUAL FICTION
AWARD
FRIDA Y
JUNE 7
By SYD NEY 0!\1ARR
:ARIES fl\tarch 21·April 19 1:
ROadblocks to progress arc
removed. Green 1 i g h t i ~
n&shed by one in positio11 of
.t,,'lithority. Accent is on am·
1*ioo, career, preslige and
standing in community.
TAUR US (Apr il ro-May 20):
Good lunar aspect coincides
now with long;ange view,
awareness of po tc n ti a 1.
Travel, communications "'ith
!hose at a distance are also
apt to be on agenda.
GEl\oflNJ (~-lay 21-June 201:
New approach to accounts,
stock, inventory, cash flow,
borro wing and lending is re·
quired. Creative abilities shii1c
if yoo avoid scattering your
forces.
CANCER (June 21-J uly 22):
Avoid becoming in•;olved in
con!ronlatioos. 1 e g a 1 or
otherwise. Judgment could be
slightly off target. G a i n
cooperation of one who holds
opposite views to your own.
LEO (July 2J. • .o\ug. 221 :
busi ness. P a y m e n t s , col·
lections arc featured.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2<!-Jan.
191: Lunar cyc!c is strong:
you can organize <lnd cxecut~
orders. programs. You get
credit ror past efforts.
AQUAR!lJS I Jan. 20-Feb.
18 1: Finish rather than iniliat.e
project. '''ork within confines
ol group, club, organiiation.
Oieck areas usually kept
under wraps.
., . . '
DID YOU KNOW •
FG guarantees Quality.
Variety.fashion & Savings?
WE DO! EVERY DAY!
CRISP WH ITE
OTTOMAN
~ 119 ~ yd.
Values lo 3.00
Special LOW pric~
3 days only.
Heavy Wf'1gnt. mach1ne·wasnao1e
Cotton It looks great 1n sport
fashions summer CdsuJIS and
dress·uo::. 45 · wi de FG s 1eg.
LOW procf' 1 98.
COOL SUMMER WHITES
Sew a cool galhered smock 1aci..e1
TO wear w11n your sporly wh11es J 39 Cotton·Poly blend. m achine
washable. Perma Press. Assorted d
weaves --' eyelash. lenos. a111a ..... n~ Y. •
-all popular fashio n lool\s, 45 ·
wide. Values t o 2.00
WHITE DOUBLE KNITS
POL VESTER, 9 ~ssorted Jacouards perfect tnr ric-34
live sporrswear and morP !orm~
lashoons. l!'s ma(.h1nc·wash.:ible ;ind yd.
no 1rcn1ng 60 · w1(Je.
Values lo 5.00
a (CJ;
NEWPORT BEACH
PT Units
Keep re90lutions. especially
those coocemed with work and
health.
VIRGO !Aug. z:l.Scpt. 22 1'
Accent is on creativity, special
rC'lationships, d~ with
Childrt'Jl and opposite SCJ:.
PISCES (F'eb. Jg.Mardi 201:
Emphasis is on getting to
heart of matters -and ha vin;::
heart-to-heart talk w i I h
merOOer or opposrte sex.
Leland
Frederick
Cooley
&
Avon
Books
LAGUNA BEACH
278 Fonst A•e.
Open Mon.-Sat. g..s:30
Sun. 12.fip.m.
"" c .... M-.1\1~ ..... ~2 .~2.~:: f.~: ~~9:30 P.M.
·-
School Bells Silent LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22!' ~tor e comrm.mk:ation is ~iiillll!iiiiiillllllllll~iiiiijill~~iiiiiiiillll~iijiiii~~ii~~iii~;; ... featured on borne front . 1--:=========
Welmrne this -Mete views
and be reeeptive to those ex·
pressed by others.
ADAl\1S PTA : Bo a rd
members will host an cnd-0!·
theoschool-year luncheon at
11 :30 a.rf'. tomorrow in the
hon1e of i\fr~ .• Jody K'ee. for
faculty and slaU.
~fARINERS PFO: Lu a u
with fresh flowers a n d
gretnery ·will be the setting
.. for the sixth grade graduation
party to take place at 1 p.n1.
place at II a.m. Thursday,
June 6, at the Petite Auberge
restaurant in South Coast Vil·
lage. Also being honored will
be John t.1cG<>wen, principal.
VICTOR I A P TA :
Graduating students in the
fifth grade \\'ill be treated to a
beacll p.v1y at 8:30 a.n1.
tomorrow. Refreshments will
be donated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Accent now is on visits, deal·
ings with relatives. letters
and·short trips. Ideas can be
developed with aid of one close
to you.
SAGm ARIUS <No''· 22-
Dec. 21): Money picture can
be active. Key is to separate
fact from fan cy -gel down to
Wednesday, June 12. Flower -;;;;:;;;;::;;;:;;;;::;;;:;;;;::;;;:;;;;::;;;;:;;::;;;;:;;:;;;;;:;;; I
lei s and diplomas will be 1
presented to the teachers and
students. Following lunch a
talent show will be prt9Cntcd DTERY by the sixth grade class.
Serving the committee und<:r
the chairmanship or ~!rs.
Lawrence Klein 11rc I he
i\Imcs. Henry Dur kee. Paul
Berg. Bernard Leckie. Chester
Ranger and Robert \Vecks.
TEWINKLE PTA: Members
11111 •:;r;p -(11~~ ... 'i ...
"'1'<.,A~K ll -(,l11,Q••r11(088Lt;,
Lil '.(Mi).~ -Bi:.='l•U,'-i>J
If·~~ (A<,1111~'. ',j:',l',:.HQo.C.l-'.";
P..LU'.. -HAI !DeAG~ -HQ<,l(i! f
I J"'°'IJ'. <,.,,,, f,.. (hUen
~U..n Hi:<YJ -C,.,.t;.-~d• -U.S. Kcds
V1• ii·_, Ii Pol~ -'.:un ~" Surd<JI;
c0.:. ... 1-CTIVE SHO'i rQ;;? (HILDRfN
from the old and new boards e;~,,.,o..nces-... 01u1c•-t11°""""'
wHI be honored atthe ins"111a· 225 E. 17th ST. -COSTA MESA
lion luncheon lhat \Yill lake l ~::""·~··:":'·~·:'":'~':'":'".::·~"="~"~'':':'"~'":':'~·::"":".:~5:4~8~·~2~7~7:8~·-:~
Meet Laurie Kasper
One of the
Dally Pilot's
Ro le
People
SlMitf on c1mpw .-ctlvh.it1 as well as more 1cneral !<>lor1es nn the people offhc Or~nge
~ l have been amon• recrnl conlribulions to Puo11k· from L0tunc K.-1'1x·r. 11e11o·~~l
member of the People Section staff, 1-lolder pf a de(t(t'e 1n )00tn11h1>m from California
Sl:ite URl\lnslty ll Lnnt &eacll, Lluri• is workil\I P•rt -time loward a m&ster·s degrec-
;n social «oleo' •t UCI. SM tOVtred \'arkiul ""·• bell$ fOf' ne.._·~p;i\H:'rlri 1n the :,.an
G•bfliel V1I..,. •rea before joinfnt lM Dally Pllot staff in 1972. She h.i~ l>l"'" on tho i.lalf
of People lfornwrt,v \\'omen's St<iionJ eve:r ~Ince she came lo lht D011ly Pilot
( ~ople J is ihe Daily Pilot's
Aw ard -winning section f or
wo men ( an.d other people, too)
NOW: ALSO
~NSIDE
LINIROOK
HARDWARE
AT
FOUNTAIN
VALLEY
17200 Brookhurst
•
INSIDE HAR DWARE STORE
968-8541
OPEN SAT. & SUN.
10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
MON .. FRI. ! TO 9 P.M.
HIGH
LOW
SHAG
REG. $12.95
SPACE DYED
TWEEDS
49
SQ.
YO .
REG.
7.99
DuPONT 501
NYLON
EXTRA THICK
SHAG
REGU LAR 9.95 SQ VD
SQ. YD.
'""'""' '"""''"" ., .. him ......
'""''"'
CA DON
NYLON
IY HOUYTIJ
88
SQ.
YD.
R.EG.
10.99
Compl111ly lnifoll1d with (•mpl111 y ln1t1llod with
Deluu Rubber ~1d4l•g , Doluu Rub btr hdd"'9
88
SQ. YO.
Completely
Ins talled
with Deluxe ,.-.
Rubber ""
1
Padding
SPECIAL
MILL PURCHASE
CARPET
4 ROOMS
MAXIMUM 40 't'DS.
tOOll -T HLOll
CHOICI Of COLOll
219°0
''"''ltltl, 1~11.111• •ltll
4<!111111 lll"l f ,tddlflt,
SAVf ·$1~9.00
EXTRA HEAVY
DultONT501
IY MAND
88
SQ.
YD .
REG.
9.99
Complete y n1to ll1d with
Otlu• Rubber Pod~ln1
~~
"
Sat. 1<H> PM.
Sun. 12-6 P.M.
HUNDREDS
OF ROUS
ON DIS PLAY
MOHAVJIC
PHllAOELPHIA
HOLLYYT~X
ARM5TRONG
CABIN CRAFTS
CALLAWAY
B~AnlE
&ARWICK
·ALDON
MAGEE
~MITH
I OYAL WEAVE \
~t::(:jlEES
" . }1,
··1 .,.,
~ r;
'" ""· ..
l
,,
i ..
..
' •
•
Tliis Is It
Minister
Gives Pav
•
To (:hurch
rlALL.\S. Trx. ! Al'/ -Dr.
\\'.A. Criswel l of the First
Bap11 s1 Church of /)nllas snys
he 11•ill return C'Ver.v pcru1y he
has !akf'n in salar'v since '
l.H.•t<rirning it5 pastor 30 years
<1go, more than SG00.000. I
II r . CriSWC'll. 6.l-~1·ar-old l
furrnt·r pl't'Sidcnt of t II c
Southern Haprist Con\·ention.
said he alrclldy has bc~un 10
r1·turn the 1noncv and will
lulfill his tolal pledge upon his
d ••a th ''I ha\•e
n)nsummatt'd n1y pledge in
1ny will.
"TllE r 1Rs r tun·· 1
1
prt'ached in a church. lhc
deacons look up a collc<:tion
and I \\'as gi\'cn SIO," Dr.I
Cris\\•ell recalled. ''But I gi'l've
1t hack tu th en1 and told them
thot I did not preach for
n1onc•y _"
A ftc1· n1onths of preparation. 1norc than 2.500 rnusiC" :--1 udenl ~ frorn Saddlcbat'k
Valley Unified Sc hool Disl ril'L pre:,;enied 1he1r annual 1nu· 11· ll''>llV<1I .anti ;irt fair
'J'uesday night at Anaheim ('onvcntion ('t!11ter. '1 he!-i1• .~1udl·11t.., ~vetl' soinc of
hu ndreds in elementary school string section. p:.irt of cvc•111n1..;''i fealt11 l's. 1\lso
o n tap wcrt: 200 guita rs. a rock b~nd . 1.000 ~ingcrs. lwo conrerl band .~. :ind :.-;ue~t
ronduclor Dr. Jess Jlai rston. Sonic 8.000 people ;11lcndctl the 1•ven1
'fht' pastor of !he lR.000-
tnf'nlbcr cl'lngrcga1io11 saitl at
that tune he did not kno11• ho\v
he v.·as going 10 Jil'c '''ithnut
any money. ·'but I had the
!re1ncndous feeling that I' had
gi1en n1y life to GQd freely .
"f FEEL I ST ILL 11ant \I)
give back to the chu rch
c\'cryth1ng: that it IJ.,1.1 sri·. •'n 1c
inc so that 11hcn I meet 1hc
Lord I 1.:;111 s:ty I did all or n1y
\\'Ork freely." EdseJ o ,f11ers to ]\l et.>
--If Th ev f:a11 Ma l~e It
•
' I
(\
I'.
•
HURRY-UP, HAIRDOS:
CUT, BLOW 'NGO!
Wn <,h•i w you •1ow to care for them step by step Our
cud co;1x 1nq 5CISSOR ~STYLES are all luss-free and
l11n-:t1"'nil ! and are easy to do as 1ust shampoo' ln-
ch1 JfXI Jre l.1rrp cu !s, linger fumble cuts. curling iron
c.ut·;. bl•Jwer C.<11:,, •nasn to wel dry. brush 'n llu!f cut s
or "11nnle w;:sn and wear cu ts They are all SC!£-
S0ht:D tai. .. -carr .. o l-yourself styles. Good !or any
Joe ,1ny nair !'40 teasing. no rollers. no pins. NO
ruLLU I ING HAIR SPR AYS ALSO NO SE T PER -
MANLNT WAVES YOU MAY NEVER WANT TO
SE T YOUR HAIR AGAIN
JOSEPH 'S SCISSOR STYLING
Huntington Beach
'f564 Hor:•ilton A•e.
Fullerton
JOS N. H.-bor l l•d.
968-3535
\
~' \I -:'~f'. . '
879-3863
Sa le
35.99
Reg 45.99
Boys or girls· 20" H1-nser.
Coaster brakes. 20x 1 75
t1 r£'s. Chrome pla1 ed
handlebars. full chain
quard and banana·stylc
denim saddle.
SALE
56.99
Reg . 62 .99
Men·s 26" 3-speed bike
Chrome fenders. slandard
hanCl~bars with 3-speed
trigger control. Front and
renr caliper brakes. !O!!l!!!t~
BU ENA PARK ORANGE
City Dr. al Gar~11 Grit•e ll•d. leac:I! oi Oro~qtlhorpe
OJ"'" Doily 9 JO to If lO P·"' \1111doy I 0 to 1
j
OP"" I O·'f p.111. Doily Sv11doy I 0 to • .. ,
'
Th11r~ay Jun~ b }q74 DAIL V ~l~~2 I
FURNITURE
Dynamic duo! Our original
design eight-foot tufted
vinyl sofa with matching
swivel rocker and ottoman
=~SS.
Our smarl contemporary designs in deluxe vinyl
al a sensational price. The big dl'ep comfortable
sofa in fabulous colors, cx1lcnsi\'c ly tufled and
det.1iled wilh side pockels for md ~azi ncs ,1nd d
l~rrific black S\viyel h.ise rockl'r w it h m.11 ching
olloman, Our d~corat)n g service ''·ill put you r
roo111 setting around thi!> duo JI no cxtr.l cosl.
In Soulllef~ CGUtorl'lia: Drive lest, ... more at 41 dot• to l'lonw RI Jhowroom·1lores
ll~(WIUO: JCIO M<•I 1"
1RllSlol: llll7SotJ1~·.1,.e1
COYIN1: 91~ N I,/""
llO'll'NU· 9-ll~ ! r """"' (t t.llOR: Ml N .. ~"""''" 'L[N04ll. lll N c .. 11.i ... ,llA_ MlllS l~IOOB,;t<0• 8.tJ HU:Jfl~,!1111 I U("· 191ll Buel 6 id
L1 ll'lllA: Jll'O ~· W•,n,., lO!C It.AC": 11!9 t .. 1-8 tt1 Ml)lllllU ,~··-JI~ 5 /olltn•c 9 .. d UPDI MI 8~ ~ ~"''""d l l'lllSIDl: 10.000 111.,..,,,.
SA!lll 1JU/1US11~: I !Cl I I l•h St SA.II ll•IUIDlllO: .,-, S .. , . St SI~ Dll'°'. /l I~ Ch«"" "1 """'" 6 ,-~ SCIUl M l~I: I~~)) \ Clf"" •• B <ti
1llOllS4l!D cw.s: 1U 1--o .. _, 81<!1 IOHIJl('i, lU1l "'"'"''"' .... l'(Jflijllt,. J.l'JO , __ ,,,.,. ~~ WOOOUliD "Ill.lo" ?:1n v,.,_ .. 8~d
COllYlN!£NT 1110 llNS • SHOt' 1 DAVI A Wllll • WllllCAVS IO UMtll I · SAlUIOAV 10 UNfll 6 • SUNOAY 12:JO UNTll 6 ·....,._,II llEl '11•1N'
"
Reg.5.69
l ightweight rear
carrier. Alloy meta!.
heavy duty spring.
2.59
6-woy 1poke
reflector $el
Protect~ front
rear ond $•de\ of
b•cycle.
8.99
c -
. :.~:Jr·" -~ 8:99~i1d
Reg. 10.99 ~-· .
Light and generator
set has headlight
and ta illight.
6.29
4 · heavy duly
security chain
w1!h lock.
2.99
Reg. 4.29 ~~· Ball shape
hcadl1ghl With 2 ~t!SS
amber side re11eclors
SALE
63.99
Reg. 74 .99
Men's 26" 10·speed bike
Th e Treasury·s own features
derailleurgear1ng system
side pull caliper hand
brakes. Rat t rap relleclive
pedals. Racing saddle.
' Charge ii on your JCPenney charge card.
"
..
' '
" .. . .. .. . ..
" ·•
..
.. ..
.. ..
" .. .. •
• "
• •
..
•
. -
' 2b DAILY PILOT T1t1.1tsda1. Juneo 6, 1q74
Equality Just Elementary
By PATIUCIA f.1cCOM1ACK
l'\~:\V YOHK 1 UPI) -The
\\'l Y it used lO be you 'd be on
the 1nark saying: ~iris "'ill bi·
glrls an d boys \\'ill be boyl',
1\l, least that's the Y.'RY it
"'t\S before \von1~n·s I i b
brought up the dastardly
business of sex r o I c
stereotypign from the cradle
to the grB\'C -but especially
in the nation's schools.
Today to be on safe ground
you'd better say -"Persons
l'ill bt> persons" and lei it i;o
at that.
Se1 role slcreotyping tends
IG lead litlle girls .toward
fe1nininc careers -nursing,
teachin g. ho1ncmnking ,
motherhood.
It leads little boys dO\\'n a
thom·slreY.'11 path to"·ard he·
man pursuits -rough and
tumble sports :ind careers that
require s urer bra1\'n or
supcrbrain. or cour s e ,
fatherhood , too .
The stereotyper,; say that, in
the latter role. daddy brings
home the bacon.
But. of course, mothers do
that too.
disti nguished "·on1:;on fr Qn1
Cnn1brldge.
l·;Qith Ruina an~l L.l.lyn
\\'it•sncr speak enthu siastically
;u1<l ca rry a big report \Yhen
they !hun1p for a nc1v dell! for
Sl'hool girls.
~l rs. \Vicsncr's hu.>band.
JerOlll(', IS president 0 f
hla ssachuscus lnst itutt! 0 r
Technology, ;ind ~ d vi s c d
r>residcnl Keruiedy on science. ~'I.rs. Ruina's husband · is a
professor al ~UT. During the
Kennedy administration he
was head of the Institute for
Defense Analysis.
The report the tY.'O \\'Olnt>n
talked about in an interview is
based on an ~{IT "·orkshop on
··\\'on1en in Science and
Technology." The \Vo rkshop
pllrticipants. I ea d c rs in
science, c d u cll I ion and
industry, I a ck I c d this
problen1 :
''What to do about women
who are excluded fro n1
scientific and technical }obs -
despite the rising national
needs for technically
competent workers."
FINDING
One finding wa -s thi~.
persistent and stereotyped
sex-role perceptions held by
parents. educators, employcl's
and even young w o 1n e n
thcn1sc\ves."
"It "'SS found," said hlrs.
Weisner. "that some women
ha\'e been precluded In science
and technology because they
made poor curriculum
declSions in high school."
Those decisions: according
to A1rs. lluina, often had their
roots in grade school.
"The girls were not given
the proper (oundntion V.'Ork ror
science and mathematics,''
she said.
1'he report stresses the need
for mathematical competence
-so1nething children cannot
achieve unless the y take the
key courses in the lo\.\·er and
midd1e grades.
The t1vo won1en said
,1·orkshop .participants showed
rclalively few girls carefully
consider their fut1.1rc careers
and the full range of optious.
"Unless they do so, be£ore
the end of high school, women
will continue to settle for
lo"·cr stalus and achievement
than men, and the situation
will be worse for \\'Omen from
poor famJlies who have little
formal educntlon," P.1 r s .
Wiesner said.
"No n1atter what
educators do
career choices
students," said Mrs. Rulna,
"They cru1 and n1 u s I
consciously and a c t I v e I y
encourage girls to challenge
the widespread and Ill-founded
belief that they cannot or need
not learn to work with
numbers."
ANNIVERSARY
The conference was a \\'8Y
Of marking the 10th annivcr·
sary of the graduation of 1he
first woman at 1.1IT: The
school now has 500 won1cn
students, 14 percent of the to-
tal. Next year it "'Iii be 2{)
percent -and hopefully 1nore
the year after that.
"Teachers and counselors
must learn more about the
preparation necessary for
women in science a n d
technology -and the many
opportunities for them," said
Mrs. Ruina, coordinator of the
l\.11T project.
Mri. Edith Ruina (left) and Mrs. Laya Wiesner thump
for new deal for girls.
Thun1ping a ne1\' era for the
nation 's school girls arc two •·\\
1o1nen continue ID be l-;:::====================:;-J excluded largely becuusc ofl 1 OUR SINCEREST THANKS
.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Capricorn ~ood Organizers . . .
FRIDAY
JUNE 7
By SYDN .. EY 0~1 ARR
'.ARIES (~larch 21-April 19 1:
Rbadblocks to progress arc
J"imovod. Green I i g ht i~
a8.shed by one in position of
..i:~thorily. Accent is on am·
bltion, career, prestige and
PT Units
sta_nding in commwtity.
TAURUS {April 21)-May 20 \:
Good lunar aspect coincides
now with long~nge view,
J\\'arcness or pol e n ti a I .
Travel. communications \\'llh
!hose at a distance ::ire al~o
apt to be on agenda.
GEflUNI (!o.fay 21-Junc 20 1:
New approach to accounts,
stock, inventory. cash flow,
borrowing and lending is re·
quired. Creative abilities shine
if you avoid scaUering your
forces.
CANCER (June 21-July 221:
Avoid becoming in•;olvc<l in
confrontations. l e g a 1 or
otherwise. Judgment could be
slightly off target. G a i n
cooperation of one v.+io holds
opposite views to four own.
LEO (July 2.3-• .\ug. 22 ):
Keep resolutions. especially
those concerned with work and
health.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 10
Accent is on creativity, special
relationships, dealings with
childl'ffl and opposite sex.
business. P a y m c n t s . col·
lections are featured.
CAPR ICORN (Del'. 2'l·Jan.
19~: Lunar cycle is strong:
you can organize and cxccutr
orders. programs. You get
credit for past effort s.
AQUARlliS !Jan. 20-Fcb.
18 1: Finish rather than initiate
project. \Vork within confines
ol group, club, organization.
Check areas usually kept
under wraps.
PISCES (Feb. 19-f\tardt 20):
Emphasis is on getting to
heart of matters-and havin~
heart-uHleart talk w i t h
mermer of opposite sex.
Leland
Frederick
Cooley
&
Avon
Boolcs ·-
to
tho U.C.I.
FRIENDS of
the LIBRARY
for this 9th
ANNUAL FICTION
AWARD
DID YOU KMOW •
FG guarantees Quality.
Var iety, Fashion & Savings?
WE DO! EVERY DAY!
Values lo 3.00
Special LOW price
3 days only.
Heavy w1>19nr. macn1nc·wasnacie Collon 11 look'! grPat 111 sporl
lash1o ns :;ummor Cd!>ual~ and
dress·u o~ 45' wide FG s reg
LOW prtCf' 1 98
COOL SUMMER WHITES
Sew a cool galhered smock 1ack{'I
to wear w 1lh your sporty w h11£>S J 39 Cotton-Poly blend . ma c hi ne
washable. Perma Press. A:>soned d
wea\les ~ eyelash. le nos, au lawn<; Y. •
-all popular fashion 1001-~. 45 ·
wide. Values to 2.00
WHITE DOUBLE KNITS
POLY£STE!t 49 ~ssorled JaCQuards perfect lor ac· 3
11 ... e soort5wear and more lorm<14
fashio ns. It s mac111ne·wd~/l,1ble dnd yd.
no 1ron1ng 60 ·wide.
LAGUNA BEACH
278 Fonst A•e.
Open Mon.-Sal. S..5:30
Sun.12-6p.m.
Values lo 5.00
1al
NEWPORT BEACH
"" c ...... 1-.1\land :.,~.~ .~&.~:: F~: ~~9:30 P.M.
Sat. 1o-6 PM.
Sun. 12"6 P.M.
School Bells Silent LIBRA (Sept. %1-0ct. 22Jo ~rore c:omrmmication is l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiii~iii~~iiiPiiiiijjiijiijiijiiljiiiiiiiiiijijii~jliiiiiiiiiiiiij~~iijijjjjjiii~~iij~~iiii~;;Oij featured on oome 'r 0 n t .
Welcome this -state views
aOO be receptive to those ex·
pressed by others.
ADA~1S PTA: Bo a rd
members will host an end-of-
the-school·year luncheon at
11:30 a.TT'. 101norrow in the
honie of P.fr!:. Jody K"ec, for
faculty and stall.
rt1ARINERS PFO: L u a u
~·Ith fresh flowers a n d
greenery will be the setting
for the sixth grade graduation
party lo take place al l p.1n.
place at l 1 a.m. Thursday,
June 6, at the Petite Auberge
restaurant in South Coast Vil·
lage. Also being honored will
be John f.1cGowen, pi"incipal.
VICTORIA PTA :
Graduating students in the
fifth grade Y.'ill be treated to a
beach party at 8:30 a.m.
tomorrow. Refreshments "ill
be donated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Accent now ~ on visits, deal-
ings with relatives, letters
and-short trips. Ide.as can be
developed with aid or ooe clo.se
to you.
SAGfrrARlUS <Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 l: Money pictw-e can
be active. Key is to se parate
fact from fancy - gel do,vn to
\\'ednesday, June 12. Fl°"·er -;;;;;;:;;.;;;:;;;;;;:;;.;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;::;;;;;::;;,;;;
leis and diplomas will be 1
presented to the teachers and DTER? students. Following lunch a
talent slx>w will be presented
by the si,;th grade class.
Serving tile comn1ittee un<l':!r 11111 .-.1~P -Cr'il.!f':.<:;il\
the chairmanship of ~!rs. ,._., .. , Ml~"'K l'o r ~u·O· • ~" CCtlfu.t• ,
l..a'AoTence Klein are I h c or.:. \l.._t+ ___ -llE't11-i.:oo ~1mes. Henry Dur:-ee. Pj1t1l If'~ t· CA'>''""·'· ~,R,1.'.'JiO~l-::;
Berg, Bernard Leckie, Chesler Kt U~ -~r :OOACu -H()')l[~Y
"--d R be IV ks I J"°'d·. """'" '"' (h.lift!'I 1w&.11ger an o rt ec . 1...,_,t,., Hr>L~ _ Ge.bo-nch _ U.S. Ked~
WT ~'I) Ii Pul• -:.,,n ~ S.,,..O.Jl•
TE\VINKLE PTA: ~tembers c0.:,,1(T1Vt SHO.S ro~ CHIL0Rf"1
from the old and new boards C.pe1., O.t'Ctl Sl>oe~·Dllta We<v tr.,°"""'"'
will be honored,, the installa-225 E. 17th ST ........ co. STA MESA
lion luncheon lhat \v iii take • W"'!;T[R CHM!(';{• 548·2778·
Meet Laurie Kasper
One of the
Daily Pilot's
Ro le
People
Stori<'S on c11m11w; ;1eti\·1t1r~ :1s '4·t'tl ai. rt)Orl' gt'neral i.tones on the p.:ople or tht' Oranee
Coa~t h~ve bc!en 11moni;: recent contn b1.111vns lo People from L1t1uric K H~JK'r . n~w~~I
mt·rn~:r of lhe People Section stan. llolflt'r of a deGrL't' 1n Journ:1Jl~m from l0alif0fnla
St Ille Lin1ver$ity al Lona Ut:.ch. L11une ti'I <A'Ol'king part ~ time toward a master·11 dt·~rtc
1n i.oc1al ecoloB)' &l UCJ. She covtrt'd var10U1 ne<A'li heals for nt "A'i.pu1lCr-. 1n lhr Son
(i ahnel V11ley al't'a before Joinin& the 01111)' Pilot l'tarf tn 19i2. She h<1i1 bt'rn on the st111f
of Peoplr !formerly \\'omtn'i> Sect.ion) t•\•rr i.lnee she 1•i1mr to !he Daily Pilot
llo le is the Daily Pil~t's
Award-winning sec tion · for
women (and other people, too)
'
NOW: ALSO
INSIDE
LINBROOK
HARDWARE
AT
FOUNTAIN
VALLEY
17200 Brookhurst
•
INSIDE HARDWARE STORE
968-8541
OPEN SAT. & SUN.
10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
MON .-FRI. 9 TO 9 P.M.
HIGH
LOW
SHAG
REG. $12.95
SPACE DYED
TWEEDS
49
SQ.
YD .
•
.., RIG. -
7.99
DuPONt 501
NYLON
EXTRA THICK
SHAG
REGULAR 9.95 SQ YD
98
SQ. YD.
CA DON
88
· SQ. YD.
Completely
Installed
witt-1 Deluxe
Rubber
Padd ing
SPECIAL
MIU PURCHASE
CARPET
4 ROOMS
MAXIMUM 40 TDS.
1~-lHIOll
CllOICI Of COLOll
219°0
Ctwi~l11rt1 1~1t1llrl •ltll Ml~•• '~"•r ,144111t.
SAVI ·$129 .00
EXTRA HEAVY
NYLON _DultONT501
IYHOUTTD IY MA.ND
88 88
SQ. so.
YD. YO .
RIG, HG •
10.99 9.99
(ompl1t1ly ln111U1d with Cvmpl1t1 r ln1tolle• with Complete y ln111Utd wilh
Delu11 lubber hddln1 D1lu11 lubb1r P1d4ln1 . Dtlv11 lubbtr h•ditif
HUNOREDS ...
''· OF ROLLS ] ~·· ~.
ON DISPLAY r·.
MOHAVll< .i;,,
PHILADELPHIA ..
HOLLYYTEX ·~ " ARMSTRONG !!"
CABIN Cl!A~TS '7c C.ALlAWAV " B~ATIIE
BARW!(I( '] Al DON .. ' MAGEE '
' J
..
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•
.-J•
•
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Tliis Is It
Mi11ister
Cives Pav
•
To (:hurch
OALL1\S. Trx. ! Al') -!Jr
\\·'.A Criswell of the Firsll
Hup11s1 Church of /)allas says
hv 11·i\J return l•very penny hcl
h:1s t;Jkf'n in s<ilarv sinl'c[
b1:1..'orning its p;is!or 30 years
:1go. rnore than $600.000.
[) r . Cris\.\'l•IL 65"~cur-old l e
forin(>r prrsidcnt of t h c
South1·rn Baptist Convention.
~aid he alrcad~· has begun to
rt•lltrn the 1nOnl'y and will
!ulfill his 101:11 pll'd~c u1)()n his
dt•<ith ''I have
t·onsu mn1atc<J n1y pledge 111
1
Illy v.•iJI.
··TllE f'IHST l11n" I
pn~a1·hed in ;1 church. the
dcutons took up a collection
1u11! I v.•as giVl'n SIO." Dr.
f'ris\\'Cll rrcallcd. "But I g11ve
rt li;ick 1v thcrn and told them
that I did not preach for
nlllllCY."
After nlonths of prepa ra.tion. 1nore than 2.~00 nlu!>ir studeills fro1n Saritllebatk
Valley Unified ~chool Distritl prescnled 1hc1r annual inu• ,,, Jl's l1 val :inti ar1 f;.HJ"
'f'uesclay ni~ht at Anaheim l'onvcntion ('enter 'J he.~e :-ltHlt·n\-. \VC'I(' ~0111e uf
hundreds in eleinenlary school string set11on, p~ut of cl f'llln.,:·,.. fea t ln~s .. \l:-:.11
011 tap were. 200 guitars. a rock band. 1.ouo singl'rs. 111•0 conrer! ba n (t.~. :ind ~~ue.~i
ronduclor Or. Jess l lairston . Sornc H.000 pcnph-' ;ttl endcd till' 1·vcnt
'fhf' pastor of lhl' 18.000.
1nen1bcr congrcgntion said al
11l<tl li1nc he did not know ho\v
he \•:a s going to live \Vithrnn
any money, "but I had the
tn:1nt•JJdnus feeling th<11 1 had
gi\'en n1y life to God freely.
··J FEEi. I STILL \1 :1n1 lt1
gi\c back lo the church
l'\"erything that il h.1.; !'i'.•·n tel
ml' so I hat 11 hen I meet th1•
Lord I can say I did all o! 1ny
"'ork freely.'" EfJseJ Ow11ers to !\Ice
--If Th ev (:a11 Mal\.e It
•
SEAT.l'LE rrl'l 1 l'at1fir
North\\'C'~t chaji1ers of the
.. Jo:Uscl 01'.'ners Club \\ill holU
l l1eir n n nu a J in tcrna!ional
llH.'t'l on !he U.S.-Canada
borUcr near BlainC' on June lti.
l!:d se l 01vncr s fro1n
At !he J1'1rk , the O\\'ners 11 ill
compete for lrophics. swap
l'.:dscl 1;.ilk and e:il al the
. ,.
HURRY-UP I HAIRDOS:
CUT, BLOW 'N GO!
I/Jr> • hr1w you 11ow IO care for !hem step by SICP Our
curl c;o;ix inq SCISSOR STYLES are all fuss-free a nd
/11n~hnn;.1 1 and are Pasy to do as iust shampoo• ln-
ch1 Jed .Jre l1rrp cuts. linger rumble cuts. curling iron
cul·;. bloi.ver cu::., v1ash towel dry. brush ·n llutl cu1s
or •,11npl e . ..,.<i.,n and wear cuts. They are all SCIS·
SOhC:U IC1ht··c:Jrf•-<J f-yoursel1 styles. Good lor any
aol'.' dny hair NO 1eas1ng. no rollers. no pir1s. NO
f:.;JLLUT1NG HAIJ:t SPl~AYS ALSO NO SET PER-
"-~ANEN T WAVE.C:,. YOU MAY NEVER WANT TO
SC r YC:'.l UR t-lAIR AGAIN
JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING
Huntinqton Beach
'1564 HamiltOft A•~. Fullerton
lOS N. Hcrilor IJ•d.
879'3863 968-3535
Sale -
35. 99
Reg _ 45.99
Boys or girl$" 20' H1-nser
Coaster br;Jkes. 20x 1. 75·
t1rf's. Chrome platf'd
handlebcirs. lull chain
guard and banana-slyle
denim saddle.
·-' ~ I ; ""-~ ,., .. ";·f. . '
SALE
56.99
Reg. 62.99
Men's 26"' 3-speed bike
Chrome fenders. standard
handlebars with 3-speed
t1 1gger control . Front and
iiiili~~<e=ar caliper brakes.
ORANGE
City D1. al Gorden Gra•r ll•d.
Opr11 I Q.t p.111. Daily, Svndoy 10 la •
BUENA PARK
la11ell ot Ora11gethor,.
OJI"" 0111!y t l O to 'l·lO •p.11'1 ~unday 10 to 7
•
DAILY ~LOT_2 f
tn s .... thef:'I CGlllOfnla:
FURNITURE
Dynamic duo! Our original
design eight-foot tufted
vinyl sofa with matching
swivel rocker and ottoman
;~SS.
O ur smart tonlcmpo rary designs in deluxe vinyl
at a sensJlional price. The big deep comfortable
sofJ in fabulou~ colors, expcn~ivcly luffed and
detJiled with side pockel s fo r m.1Aazincs .1nd a
terrific black S\Viyel h.:i~e rockl'r wilh m,\lching
oll oman. Our decorating Sl'rvicc \\•ill rut your
room selling around thil duo JI no c>.lr.i co~I.
Drive le11, He mOl'e at 41 do•• to home RI showroom·slote1
\OS IJKl.LU: ,111 W·'"'"' B..., M<UC!t M Ir. JlllSll, 111!/ lioo•~ 'l!H'
C0.1111: 9•1 It ,,,,,. IA<lWl!lO: )()10 M••I I•< CHlltA 'tlSTI: U6 B• .. d•Of
001111~(1 911\ l , ..... 1 ..... lt ti.JOit: 111111 N .... ,,., ... 'llltlW.l. lll M C.•1 .. 11.. ,_ ... lllllS· IOIM B•'l<M a .~ llU~ll"'IOll IUCJt· 1911! lluu !Ill
U. llAIU: ll?O ........ ,11 .. , lOJC IOCH: 118t l•"•OO!I 11..i MOll!ll(t r ui•. JI~ s ..... '< !!.~ 1lSO(!ll !' ~ .... .,, •• d l n'IH!OJ:: 1n,ooo Mu .....
!.APIU MAlll!Sl!lt. L/ill I 11'1 ST SAii 1£WtOlllO. \l'J'J S ··1 S• $&~ Ollff: 1•1~ ti•"'""""''"~·~ SO!llH I.ti: ll~ll S C1t""'"" '·••
!HOUWO °""-$: iu 1"°""'"' o .... ,.. IOllUI(;; '1lS.'I ll••lllr< ...... d Vlfl!Ultl: l l'l" !• "/''P' ~· J!OGOU~O lllUl /~.'.'] v .. ,_ .. •··d
WNYUlrt/l"J WU 1£11U • SHOfl 7 DAYS A WlllC • WllJIDAYI JO UN Ill 9 • SATUIH>AY ID UN!ll O • SUNDAY 12:30 UN Ill O • 4i.or11 fllll ,Al•INC
Sales and Specials.
"t f~~ A -
Reg.5.69
l ightweight rear
carrier. Alloy me!al.
heavy duly spring.
-~ 8.99 ~~
Reg. 10. 99 ~--
2.59
6-woy 5poke
reflec1or ~er
P•otec •~ fronr
rear and side~ of
bocycle.
8.99 ----. __ :~~
Speedometer for alt ~-
24 aod 26 b''"' ~--
SANTA ANA
)900 So. lri\IOI ·No. of So. Coo\I 'la1a
Qpt11 IO•t p,111, Dally S1itndoy 10 lo •
l ight and generator
set has headlight
and taillight.
6.29
4'heavyduty
security chain
with lock.
2.99
Reg. 4.29
SALE
63.99
Reg. 74.99
Men's 26"' 1 D·speed bike
The Treasury·s own leatures
dera1lleur gearing syst em.
side pull caliper hand
brakes. Rat trap reflective
pedals. Racing saddle.
• Charge ii on your JCPenney charge card.
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:_';;! DAILY PILOT Thursday , Junt 6, 1q74
Since 1942 Berkeley 1 Acior's Son ·Gets
State's P1·ii~ary
Tu1·11011t 'Lowest'
,_
Students
Protest
Fine for Assault
BRIDGEPORT (AP) 111E JUDGE ALSO ouUlned
Scott Newman, aon ot actor 1 ttntatlve settlement of $1,000
Paul Newman. hu been lined to U.. ofllcer for any Injuries
$1,000 and placed on two , he may Nivc aufferod. •' Los ANGELES L"-P 1 -i'\01
si1!f.e the election of 1 9~2
dllrlng World War II hns n
California voter tumoul been
so ( low as in Tuesdoy's
prlh'!ary. the secretary of
st(le's office says.
talifomia's leading political
po8ster, f\1ervin Field. says
the re ason \\'as Watcrg:ite and
thjt it affected Republicans
the most.
' ' ';TllEY ARE shaken up,
dismayl'd , resentful. lrus·
trited." he said in an in ter·
vif\1• \Vednesday. The office of Secretary of
Stale Edmund G. Brown Jr.
~~
' .••. If Reinecke
~d not been 111·
dieted, Ire u·ordd
have 1vo11.'
said only 47.4 percent of the
state's 9.5 million registered
voters went to the poles. The
percentage in 1942 \\'SS 47.2.
Brown was nominated for
governor on the Democratic
ticket.
Brov.-n's pre -ele c tion
forecast w21 62.5 percent ,
about normal for a primary in
recent years.
Field said the apathy '1'a"i
noticeable in both parties.
based oo interviews by his
staff \Vorkers. But he said it
"'as more pronounctd among
Republicans who traditionally
ha ve a better voting record
than Ocmcerats in California.
Field said his aides detected
"fru stration. dise<imfort and
disn1ay about v.•hat "'OS SOing
on. This manifests itself in not
voting."
Anoth er factor 1vas the
Watergate grand jilry perjury
indictment against one of the
tY•O major GOP caodidate :i, for
governor. LI. Gov. Ed
Reinecke.
THE 1NDICT~1ENT
crippled the campa ign of the
onetime front-runner. although
he professed innocence and
..
said he \\'BS the v i c I i "' or
politicC1l harassment. State
Controller Houston 1. Flournoy
won the GOl'> nomin ation in a
landslide.
It \\'as a turnabout for a
GOP pri.illary in California
"'here con servatives mo s t
fre quent ly \\1in.
Reinecke billed himself as
the niore conservative of the
t"·o and Flournoy long has had
the image of a moderate and a
progressive.
f ield said his s ur.,.ey s
sho"'ed that there \\·as "no
qu estion that if Reinec ke had
not been indicted, he \Y ould
BERKELEY (UPI) -A
student tak&aver or t b e
University of California
CrimlnololY building ended
Wednesday wbe.n 1ao
ptQtestors voluntarily
de parred.
yeen' probllloll for k!Ulnl a StUI penclln1 In a Mamrooth
lawman who wao trwpcrllng Lak., Justice Court II a
him to jail afttt a Feb. S misdemeanor cllar1e cf public
arreal lot dnJoktnesa, _drwtktnne===':::':...· -----
The abandc>oemtnt ol the Haviland hall lit-In climaxed a Lo B J A MONO COUm'Y Superior!.--------...
protest against the •IUlOtlllCed ng eaC l Court Judi• ~i.. 111ued the REl•'l,Et:TIONS
closure d the Criminology and aen1<nce found Newman. 13,
Ethnic Studies Department p D • -ol fdony battery, the ~,
About 50 Berkeley and ay ispute ·"~··1 ..... -. bul -·'lty of R
c•ml"" pollce sum>Wlded the --~ ---·· ·-cyn
three-story building, tea.ling LONG BEAOH (AP) .jTbe mtademeanor ~ttery, SI ff
off all doors but the main autborillt1 uld WedoetdaY. lC ct
entranct. A group ol. aome Long Beach Board 0 f Newman appeared in court.I L---....1
1.000 students gathered in a F.ducation buildini was Monday, aocompanied by an .----..
grove of redwood trees near picketed Wednuday by UO 1ttomey. Tbech1rge stemmed i,.::=.;::,..::;;:.i
the building to cha:nt and sing teachers seeking a I percent from an incident at Mammoth "Of •It tlM ••II 1plrtt1
in support ol the sWdtnts salary increase. Lakes where he bad been *"4 et tWt ..._. • ._
inside. 'I1le teachers are members living white working at a akl ,.,.,... ...... ....., h ......
have won ."
f ield said ~me Repu blicans GOP'S FLOURNOY (LEFT) REINECKE Me"e'r' 'p-Re"s"s .
supported Reinecke ··out of a · ' ' feeiing of spite. They felt he .. -~ollstei:_Says~~d1ctments Hurt Lltutenent Governor '11te police wore flak jackets, ol the Teachera ASIOCiatJon of resort. •••I',.." .... ,,_. A.,,._.
helmet.., and were armed with Lore Beach, which sakl it The Jud&• also ordered From 1J,ovemment11I and
Safec1·a<·l{ un·1·t Nets ~~~as.~ PJr?c~:s51 !i~ ~:i:~ts ~e~~~t ~~ ~~ tod:~=er~tut:~ r~~101~~~~\d~~(r~~~~~l~~ "·as a victim of a Democratic ---
and media plot to sm!'a r th!'
President. So he got sonic
sympathy.'' 1
Bul that \\·as offset by
conservative Republicans v.•hc
instinctively 1\·ould h:ive bcf'n
for ReineCke bui \\'ere dis·
mayed by the indictment •·and
turned against hint Uccause of
a belief that maybe he \\'dS
1nvol\'ed in someth~~ scan·
dalous," Field said.
Rock Group
111 Lawsuit
LOS ANGEL.ES (UPI / -A
personal mana gemenl fim1
\\'ednesday sued the rock
group "Thre'e Dog Night" for
$2.5 million, charging breach
of contract.
Reb Fos ter Associates
charged the group's membe rs
-Charles Negron. Daniel
Huttoti and Corey \Veils -
entered into a serie s of
contracts with the firm in
1967, but tha t the group
repudiated the contracts on
April 16, 1974. when it claimed
Foster \\'SS no longer the
grou p's manager.
ch.ant,,of"plgsoffcam.pwi.'' association has been sheriff's car. The vehicle ran person levels, sincerity is
The st&xlents entered the neMtiaUng with officlall of off the road after the of!k:tt , one of the least co mmon
$60 O·o 0 F H bu'ldln th rched'-•'-r-: commodilies . Unfor· h 1 g u ey ma uvm wo:: l.GnC Beach Unified School driving It was kicked in the tunately, the rondllion or ' rom ug es._•_r_al..cly_to_;.p_rot_ea_1_1_11e_c1_ .. _ure_._rn._· _lri_c_l f_or_lllr<e _ _cm_con_ths=----=::.::•f:_the:::.he::::•d::. ____ , th• world ...... ,••oh 1 th11t 1i ncerily is often regarded a ,.,eakness to be
JIOLLY\VOOD (UP l)-Safe·
crackers \\'ednesday broke
into 11o"'ard Hughes' person·
al n1cssage center -purport·
etily one of U1e best-guarded
buildings in the country -
and opened t\l·o safes, rifled
the billionaire's file,; and
escaped with $60,000.
The gang \\'as in the build·
ing for four hours after tieing
up a guard at gunpoint, but
oth~r workers sa id they were
una\l·nre of Lhe break-in .
"'TllE\' l\1UST have been
\·ery \\•ell organized to pull
this off.'' a Hughes spokesn1an ·
said.
The guard, Mike Davis, ~o.
said he saw l\\'o nf the rob-
bers but thought there "·er~
four or five in the gang. \Vhile
he \\'as making his rounds
shortly .aft er midnight, one of
the band stuck a gun in his
back and forced him into the
building, Davis said.
The two-story, warehouse
type building occupied by
Hughes productions h o : d s
some of the mysterious bll·
lionaire's personal files and
those of certain hi~h rank ing
subordinates, one of \\tlom
was served \\'ith a fed~raJ
subpoena for sonic of her files
only hours after the burglary.
THE BUILDING, ~ remnant
of the days \'-'hen Hilghes \\·as
a movie producer, also houses
his "message center,"
through 11·hich his emptoyes
rommunicat.e with hi~ trav·
eling hideaway. and the
transportation center for his
many enterprises in this area.
It was once described by a
ne\1-s magazine as "one of the
most secure st ructures in tht.
llniled States." ·with sophisti·
ca led security eo•tinTflP.flt.
FOR THAT SPECIAL
GRADUATION GIFT
SCHWINN
BICYCLES
SOLD FULLY
ASSEMBLED
AND .ADJUSTED
"RIDE IT AWAY TODAY"
T, ... ~~ J ,~p
' .
HUNTINGTON VALLEY
SCHWINN
CYCLE RY
PAmaie11ma
JOI ALL lllA•S
17171 llAHOUA
l•IW••-1
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
545.0377
• ~xploitt;d and capitallied
upon tn the co nstant
ma ne uv ering for power
and g:.i.in. The individui1I t'an still
struggle lilon& v.·ilh only a modest show of sincerity,
but it sometimes appears
to IX' a thanklt"S.~ efrort in a
l'i,·ili ;r.ation whil'h i s
coming lo recognize lnsin·
crrily as ii practical
v.·orkinc tool.
Uur sincere' inll•r<'Sl. ex·
pt·riencc a nd unrlerstan·
ding makes it possible ror
us to hel p you make those
decisions yo u might wish to
make about the l)'pe of ser·
vice you desire. Ask us to
explain our pre-need ar-
ronge menl plans.
~H€FF€R MOKTU,UIY
CJ7b SOUTH COAST HGiWAY'
LAGUNA BEACH
·~·1535
SAN CUMENTE
ISll NQ;!TH El CM\INO R£Al.
•'?1.()100
3000 custom mixed colors. Can you match that?
~~
..
SALE
• gal. Reg. 6.99
The Treasur;y premium
latex wall paint
In 3~ cuslom colors. Easy 10 apply. Dries in
20 m1nu1es to a smooth mane finish. Can be
·spot washed again and again. Soapy water c~n·up.
SALE
• gal. Reg. 8.49
The Treasury premium
latex house paint
In 3000 custom COiors. Dries in 30 minutes to a
smooth velvely finish. Resists wealher. peeling,
cracking. For siding. shingles. stucco. lfllsonry.
Warm waler clean-up.
-~~
~ • Sale prices enectlve •days only.
Ch1rge II on rour JCPenney charge c1rd.
' ~L-.--. ..
SALE 2.99 SALE 5ge
Reg. 3.99 Reg. 8~
6 pc. premium roJler 9112 tt. heavy duly
& tray set P'IStic drop ctoth
SALE99¢
Reg. 1.29
caulking gun
! ft',
Lry~
J~~ ·, /, \'·
I * f: ~ ,4
' ~ALE 13.99
Reg. 18.99
6 n. aluminum step ladder
~RK ORAM GE
Cit., Or ... •••" GN"' l lw'-
o,.• I lot 'pA Deity 5-ilt4iy I 0 I• 4
........ or.,.....,.,.
Oltf• Oeily t:JI te •:JO''"" S. ... 10 le 7
/, . •
SALE59¢
Reg. 7~
late11 caulking
Clrtridge
SPECIAL 1.99
4" nyton paint brush
\
·:. Hoppy's Horse
• '
Was 'Topper'
Q. At u old Westen buff, l recall Tom Ml.I'• bor1e
wu um .. TM)'. -Rosen c1Ued lllJ Mne Tri11er,
Aid qtee Autry umed lt1s moot OalnsplH. Bat •wliere
-h Illy -t liepoloa1 C.111dy coiled ~. wlllte ....... <:al 7"' Ibid out7-Bette Collea, O...U, Neb.
A: Hoppy called hit hone Topper.
, Q: Yoe oeee mntloled U.1t bl tome d<t tltey"W
..,_.,. llcll laWI to lenee la drtveiu ,...,.., X Pk-
Autil • UMy cu·t 'be Hea by puaenb)'. Aay mew develop·
m•tlf-J11et lt•meu, Gr1)'1Jake, IU. •
A: Yes. Jact V1lenll'1 Motion Picture AuociaUon of
America reveals that research ls now goinJ: forward to
design • new screen. It would confine aucfi pictures in
'Glad You Asked That~.
loy Morllyt1 and HyOonln•r · ·
drive-Ins only to viewers inside the theater grounds. It
would be a mirror-like screen des ighed and fabricated to
dire... ·'" llaht only to the ramp area where the autos are
parked Inside.
Thursday. June 6, iq74 DAILY PILOT 2:J
Cicely Tyson: a · Quality Actress
LOS ANGELES (A~) -
When Cicely Tyson decides 10
do a movie. it's a decision
made £or love not money. '
"I "'ou ld have dont 'Jane !>he made another mov1t refused them all. Black she was offered "Sounder."
Pittman' in a base1nent 111 an exploitation films were not her And "I felt I was rewarded
Orf, Ofr Broadway house:· THOSE FOUR years were cu p of tea. she said. afte r all those years waiting
The sle nder >fool·% black
actress has turned down more
parts than she has accept.cd
because "I set high standa rds
!-Or myself and even when the
going got tough, I stuck by
those standards."
she said ... 11 doesn 't ...,atter fitful, she says. Siie was ··1 even sat d-0w n and "' offert.'d roles as a prostitute, a considered doing something for the right vehicle lo come
whether it's television, the sex kitten. a junkie ; but she else with my life." But then along."
1novics or the stage. It 's the yiiiiiiliiiiiiimiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiii•iiiii...liiiijiiiilmiiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliil.;;ml..illiiiiliiiiliiiimliiii. role. In this country people I
tend lo look down on you if SEE OUR
you work in television. I Jet
ENTERTAINMENT · -. It paid of£ when she won an
Erpmy Award for }ler .por·
trax_al of the title character in
"The Autobiography or !\1iss
Jane Pittman." The television
play itself won an Emmy for
the best drama special.
lh~~~::~~::~:~:.'' she GRADUATION SPECIALS!
H)S DUTIES . ' '
B~ATl(l,ESS
says, there are few roles
tailored for black women. '"I m hoped that af ter 'Sounder' I
would get roles s i m p I y -
lx.-cause I'm .a good actress. ·
But If a role isn't written for a
THE TWO.HOUR film told black actress. 1 don't work."
LONDON (AP ) _ Brian the life story of a black "Sounder," made in 1972.
Waines says be' t"red of , woman freed from slavery at was her second film success,
. " 1 • the age of JO who spends the It was the story of a black ••• =1== ••• •••
lrothtri .,.,., .. ...-t" .....•.... , .. , ... , ... , .,~.,.,., Sl9.9S
F.cH Mo....-1 ,.......,, IJ" cwri ....................... 119.91
Sll'llthCoroMUodricrort. IJ"corri.,. ••.............. 119.9$
CHl1111 World F-.... DtM Modet C ..... or ,.,.,,, .... , •. 64.95 •-r lrolfl C.._.., ........................ oslo .. 1149.95
Uoyd1 Cok...,. w/..-y ..ct 'le ......... , , • , ..•...... 79.91
c-roc:••trwic w~ .. ' ••....................... 1)9.91
Unic-'"SliH-IWt'" C._.or •• , •••• , •. , ............... 195.00
ShHiettl·S .. t•-Dttlc & C~ CM9., lillt ,...,., ......... , .. 79.90
Victor rrinthtg Coklfftor, .. Md ........................ 1)9.50
BAKER ·-----ti 1Mow1ng the born or Ripon, next 100 years fightin g for her family of sharecroppers
Yorbhirt, without a deputy to race. The part seemed made ekeing out an existence during
give him a windbreak now and for !\1iss TysOn. the depression. and h c r'
then, so he may qu.it _ even "While reading the book I portrayal earned her a n
though he's food of th th never though~ or h~r as a Academy Av,.ard nomination.
M anufact~rers Warranty Fu"y Covered· L
.; D ' >
e ree-person who didn't exist." she In her ffrs t film, "The Heart
cornered hat and buff coat said of Jane Pi ttn1an . ··1 fell is a Lonely Hunter," n1ade in
that go with the ofrice. madly in love wi th her. She 1968, f\1iss Tyson played a
The horn has been sounded was so spectacular." volatile girt married to a field
al 9 o'clock each night since MisS Tyson, a native New hand. •Ier co m p e 11 \ n g
Trade-ins Wanted
• CAL-MART iJ
..... lol'oil of Coilo Mtto P'lo10 ~
~ • ' .. 0 c • COSTi ..
~ MlSit. • :c lit.Ml(
0 ~ ~
..
'
Q: 11 Soplala 1Area'1 allter, wbe married Romane
MlllOllnl, Ute malclan•n of the dece11td dictator, 1tlll
m.urfed Co klm?-1\lrs. Fred Storms, Dea Mobtel, len.
· A: No. SeJ:y Anna Marie Sclcolooe divorced Mu!SO~
llJU ~me five or. six years ago. She's now seen sipping,
&Upping and hcNding hands with an Iranian doctor named
Tamli Abdhlamll.
the year 886 to remi'nd Ripon's Yorker in her 30s, said it's performance brought her to ------a !
citizens to extingu.ish. their "the role" that dictates where audiences' attention quickly. ·-
fires. she works. _. -----· ~~t it was four years bef~or~e~~"'11"'11"'11"'11~~~~~1il'i~~~~"li~~~lllllll~~lllllll~~~~llllllllllllllllll~
""""'"' 2960A HARBOR r,.. .. Sot. 546 4088 c::zm COST A MESA 9:l0·5:l0 • N DALE WAY
Q: TbiJ'll 1tump you, I'll bet you! Wbo Wiii in the
balcony or rear of lbe nd .. ttud• from wllkll. the popular
"Dr. 1.Q." ~ wa1 broadcait? I mean, the penoa
"bo relayed 1 question ud, .-It "" aanered, '"I'haU:
JH, docter!"-Dr. R.B.T., Da)'W1, ()Ml,
A. 'l'Mnk YOU, doctor. One iJI many to play that part
(!or eating money) was the now ~i.zed creat a<:tor.
Jason Robards. 1
Q: Hew IHI Us Barbara W1~n been u 1he 11Ttc11y"
1bow? A•d wlll lite remata It& sole permueat btst!~
Pamel1 Rosen, Great Neck, N.Y.
A: Barbara was officially named ci>lx>st atter Frank
McGtt's passing. She's been a fixture on the NBC aeries
for a decade, meaning she's had to awaken every week-
day for 10 years at 4:30 in the rmming. As thls is written, a number of the netu•ork's newsmen are rotating in the
slot "'hile the search for a successor to McGee goes on .
. , Send your questions to Hy Gardner, "Glad You
Asked That." care of this n.ewspaptr, P.O. Bo:r 156(),
Cruta Mesa 92626. Marilyn and Hy Gardner will answt?" as many questfons as they can in their colum11, but the
votume of mail makes personal replies impossible.
Truth Outdoes Fiction •
In Abby Mann Scripts
By BOB TllO~IAS
UlS ANGELES (AP) -"In
these times fiction can't live
up to what's happening in real
life." observes film writer
Abby !\fann, who has
specialized in converting
actual events into screen
enlertairunent.
"Take the Patty Hearst
story," he says. " . .\screen
1 writer couldn 't imagine a
script so bizarre . Or
Watergate. If it were done as
a movie. it y,•ould be heavily
dramatic. "But the most interesting
thing about Watergate is that
it's so mundane -the people,
their conversations,
everything."
l!faM points out that even
"The Exorcist" was based on
a real-life evenl Such hits as
"Patton." "The F r e n c h
Connection" and "Papillon"
have also proved to producers
the value of film subjects
based on actual happenings.
THE TREND IS favorable
to Abby ~Jann, a former
rep:irter who knows how to
dramatize the news.
His first movie scrip!,
"Jud gment at Nuremberg."
won Mann an Oscar. He did
his own legwork on that one.
interviewing Gennan judges
about their activities during
the Nazi regime.
His ne:r:t assi~ment is to
chronicle the plight or the
Indian in today's America . Hi!
producer: Marlon Brando.
At present Mann i s
overseeing the filmin~ of ltfike
Franko vlch's production,
"Report to the Cbmmi~ion
er." hued on the James Mills
novel. 1 Offhand you might
think that the Y.'Orld -doesn't
need another mo\'ie ahout
corru p ti on in the Ne\\•
York Police Department, but
Mann says this one i s
different.
"11fTS IS NOT a police
picture, nor is it a chase
picture," he remarked. "It's a
refiection of our s ociety,
showing how three young
people -a young white cop,
a while u nd erc o ver
pollctman. and a black pusher
-are destroyed by the
ulabllshm<nl b<cau..e they
try to a:o against the system."
Mann. Who ordinarily does
uhausUve reRarch for his
~lpts, dldn.'t need to for
''Report to the
Commiu~r!' He had
already exPlored the law
enforcement \jungle of New
York City for his much·
Reclaimed television movie ,
''The '-1 a rc u s -Nel s on
,.furders.''
'
'1The most gratifying thine:
nbollt that !lhoW." said the
writer, "was that after it
appea~ on television . the
real boy whc> w11s accused or
thrt'I!: murders ;ind 11ttcmpted
rape -George Wbitmore -
was freed from jail.
"A great many people In
New York -judges and
district attorneys ...;•tae;w. ~
the boy wasn't guilr,;bU\1~ r;
'went along with tt. on thi
theory of don't rock tile boat.'
"THAT WAS nlE same
kind of philosophy J ~~
encountered taJkin; kl judges
in Germany after the war;
they didn't want to 'rock the
boat' while Hitler was in
power."
IMann disclosed some of the
d e t 1i l s ol the next Brando
project, which has b een
subject to aecrecy, like most
of the reclusive actor's doings.
1•Marton called me one day
to ask if I would like to write a
script about the Indians." :said
Mann. "I was wary with my
answer, because I have an
actor frienct who sometimec
does Brandal. imitations on the
telephone. .
. "But I called Sr a ndo·~
setretary and was assured
that be had lelephc/ned me."
THE TWO ,_.1EN di scussed a
film to deal with the Indian
caUse. At first they talked of a
story set in the frontier west,
but they a~eed that a modern
story Y.'OUld~ make a stronge r
point.
"l have attended trials in
Sioux Falls and SL Paul and
I've talked to a lot of Indians
in those aftas." said the
writer. 11l'm begiMing to
understand that prejudice Is
so immense that murders or
Indians are !Ometimes not
prosecuted. It's making it
hard for1ne to dramatize the
story without making i I
melodramatic." •
Brando had ori gina l l y
planned to play an Indian in
the still untitled film . s a i d
Mann. "but he was afraid he
~·ould overpower the story if
he did." '
Instead. Brando will play a
white man . Production is
expected to b e g i n in
Not'cmber. with real locales
and Indians being used .
-W'WI Vet
Senteri~ed
SACR.UIENTO\UPn -An
82-yeaMld World Wtt I
veteran bas been etntenctd to
10 yean to B!e imprisonment
for the second-degree murder
of a tallCab drivtt1 here.
0 O'Cana wlls .. ntenced by
a Superior Court judge for the
~hooting of cab driver James
\~'. Forbus of Secramento.
Forbu1 was shot in the back
of the· neek as he '"as driving
his cab on Inter1.tate 80 near
downtown Sacramento on Dec.
22.
'
BUENA PARK
ltK~ .. Ofoo!MJtlllttrpt
0,.• Clolly t:lO lo t:lO , . .,,. So"ftr t 0 +• P
---------
FOR
NO DOWN PAYMENT, 5.50 A MONTH
ReliAride®Deluxe Steel Belted tire
has: ../ 2-piy po lyester cord body ti, 2 tough steel cord bells
ftd.
5,.., llet E• Tor
r 7B •I• f'\5 ••• •"
f 18•>• 115·•• . ~.
Gl8o1•-8~~•1 • "'
.,78• I• 8•5• SSS, •
rr•r•'~ ~.,o .. n a,., 1M .~. •· ... ,, .1h,!""''ll~~lu•f C•I (• 1"' ''"' u,,dff•'n <llCJ"d Ou• Ru1,A10J<1"
O~hi•a Sto~! Oe•t~a ,. D~• o"'"
,,..,.,u a~ll 11.:i.:• rm! rer1.,c1 ~"'
n~l•C>l'W<<kt .,~r>OJord ol Qui1•1)
ORAM GE
eu, (). ol G.....-.~ G•o•e t 1•n
o,.~ .i o·• ,.,, a.11, !i.. .. c1o, 10 '•,
•
.v.1111110 purtlla!e o! Re11A .. do 1ores you 9ei
I. FREE ·~s\allauo" 2 FREE 1>1e •Ol<1hon e~c•y 5000 m>lr~
$die pnccs through Sunday. NLI~ 11.
Cherge It on your JCPenn ey cherge c•1d.
SAMTA AMA
JtOO So. 8"1tol ·Mo. of So. C•11l "•1• OPf~ 10·• , .... Oel"i $.l!HllY 10 le•
• ,
' .·• . . . .:;:
f .. ·-
J ..
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... . . ,
DAILY PILOT Thursday, Junt b, 1974
. . ' ~ . . . .. • • '• .-. ' ' .
.;
llero JI et
111 Me 11tal
Institute
FAIRf'IELD, Ill. iAP I -1\
Vic1nan1 t.1ed at of llonor
"'inner \\'ho said he couldn't
adjust to being a h('ro and Y:as
gro"•in g 1narijuana ns pn1·t or
his fighl for pcrsonn l frecdorn
has hct-n admitted 10 a mental
i1v:titutio11 for obscr\•ation.
Kenneth Kays, 24. cntl'recl
!he slate 1nental hcallh C('nter
at Chester for obscrvntion on
an entergency huspilalizatii)n
petition granted by Stair ';;
Alty. Robert ll:n1·kins nf
\Vaync County at the rcqu1•st
of Kay's father. John Kars.
Hawkins said the cider kays
ai;kcd him for ht-Ip when ht>
found his son in un incoherent
stale in his trailer home.
Young Kays "'as arrested
l\\1ice and convicted once thi"
spring on cha r ge s---or
I culth·ntion and posSCiiSio1i of
n1arijuanl\. lie \1-'lls placed on
probation.
Kays openly grew about 100
marijuana plants in a small
oallY ,1101 siao Pno,. plot at his father's farm east
J ·HdfJC Decl1r1·es
ai1li:e1· S1nitl1 i11 Conte1n1lt
'
SAN !EGO I AP )
Finanl'icr C. Arnholt Smith
has been (ound in conten1pt of
C'ourt i;uvcn tln1e11 ti r I e r
refusing lo :1ns\\'l'r questions
in the trial of a man accused
of att t'n1ptcd extortion.
Superior Court Judge Paul
Eugene Overton \\rcdnesday
found Smith in contempt and
ordcre<t hin.1 to return to court
June 13, \l'arning thot "the
long ar1n of the law is upoo
you."
attorney conccn1int1 contacts
between the Daggett brothers.
in the trial of Robert Daggett,
wha j.&, ch1.1 rge.a with offering
to change grand j u r y
1estbnony given by his brother "llN THE AUVICE of my
If Smith would buy up to $20 allorn<'y. I a1n asserting n1y
n1illlon "'Orth or property for consistitulional prh·ilegc not to
hini . pince myself in a potion to be
S1nlth. u longtime friend or a witness <1gainst myself,"
President Nixon and a n1ajor Srnith snid.
ca mpaign contributor. is The tax attorney, Richurd
former presi dent of United Truttner. ad\•ised Sn1ith on tax
States National Bank, which fraud •natters. Sn1lth fAces R
collapsed last ycnr ln the $23 1nillion lncon1e tax clnlm,
natio n's blggest bank failure. the largest ever filed by the
~le refused to a il s w e r hiternal Revenue S e r v i c c
quest ions reg a rd in g against an individu nl and has
S!\UTll, 75, INVOKED the conversations between himself been the subject of a gr:ind -
Fifth A1ncnd1ncnt seven Hines and a Los Angeles ta x jury lnvestigalion. -·
------~----~
103: FM .
HOW WILL. COUN(:IL REACT TO BRIDGE RECOMMENDATIONS? of this Southern Illinois town
It's Up in the Air Now -About 32 Ffft, tro;;B;;e,;;;;E;;x;;ac;;t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;r;;6;;;.000;::.;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;::;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;,,;;;;;..;. __ ...;;;;; ____ "I
STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
Newport Will Get
Bridge Arguments
8)' JACKIE HY1tlAN
Of ~ Dl llJ' ,.w.t Slaff
Recommendations for the
. proposed Coast , }I i g h w a y
· bridge over Newport Bay "''ill
· be j)l"escnted to the Newport
Beach City Council 1t1onday.
according to Bay Crossing
Plann ing Comm i ttee
Chairman Robert Shelton.
The committee's report,
prepared Monday, does not
include a recommendation on
the controversial bridge
height, but lisl.S thl_! arguments
for a high 132-foot) and for a
low (17-foot) bridge.
THE REPORT recommends
that the bridge have at least
three through-traffic lanes in
each direction -a total of six
lanes -plus at Jeast one
right-tum Jane onto Dover
Drive and a bicyclc-pedc31rian
lane.
ln addition , the report
reoommends that plans for an
interchange at either end of
the bridge be dropped due to
cos t and safely factors.
Shelton said the ci ty council
has indicated it will pass the
bridge report lo the planning
commission for a p u b I i c
hearing.
TllE COUNCIL IS expected
to make its recommendation
to the California Deparlment
of Transportation (Ca ltrans)
in the fall. Caltrans. wh ich will
build the bridge, will then hold
at least one more public
hearing.
Finally, Shelton said. a
permit must be obtained from
the U.S. Coast Guard because
the bridge crosses navigable
wafers.
The bridge will replace the
fou r-lane bridge over the bay
bel'WC<!n the Coa!lt 1-l igh "•av
inlers('('tions \\'ilh Dover Drive
and Ba,•sh<>res Drive.
Consiruction is not exOl'{'ted
lo start before 1sn. Shelton
said.
* ~ * * ~ ~
Coast Highway's Spa11
Could Be Drawbridge
The Pacific Coast llighy,•ay
bridge over NeW)Xl'rt. Bay is
well known for the troubles it
causes motorists b ut little
knoY.'11 is the fact it could have
caused a lot more tieups over
all lhese years.
The present brklge Y1as
designed as a dray,·iJridge.
l\'e'\\'POfl Beach Public \\'orks
Director .1-0scph T. Devlin has
noted.
PUBLIC NOTICE
r,
int.errur,t traffic on t h c
highy,'ay."
De\•lin sa id that although
bridg.? hei ght and b o a t
conrenienec is a hotly debated
issue . no one has suggested
thal the new Ne\\'J)Ort Bay
bridge cu rrently _.u n d c r
consirlcrafion Ix! designed as a
dra\vbridge.
"If you cut off lraffie on the
Coa~1 llighwa.v foi-c1'cn a fe1•-
minules. it. y,·ould back up
rapidly."' he said. . ----------
' I
•
It could be the greatest thing that ever
happened to your feet!
CARPET TOWN'S PATTERNED SHAG.
A STEAL AT $10.99! NOW ONLY
INSTAllATION &
PADDING INCLUDID
We think this .is the finest
carpet value in greater Los
Angeles.
Th is beautiful. 100°/o Du-
pont Dacron po lyester pile.
cut and loo p shag has
been one of the fastest sell ·
ing carpets in 1974 ... at
a price ranging from Carpet Town's low
Sl0.99 a sq. yd. to a high of S12.99 at the
more expensive carpeting salons.
Now. because of our unique purchasing sys-
tem and warehouse display centers, Ca rpet
Town is ab le to offer th is highly popular
carpet for only $6.86 a sq. yd. installed, in-
cludirfg padding.
We invite compari sons. Shop around. ChecK
the price at other carpet stores. But be sure
they quote you the installed price!
Remember, this is a sale item. We can no1
promise to hold this price forever. Although
we now have ample stock, the sale is limiled
to our cu rrent supply.
The latest word i.n quality fashion ca rpeting.
with tone on tone coloration to give that
eleg ant. sublle look to any decor. Available
1n 13 color co mbinations.
Note: You may never find this carpet al a
price !his low again!
r/
COMPARED TO·SOME CARPET STORES,
EVERYTHING IS SALE PRICED!.
At Carpet Town , we buy carpeting for our
32 showrooms and our central warehouse,
directly from the mills. This entitles us-to
the biggest discounts available ... substan-
tial savings that we pass on to you! That 's
why. in many cases. Carpet Town's everyday
prices are lower than other carpet stores'
·sate prices! Here are just a few examples:
NYLON Hl·LO
Choose 1rom bright tweed com-$ 4
binations in nylon pile. With tong-H
wearing, double jute backing. sa.Yo
INSTALLATION ANO PAOOING INCLUDED.
HEAVY DUTY COMM!RCIAL CARP!T
Dependable, extra strong nylon $ 6 ,.9 pile with a jute back. Available ..
in 8 tweed colors. so. Yo.
1HSTALLATION ANO PADDING INCLUOEO.
RANDOM SPLASH DYID PlUSH
100°10 continuous filament ny1on
pile. 13 color combinations. A11
the newest decorato1 colors!
INSTo\LLATION ANO Po\OOING INCLUDED.
VIL VITY SHORT SHAG
100°10 Dupont Dacron po1yesler $
1
9'
pile. Tightly twisted to reta in its
good looks 16 sol id colors. so YI)
INSTo\lLATtON ANO PAOOING INCLUOlO.
I
CARPET TOWN'S DENSE PLUSH SHAG.
REDUCED FROM A LOW $10.99. NOW
' Carp et Tbwn offers the low-
est .price \n town on this
versatile 100°/o Dupont
Dacro11 po lyester pile.
splash dyed, short shag .
A carpet sold industry-wide
forS11 .99. $12.99 and even
$13.99 ,a "square ya rd. Now
sg!!
IN5TAUATION &
'AOOING INCIUDlD
only $9.$6 a square yard for this extra heavy.
crush resisting. densely tu fled, soil -hiding
shag! June only.
CARPET TOWN'S DURABLE NYLON HI-LO
AT OUR REGULAR LOW, LOW PRICE.
• Carpet Town's traditionally
low price. Only $5.99 a s599 sq. yd. installed, including
padding. 9 ri ch tweed cofor so YD
combinations ol continuous
filamen t yarns, at a price
guaranteed to beat the in· IN5TALl.tTION,
flationary spiral! ,ADDING INClUOlD
CARPET TOWN'S SPLASH DYID SHORT
SHAG , AT OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE.
An outstanding exa mple of
the kinds of bargains you $ I P! can receive at Car pet Town.
This is our lowesl price on YD
a 100°/o nylon pile. splash
dyed short shag.
With heat-set yarns for tex -
ture retention, in 6 princely
INSTo\llATION &
'ADOING INClUOiD
colors ... and at a price that won'I turn
you in to a pauper! Installation & padding
are included af Carpet Town.
Prices include padding and installation! •
A Watelious.e Full 0 1 Carpel
In EYe!Y Slore !
The largest Carpet Chain in the West o,..,,.
rVfNINOI TIU •
tUNOAf 11-J
29 I I SOUTH BRISTOL STREET
Just Horth of Soutli Coos! l'kno
SANT A· ANA • PHONE 556-8287
• I '
llarety Panel Studies Ferd's
x ··· ~\Vh~el P1~oblem, GM Engines . . ~ .. ' ~:iti\sHINCTON (U PI\
!The· govemmcnt hus \\'ll.rnl.'d
:Or Lhe danger or engine fires In
~bctwt 200,000 eight· and nlnc· ~~.:Old Chevrolclcs a n d
~k/J. ·-:.:.·c : •.tlWJlers of
model ~t •bout
rord
135,000
·Pinto
station wagons were cautioned
about a wheel probl:em. that
could cause lire blo.,..·out~.
In a prelln1inary report, U1e
NaLJswuil Highway Tr a fr i c
SafCtr Agency said a defect in
the ;~arburctors on 10me 1965
.and ·11166 Chcvrolets and some
t~:·Buicks could allow raw
gasoline to spra y on a heated
engine.
TT "'AS NOT known which
models of the cars wtre
equlpptd with the "Rochester
Quodrajet units,'' a
spokesman said.
In a separate actioo, the
agency said it had bffn
discovered that 1972 and 1973
Pinto station wagons had a
mctal "projection" i n si de
their rear wheel well!: which
could cause blowouts.
Accordlng to the agency, the
metal tab!, which have no
operational use, cin slash the
tire's sidewall.
lnv esUgatlon showed "Many
FASHION UNIFORM SHOP .
SALE IH PROGRESS
UP TO 50°/o OFF
ri'
" .. Dresses, Tops, Slacks, Shoe•.
Jttt Urilf-lh"•wMMJ ltll• MOlltlt c-"' _. Si9' u,.
ll62Z S. Coost H11ty.
;499.3510 SouthllMJllM
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
owner1 ma y be suff<'ri ng
se:rloos sidev.·atl du rn a g c
wilhout rcallzh~ It." n n
agency coosumer protection
bulletin reported .
111£ G 111 inveiligation
showl!d that a n1elal plug
originally In.st.ailed in th~
carburetors or I.he cars oould
drop out , leaving "a one-half
inch opening frorn which raw
ga90\ine may be sprayed onto
!be auto engine," the agency
said.
The PRency said G~I failed
·to provide any foolpro of
n1eans of keeping the metal
plug in place.
Under the agency's rulrs,
GP.I can present evidence
opposing the group's inillal
finding of a defect. After GM's
evidence is COOl!l\dcred , the
agency then makes a final
determination on the defect.
IN THE CONSUMER
bulletin . the agency said the
half-inch tabs inside Pinto
station wagon wheels can be
"easily bent dov.·n lo eliminate
risk." But it urged owners
Y.'ho have had tires da maged
from the tabs to make a
report to the Transportalion
Department. including t h e
make, model and year of lhe
car, and the size and serial
number or the tire.
._,_
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l ' -~ --
· Prior to May 13th, Orange County Trons;t bu"" went as lorsou!h os
Laguna. Aftsr that you werapn yqur pwn. Now .there's f=Ompl~te service
lhroughovt Southern Orang'e Cpunty. From La Hobra to San Clemente.
· 35 minu!es separates downtown Santa Ano from l01sure World
and loguno Hills Moll. Or go through Laguna Beach to connect with the two
different roules down to Son Clemente. And the frequoocy of buses is the some
05 it Is throughout the res I of Orange County. All existing r.oules throughout
Orange County have been improved, too.
Abou! the only thingthot hasn't changed is the quarter fa re. And the
free transfers.
We'll get you there in style. New bu1es !double
the number!. Vinyl bucket seats, package racks, and air· .... •
conditioning. Send for your detailed, easy-to·read, new M -
·bus sthedules. Ride OCTD. lfll get you there..,
.J
OflANDE COUNTY TRAN BIT Qt8TllllCT
•
•
I
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ThurM!JY, Junt f)._1'_7_4 _________ 0.4.ILY PILOT 25
( Staying Out? Over The Counter
HASD Li•ll"9' for Wodntsday;'.-S, 1 '74 W o.U Street: A. Dead Entl
FINANCE
Passenger
Miles Vp
At Air Cal
Newport Be<i:ch-based Air
Califomia carried a record
130.5M passengers in i t s
satellite llklriets during r-.tay
and flew a tot.al of 46,776,600
revenue passenger miles.
These preliminary figures
result in increases of 22
percent and 24 percent ,
respectively, over a year aga,
according to Joseph E .
Walker, ass is I an I vice
president-sales, for the airline.
Traffic results for the firs l
five months of 1974 l!lhow
608,829 passengers c a r r i e d
compa red to 482.774 for a 26.1
percent increase over the
comparable 1973 period .
Ry Mll,TON MOSKOWIT'l
Cllrtolllcle P'NIUttt
The Nf!v.· York
Exchange Is now
IT'S NO FUN to OY.1l a piece
of a company or a mutu<il
fund and v.'alctl its price
dee line l!lharply. The stock
market used to be promoted
a hedge aga inst inflation. As
the prices of the products you
bought wenl up. the value of
al! a hedge against inflation.
As the prices of the products
you bought went up, the value
of your stock also was sup-.
posed to rise -unlike those
fixed-income insurance poli-
cies.
HJ)w depressing it is then to
experience a n inflationary
perrbd In wbicb prices of
products and s e r v i c e s
skyrocket 'vhlle stock prices
•
1, • • •
NEXT EXlf:)
r------------,
fOf 1nlormo1ioo on bus ~les. ~m)d !+ii: coupon to I· ·OCTD.611 c;oicCenter Ort... W,5ontoAno,CA 92/ol. I I et'coU 171415'!7-«XJ<. I
I . I
NAME------------
! I
I
I
I
I
L
ADDRESS-----------
CITY ________ ~1,p ___ _
I
I
I
I
-----
I
OP _j
pltmge d°'•111wnrd .
Shareholders have rerictcd
in quite predictable fashion
They don 't y,•:i nl to i:l'a r
any more tt bout fu•zylconcPpt'\
like "people's eap!t;;i1Jsn1.'
They are selling out.
At the enrt or 1971 the i\('\1'
York Stock ' Ex c h an 2 e
ttt.lriiated th:-it there were 32.J
million A1nericans 11110 oy,•ned
shares in a eo1npan~· ar
mutual fund. Some 800,000
Wert clipped from these rolls
in 1972 and last year another
800.000 decided that there W!lll
no special distinclioo attached
to OY.'lling sharl'l!l jn slocks
which depreciated in \'alue
,,.,'hile the price or everything
they had to buy went up.
AS ·a result. the nun1be.r or
Americans· who can qualify as
stockholders bas dipped belaw
the 31 million mark -and by
the time 1974 ends thei r ranks
WU! probably be thinned to
below 30 million.
EVEN '11JOSE r I g u r e s
overstate the public
participation in the stock
market . In wealthy famili es.
stock is usua lly owned in the
hllmes of both the husband the
(MONEY TREE)
wife -and even the chitdrC'n.
So 30 million shareholders
may not even represent as
much as 10 percent of all the
family households in the
nation.
The desertion of the stock
market by individuals has
been going on for some ti me.
According to Federal Re-
serve data analyzed by the
Olase Manhattan B a n k ,
individuals have been selling
more stock than they ha\'c
IT'S ESTilllATED th a t
Up U .1 Up ·u .1
Up 1•.J
Up tl.J
Up n .t u, 12.S Up 11.1
Up 11.1
Up IG,S VP 10.0 ......
Up '·' .Up 9.1
Up •.1 Up t .1
Up 1,1
Up I.I
UP l.J
Up l.l .. .,
Ott 11.J
Off U.J Off U .G Oft 10.0·
()ff '·' "" ., Ott "•.I g; :::
Off 1.1 "" ., g; :1 .... 2!!" •. I ...., S.t g: l:f
Off S.I
OH S.6
institutions now control one·
third ti the value of all I I
seeudties Their shace or the MUTUAL FUNDS trading on the New York Stock
Exchange is rr.uch higher -at ....... !""••~"!!'-...... !'" .. ~I .......
least 70 percent. And they are ,...., vork -Fol· o•IYP'US 01fl' u .16 1~.1 VDyao· 1.91 '·'°
do '°""lfl.O h • 11$1 OI Or'tl Fd t ."6 M,3 lft 10.11211.11 .. ttf\' F !_.00 1.00 ing that trading in only 10 bkl -,,_.., prl E11I"( Fd l .U 3.6 N H,\fllCOClt: ,...,.,.. F ,,M 6.0I
-cent of all the t'ssues l•'sted. ttt 011 Mu11111 Dr"(I L ... u .CH u .1 Biid Fd 11.'120.2 i.c: E• '·" 1.Y ..--• FYllll\ •1 llUOl..:I b Dr'(f LA 10.00 ~ 6 • .0 6. s.fke G !l.14 SA' This nieans that there i!'i ..... NA~O Inc. Sp 11\Cm 6.!I0 .1:r SigMI 7,M 7.6 K.UDD .. 11 FDSI :ltd Cenl 1.71 t. EYSTOHI: lnlt lftv 12 ... 12.tlo virtually no "market" for 90 WH-.y El.£ Mu 2.11 2.11 eusi. ef 11.SJ,11. lliMK 1:J,.>11l.J.1
I JUM J, 1914 £9tls G< •.50 1.1 Cusl 112 11.tl lt.6 Cooft 1.5$ •. J!I percent of o I stocks. 111111 A1 UTON a c ... 1 &4 1.» 1.0 $0K•I :n .... 22.-The pov•er of the hi" ,"om c, ... 1 ... 4.o•MOWA110: c ... 1 1t1 1.2,,",·, ""••c•"••'TY'•"•'•'·•l ,. 0.., llC l.7l 1.!I e .... F<I 1.10 I.I c"'' KJ •. . :
institutiODS \\'aS delineated !":~w.~"1 t~ !:1 :":'~ F t:!'t~ ~l ~; 1:J~2::l rn~J l~ !ft
recently by Roy Schotland. MtM F<1 ,•,.,,w, ,',,· ~II'••"',', s.n •.• eu.1 ~ 6.21 ·• unr• F l.J7 LIO ~. t he G Ael.,. In ~I< t.u 10. Cust S4 1.10 I. SIL«C1"10 •DS: ,.11U eac s at eorgct0\\11 Atutwr• 1.1• 1.1 EDIE 5oo 11.1• 11.1 ,\flollo 1.u 1.1 A"' .sN" 6.SI • . .s.
Uru·v......,uy•s Law School. The ,\GE Fd •.JO •. E91'tt Gl 10.n 11. Po1ar1 2.1• l. OJlll Fd 1.11 1.i1 """~·~ All•l•I• t .1110.J! Ellvn Tn 17.tl ... 1011<-r S.H J Sell~ 11.lCI 11 • .Jll data he COiiected Ofl 1973 Alphl Fd '-" 10.11 ErMr9 2 ... 1, ltnkr Gtl'I !I.ti 6.4 !otntlllel '-" 10.1• Alnc;1p F l ... 4. £M.r9y 11.41 10.4 l.t>dmrk !I.SO t .t S.ntr, I'" 11.21 U .10 trading showed lhe follooi ng : ...... Blrlll t .1410.J F•lrlld •.U I. LO Edi• lJ.ll 14. Altl:HLD Gii• ; ""--Am Owr1 7.I J I. Fm llu•• 1.n 1, LEX GaOUI": Gom11 l.)7 2.M
-1 .. c trust department of Am Eqtl •.11 ~.JI Fed Rlll1 ,,., .• oi Ltdr 11.u 1•.1 &1r,.-'·'° s.1s
b k •1 G AM ex ••ss .. 101:L1Y1 Gt•'" s.21 s. ~1 Fd i.Sl i ... one an • n organ uarant~·. ,u,.os: ioaou": Atv(n 11.u 11. tt.rbr 1.•t 1.J1 accounted for 38 percent of al! c..11111 s.11 '·' enci °'" 1.i. 9. u ie 1nh• s.1t •· Lt911 L J.J• •.JO lntom l.•S I. ~Piii •.'I 10. Linc ~p J.M LI l'-<e Fd •.l.l •.ft the purchases of Ralston 1 .. ..,1... •·"' 1 • .s. C.Onlr• 1.•• ... LOOMI S sMua.o,. P'OS :
Pur, k ( d S""'I •.•1 1.01 Cv SS..c 6.•l ... SAYLES: Apcwc 11,11 11.10 1na stoc ast year. An it s1oco. •.•1 1.01 °"'' s.tl ~o ov 10.t1110. l11Com u.t:t 11 . .a
al!IO accounted for one third of ~ ~\~ lll !:;, ~::.~1 1tH 11:,7 L'C:'::~.~~-v 12·1 ~'7:.1en 1~:;: 1t~ all the sales of Rev c o Am 1nv" ,_JJ •. FIX'd u.ot 1•. A!lil•t ,_,, •.6 :1.10t Fd •·" 1.Js Am Myl l.H l .:lll PurH' •,/J t. ""'Bu• 1.Jl 1. SIOM,\ .. UNDS: drugstore stock. AmNI Gr 1.'6 2.1• S•ltm ~ ... 1.1 Bnd deb '·~ '· CMI 511•. s.•1 ....
F "NC:HOa Tre.... lt,11 JI. LUTHl:ltAN 1110: Inv l.olt t .1S -Ive percent of all lhe GllOUI': fl'tNANC!AL Bron l'O '·* 9. Trot '·" 7.2'
F ~ M to I k Id · Gt.,.tti I .JI •·"' l'llOGllAMS: Bro Inc I.SJ t .l .v ... tw 1.st 7,Jt On1 () r S 0C SO ln !11eom 1.l• 6.ts Fin O"fn J.04' l. Bro US t.91 IO.I Sfn!tti 8 1.4S l .•s 1973 Wi.9 sold by the Citibank Aeworv IO.JJ 11.ll Fin 11111 319 l .6 MASS CO ; S8 I.I.GI" t.lS t .1S Scie<tr l .n •.It fin Inc s u J,j,j FrHm •.SI I. So C..nF 10.11 10.U trust depar1menl. Citibank F'nd lnw 1.11 •.II Vtnt 3,11 1.2 1,...p F •.SO 1.1 s...st Inv '•.JI I .tel
I WI N•ll 10.17 1!.J6 h11'0 Ve 9.•I 10, Meu F t.Sl 10. s... Inv G •.•1 S.Jl a so accounted for 14 percent ......,...~ F s.)I 1.11 ''llST ws• P'NU.: ~" t.1s 10.1•
I II !"• "• f AXlt lfCHJOHTO"': IN'f'ISTOllSr MIT t.IO 10.1 • • 1.41. 1.7) 0 a HC purcu1:1SCS 0 Fund A . •.11 '·'9 OlK Fd ,.at '· MIG 10.JI 11.1 p l"D ,.SS J.U Matsushita." fl>llll 8 •.• , ..... Gfll'I Fd J.n •.54 MIO 11,1' 12. STATI! .,.o o•I": -~W-~~-••l\••-N-~ \Vith that kind of c!oul A•e $(! l ... '·00 Stocct F •. 7S J, M11•1 ... 1.54 .S4 e1 ... 111 t.U '·" BLC Giii •.•J 10.JCl 1$1 Mul11 1.16 '·J§'Mlllll'• t ,J1 1.)1 ........ $ 1.•r 4.:U operating in the market. it's B•b'°" '·" '·" F1m a.• '·'' 1. Id A"' '·" '· SI "' Gr •. oo 4.00 ' t ' I k Blfro< J.06 S.SJ r:OllUM GaOUP': ny Fd '·'' .... 54 ,,, Inc 7 .• '·" no surprise o see issues a c e., •• 0, ,.•1 •.tO 1oo Fnci 1.1• 1.1.,MS11 Fd n .01 11.01 S••t• sir Jl.&J J7.1$ disastrous d"""s in one dn". If BM<" HI 1.10 1.1 101 Fllll 1.12 1.n '.Mu &ftG 1.1• 1 ... STEAOMAN r:os: 'V t' ~ 8tKOf\ t .10 t .t Co!""' l.Jf JJtM!F F" 1.02 I. Am Ind J.•J 2.4~ f\forgan Guaranty decides to Bt·-'~' >.11 J.441 n Fund ,,4& s.jMIF G<o l.n 1.11 Ano Fd 1.01 1.0l
II eo..chl-l .M •.t' f'd" Gt J.lt 4.1 MuOm r. t .01 t .11 1 ..... 11 1,10 1.10
Sl" out a position, you're in Boll Fdn l .>I '" NIUHOE.1$ """°"" " l.M 1.61 Oct9" S.to S.to
I bl '( "· t he er-l .St J.•I GltOUI": Mir! Stitl 1'.1' 16. S"TEI,. aOI P'OS: rou e I you 11<1ppcn o U llrl'lllm t .01 1.oJ Gt••ti 4.n s.t ""-'Ill Trt 1.11 1.11 1111..-.c: "·*' ,._,, hapless holder of !his stock. CALVIN l'U N0$: 11\Com 10.1111.tl:N•I llldu I.JI l.ll c..,Hll 1 .• '·"
81111 ,d 10 tJ 11 ... " MllHI I.t s •. NAT s•c r:os: SIO(-"·'' 11.•1 "1latever it is. Cdl"I Fd • t'l 10.I J F Si>e<H • OI •.n , .. ...., 7.61 1.H SIS OllOUI": Oh Sr... J 01 J,JI F°"'tq I' 1.•I 1.0 Bond 5, 4,.M 4.14 G<W1fl !1.21 ,.IJ
BROKERAGE II 0 US E
snlesmen are having a diffJ.
cult time enticing customers
to return to the stock market.
After all, who wants to lltep
in front of a stampede?
lnve11tory
Buildings
'Going,Up'
Four bu i ld ings 1\'lth
combined tot.al of 3$0.000
square fcrt or noor sp:ice. ;lre
now under construction 111 the
new S$O minion ee&r Orange
County Industrial C e n t c r •
:innoW'lced John J. ~tcPhilllp5.
m11rketing m11nagf'r for the
221-acre eomple:ii:. !orated in
the tities or ~nta Ann and
Costa T>ttesa.
\Vh~n complettd, !here "Ill
be-14 buildings on the site,
rl"Pf'CS<'nllng more than 000.000
square feel The center is
being devek>pcd h y a
sub~id lary of tabot, Ciibot nod
Forbes: Ornnge c 0 II II l y
Properties, Inc.
•
Ne1...0 1.61 •.so , ... NkLIN Olwldn ).II 1. lllCori> '·" l .U ... v v... •.IJ 10.00 GltOUI": Prtl Sil s.n •. Smm!I 1.41 l .U
CG Fund 1.:M t ,02 ONlC 6.:rt I, lntom '·~ 4.M T..:11111 i.IJ 6.21 C..nt 5111 •.II 10.IO (;wit! St •.t~ t I ~tocl Sr •.03 6,1 SU.-..1 F l.ll t .11
(/lel lll"o' 1,62 l .ll Fr Inc,,., 1.ll 1. Gfwll'I S.43 S.t T..,..i G 1.54 1.26 (MANNING VS G• 5 t .l\ 10. NIW llNO LI': TrM Cep I.GO 1 .• 1 P'UNOS: Ulilo!I• J.W J. Equity U.ll U.67 Tr•wl £11 1.51 t .J4 Am.. 1.U 111 Atl Ct P S.61 •.f Gt.,.111 e.lt t , T.-H I.II I.I•
ftell!Cd 9.01 9.1! .. , Eqty J.U l .I lfttom 11.P'I U .'110!ft CG 1.>s '·" Biid Fd •.H t .OS ~ll LIEll 10.os 10. SIOt n.tt n . '°'11 (I J.J4, l .tO EolJ Gt •.41 I.Oii Fd M• dP 1.•t I. NEA Ml 7.12 1. Unll!.d 1.)1 1 ...
Eqty Pr 2.JO J,)l ,UNOS INCi' i'leu Cent ··" '·' IJl'lll\llld •. n 6.111 Fnd Am l .4l l.Ol OllOU I": '*"""'n 1.n 1, UNION SEa111c11 Gt ... 1~ •.OI '·" c;o..,m 1.7' 1.t1NtW1on 11.1212.I OltOUI': 11\CO"' t ,00 6.Ji l1T11K • ~ I.I N"' Pert IJ.Jt 14.!I &rd 5. lw 11.jl U .11 ~P«-1 1 ... 1.60 lllllus Ir t.4l 10.i1 Nt• Wld 10.11 11.0 Hflll lftW •· l 6.'0 Vtlllyr 6.1(1 7.43 P'lk>I 6.11 I." Nlcl'lll~ 10.SJ 10.$ Un Cepl 1.tl 1.11 CH,\Sll c.1 .... 1 ~.n s ' i'lell h!• ll.•1 11,41 Ullllll'I In 10 ... 11.19
•CKTON : E S-p no111.01 Drneo1 .... 1. U•UTID P'UNDI: F .... llot t 71 6.IO ~ FAm 3.q 6.lS () N1l 1 10 10.11 10,1! MUI"' 1.'2 •.•9 F•on CP t,U 4,U t~ 1..0 11.11 !1,11 OM Wiii 1).911).t 8"41 I'd I.Ii 1,M !tl\Tr 81 1,J1 .... ,..,g 11.lt"'l!.llo Ol'l'E .. NM PO: (.on\ 9'1' 1.46 t.11
SP«.I ~.IO S.JS HAMILTON Gilll": 0o A!m 1.0 t ,1 Con! f!K I.JI t .>l
Clltm "" ..... •.n Fwllll l .. •.OO Oo Fnd J,!O 6 •S Inc•"' 10.•S "-'' (NA M"'D P'OS: Gt .. !~ S 3' J, .. 0o T,.... }.411 S, Sl.lt llC $.It •.lS Llbrly •. 10 .... IMO!!\ S.IJ 6,ll o re !of( 9,11 10.t lltftOd 4.M 5.0I ,,.,.llM J.U l.•! lit!! Giii f .lol t SI F1r1"'1t J ... t.' USA.-, C• j ·U t .tl """' F t.2' t .tl lrl LW I U 1,23 P1wl Rt• J.41 S US Owt5 .)9 e.SJ
$("" Sp I.JI t.tr °"' I )I , f>Onw' F l IJ •. UlllPR PUHDS ~ • TMA A •.l) •.'4 1110t 1,H ~ .... Ml I.I I I.I ...... F t .16 I.SJ COLCMlaL •Iott 1111 H ,1' i:>.M SCI t.U t .11 a.ti Fl'td •.IJ I 0 PUNOS ~ 1-1 CO I tl 1.:U PlllWI Ft J.)(I 1.11 (Mlt St~ t .tl 10.16 Cllft .. , 1.!11 9.ll fllfl Co< J.M •.'l ""°"'• C J.7l I, VALUI UNll P'DI:
f.QIHIJ J.61 1 .. 11\C ..... 11 .n n .n ,ILGa1M GI": Vt! l.llf ··-J.J7 Fl>llll t .1$10.11!"< 8'•1 SU I." Pll Fr"' 111.H ••. Ve! ltot J.t0 t ,lt
Gt•ln s.:ro s.w '"" F •m 1.21 ... CIPl•I t.11 3. Lf• F j·* J.'1 lllCtm l.7J •. .M 1~1-7,)1 I. IM-I.II I, Vel ,)6 111 lltftl'"" J.~J 1.M 111 1n...e1I lt.0210.M P'li11 I'd I )I t.• llAlllC: COi"'" G 10,$1 10.11 ~W11r11 G i ... •.'6 PIN SI e,lt t .I NOEllS:
COMMC),. .. !o.TN 111 .. Cl A 11 0 U SI Pin Trt 116 lftft\I ~-· 6.*1 ta1.1tTi nw e;,ud •.U ,,11 l"l()tlllllt •o: vs c-•.11 •·')
"''' .ti .• .. vlllllk 1.il PIOtl ltn •11 •· 5-llftl i•s •.SO C I.It l.3ll l11w e.t •II tl ll Ploft ,. 10 " II , \MOrblt ).2• J J4 c.n.cr tr S.6J 6.11 N'f'l'T Pl-It •.JI 10. V:::rd· 1 10 110 ~ c. t.'9 • .. U UHSltL Pl-I.to 9.1 llM 10'IO l"I CA-8d 1,11 I.II (ICMl'l'll 106 1.141PLI GltO IO.Slll.SI ••lff I ,1 J •i
(Aftlp Fd 6.•t 1.'1 c.p!I 1¥ l .U t .11 PL! ''" • 4G •· \lllfl.O Gr • ,_ 1,~ c-"' I.If t It Ctl!lt Sii ,, .. '·" 1"a1c1 aow1: 11151,r. 1 . ., •·" ~I tftw t.11 t .U 11tVIS1" OltOUI": e;,•tll 11.)l IO.I "'1•'11 u 11.11 11 ti " o-< 6,91 1.•1 •OS Giii J.tl .• l...:om .~t • W.lftt •II 1.11 1.11
Ml 111 '·'' t.•9 ICrS NO ..... ) CH Nw l•• 10.l<Q 10 WILLINGTOH
t•y ' I~~ 11.4' 10\PI-J,1• l U -NOr ) U I U OllOUl'i 0.11 S.11' IM Mlll\ltl I U 1.9}Pro ~d tf• •1 E•PIW lfMlltO
C..., Olw 4 •1 i.i' Slocl 11.•Jll ... PtOW•dl Jd l .7 1.,.,. 714 1.IJ
Oal le\ 1.•1 .• ~Itel 1,11 •.11 Pro .. ., GI I CH J . -~ t n 10 1.1 Oevlot · 6.lt 6.lt VM Per t ,11 7,)0 Prue Stl' 1 ... t. hw~ t 10 10.:it O!U.Yt,\al( 1111 Ali •.)O 4,70 l"UT .. AM W.ltlt 10.iJ 11,"4 o•ouP: s ., FUNOS: Wtll111 •JI 11,u
DHt1' j·'' •,M 0..-w•n ',)) t ,10 CM"'!r t t9 10.37 Wl!"'n 1·.J4 10.U p.,1.., f ,IJ 1,tt 111ttn't Qt 4.'4 E111tlly 1,11 1, ... Wlf!Ch.r ,JI 7.11
Dlfll• T .'1 6.ti 10\\ VI .,>,·,•,> •>.••' Gt0'9 It J.6 1111 wt\I 1114 t9 tAt otlltgl'I ,., Jl.11 lr•t '" G<•l'tl • 10 9.•i W\l!d Gr •• , 'JI 0r1cf Cp s.tl 4.11••1•1 t<"d 11n1toe lftCOftl r11 1.11wlw;U1<\ •.•1 J
OollaC• IJ.61 IJ.•t 1 .. y 'llllO 6 tt •.1t lft .. ,f I •1 I.JI l•"lef 1.tJ f ti Ortitl f 1 10 t 1 l"GWlll 11> l .M ~ti F 101 IDr•t•.(IVIOrftd
i
{
"
..
•
..
~ ... . .. _.,
DAILY PILOT
PUBUC NOTICE
ILl"·l4DI IUl"altlotl COUIT 01" THI
ITATI OP CALl .. OlllMIA 1'01l
THI COVMT't' Of' OllAflOI
Mt .IONS
Thursday. Ju~ b, 1974
litOTl(I! Of' Hl:AltlMO 01' l"l!TITION
"01 ltlOllATI Oft WILL ANO flOI i
Ll."111 TllTAMI NTAll'f
Bankr11111 ey
Bids File£l
Ed1'9 ot AL9EltT RANO IALOW\N,
Ot«•Sfd. NOTICE 1$ HEii.EBY GIVfN 111-1 LO\llS
Illy HIM..,.. 1191 IU1G M,..IPI a pellllOl'I
tor ,,_II o! Wiii and lot hlWflCI ol L111 ... 1 ,.,,,.,,,..,,,.rv IG IM Ptillll-r,
r111rt111;1 ro which It maae tor turltoe•
p1rllC'UI ..... l!'>d 11111 Thi lll'M Incl ~ICI
of .... 1•1119 IM Mlll\f: 11'5 bean W lor Ju111
IL 1174, 1t '''° a.m .. In IM tcurllllO"' ot Dt~fl-1 No. l ol uld COUii, et 7'0Cl Clvk C1n!OI" D•I~• w11t. Iii ,,.. ~v ol
S1nll An1, CalHornl•.
Oiied MIY 211, 1174
WILLIAM t . $1 JOHN
county C..,.k
LOUIS A, AUOl!T
>ffl WILSNlllE ILllD., STI . 111
LOS ANG ELES, CALIFOltlllA tOOlt 121)) »1<4144
Att-y fw Ptllll-• l'ubll1hed 0•1"111' Co.111 D•llw Plldl.
M•v lG. JI, 111<1 Ju,.. 1, 1111 ••5'·1'
PUBLIC l\'OTICE
I ttlll
SUl'l!•IO• COU•T OF THE
STATll 0 1' CALll'O•NIA l'O•
THE COUNTY 0 1' O•ANGE
NO, A ... 11
NOTICa 01' HEA•ING 0 1' l'ETITION
FO• l'•O•ATI! 01' WILL ANO l'O• LETTliltS TESTAMl!NTA•Y
E•lll• ol MAltV ANN RENSHAW,
o.ce1Md.
NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN ll'lel
MAAGUEAITE VICKERS, lllt 111.o!
rier•ln 1 petillon tor Pro!Hte or wm 1"11
for IH.ulllC• ol L1tter1 Tnt1ment1ry 10
the peJlti0<1er rete•••>e• 111 wr.lch 11. tn.,)!M
tor turtto.r p1rtlcu11rs, 1nd 111.i Ito. lime
and pl1c1 ol Mering I~ s1rnt has bfff'I set 101 Jurie IS, 1914. 11 9:)(1 1.m., In !he
CDU•lroom ol Oepartmen1 No. 3 ol •aid
courl, II 7t>O Clvlc Center Orlve Wt1!, In
111.e City ol San11 Anl. C1lllornla.
Oiled M1y ?II, 1911
WILLIAM E. SI JOHN
c-ty Clo•~
HELEN LIE MACKELL.I.JI
JU I!. WlllOll, l ull• JM
Gl9M1l1, CllllO«lll '1216
Tel: UUI 24'-G4'
AttorMY 1..-petUl1nor
PIH!lllhed Or1nve C111st D•lly P llOI,
MIY JO, JI, Ind JUN•• 191' 1'69-11
PUBUC NOTICE
SLl'·7Ul7
5Ul"Elt101t COURT 01' THE
5TATE 01' CALtl'O•NIA l'Olt
THE COUNTY OF O•ANGE
NI ....... ,5
NOTIC! OF Hl!A•tNO OF PlTIT10N
FOlt l'•08ATE OF WILL AND 1'011:
LETTERS TE5TAMENTAlllY
Esttlf ol CV.AA AD ELA I O E
AtlOEASON, 0<-c:et.ed.
NOTICE IS HEAEBV GtVEH th.It
LAWRENCE E. ANOf'll.50~ ll;U Ti hid
llc1<tln 1 pelllion tor Pr!Mllle o! Will a'ICI
!or ISSUlllCt ol llllt•• T'"Slllmf!tll•'Y to
1r.e pell!lorier. rel1•.nc1 l<i which 11 m,de
lor turllle, parUcul1r1. lln<I 11111 tM ll'fnt
and plac• ol lle••l"ll ltie •.ome llas tieen
set lor June 1), 19U, ill t ::JC ~ m .• In the covrtrllQl'TI OI Deperlmenl No. 3 of u!d
court. ill 700 Civic Center Ori~ w 111, In
Ille City ot Santa A~. C1IUornl1.
Ofled May 1,, 191,
WILLIAM E. 51 JOHl'll
County Clerk
PAUL, KASTINOI, JANOFSIC'I'
AND WALKE• 1112 Oupenl Dr., Sii. I
1,....1n1, C1tllonl/1 '1"4
(114) Ul·1H1
A"orMYI ICM' l"t lililMr
PuDllsl'lc!d Or•nge COit! O•ll'I' l"Hol,
May lO. ll, •nd June o. 191' 1960-74
PUBLIC NOTICE
5L1'·1U:lt
The following persons ha\'e
riled petitions ror
b..'lnkruptcy In Sant:i i\11a
federal Court : •
Broad,vay's
Sales Jump
Special to lhe Daily Pilot
SAN F RA NC I SCO -
Broad1vay·Hale Stores Inc.
chairman or lhe b 0 a r d .
F.clward "'. Carter, t o I d
shareholders the company's
first quarter sales a n d
earnings rose to reco rd levels.
Sales for the 13 weeks ended
~1ay 4 totaled $239,633,000
compared wi th $216.006.000
last year. an increase of 10.9
percent. Net ea r n in gs
increased 12 percent t o
$5.735,000 compared with
$5, 122.0CMJ. or 28 cents per
share vs. 25 cents for the first
quarter of fiscal 1973.
PUBLIC NOTI CE
SUl'E•IOR COU•T OF THE STATE 01' FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
CaLll'OltNla FO• NAME STATEMEHT
THE COUlolTY OF O•ANG• TM followlng persons are llol"ll
N1. A...U tiuslneu 11:
NOTICE OF HEAii: iNG Of' PETITION KOt.L CfNTEA NEW p OAT
FOR PltOIATI! OF WILL AND FO• NUM BER 1. lNll s-y Par-Clrdt,
LETTERS TESTAMENTARY S11Jte L. Irvine, C.,,liforn!1 916'4
EU11e al HOAACE CADEN, Dlc:eMtd. Don.lid M Koll, 609 VII Lido Soud,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN !hill MAX Ntwi>orl 8"ten, California '2660
F!HIC Ills lllfd lltr"eln I petUICl'l'I "!': Rlt;harct C. EIH011, t6 L.lnda lilt. Pr~le of Wiii Ind I« llSUillKf Of Newllll"l Beech. CMl!ornla 9'l660
Ltlltr' Ttsllmenl1,.... lo the Ptllllone,, LH c. S.rnml1, t4 Lll>d.o 1.ie,
l"f!ftlfflc:t Jo wtllcl'I Is mlde Tor l11rllle• NIJWllll"I 8eKl'I, Calllornl1 '2'60
p1rllcul1rs, Ind 11111 11'11 Time and pjace O. p , MlddlC!m•s, 11 H•ll Moon 81~
of hetring the '1m1 Ills -n HI !Or June Drivt, Cor,,.,. clt l Mir, C1llhw'nl1 '262S
11, 1'14, II t::JC 1.rn., 1., Ille cour"oom of Eve-ell 01vi1, l809 Sindu"' Lint,
OePilrlmenl No. l ol 11ld covri, •T 700 Corona del ~r, C•lilornl1 '267.S
Clvk Cenlf• Drive Wt1I, In !I'll City ol TlrnoOw L. Str1<jo,r, 19:JC Port Alt>ans,
51n!I Ane, C1111ornl~. Newl'Of1 Bt-Kh, Catilornia t266G I
Dlled ~y 21, 1914 St~n H. &arnard, 1100 W111 B1y
WILLIAM E. 51 JOHN Avenue, 8111tioa, Calllornla '2662
County Ct11!1 S~ney E. -auc~, \23S Se rid K•'I'•
MA)( FINK Corona clel t1o1r, CaUlorn;a 9162S
'"' WILIH1Rl" •LVO., STll. 700 A, E Procier!l1,, Inc., 1Sl F1rmlr19ton
ll!VERLV KILLS, CALIFORNIA Ml11l Avenue, Har!lord, Connocr!cut 061U
11\J) 17J·t111 This l>uslntH 11 'onduct!ld by a llmltcdl
AltorMY Ill' l'ltfl!OMr par!ntr,hlp.
PuD1l1111<1 Or111119 C1111t Dally Pilot, Tlrnollw L. Strader
M•Y 30. J\, Ind Ju .. b. 191• lfS9·14 TM• ~latemenl WIS Ille<! wlrl'I lht
Covn•~ Cler~ Ill Or;onge Covnty, C•lllO<"ni1 PUBLIC NOTICE on Jul\!! '· 191,. '"m Pul>li,n~ Orilnge Coal! Dilly Pllol, J~~• •· ll, 10. 21. 191• . ?OS•-111
PUBLIC NOTICE '
F:Ml7S
Pul>llil'>!'d Orange Coan 011ly Piie!, Ju~e 6, IJ. ~o. 21. 191• 10l1·1'
PUBLI'.:; NOTI CE
• ~ • • -J • • ' .
Jtl011ey's tt'o1·th Eliminating Cars
Not the Solution
:·
Measure .Hu11ting
Catcl1es 'Ert"Ot"s' Clpllol Newt Scn1ce
SACRAMENTO -'Dovel·
opment or American cltlts
in the rutlD'e musl take
into consideration the fact the
private automobile ,., 111
continue to be the n1 aln IOUrce
of transportAtlon no ma tttr
how many other systems ure
pe<fected.
•'Overcrowding, d<'flclent
educational systems , Incivility,
<:rlme and corruption are
social, economic and pc\itJcal
in crlgln,'' Krem l declared. Uy SYLVIA r oRTi:;n
!lave you ever counted 1hc
c~1psull:'s In .. bottle of
vitamins )•ou 'vo just bo11ghl
for $t9S?
Or unrolled a roll of toHel
paper and COlUltt.'<i rhe sheets?
Or counte dthe p:ipcr clips -
or index curds, or pins or
needles or Y"hatcver -in a
box of any or them?
CAN YOU EV EN imagine
SO'lleonr. do--
ing this level
or polic e
\\.'Ork in the
L'.8. market-
place?
\V e I I .
~n1eone is.
In r..lian1i. 11 , ~
\\'IOrl radio .. ,
stll lion's hosl
Art i\'lcrrill
has launched a ran~p::iign.
reported in a recent issue of
Aledia and Cons u mer.
in\'olving thousa n ds or
listeners as well as the Dade
County Consumer ProtecOo n
Division.
The measure hunt began
\\'it h a bottle of vitamins
bought at a discount store.
~lerrill counted them and
found the count a full IO
percenl short or the number or
capsules promised on .the
bottle.
';IF V(TAi\llN bollles are
shorted.'' l\'lerrill \vondered
out loud, "ho\v many other
products. sold by count. are
short?"
i\1errill started c o u n t i n g
paper clips. facial tisi.ues,
thumb tacks. paper cups,
baggi es. carbon paper. scre\\'S.
His early finding of serious
short-counts was confirmed.·
lie then asked radio listeners
10 join the count-in.
Reporls ca1ne back of a box
of cough drops supposed to
contain 15 drops '"hicb had
only six: a box of •·11xr·
screws containing only 60, a
pack of paper clips 30 percent
shorl.
PRODUCTS SOLD b y
weight, the counters found .
usually con ta i n e d the
ad vertised an1ount of the
product. but short-cnunting in
L.A. CALLS
41/2c '"'
r r1,11tt Li11ts -1usi11e•1 W•ict
OiJy -C11ll for ltrochllrf ..id
'"°"thly r11ft -Sall frlll'CiKO
Liltl1 A•ailablt -
The Telephone Company
Of California
JOO I Rtclti•, C.M.
171 41 979· 1234
MEf'I OF MYSTERY
LEFT THEIR MARK!
products sold by nu1nbtr "'B!i
widespread.
Included in the shorting:
h<lrdware in nt11ny l)'pes of
contaillcrs (sometimes as
tnuch as 50 percent short.
aspirin, preSC'riptlon drugs.
pat('nt med icines. o f f i c e
StJppHes. electronic p a r t s ,
paper goods, needles, pins.
index cards. boxes or writing
paper, sugar packs. dcntaJ
floss.
niese are the oplnlons of
Franklin M. Krcml, president
of the ~totor Veh i c l e
Manufacturer's Association.
KREML BEUEVES the
fainily car has been so
rompletely integrated into the
social and economic life ol the
country that it can't be
dls!Odge<f.
UE BELJEVES that plans
for tile future U.S. cities must FINANCE
.·
be&in with a "recognition and , ____ ...., __ _,,
r e'J)eCt for th& wny Americans
have chosen lo li('e."
Trans portation systenls, both
pu blic aod private. "have lo
~NHIGHG~
.Bur ns Eyes
Federal
Budget CntS Tl's the most elementary
economics that if 20 _of the
widgets in a box or "100"
widgets priced nt $1 are
missi ng, a hidden forrn of
price-hiking has occtuTed. ''ou f"l ghtltlfl ltlnd
"It helps society mcel Its
most basic needs," K.reml
said, ~·while making It possible
for the individual to realize a
basic dream or Individual
freedom ol mo\'ement."
be considered a means of
uniting all parts of the parent
city and Its suburb3 so that -
howe ver large the scale -·the
area of the greater city
const i tu tes a r ea l
community."
\VI LL I A MSBURG,' Va.
(.UPI) The N.I i: 0 n
Administration h'as decided to
prune the fl'defat budget I~
yet another attempt to get a' ·
and I have taken it for granted A1rs. E t he I R o se n ,
thnt a roll of 120 o::iper tnwel!I whose war on food
contains 120 shec1s, havt' prices began national
assumed that t he 1neat boycott last year, . "
mflnufa cturers have at least ntunches on peanut but·
(airlv precise wa.vs 0 f ter sandwich as she
.The association executive
says he doesn't believe the
aulomobile created the basic
url>an problems we face today,
and its ellminatton ' ' a .s
proposed by some," would not
solve these problem.s.
While he • admitted the
automobile has contributed to
such proble111s as highway
casualties, pollution and noise,
the association leader asserted
the motor vehicle induslry is
\\U king to reduce t he s e
problems and has been long
before they became national
issues.
hand le on th nati on's ,·
inflationary proble1ns.
checking and assuring the plans next move. She is
counts advertised. suing Agriculture Sec-
Chairman Arthur Burns of
the Federal Reserve Board
disclosed \Vednesday t h a t\
budget of fi cia l s Were
grappling with ways to' hQld
back some of the $305 b)llian
earmarked for f e d e r a I
spending in fisca l year 197$,
"'hich begins July I.
But the ~flami measure-hunt retary Earl Butz for $15
underlines how commonplace billion for nation's food short-<ountin~ may h a v e -------------become without our even
thinking about it-and how
n'uch \\'e may be being
'·nickled and dimed'' in the
marketplace. And this, mind
~'OU. is on top of the price
incrr-ases you can see day by
day on the packages.
OF COURSE. !hr-re 11re
cases in wh ich dishonest
grocery store clerks may sell
off part or a box of \Vhatever-
it·is, then sell what's left as i(
it were a full box -confide nt
that none of us will check up.
And of course. there are
instances of d is h o n es t
shopkeeoers in a wi de range of
areas de liberately s h o r t·
counting.
But this type of open
cheating doesn't explain short-
counts or as much as 10 t'l :m
percent of the number!'
prinred on the labels of so
many products.
Throughout the nation, !here
have been serious variations
on this theme : for instance.
excessive amounts of waler .
ice. juice and other 'M"eight·
· b<lostinit fille rs in canned and
frozen foods.
Rail Rate Increas es
No Help to Consumer
NEW YORK (UP!) -The
cotisumer will pay more for
most goods in a few wee.ks
because or an impending rise
in rail freight rates.
Lettuce, meat, soap. bread
all will cost pennies, or
fra ctions or pennies, more per
item because of the boost.
And the cost of transporting
the average car from Detroit
to New York City, fo r
instance, will go up more than
$5.
Virtually every segment of
the economy will face higher
cos1s as a result ol. the new
rates approved Tuesday by the
l nte r s t·ate Co mmerce
Commission.
The rate Increase i s
expected to bring the nation'!>
railroads an additional $1.2
billion a year. The ICC gave
them pe~lon to boost
rates as mudi as JO percent
but some lines may charge
less. • depending on I o c a I
conditions.
The addit ional money. under
provisions laid down by the
federal agency, must be used
to improve service and cannot
be applied to operating
income. "But that won't
hurt," said one ra i lroad
sJXlkesman. "since t h a t ' s
·where we need the money.''
* Auto ma kers are considering
a suggestion from t h e
Anterican Auto mob i I e
~lation that headlights be
wired to the ignition system.
so tha t "M'hen the ignition
system is turned off, lights go
off at the same time. AAA
says this v.oold solve the
problem of people walking
away from their cars with the
• lights on, causing a drain on
their baUery .
* CAR ~tA.NUFACTURERS are
not unsympathetic to the
plight of car dealers whq are
losing money, But Detroit
doesn't want to make too
mooh of dealer "M>'oes because
the mor.e car buyers kno\V
t bout dealer problems. the
harder buyers will press (or
d.i.sc()Unt.s on car prices.
Previously Budget Director
Roy Ash had insisted that the
Administration had been as
fruga l as possible in its 197~
budget proposals. But Bufns'
statement indicates that there
may be some expcnda~\e
dollars still hiding in the
spending blueprint.
Striking a more optimist~
note than In recent speecho~
Burns also predicted tnat th-~
economy would rebound in th:~
current April-June quartc:
froin its firs t quaiter slu.m·1
a nd thus avert a technicr!
recession.
The economy declined bf -~
6.3 percent annua l rate in lb'!
first three months or the year.
but Burns forecast "a small
plus" for the second quarter.
Complete .Mid .. day American Stock List In New York. Consumers
Union. tne Department of
Consumer Affairs and other "---------------------------------------------• consumer groups have been
uncovering a broad arrav of
other hidden price rises :
excessive amounts of fat in
h a m b u rger, pref.lcka ged
meats which wei~h far less
than t he machine-written
"M'eig hts Ion which prices are
based l on the labels.
IN SAN FRANCISCO, the
Department of Weights &
l\Ieasures recentl.v sent a ban1
of inspectors into a y,·ell·
patronized s lJI re . The
inspectors discOvered more
than 12.000 items sh o r t •
y,·eighted.
In Arizona . !he Consumers
Council spearheaded a 27-
stale bread and milk-pricing
campaign which concluded, in
!he v.·ords of council president
Dr. Currin Shields, "The
prices of bread and milk in
chain supermarkets tend to be
uniform within any market"
·-with the notable exception
of hou se brand bread and
mllk. The findings have been
turned over to the Federal
Trade Commission. -
What's the answer? Eit her
lhe man u fa ct ure r s and
packagers clamp much more
stringent "quantitv controls"
on themseJ,·es to eliminate the
short.counts or state and
federal rc~ulators will move in
and do it for them.
CONNELLEASE
I L;L .. " ..... _,J~ I
Chnro...-i..alnt Dfflef • N•w '74 Y .. a Hafchbocll
S8840 l"ER MOMTM
S..1e1 Ne!
P·E !l'IOsJ UIS! Cr.g.
~·-AARCD .OSd 6 S 10 -11
AIM!, Pl!lrol 10 l 1
A<Mm\ Ru~I ~ t P< , ••
AOoblO .OSCI 12 6 1'• ...
Aeols Co• on • 6 .o..
AtfHl)511 .10 I • 4't+ ~ AllllPDI .11111 4 1 1'1-'At
Ait!IOl'r>t Fr I 2 6"+ •:.
A<rwlc~ .20 11 11~ n•,~1
A1illMa91'1 I 6 S ti' 1-'I•
Allokl Airl U • (lo •••
AUeon .t.111~ I 11 1\o-"' Allt9"irp/ J I J •
Alll'<;I Air wt .. I Jltt •o Alte( Corp 11 I 11-16 :~~ ~J~i ·s '~ ·~.: -~
AmHe\\ wts • Ji•o• '" Am A9,onrn ( Ji 2111-Vo
Am81ltrl .WI ( l 6'1>t-\, ArnFll l.•Sd 6 l 11 ,. ,
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A Pl!!ro 1 WI 1 2 J2'<1 + ~.
Am Rn . .iGe • 3 s
Am S.ottt •k 4 I •'t-'/1 Amfl!( .11c1' 1 s•, ...
Am TralnnQ 10 ]
AMICCp .CM I 18 1Pf-\<o
Anll'lor\y !rid I Ji•, .. Vo
<IQu•llrot • .lO 23 I '1<1+ '"
Argus Inc 111 '' ,,. <l'lClcl .10d 8 I t• ...
A•rn•n Cotp 6 11 1Jll•+ \lo
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B•IKln 19 3 II 17 .. ""~-re • ..e t It 16' , .. •,
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D 8U•QflS Incl t 1 1 , ~ 2128 HARIOR ILV . &rn\lnt .60 9 1 ,,.,~ t"
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ComD Equip 11 12 11 '''r •.. CW.rctMt wt •. JS 2 •. , Comin( l 'id I i 27''°f+ \~ Gultord .10d 3 12 4i.to-\'I ComlAlll .:JC 1 2 11'1 , , • Gulf AepF(I S I •'9 .. \'I Commoclo• 1 I 1 , , , . Gulhtrrn Ld 4 l 10•-.-V.
CC>mPS 1.•1 1 I 11'•+ ~· ~ H-Compugr• 9 ' 201~ •. . ~""PO . l!MI 2 1 c.oi.ctVn .40 • •4 91. , • . H•rnptan In , • J Conro~ Int; / s 2\o Harl1nd .11 20 I
Con!.Oi1 .;;.~ 111 • •~• + 'it Harmen 10! 3· ' Con5f l'lt CD I 9 } H1rlllcl 2d~ . . I
Conl Ma~rt t 11 l''o .•• H•r11 Ml CO It l
ContTtt wt~ I 1•·• H~ll"9 ,IO• S I C-1n .20cl ·; l 29 -\'t Hayden Sin ,. '
Cordon !nit • l ''•-~-. Hell M l.Jld S .t() Courtld ,10d I> •1 1'•-~'11 HoerMlj .41 4 l
Co• C•l>lt 11 '' ,,.,-'lo HI G tn<orp 13 to
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LIBERTY
COIN CO
PURVEYORS
OF GOLD COINS
SPEOAUDNG IN
~tEXICAN 50 PESOS.
A USTRIAl~ lllO CORODilAS.
AUSTRIAN DUCATS.
1}.L\IEOIATE DELl\1ERY
C r\Sl-1 TRANSACTIONS
INST AST t~fOlt\fATIOK
il'4·~·~·7/1)6
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'["'PORT DEACI I, CA 92660
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NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
,•
'
, Junt DAILY PI LOT
Year's Hi gh·Lows
Appear Every Saturday
P1·h11e Rate Hint
Boo11 to Stocks
•
A1neriean
10 /tloat A.,Cltie
•
•
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1.18 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, June 6, IC~74
...
...
••
J..M. Boyd
~ ..
Most Football
·Players B1~uised
When orfercd new pens to try out. 97 out of every 100
people ·wr ite their. own names. So reports a pen salesman.
Most widely circula ted dol lar coin in history 'vas that
Spanish eight-real bauble more popularly known as the
piece of ctJ8ht. Only one out o{ every 20 professional footba ll players
comes out of a game unbruised. l\1orc
specifically, eight out or 20 get big bruises.
d J l out of 20, little bruises.
History records that the African chief·
ia n named Pongo of Nigeria once pro-
ibited any wife in his reign to wear more
han a simple cloth around her loins in
he belief that "I.he wearing of clothes
oooragcd immorality."
. ARTHRITIS
Q. "\\'hat are the chances of reCovery for somebody
1P1th. crippling arthritis?" ~
A. Pretty fair. Seven out of 10 such patients are said
to g~t better with the right medical care.
• oQ: "Louie, your ,best suggestion1 please, as to how I
can.get my husband to go on a-diet'?"
A. All right, hang a full length mirror on his shower
door.
Q. "What percent.age of the cigarette is niootine?''
A. 1aybe t\\'O to seven percent. Depends on the
tobecco. Turkish, practically none. Cood Havana, not
much. Domestic, somewhat more.
First of the world's horse drawn trolley cars turned
1 .up 2,000 years ago in ancient Pompei. The tracks weren't
•rails, bui grooves in the pavement. File that.
,.., ELEPHM'TS
· bast I heard, male elephant calves were selling in this
country for abotit $560 ea ch, female elephant calves for
about $100. Clearly, it's not the cost of the elephant that
prevents each of us from keeping one in the backyard, .but
the cost of the elephant's grub, It's known that every ele-
pharit is hungry all the time. '
,Am asked the age now of that fascinating .fictional
character known as Nancy Drew. She got her start 44
years ago. Tn "The Secret of the Old Oock."_Her creator,
C8ro"lyn Keene, v.·as really Edward stratemeyer. He's
gooe nov.•. His daughter. Harriet Adami;:, continuei; to
crank out the Nancy Drew novels, one a year.
Common notion is that a check is no good if it's signed
with a ...tpcncil. That's wrong. Nor is it right to think-a
pcncil·written last will an d tastament is invalid. Repeat·
eclly, courts have been asked to throw out legal documents
with penciled signatures. Repeatedly, courts have decreed
such penciled paperwork was valid.
Address mail to L.M. Boyd, P.O. Bo% 1875, New·
port Beach 92660.
'"Baby Doll'
She Plies Trade at 73
PEORIA. Ill. (AP)
"You're never too old to
practice the world's oldest
profes§ion," says Sarah "Baby
Doll" Cowan.
Police arrested her again
Tuesday on a prostitution
charge. She is 73.
l\.1JS.S COWAN WAS picked
up. police said. after an
undercover vice squad officer
claimed she invited him to her
house to ''have some fun."
"I've been selling my
services since r had a broken
love affair when I was 19,·•
111.iss Cov.•an said in a
telephone interview from the
,Peoria County jail. "l'\'e paid
enough fines to own a third of
this damn county jail.
"l'll get out again. and.
maybe, I'll be back again. But
$150 a month Social Security
just doesn'l put enough bread
on my table."
MISS ' COWAN SAID her
, going scale is SID and up.
"Those are inflation prices."
she added. "When I first came
·to Peoria in 1932 it was known
·.as a dollar town.
"In my time. I've pleased
Ul'I T1i.tlet•
; 5 at Once
thousands of men. Some have
asked me to marry them .
Those th.at did I 'ft'ouldn't hang
on my Christmas tree. I 'm too
particular, I guess."
AGE IS NO problem . she
said. because men always
ha\'e wanted a \\'Oman and
always \\'ill.
"The only things bothering
me are my weight and high
blood pressure,'' she said.
';Jlm up to 200 pounds from a
trim 125 in my heyday. t
bought an exercising machine
a couple of months ago."
Police say she has been on
more blotters than a ball point
pen.
"\Ve feel a little sorry for
her," said Sheri fr Bernard
Kennedy. "Any time girls are
picked up , she is the first one
to visit them -bringing
Cflndy and cigarettes. \\7hen
Baby Doll is picked up, no one
comes and ·an she has to talk
to arc the police111cn."
Man Gets
$630,000 ' ,
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -
A San Francisco Supe:-ior
Court jury has a\\·arded more
Lhan $630.000 to a market pro-
duce clerk whose wife died
during a varicose vein opera·
tion three years ago.
After a 15-day !rial before
Judge John J, Ertola, a jury
of nine women and three men
found that anesthesiologist Dr.
Robert T. Terry had been
negligent in keeping vig il on a
heart monitoring machine at,..
tached to Elizabeth Machado.
During the 1971 oprration.
:filrs. J\olachado, 30, suffered a
cardiac arrest for 90 seconds
before the surgco,1 Rnt the
heart sta rted after being told
of the cmer[(enc,\'.
Sessio1:i
To Start
Registration for almost 200
day and evening summer / classes offered by Orange
Coast College will begin June
IO.
The summer session runs
from June 17 thiough Aug. 9.
Oass listings are available in
Lhc school admissioa.s office.
! K°"in IV. K. Ton~ of
~Hong Kong has received
'five separate degrees
from Massachusetts In·
stitute of Technology.
Tong was a warded '~ l three different degrees
Jn mechanical engineer·
ing, one jn electrical •
Registration wil l be held by
appointment only June In
from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and
June 11 frorn 8 a.m. to 1 p.m .
Appointments are not required
for registration June 14, 17
and IS.
I
en gineering and one in
management.
'\1 I
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• Clod i111idt with TtHtll II, RIW'
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larl leftlman, Mirra <•111ultanl will be here to ~ervke your Mtl!RO·
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DAILY PILOT ;?9
Anteater·s l(ings .of College Baseball Again
• ~ •
I •
• •
_,
•
SHORTSTOP STEVE WHITEHEAD OF UCI ELUDES SLIDING RUNNER.
r ,Sports i11 Brief
8 Area Stars Drafted;
Hayes Has Heart Attnck
Three UC Irvine and 1 three former
Golden West ,College st.au were arnong
eight Orange Coast area basebaH players
taken in the free agent draft this voeek.
Gary Wheelock . UC l's outstanding
pitcher who won 17 games this season, .
was taken on the sixth round by the
Californ ia Angels.
Keith Bridges, an outfielder. 'vas
drafted 12th by Kansas CilY. UCI pitcher
,·Ray Humphr ies was drafted by KanSas
, City on the 14th round.
Pat Curran, an outfielder who played
~at Marina . GWC and Chapman College.
: v.•as taken on the four th round by Kansas
City; Bud Bulling, a catcher out of GWC
v.•ho played at Cal State (Los Angeles \
this year, was drafted 14th b y
• r..1innesota: and Mark Barr of USC, was
taken 14th by Boston.
~ Tim Richards, a catcher a t
\\'estm inster High. was drafted on the
12th round by Kansas City and Curtis
Etchandy, headed for Golden West by
way of Santiago High, was .taken by
Minnesota on the sixth round.
e Ha11e• Ho1pltall::ed
COLUMBUS, Ohio -Ohio State
University football coach \Voody Hayes,
61. was rushed to University hospital
today where he was listed in guard ed
condition. He was believed to have
suffered a heart attack.
A .hospital statement said the Big Ten
Cleveland Top s
Strings, 29-25
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Cleveland
Nets, with victories only in the women 's
singles and doubles, still piled up enough
points to beat Los Angeles 29-25
Wednesday night and hand the · Strings
their first World Team Tennis loss at
home.
f\.1eanwhl\e Newport Beach's Roy
Emerson and Lesley Hunt beat Frank
Frochllng and Laurie t"lenting 5.() in a
nine-point tiebreaker Wednesday night to
give the Golden Gaters a 26-26 W1i
victory over the Florida Flamingos.
CltYllllMI 21, Lal A"9(!111 U wom1n -Gvnter (Cl bHt Redolldo IL.Al 6-l. Min -At1~1nd ... (LA) l!llRI Rltlley lC) 7.J.
women·1 OG1.obt11 -8trtlawkr-Gunter IC) beat
H1rlrlff-SU!lmln (LA) 6-2.
Mefl'I Douol11 -AllK8nder-M11!ffs (LA)
bell Gr1ebMl".,t,llQl)rl (C) J ...
Mf•ed Douttlft -Mttlert·Svsm•n (LAI ~I GrttlHll"81rltawlc1 ICI 1 ...
coach was admitted lo the hospital at 8
a.m:and "is being lrealed as a coronary
type patient:
"His condition is rated as guarded until
such time as a final diagnosis can be
established."
Hayes has been head football coach at
Ohio State for 23 yea rs. ilis teams have
won 159 g~mes, lost 49 and tied eight.
e 86,2116 Ex11etn
Lancer Strip, a 60-1 lon~shot, captured
the sixth race at Los Alamitos
Wednesday night setting up a track
record $6,286 exacta payoff on the
quarter horse race.
The winner nosed out Gleeful. a 4-l
pick, with nine $5 tickets sold on the
combination, the track said.
Lancer Strip paid $134.40, SS0.40 and
$14.40.
The exacta return bettered 'the old
track high of $5,182.50 set ln November
11110. I
e R e ds Piek Gatll11
NE\V YORK-The Cincinnati Reds
opened the secondary phase of major
league baseball's free agent draft today,
selecting third baseman ~like Gatlin of
the University of Arizona .
The Angels pi cked right·handed pitcher
John Caneira of East Connecticut State
University on the rir!lt round and the
Dodgers selected third baseman Robert
Glass of Bradenton, Fla.
e A.%ters Sl::;:le
The Los Aggeles Aztecs tied a North
American Soccer League r e c o r d
\Vednesday night, winning their seventh
consecutive game by beating Boston's
l\linutemen, 2-1 at Boston Col lege.
e Smith (]pset
PARIS -Stan Smith, who shares
America's No. I ranking with Jimmy
Connors, was gunned doY.'n in the first
round of the $200.000 French Open tenn is
championships today .
Jun Kaziwuzuml of Japan upset Smith
in a match resumed after it "'as delayed
by rain and darkness Wedoesday.
Ilie Nastase, the defending champion
and No. 1 seed, o\•erwhehncd l\1aurice
Claitte of Ffanee, 6-0, &2.
In the first round of the Y.'Omcn's
singles, No. I seeded Chris Evert rolled
past 15-year old Regina t\.larsikova o!
Czechoslovn.kia, 6-t, 6-4.
Sptclal to Ille DIU1 Piiot
SPRlNGFlELD. Ill. -UC Irvine's big
bats made a sh.ambles of the fina l game
of the NCAA college division baseball
toumamtnt and seniors Jeff Malinoff,
Gary Wheelock and Keith Bridi;es closed
out thei r careers in a blaze of glory as
the Anteaters pasted a one-sided, 14-1,
victory over Louisiana State of New
Orleans in the cl;lampionshlp game here
Wednesday night before 3,200 fans.
The victory gave UCI Its second
straight NCAA national base b a 11
championship and it closed out the 1974
campaign with an impressive 48-8 reeonL
Malinoff, the team's starting first
baseman for the past three seasons, had
* * * Best Team
I've .Had,
Says Adams
By HOWARD L. HAf\'D \'
Ot ,,.. 0•111" "11ol 51•"
Champions of all they surveyed in the
NCAA college division ranks for the past
tv•o years. the UC Irvine baseball tea1n
returned home to Crawford Hall this
artemoon amid a bit of fanfare and
peaceful celebration .
"It's just as good to v.·in the second
time as it v.·as the first,'' coach Gary
Adams said today.
"For some reason, I feel better this
time.
''I think it means more to the kids to
win it this time -especially the five
seniors that v.•ere so involved both times .
"They wanted to do well and our goal
since the start of the season was to do
better than we did a year ago.
"It was a tough goal but I think we
accom plished it. I've said all along that if
y,·e win the nation al championship, I will
feel this is a better team than last year.
"It may be the best team I will ever
coach -period.
''Losing Tuesday night made us
appreciate v.·inning even more,"" Adams
added.
"\\le breezed through last year and it
v.·as almost taken right out from under
us this time. But the guys came through.
"It's going to be a tough job trying to
replace the five seniors we v.ill Jose -
Jeff Malinoff, Gary \Vheelock, Ray
Humphries, Dave Lyons and Keith
Bridges. They have been a great group to
Y.'Ork with."
Three of the five senlors were named
to the all-tournament team including
fo.talinoff, Wheelock and Bridges. Last
year's MVP, Terry Stupy, and right
fielder A1an Belasco were aJso selected.
ri.1alinoff is MVP this year.
"Belasco made probably the finest
catch any player bas made for me as a
coach in the game we Jost Tuesday
ni~t," Adams said.
'New Orleans had the bases loaded
Y.ith two outs and the batter hit a ball up
the alley in right centerfield. Belasco
took off going full speed, leaped at the
last minute and made a diving catch of a
sinking line drive. ,
"His glove and the ball arrived at the
same time and Alan Y,'elJt skidding for 10
or 15 feet but be held onto the ball !or the
out."
Wheelock; Bridges and Ray Humphries
were selected in baseball's tree agent
dra!t Wednesday, Wheels on the sixth
round by the caJifomia Angels and
Bridges on the 12th round and Humphries
on the 14th by Kansa s City.
"Gary has every intention oC signing
and so does Bridges," Ada~ said. "I'm
sure they'll be contacted soon and v.·ill
probably leave as soon as they can get
thei r classroom work completed."
Malino!f will probably go high in the
secondary phase of the dra!t today and is
also 'expected to sign soon afte r he Is
selected.
It was a happy, but tired, group that
returned home following the most
successful season In the relatively short
five-year history of baseball at UC!.
CURRAN NAMED
TO ALL-ST AR NI NE
SPRINGFIELD, Ul.-Pat CUrran, a
hard hitling outfielder from ~1arina High
and Golden West College and a member
of the Chapman College team the past
tv..'O seasons. was named to 1he NCAA
college division All-America baseball
first team.
Three UC tnrine players were also
named to the first team and announced
earlier in the Daily Pilot. They included
catcher Terry Stupy, first baseman Jeff
f\.1alinoff and pilcher Gary Wheelock.
Players were selected in voting by tbe
American Association of College Baseball
coaches.
four hits In five plate appearances in the
final game and IA'all n:uned 1nosl valu.'lbl e
player of the tournament, replacing
teammate Terry Stupy in this spot.
Stupy, Wheelock. Bridges and Alan
BelillCO were also na1ned to the all·
tourney team.
Wheelock posted his 17th victory of the
campa ign with another complete game
performance, his 14th thls season.
lie gave up an unearned run in the top
of the first, then settled back as his
mates posted six markers in the bottom
half or the first frame and the Anteaters
were never again threatened ror the title.
\Vheelock breezed along y,·ith a five-.
hitter and appeared to get st ronger in the
late innings. lie struck out the last seven
batters and whiffed nine of the last 10
men he faced in the garne. His 11
5lrikcouts brought his season record-
setting total to 138.
Afl•r losing to LSU Tuesday night , 7-6, ,..
and ending a string of 32 straight
viclories, the Anteaters took the field
Wednesday in a somber nlood.
"There was no tiorsing around before
the game and everything y,•as very quiet
arid businesslike," coach Gary Adams
said. -
"We just went out to get the job done.
The guys really wanted lo win il and
after losing Tuesday, they couldn't v.•ait
to get on the field to play the final
game."
'rhe only extra base blow by the Ant-
eaters v.·as a tw~run homer by Bridges
In Lhe fourth when UCI scored six runs in
one inning for th<' sccood time during the
game to take a 13-1 edge. The othe r 14
UCl bits were singles.
\V beelock was given more than enough
to win when the Anteaters scored six In
the bottom or the first.
YC. •rvlr1e \II) •-·-~ 1brllbl !fkkltl, (I J 2 7 J Wlllll"'fd, t~ l 1 1, ! i~g:~oC '' i ~ ~ ~ ~'1f:;~ iln ~ i
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Scor1 '' 111111111 ' ~ 1 LSU !New Drltilltl 100 CICIO !lCQ -I S S
UC lrvlnt •10 600 1lh -u n •
UCI PITCHER GARY WHEELOCK ILEFTJ IS CONGRATULATED BY CATCHER TERRY STUPY.
Aftermath of. Brawl
Place Was a Madhouse,
,
Says Tribe's Brohamer
Special to lhe Daily Pilot
CLEVELAND-The analomv of the
riot v.•hich cost the Cleveland Indians an
American League baseball v i c l o r y
Tuesday night begins 1,000 miles from
this Ohio metropolis.
And in tbe middle of it all is
Huntington Beach's Jack Brohamer, the
Indians second basen1an.
Brohamer v.·as on the tailend of a
double play ball a week ago in Arlington ,
Tex.. when Texas Rangers baserunner
Lenny Ra ndle of Compton slammed into
~im -which Brohamer later termed a
cheap shot.
Later in the game Randle was brushed
back by Ind ians pitcher f\1ilt Wilcox: and
Handle retaliated by laying dov.'ll a bunt
and throwing an elbo\1' at Wilcox as he
attemptc<I to make the play,
Both benches en1ptied and a bra11'I
ensued. ltangers manager Billy l\.larlin
y,·as decked twice. Rangers fans poured
beer into the Cleveland dugout.
Brohamer was quoted by a wi re
service: calling Randl e a triple-A player.
"It's amazing how words get
distorted," Brohamer told the Daily Pilot
by telephone.
"I told the papers it was a cheap shot.
that Rruldle was a good ballplayer, but
he needs to learn some things upstairs.
otherwise everyone is going to get do'vn
on him."
That was lest week and Martin said he
wasn't looking forward to an ensuing
clash v.•\lh Cleveland at the Indians'
stadium a week later -on JO cent beer
night.
How right he 1~·as . al!hough one
rev.·ard came to tht Rangers . . . they
got the victory after the t1~·0 team i; had
hauled to a 5-5 tie 11nd Brohamer had a
chance to win it with runners on first and thin!. ·-·
Cleveland fans interrupted play time
after time and finally in the ninth inning
Texas outfielder Jef£ Burroughs was hit
from behind and all hell broke loose
resulting in a forfeit loss for the Indians.
"I wa s supposed to bat next." says
Brohamer. "and people were running up
to me and telling me to gel a hit and v.·in
lhe game.
"All I could tell them was that v.·e just
lost the game by forfeit. We v.·ere all
pretty upset with oo r fans afterward in
the clubhouse. \Ve've been trying to
struggle with injuries, then the fans lose
the gaine for us."
Brohamer had doubled and scored a
run 11rior to the ninth inning fireworks.
Included in the audience w ;i s
Brohan1er's 'vife. i-lelene. '·J \Vas really
\l'Orrled about her v.·hen y,·e got off !he
field because the place was just a n1ad-
house. ··
Broha1ner came out of the fracas
unscathed and the only Indians casualtv
was pitcher Tom Hilgendorf. hit by thC
same chair that new into umpire Nestor
Chylak.
"II v.'aS the wor st I've ever seen:' SB\'S
Brohamer. "After the third or four'th
Inning v.•e became wary of the si tuation.
A lot of people began running across the
field and it got v.·orse as each inning went
by.
"We almost lost the game by forfe it in
the fifth inning because or the debris
being th rown at the Texas players and
the umpires. As soon as It broke loose in
the ninth we lost the game."
The Indians were the last to leave the
field and then the light s 111cre turnt'.'d off
as the rampaging fans s ! o \11 I y
subsided . . leaving Helene Brc'.11rner
and fr iends to mnke I.heir y,•ay out of the
Cleveland asylum.
Future beer nights at Clel'eland have
been cancelled.
Rau Gives LA
Near-perfect
Perfor111ance
LOS ANGELES (A P) -Don Sulton is
;i man v.·ho says that one da y he's going
lo pitch a no-hitter.
So the Los Angeles ace v.1atched in awe
as young Doug Rau came with in an
eyelash of pitching one Wednesday night
when the Dodgers edged the Pittsburgh
Pirates 3-2 on Steve Garvey's dramatic
n!nth-inning home run.
"He was really sharp,'' Sutton said of
Rau who pitched a no-hitter into the
Dodgers Slate
All GllMI OR KAIC (79tl
Jvne 6 Pilt1b0rgfl a! Los A11111le• Jur~ 1 Cfll~a11<> ar Los •11!1elt!1 Ju..e I Cnlcavo II lO\I Angetfl -------eighth inning before Richi e Hebner'!
solid single broke it up.
"f really thought hc'cl do ii. fie y,·as
letter-perfect. There \'as no question he
\11<1s on his game. When they did hit the
ball it 11·as to somebody who could make
the piny."
A!terv.·ard Rau said , while he was fully
aware he had the no-hitter working, he
was more perturbed with a ninth inning
$ingle by Al Oliver that started the
Pirates on their way to a tying run .
"I'll see that hit in my dreams all
night" he said of Ollvcr's roller that
:;econd baseman Davey Lopes nearly
caughl up \Vilh but didn't. "That hit set
up their v.•hole inning."
!\foments later Rau walked Willie
Sta rgell. Manager "'alt Alston replaced
Rau with Mike Marshall after the walk.
"It was a tough decision 10 make,''
Alston said. "but I figured we might get.
·a double play."
Rithit" Zisk ' rifled a single past
l\larshn ll into center field. That scored
O!il·er fron1 second :ind tied the game 2·
2.
Marshall th~n struck out Bo b
Robertson and Hebner, leaving the
potential ly ing run at se1..'0nd.
A -ISS ti LOI A•I''· DIR"ffr Jt, New Y&tte 21
Women -Durr 10) Mii TfftlHlrden (N Y),_.
Mefl -Rac:IM CDl beet PHI<: IN'l'l M w-·1 Doubln -ourr·Ktmm1r ID! 11111
Gr1dln«·W.i1t1 CNY) &--' Mtn•1 Ooublft -Rocf!9.,llllaon (01 bit! Pttl~
Stf!l1M CN'l'I .. J
Sweet Revenge for Angels Duo
Gar11ey opened the ninth. hitt ing loser
.lint Rooker's first pitch high into the
C'l'nterfield seats to win iL It was his 12111
homf.'r of the year.
l'ITISIUllOH
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MILWAUKEE (AP) -''Ho" good do
t lecl~" California Angels' pitcher Ski p
Lock,,ood beamed. "About as good as
Joe Lahoud doe!, I gue!S."
Lockwood and Lahoud , former l\1il·
waukee Brev.·en:, savored ~pccial satis-
faction Wednesday night. Lockwood re-
tittd all five batters he faced lo eam
hls second v I ct or y, while l.aho11d
slammed a decisive two run hon1e run
as the Angels nipped the Urc,,ers 6-S.
l«kwood nnd Lahoud v.·ere principals
in last fall's JO player trade which sent
Clyde Wright and Ken Berr1 to the
Brev.'Crs. Ellie RodrigUez, also sent to
California In the deal, doubled In three
official times at bat to run his string to
A,..ei. Slate
All .. _WI KMl"C 1n11
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J-' C.llfOM'lll " OttrOll JUM t C4il/f0mlt II Pflfolt ''" •·"'· 11 :10 ......
lO:U •·"'·
12 hits in his last 24 trips, a .500 pact.
Lahoud11 sixth homer, wlth l.ee $Ian~
ton on b.1se and two out In the ninth In·
n\ng, erased a M lesd taken by ~I ll·
waukee on Rob Ellis' run scoring double
In the eighth.
Lockwood, beaten by the Brev.-ers in
Anaheim last Wffk, replactd John Cu1n-
betland after Ellis' double .'.tod endtd
the Inning by retiring John \'ukovlch on
a pop foul and ~obin Yount on a
grounder.
Bob lfaMCn. r.oorge Scx>tt and .John
Brtgp "1!l'6 easy outs In tht ninth ~s
lhe Brewers lost fot the first time in
five meetings with canrornla this year
and sll~ -tv.'O games behind first plact
BoB!on 1n the American League J::ai;t.
CALIFOllNIA MILWAUICEE
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\
30 DAILY PILOT
Foothill Wins Annual Swimfest; DiaDlos Fourth
By ROGER CARISON
OI r-. Dtllr .... lletl
Foothil l liigh 's domin ation of CIF
swim circles is renecltd ln the fifth
annual Daily Pilot. all-lime Orange
County hypotMlical varsity !\Yim meet
as they roll to thelr rourth straight title.
The Knights or coach Tom DeLong
scored in every event (diving Is
xcluded) and piled up 63 points to
. outdistance runncrup Sunny ilills by 37
points.
1 The Q counters ls only 14 short of a
perfect score.
Results were compiled bv comparing
swim records from each of the 47 Orange
County high schools with $ w I m
programs. Points \\'ere given for the top
six places in lhe on-paper meet.
-Points we~ awardtd on " 7·5-4-3-24 1
basis with relay points double that of the
Uldividual races.
, 11-tission Vle)o's S\lr~jng Dinblos not
only scored for the first time in the rive-
year history of the meet. thcv finished
iourth, only six points behind runnerup
Sunn\' Hills. fhC 400 free relay quartet or Brian
Goodell. Tavlor Howe. Fred Ride:e and
Cary Oka1.aki finished third with their
3: 15.8 chalked up In the CIF prelims.
Howe, a junior, is the Orange County
champion in the 500, freestyle with his
nifty 4:33.6. The event replaces the 400
free and erases Rod Strachan of Foothill
and Garv Hall of Rancho Alamitos \\'ith
ttieir 3::1°9.2,.
Howe is third In the 200 free with his
t:43.3 and freshman teammate Goodell
scored in the 200 individual medley with
a sixth place mark of 1:59.5.
Fountain Vall ey High's Jack Babashoff
holds on to second in the 200 free (1:4.2.4)
8Jld the 100 free ( 46.8) while sister
Shirley edged into the elite with a sixth
Place mark of 4:54..5 in the $00 free.
Orange Coast area newcomers to the
list of scorers inelude Estancia High's
Steve Wyatt in the 50 free (21.8) and
Westminster·s Dave Juedes in the 500
4!5.'l.81 in addition to Shirley Babashoff.
. Footh il l fi gures to own the meet for
several years to come with Bru~
Rlimiss and Peter Spurzem only juniors. •ir the Knights abolished swimming
they'd still have enough .firepower In the
marks al readv established to dominate
the meet for at least five years.
~ Furniss broke Mark Spitz's national
ecord in the 200 in do with his I: 53.2 and
lso owns the best mark in the 200 free
p :41.6 ), replacing Jac!r,J!aba5hoff in that
~ategory. ! Spurzem , meanwblle, lead s in both
Sprints while the Knights' relay teams
're second in the medley and first in the
freestyle.
~ Other area stars to score include
University's Wit Davis in the 100 breast
l lhird), Huntington Beach's C1ay Evans
firth in the 100 back and 100 fly and
fourth in the 200 indol. t Corona del P..tar·s brother tandem or
pru ce and Kurt and Bruce Krumpbolz
~tinue to score. Bruce is seCond in the
'
no breast and fifth in the indo while Kurt
s sixth in the 200 free.
f All-IJme Ora nge Countf !\feet
M
med relay-I. El Dorado 1:38.7; 2.
Sunny Hills l :39.4; 3. Foothill l :40.0: 4.
tie) Servile and Anabe lm 1:41.6; 6.
' Full erton 1:<12.3. loo free-1. Bi Furniss (Foothill ) 1:41.6;
·1 2. J. Babashoff (F~ain VaJley)
1:42.4: 3. Howe (P.1ission Viejo) 1:43.3;
' 4. Hall (Rancho Ala mitos) 1 :43.7; 5. J .
t Cameron (La Habra) 1:44 .J: 6. K.
~ Knnnpholz (Corona del ~tar) 1:44.7.
_too indo--1. B. Furniss fFooth.ill ) 1:53.2:
2. Jiall (Rancho Alamitos) 1:53.9; 3.
4 Boss (La Quinta ) 1:54.7: 4. Evans J <Huntington Beach) 1:57 .3: 5. B.
~ Krumpholz (Corona del ft.far) l :~.4 ; 6.
• Goodell (fl.fission Viejo ) 1 :59.5.
21.5 ; s. (lie) J. Bab3sboff (Fountain
\r~ney) and Wyatt (Estancla) 21.S.
100 fly-1 . Franklin (Tu.11ln\ S0.7: 2. Boss
(La Quin,.) 50.9: 3. Wills Woolhill)
51.0 ; 4. Hall (Rancho Alamitos )51.i ; S.
(lie) Evans (Huntington Btach) and
Belardi (Servile) 51.4.
100 tte&-1. Spurzem (Foothill) 46.4; 2. J.
Babashorf (FOWllain Valley I 48.8; 3.
Carey (Sunny JI.ills) 47.l ; 4, K.
Krumpholz Coronn de! Mar) 47.5; 5 .
Zorn (Buena Park) 47.8; 6. Gates
{Servile) 48.0.
500 free-I. liowe IM Is s Io n ViejQ)
4:33.6; 2. B. Furniss (Foothlll) 4:34.8;
3. Searcy (lov:tll ) 4:50.8: 4. Bowman
(Garden Grove) 4:52.2: S. Juedes
(WeStmi.nster 4:53.8; 6. S. Babashoff
<Fountain Valley) 4:54.5.
100 back-I. Hall (Rancho Alamitos)
52.5: 2. Schwartz (Sunny Hills) 53.4; 3.
B. Fumjss (Foothill) 5.1.5; 4.. Franklin
(Tustin) SS.I : 5. (tje) Evans (HWlting·
ton Beach) and Reidenbaugh (Sooora)
55.2.
100 breast-I. Miller (El Dorado) 59.9; 2.
B. Krumpho!z (Corona d•l Mar) 1,00.5:
3. Davis (University) 1:01 .0; 4. Webb
(Fullerton) 1:01.8: 5. Hoffmann
{Lowell) J:Ot.9; 6. Peper (Sen,ite)
1:02.1 .
400 free relay-1 . Foothill 3:08.2; 2.
Servite 3:15.1; 3. Mission Viejo 3:15.8;
4. Corona del Mar 3: 17.2; 5. Anaheim
3:18.6; 6, Sunny Hills 3:19.0.
Final scoring: I. Foothill 163); 2. Sunny
Hills (26); 3. Senite (%2): 4. Mission
Viejo (20); 5. Rancho Alamitos (18): 6.
Corona del Mar (17 ): 7. El Dorado
(141: 8. Fountain Valley (12\\): 9.
Tustin (10); 10. Anaheim and La
Quinta (9): 12. El Dorado (7): 13.
Htmtingtoo Beach and I.Dwell (6); 15.
Buena Park ($~); 16. Fullerton (5);
17. University (4); 18. Garden Grove
(3); 19. Westminster and La Habra (21:
21. Estancia and Sonora (l"l).
ARahe hn
10') brt•tl
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100 med ..., • ., 1 :'1.1 m ,,.,.. c. wire 1:'9.1 700 llldcl s1mmon1 2:11..•
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BUY Baseball ~tnndings
I
I
I
OR
LEASE
1974 VOlVO 142
2door.(416352)
54195
'89 51 ·+~~.
•
BUY
OR
LEASE
NEW 1974 TOYOTA
Corolla. {1170167J
55 3n ,. "°""' .ttM.kNG.O&
VISIT OUR USED CAR
HEADQUARTERS
'72 VOLVO 142
2 Door. 4 speed, radio, heater
luel 1n1ectt0n.1786ELT}
'2977
'72 TOYOTA
Cel•ca 4 dr . 4 speed. Alr
Cond .• mags. wldl oval Ures.
(516ESHI
'2177
' I l
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Ol vklon
Philadelphia
St. Louis
Montreal
New York
OU ca go
Pittsburgh
W L
29 24
27 23
23 21
21 30
19 28
18 30
West OiYisloo
Dodgen
Cincinnati
Atlanta
Houston
San Francisco
San Diego
39 15
30 lO
28 25
27 27
28 28
20 38
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Ati.fERICAN J..EAGUE
East Division
Boston
!\1ilv•aukee
Baltimore
Cleveland
Detroit
l\"ew York
W L
29 23
25 23
25
25
24
25
28
28
27
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ll 22
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FORD COURIER
~ •• the gutsy little pickup
from the No.1 truck
dealers.
When you're No. 1 in trucks (see be-
low), you don't sell just any small truck.
Ford Courter's rugged frame has box-
section ra ils and 7 •.. yes. 7 ... cross·
members. Its b ig 74.5 in. x 62 .t in. steel
boit Is all welded. An Independent front
suspension leatures big coil springs and
a stabilizer bar_ Oouble4 acting shocks are
standard, front and rear. There are long,
wide 6-leaf rear springs. The transmis-
sjon's e fully synchronized 4-speed. And
you get all this in a pick up with a comfort·
ably roomy cab over a long, ride-smooth-
ing 104.3-inch wheelbase. .................. ...,_
lou•t•: lllt. l , l"ol~ ' co 1191u1•t!oi1 !•011111.
tu"'u11t1•• l11d1rt11I• .,.,.., • &·rtlr 111rlod,
4-cyll~er 1800-cc. engine has
alumlnum alloy haad ,,, 5 m1ln
bearings !or rigidity, 11rength.
De luxe bCIX cover with ns
11ntltd •Ide windows Is a
popultr op1lon. Others:
au1om1Uc 11anam1a1lon,
•Ir condltlon1r.
Courier shown with opUonal
gtrlping, wha111 cover1 ind
mirrors.
•
Snap.down bid liner option of
du11ble Indoor-outdoor material
ot11ra carpeted comfort.
See your local Ford Dealer
FORD COURIER
FORO DIVISION ..
-·-·---·-·-···~ --·"+• 4-··---.. ·-·--~--·~·--·----~-------------
'·
! !
I
..
Irvine
Runner
Second
Frank Boianlch of San
Diego posted a time of 2
hours . 28 mlnutcs and 54
seconds h:;i. wlMlng first place
overall In the senior 01ymplcs
marathon championshps held
on the Irvine Ranch last
weekend.
Bozanich ran in the 3()..34
age group and bettered the
time of 35-39 winner Trwnan
Clark of Los Angeles by
almost five minutes.
David Sills of lrvlne placed
highest of Orange Coast .area
residents when be finished
se~ to Clark in the 35-39
age group.
~ ... ct=~:.ii,.
. "'" tJ<tt I. Jlennell· 'LllMkY!ll C'V ... IUll 2:lo0.1S: 2. Tl'H)m1• Cory !Mlri1lffl•l l. MlchHI s.r..1rd (Or1ngel,
1. l"r•11k 8oun~ ~ °"'90) 2:21.!-4
(Flrtt over•n)1 2. "'let' P11tr10l'I (Norll'd''*) 3. Jllu1HH l•ylor ($.fn
019110).
e CIF vs. Cit11
CIF Southern Section and
Los Angeles City p re p
volleyball teams: will b e
featured June ll at Inglewood
High &hool when t h e
champions or each divi sion
collide at 8 p.m.
Jt rollows a 6:30 match
between the runnerups or each
San C"lemente Spike · Coach
Considering College Post
•
Chuck ~Fate, the Cirst.-year track cooch at
San Clement.e High, admits he's considering a
silnilar orrer from Chaffey College.
"They've offered me the job bUt it's
contingent upon a teaching P.QSilion." says the
veteran coach. "I've mode no dcrinlte
commitment and, in fact, I've already signed
my contract for San Clemente next season.
"But U they offer me a teaching position as
well as a coach'ing job, it would be a move up
and I'd accept."
He said \VOrd that he'd already made his
decision was strictly unsubstantiated rumor.
STEVE
Bl{AND
"[ like it at San Clemente and even if I
leave now I know I 'll be back again," says
McFate. "But a move up is a move up and
you can't turn it down if the offer is good." * .. • •
When an area which is expected to have
four state high school track champions ends
up with just one, it's a disappointing
performance, right.
For some of the fans, maybe. But not for
the athletes.
"How can I be disappointed with an
8:50.5?" questioned Laguna Beach's Eric
11ul st, v.tio was second in the 2-mile despite
clipping 3 ~i seconds off his lifetime best.
"I'm more mad than disa ppointed ." chimed
in Edison's Tom Lloy. "I learned a IOt though
and next year it'll be a lot different..,
Lloy was jostled about the entire last lap or
the 880 while finishing fifth. He finally
returned the roller derby tactics the final 50
yards but by then it was too late.
"I guess r'm a little disappointed,"
adnlittef:I Newport Harbor's Brian Theriot.
v.'hO finished ninth in the 440. "I ran stupid. I
tried to relax arid the field ran away from
me."
If I don't, I'll try again in the 3-mll e Satur·
day. If I make the 6-mile, I'll try to double."
Another athlete, the area's only chainp, Jiii
Caldwell of Westminster Hlgh' wbo won the
girls mlle in record time, also ls thinking of
making the national junior team. The girls
team.
"T'm right on the sched'1le I .wanted to be
on," said the IS.year-old freshman.
ft should be noted this was the (irst year
California held girls champion.ships and of
the I I events. seven national high school
records tumbled.
The girls' enthusiasm was contagious and
added a lot to the meeL Even more, it should
help bolster track interest for the girls which
even tuallY' will help Uncle Sar:n's Olympic
teams in the future.
For those who misseti the Bakersfield meet,
it 'll be shov.1'1 on Channel 4.IUfldaY from 1:30-
3:30.
Of special interest a-r:e the mile-2-mile
double by De La Salle's· Rich Kimball (the
fastest ever by a prep), the triple jwnp with
Oceanside's \Villie Banks and MiM Caldwell's
run (if it's shown.)
Speedway Cycles
Return to Action
Mike Bast wasn't unbeatable after all, but
at least the scratch maln event title fo r the
speedwa y motorcycle races at Costa Mesa
remains 'ih the family.
Brother 1;teve Bast picked up a $100 reward
for being the first rider in the last six v.·eeks
to beat Mike in the scratCh main last Friday
night. And he'll be shooting to extend his
brother's losing streak Friday night when the
s~way cycles again roar around the oval
at ·the Orange County Fairgrounds.
Gates open at 6:30, the first race is at 8: 15
and parkin gand programs are free.
division. But the thoughts quickly turn to other
Tickets f()r the games are things.
Sailors, CdM Netters
Advance to Finals $1.50 for students and $2 for •·rm going to lock myself in the gymnasium
adults. for the next two weeks," sakl basketball
'lbe CIF SS finalists are player Lloy. A pair of Newport Harbor High doubles
Inglewood High and Santa "I'm excited about playing in the spring teams and a Corona del Mar singles stand·
f.tonlca High. football game (tonight)" said football player out advanced to Saturday's CIF individual e CHnle Set· Theriot. finals at Balboa Racquet Club following pre-"Right now I'm only th.inking about making lim actiOn Wednesday at Santa Ana High
The John Vallely vo11eyball the United Stales junior track team," said School.
clinic for boys and girls age Hulst, who will run the 3-mile this weekend in Newport Harbor's Cody Small and Mark
10.18 is scheduled for June the SPAAU championships at Redlands in Jones advanced with a '6-2, 6-4 victory
24--28 at the Orange Coast preparation for the AAU j u n i o r and Marc Roy and Brad Bawnann rolled
College gymnasium. championships the follov.•ing weekend in to a ~1. 6-3 win.
Fee for 20 hours of Gainsville. Florida. Corona del Mar's Dan Gerken rallied to
instruction is $.15 per person "I'll try to make it in the 6-mile Friday. but beat Foothill's Chris Dunk, 0-6, 6-4, 6-4.
and included in the fonnat wiJl,--------------------------------
be emphasis on fundamentals,
passing, setting, spiking , .-----------------------~--------. serving, blocking and defense.
Sharing the tutoring will be
former UCLA player Craig
Thompson.
Sessions are from 9 a.m. to
l p.m. daily .
Vallely is a former
basketball star at Corona del
Mar High, Orange Coast
College and UCLA before
playing· professionally a t
Atlanta and Houston.
Further infonnation can be
obtained by calling Vallely at
67~. ..
e Closed Ci...,..it
Jerry Quarry meets ex·
heavyweight champion Joe
Frazier in one half or a boring
doubleheader Monday. June
17, in h1adison Square Garden
that will be seen on color
closed circuit TV at the
Anaheim Convention Center.
The co-feature is a IS-round
world Iight-heav}'weigbt tiUe
bout wiUt Bob Foster deCend·
ing against Jor~e A~umada .or
Argentina. Ttu.s fight wlil
come from Albuquerque.
'I1le program will, get under
way at 7 p.m., with Quarry
opposing Frazier.
Ticket! go on sale Friday at
the Conventkm Center. Ticket
·prices are $10 and ~·
Benefit Tilt
• Newport Harbor Hi g.h ' s
spring football practice closes
tonight with a spring football
game benefitling the John
Gust At h I et e Scholarship
Fund
Tbe game starts at 7:30 al
Newparl Harbor \ligb with the
winners sharing steak.
'The game is sponsored by
the Fellowship or Christian
Athletes and .that body will be
collecting I ona tion s at
halftime.
speakers include Don Lent.
Ken Newbery and Ev Oust.
John Gust \fas an All·Sunset
League, All-Orange Coast and
AU-Orange County selection in
football during his senior year
and was a three-year varsity
wrestler at Newport Harbor.
A fat.al accident f n
Decembtt ended hi• brief
athleUc career.
In addition he was named
among the top 25 athletes of
the year at Newport 11arbor
by the Chumer of Commerce.
California . Knows
Only V.O. i~ V.O.
\
• \ Hl.~:'li l•
(,o ~ ........ (.•·" _ . .,. •• ,
·~··"' "·~ 'l'.!.."'ltl• '"·' ·~······-:;,·.~· • .. ~ ..... 1>< ... 11o ..... ~ ~-~ .. ,... .. ·, •
'nt1' "''HC.1'.~ 1$ ~/~ \'t/\)j' '' U
' .... ~ .... ,,~··· ... ;r•1 ,_, I ·., .. (•!<""I .·,,,,, '" -· .. ·~ ....... -~·. ' ... ,,.
Seagram's V.O. The First Canadian. First in smoothness.
First in lighmcss. First in popularity throughout the world.
Seagram's [SQ] The First Canadian
,
Th11rsdo)!, Junt ta, 1974 DAILY PILOT :J J
Rustlers
Fall, 6-5 ,
In Opener
South Team's Top Problem:
. .
Can It Stop Wulfemeyer?
Golden West College opened
lhe l\ietropoUtan L e a g u e
summer baseball season on a
sour note Wednesday night ,
dropping a 6-S tilt to the host
El Toro Marines in an 11·
inn!~ affair.
1lle game featured a series
of heated arguments between
the two t.eams.
Golden West, under the
guidance of coach Myron
Pines, jwnpcd to a 3-1 lead
after six innings. But the
ifarines \l.'ent ahead on a
three-run homer 1n the sev-
enth inning.
El Toro added a run in the
eighth. but Golden West's
RusUers tied it in the ninth.
Ed Orozco pitched well for
the Rustlers. He tossed the
first six frames, striking out
lour ~ walking none. Doug
Moll l itched the last five
innings.
John Macauley had three
singles for the Rustlers, driv-
ing in a run in the third and
one in the ninth. Bill Whiteley
and Jerry Brown also singled
twice for Golden West.
~ewe returns to p I a y
Stinday, hosting Orange Coast
at I.
sc .... 11y111111np ' ..
By ROGER CARLSON
Of '"' D•llt 1"11-t Sltll AU-star basketball teams
generally present" well.round·
ed attacks out of passing of.
fenses and it 's seldom that
eny team is presented \~1ith
the task of stopping a ooe-1
man show.
But when the underdog
South of h-1arina lligh coach
Jim Stephens takes t h e
Orange Coast College floor
June 15 in the ninth renewal or
the Orange C.ounty All·Star .
basketball game that problem
is the first that his team must
cope with -stopping All-
American Jl.fark WuUemeyer.
Wulfemeyer is the most
prolific scorer .in California
prep cage hlsto,.Y and has
generally been conceded his
40-50 points almost every time
out.
But Stephens isn't conceding
anything to him and first in
line to attempt to put the
clamps on the 6-t guard is
Newport Harbor High's Brian
O'Flaherty, according to
Stephens.
"Brian lacks a little in
height, but he's quick. And we
have a couple of others who
may do the job. Keith Koeller
v.'as my best defensive player
at Marina and he has the
height to go with it.
"Wulfemeyer is the key ...
but no one man is going to
beat us. Still." muses Steph·
ens, "he's a good one."
Volleyball Tilt
SANTA MONICA -Ingle-
wood High meets Sant.a Jl.loni-
ca High for the CIF vol!eyba!l
championship tonight at 8 at
Santa Monica City College.
JIM STEPHENS
"\Ve have to use full oourt
defense and must p i c k
\Vulfcmeyer up immediately.
The Soutb mentor says his
tea m has to play a tough man
pressure and IC he doesn't
bring the ball down court v:e
ha\'C to keep pressure on him
-make him work hard to get
open." 1
The South has a prolific
scorer. too. in lhm tington
Beach's Raul Contreras; but
the confrontation bet w ee n
Contreras anp \Vulfemeyer
doegn't really shape up \\'ith
ne ither figuring to guard tht
other.
The South \\'ent through ils
practice p a c e s Wednesday
without Westn1inster High's
Dave \Valsh, who appears to
be lost Cor the game with an
ankle injury.
Stephens has scrimmages
set at Golden West College
~londay and Tuesday at 2 p.m.
against the Rustlers.
Tonight's 7 o'clock practice
is the last \Vorkout !or the
South prior to Monday's
scrimmage.
Trov Girls Dominate
" Troy High swept the first University. Cindy Betz of
three places in the diving lf unt ington Beach, Lugene
competition of the second Rosen of \Vestminster and
a n nu a I CI F g i rl s Kim Homer of Corona de! Mar
c h a mpionships Wednesday were all out of the top 12
afternoon at Mesa Verde places.
C -Dlvi114 Rnvlh oont ry Club or Costa Mesa. I, Kim o~v (Trovl :OU.95 '· Jill
K l·m Day fl·n,·shed fa r l.ll ~e~1mll!I tTroyl 1123.CIO l. Et!cki C~"flOll !Trov l 2U.!O '· P~I Rowe front with a Mnt total of fP•!ot Veroa•l 205.6.5 5. M••o••et t"Y~• WC!ltlt>Q (Aviation! 1 ... 50 6. K••Pfl 234.95 With tea mmate Jill lffi!nin11 ILomoocl 111.IS 7.Ji""! Ko11r Sexsmith second at 2.34.00 and !l'l&i.1m1rtS1er1 1t.t.ss 1. t.ori uurrc11 lD"~l::!::•i111'.:f~o. '·ite~~.· G~1~ Ericka Cannon third at 214.10. csunnv Hill•l 111.111 n . s .... Edmorlds
Five Orange-Coast area !~~\~ l:1,\~\ 110tJ.!£ 12. siacv aH1moero
girls were among the 44 i""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"I participants in the elongated
competition but only J anet
Kolar of \Vestminsler could
dent the scoring column with a
seventh place finish with
184.55 points.
LEASE A '74 610
WA COON Sh:tt -+ l .. 30-.0.LL-
Gold•~ wes1 cm 001 cm OG-J 11) s El Toro ooo 010 310 01 -4i 6 1
Tickets are $1.50 fo; adults
and $1 for students. -Joanna Broh ar d or
C05TA M15A DAT5UN
2145 HAllOl ILVD. C.M.
540.6410
Save on the tire that's
been selected for so many
of this years new cars.
BFG's Si lvertown Belted
features two tough belts
of fibergla ss cord for
strength ond stabi lity.
Its polyester cord bcdy
construction gives you a
smooth ride .
These popular sizes: G78-15,
F78 -l5, G78·l4, F78-14, E78-14,
C78 -l4, 878-14, plus Federal
Excise tax of $2.05 to $2.74 and
t rode. BLACKWALLS $1 less.
S37 for larger sizes:
LJB-15. J78-1 5, H78-15,
H78 -14 plus Federal Excise tax
of $2.92 to $3.19 and trade .
BLACKWALLS $1 less.
wheel alignment B.FGoodrich
· coll for 9· oppoinlmenl $
this week only
mo:.t c(i1 .•
reg<.1k1rly
$1 3.95 we're fhe ofherguys
.(ways to charge/Revolving Charge. American Expre'>s, ll<Jslcr Charge, BonkAmcricord
B. F. Goodrich Store ~ • ...;.11,tM .,..._..~....,1t.10.s ·c..-....... 2049 HARBOR BlV.D. lat bayl COSTA MESA 646-4421
o.-,..c .. , .. -540.4)43
.............................. AtSOAn ........................ ...
I. F. GOODRICH STORE
·6182 UHCOLH
CYPRESS
82'-4010
I . F. GOOORICH STORE
524 W. LINCOLN
ANAHEIM
774-7578
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( 200 SO. MAIM ST.
SANTA ANA
547-7155
'
\ . . ' . ' ..
• Dlllr P)i.t l l•tf .......
OFF TO FLORIOA :_Coach Jerry'Hulbert, le!~ and four of the live UC Irvine
·golfers he will take to Tampa, Fla.. for the NCAA college division tournament
1.1ext wee_k are shown .. From left, ·lhey ·include,Gary_ Singer, Stev~ Robertson,
,.lerry Wisz and Denrus Foster. Absent when the picture was t~en was Joe
-Oerard. , · . , .
Alamitos Entties Anteaters
I "
. " '" "' "' '" "' '" '" '" "' "' "' "' "'
I SECON'D It.I.CE -110 y1rd1. 3 ye ...
~ a. up. Cl•l,..lnQ. Puna 11100.
01lml119 Price UOOO.
t,\r. Aclequ1lt !C.1rO<>lll
Hila lllob IGl rLll
A'lol1M ocnivno Oo<I IC.sir 111•-•l
Gre~ Up !Trt11urt l
Mtllo Jody IW•l)Oll)
E•lfell1"~ Olole (Cre~)
Oupllcalt B1rri!'d !Rlcn1rdd
.l.llO lilltlllt.
Ml Pie lH1r!) •
PtPPY 'foc!'lum (W115o0n)
Khall Pro (Tre11ur~I
l(i119°i. R1slu1 (ll:!c111r111) --. , .
"' "' '" "' "' '" '" "' "' ..
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THlltO It.I.CE -:U0 ¥1fds. 2 Ytlr
oloi. Cl1lm!n11. Pur1t 51600. CIWml"ll
prl« naoo. . , ~
Sprif\91 First IRl(l'i;trds\ in
Kerin¥ Ooo Sir<:ond llipll&m) 119
Ju1tlll11;>1e (llrook1l 119
Tl!lilr lly Tiie Till (l(lllQ~I) 119
1..1111e A~I• (11...,kll 119
O.td<IV'I Oarlln (Trt11ur1) 119
Tonto B1r1 Vic !Wtlson! 11'
A\1\ti llC fltsh {.l.r1IJI) 1!9
Tre1•ure s.ffkl• IOrlJtr) I\'
ll•eti."1 Jet On (MYI••) 119
'1"0UltTH It.I.CE -~ y1rd1. J ye1r
o111. AltoMnce. Purw l3000.
OW Prcraotrlve llrooksl
Mr. Cnoriier CWat\.Gn) ,..,IOV kl (C:..r~l
(111t1ln crunch 1H"1'1)
Ml» Star I.Ith! (Morrill
W1r Chk '1 G•I Clll)lwn'I/
Mr. C"Pfl (l(nl11"'J
f lo9<!t's Dupe lW1r10
0,:.. OH AM CDrrrlf)
Jtn'I C1H1l11n lCrltllfrl
"' m
"' "' "' '" "' '" "' '" y11r
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" 01df. c111 .... 1r14. P\11'5t .u1te. c 111m1no
prke SJJOO. Thi Olplomt!lll/Ar.11\flm
V&C , . lnwy R1srus (llafl)lsl
TMff Getaw•v (Morrh )
Rocke! Duf (\V1lk1r)
Mr. SPff<I (lll.lfll f$mllf\l
Pat's OlndV !Ad1lr)
Rock!11• SM (Or'V*'l ,
Roc~e!'I Fl111l1 {IC.DI0/11)
Blrittm (Trt•Mlf•I
Tlfl'Y Gin 18r.oclul •
111 .1. Gr.tar Div l~•l
• "
"
"' '" "' ...
'" '" on
"' '" "'
Sl)(T" ltA(I ..;. 4.o v1,(11. 3 V••r
akh. Clt lmlng. P~rM ' 11100. Glilml1'9
price 5lQOO.
Golf Eve11t
UC Irvine will -.send five
plar,ers to the NCAA oo1le@;e . . ( . division gol r championships ·in
Tampa. Fla. belinnin'g Dei:t
I Vtn (Catdolll .•
R•1111rrv J..n IW1r(I)
1'1-·1 1..ilH (C"1ged
Flftl l..Yftfl /G1r1:1l '
81ondt JPS (Trta1urel
, ~~ .Tuesday on the campus course
111 at the University of Soutber"n "' Pilliiit'I ltt®nt IAllflt) 1 • ... nt Florida. , . . ·~ 112 Coach J,erry Hulbett and the
"'
~~ F IS! (Drrtl t) •
""' Dculll• tK111111~n • · 1 • 111 five p1ayerS ~nl leaye Friday
"'
Floal l'l'f ....... (lllollou) ~
Frtlllll D11:k Clltr..., CLIPh•~ ..
...:l:i._ . "-'
SEVl"T" lt'-.~'_..llt.tlrJi_ 3 .,., ...
Cllll lo ·Ill>. Fll!r.f a.lrMfl$. p.,.. MOOO.
The 0011111&1 Alrcr•lt .cc.
M1na11ement Clutl.
A 'Gone Mtm~ U.lpMO'll llt
~y Wtkh C81nkal 119
Be Surt OR \...ldY (Aralz.l l 11'
SIDie "Ill (Knight)' lit
Mldnftl'il"ll!lrtj' (TftlMll't) UJ
Forgotten LtdJ (6111'0111 in
Super ~e C.l.d•l{I· 119
Ntvldl Dally 10,.Ytrl 122
Cau111rv c11w'ltl (Ptiie>' n2
EIGHTH 11.1.cir" _:'!»Yard!. s y11r
01111 & up. _ (:l1!ml119. f>Urtt SHOO. c.111m11111 prlte SJ!llo. -• ' ' :
Oon llfr'I llfll<>t (KnillM ) l l t
GtroNmo MiVCr \CltrltMI 112
Gel Re•dy fl'tttsurt) llt
Truly TlrC'CI (l..lpf\lml 119
Third lmt~e {Myl11) lit
lrucklin M.tn ($mlttll lit
llld Who 4 1tltht~J ' llt
Ar1•Pipl)in 1.1.11~1 1\t
E•tr1 Poinl IWtrO) 119
NINTH Jl.1.C.l -4-IO Vtrds. 3 ye1r
oldt. 'ct11m1"9. l'Vr1e 'slim. Cltimlno
price $3000. • •
St<ttnk 8ft (Hi rt) "' "'
along with tee.ms froll!' UC
· Ri verskle and CaJ. ·S· tat e
<Northridie>i ;· lhe ' J·a 'tte·r
de!endmi''team titlial
''We will hav! to keep -the
ball in play and will, have to
a,d iust 'to . !be . 'time
dilferentil!J',~ H~bert says.
"I have \a Jayoqt ·Qf the
·course and it ·has . many
eieva ted, saucer type gree-~.
. 'fhere jj also a iot oC \\'Ster
and it is well.trapped.
"Tbe course was built on
sand dunes and has bermuda
~rass greens. It will !like some
adjusting to· play lhe~e,"
1be UCI ~m wi,U Include ltrrlt>lt f'1te lltltf\ltllll Mi•wn.1 {Myltl) .· • ·
He'1 T1ylor _Mtld [llllou)
FrtUoot rLtllhlml
n: two seniors, two jlD11ors and a
MiH Go Rhodt i 91nlt1)
/,\!z Cle~MIM (Clrdo••I
/\'.amleur P!errt (Adllrl
Bo 9iobb11 (Wtl-J •
-.
lit ·sophomore. They are Jerry "' i it Wisz, junior, with a 75.1
"' "' average_ score tbls season;
:. Alamitos Results
Gary Singer, senior, 77.8:
-Steve Roberblon, junior, 77.6;
.Dennis Foster, se nior. 77.4;
and Joe Gerard , sophomore,
79.0.
Wt ln11.cl1y, J-S, lfll
(ltlf, ~k 1"111 ' •
FlltST ltA,CI! -3l0 Yl•d•. ;i year dt~1. Cl1lmlng. Pur11 52000.
Clh&rge Dirk Racki!
IWt11°"l 11.10 11.IO • • .O
Ftml!y Fight !Rktlird11 '·'° s.oa 00 Co;ran1 !Htrll L..O
Tlmt -11.2.4. , , Aho rtn -Ptllt1n'1 D1ndy, Pan DH
11.r. Tully Miii, 1(1111 Gold, D•!'OY'I
Elll>ftll. Mtfesllc Cllfc, Mumlllt I ll"
S(rtlchl<I -Gt! Mtlll'f, Mhs Lllllt
Town.
ft fqdf -11-Clllrtt Dertl ltMkllt
'J..1<1ml1Y Fl111t, l'1ld 11nM.
Sl:COHO It.I.CE -l50 y1rd1. 3 ve1r
oMh lo up. Ctt !mlno. Pur• 11100.
Sure Jti1 A.I 11..ipt,.m) 21.00 l.IO 'to
Oark H OtNIY CH«!) J.00 3.00
G1rv1., C°""'ty (Smltf\) 1.IO
'fl'"' -II.It.
Jti,1.0 ~•n -lthylhm Mii\, l lld Evt,
SI. Pel9, llold Ramin, P1tr!ck llob.
kr1rcl>td -0..:ktllar.
•THlltO It.I.CE -150 y1ras. 1 Jtlr
oldl-Cl1iml119. f'urM S1600.
ltO&eY J"' (H1rl) 1J.llO 1Q.IO S.«I
l'~rr T1.CMylttl •.DO J.llO
POl!le Rtd Clltltoul 1 . .0
Time -11."9.
~l!oO r1n -Nl'QCYI Expr111, JI~
lt1ge, IC.n!gnt Of Glory, Gtt TM ~v.
Limit• llrut•U.
>1cr1lchtd -W9!!Cll Wll'C:f\.
J!OUllTH It.I.Cl' -110 Ylfdl, ) yHr.
ohli lo up. Cl1lmt119. Purlt 1!600,
Cl1uy ltDC_., (\..lp1'11m) ol.00 3.'10 J.60
flt RICI Tldt lSml/nl 3.«I 2.IO
'
NO Kfl!Cllll. -,·: SIXTH Ill.ACE -40C! v•rdl. l ve•r
oles . .l.Uow1nc1. P11r~ snoo.
l..tncff .Strip 1Cr"91'fl 13-l.st 59 . ..0 u . .a
Gl1tlult tTrusurol 5.90 J.60
Couiln MK-IUpl'llm, ' J.00
Time -10.2'. • ·
.1.110 r•n -W.nt1 Go. Ctl11f°P111!;1r,
Evwlltl JC!,; !Slatlll 1111 ~ l a
J lnolts. T ht1 OlhM' Mtn. 1'1i.;j· ~ Dt<.k.
Na Krtlcllel.
IS •••di -M..IActl' Sl"" t. 1• f'-Glffhll, ,.1. u.-. •.
l'IGHT'H 111.ACI~-400 Ylrdt, 3 yNr
old•-6 wp. Cl1!mlno. Pvru lllOO.
A<iufp0\11.f IG••~I l.SAO 10.tO 1.60 Moon Fn1 ((rH!lfl'l J..&I ~.IO
MldnlJM Spttd fWaTIOlll' JO.AO
Tlt!\t _.•to.O. . ·
~IM ran•-T•rrtlllt· 1'1111<•• a unnv'i
Gold, Hllll'{lfll. 6Utt DOii Deck, At~•ro•r• NM'll touni.,-. E•rlwy Char go. " '
k•1tcn.c1 -ou,.,e St•r, COlll)l 0 1
HOflor, 111.0(ket Mkk. Sll't'I TIMI \rt!.
~
All bul \Visz played in the
!\'CAA tournament last year
when it wa~ held in Riverside.
·ucr finished fourth a year
ago.
In dual matches this season,
~ Anteaters have a 17-8
record and split w i t h
Northridge.
There are 31 scbools with
teams entered iB t h e
tournament this season along
,with 31 Individuals making an
entry list of 181! players:
UCI finished fourth in the
Southern Ca l ifo rn ia
Itttercolleg!ate tournament at
TorTey Pines with Wisz as
medalisL
Jn a final . tuneup' for the
naUonals, the Anteater s
finished fourth in the 'USC
invitational last week at
Corona Natianai Golf Course.
tndivi~ual sco~ found Wi11z
poslil18 a 72-71-n-211: Sin&;er,
1pe's Chic CMorrll) too
1 Imo -"·°'· lltWTH 111..1.c1---=-io •• ,11., l v••r . 82·73-7~229; Robertson, 71.74.
olds. c111m1no. P11•M S70!». 71-.2J7; Foster. 71).73-70-213; "'"° r1n -JlillfT\!IOI Pl!ll, Llll0'/111 Sir. Ya QI-M<*Y Kllllen .... Spy.
krtltlled -F11KY Wiiiow, Glmmt e ... , Top Shit, O.ll1ntrnffl'.
111nnon 0«11. cer-.11,1.l.ot s.:io 1s.IO arfd Ger.i.....i, 72-77·'1l-.222.
'MW1nord {Haro -..o l..O -------'"----"'---
l'lnH It.I.Cl -so yordt. J YI••
okll lo I/II. 51•rMrl t llowlfKt. ~UfH """' 1J1 Deck• ITr••M.ffl 11.0D .UO ).40
~ C-' CH•tl) 3.40 J.MI
'M11t1 ltthlt'" IWtllOfll J.JO
j.)1Tll'l'll: -fP.JO. _ A• ren -S.tn'• Won<llf Mt,., 01'
D•"· Now Mmrl.
H•Pl'.IY EMlitfl CC ... r.el 4-40
TltM -11.if. • Aho '"' -tit&nr 01111, QvtU ,. llMOO. MlltsllC Jt., Va.lln -.. ,..,,1
CttH To WOl'oOlr, 5por!"'8 .......... Cvt.
.1.1 rver,
Scr•ltMd' -· ~I Tlett'. c111ri-. 91'ffl'.
ti lllMll ;-~· DKi' a
W"'1t11• P,llf fl .....
.WE ,0'DoH YOUI CAI IDU IOUOH1
STAIT HMDP
GIVI POOR MILAOl? CAN ,HQ.P r ...
THE CARBURETOR SHOP
IMIHAA-..ei.\ID.COIYAMCS.I.. , HUit• v
All M:Jtll 0_.,,._, I ~or l.000""""
j
'/' ('(JI'.)
BIG n
II • \ ~ . >
TALL
Suet:. e 5por1c, '''
Si.1._i..., e Fu1ri1,h.,,g·,
)]If 1 1•• ~I c .'._, .... ,a
In Mo-1:1 C~nlro l l 0 ll ~J
I I • I ' . . .
I 2 .. tegi.,µ; 1 t;
Niqes Post
Victories
Orange Coast area
American Legion b a I e b a 11
teams lt.1Ission Viejo. and
\Vestminster eked out one-run
Victories Wednesday while
Fountain Val~y rallied in the
bottom of. the eighth to
salvage a 1·1 tie \vith visitlng
La Habra.
lt.1isSlon Viejo saw its 2-0
bulge disappeal' in the bottom
of the ninth agalost Katella,
then.scored tl\e. wlnner in the
lotb . iiinil:lg when S t e v e
Roberts ·singled, advanced to
t1iltd on_ Tou,y Richardson's d~~t La~ ~~lktd to load
lbe bases and winning pitcher
Rieb Rommel, who struck out
12 and: walked ooty· ~\.\'O,
.-squeezed !be w.lnning r!JO
'across for a 3-2 triumph.
Westminster's 6-S win over
visiting Buena • .Park '°as
higlllightecl by ,'!'Int Rlcbaltls'
rbi sirigle in tile ' sli:th fnnfng
after Larry Kubacki reached
first on an error. ,i ....
. ._ . . . . ' .
•
Ba1tquets F et~ :f'rep, C'f>llege
,Ne ~ T·t(),ck and.Fi,eld Teanis
Sa11 Clemente Saddleback Colle1e. Dl.na most val uable tennli player
Hiiis and San Clemente high '&)Id teammate cartos Posso
S<'hools honored Its ltaCk and , was aCc0rded Rustler-of·lhe· Gary Wise Wai named most
rleld teims with awards • y\!ar honors nt a recent valuable on the track team at
banquets recently while cUnner. • · San C l em~te Hig h
Golden West feted lts t~nnis Mike. )Va~,b \vj~ ,¥1ected I WMnesda nl l al 1 h e aUtletes. ( captain. _ . t "'' , y Newport Harbor and San ~ . 1 • . sc;hoot s sports award banquet.
Clemente will honor its tennis bftn• · lfllt. San Clemente's tennis team
teams tonight. will. be fe~ tonight at the
Here a!'fl the award Bn.ici 'Tov:ey, h-1arjo,'Jarc.op Scan d I n av I an Bur le t
'4'inners: aod Dan:yl Jlowe shared most Restaurant In San Clemente
outstand1og award;f \\'ednes-atH!·re are the traCk award
day nllhl at Dana llills Hlgh's winners : Saddlebulc
Saddl~ College's Dan
Pahnka' has been named
Gaucho-of-the-year at a recent
ban(iuet honorlns the track
and field team,
Glenn Bradley was seletted
the most valuable competitor,
Rod Brown' was nariled most
improved and the captain's
award went tO Tim Dooley.
Golden We•t
MOtio Parker luls · been '
named Golden West College's '
'
.tribute to the school's track
and field tea1n.
Special award winners: ·
Vlnll'I' •
Moll hnlll'9Ytd: lrvc:e 1' o v • y 1
Outal•ncl!119 Olsl1nc1: ~o .1.J1rclll\1
Ov ts 1111•tn 1; 0.,...,.. ..._1
Outlllndf"ll Flold: Mar-1!114nhalm. . '°"""'*' MOii lm,,oWd: Tim McCl~tt:
Oultlllldl• Ofatlft«: Johll P•nlri Oubt•nc1'"9 .R""n!ng: Tim o¥c.Clur1:
Olil\ll•nc:ll"ll l'ltld: John Gr1enn1!11h .
,,..{'llh'"I"
Most lmprovld: Eric s f 1 r n 1 1
ouutilldl"ll Ol$!•nct: 1111 v1~11
OUttlllldlflir Runnlne: 1t11th IC.111111
OUl1t1nctln11 l'ltld: Pl! $-MY,
Girls SOf th.all. Clinic Set
Co-<1pt1ln1! Citry W!M and Jim
l..orll1>111 Moll l"""rtllon.I! 'l'lm
Ju111M1 Molt ll!'IPl'0'4d: Tom
Alldloan1 MOii V•hi.blll G1rr Wlw. ·-C•Pllln: 'l'ltn Vi.t1klt1; Mos I Sn,.,rr1l1-I: lltl1n Wood! Moat
'""""'": Jolln Cocl-1 ~t VllUllllt! Tl'frv Hudcllu1on.
l'rttMwilll
(IPllln: llal> Hcovtt;
•· l11tplr1llafltl: 111:11! Te.Ii
lfl'IPrOYtd: l(!m HlflfJ; V•lu1Dll: Gr1ti.111 Cowin,
Jv1111r V•nllr
C•Pllfni Rick Rlvt11-yr1:
V1l~ble: ~ S1111 McGow1n:
lmpo-1vK1: O•n Luhm1nn1 1n1plr1ll0111I: Y.-m1r1 snaoiu.
MM<
Mo1t
Moil
\Vestmihster\ ·~ iMee
times in the ~ secOna inning Fonnation of a girls softball and will bf! condUcted al
when Dave Twiss and Rich tea Dl in the )Usslon Viejo area Avery Park,vay ball field and
Smith, were. bit\by ;pitche~ahd followJng a series of weykend at the Wl ssion . Vi~jo Little
Art True. w3u::tcl tp>JbaQ ' iie clinics will give tbe area a
·Nemport llarbor
Ne.wpoit Harbor H. i g h ' s
Sumet League champk>n and
CIF 4·A runnerup tennis team
will be feted with a sports
award bar:iquet tonight at the
Newport Harbor Yacht Club
starting at 6:30.
bases. Ken Loomer hit arr rbi r e p r e s e n t a t i V' e in the League field between 5 and 8
single, Tony Accomando was California state women ' s Saturday .and, Sunday
•
Deep Sea
Fish Repoitt
POOL
TABLES
'395°0
--...;:. ond
up
CHUCk'S Ci)OWL.ING' on.u.uos
1151 "' ............ (1111 MIM .. , .. ltl1 N•, Twfi111 ··-.... ... safe on ah erfor and another softball championships I n evenings.
run scored on Rich Rosen's August accon!ing to John Instructors for the clinics/ IME C "'R OW ... ERS sacrifice fly. Simone, cooklinator. will be Darold Klein and Milt A "
Fountain Valley tied -. its fi'l'be~~c~lt~n~lc~sa~re~desi~· gn~e~d~!~cri.~S~ta~rk.~iFio~r~fu~rlhe~~r~· ~d~eta~it~s,~· ~~L~E~A~TH~~E~R~. ~w~-~·~'~""~•~i.~,.~~·~...,.~~~~·~~~; game with La Habra in the girls and women 14 and older contact·Simooeat 837-2676. .LIFE .. 11•11 ..... ..,.. .. .--tJIJI "'"'"J
bottom of the eighth before
darkness stopped the game
when Mark Garfield doubled, I B I 1. 0 · ~::·;o .~:~ ~~ B= . ass-· e 't ·ire.. ff er_
Ray Craft struck out two in
going the distance ind limiting
La Habra to three hits.
Wt1ltnl1Ul1r UJ . .. ' ' •• Aceom•~· If ' • • ' 1111111111,~ ' • ! ! H•lt, 1 • • •KUOK ,c l ' ! ' vm:,,rt . • ' , It clllorcl .. ,, rf ' ' ' Twl", ~ ' ' ' Smith, u ' ' • ·! True, 1t1~ ,_ ' ' ~r,p ' • ' ' T•!l ll " • ' ' Sun •r 111111n11 ' .. = olf .°=/ s' l
1'..,1111111 V1ll1r 11 I .. ' Sc•rfH~. <f OeLono. ti $wensan.?O Glffl~d. II Fo•, :lb llowef\. c Jordan. 1b Cr•wlord. rf Crall. o Tot1l1
J f • • . l i •• ~ 0 ' J· g
" "
••• ' '
1 I · :· f , .
Sc1rt •Y hllll'"s r '-~ •
l t Habr• 001 000 00.-1 l 1 Faun11ln V•llt v ooo 000 01-1 • 1. 1
Million Vlelt !l ) Ill r II rill
~ftllTW)l'e, c 2 0 •' •' CDert1. II l ' !th1rdldn, 1$ ' I· I O
LanQ. 'I • 0 \ 0 Remme , p l 1 · 1' I
~~~Y:·~: i g T 3 f.,'fc.~tw. rl ~ t ,! ,· Toi .. , :M l .
' . 1 ~
Six Co1111tv
Gr.idde1~s
Selected
"
.
' ·~:
f~
"· . ' •' l,,
' '
,;~ .
G·enerat c·a1ibrated ' Jumbo ·780
.t'· 'SPECIFIED BY -LEADING
i ' .,_. ~: CAR.MAl<i:RS ! . ,
~General's popular q figinal Equ ipment tire with a
~ .. ~png 2-ply polyest&r ~pr.d,b o dy and 2 lotig -
["liil!eage glass beltil:'Wl>y settle for less? ,,,, -4.·'.11: ' $ , . 90
·10r. Size A78·13
lubeless black
wall. plus $1.80
Fed. Ex. Tax
per lire.
SIZE REPLACE~ "'2 FOA" PRICE F.E.T. PER TIRE
A78-IJ 6.00-13 2 IC)f $42.to $1.80
C78-1 4 8.50/6.95-1 2 lor $44.to 52.17 .,..,. 7.00/7.3$-1-4 2 lor S4t.IO 12.33
F7&-1 -4 7.50f7.75-1-4 2 lor $52.IO $2.50
G7a.11 8.00/8.25-)-4 2 IM $54,IO S2.87
H7&-1 -' 8.50/8 55-1.t 2 lar 551.to $2.112
E78-1S 7.35-15 2 IM $52.IO $2.~
F78·15 fl.70/7 7<,.15 2 tor u.t.to s;o.se
G78-15 7.10/8.25-15 2 lor $51.IO $2.74
H78-15 7.60/8.5S-15 2 lor SSl.IO $2.117
J78-15 8.85-15 2 '°' $80.to $J.1J
L78-15 9.15-15 21or $18.90 SJ.19
Whilew1!1s $2.50 more per tire
PASADENA-Six 0 r a n g e RA N c ECK s I ':I . : hould our 1upp1y of sCime !ires or lines tun short d(lring this evenl, we will ho11or any orders pt1ced now for ruture de1ive ... et County prep football players the 1dvert•sed price. , , .,
are among the South squad lti-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1111111•••-I "'hich will vie in the 2.1rd
annual Shrine AU-star football
game JuJy 27 at the Rnse
Bowl.
The format of tbe game has
been changed with the South
team composed of players
from schools south of the
58.nta Aionica and Pomona
freeways In addition to Ora11ge
Cou,nty and Riyerside County.
The entire net proceeds frotn
the classic are eumarked to
operatlng e1pen9e.s at the
Shrtners Hospit.el for Crippled
Childrm Los Angel~ Unit.
The South team will lrain at
Cal State (Long . B e a c h )
beginning July J4. Tncluded on
the South TMler a r e
:Anaheim's John Lopkcr and
Jeff Heinrich, Loara's Mike
Henry, Villa : Pa~k's Rod
Kennec and Se'rvlte's Rick
Garretson and Steve Kenlon.
Coaching the soU1h ts RalRh
Vidal of Gardena and John
Hangar tner of Ke.Medy.
· Tickets are priced at $5.15
and $2.10 and can b e
purChased by mail at the
Shrln~ li"oolbaU Office, 6S5 W.
Jetrenon Blvd., Les An.gt-Jes.
MAY SALE!·
We Med YoUr Tradet
EX"allf~
lmmtdiolt Dohery
NA~E RS
~
Ol'EH r Oo\'S
Pteese Call 5-40-9100 2eoo H1rb0r Cosla Mesa
SUl'ER SAVIMGS ••• WHILE THEY LAST!
·Ouality "India" Passe riger Gar Tires by General Tire.
4PLY, ,,
:NY.LON .CORD ,
WHITEWALLS ..
825'-14. 825-15
s~
Plus $2.55 F.E. T.
Manufactured by,General Tir~~rand l'lew-Not blems, not retreads
'"
. H.IGH SPEEO . . , ' WHEEL BALANCE
OH YOUR CAR'
.$250
EA. · •
l~woi;t.ii.Mo.;l(Qs
S~d .w!w:;ek
"
USED
TIRES
' HOT WEATHER
SPECIAL
50°/o OFF!
Chains to Fit Most
Cars and Trucks
Lots of nOriskid
tread left on '
these bargains
8 11ll c;__JllCll! P'fttld ovr 1uci,•w ol IOf'I• t1rt1 of II~ "'" Jl'lorl !fUrl111"'"1 .. 111, •t •<II tlor>O• 1nr orcl1r1 pllc•d llO"" rctt f~1u11 dell .. ,,•• 1111 M"'lfllll'O "'ICf,
!
Don Sw~dlund's
•
-Oollr 7:30 lo &:00-&4'·50ll -540.5710
11 own Generals
I,
PUBLIC NOTICE ~ ' . Co1·ona del Mm· Students PIJBLIC NOTICE Pl!BIJC NOTICE J
ltlSOl.UTIOM 0" THI IOAllO 0111 l"ICTITIOUS IUllllllt ,ICTt~eUS IUSIMlll
COUCATIDN 0.. THI lllWf'O•T• WAMI J'(ATIMINT , NA.Ml tTATllMIN'T
Ml.SA UNlll'll.O ICHOOL OllTltlCT Tiit followlt19 l*'WIM IA Ml.. The lollowffll Ptf'-.,, OOll'lt ~ OlllANll COUNfY, CALllllO•NIA bvth,.H 11: , llu11Mt1 .. :
Mly ti. trU l flM•l lMMSlt COMflAHV, 1 Pl'llltd UNIOUI! COll',Ullll, 26G4 AllOll &I., 0.. ""9tl1111 OI MMIO« l bOft\11 (:, 11'flfttf"tlll11 Ooifll lll,liolNt.t It Ult.I """"'°" hA<.frl, C1H,.,-lllt nMoi ( ... f , duly MC«l!IMI and Cllf!411 Ille PAltl( V, HAlltA, ~ &ol/fll Ptlrr!. I.I Tl!ll,_ 'R. OfltNt, iiWi flflele,.
lollowlng llesol11llOn Wit edof!tdJ HW .. CllHforfll1 MUI Cl., (•I• Mitw, C1lHorlll1 t106 WHl!ltl!A$, IL.&aoul.s 11\tl llW $!tit EOwll'I J. E11111t, J.1n OUl)tft Ol'lllt, Lfttti' W, OM-, tMJ fllWl_,OM ct~
HoWJll•l l lt"*llery Sc.MDI tilt \ltOtl Hllllllng!Ofl &Nell, Ct lftomlt c.!t M..._ Cellfwllle f'Wf
dtt(fl.plloll •llitelllcl ... , ..... 111111 l'l'lltlttd Jolwl H, Pt!et.on. Jr .. 11 Cor~thlan Tl'lll 'ou.U..N •• ~11(1111 Dy I ll
Honored at A ward Night
lilfll!lil "A") COMl1l1f19 01 1 .._.fl' Int W1tlt, 1.111'19 llKll. C..llt«lllt lnOIYld11•I.
acttt. , ... ll~le Hot.Olttl ll'llormadl•ll $111 Dotlt kl o, M(C•U•. lnl1 Cal ... ,,., w. ONIM•
fl ... , CltkrlptlOtl 111tcl\H 1w .. 11 •Ad Ht•l'llOdl, 'l'orN llnoil•, Ctll!ornlt Tiiie .tit!.,,..,.. w11 llttcl wltll 1111
l'!'llrktcl lxll!blt "l "I cOl'ltl1114'1t of 11 O.vkl O. Mcttn1, 1)1)1 lttltlOOW, County Cler• O' Or•11oa COlinhl °" J1111t '•
mort or llN ac:r11, 111111 • wtlon "' 11w O•rc11n C•-· Ctllfor"11 • ,.,._
T•naoer l ltmonl11V 1Jt1 t ltu a 1 111:1111111 H.. lll'l!lfllt, Int W-l.tl'llotJ~ PJ.IU1 d•te•lllllOll 1t11tllld lltreto 1ticl m1r'-d lltoad, 1..1 H1,,..a, Clllloull• flubUUlld Or11"111t Cull 01lly Piiot,
U.llJDll "(") con1h11119 ol J -·" ltll 11111 IWNMU 11 btllltll cond~ltd l>r • J-'· IJ, 20. t1, ,,,, to1t·1• tu .. 111 1141 1111w and wlll flOt bl nlfcltd tlmltec1 fMl•ll'lt•~o.
tor i.cl\Qlll (llN•otlfl IWlllllllOtJ alWI EOWll'I J, Evin. PUBLIC NOTICE WHERI!~$, ll'lt Cl!r of Cotti Mff• 1111 th11 111t.,11eM llltd Wiii\ m.. COWi!~
0U1rld to P\l•Chlllt 11ld '"' Pl'OP¥1V lOr Clttk °' Or111Gll COWJty on Mrl tl, .,,,, J----,o..,:::~.,"·=·~,=.-.~,o,",~•=•"u=----1
!)Irk 11'11 rtctfflfon "°"'-Ot1 Ille ~llt flMtU lf.t.MI SfAflMllfT Of 122.000 11tr 1tr• lot 1111 111!1 HO.Ollll flUDlllhld Of•llll• (Ml 01llr ,1101 llilllmtnl1r~ lif•· il:3,J16 otr .i;:r1 for 1111 M1y SO, 11M Jvne 6. 13, 20. 1tJ• 1,u.1• ~I'll IOllotwlllO Wtll'I JI tloltlf tu1IMt1
lllllt H .. pl11 lnl1rmldl1hl tltt, 1rwl 11• '
tM.650 H r It•• !or '"'' portion Of IM PUBLIC NOTICE lltVINf. l"NVlllONMllNT!., Oii r.,,.,., 111.....,.11rr 11111 prOPOlfd to tit = St., NIWW't ••tell, C1t1Wn11
COtlYtYldl •net ,ICTnlOut aUlllfhS 11111111 PDD11. Inc .. I C1llfornle COi'•
WHl!lll:EA,,, 1111 COflV.VllKI of Mid rtll lf.f.MI tTATIMllft oor1tlOt1 ;(IQI •Itel! !t., tltw"°'I 11r0111flV 11 In conlormlly w I I fl Tiii following Hr$OM 1,. dolllll BMcfl, <AUfor11I, ""° Gowrnmtt11 coo. StellOl'I IJ.CI Ind bllJ.ll'tffl ,,. 11111 bl,llll'ltll I tlllld\ldl<I 111 I
c1nnol Incl will nol tit.,.. I 119nllk 1111 l!flM·HLINT C::OMPANV. cl o I n ' C«llCll'1T1111.
lllK I on ll•t lllYl-11 bvllMt 11 l..Al(E PAlllC U.NTA ~NA l,,,IM '"°411. In(, NOW, TH E It EI' 0 It E ' BE IT ~111 Yltlt Ffrtl 5trfft, Stllll Ml; 1'1111 ttallll'lolftl w .. flltd wllh tn. lll:ESOLVED tfllt flllt llolrd of l!dWlllOl'I C.lllornli tvw C-IV Cit•• .. 0.1n0t Co\lnly on MtY
hlff!IY t'9nlf1 ... ltt l"t1111ll011 lo COIWIY Ec1wl" J, EvttH, n12 Qlll)ltl ortllf, I(,, lt1l
Wiii 1111 IM'Olllfly to ttM Clly of (Olll Hlll'ltlllO!an •tld'I, C•lllorfll• ',,,.f ~ui 1111rt1111nl lo EM1rlOo1 COdfl Stetlon JOlwl H. Ptllll(lfl, Jr., JS Ctl'lnllll•n l'lltlolltMd 0ta1111 (.alt! Gilly l"llot,
16201 ti -..q. for tlw prlc1 a.ti '°''h Wflll. , -Btldl Ct llletl'lll ,,,,_., U, tJ, lilJ, Ind June,, 1•11 1:•t·1• lwrtln11lOY1 on tM lollowlno tdcll!k>lltl .... ., ' , I ~-"--"-'-,-,,.,,-,,-,.,--~---I """"· O! Tt>e w rcflls• price sMll bl OOl'llld D. McC.1111, 11J7' c1w p"uBLIC NOTICE ulu1l11fd ""'°" llM compltrlon of 1 Httmo.e, Vorti.t t..I,,.,., C1Hlorril1
surwy DI' 01111r ,...,lllcillDn ot II•• 1,11 o1 D1Yld G. McC1H1, 13lll R1lnDOW,l----,,:::o:;::::::-,::-:=:::-:::c:----I
Mid 11111 Ind '"•It bl 1>1kl In cisll; l2l G1tcMn Gro,,., C1ll1ornl1 PICTIT~S IUSlllllSI
An t Krow t.11111 tit' Ollfntel with ttM Fir\! Tiiis bll1!111f1 II !wino toncllltltO by I NAM• STATIMINT
Amorlt1n Tlllf Comp1ny, Mid tl(row lo llmlllCI 1>1rtnershlp, Tiie followlflO persons 1r1 dolnt
bl complt!OO durlnt J....,., 1t7•. 11 !fl<! Edwin J. Ev1111 MlntH II.I
11rt111t prtclkllllf dllt. Ill thi '°"'' ol This 1t111ment HIM wlll'I 1111 County THE HANGING Sl"REf, • O I luth eotrow lnc:h1dfnt 11111 1111ur1nc:1 to Cllf(~ ot O••llOI County Oii May 21, 1'7(. l"rlntllfltl Dt., Cblll Me11, C1lllotl'll1 ·-·---·-BE IT FURTHElll. REM>l..VED IN! llM PU~llil!fd Ortnot C011I Dtll'i flllot, RI/Ill E. '°'g.,...,, N/A, 111)6 Wiii
Clfrk Of llllf I Olrd 1~111 publlifl this M1y 30, JVM ,, 13, 20, 1974 lJU-7' St., T1111ln. C11Jfotnl1 '16'11
Rttolullll" In t"' Oront11 Co1st Dilly lltfchotrd I(. S!mmor>1, ll01 l"tlnc:1t011
l"Hol, 1·newa1>11>1r ouDll1ned In one! 01 PUBUC NOTICE Dr .. COJlt MtM. Celltornl1 1"1'21 Qefllr1l clrcii41!10l'I In thll Dltrrl~I O'l<t Thll IHllll'ltll II C-UC:ttd bi' I Gt!ll'll
Co""'~ clel Mar mg11 School
students who 1 c.h I eve d
d~tinetlon the pall s<hool
ye:ir have been honorfJd at lhc
school'$ atmual Jlooor Award
Night. I
NanlCd In the list or honors
t.1•cre scholarahlp and award
wlMen, class orrtcers and
represtiitaUvea:, and students
rrom djfferent • c a d e m I c
departments.
Two of the hlgbe&t
scholanhlp be n 0 r". the
Presidelltlal Sebolar Award
and a NalloniJ M e r i t
Scholarship, both went to
Stan Dom. Lee Phillips
received a Merit Scholarship
from the Dillingham Corp.
~ferit Scholarship nn.allsts
\vere Marcella Gilmore. Da\m
Ifawk and G re gor y
Parkinson. C o m·m en d ed
siudents in the M e r i t
competition were:
I wuk for ll'lr .. -kl prlDI' lo Ju111 II, l'ICTITIOUS IUllNl"IS PlrlMflfllp D1vlcl Arfllur, -!Kq.111t1lt'll atrn1rd.
1"4 tf>f !1111 Ml tor tflt m1klng of l~h 111.t.MI STATIMllllT •uth I!. FOl'Oll'IOtl Dirt Coi., Jim "r9llll1n. K1rlfl •ti• by lhll lo.rd. Tiit lollO\Ol"41 perlQl'I It dah'CI llutllllt'f Thlt lll!lmtftl Wll llWd Wllll ll'lt Jloptr, L«I tcra-. l(lm Luc:•. AVES: MEM16R5 A "1b11 r O t V, 11• · COllfllV Cltrk ol Ora11111 Cttuntv Ol'I Mty Mlch11I NiilUlllOfr, HIMrv "'°Vici,
ltrOI SOtl, CIRY, It I l'I (I r 10 l'I • . SCREENETICS, 11t• Mtrll!lr Dr., 14 1tl4. ·-5UMn lltoblrtt. trMI AllJOn Wl'lt!tn • .,. M1cMlll1n, Sm1llwJOd, Tl'IOll\PWl'I Hunlll\OIOn 8"efl, Cllllornl• f2'4t liell'lllWtl 11 nclf!l!lts. of 'th1 NDES: MEMelERS Nor11 s. Loului Ttnnint, llt4 Mlrlllll' Or.. Publl1Md Ortll!ll to.11 Dilly l"llot, Gowtnor'1 Schol1r1' Aw1rd """"
ABSENT ; MEMelEltS noM Huntll\OIOl'I 8licfl, Ct lf!Ort'llt '2'°" M1y 16. ».. llJ, 11111 J111116. lt7' 11'5·71 Eliubtfli llltt.,., Sltn Dorn, Jtr•"lhlr STATI! OF CALIFORNIA I Tflli llui!nni ii t onducllld by in WIU, 0111hl ArOwr, Simon llouOl\lv. 1 II. ltldlvklu1I. • PUBLIC NOTICE Mkl>lfl Ml11trt01r. 1"1ul llt°""tY, J1v COUN1'1' OF Oll:ANGE I t Mlc:lllel Witt, Su11nne Friend, fltlrlclt '· M1rl011 c. Btr"'"", \lie. P•••ldt!>I, s. Lou!IO llllllnt Sul~Yln and Datt Colt. Clork of Ille aotrd o! E.W.:lllOl'I of tM Tfllt 1t1ltmenl WH 111111 Wltl'I tf11 PICTITIOUI IUllllltll Ci llflltnli Scllollrohlp FtdtrtllGn
Nlwoo<l·MIW UnUltd Scflool Dl~rrlcl or Covnhl Cltrk ot 0.11'191 COUl!ty Otl JUM .t. ffAMI STAT.MINT u.tl-ttrl lt1ttude:
O••nu• Counlv, C1lllornl1, htrMV certll'Y lt74 Thi i.11-,11111 Pl!'IOll 11 dol111 bullMuj Hiney Ablt y. Oivld A r 111 u r .
11111 !he above 11\d lor-eolnu 11t1Mllullon ')4)11 11< J1u1uelln1 B«n1rct, Simon l ouonev.
Official
'Barely'
•
Qualifies
WIS duly Ind 11t911l1rlv edOptld l)y 1111 l"ullllsfled Or1nve CO.ti O.lly flllOI, ANCHOlll:. I.. TO., :127 f'OCllll' Avt., lltldllr.i •urrun . EMill:ll'lll 11/fitt.
Mid llotrd 1t • rtoulit 1'1'1111'"9 lhtr.ot Jur11 6. ll. 20. 21, 111' 20:51·1' Coron• 611 M1r. C1llfornl1 thU !(Min Chong, Jlllle cr,rg, S.11n DGrn, From Wire Sen.1cu
l>lld Ot1 1111 2111 <It~ Of Mly, !"•· 1nd lt091r F. Morin, 227 f'OOllV Ave.. Margo Fttlllltr, Ind iw,1nne Fr!INI.
1>11MC1 1w 1 11111111-llOI• of tit ""' PUBUC NOTICE eor-0t1 Mir, C•Mlor.,11 nus Otfllf" M•l-r«• ,,,, s11w Fry, 1be post-election news ror "'-bfr5 Of w \d aotnl. Tllll llllSlnffl II tllldllcffd lt'f In ic'11t,y Gii)', Mll'tc H~t>f:)ien. Mfkt Sa 0 . IN WITNEll WHEREOF, I ....... ,ICTltlOUS •u11111•t• lncll11lcl1111. Htnley, 1(1ren HIN1cl'lt, OtOt-11 n tego County Supervisor
,..,,,11110 Hf rrw lllnd •nd 1 .. 1 1t111 2111 NA.Ml nATllMllllT ll:Oiff P'. Morln HOclgln.. Lnll• IV•l'l'lll'· L.orl ttr1mor. Jim Bear was Jess than
Illy of Mir, 1t7.t, TM fotlDW!ng Plf'Mln II dolnt IMllll'IHI Tf'i11 111'-! Wtl !Uld wllfl Ille 8trMr1 Lolli., Ml~t MtlMllfll', frff
MA.IAN C, 1EllG25'J~ 11: County Clerk Ill Ot1n" Co\ln!Y Otl May 14, Moore, CCll"i O'COtinOr, Jim P11'tc, Cheering.
Cltrk of Mid KAt.. ENTElll:Pll:ISES. 30ll John.an 197'-Mtlodlt P...e..... T~· POllltt. l"tlll He faces a runofC to hold on l otrd of Educ:1!1M Aw. CO.ti Miii CIUllWllll ni.H •ntn 11:_.,, K"hr Ulldtrweod. llllfli:Y Vlft
Plo'blllMcl 0r1,.. C011t 1>a1ry flUOI', Ed' rct y p ~Id"'' _. JollMOll P'utJllN!ld Or•ne• Cotll 01lly P'llol, s tnct.n, Jfl'lnll,,.. w.~ •nd Olllorf~ to hls job ~ a $2.7 million MIV 1J, JO ll'ld J.,,.. 6, 1'74 1173-1' AYl .. w~Ollll M,M, 'Flll!W~ll '2'1t M1y n, JO. •nd Jun.I I, 13, 1'1' UU-7' Wilson. d .1· ~-id .
... mOflll nit "'1nners of (tllforl'lll I amage 5Ul ·~ es, accus1n0' Thll Dl/lll'llll u. c:Ol'llfllCtlid l)y '" PUBIJC NOTI~ I of ,_ ud -~ PUBLIC NOTICE 1nd1¥1c1u11 "1:o s1111 ~11o1erS11!1M .,.,, • h m u a .
E<IW•r' 'I', p, Ktltlklnl l•<qutllM l «nard, J\/dy l lodiitt, Th . fled b
,ICTltlOUt IUllllltll Tiiis "tltmlfll Wit flltd with tlll ,ICflTIOUS llUltllll!SS 8.trti.t11 Botk, EH1a11ttll f untr, lltgbfr1 e Sllll W83 j Y nine
NAM• tTATtMtNT County Clerk of Orfl'lt* Countr Ot1 JUM" 111.t.Mlli STAt•M1111r c.o~. Pitrlel • c"'"'"'' 'Jotll\"Ofmo. inre.stors involved in a legal
'"' •• ,-,., .... -,, .... ··"'""' 11'14 TM followlftC[ IM•ton It OOll\O lluslntlS OtniJt Otwln. Stlpllen F•r. JOM ,1. ""' ""'' """ ,*'114 11: Gullck, K1llly Guy Incl 01wn H~wk.'1 dispute With Bear over three . • •• ·-.... , ••• , •• ,,, ~·-u. DISTll:llUTOllS l!.ICCHAN(il!' 1.110 n)l'Jlld "'"' •CflOltrlhlp wlMll'I --"om•'"•'um . p-i·e~-,· n JADE 111.e .. L TY HS.S W1rn1r AYI u ....... , -~.. . . ' ••• Bonnlt Mln:ut. D1wn M1nron I.VIK.I " -• v 1.:1..::1 Foun111n v1U1y, C.fllornla '2tot ·• June 6. 13. 20, 17, lf14 1"'"7• =,:·~::-BIYd., C0tlt Mtn, C•ll· Mclod!t p,,_, s1r1 Slic~. Oi1n1 Carlsbad.
W•vn• Fono. 9211 ,HucllOll Dr., Oinlir Cl1nton Lthmon 10, no lrvl nt \'/~rll::y, M1rt1yn Weil 1nd Jonlblllt
HUf\!lnotfll'I l•1th, c11uoni11 92..U. PUBLIC NOTICE ll10. Ntwport IMcfl, C•t1torn11 92640 WlllMl'f, ' 1n the primary: B e a r
Tllf1 11111111111 11 conducttd by •n Thi• btl1!nti.a 11 cOllducted by 1n ~=1~111:!•:1n1i:-c=t1_, 1 Cort~ finished second to Jim Bates,
lndlvklu1I. / NOTICI! TO CONT•ACTOll:S ll'ld!Yldu11. SW.rll ihldtnll tltO 11ci lvld
W1yne flllllt ' CALLING 1"011: llOS 0111111 Cll"lon Llflmtn Ill flotoo..s ti t nr,.nct ff'Olh tl'lt!r toll-sin.
TMs 1t1ttmtnl Wll fllld wllh tlHI SchOol Dl1,,lcl: Tflt1 1!1lem1nl Wit fl!td Wl!ll 'llM TM'/ •••; ' ( J
County Clerk of 0.111111 County Otl Mr/ NEWPORT·MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL CounTY Cllrk of OrlnH Countv on Mtr Louf" S1wyer, l"Kltlc Lutlwt'll)I ·
11 , 191•. ii 01$TllUCT 14, ,,,, tt•lllV Guy, l..oyol1 l,\try1•1011nl t..ril· f'"OPLE· ,... 11111 Dffdllne: ,,.. l'lfllly; Birth Nowen. UC 1rV11111 Ind L
Pullll•-Drlnvto Cots! Dtl1v Piiot, 3;00 O'(lock p.f!'I. 111'1 lht 21tl dlY .t PuDlhftld °'"''" COISI Dlllr l"ltol, Klrlfl J1JPll', Ellll!Mtih Bl.Iller Ind
May 73. 30, Incl J-6, I], 1974 11.)0..1' June, 1t7l MIV 16. 21, JO. 1nd Junt 6, 1t74 1764-14 9etty Fri,,,., Ill II USC, '·------------
PUBLIC NOTICE Pltc;e ol lld Jl:«•!cif: Unl\'ffalfy Oii flt.cilk: fl•nlcler,1111
11S1 Pl1c111!11 A~. C1>1l1 Mellt, PUBUC NOTJCJ.o; Hmors wttl OIYitn IO Dl1n. e.rowley, cintor"I• EMuol>tth elutlef'. Terri P1n1ri;on,
''
S11&1-Smlley Ind K1f~V Ur.dlr<;oocl. STATEMENT OP AaANDOlllMl"!lJ OP Mtl "9 Addrttt: 'ICTITIOUI •ut1t.:•1s SlllOtnl1 -rec.lvM:t coll1111 use: OP' P, D. l o• 1"*· Newport Btltl\, NAM• STATtMINT ~inl'llllS Wll!tt:
FICTltlO\IS IUllN•IS 111.r.Mt C1Htornl1 1'1"'1 Tllo tollo'"'1llO petlOll$ i r• cl~lng·'---'-'---'----------Tllt lolfowl119 --Niii tbtndontd Ptolt<f ldt:l'ltlllc1ll011 N1mti Oin.lnf$s •s: 'I
1111 1119 ol 1111 t!(ll!lavl bullllftt Nm•: R .... l t(fl ...0 0.....IOP"llfll FKMlty lPM·llMMl!ll COMP.ANY, I limiltd
COMl" ... lt, 111• E, COii! Hwy .. CorOlll PIK1t1ll1 p.tr!Mrlfllp, 1107 E11t Chlpm1n .IY• Ml Mtr, C.lilornl• tli15 fllKt l"llM ,,, on Fiie: ~. Or•l'ICI*' C1Uforl'll1 1'1"6
Tiii Fldll!OVI e11111ntU N1rM tl'ltrrtd 1151 PllCenll• A-. Costa Mlw. Edwin J. EY1ft1. Q12 Gllblrt Dt'l¥1,
to lbo\11 w11 flltd In O'*l'l!IC Counl\' Gii C1Ufornl1 Hunllngton INctl, C1lllornl1 l\UOUll 10, 1'66 CF DH·Flll. 10, ltn). • NOTICE IS HElll:El'I' GIVEN ..... , "" JoM M, fllllf'IOll, )t,, 7S Cot!nttli1n
Orl• OIYll T1rry, 1'212 Htrrldtn t..1", l b0¥t nt.....:I SChttl Ow.tel of °'.... 'w11•. Lani lklcl'I. C1lltotnl1 H~Dtot°" 111cll. C1lllorrll1 ~1 c-hl. C1l!torni.. ldlng Dy entl tl\;"OUOll Do1111d-I).. McC11t1, lm'J1' c;"" 111ra1d K11111 Smtih, 1• crnt1nt B1y Its Gowrnlno lotril, 111tir!Mt11r ,.,.,Id MlrinoA. v1r111 Unda. c1n1or11111
Or •• 1..11uun1 llNcl\, C1H~ l'IUl ID •• "Dt5Tll:ICT". wnr •«.lllllt! WI ... 11111 • Dwld G. McCelll, 1in1 ......... ~ J
ShlrD Aol:J, 1'951 llulhlrcl, Hvnllfl>CllOl't not l11tr lflon IM •tlOYt d•ltcl n1r11, Gt f'dln Oroffl C11!tornl1 , .,...
llH(I\, C1llfornl1 \'J ... 7 -ltd bldt tor m.. IWl•d of, a CDl\trKI llt1nd1I H llm,.,.r. 11'1 w. lam~
litolltrt Edw1rd s uney, 3 SI 2 tor 11>1 1bovo P<OfK1. 1 lll:Old, 1..1 H•llr1, Clflloml• Minn.Miii, CMll Mtll, C1IUornl1 Bldl 11'111 bl rKtl'llcl '" , ... pll(t Jclen.. Ttd1 tHlllMll ,, bllng candutt9f bY •
Tlllt bullntll WH tDllllUCll'd by I lilied li)0\11, Incl 11\111 bl OPfMd Ind nmllld 1>1tlnerltllp. •
IH'llll'll ll<'ftne<lhlD, l>l/bll(ly ,.,d 110lld t i Ille 1b0Vt 1l1led Edwin J, E111M
H11rold tt•l!h 5mllfl ilrt11 •nd Pl•<•· T~l1 1t1ttrntnt w11 llltd with 1111 S~l•o Ao~I Tlltrl Wiii IJ.I I Sl0.00 cltPOtlt rtqlll...0 C::OllnlV Clttk ot Orllllllt Count~ Oii ,,,_V Tnh llt1tme11t wet llltct wl!fl 1111 1or e1cl\ HI Qf btd crocument1 10 21, 1t7~.
County Cle•~ of Orllf\O~ Counly Oii Mly gu1r1n1ee lht return In O'Oocl condll!Ol'I 'J.IH'
11, 1,11, Wl!ll1n 10 d•Y• •It•• lht bid OtMnll\ll !Ille. "Ub1l1111d O••r.o• coMt. DlllY PllOI.
P·ntl E1c11 llld mu•I contorm tncl bt M1y llJ, ind .lunt '· \l, :ro. 1'7• Pllbll1ht!I o~•nQ• C01>1t D&llV Piiat, rt lPOl'llllle 10 1111 co"tr1d ctocumtnll. ·
PUBLIC NOTICE M•V Jl, 30, Ind June f, I), 1974 11"2·14 e1c11 tlld 1h1!1 lie 1Ct ""'1P1"11d by llM
HCUrlty ••!erred ta In !he contr1ct PUBLIC NOTICE oocumen11 111111 II?' t11t 1111 of pr0p0Nc1 --------------11ul>c011tt1clor1. l'ICT'ITIOUS USlllllSS
SUPlltlOlt COUll;T OF TMI! Mr. J1me1 M. Ht i1t1nd, D!rfd'or, lrf""'I lTATIMllllT
STAT& OF CALIFOlll:HIA FOil SchoOI FKllll!tl, Mllnllfllntt ll'CI 0-•· TIM followlrt0 ll'l•JOnl i re
tlon1 ...in ""'' wltll thON ""°'" If>. bu1!nn1 '" THt COUlllT'I' 01" OfltAlllOt lert;ttd In tour!(IO""' slit 11 lllt S<llOOI MESA \IEll:DE AllT GALl.Elt'I', 7101
No, AO 1Ul7 F1ellllltt Ofllc•. locilld 11 923 Blktt So. H1r11er BIYd.. Co1t1 Mist, CITATION 1111:11 ITl!P·l"Altl!NT Strllt. c..,11 ~. II 10:~0 1.m., Mon· C1Utornl1
AOOPTIOllll city Juno IO lt7l V1111111n A. B1011ow, et W. l1y, In llw M1Mtr of 1111 Adaption Pt!UIOll Tfi. OtSTRict riSlf'W'I 1111 rlgl\I ta r• Cotti ~ui. C11ttornl1,
of GAlll:'I' LEE GOTTSCHALi( Ind lect iny or 111 blch "" 10 wal._.. ""' Ir· 1"11111111 S. Murplly, 1111 Cllurn1s~ St.,
CYNTHIA KAllEH G 0 T T JC H A L I( • reourirlllii or lnformtHllH I" lfl'I' ~ or Or1not, Ctlllomle,
AOOpl!ng l"trlllls. In 1111 blddlno. Tlll1 llush>111 11 e8"d~ttd bit I Offltt .. To GARY LEE l(IDDElt, tilt flthtr el TIM OISTRICT 11n dlfln'OllnM 1111 l)Ol'11111'alll1t,
llid f!'lll'OI" IMf""' ntrnlcl In l"l!ll!Ofl, ..,,.....r prtYl!U"' , ... of ...,. diem WaQll VlllQflln A. •1a1low
lltlnt. TAIMlll:A BETH ttlDDER. In !ht locillty In ""1)kll tht -k 15 to bl Tlll1 11_,,...,I '*II llltcl w!lll tlll
l y Ordtt' of 11111 Court, \"'OU 1r1 lllrt ptrtarmld tor eKll CTlll or ,.,,. of Counl'Y Clw• of Ori .... COlll'llY 111 ,,,_y cltM ...0 reqvtrtd ta IPPllt bllor1 --mllt ~ to lllCIM ,,.. clllltl'KI. 21, 1t74. JIJOfo pretldlfllll In l>eJ>trlmtf'll 17 of ttM! Tl>lll rile• 111 °" nit 11 1"51 fl\aetntl1 l'*1 1l>ollt·tntlti.tl Courl, loclltd II ~ Civic Avtnut, Cosll Mt11. COPies mtY be ob-l"IJOll1Md Orlflllll Cont D1l1y Piiot,
C.,,litr Drive W,, Slnll An1, C1lifornl1, lilned on roqllftt, A copy of thtu 11111 M1y 2l. :io, 1nd J11M 6. 13, lt7A Tll2f..14
on Julv ts. 11u, 11 •~ao 1.rn.. "' 11111 Pl•ll bl oontlld ti !fie IOb 1111.
dtY. thtn tnd t11tr1 lo 111ow c11111, 11 YOU Ttll toreoclno Klltdlllt of "' di"'" PUBLIC NOTICE
l'llYI t nv. why lllld perlOll "-Id r>a! bl w"•' J1 tillltd ""'°"' I wortllng d•V of
edOOted Ind rtulrlltd Ind l"1ttd I I Ille llOhl (I) hou,,, Thi tile !or flollcl•V 1nd l----,-=,==uOl~OOUCSC,.OEOSCIC---I
cnllC! ol 1111 Plllll-r ICCorctlnu lo "'' overtime --1.1'1111 Ill ,, IHll !Imo llld "~~~·01TATIM•NT PtUl!on Oii Ill• lllrtln, Ol'lt·flatl. Tiit tot-Ing ptf'IOlll •r• clol1111 O•ted; AprH \6, 1914 ti 5hlll De m1nd1lory upon 1111 CON-blltlnfll II'
(SE.IL! , TR.ACTOR lo whom 1111 cOl'llrKI I HUMAN. BEHAVIOlll: ASSOCIATES,
WILLIAM I!, SI JOHN, Clttk 1w11'1Md, 1nd 11J10n 1ny 1111:1<onlt1ctcr LTD , Sulit 204 .@ CIOlll'f Line,
Iv Arlhur E. ttrt11er, DfPl!IY tilld•• hlfl'I, 10 p.ey not lttl tn1n thl 111d NIWPort lticll, C1lltornl1 1'16611.
MAlt''I' A. OLIVAlll: ll)ICllllCI '''e• to •II workmen lf!'lj110Yfd R!ch1rd E. McC1rly, l'h.O .• SU AYt.
llOO AW!lllt of th9 SllB l)y tlllm In 1111 txttul!Ol'I Of the conlrttl. LI (till, Si n Cllmlnfl, C1lltornl1 Sijlll n~ No 11111c1er m1v wl!hdr•w 1111 bid tor • f'l•n
LOI A11t1tl11, C1lltor11t1 "'°" i>t•loct "' tortY..nvt ('51 dtn tfl•r ,... Dorf• L McC1rty. M.A .• JU A~•. LI Ttlffhll>li 121U 17'-not dart st! tor 1111 open!no ol bid•. coiti, 51" Cltml!lll, c11ltornl1 '267'
A!ltl'ney tor l"tlltlOl'Mrt A a.vm&nt tlOnd end I w1orm111t1 Thi• twilnttl It c:Ollllucted bY 1 11ner1J Pullll1hld 0.1nut eo.11 Dilly Pllo!, tlOncl will 1J.1 requlrecl prior to 1xet11tlon of jllf1nerlh1P
MIY 16, 13. 30, lltld Jun• '· 197, 1754·14 lht t0nlr1ct. Tiit PIV""""' bond 111111 Thl1 t11itmtnt wtl tllld wltn Ille
In 1M •orm WI forth In lllt COl'ltrKI Counhl Clwk of Orl nQI Ca.unty on Mly PUBLIC NOTICE Meumonl1. 21, lt14. ----~=c::-:::=::::::::---1 Gol!ffnlftC[ Bc1rct , PMtU l'ICTITIO\IS aus1111•1• lly Ooroltr( H•(WY Flll>lr l"ulll!tMI Or.noe Co.ti D•11Y l"llct,
NAM• ITATtMllllT Purch11!no A(llltf M1y 2J, JO, ""' Jllfll 6, 1,, 1t74 11SS.1l fill toltowlllll Plf'llOfl 11 d!llllll bl.lllMll Pulllllhlfl Or1not (Ollt CltllY flltot,1~.:.:.-=-=-------,---1
,., ~v JO, •nll J11111 " "'' 1""14 PUBLIC NOTICE ltOlliltT I!. Olllltl S•.
GliNlRAI.. CONTRACTOR PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUI •USlllllll
AND Dl!Vl!l..OPE.. NAM• ITATIMl!lll'r Ill.ED ENTl!ltPlll:ISt5 I UM Thi follOlfll\"11 "'IOl'I ho dOlno llusl!lllS
21'1 kYltko A"'" SUflElll:tOlt (OUll:T Ofl TMI! It: B1Hlol, CMl1Wt111 '2111 STATE Dfl CALll'OltllllA l'OR l"Atlll:WA'I' t..ANDSC AflE CO., .. S
ROllfrl E. DtnM, 11'5 Slvillt A111,, TN& CO\llllTT OF O•ANO• Trt11ton Wty, Cosll M111, C1Ufornlt
l1Jbol. C•ll•orn11 ""' NI. A•1'SJ7 '2616 Thl1 llull11111 t1 tol\duc:tlcl llv 1n lllOTICt Ofl MEAlll:llllG 0, l'ITnlOlll Wllllt l'" llticl\.trd l i1ull1u, ttS Tl'fl\lfltl
• lndtvldu1t I' 0 It 0 It 0 I: Ill: 0 I • • CT I Ille Wiy C°'t1 M111 C11!tomle 9?6'6 "°""' E. OtnM CotlV•YAlllCri OI lll:IA.L l'ltOl'lltTY Tltli' llutlMst I; tontluclld 11'1 In Tf\11 1t1titmenl Wft 1111d wltn 11\t TO COMflLlliTS 0 IC I D I Ill T 'I Jncllllldutl.
Cov•Hy Cll•k of Orll'I .. Counhl on MIY CONTAACT' Wlllltm R. 1""'11w
'' 1"4 E1lthl of LOUIS REITMAN, 0«11.-ct. Tltli sflftrntfll w11 11114 Wllll ""'
Amn~•tur
Daniel Cohn • Bendit,
knoWn. as 'Danny ·tbe
Red' during 1968 stu-
deht.1' rebellion .in.
Paris1 asked new ptesi·
dent . Valery Giscard
D·Esta,i,ng for permis-
sion to return 'to
France. H i s where-
abouts was not known.
SWEET IDEA
BY CABBIES
KARURUHE, G e r m a n )'
(UPI) -A group of 160 taxi
drivers are offering candy to
passenger• to distract them
from smoking inside the cabs.
X spoke&man f~ the taxi
drivers usociaitlOn said that
U)e antismoking campaign has
been a success. ' P»UJ NOTICE IS HElll:EIY GIVEN 111111 COlllllll , .. ,. "' 0.1no• countv oft MIY
Pltfllltllld Or•rioe C011I Dilly Piiot. EDITH FARllELI.. and E TH E L 2*. lt11 1-------.... o------
MtY 11, 2:1. lCJ, "nd Junt f, HI• 11 .. ·14 JACKSON, 11 Co-n1C11trlc11 of 1111 1..111 •>ctn PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NO!l,CE
, ..
wm (If t..OU•i REITMAN. CIKHSld. fllv• P11bl1111e<1 D••nG• Co•'' Di lly Pl101.l---co=oc,,-,.-,=c===----I
llled hfttfn I pt!ll1on for Ordtl' OlrKllnG MIV )0 Ind J11111 I, 1l. 2o. lt1' 1f30.1~ .. ICT'ITIOUS 11\JStllllSS conv•Y•n« ol 111:111 Pn:iptl1\t to Ca"""'le!l""-'-"'"'--~·~...,.,,,.'°",---1 De<:edetil'I Cfltllrl(t or1ntl1t1 111 ll!t lulfYi PUBLIC NOTICE •AMI JTATl.MIHT FICTITIOUS IUll NtSS rlthl 11111 ootlon ra P\lr1;1'1111 ctrlllfl rMI The lollow'lnt Ptt-''' do!l'G
NAMI STATtMllrfT oPerlV tntttl'd Into bV lllt dle.otfll In • ~tll'tffl 11; ' Tfle lollowlno PlrKM'll 1r• doing:. t1'9t11n1: lllcl UHION LAND l'IC:TITIOUS aUllMISf t.:ESCOULtE MEDICAL aE!IVICES,
bu1l{lt1i 11: COMPAN'I' INC 1tld rNI 1trOl*hl lo bl 111.t.MI tT•TtMlffl' U\ HOfflllll 111:4. No. IOI, 'N>twPOrl
AUlll:OltA. c HA It TE R s' 111n tOlllltYtd ~"' ;111111111 ]ft""' CounlV of . Thi tollOWll'IQ ,.,._ 11 '°'"' 11111!nm BMC~, c.. t2'60 Slltrl)rOOlt,, Tu1l1n, C1lllornl1 '26*0 Rllllnldt Sllrt of Cil!tornli, Rhlrenct 11; Ill ltOblrl [. L.lml>tfl, \:.OJ 1Cl1191 ltd .. Kll'IMlh A. J~tGn. 11'12 5htrbrook, IO"wNch'll f!lldl for Jyrtller ,.r11cvt1r.. Mll..LIOff, 311111 ltldfllll .IOI. S, I II N"""°" ... ,1\, Cll. '26'0
TU>lln, Ctltloml• '2'90 nd ll'ltl 1111 tlml INI plac:I (If htftlftC[ "" \Of, Co1i. Mell. C11!lorflft ,.,.,. SvtYI• L. Lltnlltrt, 1J01 l(in(t1 !Id.,
D•"1d P. Stroud. 21' W1lnlll, Ne~. 1 ,,.. 1111 lletn 111 !'Of J unt '"' ,,, .. 11 (lllt'I"' A. 011ptOt1, UI lrvl111 A"I.. Ml~oa..11, C1, ~
C1tllornr1 '2662 :'oo 1 m In "'' courtroom o1 No. IOf, Ntwp9r! 91uh, C1lttornl1 ttUO Tllll tml1'1111 It ctndu<ttcl·bY I a-•I Jeck Vlntrnl, um s1n11 L11nor1, O.Wi.,.;.,,t' ,.., i of Mid court, " 1'0l1 Tlllt t111t1111• 11 ~ bi' 1n 111rtMl'ffllP.
Rt\lnllln V1U1v, C1llfornl1 '2711 Clvlc Ctnltr °''"' Wnl, In ttM City ol lllCttV16utl. ltoMrl £, L-""11111 lltl w1 tflt T1'111 1111t111111 It toflduocttd fl'lt I IH'Ml'll itn!t Ant (l1ltornll Cl'llrln A., Guotoll _..._ IM Tflhl llttemlnt _, It lh
plflMfllllp. ' O !ff• j-4. t'1i Tilll 1t1lflTlllll Wi t tlltd "'"" Countv Cler• ol Ottl'IOI CounlY Oii MltY tttnntlh JoMtOll 1 i,y E ST JOHN COUfll~ Cletk If Ortl'IOI (61111111 Ill M1r :II. 1'14.
T1'llt 111r.m1n1 w11 n1e11 w1111 1111 ciiunt' '"" ' n, ,." -PIUU
COUfllV (lffk of Or•not C"""ly 111'1 M1y MALSTl.AO ~AIC.t• AlfO ITl!ltLllllO "*"' l"UllHtl\ld Orltlff CM,! Dilly ~IOll.
a. 1n' w ,,...; tt w1o • 1~~-~~"~""~2°'='""~~e~oo~•~·~·~·'~"~'~'~"'~·/':"":':..::"-::..:'~'"~'~-i;~'·~·~·~"'~·j,"~'i':~'"=-'·""/ l'Mtl& ::. ,,; C;N""1111 •11 MIY )0, ltilcl J-,, ll, 111. 1t7l "°"''' P~I"* °''"°' '°''' D••ly flHot. Ttl· 1;m"' ...,,., PUBl4C NOTICE M•V ... --Jl/f'MI ii, 1l. 20. lfJt ltn•1' Antn..VI .... (Mft(Vtrkll PUBLIC NOTICE :=ft
fllllllhhld ora1111 tonl Oil~ flllol, NOTICI 0# llllft~ TO lltfAel
PUBLIC NO'l1CE J11n1 6, 1, ,,. '''' *'·" 1'1CTn1ous llU11111JS ','-•"'••'•u'.u.. 01' M.COf'OL~ 111.t.MI ITATIMl!lllT ,..
,,CtlflOllS •VllMISI PUBUC NOTICE Thi follnlfN ,..._ .,. C161nt J11111·2.tl1'
NAMI STATIMIMT 1---------,.,.,.,.,----lllull'llH 1t: to WHOM IT MAY COHCE"H: IOUOWlllO pl!'lGl'I II cto1111 111/Jllllll ,_,,IOUS 1us1111•11 tl!O'I INSTALLATION AND lll:El'A11t $\Jtllecl .. '-"" "' It'll ~ '"' SElt\llCli. tQ' l'lllhweod 0 ' • • 110fltd hit, Mtkt It ..... fl\llfl tllll ffl A\.fAY I M fl 0 " T t; It S AND N.t.Ma ST•TIMllllT Hut1!1111tlllfl IMCll C11llotnl• '7tl6 lfll IN\clllnltl'*I fll'OPO#t to ttH tl<ONillc
DISTlll:llUTDlll:S. -.. lf'W B11111.. No, Tiie foltow!no,....,... lrt OOfN buf.lfllll '" P. llld 1"1trtcl1 L.. C.11tf'llt, t'SU "'"""'" at th9 ~Mt, dntrMIM ••
DJ Cost1 MIN· Ct llf,.-1111 '26;t It: ••••N•L 1..10 tD•TOlt, l I'D 1'1!11wood °'" H\lfllfntlOll '""" tatlOWI: llMU Wffl lflh '""'· Cott• t'1rt D. G_,., ttn A1i.f Clrclt, N C Ctlltorfll C1ll~1 .,... MtM. Clllfwnl1, , llovM1ln Vall..,, C11uor .. l• HJOI Nr Blvd.. Olll MIMI. • Tl1t1 l>u11M:U ,, coftOuclM , •• llOl'lll'al llWIUl"I to WC~ lnt9t1110tl. '""
Thlt blr1IM'' I• COtldllCtld bi' 11'1 ~1*"' It Ind C.,Ol~l'I L. ltKlll. 011 ..,.1111rtlll11. """""ltl'lld 1. '""vino lo 11\o Olp1rttntnl
lllOMllUll • c !llornlo t1l'U Tlcl F. C.llfT'lill 1 tf AICOllOl1c '""''°' tonl,ol kit l•w•net C••t D GtOtlt l..•fll-. Sll'ltl AM, a tll Tiii' 11119'"'"1 w11 lllte wl"' IN of 11'1 •lcoho!lc: llt""llll lie-IOI" ffltM l'~h ,, •• ..,,fnt w ' l(ftd wltl\ 111111 Thi• 91-"COflOllClld trf a 9'1111 COlllllY Cl1rk of °''"" C411fthl Otl ~ prt flllMI II IOllOWl l ...... On Slit
County CltrK Of Or111119 COVIii\' l'I Mir 1>1rlM•~ 11;. Ill U, ,.,. ,,_ OW.II (P\lb/1c flr1m11 .. )
21 lt7.t. \,.. · If 1'10ft Ltonf M. Wtnl
• l'JUll c 0 Uy .. llot '111111.t.h .. 0!'1~0• (0411 Dlllr 1'11(11/ fll*lttNd Orano• C••U 0.hr 1'1111, "~titltlltd Or•no_e C011I D•llY ,,lbl, l'u•llt1>tc11 ,,~"'\~, otfl 1
1"1,14 Mir i•, 1>. Jo. 1no Jlint '· 1tl4 ''tN JUl'\tl " ,.,, 10t5·1• Mir ;io, '"" Ju"• •· u . :o. 1•11 190'•1' Ju.,• '' , • • •
• ,
a Sen Diego city council man.
Nobility in batches ~·ere
present al the maniage in
Switzerland of P r i n c es s
Cadterbie Napoleon Bonap1rte
and Atarquess Nico S 1 n
1'1artblo d• S.n GermaJHI.
The Roman Catholic
ceremony was held at the
home of the bride's father.
Prince Louis Bonaparte
Napolton. ~.
Among notables present,
raml!y sources reported, were
Belgian King Baudoula and
Qvetn Fablol1.
The 2.'J-.yoor~ld bride is the
eld~t Swiss-born daughter or
Prince l.oois. The marquess,
26. is a descent ol an ancient
(taly.
Presldenl Nllon's c I o s e
friend , Cbarle1 • • Be be ' •
llebno, baa sold hi! ~fonroe
1..&1'<1 and Title Co., which has
headquartered in Key U'est.
Fla. The amount Involved waS
not disc!GM.'d:
Robert Dioe , president ot
the purchasing firm. First
Federal ~vings and Loon
Association of the. Florida
Keys, said negotiations began
last August. Not included in
the sale is the frame building
that houses the title search
company.
Gene L Tunney, son of the
former heavyweight boxing
champ and brOther of Sen.
John Twmey, was elected
district attorney for Sonoma
County.
Tunney. 42, had been a
deputy public defender.
~fr1. Margaret Tr a d e a a
returned to her hometown of
Vancouver and introduced her _
husband, lhe Canadian Prime
minister, at a campaign rally
a' "a beautJful guy."
H~r husband , she said , "A
very loving person. And in the
thtce years l'\'e been married
to .him he's taught me a lot
about loving."
1be rcmairk drew applause
ahd laughter from the crowd.
San Jose ~fayor Norman Y.
Mlneta won the Democratic
congressional nomination in
C.allfornla's 13th District by a
wide margin.
Mi.11eta will face rormcr
Asoep>blym•.n GeMt• w .
Mw.M, the Reppbl..ican winner.
in the November gcner~d
ele<tlon.
Mlneta, cl Japa..,. de&c<nt,
garnered 44.515 vota
nearly 79 percent of !he
Dtmoa"atic \'Otet.
The Stoakl confinned the
nomination ot AJr Force Cien.
Georse s. Bnn to be
chairman of the Joitlt Chiefs
of Stiff.
Brown, chief or staff of the
Air F'ortt, will succeed Adm. Thom•• U. Moorer in the
nation's top milllary position
for a two-year term.
ThurW.,, JuM 6, 1974 DA.IL V PllDT
.,
•
, TONIGHT'S ,. •' '\.
TV IDGIIlJGHTS ' •
CBS fJ 9:00 -"The Prime of ~II" Jean Brodle.''1 ~taggie Smith won an Osc;ar for her portrayal of ID
unconventio~al school teacher Jn this 1970 dri.ma. rti
NBC D 10:00 -Comedyworld. A new summer. series debuts with Jackie C90pe.r, Barbara Feldonv ·'
and Nipsey Russell sharing the hosting duties along ~
with clips of the great silent movie comics.
KTl'V m 12:00 -"Phllt." Judy Holliday and
Jack Lemmon star with Kim Novak in this co1nedy
about marriage on the rocks.
TV BAILY LOG
Thursday
Evening
JUNE I
,, ..... (J)ll)l!JaJ ....
Q)fj~(i)tfl.llll .... . .....
OO HllH'•*'"" D hftf1ll Hlllbillit1
• lllinlM: 1111,.llitllt . .......
m D '"" Glllultr I . ....: (llt) "'Opu1tio1 Mlitl'' ~t) '65 -Gtu11ts Wilson, Uat-1 To1111u l. 1 m 11tt111111MP lt4t• w ...........
rintlln, Cellt JohnlOll, Gmdo1
Jai:bon, Di111t G111aon, J1.1t C111.
All W"1CC1n~ent1on1J ithool lfl(iltf
cr111t1 hti'OC In lht li'ltS ol h11
youn1 1111 slud1nb wl!Olt lmpru ••
slon1blt mlnd1 tile lolll wilh 1111
Otl'ft 1rtisllc1l)J i nd polilic1lly r•vo~ •
lutlontry lde11. Sh• intdvertenllt
CIUU1 tht det1h ol !Ml i lfl, 111d ,
1nolh11 Jt11Du1ly inti b1ut1!1y 111~ /1
to tu 111in11t !he teachu's chuac-
ttr. , r. 0 ~ 00 IJj m l11111ide "Tw\ tf
Hufldr1cl l.lr1e" (R) Ptlll Bur~\'
111tsl1 11 1 caplurtd b•n-rollbtl
WbOWI c1111ltdt11lt hl1 tKlptd ••lh
Ille 5200,000 loot. ,
0 @(1.)Q)avn1 ru '1he W11
of YIOltnce H11 No Mind" (llJ Cacne
lindl hir!lull u u1h1 1n the m1dtlle
Ol!ltn 1 1no ol Chin11e "Rollin ~"
11deu ,re1 on daim jumptr1. Gt•J
':lO (j) Dtaltr't CMk1 Merrill, l!•ll Wttvtr ind Robtn lllD
QI tkt; V• ~ fUtS1.
~ Mel'f Crilti-Slllw 0 •HIJ lir1h1111 At1J:on1 Clvsadt
U1l (I) He1 .. ·1 th1tt1 fE W1t ' ~1u
ti!J 1Mal Ill AcllllOl~IMI .~=~", . ~ ~11 TV Mou1 m ~1 ... li '!JO r~6 TIM lolll DMS
1:00 II (]) D n m aJ Ntin . Noc~t de li1t1 u hwllil1 7W Dmllltt 0111111
Ci) llltwill: (ZIA:llf) "Mlwl & ... 10:00 O .U@ :I§.m ,lt[Ml(lt( Co~ J'lflll" (dr•J '~] -Roblrt 11)'101, fclporld Jte~11 Cooptr, B11b11a ft
lltlflOI tl11ktr. dOl'I and Nipw, RUSHll 11' 11051$ 0
I l11t111 $plcl I !his new sum-fl\tt H•iet ul)tizl111 lilm
'#Mt'• .,. U111? j and 1•114: foot11t of comtdi1ns It
I LM llfq • work in nithlc!ubt, 11so1ts or OCPU· n l1M1 A Tllltl lar 11thuin1 1lte1 such 11 !hi
(11! ffi I Dttt• Ill Jt11111it F1i11's Club (Hollywood), Nate 1t14
fl:) liiialNI Al'1 (81~1r11 H~Js), and lhe Sl111 l'l1 (j) lhtpet Dtlitalesun (New Yo1k City). Com·
fL) ~ lipt, t. leN A Mlt hOUI tllned 'lli!h '1iff" pufor1111nt.es w,NI
sp1c11l on lllileraey and wn11 15 bt dame mmtlfr 1001111 from bcilll
l>tin1 done. to combll 11 •n C1t1e1 111tint and M>Und cllPS or such ttt~f\ ~-OU lht ftl~IOtl. IS Cfllrllt Chaplin, HJrolcl Lloyd, 11])) ltnil Bu1t11 it.tlOft W lht M1r1 81011t
lk1111 ers.
Tllt·lnitll Mldfc1t 8 !I.!~ jj N nl'lt ""SU atJ CB S::ti el S.n hMt
citc1 CR Wht• 1 mu1ti·milhon1l11 1'JO i°'-WtlQ G111t Mplthts \R) sllmp co lltc!Df is ml!ldlfl'd, ifs
) M111•'• MftMS poisil>ll 1111 wotld's mosl fl1111Mre
fttw PrlOI 11 lllPI post11e stamp his be•n sloltn. ""' nr Mll&*f Onil'• Gitt• (R) Earl Kollim1n and .le11k1 Walllt
~C..C..VttlH • 1uesl.
Millit1 $ llltvi1: 11111 "M1111 0...., lfM" (ldv) 'SZ--luol fl)'nn. Ruthi m h1IM !lilt Lei• Chrll
Rom1n. ,JO:JO (ii Pt1ry M11M @.I WIW Kl•,._ l ift C.s~ m TNl Cit! l1 Cillllltll Crill
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Orange Counly's UHF television 5tation, KOCE-TY. has
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listinp of Channt! SO's programs are carritd In lbe D11ily.
Pilot's TV Week each Sunday.
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,,
3 ;f DAILY PILOT Thursday, June f,, }q74
•. ,,.. ...... Top Performances in SCR Drama
, •• 1111 ...
Costa Mesa Ovic Pfoyhou ..
P'll:SIHTS
"U.T.B.U."
l"U11h•""'rT• le ~ ...... I
ltOJ £1u C•til Hwy, ~ co110HA 011.. M.-.1t The pren11se that superior llJS ~tISTRESS, played by gt>ts his brains from his
performt11ll'es arc capable of llelen Hod11e1t. Is indeed a mothtr's side or the fanlily;
overn ll lllle, wh.lch Is symbolic
for the funny farnt
Mor JS.JI, .lwM 1·7.a
WIST 0411-0IAMGI COUNTY flAllelOUtoolD$ h elt'\'ating material or less 1han
W eTie enrth·shaltcring signific.ancc cvric:u.'ture or all tht lJtllll· !\1ancy Johnson as o deurcncd Intermission kl d h 1 d d' I 11 II d UNDEH ~1A H'flN Benson's has been proven many tunes crac Ilg. roun · ce c . uuc star ct, cruc y prope_ e to a
over at South Coast store pieCt's -0f fluff fronl tragic ending; Gary Bell us skilled d I rec l Ion , the
•:11'.l~m Anmo_,2ll0 '0<'•"°''fll-o:t~b~bl00 Mo)ft llll~'"·•·b
the l'l Repertory. but r arc l y so balancing act en the fringe countless plays and 1Mvh·~. he-r phony producer fiance. characters rcnch out for the I I S graphically HS in t h (' Uut Miss Hodnett plays her so rubbing' elbows \Vllh the "real 11udienCt! anti, at times, ntltke
· conlapny's latest endeavor. lunacy. firs t lipped one '"'n ·. skillfully. and \\'ilh such people," atld Barbara Leva as a sort of spiritual contact.
bl John Guarc's "The House of then the other. ~1lss SnU h m.1.rvelous Un1ing, that shl' a naive nun who kicks the Yet, sa ve for the performance
NOW!
Al THEATRES & DRliE·INS IHRDUG.HDUI SllUTHERN CALIFDllNIA -Qom Blue Lea\'CS .. , delivers this pa 1 h e t i c takes on an originalily all her hablL as it "'·ere. A! I of Miss Smith. the consistency
The play itself is a mixed person age across the own and becomes a welcome contribute their bit to the (Ste LEAVES, P1ge 36)
blessing -some of its v.•r!ting footlights witl) extraordinary comedy relief in the show·s,---------------------"---
THERE'S NOTHIN' THEY WON'T mu
HELD OVER!
EXCLUSIVE AREA
ENGAGEMENT
A VERY FUNNY
MOVIE!
"ONE OF THE
YEAR "S TEN BEST '
L.A. TIME S
"THE TALL
BLOND MAN
WITH ONE
BLACK SHOE " ,.,
\
....
WALTER MATHAU ,,
IPGJ
......... ,.,. ·--...... ..., .. ... .... , .. ......
WHlll THI LILllS lLOOMoo
WWARl.WMm
~·
inspired, son1e of ii insipid. heavier moments. w, ........ M.Y. DIAM.A ClJTICS c1acu AW.AID richness and depth. These characters are the
Hal Landon Jr.. in a core of Guare's te:<t and, since • i-: ... ~·HA .... tl ~· 11.\· ~ I.,\ ·n111u~ M 11; ltl. l'<l~U~l 'io\I, ... \Hf~;····· Woll«• ·~l't./'j. \' 1\"""'
"TH& Houie oF tLV& LI.AVES" "'eicome return to the SCR the first act is all theirs. it is
A ol~V l!v JOiin Guore, <llrtc!e<1 tlV Stage. functiOOS SUpcrbly RS
"THE HOUSE OF BLUE LEAVES" "r JOMM GUAll
!Mrt!n Benson <1e•lont<1 by Su••n the Stronger of the l\\'U. \V ith
Tou11v, llgMino t>v D<in HamHt~n. coi· her husband, a middle·aged the second act eonte the fringe
1un1P• t>v 1<:a111v Hill, "''~"'~ dreamer v.·ho \\'files incredibl.' w.oiwKi•v• ""ou1111 sund•V• at • players. inflated and farcial
o'clock ai sou1n Coa•t 11,pciriorv b:id songs and veers between cluiraclcrii.ations l\'hich dilute ~8]:,,,v~~~:.''i1--r~1~·· co,,. M••a. reality and fantasy. He is a the story rather than
THE c•sr vital. gutsy characterization. ad vancing it.. :~~:n~~·ri:;:i,:~~~..ev .. H"i};~fi':..!i'ti at once earthi• and sensitive. R ie sti.ouo11 Ml ~ i H There is l\tichael e~r: Elnllo•n ne•••v . , c !~.v 'II~ probably the most genuine the zookeepcr's GI ~~·;~"~:ns"olltr · · · ~~~!11!0~~!?:"! character in the play .
StCOfld nun P~melt IC'Vmb ----Ll!!le nun Barwra l tv• MP Jack Gor<:1lner !lfNl ll~c c ... , ... A c 0"POllAflO'W
Wiiiie Man Andrtw Vl,ctlk
---------·--·
After a splendid first act, the
rest of the i·ourne.Y is downhill 1 2~-S.!!Suf\/Moo\ 1°12.ao rem,_. through a series of inanilies to "Dirty M•ry. en.ry Larry"
an illogical climax along a Alto
road lined ~·ith playwrit ing "THE LAST DETAIL" Ill
ghnn1icks. I lll§~l;~~~~~~ia-1 is ~e~~~~~=t0~aB~~1~e~~~~e~t·~ ~!!;'!]
three principal perforn1ers 1 ,~ s.1 . Sun . ....,,... ·1i1230
for their roles are so div~rs~
and den1anding. Gu a re 's
•·n1en1ory play" may harl'
been penned after a disjointed
drean1 . but he furnishes his
pri1nary actors \vith t he --
n1eans 101\'ard outstanding
pcrforn1ances.
rilOST ~tE\IORABLE of the
trio by far in the SCR
production is ~1in1i Smil h as
the der~nged wife of a phi-
,landering zookeeper. It is a
role \\'ith an enormous degree
of difficult\•, demanding a
• ----I
•
TtK,doy, City l South
CIKllf LADIES a. S&I. CIT.
soc. 'til 2
"TMI LAST OfTAIL ..
"'Tllf H.w ,.......,_ .. I
Speci•I Prlc• 12,JO 10 2;00 p.m.
•1•c~1 Sun. & Holid•Y•) Sl.00
S.A. FRWY IMANCHtSTER f )(,J
G.G. FRWY (CITV 01'1. EX.I
HHfWMAH'S LAW" J'G
''Th1y Shoot Her .. ,~
'"WM'"' TM Ulir-1 Moofll""
HJEfllMT"l'Gr
A .. THI LAST ClfTAIL'" I '<if ""'"tty M1l.t. A.II ill 1 low"
Spec.itll P•lc1 12'30 10 2:00 p.m.
ll•••PI Sun. & Holiday i i $1 .00
0P•"O"IY )] lOprn
m MANN
THEATRES
I
"WHWTHE
LILIES ILOOM.,
·~ "JEalMY• IP'GI
"CONCERT AT
BANGLADESH "
~ ..
0 ..,. All·l il!IC"
Mod l'op1110~
Surfi1t9 Film
"PACIFIC
VIBRATIONS "
.tlf~S .I
1884 Newport
Cos to Me!a S48· l SS2
~IRST RUN!
'NOW SHOWING
"MEWMAM'S
LAW"
+
"SSSSSSSSSS"
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE COUNTY
cunT EAITWOOD
"THUftDIRBOLT
AnD LIGHTfOOI '
•
o.n..
P~nMsula
67)-8)50
NOW PLAYING!
l'ETEt FONDA
SUSAN GfORGE
"DIRTY MARY
CRAZY LARRY " ...
DENNIS HOf>PER
"KID BLUE"
Preview -
''THUN DU:IOLT
AND UGHTFO<>T' la!
"WHERE 1lE UUE.5 l&.OOM" IGI • "PAJ'tLLOM" lP'GJ
"THE STING" IPGI •• '"CHARLIE VARRICK" IPGI
.. DIRTY MARY, CU.IY LARRY" ll"GJ • '"TEACHER" 1a1
"THREE MUSllEfEEll.S" -· "12 CHAIRS"
Friday 6/7 •
This is a very major studio Preview
Showing of a Big Feature Film
audience reactions ,..
to get
AM OUTSTAMDIMG CAST OF IMPORTANT
STARS -THIS WILL BE OME OF MEXT
SEASONS GREAT FILMS! ! !
Studio people will attend and audience
reaction ca rd s will be given to you for your
FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER Comments -•••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• ••• • •• • INTERESTED IN A
TRULY EIITTRTAINING
EVENING?
TRY FRIDAY 6/7
AT 8:~ P.M.
GaEAT GATSIY SHOWH
IEfOll & AFTlll ,.lYIEW
' IJlllTY MAllY CRAZY LARRY
[l'GiG COlOfl BVOE LU~£,· L"1
ORANGE COUNTY
COSTA M[SA UA So, Hl:WPORT ll:ACH l •J.,e1·1 8 ·~
Coast f'la1• 714·~0·0S94 OUNCE
FOUNTAIN VALLEY Orange Mall"Cintma 71 4-637·0340
fount1in V1llt1 CiMma 714·839·!500 ORANGE . FOUNTAIN VALLEY S11dium Orivt·ln :J 714-639·7860
raunlain Valle1 Drivt-ln 714-962-2481 STANTON Stanton Cintm~ 714·89~·141 l
GATSBY
AT 6:30 & 10:45 (PG/
Tiil 6Til'llG
27 MILES N.E. OF AVALON
NEWPORT BEACH • 644-0760
1
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.MIXED SINGLES
fV! oor
A Now
llo~s.;,
6ooM€11.
TOM~LEWEEDS .
'ltlU'RE MAKJN6 AN AWFUL. RACKS• CO'm<NI WHA'l'Re lDU Sf00111-11 Im
l'OW! PINI! V
POW!
·o ~R...J t ;~
, ..
MUTT AND JEFF
I HOME
SWEET ~CME!
FIGMENTS "
f '
;
}
' NANCY
..
TODAY'S CRDSSIDID PUZZLE
ACROSS 'labric
'Ves1erday"s Putt1e,So1nc:1:·
l Fruit SO Stocking
"" 5 Wa tch 52 lea•e ornaments business 9 Slac> on ' life ,,.. 54 Military bullocks p!atoon 14 The very 56 Moral .... anguish 15 Touch 59 Chinese against gela!ln 16 Boy's 62 Cooking namo vessel 17 Dlssolute 64 Forceful• person ... , 19 Sierra 65 Danger
Mount ains 67 Insect
bite: 2 20 Muaeol words mlmo 70 ''Good 21 Roofing nigh!" material girl 23 Select 71 Fencing 24 Erased sword 27 Foolisti 72 Wilhin: 29 Circus Prelix rings 73 Frontier 31 Paid vehicle attention 74 Payment .35 AlrcraU for use part 75 RelaKation .37 ----· DOWN plexus
r. A F 8 E C K S ( A M P
hit 35 Paddock
8 Ending youngster
with road 36 South
and bed American
9 "Penrod l~ia01
and··-" 38 Per!a1n
10 Shallow 41 Lasting
plates 43 Proportion
11 Operatic 46 PlayillQ card
soprano 48 Foolish
12 Police people:
informer: Slang
Slang 51 Become 13 ---·action torn
18 Mechanical 53 Fan
routines 55 Tall
22 Hurrah structure
39 Gollshol 1 Turned 25 Mr. 57 Causes 10
40 As soon White S!aughter go
" 2 French 26 Glens 58 Plant "'2 Keep river 26 Gave disease
apart 3 Erratic nourlshmenl 59 Egyptian
"'4 Haughty 4 One
person an ending ... s "l don'! "" have -assembly --·--5 Plump
"'i Fumltur• 6 J al)anese
Ile ma sash
,..9 Openwork 7 B aseball
to sacred bull
30 Tas!e 60 F~lnlne
32 Chian!i !or nickname . · 6 1 Tract one. 2 63 ·-··measure words 66 lrlali river
33 Cry ol 68 Coin ot lhe
revelry Orient
3-i ObliQa!ion 69 Favorite
• ..-r.-,.,.-,,;-. 1 I\ 12 ll
..
J
by wnl. F. Brown and Mel Casson
..
DOOLEY'S WORLD
WELL.,
DOOLEY'S DAD
FINALLY flGllRfD
OUT A WAY 'lb G<'(
IN TH~ LAST
WORD WHEN
HE ARGUES
WITH HIS
WIFE ,..~))l,,Z~.ll;,;;Q;r--
Dr. SMOCK
l
!
l
j
!
1
' ' '
by Tom K. Ryan
Wl'LL1 M LEAST 'ttlU'RE tCf MAKING-A MESS .•·' A · GOOP
by Al Smith
,.,.,_
by Dale Hale
GORDO .
MOON MULLINS
I FLUNKED . ITISN'T
TIIE END
OF THE
WOl'ILD,
KAYO.TAKE
IT ~li<E
AM.AN.
<:::::!
I CAN'T MAKE A J.ICK
OF-SENSE
OF aASll-44SrDN1S
GoSSIP
CDt..UMNf
.-,, .. ,
\~ ..
by Emie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS
r-r.:rt<E<.'=~~=:.-~"'s~--. .~ -----:--"'6_ -....-
HE MUST
LOVE HIS
FREEDOM
PEANUTS
BAUOoNS
A~E SUWOSED ,
T08E~SN' • IDT'S 0: FLl'I ... >
ARE eo...DAT .!; ~~IVA~ A~D ' l7
FO/tJ P\,.Aces ... ;·J i·f
= .~~ i~ -' . ' ' I -· ' i
·.· .,
11ll TELL 'r'OV
WAAT iLE QJJ. 00,
LUC!U£ •.• we CAN
ALTERNATE EARS-
!'LL 60 !N ANP HAVE~ EA~
f'IEm:ED.MTH.EN '(OU GO !N ANP
HAVE <1'f EA• ~ERCED .• TH£N
['LL 60 IN A6AIN"lHEN '1tJ(l 60
IN A6AIN.:THEN !'LL60 !N:A&\IN,.
i HEN 'tOll GO IN A&t\!N ""
by Charles M. Schul:r:
r-:,.----'-.,.;,,
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
•••
eur YOU WERE MAKING A DEAL WITH
WAKEMAN, WEREN'T YOU, STRAND?
FOR FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS, YOU
WERE WILLING TO CLAIM THAT YOU
~D KILLED THAT WOMAN!
~ . ~ ''"· ·:;; ~ ' ~--~' : ..... .--' ' -~~ Y'l. --I . . '
, :X: l<A, YO~ ~y YOIA Al<E DePl<ESSED ?
D~P~ESSION co~~o ,,, l<IP!rl!~D
DICK TRACY
A~. MAY9E V()(,(
~l<OULO Tl<Y
TO (;.E;T IT Ot.if ....
9UT l<llPTMI
MAT OFF' WUR
MIAO.
'1UU'RE RiGHT. .. W<'LL HAVE To
TELL T"6• TO STOP US ON
THE RJURTH. EAi{!
by Harold Le Doux
HERE ARE SOME
PICTURES YOU MIGHT
flE INTERESTED
IN SEEING!
by Chester Goiild
TllAT MAT!. IS ITA80U
TO STEAL. TME sn.QA:\NG
ROLE IN TME SAGA OF
BIG BA:ASS? 1?
ooe:sr10N
DAILY PILOT 35
by RO<Jel' Bradfield ,.
HIS
7YPE;
WR!IE.R.. 'MUSTIVE
FALLEN
OFF
THE
BACK
rE.NCEf
by Ferd Johnson
WAL; IT
W).SYO<JR
IDEA!!
MN/BE 1.'M
Nor IXllK6
IT Rl6tff ...
THE GIRLS
0
0
0
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1
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'SI/Rf lM AT 'JHE Z!XJ, Jor.Y ! L!sT£}1.' ..... -
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' 38 DAILY PILOT TllurSd1y, June 6, 1974
LEAVES PUBUC NOTICE
•••
C""lt lh1t•111 ktWkn. 0.,)1'14jit c:-•v fC..tb::iaed From Paae S4) or.1~ l't.ll,.,111, .... a1ci..•c1 "· P1..oi. ~ ~. L PrebM 1nd Rl<Nfll Prl'lll• of that contact is fragile. 2,9,! ::~Mot.I AN•'""""r"' o.•'41·
Suaan .,._,k .. •1 realistic J~• 0111: M•y_ i. '"., • .,...1,1 I Y ...Sr ..... o1 111 lk.amotl 11.Mft 1111 Mtv
setUng Jnd Don Hamilton's " "'" '"' "" M\Mk:INI C-'· et SOvt11 Or•• CDUftfr Jlldlcl•l D111'rkt, Cout11y 01 moody I I g h I I n g contribute Or••· S••t• o1 c111JOrn11, voon • I~! ...i...-..i 111 ""°' al Crtd!t Jmmensely to the overall sur ..... Sffvkn. °'""' ,_,.., 0 1v11.1ot1 . II ludil-1 cr.altor1 ~nd IQllllSI effect, an excellent production 1tk11ar11 s. Prtbl• _. s.00.1 J. Prt~
'""' Rk harCI 1"-.011 OSA Rft0!1 MOl•I of an u n e v e n -«' pl& Ap¥tmt1111 ,, 1..........,., ,,.,.or., 1~1 .. ,
P rf t. If 1 ""' Wlt l)tt OI' lflt,JO "'h111ty 11.,. ""' c ormancts con 1nue or w id l<IOOineot on ,,,. ~'' o1 1,. r11uanc1
r k W-.1 ....i ol ..ic1 t xec.\11lon, I 11a-. l1vMd UPOn 111 our more wee s. ..... ~ne'l'Uaye ,,.. rleflt, 11n. ,nc1 1t11ern1 °' ••Id
th rough Sundays al I o'clock l=t:,~~ ~:t':.!11 s\~, "'~1t1~;,~~~
in the Third Step Theater, 1827 OM<~bed :,~ ""~w;: 16 m tro1et 11:
Ne.....,,.. Blvd CMta '-lesa lt1t.or<Md in BOOll 1$, P•O•• ~1 to " "...,. • ·• ' lnch11lv1 ol Mltctll1MOU1 ,..,t PS.
• II If Comr'llOlllV k,._,, 11 :MO PtHO °' Crill-I, S.n CltfMnlt, Ct U!r.r nl1. CAUBOARD _ FI n a I NOTICE is . HEREBY GIVEN th1t on Thuncltv, June 27, 1914. ti 10:00 111'doc-
audilions tor the Lyric Opera A.M . ., CourThlll<I••· M1r.r..1•1 0tt1ce, 3010 Crown Vllhiy PtrKWtl'• City OI A s s o c i a t \ on ' s musical L~ N111ue1. c....,n1y °' °"'"'°'' sr1tt o1 Ct lllornl1, I will ,ell 11 -peolic 111e:11.,.. to production of "The Wltard or th9 llltM•I olclO.f, for t •llll 1n ltwfut _.,. of the Unl!td Stilts, 11! ""-rlghl, Oz" will be held Sunday at the 11111 11111 ln!fr11t at u lo tudllment
Broadw•ay "-nter S t a g e ... blors in ,,,. 111aw. dti.crlbecl prl)f>e•ty, \.A: w io much lflolrtol 11 m•v be n1c1111ry Studio 307 N. Broadway, ta W1llstv u1c1 t~K\ltlon, wo~ 1eer<11c1
' . lnM•HI ilnd c01t1. Santa Ana . • . d 1 r e c t o r o.1ec1 M•y 31, 1t14. ohor-apher Cris Timmons c 1v;11on: Soutll 0r1og• counl\I DON E. ltHEA, wi ll audition actors, Sinl:lers Mtn~11, 0r.,. countv
and dancers for a cast or 100 &~to. 1· H._.,
-children at 1·30 adul~ at 3 WILLIAM M.ANCMAllO • ' , -J. IEI CtllllM llMI, Me. 211 o'clock ... th e children s S•• ciefnMl9, ce. nm classic will be staged Sept 13-Publistitd or.,.. co.,1 0 111, Piiot, • June l. 1:J. 20, ltJ' 20ll).1' 14, 2().21 at the Irvine Bowl in - -
Laguna Beach. • PUBUC NOTICE
Geology Degree
1------------SLP·74*
SUf'lltlOlt COUltT OI' THI
STATE Ot' CALl"Oll:f.iA f'Ofl THE
COUNTY Of' OltAN•I .... Mlt114
• NOTICE 01" HIAlllMG Of' "l"TITION Wallace D. Kleck of Costa FOi f'IOBATll" OF WILL ANO f'Oll
~tesa has received a doctorate L~!~~,111 J''l:':1~~1~\Y .tOH°NWN in geology from \Vashington HEWETT lkl GER ... LDINI! HEWETT,
State University in Pullman. °:M~ 1$ HERE8Y GIVEN 11111
Klecndidk ·-wfas d among 6t 2 :~~~~A M~HA':tt~i~L~.··~ -:.~ .. 1: ca a~ or o c t o r a e ~1111011 tcw Probtt1 ot 1V111 . 1nd '°' degrees. Lei!.,-, T~t1ment1ry rei.r.nc1 to wllkfl ---.,---------r1• !"fll6e !of-tvrtlltf" ~t1cu11n, w ""' ~ p ' Ille t!me Ind pl.a al bt1rlnp llM .. _ UBLIC NOTICE has been Mt tw June 11, 11 f :XI 1.m.,
....,,-,-~--~---~-,--[in 111e courtr-o1 Dftlertn'Mnl to:o. 3 llf
Notlc1 Is hlr'ttrf pt...,,,.,., AMERICAN wld court. '" 700 Civic Clntw Drll'I STATE BANK, m S.OUlh Mt ln SlrlMt, Wt$!, ln 11>1 City of 5-nll Ant, Ctllfllrnlt .
Orl'llil't, CINfwl'llt ~ has lllMI, wltti Dtltcl MIY 31, lfJ4. n. F"tdertl DloposH I n a u r 1 n c e WILLIAM IE. SI JONH,
CorJ1or1H-"" Applle1~lot1 to Eslttt+t1ri • OIMA11:~:"1"' of:l~co
BrtfW;h, wftlcll 1ppllc111on Wit Kc.i>Md lst5 I Utll SI Sl• 2t2 tor flllno •on J\IM J, 191,. TM p..-m1t11nl 11 .. Au, c.W......1 ft7ll
toe1tlon ol ttM P•~ t1r.1nch It *' T.........,.: 11141 541-'1.-"'-' Center Orlw, Newport !leach. """"""" .... ~di......,. C1Ufcif'nl1 '1660. . " Arry ,...._ whl'li"ll to comment °" lhli Pubht.hecl Ortnoe Cot1! Dilly Pilot.
1DD1lc.11ron mty Al • 1111 "'"""""" In June .S, 6. 12, 1974 10Jl.u Wrhl111 wlttl the Rt9!0fll1 OlrlClor al 1111
F-11 p".,...11 1n1uranct corpar1tion 11 PUBLIC NOTICE 11111'91ontl Ofllc•, '4 Mont;omery Strfft,1 ___________ _
Suitt 3600, Sin Frtnclsco, Ctlllornl1 9411U. NOTICE OF" MAllSNAL'S SALS
11 1nY 111•*1 clfl11rn la protnt tl!t Oonilel 8 . Ayres Jr .• Ptlf"t!IH Yt. T. O. gr1ntl110 ol lhb IP"tfeatlon ht 1111 I rl!lhl Lllld11tY. Otlend...,I. Na. 38 37S
ta da 10 11 lie I/Its I -lnt n notice cl hi1 er virtut at tn 111ec:utlon luued on
lnltnl w!lfl ll!t R.,glon1I DlrKlc• wl!llln Mireh 1, 1914 bv !ht Munlclptl Court,
1S d1y1 ol Ille dt11 ol lh11 Plll>llctllon. Hlrber JUCllclt t Dlslrlct. County 1111
Tl!t nOl'IConlldtnlltl part!-ol the Ortnge, Sl<l!e Of Ctllfllfn("' u11<1n ii
1ppllct llon 1r1 on lilt In 1111 fl9gl-I luclgmtnl t~H In I~ of "Qon,lld 8. Offh;1 11-p 1rt -o1--·f1"1e-""11Ublle--fllt Ayres -ir-tt ··1uc1gintn"1 cridltor 1nd
m11n11lntc1 Irv lht Carpor1llon. This lllfl 11 11111nst T.·o. Lind~ 11 ludllmtnl °'blor, ·~•lltl>le !or pUt>llc 1-tlan elurlog iflowlng I "'' NIMK:e at "30J.30 ld111Hy
noul1r b<11lnn1 "'°"'''· clue.,, ..,(d"l\ld9n"llnl on,..,. dltl of Ille
"Ublllhlel PWMllnl la S I C t I an 1.,.,11n<:t al seld n:ec:utlon, I Ill,.. f.lvlld
"2.U(b)Cl l ol 1111 R11I .. t...t Rtqull1lon1 llPCll'I tll Ille rlgl\I, lll!I 1tnct lfJMntff of
-' tht Flde!'1t Dlpol!t In-•~ .,Id ludOmlfll debtor In tl\I propef"..,. In Carporlllon. \ l<MERIC"N STATE "IAHK Count<' ot 0rtf'P9, lltl1 ol Callfol'n 1, JI: monc1 w H described 11 fal lows: .. ::.idotnt -.... Loi Na. 2( of T•ect Na. 6523 II"'"'""'" ~llbllVllid Ort• CMsf 01lly l"llot on I INP rlCOf"ded ~n Sook 2>4 P"Vf1,
June " lf1f 2CS9·1· '1-SD lnchliiYt of Mlt.eell~-· Mi.Pi -----'-------'=-'! r1eore11 of Ortnvt Cownly C11lfcrnl11
PUBLIC NOT C loge!,,... wltll II) In ~ltn1nt non-) E •l!dllliYe e1~men1 lor lngr!n ond
egr1Hs lll•Ol/llh Lal lQ I nd commonly
lllOTICIE k1'0Wn 1$: 111'.S Ot~lrtt Line, lr11lne.
~k1tl11111 F"k Wnte ti I • c "1 r 1 1 c1tt1ornJ1. • ._..,._, (KlflwYI ,, • I I. I I "' Sllndlng on Ille rKOtdl of , .... (Ol/n•
Oltclll..-•H'llllMl!lflol SYlf"" PIOlllll ty ln the nt~ ol Tl>amtt 0. Llno1I~
flf '"° Sltlrley J. LlnddlY l\Ulblond 11111 HllllllllllM M•111t•r c..._1t1111 wile •1 \"olnt ,.,...,,.._
Ltt-•-rlf!H DIK"""9f NOTICE S HEREllY GIVEN tllll 11111
Trteb 1151 •11411 )4Jll Tue>d1y. June 7S. lf1f, 11 2:J0 a'CIOC~
Tiit Huntington H1rbour Corpor1t!an, P.M. tt front ol Caurltlou" Ortnoe G(1 W1rntr Alltfl.,., liun!lngton Betel!. Counl°f' Htrbor Munklptl Court, '2(11 ~., flltd I fltpOr'I al Wtill Oi1Cllt•9' Ind J1mboree Ratel, CJ..,. al HtwPOrt •••ell.
1pptlecl for rl'qulr-nt1 1or 11'11 dlld>9roe County al Or1og1, Stilt GI Ct1ll?rnl1. I
., w111"1s Into S<.lnttl Bt y. wlll wll ti public 111C1ion to tllt ll)ffllll
Tile Hun!lltolon Htrbour Cor11ori tlot1 bidder, for CtSI'! In ltwtul ,.._.,. OI lllt
pr-1 to dlldllrll' 119 ta •. .)I MGO ef Uni"" Si.I~ .i1 lflol t1;111, ttltt Ind w11tew1ttt trorn 1 w1l11 ot 1111 w~ lnl.,nt al uld iuclQtMnl dfb!CH" In lht
1'900llS te Suns.ti BIY. The e11sc:111,.. 11 1bOWI described 11roperty, or Ml mucri
requlrlcl to m11nltln wetwr qu1Uty lfltrtot •• m1y be nec:•1111"\• lo U lh fy
!Moutfl f!lt 1..-•Ytltm.. uld 1xecllllllflo wl!11 1ccrutc1 lnltrt11 111d
Oii !flt bl1lf ol Pf'filmlnlf}' 1t1ff rtYltw c..a. •
and 1pptlc1!1on or 11w1111 1t1N11re1s °""' D~lfd Mav -21. 1974 regultllons, !I'll C11!tw11f1 R99!ant1 w11... Oi¥1111on: HtrDOr
Qvtllty COlltrol Baird, Stntt Ant Region, , •' ,D:ON E. RH EA ltnl1t!11tlY P'OPOH'f fo lttut Wl1hl -Manllll, Ort .... COv!!ly
dlK111roe rl<)U1r-ts llldudfno tfflutnl 8y Mt<l lM L. Brow,, Dtput,
llmlt1llona ~ tPtC191 coMttlani. Pffton1 DIMM •· A'/ftl ''·
wlslllnv lo COll'lmellt UPOft or Obllcl to the ""1 an.kllwsf "'"' ptQllOHd (lltc"'-"• r. q u I r t m I n I . " ......... acri, C1Hf..-1!11
t rt lnvl-to submit 11mt In wrUlng to l"Ullllsl'lell Or1ng.t COMl Dilly f"llot, 1ne 1DO"' M<ire11 no 11'9!'" 1111n Ju..,. a. Mt , JO, tnd June ,, 11. 197( 1tU-7'
1f7'. AU com..,.nll or OblKllon1 rea"'-d
ptl« la llMI 1D011t dtlt wl" bt CGnildl:rM PUBLIC NOTICE
In !flt tormul1tlon ot flntf lle!('(rnln1tion11------------reg1nil"11 1111 wts.. dlschtfVe. If nc a ttlU
otllKllOl'IS ,,. rtetlWO, 1119 Reg!antl NOTl(I! TO C••DtTOllS
80ltcl wilt IMut <llKfllrOI '"IU~tnenll. $Ul"£11101 COUIT OP THIE
A pUOtk .... rlf'IV wltl be lltlcl upOll r-11 STATI OF CALIPOllN1A l"Otll:
ol 1ny kllfftsle<I 111roon. THI COUNTY Of' ottAlllGI
Tiit AfllOt't '11 W11i. Dltclllt"OI• Ai1recl .... A·7tffl
tlocvmenl1. Itel ll'llel1, c 0 mm I n I I Etlllt el M'l'ltTLE K. MILLS. 11$0
•tctlved, Mid ollllr lntonnallOll I• on tit1 known II MYltTLE •• Mil.LS, DecttMlll.
ilnd mtY bt ln~decl or copied ti Ml:J NOTICE IS HEllBY GIVEN to 11M1
1n<:111n1 .-.-. ltl.,..,1.ldt, C1l!foml1 crfelltoo"I o1 the tbo'wl n1meel dlclclflni crvrtno 11U1ilwsa lloo.ort l :OD 1.m. lo J:OO that 111 lll!f"MIM l\tYlng dalmt 19&lnsl lhe
p.m. Wft'kd1y1. uld dtceOeflt 1r• required to 1111 ll'llm,
l"ublb l'lecl Drll"lll• CMtl Dff~ f'llol. with lht r.cl'!sary vouclllrs, In IM offlct
June 6, 1t7t :'041·T4 a1 trie ~k el tne t beve t ntllllll COU!"I. or
to ptts1nt lflolm, wt tfl tllt lllCftllry PUBLIC NOTICE vouci'llrs. to !ht. urotrslllflld ti "" olflct ------------tal hl1 111ornep. BARNES, SCH.AG. JOHN-PICTITIOUS ausu••ss SON, KE,.NEDY &-CAALSO,., 4.575 MIC·
HAM• STATl!M•NT "'"'UI'" Blvd., P.O. Bo• 1116, lltwporl
T...... ...,1_~-,.,-''' ,.1..., e .. ch, C1l!larnl1 '2'63 AlTN: At111. ,.... '"' .._..... -.. ··• E'""l J. Scflto, Jr., wfllch Is tht plt ce bu1lllft1 •t: e1 1>us1nt H ,ot the uncle"lllned Jn 111 SNOWFU KI! STUDIOS, 11'.S Lll'io'n mt111ri Plfltlnlnv ta 1111 esttlt GI u fcl
AY'f .•. Sulfl "A", C111t1 Mtsl, Ctlltornlt dKtclt.,I, within tour monlhs 1!!er Ille
'1676 flr<I ,....bllctllon of !Ill• noti~t. lrlling klnvlrll, 10$7 v."11! 2JJ SlrNt, Otle<I Ml<, 211, 191~
Torr1nc1; C1llfofrllt , fl!Sll2 ROllEltT E. ALLINGHAM
Tflomti J1m11, U9lD Add1oon Al'I., A<lmlr.1$1rttor wlt'1--1119·w!ll
s11erm1n °'-" Cllltornl1 t1'°3 1nne~td 01 tllt e..1111 al the Cht rl11 Wide, 3lJ6 Ctnlon Wty, tbOve "imeel dKldent
Sluclla Cltf', C1!1torn41 t160-t BAINES• KMAG, JOMNSON,
lh11 bullnffl l1'conilucttd .,.,. I 11-••I KINM•D'I' & CAltLSON p1r!.-~hlp. · l y: EfMll J. Scl\111, Jr. lr11I ... S(hwtrlJ (tU Ml,Ar'llM" BIYd.
Thll lltftmtnl Wll llllcl wit~ the I", 0 . l lJI 17N
County Cltfl al Or"l"fl County on J-•• ,.....,,..... BNC:h. Clllftnllt '26'1
ltl• Tt'f1 17UI tlf-ttM
fM:l71 All1ntn flf A*"illlltr•fllr CT,t. PVbllll'Mcl Orqe Cotti 1>1111' Plllll, Puoli11'itcl Ortl"IQe C-1 O.ltv Piia!.
J U!'M .. 13, JDr. 2], 1'7• 201 •7' Mr( JD, Ind JlllM i, 13, :111, lf74 lHl-14
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
OflOIMAHCI MO. no
Ali! OflOtHAIK• •STABLISKlltG PltlMA FACll·Sf'IED LIMIT
OH CaflTAIN l"OtlT!Ott OF MISA OlllVE 111 THI COUNTY O"
OltAHOI, CALlfOllHIA
T"' lletrd of 5-nil101"1 ol 1111 Caunty of Or11•1111. C.ll~n11, -. ard1ln 11
followl:
SECTIOH 1. Oii !ht. b11fs of .tt1 lfllllnterir>O 1nd tr11fk _....., mtclfl pws111nt
lo s.ctlons nlS1 Ind 72151 Ill lllt Vl!llk N Coclt al me Sttl• al C1ll10rnt1, 11 11 "''" by dlllrmll!lel Ind lllKltred 11111 the prlm1 teclt speed Umt1 uporo fflll por!lon of
~ Orlve. h«el111111..-11! form, IOCttect In 11\t 1111h1corpor11ect ''" al 1111 County et OrlnOf, Is ttlllbtlrl<Md t s htrt ll\lfltr klelktt~, which 1Pftcl nm11 It found moil
1ppr°"'!1t1 to ltcllhatt Ille ordtrly moYtmenl OI lrtlllc mtreon tnd 11 '""°"'bit
11111 utc.
SECTION :l. SICllon Hrl• 11 hereby fCM«f ta Ille Cor:lllltd OrcliMl n<N 01 tht
COlllllJ of Orll'IOI IO reed 11 lollO'Wf:
Sec. 6·'6o21•. Mest Orlw.,
M111 D•l~t btlwt1n Stnll Afll AvMIH end lrvlnt A....,.ue, lflol prim• !Kit
~ llml! 11 1111r1,.lf\'I (Jll mlltl per"-·
SECT ION l. l ht Ratel Comml1tl-r ot tne 111d Countr. 111f p ra"!lt ,n1H ••tel
lllll!"llP'ltll s)firl1 an IM' 1llo¥"4lt1erlbf<I wtlOll of MKI Or vt hi contormllr fle•-'O
end wllfl Mellon m~ of lflol Vtll!clt Cede-al mt Stt!t OI C.ll tcwnl1.
SECTION •· Thll OnllnlnCt ~tll ttke tllec:t tnd be In lull for(1 lflftly CllOI
d.IYI lrom 1...t titer lb pe11111e. Incl belort !ht nplrttlon of lll!f'tft (Ul dtyt tflM""
lM Plli.aot tlltll"tot 111111 bt llU041111ed on« In "'' er.1'191 Cotti Deity Pllo!, 1 ,.._
P'Plf" pUblllhft In lflol COl/lllV 11 0rtf1411!, Slttt o1 CtlllOl"nlt, lootllltt Wllh !ht ntmti flf 1111 ,.,,.,.,,.,., OI 1111 &Nrd of luPtfYllOl"I ~Ing .... Wiii t91IMI 1111 ilmt.
•ALl"W 8. CLAllC '
(IEALl
ATTl!STt WILLIAM I . ST JOHN c....,.tv Cit<' ...-••<tfllclo (lotf"tr: Of l!lf 9oo1orel ., St~• Of
Or11t1411 Cwnty, Ctlllofrllt
By June Almi-_,,
ITAJE 01' CALIFOINIA
1
1
COUNTY OI'" OJl:ANGE I ••
Clltirm.t" of the llolrd oi ~wlsors
ot Ortnot C-1\1, Ctlllornl1
I, WILLIAM E. ST JONH, Covnty Cler• Ind n-offklo Clltll: If 1111 lolrd If
lW>trvl,o•,, do 11.irtbJ' ctrlll• 11111 11 1 •eollt•r mM!ll\t al 11\t 8olrd =W• o1 Ot•, ., .:.0..11'Y, (4Utornl1, 11t1c1 .,, the 21th rJty el M.ty, 1fl4. Tiit lo<" nt 0•'1--
ntnc:t (.Oflfllnlne lo.,ir 14) MCflonl Wiii HUICI 11'1(1 IOoPIM by "" "" >'Oft: A'l'lS: $UPllltVIS01tl llALPH A. OIEDJl:ICH, ltALPH 8. CL,A.lt K,
DAVID L BAKEll ANO ltONALD W. CAl PlflS
NOES: SUPl!lllVISOIS NONli: ABIENT: SUPEJl:VIXlll!5 It_ W. 8ATTIH
IN WITNESS WHEltl!OI'. I fltw htrtvf'llO "' my h...O Ind tlfl"td "'' ••Itel••
... , OI lflt ... ,,, of Sullf'n'ltOri OI Ill• '°"'""' ol Or•no•. Sl&tf ol Ct lllo•"''· thl1 lit~ Oty ol Mtv. 191 ..
WILLIAM E. St JOHN
COUlllJ (ltr-tnd 1~.offklo Cl•f'tt ol !flt l otrd Of ~Yltott OI
Ort"" COU!ll'f, CtU!Ofl'llt
(SI.ALI 9, J-AIMt!ldlr _,,
"lltlol!tlltd Ort"tit' C.Mll Dilly "llot. Junt •• lfll
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ltal Estote ••••••.• 1000.2999 The Biggest Marketplace on the Crance Coast EmplO'ymtnt &
Rtntol• •• ' ••••.••• 300().4699
lutlntss, Investment &
finonc:lol ..•.• ' .••• 5000-5049
Announcttllllf'f1, Ptnencis,
lo•t & foond .••••• 5050-5499
Sttvkts & Repairs 6000-6099
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS l'rtparotlon ••.••. 7000-7199
Mof<lllndJN ••.•. • -8099
llocll1 & -
You Can Sell It , Find It , [ 642•5678) Trade It With a Want Ad
One Call Service
Fast Credit Approval
~· •••••••• 'IOIJ0.9099 AYt•••blltt & othtt
T""'apottotion " •• 91011-9099
10020.noril R.E. 1002 1002 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. l General R.E. 1002 General R.E.
ERRORS: Advert!,." ;;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;
should chock their ed1
1
IN-LAW * Balboa Bay Properties *
delly l ....,.rt .,.,....,
lmmedlo tely. The SUITE
DAILY PILOT 011umoa
I f •-fl Private-cntranl'l:l, u co:1:y l1bUlty or t..,.. rat flreplnce, nnd rlegan1 hllth
I n corr• c t lntertlon n111kl' 2 ~e1~ratlons 11hlc to
I ' live und('r the 1111.n1e roof on y. eull)•. LARGE 4 bedl'OOlll,
----------.; z bath. ho1nu v.ith luxuries plus -ca.11 lor Rppoi11tn1l'nl.
$52,500 I~ [ ---
O.nerail R.E. 1002
7'h0/o Auumable ' Sun/Eve•.
Mesa Verde Cando 646-585Si
Selli"' '"" hot. "'k"! Too I ""!O~N~E~O'l"'!!F!"'lA!"'lK~l~N!!!!D quality high-low catpet.
• an.(; n g. • • a "'11"" COUNTRY CLUB co nv e n ie.nce kitchen, .
attaohed •":!""• Won't tut ELEGANCE long -call ~2313 1 Ol"E~ 1/L 11 • IT'S RJN ro tlE NICEt No u·oy to replace th iii
I ~ dlstloctlve custom 1 story
n100un1ent to the builder's
art! t\tesa Verde:; fine~t
area. Nestleµ in broad.
supur1Jly lnndsca(>(!d sett ing.
FlnNt \~'OOds, tile, carpets C R EAMPUF'F! Gorgeous
home in desirable
Huntington location. Super
inside and out. At S3S.::.OO
lf"ll go fast. Call Agt. llO\\'
at 847-6010.
$36,50J! Lo''" cash 10 assun1c
and ~·n.11 coverings. Jluge
tx-drooms. Secluded den
Y.'ith outside entrnn c c .
!-.ta.gnifk.'t"nt pool Rdd!' thal I
IA!lt touch. By 11ppoi1111nenl 1
-c·rill :).16..-2:113.
OPfH 11l II• ITS Rf./ 70 BE NICE/
Call 847-6010 for more in for-_ ~ THE REAL
ESTATERS
1~')(. existing loan. Prin1e
Huntington Beach location. ~
)"OU'll lo\ie this floorplan. I
mation. Agt. """ =1~0~0A:::=o::'D~O~W~N::"= I
81h 0/o INTEREST
C.D.M.
OUR BUSINE.SS IS
HELPING PEOPLE
LIVE BETTER
BIG CANYON-BEST BUY!
Large heated & filtered pool. Brand new 4
lxlr1n .• 21h ba. home ' .. large r,mily rm. &
rormal dining rn1 ... aJI the latest built-ins.
3 Car garage. Q\vner transferretL Excellent
buy at $154,000. Properly localed •6 Winged
Foot Lane (left on Burning frfe1 rJgbt on
Winged Foot). OPEN DAILY •1·5.
I
OUR
CH
' NEWPORT HE IGHTS
COSTA MESA FIXER-UPPER?
•2 Bd h 3 BR.. 2 ba .• w/Jam.
<fl-rm . omes rm 2 frplC li X I n t Will trade " · • 500
$45 000 Call 675-7060 Height s Joe. '4•, . • 642-7491 .
WATERFRONT. 2 +
OPEN SAT/SUN . J,5 Den, pier & slip. Corner
337 Weatbrook Pl. l9t . Owne~ most an-xious. '107,000.
College Park, C.M .. in p E N I NS U LA PT.
a nice neighborhood . 4 Brand new 4 BR. ~ ba.
BR ., fain. rm .. study & Best location. Asking
pool. $46•900· ~. $149,000. 673-7420. m REALTORS
LJ:::I 5 L~al Offlco1 To Servo You
[B
General R.E. 1002 GeneralR.E. 1002
~~~~~~~~~~~!CORONA DEL MAR General R.E. 1002General R,E, 1002 HOME WITH INCOME -Cozy 3 BR. 2 ba,
with fireplace + neW 2 BR rental over ga·
* WATERFRONT HOME~ * Elegant 4 BR. & lge . family rm. or 5 BR .•
\\'Ith O baths. Lido Nord. Spectacular vie\v.
Pier & lloat. $275.000.
Lovely 5 BR., 5 ba. on prize 60 ft. \vateriront
lot, Lido Nord . Pier & float. '375,000. * WATERFRONT LOTS '* 40x90 ft. Ma~ni!icent view. $250,000.
30x105 Ft., Lido Nord , view. $165,000
BILL GRUNDY, RElLTOR
341 Bay~ido Dr., Suite 1. N.B. ~ 1 675-6161
rage. Priced at $90,500. For additional in-
lol'mation CALL 540.1151 .
BET'NEEN BAY & SEA
LIVE ON BALBOA PENINSULA POINT-
Prestige location, near ocen. b~y and ten-
nis club. 5 Bedrooms, 3'h bath , fainil y roonl,
·1 'W" room, billiard room and wet bar.
$ll4,500. CALL 541).1151 . .
Gener•I R.E~ 1002 General R.E. 1002
Dial Direct
642-4321
Call Collect · I Look al tllose terms!! They
rn;iy be hhitory soon so don·r I G;;;•:"";;;;'•:l;;;R;·;;E;;.;;;;:;;;;1:002,;;G;:;e;n:•:re:l;:;R.~E:.;;;;:;;;;1;00;;;2;;;;.I hcsllate. If you ·\\·ant fin
extra sharp 2 BR 2 BA
POOL ho1ne In CORONA
DEL l\.1AR on a big 60x:l00
lot Y.'ith private com1nunlty
heach access.
* * cdlio SHORES * * . NEW LISTING Subscribe to the
newspaper thaf
covonyour
hometown best .••
YOUR Hometown
Daily Newspaper
DAILY PILOT
-----··~l[j]
Cl•ssification 5150-5499
1 1---l~i
Classification 6000-6099
tnstructlon l~l
Classification 7005
1 ~ .. -l(Il]
Cl•1sification 7000-7199
.__~·_ .. _._._ .. ~11~1
Cltssific•tion 8000-8099
Cl•ssifi cttion 9000-fi!099
T-o1~ ]~
Claissification 9100-9499
Only S6.q,j00 1 c.n 644· !211
1 ma
THE REAL
ESTATERS
NEW LISTING
Triplex. ju:-ot t;teps to the od'nn or bay: on fee land. 2·
2 BR., 1-RR. unit ~. Xh1t
rcn~I nrca! Good condition,
$115,000
CAii: 673--3003 64.2-225.1 Eve1.
. '
associated
OR OKE R "i-Q fAL TO~S
1l 1\ W boll'"'" b'l IA1 1
Sweeping ocean view, exceptionally lge. patio
area ideal for
11
entertaining. Call for app'l.
to view. Of!ere at $114,000.
/Jn NICEL
OAILEY E.
ASSLJ[IATES
EXPENSIVE
IMPORTED TILE
. . . in entry, breezeway,
kitchen and rear yan:I of
this exqub;lte Po r t o. f in o
hon1e "''ith view of Fashion
hland. FEE land. 3BR, 4BA + bonus nn and many
more custom features, all
for $96,000.
CALL 64J>.1672
LISTINGS NEE DED
$36,500! Nearly new home In
g1't"at bt>n ch 1 loca.t:ion. Nh.:e
fa1nily roorn ; Perfec..1 hon1l'
for young l11n1ily or retiring
couple. Cnll right llOI\".
847-6010 A.1(1..
General R.E.
MACNAB
I IRVINE
"BLUFFS SUNSHINE"
1002
Custom 2 bedroom/den condominium
styled for fun & entertainment. Extra
large tiVing room + beam ceilings. Spec·
tacular :VIE.\V of private garden~/fountain
& Uppe Bay. $89,500. Jack Cust~r 642-6235.
(Y64 )
POOLSIDE, BAYSIDE-$110,000
Large 2 bedroom, 2 bath condominium-
security-many extras. Barbara Gothnrd 642-823$. '(Y47) . .
, CALIFORNIA LIVING
Spacious view home surrounding sparkling
pqol. 4 .bedrooms, 31'2 baths-family room.
$235,000. Ron Sherman 642-8235. (Y35)
CHOICE BIG ~ANYON LOT
Exciting building si te w/195' of !airway
frontage. 270' unobstructable view. '85,000.
Jock Custer 64U235. (Y65) .,.------
[ Irvine 1· Mocn••-rrv1ne .... ,eam,.., I
101 Dover Dflve 142·12a1
I .... M1cMM M4·UOO
Ntwpoft ... ctl, C.IHOfnla IHU
• •
•
99
TS
m.
nt
500.
• t.
an-
PT.
ha.
ing
• t ..
E
s
io 'L
NC.
66~
l
I
1002 !
A '
many
, all
' '" Nice
hon1c
tiring:
'10\\".
1002
a
C·
in
•' .. fhur$d,.y, Junt b, 1')711 OAJLY PILOT :Jl
CH;; •• ;;,;;.iit'ARC:.Ef.:---1'1002iM:o;;;:.00=:,:;;.r, iRl.eif.--""tii002m -:oi;r..;;,,.;:,;;,J1iR'."· --;;;:irr-;:c::.....,.:::::-:di'::oJ11MA.•;;,:-1'1oiln1cc;o,;;o;;;n;;•-;r.•J1•MA.•;;,:-·1i102m2~cc;.;;,:;:,,;t;Mr;;•;;,.;---71ii'o2il4i";i:Hidu;;nil1"1;;:9;;;,:;;.;;nos:: .. ::.,;;h:-;,040 tr-vine 1044 L1gun1 Beach 1048
Price Reduced =u::N:;;l~V;;E;;R;;Sl;;T:;;Y=P;;A;;R;;K~loo~P~ENN!sii:ui;;NiCDi:iA~v:-1~.sii!';;M~I
I
..
IN NEWPORT BEACH
The UNIQUE F11ture t Of This :Home Are:
Oh Wow! Jo~loor \Q ceil ing windows , crazy
angles, cxciling Skylights, colorfu~ court-
yards and brand t1ew ! 3 bedrooms, single
story. nilly kitchen \\•ith trash compactor and
all. Great home !~r plants 611d paintings.
Only $82,000. Open daily at 2200 W.indward. Newport Beath.
UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 675.6000
2442 E. Coast H w y., ~orona del Mar
O:neral I.E. 1062 Ge ner1f I.E. i&i2
COLLEGE PARK
3 Bedroo m. 2 bath , pool. All bltns beau-
tirut stone fireplace, studio ceilin~s & large
do~e garage. Fantastic condition inside
and l. O!A·ner anxious. Call for fuU details. 546-. .
BALBOA ISLAND .
HOME PLUS INCOME -!or under $100 000
Balboa's sharpest 2 hedroon1 home + 1 bed-
roo1n apartment. Like ne\1' inside and ouL
Extensively remodeled \Vith quality material
& workmanship last ylea r, Tastefully decor-
ated and great loca tion . ·r,vo blocks to beach
and steps to shopping.1<:;au now, 54~5880
S46-S!IO
Open Eves. ~o ~,. H ERITACE
. • REALTORS
1 VR WARRANTY
• HOME
Dnlrable Santa
Ana Locatiaii
Sandpointe Homes
Near #l'iw)oi... ruwl 'lo\•e l
J>lll.hs to /)i1rk "1th lcnn~
l'OUrl11. l..ov.•ly yurd with
prl\'acy 1v:lll.~. ;i ' l'!r 4
bC'd1oon1. :: Bath llo1n1• 1\•ith
FEtn1lly B0Qn1 ttnd IHl'S:l'
e1tt-l11 K ! ! !'hr II wl!h
bulJt--in11. l!n1•1\ wa J I
i"Jrcpll11·£' In t.lvirl& Roo111
und l"orrnal r>lnu:i,i.: Hoo1n.
All 1hi11 nn1I C't•11tl':1i Alr ond
"'tt!~r So/t.~r1i-·1· 100. P1•lrll' of
Oll'llership honlt'. Coin<' ~!
t~~~A~~~v o,~E J~~.~:
Cllll &16--0'.&. . "''"""'~·· .... '
\'.\l,LE\'
l<I \I.I\
' ' ' 1'• ! ' ' I ... ' •' • I ""'I• ' " I~·
* PROUDLY WE OFFER . • • * Assume 71/2•/, Lo•'l
On 1hlN vr.ry 11nitty ~ bdrn1 , 2
hath hum... With dinlni,;
1-00111, homemaker 's
kitchen. lricludH thick sha:,:
1"Urpe!1n1:. <ll'ilPt't'· f u 11
prloo. S3t!M. Call MG-1710
• • 1414 MGrnlngsldt. $2,400. 2.'iOO Sq l'I Tow~ NEW Nr\V NEW-Swttpinc I New listlng&-Quality Duplexes-Qualli,y renters
2 Bdrm. + Pool 2 .Story, 4 bedroon1, 2\• be, v\lrvo; 0( ~an & h1ll1.
211-225'h MARGUE RITE-$84,5"
426-426V2 ACACIA-$78,9511
~'h ACACIA-$79,5"
71S.711'h ORCHID-$79,5" [~]
lam.Uy room, 2 _nrtplact11, Atrium C'nlry, lots ot ""OOCI $22,600 lor1nal dining, utility ruorn, k ahias, open blani ceil'g, ~>11lcony bedroQm. l..w!.h lmp-gournift kitch, 3Bn, h1mrm, You Mn r.iy ~ more lhun l<"sl t"Ourtyard to a 2 t>tol')' :?BA, nn for pool. AAktng
tlu11 fQr R 1tC\\' unit or )'OU NllUili '1nt:ty. Pool die yard Sll3,300. Ownrr will c.:1:trry
('lln buy 111y UP!lradcd unit w/lt11"¥ft CO\'ered pal.Jo. ('.11\'e. 2nd. TD. For app't to see, please call:
COKt. J>OQI & tterettlion arc~"· OCEAN & CITY VIEW
lor $2.00J below re!l~ent 1rre maintenance. \Valk to •--•
RACHELL£ ROBERS, REALTOR
3333 E. COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR 675-2373
2955 llarbor Blvd
Col>tli !\le~
2 Btinn t:Ondo., det1lrable Best buy at reduced pnN! c1os<-.1n. fabulou:i split lh'Ol
j!'round level floor plan, l~ of $59,900. SBR fmrm v.• wet bur &
YPHI'll ll{'W, t'reah Painled !pl. 'hµ'=e 100' !l<'rk. "1Mlll
TIME To ACT'.'· Wllh ll\Sll•lully paneled and g11..lom, GUlfablf• lor 2 lnm1\y ni lrron.-d living room, pll#Sh _ .. _ I $0 •~• XI '
3 °""'"""n1 •32,950 In eo.~t11 wallri"""red dlnln• """'· ,., .... rn~ .. ~"""'· •· nl temii. ~·-• •h'"' '", ... _,, ·~ -·crom SUM~fER RENTALS AVAIL. MNitt. 2 bntbs -nlc:\'ly ... ~.,.. "' ... u *AME RICAN HOME* con1rlctl!d -\11.rjitc fcru·cd drapes, ove:-slzed Pfllll.ry Gene ril R.E. 1022 1002· Coron• d el Mir
COOL POOL!!!!
i~:verybody !tr the pool. 'tiu
1..-ould ..be snying ~ soon It
you 1vlll ju~t (·11 11 to tiee lhi11
BlG-BIC 1 BR, 2 story
North Cotti• ~h·sa home,
dl'1:01·1tted LIKE; A ~10DEb,
wlt/1 Jealuri·~ like dcoor111or
w11ll p;1J)l''l' . .;, l\ft'xicnn lilc
anu111 PLUS conversation
fill, gag flft.'d BAR B-Q, &
Bt.:AtrrlFUL USED BRIC!\
DECKING AltOUND 1
POOL.. "A 110ST SEE" if
_you're klokin~ for a Attar
'home. Call lor appo!nttne111.
CAN'T SELL }'ti!'( anrl oovered patio -u1"Cn, cusl:>m lilo counter REAL TORS
11;AAun1e1 7\1~ VA i<1<i11 r111 toµ11, shukc roof, near J~j tVeMt'rn Biink Bldg, 194-7513 494-1001
Pel'haps If \\'C nssun1c tht' $.1.300 (loy,·n. fo·h~I llllll' 1(1·h•1r1ls, y,•alking dlslffnco to UnlverJ1;ity Pllrk, Irvine r~poni;ihillty ol 1u1slsli11~ advt>rtls1ed. 6'16-7171. lluntit1J,;'.on Center, 11..vtm-h
)'Ou with the rnarkcting of oPfN Ttl f , IT'S FUN ro 8E NICE• n1ing Vo\•I Pnd m:iny Park Day1 552-7000 N ig 1$
yuor hu111e you will be abki -a.t'Cal. ~ow $2000 below l.'Oftt .!S
t,o KUC(~!U!Jullf. 1narkct your 11{.>\\'. ~l-'rin c ipnlH only PRICE REDUCED
hon1t'. \\''-" of er buyel'!I !he oll'a~J. G'ftll toll&y St'-n~11tlo1u1t A1nerict1n Home 147..)095 Thi!1 spiu·1ous e11d·u11lt hvnhse
Shit•trl \\'11rrruuy \.\'hl'n 111£.:t.n ~;#i·~~~~""=-'=~~?l•iiiiiiiiiiii,....,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• ii;, the Jov.cst pnet'll ·I hdrn1 .
purchn"I' one of our t1111ings. I BY O\VNER. Priine l'fE.'lla homl' 1n L:nivrn<iry Pr1rk.
\\ r 1 ;1n nller yolu· huyt•r n Verde klc. 1 2 yn;, nl.'w OWNER ll°i> 11 twn stetry 11-lth l1.11nily
lo.in It he necdi> funds lo E AO'l'' E rt>tnn, lll'n hu!h-. 111th 11r1n GAltD N J. ... ~t'C. ANXIOUS I . ., ,. l'lai.>' lhc t'111,;rou• wilh you 4BR/38A, FIB, f 0 r rr. I J11:i::1n~. ,,.,11 dt'I' 1mn1, -ire..
LUXURY •••
.. lh'ing : ll §Cn~e or i~
lalion pl'eval!s upon the UC•
cupant of this 3 bdm1. home
ol n1agnilirt'rk'<'. 11•ith 11u1np-
luou!i o.·r1111 ll.:. l"Oa!itl!ne
vii'"'"'· E11rk>11·•'<I \\'-llh Inter.
lvr plantl•r & a frplc., thi~
je"·tt ali;o h111i cleck11 wilh
\'lf'1<oM, a Mmpi1<"lor, a 11'1'!
blor In lht' cnrcr1ainnwnt
1v.1n & 11 ~unkrn lla1h lhal
e11n IX' l'Oll\'el't{'(I LrllO !l
5>1Ulllt. Sfit,9.j(]. I
Carona del Mar 1
• COATS I
One half block to ocean, . WALtACE (,'USlom 2 bedroo1n and ~n ,
re.!i.ldence. Completely · REALTORS
l)(l[On• hi~ sale 1·ll)!l('H D ~. Hi vaullt'<I t't'llin~li Assun1t' (•,; VA loan, pla1:e~ tu"Kl ~u11 di~·k. ~
1•s1 l"O\\". And \\'Ith thirty thruout &-lg ahy 11 iOOiii·s 1'11y1l'lt•nl" $261. PrTI. J 1·nl<'tt on l'X11'1• l;i~•· IQI "~'Vt·n ofliC'l'll thM\Jghoot the create bright, chcel'Y atnlCJli. Bedroc11ns, huge corrler lot. near si·h0<Jl, po<JIS and shor ..
sl11te 11nd over one hundred :z Ll:g. sep. bk yds. prof. Boal or tr.tiler act"f'Sfi. ping. $~.900
!hnl(Jg"hout the nation, "'!! ldSi'pd. QUIET 4 h!le ('Uldsc. B {!II ll I i r u J pan c I in g. CALL 552-7500
h<ive constc.nl rt'ft'rrals on Upgraded & imntac. $63,900. 1' l 1'1'plat:e. Professionally • v ISION • i111•<.uning buyers. These. \Ve have prospective landscaped . I.Ats of
i;olkl l't'at.Oil.'\ plu1 ·a ·good buyt>TS,sohun-y! ~6-92:.PI l.'Oncrcte. Huge coverrd ~Ian
REAL ESTATE Joi'al ofl!cc ~tailed b): full ·1, 1 1 "'h 1 1,.1 pat.kl. Hurry! Only $"10,450. Red H'ill Realty llnlc pr-ofossionals, anti :in au ar no '"' 00 , IS · 1100 Gle1meyre SL ~ulpped kitchen. On 45 R--2 -546-4141-
Jot. Duplex .uddilion L'Ollld (Open Eveninns) havl' tan1as11c1 harbor and •
ocean vlc\\'. Ext-eptlonal i '""""""""""""""""""" linonelng can be arrang('(f
$99,500.
640-1120
COSTA MESA
RANCHER
$28,950 FULL PRICE
adverti'ilng l:H.id!i(l'I sec;ond 10 3100 Llnc:oln \\;iy I' REALn' REALTORS 49-1-9413 549-0316
nont: givCli tis lhe tools YOU Bea,utlfltl 2000 (t ., ~r Harbor l ~U~n;';'·~":';':·k~C~"~"~"~'~· ~''~'~·in;'d""'i:i'51~ii'(:;['ii'~C"'~1 NEED. 4 bedrnt, 2. ba. ltv I'm. fllin f62•4471 ( -) 54 ... 1101 -MONARCH BAY Call 67~722:) mi. CUSl kit .. pano. eornc1 r·· Che ye nne i~Ranch I tl l (.il.ot, be~! Jntlst•p'. $·16,200. • $ 0 ,. 1.1 1 ,_k . • 1 1 A 1an son1t' ~tc;interey s~y e ,." •'·· "' '''" '" .. '" (•, ' · \·,.\LLE\'
l~l\LI\
o n s r-5 ocau 1 u ,~,me on a qu1e t'U home. Lge. Jiving rm. \\'Ith t t unM · R It Mothe r-itt-Law's Suite rle ~ac i;tr\"e~ Jl('tir !hl' ol)l'n be111n cathedral <·eil.,: 3
, os a esa ea Y \\'1111 ili; oi\·n kitchen & h111h G1'l:'cn1X'l1 . ~t'atur-es ..i hdnns .. 2 bi. .. s\1•lm1n1ng
Since 1958 * 548-7711 in th is rarl)l,lllnij ranch 111ylf' lxh111s. 2 IJath.~. t"arnlly pool. !llr roof. Oversized
Alter 6 P~I. CHU 551·4611 horne. :i fUI? baths & Jots of art>a. lire1)la1't'. A!I 1noderu yar!l. Sl l;:i,poo.
General R.E. too2·;en"al R.E. 1002 HIGH ON A HILL :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 Spyglass HU l 1\'il h a fon>ve!'
ASSUME VA 7~~,.,{. L.'1.
$194 1 MO . T 0 TA L.
PAYl\1ENTS
. ~· . '~ '' . " ,, """-·~·· ,., ... ~·· ..... ~· r.tESA VERUE 2932 Rcd\\·ood other rooni tor Your family. kitchC'n. _ !'arty put ! o, TURNER ASSOC •
4 bedrm, 2 ba, fplc, cusl It hll~ an assun1able lo\\' childn-n s p!11y 11rca. ,Rich, \ l()j N. Coast Hwy., U.guna
EASTSIDE BEAUTY '"w •mi "" i1' p1·0<1lgo. i'l'!l a BRAND NE\V listing.
See how spacious I am. I
The ideaJ !amily home ~n huge Jot on cul·
de-sac. Features 4 bedrqom , 18x22 rumpus
room. 2 Fireplaces. Fruit trees, Stora ge
she<!. Fish pond and MORE! $48,950.
' 1797 ORANGE,
COSTA MESA
642-1)71
-~
General R.E. 1002 General R.E. I"'=-"-='"---"'"' 1002
BONNIE BELLE OF NEW-NEW-NEW
' A HOUSE 1 * * * Clry of Orange * * * I I~ Bedioon1 SjJ.900 2.028 r;q rt
\Vhere ell!(' in Cororni d1>l f rorit hnvn & sprinklers -
P.lar can <you 'ind p 3 sh~e roof -dou~I~ entry
bedroom, 1lcn and 2 bolh doc:iri; to large 11.vtng nn
ho1ne on 11 65 x J\.'; \ot \\"/h'JllC fainUy r n1
priced at only $671500. H's in \\'./lrph: & "'et bar-rountry
lrvine Ten·acc and il has k1tcl~cn \\'Ir!!-n g e &
many really rxtra fin(' continuous cleaning ovt'ns -
featul'(.'!I! Let us show you . Dl\V ct<. trash l.'Ompactor -
one of n kinri (/Uali l,v hon1f' ht'l'akfasl nn -~ lrg
that.cannot be du1>lic·a1r11 a1 ™;d7·m~. -: ,2. full b.1~hs -
today's t'O~tll. Call b'73-8;;.ao \~f\\ c.111lt't1.ng tluuoul.
f an.nninlmen!. \lr/8() Ol. p11dri111g -fenced or .,,-. n-11r ~;il'd \\'/roon1 for boat
have rooms for ei.'cryonc,
including a huge mil.liter
suite. Call lor appcun1n1ent.
$159,oo:>.
644.7270
IRVINE Tl(RRACE
HOf\lt~s. p rt/DE OF
O\\'NEfl.SHIP .I.. . . DUH
AV,\JLABLE ,iNVENTOHY
IS SUBSJ'A~~AL. 3 .t· 4 HDR~1S., 58;JE W l T II
gc~~~ ~bt~ ~~
& J<'Ai\flLY ROO i\TS .
PRIC .. ~D FHOf\t $68.000.
CALI. FOR \'\ PERSONAL
REVlE'\11'.
HARBOR
REALTORS
Sl]\'Ct": 191.t
673-4400 or can1per~'i00 ~ fl kit-
hlral O.C'. loo:atinn-1\10\'E
UP TO QUALITY ... ! I•-,,.,,.-,,.,,.,,.,,. ....
For hTf•1rmfltion rull: 111~'
I, :i."Jl-41t:'.O \r1n. l\l<"Cri br Ine.
=;~~====~~1 -'~'~""~'-~~---~~ General R.E. 1002 G e ne ra l R.E:.. 1002
dowrL •
SUV A
WARRANTY HOME
THE BLUFFS
Spaciou.~ and Li.r:h1 'C' Pliu1.
Top n1ove-in l.'Olldltion 11•ith
n10re upgradin~ and amenll i~ than 1·an be
dellC'rj't)('(j here. 4 Bedrooms
or 3 and Dl'n. :~ Baths.
Hedu/'NI lo $75.900. Call
6•l!i---Of.i5 .
' •,I ... "'' .. '
·~ ,,,,., lanai llC\I' 115. i111ert•st rate loan, so hwTy. p;<rk--ll ke g1:ounds. S..!9,900. 49~1177 ...... ~. ' ' ~ $39 900 c JI ·...io-1120 sumable.loan avail. S,l•l,900. ' ' a . . BY Q\\'NElt: 3 BR, 2 BA.
0!l('n Fn thru Sun 1-5. Christia no Realty [ mftnELL.J fain nn. SUPER OCEAN
Costa Meia Realty 6916 Warner IU1 VIE\\', huge bckyrd. 151,900.
Since 1958 * 548-nll a t Golden West ~ ~•,.._95_·"'-=---=
After 6 P~f. Call 551-4617 714 : 142-7416 W~~e.> Laguna Hills 1050
TOP·O-THE
HILL
'
•
You bargain hunters had
better take a good look at
this one. 3 bdrms, 1% baths.
area la1nily room, forced
air heat, huge lot, bu\lt-in
gas range and oven and a
great loan that anyone can
take owr. 1-~or lwthfor
information please ask
about listirig number 9570
With a dtamaUc 180 dl'g.
plus ocean . view, a
beautifuUy ~ted S BR
&. Den or 4 BR custom built
home with h~ game room.
formal dining, and luxurious
n1as1.er suilc. ,Outside is ex·
ICnsive ..,atio d ecks, big
trees and a Kol pond. A!l al
thl' ernl ot a q u iet
l'Ul-<ie--sac.
* MESA VERDE * 213 : 592-5568 29:-D Hal'bor Bh·d. 4 BR 3 ba, air t"Clnc.l. iiCJ bar,
A beauty! A home for Jiving prof. landscaped., spii nkler' .. & lo\ing. Pool. Country clu.b DOLL HOUSE 7 <
WALKER & LEE
REAL ES'fATE
545-9491
t he Call lo see it YOU CAN AFFORD systl'm. Asi!umable <7: a nt?SP ":· Pt't1et'I 1iUle i;tar1er homC'~ -19'.l--78-U. 581-2-li6 •1
OO\\ · S?t950 Cute 11nd clean as a pin! 2 this customiz('(I t·u1ie \.\'ilh . • .... ,
SPANISH!
I .EACH!
POOL
Spanish ranch! Close to
heach. NE\V C U ST 0 J\f
POOL! ! Raised e n t r y .
Large torrnal. living room.
Separate family rooi11 .
Hon1c n1akers k i I e h en .
Heated custom pool with
sweep! Secluded master
suite. Family sized
bedrooms. VERY CLOSE:
TO BEACH. Take
ach·antage eall 963--6767.
OllfN i!L 51 • rrs FUN 10 BE NJCEr
A top value at
$159,500
Call 6-14-l'lll en
OCEAN VIEW
PRIVATE BEACHES
1 Sre this t.'Orner k>eallon • 3 I bedroom, (amily r o q ni
I
hon1e. lUghly u~.
Enjoy the pla.cl<l poctl o.c ust:.
!ht• priv111e beach. A super
lr•ll!l' lol. A truly bes'f buy
:11 S~.!.j{)().
-GEM 81~ BR's, 2 ba's, candlelight its 3 bdrms .. 2 lmlh, hreak· Laguna Niguel 1052
l:ZO-.F' Tustin Ave .. N.B. dint', Cantina k i t c h(' n fa~r liar. 111Jli1y roon1 wash· BEAUTlfUL ..i BR hillside
REAL TORS 642-4623 w I h I r n s , 111 i r r o I' e d er iinti dryf'r .. 1 \ ha,; I ors ol homr y,r/vicw or ocn Ir hills.
fixer. Perfect \\'ardrobe dOOrs, C"rac~ling storagl' ;uul 1~ In <· a I e d lll'al<'d -1o· p!Xll. Oll'ner. ~~~~:o~mC. 3 Br, den,' used brick firp! Only S ,000 across fro111 park and pool. $6.j,!IOO. 831 __ 2620 f!ining I'm, Jl,J Ba .. Cbe<>rv. -you lll!Y @SSUme 011ner's Only m.!IOO. L I F 1054 5~~ + 1,J ntA loan 11· Dints CALL 552·7500 a (e ore st kitchen. Lot si£e 51x179 of $103. PITI • or rcfi1111nce
\\•/lots of trees. T~ere's the 11,ay you v.·ant! Bkr • VISION • 7o/0 A ssuma ble Loan
roorn to add. Don't wait call 962.5511 -3 Bit 2 ba, \ yt• ru~w home in
no1v. \V. T. Miller, Realtor, I coiu:try sidr. Sl0,800 cash It>
&12-<Su. BEACHWALK CONDO Red Hill Rea ty ""'" "" '"'"· r""'· • PRIME LOCATION :liBt'<lroorn, 1~ ... baths, bcauU· REALTY ~8'\l.TOR:-'. inlc1'. or orily Slll7. per mo.
. ; . nt•ar South Coast Pl11za. full y llP!:illdM lhl'UOUI. Jlilir-Univ. Park Center, Irvine ror appt. 17141 581-0210, 48~/2BA, firepl, <;O''e1-ed rored doors, self-clt'anlng Cu1Tand Realty Co.
patio. O"':ner an:< 1 o us O\'en no·wU floors . $47 900. RACQUET CLUB I r'do l•le 1056 $42."'1. ' ' JEWEL -·=_;.:.c;:._ ___ c;;.;."I
CALL 9fiS..4-141 Qn1u Popular J Br. 2 ha, all "l"""I Wa terfr ont Duplex
'Tl North Irvine. By 01\·ncr. hulk (lr th•' l•ilb. O.\tl('I''<;
• .. • ·•
,., • .. • " . •
THE REllL
ESTllTERS
644.n70
* Crest Realtj ~IV21 ah· roncl. Beaut. landscafX'l.l.
1
ynur "'uan15 ,,..;u 111.y rh"
l\IESA VERDE 3 BR. I ~ ba. ~.i.1--2!.51 ;,p1 .. 2 studio apli< .. :; tx:1·n1~.
1'"anr-rn1, lrple, eo.1·nt'l· 101. t'U. L<'tlM<lt<>ld $!G(J,()l':O l..;1nd -•
By O\\'tJ('I\ S-11.800. ~·S!li§ 5~7542 Lagunil Beilch 1048 "~" ho· rurt•h11~·"I.
Oanil Point 102611 SOME Start Summer Right
BR S. [ S ' _ HANO Tl'\pl""· Th1l· · ~· ~h .11 ... p1~. SALES MANAGER DANA HARBOR VIEW 5 1ng e t ory I F11:nuly hom" ot· 3 B<irm:;; .. s tens 10 lleaeh fl.· h:nni:oo c1.
fhe highly successful Unique ! , . . $45 500 J !gr. den .~ 2'~ baths. llugl' Slli:> 000 J{oines OUice in U:ii;q_na del ; ,. __ ,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,...,,I \\ hlte Ylaler & Catalma, 2-IOO 1 Pnh~·ay with \l'aff'rf11ll. f • B Ibo
Polar i&.. seeki~a lMnagcr ' sq. ft. 4 BR. 3 BA, crpts, Escellen1 ·re1id<"nti11I loc111ion 1re1 bar, bll-in~. f11>lc .. N d a 1 a 1 skilled in sales organizalion drps, patio, lJ x 3.'> fenct'l:I. -close to 1'1cl>onald· oveNiize iara~e. 2'.!00 Sq. f1. l'll · 3 J3L·~ur < u P ,.. -: <' ll ·
:i1KI capable of directing a au10 sprklr, gar. 11921 Ct_llc Douglall.r 'All li!cns.. 5lone -+ espa11.sion room. Ocean ,t ~~a~t'r Ol lf'ntt'<I. $I IO,OOO
slaff of 21 sales proplc. This De; Bonanza, S.J.C. SS2,.i00 fireplace, r a n1 i I y room, hillside vie11·s. A really Each.
posiUon docs oot require a NEW LISTING or_ lease for $495. Bkr, Chvn, play yard, 2 bli lhs nnd greal buy at $89,500
Brokers l ice n s c bu1 61:>-741~ or 498-1440. freshly !)llinced inside and
t'Xpe.r ience in the local Cozy ~ bc<lroon1 rloll housf' Eastbluff 1030 oul. Call f\1r. Rissc>r,
resale market is 1·t'Quircd. 1\i t.h fireJllace, comer R--2 545·&124, SoulhCo, Rea hors. .. '!
Contact: Jim Wood , 6'ia--£000 Joi wi1h greal potential for ONE OF '• $110,000 ~
or 675-1454 eves. 11ddi1ional unit. Up grades f.asttrlutr11 !inest 4 BR. Irvine 1044 REAL Pri(.'{' .iust i·P<lu('C{I for ··t
NEW LISTING gulore. This is truly a must homes. Big fainity/clinl ngl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~U!lHll<'L' sale. Clrnn & lxesh ,'~
• i;ce Only ~{XN) call nn N I redec· s-0500 1• 494 _. ,_561 .J bdrn1 .. :: b.1th, fa1nily rn1 ...... Newport Heights area: Super trn"m· · · · t'ii:y ... 1 · ." • u t h"Plcs. Lgt'. sunny pa!io -·1
3 'BR, 2 bas., Family or ;r J. Balboa Bay Propertie s LOVELY sp6cious 2 story ,v/BBQ. 35 .1"1. lut ~.~.
Dining -rm borne \vlth 2846 E. Coast Hwy. lion1e v.'ilh rustic 11oocl
custom detailing thru out. Corona del !\lar 640-8~8-I -es1t'rior, 4 bedroon1. forn1al h owol'l() l awsorJ Jn . , ·~
•
DO REALTY·'
117; \ '" I '""·' R
*673·7300*
A small price
1opay , !
1o move in1oa
\'. \ Ll ,I·~\·
Rl\1.1\ ,., ' -· ..,.,. ••• ... .,,rLv"'"""
SUMMER:&
COMING
Located oil Irvine ave, So. Fountain Valley 1034 dinin~. fR1f1il Y room .. aU IMMACULATE I I . qcalton •
of 17th St. j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j l'lec1nc k1!che11, hr 1 ck 2 6dl"Jl1.. 2 ba1h hon1e; 3416 Via Lido 675-lj62 ·~~
GIB WALKER n1,•place, new shag carpcts landscaped. "'ifh lge. tr('('~ F.ANT ST C V IEW ,..,
REALTY 67.5-5200 Assume 70;0 Loan 11in1ou1.:: Cal' }.:uriq:e. Quiet & hrick patio. Close 10 m•1\'f · A I ' CDS s1n_'CI. ~H.500. Bkr. lolarina. Hurry on lhls OTK' Back ~~r lo beach \\'alk 1"
$32,900! 1\ real clollhousc. So ONE OF co M •s J1uge 2 story, 4 bednn on 963--5681 at $36,SOO. l\/lt'nn1.s court adj. 4 BR +
Ft0m P1Clllc Coast HlghWIV
and Superior A....enu•
lnterucllon, drive ~
Superior to Newport Cr.St
entr1nc1. Sale cnlce:
.#12 Aobon Court. Open
dally 10 A.M. to Sunset.
(71 4) Ms-6141.
. ,
'
Oel lf::hlrul hon1e \I' i 1 h
CUSf01'1 SPARKLING
POOL, fresh painl
throughoul . PROFESSION·
ALLY LANDSCAPED. Spac-
ious Jiving roon1. Fo1m11I
dining room. Chrery kit-
chen. Huge masler suile
11'11h !ICparnte den. \VALK
TO SCliOOLS. Loaded 1l'ith
goodi1•11 -n1ust see -call
842-253.'l.
OPEN f/L SI • "'S FUN ro SE NICE/
THE REllL
ESTllTERS ~
$2!1,500? Super J-tuntingto11
Beach home is sharper than
a model? 3 bedroom!!, 2
baths, clost' to ocean.
WON'T LAST? Call agt.
• ""-a'' <lean -u <all • • . oversized comer lot 11·i1h ,, • n bay VU. lA>w \JL>:es & C07.y sn~ • ., uu ,,~ NEWEST & N ICEST .:X·.-. _._._ " _ _.,,, pal<'o. N-" SI0,000 movt' right in. But al this boat gate. Needs some TLC. ,.. _____ ...,.,._., '!-(: u.u~ ewu~ ., ...
super low price you'd better CAPE COO BEACH Payments only $'155. PITI. UNIVBRSITY P<it'k, Vitlagt': ~ ·' ~ less. Hurry! Open sun. l-5. ·.~
pack 00\v! To see call HOMES IS OFFERED $42,900 . 1, for ll31l' by owner, _· ~ 42.;i Via Lido Nord. GT.,..741-1. -:
847-fiOlO Agt. For Sale By Owner 842-7411 Eves : 963-4062 bt'aurHully upgradc>d, JSR. ,.,._5•1, ,.99•2100 L IDO ISLE-By Owner
Cus1 till, !his 2 yr old, 2 S!)'. 2 1~ bn. f11111 nn. IJl'inc. -"'.C.C.~~==-o-,---1unusui1I 50' co~r Jot, 1op Balboa Peninsula 1007
EXECUTIVE HOME
By Owner. Oloi«> Balboa
Pen Point. 2 Story, 4 Br,
lkn, Din-rn1, Cusl Bil
wfloads or xtras. 50 Yds
h'01n Boat laun('hing ran1p
&. bay beach 3 Blks froin
'fc1111is Club. Pl'inc only.
67"J-73'i0
Lg. 4 Br, den, nr. Racquet
Clb, boy rrunp. $97.500.
So. of !he 1111')' lxtnlt' (BRASHEAR) only. Sj7,500. :)j;l-4ill3 or * * $37,500 * * lo1"at1on, Rustic Otarm.
fc atun·s •I Br. Den. ~(' -fi'i:~2Q.t3 \\'rlJ deslgned 2 BR., S11arious 3 Br, den, 2111
se11·in(::-lnun<lry rn1. 5 00. _ REALTY . . ,\SSUi\1t:: 7'(.. 3 Ar. 2 Ba, fealuff's /lt.'I\' w/w c11rp. & Balhs. huge. I i rep la c I' ,
all 1vlshi\'l'S, Liv -r n1, I =~=iciiii:ii::I houus l'OOn l .r;, pa tio, lgr yd. cus'ron1 draperies lhi'UOUL eun1n1uni1y rennill <' r I ,
Din-1·111, brkf s 1-bar. 21; lo felll'I', abLils h'ft.'t'nlx'H .~ t'ront liv. nn. ;iffol'ds a tx>ad1. $115,000. 67:'>-1079
11·1·1-hars, 2 Fl' p 1 cs' **Assumable SV•o/o ll'('('S. By 0~·1n'r . appl Oll~V. ntngnificcnl VtE\~I or THE Linda Isle 1059
ft.d!shakc roof. spac patio, VA Loa n ! 1!1 S!6,000. SJ;,-SjJI , i\1 r . OC~N-Loe. 111 \\·Ooc1s1----------
t'rpl ,I} tile lhruMout. It is 119. P 11,,, ., \\'uhncr. Co1·t' !'l'l'lion, lf'ss lhan :.!00 * BY OWNER *
offert'd to qualiliN.I buyl'r al · J. flyS ::t • • • ·' v111'ds fro111 bt'ach. 1 · I· I I 1 I '199 000 s1:12,;-.oo. ShOl\'ll by aptlt only Bcdl'OOn1 ho111l' \l'i1h slate TURTI .EROC!<: T1·unsfr.l'1'••d i\i ISSION REAl.TY 49 l-OT.ll .. int <i it'.l~. .~n ",'.,,r't · !ii:'r..~m. entry, fn111ily r o 0"111. 011·ncr 111ust i:t•!I. 4 BR. :.!':i I "' .,,.
"Ourn1et food ccnler \\•ith bas.. Lgr Fa111-rni. i;<'p IOo/o DOWN 71~: lll1-iil1:i 'ii~: :>48-ti037
bteakfasl bar,. hardwoqd Dfn-1m, Rtriun1, patio. Nr. 1\lovc into bi:nnd 'n1n~ ocean Mesa Ve rde 1063
.\
" Owner/agent 67a-4600
SOPHISTICATED
You 11·il! recog:nlzt' that this
8' · assun1abJc loan i!I 11
b<ul!<tin! Invi1ing duplex, So.
floors on large cul-de-sac pool. park. lotany str:is. 1ric1\' mu!ti·lelt'c>\ hon1c, --------
Jot. c~n $69,500. incl land. !l13--!12Q.'I I hcantcd celli~:;;, f.1~\\'.ilCC'kS, Mesa Ve rde De light ',
The Real Estate Fair *BEST BUY* mastf'r su11e, ,nni·rored Bv Ql\ner. 1..a1"!l:<' <IBR, 2BA. •'!I C1plstr1no Beach 1018 nf fh1·y .. surrounded by ex· 839-6133 or 536-2551 *IN TURTLEROCK* cloi>etll, dramatic -e-nuy. j1lus bonu~ roo111 . Ne1v plush .. 1J('n:oi\'t' properties, on a
CUSTOM 2 SR, 2 BA, huge ~1u1e1 ~!reel. Your lnvt'!I·
fam nn, stone frplc, bi1·ch 111..-.nt will he prot{'('led. Take
8-11-0010. I cabnts galore, 2,1'.XXl sq It, 1i look! You'll be happy you
Jiavc &>melhing you want lo Palisades. tlfrl?
sell? ctassihed ada do It 31931 Calle Vt'rano I MORGAN REAL TY
well • call NO\V &12-5678. $54,950 ~1 673-6642 67.5-6459
~~~~~!!!!!~~~!"f Plan 1. 3 BR, 2 oo. + fani, Red Carpet, Realtors ,·J:j ri •1 thru·out. See , to
Il.t 1'1ACULAT£ 3 BR, 2 Ba. Tennli; & pool!!. 833·:t1-17. 497-1761 Appl"l'Ci11te! UndM" mark~t
Fu1n rn1. bllin~. ci'pls,1 -p1ice $."19.fl.IO. !l79-7:t2Q
dr"" fed yd, xlnt Loe. & r===-=-:=:-::=---------
rond'.613-0062 '"''' & wkmi.. SEEK & FIND. Famous Sculp!ures
Huntington Buch 1040 ;:=.:==-=~'-"'-"'"----------,
Newport Beach 1069
-----.....,,......_,,.--:::-~-:::--.,--· The Only THING s@ll~µ-ai2t$& 239 HEL IOTROPE
Thal Intriguing Word Game wilh a ChucH<
------filit.il loy CtAY L P()fj,•N
0 t.orrong• l.119rs of th•
four .crombltd words bt· low to lo•ni lovr 1impl• word1.·
$74,500
OPEN SAT. & SUN.
!o.Jnivers lty Realty
:JOO! i:;. Cs l. ll"'Y· 673·6510
j !! NEW DUPLEXES
Dnnu Point
$61,950-$7:l,9j0, cx.'1!8.n views
1 Sa"e $30,000 ro $50,000 over
COr'Ona dcl f\1ar pricell.
r . ~tcr Apprectarlon
Ag!. 3.1861 Copper Lantern
'196-3-131. Dana Point
SPRA\VLING EXEC hon1e
fei1tures isolt1tc<l -n111stcr
~ultt, children's 11•ing, glU'·
rlen gourmet kilchrn, 11•ith
. ~unny hrt'a~fast 1wn1 \'i~11 s j
l:ix:JO ~pi11•khng J)l>OI! •I Lacge l
BR's. roaring Jircpl11<•c, no
ll'R.'< flooring! Just blocks lo
oct'an. Still shiny as ne1\'
11ntl only $~5.000 full pr ice!!
Bkr 962-5511
REPOSSESSIONS
For Wormation and )oc:itlon
of these FHA & VA horncs,
conUlct •
KASABIAN
9624644
11 I. L U B 0 I. r; \ \\ ~; F. \" f• \" \\' II
I• I Ii -..; F. :-I H 11 t. I, I. II t: •I I.
\ IJ I '\ t, II '\ /, 1 \ " I I' \ I.
\11.11\1.l\ It \ II \' c ~. I.
11 1: 11 It '\ T II I: 0 \ I \ H :-n II I.
' :.. n I' 1\ 1· n 1 J 11 \I II \ q p ',I
11 i . It I' I. I''\ "J II II j, \ t' t. ti ti \ I.
:-I, l I. I' T I I~ I , .. \ It \I." II t. 11'
C 1£ I~ E ..; 11 I! 0 V .\ ~ II H I) <: L ... :-,
IJ .\ ~· f. •. ..,. 11 I. 41 V."~ I. t:llKS 'l'U
IJ fl X T E E Ft E R " \
r L ~ S 1: ' V ~ II T ' T ~ ,\I ~ ii h
NEW LISTING
H.\LBOA PESINSULA 3BR. .. ... ,
t'Oltar,e, steps to be.t beach. •
i't'll'Ni 10 sell. 159'.:ioo. <1
(' 0 A S T PROPERTIES, • ~
lii'.;..'J ILO
UIG C,\NYON ro r mcr
B1"0adn1oor i\1odcl hon1l'. ·l
Bl'. Fun1·rn1., \\'ct·bar, 1 hr a>it cond. By 011.•ner.
6-I0-821.i ". HARBOR VU, Carmel ... i
J HR. 1 B:i, Frnn·1·1n. Bell! I 11 IOc111ton (lrt Jt1'f)('U belt. ,1•
Owni"1' $71,[100. Alt. 6. , ·~.
348-53i.l
BJ(; CANYON C .C . I
! 'l'.1111 lilt'. 3500 Sq. It. 4 Br .. ~··
:1 B:1.. Spectacular vie\v. ' ~ ... ~1J9.500. 644-8121 or ~ O\VNER deslX'rNlt'. Sh11sp 3 V \ L X 1 \ T I' H Y II t. L ' \ fi.l:.!-1!\JO. h.v <M'nt>r. ~ bdrn1. Assunic 7r,,; 101111! • ~
, cation: lh;,1'5 two weeki
in tl-e counlry fo llowed by 50
FINE DUPLEX
nu.~llc bt'auty w/atonc fl]Xc-,
~lli5lli w11ll!I, lu~h palio, + 1t
tree top 11pt. to boot! Only
$93.500. Bkr, Open Sun, 1 ... :;,
429 his Ave. 675--7414 or
·l~ll lO.
Ha11 lihag "'-'ttrpeting , WI'!'. K n 11I"!.r;11 11 l fl A l1 I.\ I' l1 HA RBOR \'IF;\Y HOl\1ES-•
Built·ins. tll-Sh11·1u<ht'r. FA 1'11onat'O model 2BR. &:: den.
heat. ran1lly area. 1 bath~. :-i T \ T U t I 1 ~ I. II E H T Y ll I) )I 11 2BA. 1'11an1y xtras. X1nt
W'etli;, .. ·-.
_t>_..g'f .... l'..o:""'.~"'w.,1'._"_1'_"_' _'0,.i__.I_. I I I I
SCRAM·LETS Answcr1 in Clilsiifiutlon 8080
Costa Mesil t 024
COLLECI:: Perk. I\ ehan~
10 bu,v A. lor cil ho\111<•. 3 Br.
I H11. Avail. mlddlr or
C"ntl of June. Ask for Liz or
Ken. AgentH, 5'56-9521.
O\VNF.R-:-ti1e~a Vt'l'<le. Sharp
'.\ 11R, 111 bas, f'a1n-rm. 2
fr11\Cll, 114!."' (.'Pl. Pl'lr1. only.
$13.fm 5~
.lulil ~· old! $37,930. brk , 1 rorkl. S 6 9 , ~ 0 0 , Eve: ,,...11u.iK111•: f h• luJ<ku n.1"h' h.i~J l.111 ~rflld' '""., .,.. 0 0·~•1-Call -2561. !·.~'"•"'· 11r .• 11,111n. "'' doa,·on•lh Ul 1i..· r~11k. l inJ ~ ... 11 6-1·1-l::.rl/ A)'!: ......,...., •u Q\\~F.R liq. Assume 714~ h.JJ,n ~~"'·~~·I IMI' '' 1n<0,•llo""' CHOICE 8:1yfron1 IOCJ.\0011. " w. Vl'I')' prrtty 3 bclnn. 2 Mi«i. Stir"' or t.ibttty Vt11U~ Dr ,..,l!'I itlntle 1v1de 1nobllc honito. •
h11t h hl>nlf'. Has fo"A heating, r1tit11t1J•blh P1lllodlurn ~'il!Jt'd BuU .. T\t.'O bf'dl'OOrl1, patio in
Kil<'hl'n but11~1ns. f'sunll)' t:l:n"uu ~r.~~;1 lhU :·:;: ~:::,.., lul<Ul'Y park $17,JOO. 6-H-6023 ":
IU'l"a, flN'plAL>e. $.1i.SOO. bkr 1'0fll0ffo•: 111 • .019!: ClinrntWs bf:ACH HOUSE S~l,500
C>ll 9'2-0566 L,--~---::--;-:---=;-;:;;=-:-;;::,c-;:::~ f d' I Pri\'At")'.. Charact<>r. CAU.. l!UGE lain rm lookin1t out at 'l o u11le1 :tll\ ur ;,ll nf ,he '"r~ndt'J "S«I; & ·in ' iuui.~. oii·ner, tnro "1 !lJIJlL 6·15-A914.
cu!lllTl bit pool, Iii' mi nu111b•'" ! 1hruu~h 7, sen,t oO rcnn f111 t :K"h, mt1l.11111 ,·ht'"~" S-~IJ! nr (ii~! 32&-X!.t1.
y,/d('tp shag erpt, bltin11, p;11•;1hh.• 10 "Ml'!. S: rind ... :0.1~r·l <·l<'i:1;11n S}udll:atc:. ,\Jdt<~
.'IRR. •, ·Ja•• '""'· "' '"•<". 1 r I · Cl.nssificd Ad ! Cnll 642·5678 • " 'V 1• ""' " klltr\ n Ctll' (I t II~ MC"'fl:ir .. r. od
$:,'9,7(1(). !l62--i202 ------------------~-~' "ay='-------
'
I
·--• • i •• , ' • • I • -... ) . ' ~ .. . , .
T1'111r$d~y, Jurit 6, 1974
ewport Beach 106 lncom• Prop•rty 2000 ·· 1=====;;;;:;:=====1 -'-~~;;;--= TRIPLEX
ousel Furnl1 od HouM1 Unfurnl1he HouM1 ·Unfurnished H1t1 p11rtmen11 Furni a ed
Cost1 Mesa 3124 Co1t1 Mesa 322 4 Laguna Btt(h 3248 SAl''l'A ANA Country Club Huntington Beach 3~
E ·SIOE 1 BR FURN. 3 BR.-Kids, Sln~ff-s. t 'rull $150-NlCE 1Br. North cnc:l lt0111c. Unfum. I llr, Den, ON Bt;AOi a Br scudkl
Water & gardener JNld, trets. S2:.Yl/ti10. \\111l k 10 bcoch & lOY.'fl. 111u1~ry ni1h·11Wr. front v.·/ilOOI , clubhou"'"" IRl\UUl &
Ap11rtm.ntt nfurn.
D1n1 Polnr 3126
NEWER duplu, 2 Br, t 811 bltnt, grdn patk>,
encl t•r. Adults. $210.
493-593', 33962 Sllvor
l1nt1rn: O .P . BAYFRONT COMt,IERCIAL
OPPORTUNITY! Deluxe 2 bedroom, 2 bath
condo zoned for busi ness suite. Sunset and
Sailboat vle\v. J)ynamic Ne\\'port lO<'ation .
Super lo\\' do\vn ... Super lou• in terest!
Jllness forces sale belOV.' market at $69,500.
CALL TODAY!
NEWPORT
Ju.st off Nl'vt'po1•t Bh"-1.
C.OOll nL~M to Nt111""rt
a,~1:1 ~tesa. -Slln Dlf'i:o
tV.y. C<'nlrul ~1Na toc.11lon.
$295/ 545-0221 $185--2 llR, l\ld~ 6: pell SJ85-I BR. North 1•nd. NPt1r 111.1"h, Oltk Roon. S27ti. mo. 11tturlty Adult• SJ.15 mo mo. \\'1·1l'On1e!! bea('h, ~tt./pel v.·1•lton11•. N"-.:1\' COTT1\GE, l Dr, ti.I" ~7373.or :).'!,6-110-I eve. ·
Huntington B•1ch 3140 Sl~-Plf'x. Si ng l es kids SZ?i-UTILpd. Ch&rn1ini: l'f'nr fu n1. $175. 100. PitEN 1 1 -ok. ('011 •• h'plc, lovel,v area. COTTAGt::, turn .. l Or. nlO. . isn1a I~ lleiu·h llOle.
NE1\R l ~1k<' Park 3 BR Sunt· Homeffnd•rt * 6.42-9900 $2G5-2 Bil, bl.tns, Jriilc, !let·k, n10 Roonui: SZJ .:;.o W<'<!k. Apb.
n1l'r only~ S42:5. UliL Inc. MES E t blk heM:h. All ~·lt'Ct'lrol<.'d. 141 ttt~ Dr. S!fl/ino. 5JG-70.i6. ~-0321 l-:t•cs. only. A VERD $325-NE\~ 3 Br. frplc., tos.111. Alcaa . Or call l\lr. Hunt. Harbour · 3742
LigunaBe1ch 3148 3 br, 2 b1, top loc1tlon »;11r, ylll'd, Pifllaion Vleju. Stcv•·uJ, 6·1~5000 Ext. 433. 1--~-------
SUP1';R 2 Ult. APTS.
Crt!~t Vlev.•. ThrunllflUll ~11'n11rc1'nH'nt Col'p .. 493--0141.
Water & Gardtn•r P11 ld SlM-2 BR, 2 BA, all bltnK, ACllOSS PCll lrom oreno.
VIE\\' 21lll & den, nr 10\\'ll. $415 Leise, S4S.Ol28 gllr, yard. View! CONOO 2 8 . Sa J Sludlo, frplc, jocui1J, \\"Ulcr ~E~•~•~tb~l~u~ff;... ____ 3_130_
I. ,. /( ' ,. s 4 3 5 / nl 0 ·c -~o""~=~~=~--· S500-3 BR. ll'fllt", p 0 0 I ' Cttpo. Pool81~·. but nprh•~c~ . pd, SI6S. 1213) 427-4182 • l.IHUSl,IAL 2 Br, 2 81'1. M!p.
t-;EHF:i\UIPITY REALTY. LLEGE PARK -l f\lii.iJ1illcc111 \Vhltc \Va1er Pnli(). Security. W•hr-clryr. L~una llffch 3748 illn rnl, (rptc, po0I, ndullal,
GRUBB & ElLIS CO.
0'>1111.·111 wilt hna 3 blidroonl!I
-dlnin~ mo1n -fa1nily
room -orr.hld room -2
'lteplacl":. • \11t1oor BCQ • :'16'
patio cirt•ll•ri in 1vrought lrun
-2nd pntio -plUi got'gUQU~
1nore! Uoth 01her unllic "n'
2 BR -11nlk!~ -l'nclo~•'d
~Al'jl;gc'8. All 1111~ fOI' only
II)"~ down -Jui.t 1·edt1<·l'1t.
NO\\' 011Jy $i2.~l{l(I. Ca 11
752-1700.
•lllT-217:'1 Br, 2 Ba, w1l1r, gar-VNleUw!. Child, S1l1 JM!f. $235. 495.5346.l'-"""""';;..;;~c;;;--.:.c..;;cl S"'2> ~lO. 848 Anili,'1>!1 Wll)'.
Lido Isle 3156 diner JMld. $375. -VIEW RENTALS ufr 6 s. \1•knds. BACU. at D-escent Boy. Col. 4~7_1977 or 6<14--0900.
------..,--S4S-0228 673-4030 or 4~48 c d 11 &.. 1'V., Uli.ls pd. \Vkly S55 .. I---""'-'""-~---~~-
REALTORS
Newport Harbor
lk SUI~ 10 11\.'lpt.'Ct this
l!l({'CUti\'{' I l>e<l1'00111 within
!lteps to a prlvat<' brach &:
lhe n1arl.i111. !Ins numerou!I
ct.1!lton1 e.<etrall. A s k in g
$69,!)j(J. Call 61\-ST:JO.
iiOO Nr"·por1 Cr"ntc1· Ori\'<'_
Balboa Peninsulo
$61,000
J bcdroom 2 \)(Ith hon1c plus
bachelor 'l~ntol. Built-ins,
tircplael! and pulio. $61,001
646-7171.
TWO STORY
EXECUTIVE
Supc'r spac:ious j bedroo111s
in Ni!\l'f)OM 1\·i1h forn1al din-
ing room. Plu~ hu'}!t> f11n1ity
room nnd \l'Ct bur. A beauty.
Cal! no\\' to Sel'. 616-7711
Walker &Lee ~lAL llfall
WESTCllFF
1311 & 1207 Highland DR.
Pre sentl y under
consh11cHon prestige Exec.
t ustom hoJn('s in I\' e I I
cstablisht'd n<'lghborhood.
Each homr l BR. 3 lull
ba.lhs, forn111I dining, lg.
f8Jn rn)s, \\'Cl l:Mlr, sunkC!n
convcr s 11tion pit ,
+ n1any fabulous Ica1ut'C's.
Tclc. 645-2238 for appnr.
If you ha\·c a flair filr rile \\"on't <lo niurh in u \lOk:~~·
dra1natlc call us ahOu! 1hi~ 1:,nn~. b.ut thls pi111· uf 1' Ol I.
stnsational propei'ly. I r'~ I L1'.Xi:.S can do n lot !or
tht' liQught alter 4 Bit )'llUr .Pllllls !or a M'<'u1·t·
1''11m ih· Room 'E" Pla n lri f11mnc1al fuh11'<". P1·rC1'1'1!~·
lhr BiuH:'I hij::hly UPR:radcd SUUC'd for O\\'Ul!r (l('{'\ljl<lth'Y
11·ilh rff1•ctivc USl' •) f cu· h1\'f•sr1ne111. S7J .!i00 raC'h,
n1 1rN'lt'll. shunrr.i1, top grade h.1\1' uwon1es that can t"nsil"
.·at'pt'1 ,10(! \\'Ull c'O \'l'rings. 1 .. • rai~t>d to S7:\0/n10. 9';'..
If )OU t'nlertain this :s yvur ~~loon )IOS.l5ib!c or ?~ Sold
hu111•·~ ! tugi.'lhl·r or sl!porat<'ly.
On,iy $87.SOO Fet! Call 64·l-721l
614-Tlll ~ e1a~
BEAUTlf'UL , BR. , ""· Costa Mesa Units
Harbor Vu. SSl,500. Ft't'. 5 fantas!lr unih; in cxc<'llent
Agent. 6-1()...1 120 /\rea. Room to ndd l mott.
San Clemente 1076 All 2 bcdroon1s 1\•ith lots ol
prl\'::ic·,v. <::ill for uppL to
SPACIOUS 2 BR, I ·~ B1\, 11r s('('. $11 5.0CXl.
lx-ach, 1616 S Ola Vista. 6 one hcdroon1 units, fl ll fo1·
541 ,500, 011•ner. T.1.l-39Jj $79,r'il:l!l.
PRESIDENTI,\L HEIGHTS 2 .unils on one lot. S1.3.SOO.
Ocean view. 3 BR, 2 1'11 BA. Gl\·t• _us a 1·.11J, 11·e r~' 01wn
for sale or 1eaSE'. ·192-MOl cv(>n1ngs and \\'C'ckends.
Rl'rl C 1.1 r p-: t • ln\'<.'!ltmcnr
South L1guna 1086 Dl\•lslon. 9~2:'i'll1.
2 13H, 2 .lli\. Su1n~r or on os ""!n,vrn. 342S h1o $100 up 494-2508 F I V II 3834
I I ·' \ U J I D1n1 Point 3226 L N ' I 3252 . . ount• n I •y Y!';.11· ~ '"' !l:u . ' v=-· u y. 19un1 1gue LACONA llllli L e J s ure STUOJO great tor 1 pct!iOn. -
C11ll 1::?131 793--0.127. \Vorld Now dl!luxe extra SI S!i lnt'l. utU. \Valk 10 1.M.•uch, DE:L.UXE condo. 2BR/2BA.
Houses Unfur nithed 81.-:ACH HOUSE 3 BR clo11ti PACIFIC Ille. Village. Yrly l1U1te · 1 BR. l bll. Se~uh! •lfn'·lS:i9. !)00.I, bltim, 1-ec area; Olt
to Dana 1-IAl'hor. Le:isc opt. lcAse. New, Condo., 1 nr., 2 Cllr<'ll't't' liVlng Included. Newport Bu•h 3769 Urohkhunsl & SID F rwy.
G•neral 3202 $285. 4!54486. ·199-1331. BR. 2 bas. Viti"'· Priv. S:l25. Cull ownr bctwn 7. ~ S200/n10. Days: 83J.81GO, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I El Toro 3232 ~:~~~t1f· Club priv. 9pm, 673-683:1. $;'\51\\'K UP. 1 Br. i Bu. & Eve11: 66.-41.~
ALA Jl.ENTALS
WI U'Kl.l.llH 1M lllVl(I
t-llW'°ltT 4 IAT, C.M. •41·131)
ON .lkach? S9l /Sl50 Bach.
furn. dish<-6 & au: Ull pd.
AS 1S1 U-1)aint 1 br $120. util
pd, sin JX'l ok. now~
N!Cl::ST I br In l:. CM $160.
lurn-pool-sml complex.
2 on LOT! 2 br $170 SA child
& l'{'l, has garai;r.
PATIO 2 Br $183, garage
stv/rcf. C&D. sml pet ok.
UNIQUE! 2 br $21-0 E. CM
C."D, pal.io, pel ok, gar.
\VON'T Last? 3 br/2ba $235.
fncd, kids & pets, 2 cnr.
COOL Surnml!r! 4 br/2 ba.
$26.i, kids/pe1s. S.A. River.
SF:E NO\\'? 4 br/2 ba $295.
c.i:.:o. fncd for fantlly, gar.
Too l\lany to List-Call Us
\\'(.' scr\'iec all the beach
cities & inland Orang!! Co.
NEW :t sty rondo. 4BR. 2 ba, -UNIVERSITY PARK llilch. Color TV, mnid !K"rv, Huntington Beach 3840
bltins, ca·pt s, dl'ps, 2 car Mes• Verde 3263 1.artt, brnnd new, 2 BR :t pnol. THE MF.SA. 415 N.1 ~::::;;.:;2:~c.;o~;;;.;..c;.o.;;;1
gar, tte <'t"nler w/pool. No 3 BR 2 BA r-.i ...,...,e rm bas. Condo. wot 1>a
1
r, Nc\\•port Bl, N.R. ti41J...OOX1.
IX'lll $3;,Q mo 6T::r-72.l0 ' · • .,. ' 0 -·· ' Jacuui, pool, 1325. l RP.DROOl\f, new cptii. drps da~. or 9ti2-lO:?i
0evl!:i [;~0~$4\;c :~~· ~3J.i~ 5·t7-G79l & furniture. Steps to beat•h.
Fountain Vall•y 3234 LN gol{ t'OW'lle. 2 BR + exp S200 mo · yrly lell.M.'. Barrett -;;;:--;-;;-;;:;:';,:;:;-';;::'.l!M~;,~,~;o~n~V21•!i~o~-_23~2~6~7 livin.g nn, will <.-onwrt to ll.C'nlty 642-4353 3 BR. 2 1~ BA. bonu!I nn. Jrd BR. Obi g/\r. plw;.h OCEANFRONT 2 n /\ c II
1-·rplt•, patio, dW ~. lndry $325. ,3 eEDR00ti1, 2bath, Xtras. $325. 49.1-5748. A11ts. Furn. Sl60. a rno. Yr:1r
nn, fenced yd, $350. per nw. fan1ily roon1. W/\V rpts, RLUl'.F'S, N.B. 4BR, 2B/\, 2 round. lfK•ld tall util . 673-1531
Rr-l!!r. req . 645-5565. rl rps, large yard. 4~ c:ar gar. Lea.SC S450. Owner. 2 llR, 2 BA. rerrig, hllns, pvl
Huntington Beech 3 240 Newport B••ch 3269 644-151 2 palio, pool, el~ gar opc'ncr.
3 BDRMS-Garagco. Kids & NEW Somerset 5 Br 3 s; pet..o; \l'<'lroml!. 4-plC!x. 1 . ' ' TREE HOUSE + 4 Br. Kids comm. poo, tennis (•rts, $5.'JO
& pets fine. n10. 640-4114, 552-7800.
3 Oll, El Niguel golf 1,.-ourM', S~. 67'..-5908.
$300. month. Logunn. Cnll Apertments Unfurn.
644-7917.
Duplexes Unfurn 3600 G•n•r•I 3802
CHILDREN
•nd parent• love the
l1rg•, 1pacio.,1 •JNrf·
ments at B •nbury
Cross.
• t'hlld•·en G & yowu:er
O Stat\' lic,nlil'<l pre i;chl
• 01ilciron11 pluy llf'l!!ll
• Large 2 & 3 Bil apts,
e 2 ndull rt'C. cenll'l'I
• Easy access lo inost em-
ployment 1ueas
• Nr. i;hopplng & lr\\.')'11.
• rrom $165. SINGLES-Kids, pels ok. :~ LUXUR IOUS 11 0 ME · \VI
Bedroon1, $30Cl/mo. gorgl!Olls view of prestigou11
Homefindars * 642·9900 Sanla 1\J1a Country Club. 3
" BR 2ba 1·k I) · DELUXE unfurn I B R. ,., • • 1 e nciv. riv. Gardl!n Grove !rec laundry BANBURY CROSS
)'IU'd & aar. S245. mo. 812'J ....... .-..... A 1'1 -• 111· (N Be h Bl d • w )
BEACH Aren! 4 BR, 2 Bii.
$235. Vat'. Lrt: yd. Kids ok.
PETS It Kids! 4 Br, 2 Ba.
BR, 3 BA. Den, llbrary, 2
lrplc's. gardener. Av ail
Jtutc 15. $-195/MO. 828-4493.
$300. Nr new. \Valk bch. BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSE
\\10N'T Last! Pri, l BR. 3 BR, 2~~ BA. Vie\I:. Encl
$130. Gilt'. Vac. Appli's inl'L Uni! on 15 ac. greenbelt.
Homefinders * 642·9900 Private patio. crpts, dr!"l.
R ,\NC H 0 L/\ CUE!-,,fA bl'.ns'. frpl.c~_J!'Ol~10. Ph:
Benut. 4 BR, 2 BA. Close 641-1480 01 ;>;J1-;J770 l'Xt. 446.
~1lchllrl Dr., Jlnlg Bch. Call '''" • 1'""• va • ..,11, J, l:'ur nc v .,. an1er N47-35<1t. &12-4844 16761 vrF.\V POINT LANE
• 842-6604 •
Apartments Furnish•d Balboa P enlnsul1 3807 ........................ -.1
Balbo1 lsl1nd 3706 BACH.J:.:LOR. S16J. 'ls\ & }HSI ~~~~:~:T w---------1 :105 E. Bi•y, No. :l. Cnll
2 IJR, 2 ba, sun1nu'r $750. 213-G97-1·196. 2 Hit. Bii-ins. New 1 y
nio. Yrly S:l7j. nio. run1oi-==~"'------1lrt'Or11h><l. F:nel garages.
or unr. 67?.-7171!, l-T!S-2749. Capistrano Beach 3818 l:rautiful IAndscnpins;:. Lzg $ LANDLORDS $
rEE FREE Call Us Today
ALA Rentals 642..S383 to the ~a.ch. 1 ~-r lcasl'. TERRl.1".IC 3 BR 2l~ BA Costa M esa 372410CF.AN VIEW 3 BR, 2 BA, 23262 Palawan Cir c I e, lsr & last? $42'1 ?.10 . Park Lido TOl\"nhousc near -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~fonarcti Te1Tace. Quatil)' is DANA POINT 962-2734. Hoag. built in interrom, • balcony, crpls, drps, bltns.
\\'hat you e.1Cpect as you DUPLEXES 'h P.ULE to Be ch, 3 BR 2 Stereo. pool and murh more ~ d I \\'asher/dryer. 642-1153.
play arcn· 11. chlld'11 dreAm!.
CloSf' ro ~hopping & schls.
Children \\'C!ICOmc. P h :
556-4150: it no nns. 847-7331.
aµproach lhis Ill.'\\' custon1 fnbulous On:>an VJ~·s LIVE HERE! ha f a Su. only $365/mo. 644-Tlll Agt. assa or nn OCF.AN Vie.,.., Ile'\\' duplex, 2 filtORT \VALK TO BEACJI
built 3 BR 2 ba. hont<'. 8 N1!1\· &aut i(ul Duplexes 2 br. -like , nc11; -shi.rp $;5~0.8f:18&_ IAstpe: BLUFFS COND0-3 BR, new AND NEW RR. 2 ba, dshwsr, reCrig, Brand n!!w I, 2 & 3 BR.
Quality stands out as You $61 ,950 to S73.0Ci0 shingles SZlO sec. dep. l yr lellS('. 962-4495 decor. Bit-ins, crpls, drps, .SO & Up S23:"i. Ctil\ 528-8202. 7:30 Ai\l . lrnnwd. occupy. ()pcn (Or
entl'r ove-r tile floors & gaze from $8,300 Du\\·n 2 br. -Cd~l -culic U'lO ., private patio. Pool & tennis SINGLE STUDIO APT iuspcc1'on Sat/Sun ]().6,
at The beamed ceilings & Ofrice Open Daily 1-5 .'t br. -Cd~l -new $3/J 4 B~. w ba, newly dee. Nr. near by No pets. $31j/MO. SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES Corona del Mar 3822 N.\\'. rorne-r Warner &
c1Cpansive living area. OncC' \\"(>Ckt>nds 10-6 at 3 !fr. -Bay -slip s.195 beach. No pct~. Lease $.'UO. 67".J-5364: 644-577l 2277 Si nis. Dolphin Re a J t y
irto;ide, the n<>nnram.ic ot>ean 11861 Copper Lantern •I br -Penn. Bayfront $SOO Sngls ok. 96z-44TI : ~ ' • Harbor B~\'d. VI EW·VIEW-VI EW ,213137,,,., .,.u~ 62lj, NEAR Beach, New 4 BR. 2\2 Costa t.Ieaa. 645-4840 .,......,... vir\\' Ix-comes part of your <196-3-t:ll, Ag!. 6-12-4905 Call 6T.>-7223 ==~~~-=~~. ~. ~· ba . To"•nhousc, fr P 1 c, Deluxe 1 Br. frplc, sun deck:
dnily life. $119,000. ~Dann Harbor lnt-on1e Hornes CLE~. 2 Br, li.tGR. 2610 t'Ompaetor, pool. tennis. $30 WEEK & UP c:ar[lOrt, storage area. soft Be aut. G1rden Apts.
LINGO REAL ESTATE l~=====:::o::===: Fland.a. No pe1s .• 01· S.c:!s. Avail. immed. $<150. rno., water. Adults. S295/tif0. Privatl! ·patios, 6 pools,
49"'-80!!6 499-1397 Duplex near the Sea ~~~d 0.l{. $liJ. 1110. 64~16."!8 : ~d~ ~~i:'ie:~i~~ Avnll. ~&16-4""'~73c;;-' ~"='~6~7>-C;i:T.....G=;;l.';;::--:::c ~~n~~.'k·J;cai~~ l~nn~~h~
. •SUPJ::R H0li.1E -3 Br, 2 Ba, e Phone Sl?rvlce -lltd. pool BR,\ND Nt>\V 2 Br, 2 Bn. su11 1-'roin $135. 846-0259. [ · I~ VERY nice 4 bednn, 2 bath. Jrg yrd, L<;e $300/nio. inc lds e Children & Pel Section deck. rrplc:, bHn oven, rni;<'.
ltilhttom. lilli'I ::I Bedroon1, 2 ba!h f'ach. One cpts, drps, b.ll ns: 2 car gar .. gard<'ncr. 132-1 Anita Ln. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM Dsh1vhr, crptg. drp!I, gar. CHEZ ORO /\.PTS ~·jlij;jiiiii;;;;iiiijj:.:;;iiij~j ye:ir old. En('ln~crJ g1u;1~c11. enclosed patio, S29J. Ask for For a ppt call &J2-ll21 or 548-9755 or 64~1J67 $..130/r..JO. 67J.41i4 or 64'1-627•1 823-1 /{tlan11;1
' built-i ns. Hrnt11 r1N' $275 ARTISTIC One of a Kind old Dale. 963-6746 eves 67!l-J40.t TtRED Ot' TllE "BIG LARGJ:: lBR with expansi\'c 1~"~1~1.-,Bl~r~~~~ i;g0~~
Mobile Homes eat•h_ All rcntN(. S72.000. Sp<l:.ish !Jonie se<:ludl!d 3 Bit Vaca.nl '"!ousc, S210. HARBOR VTE\V '.tBR or CO~fPLEX"? Quiet, tgc, 1 ''if'.\\' or bay & ocean nr he<iC'h. 5J6-033G.
• for ule 1100 /\gent 536-8836 atop hill fn North Tustin. A~so ~ BR s utll pd, S210, 2&dcn, great \'iew. NI'\\'. BR, East1>idt> npt. Utll pd. Ouna Cove $m. tll\VIN &
SOMERSET MODEL S~lacular pa n or am i c C1•1, kids/pets ok. Agt. Fee. SJ75 mo. yrly. Pacific SITS. 64G--O!l31 art. 6 p.m. JR\VIN, Realtors 641-6UI NEAR nC\\' 2 & 3 BR wl
j bc.droom. 3 hath, large lot CHAR.Po1ING l BR + ATI'RACTI\fE S hopping ocean view. 1 acre of pines, 979-8430 ~e r vi <' es R ca 1 t )'. bt111s, nr. !lhopg, frwy &
• pool. Slll.99:l. C·ba--. '· * P--k. p,.·,... !\Tall. !) Leased u n It s ' avocados & park.J i k I! HUGE 3 BR !pie C'O\I t' L'AILO'l«n/8!1 ,.,. 3 BR, 2 BA, fpl , game, rm, Cost• Mesa 3824 schls. NO PETS. 64G-37!16/ " '"' " ""' ~ ~ctti""· 3 Bit 2 BA. 2 · · pa IO, ~ ' -·'" filed yd. inc lawn care. $350<1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 54j..(}760. s~, ';0 INTEREST beach. See to apprec. \\'k· custom('r pkg, Expansion f I .. ,, d' \\'8lk to 5C~I & park. $..12J. NE\\'L'i rcmodl!ll!d barhelor un. or $-125 furn . 56-3182. 11 -~~~~~~~-w
HARBOR VIEW das. SS,T;.iO. 675-2-15j, \\'knds potential. Orean v l.e ~\·. rpc's, lani. rni. in. rm., Ask for KEtTlf SNIDER. unit. ll3/l. U"I pd. ·~. $149 2BR CPTS G75-4288 01l'ners w/carry to ex1stur.; liv nn. w/ cathedral hand 9624471 u .J-JU AP'T'. ti.1ANAGER for 12-2 NEW
HOMES Joan. painted bC'am ceiling. All <BR 2 hn I d ed. ""'°'Bl d llN. B469 01~, Nl!\\'port BR funi units. N 0 d8raRpes. 1g1•991-, po1~,1; .. S~ious 3
REALTY 833-0780 ri.10B_n..E: HOME, dual \\'Id!', SERENDIPITY nC\\I kitchen. Shop. · • nc\\'Y ccoral . v .1 .. 645--0_.. children-pc-ts. Live in. $85 u.•" .•~• · ~" or
'""""""""""""""""""" 20X55, 1n hC'art or Nevoport I Badmillen court. $79.) per nr beach, no pets , lease, off rent. t.1in. dutie~. Prefer 1 2 & J BEDROOM ~~~· I' BAYCREST I Beach, Baysidl! Village. 2 Rea ty 497-2175 n10 incldg gardrnt'.'r. Call ~C;!:k. S310, 962-1471, Newport Shores 3272 inaturc \\'Om an. &12-9520 aft ' \\'ALK to beach, new, large,
O 5 BR. 2 ha. >..int . Ph 675-33.19. 110USE PLUS n\'O Don Osen. ~alt~rs: 163i E. • ;:i UNIQUE 3 BR, 2 bas, trplc, 5 P:\!. upper, dcluxl! 2 BR. 2 D~i:~~~~\~-~.~c~cn Acreage for sale 1200 Live in new 3 BR, 2 BA 17th St, S.A. 547~131. _... ~DECORATED thruout, 3 patio comm pool tennis 2 LRG Bachelor, !iv rm, scp. Split level Apts Unf. Adults. $2,j().. mo. A 11
w/l!atlng 11.rca, 3 bs., Utility house and r(>nl T1\'0 2 BR. 2 LANDLORD!C.I BR. 1 %. 00, $275. mo. lease. car gilt., \Valk lo Bea~h. kilchen, bath. \Vtr pd. Pool. OCCUPANCY JUllE J utilities paid. 838-2921
rm., 2 lrplcs., Spacious APPROX. 5 beauHt. es~nnh~ ll,\, apts. Frple. palios, I\' S . 1. . N l"".~ B'.r, No fee, 893-1351, _..._~~"~'~'-------Adult, no pcl. SI.W. 6">8965. 2 Blks to Beach. 2 BR. 2 BA.
backyard ,i:: bi~ invil lng nr rcs off Ortega wy, .,,.n ~'<lra~cs. laundry. $86,000. c pec1a ize 111 eo;._ .. Hunt. H1rbour 3242 LGE FURN 2 BR. Bltns. Llkl! New. Fncd priv. yrd.
pool 'I · o. I Juan Ca pistrano. Zoned E-J. at 8~1~'i·, BuiJder &IG--'1·114. Bt'ach e Corona de! Mar e S•n Juon Child ok. No ""ls. $21S/MO. · " anncr.i .,.,·h area. o ·ai R I 49"1!0 " & '·---O R -• .,.__ \V/W a-, pool A<lult• ''° FEATUfllNG· ~ r I ncl !102 000 Pri 1 ca !y. ....-·'"· JO UNITS. COST' '• IES,\. ._,., ..... a. ur ent ... =·· C ' · ·" ' · ' · avail Jwie 7. 968-0652 alt 4. l'I! a ' ' · n. " vice is FREE to You! Tey ELEGANT 3 BR, fam nn, lpirtreno 3278 pct!!. SJSS. 642·9520. only. By 01\"llCr 646-~1288. Apts. for Sale 1300 All 2 Bedrooms. Principals N v· , fD a1 d' i ho w---------1Lorl Bedrooms e Frplc's e ON BEACH • 2 Br, Studid
THE GREAT ESCAPE 1 -;:-;;;;;;--;~-;:;;;;;-;:;-;;;l;o~o~IY~-~$~15~7~,000~-~6~73~-~79~1~0-,.-uLJ iew. T LS N rm in ;J' ~ me. LEASE Village San Juan, D ana Point 3n6 Ceramic tile kl!C'h!!r.t C F:x. \1·/pool & fn cil!tll!s. Adults. 12., UNITS .. 1~_ 2 bd_rn1 .. 2-3_BR __ . ··PLf".X'. C.'I. + ltm lo~ N -VIEW REN A Veiv crpt !!~-nt a y''"P1ing. new 3 BR 2 ba, air ---------posed Bcan1 Ceilings e J::n-$285 mo. s7;,...7373 days or Luxurious 2 Br, 2 Ba condo. h ,, " " ' 673-4030 or 494-3248 acan ...,..;;r. nio. rs. se. condi lioned, di !lh 1va sh c r , 2 BR . !2;.n closed Patios e Pool f · 5.16-ll04 eves. -.,n, ~alpGrts. "' gar s. more. $6Jl \O/vr '""'!!.<;. Pri11, Ch'+· R II " ., ="o'='O"'""==~~~-Custom dl.'!t'Or. Your 01vn $20.000 gros!I i n come . onl v 5:'ig 5()(] ~51Hi'i6 "RENTERS!!" ris 1an~ eo y self .cleaning o~n. Utilllil!s lncJuded. muny other Convenienel!s. 3 BH, $25!1. Children & ))C'l!I
park w/pools, goll, lighted Sl08,400. full . $20.000 dwn.i, w~·-·--·-·------1 You Get All The Houses 6916 Warner drps/cpt!I, ele<:t. gar. door 2 960-1142 or 496-0l!)j Adults only. OK. 16902 Lynn St. Call .,.arden . Etce. door O""ncr. 2-• ot'bl 1 t 1 · L I I I ••oo ·1 bl f · o u R '" gar. Fenced Y rd. , .•• ~•i . ., .,.. uu neg 1 c, oca e< 111 o s or sa e 1.1. <i\'a1 a e or rent in at Golden Weot ~ $36,."iOO. Call Denison Assoc. Victorvilll'. No trade, pri~ BUl.LETIN ··roATED 3 Community lake & POOL, H I 8 h 3740 HAY LOFT APTS 673-7311 lirin. fil<I) ~2·197. o AN/\. POl.i'1T·Hcsidcntial tlmcsf\\'t>ek. 714: 842-7486 incl. gardnr. $295. 830-5146 unt ngton tac • 2 BDRM., closed nrage.
I 'I . o .. 213 592 '568 SHIRLEY'S d I N Child or sn111.ll pct o.k. $165 BY Owner. Ideal noor plan, · ot, 1• ar1na A.rea. .....:<'an Homefinder5 * 642-9900 : ·~ · up exes. ew LOW WEEKLY RATES • 1147-11149 * nc\\·ly dct'Oratcd in & Commercial Prpty 1600 l'ie11·. N. of Coast 1·111)' .• ~· 132 Ca . 1 CM delwcc 2 BD, 2 BA. E . 283 AVOCADO
out, marble entry hAll. lrg , Crystal Lantern. SljJXXl./ bril 0• · ·
32
,,.,,. dshwshr / bit-ins ; 2 car xecut1v1 Suites COSTA MESA LARGE 2 Br., blt·lns, crpt11,
!iv nn, frple, ·l lrg br, 2 tile I BU< . to OCh .. X l 11 t 50';;. dn. 1 2Ll169l-3~H FHEE FREE Irvine -g3r / lndiv yds / erpt ; n7 Yorktown Blvd, dl"p5, gar. No pct.I. Convcn·
romn1ercial lot. 29,$0 ~I· •Professional "-·i-e d / 1 · Beaoh Bl d 1 y k• 64S.0143 · I "" ~1Jlt2 ba. step savin<> l!l~I kilch., fl . IOO' ,,_ .. ,,., ,1 2170 HAL\1tLTON Sf, Cl\f. R-3 .::1C•v..,.. f'P" L'Ompele pnvacy. \".a or C\\·n ,1 Th 1en1 ocauvn. OIUQ'" .. u.,.. *LANDLORDS* ·-· 4~ •· , 5"0411 :•on· un> 5:30-7:30 pn1 l'l'PIS. drps, perfccl yan'I. Carlsbad Blvd & l O O • 2fi,Z',O !'>q fl. $43.000. Agt. Bradford Place • Santa Ana ~. """"'".6.3 -Sat-Sun 1().4 pni $155 per mo. 2 BR, 2 BA. No
planters, !ruit trees, $75,000, frontage on 334 Ct'da.r s1, ;)1~5:l41. <.'\"C'!I 548-6j62. Homefinders * 642·9900 3 bdrms. 2 bo .•••••.•• $275 RE..'IT/lSE ne\\' :t br, 2 ba. STUDIOS & 1 BR's. pets. GoOO location. 1 child
64.5-089.J. Carlsbad. Calif. Old but Mount'n, Deser t, California's Largest Calitornla Hornet · lrvlne Bllru. Garden pat, upgraded • F'\ilt kitchen F'OR maximum privacy-r;ee ok. Call 531-6515.
LIDO ISLE-By Owner good shape house on ~ar Resort 2400 •Rental Service!• 3 bdnns. 2 ha. F.R ..... $320 thruout, 2 car gar .. pool, e Healed pool oor Bach. & 1 Br Loft Apls.
Unusual 50• corner lot, lop l."Orllt'r of property. S79,500. -2 BR-C~I Sltl, 2 BR HB. The Will0\\'5 • Irvine $250 mo. 496--0738. e Lnundry f<1 l•llltie3 incl. util, refrig, encl gar,
location. Rustic Chan n. ~Y ownr, if 00_ comm. CRESTLINE AREA $163. l BR-NB. S155. 2 BR. 3 bdnm. 2 ba.. • ·••••· • S295 RENT/LSE 2 br + alrove, 2 • Free utilities 11torage. Adults, no pe 1 s.
Spacious 3 Br, den, 21~ involved. 1714l72S--382l. 3 BR.2 ba.~nrroundhom<'. CdM $200. J BR, Seal Gr~nlrtt Home11 ·Irvine_ ba, upgraded thruout. Pvt • Free linens No watc r be d s . 393
baths, huge r I r (" p I a ce, COAST Hwy fro n lag e . Secluded. nll uril. 171•11 Heach, $330. Sing I 1! s , 2 ~-1 ~· F.R ..... S32:i palio, bltns. 2 car gar, pool. • T.V. & maid serv. avail. Han1illon. C!\1. &15-4411.
community lcnni" c r I . $80.000. Trade & finantt. :lSl-O'n O. Currnnd Really Co. ramil irs, kids/pets. AgL i~ I ~:· Park • I$.1'T~ S250. 496-0738 : :;:;!·':cU~irr 0 1JLDREN \\'ELC,Olt·IE
beach. n15,0CXl. 6Tr1079 9,l~~';.,.. Realty S ~ r v i c c CABIN, Big Bl'ar • 1\rca. Fl!<'. 979-8430. 2 bdrm!: l ba: '.::: '. ::: SJOO South Laguna 3286 • 1 niile to llf'Ctm 3 1:31'.· 2 Ba condo, Nev!'port ADORABLE :. ,....,...," $7000 Af 6 R1v1era . Pool, lounge &
3 Bdrn' 2 .... 11, • ·,,;, ...... , C d . . ' · term,,~·201~· · Balboa Island 3206 Vlllc.;·;e II Univ. Park -11-v. _J..AN VIE\V 3 BR homo Beaut. Gar"'tn A .. t1• PflV\lion. Like rountry club ·• ...., • '""'"-on om1n1um5 . · ~-.1 3 bdnns. 2 ba .•••. S400/$425 UL"~ 'C ....., 1. · ho Best "~·,.,., ,. ll••bo• 1700 pn" rom R-C•-<•c Private petios, 6 Pools, 1v1ng! $325. on l yr 151'.'. me. •·'1'" 11 ' for sale O•ange Co. P•ply, 2500 Yf.;ARLY rental wanted for Village Ill Univ Park· Irv •, m. '"'-• " · \\' Highlands. $69.500 Ca.ti for family. 3-4 br house, avail 3 bdnn. 2'h ba. · •....... S4siJ POOL, TENNIS. JACUZZI, saunus, jacuzzi, ll'nnis, 2 ·n1. To1n '.\1illrr. 642-4811.
lnforn1aticm A:->SUti1E 51,~ FllA, Double G/\RIJEN fiHOVf.: now nr Srpt. 113-373-7528 3 bd 2 "' $3.iCI \\'3.lk to beach. lrnmed poss. t:ar prk'g. Blkl! lo bl!ach . VFlRY Nicc-3 Br, 2 Ba. fa.m ~·••so 2 •• 'I '·ti ''I 1 0~1·,. 1.1',·m'.:.,"_"1·;:.,:., Ownrr $450./mo. 493-.5227 From Sl :\:'i. 1146-0259 ni1, D!'\hwhl'. rcfM". \1•/w _,,.._ g;;ra~<'. "''.!'nl, • ~,.. I;·" l1 DY O\\'Nl~lt -S12'i Int. No .... , " .. '~" .,
HUG HOMES l•lcntion $2fi,500. 5~:r:t857 rin. {'li•ra. Shurp :i BR, 2 nA . College Park 3220 3 bd1111. 2 ba, .... $3.t'i1S37J Costa Mesa 3724 Costa Mesa 3724 crpls, drps, laundry mi. 2 ' T T ---------------------1 ciu· garagl!. Adul!s. $300 . • BAYSHORES • Duplexes/Units 2 fpl'~. 1·us1rn hnn1r. 20' :\ he l.'tTACI! -It-vine R f' 6'" ,..3 h 1 Rl'\'D NE\\"· 3 BR 2 B 2 •· 1· • .,,,n ~· s. ~•.lu. a 5 r !\.
0 d I . lo• sale 1800 2·t' f:1111r111 , c·nv'<l n.~1 io, l'll·. , ,, ' i ' • r. • ..... nc\\', urn .•• ,J.)<JU LRG 2 BR 2 B J' 11•ncr cspcra1e, cuv1ni.: ''y Fa111-1m, Dl'n, formal Din., 3 8 2. "35()/•Ann , a, 1 1n rn1 .
area. 4 Br,:: bn, dC'n. Cul-rlc-~nc.-. •7141 530-11112. (•prrt ,i:, drpd, c ompl . ~uni~a·n:k'.··b~rinl! .. ""' Wh I th k"d C'pt/d rri, stv/rcf, p oo l .
$69,900. li.1ak<' 0 ff c r . 3 UNITS Real Estate Wntd. 2900 lnrli;c-pd, s:i95. 5 51 -6 3 4 1 3 bdrl'r 2 ba .... n. $425/$•150 OS @ n@w I ~Ar~H~~._no pct!'i. s I 7 0. 642-349~-Evrs/\\'knds CALL 552-7500 .,..J"O,,.,.
BY OWNER /Ill 2 BR's, scp. o"·r}('r unit $3001000.00 v SION • F:L!\f GARDENS APTS.
Harbor Vi•w Monaco 11·ith 11.'nced y111U. Also II('\\' To Buy nun(I0\\'11 ,,roprrtles Corona del Mar 3222 • I • th bl k? Unrurn I BR . $155 Up.
2 BR. + den. 2 ha.' 3 CIOOl'S i·a rpct, d.ra\X's, 'ill', 5~0\'(' in ()r.illJ;C County . Fer-4'; 1----------on @ DC • in Adult section.
I k I ~ ... and paint. s ,,9,9.,0, ' "-II Cl I Q . '.VANTED R d H·11 R I 177 E 22nd 9r 642-3645 rom par . poo · ''' Cllviinn . B,.\RP.E'IT R E ,\ LT\' , o -x· r rs · iar ~!;. u~n· lit" USED BRICKS * 8 I ea ty . . . .
$69,COO Fee. 6~1--5."!69. .,,1., .... 1~ . ., t11rrl. lle11..Hor • ~1.111e ~J -c-,• •=• REALTY RE,\LTORS e TROPICAL POOL * POOL lit" °"'lid ""'Id 1111.·. v-. ·~'"'· :l:l').i Via Lido. i\ B. & lrtfl ",,..,,,.,,.. 2 BR, 1"' bas., spiral
Laguna B11ch
* OCEAN \IIEW·2 BR * * No pets. LRG POOL. * m lse. fii5...6145
I BR ground Door apt.
NORTH END, 494 -9 466
daysr49S-l283 eve.
Lido 1111 3856
LIDO ISLE Dramalic
\' I (' IV -\VR I crl.ront lBR.
Condo. Apt. $375/mo inc
Utils. No pcl8. By owner.
ti75-0534.
BAY VIEW nr. pvt beach.
:: Ar, 2 ba . Lg Iv nn \\'/ frpl.
S:l2.J lsc. Adult11. 675-J022
Mesi d•I Mar 3861
2 BR .. 1 BA .. bll-ins. Rerrl·
~erator. Upper. Adulls only.
$170 mo . 838-7110.
Meu Verde 3863 ""'' .. ~ !I bo Bl C \I 61"' ·~1 :l BR. 2 BA. frplc, ra1nily Univ. Park Cent<!r, Irvine !!--":"":"="'!=""":"":""'::""'!""'!=""=""":"------I 1 I f I tJo ~
0 11·ner wanls oul. \viii help. Income P ron.rty 2000 ar r ·· .. · ;. . ...,." <.tlltl '"!!'!'~~,,.~~~~~I I AM BA s s AD o R I N N 11 a rcase, rp c, pa 'ya .... , JBR. Si-l,9!X). Call ror 1111Jn• ,..-:1ny1ilnr . rooni. crpts, drps. <i"'!N. pcr .;-Water & Gas pd, 548-1168 e J.IOME ATMOSPHERE . I I' I" S . mo, 6T.'l--0367 :i BR Condo .... $235/nio Lse Del 2 • 3 BR Re I O In o. Ill' "c c r v I (' e s 4 Al'T Units on 19,600 ~ fl NE\VPORT &·11ch rondo 01' -=-~--"'"""~----32•2•4· 2 BR Condo~ .. ".$265 &: $273 CLl-:AN 2 BR apt. Wall 10 wee . nlB fc
Rc11llv. f>.ID-82JO or RJl-l."11 1 l<Jt . Zoned C·Z Nc,,..·porl ~ingle ri·~idC'rlCt' \Vanled, _c_o_s_ia_M_•_•_• _____ 3 BR Condos , , ... sza &. s21:; BRAND NEW · wall CPI&· Built.in slOvt'. 3.'i7 :»35 Mace Ave. 546-1034
CHOJfP. LOT • lllvd., C.:'1-1. $5.iO 1110 111(.'0n1c. \I ill ,.,,.lla11g1• SlS.000 ~lld s~-3 BR , •·"d k I 3 BR i!JmeK $300 $325 $.1.1.'i Vlcoria, C~!. 6~. 4-N t B h 3869 PRO~IONTOltY HA)' Good for co m 111 c r r i:1 I 2nrl T.J). H'< 110\\·n pi1ymrn1. t;:::bc-qu0 r..I s O UL'I 3 BR Homes .. S.1fici.sm,' ~:195 "• Ct •••••• $3450 & _u_ p-... c9P~M"",,.-o-c=-~-~-ewpor tllC r~cc. S.1erlflC'f' SI J!i.000. 1lcveJopml.'nt. S 6 ;, . () 0 O. c.all lilG-i"".i';:: illon-T11cs-GARAf;F. Sl!lO. 2 BR . 4 BR Hom<.'!I ... $115.S:t<IJ. $425 ._,.., ,.. '-LARGE 1 BR, artlls only. BAYWOOO
01vne1· 5 1~·!lfi9:l 0 1\'IK'r·Broker. Gl2--0.l90. \\·~I. PHJV,\TE! RANCH Rli:ALTY ~'.:"'i!.:.:.i..': DIY.', \V/Y.' crpls, & dl'f"'. APARTMENTS HESl-'O~~S!BLJJ purly \\'lllll!i GOOD Al'r;i!-l BR, ldds .i:: * 551-2000 * · ...,,_ ...... .....,_ Sl50. AH 6 \\'kdyg , 642-7973. to Please Adults , ' ,
111 buy hon1r for lu\\I du1111 fll'I~ l\'c•ll'omc. SpaciC'.lus! ltANCll REAL n · 3 BR, ""liO. Child-n ok. l ~---=-------------~"°'I I Cl""<'~ 642 9900 • a,'-".5800 • '"' ,L. 2 BR 2 BA '''"II •pl• -:mrs • ~ l>IJ~·nicn · ' .>-i .,., Homefinders * · TUSTIN, REAL'f "' l1Mft1 '"""*d Swttchbocard Sl!.15/1\10. + dl!pordt. Nr. bus '' · · ...... w ~· S TAR G A ,..,E"D ·IC i' PVT~A'fi'T\'-\\",\~1~ TC) --i llltchfl! f.c.ilitift.-U. H.otitel rool ,L OCC. '1-pl•x .. "'•n na~,7. avail frorn $.150. $8 1(•S OUICC!
·,1 • ~ ~ 1t "' 3 & !)EN, 200 home nr ba!·k • ~2-:iu t * "' .. ·"..,.....,.., OIM'n 9 ''''to· :ro d 11 UUY IJ 0,\1J:,; f)!RE C"r • .,,.,,.. IMi1iditctlte ... e°"'"'°' J111:M11i LARGE 2 I R . :;i: pm a>'· •uu 1~,.' Ii'\\ !'PILI>.; l11•• FRO;\f PVT PTY :,3f1.:1fl!:2. b11.r, yr:1rly lease~ 111•r NDV Coll~·g<' Jlnrk J BR., 2 Wtlbw ,G••llQ'S J , I BA. Crpts. G1~-5555. l.oc /'!t.cd M
-"' .. ~, 11 ]:). Yov• Do·l1 •t'•'"' c~~1. ~ ir•1 11 j• 01110 .. c:lll. cvt•s ofl 7 or 8:;;u1 ha .. 1 blk 10 schl & Jlfll)I. Tefe.,.iW... .,.u.w, 1 drps, garage. $195 mo. 8aywood tJr., rfl Srin . dA.,,;," Aua1 n°~9 •o 11 ... Slo" oc r II ~~ PRJVATI•: P;q·1y 11·nnt s t·~ <ll' !1]1[)01!111l1Clll 10 !ICC . Ull c I d hl l I S'l?" tcl"ffticwlRDOl'I j.UJ-1309 Qr 675-1849. JoAquin Hills Rd .. NB. 1 , < -< F ldo h '12 · · I I 9I 'l'"l!l6 ri s. rps, -n~. ........ Di'9C ldl91 -s•..U W• ..... &D .... ernllif --;:j;:--;;-c-~=--I S.11-23-3' .,,,,~c op mr''"lf" or 1 y, 5131~31('.; uy .... units, pr1ni·1Jl11 ~ .unr.11 .. ·,.,_. n10.,S."IO-llill8 · ·r ' e OJ:.:LUXE38r,2Bn.all 2 txlr., z ba., UPP•r S1·61·1't· rl"¢ll w0tdS <Ol•f'.Jlond, •"iJ IOrumbcr~ , .. .,.M •:O: o••ly ""·1~ f =====~-~~~-II bll .. I I • ot you• Zod.oc t •• ,,~ g1' 1c~0 . ,,,.., ''"" ~~~I l\IESh VEltDE tEN1'AI. TURTLEROCK lovl!ly 3 Br. WAllRfAU. .... STIU.MS-U.GOONS 11s, P c, gar, poo . u n lurnishe<I, 1111~1ei.'lric.
1 y..,·,. JI~.. 61 P .. ,..i , ::": Cu~ron1 cnhlncl~. cus1on1 2 ha, l!'R rnni rm, tennis & AduH,,. S.l~. 642-11S5. Nc1v cu111or11 r(lrptl~. ilrnpca ~r.:,:.. ~~~· tl~~~ ~! ~:~;t:i· R91ltall JI &j kltrh••n nook, 3 BRfrl\3,1
1iv-pool. S·I~. 673-1235 or 2277 H 'RBOR BLVD . 2BR APARTl\1f;NT, clo!le In, and pnl nt. Oishwnshcr nnd ·~ J.4M•ul .,,...,_ 11 "·?S-l!i ,,,-rni. Call lo rtot, 51 I or 6T.",.;.e!2 ,,. Cos111 ~lcsa. Avaltablr July \\'00dwburnin1e tircph1cc. ',i 5r-' 3'No-6~1' ss910 11;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;:;iiiiii.:1 !•i9-.'<T:'J3 ""'-."'""". =;;,-.,,..=-;;7' COSTA MESA 1. $11'6 in'IO. Pll: .J!H-4534. block to Westcll fl t hopplftR:, w.111>11 '~ ~:::::;: ~~:' 1ac::Tii1v1 CT:>LLf.GE Park 3 BR, 2 ba. T~ltTLEROCK. 3 Bit, 2 ha , 64 ~ 3 BR Ch Laundry, CArport, lllotnire 0.-'1" "'•1 11 •11 lit. 61 ...... '"'Q' ~o, 11 J ~ fain rm, New crpl, paint. 1 tlSC $37.i. mo. 834·6042, •4840 • ild ok. no pels, $285.000 on lcn11t. ca1i ~?/Ju~t 10 ..,~~.. ;::.: ~=" oiC..ir 1~!.i Haus.es Fur,,ishod S.'\?1. :~.6299• 772.9706_ ~.'~1 1~...?r:.~._card Rt Sli5., 753 Shlliimar, 642--2152. •11·,. ",_ ",.. 1< '-•-1•n.n" • ·• r•-~ -•"" &I~ ~ "1-n i1vc.u 4:.-..:-n...., ~1• -:· General , 3102 . E ASTSIDE TUfUiR<'Ti'iL:iERfficOCJ<>Cii·c.14iBBRR. fitammO:·l l-...:·:....---~~~---..;.~----~ Exi ra La.ri,e lb cheJor, Sl ·IO New & Spacious ',', !'2 u,, ',:'.:'!, 11', ~.., -'l Ult Unfum. Stove. yard rm Atn"u•1 • '• ro~ lge mo. ""' pd. Ne. QCC. No I 2 & 3 BR
"'"'" ...-.... n _, $15().L'TrL Pd. r\'lcf' &ch. •"""'/ ,.,. , ... 73 ' " · .... '"'" • · · blt-il\JI, pool ''~ ~sf,...,. 15 l•••pui.-~mo. ""',....,, · yd. $47:;. nlO. S:U.1711. pel11. £all 979-0134. Rrc. ctr. F'r. $18:l to $3j(), ,, .... ..., ~no.-·, ''""''°"' Patl<J. Corona del :ilnr 2 Rn -N EW PORT VILLA ''•'~ .," ... , .. ," ",,'!..~, $1li5-flACll nr. bear..h. l'a11o, Rl\t.1~a&ll yardhU·d'o"'K!· LC nrw rondo. $325. prr UJ,1'£R 2 br. c-pt/drp, rngt, "-A" .---.... "" 1 -'· • A J:t•rai,:c. ·..,t I c . mo/ 2 BR. 2 ha, couo•-,,., °""" f · •• SI'"" 1-PU Plti<.'tntla A .. .,.,, N.B . .. ,,,.... 4tC.,._ 1'w'"' ~ -· .... gium. C'p & d 11 0~ "'A"....,... .. .r , l't' rii;t, no pe..... -· , :io--.., !!Ow""" 90,,_,. $19.•,.trrtL Pd. I Br. frs>IC', 111 rp,, ,.,:;, ;n;i-,......, &: pool facll. :151-4191. 752·0 Shallmnr. MS--Or~. 71~·1~2337 ~~ltotf ~:c~ . ..., li~' ''*" H dC'Ck, \'i~IY, gar. 1.Jlgllfl<•. R~:"n'" July 1. 197>1. 2 BR, 2 L1gun11 S.1ch 32481 2 BR Ell.stii:idt'. Glll'l'lgl!! LARGE lBR. on &y, grcn1
nr .... , ~l r....,..,.,, tl .,..,,... "'· 11 NU-VIEW RENTALS h!t , chndren OK. Lg. f~nced Adul111. S16;>,t1\tO. v:lew, pool, llC\\' l"Ondo, full ~=MC t l"'~" IS~ 6-11 -:17-'3 673-JO.l> 'Jr -iM~a 1s ~'Vi~·~"'~""'-"-'·~~~~~ NE'\V 3 BR •• 2 bA11 .. hnu!ir.I 64~. O'Wlltr/Agl . ateurlt)'. S-15CI, Gi."l-T.;20 ri=:. r,¢:• ff~=:' '!:u S!I0-1 HR l h)U""'. k id~· nk .. ~~I RBRl!oH"a"'s'2'"oll pdl .1211 0.,/\l!iO lk&ll 111trul OC'C'M view fmrn }l.'TRA l...ARGF: :t Br, 2~ Bll. Bl.K lo 'f'lln, l Bit yrly.
"'""" s. a..-N t""*'";•f<:I lff.. 1, /7 , S105-l BR ti.lob. C, ?It , · I . 5 ng es, am•· ri nns. Avail. July I. S~25. Studio, 2 sly, $225/~10. No Sl i5. ln('ldln11: utU l\vnll 711.
· ,, ,."'~ " .. ~ ,.10 '.":"'',..,_ ,.;:.i. 10 4''.ti ~ SIOO Ba1·helo1\ wn!k Tu ..!_it" .. , Alt!. f('('. !l'i1).,'4JO, _)"~ly7'1<~•~,.~·-"'~2-_9_IO~I.~~~ pr1 s. ;;i~\S4 l)r M&-922'.l. GTr~ aft Spni. ""· w·-®·-{)-,7, 1 <•J <l'C.,., l)t>aC'h, llR. 2 Rn lf()Ulll". 21lR .f.· itiu· Adu/I.!! only. No NO. LAGUNA. pl. l\u'n 2BH 2 "-"-·m a" a r I 01 e n t , • (;Ml '1fnir ~cund · .r.J-('d'I l""" A-. '" ll!MJ Ca ll 1 & °""'"" ,. OEt~Uxt; -l DR. 2 ho, 2 flro. l~~~~!'':'.'~==~·=·=·==~===~':·":·:"::'.~U!£t·~·~':_w':"~':"~"'~·~·~~"~':N~·~·L'."':':'~·~:·ill·•~I!!_--lM' nr bcb .\IOl'C'J!,. Le1u1{'/I $16."1/MO. 796 Sha llnui r Or, plar'C!I a111. Sl'.l5 )'('nrty, I• ':. 979--..~4,10, !:118--f).lOI AlllhJ, 5280. 673-.1159 ~=========~========::!' tf11clng Pl11r enri11 1. :>43-32-10. 11vMIL July ll\I. 6~0610 •
\
'
\
\
I ~;A;po;r~t~m~e~nt~•~U;:;:nf:,:uir~•·~ l ~A~p~t1~F~u~m~· y~U~nfv~~'"i;;i'~'°°i;ji5R::::::lc:•~R=•~nt=•l::-=~4400~ ~ Buslnie•• Oppo," I ~•wport Beach 3169
. Thu,~a~. Junt b, 1974 DAILY PJLOT ;J9
SOOS Coat i Found J3ii Ptraoni1il1 5350 1 G a rdening 6045 School& & Help Want 1 M &F7100
CA.Lit". AN1!11AL CONTROL Y.'ITNESS to 111! & Ihm I Re li;ble Garden Inn I nit ruction 7005 -" NEW OFFICES An11.1tl('m«'t1t ~ -IN LAGUNA NIGUEL CHANNELFRONT
:? Olt. 1 btt. ltoo1n for boat Sl75 U11l . Yf'it.rly.
WALK TO BEACH
:1 BUnus., 2 bi1th• ''~IH'ly \C'flS~. $325 Mo.
CORONA DEL MAR
'.! Bt, 1 llfl, unr, yrly. $215.
associated
BROKERS -REA LTORS
101~ W llalboa 611 }6LJ
'11 1f __ ·-~ Only 42c per aq. ft.
'I' '1!!!:!!. . 400 II. & UP. All lllll Incl,
Crpl11, drp!f. rtlr, wet9J'tr. 2 BR. 1'ownhlluse, frplc, 2i002 C11.1ulno Caplinfnno
fron1 $250. l BR. trorn S19!. San Ulego f'rw)· to
Pool, tennlti, c..'Ontincntal Avery l~1 rkwoy turn CJU
brcnk!a.st. Separate tan1Uy 831 1600
11l.'ct1on. Cloi>e to Jihopplnc --;--,----'---· "'-'==o:-
& '""' """'•-&1<-il26!u!lli=I 1st mo. FREE ii Dclux1i l roorn oUICf'!, C1trpel,
Occ11.n Vo · 1 Br Unt $220-.$230 drupes, nlr l.~Jnllllioru~u. in
Furn J:s.achelor, co 1n p I N<!WJIOrl ,&1\ch 11e1tr Lido
kitl·hen, $215/ino to $225/mo Shop11. ~20 sq. fl. $240
VIDEO
GAMES
''The Electronic ·Video
Came· hJ quiet. y(lry profit·
11hlc & Is !lee!J In 1 be11t
Jlh\t:(•S." • • W~JJ Street
Joutn11l lront page Marcl1 H11loonk't, Pool. ~\dult11, no n1on1h. 0111 NcY.1port Pla<.-e * 2 WEEKS FREE * pct11. Yeftrty Lease. Really S7S-Jf.OO
YI' d I M LAS BRISAS APTS 01<1''1Ct; SPACE! FOJ-t
HI, 1971. • '
"111e totn.I l«ke from .all thr.
nlttchi~ now Jn 1>!.lty J~
t&Unlatod at 111ore than SOCIO
inllUon annually." • Time
MRgazine, A111i/ l, 197'1.
S a e esa 5515 River Ave, NB It.ENT. Coitta ~fcsa. Harbor
ADUL 1' CARDt.:N HOMES Mi.2566 lit'" Adan1s. Be au t If u l .
IRVINE Artf:A AT J\TESA ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~'!'!I rnodern. i\lr, music Move In w/depo~l1 only Rooms 4000 Jnnitorinl, Cla:u A. Walke;
1 Bit SlOO ~ Br. $230 ;.;.;;;;.;.;;:.. ____ ....;.~ & Loo Bldg. Call Gene J-l!U,
Duy & Nli;;ht Se<.:urity, Pool, SLEf!:PING Rooni, tefrlg, $57..()L)(i Cir G42--0'200.
Jacin:zl, 11l'(". Bh:lg. \.\'/exet'-troes. cozy, prlv. tntr. NEWPORT BE--A-C~H~clse •TI1, bJlll1H'dll, l.'f..llot· TV.
Thl.1 can be your OY.'n bull·
lnri;s. \l'ith all of your
pro!its in cash Jn1n1nrllu1f'ly.
Documented i.iroof of Pol<'ll·
Hill eurnlngs. Bti. Apt. ru111 tli8hwiuihQr, (;entlcnu,n. Ref 1, NI.I \Vu.tc1i 1'01l1 CXl't'uliv.-offict.•·
n·fl'lg. ~hn~ 1_.111 & P\'I putlo lltllOking. $120/mo. 673-!'i2Zl. Olli.' 'A'/f1•pl1·., \.\'t'1 bar. 11;.iv'.
or deck. FURN. ROOt.1. "''ith young bath: one 2 roo1n 11ulte \vilt1
515-4!;5,'"1 rouple 11tudent1 p r c f . Vll'W_ Of hOrth~ & Wi!.ICl'.
PARK NEWPORT Easta:Jde Costa l\Jcsa, 646· lilt! G1iindy, fU1 r. G7j...6161
lnv£"111mcnts from S'.1200. Cf!H
1,111 t•ollect fron1 9 Ar.1.;i 1'?.I
01• f(ll'\vUrd your lr1<1ulry to
Nut i 0 II II I 1-:11tt'rrain rr:•·nt
Cornpany, JO:fl 1·iseh \\'ny,
San Jo~e. Culiron1lu 9~121>.
0870 aft Gpnt • l J\10. Jo'l'tEE nENT •
APARTMENTS l't~NINSULA Pnt: $90 1·an1 No lell:.e t~I· Dix. olllct.~.
811chl!lor I or 2 Bedrooms rni. TV. l'rl. cnt'. No adj. Alrporler JJ01cl. 55c Sq.
SJ!d Townhouses 1m1.oklng. Call eves only; Ft. incl, A/C, full services. ~r. Sl~.50 Open 9·1i Dally 673-4419. 2172 DuPont rin. s Ci11U Tues/Wed
S?S-Pools Tennis 833-3223 (9 'J I Aerosi; froni 1-·ashion Island Priv. Roon1 & Bath, has · ti noonl Col ect : -
at JamhorCc un San Joaqwn rcfrig: EI s l de · C.M. NEW Plush offict• Bldg, 2 to Mr. Art Davis
J-iilJ!I Road, $100/MO. 640-4161 o r 6 Rl\I suites. Conf1>renrC' (714) 835-.3311
(714) 644-1900 6T:r&l88 eves. Rn1. Xeorox copier. Nen.r 1 '!!!!!!!!"'!~~~!!!!!!~ 1-... ~iiiiii..iiiiiO..iiii• I ltOOMS $20 wk up, "'Ith O.C. airpiyri. 833-'.'.640. I · FARGO
NEWPORT CREST kitchen: $30, wk op apt. SANDWICH SHOP 548.9755 or 64.'>-3967 Business Rent•I 4450 New 2 BR, dCJl, 21,!i ha.
Ocean \'U. pool, tennis, S395. Gi~NTLEMAN, wlk_l? oc~an, NOW LEASING
962-1015 Vic: Beach &·Pac1f1c. Coast , . .
Near 0. C. Airpo11
Oix:n !) !O :1
5 Day "'eek
Steady businl':so;, tl'n11~.
RIVIERA REAL TY San Clemente 3876
NEAR ll<'W ex1.1·a large, 2
BR. 2 .l.~A. d~hwshr/paliol
gardens. $200. Adults. David
Walter R\lr 492-7790
NE\V, extra large ~2
BA poo l. £)(citing <:lty ,".,
ocean vle"'· $240. 49G-OOJ6.
DELUXE 2 BR, 1~ BA,
walk lo lO\\'ll/rear.h. Ocean
view. Ad ul ts. 498-0036
LARGE 2 BR apt. in S. San
Clen1ente. VIE\YS, Sh11g
epl!i/laundry 4~26l!l eve.
Santa An1 3880
BEAUTIFUL
suiwundings & chccrful-
spacious apts.
• Adults On!y
• 2 bl ks fmni S. C Plaza
• Rec fa(·il & clubhouse
e 2 & 3 Blt·SolTy. oo pets
e r~ROM Sl!MJ/MO.
PARK PLAZA II
li05 \\I, Stevens
( Off Sunflo\\·cr )
Santa An;i ;)-15-1121
l BR, 2 ha, patio, frplc,
1crpts. rlrps. d!h\\'tihr. bltins,
nr. S.C. Plaw. 2731 Juniper.
Apt I or 9!H..(l.184.
W11tcliff 3896
NE\\'LY I'('<lc1· .. 3 BR. 2 bath
To .... ·nhsc. Pool. $295. nl<J.
673-4238 P\°t:'..~.
Apts Furn/Unfurn 3900
live
BIG!
Al Oakwood Garden Apar\-
men1s.
GREAT RECREAT ION . !\W1m·
ming. !>aunas. he<illh clubs,
billiard~. ienn•~. pro & pr'>
:;hop, !'JOU driving range, p;i!ly
room. etc.
FUN ACT!VITI ES: Full·t1me
dlrocto1. !lee Sunday brunch.
BBO's-, trips, p11r11es and more•
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS:
Slngl~s. 1 & 2 bqdrooms.
Fur ri. & unfu•fl. W1lh all the
l'Jl'.tras. Models ool.ln d31ly IO
lo 7. Sorry, f!O pets or children.
Oakwood
Garden
Apartments
Newpo rt Beach Hori.A
livine and 161h
645·0550
R~n t$ fro 111 $155
Newport Btacll So11tll
16th at lrvim!
&42-8 170
Rents ham $160
Jlwy. TV/l'l'frig, 536-8518 Vil-:\\. '?'-•! Obispo H.o:id, . . . Dana Point. 2 story. orf1(."<'s, i11a~1flcenl view. Roen!' y,•/ suitable for do c tors ,
1111 ba _ & bacony. $35 wk dentish1, :trchitccts, etc.,
& up. 2500 Seavicw, CdM. siorci;, boutiques. Exclusive
llALBOA ISLAND, $25 \Vk, no 11 c 0 n1 pct ltivf' .:ll'C:i,
1nunn1er. Man, quiet; non· Occupancy end of 197~.
smokcr.Sha.rebath.67:>-3G13 O \v ncr/Broker, 171·1!,'
Nir.t:Jy furnished roon1 in gtl 612--0590.
Joe w/k.ilch prlv's. $20./l'V~E=R~YC-'-~A~T~T~f~t~A-C=T~l~V~E
""k. 5'1!">4'1-1.9 CornmcrciaJ Unit. '620 sq rt
in snui\I ihopping n1all
Summer R1nt•l1 42.00 w/customer pkg. Good
expansion po tential .
B A LB 0 A I s l a n d $2Zl/mo. SERENDIPITY
\Vatcrfront-Avnil July l~t to REALTY ...... 497-2175
* 642-7007 *
*WANTED*
ON & OFF
LIQUOR LICENSES
(Have deposit check)
HOLLAND BUSINESS
6~:>-4170 SAJ.J::S 540-0008
e HAMBURGER
STAND
July 29th, S300 per wk. 4 TOP Loca.t" E 17th St Est. 8 yrs. S. steel equip.
BR, 2 ba, bllns, 2 car gar., . ion. · ' No competition, ind. area
clo c k p r iv Pt Y CJ\1. 720 sq. ft. Across from Try $10M Down 21~2:1236. . . Safc\l·ay, Thrlfly, Alpha HOLLAND BUSINESS
RENT I . K Beta. Owner. 543-5.>11 or , o,ur io1n<'. 1n ona, Eves ~~2. 64.J-1 170 SALES !)4()..06(l8
.2 BP., 2 BA. big lt1nal & 1 ~~~~~~~~~~ gnrden. clORc to beach & J''OR LEASE Rct..'lil Sto1'C 21
i:olf. By wk or 010nth, x 46 in shopping ccnte1· 333 Money to L,oan 5025
ti7H-l.4t t:. lTth St., C~t. S300. a VENTURI'.:'-i'.· ITAL
"U,IMER """\",I 0, ~"" m•-~~!h1 . 6TJ--0140 67ZHJ707, _.. b " '"" " ......... 6.J ,...., 50 to exp11'"' or stat a usiness. front, Ne-.vporl Beach 2 BR1=~·==~-~~-~-A bus inc s s p 1 an
house completely ful'n, sips B~AUTY SALON f~r lt·~~c pre!;('ntation a must. B.P.
S dish \\'ash avail July & on or ahout June lalh. I-or Specla.lisl. Venture Capital
Aug, 673.9400'. infonnaLion call 548-1050 Source' list f1'1'r \.\'/ B.P.
"'· NEWPORT, .! hlk oce11n, STORE/O_ftlce nr. Ne-.1•port 772-Z\21 Anh.
pool. Sips 8. Xtras. E·Z Post Offttt. 322 Sq'. F1. $90 Money Wanted
p1'kg. Jrnmac. ReB.ll. Ca.II ~Ionth. Agent &i6-tl14
642-87G8 oc ,.,_.,.,, 600 SQ. FT. C.M. $155
LAGUNA Beach. oceanfront w/2 pri. r ins. 646-2130
I-2 BR apts. $15().up W('ekly, Industrial Rental 4500
5030
5.'\6--0321 eves only.
2 BR, frplc, 2 BA. Nr. park, INDUSTRIAL
beach & bay. $200i wk. 3606 C01\1~1ERCIAL
Park Ln. 673-0473. OfflCE SPACE
RF.NT yiir home in 1\onu bv . .for lf''!S~ in choice . w(•t•k or rilonth. Plmne ' !\hs~1011 Vir.)O at·cu. Goorl
67M444 frwy access ~I Avery
=-c---'o~~-""'=--ol P r k \1·ay . ft ca 1 t o rs
Cdl\I, 11\Y charining 2 BR. 1 participation so I i c it l' d.
tx1. hon1c, fully furn. !l.~1-1401.
Aduhi; unly. 67~3·182.
F·urtN. 3 BR, 2~ ba., den, all INDUSTRIAL $~. ~16-~· 612.5 -8/5. L~U~~ f~l~~:L
V•cation Rentals .C2SO 27992 Ca1nino Capistraoo San Diego Freeway 10
D E L I GjH T F U L Con-Avery Parkwny Turn Off
dominioms, Lake Tahoe, 31'°iiiiiiiii8ii3ii1-;;;1600==iiiiiiio I
& 4 BR. Day, Week, Mo1:1th,1•
Cull 63,.6700 or 673-3262
Eves.
Rentals to sl'lare 4300
NOW LEASING
Huntington Be•ch
NEW M-1
SJj,00) for 1 yr. \Vilt assign
$64,000 1st and pa.y 10';~ and
10 points. Box 3. Apple
Valier. Calif. {7141 2-12-31·14.
Mort, Trust Deed1 5035
LOANS UP TO 90%
1st TD Loans
2nd TD Loans
lowest rates Orange Co.
Si1ittler Mtg. Co.
642-2171 545-0611
SeNlr.g Harbor area 24 yrs.
J[g]
Lost & Found 5300
9iO Sq. Ft. & .UP LOS't· !\fa.IC' Irish Setter mix,
CHRISTIAN, neat, positive l-lamilto11 & Newland St. 6/3 Blk collar, vie. Beach &
attitude male. Own roon1, 960-1970 \\'tirnl!r. Nds ml'dication.
t'urn/Unfrn. l Blk Ocean., ... ~~~~~~~'!"'!!!! I 812 -~ I. ~-~-~'~'~~·~---,,,,---,----,-S!~· 1/3 Utils or less. CdM, NE\V BLDG 1 J\1-1. 1200 sq rt FOUND lg. whih• 1nale dog
6ia-7900 $176. 2-100 sq. fl. $355. 220-3 Vic 161h ,V. Nf'"·port, C.l\t.
r1oy. s1raigh1 I"' ma I e ph. front oflice, crpts, lrg 6•16-8702
rle.sn't's san1e. Share hou._.:;c rear doors. Annhein1 & ==~------~ + \2 Utils. Nr. Beach, $135. Terininrd \Vny, C.r-.t. Days FOUND cat fl.'malc, black &
1110. 645-2314 aft 6 646-503:{ or eves 64!kl68J. \Vhllc. Vic r-.tesa Verdf'. 557--0719. ~HARE 3 BR House, S.\\1. IDEAL. LOCATION for small Santa Ana. Female only. Bu 5 in l'SS-J\1echanical ~·ouND: &'\ck Bay area. 2
Priv. Rin, lge yd. $75. mo + Jtadiator & etc Located i~ small dogs. 1 blk fl'.'m. & 1
share J-lsekeeping. 557-9269 rtar of EAri.L's BODY blk & while male. 548-2688.
RESPONSIBLE Roommate SI IOP. on Placentia. Ca.II .FOUND sn1all mixed bttt'd
to share Park Ne'>''port or ~7 aft 12 noon. female dog in Cosla J\fcsa
equal accommodations. L E A s E o FF I c: E area. Call anytinic, 897-2257.
67:>-5SL.i 83:J-9403 \VAREHOUSE 2800 sq. fl . FND; fml Dalmation Vic.
<! • BR Duplex on Penin. lot 50x3n. Part fenced $600. N.B. Irvine
Yearly rental. $117.50. + \-i: Avail. Oct. 1855 Laguna Can· 1)..14-62!"1!
utit. r.ilatc or rem ale. yon, Laguna Beach G58-0869 CAP.TERA found \n San
G73..S187 a.fl 6. RENT nC\\' J\'l-1, 1200-2640 Clenlcnte. Ph:llsc describe
STRT. pt'()L nlfllc seeks ~· ft. $170-$360 111 on t h 49~16n
sanic, '.\Bit ocvu. l...'lg, Bch.I \\·/ofe. 2950 \\'. Centrnl, S.A. WST: Silv('r Gray Poorilc>,
hn1I'. 4~1-Z761, 49'.l·69fi0 eve. Robert 1'1ull<'r R.E. 673-7039 Vic. \\tarncr & C:Uthard,
f0J·;i\1. sluu-e furn. beach NE\V J\l·l l •IOQ.5000 sq ft shop lf.B. RC\l'ard. S.12-7588
loiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiii.,.iiiiiiiiii I house. $GOO. for sun11u('r. & offic'!s. Ampl prk.g. 208 3 LOST; Fein. Irish Seller
4!M--7;,t;l phase p\\T·trash S<?r .• xJnt puppy. Vic. \\lallace &. BRAND NEW
VERSAILLES
ON TIIE LAKE
At Sr.uth Coast Pla:ta.
Pool • Acapulco Aqua Bar
& Jilcuzzi. Spel'W.cular 8
Acre Lake \V/Towerinc-
FounlAins . 1,li r.iUlllon Dollar
Clubhouse, Gyn1, SQUlli),
Tota.I Securltv.
ln1n1edhuc Oi'cupancy
ADULTS
Sony. No Pet~
Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br's.
from $175 per mo.
Santa Ana
3700 Plaza Dr.
714-556-0466
8i@fJ-600.i'.600l1
OQTJNCJ!IW CONCEPT!
AOUll IJll[SIO( llYINC
SJo!AU "'' .tlC.l'1'10
•8ochelon
•18R,2BR
•2 BR & Oen
Fcom S 175 -S48S
Meto Verd• East & Adams
540-1800
TllE EXt1TING
PALM MESA APTS.
l\11Nlfl'ES TO NP'!'. tiCII.
Bach. J & 2 IJR. fro1n S1:i7
Adulr!I, No 11cu.
1561 ?1-leM l)r.
15 blkl from ~twport Blvd,)
5-16--9\lOO
Bf.:,\CH lovcr only. Bulboa Joe, nr. S.D. ltwy. 646-12.)2. Hamilton. C.1\t. 548-1956 cv<'
Pf'nin. f·crn. Creal atnios. 1'-1-1 SPACE COSTA l\lESA FOUND: Cat, femnlc, Jong
Jo'urn great, 615-591f! a ftn 1200 sq. f!. LOGAN ST hair blk & whf. H.B. Florida
Garages for Rent 4350 Owner 64&-1252 644-2228 & o ... :eno;;. 960-2U3 Ill!. 5.
IOc PER SO. FT. FOUND female Siamese cat.
MINI WAREHOUSES 3600sq. It. 4001 Birch, NB Vic. Walnut sq. Call
STORAGE Baun1gard11('r. 541·5032, 551-5449.
No Move·in or Move-out · =~~---~--~ c-ha ..... es. From 17.50 per Stori1ig1 4550 FND: Orange tabby. J\Jolc. .... Young cat. Vic: 1-Ughland ~:::~:;:~~11 & N,iy,•land Sl., IIB \\IAREHOUSC: Jl)r rent un Dr. & ltvine NB. 5'~7427
ALLSPACE Coo111 Hwy. N.H. $;°J.1 per FOUND: Puppy, Tri·tolor
960-1970 n1onlh. fi.\j ,,0~,, 1nale. 3 mos. Vic. Hoa& -nlllllr Hospital 642-<1288. 6-1~7186
\\', Newport .(:'arngc. 1 car Rent•ls Wanted 4600
~pace. $.IS. per n10. 673-45061----'-------
or 67".r-1972 UNJo~URN 1 or 2 BR house or
Office Rental 4400 Condo \\'/ encl. patio or
----------1 yfu'CJ, l'tlCi. gnragc. Co~\a
1501 WESTCLIFF DR. r.·1csa. llunt. Bcaci1. Irvine
NEWPORT f'inancinl Center or Newport. N~ chlldrc~;
Leasing Office Space ~oY P')Od~e. Xlnt ref s.
CALL ON-SITE ~1ANAGER -·•_,..__76_1t_c_,~•-· -~---
LOST, Keys. In 16th &
Superior area, on plain
silver rlng. &15-39Si.
1-'0UND -\Vatch by Oran~
Coast College on f"alrvle'>'·.
540-3471
LOST vie llarbor Lanc11, dt>I
Obispo: 4 yr old male Irish
,;etter. Rcw;rrrl. 496-2170. i714l &12-.1lll ('xt z.t6. 1 BR fun1 ho11sc 0 1 area.
DESK fl bl Ptli; a.llo\\·IXJ $140. mo. LOST: Very lrg Irish !iCl1et'.
space ava. ll e $50 646-4707 Leave nicssage for Vic Dann Point, 638-1415
mo. \\11\1 provide tumlturtl Frenchy * REWARD $50 * ~tt n~W~a~I~~~~~~~ Mlscellan"Rent•ls 4650 f'OUNO: ~lale Germ. Sl}('p
t!~~. c'J~~-Hi.lntlngton CANNElt\' VlCLAGE 330' ~U2:11n. Vic Turtlcrock
Nf}\\rp()RT BEAOI Joe .. 3 space in ttnr ~f exl~lng LOsr, bla¢k & silvf'r Husky.
Jt1n office+ bath & sho\\'cr. !!hop. G73-l77JltJ.;i t mall', "'/curtf'<I tall . 5/?.0,
, Prlv. entr., & 2 rar prkg. Vit>: Co111a ~fesi:1, &l&-6030
Ulils lnel. $400. 1110. I 11 •i Jo'OUND; Italian Greyhound. fi73~10 tlnaneilf _ \'ic. or 81111ht1rrl & Atlanta,
A I RP 0 RT AREA-OU!~ 11.B. OOS..-00. Candy.
i<paoo, 45c. IL •"'ull M<rvlce. FOUND: Feni. Irish ~tier
l\1ullan Really, 3400 Irvine, Business Oppor SOOS n! PnH~adei:i & Bin·h, Back
NB M0-2960. Bay rtreit, t'5T-8923.
0Et:U:XE, rRneled. llho\\'f'r, RARE Fl.ND Air 4'911() \Vl!h l!'i x 2,1 ll!Or· LIQUOR STORE. Orange l"OUNO ~ ApriCOI Afghan, 11~ otl.at•ht'd. C.J\t !>IS.9?G6 Counl.)' C'OftSI area. Heavy &-1·74, H.B. area. 613-2299.
1617 W
-E-S-TCLIFF-N8 tr11ffl1·. Qualified b~rs r~lNDER of !tt of keys
only. Jt.A. Bany. BKR.
1
y,•/leathM' ring......_6/3, J'f'lun1
a.l~i.lro'J,2300 afI a n-oo:n 6"~1.:il • to Rtifl4'rt'11 or cnll !>-111-1212
j
lfunlinKton ~Ach Sht:llt'r ~. Npt. U•·h .. TO "Indoor l~ot• •· Plan\•,.. WAIHINANO'S -A("l"IVJTif~S DIJll-:C'TOg 8521 EdllKln St, ~<?HI Yellow VW, Llr. HM BNJ. \\ hslc t>rl . « ..,A.., l,....,, ~>.per, Jlrl•f"d , F/t101c.
IB1u·k of Hun1anc ~letyl 11.s !ltotorC'ycle on G/17/72 ti•g """""'v•" POLYNESIAN C<>tl\'. llospilal &12-05911
ANIJ\fAI. ASSIST. LJ::AGUE a.pp.i'l>x. 5PM. $50 Hty,•ard t'JllP. Jap.:ule6t'. Apt. Bldgs. DANCE CLASSES All Sh1f(;i 01~·n
Adoplion, &paying & fer Info. 892--0217 or ,\11y'i; ll~rneos. Clean up. 1'~ est. dil'<'ct frvni llu\l•all. l<i Yrs VACATION SS
Nt>uterlng 1Jlfom1. 5.'l()..%>13 no. Sm.-1010 J\1c0t>r1no11. aL'>-2809 leru·hlng t>xp<>rlcnce-, lt'll.eh1-.1 PART-TIME
ANIMALS J~tPOUN1>£0 POLICEMAN & \\' l f e l.ANDSC:.'Al'f:. Md. 8011 ('(Ind. nnclc111· & 111odf'rn llul11. WE EK ENDS
Shee., Whlte, rnllJe ava!lahle ror llour,:e Sittin~. ('!(·anup. 11prinkh.•r repair. T11hlUun, J\l11orl, Rl"11~1 r11· Jn111Jt.,Ji:.i!" Orlf'nuJJ..:,; r o r
COi.' -a~poo. H/W, mule 11t1trtlng T/1. l'rotC'ct youi· •:xpcr. 6·\f",..f.)08. tlrin Sut., J un1· 11, I p.ni. 111 St·i·ia·hy Guard~ in o ,c ,
W/11 Tf'ITler, n1a. fl•n1. VlliUAhlelf. c11ll 008-1.316 G eneral Service& 6046 f)i)n;lhy J() Dan!'C Sludio. 11n·i1, t(l...l11 Jl rs/\1'k. $1.ij
Shep., Butt, fl'.'m. Tr•vtl 5450 t;.15 E . Coal'\! J!wy., (',lJ 11. !Ir. N'o ,.,.P•'I'. nt"l'e:o.~. Ca.II Sic~,,.,•. Biondi ·.·,'an(lll' B & \V ;\JAL'ZTE'.NANCE t1a!ISCll nrc lin1itf'd . 6'1:!·2~20 "kl fl.Jn' :;u;...9j11. 0 t rn x, • f('m. EUROPE (ie.n'l maint elC'e-pl nbl"g !\t:('''ll tT\ •• Sf'l'\'IC'·'" "'0. Irlsh Seller. H.c..J, n1ale ' . " • • UI • PIANO l!lSll'Ul'IOI' h fl l' ... -' ., '
Terrier rniit pup, B/B, Ji.I. Set It this summer & ~lnting. No job too Openings nq\.\' for ~'\11nmer APA1tT:-.1lN~~e1'i. 98
I>1dn1ation mix, B/Y.', niale Set it by ci1ir ir:m · ~..o"· r:ttl."s. 900-22-ll sch~ulr. June J71h to Au.c: L'11h.~, fl •ord(·n Gro1e. <>xr1d
Ml• puppy, Blk, male J-l.D. 66-214·~ C.~f. 10th. $-t:lO l 1;< ~r. i\le~11 t·rmpt". 7 I -a -8 •16 -:1 7 2 7 , .. Oi'dt•r ruiy cur for dellvery In OK'S II ·' '! "" · ' Lab ·n1lx, Bhn·k. 111ttJ(' l<:uropc. fac!<lty pri<'e & ai .... y 1• an ~rv1ce Verde area. 5.jG..3 ~2. .~3--91'.'.6
Ooxle/Ten·le r, Rm, r . \1'e'll plan ,,,ur dr!\'ing qui alHled iu repairs of all READING Sp i> 1' I a 1111 t A/R EC CLERK
<'n ~,., \\''hi! I k nd!l, i·lf>ll.11-llJ>!l, al!ltl !IClme .1 hi 1 •><dllOy....... e, nia~ i•h'ltrlll")' JollJo:Jo;, You 'll 1\1!(' l.'lcctrlclll ini;tuJJatlon Call avaiu r r,r tutorlnt:-has1 F'•••' I'll.It!. l*suliful 1nod('n1
ColUe 1nix, T/8, 1nalc Buropc :u: ltw tr.ivtlt'rS Dnvld-K G73-5333 · ov._11 ntalcnab. C 11 J ! : "''"• 1r1 ffl~ti11111 fshuVI. ('.oilj"I
Collie/Shep, l.t. Tau, l\f. c1·cr st'e lt. , . l 64.-,-3979. phu11.-. \'nil·<' & 10 k•·y hy
Cock-a-poo, Bm, male EURAUTO ~o:-.tr.:, tl;.1 AIH. itHu'h. Salary 111 ss:.lfl. A\>'O
Poodle nilx, K.ry, f<'m. 673.4550 Cu.1~n11). lluniblna
1
j[Il)l !'•·1• J11hs, 011! Salty
Tt>rrler mix, B/\V. f<'lll. 3700 _F:lcrtn('al. lleas. ~9-1004 .. ~, i J , '''"'\, '·IO •'".~;. c .. a" ,, I r."k I Blk r r\ewport Hh·d., Bny Lido " .. ..,..,,,_, ~ ...,., ~, u """'er n1x, pup, · · !lid N I"" ,., H;\.1ND\':'llAN, !tomes & Apts I P(·1·stJnnl'I A"tney. 2790 Col·'c11 Rel' R-1 1·0 •c g, · 0· 11"· /'i., · · "' u · ~-.. · '""' (;()nsclcn1inus Craft11n1an !l,11'hur Hlvd, C:'ll
l'ointer 1nl)(, \V/H, nlale * Gl6-1 ·161 t Job Wanted Male 7025
Poodle inbc, Gry/Wht, pi'tg. I I I~ Hauling 6051 • ASSEMBLERS J>oodle mix. Blk, fcn1. s.mc. tnd R .....
&unoyed, \\lllte, n1alc _ LOCAL . J\JOTC:L nianager !r,.,kint:: fvr f.:!f'ct1·1cnl/!\lcchanh,'itl Bl'flgle in!xg',,p, rr.in. mov111;: & haullng by 11111all or n1rd1un1 n1ol1'I 1u To 1,, ! 1 kill
ATS student. l.argr. truck. Reas. m111111u~. K('('p!< tJu~lne~s.· "I' P ·•.Y l'lr op s s. · Add A R "' f11111H••I. Jvhq St't> U ii Siiunese, Tun/Blk, l\-1. .. • oom 6002 BaiT)I, 531-1235 or S.19-9-138. 1!11\'I' 1'<>ft'1~nr1•s. Gl!>-1791 •H" TOO~;y~ ·
B!k, Gray, fem. (il•::'-IF.H.AI. Tlauli.ni;c. Tree 6·Hi·:l6:l:L ;\'~~·v ~:it ,\ FEE
\\lhitc S/H ff"TTl . PAWi\180 Construction Co. Trim ,i;., Removal. Free /\~~rtcd Killen~. rolor.; slnct 1923. Qual ity \.\'Ork, r-:slirnalcs. 531-:!743. le'~o~.~,T~~S~K~lf~'l~'F~:l~!:-~15~,-.,-,
Available for adoplion. t: 0 111 Pct l t Ive 1iricf'l!. ftlOVING , Hauling. Exper. e~'\Jl.: nped full tin1c posi1iui1.
AND OTifERS 536-2511 nieinber BBB 962·1961. Reliable. Reasonable. Free E.sp 1l. n1ech. & <'le<:.
l'Sl. SJ2-758L 2J.J .. J92-6627 LOST: Boxer mt)(, fernl, 5 Bu1ine11 Services 6009
1110 red/brown, \V hi 1 e 1-lAULlNG & ~tOVING, fast J b W t d F 1 7050 I & 'he 11 \I BOOKPG, IYP<'""· t 1· 1111 g . lc11v cost serv1·ce. 'l:'-...t 617 ° an e ' ma e lllUl.Z e . c SI, l 1r l'O Ill'. .... J;.;\. ' ----~
JlJ::WARD. Need help! Call Roxanne',; <194-1003, 545-(1.187. PP.~--:. OF.NT AL HYGJEN~ I
URGENT! Bus Serv. Reas rates. YAl<D, garage eleMups, gtudcnt. de~ires 10 \rork ASSEiiBLY work for .small
NC<'ds n1edication. Vie 18th & 5.57-2S27 eves. l'Cn1ove trees, dirt, ivy, lu !X. n . Of'n111l Offiel", 1\lfg. nr O.C. a1rporL
l\lonrovia. C.M. BOOKKEEPfNG. payroll. cJ riv cw a Y s, st umps. \:ar~~. to learn. K i nl ~vo1~n?n. :•.J -,5.i:;1 ~ ... ~ hrs/
PLEASE CALLI l ta)(es, typing. Kathy's Book· 8-l.7-26fi6. fl1.i-.... l.1 ' ~··~~a Y.Ct .• '!;)7-1=..
C.12-9"82: 616-2877: 6-16-17l6 kCf'ping Services. 645-2WO. Gen. Hauling·l\lollin.'f· Tra~h T 1'~ 1-: ,'\. 1\ G F, si s 1" r s I ASSJ.:l\1BLY TRAINEI-:'S
Tree & shrub lrtm or int1•rl'~l('(I in sun1111c1· \l'ork NO EXJ~ERIENCE NEC. $2.
FOUND -approx. 2 yr oltl Carpenter 6015 I ren10\'al. Est. 545-:..175. l'Ul'h . ~ s houseclea11 ini;,. hr. Day & Nigh! Shift.
[f'111nlt' lrl8h Setter \'lc.1----------Moving and Hauling t·d1ys1111ng-,. t~·p1ng. Cit'. 111 1 :\ .... \C LEODS 83..1-l!l:I:!
RIJ'leigh k \V-ilson. Salurda:y c AR p F; N,. Ry. J\fa stcr SlO & u11: * 96..\.6452 ;\k•s <r_.:•IX'fl .. ).l.H2.W. ,\SSC:l\'fBLERS & Jl<ltkl·r-.
night -J une 2 548-3177 aft 6 Crallsman·remodeling & \' fJ t: N (j En gllsh/S1\·li;s N•1 f'Xl)t'r. nt:Ct..'l'iS. Apph
1un . finish 11'_0 r k guaranteed. Housecleaning 60541 ~lntht•r: 5ff'.kS J»111 tin1;;> }Oh. 20211 .\lrC1111", Irvin(>. ·
FOUND -Sm. blond male F'ree Esumates. 499-3105 ~ _ , .
1
• I !'l'L ~as? ion Island or O.C. AR:;J!)"f,\1'T J\1 an a~ er,
Tt!1Tie1· nr C.l\L Park GF~NERAL CARPENTRY T\VJCJ-~ •!:'.! ~ F. ~ST :: 1 \\ICE 1~1r:1xn1 . Rica or ~~lY home. 3 lralncts. counter g!tls, fry
wearing red collar. Sy,·cCt -CllSTQM FINISH \VOR.K . A:<.; Et f. lCIE~T . ) n;. offir-c exp. JJ2-0669 t1)0ks. doys, nigl1ts, gravr
Bul co.n·1 kecpl 64.>-n24 aft Smilll jobs ok. 89-l-48.')8 2 Chris!ian college girls ....-·rll Help Wanted, M&F 7100 yai·d shi lls. Opc·i full &
5. <lo I 1 g h t housekeeping. · .. · A I J k · I Cupet Service 6016 f·J . & 1 do ! . !~ 111.u ~ 11n1t'. PP y ac 111 t lC LOST black dog, part L.:ib, l ----------I Qf)l s w n ws ex ra. · · ~ Box 3$5 E 17th St Cosli'.1
I per hour each. S.18--0S69 . ·~· · ..
male. bunt tail, 2 slits right JOHN'S Carprt & Upholstc""" IOani-3 pm. Accounting Clerk~ 1o $·168 -"~'~-·-·~,--.,---;c"'-,---~ ear. Vic. Redhill & Jo'il!her. '"o ·~ A~I l\1 R ·red 1 C.l\f. Re\1-a.I"CI 552-0691 after rl Sh a n1 P o o. (Soil r:XPERT Cleaning. Local Jndus/l\lcch E11gr s1:1K . . ~r .. et.' t"Oup e
5 pm. Retnrda.ntsl. Degreasers & re.rs. Your house. apt., or Scc'y/Hkkpr to S900 I Lite. dunes. N1ee apt +,
all color ,brightener s & 10 boat. Ne\l•port Be nch . Cpl niw \1·inc <·e!Jar $800+'"~. E/s!~c C.1\1. Joe. Call
F'ND: \'i"hire stocky bu ilt dog, minute bleach for '>'·hite 673-9186. F/C Bookkeep1'r $SOO I c-=~554~2·==-~---
malc. med. long hair, earj'.Jl't!'I. Save your money D·•I ", I , Co1·p E:x Sf'l''y to Si!Oll ATTRACTIVE. l o c a l
approx. 15 lbs. Vic by saving me extra trips. eg Ciliteg C 1an1ng Salt's i\lf~ Sec'v Sij() ll\1i!<~ion Viejo I El Toro
Grecnbrook tract, Ne...,·Jand \Viii clean living rm .. dinlng • \fE 00 ZVLRYTHING • Field Claitus Ad]UKtt'l' I 11N'111 young lady for offiN"
& Ellis F'.V. Call 963-1443. mi., & hall $li Any m1. Refs. Free est. 646-2839 Trne. rlegrrc 10 sn;, \iurk. Li1" Typ\nl!: req'd.
LOST na\'Y plastic folder ~~~~~j~ !~~a;::i:U~1~5·11~~ H ou sf: c L J:; Ari JN c _ Sl'e·~· Ti!lc t: ... c1u1r 10 S71)11 T~ecrnt ll~S. %rad 0.1.-.
\\'/sheet n1usic & 2 method. 1 do work niyself. experienced, ~fel'ence. G.Of· Rl'J.:C'pt 10SOOO $500. n10. !i30.2S28.
cassettes Vir·. Brooks. Cl'Cf!~ Good ref. 5ll--OlOI. $3.~ a.r1 hcrur. N.B. ar·ea. Reccplionis1s t s:(ll AUTO SALESMAN tac~;j.n~~·~!M-1'flf'na l-Oc"A"Ro-=P'=E°'T""c"'L°"E"'A~N=IN~G~ G45-f>2!=13. p t PBXIG. Ofc 52·50 hr Experience Not
JOc sq ft. No xtra chg for Masonry 6070 RJrNE. PERSONNB. ~ecessary I.OST go.Id "snake" ring
\v /ruby eyes, lost on beach·
near Hotel Laguna. J!E·
\VARD Dave (213) 986-0279.
FND: Sn1l brown male dog.
\\'hitc 1narkings. No collar.
Vic. Bank of AlllC'r. hy
airport. '19-1-ZJJO.
FND femo.le St. Bernard Vic.
Sanla Ana F'>')'. &
Broar!y,·a;v in S!lnta Ana.
Call ;;.13-4257 aft 5 pin.
LOST; Ladies Bulo\·a \\·atch .
Gold mesh hand
\\•/diamonds. Re\\·ard. C.l\I.
64~2200
LOST:Femllle Irish Setter. 3
yrs o!d, on Frh 5/31. Vic.
\\'estsidc. C.M. Re\\'a.rd.
&15-2057
FOUND: Beauti!ol ma I c
Se-alpoint Sia.mcsc, vicinity
J\larguerite, Corona de!
!\far. cannot lreep, 6'!0-80S8
FOUND: 6/2 Srn. Blk &
Bn1·11 Fem. Dog, PL Peke.
Huntington J-larbour & Coast
H\\'Y area. 84&-1162
FOUND: H .B. area
Dohcrman, male, m i Id
trn1percd. \l"l'll train ct!
idl'ntify 1-714-847-$20
f"OUND: Handso111e,
clC'bonRir cat \\·lshing lo
adopl a loving fan1ily. Call
962~1391
FOUND: Ne\\· 10 Sp d.
&h\\1nn Varisity, vi c.
Orange Grove & \Va.lnut,
Tivinl'. :hl1~73S
FND: eat, blue-gray long
haired. Vic. of Newport
\Vl'st or Shore Crest JIB
963-145.j
LOST i\tale Btack & white
long haired cat, Pron1ontory
Bay a1'l'a, Bayside Dr.
67~
Personals 5350
spoting or removing furn. SLUl\lPSTONE bl k all SERYICES•''"ENCY O~ TllE JOB TRAINI:!'IZG Also, '>l'indo\vs & !loo' c0 -. ! · 1
' <X.' 11· s. ~ Sell Both Ne1v and Used Cars .... " brick planters, e .x pf' rt I y
Reduced prices ror empty installt>d. Specially priced. CAIL TRISH HOPKINS Ext·ellf'nt Benet.its
apts. Dutch ji.falnt. Seivicc, Bob-640-4425. Jl::RRI \\'HITIEY!ORE Prtid Vacation 537-1508. Insurance Painting/P•pering 6073 488 E. 17th St \at lr\'i11e1 c;i.1 Apply in person only.
L&R Crpt Clnn. Hse $24.9j.1 ---~~-~-~~--I Suit1 224 642·1470 Ask ro1· Mr. Ruberts.
Rm !4. Sim h,.. !3'.'5. Sofa EXTERIOR ONLY ~ ATLAS
$14.95. Guar. 7i6-s.170 6018 Licensed. Insured, 1-'rCf' Est!·l-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Chrysler-Plymouth
Ceilings n1ater;. Richard. 979-3335. ACCOUNTANT JR. 2929 l!arlxn: Blvd,
----------Costa l\1esa PROF". painter, honest \\'Ork, Grneral fHX.'Ountin:; fu11clions * \VILLARD PAlNTlNG •
Nev.• Acoustiral Ceilings +
repairs. Drywall & 1vall
!e)(l. patrh plastering. No,
~103.S. 64Z..5n5
rea.'\. Int I e .'( t . , free for sn1all manuf. co. Resp. Auto Sales
estimate. Rl.'fs. s.JS-2759, ror pny1vll & p n )' r o 1 1 Theodore Robins
642-3fJ13. reporls. audil acx•ounling }'II~ CLASS EXT./INT. 111achi11e runs, rrepa.1x-FORD
Cement/Concrete 6019 PAI~lNG, PAPEfUIA .. N"G· journal C'ntry~. Ablr ro
ING, r~;'CC E~timates ass is r a cco u n Ii ng 979-5294 s11pcn:isor. Kno\\·!edg<' of CEl\IENT \\'ork of all kinds. ~~~='--"=~-~-I coniputer syi;t<'ms css<.>ntial.
Reasonable, tree Est. 11 0 U SE P a i n l i n g 549--3041 6.18-3.125. insid~utside work gu11r. also any ki-" ol ""d ,.. bt Equal Oppor. En1ploycr CONCRETE Patios. Patio '"" vu "'
Covers. Quality \l'Ork. Reas.1 _,_10_-~646--09~~·-'~'--~--
Licensed. 642-8514. P AINTING & Repair. 35 yrs Acrountant
1\'ecds nf'\I': used c-ar sufcs.
n1en. Ca!l i;alcs 1nanager for
inlrrviC'11".
642-0010
Aulo sales
SPORTSCAR
SALESMAN CE1\1ENT: Patio, drives, .... urkmanshlp guar. T ake Financial Analyst
"''alkl!-Re-pairs, MW & ~vantage of n1y exp (Jr.) s1arr $12·$141\1 Excellent benefits & floor
remove. Free est. 544-8998 536-7{).j6 Deg niajor acctg Y.'/sOine 1rnffic. A~k for Contoni.
PATJOS-DRJVE\VAYS.SIDE FREE EST. PROF', at·counting e.'\p in a 111fg 1 _____ >lll-_41_9_1_~--
\\'ALKS-BWCK \\'ALLS. PAINTING. INT. · E."\T. firm. Lrg stable com1n'I AUTO cnrrier, R c g i s ti: r * 645-8720 • * $57-4274 • nlfr n1oving corp ores to No. Ne 1\' spa pc r. A;\l/Pl\1. C~-------60=2~1 PR01''. \.\'ailc.'(l\."er ing. stale Orange Co. F'l't'C/a1so Ft'e. pcnnanl'nt. part time wurk. ontractor 1 7 Angus Gordon Ideal ror s t u den 1 :o::. ie. No. 2 9514. lns,ur., ~u Pcrsonn<.>I Ai;!Cney housc1\ivc!< & r rt i red
Design -Remodel -Addi· type.~ paper. 714/84 -4386. lt\ F.. 17th St.. Unit 1:1 ._.,, ?"""' \"ood I
persons. A,~VO·N' y. lions -Pa.int. ")3uilding l' A P E R J-1 AN G I N G &. ~o=•~i.=M~c~,,~~~~642~--<~1;211: ! ,..,iiiiiiiA~OJ;'iii"""' as it it \\·ere ours''. Manor pa inting. 21 yrs Ilarbor
Construclion Lie #250733. ! area. Re(s. !uni. no. 183281.
C..t-0-78'8. 6'2-2'.>l A/REC CLERK
GER\\'.JCK & Son Bldg. * 10% DISCOUNT • f"re Paid. Top s11l11ry for
Contr. Add, rem«!. st. lie \Va.llpi1pcring & Painting i:rnting cash n'c-eipts. l~
B 1-11 4 3 2 1.. 6 7 3..@41. i-~ree El'!. Call ~ lite COITCSpondr-nee. l.Argc \\'ell koo11•n to. Plush ofcs. 549-2170. * Wallpaper Hanger * Also F'«' Position~.
JACK TauJane, patios, C. Rt>bko 646-2449 Jason Best Agency
remod, add. Uc. B-1 ~9072 *WALLPAPERING 17~00 Brookhurst, F. VI~·.
J\ly \Vay Co. 642-4703. No Waste .. T\.1ac" fi.18-1'14·1 Suite 213 963-6775
Room Additions, Alterations. 1
Asks ...
PRICF.R ARE GOL'\G UP,
SH OULDN'T YOUR
FAi\iTL\" 11'<C0~1F.' You
ciin help by ('8l'l1in;: extra
1nonry as an A V 0 N
l't. E J>RF:SENT l\'fT\'f:.
F!l.":<ihlP lmur;;. I'll train
~ou . Tnlcrcsted? Ca I JI'
!">10-704]. Li~. Reliable. Free Est. Jay INT/EXT PAl_NT!~C?. Any da v is !he BE~ DAY to
,Johnston 642-1403 AH Orange Co. J1n1 61.>3:i:>!l n in a~ .'\d' Don't lielay, . ,
Driveways 6028 Plas .. r/Repair 6077 D11il~· ~Pilo! Classif ied Ads 1 Cln~sif!cd Ad! Coll 6'12-5678 ---~~-----I 6~2-JGill. j loday.
D F!. IVE\V.<\YS resurfaced, PATC!l PLASTERING Help Wa nted, M&F 7100 Hefj)W7.-n~t-ad7,~M=&~F=11=00
J\1ALE 34, seeks fenlale patchl'd & slu1Ty scaled. All types. Fre-e es!iniatcs 1
Mnlpanion for el\illping trip Ex t' rllcnt \11ork1nanship . Call 540--&125 , .. ------------------•I in July Yoo .need a love or 838-8090 Pool Service 6079
nature. Rf'p!y \\'ith phone Electrical 6032 --------
No. to Classified ad No. 146, 1--------PR 0 FE SS I 0 NA L Poo!
elo Daily Pilot P.O. Box ELECTRTCIAN License Scn.iice & i\taintenancc.
1560, Costa i\tesa. Ca 92626 r.·o. 233108. Sniall jobs, Ef1iclt>nt & Re I i a b I c.
SPIRITUAJ .. READER 111ain! & repairs, 54S-S:?03. Cus!om Pool Sc r vi cc,
Open 10 Mf to 10 Pi\t Gardening 6045 64-1.-8726
Ad\·i<'C on all malt<'1-s. QUALITY pool scr\lice free
312 N. El Cwuino Real MOW & EDGE est. cleaning only, J'CJiablc
San Clemente. For app1. ./ 1..0\VEST PRICES y,·ork111anship Nelsons Pool
Call 492-90'.H 492-91:'.6 ./ BEST SEHVJCE &rv. 8'12-1661
VASECrOl\fY GEORGf.: 549·2015 Sandblasting
Confidcnliril info r n1a I ion GE RR IT'S Lawn Servl('I':
couns<'ling & refe1T11l. l'0111p1i.1e la1111 CAr<' H.B.
APCARF.. Incorp. A Non· only. Clean-ups, rotU!illing.
6083
""~'"~'~"~'~·~·~"'~'~·~· "'~'__.,~'"~·~· ~-1 ~'~""=2300===~===~ MASSAGE & SAUNA PROFESS!Ol\AL .IAP.'\NESE
Clt>llll l'OOmi;, p I e A 1111 n I GARDE:NEH.. Ccpl'ndablc.
atn10!!phcre, TV & lotuig:c, rREE EST. 963··1974.
Cnll Donna Ill 963-1247 ~10\V & EDGE cxper1 +
R"'19 Adnn1s A\'e, llntg. Bch. rtepcndablc. Call for pron1pt
PRJ-.:GNANT~ free cs!. John f-..16-3446
C;,l'ing. co 11fId 11 11 t I ll l J\lO\\' & EDGE c,>;perl +
counseling &. l' c f I" r r 3 I · dependablr. Call 'or 11rornpt
Aborlion, a do P I I n n & rl\.~ ctil. .Juhn 546-M413. keepinl?.
APCARE 642-4436 f'INE EDGE
lNCHEASE your bustline, 1·3
cup sizes in 2 \\'ks, no
('JCt>rtlacs. pads or g!mmlc:ks
ALSO Cll8tom f i tt ing.
h11lters/S\\'in1'>'·car. Juanita,
832-4272.
• PAU.11CAllD READER *
AD/REnUCTION
108.11 !kach BL. Slnn!on.
527·3406
UFE or OEAT!f: Let our
babit!i< l!\'t:. t"or a.ltcrnAl:lw~
to ABORTION call LIFE
LINE MJ-5522. 24 hr~.
Tj EST l\IASSAGt: IN N.8 .
3400 In•ine A\•i>., Suite 1030.
()pQn 8-6. tlosed Thurs. Ann.
557.0039,
ROBERT C. HARKE
\l·htol'l'\'er )'OU
f415i 989-r£1.
.... call
''~.rd l\1'.llntcnauce Service
Ocanups/lilloling. r>ls-8625
MOW & l'.:DGE · n10nth.!y
mnlntena.nce yard rleRnup
& hauling. Grorw. :-14.'41·12
STUDENT cpl. \viU mow,
\\'l"Cd, edge, trim. Lo r11tc~.
aM!-7103 for t~I.
l'.~UROPf;AN GARDJo:NEll .
Lltnd~coping -trt.'l' scrvl~
rf'nsonablc, 642-5329.
GARDEN &-ivice elen.n ups,
planting, long renovation,
free est. Exper, 96.1-1072
EUROPEAN Gardener .
i\l;.l11tcn1uief' -1And5Ct'ping.
Tree removal . Very
l'elt.l!Onll.bl4':. 642-5329 ll~.
l..ANDSC/tPJo~. 81',1d, ~\I cond.
Cleanup, gpr\nklfr repnir.
~f!C't. SJG-4008.
\\'OOD Text., Bldgs, houses,
boats, palios, swin1 pools.
Shop for 11m11iler ilcn1~.
• Quick Sa.ml Co. 6-16-4296. !HO
\V. 18th S1, C. ~tesa
Television Rep1ir 6090
T.V. Servieing, J<.inc<' 1947.
$12.93 + p11.11s tolal. IUnlrss
shop 1\'0rk nccdcdl R('rond.
T.V.'s, guaranteed.
FRANK SCHROTH T.V.
83: \V. 19th, C.~I. ;,~8-33.'!6
Tile 6091
CERAMIC Tll.}; NE\V .~
1~nmdcl. 1'01'('(' cs1hn1.1h't!.
Sn1 jobs, \\•elcomt'. ;).1'>·2·12!i
Top Soll 6092
*TOP SOIL • COJ\IPO!'T * ;l;JULCfl • RED\\'OOD
CalJ 586-G!l:IO
Tree Service 6093
TREf.: SERVICE, trlmm.ing.
topping, n:-n1ovnl of h'Y &
!lhn.lblil. Roitcr 4~S289
• TOPSOii~ • COMPOST
• l\lULCll • RJo:O\\'OOD
Call 58&-6930
Window CIHnlng 609'
* SlfNSl~INE \\.ORJ...."'ERS * lndu~frlal. ttiildentlal
t': '" C'il., '8.1'2·6fl3 1
A•ronulronic In H•wport B•ach
Has lnwnedial• OpenlftCJS For:
Steno Secretaries
Repro Typists
IBM Composer
Operatqrs
IBM MC/ST
Operators
·full-Time & Part-Time
Nighls & Weekond Work
Contact . Jean Wilson
Department
51-01
Philco Ford Corporation
Aeronutronic Division
Ford Road, Howport 1-11. Co 9260
EQual ()ppor1un11y EmplOyer mll
•
I
-
,
'
DAILY PILOT lhursday Junr 6 1~74
elD """'-' mlF ,,_, Help Wanted, ... i.F 1100·7'0H'~el'p'""w"'.-• .,., • .,a-. M"i=F""1"'~r:-1"1He.,l-p"'W"'a_n.,..ted...,..,, M"'&'"'F .. 7"'1"'00,,....,H""•""lp°"'W,,,...•n"'t-1d'",""Mi,....,F"1"'1"'0o....,.,.H'11p Wantod, M&F 7100H1ie W1ntec1, Mi~ 7100 Holp WtnflCI, IUP f100 Holp w.nt..i:mlf,loo
A e"Y s 1 TT ER \\11.nted Delivery-Sunday Only GIRL 1s 1" ai yni. !'.lu!it hll\'t> JANITOR, P /tlmt RF.AL ES'J'Ai'E 1nveat:rM111
• \lfkda,y1 my homo, 8 to ~:30. ~fir. Shopping fbr food J: Or fJtlme janitorial + PCB BOARD Co wllh 1'00tlnued niµld S.Crtl•ry
I, w~~s "?°·old. 11.8. i\l'tl OF DAILY PlLOT TO CAR!UERS. RE-emu-di. Eali)' job. 615-1085 uthrr du1les. Apply arowth hu poilllon openlne s .. no .
1i& sai .. -.~ ~~ a'ttV~st, ',· QUIRES THE USE Of' ,.\ LARGI-.: STA· GROCERY PEOPLE Tapm•tlc, Corp. In Irv lne, Ca, for \V.., pn•11tn1ly 1u1vr" position r;0 y~', T T ~: ·-ed ~k0J'r6"N'~~1~i?i~~i'~~"33~0~~~~ Jl~; '!i~:t t,;~;~;{£\~:~~~ J ~~,:~~~~~A;;T PROD u CT ION ~i+~~z:. ~·,1~~1'rf ~!,~~tr.,,:~"°·~·~~
1$1nciay momlJun 10:1~ 10 STREET COST,\ a1ESA. 1'f:LEJ>•IONE E Coa C Lot•al nuu111(. flru1 needs ($ T""P DOLLAR $} tranJCriblnJ:. j\blllty to n1ttt PLEASE CONTACT )1~ i· Ch h ~-' it • st Ii\\')\. d~l. !\Ir. indlv, 11ho woold b I!! ""' &c \\'Ork \\'Ith Quillnc1111 Grtg Newl&.nd fif°A~.;· ow~rctt·a~~:ss':· ,e~1~~ 642-4321 FOR 1\PPOJN1'~1ENT. Adami or Pennington. regpon.~lbll" for pa,yroll 11 W 1 k' 1 IWl(J(•U\!u. &ilary in 1u<tA or Bank of Amerlc•
i!>tt 29S8 64"'-S'lGl E 1 reporu. This po1ltlon can • ire 00 1n9 or1 ~. per mo. conl~n!nlrllte ~ NcWJIOt'f Cfnler Dr.
i:;.:.:-or An Equal Opportunity mpi oytr GUARDS ll't1d 10 11up('n>l5oiy position. 1vlth ablllly & l'Xp. Ap111¥ lal
YSITTF.R ror boy 7, girl Help Wenttd, M&F 7100 Help Wented~, M=&=F =1=100= Sntury 10 $700. C•ll Betty e EXPE.RIENCEO LEAD IN TOUCH-UP by phone. 1133-91}1. "'~i~''<I
S-5 ~foo-·Prt dur~ni: Culll'1" 541)...G0.)5, Coostut REAL ESTATE !..~!~;·, N.B. on beach. C0:'.1PA.'\:ION for 4'idl'i'ly DRIVER WANTED Pcl'50nnel Agc-ncy, 2 790 e EXPERIENCED TOUCH0 UP PEOPLE . E~uul Oppor. Employer
_._ <.'Orll:eninl, ht•ol lhy wo1n:111, -I ~hullh' bu~ drive1· ror one ol Harbor Blvd, C?i1 IP L 1 MANAGER _f!i
8ABY Slt11.'r,.:; dnys a llttk, r1y11/i\'k. Oii·n lr/\1111p. rt>f. Jn o~uge County'• ll'udlni.; Laguna Hiiia area & LA N O s C A p ER S. e EXPERIENCED T P ATE RS FASHION ISLAND, SECRETARY' • \Ve aro ~ 10 5. °'''n 1ran.11p , Good 11.B. \\'ritr t·husificd nd No. 1 Nr11· c 1t r Dt>fll('1'Sh!p11. S, Orange Co. "x I) erieil(.'C(i. Sprinklers. e EXPERIENCED SCREENERS NEWPORT BEACH looKlns.t £or u.n ea?ief'-beaver :pa.y. C.!\1. 83~ or 1 2$, DuU,y Pllol, P.O. Uo:\, F:x1'1.'li<'nl uppo11unlty. &-... gi"l\ding .~ exii. in ('Ht!K'ntJ')' Major h'nuchlis,. !\lust be Qi• Girl F!lldity w top ~YI
6'6-8456 <.'Vl'• &. 1vknds. ljGI) Costu tilcsn, C11l1r.' \'ii' Snyd<'r Full & P/Time and n111cblllt'ry. Contact Jtn1 (1st & 2nd Shtft) Mt'tllilvc, knowll~Ji;able arid ~~g:;:. Jutl~u::~~!d ~1:h
i\IBYSITTEH. full H111t'. S 9' .. '626. : ATLAS J<".lm<'r. Cr er n ha" c n \Ve also have openings for 'fRAlNEES. Join lndu11trlo1"'1 .:,. ~""11 "' , ",•,tted i;rlHni: our beau t 1 f u I
I.Ip 6. l\1on lhru F'ri. C11r CO!\tPA.~ION f(•ni , for Silt & 1 Chrysl•r·Plymouth Gardena 212:1 Ne w1p or t otflCt', a ..... ne t11, c 111 E'tig· llallc.rnl\ Ynrhl•. Attracllvfl ~na't'S&ary. Shu't June 13, Sun. ~lui.t drive. Nol ~":11!l llarborOl1'(!. ./ Tn1lning Pro\ided Blvd., C.l\t. 646-3927 a leader in the industry. Excellent frJnge Ing 01)1J011unlly. ttepliea b8 f 1 offk.-ell cunge 111 •Call ah 6, Ma.0033. s1noking. HB. 96:Z..:'>221 . ('n~!:i .i\li'~fl 5-16-1!13~ ' ltcllred personii ok LARGE O\CI\ for ~nrt betneflts Bnd salary con11nensurate with ex-<.'Onlldcn!lul :1nd only by ~~l~~L"5 & p I e II. an,: t
BABYSJ'ITER COOK GRAVEYD / Xln'I opportunity track. Oa)' or nii,:ht llhlft. pe rlence. Appl y : ni1tll. \\'rlti• CltiQll\ed lld clicntclc. lhUt~ru. In r.ldo n1y hon1l' 2 -, DRIVER ror ('01it>ge~iludl•n1s Jo'~. nds GoC'al'I JOO No. 1!1 1, l)Ully Pilot. P.O. ViU«"t', NewPort Bta.:h. pm • 11 pn1, 2 ('hlldren. EXPER'D. l\«'d\'d l111n1ed. ; Girl pref'd. Pick-up .~ ./ Tin1e & iv for overtin1e Eurgrou · g, DICEON l:lo.1r1 1560, Cost1t l\fe11<1, Calif. "' ~ible liv~ln Call before Denny's Restaurant •lelii·erv, Local. Over 18. I Car &•phone required t'air Drive, Cos111 l\fesa. 92G.26 61}-ll7ll.
'2 642-1460 3li0 llKrhcll' Bl .. c.~I. I \·a111t Dl'ivC"r'g Lie. Apply LB GAL Se CT'l'tary·ien'I Real Estllt\' Sttleliman, ,.,.hy *Stc'ya, Bookkeeper•
BABYSl'ITER. Uve 111. on COOK 2120 Hal'l>or. C.?it. WELLS FARGO pracilcc e~p. rNfd. for ELECTRONICS INC 001 \\'Ol'k in the hottest area, JlllV€l too nu1ny 10 1111 heh, HB. 5 chlld1-en all ~·h D · /I I I 2 r ei>lublishM C.ardrt1 Gro,•e Li;( Rclnder·1 N,-eni:.,-Ch\: & T\' Expo."'!'. only n~ apply I n i·cr, 11 w l' It~ .•e. u.\,. firrn. Sahu)' Oi>en. Call t • 1-luntington Bcnl.'h, J<'ownain 10 8. h S 5 . J().t ~1007 n rnl . Dcn\'CI' Mining Co f"r 10 i1·hl't'lcr, cxpl'r pref d. GUARD SERVICE :i.1()-.1;;.)0. 18522 Von K•rmtn Vallt>y! Let u11 •rain you. N:~j·io111'Bea~·· u1l~l!KI · 719 \\'. 191h St, Ci\i Olit\'I' in;ul ok il}-$1~ Coll Phi' ~ll'N1rn1ee 963-4567 £\B\• Siner: h\"e 111. Prlv. &l:)-23·l3 Ult\" CLEANING LEt;AL Secretary lr1tirll!(' for Irvine, C11if. n<~·~JONIST Dia A Job 13S-Ol5$ .,.n 1 Bo s c 11 P:\I' Grtrdcn Gr"tJve Lin,· Fir111. ""'-""-• N Ch T y ~ Y ' yrs. ·" · s I COOK, t>xp't!, full 1h11c. ,\1r : C:i!u.nt<'l' Help DI\'. Bakt>r Prote<"li\'l' Scrv. 1\Iust have xlnt 1ypin1; & SJ!. An Equal Opportu11ity Employer for front lobby rnor1iage 0 •r9e 0 OU
11lv Slt'\1' Kettle, Adains al I ~ 11n~lh'1'.<:. IJ.12 \\'. Co1nn101111·t•r1\!h C n ~··i0 bankinG" flrn1. p I ea 11 ant Eslabllihcd 1965 ~\' Sitter needed. j da. Harbor trlC"XI I:> Tu1·iftin1arn !lo.lau,~l'l'. . . ~~ullerlon l .ii'~iiii~'·;:ii;· ~~iiiiiiiio l!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!'!!!!!l!!!l~~!!l[!!i!!!ll surruwl<ii11t & v.· or k i n..g SECRET ARY-C.~1. l\1oture
•\\ok, 7 to 4. own lr:\nlip. -fl'11' nt'11• 1: ex1shng plants, (714) 525·23" Leading Valve Htlp W•nted, M&F 7100Htlp Wanted, M&F 71IO condiliorus. Llll' 1yp\ng & 11·01nan, M\1r 11t?Crtla1inl,
: Call 642-9302 j COUPLE \\"ill u·ain-Exp. prcf'd. Bquid Oppor. Einployl't' M uf N _.J clerical · dutii:s. l'leas."lnt p/titne or f/llmc. $2.50"hr.
· Call fW.1-003. an acturer e.us phone volro rcq. Nr {l11u1ge Call 556-I.-~,140~·==~--!:'oliddle·a~NI. experienced for GUARDS DRAFTSMAN Coun1 y airporl area. SECURITY
"";"""'""' ol I o"" e ELECTRONIC PRODUCTION TYPIST THE MEAIRJ; C.mp. l 11part1nen1 house, Ne11·po11 1 ENGINEER !\It'll & \\/omen, full and µart· 2082 Michelson Dr, h'V'i ne GUARDS Beach. Lil'e-ln. 1 rinll' Unllonns furnished, Expel'. in 1•rr ll'f' design, 714-83.'h~340 NC<'d J<'ull & p/liinc guord~ c II 4~1268 I TOP &nefi!s. GUAHD-production tooling, loll'r-for Ot·unge co. area. For
Experienc:ed
' : New Ac:c:ounts
i Clerk a i TECHNICIAN i\1A ltl(, INC. 009 N. Se11ul· ances & ths. r lnke detuil SEL C HECEPTIONJST, t• R 0 NT inlcrvie\v Ctlll t213l 435-8959.
. -• vada Blvd.. El Segundo, drn11'lug11 di · ... ·1·tly fr'On1 J1;y. IBM E JRIC OF'f"ICE APPEARANCE, Lawren<.-e Si!!curlt)', lnc. D~·na1nic n1ecliL·a l eleclronics 121:1• &W-01!/5 /l.n Equal Op. outs. Xln't bent;>fit1. C 0 NS 0 LE S \VI TC H Loux Beach . •
: UNITED
'CALIFORNIA BANK •
222 Oce•n Ave.,
Laguna B•ach
(714) 4944546
CREDIT
MANAGER
~;:;.11~1~.~11~ 1~1~11~~;11 ~"f~1~1 por~~i~PE~:~e;.ED CLA·VAL CO. Need to type 70 \vords per minute accura tely, ~~~DO~~ Wu~
e n gi n e er i e ch nician >'·ii & P/l•·me 17lh & PlaL't'ntia, Cl\l slo\ver typist need not apply. AIRPORT, c0ALL5 ATl'fSUENR Sr1.ndPro~}ngid·,,..1r SI•<·
i·apable of understanding · 11 ~ln't tlC'neflt~. r1-ee life & AJ so needed! Part-time Proof Reade r 7:00 P.fi1. R A / us P•""· eve op "'
l'lr<:uitry, dra"•ing "·iring METRO CAR WASH nicd ini<. Poid a~nci• &· Experienced only ~'=11~4=1 ;"=l~-<998"°'=~-~~ Gena-ul Office to $47G diagran1s, \\"Ork in ll&D 2950 llarbor Bh·d vacation~. Prof! sharing. A. I · RECEPTIONIST N ceded, Clerk Typiit to '500 I Orange County) AAop to phy~icall>" build Costa 1\lesa f!-IG·Sl91 lqual Opror. l'lliployt'r • PP Y in ·person s 0 u th c r 11 c 8 11 fomia sec·y to .>toes. to S700
prototype as.~n1bhes. AA HOSTESS Q Op1ical. 23811 Bridger Rd, Legal Sec corp RE $800 An Equal Oppor1uni1y
En1ployer C1u1>;ing el e.,,[:tr onics degree or b<>ner or equl\'. Drnwr ~tining Co. LYN· \Ve<!kcnds. 7_3_ Good RANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ElToro830-7400 ~~~~~l~~:e~tr =~
1nanulacturer ~ocated in e.xper. 119 \\'.19th St Ci\1 \\'Ol*in~ corwllUons. Too 330 WEST BAY ST, COSTA MESA RN. 3-ll. pttimt>. LVN or A/Pay Constr to S6:iO
Orange County requil'\'& Submit Rrsu1ne To I &~T'...13 S. Ciill 642·2.HO ' ask for Paul \Vard. RN f/lime ll·i. VacaUon t·1 c Bkkpr, Constr $700 ~nking individual v.·i1h s Iron g' Cla:.:sificd Ad No. !GI HOSTESS relief June 16111 lhru 28th. Ex. Secy ~1ort&8"• lalO : * ·pI:TL;l~~ * ~~~!~co~~~~!: 1 CO Daily Pilot Pa11·Tln1t>. Apply Delaney's, MACHINISTS Help Wanted, M&F 7100 1 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 ~C:rV~rd. ~~0~.~~· fitil Purchu Sec'y 10 $650
Sal · 1 P.0.Box 1560 2·1035 El Tol"'O Rd, Laguna
1
l'ayroll cterk lo $6.'lO Jmmedialc opening in Costa ary oom1nensurate "'1' 1 I Costa l\lesa, Ca !lai26 PBX An · S. • SALES call JeltlUlic Sisco
)i.1esa. Orf.ice. Savings and ex Perie n c e · Degree Hills. In1111ediate ope-n~~~ for Joor· MEN & WOMEN .all shifts,swi!~!""'ee~=~~: EXPERIENCE or Judie Sle\ner
Loan or bank experience prefen'ed. n1i11imun1 of 2 ELECTRONIC MSenibler, HOUSEKEEPER, Live in, ney1nun ninch1rui.t:s I.lit & Agtl 17·34 ·J<'ull &. part tilne. ~1962 · NOT NEEDED NEWPORT
·preferred. ?i.Jus l be \\'illing years coll~ge required. Send F.xp nee. Snil coinpnny wJ help \\·/children ages 12 & 2nd shlfl~. Produ~·lS o~ienled lnimcdlate 0 nin in I •-·
:10 ,,·ork Sa 1 u ·day". resume 10· surroundings. Nr the ocean Jj for \\'Orking moUie.r. co. Xln t benefits include Scl 1 & J bspe 1 S'1 1 11. PEST CONTROL ~,,.,::; 1-fin. 10 $2400 nlOnthly Ptrsonne ...,..nc\ ~ II I kl I Roon1 & board+ saJ""" ... r1 'd I 1·•-& ' 1tlO s o n n e 1· Si -• · b I · hi -133 D " D N ,..x« ent sa al)'. \\'Or ng in Ne11·J10rl Beach. App y at rni. Ne:......,,l'f Beach.,~~k fd,: pa1 10 h.wys, vacs · group gence, Clerical. Stock Con· e ..... y )Cl or ng pen;on, guai:a!ileed. Commissio~ if o..-er r., • •
,rocandli·.itions and b en e f i I s. Standard Nl'\\'porl f\larinc, J01un-4pm. ....... ins. Co11tal·t J1m Gentry, lrol F'ood Servl<.-e & lOO's No .eJCper. needed. Profit ciuahfied. Company vehicle, 642-3870
507 SuPt!rio1', 548-2622. t,tc_~ Al'cher 61.r4630 or COROTEK CORP ~I ' p . 1 \Vh"I Train" sharmg & K!'OUP health. 'JC'pcat buslneAA, \\'t'Ckly & I ~~~~~..,..,~"':"•! AMERICAN SAVINGS Memories, Inc. f'LORAL delligners. r·u11 & • .ore. au. ie m!!. Apply. Thurs 12..<lpin or Jo'1i monthly OOnuscs. Daytime SERVICE Slallon H e lp
;>110 Bristol St, Coste Mesi\ A Subsidiary of part u nic. l\lin. 2 yrs expc-r. HOUSEKEEPER Needed 12812 Knott Street ~ ree ~~g, r.i~11J~· ~n~ 8-12, Uoyd Pl!.llt Control, l\'ork. No £'\'es. Local meat \VllJ!tcd. F'ull &. Part Tlnie.
Mr. HuizC"ngn 979-!ISOO +APPLIED l\t AGNE T I cs \\lo!'k refer. I't'tlUlled. Phone in1111ed. Cook/home n1aker. Garden Gro\'e 89S·I389 ~~·1 + ;m ~el~ r.7o. 2810 S, Halladay, Sanla Ana. 11·holesaler: '> • Apply In Perwn, 300 E. 17th
Equal oppcrr1unit,y e1nploy~r CORP. 962-3280 for appnt. I Live 111. Lake Arro1\'head Machlni'ot Tra·i-e Quiek Ad ance e t GI 8 .11 PHONE SOLICITOR ~Ir. l\lart1n, ~13-77H:>f3. SL, Costa l\1esa.. ' i\l/F ' 2221 s. Anne St. I sumn1ers. Newport Bch. ,... . 1. v . m \n · 1. FACT IS
BAR.i\IAID. top s a 1 a r y, Santa Ana, CaliL 9270-1 I EXECUTIVE 11·inters. Exper. Top salary. Small eon1pany 1\•ith blg co. t1gTui;on1:11~ \ 'h.~1,: .. Se~;. to make calls 10 Busl11C!!s Everyone Eats Mtet .s:'~:~~re'!!e:een·~ ;:~~no :~
'nlalui-e. dC)>('lldablc>. Full SECRETARY \\1kclys 64-1-191!. benefits. looking for sharp daliy. •·· ecnn~.,,. ;i Men during the day, S hrs al .. iiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiii.., I Housekcepi~ duties, good
time. Apr>ly i11 l>l'l'!.!On. The? An ('(jUal opp o t· t u n l t y I lntclh~~n!, in o t I '' at I'd . H 0 USEKEEPER, Jive-in, perso~1 . lo train as a 962·8821 645-1 163 day 3 days a v.·cek. f,?, hr. SALESWOMAN phone pe?l'SOllality. Hi &.id~
.Tin LlzLie, i;)2 Sl. Clair, cuiplo)·er clynan11c 1nd1v1dual wanted beautiful Hunl H 'bo nu1ch1111st. Con1acl J\lr. Torl'es, 835-45·15 Collc•e "irl ok, Cd t.1
.Costa i\iesn. ,,. ________ _..! to inannb'C. smnlt last hon1e. ~lust dri\·e,ruha~!I LARK ENGINEERING 542·2435 Ext. 228. EOE. Desperate _for good salC1i-• · · · 1 fJ & \ \\"Oman, \\'Ill pay top s&llU)'. c6Th-<022"7'7""===.,,--,,.,,.1 ; BEAlJ'TICIAN, DELIVERY men per 111 ., g~~1'U~~.4 ° ice 1 ary own car. E.."l(per. & refs. Top 866 \\"est lGt h Street Plt•asant atn1osphew. l\lusl fu\tALL GRO\\'ING Company
ltcens<'d, to assist 0\\1-.Cr. 11/tinK>. Early n1 or n i "!" . -• Sa.I. 8.J&.-01~ Ne111>0rt Beac.'h 642·9205 ~fOTEL. Maids. 11·\lJ train. PRINTED i1urk 2 nighls per week & in Costa l'ttcsa, Jl('ed5 cal'ft'r
: 61:,..jJiD llt'\\'Spaper dcliv. lo N.B. I EXPER. s1er~ lcc~ician I HOUSEh.'EEPER nttded to f ppl~~ f:'~ f{:s'm~esa every other Sun. • oriented person to take over
, BJ-:..\IJTY OPERATOR home;::. Ap?1ux. 2 hrs. S200 ~Ull or part. llmc. L1bern.t 1 help take , care of sick MACHINIST nn, 8 " · · CIRCUIT APPLY AT expanding accounts payable !tent spu<.-e. HAIR CHALET. per mo .,. gas nl\01v & I salary arrangements. 179 E. ! ?i.lother, small children & Log 1 t 1 th 1 MTST OPERATOR JACKIE'S dept. and to assume other
64-1-7103 bonus. 642-4800. j 17th St., Cost a ~I e Ii a . House cleaning. 8:30 Ml to ,,_a_n ~-a 00' ope,. r~ or. 4:45 lo 9 p.m. Ability to \\"Ork Hunli""too Cenler, HB r e la t t.'<I respomibllilin .
.8 OAT·SAIL ron1n1·rigging
wo1·k. l::xper. req. Good
,:.'Ol'Xl/pay. ~lariner Yaehl5
. 6~-2H2 ',,,.,, ma1.:111ne a P ra.tnN'. 'scd Ca!J n· H'b o t --". DELIVERY i\IAN, Furniture I _.. • 3 P.i\t \\·eek da_ys. J\;lust have Lok-Fast Int. 1164 \V. 16th, ~nsuperv1 · laJ>e, BOARDS 1...--.,===I u s 1_. .... in g company
store, bondable, goo cl ' EXPER. \\'Otnan to \\"Ork in transp. 968-9359 ;~eivporl Beach. 54fHi170 liliiiliiiiiiiii benefits. Call P.lary or driving~coZi-d. Call !or sporl~'"l1·ear shop. t''ull tin1e. HOUSEKEEPER·Live in for NEW FACTORY \. SALES . Robin, 556-0320
appt., i Thl' Sport Nook, 4&1 E. l7lh motherless home. 2 children MACHINISTS Branch outlets i·ust opening D ' El t I Extra On. Cnll. Daylimc !:iI'OCK GIRL. Start $:! hr . DENTAL asfiltant-Oral St., !Corner of Jivine) C.f\I. 5 & 7. CaU aft .:> wkdys, 1ceon ec ron cs, a Raises qufll'terly. f"/time. ~!iliEEJ>1En. /;:111 charge surgery office. Over 23 "'""'· 546-8612. Top pay for skilled general In area needs the follov.·ing: leading manufacturer a\11\ilahility preferred. Hrs !lexible. No expcr
• 615-1393
t ;u11u tr.1a ""a.n.~'C 8~2-2521 H.B. ...~ EXPERIENCED '\'aitre1se1. inachinlsls. l'ttu111 know l\1gmt T-T!e $18.lv.·k of Printed Ci re U it Apply Personl"lt'I 10-noon rt.'<l'd, v.ill train. ContDc1 payrolt·at.:l'OUnts rf'l:~1vablC". Apply in person. Can'Ow's HOUSEKEEPING, Ute. 5 punch press setup & die Servmen (2) s.1 hr Bo d . k ' I 1171 Edinger, H.B. Drakl' Niven, 6 4 6 _ 1 717 payable. l\tust have ~xp DENT1\L ASSISTAN_T · Restaurant; 620 Ave Pioo; afl<'rnoons a \\'eek. l\I ust repair. Cosla f\lrim. &12·8080. Salesn1en Open ar s lS see mg qua • Equal Oppoi·. Employer hct\\TI g.5 ~/11,111a ll manufactunng l Control ~u1'SC, mohl'alcd,1 SC haveo1t11 ,,,c_.a,r._J,,,o,ppay. l\.IATD _TOP &\LARY +All benefits. car«'rpositions. ified candidates for :
·ronipany. S6::.0 111 arr . 1 l n \ e 111 gen t, happy· I . . ........,,,,,,,., niany xtras, lor right Maid, 494-1064 S S 1 y STUDENTS for telephone
•Fountain Valley . ~1-5&11 ! e :'(pe r ienced, individual EX~ERIENCED back 01~1« HOUSEKEEPER, Ai cl e, SILK SCREENll\'G ALE 4 AD · inature?, !l<LlcH. Jdcnl su1n1ncr \\.'Ork. J.1r Stuart ~\\·anted for P"'""'J'CS!!"ive assistant [or urology o~l~cc. i\lon-J<'rl. 8:30 1o 3:30, Nc\\·spaper C11rriers· PLATING responslblr v.·on1nn needed 211, hrs per wk. $1.7j hr to I d 1 u· Sal·ve l\lust be x rny certified l\.lnturc depend. a small every other Sat. hall ~ay. BOYS & 'GIRLS ror pleaimnt sales pnsillon. Mid c·1y 1 k
B.KKPli need«l l.ro1n 6/10 ;nta_ 0 ice. acy open. 644-872'.l ino~ings only. · facility Xln 't iv fl g es . Locnl J'Cfs req. \V rite i\tlULTl·LAYER Xlnt 1\'0rklng cond .~ hours. ~~:.1·1ohn, 16J1 &ii-~ ":rt
!thru G/27, pegboard system,' 9i9-G5lO • . . &12-2·110 CJas.~UC() 11d No. 173, Daily lO yrs & C>tder TOUClI-UP ~1u11t be bondwblc. Apply In 4:30
'IJO finnn rcporls. Salat')' DENTAL As.~!. chairsidc, EXPERIENCED T 0 Y 0 ta HO USEKEEPER 1\·antcd. Pilot, P. 0. ~x f560, Costa DAILY PILQJ STOCK ROOM pc'rson Shell World , Hotel f oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~J
. t'on11nl'nsut'all' \1' I i! x p . r, linie in Ne1vpcrrt Cl·nter. incchanic 4947~ited r o r Big Canyon. Exp'd, niature Mesa, Cn. 92626. JNSPECTION l..ttguna 431 S. Co..'l!>t 11wy
1 ".'l::iG-4170 X·ray lie 1"'.q_'d. Call bct1\·n S! agency. · lady,.') day~ 11·eek. 10 to 3. MAIDS 497-1333
'BOY ro1· n1ailroon1. Open.! & 11 i\lon·f n, 6'1<1-().16(} • F /C BOOKKEEPER Refs. rcq'd. Call 6+1··1618. & LAUX DRESS "'anted. Top Has Route& Open l'OOL CRIB SALES, Art in 1 e re st c d
£:1assily & dis1.rlbute n111il. I D~NTAL _Assisi .. cha_irside. t·uu charge thn.1 T. _B., H 0 USE\\'lVES Playhouse \\'ages. Newport 8 e 3 ch Dana Point 1st a nd 2nd shi(t o pen-i,nale/fcmale . 2'l ' o~er,
handle n1ailing equip .. will l:."fl. des1rC'd. Part l1me & payro_!l for sn~all ofh<.'1'.!. Toy Co. needs party·plan Tta\•Cl Loclg('. 6208 \\". Coast ings, \Vill train Sharp S11_arp, energctic .. respo_ ns1ble I .tTain. Gro\\•in£ financial possible lull tin1e. Age 21 or bcauuful locut10n. \Vork · Free · · & ti NB 00:: 82-2 t 11 to k R
organization. Xln't "·orking over. 962-2.m 11·/con1t1'0l!er 1reas~r. Co. :~~~~~rsCa1t ::;_a1ru:;i1; i\y. · · "· Capistrano Beach applic~nts. \Ve a re an :a:;:~ shop ~~r So~11Coa~
1 coOOs ,t, company benefits. DENTAL AS...."t."<I'. Laguna f'Y~ ~of fee & reimburses Dorothy Cotter. P.O. Box MAIDS e stab}1shed, reputab,le, Village, ]ltust like rcteil
Ap"'ly. 500 Ne1\·port Cen1er Ifill El Toro area. Exper. ' in 90 days. Also Fee ""12·, Anahe1·m. "~" "'~2 Fllime. Sec Pei"SOnncl ~!gr Sa g rowmg company with Ir I'·-I ~-·D t"'S1 'te 600 NB . . I .Jobs. Call Betty Culler, ,,,,. :JJ<J'""V'I.. Balboa Bey Club n Juan Cap1"strano SC 1ng. . uu a n1osp1~~. r, ui chair~idc. Sa ary 0 Pen · 1 s.K)..60;-i,; Coas1ul Personnel II OUSEKEEPER Needed, good benefits near the Call Rug Crafters 546-6340
BOYS & GIRLS Repliescontidenfial.83().lllD A~nc.y.' 2i90 Harbor.Blvd, t:nglish not 1}('{'t'ss. Beverly Im \V. Coa.Kt ""·)' .. N.B. Orange Counly airport. SALr;sGIJU,. Retnil. Full&.
Ne11'Spaper Carriers. i\lio. DENTAL RECEPTIONIST ' C:\I ~lanor Con1-. Hospital, 340 ~lALE &. Fem. \\'anted for CALL Mr. Lowder Apply, Part·tlme. for ?i.1ens &
age 10. Lldo lsle, BAiboa Exp"d, computer bi 11 in g ·I F /C BOOKKEEPER Victoria, C.l\I. 612--0387. lull &. p/llf"!le. A J:1 PI Y 492.4420 \\'omens Spo r ts w ('a r .
PeninmJla & Balboa Poinr. Pl'Cf. yng. n1ature "'on1an, • Kentucky . ~'ricd Chicken, OICEON Experience necessa ry. Contact /\Ir Backstrom at Garden Gro\"e 534-0109 f or busy ~xcc. Personal :Wl22 Pacific Coast ll\\'Y, NURSES Aide & Orderly. 7. App I y i n per so 11, ' · ' I 1'Ccot'ds. P/lime 7 1.: hrll for INSPECTOR Dana Pl .. Ex r 1 c·E-AW y So c ttieDA.ILYPILOTor ~all l DENTAL ASST, ehairside. ·ldaysorG tu"Sfor Sdays. · .... per. pre. ntervws ,,., A .. oas t
6424321 &. lrave application. ch~rful, X·R::iy license ~I u l I i p 1 e M!t of hooks Requires individual \\'I ~!ALE engnver-trophles & l\ton·f"ri. Mesa Verde Conv. ELECTRONICS INC Village. 556-8276
1 BUSBOYS I req d. N.B. &14·9211. . including PR, A/R, AIP. s1rong elC<'lronic & electro name plates. Some exper. lfosp~ _661 Center St. CM. ' • SALESMAN, draperi£'s &
Engli11h not nect!&"11'Y. DENT ,\L Asiil. chair.side, 1 }(en'l ledg£'r lhru T.B. nicchanieal in l! Pe c 1 ion Age 2().35, neat appearance. 548-5585. shades, neat, aggressive,
See Personnel f\111.nagi..·1· I .11-ray. Nonsn1ok('r. Prcler· Sa la ry co tn men surate backgrc\und. :\I us t be Steady cm PI o Y men t. NURSES Aldes, 7·3. \V/\RD 18522 Von Kerman cus1on1 shape & drapery
Balboa Bay Club 11bl>· under 30. 6~~·0611. 'i i1'/C"xper. Send r cs u n1 e capable of passing NASA 646-31·11. Clerk 7-3. Will train. ~1esa Irvine, Calif. 92664 shop, 3535 E. Coast H\\')',
' /·el• lo p 0 "·• 21"" soldcrlng school & be. 11·c\J ~IALE & Fem. wuoted lor Venlc Conv. Hosp, 661 COM
12'11 \V, Coast ll\\')', NB DENT A!, ll~gienist. Sal. ~c~\-~11 Beacl; c;• 92663 '"'· 1·e1-sed in tht> coordination "rull & pltime. App I y Cl'ntcr Sl., C.J\;1. An Equal Opportunity SALES \VOf\l AN, Pt·liine,
CAMERA TRAINEE only. ~ountain Valley area. ' ·· of qu:i!ily docunienta t.ion. l\entucky Fried Chicken, NURSES AIDES, EXPER. Eniploycr m/f Cos111elic DepL., lgc Drug
Full tin1c position for young 17141 8-li-&'JOl. 1 GAL OFFICE 2929 E. Coast !fwy, Cdf\1 Pref'd . All shifls. Beverly Store ,·0 H.B. E,.0, & ·-m· · SS 11 Exccllenl fringe l:ICnefi ls: ...., " person. No ex p e r 1 enc e DENTAL A ISTANT. lu 3 \Veeks Vacation ~lALE hel p v.·antcd full & ?i.tanor, :bl_l52 Via Estrada, PRINTING pr cs 1'I man . Sundays. Sl7·256l.
necessary but helpful. Alter or part time. Experience Paid i'ole<lical, Dental p/lime. Apply Kentucky Laguna Htlls. Starting ne1t• bu:siness Cosla SALESLADY, over 40. i'olust
Mb•gr;o_mgApplloy 'b"ero pemnoe "·~~tk. neceAAary. &l·l-0583 ' \\"or~ v.•h/4 ,fft?nd'1
1 guys. J( & Life Insurance Fried Chicken, 695 S. NURSES AIDES, Full·Ume, l\ft;>sa. Need ex PI!! I'. have experience in better
· ~ I you re I e "' o 5(!Cretary f' 'd" b c 1 H •-"-h 73 '11 pre I for !\Ir. NiCTle. DESIGNER l'k 11 f h a1 i...ung Tem1 Disa , in!ii oas wy, ..... g. cc . · , ,,.. • 1naturc, cxper. ss1nan o operate dresses. Xlnt working
K-MART I ~;~ntio~. e~hena thiso Is ~ Ar>pllcations accepted r.tALE \\'ilh art background prcf'd. \\'Ill train. 6-l2-2410 multi 285(1, Un l i m It e d cond's 673-2990
d"ily APPLY need-' 1-.~•tore. NURSING·. LYN Rel>'el •-potential for lhe right alll,,j; ... ;;i;;'iiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiii-2'100 Harbor Blvd, C.~I. spoL for )'OU. N l c e " · ··· "" '" .... ' '"' around m c 11 •· 1 I' I . 1 ODETICS, INC. 673-9120 pm &: nile sh.ift. RN ~--e an. a ocver y, SECRETARY
CASHIER persona 1ty, peasant .. , ..... & 833-8320
P .C. BOARD LAYOUT surroundings. 1859 S. l'ttaochei;trr for days. &12-3."J(ij, ---· ------Reliel for food & beverage.
·Mature. l"Csp. & dependable.
Some lit£" bkkpng. P1lln1e.
See Personnt•l ~tanager.
B4 lboa Bay 9ub
12'11 \V. Ql.asl H1ry •. N.B.
C.\SHIERS 11·11nted. Gulf
self·i;erv<'. 6 day11/"·<.'l·k.
}'ull thnt•. S2.2:i shtr1h1J: I
PAY· 1\pplicanri1 01'l'r :.o
\\'el<.'Olnc. 1010 S. El Camino
Real; SC 1 CHILD care, one 10 yr old
girl, I lie housekeepin~ f\lon thro Fri 7:4J lo 4:4j, \Vould
consider 4 days \\"k. 011·11
tran!I fll't!(CJTed hut uot
req'd. l\TCSA Verde at'Ca.1 ~an£"r5pr11 .
CHAIR side asst, l'l'Unti'd,
full lime. l'\lln. I yr exp.
Star1 l1nmed. SAiary OIJ('n.
Nt\\•porl ~ach a r c 11 •
645-<631
(Orange County1
\\"c lll'Cd an MCperienct.'d, top.
notch Designer in high
dc.'nslly DIP and di~t
circuit layouts. \\'e are a
dynamit•, gl'owing,
:o.uctr~.c.rul con1pany \\'1th o
11n1!tll. s1nblc design si'clltnl.
S.ulll1'~ t•On1n1eni-urntc \1·i1h
<•xpi•r'i<'llt~'. rxctll"nt fri11~c
hr11e-tits. ~nd resu111t' to'.
100% FREE
556-1100
AAMES Bureau
Ol Eri1ployn1e11t /\i;:C'n<'y :noo lh1.r1Jor Blvd.
Suilc 201 0'.111ta Jlolcga
Anaheim O Equal Oppor. Employer MANAGER 2 FFICE GIRLS
NEEDED
lNSUltA~CE Radio tell'phone dispatch
\\'E N~~ED YOU! TRAINEES ~lust be 2."5, able to drive Cl.F:RK TYPISTS to S4i0 Apply In Person .
r!LE CLERKS to S4-10 . YELLOW CAB CO.
KEYPUNCH OP!t 1u Sj\:! Full & p /time 186 E J6lh Cos1a 1"1esa
INS GIR.L 1v/bkpnJ?: IQ $4:50 lnll't~:ie11·!ng No1v rGr Posi· , . ' ' . ~'IELD Ul\10\\'R. ~.D. f!.rtn lions in Orange Co. :l\1ullt 00 I ~INTER, exp only. Resuien·
t'll{E PKG UNDH.\\'P.ITER over 21, borwlnlile & \n good ~111 1 \\1!_rk. Call after 4:30 pn1,
LINDA f'ORD phylllcal 1.'011d, llavr cflr & =''71&-~27~'9~·~~~~~~~ t::~IPLO\"l'\:1ENT AGENCY lt.'lcphonc. Go to Tic TOI.' PARKING Loi attendant,
17305 Orookhum, F'. Vly l'\l11rkc t ne11N"SI )'OU Qr tele-heaL'hfronl -H.B. resident.
Cla!isilil'<I 1\d no. lj,S GAl. .. 'i lo ht•lp w/expand bus. !l63-78J1 or :-;,=;1,;.~ 11hone our offlei!~ .. , l\Hddle aged. Prefer retire
co D:iily J}JJot l"ull, pfl. Top $$. Cllr, Insurance A•cy G "irl 1714) M..~i-7417 or semi rcrired. Non
Pho11e. f\tr. Lyorui 8''6-:)-155. • f"'or Informnlion drinker. $2 per hr. Seasonal Co"1~·~e1!::~ C~262G f"'ull or p/tlme·Dwelling fire TIC TOC SYSTEMS Ji.>b thn1 Labor O&y. Apply
*GARDENER* or honll'O\\'llers ex per. . • 8unny 's Snock Bar, Sth 111 An Equal Oppol'lunlty rt'ffrl . Must be good tyr>l~1. Equal Op\Jor. f.mplQye r Oeennrront. Hunt. Bch. s&i
J.::m"IOyt't' Be yo·~r own bo11!1? J>pn or .:a''' opeo "·ii l'ern '' . .,... ' Y · .... • or Sun n10rn. Ask for Mr. ..,_..,..,..,-... ~ ... !!! f f/timt'. Your own orca. J13."'"'!U80. ~TGl\IT Trne, route aale11 ro. Shnn\~ 5,l).,9986, DISHWASHER High Income. Gua.rantool ~~,~N~S~U~R~A~N~C~E~--1 Jo'utUJ'C. Ag" 23-49. Car nee
Cull!omen. Earn Novi. Pay ?.Ir. l·Uc•hiu·d~. 846-54:>5. P•rt-Timt Job a.,lksr,\~~A~.l31~:1~~~.r~~ hltrr, 0~!~1U~~ry t'X°:r~ r ~ .. ~;~1: ~fARTNE yMnl men WRnlM. Flexible ~ll'!I; Hoi;pitaHcy
534-7117 or 534-3144 &ii Good trlnge Apiity In pel't;l'.ln. Ancl'IOr lf0111te11J1 Service n e c d s Qerlc~,1.Eri.~~~~·\·~Sri.1 :i~~~~~.t.Hou.~kl't'p, A1d<'. . ix-~7i1s.openCo.i1111.'t P.fl"!I. ~~ri:.B:'"· 1171 09.ck Bay ~!f='~w ~:n~iji~:, Y::
{ Oent11l A"t S.iOO ~latun>, drpcn(I, ~111. laeil. GENERAL OFFICE Hlchardso~ Empltt "·Ill nero t1 cu &
./ 1'1ed, Auts. to S600 ).in't ..,·a~. 642-2410. Busy movlna: & slorage co. ,.""•'•"iiiii·o~eo.._._,,"...o-~~~·--1~IEDICAL Hecept for busy type\\Ttter. Cati a.17-309:i for ' '"il •• -·--• I • d01.•IO~ ollict. /\pr>lY Bristol · .... ~led. Tn11. 01 er 10 $.)jl) DRAFTSMAN , ........... ~ accurate l)'I> ~1 11·/IH~ INTERIOR Park f\Ted lcnl Group, m lnll'rv1t!w oppt.
./ •'tie Clerk!! lo $-140 f"Or ditipl"" ro Ba,; i c bkkpna exper. Cr~ o I "-k r-'I Sal pf1 L\tE ~· k' F I ./ Gc-n~ Ofll<.-e to ,,.:.·~_ 11 knowledge""lot archlt«.lur,al 11h1nlfU( Al!l:try .t i;:"ood CLERK 0tt tr, """'la ,. esa, ary en1a . os er , '_, Tr ' .... .... ...... .... ,;.,, Ex-. -1 ~··· , •• , • .... ope.n. FT'Ct'le. Apply 899 \V. 19th • ~ a..K't'u•· ....,;i.i dr11ftlng, 11:r.1phi1.'ll & art .,...,.,, ....., "" ·--. ""' ..... SI ~ta ~fesa ./ Typisl8 10 $470 btl ck i:t' r 0 u od helpful J•son Bes t Agency c;w·"cy lmpor1a111. l'llEN & \VO~IF:N \VANTJ<l> · · ·
LINDA fOhO Ad \'anct"d ~1erehandlilng' lilOO 81'00khurs1, t~. Vly. PLF.,\SE CONTACT No t'"P· ncct'11sary. SIS. per PBX OPERATOR
El'llPLOYJ\;fElllT AGENCY Inc .. mi So. Kil!iOn l)r; SUitt! 213 96.'HiTIS Greg Nev.:land day. \\'ork fron1 your hotnc Tl'ltr>hone ansv:ering iierv.
J7300 Brookhurst, F. Vly. Sanla Ana. , Bink of America tl\klng C1Jlt1lo1t ordl'l'S by prof(>siiional (' x ch ah g e .
003-7811 or ~7-ll863 l GEN'L OFC CLRK 500 NewjXlrl <'.cnler moil. \\'ril.C Nat Ion" I t't11hlon l~huw:I, N.B. Exprr.
CLERICAL DRAFTSMAN-CIVIL Crowhia ~llb<M1 ma11ur. f'a11hlon Island Mailing HouS<'. Der>t D, Hn-.: nnt)'. Top Pl\.Y .l bi!nefil~.
Dnmed. Mllattmcmt1. ,..,P
$SS. Long or short term. 0>11 540-4<;0,
~tin l )'Ml f'XfJCr, Good oppor, fll'td11 l'OUllll CIH'Till!tlc x\rl l___L l:J+.3505 JIM!!, l.m Anjttles, Ca. Cnll rl't·1-7009.
"'/new firm, 979.51~. good w/f.igul"f's, lit(' typln{.'l~ual Oppor ~mployeor. 90011 -P=B~X,.-:O"P~E~RA~=T~O~R~
N!."VElt A FEE AT TEMPO SutferillJt a a!orage cr~lt'l'
TE:0.1PO T""nlj)(>rery Jfelp Sell no-longer needed ltem1
With 8 Dally Pilot Clas5.lficd
Pilot Cln.ss:ifled ad. 642-5618 Ad! 6f2.5678.
I ,
f'ii.Ktr IO le11rn. • Put your bOO,:ct bocic on Ans\\'tring scrv. rxJ)f'r. Full
Call Bev, 612·8961 ou1t1oor Nports IOg( Its Ille! track ... Sell lcllc Items or p/tl')"IC. ,\pply 6.)1 w.
Don't Kfva up the 11hip! Appe117 Sell )'Otlr equipment v.1fh o Jow-.co1t pall)" Piiot 19th. SY1te 14, Ci'-1 &12-1403.
.. Lisi" it ln clssslfied. $hip with ll I0\\'-.00.'I Ottlly Piiot On~Uied Ad! C~U 6-«i-5678 The fllttr.il dl'llw 1n 1M Wi:JI.
10 !;ho1'(! ReAultt! 642-W78. Cli.sslfted Ad! 642-5678. 10011y! , • ,. Dnlly Pl]()! Cliwlfied
•
PRODUCE MAN
Exp'd 83J.8144 Immedlalr opening fo~ a
Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiii .. f gharp sell s 1a r t1 n g
PURC lndtvldual 1vhQ. de s I r e s HASING vorioo """'"''blHtl" • \\'Ork independenll)\. Typing
St'cretary 10 bu~y purchasing
agent. Lots of phone V.'Ork
enllill$: in orden to w..ncloni.
Expediting oNlers. typing of
P0'11. No sh. Lends of
variely, Increase After 30
days.
100% FREE
556-1100
AAMES BUREAU
Or En1ployn1tnt Agtncy
2106 llarbor Blvd.
Suile 207 Coslt1 !\lrsn
80-90 w.p.111.. Sh 100-m
w.p.m. , Excellcnl 11·orking
conditions & benclits.
THE IRVINE CO.
644--3319, 9tm-noon
Equal Or>por, Eniploycr
Sec'y PR to $650
SPOTLIGHT
~~EE PAID
Jr you l'Jln take the hru1 of
the tension you'll funcli1ln
fl.~ adm a..s.,lstant to gcn'I
iqilcs n1MRger of cxpandina
<.'Orp. Positively Plush! Li le
sh ok. Call Liz Blake,
833-2700. ALSO FEE JOBS.
t>cnnls & Dennis Peraonncl
1'\tccn1!y or hv1ne, 20S2
IF YOULI,J<E PEOPLE Mich<>l.,. Dr
WE'D LIKE YOU Secretory $650
To conskfri-t\ Cl\recr "·llh lhe F'tt PuidJAlso Fc,e ~ot)s
\\"orld.1 F"l~1 Rct1l EltntP Bch aren, motl i'.k1lls
ComPtJJlf. You Supply t.he WESTCLIFF
de.tire and "-e'll rumi.sh the Pt'r.ooonel Age™''>'
lrolnlnt. Tolttlhrr. we 'l l <r.111rk Ill Ccnter1
l'llrll you S 1 5 O O Im u lGSI !::. Edinger, S.A.
lcommlssll'.lnl !Ask 11hou1 M2-8336
our llcen!V' I fl;I In In a: SECH~IARY k GI R L
progm.m !or non·lll'Cnse rRIOA Y 10 V.P. of golf ro. ~plcl J.or furlher Good shonhand & lyplng:
1nforma!lon plca11e call Jack !!kills. Panunouni, Calll.
l\,Yers •I ~9-191. Joe. nr. Art<'sla Ji'rwy. Ml:
531-2333 for penlC\ll11n.
,--!1111•!1.,-,lsECRETARY .l 1.-en'I oUice
Walk I! l 1illm. Shonhand OK, 001 er ., ea ,..·a. Lll• ,,, ... ""'""'''' ~••L ,.,,,, exp, hclpf\tl, 833-9223
' '
Temporary
Summer Jobs For
Typists, S.cret1rie1
10 Key Oprs, Acct Clrks
MTST·MTSC Opn
PBX Recept, Packers,
Ass•mbltrs &
Warehousemen.
We're. looking for posl·
tive & responsible peo-
ple to work long & short
term assignments dur·
ing the Summer. C1ll
or come in now. WHkly
Pay. No Charge To You
Office Overload
3723 Birch St., N.B.
557-0061
Temporaries
Does The Temporary
Htlp Service You
Work For Now •••.
OUcr \'ou The J<'ollowlng
&""Paid Holidays
&""Paid Vac:atlons
&""Med. Ins. Plan
If Not You Owe It
·To Yourself To
REGISTER · WITH
VOLT
Instant Per1onnel
l\laj(lr Medical Pinn
NO\\' Avall~bll'
Teniporary 8'irvlrc!
:\848 C .. mpu~ Dt .. Suite 106
Ncwpon Beach ;',.\G.<1?41
\\'e htt\'t a 1.'()n111l<'te Pll<'kngc
11( employtt bencllt11. \Ve
r>tl,Y tnp l'l't\,l.?C'll. All offlct &:
lnd11~hit1I ·~'<illg are ~lei'J,
Equal " .,or. t..:m11lo)'t"r
Tel.,phone Sales
Cott• Mtsa Art•
Work From
Your Home
Top Commissions
• 5."18-7311 *
TJo:Ll;PltO!'lE 1vork.
pleasnnl pJllme fron1 yooT"I
hOml". Hrl3· \\'l\S:C. Olli
Shnron. 61&.mJ.
' I
-'
•
'
'
-.
..
'
TEL1':PHONE s I\ It! I DI e n
ll.ll, •l'etl, Good PllY, R'fJO(f
dt'RI, no rip.off11. C.U Tom ~l~ !lr92-22'77 1..fl pm (11\ly,
7
TRAINEES
OpenJ111ii for women ns
tnah11..'C'1 on for moldltlll
mnrhtne opern1ora Qn all
Mlft11. Act-epting f')(J)Cr. UJ~
ernlol'll al110. Shift IJt111UJ
Pl'l':mlu1u paid ,111 llwing &
gl'hvt'y~td. Oppor. lo Irv.In
On Khih of )'our cholcf' w/
wood 111JUtlng w11.1ee 4 30 d11y
probationary period. Co.
Pllk! health Insurance. Reltl verified.
Ap1•ly 8AM·JPM
Ca_ If. Infection
Molding Compeny :ll.11~ Brlf>K11, Co11t11 t.11'sa
I blk. S. of Beker
111J )lf11hlllJ
TRAINEES I~ Ille 11111!W.'mbly & ~111Jn eftlll·
ing. Hgt min. ~'6". c.t.t .
area. S2 hr x111t1. !J'ro.8600.
Typists
General Ofc:
Ute Industrial
Long &: Short Terrn
A.ulgnmenls
NO FEES .
MANPOWER, INC.
0
lo t'nter date on vidro display
terminal In newspRp er
acoounting office. Must be a
fast and accurale and also
pcrfonn other c I e rl c 11 I
dulies. Flexible working
hours possible for ilomf'
• evening and/or weekend
work sch~ult' l.n the futun>.
Good pay and excellent
working conditions o n d
benefits.
Apply to MI'3. Greenn18.ll
DAILY PILOT
330 W. Bay St .. Co111a Mesa
~+ \\'.p.m. w/good muU1
11ptltl.ldtt.
Apply In Pe~ Dcpl.
9 AM·ll A.1\1, MQJ1.·Fri.
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700 Nel'o•port ~nl~r Dr.
NCWJ)'.»1 Bench
F'JUUI Oppor. ~mplO)'f'r
WANT TO MAKE
Al-'GHAN Puppies,
&how quality. M/F'.
673-2552 675--4911
AKC,
COON HOUND, 10 mlh old.
Black & tan.
962-76.'14
EXTRA MONEY? I 111'!\. l OLD ENG, s H EE p D 0 G &ill or p/timc d~livery help MwdlMclM V Pups. 6 wks, $100. Beaut.
!ir local advertising 00.l 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·:.~ =m~"'~·~·~"·~·~·~<711~64~•~279=1~. ~ AboVe aVJ: earnings. Your11 PllA.ROAH Hounds puppie~.
own transp. Paid da ily + An I 8005 f{arc:, gas allow, Pick your own1--'-q~•-•_•;... ____ _;_;~ 1213) 691-8766
hrs lOarn·SP!'fl· Apply 315 * NOW OPEN * :!rd St, Suite E, Hunt Beach. r-.rrs. \VII.rd. . GARY DORRIS
ANTIQUES
B~AUT. AKC Cocker Spaniel
puppies, Butt. 6 "'ks. $12!i.
ea. 543--9172
. Don't give up the shl{>! Specializing in: Ibe fastezt draw tn the We!!I_. "List" it in classified, Ship Americana
• .. a DaUv Pilot Clwiftleo to Shore Results! 642-5678. p · ·11
GERMAN SHEPH ERD,
A.~c reg. 8 wks. Shots, 2
fem. lefl. $85. PH: 536-4028.
IRISH SE.'TI'ER, AKC. i\1ale,
7 mos. Top cond, all shots,
guaranteed. 962-11"5
Ill _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ r1m1 ve
...LRSAL-OJWU..\.L.llLi.L!L~ Period Furniture •.
f#~~~ ~ .. f .. CONY(M[H'f SHOPPINc: ""° -<t::1 SCWINC GUIOf fOR THE it:_ CAL ~ THE CO,
For an ad In Woman'• Werld
Call Mary Beth 642·5671, eJCt,. 330
No Waist Seam!
j_
Brighten A Room
" ·.
'.
11nd acl:es..'IOriei;.
Open \Ved,·Sat .. 11-5
602 Pacific Coast Hwy.
lf.B. Alt. 5. phone
536-7295 ~57().;
ORANGE COUNTY
*ANTIQUES*
GOLDEN Retriever pups.
AKC rec .. Rnyally bred. 6
1-1·ks. Shots, 673-7469.
GREAT DANE, 6 mth old.
fawn fem!., had sbots &
cars cropped, 84i-2871 alt.6
GOOD fem sm dog, been
fixed . House dog, 839-5510
or 842-4236.
Free To You I04S
838-E. bit. !:it., Sanla Ana
Stain«! glass, roll lops,
sideboards, marble t o p
wash stands & much more.
Open daily. LoY" prices.
VERY old carved cabinet datl'd 1614, $650. Also have ADULT couple (lnJy. 7 yr.
Englhih country settee Circa male white West Highland
1720, $400. Sell or trade for Terrier. Lt Col Cap\\·eU,
l71h century an ti ques 337--05.iO.
847-5286 LOVELY KITTENS, Persian
EXCELLENT SELECTION, backg r ound. See 1(1
ANTIQUE FURi"llITURE. apprecia,te. 9'l9-8978 eves. &
Roll Top desk & Brass Bed.1 _•,'k~d~""~'~·....,,==,,-,-~=-. '-'.·;j:.:,:::!·.. HOUSE OF STUART if{ISH SETIER/ LAB,
,..: ,_ .. ,,., 326 Main St, Huntington Bch Puppie9, 6 "'ks old.
ll ·.•,' /."~,_:;::':;. i PAINT & VARNIS H 540-825-1
U1
V I
I
..... 1
.. .
9028 ' •
SIZES e.1e
_,
1
~ 1!T .. ;.., 11f,,.,,i'~
I ~ ·· · '" , :·:· ·· RemOval.AnUqueF'urniture 2 YR rem. C(lck-a-p(IO
" ·· · ' :· • ."· our Specialty. Free Est. te1Tier. :\.1nt \\'/children.
.· ::. c\ • ';.;,~ ~~~ ~: ~o~~y ~~ A~;~~\\~~~~:i;:~-10
for new homr, pvt ply, Call 581--0797. ~ :·.·.: !,. .... no al{enl!I please il9.1-2360. S Jl E p /CAYO TE mix
1 ·: • ,. :. • ., ~ Appliances 801 O puppies. all males, to good . . . . homes. 645-7597 ·~1·~~~-_::~ t!7vIG~I~ '?>o~t1tEe~i: t~.E;o=~~e:~~:~
,1'f' e1'8IOrs, \Vnshcni, Oryt>rs & children 979-8123.
Dishwashrrs, New War·
runty, Credit. e of A, 3623 h11TEN-8 "-'.ks old. Male.
W. Warner, Santa Ann, near Big eyes. White wfbeaut.
Harbor. 979'29Zl. markings. Funky. 645-2342
5 YR auto Kenmore \Va.sher. 1'~REE female Siamese cat,
ISO 2 \Vhl I I approx 1~ yr. Likes dogs & ~ ; yr. r poo gas children. 817~890 · \\ ~ dryer $75. Avl .7/20 ;-«~ 'RF -_.,: 837-{fiM. KI'ITENS, 7 "'ks old, 3 inale,
I s , 2 fem!. Grey & b lack ia'Y:-~ l). hWA S H ER, G.E., ti 1 . ""'""'' l .r-.. ~~.~ •.,_·:, po1table, like new, Cost grr s rip<' •• r...,.._,.,, ~ ... ~ -:;,• S210. Sucrific<' Sl!O. Ph. BLACI< & Ian 1nalr Cocker
7379 · -a-~ .. --~'" ;'J-18--3002 Spaniel. /\KC rcg'd, to gd
Rent Washer1/0ry1r5 home. 6-10--0383
$2. \\'k. t 'ull n1alnt. llAVE Papers for a 5 yr. old * 639-1202 * Pedi&roflt blk Poodle. l\lust have good home 642-4980
KENl\IOHE Aulo \\'a.sht>r, FREE LUV· Adorable 1 ~
l'ur rnlor unilPlf{ll" -, ,.,. $40, NORGE Elect Dryer, SIAl\jESE kitfys, 7 \\'kl!.
rh••r 01.11 1·11i: '" 1 11•lor~· Sl."i. guar & fl()!. 5-M).8672 .,.. ~JS *
11 ~ 1111 si uu .. • 1od ,.•1 ~" HOTPOl NT Refl'lgerator, gd
• ,, n" l>i>i:lnn••t ''"n •n:tk•· th.~ workln"' rond. Cl\ ·s·top FOUR Darling kittens, free! 1 a111IM1~ ••11:1h:11·11~11•,.tL•11 1n f ,,\! . /;>2~ \Vant 10 give to lovi ng 1 umpllm,.n1~ l'.irtP•n :~;·•· reezer. • I. a pm, hoine. 646-971::1
KJNGSIZE bed, xtra firm , Ove r 50 pellet1 of
new, incl. mattrelil, OOx storage
springs & .frame. $165. Cotnbin('d from 4 C(lo1pnnl~
(11o'Orth $SS O) · Queenslze l. BAL B 0 A TftANSl"ER
$145. Inc. delivery. Usually & S1URAGE
home 83Z-2488. 2. LAGUNA BEACH VAN
MOVING EASf! & sroRAGE
ANSWERS
''BOX TOP"
*CAMPER PARTS*
&klw OllSCOUllt on ltange11
Sinks, Ri•frlgii, Jr.:eboxeH:
vcnl.s, \\'i ndows, ports, skin
oil t.-oolers, etc. '
Phone !H!l-0213
MUST Sell hy June 12th. 4 3. HARBOR MOVING & STG.
rms. Furnitut"e, 2 bedrooin, 4. UNITEDAt.t VAN & STG. BARTLETT
I living roon1, I dinnettr. AUCTION 1 FLOOR COVERING 6'1~980. 275 E. 18th SL Apt : 788 W. 19th St., C.M.
L'i, Cri.t I P<' r seinalizcd lni;:tWiltltOn.
KING SZ BED, $75. HercuJon UNCLAIMED Nan1e Brand, Ca 1· p" t
Sofa·bed. $~. Spanish Thi Guan1ntce<.1. Over 30 yrs.
& 4 chn., 1175. 9 D•= * STORAGE * "'· Drcl!.Set', Sl25 .. '71 Scuba FREE ESTIMATES
Tank, Hawaiian back-pack, SUNDAY, JUNE 9 Call 64&-1412
$70. 546-0181 aft. 6 p.m. 10 A.M. ·ALL DAY SURFBOARD & \VET SUIT,
SOfA & matching chair-2-\81 AL roN ST. ! Bing S\\•allolVlall, no dlng5.
\' )" modcm.overstuffeded * IRVINE * 1 $40. Sea Suit, Longjohn,
l!W. &fy.le-dark blue w/ Ott S.A. tly. at Red Hill. 1 new. $2'5. Both for $60.
mi plping-$300. 833-9193 So. 5 mJ. to Alton, !ell. Revelle 1.laster Trumpet, lk
da.ya, MS-8101 eves. new. w/cue. $70. Humanic
PIANO. French pr 0 v . lfousehold fUJ!I .. Personal _er-Ski Boots, all plastic. brand
canopy bed M?t, cabinet bed. feels. Appl~. Office new, iU: 101,S, $50. or besl
Oriental bar / stools ; di· furn. File cabmet~. An· oite.r. Aft. 6. 645-0341.
neue / desk. Se\\·ing mach. t~ues. Color _& B&W 'l_V's. I I BUY II 67~4367 atl 3 pm. Stereos. SC'w1ng t.·lach1n('!':. ••
Golf Set. Bar & Stools. 1oo·s , Good, usaj furniture I.; BAR-large cust(ln:i natural of Bam>!s, Boxes, Trunks, 1appliant.'e!IO'l'"Will11elJ for you ~=ht wi~n ~~s 'perl6 Lu~age with .Bri<'-a-Brac. MASTERS AUCTION
for rec room $575 ~812 China, Glass. Miscellaneous. 646-8686 or 833-9625 · · · etc. MUOI ~J ORE' <' eves & wkndll. TERMS: Cash, ccrtiiied ck.~i'. 83" ,.,,!ilt 6 r:~~ 3050 ... ::ido)~•o 6349 AlR C8ND for s l i din g on.ly ,,..., ..• -.,.,.,.. -.......,.
\\<indow, $85; 4 dra"'er c:hest E C "ED" JENKINS CABINETS for Kitchen & $45; night stand $15; table • • Bath
lamp S.00; liOfa & chair $50; Auctioneer, \Vhse. ph. 54().3880 ·Unfinished Prcfinished
64Z-3672. Counter Tops also
SHHHI FURNITURE FOR Sale: Everything you'll 1-IARDEN ENTERRISES
AT WHOLESALE I nl.'f!fl t or camping-never 815 \V. 18th St. C.l\1.
before used! Tent , 3 do"'" &12-28-12
TEIDAS, TOO? sleeping bags "-'/air malts, DECORATORS • COU.ECT-
894-2020 C(lle1nan re[rig, 5 I o v e · I ORS oaxacan Indian Rngs,
DINETrE Set, Uke new $50, luntcrn, heater, etc. Call hand woven, all wool, nat-
baby tum, Colonic\ couch. &I0-8150 Cdayst 6.;o...1567 ural d yes. 609 C8lTIOlion,
$50. Matching chain, $3). (e\•es ~ Cdt.1. 9 til 4 Sat & Sun.
J-'ull sz. box sprinJ;s &: mall, DECORATOR'S ~tL~take-1)75.3968.
$25. 979-2331. Shl't'r natural Linen ~A~Q~U~A~ru=u~Mo-hood,.-~.-,,.~-.~.t
\\111.L BUY draperies, 4 panels. t'ach show tank, stand, hll aec.
GOOD USED J'1JRNITURE 95" 1o1·idc by 96". l(lng. 150 Ne\'er ~. Best offer. Ph. Al.so Stoves reCrig wshrs yd1 tan nylon H1-U:> shag 963-62'.ll
1-pieceorA.houscfui. ' trp!-_ Su~r buy! 642-o;c,.-~~~~--== * 675-8321.. * 225.'l1.~1ro1 Misc:wanted 80IJ
8' WH.ITE c.'OUCh l custom COMPL~"TE drafting outfit, f
made Jov.· ~s! l • 6 · 4'x6', knock-dov.'ll lb!. stool.
formica top cotiee tbl. Vemoo draJting madii11e,'
e PIANOS e ORGANS
Rentals fr $5
Open Nl9ht1 'til 9
Sat: 'tll 5:30, Sun. 12-5
*Pianos & Grand'*
Baldwin -C.:lblc. Oiickerlns;
• 1-'l:scher • Kawal • Kimball
• Knabe. r.1· rin $.: J.llor"'I .
f..1Wl!lt't! • Sollmet• • $1(,l.n·
w&y • Srorey ,\ Clnrk • \\'in·
ter • \Vrullti:cr -Ya.m<iha New Spinl'lll 1 ......... $5$
UKC(I h•Jm . • .. ... • • • .. $9.'i
Ptayr l'li " ....... , •• $893
(:rund.I' " ........... $395
*ORGANS*
Buld\1 In • Cllnn . 1!111nmond .
Ka11o•ai • Kimball • Lo111J't'Y.
Rodge1"11 · 1'hornas • .1n·
aha • \\'urli tier.
Optlgnn ....... , .•••••.• $1:.0
U:Jwrey Spine! ........ $19;)
\\'urHt~cr Spint'I, ne1o1· •• $199
*WIN FREE *
ORGAN LESSONS
FULLERTON MUSIC
18191 Luclid, Fountain Vallt')"
SS7_.836
122 N. Harbor, Fullerton
871 ·180S
JIR40 HA~1_:i.10ND Ton e
Cabinet, w/Stereo Anip. &
Revcrb, S25CI. NE\\'PORT
ORGANS. &15-1530.
DAILY PILOT ,J J
8oat1. Power 9044_
ll' BERTRAM '61 ,
'?\o.1n 1 1'h·re f/0 2 \\-Sy
radio, lathon1rll!'r,
dlr'C'Cllon11I ran~ tinder.
ootngjCfr&, ba~t 1t111k, Wotor
ternp. .1:11iugt>, 1'Ut11. fire
e.~lln1:11. lle11.rl & sralley. Xlr11
_!2~t~ _JJ :J,500, H4fi.JOOI
S1~CH.ll"ICE, llral Bargaln,
11 llyd1'06wln .~1 boel,
7Ch11 ~ICl"t" 111n1 o r olb
\\ Aml'ric&:n I rlrr. &. 2 p1'il
t;f skl!L /\ jp'("tlt buy JI.~ tl
101a1 p11ckll.J(c. Pr pt) .
540-19-ti or 6U-MOO ·
Boats, Rent/Char. 9050
42' NE\V C1irl11-Crn ll
NO SKIPPER IF
YOU'RE QUALIFIED.
fly-Bridge Sport i-~lsherman.
Plush. J-'1111 ck'Cl:ro11itt, lull
guJley, 500wcr, etc. 1-·or
1•hn.rtcr b:y day or \\eel(.
F ish, rrulsl', L'OCktail, ell'.'.
Gr-,.nQO, 962-2301 Sunday
only.
EXPLORE ISLANDS
S&U on lx-autitul $7' Kelch.
Exc1:~1 r.tles; day11 or "''Cl'k!I.
Hf'!o(>fVatlons n.>q'd. Box :ns,
Ba.lboa fi;le, Ca. 93i62 or f·all ST>-8344
EP.JCSON 26" sloop fl. eqpf.
i>lps. 5 Chruter dntwk.
pr/ply. MG--04211
Boats, Sall 9060
RANGI::R l.l Time for
cruising, 1in1r for n clng, ·
this boat ready, priced to
Sporting Goods 8094 sell. &14-5662 aft 5
SKr RACKS, roof & trunk VENTURE 17 Deluxl!'. Many
lype. 1-'iti nlOSt earl. SlS. ex11·as including tr\r &. ea. ~2 motor'. $2500. Riverside,
171-I ! 684-4~.
PRO Set Goll Clubs. Value 18' ALPHA Catamaran.
SZ-:.i(l. wsale price $125, incl. "The (Inly w•y to fly ·'
fl('Y,' SSJ. bag. 5-15-797'7 $2,000. Days 644-730~ •
TV, Radio, Hi Fi St, 8091 f Eve!! 507-8965
SENNllEJSER open air
headphones $25. Sherv•ood
lll 1ms 1o.·11tl F'f.1 stereo
recci\'l.!l' modPl 8 9 O 0 A ,
\\'/walnut case sm. Fr.
C.S.l\I. studio n10nitQI' spkrs
12'' "'OOler, 5" midrange,
21.~" t"•eeter, ported full
frequ~ncy rf'Sponse, walnut
rnbinets $:al pr. Pioneer
Pt,.12D profesmnal rum1bl
w/Empire 66PEX cartrirlge
$125. All equip. is still under
fa cl. "'arr. All ju~t bought
in Jan. of 197t All prices
e1-c cost. ~2342.
25" COLOR ZENITH T.V.
CONSOLE. Guar Picture
Tube. .
Excrllent condition 1250,
S A B 0 T -c omplete $12;,,
Chron1e<l 48 !I.fen::, Rear
end. $65. 278 Santa Isabel.
C.!\I.
1:-i'T'L '14' Sailboat & trlr
Good concl. Must 5«'11. $750.
Of.fer. J\Iariner Yacht~
6Trll.'13 -
VENTURE ~25 Pop-wp
cabin. Easy terms Ir.
lmn1-0diate delivery 49&-8290
!Dir.I
VENTURE 2-2'2 Spacious
cabiIMleeps 6. Low d<w.11 &.
ready for vacation. 496-8290
(Dir.I
'lENTURE 2-2-1 Demo. Many
Extras. & Real Savings.
496-8290 •!Dlr.) '
HOBJE 14. 2 sails, racing
equip.. car rack incld.,
Xln t cond. $850. 54!).5735.
21" CO LO R RCA CONSOLE
Guar Picture Tube, excellent
condition. $200, PIK>ne alter
3pm 15 ~·Snipe w /p lpe r 11 ·. ~-==54=0--1395~=~-= 1 Trailer, 2 mains, 2 jib, fast lSO \VA'IT STE R E 0 $450. H.B. 536-3496.
AJ\TPJ.,lPHIER 4 t r a c I rfl!l.SCtt<'. F~1 Tuner, AR R1\CING S.1IK>I, fully rigged,
Turntable, 24·~ high spkrs, extra mast & rudder. $2501
$300. 831)...7403 1213J 592-2977
20· &LION 'Cat'. l\lint ·
cond. , $1450. w/trlr &·
trapeze. 645-3861 Days
12' DART Sailboat with sails,
SA.t'\'YO quad rec "'f-1 spkrs, l 9i 4 Lie .. S300.
tape & tel'Ord player. Sony 1 ~~=Pho~="~'~'~n-~=~=col port TV + \\'all unil. 1970 lSl..ANDER 27'. IB eng.
8'l7-93&j New paint. Comp. equipped.
22" ?.1AGNAVOX t.'01 TV.
Beaut !'.1editerranean C'ah.
Xn cond. Real bu)' $275.
5.11--0507
ZENITH 17" COLOR T.\'.
Brnnd new, \\'On as Prize.
Ji.lake offer, n1ust sell,
673-1989
$9975. firm. ~-
KITE-l!ro. 2 sails, l i co
block.c:, y1;1rd trlr. $500. PH ~
61S-'Tl0.1
Boats, Slips/Dock• 9070
Reasonable. &10--0889. Dawr lamp, Templates,
LIV RM FURN Lo cornpass, etc. Complete $200. NE\V Dock. Wes! Newport
· ·• VCSl('at, 5'18·9-11B. WANTED to buy electric ,,...,. MOTOROLA -lo• l'V. POY.·rr boat lo 40'. $2.50 n
COLOR TV.Console, Spanish,
9 mo. old. See 10 apprec ..
$?.60. 646-1309/963-6601
Sofa, ComnlOl.ies, Cocklllll • ( ., IBM •> "" • I 11· · 6= '293 Tbl alniost new it 98-l09.l MINK COAT, full length, ypev.'r1 er preferred. $50: Panasonic stereo. $7J: OO!. :i. n11n. •.rot .
Aft' 6 ' nat'I blk cross mink 3800 Apt K South Flo11o·cr, Phone \'alet, $j(I; 6-12-3672. Boats, Speed & Ski 9010
· w/mntch Pill Box Hat. Santa Ana !'>"15-9685. TEAC Heel 10 Rf-el it010 S ~l~i~gui!c:n1 ~dpite8n;i;;,c0a,.00 :..u..sJm S~de. 1/73.1 P._.~rf. 'NEED SL Augustine grass S?'lll. Yamaha 80 S 9 0 . J71.:' Qt>cp V, 140 lf.P. 6 cyl
• 0 ·.. ...vuu. ~.<0l. apprs · ~ic. sod. Please call 6'6--0TI5 833-!682 l>.li'r<' t/O. Tand. trlr, Xlnt $700. l\la)'._t3i; \\'llShcr & $900, 552-1227 af1 6 Pi\t. after 5:30 pm. family boat. Ski & Fish. New
<lryer $75. 531i-693'1. MOV ING on~ . , •. 1. QUAD SPEAKER SYSTEi\t, ~nt & , •••• Eog•·--•1i l , ~ • • ......,5a1ns. "ISC. \\'ILL Buy IOOV Air-condi· .... ,. ' "·"""· "'' .... -.. . T\\IN BE?, CHEsr $50. household & decor at o 1• tioncr. i\lust be in i;ood 55\~5.?,o y1·. ~·anlastic cond., szrrio.
DESK SLi. MIRROR SS. items. Furniture. antiques. ''°;;;;""~;glio~"ii"~~~m~·~'~;;-o.;.,
11
~~~~~~~~~~ 6-16--3176 A~IER 5 PM \VEEKDAYS. June 6 & 7. 440 DeSola Terr i':i . T.il Jl't Drive JG' Horizon.
5-l:i--0811 Cd"'I '1 Mus ical lnstrum'tt IOl3 I Boat•Md I~ TunM OlE!V)' 301 C.J. 250
7' <;oUCll, 1 yr old $50., DINETTE, blk wrought iron, I CRO\\'N 0 . Mlrine Equipmft t,f hp. 200 hrli. Very Ocan?
T\11n trundle bed m., 6' SllO .. ti>tirror, 21 x Jl" "'/J" rurn set 9 pc .ll 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiil Trlr. inc. $2200. 642~ a.rt.
Spanish Iron 11piral stairway Maple frame, $?5·· Smith· ~~~r vzxrh~m ~~ia:is~· ~ 6 Pl'oi. 67J.6520, 8 AM-4:30
$40. 8>17-7T;>oJ Corona Typewnter, plbl, ea. !ltJ-2()98 General 9010 pm .
C01'1PLETE room full of $60 .. 642..Q.i.I Of . ---------I "!~~~~~~~~~' '"", Hy. 3 strand rattan, 13 Cherlie'i Trading Post c. Furn. & Equ1p. I085 WANTED -Slip for 35' Sall-II r
Jud h & 3 1 boat. Prefer Balboa Island ll•l ' ?!-' s, me · ar stoo s. 49'1·1629 \VALNlJT S<>cretary dCllk, (Ir Bayside Dr. Al't'R. Tr8NpOrUti. . ,
$300 or bsl ofr. S36-79lJ. \VE BUY. WE SELL 11"·1vel chair & filing riibinct 6/a-6485 eves ~iijiiiiiipiiiiiijjiii;l·l;iiii:1 1 GENUINE leather IOU11ge Antiques , Me111ts, Junk l $175. 496-1054 alter 6:00 j E
chair & O!loma.n, 2 comer R/\RE Dad:i Gifl Custom I p.m. Boats1 Maint/Ser. 9020 Camper5, Sale/
couches s25. ea. 673-2037 made brushed full ll'alhcr ' o==E~SK'°"s.-~.-,~lh~lo--ped~,-,,~al BOAT Bld,{;'ing .t:. repnir: 1 __ R_e_n_i _____ 9~1~2::.::0
WANTt:D frontier co11t. 14~) Top cond. :>O"X60" "'ood desks, $35. Toolinb, car p e ntr y & * USED BRICKS * l\1ovie background. SSO cash, ea. 962-$~-1 fbl'<•lHss; Int. & Ex 1 . 8-fl <'ab-over, ice box I stovr
87().4!}64 673 4il i;, '""'""'=,.-,==-cc-~ · ~ + O\'Cn I sink / lots or . . . . . OLD TO\\'n Copier, ~tnnd & 5~8-0968. SIOl'agl', int'I jacks.
8' SOFA, beaut dark b1'\111 NE\V A~IER. Custoni drum supplies. Ask for Le Boats, Ma rine Eq. 9030 SJ75. ·196-4870 an :, 1
\'inyl, 1 yr old. (' 1sl $600. sci $200., Nc1v Git an 10 spd. I * * * 552-7500 1
!l.lus1 sell $350. fl.15-4852 bike $1()(),, reirig S:i5.,' l.li.l\1. SELECTHIC iv full RADARS, 16 nil. &ndl:-:. 1~:·~ CABOVER-Ca?lpcr, tot '
COUCH. 1vroughl Iron, gl:is.~ hul chci::'s _sc~le $35. PH:' service co nlracL :1.Yrs ol 11:1VAC only. $700. sec in j 2~\~on-i:-rkcw~ly,$60pcrwk, t
lop t.'O ftee table. db!e b('d, 642-3.13J/64.rl•03 1 lite use, $47.i. 548-2817 oper111io11, 1U.SO 15 n1i., k nun. 642-1497· '
96(}.28401962·5984 01'.:LTA 10-60 x 15 O~f·Road I Pianos & Organs 8090 RCA L"Ornplete .~ operalion~ SLEEPER. Sll'eps 4, like •
CONTE!\IP. 9· sectional sofa. Tires. led for"' h1gh\\'l1Y \\'ht'n 1-c1~vi.'<i. $200. rll'\1·. Pancllccl. green plad
$150, Big Canyon, Call use, good l'Ontl. ::i for $85. WE'RE DIFFERENT 5'18-2635 inrcr. S.i7J. 557-!31}j.
644--8188. 6Q.l3-15 I Jtegardless of the "!'o.urastic Boats, Pow•~ 9040 GE~·! t•1r> c·ampcr shell lil.~
DINING room table & 6 REJ\TARRIED -100 niany 1 PriC"Cs" lhat one n>arls ----·-1969-iO ~·ord Ranchcro good
chairs, dn!sser & che5l-of-dupl~cates, di:;hcs. furni1ure.1 about •. ~he tact is !hat ·73 18 ·~· RIVJEH.A !SeaRa)' shapP $]). 89'1-AAGS l
drawt-rs. 962~974 11p.pl1a_nces, pictures & other , competlllon keeps 1u·ic·c~ look-o.·likcJ 188 .\I c r c. Motorcycles/ , -UO\i;;si;:Nf;>;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;f~m~•~"'~"~•~m~'~· ~-~l~O~l9~·~-about 1l1e ~me \\'hercvi'r cruiser 10. 30 hrs, 50 mph. S t Pl SO *LOVESEAT & sofa custom (2) 8• SOFAS SIOO ea you shop. \'.'e IOSC! V<'l".\' rc11, lull canvas. Ice chests coo ers J
n\Ade e very gd qua!. nl!ver Rose 'OOd r1· 1 ib! 2 sales by-bclng undei-sold. 1neldin~ trtr. $4900. Pri. Pty T\VO l>remiC'r hclniets, I~. i 'l'h .. t«:•~on".,, rh•• n·p~on !n
whll• up 1hl>1 rrrm·tl,.~A >1hl11 ·
drr,~: t'urdlitan rut l-la~h·
Ion n•·"" -1·11~)' ••••l'lni: I• a J•un• d··llght . s .. nd no"':
•hi.·runn~ 1nr 111::. :; .. ' :.;~ llr FREE PICK UP REFS
:; .. ~ ~,,·· 11u 1iur .. ,1 APPL. & SC RAP METAL 4 h.'TITENS. 7 1\'k old, J all
used, usually hn1, 968-i910. leave~. 9', S;~~g Port.' air \Vel're d if!erent heca11se our iKG9716> Alt 6, 645--2969. like oe·.r. $25 ea. can I
Garege Sale 8055 rond s1n. ~274. sa estncn listen.-herd fl) '6:) lfYDR0.5"'1FT. Deep v 6/:>-R176 I
FIREPLACE f tand 11·hnt you sa,y, thcy'rt• hull. n1cch. 'l:Jnl. Concl x\nt .. 71 N'OR~TO=,~.-CO~-M-,-1A-NOO-. ,j
l'rln1 .. d l)11 l l .. rn !HI~~!
)ftJgt1' Rltl'I ll. lit, IZ, I I, 16.
Jll. ~11111~ (bu11t ::11111.lrr1 !!,
1•1'd~ 15·1n~h.
· -.&·nd $1.00 for e•rh pattern. Add 2:'. r{'nl ~ for c:1l'h pa\lern
for llr~l·l'l:t~~ m11it 11nd ~JM'Ci1t h andlln l.!: -0 1h er 11·1 .~1·
lhird·Cl811ff deJl11er, Will lllkC thr1•1: wi'l·k~ or morl' .'\i!nd to
M11ri;in Martin, 44Z, :,~ily J>llot..
l'~tlP!'ll ll"l'L. ~a~ \\·~~l J~t
SI .:.;,.,, rnrk. :.; Y 111~11.
l 'tlt>l NAME , ADOAE8$. ZIP,
4 1ZE n1ul STVt.t NVM8(fl.
.O;.<~: FU El·: I',\ l'Tl·:U:oi "f ,I ""I'
1·ho11 o• 1" '"'"d ln1 nn•• "'"" lM!lh•rll ln~ldo• :.;~;\\' ~l'ltf;..'1:.
:<il'.\1~11-:1: 1·.,1·1·~:1:x t' ,·1·,,.
l.Oi:. I!••"')'""· nil ~n··~. fb .,
l•Mt• .. rn .. 11u111in. ~··n•I :~r no•"
8EW+l<NIT H1Ml~ 11·t1h lm•I" 1\~~11~ f\11.\\,.111 ....... Sl ~~
lntl1111 F1•ll!e11 llt>nk .~ •• SI.OR
ln111nt s,wlno l1rolr ..... SI.to
The fas1~1 draw In tho \Y~t .
.• , a Dnily Piiot Classified
Ad. Ci 11 &12-."1678.
7.\ t;F.NTS 1111' e:1rh p:11tt?rn. * 675-5258 * black w/blue eyes, l
Arid 2.~ <'l'nl~ for l'a1•h p111tl'r11 T£!,bby, 64&-859-i aft 6 pn1. ~IOVJNG; Furn., mo v ie • ree s • 1 SC'nsitivc to what )'tlU real ly lo11• hl'l" on both eng. & N>ar
c11niern. proj .. glrl!i blke. brand nell' COnlpl_cte ~I. want & they ha\·e lhe end. $2000, or best off('r. 11.ll new, "O" miles, comply f1•r fir11t·cla% mail and )lJl.'('1al WESTINGHOUSE Electric FllEE h.TITENS
hunrll1n11 : nthcr1111 ~c ~.""t0\'~0~l i5. or best offer. TOGOODHO!l.lt: file cab Inc f, dupllcntor hlack Cnllnicl. 9ng. $250. invC'nlory to make the 1\lust sell. Dys 5.11-13~; chopped, sharp. ~)1..Qi28
painlings.. morl.'. Sitt. oncy g; Best (lfll'r. 83 1~ cvPs. perfect match be I"' c en f'\'<'!I 63.HJ.9:1• Ki\\\rAS,\KI 2.:i() STR.EET ! thirdcl•s~ dl'livery >A'i11 ll!k(' ,.....,..,,....., 67,, """" !'!~"'-.......,
thrllt' wC'ek.s or mort. ~·nd 111 ~ -"'" '""" -1. rooo2 Crown Reef Ln, H. OOUGJIBOY POOL. lillcrcd Orgah & Organist. Piano & i>OJ.PHIN Ot't'Rn or River. BIKE. ;.."E\V <'ngill('. Melmet
n . 00.~31."18 \\'/ladd,,r. !-\..1\'f' ,~ over Pi11nlst. If you are thinkln1: included $300 &iHl95 rf r • 16--1833 about o k c y b 00 r 1t 100 hp Johnson: Electm-_ · · · -·
BEDS, l'hetits. re r r I g . P ct'-~ JK!ii • ·~ or instt"un1enl. give U!I a try. n1atlc i O gfll 1111-in gas. :f ·;3 YA.i\1. 360 End.
i\lirl' BrclOk!, ICl.5. !he lla 1ly l .. ARGE Reirigt!.rlllor iv/ 2 ADORABLE CATS. spayed
p11n1 . Nt'\>tll~rufl O..•pt., 1t"x ltem«k<'I', ,liot101n frecze.r, 1 1 • ., 11,1;,. "l"l769. cm., very lr cndly. 1 or l fi.1. 0111 C'hrlst•11 .... 1atfoo. Nf:'w .,. ,,... OO!h. 642-7768 noon lo :i 1\1olorrycll'!1, Cfln1plng, lots S79-.lliJ.~ \\'t> thin k you'll agree that !Warn, 2 hunk~. full c-ovt•r Undc1· 11fU'l'anly. ]700 nil. York. N.Y. 10011, Print NJ l1'<'. Auction 8015 1-'=""c=:o.:.::,::~""':;:..-
l'l!lrtr•·•!.. Zi 11. P11 tt1•rn 1----------'-ClITE KrITENS 11101'('. Junt" 7 - 8 -9 -2 2 7 J)LACEH b'Old in natural \\'C'm dl!fe~nl. 1\·1 1rlr, Xlnt shu1~. G-1:,.~1 S!KJO. 002-14·16 ,
Numhrr \\~&ned & trained.
N1w ! l~O 11101t 1•opu!IH rt11 INDIAN JEWELRY 548-4615 Orange. Npl S hore 5. lorm. For lu!C'.trn111.tion ca ll COAST MUSIC f3• BOSTON WHALER 1973 ?j() 1\IX YAJ\1.AllA. Like
r..t:>--042:!. 5.'IB-7548. Nr"'1Xll1 at llat'bo1', C.1\1. N Call 61'>-&.'ll l t -11111~ 111 uur 197•' Needleer .. 11
<::1t1log! 1\!I rr11.t1~~ THR1':>: *AUCTION* Fr•'" ''"~htn8 1n~lil.. . .1~ :.;,.\\'. Sew+ Knit 8ook -
h1111 IJll~ll: Tl~~ut! Patrvt'n $1~
:.:e": Ne•dlepo1nl Boek Sl.00
;.11,.•: ..,lower Crocllel Bk $1.l)l
Hairpin Crochet liook .... St.DO
ln1t1nt Crochet 8(1(1k .. $1.00
ln1t1nt M1cr1m• Book ~ .. ,1.00 ln1t1nt Monty Beok ... $1 .00
Compl1I• Gift B~k $1.00
Compl1t1 Afohan• ~l~ ~ .• $LOO
L.AIJ. Mixed puppies. 5 wit MOVING !iale, Mirls bike, toy P OOLTABLF. FACTORY! 646-0271 ~:T,:.ic~l~ea!~~~~~ &i2~~;·Ml7 de.vs. ' .. · eves; ,
old. Free 10 good home. Call c hcsr. to~·s. Kamcs, lnitlge Save on table!t, lainps, C\les. Brookhurst at To.lbC'rt, 1-"V irocwl t."Ond, ~. 673-7334 . ·70 llONO,\ ;:l(l, 01 n n., 1:
897-1413. 1h1 & ch11l111, phonogruph Pichinkost fl'tl·lll.~, 1 9&3-6733 1 ' •
1.l Prht Afgll1n5 !H2 !Or
Boek er '' Ou•lll : 1 . ~Or Mu1111r"' Quilt Oooll :2: .. !iGf
15 Quill• for TetAy :3 ~
Beett et 16 Jlfly Aug1 . 50c-
Sa 7 S o-" -di 1 ti ;-Tl BELL l'olin~Ski. 1JO HJ7: eicll'a.s, x 111 C<lnrl. $950. ' t pm Un 1 pm FREE .. ITTENS '""''" ·~P.. n nn. " ·• LOUNCF d S6 24" bbq · 64:')..()139 • 1 "' crib, dre8~er. 8.11Hil.58 S8 '••pa .. · CONTINUOUS t~EE J\lrrc., clcc start. Ext.-el. ' Inspection 1 hr before sale 9'm--5573 ·• table radio $9. Port. TV ORGAN CL.ASSES FOR rnncl., Olst $2,000. Sacrtfice '7~ llondl'l!I Th'! & ~ •
400 picct>S or fine Sllvc• • F I ti-10VING solr: Thu~. F'ri, "-'Ork11 guod $27. 64&1525. ADtn.TS. ~.,_ ~·,·"•" $625. 84&-J.l•O Xlrus, Sl95<J &. ~liOO ,' urn ture 8050 Slit. 10.5. Couch, chl'llr. hide-"'" ·.1 '" "" ~ * Turquoise & lndl&n Jewelcy a -bed, dinette set. \\"asher, AQUARl1J~. 20 ~:ii. Ind 1 7:30pm. Slnrt any week. 2tl' EDD\'CRAf,., family 498-0039 ·•
AUCTIONEERS 4 ROOJ\IS of ~-umiture & dryer, nunicrous Item 5 . pump & filter. $1:.i; I Tom Dieterich In chlu·gc rruiS(lr. Sips j, 1nan y '69 SUZUKI, s ~'in, gd, •
CQ.L. \\'. C. JJURGESS llPPilanct?tJ. f.Tust 11 e I I . 17372 Encino, tt:s. 847--0365 64~ or 64.r-8089 ,
1
1 Coast ?otuslc Co.'13 l'of~i. extras. nt""'IY painted, reedy' cond. nds 1111)(" up. Best .. COL. R. F'. BYERLY ....... ~.293 ~=~=-~--~-01~ /••··e ~ in<le Newport Blvd. at llarOOr. 10 ..... ,,~ =~ ofl•• ,, ••• s~• 1~ -v-iv;1 ~JACJL\J\I E, po\lrry. \'lants, ""'' ·~~ r ..,.,., ~ 6 2·2851 ''"'' .......-;~,..._ ~· ~· """· ,,,....,,....,. .. LAGUNA HILTON s~·-"so"'F""A'".-"very=--.-.-o~d I !90{11. baby ilrm!I, c othes. bl'd $15., comPr tnble $10. • 2.r loc.6 F'9J11(1S)', n?blt '"'In ·70 l!ONDA 350 CB
25:MXi La PRt Rd. J..Quna condlOon .. Salt Gn."Cn print. Junk. 3'1422 El Molino. 644-51'1lO atlcr 6 pm. 120 JIP J\ll'rcruiser11 lonl:' s;,oo ur offer
Hlll11 $85. ~lO 'rhw'!-Sat, HARO Rork ~laplr dine!\~/ CONN SC'rnnodc b'u 111 -In r11ngc used in lrt~h v.~<Jter • 646.7269 •
!No. 81111 Room, 21\d noorl rot-~f>"E'F. ll'blc, 8mokC' glll.5S, GARAGE Sale-Wed . !hru i>el S.fO. Trailrr. Nee. 'tA'81er !l'prukc111, Bloi~e \\'1dnU1. $6500. •l!J9..m 1973 St:ZtiIT.ls:i t::-.,,.~t>-,.,,-.-St-,
Col. R F Byerly & A5sOC 40X52, 18" high, Decoralor'1 Sun. t.i· Sail boll. l>rttst>r. hrater $10. 642-561i6 su~lnln ,fr l>n>. Like Ill'"'. '73 SKtP J11rk l). 01l('n legal. 300 ml .. SQ!O.
ORANGE COAST'S
SALESMAN ••
BEST
DJVERSIF'iEO ltC'm. $175. 6#-78.\'i AhCl\•es, 100111 & much more. 6 x 9 KAR.Al'i'T AN Gold IV.I:. Sl,/J(), Nel'o·port Organ~. ~-M.i cruhwr. 1~1 hrs. SAIC/p:Jrt• 67:\-<&1117
AUCTIONEERS A DAB OF PETROL.EUJ\f 9"19-$)68. 2978 1'1\lbro SI. 01 C"r{l()(f rondltlon, fringe s.10. Prodix:tlon Pin~. NB. neMl/111) or tra ~ down. e '?D YA ~tAllA 360 l\L'<. xlht !
61Q S. llnmd\\'11)', S..A. JF.LI.\' npnhett l(I tilt< GARAGE SALE, U'all t'Offif'. 644-5199. l -4~J.9JS8. <'<Ind. Lo11 ol xtras. Konl ~2899 .1t1:1-Zl28 thn!nds of fln~t.1'111.11 polish June f.8 & 9. 9 t1n1-flllrk. ESTATF; Sllt"•l-~um. 11:tass. p• tVATE PARTY \VANTS 0 \V'F.NS XL 19' Inboard, \\1th 11llQCk1!1. SlOO. AlS-,1169
Bey a new '7~? Your oldrr and glue bottles "'ill keep 15682 ~tonroe SL ?>tidll·ny po"·rr 10011, Sllbo1, etc. 11'IO
1
TO BUY PIANO 1-'0lt lrttilC'r. N1!1\• r n,.,ine. Xlnl '73--Yflr1111h11 F. n du ro '
model car I.I tn big demnnd the lfrts ftom sticking. Try Cit~. Cl3each I: ri.1craddrnl -k~IK'x l.n, \\7C!ill'lif1. CASI(. ~lnd1llon. 6~. ~•ri11pi•cl tor r\irt, ("llll 11rt. 6. ~
Daily Pilot Classlfiecl . • • &!II II fast wlllt a a 011.ll,)• Pllot Ou~lfitd Ad BIG GARAGE &\LE 1\VOCAOO l:tABYJ~tNE O'ib * !>17·944.\ *' GHAND BANKS 32. 19'n i ~~~-Xlnt t"1n0. ; D~Dy Piiot Claultled J\d ! to buy, acll .,, ren t &\i/SUN .f.I flit !\ rt,, S:!!i. I Si:>ll 1dlr ltt.•n1:t 1vlth t1. Df\!ly l\llNT CONnlTION! Lois of I On&.<tUied i\d!L'.4\u &12-5678 • 64i..s678. -"'°~m="=•~I""=· -----12.10 E!l!ICX Ln .. \\ll"iJlt HU ~15-4379 I c"~"'='-C!='~"~;'='"'"'°~"~l,~•~1~2-~"~111:.:::cf~:x='="='c·•="='~"°=-' =m.=-~J&l:=O,_ IOOay! J
•
·.
I
•
•
OAJLV PILOT Thursday, Ju1lf t>, 1974 ~Mo~;~~~=;!;fR~oc~v~·~h~l·~·~·~~~,s~JOtJri~u~'r~o~sC1~M~PO~R~T~Eb~fD~•~t~•u?r"£=;,~~~,11~o~·~v~·~vo1~·fi=~;;~~9~1~,s~V~o1k1w&11•n tno AMc • 9905 c~ar · 993301d1mobH1 ft55"I
Scooters .91~ Y.'ITJ. BUY \"OUR RE<'H.E· G.neral 9701 A "VAl.IU VALUE" USED '73 TOYOTA !\IOVINC:. mUill M!ll. '68 '73 Gremlin 13,000 ml,• llr. '69 ME.RC. &wr:ar. fully I!li:i"l OLDS. ~ Gd tlrta.
ATIONAL VEHICLE PAID 73 DATSUN \I \\1, \IW\, l'li:·w t'lli;Ult. ntv.1 ra.dlnll. are&t thlpe $M50 t.'qUlp, Xlnl condfi\on. $1400. '"'''" ahock• I radiator, ad
Q
SUMMER SALE
• HEW •t74 •
KAWASAKI
. 1oocc G4 '530" ~ S,.E!D
lOOCC G-3
750CC H-2 '430" '168500
19·74 BMW
FACTOR¥
DEMONSTRATORS
ONE OF EACH ONI. 'f
7SOCC 1175/6 "2300"
900CC R90/6 '2450"
;
• • • Mtw 1'74 IMWR75/6.
Rt0/6
<O SporlA.,..._..
Fw ...._"'* w .. irt"Y
CtlokirOf~
& L.,.T.._,
•HEW 1974 •
*NORTON*
One Only -B1ue Roadster
t'OR on. NOT. CAU. us A!JARTll : 1000 zag« I 0 CORONA bnU ., aencn11or. t'IC., ri,takc 4944'!08 CUI 612--5M3. u.!t 6pn\, K41• mllc~t l'Ond.
Jo"OR BES" PRICE. OPEN ri.tonu. f1r1t eOM:. Xlnl ~·ond. 1200 Sedan 4 or. Auto Tra:"', Air cc11id, ofll'r. 551-0M'78 l'\'l.'8. ~B'°u"°1c"k"""----~"~l~O -, .. ::::::..COe.:U::G::A::'\j:::.:31:,lc,;."•"•,"".-,-w-r, • •
ROAD. l!UN TTNG:ON $.Q00.$16-6173 ·1 1 .. , llh v•-•T cl 000 . -·Pl I mz !*auu u t r gref'n, '" .. v• op, whit&, \716HSOJ. V I 977~ \'el')' cnn. . m1 .. '"' n o
Bl:ACH. lSo'(I Beach Blvd., Audi 9707 l\uton111.tic tr11niin1isskln I:. $2849 o vo " '14 BUICK -nlv~ra. Sliver l'\lbbcr. fl-IOO. &D--3048 842-~. 1:;:::;:,: _____ _o.:..:.;. 11.000rnllcll!Don'trnisslhlt wf black Vln)ll Too f , Dadna 9935 71 PINTO
1912 ECQl'JOLJNE :WO· v , '71 AUDI n1ill'tt~l' ch1:W1plon. t:tM· '74 VOLVO Loaded! Low in 11ea1 e. ~
KurA\'Rn oonvers10n, PS." spcl'rl tnuan1!s~lon A~ Ji":\J. Private party. $3, 150 , "fO OODOE S1,1ngt>r. 6 cyl. Runabout rs~ 1:1.~dLlk:.'x~:~· =. f1'1 r:1~lo. hent~r. 169Sf:A 1 I Only $2288 Best Deal ~::;:E. 2 dr harrllop. ~:~1l,J!Jco7.~g"~°'~ N:toY~l':;; ~~l~nr1~ Illnr~s forc~s sal~. SF.>-i67!_ $2877 Anywhere! Full p'.r, air. Beal ol1t"r. 5-7Pfl:1 real ba~a.ln! (119010).
4 Wheel Driv11 95So .,;c.;:;1c,1 o;•";;·,.:6:..' :::"""'=':::72::.· --'-1 ';:65,::_:00::,..,,oo=E~D-art7,-,-,,.-c,, Only $1488
I l>ODGE l"o"·er \Vagnn, 1!173.
~,Ton, Pi{'kup, 12,000 miles,
1\1/-..:tt·a.s, ~fusl sell ht1n1ed,
~w..lewia
V YOLYO I
fr C11n111er shell, auto, p/11,
f1/h, pogi traction, Loaded.
$4,000 Firm 645-nOO f'X ttt l!IGl.l ltarbm', C.i\1. 646-!rJ0.1
Trucks 9560 ·73 AUDI 100 LS. aulo lr/Ull! 2
dr, sunroof, 13,500 ml, $4,600
SW~ .. ""'*--.. .1.•y 1 Qt: best otf('r 6'r;>-'7286. "U"ll"W.,__ Rigged for sml boat.
SPIC;IAL. \' ' '72 .-\UDI lOOU Auto. trans ..
'11 FORD 1:1 TON PICKUP. sunroof, &: lnunaculate in &
VS engin('. rad)o, heatrr, oul. 831-20-10 Dir.
u u r om a 1 i c 1rat1sn1ltiskln. Austin-lieal•y 9709
t!tl227J ). $2399. THEODORE ROB INS 1\USTIN ltEALE\' 'ti:!
. ~ORO NE~1~?RK
'69 DATSUN
ROADSTER
4 llPl'fX:i 1r11ns.1nts11lon, 1'3dlo,
hen1c.•1·. i YQX5l1\.
$1077
~w..lewia
W TOYOTA
1966 Harbor, C.l\1. 646-!13(!3
2060 11Mmr 'alvd,
Costa ~fesa.
&12·0010 or. s.tt}.8211
1969 SPRITE. 42,000 nil. '13 DATSUN. Lime gi.i1,
good J 50 vinyl lop, air, n1ag rims. pln R&.H. 96.S~~ $U -· stripe!. Radials., l\ol ('ch.
'67 DATSUN Ptcirup, needs ~M-w--==='--=~ PrrfPt•{. 117!'.-"'i."fl.
b1·a.J.i.es. •roo. .. .. ~ 1 :B;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;;;;;';;71;,2 Hond• , 9727 ,,...S61"l I• :.:;::::;.:...:...~~~~~
,74 TOYOTA LEASE OR BUY '72 SKYLARK CONVERT-engine v.'ork. $90 . 0Vt::l\S~A,i,; PE'.1.IVl:.R'{ ISLE w/alr cond. Xlnt t'QtHt. 6.U.-1475
SP1':0J,\LISTS 1 645-0662 or &15-3457. '69 DODGE DART, 2 dr, 4
S.st Deal -'flhw lii..:.i '69 El Dorado. 46.000 mlle11. spd, Ex1.-elltnt t'Oi>d,, SMO.
Anywhere I lUwn ~ID Xlnt u:ind, Loadl!'d! $2'100. 673'-0161 Ask tor Coco
Vol' (low book) 6'12-4905. -..11
LEASE OR BUY ~vo Fo,d ·-
All Mod1l1I Cadillac 9915
.,Pw..lewia
W TOYOTA.
1966 Harbor. C.~!. 6j6.:S~t•:l
'72 TOYOTA
CORON~ CPE.
Auto Trans, Light Blue, t.o
1niles, (316ESE L
$2349
'··"'·::.c'~"~"~""~'~·~c~"~'·~~·-'"~·•...c:~3 -~~~~--....;..:..;;: -'65 1'~LE ET WOOO '70 VOLVO Bro\'l:ham, "'I pwr opl~M
4 DOOR + {'\'U\se l'Ollll'Ol. Gold
\\•'Blk \I. IOp. Ll hr,
,\ u Io n1 a l l l' lrt1J1SnliS!j.io1l, c61~>-..c1•:o;540::;,,.~~~~~~
radio, hcatl'r, 1716CA'V ). '7 3 E L D OR AO O
$1777 \\'/EXT RA S! lotlNT
CONDITION! 10000. C•ll
833-3&!0
·n LTD BROUCHA!i1. Radio.
heater. Rir t'Ond., po1vcr
!lteerini,: • brakes · wiJ1dov.•J1
-seats. (9T101'~(). $2475.
THEODORE ROBINS
FORD 2000 Harbor Bl\'d. ~w..ltADi& V YOLYO
'67 Coupe: DeVlllc. air, Cotstri Atesa.
AM /Ft.1 re~ Cd cond & 1 _....;,642:;::·00:::.;:l0'-""":.."""21=·~:..l ~.
tires. ST95. 546-8849 ·72 LTD Brough8n1. 2dr, full
Hl66 llarbor, c.M. 646-9303 1.c_._a .. m--a_._r_• ____ _;.99:.;17
SPECIAL
'73 PINTO WAGONS. 2000
1'':ngine, radio, hcRter, auto-
mul\c, \uggRge rack. (21!-
JESJ. Low as ••. $2580.
THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
2000 Harbor Blvd .
O>lta M,sa.
642.0010 or !W().8211
'
. BSOCC 0 Sl'IQS '73 DATSUN ei;r:, .ma.'g9~ & '73 HONDA Civic ha1chba<"k, · -Ulll. Ol.t.ll~ 'fOO 11 o ., (( whl~ XJnt C<\f . S3.000. ~p auto, must se . e<:Sl o er
"""" '56-4614 t ' BAVARIAN 831..,...
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
VOLVO '69, 164. , 4 dl' S(d. 4
spd., .·R&H, Clean. Extras.
$2,050. <\94-9837 .
CAMARO '68. P/S, P/B,
l'et.'i'nt overhaul. S uper
clean. $12'15. Call 548-356.5.
pwr, air, vinyl top, l'US·
Ion\ paint. \\'hr l'O\'ers.
N<!v.' i;;tcel bells. 31,<XXI
mile.'!, 11int t'Ond. $2595,
644-8429 days, tiTh-4362 eves ·n FORD Squire 9 pass. Sta
Wag. PIS, P/B, a Ir i
AM /FM stereo. lug rack.
Orig 01vnr. 673-;1573"/eve.s,
494-2712
'71 PINTO. 4 speed. ml\311;
radio, heeter, low ·mllfll 'Bic
One owner! GREAT GAS
SA VER. $1499 or belt oller.
Cash or fi nance:, &J&..44H
Dir •
'73 PINTO Wagon, tpp
n1\lenge, auto, alr. A Tea.I
beauty! ri.il-0999 "•knds fr
eves. '
lt74 Rird • tMck c-D~d=
G¥oiloblir for l11111t1dl1t1
df.li¥1ry.
'2295
100~1. F1nanc1ng
Available O.A.C
I Mg~~~l~~~ES
1 tlO H.-. 111.,d.,
Coshi Mlw
642-2311
AWARD
MOTORCYCLES
Honda, Triun1ph, Yamaha
l~ Newport Blvd, Costa
Mesa.
'74 Ji onda l\JT 250 Elsinore.
IA\\' n1i ne11· oond. $73. 180
E . 21st S r . Cl\t .
51!l· 1618/!>l8-62'.l6 .
'SS YA1'-1AHA. 250 CC t"·in.
Scramb. Xlnf rond., $200.
\Y/hclmel Ci73-7033 aft 9
PM. ""
·72 HARLE\' DAV IDSON.
Spo11s1er, !!XX) cc. S3000.
invested, Sell or '! 646--3393
eves.
'72 Honda 175SL s.i50
pis, p/b, can1per shell, O ,, · r ,~""-'_' _'"_".:' :::".::d:i"',_",..d.;;. :..s.;;o_· ..,· = 30.000 1ni. 968-29!11. T ,..., e ,tq;t..p,1-.r:e
197'1 CCURIER, one 01\•ner. DR Karrnann Ghia 9135
11•/shell. Exeel. cond, ne\\·
1811b I Stach lll•d.. Q47·8S\\
HUMTIMGTOM BEACH
•
53"1 ANlllVlltSAllY
SPICIAL
VOLVO-'70 · l•l:l S. fm/an1,
nlllO '68· 1•15 sta. 11•ag. air,
r.Qnd. call e.ws 5574662 • '71 CHEVY PU. Custon1 eab, M & i 1971 HONDA {'IU'. 45-50 mpg
tires. $2100. 556-70Ci0 '71 KARMAN GHIA General '71 TOYOT.\ :'>!Kii. Red io .f.::;:;:;:;.::c_ ___ ...;.=
Exeellt'nt condition. New hea ter, ·I siw.t><l 1ransn1is. ~ paint. 6~:...3731 or ;;1011, air t~111di1ioni11~. (531·
BUY or LEASE
NOW!
1972 , CHEV .• Lµv PI U.
O/siied "·his & li~. Xlnt
cond . $1500. 846-8173 G\\'X f. Sl875.
Bent thl' pril'e incre11se Mazda 9738 THEODORE ROBINS ll.: surchargl' GUALITY 'GS DODGE, iiT 'P.U. 318
V-8, auto., lo\\• miles.
Exl'el. oot1d. $1250. &1~ XL:':T SELECTION 01-~ FORD
NEW 1974 BMWs '71 MAZDA RX·2 ""' "'""'" "'""· USED CARS
Vans 9570 at pre-revaluated priers Cpe, Blue iS68E'.\IZ• 642.~J110~=8211 e , _........, I $1899 !.EASE A BRANO NEW ·141 SUPER SPECIALS
'61 FORD ECONO. reblt lSCJ~ • eng., w·/3<100 ml. 6 cyl, 3 sp ,_,.la-v · TOYOTA l200CorollaSedan ,
trans. (just reblt) new gen, ~ for only $61.26 t'~r mo. 36 ,
('arb, tune-up, rear end, ~CS. l:'lC. n1os. open end !cue. 72 Mazda Wa9on
clult'h. brks, tnJJffler, 11011· .......,-~ shol."ks, 1nag \\·his & 2S402 l\.1:irguerite Park\,•ay Nt'\V lire:;, luggage rack &
!Ires door 11.ssen1bly & hllII· ?tlission Vi<!jo sharp! (582GlP).
dies. storage space in rear. USE AVERY pWy EXIT. Mercedes Benz 9740 $2099
New grn. erpt. lhl'U-OUI. 831·20-IO e 495-49·19 e ne\\' uphol stery, l'Urtains, & ' ·74 l\.1ERCEDES <l50 SE Ex·
panelling. BONUS 'S·lrac. ORANGE COUNTY'S ccutlve Car · one only (Ser-I "'iiiii.__.._ ............ 170 Datsun Wagon
rape deck w/tapcs. Gets 20 OLDEST • " i;i\ No. 017141). Fully eq11ip-'71 Toyota 1600 Nc\v I.ires s, sharp C547AKh:l rnpg. Really a per I peel. S226.~3 1110. lease for
investment at a J>('rf tinie. & 36 mo.-s. OEL + T&L. \Vh)• NC\\' brakes, tires & bat!. $1399
$1500. cash. &15-2981 ~~ lease •I yrs from others -h:oni shocks. Oyno·luncd. e
SJ
.rd-, .. .-:'...._.i.·•y "'hen you pay 1M) more for Loii• milcagl!. !'llany ex1nu;. 64 Mercedes AtWW•.a~ a 3 yr lease v.·ith us. Orig. ov.•ncr. Pr\. party, . ' ~ Jim Slemons Best orfcr. 6 ,15 -2 3 4 2 Au 1oma1 i l' transmission,
Anytime. air <'Ondi1loning & original.
·10 f"O~D VAN. \VlnckHv van. 1974 BMW's Imports A r£"al beauty! (2·15DFBJ.
6 c1•hnder, 3 speed trans· 1301 Quail '70 TOYOTA J\fark 2. 4 door. $1299 1nL~ion, heate.r . {280BSTJ. in stock ready f<'r inimediate Neivport Beach autnmatil' good condllion. ~l(l99. delJV(>ry. Excellent savings 833-9300 Sll50. l\ofust sell. Phone •
Ch•vrolet 9920
CORTINA '70. GT \\lagon.
'13 CllEVY NOV\ 4 Doo Bxcel. l'Ond.. 29,000 mi. · ' · r. First oUer over $ 7 5 0 , RRdio, healer, au1on\Rlic, 54~79
air cond itioning. {260G!V). 1970 ,.•-o~~R~D~Ran~~,he-ro-. -1 f~ODORE ROBINS o\\·ner, air C'Ond. rndlo, . FO'RD hcatcr.Sl550.540-7331, ' ::i.Jl...Q571 ' 2ltiO Harbor Blvd. ,.._n '70 L TO Wagon, lo mileage, ....,,.ta fl:ltAA. n/c, pl<. p/disc brks, l"" 642·00IO or 540-8211 -rack, nev.1 tlres. .$JJJO,
'69 CHl:.'1¥ SS. Air, vinyl 842-S(lil 1
'13 PINTO, 4 •od. 25 MPij,
1'take offer! j
l-49J..9188
Plymouth 9960
ATLAS
Chrysler/Plymouth
Open Dally &: Sun., 'tll 10 PM
2929 Harbor Blvd., '
Coflla MHR.
546-1934 I
roof, \o\nyl int., radio, '62 FORD Cnl"" Squire '72 PL~10UT1-I OUSTER heatrr. &: rallye wheeb;. •3
f 462FKDI $899 Cash or Wagon, Great r u n n I n i; 16,000 miles, excellent, 2
finance 646-4446 Dir. family transp. • $ 2 0 0 . Door H.T. AutomatJc, power ~t steering, power brakes, air
'65 EL CAMINO .74 FORD Ranchero. Fully rondllioning. vinyl roof.
Immaculate cond. All new equip'd. One owner , Shown 196SEXXI. $261S. Johnson &.
running ge11r. Musl ~ to by appt only, 833-8320 . Son Llncoln/Mereury, 2626.
. appreciatt'. 673-m·t Harbor Bl., CM. 540-5630.
60 Che\·y Station \\'aann. 1972 LTD. a.II pwr & air.,
.. ¥ Exc.-el cone!, one owner. Need5 '14 plate.'!, best oner. l llOO. 646-!300/963-6601 Good trans. MS-fiOOO al!e1· 6 pn1. '72 RANCJJERO, D e I u x e
1005 Corl'uir for sale $100. mdl. Like ne\v. Xl nt cond. ~ $2:100. 545-6882 8 ani-5 pzn. c-11 nfler ., pm
64:" .. 4i111 '72 Ford LTD. 4 dr, xlnt ___ ..::;:.:::::... ____ I oond. Auto trans, air, pv.T
Chrysler 9925 str. Original O\\'ner. $1900.
6i3-4961 'AA CHRYSLElt \\'AGON, Loadrd, Full f>O\\'t'r. \'ACA· '72 FORD Gran Torino Sia.
TION SPECIAL. Cared for \\'gn. Pis. p/b, air, orig.
sinel' nc,v, a l(I. 7063 or ~•:::•.::"'::',:.· ::""""=="';;,· ~-~
·n PL \'MOUTH Sl\t('!llte
Sta, Wag. PIS. Power disc
brakes, po1ver l'f'nr 1\•lndo"'.
Facr. air. Needs auto. 11'811$.
Beautlful 1w. Asking $1950.
91)3..197 1 nfr. 4Pti1
'73 DUSTER, 3-spd, 6-cyl,
gels 24 mpg., \'cry clean.
14,500 miles. Only drlvl'n by
wife to work. Ul95. Prlv11te
party. 551-5 l5t.
\
'70 Sl!Zuki 90 5.spd S250
"6-8397
Motor Homes,
Sal•/R•nt 9160 ·1 1~
THEODORE ROBINS on remaining 1973 models. ENTER FROM t.facARTHUR ti45-Rl!l6 69 MustanC)
FORD SALES-SERVICE !..EASlNG OVER .69 TOYOTA 1200-Radials 302 El'OOOn1 ica\ v.g engine
2060 Harhor 81\'d OVERSEAS DELIVERY Good condilion. 30mpg, $600. & <·lean! IZGE311 ,.
"""'• ""'· · ROY CARVER, Inc. 35 . USED ,,..236tl '"" tru• m316t SI 199 &t2.0010 or 5-J0.8'll1 ROU.S ROYCE BM\,. ext. 582 days.
LEAVING for Ha\\·aii, must 2:H E. 17th St~ MERCEDES ·n TQ)."OTA, Mark Tl. Club •
'68 PLY?t10tm·I Fury Ill.
Good cond. PIS-PIS, Air. 2
brand new tires S 7 0 0 .
5-16-1021 befnre tiPl\1
Pontiac
646-9i97. ·n LTD \VRgon, 10 pass .. air,
'Tl TO\VN & Country PIS. rack radial tires.
Oirysl('r \\'g. 31,000 mi, a.i r Clean. Sl!l50. 5.'12-7120.
cond, p/v.1ndows, p/seat, ·oo F'ORD Ltd,~ v.·,y,•hitel ----------1
am/fm stereo, In xlnt vi n top, po"'er, air. SllZ>.
cond. prv. ply. &1-1-0nl. Call 963-2832
1!165 PONTfAC Te1npes1, 4
spd, recent valve job. S.IOO.
642-7001 ~
'I
RENT the bel;t: '73
Executive, 2:>", all xtras.
Free mi.. 979-00:16 5 lo 8 P:'.I
1973 27' \\rINNEBAGO n1olor·
home, has t'\'el'ything. Reas.
rate!\. 962-4587.
Motor Homes,
Sale/Rent I 9160
e VACA'J'tON e
AT ,.OUR O\\'N PACE • , .
Choose num So. CalH.
''Largesl Selection."
f01-er 40 ~iinis & M.H.'11.
DALCS
MOTOR HOME
RENTALS
Redhill to San Juan, Tustin
(7l•U SJS.IOOJ
'72 Pae<' Anuw 2r, 3.100 mi.
Rool air & 1'tor ag c.
,generalor, s1erco. Xlnt cond
$8500 call ~6-MS7
SHARE WINNEBAGO
20% ln.terest. use 10 v.-eeks a
year. Pl~ne 6-l(HH82.
'71 C 11 E \I . Rl"d·E.Can111.
xln't cond. Self con1. !\fan)
x!ra.'5. Pvl ply. 67:;...o679
Trailers, Travel 9170
'71 GOLDEN Nugget trlr .
'.!l". Ideal tor beach or
niountain ri>trcal. Self-cont .
Gas or elel'I. refrig. Air
rorn:I. ,Rivil'r& sof11. S4\9,'1.
~7141 623-137;1 <lays. !21:!1
SS&:69:i9 n.fl 7p.n1. _
14' Sll,\STA. Sl~ 6, srw••. ~ink, icl! txix. hook-upl, $GOO.
detall.!1, '8.11--05.'ia-·
'6S SllASTA Lo-f'lltc ]j1,".
i;Jeeps 4. s1roo.
962·84'i6
Trailers, Utility 9180
JEEP trt1il<'r. gd 10.ply lir-es.
brakes. Xlnt rond * 496--9250 *
Auto Ser. & Parts MOO
DEL TA 10x60 x 15 Off-Rood
Tires. rated for hiJth11·iiy
use. Good. COtld. ~ for ss:;.
675-1345 •
U.S. i\f11g 1{i11111 • 5 lugs .
Excellent cond. 14"-Asking
S.l!O. c11 11-!\.'ia-6340.
'.i7 Cl1EV\", all or par111, 4.11
rear end.
Call MS-k779.
'69 V\V 1·11i:lnl' 1 ror dunl'
buggy I'! BN;t offc1· ovrr $27!i
494-1710
Auto• for S.11 I ~
9510
71 TOYOTA
1600 cngl~. NI!!\\' brake.•.
tJ?"e$ & bau. Konl 11hook11.
Oyno-tuned. t..ov.• -mlleage.
l\1ANY EXTR.Ni. 0 r I g .
owner. Private ~11)'. Be11t
offer.
rtllYllntl'
645-2:142
sell my van. '61 FORD Van. Costa l\tesa • 546-4444 ON DISPLA y cpe. Vinyl top. Fl\t 111creo, ~ 69 Toyota
new '65 eng .. 1le\v tires. LEASING spd_. a ir, i:,adlals, Pvt. Pty. COROLLA 2 OR.
mags •. tape deck, iotally SPECIALIST'S Sl6.':i0. 536-5741 "'~A be!' ,
C'Uslomizcd, .20 l\f p G ' Sctvice during lease period House of Imports '69 TOYOT1\ Corona. Good s~~~)rp, """~to revc.
494-3&16 Charlie iii important. Crevier 8~1\V 52)..7250 l'Ondition. SJOOO. 01iginal LIK.E NEW
'66 DODGE Van, v.'indo\\'S, \\'as a\1•a.rded the Bl\.IW ---"":.:.=:.--~ o\\'ner. Call 675-81!17 elean body, in!. New engine, Serviee Award hy Hoffm<i.n '66 l\fERCEOES 2505. Orig. 8000 ml. $1200. 497·1947 or l\lotors. \\'e are dcdicnted pa int. XI n t con d . Volkswagen f770
49-1-2427 Dave. to glve ·~·ou good sel'Vice on t.1 e ch an i ca 11 y sound ,:.::::;::;:.;:,,;:;,:.. __ _;.;.;,.;.I
1972 F'ORD, ale, auto. many your nc11· 8!'11\ll . &e us 'v/e\ecr. sunroof, 4 spd. R & '73 Volkswagen H. Besl offer. Call &IG-4438 · xtra.s, xlnt cond, 11sking before yon \cRse any BM\V. SUPER BUG S2850. 842-4176 aft 6pm Large shlpn1rnt or '74 BM\\''s c•o:1o.1 :o5Pe:'":::·c...,~~~-
'6.:i CHEV. V-8, mags, gel. just arri\·e1!.. l\.1ost .n1odels '71 !'IIBZ 250 Sedan Au10. 1~1 .. rims good! SlSOO. Ask available fo1· 1mn1cd1ale tie-trans., air, Al\t /fM, l\lich.
[i1· k 5J9-547'9 livery. X radials, & ]01v 1ni]cs.
or ar • · · CREVIER BMW &31-:~J.10 Dir. * 1972 CIIBVY 20 VA:'ll' 20S \\' lsl Sc SA 83-3171 ··';is""'M'°ERCo='°E'°D'°"E=S"°"B<~"'~l!ltl~S~L Pricetj rlgh{ ... no reasonabll' · · · ·• · · _..
~ !\peed 1rani;mlssion, 1·a.din,
heHll'l', 7,000 originnl miles.
j.114J-IDAi .
$2677
• 72 Mazda
ROTARY SEDAN
Clean, only 31.6.'iG miles E<
runs greRI!
$1499 • orrel'"rl>full'!i. 493-,.;1247 'il Bi\l\V 2002. A.i'flFJ\f, ·I Rcsloration. HT. new paint,
<pd 36 000 mi xlnt -nd tit~. cng. clutch, etc. $3250.
·73 DO~E Van, 100. custon1 · 200. C~ll ~. "" · :>~8-24t2 eves. everythu-.g. Sec to apprcc., S:l ~~~C"-~~~=~ Call Ste\·e, 642-8769 Capri 9715 '6:).230 SL. !\lint, A.\1/}:iol S Irk. l\Jichelin. S •I , 0 0 0.
1.'lUSf sell 1970 Ford •73 CAPRI 91)8....,9701 eves.
• F'inancc specialists on
duly fiffgy\'tf : ~~;~;:~~~;
1966 """"" c.;1. """'''d DEALER SUpen1a11, mo v i n g to n......1
Ew<ope. $1795. Ph: 8-li-8679 Automl'lt ic, air rondlUoning, :""..,...
'6.q CHEVY Van 108, nev.• V6. radio. henter. low n1iles.
9746
tircs, brakes, shOcks, duals, See ii, You 'll huy it. tS.ll·
mags $1600 960-2514 JJQl.
$3477 Autos Wanted 9590
CADILLACS 1\ l
NE ED 1967-68 or 69 Opel
boriy and frame only. CaJI
61..1-6.lZi
·73 OPEb Manta Luxus,
auto, air, low mi, 2:; ~1PG,
Spotll'SS., m-~
'TI OPEL J\lanta H.allye
16.800 mi. 4 sp, radio, Good
t'Onrl. Sli50. 831)....1865.
69 VW Bu9 2150 Harbor Blvd. C.M.
B<o~tirul b'"'· ''"" • '"""'· 64c c7QO radio, healer & air cond1· \J"J
lioning. 1315CRPr.
Only $1388
Along t Sen Diego frw'f. '"'"'JUAN c,.,,,"""'o Largest Selection -tAJt eW
In Orange County I TOYOTA Coupe DeVil\e<· -Sedan De· Porsche 9750
\'ill{"> . E' Dorarlos · Coi, I 1!11",r, ~llu•hot•, ('.i\I. f>46-!lM:: :...:~=-----'""
•· ··' .• , . ,, ... , ..... ~ ..... ~ '
49l·ll75 or 8ll·ll75
1\'l'llhl cs. Also 111any other[ PORSCHE scle~.I C:1<!:.l\ac Tradl'·ins. I Slrd AtftitYaSARY ·71 91~ 2.0
'70 V\\' Advcnlu1'f'1' Camricr.
!\lust !>ell. F.xcrl. conrl.,
i\lieh. tirl.'S. l'le<'. rcfri,1t.
sin\'<', rice runn\ni.? \\'a\cr.
brd, 1naj11r June, brtikc &
clut<'h arlj.. $.1200. l>h.
6:-:5-10-lO or :di ;,, 64:)-29AA
_ Fully 111:-:ury equiprrrl
N.lHM.(A. UAC SPECIAL Co1nplctr. NE\V. r.:avc li ke ........, I crazy. Black on Black. 2•~'tiaht)~ '72 CAPH.I. R1Hllo, h1•111cr. 4 · $i6!1:)
ce...i~ 540.9100 ~.~~l.'s~;~ntlitioning. t0.11· Phon£" !hl8·1!XXl DLR.
TOP DOLLAR PAID THEOD~~=DROBINS
IMMEDIATELY 2060 Jlarhor Blvd.
FOR AU.. FOREIGN CAHSI Costa :'llesa
Call er 1..'0me in to sec u1. 642·00>0 or 5-W.8211
Datsun 9720 NEWPORT
IMPORTS 53"1 A ... Y.SAIY
Sl'ICIAL l
3100 \\I. Coe.st Hwy., N.B. I 64'1-9405 ·12 DATSUN PICKUP. R.11lio,
hcnter . 4 ~peeil lrans111ls·
WE BUY USEO CARS '""· <889581. 12109.
AND TRUCKS THEOOORE ROBINS
ComC' in for a tf'el.' llpprni.~;11 FORD
to GR01'11 OlE\IROLE"r , 200/J llnrbor 111vd.
Ht211 Btach B\\'d,, llunt. Bch CostR !'11c!UI.
8~7-6087 Jl9-ltll &12'·0010 or• 510-IJ211
TOP CASH lnr clean USt.'1.1 Will BUY YOUR-
ctn-s ul'ld l1·uckt1 DATSUN, TOYOTA
Howard Chevrolet OR VOLKSWAGEN
l\lncAHhi1r e ncl Jrontiorec PAIJ) FOrt OR NOT. \\'ILi.
Nc\\·port lll'ach PA 'I' TOP DOLLA R. CALL
m-0'""55 KENT ALLEN. 540-01-12.
\VE HUY 'i:l 2-'0Z, 11.ll factor)' opl,
ntPORT!.:O AUTOS Copper Bl'\\'l\, Rlr, mggs,
'i3 PfH!S<:HE 914-2.0. One o/ Ask for Rob.
n kind paint-appearance '70 v \\' SQUARi'~BACK,
i,:1'0(tll · 13000 miles • hrnnd Al\1/Fl\l \\'/!ape •lrck'
new 40000 m\ ~1ichelins. ne"' brakes, runs gootl. $1500.
S."1,lj()(), firn1. 6#-1179. 536-4116
'64 PORSCHE. Interior xlnt, 19"2 Ycll0\\• VW Bug Immar
Ill'\\' r r1di:'\l 1ires, xtras. Nds 1 · · .11 l'Olld. Low miles. A!\l/F~l t:nJ!:. or 1v1 option "'/t'('bl! rAd io. Radials. S 2 15 0.
'1\2 Su1ll'r 90. C\1ST0'.\1S BY 613.-MOl
ALI, J5j() Superior, C.i\I. ' .
·64 PORSCHE li6 B new '67 V\V BUS, home·n1adc
"ll\nl, f'IC>"' brakl's, nn<VJ ramprr, r~blt t>ng. 4 mo or " .. ~ 4000 rni \\'!UT. 725-7381 7:30 lrans. Runs good. 6!a-71Ga p 1 art 6 A~1 to 4:30 ) , Duffy.
'i2 SI LVER T11nu1. 2.4 91 1T 1972 !\upf!r hu.it. 8 a j a
2.4. su~r cond. for infor. packaj.!('. onl~· 16.000 n1i.
l'llll 644-ailJ. Tape dt't'k, xlnl L'Ond $2.t.10. ':.::c-"''-"=---== I ff75-50~i0
Subaru 9761 "°·•"°' 'cv"'11""• "F'"•"""11'".,,-,.:ck.~X°'1'""':--"'cc;nrl·
TOP DOLLAR
FOR
SPORTCARS
All moclel!& .I} YClll'!I
SEE US FIRSTI
. •I : ' I ----........ -.. .....
irinn $1:19.i. Priv, Party. Cull
!179-£13-1 • •
'f,7 V\\I, vl'ry , 1·lcan, Rchlt
engine, xl n'I l'Otlfl. SSj(I. C11JI
6-1.'"i-6 l <19
BA.1 ,\ a-,-.-, ~c.-,..-,,-,-,,-.,,-,.,-,,~,,..
romp. IK't·up, n('ver usM.
l:W~I offer 6T.l-3263
Continent al 9930
'73 MARK IV fuU l>O"'l"r
At.1/Fl\1 stel'('() s i I v t' r
edit)on xlnt. concl. !lGS-3103.
Cougar ftU
'73 COUGAR XR7. Al\t/rM,
auton1at\c, power sleeting,
vinyl roof. f030GXD). $3175.
THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
2060 Harbor Bh'd.
'li6 a.JITT'Ol\o1 390. Gd !ires.
$350.
'57 FORD, 2 dr, auto., very
rl'p en d a ble transp.,
$12SfRo;t. offer 5.'i6-6296
Mustang 9952
'67 P..IUSTANG , Excel. l'Ond.,
new 11.ulo trans. PS, small
V-8, alr-a>nd. Best offer.
67~743
1966 FORD MUST ANG 4 1pd,
l89 V-8, ale. xlnt cond, new
polnl, make ofr, 89:\.-8752
'68 MUSTANG Conv. Top
condition. SIDl:--
646-341.") CO!lla l\.lesa.
642-0010 or 540-8211 ~IUSTANG '6ti, ye.ll()w. Air,
'69 COUGAR. Gd rood .. air· pov.·er. clean. Si95. CaJI
1<ond, P/S. $13Xl. Call ev,&, !l(j3..2S32.
5'.i&-461-1 Oldsmobile 9955 Sell idle Items wnh a Daily ::c:::~:;.:.:::.... __ _:~
Pilot Oasslfied ed. 642-56'18
Classified Ad! Call 642-5678
today!
Bill-paying time'! Sell ''Don't
need s" fast and eRsy with
a Dally Pllol 011.ssified Ad i
Fiat
~tlea A sr.v'lce
OLDSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS
HONDA CARS
UNIVERSITY OLDS
2S50 Harbor Blvd.
Costa lt1esa ~·SMO
'ti5 POr-.'TIAC.
S.100. or best oHer.
581-4U8
53rd ANNIVERSARY
SPECIAL
'72 VEGA \VAGON. Radio,
heater. 4 i;peed tran11n1Ui·
sion, sharp. (718E!JB). $1 ~22.
THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
~ Harbor Blvd.
Col!ta Me118 .
642-0010 or 540-8211
VEGA G.T. '72, 14,400 ml. AM/Jo~M, A/C. 8 track. Ex.
cond. 17100. 56-1178
·n VEGA GT Sta \Vag., fly
eqpd. SI,795. Eves:
673-2518
'74 VEGA. H atchba c k ,
am/fm, 4 spd. Mwn sell.
~art s
'72 HATCHBACK, A I C . Al\1/f~. 4 11pd, radial tires,
xlnt c.'Ond. SLi99. &13--0700
Flat 9715
'74 Fl~T 124 s Car
'74 FIAT'° L~C\ -.!~c
We have a Large Selection of
New f IA TS and
BEST PRICES PAIDI an11tm. a.m mi. lk new. 1';19j, 89~
J --..... -.... -. , 7Jltl utMI ll\1 .. CJI. '4i-M '
'TI BUG, xlnt run cond. Gd
Iii-es, lo-mi. StandBrtl shill.
$1700. S36-Ti61 8.ft.~ Deen Lewis Imports
U.66 Ht.r~r. C.~t. M6·936: 1969 DATSUN 510 9765 \"\\' Bup: l!'M:i1 Nu clutch &·
\\'ANTED to buy 1 9 6 j SS00 84&-4U4 aft 611.'!1 CT:.:•O!Y.:•:.;ta::_.. ____ .:.;.:: l>rakl'11. S.~ 536-5112 llfter
'74 FIAT
128 S.L Coupe
Late Model
SPORT CARS
Cht'\"'lle 1.lalibu s t a 11 an '73 1600 ('ng. 'IXXI ml S!l.-1() '72 'i.\ TOYOTA Co1'0lla Sta. ,5;;·~=-,"'°---,"·agon. must have good 1200 tn\(:. Mg<I mi. $260. \\'l\jt, l.1.fi:illJro rack. 1.8.000 '69 PUG. A C, i..-w t f e t1 I
body k good inlerior. Cillll ~her pnl111 (-11,.ap 613-liM. ml. S2GOO 494-8339 ra(.flAI~. orig OWT'l('r. S\295.
af!er .i p.111. 968--1971 [),\'rSUN 2W Y.·:i,CQI 1111. 'S7 CORONA. Compl"tl•Jy 642~1691 alt. 6 or wkndia.
Jl!NI..: C11r:< O('t(ltod. toi•f'f' 1ow F.xlr;i5. lk'llt 111f<'r. PJI: l"C!bu\lt pov1t>r train. 'i'O V\V Bug. lmmac., Xlnt
The most modern Sports & Foreign car Service Dept. in So. ca111.
CUSTOM PAINTING & BODY SHOP
Our ·facility is equipped wjJh the latHI eltclf90IC automolMI equlpmenl 11 \11:1~. Cll~h for t t 1 l r .
1
1 _~3341 C.all aft 6:l'.l, 892-nll \'('ll~·. sunroof, A!\t-f•l\1.
reic1u'fll"1'l' n( <.-otll'l1 Call 197.J Oi\TSUN' 610 \\111go11, '71 TOYOTA Cnron:i, 4 di\ 0"~·®=":;.'.c.1 ·:..· .c.61J..ccc"'"'co' "-,,--,
rOR sale 2 JO 'x 16,5 lil't'l! 71 4.-5 4 r -•I 1 6 8 or t'\'Cll fully equipped, 111ill under Im\· nii. A.~king $1372. '66 V\\' l)ug, runs 1<o('lt, 11~!11
l'k ~·· •.•• , 2l:h"i9S-1:"1 J orlR 1\-IUT!y. 8.'U-')([I/ IBeki"'' Boolo ~li>.737G borly \\Ork 12;i0. Open Daily 7:30 .am to 5:00 pm. Open Thursday 7:30 am to 9:00 pm .
r t' 11ti1y '-"" "'n. -• or 4~161 1 Tut's. 53&-4421. ASJt FOR 'i2 DATSUN pft'kup "'/shell 1969 TOYOTA CORONj\ 4 =,,..-,..,.-,".,:,''' '"""'=~-~ Antiques & C ass tSfO YOUR CAR c11.n1per \\'/boot. 1 u ll c r door, $1100. CaJI 54$.-IS.';.I f'OR Sale, '69 V\V, In ~ -~=~54&-"""70'07;,0~=--l~'=·l~t·•o-"'C' ~s,1,,350,,· ,_<'091HJ'=-'o:;'c.l..c'.o,'°;o·'"' nfl rr SP~l t:on<I, Sim, or ~I ntrer.
CLASSIC '!W Oievy \\'agori AUTOS, CASJl PAID "13 DATSUN 610. &.'d. 7,QXI '68 TOYOTA 2 cir, Cor3°nA' 642.--J:iOS RH 6ptn
Gl'f'9't Sha.pc, 11111 orig, $4.iO Runnlna or nnt. \\/recked mi., Mint cond., $31000 "port coupe. Gd <.'Ond. Priv ~·U idlt' llem11 with fl D1tlb•
or ht~ off~r. 644--03,;G nk. 842-31%6 Finn. G4&-0m 111111y. S125. 493·079?. l'Uol O£Mlflcd -.d. 642-5G78 ---~~~-=-~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'
;;-:-;~] B.J. SPORTSCAR CENTER'"' ~ -~ 2833 Harbor Blvd . (o\f O Me sa ~
I • • • ~
I l
l
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7
•
San '~lemenie
t;ltpistrano EDI T I ON
VOL. 67 , NO. 157, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES
•
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
•
Today's 'F ina l
N.Y. Stock s
THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1974 TEN CENTS
San Juan Extends Moratorium for Building
By PAMELA HAU.AN
Of "" Dflll'f' ll'tllf "-"
An orderly croy,·d filled the seata and
lined the "'alls of lhe San Juan
Capistrano council chambers Wednesday
to hear the city council vole unanimously
to eltend the moratorium on new
building and zoning applications.
Because of legal lmplications, the
freeze was extended only four months.
City Attorney James Oka:z::'.d told the
council It can, after another public
hearing, stretch It out for eight months
after that, giving the city a full year if
necessary.
The purpose of the ban, which drew
emotional pleas from each side during
the hour·long public hearing, Is to gi\'e
city officials time IO adopt a new geoeral
plan and It& auxiliary ordinances. A
thousand new homes already approved,
but not yet constructed, will not be
affected and there are exceptions to the
freeze !or routine matters and hardship
cases.·
A $polcseman for the building and
trade! indWJlry said this woold create
unemployment and generally b u r t
v;orkers he represents.
",111.iJ isn't a deferral," said Alfred
Gray, ei:ecutive secretary of the
Building and Construction Trades Council
or Orange County. "It's shutting down
our buslnesa: here." ' .·
Earlier this week Gray sent a strongly
wo{'d~ letter to the council which said •
1'18.t If the council approved the building
ban relilliatory actiona might take place
including litigation and picketing of
downtown businesses.
Agreeing with Gray that the [reeze
could cohtribute to unemplovment,
delegates for the Council 1 on Environ·
ment, Employmen,I, and Development
said the moratorium would "greatly
interfere with the normal prOcesses of
lhe market place at a .Ume where thefe
is i great need for housing by all levels
of sociel1'." The statement, authored by
Peter J. Remmel, said the moralorium
v;ould be inflationary. y,·ould C<>ntribute
to the v;elfare roles, vooold cause higher
taxes, and y,·as discriminatory and
unjust.
Ataking an eloquent plea for the ri ghts
of property O'll'ners, the Rev. \Yill iam
Davenport of the Capistrano Valley
. Baptist Church said he believed passage
of the moratorium would open the city to
inverse C<>ndemnation suits.
"1 don't want to be back in th\!
c:ounty," he said, •·001 if we go alon~
v.•ith this peculiar ordinance y,·e ar~
opening ourselves lo this." He added that
the ban was "grossly unfair" to people
y,·ho ov.·n land, some dependil)g i>n it for
retirement y,•ho Y>'ill Jose it.
Other speakers against the free?:"
were John Toner, manager of the Sa1J
Juan Capistrano Ch amber or
Commerce; Paul Solatta. 'll'ho as ked i(
!See SAN JUAN, Pagt ti
Capo Teachers to Walk Out Tuesday
--------------------------------------------·-----------··----~-----
125 Death• in 1973
Jury Urges War
On Drunk Drive·r
By WILLIAM SCllREIBER
Of 11M 0911Y Piie! 1!11f
The Orange County Grand Jury urged
Uie Board ol Supervisors Thu,rsday to
Grunion Suirt
Run Toni ght
Gninlon will begin a IOW'lllght
spawning run on Orange Coast
beaches t.onigbt.
The two-hour runs, dictated by
tides and moon phases, according
to the Callromla Department of
Fish and Game, begin at 10 :30
tonight; Jl:06 P-D\ Friday; 11:41
p.m. Saturday and 12:23 a.m.
~onday. ·
Grunion hunters must have valid
state fishing licenses and must
catch the fish only with their
hands.
Nixon Will Make
Visit to Coast
F ollo wi1i g Trip
President Nixon plans a t"·o • v.·eek
vaca tion in San Clemente on his return
from a 'round.the-world ~rip. and the
stay will include the Independence Day
holiday. But the first visit west by Nixon since
January might not be as festive as
\vishecl.
Speculation in Washington is that t~e
llouse Judiciary Committee probably will
take its impeachment vote while the
President spends his traditional summer
vacation at La Casa Pa~ifica.
White House aides said Wednesday the
President plans to stop over in Tokyo on
the last leg of his trip abroad and then
fly directly to the Orange Coast. .
If the visit indeed takes place, it will
mark the first stay In San Clemente
since January, when Nixon slipped away
from Washington, D.C., and flew west on
a regular commercial flight, leaving
aides an4 the press corps scrambling to
catch u)f
That visit came during the deptM of
the energy crisis and Nixon emphasized
that be chose the regular jet Oigbt to set
an eumple for saving_ precious fuel.
wage all-out \\'ar on drunken driving in
the county.
In a three-page report lo supervisors.
jury foreman A. E. "Bill" Gazlay said
the county recorded 125 alcohol·related
traffic deaths last year.
"And it is estimated the cost of
alrohol·related mot.or vehicle accidents
approached $7 million," Gazlay added.
The main tllrust of the jury's
r=mendalion was aimed at ptting
the board to coordinate a comprehensive
Progr&ll) designed to reduce the nwnber
or dtaths, lnjliriei ind property damage
cawied by drtilldng driven.
Gmday said the prnblem Is getting
\\'Gl'Se instead of better despite work by
several oxmty agencies and the grant
programs to solve It.
Referring to a roadside survey made a
year ago in Huntington Beach. Ga7.lay
said one out of every four drivers on
weekend evenings had been drinking and
one of every 25 was legally under the
influence of aloohol.
"A comparision of thls and other data
suggests that atTeSts occur in ooly one
percent of the OCCWTences of driving
Wlder the influence," Gazlay said.
Of those WTested, Gazlay said liO
perce'nt are classified as problem
drinkers or alcohGlla in need or
treatment and the other 40 percent are
labeled "misusers" who need education.
Among other things, the j u r y
recommends :
-A public education effort ti> solicit
p..tblic support.
-A specialized education effort aimed
at drinking drivers.
-A cooperative program between
criminal justice and health agencies to
detect and intervene in behavorial
patterns of problem drinkers.
-A referral center acting as a hub for
all processing and referral activities.
-A means for evaluating th e
(See DRINKING, PaJe· :1
IR VINE CA PTURES
BASEBALL CROWN
SPRINGFIELD, 111.-Gary Wheelock,
Jeff Malinoff and Keilh Bridges paced
the UC Irvine -baseball team to a repeat
performance Wednesday night as NCAA
college divisk>n champions.
For details of the final game, see
today's $OMS section, Page 29.
• I ? ,. •
IMJlr 1'11.t St.it Plltl•
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO FIREMEN TR'l IN VAIN TO REVIVE BULL DOZER VICTIM
Grading Checker At New Park Was Crlnhe d To De.th Benuth Heavy Rig Wednesday
BulldozerCrushes Worker
To Deatl1 at San Juan Job
A 55-year~ld grading checker at a
major San Juan Capistrano parks project
was crushed to death beneath the track
of a bulldozer shortly before noon
\Vednesday.
Ephraim B. Pectol of Anaheim,
suffered. major head and chest injuries
and was declarei dead al the scene of
the tragedy on the grounds of the new
Jwtlpero Serra Park, c:oroner"s aides
srud.
Workm'en who witnessed the accident
said that Pectol had been malting sure
thal grades were done according to plans
in the westerly portion or the park and
was standing close to the path i>f the
bulldozers and dump trucks working the
site.
A doter operator who was not
identified. made a sharp right tum while
descending a slope and the blade of his
tractor caught the grading checker,
throwing him beneath the left track of
the heavy machine.
\\1itnesscs said that because of blind
spots from the driver's seat, the driver
thought nothing was amiss until he saw
the victim's hard hat roll from beneath
-the tractor.
2 Sought in Slayings
McCORMICK. S.C. ( U P I l
Authorities '!\'ere searching today for
"two hippie types" in the slaying of three
Ft . Gordon. Ga. soldiers whose mutilated
bodies were found near a reservoir
Suoday. Police said romposite drawin gs
had been made i>f two persons who may
have been involved in the slayings.
Youth Didn't
Like Base ball;
l langs Hinise lf'
CINCINNATI. Ohio tAP) -Youn g
Richard Blusl Jr. told his mother his
arm hurt and he didn'l want to go ti>
baseball practice for the St. Catherine
Roman Catholic Church team.
l\1rs. Blust told her son he bad the
responsibility to show up and tell the
manag er. The boy vanished , and his
lJ&rents spent the night looking fi>r him,
in vain.
On Wednesday. the body of the l2·year-
old was found hanging in a y,·ooded area
near his Cincincnati home. A baseball
glove v.•as nearby.
''I'm not sure he really liked sports, at
least no\ baseball," ·said the team
manager, Carl Buschbacher. '·He wasn't
that enthusiastic aOOut it."
'Eas y' Judge
Lo ses His Job
135-unit Complex -Delayed
.iHe was a starler on the team. but
several weeks ago he began nii ssing
practices. Then he didn 't show up for one
ol our games and I started someone else
in his place.
"I '"onder if I pushed hin1 too harrl?
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!l -A
judge who gave an easy sentence to
a rapist was defeated Tuc!day in lJ!s bid for tM!.l~lon to" the bench.
Judge Bernard Gllckretd ran
bcblnd Assistant District AllQmey
Robert J. Maurer and attorney
Edward L. Ctagen, who will meet
in a No~bcr runoff for the
judgeship.
Glickleld senteoced a rapist in
l!Ml9 to S2·wcekendt in jail :ind \\'J\S
etnsurl-d ln 1971 by the state
Suprtme Court for ' • c o n d u ct
prejudicial to the administration of
justice." He had called the \lictlm a
"horse'& ass.'
The uny,·illingness of a pioneer resident
of San Clemente to sell his home and
proposed densities higher than any codes
alli>w threw major kinks Wtdncsday into
a bid for a large retirement complex
sponsored by a church group.
Despite-abundant prftlse for the spirit
or the project propOS<d by the First
Christian Church and the Churclunan1s
Foundation of Glendale, clty councilmen
delayed for l50 days a dectsion on a
gentral plan chiange which would pave
the way for the 13S-unit complex •long
Avenk!a De La Estrella.
The majority o! the council made It
clear that umess the developt':rs could
convlnct the Crtsetnsk> Esplnozas to !tell
their home, the council probably \11ould
not consider the cha"ge.
The Espinoi.as. rcsldent11 1t. UH El
r
Oriente, moved to the city in 1929 and issue of the Espinozas' unwillingness to
buUt lheir Spanish type l\<)me. leave their land.
Preliminary plans call !Gr wrapping Mayor Thomas O'Keefe emphasized
construction around the private home that the serious concems include the
and yard with buildings as high as six proposal to abut the project IG
levels. rising from tbe floor of a canyon. e.!ltabllshed single-family houses; the
Petitions Jnd letters from supporters proposal ti> uike over a gully owned by
of the proje'ct along with the presence of the city and its conversion inti> a parking
dozens of Ddvocaus Wednesday failed to lot and the extremely high density of the
sway councilmen. Planning commission-project. crs were not convinced e,ither and re-Spokesmen for the church a n d
cently recommended council disapproval foundation stres:sed tl\at the need !or
• of the prGjtct. suCh a project was extreme and that the
Official praise centered tr. the ncJ bull< o( 1he sur-.dlng deY<loped land is
!or adequate and medium..(OSt t>ou,.,lng mulUple ln nature.
for retirees, and dty councilmen thought No othq pi>Mible tltes exist in th4! city
1he idea oomm<':ndable. • where a project could ht economically
But on the maUer of ZOil.ing, the feasible, tbey added.
council balked strongly. The)' ctted repeated attempts to buy
'Ille C'Of'M:nswi among councilmen \\'Bl tho 'Espinoza property -111 of thc.n1
thnt serious concerns exist beyond the (Ste COMPLEX, Pqt Z)
'
I've been asking myself that O\"er :ind
over again since it happened and can
honestly say I don't think so.''
"His father has a very responsible
position as athletic director for the
church. He coortlinaies oor entire sports
program . which has a $10.000 to $11 ,000
budget. But he didn't push him that hard
either."
Sister Paula, principal or lhe sc'hooJ.
said the se\•enlh grader was a Boy Scout ,
SU\led ~lau and had a paper route In
addition to playing: sports.
"He \\'I! 11lw11ys cheerful and good
humored nnd performed his duties at
~lass very faithfull y," 11he said. "lie was
the kind of boy >"GU never tho1.ght this
'MOUid happen to.''
•
CUEASet s
'Mourning'
Fo1·aDay
Bv JOHN \'ALTERZA
'ot n.. D•llY Pli.I Sl•ff
The organization represen ting 1l1c
bulk of teachers in the Capistrana
Unified School District late \\'ednesd::iy
agreed to launch a y,·a\kout aur.l
''professional day of mourning" Tuesda :,
In the strongest plan for a y,·01 k
sti>ppage yet to hit the large district. tl1!
membership of the Capistrano Unifi~t
Educati>rs' Association (CUEA ) agrc.:·
ovenvhelmingly to stay a\vay fn'r.
classes to emphasize dissatisfaction .,.. i' :
a district offer of an eight percent rai,;!
in wages for the next fiscal year.
In addition, the seores o( teachers 1•·
the afternoon meeting in San Juf1•1
Elementary School emphasized that as .1 •
today their members would perfor!r
nooe of the extra \\'Ork for \\'hicn
teachers are not C<>mpensaled.
Essentially, they said, me1nbers .,..-oul !
\\'Ork their slandard seven hour day a,1 i
do little else. including attendin!:
oomn1encemcnt rites at each high schoo!.
In the strongest y,·alkout vote yet in !fl··
district, the CUEA members conden111e·l
a board action last A1onday whic:t
appeared to end any solid negotiatio:1s
over increases in wages. Trustees batkOO
at a request by the group for dai~'
negotiatioos in an effort to resolvi!
differences before the end of the schcal
year.
In a second action. trustees agreed tha t
they \\mild \"Ole soon to slam the lid on
any increases ahove eight percent.
Teachers have been seeking a 13
percent hike because of dire predictions
or heavy inflation over the next 12
months.
Despite· a decision ti> decline to conie
on campus Tuesday, the teacher group
made no motion on the exact duration of
the "moorning" period.
Instead of staying hon1e on that da •"
the members declared they would adhtir..:
to a schedule of picketing. meetings anc
spreading of printed materia ls in thl
community in an effort to explain thei1
plight.
l"'1 te in the day, the group y,·ould n1e61
again to determine how long the actiot~
~hould last.
A smaller ·walkout at this thne las~
year by the smaller and more militant
Capistrano Unified Federation or
Teachers. threw a serious kink h1
operations at the two di~trict hlgti
schools and lasted about two days. It dl·.I
not affect elementa'ry camp u s es ,
(See WALKOUT, Page!)
Or ange Coast
Weathe r
Loy,· clouds and fog nigl1t and
n11>ming hours with hazy sunshine
in the afternoon Friday. Only pur-
lia\ clearing on the beaches. Slight·
ly \varmer inland. Highs upper 60s at the beaches to low 80s inland.
INSIDE TODA\'
The wedding of Sly of "Sly arid
f crtnity Stm1e" toos atte11 ded b11
23.000 fans and it wa~ a hug e
success. Po/Ice arrested 13 per·
sons· for trespass, six wot~lell
fai11ted. a1itt fistfigltU broke out
sporadically. Story, Paue 4.
L. M, t.r• 11 ca11 .. rrii. n
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\
I I DAILY PILOl SC
Cle rk S<;rea rus,
Sliot to Deatlt
l.ONli BEAC!l (/\Pl-A 72·ye[lr·
old grcal·grand1nocher serearncd
and then was fatally shot late
Vi'ednc5<1ay in the small g~ry
store \l.·herij sht' .... ·orked part t1n1e.
Long Dca(.'h police said J)or-0thy
Jtlnicck inll)' lm\'t' fri~htencd a
potential robbM' \\'ho p;ln1ckcd .. shot
the wo1nnn and then fled. Officers
said no n1oney was taken . An~. th~t
they bad 110 clues to thl' assailants
Identity. . the ri.trs. Janicck, shot in
atxloincn. died at a hospl\RI 1 ~~
hours after being shot.
Vets R e t1i 1·11
To B eac l1es
Of No1·1na 11dy·
0~1AI1A BEACH. Normandy, France
<UPI 1 _Thirty years afler their .longest
da\' Allied war vc1erans lt>tl by five-star
Ge·n·. On1ar N. Bradley. Bl. ret urned to
the 0-Day beaches of Normandv today
and paid tribute to fallen comr~dcs.
At Bayeux, American old soldiers ·were
joined by a French delegation led by
'.i\.rincd Forces l\linistcr Jacqu~s Sournet
and .,,,a\kcd in solemn procession lo the
~1emorial of the Liberfltioo to lay
·.,,·rcaths. .
At Omaha Beach. \vherc American
troops landed. there \\'as a religious
service at the U.S. cemetery and another
\i·reath·laying at lhe National Guard
l\lonum"ent "·hich \Vas specially erected
-for the 2.1th D-Day anniversary. Further
ceremonies took place at Point Du Hoc,
\\'here the Rangers stormed ashore and
clilnbed an impossi ble cliff.
The 90th Division \\'BS honored at
Carentan and Gen. l\1axwell Tay lor's
·airborne troops at St. r..tere L'Eglise.
where a private first class once dangled
·by his parachute rrom th e church steeple
and watched band-to-hand fighting go on
in the square bclO'>''.
A total or \3{),000 men la..jed on the
t\onnandy beaches June 6, 1944. ntere
"·ere 9,000 casualties, including 3,000
dead. It \\'as history's biggest seabome
operation commanded b)' th e then
General , of the Anny Dwight D.
;Eisenhower. and proved lhe beginning of
the end for Adolf Hitler, funnel Ung
eventual\v onto the shores of France a
body of human beings larger than the
population of Pittsburgh.
Cl1amher to Hear
{..Ma yor of Irvh1e
j : ~1 rs. Gabrielle Pryor, the mayor of
. l.rvine . \\'ill discuss the clements of an
~~emerging city with members of the
:'.Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce
~~at a n1onthly meeting· June 12. .
The noon luncheon will mark the fir st
.. .meeting of the chamber at a new location
;'in Tiny Naylor's restaurant in San Juan
; .Capistrano. .
r The title of ~fayor Pryor 's talk Will be
~=·steps in Eitablishing a New Ci ty." All
' rhan1ber members and guest.s are
; !''elcome to the session.
" F rom Page 1 .
:DRI NKI NG. ••
. effccllveness of lhc system. -A fiscal arrangement for the
: operation o[ referral and trcatnient
· programs. A $25 to $~0 client f1..-e ls
'suggested.
Gazlay suggested tha t all efforts be
coordinated by the Alcoholism Services
, Posi!ion of the Department of .~Iental
, Healfll. The jury also s ugges t s
, hppointmcnt of an interagency advisory
commiltee.
. . -
01.A.HCtl CO.A.ST SC
DAILY PILOT
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6'YS!!'M1. Go114 -C.hkoo"•• 9161t
P<"l..MIJ V.:,,..;
~ftl.00"0 1"'3 l>yl)o•I"""
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l'fu!e\H Loos ~+odP.Noll ,., ... ,,.,,.,,....,. .. 1,_•
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l
lhursday, June b. iq74
'
San Juan Ac.cepts .$20,000
For ree Felled· at ·Tract
A controveray O\'er a felled tree was
laid to rest Wed.t1l':sday hen San Juan
Capistrano city L'OOncih CJl agreed to
accept $20.000 for it.
Keeping the tree lntnct was a condition
of a \Veslport 11on1e Builders ' Tr:u1 to be
located on Ute sooth side of Del Obilspo
Street on the Fornier J\\·n ta property. The
developer claims that !he !r(.'f?, which
\\'35 in the street rlght-of-\vay1 was
removed by mistake by o grading
contractor.
Westport Introduced a San FrllllCile>
planoJni uj1'rt. Jeromy Et .. Hobrl, who
wu lnttrrupted In mld..spe<cil by the
mayor and told to sit down. Cooncllman
John Swe<ney obje<:led. The mlyor
µollcd oth~r Councilmen.
Councilman Doug Nash, who said early
In the discussion that he. didn 't want to b'O
over old ground, told tho mayor tha t Et.s-
lioken'a cornments were an example ol
"1lo1 he meant. The speaker, who had
not been allov.·ed-the traditional three
rninutes. was not allowed to finish.
City PlaMer David J . So1ith pointed
out tbat the Westport tract must fulfill
eovtral mlnor conditions before a Ona!
map crin !Ml recorded.
lieckschcr said be t h o u g h t
rompem atlon for t.be tree should be
made even if the final map ls nol
npprov~>d.
M the end of the discussjon 1.-layor
Byrnes 1ald the record should show that
"the chair was ruiwilllng to eotertaln the
irrelevant, ramblin g com1nent.1 of £ts·
Hoken."
The visitor said that when lhe mayor
con1es to San t~rancisL'o, "you'll be
treated \l.'ll h the same kindness you\•e
shown me,"
T
S~LA If
• •
The \\'estport offer \\'<IS mode by its
attorney, Roger Graybill of Rutan and
Tucker when the council appeare:I to be
rejecting an original offer of $1$,000.
Cotmcllmen agreed to ocet'pt the money.
$3.500 of "'hich is to be used to plant ne\\"
trees and the rest left to "council
discretiOll." only af1er \\lcstport agreed
to pay the money lmmedlatelv. The
developer had asked that payment be
niade when the fin al map is recorded.
Swift Fzrst to Finish.
The procredings, "'hich took several
odd twists. "'as the culm ination of
severnl n1onths of negotiations between
the city and developers.
In Guadalitpe Isle Race
During one stor1ny private 1necling
\Veslport said the city asked up to $50,000
for the old eucalyptus tree.
That meeting cited by Councilnian
Yvon Heckscher "'ho said the developer
accused the city of erasing a tape which
had certain proposals on it.
During \Vednesday·s discussion a court
stenographer, hlred by \V es t port.
recorded every comment and at one
point a \\'estport official 'varned city
atlo mey James Okazaki about "leaning
against thi! tape." Okazaki's chair ls in
front cJ. the city 's recording device.
Before making their fina l offer.
Roof er Plunges
To Death From ·
Building Tower
A 24·year-old Laguna Beach roofer
plunged 14 stories to hi! dealt! \li'ednesday
from the top of a condominium tower
be!ng erected In Laguna Hills Leisure
\Vorld, when a construction lift failed .
Robert Nichols of 662 Oak St.. "·as
catapulted from the roof wh.ile trying to
brake the caged hoist assembly whlch
v.·as attached to the side of the structure
on runners.
A spokesman for thl': Orange County
c.ororter's Office !ald the load of
materials being lifted by the mist
was too heavy and when Nichols applied
tbe brake, the hoist was ripped from the
building, one of tv.·o under construction.
The entire rig and loed piWJ.ged to the
earth below, crushing the vidtm when It
landed.
He was rushed to Saddleback
community Hospital , but WU declared
dead on arrival of massive head and
internal lnjurld.
By ALMON LOCKABEY
IMlln• Editor
S'A·ift, a Newport·41 coskippered by
Gavle Post and Jack Mall inckrodt of
Baioo11 Yacht Club, slipped acrots tbe
finish line at 4:50:15 p.m. Wednesday to
capture elapsed time honors in Bolboa
''acht Cl ub's 600-mlle Guadalupe Island
rat't! for the second straigh~ year_
s.,.,·ift's elapsed time was four days,
fo!lr hours, SO minutes and 15 seconds,
beating her last year's lime by more
tha n t\\'O days.
As elapsed ti me winner. Swift v.·ins the
Endymion Trophy, a model of Dooald
f'rom Pqe 1
WALKOUT ...
ho\\-ever:
Substitutes, teacher's aides and
administrators all manned the desk.$ ln
classrooms to tide the district over.
Spokesmen for the CUEA charged
Wednesday that the dis t r I ct
administration already has been gearing
for a single-day v.·alkoot.
Some teachers charged that student-
were being recruited to sit at the head of
clanes if teachers d1d not show up.
CUEA bargaining representatlve Tom
Yoongennan warned the group that all
members soon v.'OUid feel pressure to call
off the intended walkout.
He warned the group to gear up for
"hassles and abuses.
"We are not alone. Custodians have
come up to us and said they would not
cro!I our linel if we decided co an action
such as OU..," he added.
"Don't let a paternalistic ;rindpel talk
to )'OU about professionalism at this point
and urge you to atay in, btoluse ol bann
to the kids," Youngennan warned.
"I say to him, 'you're not eatina: off my
salary, baby. Give me yours and I'll stay
in"'
The suggestion drew cheers from the
group.
South CoastPanel Cited
For Marine Element Work
By CA~l>ACE PEARSON
Of flHI Dall' Pl .. t Sl1H
The state coastal commission took a
verba l beating Wednesday on i t s
proposed marine element master plan
'~'hich many speakers called spfneless
and vague.
The commission -in the past
considered far more conservatlonlst than
the Sou!h Coast reg ional panel -th.is
time was told the stricter policies
developed by the regiop were better.
''I have been so Impressed with the
work done by the South C o a s t
commi!sion, ·· State Commissioner Ellen
Stern HaITis said near the close of the
day-long hearing in Inglewood.
"I 1WOuld like to move we adopt in
entifety the South Coast element for the
state marine element," Mrs. Harris said.
Her motion v.·os ruled out of order by
Commission Chairman P.telvln Lane, who
said the staff and commlsaion has to sift
through the new evidence and testimony
and revise the planning dOC'Ument before
a final vote on it in four to six weeks.
-A· total of 28 people spoke at-the Stale
Coastal Zone Conservation Co nunlsslon's
first hearing on the statewide marine
element -the first of nine parts of a
.
From Page 1
COMPLEX ...
futile.
Spokf!!men for the Esplnous were
adamant in the rtfuaal to yield.
Family spokesmen said that the elde rly
coople planned never to move from the
property and that wht'.!n they die. the
house and . land would be given lo a
daughter for her use as her residenct:.
\\'hllc nt.gotlatloru continue over the
parcel, movement Is afoot in the city ta
roll back the densities in sC\'t.ral multiple
zones, and the effects of the move could
ha\'e a direct relatklnsh.ip to the board·
and-care facUlty,
f'llannlng oommlsslonen are ready to
make rccommtndatlons on the n-4 zone
v.•hlch currently alloWI 1 maxi mum
density of ~ units io the acre. That i~
one of the higheJI allowable densities in
any city in the counly.
Counciln1en in!llRted the rollback
study .
•
coastal master ptan ouUined 1n lhe 1972
coastal zone act.
The act -known as Proposition 20
when passed by voters in November, 1972
-set up one state and six regional
oommfssions with interim powers over
coastline ronstruction.
The completed plan is due in the
ll':gislature by 1976.
A number of speakers We<lnesday were
concerned that the state commiss ion
ma y be softening its policies already with
the legislature's opposition in mind.
"We're quite ashamed or the
document,'' · said Dale Secord of lhe
Environmental Coalition of Orange
County. "We don't think the voters asked
for this."
''It's not just the coastal plan," Joseph
Edmiston of the Sierra Club reminded
the commiss ion. "It 's the coastal
'conservation' plan."
Other environment.al groupe said they
were disma yed, discouraged ,
disappoint~ or even "outraged" by the
draft element .
Re reten!aliyes of _manuf~ct_w:tna:.
lxia ng, fisfilng-:-liilfness and ulllity
firms at1acked the preliminary document
as full of sweeping, often restrict.Ive
general policies which lgnore economic
concem'f.~
Almost all 28 speakers insl1ted on the
need for more speclflc1.
The dra!t element d I s c u s s e s
"espetj/llly sensiti ve" environ mental
areas, "upland development" and elher
concepts "·ithout detailed definitions.
Dr. Donald Bright, chairman of the
Soulh Coast commJsslon, Wlrned the
stale panel lts plan may be takJng the
"·rong direction If the lancuage isn't strengthened.
• "W' hope you would devise a more
positive approach," Dr. Bright 1aJd;
Adding that the dran 11 too 1lmil1r to
language In the unsOC'CtSSful C.lifoml11
Ocean Area Plan (COAP).
Finished three years ago by the it.ate
department of navigation ind ocean
development, COAP Is now sittlna on 1
shelf. none ot its pollcltt lmplemen ttd.
Bright said a slllte atn~.tor who had
read the drift marine element asked him
Inst wttk. '"Why are we 1pendln1 $S
million (for the co111al comml11lons)!
\\'e'vt already paid for thftt in COAP"."
"I hope that 's not too propheti c,"
Bright Added.
Douglas' famed schooner of the san1e
n!lme dedicated by Los Angeles Yacht
Clu b. She saved her lin1e on the other
two international offshore rule racers to
win the Vilan Couch ~temorlal trophy.
Second boat lo finish was Aquavit, a
l\torgan-42 skippered by ~lilt Baehr,
California Yacht Clu b,l at 4:17 a.m.
today.
llob \\'iltiams· Lapworth-44 Talisman.
B''C, finished at 6:38 a.m. and is the
possible v.·inner of the Dally Pilot trophy
for bl':st corrected lime in t h c
performance handicap racing f Ice t
division.
Her closest competition was the
lslander·37 Pele skippered by Jim Em mi.
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. At the 8
a.m. roll call Pele was off Dana Point
an·d was expected to finish sometin1e
before noon II lhe wind picked up. She
had until 10:38 a.m. to save her time on
Talisman.
'Mic rest of the ll·boat fieet was !prcad
out from 30 to eight mJles from Newport
and experiencing extremely light air.
Reside11t Calls
Panel 'Phonies'
On His Way Out
A man who called San Juan Capistrano
city councilmen "phonies" as he left the
public hearing oo the nlCl{atorium
Wednesday, found himself detaliied aqd
led back into the room by ln Orange
County deputy sheriff.
Will lam l\1olnar. representing the
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners' Dana Point chapter, was
brought into the chambers by the deputy
who had been hired for the night to keep
order, at the reques t of Mayor Roy
Hymes.
Questioned about his remark by
Ccxmcilman Doug Nash and John
Sweeney, Jwfolnar said he thought the
proceedings fair but "one.sided." He said
be represented 44 residenLs of San Juan
Capistrano, many of 1,1,·hom '>''ould be
seriously hurt by the ban.
"I can't see stopping a man \\ilo owns
property from developing It," he said: "I
th ink Its against the constitution."
l\.1olnar said he thought the public
hearing was futil e because l he
councilmen had already made up their
minds.
"I'm disappointed in your oomment."
said Mayor Byrnes, referring to the word
"phonies." "It was a difficult decision to
make and we are concerned abo ut people
who work here."
Molnar said he would apologize, bul did
not regret his rtmark. "l said what L
felt,'' he added.
JSOO W. COAST HWT. ~IU.CH
PHOMI 642-7076 -.. .. _.,. . ._
DIU1 P'Ull lllfi P'-'t SPREAD ING THE WORD -Teachers of Laguna Beach Unified
School District, who recently staged a wildcat one·day stMke, fol ·
lowed by a large newspaper ad to air their salary grievances. con·
tinue the campaign by picketing. They appeared in various locations
about to\vn \Vednesday.
From J•age l
SA N J U.<\N MOR,_\TORIU M • • •
his taxes would also be deferred: Lou
Confer "'ho pointed ou! that 5~ percent of
the votes cast In the P.1arch municipal
ele1..'tiOn \\·ere for candidates opposing the
three \\'ho "'ere elected on a platform of
slow grov.•th; \\'il!iam l\lo\nar of the
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners, and \1incc Purvis of the
Operating Engineers' Union.
An equal number of people spoke in
favor of the freeze. Jl.1rs. Fran Frost told
the council that only eight n\onths stands
between orderly growlh an d chaos. She
referred lO Gray 's statement as an
"erroneous, Irrelevant ·and emotional
appeal to deny citizens of thei r rights.··
She read a telegram from Supervisor
Ronald Caspers supporting orderly
growth and admonished three new
councilmen to remember their campaign
promises. 1
Robert ~IcCollum said he tGas In favor
of the deferral period but existing
commercial properties should be
developed If In harmony with the new
general plan.
"The moratorium Is as American as
apple pie and the Fourth of July,'' said
McCollum. "l\1any communities arc
doing it.''
He added that people are offended by
poorly planned and poorly bu 11 t
communities and pecple's rights should
be equal to property right.s.
Mrs. Carol Helm, chairman of the
planning commission . read a statement
from her group supporting the freeze.
Other speakers in favor of the ban said
it was only logical to approve the general
plan before approving new development.
Mrs. Conn ie Riley, wbo came to the
podium wearing a construction workers'
hard hat, quoted from a Su prem e court
decision which said cities can zone land
where peopte can enjoy clean air and
quiet seclusion . Jack Connelly of Mission
Hills Rancti llomcowners said 31 of 33
families cont.acted in his tracl were in
fayor of the ban. lie estimated that 10
\\·ould be against it. Earlier in the week,
a conlrovcrs.v flared \\•hen I h e
homeowners' board approved the ban
\\'ilhout consulting men1bcr faniilies.
Four resignations resulted.
?>.1ayor Roy Byrnes said he hoped the
niora torium would not polarize citizen,
of San Juan Capistra no.
"It is wrong for people wllhout
economic responsibility to bur d c n
lnndo"•ners and de\'clopers and it is also
"·rang fo r the construction indusrty 10
not be concemed about the public at
large." said the mayor. "This 1the ban i
is not a shutdown. It is a calculated,
precise maneuve r for a specific purpose . .,
"Lei us not for one minute think a
moratorlu1n is unconsti tu tional o r
unAmerican," sold Councilman Yvon
Heckscher. "We can look before 1924 and
finds laws that re strict propeny rights."
He said people !oday are concerned
about quality of life for the group, not
just the individual , and for that reason
moratoriums are con1mon. "So let's put
lhat matter to rest." I ' •
Gree ks Honor
Big John Wa y ne
ATHENS (AP ) -Athem· 5-foot·2
l\1avor Dimitrios RiLsos h3d to
pra0ctically stand on tiptoe in presenitng
the key to the Greek capital to ilollyv.'Ood
movie star John Wayne "'ho stands O\'er
six feet tall .
Here to promote one of his California
antipollution business ventures. the
Newport Beach actor heard hlmseU
eloquently extolled tor his acting,
especially for his \Vestern roles.
"Thank you, mayor." Wayne replied.
ever the epitome of the taciturn
outdoorsman.
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES
EXTRA SPECIAi. BARGAINS from BORDEAUX
IARGAINS UNDY $5 l'llt 1om£ .. ~./ s49s 19&7 CHATEAU LarLEUR SSJ46 ;,lf';J ~ BECAOE [Haul•Ml'!doc) ·, ./. s4 95 101ocHArE•urnoNouov. s53,6 ,/ff7;, LAL.ANOE (SI. Estepl'le)
Yoar
, Cholc• $179 lb.
IARGAINS UNDEll SI PY 1omE
R•" s 1~·.! ·~..< s59s 1970 CHATEAU . BATAILEY S6426 T' ,:O-.Ju (Slh Growth. Pflutll&e)
1. 99 .. _..-s6 95 1967 GRANIJ.PUY·L•coste s7506 Ll111M 1.... Li111ff , ... lb. !-11J'7J (Slh Growth-Pau1Uac:l
wlftl c....-· 'f'ltt. c..... I 1""•"""~11-..... ilor1 ~:!51Qllii~·~·~~ ?.1!!.!~~!ill''!!'.lli~~·~· •~ SJ 50 1966Challau.Joan-Foure SS J OO '·"' COWOH ilPlul WIO. 6 12 .....>U;;,u !Grana Cru·St. Em111onJ
,, , • I
• .. •
• Thursd ay's
Closing Prices
'
-.
ThurMlu Junt ~ 1~74 SC DAJLV PILOT J7
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Ye ar's Hi gh-Low s
Appear Every Saturday
• I
P1·in1e Dip Sparks
Ai1otl1e1· Advance
NE\V YORK lUPI I -A banking exec.i.itivt!'s encourag
tng v.-ords on the future course of interest rates L'Otlpled
with a third bank lowering Its prime lending rale spared
a fourth coosecutlve rally 1n moderate trading on the New
York Stock Exchange Thunday
The Dow Jones 1ndus1rlal average
"' a.is 35
gained 15 17 points
f 1rst National Bank ot 1-ftarru became the third benk
to lower the rate charged w1 loans to best commercial
bomi"ers 1he A-ftanu bank reduced its pnme rate to 111,
~rtent while the preva1llng rate at maJOr banks remains at 111 percent
Sparkmg most of the days bu~ ing however was a
statement by A \V Clausen president of BMk or Amer1
ca th at the pnme rate probably bas reached 118 peuk and
oould decline qwckly once a do'A11turn ts under way .\
spokesman for First Nalional City Bank of New York made
a sunllar statement on \Ved.nesday
In the pa.st three sessions the Dow climbed some 28 point!>
Advances outnwnbered declines by n\Ore than two-to-one
or lhe more than I 761 issues traded
Closing volume klta led roughly 13,500 000 snare.a: com
pared ~1th Wednesdays IJ 680 000
Stocks on the Amenc-an Exchange also chmbed
trading .. l'l!hl
S11mbol1
..
•
•
I 21 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Junt 6, 1974
• •
'
L.M. Boyd
Most F oothall
\Vhen offered new pens to try out. 97 out of every 100
people write their own na1nes. So feports a pen salesman.
1.1GSt widely citcuJated dollar coin in history "'as that
Spanish eight-real bauble n10rc popularly known as the
piece of eight.
Only one out of every 20 professional football plaYcrs
aunes out of a game unbruised. fl.1orc
specifically, eight out of 20 ge t big bruises.
d 11·001of20, little bruises.
1-listory records that the African chief·
i3n named Pongo of Nigeria once pro-
1ibited any wife in his reign to wear more
han a simple cloth around her loins in
he belief that "the \\'Caring of clothes
enoouraged immorality."
ARTHRITIS
Q. "\Vhat are the chances or recovery for somebody
with crippling arthritis?"
A. Pretty fair. Seven out of 10 such patients are said to get better with the right medical care.
Q. "Louie, your best suggestion, please, as ~ how I
can get my husband to go on a diet?"
A. All right, hang a full length mirror on hiS shov.·er
door .
Q. "\Vbat percentage or the cigarette is nicotine?"
A. lilaybc t\.\'O to seven percent. Depends on the
tobaceo. Turkish, practically none. Good Havana. not
much. Do1nestic, somewhat n1ore.
First of the world 's horse drawn trolley cars turned
up 2,000 years ago in ancient Pompei. The tracks weren't
rails, but grooves in the pavement. File that.
ELEPllAl\'TS
Last I heard, 1nale elephant calves were selling in this
oountry for about $560 each, female elephant calves for
about $700. Clearly, it's not the cost of the elephant that
prevents each or us from keeping one in the backyard, but
the cost or the elephant's grub, It's known that every ele-
phant is hungry all the tim e.
Am asked the age nO\V Of that fascinating fictional
character kno.,..•n as Nancy Drew. She got her start 4-1
years ago. In '"The Secret of the Old Clock." Her creator,
Carolyn Keene, \vas really Edward Stratcmeyer. He'::;
gone no\\'. His daughter, Harriet Adams. continues to
crank out the T\1ancy Drew novels, one a year.
Common notion is that ~is no good if it's signed
with a pencil. That's wrong. Nor is it right to think a
pencil-\vritten last v.•ill and tastament is invalid. Repeat
edly, court s ha\•C been asked to throw out legal documents
with penciled signatures. Repeatedly, courts have decreed
such penciled paperwork v.•as valid.
Address ma il to L."1. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New.
port Beach 92660.
'"Baby Doll'
She Plies Trade at 73
PEORIA. Ill. !AP )
1'You're ne\·er too old to
practice the v.·orld's oldest
profession." says Sarah "Baby
Doll" Cov.·an·.
Police arrested her again
Tuesday on a prostitution
charge. She is i3.
J\USS CO\\'AN \\'As· picked
up, police said. arter an
undercover vice squad officer
claimed she invited him to her
house to '·have somt! fun ."
"I've been selling my
services since I had a broken
love affair when I was 19,"
l\liss Co\\'an said in a
telephone incervie.,..· from the
Peoria County jail. ''l'\•e paid
enough fines lo O\\'n a third of
this damn county jail.
"I'll get out again. and.
maybe, J'll be back again. But
$150 a month Social Security
just doesn't put enough bread
on my table."
J\USS COU'AN SAID her
going scale is $10 and up.
"Those arc inflation prices."
she added. "\\'lien I first c;ime
to Peoria in 1932 it v.·as known
as a dollar lown.
"In my tinw, I\•e pleased
5 at. 01tf!C
K..,in W. K. '!'on~ of
Hong Kong has received
five separate . degrees
from Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology.
Tong was awarded
• three different degrees
. in mechanical engineer-
ing, one in electrical
engineering and one in
management.
thousands or men. Some have
asked me to marry them .
Those that did I \\'ouldn't hang
on my Christmas tree. I'm too
particular. 1 guess.''
AGE IS NO problem. she
said. because men ~!ways
have 11•anted a ~·oman and
ah1·ays ~·i ll.
''The only things bothering
me are my weight and high
blood pressure," she said.
'·I'm up to 200 poilllds from a
trim 125 in my heyday. T
bought an exercising machine
a couple or months ago ."
Police say she has been on
more blotters than a ball point
pen.
"\\'e feel a little sorry !or
her," said Sheriff Bernard
Kennedy. "Any time girls are
picked up. she is the first one
to visit them -brineing
candy <:1nd cigarettes. \\'hen
Baby Doll is picked up, no one
comes and all she has lo talk
to arc the policemen."
l\ian Gets
S630,000
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI l
A San F'rancisro Supe~ior
Court jury has av.·arded more
than $630.000 to a market pro-
duce clerk wh<lse ~,lre died
during a v:iricose vein opera-
tion three years ago.
After a 15-day trial before
Judge John J. Ertola. a jury
of nine ~·omen and three men
found that anesthesiologist Dr.
J{oberl T. Terry had been
negligent in liecp1ng vigil on a
heart monitoring machine at-
tached to Elizabeth ~lachado.
During lhe 1971 oprration.
?<.1rs. li'lachado, 30, suffered a
cardiac arrest for 90 seconds
before the surgco'1 l!Ot 1he
heart started artcr being told
of the cmerp,cncy.
Session
To Start
Registration for almost 200
day and evening summer
classes offered by Orange
Coast College will begin June
JO.
The summer session runs
from June 17 tfirough Aug. 9.
Class listings are available in
the scbool admissions ortice.
Registration will be held by
appointment only June 10
from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and
J une II from 8 a.m. to I p.m.
Appointments are not required
for registration June 14, 17
and 18.
'
Mirro"' 3-Piece
3-Egg Poocher
• Clod i11sidt with T1!11n II, 111w
white, 11t11·tli1• CHli11g
• fesy lo clt111 ... pDOche' eggs i11
110 lil!lt
• l ri9hl, slurdy 1luminu111
Time-All tirver
• St11t y111r 11flee pit ,_'"'"
lighh 11111d 1fl while yfl1're
gont
• Avlomalic ti111er c1nlrols lights
ond •P11li•n<1s
• Man, u1es ... dtpend1bl1,
Model #lf21-JS
7aa
Glidden Spred
House Point
'" Spr111ds 1111nly with ~n11h or
111ler
• folo.f d1yin9 ... 'l'olick 111111-1111
with IOOPJ Wcrltl
• 011rablt ouylic laltl fi11iJt •
Reg. 879
10.99 Gal:
Spred Latex
Trim House Paint
• (1111corrtlated11 Spr1d111d
tnd111ant1 H11111 Pai11!
• Mtdi11m 9ID11 li11i1h
• T11h; dean"' with w1t11
Reg. ·959
11.l! Got
t
PRICES (i00D THRU
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12
SERVICE
ON YOUR
MIRRO-MATIC®
PARTS EXTRA
larl Nedelman, Mirr• (onntllanl will be here lo ser~ice your MIRRO-
MAllC Pte\1ure Cooker , ond oruwer your que\tiO~\ on prenu•C
cooki ng. FRff SfRVJCf CHARGE ... yOu only poy for ports,
DO YOU KNOW?
• Wh.tn ~ur Prc11u•e Cooker
need1 o new 901kel
• How to cook more thon one
lood ol a lime in your
Pre11ure Cool.er
• How lo moke fuU u1e of
your Pre1sure Coolter
6-Qt. Polished
Mirro-Matic<''
Speed Cooker
Made of super-rhick aluminum.
Limited Supply of Ca•kers
.. How to odopl your lovori1..,
redpe to Preuure Cooker
cookinq
• How !O moke denl!rh ond
breod\ in yo ur P1enure
Cool.er
• How to reduce pre11ure
prope•ly
1599
-4-0t.CtltrtdC00•1r .................... , 17.99 I-Qt. Polid1td C10•1r ................ , •• , 22.99
6-0t. Coltrrd Coo.er ..................... 19.99 22•0!. P1lislttd Coo•rr ................... 39.99
• Double Omelet
Mirro'• Fry Pan
Mirro® 9 " Round
Layer Cake Pan
• New, while Tef11n ll i11te1i1r
• Ch1i1t 111111oc1d1, PIPPY Ir ho'"'" gol d e111,ior
• 1r1dp1s1ep11d11<td 111 sidls
lri ~Sink~ Erator
Garbage Disposer
• ND mort lftfs1y, tfrWy (
r 9cnbo9t ~s
• Easy fa i11st1ll ••• de it
yeurstlt and save
• lifetime lWrir•tion ••• qvitl
fVttnint
• U,l. -....i. lloffl !DJ . .
31aa
.1 .
GarogeDoor
Opener
• Ued11nicallr op111s end d11ts
garage d11r -ea1, 11 instoll
• 1111111 ligh1S: on and 111
• SO' r11di11s 11 op11ati1n
'" (Hird i11sid1 with whilt Ttll11
II 111 non-slit• b1~in~
• MttWJWei9hl 1l11111in11111 f11
eYlll heat di11fi1111li111
• l11r I• d1111
0111 lror""''"'' Two lr1111milltf
Re9. 109.95 ltf!. ll.t.tS
99ss 109ss
Right or Left ~~
Basin Wrench ""
• Oper1!11i111ith.1 ilir11ti111
• Use ofl Mt in 1111ts, "•ll<11ks,
tic.
• S11pt1 siring, drip f11grd steel
with l1111ff11ed !11th
fTIOOOA
299
Kerm's Plastic
Trash Bogs
• Slurdr plaoic, weatM1p111f
'l111h can li11trt
• ldtol far ll1sh, le11111, elr.
• IUJ n1w 111d sow ti
32-Gol 199 Pig. el 2S
,, .. , SA ~IA ANA
cost A
Ml~A
. -
I
. ... . . -
$
SUMMER SALE
•NEW 1974 •
KAWASAKI
lOOCC G4 153000
1'91 Sl'tl!D
IOOCC G-3
750CC H·2
'430""
'1685"
1974'1MW
FACTORY
DEMONSTRATOR$
ONE OF EAC»rt ·ONL'r:
750CC R75/6 '2300"'
900CC R90 /6 '2450" • • • Mew 1974 tMW •75/,,
t t 0/6
& tto s,.t .... ....,.
For '"'"'"'-" o..i¥....., Cltelct Of S...
ILOf'9IT .. 1
*HE~ 1974 *
*NORTON*
One Only -Blue Roadsfer
850CC SI ciq5
tt14 ••d l blodi ca-1111h
•-•ilablt tor il'lt11tdi1lt
dt4i¥~,
'2295
100% Financing
Ava1l!lbla 0 .A,C.
CHAMPION
:MOTORCYCLES
1910 H.-•Yd..
Co•••~
642-2311
AWARD
MOTORCYCLES
Bonda, T't'iun1ph, Yarnaha
1600 Nc\\·port Blvd, Costa
l\lesa .
642-4345
'74 Hond11 Jl.tT 250 Elstno1:e.
Low 1n i npw eond. ST:>. li!O
"E. 2111 1 St. Cl\1 .
. MX-1618/S.18-62:"6.
'68 YAMA~IA, ZiO CC twin.
• Scrnmh, Xlnt mnd., $200.
w/hclmct 673-W:tl all 9
Pl\1.
'72 HARLEY DAVrDSON.
Sport!!lcr. 1000 <"C, $~.
inv~stcd, Sell or ! 64G-3.l.13
ev<'s.
·72 Honda liaSL $550
·70 Suzuki 90 5spd $250
54<l-8397
Motor Homes,
Sale/Rent 9160
... ~ ...
DODGE Po\\'er \\'11.st&n, 1!173, • ;o l.tW
S Cu1npcr shell, 11.uto, p/11, UIA ~Ton. P h:kup, 12,(Q) 1nil11:i:, •• ••t1
p/b, JlO•I ll'•cll<m. LoO<l•<i. YOLYO
w/xtra11, Must 111.'ll ltn1ned, ~.000 F'irm 64~7700 CJ\ lll 1966.J·larbor, C.M. 646-~
Truck1 9560 '73 AUDI 100 LS, 11.ulo !runs 2
d r, sunrool, 13,fiOO ml. $4,600 'iJ-:d AtritvaS.U:Y ()I' be&t onc1· 675-7286. • .. Rt1«1«i tor 11nl boat.
SPICIM. '72 AUDI IOOLS Aulo. lrWlS.,
'TI l"ORD ~li TON PICKUP. 1unroof, & ilnmacuJate In &
V8 engine, radio. heatrr. out. &ll-:»10 Dir.
au t O'>n at le transrnbr!kHl, Austln-li•aley 9709 1 s2'!nJ). $2399.
THEODORE ROBINS AUSTIN HEALEY '62
'69 DATSUN
ROADSTER
'1 11pccrt t1·1;nsn1l5Kion, radio,
heall•r, \ YQX.'i33,,
$1077
:Ow. LtADiA
-TOYOTA
FORD NEEDS WORK 1006 llnrhor, C.~f. 6-1('~9303
a>6<l Harbor Blvd. S36-46Tl Coil.a Jl.fesa. lil69 SPRITE. 42,00J nii. '73 DATSUN. Limt> Krn,
&U-0010 or S.~8211 R&ll b'OOd cone!, $1150. Yin_yl top, air .. mag rim.s, pin ' !lGS-3001 stripes. ~dials. MI" ch.
'74 TOYOTA
Best Deal
Anywhere!
LEASE OR BUY
All Models!
' ~w.Le00
-TOYOTA.
1966 H1lrhor, C.r-.t. 6l&.;,:,113
'72 TOYOTA
CORONA CPE.
Auto Trans, Li~hl Blue, Lo
1nllet1, {31tiESE1.
~WtluviA
YOLYO
1966 Harbor, C.:0.1. 646·!1.lf'l.'l.
'70 VOLVOc'1
4 DOOR
9915
'6.i FLEE T \\'OOD
Brougham, ttll P"'r options
+ ('MJi..~c c'Ontrol , Gold
\\I Blk V. 1011. Lthr ,
A 111 om n ! i c: ll'ans1ni•sion, li7:~7:H9
radio, heater. 171GCXV! I-, ,~,-,-"'-~E-L--D-O_R_A_D_O
$1777 \\'I EXTRAS! r.ttl\'1'
CONDITION! 16!>)(1. C"ll
83>-J&tO
•
'I\••• ll11:.1 '67 Coupe DcVil\c. an·, aUwn. QUMI A~/F~1 r:11llo. Gd t'Oncl &
YOLYO n~. """ ..._...9
'67 DA'fSUN Pickup, ~'!==~-=-='-'--~=~I Pei,:re1•1 . 67!Hi680. ·~"~'~'~"~· s~:,...~oo~·~""'~---, j;B;;M;;W;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9;;7;;12; i' Honda 9727 1966 Harbor, c.~1. 646-930.1 Camero ::: VOLVO '69, UH. , 4 dr sed. 4 CAM RO i p S '73 DATSUN PJU, n1ags & '73 HONDA Civic hatchback, pd P.'11 Cl E A 'ti· I', PIB,
$2349 9917
hi Xln nd $3 (KXl CUii •uT• IKAUI ro1 8 ·• •"'-• eao, xtras. l't."ttnt overhaul. ::; u p e r :ve:·~ . ' . BAVARIAN ~11~~.ust sell. Oest oner ri.050. 494-9.\11 clean. s1m. Call 54S-3565.
VOLVO-'70 -142 S, !n1/am,
'71 CHEVY PU. Custom cab; M & i l97l HONDA car. 45-5(1 01pg u!so '68-145 Nia. \\'ag. air, Chevrol•t 9920
pis. j>I~. eamper snt-11 , .Q ,.,. new eng, gd cond, $550. -"=========-l'flnd. calt C'Vl'S 557-4662 . ll,<m mi .• !!M--2991. • s e4900•~e • 1----------. ~~ ' Uni A-YaSAllY 1972 l'CURIER, one o\1'ner, Karmann Ghia 9735 ,. 5-....1 ... AUTOS USED 53rd ....... 8.5.UY
w/shC'U. Excel. l'Ond, 11ew '"-.......,. SPICl4L th~s. $2100. 556--7ffi0 '71 KARMAN GHIA General 9901 '71 TOYOTA ~1 1\11 . Rad lo,'--'-'·--------'73 CHEVY NOVA. 4 r""ir. 1972 CHEV. Luv PI U. BUY or LEASE Excl'.'Hent condi1ion. New ·1• '-""
0
"·-• .. .-X • & heater, ~ Sj)('l'<I truns1ni:;-Radio, heater, auto1natlt·,
'71 LTD liHOUGJIA.\I. Harlin,
heater, air l"Qnd., p1111cr
steering -brake~ -1.1•1n•l<iws
-M!at!S. 19770FC 1. S:.!·115.
THEODORE ROBINS
FORO
2060 Hurbor Bl\ rl.
Costa '.\<lesti .
642·0010 or 5--I0.8:tl l
'72 LTD B1'01Jgha1n. :!<Jr, full
pwr, air, vinyl top, cus-
torn paint, 1\hl' C:.'U\'<'11'.
N~11 stet>! 1>e11s. ::1.rro
n1iles, l\lint _ (,.i1111. $2:;!15,
644-3429 day~, 61..>--4362 f'\'C\{
'72 FORD Squiri~ ~ r•a.ss. Sta
\Vag. P/S, P/B, a l r,
Ai\1/f!\1 stereo, lut: rack .
Orig ownr. 6i3-1."1Ts'/evcs,
ots.i-m2
CORTJN,\ '70, CT \\'agori.
Exeel. contL. i'J,000 n1i.
Fi1-s! 0Hc1· over S 7 5 O . :.uJ .... j679 /s1z.cu w1ull & tires .• Int NOWI hres paint. 645-3731 or . 1.'0l'ld. $1500. 1146-8173 • 9liS--08f'3 s1on. air rondllloning. (531-ttir l'Ondltioning. 1260GIV).
cwx1. s1x1a. QUA S25:i0. J9io t>UHD
'68 DODGE, ~T P.U. 318
V...S, auto., low mt~.
Excel. cond. $1250, 645-4358
Beat the price increase
& llUrcharge
XI.J,'T SELECTION 01-~
NEW 1974 BMWs
at pre.reva.luated pMces
Mazda 9731 THEODORE ROBINS LITY THEODORE ROBINS °'"'"" '1'' FORD FORD lwalC'r. SJ5j(J,
Ranchl"rll, 1
rond, rudio,
j •40-7337,
'71 MAZDA RX 2 USE S :i.·11.a;n • 2060 I10<bo1 Blvo. D CAR 2060 ""bo' Bl>d. .-,:;;:, "-'Lro;:."",v=~~-~-cpe, Blue {868EMZl C,osta :~1csa. • C:O:.la !\lesa. ago~, lo n1ileage. $189l 64Z·OOIO or :HG-8'111 SUPER SPECIALS 642-0010 or 5-IO.R211 ale. p/11, pldLe.c brks. lug
'61 FORD ECONO, rebll ~£:'\ LBASE A BRAND NE\\' '741 '69 OlEVY SS. Air, vinyl I ~~~lnC\\' tires, Sl850. eng., w/3400 ml, 6 cyl, 3 sp .,...,,...IL.rU 1·0YOTA i:m Corolla S<!dan • roof, vinyl Int.,· radio, oO''-"~=-~-~~~
trans. tju.'lf rebltl new gen, ~ for only $6126 ('~r n10. 36 heater, & rallyc "·heels. '62 t'ORD Cntry Squil-e
carb, tune-up, rear end, .,..__ n.os open cod lease. 72 Mazd W f462FKD) $899 Cash or \\'ar;on, Great running
clutch, brks, m11fjlcr, Mon-c..:::E:..=.:..::=::!..~---== G OCJOft finance646--4446Dlr. family lransp: , $200. ~ shocks. mag , \11hla & 2'1-Kl'l Mal"gueritc Plll'kway ?\~.,, tire:;, luggage rack & '65 E-L CAMINO "o716-'-""3"6~I~~---=~
lireN door assembly & han· JI.fission Viejo 1 c=~~~-----sharp! t582GJP). Immaculate cond. i\1\ l\CI\' 'i·I tl)RD Ranchcro. Fully ~Jes, storage spaee 1~n 1~ar. USE AVERY P\\'Y EXIT. _M_o_rc_od_o_s_Be_M ___ 97_40 s·2l)99 running 1o:eai'. ;..1ust sec to NJUip'd. One 0"11er, Shown
-cw gm. crpl. ".U-OUI, 8.11-IDtO • 495-49-l!l appreciate. ti73--7774. by appt only, 833-&'20
new upholstery, l1lrta1ns. &1.,...,.,....................... '74 MERCEDES 450 SE Ex· • "'•nellin" BONUS l~t 1· ,. r. I ("-7 w 60 Che'''' Station \\'a<>on. 1972 LTD. all P"T & air., r-.... rac. ORANGE COUNTY'S ecu ivr ._....r ·one on Y ""'l'-0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;, 0 Datsun agon ~ " Excel rond, .,. -,,-,, tape deck w/tspcs. Gets 20 OLDEST ' la! No. 017141). b'ullv et1ui"-N~s '74 plates, bt'st <lffe r. " "' ... , y '71 T 1600 N ,. & h (O•]•"K) Good '-'8·"~ I $1700, &16-1309/963-6601 mpg. Really a per f pcd. $228.43 mo. lease for oyota 1 e\\' ires · s arp "" .u-.. trans . .,,.. """" a tcr 6
Investment al a per£ time. 36 mos. OEL + T&L. \\fhu $1399 pm. 'i2 RANCHERO, D c I u x e S'~ h & ~ Nr\1• brakes, tires & halt. 11 L'k XI ·' ...,.,.,, cas · 645-29!0 ,.,. ·• lt"ase 4 yrs from others -1965 Cor\'air for S(1\t• ~100 1111 · 1 c neii·. nt l'Ullu. Koni shocks. Dyno-tuncd. e ~ · I"""" ~·· "002 s ·
9' when you pay no more for U>iv ntileagc. J\1nny extras. 64 M d c~ll after 5 pn1 o.IUU. ,,.,:i-voo am .. i pin. '5JN ~AIY a 3 yr lease \l'ith \lli. It• Orig. o>,1•ncr. Pi•i. party. erCe e5 ti4a-4791 'Tl F'ord LTD, ~ dr. xlitt ~ Jim Slelhons Best oUcr. 6 4 5-2 3 4 2 ,\ u, 0 in a 1 i (' iransmission.c --h-,-y-,1-0-,""-"''-'-----1 <:ond. Auto !rans. air. \l\\I'
An· .. in1c. air conrlitionio• & 0ng· ;,,1. 9925 str. 01iginal 011ner. Sl900.
·10 tl)RD VAN. \\'lndow \'an. BMW Imports '' b 673-1961 6 ('yilnder, 3 speed trans· 1974 's A real beauty! (245Dti3L '&.I:: CHRYSLER \\'AGON.
mission, heater. f2808STJ. In slock ready for lmn1edlate 1301 Quail ·70 TOYOTA !\lark 2, 4 door, $1299 LO<Hl<'d, t'ull JX11vct•. VACA-'7'1 FORD Gr11n Torioo Sl;1. ~~-, deliverv. Excellent savinas Ne1\•port Bt"ach a uton1a!ic J;:"ood l'Undition. 1·10;-.; SPt:Cl,\L. Cared ror \\'gn. Pis. p/b, uir. or\g. '' ·~ ~•9300 !1150. o1\1" .... sell. Phone e I O"'"n~ ~;2 ~•· THEODORE ROBINS on remaining 1973 models. .....,.. ""' s nee ne1\" 511).7063 or =-~·="o-o-~~~-~·~-~--~ FORD SAL.ES-SERVICE!.EASCNG ENTER FROltt}.IacARTHUR 645--:l196 69 Mustq_nq &16·9797. '71 LTD \\'agon. 10 pass .. air,
2060 H bo Bl d OVERSEAS DELIVERY OYER '6$1 TOY0'1_°1~ 12?J. Radials 302 Ei'Onomical y.g engine 'i2 TO\VN & co u n 1 r y P/S, nJ('k rarli<1I tires.
Vans 9570
eos:1.:' 11.r'°csa.v · ROY CARVER, Inc. 35 USED Good ronthllon. 30nlpg, S600. & elt"1;1n! jZGE311 ). ChryslC'r \\'g. 31,000 n1i, air Oe11n. SI~. 5.'>2-7120. 499-2360 e\'e., l213J 391).3-161 $l l 99 , I ·--•-I -~RD L I 642-0010 or 546-8211 ROU.S ROYCE BM'V ext. 582 days. conn. P \\'l•ruvl\'S, P sent, "'" rv !(, tx'il \\' \\'hite
RENT the be!lt! 'i3 LEAVING for Ha\\•aii n1ust 234 E. lith St. MERCEDES ·~,-1 TOYOTA, ~lark II, Cl"b • an1/ln1 stcrt'O, in xln1 \'in top. po\\·er. ai1". Sll25.
Ex•cutive, 25', all xtras. 11 ' "-1 •1 e "'A" AAA~ ... cond. pn.'. pty. 6-l-l-023S. Ca.II 963-2832 se my van, '61 FORD Van, ........, u "e11a .....,.......'"" ON DISPLAY cpl'. Vinyl lnp, F'M sh'reo, .i 69 Toyota --· Free m i., 9i9-9056 5 to 8 PM new '65 eng., new u~. LEASING pd . dial P 1 p Continental 9930 ·~.,,..,..cu_ STOi\l 390, Gd tires. s ' air. ra 5' v . ty. COROLLA 2 DR .....,., 1973 2'1' \VINNEBAGO n1otor-mags, . tape rleck, totally SPECIALIST'S S16.'i0. S.1&f:i741 • ·73 i\1ARK I\' full fX>\\"er
71 PINTO
Runabout
Ne111 ycllQI.\' \\'ilh 4 l!il~I I
radio & air C01WJl!looln1. ;\ ••
l'l'a! bargain! 11\901DL
·Only $1488
Sint .-VllSAIY ·
Sl'ICIAL
'i:I P1:;1'0' \VAGONS. :!OX)
En~inc, r!Nio, healer, au1rr n1a1ic, l~e rack . 1213· J~;si. LoWI 8.$ ... S2JOO.
THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
2060 !!arbor Bh·d.
Costa l\ICSll.
642-!XllO or !'>-IO-i!2l 1
'ii PINTO. 4 speed, mags,
radio. heater, low mile5 &
On!.' owner! GREAT GAS
S,\\IEH. S1499 or beiit offer.
Casll or finance. 6-16--<w.IB
Dir.
'73 PINTO \\'agon, top n1ileage, BUit), air. A n!BI
hc11.uty! ~1--0999 "·knds &:.
eves .
'73 PINTO, 4 spd, Z5 l\t PG ,
/\fake oHt>r!
1·19J-.9.iii8
Plymouth 9960
ATLAS
Chrysler I Plymouth
Open Daily & Sun. 'til 10 PM
2929 llarbor Blvd.,
C:O:.ta Mesa
546-1934
·72 PLY!\.IOUTll DUSTEP.
16,(00 mile!, excellent. 2
Door 1-1 .T. Au1omstlc, po>A·er
steering, po"·er brakes, air
conditioning, Yinyl roof.
1965EXXJ . S2675. Johnson &
Son Lincoln/Mer<."ury, 2626
Harbor BL, Ci\1. ~(}.5630.
'72 PLY:\iOUTII Satelllte
St;1. \\"11.K· PIS. Po11.·er disc
brakes. pow1·r n:>a1· "'indo\11,
r ael. 'tit". ;\t·w il'Jlo. ll't\ll!l.
Bt•t1utUul c-<1r. 1\.'!king $1950.
9AA-HJ71 all. 4P1\I
'i3 DUSTER, 3-~pd. 6-eyl,
:.:ets ii mpg., very clean.
14.~:100 niill:'i. Only driven by
\\'ifc to \Vork. $2195. Private
party. ~1-51:11.
'68 PLYl\tOUTli F'ury III.
Good cond. P/S..P/S. Air. 2'1 hrand nell' tiT"l'.'s $ 7 0 0 .
~10'.?1 be[ore 6Pl\1
Pontiac 996S t
196j POi\'t!AC Ten1pest. ~:
spd. rccen1 \'al\'C job. $100.\ 642-~601 '
$400. or bc11t offer. home, has everything. ltclili. ~2~1:1 P.l p G' ~n:ice during lease period House of Imports '69 TOYOTA Corona. Good Sharp. Sharp, Sec lo believe! AJl.1IF:\1 SIC'roo s i I\! c r ~"'~"'c:.:.."· ~96~2~~~""""-'----· I ;cii'.;;:;;;;,;;;"";"':-,=::;::::: 15 important. Crevier Bil1\V 523-7250 t.'Undilioo. $10CKJ. Original IYXHL7UIKl.E NEW edition xlnt. <'Und. 968-8703. Motor Homes, '66 DODGE Van, ~·indows, .\\·as awarded 1he BM\\' =~===='=~~~ o\\'ner. Call 67.>-8197 Counar , 9933 S•le/Rent 9160 clean body, int. New engine, Service Awurd by Hollman '66 J\fERCEDES 2j()S, Orig. • .,
'6.i PONTIAC. \
':'17 Jo"'ORD. 2 dr. auto .. ,·ery ~---;<_1_-1_,~18~--
cl e pend abl e transp., Veg a 99741
$125/Bst. oflcr 55&-S296 I -~---------1
8000 ml. $1200. 497-1947 or Jl.lotors. \Ve are dedicated paint . XI n t con d. Volkswagen 9770
e VACATION e
AT YOUR OWN PACE .. -
Choose from So. Culif.
"Largest Selection.'·
(0\'er 40 Jl.11nls & J\1.11.'s).
494-2427 Dave. to give you good i;ervlce 011 1'1 e cii an i ca 11 y sou.nd 72 Mazda
1972 F'ORD, a/c, auto. many your nc11• B!\fW. Sec us "'/e\ecL sunrool, 4 spd, R & '73 Volkswagen ROTARY SEDAN
xlra.s, xlnt cond, askini; before You lensc any ·BJ\fW. Ii. Best offer. Call 640-f.j3S G Clean, only 31,650 rnilcs &
DALES
MOTOR HOME
RENTALS
$2850., 842-il76 afl 6pm Lurge shipment of '7•1 BJl.f\Y's aft Spm. SUPER BU runs g1•ca!~
'65 Cl-IEV. V-8, mags, gd. just 11rri1•cd. MOii! models '71 f\.J'BZ 250 Sedan Auto. -4 io;pce.cl 1rnnsn1.ission, radio, $1499
body, runs good! $1600. 4.sk ~vailnble for immediate de-trans., air, AMIFi\1, i\fich. lielltcr. i.000 oliglnal 111lles.
for P..Iark, ~5479. 11\lery. X radials, & IO\\I 1nilcs. ~-U~llDAl. •
• 1971 CHEVY 20 VAN CREVIER BMW 831-20-W Dir. $2677
Redhill .'l S<tn Juan, Tustin
• 11141 838-0000
Priced right -OO·rea!lOnable :Il8 \Y. 1st St., S.A. &'l.5-3111 '58 MERCEDES Benz lq()SL e Finance . 1· R,,10-1,.· "· HT, 1-w ,,,.,1. 11 .. ,Y spec1a 1sts on offer refused. 49J..5247 '71 B;\tW 2002. AM/FM, 4 '" ... ..
'73 DODGE Van, 100. custon1 spd, 36.00J_ '!Ii, :"Clnt oond. ~8-~4,~~·\l~s~tch, c!C'. $3250. -f\..,11111 L111~.a • Qu;;.lity \\"arranty 'f.? Pace Arrow 2:1', 1100 mi. Roor air & s1orage,
generator, stereo. Xlnt cond
$8500 co II Ms..8487
everything_ See to apprec., $3200. Call .l36-8240. lUWATOYLOUllTAID • Nc11N· Ec'W' •T'C'dAe·inR' Call Steve, 642-8769 Capri 9715 ·~230 SL. !\lint, A.~1/Fl\1 S
U U
,[~;;!:;:_ _____ _:~ 1rk, l\·lichelin. S4,000.
JI.'! ST se 1970. Fo rd 1 3 CAPRI 9!)S.Si01 eves. I
Supervan. m 0 v In g 10 7 n....1 9746 1966 Harbor, c.~1. &16·9303 DEALER SHARE WINNEBAGO
al9'o interest, use 1D \\'eeks a
year. Phone M0-0-182.
Europe. Sl795. Ph: 847-86i9 Automatic, air oon<lilionlng, ""t-
'69 CHEVY Van 108, new \'6, radio, heater, lo"· n1ilc11.. NEED 1967-68 or 69• Opel 69 YW Bu9 2150 Harbor Blvd, C.M.
tires, brakes, shOcks, duals, &'C lr, You'll buy it. (831-t,o.;y ;uKI framC' only, Ca.JI Bcautilul blue. \1•ith 4 ~pef'fl. 645-5700 '71 C fl E V . Red-E-Cam1>.
xln't Ct)lld. Self ront. ?\fany xtra~. P\'I ply. 6ia--0679
mags $1600 960-251-t JJQ). 61~ radio, ht"ater & air t.:Ondi·
' Autos Wanted 9590 $3477 ·n OPEL l\Ianta LID:us, tioning. t315CRPJ.
i;.110. air. 10\'o' nii, la i\1PG. Only $1388
Trailers, Travel 9170 j
'71 GOLDEN N"<•" trh'. C~DILLA~S I "'·· .. L • 32". Ideal for bea('h or Largest Selection .UU\ t1D14 nlooncnln re1reat. S<'H-conr. In Orange County TOYOTA
Gas or el('CL refrig, Air Coupe DeVille--• Sedan l)e..
'rond. Riviera !'Ofa . $41\Jfi. ViJIN -E' Dorados -Cor · , 17141 623-157a days, l2l:ll l'l'l'tibles. Also niany oth(!l' 19fi6 Harboi, C.M. fi•l6-930.1
886-f\959 alt 7piTI. sela·t C:icl:llac Trade-ins. SJrd A ... VllJWY
t<' SHASTA. Sil>' 6. "°''"· e;· !!' :~~ Sl'ICIAL .'!ink, ice hox, kook-u11s. $600. · N-~~6 . · ,
details, 8374f!O. · 2 · -~llWdf;. ·72 CAPRI. H.adio, hcn!er, 4
'68 Sl-I-i\STA" ~fiite tS'::', ~:M0191 speed, a~ ronditioning. (031-
slceim 4. $1050. _-i;:· ·-·-EOl l. .S2;J'i9.
!tti'.!-11476 TOP DOLLAR PAID THEODORE ROBINS
Trailen, Utility 9180 IMMEDIATELY FORD
JEEP tro!l<:t". gd 10.ply !ires.
brakes, Xlnt cond * 496-BT.,O *
Auto Ser. & Parts MOO
FOR AU. FOREIGN CARS 2060 Ha rbor Blvd. Cosla Mesa.
Call or oome in to see us. 642-0010 or ~(}.821 \
Datsun 9nO
Spotless .• 83G-5500
'71 OPEL Jl.1anta Rallyt•
J6.800 ini. 4 sp, radki, Good
cont!. Sli:"1l'.l. 830-1865.
Porsche
PORSCHE
·7~ 914 2.0
9750
Fully luxury equippPd.
Complete. NEW. save lik('
ci·azy. Black on Black.
$7695
Phone 558-1000 DLR.
BARWICK DATSUN ·~" '" ~ A.long the San Diego Frwy.
SAN JUAM CAl'l$llAN0 '~•·--.•··" ... ~· .. ·-· .,,, ..
49l·ll75 or 8ll·ll75
'i() V\\I Arlvcn1urrr Can1pe1·.
i\lus! srll. 1::1'.TC'I. r'Ond.,
!\Hrh. lirrs, el<'<'. rrfrig .
stove, e!cr running 11·a1cr.
bed, niajor turn', brake &
clull·h 11dj., S,:l200. Ph.
63:>-4020 or arl 5, &1~29S8
'i3 POJlSCHE 914-2.0. One ol Ask for Rob.
a kind p.'lint-appearance '70 v \\I SQUAHEBACK, ~ro1.11) -13000 miles -brand AJ\llf''l\I 1.,.11111 ... cli'Ck'
llC\\' •!0000 n1i l\lichclins. llP\\" brnk<$, runs gOl)l!. $1500.
S590(). firrn. 64t-lli9. 536-4llG
'64 PORSCHE, lntrrior xlnt, 1972 Yellmv V\V Bug. Tmmar.
nCY.' radial tires, xtras. Nds cond. Low nllles. AM/f':OI
t"ng. or will option ~·/rehl! radio. Radials. S 2 150.
DEL.TA tOxOO x 15 Off.Rood Slrcl A.MHIVliSAIY '62 Super 90. CUSTO!\IS BY IJ73..S400.
-~:'~1~~"~~r 5 ~~~h~ 3100 \Y, Coast Hwy., N.B. ~ ·~LI~5::i~ricl~ c;r.ne"' 'SJam~~. ~~·en~~~:;,~~
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
. 675-1345 642-9405 '72 l)ATSUN PICKUP. !Wdlo, paint. ne\\• brakes, good 40XI nii \\'aIT. 725-7J8l 7:30
U.S. !\tag Kln1s . 5 Jugs. WE BUY USED CARS heater, 4 speed tran111ni&-~'ft1:· Runs good. 6T,.770CJ AJ\1 to 4:30 P~t. Duffy.
Exccllenl cnrxt. 1.f''. Allklng slon. 1889581. $2199. $80. Call 5.'l.().63•10. AND TRUCKS THEODORE ROBINS '72 SIL\TER Targu. 2.4 !tllT 1972 Super bug. B 8 i 8
Co1ne in tor a free ap11raisnl FORD 1.4. Super (.'Und. •For lnfor. packagr, only 16.000 n1i.
'57 CHEVY, ull or parts, 4.11 to GROTH CHEVROLE.,', 2000 Harbor' Bl\·d. call 644-5713. Tape rlcck, .'<Int L'Ond $2400.
rear end. 18211 Beach BlvQ., Hun!. Bl'.'h 9762 675-50".J()
Cull 5-ls-AT79. 8~7..fi<m :H9-33.1l 642_~Jan:1~':R2il Subaru ·~ V\V, Fnslblll'k. Xlnt 1.1111d·
• 'G!t V\Y C'n~lne ~for dune TOP Ci\SH Jor clean usec1l-~w'""iL"L""'B"'u~Y,..ocYc,O,:cU°"R-'T"OP DOLLAR 1tion 11 395. Pri\'. Party. Call
b11gR." I"! Best orfcr over $275 ,., 0 id li·u •·-979-643·1 ·
4,,1-17",,n CB 1 CM ' DATSUN, TOYOTA -w H d Ch I t FOR '67 V\\'. ve!'y c·l<.'1111, Rebll ~~~~~~~~ J owar evro e OR VOLKSWAGEN SPORTCARS ,..,100, ,1,., c<md. ss:~. c.u
;: ~1acArthur und JAmboree PAID FOR OH. NOT. \\'ILL 61~149 II c;:q j Nc......port .~aeh PAY TOP DOLLAR. C;\LL All nlO<iel11.t-yea~ BAJA Bug, Cotv:11l· po11.'C't'('(I, ----""8.'l>-0005"""----I KENT ALL.EN, 540-0M2. SEE US FIRST! romp. !11?1-UJl, nrve1• used.
\VE BUY 'ill 240Z, all factory opl, Best offer 673-3263
Gener•I 9510 l~tPORTl,:O Atn'OS Copper Bl'\\'n, air, mng11, 1 ---..... -•• ,..., '71 BUG, xlnt run cond. Gd 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j BEST PRICES PAIDI 8JTI/fm, 5JOO mi. 1k new. ii -..... _,,,,._ ·,· tires, Jo-n1 i. suindard shift.
I• Dean Lewis Imports S5-19S. 894-8608 l!HU•1111t•1t.c.11.. WS·•..:. $1700. 536-7161 aft.j
71 TOYOTA 1rsg Hrrbor. C.!\t. &46·9:«).; 1969 DATSUN 510 Toyota 9765 V'V Bug 1007 Nu rlutch &
t60J engine. New b1•akes, \\'ANT.ED to buy I 9 6 5 1800 ~46-4114 aft 6pm I-~--------brakes. $800 536-5112 after ll~s & bait. Konl shock!. Ct'M:vtllc l\l ulibu x tat Ion ·n 1600 eng. 9000 mi Ui(l '72 "l~ TOYOTA Corolla Sin. 5.
Fiat 9725
'7:1 COUGAR XR7. A!\1 r!\f,
<1ulon1ati<'. [lO\\'l'r scecrinK".
vinyl roof. j03QCXD1. $3175.
THEODORE ROBINS
FORO
:!(Xj() llarhor Bl\'d.
• Costa !\les11.
642-0010 or ~1().8711
'69 COUGAR. Gd l'Ond., air-
cond, PIS. $1200. Call eves.
::i.'l&-1614
Sell idle ilcms \\'Ith n Dally
Pilot Classiricd fld. 642--5678
Classified Ad! Call 642-5678
today!
Mustang 9952
'67 MUSTANG, Excel. ~·onrl.,
OC\\' nu!o trans. PS, sn1all
V~. air-rond. Best offer.
6i:'~743
'72 VEGA \\'AGON. Radio,
hentcr. 4 speed 1ransn1b»
sion, shnrp. 1718E'.JB) . .518~'2.
THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
-~-,~ . -' --' ~ -I --.
'74 FIAT 124 s rt Car
'74 FIAT,,£ L .. ~-
1 0
We have' a large Select ion of
New FIATS and
Late Model
SPORT CARS
0yn()otuned. lJ.l\\• n1lleage. wagon. n1ust have good la'.lO cng. 3400 mi. $..'160. \\'ai;, Luggage rack. 18,000 '69 BUG, A C, Tl<'I\' s t c e I ~1ANY t-:>..'TRA~. 0r,~!t 1• body &: good inltrior. Call Other pi1ru <:henp 673-1784. ntl. $2600 494-8339 radials. orig 0\1·t1'!r. S129S.
ownet. Pr!Yntc J11ir1)'. uo.:S -• 4 -0 MJI 612 91 I 6 k ·• ~'::;:"l<r:,_:,..:P~·~rn~.~~::::..;::.:_'~---DATSUN '2!0 Z-5.000 rnl. '67 CORONA. Completely [ ,;~~-~16::::..~•~l~. ::,:;°'~·~·~· ~·N~·~·~-1
oUcr. tinylhnt JUNK Ch"' llC'l."<lcd. Free 10\\.' Exlr1111. Best offer. Pl-I; ~bulll Po""'Cr Int.in. '70 'V\Y Bua. lmmac., Xlnt.
CUSTOM PAINTING & BODY SHOP
645-2342 flw.t)'. Ctsh for 1111 e. 546-lMl -~~Ca:::l~l ,:,•::ll,..:6~':!0"-'"1192-=:::2361::::._.1 \'t llow, aunroof. AM-f'"M, 1..,...,.,..,.~~.,.~~-· I ~tu·d~i'!l!l or cond .• C~I~ 19i4 D~A~T~S~UcN~~,~lo~w~ •• -,-n, '71 TOYOTA-Corortu-4 dr, I ,3'"",000"'-~rn~l~ .. ~673-e::::~"'~"1:::...., ___ ,
l'F'OR lilllc 2 itlil"G.5"11re~ ~ 1 4 • ·1 4 I ~ 4 1 6 8 01 ('\es fully equippt.'(( &llll under Jo"' ml. Asking $1372. '66 V'\' hug, runs \\'C'll. nt'(!,llllf
like llCW Clll f"r\, $QI, OS' ll3-~l~I-~ or!& Y.'81TI)'. slt-mi7 tBclo1\1 Book\ 545-73i6 bod)' \\'Ork $2..;(l, Tue~. ~121. CASll F'OR '72 DATSUN pickup \\'/.!!lwll 1969 TOYOTA CORONA 4 [-~--•::'9-:,,::16',l ~I ~-~
Antiqutl & Clas1ic 9520 '\'qUR CA!t l'am11tr "-'/blxit, ti up er donr. $1JOO. Ca11 MS-1."M FOR Sale, '69 V\V, in good -~= ~&-?070 clyan, $18.iO 4.116-L\'l.:i C\lt'., after ~Pi\I {'Ollri. s1aio. Ur' B1·~t !)(fer.
Cl .• flSSlC 'j4 Chevy \\'nirori l\lITOS. CAS1t PAlO •t.i DATSUN 610.'Sed. 7,000 '611 TOYOTA 2 dr, Corona 6-12-3508 ::ifl liprn
Grtal Shnflll!, 1111 orlg, S6:iO Runnln,g or not. '''recked l'nl., ~lint cond., S3 OOJ l\p()rt. t'Oupc. Cd eond. Priv &ifTdle itc1ns \\'\lh a Ditll~· -"~'·~""~'-'~'-"~'~"~"-~-'-"'-'--ok. 812-31.W ,r~1~,"~"~· ~&16"::c::>=m:..:... ____ · _ _, .. :::::''~'~· ~!12!='·~· ~•::93~·~0"'::· ~;.__ Pilof C1r.1111lflM ad . G42~567R
'• ' .
Our facility is equipped with lhe latest electronic auto11101lve equipment
• Open Daily 7:30 am to 5:00 pm ,· Open Thursday 7:30 am to 9:00 pm.
~ B.J. SPORTSCAR CENJE.R 1,.;_, ~ I~ 28 33 Ha rbor Blvd .. Co sta Mesa ~
,
•
'
•
Help Wi1nted, M&F 7100 f He lp W•nted, M&F 7100 Help W1nt1d, M&F 1100 AuCilon ..... 8015 Furniture IOSO G1r•a• Sale IOSS Mi1cellaneou1
T£LEP•IONI:: S 11I1•"' 1111• n \VAN'rl':D • * Col. R.F. Byerly * I Htlpl I Ovtrstock.d SUPER · NO JUNK? 'An-i \\'AREllOUSE
Thund ,'11, Junt f>. iq74 DAILY PILOT _;fj
-dio ~l•nos-&,-On;:rg:;1::n::-1-...,_~ii'7"e, .. =,::-,,'p•o=w::•::,,-"--,~i!J
lt.B. •tta. Ccnli l)liy, pJOd TYPIST CLERK l\10TO!t ROtJTI:: DRIVER & ASSOCIA1'ES W1rthouse. IJQUl!I, houR¥1'11re-, l11dll:'r L!QUIOATION
deft.I, no rjp.otf1. Ctill Toin IN WUTll LAGUNA AREA J)l\'('Nillcd Auctloooera l.1!. trpl. dn!uer/cht"at. or 11lct" cloth~• ti•'· Some OUT 0 1" TO\VN .
• PIANOS ll' BERTRAM '61
• 'ORGANS 1'w1n l>l More 1/0. 2 W'l
Netoc'C S92-tl77 1·6 pn1 r.nly U+ "'.p.n\, \o. l;ood nialh f'Olt 'l'HJ:; L>AILY PJLQT, LANO, 1VRQUOIS£, lae. dbl. door .1 dwr, Amulre goodkt from Unda I 1 l_e . BANKRUPT MFG.
Hprillvlt•. (;O()O 1·:,\Jt~INCS. 1-"'0R i\l!rO'S & E.'TC. Chest &tl. &: Sun., 10.5. U28 *PUBLIC AUCTION*
radio, lath on1e ter, Rental. fr $5 directional nu1.11v llnder, ~ outri .. •n, b&l< tonk, "'"" TRAINEES TJ:i11-:: \rOltKED. tilONO,\\' h • c ll Ln rr Doff Anply Ju Pl'r50nn.-1 l)(•pt. NATlo.:1N\VIDI-: CJIOICt; OF STYLE & omwa • o r, * FRIDAY 7 :30PM *
Openings tor \1(11111•11 1u; {j A~l·ll A:it, ~lun.·F'ri. THROUG H 1-'R IDAY LlL'f'n&ed, liof)dec.I & 111$urcd L'OLO~ Wt'llt'llff, N.B. ~lllny lrul'k kllidl, bffut Open Nights 'tll t lt>mp. f{lltfit:, 11.\110. ' nre·
extlnaii. l'lt'ad' illlh•y. xw~
C\)fttj, $13,500. 846·1604 • tral~s on lor 11lOl<l1n~ PACIFIC MUTUAL ~,~'.uXn~~~~;,: ~1(•mbt'r of N 1t t Ion RI S99.~ th\& 11i·erk. RECORO Pl~'tr &. antp . B It. O/K, V tt turn .. lteni~ S•t t 'tll S:3D, Sun. 12.J
n1nch1M opt•m1on; on nil tilOBN[t;GS. EXC1:.T.Ll-~T ,\IJCt~N AslOI:. All-962$ fH6..86!ll l)'lltc>m m. 2 T. "''indow alt I too n1unfftlus to menUon *Pl• & G d * 8hili.. ACt.-cplin1t expc>r. op. 700 Ne>A'port t 'cntt-r Dr. 0 p P 0 R 1 UN 1 Ty 1-'0ll ~ .6.10 S, Brood>A'lly, S.A. Dealer. welrome, 1ave, NVt'. l.'onctltkulil'ijj; unit s:w>. Large 1 pnrtWI llillng lomorrow·S . not r en I
eratoi'$ ILliO. l)hllt OOnu:s Ke>1vport &:nrh ~--~'99 ~2228 FOR ••• , .. Home lurnl•"""f• fan $10, Camera f'<tUl)I, Jlll""'r, Ualdwln • Cable· Oll~erlna SACRIFICE, Real Barplb1 17' Hydrmwlft Ski 6oo.t,
70tif) MCl'C motor o~
w,A1nerlcan trier. & 2 p~
or 1kl1. A rrcet ~ OA ·i'
lolal 1)1lck~. P\'I p(y
~1945 or 642-6800
ml d l I• I 0 ,. I SErin Ok It·~ Tl n ED .-.. ... "'~-Sa • , •• ~..... ••• •• .. •• , prf' um Pih on 511 n.it ,\. .qua pl)Or. i:.n1p oyo>r Pl::HSON LOOKING 1-'0R 8 icycl11 8020 purthu«I rrorn Rob\f\80n I fl:._., )11, t. Sw1 orG, 178 MASTERS AUCTION • ",.,.. "" • "' W40.4 . nlua.o
21'9.vtyMn:I. Oppor. 10 lr11!11 used •on1y 2rrio., Sora, 2 t!lu'll FalN•a)' Or, CM 1133-~ S.l6·S686 ·Knabe· At .. ·on.!: HaJr.'"I ·
on Milt ol )·our ~·ho11·1· 11 TYPIST t'l1•rk, rn~1 & i\Dll~:U lNCO,.dE. CASll SCll\\'INN CONTlNENTAL l ttom di t I U ED '·• I Jl\wt.tl • SohtrH'lr • Stelo-l{Ood 5trtrrlng 11·11~ & 3tJ 1!11~ lh'C\ll'lh'\ n (' (' .. ll s •Ir> ' HUND H.l::QUIHEU. 1"0R • 0 :.:i. n nn Ml ',;;,e s Carptltu..,, cerant c Op.•n 9 to 5, CIClllOO Swi. Wiiy . SIOn'y ~Clark. Wln·
proOOtlon11.ry perl<.:I. Co i'l<'11Jll:1111 off11•e> in :-ii•111W'lrr 1;\r0 H ;'\J,\TION C.\LI. lO itpd. $8.S. sent, deick & Ch1tlr, 1 fioor tUc, dra Pc r 1e 8 ' -BA°RT[ETT-!tr · Wnilltzf'r. Yamahu
.. h ... ~I n I'" I , • b n . .' " ' ' JllC'l~ JOt;Hnt:s J\T ----~·~l()-:..=1£83=---tixtUN')I(, drnperies, etc. call clothlT'IJI'., tu1!1q drca:aer, FLOOR COVERING N ... Splnet l .. M IMl"" ll11Hu nsuraucc. l"fi; ... ·11<• 1. tau , 1.w u1 •. "•~ ,\: &I'' ri·ii • ,Yili-{i!)!l'I &\G-3150 (d11ya), &ID-1561 tniac. SAT. 221 Millont, 1 ' • • .. " •• · ..,,,,., verll!X~i1Jy BAl\J.:JPl\l ~~io. l IOI Qu11ll, NI~, \V;;~·~D u1:i'i1111n::~-·b,-,-,,-,,,..-. , Cameras & Equip. 8030 C('\·e11 ) Cdl\1. GT.J-7040. 788 W. 19th St., C.M. ~~ r~ro1,1,1 , :".:'.:::-.:·: ~ 42' N1';w Chrl1-CraJ1
8o•t1, Rent/Ch•r. toSI
C l'I I . I 3 '" I II '" l"l So Hor111 -60 1 Quallty cu.~1010 ll t1or Grind• " n M NO SKIPPER IF
Molding Company 111or11lngs. 11fl(•l'J11J1111s, t'\'""· iiki\d~. Nu1'1h ltB. &IS.0~05. 11 It. n11r., i;u"Qbt.• cast', tll'llt. (!Oid. ~ P<'· Den set, til,\R£ g ,. n 11 e, "'en Arnunron: & Conaolount. *ORGANS* YOU1RE QUALIFIED·
a 1 • n1ect on T 'f p r S T ~ . 11 a r t·lin11·; · : . ..., 0 · '"' " · · inc Nl!\0:-10S ll, ll/\V Cruncra. ~l~VlNG • 1"Jt111t SeU nt t/3 ~ I l'\l\'erins:. l"cr.turln~ No too. 1 '· · ·"" · • • _,,, •
265 Br!gg11, Cutih• ~testt or wknd~, l'llu.~1 l>..' fa.-;1 ,(· \\' AHEllOUSEl\11\..V, Looking 1nd1·1u tu!Jto. SJ7r1. S.IG-31:11 ".' v r .111 y ctu!1tr1~~/a.ntic1uc ituuuicii."fl, 20 yen rs old ·Guaranteed lnstnllutlon & Baldwh1 • Conn • llt1.mmond • Fly·Bri(!Ro Sport Flllhorm1ut.
(1 blk. s. or llnk\T necurate. N.B. Ph. Aft. ti, tor 111aturc, ale1·t indlvldu11l Ext. 2:i6, C\'('S s.: 1vknd:1. v.rought Iron . .'~ 10u111i. ·MIJ~r "'·ith kids SJ.SO. Sornc I perhu·inancv. Over 30 yni. K•wal • KJnibflll ·Lowrey· Ph1ah, Full electronlc1, run
ort Rcdhilll 6M-J;,37 ll'llhng 10 learn & iil'l'1·p! IU7-.'H;1'l t'Xl(•1\ds to 12 l~ar gc ltH'k ('lfpc.•r. R0C4:era • Tho1naa: •. J1l· gnlll"y, 1bower, etc. F~ l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•ITYPJST for t,vpin~ of ~pi·i·I· responslbl1!1y In e>St6hli~lll"d cht'lltnut suede saddle bi1s ' M2-Mli:I j FREE ESTIMATES aha · Wurlitzer. C'hurter · hy day or v.·eck,
TRAINEES flcatinns. 1\ccur:.tl)' .J.. Spt'Crl N\'\l'J}l)t't Heiu·h "'Ir nl c-=··~·=--------80=35 chair, quality co111truclln11. (·all 646-1442 Opll111n ................ Sl:-icl Jo'lsh, cntll!O, cocktail, etc.
11 niu1o1. Cull Bl' v r r l y, 1nvc!1•ed ln Ya r h 1 i n g . -Aztec tnbte lamp v.·lth Jewelry 8070 ---'·=..;;.;:..:.:.::. ___ I Lowrry Spinet ........ St!l) 64a-2200, 002-2301 Sund•;y
In lite IWll'inb!y & rt>~in t'IU'I· 8.l.l8S20. l•arkpa(·k!ni:: .~ s k I w c n r \VAN'fEU. Siamese Sealpolnt -~"~'"~·~·'~"~~~"~""=-----!·---'-------SCRAM-LETS WU<l*lt"'w' SlpNlnt.!tR"E'wE ·*· S49!1 only. i ing. llKt 111iri. 5·0" C.Jl.1. oi-c;~'-'~====~ textil('s. Good ru1ure for f1·111. unl"t~g·d to brt\'<I INDIAN JEWEL.RY hand t' EXPLORE ISLANDS !
a reK. S2 hr iilr.rl 97!l-!!li00. e TUTOR WANTED e right pt>nOn, f'1Ulng of wtllke rnkle for pick ol DRESSJ::R $12. DreS!Wr & rnnde by Nav~jo and Zuni, ORGAN LESSONS En.Rlish & Jl.falh, JI.tale for ordf'rs &.: ~1·rM>rn.I w11rehouse Jitk•r. {t-lti--0169 de~k ru. Table &. ctutlr:s \'C•r')' reason.a b"' 830-6815. Sall on beautiful 57' Ketch,.•
Typists
General Ofc
Ute Industrial
Lon.1:; .t· Shnrt TtTnl As..~lgnnit>nt:i.
NO FEES
MANPOWER, 'INC.
·l~S \r. 19th Stl'CT'I
Cos ta Mesa 64S-'2043
i23 N. Anahc<ini Rll·d.
Anaheim 774·8000
=quaJ Oppor. Em)Jlo~e>r
Typisl
SKILLED TYPIST
to enter date on \•irloo displ11.y
terntinal In ne"·~pap er
accounting orfi('('. ti1ust bl' a
fast and al-curate o.nd also
perform olher c I er I ca 1
duties. 1'1exible OA·orkin,I!
how'S possible for som('
evening andltir ll'C'f."k<'nd
\\Vrk schedull' in the future.
Goaj-pay aM l''(t'f'llenl
\\Vrking ('Ondl!ions n n ti
benefits ..
Apply to :P.lr.;. Green1nan
DAILY PILOT
330 \V. Bay St.. Costa ?.fesa
I~)' tnlel'lng Hi &hi. Jul) duTit'~. Call 645-lOOl $15 2 °-·k '1 pl Kl AKSWERS FULLERTON MUSIC Bxccl rate•; Mya or V."etk..,: Id N 'l'llREE rr<I Persian kill<'o~ · ,...,.,: "a e ei """' I Reservations req'd, Box 31$: !st to fll August. C>AT'Ort fur Sttle, S50. ea('h. \\'ith or uttil~ & t:oUee lable S.IO. Mlsc1lleneou1 18191 £.:uclld, Fountain Valley Balboa lale. Ca. 926b'2 or
llt'iu:h, 213-'67-7935 WELDERS v.•ithool paper:s a46---9965 Apt. size Re~. $25. Port. i Beavcr -DouJ:h -r"ount -557-4836 rall 615--8341. ~
WAITRESSES ARC I ·rv $25. Rock ?-.IR p I e H G Diinicy -IN DEBT 122 N. }larbor, Fullerton ERICSON 76'' 1\oop n. «jpt.
HOSTESS/CASHIER Dog1 8040 k\.nj,:il7.c bed SlOO. Dressing U E I Viict11loo: Tiwl'1 l\\'O "'M!kll 871·1805 sips. 5 Olart('r da/wk
.'.llu!lt be "'·•·I! """""n1ed & General Shop -t.ablt'.' $5. Sofa Jl2· l.rullps ln the country lollov.·ed by liiiiiiiiiiiioi.i.ii;;iiiiiiiiii pr/pty. 84&-0421! •·-· e PUPPY WORLD e ;ind 101s nK>re, or best oller. 50 ... IN Df""T -~='-'"'-='-----r rellahle. P.J(pcor_ hE"IPful. \\l ith P11id medical. vacation ~3 wee..,. .o · llR40 Hl\l\.tMOND Ton c
Surf & Si rloin & holidays. 3100 \r. Central, \\latch dogs • G c r man ALL DAY SALE I iiiiiiioi~""'iioiiii;iii&liiiO I Cabinet, w/Stereo Amp. & "&o'"'-'a'-lt"', ... s:c•:cl.;.I ___ .;:9060=1 59,'l,O \V, Coast H\\'y, NB lmSii"'ii'toiiiAiinii!!iiiiiiiiiiiOiiiii I ~·t~; p t::fl~s. ~~u~~: KlNGSJZE bed, xtrA tlrm, Over 50 pallets of *C;;:~:R T~r;TS* ~~~~Sr:: NEWPORT RANGER 33, Tinte 1t1! WAITR~SS WESTSAI L CORP Cockapoo, Old Eng 11 sh, new, inc\. mattress, bcOI: storage· &·row· Diltcount on R.an&es, l :!"'""'""'"·""~1530,...,· ""'""'" cruising, time for rnclng,
,'pply '·,, ,....,...,,.,. •·~ .. .,..., .. '"· HAS OPENINGS Samo y (' d, Dachshunds. sprifliS &. f.rame. $165. Combined from 4 Companies Sink ll lrl 1 00 S this llOll.t l'l'ady, priced to ,.~'""" vt''"""'" " H k' Pug 100 ~IXED {M?,rth $ 3 5 0 ) · Queenaize l. BAL BO A TRANSFER s, e gs, ce xes, portl-Goods 8094 Mill. 644-5662 afl 5 ~;~~~oo' PR" '1-.J<>i mNe. E Lt Ltlrgc bonl builder net>ds: eUPS~s, Stud sServic~ ~lost Slt>. In('. delivery. Usually & STORAGE vents, ~nd°"'l!• poMs, skin, ~--""'-"--~~--VENTURE 17 ])(>luxe. Many
• • H>.:i ev.·por ./Carpente.rs 502'i home 832-2488. 2. LAGUNA BEACH VAN oil coolers, etl·. SKI RACKS, roof & trunk · 8h r!. C.:il. 'C"bi·,,,1 M"k"-81"C!f'ds. Open Eves, 531-p Phone 548-0213 t I"'" I I":. ex1rns lncludlrig trlr ,I(;
<r " « """ MOVING E·~·. • STOl"GE ypc .. ,..,. mos cars. ..,, >lOIOl' s~ RI Id WAITE RS ./ElcctrieiRns BE~\UTIFUL Httle Yorkshire no>• "' v. ell ~4852 1 • WIN. vt•rs c,
T · g k Id S'-" l\.1Usr Sell by June 12th. 4 3. HARBOR MOVING & STC. BARTLETT -,,·,,..-,·"""~~· ~~~ (7141 684-4232. Only ll'C'll exper need apply. </Enginl' Installers Cfrlt'ts. \\' s. 0 · u-..u J>JlO Set Goll Cl'· al
St'e P~·rsonnel l\1gr. ./Plun1bers by AKC CH Ki r 11 e I 's In\~· 11''urnilure, ~ ~m, 4. UNITED AM. VAN & STC . FLOOR COVERING $250 sa.l pr1 .u~ vi \Ile lS' ALP~ ClltalTUlrlln.
Balboa Bay Club Con1pt1ny cxpnnston has Bl uckarooho , Atales &I ',•,,m•,!~~ 64J'~ m''E: ISlh St~~~ AUCTION 1788 W. 19th St,, C.M. new' n;, ~. ~1917' nc. ..,·~.im~ 6ayW,,111c~~o J..i" I
l.>21 \I'. C··'t H·•'Y-. N.B 1'1'C'. aterl opet1lngs fo1· career or s w or pe. -~ "' C" p ol . -·--· Sa & Su ...,, '" e r son lzcd ln11tallatK1n, TV, R-"lo,'HIFI St. •-Eves 557. -8965 nunded people. Apply Now. eves. or t n. 1 N B d c 1 ~· WAITRESS IV n1 d S•t & KINGSZBEO,$~.H•-ulon UNCLAIMED a.me ran. 11.rpe ~· · . a e · "' · 1638 Placentia Ave .. CM RARE brff'd Eg y pt I a n "' '"' G 0 SA B 0 T ~ c omPlete $125. Sun nn1 shift, Balboa Yachtl"'""""""""""""""""""'i Pharonh llound . 8 mos. oh!. Sofa·bed, $175. Spanish Tbl uarantttd. ver 30 ynr, SENNHEISER open air Chrome<t.,~ ... lote('C; Rear
c.1.uh, hncrvic\\:s -Thurs , \rIN S500 student grant. EKC Re¢st. $200. 8.JT...fi.l..i3 ~ 4 chrs.. S175. 9 Dr"'r * STORAGE * "frReE ESTIMATES h~.11dphone1 $25. Sherwood end. $63. 118 Santa Isabel, 4·~6pm, 673-351:1 Earn s thi11 Summer. F'ul!, or 54IJ.40!6. resser, $125 .. 'TI Scuba 130 rms watt fo'ti:I slcreo C.l\1.
\rAITRF.:SSES & KITCHEN pi t, neat, relia. Jl.1r. Levi -"'s~1.-""•C-C..,~n-a-,d'1-,-6~w'k-1-,-Tank, Ha"·aUan back-pack, SUNDAY, JUNE 9 Cull 646-1442 receiver n1odel S900A, INT'!. 14' sallboat & lrlr MELP. App!y l o andylion 846-5455. YW $70. 5.:J&-0181 alt. 6 p.m. 10 A.M. -ALL DAY I SURFBOARD & Wt.'T SUIT, w/walnut case $275'. Pr. Good l.'OOCI. Mllll sell. S1SQ.;
\\'ine Co. 332 Fores1, La~a '',~VO~><AN~~,-,~1~i"-,~in~&-.,..-,..~10r AKC SOl-'A &: matching chair-2481 ALTON ST. 1 Bing Swallowtail, no dings. C.S.?of. studio nlOl11tor spkrw Off . ?otkri.oc!r y ht¥
Bearh. C'klerly invalid llldv,, room, 8.JZ-962:5 v Y nlOdem-overstuUeded * IRVINE * 1 $40. Se
125
a Sultth, Lo1 nd<>l601ul, i21'.' .. "'W1 lor1,0 5" mrt~lgulei 67~;393 ac ·~ C Ital. style-dark blue w/ OH S.A. Fry. flt Red Hill.• new. . Bo or . • wee r , po ....., \V \ITRE&i."ES 1\.1 t ~ 21 board & s.'llAry. 842-fil.13 or AFGH,\N Puppies. i\K • red plphig·$300. 83J..9193 So. 5 ml. 10 Alton, left. Revelle Master Trumpet, lk frequency response, "'alnut VENTURE 2-25 llop.-tOJ>
' . • u..c; ""' • 5.1&-21!62 aft 7pm. show qua1ity. M/F. d•-, u• ~01 --. now, w/cue. ttn. Humanlc cabinet.I S250 pt. Pioneer t'.abln. .Eaty terms 4 Apply in person. The .,.,., 2552 6Ta-1911 'YJ" ,, .. , •• u .. ~.... ••v P '12D I io••' bl Im ~,_ d II 4'!&<129\~ Grounrl RouOO, 21:>0 Harbor \VOOO\VORKER wanted for u ,,,.. PIANO. French P r 0 v , Household fWTI., Personal el-Ski Boots, all plastlc, brand 1.r pro es1 , .... lumt m .......... te e wry
Blvd, Cosla l\.fesa. 556-1783. small C.O. ~!;<!!lesa c.oo=--HOUND, 10 mlh o!d. canopy bed set, cabinet bed. feels. ~ppllances. Otfil.-e new, 11z 10~. $5ll. or best w/Emplre 66PEX cartridge ID!r.1 ~· Black & Ian. Oriental bar / atools / di· turn. File ('&bl.nets. An-oHer. AIL 6. ~1. $125. All equip. is still under VENTURE 2·2? SpaclouA
WANT A 962-~ liques Color & B&\V TV's !act. warr. All jua:t bought ca.bltHl,,_ 6. Low down &" TOM KE nette I desk. Sewing mach. · . · ! I BUY!! in Jan. or 1974. All prices •• ,... '""' .,..,.;,,
EXTRA MONEY' 1 JI"-1 OLD ENG. S HEEPDOG 6T;>-4367 aft 3 pm. ~7:t. ~;1~s!~~.h~S : Good, wied fumitUN1 l Rre l'O&t. 64.S-2M2. ~~~for vacation. 4~
F'ull or p/lime del~ery .help lrllrdiandiM V ~:kin~s~~f; ~79~aut. BAR-large CUilom natural ol Barrels, Boxes, Trunks, appliances or will sell for You =,,,~ .. ~c=o=LO=R~z=E=NJT==H~T-:V. VENTURE 2-24 Demo. M&ll)':
for locR! adverttslng co.I ~ 1 ~,c,="'-""7.-'-7-"-~ cedar w/ tefrlg> & 6 Luggage with 81ic-a-Brac, MASTERS AUCTION CONSOLE. Guar Picture Extras.' .t:. Real $8.vincl~
Above avg earnings. Your1.___ J>HAROAH Hounds puppies. v.·rought iron 11tools. Pe>rf. China. Glass, l\fiscellaneou11, 646 8686 or 833-962S Tube. '196-8290 !Dir.I
fl11·n tra.nsp. Paid daily + Antiques . 8005 Rare. .'°,r.,,l"l'.:i.·,""'·kndms .. s.JTh. 838-4812 etc. MUCll r.1 _o RE! nil 6 or ,._ ... , doy, Exl'f'lient condition tr.A. l.'llS allow. Pick you. o•-•---'--------!213J 691 g·,66 -" 2 • COLOR RC CO SOLE HUBIE 14 2 ,.11, ra"intt ·• "1· ' • ~:::'...:0.,."-"'::::".'---~-1 TER~lS; Cash,cenlf1edcks. 8,1g.OQ:,. 54.:J.3ffi0 . 548.63,19 I' A N · • .. " hrs lOani·Spm. Apply 315 *NOW OPEN* BEAUT.AKCCocke.rSpaniel AJR COND for a:lidlng only ~===~-=~-~1 GuarPlctureTube,txcellent equip .. car mck lncld.,
Jr,.I St, Suite E, liunL GARY DORRIS puppies, Buff. 6 wks. $12;i. wuxJow, S85: 4 dnlwcr chest E C nED" JENKINS CABINETS for Kitchen & condition. $200, Phone after _xl_n_t_ro~n~d~·~IS'="°~-~'~'~~5~735=·-i,
Bea('h. ~'!rs. \Vard, ANTIQUES ea. f~l-9172 $45; night stand $15: table , ' ' Bath 3pm 15 1,3· Snipe w/p\per•.
GERl'dAN SHE p H ER D, lamp Ul; sofa & chair $50; Auctioneer, \\'h&e. ph. 540-3880 ' Un!lnishcd Prefinished -~-=~"'=·~1~395""'="'"= Trailer, 2 maim, 2 jib, tut; Don't give up the shll,l! Speclalizini.: in: &i2-3672. ,, Counler Tops also .~ \"A-s TE RE o .. ~ II B ·~ '196 fhe fastest drnw 1n the West. "List" it in classified, Ship Americana A .. C reg. 8 11·ks. Shots, 2 1''0R Sal Ewryth' •11 HARDE..." ENTERRISES wu ·• ' l ....,,,, · · ~ •
.•. a Dallv Pilot Cl•.fl!li!ied to Shore Results! 642-5678. Pr'imlli'vo fem. lert. $85. PH: 5.16-40'l!I. SHHHI FURNITURE '"-' fe: ing you 815 \V. lSth St. C.,_t. M1PLIPH1ER 4 Ir act RACING Sabot, fully rigged AT WHOLESALE! 1 ...... .,, or eamping-never 642-2842 cassette. FM Tuner, AR tra 1 & rudtl $2.10 -~ ~n~ri=~~~!~ure l~I1:11~~E!~~aTi !:!:~: TER.)!S, TOO! ;ir~;ng us::~ T~/~3 m~~~ DECORATORS • COll.ECT· noo.tg:7~" high apkrs, ~~~_t_3l_;,_•_.ki __ · __ '_" __ ·-"I
;"~ . Open \Ved.·Snt., 11·5 guarani . 962-4145 894.2020 eo, len1an Lr:frig, 5 t 0 \ea'•,,· ORS Oa.xacan Indian Rup, 22~·"'· °"'M""'AG~N~'A~V~o~x~· -.,,~,~TV=. 70' _ ... a.LIO$~::.\ 'Cat'. _,JI.Ii n&t
· 602 Pacific Coast Hwy. GOLDEN Retriever pups. OINETrE Set, Like new s.;o, antcm, ,,.,ater, elt'. ha.od \\'Oven, all wool. nat· Beaut Mediterranea n ('Oh. l'(\uu. • J....,, W/inr · A'Jlj/IUMA..IJ/j ,/JJJJ_&-d:'/'' 1-1.B. Art. 5, phone AKC rrg .. Royally bred. 6 baby furn, C.Oloniel couch, 640-B(e l:;i' Cdaysl 64()..1567 uraJ dyei. 609 Caniatlon, Xn cond. Real buy s:m. trapez('. 6-l;T-3861 Daya .. /V,t,,,~"'IV.J!U'«l.J. m, 536-7295 SSl·S7Qol ,,;;"~"~",.::CSho"'"~·""673-::_;l~469",. C-C7' $50. ?.latchl.og chairs, $20 •. 1~~·~·~·~~~---~-Cdl\f. 9 lil 4 Sat & Sun. ::Ol--0507 12' DART Sailboat with ull1l -;:;.f ORANGE COUNTY GREAT DANE, 6 mth old, F\lll .sz. box sprinp & matt, DECORATOR'S ?.Ustake-675-3968. =SANY~"o""'q-u-,d~,...-,-.1~4-,-p'°m-, 1974 Lie., $300. l
1'.,;::: ..a ~~E~~~~~~PP11"NC' "'0 · *ANTIQUES* fa"'" fem!., hRd shots & $25. 919-2331. S0heer natural Linen "A~Q'°U7A~R~l~U"A71--o-bood,.-,~.""'°30,-g'""a1 . tape & remnJ plii.~r. Sony =-.,,;_Pho;:::•=•~61>-:,:.::~25=3l=---
0 ----"'· e•--p~ 84" -oft 6 \\"LL BUY raperie11, 4 panels, each ,~ .. l"'k •!·-• II ·-I TV II uni 1970 ISLANDER~· IB •ng •...... <flli:o'· CAl O,.. THE co. ~~-~~,-~ 838-E . .151: 31., Santa Ana ........... V'O"· ..... ""'' • GOOD usf.:o 1---URNITURE !}.)'' wide by 96" long. 150 N;:;r ~ s::.~·o~er. "Ph: :.-9~rt + l'.'8 t. New paint. c.om;.' ~ulp~:
For an
Call Mary
..
ad in
B•fh
\
-.. -1
9028
SIZES 8-18
• Stained glas1, roll tops, GOOD fem sm ~ ~n Al!lO Stoves, "''"•. wshrs, yds tan nylon lfi·Lo shag 9fi3.i20l $9975 frm 646-$32 sideboards. marble top fix('ci. House dog, ,,.,.,.--.ijffi 1 · hou .. ...;ul crpt. Super buy! 642-7"7"~~~~--""'°= ZENITII \7" C'OLOR T.V. · 1 • • Women's V.orld
642-.5678, ext, 3~0 >A'Mh slands & n1uch 1nore. ,"~'-.....,,.:c::;::""·---,=•I -pieceor11. set · 2255/548-46M Misc, W•nted BOil Brand ne\\', v.-on as prize. KITE-BO!!. 2 Malls, ri c o
Open daily. Lov.· p1il.'e1. Free To You 8045 * 6Ta-83Zt. * COMPLETE <1r-•· 1. I P.1ake otter, must acU, bk>c:ks. yard trlr. $500. PH:' 8' \\'HITE C'OUCh I cWi tom ~ cueing out it, \VA"fT TO BUY: 673-1989 6r~T.nl I V~RY old carved cabinet ADULT couple only, 7 )T. made low cties1, 1· 6 ' 4'xS', knock-&;mm, tbl. sf?Ol, 1 PLATE BUH.i'lER end
f Brighten A Room dE<:,t:t11,,1,6~'.n$650t-.,.A11'.,"' c~~.e niaJe "''hite \Vest Highland formica top cotlee tbl. Vemro drllfttng mactune, I J.tULTI (anyCondJ. COLOR 1V Con&0le, Spanish, Boats, Sllp1/Dock1 9070
. ..., .. vu •J ~... T · L 0 1 Ca 11 H.ea!IOnable. 640-0889. Dazor lamp. Templates, * LfdJ4ll * 9 mo. old. See to apprec., 172{), S400. Sell or trade lor emer. t. O Pl'.'e • rompa.ss, etc. Complete $200, I '".,. Sl50. 646-1309/963-6601 NE\li' Dock. We11t Newpor1'
17th cenlury antiques 837-055-0. LIV. RM FURN., Loveseat, 548·9418. \VANTED to buy electric 23 .. MOTOROU color TV Power boat to 40'. $2.50 a ,
847-Zl286 LOVELY KITTENS, Persian Sofa, Con1modea, Cocktail MINK COAT fuli 1 th typewriter IBM prelemxl. $50: Pana!Onlc stereo, S7."i;' f, ul. S75. mln. 615-429:1.
J:o;XCELLENT SELECTION, ha, ck~ r 0 un d · See to I~1• 6 alm~t new, '198-l093 nat'I blk 'cross ~nfn k 1 3800 Apt K _South Fio>A·er, Phone valet. $50; 642.:Mi72. j Boats, Speed & Ski 9080,
A NTl"UE FURNITURE. arprcciatc. 979-89i8 eves. & . v.·/match Pill Box Hat. I Santa Ana 54a-9685. , -0
>w: kdnds BE TE'AC Rl>el to Reel 401 S 1•1 .. n-.. V l'O ll p 6 , '! I<.oll Top desk & Brass Bed. ,,. · · . AU T. Mediterrane~n Custm made. 1/73. Pert.• NEED St. Augustine grass S250. \"amaha 80 $ 9 o . I ' ir ....._...,p , ., . . cy
HOUSE Of STU1\RT IRISH SE'ITEH/ l.till, d~nlng room comp. Bargarn cond. !2225. apprsl. Sae. sod. ,Please call 64!Hii15 S.1J-l682 I l\1erc 1/0. Tand. lrlr, ).1n'I
326 J\tai11 St. }luntington Bch Puppies, 6 wks old. S100. Maytag \\'&sher & $900. 55 -1227 all 6 Pf\f. after 5:30 pm. fan1ily boat. Ski & 1'111h. New 1
540-82'.54 dryer ST5. 536-6934. ~1~'1NG ' QUAD SPEAKER SYSTh.'"11, CJlt & seats. Enginr re-bit I PAINT & v ARN 1 s H :•VY • Bargains! JI, isc. WILL Buy lOOV Ail'-l'O ndi· f.!00. I yr, fantastic cont.I., $2750. Removal. Anllque .F'urnlture 2 1·1:i. rem. Cock. a· po o lWIN BED, CHE~ $50. household & dec o r ator !loner. i\1ust be in good 557--05.10 , {i.lf>..JIT6 our Specialty. Free Est. t('tTier. :\1nt >A'/children. DESK 515. 1'1lRROR $5. Items. Furniture, antiques. l.'Ondition 893-3503 c;.-'7-0--,~-=~~~-I
557-2736 Lt. Col. Capv.·c!I, 837..ffi50. AITER S PM WEEKDAYS. June 6 & 7. 4-Ml DeSola Terr, M , 1 ·1 , ..,
3
:r.11 Jet Drive lG' Horlzon.
\VOULD like to buy old ADOR ABLE kitten free to a:li>-OSlt • Cdr.t I usica nstrum ts"° I Boet1Md ll·Jf ] Twil'd Chevy 301 c.r. 250
Oriental Rug as basic decor good homf>.. 7' COUQ-f, 1 yr old~ $50.: DINE'M'F;,. blk wrougry~ lro~: J rnO\\'N Orum set 9 pc·s ....... ~ 1'" hp. 200 hl'I. Very Oeanl
for Ol'W hon1e, P\'t ply, Call 581--0797. T":t" trundle bed $15., 6 $110., tillrror, 21 x 31 "''!3 Sl2S. Vox amp SIOO. Base '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiil Trlr. Inc. S2200. &12·8582 aft.
no agrnts please 493-2360. S Ii E p 1CAy0 TE mix Spanish iron spiral sta.ln1·ay t-.taple trame, $25., Srruth-J(Uitar & rhythm guitar S2S G.ner•I 9010 6 Pl\t &7J..6520, 8 AJl.f4:30 ,
Appliances 8010 ~~~=·s64~75;1es, to good ~~p~;,4 room Ml of ~~n&izlzWv.riter, ptbl, Olea. 833-F ""',. E ' •••• ·W-ANT--E-D---S-ll_p_l_o_r_•_•·-s.-il-·,~ ~'~· ~~~~~~~~j :
qualitv 3 strand rattan, 13 Cha•lt'•'• r,·,lng Poot c. urn. quip._.., '--1. ~-r •• u ..... ~IA"·--' ~ 1• . }"REIGHT DAi,lAGE SALE, FREE to good home _ Daisy , . ., I d b I cru ..,.... r1-.. ,,_....,.. ,..<U.., .. '
nev.· Hot Point Ref i g • dog, 3 yt'ars old _ loves ~ '· UlC u · ar & 3 stoo s. 494-1629 \\'Al.NUT Secretary desk, or Bayside Or. Area. Tl'MIPOrtatbl .. ,
eratonr, \\'11shel'!I, Dryers & children 979-812t S500 or bsl ofr. 536-~. \VE BUY, WE SELL swivel <'hair & Iil.ing cabine! GT:r&l85 e\'es •
Dlsh\vashcn;, New \Var· KITTEN· 8 \\'kl> old. ~talc. GENUL~E . leather J0W1ge Antiques, l\1elals, Junk II $175. 496-1054 alter 6:00 Boats, Maint/Str. 9020 • E R U 1 I rnniy, Cl'cdit, B of A. 3623 . 1.-chair & ottoman. 2 comer RARE Dads Gift Custom p.m. Campers, SI e
\V. \Varner, S!!nta Ana, near ~~rkr~;~ F~~~ ~t.:n,:~t. couchea $25. ea. 673-2037 n1ade hni11hecl full leather =o~r.~s=K~S-. ~,-d~b71c--..,.,~,-,~,al BOAT Bldging & repair: Rent
Harbor. 979·2921. WANIBD frnnti!"r coat. (4.$) Top cond. 30"X60" wood desk:s., $3j, ·r.v.Jing, "ll I' p e 11 t ")' &
'
'REE I' ... s· •0 •at ,_, .. 8·1t ('ab.over. ice box I 11tovc 5 YR auto Kenmore Washer, •. m iame ...... '-• * USED BRICKS* l'.Jovic background. $50 cash, ea. 962-00l.4 fbrglass; Int. & Bx I.
S50; 2 )'r. \\'hir!pool =is approx l~!t yr. Likes dogs & ST0.4564 673.4845. l o"'°L~D-r~,-w-nc--,C~o-,-, .• -,,---,,~,~n~d•& 5'18-0968 + oven I sink / lots oJ ,.. children. s.17-4B90 " =,·~~-~-=~ ~1orage, Jncl Jacki. " 1• '~ .. ,", ~:~.$75. Av l • 7 / 2 O. ·"'-'""';:::~::...:=c_~~~ Is· sorA, beaut dark brwn NE\V Ar.lER. Custon1 dru1n supplies. ~-!l.k for Le Boats, Marine Eq. 9030 $375. 49fi.4a70 alt ~
"VJ.N KITTENS, 7 wks old, 3 male, vinyl, l )T old. r ii;t $600. S('t $200., New Gitan JO spd, I *** ~2-7500 '' 'l feml. Grey & black b'k 1100 · Ila. 10\§i CABOVER·Camper, for : D l S H \V AS II E It, G.F.'., tiger sirlpl.'. ;,.16-5392 ~tust i;eJI $350. 645-4852 I e ., rt!h·ig ., , 1.B.t.t SELECTRIC, Wi full HADARS, 16 nil. &ndix, ~Ton Trk only, S60 per wk, ,
p•1rt.:1b!l·, like lll'\I'. Cost COUCH, wrought Iron, glass bulch.~i:·s scale, $35. PH :~ service contrael. :i Yn; of 11.'iVAC only. 1700. See ln 2 "'k inln. 642•1497. ,
S210. Si1r.:r1rll·e SSQ, Ph. BLACK & tan n1a lc Cocker tnp rof!ee table. dble bed, 642·!!.!5/645-1703 , Ute use. $175. S4S-28JT operation. ALSO 15 n1i,, , ~ilS-::O:r.! Spaniel. A!\C reg'd, lo gd 960-2840/962.5984 DE_LTA lO·fiO x 15 Off·Road Pi'anoi I. O•gtni ""90 RCA complete & Optratlon(ll SLF.:EPER. Sleeps 4, like •1 R .~~-~,---1 home. &Jl)..{)3R.1 Ti 1 d I hi h " ivhen t'\!inov~,··$200. n_ t'.'w. P_anl'lled grec_ n plad enf Wa shers/Dryers CONTEl\IP. 9· sectional sofa. re!I, e or g "''ay -----~----s r:; 551'-430J. • $1. \\k. ~·u11 ni;i int. llA.\'E Papers for a 5 yr, old $150. Big Canyon, Call use, good cond. 5 for $85. WE'RE DIFFERENT 548:-~ k lnl<'r. ,, :i. · J. l * li39-l20'.l * Pedigreed blk Poodle. JI.lust 6"4-8188. 675-13·15 l{{'gartlles& or the "1'"antas!lc Boats, Power 904_ O GEflf top ea.tnper sheU flta have good home &12-4980 E f>rl .. d 1969-70 1-"ord RMchero good 1 h::t::-.~TOHF~ Au!n \\RshC'r, f REE bl DINING T'OOl'Tl table & 6 R ~1\1(\RRIED -too i:1any cell that one. n-a s '73 18 ~;,; RIVIERA rScaR.ny shape SJO, 897-8468 'I
l'iu ,.,1111 uDo!·t1u'" ,,., ~-IU, NOHGE Ell"'' IJt')t'l', -: LlN-Adora e \a chairs. dreS!ier & chest-of· dupl!catcs,dl~hes,furn1ture,1 about. the fact IS ~hat look·a·likel 188 i\ter c. M I
'h• ! .... ii 1!11( In I '.,,,,,.. _u_;_, J.:U.1r & d<·I. 546-8672 Sl/\i\lE:E ~~;g 7."·ks. dra\.\'efs. 962--1974 ma~~~ai~~m.·.P~;!u"',01'.·. oth<'r ' ~~i:t1Ji~~ sa~p~h:~~~ cruiser JO. 30 hn, 50 mph, 0s'~ .... ,r.',,"' 9150 l; 11" :ill ''n ~\ .. '1"'1'''--.. llOTPOl''T R frl • LOVES ~ -I II I '·I • i• e geralor, K" * EAT & !Klff. cuslom ''' 8, SO"AS SIOO • )'OU •hOp. Wo '"'' .. ,_ low u canvas, ce Cues 1 •1 ·n~ ll .. k1nn .. r•un1>1.1k•·lh1> k' 1-LIUR Darling kittens, !ree! d e r ~11 .... ,, I Jdl ~ "900 ~· Pty
9120 t
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11'"'''"''"~t!i.<1~•1.1•~~u,11u 1'·nr 1ni: t"Orwl. Cr.·-:·top \Vant 10 give to lo\'lng mae verygdqu1d,never Ro8ev.'00d dining 1j11 .; sales by being undersold. <"K~Gen"'•>"'v""s ,,;,.r..:.!;... T\VOPremierhclmel1,lge.1 "'uq.1,,,,,_n.,. 1·~11 .. 111 ;~;" fl'l'E'z•·r. Alt.:> pn1. 752-0688 home. 64&-97ll W>ed, usually hm, 968-7910. leaves. 9 .• SlOO. Port.' al; \\'e're diflcrent because our • t • vw--.... like ne·.v. S25 ca. Call
'1''"' '1<·11 1"r 11"' -·'' ~~·· ''· f'l<F~Y. PICK UP REFS. I "<~K~l~TI=E~N~S~.~lC--w7k-o~ld7.~,~all Garage Sele 8055 oond $40. 83Q..8Zi4. sa1e1tnen 11.sten hard , to '65 HYORO.SWll''T. Deep V 6T.'"l-81T6 • .f
"' ~.. 1·1 l··•t ~\PPL. ,t: SCRAP ~IE.'TJ\L ) I k bl 11·hat )'OU My, they re hull, mech. xlnL Cond >tlnL ·n NORTON' COT<.tMANOO, , h'Ul II•,.. --t·~~r ·•'l'•llC: I" .1
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i~ t 't::\TS t•1r ""~h Jl:ltlt•r11 * U.~aS * lac v.•/ Uc eye~. l l\tOVJNG: 1'"urn., m 0 v It' FIREPLACE. free !ltautl, 1 sensitive lo what you really low hrs fln lxlth eng. & rear
Add Z~ t·en1. for each 1>att.•rn (; Tabby, &WH!594 alt 6 pm. camera proJ glrlll bike brand new complete RI, \\/ant & they have the end. $2000. or best ofter. all new, "O" niilea, comply f
tor f1r .. t rl.i~"' m~1l 11nd ~1><'r1~1 \rESTIN ~HOUSE Electric 1'"REE KI1"'TENS file c 8 •b 1 n e'i , duplicator: black enamel. Orig .• $250. in\-entory to make the ?otust IK'll. Dys S3l-l330; chopped, sharp. ~1-6628 J
h i1nti11 n i!: (I I h er w I'.: s.~~\·~ .. ~115. or best O[fcr. 1'0 GOOD llOl\lE pkint\na,, moro. Sat. only ,. Best Off('r. 831--0982 e1;e1. perfect match between e\·es ~195. KA\VASAKI 250 STREhi : thir<lfh1~5 deh\fr) >A·1ll tJkt ...,..,.."""" ''& ,,.. o & 0 is Pl & thrt'f! ,..,,tk~ or mort• :'<·nil In fin-6j98 82S-7228 4. ~ Cro\\.11 Reef Ul, H. OOUGHBOY POOL, filtered .. ~an rgan I, !1"° DOLPl-flN Ocean or RJvcr, BIKE. NEW engine. Helmet )
,\tir1• !lr•Mik~. 10$, lh1· ll.ul\ L1\HG~~ R.cfr1g('ra1or wl 2 AOOl{i\BLE C1\'rS:, spayed B. 96.IJ-:1158 "'fladcl('r. Sllve ~~ over I 1anlst. U you are thinking 100 hp Johnson; Electro-included. $300. &15--4100 ,
l't\ul, "'"'dl"l'raft lll.•pl H()x IN'mHkrr. bolto1n freezer, 1 1 pt1ce of IW'\\ ;,.i&-1833 or about a keybonrd 1 70 8• .73 "AM 360 Ed ,I 1,~1 !l!rlChi•lM·nSlt•U"n.\ew $115 j j().Ji'69. 1·n1., very riendly. 1 or BEDS. chests, r c trlg ~ w.n .. 7~3 • inKtrument, give us a try. ma1 c gal blt·ln ga•. . 1. •. n.
huth. 642-716.~ noon lo :, ~1otnrcyclt's, camping, Joi• "~ > II'" think you'll ·-that Beam, 2 bunks, full covtr Undtlr v.·arranty. 1700 mt. I I l'111·k .. '\ y 1~111 l'ruil:"\JnH·, Auctio" 8015 1---r="'"===,,.--" -..·--sroo 962-446 /\•h!r•··'·' z 111, l'.111,:rn 1 _________ ;...: CUTE KITTENS niore. June 7 ... 8-9-227 PLACER b'Uld in naturRI \~·~Ire dltlttC!fll, v.•/IJ'ir. Xlnt 11hape. G45-5881 · 1 I
J\umht•r ll'e>nnl'd & trained, Orangr , Npt Shor c 5. forn1. l"or l11formallon call ~"f. MUSIC 13' BOSTON WHALER J973 200 MX YA~tAHA. Like J
Now ? 1~,!) m!'l~I. fl•fll\l!l<r r,. INDIAN JEWELRY :t48-l615 l\4:>-0123. r'3G-TMS. NcwpGrt at lla.rbor, C.ttf. Cu11om bucket 8t!al5, con\olt'! New. Call £.15--0911 eves;.
.,.·n• In 11ur 197.< "•elll•t '"" l\fOVING I I I b'k '~LT L F CTORY 646-0271 6'12-1597 flny11. ' ,·,,1.,10~! ,\11 .. r,1ft•" Tl!I!~;~; *AUCTION* LAO. i\Uxe<I 11u11plc.11.:. "'k 1 Sae, g r s I e, toy r vv ABE A ~ k 1._ ,.,, 1lttring, 3SHP cng, \'Cr)' J'r• ... 1..,.11.:n• u1~1t1.. t5r old. Fri..-e 1u ~ honie. Call cheHI, toys, games, bridge Save> on ta.bk•8, lamps, eucs, Brno hursl 11.t Tt1llll!r1 , F v l.'OOCI rond, $8.i(l, 613-7334. '70 HONl)i\ 7jl), ni any 1 ...:~w· S•w + Knt1 Boo!< • ~~17-111:1. tbl k Che irs, phonograph Plchlnkoa:! 541 ·3338. 963-6733 .72 BELL Mlnl·Ski, ·IO H.P. extras. xlnt cond. $95(1. I hA~ll·1.,1r·n.,u.··1·~11.rn $1J1 Sat7pm Su 1 p -FREE '.¥ITTENS nc:e<ls rtop., din rm. t11Ll., LO\JNCE. pad, $6. 24 .. bbq P.t 1 "'·· 1 £.~139 '-'• w' Necdl cpo11n Boe .. $1 00 ' ft m .... ('rib, dn.>llser. 831Hil58 IS., lablo -dlo.l8. n-. TV C 0 N: Tl NU 0 US rREE ere., e> ec start, r..1'l"e. 1,," · F1uwe1 Crll(l'tt Bk $1 o.'l h1~)')f'ctlon 1 hr before snip 919-5573 ... rv11 ORGAN Cl.ASSES FOR cond., Cost $2,000. Silcrlflcc '14 Hondaa 1:io & 5'(I ~•1r111n Crecntt &ciei.. \! oo 100 ple<·c~ ol fine !=illvl'r • MOVING Sil.le: Thlll'll. Fri, 11.'0rkll good $27. 646-1525. ADULTS. t.'very Tuesday $6l5. 84&-3445 Xtras, $.1950 & $1100 lnu~nt Crotnet Boo.. '' "' Tul'f[uoiM' ~ ltidht"n Jt1\.\elcy Furniture 8050 Set. 10.5 .. Cout'h, chair. hide-AQUARfUM, 20 gal. incl 1 7:30pm. Start aey wee:lc. 28;c, =';E~O~D~Y~C~R~A7>~1'=.-7lo~m~t"'ly "91H6.19
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": ~nr.am: Bock · ~i ·~ AUc1·10:-i r-:r-;ns 4 nt'V'\·''' of >'·cnltiu-& d~· di~tt~ llt':t,I :"ea~er, riump & filter. SIS. ,I Tom Dtetertch tn charge. crullK'r. Slpa 5, many "·•~,-s=u~z;U~K~l~.-=,,.""'=r~.17n-.-~~·1 i
I c11e,.,'11~i1e ({'.~toe~~~ s1 (l(.i (.'(ll.. \\I, C. IJURGF'.SS •wv · 11 " '1 r , numerous '' 6-1.;...soRS or 64r~ C°"1t Music Costa ?.lC!!ln. rx1ru, newly painted, re1uly rood. nds tunt up. Best •
C:OL I ltL Rppl111nce$, tilUJlt Ke 11 • 17372 Encino, H.B. 347--0365 Ncw.-t Blvd. at Ho.rbot. s~ ~1 ff lt.,.;,'t 4"" .......... j ~~;~1~e~t·A~;~~=":~dJ '1: · t Jo'. 8\'E 'i 54!).-~3 MACRJ\ME,' pottrry, pllnta, OIEST _ rrctzer $30., single . I"''' &.Z.28S I lo go . ....,,., J. o er over ....... """"""" ,
a:ook ul 16 0,,,11 • .:• t.o, LAGUNA HILTON 8. SOF,\, \'<'l'Y g 0 0 d sofa, bllby lll!m~. clothes, bed Sl:i., romer table $10. 24' J9fi6 ranta11y, rebll t"'in ~70 HONDA 350 CB ·i.
Mu1111m 01t111 Beoi.; ::-z ~t 251J5 Le Paz ltd. La~na <'Ondltkln. Solt Green print. Junk. 3'1422 El t-.lollno. 644-!iOIO after 6 pm. ~ l20 HP MercnJ!aers Iona $500 or Ofltr
The.': f~s1~1 dr1111,• In the \\'~t. 15 01o11tu fer Toe.1r .:3 ~ HilJ8 $85. 5'18-6310 Thurt-Sal. HARD Rock Jl.faple dinetto CONN Sl!nnadt'. h u 11 t . In range uM:d In hnh wntcr * 6iJ6.7269 •
•.. n lla11y Pi101 On.11.i;iflf'd BooJ< or 16 J111, Au;l 50r INo. llllll Rr()m. 2ntl noorl GARAGE Sal-w~. lh-· .el MO. Trailer cltt. v.•attt !fl)enkerll, Blonde Walnut, $6500. 49'J...321!i 1973 SUZUKI, 185 Enduro, St. A,,. Ciill G41-5i18. COFFEE talllf', sn'IOke glau, · ... cu •" h t $10 ~ Stl!I Pre Llk I al 300 1 .,,_ loijiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiO.•••---------ICol. RF Byerly & Assoc 40X~2. !8" hi.gh, Ol'«lrrllor '& sun. 14' SAii boat. Ort'satt, flJ c.r · 1 tl!llllln k · e new, 'Tl SKIP J11ck 20. Open Log · m ., ~·
lw l)IVl-::l?SIFll::D ~175. 64.J-7~ ~IV<'ll, 100/1 A n1uch more. 6 :t 9 KA1tASTAl~ Go!d rug. Sl750. Nc\.\'J)Ol'I Orxa1111, M6 crulMir, lo\\• hrs. Slllc/pnrt· 673-4187 ORANGE COAST'S
SALESMAN ••
BISST
Dally Pilot Classl§ied
•
AUCTIUNE~~lt." -979-606&. 2978 P.1Ubnl SI. cr.1 Good condition, frlngc $-IO. , Production Pl•l.'e. NB. nmhlp or tre J do\\'?\, • 'Tl) YAMAHA 360 MX. xlnt
610 S. HrQf1tl.\·11y, S.A. A DAil 0 1'' PETROLEUT<.f CARAGF'. SALE', U'all l.'Ome. 644·5199, J-493-9188. • cond. Ult1 of xlnu. Kon! ,,,~ '"""' ,,.,,. ......., J~:LL\' n11nhr.I ru lhC' EST T 00-OIY"NS XL , I ~ I h tt.hockt. $t00. 838.-4169 -> .__,., "'"''-''° thre•d• ol fingernail poll.ah June 7.8 &: 9. 9 11m-dark. A E Sale-Furn. gln.$9, p; JVATE PARTY w....,,,.,, c. 19 nbo& .... , \VI ==:;;c="-'=""=-~-1'
Buy n nflw '741 \'ot!r ol<k>r nnd alue bottf,s wtll keep lbfi82 Monroe St . Mld'A'llY po-4-er lools, Se.bot. etc. 1nl TO B\J\' PIANO FOR trailer. Ntw Cl""loc. Xlnt 't'I ,.111nnha Endur,
rtJodl'I car Is ln big demand the Jllh from slicking. 1'ry City, (Beach & McFAddt'nl i:S&CX Ln. \rcatclUt. CASI-I. condiUnn. ~3. 1lrlp1>ed tor 11111. Clll iif't . 6.
, . • Sell It !11s1 with t1 a Dally Piiot Clas1iUed Ad UIG GAFtAC~ SALE AVOCADO IJABYUNE Crib * 517·9445 * GRAND BANKS 37. 1972 !411-!IMIJ. Xl'lt ('Olltl. t
OaO)' P11ol Claulfied Ad! lo buy, ~II or re n I SAT/SUN A Alnll., $25. 'St'll 1d!t• llPmt \vllh 11 011lly P.llNT CONDIT10N! l.nlt or CIAt.!tlned Ad! O.U-142-i7& ·1
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·-
• •
..
Laguna Bea~h r
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 157, l SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1974 TEN CENTS
• eac· ers IC
Oil Curb
Drive Set
By Laguna
The city of Laguna Beach will head a
drive of all Orange Coast communities to
keep oil drllling out of offshore tidelands.
The Laguna Beach City Council
Wednesday enthwiastically agreed to call
a convocation of cities, c i vi c
organizations, conservation groups and
others to unite in the fight against
tidelands oil production.
The council's agreement wa s
unanimous. However. Vice-mayor Carl
Johnson stepped down from the council
bench and out or the chambers during
discussion.
Johnson is a research scientist with
StandarCI. OH of California.
The council 's action came following a
presentation by Anthony Demetradies, a
Laguna Beach resident, who urged that
tflc city initi ate opposition to threatened
offshore drilling,
The U.S. Department or the lnterior
has announced It is considering the
leasing or U.S. tidelands beyond the
lhree-mile limit for oil production.
SI.ate tidelands run from the shore to
the three-mile limit.
Between the Santa Ana ri ver mouth
.and the Mexican Border. oil drilling bas
been barred in staie waters by the Sbell-
Cunnlngham Act The "sanctuary"
established by the act, however, can be
violated. if tbe state oil resources are
threatened from draiDage by ~ adjacent
drilling.
Dm!etradies, senklr researcb scientist
at Philco-Ford. said he and others were
cmcerned that ·offshore drilling would
despoil the southern Orange Coast.
lie said this would ha ve a tremendous
impact on the economy of lhe area by
hurting tourism.
"We're worried about the loss of
tourist re venue -they shouldn't ha ve to
(See DRIVE, Page 2)
Roofer Pltm ges
To Deatl1 From
Building To,vei·
A 24-year-old LagWlB Beach roofer
plunged 14 stories to his death Wednesday
from the top of a condominium toY.'Cr
being erected in l...aguna Hills Leisure
\Vorld , when a t'Onstruction lift failed .
Robert Nichols of 662 Oak St.. \1'aS
catapulted from the roof while trying to
brake the caged hoi-.t assembly \vbich
\vas attached to the side of the structure
on runners.
A spokesman for the Orange County
Coroner's Office said the load of
materials being lifted by the fi()iSt
was too heavy and when Nichols applied
the brake. the hoist was ripped from the
building, one or two under construction.
The entire rig and load plunged to the
earth below, crushing the vlcilm when it
landed. I
He y,·as rushed to Sa ddl ebac k
Community Hospital. but Y.'as declared
dead on arrival of massive head and
internal injuries.
Oraage Coast
• ·Weather
Low clouds and fog night and
morning hours with hazy sunshine
in the afternoon Friday. Only par-
tial clearing on the beaches. Slight·
ly warmer Inland. Highs upper 60s
al the beaches to low 80s inland.
INSIDE TODAY
T1~ wedding CJ/ Si11 Of "Sty and
F'amily Stane" was attended bu
23,000 fan$ and ft was a huge
succeu. Police arrested 13 per·
•0111 for trespass, &i; womtn
fai~i~d , and flstfight1 broke 011 t
sporadlcaU~. Story. Page 4,
\., M, anf 21
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ltloulto11 Ra11cJ1
Laguna Opposes
'Development'
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of IM OallY Piie! Sl1H
The city of Laguna Beach ~'iii oppose
planned development of the 10,000..acre
Moulton Ranch proposed for a populatioo
of 57 .000 on the now virgin lands.
The Laguna Beach city · council
unanimously approved a city position in
opposition to the l\.1oulton plan and
Oide red the city's ~lance be forcefull y
Grunion Stnrt
Run T onig-lit
Grunion will begin a four·night
spawning run on Orange Coast
beaches tonight.
The two-hour runs. dictated by
tides and moon phases, according
to the California Department of
Fish and Game, begin at 10:30
tonight : 11 :06 p.m. Friday; 11 :41
p.m. Saturday and 12 :23 a.m.
t.1.onday.
Grunion hunters must ha\•e valid
state fishing licenses and must
catch the fish only with their
hands .
County Urges
'War' Against
Drunk Driving
By WJLLJA!\1 SCHREIBER
Of ,... lnllY f'llot 51111
The Orange County Grand Jury urged
lhe Board or Supervisors Thursday to
wage all-out war on drunken driving in
the county.
In a three·page report to supervisors.
jury foreman A. E. "Bill " Gazlay sajd
the county recorded 125 alcohol-re!atl'CI
traffic deaths last year.
"And it is estimated the cost of
alcohol-related motor vehicle aceidents
approached $1 million." Gazlay added .
The main thrust of the jury's
recommendation was aimed at getting
the board to coordinate a comprehensive
program designed lo redul'e the number
of deaths. injuries and pro perty dainagc
caused by drinking drivers.
Gazlay said the problem is gelling
worse instead of better despite 1vork by
several county agencies and the grant
programs lo solve it.
Referring to a roadside survey made a year ago In Hunttngton Beach:' Gazlay
said one out of every four drivers on
weekend evenings had been drinking and
one of every 2S was legally under the
influence of alt'Ohol.
"A comparislon of this aod other data
suggests that arrests occu r in only one
percent ol the occurrences of driving
under the influence." ,Gazb1y said.
Of those arrested. c:azla v said 60
percent arc classified as· problem
drinkers or alcoholics In need of
treatment and the other 40 prrcent are
labeled "misuscrs" who need education.
(See DRINKING, Page 21
presented at upcoming county hearings
on the matter.
"We understand the pressures and
demand upon the land. HoY:ever, we are
sinC('re in our desire to preserve all of
the unique and vaJuable natural and
scenic resources throughout A I i s o
Canyon. \Vood Canyon and the
surrounding steep hillsides. and achieve
the Greenbelt (surrounding LagunaJ to
the greatest extent possible," the
conclusion of the formal city position
stated.
"Unless an overriding need to change
the present zoning from agricultural to
allo\v for such a large-scale development
is demonstrated, we have no alternative
but to recommend that the present
proposal not be amended into the
jcounty) general plan. but that the
general plan be clearly deJineated so that
it is consistent with the existing zoning,"
the position statement concluded.
The city of Laguna Beach is bordered
by the giant ranch on northerly and
easterly sides. The ranch extends from
Laguna Beach to the San Diego Freeway
and south to Laguna Nigue1 .
The Orange County P I a n n i n g
Commission will .bold lB. "wor~" on
the plan at 1:30 p.m: Tuesday ln Santa
Ana.
. The ~Y1il position is contained in a
Jetter ,frOm Mayor Roy Holm to the
county commission. Tt not.es eight
specific points or opposition to the plan.
-Auto traffic generated by the
development y,·01.Jld overload all existing
major thoroughfares. including the San
Diego Freeway and Coast Highway and
11"ould even overload proposed "scenic"
roads through the project.
-Air quality within the Saddleback
Valley and in the surrounding areas
\11ou ld be deteriorated in excess of statc-
set standards.
-One .. village" is located in an area
subject to nooding. Other developments
are planed for geologically unstable
areas.
-PrOJX>sed development ties inlo a
road in Laguna Beach \\'hich the council
has ordered expunged Crom the city's
plan for streets.
-inadequate provision is cited in the
project's reports for providing ne\v
schools for children drawn to the
development. Laguna schools would be
(See l\10ULTON, Page 2)
Clerk Screnrns,
Shot to Death
LONG BEACH (AP)-A 72-year-
old great-grandmother screamed
and then was fatally shot late
Wednesday in the small grocery
store where she worked part time.
Long Beach police said Dorothy
Janicek may ha ve frightened a
potential robber who panicked, shot
the woman and then fled. Officers
said no money was taken, and lhat
they \'Jad no clues to the assailant's
identity.
l\irs. Janicek, , shot in the
abdomen, died al a hospital I th
hours after being shot.
Driven Too Hard~
Little Lengue Player Found Dead
CINCINNAT I, Ohio lAP l -Young
Richard Blust J r. told ~ls 1nothcr his
arm bW'l and be didn't want to go to
b.1seball practice for the St. Catherine
Roman CathOlic Olurch team.
l\1rs. Blust told her IOn he had the
·responsibility to show up and tell the
manager. The boy vanished, and his
iiarcnts spent lhe night looking for him .
In vain. .
On Wednesd ay, the body of the 12·ye11r·
old was found hanging In a wooded area
near his Clnclncnetl home. A baseball
glo ve was nearby.
"I'm not sure he re.ally liked sports, ut
least not baseball." said the team
n1anagcr, cart Buschbachcr. "lie waMi 't
1ha1 enlhusiastic about ii."
"•le Y.'as a starter on the tca1TI. bul
several weeks ego h~ bel(nn rni5i;\ng
praellccs. Then he didn't 511ow up 'for one
;
ol our games and I s!artcd someone else
in hi s place.
"I v.·ondcr if I pushed him too hard?
I've been asking mySt)lf that over and
over again since h hnppencd and can
bon stly say I don't thii 90."
"Iii.! father has a ery ttsponsible
posifion as athletic irector for the
church. He coordin11tes our enti re i;poru
pr0gram , which has a $10.~ to $11,000
budget. But he didn't push him thal hard
either."
Sister Pawls. principal of the school , .
s.il d the seventh grader wns a Boy Scout,
c;cr\'ed !\lass and had a paper route In
oddl!lon to playing sports.
"rte \YRS al'A'AYS cheerful ind good
humored and performed hi!I duties at
~1ass ve ry faithfully," she said. "He was
the ktnd of bo.Y' you ne\•er thought this
v. ould happen to."
I
• et Ill
REDIRECT -" THE.
SALARIES
•
Dtlllr Jihff 11a1t f'liolt
SPREADING THE ·woRD -Teachers of Laguna Beach Unified
School District, who recently sta ged a \Vildcat one-day strike, fol -
lowed by a large newspaper ad to air their salary grievances. con-
tinue the campaign by picketing. They appeared in various locations
about town Vv'ednesday. •
Bradley Reti1rns to D-Day
~~~B~~~o~an~~~:ce~:~~~:e~~;~~:: U.S.
(UPl t -Thirty years after their longest Veterans groups .
day. Allied war veterans led by five-star U.S. Ambassador to France John lr\\"in
Gen. Oinar N. Bradley: 81 , returned to "·as _among them.
the O.Day beaches of Nonnandv today Ru s.ted metal skeletons and an
· . f occasional slab of concrete poked and paid tribute to . alien comra.des. through the tWirling sand. tbc last
. ~t Bayeux, American old so~d1crs v•ere vestige of Hitler's fortress Europe. Past
Joined bJ a Fre!1~h delegation led by rows of \vhite crosses. the nearby fields
Armed Forces Minister Jacques Soufflet of Normandy blootned with spring:
und walked in solemn procession to the flowers.
~Icmorial of the Liberction to lay
wreaths.
Al Omaha Beach) "'here American
troops landed. there was a religious
service at the U.S. cemetery and another
wreath-laying at the National Guard
Monument which was specially erected
for the 25th 0-0ay anniversary. Further
ceremonies took place at Point Du Hoc.
where the Rangers stormed ashore and
climbed an impossible cliff.
The 90lh Division was honored at
Drentan and Gen. Max~·ell Taylor's
airborne troops at St. ~fere L'Eglise.
\Vhere a private first class once dangled
by his parachute from the church steeple
and watched hand·lo-band fighting go on
in the square below.
A total of 130,000 men la .. ;('(f on the
From Ouis1reha1n to St. Vaa st, :111
1'/as peaceful and quiet on the 30th
·anniversa ry as American. British. and
Canadian veterans came back to such
forgotten places as Omaha and Utah
beaches.
After a prolonged v.'ait in their crowded
landing craft. allied soldiers. having
crossed the storm-tossed sea, hit the
beaches in 19~4 at five spots -the
.t.mericans going ashore at Omaha and
Utah beaches. the British and Canadians
in tbe East at Sword. Juno and Gold.
After furious fight ing. th seabJrne and
ai rborne lroops gained a foothold in
France under !he umbrella or nea rly
(See 0-0AY, Pa ge 2)
lOOMarch
111 Forcing
N egotiatio11
By HILARY KAYE
01 1111 O•!lr f'Jlol 51111
~lore tnan 100 placard·carr\'in~
teachers picketed the Laguna Beach
Unified School District offices from 3
p.m. \Vednesday until 12:30 a.m. toda)'
and \1·ere successful in etablishing a
con tinuous negotiation session due 10
begin al 4 p.m. Friday.
Teachors picketed du r i n g i1
Professional Educators Council 1PEC1
meeting during the afternoon. the first
return to the bargaining' table between
the teachers' official negotiation tean1
and district administrators and trustee-:
since the three percent sett lemen1
offered by the board last March 15.
The protesting teach{'rS ren1ained nt
the district offices until thl' cvcni11:;
board meeting, which was iin1ncdia1ely
followed by another PEC session 11!nl'h
ended after midn ight.
The teachers -several brou ght
sleeping bags in case an all-night vi~1!
\.\'as necessary -agreed to go hon1e only
after learning from the PEC team thti r
negotiations were firml y scheduled an~
the board had sho"'ed "good faith."
Protests began last "'eek v.·tw,·,
leachers held a one-da y V.'ild cal st rike 111
demonslrale their discontent "'it h 1h.?
three percent sel\\emenL
Jerry Fair, di rector of the dislric\'5
cont inuation school and head of th .?
teachers' strategy committ ee. said that
at the height of the picketing. 103
teachers v.·ere counted. There are 150
teachers in the district.
"By lhe lime 1''e left at 12:30 a.n1.,
there were sti ll 99 teachers here. A fC'.I',
who h<td s1nall children lefr 1l'i!h
babysitters. left before midnight." Fair
said.
Trustees today said they arc pleased
\\'ith the rcacbers· conduct.
"I v.·as very impressed v.•ith the
!cachers' orderl iness. and the wa y they
handled themselves during the day anr.
evening. I feel good about the sessions.
and feel there's openness on OOth sides,"
s..1id Trustee Jane Boyd. a board
representative to the PEC committee.
Board president Norman Browne
agreed. and added, "Both sides arc
reasonable and are making a good erfort
to solve 1his. The teachers certa inly
shov.·ed a lot of unification and desire
\\'ed ncsday night."
"I \l'Ould hope that the whole thing can
be settled wi thout any action by the
teachers. such as a st rike but of course
v.·e haven't sat down yet and talked
dollars and ce nts." Dr. Browne said.
In March. the teachers received a t\vo
percent increase for 1973-74. effective
April I. They 1\'ere also offered a thre"
percent hike. to go into effect July I. for
1974-75. The board also pron1iscd 11n
additional \\l'O percent increase if "new
money" -ho1>cd far rrom the no\v-
dcfeatcd tax override election -bccam•'
available.
Thl!;-1oraled a rive percent , or possibly
seven percent. increase.
Teach ers arc now asking for a total
pa y increase of nine percent.
Three teachers made presentations at
the meeting -Fair, Charles Reich.
LaBUFA president and PEC head
negotiator. and Kay East, PE C
negotiator.
Fair first explained how the protest
began. and called il a "slow , smoulderin~
thing," culm inating after years or
!See PICKET , Page 21
fr ):( * Normandy beaches June 6. 19~4. There
were 9,000 casualties, including 3,000
dead. It y,•as history's biggest seaborne
operation, commanded by the then
General of the Anny Dwight D.
Eisenhower, and proved the beginning of
the end for Adolf Hitler, funnelling
eventually onto tho shores of Fruncc a
~body of huma11 beings larger than lhc
Lagu11a Tri1stees Focus
pof>ulalion of Pittsburgh. ·
Among lhe American veterans v.1ho
came to Normandy to re-live the day
were Bradley. Tay lor. Gen. ~lark Clark,
Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Gen. Ira C.
lRYINE CAPTU RE
Il.4SEBALL CROWN
SPRINGPIEl.D. 111.-Gary \Vhctlock, •
Jeff Malinoff and Keith Bridges p..1ccd
the UC Irvine baseball team to n repeat
p<!rformanC?e Wednesday night as NCAA
college division champions.
For detnlls of the final i_:i:ame. sec
today's sports section. PJgc 29.
, ,
•
On Reac l1i11g New Bi1dget
Laguna Beach Unified School trust(>(!~
had Jillie comment \\'cdncsday night
about 1he f31lurc of 1he $271.600 tax
override meas ure.
They appeared determined. however.
to quickly get the ball rolling towards a
new. acceptable budget -with more
lhun U>0.000 trimmed off.
~tost of the board mttting was spent
listening lo te.!lchers outlining salary
complaints. so trustees had little
oppor1unlly tn discuss the Implication s or
the defeat nt the polls.
Trustees Patricia GlllC?ttc and Capt.
Ge.raid Linke. \Yho both withdrew the ir
support of the 1nC?asure just days before
the elccllon, brleny spoke of the nt..'t.'d to
rc1..'0nslder budget priorities.
"1 rcc('l1nmend we face our p~bleJns
•; •r
..
and get back to RC':JdC'mic etlucnrion. an(!
cut the fr ills \l'e do11't net.'<!." :\!rs
Gillette said.
"And I second that." Linke added .
Trustees or1glnally planned lo begin
renewed budget sessions next Tu rsday,
v.•ith the goal of sending n tenlalivt
budget to the county by July I.
But requests by teachers tet speed u1
contract ntgolintiort! pn!ihcd their budget
study schedule up to Friday.
The board will hold a noon meeting 01
Friday lo reconsider budget priorllies.
Following tbe mtellng, there will be t
Prof~sslona1 Educator5 Councll (PECI
meeting, where the teachers' ortlcld
'adrnlnl 1rakln and tru~ter!' v.111 bcg\1
negotiations and 1:1rr rxpech .. -d to eon1lnu1
until a scttlcn1cnt is rct1cht•d
I
r
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~O t-lE.Y (
r11ursda~, Junr 6. 1974
O.!lr 1'1101 S!tff l'ht'9 TEACHERS PICKET -!-~o r n1orc than nine hours
Thursday <!iflcrnonn and ni ghL teachers picketed the
Laguna Beach Llnif1cd Sthool Oi~trict offices in an
attcinpl to re-open stnllcd sala ry nf'gotia tions .• ..\bout
100 protesting teachers worked in shifts in front of
the district and in downtown Laguna, with all but
a handful stay ing until after midni ght.
Frt1m Page l
PICl(E1' • • •
frustration.
"\\"e y,·anl the bo.1rd to realize y,·c're
not asking for the moon but just asking
~·hat other districts ha\'e already turned
dov•n." Fair said.
:'llrs. East told trustees !he lhrel'
percent increase offered is "simpl~
degrading.··
··1rs like a pcnn.v lip to a v.·aite r in a
rMtauranl .'' she added.
From Page 1
DRINKING • • •
An1ong other things. the j u r y
re<.'Ommends:
-1\ public education effort to solicit
p.i blic support.
-A specialized education cHort aimed
al drinking dri\'ers.
-A cooperative prog ram bctv•ren
criminal justice and health agencies to
detect and intervene in beha\·orial
patterns of problem drinkers.
-A referral center acting as a bub for
all processing and referral activities.
-A means for evaluating I he
efff.'C'liveness of the system.
-A fiscal arrnngement for the
operation of referral and treattncnt
programs. A $25 to S40 client fee is
suggested.
.. From Pqe 1 .
MOULTON ...
Overloaded if more v.·ere not built.
-The plan y.•j]\ not provide housing for
low ino:lme persons.
-Portions of the area arc v.·ithin the
~und-impact reaches of the El Toro
Marine Air Station jet fl ight raths. The
Ctly no1es that miligation measures con-
taineci in the report propose sound-
Jlfoofi ng houses. '·That is only eflecti\·e if
th<.> residents never desire to come
,oUtsidc.'' the Laguna p..iper states.
From Pnge l
D·D_i\. Y ...
1.3,000 war planes. eight batll e.<flips. 2'.!
t roisers. 93 dcstro\'crs . .;50 navnJ vessels ~nd 360 lorpedo bOa!s.
• But now the beaches arc WC'lcoming
the first suinn1cr vacationers. The little
4iwns and villages. leveled by artillery.
have been rebuilt , and the green pastUl"<'S
are filled \l!itlt herd:; of f<1I Norm an
CO\\'S . ..
•
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Day of Mourning'
CUSD Teachers Agree
To Walk Out Tues~y
By JOllN \'Al.TERZA
Of !ti• o.ity ~llol $1111
The organization represenlini the
bulk of teachers in the Capistrano
Unified &bool District late Wednesdav
agreed to launch a -v.·alkout and
""professional day of mourning" Tuesday.
In the strongest plan for a v.'Ork
stoppage yet to hit !he la rge district. the
rnembership of tbe Capist rano Unified
Educators' Association (CUEA 1 ag reed
overwhelmingly lo stay away from
classes to emphasize dissatisfaction with
'.i district offer of an eight percen t raise
1n wages for tbe next fisca l year.
In addition. the seo res of teachers at
the afternoon meeting in San Juan
Elementary School emphasized that as of
tcxlay their members Y.'OU]d perform
none of the ext ra v.·ork for which
teachers are not compensated.
Essentially, they said. members v.·ould
v.·ork their standard seven hour day and
do little else. including attending
conunencemenl rites at each high schcY.l l.
In the strongest ~·alkoot \"Ole vet 1n the
district, lhe CUEA members c0ndcmne:l
;1 board aclion last r<.!onday v..'hich
appeared lo end any solid negotiations
O\·cr inc reases in v.·ages. Trustees balked
at e request by the gr~up for daily
negolialions in an effr(t to resolve
differences before the erd! of the sc hool
year. "
In a second action, lrustees agreed thal
they would vote soon to slam the lid on
any increases above eight percent.
Teachers have been seeking a 13
percent hike because of dire predictions
of heavy innation over the next l2
months.
l:>espite a decision to decline to come
on campus Tuesday. the teacher group
1nade no motion on the exact duration of
the "1nourning" period.
Instead or staying home on that day.
the mt!mbers declared they v.·ould adhere
to a schedule of picketing, meetings end
!lpreading of printed materials in the
community in an effort to explain their
plight.
Late in the day, thE: group would meet
ogain to determ ine how long the action
11hould las I.
A smaller \falkou t at this tin1e last
year by the sn1aller and more 1nililant
Capistrano Uniricd l'edcration of
'l'eachcrs. thrc\.,, a serious kink in
operations at the 1 .... ·o district high
schools and lasted about l'rl'O days. It did
oot-affect elen1entary c-a mp uses ,
hO\\'ever.
Substi tutes, teacher's aides and
administrators all manned the desks in
classrooms to tide the district over.
Spokesmen for the CUEA charged
\Vc<lncsday that the d is Ir i ct
administration already has been gearing
for a si ngle-day walkout.
Some teachers cha rged that studcnt-
\\"ere being rC<'ruitcd to sit at the head uf
classes ii teachers did not sho\\' up.
CUE . .\ bargaining representath•e Tom
Youngerman 'rl"amed the group lhat all
members soon v..·ould feel pressure to call
off the intended Y.'alkout.
He "'amed, the group ·to gear up for
"hassles and abuses.
"We are not alone. Custodians have
come up 10 us and said they would not
cross our lines if we decided on an action
such as this," he added .
"Dcn't let a paternalistic principal talk
to you about professionalism at this point
and urge you to stay in. because of harm
to the kids," Youngerman v.•amed.
"I say to him. ·you're nol eating off my
salary, baby. Give me yours and I'll stay.
in'"
The suggeslion dre\v cheers ffOJTl the
group.
Power Pole Hit;
Lag1ma Officers
~
Seeking Driver
Laguna Beach police are searching for
the driver of a car which smashed into a
power pole on Laguna Canyon Ro ad
today snapping the pole. toppling three
electrical transformers and sending liv"e
'rl'ires cracking into the street.
Police Lt. Al Olson said officers found
a HJ-year-old cai-smashed two-to-three
feet in to the pole. Officers found traces
of blood in lhe interior of the car, but no
driver. The surrounding area was
searched , fruitlessly for a body, U . Olson
said.
The accident occurred at 2:36 a.m.
today in the 2900 block of Laguna Canyon
Road. in front of Langlois Fancy Frozen
Foods.
Electrical power was cul to 110
customers for about an hour. Edison
Company cre"'S restored service to all
but six or seven customers by mid-
morning, a spokesman said.
The accident left. a slippery film of oil
spread across the roadway. The oil t'OO!S
the electrical lransfonncrs:
Laguna Beach city crews scattered
sand across the roadwav street 10 abso rb
the oil. Water was not .used to wash the
pavemen t because of the elect rical
hazards. ....,
Lt. Olson said Lhe steering 'rl-'heel of the
car was dented as if crushed by a body.
An unidentified witness said he saw a
ma n running from !he scene of the
accident.
Officers traced the car to the address
of its registered owner who resides In
Laguna Beach. hov.·cver, the home was
unoccupied. Officers also checked with
nearby hospitals. but v.·ere unable 10
locate a viclim.
La guna Coi111cil Action
~hes~ :ire the prin.cipt.I actions taken hy the Laguna Beach City Council
mechng in regular session \\lcdnesday.
OIL D~~Ll~G PLUGGE O -~naniniously and vehen1en tly opposed any
off.shore dr1lhng 111 federal or stare t1d<·lands. !\layor Roy Holm was authorized '? C!ll~ ~ "c?"voc~tion''. of cilil•s' civl eori.tanizations and others to unite against
oil d!J!ling incursions into the off-.shore sanctuary. Vice r-.tayor Carl Johnson .
an 01! company research scientist. left, the bench during discussion.
1\TORA!ORlt:~I co.NTil\"~ED -An eitnt·month extension of the city's ~ntroverstal mult1-fam1ly rcs1denllal zone morotoriUm 1\aS approved by unan· unous vote.
PA RK ING i\tETERS PEl\i\IJ TTED -Installation of parking meter!'; the
lengJh of Coast lllghv.·ay a.s ll p;is.~<!s lhrough Laguna Beach ,,..as approved
but Jn a sudden aboot·face. the council dt>ckled to hold the hourly rate al 10 cents.
CANYON SE\VER r<.tl/tt~I) -[ventuul extension of a IO.Inch sewer line
out 1..aguna Cnn yo!l !{oad lo the vicinit y of the animal shelter v.·as con~idered
~y the council 'rl'hich authorb:ed s1>endlng 575.000 in revenue sharing funds
first to pul the pipe out lo J.anglois frozen Foods and Telonics Ind ustries.
1'hc deaf is ~ontln~cnt on repaymr11l fron1 an assessment district.
•
Fnisnl's BrotJ1er f 'rom Pa9e 1
Presioent Holds DRIVE ...
look at derricks and walk Into on pools,''
he said.
Be said coastal property value11 would
Talk With Arab drop as the ocea n views were broken by
drilllng platfonn1 and tower1.
"I believe the City Councll or 1.aguna
Beach is interested in preventing lhis.
Uy HELEN THOMAS
\VASHI NGTON (UPI) -Pre.sidt•nl
Nixon conferred for 45 mniutes today
Arabia, one of the five nations he will be
vis iting on n swing tllrough the f\tidcUe
East starting next week .
Secretary of State llenry A. Kissin gC'r
joined Nixon in the President's oval
ofOce fo r the meeting with t~ahd. half·
brother of Saudi King Faisal. Fahd plays
n major role in making Saudi oil policy
because he is the nation's interior
minister and sc<.'Ond deputy prhne
1n inistcr.
Fahd ca 1ne to \Vashi ngton v.·ith other
senior Saud i officials to discuss ways to"
ex panding economic and tec>hnical
cooperation v.•ith the Unilcd States. Fahd
also spelled out Saudi Arabian military
'.defense require1ncnts.
The CQnference preceded a \\'orking
lw1choon in th e. \Vhite House with about
100 officials of both n<1tions invited .
\Vednesday the President laid down his
strategy for \\"Orld pea cc at
coin menccmcnt cere111011ies at 1t1e U.S.
naval academy.
lie rebuked n1embcrs of Congress v.'ho
ha\•e demanded changes in Soviet
Comesllc policies as a pr ice for detente
and said the United Staes must not
intervene in the internal policies of
0U1cr countries .
He v..·amed that detcnte ca nnot be
taken for granted and said "we cannot
gear ou r foreign policy tel trans·
formation of OlhCI' societies. In the
nuclear age. our first responsibility must
be the prevention of a war that could
destroy all societies."
After returning to Washington. Nixon
met with a delegation o f American
Jewish leaders and reaffirmed to them
the Administration's pledge of continued
economic. military. and polities! support
in the !\>liddle East.
r.iixon begins his goochvill tour of the
what 1nlght t1;1rn out to be :i ll!r1ninal
ca tastrophe,•· he sald. f\1lddlc East f\1onday. flying first to
Salzburg, Austria for a tv.'o-day rest stop r<.1ayor Jloy Holn1 . an a rd en t
oorore arriving In Cutro Wednesday. eon.'iervationl st. supported Q.nd suggestt.'<1
Egyptiun leaders arc expected to tur n \Vilys of coordinating coastal opposil\on.
~t chee
1
ring
00
• throngs
1
ror rN
1
ixon, who will f\1ayur Holm coinniented on the past oil ue we com ns t 1e rst An1erlcan : . President to vi!l\t Cairo since the Big opposition by Slate Sen. Denn Is
Three conference attended by Franklin ·"' Carpenter, Assemblyman ll ob e r t
D. Roose\'elt In l!M3. Badhant and Ronald Caspers. Orange
The President also will make overnight Coun~y supervisor
stops in Saudi Arubia. Syria. Israel and Cas r t Jordan be.fore returning lo Washington pc s sen a telegram t o
June 18. Dt~111etriades stating his u n a I t c r I nc
Ni"on \\'ill spend about a week back opposition to oil drillinc.
in ~he United Slate!! before laking olf "Please be assuri..'<i 1ha1 J will contil • "" agam June 25 on the Hrst leg of his iuc summit journey to tbc Soviet Union. He my efforts .10 prevent the Orange Coost
will make u rest stop in Europe before from cxper~encing the same unfortunate
arriving in P.1oscow 10 begin his tal ks disaste~ which ~?ta Barbara. faced only
v.-ith Soviet Communist part y leader a few )ears ago ,· Caspers sai?.
Leonid I. Brezhnev, June 27. A state[nent from environmental
The President, according to admi nistra-~u!hor a~ lecturer, Wesley Ahlr)(, said.
tion officials, may make a brief stop in oil explo1tatlon. poses a we~l-docunientcd
Japan at the windup of his stay In the ~a7.ard h;i ~ar-s1ghled public investment
Soviet Union and will then go to San rn the scenic and recreational re.sources
Cletnenle for the 1',ourth of Jul y, or the southern California coasta l zone."
' ~1uyor Holm said he doubt ed if ''Ute
Viet Buddhists
Cut Off Fingers
litt le old city of Laguna Beach has gut
quite enough mu scle to take on the
Department of the Interior and the state
lands commis.sioo,'' but he said by
organizing a unified effort. and 'rl'lth
support of area legislators, the ~city could
make an impact.
LONG KJEN. Vietnan1 (UPI ) The mayor said he had discussed the
Twenty Hoa Hao Buddhists cut off the matter with other ,cities' officials. an d he
1 lillle finger of their left hands today in believed a meeting will be "rather well
protest against the government's refusal attended."
to meet their demands. He said he had indications Los Angele!\:
atore than 10,oon or the Buddhist sect ~layor Bradley v.·ould be interested and
rallied in this small Delta 1own 90 miles that even the city of Monterey which also
southwest of Saigon. has 3l\ ·'oil sanctuary" orf its coast was
Six monlhs earlier. they requested I.he concern ed that should the Orange Countv
government grant "seven aspirations," sanctuary fall. theirs v..'Ould be ncxL ·
including the right to form a self-defense No date was set for the meeting,
force and have lion Hao military however, the mayo r said he would like to
chapla ins. The government recenily hold it in Laguna Beach, if a place big
refused to grant alt seven "aspirations." enough could be obtained.
~~~~·~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~--~~~~~~~~
. ' ~-.· . ' ' -'l!V ...
B,ralres Failed
Susan M. Thormod, 25, of 1089 Oro St., Laguna Beach
was driving down steep Summit Drive Wednesday
evening when her brakes failed. She attempted to
stop van by steering against cLirr but ve hicle over·
turned. She suffered only bumps. Homeward bound
commuters were delayed.
,.,1~ Wl·NEMEN·s
~ ........... ~~· ~~-CELLARS
ZSOOW.COASTHWl'.
HIWPORT IEACH
PHONE 64Z· 7076 aow-.--,.,..__
CORNED BEEF
OR
"IUON GUSTO"
ITALIAH SALAMI
Req. $449
I. 3.98 . .:Ii"" lb. ll111ft l h .
With C
•
2 CONVENIENT LO.CATIONS
. '
~ IH H&WPOIT PRODUCE VILUG&
-• -1601 MfWl'OITILVD.
~ COSTA.MESA 642-tOCM
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES
EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAINS from BORDEAUX
•"om-P"~• i;A1 I I'!"([
f>ll' '"''''' f'<'t ro•!•t
IARGAINS UNDER $3 l'ER IOTTLE
SA~ s295 1967 CHATEAU TOUR TEAU s31 s6 ;,..w ~ (St George, Sc Em111onl
BARGAINS UNDER $5 l'ER IOTTU • ~..,{"" s495 1967 CHATEAU LoFLEUR 55346 :,,1/1:J . BECAOE (Haul-Ml'!docJ
-•• ~ s495 1970CHATEAUTRoNOUOY· s5346 )l:P;;J LALANDE {St E&tephe}
IARGAINS UNDER $1 l'ER 1omE SS95 1970 CHATEAU BATA'.LEY S6426
!5th Growth, Pau1llacl
< • _.-S695 1967 GRANO.PUY·LACOSTE s7506 !-111 1 ~ .(Slh Growth-Pau1Uac)
,...,,..,.~, ... 11 ... J s7so 1966 Cliateau Jean·Flure
(Grand Cru-St. EmiHon)
I
ss100
'
-saaatehaek Today's Final
' EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 157, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR NIA THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1974 TEN CENTS
OC Grand Jury Asks War o,n Drunk Drivers
By WILIJAM SCHREIBER
Of fllt DfllY 1'1191 Iliff
The Orange C.Ounty Grand Jury urged
the Board of Supcrv1'ors today to
1vage all-out war on drunken driving ,ln
lhc county.
In a three-page repcrt to supervisors,
jury foreman A. E. "Rill" Gazlay said
the county recorded 125 alcohol-related
traf1lc deaths last y~.
Ranch Plan
Opposed
By Laguna
By JA CK CHAPPELL
Of h D.ity P'llel Iliff
The city of Laguna Beach will oppose
planned development of the 10,000-acre
Moulton Ranch propooed for a population
ot 57,000 on the now virgin lands.
The Laguha Beach city cmmcil
unanimously approved a city position in
opposilion to the Moulton plan and
ordered the city's stance be forcefully
presented at upcoming county hearings
on the matter.
"We understand the pressures and
demand upon the land . }IO\\'ever, we are
si ncere in oor desire to preserve all of
the unique and valuable natural and
scenic resources throughout A I i so
Canyoo, Wood Canyon and the
surrounding steep hillsides, and achieve
the Greenbelt (surrounding Laguna) to
the greatest extent possible,'' the
conclusion of the formal city poshion
stated.
"Unless an overriding need to change
the present zoning from avituJtural to
allow for such 1 large-scale development
is demonstrated, we have no alternative
but to recommend that the presen t
proposal not be amended into the
(county) general plan, ~but that the
general plan be clearly delineated so that
• it is consistent with the existing zoning,"
the posi!Joo statement concluded.
The city of Laguna Beach is bordered
by the giant ranch on northerly and
easterly sides. The ranch extends from
. Laguna Beach to the San Diego Frec y,·ay
and south to Laguna Niguel.
The Orange County P I a n n i n g
Commission will hold a "workshop" on
the plan at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Santa
Ana.
The city's position is contained in a
letter from Mayor Roy Holm to the
county commission . 1t notes eight
spec.ific points of opposition to the plan.
-Auto traffic generated by the
development would O\!erload all existing
major tOOroughfares, including the San
Diego Freeway and Coast Highway and
would even overload proposed "scenic"
roads through the project.
-Air quaUty within the Saddleback
Valley and in the surrounding areas
v:ould be deteriorated in excess or state.
set standards.
'-One ''village'' is located in an aren
subject to nood ing. Other developments
are planed fo r .geologically unstabl e
areas.
-Proposed development ties into a
road in Laguna Beach which the council
h3s ord ered expunged from the city's
plan ror st reets.
-Inadequate provision is cited in the
project's reports for providing new
schools for 'children dra\m to the
development. Laguna schools would be
overloaded if more were not built.
-The plan will not provide housing for
(See MOULTON, Page 2)
' • Oruge Coast
Weather
1.o\v clouds and fog night and
morning hours with hazy sunshine
in the afternoon Friday. Only par-
tial clearing on the beaches. Slight·
ly wnrmer inland. Highs uppec 60s
at the beaches to low 80s inland.
INSWE TODAY
The w<ddlng of Sl~ of "Sly a1id Ftnnilr,i Stone" wru attended bv
23 ,000 fa111 ond ic Wa.J a hugt
succe1.r. PoUct arrested 13 ptf'-
sont for trespc.rs, si% women
fainted, and fistfights brokt out
1poradically. Story, Page 4.
L, NI. ..,.. n
C1Ulei'lll1 n c l•nlllM JHJ
Ctmk1 )I Crtn-• JI °""' Httlcff 12 Etltwlal 1'1.. ' 1En1tr111Mit11tl U , M
P'lllltll(t "'" --.. Ann Llnf9tt 11
M-r TtH H MOVltt M
Mul\lal ,,..... IS
frltl*'-I "''" 4 o,.n .. C••ll' 11.u ,.,,, "
IYf\11• ... ntt JS
'"'" 2t.J2 Stot-Martlet1 2'·21 , .... ,,." ,,
Tlll•tl.. JI
WH!lltl" 4 w''""'' Ntwl u.n W.rl4 frl..., 4
"And it is estimat.ed the cost of
alcohol.related motor vehicle accidents
epproacbed $7 mlHion,'' Gazlay added.
The main thrust or tbc jur;V's
'reemnmendalion was aimed at getting
the board to coordinate a comprehensive
program 'designed to reduce the number
of death!, injuries and property damage
caused by drinking drivers.
Gazlay said the problem ls getting
worse instead of better despite work by
several oounty agencies and tbc grant
programs to solve it. .
Referring tO a roadside survey made a
year ago in Huntington Beach, Gazlay
said one out o! every four drivers on
weekend evenings had been drinking and
one of eve!) 2.5 was legally under the
inllucnce of alcohol.
"A comparislon of this and other data
Even Principals got into the act Tuesday night for the Saddleback
Valley Unified Schbol District music and "'rt lair It the Anaheim Con· rent.ion Center. Joe Adams, ,Principal of Olivewood School. and Doris
ynch, principal at Linda Vista , rode a bike through the audience as
the elementary string seclion played "Bicycle Built For Two." Some
8,000 parents, friends, and teachers attended the event, themed
"America. Our Heritage." Related picture, Page 21.
W estrninster Arrests 64
In Crarkdolv11 on Drug s
By KA TIIY CLANCY
01 11M D•llY P'llel Sl•ft
Sixty-four suspected narcotic~ pushers,
aged 13 to f2. were arrested late
\\'ednesday by Westminster police in a
mass crackdown on drug sales to
teenagers.
The. arrest roundup climaxed eight
months of police investigation involving
200 undercover drug purchases valued at
$4.000, police said.
The crackdown was shnlla r to one
n1ade last month by Fountain Valley
police where 62 suspected narcotics
pushers were arrested and one in late
April in Irvine where 130 pei'sonS were
arTeSW<I on suspiciOtl of various drug
charges. .
Sgt. Manuel Hinson. coordinator of the
Westminster project. said uniformed
Westminster officers set out at dusk to
arrest Westminster suspects.
Police in Fountain Valley, Garden
Grove, Santa Ana and Huntington Beach
assisted by arresting suspected pushers
in the1r cities.
Police had warrants for 27 juveniles
and 48 adults, all charged with sales of
narcotics, ltinson said. OfliC'Crs loday
\\'ere continuing to search for the nine
remaining suspects.
·rorty-two were from Westminster. one
from Fountain Valley. eight from Garden
Grove, nine from Santa Ana and five
from Huntington Beach. Hinson reported.
Officers were told in a pre-sweep
briefing to arrest juveniles by IO p.m.,
and most or the other arrests were
completed by midnight, fllnson said,
noting the operation "went smoothly.''
The parents of each juvenile were
given a packet of information about !he
arrest, Hinson said, including a special
telephone number where officers were on
duty to provide additional details.
He estimated about 50 ca!ls were
handled throughout the evening. Officers
on the phone Jines had copies or all arrest
reports and were able lo explain arrest
and court procedures, Hinson added .
Westminster police started t h e
narcotics crackdown because of
increasing drug traffic in the city,
particularly around teenage hangouts
and \Vestminster high school campus,
(See PUSHERS, Page,)
Quigley Co11gratulates
!(ehoe Over Victory
trvine City Councilman llenry Qu igley
la(e Wednesday wired his opponent In lbc
Republican primary ra!e for :Uate
treasurer conceding defeat .
Quigley congratulated state consumer
affairs director John Kehoe on his
Tuesday victory .
Kehoe received 534,227 votes compared
to Quigle'y's 432,%91, final tallies $howed.
The first Irvine t:a!'ldldate for statewide
oflit:e took 30 ptrcent of the GOP
primary vote Jn the four-man ract.
Kehoe, Rn appointee of Governor
R~agan to the state eonsumcr affairs
post, entered the tre:asurer·s race with a
slisht edge In name ldentUlcalion.
Quigley budgetfd only itbout $9,000 to
cover his tr11.vel and advertising costs 10
fflmlliarite voters with his n11me And
quaUficatlol'l.'I. 1'hat comes to 2.8 cents
per vote recei ved.
f
,
By con1parlson, Fifth Dis I r i c I
Supervisor Ronald Caspers spent about
$160,000 to receive 54,480 votes to return
him to the board. That is nearly $.1 per
voter.
IR VINE CAPTU RE S
BASEBAL[, CROIVN
SPRINGFJE~D. !U.-Cary Wh..,lock.
Jeff t.fallnoff and Keith Bridges p..1ccd
the UC Trvine baseball learn Ip a repent
performance Wednesday nigflt as NCAA
college division cha n1pions.
For details or the final game . .!ice
today's sports section, Page 29.
'
suggests that arrests occur in only one
percent of lhe occurrences of driving
under lbe influence," Gazlay said.
Of thme arrested. Gazlay said 60
percent are classified as problem
drinkers or alcoholics in need ol
treatment and the other 40 percent are
lal;>eled "misusers" y,·ho need education .
Among other things, the j u r y
recommends:
-A public education effort lo solicit
puiic support. specialized education effort a1n1ed
at inking drivers.
-A cooperative program bet 1i.·een
criminal justice and heallb agencies to
detect and interven~ in bchavorial
patterns of problem drinkers,
-A referTal center acting as a huh ror
all processing and referral acti\~lies.
-A means for evaluating t h c
eff('('li\·eness of thf system.
-A fiscal arrangement for the
operation of referral and treatment
programs. A $25 to S40 client fee is
suggested.
Gazlay suggested tha1 all efforts be
coordinated by the Alcoholism Services
Position of the Department of ~1enlal
llealth. The jury alS() suggests
apJXlintment of an in tcragency advisory
co1nmittee.
Closing Pay Gap_
Saddleback Teachers Charge 'Sta ll'
A tv.•o percent gap separates a new set
of offers made Wednesday night by
Saddleback Valley teachers a n d
administrators ill continuing discussions
of next year's teachers pay scale.
The teachers' bargaining group , the
Certificated Employee's Council (CEC),
has charged the district with using
"stalling tactics" designed lo force a
lowe r settlement after the most of the
teachers have gone on vacation.
But the board's ncgoti9tor, Dr. Richard
\'leltc. denied the charge.
Meeting \Vednesday night, the teachers
cut a prior pay hike demand from 15 to
11 percen t. The req uest was counlered by
a district offer of $830,000 or about nine
perc:J!,nt.
Welte said he would take the new
offe rs to the board of education today
and hopes to be prepared to meet again
with teachers Jo'riday night, for further
discussions.
"Bul there may not even be a counte r
offe r," \Velie said . "\Vhat the board has·
offered is quite reasonable.
"The district is in very light financial
straits. \Vhile lhi board of educati'on is
inclined to be equitable with the
teachers, it also has a responsibility to
the public."
Follo"'ing a meeting Tuesday at which
\~·efte was not prepared to counter the
teachers' 15 percent request. Mrs. June
Gayron. head of the CEC. which
(See STALL CIIARGE, P~e 21
Councilmen Study Budget
Irvine Operating Plan Includes No Ta x Rate Hike
Irvine city councilmen haye bci:µn the
l4<llly !!f. • 11~·· milU... .\1:!_.tlli2.
bUdget-which requires noJncreaie iD the
city's t..ix rate.
City Manager William Woolletl Jr. and
key department heads explained the 1974-
75 income and spending estimates
recommended in !he first draft budget
\'lednesday. A final budget including
priorites to be set by councilmen is not
expected to be adopted until June 25.
\\'oolletfs draft also suggests city
D-D.ay Veterans
Rettn·n to Scene
Of Big Invasion
L-
O~fAHA BEACH. Normandy, France
fUPI ) :__Thirty years after theii longest
day, Allied war veterans led by five-star
Gen. Omar N. Bradley, 81. returned to
the D-Day beaches of Nonnandy t:d:iy
and paid tribute to fallen comrades.
At Bayeux. American old soldiers ~-'ere
joined by a French delegatioa led by
Armed Forces Minister Jacquet Soufflet
and walked in solemn procession to the
t\femorial of the Liber::.~ion to lay
wreaths.
Al Omaha Beach, where Americiln
troops landed, there was a religious
service at the U.S. cemetery and another
wreath-laying at the National Guard
"'1onument which was specially erected
for the 25th D-Day anniversary. Further
ceremonies took place at Point Du Hoc.
y,•here the Rangers stormed ashore and
climbed an impossible cliff.
The 90th Oivisioo was honored at
Carentan and Gen. Max\vell Taylor 's
airborne troops at St. Mere L'Eglise,
\\'here a private first class once dangled
by his parachute from the church steeple
and watched hand-to-hand fighting go on
in tt1e square below .
A tot.al of 130,000 men la '.ed on the
Normandy beaches June 6. 1944. There
\\'ere 9,000 casualties. including 3.000
dead.
It was history·s biggest seaborne
operation. commanded by the then
General of the Army Dwight D.
Eise nhower. and proved the beginning of
the end for Adolf Hitler. funnelling
evcn1ually onto the shores of Franct a
lxldy of human beings larger than the
JXIPUlatlon of Pittsburgh.
Among the American veterans who
came to Normandy to re-live the da y
were Bradley, Taylor, Gen. Mark Clark.
Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Gen. Ira C.
Eaker and representatives of seven U.S.
Veterans groups.
U.S. Ambassador to France John lrwin
was among them.
Rusted metal skeletons and an
occasional slab of concrete poked
through the twirling sand, the last
vestige of Hiller 's fortress Europe. Past
rows of white crosses, the nearby fields
of Normandy bloomed with spring
flowers.
r~rom Ouistrr.h11n1 to St. Vaast, all
w11s peaceful nnd quiet on the 301h
unnlver$nry as Arnrrican. British, and
IStt O.UAV. Page z~
•
spen<ling needs c:in be met b y
coouI.i.at.it)ll ()f the 33-nnt per •too or
assessed valuation tax levy. Councilmen
do not set tM tax rate until August when
final income figures are available.
In addition to the city operations
budget.. councilmen began reviewing a
$1.13 mill ion capital improvements budg-
et.
City Public \Vorks Director Brenl
~fucho"' said the budget for street and
parks improvenlents is based on the yet·
to-be finalized capital ln1pro,•emen1s
policy. That docwncni. if adopted a:.
presented. assumes developers 11.'ill bear
the burden for most neighborhood streets
and the public sector will pay for arterial
roads.
J\:lucho"' snid he was satisfied with the
trin1med capital improvements budget.
He had requested inclu.sion of projects
totalling nearly $4 million whict1 sta!f
!See SPENDING, Page 21
Driven Too Hard?
Little League Player Found Dead
CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP J -Young
Richard Blust Jr. told his mother his
arm hurt and he didn't want to go to
baseball practice for the St. Catherine
Roman Catholic Church team.
Mrs. Blust told her son he had the
responsibility to show up and tell the
h ·vine llo1ne Burgled
Of $900 Draperies
A burglar has made off with $900 y,·orth
of draperies and related equipment after
breaking iRto a vacated Irvine hon1e.
police said today.
Haiel J . Kidd. of 2205 ~laple St .. Santa
Ana. told police the items stolen from
3701 Provincetown Ave .. Irvine. Included
36 panels nf off.while drapery material.
Co unting . the Tissue
TOKYO (AP ) -Toilet paper u'as
unrolled . across the nool'3 of eight Fair
Trade C.Ommisslon offi ces thJ'ouihout~
Japan today as workers checked
housewives' complaints of under-size
rolls. In the Tokyo office, officials said.
about 10 percent of the 423 rolls checked
had fewer sheets than specified on the
label.
manager. The boy vanished. and his
i:arents spent the night looking for him,
in vain .
On Wednesday, the body of the 12·)'ear·
old was found hanging in a v1ooded area
n'!ar his Cincincnali home. A baseball
glove was nearby.
"I'm not sure he really liked sports. at
least not baseball." said the 1c3n1
manager. Cart Buschbacher. "lie wasn't
that enthusiastic about it."
"He was a starter on the team. but
seve ral weeks ago he began n1issi ng
practices. Then he didn't show up for one
of our games and I s!artcd someone else
in his place.
"I \\'Ondcr if I pushed him too hard?
l'\'e been asking myself that over 3nd
over again since it happened and can
honestly say I don·t think so." .
''His rather has a very responsible
posilion as athletic director for the
church. He coordinates our cnlirr sport s
pro'!ram. "'hich has a $10.000 to $11.000
budget. But he didn't push him that hCU:d
either."
Sister Paula, principal of the school.
said the seventh grader "'as a &y Scout,
se1·ved Mass and had a paper route In
:1ddition to playillg sports.
"He \\'as always chee rful and good
humored and performed his duties at
i\lass very faithfully," she said. "}le was
the kind of bov vou never thought this
\\ ould happen lo.:, ...
Thais Get Ma11
So Sorry-llarern No t Perrnitted
BANGKOK (UPI) -Police have arrested .a Japanese bus!ness-
man and accused him of maintaining a hare1n 1n northern 1'halland.
Police s.Ud they charged Toshio Tamamoto. 41,. at a ~angkok
hotel after his return from the northern city of Chiang Mai. .
Tamamoto was first arrested in January 1973 and charged. with
keeping six girls, aged 8 to 17, at his residence in Chiang ~tcu. 350
miles north of Bangkok. A lS·year-old girl told pollc~ she had been
kept against her will and raped on numerous occasions. After his
arrest. Tama mo to was released on ball. wh ich he. jumped.
At the time. he said he had pa id the tradlt1onal dowry for lhe
girls at prices ranging from $250·$500. . . . .·
Ponce were tipped he returned to Thailand 1n 1-fay when a !~;111
driver said 1'amamoto was ou::ting suspiciously. The driver told pohce
Ta1namoto wa s wearing a wtg when he delivered him to his Bang·
kok hotel.
•
o DAILY PILOl ~ IS
Irvine Eyes
'lriforn1al'
Zo11e Plru1
lr\'ine City Pl11nning com1nissioners
Mil review tonight an "!nfonnal"
tt'<\UCSt of the Irvine Co1npany to place
115 toy,·nhouscs on 13 acrrs of tlniversity
Purk v.·hcre :ll>flrln1ru1s have been
plnnned for the past dread<'.
1 ·commissioners rncctlng 111 7:30 in city
h!l\ will be nsked to indic.lic i! the
1.."bmµan~· should stC'k ri rezoning for the
contro11esrial area 13 p.1rccl. The
discussion is e.tpcctrd to end a
son1elln1es bitter struggle Y:hich flared
O\•er plans lo build apartznl;'nts the~.
Original Uni\'Crslt.\' Park development
t'lan~ called for placing .nea rly 700
apartmenls on 11 30-acre ~1lc _bel\\'een
University Dri\'e and the Un1\'ers11y Park
Elementarv School.
Alter Incorporation. the original 'cil}'
planning ('Onm1is~ian rrv.'rote t. he
llnive.rsity Park zone nnd Inter . required
dedication of 15 acres of the site for a
con1muni1 y p:irk 10 be dcvc!opt'd by the
cit\'. S1i11 l11tcr. rcsidrnrs of nr:irby single·
familv hon1t>s pctiti!>ncd the city for
,.ezon.ing of thr site \1hen it v•as lcarTJed
the apa rtments wer<' 1:1houl to be built.
TM! rezone bid failed .
A site plan reviey,· by commissioners
and citv council n1c·n failed to receive a tnaJorit~· voU:' appro\·al and the 1nat.ter
"'as sent b\" counciln1cn lo the planning
C<lmn1issiotl for reconsideration of the
;.:oning question. .
A lr\'inc Company spokesman said
toda\ if oommi~~inners agree the $55.000
to f6.; !nl toy,·nhomes are a desirable
land u~ for the parcel. the con1pany ¥.-ill
seek fonnal zoning for !ht project in
Sep1en1ber.
The informal proposal suggesls the
project "·ill be 50-50 adult and fa f!1ilY
units, be subject to a 1wo-story height
limit and vdll offer its own recreation
amenities.
The architectural desiJm of the homt>s
~rill be compatible \\ith older. established
neighboring units and y,•ill be built in a
1nanncr similar to the Village TI
townhomc series. a company spokesman
Ea id. ,.
The develo pment \\"ill add 322 nCY.'
residents to lini\'crsity Park compared to
4'50 thl! most recent apartment prnposal
would have brought to the c<1mmunity.
Roofer Plunges
To Deatl1 Fron1
Building To,v er
A 24·year-old Laguna Beach roofer
plwiged 14 stories to his deatti \Vednesday
from the lop of a condominium to~:er
being erected in Laguna Hills Leisure
'V.1orld, 11•hen a construction lift failed .
.; Robert Nichols of 662 Oak St.. ·~·as
:t ata pulled from the roof \\'hile trying to
:brake the caged hoi~t asse mbly 1,1•hich
! i:was attached to the side of the structure
: ~n runners.
:; A spokesman for the Orange County
: .Coroner's Office said the load of
i materials being lifted by the hoist
i •"·as too heavy and y,·hen Nichols applied
·ihe brake. the hoist was ripped from the
:'building. one of tv.·o under constru ction.
: • The cnlire rig and load plunged to the
• <>arth below, crushing the vicitm v.·hen it
! 1anded.
l ~ He "'as rushed to Saddlebac k
t:ommunity Hospital, but was declared
t tlead on arrival of massive head and t tntema! injuries. ..
~Kidnap 'An1atcurish'
• ; ' DUBLIN (UPI \ -Police said toda~1
the kidnaping of the Earl and Countess of
Donougbmore was so amateurish they
~ believe a party of you ng provisional Irish
: Republican Army men conducting a
: v.·eapons raid abducted them on impulse .
·This theory means the ii-year-old peer
, and '''ife were not primarily taken as
hostages to force the return of the
,hungcr·striking Prirc sis ters from
London to Northern Ireland. pollce said.
. .
O•ANCil COAST IS
DAILY PILOT
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T~l7141641·4lll
Cl•11I~ Acf'lwtl11MJ ••1·5671
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TritpMM 491-4411
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•--•-... v•-.a.•• ""'-~-°'-~~"' Ll•1 -~ DllO ti CIM11 Md.o, t;.ohlo;tt "' Sll~Dl"-•l00""11"1"'1t ~ ... ~ 11 00"""'t"'w.llllM..,~-·l OOO'IQnl!!I,
•
ThufKllly, Junt 6, 1974
'RE DJ REC -
D~11Y P'llol Staff P'l'alt
SPREADING THE WORD -Teachers' of Laguna Beach Unified
School District, who recently staged a wildcat one-day strike. fol·
lowed by a large newspaper ad to air their salary grievances. co n·
tinue the campaign by picketing. They appeared in various locations
about town 'Vednesday.
Laguna Teachers Picket
~
District IJitring Night
By HILARY KA\.E
Df "'e D1i11 P'ilel S!itf
~lore tnan 100 placard-carrving
teachers picketed the Laguna Beach
Unified School District offices from 3
p.m. lVednesday until 12:30 a.m. today
and \\"ere successful in elablishing a
rootinuous negotiation session due to
begin at 4 p.m. Friday.
Teachers picketed d u r i n g a
Professiona l Educators Council IPEC i
meeting during the afternoon. the first
return to lhe bargaining !able between
lhe leachers' official negotiation team
and district admin istrators ~nd trustees
since the three percent settlement
offered by the board last ~larch 15 .
The protesting teacllers remained at
the dis trict offices until the evening
hoard meeting. wh ich ,~·as immediately
followed by another PEC session which
ended after midnight.
The teachers -several brought
sleeping bags in case an all-night vigil
was necessary -agreed to go home only
after learning from the PEC team that
negotiations \\"ere firmly scheduled and
the board had sho"~ '"good faith ."
Protests began last week when
teachers held a one-day wildcat strike to
demonstrate their discontent with the
three percenl settlement.
Jerry Fair, director of the district's
continuation school and head of the
teachers' stra tegy committee. said that
at the height of the picketing:. 108
teachers "'ere counted. There arc 150
teachers in Ute distric t.
"By the time 111e le!! at 12:30 a.m.,
there were still 99 teachers here. A fe·N,
v.·ho bad small children left with
babysitter£, left before midnight,"' fair
said.
Trustees today said they are pleased
"·ith the 'teachers' conduct..
'"I ~·as very impressed with the
teachers' orderliness, and the way they
llrom Page l
SPENDING ...
red~ lo the Sl.13 million amount.
\\'hen combined with the operations
budget. city expenditures next year ma y
total $4.5 million. an amount jU5l four
times the city's firm budget.
~tajor expense Items are:
-$1.2 million for public safety
sC'rvices olher than fire department men
and equipment provided by the county
and paid for by a separate ta:< levy.
$i99.521 for public w or k s
administration and maintenance cost-;
provided by the city.
-~~33.070 for city plonntng scr\•ices
cx1• • to be offset by a 1120,000 fee
inti program propo 11e d for
asse .. 11ent against new dt!:veloPment!I.
-4327,097 for community service!!
administration. parks maintenance and
staff ing :ind recreation programming.
-$541.826 for adminlstr11tion services
and non.Oepartmental spending for
cmploye benefit1 , working supplies an<I
the city contingency reserves of $100.000.
Supporting the IOtRI St5
mlllioo·spending prognm art estimated
revenues Including $1.4 million from
sales taxes. S70'2.670 from the city
property tax lt\'Y and nearly $500.000 In
combined motor vehicle taxes In lieu of
property laxes and gasoline sales levies.
Budget figure! under study h y
councilmen do not include ~pending ~ny
of the? $1R million bond s ror park! Rn<i
bike trail~ which were a ppr o v c d
Tuesday.
handled lhemselves during the day and
C\'ening. I feel good about the sessions.
and feel there's openness on bo1h sides."
said Trustee Jane Boyd, a board
representative to tbe PEC committee.
* * * Day of Mourning
In Capistrano
District Called
By JOllN VALTERZA
01 !~1 Dilly P'llel Still
'!'he organization representing the
hulk of teachers in the Capistrano
t;nified School District late \\'ednesday
agreed lo launeh a \\'alkout and
•·professional day of mourning " Tuesday.
In the strongest plan for a \\'Ork
sti>ppage yet to hit the large district. the
membership or the Capistrano Unified
Educators' Association (CUEA ) agreed
over\\•helmingly lo stay av.·ay from
classes to emphasize dissatisfaction with
a district. offer of an eight percent raise
in wages for the next fiscal year.
ln addition, the scores of teachers at
the afternoon meeting in San Juan
Elementary School em phasized that as of
today their members would perform
non<! of the extra y,·ork for which
teac hers are not compensat ed.
EssenPally, they said, members \\-OUld
work their standard seven hour day and
do lihle else, including attending
C<lmmencement rites at each high school.
In the strongest "·arkout vote yet in the
dist rict. the CUEA members condemned
a board action last r.-tonday which •
1
appeared to end any solid negotiations
over increases in wages. Trustees bal ked
at a request by the group for daily
negotiations in an effort to resolve
diffe rences before thl! end of the school
yea r.
In a secood action. trustees agreed that
they "'·ould \"Ote soon to slam lhe lid on
any increases above eight percent.
Teachers ha\·e been seeking a 13
percent hike because of dire predictklns
of heavy inflation over the next 12
months.
llrom Page l
STALL ...
represents about 85 percent of the
district's teachers. called We 11 e '~
stalement "the annual postpone1nenl
ploy."
"They do this annually," she said.
"They wait until most of the teachers are
away on vacallon, then offer a much
lower figure than requested."
Jn addition to the request for a higher
pay scale, l\1rs. Gayron .said, the
teachers wanted to be Able to reach the
maximum salary level in sevt l )'earS
rul~r !tr.Jn 13 as at present
Welte, denied the procrastination
charge, saying, "There has never been
any Atlempt to postpone. We hBVe met
with the teachers when and where they
WRnfed,
"It was not the board's intention to
come in "'ilh a low figure and work up 10
a higher one."
\Vcllc said he could not ~peculate on
whelhcr the board might settle on an
ln<'r!'ase }X'rcentage bet\Yecn the two
offers.
\
Na1ned by .J11dges , --Grunion Sta rt
Nine ·From Coast I
Ru1i Toni gJit
' ' On Jury Roster
Grunion will bcQ:in a foor·nlght
spa\\·ning run on Orange Coruit
beaches tonta:ht.
The tw<Mlour run1, dictated by
Udes and moon phases, accordlnJ:
to the Cslifomia Department of
Fish and Gt1n1e, beJ1:b1 at 10:30
tonight :. 11:06 p.m. Friday; 11:41
p.m. Saturd11y mid 12 :23 a.m.
Mpnday.
Nine Orange Coast residents ure
nmong U1e 30 ))Qfsons nominated by
·Superior Court judges for se rvice on the
1974·75 Orange County Grand J ury.
Thoir names will be among the 19
name1> drawn from the ballot box July l
by county clerk William E. St John prior
to the new jury's swearing in bt>fore
Judge E\'erett \Y, L>ickey of San
Clemente.
Judge Dickey will be the criminal court
arraignment jurist BJ'ld Grand J ury
liaison in 1974-75.
The current Grand Jury will complete
its service June 30 and will be disbanded
by oulgolng 'Judge· James Turner of
Laguna Beach' shorlly before the new
panel ls sworn Jn.
Ifs 18 month serVice constitutes an
Orange County record. That record
becan1e possible this year when it was
d~lded to commence all future Grand
Jury tenns on July I and conclude them
on 1he following June 30.
'lbe 197~74 Grand Jury took office on
Jan. l, 1973 and will complete Us tenn of
service June 30.
Four Hun tington Beach residents \Vere
among the nine Orange Coast residents
included in a list that represents the
Irvine Alternate
School Due Study
At Monday Meet •
The Irvine Unified School District's
planned alternative high school in !he
lrvine Indwtrial comple:r: will be outlined
to parents and students at a meeting
l\.1onday at 7:30 p.m. at University High
School.
Jack Parham. manager of the
Secondary Education Le a r n in g
Facilitator (SELF), will explain the
flexible program which will begin
operation next fall.
Any interested student is eligible to
participate in the SELF program. The
extent of participation may vary from a
single class at the facility to· the student
using it for his whole hlgb school
curriculum.
The SELF offers a range of actlvities
from nrk experience programs to
participation in college and university
offerings. '
\~ aller i YMeA~
Slates Course
Registration is open now for a course
on self · defense for ~-omen at the
Saddleback Valley YMCA.
Schedul ed to begin July 2. the class will
he held from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. every
Monday through July 29.
All women age 13 and over are
welcome. The course is designed to teach
self-<lefense using karate, judo and
aikido. No previous experience is needed.
l\1ore information may be obtained by
calling the Y at ~9622.
llrom Pagel
PUSHERS . . .~
Hinson explained.
Police said they did not use any
undercover agents on the high ~hool
campus.
Included in the drug purchases were
marijuana, hashish, LSD, heroni, co-
ca ine. PCP, amphet.!imines and sec:ohal.
Hinson said marijuana sales were the
most frequent.
personal choice of 27 of the Superior
Court's 'J Judges.
They are: Micha.el L. llefOln, 27, of
16112 Craig Lone, nominated b,Y Judge
Robert L. Corfman of ~cwPo<l Beat\_
Nick Y. Nerio, 38, or 5t41 Warner Ave.,
nomlnaled by Judge Harmon C. Scovillt;
Marlette M. Slates, 44, cf 1701 Main St .•
nontlnated by Judge Charles A . .Bauer of
lluntington Beach and Bnrbara S. \Voods.
39, 9t 21052 Indigo Circle. no1ninated by
Judge W111ter \V . Charamz.a o {
HWltington Beach .
Other Orange Coast re,o;idents Included
Joseph Ga tlin Jr., 47, of 23062 Lavaca St ..
and Elaine N. Stanfill, 57, of 13191
Meadowbrook Circle, both of El Toro.
Gatlin was nominated by Judge
lierbert S. 11erlands and Mrs. Stanfill
v.·as nominated by Judge William S. Lee
of Newport Beach.
Also named are fl.1arcella Scott. 39, of
16&75 Spruce Circle, Fountain Va lley.
non1inat ed by Judge Hobert P. Kneeland
of Newport Beach: William L. Spencer,
65. of 3716 Ocean Blvd., Corona de! Mar,
nominated by presiding Judge Robert A.
Banyard and Victor S. Stewart, 67, of
25-152 Gloriosa Drive. Mission Viejo.
nominated by Juct&e William C. Speirs of
Newport Beach.
llrom Page l
D-DAY ...
Canadian veterans came back to such
forgotten places as Omaha and Utah
beaches. ·
Alter a prolonged wait In their crowded
landing craft, allied soldiers, having
crossed the storm·tossed sea, hit the
beaches in 1944 at five spots -the
Americans going ashore at Omaha and
Utah beaches , the British and Canadians
in the East at Sword, Juno and Gold.
Alter furious fighting, th seaborne and
airborne troops gained a foothold in
France ·under the umbrella ol nearly
13,000 war planea. 'eight battleships, 22
cruisers, 93 destroyers. 450 naval vessels
and 360 torpedo boats.
But now the beaches are welcoming
the first summer vacationers. The llttle
towns and villages. leveled by artillery,
have been rebuilt, and the greel)..98.stures
are filled ~·ith herds of fit Norman
cows.
SpPrts Signups
Slated S~turd_ay
R:giStratlon for swimming or tenni s
lessons provided through the· Irvine
Recreation Department will be held on
Saturday.
Recreation coordinator Froome Gayle
~aid swimmers may sign up rrom 9 a.m.
to noon at the University High School
pool, Culver at Cadlf'pus Drive. A second
registration for swim classes is plaMed
for the same times on June 22.
Those interested in tennis instruction
may sign up between 9 and II a.m.
Saturday only in city hall, utll C3mpus
Drive, Irvine Town· Center.
For Information about the classes call
83l-3340.
11 .... m Page l
MOULTON •..
low income persons.
-Portions "of the area are v.·lthin the
sound·impect reaches of the El Toro
Marine Air Station jet night paths. The
city notes that mitigation measures con·
tained in the report propose sound~
prooOng house!. "That I~ only effective if
the resident• never desire to come
outside,'' the Lttgwia paper states.
Grunion hunters must have vo lid
state fishing llcenses and n1ust
catch the fish only with' their
hands.
Balboa Yacht
Club's 'Swift'
Gets Trophy
• By ALMON LOCKAB~V
D.+lt •lie! .. 1M11t ltllltt
S\\•ift. a Newport·41 coskippcrcd by
Gnyle Post and J~ck Mallinckrodt or
Balboa Yach t Club, slipped acros.<1 the
finish line at 4:50 : 15 p.m. Wednesday to
capture elapsed time honors In Balboa
Yacht Club's fiOO.mile Guadalupe. Island
race for the second straight year.
Swift 's elapsed lime was four days.
four hours. 50 minutes and 15 sccoods.
beat ing her last year's tin1e by nwrc
than t~·o days.
As elapsed lime winner, Swift 'A'ins the
Endymion Trophy , a 1nodel of Donald
DouglaS' fa med schooner of the same
n11me dedicated by Los Angeles Yacht
Club. She saved her lime on the other
ty,·o international ofrshore rule racers to
win the Vllan C.ouch Memorial trophy .
Second boot to finish was Aquavit. a
Morgan-42 skippered by Ptiilt Baehr,
California Yacht Club, at 4: 17 a.m.
today.
Bob Williams' Lapworth-44 Talisman,
BYC. finished at 6:38 a.m. and is the
flOSsible winner or the Daily Pilol trophy
for best corr~ted time in t h e
performance handicap racing f 1 e et
division.
Her closest competition ~·as the
lslander-37 Pele skippered by Jim Emmi.
Bahia Corinthia n Yacht Club. At the 8
a.m. roll call Pele was off Dana Point
and was expected to finish sometime
before noon if the wind picked up. She
had Wltil 10 :38 a.m. to save her time on
Talisman.
The rest of the ll·boat fl eet was spread
out from 30 to eight. miles from Ne1A11Qrt
and e1.periencing u:tremely Ught air.
Tl'.ailer' Burgled
On Vacation Trip
An Irvine trucker who didn't want to
turn around and keep on truckin' back to
his vacation spot to file a vehicle
burglary report appealed to local police
Wednesday.
Dean Hueter of 135S2-0akhaya ·circle
told Officer Rudy Malik he arrived home
from Lake Havasu .&o discover his rented
motorhome had been burg\arlzed there.
He found his watch and his wife's
prescription sunglaws with a total value
of S335 missing, then discovered evidence
that someone had broken into the vehicle
at the lake.
Irvine police took the report directly
and forwarded a copy to the Mohave
County, Ariz .. Sheriffs Department for
further investigation.
A11ram s in Surgery
WASHtNGiON IUPl l Ge n .
Creighton W. Abrams , Army chief ot
staff v.·ho \Yas U.S. commander in
Vietnam at the peak of U.S. involvement.
Wlderwent surgery for lung cancer t.oday
at Waller Reed Army ~ledical Center. !!Ill!'\ WIKEMEH·s ~~-~~ CELLARS
2500 W. COAST HWY.
HIWPOttT HACH
-'42-7076 ....... _,......._
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
~-·-~ IM MIWPOllT l'llOOUCI YILUGI
1601 MIWPOITILYD.
COSTA MISA 64.Z·t004
·~
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES
EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAINS from BORDEAUX
f ll"'"" nrn;1 tt.ll[ ~I(;(
P0tD<llllt IWDnlll"
IARGAIHS UHDH Sl 1'111 IOTTU!
SA~ s295 1967 CMATEAU TOURTEAU $3J 86 ;>r -(St. George, SI. EmiUonJ
IARGAJHS UHDll SS 1'111 IOmE • pJ $495 1967 C>IATEAU l1FLEUR . $5346 ;lf'J _ BECAOE (Haul•M'Kb:J
-. ,,&" $495 1970 CMATEAU TRoNOUOY· S5346 /fI7;, LALANDE (St. Est&Qhe)
•
•
7
Huniingion Be-.t!h
Fountain ·Valley .
VOL. 67, NO. 157, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COU~TY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 6, J974
Today's F inal
N.Y. Stpck s
TEN CENTS
OC GraQd Jury Asks War on Drunk Drivers
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of 1119 Otlly rllfl Sltff
The Orange eou.nty Grand Jury urged
the Board of Superv1sors today to
wage alJ-OUt ~·ar on drunken driving in
the coun ty.
Jn a three-page report to supervisors,
jury foreman .t.... E. "Bill" Gaz lay said
the rounty recorded 125 alcohol-related traffic~ deaths last year. ·
"And it is estimated the cost of
alcohol-related motor vehicle accidents
approached. $7 million," Gulay added.
The main thrust of lhe jury's
recommendation was aimed at getting
the board to coordinate a comprehen!lve
program designed to reduce the number
of deaths, injuries and property damage
cau.sed by drinking driver9.
Ga:zl~y said the problem is getting
\\'Ol'SC instead of better despite "''Ork by
several county agencies and the grant
programs to solve it.
Referring to a roadside survey made a
year ago in HWllington Beach, Gazlay
said one out of every four drivers on
weekend evenings had been drinking and
ooe of every 25 was ieffilly under the
irifluence of alcohol.
"A comparisiQn of this and other dat<i
suggests that arreslS occur in only one
percent of the occurrences of driving
under the influence," Cazlay said.
Of those arrested, Caz\ay said 60
percent are classified as problem
drink~rs or alcoholics in need of
treatment and the other 40 percent are
labeled "misu!ers" who need education.
Among other things, the ju r y
recommends:
-A public education effort to solicit
public support.
-A specialized education effort aimed
at drinklng drivers.
-A cooperative program between
criminal justice and health agencies to
detect and intervene in bfhavoria!
patterns of problem drinkers.
... -A referral center acting as a hub for
all processing. and referral aC1ivities.
-A means for evaluating the
effectiveness of the system.
-A fiscal arrangement for the
cpcration of referral and treAtment
programs. A $25 to S4f.I client fee is
suggested.
Gazlay suggested that all efforts he
coordinated by the Alcoholism Services
Posilion of the Department of ~\tental
H~al1h. The jury · also suggest s
ai)pointment of an interagen cy ad\•isory
committee.
Ocean View Teacher Strike Averted
West1ninster Roundup
64 Drug Pusher
Suspects Nabbed
Sixty-four suspected narcotics pushers,
aged 13 to 4.2, were arrested late
Wednesday by Westminster police in a
mass crackdown on drug sales lo
tttnagers.
The arrest roundup climaxed eight
months of police in\'estigation involving
200 undercover drug purchases valued at
$4,000, police said.
'Jt)e crackdown was similar to one
made last month by Fountain Valley
police where 62 suspected narcotics
pushers were arrested anCI one in late
April ln Irvine where 130 pe-rt0M were
arrested on suspicion of various drug
charges.
Sgt. Manuel Hinson, coordinator of the
Westminster project. said uniformed
Westminster officers set out at dusk to
arrest Westminster suspects .
Police in Fountain Valley, Ga,rden
Grove, Santa Ana and Huntington Beach
ass.isled by arresting suspected pushers
in their cities.
Police had warrants for 27 juveniles
and 48 adults, all charged with sales of
narcotics, Hinson said. Officers today
were continuing to search for the nine
remaining suspects.
f'orty-two were from Westminster, one
from Fountain Valley, eight [rom Garden
Grove. nine from Santa Ana and [ive
from Huntington Beach, Hinson reported.
Officers were told in a pre-sweep
briefing to arrest juveniles by 10 p.m ..
and most of the other ar rests were
completed by midnight, Hinson said.
noting the operation "went smoothly."
The parents of each juvenile were
given a packet of information about the
arrest, Hinson said, including a special
telephone number where officers were on
duty to provide additional details.
He estimated about SO calls were
Ass assination Trial
THIMPHU, Bhutan (AP) -The new
18-year~d king of Bhutan s a i d
Wednesday about 30 persoru; will be tried
on charges of plotting to assassinate him.
King Jigme Singhi Wangchuck. '"'·ho wa9
crowned Sunday and is the world's
youngest ruling monarch. told newsmen
the plotters wanted to take over Bhutan
and use it as a ataging area for guerrilla
raids into Tibet .
Orange Coast
Weather
Low clouds and fog night and
morning hours with hazy SWlShine
In tbe afternoon Friday. Only par-
tial cleari"i oo the beaches. Slight· Jy wanner inland. Highs upper 60s
At the beaches lo low 80s inland.
INSIDE TODA. Y
\Veddtng of Sly of "Sly and
romily Stmte" tooi attended bu
23.000 fo111 and it was a lu1g(I
success. Policfl arrflstcd 13 per·
sons for lrflBJXlSS, &ix wome1t
fainted. 011d fistfights broke out
spcradica/ly, Story. PO!)e 4.
'-M. a1rf M C1llft"'l1 7t
c11nlf1M >M1 C-lu H c~,_. n
DHfll Ntlktt u
••11#1•1 '"'" • l"lwrt•~ u, ,. f'llllMI U.17 -.. "''"' \.ll!Wt 11
M.-., '"" ,. ... _ ~
MUl9fll llllllW' U N1llOl'lll Ntw• t OrMlft (HlllJ' ll•IS ,.,... " S•MI ~ H $"'"' 7'•D Si.di M11'111t1 ,._U
Ttflr\'ltlofl U Tlle11tn ,.
w111Pi« • wtrMfl"I N..n U·M
W1"4I N"" 4
•
•
handled throughout the evenirlg. Officers
on the phone lines had copies of all arrest
reporlS and were able to explain arrest
and court procedures, Hinson added.
Westminster police started th e
narcotics crackdown because o f
increasing drug traffic in the city,
particularly around teenage hangouts
and Westminster high school campus,
l!inson explained.
Police said they did not use any
undercover , agents on the high school
camp{ls.
Included in the drug purchases were
marijuana, hashish, LSD, heroni, co-
caine, PCP, amphetamines and seconal.
Hinson said marijuana sales ·were the
most frcq0ent. I
Probers Eye
17 Wiretaps
For 'Offense'
\VASHI NGTON (UPI) -The House
Judiciary Comm ittee studied evidence
today to see 1£ there was impeachable
misconduct in 17 wiretaps conducted on
President Nixon·s orders from 1969 to
1971.
Although Nixon has cited national
security as justification for the wiretaps.
some committee members said the
information gathered had nothing to do
with security.
Reports on the results o! the wiretaps.
according to Rep. Robert Drinan (0-
Mass.). •·show notQing i n v o Iv in g
disloyalty or national security, but things
about their personal lives that were
degrading. They had no business getting
JURY'S VOTE NAMING NIXON
CONFIRMED. Story, Jage 4
that kind of stuff."
Rep. Joshua Eilberg (D-Pa.), said
\Vhite House documents presented to the
committee in a closed impeachment
session showed Henry A. Kissinger
suggested the names of the 17 wiretap
victims in his role as Nixon's national
security adviser. He has den i e d
proposing the wiretaps.
Rep. Jack Brooks (~Tex.), said
!Ste WIRETAPS, Page Z)
Boy, Girl Held
After Holdup in
Fountain V allev
" Two juveniles, a gJrl from Fountain
Valley and a boy from Santa Ana, were
arres ted by Fountain Valley police early
today after the robbery of the 7-Eleven
market at Slater Avenue and Ward
Street in Fountain Valley.
Polic~ said two suspects entered the
store early in the evening. then lhc male
returned abou t 2 a.m.
Police said he robbed the store clerk of
$40 al gunpoint. then forced him to open
the cash register and took Sl60.
The robbtr ordered the clerk to drive
him away in his car, palitt said and
\\'hen the clerk refused, the youth fled on
root.
He "A"as arrested by po!ict a short time
later at the home ol the girl in -iunla in
V111ley, police saJd.
'
llPI 'hltPllOlt
Kentaedys Pay T1·ib11te
Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.J is flanked by sister·
ln-law Ethel (on crutches after a skiing injury) and
wife Joan at Arlington National Ce1netery where
they paid respects to the late Robert F. Kennedy on
the sixth anniversary of his ass assination. Joan left a
psychiatric hospital to atlend the rites.
4 Huntington Jurors Set
Jucl ges Norn ina te 30 F roni County for '74-75 Du ty
Nine Orange Coast residents tire
an1ong the 30 persons nominated by
Superior Court judges for service on the
1974·75 Orange County Grand Jury.
Their na1nes will be among the 19
name8 drawn fro1n the ballot box July I
by county clerk \Villiam E. St John prior
to the ne11.• jury's swearing in before
Judge Everett \V. Dickey or San
Clemente.
Judge Dickey \viii be the criminal court
arraignment jurist.. and Grand Jury
liaison in 1974·75.
The current Grand Jury JNill complete
its service June 30 and will be disbanded
by outgoing Judge · James Tumer or
Laguna Beach shortly before the new
panel is sv.·om in.
Its 18 month aervice constitutes 11n
Orange County rerord . That recorcl
became possible this year v.·hen it was
lH.VINE CAPTU RES ' B.4SEBALL CROWN
SPRINGFIELD. 111.-Gary Wheelock.
Jefr ~fallnoff and Keith Bridges paced
the UC Irvine baseball team to a repeal
pt_rformance Wednesday night a$ NCAA
college division champions.
For details of the final ~ame. see
today's sports sect.Ion, Page 29.
' .
decided to rommence all future Grand
Jury tcrmi: on July l and conclude thcn1
on the follo\ving June 30.
'n'le 1973-74 Grand Jurv1took office on
,Jnn. 1. 1973 and v.·ill co1ni>lclc its term of
ser\'ice June 30.
Four Huntington Beach residents \\.'ere
among the nine Orange Coast residen!JI
included in a list that represents lhc
personal choice of 27 of the Superior
Court's 31 judges.
They arc: ?-.Iichacl L. llefflin , 27, of
16112 Craig Lane, non1inated by ,Judge
Robert L. Corfman of Newport Beach:
Nick Y. Nerio, 38, of 5141 Warner Ave ..
Hi jack Search
Charoe Rcducc<l 0
.\VASHJ N(;TON fAPI -A judge ha"
founcl that the surcharge collected by th e
nation's :ilrllnes for ant I hi j ll ck in g
security is '1lUljust and unreasonab le.')
Adrninlstrative L.av.· Judge Rober1 S<!::i
ver or th e Civil Aeronaullc!I B o a r ti
\Vednesday ordered the !iun:hllrge cut
from 59 to 43 cents per p:titSengcr. lie
said thC' 43 cents represents how much it
costs the airlines for the security
1neasures. Seaver said Amer ican Airllnes
took . in $1.9 million in surplus revenue In
the last 1i,,; month, of 1973 from th;,
security chnrgc.
•
nominated by Judge IIarmon G. Scoville :
~\ofarlettc M. Slates. 44. cf 1701 Main St..
nominated by Judge Charles A. Bauer of
Huntington Beach and Barbara S. Woods,
. 39. of 21052 Indigo Circle,.1,nominatcd by
Judge \Valter W. Cha ramza of
Huntington Beach.
Other Orange Coast re1;idents included
Joseph Gatlin Jr., 47 . of 23062 Lavaca SL,
and Elaine N. Stanfill. 57. of 23191
.\l eado\\•brook Circle. both of El Toro.
Catlin was nominated by Judge
Herbert S. Herlands and l\frs. Stanfill
was nominated by Judge William S. Lee
of Newport Beach.
Also named are 11farcella Scott . 39. of
16675 Spruce Circle, Fountain Valley.
nominated by Judge Robert P. Kneeland
or New1>9rt Beach : \Vlllia1n L. Spencer.
6.:i, of 3716 Ocean SJ\·d .. Corona de! ~1ar .
no1ninated by presiding Judge Robert A.
Banvard and Victor S. Sle\rarL 67. of
25452 Gloriosa Drive. ~fission Viejo.
no1ninated by Judge \\11\liam C. Speirs of
Ncu·port Be:.ich .
2 So ught in Slayiugs
McCORMICK. S.C. ( UP I l
Authorilles wcrt searching today for
"IV.'0 hippie t}'pcs'' in the slaying of three
Ft. ('r0rdon. Ga . soldiers whose mulllatcd
bodies v.·ere round near a reservoir
Sunday. Police said com~lte drawings
had bttn made of l\\'O pt>_rsons \\'ho may
haVc been involved in the slayings.
J
Wage Talks
Stewing 111
Valley A1·ea
By KA TifY CLANC\'
Of 1111 D•ll• 1"11111 "•fl
A threatened teacher walkout in
~lunlington Beach's Ocean Vie\\' School
District \\'BS averted today. but teachers
in the FOUil!ain Valley and Hunt ington
Beach City School Districts continued to
sle\v over wage talks.
With a threatened strike just two houn;;
away. negotiators for Ocean Vie\\'
teachers and the school board agreed al
5:30 a.m. today to an eight percent
across-the board pay increase.
Included in the settlement art'
agreements to call in outside mediation
for teacher grievaoces. for formation of
a committee to study class size, lo allo11·
teachers to choose teacher members for
curriculum study committees and to
provide additional pay for after-school
sports.
The proposed settlement \\'ill go to
teachers for ratification at a meeting
scheduled for 4 p.m. Friday at llurdy
Park.
Negotiators had been meeting almost
round-the-clock since noon Tuesday \\.'ith
a mediator from the state Conciliation
Service.
Jn Fountain \'alley \\'ednesday night ,
more than 300 angry teachers and
parents confronted school trustees,
urging them to reopen wage negotiations.
The board refused. but offered to let
both sides prC'sent their demands to Dr
James Ro1\'C, a Santa Barbara Count~·
school administrator. and let him make
recommendations to the board.
Teachers rejected the proposal and
said they'll return to tonight's 7:30 board
meeting with more parents and teachers.
Fountain Valley teachers ha\' C'
threatened to strike Friday unless thi'
school board agrees to r e o p e n
negotiations. Instead of talking .. rilh
)eachers and parents i m m e d i a t e 1 ~
\\'ednesclay night, trustees \\.·ent into a 95-
minute executive session, f u r t h e r
angering those present.
"They can only solve the problems out
here with us,., observed P e t e r
VanDinter. one of about 40 Fountain
Valley parents present.
Several parents tried to intemipl the
executive session, but \\'ere stopped by
Fountain V11ltey administrators Bill
B:::rnes and Robert Sampica. who told the
pa rents they could be arrested for
interrupting a public meet ing.
In the Huntington Beach City School
District. negotiations were cnnlinuing
today. with teachers manning pickc l
lines outside the meeting room .
Huntington Beach teachers already
have rejected three salary offers.
One plan \\'OUld have given teachers :i
five percent pay raise \\'ith belier dental
insurance. The others cut the dentnl
Insurance plan. but offered seven and
eight pcrcC'nt pay boosts.
Valley 1{11 ns • • T enchers' Line
An infonnation line. designed to
give parents U)l·to-datc lnfor1nalion
about the status of 1cnchcrs
contract negotiations. "'ns pu~ into
operation ioday by the Fount.1ln
Vnltey School District.
A district spokesman sai d
parents mny learn or a !cacher
slf'ike or unusual corditions nt any
school by dlaling 842--0788 31 an.v
lime. Callers will hear a recorded
message and . information y,·ill be
updated rrequ~lly .
!
? DAILY PI LO l " Thursday , Junt 6. 1974
"
1..,hais Get Man
So Sorr .r -llare1u Not Per111itted •
BANGKOK ( JPIJ -Police have arrested a Japane se business·
man and accused him of maintainin~ a bare1n in northern Thailand.
Police said I cy charged •rosh10 T"am~molo, 41 .• at a Bangkok
hotel after his return frotn lhe northern cil.y of Chiang l\fal.
,.ra1nan1oto wa s first arrested in Ja.nuary 1973 and charged with
keeping six girls. a g~d 8 to 17. al his re sidence in Chiang htai, 350
miles north of Ban~k.ok . t\ 13-year·ol<l gi rl told police she had been
kept again st her will and raped on nurncrous occasions. 1\fter his
arrest. Ta1narno10 was released on bai l, which he jun1ped.
At the tin1e. l'Je said he had paid the traditional dow ry for the
girls at prices ranging fro1n $250-$500.
Poljce were tipped he relurned to Thailand in fl.l ay when a taxi
driver s'aid Tamamoto was acting suspiciously. The driver told police
Tamamolo \Vas wearing a \i:ig "-'hen he delivered him to his Bang-
kok hotel.
Coast College District
Awarcl s 10 Pe1·ce11t Raise
Coast ('on11nuni1y C.:o!lrgr D1strirt
trustees rcvic\\0ed lhr di s I r i c I · s
prelim inary budget for the coining year
\Vcdnesday night and , at the same ~ime.
.gave everyone at Golden \Vest and
Orange Coast College a 10 percent pay
raise.
The salary package. a p prov c d
unanimously by the rive-man panel.
amounts to Sl.8 million or the $43.8
mi!Hon budget proposed for fiscal 1974-75.
Jf approved as prcS<'nted. the budg et
\1·ould increase expenditures by SG. I
million over this year. raising the
district's tax 17 cents to $1.15 per $100
assC'Ssed valuation.
Corellan Thompson. vice chancellor for
business affa irs. said the wag e
agreement covers 508 teachers and 531
non·lett ching employes. plus a number of
part-ti1ne v.·orkers on both ca mpuses.
The salary increases were negotiated
\l'ithout public t'Ontrovcrsy. The Bureau
of Labor Statistics' Cost of Living
Average is 9.7 percent for Orange
County, according lo district officials.
However, district officials made it
'Swift' Captures
Elapsed Ti1ne
Honors Again
By AL~tON LOCKABEY
O.llJ 'llot h lllftl Eifiltr
S"'ift. a r\ev.•port·41 coskippered by
Gayle Post and Jack ~iallinckr¢t or
Balboa Yacht Club. slipped aero~ lhe
finish line at 4:50:15 p.m. \Vednesday to
'capture elapsed time honors in B;;ilboa
Yacht Club's 600-mile Guadalupe Island
raci• for the second straight year.
Swift's elapsed time was four days,
fo!.lr hours. 50 minutes and 15 seconds,
beating hei-last year's time by more
than tv.·o days.
As elapsed time winner. Swift wins the
Endymion Trophy . a 1nodel of Donald
•Douglas' famed schooner of the same
O.'.\me dedicated by L-Os Angeles Yacht
Club. She saved her lime on the other
tWo in ternational offshore rule racers to
v.•in the Vilan Couch r-.1emoria\ tro~hy.
Second boat to finish \\•as Aqu"avit. a
~torgan-42 skippered by l\lilt Baehr.
California \'acht Club. at 4:17 a.m.
today.
Bob Williams' Lapy,·orth-H Talisman.
BYC. finished al 6:33 a.m. and is the
possible winner of the Daily Pilot trophy
for best corrected lime in t h e
wrformance handicap racing f 1 e e I
dl\Pision.
Her closest competition was the
IsJander-37 Pele skippered by Jim Emmi.
·Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. At the 6
a.m. roll call Pele v.·as off Dana Poin t
and was expected to fini sh sometime
before noon if the 1,1•ind picked up. She
had unlit 10:38 a.m. to save her time on
Talisman.
The rest of the I !·boat fleet \\'as spread
out from 30 to eight miles from Nev.'j)Ort
and experiencing extremely light air.
Oa.t.HG-l COAST Hll
DAILY PILOT
T"" 0<1"'1" C:~Oo t r..1, P"A """ .oi<o("" ,,.,....
l>""<I'"" oi .... p,., ... "'"'' .. _"',,..°'·-c.,. .. P,lf .•t "'I~"' "'fi.V•le --... I''°''""" "'""Of, "• u0" '''""' '°' (.1,,,. ~·-"""l>"l'I !Jo.-• ''""''"Ill"" ~.oc .. lfOv"<
tf-"Vllir" llO·i••lloo _• 1 ..... ~
Son Cl•.,.••••:,,., ........, \""'"'*"" " •""3'"
·-· "'(!'"''" , ... ,.......,.." :l-o•Y'llt f" ..... ~·
11.o,.. 1~. ''""<-• •"""''"''"" ~ ...... , )'°""""' 811f>T"°f"I Q,1•t"'••·o1 ('.ol'l(>I" .. 01'!~
I, f"'" 11 oN,..,.~
l''••""'"'"'''VOl•I""'
); '. ( .,1~,
v.,.., P'~lo<,l•ol oOO(\•.,..,.I Mln09fl'
c!c_.ar thry cou!d not CO'!fn1il themselves
to con!inue 10 meet cost of ll\'ing
increases because costs are sl..-yrocketin~.
v.·hi le lhe distri ct's revenues are tied to
fixed income factors .
Also ren('(ted in the budget are about
Sit! mil!ion in capital improvements,
mainly to complete projt'Cls already
under v.·ay on both campuses.
At OCC in Costa ~1esa . th is includes an
administration building, a le<:ture hall
and arts building. a student services
building, a tutorial center. a food
services lab, a horticulture building. a
skills center. a literature and lanJ(Uage
building. a drama 1,1·orkshop, and hand-
ball courts.
Sdleduled for Golden \\'est are the
renovation of existing parking lots and
nev.• parking construction. a storm drain
system, a humanities. art.<1 and sciences
bWlding, a math and science building
addition , a library and audio-visual
center addition and a music building
addition .
Exce pt for the salary increase.
trustees took no action on other i-tems in
the budget' which is described by
administrators as "high]y tentaive."
The budget, already cuf by more than
$1 milUon from ·original budget requests.
is scheduled for public hearing at 8 p.m.
Aug. 7 at district headquarters, 1370
Adams Ave., COsta Mesa.
Suspect Chnrp;ed
In Three Sc1.t•nge
Cn1npS,ite Deatlis
SALINAS (UPI ) -A 23,year-old
Salinas man was arrested today and
charged with the murder of three teen-
agers Sunday at a campsite In Los
Padres National Forest.
The silspect was ldentlfied as Stephen
Hammack.
:\uthorities declined to give any details
of the investigation which led tc the
arrest. Hammack was picked up at 8:30
a.m. by Monterey ·eounty sheriff's
deputies.
He was accused of the bludgeon
murders of Wyatt Hanson, 17. Patrick
Hill. 18, and Kathleen ~1cCort. 17.
The three young persons were viciously
beaten to death and their bodies dumped
in tv.·o rivers Sunday night. One of the
vic tims had his eyes gouged out.
The killing took place in the llCetJ\c
Arroyo Seco Gorge south of Salinas
y,•here the teen-agers had apparently
gone to relax and swim.
The bodies of the two young men v.·cre
!hrov.'ll into a cr?ek at Ule campsite. and
1he body of ~1iss McO:lrt '''as dumped in
the Salinas River 30 miles north.
Greeks Honor
Big Jolui Wayne
ATHENS (AP) -Athens' 5-foot-2
Ma)·or Dimitrios Ritsos had • t o
practically stand on tiptoe in prescn itng
the key to the Greek capital to Hollywood
movie star John \\'ayne v.·ho stands O\'er
six feet tall.
Here to promote one. of his California
antipollution business \'entures, the
Newport Beach actor heard himself
eloquently enolled for his octing,
esptdally for his Western roles.
.. Thank you, mayor," \Vayne replied.
rver the epitome of the taciturn
outdoorsman.
Youth, 12,
Kills Self
In Pi<Jue
CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -Young
Richard Blust Jr. told his mother his
arn1 hurt and he didn 't want to go to
baseball practice fvr tbe St. C&.therine
llo1nan Catholic Church team.
i\1rs. Blust told her son he had the
re!>ponsibJUty to show up and tell the
mttnagP.r. The bo y \'anished, and hls
11arents spent the night looking for hi.Jn,
in vain.
On Wednesday, the body of the 11-year-
old y.·as found hanging in a v;ooded area
near his CJncincnati home. A baseball
glove was nearby.
"rm not sure he really liked sports, at
least nol baseball.'' said the tean1
manager, Carl Buschbacher. "He wasn't
that enthusiastic about it."
.. He was a starter on the team, but
several wttks ago he. began missing
practices. Then he didn't show tie for 9ne
tJI 0t11· games and I s!arted somflne else
in his place. "·
"I \\IOOder if I pushed him IKl hard?
I've been asking 1nyself that ovCr and
o~·er agai n since it happened and can
honestly say I don't think so."'
"His father has a very responsible
posiUon as athlet'ic director for the
chuttb. He coord inates our· entire sports
proi:ram, which has a $10.000 to $11,000
bud get. But he didn't push him that hard
either."
Sister Paula, principal of tbe school,
said the seventh grader was a Boy Scout .
served Mass and had a paper route in
addition to playing sports.
''He was always cheerful and good
humored and per{onned his duties at
r-.tass very faithfully," she said. "He was
1he kind of boy you never thought this
v.ould happen to."
From Pagel
WIRETAPS. • •
lGssinger, H. R. Haldeman, then While
House chief of staff, and Alexander M.
Haig Jr., then Kissinger's assistant.
suggested the wiretap plan to Nixon.
The victims included White House
personnel, State Department officials and
newsmen, a number of members
reported.
"It seems to me a serious question why
they were putting wiretaps on people like
Joe Kraft," Brooks said.
Kraft is a syndicated columnist.
Some other names have seeped into
public knowledge. William Salire, a
former presidentiaJ speech writer, and
~torton Halperin. then an aide to
Kissinger, were among them.
!\fembers of the C:Ommittee found little
stomach for trying to make an
Impeachable offense out of Nixon's
aeceptance of a $2 million campaign
pledge fro m milk producers that
coincided wit!t presidential action v.·orth
millions to them.
No member emerging from a closed
day·long consideration of the milk case
Wednesday was willing to charge that
Nixon's order to boost milk price
~supports, contrary to the advice of his
secretary of Agriculture, was a quid pro
quo for the dairymen's contribution.
Rep. Wiley Mayne (R·lowa l, said he
took the opportunity to complain !hat the
impeachment inquiry's legal staff had
not pointed out that half a million dollars
in dairy contributions flov.·ed in 1971}.72 to
congressmen urg ing the same action as
Nixon look.
~1ayne said "the roncidence of Liming"
in Nixon's case "was net enough to
sustain an impeachable offense .''
The members, meeting Wednesday for
their 10th day behind closed doors, heard
three tapes about the contribution from
milk producers' cooperatives, Including a
SO.minute meeting between Nixon and
officials of his administ ration and 18
representatives of the dairy industry.
At that meeting on March 23, 1971,
Nixon thanked the dairymen 'for their
"support." Later that da y. at a meeting
with se\'en advisers, he made the
decision to boost milk price supports to
85 pe .. rcent of parity.
Ex to1·tiou An·csl
SAN FRA NCISCO (AP ) -The fBT
has ch"rge<l a 20-year~ld, unemployed
Oakland n1an Yl'11h extortion alleging he
collected $4.813 by threatening to bomb
<1 Coast Federal Savings and Loon
Assoc:llion office in Dakland Tuesday.
Richard John Alex ander was arrested
within an hour aft er a telephoned
extortion threat "'a s received.
l• Mr• /,'11•·~
,,.·....:i··~LJ~"'
Valley Co1u1cil Action
• ' .
(!t •lt-1H l .1 k,)oqJ F' Noll '"" ' ...... ···~ "" [~~ .....
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140.1210
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~tiff•...,_,_"'"'•' toi•• "'*"'" GI~.,,.. .,.. $/'""'"""'~ !>)--J.100"'0!11"'• "' ... t 1•00-•~!~ ........... ~··-•100--
\
I •
Jfere in capsu1e form are actions laken Tue5day night by the Fountain
V;illey City Council :
80001!.i: Appro\·ed a 1974·75 budget totalling M$.},28 million aft<'r giving
the chamber of comm erce $16,051 mort lo hire n manager and incrt>ase pro-
nlOtlon.
"'AREllOUSES: Okayrd thf' first ~ading of nn ordinance prohibiting
ronst ructlon or mini-warehouses nlong ~fagnol ia and Bushard Streets afttr no
one Objected at the public hearinR.
ltlJ BBISH: Snid increnst'd fuel and operation costs v,.·ere reasons for ln-
crf'll!ilng lhc m:ldentlal trash M!rvlce fee to $2 per month Crom $1.40 and ap-
proved a new conlracl wit h Rainbow Disposal.
AN lf!IAL: Set 8 p.m. June 18 II! tl'le date for 1 public htarlng on a pro·
PQS<'d. contract with Californ ia Animal Control wh ich include license fees of
$10 pe r dog but no cat t.ags.
'
Hoopla
Chrisie Beatty pla.ys lion-lamer. holding hoop for Tony Kightlinger
during \Vednesday's kindergarten circus at Gill School in ltunting·
ton Beach. About 56 parents turne'd out to watch costumed per·
formers at the annual event. ------------------~ ---
I Hanna£ ord, Bo11d to Face
Each Othe1· in 34th Race
Tu·o Los Angeles County men will
confront each other in a November
election ~ntest for the new }tth
Con.gressfOnal District seat t h a t
represents part of western Orange
Count y.
1..-0ng Beach Assemblyman Bill Bond
easily v.·on the ·Republican part y
nomination in a race against L-Ong Beach
City Councilman Don Phillips.
Democrats nominated Lakewood City
Cooncilman Mark Hanna(ord , who scored
a narrow victory over a large field of
contenders led by Dennis Murray.
Murray challenged Rep. Craig Hosmer
R·Long Beach), the cur re n I 34th
District congressman, two years ago but
was buried by a Hosmer landslide. The
incumbent chose not to run for re·
Retail Clerks
Sig11 Ne'v Pact
Orange County retail cle rks approved a
new contract today , averting a threat of
strikes at county food stores .
Negotiators for nine Southern
California retail clerks locals reached
agreement on the new pact with Food
Employers Co u n c I I 11tpresenlatlves
~1onday after intervention of a federal
mediator.
Oranj?c County Retail Clerks local 324
today votl'd 1.699 to 289 to approve the
contract which reportedly includes a 50
cent an hour pay hike .
Earlier this ~·eek the. Bakersfield local
voted to accept the new contract, leaving
seven locals yet to vote.
election this yea r in his new I y
restructw·ed district.
The district extends into coastal west
Orange County and includes the city of
Seal Beach and part of Huntington Beach
and other communities. Only about 25
percent of the district is .Jnside Orange
County. ·
Based Of\ Orange Cow1ty reWrns.
Hannaford trailed ~1urray for the
Democra lit nod but when , 11he µis
Angeles '(ot\s were ~dded, he acored a
victory ot 14,689 to 12.449.
Bond carried the OraJ\ge County
Republican vote and his margin of
victory was widened by a large plura lity
in Los Angeles County. J{e defeated
Phillips by 29,679 to 16,163.
Clerk Screnn1s,
Sliot to Denth
LONG BEACH (AP )-A 72-year.
old great-grandmother screamed
and lhen v.·as fatally shot late
Wednesday in the small ~rocery
store where she v.·orked pPrt time.
Ulng Beach police said Dorothy
Janicck may ha\'e frightened a
polenlial robber who panicked. shot
the woman and then fled. Officers
said no money was taken. and that
!hey tiad no clues to the assailant 's
identity.
Mrs. Janicek, shot In the
abdomen, died at a hospital 11,2
hours after being shot.
Preside11t,
Ai·ab Talk
About Trip
'. 8)1 Jl l::LEN TllOAIAS
WASJ-llNGTON tUl'I) -President
Nixon conferred for 4S mnlute.s today
Arabia. one of the five nations he wll\ be
visiting on a swing throuib the Middle
East st.artlng next wee k.
Seeretary of State Henry A. Kiasinger
joined Nlx:on ln the President's oval
office (or the meeting with Fahd, haU-
broU1er of Saudi King F~i!-!nl. 1-'nhd plays
a major role in making saudi oll policy
because he is the nation's interior
LAST POWS RECEIVE
TUMULTUOUS WELCOME. P•go 4
minister and second deputy prime
minister. }
Fahd came to Washington with other
senior Saudi officials to discuss ways lo
expanding economic and technical
cooperation with the United St8tes. Fahd
also spelled out Saudi Arabian military
derense rrquirements.
The conference preceded a v.•orkln g
luncheon in the \Vhite House v.'ilh about
100 officials of both nations Invited .
WedJlcsclay the President 'lald down his
strategy for world p e a c e at
commencement ceremonies at the U.S.
naval academy,
He rebuked n1embcrs of Congress: who
have demanded changes in Soviet
domestic policies as a price for detentc
and said the United Staes must not
intervene in the int ernal policies of
other countries.
He warned that detentc cannot be
taken for granted and said "we cannot
gear our foreign policy to trans·
formation of other societies. In the
nu'ciear age, our first responsibility musl
be the prevention of a war that could
destroy all societies.''
After returning to \\la shington, Nixon
met \Vilh a delegation of American
Jewish leaders and reaffirmed to thc1n
the Administration's pled ge of continued
economic, military, and political support
in the Middle East.
Nixon begins his goocll\'il\ tour of the
r-.lidd!e East Monday, nying first to
Salzburg. Austria for a tv.·o-day rest stop
before arriving in Cairo Wednesday.
Egyptian leaders are expected to tum
ou t cheering throngs for Nixon, who will
be V.'elcomed as the first American
President to visit Ca iro since the Big
Three conference attended by Franklin
D. Roosevelt in 1943.
The PresiPent also v.•ill make overnight
stops in Saudi Arabia , Syria, Israel and
Jordan before returning to \Vashington
June 18.
Nixon will spend about a week back
in the United States beforP. taking off
again June 2j on the first leg of his
summit journey to the So\·iet Union. lie
will make a1 rest stop in Europe befor e
arrivtng in Mosco'v to begin his talks
\\lith Soviet Communist party leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev. June 27.
The President, according lo administra-
tion officials, may make a brief stop in
Japan at the windup of his stay in the
Sovie t Union and will then go lo San
Clemente for the Fourth of July.
Irish Bre·wery
Workers Strike
DUBLIN (UPI) -Irishmen today
raced the prospect of a thirsty weekend
with supplies of draught Cuinness beer
drying up in the Liffey·Skle Brewery's
first strike in 215 years.
Some 1,700 employes u·alked out for
higher pay two weeks ago in the first
industrial shutdown of the brewery since
it was · founded by Arthur Guinness in
1759.
Stocks are starting lo run out, pub
owners said, not only of Guinness porte r
and stout hut also of rival draught beers
because the Guinness brewery Is also the
source of the gas cylinders used to
dispense them.
•·?'$ WlHBMEH'S ~~~~, -:;;::;.··_ CELLARS
2500 W. COAST HWY.
l*WPOIT IEACH
rtfOHE 642-7076
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
116t.,.i .. _.,.,~ ~ IH HIWN)W'f PllOOUCE YIUAGl
-• -1601 HIWPOITILVD,
' • COSTA MIU '42·9004
. illilllllil\'I ~Ts!. llli!ilil:l'J ~, THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES CORMJ~ BEEF · , BRAUN 5.J EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAINS from BORDEAUX
"IUOHGUSTO" .. SCHWEIGER ~ •.-· ... c•-••~••.'-'.-•••-1o '; ITALIAH SALAMI ~. i 1111••t11elOlD1AUJSAL1 ... •.tWll-tt•4'1MOW!
Re9. $449 ~ Mow . S) 89 ••-·•'" ""'°"' ""''°"' /. 3,98 . ~per J lb. • PMbQtll• f'11•110f!.. J'W-.M
lb.' '8 IAl5AIHS UHDIR U l"Etl IOmE : -~ .;::·c~:';\.~"'-~I_;,' ~A'l-'I"" s29s 1967 CHATEAU TOURTEAU s31 s6 ~~'i ~ ..._r.;11 ;,.w--!St. George, St. Em1Uori)
_ TN$ WEB'S Q4HU flATVl.IJ
t~i~·~:ti : , L~H~G~Hi!2!0R:g g. DOMESTIC SWISS h;: :" CHEDDAR (-"
Your S )79 ~ Ren. · ·chi b · ~ $)4,,9. ' 0 te I · , 1.99
.1 Llllllt J 8'1. LIMlf J b . lb.
WI~ c..,.,. /r1 Wfttl C..,ott "': ~~~~~ \ ~~ CCMOM O:Nl$ WID. 6/12 •
(
tARGAIHS UHDEll u PEii 1omE • ~.l" s49 s 1967 CHATEAU l•FLEUR s5346 ;<f';, _ BECAOE {Haut·M'Miocl ·, ,/. s495 191o cHATEAu r•o•auov. 15346 )tS7;, LALANDE !St. Estephe)
IARGAIHS UHDEll SI l'ER 1omE
,ft.,(" s595 1970 CHATEAU BATAILEY S6426 /JSJ" {5th Growth, Paulllac:)
., .....£" S695 1907 GRANl>"UY-1.ACOSTE s7506 ;.t07 -> !5th Growth·P1ulllac)
(~" 131°""1" Pw~ocl S750 1966 Chateau Jea"'Faur~
(Grand Cru-St Emilion)
r
sa100
-
Marin~-Element
-'-'"-'-"_c'Yc.'_J,_o_•-'b'-, -"-'-'---'H'--______ DAILV PI LOT :J
At-Yo-u-r
Service
A Sunday, \''tdnttdty and Friday
Said
fo'e.11Wrc •
Of lht OaUy rnot
CJul n problett1? 'f lien
Pot Du1111. Pat Obscenity
Overturn
State's Coastal
Panel Assailed
1 Ytiur Service.
1HethaHe EHergy
DEAR PA1': l know y.ou've had column
ilfms about sola r and wind energy. I'm
inlercsted in both and also would like to
look into 1>0wcr from methane gas
cnf'rgy. llas anyone pub Ii :rh c d
informalion about all three or these
potenlinl energy sources?
T.V., DANA POINT
Bu11tnm Books has published "The
l\Tother Earth News llandbook of
lloruemadc l'owcr," which gives plans
ror sun, win~ and methane energy
producing devices. The $1.95 book can be
ordered from Baol.Dm, U6 Ftf&b Ave.
New York. N.Y. 10019. In addition, Issue
No. 2• of l\1otber Earth News describts
on u11usu1.1I S.rotor windmW being s~ed
in California. The News addres11 Is P.O.
Box 70, llendersonvllle, N.C. %8739.
Arehite.,ts' Vnit
DEAR PA1 : As an architect's wife and a ne\.\' California resident, I'd like to find
out if there ls an organization for
architects in Orange County. Both my
husband and I enjoyed belonging to a
group or fellow architect families in our
former stale.
G.N ., FOUNTAIN VALLEY
The Orange County branch of the
America n Institute o( Architecls is
locnted at 4000 Westerly Place, Newport
lleach. Telephone 833.(1973 for informa·
lion about meetings and aclivllle~.
J,udy!1ugs Needed
DEAR PAT : My aunt's plum trees are
Infested with aphids. r ve heard that
ladybugs and praying mantis eat aptuds.
Where can I get some for her so she
won"t have to spray the trees· with a
chemical pesticide?
A.H., FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Contact the Bio Control Company.
10180 Lady Hird Drive, Auburn, Ca.
92603. Both ladybti~s and praying mantis
clusters are available in vary Ing
quantities and delivery is via air mall.
Pas•porls al Parks
Requested
Orange County will ask tbe three-judge
federal panel to reconslder its decision
overturning Call!omla's ob6oenlty law
because it bad its fad.! wrong, a
spokesman for District Attorney Cedl
Hicks satd today.
The obscenity statute was declared
uneonstltuUonal Tuesday by tbe jlldg~s
"'ho said it is too vague in defiDJng what is obscene.
Bu t Brent Swanson, deputl district
attorney, sa1d the ju<f&es erted when
they statOO that there are nj criminal
charges peoding againit the People wtio
filed the suit asking that the law be
struck down.
Swanson Indicated that this may have affected the decision .
And he pointed out, there au still
pending chargts against the management
of Buena Part's Pussycat Theater for
sOOwing the movie, "Deep Throat."
Warner Properties Inc., parent finn of
the Pussycat cha.in had fi led the civil
action in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles which led to the Tuesday ntling.
"We will petition for a rehearing
because there was a po s s i b I e
mistmderstanding of the facts," Swanson ~aid.
He pointed out that prosecution in the
"Deep Throat" case has merely been
delayed pending a ruling on the
constitutionality of the statute.
Earlier, Deputy District Attorney
Michael Capizzi told the Dally Pilot that
if the rehearing ls not granted, or doesn't
change anything, the decision will be
nppealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
"We have the right of direct appeal to
the Supreme Court," Capizzi said. But he
pointed out the court is due to adjourn in
about t~'O weeks.
They will riot reconvene tmtil the fall or
winter "so there will be ample tilne to
file an appeal later," be said.
Nixon Will Make
Visit to Coast
Following Trip
Air Force One?
President Nixon flip s toy plane in the air as he attends Naval Acad-
emy graduation ceremonies in Annapolis, h1d. The plane, as well as
small flag and midshipman's shoulder board (in breast pocket) were
gifts to Nixon from middies as they ca1ne on stage to receive his con-gratulations. Story, Page 5.
Quigley Co1igratulntes
Kehoe on Nomination
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 Ille o.llY Piiot Stitt
'the state coastal commission took a
verbal beating \\'ednesday on i t s
proposed marine element master plan
which many speakers c21led spineless
and vague.
The commission -fn the past
considered far more conse rvationist than
the South Coast regional panel -this
time \\.'as told the stricter policies
developed by the region were better.
"I 'have been so impressed with the
work done by the South C o a s t
co1nmission," Slate Commissioner Ellen
Siem Harris said nea r the close of the
day-Jong hearing in Inglewood.
''l would like to move we adopt in
entirety the South Coast clement for the
state marine element." ?t.1rs. Harris said.
Her motion was ruled out of order by
Commission Chairman r..1elvin Lane , who
said the staff and commission has to sift
through the new evidence and testimony
and revise the planning document before
a final vote on it In four to six \.\'eeks.
A total of 28 people spoke at the State
Coasta l Zone Conservation Commission's
first bearing on the statewide marine
clement -the first or nine parts of a
coastal master plan outlined in the 1972
coastal zone act.
The act -known as Proposition 20
\.\'hen passed by vo ters in November, 1972
-set up one stale and six regional
commissions with interim J>01''ers over
coastline construct ion.
The completed plan is due in the
legislature by 1976.
A number of speakers \Vednesday were
concemed that the sta te commission
may be soft ening its policies already with
the legislature·s opposition in mind.
''\Ve'rc quite ashamed of the
document," said Dale Secord o{ the
Environmental Coalition of Orange
County. "We don't think the voters asked
for this."
"It's not just the coastal plan," Joseph
Edmiston of the Sierra Club reminded
the commission. '"Ifs the coastal
'conservation' plan."
Other environmental groups said they
In.ine City Councilman Henry Quigley familiarize voters with his name and were dismayed. d i s c o u r a g e d ,
late V.'edn~ay •• .:_ .. ~:a opponent 111· the IJr· · Th t 2 8 disappointed or even "outraged" by the '"""" "ul::U LUl) qua 1cations. al comes o . cents cir f' I · Republican primary race for state a ~ e ement.
treasurer conceding defeat. per vote received. Representatives or manufacturing.
By con1parison, Fifth Dis Ir i ct hoe.ting, fishing. business and utility Quigley congratulated state consumer Supervisor Ronald Caspe rs spent about firms attacked the preliminary document
affairs director John Kehoe. on his Sl60,000 to receive. 54,480 votes to return as full of sweeping, often restrictive
Tuesday victon-. him to the board. That Is nearly $3 per general policies \.\'hlch ignore economic
Almost all 28 speakers insisted on lhe
need for more specifics.
The draft clement di s cuss e s
"especially sensitive" environmenta l
areas, "upland development" <Jnd other
ronceplS \.\'ilhout detailed definit ions. •
Dr. Donald Bright, chairman of tht
South Coast commission, \\'3med the
state panel its plan may be taking the
\.\.'rong direction if the language isn't s!rengthened.
"\Ve hope you \1·ould devise a more
positive approach,'' Dr. Bright said.
adding that !he drafL is too simila r lo
language in the unsuccessful Californ h1
Ocean Area Plan ( COAP).
Finished three years ago by !he state
department of navigatioll and occ:an
development, COAJ) is now sitting on a
shelf. none of its policies implem ented .
Bright said a state sen:.tor \\'ho hnd
read the draft marine element as ked him
last week. •;·\Vhy art! we spending $:i
million (for the coastal commissionsJ?
\\'e've already paid for that in COAP' ...
"I hope thafs not too prophetic,''
Bright added.
AJwa111s in Surgery
\\'ASHTNGTO'.'J (UPI\ Gen ..
Creighion W. Abrams, Army chief of
staff \.\'ho wa s U.S. commander in
Viet nam at lhe peak of U.S. invol\'emcnt.
unden,·ent surgery for lung cancer today
at Wal ter Recd Ann y ~fedical Center.
Grunion Start
Run Tonig1it
Grunion Y.-iil begin a fQUr·night
spawning run on Orange Coast
beaches tonight.
The two-hour runs, dictated by
tides and moon phases. according
to the California Department of
Fish and Game, begin at 10:30
tonight ; 11 :06 p.n1. Friday; 11 :41
p.m. Saturday and 12:23 u.m.
~fonday.
Grunion hunters must ha\'e valid
state fishing licenses and must
:atch the fish only with their
hands.
DP.AR PAT: I'm Ct regul ar re.lldtt who
enjoys your column immensely, but you
made an error recently. Although Golden
AgC pa$CS "·ere given to senior citizen
post al patrons Rl post offices last year,
"'e arc no longer the sales agents. \Ve
sliH !it'll the Golden Eagle passport for
$10, but C:olden Age passports now must
be picked up at the National Parks.
President Nixon plan_, a two· week
vacation Jn San Clemente on his return
from a 'round-the-world ~rip. and the
stay will include the Independence Day
holiday.
Kehoe received 534.227 votes compared voter. concern s.
to Quigley's 432,!91 , final tallies showed. /_:.:=:.:_ ____________ _::::::::.::::..... __________ _.,============~
The first Irvine candidate for statewide
11.S., NJo:WPORT DEACll POST OFFICE
Thanks for the eorrectlon . A check was
made for updated Information on &he
passports, but incorrect Information was
gi\·en by another post office branch.
Golde11 iH11sie
DEAk PAT : \Vhere can I get an ap-
praisal of old sheet music? I have 50 or
more popular songs by famous compos-
ers like Irving Berlin, publishl'd Crom
<1bout 1915 to 1930. plus pla in piano Jes.
sons. I \\'ould like to sell them, but have
no idea or their worth.
II.\\'., LAGt;NA BEACH
Th e Americana Collectors Shop, Santa
Ana. specia lizes in all varieties of '4pa-
per '' Americana , including sheet music.
Its mona-'er says most post·l915 n1uslc
shet'l music has little current value
($1-lo~l unless lhe cover Is very col·
nrful or feutures a picture of on old-time,
fi1mo11s entertainer, such as Al Jol~on.
A1nericanM ll'ill appraise nnd bay your
music. if you 14·fsh, but von'd be. w:lser
to hold orr !hi! sale for a re,, years until
lhc value increases.
C'f111,c11111er Probe
DEAR PAT: I read recen tly that the
F'edcral Trade Commission is
invcslil!aling idea and i ov e n ti on
promotion compa nies. Can you prov ide
furtllrr inforn1alion.r· out this and 14tere
I run wriU: lo complain about such a
cornpany wit h wtlich I almost got
i.n\'olved.
1 J'J. A .. El Toro
The F'TC"s lndus(rywide ln\'C.SUgaUon
of the!le companies will chcck1 among
other thin gs, whether such services
really brin~ economic benefit to
customers. Ille extent of their eontact
with manufacturers, the validity of lbelr
tv11luatlons nnd tbe quallflcatlons of
personnel lo conduct such stodles. The
fTC esllmutes that these. firm1 do
buslnes!I in excess of $100 million
annually. Con!ilumers' comments on Idea
Hnd invention-promotion e o m p a n I e s
should be maU ed to Richard C. Foster,
Bureau of Consumer PMtectlon, FrC,
Washington, D.C. 20580.
Q11ile " q11l1ter
DEAR PAT: llope I'm not too late to
get my name to the reader \.\'ho recently
requested someone to do quilting. J have
beL'fl m5klng quilts for myself and my
church group since my grandmother
l:iught me in the Ht30'11. Now I ·•·ould
npprcciatc the opportunity 10 m3ke or
finish quilts for inctlvlduals to help sup-
plenlcnt my n)tlrcmcnt Income..
~l.L. ~11d"'")' City A.I. "·ill be ro ntacUng }'OU to complete
bcr q11l11s. Other rtutler~ ran arrange.
qnUllnll' tn be done for them by ~TtUng-to
1\IJ,., 8502 Waiihlngton Ave., l\lldway
Cily, Ca. 92635.
•
But the first visit \\'est by Nixon since
January might not be as festive as
wished.
SpecuJaHon in Washington is that the
House Judiciary Committee probably will
take its impeachment vote while the
Pre!i&slt spends his traditional summer
vacatioii at La Casa Pacifica.
White House aides said Wednesday the
President plans to stop over in Tokyo on
the lat! leg ol h~ trip abn>act and then
fly directly to the Orange Coast.
If the visit indeed takes place, it will
mark the first stay in San Clemente
since January, when Nixon slipped away
from Washington, D.C .. and new west on
a regular commercial flight. leaving
aides and the press rorps scrambling to catch up.
That visit came during the depths of
the energy crisis and Nixon emphasized
that he chose the regular jet flight to set an example for saving precious fuel.
BoJivian Rebellion
LA PAZ, Bolivia (UPI) -Bolivia's
anned forces today interrog~ted t"'O
anny cokJnels who led a bloodJes,,, short-
11\ted rebellion against the government of
President Hugo Banzer.
office took 30 percent of the GOP
primary vote in the four-man race..
Keboe, an appointee of Governor
Reagan to the state conswner affairs
post, entered the treasurer's race with a
slight edge in name identification.
Quigley budgeted only about $9,000 to
cover his travel and advertising costs to
Roof er Plunges
To Death From
Building Tower
A 2~-year-old Laguna Beach roofer
phmged 14 stories to his death Wednesday
from the top of a condominium to\.\·er
being erected in Laguna Hills Le isure
World, when a construction lift fa iled.
Robert Nichols of fi6'l Oak St.. was
catapulted from the roof while trying to
brake the caged hoist assembly \.\'hich
was attached to the side of the structure
on runners.
A spokesman for the Orange County
Coroner's Office said the load of
materials being lilted by the hoist
was too heavy and when Nichols applied
the brake, the hoist was ripped from the
building, one of two under construction.
Bradley Returns to D-Day
1
Beaches for Anniversru·y
O:..IAHA BEACH, Nonnandy, France
(UPI ) -Thirty years after their longest
day, Allied war veterans led by live-star
Gen. Omar N. Bradley, 81 , returned to
the O.Day beeches of Nonnandy today
and ·paid tribute to fallen comrades.
At Bayeu~, American old soldiers were
joined by a French delegation Jed by
Armed Forces Minister Jacques Soufnet
and walked In solemn procession to the
~femorial of the Liben:!Jon to lay
wreaths.
• At Omaha Beach. where American
troop!! landed, there was a religious
service at the U.S. cemetery and another
wreath-laying at the National Guard
~fonument \\•hlch was specially erected
for the 25th O.Day annivef'Sl;ry. Furthc!.r
ceremonJ~ toolt place At Point Ou Hor,
where the Rangers sto~ ashon! and
ctlmbcd an impc>Mible cliff. .
The 90th Division was honortd at
Carentan and Gen. Maxwell Taylor's
atrbome troops at St. Mttt L'Egllse,
where a private first class once dangled
by his parachute from the church steeplo
and watched hand-to-hand llghUng go on
i
in tbc square below.
A rota) of 130,000 men la led on the
Normandy beaches June 6. 1944. There
were 9.000 casualties, including 3,000 dead.
It was history's biggest seaborne
operation, commanded by the then
Gene•l of the Army Dwight D.
Eisenllower. and provl'd the beginning or
the end for Adolf Hiller , funnelling
eventually onto the shores of France a
body of human beings larger than the
population or Pittsburgh.
Among the American veterans \l'ho
came to Nonnandy to re-live the day
Y.'ere Br.Jdley. Taylor. Gen. ~fark. Clark,
Gen. J. Lawton Collini, Cen. Ira C.
Eaker and representatives of 9evcn U.S.
\'eterans' groups.
U.S. Amba~dor to Fran<.-e John lrwln
wa9 11:mong them.
Rusted metal skeletons and An
occasional slab of concrete poked
through the twirling sand. the last
\'cstige of flitler's funress EW'Opc. P11s1
rowa of while crosses, the neArtl)' ff~lds
or Normandy bloomed "'ilh spring
nowers.
.•
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on Schafer Bros. Leather
for Father's Day
-I '
' .
Leather SOFA
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Sizes
yo14 r Jai:o rile aerigncr will be happy lo assiil you
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I
,,
~ DAil Y PllOT Ttmrsday, June b, 1974
Just • Jury's Vote to Name Nixon Confirmed
..• . "\'-' ':'.i~~ -f•L "'\:>,:.~ ........ . ,.~~ .. Tom. .,. . ...-phine
····.•::-
' Lights 011t
• for Co1111ty?
• aUPCOAST, OOWNOOAST: Your
11.'eb•lls are tired of re•ding all these
afttr-eltction political pundit analyst!, r~ht? Tuesday's Jat.e election has been
Ol"er-analyzed arxl under·\'Oled. Despite
this, I ha\'e a startling election analysis
~sh for you :
,?I.fore than half the vgters made il clear
tbey don 't gi,·e a hang or a hoot whl!ther
ciange County street lights keep burning of go dark.
l'I'here. No...,. admit ii, you didn't cull
tlat enlightening bit of intelli1ence from
'Ijie!day's ret urns, 4id you?
• Rega1'1:11es.s. that's what the vote
iddicated , Here In Orange County, we
hi\'e these special street ligbttng
dJStricts spread all about Property
owners in them get ta1ed . The taxes 1et
spent to keep !he street lights on.
THUS IT DEVELOPED that in recent
times, the cost or electrical juice began
to outstrip the amount of tax money
corning in,
Jn the past , this would have been no
Cause for beavy alarm . Some!. bureaU<:Tat
\\'OUld ha ve figured out a v.•ay to simplf .
il\Crease the lighting tax and thus keep
the streets illuminated,
Now, ho\vever, we have this Senate Bill
90 in effect. It freezes all property tax
rates unless there is a vote of the people
to up the ante.
:'rhus it beca me necessary to puf 19
orange County street lighting district on
la'st Tuesday's ballot and ask the people utmg underntath the street lights to b9ost their property laxes on the average:
of 12 cents for each SlOO of taxable property value. • !APPARENTLY IN 10 of t.h<>se 19 areas.
eYerybody had a street light shining in
~ir bedroom window. They rejected the
increase.
1any of these anti·street light \'Otes
came right here in our coastal region.
Ul'I Ttl ..... tt
SUSPECTED SNIPER WHO l(JLLED POLICEMAN AND WOUNDED 10 PERSONS LIES DEAD
Om1h1 Gu" Battle Lasted Five Hours 11 An9ry Bl1ck1 H1r1ued Offl4'!!1r1
Policeman, Sniper Killed
~
O~tAllAo Neb. (1.IPJ) -:\sniper killed
~a.young poll~man and wt1unded •10 oth~
peNJOns durint a nearly five-hour gun
battie that ended early today \Vhen he
\\'as gunned dov.n by officers v.·hile flee-
ing a bumlng home filled wit h tear gas.
Police Chief Richard Anderson said
officers opened fire' on Elza Carr Jr. 33.
after Carr came out of the home onto a
cloaed·in parch and fired n shotgun at
the-officers crouched -outside. wounding
one policeman.
Carrts ·bullet-riddled body fell out of
the door onto the steps belo\1'. A Douqla<i
.county sh eriffs deputy recovered a shot-
gun on the porch floor inside.
Afljilry you ng blacks, who had \\'alch r.d
the drama during a night filled A'lth
sometin1cs he3VY thunderstorms. surge:l
into the combat area objecting 10 the \\·ay
the pQJiCe had gunned carr dO\\'TI, liter·
ally Jerked his body off the steps and
dronped it on a slde"•alk .
The cro\vd. estimated at more than
100 persons. dispersed but only after
a woman "'as strot. She \\'as not be..
lie ved se riously \\"Ounded. Anderson said
.. he \\'as uncertain "loo fired the shot.
ThroughQ.ut the incident involving Carr,
police \Vert> openly harassed by blacks,
several of \vhom naunted police barri·
cades and walked within firini: ra11ge
or the sniper, \\'.ho "'as holded up in
the upper story of a tw~slor.,. house
ne.ar north Omaha where he had a room.
Patrolman Paul Nields, 29, a-fi ve-year
police veteran, \Vas shot and killed by
Carr. \\"ho was standing on the sta!nvay
as Nields attc1npted to enter the home
\1•hile officers fired tear gas into it.
Anderson said he authorized Lt. Jantes
Perry and Sgt. Charles Parker to fire
lhe: tear gas into the front of the home,
but no <>ne \\•as auth<>rized to tnter it.
Follo\\'ing Nields' shooting. Omaha Ma-
yor Ed\\'ard Zorinsky, on the scene \Vi th
his publlc sarety director, Richard Roth,
told Anderson . "I don't \.\·tint any more
palrolmea shot."
Roth, former head of the Secr1!t Serv-
ice in Omaha, added . "\Ve can 11lways
wait until morning. He 's got to come
out." Anderson said aur.horities will "prob-
ably never know'' what prompted Carr
to open fire. Anderson said carr was con-
victed of l\VO felonies, a burglary in 1967
and auto theft in 1972.
Thr.ee people in the home, Mr. and 1ffrs.
llarry Owens and James SOiman, man-
Aged to sescape while carr was Inside.
Anderson said just how they escaped
\\'as uneerhtin, but they weren"t banned.
The night. • long ordeal started when
carr reportedly shot and \\'Ounded hi.s
half brother, Jesse McDonald . 44, less
than a block Crom the rooming house,
Bystande rs reported , Anderson said,
that Carr fled dO\l,'Il an alley into the
room ing house where he shot tv.·o police-
men and a bystander from windows .
Sanset Beach. for example. turned dow n -• a nine-cent street light tax hike, Laguna
~ills and Laguna Niguel \'Olers nixed a
JEent boost, , .
ike"·ise ~fission Viejo. ·a section of
ta l\'lesa. part of El Toro and a settor
ij Rossmoor -Uls Alamitos put the ~ock on higher taxes for street
iDumination .
I
!THE Q,'ILY BRIGHT SPOT (oh . that's
.. ful ) came in th e ci ty of 1J'\1ne v.•he:r~ -
lJe citizens \•oted 3,421 yea to only Z.983
qJYS for a HI-cent boost to finance t»e
•ect lamps.
::ivou suspct maybe they ha ve a large
rf;sm ber of pro'ol·lers out there tn that
J,..•ine neighborhood.
[
Y"'ay. if you look at the \vhole
nty picture. 10 s1rec1_. light ta x
ctions got flatout rejected "''hile only
e passed .
f[icials up in the · County Seat
mate this means that "'it hout 1hose th boosts. some sno.ooo "'ill be ~ilab!e to pay street light electric bills
ling $1.4 million.
vcn I can figure out this isn 'I going to
t ork. ~ they will just nip tht switches off.
tfht?
~ROBABLV \\'RONG . It is expected
~ Board of Su perviso rs "·ill ask the
l ie for emergency po\ver to boost the
ht taxes an}"lo·ay,
he governmental reasoning is that to
~ those lights .off would be
~angering the public "health, safety
~ \\'l!lfarc ."'
flJI of wh ich makes you wonder why
.. X held the election in the first plact,
\Veil , a lot of people are asking that
§iK!ay about the rest of the TUelday
•not, too.
. S'Iy Weds-Wow
Good Tinie Hacl b)' All-All 23,000
NEW YORK (U PI l -First came the
sUnky d&ncing girls waving bill paln1
branches. Then came a bishop in flo"'ing
robes. And finally, Sly, leader o{ the rock
group '"Sly and the Family Stone,''
danced onto the stage and married the
mother of his young son,
The 23.000 "'histle-blowirlg, a i 1 I e ·
d a n c i n g , hand-clapping. tambourine·
banging fans at l\ladison Square Garden
\l'Cnl \.\'ild.
The preacher. B~hop B. R. Stewart of
lhe Church of Christ and God In San
Francisco. asked. "Do you teke this
\roman. Kathy Silva, to be your ll'ol'ful
\l·edded "·ifc?''
Sly responded, hi do," and the entire
stadium roa red. ~
But before it was all over, 13 persons
were errei1ted on trespaM charges, six
\vomen fa inted, and nstflghts broke out
here and there throughout the stadium.
DESPITE THE antics. Sly's mother .
Gracie Stewert, a big woman with a
trombone-like voice, stood in I he
s-po1\lght and told the crowd, "this Is a
~olemn ceremony."
She then Introduced her 12-year-old
neice Lisa Davis to "sln1 a small song
for Sly,'' and into the blailng llghla came
a skinny girl v.·ho threw back her head
and belted out an old spiritua!;
''l don't know about tomorrow, I only
li\'e for today, but I don't worry about
the futu re for I know what my Jesus
says."
The audience became ~ilent for the
first and only time of the niJht.
Afterward , the beat of a rock tune
be1an and grew louder and louder.
SUDDENLY FROM back_,t3ge, II long
lovely ladies. all dressed in slin ky black
10Wiil with silver bangles on their arms
stet>Rfd solemnly onto the ~tage waving
big fan palms like an Egyptian honor
guard.
Members of Sly's group. dressed in
sparkling gold and black. waltzed O(llo
the stage 8l1d finally Sly himself danced
out of the shadows in hi,<; floor-length
seq uined cape and took the hand of his
20..year.old bride, who 11•as dressed in <J.
glimmering sliver and gold gown.
Sly then took off his 5ung!asse.c. sn1iled
wic kedly at his fans and slipped a ring on
the tlnger of his Hawaii an-born bride.
Sly, 31, said the marriage "'as ''the
only fair thing to do. for myself, for
everybody else." The couple have a 9·
moolh. old IJOn Sylvester Jr.
Sly's real name is Syl\'ester Stewart.
• Ill Gulf
~ ~ Heavy Rainfall
·~ .,.. . ... t
Man; 70, Drinks ··
Whiskey-Takes •
Off 011 Streak .,
JONESBORO, TcM. (AP) -Seventy·
year-old Jln1 Smith stood ln court
dressed in overal\1 and T-shirt and
admitted. "1 dn1nk a little too· much
\\'hisky and I \\'as streaking up near tbe
oountY. fann."
"But there weren't no women up
there,·• he qu ickly told General Sessions
Court Judge Stewart Canll9n·
Cannon considered this momentarily.
then announced the charge of disturbing
the peace against Smith waa amended to
omit any reference to streaking. He fined
Smith $20 and costs for p u b I i e
drunkenness.
'·He insiils he was st reaking," CaMon
said. "But I don'l think anyone saw him
and it's hardly a crime for a person to
streak privately. Besides, ai his age, it
v.'as probably more like ;snailing.'"
Patricia Hearst
Look-alike Held
lllLO, Hawaii (UPI) - A 17.year .. td
Patricia Hearst -look-allke arrested here
· last \Ve~end <>n drug charges has been
re-arrestld and reidenU!led by Hawaii
police.
The woman, identified as Pamela
lioysler, \\'as charged with grand theft on
a warrant Issued from CHrus Municipal
Court in J..os Angeleii: C<>unty. She \\'as
held on . $25,000 bail pendins extradition
procedures.,
Tornado Touches Down in (;cntrnl Ii1ississippi A rca Pollce originally identified h~r !s
Barbara Ann Thorson , 23, of Los
1\ngeles. but said the 11ew identification
\\'US based on a "diitlnctlve birthmark,"
ind was "believed to be positive." C:oaslal Wead1er
H1ty luntlllnt loda1. l.ffM Vt•lt~lt
WlllOI nlgM Ind mornlftt """'' Dtc0""• l•f sou!llwel! to W91!"11 • 19 1' •1111lt I~ 1!!1•nO(Hlt l<>D•r 1»0 1Jrldt1. Hl1h
IOdaY lft mid 14~.
(011111 ltmpt•llU•H •I .... lrlol'n Ion
ffl ... lnlind !e"'H•liurt• ''"" trim ~ 19 7t. Wiier temC>er1111rt jJ.
..
tHUll:JDAY"
, lt:JO 11 m. S.I
' \I //,f!I, t I
flUO,t,Y
Flrol Moh , U:3~ P·""· 3.!
Flrll lcw ,, , . S:Sl •.on, .(l.S
Sl<ond ~lg~ ......... ll;D-i ll nl, 5-'
Stt ond tow .... , ... ,. •:S1p.ll"\, 15
$11n rllll S:'J 1.1'!'1. S1t1 Ii 01 II·"'·
Moen rlH1 t:•l •·"'· s.11 7:1111 1.m.
Temperature•
Soutli Koreans
Blast Copter
SEOUL, South Korea (AP ) -
South -Korean antlalraaft gwwr1
fired on a Unlled Staltl Army
helicopter flying over Seoul today
and wow'lded two officers, lhe U.S.
Anny sa.id. The Korean defense
ministry said the chopper had
violatod lhe capllal'.a restricted air ,
i,pace and that It had refllltd to
heed ff\'eral warning 1hot1.
The U.S. Army sald the UH·lD
hellcopttr was oo 1 "rtuUne
orlenl•llon Olghl" npd \\'81 Oylng
"ln the vicin ity <>f the restricted
fl ight zone'' over Seoul when Sooth
Korean teeurlty forcel' opened fire.
St. Clair Reveals He
Was Told by Jaworski
WASHINGTON (UPll -A Federal
grand jury voted t•st Februery to nam~
President Nixon es 1n unlndleted ~
conspirator In the Watergete coverup, it
was dlxlosed tod•y.
The Pr~1ldent'1 Impeachment lawyer,
James 0, St Clair, told reporters he was
Informed or the development three or
four weeks 110 by 1pec.lal prosecutor
Leoo J•W<>rskl.
St. Clair made the comment after the
WHhlngton Post and lit• Walhln1ton '
Star.News said the grand jury named -
but did not indict -the President and
<>thers in a sealed Indictment retumed ·
March l agalnat seven ronner White
Houae and Nixon campt.lgn aides.
THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, which
first reported the grand jury wanted to
name Nixon, said Jaworski persuaded
the jurors not to menUon the President
even as an unlndlcted co-conspirator .
Asked about the reports, St. Clair said
when Nixon wa1 told that the grand jury
wanted to name him, the Pre1ldent uld,
''They ju1t don 't have the evidence and '
they are wrong, 11
The namea of the seven persons
indicted. including top f o r m e r
prtsldentlal advisers H. R. Haldeman.
John D. Ehrllcbman end John N.
Mllchell, were revealed March I. No
names of co-eon!plrator1 were dl1elosed.
LATER, • THE GRAND jury fumed
over voluminous material It used ln Its
in\'estigation, including any evldenct
relating to Nl1on , to the Houae Judiciary
Committee for Its Impeachment inquiry.
The new1papers cited UMamed sources
as the basl&/or ~reportl.
The Post and Slar·Ntw1 said the furors
actually wanted to Indict th' Prealdent .
but named , him a1 an unlndlcted
coconsplrator1 Jnatead alter Jaworakl told
them there "as some ques~on wheth er
they had po.,r lo Indict a t>fOSldOlll.
Aa an unln~cted co-con.splfator, Nixon
"'ould not fact criminal penalties. •
St. Clair said today, "the President
said ~ey ju&t don't.have all the evidence!
· an(l they are wronr." Interviewed a1 he
1rrlved for 1 cloeed MUlon of the
judiciary commlllee, St. Cla~ uld'
0 1 DON1' THINK. the evidence
supporta it. It wouldn't be the first Umt
a grand jury was wron1 -and It h11 no
legal effect."
Last Mideast
POWs Given
Wild Welcome
By United Press l11tem•tlon1J
Israel and Syria gave their Lut
retumine prisoners of war tumultuou!
welcomes .today Jn Tel Aviv and
Dama1eu1 and the Israeli mllttary
command &aid the first or lt• troopc
began lo pull out ol the Golan Height$
disengagement tone ..
Joyous frlenda and relaUvea cro,_·ded
around the internatlooal Red Croa Da
airliner carrying returning Iaraella back
from Syria and forcln1 the 56 POW1 to
struggle down the landing remp 1nd
through a crowd that brol<e through
polict lines to get cl<>ser to them. ·
-Fonner Prime Mlnllter Goldi Meir
joined Israel'• current iovtntment
leaders in welcoming the returning
.soldiers home, but govern m • n t
ceremonie• were disrupted by the riotous
v.·elcome and she was almoat knocked
dovm by overjoyed famille1 racing to hUJ
returning 10111.
THE SCENE w•a even wilde r In
Damascus and 500 pallce \lied water
hoses to dilperse a chaotic mob of 11,000
spectators who surged around one of the
two Red CrOSHhartered jumbo jets
bringing back 382 POW1 from Tel Aviv.
Wltneases said It took police 45 minutes
to clear a paaage for bu.sea to drive to
the plane steps and take the returning
pri1oriers abt»nt The celebration was so
great that a second plane with Syrian
POW1 wat forced to park at a remote
spot on the airfield,
ISRAEL SENT 382 Arab IOldiei'I back
to Syria in a simultaneous swap for th!
f. 'M, prisoners It got back. The e1chan11
came et;ht mcmths to the day after Yom
Klppur, the first day of the 11'13 Middle
East war.
Wed1H1111 Plan•
Actor Elliot Gould's girl!riend,
actress and model Jennifer
O'Neill, has confirmed the pair
will marry, probably alter they
finish• film together ln Europe
this fall . II will be the second
time for "Pt1lss O'Neill and the
third for Gould who was once
married to Barbara Streisand.
2nd Volume Oat
The exchange 1et orr a 2().day
diaenpgement proce11 that II to
conclude with a United Nation• buffer
force occupytn1 territory evacuated by
11rael on both aides of the 1967 ctue-flre
line in the Golan Heighla.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
.
Oeliveryot the Daily Pilot
Is gl!'ranteed
1'0tl(U¥·F•ldl1" II YGW'oo nol "1¥t l'Ou• NPt• t1 J:>O P·""·• t •!I 1nd rour (llCI• woll tll ~fll,lllll !O you. Clll~Mt ll~tn ... hl I .OO p.m,
$1tu<'dlY Incl Swnd••• II .,..u ~l'OI rt<•••• your
<00¥ b• t t ..... S.l ... IU•."' I •-"'•'"""''· <.•II ~•.d _, lODY w•ll br 11fO<i91tt lo JOU. c .. i. '" tl•tn
uni.I 101.f!I,
Telephones
MO•t O••nui CouMy ••••1.
No•1~wt1! )u..,l"91.,...1k11n
•ndW1~1""'"""· ....
S•" Cltmt nle, !;•11.,1•1rtt llt•,~. ... ~'" J~•n C•Plll••no O•n• P~<"I. Soul" L•9una, L1"'"'1 Noou11 , . ,., 01·1110
Lenin Started· Gulags,
Solzhenitsyn Charges
PAJIUS IAP) -.4.le11nder Solzhenltayn
chargi!s in the second volume or his
"Gulag-Archipelago" that forced labor
camps were a part or the Soviet state
from lt!I vtry Inception, and not a later
Invention of Josef'lh Stalin.
The n~ installment of the: exploaive
docu1nentary thus lay1 the blame for the:
Vf!St Soviet labor camp system at the
very feat of Lenin, the hallowed foundor
of the Soviet Union.
Official Krttnlln policy hu been lo
term the camps as an abcTTatlon
1temmlng from Joatph St•lln'• "cult of
peraona1ily," But Lenin hes mnalned
inviolate, and acCUJetlon• 11 t e
Solihenltsyn's would be tanllmount to
sacrilege ln lhe official view.
THE UPROAR over the pu~llcatlon In
Paris of the nrst volumt l1st December
led to 1 vicious campalp In the Soviet
media 1galnst Soldler\ltayn and to his
exile In rebruary. He now lives with his
f•mlly Jn Zurlch1 Swtturland.
The new 6»page volume In Russian,
which aoes on aalo here next week,
continues tho exiled writer'& detailed
docwlt<ntary account of the vu\ forced
labor camp 1y1tem In which he 1pcnt •
(
el(ht years ol his Ille.·
Sotihenltsyn userts that H mll\lon
persons pultd through the sy1t.cm
between 1111 and 1911.
The ftttt camp, he says, \vas a
converted ciaritt prl10n on the White Sia
lsl•nd of Sok>vki north of the Arctfc
Circle. Unknown thousands died In the
early campa, which were Intended to
keep Inmates alive -1nd worklnc -for
three monthl at most, ho wrttes.
ml PIUION system was "a cancer
"'hlch started at Solovkl and 1prud lt.s
growth all over the country,''
Solthenitsyn Sl)'I·
The systerq began under Lenin, he
11ys. But It w11 perfected under the
dJrecUon of Naplltall Frtnktl, 1 1ener1I
In the NKVD teeret police and ont of
Stalins' fa vorlte1. F'rtnk!l h.lmMlf, like
many otM:ra of Stalin'• cronlet, perllhtd
ln the camp.'! be hel ped cre1te.
Solz.henlt1yn aaya lht camps wert fltlecl
undtr Lenin with polltlc1l pri100ers
regardtd 11 holtlle to the Soviet 1y1tem.
Bul under Frtnkef's guidance , Stalin
chon&ed them Into an Instrument for
ltceobl.I the m11'1\J>llng soviet econo111y
on ltl lcet with 1 mli\lmum of foretp
aid.
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Hoppy's Horse
Was 'Topper'
Q. Al an old We1terP buff, T recall Tom r.tll'1 llor1e
'Wll aamec:t Toay. Roy Roftrl called hit horse TrJaer.
And Ceoe Autry named bl1 mount Ouim,&08. But nowbere
dot1 It II.)' wllat Hopa)ong Ca11kly called bis wbiM borM.
Can you flad out?-Bette CoUon, Omaha, Neb.
A: Hoppy eaUed hi• hone Topper.
Q: Yoa nee 1mt11Uoaed that La tome cities tbey've ~•Ohl~ local laws t.o fence in drjvein1 1bowtq" X pie·
tUl'ttt IQ tbey can't be teen by putenby. Any DtW develop·
m~t1?-J1net Slmmon1, Cniyslake, lll.
A: Ye1. Jack Valentl's Motion Picture Association of
America reveals that research is now going forward to
design a new screen. It would confine such pictUrtS in
'Glad You Asked That'
by Marll)'I! and HyO.nlner "
drive-ins only to viewers inside the theater grounds. It
woultl be a mirror-like screen designed and fabricated to
dire ... -· lfl llght only to the ramp area where 1he autos are parked inside.
Q: Ii Sophia Lortn'1 · iltter, wllo married llom1no
l\fussollnl. the musician.on ef tbt •ceased dictator, 1tlll
married to htm?-Mrs. Fred Stonm, De1 Mtbtet, low1.
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ThursdttY, Junt b, 1974 DAILY PILOT 23 \
Quality A~tress Ci~ely Tyson: a
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I would have done 'Jane she made another movie. refused them all. Black
When Cicely Tyson decides to Pittman' In a basement in an exploitation films were r.ot her
do a movie. It's a decislon Off, orr Broodway house,.. THOSE FOUR years were cup of tea , she said.
1nade for love, not money. fitful, she says. She was ''J even sat down and
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she was offered "Sounder."
And "I felt f was rewarded
aher all those years waiting
for the right vehicle to come
along."
The slender S.foot·2 bla ck she said. "It doesn 't matter offered roles as a prostitute, a considered doing something
actress has turned.down more whether It's t,leviaion, the sex kitten, a junkie; but she else with my life." But then
parts than she has accepted movies or the stage. It's the ' l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~ilii~iiiiiiiiii,;m;iiiiiiiiiijjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj. because "I set high standards role. In \tills oountry people I
for myself and even whett,, the tend to ook down on you If SEE 0 UR
going got tough. I stuck by you work in television . I lei
ENTERTAINMEN1T "';~:;~:~~~~she won an the role dl\tate lo me." GRADUATION SPECIALS! " I
IIIS DUTIES
BRE.4 TH LESS
Emmy Award for her po•-UNFORTUNATELY, she
trayal of the title character in says, there are rew roles
"Tile Autob_lography ()f ~11ss lallored for black women. •·1 m
Jane Pittman." The tel~vislon hoped that after 'Sounder' I
play ilself won an Emmy ror would get roles s I m p J y -
the best drama special. because I'm a good actress.
But if a role isn't written for a
THE TWO.HOUR film told blac k actress, l don't work."
LONDON (AP) -Brian the life story or a black "Sounder," made ln 1972, I
Walnes says be'a tired 6t woman freed from 11lavery al v.·as her second film success.
the age of 10 who spends the ll was the story· or a black w··,·
lretMrt .,.,.. ... ,..... ........................ in low•1SJt.t.S
fHltM•-SP ......... , IJ "'~'9' ........ , ........... llt.tS
SMlth c ....... 9tdric: Port. IJ,.c:orri•p ... , ............ llt.95
Cltlut1 W.,W ~ DtMI Modt4 c.icui.tor ••. ' •......••. 64.t5
.....,. lr•HI c.._._. .. , . , ................... ••lo• •14t.t5
u.,41 C ........ w/-, .ct "• ......... , ............ 79.tS
C-P.c:ll ....... cw/ .............................. IJt,95 u.wc:-"~"C•u1crtor .......................... 1t5.oo
5N*llf-S9'f'.-.. o.toll & Cit.Ir,...._ likt iw•., ..... , .. :. 7t.to
•lf>t.r Prl11t~ c.k¥Ntw, 1tMd ........................ IJt .50
IAKEA --....--
blowing the horn oC Ripon, next JOO years fighting (or her family or sharecroppers
YotkstUre, without a deputy to race. The part seemed made ekeJ.na: out an existence during
give him a windbreak now and for Miss Tyson. the depression , and her
tbea, 90 he may quit _ even "While reading the book I portray&! e'amed her a n
though he's fQnd of the three-. never thought or her as a Academy Award nomina tion . Manufacturers Warranty Fully Covered l. ci .o • >
person who didn't exist," she In her first film, "The Heart
comered hat and butt coat said of Jane Pittman. •·1 fell is a Lonely .Hunter," made in
that go with the offic:e. madl y in love with her. She 1968, Miss Tyson played a
The horn bas been sounded was so spectacular." volatile girl married to a field
at 9 o'clock: each night since Miss TyS()n, a native New hand. Jler comp e 11 in g
the year 886 to remind Rlpon 's Yorker in. her 30s, said it's performance brought her to
Trade-ins Wanted •• CAL-MART ~
-.... of Cotto MtM Pll11 ,.
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A: No. Sexy AMa Marie Scicolone divorced M~ Ii~ ~me Cive or six years ago. She's now seen sipping ,
supping and holding hands with an Iranian doctor named
Tamlz AbdhJamil.
citi?.Cns to ext inguish their "the role" that dictates where audiences' attention quick,01~y,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. ~~~lllllll~IJiiilllllll~~~~lllllllllllllllllilll~ _1_1r_e_s. ____________ s_h_e __ w_o_r_k_s. __________ b_u1_i<_w_a_s_four years be~~re
,.~,.,~, 2960A HARIOR' r,.,., S.I. 546 4088 m::lll COSTA MtSA t :JO.S:JO •
Q: This'll stump you, I'll bt:t you! Wbo was ta die
balcony or rear of the radio studio from which Ute popul1r
"Dr. I.Q.11 prearam wa1 brolNlca1t? I mean, the penoa
w.bo relayed 1 q11e1tsen and, when U wu unered, ·~
you, doctor!11-0r. R.8.T., Dayton, Obto.
A. Thank YOU, doctor. One ol many to play that part
.(for eating money) was the now recoenized grt1t 1ctor,
Jason Robards.
Q: How Joni ha1 Barbar• W1ltel"I been 11the 11Tod1y" sho~·? Anil wW De remata Its sole permueat boltt-
Pamela Rosen, Gre1t Neck, N.Y.
A: Barbara was officially named co-host after Frank ~tcGee's passing. She's been a fixture on the NBC aeries
for a decade, meaning she's had to awaken eveey week-
day for JO yea rs at 4:30 in the morning. As thi! b written,
a number of the netv.'Ork 's newsmen are rotatiftc In the
slot while the search for a successor to Mcett I'* on.
Send your questio11s to Hy Gdrdner, "Gtad You
Asked Thai ," care of tli is '1ewspaper, P.O. Boz 15SO,
Costa Mesa 92626. Marilyn a11d fly Gardner wlll amwtr
ns many questioft.s as tliey COil i1~ their cohttn1t, but tht
volume of mail makes persCTnal replies impossible.
Truth Outdoes Fictia11
Jn Ahh)' Ma11n Scripts
By BOB TH0~1AS
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -"In
these times fiction can·t live
up to what's happening in real
life." observes film writer
Abby ~fann. who has
apeci Q.lized in con v ert Ing
adual event.a Into :11 c re en
entertainnlcnt. ·
"Take the Patty Hearst
atory," he says. "A s c r ec n
writer couldn 't tmaglne a
tcript so bizarre . Or
Watergate. If it were done as
a movie, it would be heavil)•
drBplatic.
"But the most Interesting
thing about Watergatt is tha t
it's so mundane -the people,
their c onversat i ons ,
everything.''
Mann points out that even
''The Exorcist" was based on
, a real·lifc event. Such hits all
"Patton." "The French
Connection" and "Papi\Jon"
have a!So proved to producers
the value of film subjects
based on actual happenings.
TllE TREND IS fa vorable
to Abby l\1ann, a ronner
reporter who knows how to
dramatize the news.
llis first movie script.
1'Judgmeht at , Nuremberg."
won Mann an Oscar. He did
his own legwork on that one,
interviewing German judges
about their activities during
·•the Nazi regime.
His next assiil:nment is to
chronicle the pligbt or the
Indian in today's America. His
producer: Marlon Brando.
At present ~tann \ s
overseeing the filming or 1.fike
Franko vich's production,
'·Report to the Commissifln·
er." based on the .James Mills
no vel. Offhand you micht
think that the v.·orld doesn't
need ano!her rno\'lil about
co r rupti on in )he NC\\0
York Police Department, but
Mann says thi7 one is
different
•1TH1S IS NOT a pol ice
picture, nor is it a chase
picture," he remarked. "It's a
renectton of our soc i ct y,
showing how three young
people -a young white cop,
a white under cove r
policeman. and a black pusher
-are destroyed by the
establishment because the;.-
try to go against the system ."
~hM. who ordinarfly docs
exhaustive research for his
scrtpts. didn't need . to for
''Report t o the
Commissioner." lie h ad
already explored the law
enforcement jungle of New
''ork <:ity for his much-
11ccla imed televi.9ion movie.
"The r..t arc .u s·Nelson
~turders. ,.
"The most grntifying thinr;i
about that show," said the
writer, "was th11t after it
nppea rtd on television, the
real boy who was nccused or
thrcll murders and 1Ucn1ptcd
rape -George Whitmore
was freed from jail.
"A great many people · tn
New York -judges and
distrid attorneys -inew that
the boy wa5"'t gulltf,-tOttitiey •
'went aJong with ft on the ~
theory of don't roclt tJte boat.'
"THAT WAS TBE same
kind of philo s ophy I
encountered ta1kin1 to Judees
in Germany after the war;
they didn't want to 'rock the
boat' while Hitler was in
power."
?tfann disclosed some of the
d e t ai Is of the next Brando
project, which has be en
sllbject to secrecy, lfke most
of the reclusive actor's d9ings.
"Marlon called me one day
lo ask i£ t woold like to write a
script about the Indians." said
P.1aM. "! was wary with my
answer. because I have an .
actor friend who sometimes
does Brando imitations on the
te leohone.
"But I called Bran do '~
see~t.ary and was assured
that he bad ttlephoned me."
THE TWO lttEN discussed a
film to deal with the Indian
cause. At first they talked of a
story set in the frontier Well,
but they a~ that a modem
story would make R stronger.
point.
"I ha,•e attended trials 1n
Sioux Falls and St. Paul dfld
I've talked to a lot of Indians
in those areas." sald the:
writer. "I'm beginning to
understand that prejudice is
~o immense that murders or
Tndia ns are sometimes not'
orosecuted. It's m a k i n g ii
hard ror me to dramatize the
story without mak ing i t
melodramatic."
Brando had o r 1gin1lly
planned to play an Indian in
!he still untitled film. s a id
a,fann. "but he was afraid ,he
1vould overpower the story if
he did."
Tnstead, Brando will play a
white man. Production is
expected to b e g i n in
No'f'ember, with real locales
and Ind ians belng u~d.
~'WI Vet
Sentenced ,
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -An
82-year-old \Vorld War I
veteran has been 8ellten~ to
10 years to life imprisonment ..
for the second-degree murder
of a taxicab driver here.
0 O'Cana was 9enlenced by
a Superior Court judge ror the
,11hoollng of cab driver James
\V. forbus of Sacramento.
Forbus was shot in the back or the neck as he was drivine
his cab on Interatate 80 near
downtown Sacramento on ~.
22.
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%4 DAILY PILOT Thursday, June b, lq74 "'"'~~~~~~~~~~~
Newport Will Get
Bridge Arguments
By JACKlE HY!\1AN
. Of flle O.llY l'lln Stiff
Recommendations for the
proposed Coast H i g h ""a y
bridge O\'er Newport Bay ""ill
be .presented to the Newport
Beach City Council !\tonday.
according to Bay Crossing
Planning Committe e
Chairman Robert Shelton.
The committee's report.
prepared t1ooday, does not
include a recommendation on
the controversial b r id g e
height , but lists the arguments
for a high j32-fool l and for a
lo"· (17-fool) bridge.
TIIE REPORT recommends
that the bridge have at least
three through-traffic lanes in
each direction -a total of six
lanes -plus at least one
right-tum lane onto Do\•er
Dri\'e and a bicycle-pedestrian
lane.
In addition. the report
recommends that plans for an
interchange at either end of
1:1 ·t.t
. the bridge_ t?e, droyJ:MXI .due t.o .
cost and safety factors.
Shelton said the city council
has indicated it \l"ill pass the
bridge report to the planning
commission for a-y u b I i c
hearing. ""
TllE COUr\CIL IS t~xpcc1ed
to m11ke ils reco1n1ncndation
to the C.'llifornia Derartment
of Transportation I Caltra nsl
in the fall. Caltrans. v:hiCh "·ill
build the bridge, wilt then hold
at least one morr public
hear ing.
Finall\". Shelton said. a
per1nit Tnust be obtained from
the U.S. Coast Guard because
the bridge crosses navigable
"'atcrs.
The bridge v1ill replace the
four-lane bridge O\"Cr the bay
betv;ecn the Coai::t High"'ay
intersections ·with Do\'er Drive
and Ba\"shores Dri\"C
Consiruction is not exoccted
to slart before 19n, Shelton
said.
Coast Hi ghwa y's Spa11
Could Be Dtawhrid ge
The Pacific Co:ist lligh .. va y
bridge O\"er r\ev;port Bay is
11cll kno"·n for the trou~les it
causes !T'Otorists but little
kno"·n is the fact it could have
caused a lot more tieugs O\"Cr
all ~these years.
The present bri:lgc v.•as
designed as a dra"·Oridge.
l\"ewport Beach Public \Vorks
Direct.or Joseph T. Devlin has
noted.
' . •
interrur,t traffic on 1 he
· high"·a~'···
Dc\'lin said that although
bridj::i! height and b o a I
con .. ·enicn::f' is a holly debated
issue. n'l one has suggested
tha~ the nt>1v Ne"'JX>rt Bay
briOge cu1 rently u n d e r
consideration be designed as a
dra1vbridge.
"If you cut off traffic on the
Coast llighway fo r even a feu·
1ninutes. it would back up
rapidly."" he said.
. . . . . . .. . . . . ..
Ilero Vet J 11dge Deela1•.es
1 11 Me11tal Banke1· Smitl1 i11 Co11tem1lt
J11stil1ttP
•
;:inorncy concerning contacls
between the Daggett bro!hers.
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A STEAL AT $10.99! NOW ONLY
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This beautiful, 100o/o Ou·
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a price ranging from Carpet Town's low
$10.99 a sq. yd. to a high of $12.99 at the
more expensive carpeting salons.
Now. because of our unique purchasing sys-
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We invite comparisons. Shop around. Cnec1<
the price at other carpel sto res. But be sure
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Remember. th is is a sale it em. We can noi
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Note: You may never find this carpet at a
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At Carpet Town, we buy carpeting for our
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NYLON Hl·LO
Choose trom bright tweed com-$ 4
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100,o Dupont Dacron potyeste1 S
1 pile. Tightly twisted to retain its 99
good looks 16 solid colors. so vo
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CARPET TOWN'S DENSE PLUSH SHAG.
REDUCED FROM A LOW $10.99. NOW
Carpet Town offers the low-I
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A carpet sold industry-wide
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29 I I SOUTH BRISTOL STREET
Ju st Mortll of SOll!h Coast Pima
SAMT A AMA • PHOME 556-8287
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Orange Coast
, ; EDI TION
T oday 's Fiiiai
N.Y. St ocks
VOL. 67, NO. 157 , 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, 'CALIFORN IA THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1974 N TEN CENTS
I
I -.
OCU:1Budget Plan Calis ·\Eor 17-cent Tax Hil<;e
Coast Comn1unity College District
trustees reviewed, the d i s t r i c t ' s
preliminary budget for the coming year
Wednesday night and, at the same tllne,
gave everyone al ('i{l\dcn West and
Orange Coast College a ID percent pay
raise.
The salary package. n p p r o v e d
unaniTnously by the five·1nan panel,
amounts to $1.8 million of the $43.8
million budget proposed for fiscal 1974-75.
If approved as presented. the budget
v.·ould increase expenditures, by $6.1
million over this year, raising the
district's tax 17 cents to fl.15 per $100
assessed valuatiorl.
Corellan Thompson, vice chanccll~r for
business affai rs, said the wage
agreement covers 508 teachets and 531
non-teaching cmp\oyes, plus a number of
part-lime "''orkers on both campt.L!ies.
.The salary increases v.·ere negotiated
without public controversy. The Bureau
or Labor Statistics' Cost of Living
Average is 9.7 percent for Orange
County, according to district officials.
HO\\'ever, district olf1cials made it
clear they could nQt commit themselves
to continue to meet cost of living
increnscs because costs are skyrocketing
v.·hile the district's revenues arc tied to
fixed lnoome (actors.
Also reflected ln the budget are about
$14.1 million in capital improvements.
mainly to complete projects illready
under way on both campuses.
At OCC in Costa Mesa , this includes an
administration building. a lecture hall
and f!MS building. 'a student services
building. a tutorjal ccntur. a food
servicei lab , a. horticulture building, a
skills center. a literature an:! language
building, a drama v.1orkshop. and hand-
ball courts.
Sdleduled for Colden \\lest are the
renovation of existing parking lots and
new parking construction . a storm drain
system, a hu1nanilics, arts and sciences
building, a math and science building
addition, a library and audio-\•isual
center addition and a music building
add ii ion.
E:<cept for the salary increase,
trustees look no action on other items in
the budget' which is described by
administrators as .. highly tentaive."
The budget. already cut by 1nore than
$1 million rrom -0riginal budget requests.
is scheCuled for public hearing at 8 p.m.
Aug. 7 at district hcadquarterS", 1370
Ada1ns Ave., Costa l\1.esa.
·-----·--------------
Up to Councilnien
Oil Drilling . the ~Only Solution?
Nev.'J)Ort Beach City ,)1;:inagcr Robert
L. \\lynn said Wednesday it will be up to
citv councilmen to decide whether th ey
shOukl seek a charter change to allow oil
drilling in \\fest Newport to solve the
proble1n or seeping gas and oil there.
\\fynn said he's convinced that plans· to
cap and vent existing We.!l t Newport
\\"ells on city-owned property will
alleviate the problem as it exists now.
The venting project, estimated to cost
$35,000, will go out for bids next 11M>nlh.
New Offices
In Newport
Center Due
Irvine Company officials t o d a y
disclosed plans for a $10 million, 35-acre
complex or office buildings in Newport
Center.
No name has been selected for the
complex but Jt will be designed to house
corporate he;:idquarters for s m a 11
companies.
The development will be located on a
site adjacent to the proposed cultural
center, between ~1acArthur Boulevard
and Newport Center Drive, south of
Farallon Drive.
City officials estimated the cost of the
developmenL al $10 million. plus the cost
of land. "'
David Neish. an Irvine Company
planning administrator, was scheduled to
outline plans at a Newport Beach
PlaMing Commission stpdy session
today.
The project \\'in include about 20
buildings. None will be more than two
stories.
He said they will be built by
independent rontractors on leased land .
NeiSh said a total oC 320,000 square feet
of office space is plaMed on about 20
percent of the land. He sa id 45 percent
will be landscaped and the rest will
provide parking and road space.
Neish said the Irvine Company hopes
to break ground around the first of the
year and estimates that building will
ta ke about three years.
The presentation to the commission
prior to requesting a use pennit was
made to obtain opinions on the project
from city officials, an Irvine Company
spokesman said.
He said the company plans to make a
rormal application June 17 if no major
,objections are raised.
Orange Coast
Weatller
Low clouds and fog night and
morning hours with hazy sunshine
in the afternoon Friday. Only par-
tial clearing on the beaches. Slight-
ly warmer Inland. l:Ughs upper 00s
at the beaches to low; 80s Inland,
' INSIDE TODA. Y
\Veddhlf!-'"O/ Sl11 of "Sly a11d
f'amily Stane'' was attended by
23,000 fans and it tQtU ti huge
succtt.!. Pol let arrested 13 P6""
ton.! for trei pa11. six wo1r1et1
/alnted. and fistfights broke out
1poradlcoll11. Story, Page 4.
l . M ... Wtll •
C11hl9ntle ft C1t1Ut'" _,.....,
c-ltl ,,
CNI~ 3 Otllll Nttltn It ••ttt1114 .... • l11t.,,1llllMlll H. J4 l'IMIOl:I U-t1 ......... . Allll L......,1 1f
NI_, T!'ft 7'
Mov+n J4
Wynn said he \\ill not even discuss
possible drilling in his report to
councilmen ~londay.
.. J'm not trying to duck the issue, I just
think the ' venting will take care of the
problem," he said.
Wynn disclosed that the city has spent
emergency funds to Climinate the danger
of explosion at a vacarit house at 42nd
and River Streets \\·here an old oil well
er\tpted for the second time two \\'eeks
ago.
LOST AT SEA
Sid Common
Se rvices Slated
For ltdve nturer
Sid Conimon
The spirit of ~venture th at drove Sid
Common to explore life as a fortst
firefighter and a lumberjack and fina lly
se.nt him to sea has ended in death.
Memorial services for the lifetime
Harbor Area resident lost at sea off
Northern California are scheduled for 2
p.m. Saturday.
'lbe 1970 Newport Harbor High School
graduate will be eulogized by Rev.
William Acton at P!,1ariner's Church, 2DI
E. Coast Hi~hway. Corona del Pl, far.
Authorities from the U.S. embassy ln
J\1adrid. Spain. finally located his
vacationing parents Sunday flight to
notify them of their youngest son 's P!,1ay
28 death. He vanished from the deck of the
Simmons·Tugboat Company vessel Chief
off Blunt 's Reef near Eureka eight days
ago. A lengthy search turned up no trace
of him .
His parents, J\lr. and ~1rs. James A.
Common. 409 Broa<tway, COsta Afesa.
arrived home Tuesday.
No one atxiard the tugboat witneslled
the accident. Sea conditions ~re
described as rough at the time he was
lost.
"They don ·1 know it he hit his head or
what." ?o.1rs. Common said Tuesday.
Sid·s rather is a longtime staman
himself. employed as a pilot skipper with
Jacobsen Pilot Service, bringing ships
into Long Beach Harbor.
His empl-0yer Immediately hired a
plane in the Eureka area to condltCt. 11.
search for the missing m::in bclore Mr.
and ?o.trs. Common were no l I I I c d
~mselves.
She said Mr son1 who attended llarper
Elementary School, Kai9fr lntermcdlale
School. Ne,vpor.t4farbor Jllgh School and
Orange Coast Col~e. regarded life with
a sense of adventure.
He had been a firefighter in lhe
Elsinore area before packing his bags for
(Set ADVENTURE. Page II
•
He said crews cut a hole in tbe roof of
the house to allow methane gas to escape
and he has authorized ronslruction of an
eight-foot v.·ooden fence around the
sumps dug on the property .
Wynn said there is little if any danger
of explosion no\\' because the methane
gas escapes quick1yinto the atmosphere .
Wynn said he is ignoring
recommendations by an official of the
Galifornia Division of Oil and Gas that
(See OIL.DJULL._eage II _
•
County Urges
JJ7 ar Against
Drunk Driver
By Will.JAM SCHREIBER
ot Ille N IY P'lltl SI.ti
The Orange Count7 Grand Jury urged
the Boa'rd of Supervisors today to
wage all~ut ~·ar on drunken driving in
the county.
Jn a three-page report to supervisors.
jury foreman A. E. "Bill" Gazlay said
the county recorded 125 alcohol-related
traffic deaths last year. '
"And it is estimated the cost or
alcohol-related motor vehicle accidents
approached $7 million," Gaz.lay added.
'The main thrust of t~ury·s
recommendation \vas aimed8t~g
the board to coordinate a c:omprebensive
program designed to reduce the numbe.r
of deaths, injuries and property damage
caused by drinking drivers.
Gaz.lay said the prohlem is gelling
\\'OI"Se instead of better despite \\'Ork by
several county agencies and the grant
programs to solve it.
Referring to a roadside survey made a
year ago in Huntington Beach, Gazlay
said one out or ever-y four drivers on
\Veckend evenings had been drinking and
one of every 25 was legally under the
influence of alcohol.
"A comparision of this and other data
suggests that arrests occur in only one
percent of the oCcurrences of driving
under the influence,'' Gazlay said.
Of those arrested, Gazlay said 60
percent are classified as problem
drinkers or alroholics in need or
treatment and the other 40 percent are
labeled "misusers" who need education .
AITl(lng other things, the j u r y
recommends :
-A public edu1;alion effort to solicit
public support.
-A specialized education effort aimed
at drinking drivers.
Ul'I T.i...r.ote
Kenatedys Pay Tribute
Sen. Edward Kennedy (0-J\tass.) is flanked by sister-
in-Jaw Ethel {on crutches after a skiing injury) and
\vife Joan at Arlington National Cemetery where
th ey paid respects lo the late Robert F. Kennedy on
the sixth anniversary of his assassi nation. Joan left a
psychiatric hospital to attend the rites. ·-------
Building I/eight
Advocate Seek.<
Heavy Smol{e i11 Rest1·001n CdM Excep tio n
•
CdM Stude11ts Protestn1g
Smoking 1naf' real ly have become
haza rdous to the health of students at
Corona de! Mar High SchooL Ncwport -
?-.1esa !!Choo! trustees 'vere t o I d
\Vcdnesday nigh t.
"Non-sn10kin{? kids arc being driven
out of the bathrooms by the smoke:·
complained f\1ichacl ,\1essenger. the
school's st udent representative. du ring a
board session.
~1essenger. a srnior. sn id he represents
n small commillce of students v•ho arc
trying la find a solution to the problem.
·'There's only one balhroom on campus
now that hasn"t been taken over by the
s1nokcrs." he said. He said about lj
percent of lhc students smoke.
Trustees listened but said they can·1 d-0
much about it.
Apparcutly neither can school officials.
?o.!essenger said security checks of
bathrooms are ineffective becau~e the
smokers maintnin a lookout. He n!so said
that litter and damage rrom cigareucs
~ometimcs force the school lo close :i
bathroom for repai rs.
~lessenger said his group believes the
only S'Jlulion is to have a special area set
aside for smokers M thev I\ on ·1 bother
!See S~10KING, Pege !I
former t-.'ewport Beach planning
commissioner Gordon H. Glass. who
helped write the present building height
limitations. will ask the planning
commission tonight ror permission to
exceed those limits in China Cove.
"It doesn't bother me at all ."' said
architect Glass "'hen asked about
requesting the variance.
Glass is combining tv.·o houses into one
and ren1odeling them for Fred S. and Ina
J. Thomson at 27't1 Shell St .• Corona del
Mar.
Two Newport Jurors Set
··we \\TOie the height limi!alions for
flat lots."" Glass said. "If you lried to
make th is house conform to the elevation
of the lot. you"d have rocks slicking ·up
throu gh a third of the house ."
Glass said the two-story houses used to
be restricted to a height of 35 feet but
are limited to 24 feet under present
codes. The highest point of lhe new roof
wi\ be about 33 feel above Ure ground.
Jud ges Norninate 30 Frou i Co un ty for '74-75 Du t,y
Nine Orange Coast residents are
among the 30 persons nominated by
Superior Court judges for service on the
1974-75 Orange County Grand Jury.
Their names will be among the 19
nama.'I drawn from the ballot box July I
by county clerk William E. St John prior
to the nev.' jury's swearing in before
Juda:e Everett \V:-Dickey or San
Clemente.
Judge Dickey will be the criminal court
arraignment jurist and Grand Jury
liaison in 1974-75.
The current Grsnd Jury will complete
11!! service June 30 and wi.ll be dil banded
by outgoing Judge James Tumer of
Laguna Beach shortly before the new
pl'nel Is sworn in.
lts 18 month Jiervtee constitutes an
Orange County record. That r~rd
became possible this year \\'hen it v.·as
decided t-0 comntence all future Gra"hd
Jury terms on Jul}' I and conclude them
on the fol10,v1ng J unc 30.
The 1973-74 Grand Jury took office on
Jan. I. 1973 nnd "\\1ill complele Its tenn of
"service June 30.
Four Huntington Beach r.esM!ents \\'t>re
among the nlne Orange Coast residen!A
included in a llst that reprei;ents the
personal choice or 27 of the Superior
Courrs 31 J~ges.
They are: Mic.heel L. lle(flin. 27. of
16112 Craig Lane. nominated by Judge
Robert L. Corfman or Newport Beach :
Nick Y. Nerio. 38. of &141 Wamr.r Ave ..
nomin:itcd by .ludge Harmon G, St'Ovllle :
~tarlctte ?it. Slates. 44, cf 1701 Main St .•
nominitted by Judge Charles A. Bauer of
Huntington Beach tind Barbara S. Woods,
39. of 21052 Indi go Circle. nominated by
Judge \~"al1er \V. Charan1za o f
Huntington Beach .
Other Orangr Coa~t rc11-idcnts included
Juse ph Gatlin Jr .. 47. of 23062 Lavaca St .•
and Elaine N. Stanfill. j7. of 23191
Meadowbrook Circle, both of El Toro.
Gnllin v.•11s rtoininatcd by Judge
llerbei:t S. Her:lands and tilrs. Stanfill
wR'I nominated b~· Judge \Villlam S. Lee
of Ne~·porl Otoch.
Also namc."CI are tifarcella Scott. 39, of
1667..5 Sprutt Circle, Fountain Valley.
nominated by Judge Robert P. Kneeland
of Newport l":k!ach : William L. Spenet!r,
~-of 3716 Ocean Blvd., Corona del Mar,
nominated by presiding Judge Robert A.
Banyard and Victor S. Stewart, 67. of
254:>1 Gloriosa l>t'ive. tillsslon Vtejo.
nominated by Judge \YllH;in1 C. Speirs or
Ne~1port Beach.
•'
,I t
'
"The roof will not obstruct the public's
view of the water," Glass said. ''In fact
it \\'l l\ be about rive feet lower than the
roofs on ei ther side.''
He explained that the house is built
over the China Qi\·e roe.ks and that there
are sudden drops all over the lot.
··\\'e rouldn"t consider everything in
planning the heighl ordinance:· Class
said. ··That's 1vhat variances art> for."
l 1<Jll NE CA PTU RES
BASEBALL CROWN
SP RINGFIELD. 111.-Gary \Vheelock,
Jeff l\lalinoff and KeiLh Bridges peced
1he UC Irvine baseball 1ea1n to a repeat
performance \\'edne~day night as NCAA
college division champions.
For details of t~ final game. see
today·s sports section, Page 29.
l
2 DAI LY PIL01 N
Police Nab
64 Pusl1e1·s
In Roundup
Sixl)'·fuur suspccleri narcotics pushers,
aged 13 lo 4%, were arrcsl1..-d late
\\'cdnesday by \Vcslinln$1rr poli ce in :i
n1ass cr:1ckdo\1111 on drllg snlrs 1o
lcenagers.
The arrest roundup ch1naxcd <'ight
months or police investiga tion in1·olving
200 undercover drug purchaS<.'s \'alu cd at
$4,000, pol ice said.
The crackrlo1\·n \1·as similar to one
made las t monih by Fountain Valley
police "here 62 ~peeled narcotics
pushers were arrested and one in late
April in lrvil'IC' 11•here 130 persons were
:u·rested on suspicion of \'arious drug
charges.
Sgt. t\tanucl llinson. c.'OOrdinator of the
\Vestm inster pr.oje<.'t. said uniformed
\\'cstn1ins1cr officers set oo t al dusk to
arre st \\les tm inster suspects.
Police in Foun1 :1in Valley . Cardrn
Grove, Santa Ana and Hunti ngton Beach
assisted by arreslin& suspcetcd pushers
in their cities.
PQlicc had \l'arrants for 27 juveniles
:Jnd 48 adults. all charged with sales of
narcotics. Hinson said. Officers today
were continuing to search for the nine
remaining su spects.
Forty-two were from \Vestminster, one
from Fountain Valley, eight from Garden
Grove. nine from Santa Ana and five
from Huntington Beach. Hinson reported.
Officers "'ere told in a pre-sweep
briefing to arrest juveniles by ID p.m ..
and most of the other arrests were
completN by 1nidnight. tJinson said,
noting the operation "1\•ent smoolhly."
The parents of ea ch" ju\'enile were
given a packet of info rmation about the
arrest, Hinson said. including a special
telephone num ber .... ·here officers were on
dUty to provide additional details.
He estimated about 50 calls were
handled th rou ghout lhe evening. Officers
on the phone lines had copies of all arrest
reports and were able 10 explain arrest
and court procedures, Hinson added. 'L \Vestminster police started th e
!uircotics crackdo...,·n because o f
ingreasing drug traffic in the city.
-,iarticular\y around teenage ha ngouts
and \Vestmin ster high school campus,
Hinson explained.
Police sa id they did not use any
undercover agents on the high school
campus.
Included in the drug purchases y,·ere
marijuana. has hish, LSD. h~roni. co-
a.ine. PCP. amphetamines and seconal.
. "Hinson said marijuana sales "·ere the
most freq uent.
School Back In
On Septe rnb er 10
Newport Beach a n d Costa Mesa
children wi\I go back to school Sept. 10.
The school activities schedule adopted
Wednesday night by Newporl·f\-1esa
tiChool trustees calsl for a Sept. 10 school
Opening and a June 12. 197fl closing.
The :-chedulc lists Ci1ristmas reces.s ·
beginning Dec. 20 and cndin~ Jan. ::-Jan.
24 1r1ll ma!'k the end of the fall sen,cs lcr
Spring semester .... ·ill bci;tin Jan. 27. and
spri ng vacation "'ill run fron1 !\larch 22
Urrough ,\larch 3{1.
Other holida\'S when school will be
closed arc veterans Dav t:\0\", ] 11.
Thanksgh•ing tNov. 23-2!11 . Lincoln's
Birthday fFcb. J2 l, \V as hi n r, 1 on ' s
Birt hd;iv ~Feb 17 ), and ~lemorial Da·;
(htay 26 1. -
Extortion A rrcsl
SAN FRANCISCO IAP I -Tl1l' FB I
has charged a 20-ycar-old , 'Jnerr plO) 00
Oakland ni<1n 11·ith extortion alleging he
collected $4.813 by threatening to bomb
a Coast Federal Savings and Loan
Assocation office in Oaklantl Tucsd<1y .
Richard John Alexander \l.'as arrested
\\-·ithin an hou r artcr a tele phoned
extortion lhreat \\'as rccci\'cd.
ORAMGl COAST "'
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DilHY Piiot Sltff Pl'lotoe PREPS FOR CONTEST
John Gaynor, 13
ll119hes Donatl011
Nixon Brothers
Won't Testify
\VASJfiNGTO~ tUPI ) -Prei;ident
Nixon's l\\'O brothers, Donald und
Erl\l.'ard . ha1·e bnlked nt answ~rln11
Senate Watercate Committee qut':stions
about the mysterious $ 1 O O , O O O
i»ntributlons io the resident fro n1
billionaire How1trd llughes.
But \\'hat their reflWll to testify means
-e1·en their whereabouts -were 1a
mystery loday. Their lawye r said he
didn't know if !hey would return to the
committee and couldn't say where they
were staying, except that it wasn't at the
White House.
The Nixon Brothers met briefly with
committee Chairman Sam J . Ervin and
conl!lllttee lawyers Wednesday morning
and were scheduled to return for an
a(temoon of questioning by s t a f r
members. ··
But they ne \'er appeared, and Sen.
Hertnan E. Talnuldge (D-Ga .) said it
was his understanding they had gone to
court seeking. to quash their subpoenas.
Old that mean the Nixon br-Qthers
mig ht be risking contempt? "No.''
replied Talmadge, "Not at the moment.''
But a search of U.S. District Court
dockets In late afternoon showed neither
of the brothers nor thei r lawyer, Elmer
Stone of L-Os Angeles had filed a
subpoena.quashing suit.
Talmadge told repo11ers there
Rppcared to be "some dluigrcctnent ...
some misunderstanding" over th e
longstanding subpoena& for various
records and documents held by the Nixon
brothers. Stone said he believes they art
''in f\Jll compliance ," but dcellned to
My what the dispute in\'olved.
lie stressed they already have gi ven
"extensi\·e testimony'' under oath to
committee investigators who trnveled to
the West Coast recently to interview the
Nixons.
The committee, which is due lo Issue
its final report June 30, Is investigating
the 1969 Hughes gift to Nixon and what
happened to It. C.G. "Bebe" Rebo1.o, the
President's closest fri end. has testified
he accepted the money from Hughes as a
campaign contribution but returned it
untouc:hed three yea rs later.
But the committee v.·as reported to
have heard other testimony recently that
part of the $100,000 went to one Or the
president's brothers and to his secretary ,
Rose Mary Woods.
Hearing Delayed
Ort 13-stor·v •'
FRANK GLAS, 12, COSTA MESA, PRACTICES Hl(fH JUMP
At Upper Bay Boys Club, Shades of the 1960s
Skateboard Fete
Slated Saturday
By Boys Clnb
Executive's
Jf'ife Freed !V ewport II otel
~.public hearing on. a propo.~l'd $16
m1Jhon, 13-story Atlas Hotel in Ne v.'port
Bea~ y.·as ~cti.eduled for tonight's
planning comm1ss1on meeting but will be
eonlinued W"llil June 20.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Mrs.
Thais Get Man A sport that was popular in the 1960s is
being revived by a group of yoW"lgsters at
lhi! Upper Bay branch of the Boys Club
of the •!arbor Area. They've or ganized a
skateboard contest for Saturday.
Jack Freidland, wife of the
president and chief executi ve
officer of Food Fair Stores, a
supennarket cha in. was abducted
at gunpoint from her home tod ay.
police reported. Later she was
freed. unharmed.
''The plans just aren't ready to be
submitted." said James Hew i ck e r
NeY.'J)Ol't Beach assistant commW"lily de:
\'elopment direclor. ""' So Sorry-Hareni Not Per1nitted Police set up road blocks and
search <:ars \\·ere dispatched.
Officers said they \\'ere looking for
a brown·colored Ford Pinto or
f\fustang.
"The environmenta l impact report ha s
been done but the parking an alysis.by the
city's consultant isn't fin ished." he s.iid. BANGKOK (U PI) -Police have arrested a Japanese businesS-
man an~ accu~ed him or maintaining a harem in northern Thailand.
Pohce s~d they charged Toshio Tamamoto. 41 , at a Bangkok
hotel after h1~ return Crom the northern city or Chiang l'tfai.
f\fuch of ska teboarding is still the-same
as it was in the 1960s. You step on a
narrow piece of wood with wheels and
zoom down the hill as fast as you can go.
Hewicker said the hotel. to be built In
Koll Center at the corner of Birch Street
and Von Karman Avenue, is subject to
the parking fonnula approved by the
planning commission ~lay 16 i n
coonection with the nearby Sheraton
Hotel.
:rama_mot.o wa s first arrested in January 1973 and charged with
k~epmg six girls, aged 8 to 17, at his residence in Chiang l'tfai. 350
miles no~h o( Ban~kok. A 13-year-old girl told police she had been
kept against her wil l and raped on numerous occasions. After his
arrest. Tamai:noto was ~eleased on ~ii, which he jumped.
. At th.e time. ~e said he had paid the traditional dowry for the
gi rls at prices ranging from $250·S500.
Ev~n th?ugh the idea hasn't changed,
technical improvements in skateboards
have grea tly added to the skills of the
Mdcrs.
No1\', instead of boards c o st in g
about $2. they can cost between $1G-$2{1
and offer the rider a great deal more
speed or maneuverability.
When a newsman c:Jlled the
FreidJand residence in Gladwynne
on the Philadelphia Main Llne
inquiring about the abduction, an
unidentified man replied. "I can't
say anything at this lime. We have
to keep the lines clear.'' The formula permits hotels to provide
fewer parking spaces Uran \\"OU]d
normally be required for the hotel's
restaurant. convention halls, rooms and
other facilities. . Poli~e were tipped he returned to Thailand in A1ay \\'hen a taxi
driver said Tamamoto was acting suspiciously. The driver told police
Tamamoto was wearing a wig when he del i,v~red him to his Bang·
kok hotel.
The idea for the contest started with
lhe Boys Club shop director. Steve
Baumgardner. and surfboard ma ker P<1t
lfann ifin. bolh skateboard enlhusiasts
t~emselves.
Educator Asking
Dan;iag~s .~ver. "
Pressured Ouster
Instead. the nu mber of parking spa ces
can Ix> reduced in accordance with a
complicated formula prepared. by a ell y
contultanL The formula would take into
accoWlt lhe fact !hat more than one
facility may be used by individuals whose
car occupies only one parking space. Bull.dozer Kills
Grading Checker
In Capistrano
A 55-year-old grading chec ker at a
major San Juan Capis trano parks project
\~·as crushed to death beneath the trac k
of a bulldozer shortly before noon
\Vcdnesday.
Ephraim B. Pectol of Anaheim,
suffered 1najor head and chest injuries
and ...,·as declared dead at the scene of
the tragedy on tbc grounds of the new
Junipero Ser ra P.ark . coroner's aides
said. ' \\'orkn1cn 11·ho witnessed the accident
said that Pectol had been making sure
that grades were done according to plans
in the westerly portion of the park and
11•as standing close to the path of the
bulldozers and dump truck s working the
site.
A dozer operator \\'ho was not
idcntfhed made a sharp right turn v.·hilc
descending a slope and the blade of his
tractor caught the grad ing checker.
throwing him beneath the left trac k of
the heavy machine.
Witnesses said that because of bhnrl
s.po13 from the driver"s seat. the drive r
though! no1hing '>''as amiss unt il he sa .,..·
the \•ictim's hard hat roll from bcne11t h
the lr<ictor.
From Page I
AO VENTURE • • •
the Paeific Northwest where he tried
logging for a fe w v.·r.cks.
..This was a young man ¥.'ho just
wanted to try a lot of things.'" h!s mother
reflected Tuesday.
During high ~hool . Common ran cr0'1-s
('OUntry and was a two-mile r on the tr11ck
tcamn lettering t'>'·o years on !ht': va rsit y.
"lfe "'as a fine runner ... n hell ol a
kid ... aly,.ays ·easy-go-lucky '." rL'CnllM
track and cross co unlrv co.ich Bob
Hailey upon len rn ing of ihe tragedy
Besides his molhcr and father. who
moved to Costa ~lesa from Newporl
Bcactt 1n 1958, ~tr. Common lca1·C!I n
brother. Chris, <>f Coos Ba~·. Ore .. n
siste r, !\frs. Sheri Y.'hite. of Ind iana :
grandmother~ ).irs. 1\fedc Prcv.•ctt, of
Tustin and ,_.11"3. Ruth Common of Santa
Barbara. plus thrl'<' nephews.
Family members su~gest n1crnorla l
contrihulions to the "larincr'!I Church
Building Fund in Mr. Common's n11m c.
"
" From Pagel
Both have been helping the boys ban1d
boards ror the contest, which is
schedul~ to begin at ii a.m. at the Boys
Clu b. 2131 Tustin Ave .
The contest will be broken into two OIL DRILL ... parts -a slalom course , and a Damages totalling M00,000 are • being
competition trick course. To make it fa ir demandti4 ln Orange County Superior
Hewicker said the public hearing on
the hotel's use permit will be continued
until June 20 "and if I.here are furthe r
problems then. it may be. continued
again." drilling should take place because he's fo; all the boys who have entered, there Coort action taken by a man who claims
· i·~.1 wrl! be heats depending on the skill of the pres!ure from loca members forced him sat1s lt.-u with other reports that the rid er. . to offer resignation as executive director
venting of the wells will "'ork. Boys Club officials say onlooker! ¥.·ill of the Newport·Mesa F.ducation Associa-
He said Ne .... 'J)Ort Beach geologist be able to see such tricks as high jun1ps. tion. Retail Clerks
Sign Ne'v Pact
George Zebal recommended the capping handstanrls a~d 360-degree spinners. , Barthold R. Hake claim! that publicity
ond 1· · h The boys will he comrv>ting yor pri ... "s disseminated by several defendants led • \'en 1ng six mont s ago and an r-v .... him to offer to resign last June 22 desp1'tc
Omng C t r -11 f "tith a total value of more than $200. All • e oas vu cge pro cssor has h the fact that his three-year con tract, . ave been donated by local surfboard supported that recommendation . shaps and merchants. renewed in 1972, still had two years to
I-le, said Professor G<!-orge r.uthrie 01 nm. Orange County retail clerks approved a
OCC s Petroleum Departmcnt submitted Noting that the Newport-,.tesa group is new contract today , averting a threat of
a report Tuesday sa ying the zebal K"d 'A . h' a chapter of the California 'Teachers strikes at county food stores.
recommendations ··11·:11 be a<; effective as 1 1.13 Jl 1113 le urts Association, Hake demands f5(1Cl,000 in Negotiators for nine Sou 1 her n
J>OS!'lible und er the state of th<' art todav. damages plus SID.00> each from the CTA Californ ia retail clerks locals reached
But . \Villiam L. ~ Jn~ram. depUty DUBLIN (UPI) -Police said today and ID individuals. agreement on the nrw pact with Food
su_perv1so r of the Division of Oil and Gas. the kidnaping of the Earl and Countess of Those are identified by Hak:r.as: Em ployers Co u n c 11 representatives
thinks that venting \\•ill be only a Donoughmore was so amateurish they Kingery E. Whitcneck: Elsie ary Monday after intervention of a fede ral
temporary solut ion. believe a party of young provisional IriAh Deeter; Charles S. Gordon: Ve! a v . mediator.
. "Th~ \l'cli abandonment program Repu blican Army men conducting a C't0rdon : Laurel Arnold ; Jerome H. Orange County Retail Clerks local 324
1nclud1ng the relief well in the park weapons raid abducted them on impulse. ShaMon: Jack Recs: George Wichman: today voted l,699 to 289 to approve the
would still be advisable, but y.·e !eel !hat This theory means the 71-year-old peer William Kingsley and Horace Whea!ley. contract. \\·hicb reportedly includes a SO
this program alone \Vould only be a and wife were not primarily taken as Rees , Wichman, Kingsley and cent an hour pay hike.
temporary solution and that rurlhcr hostages to force the return of the Wheatl ey are further identified as Earlier this week the Bakersfield local
relief wells should be included in the hunger-striking Price sisters from employes of the CaUfom ia Teachers voted to accept tbe new contract, leaving
program," Ingram said in a letter to IA>ndon to Northern Ireland, police said. Association . seven locals yet to vote. co~~c~~~n,~:i:d~~~~a, .... ·ells should be !:~••••••••oio•••w:":":~1:~H:o::o:1!..:~;;M:~:o:1::~?(:;;~~.~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-
aeti ve. producing \\'ells. a ·· s "We strongly recommend that the city ..11
1
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consider some emergency provision to ~u1•
provide for the e>traction of oil in this "•lllllll1iiji'':1.::;;;:;. CELLARS area lo miti~atc an obviously hazardous
s11uation." Ingram said.
Wynn said he doesn't think the hazard 2 COHVE..,IE..,T LOCATIO..,S i' dangerous enough Jn ci rcum vent the 2500 W. COAST HWY. ,... ,... ,...
cha rter prohibition against <lil drilling. NEWPORT IEACH ~ • ~ IN NEW'°'1'NOOUCI Vil.UGI
ll eexplaincdthatCity Attorney Oennis 1 ~~.~ ~ --• J 1601MfWPOITILYD. O'~['il has. ru led that on!" under dire COSTAMISA 642·9004 ~;:E~;t~;~~~~;~i~· ~:·;~; ;~~~~e~ ~ 0CWllW1fi •·UikS'i*'MHlmftltmilf11tllwt~~MI;)
\V ynn s:iid the earliest a charter
rh11 nge lo ;illo\v r vr.n limited drilling ~,a-~,.,,
cmold ,o bcfocc ,·otcrs would be at the CORHOERD BEEF · ., !:lil'·,,._BRAJUlllN!V.. ·.
:'liovcmber election.
"IUOM GUSTO" . ·' SCHWEIGER From Page l IT.ALI.AH SALAMI .. '>f ·~'
Reg. $ 449 ~· How . $ J .89 S1\'IOIGNG ...
the oth<'r student~.
"ThP administrlltion has rejected th1!1
pro[l')s.11."' he said .
~l cs~rnRcr ur~ed the bonrd to support
p:1s~nge of S<>nate Rill 71. which calls for
dec;1 ~n;11e:I sn1oking are;1s to be set aside
1n high !"chool!l. subject to the approval
of 1'ldhic111a\ school board~.
"'l'ht only problem .,..;111 SB 71 is that tt
requires parental -permission a n d
therefore crc<ites an c n fo r cc m e n t
problcni." ).1essen~cr ~Id .
"I don 't think 11 v.·ilt pass without the
par<'nt:il petmlS.!iiOn clause. however," he
said.
Asked lf glrl student s ha\'e Uie samo
pmblcm in their ba lhrooms. ~1cssenger
M Jd , "Girls hal'l' o v.-orM? problom.''
lie didn't elab&rate.
l 3.98 , .A por If;) lb.
"'· '8 Ll"'lt lh. ,~Ll"'it J h. WlttlC _ ,.. ! Wltt.C~ . ·~. -~~
ntlS WllrS CMEISI NAMU
~.\(f~L""!I"'r1"'J1hj4~ ~ · : ~r MUN-CHEE a : LONGHORN
$179 1 Reg. S JC9 lb. , 1.99 , ...
Limit J lbt. Lhllit l h . .. •
WI"' Co.po11· f ';J" ' Witt! c...,.11 ~~~~-~~ cC>Uf'OM ixmt
'
.r
THIS WEEK'S WINE FEATURES
EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAINS from BORDEAUX .
H ,,_.,.. • CA-..r SAUVtGHOH -=~.J.;': ce.1 .tfwd .. 1111 .. tlM IOIDIAUX SAU ..... •_, 'S MOW!
IARIOAINS UNDEll U l'Ell IOmE
SAM" s29s tS67 CHATEAU TOURTEAU s31 ar ~ -tS t George. St. Em1llon)
IARGAINS UNDEll $S l'Ell 1omE s495 1967 CHAtEAU-LaFLEUR SSJ 46 BECAOE (H8ul·Ml!docJ
·, ,£ s49s 1•1ocH•T••u rnoNauov. 55346 )fI7 ~ LALA NOE ts1. Estel)he)
IARIOAINS UNQEll SI l'Ell IOTTU s59s 1970 CHATE~U BATAOLEY S6426
(Sth Growth, Pau1Uac)
<, IMd" S695 1967 GRANC>f'UY-1.ACOSTE s7506 ;..tt17
J (5lh Growtn·PauiUac)
-~ 1 .. ~~~P..,1~.w;) ...-cpu s750 1966 Chaleau Jeao-F1ure SSJ 00
(Grand Cru·SI. Emlljon) ,
I
I
1
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7
•
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 157, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1974 c TEN CENTS
OEC Btidget Pl~n Calls
Coast Community College District
trustees. reviewed the d J 11 tr i ct' s
preliminary budget for the coming year
Wednesday night and, at the same time.
gave everyone at Golden West and
Orange Coast Co llege a 10 percent pay
raise.
'The salary package. approved
unanimously by the (ive·1nnn panel.
amounts to $1.8 n1i1Uon of the $43.8
million budget proposed for fiscal 1974-75.
If approved as presented, the budget
would increase expenditures by $6. l
million over this year, raising the
district's tax 17 cents to $1.l~ ptr $100
assessed valµation .
Corell an Thompson, vice chancellor for
business affairs, said the wage
agreement covers 508 teachers and 531
noo-teacbing employes, plus a number ol
part·time workers on both campuses.
The salary Increases were negotiated
without public controversy. The Bureau
of Labor Statistics' Cost Of Living
Average is 9.7 percent for Orange
County, according to district officials.
However, district officials made it
clear they could not commit themselvc!s
to conlinue lo meet cost of living
increases because costs are skyrocketing
Noise Violation
Friday Night Cycle Races Rapped
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
A study just completed by Costa l\1esa
city officials shows the Friday night
m<>torcycle races at ltle OranO'e County
Fairgrounds to be in violation of the
city's noise ordinance.
However. city administrators believe
they can cut the noise from the track's
speaker system sufficiently to diminish
complaints from the nearby Mesa del
~tar neighborhood without resorting t.o
W estrriinster
Police Nab
64 'Pushers'
Sixty.four suspected narcotics pushers,
aged 13 to 42, were arl'e.91ed late ·
Wednesday by Westmi.n.!ter .police In a
mass crackdown on drug sales to
teenagers.
The arrest roundup climaxed eight
months of police in vestigation Involving
200 undercover drug purchases valued at
$4,000, police said.
The crackdown was similar to one
made last month by Fountain Valley
Police where 62 suspected narcotics
pushers were arrested and one in la te
April .... in Jrvioc where 130 persons were
arrested on suspicion of various dru g
charges.
Sgt. f\.fanuel Hinson , coordinator of the
Westminster project, said uniformed
Westminster officers set out at dusk to
arrest Westminster suspects.
Police ii\ Fountain Valley, Garden
Grove, Santa Ana and Huntington Beach
assisted by arresting suspected pushers
in their cities.
Police had warrants for 27 juveniles
and 48 adults, all charged with sales of
narcotics, Hinson said. Offi cers today
were continuing to search for the nine
remaining suspects.
Forty-two were from Westminster, one
from Fountain Valley, eight from Garden
Grove, nine 4om Santa Ana and five
from HunlingtOn Beach, Hinson reported .
Officers were told in a pre·sweep
briefin g to arrest juveniles by 10 p.m.,
and most of the other arrests were
completed by midnight, Hinson said.
noting the operation "went smoot hly."
The parents of each juvenile were
given a packet of information about the
arrest, Hinson said, including a special
telephone nun1bcr where officers were on
duty to provide additional details.
legal action.
Robert K. Duggan. the assistant city
manage r under whose direction 210 noise
meter readings were taken, described the
ordinance as "rather restrictive" and
that it was unlikely that the noise could
be reduei!<:I to meet the letter of the law.
The maximum noise level allowed in a
resklential area such as ritcsa dcl ~far is
50 db. Readings show that that l~el was
consistently exceeded by track aoise
drifting -into lhe-n-e-i-g-h"b o r h o o d .
LOST AT SEA
Sid Common
.:-.1easurements ranged from a low of 48
db to a hi gh or 82 db.
However, Duggan pointed .out that cars
driving through the neighborhood and
airplanes flying overhead make just
as much noise. Both cars and planes are
exempted from the ordinarfce.
''So strictly speaking, in noise level
terms only , the noise coming from the
speedway races is in actuality little
louder than passing cars and airplanes.
' !See SOUND, Page %) --
County Urges
Wr ar Against
Drunk Driver
By WILLIMI SCIJREIBER
0 1 1M D.lftr P'llet St•ll
The Orange County Grand Jury urged
the Board of Supervisors today to
1vage all-out war on drunken driving in
the county.
In a three--page report to supervisors.
jury foreman A. E. "Bill" Gazlay said
the county recorded 125 a!Cohol·related
traffic .deaths last year.
"And it is estimated !he cost of
alcqhol·r~ated motor vehicle accidents
approached $7 miWon." Gazlay added.
The main thrust ol the jury's
recommenda'tion was aimed at g~tting
the board to coordmate a com prehensive
program designed to reduce the number
or dea Uls, injuries and pro perty dama ge
caused by drinking drivers.
• C'8zlay said the problem is getting
woi'se instead of better despite v;ork by
several county agencies and the grant
programs to solve it.
Ser.vices Slated
For Adventurer
Sid Com1non
Referring to a roadsiOe survey made a
"' year ago in Huntftigton Beach, Gazlay
said one out or every four drivers on
weekend evenings had been drinking and
one of every 25 was legally under the
influence or alcohol.
The spirit of adventure that drove Sid
Common to explore life as a forest
firefighter and a lum berjack and finally
sent him to sea has ended in death.
Memorial services !or the lifetime
Harbor Area resident lost at sea off
Northern CaUfomia are scheduled for 2
·p.m. Saturday. •
'The 1970 Newport Harbor High School
graduate will be eulogized by Rev.
William Acton at Mariner's Church, 2200
E. Coast Highway, Corona de! Mar.
Authorities from the U.S. embassy in
Madrid. Spain,. finally located his
vacalioning parents Sw1day night to
notify them of their youngest son's f\.fay
28 death.
"A comparision of lhis and other data
suggests that arrests occur in only one
percent of the occurrences of driving
under the influence," Gazlay said. or those arrested, Gazlay said 60
percent are classified as problem
drinkers or alcoholics In need of
treatment and the other 40 percent are
labeled "misusers" who need education.
Among other things, the j u r y
recommends:
-A public educat ion effort to solicit
public support.
-A specialized education effo11 ai1ned
al drinking drivers.
~A cooperative program bel1reen
criminal justice and health agencies 10
detect and intervene in behavorial
(See DRINKING, Pavr ?'
'
while the district's revenues are tied to
fixed income factorl.
Also reOected in the budget are about
$14.1 million in capital improveme nts,
main ly to complete projects already
'unde r way on both campuses.
At OCC In .Costa Mesa. this includes an
adn\inistration building. a lecture hall
and arts· building. a student services
building, a tutorial center. a food
serviet>s lab, a horticulture building, a
skills center, a literature and language
building, a drama workshop, and hand·
ball courts.
Sctieduled for Golden \\1est are ttie
renovation of existing parking lots and
nev.' parking construction. a storn1 drain
srstem, a humanities. art~ and sciehces
building, a math and science building
addition, a library and audie>\'isual
center addition and a music building
addition.
Except for the salary increase.
1 rustees took no action on other items in
the budget' which is described by
administrators as '·highly tenfaive.''
The budget, already cut by more than
SI n1illion from ori'ginal bud.get requests,
is scheduled ror public hearing at 8 p.11).
Aug. 7 at district headquarters . 1370
Adams Ave., Costa Mesa.
·----· ···----------------------
•
-Kennedys Pay Tribute •
Sen. Edward Kennedy (D·h-lass.) is flanked by sister·
in·law Ethel (on crµtches after a skiing injury) and
wife Joan at Arlington National Cemetery where
they paid respects to the late Robert F. Kennedy on
the sixth anniversary of his assassination. Joan left a
psychiatric hospital to attend the rites .
Margot's Little Lamb
Can't Fight City Hall
By ARTllUR R. VINSEL
ot t!tt 0111'1' P llOl .51111
~feshuganah the Jamb is about to be
evicted from the Elegant Barn, a Costa
?11esa deeor boutique. Animal rontrol
oflicers say she just doesn't match the
rest or the merchandise.
f\1cshuganah and her mistress .• ~largol
Goodman. felt the 1velght of city hall a
month ago after complaints by
n<.'ighboring merchants over the alleged
keeping of livestock in a FOmmercial
zone. "
l\lrs. Goodman moved her sheep fro1n
the shop at 445 E. lith St., but
l\feshuganah remains today in.side city
Umits against the \a\\'.
Saturday, she will be the center of a
farewell party at the shop from 4 to 7
p.m.
"We're going to sell nleshuganah ,"
r.1rs. Goodman explained. ~
She originally purchased the \\'IXlll~· pet
(City authorities say l1 cannot be a pet
because it is livestock) for $165 at ;1n
auction benefiting the Ctiild Guidance
Clinic.
A pen outside !he Elephant Barn and
feed ran her investme-nt up considerably
(Ser SllEEP, Page !/
Detectives Nab
8 Men, Pot Haul
In Jtf esa Raid :·
A team of narcotics detectives raidect .. a
Costa Mesa residence \V e d n e s d a r .
capturing eight suspects and seizing ~
pounds of alleged marijuana and nip"e
ounces or suspected hashish.
The arrestees, an m31e. offered no
resistance \\·hen confronted Y.'ith the
estimated $6.100 v.·orth of contrabaOO,,
poli ce said . ~
Bai! was set al $7,500 each for tbc
seven adults arrested. All remained In
cust.ody today. ·
A teenaged youth among those
arrested v.•as lodged in Orange C.ounty
Juvenile Hall.
All were booked on suspicion of selling
marijuana and hashish.
Orange Coast He vanished from the deck of the
Simmons Tu gboat Company vessel Chief
off Blunt's Reef near Eureka eight days
.... ago. A lenglhy search turned up no trace
of him.
Nine Coast Jurors Tapped
Investigators \\'ho raided the Halecrest
area home til 1170 Charleston SL,
identified tv•o of the suspects as Roccl L.
Ho\ve and rifichael \V. Angier. both 20
and both v.·elders y,·ho share the
residence.
The others are Michael L. Allred, 20. pf
El Toro base housing; Charles L. rit il~.
22. a 1nechan\c. 1111,\ 31st St., Newport B~h; Daniel J. Allred. 22. a Covina
factory worker : Paul E. Guskey. 19, of
17577 Santa ~1onica Circle. Fountain
Valley, and Thom3s J. Hl'dge. 28, a
carpenlcr. of 12521 Dale St .. Stanton.
Weather
Low clouds and fog night and
morning hours with hazy sunshine
in the afternoon Friday. Only par·
tial clearing on the beaches. Slight·
ly warmer Inland. Highs upper 60s
at the beaches to low 90s inland.
INSIDE TODAY
~Vedd;,1g of Sty of "SL11 a11d
Pnmity Stune" was attended~ by
23.000 1ans and tt· was ('["huge
success. Police orresUd J 3 per·
sons for trespa!S. iix womtll
fainted, lllld fistfights. broke out
sporadically. Story. Page 4.
L. M. I•"• 1' C1Jiftolllla H Cl•••ll'" .Mo4t ,_, H c .... _. :as
0.11111 M llc:H 11
11.i1"'111 ..... ' E111eft._I JI, .M
'""""· "'" "'"""' :If AM \,"'"" lf ~ "'" ,. IM'll•• )4
MUhlll 'Ufldl ts ftlllotlltl Mtw1 4
OrltlM Ct1111,., 11·1! ... . s.,,.1a 'ttttf' u '""" ,,..u St.di Mlrtlett 1 .. IJ
""'"'"'" " llle•*' )4 W111Mr I
W.""efl'I ""'' 0 ·1f w.r1t1 Htwl I
'
His parents. Mr. and ~1rs. James A.
Common. 409 Broadway, Cos la 'Mesa,
arrived home Tuesday.
No one abo:ird the tugboat witnessed
the accident. Sea conditions were
described as rough at !he time he v.·as
lost. .
·"They don't know ir he hit his head or
what," l\1rs. Common said ~esday.
Sid'!! futher Is a longtime seaman
himself. employed as a pilot skipper with
J'acobscn ·PllOt Service. bringing ships
into Long Beach Harbor.
His emp1oyer \mmediately hired a
plane ln the £ureka are:i lo conduct a
search for the missing man before A·tr.
and Mrs. Common were not i r I e d
themselves.
She said her son. who attended Harper
Elementary School, Kaiser lnl.ermcdiatc
School, Newport Harbor High ScOOOI and
Orange Coast <Allege, rignrdcd life with
a sense of adventure.
lfe had been a rirefigr\ler in the
Elsinore 11rt'a before packin~ his hags for
(See ADVENTURE. Paget)
•
Judges Norninate 30 Frorn County for '74-75 Dnt y
Nlne Orange Coast residents are
among . the 30 persons nominated by
Superi'Or Court judges for service on the
1974·75 Orange County Gra nd Jury .
Their na1nes will be among the Ill
name.'i drawn from the ballot box July. 1
by L'OW\iy clerk \Villiam E. St John prior
to the ne"'' jury's swearing in before
Judge Everett W. Dickey o( San
Clemente. .
, Judge Dickey will be the criminal court
arraignn1ent jurist and Grand Jury
liaison in 1974-75.
The current Grand Jury wlll complete
ils service June 30 and will be disband~
by outgoing Judge Jamet Turner of
Laguna Beach shortly before lht new
panel is sworn In .
Its 18 month service constitutes an
Orange County record. That record
became possible this year when it was
decided to commentt! all future Grand
· Jury terms on July 1 and conclude them
on the following June 30.
The 1973-74 Grand Jury took office on
Jan. I. 1973 and will cornplete its tern1 of
service June 30.
F'our Huntington Beach residents were
among I.he nine Orange Coast residenlli
Inc luded in a list that represents the
personal choice of 'J:l of lhe Superior
())urt's 31 judg<:s.
They are ; Michael l.. Hefflin. 27. of
16112 Craig Lane, nominated by Judge
Robert L. Corfman of Newport Beach;
Nick V. N~rlo. 38. of 5141 Warner Ave ..
nominatl'd by Judge 11annon G. Scoville :
~tarlMte ~1. Slat~ • .f!i cf 1701 Main St ..
nominated by Judge 1.;narle5 A. Bauer of
lluntington Beach and Barbora S. Woods.
• •
39. of 21052 Indigo Circle. nominated by
Judge \\'alter. \V. Charamza of
Huntington Beach.
Other Orange Coast re1ddents includctl
Joseph Gatlin Jr., 47, or 23062 Lavaca St .,
and Elaine N. Stanfill. 57. of 23191
A1eado\vbroo1! Circle, both of El Toro.
Gatlin \\'as nominated by Jurlgc
Herbert s. Herlands and ~frs. Stanfill
was nominaled by Judge William S. Lee
of Ne\\'flOrt Beach.
Also named are Marcella Scott, 39. of
16675 Spruce Circle, Fountain Vall~y.
nominated by Judge Robert P. Kneeland
of Newport Beach : William L. S1>enctr,
M. of 3716 ()cc!an Blvd., Corona de\ Mar,
nominated by prcskling Judge Robert A.
Banyard and Victor S. Stewart , 67. of
2&452 Gloriosa Drive. f\-1\ssion Viejo.
nominated by Judse William C. Speirs of
Newport Beach.
ln\'estigators said they had been
probing activities at the home for about a
111onth.
lRVI.l'\1E CA PT URES
R.4SEBALL CROW"N-
SPR INGF IELD. tll.-Gary \1lhcclock.
.fcff ~lalinoff and Keith Bridgt'!! paced
lhC' UC Irvine baseball team to a repeat
J)t'rforman<'1! Wednesday night as NCAA
collrge dlvls\on champions.
For detail!! o( the final game, see
today's sports section. Page 29.
Let's Ji1nk It!
?ilrs. ~1 onica Viotto (le fll is getting some help from neighbors Jodi
Cavin reenter) and Lorena Burton (right) ini.rounding up rumma~e
for Friday's speci:il Costa fl-1esa trash cleanUp. A sta.kebed truck will
pick up any items not normally taken by the trash collector. in-
cluding old furniture and the swing set being disl'nanUed here. I!
j'Our normal pickup day is Friday, put your rummage out on the curb
this Friday. Other pickup dates will be announced by the Costa
A1esa Beau tificati on Committee.
-
TONIGHT
: "HOUSE OF BLUE LEAVES" -
South Coast Repertory Theater, through
Sun. 8 p.m.
UCI LECTURES -''Leaming to Live
'f'ith Money,., Room 167 Steinhau s Hall , 7
g.m. "Adventures in Folk Eicpression."
Room 161 •rumanities Hall, 1 p.m.
''Photographers on Photography." Room
100 Socia l Science Hall. 7 p.m.
; FRIDAY, JUNE 7
; U.T.B.U. -Costa f.fesa Civic
.Playhouse. Comm unit y Center,
fairgrounds. Fri. and Sal. 8:30 p.m.
---·----------
.From Pagel
SOUND ...
Planes flying over the neightxirhood often
register a higher reading than do the
motorcycles." Duggan concludes in the
study.
He said a meeting has been scheduled
for Frkl.ay with race promoter Harry
Oxley and city Communications Director
Orville Amburgey to determine if the
speaker system. considered the pri1n3ry
offender, can be modified to lower the
noise intrusi on into the neighborhood.
··~e're going to try to work with the
race track operator to find out what he
can live with and what the people ol
r..1esa de! J\Iar can live with," Duggan
added.
Preside11t's
Stay Silent
WAS~UNGTON (UPI ) -Presldcnl
Nixon's l\\'O brothers, Donald nn~
Edward. have balked at answering.
Senate \\'atergate Com mittee questions\
about thl mysterious $ I O O • O O O
contribution~ to the resident from
billionaire 1mv.·ard Hughes. But what t eir refusal to testify means
-even the \\'hereabouts -\\'e re a
mystery today. Their lawyer said he
didn't know If they would return to the
committee and couldn't say v.·here they
u·erc staying, except that it wasn't at the
White flouse.
The Nixon Brothers met briefly with
rommittee Chairman Sam J. Ervin and
committee lawyers \Vednesday morning
and were seheduled to relJ.lm for an
afternoon of questioning by st a ( f
me mbers.
But tliey neve r 'appeared, and Sen.
Herman E. Talmadge (D-Ga.) said it
>1·as his understanding they had,~gone to
court seeking lo quash their sub~nas.
Did that mean the Nixon , brothers
might be ri sking contempt? "No,"
replied Talmadge, "Not at the moment."
But a search of U.S. District Court
dockets in late afternoon showed neither
of the brothers nor their lawyer, Elmer
Stone of Los Angeles had filed a
subpoena.quashlng suit.
Talmadge told reporters there
appeared to be "some disagreement ...
some misunderstanding" over t he
longstanding subpoenas for various
records and documents held by the Nixon
brothers. Stone said he believes they are
"in full compliance," bu t declined to
say what the dispute involved.
He stressed !hey already ha\'e gi\•en
•·extensive testimony" under oath to
com miltee investigators who traveled to
the West Coast recently to interview the
Nixons.
Executive's
lf'ife Freed
PHILADELPH!A IAP) -Mr1!.
Jack Freidland', v.·ife of the
president and chief executive
effi cer of Food Fair Stores, a
supermarket chain. was abducted
at gunpoint from her home today,
police reported. Later she was
freed, unharmed.
Police set up road blocks and
search cars were dispatched.
Officers said they "'ere looking for
a brown-colored Ford Pinto or
Mustang. '
When a newsman called the
Freidland residence in Gladwynne
on the Philadelphia ?itain Line
inquiring about the abduction. an
unidentified man replied, "I can't
say anything at this time. We have
to keep the lines clear."
• 1 AIOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING ~ Fairgrounds. 8: 15 p.m. Parking Meter Forest .
; j Fr••••• P11ge I
' ADVENTURE. • • ' .
Ii~ Pacific :\orthwest 11·here he tried
lc;;gins for a few 11·eek:>.
: ··This 11•as a young man 11 ho 1ust
t-.·antcd to try a lot or tnin:;~ ... his n1othcr
reflected Tuesday.
•During high school. Common ran cro.~s
counlry ano "'as a tv;o·nlilcr on the tra ck
l~amn lettering two yea rs on the varsity.
, "He was a fine runner ... :i hell of a
kid ... always ;easy-go-lucky '," recalled
track and cross country coa ch Bob
Ha iley upoo learning of the tragedy.
: Besides his mother and father. 11'ho
1t1oved to Costa ~1esa from Ne>1·port
Beattt in 1958, i'.ir. Common !cares a
!:rother. Chris. of Coos Ba~·. Ore.: a
sister, ~trs. Sheri '\'hllr. of Indiana :
grandmothers :-O·trs. \lcdc Pre1vett . or
Tustin and i'.lrs. Tiuth Con1n1on of Santa
Barb<ira. plus three ncphc.,..·s. . .--·-
I
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'Robin Hood' Gets 01(
To Continue His Deeds
:-OllL\'iAl KEE. 'Vis. (UP!\ -Robin
Hood rides again -through the
do11.·nto\\ll forest of sturdy parking
meters.
l\lil.,..•aukee·s modern-day Sherwood
Forest rogue. Bruce Vanier. resumed his
self-appointed niission of s a v in g
motorists fron1 parking t i c k c t s
\\'ednesday afte r the city attorney's
Qffice could rind no reason to stop his
philanthropy.
Vanier, 23. began his rescue 11.·ork last
u·cek. pedaling his !()..speed , bicycle in
sea rch of expirOO parking meters. '"hen
he spotted one. he plunked in a roin and
left a stamped, self·addresscd envelope
under the v.·indshie\d "''iper.
Inside the envelope was a note : "You
hare just been rescu ed from a $5 parking
licket b~· the Robin l·lood Public Parking
Aid." The notes asked the motorist to
send \'anier SI to help him contin•1c his
.. i111hlic service ."
llO\\'e\'Cr. police ca u,ght up .,..·ith Vanil'r
and ordered hiln to appear in the city
allorncy's office for PQSsible chargC's of
using a restricted parkin~ area more
than once a day and "thro11'ing a missile
on a vehicle."
"Bruce can continue his operation."
Assistant CHy Attorney David Felger
concluded after Wednesday's meeting.
Felger. after conferring "''ilh an
attorney provil:led Vanier by lhe Legal
Aid Society, agreed the ';miSslles"
ordinance was too vague, especially since
police also throw "missiics ·· in the form
of parking tickets.
As for putting roins in meters for
son1cone: else, Felger said no ordlnnncc
f'O\'Crs that situati on. If anyone "''as
\'iolatlng a la\1'. it woold be the motorists
for overparking. he Mid. •
Felecr's Interest in the case spurrl'd
him io extensive research. Including a
trip to the Jihrnry lo reed "The Engllsh
Hogue," published In 1665 and
purportedly the origin of the Hobin flood
leRend . ·
Felger s:1dd tr anything "''as needed to
pin a rap on l\1llwauke~·s Robin Hood. it
"'·as a citizen's complaint.
But police had none. Jn fact, all the
writt en l'Vldcncc wa s In Vanicr's fa\'or -
notes he'd received from motorists
saying . "I hope you get off the hook" and
Ul'I Ttl .... tt
METER FEEDE R FR EED
Milwaukee's Bruce Vanier
' r.od "'ill bless i"nu."
So Vanier pedaled 3\1'ay a free man
and 11nmcdlately began r c s c u l 11 1J
ovcrparked motorists. But, like hi!
ll'gendary namesake. Vanier rouldn 't
elude the long arm of the law completely.
Before the day was over, police
ticketed him for riding an unllcenscd
blcyclu.
' ... •
• •' f
PREPS FOR CONTEST
John Gaynor, 13
Skateboard F ete
Slated Saturda y
By Bo y s Club
A sport that was popular in !he 1960s is
being revived by a group of youngsters at
the Uppe r Bay branch or the Boys Club
or the Harbor Area. Th ey've organized a
skateboa rd contest for Saturday.
l\luch or skateboarding is still the same
as it was in the 1960s. You step on a
narrov.· piece of \\'ood with >1·heels and
zoom down the hill as fast as you can go.
Even though ·the idea hasn't changed,
technical improvements in skateboards
have greatly add ed to the skills of the
rid ers.
No"''. instead of boards c o s t i n g
about S2. 1hey can oost between $10-$20
and offer the rider a great deal more
speed or maneuverability.
The idea for the contest started v.·ith
the Boys Club shop director, Ste\•c
Baumga rdner. and surfboard maker Pat
Hannifin. both skateboard enthusiasts
tt:.::n1seJ,·es.
Both h:ive been helping the bo~'S build
boards for lhl' rontest. which is
scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. at the Boys
Club. 2131 TUstin Aft.
The contest v.·H! be broken into two
parts -a slalom course and a
competition trick course. To make it fa ir
for all the boys v.·ho have entered, there
\vltl te heats depending on the skill of the
rider.
Boys Club officials say onlooKcrs v.ill
be able to see such tricks as high jumps,
handstand.! and 36().degree spinners .
The boys will be competing yor prizes
with a total value of more than S'.!00. All
have been donated ~y local surfboard
shops and merchants.
l'ro1n Page l
DRJNKING ...
patterns of problem drinkers.
-A referral center acting as a hub for
nil processing and referral activities.
-A means for evaluating t h c
effectiveness of the system.
-A fiscal arrangement for the
oper'ation of referral and treatment
programs. A S25 to $40 client fee Is
suggested.
'. -
'
, •
\-::;o , ·~:-
o.itr Pll111 S!1ff ,.,.,,, w_ 1uc~1n1 ltffllltr
FRANK GLAS, 12, COSTA MESA, PRACTICES HIGH JUMP
At Upper Bay Boys Club, Shades of the 1960s
l'ro•n Page I
SHEEP ...
and now Mrs. Goodman says She faces a
potential S40 fine over the case. Mrs.
Goodman is. scheduled for a court
appearance Monday .
And then there are legal fees to her
cousin. an attorney who norm a 11 y
special.ires in rorporate business la1v
rather than livestock cases.
"She's already cost me $500." com·
pla ins 11rs. Goodman.
1She said Judge Calvin Schmidt had a
h'earty laugh last t\tonday when she and
her counsel appeared in court to explain
>1·hat led to the case of The People 1•s.
\fargot and ri.tcshuganah.
The jurist seemed inclined to think
justice .,..·ill be served if J\fcshuganah is
sold . Mrs. Goodman related.
"He said just as long as I don't scll the
sheep to spmcbody else who Jives in
Costa. ~fesa.·~ she explained.
School Back In
On Septe111ber 10
Newport Beach a n d Costa Mesa
children u·ill go back to school Sept. 10.
The school activities schedule adopted
\Vednesday night by Newport-Mesa
school trustees calls for a Sept. 10 "SChool
opening and a June 12, 1975. closing.
The schedule lists ctig;;tmas recess
beginning Dec. 20 and ending Jan. 3-Jan.
24 >1-ill mark the end of the fall semester.
Spring semester will begin Jan. Z7. and
sp ring vacation v.•il\ run from March 22
ttrrough March 30.
Other holidays when school "1'ill be
clo!ll'd are Veterans Day tNov. II),
Thanksgiving (Nov. ZS-29), Lincoln's
Birthday (Feb. 12 ), W a sh i n,::: ton 's
Birthday (Feb. 17), and Memorial Day
(May 26).
Thais Get Ma11
So Sorry-Harern Not Perniitted
BANGKOK (UPI) -Police have arrested a Japanese business-
man and accused him of maintaining a harem in northern Thailand.
Police said they charged Toshio Tamamoto. 41 . at a Bangkok
hotel after his return from the northern cit y of Chiang 1.fai.
Tamamoto was first arrested in January 1973 and charged with
keeping six gll'ls. aged 8 to 17. at his resi dence in Chiang ~1ai, 3.50 .
miles north of Bangkok. A 13-year·old girl told police she had been
kept against her will and raped on numerous occasions. After hi s
arrest, Tamamoto was released on bail , which he jumped.
At the time, he said he had paid the traditional dowry for the
girls at prices ranging from $250·$500.
Police were tipped he returned to Thailand in May when a taxi
driver said Tamamoto was acting suspiciously.' The driver told police
Tamamoto was wearing a wi g when he delivered him to his Bang-
kok hotel. •
,,
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