HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-07-22 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 22, 19j 4
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orse_ .....
\ ' Police!J Guards Halt
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Newport Surfer Protest
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Bitter ·Battle ---
Rages Around Nicosia
SENATE 'DOVE' DEAD
~x-solon w .. .,.,.. Mor1e, 73
Former Se nator
W ay ne Morse
Succu mbs at 73
Beach Riot
In Newport
About too surfers fn Newport Beach
· becalll<l unruly Sunday mornlng •'Id a
display Ci force by pollce, lifeguard•
aDd the Ol'ange O>unty Harbor Patrol
was required to prevent the dlsb.lrbance
from erupting into a fuU Jeale riot,
authorities said. •
There were no arnsts but numerous
citations were given.
Trolible began about 10:30 a.m. when
Uf_.-da had fl> clOse the beach around
19th Strtet to surfers during normal
slrllng howw bocause .of the unusually
large nmnber of swimmers, according
lo Lt. Logan Lockaliey of the Marine
Safely ~nl
"We had · our biggest crowd of the
year with l«i,000 people and IUl'fboards
presented a safety barard," Lockabey
said.
He explained that surfers were also
causing a problem by surfing around
18th Street, which ls off limits to surfers.
The surfing area begins at 19th Street
and extends westward.
"A lot of the surfers stayed Jn. the
PORTLAND, ore. (APJ -Former water and refused to obey our oommands to come in," Lockabey said. "We cillled Sen. Wayne Aforse, one or the first in the poUce and the Harbor Patrol."
members 0£ Congtess to speak out "At that point a nun'i>er of surfers
against U.S. involvement in Vietnam, who were on the beach began chanting
died today at the age of 71. and throwing sand but were finally
Death cut short his se<OOd attempt diopened by three lifeguard J<oll8 and
at a political comeback since klsing three police cars."
bis Serlale see< in 19'18. A roundup by the police helicopler,
Hospital officials aaid Morse bad be<n a _lifeguard boot and two Harbor Patrol
suffering from a urinary tract Infection._ boats ptus indivi~ lifeguards brought
'll1ey said he died of kidney and heart Jn the rebellious swf<n -...,.. still
faWure. in the water. Morse~~s ousted by_ Republican Sen·=·~-"We gave a Jot of-cttationl but I
Bob P&ckwood in a Close o:ftest. Four don't know the exact number," Locka~
years later, Morse, then 7·1, was beaten said. "We had a problem like this in
harxlily in a race against Sen. Mart west Newport a month or ao ago but ·o. Hatfield (R-Orc.). this was mudt WU"Se."
Two · months ago, Morse again won However, the trouble between sur(ers
the Democratic senatorial nomination and authorities didn't end with Sunday
-and the right to challenge Packwood morning's near-riot.
-by defeating state Senate President "That· evening the police told us they'd
Jason Boe, 44, in Oregon's primary heard rumors that Surfen were going
ei:-. known for ~ unpopular Views to bum JCme of our lifeguard towers,
and tl'lwillinptu to COITIJHOinile • en so they began patrolling th e m • ' '
-· was one of ·the first members l<>ckabey said.
Of Caignos lo -U.S. i-in Vlelnam.
, He and ~ Sen. Emell G'rumilV'
(IMlaslm), who died last nmth ·at.
tbe ... al fl, -. Ille only .... -who voted aplnst the Tonkin GUif
reoolutlon in 11164. President L~ ..E.
Johnson used the measure.as a functional
declaration of war In Southeast Asia.
L\fone's age was a major campaign
issue during the MaY. primary, but he
counlen?d by saying that many great
U.S. 1enators had performed their best
:.ervice after they were 70 years old.
Bui, he added, "I think eV«J!bodY
reallies lhat it isn't to be expected
that 1 would nm for reelection In 1980."
Being a one term tenator would not
!See MOISE, Pap II
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' Grove Moto~t .~'
\' Killed in crash
Feliciano TrujlUo of Garden Grove
sulfered fatal Jnjurin Sunday night when
his cir went out of control and slammed
Into a pylon supporting a shopping center
sign in Westminster.
Coroner's deputies said Trujillo, !2,
of 13092 N1..lson Ave., was dead a( the
scene of the accident.
California Hlpway Patrol offlcen aald
the accident OCCWTed on Weatmlnster
Boulevard al Hope Street.
Reseue Attempt :Fails
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Turk Planes'
Raid Areas
·_;After Truce
By United Press Intemational
Bitter. batUes-raged-in and-around---d
Nicosia today long after passage of a
7 a.m. PDT cease-fire deadline agreed
to by Greek and Turkey. U.N. Secretary
General Kurt Waldheim reported . ~·
Turkish air raid on Nicosia an hour"
and 15 minutes after the truce deadline.
Radio reports said Turkish pl anes hit
a hotel in the port of Famagusta, killing
at least 20 foreign tourists, and UPI
correspondent Michael Keats said in a
dispatch from Nocosia that the truce
deadline came ·and "·ent with no sign
of any relaxation in the fighting.
Greek National Guard units, relnforced
bf troops from 11 Greek planes which
slij)ped into embattled Nicosia during
the night, kept up a steady pounding
of the corridor, Keats said. Turkish
troops were attempting to drive to the
capital from the Kyrenia area where
they landed reinforcements b ir and -~sc='-·toaay.
D11n' l"lt.t Iliff .......
LIFEGUARD MATT GREER TRIES MOU.TH-To.MOUTH RESUSCITATION IN TRANSIT
Costa Meu Ma n Din Despite Rescue Efforts, But His D1ught•r is S.ved
County Bo y, 14,
Hero f or Saving
Three From Surf
Mesa Swimmer Drowns
-OEAllHAR'I', Ore~(UPU_ J
After Saving ·Daughter
Burget, 14, of Villa Park. Calif., swam By· L PETER KRIEG
300 yards into the Pacific Ocean surf °' -. o.1~ Pll9t st.tt
Sunday to rescue three.. l~year-oklsY "This "Jad did 8 herOic thing· and I'm A Costa Afcsa. man drowned Sunday
going to recom~ him. for any evening near the Newport Pier after
lJfesaving aw¥I:can," P,ollce ·.Ohicl saviilg hi.s 9-year-0ld daughter's ,Jifc_by
BW F.ddy ukl. "I'm cobvinctd ht saved telling her t.o float on her back until
one Ille and po68ibly all three." help arrived
Burget end hiS cousin, Charlie Shea, '-N rt 8 ' ~ l'f ~-'d Denn' 14, of San Joee. wre 'diUmi oo the · cwpo ea 1 egua,..,, 5;3L is beach near the mouth of the Neeanicum '-fcArthur, 28, o 1028 Valencia St., was
River when they heard screams from swimming with his daughter, Dorot~y,
the ocean. • a~t a p.m. when. they began. __ hav~g
, Whtie Sbea ran half a mile to the d1fhculty about 100 yards .orr shOfe due
---for help, Bprget plunged lo M~des and ~mlle-an-hour winda.
into the water, awam out about 300 AcCordlng to the "hter, ~tcArth~
y.nli and i>rou8ht bad< Rodney Allen told her lo fioa( on her back while
lifeguard, '-1att Greer, swam out by
ltim.>!lf.
An Orange County ltarbor Patrol boat.
summoned by the lifguards, arri\lecl with
lifeguard Greg Long on board and
carried McArthur to harbor department
hcddquirt'ers, where he was transfe rred
to· an ambulance.
Ufeguards attempted resuscitation
throughout the rescue and transportation
of the victim. according to Gibson. but
he "'as pronounced dead on anival at
Hoag Memorial lloopital at ~,50 p.m.
Dorothy and McArthurla two younger
children, woo· had waited on the beach,
were taken horntby a police officer.
A United Nations command spokesman
in Nicosia said no official orders on
a cease-fire had been received as yet:._
and that "\Ve will continue doing what t·
we have been ·trying to do all along,
to have the Greek and Turkish
communities observe the last cease-rrrc,''
he said.
"We will keep on trying.''
Waldheim said l\1aj. Gen. D. Prem
Chand of India , commander of the U.N.
peace keeping force in Cyprus. and Luis
~echman-l\11DlOZ ol l\1exlco. t h·e
secretary general's personal cepresenta-
tivC in Cyprus, reported that fighting also
. Ylas going on in other pans or the
Mediterranean Island.
At 7 a.m., Keats said Greek artlllery
(See CYPRUS, Page ZI
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Oru ge Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy at times Tuesday
but otherwise mostly sunny skles.
Not much temperature change.
Beach highs in the low 70s rising
to the mid-80s inland.
~ Fe11ti11ist Betty Friedmi says
:;.,ii~ women "s n1ovement is get-
ting to men. She soys males stop
" I
Of .Portllnd. 'I1lerl. he went out qain he Went for-help. He dever made it.
and brought back Tooi HeinninltS of Accor_ding to lifeguard supervi10r
Portland and Cindy RastnuS!en " Castle Larry Gibson another swimmer alerted
Rock, Wash. lifeguards to the fact that two ~e R~nch Calm Restored l
Iler Ott the street to teU her how
tlte moveme11t has cha11ged their
Lives. Se e story, Page 17.
The two girls were examined at a ""ere in trouble. Lifeguard John Sutton
seaside lmpital and released bit Rodney swam out and rescued Dorothy, but
was held overnight in the hospital. saw no sign or PilcArthur.
'"Ibey were oot way too far" said Lifeguards promptly called the Police
Burget, who does not have a llf~vlng helicopter, which spQtted P..1cArthur's
certU:tcate, "But I had to help as no body about 200 yards offshore. The
one ebe was around." helicopter then made two trips to the
LlfeguardS are on duty on 80l"nC Oregon lileguard station and *°PPed lifeguards
,COi.it be.mes but not in the area where Ken R.ou9e and Larry CIMon into the
the dlildren were. . water near McArthur while the third
• • I
MENDOTA (UPI) -Quiet was
reported at wen side melon ranches
early today foll°"·ing a Sunday clash
between United Fann Workers Union
pickets and Teamsters Union ""orke rs
in which 13 UFW members ""ere
arrested. Fresno County Sh e r I r f ' s
Captain Bill Young said 1.he pickets
were arrested for trespassing at the
1Pappas ranch near Coalinga.
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-I of ~2-Perjury Ch~rges '
Dropped _Against Reinecke !
WASHINGTON (~P) -One of the
two perjury counts against California
U. Gov .. Ed Reinecke was dismissed
today by U.S. Dil>trict Court Judge
"The question ls put somewhat the two counts wa., made befote the
ambiguoualy," the judge &aid of jury entered the courthouse.
Kennedy's question. se k the I I
_Bnrr.ingtqn. arker.
Cox had argued that Kennedy's veral . wee s ago s p e c •
. question specJ!ic_ally..-called for: an prosecutor s ornce dropped another
impreii!Oa. ---perjury count-against Reinecke, saying
Surrounded by Bodyguards
Queen Elizabeth poses with members of the Bucking-
ham Palace yeomen of the guard after making her
four-yearly inspection of the bodyguard. The cere.
inony goes back to 1485 when the guard was formed
by King Henry VII.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
LA Radio Exec
'In Conte111pt'
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
· ~ U.S. Court or Appeals has
,__.:_ -affirmed the contempt conviction
of a Los Ang~les rad!g sta tion
manager for refusing to surrender
GOP Counsel Quizzing
Panel-011 Public futeresi
an original tape recording from WASHINGTON (UPI) Sam
the Symbiooese Liberation Army.-.-Garrison . newly installed chief
1be court, in a d e c I s i o n ~publican counsel for the House
announced Mo n d a y. ruled that -"'idiciary Committee. told the panel
Will Lewis of KPFK had no today it must consider "whether the
grounds to refuse to provide to public interest will be served or
the FBI a tape containing the disserved. by removal of the President
voices of c o n v e r t e d -SLA from office."
sympathizer Patricia Hearst and Garrison told reporters as he entered
SLA members William and Emily the closed committee session that his
lJarris. ~minute "balanced summary" o f
Autoorities sought the original evidence v.·ould be a description of the
tape rooording to check for role of politics with a capital 'p' in
fingerprints. Lewis argued he was -the impeachment process."
protecting a confidential news TL is "not a narrow question-of-what
source 'by Withholding the-ta~pe~.--ll--th~e president did on a particular date
Robber-rapist
Found Guilt
In Mesa Crimes
A transient who raped and robbed
a T\min woman 1n the parking lot
o{ a Costa Mesa bowling alley and
gave her two $5 food stamps before
he fled from the scene wll.!I found guilty
Friday on lhe rape allegation.
Judge Raymood ThomJ&Ml set Aug.
8 as the date he will sentence Robert
Edward Steinmeir, %7, also known as
Douglas Edward Stevens, to vohat could
a state prison term of not less than
three years.
The jury returned its verdict after
hearing testimony that Steinmeir, known
to arresting officers as Stevens, was
the man who last March 25 raped,
or whether there was complicity in a
crime," GarriS011, "but whether the
public interest will be served or
disserved by removal of the President
from office."
Garrison was informally installed to
ropresent the Republican side in the
inquiry into possible impeachment of
President Nixon to replace Albert E.
JeMei' because JeMer "seems to have
forgotten who his client is in this case,"
according to two committee Republicans.
Some Republicans felt Jenner deserted
them by endorsing strong arguments
Friday by the chief committee counsel,
John M. Doar for a recommendation .
for Nixon's impeachment.
Doar said he felt the evidence laid
out by the committee 9laff for the
members provided a foundation under
which "reasonable men a c t i n g
reasonably would fin.4 the accused guilty
of the crime as charged."
t---~~am! beat his 27-year-<ild victim
as sOe'left the Oar at al!arOOr BoWevara
bowling alley.
Doar said he concluded that Nixon
decided soon after the Watergate
burglary in 1972 on a policy "to cover
this up ••• and he's been In char~e
of the cover-up from that day forward. '
Following.J)oaC.:s_presentaij9n ·Friday ..
Jenner told the committee, "I join with
him in all the remarks he has made,"
and said that "where there is secrecy
and concealment, You must draw
inferences.''
' I
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The woman stated that Sleinmeir,
whose last known permanent home was
i:n San Francisco, took a $20 bill from
her purse and gave her b:ck $12 in
change and two $5 food stamps.
Steinmeier was arrested on the
rape, robbery allegations later that week
when officers who booked him on a
traffic warrant found a number of food
stamps in his possession.
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OIANM COAST ST
DAILY PILOT
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I
Jenner added: "You don 't have -
you can't rind the m.11.n ... with hi~
hand in the cookie jar when you open
the door suddenly, but you can see
T·1vo Gunmen,
Rob Tic Toe 's
Mesa Market
A gunman aided by an accomplice
held up a Cosla Mesa convenience
marke~ late Sunday and escaped with
a shopping bag stuffed with cash. The
IO&S was estimated between $45 and
$50.
Marlin R. Slgford, clerk at the Tic
Toe market at 2'l71 Fairview Road,
told police the robbery occurred around
J 1 p.m. v.-ilen one of the men entered
the store to buy three cartons of
cigarettes.
When told whal the price was, the
man unbuttoned the bottom button of
his Hawaiian shirt as if he were reatiiing
for his wallet but Instead pulled out a
,38 caliber revolver.
As he ordered Sigford to emply !he
cash register, a second man who had
been hiding behind a nearby Ice cream
counter po~ up and threw over a
bl"OVtn shopping bag, police said.
After placing the money in the bag,
the gunman told him lo lay on tho
floor for JO minutes and both he atld
his accompUcc escaped on foot, Slgford
tolo police. .
. The gunman was described 8!1-belng
Jn his early 20's. about 5'7", weighing
170 pounds and we aring a blond
muslach<!. 'T'here wa!I no d scription of
UJC accontpll<:e.
••
the pieces or the cookie, the crumbs,
perhaps off in the comer of the room
when you suddenly open that door."
, After all the arguments are heard.
the Committee later this week will start
debating articles of impeaclunent.
Secret Service
Swar1ns 011 Boy,
Driv~s-H-im-Home
Caillcidence and the U.S. Secret
Senil.e caught up with a San Clemente
youngster Sunday night as be headed
on foot to his tmCle's house next door
to the Western White House.
Police said the youth, 15 years old,
~d emerged from a car which gave
him a lilt to the entranc< to "Cyprus
Shores at about the same time President
Nixon was an'iving by helicopter from
the Bel Air party thrown by his budget
director.
The youth was carT}'ing a walkie-talkie.
And that was all it took to prompt
a hunied visit by age111& protcting
President Nixon. Add.inc to the muddle was a .22-<:aliber
bullet the youth bad in his pocket.
Police said that interviews established
that the boy and his tmele have a
habit of. using walkie-talkies to
communicate.
The i.enai:..-insiJted he did not know
that the PresiderK was arriving at the
Ume.
Agents were convinced and they gave
the youngster a lift home.
Police Picketed
By Irvine Teens
A small knot or Trvine teenagers
picketed the Costa Mesa Police Station
Sunday afternoon, protesting . t h e
activities of omcer Robert Berg.
Berg was involved in the "Operation
Irving" mass drug arrests in Irvine
~1arch 27 and has been the subject
of several youth protests since.
Betl\'een 21 and 15 teenagers, police
said, picketed the station from 1 to
3 p.m.
The pretest ~ quiet and-wnoour
incident, police said.
An American Civil Liberties Union
investigatioo of the ltfarch 27 arrests
concluded that Berg had conduc:<ed the
reids properly.
. .
Irvine Motorist
In.jured in Crash
James Gregory White of Irvine was
critically injured Sunday when hls sports
car Vt"tnt out o( control and slammed
Into a power 1>9le.
White, 27, 1"°3 Kazan St., remains
In guarded condition in lhe intensive
care unU at Tustin community Hospital
where he was taken following the I: I~
p.m. accident at Culvtr Drive near· the
Santa Ana Freeway.
Police said Whitt suffered head
Injuries and cuts on his face and body
v.·hon he mal1e a turn whlCh sent his
car. 1kiddlng out Of «1n1rol and put
It on a coll11lon .course with the utlllly
pole.
Traffic investigators are checking Into
the circumstances of the Accident.
' -!',
But Parker den a efefiSC mOCf
to grant a judgment or aequittlil on
a second count as the defense prepared
to begin Its case today.
The count dismi.Med at the request
or defense attorney James E. Cax alleged
that Reinecke testified falsely to the
Senate Judiciary eorfimittee two years
ago v.·hen he sa.id he had no way of
knowing whelher former Atty. Gen. John
N. l\.1itchetl knC\V of a financial
commitment . by a subsidiary 0 f
·International Telephone & Telegraph
Copr. to the 1972 Republican National
Convention prior to July 31, 1971.
Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Pt!asa..}, a
member of the Judiciary Coinmittee,
asked Reinecke about M i t c h e 11 ' s
knowledge of the l'IT pledge while the
panel was o:insidering the nominaUon
of Ric.hard G .. Kleindienst ·to ht attorney
general.
From Page 1
CYPRUS .•.
units near Nicosia airpol't p~ a
ceaseless 6imlgeintOTUiJd.sh iiOlitions
1 down the 16-mlle road from Kyrenia
to the capital.
United Nations troops, working 12
hours oo and 12 hours off "If we are
lucky," dug new machine gun positions
at Blueberry camp, their military police
unit base camp.
FiMish LL Lettala Teuro, 'n, of
Helsinki , retumed from bringing a
wounded oomrade to ~ !l,_fj,_base_aL
Tziklos. He said1tiirkish troops there
were withstanding a rain o£ artillery .
~nd mortar shells front Greek units in
NiC06ia.
Jn the capital itself patrol wiits of
the Greek National Guard, in vehicles
disguised with foliage. movOO up and
down the streets. Others turned out
on rriotorcycles. ~'O pedal ed bicycles, ·
rifles slung from their shoulders.
Ankara radio saki an Athens coup
"It was vague and uncertain and that · It would have been necessary to calll
question called for an lmprM!ion," Cox fomter White Houae aide H.1\-. Haldeman
argued . as a witness ii the charge were preued.
The one remaining count against J1aldeman Is slated to go on trial Sept.
Reinecke accuses him of lying to the 9 in the Watergate cover-up ca.o;e.
committee aboot when he first discuued That count alleged that Reinecke lied
Uie convention site witb Mitl'hell. lo the · Judlc!Ary Corpmittce v.'hen he
Reinecke tcld the committee that he said he first di.<".cusscd the possibility
firsl dL'iCUssed San Diego as a site of bringing the 1972 Rep u b Ii ca n
of the convention in September. 1971 convention to San Diego in April, 1971. · •
-arter an out-of-court settlement of ~einecke told the Judiciary Committee
an !IT antitrust case. that on "that date he wns in Washington
But the prosecution contends that and attended a social reccpUon let
Reinecke dl!c\l.sscd the convention with promote economic development in hb ·
Mitchell in a telephoiie call on May state, "and we discussed lhe poaibOity.
21, 1971 , before the J'IT case wa.s settled. at that potnt and that was where the
The ITI' cue was resolved out of C(JW't idea was really hatched." . .
ib July 1971. The charge ·remaining again 1 t
Parker said the remaining cooit had Reinecke carries a maximwn penalty
enough' merit so that a jury should ot five years In prison and a fine of
decide on it.• The judge's ruling on $2,000.
•I ....-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----.!
I Count Du111ped
Eltrlichn1an veM1ct Reversed -
WASHINGTON (UPI) -U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell
today threw out the conviction of John D. Ehrlichman on one of
thr'ee perjury counts against him.
Gesell, in a brie( order and accompanying memorandum, said
that the statute under which Ehrlichm~n was charged and convicted
-a federal law against lying to the FBI -"was not properly in·
voked in this case."
-He-ordered the guilty verdict.set_aside..and a~~verdict otac_quiL-
~ set in its place." . · , .
Ehrlichman was convicted 10 days ago of perjury and one cqunt
of violating the civil rights of Daniel EUsberg's psychiatrist, Dr.
Lewis F. Fielding, growing out of the breakin of Fielding's office
in 1971.
The jury found Ehrlichman innocent of a fourth perjury count.
The perjury count which Gesell threw out carried a maximum ·, .
penalty of five years in prison and a fine of $10,000. ' . .
overthrew the Greek government today • • ~:d ~ G:.~ .. E:a':"~:r,, ~~1:~ Erosion Puttmg Squeeze
UPI correspondent John R1gos reported
I from Athens that the Greek military .
junta remained in power and the city
wasnormal. --On Newport's Dory Fleet
Fro•P09el • MORSE •..
be a liability for Oregon, said Morse,
who already had served 24 years in
the Senate.
Morse. once a Republican himself,
switched to Independent in 1952 when
he and party. leade!'s agre«t he was
too liberal for the GOP. 'lltree years
later, he,became a Democrat and was
re-electea In 1956.
His detractors claimed that Morse.
who earned th;e nickname "Tiger or
the Senate," was too cantankerous and
too much of a loner to accomplish
anything for Oregon in a sin&le six·year
term.
In 1944. when Morse first ran for
the Senate, his campaign slogan was
"Principle above Politics." Th r e e
decades later. the sloaan was basically
the same: "I shall work and fight for
the restoration of integrit)'.' in our own
government."
The son or a Wisconsin farmer, Mors
was ,born in Madison on Oct. 20, 1900.
He earned AB and MA degrees from
the University of Wisconsin, a. law degree
from the University of Minnesota and
a doctor of Jurisprudence degree at·
Columbia University.
Bf J.d:IUE RYMAN
Of ntf D•ll'r l'IM't Sllff
Sand erosion has eaten away so much
of the Newport Beach dory fishing fleet's
beach area near the Newport Pier that
the fishermen may have to move, a
spokesman said today.
Paul Phegley, a 39-year veteran of
the dory fleet, sakl that only seven
of the fleet's 13 boat! can presently
lit into the area allotted them.
"1be others eitheT don't go &bing
or they have to beech their boats down
below where the tide comes in and
washes away their garbage cans," he
said. ·
Phegley said if the fishermen have
to make some ltind of. move, they might
pr;efer to spread out along the beach
and occupy the space between the fleet's
current site and the pier.
"But of course that would have to
go through ftl<l Newport Beach Qty
Council and we haven 't even talked
to our councilmen yet," Phegley said.
"We keep hoping the beach will build
back up like it usually does in the
summer. It's usually about. 200 feet wider
than it is now."
He said the Newport Beach General
..
I • •
Brush Fire Co1atrolled
Strvices Departme11t dumped about 20
feet or sand in !root ol the dory fleet.
last Wednesday evening, but that wu
all washed out by the high Ude that
night.
High tides ol up to 7.1 feet, surf up,
. to eight feet high and sfnlrlg rlolideo
have been recorded at Newport Bead!
thl.! week, adding to an erosJoo p.001..n
whidl his tlreatened the lileguard sta·
lion as well as the dory fishing Oeet all
year.
"It looks like we have a trend of
~etttiorating beach line," commented
Marine Safety Director ROOert Reed.
However, city officials say they'~
aware of the ero«ion problem and are
trying to do something about it.
"Three months ago, the city COW\cil
passed a resolution calling for both a
short-term and a long-range 90iution to
the problem ," said City Manager Robert
L. Wynn.
"We've asked the U.S. Corps of
Engineers to make a study on what
will be the best way to stop the erosion,
in the ·1ong rwl," he explained .
"Meanwhile, the council okayed the
extension of some wooden groins near
the lifeguard station which will give
Ule dory fleet some relief."
Delly , .... tt•ff ......
A fast-moving ~rush fire, asiertedly caused by boys
playing with matches, burned about 40 acres of San
Juan..,Caplstrlino's easterly hills Sunaay afternoon.
Bulldo:tcrs, aerial .tankers and ground crews battled
fie ames ·near an Juan Hills Country luti.
lucky wind shift kept it from moving Into open
hl.lls toward Ortega Highway.
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---
• •
A Sund1 y, Monday, Wed.neid1y
and Frld1y,Ft1htre
Ol lhe Dally Pilot
1'10tlllllfJ Injuries
DEAR PAT : I've ltt my m take
over lawn mowing chom at our tl>u!e
Ws summer: When, I tell him lo be
careful when using the power mower,
he says 1 worry· too much. I doubt
that this is 1he case and I'd appreciate
an "official" injury figure to back up
my warning.
L N., Jntne
Youv'e pl It. The U.S. Consumer
Product Safely Commluion estlmale•
"!)me W ,500 ptrtODI will wt.Ill •P in
liMpltal emergency 1"1111111 utlelwlde
&Jtls year as 1 result of accktellU
aaoclated wilb yard and garde•
eqaipmmtl---
Teelh Don't Fit
DEAR PAT: I paid my deotiat a
lot of money for dentures and they
· don't fit properly. I've complained to
hbn repeatedly to no avail and now I'd
like to contact some official agericy, but
~ don'I know ho win go abollt it.
H.C., llanUagtoa Beach
•
Molld&)', July 22, 1q14 s DAILY PI LOT 3
Pilot Logbook
~""=-1-:R'7i · ding-Power. Meter's
No Simple Undertaking
By CHA RLES H. LOOS
Of 11!1 0•11~ Piiot Sl•ll -My v.ife and I are having this problem wilh the Edison COmPC1;ny.
Actually, it's all my dog's rauJL -
We have • big, black standard poodle named Beauregard "-'ho, in his
uiual unkempt state, looks somethinf Uke a bear. When he barks, he IOQDds
f~ious. Actually, he is fairly friendly, but the Edison
Company meter reader doesn't know. that. And access to
our meter happens to be through the portion of our yard
set aside for Beauregard.
A few months back, v.·e got a letter from the Edison
Company. Jt said there had been a problem in reading
our meter. There was a card enclosed with instructions
on how to rtad our own meter. We were to ma il in our
-findings !O we COUid be billed, the letter explained.
'lbe Jetter aod the card got buried under a stack of , .
other papers on my desk and I forgot about il Then '1.001 •
another letter from the Edison Company arrived. Jr we didn't shape up, 1t
said, Edison would be forced to cut off our elecbiclty.
SHOCKED AT my uncharacteristic cartiessness and, at the urging of my
wife, who likes things like dishwashers and washing machines to work when
she pushes the buttorui, I hastened to read the meter. The card was in tht
mail the next morning.
Two weekJ later, wt got another letter from the Edison folks. Darknea
was about to ran on the Loos houaehold.
"What gifts?" I asked the Edl!IOO service supervitor who answered the
phone. "I sent in that card two weeks ago."
He said he would check it out.
WHEN I arrived home that night, my wife greeted me with a mUrk on
her race. ·
"The Edison Company called," she announc.d baughUly. "You read lhe
gas meter."
I was speecbiesg.
"THEY'RE aending another ~ard," she went on, "and this lime, 11l re.I
the meter."
She did and the bill came the other day. tt was ror $349.25. Taking into
account the extra month during which atl of this bad been going en, the bill
is still about four times our nonna1 charge. •
''My god," I said, "you must have reast every meter in the neigbbormod."
My wire gjggled sheepishly at ber apparent wrong reading of the riaht merer.
MR. KENT, a very patient and understanding man at the Edison ComplllY
answered nt)' call.
An)' pretili:m IDdeatlltij tliilCooct~.
iDcompdent, frauctaleat er crtmiall
coadGct, moy be dtroctod -lo-the Slale
Board Of Deatal E1:1 mlners, lozt N.
__..!!Ob;-1-remember-you;"-he-said;-''You're-the-guy who rmd-tbf!'-gu·meter!' 1---~I
Mr. Kent is send.Ing us a new card.
~I.. S.crameolo, Calli. 15114 (pllooe'
llM4Mm). Before ..... ctlag tbe
bosrd, Y.tG mlcld comlider eoatacdae
the Or1age C...ly lleGlll Sodely, Zl5
S. Flower, Onage.
JA1nd for S•le?
DEAR PAT: Is there .any public land
still available ror sale through the rec1era1
government? 1r !IO, where can I get
tract descriptions, sale information and
how one goes about making a purehaese:
C.W.90olta Mesa
Struggle Tlat'OtJflh Suri
Oarsmen fr.om several Southern California lifeguard
agencies battle through San Clemente surf in an-
nual dory races which were part of weekend wind-
up to Fiesta La Cbristianita. One o! the two boals
from Los Angeles County Lifeguards won nee Sat-
urday around ci ty pier. Local agency entered two
dories, and placed fourth and !i!th.
UC lr"ine Value to City County Glider
PilatJUlkd~
$882;360 Over Ten Years _ SAN BERNARDINO (\IBI) -
Joseph M:--6il~ke·r;-1B,-of Villa---
Park, was killed Sunday when he
Josi control of his hang gilder and
plummeted 150 feet to the ~.
nus TIME, I think I'll let Beauregard read the meter.
'Space ,Window' Feted
By First V. S. Moon Men
WASIUNGTON (AP) -The ~lo the cathedral, the Very Rev. Francis
II aSfroiiiUfSfiid jiiSt ae<JiCaTea a new B. -yre, wilha-sman fock Ui"ey bad
"Sf>"Ce window" In _lllt___!\'_'!ShinK(oo brought lo •arlh,_ _ _
cathedral-when a crowd__of 1everal... Making the presentation 1t the tigh
hundred people suddenly surged around altar, Ann3troog said; -
them . singing "America the Beautiful." "On behalf or the President and the
Nell A. Anrutroog, Edwin E. Aldrin people· of lhe Unl1ed States, we ptt9el1I
and Michai!I C.OUins joined in. 1be eyes unto you this fragment or creatim from
of all three gliJtened. . beyond the earth lo be imbedded i!t.
~tost public l1nd stl~ .,·.U.ble f~r
sale ii located in the Western stat.es,
with small parcell offered ia tlte Sou~
nd MldwesL ne best lnlormatktn
source la "Oar Public Lalldl," •
quarteriy m1pstoe sell.Inf for $1 • year
from the Saptrintendeat ol Dotaments,
Government Prtadag Office, Wasblnpon,
D.C. !011Z. It 11111 pabllc lands lo be
110ld Jn tbe near fatare, a detcrlptloa,
Jncluding ioc.uoa, appraised price 1ad
other usdal data. Addtuonal iaformaUon
on specific parcels c.11 be obtalaed by
writing the Bureau of Land Manaiernent
office for the state In which the pen:el
Is located. Ask for a prospectus lfvtng
complete del<rfptloD, the dllle of ale
and 1 bid fonn. Parcllase mast be
throa&b public auction ules Hid in
any of tk It laltd ofDces of the Barea•
of LaDd Mlnagem61t. Yoo can .end
tn 1 sealed bid wttb full payment
included, appear In person. or b1 ve
•representative appear for you.
UC Irvine will be wcrth 18G,3IO, or
about $67,900 ,a year, to the ctty of
Irvine by 1985, acording to a UC Irvine
eoonomic impact study by Ashley
Eoonomlc Servi"".
and 1985, the city will receive $1,627,800
in revenues attributable to the university
and will spend $'74.5,400 in services
related to tt.
Gil maker, who took off horn the
Little Momtlain area north of here,
apparently 1ost control.oLhis craft
when he tried to crawl into-a
'lbe ceremony Sunday chnw:ed a the fabric of thll house of prayer for' wed<alCl-of-evenla-in ....,..._aH·peop•le:'. ~----..:....i:_ ___ _J
commemorating the ntth anniveraary
Worm F•rmlng
1be report says that between now
Laguna .Pro~rty
Sales 4 Times
Ahead _of 1964
Revenues to the city, the report says,
will come from property taxe.s paid
by students and staff living in Irvine,
ranging from $38,000 in 1973 to an
estimalcd $47.000 in 1985.
Sales taxes generated by goods
purchased in the city by Wllversity
people amounted to $38,000 last year
and should rlsc to $60,000 by 1985, the
report says.
Impact Add-H·I
• seat on the glider after taking
off.
He was pronounced dt.ad on
arriv~ at San Bernardino
Community HOspital.
of man's fir9t landbtg: on the moon.
Armstrong and Aldrin stepped mto the
lunar Sea of Tranquilily July IJl, list,
•'hile Collins clrcled overhead.
For imbedding in the space window,
the astronauts presented the dean of
f;ities Get Funds
Major city expenses to sustain the Orange O:>ast cities will receive a Orange Coast cities are receiving the
1be amount or Laguna Beach real university, it says, are parks, fire and total of $847,000 In the most recent foJlowing sums:
estate sold during the first hall of 1974 police protection, public works services, distribution of local sa.ld and use taus Costa Mesa -$227,500.
is four times that of 10 years ago. library scrvi~ and administration funds, State Board o! Equalir.ation Fountain Valley -$40.000.
and in dollar volume 10 fold that or costs. member John W. Lynck annowtced Huntingtoo Beach -SIM,250.
1964. Retail expenditures by university recenUy. • Irvine -$61,250.
Armed Robbery
Suspect Given
Ten-year Term
A man once lulled lllloual>oul
Southern California for a stri!lf! of armed
robberies and burglaries Iha! included
a $4,500 holdup at a San Clemente
market has been sentenced to llf!l've
nol !OSI than 10 yean In Slale prison.
DEAR PAT: l1m interested i n
contacting Western Bait F a rm s ,
described in a recent Daily Pilot article
M a company that sells starter worm
rarms to private growers, then buys
back any worms raised.-What's the
address of this firm and what kind
or a businessteputation docs It have?
These figures and more are contained students, it says, should reach $2.7 In addition, Orange Co unty • s Laguna Beach -$31,000.
in a recent DeWB!etter-ot--tbe Laguna~million-in IM$, --USUJning that......the-tra.mportation-fund-ts receivtng-$700;000--Lc:iSAliiti.l~.
Beach Board of Realtors. -university will have 10,200 students by from state sales and use tax funds. Newport Beach -$145,000.
Orange Counly 5"perior COOrt Judi•
Raymond Thompson onfered t h •
ma.z.imum term for Ralph Jamel
-er, , rmer y OIROSei'ri'°""'ieiil""'-. ---1
. 8.D., Costa Mna
111e buslness rtpuLatlon ls good and
Ute address is ntt Walnut Ave., Alta
Lorna, eaur. 11101. western Bait
Corporation l!I sending a brocllare to
you, ei:plalnlng Its business setup
procectares for novice worm farmers.
Chi-Doll Kit
DEAR PAT: Some time ago I clipped
out an advertisement in a magazine
ror a china-head doll kit, but I've
misplaced 'it. 'ms would make an ideal
bccauae.sbe.Joves dOl.ls and~e
interested in sewing. Can you find out
t c name or tHe ci)mp®y ortc:rlng-this
doll? M.J., Lorna Hiiis
Write to Yield Rouse, Dept. 03183,
N. Conny, N.R. -·
'Me.rs on Wheefl'
DEAR PAT: Is there such o thing
The board states that during the first then. The two sums are part of more than San Clemente -$27 ,000.
of. 1964, the board handled 581 listings. Staff expected to reach 2,837 in 1985, $45.7 million in tax hmds being San Juan Capistrano -$15,000.
and 484 sales with a dollar volume it says will spend $6.2 million in the distributed to every city and colU1ty Westminster -$85,000.
of $31.6 million. Average selling price city that year. in California. The payments are the Orange Counly received an additional
after a jury round the defendant guilty
of armed robbery and burglary.
Whittaker was arrested in December,
1972, *>rtly after he and Joiteph Duchi,
38, of Milpitas, Calif .. held up lhe Alpha ,
&ta market in San Clemente. is $65.304. In Orange County, it says, 12,140 )obs 1 second advance of t974's second quarter. $140,000 ror its unincorporated areas.
Jn June alone. the board handled 163 were attributable to the univ~ty in i(~~i~~~~~~~i~~~~~~====~~==~;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;) listings. and 75 sales for a total of 1973 and should grow to 15,390 by 1985. I
$4.9 million and an average selling price ·
or $66,000.
By compari800, during all 12 months
1964, the board bandied 581 listings,
217 sa1es and a ck>llar volisne ol $8.&
million ror an average selli ng price or
$31.3611.
The Orange County asses90r bas
Convict, 18, Dies
After Sniffing
increased the ........i •• 1 .. uon or Pesll·ci'de fnmes Laguna Beach by 11 percent, however ..... ,... a n exam1n-auon-of the-real estate sales---
price indicates that 1973 to 1974, the--VJCKSBURG, Mia._(UPI) -A__t_een-
average Laguna Beach sale increased. age jail Inma te died during the weekend
Ill percent. after he and other prisoners apparently
sniffed rumes from mosquito killer,
Shes-if! Paul Barrett said Sunday.
Bones of Island
THE RED
BALLOON
"' "meals on wheels" In our Costa -W T Id W II Mesa-Newport Beach area? If IO, how ll Or ar
do we contact it, what kind of seMce
Bairett sakl an autopsy indicated the
vapors caused Claude Harris, 18, to
vomit, become choked and die.
-Barrett said Harris, serving time on
a misdemeanor charge, and other.
inmates apparently talked two trusties
intp spraying the in9ect spray on a
piece or cotton, which they put into
a paper bag to sniff the fumes.
LTD.
is available and how much does K cost? I • F d
My elderly parents would ,like ""'"' Casua ties oun available to them lhan "pizza man"
when they arc shut in.
M.C., Cotll M ...
Altboap tbert Is• 0 me1i. Oil 'W'hieLI" .
fll'OIMI'" '°""' ... Lop• -lo Sn Clemate cont aru, · 10R h:
1v1Uable II C.a 'Me.Newport Be.ell. Your . p11reata are lnvtted .. Join ottaer
1tsUor cklatu 1t p.,.jtet TLC. 'ndl
rree lucbe. ud 1fternoon •cdvltlu
program. administered by Fetdbt<:k
F0Dd1Uoa1 Inc:., tbroulh Ute C.11/onla
Ollie< '" Aging , Is h•ld II 5" Job
The lltvble Eptocopol Ctmdl, lt4'
Oran11:e Avt., Costa Mt:u . There 11 •
"afdn1 llst-fer-Mme dellvered ..-als
nt this Hme, bot yoar pimtll CID sip
11p for tblt attVtct •nd: otbla ~r
inform1ttoa 1boat l'rojtct TLC ffom
director Dfc.k Klnctld.
I
HONOLULU (UPI ) -A gri m legacy
of a battle on Tarawa atoll In the
South Pacific more than 30 years ago,
in which ? .000 Americap and Japanese
soldiers died, has arrived lri lli!nOlulu.
About 400 pounds of boOes -all
that remains of an undetermined number
ot Tarawa casualti'5 -1 have been
delivered to an Anny mortuary.
l{arris died at a local hospital. Several
"ther prisoners wtre returned to lbelr
cells after being cbec.ked by doctors.
Barrett said be was ror.lderlng the
possibility of filing charges against. the
two trusties, who were relieved ()( their
duties and placed in cells.
J\faso ns Work Again An Anny sPoke«m1n said the remains
will be sent to Japan, where an
anthropologisl, working with military
rte0nls, will try lo idenlify lhem. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Aboul 1,000
TbL.spokesman......said-lhe--Anny-bas_ctment m3.90ns returned-to work today
l'C(tived calls rrnm "rtlallves of men aher voting to ~ccept a new contract
killed at Tarawa but said il will biiC with the local construction Industry.
Another thrt't to' four months before Sunday's agreement ends a five·we(!k
any posi1ive klentlfl cat!on can'bc made. strike.
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THE RED BALLOON LTD. IS HAVING A
50% OFF SALE!
SUMMER MERCHANOISE FROM THE ON
DESIGNER
JOHNSTON ,
COLLECTIONS OF PICCOLINO.
FISCHEL , FLORENCE
MILLBROOK. IMP, BETTI TERR-ELL,
RUTH OF CAROLINA AND OTHER
CHILDREN 'S DESIGNERS.
EISEMAN,
DANSKIN,
QUALITY
FASHION ISLAND LOCATIO~ ONLY!
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'--~ .. ' . ,.
Cyprtts lnvasloia
·~U.S. Misj-udged
"~&~. '\'i with 1 T k. h Th t .,~, .. Tom ur IS rea .
urphine
c·:.<i:·, •• .. ,
•
t
... •
BY. FRED S. HOFFMAN had closed off~ the area around the~_j~~~.;~
•--,"'A"S"Hff;NGTO Pj -!rS . poi'lo!"Meri111, excliil .. lt!Rh~
.<\ F1tll House
On The Beach ·
InteUigence nlisread Turkish military and other observers.
intentions towards Cyprus, admini~tration Pentagon official, insisted al~ lalt week
offocials ackno~ledge. that the United States was not conducting
"It was our conventional wisdom that aerial .reconnaissance over southern
the Turks could be talked out of landlng Turkey and Cyprus, or the waters
on Cyprus," one official said. "Ob\.·iously, between. They said they were depending
we were wrong." on the B r i t I sh for that kind of
History played a part in t he infora1ation as the United State& strove
misjudgment by U.S. lntelligencf: and to maintain a low military profile in
WEEKEND THAT WAS: The young the situation.
Lagwia Beach lifeguard who manned ( ) But even with knowledge that the
his post just northerly o1 the NEWS .dNALYSIS Turkish roree had sailed, officials said
headquarters tower on 1i!ain Beach ..,_ ------------" they had no way of knowing what the summed up the weekend pretty "''ell Turks intended.
as he surveyed 1lhe emptying sands at by intelligence experts of a number U.S. intelligence has come under
· 5:30 p.m. Sunday_. of governments, including the BritL~h, criticism in two major crises in the
"You should've seen this place two with '\li'hom the United Statse comulted past six years. It was accused pf failing
hours ago," ~-sighed. ''l-tan, it was <as the crisis deepened. to anticipate the So\tiet invasion of
b'antic. It was wall-t1>wall people. It Secretary of State Henry A. Klsslnger Czechoslovakia in 1968 and of
was a zoo oot there ... " recalled Saturday that during the 1964 misinterpreting the signs of an imminent
That ~bly tells the story as well and 1961 Cyprus crisis the Turks Arab attack on Israel Jast October.
85 anything. embarked troops but did not invade the Meanwhile, there are i n d i c a t i o n s
lt has been estimated that 250,000-isJand. Turkey may have reconsidered briefly visi~ ~~ their Inoperative air Therefore. J(jssinger said, m a n y before taking the plunge into Cyprus.
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UP'I T .. '"'911 concht1on1ng in Los Angeles and the members of the intelligence communil,Y Kissinger said he first was informed -~en~a\ heat ~ve else"ilere to drop' and foreign goverrunents thought this Friday even!ng that the Turkish fleet
in on <;>Ur shoreline. . . ~Jing of troops from southern Turkey was heading for shore, but that later
Thats a good estimate, give « take might again be a maneuver to bring information indicated the ships had
TURKISH TROOPS 'CROSS COUNTRYSIDE NEAR KYRENfA ON FIRST DAY OF INVASION
Intelligence Experts Admit They Ml1rHd Turkish Intentions tO Lind Troops on Cyprut
a couple of hundred t~sand. pressure on Greece in diplomatic ·turned around and withdrawn.
I knew we were in for a ~d negotiations, rather than a forerunner But Kissinger said that about 25
Saturday "'hen at noon the radio cir invasion. minutes later, amid frantic efforts to
announced it was 95 degrees in downtown Earlier, the sailing itself came as gain a 43-hour respite for last-ditch Sant~ .Ana . a surprise to many U.S. officials, negotiations. he , got word that the
. Drivtng . over the weekend "11:! more although they were a\\'are Turkey had Turkish force-had reversed COW'8e again
like crawling. concentrated~ and tanks on its and a special U.S. envoy was informed
EVEN THEN YOU could see some southern coast. that the Turkish government had decided
sights. Like the guy in his pickup camper Pentagon sources reported the Turks to land troops.
in Corona del Mar who displayed a
large bumper sticker p r o c I a i m i n g •
"SAVE TifE WHALES -Boyrott
Japanese Goods." His pickup truck is
a Toyota .
We had the big surf sometimes.
Welfare Can Make_ It Pay
'Help, Help, Help' ;
Restaurant Robbers
Execute Pat~olman
.,_
1----riptides-upon-occassion-but -the-lure------
of the ocean was great. Water F F h D
temperature hovered near 70 degrees or at ers to esert
FORT LAUDERDALE,.Fla. (UPIJ -gunman whe<led and f~ed twice,-•
--"--4-.Tll<-Ol<llo~.eracklecL with.-...Eatrolman_woonding--llyankoff-in-the--Ohest.-and-
Walter D. Ilyankoff's desperate appeal : to ma ch
both Saturday and Sunday.
That's even warm enough to get me
in.
It was also tepid enough to get
NeY.'J>Olt Beach Marine Safety Director
~.Bob Reed into the surfline. It's not 1 too tough for him since he just has
4 to step off his front porch near 40th
Street beach.
REED, SOME11MES known as the
"Old Walrus'' of Newport's waterfront,
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The natioo·s
. welfare system actually encourages
unemployed and low-income fathers to
desert their families and avoid Work.
according to a congressional study of
welfare programs.
The same is true for Aid for ~t
~ vowed to ride only one wave as he
1 was gloriously decked out in green swim _ ~. C.hurch Funds 1---j-rtunks and matching swimfin.$. - -, -
. Newport i\fayor Don Afclnnis lives
·--~· nght next. door to Reed and -eYen he --B . -n -h ; jumped into tlie Suri. Swam out to ring µeat i Councilman Howard Rogers' boat wtuch
was playing just outside. WORCESTER Mass. (UPI) -Som~ of ·these city officials will go The ~' t the 11 to any length to hold a secret meeting. .. .... -.. .,....rs a a.m.
So '1 swam out to stop all that. About service at the Church of Ascemion t!"e time 1 got to Hoge!'!' boat, the dropped their dollar bills and
,_ __ l~•f_,e~ard ashore came on his loud$~ktr.--change-in-the~oollection plata and
and ordeiid ROgerilo get back outside. passed them 00 Rogers left Y.ith MClnnis aboard. 1 got ·
... to swim in alone. Maybe It was some Chester F. Sklan, 51, a fac.tory
kind of conspiracy between Mcinnis, foreman with a wife and three
Rogers and that lifeguard. children, put the money in a
111EANWIDLE CIDEF Reed puffed sack and left to bring the offeri ng
back out of the water. declaring he'd to the ne~rby church rectory for
actually ridden t.v.'O waves. "1be hike safe keeping.
up the beach was the worst part,·· Before he got there. police said
he admitted. a man sitting in a first-floor
The whole day seemed to be a saga apartment across the street shot
ol the old men in the sea. Sklan once in the chest with a
Back in Laguna late Sunday afternoon, .22 caliber rifle. Another man
when the whole population seemed to sfanding nearby grabbed the sack
be sifting back inland, I decided to and ran' as Slari slwnpe'!! to the
try the ocean again. Just to assure ground and died shortly after 11:30
Lhat y.·arm water was fot real. It was. a.m. Sunday.
Inquiring of t~ life_guard , you learn Police later recovered the sack
the yellow. nag IS fiymg because they and arrested Peter L. 1ilartin, 33,
had e~nenoed some ~ or~ L is..wife.-Joan-AMr 32rand-Geof'ge-
l---,w".•"ve'"s"'. "1 IOOlt at tiny surf. and Farland, 23. All were charged with
giggled. So I sel~ed Ol,le of the bigger first-degree murder and armed
\\'aves and gave It a go. robbery.
IT LIFTED ME up, then over the . "It's the most .~~less th!ng
falls, then sidew·ays and finally, b4Jried I ve ever he_ard of, .. said Detecllv1e
me up to my nose in the sand. Sgt. John Killoran. There couldn .t
And that, my friends, is why you have been ~e than,, several
should listen to lifeguards aJong this hundred dollars in there.
best of all possible coasts.
Children <AFDC> programS which
provide financial incentives for women
to have a first child.
The report showed that an unemployed_,
childless woman can almost double-her
welfare benefits -with an additional
$1,159 a year in cash am f!)Od payments
-by having her first child. The
as.sistance value of additional children
was $756 for the second and $628 for the
third.
While welfax.e l;leneftts·vary from state
to state, the. study said,· the "ave'rage
amount potentially available to the
fatherless 'tl'elfare family begins to
compare favorably with what Pf<>ple
eam."
For example, a noo-working welfare
mother of three can gross 10 percent
more than the average income for all
women workers, and when a n
unemployed father -deferts his family-.
.their welfare benefits increase about
3.1 percent.
'1'be survey showed that if an
unemployed rather deserts his family ,
the wife g;line.d from $1.004 to $1,318
in food and welfare payments depending
on the nwnbe.r of children.
The subcommittee's findings disclosed
that a non-working \\'ellare mother of
three, geuing cash, food and housing
benefits, could receive an average of
$4,579, equal to about $$,006 in tax.able in<:ome.
This was more than 30 percent -of
wbat-1"'00lefl-woFking-rull-time earned
and $398 above the median earnings
of all women in 1972.
The study, conducted by the joint
fiscal policy subconunittee. was based
on 1972 statistics and questionnaires sent
to 100 areas around the cOuntry.
Payments under many p r o_g r a m s ,
including rood stamp benefits, have since
been changed.
Central States Dampened
Wind Gusts of 72-MPH Buffet Ot~1nwa, lo·wa
Energg Saver
Federal Energy Adrqinistrator
John Sawhill pedals home
after a television interview
Sunday in which he warned
consumers not to expect a
break in energy prices in near
future.
Poll Makes Ford
Favorite GOP
Choice for J976
PRINCETON. N.J. (AP) Vice
President Gerald R Ford is the front-
runner among members of his party
and independents for the 1976 Republican
presidential nomination, the latest Gallup
Poll shows.
Tu·enty-seven percent of Republicans
surveyed said ford was their choice
for the 1976 presidential nomination.
Only three others received more than
5 percent, with Sen. Barry Gold'Nater
of Arizona and California Gov. Ronald
Reagan tied at 16 percent each. and
t-.w-..m _, fl'llittl iiiiCfftl r.1,,-former New York-Go~ s on
to ,_ •r•.. but '""'"• vloJ9flt Rockefeller with 12 percent -1111r to otlltn. · · •
1,
11t 1"1w~ ...
Tiit Htll-1-willller Sttvk• 11Mltd
I ll"'tlt f ll•tl'I ff-W•kft blllltffll
SU!'IUy, tlWltl'lO'IQ P011lon1 Ill $.., Of9oo.
lmotrl•I, San 6er,..rdlno tllll ltl.,.rtfot tounlln .
Fortctlltr W11111 "MCC1rlltl', t i lilt
l~ Aflll'lti Wt11toer s.ru1u oUlt t.
lffd !... tlvflflifl Wll lmlfd II t
Pf'9Ctvl!Mtr'( -""""· ~r ,_ o:l•not• I• 1~11 • 1torm c:oukl
flC.tllf' -•• rnllts •••Y lrom • city or • ftlghw11 •nd ll(IGl([Wtlt<t
could 111lt1 btlart PtOPI• wetW ~
llGIMO----~
r.••t"I (/ • r~JsNOw '""" ... "' ~~·i 11ow
111'11>1•1'11 tor II," MCC.,kr UICI,
lttlfl .... , .. r1.. In '""' .,_ ~ IOl'lithf,
EIMWlltrt , •-•II• wt rm wtllFll!' ii tl<Ool'C:lfd to conll11111. wino r.lg!'lt
,..,..,... trom tht "'kl ni. ''°"' Tiit totil I• IM low lh Ill -10\lln Los A..-1n tnct oro uo ln•o lht '°' lnll 100. hi ""' Ot.Mrtl. 11.S. Suinin•r11
I\ p.ttlr OI COid lrllftll ICMlwned
Tllilndtr.,,_.,. K rOh Ille ctnlt#I
1111.. 10.Ur. :lhelllll t • o I • r
rht ~'-'"• ""'™ from Ford was selected by 20 percent of
1-r MlcN9911 lo M5ltm ColorHO the Ind d _,. ed h'I R w 1nc1 11rni. "" 19 n m1111 ·flt!' epcn c,..., survey w 1 e eagan
hour._.., reeorClld •' on"'"'wi, ,.,..,... and Rockefeller e3ch got 13 percent.
"""'' ,...riv th"" q1111•tff"S of •n El r th 'nd d !nd1 of rain •lw fflt. tar11.oo.1 even percent o e 1 epen enta
~r• 1l11h1ec1 •' Polo, s.o .. •nr1 ..... questioned July 1·2 chose Goldwater. Ttmt. Iowa. Ai.rdwn, S.O •• r-r!ed
wJnct Mlt 1111 to u mu" pe~ hour.
Slrq mv11c,.01orm1 tlto P•1MG
lhrOllgll Hllern Colortclo.' Tiit IOW<l
of 0"1' Trtl! •-*" 1111'• CllHlrlltl'• ol •n Inch of ••In In 'I ml1111t11
•lllf'lll with lltll, T-lr.c:l'lts of ••In
1941 ti l'f'9"l. Colo., Ir. -hour,
tl"ld lltavy r•ln '1111ed floOdl/lf •rid
Clolll'ISI of lnl""ltlt 10 lft 1111 Ottwtr
ltl'H lor a lhort whli.. Wti.ri.o.
lowt. rtctl•llll m«t ""'" -lftC'.fl of rtln. •rid -•tv • ., IMh of rlln
It'll ti U1 Cr-, Wis. _
S<t~ """""""-' t 1 t • occur,.... In !111 -n ol•lffll reolGtl
and In 1111 Ctfllltl ffld "'""' 11111
lttlft. ffllll -· dl-'PIH"' "''' IGOty, ·coul•I Weather
Fllr foOt'I'. (Jgtit Utrl8b.. wfl'ltl
n1gM Ind """"""' hcMI Ot<ot!'.fllo "'"""11 1e 1o 11 11no11 111 ''""-• 1'0day 8tld Tllftelfloy, Hl9h lod•Y _,
1'. , ... 111 ..._., .... " ,.,,,. ''°'"
M to 71, 1"4tnd t.mPtrthlf'n ''"" ''°'" "1 to •. w ..... NmPIM'-""'• 11. Spn, llfeon, Tide•
MOftDAY
$1otono hltft -lt:lf p,rn. J,,
Stcond low •:n p.m. 1.1
TUISOAY
Flr9I hltfl , l;H ""'· S.J
Fl1'1 low •i• •.111. .O.O i«6nd low 1:11 P.,IYI. •. ,
• '"" rlttS J;S7 t .l'l'I, Stl1 t :01 p.m.
Moot! rl"" t:.U 1.m. leh lliOI 11.fl'I,
DAILY PILOT
DEL IV ERY SERV ICE
Del ivery of the Daily Pilot
is guaranleed
Mofld4of·F •ot1•f• ll'f'llUltOn.0!11"'°~ --• llf
!I JO P"' , t•H -.J 1'111>' tOOf "''" Dt "'°"'"' IO f0¥.C•1l1 .. tll•tn..,hl/ OQpm,
W•.,.Otf '"° W""~' II..,,. 00 "Of "'<.••.,.. wow IKli I>• t ~ m SAl"'IM" Oo I•""' ~~•. Ull
'"" ...... , ... u Oii brCNQllll IO -(flh -· 1••tn • ""'ol 10•"'
Telephones
liorlll•t\I Huflh .,..on ~111fl
tllGW•)!"'on)l•• , ,
~(llllfl•ftt~ C.00<11r ... <o1llt"I ... W"Jw11~C•11•\I•-, 0..... Pl>•nl, Soul!\ leQ-•I~-. 1*'111N N•Q~I
"Help, help, help, I've been ... ," s · then it went silent. Uyankoff fell but freed his walkie
Before he could imish the sentence, talkie and began his appeal fer help.
a third bullet was pumped . into the Before he could complete the call,
head of tile twire-Wounded F o r t Brophy said, a bandit walked over and
Lauderdale pollc:eman Sunday, other pumped a third shot into Jlyankoff's
officers said. be'ad, killing him.
"He didn't even have time to draw The four bandits fled, one of them
his gun,'' pol.ice spokesman Tom Brophy in Jlyankoff's patrol car, which was
said. found abandoned a few blocks away.
Uyankoff, 40, a t>year police veteran, Nearly 100 men equipped with dogs
\\'as patroUing alone in his polic:e cruiser and three helicopters joined the mauive
when a radio dispatcher reported a ~unt.
robbery in progress at a seafood home. About 90 minutes after the shooting,
llyankoff drove up behind t h e a suspect identified as George Angelo .
restaurant and opened 1 a rear door lo de Costa. 25, of Jacksonville, Fla., was
find four masked bandits holding four flushed from a rock pit in a wooded
-restaurant employes -at-gunpoint. One· area twoJniles·wesror-uie restaurant. ""
Dean Says Nixon Willing
'
To Defy Court on N-test
NEW YORK (AP) -Time magazine
quoted John W. Dean III as saying
President Nixon was prepared in 1971
to defy the U.S. Supreme Court if it
had ruled against a proposed nuclear
test.
But the high court ruled 8-1 jn the
government's ra\'Or in a suit brought
by envlronmentalisl8 who wanted to halt
an atomic bomb test on Amchltka Island
in the Aleutian chain off Alaska.
The sources say the guard was
assigned there after a secretary caught
a "well-dressed" man trying to pick
the lock on the office door last week.
The subcommittee is looking into
charges that the Justice Department
dropped an invesligalion of a multi-
million dollar heroin operation whetf
( IN SHORT ... ) The magazine quoted Dean, a fonner
White House aide and counsel to Nixon,
as saying in an interview that "the
President was prepared to defy the· fugitiYe financier· Robert L. Vesco was
Supreme-Gourl-if-it-ruled--agaimt-the-implicated,-. -----------
Amchitka blast in 1971. He was going
to say 'pull the trigger' and then explain
that he,... had taken the action because ·
it ·was vital to the military position
of the United States vis-a-vis Russia,"
he was quoted .
e Brealcha Thocarted
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An armed
2Uant is now stationed outside ~ orfices
of _the Sen. Henry M. Jackson's Senate
permanent investigation subcommittee
according to Senate sources. '
.f OH Talk!!_ dver
. KUWAIT (UPI) -Treasury Secretary
\\'illiam E. Simon left for West Gennany
today at the enQ. of a nine-day. Middle
East tour ca pped by a last-minute
di~ussion or oil prices which Kuwait
~'3nts (o keep high.
In a brief departure statement Simon
said his talks with Crown Pri~ and
Premier Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmed and
other leaders of the oil-rich sheikhdom
were ''fruitful, beneficial and fran.I!:."
Torture (;harged
Ps ycliiatric Care lnt'.est igated
WASHINGTON (UPIJ -The Pentagon
Is paying for psychiatric care f«
servicemen's chlklrcn at institutions that
allegedly torture the young patients,
according to a Senate subcommittee staff
report.
Sen. lfenry l\f. Jack!Klfl (0-Wash,) said
his permanent Investigatio ns
subcommittee begins hearings Tuesday
on the charges.
Jack.son called the a 11 e ga ti on s
"shocking" and said the Defense
Department "must be held accowrtable."
Pentagon spokesmen said It would be
"inappropriate'' to Comment on
Jackson's di!tlosure, but the y
acknowledgl'd that olriclals of the
Civilian HeaJth and Medical Program
for the Uniformed Services (CllAlllPUS).
a medical Insurance program for
military dependents, had been summoned
to testify.
The sp(lkesmen could not say "'hether
military doctors had re!e:Ted dependent
patients to the institutions involved , or
wh~ther the parents had sent lhem and
CHAMPUS was merely picking up
the bill~ •
Jacksoo said two psychiatric
institutions,. the Green Valley School In
Orange .atY, Fla,; and the· ![niverslty
Center 1rf Ann Arbor, 1i1ich., would be
probed.. Without saying specificaJly that
abuse and squa lor existed at the two
facilities, Jackson said a "prelhntnary
staff investigation" has found oondiUons
such as:
-The use of ot.he instruments or torture.
-Utter fi!Ul and squalor of the t1c1U·
ties inhabited by young child"".
-PhY>ical abu!e including' mod<
burial! uid U9e o/ chains I
-The ramP'6l use of drugs.
-Questionable psych.iatrk l.N!filment
Including heavy doses of vitamins
questionabJe use or carbon dioxide ~
therapy and lnjectklns of urine and 'dust'
se~s.
-Isolation of chlldttn In solitary
confinement.
-Lack-of supervision and cducaUon o: children entrusted to the institutions.
-Questionable billlnJ techniques to
rE!ce.Ive government fundl.
j
••
•
•
.. • --· -•
Monda)', Jur1 22, 11174 '
llfissing.
Teen-age•·
---iocated
' DAIL V PllOf 5
Arsonists O'Neill Top Spender
"JP'!~1,_Sus~e_cte_d___;..Keh C_ocy Reci.pie_n.~
In B-fazes SACltAM E\'TO IA PI -The
backers of Prop. 9. the
i>UCCtssful political reronn
initiative, fllr out!ipent their
Opp'.JnenUJ, nccordin~ tQ ·the
latest campaign reports.
SALMON. ld•ho f AP) -A
CalUGrnia teen-ager \V n s
locuted in apparent good
condition after spending fhre
days lost in rouRh mowilain
terrain of the SnlrTion Natlonal
Forest or nGrtbcrn Idaho. 1----nr.rrMeiler w ot
. CARr.-1EL CAP ) -A brush
flre that COMUmtd 1,SOO aeres.
And .another that errupted
sevt'l'nl houri later, may have
been the won: or arsonists
~lnLiiJ:t
The reports. on file in the
secretary of state's office
ava.ilab\e,
Attrmpling to defeat Prop.
9. the Koow Nine O>mm it.tec
:.ind Coliromians Against Prop.
9 1ogti1her spent $115,089.
Edn1und G. BrG\\"n f or
governor gave the pro-Prott
9 carnpajgn $:13,!X)l.
Urov.1l's o \V n successful
campai~1 r or Dcmocr~tic
nominaliqn for ii: o ve r no r
received $38,581 rroin O'Neil l.
Aaron Crippen. of Canoga Park
said Crippen, 17, wa1 roll9Wlng ;J
a streambOO that would .have
led him to a road. 1
here in the past twG w~ks.
authorities say.
~ Capt. c.otge Aler: of the
Jtate Divblon ol ForMtry said
twrdey, al~!howed-tha
Orange County d eve l o per
Richard J, G' Neill, a
Democrat , was the JargC'St
Individual campaign spender
for the J une 4 prin\ary.
Prop. 9 will place stringent
control~ on I o b by i n t ex·
p c nd1turcs uut!a ca ·
1ii. gJ'I CM nbU ions r o m
lobbyists. and r e q u I r e
incumbents to spend I 0
percent less than t h e i r
challenger.~. Appro\'Cd by a
wide margin, it goes Into
effect Jan. 6.
opera ions cen m-
southem Orange County. The
a.rea has changed t r o m
grazing land to a metropc)litan
Fore!tler Ron Hamilton said,
"For someone out five days,
he w11s ,jn extremely good
condition.·· 11c said Crippen
\Vas \\'earing only a pair of
cul~ff pants when h'e was
found sOOrtly after n o o n
Swiday. Iris only injuries were
cuts on his feet and insect
biles.
hiore lhan SO searchers and
a hellropter had joined In the ·
search.
"I first saw him down the
creek ahead of me. Then he
disappeared around the bend.
I caught up ""Ith him and
spoke his name. and he ·
whirled arollfld , then sat back
against • a rock and relaxed
and said, "J never thought
anyone would find me',"
Hamilton said .
lfamillon s:iid he foW'ld
Crippen wading slowly down
the West Fork of Bla;kbird
Creek in the Cobalt area of
the forest , 45 miles west of
Salmon.
Forcat officers Bill Knispel:
and Stan Feucht helped lead
the youth out.
CrippeO ,vas r e p o r t e d
missing Monday night and laist
spotted brieflY. \Vednesday
afterooon by a companion.
'Trul9 a Miracle' .
Lloyd "Boogie" Daugherty or Torrance is only four and one·haJf years otd,
but be already has undergone two major operations and .his doctor says the
!act that he is alive is "truly a iniracle." The first operat1on was perfonned
when he was only ·four days old. The second took place a few months ago a~d
now "Boogie" is .home and playing with neighborhood kids. He was born Wlth
a wrong way heart, which kept recircu·lating "used" blood according to doc·
tors.
Stabbed ·
-For Bill
Union Clai11ri11g Victory
,,.---------. • Prop'. 9 backers included six
( Stale ) committees and organilnlions
that gpent more than $677.900.
'---------Conunittecs opposing Prop.
more than 100 fir eme n
controlled a windswept brush
!ire 15 miles southeast of here
&inday night aftet it charred
1,500 acres and threatened
plu!h homes in Carmel Valley.
The ground tttY.'S also were
aided by small planes ,
helicopters and 1() air tankers
whlclt droPP<d 711,000 gallons
ot fire retardant chemicals oo
9 reported spending $170,250.
One pro.:: Prop. 9 g r o u p CalifGm1a Con1mon Cause , the
California branch or the so.-
called citi1.ens Johby, reported
spending $452.621 -the most
of any organizaliGn.
National Common Cause
spent at least $215 .125 ,
including a $12.1,001 loan to
California Common Cause.
But its final report \\·as not
f\1ajor CQntributors agAin<Jt
Pl'op. 9 included the Callfomia
Labor Federation (AFL-CIO l,
$14.036; Southern p a r i r i c
Transportation So.. $10,000;
•Pacific Gas and Electric Co ..
$10,000: Bank Gf America\
SI0.000, and Pacific Lighting,
fl,500
, Altogether, 81.3 million wns
spent for and against. the nine
measures on the ballot. Only
one, Prop. 7, failed to pass.
Tttree c ommitt e e s
supporting Sec retary of State
area in le!l.1 than 10 years.
Bllt about $200,000 ol O'Neill 's
tota l was in the form of loans.
O'Nei ll also donated $25.1,373
lo Den\OCratic Assemblyman
Kenneth Cory's campaign for
state cootroller.
One of O'Neill's Orange
Co unty friend s. Dr. Lou Cella.
reported $291 ,653 in donations .
including $152.433 to Cory and--.
$3.397 ,fo Brov.'Tl. a.tarian W,
Cella adcled another $6,384 to
Drown.
At Jea~t six individuals
pledged more tJ:!an $100.001 for
the campaign. Al l but one
were Democrats.
;?;;~~1JE~ San Francisco History
Art Jaaeau said the p.1ttem
d the fire was the same u ft d b A h l • i!':t ~~.e .= .. ~res over'7,";the -unte y re eo ogists
e Tmo Injured
SAN BERNARDINO (UPI ) SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - as catch can," Oiurchill said. records, but much of San
-Two persons were injured Archeologists have been "We'll just !have to sit up Francisco's ·recorded history
when an antique single-engine digging for forgotten treasures the.re 00 the edge and \\'at.ch \\'as lost in a serie8 or fires. bi-•-•~ a Lu--· and f the mid·lllOOs and -in tht _.., cras11cu .. ne r ......... ~ 1n ·the clay mud o !he With an eagle eye. Otherwise
Valley in the ,_fojave Desert city's -.id rush-era waterfront i't'JJ be 1.~ forever." earthquake and fire of 1906. Simda !i"" ""'° "It's all part of a puzt]e," Y· before a ne\v 34-stor-1 hi'{h rise So far !!he site has yielded .The pilot Saeyar Pe~n. bui,',ldi,·ng. ~ries it fo!°Cver.. an old opium vinl. medicine sltid arc:beotogist Leon a rd
Scott Moore. 17, aloo of LOS ANGELES (AP) -Cano~ Park. -. 11. man "''ho \\'alked out
I W t P Strik Rial':'>. told Sal?' Bernardi~ \\c re literally f 1 g ht I-n g OOttles. rice bowls. a variety \1aldivia. "Each piece tens llS u a er . ow er e Sheriff'11 depuUea be and his against time \\ith I h e of shoes. Chinese coir.s. clav ~stmocryt~~g about the city's
:-> ' • P ~ s s~ n g e r had eadt bulldozers." archeotogist Bob pipes and other assorted
Hamilton described l h e .. ...i , ~--~outh-as-6'foot:2-and-about-~o~ . .<l.restaur~Lte~~U
210 d \4·1thout paying his bill.
H po~d ~ h d lked do was ~tabbed. to death by e saJ 8 wa wn a \\'a1ter police say t~ trall\ess creek about t"'O Officer's said th~ man
miles wh~n h~ ~led ~be !eft the Tai p t n g
lx>y. He ~d Crippen s version Restaurant Sunday night
of becoming lost was hazy and amVtfie waiter gave chase.
that he oould O:)t renl'Jllber k h. d I bbed why he left t.1oore when 'lheir !>yertoo im an s a
ear became stalled o n trim as they fo ught.
~1onday, Hamilton said.
mistakenly thought the other Oturchil-1 said Sunday. "junk ,,-The archeologistS hope the
LOS AUGELES (APl -The strike. The crowd wa! an~Jn control of_the._ old_open____Neafby· skyscrapers-alrtadr~nie---.!... excavited itetM are -bulldozers .may WlCOVU'--one,__-
lirst strike against the city and the mayor. OCCa5ionally t'OC, kpit plane. The plane :ttood oo the spot \\'here sailors ~ldom older than 120 years. ci rthe ships abandoned by
Department of Water and ~·u jeered, interrupted and \~red !if~ and cras~cd JUffiped ship .125 years ~o Wt the diggers say everything gold ru.<;h sailors. The builde rs
Power ,·n "" yea-,.. over shouted at "hile ttl a brief ple3'ure night to seek their fortune 1n is histortcally valuable. S<J ay they will ha!ht <.'OOSlf ructtionh
.,.. •o . from Apple Valley Airport. -· Califonria·s gold fields. ~1~ ~t·1cs have o Id on,!! e n o u g or e and union leaders are claiming "It's ridiculous," said one 11 u<>• '"' ar('heologists to dig i.t up.
victory from the walkout that I The digging is where &in merchant and s h i p p i n g ·;::==::::;:~~~==::;-~·oman. "These people are e Youth Bed Francl'ieo's ''Ion~ \\'h<irf." ----1 resulted in service stoppage holding us as hostages. Jf they SACRAME?-."TO (AP) -A oorripleted in 1951, 1s supposed THE SUMMER to ~housandS of customers. h CLEARANCE "It took the strike"·to show don't get· their salary hikes, teen-age suspect in the near-to ave stood. Fires .an~ R"'D
d I . ·i' " fatal attack tt1 an 11-year-old pressure from the c1ty·s L we need vour Trade!
said one union o[ficial after an earlier attack which left landfill and waterfront ·-L1"0. EXCEllENTSELEGTJON
!hem we meant business," 1''e on't Bet e ectrio y. boy"' ·being questioned about growing populatioo led to ~ ~BALLOON Premium prices paid .
negotiators reached agree--ty,·o smaller boys in critical Y.'arehouses on \\1tat \\'SS once . Immediate Deli'(ery ment "" • one-year t'Ontract Few Women CMdilion. police say. bay water. __ : 3 TWA J ts Make providlngf<irwageand!ringe Olficer.ideclinedSunday to Chunohill and others have .,;. . SUMMER NABERS e beoer1t increases totaling identifv the bov~4-vear..old. ,been _j._ i g g i_n g at the ... , Sl__ SALE
--· • bout 11 ~t. FI--k ToiiJl) Yi'ho v sud~ to1of liem he. excavation site for t"·o \Vee.ks 50% OFF V':./ __ /_•/7/J -Four oC tht five striking lJD OUg 1 held Delbert Yordy's head while construction wa_s halted .;::] , ... ). caaa.eac E L n d;n us unions ratified the eontract . ~ t•-· h b ~ t k bu t . .., -ltter..gen cy a -..!' __ ~ __s.~r anq_tedthtei<be-·m.:~kl\eron•=eHP Tests 1:1"!.:'':ad."tiJ,;Jb.~~:i~ .te ka caod;;t~~rs ~ "Jjjj'at '°I A~Ac:'~~:~~~s.-~~AR OPEN /01\YS
Please Call 540-9t00
2600 Harbor Cos1a Mesa "'ere expec · o "'""' ..i.--J fl'""' of a sel'ere "'w t ay. '"'--.__ fi"'-• 3'11U .. -CY >.&" LOCATION 0NL Y LOS ANGELES (UPl) -evacuated down escape chutes iuc job today. '"'' 1111 union s•C""MENTO (UPI) _ beatktg, they said. , _ _:':'.'Af':t'.:er~th~a~t~it_:wi".:·~11..'be:"'..'cat~c:l<h~=======~~-========== Three Trans World Airlines shortly after the jet landed. is holding its ratification vote n """ 11·
jets made emergcnc)rJandingl More than » pa,..ngers wen" Joday. =fornil:. Hl~~-9~\'.ietltR-Dlel'
led f ~ · and · R1''ERSIDE (UPI) -Flli· within minutes of each other trea or aUI as1ons THE SE.TrLEMENT arfects grueling physical performance Solis 38 a farm \t"OrkeJ"
at the Li Angeles Inter-other minor injuries while , abc>ut 11,500 D\VP emplGyes. tests to 176 women who, hoped !!: was f Gll n d beaten nnd
national Air p 0 rt Sunrlay sliding down the chutes, but Their average salary t~ be amona: the states first unconscious on 8 r 9 n ch
"'hen an engine caught fire none was hospitalized. previously wu approxi!Jl•lely hi.ghway ~trolwomt11. Thursday died w i t ho u t
SAVE NOW! SEW NOW!
G d ere"" put out the SI .000 a mon~h. AOOu~ 7 ,500 ~ few oi the tr.·()men r e g a i n i n ~ cmsclousness, on one aircraft apd warning . roun of them participated m the w1thd.rew because ol nutlnitles seid Sunday.
lights indicated mechanical !ire and damage w,a s strike, which began 1 as t exhau.st100 Saturday and 29 Solis of Thermal was found
pi:oblems on the other t\i.'O, destT ibed as minor. \\0edne8day. fiunked. But the ~est passed near a ranch house at La
TIVA official s said t76 The plane was en route to Afayor Tom Bradley, the ,specially designed t~st, Quinta.~ A grape stake .
passengers aboard a 747 Boston. htass.. \\'hen a although holding no direct qual.ifyin.g for the ner:t series trpparently used in the
· d b \\'al'ftinir light indicated an power over the city agency. of hi&hway patrol exams. . beallng was fouOO nearby. Jun1bo Jet ha to e \."~~ played a key role in ending The women wtre required '
engine ifre. the dispute. He talked by to run ooe-half mile in 5~ e Strike E11d•
lnniate
Stabbed
8 Tinies
The other two planes, both phone to several principal minutes, do 23 sit-ups at 3. OAKLAND !UPI) -Pi!Gts
L!Oll jets en route to negotiators throughout the aecood intervals, run a rig and night attendants went
Pittsburgh, had to turn back n!ght Saturd_!ly and early ~ ~twlba~~g ta'ke 7~ back to work today to end
because of s u s p e c t e d Sunday tfioming. grip strength test. the fint fltrike in the 2&-~rear
mechanical problcmJ. Both .(i!. estimated. 12,000 or the 1be job applicantl: are part ti lstory ~ Trans International
landed .thout · 'dent and DWP s 1.1 million customers 1>f. a h\1>-)'eM" experiment 10 Airlines, the world's largest
wt ~1 v.·ere deprived (If service ·c:tur• determine whether women can vacation charter servi~.
later took of! agam. ing the \\'8lkout. Unitt1 and handle highway piltrol work. Plane crew n:i e m b e r s
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Tnmate Frank Hernandez was
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after he was stabbed eight
limes by ihree other convicts,
authoMties said.
One plane landed v:hen the management officials agree SOme 40 llUCCeSlful applicants \\'alked o{f the JOb exacUy
pilot UlOUght he· had hydrauli~ tha_!_ the nwnbe_~. ~ould ~ave Yi'lil begin 18 -Weeks-o f_a wettlgo to back d_em.an<ts
problems and possibly a lOst ctif!!l:iei:l-:-far'li1~1:i!r"'if tlie inlen.si~ t r a i n I n g nt the for shorter . work shltU: and
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back after the pilot found he longer· exper1ence likened to anny not an isme.
IARJ.'S
could not retract the .landing Before the strike began, the basic trainina camp. ir==="'=;:==:,:-::-=:-:=:::=::;I
gear. . unions were asking for a. 12 THI
Hospitals near the airport percent increase in wages and ..----------,
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Hernandez, 25. serving a
~ence fo.r rape end robbery
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ll'age 7).
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the Boston flight. · Bradley went to suburban all
In a separate incidl'ftt two
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up in routine r o r m a t i o n killed, the coroner'• ()(flee
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•
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
het the -reople flick
\. ' A member of the Orange County Board of Super-man . So the Democrau -particularly Orang' County
visors is a non-partisan office holder, elected by a party chief Richard· O'Neill -don't want an election.
majority vote cast in his' district. Since the Democnts control the Asaembly, and since a special bij.l is necessary for such an election, tt. doetn't That may be the way It was intended:J, but ~Jl~ Fifth appear this course _wilLbeJollowed. · __ . _____ ,
District Supervisor RonaWCaspers was · 10sf at sea. the It is a crude usurpation of what clearly ts the beit
shuffle to fill his seat has every el ement of a political public inte~st. The office should be !Wed by voter 1------idiio~fight -involving. both political parties,_an_d_a_n ___ ~cb..oice · at all_.P.2ssible _ and' it cerf;!!.!?ly is ~ble ._
a mosr lnfilii e rtay-15rp-orentta a:ndidates. 1 ~1he CQUpty s eaaers, Democra an RepuDliCiD~t~,-:.""-~-~------..jj:
Caspers had just been re-elected to a four-year push th,e ISsue. · ·
term, subject to begin next January. So two terms The~ best place to start is with the B<aj'd of SUP8f! ·
actually are to be filled : the remaJnder of the ·current visors itself. lf the present fOur rifemben 1f0Uld dittJJr9 ~.
term -. about four months -and the other for two J themselves solidly behind a special election in "NPVW· ·
yearS, until the 1976 primary election. · her t.h.~Y lUr:ely would Corce <>thers ·in.to an OQtil ,declara· -
How those terms will be lilied, and by whom, is the lion lo fill the ollice as it ~hould be filled. · · , . · ·
subject of debate, analysis, legal disagreement and Boan! Chairman Ralph Diedi::lch could and,should
politicill intrigue. The options seem to be these: lead Such a movem·ent to permit ... a responsible, demo-
1. Appointment by Governor Reagan of a supervisor cratic selection dictated b~ the people, not by ' poJiUcal
to serve the remainder of the current term. Then ap· party.
• • pointment for the two-year term by the next governor, , '
Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr. or Republican Houston
Flournoy.
2. Appointment by Governor Reagan of a supervisor
who would serve bOth of the terms. County Counsel
Adrian Kuyper do~n't read the law this way. but
.attorneys in the Atto'mey General's office believe this is
the proper legal process.
3. Calling of a special, winner-take-~ election c.on·
Current with the upcoming November general election
to fill the two-year term, leaving the office vacant for
the short term or filling it with a Reagan appointee.
The election m:Q£ess undoubtedly is the fairest and
certainly the cot.Irle most favored by voters in the
Fifth District.
Unfortunately, that's where the pure party politics
comes in. Most observers believe the key appointment
will be made by the new governor -and as of now the
heaviest bets are that Democrat Jerry Brown will be that
G~d Joh, .Gran~ JJ11J .
Grand jµries are a fact ·of life : •. :.they eome .aniilo
With the recuJaritY :.or a calendar. ·
But In the case of the jury dlsmissod In Orange
County -Uy.the calendar wu significantly dilfere!lt. .
Those laymen worked for 18 months, not, the 11Suil
12. ' '~· The outgoing jury ~rked six months overtime to
comply with a new state ·law placing the jury liC~Olfules
on a fiscal-year basis. · . . , . ·
During that tiine, besides indicting 170 . penons
suspected of major crimes, the jqry compiled.a·scOre of,
reports clirhaxing investigations futo serious in~n Uri .,
county-govemment. ...
The jury members deerve high commendation and
thanks from us all. ''INFLA'flONZ • •
Doctor• ita Cro•• Bair
I
t
' • •
' •
I
Huma:qlty ·Mixed
.
In Melting -Pat
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
·Malpractice ·Ris~ Rising
Exaotly a half century ago \\'a1ter
Lippmann could write: "The great social
adventure of America is no longer the
conquest of the wilderness but the
absorption of 50 different peoples."
The name of this problem andrcr
opportunity was, in those days. The
Melting Pot. The phrase came from' a
distinguished Lo n·
don-born J e w i s h
publicist, I s r a e I
Zanf\\o'"tlll. He wrote
in 1908:
t:~ 'r·1'f·--"Ametica is God's fl crucible, the Great
i\telt~ Pot. \Vhere
all races of Europe
are reforn1ing. You
!land. good folk. think
J, when I see them at Ellis lilw;id,
here you stand in your ;)I) groups with
your 50 langua~es and histories and your
50 blood-hatreds and :i""alries.
"But yvu won't lc.ng be tike that,
brolhe1·s, for these are the fires_o.!_GOCI
you've COf11e to -these are the fires or
God. A fig_ for YoUf feuds and vendettas.
German and Frencl"lnen, Irilhmen and
Englishmen. Jews and Russian$. in.to the
crucible with you alt. God is making the
A.merican."
THE RllEJ'ORIC is still beautiful. but
\Vhat it Describes has not con1e t.o pass,
tll:lugh it very nearl y did. Mr.
Lippmann's dream of 1914 stands on the
books, if at all1 as yet another unrealized
Utopia.
T11r. Justice Oliver W. Holmes said all
life is an experiment aod surely the idea
of democracy itself is caplured in that
tieneralization. lt is sad that the idea of
the melting pot has not worked out in
--anything like-the 1\'ay z a n-g-w i 11
envisioned. but it is not a cause for
hopelessness. U there is any idea which
i3 more American than the idea of the
melting p>t, it Is that if something
doesn't work, we just set it aside and
'~ork out something else.
'nlE )IELTING pvt ~vorked \\ilen
\·irtual!y all the hnmigrants into this
country were Northern Europeans. As !ate aS 1!160 _lmmigr~'lts and their stock
in Ne\"l York City were 90 percent
European in origin. Ten years later the
percentage y.•as down ,to 76.
(cHARLES McCAB~
The largest single gToup in the cit:Y
'A·ere 258,356 immigrants 1from the
\\'estern Hemisphere, half of them black.
They ·were larger even than. the liaJian
minority. The Irish lo!1g .ego gave ~p on
~fanhattan. l\1any of the new were in the
country illegally.
Bet teen l94iJ and 1965, • ~n a i ~· itnmigrahon law \\·as passed; Europe bad
provided 45 percent • of all our
immigrants. By 1970 immigration from
all places had decreased by~ percent,
but northern Europe's had decreased by
G4.5 percent. Greeks, Po r tu g u e s e ,
Yugoslavs all rose sharply.
WHERE OUR melting pot dream
(altered was with .the black population.
Tllis.segmeoL tumed _ool IA> be just_ooo
dilferent · for the countrY, especially
middle· America, to tI:iinJt,of absorbing.
Not oniy \\"ere the 1blaeks perceived to
be different, but there· was lhe whole
v.tlite guill rap. Our essential decency,
the argument ran. was outraged by our
ancient orf~scs·against the black man.
This· had the parado:'rical effect pt blinding us to his humanity. A lot of truth
there; and a lot of baloney, too.
Alon_g with the black's achievement of
civil nghts, there came an l}lly word for
an ugly thing. ethnicity. Ttiis is lootber
wor<l for racial chauvinism. This Ml a
move to emphasi1.e the diffe~
among Americans, in tenl'IS of their
heritage, instead of the old seeking for
consensus.
~ THERE JS eveti an Eltiiiie Heritage
Studies Act, whereunder the federal
government made available $2.5 million
to promote these studies among white
group& as well as racial minorities. 1l1i8
racial Polarization may work CM&, but -it
doesn't either look or sound 1ood to me.
Early in .this century Teddy Roosevelt
could S&}'. not speaking of blacks, "Every
hnmigrant who comes here should be
required within five ye-ars to team
£nglish or leave ,the coufitty." \Ve've
traveled a long way from .that .;tem idea ;
but has the journey been worth it?
Bring Back Youth Fares
Wt fall. dte Civil ,\eronautics &ard
decreed that do~tie airlines C()uJd no
longer offer special youth fares and otl}er
OJI-rate travel b.2.rgains. /The special .
fares. said the CAB, could n() longer be
tolerated. because they Yiere both
"discriminatory and unecooomk:."
At least half 0£ that argument is
plain1y invalid, according to tho.se who
ought t.o be in the best po8ition to know
-officials of !he airlines themselves.
The e1imin8tir\on of the youth fare, claim
officials of one major catTier, ls costing
lhl airline about 18 million in lost
rennue&.
AS P'OR. '111E 1rgument that cut-rate
faNI ire a Conn of discrimination. that
may ht true. But the same kind of
discrimination hf practiced by movie
theater~. ball parks, transit systems aod
do:!erl.s o( government agencies which
routinely trffi poople d I ff e r e n t I y
<iepending on whether they are YotJng or
• old, rich or poor, manied or sin11;lt,
""°"'kinlf or :metnployed, veterans or not,
lfid. so rorth. .
Appa.rer,tty the CAB's bu~ucrats
thaul!R lhlt by tllminating the opeclal
rano the)' """' doing a ravor for ~
,
(GUEST REPORT J
who oouldn 't qualify ror them.. But the
equalizalioo of rates has resulted in· a
loss of passengtr1 who used to fly on
discounts, and .~ regular paneng_en
are going to have to pay higher. rates to
make up the difference. '
SO~fE OF THAT lO!S, however, is
being diverted to foreign 1irllnes that are
still offering dlecounts on international
nlg)lls for pustngtra -:ho can gtt IA>
Canada or who can qualify for "refunds"
after they arrive it Euro p~e an
destinations.
SO the CAB is now giving some thought
to restoring youth fares on transai!lantic
flights. That 'Aoold be a step in the right
dire\lon. But it 1\WIG"be better still i!
last rail's edict wtre rescinded
altogether, and the CAB let the airlines
and their passef11en decide ill the
r:narket place whit is the faire.st and most
-1C S)'llem
BlolGO Honhl A-•
'•
For thofle wonderifta: . what Ron
Ziegler means by'Uie term "dubli·
citous," it's in the -41ctionary ~
l1'-eert deceit and evasion.
J.S:M.,
OIMflll' eu1 __,., W. .......... ..,. ,,_,.. ......... .....,...,. ,-.a ""'
Ul9WI tf ""' ~r ...... J1Mr '9f
-.. ..._, ... Dllfr ""': .
/'1ge .cShould'
Fit theJob ·
c~~~R1s)
A' CiHfom;i. .wetnbly committee,
llfldertakinc a-loni oyerdue study on
~it81 nialprtdiee, ha!! come up "ith a
1 prdiqtjnary _npon ·reflecting a ri~ in
Jawiults involving· medical malpr~ctice. ,'I;\at lss)'t ,·exactly neWs. Physicians
throogbout tbe state •have be e.n
compll.llitoc. ·for the .. past clea!de about
the co.st-1,of mal-· ,,,,.....,~ Pl'i.dice, insuhiu:e i.
relulting froid, the t
growin& numbtts-Oj ' .~, ,Q ..... c·oar~'3w•nn pr • , .._
d. a 111·aces· throuih 1..>.•
,..cflc:ill ,,,..ti~. ,
1be .comlnittee re--,
porttil. -ibat in:!Ur-· l
ance ntes ·1ncrea9td
400 ~·bietwee11 · • · •
19'18· lild.Jlt10. -·'"""""'(thefe ba\'e
been increaseo·.iii'ce~ miiot doc·
ton ·ha.vi· beett able to · meet the costs
but said · '<the continued ability of the
health care indu'str)' to absorb them is
'hoogbti at Larae: queit~" -· _ ·
In a· "'stosi.hle ·and humane JOCiety, i'r ltEPOaTEO with alarm Uiat "fh6Se
l\'0Ukin1t It be the young who weie hired ptiyaieians Who have bad a recotii ol
to .ie~ down~ Cl~n the_~~ ~-m•lpradice suits may ~ f J1n d
buildinp,at-mght;-imtead al Ille Mli1lcleil theri1te!V'8 ;paytll(· txorblla•l :r•~ fo old·.~ who have earned. a ,Ut,Ue rest high risk earners or unable' to obtain
and' dignity? ~ in!itrance'." --.-~ ,
" • • ' Fnim that ·. it would · seem the
fl people "'"' forbidden lo lalk,.ahout pr<Ilmtnaly . ..port Is 1 o m • w b a t the~r foreign .trips, overseas travet· Would superficial. The fact ~ that m8ny doctors
shrink by 7S percent alnody have beelflotted out Of ·JM'•ctlce
within a year. becaltse of ei:Oib.ltant insurande eotits ·Or • 0 .. • •
( EARL WATERS J
inability to get CO\·erage .. Qt.hers have
quit voluntarily rather than, to Tisk
exposure to 'the h~rassment of 18¥.'suits.
In attempWig lo define the problem,
the committee seemed to be seeking
Y.'8}"S to lay It else\\•here rather than
attack the issues directly. It cited the
growing impel'90flal r e I a t i on s h i p s
betvoeen the doctor and patient but went
on ~ ,ay that the improved expertise of
trial lawyers and the · wi~n~ _ oJ the
scope of medical malpractice lil6i1ity Dy
the jqdiciary'at tbingl' which have lead to (the' grea~ Ouinber of lawsuits.
AND ITS REPORT that "an increasing
number of trial Ja"'Yers are entering the
malpractice field , ~ue to its lucrative
potential and the threat of no-fault auto
inSurance, there ' nlay be, indeed, an
increase in less meritorious . cases." seems a bit prejudicial. t.awyers can 't
ca~ a doctor to be .negligent.
'Ihat malpractice sults and increasing
in!Ul'ance costs are driving doctors out of
practice is a fact. That this Is bad for a
society alre~dy ' faced utb a physician
sbOrtage goes without saying. That there
Is .possibly ao~ ~orms needed in the
insurince program (or doctors is 1\'0rth
studying. ·
The present system penalizes all ·.
doctors ~ithin a given area, and within a :
gi\·en discipline, for the shortcominp of
a few. It also penalizes a doclOr who ts •
sued even though .he is subsequently
round to be without fault.
Btrr A BASIC problem does exist ;
v.·ithin the medical prof~ion and . to ,
attack the outward signs conneded with •
malpractice . sults ia treaUog the ·
symptoms nther than the disease.
fl.lost illuminating therefore t.o the .
committee, and to doctors generally,
.. ould be perusal of the splendid law '
review of the University of San Francisco ·.
which devoted its entire v.'inler edition to ....
medical malpractice in CalUornia.
The law review has done' an eicellenl ;
job in di!ICU!Shtg the latest developments
in the laws CO\'ering medical malpraetice '
and thereby provided a guidebook not ;
only for tl,le physician, but the entire •
health team. in avoiding pitfall! leading
to malpractice sUlts. Inferentially, . it •
suggests tho6e in heaJth care must do a
better job of policing themselves and •
points· out hospita!1 can no tonger shirk ,
reSponsibillty for what occurs within ·
their walls.
Interestingly, the review devotes an
entire article to "The Right to be
Infonned," thus con finning t h e
Assembly committee finding that many
lawsuits stem from the d i s t an t
relationship bet••een doctor and patient.
One • o( the fe\' ~i~§ . ,,it ",_ .Qil Profits Put A-bove Patriot~m
!1n~a:,d:i~~·; . T .. w.wiJ.~:-:to:eted in 1he ·teeftt (. ) Arabia wish to have this brief
and villfyin~ loiters ' Wbite ."""'°·file"il ·~ ttiot -J".lCK ANDERSON memorandum summarizing the critical from penons who can barelyrwrilll. Amei1cft 'olL~et, supporUd Ar~ A situation In regard to the now of oil
• • • • ' inieres~.~I, ...... ·tbltlr: ~-country supplies from the Middle East placed in ~The_;~ishmmt for_chronii h~sy ·durig·~·~llrfeli'warlut.October. the President's hands as 900ll ag
isslow bUt sure; as a French writer ODC< · • ...,..,. 'J ·<-•.w~. ••-y Euon Mobil, T d possible." put it, "If 3 inan does not ;let II he Af. 1IJae/ ~·1• ms ........... w..:: et • etac;o an
thinks, be will sootrthink as be aCts·.'" chainrftll:.ef ·~. Mcibil, .Tezaco ·and Standard of CalifomNt, putting profits
• • • . , Staftdanl;af .:CUUGmia ai&n~ a joint ahead of ·patriotism, didn't beslate to
U yoU feel you have· to ait the ~rd.I, mtm. t!>;~iint Nlxm. ~· ruabed it , withhold Saudi oil from the U.S: armed
you'!" pl~ with P!OPI• yoouhoulo)n'.t. by,~~ \o the )l'hite """"· force• al the snap of King Falsal's
Great ~ufit •in tbe•ir .nekit:~Ukt . ,,.1·"~-Jrb(~ •aa deliver~ on linger.
··--··· . '·~ .,._, ·--l~tly Ocit..-12, C'""'V' Wlll timed lo iollutnCt TllE . FOUR OIL ' gianll we"' pul on .~";:,'[ ,::;;,;1.;;,;..''.;;Ms 'Uian iM' Preiident'•1•ialnot il<rldirig miuiafy ootlce by the klng1at e -.! meeting in
the _avtf'l&e man; for the ~ kl aid to llrHL,. The . · . i, Geneva on May 23, 1973. He bad come to ~i(I~ aa:inty is1 ~ c:_:: ~~ n~~~ .Switurland for" a ~est after vlsJUng !:, anbriltian~ ·-~tlltl'c! area lends Anbia' ~abd Kuwait · Cairo, ~;here Pr e s I d' e n t A n w a r
• l • · · '\-;; .. IA. "lal. '. ( a..., Sadat liad put pressure Oft him ito lJ!le Oll com""t<nce in a wholly unrelated filld.' ""'""'ft. 1a •··"" ..-• • • · + c:UttlRt' back OU ~ ·as a .weapon against the West.
A uo..._1l1...1ty" 1. someone WM fims be ' ·~, ' ·;· L __ -·· 'l)l_e king told· representatives ~of the erwled~• · ~ , ecLthe .,..,,.. fOuf\Americun>ompenies, accordinS lo ~u iii~ e""-wi\!:';:!:1?:.': ,pr!ij-ii,<Tfeally: ~ -1n-ome111genee-n!pol't;-that he-dtdn"t-
none • . ~eta... .• "' , · . : ~·Ttiire, Is ':A high ~ • intebd tOi. ltt,. Saudi Arabia's traditional
HU11ly· an·•••-elle. ii .. . ........... r.:r-•. ~:C,; ·~-:.r:r:· ..,._ friendship with the United Slates isolate ,~-~ ~...... ""'' his,C!MIDtrY .!tom the Arab~ affected by our <hildbood II -... ionh-alloJMl Ille Stalll'"""Jd lJnf~ the' Aramco ~ bn\ucht
ate gent rally happy or deprellled · on ba• .a snowballing,tffect. that ~1d J>1'0-• pressute 00 the ·u:s. govetnmept to
holiday&· •' • • ~ .• ~~ ~m supply ~9·" c~e Its ?wllddle Ea•t .p\,Ucy, he n-..,,.-conru.. "1e!nnlly wilb ' TRI! PUllDl!NT :didn't read· the warned. Ibey cooid '-their .Saudi oil
piety abouk( reflect an the.words at_ that ·~" boweW:r, until after ~ bad concessions. He called ujJon tbem to
Anglican pntet., Dean Inge. who ..,_ lliMd)I ~ a· mUlllW, emerpncy im(ftlS this metsage upon both-th• U.S. -·l<ed in a oennon: "I have ... ,,.. mno Aft ., .. 1orae1 on Oct. 14. public Olld U.S. ltadm. ;;;d~ why it·lbould be ~ The Anb ~ produoers lll""'l' back, ":l'ime lo runninl oat;" the ·king
denJPf«y IO the Dolly lo aipp0oe that -· after i 11110lbtr, with an· tmbargo ~~~rcoulded, ~ .. si!!!!hl~." yr Iba! He bas•a """"of 1111!1>«." .,a1n111 the Un!led Stateo. The m.m ,.--_,, , , , po....:tul .r the oU lhelkbs, Sauoh With Ibis wamq'atfll tcllofnc In lhelr
.Anlia'• Kini P'ai11t, ·halted o i 1 ears, the oilmen b«ame j>anicky when Tilt j>lay<n gt! the -= but it's ~1 maupr ~ U. -
Welioll teem who -"" lo ·i-me rich In -., ...-..r In P>lltlcs. • •• • n.e difference between an lflUJ'lent
that "'clean the air" and oae tbaf rner.ly
pollutd'il furthe< 11 .. JO Ill< dtslrt ol
each dfspltent IA>.~ hl1 point or lo
examine it. • • •
1,
1hlflllmll lo Jiit 1.Jnlted SlaltS on Oct. !he United Slates obowed favorltlam for
20. Israel during the October, war. Tbe lour
1'bl Saudi embarp .., administered chalrmen-R.K. Jamiet001 • E s son ;
and tnfolced by the fGur Amtrtc:an Rawleigh Warner, Jr., Mobil; M.F.
eonipmdet ttiat topther forn:t · tbe G r a n v i I I e , Tuac;o; and otto N.
Arabian American OU C o m·p 1 n y A11ller, Standard ar C&llfomla-drafted 1
(Aramco). When Kine Faisal banned oil blunt "~temorandum to the Praident"
dtllvtrie:I 10 U.S. military form, . the on Oct 12. •
four c:ompanM!I tcrUpulOUS.ly carried out Th~y turned It O\'et' to Aramco's
the kina'• otder. polittcally potent eountel, John J. '™ eupmne Irony is that the four McCloy. wb:> ten I It by metltJ\gtt to the
Aramco partnert bad amalled hundreCls White Hoote 1ta(f cblef 1 9ei1. Alnander
of milHon1 of dollan tn tat credits and Hal&.
oil su~din from the A m t r. i c 1 n In 1 covering letter, McCloy exs*ined :
11rpayer1 for the opedflc purpooe of "The chief Ara!l)CO. obtnholden with
~ Saudi oil for U.S. def..,.., Jarae .,..,.111onary lnterestt In Saudi
I ,
THE MEl\10 WARNED !Hat "the Arab
negotiators in Vienna have stated that
their govermnents were angered by the
speech or Ambassador (John) Scai ,before
the United Nations. which t h e y
interpreted as a clear expression of
support of the Israeli position,"
RAISING THE familiar cry of
security, .too chairmen pleaded that
"much more than our commercial
interests in the area is now at huard."
The real stakes, they pleaded, were
"both our economy and our security."
Not. king afterward, Ibey joined in
Ulld_ormlol!!gJ!,I!,. aecuri!L.1!1 the MldEd'CI•,____ Eut by cuUing off Saudi oil to American
planes and ships.
I
OIAN61 C:OAIT
DAILY PILOT
/lobm N. Weed, l'obU.hcr
Thoma1 Keevil, Editor
Barbara K rtibim ·
Editorial Pogo Editor
1'le tditmial '~ cl ~ DaitJ
Pilot ~ to bdlmn. ucl stimulate
reedttl by ~ on thQ: ,...
dlvtne f~'on topics or in-
limet by IYndlcatM ClOlwnnists and
cartoonilta, try pnMtftns • fOMll for
naden' views and by pmitf'lt\rc thi9
new1pe,per'1 op4ntonl and id.a. on
cumnt toPtct;"ne tdltottal optn'°'9
o( Oie DUiy PlkM appnr only in the
edl1ortal cdw'nn •t the 1np at the
pqe, Oplniom dpiE-.I by the ,&f..
\lmniltl ucl Qf"IOIJnft and ktter
.~are Uwitown and m~·
mtnt of Mr views tit< 'the D..ilJ
PUot thOuld "' ~
Monday, July 22, 1974
r ' '. ... ,
•
'Still Bad' I
:."
1
Mond'1, Ju" 22, 1974 DAILY PI LOT ? ,
I ·Firemen QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl
I .
'
~ __ , __ ,...._ __ -, .!HAlll.L ~/\lJ£_kR¥J<;..t .._....~~11~ ~l'.-__ P_risonSta6bin _ s i-.·sia]e
• '
:,Stress? Show Decline in 7 Months
~ MEJ AL SCULPlURING n A ~sc-look oiK1 s ..
""""'4,l ~i.t..... Y°" IWOll
You Can do Metal Sculpting t
I
!
WllhHelp '
ONLY 6 TO I< CU.SS
SACRA}dENTO (UPI ) -violence that ·has plagued the violence control n1easures !his CALL 673-6620 ~MiMT
califomia prisons hav~ f!X· instit utions. yeai' with tighter >,•/&!Ch O\'er ..... _...,.,;...;.;..;;...;;.;;.;;;,;;.._ ........ .;;.;.,;;;.;;;;;:;;;~
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Firemen -get Jols of exercise
and keep their weight down
and their cholesetrol low but
they may be greater heart
\itttack risks than fat Insurance
11nderwr1ten cloctorS sa
perienced a "rather ~allfying It !iho"'ed that fro1n Dec. 90Urees or possible \•:eapons
decline" in vloleri1.'e t>ut ~tin 1 .... 19n, to _JulLJP.7j"'"tbcrc .;md mcrlW!CCllril:y ror-aome l=::==::;:;:==;::=::;===========---,....J
Quentln""!tllnt'rtra1n1"! lrdu· were . 118 stabbings In the groups of lnllUlfes. Nearly Evc.-yone ,, "S ress rea ly ma es the
difference," said Dr. Victor
P. Bonfilio. the &in Francisco
Fire Department phystcian.
hie spot, the State Oeparhnenl prison system. That figure 9uthr\e ~1d. all the other
I ,._ prisons ma1nta1ned a \o\v level
o ....., , ectioos says. drop~ ta 98 from Dec. 1, of violence or experienced a L' L
' A report prepared for State 1973, through the end of June reduction as the result of the Istens to anders
lie said firemen have an
a'?'K>rmally, high rate of heart
disease and die of it sooner
lhan most people.
Prison Boss Ra ymond K. 1his year. . e(forts to curb the problem.
Procunnier showed sta.bbings Fatal stabbings "'ere down ----------------------------------'
o._...r ........ s...10c .... 1..... ,,,,_ 11.• .. ld ,,,..,, ........ .
· .. ~lay J sa~~ J 'vp St!ldom seen a lovelier fotru
• •.. er .. return: r.clurn." .,..
L. ltl.. Bo114
Redheads Rarely
Eve1· Get Bald
''THES·E GUYS are
amazing," Boolillo said fn a
r~t inletyiew. "Their
adrenalin is always right there
and ready to flow. Their
cardio va9CUlar · system ls
under_constant stress._ eveo ·
while they're just "Waiting; and
over k>ng periods of time.
"I look '&t a .fireman who's
48 years old and he looks
a lot ·older."·
and fatal knifings h ave from 17 to 9.
droppect overall during the lailit Guthrie tenned fhe drop
seven months compared to the • · r a t h e r g r a t i f y ing"
same period in 1972-73. particularly in light or an
But at San"Queslin and the increase in the pr·ison
Deuel Vocational Institution at populalion from 16,470 to
Tracy, the number of 21,256 during the period
stabbings ju m pa d·. Both studied.
priSOflS are classified. as1 medium to_sJq_se security and TllE RBPORT-°SHOW-C:D.
a r e u s e d to h o u s e •however, stabbings increased
''un-predlctable '' and from 29 ·to 36 at San· Quentin
"volatile" felons, said Philip \vhile the number ,ol inmates
D. Guthrie, assistant director ju~ from 1,842 to 3,236.
of the department -or. At Detiel, stabbings v;ent up
corrections. froln 23 lo 3.S. • '
''Far fr om be in g Because of the problem,
discourage<!, "'e are cautiQusly ,-P_r_oc_u_n_;,_, __ •r_d~er_ed __ ;n_c_re_a_scd_1 encouraged," Guthrie said in 1'~v.,111emcn1
an interview. Do This If
"WE HAD A RATHER FALSE TEETH
subst.anti<il increase in the Drop At Thi Wrong Tim•
prison population but still had MnW 1.-._., will "°" •t thll
THE STUDY. r...v.rted in a decrease in violence he'S81d. '.WT081;U .. ?Adntura~vetan -~ ~-all f lieifi. 1'ASTEETIP Po.., rlvm
Bonfllio a~ \1.ith a recent
study by a University of.
California research t e a m
which compared 90 Lo s
Angeles city firemen with 232
insurance underwriters. All
participant! were bety.·een 40
and 50.
~t e di ca I World News 11ft: st repor t o •t-• ~· .tMdler
maagazine, showed that the California's prisons wa s =~::cl ecuafort, !!•r~
insurance men excelled the undertaken to determine the TEETH :oe... MMli .. Powder.
THE STORE THAT BROUGHT LOWER PRICES
TO THE BEACH AREA
PHARMACY
WE QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE ANYTIME
CHECK THESE SUPH SAU Sf'tCIALS--~. AlKA SELTZER , #25•••••••••••••••••••••••••83~
MURINE . 6 oz.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.09
EDGE Shaving Creams, 7 ot. ••••••••••••••• 1.29
AO.JA, VELVA After Shavd, 4 Oz. ••••••••••• 1.23
·O.-'°"' f'lloO
74'
99'
1.09
1.05
55•
6''
79" n ·
2700 E. Coast Highway at Fernletif, Corona del Mar
• AMPUPAIKINGIHllAI 644' 7575 · -"-t.-t:Jo.,:oohly
• CktwdS-.,.Mlll.....,. -
Not only is June the biggest marriage month, but il
is by far the biggest month ol the year fo r that cosmetic
sutgery known as the nose job. \\lhy is a mystery, but
about a third more nose patients visit their plastic surgeons
I. · he he tth effect of recent measures to ~~ t11.i It .,. -.dial to 1remen m art a , even hnltll. s. ynw d.tili ~-
thoodl they Y.'tre falter. had -'~urb=the __ u.:.p_•.,_rd_s_,P_;,_,_1 _;0_1h_• __ ------------------------~------============-• higher cholesterol levels and -in June tha n in any other month. Or
so a medical specialist repo_rjs.
AM ASKED what word in an ad· •·
,·ertisement tends to attrat;t the most
ettentioq. That's well known. lt's.
"free."
vOtJNG LADY, how many eggs
do you put into your holiday cakes?
The record shows that 1'1artha Wash-
ington customarily tossed in 40 eggs.
Some cakes.
BALD WOJ\IEN
Q. "\Vhat proportion or the women eventua11y get
bald?"
A. About one out or every 20. Tricky statistic .. Doesn't
mean tota1\y bald. Or ju.st a little bald, either. Did I tell
you red-hatred women almost never get bald?
Q. "CAN a rider get kicked out of the Rodeo
Co"•boy 's Association ror fighting ?"
A. 0erinitely. Can get kicked out for writing a hot
check, too.
Q. "DOES Santa Claus go to Japan?"
A. Certain1y, Virginia. They can him Hoteio.sho.
JN FEWER than two out of every _25 marriages wherein
both husband and wi fe are on payrolls does the v.·oman
earn more than the man. ·
1• BASEBALL ·, ·
Hardest single thini,to do in any major sport is hit a
baseball P.taybe you've never heard the proof ol tha t. A
hitter is good if he bats .300, correct? That means he's
successful three out of every 10 tries. If a quarterback
only coMected with three out of JO passes; he'd be
'benched. If a ba.sketballer scored ooly three out of JO
shots, he'd be benched , too. As for bowlers, golfers and
tennis players, if they ooly put the.ball in some appropriate
place three· out of every 10 times, we.II, sir, goodby. Such
wa.S the explanation delivered to me. the other evening J:>y
that onetime. baseball big leaguer Roger \Vifliams. How
does this interesting theory s~ up in soccer, hockey and
jai a\ai?
SOrt1E MEDICAL l\1EN insist the tendency to blush
i.! inherited.
Addrtll tn11I lo L.HI. loyd, l".0, llo.w 1175. N-rt lltKh '1660.
COltyrlthl 1'14 L.M. Boyd
more high blood pressure.
Dr. Gerald \\1. Gardner, of
the University of California at
l<ls Angele!. one of the
scienti~ In the Ia Angeles
area study, noted that the
fireman carries ·a tremendous
load -respirator. helmet, ax
about 67 pounds 0 f
equipment.
"There is a man doing a
tremendous amount of work
under great stress and in
extreme heat." Gardner said,
"\Ve don't know \\•hich is
responsible. but "'e do know
that ·hear! ra tes go up when
a person is exposed to heal
or extreme stress."
Sen. Baker
. -Miglit Run .1
CllATI'ANooGA. Tenn.
(UPll-Sen. Howard Baker
(R-Tenn.), uys he will decide
in the fall of 1975 \vhether he
will make a bid ror the presi·
dency. ~·t mlghl ·JUSl march up.to
New . Hampshire. plact my
name on the primary and
make the run • if l lim
strong," Baker told the Chat·
tanooga News-Free Press.
Baker, vice chairman of the
Scrlate \Vaiergate corrurj1.'?'\!
is married to the daugtrter
or the late Sen. Everett
Dirksen .
• t ; Marines .• J. ·. AcWEATISEMENI '· . . ~ • '
" ( Vnequipped Health News.
There. Are Two Types of Arthritics ·
-You Can Be One Of Them
·, , For Kids • f BURLINGTO N, Vt.
! (UPl)-The Marine Corp s .;Maybe it's time someone cbaure.
\ doesn't have a dequat e spoke frankly about a rthritis." "An arthritic begins lo lole .
• facilities for children. a judge And Dr G c l o c · l l · 1· tl' s lh•t . ary oo. ure, . , 1n eres 1n ac 1v 1e ~ says in uphold_ing the right 'of lhe Couture Chiropractic of· require action. They 'don't get·
• of the Marines to discharge f1ee agrees. around' as they once did.
~ a woman recruit Who becomes A number of individuals ad· "Now. as l've noted," Dr •.
,· pregnant. vise arthritics to 'restrict you r Couture says , "'These con-
t U.S. District Court Judge activities ... relax. take it dllions come and go . · • l James S. Holden ruled that easy ~nd don't weather and lhe barometer ~ Vt'hile if would cause a male use that pain· can be a .factor in bringiq on
Marine distress 'to be (ul joint. And a bOul with arthritis. Qr
separated from. his child, it here ••. ta.ke maybe a go lf game or a
would ·be •traumatic for the lhes4!: pain pil· quickened pace or hard wort: ls.' ''But as time goes by," he baby and its mother to be • , Q u i t e warns; "the attacks become
separated. f --• 1 t 1 He also ruled the Marines frankly." aays more requent anu. as onter.
-_ _,,,uld refuse to allow •,.,_-_,to'j-,,,.:,-'I ·~·or. Ceul•re In .lime, the. condition is Pl'll': '~' ,,,.,.....,<:'::&' dvtce is so imnen.l,y painful." •
-re=-en1 \st. -Dr...., · dangerou• ll M"dCA!ty speaking,. arthri1i!
•
The case \\'3S brought by ~D.C. frightens me. 111ffects a joint because, as
Stephanie Crawford, who .. Face the noted. of an lo.jury, Infection,
.clainled. she WBrS denied due facts. The more an arthritic etc. The joi.nl is then irritated
'process and equal protection restricts his or her activities as there is a decrease in the
under the law because her the more prone' he or she is to blood and nerve. suppl y. The
re-enlistment application was 8 recutTenee of an arthritis at· lli.sucs t~~ be~1n lo har~en
1rejected after she had a baby. tack. And the 'take il easy ' with the .•~f1ltral11?f1 of c~lc1um
She also maintained she was period gel'! longer and longer and the JOlf!l begins 1~ Lighten
dt·scrun· 111' aled aga1'nsl because ·until the person reaches the \IP to t_he p<Knl of freer.in&, , · . -·~This as actually nature s she was a woma n. pomt of no retu,rn. , . tA·ay of compensating for the
The judge said the U.S. "You just sl mply ca?. 1 dig lrritatlon," say& Dr. Coutuie.
1SUpremc Court re ce nt I y )'OW"M!lf out ol a hole, says "by free7.ing or locking the ·
su pported the position thnt lite Dr. Couture. ' . , .. joint to prevent it 1 use and a
military is a ';specialized "And as ror pain killers, comequent further irritation. says Dr. Couture, "the m~ lfowever," he says, "thia ·society separate from civilian •'--"re taken the less e.ffect1ve ..... king I!! itseU res~nsible for life ." ..... .,,. ...... they become and the more a multitude or prob ems.
they must be taken. It's quite .
a vici<lu9 circle," be adds. "I have always had profound
'What causes artllritis?' sympathy for the person· suf·
"A number of causative fac • ferin 11 from arthr.itis,'' s~ys
tors must be considered iri an· Dr. Couture. "Their 11uffenng
swering lhal question." says Is real and t_hey a~e often
Dt. c.outure. The condition can desperate to find rehef. And
be due to an injury sustained there la .• great traged~ con·
earlier in life • , . il could be nected .nth this despera~1on.
as mu c h a s JS years Dr. Couture maint~1n1 of·
previousl y. llcredity may flees 11t the Couture Ch1.roprlC·
share the blame. Jt can be due lie Office, 2043 Westchff Dr ..
\o an lnfection. 1 Newport. Btaeh lcor~er 17th •.
And frequently there is Irvine -nei1r Cocos). Phone
fat.igUe ••• chr01JI C fatigue. I M$o53Xl.
night add,•• say s Dr. Couture .
II
(C) ARS1974
I
••
•
l
• 1sa • size
Our ma in emphasis is on an exercise proqram. especially
designed for your individual needs. Even !hough we counsel
you wit h a dietary progran1 to hel p you s hed Those exceS$
pou nds . it's only par1 of you r physical fit ness needs. A few
pounds will not sh O\V n1uch , but a few inc hes \viii show a
big dif ference. Wit h our modern . space-age equipment
and prolessional supervision, you vo1il l"fi rm up and tr im
down evcrv part ot"vou r body. especially those pla ces thut
need it mos!. You'll be firm , without 1ha1 excess llab .
Before you know it you 'll fin d yourself beautif ully
propor1 io ned. firin. lit and 1r in1. Th en you ca'n abandon
yourself to those lull'urious facilities-Steam. SaunJ, Sun and l~ydro-massage whi_rlpool. Swim n1ing and much 1nore. J<i tw"enty
'
vi sits you n1ay have the re sults you neud. Yo u may \Vant to
r.ont inue. t!i e decision Is your-s 1
Special Introductory 5 week Program
20vlslts•20for2
Th11's $10 per Person
Regular Membership Av.1il.1b le at low Cost, lower cos! on your fir5I visit.
Tnerc arc SEVEN d1flcrr>nl prog1ams 10
cnoo&c lro m lo suit your 1nC1 1v1dual needs.
H~nda~ ~,i ~~~~~Hw~!~88
-c~llt~.
BUENA PARK 510 S. le•ch l oulev•rd, South ol l i1teoln A•enue 12'·0311
OR ANGE 611 l111 ll•lell• Avenue. Wt1t 01 T11111n Avtn111 639·244f
COSTA MESA 21 0 0 H1 1bot l oulev1rd. H1rb o 1 Ctnlt r 549°3381
WESTMI NSTER 6757 Wtttmin1111 Avenue, Westmln111r Ctnler 894-3317
HUNTINGTON BEACH 11585 M•in s :ietl, Mtl,, SI. 11 Be1ch Blvd. 842·1451
LONG BEACH '101 All1n11c Bo111tv1 rd, Co1n1r o l Ca11o ti 426·11174
ENCINO 1 7011 V1n1111a l oul1v1td . Wtsl o l l1lbo• 9116•1330
,
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•
•
8 DAILV PILOT
Talks Sag;
St1·ike Views
\\IASHINGTON (AP l -Animosity
j.'On1inues to plague the labor dispute
1---'i"!'-~l.loJ>al.EllolbalUA'agJM> bell<'.
the 26 club owners and the striking
tllayers.
Another cmtract negotiating session,
Collowing three over the week.end, U
dleduled for midafternoon bu t
f1pparen1ly only the pl.ayers union will
be-there In full force.
The NFL Management Cou n c 11,
\-epresenting the owntrs, abruptly broke
')ff negotiations Sunday afternoon and
-;aid management would not return until
the awleiatlon submits a revised
_>ackage of demands.
1.ieanwh ile, Rep. Jack Kemp, R·N.Y.,
Ormfr professional football pl•yer and
Costa 1'1esa resident. now com_Pleting
ll is 9eCOOd lenn in COngress, says he
is in sympathy with the players on
many grievances they Mve against Na·
Uonal F-D Lequ< owners. ~. "Kemp, speaking here
Sunct.y, ~iffenid with the National
Pootball League Players AssociaUoo. on
!he issue for v.•hlch they struck, the
"freedom" question.
· "I'd hate to see pro football grind
to a halt over that freedom issue,"
said Kemp, who helped st.art the Players
Assocla Uon in the American Football
League and ia credited with the
negotiating Utl_j carried DW)Y of Y!at
1association's gains into the merger with
the NFI... "I dOn't think It would help
the players to ha ve a he market for
,lhcir services among the teams •..
~ "II tho Nallonal F-ll Leep is
Ito thrive and be .t>le to provide high
1salaries, it is in the interest ol the
players to accept some restric:ttons on
the !reedom of their gervioes in the
imdentanding that it allows the game
to be profitable. I think it is an issue
whi ch is very much misunderstood. ll
is Mt th£ right issue over which to
strike:0
Kemp, ror 13 years a quarterback
with the San Diego Chargers and Buffalo
Bilis. said he imagined his statement,
!1.il.ich was In answer to a question
at a political fonun. would anger many
of the players.
"I'm not trying to hurt anybody and
I wouldn't have said anything except
for the question.," be said. "I want
the playcn to make more money and
they can use the Workl Football League
and they can play out their options
in order to negotiate higher salmies."
l\IcGuire Rolls
To ~IV Victory
Not since Costa Mesa's Romie Reif
was crushed six years ago In the finals
of the Southern California P G A
sectionals bas a champioo bad things
so easy.
That's the way it was Sunday at
l\tission Viejo Golf aQd Country Club
in the 50th edition ol. the golf aectionals
as San Gabriel's Paul AfcGuire trampled
Palmdale'• Ron O'Connor, 8 and 7 in
tv.·o rounds.
i\fcGuire. a fonner touring pro, v.·as
four up after the first 18 holu. It "·as the wid est margin of victory
since Reif was belted by Jimmy Powell,
9 and 8 in 1968.
And it was the second most impressive
victory in the past 24 years. In 1950
Fay Coleman defeated Zen Eaton, 9
and 7.
PifcGuire was m the tour fmm 1950
to 1957 and recalls recording a 21 ui
the front nDe at Tucaon In '57.
l---~He,..._logged a 6.1 f;Q!' that ~y~ In 195.i
e 1100 for second in the Crosby toomey
and was on the winning team at the
Ha vana pr~m that same year.
His history of turning in a strong
putting game held up Sunday. "I putted
very ~·ell," said McGuire.
o·eoonor elaborated, "He putted very
\\'Cll. His lag putting was just super.
I drove it as good or better today
than lbe past couple of matches. But
he just outplayed me."
\ ' • -
'·
MOldly, Ju~ l2, 1974
Shades-of a Yea Ago,!
Reds C~o:sing In ·~n LA .
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Ansel" Dod&,.. rw, deopKe their teom'•
-~~L.:lllil ..Yw . ..hlve be<n b*Jnc .... their lhoulden -bock lo l9'1!.
A Happy Lancflng1'
One youlhlul rider in. blcycl~ motocrO&S goes sunny side up after
taking a spill during action last weekend at the Encino, C.lif. Vel-
lodrome.
Rive1·s' River of Talents
Sinks Baltimore Hopes
BAL11MORE fAP} -"~f i ctey
-Rivers, .. says catiiomia Angel teammate
Frank Robinson . "Is going to be ooe
of the most exciting players seen in
23 hits in 50 tripl !or I ,4110 ..... , ••
His' seuon aves:ase-ls up-to'.JM.
a long, Jong time," .
"8Ut this is his. first full year in
the ma)<n,." R~in!loo edded. "He'1 ltill
learning. Even he doesn't realize what
he can do."
Sta,..,. Andy J!.onl'!f 1llond only lour
hits before being rep.iced by Frank
Tanana with two outs kl the seventh,
but ~ ""'" IOlo homtn by Boliby G.rlch, llroolts -..., llld Tommy
' ·Divis. ' · ·
CM.~1.1. 1.1.LTWO•• 1'faybe not . but the BatfulJore ~. Mr •rM • , .. ,..
----JI aware of the ewif't Center-11:1 ...... c:r s 3 • • ••1r,tf • • • • """"' ITQI. .OMlk,:111 •r $ J,f Oricll.a I I I 1 flekler's ta!Mts after losing to the st...-, rl • 1 1 TDtm, dl'I • 1 2 1 . nd ' · ltClillWr,lll\' l I 2 IEWllll1"", 1111 I I I f An(els, 6-4. Su ay. _ ., ... !!Mii.,.. • , 1 .. , ...... , • .t 2 1
Rivers had three doubles am •'tingle 'V•i.rtitle.lf I •• •ltebl-.a ' l 1 I _, ~ lhree ru••. incl•-'••• . the L ..... If ' . • I O f\llltr", If • O t O auu "'-vta& '"' ..,...'6 IA_lloud,11 I 1 l Etdltbr!\.c I 0 0 I t~ in the ninth i:rlklg (ll a ...... lb ' I 2 0 ........... I 0 0 t EtM, < l 0 t MdQtly, ' I t I I medium deep sacrifice fly to Robilllon. ~"' , , , ••~, , , , ,
"It's bard to •believe .he bit McNatly ~~~P~ : : :
11.ke that " said Baltimcft ~· Earl T.....,.,' 0 t I .., .-c-: Toht. 31 11-5 ..... - -U . < 6 < Weaver, who lifted starter Dave 111y. after Rivets ,.,.:_,eel the ntntb -wltli a-c111fWlllli "', in 1n:., ~r-· ••Ill~. , lip.-.. Oii 11~ I double. "Maybe-lie'• goOlr tc>bo ,_..,, · ~,
I tim --Orlo1-· :-..a..ed ·•-McN9ftf. lot-Cl""""• '· ••1t1-s. The 00 Y ,e u111: ._ .n:w' is~'"""'-'"""""'· •• .,...., T. or.-11. Hll:-Grlcfl Rivers ... when Om Baylor need OJI, •• ....._ {I), T, Ohlt (Sl. $-1«:1111,
into the left field· comer to prevelit Et.n. Sl'-1', 11:--.
another .--U In lhe 11eVentll.
Rivtn abo was rolJbed of • appamit
safe steal al home Jn the ~ '!'Ping
-.hen Bob ·rntv..---with the
pitch as he raced tonnl lhe plate.
. "Micl<ey has hid hla upa 11111 downs,"
Robin9on said. "Sornettme9 he goes
tittoolh Maks when he -·t make run ... al hi! speed. Wbm' he· oo..,
he make. things happen."
Ho-'T•-.rw. '-lO McNlllf1 IL, t-11 ··~· Hll'~ iMcNlf!r T-21:11, A-1 ~
.. .,,,
"'' • ' •••
• • • ' • ' " ' • ' qtlYV.
•
... .. ..
' ' • ' • ' • ' ' ' • '
W,.-MtNlll)'. .
A yeu •rol the Dodsen led the
Na!Dwl I.all"' WMt by 1% pmes
at the All-Ur pme -k, but loot
tht t...s llld the dlvillon Dag to
Clnqlmall ..
'Simdly the Dodgers ettaclt f>Uled at
the pl>te and, with some flll< fielding
by Philadelphia'• All·atar shomtop
lArTy Bowa, the Phil& beat Los Angeles
2·1. With thM, the Dodgers' lead over
the Red1 dropped to 5\-2 games.
Twelve mcxltha ago the Dodgers had
woo 1.1 games. Today at the All-star
break they hive U triumph.!. Sunday's
1-prompted many ,.,,. .. r.pe.a t the
oft·l10ed phraae: "1lley'r< going lo blow
it."
But Bowa doesn't think the' noq.n
will blow It thb year and Dodgers
monar<r Wak Alslon thinb his men
will """" out al the •lump.
"We haven',t hit the bell with much
authoritY theae daf'," sakl Altton after
lria teom 1J>1 Jua ~ve hitl. "I'm sure
the -lhoukl help rma everybody." The Los Angeles lead could be 7%
or 3~ after the nei.t NL actlm Thursday
evening following the break. The Dodgers
travel to Houston fer a doubleheader,
their final .nduled twin bill of the
sea900. 1be Reds are In san Francisco
for til."O pmea.
A granite -tough Jim ~ limited
t.os Angeles to live htts Sunday.
Dave Cash's error and Bill Russell'•
l'WHCOling Cngle in the aecond inning
gave the Dodgen: a 1..0 }eed but then
Looborg kept the Dodgers In check.
Mike Andenon's homer off kiier Al
Dolmlng; M, and Wiilie Montanez' run-
produc.ing single m the eighth gave the
Phils all the """ they needed, llld
got. .
Thing• started unluckily lw Los
Angeles in the first inning. Davey Lopes
doubled but he v.•as Sill there v.·ith
two outs when Joe Fergusm smashed
what 1_.,.i lo be I run-sewing liner to lei!. . .
Bowa made a remarkable diving catch
al the ball belon! K hit the ground
lo end the -.. Looborg, 12-9, didn't allow a fly ball
unfil the ninth lnnlnr, when Fergll300
slammed one to center.
PMILAHLPML& LOS .vt•ILIS .. , .... . , .....
DCtlf\.2' 4 1 I I '-"""-211 3 O I O -..W., 11 3 I t I 9\ld;f191", Ill • O t O ~.,.,. • • 1 • Wynn.cf • 0 0 0 Mlftft_, 1• I t l 1 rW"fWOI\. C .t O t 0
0 1-. tt "' 1 t t WC:rewfltd, rf J o 1 t 9~'*"1.d • 0 I I c..y,a J I 1 O a-.1; ______.. I 1 I ....._.., J o t o
MAllll..._, rf J 1 2 I ltUMlll\, 15 3 O 2 1 ~-~ •• 2 • ~.. ' 0 0 ·-......... 0 0 •• ,._,.,.._ ... l 0 • •
Mllrwll,p o o o o Tot•ts :D 210 2 T"'* Jt 1 i I 1'1'111...,..,lt ., .. 011)-2
Lo. ...,..... 010 -JI»-I 1!-0 . C.111. OP-P'~lladtlph./11-i, I.ft A6ofl• 1.
lOl-Plll,...flJllt·I, YI Anee!• A. Jl-l ..... -Hlt-M. Aadfflln (JI. Sl-JlutMIL S--hft.
IP M It Ill 99 IO
I j I 0 2 • 7 2/J • 2 2 2 3 111 ·01001
1 2 0 8 0 I
Dtwi11111 (Mont1M1), T-J:lS. A-
In the thin! inninl Sunday, Rivers
beat out a tapper down the third ~
line for a bit. raced to.third on McNally's
wild Pick~ft attempt. and ICOreid on
I wild pitch. After doubling lo lllO ninth.
Rivers· movM to third oo a tut *'elf:
by rookie Dave OJalk and ICCftd C!I\
the 81<rilice fly by -·' ,Qmfii took """'1d on lhe play at Ibo plote
~layers, F ru1s Surprised ·
Over Mathews' Ouster
'
and scored on a tingle by Joe Laboud. An.ANTA CAP) -Tbe.Allanta Bra\·es
The •Y-Robinson, r<9led -becln the -.di today for 1 manag<r playing 1 twt-aigbt do 1.1 b 1 e he ad er to .....i...... Eddie Mathew's, -was S.lun!ay, bolted fur OllV<r who htd ,.,,_..
U'IT .......
THE PHILLIES' BILL ROBINSON OUTLEGS A SINGLE,
Sports In· Brief ..
Rams' Veterai1s Picket;
'
I
Smith, Riessen Collide
LOS ANGELES -Rams ' veteran' to iro \v:ith earlier cards o( 73. 72 and
hil the picket lines here d e s p i 1 1? 74 for a second-place money of ts,eoo.
aS.'IUrances las l week Uicy v.w ldn 't do Hls fou r-<lay total of 290 bettered
it. Scotland's Sam Torrance by a stroke.
About 15 Los Angeles Rams and five 'nle 21-Y.ear-old Scotsman -ballooned to
representatives from other Nation·c~,,-....,,,°"five-over par 77 on the final 18 •
Foctball League ,quads working -out in earning $5,300.
the area began picketing t he Rams'
training camp Swlday afternoon.
Team owner Carroll Rosenbloom
l'tfPOOded to the boyeott by accusing
NFL Players Association chief Ed
Garvey of using "dictatorial ?)\Vers."
'1t's obvious Garvey has dictatorial
powers and the players believe they
have no choice but to follow ,','
R011eObl.oom ccmmented Sunday .
The picketing eount«ed a decision
by the veterans that they would refrain
from picketing because to do so would
draw ltlenUoo away from the real i!!Sues
of the players' strike.
e Chlca90 Finale
0-UCAGO -No. I seed Si.an Smith
races Marty Riessen tonight in the finals
of the $50,000 QJicago International
Festival of Tennis.
Smith needed a victory In a third-set
lie-breaker to get past Eddie Dlbbs 2~.
6-2, 7~ Sunday and into the rtoals for
the $9,00 Ofirst prize.
Riessen downed No. 4 scl'd Dickie
Dell, M , S.2 in the lleIIUfinaJs.
... Broliam~ Sliarp
CLEVELAND -Jack Brohamer,
appa~Uy out of a mld·91!8SOfl slump,
singled three times In three appearances
at the plate for Cleveland Sunday, but
the Indians dropped a 6-3 American
Leaaue baseball iame to Oakland. Brohamer's average had dropped
. nearly 60 points. but he'• now hitting
near the .1.80 mark. Brohamer, a: second
baseman, Is a graduate d. Jlwttington
Beach High School.
e Campre9her Wins
LOS AiVGELES -M a r i n a High
graduate Tony Campregher, a l~year-old
Mudent at Cal State floog Beach), shot
a final round 70 at Rancho Park Sunday
~o win the L<is Ang'eles City golf
championship.
Campregher·s fou r-day total of m
was aeven strokes under par and four
shots Detter than sccmd place Mike
Haney.
driven In two earller califomia runs=~· ---111.f'f.il QJnday after his team dropped
-"When the game Is on"'the itne, yw t.-1"'"1!.....,_,tlve:}lfr!\e-:;--
put your money player In," tn1111ger The dltmlal ahocked DOI only
-e lacldl• TrlumpllS
Randy Karcher of ,Huntington Seacliff
~-as fifth with 288 and George Studen
of · San Clemente tin I shed !e<:ond tn A
£light with a score of 268.
Dick Williant3 !II.id when asked about . MatheWI, whole team camplled a 50-49
the mo\"e. "There's no one on our club mld-eeuon record, but his fa111 and pl1ym 11 well.
like Frank Robinson." "It was a ?»ow' U. me," said borne "All I wanted to do," Robinsoo said, "wu to put the ball in play sornewhert, run kt~ .Mery A.arul, a lmgtime teommate al M1tllewa. preferably in the air." "Why did ,,_ •-hi • H ' Ill Rivers, who had played in 131 ca.mes .. -1 i-1111:1 m · e I e
in fOur previous partial !leaSCN with best manapr we'ft had," said an angry
the Angels, is on a bot 1 t r e a k uf fa~ Ali.ta CcmtitaUon sport9 editxr
MA.L.\10, Sweden -Britain 's Tony
Jacklin, who e!ltablishcd a course record
6.S 1n an ear1ler round , can:led a three-
over por 75 Sunday, but still breezed
to an 11-stroke victory in the $'70,()!))
Sctndinavian Open.
Jacklin. lbe leader aft.er all four
rounds, fash ioned a 72-hole total of 279
and pocketed the winner's purse or
$11,000. It wa!I his first victory in a
major tournament in 18 months.
e A:lecs In l'lctor11
LOS ANGELES -\\'Ith just nve
game!! remaining In regular season play
and a 17-point lead over the.Ir nearest
pur!!uers. the Loa Angeles Aztecs appear
tG have cinched a'"North American Soccer
Lea/!Ue. playoff berth. .
Lbs Angeles defeated Toronto, 2-1.
Karl, Haynie Triumph
wn:ice: "You can't· fire 25 playen, m
In -D yw t1ro the 1111nac<r. What
lbe er.--11-.... ,,..,.... ...
---~ tali dlanbu1 v.'hen 9ravt11 ~ fJnllidml Eddie -·came to hit olflce lltor Attlnla
dnlppod I ~ decision to Pl-..p
SundlJ 'llld aid, "rm go1nc to dlu'lo
Joae Canlza..,. al !>pain, playing 11eady
golf throughout, ftred a final-round 71
Sunday to move Into command In the
NASL's \Vestem Division. And the three
rivals of the Aztecs all have only Jour games left lo play.
Dying Father Gets Wish
-a ...,_-Eddie." _:.__
"He· tGOk It Mke a man.'' Robinlon
rommentod liter. ,
"It WU a' lhOck," admltted ,Madwra'I,
who toot oV« fmm Lmnan Kln11 In
August. 1972. '1 dldn~ have 1n lnkllng
this wt1 PC to happen. But tt'1 O¥tr
and done wtth. I'm ture it wun't done
"' the 'PU" al lht lllOIMll. .
"When )'OU don't Win, )'OU don't ttay
al"Ollld loo~" laid l\lalhtws, ,,._
Braves ftrU ftttb in the National
1 ...... West I )'tlT ·l(o lritll I 7U5
reOOIV.
USSR, Italy Win in Tennis
By Tbe A1soclattd Pre1s
The. Somt Union and Italy mO\·ed
jnto the !lnals of their rt&pectl\'t Oavts
Cup zone competlt.ioM, but were ~·allin1
today tor lhelr opponents.
Taimur a7. Kakulia, champion of the
1973 Student Cflmea, gave the Soviet
Union an ln9urmountable 3-t lead In
'the best-of.fi ve rnalch semifinals with
Vu,roe:Javla Sunday. Kakul\a scored a
;,
6-2, &-4. 6-0 vldor)I over Yu..,1av1a·1
Boro Jovanoic.
Meenwllile. the Soviet Union'• -l
ln the European Zone B flnllt was
to be decided tod_, 11 C~lovakla
and \\1est Cennany wtre tied 1-2 after
Sunday's. action. •
Jan Kodcs of S;,ecl!Mlova kla defea ted
Karl f\feller of West Germany· e-1 , 7-6,
&-0 to forge the tie ... 1
McJnwb.lle, Jtaly IM!Pl Jll way Int o
r
EDDIE MA THEWS
'1Per90llally I thought he dld a beck
of a job," said Aaron, who together
v.1th ~tathcws teamed to crack oo t 863
tnrne runs ~hile playing together, a "'°""' thal still stands.
Allthews 11.lammcd. out 421 of them
ml d..00 hb 11-year major league
career wtth 512, ending up "'i th HOUlt«I
and Dctrolt befonl retiring in 1988.
11We v.-ere not playing good now but
n bad been playing better than. in
tht put," said Aaron . "But it'a thetr
Mil ctub am they CIR do what they
want to."
'nllrd battman Darrtll £,•ar. aaid
Mathews ·•wu the falresi man•aer I
...,. ployed under. He lttaled overyblcty
aa a man -maybe: tome of U3 oawdn't
bindle il. II
Robinson said M' Interim ma:napr
1":>Uld be named within a rew dal's.
"I wanted Eddie lo have a good allot
at ii," said Roblmton , "and r think
he bH had I good shot. I think hi~
years Is a good 1hot.''
As Son Meets . Reds, C1ibs
CINCINNATI (AP) -seven.year-old
Andy Allen got more than his dying
father's wish for Andy to see a big
league baseball game. lie also got to
meet the players.
Andy'• fathat"-is Air Forco ~1aj. Johrt
R. Allen . who ls suffering from tennlnal
cancer at a military hospital in San
Antonio, Tei.
"You'll want to sec Joh.My Berfth,"
Allen said he told his !IOfl.
The boy, who has llvcd until recently
in Cffnnany. a!lted: "Who'! he?"
"Yoo'll find out ," the lllber .. id.
Andy w1111 broU&ht 10 Ctnclnnt li's
R.l\.'ttfroRt Stadlllm Sunday by rtl1ti,·~
fN>m Cohnnbul, and he •"II mol with °""' mn• In tht Rodi' fl<IOl office.
The tow-headed boy'• ''" brlghtened with awe as he was taken onto the
fltld to meet lhe Red• and ..... or
the Chlcoao CUbll bofore the ~•me.
Manager G«>r1• '"Sporl<y' Andmon
put his enns around Andy and lntnxluced
him 19 lh• Reda, includlni Johnny Bench
and Pete Rc>se. Andcr&OO even took
care of the boy's at.1totraph book.
· Then Andy end hl9 party were put
in seats down front for the game.
Allen. 37. has ca~r of the colon.
"l''s a solid tumor," he said from
his hospital bed. "t've got maybe two
months," said the veteran of HIS
reconnaissance missions in SOulheu t
Asia and v.i mler of the Distlnsuilhed
Flyilll! Q1laa in Vle<Mm.
Allen ~ -a patient It WllfOl'd
Hall Air Force Medical Cenltr. He ukl
Andy took up baltbell earlier this year
In Gtnnany where Allen Wiit statloMd
whtn the cancer w&1 di!ICOV<lrtd.
AUen coached the team dt 8J)ite hls
'""'"· Andy played the ooUield. The team lo.i.t evtty game, but. uthey
gave k everything lhey Md ." ,.id the
lather. Allen la to _, be airlifted
to \Vright-Patterson Air Force 8'1e ·
hospital a< Daytoo lo he """'r his
famil y, Including his wife, Donna, Andy
tnd douahler Krlsly, 8.
l
'
-< I
I
'
' • • ' ..
DAILY PILOT 9
·Irvine's • ..
--
Miller 5th
ID) Diving
I Have-No-Regret--=-· ,___,G~r·d, Ne~
----~ ---Soccer
Says UCI's Mill~r Standings
1be Senlk Rustlers moved-wl'lf'le!"~ Su nday, stroking an
to within 1 \i games of rbi sing le in the first Inning
Metr.opolltan Baseball Lea P.ue a'11 scortn, ·the tie-breaking
leader La Fonda Sunday run In the siXth frame to
aftem>on with a 4-2 triump~ give his mates a 3"2 edge.
over the Cypress Charger.i at Joe 'Ronquillo came through
Golden West College. with lhe clutch rbi base rap
-1 Irvine resident Sue-Mlller;-1--1~
a University High student,
..,.. _,11,. 1 The Rustlers (9-4) are even in the sixth to plate l\1acauley. .....,.. oiw.:-" ~itb La Fonda -( 12-4 I In the -----'-----
finished fifth In the women's
hlgh platform event at the
By STEVE BRAND
OI IM Dtltr Pllll Sltfl
• a llUll«ior mark would be ,......,. '; ~ Tl 1.:· ";: ~~ loss column in their drive for OS
/llrlher -thin In .,... '"'-'" ' ' ·'" a 11 the tiUe JOE CARL
One , year ago Len . fl.ti,ler IC,'biol but tblt'• not t ';, =~::~ .. \.U,. := B :; John ·Macauley paced the PLUMllHG CO. 1---Lo.s';'; A n a e I e s Invitational ·vlng-champlamhlps Sunday
at Los Coyotu Country Club.
Twenty•year-old Anaheim
--SPORTS -had to ma~ a decision. Uher ........ bellt tbletel 't= • i!~-O---~tr;_;"""i-Z--tJ-' .. wo "1
His choices we .. : • · •-. 1 !!!" . §'-"' -1-1-Hl-J!• ,._ -~·-.-dedkote<i. I • I '-• 548 5558 I. Stay at Laguna Beach ........ .._ UJ ....,. .J-..· • • 1...ik ."...,.. 01 •
High where be had built a ta~•~.". julC. be more ~.5!!'"""' ·!: l •1 :: ff ff =::i.~'. /' •: : ~ ,~ 1~~t~U::~m
track and neld program which -·-H:Z-1 I ! .:tl:J N ~ Hiid-. c l ~ J :
appeared a year away from MWer cHee: 1tvtnl l'IUDDI """91111~. : ~ ·• " =~. 11 ' 0 ~ ; leplec....t the CIF 2-A title. he't ' -I I J' tk......,.., ,•,' :~ o o I' .....
reaident Kit Salness, a student
al Cal °Stale <Long Beach)
won the plaUorm event with
307.50 points, two ahead o(
Enlko Kiefer of Montreal.
Mi ller had a total ol 274.9$.
Alamitos
Entries
. hippJ' .in 1 bil1 CWNllt ' = .. p~lef ·-lt--..llro'. f~ I I ()w S,.cWfy 2. Leave for an assistant --..ltJon. .• , ' • ce1ifltmt• 11 JKk-'1Ji. ~=i'. ': • 0 g : track coach's job at UC ...--• .. 1 1rm1,,._.., 1ori •• , ,, 0 0 0 o "for• Wet.r........,. ·A
I ' "First ol aD lt'I been a CNelie9 "' .-.i-:i Or-.o. ' o e o e clwll ..-A 1eMri 'iJr Sfytit -Mexican Olympic brotue
medaJi9t Car!Os Giron ,
graceful despile a severe
upset stomach, won the men 's
high platform event.
fVJne. • • ,,.,....,.,.. 9-TOflll l3 • f ) After lltudying all the pros poeiUve ezperitDce o:.chl'W ..::,:r..z.•• a1 P11111m1J11111 !MtloMt kw9 ~ ,_,.. ~
11
, ...i F.-II•• QWicll Sft'•k•
and cons he went to UC Irvine. with Bill Toomey," ht ~ c~ !M!w!J":.,• 1,. p.m. ~=: I: Jo~1 :i:=J : / ..... "JM""' OW"
nie 21-year-old student ·at
College Industrial de Mexico
scored 487.IJ points for an
easy victory over young Kent
Vosler ol Columbus. •
However, the 18-year-old
Vosler, a ne"'Ncomer to
intematlonal diving, put on
a stunning d1splay to finish
second, ahead ol s u c h
veterans as the defending
world champion, Air Force Lt.
PhU Boos, U.S. Olympl~n. Davkl S"iish and two-time
ddending AAU champ Steve
McFarland.
LM AlalWIMI ll!ltfrMt ... ,_..., (IMf, Tr.ck ,.,,. •It'll ,.., J:CS
··~ 12 ll!alet• ,.trtf ltaa. U Ind••
6fll. ltll ... "" It-
''"' •--«JO . y1rd1. 2 y11r old ~idtflf. '"u•M '1100 Judoe Hand ILIClfMm) MOOl!flre !Ad•lrl No SH Sonot !Mvttt) Tllfl 1kn1 (W1IQr) Glorl1 IOU!ld (Smll!ll P1ur Sc•len 10,..wrl
0-i..· ""'""'° (llroal!.1J Tl'lol Old Goel l MorJdl DHtrt T .. IRkNrdl)
T .. 1 Jet (ICnfVllll
m
"' '" '" '" "' '" m
"' 1n
S'-ll\111'1 Sam CW1rd 121 ,. ... '1r"'
Az11r1 A11!1 ... (M.,.._ 122 Think Gokl (Cr""°") nt Cut COPr {C•rdo1'l l lt s.c.. ·--350 .... ,... 3 ,,.., olds .. UP. Flllle.. .. Mlrft C!ilml1111. ......... $2800, Cl1lm]1'>9 Prl(I IJOOO
Arltone Gold Olis! IDt1.,-.,.l lit ltkk1tt1 .... , (Smflfl) lit Shamlll {W1rd) llf ICk ll>U 0""'1 {G1r11 ) 11t
C•nd'f'.t t rinket (lletib) I ll Hint 1 Note (~lr) lit
Tllll'll 1tac1 -5" Y•nk. 3 ,.e1r
f --L.--l>ldl & ueo. Allowlfl('.t . PurM S2200 Vosler, just a r-.:u1 ... n at Dff9 Tonia 1c.0011l -i n
Ohio State. .~ '"."n P1l1to'1 ••• CAlcMrdtl ln '30.."Ul~ '1'11;1"" Mr, Mlln 81r lWllSOfl) ltz -'•'· more ••--six· ...;0 •-TOP ltulef" fLlpti•ml 11t. ....... ,"l, UICUI t"" "l Gan1ln (-ty !Smith) . 112 ahead::t Boggs. 'n\e youngSler SPiii' City (Hert) lit · Wonder How l lenkt l lU bad wn great promise in .._. •--110 v•rth. , ve•r hJgh school but his coolness olds .. !IP. Clelmlno. P\JfM WOO. Clel;tnltlo "rice 110.000 under the pressure of. a major sN-lMvt", 111 N1llw Twitt fllpfiltt'fl) lit meet 1WaS encouraging. "' Goin, -111enk•l 112 ClllH a.r ISmlllll lit Boggs' performan"ce Ntmno IKl!IQlltl -112 Kl111'1 ltestw CRlcNrdtl llt Saturday was perhaps the """" •--sso v•rdt. 3 ve•r highlight ol the meet. The .id• &-~. AU-1nc1. "urM UDOO TOii Mesler {Wtlt;.,) Ht 25--year-old computer .analyst ''""'°' 1Me1•1 112
at the Air Force Academy • ?;'Y~JP!~l-) lJ: --• ••• 90 · •· I Go for Two Slftllhl · 11t ~VI CV -· pl)ll1Lll or a TOWMmM s rip, (Cr1....-J lit world record in an 11-dlve· MldnlQ111 8":kY cwerd) 111
pr! boa...i •:.: Meet Sldfl RKI -350 verdL 2 veer S ng 1u compeuuOll. old1. Cltlml119. Purse 12000, Cltlq:1l11a
director Peter Xiques said r~~~I= (Mylftl 112 n,...,,....• near-'ect routine Gor-.i1 Louie £Adtl•I 1n ~ ""1"''' J\ldfack (ltimtr111J llt showed that he must be Pein'• ltodltl IWIHterl 11t
he lu Cobr1 Dick (Or ...... ) 1 It reckoned with in t ture. Altmllot Ctmeo 1aroo1u1 11t GafT!e C1111y (LIPlllmJ lit
Aftulll lfl 5ulllllv'I two fll\lll l'l'ttlll lt-l Option fClt'r!IM) 112
Today he hasn't regrejted the "He's given me tbe freedom
decision. . ' -.":..':*: .... ~"'" "It's tough Jo leave a to be creative . 'lhe AttM!lk "'" ...
SU<."Celll6lul program," he says, cormudcadna between u 1 Phi......,, ; ~ ~~ ••
"but in this case I had a -hu been perfect and be'• let =:-11 l1 :~~ ,tt~
chance to help build a winninf!'. it be mown he's appreei.&led ,..,,.. v1111: ' " .m 1•
program from the ground LEN MILLER my ellor1a. D11n11 t•n,~ ~ .m fl ..,,,.,...,. 1t II .65S Vo
0«.I ~-11 and he "l've enjoyed tbe cont.:t ,.___. '' 11 .N 2 "I ove l:llA enges re with atbletel. lftd .... ...._ T--..111Mii. " ,, .Joll '
was a major challenft"e." week. Don't fora~. this year from ICf'l1fb. -·~ --. .,......._
He bnmedlately noted some 1 still taught at Lagtma Beach "At _ ~:• ... '--11 ••• ..., ,..... '"*"' " ,....._ __...... '"' lll'Htt II 11 ,,:It differences between the high High. _1....,. be ·~. but ..__ ...,., ......,.""' · 11 12 .su ,'
hool and ll ck d . II ha u ""'&".. QIUU uc:n:: ~-,.~..... 1' ,, .~~ sc co ege tra uties Mi er s recen y slgned have polttlve, ..,,.I-oriented CMc.ee9 12 11 .-•Vt
for a coach. oo as a full-time inltructor people from the t b I t I ~ '•111,-'1'i"' .sn "In high school, you're at UCI and believes he'll be a e .c ,...,. ..... " nAi.r. ,, u .m ,.~
trying to sell the sport to on the 12-hour, seven day a dlrecior all the way down ~ ... ~ '! ;r .Jl7 ~
a youngster. You're not week grind. through the COldM!I and. ·222
competing against anyone," Miller al!O sail he had to ~·to the equipmeot .~~.4'.t'!<,=:'a1o 1•
.. ys Mille'r. ad)USI. h1S. I h . k I g man. '"""'"""' n, ,1or1dl lt
"'eJlmioan .... ~ __'.~. n ' Mlller,.bf coune,J1 neptlV•-=!~;='n" "In college, the coaching ... -e ........... UUWUI.. only ·when dllCUIS'"'• lbe .....,. ,,,,..... "' responsibility lsmore "For example," r.e says, ""Ii 1"lMktliM
extensive, espeeiaJly in the "you'd think the runner by recu"'d, where UCI won Jutt ~:,:::~Ml~J' of I · nd fund the lime he -ii.... two meets. C111~ n. Goldlfl ~,.,, 21 areas recru ting a got to ~e "RelJitUcally, that'1 not ,,. ..... .., ... ~1 ... -1..,. ratsing wouldn't need as mu c b ''Her~ you have to be a coaching. That's just not true. bad," be ays. "But With the ti~ o.w.. w.. Tw1111i.e111111o
recruiter. You seek out the "Tbe athletes still need people we ba.ve coming in, 1 t"~~.~ ~11
thoroughbred because yoo just sectllity, recognition and I· bmntly ·~ ·•11 hew , ...._ ;..";~ ~
can't get by without them. ~UQIL.a_t the collece_Jevel. -the talent to wm (lUl' NCAA Gelfllfl Gdlrl ., '"""'Yen
-"I'd put in I 12..00W -daf ',I'heY need ind act u .a 11 y ~: .!::-t~ I ,a=: ".;.,~'~,,,,... a1
at Laguna Beac:ti,.·flve d.ays demand a d isc lpl1n.e,d "TheNo.2.pallltoCl'fllte·. a week. Now ii s an eight program.
hour day but seven days a "You'd think an athlete with 8 flDIDCially atable program which will· .. _. 10 fUO-<lde
Cornets Breeze, 9-4;
Saints Stiimble, 4-1
tcldantUps a year. Tbe
NCAA limit· b D In 1'77 iail
rteently, UCLA gave 315, but
10 """1d be0 ~ r.. ...
.....
'" """· Lot Af!Qelll 1n1tr11all0Ml IClrlrlltl CC•-) lit
lflvl1111GMt Diving Chltnplon"'IS-11 John'• •--Y (Cerdou) 112 Costa Mesa's Come•n ____, ~ Coyot• COUfllrY Club: s.-ttl ·--150 Ylrd$. ' w1r L;l """"~ rbi aptece.
""nle· .third • pl is to
establiab ... UCI .t: is the . floett.
di!laDoe -.tni -I In Ille
natloll. ,,.., fl DO ·questioo
lbafK will ha-. ·
. Mlllq"1 <DJfldeDcie is hued .v..n•1 llloh pl.rform -l. Ctrlol olds • Up. Allow....ce. Purse "*'· · in all but two innings St.rday
Glrot1, Ml•lco City, 47.lll, 2. ICMt 6 TN Sp.clrt 51'11P -AM\111 No. in rou"-lhe Santa Ana
\tosl9r, ColllmOUs, ...... 4 l. Lt. Phll c---C•-I 1 • .,., ''' -.. ._., U.S. Air Fort• Ac•Oenw • .ta.llS. ._,,.~ ,.. Hornets " .. · n.... ..... r-.... ., O.vld au.ri, 0.1111, 431.20. s. s-sp1;1 T .. !H•rll llt , ;r,, 111 .., • ..,16e'-'IW"y
llo\(FtrlM>d, t>rtl...,sllY o1 Mlt ml, al.a:;. L0¥9 CIM~1w-1 llt Amateur •·-bail .i.n-....:n•:-6. o.rw Mdnrv ... EUOlflt, Ore., JIO.IJ. Nol.Mii• Too Ctrdclrt) 117 ~ ~MIUUll
Wonwi'• 111o11 p1e11crm -1. Kit ~~~~'f:r'~1 l~ action at TeW'mkle Park.
St f,..1, Alllhllm, J07.JO. 2. Enlko H ... lo Ft N .. to (.f.4tlr) lit $ d d 1~·-k 1C1-. Mont1<N1, JOS.u. s. Susie ·-•-_ uo Ytt'ds. s _.., a ~ , meanwhile, 1t1t1c:tds, Utlc:Oln, ,..., Bf.15. J. .....,, .,,.-,.,. .1......-.wt a no1~ ~.,~ the
The victory keeps Clolla
Mesa two games off Garden
Grove's pace with lliD two
games remaining, between the
two in loop battle.
Bob Fee tripled in the fourth
inning to pl,ate the ooly ·-· L-Bft<h, ,,,, ... 5 S!ll ~':.k. ~~"""'· """'" Sll'OI. Ciemlng .... ....,..,... U I uo;ll.UIU
M11J1r, rrv1,.., t 74.t5. '-G.,or• 1Ct1t1<, llettv L .. l id 1,,,..11,1 1j7 Anaheim Pirates when the Saddleback tally. His blow
Mon1r111, m.os. ---"''" .. ,,a. io.i...1 ',,•,1-1atterdealt the Sahu a 4-'1--came-with Rick White aboard. \t1tley Buu \"..,..' 111-scrip cr1eger1 122 lesson al Brookhurst Park in The next actkn for Q)sta :.,~r.~rzr~) ll~ Anaheim. Mesa and Saddlebeck ts f~ N .~'A~L~-' -In 1be Comets had-an-easy~ _Eriday: nigbt_at 1:30 when
on one majlw Jl"!Dia. u11mer.~~.. 1 .
"I've alwl)'I· believed and "~. •ecllldW 1 will contDle,Jo . belttVe· IMt t:°".iw t::e:"" 1 . there II JDDl9" lblil _ enoucb CNU.. .. I. 1
la,_,_. In so.-n..1....._·,. N.W 'YW'k 2. S.."'9~ llCla ......... '\,•1.11unai. Wllfl!""'1! 1, De!!v1< 0 to wtn ·an •. N-CAA u.""*"'t.T•O!M•
cbampionltdp."" • ' T ......... ._.; • Winllr •~ • (Welt G«rMnyl "Yoa don't blvt· to p oUt at SI. Lllll1,,=.,.."""l-
of the .tate·rcoaotry. -We"n: 1w1e11 ., ~
-~nn. GW·---'''-"' in Mltml "' _..,, "''If"'--.. • ...... ~ \t•--.. .. Orange Comty bec:au1t we w ..._... et '""" ""I the laleot it. there and'--==-~_, __
Rare .· Pleasure
W? found a way to bottle it.
To end the day.
or to ftar11he evening.
To $hue with friends at .
a pa11 y or with a friend, aloM.
The i»Y of Scol~od.
Dislllled ud brou&ht ID
pttfcction m every bottle
of JAB Rare Scolch.
• ;
i
t
' ' J41 • i l RARE . SCOTCH I JL".slulNI AlllO'.JD -"" l ,f!M/f ~;..,,,,,,.,,, I • Deep Sea
Fish Report
~::.,~~11.i"f:::.~!1 H: time ol it with Mark McMillan the two collide at Anaheim's
,....... •--400 vtrds. 1 ve•r leading the way with two Brootdlurst Park. r:..:-~w~d" $l700 1tt safeties and three rbi. ~W'.JJ."'S:::~· cU::r1 lY In addition, former Orange e.--n. er'~ ~11 .~
we.have lots to ollr:i." -i.~'~"t:'.' (:i= tt'a obviaus one year-.ner -;:;'";;~;:"';;:;"~' ~";;v;·;:-:;;;-;:;==;;;;======================; ~ leavlnl< Lall""!!-Beach. illgh. J
11 r111 Len Miner 11n'.t eveo casting
.• '
DA•A WHA•~ -,.. englitn: m
c1llco blU, lt barr.cud1. t.I bonito, 15 h1llt1U1, 11 y.ttowt111. » rcs:k
COd'. no m.ck1<t1.
SA" "IDID C'-1fllfllllll -ll:J 1110t.r1: 7 '(lllOwi•ll, 3 btfr1eud1,
21 bonito. UJ c•llco 1>1u. It.I Mnd blu. 6 lllllbut, 50 tack cod, lit mKklf•I IZ!IMI •trwt &..llfl119) -!U envif',.: J t>llrrecucll, s yt11-i111, lSf ClllCO btU, • Mftd Dll S, lf blue btst. t lllllbut, 31 mtc111rel.
O(:IANSIDI -3SI enul1<1: • blrrKVd•. n bonito 1""5 Miid b.11-" 100 .,.1r-1111, s lui11111t, · 62 •ock
cod. 241 meet1r11.
llAL ll!ACH -264 1119r.t'1: J blrreeud1, i,as Mnd bl••· ~ •C!C:k Cod, U bon(lo ....... -2 blrr1Kud1, 11 Mnd 1111. •
NIWP<HlT llACH (Al't'I L1Mlfltl -u1 an;t.r1: I t lbtcor1, a blrrlC..,.,., S bonito, l7f t tlp blss, 7 '/'lllowltll, II roctt cod, 113 meek.,~. 1 1111111ut. 10....,..1 Lecllerl -in tl'IQl1r1: a 11rr.cud•. 11 bonito. sn c•llco blss. 2 y.tl-itll, ,, rack
Cod, S hltlbut. 3 2tn1Ckl .. I.
LONG II.KM 11..,itllflllll) -2'20 •ntllfll S llh>tcw•. !3 barr1CudJ, J bonlfv. 1,(111 ctllco DIU. .!67 rock cod. (l.t_., ''-1 -Ul tlll'9rJ: "° und bl11. •1 u11co btu , 1 blrr.cud1, • h1llt1U1, IU rock (911,
lt bonito. 111'99 -U N llbvl, 1 blr•Kude, 2 boriho.
WOULD YOU
BELIEVE?
OVER200
MewandUHcl
TOYOTA'S
IHSTOCK
Mow h 11lo n.o To..., """'" .. -LEASE
IRAHD HEW
'74 TOYOTA c ....
s72s!.
:Ml Mo. 0 f..L. 0.A.C. --AL$0
OllPI'• Trldftlol'I 1L1p11am1 lit Coast COiiege player Rick Wl!lt.i, 211 2 1 \tl1ua11v (Morrll) 111 Tlrrwe. oh 2 o
Df'ee .. Jft ~Ar11a1 11t Martz, WaYll.e Reiss and S•nd•lt'(ll, lb • o i : a glance back. • SUMMER TENNIS PROGRAM •
J i . . AcWts .. Jwilan-1.....-int.-AdY. Lovelo (Kn Ml Ill dft.ff
IClllCIOfeutt Ad1tr1 1 "'· former UC Irvine student ""~..... ,, • ' Joe~ Too 19roolal in '.,...,, Gabl .bu ed Toi. .... ,,. l o
Cool II ltbY IC1rdcll•I 11t ._., e contri t two ~=~,~· 1• • ~ :
Hesler. rl·2D 3 O Mofl11!. lb 3 0
l : Oiard's Bat COSTA MESA TENNIS CLUB j i 110 JmliptrO Dr: rr·...,,... P.tl Costa Mesa. Mi'lmg ....... p 0 0 P•ller,oct11, p 0 o T011I• 31 1 ............. ' ' Aids ll'Vine 2 w"" "'•• • ...., 22.""9-~ .. .Jio ii..91 G"""'' ' .. Team Tennis Summaries
~1ebtcil: 000 100 000-17! • 11 ... Mflt .. 21.tl .... ~"*'ltt.~, ,i;;: ~~ 11
, ••• IM,J:.!,.. •• 6oubles -GllftlO!l'·Dlr'itlnl ,,,,..""'" Clltl ::..noi:~•-4 7 1 y _:_ 6-3 wm· 5 .W ... ":Zl ... J..1.. 29·AllCJ'. 29 .••• $25 ISmall Group) __..,. ,. ...., fCJ IMlrl ScNl1111'Tlmlbull IM) 6'1 1 111 fW J.Il -J
,,.,.,, -11:_....u fPI bell Mayw IMrl'S dOublft -GrHbnl•..V.00..•. Lostltl. lb" • • ; l ,•" Jr. c c Prw---J..lu 29 ......... 29 ••• s 15. fS.nt1,.J (NY) '"4 (Cl -t H-ltt-01vld'°" IMI 6-4 Uk ct • O O -Tl •'J ... -.., ·
Ml•ICI -G•Mbnlf-Oucionl IC ) 11111 -rt.. ti ~ , ) 1 NO~RJDGE--· 1.....i-· .... """22-Z w-·· Ooubln -Gooll90nlf-Mlcflel l lovdJ-. fM) w lb "' n 111e 1 vu.,; (Pl _, Wodol-TNgUlrMn !NY) 7.5 ... -2,lll "c ..... ,.11c1 coo11..,, ,. ' 0 I 0 r-!Jeg•----1·~~ • •3 Min'• doubla -Aosw.w•U·S•rtrlct McM 1an, • O 2 01 ......., Jil1ua ...., tc'l:loC\I ~ f PJ _, 0..-l·Mtwr (NY) 7'4 tlll 22 °"*" Oeff 511hl, ., I 1 0 victory SUnday over host San
"*-•k« s.t1 wome:i~ S11p 1c1 11o11!i L M g::·: l · T f g Fernando to .,,.. t be Ml•"" -5Mlln1·T""1u.ardln !NYI !GG) 6-J . 11:.i1S, rf • 1 1 2 &'
bH! 81ttrkk4o\lchll IP) ... ......... -lucl!holl (CJ bl1I Sohrnai.dl .... ' 2 , ....... -' .. 1.-. II • ~' t Super llttlrMk• -811!rfck-MICMI IGGJ 7'4 ;i;:r!!: fb 1 0 ' : .... ._._. an -0 ·~1" A ALL NOHl.Ms ·..C.-J
MiwlAW I I
PHONE 557-0211 c;• 6"1 5anltflt.Tttvu1rden (NYJ Womm'I doutllft -511P.Youno (C) ~J!""'. i p ~ T o, •, the half way mark in the
bit! ttunl·KIOQ (GGJ ... 2. --eaJ•L~ ~-· te B--~·1 "' -un ., P1t11.t1uroh. Me!'I'• ~ -s111w111.w1rw1ck . cos1.i1o. Tl o o ,,o o PUn-.......,, ~ * COMP'Lm PRO SHOP * . . . ' . I AU PIO.RAMS
IMCLUDI J
MIW IAUS
c~ 21, Ml-9• II i~i ... , McMHlllll·khmt-CGGI Tottll ,_.. ..., I~ • ' League: ' ' .
W--GunMr (C) bltt J-. Ml•H -Klou-lt...:1 I GG) btet r Ji I n,...,. Chard led the winnenj ~=================================~ !M) 7'4 Loul1 Et1lm1n.Slllwll1 (Cl 7'4. S.A. HDrMll 100 :JOO~ J I ~ I·
......... -ltlchlv !Cl but tmi(r11 ... _,.. ., ChlU90. C.M. COl!MI• 100 312 11•-t 12 1 with three bits and a -.:......_.:.......:::..:c..===--------~----~ of rbl u Irvine ""'l'POd a
..,,...i... duel in the -lilning and never trafled. Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Dtvl1kta
w L
Philadelphia 49 16
St. Loois 16 49
Montreal 45 18
Pittsburgh 45 19
Chicago II 52
New York 40 52
Weal Dtvbloa
Dodcen • 63 34
CindrmaU !13 10
Houston 51 ltl
Atlanta ' 50 " San Francisco 15 53
San Diego 43 58
s..-.w·1otrM1
SI. Loul1 t, Houlton I
Pct. GB
.516 Boston
.181 3 Baltimore
.181 3 Cleveland ... ,, :J.11 New York
.441 7 Milwaukee
.435 711 Detroit
.649 Oakland
.59'l --S~r-chicago -
.526 12 Kansas City
.505 14 Texas
.459 18~i Mlnnesota
.426 22 Angels
Ent Division
w L
50 15
49 45
48 45
13 47
17 13
45 • 50
Wett Divilktn
55 II
49 45
47 47
13 50
47
39
50
59
Pct.
.526
.521
.511
.505
.495
.171
.573
.521
.500
.490
.185
.3911
GB
•,1
I
2
3
5
5
7
I
'"' 17
Gery Smith, a UC Rivenide
product, 1C&ttered a dot.en San Fernando hits to ga.in the
verdict.
Chard singled in. one and
Rich Fielder added an r:bl
safety for two runs in the
fourth Inning.
The wlnnen came bad: with
• stncl• tany in the filth when AJ8n ~Bela9oo IC'Oi'tel-on
(]Jard's rap.
In the .eventh Jolm Palmer,
Pat Etplmza and T I m
Rl<:llmls came through with
rblblows. . "' • • 1 • i ~ ~ \
1 I • • • • ' ' : :
IClf't Wf 1111111111 r Iii 1
For summe.rtime tTa11el. ...
~52NEW Plt11bu'9il '· '°'lttflll 1
Clnel111111l I, Clllcego 2
Stn Fr111CIKO •·f, MDntrMI ·~
Siii DI.-7, ..... 'rlrll S
Pl'lllldlll'llll t D!Mllrf I
s ........ , •• 0111111
Ot~ltnd ,, Cl1Vfl11\d 3
Mllll'lftO!e 10, ditrolt 1
_,..,.., ,, 91Ulmote 4
Htw Yor• S, llitnMI' City •
Clllcl90 W , Mltwtt,1•ff 2-l TUii 2, IOlllPfl I
ll"Vlflt 000 710 1'0-f" ' 0 Sin F1<nendo .. 1• O'JO.-..) ll I
A11U11C
SHOE REPAIR VOLVO'S
•
142's· 144's -145-s
16'fS· 1114 Sunroofs
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
USED TOYOTA
PICKUPS
4T•ClleeM"'-.......
s1777
• "
......,.. ... _
No p-. KlltdVlld
T.-..r1 9-
All.,t1r 91me •• PhlfW!Vll, J:IS p.m.
/ ~··-No ff"'*' Kl'lldullCI ,._...,.I .. me
Atl<lltr aa .... II "lnllwrll'I, S:IJ p.m.
by
tiiai'
TllDI &'TMll.A.11 effert OMCIAL ..... -4 ,..,. --•Adidla ·~ •Tretorn •TIOll'
•Nihe •.He.I .... _
Treds & Threods
Jiil. IMiL-c..·..,_ .... ,re:·· ••••11• t4lllnl Mon. ~ .........
• , I '•
Seeraucke.-1plaid sportcoat with traV"e[
wmght t11>pical Corbin trous.ir .G11nt huttol\
®Wh C>md shirt • Clu.lo t ie from TALBOn of Carroe.1 Vall~y
' JO DAILY PILOT MGndai, July 22, 1CJ74
That. Hotel Asht~ay Will Co~t You at Che~kout Time
SOme arc 500ven1r hunl ers. estimate eltactly how much Is of Inn Keepe~ -Do h rm l'I n of copiflg with -the problem , largely bus~men. -mOst
Others are unthinking guests lost in sto!cn soap. tO\rels, Company, su pp 11 er of &tealing by guests ¥.111 lead to hotel and motel rooms are
\\'ho inad\•ertently loss an a.AA bedspre.1d.1., linens, television lns1itulional furnishings and an even greater squeeie on occupied during the summer
tray ioto their suitcases. Still sets and even furnhure. the products In the \Vest. profits this year." by fnmllies on vacation.. That
others are professional rip.off fig11rc probably exceeds $500 "The problem of theft from The result 'for the traveler. means oae, two, th ree
artists. All are people who million aiu1 ually nationwide, gutst rooms is a very real of course, is higher r001n additional peop l e who
steal fro1n hotel n.nd motel one," says Lewi.\. \\'hose rateA. potentially can take pllrt of
guest rooms. ··titOST llOTEL l\tOTEL company serves n1 a j or The problem ls parUculirly the room home wi th them.
Thefts in the holel·motel operators are reluCJtflllt 10 talk national chains. as well as acute in the summer montt11. Industry experts b e I I eve
industry in the West and abou t losses for fear of independe nt h o t e J • m o t e I Business in lhe hotel·motel that aa many as one out of
The ll\06t commonly removed
hems are extra soap and
ashtrays, U!oogl) It Is nol
uncominon for maids cle•ning
rooms of ~~ntl;y departed
guests to diacover mlaalng
t~·ets, bed.tpreads a n d
draperies. Even whole suites
of furniture -down to the
~'allpaper -have been Stolen.
much u.-.to keep honest peeple
honest u to protett hoi el·
motel properties from outright
thievery," Lewll says.
1----f!llllll~ ULUl CQ.Wltr:)'.Jlf'e...on...ai· e.uaUng,,Jhcir. .Lleit.s..:.:... . ..,.__o~m._lQl'S. ' ' s •. LJh_.~•_,,i!l'i'idu~ Is at its ak. And every three hotel· motel gUMts
the rise. While no one can Elliott \V. Lewis, president hospitality Industry fl wa ys w le t c '"entele P IUtr ltemrrrom their~·~. -'Tlf
Most of the people ¥."hO steal
from their hotel rooma do not
consider lt ateallng. Some say
they are just taking home a
momento or two from their
trip. A lamp. A bedspread
wUh the Insignia ol the hotel.
PROBbBM-IS .. -A nllty lu-.rack...Iow
Edison's GM's Still -Thinking Big -
lncon1e
with the name of the motal
where they stayed . a 'II
Yellowstone Naliontl Park. 1
Others th ink that the only
v.·ay you can "get y o u r
money 's worth" Is by taking
everything they think they
paid f9f' -evtn If It Includes
the bathroom sink.
SociologL'lts believe t ha t
people jtmlfy their actions by
thinking tha t such _ thlever,y_-+---ooesn•rma e ~urrerence;
"Everyonc docs It," bi: their
response. This ii particularly
true in large hotels and motels
and chalM, where people thlnk
that a major corporation can
afford a-towel here-and-lhere,
whereas a "mom and pop''
operalor cannot
Up82%
From \\'ire Strviees
·Despite Small Car 'Flood' While the traveler accounts
for much of the pilferage from
hotels and motels, Lewis
all! dov.11 30 percent. The most speculation that · GM looks admits that i nt e nt ion a I
brui.sin, declines have taken with disfavor oo small cars robbery accounts for ot her
By MIL TON MOSKOWITZ
(iw.de , .. ,_
General Moten never gives
up.
IOBSeS. Hotel furn ishings have pl~ in the Buick and because It ean'l make as much been the prey or countless
Cadillac divislom. profit per tmlt as it can on bandits, particularly items
GM's message to th e option·loaded big cars. But like televisions whlch have a
American public ·has been: GM has been v.wkiftl, ·in its quick resale value.
Southern California Edison
Co., or RosenlC3d. has
reported an 82 percent
increase in net income .for
the three month.! ended June
30.
\Vhoo. i.Jnported cars sharpl y
increased thei r share of the
U.S. market, moving up from
ten percent to 1~ percent, G~1
sakt It would repel the
invasion. lt fed the invasion
ii.ell by importing the Opel
' ... from (;er·
"\1.'e want yoo to drive whal traditional way, to improve Indeed, it is not uncommon ror whole room load' to be you like and like what you margins on small cars. taken away in trucks which
The utility reported earnings
increased fu $57 million, or
SI .JO a sha re. fron1 $31 million,
or 56 cents a share, a year
earlier.
drive." Oscar A. Lundin, GM's top have easy access to motel
But affection ror the big car · finMcial officer, recently told rool'Qf where guests do not
remains strong at General a gathering of Wall Street have to go through a central
Motors. It's tough to break off analysta haw more profit is lobby. Most h o t e ) . m o t e 1
REVE~lJES ROSE to $347
1nillion from $247 milEon.
For the six months ended
June 30. earnings amounted
to $Ul5 mill ion. or S2 a share,
on revenues of $673 1nHlion.
This compared \\'ith $ 6 O
mi llion, or $1.05 a share, on
revenues of $494 million in
the 1973 first half.
many,. but it
also fielded
th e V ega
and s u c h
.short wheel·
base cars as
the Pontiac
\1entura. the
0 l d srnobile
Cutlass .and
(MONEY TREE)
operators have established
being .squeezed ·out of the pr o c e d u r es to Jrotecl
Veg8~ This year 36 percent or themselves from this sort of
Vega buyers are ta~ air thert. But the big enemy
conditiontng, up from: l.f -per.-re!fUli..m-the industry's ~t
cent in l9'71. friend, the guest.
The company sa id its
earnings benefited from the
eJtraordinary availability of
k>w cost hydroelectric power
and increased availability of
natural gaS, both of vthich ...
temporarily reduced !he need Fail-Safe System
to burn higher cost fuel oil.
,, ·c
·,
F.dison chairman Jack K. Since all 1975 Chevrolets are being designed to u~ only unleaded gasoline
Horton cited i n c r eased precautions have been taken by engineers to 'fuel-proof' fuel tank intakes. A
availability or natura1 gas and nozzle restrictor will accommodate only the smaller new fuel nozzJe which
extraordinary supply or low· gas stations will be using. The restrictor prevents insertion and a deflect.or
cost hydroelectric power as causes the automatic nozzle ·Shut-off device to stop flow. reasons for the rugh second ~~'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~
quarter income.
"'J11E DIPROVED retum
strengthens the company 's
financial. position." Horton
said. •"'hich is particualrly
important at this time when
ma ny utilities are having
difficulties attracting capilal
for needed co n st ru ct i o·n
programs."
Texas Land Par~hed
W eather1nen See 'Dry_ Spells' Ahead_·
up-pastureland;-
!he BuJct Century.
The new m:tdels failed to
roll back the imports.
When Ille Arabs embargoe<I
oil last year, touching · oCf a
new wave on interest ln cars
that get more miles per
galJm,. GM was cl-..00
more than any other company.
Why? Becaus~ it makes more
big cars than anyone else.
a love affair thal has enabled
the company to earn more
than $2 billion a year after
taxes.
GM OFFICLUS just <loo "I
eee the American motorist
going hog wild for small cars.
E\•en though the Vega ~as OOW"
becomLthe top-selling model
in the automobile market, a
GM. executive recently said:
• WREN ntE embargo was '.'1be man with a wtre and
lifted and gasoline prices !hot four kids and a shaggy dog
up by a third , the rage for can't get into !l Vega."
small cars cootinued. GM Ford and American Motors
respn:led 'by converting big have been beating the drums car plants: to small car Jines--<lnd It announced that !or small cars, p<edictlng that
all ol its divislom, including they may capture u much as
Cadillac, will """" be bringing 60 perc<llt ol !he total martet
out new snail car models. in the very near future. Not
GM is ftghting to mairltain GM. "We tee the polllibili ty or
its: plus.SO percent !hare of it swinging the other way,"
U.S. auto ouq.it. While sales said Richard L. Terrell, a lop
or U.S.-made cars are on 24 GM exeeuti~. last moath.
percent this: year, GM's sales--'I'here ha! been s om e
IN ADDITION, 28 percent
are-buying an e1.tra<OSt trim
package, up from six percent
in 1971. And special luxury
models of the Vega have been
introduced by GM. Sticker
prices have also b e e n
!increased. As a result, as
Lundin put it so graphically,
GM has "started ln get the
Vega price 1 \\Ticre it should
be."
In short, oothing much
changes at GM. It simply rolls
wilh the punches. It hasn't
given up en big cars. Instead
it"s ~ to imCJrove the fuel
ecooomy of Its big models.
Aa fot small cars, GM will.
of course, malte them. But It's
confident that it can get you· to
buy them with so many
options that before long you 'll
be paying as much for a Vega
as you used to pay for a Chevy
Impala.
AN INSTITUTIONAL
supplier like IM Keepers-
DorhmaM might stand ready
to gain from this great rip.off.
However, Le wis says that the
Los Angele&-based fir m, which
has offices in ten ciUes
throughout the West, trie1 to
h e I p hotel-motel operators
combat the problem.
The firm's distribution sales
div~ion, which h a nd I e s
expendable suppli es. carries a
full line of the items mOs t
frequently taken by guests.
Similarly, the c ompany 's
contract development a n d
refurbishing division designs
new hotel and motel roorM in
such a way that inhibits easy
rip.offs. They also advise
owners on how to select
furnishings that are difficult to
remove .
Yet the problem remains
and the compa ny rore9ee5 no
immediate soluuon -shott of
asking guests to take showers
ithout towels.
Other factor s benefiting
earnings were : Billing
factor adjustments designed to
offset rapidly escalating costs
of fuel oil.
United Prts:s International
Ike Rupard runs a small
store in Sand Springs where
hot and dusty ranchers, beaten
by the long west Texas
drought. cool ofr with a pint
of milk ot a soft drink.
in Texas, New Mexico and
Arizona indicate the cycle of
plenty has ended.
"Once weather patlem!I are
set up." he said, ''They tend
to be repetitive."
"'lbe grazing is very short,
not much out oo the pasture!
for livestock, a lot have had
to resort t6 feeding," said
Bill Braden, assistant editor
for the Texas AgrlculturaJ
Extension Service.
Complete .Mid .. day American Stock List
Clemente's
Hydro1rics
•--S~ts Gain
For the six months ended ~fay 31. Stang Hydron iCs Inc.
of San Clemente has reported
net income of $532,100 from
revenues or $6.152.100 as
compared to $157.000 fron1
revenues of $5.2.S9.737 for the same period in 1973.
T h;s re-pre s ent s
appro:cimatcly $.88 per share '
ror the sis. montm a s
compared to $.26 per share
1---~i'"-'ll13_1!lr.Jbe~ on total shares outstandlns or
601.818.
Stang Jtydron ics I nc.
specializes ind ewa te rl n g
systems f o r construction,
pu1nps and pumping systems.
fire fighting equip men I .
commercial aircraft ground
su ppor t ma i nt enance
equipment. and p o 11 u l i o n
control equipment such as
small sewage treatment plants
and lift stations.
Fanners lean on the counter
and curse the weather.
And they watch the sky for
rain.
"We aint't had no rain at
nll in Howard County. \\'e are
abouU2_in~~hind_nonnal,
~nd norma,1,"s only about 16
inches ...
AGRONOML~T 0 LI V E R
Newton, at the Ten s A.lM
e1')CJ'imental station north of
Lubbock, said, "We've bad
similar ciCcumstances in other
years at this point of the
season-and-heavy-ra ins-in
the second half of the season
brought lJ.I> back to normal.
The resul~ he said, woold
be higher production prices
for ralichen and higher meat
prices for consumers.
S1k" ~I P·E thd~l ll~I Ch<J.
-AA--
A•ll(t> .01d • I 10'•• ~• "'lE P"~I~ l 3 1'• ... Acmt' H1ml l I 1•1· ~I A<IM Pr« 1 ~ I o• 'o
:..4 0 e l u A.<tlan 1"<1•1 • J l
11 -o .o~a , , .,o p;-;;--•. -•r -u -p-s---~··"-'-' '" ·· ' A""ll (.orpn 6 • ,, ,.. Atra\01 I•~ . ' 1• ..... A>l<•n llldlfl. ~ 1• 1~. '•
'MIE STORY'S THE same "In one way this is one Passe1•gers ::~~.neAf,j ,~ : ~::: ::
all Ov-"-t Te•••. of the \\'Orst droughts sncc " "''•o'"' .~Id / 1• ) •• "" ... ,. """ ......, All~h(p wt • •~1 • 11 Allen ·Pearson. director of the tum of the century." he !:\:-.,,'·i,~ ! ~~ ~··· '• the National Severe Storms said. "We had no moisture Air califomia of Newport A1nr.e. 1 10 ~ 1 11•0..-'·• . th ·1 I start th Alphd lndu~ 3 ' 1 • ... Forecast Center in Kansas in e soi o e year Beadl, canied a r ec ord "'u.c c.or" 12 ~ 11.1~ •.•
City, sa\d I.be 2().year cycle because last year's cro p took 128,&13 ru1.-.aers in it s ::~~ ~~ ~. ·.: ,1~ •l~ • ·;;
I pt 1·1 I . . th all the moisture out of the ~ A/Mll wl~ ·-I .... '• o en 1 u m0tsture in e topsoi·I. It equals the dnmMl'l satellite markets ..... ~ .. -June "'mco •no~1 J 1 11 •. •.·o United States ·~renUy has ·1·-UWLU>g Aml'1f\\ wll • 2• •l.. , .. I Y a • Jhe past and flew 8 total" 46 'tt.7,300 Am8tl1rl .SO ) • 11>+ \o ended and wea er patterns o any one e r m .-ACOl'ltro• .Jt "° • 11, ~. I··-•··ades But 1·1 the top revenue n<ift<>naer miles. AmF11 •.•i.i • s 13 ~ \• indicate hot, dry \\'e3lher fOr ftv ~ ' ha 'I'&.....-r--•<e A F!elcl'I W' ., Ii. 9·16 • •..• the next two years, corn par· six feet of the IM>d d been '1Ja11C Jreliminary figures ...., M01 '"" • 1• J <o· ~. ableto~ther inlhe_droug~ts _satura~ at the ~tart !" restll in increases of 11 z::~:.i'~ ! ~ !". ·;;;
of the mid 1950s. -;January, we, ~ldn t,,be 1n percoent-aod-12.5-percent -~,r!?~~· ~ ~~!. • .:;;
He said. however, the the shape we. re 1n now. r~vely over a year ago, !..'1~08, :~~ ~ t !:; ~ .~~
\veathcr won't be quite as hot Leonard Will iallll!, of the !:!t.,;'~ E. 1w a 1 k e r , !~~~ .... E·!i1 1; ''T a! • · ;,~
as in the dust bowl days in state ASCS office in Austin, l vice pres dent...ales. Ano...i1c~ ~k :i 1 •
the 30s. said cooditions in west Texas Traffic mull& f<r the first !~:;;:. .. ~~ 1~ 2~ ~~: .. ~:
SI·• -·-·-ol 1~4 ~··ed ··~l<IOll '~ 1 J '/' ••• , "There are some indications are "terrible." "' ntunw...-i ~' ""JU"' ... sP110 .tOo • • .~. '•
that pollution is causing "It's mostly sand it's 737,662passengerscarri e d :::~~·1,,d~~ ,: I ~. •1.;:
te mperat u res to rirnp blov.inga"·av,''hesaid. comparedto598,99Sfora 23.1 "'nc1111 .ua) • 1J••• '•
ha " p · d ' percent increaJe over the "'tA1cnld •1 .. • U · 'o somew t. earson ·s a 1 • "There's moisture. everyday All••'" wh · ~ '• 1·1• "Flood control projects also we •et thunde~·ads. but comparable 1973 period. ~~~~:" J1~ :; ;
1::~ ·,;
I d h " lift: "'ulo 111aio • .-1'•' ""' make a di rerence an in t ose when it does rain its prelty .. ,.,o !....c. .xi • 1 .,.. •,
days there weren't nearly the widely scattered," said a :.!.J, ~t ! .; 2;::. ·:;
number of fann ponds and spokesman at the Midland Bug Hits .. ..,x '°'~~}._, iJ• ... '•
lakes v..-c now have. Those weather bureau. "No one ls =P·•:, :· 'l t J,. ::: r ------.. aJon& v.ilh erpandcd irrigation getting any real relief." Oak ~~1e·0~: ; 1~ ;::. ·;_;
SILVER hold temperatures d ow n "It's so dry here tha t even Trees a"""' Enq •. ' J.i.· t .
I I Sll.ghUy .... ,Wr ·'° s • S'•. I..
11 ·.d the . 1 d the weeds are drying up," e.r1t11 1o11a .. , u, ...
I -.. _ I e sai ngiona ryness sai d Swis h e r c ount y SAN BERNARDINO (UPI ) l::"~~:,1 •: ~~ 1!:+'l;
·• .... ••··-... agn·cuttural cxtens1'00 agent -An ~-~ -•. w ... ,_._ fll.,,oc: .4d .. s • ··· • ... -. ···-... II~• ......... IQUI lltll llld .OI • 10 1'o+ ~
I ·--. >•·-.,..i I G' D KenCook. annPJlf'Sincydes, lschewiNr ""''"'' co • • ,,, .. . . ........ ,,.._... iven egrees .... --~ lil•Qtt'I B•w " , .... ...
-
... I up the leoves ol the ea1~,·. 8f•n10<Not • 2 ,, ' i . I -_ _ _ DUlll l!l'r'I(>~( .10 6 I l • lo GRAIN S 0 R G U M bladt oak trees in the Ruming B•< P1111 .14. t 20 , ••.
I Sale Ends J•fy 31 sf I Seven Orange Coas t production Is down from 220 Springs and Lake Gregory l::~~'b~;~ l : 1}.i.. • .~~
Gold Coins-Sil\let Coins students are a m on a 331 million OUshels to 160 mill ion: are-ot the San •---~UlO· e1ou~1 ·°' ) ' ''' • t,
I I & .. .,. DC"l lWLIU ao...m.r 111> 1 21 1'1 ,..
t o..ni:e ord i.p ;.qc,1.s -Pomona College seniors '\'ho the Texas A g r i c u I l u r e Mountains. aa .. ne c .XI 1 • ~1. • ,,. · d " .. •-J 1 ,.,,,.__. · .. ~ t I &.10 111°"11 ~ ? ,.., .. •·
I rf'llftMiOMt-c:Oflfl•..W I receive u&cu~ or o arts •-•·•11•111ssion says wu1:a osses Deputy state forester John &e••t '°'" .. 1 •·'. ·~ s.,,,c, degrees at the 8lst graduation are estimated to range from Hastings reported that the ~;~C:~:: • 1~ 1ii.~ .~~
I I exercises early this month. $00 million to $16£1 milliorr: pc.st, known as the Jeaf roller. g;r:; :U ., 1~ ~1 '· ... ::
I c.a C.U.Ct I They are lngrJd Rowland of the Texas high plains wUl is a nuisance but does ..,,,. l\TU E.no.·!I~ 13 1 J • "
(714 ) 547 6941 '""" f)l>~llln .JO(I • I 1•0.,. '• • Corona de! ltfar; 1\tark t.la· suffer a loss of an estima ted usual ly destrov trees. 11u•9'l~' 1nc1 1 • ••·. ~. , ' J 600,()00 bales Of cotton -/ Our~lnl .ta I 11 •••• ~ I U.S. METALS I Ja('1an, eanne lttcKinney and The last time the leaf roller out1t) c~~t.oc.!!.. 11•0 ...
I Neil Selvin of ltunting1on "'Orth $126 million. made its appearance was in clK ~1101 , 1 '" •.• I Union Bank Sciuare Doach; Anthony Soter ol The drought. also has dried 1951 and 1962, HUUOgs said. g:~f~., 1~ 1; l .-.:'.
I Central Tower, Orange I Irvine: Scott Whittle of·,----------------------...:.---1 ~f00t~S.: : 1~ i1,a· .'.~
Laguna Beach :wld Rike Van ·~ · C•m<o •11~" •• 1 • .. ~0
.. _.,99.9 ffnta-.1 D,am of Newport Be.1th. WhatDo~n_....__rsnse ~:~:"in'~J ; ); ,!•! ~
l\fISSlON VIEJO IMPORTS
-MERCEDES BENZ -
Sales • Service • I.ea sing.
21701 MARGUERITE PARKWAY
05-1700 MISSION VIEJO 831-1740
s. D6tp '"'· ... ...., ""'· ...... . ........ ,..n ..
•
J.JtltiW (,<In E• Ce<. •J It J •. '· C#I Mm~ted l l I I ,..
When They Sutter Pain And Itch 5 ·rn '! f 1~: s
Of Hemorrhoidal tissues? ~~ E :~1 'i f: :~: • I f ""• et•1' 1 :i "•· l<o r,JCC usive ormul1 gives prompt, tem-1ry relief fr om (.t~M"• J11 .. 1100 ,, ..... ,..
, t'Y' (tf\w1U '°"' I 1 •' • • \ft such p11n ind itch in mahy casts. lfelps shrink swelling <.etc c... • 1 •n ...
f h ·-·d I . d . fl ChllMIH '° • , •••... o emorruvl a tissues ue 10 1n ammation. c"'""" .oid J1 Ji J,'', .,,. .... 1<111 10 ' Jn• !lUMl'll:)', dnctnr31 wt~ asked ninny Cit~• frnm n.:iin, i1chin1 '~' Mii 4 I '1•· \o "·' h ' t h . "-I ,. H c Cb<• s ,... fo w ... 1 I C)' ''"" o rf" '"''"" ~ur II'\ ncmorr )()'idal tl~~uH. And it ~·•t11• , 2s I'•• ~. 11n lnfuf 4\ml)l(•m•.~lonyorthe 11Clu~ll1hrl111 11hrink 1)11l nful •U•ll. .)0 • 1 • ...
doct<>r1 °rl'pur!lnit ~ald !hoy t1wclhn1of 1uch tl11~u~whf'nin· 1•••,oit .I• ! 1 ''"''1'
fli lhrr u ~1t Prr1ln r11t1 n l't II h~clr.dt1ndinflaml'<l.1rv rioc1or. 1~'t1•(°'M~ .. ,; f"". ~: rh1·m ~1>l v1•,. 1Jr i n tht"ir oHi <'t! ttSI~ Prtp<tration If." 'l'here's ' 1'14'1\ '! u t•• ~.
l''''I',,... h I I Ilk 'w1 • 1 II 1t • '• noel et o'mu 11 oft. AldtuA: 1.,110 iJ ' -· \. Prl!pal'3tion lf fi~ pt't'lm(li. c;1,1t1nt.rt 11M11')'Whef9o Oi4tmt11t em111\ ·" • • J.o... •·· temporary rtlltif ,fnr hout11 In nr-Nn~~
• '
Silt$ Ntt
p, E tllds I l '" Cht•
(l)ll('~t .'JOq s 6 10• .... Catan••! cm . . 2 •'. , • , (.alwl C.0 ,te 1! 1 l >o • '·• (.Qm.1111 Con1 B :i11 11 ,. • •
(.oMI) EQu•p 10 ·J n • .. • •, '°"''"''" .lO • 1 llt •.• ~ ft1 ~-~_____!;;:. ·~
(Om Pi .100 .. I \' '• Como:>Olt (t>. 1 1 ... ComPOln ,JJ ) I t 'o ...
Corn11U9f• / 11 11 •• -~.
C-t (p .• J 1'• •··
ConneHf (.11 10 I J\> • '· 1 Cotlr<if Int J 3 2 Con.0.1 <:.as 10 11• • • ~ ~A•l ,fO • I I '°'"""' Cp 1 • • ' "' (an! Mlll~fl 10 11 Ho •.•
Cool\ El .•O • I I '•, '• (DOlo; In .20<! 1 • f H>1 • 1. C-P1in1 I ) • I IO>o· \,
Coollrt J••• • . 1 '~. ~. Cou<Ha .IOd 1 11S·16t 1·1• Ct1rne•Et J i 2 9 • , ,, (.r'ol'P 1,l>G .S II l.S'o '"
&::.:.t'ir. . .J ! ; '• ·: t Crw (P .1.Sb 2 • I~ • l• Cf~-"ll Ol1 I • ,1-, • "" CSE (JI • .0• f I ,~,. h (.I.Ible Cp .70 1 ( l lo ...
C.U..115 ~tll .. I 10,.-1-0
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0.1 l..JM .?O • S S'o· "-Otl!~ '''" •. 31 '•. 3·11i
OflJIEr .!Sd Ii " '""• '• °''i9fl J .. 1 3 ' ,,, • <.
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O•ttlOlll \len •. 11 1<1 ., , O•oi<on int • 10 l'• • •,
0 1fl••dSI .00 .S l 17\o· " 0.K F~blO. J J 1 •'o °'""'s.e' .w. • ~ ,.,. '• Oi•lyn Corp 11 ~ '", ', Dorne Pl!tro U lS 11•,. ~. Oow"'Y .ts l l ••.••.• °""'°" ,0111 •. ,_ ,, • . "
Durofi ,,}9 1 I • • '•
Oy,..lt l .Olod 10 7 31•• ~. --<•-E!.ystm.llO S I .._••• ElrtSl;h.llo I 1 •\1 0-
l:erlll""°' .11 • f II•• ~. E""'"° . !Ob I ~ IJ4o-\1
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•
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Look around your house and g~rage and you'll prob-
'
Don~ t -iust , Sit
•
he1 your
small . fortune •••
SELL T!
•• •
•
•·
• ably discover you have a mountain of merchandise you
Thousands of ready-to-buy want ad r e a d e r s are
"shopping" the ads in the DAILY PILOT every day. And
it may surprise youhow mC11ny of them are eager to
buy just what you have to sell. Want to give it a
try? Get with the Orange Coast area newspaper
with "response ability" •.• the one tbat can move
•
' could sell -all kinds of goodies that you just 'don't
use much any more. Wouldn't you really rather have
money? Okay. To move that mountain, just call a
friendly ad-visor at the DAILY PILOT. Use the direct
line. . ' ' . '
your mountain of merchandise.
Advertise in the Orange Coast Newspaper . with Response Ability
Classified Ad Line
642-5678 DAILY PILOT
I • . \
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•
DAILY PIL.OT Monda11 July 22, 1974 •
Dea.ti is
Else,ivliere
UCI Faces -Faces t0 -iJ.Sui'A°Nci I
NEWTOWN, Conn. CUPU By DOUG FRITZSctte
-Funeral services will be Of 11M D•ltY .. 1Jers••if
~1d Tuesday for Frederick UC Irvine will face a space
8 " Rauell, 8 form er editor shortage for the resl of this
with the Bridgeport Post who decade and into !he 19805 died Saturday at the age of
73 in nearby D a n b u r y unless the campus building
}Jospitat. program is speeded up, UC
Russell, a native or President Charles 1-litch has
Burlington, VI., joined the told Wliversity Regents.
Post in 1934 as a wire copy The Jrvine campus is ono
cutbacks in many elementary
saiools throughout the stAte.
be Cf'O"'ded to an· intolerable hopes to get planning funds
extenfaur!ng the late 7Gs and'"" for new biological science and Theft Trial ~ fil~~~·
throughout the 80s," be said. fine arts bu.ii dings.
Blrl' lllTCll sakl the The Irvine camptis opened UCJ-Call!omia tl>llege of m:~r:J~ be~Aorde~ ~7~: .. --------.
projections are u•rong and the in 1965 with an enrollment Medicine has $43 million set trfal today In tJ range LIASI A, '74 DATSUH
Irvine. San Diego, Sa nta Cruz or 1,528. Including tnt.>dleal aside ror Its building program, County Su1>erior Court. 00 710 2 ctr. '1911 "'°"
and Santa Barbara canlpuses students, added to thecan1pus but the funds do not apply i 1, ••••ges that he Was lnvelved •1·u-.o.1.1. . rt' I 'II 1· t ... ...., COSTA. MISA. DA.TSl#4 tn pa icu ar Y.'I l!On tnuc 0 in 1967, enrol hncnt no1v tol ulS to conslrncllon or facilities ror ln\ the theft of a Newport 2141 HAllOI ILYD .. C.M.
grow. a,ooo. the gener:i i campus. on•llt'E COUNTY Beactt physician·s car that 140_,410
bctt look t enrollment Ttirtle f\ock area. • • ---1---edltor and ,be<:ame..Jelevisioll:-'Ot4our-..rn·1c1r-\ri' 'I ace p dio and theater editor and 'wrote a '1-'eekly column en Overtro\\-ding upless nl o re
the Bridgeport arts scene. laboratories and classrooms
,, As u•e took a harder and Despite the steady growth The Ca Ii (or n i a. w 1 de . MnG waa dettroyed by fire in .~theJ~~~~~~~::5
d ~ea:_ I • a . -· !-.AE-tbe m.nua CJ senior enrollment. ...... i ..... •ltJonsliowwdodo.no!not.~--------L-prGJecl1ons, 1noo s Ike we 11 -~· ··..-. ..--.---Judge.&ver.eu .• w....nicke.y., :rH1ir----·1---
be on a plateau in the 19806 architect Ray Flanders !did. ~cCurately reflect the pr~blc "'~ ·the trial date after Elbert L. NEPTUNE SOCIETY
l
•
instead of having a dip," he the 911ly C\!M'ently budgeted growth ol. UCJ, Hltcb said. system's three· 1 a r,& e' t Flowers, 19, o( 19142 Sie1·ra CamJIM c-• ......_
said. money aimed at construction , Maria ~d . Irvine, pleaded wi• ......., ..... 11 -
Enrollment at the Irvine o! general campus learning WIULE TUE number ~ campuses, Berb:ley, · Los innocent lo <ilarges of grand ~=·T~ =-~ Before joining the Post, are built, Hitch said at the
Russell had \\'Orked for the regents' July meeting in San
·Knickerbocker P r e s s in Francisco.
•Albany, N.Y., the Pilot of Previous proU....tions have Brunswick. Ga., and th e 1"'"'
campuSi he project~ \\'ot1id facilities is $35,000 earmarked high school g r a d u a t e s Angeles and Davis are either theft and vehicle theft. "-•• c.-tn ,,_._
rise moderately durpg the for preliminary plans for a throughout the state is at or near their enrollment It 1s alleged that Flowers 1'='='="=-==-==='='='""'==·'='='=' 1970s, level out in the next 750-seat lecture hall. expected to decline, be said, limits.· was involved in the theft oC a1.
~Telegram of Worcester, Mass, indicated that enrollment in
lhe nine-campus university
decade and rise again in .the Oranae ()Kmty high school Bl 0 ck in g ad d I tional car that caught fire. ~lay 21 31 1990s. THE EARLIEST the hall grads, which should make up Turtle Rock and Sierra Lane
De•tll Notires ·will decline in the 1980s
because of the drop in !he
birth rate which"}s now forcing
''l F \\'E DO not build new
fac ilities now. v.•e \\'ill actually • J ll'l'IUl!S -
l tlllw l . Jelfrl .. of H•wpgrl BtlCI\, CA. Sffvlcn Pt:netll'lll, P1clllc Vltw
Mtrnorl1l "•rk Mor1u1rv.
DAVIS Wy I. O.vl1 of li19u11• llff(h, CA.
Servlcff ""41no ... Kiiie V!tw MttnOl'!•I
"•rk Mortuary.
SILSSll FJov M. SUsbN of Redl•ncu, CA. Wv1us
,...-ldlftQ, PKll!e vi...., Memorl•I P1rk Mwt111rv.
MAWO•nt J-W. H-111 of Ttn!ln, CA. S....Vlc.s
.-ndlno, P1clflc VI...., Memorltl P1rk MOrtu•ry. ·
HOOVIR
Mendl!h 11. Hoov ...... 1ldtnt ol L..:1un1
Hiit• 0111 al dffll! Julv 11, 197.,
SuNIV.0 b'f Ills wll• MaOolOl'I O. Hoovrr:
""'" bnllh.,i. Ch•rle1 Hoo....-ol T.OW1t1 VIit~, Florld•. ICftlllellt •nd
F...:I Hoovw of Ml!WINPOll1. Ml<IMMlll.
F ........ 11 1«vkn Monc:ltV 1 ;30 PM,
McCormick L..,.un• Buch Chapel will!
Tiie R~. ~. l•WritnA I'. Htwlty,
Unit«! Melllodfsl Chu~l'I. Offlcl•rtng. tn 11w of ncowl'l's, don•Tlons ..,., 11o1 m•"-,. tN Shri...,.1• Holplt1t tor Crl!>Plftl
Cl'llldren. McCormkk L111un1 81Kh
Mortu.ry dlr11Ctor1.
SULLIVAN Ymll•m T. Sulllwn, M.O. 0.Tt of dt'llh
JlllY 16. lt7~. G••Vflloe wrvlc" wlll
.,_ held T~y l :lO .. M. HtllOl'l•I
Ctmlftry, w .. 1 Los Ar,geln, CA.
MaCwmidl L-OU!lt lffch Mortuary,
•rtctOl'L
MCCALL IN
,,,_,,. L. Mc:Ctllen. 0119 of dultt July
.. lf'T(, forrMr r~t C11 Cosl• Mew.
Svoll"9d DY llw lilt ... , Mr .. IMfll•l'i!I C"-"i of lKWldlao, CA. V111t1t~
Wiii De held t11i. ..... enl119, Molld•Y• 6:00 to I:». p,y,. Gr•wlid• ..,.vlctt Tuftd.lly
10:00 AM, Holy Sejlulcntr C1mct1rv,
Or•nvt. CA. 11 .. 1 11roactw1r ~wrv
cSlr.,;hlr'-••• AmDroglo Pro, rtll<Slnl Cl! l(lgOS Golden
Er• Avtnut. FOllnl•ln V1ll1y. CA. 0111
Of dtllll July 10, 1'7•. Survived DY hl• ctauo111tr, Mr1. Plll!'I Pcr1t; -.on, Or. Julld Pro; -lll'ottwr, David
ho;. M¥t••I 11r•ndchl1e1r1n. Ao11rv
MOnd•Y 7:30 PM, Ct>sla Mt11 Ch•pal. ,..._.. t :OO AM Tuftd•v. Our L1dy of
N)f. Carrntl. lntenMnt, MIHlon Sin
f'-no:lo Ct~v. laltz·&erveron Costt Mn. MortU«V dlr«lor1.
L•ONHA•OT
G.rtkl w. LIOl!Mrdl, rn!cltnl Ill' lill
N"" H•mp.hl,.., Co'1t Mtlol, CA. O•lt
ef <M•tll July ''· 1'1'-Survl"9d 1>y h11 wl .. M19ftlllll9 ~rdl; Ttll'M &Om, 1t1r , Mllft •nd E~n; ,_ d•ughter1.
Ev. tnd 111111'1 matlWr, June 1.aoni..re11:
,_ Drottwn.. ••lph Ind Don Leni..rdt.
Mlmori.I MrVlcn Tueld•V· Coll• Ma.I c~. lnt.rmftll "Kllk C rt 11 C.met.ry. ll1ltt-8'111'fr011 COtlt Miii
#IOl1\lilr'I" Cllrtetort.
AllSUCICU & SON
WllTCLlfF -TUAllY
427 f. 171h St .. Co~ta Me~a
"646-4868 -·-l.&l.TZ-IERGHOH
FUMERAL HOME
Corona del Mor
' · Costa Mesa. -·-
67J.9<150
646°2424
llLL UOAllWAY
MOllTUAllY
J'!O Broadway. Co~!a Me50,
M2.q 1so -·-DILDAY NOTHEIS
~MOllTUAllY
1 791 I 6ecxh Blvd.
Hun!ingion Beach 842-7771
2<14R~Ave.
Long Beoc h (2 13) 438-1 145 -·-McCoaMICIC LAGUNA
IEACH~Y
1795 LogUAO Canyon ltd.
.494-94 15 -·-McC-IC
MIHION ~UAllY
28832 Camino Copi51rono
San Juon Copt~rrono
~..-95-1776 -·-PACIFIC VllW
MEMORIAlPAllK
Cemetery Morluory
Cho"'
3.500 Paclfic View Drive
Newport Beath. Colilorn•a
644-2700 -·-PHIC FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNEIAI.
'HOMI
7801 Bobo Ave.. Westmin$lel"
89J.3S25 -·-SMITHS' ~AllY
621 Main St.
tlunting1on Becxh
S36-6539
WISTMIMSTB
teilOllAL PAii
Cemeterv Mar!UO'~
°"""' 14801 &och Blvd
We1!m•n11ei-. Cdif0tl'l.O
~ll-172!,
PUBLIC N(\TICE
,ICT!TtoUS IUSINISS NAMI STAT•M•MT TM tolloWI"-PlrMlfl II -111111 IMINM
Ii : ACCUTECH SYSTEMS CO., 1161 lllITTI'
l'llm c1rc11, Hvnt1ntlOll a..<t., C•I. nr'..,.,. J, Moro-nl~'l1'1 llum"9m Ctrot .HUl'lllflelon INc". C.t. nw.
Tiii• t:wll*5 b condul:ltCI W •n lndl· Vldv ... • s J. Mc:rwtrll•rWr Th11 1t•l""tnl wn flltd wttll lh<t County
C\erk o1 °''"" '-"' on July 11, l.'l:tn
Put:lttMd Or-c-1 0.lty POOi,
Jiiiy ft, 1', Ind A\llUSI J, 11, lt1• ?r.lf.1.U
Kids Like to
Ask A11dy
.\ I, •
• A.,..tMIMtt.ef ...... .........
2)1" ....... w..ri.. ..,, ........... . ... -' lf'Mtt • ., , __
llG.39" IL •100
Brcns Atomizer
PLAllTIPUYm _____ ...,.., ........ , ....... .
• Ahe.WS"ilst• ..... 'tf
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llG. s 199 ,,,,,
Plo stic
FAlllPRAYD
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• G..fty wettn ltW 1f9SI ..
""""
_llG. 69« ,,. 1 ••
75 Foot
GARDlll HOii
• 7Sft ..... _wil radite
.. t.rtt.Ht CMMt' .. _ ......
• Vittyl r1bif1rcM -.... ,
creclflf,,t;tiil_, -· llG. •999 'IS."
"
could be ready, he said, is muCh of UCI's enrollmCnt, are enrollment In these campuses, in Irvine shortly after it
in the fall of 1977. likely to continue to increase. he said, will shoot more sla mmed Into a fence and
The Irvine cami}us al!IO Addition.ally, the university students to the newer ones. sheAred off l\\'O trees.
'"'lb. Bog
SIUR .
MANURE
• flffltir1 ... ,. ..... .....
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................ i....
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'
COLBIS
OR BIGOlllA.
• flllOVS llGONIA -• .... ...,ce tf
......-&t.l<Ml't. ....... ,, ........
• COllUS -~itli.tfy ~ '"-' -1111 es . ...... " ... ~-.
c.tns llG. 11.st ..... 11G. 'l.4t
'I '9 99'
--
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l\.ids ·Like to
Ask Andy
' . (
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IQs ·Rai.sed With Program,
Effe-cts Success
By JO OLSON ..... °"' '""" .....
Liz, Harold, Kathy, Bob, Martha and
Wanda.
They 0011ld be )'Olr ne•fdoor neighbon
or the people you work v..ith. Their
names could just as easily ·be Rm,
1t1ar1y, Grace or Vic, but they an have
one thing In commoo: they want to
•lop IJl>Oking,
Uz, Harold, Kathy and the relt were
meeting the pniblem hea~ In a lour·
··eet Slop Smok1nc dw -eil..by
lour ~ qendes, includlng tbe llMrt
......... loo, Luq -Asaoclatloo, Cancer
Society and Health Deportment.
w.lebt pniblem."
Wanda complained of light·-·
whk:b Forster •kl was normal for a
wblle .. the body adjusta to beJnc "ith-aut nlcotine.
Shirley said lhe was \'try depressed
and wondett\1 what she -Id do, "I'm
not smoking but I'm miserable," sbe
said. ' She ""s advised by her classmates
to go out to dinner, treat herself to
nnething she really wanted. "Pray,"
someone else added ball kiddingly.
retraining ones.II, l'<lltcluskm lrom the
Surgeon General's Report and a list
ol reasons why people smoke.
'J11e9e Are all useful, F o r s t e r
emphasizes, but the final detennination
ot' whether a person is' going to stop
smoking or not is the ' attitude of the
perJOO himself.
The packet tells the students that
they will have more wrinkles than their
m>n·smoking friends, face an lJlcreased
risk of dying of. 1Wll canc:er or chronic
bron chitis and suffer from
-breathlessness, but each person needs
a "moment oi truth" to finally make him quit. • Marp -she thoull>t Sl>lrley should ride the lg an tNtt Orange Comty
lo -ber tlmt. "There's oo smoking Dmq the ne:d-to..lut dus, they __ ,, For ooe person in the class, it v.'as
r00011111ed tlleir , _... In the group 00 the bul,_'' she lqhed, the mlization that humans ooly operate
therapy -which_. the dais, E...,...,, !ell beller after telling his <in Ol_le-third ol -their lung capacity and
--Some bad-tboqbt.tbey.bad--,...,.-tforyr -Marty who Mid he alnioot-his 30 years ol smoking were pulling
quered the babi.t aflfr three. ~b ii. didn't cmne to dass because he was that precious amount at great risk. struaUnc IDd atber1 were dimqed ~*"' &·, '!.µ.to.-~ ..mo uid lhe
end ready to ctve up. · ~I._., llbeW·'loing to make
AA '""" Inspired by !'Al F"""', the it. ,
teacher, who alJo Is a !ormtr -· , 'Ille quiet, sUghtlj ICC91ted YOice of
For a young 1''00\an, it was htr 900'5
cough from her smoke and h.is plaintiff
pleas of "Mommy, I don't want you
to die." (He has seen warnings about
srn<*.ing m TV.). Signs cn the blacldloaril In tbe San S.isHom Forster dropped In hlnls and
Clement.. High School c1-offered oller.d coorage lhrouiboul the group
more help wtlb PoSIUve thinlQoc: therapy session. BAD X·RAYS
"Quitters Are Winnen," cne proclltmed. Another woman feared emphysema
NO PRaSURE when she saw her marginal chest X-ray. APPIAVSE
M , eedl pencn. spolit, be .-ll!>Plaudod •. !ot lis P<GPw. -
nttle H JD11 baft·-·
"I' 'Jecumuend qulWn1 co111 .tmtM,/•
said Han>ld, the ftJ1I to !l"oiL He
is llill olf and aayx he !oell boiler ..
U. lalkod nut. She told ol having
her teeth cleaood Ihm not" "'°ting .to
soil them by llDOklng. Siie Aid she
felt nervous in the evening ·am wanted
suaestloos ol what to do to·uy,buly.
Knit or pt I boyfriend, she 'IVlf.
advhled. · She ldmltted 'lbe 1 does nnd
t"Omftrt in chewing cm ,an unlit new pipe. "
Bob told of a more dramaUc way
ol quiWng, He bad -..i ono and
1 ball paclts with bis head In a poper
bag to get the 11111 e!lect.
"I really l<ll llek," he said, 'lbls
lechnique, called ·-· therapy, actually made him throw up, he laid,
but ii provided a valuable lo!lon tor
him to thlnlt bacl< on.
After the experience be _was Vf!!l'1
, tired and !ell like he bad a llaqovu
from drinking, --
BUSY llNtmNG
Martha, olf tor lour da:1>. ..., -that she ,.., eating too mud!. She
had loept her , buds bay_ !or. houn
lllllttiq with no partl!:ular Item In mitld.
"Try to eal low-calorie foods,''. Forster
said. "I don~ wan! >OO• to ha .. a
111bere'1 no JftlllUl'e thlt you ~ve
lo quit cUing the daa, Figure out
what mUeo you .......... Don't ,_.
e•ayune'a ·dffferenl I wu that way
too. It ~"
'I1m tm•4ted I acenario which has
become an Integral port of Ed Forster,
San Clemmte -t who teaches paft. time tor the Lomg Assoclltloo,
lie ,... In the hotel m.sine... but
had to retire at the age of 50 because
he was aJlergic to snokc. Now, he
hopes to motlvite aa many people to
llGp smoldni u he can through dasaes
given all over the llOW!ly and lectures
be (ftRllts tor ldiool croups.
For the put three yean he hae been
ming group di8CUSlonl, films, medical
sjlealren and habit l'mdltioning to help
both young and old Slop smoking,
Classes me«: t1rict a week for four
weeti, two hours at a time. Only first
names are used and no pressure is
pul on anyone to quit during the elm.
A pad.:el of. information i! given to
each person enroUing, which includes
a speci.al ~mpblet on women snokers,
a .Chart and explanation · ol the
reopiratory .,-i, a poeter, letter to
be -., lamlly and -uklng their belll and • ~ rating rocon!,
llEAllONS
Alao, then ... hJ lads .. smoking
and health, • -·· teel to belp
dei<nnlae the type ol -a -i., a · tip -rib llUQ<llJona for
For aome, UM! "click" may have come
.. diey li9lened to the wonis ol Art
Leach, a re!onned smol<er who quit
only after be loot his laryn• and with it, his Wice.
Leach, a board member of the
American Cancer Society, feels so
strongly that all smokers ought to quit
that he gives all of his spare time
to speaking engagements such as
Ftnter's class.
For nearly 45 minutes he spoke on
gulped breaths or air and told or the
firm belief he had had that "it will never happen to me."
But ht now knows loo well what
it !eels like to wake up from surgery
on your 19th wedding anniversary and
not be able to speak to your son,
daughter « wife at your bedside.
"II yoo decide to quit smoking yoo11
acJd 10 years to your life," be told
the class. "All of you are going to
!eel better quitting.
"I lost my larynx to those cigarettes
you are smoking."
SORE THROAT
, Leach lint noticed his pniblem """'1
he developed "a beet of a sore throat."
In hopes ol an easy cure, be took
""'¥! aspirin and then kept going back
&o upb1n "like they were candy pills."
Finally his wife penuaded him to
go to a doctor, and the fi"1 question
the doctor asked WU, "How maqy
cigarettes do you cnoke each day?"
'Ibe examlnatioo revealed what Leach
·did not want to hear: cancer of the
larynx.
"I didn 't v.1ant to believe that man,''
Leach said. "So I went to another doc-
tor ."
His finding was ,thf\ same and Leach
"''as told, "If you want to keep on ·
Jiving you'd better have your larynx
removed."
A third diagnosis confirmed Leach's
!ears, and he consented to treatments
with the linear accelerator and fina11y,
.surgery.
"Go see the linear accelerator in
operat.ioo if you want to quit smoking,"
Leach said.
He said that smoking-is like putting
a board oo. a green lawn. Tbe grass
will wither away as die lung does when
a person smokes.
Smoking also·· ts like "putting a
thimbleful of sand er sugar each day
in the gas tank of your car," be said.
BIG EFFORT
After his talk, Leach was wet with
persplratkln Crom the simple effort of
fonning wonts and 9E!lltences. 1'lt ls
an effort," he conceded.
Someone asked Leach how long he
had smoked. He was a "couple of. packs
a day man with no effort" he .said,
for 35 years.
His wife Maxine reminded him that
he used to tell her that "l don't smoke.
They just lie there and burn."
Her motto during the six-month period
when he was learning to talk again
was "Show no mercy."
Leach made a final appea.1 to the
class. "It's nice to know you're all
going to quit." he said.
The classroom had been u quiet as
an empty church as Leach spoke, and
as the class ended, Forster offered a
!ew more words of encouragement and
reminded the members that there was
one more meeting and one more week
to try to quit.
The woman who had brought the
sunflo~er seeds and candy to keep her
hands bmy gathered up the wrappers 1 and hulls and the "unan with the can
ol diet llOd,a plcl<ed iip her empiy·can.
The pep taJks were over and the
applause had faded. Each per30n. was
left with his own problem to deal with
and his own decision to make about
wbether he really wanted to .stop
smoldng or not.
One could orily hope for success for
those who really wanted to make it.
-
Paring Guest List Appeals
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Whal does..,.
do when ball ol the couple la lovtJy and
!he other ball la-?'
I'm Yer)' food of a warnan who llvtt
near 111. Belay II inlell1-, cbannlng
and lftlt cmn-. But lte1"hulbahd ls I vulgar, foul-mouthed gluttoa who 1ttacb
!ood and drlnk u H be had been clt(<d up
!« 1J1GOtlte, 'Ille man tells llllhy llOrles
and mooopollus every converaaflon.
Recently we bad a Rries of dinner
partie%. I begpd my husband to let me
Invite them for cme evmlna. I knew P.tJY would oee the can la our driveway
and realtze they had been ucluded. My
bUsblnd .. id, "Ablolutely not."
When I ran Into Belay a few day. ago,
I could aee the hurt loot oo lter lace, but
I uld nolbln(, Should I hive? How clo '
\
~ dell ·with iiJ. pnibl.;.? -
ACRalS .TllB 'llAY
DEiR A.C.: B'a dtt ...... ..._.,
t'Lewl ltlr, CM't ..... 111111." (Slmedmn ..... _...,_.) See..., ..... aften111 .... "&be
..c..t.n1We ... ...,..~ lltem lff
>--JIUV .... llat._ Oll-ly
tlley llAVE -lo-ad tllO ~
mode a ...... " Malad!, Ooce " .....
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband
Ind I and our 17·year-dd daqhler are
planriing a trip to tee my •llnl ln-l1w1.
When ,.. "'8Ch our destination, ,.. will
be staying in a motel for !Ive day.,
We don't have mUcb money to spend
' . .
I 1'llil ~~ @J
ind have decided to take one double
room instead of an extra room for the
girt. 1 tokl my husband thlt I want to
sleep in the double bed with my daughter
and he can use the '"her bed, He said
"Noth~ doinlt, Edna knoW11 we sleep
together. ' (We have six kid~ l\ty
husband claima he Is not comfortable
unless I am sleeping next to him.
Ann, I know I won't sleep a wink ln a
double bed with my hµaband lf Edna is in
the same! room. Whal should we do? -
DEAR TORN: Jt'1 rather sweet th•t
yoar lil•tband ll not comfortable ntess
>'"•re slttpln1 next to lllm, lMlt tell lllm
YOU wllJ 1 be uncomfortlible sUrtn1 •
doaWe bed wtUI lltm .la yoar d1qllter'1
preteDCt.
A1 • eomproml1e, gel • &wt.bedded
room ud •Ilk &Item to move In a cot. Yta
in ICCIPY die twin bed next te J'Mlr
llnbud and Edna can sleep on &be cot.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : May I say
' •
• ,
e
BEA ANDERSON, Edito•
JIMIM9y, J111, u. 1'14 ~·~• n
. }'
-' '
• /""·
;. ' •,
">:-,,
• •
' ' ...
to This
something to "Phone Weary," the person
who was furious because she was
pestered by telephone solicitors?
t WOnder how many people realize that
a large percentage of phone 90Jicitors are
physically handicapped, or old folks
struggling on a pension, pr young
mothers with small children who can't
get out ol the house? They arc just try·
~ to make an honest livinR. I'm a wktow with tv.'O young children. t
receive a small check from the
government, but with the cost of living 90 •
high I must suppleinent my income by
doing this aort of work.
It's _not pleasant to lislen to the
abusive lan.guajl'e we ~ct when v.--e annoy
someone. Phone soliciting Isn't fun . We
do it because we MUST. Thanks for a •
'
l \ .
I ~ " ... \'.
'
'/
Host
chance lo speak out. -ANOTHER
BL£STERED EAR LOBE
DEAR LOBE: Happy to obll1e. It's
like the old story aboat lhe tv.·o men
seated across from one anothtr and
there's a number •irHten on the·mtddlt
. of die table. ''lfs a six," tnskts OM
obsener. "You're · craz)'," yells "e
other. "It's a nine." ll all depeltd1 on
w!Kre you're 1lttlng .
Do you feel awkward, self-conscious -
lonely? \Velconi e to the club. There's
help for you in Ann Landcr1'' booklet,
"The Key to Popularity." Send 35 cents
in coin with .vour request and a long,
stamped, self-addressed envelope to Ann
Landers. P.O. Box 3M&, 222 W. Bank Dr ..
Chica_i::o, Jll.
,, ~ .. •
•
•
•
• Monday, Ju li 22. 1974
Weddi.ng ~ Bel -ls
HEINRICH-CAMERON
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church, Nev.1J0rt Beach v.•as
the setting for the double ring
nuptial cere.rnony 1 I n k i n g
Sherry Elizabeth Cameron and
Gerald Lloyd lleinrich.
' ' ...
I
•
. Ring
Barbara Court llouse were
Linda Sue Stevenson and
Thomas Novlnson of Colta
Mesa.
The bride, daughter ol the
William W. stevensona o(
Corona del !\tar, Is a graduate
of Corona de! J\lar Hig h School
A Io rrg ~"'1rarrg=e
as hit bride durlnc ceremonies
conducted in All Hallows
CatOOHc Chureh , La Jolla.
Mn. Earl A. l.<w~ of
Newport B3ach end t h e
O.rlu F. Waldens of
Phoenix.
Bridal attendru1ts v.'Cre 1'1rs.
John Gridley, Mrs. Leroy
Miller, Barbara Fagcrland
and Debblc Eyer.
l"-~---"edonnlnf! iit••"-''"'---.,1" . • and received her BS ·at the ...,,....,tfnh>erst S"O"U"ttrffl'll
California \\'here she pledced
The bride, daughler ol the
Carlin Campbells of 8an
Dleco, was attended by Diana
Cowley, Stephanie Mossini,
Donna Prater, Pamela King,
Jan Qvnell and Patrloe -c:iili\li1>err. · , Serving __ l_bJ 'fl-":IWJl).--l
\\"ere T~1 , John Hill,
•
the Rev. Don l\taddox. Parents
of the bridal couple, graduates
or CaH£ornla Polytechnic State
University In San Luis Obispo,
are P.lr. and li.{ra. l\ferton-Klrk
Cameron Jr. ol Newport
Beach and Mr. and l\frs.
Edwin Heinrich Jr., Glendora.
Honor attendants l'.'ere fl.frs.
Jotm Blanchard III and Dick
Heinrich.
Others in the V.'edding party
y,·ere Sherri Diamond. Betsy
Wallace, Mrs. Dick lfeinrlril,
Capt. and 1'trs. Ed"'in lfrin·
rich Jr., Brad l{eirlch, Charles
Hauner, Tom Vassar, and
Kirk, Tom nd John Cameron.
HAUPERT-MARKEL
Melanie Markel and Robert
Haupert· exchanged nuptial
vows end rings before l\fsgr.
Thomas Nevin in St.
Joachim's Catholic OWrch,
<mt.a Mesa.
Chi Omega.
Her twsband's parent.t are
l\tr. and Mrs. Jack Novineon
of Santa Barbaar. Witneues
were Dr. .nd Mrs. Keltaro
Senga of Tokyo.
1
The bridegroom received his
AB degree from Kenyon
.College, Ohio, his l\tA from 1 \Vesleyan University and RhD•~--:--'"-,.....C'-:'-'-:::i!r-'~
from the University or
Cincinnati. lte was named a
research fellow at UC Irvine '
• • MRS. HAUPERT
of San Juan Capistrano. graduate of Mater Dei Hiiti
Attendants were Mr. and School and Sad d I e b a Ck
1'1rs. Tooman Ersavas, Mrs. College.
James Quinlan, Barl>ara and They will live in San Die~o
Dani Haupert, Pervanc.h and he plans to continue his
Ersavas and Nolan Boyer. education at California State
The bride is a graduate of University there.
Ne"'J>Ort Harbor High Schgol
in 1969.
HESS-TANNAHILL
Making their home l n
\Vestm.inster are Gary HeJS
and his bride, the former
Paula TaMahill who we.re
married in St. Nich ol as
Catholic Church, Laguna Hiiis
with ~he Rev. Otto Sporrer
officiating.
MRS. HESS
Mr. and Mrs. Louis R. Hess
of Newport Beach.
MRS . COWLEY
The bridet > a graduate of
Orange Hi1h School, attended
Santa Ana <»liege. Her
husband is a graduate ol
lilater Dci High School and
Orange Coast College.
COWLEY-CAMPBELL
Atlt.ndlng the bridegroom
were Stephen King, Phil
Merritt, l\.fark1 llendler, John
Goodwin, ?I-like Good -and Tony
Polak.
'l'be bride a-t t e n d e d
Jeff GleCMer and Kenneth
Grise.
The ncwly.,.,.eds will live in
Phoenix.
BOEITO-WROBLESKI
California. State Unh-ersity at John Boetto, son ol fl.tr. and
San Diego and affiliated with Ml""!. Anton J. ·aoeuo o(
AJpha Phi . Newport Beach, claim.ed Jean
Her husband, son of the Ann Wrobleski as his bride
Frank E. Cowleys of Newport during n u p t t a 1 ceremonies'
Beach. at t-e n-d e d · csu-eonaucfid ~in St. M~a r Y's
Fullerton arid is a member Catholic Church, fl.1enasha,
of Sigma Alpha Epsilon . 'Vis.
WALD.EN LEWIS The bride is the daughter
-of Mr. and Mrs. C1ement
Ohri~Une Marie Lewis and \Vrobleski of Menasha and she
Charles F. Walden Jr., is a graduate of Menasha lligh
Jll'aduales of Arizona unlver-School. '
1lties, wer' married "in St. Her husband is a graduate
Andrfiw'a P r esbv1terlan of Newport .Harbor High
Church, NeWtlOl"t Beach with School and attended Orange
the Rev. .Don flf add ox Coast College.
officiating. They will make their home
Their parents are P.tr. and in fl.lenasha .
Parents of the bridal couple
are the George fl.farkels of
O:lsta Mesa and Paul Haupert
and St. Vincent's Q>Uege of NOVINSON-STEVENSON
Nursing. Her htW>and i.s a ?t.tarried in the S a n t a
Their parents are Patricia
Tannahill and Jame s
Tannahill, both of Ora~e and
llonor attendants were
Denise Tannahill and James
Clarkson. Others in the bridal
party were Mrs. R o b e r t
Willla1111, Atrs. Neil Graf Jr ..
Raelene and Ilene Hess, Atike
~toore, Mark Fitch and Ron
0Tapnahill.
Rick Cowley of Newport:i-------------------
~
Beach claimed Jerie Campbell
Bundles of Fun
Thrift Shop Profits • Bag
It tool; great res!J:aint by
bargain hm&en ·and t h e
curious at the Assistance
League's Bundle Coffee to
leave the sacks and boxes ot "podies" unopened.
They were, after a 11 ,
Your Horoscope
.
destined for the shelves of
the Newport Beach group's
tmi{t shop.
But J1le packages were
enticing, ..m:teed. Some were
spilling over with dresses and
ehoes, while others contained
'
Olristmas decorations and
knick-knacks . Some b o x e s
were mysteriously tied shut
f« only the thrift shop
vohmteers to unpack.
Several times a year the
league encoura,ges its
members and friends to clean
out their closets .and g&rages
to help restock the thrift shop
by hosting a social •event to
which the price of admissioo
is a bundle of bargains.
As a further enticement, the
event usually is given in a .
luxurious home with a
beautiful view.
Mrs. Sam Gurley hosted the
most recent such party, which
was the rirst fOl' the upcoming .
year. Her new Dover Shores
home, with its panoramic view
of the Back Bay a n d
Newport's harbor, was a
perfect lure for donators.
Gyests w,..tte greeted by the
Mmes. Joseph Clarkson, party
chainnan, Olarles PtY1oo, her
assistant, and James Loudon,
hospitality chairman, a n d
encouraged to tour the home
before having fresh fruit and
sweet rolls.
All funds from th<i thrift
shop are used for the league's
two main philanthropies, it.o;.
Oilldren's Dental ff ea I t h
Center and Day Care Center,
according to Mrs. Phelps
Merickel, league president.
She reminded the donors
that they C9U1d soon look for
those enticing items being
deposited at Mrs. Gurley's
door al the ttwi!t shop, "'hich
is open six days a week from
As the old saying goes, "One
man's discards ·are another
man's treasure."
Or aoot.ber woman 's
pleasure.
,?I
4 /tf" -~. ..,
fJijl -~;~
.,
Mrs. Phel ps Merickel, Pre sident
of Newport Beach Assistance
League, couldn't resist a
peek al contents of bundle
from stack on porch (laltl. ..
Aquarius: .Avoid Fuss He's on the
Daily Pilot team TUESDAY
JULY 23
By SYDNEY 01\IARR
AllJES (March 21-A~ll 19):
Accent is on work, health.
reallr.ation ol truth a s
_,.._ to lllU!loo. Strive
to bnprove services, to keep
diet "80luliON and to protect
younell in emotlmal clinches.
TAURUS (April »May 20):
Good lunar position n o w
emphaAl.zes creativity, Jove,
imprlnUng your style.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
You finish, complete, add
concrete to plans a n d
structure. Stop playing word
games. Be frank , specific.
CANCER (June 21·July 22):
New approach to neighbors,
relatives is necessary. Short
trip is on agenda. Pay
attention to caJJs, messages.
LEO (July · 23-Aug. 221:
Teach, follow hunch. Money
question.! will be resolved -.
in your fav«. Know It and
refuse to get involved in petty
disputes.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ):
Cycle high -judgment is on
target. You are able to ~·in
friends, influence p e op I e.
Persons who were indifferent
now show interest. in your
actions., thoughts.
IJBRA (Sept. 2:l-Ocl. 22 ):
Check behind closed <loon.
Visit those confined to borne,
hospital: cooperate ln
charitable project. You can
make valuable c on t a ct &
through club, group, special
·organization.
19): You can sec what is
going to ·occur. Act on
foreknowledge. !\leans your
,;ense of perception i s
heightened. Journey and
language figure promlnently.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Dig for infonnation.
Assume responsibility. Mike
moves which are designed-;to
be permanent. Avoid ftm,
flllfTY.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Realize that so me
assoclatioM, relatlonsbiJ:lll are
drawing to conclusion.
• • •
GLINN WHITE
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Emphasis is on hQ.w opposite·----------1
sex responds. You ar~ Jn need
of flattery, affection. You
Sport~ editor of the Doily Pilot, he
ho~ been on the Daily Pilot stoll for
12 yeors. Glenn orgonileS o ti:I
odmini$Ters who1 hos to ·be one of
could be vulnerable to one
who knows it and uses th"
knowledge to per sona l
advantage.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Family ties, security
and ptoperty dominate .
Adjustments are in order.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
THE RED
QBALLOON LTD . 1· SUMMER ' •..i SALE
50% Off
;I "J:.I
FINE CHILORfN'S WEAR
FASHION ISLAND
'LOCATION ONLY
" "
Indian Art
Competition
To show, sell and/or
oompele for S 1500
Artis! of Year Awa rd .
write •2• Hun11ngton
Center. Hunhngton i
Beach 9:2S. 7.
.the bu~ie s t spo rt s coveroge
calendars in So1.11hern Cotifornio. He ·
soys he m::>sl enjoys lhe o~!o0Cio1ion
wirh Oronge Coost oreo yourh that
goes with his job, but, as Doilv Piiot
.__. ' -$pOI'~ editor..-~liobl•-lo-b.~found
anywhere from a high school game
to the Olympics-wherever In 1he
world they mov be.
J A • • • Best in the .,eague for
Orange Coast sports news
cmon·s
SPORTSWEAR • DAILY PILOT
WfSTQIFf P\Al4 . BAI BOA ISi.MO ' I •
"Sw.~ 216Mar1neAve.
61S·l904
-I •
' '
TENNIS LESSONS
OM ~CLUSIVE l'ttlV A TE COURT
114 U.GoUMA IEACH
HIUt4 l.t.USHIL THC ... ""•h"1tl11 ..
• , ... , •• 1 ...... 67l-17t6
~.,.id-Summer
SALE!
FOXY LADY CUSTOM SIDD
BIKINIS · .~. 40% OFF!
'lloon's l'IHly of S• I. Swl'" Tl-1.eftl
• COYll.ws •PALAZZO PAMTS •
•WI.AP KllTS & TOPS •
• CROP TOPS • MU\l.MUUS • 40%
• CAllTAMS •
• tie4"'S MATCH ... TllMS
SALE STARTS MOM.; JULY ZZod
.....,_ l :JI .. , ,.._. M9a. ... fri.
OFF
JStS MOHIOYIA A'fL. NIWPOIT 11.lCH
IC-.. 1•t.1..c.-
You want fashion-
right fabrics -so
shop FG -buy the
'-BEST-for-LESS
SUPER GROUP
DRESS & BLOUSE PRINTS
··~
Values to 3.00
OJr reg. LON priced 1.59-2.29 summer prints. Cottons
. & blends. now permanentty reduced tor greater savings.
Sew now lor late summ8f and back~t01Chool fasttions.
45'' 'Wide. Excellent setec1ion.
INDIGO DENIM
Sew a "big top" overblouse, shorts
Rnd slacks. You can save ov.er
S25,00! Machine Washable Cotto7.
39-<41" wide. FG's reg. LOW price.
ISIM-lOOK DOUBLE KNIT
l°"'POLftSTll
The go..,nywhere denim look in
no-care Polyester lor dresses,
pulk>Ytr blou1es and suits. Se\leral
Q)fors. eo" wide. FG"s reg. LOW
prd. ~ ........ 1.01
II
LAGUNA BEACH
271-lil••·
Open Mon . .&t. 9-5:30
Sun.12-6p.m.
..
NEWPORT BEACH
JO P11hl1R llf9IMI
()pen Mon., Fri. 10-0:30 P.M .
Stt. 10-8 ~. M.
Sun. 12-6 P.M.
I
f • f
y
d
II,
th
in
d ot
nt
e
h
te
h
e
..
MIXED SINGLES
•'IOU Kllow.
' ·· LINDA, £vt~\I
AWN1Nc; I .
. Ger OP A>ID ;·>b
IOU: our ! ,.·'.. · . ..
, 1VMBLEWEED_s·
' "' ! ' t
.,.,,_.
·MUTT AND JEFF
.AUNT l'RITZl·--
I l'OUND A WAY
TO M AKE OUR
M EALS MORE
INTERESTING-
MAKE-SURE
YOU STAND
CLOSE"Tt> ~ERAZOR I
•
OH,I DO
EVERY
DAY.'
·c o
0
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
. '
UNIT£D fNtUrt Syndicate S•t\lf'dlY's Puul• So1ftd:
ACROSS
1 Bas1bi11
slalisUcs
5 Causes lo· .....
10 Gemstone
14 Correct
15 ChOu ·-
Chlneaa
VIP
1e Small
group
17 Black:
Prefix
18 Special
vocabulary
compiler
20 Coconut
source:2
words 22· CraUs
23 Fuel
24 Numer ical
pre!!•
25 Reduced
in rank
28 Noblemen
32 Religious;
Abbr.
33 39.37
lnc1>n
35 Back:
pre I ht
36 Perched:
archaic
38 More evll
40 Thickened
Julee ""t Something
eictra <43 Aaeends
.. ..
45 Time of
day ..
o46 Climbi"O
plant: 2
w ords
48 Logger so Sall
wet«
bodies
5 1 Paraalllc
Insect
62 Trivet
55 Kind of
lealher ·
59 N.Amer. wildcal :
2 words et Grievous
62 Moonshine
63 Sall
6-4 Noted
es1ayl1I
65 Yourig
males
66 Fencing
aworela
67 Amer.
carloOl'Ut
DOWN
Ice 37 Time
8 Tasminla: periods
Abbr. 39 Involuntary
9 Nun responses
10 Steve A2 Ending wlttt
I 1 Barren road and
12 Upw'ard bed
slope -44 Prophel
13 Specks -47 "'I Love a
19 -·-·clad -·······
21 Abound -49 Call!.
24 Rabbits' mountain
relatlves 51 Encloalng
1 Ha&hilh' 25 Semites atructure
source 26 Fllflher 52 Plant.
2 Notion down disease
3 Castllet'I 27 Kind of 53 ---AllO.
dr1wer dress Callf.
4 PhHat1ll11'1 28 Stalin's top 54 Murky
cone em policeman 55 CGS unit 5 Sorted 29 A . dlllarently Barryft'IOAI 56 Afncan tree
g Narrow 30 A !ind 67 Rainbow
water 3 1 Sedate 56 Not messy
channel 34 Grows 60 Garmet1t
7 Maas ol weary . part
by Wlfl. F. Brow~ Cllld Mel Casson
...
T~IS RAZQR
HAS NO 8~ADEIN1Tl
PEANUTS
DIO VOV AAVE
• A 6000 TIME AT
THE PMJlf, 616
BROTHER?
JUDGE PARKER
MISS-PEACH
VEe\I rew
PtOPl.f
WO!it~ AT '
llOME
A>1q,11o~e !
by Tom IC. Ryan
~J:.5 11'1' HIM.MORTIMER
SNERP PALES 10
INSJ&NIFJCAI.(!:.
by Al Slflllh
A&.Cl6HT', ttf'A I
Wf'LL ~Ad C/lln
Of' f MA'I'..
~.
.. .
· DOOLEY'S WORLD
HEY,
NEVILLE
I
-DJ
Dr. SMOCK
GORDO
TllATSMY_,._
lift ciiPos1T 11ox:
1
!
by Mell
by Ghester Gould
•
Monday, July 22; 1974 DAILY PILOT
by Gus Arriola
"'"" TAI.KS?
by Ferd Jobns0n
You sKOULDN IT,A
PL~Yol> HIM 5o LON<; .•
HE E)<.E~C::IGED OFF
,ALL HIS F,AT ...
by ROC)el" Bollen
' .. ·1· ! :
~~
ff
f
f
I
"Whirh wine'°"' be:st with 1My ielub mtttinr lasted trfttll
five 10 J didn't have time lo fix a nyt.bi.n1'?"
E MEHAC
~-·
' I
'
J 6 DAILY PILOT Monday, July 22, 1974
TV H ·::l::-1!~~.......;:.•ttptow-n!=-IJ-p ~i-'ht~ 1g1rng its ---,-~
NBC 0 8:00 -"A Tree Grows in Brooklyn."
The television rem.,ice of the well-known movie
drama or a famil y struggling against poverty with
Cliff Robertson· and Diane Baker. ~
Cosby Scores Cri tic s of Co1n ed)'
By BOB THOMAS rogether and directed it for prominence to the whiteness
LOS ANGELES (AP ) First Artists.i 1in Yl'hich he Is a of !he eyes than does the
•
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• •
ABC 0 9:00 -"Five C!ird Stud." When a big
poker game ends in a lynching, a kil ler shows up to
even the score in this 1968 movie with Dean Mar·
---ln ti:r-"'i<' ;;;Ro;,;;~rt litchum nger-5teven and ·<1<1
Wtw.t happens ·when black partner v.•ith Bar·bra pinkish tinge or the \\'hite ''M.A.S.H."
superstars blind together to Streisand. Ste\•e ltlcQuecn, Ulan's skin. ··~fft~"M~~K" 1.~:::=======~'.'...-ilm"'-The)i r·•--t>ustin.-1lo"-·u1..J!Jll!l.....!:J!J!l...-..,. r.;;,;:r;::fl...,,~~.ji•u~au•~· ·~·~·~·~·~'~<F-Jll--"',."'.:="'"""'"---1 m i s u n d e r s to o d ~sseri; Nev.'Tllan. . -~ XTClf'CEOJlCl ga or ... W;;,;;lllmTE;,;;,,;;LiiiGiiR'TmNm!NOiG;;."... ,..
•
,•
,
IcDowall. 1 CBS fJ 10:00 -CBS Reports. Walter Cronkite
1 analyzes the American space program 1 its achieve-
ments and fai lures, and asks if the taxpayers are
gett.ing their money's wort h.
1:00
l ;JO
Tuesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
Sl!uMMfT~I-· 111t1eu1 Festini tf Tiilii (411rs)
M1n'1 sin11ts 1nd doubllS fi111ls.
111-
llil-Q) NeM: "TIC" Sbll" (1dv) '32
-Edwaril G. RobiMOft, J. tairol
Naish.
1:• m 1i1etw Criffi• sa.w m .... : ('IOI "Scnl•U 1 Eartn"
(dr1) '56-Tom Tryon, M1rtin Mil·
ner, Jan Mtdin. m, ............
l;OO IJ mT C.-.-Hy kliM 5"cill
"It's A Mlfttr of fit" KHXfs Glettdl
Wi111 l lld M1rio M1ehlclo llost tht
specill. wtlich )O(Ms l l tlle COii·
tinuln1 "btttlt ol tht bul1e" -
llow peoplt ln l 1bout e.ces.s wti1ht,
Its u~ wlllt thty'r1 doin& 1bouL -it;lild-~ia-tedllet wit.II betttr
results. •
-@ Till:llWO.. n @m muc-.,-,
(e) (211r) -ffil·C.nll SW" (cl11)
'68--Dt111 Mart(n, Rob;lrt Miltllum;
lnllf Stnens. flOddj Mt0ow1H,
K1t111rine J11Stice. A hi1ll-stlkes urcl
11me ellds in 1 tynchin1 and soon a
mrsttrious •me r 1pp41ar1 to »Ult
the scot• with the survivors of the
1ame. CIJ (titJ m l Hlr1'1 LKJ (A) Kim
becomes Uie son1-1nd-d1nct partntr
ol fr1nti1 Avalon.
GI ,.., Alrldlddo mv.rqa...
•@@(C) •• -......
(com) '62-Altt Gui"°"" ftosalilld RllSl:'ll _,__
3:00 Cil ..,.. ........ If """ ......
Part I (dr1) 'lt-Charlts L1W111ton,
M1urtll'I O'~ra.
1:00 D (C) "s.-I• Dalbta" (susp) Oj (C) "It S&lrW ..... A Iba" '~11 G•rrilon. Millcin Berle, (awn) 'S9-Dtabie Repold11 Gltnn
Dini Merrill, BllT)' Nelson. FOfd.
1'311 8 -rill T1111" (wn) 'Sl-Lloyd 3:30 R CCI '1M Utlr ...._ .. (ct11)
Brldsn. M•rl• Willdsor. '63 -MWon Br111do, Attllllf Hill,
11:00 II °'Tllt MOii._, & lie '"1" (llor) [D~~~ ~~i=) '6S _
'li-P1ul Luus. Ellen Dr .... "Sitb· Jtmu Garner, Elke Sommer, Didi 1111 MDII-" lmrsl '67-Klr!n Dor, van Dyke.
-H11old Lllph!tL D (C) ~ ............ Concl..
lZ:OD m (C) ''R'11l WtddMI(' (mus) '51 (mus) '53-fied Alt1l1t, Cyd Ch11°
-frtd Aslllrt, J1n1 Powell, l'tttl isU:, Osur ltv111t.
comedian Bill Cosby. "Uptown Saturday Night" Jack Nicholson or Walter1~===
The film is ' ' U p to w n opened to e:r1:cellcnt business in M'itthau
WOODY ALLEN
~
Saturday Night," and it stars New York and Chlcago, but when Ibey are doing comedy
Sidney Poiter, Cosby, Harry and you will note that their Belafonte, Flip Wilson, Rich-rome of. the reviews have been
ard Pryor, C8lvin L«khart di:9"aying. eyes do i~ bug ·out. It is
Roscoe Lee Browne, Paula only natural in comedy to open
Kelly and others. "AS BLACK 'film makers, your eyes wider."
· • PoiUer put the project v.•e are subject to a condition Most ol the reviews of
MANN
THEATRES
"lfJl"CH CASSIDY ....
sa.eANCt IN)"
W, 1 l:JI, Z:JO. 4:JO,
6:l0, ~JO, ll:JO
''THATS
ENTERTAINMENT" D9itr" J. 4:JI
7:1 5, t :JO
in which things get pushed out "Uptown SatlJfday Night" in ~~:/ 0 rt i 0 " ' ' ' Cosby New York 11·ere favorable 11
"In the first place this Is not pro, 1 con. 3 no opinion but
a black film made by blacks Cosby complained that "~ as
for black audiences. We are black Americans tend to be
Americans, and y,•e made the auditioning e~ry time .we
picture to be seen and enj<ryed make a mo\'.1e.
. by Americans." "Nobody talks abo u t a
Cosby was especiallv piqued 'white movie.' But whenever
by criticisms that l'UptoM\ blacks do a film, the critics
Saturday Night" repeated, the ask 'ls it a black movie? Is it
old movie stereot}'J>e of reye-real?'
bugging by black comics. "Well, I'll tell you what a
"The color of the skin of a rem_ black movie would be :
black man," said th e two hours of sorro\\', poor
comedian in a pedagogical people, roaches , being called
mamer, •' g ive s more names and no place to go."
""""• .. Cypnss 121-1341
FAMILY 1Wt4
.,_.. ,...,. tZl-1241 w .......... 53~tJt6
WU.. 0...,.. 6Jt-N66
......... _ ..... __ .,.. _...... ... ,... == .. r·;-
• • CHARI ES . llONSON
"MR. MAJES1YX"
}:ii .......
. CALL THEA TRI FOi
SHOW TIMES 671°6260
AIM
.,_ .. llDIS A•AIM" -"WOILD'S GRIATIST"ATHLITE"
'BL'JtZING S71.DDLES ~II i BUTCH CAlllDY AHD
1111JNLJlf1LJCJL 1 .,/iiJI( THE SUNDANCE K10 ··
, ,, , ~ ! !GHTf r JrJT IHE tERr.ll~Al r.iA ~ 1 HE s11Nc;
"A MO\TI E CLASSIC!
l'OU •'IU, flt: U1TERLY
F ASCl:'lATEO."--i. .. l.< .. -. •-~ .....
~PICTUREOf'TJt!·MO~H~ A POIGNANT
l.OV! STORY. Cl"RUL SHEPllDlD I~ MAL
\'f.LOtJ!!.. A 8LITHF-COQU£TTISH l!lllP, A
WllOUHEARTfl) FRE£sr11rr. ACEJI!"'
I ,.... • -__.,.., .... --~ -~ .. ·--·-.. ~·--·-· _ _,_,_
.... .. '
Nl·~WPOR1" <---
MESA
1884 Newport
C.0.-.tu Mitui 54j ! S5l
llCHAUHAlalS
QUCll COMIOll •••DMD O•llM MlllC IT ... , MANCH
IGds Like to
Ask A_!ld y
"PLAY IT A<OAIN
SAM"
lotll 111 Co&or
ll'GI
~673· ~1350
BUTCH & THE KID ARE BACK!
~ for the fun of itl
Al Thulra Md DllN-im
-Tlvoughout SoutllemC1llfornll
AllWWU --\;:l
--MULMIWMAN -
ROBIRT REDFORD
KATHARINE ROSS .
"BUTCH WSIDY AND
THE SUNDANCE KID"
~rni~4ion• • COICH" by OeLu~e• ~ rm• .... _.,L .. J
OAANGE COUNTY
DIANIEE-.,---,---,..--1
Of11ngt Mall Cinema 714~37-0140
DIANIE
Stadium Ori'tt·ln #4 714-639-6990
WESTMINSill
Cinema.West 714-892-4493
WSTlnTl./U KHRST.
Westbroo•J 14-530-4401
L1wlord , @()) "Aletllef ..,_,. (dr1) '49-~-lCll'"'"'"''~'"''~•u•M'*'"1'rlf'.,f--iiO';j:l"',.._,"",...,;,,,-.--r 1.----~ -J1mes Brolin, Cl1ir1 lrlVOf. 4:•<iaJ()))"f•tt•T ..... (com)
•
J
2:00 m (C) "Tiit Secret SMll" (aft) '42:....:eiiy Gr•!, "'" NU!ur.
'66-Tony Russell, H1t11 Line. S:JO m...... w.. TMlr flClll'"
2:30 D CC> "Bt hlftt1 ,,..,.... (d11) ·J9........0etcl EM 1Ucb. Mn Sfltt·
(com) '59-Tony Curti1, Janet ltilfl, • 14111, JlofllW Rl•llfl.
KOCE, CHANNEL SI
Orange County's UllF television station, KOCE-TV, has
sche:fuled the follow ing special programs today. Detailed
listincs ol Channel 50's prosrams are carried in the Daily
Pilot's TV Week each Sund~y.
·-
•
,i11 0MN18US 5' ICl ''Whtl klfld
of H~hl" -Detokll11 S•r.e•~11• Otve Otnlel• of :iw Or1not Police
l)(o')lrtmtfll dllC~IHI 1111 fllm
Mlllk 1I "hlqh1".
t :• WHAT'S TH• llG IOIAJ I" "T~r1 1r1 11tn1r W1v1 of lac l'l!I
Dt~lh"
,, .. MUSIC 01' THI PIOPL• IC) "ll11!11tlt.~ Tt!ldil/OI\" ,I. MAN I UILOS, MAJll DSITltOY$ (Cl "YOU C&n http, Ttw(l"fltl It Mtt" (JO ml11I
I
••
~-~, llllMIWI
.'MNNEllt 7 ACADEMY AWMOSI
!i>•••n•"
f nw~Pn"
< l\I \"I' f \ 11 I,,
' ..
-C-m.tl•I ....... ,._.
-~· ....... ~·· •U-•-..... ,.~••-• -c"uu•••-,_._.._,,.. ,..,,... ......... .......,,,....,.
W IS1"8ROOM 1
,.."";·~
..
~-~ ~LI~' ·~':.,..II ~ o-'!·m
' '. ----....,... ...... -· ----..-11 --·-
,_.,.,
.. ~It.
~f'-JIH
NUS YUM'S/MYmllOUI
ISLAND Of CAPTAtN NIMO ""
-·~llUlllMAlOA W t Of jAYA ll'OI
IOI
"f'I OMaloUD,~Y ,,., Wfft4 "ftWm; ..
IT II IM .lllOWllLT ...,._,
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• r Monday, July 22, 1Cf74 DAILY PILOT 11 -iihller~Looks =a Ba •• • 1,-
~~~~;,;,;...~~~-~---=b~~l 17-clas~-
I
Decade of Progress for W onie1i Noted
By JO ANN LEVINK
Cltri.ttian Science Monitor Service
apart lrom other reminists and even
from other members or NOW. She has
been criticized for saying:
'.'I can't buy some ot the ideology that
has lt.s root In breaking our ties with men
Regatta
Winners
I Seventeen c las1e• ol NEW YORK -1Men, too, now stop Bet·
ty Fr1edan on the street to fell her how
much she has changed their lives .
----Men';4.oci~ e flO'Clt:i~ng.-,·'A--·=,;:r-.,,,..-
author of "'nle Feminine Mystique'' talk
and~with.children.4bave..dl&agreed..open ... _____ _,,.,_..,
ly with the extremists because I feel on
enormous responsibility to women I have
helped change to want something new in
sailboats showed up on the.I
·-_;,.;;;,;...,..;..t.ijJ,.~~~---'----------_;;starting Jines Saturday and unaar or a 600 acll
Club's P.1idsununer Rega.H a,
sailed on inside aOO ootside
.courses. Trophy winners:
on the .wOman's movement for equality:
they a~ half her audiences.
Men no longer feel they have to
a!Mllme ,the role of sole breadwinner.
Women are liberated from sole iden-'
tificatiOO as housewife and are finding
their own identities.
"The future is beginning to happen
already," said Ms. Friedan (she pi"efers
the tenn to Mrs.) one recent 1noming.
"1'.fen have begun to see tne women's .
nx>vement not as a threat to them -but
as a liberation to them!'
TJIE WOMAN credited with coining the
term "the feminine mystique" explained
in her book: "1 needed 8 name for what~ver it was that kept us from using
OW' rights, that made us feel guilty about
anything we did -no~ as our husbands'
wives, our children's mothers, but as
people ourselves."
She also bad written, "It 9Bemed to me
,.,. ,. ... ,.
'FUTURE HAPPENING'
Feminist Betty Friedan
that men weren 't really the my -
they were fellow victims suffe g from · ~full persons that will .let them be
an outrmded masculine mys ue that everything they are. It is not happening
made them feel unnecessarily ina overnight. ~I is not easy.
••hen there were no bears to kill." "But for my daughter, there is no
Copies of the 10th anniversary tBJ(i feminine mystique. Her idea of being a
of her book were scattered around her women is based on my life and many a~rtment. The dark blues and purples or other role models. She has fallen in Jove
Oriental rugs and modem oil paintings with moleeular biology at Radcliffe and
absorbed the glaring sunlight. From her takes it for granted that she will go on lo
40th-floor windows, the Hudson River medical school or some field like that :
looked 1Uke a healthy creek, and Central that ~ will also marry and have
Park was patched out like a children. Being my daughter has not
neighborhood playground. made her a rabid liberationist. She has
said from the a{ie of i, 'I'm my own
"TIIE WOMAl'i'S movement is getting me.• "
to men," said 1'.ts. Friedan. "lt'a ~etting A. combination of the womens' move-
down to midd1e America. It's not JUl'it an ment, the value changes of the young,
extremist sort of thing that will fade out. the idea that no one should be doing
What was just theoretical discussion monotonous, repetitive work , and the
among perhaps a minority o'f V.'OlllCR and energy crisis, she says all are working
treated not too seriOusly by the media togetber to force the future on us -and
five years ago Is now actually in the to give us an excuse to restructure in-live8 of a majority of women In the stitutions.
rotmtry -and It ls one of the hopeful "The ~rgy crisis is already forcing
things that is happening In tbe country·" us to COnfront certain eronomic im·
A recent all-day seminar held by New pUcations," ·,Ms. Friedan said. Con·
York's Raddilfe Club focused on the ef· trasting today to the depression of the
fects these changes in the lives of women 1930's. vlhcn women ~·ere the first to lose
v•ere having on men . One young man their jobs, she continued, "Don't thin k
read from hi.I Harvard dissertation: you arc going to solve the energy crisis
"ln the 1950's and '&O's, men generally on the backs of \vomcn." It will have to
didn't approve of their wives' working. be done some other way, she argued,
Even boys at the age ol 5 were already such as through a shorter. workweek or
saying they didn't expect their future !Oorter hours. "Thirty-~ m i 11 i on
wives to work ••. (In) more recent \\'omen v;on't go home aga-in."
studies of college men, 50 percent ex-
pected their future wives would have l\tS. FRIEDAN IS most often criticized
careers." by the· liberaHon movement for tBking
Betty Friedan has found herself con·
stantly involved in this change. In 1966.
ft was one of .. the l<iiiiiders and ·a.en
president of the •National Organimtion
for Women (NOW), an organization that
today has 700 chapters, including one in
India. She used "for 'wornen" rather than
"of women" became lhe ''wanted men to
, ... pert of It."
too much credit for its form ation.
"I have no illusions that I caused all
this," She Said. "It happened because
history made it happen. It had to hap-
pen."
She added . "These historic.al currents
came together, and by some unique·com-
bination of abilities and education and
just experience as a woman, I was able
IN A l'OICE that slows do\111 and lo write that book. Becatfse of the book, I
speeds up like a record being played dur· felt there had to be a movement. I took
ing a power crisis, she said, "I think that the initiative on that, and now it is such a
for the yoong ·generation moving up there huge thing, and it is changing lives for
""ill not be a feminlne--rnystlque-;-but-the better."
lbere will be 3:11 assumption of women as Some of J\1.s. Friedan's views set her
life." .
SPEAKING PRIMARILY OF lesbians
Jn the movement, )¥ho now form one of
the many grou~ included in NOW, she
said:
"I think they do a disservice to
themselves and the movement. I think
that the woman's movement is so much
bigger. It involves the majority of
women who still want to love and be lov-
ed by men -and yet also want equality
in society. You can't let one small group
mess it up for everybody."
Toni Carabillo, national vice president
of NOW , disagrees. "ll yo u are an
organization that is going to deal wlth
root problems of women," she contends,
"you can't' ignore that lesbians are
women. Thus they become one of our
co~lituency. Jn many w~ys, ·they
drSmatize the need to be self-suf!icient
since they don't get economic support
from men ." .
Vice president Carabillo said she feels
that Ms. Friedan appeals mostly to
wqmen who believe that equal pay for
eQual work is enough, and not to those
who are trying to change sex-role
stereotypes.
"However," she added, "there is no
question in my mind that 'The Feminine
Mystique' is the classic volume. the first
breakthrough really to touch women. It
touched them because it had so much
truth in it. And it aroused the response
'This is true; this is what is happening tO
me." For that, (Ms. Friedan) deserves
all credit." .
WJDLE 111E• DIALOGUE goes on
within tbe membership of the movement.
wo1nen all over the United States and in
many foreign countries are buying toys,
books, and records tor their children that
help erase J.he old sex stereotypes. Some
114 million women are reading Ms.
magazine, and Title VII of the U.S. Civil
Rights Act is a more powerful legal bar-
rier to discrimination against women
than has ever existed.
There are new evidences of the
widespread effects or th e movement. For
~xampl~. on March 19, a Superior Court
Judge 1n Washington, D.C., ruled un·
Cons~tutional the metropolit~n police
practice or exclusively arresting pro-
stitutes who solicit. but not the male
customers.-The -judge--noted---i hat 450
\.\'Omen were arrested last year. but not
one man.
~ Friedan always had said that \.\'hen
\\'omen changed. men and--institutions
would change, too. Now she says, "we
lvant to transcend the old definitions. not
just react against them. That is the real
affirmation.''
She l~aned back,· sighed a little, and
added, "I would never go back -but it
is scary to realize how far we have
gone."
She admitted she \.\'as "not sure" what
lies ahead but affirmed she is more and
more confident of--womcn·s ''ability-to
handle it."
AND MAKE lT
TME DAILY PILOT
'JOST CALL642·4l21
FOR HOME DEll\ftY
.
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•tct-,. ... ,(!
P.llRF -(l) Alolul ll, Glen
Reed, SSSC; (2) Sparkle, A1ex , Irvin~. BYV ; (3) Betelgell3C,!
Ray Booth. BYC.
TEMPEST -( !) Sleiimr.
Lanee iicCabe, BYC; (2)
Snake, Argyle CampbP.ll , SVC.
.ETCHELLS ·22 -(!)
Bananas, Leroy &itberland ,
~HYC; (21 Bob Bon, Rog~·
1'.1eisinger. NH.YC.
RHOOES-33 -(l) Folly IT,
Blair Barnette. BYC: (2J
Na iad, Tom Souter. BYC.
SHIE1i-DS -I I l Tomino.
Bill i\tartin, . N~fYC:. l 2)
Prudence, Pat Doug an ,
BCYC; (3) Charlotte, John
Morris. VYC
TH ISTLE -(I) Ariel, Bob
Riley, BYC.
SANTANA-22 -{I ) Bolero,
Dick Jones. BYC.
llHOOES-19 -(1) Conflict,
Bob \Viegand. SSSC; (2) Great
Pumpkin, Harold G i e d t ,
SFVSC.
470 -(I ) Jin1 Grubbs,
NBDRA ; (21 ;\lien Sn1ilh,
ABYC.
S~RIE.S LE~DER -Yellow Brick Road, a 1i1organ One Ton sloop skippered by
Bill Ficker IS ~he leader aft~r five races in Newport 1-Jarbor Yacht Club's
Ahmanson Senes. Yellow Brick Road placed second overall and first in Class
C in Saturday's Modified Gold Cup race.
SNIPE -(!) Bob Leimer,
~fBYC.
LASER I 1) Ifugo SC'hmidt,
NHYC: (2) Jim Buckingham,
NHYC: f31 Ty Beach, BYC.
L!DQ.llA -(II Bi If
McCord. BYC; (2) Bruce
Ors~n1e, BYC; (3) Rowland
Lohman. BYC: (4) Merlin
Gayman, ABYC; (5) A1an
Olson, B
Balandra ' .
Takes Gold
Cup Race
~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Slight Detour
Gu111boots Rescues Creiv ·
L!DQ.14B -(!) Dori.sKirst.
BYC; (2) Ted Hinshaw, LIYC;
13J Dean Hope, BYC; (4) Fred
Toepel. BYC.
TORQUAY, England (AP)
-The British yacht Gumboots
dropped out of the 150-mile
off-shore race in the One Ton
Cup series early Sunday to
rescue seven persons who had LI00-14C (J)
abandoned their b 1 a zin g \\'heeler, BYC; (2)
Bob
Bil t
vessel after an explosion. Redman, SCRA.
Gumboots had been leading SABOT A -( 1) Steve Rados, NHYC: (2) Wally the series on points after the
Balandra. a Chance-30 sloop
co-skippered by B r u c e
McCJaire of Lido Isle Yacht
Club and Dave Ullman of
Balboa Yacht Club was the
overall and Class D winner
ol Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's ~todificd Gold Cup race
Saturday. The race was the
fifth of the Ahmanson Series.
first two races. Its crew hopes Gerrie, NHYC: (3) Jack
to get a placing in the third Franco, LIYC: (4) Bi I I H uff1nan' s race under a special rule. B~~a~. BYC(l) Sheryl
It abandon ed the 150-mile Rados, NHYC; (2) Karen
}
7 k third race I'\ miles off F be BCYC (3) Med J UU ee-30 Brita.in's south~·est coast after N~Y2: ( 4) ~ark Wm~:
sl?'llting red flares. The cre\v BYC: (5) Tom Halderman,
____ picked__up seven persons oiL -BeYC Su.!Ylmary: _ _
OVERALL -( l) 'Balandra ;
12) Yellow Brick Road. Bill
Ficker, NHYC; (3) Andiamo.
Bob Sodaro, BYC.
Wilis 4tlt a life raft from the yacht .. sABi:>TC-(l)JobnVirtue Ampttio~. which san~ after the BCYC; \2) f\fike Shepardson:
unexplained J!Xplos1on a n d BYC: (3'1 Peter O ode r
fire. Amphion was not in lhe NHYC; (4\ 1'.f. Tyler. BYc ;'
CLASS A -(I ) OrullJ.beat,
Qon Ayers Jr .. NHYC; (2)
Raider. Jim Lindrrman, BVC;
13) S\.\·iftsure, Nick Frazee,
SDYC.
C LA SS B (!)
Summerwfnd · 11,-R i ch a rd
J'\Icinie, LAYC; (2) Bandit,
Steve Morto0, Chicago YC;
(3) Ragdoll. Hall and
\Villiams.. NHYC,
CLASS C -Yellow Brick
Road; (2) Seventh Heaven,
Langdon Parrill. ABYC: (3)
Wildfire. Ralph Mack. BYC.
CLASS D -(1) Balandra;
C2) Andiamo; (3) Quadriga,
Brewer, Meserve and Myer,
NHYC.
1'.10RF-A -(I) Serena. Von
KJeinSmid and Doane, NHYC ;
MORF-B -(I) Sail Le Vie ,
Don DuBose, VYC.
F'red ltuffman's Yankee-30
La Diana from Blue Water
Cruising Club \Von California
Yacht Club's MaratOOn Race
Saturday lo make it four
straight wins in the t-.ta tt
Walsh Series for 1'.fidget Ocean
Racing Fleet yachts. The
Walsh is a best four of six
series. giving La Diana the
overall victory without sailing
either of the final two races.
h1arathon race summary :
MORF-A -(1) La Diana :
(21 Cutis, Don Rosenkrans,
WYC; (3) Su·Dy lll. And y
· Lockton. CYC: (41 Gremlin
JI, Hasty Arnold . PMYC: (51
Magic. Henry Peper. SMYC.
MORF·B-(I ) CC & Water,
Clyde Leach, \VYC; (2) Foxy
Lady. Bert !;Jckwood. PMYC;
(3\ GT o o vi n . Baker..&chs.
SMYC: (4) Lollipop, Tom
Leweck, eve.
race. (5J Corel Kimball, BYC.
The 150-milc race was \l'On
by the American yacht
America Jane with another
U.S. boat. The M a "g i c
T\.\·anger second.
The third American entry,
Terrorist. owned by Al Cassel,
limped out of the race after
being dismasted . Terrorist had
v.·on the first of _the fi~_rac~
series.
Top placings in the third
race: I. America Jane. United
States. 2, The Magic Twanger,
United States. 3, Hati VI. New
Zealand. 4, Breyell, Belgium.
5, Solent Saracen , England.
6. High Tension. England. 7,
Irish Mi st, Ireland. 8 ,
Chartreuse, Eng I and. 9,
Golden Apple, Ireland . 10,
Billy Can , New Zealand.
Windsurf
Competition
Mike \Valtze of Newport
Harbor Yacht Clul!..J!eilt JlY"--
14 rivals Sunday-to win the
Newport Harbor Windsurfer
cham pionship. the regatta also
dre'v competitors from other
areas in Southern California.
Results:
CLASS A - (I) Matt
Sch~·eitzcr. CYC; (2) Mike
\Valtze, NHYC; (3) Seymour
Beek, NHYC; (4) Pat Love,
S~1YC; (SJ Susie Swateck,
LSC.
Valiant: Bail Lnrk-Strea~
NEWPORT, RI. (API -
Courageous continued its good
record. Valiant continued its
bad luck and iime trials
continued on Rhode Island
Sound.
alwninum yacht, which is not
racing in the July trials. is
2--1.
The Nelv York acht ~lub
selection co1nmittee headed b,v
former commodore Henry S.
Morgan had decided even
b e for c receiving Valiant's
aocident report that it wanted
to see Olura·gcous a n d
Intrepid race fur the next two
days.
Coura ge ous. a new
aluminum 12 meter yacht.
raced to two easy victories
Sunday over Valiant. which
was bit by another stroke or
bad fortune. in the America's
Cup observation trials. Mariner, which has been
VALIANT, \\'llJCH had been undergoing alterations at her
in a rollision with In trepid builder's yard in 11.amaronec;:k N. Y. is due to be retumed three days ago, sus!uin::d to Newnnrt Friday and •will minor damage to her keel """ and ru<lder \\itile b e i n g join Intrepid, Courageous and
Jo\.\-ered into the wal er al the Valiant in the final trials
Ne\vport. shipyard . starting Aug. 15.
A steel cable on a mobile The Ne\v York Yc:cht Clnh
transporting vehicle broke. has until Set>t. 3 to name
droppoing the yacht five feet the vessel \vhich will oppose
.• Jnto th water~ The damage the F'rench or Australian
to the keel and rudder was challenger in !he Afiieri Ca's ,. _ Cup match starting Stpt. 10.
from raclng but apparent y n rem was o 1c1 a y
slo1rcd her w.p c.onsjdtrably. disq ualified Frid a y for
The v ic tories ran cOll iding with Valiant.
Couragoous's record in the The Ne'v York Yacht Club's
observation trials to 11-4 while racinq committee ntled lh91
Valiant's marks dipped to 1·12. Intrepid had not h a i I e d
Courageous won 1he first properly for the right of way
race over the nine-mile \Vind· before its stern ripped a six·
ward·lee\\'Bnl co u r s e by inch gash in V a 1 i a n t ' s
three minutes 40 seconds. lier starboard side :imidships.
margin · in the S«Ond race
ovP,r a 1o:a mile triangular
course was 4:56.
"J'l\1 DELIGHTF.O al th~
decision,". said skipper Ted
12-mi l ecou r se while
man e u ver in g b efo·re
approaching the s e c o n d
in the \\'indward mark
unexpectedly close race on
Rhode Island Sowtd.
~· .~
Both races \Vere sai1t'<! in
a southwe~t-westerly breeze
ranging from 6-12 "knots.
Tumcr, \.\'ho was at. the helm .._ --
of the "'inlcss Valiant during •
l~TR EPIO, WlllCII will be
paired against Courag('OUS lhe
ncx:t two days, is 10-S.
J\.tarincr, a n o t h e r new
the collision between the
""®en yachts. "That makes
one for us. \Ve were tired
or losing."
The boats collided aftCr
turning head·to-wind on lhe
TROUBLE AT NEWPORT -Intrepid rounds mark
in An1erica 's Cup trials wilh a good spinnaker set
in race against Courageous bul the conlest was later
aborted because or a 180·dei;ree wind shifL
•
, Jf DAILY PILOT • . -·THE FAMILY ORCUS By Bil Keane ~ PU.BLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTJCS PVBLIC 'NO'l1Cll .. .......... 1111 .... 0lallflll~
DillLY •llOT CLASSIFllD ADS
en. 0, TMI _Cl'tY_ Of COIJA·MltA •·XI Ne.rl .. 1 Ttie Htfl'I.~ llol!W Mi ii COUNCIL OP TMI CITY Of' COSTA .,, ' I illtA r::r-~-:---~~~~~~~~~~;~:-----r~~QaOJJtUC.L..flO...,J~ ,-u;;;;~wl!lllLltw..IMI -UIOLUTJJll-.0....lWI !'W.u.a. ... _
l lOULATtMG THI 1'000 MAMDLIN• ii1 ... ,~. •IOlll IO • ""fliio, ... •II MltA, CALl•OINIA. llLATIN• 1'0 ,oa '" c .. OllA•••
N o aDt1•.&NCI CWT-MI (1T: -CO No llmot\lilill_aiidl_vlOi•1I.,,. ''' co<r-9ttfd. A •IMM..U'TION OP Tl41 CITY Cear • ... ................... [ ...... =, ...... .-.1-1---,... ....... """"Ad ".... Dant . ,.. CNdlt --
,.
lltDUStliY~ CllATIM• UIUl'OttMITY v!oltlLOtll ll1i.d In Ille f\011( .. T~I wmlt THI" tALI, 01' CJTY PIO_.llTV, '"ii"~MA~AJl~T OULO tLblllt WI TM OTMll CITllS TIMOU ... OUT tfl•ll h--.. JU*IM'l'd9d unleu tllf IMDICATtN9 TMI IMTINTIOM OP •k• All ltE1"'6. LD • IMCHNCI '
,,.. COUNTY °' 0. A ... I I 0.0.,:,,,.,11 ff(ef\i .. lfOITI lh• perl'l'lll ,... CITY T'O SILL t A I 0 NO IC $ ... ,. •V olv•l!~~o .• ,..
ADOf'TjNe Dll'llOTIONI l"IOVIOIMO llOIOtr, ~· t:OO 1.m. of tM lll ft l'lllOPlltJY. ll"INe A 'TIM• ,0. cr..tlf~I et tflt •"'1• l'llltMi ... M ,o. , •• M,,., SITTINO '<>•T .. 11'.Cfflt<i unOer •tclloil •1t td). wrltttfl or •UILI( NIA•INO AND ••0111011110 fhtl v ..... , Novlllf ~l•lm1 111r tM
S A N I TAT I 0 N I T A Ill 0 ~a 0 I I w•I ttQ\lllt IOI' • hfltlfl9 f1f I l'IO!lc• lllel 'Oii Tltl II' 0 ST I N 0 ANO :111 tfl• -::~i~r~ ::.:i .. "" 1!• "fi"'' ll'•OVIOINO 1"011 II f A II IN 0 SI t •! YIOllliOlll htvt tlttfl CO!'TKltd '' ll'UaLICATIOM·OI" SAMI, 11 flle cltf'-OJ !flt 1~1 tflfltl'=: ~· 11'1110\llOIND FOi: ll'llllALTllS l"Olt Jpecflltd, THI! (ITV COUNCIL 01' TH.E Cl1'1' Cl' ro _, 1111,.,, w lh "" -·~,~
THI ll'llOT•CTION., THI HULTN, Tht ht•rl/ID 1111111 lie 11'1d ~v lllt Httl!h Of" COSTA. MIESA, CALll"OlllHIA, OOES "!"""''~ IO the om Y' '311 )illCI SAl"ET,Y ANO WILf Alll Oil TMI C)lflctr ol ~I -llluly I Ulhtr l1td HEll:E•Y ll:ESOLVE AS FOLL.OWS: !rffl, • 0, tOll , 1 .• ll<ft
CITIZlllll Of' TNI COMMUNiTv'. •Hll't•tflll1've wllt la • O\ll llrltd THAT, WHEll:EAS, !flt City 1111\V OWfll •lll'orfl • fH60, W ~\II It ol-itt
THt CITY COUNCIL 0,. THE CITY tanll1tl1n 11 dt!INCI ltt SKtlon S4 ot)M lr1 lu tlllt lhtt cer\t1fl .-rctl of itrOPtrl¥ ~~~ ... -~hf11t~!f:':f·:i11:,::;:1
OF COSTA MESA DOES HEll:ElY Hfflnt tM Stl•IY Coat Ind r1-9ltttfM 11 wllflll\ !ht City ot Co.It Mtll 11 wllhlll IOYt rnonlPll ..... · Mfl f,
Oll:DA.IM "'' l'OLl..OWS; provlOtd Ill Section ut llltttof, but 1h1JI dt1crl_lled .l11 lf,.,11!tt11 "A" •ll•cllld hii<'elo !IOI\ 01·1111, llOtlce. 1 !Plf rtt .vMI<•·
tll02 O.neral R.I. 1002
Rancho Viejo
Tow,homes
1174 SERIES
eMOYE to MONACO
t:alfll In the Jwcucy o l this
f!>?.•ttptlonally beautiful 2
be(lroom and don home. SECTION 11 TM CITY Council ol-lht !IOI 0. tM llUPtClor wllo r-ltd 11'\t Ind l)j' !his •~lllC refer~·· ''"" e 0.!ld JulY l•, 1~7 CIJy "' CO<lll A\.-1 rlncts Ind lfKl•r•• vlot1ll-or WllO lntPKlld •n~ (l)H.C!IVI P•'' 11t...or1 I nd Wtf'lry 1(-~1 Jr. ' 1-+-~-~-<'--"·I--111•1 ln&Sll'"""' ·~ ,,,. J1!1l!!l. O!fl.t"l!MM ~~11~u•1!..!_1ktfl, -''o'JHE.fllE:~~Jhl Cl~~~--Ull -l•~tw"' 'IYlll otr.J'•"'--"-l6r"""U1Y-tour.1y--O,...Or1ng• •dt •i'''ll -nt )tfton~v<l1ni'1ht flYil'll\filiill wta proper1y -wcv11:os· -.lid CHll:1STA MUll:WI ; "'""*"'IM"
1 Quiet cul-de·i>ac location. Combl~superb,,R!~nd or J11. ~ ·r~E. "-""=-,_-IVililllfY ind JOCa'IJOn,l.hese \\'llldnMOn ~6[.
"Mommy, God'~ here!"
H••l!ll o..,..rtmtnl for '"'-CUy 01 Corl• m•~• • ... -rl!!M....,.,. 11 to -II 111...,0 .Vllt·OI' tt+t t h-.ir11 Clrc!1, C11t1 Mell .. nllf · Tl' I 1114 •I
Mttt fl"OCler er>lorctmerlf Of httltll vt1l1tlon U11'M Oii the 110tlc1 t l'ld ~ti 11 jOlnt 1-rit• wlll'I rl1hl ol wrvl~erllllPJ ,. o , ... l ~ •
rt11u11tlM1 rt<;ufr" unltorm!ly 1 h ~l.,..r 1 t l011'4 copy 11\trtof 10 11\t tlld "'-ei't -..C C....,...I ....
Ol'ClllllMH ldffllnl1t•trld 11¥ 11\t CounfY of permtn"• Al to H<ll Yloltlll;Pll, ! .... order WHE•E,t.S, l"e CllY lh ... 1 1Fl(f M llJW Mii-. fW ncllllt
Or1r.ge Hetl!ll Otpt1r1m1M. Tiit (ltr 11\111 •I"*': Ill lnr.tn!IOll It IM'OC:•<I llf\Cllr 1nd bl' P'~olltlltd Ori... C-' Dtlly •lit.I,
Cou1111U fur!lltf' 11.W. 1nd oec!erw t..,.t·lht (•l ~ Ult ,...mil ..,nm If \1 Virtue of ;fltlt oL DIWll6" J, Cl'llll!!_tr "' "J..;.., f2,J'!, !!If AU91t1f 4. Jt. In.I 211"7'
ll••llh, 11ltt'f 1/'ld 1<'ell1r1 ot 1111 foOd corrK-1 or , l\rllclt & $1(116" 3".00, el ~ ot tilt ·
<ontu.,,.r 111 1111 community c111 Mtl .,. (bl e11t1ttd ,..,. fl-or 11'\0d!IV fflt C11llornll a.-11-1 Codi ,.. thl H ll ·PUBLIC 'NOnCJ
orot1t<;te<:1oy1111Uorm •et~l•tlons 1Hordl!!t fl'tHSurtt to \le lt k•fl fo( corrtcllon ot leld Iii.. __
1n·ocpor1unllv lor-THWfllblt complltn<t blfor1 -Ptfl•IOl'll Of' NOW, TH Ell: f I' 0" I , ti! IT ,.ICTITIOUI IVllw; ......
11\' 1n• loo.;I ~n.cill119 lridutl<Y er.cl i n tel <leCJere ""-'!hi Yloltllon l'ltt betn JIESOLVfO 11'\111 there !1 hetelly lh'4 Ille ITATIMI . Oj)pOl!unllY to tie Plffr<I on enr •Jlltfd correclld to 11 lO com111y with tl\I tl,,,.,ol l ::IO 11'.M. AUStu•t 20, lt14 In the Tiit ,.i1-.w1,. "Pefltl'I 9'1111 Ml-•
v101111on, TM Cltr COUflCll of tl\t Cit~ cl •P!l'llc101e l•w1 ar C1111rc:ll Cllalnlltr1 •• n Fair on.,. ln tM 111 1
coe11 M111 1ur1fla.r 11ttr:11 1nc1 declir .. · Cd) de<l•r• tlllt t11tr1 w11 no Cltt Of C11t1 Mt11.,11 • , .. u11r m"1ln1 1Jr!i.u tfl~~f•c J~"-.. A~rA~'''
1i1ol Ille 1>1$1 lfld most rtttor1•lllt ~lloel Viol•tlor.. 9f the City CC~l'ICU II the lln>e Ind ,i1c1 OOrOlll;t M .Ht11':1:0. 231\' Mao Or
ol ... 1or~1 of ttie r1oguf•llont ldolli.ii 1·21 •~ lw 11..-...1 ., lllft'Y: 11 for flHrtr11 ol prol""tt re11n11g 10 Nici \•nt1 1An1,. CA n 101 • 'f
fllfeln 11 tllrOVliJ!\ Ille PtrMll method Tri. Sllt ll M I vloltflCll ol 11111 cl\.lpter !or t nY Ml• or lr1~. 111, O\l:lff\Mt It colldllCtM bV •11 llldl· Chy CoUMll ot tn• City cl COl!t Met• 119rson to <ltnv Cl( f\!!ldlr tf'llry Or •"Y lf IT FUftTHEll: ll:ES~VEO 11111 lht vlduel llntUv llt41 ll'Y.I cllcttr• 11111 rN DI •fllP«!OI" for ,..,. PU•-... rn1pecllnQ CllY Cltf'k be Ind 11 hert bY ln1lr11Cltd to O«olllY M. HMlfllPlt
2 .\ 3 bedroom, Spenish ' atyle townhoinca• offer a •LET'S GET POPPIN'
complete, p& c ka I e of ON POPPY. ~ triplex In featurei, Corona del ~lar'! A n e Central air CondltlDninc ln~ln~nt that .PflYll for •·cu.tom drapes/~l\Af CI'Pli ltM!lt!-Clean buildina: and
• Ehcktsed ~ &. p1ttio neat tenants. U n d e r e Coneem l![ltCkaa:e, heavy Sl00.000. All thi!I, situated on
duty insulid wells/ceillnga '"'O R-2 lots make this a
~ • Poof, bathhoute/cabana superb value. call ror
• All ~ rec co11.r1 details. Blfl J acob Ii en ,
'ROM $27,490 6'+4114.
CALL 7141-.1J90 eCATALINA. e S% D9"1t/excelle11t con· PALOS VERDES
venlional financing NE\VPORT llARSOR. See
}'tom L.A. take Santa Ana thelu a.II fi'1m yout· fully
rul•& ettet rto11ullllcns ldllj!Fed :"'it! Illy ill l~ fOOd hlndllng 11t1bflt11m1'1'111 W.blltll I (Of/'/ of lhls llt$0fullatt In !hi C 1'1111 ;.,'(,'-' ~-·• rlltd °T,:(: 't' ~:tf.ly G111nty Ht1 ~h Officer wlll 11,.,. 10 bell oucrlbtd 1n S.cl!c11 1-13 .11>0Y11, or 111Y OrlnO• Cot1ll 01!1y ll'tlof 11 11u1 OM terk rtnoti on "¥ • l'lUas
P•ottct 1111 l'lff!lfl, ltl•IY 11111 welfare Of portion tlltrlof; 1nd t~ t11CI! ,.,..,, !fie; time prior to 1111 tlmt ·of u ld. 11t11rl""1 Pubfhl\9d C,,11111 CNlt 0.11¥ Piiot, mt communllr. l11lpeclor flll¥ fortnw1111 1u1petld Ille loOd tnd • July n. l't, 11\d l\uol/JI s •. 11, 1t'' 2'11·1• ----------------------------! AccordlflCllY C!Hiplir 11 el Tiiie t ol lllt vending pl<'l'llh lmutd for I h e IE IT l'Ull:TME~ RESOLVED tl\tl ll'le•l---------'--Cc111 Alt3ii i.1unldpil Clldts )t llereby e;rat>:bl!mtnt. ' Cl!y Clerk be Incl t1 hereby lnstructl'!I lo PUBLIC J.1nT1CE
F"n\'Y or. San Dlego Frwy to J -~ ped J h J h J El Toro tumolf, then left on a • .._.gca aiu: i Y upgraded Spyglass H i I r El Toro Rd. <1\li ml.) to rl'trcat. 4 ~droom11 and lmtfldtd TO •fl.II It follOWI' 1·22 ·--ry l,..,.IUIM 1 WMMVtf Ill POSI 11ld pl'QjllrlY In """ conaplc-.-1 '"Y ~ SICTIO. 1: CHAPTER i1 POOO ANO lnS10eclo.· llno1 lfl•1ni11rv or other Pltces upon lh:J parctl IO bit 1'0kl 6'" ~·---"-----. FOOO HANDl..111:$ 1·13. DefllllM_, Tiit condlll-1n .... Optr•llOll of lflY food trl<kd II IMSI ltfl d•v• prior io Au1111t ,, ...
,o:tol<'il'IQ 1trmt'1t1ect In lhls cfllo>le• ~11111 t1!1blls11menr W'hkll. In 1111 11.IC!gmtnt, 20, 1'1,. • 'ICTITIO~ lUJ;IN•SI 'Paid Agetats' Pino Lni I nl0del1. famiJy ·.room. l!~ee la.1)d. For LE\'ITT·WE~T, INC. only $169,500. Comi>are al l
other· vie\v .prices. Bart ~ •• .,.. 1111 tnffnlngs fnd!Ctled below· censtllu!e 11n 1tnmtdllte Ind Wtlllln!l1I I E IT l'IN,\LLY ll:ESOLVEO 11'\111 Ill• T N~I I Afl _lllT
Vesco Associate
!•I Nnllll °""""'-' tr ~m-111ard t~ '"" 11Ubl1c hfftfl!, llt 1h1ll 111ve Cltr Ccunc:!I will ,.....,, end tttere •I nt• Ill /~low I'll ·P'rttn 11 do!"" IMJll""s
w n ,...,,. Tiit °"''""' ccu111y HNftn • wrlnen notl<• TO •M permit hold«" or !!or':e~ld ~~ '"1:, pl~r, ec~=ut~::.wr. •11 Al US"' Wt"sleltN, 1501 w: T1i1, =~'::!~'· ;"1;:. 1(~y ·~:r~ue::r•i:: :;1':~th':;,.~~·;~1e11,:: ,~':i ~ i:::i~1~: 0,'j"~~r~,~~o AOOPT~O 11111 16111 d•Y Or•~·· .;:f. row;., , c 111 t • r 11 ' •
rtilOlulfon m.O. unaer 11\t proylslon. of lmmtdlt1tl¥ "'u•ptnded i nd lhtll s,1 forth \foOerl M. WlllOl'I ' eorpor1tlon 1701 W Gltd I A
Stcllons •)• lttd 1n of !I'll HNUh 1ttdh111 sutisllntl ... lh•. Sl/lipenslon ,, • A\1...W ... '"' AMR, Ct lif. 9110'1. ' • -.....
Safety COd11 Cl IM STiit of C•lllllrnJ1. 1~~~~ :,~.,··:'·,$= :.::.0fm:..,r.i::;n, CllY of COii• Mese Th1t 1>1111 ....... Is ('i_/ldu''l!I by I
Howallan leach!
$167 l'er Mo!
Decorated Hawaiian style!
Close to· BEACH only $167
P .l.T.l. Beautiful 1$lllndS cnll')'. Spaci00.11 lMng room. I
Lara:e dlnfna area. Circular
kitchen plah. Family sized
bedrooi:ns. 'POLYNESIAN
COVERED PAT)Ol Vine
covered 1 i&lands "•allrn·ay!
ALL nns .. , . Onl>:' $Hi1
per month! Take advantage·
963-<'167.
Ill) Htllllllo Offlctr 1htll me1n Int 1 , ... TTEST: COl'flOf'lllOI\. •
1ul1t1nt dul¥ 1u111ori11'!1 to et! Jn 1111 10 tllt fflSPKIOr wt>o orders ltwt en., Clerk Cl tlle P'r11ld..,. • •
County Hnftll Offlc.r or 1\11 Olp<J!y if'l ~o111plv ltwtrewl!l\1 tM!t, 11po11 rlQuesT m•d• EllHn I!. Pfl!nney P.lcll1rd c. L1wton
bthltf In , ••• Cl h!1 l l>SlnCI or IUSPtf'li;" , •,.on, or 1111 HNlln Of,lletr ~ ~. Cfly'of COlll MeH T~I• lltltl'l\enl w•• Ill.,, wit!\ "'-•
!ntlP4CllY. ' eut ot l repr e 1en t 1 t Ole, .,n.r STATE OF CALIFOll:NIA Coun!y CIO!<k of Or1not County on June
l') lllfpl(lw SMll m11n 1 s1nir1rian, ~rson111r or 1>1' 111eprior.e or In 1<'l"llll'lll· COUNTY OF OJI.ANG!: ·1 '' !I, 1'71. · 111 Oellnld In HHlll'I •nd Stfetr Code'" ~1!&11 bt •!lorded I M1rlr19 ts~ II ~ITV 01' CO!TA ,\\£SA ) IVllllO#, YOAl(UM, PAPIAN•
Se"lon .5.0, 1mPIO¥N by • tilt Htil:ll 'Xll!lble, 11\d nollte ol Ill Hllln11 Pnt1' lie I, EILtEN 1". P'HINNEY, City Cllrk of & NATCM Tells of Sea1·ch ·
'1.1 ASH INGTON (AP) -An
associate of financier Robert
L. Vesco told a Se nal t!
subconunittee today that he
paid federal d rug agents $3.000
plus expenses to s e a r c h
vesco·s home and office for
hidden e leetronic b u g g i n g
devices.
The associate. Thomas P.
Richa rdson , head of a Los
Angeles-based brokerage firm .
fold the Senate permanent
i n vesligation subcon1mittee
th;Jt Vesco subsequen:I~·
reimbur sed h hn for the $3.000
pa~ring him in $100 gambling
chips at a Bahamas casino.
THE AGE~"TS involved in
the Vesco S'.l'eep. Robert P.
Saunders and Sergio Borquez,
Along ~ith John L. •: e i l y.
ronner assistant director of
tl\e Bureau or Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs in LoS-
Angeles_. also v•ere scheduled
to testify under oath abo).lt
the J une 1972 incident. All
three men have since left
B NDD. ""itich has been
merged into the D r u g
D&partrntn1 or Th• HHlth officer or eny 1lv..-In the ,,...,. m111ner 11 1111 r1<11111t, Ill! Clty__ot_CCl.la_Mn1 11'\d tx-oHlclo 111 W"' Sllltll = tlllte lM ct~,><Jlv health <11it1r 1uthorlJit;l 1a lns;i.9cl 1·'3 Sllptrvlll1111 ti CIMl-a 0-Clri -ol The C'!IY Council Cl lhl CITY ol '\:: 1:rJ1"• ( • •11
• • ' , food twtlldllno a$l10U1nmMlt or equipment Pl'etlll-: Wlllln -,permtl It fl!'fl C~ta Mn• hereb'f e1rtlly tntt Ille elMIYI 1 ~ J "14'll, PS ...
Enforcement Adm1n1strattoo. ,ar •h• i n1;)tcfm1n1 o1 1nl• ,.,.pier. w-ndlld tlereundet, Of: w,.,..n •nv 100ll •nd for1got1111 11:'"°'"''°"' No. 74-4 w1s ~llllM DrtnOI cWtt o.ll)o 1'11ot
Borquez appearing ,Vith his (d) 1'"4 ""'1l"9 l!ll1Mltllmtfll9 hotndt!"SI r.Ttll!ISl\mlllf I OWrntd hlrl bl' d~l¥ 11'\d re;ul1rly•p1ssid t nd 1clcplld by July I, IS, ti, 29, lf1• 2•n.74 • sh1H lncluoit ltnd bulld!ng1 vinlc ei
1
., dtllnld 111 SeellOll a.u (bl 111111 ll1v1 1111 Cttv COlll'IC:ll of Ille ClfY of Casi• Met•
attorney, took the Fifth ~lp1 •rid or""r v~stls whlr;,111 1ooci 1~ ~n elOSol!<t ror butlnew •nlll 1•11 In •n •I 1 r1ogul er m"ll1111 tlltnof held on 11\t PVB-Ll_C, N-CE
A d l the lwlldled, stored. Gl1trillu!ed, PrlP1tred. ln••nlllry tOlldlt10ll, Tiit H. 1 1111 1~111 d•¥ ... July, ltt4. ' v II'
m e n men t~ respon~e to I procnstd, HrYtd or sold. ind eio;o Qefarim""! s11111 h•~• 111e power 1o-enttt IN WITNESS WHEll:EOI'. ,I ll•vt -------
subcommittee s quest!Olli. equlpmtn1 lnit1:1~ or usec1 in 1ooc1l'° lnwr• t 1111 11111 food h1ndlln.11 hlreunTO set rnr htnd •"Cl •H•x..:I tM,SMI u111 .-, lltndllng eitebflSllmtnO. , etilebll11\~t. 11'9 t'-d do:rwn In ntt of TM Clly'ol Coslt Me14 lhl1 11111 dly (If PICTmGUI IUl.,.111
(t l t1Ur1 SIMlll W ts dell._,. ,111 mtnl'llr wfllcl'I Wiii no! 11'1<11'10111' Ille Julr, ,,,4. lllAMI IT,ATIM.IMT IN AN l~'TERVIEW JastlStctlOfl 211i:o of "* C•llforni• Httlln publk l\Mtth. If ,,.,. perm!-or 111s EH_,'· P'llil\ll"' Tiie fptlawlne "''°"' , •r• •lr 11
ek R. h ~ d 'bed 1ncr Stlet C.ode emp!cY" In eh.tr11 c1nrior be toufld, er 11 Cll'( Clerk ol !ht Mlnen 11· ' \ , we . IC a1uson escn (I) ,.,.:. ,.,~ .. 1111 lilf•Nlsl!-t ~nwllh11t °" un•bl• 10 remtdY 1h1 cnv ol Cc.ti Mesr•lld JtOYAL DQNUT5 !• 101•
ho\\' he gave Kelly $2 000 to
1
1~11 be 11 deflneo In SICtklll 2821o.1 ot eolldll!on Of the 1-i h • n d 11 no ••-officio Cl1<k ol 111e. , lrOCN"l•lor"'lo), 1'312, ll:O(k/ltld t !v,d •• • ' . ntaDll1llmenl, tht !rWllll' of the fcod City Coul'ICll. , I Toro, Ctlfl, t113Q, be spilt up among the three '"" ceu!Qfnl• H••~"' •net 1•••1Y COde. 11illdllno 1tt1o!!INflttl1 ii.ti w llOllfltd of LaGAL DIK•lll'TIOllf W•'f{MI win. 23211 oo-111tt1111.<1 .. e1
If th V 111) •e1i.11n111 sn1ll De es del!lltd In Ir.• !n••nll•<Y C91'1dlftoM .,.., SMll bt A por'lton 111•1 kif In SKtlon t . T&Nns!\lp Toro. c1., ~.. , . • • m~n .as paymen, OT ~ esi:;o SKtlon 21~22 of the Ctllfol'IWll HNlll't r1qu!rld lo ltke lllCll rlfl'ltdltl edlOl't •s 'Soult!, 111•1111 l~ WfftJ11 lfle 2Jl0.S(•cre f9tty S'. Wtll, :13211 Ocwr\1111\d Jl.111.1
mission. Speaking v:1th his •",~•'',',•·" c,.-.·,. _ , 11 ., m.¥ bt necuwrv to ob\11111 1ue11 p1rul' of l•l'ICI •llotlold to Ec11.11r<1o !I Taro. C1. '1'30.
I . R' h _, " ""'' -Jru, .... s 1 -•t conc!ltl6n. Pollettno In Oecree al ,_rtl!!Ott Of !I'll Thi• bu$/nttt II ccniluded tW 1 llll!bllld a\V) er present, IC a 1uson ~flnH 111 sec:11o11 mn Of 111t Ct!ITOrnl• 1•24 p_1,.,. v1o1i tlon o1 lhls Ch•iiter lt11'1Cflo s1nf11to o. s1n1• Ant, • c•rtllllld end wti.. •
insisted there was "zero" He•l"'-.,11\d ~Y ~·· 111111 be.,PIJlll;...&11> •• .provldtd for 111 'DP" 11 ~ld1 W111 recorded S~Hmblr 12, w.~,,. Well , .lU llttilt ' hell PAlducfl1111 111111 Section 1·2' 1J111111 coff. lNf, In looll "l " hltillO ol 'J!!difmtfllt 'lefty S. Wt ll connection bet\ve~n Vesco and M11Mt1111 e~~·~1 1h111 ~ 1s 1,15 Set.,...llty: 1f •nr sedlon, 'Of the 11"1 JUdtc111 or11r1e1In 1nl:I for LM Tlllt rt•........,,. 4"Jlls ftlld. wl~ ~
federal drug o fficials. cterll'lld 1., :1tcl1011 2llO'J o11111 c11otornl•1•ut1Mctlon, ...,,~ cliuM, ••" or Anct•l•t County, C•l!lornie._ tn 1i. ,County county Clwk II( Oi'll"" counry on;,J-
IHt•llh I nd S.!ety ~ode. . pcll"llcn of !tilt cl\epltr Of' eny Jlllure of Ortngt, Slife al C1T!foinJ1: " '"""'n 11, 1'7•. The tY•o agents reportedly !il Vt111e11 ·\ii111 ~ '' dl!lned 111111min<1ments ,, lllkll+loN """"°' I• 1or °" • m1, rtCOf'ded ln ••JS. P11• 1 of -, ,,.._. fc und no hidd bug seclfM 2i!!U of TM C1!llorfll1 Heel!ll eny reison . held 111 be ln¥tl!d or 11:.cords Of Sur.,.¥ ln lf\t Oflkt of t111 li'1JOll11\td Or•l'ltt C~•I 01Ur Piiot,
en s. I &r •. / S~!HY Cod•-unc:ontll!ulfOMI Or ..... cltd1IC11 ol ef\y C1>1,1nty •ecorde< "' a•ld Or•• Counl'f Jutv ., 1$, 22, 2', 1t74 241S-14 R i ch a rd son said hr; Ck) V'811i1111 M•clli• lw!Reu a!\111 court o1 cconp•tent Ju•!Mlctlon.· such dtserlbtd '' 1t111Jw.: -
contacted Kell , in the spring ! ,,..,.n th• bu1l11eu of "111nu fOOd or dtcJ~I°" sNlll "°' ,1_, ..,._.,,11dl1¥ ... "" AH '""' por11°" lyl"ll n.cir1111r1y "°"' PUBLIC NOTICE \ t:•vtr~ Irr m11n1 of'v«Wtlnt m•ehl"" rcmilnlno portions of 11111 dlejllfer, ar •irr: the Nllerl'f •••lf'lsl°" Of Ille soul~ nne '>I -'·-cf 1972 after \resco had told •f'll~rc11en cl tht mrmbtr"' loc:itlon1 •1 lulure 1.....,..,men11 .,, ldclltl-t111<e10: ""'el I.OT 7t Jn Tr1cJ 11.;a actlotnlno, •1 poor 01•.t.llTMllllT OIJ TRANIPDllTATIOM· h' h h · .,. J vlf':lch lhe venOlng m1chl..e11r1 lcceltd.JTllt CllY C°"'1<CU Of Ille City of CCIII m.p rtcordld In l ook 211, P'qe ·21 ol NOTICI' 1TO «*TtACTO•t
Im e was av1ng mtema cu I<• ,11111. Seit cMftlNlll le• PIHi MH• ntreb¥ decl••"·1111i .11 woulcl hiw M1scet11neou1 M1ps 111 ultl C011n1y SNll<lo p,...,0.fs wl~ tie r.cwlvld el
TlltlD OF RENTING Jt •you have a 'VA e.Jigibilily
v.oe can put you ln a
bcaulitul home with no
1noney do\\TI call u1 tor
an~lntervlev.· "'~·have hornes
lo ~~ MeJ!. l ltg. Be.ach1 &. ~v.'JliOrt ·lrVine. ,646-77ll.
Walker&Lee llAL ll_f.,I
prcblems" at his lnter nationa! ,,.. 1e1 ot11r11Mrter 1h111 be es dtllnlll edopfld 11111 ~ •!Id tKll HC"llon •1tecor11tr'1 Offlu.· . . n. office ., t11e SW• Hlo11W1v En.
Controls Corp. ~·here private In !ecllon .cm ... the c1r11or1111 He11111 $Utl!tcTkwt senttflc• d •UH ""'"' .;. EXCEPT 1h1t PCl'f1on ry1n1 .••s•erlY :1?::'• JI.~ e,:1~11~ Tri~~'•('"' ......., • _,. A~,. s-1ru1 s 11e1Y Code. pcttion· o, eny Mure .~ or Iron\ 1111 mo.r· H steify l!fll of Mid 1..o1 ..,u ,:· c ll!Orill Ut!lfi2": ioe~.,_., ~ .r-11a! , n"UU1,..,.,Q, ~I.VJ •• for
infonnalion Y.'aS ' 'seeping li-14 ,P.,mi1 • .,..,.., ClfldlH•• •1111 •ddllloni lflel'..l:IO. lrr-11~• cl nte 11e1 11• • A:'111t i, ~,14,., ·~ ,1_< '""°" ~'r.i: cruick 'sale! Near Mesa
MOVING
OUI " Term•. • 11'111 ·•nY -or -r• uctlOl\1, pWUctr ~ •"" 'rMCI In Jt.oom 2 _. Vt!nl~ _(;Qlt Courte. Sharp · (•l 11 sNIU be unl1wlul for 111y person ,ut>Maloo'ls. cleUMt. •hr•~"· portlOttS or IXNlllT "A'' Mid tiutldl ,·lot' tC11slr11ell011 tn ·stilt 4 BR, 2~n•A, Fam·rm, F-lc, V e SC D W a S U 0 d e T or otMr lel!tl 9ftt!ty to aperet_e ellr ktCll 1ny. Mure •rMndmenfs or ffdl!IOI\$ • • · lll111w1y ~ lltcfll'dtnee wltl'I t 11 e °" •"'
l'n VCS!l'g•t<'on by the Seeur>"'eS h111dll11Ct tst1Dllsllmtnl In which.~ II lhtrelo to. dlClerfld • lnvtlill or J ',"",,'""',, Ort• Cot1sf 0.Ur ll'llot, -flk•tlOM lllH'llf'W to .,.hleh 1~:11 -all b}t.fns. {)wner mU.'lt $ell!
1o.1 pr~rld. &Old, Pro e •It• d , or ~onilJMlonil. "'v • 1 4 'U1'·14 ,.,.,_ 11 mide, es foli&Nt: • , $42.~ 6-fo Loan avail.
and Exchange C-On1missiol'l at m1nut1e1urld, ot servld fol pUbllc . SlCTIOtl 11 $«tloa<J.13 ntrouoh •"If . Of"•,... (OllF\IY, In 1:1.wi.t l!ltlth, NEL.SON REAL ESTATE,
h . nd b I consumpllon wl1r-1 llr5t .•Plll¥1F\I tor J11Cllldl,jg sec:ri°" a.11 . ., Ille COii• Mist · .,. c...i HIOllwu from &.,....,..south of
t e time a W~.fill s.tquenty i.-•Jl!i rectlvl!'ll_• food ......,!M l!!'m11.l01" -Mlllllt1P1I COde 1,. 11er11w r_.11111._ _ __PUBLIC~NOTJCE __ Tusfln ~~to llOll!e u11 ~11..,;j_..::'::;l~9-6'!=041!;:·:'::::z:=:::::::::::: charged, along '.\'ilh 4J o ther :wch °""111°" l 15U'ld bf' i~ H~l!ll Sl:CTIOM 4: Tiiis 11rdln•nc:e ~11•11 !1k1 --(01'.()re·J·lf.Jflf.H, .C'Nnr'ltllit Ion lo t:I oeper!rnt11I und1r tM IM'<>Ylsloru. ot tl'lls • • · -mOdlfJed, tltl\ ilh'Khlre ~•nlll 1'9111-tv-w , ;---
d efendants, with loot-ing ..,.,4. e11ipier •1t•ll !Old proa11etlon •l'ICI efMcl •ltd be In 11111 1ore1 tn<I If/Kl NOTICI TO ClllOITOllt 1n11111'4 •l'ld 1,.ine 111111is.1111et 111111 ... v ...... r•Tc NOTICE ~ ' . · . I l thirty (00) 01y1 lrOl'll t nd 1flfr l!S IUPlilllO• COUllT CW '". llthllne 10 be rnod'lfltd ' &iVINA , million in securities from a m•r~•11"9 e!l•bllSttmtnTS 1' def ned. n Plllf09, ~nd plfor1 lhl upirellon of STATI .,. CALl•ORNIA .Sidi i re re.ulrtd lOr ·1r-"'1re Wltl'k
mutua l fund CO mp f-t ":t ~1CS:.12~a:' ;,:11 ~.tn:..:::1: 1111-(1.5) d1y1 tlttf' Its Pl9$111f, GNtll '01t TH• COUllfTV Ofl Olt.t.11101 dMerfbtd heriln. - ' ---..one. M ,.lllLIC l•l(tel ' e t -be ptml!sf'M!d oncf?ln 11\t Ortnot Cot s! N .. A •Jml .. ~llllt.' IOllClflc•llflnt. ft ""op&HI NOTtC5'PtS:" ktill:.EtV 'GflltleM· !'hll
originally created by Bernard TM provltl-°' 1111' c11.1pter. oe1w -. ll'U_ot; a fle"ol'IPIPI' of 111ner11 Est•I• cl ICl'ms tor bidding 11111 proifct c•" 011lv b• rsuent f., s.<11c11 un 1 ot'Arilc11 tv
Cor n/ Id fo) !1111 lood flfnallno ft110llthm1nt11 drcul1!l011 prl11l'4 tnd •ubflt hed in I .... CATHAll:INE Gll:E'GOll:Y, Olcees.d. 'obttlntd ri ·~ >olllce of 11\t. Stele ~llt tw VI 11f f'.rt 111, i>r...itlcn V of 1~
e • lo .Which tlll1 tfllOltr 1pplles Sh81J Clly OI CMll f,,\ew, lottllltr wllh Ille NOTICE IS HElllEIY GIVEN It tM H!gllw•v En f I n I I r , Trtnsportll~ll Hnfth ind S1ftfV C:odt o1 lhe Sllll er Episcopals
To Ordaiii
Inch,,..., but no! be Umlll<I la, e11y ntrnes of lh• m.,.,be" ol the Clly Councll crN l!or1 ol the 10ove "'-"*' dlCl'!ltnt l ullotlno. St<rt(Ml'llO, CtUfOr"J1, tnd,Mly C.lllfll'n\•• • publlc llffrlncl wm be 1111d
I PUBLIC N'OTfl"<t' rett1ur1nl, ltl11er1ttt resll~lll, food wllno lot' Ind t11ln1t 11'111 fl/l'\I. 11111 1111 Pl,_ llA.vlllf cll/m11 ·-inst be s•n et .the O(llCAI ol 'the St1i. en ..,.ugUll 1, 1t74. et 1:)0 p.m, In ff1t . '-r• ve~lcle, foOd YtSSff, Mk"¥' lood ,AS$EO ,ANO AOOP'TEO lhfl Ulh dlV Ille s1ld dKMenl 1re rt411lrld !11 flle Hltllw•¥ Enoh1Mr el S•cr1,,,.,,IO, IM I ... Conftf'~ Jloom (ICUrfh llcorl ol !ht
I proc:en!no tS11bll1flme~t •nd lee ~•nf of July, 1'''· 111em.-w1111· !hi ~1swry vouchet~ Jn Ofl:trlit ·DfrtCtor1 of Tr1nS00111tlon 11 CllY Htll of !'hi City el' CO'll• MeH, el n FICTITIOUS lUSINISI MAMIE Ioctl.-! In 1t.e City ol Cosll Mtia end lit_,, M. Wll110tt 11111'. ofllct .of tl'ltl derlt <II the 11bov1 I..• Anott",. Sin .. r1nc!tcO, 1 end the Felr Orlv .. C•t• Mew, Ctllfornl1, 11
I
T ollowli.:T:_~~~l1~'c1ctn; l>usinfti tn¥ vt~Olflll m1c11+11e buslneu IP9ftll111 M11yor al ti;. 1111111ec1 courr. OI lo prirsltnt tl'ltlm, wUll "district In whlcll Ille ...,,,ir; 11 sl11;111d. wlllch 111ld 11.n. tht I01rd o1 Olrlldoi1 crt i s: lie f ftt!dl1t11 mad\IMS In ~_City Of Cost1 . City of·C•I• Mflll Ille Me"~•r¥ llOUChlrl, TO I he T ..... S\ltcllnlul bld<ltr INll flll'nlM' II 11\t Ccs!t MIN Senlltry Dlltrltl Wiii hltr
111 ASSOCIATED SOUTH CO,\ST Me&e r991rdl~ ol I .... IOCltlon ol !Ill ... TTEST: UllCltf'slgnN ti 1111 offlct ol Na •"otMVI .-vm9"t IMlnd•efld • performeMe bond. tl'ICI o.ierml11t ,..._... MW! oblecllOM Ind
ll:E ... L EST ... TE (l) SOUTH CO ... ST l1c!llTI" trcm Which lhn tre -~-(11..EfM P', PH1 NHfY • I UlllTON, GAULOI N, THOM~M & ,Purtu1nt TO S«!lon lntt ., the L1t111r FIQUftfl /Ot' ewtmotl_, U eny, to Ille
ASSOCIATES -AEALTOlltS Ill AS-tel EVlt'., lllOll<1nt lor e lctcl C.llY Cl••-of t11e ' NELSON, 4\0 NIWl'Ol't Ctnltr Drive,(_,., llM Dt01nmtnt bl~ "'"lt l...S"" ~,..,.... •~lfMlll fOf' lreth 1..cl
J acobsen, 644-14174
640-1120
NEWPORT BEACH
JIU&e Fanti\y Room
0"11er will finance
This bt'autltul hon1e has
it all! Huge fan1ily roOm.
Hoot or trailer parking, new
hi-lo carpeting and bllill·ln
financing at Jess than the
current rate. Offered at
$55,TJO. Ask about listing
No. 1-0199.
WALKER&LEE
Real Estate
545-9491
2 STORY·Sll,750
4 BEDROOMS
2 story, onlf :$3.1.750. Bright
!"le\\' paint outaidr. Bright
kitchen, ·self cleaning oven,
beautiful hanh\ood floor x
and carpet. Upgraded tile in
kitchen • a·nd yard "·Uh
tra.UE'r acct'U. \\'ill sell,laitt. can 963-6767.
Ol'lN 11L 11 • IT"S FUN 10 BE HICE!
;~•:,;} THE REl\l I ~'.1ill i ESTATERS :
, CLIFFHAVEN
NEW Ll$TING
Hlirry to' ~e 'lhls 3 bedroom,
2 full bath, fan1ily rooin,
tonnaLdinlng.room home-on--
spacioµs co1:ncr lot With, a
beautiful lawn a.nd covered
patio . SOMF;T HlNG
E.'XTRA • ~a .ttparate a:ue1t
rooin o r hObby roon1 Ol'
???!? Really • this •-on't
last!! c&ll to .F-eC, $66,900 •.
SOCIATED SOIJTH COAST _ AEAI..· ~1"11 Ptrmlt Shill "" wltll lllt HNITll Cl!y o1 C0&!1< MfM Sult• ISIO Hewpeh t11e11, C1llf«nl1, Otner•I Pf'•~•Hlttl , ... of' Will" 111 Ille fl!'Olll <oll«Jlon 11 .Ill lortlt I~ 1 r•CM>rl
TOAS f•l ASSOCIATED SOUTH CO ... ST Pe~'Vt'iYte~I • \l/l'ltltfl 1opllc1llon whkh ' , ' wl!ICll Is Ille pt1ct o1 llUtlntss DI 1111 tourrtv 111 wlllCll lhe work II 111 llf don-. TO flltd wllh Tiit Secl'wllry of !11o1 01111rkl et '""""'!'~~~"'!'"'!'~~'!"!!!
Bll:OICEll:S !SI SOUTH COAST ASSO-111•1111111 ttie n1m1 '"" l<ldrns of il>.e STATE OF CALll"OllN14 l unrterslgnfll !11 111 m1Uer1 119r111'1n1111 "' ts list_, ltt Ille O.S-rlll'll!'ll ,., Thi offltAs Of lllt Ol1ttlc1. n F•Jr Dr!.,., PERFECTION 11 Woruen
CIA TEO 811:0K'Ell:S (6) SOUTH co ... sT ·P!'~~.•nl, nt,•,, ,•oc:111,~,.!' ,''",.,.~. COUNT¥ Of OllANGf • ) ,._ lo !he ""'• °'· r.al<I d«ldlnl, within ~!~",,'!"..,i.11on,,-~., ",",'i'!.on & .. " •,1 !..'.·.·, CM.•.·,-, • ,·,',•!\',M,'l.\•,·, "'l'.I" '" ' .. PHILAOELPHJA~(UF-J.\ ASSOGl ... -TES-AE" EST .. -T,,-.. ,· -fie,,,.. 1111 ffll 1 mafl ' "'' c 1 "' c Cl.f¥-Ofi COJT.t. MESA ) ttur mon)h__s 11!« 1.111 fin!. pUblk t(IQn .... "' • . -·~ _ •_w _., • _ ~ ... _ ICE .... •' .• _ • • ...... "" """ '"""'ibnillmii;t--wtikft 11-proposed-10 ~ . of t111J nolk• ,. Pr1v1llll'!f w ... ll:llH, U IH Jiil~,.1'74' r:!::r-' on ftl• Ill "" OH DI Ille l n d efiance of c h u r ch Ad1m1 Avt., SUIT• l(M, CMI• MllW, tit Cc.ndUC!fl!. •lld tllCh '11\t r I, ,EILEEN "· PHtNNEV •. City Cltrk D1t.,, July 1i, 1114 Dllld Jutv I, UT•. • M-hlllltry Dlt!rlC!i Tl l'iU•
-Alex Melklo t !1ck, 1237 Viste L1redo, lnlo•mlllon 'lt thl Hetllh Oe91rtment end t x.offk1o Clerk of the CllV COiin.eii cl HEROLD G,ll:EGOll:Y OfP,\ltTMENT 01" Or vel fourth ftOOt", ll:oom 4l r, n'<IY be
tradition, three Episcopal Mewoott 1111eh, CA 9'2660 1 e 1111 Cltv ol Cost• Mat. 11er10y cerllfr e 1 Of 111 Wiii -· TfllAHtPOllTATION •x•m,... ~ '"""°"'"~I 1:00 e.m.
bishops have agreed to ordain This DU1l11es1 11 condutted bv '" indi· m;J'i •e:~; ;.,mil $hlll tre trintN. 11itl'-111e •DOve end ·1or-.alno. Ordl~1nc1 A:'~ 4:,'".,..~ dtc~nt ol ""' "ft. J, OATf\. Wl<I s:119. •$1" MlfSA
11 women pn'ests in services vlduet. A. M. e t1e1< re_.., or r1111111i.a 11n1 .. 111e .._.1111 ~!,.!n"!.,w:i!:,1~":f':~:r:'r =1:-;:: 1u11To111. •6.uLotN, Publli~11~=•¥c!'!f''T.u., ll'itot, lf,,.1fA1tY 0 1STll:1CT
This "~ttrnenl WIS flttd wllll Thi County Dtp;trtl'l\e~, • ,d"'"1'1"", , .. • ~~ ...... ,•,nt ••Id Cltt (tullCll htld 011 lllt 2nd city ol '"'°"'SON ' N•UON Jutr 22. "" lt74 2'31-14 Ji"c'",' .. M~lW!!l"",,,;., here July 29. Clerk or Or1ng1 Covntv on J uly 11, 1t11. 1n tnvut 111 en. "'' ,,..,.. 1 1111 .I .., 1971 nd tllernller lleiffd enot AnlrMYt et· uw '":'I!' r,o-'-~, ; 0 H ''' "lMM ••ttllll!hino~t tor w111c11 lhf 1pPllc1tlon u... • .,, N--"rt c....., DrlY• s ·"' 1itt --·Tc NO'l1C o.tli • v ot, The ordination . first of its Pubt11hfll Ore1t11e co1!t 01;1¥ Pllct, 11 mtd• Is 1qulppe<1, _,.11_, •..cl t<:l(>lllMI 11 • whole 11 • r111u1 .. "'"''"" ,.._. lllldl, C•IH•niti n:. .-vu.1.o1 E July J, • 1• 4 ~14
ki h h of th JulY 22, tt. end AUQwt s, n, 1'7' i _n 4-1.i mi lnl•lntd In ,· ,111, ti nll•O' Ind of 11ld CllY COUllCll ltlld on Ille 1Mtt <11¥ T.i• 1,..1 '*lt1I
'nd in t e istory e he!Uhlut mi nr.er •nd 11111 ,.,. ~f!Olllons of Julr, 1'7• by Ille 1o11owltt0 roll c•U A~ fl 1 _,.,. l!IC"flTIOVI SUllMISI
church. is ex-..,f to bring PUBLIC NOTICE 1 1 111e 1'b1111m 1 w~lch •••\Id': .. , ' • · NAM• 1-r.&TIM••T PURI.JC NOTICE· ~ ......... ,. t~ •I n tt 1 1 "'1 I -· I .' 'YES• COlJNCILMEMlEll:S· Wll1on, ll'ublltl\H Or•rite CNsl Diii¥ P'olot, TM foll0\111 .. -. so'n 11 dol .. llullne»"------""C....~-----
·Balboa Island channer
Large 3 bedrbom pill.I 3
bath home. Huge family
rtt0m with ·bullt·in B.B.Q.
adjacent to larg~ patio for
indooT & outdoo r
entertaining. All this plus
separate guc.st quartet'!!.
Near South Bay Front. Only
$94,500 Sub m Lt . Call
673-&;50. lhe censure of t he governing --or v.'lllcfl m•¥ be U111tlf. l'Uitn tiry, Himmeit ,1,.1_ •Kiii H..;._ July n. ,,, Autut'f s, 12, l•t• 21ll-1• ..,.. " l"ICTITIDUS tVSTNlf,5 ull'Hholeson'!e or' dl!rll'nlftlll TO ""9 ' .,, • ... -. I •1: !J.i.,. church body and could lead """"' STATlfMINT llfall~· of '"" 1>11!r1;P111, c-umtrs, NOES: couHCtl..MEMt Ell:S: NOl!t TH1NKfll: Fll:M\E AMO MOUt.DING 'tc!/!TIO s 1us1Nirs1 I Of'ENTILt•/1'SFUN 10BE N1C£1
I I t TP\t fcUcwlng irt doln!! employ-er tl\t .ge!'le•ll public. • A8SEMT : COUNCILMEMIEJIS: None CO , 1111 M ,_.A.,.., CC.II Mnt, N I .liTllMe'NT ~-· , to the ecc esiastic discip ine. 0 bus!fltH ei: ~rson• ! I Ht ptt"mll sl)ll1 be 11rintecl. IN WITNESS ~ElllEOF, I l>.t'ltl hlrebV PlJSUC ,NOTICE c111torn11· 9'2W'. Tiie foUow fll lilefSOfl• trt doing ·~~~'!I ~1
tk A-..i..A tak rt ' •t PAll:IC; AV>STEAS INC lHS 5 e I llll'CI It 11\t H Ith S.I m¥ fllllld' eri4 elfi•ed 1111 S..11 of Ille H11rollll I. Solllll'Mllt,' :t41 Ht1t$1111 ll:d bullllell es: I ~' ·~ l\·i11.1 ·e p.a in 1 · Msrln.ci c1r.;c0511 Mesi . c-~111• tt61,'" 6.",~~!. ''~!terml~ "'ttitt ~h• Cll.'t' of Co.I• M9w mr1 11111 d•¥ of July, •912711 ccs11 "°'"'' CellfO[n!1 '26t6 "' FAMll..Y FAll:MS COM,,\NY, 11m ' ...
The rites, in Whic h WOITTCn Gery F. Sc:honei. 3'15 S111 M•rlno olldltl Of 1114 food l\tn llll l119 191'-SUP'a•IOlt COU•T •Oll' TKI ThlS bulff\IM II COl'llNcltd llY en It>• ,W..NtllAvt,5tlf!lot1CllH,f11610. ;i ., 1
r::intring in age from 27 to Clr., .... ccs11 Mest.· CtHI. •1'2i26 ~1.11011~..-1 11 In eecord1nct Wllh Ille l!U.,EEN "· P'HINNfY STATI •• C,\Ll•Oll:NIA dlV!Mt. • • • • ' ' P~itwJ": Ll!:i~ ;=..=:· ~~~::+;~~~~:::::::1:.-1-------"'· r! P. Scl\ol'll•, ff• Governor, t1<1ulr1man!1 o;p1 111 1ppll,1blt pr0Yl1lon1 t.llY Cler~'"" ex.ott!ela Cltrk "DC THI C9UJO'_J_Oll..CltAM.0 · Herelfl S. Sol~" ·• " __ 2 J 11i~Vertt11r1-Enterpr\-'...nm . 79-wiJ:t-be~ordained, r e-to ~1r,\\1s1;>c111r~'" o1-ihl-CiHlfiffllrH~t!h-.-ncr-s111 ..,he.c;l.,,..Coundl·llf~lhl-----:--MO TA -11611"' 'l!ttr1t9'llMlll .,.._"fll..,~11'1 N ""<:O\l"l'I• ·wni.ni A<tt s11n10., Cell! '°6111 be held t the Church of the TMlt bullnni. I• Co<'ldllCled b¥ • 1Je11tr11 Coclt, of ntlt clllPffr.tnd ~Mid food Cl!¥ Of CCIII Mett NOTICI Oft MirAll:ING Oft ,ITfTION IV Cltrk ol Ore1109 C~ .n J1111t 21, J. The ,,.;._ Gro~?: Inc., 310 N, 'si n . a p1rtnerslllp. l'ltndliltll tl!lllflthm•l\11 1rt ,1p1bl1 of J~"" .. I~ Orenge Cotsl Dell;_,1':~o;pt, fO• •ll:OIATe Oft WILi. ANO llOJI. 1•71 '· • ' _ Vlc111te llVll.>t..o. Ana1lot, (1, 900'1.
A d v 0 c a t e in N 0 r t h Garv Sc!lonet being oper~Ted In 1eccrd1n'' wl1n •11Ch u y ' I -Ll"••s· rlSTAM•NTAllY ,ma '· CenlUl'V Perk ln~•llm9lllJ1. Inc· .. PtJjla.leJphia. This tllltrnent w~~ 111..:I with Ille li ws t rid retul•Hlllla. E!ltlt Of ·EOMUHO 1,;, WElEll:, l"Ubllt t\ed Or•lllt COii! 01fly Pllol, 1trt:CI Century Perk Eai l, Sulll ._, LOI
\I Coun!Y Cltrk ol Ortflll• Coun!Y c" July Ol Ptrmlr1 mM¥ be or1n1N 11 1n¥ PUBLIC NOTICE Oece11td. Jiiiy I, •• 15• n. lttl 2~111 "'"f"tl;.;.•· ~. Inc., 34111 Oc••n
The Episcopal House O( iD. 1971 llmt Gurlftl the Yttr, ~Ill 111 ptrl'llllt NOTICE IS HEll:E~Y GIVEN 11111 Ori.,.., Oxnard, Ct.
Deputies, consis!ing of Jaymon , .. ,,, ,J,... 111e11 ·~p;re 11 '"" •M c1 1111·c1111n<1•r t tt?M JANET sUE JiASSEos ,.,. ll:ANOALL PUBLIC NOTICE T1111 buslfllU 11 condUttH bv • oen11•!
v !lled Ortnoe Co1~t !>Ail¥ Piie!. y .. r. E1'll petmll $11111 bl ?OSltd In t guPl•tOll COU•T O, THI E. ANDERSON htve fllN Mrtl" 1 ·part,,.,slllp
and c lergy. rejected ordination ~.15' ~' 29, end AUOl.l•F 5• lt~i$61·T~ (ct1solt1U1111 ;.!•ct Ol'I lne IOOd ,h1ndl!ng IT.All Of' CALl,Oll:NIA• ii1tlllon /or Probill ti W111 Ind fol' ' · Tiit LecQlleS COll'\fltll)'
Of women at a recent national • est1bll•hment 01 venlc1o for which II I• 1"011 TNI COUllfTY Oft OltANOI 1s1u1nce_ al 1.tlttn 'Tffllrntnt1ry lo ,l~ITIOUI •IMUllNISI 9¥: JOl!el' Lecq~ l"rnidtf!T V;JBLJC NOTICE '"""'°· H•· A -IMl1 tt.e pe1lll011era rtfet't11Ct tlt wh!'n Is •"!"• ITAT •llfl This tt•lfll'ltnt we1 nrtc1 w!lfl the assembly. Church law does __ _ 1-lS C-'rvct;.,., c-. ....... 1"" ll4ld HDTICI Oii NIA•IM•' o,. ,.ITITION mtd• tor lul'llltr p1rticlll•rt. 11'\d th.ti ' The lol1C'.'fl"f ~ions tr• •olna C1111n1Y Cler~ cl Ortnet couniv on June
de I ·-he ~· I' Alllf•lllll: Prior TO !ht C0<1$fMKllon. FOii: Pll:O•,\TIE OF Wll.L ...... fOl tlll 11~ Ind Pl•c• ... l\e1rl111 1111 -bull-••:. \I, 1'74. not a Whu I 01uU1a lOll lttUJ c,nv•rile11 w e11tr1'10!0 cl th¥ klod LITTlll:S TISTAMINTA•Y twis been •ti Iv ... ugutl I, lt74, '' Mc,l.A.HCIN A'ND A!SOCl,\T!S, 706 COX, CAITl..I, IUCMOLION of women, but the church has 'FICTITIOUS tUllN£SS e•llDlllllmenl, er con1lr>Kllon or purc111,e Etlllt of a ETTY J O FOll:l(Efl:T, f ::ID '1.m.. In 1111,, cCUrlrebm o1 2ht Sl(.,.t, Huritf""ton l•cll. C1Ui.r"11 & Wl•1'11 .
) ded f J N"'Ml SlATIMl lllT o1 1 model of veto1de "°' prtvioutl¥ u,,.,.,. dt<:llltd · O.pettrntnl Mo. J or· uld court, 1t nut1. . • , .. c-.rv Pvti .• Isl, S11ilt M traditionally eXC U ema CS T~I lallowfn11 Pl'ICllS t re dol11g permll 111 enr PM""' ]R lllt City, tllrN MOTtcE IS' HEll:ilY GIVEN· Ille! 111!1 Cfvte C111Mr .Ori.,.. W..,, In 11'11 hllf Chr!t!op!Mr McMellol\, 20I 21,t t:r ..... _,,_ Cltlflnllt ...., •'
Balboa Island
C·l + Residence
Exitl high traffic. localion for
ginaJI bw;incss. Home on rear, store ln front. AMunle
7~% Loan. $.:)J,000.
FOR ILL HUS
from 1he pn'esthood. l>uslfltSS •1: (l ) tQlllH of the pleM 1nd !1>1clne.1lon1 CLIFFOll:O A FORiCEAT l'llll IJI_, lllrtln CITY ol S.llle Ant , Clllfcl'..... Street, HllllllttOIM ... 1c11, C•ltllfnlt t lftJ) 117~
.. .&..-•&.-THE CAJl.PENTEll:tA CO. INC., ID3 ll'lerl'for 111911 be •u°"lllled ~ 11\t Htellll • S19t1ll011 ior Pr-le of Wiil iM O.ltd Jiiiy 19, 1'71. ~ f!ubllthld Or ' (Ill! 'clllltv Pf:"Jf 1 ........................ ~ ''Mloee WllU oppose w.n:: 2hl PIM:t. NtwPOrt ... ell. C1lllorttll 011>11rtment. Thi H•lth Ott!ctr er Ml .... ,_ of Lefl!lr• .1 .. 11menl•1Y Wll..1..IAM E, St. JOHN. ,"-..... ,rt 1"1lge,,31~.~.An!,Pl,.,mll. JUiv •• lS, n. :it".T.t, 2471~o;, -:-C-ALL IT-CHARM-
ordination of women contend . nuo 1u11111r111c1 ~ •h•ll 1twtr1•U•r 1ui.. 1o. 1111 Pl'llT'-rtlerenc:• to wNch Ctuntv Cltrt c, 2. 11t• wo.r1., • """ • •J that th< pn"est.hood i s solely W~~urenct Johll Wlllllrll O'Musl, •st 0 his certlnceN lltllnt _, modll'lc1t10tw. Is mitdt IOI' llrrthlr 1>1rtltultrt. end JAMii A, NU:':.tltRIYI.-J•. H l"1;r1~ AT t•191, l;ti,:1· 1Anria'['u $21,900 4 BR 2 BA
9261 , Wiison. Co1te Mti •, C11flornl1 11 anv, t.e <IHmt rl!fulrtd for compH1~u 111111 11\e ' II~ end jt11c1 ot h .. rino 110......, C °''"" llllt. Ult ,"...,.:., -" ~''',..· 11~r11,•, •---PIJllUC NOTICE •(ama'o gct·a·way, SU><slii·-f beca Quist Was wllll 1ppllc1ole leW\ 11'\d rl'IJUllllon!. lht Mine hsl -lel for A\IQl.lll ~ ..... CA ..... •"'• ' ' ·• ~· "" o r men use ROfltf'd J1tr1e1 Holly, '" •o· w.-1 1•16 •fflldlt11 ''""Its: '"' o~r!l'l'ltnl ,, 191.,. 11 •:lll ,,tr\., In t11e _lrOOll'\ Ttif: 111,, ......,, l11"1C11on hl<ll, Cell/onll• ~"' clee.n • ready f 0 r
a man. but 6 u p p 0 r t e r s ~~\son~~ ~~·.icr~~-;:'1~ ~21 ~r· of 1v11c11no Stlwt;' o1 '"' Cltt of cost• o1 Otpirlfl'llflt No. ·a ·of 11ld court, •--"'' llltlt!Mwt '"'' blrtl-i. COlldl.ICfed W ' "'*•t tVHlllOll COUllT OI 'fMI occupancy, jllllt tight tor maintain that Ch r j S t ' S porll!~ Mnt Wl!I nol!ly 11111 tttt llh Dtp;trtl'lll'll 11 . 100 Civic: c,m~ Orlve W11t, In P'uDllll\lt Or.1191 ~otll 0'4tr ,llCI, """'':t'~~lcle Allhe ,.,I.. JT..&T• Oft CALl,OIHll.& '°9
The C•rpenterf• Co. inc. \O'l'IWI p1111• •r• rKwlvl!d to build tr •~ C!ty o1 Sen!• Ant, C•Hf01nl1. JulY u. l!l, "· lt,4 2m·t4 Tl'tls ''''""""' .,.., ,11.., wlttr ttlt Coun· TM• cOUlfTY ., CMt.U.el YOU renters to get started.
message was for everyone and L•uretic:• John W1Ultm O'Acult remodtl • tooc1 eo111>111hmen1. DetH Ju1., it. 1'74 PVBLIC NOTI. C"" IY' c1er11; _. cir• COlll'llY "' J-21 • k A....,, Co.rpet11 & drapes lhrouout. his sex should not be a factor . P'rel 1·1' ....... flM ••r-'I: WILLIAM E. ''· JOHN. D H74 • ltOTtCI ~ "1"•1111• 'Of 1'1TITION ~-e kitc hen \\'Ith count"' , • J (1) All IOod h11ldl1nt lfl•bli,flmlflll CMlllT C.-PlllM POil PfltOIAT OP '#ILL ANO ,Dill: "'ft "J ..-•urtM~ (tlln Wltll•m O'Acu!f fOf' Wlllcll • permit 11 r911U!r'4 by 11111 ••ll:NAll:O o . IT, JONN . ...,,. •• , TllTAMINT.,•Y n10Sphcre, to tal payment11
Thl5 ,111eme111 w11 llltd with"" c-c11ap1er a111u be ce.w1ruc1ect. "ull'QICI, 1,.. w-Ctvllll ,.,. .. ,, t.lltt IN NOTICI TO c•••nou ,llbltllltd °""'" Celst 0111y,,P.!.~,& 11:11111 . of OOltC"'S II:, McKAY, arc less than rent Seller
Iv Cltrk cf Or•nt• County on June 71, OPl"'llld tnd mi!nti!ntd so 11 too w..t CftfM. Cl. ,1,,., ',~:J:•:: c~::.:,. ',.":. ·J"!Y 1• I, IS. n. 1'7• ' <IV O-.Md. Ill ll VA nd F H'"
F l C I 1'" comPIV with. lllt pertlntnl HtllOlll of Tiii: 1n11 ..,..... NOTICE IS HEll:ElY GIVEN 11111 w now se a ,. ', ourt l ras 1 "'"111 !hi C.Ulor'li• HNJlll INI S•ftlY, Codi • .t.""'111T .... r ............ ! THI COU~T 0 • o•.t.111•• PUBUC NOTICI'; ALSl!ll:T lt. MclC.AY Ill• IUlld ll!tr•tM • and payments. call 833-6256
• , J11fibir.1~td Ortnt• ca.i1t 01rly p11ot, In to1a111on. et ltltf ' tlnoll P11t11ilftH Or-CCMf D1lty 1"110!; ,.., A..., 111 O• 1191Ulot1 for Pl'OMN Of .Wm •1111 lor WALKER & LEE
I, is, 22. "'' 237t-1~ corn.-rtment 1111l1or111 iln-with llot J u1y 22. n,·2t, lf11 212•·1'-~:ii!'::. of Gl!MEVIEVl H. 0 !:Pil. ,... • I••~ of Letflf1 Tnl11\'llllflry lo flle REAL ESTATE • t lld cold run11l~ w1~1, .fi ollier · • ~ N TICE IS HEll:EtY GIVEN lo !he PICTITKH.11 lUllNlll pel)l!OM• rller1rn:'e IO Wlltth I& mede for Victim Dies PUBLIC NOTICE •POl'ov«f l.cfllllec. 111111 lllpro'lldld f~' PUBLIC NOTICE crldlfOl'I .. 1111 •bO ... 11•mtd ~ IU.MI STATIMINT . lurtller Nrtlc~l•rt·i;:"" lllll !Mtl~ 1.nd CO~NA DEL MAR
f---,,,,·,,,, .. , '"''""'' "t":I•! ;1:;r:v~:·11 bt pre111cied ,.,, !:fJ ~'~:'.;'~':~c::!m:e 'ftt~n~ .. T"' ~11ow1~""'~ '°':'8 ·'""·-':'".iufv ~;,' :,.~ II~~,: ~~.~ ;:. CHA RMI I ---
v v Jn 9Kll told pr.,,.rllklll W Ntklnt 'ICTITIOUI lliSlflllSt·NAMI wUn I~ l>UtHlrv VOIKMfl In tf\I efilct ttA•,\DISrl ISL.ANO ~llODJJCllONS, c..,rt.._,, fl DfPtf'll'llfl\f Ho. 3 of 1~1<1 1
NAMf STATIEMllllT l rff tor -plO't'ft• Ext!pllon• Wlltrt • '"' '' I ITATRMINT .... .... Cl ,.,. <llrlr"' 1?11 •bow entitled co:r-;· or I.TO., JJl:ll I!. Cl!tClmln Av• .. Or•~·· cour1. •I "'° Cl'llC c .,11.,. Ortv1 Wttl. In U·n ll ~II a I I n v c :o; I m c n t FRESNO (AP ) -A lourth The followi119 PlrlO!t 11 dolttO Mlnt$t · ' fll aw n1 "'°""" tr• 1'18 ,. ' Ctllr., f.I..,,. , Ille Clly cl S11n11 An1, C•Jltarnl•, ' ·
ed l 11. !tnllorl.. slfl~ l'lt 1llullld 111 • MU 11. , to pres1n1 them. with fM .11 u 1ry cine V9ftlUrM' 1 n 11 r n 1 1to11 1 1 o.11tt:July n , '"'· oppor1Ur\lY; 2 bdnn. + loft,
teenager has di as the resu t . COSTA MESA w"' LL."'" E It (Ol\Ytflflnl 1oc1111111 t i tpprov.,, " "" GIN: ... s. 42111 Se.r l e.th IOul•••fll, vou'htr!t, lo !ht ul'M!fer1l;lltd •' ' l1nd P'•odlKllOfl Cllflllll•"Y· '"'°' •. Cll•ptn•ll WILi.JAM llo'.'$t Jo+iN; \\'Ith &uper ...... errtlll.I Plen'"
. I
• .J ., .......;~.1· ( k 81\ZAAJI 1132 N ti d C 1 Hte!tll Do~rllt*tl II'' provide!! wl~ 1$"1 It.Kii, C1U .... n!11 , ' Sir .... ,, 0, 1!1011 t»S, N•\\lpllrt ... ell. A.,. Ortl\OI Celll ~· e Cillfll.rn,li Countr Cl Ji' I"" ' ~ 1------~u1~.mg a • !...!!.£ _ , c 'ut 1 twport "'" 05 1 prOPer m•l11tt11•11C.1, the lllond 11v11or1 LJ,.· si~l11'1 GIOlll:J:" -~~It. c1u1or..i.-nMO. w~-1.._1fle_p1a¢e ill tor.,:0...1cn, ..:...nc. f1.1.n, 0-.1 "•~ 001t.ra.: NTMA:r --oL btick. 11hakLroO!.....lgc'-----
', accident in P.t adera o n July M 1.~·-• orn • '21&27 1 11'111¥ tie om1""°· 2 01 t; "•• -w 1 , 11 1 ou11111t• ot t111·1F1NHrllonfd 111111 """''' ner. • ain, 1...,.... ,.,... b-ee&. Ex1ra \\•idc <t;; ft. lot ....,ry H, Moore, 46) ·'Nl$lm llllef" t ·ll ·silu9Mlon el' Permttt: '-ptt"mll • •1'111 • Sm • • • flll '" • PIM•lnlllf to the e1t1!• °' 111d, dteeclenl, Tlll1 bu1l-1 11 CO!ld"'°'""' Oy ,1 1111'\flld 1
: 10. Av•·• Newport ... ch. c1111ornle t1/if0 l•suecl Wider lflll' c~.,i.r m•v be f~ i!t'r.:. ~t :ltd In' • 0.....,11 whhlll 1c11r mcnlllt en1r· Ill* first Plt1Mf'thl•. L,•-•--.., ,_.,...,..1 _. \t•ith l'Oonl to build. Clean Alf ed T v1 4 P.f Tiii• Outlllfll 11 ccndutl9d ey •n ~. 11n111er tl'll pro«(Jllrt Ml lcrlh oirln•rshlt . 111.1blk11lon .t l_hJ1 notice. C•H• \leltTVlllt !'~ 0..... & sha.rp! $77,000 •
, r rt no, I , adera~ lndlY!du~~rv H. Moo•• ~~ $otellcn. l•lt ll'lrOUOh 1.n 111r tnY 11 "" tylvl• 01on1rlf::: -~ ~ OtlOCI Jul'I' 2.,m..,' 1N.1t111:H,1r.T10H"'L Jlll'f"'1's~ n. lf1• COftl O.llV 21';1~$'' C F Col-worthy • died ai St. Agnes Jtospital Thli ..... ,.,.n, wes Iii .. Will\ 1'111 follll'llllflll rt•tcnt: This '"t::"t wet ..... ,II\ ""''1, lt1t J1me1 . "'Jr. PROOUCTIOM COMll'ANY' • • ...
: here Saturday, officials siad. c°""'1r c:11rk ot Or•no• c...,lltY 1111 Ju11 l•l Ylol111on of"'•" ltwl Clef• " Wiii• c.r.tlllY'" J1111t »p:ln E-«UIOr"' ~wui" J-"'-" Mt11er, ll'rwldlnt ----REALTORS • Hft -• fbl vloltt111'1 ll'I •Ill• c.llltlll'tf'I ot tbO'lt< 1111'1\1d dttedlnt TM• $t1temelll tiled wlnt Thi (O\n'lly PVBLI' C N~E ~•• : His brother, Ernie Trevino, 10. ,.,._ ,,,.... lei u11t11 , ,~110!\ tor .&CKllMA"' Ltllf• • .1uss1t.L NuawfTt. MV•WfTZ AMO a1M•1t c11tt •ONllOI CCIH'll'f 91'1J~11. "1"' .I --------"~'"''----1--;--:.,.,=:-:::,..,,.,.,.,-,..,:-
lO, and CCJUSin Jane Gomez. ll'u11t1111ed 0t11111 c .. 11 D•l!Y P'llot. r1vot111on Of "" """"'' lltflllllO • :_~ 't:....ri :-.-,..'';"",,. ,. .............. ..... ' ,_ .,., ,,_,,~ Plct"10UI ••••••• LOYEL Y HOME
J ' ''
• • .. ' J 1t14 2'"< >• r.terlllf '"""°"' LIN IMdl. CA ttlft ' ' I u.,.,.,_ ...,..,... ' ' 17, of Watsonville Wtrt killed u., • • ........ UllllJI • ~. •·" '""" "' ........... : Whtll Mii' ... Toi! U'll) °""'' """"" ~ .. ~· .... J u v •• u . 2':1. "'·ft!• Mn,, • • •AM• ITAHMINT NEARLY NtW LOVELY
he -1.. • • .... , k PVBUC NOTI,._ "" llWINhl ........ thl• ™P'., ., n.i•• Pu.i11111d °''"" c11111 o.tN """· c,,.1 .,,.... PllBUC NOTICE '"-fet19wl111 '!.'-.,. fol"" HO'IE w·-· s•cwo•o in t Cfl:!<i.I 1Jl WIUC'b a tnJC '-'D llld 19'1F1tlltl'I• fWNe. lrMl't O/lel•ftd, Ml JlllY ft. It, ... Aupit S. 12, )f14 fl1f>1• ""'"""flt.... bl.Ill-el l It 11 n .... C.
struck their car at an 111111K1ot 1'111¥ -wrrntft n.ci11n PVBLICNOTJCE P111111""" °''"" COMtt 0111, '''°'· LA JOLI.A GAllottn. l•••t ENTRANCE , LARGE
m
, ter·~~. The driv-of l"ICT1T1ou1 1us1N1s1 ~ en1111111 "Ne11c• Of Vlolit!On" JIJlr •· ts. n, •· lt1• Jm.'• -;ieTn•oui IVlllllll M•cAflfM' ....,...,.,,, 1r111,,., C1flforf!11 ROO~fS, HOMEMAKER'S
""'""""'' '"' NAMI STATIMINT ~11rl110l nlll ~ -NAM• ITATIMlllfl '110!' I vidull 0 n £AM C 0 UN TR'{
1 lheit car. Robtrt G<>m~i Jr .... .!.~ •• ':.'~!ne "''°"' ..... OOh'IO (• ""' Kt• .nil <Ol'ld !ll111 • PICTITtOUI IVSINllS PUBLIC NOTICE Thi !Ollowl,. Ptrtflll ... '°'"' l!IJ•;tt"u~-· :1r.:·~" 1,:.i '""!.1 KITCHEN. ONLY .... ~,
6 I r W v!JI dlA.1 ..., ... c!lftttltu•ltlf •di vlelt1lon 1 • NI.Ml lfAfSMiNT Ml~•• 11. l 1• ,IC "' • "" Oii c.,, ...,.. >NU
] , a SO 0 atson e, t.-u PJl.(ONAMCY COHTftOt. MEOIC ... 1. fl:ll IM ,.rovlllOll tr prQYl1lont Tiit lottow,flll Pf'tGll ll' OOll'IO bu1!nti1 •iCTl'TIOUI tUllNllf NI.Ml SV 1;A$A •t:e11:EA.T!Olll Ct.Ut. u,. .. '{."1'a:.ft ef! lndhrldutr j,,1 \\'ON°T LA$T. CAU.. 847· -
in a hospit81 kller. ~.~?au:~~.~·,r70ci~w•r -suir. no, vlfj~111'':,=,.,. 11• ,...,1,.., •· 9 • 1 lACK HO~ ll!'to:TALS. T..,. to1iewr..:':!~:•1~Tdolno !Mlniu C1rrr•cn. I.MUM tHcll. C1!1f01nt• 9'Ul Kl~ ~•ttVon or1V.. 1t111111nii1on ieKh, _60,,._l"O~A.,,,"1~·==-~~ •-;::::::::::::::::::::===-=-=~-J EO d C '''" '110 '"' !w<• < I «ll ,_.., Yen. l..lftdt , C11!Forl!le, ' "J" Gr~"' lelf!Ap, IJSf C•rrltOJ, C1Jlf,,,... l!ASTSIDE INCOME-Av•l;i,,1111va~. l~ A""4tt:• c.. .• 90(~ !d.l. 1111 6'i!• IW wn t ll •11" ·~ f1*. • "·OEN AH O $LEEP' l'Ull:NITUJl.E. L•llllnt tltt(1t, C:•l!IOl'l'lll fUll Jerry l..ui'J'btrt, Ill lfld!Vld!;il, l't3t
Sunda>/ IS
• IC:tNtt1n 1.. w1:t111, 1,1,0 .• Jn North ~.':='rii.ll'lln~r:,·c:;:";:~· • t/'l'J t JCllll su1Uvlft ... ,, Av!ICj•dO, Ytrr. "'91 '-'•rouetlll '•rkl'l'eY, M1111010 Ell•ebt/11 w. h!l'ln. 1aM Ct•lll'*' 'JNlmrock A..,._, FOlllllllO VeU1y. f\1-'0 doll hotL~!'I on Qnt lot.
1..1rchl'flf.ttt. Lo~ ,\noelts, C1 .. fOOOI. Lln.lt. C.•lll11rn11, tloiw.._ • \'!t i• n•IS Lltun• lt1c11~c1111~nf1 ~I c1n1, n70I 3BR 2BA witll dbl .,, •
I T~11 "U"°nt:~ b t OfldOCIH ~)' •" ftl ,nt! 1ne Pt!''""'"·~·• t10hl to • Tllll butlhlJI 11 conduclfd OY ti'! Ol!'lnlJ Le\111 Yok111. !Utt T,,.1~11A!1t Tlllt 111i1lnt&t It Cllltductod ~ -.i In-Thlt btnJ11111 l1 condlltl'M by • 11ntrel ' t •' · ~
1 lnC:Motu~ l'lt•rlno 110011 rec:i1.111r1 "''"' 1n.t1v1du•I C:ourl, t1tu11t1ln Vtlitv, C1rtt. tl'OI Jlvl~1191. p~rtner111111, 2BR, lBA \\1lt,n dbl Jar". F'l]11 _,...r I Ee,.,•r~ c. AHf'ld M.D. ro 1~11 If "° l'!Nrlno It ''""'1Nr<1J, John SIJl•lv•n r11,, bv11~n• 1, C0fl011tttc1.., 111 ll'tdl· ,, c . ••1n~ J•'"" o. Hitter Seven 1.,.. otd. x1n1 buy, gn. Tflll 11•l•mtM ""'' luld .,.1111 the •M 11 1111 H111tM Ot111r"'1.,..t ""* r.or Tllh tt•••m•n' "''' flltd wl111 1~1 ~1• Coen 1 t. v lll\1 tr1i.m11i1 ..,,, f119CI with thl Ctul'I> Tf\11 11•1'"'"" Wll llltci wtlll 1111 ~1 nve!ttn1en1 . Owner JC~·~ll' Cle!k or Or•llCI• COl/flfy Oii Jul'lll 'tf.°""' llollce., ... ,..' .u lllKl'I, • ., :o''~."r' CfUnly (:lerk el Or•,,.. CWl\ty .... Jll('IO Tnh <l~I ... ,0~,~ wur, ,,. 'i'' ly Cl!"k of Ch'•llOt Coo.mJy .,. Juttl "· C-Jy Clltk of Or1nge cevrrty .n JUIY ............ 1.,1. C•ll J'RESTJGE ''· 1.,.. h••• _,, ft\ ' o•• • .m. "' ,. 1'14. Cltr-,, O••nl!t c .. 1111V Oii Ji., it. " ' 1911 I~ ltU. ""'" .. l' ·., ~ l>l !ll'••'Jl•ll ,,... 41ft 11tme<1""""' ldl 111ovt. or ~"'IR r '""* , ' "'"• PJM4J llO~fES fQr !.nnrfoorm•tiOn and [ ___ .:....:·:'"!!~' ~!'!~!!~ ,u~!I)"'° Or•nt• C~tl D•ll't' Piiot. fll!"11 llJ) ci.¥1 l fltf' ltf'Vl(t el lhe t'lllll!tlttd or:1..-..'..~ OIJIV--Plitl; ll'ublllhld O•et!H c-..1 O.•lv ltot.I l"Ubll•f!M:~,n Ciiif:-Oilln11i[i! -,Ulll.,,.. Or'ltl .. (flltf o.nv ,iJot. .de1.alta...MS-H Jvl'f 1$, tt,.19 ·~ A\lf"'I J, It/I t•it'11 Wl'lltflll MflU. Wfllchl---tlr11, Jul'y f, u. H, 1', 1'1• Wl·lf July #. IP; l r'Kt A\IGlut! " rt, 1'1• I INI Jlllt !. t, u, D; 1•1• ,,.._,4 Jl/IY lt, ft, If, Inf A\lfllll j. 1911 ,._.,, ;:::;::;:::::;"'°.::..:=.::.-------
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I. I I -\
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,,___ I M):<;=:::..:::;;...,;---;=.....,=--.-=.---=::--:---:--=-:---o :=:::-;;;-;;---..,..====-;;--;----==,..-Mond.iy, July ... 22, 1CJ74 O.AILY PILOT Io • ·1,;....,.;;;;;'~;;·'-~R~. ·:-::~-~·;;;;;;;'.001-";;-e~n~~=·~·~'=·R~.~~~·~;;:~l~Ofi~;l;Ge;;;ne;r;a;;I ;•;.E;.::;;;;;::;;;';;~;2 General R. E. 1002 Gener•I R.E. I~! General R.E. 1002 Gent:;ra:;l-;R0.0E-. --;1·"00"'2.+:G"'e:':nC'e"'ra,'it;'~"·"Er.--•1"002"""G..-•nc..•.,.r..:al;..R"°.C.E-. ='--.r..!oo2'L
H----1· 21'17 OCIAN , C!f!.AJ!E.L...IM -NIWPORT-W/POOL -~,,,ITTJ~iE--------
-wltire you can '" •II of th• followlne: u11;1o1n l>ullt j10inc 00 rart>' ~ 001. TIME
I
San Cle1nente Island tfurbor Entrance ~ kM. -;ul(J - a · hair. !l 1 J BEDROOMS + SPARKLING POOL ,_
Catalina l!i land lialboa Peninsula I lk"<hoonu, 2 buths. r,.,.nt11l fantastic Costa i\-tesa hQlne \\'ith .plush car-
Balboa Island Balboa Pavilion ~lnlrig ·iwni. llrauillui pets and drapes. Separate family room. din·
China Cove Th e Blue Pacifi~ Ocean• ~~~u18;i11':°J ~::~d10:,~~11~r ette area, detached double garage on large
. Ask BAltBA RA GLASS lo show you these · Nt'"' 0t.'11rpt>t11ld1·a~. N1·y,·1Y lot. \'acant, O\\•ner '''ants fast sale !! Last
views from . each of the S bedroo,n:; & 3 . rcnlOOeJoo bathto:, d 11 " l' I years price, only $3 2,500. Call 54()..1151 .
' OUR BUSINESS 15
>4ELPING PEOPLE
LIVE BETTER
bath•; the living room and J:ame arf·p; tbe tu.:c ,., One or thl! hf>MI ~)'11
dining room/family room/kitchen; and the 1" Ne .. port '"'""'~ 163•500· 'JUST Ll!\TllD IRVINE TERRACE
2 balconies. This 80x100'1ot is onl y $215,000! CluRi~~~1~ ~~~~l 6 11 FINEST MESA VERDE LOCATION-quiet Adult occupied 3 bdrm, & dining rm. home.
(The 2000 sq . ft. house Is "FREE"). • p1-eKtlaiou11 Jrvlne lloulr· I tree lined street. \Valk 'to park and sc hools. co1npletely redecorated inside & out. The
_ .-J,JLO.RCHID cOJi.ONA..DEL..MA vurd. NP,id1 pulut n~id 3 Bedroon1 and fa inily. Exc:ellent condition. l~nd is included (not leasehold). Qu ick pos·
Something new in old CdMI • i~:n~ust:~='S"~~~ ~eda-r ·roof .. sha-carpet , rreplac~nd-p..-'1-sess · ~ o...cougtry s;tub, shops & bea~c:!l!:1-_L.,. ____ "---"----1-•
,_ __ _..
On Coast Side of Co.it Hl9hway " De~ .. to1111al Olnh\8 ruon1 , I t10. FuJI price $42,500. Call ~1.J.51. es. $86, , ,,
4 Large bedrooms upstai,.. each with "'•"'"""' kl1'0"""· Will ~ll I GREENB~OO'( . BLUFFS BARGAIN
own bath (1 BR apt. siled .wittl slairway to ~fuJ'~~y ~~i~u>io~i-'.EN COUNTRY K'.!CHEN MODEL v It d L'k 3 bd & d' . d EASTSIDE DREAM HOME family room; own wefbar with ref~r; balcony ·~ · . . '1 -au e · · · 1 ·e new rm. ining rm. con o; Only 2 years' old, 4 bed., 3 bath, hardwood w/small ocean vi·ew·, ival k·'•n closet). Large DREAM HOME I ce1hng, 3 bed rooms, onl y one year ne\v , .upg_raded thruout-deep pile ca rpet, custo1n n d k'l h d' Only 2 Yf'ars old. 4 bed .. ::: mod toda nd d t drapes, top ~·u ality wallpaper. terrazzo til ed ( oors, ream . ·i c en, super upg ra ing -laundry/sewing roon1 adi'oins fam ily room. """· '-~-•\\'-" ''"''".-.· . em as Y a rea Y 0 n1ove 1. b 'f 1 b ll · p · 1 Large corner lot "'ith extra concrete drive
Many Other Great Features drtam kitchen. s u Pe r · ...,,_ · ·. 3i;:i S6 and boat gate. Eastside Costa Mes a, only ...... u ........, ~ ,, I into Lo'"' of rough textured "'oods sh " pa 10s, eau 1 u green e v1e\V. rice on y I
3000 Squa"re Feet -2 Years Old upgl'•dlng -Largo rorncr ~arpets, fireplace. !he works! 90% F1nanc· 9,000. fl $~8.900, or "'ill trade ror income properly. lot with ex'tra cuncl-ele drive
1
1ng available. Priced belO\V market at
You this Cape Cod beauty tor only $152,500!! Cotita M~. only S"8.!JOO. or •·;;.~~~~~~~-'\ p Re'T I Ge BARBARA CAh1PBELL will prou~ly show and boat 'gale. Ea,t~ide , S47,500? Vacant, see today. Cell ~1151. aUR ~
wm ''""" '" '"""''·.---------~-,1 · -B ~> ~
Vlsl.N propc~\l.LGl~'6 1G ERITAGE BAY~~~30~0ACH I I HQME:S
A fR~~IRe:~ ii R407 E .CDAllT HWY. CDADNA DEL MAA I REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE
A Growing Re•lty Firm
2743 E. Cont t:li1hw•y
Corona del M•r 67S-8600
1 /-+-:-~ , ~~~~~;~~~~~;;:;:;::::;;;;;~l~G~•n~•~r~al~R~.~E~. ~;·~rOO~l~-G~'e~n~e~ral~,-~R~.E.~:~dl~00~2 I 300 N. NEWPORT, NEWPORT BEACH
I 300 N. Newpoot 111 .. N~ •. _,·'l;.n;r.1R:E. fclil2 GeneralR.E. 1002 rc== .. ,.....--6.4.,5.,·6.,6,4:-:6=:;-;;..---o.;-. 1 fl. {) /) I Gene"! R.E. 1002 Gene"! R.E. 10021 Mother Out Back -· oLi J. .J, 1, ;;;;;;;:=~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;1 l"'!!a."n"e"'ra"!l"!R!".E~ ......... ~.00~2'!!G"en"e"r•"!l'!!R"'!.E!";""'-~,00~21 Eastslde ' i 0 j e
Costa Mesa * WATE!tFRONT HOMES *
Living In lhc 2 be1lrocnn Prize 4_ Qdr m .. 4 bath Lido Nord bayfron t;
WATERFRONT
. ;::~m a~:u !~111the111; ·40_ ft. !Ot. Pier & float privileges. $295.000.
. NEWPORT BEACH Ron1an bu.th and famUy POOL morn tlke n mou,ntaln XXJge,, Elegant 4 BR. & lge. famil y r1n .. 6 baths. With boat slip. Like ne\v
4 BR, 3 ba., palio w/
BBQ. $125,000. 675-7060.
Newport Back Bay
2BR., din. rm., fam rm .
Lge backyard. 65x15 fl.
cov'd patio. Cul de sac.
Nr. horse trails, etc.
$49,950. Sso.8800
3BR. fall}il y rm. Lo:vely \\'ilh huge 11ton1! Urepl aee. BIG CYN. CORNER "CONDO" $129,500 l'ier & float. 30 Ft. lot. $275,000.
h \Ve11-tcliU shopping area. Ow ner \VUI carry 75% loan at ·8%, 25 yrs. grounds w/green ouse. s'is,500. CAlL Q u I c K
1
Lovely 5 BR., 5 ba. on prize 60 rt. \\'atcrfront \Valk to schools & shop-646-n71. Sinart prof. decorated NE\V 3 BR "Bor· lot. Lido Ncird. Pier & float. $3i5,000. · ""< 950 ••• 7491 dearix." Prof. ldsc, cov patios, A/C. pmg. """' · gou· •· OPf.N11L ll •ITSAllTO BE Mcit *WATERFRONT .LOTS*
e STOP e ~· · WESLEY N. TAYLOrl CO. 40x90 11. ~Iagni!icent view. 8250.000.
. . '.·and s•e this brand '> J ·-2111 S•n Jo•quin Hill~ Ro•d 30x l0~ Ft., Lido Nord, vie\v. $165,000
T • NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644"4910
new duplex. 1-blk. to 1.:-'::· :::::':::::=::"""'::::= l 'l"'"""--""""'!"!~"""'~~""""""~I BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
IN MESA VERDE
The UNIQUE Features Of This Home Are :
The 4 bdnns, 3 bat hs, 2 stories and 1 pool ;
all in beautilul condition. !Jnmaculate prop.
erty inside & out \vith decorator \vall pap.
beach. Open daily Z.5. 4 l'i.EX General R.E. 1002G;,;;ral-R:E. 1002 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161
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207 30th St, N-B. 673-7420 FOR .THE OW. NER 1. i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1l~~~~....,;~~':::':i"ii''i""'""""~ G•n•r•I R.E, 1002G•ner•I R.E. 1002 ·[B s L-01 DffREIAceL•T~~~rve y.., [B ,.,,.,~c;IJ!A~ ,,: * SUPER BUYS *
,,,...,..,.,,...,-..,..,..,..,..,,..-..,..,..,..,,..,...,. investment property that Is I * Eastside 3 bedrm, huge lot, $36,900 1~ capab le of excellent Income I * 3 Bedroom D!,!plex, E·Si de ... $47,950
ers. formal dining' roo1n , incredible rear
yard pool area and new \Vater softener,
dishwasher and \vater heater. (The owners
are neat freaks!) This ho1ne is located be·
tween the golf couri,e and a park and pric·
ed at $73,500. You should see it.
UNIQUE HOMES Rultors, 546-5990
produ cllo n AND is Rl 90 4 d · k 1002 s u i 1 a b1 e for O\\'nf'I' * Be room, rumpus rm, qu1c poss $47,850
OC'C Upancy in a roomy 3 BR * 2 Homes on a. lot. Santa Ana lights $48,750 n --c:·
CORONA DE._ L MAR 2 BA apart men t. PLUS has * 2 Homes on a· lot, Santa Ana l.J eights · / excellcnl tcrnu y,·ith ~" $48,750 ew . 011ce1.1 CUSTOM DUPLEX oown I
A real one Ot a kind 1.-uston1 . Tll!S fS• IT!! * 7. Units, Long Beach, xlnt incon1e $59,SOO C t B k built duplex on an owrsizect Only $71 .• 500 Leading North Orange oun Y ro ·er, ex·
lot south of Bayside. only 2 .Call 644-72lt OntU 1797 ORANGE pandiilg NewpOr t Office-l1'TERVJE\VlNG
blocks to the beach. llousc II/' ' tor T E N top salespeople. ~1 u s t be
has 4 bedrooms. 3 baths. "'21 COSTA MESA experienced,_ productive and h ci v e CO· family room and fireplace ~ operative attitude. Exceptionally gener· in master hedroon1 .. Jncome 642-1771 YOU WON'T d I I' · unit is very large with 3 ous .comrrlissions split plus terrific proflt nee a car ,,. ien you ive in
bedrooms, 2 full baths .. 1-~--=~~--'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I sharing program. The fin~st location in Ne\V· this cute Eastside Costa "1esa home-Ev-
$125.900. Westcliff Dover = 'General R.E. 1002 port Beach. "The ES tate Realty Building", erything is "'ithin "'alking distance ? Priced ~n10 Executive Home G.ner•I R.E. 1002 · ---· ·---'--· -·corner of Ne"'port Center Qr. & Farallon. ·right to see-no\v.
NEWER HOME
l'LUS INCOME
General R.E. 1002 I Genera) R.E. 1..:..===;,;_ _ _:,.;;-"
i 2850 Mesa V•rde Drive, Costa Mes•
j ·Ge!ler.lfR.E. 1002 General R.E.
•
1002
Drslgned \vith oomfo11. a1\d oonvenierK"e in m l n d .
54.perblY constructed 3
bedroon1 , Ian1Uy r o o m ,
din i ng room home. Featuring c'<!ntra l \.O.euwn ~ system, sell-cll!anlng ovens and safety Jlghtin1. And'" a nearly Identical unit on the
property lo oUer a tenant the same amenities. \\'c
sull'.gl!~t-11-1\ ee.rl "i-
appointmenl to ~ !hi.~ Sharp! Sharp! \\'l!stcUfr atta I . .,. OLD
spcclaJ Cdi\t offering. Call hon11! for only S76.99:J. 1 •
673-8550. l Unbf:'li~ble! It he! four I .. . . , .. ~
-T:.:', ... e:" :/I},.,-... ~"
kt~ u")
L-~IVE BEDROOM-'r-lndividu aW.fiices-lOLsaies people,. __ F_o_r _1--PRIVATE -FINANCING, NAU'flCAI.-DU-
I ·-RANCH STYLE confi~ential .int~rvie\v, call 'Gordon Haney, PLEX. 2 Bedrooms. featuring fi replace.
• 1 P restdeilt673:1:>18 · builtins. 'bay & beach locale. Out ol area
OPENTIL-ll• /1'$ FUN, TO BE·,.'ICEI~ bedn:>0ms.··2~2 ball-.; ·and a \ · TIMER · · large pool'. Owner ha!'! '
-
II I •"""""'"""'!"'"'"!""!!!!!!J already bot.ighJ, new hon1i> In
$33,000 full pi'il't · .~-.ne•al R.E. 1002 Gen•ral R.E. 1002 o"•ner must sell. Asking 572,950. E·Z terms. No Oown 10 ,·ct;; ...,. Call for details.
HARBOR v1£\v-HlLLS S.}", & wants fast escrow. f Uig 5-Bedroon1 hoo1e, \\'ith a
Cdl\t. Luxu1ious decor. Pool, Thl11 hon1e ...,·nJ ha ve open forn1al' dining roon1, havin!; 1 -~ paUos, & IO\\' main!. yd. house EVERY D,\ Y unril ! li70 SQ ~ ft. ani:I 2· brick
\Vant e.i1 results ..... 64l-5678 fef' land. 0....'ncF 644--2975. sold. So hur1·y. before u·s ll fil'C'places. Loca1ed on 11.
G I R E 1oi2 too late. &16-771.l. 1.ree shaded corn~r lot, General R.E. 1002 en.re · · . 5T'x160'· ..... anyone can. tek(•
This vaeanl hon1(> h11s bee11 . ~~"'•'"''>: "''"'rn'""" •!"' NEw CAPE SERIES LISTING 1s JUSI \1·a1tlng for a fan11ly · '
10· enjoy it! JncludL<d-in the ~··RARE ITE·M-bui a sharp. 3 bedroo1n
pri{..'C 111-e fil'l!placc. built-in Condo in a quiet secl uded section on Costa
elec. range & oven, ca.rpcts l\1esais .EastSide .. Lovely pool. lands~aping. a•~d dru1>es, 2 car garage Children over· 15. $44 750 Call ,S46.S880.
RED SAILS IN THE SUNSET. Majeslic view
o! jetty, ocean&: harbor from Ne'v Orleans
style duplex above China Cove. Decorator's
dream; with unbelievable extras.
,,
Spocioul townhomn designed for your
pride, ple1aure Ind comfort down to the am1nest
detd. A. wide choice of eteglnt 2, 3, or
4 bedroom ftoofptant. Residents' Swim and
Tennis center. Profeuk>nal crewi to
take care of exterior mlintenanCe. A Newport
BollCll "llnd' tiom tN.-.
.Xem g TOWNHOMES
' . Frol'fl P1cffie Coatt Hig"""
end &ipenor Avenue
intefMction, drive up
Superior 10 Nh1>ort CrMl
entnftCe. S•I• office:
# 12 Robon Court. Open dilly 10 A.M. to Sunsel.
(714) 14M141.
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_ ~---, 1 Payable $200: n1onth Pm of Walker. C! lee· s20.ooo. s,.;,., pa;,, "'~'" . '. •••L 1,,~, I ~~tsJ~~·ma"r d~lla.rs. Full
"."YOUR GOLDEN 1·· ·. $33,950.
OPPORTUNITY
and n1uch, much, 111orc. If -' • ~
'°"'" "'" ' v" .. 1" 0"' ~AT . OFF TH. E FLOOR1 . n1ort. con1pany MTllnge loy,• : • . . , . . • .
dn .. FllA or s-;;. <Jn. NEW ON THE MARKE:T, lovely 2 story
L~n,<cn;:onal iinancing for r\lesa Verde 4.·and den'. Formal dining and you ' Ben~r hu111. and 11.~ aboul b~eakfast rooms. Custom ~x34 Anthony pool
listing No. 10623. with sweep, and landscaping alfords lots of
GRUBB & ELLIS
675·7080 . BROKERS
~G-~ene"",~a~l~R-~.E~."""""~.~100~1'.""G~e~ne~-~r•~l~-R~.~E~."""""~1~002~'
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WALKER & LEE privacy. Offered at ·$68,950. C•ll 546-5810.
Builder's Own House I VIEW ACREAGE
Brand ll('w listing Is a dteam 111npressive pool honlt" For ON BLUFFS
Including sunken 1 iv in g C'llle!1ainn~e~t. Spaci~w;, for OVEJlLOOKING NE\VPORT room. huge rovered patio. Real £state $46.58&0 , ranuly lnnng. Qu~t & UPP~AY _ the Otx'
2211~11. 646"~8tn
Sharp! Only SJ.1.900! Call Sun/ Eves. Costa l\fe58 · n..... E ~luded. o~ an es1a1e lot. ilTll'l""r)nJy v\c\\' building site
home "''ilh nil the extras 646-5855 . 545-9491 --~" ves. . "'Uh (Wll'khkc garden 4 avallablC' along l\lesa Ori\'e.
00\V 847.0010 ~· --"jiite;;;tjOil-i~;::;;::;;;;;.~..,"'l'"!:"~""""'l':'/!~J Jxlr111~ .. large den. fonnal , llo!'SC!'! OK + room for .. 1 ._.. • ''Altenti'on _ dining rn1. & 4 balh!ii. A I tenni~. n'anl a 0\\'-PJ'h."'"-u car? ,,____ ~---1002 I RE 1002 "'"'' ·-.... ,., · 1 $142 =-vi Read todBY,'r.: Classified Ads. \Vant ad results .... 642-5'78 .. Builders'' Gener•I R.E. Gener• · · · .... ._ ""1 l a ·"""· PETE BARRETT
Genu•I R.E. rci02 General R.E. 1002 l-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I HARB.OR . ' -REALTY-
~ Coldwell Banlc.~,
BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED BAYFRONT
Over 4,000 square feet in this custom built
near new exquisitely ·decorated home. 35 ft.
frontage on exclusive \Vest Bay. Dock facil·
ilies. $300'.000
FOR THE. GOURMET GARDENER
Lovely 4 bedroom. fea tured on Home Gar-
den Tour '74. Beautilull y decorated.. Charn1-
ing ·pati9s, \vaterfaU. pond. Immaculate
Big Canyon home. $168,500. , -
SPANISH ESTATE IN CAPISTRANO
5 bedrooms, 4~ baths, maids. rOom . Hugh
master· bedrOOm. Ocean and valle)! views.
Wine cellar. 1h acre. Prime location. 2 years
old. $159,500.
BEAUTIFUL LINDA
Elegant country English, \\'arm woods, de_ep
carpets, formal' dining. 4 bedrooms with
balconies , den, 3 fireplaces. 2YJ. baths. Boat
slip, gated community &....n.1orel $230.000.
MARTHA'S VINEYARD ONCE REMOVED
Charming Barcrest 3 bedroom. fan1ily
roo m, bea ulifu pool in· a garden -$83,500.
Make an appointment.
CAMEO SHORES
Custom buili and desl~. Beamed ceilings"
4 ~edrooms., -formal dlrling roqm, great kil·
-chen. ,Outstanding .ocean view. Owner leav-
ing'area. $157,500.
SANDPIPER HOME -VIEW '
4 bedroom. 3 bath. Dramatic cathedral ceil·
ings, wet bar. 3 car garage. Pr,ivate court
yard, large master bedroom suite. Vacant
& ready 'for you . $\16.000.
POPULAR PORTOFINO
And :t pool too! YClu'll Allio find a bonus area
you 1nay develop into your kind o! "thing."
The price is right for summer fun. $83,500. •
DIAL 644-1766
1161 Sen Joaquin Hiiis Rd., N.B.
A COLDWELL BANKER CO.
{
NC'\1'J)011 Beach addn'SS. zon.1• ~il~:.f:'"":~i ,,~,;·.~.,~· * HOUSE & GARDEN CHARM *I ~-4060--1
l07'x208' plus mutual IH'Cf'J<s COM'"•Nv ---- -
· e;)scn1ent.-froni. r-.tonro\·in Enchantingly beautiful 5, bedroom ho1ne. REA~"tts $32, 900 STILL 'N',',~g Nr 18\1. B<!undary. Ju~1 Large secluded tree lined "brick patio w/ SINCE 194·' BUYS . o . llpt'l'IOI' Avr .. rul· d d f d I' ht! I ( I ' jac'f''lt II) rc:is! ofi Ncii·port custom designe ra1na a or e Jg u am· 673-4400
ere.st. 5-IG-231~ ily fun & · en ter~aining. 2 BR's upstai_rs ; l I F~nlastic1 s111rtedr . ho•"" r'' .fiR \\'/fireplace & balcony. 2nd frplc Jn Jg. 1 inunaru Ate an rea y 01·
OPENTll ~. irs I-UN TOBC NJCt· fami ly roo1n ·ofr living roo m. Jewel like din-· i POOL PLUS! I you! SlWO clo1~·n plus closi ng
d Lo I I SAA.900 tJc.~1 buy nrviund foi• eosts. ~ 1h1s one toda y. ~ ing room w/picturesque win ov.•s. ve Y 1 fantast ir-rlccorntor honic I Call 811·6(}10. Ai::I. ~ THE REAL
ESTATERS , _ , ctpting. By O"'ner ~67 ,500. Pribc. only. irith spurklinJ? r\lsron1 pool. Don"t give up the ship?
l\lan\curcd yards. !\lust !<et '"List" U in classifled, Shi 2424 Holiday Rd., N.8. 646-2812 ~ hutTy~all S~i-6010 ,~~t-1 10 Shore Re!!u lts! 642-5678.
Inflation fighter . General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 10021
General R.E. 1.902 1 Gener•I R.E. 1002 I ; Live in 1, Rent Other · · ~---i
\\'oil b"llt '2 BR, ''""""""' * JUST LISTED * 1. BEAUTIFUL noors, f1replatt. g11rden & . TWO STORY lrec~. Separate I HR horne, 3 Bd,nn .. 2 bath di.!pl~x. JUS1. -• . ~r lo!. Creal Eastside rcdcro~·a1~. One. unit furn. 1 • location. $46.950. Conipl<i"le. • Bll·lns u~. d1sh.\\"Q.Shc.r: 1 $39,9:,0 rull pri~
frplc. en. unit. SS9.9:i0. I assunie 6'0 \7A 400L17iffll' fOI All Coll 673-3663 6o"""3t E"'· c... a1US ALSO: Duplex. 4 bednn. "=!You h.11}:aln 11hopptl'8
ill i ill 3 bdrn1s.: 1'1; ye~1'!! young · shol.lld t'\'AllY hurn' and call _.. ... !!d9;t., F.1:plt.'. Delux_P u1nts, sleps us or1 this 'onel t''our hu;:e ___ .. • -to beach. $1 25,000 J bed rooms. huge cut·dC-Mc •. __ _ __ Call: 673-3663 613-8086 Eves. lol, and a VA loan \\ilh
MAKE ROOM FOR P"Y"'"'" or 0"'' sm "'' mon\h H ~~u take it over. MOMM.YI J Ask for li~l!ng No. 95TI. • j WALKER & LEE
$40,500 I '--nooi E'1o•e
t·lui::e 4 bN.lroon1 single i<tory HA-RBOR \flEW Costa !\tC'sa with lan11ly room. Nl,ee • · 1 545-9491 'fa111ily area. \\'11.lk lo niajor MONACO
•bopplog .... nil ,.,.,,.. . . . 4 PLEX/BEACH s~o.:ioo Call !W7..0010 Agt . Thill del1..~htful 2 bedt'001n & I
Ol'f.N TIL.ll •l1'SF(JN10BENIClr rlen or 3 bedroom hon1e Is $8 000 DOWN IQca.tcd 011 qµiet cul-de·1n1r, • ~~. .1 next to green belt. I1 has a To oriqlnatt A. GI loan ol large yard and ill $45.000 at 8~~~ Interest.
be n u flfuJly land!IC8ped. Good Income. Full .price _.,;j__ :.... Upgnu:lcd thru 'out. The only $53,000 . Take --WISTCLIFF~ Be!tt of schools & &11.?J>ping, ach•1tntage, Call now 8-12· TI,900. Phone 6~. 25.\') A~nl
f
EXEC~TlVE -MESA VERDE-oPE.NTU.l •fT'SFIJN10 BE NICE•
S1.1pcr sh11.rp \\estcllU hon1C'. EXCLUSIVE ~ ' 4 .Bedn:iom. 21\ bi\lh. Large
pool. 1'hlll homt 1~ the he!!t Thi~, 1 br. 3 ba exeeut i\'e ; htt\' In Ne11 po11 Beach. 0\11 1 r1u1l1lv llOlnt" tu1s a forn1a l
fi.1';-im. 1E·•in" rtl('lm ~·I~ .":l'pnr11t r 1 -·-·--~ "\-fn r11ih• roo1n 11· • e "I p o .. e d -~ I ~·~\.~ ~'',.,?;::~; ~r 1 Builder's Closeout
W lk I! l l'<o.000. oil ro< •N>• .lo I 1 a er u ee '!Ml... . •• 12 s.·d t'Ofll''· 2 htilh Ad1111 R t •~,,,.,, D.\\IJ) l~O~ f' ~F.. f'..LTit . (<1nclo111lniun111. Only $21.950
- __ . ..:.~ • ~.19ii0 , 1•lll1 $100.'I. tltl\\O tnch,1cl ..
macnab I Irvine
realty
LIVE GRACEFULLY
and entertain in this cheery, bright home
\V/4 bedrooms. family room & 3-car ga-
rage~Del ightfut VIEW o! Upper Bay. Best
buy in Dover Shores-$189.500 rec. Amy
Gaston 642-8235. (1'49)
CALIFORNIA HACIENDA
Custom built 4 bedroom home on corner
of secluded tree·lined street. \Vall s or
brick -floor of tile. $114,500. Barbara
Aune 642-8235. (F50J
TURTLEROCK PRESIDENT
Plan 400 w/4 bedrooms, family room . wet
bar. paneling & plush shag. Beautiful cov·
ered patio. planter & landscaping. $87.500.
John Walls/Lazio Sharkany 644-6200. (F51)
$35,000 IN NEWPORT BEACH!
Quaint 2 bedroo1n hoJne on 60' x 130' lot
1h block to l~arbor Jiigh. Do nn Chichester
642-8235. (fll )
1644 MK.Arthur 64t•$200 •
Newpo11 8e1cll, C1ll!Ofnif 12613
fxp, G('n Contl'flCl01· Sl'l•kinitl 1\:114,' \1·lt!1<r 1,.•.11·; uu n·•\~· 1 ··IO'lhlf: rol'l'I. 8.'.l&-1200
Nu Pn.ljC('l , Sin~. ho111cs or1 Ulf{l'(i\\'l\Y ~ .. 11 ·11_ff1Sl \\•llh 10 A~f IQ 7 Pi\1. ;\gl. --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--11ml. Apl!. M3-6148 eve. • Dally PUot Clti'U!Uled Acl! .......................... ' ,
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!0 DAILY PILOT
Gwral R.E. 1002
REAL ESTATE
SALESPEOPU
WANTED
.. . . .
MoM.!y, Ju~ 22, 1974
General R.E. 1002
This hQme h3S It $.II
CUSTO~t Tll.R.OUC.:llOUT
CREAi LIV ING ROO~I.
Loadt of anUque !!nd<cd
nllrtors. Deep shag cllJ1)C1s.
Cheerle kitchen. Hu g c
n\aStf!r suite. J\;t I r r o r to 11
W\lo.l'dIVbeJ. Yea 1··round
enc1o&ed entertainers' patio .
Sparkling custom pool "i th
NEED S $
10 cltl$1" that deal! Call
Valley Realty and find Ot)I
about our 2nd Trust De..~
~11 Cuarantee<l Sale plans.
\VE GUAfi...\r{TEE TllE
SALE .OF YOUlt HCl\lE. Call 6.W-00ll5.
.. . .
u~tington I L•guilo iffcfl.....:... !Oil Lido iolo 1056 Newport IMcll l::::~~;:;~~~S~~*M~M~E~R~4~$~~~E~·R~~~I~
SIW righting trnfflc to and IDEAL••• \\'eckend hldtawuy for
fro1n the beach!! Own ;your , .. fa1nily hom~; enjoy the bachelor or co u p I e s
O\l'n studio Condo riaht Jov.• 1110\ntt>11<moe of this 4 pe1•n1anent ttotne. View or
11.eross rron1 the ocett.n nt bdrm., 2 buth borne. Fomu.ll noct&lg,le Cannery llrea and
l-tun1ington }larbotU' fot only dinina: nn. y.•Jth kiuver bOathta act1vtl:le1. ~ fQr
$24,900. Or enjoy a. cool. 11 I i d-1 n 5:-do0r8 fr0n1 s;;oo. lease opUon QI" sale,
Comes •\\•i!h thi1 fine-3
bedroon1 horntt. Locl\ted 111 JtunUllf(IOn B e 1t c h , A
o.1aintcnanre free l'f!ar yal'd,
al.i)o has a Kc>i l:\)01 and loa~l.o; ol h1•\t:k -\1'01•k. Call
10 ~ th!.~ lnunaculaL•'
spotles~ hotn<'.
$46,SOO Full Price
rela.~ln~ sunuuer ln a n1ore kitchen ... brick frpl<;. h1 sn.oo:i.
spnciou1> -1 b 00 room the living 1n1. & upgraded Call 675-7U5 Cclndonl\nhun w l I h I\ cl\l'fX'tit!R th1·uout. A bonus
b<>autiful p.11lo, upgraded 10 thia lovely home, i!J the
Cllrpets And d!'ti,P<":i. Only community 1-ee. center v.•lth
$!.14.!l(XI. -pru'k, with kiddie & ol.yn1plc
Ask for Alyse or Dave iiized 11"•in1mlng J>O(ll1, Just
Christiana Realty !'fteps tron1 yoor ff'Ollt door.
·2211 ~t II. 61ll6 \Varner at Gold<"n\\'Cst $48.~
\\IJ .L\
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Income Properly moo
l:A-CR=UNffF -
ELEVEN-NEW
tun s1kle. ••· 'k to schools
close 10 f_hQpp_iN:;. Easy 1---+.1-·1f,.ouou-C:i;c;;o;:9-1·-11mn~~·j.'iaViilil>re:--call 001v.
84~Z35. --~-P1-&.lm ~llngtoo..Be~=-~~~~:;t--:-:;;~_0-~7~-~·#::r~~~~ v-tO•ISISll \'!!!! e.-.,,.,, Decorators DrMm
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I OPEN nt •. IT'S ~UN ro SE Ntefl
Vil •g• RHI Est.i. [II ~ Sun/E.voo. Hunt. Hubour 1042 REAL EST.'ATE 2Bdnn.•oonon ta,..lot. "' Close to teMis & the ~h.
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You'd be l!'•klng a
WISE DECISION
"IF"
You want to make
GOOD MONEY
"AND"
You're willing to work
I "AND"
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..
"(ou want to work
with a super bunch of
Alsociat11
"AND"
You want a whole new
approach to RMI Estate
r and Supor a....fit1??
'
• ' •• CAU. ,Jerry Gllletpie
at 962-2456 to find out
I
what VIiiage bu to otler:
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.. 962-2456
-Adams It Magnolia. HB
OCEAN VIEW
PRIVATE BEACHES
J Sec this corner location 3
bednxim. ran1lly room
home. Highly upgraded.
1:;njoy the placid pool or use
lhe pl'lvate beach. A super
large lor. A truly best buy
8 1 $$9,9JO.
644-7270
'-546-4140 LEAS£. Bcsut. \\'atcrlront 2 900 Clcnooyre St. Offered at $88,950. Open :=======! BR, 2 Ba Condo. w/pri\'. 494.s.73 ~!).0316 Tues, thru Fri., 3 to 6, 123 boat slip. Avail. linnled. Via Nice. One Mile to Beach &1&-1so1 -EMERALD BAY A dt>light ful 2 BR 2 BA 1044 •Secluded, well landscaped pool hon1e v."ith I n r ,, e · . -Irvine I"'~ I t ·1• inast!'r suite on 60 :.: too" fl Altl"dCtlVE:! 3 bedrn1, 2 bath one u.1 . .ou acre o \\'I
I-• 1·,1 -• ,.,_. •i•at• --------~ OCC'an view Is only the lot, "'alking distance to I ...,m o;.....,._. "' "" l
be schools and shops. Private ~ginning. \\'I" are proud 10
private ach a e c es s · i.'v"lm and tl"nnL'> club avail. offer thi s n\agnificent 4 BR
$69,500. 10?0 down. U'.liv I Upgraded carpets, bltllS & 2 honle ·which feu turcs an CORBIN.MARTIN
interest. Call 644-7211 car attn <·hed garage. Pretty interior dcs.ign by John Reeltors
green. 1 .. wn. $.13.511> Ca 11 UNIVERSITY PARK Hall. lleRut. <ntry, lge opco * 644-7662 * ~NIGEL
GAILEY &
ASSlJCIATES
"'~" oo•"' J.<~amily~rm, gr a cl o us ....,.,....._,.. · IRYINE Living-rm with fossil stone
frplc, and remodeled l This' clnssy Kendall pla11 is kitchen ,f,, stereo thru out. QW$0t)
*DUPLEX* Rn end unit on the Alt or this surroun~s the 40 FT VIA GENOA greenbelt. II h a s 4 pool & patio which Is an • Both "ith bay views. 2 U'.lts. &drooms, 2 BaJconies, a lntegrnl pnrt of Callforni.'l ,3 Bd.nM., 3 bftths, Dining
Soulh of Hwy. One year Super Patio and a Master living at it's finest. $259,500. nn. Immaculate! Near new.
ne1v! $125,000. !.!~~~~~!~!\ Bedroom Suite tit for a King LINGO REAl--ESTATE howaRb loweoDjJl • v.•lth cathedral Ceiling and 4!»--8086 400-1397 . aealCOA =========: i a Fireplace, $5i6,500 and 'REDUCED <_J 000!!! gotng •• -•••. ·call Ocean View 3416 vta Udo GT,..,.. ~ ""'""="""-~~~7 /0ESERTEO s p AN I s H ~. Fr La Mesa Verde 1063 BY 0\\'tlcr on Fee Land. HACIENDA-sec I u de d Om CJUftQ
e PLUS Ass unic 7S"o VA loan H.V. Hills. So. Sandpiper. 4 fron1 view by huge I.recs! Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 $3000. 00\\'N. Take over Gr , e PLUS Pool! BR. 21,Y BA. Fan1. rm. 3 Loads of imported t\le, bath hon1e w_lth outstandi!1g 2 Br, 2 Be. l nd~cpg. S39 900 . e PLUS large :l bednns: C'ar gar. Upgrad ntdl. 2 \1•rought iron, brick \\'Ork ocean v t e w . Th 1 s Or \\'ill rent. 547-7500 days, e PLUS BACK BAY! frplcs, $98.500. Open House and n1irrorS! E J e g ant ln1maculate home is only :l s.i&-9'r"a4 eves
NOW $62,500
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Sat·Sun. 644-1938, 543-1331. draperies. thick carpets ·just ~pa""c'""'ne\~"""and,q. h1",'. Aa ~Nc'o-w~po~rt"B'"u,-c"'h--..,l'"06=9 ON THE WATER l52S Keel Dr. like new? Forn1al dine, " ,.., ~ SHAltP 3BR 'th boat
COATS gourn1et kitchen, 4 BR's1 --1~R~V~IN~E-TW--N-H~S~E-fireplace a~ beam ceilingf4 -BIG ·CANYON .slip, featurm':
1 1az";" patio & CostaMesa 1024 iv /s pac i o us mastel' accent tlus true Laguna andsideyardfor traller or
quarters. Spani~h courtyard UNDER $30,000 value priced al $62,500 CUSTOM HOME addition -to settle estate _
WALLA0CES Near The Plan at)d p~lios?? Vacant--011•ner Oivner selling 3 Br, 2 Ba. Call Jodlly 644-7211 Overlooking 6 Fairway goll Oller. Reduced to $94,750.
REAL T R Beautiful, secluded area of ~viii finance at 1011·, lo\\-· (plus utility room) Alpine-crse. Price reJuced $40,000 CALL '40-8672
546 4141-executive homes. Big 4 rnt.erest rate! $39,900. Full style condoininium in WaJ, for immed. sale. Beaut. LISTINGS NEEDED
'Opon Ev n'n s) Bilrn1, '.! bath home is just pnce-you_ own the land! nut Square. Air L'Onditioned, 4,0CMJ sq. ft. 5 BR, 5 ha,-==""="'"77-=i'=~ . e 1 II 9 ntonths old. Hits an the BKr 962-5511 shag carpeting, drapes, f'l'd, incldlng maids quarters. HARBOR HigbJands, b Y
:::=:::;:z:=::::z::z:=:j· built·in5. Family area,. \\'ood patio. Al!l'O$S from 8)% loan avail. or owner owner, 3 BR, 111.! ha. ror .
WESTSIDE fir-pl~::n' ~L:J Assume VA Loan ~oe'!:rmu~~%ok' I~~=::~~ I HIGH may a${4s,'o=c ~~;i;,~~:~ M81:1f:;
TEAR DOWN I IUUJ i:: c~~~'lld~sB:. ~n~tn~r~ posacssion. Price $29,900. I ON A HILL f S~\vn arith ont33°3'1il~ ~~~. V!icant. $49,00),' · Sep. laundry rrn.. close to v,iU1 90 percent financing OVer ooking the city o tr!ve n1 t , • .. Rentable 1 bednn beginner ~ available. CaU 551·5151 Laguna, \\'ilh wide ocean <offiti!) or 64&-4815 hon1e. ' 1 l.MlS.mU~l!J ne\v Sears shoppg. $3ti,900. · 11 1 ~ 0 -Newport Sho•os 1072 home 1\ith SS or the future. 842_74ll: Eves: 968-ll 78 ANYTIME. vie1vs, this \\.'f" p annc.", l -SUN LOVERS I 111
room for 4 Units -60x200 2955HarborBlvd Costahfesa yrs. young home, has 3 Oceanfront 2 bedroom flxf!r
Jot. I ., (BRASHEAR) THE TERRACE bd>:"''· 211 halhs .. fo.-m•I o" supe< R-2 lot!! ,;.,., 1967 Anaheim, Costa 11esa BY Owner, Ea.stside Costa U . 11 P k' 0 st dining rm., lge. hv1ng rn1. ., U·" 1 Only $29,500 Mesa, 2 on a lot, live in 1, REALTY nivers y ar, s m \.\'·frplc. All on tl\'O \\'ell res1 c1~ "' area, va.can .
400.LIJI rent the other out. lGOxill, · v.·anted condo. New 2 bdrm. 1 1and11capcd lots. An xlnt buy move ln tlO\I' and ell)Oy the
1 2-2 BR \\-'/dbl garages. 2 bath "''1th 111!t bar, at $67 9j(l sumn1er . build later. SU~
WALK TO BEACH
2-Sly. 3 BR., 2 ba. J.ce .
patio; frplc.. btkfst area.
Quick oossesa. $56,900
CAYWOOO REALTY * 541-12'0 * c... $49,900 Prine. only. 645-2877. --0-0 N-PYMNTS clerestory \~uxlows, garden . ~··· .. · · 1nll 1.er1ns. 011·ner may ii· ~=7C~~'?'~""~' !Real Ru . 1 enlcy and patio. $46,900. i 1:n,. i _ ~ nancc. EA'TRA lge modem 4 Br, 2 stic L'Ountt')' sty e CALL 552-7500 : ~ . nD ......... TI'f'kW CALL 645-8400 Ba + studio in xlnt single home! Cute and cozy with ____ .. ..., I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
family area. $5000. dn. crackling stone fireplace. 3 • VISION • ! .,,, 9 1..6! By Owner, 3BR, 2 BA
----. -$49,000. 637-7368 or 998-3003 br, 2 ba's, copper kC'Ule 1' •'•·5~71 •tt-2100 .V. E. U-·•nl&'~... Beach house Community
REAL ESTATE I after 6 pn1. gounnet l.itchen, ha.s all REALTY •• :::;,....._.. VoJ Pool, Tennis, ele. Redec-
Saies"""ple! 'You have Your 3 BR, 2 ba, H/F pool, cust. 1 the later.I fe.atures! 1 Big THREE FOR ONE · orated, n11 carpets. Xlnt
,,, :,,.,, )I .. t ,, 1 •,.
f"i:~THE RE AL l
~ ES TATERS
-~
2 units. 2 lxlrm plus 1 bdnn.
'l'\.\'O firepl aces. Clo.e to
park and shopping. Tree
.shaded and large yards.
$.111,T';iO.
2 house!!, 2 bdrm, 2 bath
plUA 1 bdrm house In rear
alley each 0with garage.
Delightful F.astslde Coata
l\.resa location. $43,llX>.
own pri,•ate desk & phone. 11, paneling, frp c, Assun1e .J<U"' . • outslandlng build.in• site. 3 LITTLE HOUSES G42-'757S. 6 uni1s. $13,250 per Wlit. ~· I k' 1 back ·~....i v.·ith porid a a red hill comp.,1y 3 LOTS oom........., this one ------Cond. Principalg 0 n I y
Same location 18 yrs. New 6'70 loan. Ch.,,nr, 2.17 Brent· v.•aterfall and rose gardens. Univ. Park Center, Irvine EXC"'L'ENT OCEA N & INCOME Eutside Costa 1''1'£'98 on
or exp'd real estate snles wood B'J3.3855. Obie gar for D~d. No down/•-::z::z:=::::z:::=:z::z:= ~ -· t t shaded stnet.
1 1 1 CaU 1 · to Vets. Just listed, bclter li VIE\\'. 100 FT. OF ROAD Located in desirable fl.rea S.n Clemente 1076 1 qui': ree • !""'1 Pe_ V.'f" come. or BY Owner 3 BR. l \S ba, Nr. run on thi., one? Bier 2 HOMES, Both 71,1:% as-FRONTAGE, graded & a hon1e and l\vc> others lo I Do-nut shop in Orange. ~iOr Eve 673-45n S.C. Plaza. Terms. 759 962-5511 ~un1abl<>i;. Exquisite det.'Or. ready to build on. Thi,~ rent. This property \\-'On't OcHn & Herbor View f,ll,000. Ea.c;y terms.
_ __ • Hudson. 846-8736. in "Ca.Jlf. Homes" & p~micr building site is last on1y $58;000;""M6-7711. Spup 4 _ ~R. 180 _Degree _Q!)AIL Plu\C~
Lochenmyer -4-PLEX;-f2r E8.stside. O.I. JOB· TRANSFER' "Racquet Club!" Jack Peck offered fc>r only; ocean view. Den, fonn. din . PROPERTIES
$79,500. Ha.s l\.tgmt. Q\\·ncr/ . " . • Agt. Call a85-596-I. "Radio S28'.900 rm. Detk. )rfott! $65,900. 752-1920.
Re.1ltor
~Broker. G73-52'.2l. D1vol'C(' •. dehnquent pay111ts? Pnge K-ISI." o'vner "'ill L'OllSid. lel'ms. ~ __ GEM'9---
lf.. you need immediate ;\fISSJON RLTY. 494-0731 Walker & Lie -
01n1 Point 1026 ac~:n, you need to caJI Mr. BY Ch1·ner: Turrie Rock, 5 OFFERED •••~ .,,_,, 120-1'~ Twltin Ave .• N.B . ----!!!!! l o\\'NER. \\'alli to Doheny Sm er or l\1r. Daly. yrs like ne\\", 3BR, sep. fam. . . • by builder. Lovely 3 -STEPS TO SUR_F __ REALTORS 6424623
V""el & Babb'itt Bch 2 BR 2 BA. ll & din. rms. kit. nook, Int. lximi., 2 bath sunny hon1e : . . Sant• An• 1080
$130,000
10 UNITS
10 Bread & Butter aptA. All
2 BR a~ $165 per mo. Eams
$19,800 yr. 9.9% re:tum. 6.4x
"""'· Full "r'<e $130,000. Very little dden'E!d main·
tenan.ce. Anxious seller. Call
n +752-t700 t9day!
-,. -Fu~ished. Ga;~ & Patio. upgraded.. Oesparate! was dramatic f!ntry to step.up Surfside Peninsula duplex,
REAL TORS Ui>.000. 493-~ 9 "' S63 000 now $58 900 or liv. rm., spac. deck, custom has enormous potential \\·ith BY 01vntt, 1 yr old 4 BR B. Canyon s iar 6 ... 4471 I :::.J 546-1103 Le~se' $390. mo.' \Vi 11 cera1nic tile work, $43,500. a little paint and minor townhome. S.A. near C.M eour:~ Club Ho!:s a!Jts E.lstbluff 1030 ---~------consider oflers. 833-331i7 aft. I The best buy in beautiful repairs! ·Fan ta st i ca 11 y ttpting, drps, all elect kit,
Home Sites 7PM I Laguna! For f u r the r ·roomy 0\\ ner"s unit \\'\th yd. pools, tennis c r t s
711> NeY>'PQrt Center Or. Vil.LA UNIV PARK, BUY NOW" information & a pp ' t. fireplace, bulltin.c;, carpets nearby. $32,500. 546-5985.
Nf"\1-port Beach {714)644-6056 Near The Beach FOR LESS FROJl.I O\VNER. showing, call and drapes. Chlncr asking OI
3 Bcdroon1 La Cuestn \liJla:. New 2 BR, 2 ba condo. • 832-115~ .* $14,00>. Subn'rlt )'OUT offer. South L11un• 1 6
BUY A
WARRANTY HOME •• B1lbol Peninsula I 007
WINT!R RENTALS
Buena Viata! T h e tnofit
beautiful "strret" on 1he
Peninsula. Jo~our 'bedroon1,
t\\'O story home, boot dock,
sandy beach. $850 monthly.
THE POINT
Steps from the Wedge. ·
Bayfront five be d room
home. Yearly $100'.I month.
Calf 61>-7225
\.\lJ,I:\
RI \I.I\ , .... ~''' ..... "'
81lbo1
'
4 Adjacent duplexes. \Valer
I
oriented. $110.000 To
$115,000 each. 1 ~I Yrs. old.
Buy one or aJI.
Peninsul• Point
Charmer! 2 BR. den, hl!;th
bcan1ed ceilings. One blk.
to ocean, bay & tennis els.
Sep. gu<>st qu11 n crs w/com·
plete bath. $82.500.
... ~LIDO ~"REALT Y ...
I •• I, I,• \ t•
*673-7300 *
Aln10St new!?!! Arikle deep Frplc, drps, $ 3 9 , o o o . .Ji2_uthCt'.last Pa0~~J;:?~ CALL fi4&..8400 Lifetime shag, gourmet kitchen w!lh 552-7456. MON •. BAY TERR. & I
0 . self cleanldng ov~n. f1anuly TURTLE ROCK 4BR, 211~BA, An attr .. spli t-level contemp. V. [. llw-ard & Co. pportun1ty room, gar en patio, e eg_<,nt prof ldscpd w/many xlras. of stunning d1$ign & superior ...,. r-..._..
home \\" a n1odest price, 833-2.913, Qwnr. , construction. Billiard r1n. '========~ Price reduced! $76,500. $41 500 Call · -
Best buy in Eastbluff! Four ' · • NE\V DEANE HOME 2 BR "·tth wet bar. convert. d<>n. Balboa Peninsula bedroom, plus cool pool, The Real Estate Fair 2 Bil, Avail. S/lS. '$6 i.ooo: 3 l?drm.s., 3 baths: secluded
surrounded by mature trees 536-2551 or 839·6133 495-4728 eves & \l'knds sw1JT1m1ng pool. $145,1'.00 Harbor View Montego
and shrubs. Newly painted '"''!"""'""~:0:0"!'!"'!!!!!!'),~;;;;~it.;~~-ln~ TURNER ASSOC 4 BR, 2 BA. Fam·rm. Bonus, inside and out. A 11 l"Couritry CiUb Living · Lagun• Beach 1048 1105 N. Coast Hwy., La~w1a Play.rm, 1 Story, Prof.
a pp 1i1:1nccs refurbished. Fountain Valley'.s pm;tigio~s THE BEACH BUMI 494-lln lndscpd, quiet Street. Nr. Seller will en-. a second G b k th QI Schls & Pool. Lo. maint. ~ .,, reen roo wt ~Pl£ Lct'11 race it • it looks ter· SACRIFICE & tax••· · By ow " •' . T.0 . and lender w i 11 pool saunas and picnic .., ' rible! But with a little elbow .JoR, 3&\ View Home lor p R J N CI p A L S ONLY! refinance at 91/'io. Hom<> area. See oUl' 4 bedroom, · · r nd sale by owner take lo\\-' ""'" """" carri<>s Valley's exclusive family nn Barcelona home grease, 1mag.1na .ion, sa · • ....,_ ... ......., . • paper and paint it could be down or GI, possible lease1 -~~-~-~~.~-1 one year warranty. This Just one block from club-handsome! (After all, even option. _$64,500. OpC'n Sat_ & Spyglass Hill opportunity won't last long. house $60 900 SUn JI). •~'I I v · · ' · a I..aguna Bum needs a li ttle ::i JV'N " ounta n 1ew New 4 bedroom with canyon Open Sat. and Sun. 1·5 p,ni. Centu
84
,y
2
2 •. 1~ S
4
parow TLC!) 4S7·l761. Dr ask for Ron Garner view. Fee ti tle. 1~ Down. 2854 ~i 675-7225 .._, Red C1rpet, Realtors n4-49?-1369 or 21~2222 $85,590. Please call
) i0iiiiiiiiiiiiio;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiil_::::_;l;.R;;.V~l~N;E'._CC.;._O~V:;E;;.::~ PRIME eod uru l Blutts HARBOR VIEW .
\ \l ,LE\.
li l\1.1\ . . ' '"" .. ' ' '''·' " "
Newport West I C.ondo. Original area on HOMES Outstanding corner vie\\' lot Vlsta Dorado, 3 Br'. +DE!n.
and one of the very best! available in one of the mos! 2~~ Ba. ()o,\·ncr-AgL 6Ta-:l>35. REAL TY 833-0780
2 !rI'OR\-3 Bedrt'J'.I. fa mily exclurdv~.. P!'ivnte beach * C(f!:!.ns Quirters
nn., dln1ng rooni, 3 bathi;, commun11le~ 1n So. Cal. Laguna Hills 1050 On Ill C rt
LOWER 3 ARCH BAY
3 BR, Fam-rm home with
ocean v i e w , be11.utitully
decorated & landscaped, -1-11 Ion F ' h opens onto a unique red n •t '9 ters
brick palio complete with S.e v eral .small R.~.
fountain. .. $127 ,000; · First 1nvestrl'!ent situatiom; with
Tnist Dttd of• $75,000 is l .ow . 1ntere~.t. assumable LINGC:1REA8(2~s1TATE I =fmanm"' ~':---1
494-8036 49'l-1397 .... -
~.~i!'ster 1098 fOMPANY
PAINT & LOVE REALTOR !!33-llOO
BRAND NEW
can make this your dream
horrie. Anxious o wn e r
will help you finance this 3
bcdrm, 2 bath home on 60x12'I' lot. Full pr i c e
$27,500. 842-7461
l'IAllH. Pl..AOll,
•••• 'IC.WI!!>
16062 Beach Blvd., 1-lunt Sch
Huntington Bea'Cb. 1st owner
depreciation. 3 Br, 2% Ba
duplex 9n · corner. 4
blocks rrom ocean. Good
income are&.. Bltns, frplc In
ea.ch u n I t . 30 day
completion. Buy now & pick
your color for carpets &
kitchen appliances .
Wm. T. MILLER RL TY
642-4811 I hardv.'OOd Ooots, cpts & contact B1U Davenport W OU
drps. ~·I. lawn, fruit trees, wesr•O>ast Pacific New World Condo Only $70,000. 4 Br, 2~ ba
Fountain Valley 1034 etc. $54,500. 714-831·2600, 673-6832 eves . 1 nd 3 luxury town hou se ~ ------"---·I Roy McCardle Realtor . A c~st~ni c e1..'0r .. alr·co. ·· \1•/complete elec, kitchen. ........._ I ,_
By OWNER 1810 N Bl d CM BY O\\'NER. Dovcr-Shoreil, hc.hn1s .•• 2 I>?. Assu1nc lncludes self cleaning oven ..... ewport V ., lvan Wells, 4 Br. Fan1,rm, 71h% FHA. Price S32.500. & trtish c 0 mp a c t 0 r · 5 lxlnn .. 3 bath , pool, hup;~ 541-7129 Dining-rm, 3 bas., plus CORBIN-.MARTIN S.l.Hl4l ' iiiiiii T\\·o duplexes, and three
FIVE UNITS
open beam n1~t. suile· \\'/ Billiard-rm. Fabulous view Realtors --.-B G. O Mobile Homes 3BR, 2BA home~.
sunken tub, elect. garg., L ITTLE-MANSION-of NC\\'J>Of1 Center & IkiQ: · ' ~ CANY N e llOO $69 500
Water softener, sprinklers. Big and beautiful with Bay. $174,500. OPEN &ii * 644-7662 * Beaut. Monaco mod, over for ule '
gas BBQ & more. $66,500. budget si7.e pri!,.'e. Close i~ & ~un l to ? Pl\I ~I Lido Isle 1056 <'1800 sqft, Jdscpd, custm \\'ATERFRONT $12 , 5 0 0. e UNITED BROKERS • 842-7887. 3BR, 2BA, lots of privacy Santiago Dr. 64.,...2334· crpl5, drps, on view lot. Picture windows Vu Lido 646-7414 83J..0121
STUNNIN,G 4 BR. 4 bath 2500 SQ. Fi'. of prestige with a low maintenance Cliff Dr. 0.:.•nfront BY Owner $77,500. 123 Via $l3t,SOO, firm. By owner. l~le. 548-0553 or 6~1996. 1 ~-~-~-~-~1
family home. Lg. corner lot. living 4 bedrooms 21,i baths. front & rear yard, Comporc 2 BR, 2 BA apl. Xlnt view, Zurich. Extra sharp, prof. Call 644-M26. C i I Pr ty l600 Fourplex Hunt Beach
Sotne ocean/bay v u . 18x26 rumpus room, huge custom beauty dCl!igned for location & bullding,$100,00>. dee. 2 Br, 2 Ba + den. BIG CANYON right on llth ommerc 1 P Fix I S•ve
61:>-&59 15~ liv rm. Near Slatl'l' YJlU. On ly $38,500. 847·3584. Prine. only. 644-5450. 1 6T:di212:4~ fairway, lrg yd, DEAN * Shoppfntl Center * Lgc 3 bcdrm + J.2 bedrooms,
I
C d I Ma 1022 &. Hushard. $54,900. For BKR. MONACO , 3 BR, 3 BA,+ bltns, closed gar., gw\m oron1 e r quick sale!! Agent 962-2456 xtrns. $175,0XI. or Lease. Co6ta Mesa. G~ses $2,765 pool. Hurry, on'1 J left.
3 BR 2 BA "'5'!t-581Xl. ASSUME & SAVE $ftll-o~~ J1'~trc.• ,,,.,,..,1. r;,.mr,_:::;,,,\: ,:~'!';;; Only $51,950
3 Bit. 2~ Ba, Blt·in.'i, Frplc, \!;a J.' a -p \:) BACK Bay area, beaut. Old~ $!80,000. $255,000 • Finn, First PlonHr RMlty $69, 950 Private area, Tennis. Pool~. Sharp 3 bcdrm Stardust house w/trplc on % acre Prtncioals only. Bill Memll ; 142-4421
I . • 11 etc. 2 ~li.•lx'ach, FOR SALE i"v'a1m1•101",,.a1P"1·~1.1", .nBe.w't"',.1',·. That fnfri9uin9 Worcl· Game with a Chuckle fenced garden, forced to Lido RHlty 67J.7300 -,.,==~o~~===I n , a V(!f')' nict: nort.~ o .. or Jenl\e, $225. owner ~.. tell , $j9,000 call owner, A1TEN'TT N BUILDERS h1gh11·al locat1on with I &J&.592l kHchen and bath. Freshly ••i...1 .,, CUY •· POUAH $11·9~......Q!_ ::>31-&12. Duplexes/Units COSTA MESA
d I t ti.al C 11 -palnted-tn-anct-ou Bkr963: -.~,.,,,,_ •~-:., of "-J t !Is -• 6 I 1•-up ex-po en -a· -A",;;~ME " I ·1200 .•• -·-llARBOR VIEW HO>, IES • -for-111• · llOO us -t.,.. -llOOtne--Un ""' --644-7211 <»>u 5 ~ 011.n S:i , · 5681 four acrombled WOfdJ i,. Income $910. per mo. Room • sales price 2'60 sq ft' ba r. low to for111 four ti111ple wordJ. $79.500. By owner. Palermo for 10 mom units, Call
,,.,..,,... potio, ou!Standiug REPOSSESSIONS model. 4 BR, 21> BA , WI HOUSE + TWO CJS REAL 'ES'rATE ~NICfL
~AILEY &
ASSOCIATES
:~1~1~11own<"r r ortnformation andlocn.tloo ,, IP XI MfT El ·EI I ~r~4x:~~p:t~4 ·5830 / N:cwB~.B~·i!"~~~~Z:,~~ 548-1168
ASSUMABLE S'h% loo.n. of lhese FHA It VA homt.'S, BAL PT ,, blk . I I ix.tloc ~1 laundry 4 APT Units on 19,600 aq ft. contact ,_ Jetty, ge ot. yardsiBut1der .,H ·~14. ' lot -7.oncd C-2 Newport By OWNER, DUPLEXES 3BR, 21,iBA plus 20'x20' -3 BR&. has, patio. Teen apt. ~ Bl ~ c M '"" · ho ~-k 2nd I KASABIAN '"''• . . ......... me> income. 3 BR. 2 BA. home wllge l nus rm. vw1a;r ta e . I G A M [ E j 1't· ~Ocean Blvd, $9:),000 NE~U~T~ORES Good for c omm t r c Li. I
RR. 1 Bll, kitchen, din-rm. t4I .~. S4?-42S6 or 6'1G-3S08 I Real E•t•te '61-6644 I I I r I . dcvclopm.cnt. s 6 5' 0 0 0 .
I & llv·nn area-rental. Ev· Huntington 8Nch 1040 I HERE'S A NEW ONE-Newport Crest by ~. 4 38R units w/ftrcpla~. Owner-Broker. 642-0Cm. ~rything upgrl\tle<J, newly -, · -· B.ft. 3 00. Sunken L.R. F~m $84.500. fee Agt 675-0123 12 DELUXE unih1, 3 Br,
· pn.lntt'd. Cood lnlcrest rate. LA CUESTA By Stoa: 1 blk J This ono 19 JU$l being I Rm. 1'~10 loan. Below mkt. Income 'roperty 2000 2 Ba, owner's unit. Good
OPEN HOUSE SAT&. SUN. to lk proposed • a"'R"'2~1" f!_: !"dfurb~shed00wlth t~l•d newest ., T U S [ E j $10,50ll. 642·31M . location. S~~% avail. ·~ •. '"I" IRIS CD'! ""' to oce11n., ... '"'· I eu Ill me bu1 Ing. At -2-....... rplexes YEAGER RLTY .,_ ..... -n ="-=''K"-=-"'='·-"=·=.o.":-·I huge nt/LR, c omp . $."~.OCJO it'll a steal, and )'OU I I I r ~ELL or l eaae/o p t ., rVVI ~' IRV I NE Tc Tr &. c e -By uiicraded, beaut. ln<bcplng, ca.n as.~uinc this low intcrt!lt 1 Shotte ges hevo turned us &yfront , Vista del Lido. Side by stdc In cxcelltnt lndustrJ1I Prpty. 2100
Ov..'tler ·Like tle\\'! 3 Bdrm. by ()Wn(1', ptinc. only. \1A loon nt $235. per n\(). all lnlo "-"pigs. t•·°'""'' Spa.e 1 BR & LPnal Condo. North Oi!!.ta Mesa locat;lnn.
2 beth., com .. r Jot. Pool. $83,500. 96&-0454. llITTTy, call 847-3:""'184. UKR. I .R A M w O R I Owner 6Tr585.l Income $16.200. Ju11t listed ?IJlx~sre:~~ Ol'~t1;
PrlCf!d to Sell! $73,SOO. 3 CAR GARAGE, 4 bedrooin -WALK-TO-BEACH-, I I I I I 0 CompJ,,. t~ d1udde ~~ O\\fNF.RS Unique Bl::AOI 11.nd txCIUKlve sales price AC t'unk Co.~
673-7910 \uXury home, 2 ~1 miles to 2BR. ror. lot, 2 car gRr. Only . by 1111.11! 111 1~ ffl1Ml!'19 wafd H 0 1\1 E. 5 3 I 9 8 r u c e $67,000 each, Call Mr • .,7'.-.,-~~==~=I
UNUSUAL 2BR. w / 1 r" ocean huge 12:<18 temlly 2 htki1 lo heh, owner ".111 Yoll d-lop .1om 11to No. 3 btlow.., Crescent. ti 4 5-8 91 4 or Rtun 56-8424 SoulhCo, Lots for Ute 2200
private yard, wood deck, room. Near Maftn()lla and flntlnct at 31'ii'..lt per ll\O. 328-3"Z33. RC<on .
fireplace. greenhOllM!, pl1 Yorkt()Wn. $-13,900. Agent 536--8821 8 Pll'~~s~v~0~~~slCTTERS IN 1 HARBOR VlEW HOME v~"l~EW=-IJJ~T~-~r-.... ~B-.ck-~Boy-, p~~t~~~1NToPRrXx100~ ~a.ch, O\\>ntt, 2nd TO 5.ll.9&)0 or 962-2456. Gerald S. Thom:\11, RealtQr PortoOr:o, 4 'BR. :l~i baa. Npt. -lBch. Appro x · bo&t sllp. Chmer n'*.Y
avail, s59•900 615-4616 OLDR 110:.fE near OOv.111oo,i,T1 ~to.r Park & &ehoolii. 4 I UNsciAMBtf AiOYE tETTftS I I I I I I Fam·nn & Came·rm. lOO'XlOln $35,(0). ~1 11cccr.t trade. Xlnt tcnn!
By owner 2 BR. Avail. Ifuntington Beach, ()fl 50x125 bdrim, 2 b4tM. big ta111ily ro GET ANSWfl . . . , • . Own<'r1 $89.~. 811-3894. ;ic:Cwo:·~,..· ..,,..,,........,..,.._,,,._,. av11 I . Asklnii $13 o, 000 ,
I m med I at t. I Y. Tenns, ti. R.·3 lot. 'J' er r l f I c I m1, bulll·ins. \IJtilk to · 1.hr BY Owtitr HV lfomcs, ton &Ue, BAiboa 1311\Jld J..ot, Contltct Steve Smith, Sll-
$$5..,.00\I. 71( 1' t r ft I ea f . tnvesunent pol«.'Tillal 132.900. beach. $49,950. Tarbell, cau upgraded Carmel. Fee land. courteay to broktts, 645-3323 3%12 (office), or 645-4815
l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,.m• I ..:3*«136"'-'=·'---------• ""'"' 962-24!6 or 531-0800. 962·5566 SCRAM-LETS An,....,. In ClH111ie1tlon IOIO m.ooo. Ii<~ A"-"<73-5~_,1115~-----ho-""'-·------•
' I • • I
r
[
l
•
------tw,ond11, J11ty (2, l1J74 DAILY PILOT 21
, Office Rental ~-
! NEWP.ORT BEACH
2400 ----ur. • uu• Un U(ni1bed_~ Unfvrnl1Md c~. Unturn. 3425
!------.....:..:.::::I ~oron1 del Mir 3222 Huntington Beach 3240 Lido Isle 3256 BF.AUTlf'UL North Irvine
A rtment1 Unfurn. • Ap1:rtmenti ?-Jntu_rn. A t1 Furn Unfurn 3
Cott• Mose 3124 l"'lno 3844 CHOICE newe,. 1 Rm . TOWnilQu5e. 38R., 2 B A ,
Arrowhtac'I l'IOtnc. Lake. u$(', CHARMING! SI,ACIOUS & spotle:ils, 1 fl1(), PROF OE:CORATED 4 DR, 2 U t 1·11 t y room. A Ir
Many xtrat. 1''urn. opt , Ulg new, 4 BR, 2BA, cathcdr&.l Ila, blt·lntJ, IJBhv»11hr, 11tept condlUonlng. Patio. Ga""e. NEW PARK WEST ,
APTS. aavga OJI own. AAle & fln. Veey llhnrp two bedroom, celll1l!:ll. iz:$.tt!e:n kitctlcn, to 1>riv. bl:i.u;h. fl.educed to Nr. schOOfs. l'f"l'C use Of
Cons. Ltase Opt, $46.500. two bttth home with a Upgraded Uui.IOut ... One yr $625 n\O. Mt.4$1 I e u • e . community pool. \Vat.er A 1~7-3:s4 ,purkllng pool rumished lea*, $400. per mo. No fee. b'73·8873 or 833·1316. cable TV paid. $296. mo. 1 2 & 3 BEDROOM F1mlly AfNirtm1nt1
CHOICE
LAKE FRONT
LOCATIONS
VERSAILLES
MAM?.10TH LAKES large $395. Brokl'r, 893-13.Jl l-'RENQI Twnhi>C ""view. 3 lease. s.;i.s:isi. Avail Aug. ' 2 BR. 2 &th now avnY3hle
r.oroor view Jot, o ff S
1
,, EXEC. 3 BR, 2 bf. w/pool. BR, 3 ha & den. ~l e.nd. lJit, fi'om $220. On·Cuhi!r Dri\'C, '?N Tlll•; LAKE
l\.1eridl11;n, \Valk to ne.,•; Mwir upcr ocauon . Miuth Of Nr. beach, formal din 1m, Lg aunny pa!lo. $650. yrly. l\llSSJON VIEJO. 3BR.2BA. Split Level Apts Unf. Just off San Diego Frwy. At S. uth Coait Pla7.a.
lift. All utll. underground,' highway • 11paciou11 thrte J;. r.am nn, stone trplc 6-1()..8777 or 61.>-48!>6. Nv ~ndo. Air. Fireplace, AVAIL NOW! 3883 Parkvie'v t.n. 552-9200 POOi • Ac~puh:o Aqua Bar ,
643-8031 aCt. 6 ~rooi tn lllo'O 11to1yfi. lo
1
ta oC catllCdral ce.illngit, $400. ,,lO. YEAR I••••, l BR, 2 "·. Avail lmn1ed. 892-1219 ll'LlNT SQ. ~.~ 2BR l & JacUUJ, Spectacular 8 1 ,;,::..;:;;;,:,;;;;~~----I 1t.·00< pancbna rep aee · ldi I ·-.: ...... ..,.. · · ......,,......,. • a r· Acre Lake w/Tov.·ering EJ.. C \RISO Village, %51nlles d be 00 "'" ' '"" ng poo acrv. A\'all. frplc, .patio. U e • u ti f u I .a (.'Ond, pvt gar & lndey, pool Fountains . 1~ l\tillion Dollar· E. ol Sa,n Juun Caplatrano. un am celllnga So\00. lmmed. 96&-l-450. , condition. $410. 538-5410 "'ptrtrnent1 Furnished rt:ATURINC: &; rte. Util's pt pd. $240 nlO. Clubhouse, ,_Gyn1, Sauna,
,2-Bl\ ... mtn. 'ib.ln~ ll.ll.--1..u.ndlotdil W reaU llB...214 Ba.,..Blt·ki¥ le MiMieft ... Vffl-261 BilbM....-PMIJn.tMl• 370f l:Oft ~rooma: • Frp!c'1 • 551-~32. Total Soour:-v.
view. $28,000. Ownr. !>48-0:\SS need rental lb:llttgl • houses Prtvat~ area, Tenn!.$, Poolll. . .. -·Cor~~ 111..,ldtci.ena a-& UTll..._l'Rl'i mmrdiat~~Occupancy
R .. I Eat•te Wntd. 290o' or npartments •furnished or etc. 2 fo.fl. bench. NO PETS., 4 liR, Ji'anl·nn, near NE\V. SUliUl.tf.R & WINTER posed Beam Ccll.\nis ... En-• AOUL TS
\Vatertront executive otlioo1: ~ wt ffvlc .. wet bar, prlv.
bath; ooe 2 room i\ulte \\'ith
view of boats .fr waler.
8111 Grundy, Rllr
+7Ul61
1--------"""-'I unlurnt.shed. Lease $2'25, or Sale. Qy.•ne.r, Crpt!1 & di.:shY.'aiiher. ~.Lovely, clean 1 BR. Sleeps cl~d Patios • ~ & APT. nearly new, \\1tite So......,, No Pets
liEASE OR PURCllASE. 3 Call 615-l22S 646-.59'21 mo. :M912 St a g cc o a ch , 4 or 5. One bloi:k to ocean-~cf~ o::;er Com•enlenccs. water view, blk to beach. B•cheac;~", I, 2 & 3 Br's. OFl-~ICE SPACE F o R
or 4 BR. wllh assun1a_ble VACANT 89-1-1070 one block -to Bay, S129-and u s 0 Y· t.eaMl, 2 BR, 2 bu., S270. f $175 RENT~ Costa ri.tcsa. Harbor
First "r.D. Prine. only. • BR, pooj, Munn & N rt·--h 3269 !~~pl;!l'\\'ttk.1124,V.Bal· HAYLOFT APTS. 49-J-3383or49+-~ roms •• '!'.!mo. at Adams. Beautiful-~noo or 5864175. jacuui. Walk lo ocean Sl25. ewpo -c _ ......,. lllvd. OCEANSIDE at \V o od 11 an "'"• modern, Alr, mu )I i c
Ask for l\1R. SNIDER 002-· • BA:VC S CJIARfo.UNG BALBOA INN Covt: l Bednn: Pool: S225 J700 Plaza Dr. janitorial, Class A. Walkef
. . .
\'.\LLF\
l<I \LI\
44n. · RE T e O""n July 27th, Newly W AVOCADO on yearly· 8.15-2200 X·281 71'5" ~66 & Lee Bldg. Call Gene Hill
3 BR 2 BA SI 1 hil 4BR-38A-Pool J~rated Su:rnmtt & COST• MES.a or 49+-1836, ' . ,... w 5J7--0136 or G42--0:Dl. '
& Pe.ts 'QK~g e$~: d~:: Our deal tcli thru!! Avail. \\•inter te~1a1s. 6ir8ll0. ~IU "' Lido tale 3856 CORONA DEL MAR
.Sl>-0211 and page 14tlB 10 i~inlel.l.-f ~ leai:;e. Lrg. YEARLY, 3 BR. Very clean, 12 Noon to 7 pm <If~'~ 1 Nice carpets, drapeg:, view
$100. MOVE IN leavt name 4. nun1lx.•r for kitch wicating area; spac. lh Blk 10 Bo.y & ~an. sna. 1\f th s LIDO ISLE · Drnmatic \ie1v "1Z'1">"i\7l2!1W loc:at'\on. yet central. i:>O Sq. •·LL~•NCE retuni call. bk Y~· Pre(. 001nc 011.·ncr n10. 6i3-6!;,.') or 673-0045 I · on, l'\I un. • 'raterfront lBR. Condo. llQfl•" 1cw-rr! ft., S.".50./n10., 3 \'ear lease,
"' ""'" ~\'hO IS relocattng " pre('s A t S400 l\I . u ·1 N .... ........ Ph J
I . "'. ' ~·· ~·~ ~ ' ' • ' ' •• ~ v •
.... I~
Houlff Furnished J Br. 2~~ Ba, bltnli , frplc, LOVELY 4_br~ ~ iio, 1J mile to \\'l:l.it. to buy 'Iii in~rest 2 BR, 1 BA "·inter. J hse 10 . P · · o. inc. II s. 0 AltllJ LUESIDCUVINC one an1eli B. Wood,
General 3102 gani,gc, 1600 sq. ft. $400. mo. J. to ocea)l. Newly clectn'. rate& lower. $723 mO. tile. oe¢an; Dllb~ilr, lg_ roon1s. on -rhe Beaten Path pets. By owner. 675-0a34. . tMAU NlS-ACCl,flO ~~~r;~l'Qkf!'J',-67'~ or
l Sll5. UTll. pd bo.ch a l 613-292[1 aft 6
1
ln/out. Singles considered. ~ardcncr & pool tl!'rv. $229._ 111cl ut1L li'lS-8.331 Mes. Verde 3863 • loche~s
beach. Ideal st uden t, COZY CO'M'~GES: 2 BR,
4
$3258.R' Le3"'bc. ~f 215' Pl¥Jne: 646-5288 or 642-1911: Corona del Mir 3722 Spaciou~ Garden Apts. e llOt.-IE ATr-10SPHER£ • 1 IR, 2 8R DESK space available $50
Laguoa I rpl's, 111~ blkll to bch $3()0. ' a, ,').m rin, lrg $~.65 UTJ L pd. Redl'!c , l . Adults . No Pets Deluxe 2 & 3 BR. Renla l ore 2 IR & mo. \Vill proVide funUture
$150 UTIL pd ni1,.-e bach. mo, 5 blk3 lO bch $275'. mo. l bonus rm •. ~a~e<I pool, yrd Bdr. 1 blk beach.' Hal Pc:iin SiltALL 2 BT<. uprer; u~ll. * L11.xurious shag carpets 3005 tiface Ave. 546-16.'H _ F•rom $l75o.n_ ,.,5 a~ ~-mo. Answer i n 1
No. End. Yd, pet ok Laguna yrly. Hal Pinchln, Rill'. I & pool mauit furn, 96S-48ll $3()0 VE!lY !ge 2 Bdr. 2
1
pd. S2l0 Mo .. yearly. Quiet • Blt·ins illel Dishwasher -~ ~~~~ BJ~blHu~I~~ OCEANJo~RONT 615-4392. Irvine 3244 Ba \V/dbl "&l'ngc pool. 1nm·ri~ cpl, no Pets · * Lrg Pool ~Gas BBQ's Miislon Viejo .3867 Mesa'Hfde East & Adams Beach. &i2·4321.
' Willier rentals llAR.BOR View Hills ocean Cd.i\l co ' GTh-35ll · * Pri\'ate Patios
Newport 'Co1"'""del •.l"r ' *RENTALS* j""' 3 Bdr, 2 Ba, lt pk. Costa Mesa 3724 1 & 2 BR's. Sl10-$19j 3 BR ron.:lo lltlsslon \'lejo. 540·1800 1501 WESTCLIFF OR. or: "'... " & bay v;ew; 5 BR, fam . G • w 1 Pd • G Clo"(?d garage. kids & pets •. NE\\'PORT Fl 'al c NU-VIEW RENTALS rm., ·3 ba. Prlv. encl. pal io Vill uge 1 Univ. Park. hv. Double gar, yard. patio --as a ~r • arage ok. $2"iS. &IS.3"8:i or 837.6050 nanc1 enter
673-4030 or 49-1-3'2.48 >,y/pool, $150 Mo. on year's 3 Bd. s., 2 ba. $315 Ncwpol'I Shoret. LA MANCHA APTS. ext 231 NEW Le•sint Office SfNICI
1se. Agt. 67':>-5726 3 BcJr111s .. 2\~ Ba.. t42J 1 NU-VIEW RENTALS Ambassador Inn 778 Scott Place, c.1\1. · ., · CALL ON·SITE MANAGER s:~·~~~.~~~·~i~: \~~:~ 3BR,·2BA + fan\ nn, trg Village III Univ. Park, Irv. I 673--!030 or 494·3248 BRAND NEW 642-2007 ·12-BR 001~0. A_I~. _S225. DEtUXE (1141 642-3111 eXI. 246.
pd, N.B. \Valk to \\'titer. yrd, w/patio 3308 Surfview 3, E!~'m!I., 2, .. ,.,. b !I~ --$34 50 & Up El Puerto Mesa ~~~ 8~:S,· Zl,.64.r.;.l&j tJr APTS * I l\tO. FREE RE."JT ..
pd l 1 Dr. Harbor Vu H 111 s , · ..,..,i ,ns., "? ti. "l~>' e \·EARLY RENTAL e ' ' ·' '' No lease req. Dix. offices. ~~· ~t~~s iuBabe:!~· ~1:;: 530-1050, 644-7311 Park 11 Uni'.'. Park, Irv. : 2BR, den. 2BA, Pen Pt 5375. SINGLE S!UDIO AP~ 1 BR. Furn or Unfurn. Newport B11ch 3869 2 & 3 Bclnns, crpts, drps, I adj. Airpor1er Hotel. S5c Sq.
t., h A F 979-8430 3. Bdrm~ .• 2 ha.. $400 j 2BR nu sharp apl $275 SPECIAL \VEEKLY &\TES $165 Up i-lllltics paid., Bltins, Jaun· Ft. incl. A/C, full servic•
) Be . K!.-ee. SPAC. 4 br, 2 ba, frplc. rne :r:errace, Univ. Park, Irv. 2BR lg upper apt, fpl, 2717 Harbor B!vd. All Util. Paid Newport Beach dry facilities. Rec. roo1n 2li2 DuPont. Rm. 8
Balboa Peninsula 3107 ~~~$4~~~ J::C =~~1; :i :irn1~. 2 ~,., IU'IV $-1~ beeni (.<ei~. s29J. _ C.Osta ~tesa G45-4840 f.io Cliildren, No P.ets NE\VPORT VILLA 'v/pool table, gym room. J 83J..-3m <9 HI noon)
BA\TP.Ol\'T 5 Br, •. Ba, owru· will fin. 494·2008. . ~~I~ 2~k t~cirvinc ~?D Coast Prope11ies. 6~0-$30 WEEK & UP Pool & Recre'ation . NE\'/ Spacio11'., xtra lrg apts. ~<i~~ o~' no bbqt area. ~RESTIGE SUITES
pier, foot. Wc-ekh': W1nte1" 483 MORNING CAN'{ON 2 13 Bdm1s., 2 ba. F'R ~425 4 BDRM, 2 BATH e Studio &.lBR Apts: 1959 Maple Ave., C.M. all adult scx•Jr'·v build ing. 2 Brislol c0~'0 i\les~ ~2m Xl l~f\~RT ~EACH..w_
)'Tly. Avail. Sept. 14th.· Br 2 Ba, fpl. gar pvt patios. 2 Bdrms., 2 ba. $·125 Ne11• H<irbor View Ho tne. e TV & l\1aJd Service Avail Park·Like & 3BR, 2BA .•·ith ar.1pic ' • ·
1
Sn ~· • .amp ':.rpa ...... ,,,,.
613-2039 $400. n10. Yrly 'aftei: Aug. 4 B.'lrms., 3 ba. $175 Fa nt :is tic View, ~'. e Pho!'" <:-,,r.,.ice _ Htd. pool . Surroundln 1 par1'ir.g spaces.· AU bllins. eke~ ng view, arbor I.:
Beacon Bay 3 114 ]st. 613-7099 Greentree Hoines S\vl n1n1•ng pool. l t n n is e C!lf . Pet Section DELUA"E? & 3 9 crpts, drps, d/11', ;;::as s:tovc, · &G«l60 C t Me 3224 3 Bdm1s. 2 ba. $38,j 001111. park & achools. S495. 237l. :-t mvd. CAI . -Br. Apte. 10 min. fron1 Fashion Island.
BEACON Bay, 28R. ZBA. OS a , SI UC!o Isle, Ne\1'JM)rt Beac:h mo. (714)641}-5868 51~ ..ir 045-3967 N~k!~;~ A.d~ts ::J} hot water paid. pvt patios, re~-~-~-... OOJ· s'JJkq tt.EE~o-FOOTu·re · ..... !!ding ...
lovely patio pvt beach & j 2 BORi\t din nn garage, 4 Bdrn1s., 2 be,. $690 * SUPER HOJ\tE! 3 br, 2 *SUS CASITAS* Ma. rti' I Apts' REC ROOf.lS, hcc1.tetl pool. ~ docks, $450 Per rr.o, 979-3130 ft>nced f~r pet. ' CALL 552-7500 ha, lg \valled yrd. Appli's, ft que . • saunas, gym, low~£ & Ot-t6 crpts, drps, redecorated.
& \\o'kends & eves 673-9345 j BUNGALOW 2 Br $195 • VISION • fully crpt'd. Lse $450/mo t.linutes to Newport Beach. 1777 Santa Ana A\•e. C:.\T BBQS. · 2000 Placentia, 6 4 2-4 09 7 .::.=="-='-'-'===., "-Garage, Jcid~ ok. avail. · inclds gardener. 1524 Anita Bachelors & 1Bdr1n.1''rom l\i"gr Apt U3 ~2 71~2-23"7 2 BR. Townhouse. frplc, 0',,"'='",.'..,'=~~~~~I
CoroM del Mar 3122 1BRING pet2Brtloo. Fenced Ln. For appt., 642-1121; $150. Adults, no pets. 2110 · Sorry. no ,; from $250.-1 BR, hvm $195. \VESTCLIIT DR. Newport
. .
2
BR
1
yd. garage. REALTY eves 6'5-3404 NeY.'POrt Blvd., C.M. NEW TRIPLEXES 15:1~ Place11tia 1. ~. N.B. Pool, tennis, continental Beach. 400 sq, ft . with Air, ~A?~t ~gle person ; Homefinder1 * 642-9900 a red hill company * DUPLEX • BEAUT. 1 BR, lots of _blt·ins. Spal'kling new 2 BR. $215, CHANNELFRONT . breakfast. Separate ·1amil.Y Private Bath & Billcony.
cpl 4oo lris. 132 Cabrillo, Costa Mesa Univ. Park Center, Irvine BLK from beach. 3 Br. 2 B!· JX?I. \\•alk to shopping. ~= 3 BR .. 2 BA S335. Westbay. 0 , .. 2 & d••, 211 ........ , &"',',·~· .. _C8i0""h .• )?26•11hopping ~~~o.' Call. Gene Hill, · UT!L Pd 1 S 35 gar. Neai' new $330/$3j(j i\li. beP.ch. SI50. mo. 931 \V. Inc..-onie Homes. 2675 Elden "" "" 72 ,.... ... , '"' <n:: '""" MIN Verdi 3163 ,. . • BR, tri;>x. l · yrly. 6·12-4289 or 832-5322 19th St 54g-0492 (nr. T\fesa DriveJ. &12-4005. $QKI, 2 Bdrm .. 2 ba., 2 * COSTA MES• * Bnngyourpetorch1ld-nm\' UNIVERSITY PARK · f i ~--LRG 1 BR i ~ ~ BEAUTIF1JL OCEAN VJJ:'\V car gar, rpc . ..-w 11 , .. , poo, nr. Suvps, AJmost new 1\-J l ~~~ V~ipi!: Rh~~~: Ptft~ :· b:! ~~~~i~l!.w ~ ~~:: 1 ~:· new ~ LN""e~~poiourt' , .. ~vhl~: .j"1· tmhols tt>!~!~. l~~is.id::J:s. r°,{ R\CHELOR & Loft, util. ~ ~Aiyy. FRONT l~t~1:u:\!'.1L!r!~ pclsis--0336 1 1300 sq,_~~t.236$1851~ .. Mo.
Year's lease. Aft. Sept 1. M0the1· for 1 older gent. 3 BR, 2~~ ba., fa111. $315 .. . "" s .. , ~ ·1· • $115. 1993 Cllurch. 548-96:µ. paic}, pool, jacuzzi, CID, .....r
Adults <1nly. $400 1n o. Nf.:AT 1 BR, Gar. Apt. $150., 4 BR, 2~~ ba, tam. $425 Call Sheri, Agt. 66-Gl41. \VANT Privacy? 1 ~. 1 br, refrig & garage. 1 adult 3 BR, 2 ba, unf, V75 Yr!)• ROoms 4000 OE LUXE OFFICES "~ ~2 lM'lAC 3 b 2,, b '""" only. yriy. 393 Hamilton, C. . TO· OCEAN ~ util~pd. also 2 BR, sundeck, TURTLE ROCK · t f~nt ho r, Year\ a fun1 or unf, adults, no pets. l\t. $160/195. 6 4 5-4 4 11: 2 BR., 1 ba., furn '$.3\KI Yrly ROOMS $20 ...... 11. up, with Fro:;' $130 P!~ i\ionth
Newport Beach 3169 :5185. llO\\'. ~BR 2 ba, fam. $400 v.·a er l . me. y. S150. 2860 LnSa.lle, 897-422.'i. 6-12-1960 3 BR, 2 ba, unf. S385 Yrly kitchen: $30, \\'k up apt. ev.·port ocach
ALA RENTALS 6•12·8383 COLLEGE PARK Call eves.~-LGE 2 Br rum apt Close to 2 BR + den, triplex. 2.BR. 1 ba . $2a0 Yrlyl~-'>l&-'."':!9~75:'o5!Co~<~64!!>-~396i!i17.,_~i ;Ri'"'>'alf.ofooj;m';;;,=i";''"'B=:m~.c;;i''10i'5-6~l'-ill0<1 * BEACON BAY * Kcwport & B3y, C.l\-1. 3 Br., 2 ba, tam, new $360 ; BLUFFS condo; end unit shopping. Adllits 'only, no Everything new. huge patio, CORONA DEL MAR Sleeping. room: restnn facil· NE \VP ORT CENTER
2 Bdnns.. 2 baths. furn. 2 EXCELLENT RENTALS WALNUT SQUARE !1@1. 3 Bdrnls., 2 baths pets. Inq. 179~ Rochester frplc, bltns. Adlt cpls. $225. 2 BR, 1 ba, unf. $27J Yrly itles. Over 40. S65 mo . $2(1. Growld: Floor Law Suite,
iara:e patio; yearly lease 3 BP. fam rm din rm 3 BR 2 balh• 1265 $385ll.1onth Broker~l34 0 p' I 3726 ~3432 Secun·1y. o.••.5337_ f-.'" ... :~=·'.•,d.:. .J!.c.eptionist,
$450 per monlh Turtim.ock. g A.'r den er'. ·· 1 BEDROOM duplex. 1 house ana . oin 2 BDR?i.t house. ?.iarried ""° ~.:.,,., """" 'IU-O<Ou
"C" Thomas Rltr. &18-5527 \\•atf!'J', AMOC. f~ paid. 1·3 to beach. Yearly. OCEAN VIEW spacious part· couple, 1 child OK. SllO. ROOi\l to man $l0. monthly. "NE\\'PORT CENTER,
3 BR, 1 ~~ ba.""Outs:lde Year lease. $5Zi mo. Cl?se 645--0882 ly furn. 2 BR apts. Ne'o\•ly Refs. 351 Avocado, 01. ~9136· 275 Flower St, Exec Recpt Secty 500 Sq
sMwer. \\'Inter Re n ta. I · to . pool & all amenities. Newport Height1 3270 decorated, $2C6. mo. with 1 642-0857 Costa i\fesa fl. A~;ail. no:.;.,, 64+-0433 o;
\\i ate rJ ron t. Sept.June. Unive:s;lty Park, 3 "BR. 2 lease. Inquire 25091 La Cres· ROOtil for v1orking \\'Oman &10-8325. l.Dvely. Frplc. b 11 n s. BA. 1nngle story, $350. mo. LUX. ne1v twnhse, prof. dee. ta Dr D p 496-0844 * ELi\l GARDENS AP'I'S only. Kit. privgs, garage, ---------1
615-2824. -·I Clos~·r to B~~ .. ~a. l l -r.-;t WeitCrifBink Bldg. 3 Br, frplc .. slf cln-oven. lge 2 BR ~e";ly: decorated SS. -~~~:cJ!~1ri! in --APARTMENTS -w.rq, fl~. mo. &12-3517 Busine11 Rent•1 4450 --
YEA"' v , BR 1 b "" h ; iune '1e11. """""' u · ·1y p k 1 . pati9, gar, Walk to Harbor . . • · -.. .. S c M · · Baoh•'·r 1 _ 2 Bedroom• ROOMS for rent ~'• blk to .....,_ ., .. .l. ""ac . n1ven11 ar , ?Vine H' & E · hi , --Utt! included. Cable TV. '""" t., · · 642-3&G "'"' "" • house.· Lgc. !enced y:l $350 j ~lURRY 21)., Ws 2 Br $180 Days_ ·552·7000 Nights 1 nsign sc s~-........,. 960-1142 or 496-0195 -· and Townhomes ' beach.. $25-WK & up. Otil FOR lea~ ideal sales lot for rnc,,/le&e Agt 6T"~ si~les taCls ·oK. S325. 54~1: 64G-T."K>J eve. . SPACIOUS 2 Br, bllnl, crpts, Fr. $224.50 Open 9-6 Daily pd. 2500 Seavle"" Cdi\f. used cars, boats, motor
' U · f • hed t' E·SIOE' 2 Br $180. \'a cant & 2 BR c.o do -1 Newport Shores 3272 Huntington Beach 3740 drps, pool, frplc, gar. Spa Pools Tennis Summer Rentals 4200 homes, mobile h 0 rn e 1 .
Houses n urn1s ready. kid ok. 2 BR ~dos .... $~ m,: s'i#i -Adults, no pets. 376 Vt'. Bay, Across lrom Fashion Island;-"'==.;....-'"--..:...-= Complete service facilities,
General 32o2 BRING a pet 2 Br $18..5. Fncd 3 BR Condos ••• ·• $265&:127-3 BDfil.1, 2 BA, patio. frplc, FROM $l39. l/2 mi. to besch CM. at Jamboree on San Joaquin LAGUNA Beach BEAUT. 3 Also xlnt RV auction site.
YMrd & garad go.
9900
3 BR H.Jmes ." $300, $.125, $335 ·eom.m. pool. tennis. \Valk to ~~~~~1T:~T:~~1:: SUO. lBR Duple.x. ?i.lanied Hill& Road. BR, near bch, sips ~. $195. OUi~e space avail. Lighted
. Homefln •rs* 642· 3 BR Ho $360 s315 S39S beach. s:m. mo. yrly. · 1 • • couple, non smokers, no (714) 644-1900 per v.'k. Also J BR. $95. & paved. Orange County's ALA .ltENTALS " 132 Cabrillo, C.Osta i\Ie11a 4i BR Ho;;:::.:.s335:~: $425 1 960-1235 ot 548-865.'l. PATIO . Gar~en Apt.s: pets. 968 "B", W. l lth. NEWPORT TOWERS 'o\'k. 4!M-0012 or ( 21::) busiest intersection S.E.
M'""611U .. u....a 1:: BR. l~~ ba, freshly painted RANCH REALTY San Juan ~~Jacuzzi, 2 car prkg. 548-0358 OH THE BAY 1,-==:::·--.~----I Comer Garden Grove •
inside & out. New cpts, * 551·2000 * Ca•'istrano 3278 ' . UPPER 2 Bt. Cpts, dtps, Bayfroot piiv beach park Harbor Blvd. Call days Mn.
--Mn. only, Refs req'd. $250 per *" SfiG.6800 * llart?or. near b e ac h ' $150 758 Sh II $400 Mo/yrly lse Ing, large modern 3 bdnn. Harbor Blvd, Gar d en f fi.,. HOIJSIS drps. Lg yard. 1-·amilies RANDI REALTY _ r--, STUDIO Apt1 Huntington mg/o\<en. Fam. only. No 2 BR., 2 ba.: unf. Slip avail. ' ' ' . Tucker \714) GJS-7512, 13028
W J DUl'll. mo. AUsolutel v no . pets. TUSTIN REALTY 3-BR 2 SBAPACI~~ts furnished, fplc, $225 mo., I pets. 54s.oo5s: a mar. 646-8316 • 642-3931 JG~~~~·Aug. lO. Sl)O "'kly. !-'G"roO-vec=.. =====~-I
' . 549-1058; $-JG-41'.u Agt. ' .. 832-5111 * ' . ._..!'<' • some 213--59&-9479 . BAYFRONT. BOAT SLIP 1,,:::~c::.::...,.-~-~~= .!lflWP'Olf &W,C.M. "2•a1J. drapes. Kitchen b I I· in II· WANTED 1 BR unfum, ~love & retr1g Catalina view. Spac., lux., DANA Potnt. tum 1 Br, $7j. NE\VPORT SHORES
C. MERA 1 &UY. 1 Br hse $80 LEASE·(lcean Vie.,~·. 4 Br, BEAUTIFUL North Irvine Encl garii.gc. Laundry facil. * USED BRICKS * $1~. Pref mi~ age cpl or nu, 2 Br, 2 Ba, terr. Pool . wk. 2 Br $93. \\'k:' Close 10 6100 \\'. Cst. Hwy, Newport.
or bach $90. unl pd. 2~ Ba, ne1v Crpts, Drps, Townhouse. 3 BR, 2 BA. \Valk to beach & shopping. 87,. AO'.L'A retired. No children or pets. Sec. bldg. 2 gar. Leilse •::a<:. beach &: marin'.l. A Is 0 100 sq. ft. store spa~ suit·
NE\VPORT bach 114S &\'all Wet Bar, freshly \Vallpap-U t i I i t ¥ room· A Lr $225 ,,,.......,.,.. 642-5848 ~,, able for retail business or ' ' red bi f · conditionl"". Patio. G ....... .,.e. ' A""l L N. 1 3752 n10. Carey, 675-85.31 monthly rates. 496-95:tl 1 Huntington bach $1.Z'I. now e , g yard, ruit trees. N ··co --* ..,,.,... 079 * aguna 19ue SHARP • CLEAN 3 scrv Ct'. Avail. lmmed. HEY look z Br house $150. $400. JJ10. 642·0415, Avail 8/J. r. schOols. Free use or · · SEE Catalina & Newport NE\VPORT BEACH. Ocean Hi\RBOR J\'IANAGEMENT
Fncd W·gar, pet & chi.Id _ EXTRA lge modern 4 Br, 2 COJnmunity pool. Water & NE\V DUPLEX, Pvt yard, 2 \\'EST NINE 'condo. 2 BR, 2 ~mi~. bati%. apk::: 8:3-Y from your beau
0
t. 2BR view, 3 BR. avail.~ l ~·k COf\IPANY INC.
ALL kinds 2 Br dplx·tn $15(). Ba + studio in xlnt si ..... le cable TV paid. $295 mo. car gar ... 2 BR,12 Ba, Fa~· BA. \\leekly or yearly. needed Call "' ..... nt "~ ~•41 "ate(Iront .apt. Ne" crpts, only. ~~ly 27. Auii:. "· $2JO. 67f>.60.io
115 Kids pet.s sngls "6 ~ase. a:ll·5151. Avail. Aug. rm, Tennis, nr Beach, $25."i. 525-1132 4gs..sgn · "6" .....,.....,, drps le paint, furn/unfurn, 61~1455 or 646-4101
SEE -w'• BR,h···s·~. Stv, fatnily a1~a. $400. mo. Isl.. mo. 496-8363 ask for Jeff. 3 BR, 2 B-' POOL boat slip avail. 644--M56 W. NE\'inn.RT. 1 h'lck-oc-,-.-n. 300 SQ, F"T. office rn Costa "" ~ ....., Deposit req'd 6.17-7368 or 3 BR, 2 BA· condo. Obi """r. Newport Beach 3769 ·~rv l\fesa $95 C&D tncd for pets 998-3003 f .6 UNIVERSITY p A R K bU Fan1ily 4;p!ex, no pets. $200. 3 BR, nev.·ly decorated, \V. Pool. Sips 8. Xtl'BS. E·Z • • 646-2130 RARE find 2 Br, NB $200. · a ter pm. Townhouse :r Br, 2 Ba, cpts, Capo Villas. $250. 493 -3170; 1 SOR.hf ON CANAL Nr So. Coasl Plaza, 979-6995 Npt . Yrly lse. $325. Avail. prkg. Immac. ReaM1nable.
Nu paint, all bltns D-W ,gar 2 BR, 2~1 BA, Frplc, gar. drps, atrium, xlnt cond. (213) 961-l6n $185. mo. ADULTS. No pets. $155 .• 2 BR. lnfants to t Sept. 71h. Call 844-18.)8 1vk· Call 9621207 or 968-4138. Industrial Rent•I 4500
GORGEOUS 4 Br T·house .~rot s. 8:. drps, no pets MOO. lease. 552-0.l28 Santa.Ana . 3280 mo. ADULTS. No pels. year old. 2077 \Vailace, C.ll.1. days 8 to 5 or 815-0831 wk· 2 BR frpl , 2 BA. Nf, park. •fin';. Kids &t ""ts·2 car_ pleasure, \Valer & trash Pref ·r1s 645-6680 ,,.,, """". ncls . i...aoh' & bn)' .• .....,. ... ,, ~~ * NEW BUILDING* s~RP 3 Br tfua:F· now ~~ paid. s200. 54+5loo. $Wain:i'~· Br,ri% ~veb1m: '-;i~~~ri:ilf~pt: }::sl $35-WKg
1
uP. 1 Br. 2 Ba. & 2~~ modern. crpts, drps, YEARLY 2BR. 2ba, 1 1,~ Park Ln. NB. 6'"n-O.f13 . .JOIJU SO. SANTA ANA
· .i\I. stv-re • 2 S:a';~ · cpts, kldl/pets ok. Al\1 or % ba, avail Aug. ht. s3is. Bach, Color TV, maid serv. range, adults, no pets. $115. blks to ocean, Newpot! INR BEACH 3 Br, newly dt'C. 1400 -1600 • 1900 · 2800 · 4,000 SEVE~L
2
3 Br, k"d & S FOR lease Aug. 5th l story eve. C>wner 546-9091 per mo. Village R . E . pool. THE MESA. 415 N. 2515 Elden 642·4·ll3 Shores. $'175 Avail Aug 15 home July/Aug $100 \\'k' sq. ft. 3 Phase pcl\\ter, nr.
215 Patio, car. i s pets eondo. 2 + l, 2 car gar. Lagun. Beach 3248 96244n Newport Bl., N.B. 646-9681. Dana Point 3826 54S-S348 & s290 yr 962-SSli· s1· 5810. S.D. Fl"\vy. Mc':::r~~i~s:i:r:;:· $240. Nr, pool. Nr. So. Cst. I F /Univ 3300 OCEANFRONT 2BR. 1 ~~ ba. trplc., blllns, Vacation Rentals ~4250 *COSTA_ MESA*
Plaza. Call 5.52-7712 Sls.5 NICE 1 BDR ii•/gar 1 Hi es urn r~ YEARLY OCEAN Vu de.lux 2 BR. 2 balcony, $260 lease. 848 680 Sq, ft. su~ .. 11()...2:11 pwr
$ $ LANDLORDS $ $ VACANT 2 BR $155. 3 BR No. End, near beach . 11. Furnished tv.'O bedl'oom, 3BR, 2ba. SSOOn10., 642-6193 BA, futn·unfWil. $250 up. Am\gos \Vay, r:. 61()..C678. Balboa Peninsula, 1 hse to lJ?O. sq. ft. Prh•at~ of!ice,
FEE FREE call us Todav s225. Also 2 BR hse H.B. $220 2 BDR ocean \'lew two bath hOlne in Corona lrg rec rm, sub·gar, immed.' EAST'BLUFF. Stunning 2 Br, beach, 2BR 2BA. Slps 6. Sqoiei hea,,d ~r. $19.>d. µ.ooo,
· ' $165. Agt. F'et>. 919-843(] apt lge cleck, ~ml pct ok dt'l l\tar with luxurious pool. _AJNrtrnents Unfurn. occ. 248~1 La Pf!.1! Rd. 2, ~. studio-: Frpl. Pool. S1vim Pool. Avail 1101v, $200. · · 1 mm e 1 a e
ALA Rentals 642..&313 BEAUT 4 &· hsc for lse. $275 1 Bdr frplc hous e. $395. 8 Ibo "Isl d 3806 673-l801 till 5. 548-2958. Gorgeous bay viev.·. Adulls v.·k. 613-6&IO occupancy.
LANDLORDS!, quality area. Famil_y only. Yard, patio, charm! So. a • an OCEAN viev.', 1 BR.. Bll·ins, only no pels $31)5 640--0349 I h C. ROBERT NATTR~ $380. By owner 979-41:110 Lag 2. C.Ot'Qna del J\.tm· -South of ' . · · Rent• 1 to I are 4300 REALTOR Wt! Speclalia:e in Newpor: NU.VIEW RENTALS high\i-ay • Three bedrooni NE\V l·Br., yearly. Lgc.. llv. rclrtg, garage. Trash & OCEANI'"RONT, yrly lsc. 1 Costa a-1csa 979-GSTI
Beaeh e Corot1a del t.far e COLLEGE Park. 3 Br, 2 Ba, 613 •030 491 3248 t\\·o ~tory <'ha rming home !1n .. carp., drps, de.ck, blt· \111ter paid. Adults, no pets. BR upper, cpts, drps. S300. Fem a I e . non.sn1oker. 23. MOVE NOW TO
&: , ·-·"a. Our Rental Ser· fam rn1 . dbl gar. blk \Vall, ... or · · . ·1· •be ~ 11. · ins; off.street parking. S215 $165. 100. 1493-2511, 54.5-4604. per n10. 6!2-34-13. U..-114~ 1van1s san1e 10 shat-e semi vi~ ... ffiEE 'to You! Try CID. $315. 831-2196 2 BR, 2 BA, den, bltns, 3, ~:ace, amcv ee ings. Mo. Jordan & Semple Rllrs. Huntington S..ch, 3840 LOVELY 3 Br. 2 Ba, frpl <'. JI fum. apt. 2BR. $ 11 5 MISSION VIEJO
Nu-View! MESA VERDE decks. Beautiful ocean view.I · &14-2343 . blk to bt'ach. Yearly._, n10.+util Call hl\\'11 11 an1 OFFICES FROM
NU.VIEW RENTALS ~ Bedrn1, 2 ba, saa>. per mo. No pets. Yrly lease. S37J. 3. Landlords! \Ve have leased BALBOA Island )-early, 3 CHI LOR.EN Property House, 642·3850. & 5 pm. 963-6662 400 SQ. FT. 67J.4030 or 494.3248 Agent, no.fee.-~8 n10. 644-1680 or 64(>-8914 our listings. }"or superb Bdrm 2 Bath. Pets & S.n Clement• 3876 LADY pensioncr_to sMre Industrial 3000 to 6000 sq. ft.
HN'l'G Beach, \\'&\k to beaeh 3 BR, 2 Ba, Jgc yard. VIEW 'i patio, 4 Br, fao1 1m. st'.rvicc, call us fur hohl_es, child~n OK." ·Parking $350 WELCOME --~--• _ ho1ne w/same. ell.II eve! or Call 831·1600. T19'J2" Camino
3 Br, $22.j. Pet ok. Children~· !;~erences, ~~ rm
0
.• $525. !~1;1.15g1,9rdencr. ~i~t!; ~rn~~~is~ist. n10. 613-791D 2 Bt1:, !~~01n ~~y65. Lge safAe WALK to beach? New SP8C 2 "·eekends 847-1;,4}7 Ca1 pAlstrano. ~in DicgoC "'y
NWPr .Beach 3 Br, 2 Ba .,,.,...;,~, ....,..., wner . ..,.... · ' VACANT! Reduced to $260. enc •s-P area. BR. 2 BA. Encl'"· pool,. NE\VPORT, COOL BAY· o very. rig it lo ammo
rl child'~ drean1. BI t n s, Capistrnno. garage. fp, singles ok 2 BR, l ~~ Ba. gar, patio, Ocean~ & Mount. View, 3 Call 673-7'225 y y. 2 Br, shag, drps, gar, redecorated, closed garage, ocn view. $240, 496--0616 'F'RONT 2 B<ll'rn. 2 ba. Furn ............ ==iiiiiiiiiiii'
HNTG Beach, 'bike to bch 2 cpts. drps, 'bltns. $200. 2346 King BR!. 2 BA. 1 Yr. 135~i: Op.al. 640-4307 ·, bt'aut. landscaped. Close to S.nt• Ana 3880 $150. 642·6142, 644-4300. NOW LEASING
Huntington a..ch
NEW M-1
Br $250. Kld5 & pets ok Santa Ana Ave. Old, $385 mo .. 499-3720 YRLY A il 1 BR
H
-•-* •-9900 , va now, · shopping & schoo l s . J'.aguna Roon1 A\·ail. Full u~
omefi..-rs ~£· . l BR. Ist floor, light & 11iry, Lagune HIUs • 3250 New, hltins, drapes. Call 556-4150. CHILDREN of Beaut. Home. Great \o'u.
132 Cabrillo, Costa Mesa nice apt for married couple 6'i3-34fl anytime.• AND ADULTS LOVE S12.J. mo. 494-1589
''RENTERSll'' over 45. See it! ~1461 LAG. Hl.S.·EL TORO $310. S.lboti Penlntull 3807 FROM $139. % mi. to beach. PARK PLAZA II 2 BR on ·Pcnin~11la. 1 Blk
You Cet All The Houses Dana Point 3226 mo. 3 Br; 2 Ba, A/C, BEAUTIF'UL POLYNESIAN 2 & :i BR apts. to IK'h. $130 n10 -t 1
., util.
IMO Sq. 1--i. &: UP
. Haniilton & N~l!land St.
M0-1'70 available for rent in Ou R ' · child OK. Fbcd yd & CUTE AS A BUQ, -6 POOLS, TENNIS, PRrv. Play Area Malc/f('n1 . Gr.:h~~7
BULLETIN UPDATED 3 AVAIL Aug;-! new 3 br, 1~ sprinklers, dbl gar. Beaut BAYFRONT on big bay. 52 BR stud10 duplex. 1 b:luJC PATIO Garden Apts . Pool , jacuzzi, sauna G to R·.;_;__4~3=•• '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! times/week. bl\, f.p., cpl thruout, close to Joe & vu. 552-9367 eves. Br, 2~~ Ba.. rtmodeled. from ocean. Adults, no.pets. Saunas. jacuzzi, 2 car prk'g. Rec. clubhouse aragei r !~ -~ j NE\\' ll.f·l 1200 to :l432 5<I ft
: Hornefinders * 642·'900 schls, ntarina. $290. mo, lse Laguna Nlgue' 32S2 Pvt sandy_ beach. Children 2ll E. f!alboa Blvd 6'75--8720 846-1323. Licensed day care cent. MINI WAREHOUSES S\i'. Santa ~\na or Crn;ta Mes~ -r -132-ea .. =u,-, C". -. --114J~m.--. _ _ok. 673-!IMS or-613:005.5 -ot J)985-5822 '1rBtoCKS to OCiC':lt • .,..,,., 2 -From $l&i • STORAGE-OU1ce_& ~ll!l'house·AnlpJrk . u1·• '"' .,..,., PARK PLAZA II 2083 PR •:·hOfWil"er-gas --FREE FRBE 2 BR. 2 bath Muse, Irplc, SEA TERRACE TWNHSE on bay. 3 B~. 2~"1 NE\V executive 3 Br ~.Ba BR. 11 ~. ba. enclosed gar., No i\love-in Ol' 1\lo\•e-out Trash ser 6'16-l2'52/&W-222S
e Professional Service e washer/dryer. Pets o k, \Vhlle rwater ocea:i view ba, 2 car gar, boat shp. yr apts (2). E. of PavillOn. bltns, d1!lh\\"a~hcr, wet bar, 80S W11t 'Stevena ch~(!S, }'tTlfll $?.SO per NE\I? l\f.J 1.l()().281JO sq ft shop
& ofices. 208 3 phase pwer,
trR~h setv, xlnt loc nr SD
frn-y. 646-1252. ~Ir. Forbes·
O\\·nr. *
LANDLORDS* Avail. Aug. 15, 499-3n9. among rolling ·h i 11 s . lse, $495-$3$. 646-2700. $~. mo, yrly, Mr. Swing, ch.ildrt'n & pets OK. Walk 10 (Ott sunflO\\·er inonth.
Hom
-'lndors *
642
_
9900
Eastbluff· 3230 Everything a family could Condos Furn 3400 ~lOll or SU-U. market •• Red Car Pe 1 NeRr So. Cst Pl/\ta) Han1ilto, & N,•1•1\al'lff St., HB
.., desire. Guarded entry gate. -1 BR, $100 mthly, first & Realtor!' 536-8836 Sant• Ana 545-1121 ALLSPACE
California'A LargelJt EASTBLUIT VJEW HOME Bc-ac:h. parking. Recreation NEWPORT Beach, On water, la1t, 3rd Door w/vlew. 30;i WALK 3 Blks lo O('(!an fron1 Apt F /Univ 3900. -1970
•Rental Serv:ice!e 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba, $350 mo. club \V·pool, tennis. New 1 2 bedron1 Executive E. Bay, No. 6. (213) 697·1496 this lge 2 BR apt, Antique I urn rn --=· c:.,:.:_:. __ _
FOR , _"""! NE\V 3 * &M-0681 * attractlvtly de('Ot'. 4 BR, Condominium, furn. Super C del Mar 3122 gold shag crpts. drps. nc\v THE EXCITING WANTED. llingle for storage IOc PER SQ, FT • ....,.....,.. F • V 3234 tam nn1 v.·alled yd, easy vieY.'. Boat sl\p. Pool, orona appls, f'l'ld gar. & laundry smA.11 sturt. 3600 ft 4001 Bl h NB t_:!'j= Pao! ~~~ hul ountain ..a11l maintenanct. $545. Lease. jacuu.I. Avail July & Au· CilEERJo1JL 2 Br garage _!!l_cil. 536-31~-96.~l-PALM MESA APT$. 64.7-549.3 f Keep calling J Baum:'!.·rori:er, Agt. rc54i..oo33
Tustin. Custom drape A, Large 3 Bedroom. huge -'4ro-GT69. gust,\ Sept. wee~ or monu:i. apt, Pvt patio, range, frig,' NEW BEACH APTS =~ 2T~R~;n 1fi'~· Office Rent•I 4400 PACJJ?JC' BLUFl-~ J N D .
landscapJng, patios $315. rumpus roon1 , 3 bath. all EXCLUSIVE Phone days 7.t4: 62H.16Gl garage, iitoreroom. Only SOi\fE Wl11l OCEAN VIE\V Adults, No Pets. PARK. Nt'w M·l units. 1300
M4--53.16 "att SPM, bltns. 2 car gar, Swim pool. SEA TERRACE eH,,..,d, n 4: 6il--1022 l\tr. $250. w/lsc. Xlnt Joe. Open 1·2-3 BDMf/ADULTS 1561 ).lesa Or Np W '·) 0 Rt' BE AC ll • to 8000 PJ. ft. 1835 \Vhlttier
2 BR c. M. $155. 2 BR, bike Rt<h 01'. S280 mo. No fee. W l d c 0 c ea n v \ e w , Condoes ' U ht dRlly 12-6. 612~i Jasmine, 124 8th St. ~2 (5 blkl from Newport Blvd.) W,'~~. Dri ~ ~a~: A\·e, C. ?i.1. 642-.760-I
to beach, H.B. 2 BR, 2 Ba Agent 842-4421.. attraclivtly lndscM new 4 s n rn. 3425 6-12·8367. LARGE 2 BR 11tudlo. Couple. 546-9860 642-0200, Gen<' Hill. 1000 SQ ft·Storage, $l10.
teahoUMl $195. N.B. Alw Huntington Belch 3240 BR. ru· OCh. Guarded Ciiley \VESTC'LIF'F' area. Ncl\' 2 LARGE new 3 Br, l Ba Infant OK. No pets. $157.50 LIVE on the Bayfronl in NEW Pl h ff Bid 2' Ne\\~rt Jknch. Avail Aur.
vacant hse. utll pd gate.. S495. Lea.$C. Incl uae BR. 2 BA, fpl, patio, pool. du.plex. So: of Clit Hwy. All \Varner&. Beaeh. 847-4"40 Nev."POf'\ Beach, CA .. home 10 6 R~lu.~ult~s.1~0nrer!~'ee _1st. ~'-' -~~='I
Laa. Bch. Agt. Pee. 919-8~30 3 BR, 1 'i Ua. bltns, opts, of pool, tennis. etc. Not Adlts. $2'75. Pll: 646-462'7 ne11o• apphan«t, close to OCEANFRONT small JBR. of the affluent In a v.wld Rm xo·-· -,,.,, Near Rent•ls Wanted 4600
lalbcN Penlntul• 3207 dtps, clO&C 10 beach. Lge 4•9,~769n home or h\'l\hse. park & 11ehool . F"tonl unit $28.l./n10. Jiidy ·Young. r.eno wncd atm011phere, oc' AtrPo'rt Sii-3640 fenced yard. 96&-1021 ..,..., Newport Cn'!!JI <I bdnn., 3 ba. $·100., rear · unit $ 3 SO. 842"t540 or fl.lgr: 53&1487. Conl11et Chrl8 llolliday At ' · · · \\'ORK L"JG t.fom, daughter.
VACANT 2 BR $165. 3 BR 3 BR, Oen 2 Ba, LEASE. sunkt>n l.r. fanl. rm., yrly 673--0930 ~. ~1076 eves. OCEAN 2-blks IB Balboa Bay Club. (TI4) F1lONT office. ground floor. <log, \\'nl Apt ab<»JI Sl.50 $62,;. lifO. yrl)' I~. Mode~
2 Bt condo. Octtin·b&y vltw,
80flt slip avail. to .s·. Im·
n1cd. c ;:cupy,
MILj.ER REAL TY
642·411
2 DO~!. bltnt. fenced yd.
$325. mo. 1 blk My A ocean.
&<>Tm
$225. Al.90 2 SR hsc $15S. $350. mo.· 495-4728 eves Br $475. firepill(.'(!. 642-3153 NE\• · d 1 t • 3 n.. • R unrurn. &I~ Ext 556 1&18 Newport Bh·d. C.~I. Well Behaved, PERJl.IAN·
C •t AM "oe ,,_ .. ~.,,, ,_.. , spacious, et x n•·, slo\'e, re.Crig, d/w, tn:ilc, • · ,.,,o._ .... ,.,,,,
·" • ~·· .. • t1Hf""O'lo111 \\'•u•u!l.. Large 2 bdm\,. rlrc~Jnce, 2 Ba, walk to beach m ~· !tJ&-.8142 e"n• l)36-{ITI~ ON THE BEACH -,,~::~='''w"-,-...,.-----ENT. Helen da.ys 540..3006,
1 BR coodo, near btach, CH ARM f NG IO\\;r!houl\C.. 8ha,i:. beams, garden, quiet ab:lppin,g. A\'all. Aug. 1st. Qnie t studio tn Balboa. 1 QIJJET bll!incss wom a n eves -s.18-0036~
hti.tcd IX>OI. S190. mo. No 2BR./28A. S:MO mo. N~11o'tl1 aduil•. $225. 642·3153 ~.J. Adults. 613-291.A ~i~c 1~ 2n;irtK.a2c~$Bl"I: adult. no pe{$. )'rif •. $~ want• to rent untum. T"OOm DAN.JSH lady !Old hOlM I
pets. $36-U87 Auociatca. "9....W!l-1 1fllV'C an exl.r space httater BEAUT. ocean "'°w, 3 Br. 2 233:1 t10rida St. 536-5S82 . 613-6373 or Cll 981-1983 nr. Fashion 1111. ~ -Pilsadena. 1V1111l8 yrly rtnisl I
2 YEAR old 2 Br. double 4 en. 2 l' ba new w/ ~ nu longer use? Sell It Ba, l'tltns, l{l!~c. pvt beaeb BEAtrr. quiet 2 Br. pool, 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB I in quiet 1'll"ighbor:hood. •t 1
ire.rage. 5 blocb to beach. \'W, S °''"gar. $500 n10. now wl1h a Dally Pilot prh'IS. $375, Adults .laaultlcd Ad! Call 642-6618 nr M\Opping & bus. 1!»1545. J:alO, 2300 ~/f . beach. or East 0-t di*' I
$1165. mo. 96$--06.52 ~fonareh Bl\y Terr. 493-208$ Ad. Call 642-5678. 613--8153 I today! , l'.>omona., Ol .Adlts 642-3.527 1 Agt, s.n~0032 to t1th. reti~able, &42-5449
.....
2.1 DAiL.Y PILOT MOftdQ,:..Jl.lly..22 g74 · -·1~~~~~~Si!!!~~(?~!E:ili:i~~~!!~~~~~~~!~~~-1 -Miittll•n Rent.ls 4'!0j 1 'mhs ~octric•l::t:: ~ P•lntlnt/P•peri"I 6073 1 Help W·~~~ f ;R:e::li:p;W;e;•;:;tod;~;,·~· ;F~-7=1=00~=:;,;.:::;:=::.::;::;.:,.:.l'.'!J~!!, E.ll 1-.:;...----1~,~~·~~~ •. ( ,.,_ l[jJ1 =rc1a1 ;:,::n1::1 WALLPAPERING ACCOUNTANT BW<y Bs~~uTi~1~o11,.111g Dell~ery-Sunday Only
' j
I
l'!N!r.~IN!!~~~· C~a~l~I 63~1-0,;2~00~~ lndw;trittl • 64MIJS7 PAINTING Life lnsur1'1X't accountanl nct.'CSIJ. Coinm. Gul\rn, • 1: --o= Peraon.li SlSO UEcrRJCIAN -UCt'~ Con1mercl1l1Rt>11IOOn11111 r.1wiL ha\ie collcac dtil'f!tl It ~ICOO or :'>18-9986 OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-
l[ij l'\'G. 233.lt»I. S1naJI Jobi, f.'xll'rlors &: lnlt"tiorg n1Jn. ol 2 )'t'IU'I tXJ)('_r. In the B ILLING CLE RK QUIRES TI-IE USE OF A LARGE STA-~I • \VO~lEN OVER 3G-COing rnaint & rept.lrt. Slt-3203 25 Y@11r11 ExPt•rien .. ~ Pl't'Pi.J.'Btkln or life \l\5urarK"e roo Pakl. Bluechip llrm TION \VAGON OR VAN. CONTACT l\1R. "iiiiiiiiiiiiiijji;;;-.;;;;;;i·ii;j~ bnck lo 11'Qfk~ hf o 11 G~ng 6045 Quick Replies By flnancial Stl\ll'nicnh1 \VI• llllJ\1ng to beautiful J)(?'A' Ole• BENTON \VILLIAJ\1$, 330 \VEST BAY I lV 7 £R llosplt:tls & Doctor's olfltts Radlo Te!tphoiw knowledj'l' or I . A. A .P. 111 lr\•lno coinplcx.. t.loderate STREET, COSTA MESA. TELEPl·IONE
usln••• upf>o~----~ pr~fi.'r nia1ure pti'tiOnnel. P•r•dlse-G•rdenlna Ne1A·po11 6'1~·1000 J\coountinr,. Stnd 1Uun1• typing & 10 kl'Y adder. Start 642-4321 FOR APPOlN Th1ENT. I I.earn nccess:uy s ki 11 , · 1 Sp&.•cirillze Ke1>toral\on l!unt. Beach S.11·41 ~~ 'A'frei.'l'nt. Jbl&!Y history to: $575. Also 1''te Jobs. Call e Liquor Stores~ -(2) C 1111 1o1· n 18 Profe11sionml A Ltuulicai>t: l\lont h\y 1-ountaln Vly 5S l.os,j5 Avro F111enc11'1 Serv\(.'etl Rlla JohntiOn, 5 <I 0-6 05 5, An Equ•I Opportunity Emplpytr e Or•ng• Jullu1, Trms Collegr. 645-~. Grnd11aLc,_. l\lalntPnnnc-e i SprlnklC'r ~ ~620 N<'1"'~11. fe~cr9~ Con.stal Pt.rsoMel Agcncy,1----=:....::.:i::=....::J!:!::""'::;:;L-=:;:J::L!.:C---
e Hctwt Mfe-P•tented Plac.'t'nient. ~ JI. Rt>Pllir. C:tll Ma-8649 I fi A 1•.E R II AN ct N (; & ' c~ri::: ,Cl\~~11' sri'11th 2'?Q') ltar~~.Ulvd, CJo.t.:._ Htlp W•nted, M&F 7100 Htlp W•nted, M&F 7100
eS.UboatMfg(Asttts) . PREGNAN.T. SPR INKLl:R Systen1s painting. 21 yrs llarbor l ~ F.qual ()ppor. Employer BOAT BUILDERS
Help AIS()(.!lftte \\l\nted Carini;. conf 1d entlal expertly de signed Jt aroa. llcfs. furn. no 183281. \Vest!>all Corp. nce<ls CLERK TYPIST OG
HOLLAND BUSIN§__Si, l'OUnselui11 _& __ r _e f t..!:..!.!J · led oH Wo-rk·~lSA ADV: PRODUctlON, Pa.ste· /Engine Iruitaller S11l1u-y nccortllng lo exp.
FREE JOBS
AT
6'15·4110 SALE -0608 iUx>l:flOn,~p 10 n 5 Gusrnnteed. 1''l'ee Est .! Pl)INTING &-repair,. 35yrs Up Artist, expcr. 1\eedixl 2 /Bondl't'S · P1-elcr no studcnU>. Expcr.
C JI !LDR.,,_.,. ,-CLOT-11-IN-G kl'O.llLl\g, 9G8-I62'J 'A'Orkn1an11hlp guar. Take wks a nlO. for Newpol'I /C'l.li>entcrs Purchaslnn Dept pref'd., but will train. Apply Bureau of Sron~ APCARE 6-12-442.6 ;-,..1 .& Bushes trim· advantagil of my exp, n1ag. Jo'nst, exact. \\'Ork a Co. expans!On has ct'('atOO ., • bch\'ce.11 2:»4:30 p . ~l :
SPIRITUA.L READER , m·' or rem--' w--..1. 536-i056 mu.I. Call (714) &1>1611 . Opf!fiil'la;is ror corocr mind<!d Purchasing or 1110 Io r In I llun1bl!__rger ll~mltt J~ ..---__ _ Tremendous Nev.'port Dcach Open JO A'I to JO p•1 --·-, -1 -1 N control e!l'.per-htlptur.-m Adnn\s or.-i\ikf or 1r A Joe •-· lo I 1 h r " " I d I PROF. painter, honest v.'Ork, ALTERATION La"'", exper peop e. A__.P.l!!y ow. . . ' I ' . Em lo nt &811CJ 8hu1l, r u r e Atl••I•• o• all -·H"''· "'' yar c ea-·p. . ~ 1~1 . c •1 •. pm Electric ty-.. Tl t•t• "'"•n p yme lnforn1ation cnll RJ:t·bkr, 312 N~ Ei, Caini;''Rea1 M2·Mli'.. rcaa. Int-ext., free estimate. only. Apply in pel'IOn, ---'-~"'--''-"''-""'"n"t"'~·..c·-"-·-1 M·u~t . h.'lVf' top ...-cl('rl~ui I DELIVERY MAN for early
642-2757 San Clemente, For appt. Refs. 548-27S9, 642-3913· Barbara's Dressmak.lng, ~ * BOOKKEEPER * skills. n}Ol'l'lh'" L.A. Times N>me
LO V Jo~ LY BO UT 1 QUE Cllll 492·903-4 492-9136 549·2015 'PROJo'. v.'allcoverlng, state ft·",t;.~· C.M. Behind Arco l\1 fg., Newport Bt>uch, dell\li!,.Y route, Adulta only.
peacelul, beautUul S• n VASECt'Ol\IY l\to .... · & Edge/Or Complete llr. No. 2795.14. Insur., all Neat. mW1t drive & type.I Call t"or Appl. Must tu1vc dependable car.
Cl.en1ente. ~. ( 71 4 l c 0 n rid ential intonnation Cleanups . 20 years l'Xp. lypes paper .. 714·~~. Archltectur•I Send tti!Wne .!'11'5. l\111.ltr, Jndustrl'l Hel11;Uon1 No sollclt!ng, no collecting.
492-1737; alter 6 Pm rounsellng l "'fern.I. GEORGE llAl\IPTON * 10% otscour-.~ Dr•ft1m•n suite 225, l35S Via Lido. (714) 494-9401 2 Hrs. daily, \Vcstmlnstel'/
49frl.394 APCARE, InCorp. A Non· ' \VnHpapering & Painting Spec.ia.li:dng In reetaurant Ne .... 'J)Ort Beach, 9m Ot' TELONIC Huntington lkach o.ren.
\VHOLE&\LB BAKE:RY for ~fll Agency, &124'36. REL. College student needs t'ree Est, Ca.II 53&-0.>48 lnll'rion. l\fua1 have 3.5 yrs phone 673-8Zl'I' INDUSTRIES 6JS.29'l-1
sa.J(', Xlnt oppo11unlly. E11-\VlOO\\'ER, 58, namt< Bob ~·lj~· ~('g. J: .Rolo ~bi. PAINTING-E.\.'TERJOR _e:cper. ""ltbol'Oll&h know'I BKKPR. needed b.)• local 1 D~LIVERY men p1.•rn1., p/
iablished. 8.~2 lla1nil1on A\'t' 5'll", 170 lbs. CM·ns ho1ne, p. Ga cner . .>.f3 ·4a<l l I State lie, fully insUred, refs, ot shop fabricatk:ln of inter. CPA ofc. Pl'ior CPA ore. L•"'un• Bt•ch I I ; u1 c. Eo r I Y n1 or n ~"652 lln)'tlme. I fair pn·-, 9-mo ,· deror products. Alfred it. ""P p-f'd t\I on t't<t·-1-• •
ALL FEES
EMPLOYERS PAY
11.B . ...,.,.. l 0•oo<l ~•. meet sincere "'"" ,.............., .._ .. · '" · ,..,,.,,, ...... ,. "' '"".quol O-r. E·•ploy•r l'X''A'!!pa""r delv. to N.ll ~ J AP ,\ NJ::SI'.: GA!tDENER· ------Gordon Des I g n s, 250 in Jr, Stall Accountant Call ~ ,,,,., " ,-I'°'''''· ~Appn>•. 2 l•rs. ••• \1'0n1an 50-60 to dale. Oea.nups, frtt estlmalcs, * W•llp•ptr H•~r * Fischel', Co.s1a MC' s n . 55&-68 0 __.., R Monty to Lo•n 5025 53·1·~622. Arn. call 101 •• Kris i:na t ., u, c. Rebko 646-2~49 :H()..2860. 7 per ino + gas nllo\v & Mahoc)any OW 1 ~-'----~--, BOYS & GIRLS CLERK-TYPIST bonu• '42-4800. $500 111: PAU.l/CARD READER * 646-3370 P•lntl"I, Sinn 6074 ARTISTS EXPERIENCED N ood Shoppin11 Center AD/REDUCTION E -lenctd J • FullfPart·tln1e work at C\vspaper . Carriers. Ml in. ritust ~~J~ typ&lng skin~. Dtnl•I Asslst•nt lo lln ,~ ~ JOS::.1 Beach Bl., Stanton. x,.-r . •p•nt•• , PAINTING-REAS. RATES age 10. Lido Isle, Ba boo i.'OJTCs.,. .... ._.cnee vnrlcd \\'antNI for dcnlnl specialist. Exquisitt' co D coon: a.,... 8 x gl'OJiB in Santa Ann . .,,. Landaca.-G•rdaner Adv c rt is in g ~ncy. Peninsula. Contact Mr. gen. offiti! duties in Trust ,., •. P''· tl•••-•. x-y •crt. surrou11dln'"' & !rlend\y co-l 5~··3406 r--Int/Ext. Jo'l'ee -Estiniates """ A.,.,_, Fl ·• " ·~ '" " ..... ~ Ca 1 l us o r more TAKATA NURSERY 546-0721 __ !..'°"~~ o-~·~~!_=-I ;~~iT~\Vciiii<EiGNiii>tm.k Back.!ltrom at the DAILY Dept. ol nancial Org. .....,,.d. o-··-.· open, Hutti. \1-'0rkcrs make .this job a ' f 11 this PREGNANT•. Th Ink Ing * ~ aft. * I I k p · ~·1 .xu.,._y 1 n o r 111 o. on on ART \\'ORK.ER with basic Pl LOT or eall 642-4321 &. nlcl'('st llJ?: \\'Or . cr1n. Bch. area, 962-is'862. breeze. Ute typing, Iota or property. Cnll 67a.-72:25. Abortion? Know all the l..i\NDSCAPE sod, :1<>11, malnt Pl•shir/R--.lr 40n Art Production experience. leave apphclltion. (Xlf>itlon. l\1in. 2 Y•'ll expcr. ,,. ........... work, bflnkJna and ! •• ,, ,,·-. Coll LIFE LINE, Clnup, RU IO •• ~nklcr -pr =r= l<AI\ l<O::tl kl DENTA L A.',. s I ant --·~ .... ·~· '' '" ,,~ Equal Oppo1'. Employer Xlnl \\'Or ng oond . & • • gcnerfll ofUcc procedunia. . .
\'.\IJ .E\
HI \I.I\
_!I_ hrs., ~11-5522 646-490& PATCH PLASTERING BU-SBOYS Ctnnpany henerlts. 64<1-1360 Huntington Beach, 5 days A rrlcndly penonallty A
PREGNANT! Th in king ~tO\\' & EDGE-rnonthly All types. Free es1in1ates ~~~n!.e~ ~;t~uiant~~~~s~~ or 500 Newpot1 Center Dr., Including Sat. J )'f' exp, or good grocnnlng ~·Ill take thla AboMion~ Kno\\· all !he rnaintt>nancc yard cleanup Call 540-Ql25 OVC'I' 21, well IP'OOmed, Apply In PC'r!'On, Sam·s N.B. ~uitc 600. equivalent req, Salar:Y open, job Off the nlllrket. Xll1't
facfs tint. Cllll LIFE LJ:-.E. & hauling. Cfol'ge. ~142 Plumbing 4078 c:cpericnoo helpful but not Seafood II, 3001 E. Coast additional benefits, 979-3639 airport location. -. 24 Ms., 54.1-5.522 EXP . JAPANESE. ~'\O\V llCl"eM8.r)'. Starting salary Hwy, Cdl\t CLERK TYPIST DENTAL ASSISTANT, 61no
< ----------i * PAL~l 'CARD READER * lfO\V. l\IAINT. CLEANUPS. L.R. OTIS PLUl\1BlNG dependent upon e:cperlcnce. CABINET lilakcrs, exp ln ln~unincc background prcf'd . exp nee, chalrslde, good full FiCJUN Whia ,. ·1~ I ... Reniodel.s f Repairs. \Yater No nhnne call! please. ritilllng & usen1bly of store but. not e11SCn. some lime job, r1·ingc benefits, M-·y W•nted 5030 au , .. "ucton Tn•t\otMING. ~3-186. I ,... r· · d Sa II B uo ~•o $550 -·.. 10831 Be h Bl Stanton heaters, d\i;posal!, umaccs. Je(tro s Restaurant, corne r .1xturt'S interior ~'Or & corl'('Sp. (dictaphone) Pref. some t, .. , """'""...,.. . --1 ~c. ·• · : EXP Japan garden e I', dsh\\'ashrs. &12-MIC I 1 Bak & B I t I C t artifacts V good •l><>p I t "'
... . .. ~-· ..
SI00.000. SECURED by Isl 1 a27-3406 , maintenance & clean Up. "OUu.> o er · rs o , os a · cry 111 cast yr '"'· exJ><'r. Dt:ntal Assistant, l\lin 1 Yr. l.And devt'\oper want. lndlv. TD i rt BIA. Co1nplct"' Plumbing l\teM. cond & nmny benefits. Sa lary co mn1l'11Su1·11.1" Exp. l\tust takeJtOO(I X·Ray w/2 .__of ~iM.. school or on Pl nie prope ~·. 963-loa> Service. Uc. zraiS--1. ~ST NT r.t Alfred rit Gordon Designs, v.·fc."per. N.B. ofc. CCiod & be Lise Bea h J\rea J·~ ''-'6" Value over i 2 00, 00 O. '~ Cl & R S ----------1 AS~I A an a I er. 250 FisclX"r, Ci\I. M<>-2SOO ........ "--r,·i,. Call Joan Neal, · c college accoWltina: & 1·2 yn •--... ,, --"l•t & ••nup -erv RA\-, PLU'IBUNG SERVICE immediate PoSIUon ava.11· .. ,, '""'"' 847-2569 ti Will train DVI'"" ... ....,,., .... s..ic9--·• -.. -CAREER_O_P_P-TY-833-8450 aCCOU11 ngl'xper. <'!ear .holdln;;s i;ubslantial. . FREE EST 5kJ.7373 Repairs Inslallations able. For Jr. Exec 'A'ilh DENTAL ASST. Chalrslde. to beu>me F/C bookkttper. ~o risk, trouble free E.W Hawaiian Garde.ner 2t hr. service 548-8638 , Jr. Fashion l'l'tall ex p. \VIII Dynamtcally gl"l:>\\'ing firm, CLERK·PURCHASlNG J>n.rt All ph11.Ses gen'I dentistry. Potential i5 unllmltcd w/lhla 1n\'e~tmml. Rate & ten111> serving NeWPQJj Beach area Roofl 60l2 • consider top salcs"'Omen in Irvine require ti _time, 1'1exible hours, hl(::h J\1ust have xray exp. fi firm ·ncgooablt'. Prin. only. Eves Buslntst-S.rvicet·· '°°'"l'"frei.estliniiitt; 64&-16'1'6 I "I I now ready for advanl-ctnent. individual to handle current school ed., gd al figutc'll * .f!ll-1178 * ne · ~. BOOKKEEPING SERVICE , EUROPEAN GARDENER. REPAIRS, all types. Reas See Slncha, Chris Fu:hkin, offiCl' Ir. bkkping \\'Ork & trainee OK. Roger !ii DRAFTSMAN front Office
Mort Tru.t D--•1 5035 , Small Bu.sine~~ Specialist. • -ndsc•pin<> _ tree servlr· 1 Free est. Li_.c'd. Ask.for So.· Coast Plaia. capable or advancing: Dii1trihuting Co. 97~ • ._ .... ..,.. .... " ll'al o"" .. ,..,.. [ u rt h c r w Jo.cc n t g CLERK' typist r-1_,._ 1 .. 2 Y~ min. exper., ,plumbing 5500 1;:;=:....;_:..;~ · All Ta."~· 30 Ye a rs reasonable. 642-5329, 685-1•125 t, ~:.u-.. v anyunie Auto. responsibllltlcs. Exp er . accounting deP(. 'N~;J,ort ,c:c electrical lield prefd.
LOANS UP TO WI. Experience. 6-14-2619 Tilt 6091 MECHANIC I should i n c I u de v.'Ork Beach insurance firm. Call Xlnt benefits & growth ?itanuf concern· Stoeka brichl 1 t TD L C•bl tt M king 6014 G.ner•I Services '°46 1 "'fmult!ple (::cnernl ledgers, 66-0000 o P port u n \ties. Plea.w lndlv.w/IW\RY disposition 6 s oa ns n • -CERAAUC TILE. Quality i\fercedes Deni experienced, I trial bal'I & adjusting . l'Ol'llact J ack 1-"oley, 5fAi.67{)(), xln't &roomina; to llllwtr
CABINETS, Boat Work, 1\IASSEUR State Reg. 'viii work, Reas. prices. Call 8 Oau A license, Gua.ranly entries, as , .. ell u general COFFEE SHOP DR JV£.JN As sistant phones & grret cu.stamen. 2 d TD L lattice v.-1l0d oov'd patio5. make house caJls. Reas I Ai.'d to 6 Pl\I 646-4871 plus good commission, xlnt office skills, Inc I u ding nianagcr, Evening shift. Avg typing A 2 yrs exper. n oa ns Free est. Reas. stS-5219. rates. GS3C·7221 bet 10 am; Top Soll 6092 hi nge bc:1eflts, CIC. Ask Jor I y p Ing . S a I a r y Over IS. \Vell groomed. ·will land this pogltlon.
low•1t r•t•' Orengt Co.
S•ttler Mtt. Co.
'42·2171 545-0611
Serving Harbor aft& 24 yrs.
C 60lS n!t 7 pn\ 1 per:.onnel n1gr. commensurate w/education WAITRESS , Apply \n J)l'rson after 1 Pl\f. _•!penttr _____ --irol\tE REPAIR * TOP SOIL * COl\fPOST MISSION VIEJO & expcr. Call Sll-9182 for Tastl!'C-Frfei, 2966 Bristol, Customer Service
PATIO -Co\'E'rs & Decks. Carpentry, plumbin; * MULCH * RED\\'OOD · appnt. cC:::O&l""'a"M~.,.,, .. .,,. ~~=~-I
Custon1 designed expertl)l Electrlca\, i;teas. 54~100-1. Ca.II 586-6930 IMPORTS CAREER \\'oman who oc>eds DR'S ASSISTANT To $625
built. tree estimates CLASSY Ca.I'll deserve quality Window Cle•nin_·-~~ 28701 l\1arguerite Pnrkv.•.lly $500+ mo at. f.fust be salei; \\'ith 1 Yeur Experience
646-7598 ~9--195 --. Wo clean , w•• '''' • _ •95-llOO or 131•17 ... ,. oi·ien!ed. r.tr. L y 0 n s Young lady (18-281 to v.·ork Do you have e.n aptitude ...... "' "" ... , ~ -•" ,. .. :,. Apply In Person ri11 doctor's a11\stan11rc-for figuf'('s, ehjoy talkin&: REl\IODEL. ;\DD-0:.1. GAR by hand. Alan 968-1092 JJl\l'S \\'indoir Oeaning & USE AVERY Ph."\\'\". _EXIT ,.,...,.....,, ceptiooist in health spa. No t,1·/cW1tomera & have ave ....... _ I~ OONV, Cwtom Ir new l lANDYl\L\;'-:, Home & Apts Afalnlt>nance. Industrial, A UT 0 l\f 0 BIL E-Servlce CASHI ER -H os I es s, exp. n~-e11sary. \\le train typln& skills. Thls AAA firm
eonst. 25)Ts exp, tree e.st, Conscientiou!I C?'lloft.sman eonimerclal, nsidential. cashier, exper. pref'd. Meet restAurant exp pref'rd. See C7J you. Apply in person after· ·needs a petlOn who can
&G-3439 *G46-l<l61 • .!'Tee estimates. 4.98-0234. & greet our r.u.~tomcrs. llflu l\tcl..eod, Ben Bro'A·n's JJie noon <>r eves. 2930 W!!L Cst. use ltlC!ir brain & help their
EXPERT CARPENTRY H•ull"t. 4051 * SUNSHINE \\'ORKERS * Great per s on a 11 t Y & 499--2'271.. llwy., Nev.'J)Ort Beach. clients w/t'vcryday prob-
Loat & Found $300 GENERAL REPAIR -ihdu!!lrtaJ, residen1inl groon1ing a must. Good Gleaning lady Ol' hi·school E r.1 PLOY~T OUered : Jems. :::::;:..:::...:..;:..::.:;:_ _ __::= CABlNE.lS G-t.:;-1995. ?II o v 1 NG ,. LIG HT Free est, , 642-6931 srenernl ollice skHl.s. 9-6 girl, sn1. oflice, once a v.ttk Small lite mfg exper. Co.
CAlJF. ANll\1AL OONTROL t"ENCES _ GATES HAULING EXllERT \\'indO\'l Cleaning. l\fon·J>'ri. Phon~ 919-2.'JOO. C11ll mom. only 6T.HZ71 J/)_i•gger needll rtliable ff ti m r Nimble Fingers
Huntington BcaCh Shf!:lter \\'E BUILD & REPAIR LOCAL !'JR '? E:iqi'd, f'tte Est. Laguna Auto. /<:;,,,i employte wfexper. in T $
550 s:;n EdiMlll St. 536-6551 LD\\' IV\TES 5e-1995 • 66-349;) • area. 494-1003, ext. 626 -Service Adviser CLERICAL metal shop. Oppor to grow o
Back or Humane Society (-a..-t-Strvice-6016-MOVL'IG & HAULING J Schoils & iv/c.o. ri1~ exper. req'd. Do you llke lot.!1 of variety'?
ANI?-tAi:-=ASSIST:-U:AGUE • ,.-Exp. Students & 2 Ton truck I , 7005 for ~lercedcs Benz & Jo'iat JOBS ~2290, Jim Oh>e. TI1is Is an xlnt'I entry lewl
adoption. ~ying and JOHN'S Carpet le. Upholstery w,ith excellent refs, Cont~. I n1truct1on . denlenhlp. Experle.nced 16 F•lhion lsl•nd ENTERTAINMENT position. lt Includes typing, neutering .Inform. 960-2900 \\ I Pet 642.-3174 I only. Guaranty + l'Ommis-Newport-Beach f r di-'·......, Ir eraJ ANIMALS J?tfPOUNDED Ori Sha m po 0 ' (Soil e come. e LHrn Mtcllc•I Skills slon, xlnt. fringe benefits, JOBS Behvn 9 &: ;1 am or 3 & 5 pm WANTED i ing, ...... .,. ... ne ren
Shep/Lab mix, Tri, M Retardantal., ~uers le. LOCAL moving l hauling by 1.tEN·\VOl\fE~ elc, Ask for pel'$0nnel n1on-Equal Oppo1·. Employer Apply 100 Main St., Balboa o!fiti!. Rush to hire.
Irtsh Setter. Red, 1'' an color brightcl1e!'I & 1D studenL Large tnick. Rea.!I. l\ledlcal EI er. t ron i c 11, ager. EX. SECRETARY-
:r.tixcd Breed. Blk, 1'' ntlnute-bleach for white Barry, 5.11-1235 or ~9438 Resp 1rat0 r y Therapy, MISSION VIEJO JOBS -· Presidential Aide c•-ts Save ''OUl' money T h C'OOK for PiizR PRlnce. Z1 Cocker mix, Blk, l\f -...-: 3 · l\IOVING & HAULING ·openaUng room e c . T,~,r mlx, Blk/v.·ht, -,.J ,"l.111'"1vmgll~e enn>tnd'?:!Pnfl1· S"2ft rtlovln<> Van, Jn5uttd Medical or . Dental A,sslst. IMPORT$ yr or older. Acccp1 \\'Ork "' • coan "ng "" ·~ Coll STENO CLERK " ..... ;blllty fulJ.tJmc. Terrier mix, Bl'llln/wht, i\f • ·• Local &: long dist. :Sl-0043 1 Calif. Professional ege h rm., &: hall $15. Any rn1 . tHa.-29'22 "" .1 p ,_ Abo\·e average r wage + Shellie mLx, Bile/tan. F · $7.50, couch SlO. Chair $5. U Pi-lOVING, Hauling,_. Exper. ~101 rtfargueri e ariuW\y Sh 70 w.p.1n. Typing 55 + bcnelits. Apply in pct!!On
\\'lrehair Teri':, Gold, F yrs. exp. la what counts not Rellable. Reasonable. 1''ree FLUTE LE S 5 0 NS• 495-1700 or 131-1740 \V.p.m. IBl\f Selectric. Good only. Strav.• lint Pizza
Beagle mix, T11, 1-'emale method. 1 do work 111yself. est. 832-r:>Bl. Beginner& & up. ~ 9 yrs USE AVERY PK\\ry EXIT Bllslc l\lath Pala<'C: :'12005 Cam In o
Shaggy Ten-, Brwn. male Good ref. 531~101. •Moving & H•ullng• playing exp, R)n 49i-29S3 ~UTO GEN le SI' ARTER Capistrano; San Juan
Ba.sset/\Vin)hr Puppies IA:R Crpt Onrs. Hse S2ot.95 SID & up !J63.6.f52 R. E. cnrttr trabiing. Small REBUILDER-EXPD KEYPUNCH ..:Ca=' LP1:::'1rn=no::.=~---Lab mix, Yellow, male R SI s h S39 95 So! : cla!ses. Perl!Onal attention. p 1· II T' COOK Cockapoo, Grey, male m · Im se · · a Hou1tclt•n1ng 6054 Aeadeiny School!! ~8-1192. Top Pey, enn, u ime Swing shin, 4Pt'.1·12PM. Not '1
Terrier Lghr .. Blond, l\f $1<1.95. Guar. T'l'S-5170 I :'.621 \\'Mt 1st St, Santa Ana less than 6 mo's Y.'Ork For last dinner hou.o;,c. MuJ!
Afghan. BJk iTan, re1nalc I Celling• 6018 HOUSE OF CLEAN 1 l[Il] AVON c18:cr,',·,,o·n=~.nl\'a.c 1710 or ~ST1~~~~~~~na T~I~ AKO OTJIERS SJS.2513 . . , Carpets, \YindoWll, floors • • " .,.,.,
LO&'T l computer niodule I *\\1Ll~RD ~a1ntlng •. New upboL Special rates for reg. I L1 ... )11•ll f' I Harbor. 5&' Mgr. ritr. ~., ,,_, .. ll" ....... . acou11t1cal cell, repairs &: &er.' 642-682~. 1 · A k *** STAT CLERK Leisten. a,,.><> 7ll' x •Tap, .. -" in · df'Y\\'9.ll No 281038 642-5775 · I S s . . • 2 C.OOk Jlt'lpcrs, expe_r. 1o·u11 plsi1tic. LllEt en rotJlc ltJ ' ' . ' HOUSECLEANING jobs I• i•--an AV 0 N T tatlsti al e ·hib1t'I '"'".im tro1n Costa. l\re~a I Cement/Concrett '°'' wanted b)' Coll-c girl. I Job W•ntec:f, Fm•le 7~ :..,p,-,.'~n .. tati•·c .,n ,-ur life'. Y Pe 5 c x · & Part-Un1e, lmd. opening ~. _ , .. .. .,,. proo~d. r.ome m ~ .t h Apply in penKl!l, Roman v_ia Nev.-por1 & Riverside s TA ril p E 0 c 0 n c rete I ~xpei:lenced. Vic . Fair & CONGENIAL older lady· II not. we may need calculation, letter v.nnng Restaurant, 3700 Bristol,
For top exec. of real est11.le
d C\'t'lopment construction $750
co. Real estate terminology, E~ b fi ,_ 'ndl 1 strong sh skills & ~ .. ,a· l'l'll gee..,. 1 v. w
l!CCJ'etarial expcr. req·d . bkkpng l-l'ICCt'Ct~al exper.
1'"or full details Call Annette N~at appear. Ai: biendly
V.'t't'kdays betv.·n !lam & v.1111.ng a t I 1 t u d e aft! lpm, 833-8680. ab901utely essential.
FEMALE help w a n to d p bll R latlo Ju ll/pf time. AW~v U C e ftl
Kentucky F'rted Chicken, To $650 34122 Pacilic Coast Hwy ,
Dana Point. This co. needs a polKd alert
FINE boutique piece v.'Ork perllOn to llOh'C pmblem11
!IC&m.'itreu. Steady i t & .~P everyone happy.
qualified . (Overlock, bl ind Po!!1t1on lnwlves typU. I.
11titch pref). 5 5 1 -7 2 o 6; lots of phone contact. A G44-6863 real challenge for lt)t! rl&hl
FOOD SERVICE
CAFETERIA
pen;on.
1' I\)'. • R.et•trn ~ r c a I I y bbl ·1 b . k , I-&ll'VICW. Call Jean 979-9621 1 desil'es posi1ion a.'f. live-in !;Omeone like yuu In your ability, Santa Ana ~ ~~=~~-~:mt~ct And~·! ;au:.t~ td~ks.rdrive:j Dtdlc•ttd c1 •• "1"' c on1panion I lite ncighhorhood. Sell In your FtGURt CLERK COOK Exp. apply lllltry'!! .-:::::=:.:..::=..="-~. -11':\ys. U40-4349. * \VE DO EVERYTlUNt.; * hOuMk~r. Exp. M2-4134 t1pare lime. ea.;ii good -Nev.· York Bar, 4 2 4 8
UJSTt rt '1 Ladt:,1f";'Y g~:.S~i "0..1.c;'i'O'.f tufD."T \VORK Rets. 1''rce est. 64f1-2S39 l\fATURE \\"On1an v.·tio cares nioney.,..I_~\e~~t1o41 Accounting exper.' helpful. Martingale Way. NB 8-llam, COOKS & SERVERS 0 0 !e s m. g 1 · · ......... \V "·· J It I I 6063 will ck!an your home Reas ...... .....,... l\lath oriented. 2·5pm Doctor wtll train !lharp lndtv. ~'.:-How ~ase. Lo8t end uf Pac"°'a11' 0ou"nv~ .. o-:.air" •n or • rates. aft !Jpm, a.i5.-r.®: """"'"""~!!"'""'""~'""' 1-=~~~=~=-fo'u!l time, l\lon.·Fri. All to be his assistant. Must
Angel In White
To $475
Jun~ son1e1o.·hel'e ln CcAllit ll'W"toJ ' ~·" ,.,..,,1 -=oc BADY.SrrrER. my home, SALARY ,COOK-RELIEF , l\lajor benet.!ts. Call for have either rnedical k • SMAU. Company v.-ould ~ ... ~-1 °'°.~fct;!" .3,_1,r found, plt'o.l r. cal! o:r.IEN'T & Bloc \,'ork. like to do olllce ll Htlp W•nted, M&F 7100 niature reliable ady start· ADMINISTRATION Pfhme.APshk'r'o99-r Ch"'•'t appl. &1()..1500 .Ext. JJ!K; 1Ch00Ung or back ofDce
'""""" \Valls, patios, sklewalks coninierclal buJJdings. Cood 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Ing Aug . 5th. For more In-Mon. thru r"ri. · ei.:pcr. Start your career
LOST vie. or N e"' Port _etc. By hr. or job. 646-69.U. rCf. 8J&-OO'J3, Booded & Ji fonnatlon call 645-95·15 or CLERK. COOK for con va I e II e en t "e;;F;_;;R.;Y~-~C~OO~K""'""'"""""I todny.
Rh·iera townbouAf'll mlniA. C'El\!ENT \\'OTk ot all klncls. License A Beller Temp. Position 642-1517. hospital. A~k for Supervisor,
gray poodle. Lo~·er fronl Reasonab l e. Free ;L:::nd=7"'-~1~--~6066= PAYDAY Clerical det-11, involv!ng,;:83o,:7-8000c::;;::::·c....~----•KITCHEN HELPER Decision Maker
teC'th missing. Ctill aft 6pn1. J<:s1imates. Call ~33Z'i. • •c•p "I BAi'iK ~.p':s1m:~~t.c.Typingic 0 0 K . A 11 t1r.o 1111 c1 TJ IE JOLLY ROGER $BOO
&15-145\ Re\\'11 rd! Contr•ctor 6021 EVERY FRIDAY TELLERS a · · experienced, tmmed1ate. 400 S. Coast Hwy,
1"0\JND: Ne\o;born Pupl)y, LANDSCAPING Apply \n Personnel Depl. • <192-9950 * Lllguna Beach Thill poeit1on l'equire1 an
Lngun' Arch B each J~~od T:~~a~i~ t.:'itis9an For a wilque & penronallzed Openings For l\toPndA'c'iFth1mC rrM;UdnTyU9-AllLam. ~H~o~lp~W~·~n~t~odii'i;M~&~F~7~100~·;m;iH~e~lpiii;W~•~n~l~ed;i;;j, ~M&~Fiiii7ii100ii ~x~·:~,~~ns'i.~ pebor:" ;!J J{e\ghl!;, frl, ~tl ice plan! I My wa' ,.._· <:Az.4703 .!l'lylc 111 Jandtcaplng. iSecret•ries
bet\\-een Norw. &: O r o y.....,,Q"I · C 1 J El PROOF 700 N•~nccntcro,.,N.B. secretariRI skill!! & ability -· I ontac ames J nier ./Sr. Typists • .. ,,., to lnte11nce w/fellow 4!4.-1971 Dog Grooming 6025 : Grt•n H•v•n G•rdens JR T • an equAI opportunity emply. en\plo""• & clients. llvy ~7J~~:S:'.n~ea~~n~l~~j PROf". Dog Groon1ing. Free ·646-3'27 iR:::t1o!:f~::• OPERATORS cLE-RtCAL, Season81-:stirt CAREER SALESMEN_ re,;p. U"nusual oppor. tor a
collar: vr:. ltfeea \'t'rdt pick· up .t: delivery. Jn /Laborers 111 Id. A ugu~t. .Auractlve. _ career minded indiv.
540-9W 1.8.iUnll NiiUel. 831-2180 · Masonry 6070 / Aisembly Tr•fnMs intelligent v.'Omcn 10 v.'Oric
FOUND: Sm. Terri~r male SrlU_ne anytt\lnc Wltl:i l'I Daily Irick, Block & ·StOfle A'IO l\fANY MORE! n-..1"1' •t our with a private Company in w·red collar &. flee collar. Pilot Oassi!ied Ad l.!1 a B _"Th" &. Ad · b the publi ' S c hoo Is · Vic . N•'Pt &: 18th c .rit. , idmple mnner .. , just Call all 5 pin, &45-82r.6 Interim I r-ur1t •ms r Experience not nee. But you
979-4235. ;':':":64:2-5618=='=~~~~~CLA:§~SS:l:F:IE:D::,:w:ll:I : .. :":':"::;-
1
(Huntlnvton Btach) must enjoy being with Penonn .. "--.:ce • children. $2.SO per-hr. FOUND-Gentle, well tra!IM!d ~Bly di Interesting post. 53.1-3306, ask fur Mn.
spayed, tema.le dog, Bk/tnn, Titk-s of Honor 17581 Irvine Y • tions that offer you Trimble between 8:?.0-11:00
fnd on Orange Ave, ·C.l\1. •l1J Tustin fl-it•rfl"I s•I•· A.M. 642-5638 ..... ~ ' -u p R 1 N c E B T I D E D I s A c --rlts, excellent ben· GERritAN ~. fem11le. Vie f~al Oppor. En1ployer eflts p•ckanek • Erflnger I Beac.11 ThUT f!\'r . G A U L T I N A M U 0 N I A Z T •
1913 license . l<!Rlhcr & · ! p1t•Hnt wor Ing
r.hain L,,!181'!1 336-2511 T L K A E S E R 0 K It U WA R S *ACCT'G CLRK $550 environment •nd
f'OUND: Hound \l.'hlte v.·ith c 0 u R T I E E Q s R J 0 u FN?e. Type 10 key, good plenty of oppor-
CLfRK
Engineering Dept.
TO SELL THE FAMOUS
WHrrE CROSS PLAN
I am looking for salesmen that want a
PERMANENT position with a chance at
MANAGEMENT IF THEY QUALIFY.
I want salesmen lhat NEED $1500 to $2000
every month. I \Vil! furnish bonafide LEADS
I will train you to incresae your income up
to $30,00Q.$40,000 per year or more.
Numbers Galore
$650
St'cretarlal position In buKy
a e co u ntlng atJno9J>here
'A'hete good typing akf.111 il
lite sh add up to $$$.
Conservation
$650
blRCk & bi:'O\\•n s p 0 t ! , fil'!Ut'f' ap1ltur1e, SDnta Ana, tunlty for •dv•nce-11--:-~ol f'C'TJMlle. Vic: 17th & Tustin I OT y T B N R R E M O R O PERSNL CLRK $500 mtnt.
-o t:-S-J8-:\'tl2 ~ -0 o"'R''Ar1ili.~s A N AN 0 E H-A [.VE W f·n"I". -E:q,er-in-pel'!!OnneJ
l\lninla.ln engineering 1<ecordt1
reproduction pt'QCC!!!illg,
1yp1ng a15lllty h-e1prut:-Pcrm..
anent po11it!On w/gf"Olvth
l have-....oICices in Long-BeaCh, Riverside ,
San Bernardino, Covi na, Anaheim, Santa Fe
Springs, Downey & Los Alamitos.
No WA.Ste· of effort fOf'
ct1pable. F/C bkkpr who can
handle 5CW:ral !lets of books
for cnvlronmCntnl rontroller
!Qcnte<I In Irvine complex.
F'OUND: Dog • \\'hllc. n1klc . t c"L'~PRl.KtumT~t pi'"15' Th"'1'0"'$500 BRGEFBLUUOM S WTRWPP 1 11:dult. Approx. 11 lb«. Vic .
l\tesn Dr. C.i\1. :>!11-1308 1 I I N G U ff 0 N 0 R I R M' A 0 A R M E t roe. \\'Ol'k In f!W'Chsslng
5W-7188. d<i>I .T.YJ)(! 50, 10 Key. $.\V. I
f"OUNO: 3 mot;, old kitten. N W A 1 S C ff I W A S A E K 0 H S E P SanlA Ana. I
Orange lllri~d. Vic. oJ p F' 1 s o CLRK TYPIST to $500 Back Bay Call Newport R A Q R U I S X K J z Q A A Frt~. i\h'Ounting depl. Jo'l,l:l·
Animal SheJte:r. N 0 Q U E E N P D A U N P I U C £ S A Utt! Aplitude, f}'pe 50, 10
FOUND: Cockapoo mix • K<"Y. S.\\I, &lnta Ana.
younfl female. S hag a y, A B C D p N p U p H I O E Q S N L 1 M *SEC'Y NO SH $550
We would prefer ln-
dlvidu•l1 with •t
l•••t 6 months pr•
vlou1 t JCptrlenct In
• Hnk, savings &.
loan or fin•nct
com,.ny.
potential. ·
Call f'or J\ppt.
tnd11~tti1d Relnlinns
(714) 494-"411
TELONIC
INDUSTRIES
L91un• Bt•ch
F.qool ()prior, Eml)lO)'Cl' Small, Vic. Baker &. D 8 E L U I M P C It 0 R R Z Z I A Q Z J ""™Joh. Good typing, tNl\"tl P.sulitrino. !J40..7UI M>!lt.•'Vt\tk>ns, v.11\ train on
1'1JUND: Sm. Siamese MC Z £RSC EU I RA AM LR RAE 11\l'X. "·ork tor !My group, CLE RK TYPIST
k!"tn. Vic. Bego'nia A~<e. R M A R Q U E S U 0 M 8 C 8 lit P 0 N L 1 Orf Co. Airport arta.
Pit••• c•ll for
appolntm•nt
K•r•n Flhhutih or
De nnl1 Sodtrln
(714) 961-4411 67"'~1 Free 11.l!IO .f'~ jobs For 1\Cl'OUnllng dept of rettl FQCdi\~:... 1 1., 0 • I lniuwllot1ii 111, hiddt11 Ml'IMI litrfd kfow tppttr f«••r4, Anlf\ts Gordon Personnel c rslnte d e v e I t'I pm C' n t & Ur•u 1 1 ,;,ctlcr w leltoo bKltwwd, .,,, dl1\0·n, °' di:'T ill lllt ,..,,._, FIM tatll A1e:ne)1. 642--6720 SE u RITY ct) n Mt r ll c I Ion eo. Job No. Female vk: Stania Ana . ~'·'" ,.. bo> 1< • •• 11• ln\'Ol\'l'I t::Utl typl ..... !!ling,
S1U560. ""' ~ 11"'"t BARON f.Atu. ' MARQUIS A/PAY •• A/REC c!C'rlc11;I & !IOl'Oe ~pllo1ti11t
FOUND: Bcl\il'.le Puppy fem. COUNT EMKROR r~;1;c.: ;: Super v.'Orking cnnd lOon.'1,! PACIFIC ll11Ue1. Cnll for a (l pt . VI N Blvd ., C'lAk KAlSER QUEEN · ... •~>r.. J I 833-6680. i Brown, c. ~'Pt Iii: l'>UKf. ICING JtAJAll .. ........ to lllart w-oppor. or
' 18th C.1.f. 919--1235 '"'---<l~•T•m• •"' advan~ inent. BANK '""""'"w .. -.-J le A "\\lffd It & Rtt1p" r~ wi::·6 ,viePM~·8· To ordrr any 1'f all or 1hr , • .,ondtd "Stdl & fl11d" boM:t. i1::"' Btook~~nt,1~Ty. f'mm t~n.!lures tO 1n-1ith
Chwrlned ads ~I bl• Items, n11111bers 2 1hrough 1:t send 60 cent• for tll<'h. ma~lna ch«kt Suite 113 oo.rGm Turn lht.m Int() l"A!lh
small Item• or anY Item. t'llY•ble to "Setk &. Find,"' St..,Tclfa~rn Syndlta1e. Md~ 'Cl,sidfJtd Ad i CAii &:u::567i Eq~•~P~~~t~lty Cl.A~L~~Y. -:J1~.cri" Cl.a~1tned .Adi M2'-5671. l-"-',." .. ~_;_,_,,_,._•1_1_1•k_otw_'"'c....:."'-· --'--------• • .:'..,.,,:::::.:le.. ______ ~...,,.. • .,.;,...,...,...,,.;;;. ----------
(
""" If you are at ease talking to
people
•
""" If you are 21 yean or older
""" If you aN available 6 days a
week
CALL W. H. MYERS
10AM-6PM Mond•y, Tunday or Wednesday
For Person•I Confidtntl1I lnttrview
(213) 597-4406
"CHOICE"
Scc'y·SeVt'nl
Clerk Typist
General Office
n.eccptionlst Typist
Adver1.. Secy
Call Tl!lfay •
556-1100
2706 H•rlior Bl,
Suite 207 Coat• Me••
600 No. Euclid
An•heim C•ll 77U120
-
I
•
. > .
• f.::~=::::::;J;;OC'..~~ , r 1 • Mon.t~" 1"1~ ""' 191J CO.JL'i...JU' j -tp-W.-nt~ M&:..-nOO -~. •n ,"'m1'1ioo J Help want9d~ M&F JIOOH•lp War:it-, -...f 7100 Help Went-., ,_r 1100 H11p .... antea,~I nelp -•nted, M&F 11..,. _ l\uct1;. 801SAuctlon , IOIS
FRY COOK Exr>., ?,., ;;;. JR. CRAFTSMAN REAL'>ESTATE ---* * * * * * * * * *
clcilJt " neut. Ovor 21. To ht' 1rnlli"" in Interior PRODUCTION TYPIST IS.cr1tarl11 TRAINEES Apply In J:M.:rNOn lo Surf & rcstnur&t'll d~r-ptoducl!I, · TRAINING
S"loln, 5930 W. CORBI )l..,,, ll•?l•il""' ability ro run ~;:'<~"Kl~n , f: * SUPER PUBLIC AUCTION *
N.D. . . blueprint n1acb. Ir keep up ~~~Y;01;!~~ 18~~=~ L~gal Secy Probate $750 Will train (le~ndtble J>eQple * * * 2 SUPER X DRUGSTORES * * *
dctllll fllet. Alfred M. IBM SELECTRIC II 11 one who hi well !rained. A/P Cort.'llr\ICt. $676 to become plastic JnJection All EqYipment & F i•tYre s MY1t Be Sold ! I * GARDENER * Gordon 0 e' t g n 11 • 250 W<'-are looking for carter-ltece~51fn $650 n\Oldlng operatore. r-<u~t be PART LIST ING,; Cash registers, adding 1na· ~t~~.r ~llt ~!.nPtt~C:, ;::~. Coina M c '~· Need to type 70 words per minute accurately, ~? c d. :'nsclentlou:· =ng·~e:Sa~ $= ~~angr!~~s :f~~ c1.hihn1es,, show & display ca ses, counters ,
Htg:h Income. Guuranteed KEYPUNCH $600-slower typist need not apply. , " n1en an 11,·omen w o Pt Cen Ofc 9.3 $3 hr Mlfl, $2.~ hr. 3rd shirt $2.46 tg s, ice cream cases, doll ys_. baskets + ~.. d want to leat"n and grow with Adm Secretary · $800 hr. Raise In so days. Lots More too NUM Ef~OUS to Ji\:t . ...... tomcn . Eurn Now. Pay Fctl P~ttd. This fine co. very Experience only our Company. Our company Sal s t S700 "
Laltr. 11eldo1n ha11 on-opening due -Apply in person is nationwide and listed on Ste: ~,!.1')' $565 APPLY FIRST SUPER X DRUG STORE
-
534-.7187 or 534-3144 10 1.'0ngcnlal co-workcrll &; the Amerlt'tln St o c k C1rk fypia:t ma.th S-KiO orange Coe.Ill Pli1r.tlcs 21 37 H1c lend1 Blvd (H ighway 39) -·j:l•======-hMi"~fv.;:0111SJiuulin< . 1><oo!ita.j-·-<-.,,RANGE-COASl--DAIL:Y-JIL0.•1--J.-" ,.,..,,,_,...IU'.OJ.Lwant.to. et-ypl~ "'° -80<>-W" 181h-S ., -HACIENDA HEIGH~·Srl'Al.I FDRNIA--
E 111ry otter: Great chance for 330 WEST BAY ST., COSTA M~SA be parl of l'l11r f':ic~nslon F/C ?.fanu11l isso Costa P.fe-Sll. Calif. JULY 25th AT JJAM "
GEN RAt. ndva11ceu1~·11t. AlllO F ee i"' progran,., "'"e "'111 !rain rou. Order Dsk Typlsl $GOO 2ND SUPER X ORUGSTOR E
Needed Now! J oh!!. c11.11 Slilly Hort, ask for Paul Ward For confldcntlal 1nterv1cv.·, Soc. Pei-i.nl Secy $GOO TRAINEE 9107 GARFIELD AVE
'S 1 I Coo11tfll Pcri;onncl A~ney, call Valley Realty <1141 Lb: Relnde-rii Agency • .... ecre Ir•• Z790 J-tarbor Blv(i, (;r.f • 631Hl420 .. ~~.~1s~ 402liBirch sl .. Suite 10.I \\'lre prep girl for small co. (Corntr o~ G a rfield & Magnolia) -~-~r::,~:'1---~--+·fEGAL R EC'CPT-"80 .Halp.Wanted,.M&E.lJ OO~elp"W1rtte:d;M-&F7tOO -R!C!-PTttl!G:A:t:===--NC\l.'l)Ort---Boo:ch .lfiS--8UIO ge~~~~wi:~~ F0Ynta1n Valley, Califor n ia
IK h .fl'<' Paid-Al~ roe Jobs MAIDS · 0 C PhU1h office in Newport No Ch1r9e To You TURRET LATJfE OPRS for JULY 27th AT llAM
eypunc _ ·r,ypc 75, Ille sh l )~un or Pltim<' See t·r~I E can.L needed Im-Beach. Co, prefers indJv. Establlshl?d 1965 sma.llmanul.Hrm.Pleasant RUDY LARKIN AUCTIONE ER
/Technicians Bench Area Personnel Mana e;, · nied. _t-1uat be experienced \\'/_some legal exJ>l!r. Stal't ....-..-~ working ~s & good co. For Additional Information
I Accounting ' WESTCLIFF Bo IL--B•Yg Club in ~ping & therapy for busy $67"· Call Rita Johnson, SECRETA.liY--. ""-id benefitq. Tapmatic l\1A.STERS r\UCTI0..._1 'A bl -Ch1l'OPra.ctlc of!lce: ·Hours 540-ali'l, Coaslal Personnel ,.... .. · . 1 '~ ...-IMm e rs Pt:raonrW!I Agency 12'lt W. Coast ffwy, NB S.1 & 3-7. 2040 Westcllff Dr.. Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, Able to work w I thou I O>rp, 1851 Kettering, Irvine. 11 .. 646-8686 or 833-9625
Call Dottie 540-<M50 \Mark III ,Center) ?o.YAID WANTED Suite tO?, N.B. 64i>-5.100 CAt supervision! Compo1e 9~. ~i~ A;~;;:~;E~!~ lG5l l::.5"1E=J', $,A, SEACLlF1', MOTEL OPENING for NCR proof RECEPTIONIST·TYPIST ~~l~rs ~~ lit~ ~~~y * * * * * * * * * *
1661 S. Coast H""·y. machine opera.tor, p n r I LP.~al office -Laguna magazine needs your 11kills REPRODUCTION Appliinces 8010 r Dogs 8040
GENERAL OFFICE
Act AS re<-epllo11i11t & use
small rordle11s switchboard.
Avg typing ubilhy: Nevc1·
a dull moment!
Jason Best Agtncy
17400 Brookhurst, F, Vly.
Suite 213 OOH T75
GENERAL
SECRETARY
LE:GAL tl'alnee. Xlnt lyping
11kill11. Small firm. Nr. O.C.
''irpcirt. 833--9031.
-L IQUOR~CL'""E'"R"'K...
P<'r1nanent evening position.
t\-lu~l be over 21 , expcr.
pref. bu! not necess .
673·1.JJO. AM onl;y.
Laguna Beach, 494·4892 time. Will train: Apply at Hills. Must be good typist I & imaginat.lon.
Maintenance Helper Baryk of A1nerlca. 1016 & able to handle reception· Jason Best AgMcy TYPIST F'REIGHT DAl.1AG£ SALE , • PUPPY WORLD e
Med 11\zed ·Ind u 11 trial Irvine, li<'wport_ Be.a ch. telephone I: gen'! office 17400 Brookhunt, F, Vly. ' ll e w H o t Poi n t Dobermut1s . Gcn nan Shep-ad~sives flrm s e e k s 0 RD ER Desk · Inventory duties. No SJ-l req'd. Call Suite 213 963-6775 Refrigerators, \Va 11 h c r 11 . herds, Oiihuahuas, r i 11 y
individuals to pert or m Contl"OI, exper. helpful. Y.'lll M1-i. \Vlnslow for app\. --5-ECRETARV "'e have an in\medlate Dryers & Dishwashers. Ne"· Pc'lflle!I, Pit Bulls, Cocka·
minor mechanical repairs & train energetic per s on . 837-1060 Fee Paid: Beautiful modem opening for expei-ienced Wan-anty, Credit, B of 1\, poo Pon1erani3n, Irish Set-
11ssl11t skilled employes in 642--3472. N.B. RECEPT/TVPIST office in Fashion Island. reproduction lyplst wt 3623W. \Varner, Santa Ana, ter. Anierican E s k i mo ,
-rformancc or 1n a Int. w ·ii be rl h ....... near lfarbor. 979-2921. Pu""", 100 J\-1IXED PUPS! 0~ Apply betwn loam 2pm 1 g t '""""" to area engineering & statistical 1 .. ~ Live-in J\-lothe1i; helper. 3 duties. Possibilities of PACKER Monday thru Friday vice president. Also Fee typing background. ?-.fust Rent Washeri/Dryers , Stud Service J\-olost Breeds.
school age children, wo\"king advancemenl are very good Young man wanted to pack 1200 Quall Suite 160 NB Jobs. Call Sally Hart. have \\'Orking knowledge of $2. \Vk. Full maint. Open E\1!s. 5.11-50'27.
n1other. owi1 r1n & wkends for qualified individuals. electronics equipment. -M<Hi(65, c.oastal Pcnonnel commercial & m ! Ii tar y * 63~1202 * o ,\ P. LI NG Y ORK I E
oft. call 675-.7001 for details Kno\vledge of electricity_ & POWELL ELECTRONICS, REUBENS 1\gency, Z790 Harbor Blvd, speclfiCilions w/re~t to FREE PICK UP-R.ers. Pupples, pct or s h o \v
LOCKSMITH -refrigeration are desirable -UB20 \\'estern Ave, Stanton _ ca.1 layout . & style. Exe i;. Appl 's & Scrap J\-'letal. Ca ll quality. 962-S717 anytime
Completely e~r. ln•lde/ but not necess. Must have 894-5353 ask for John i. ....... wnter 71).tr) w P m afl. 6 pm
outside v.·ork. Good salary. 1 E:icec. Type w r It er & Bl I
0,..~ own hand tools. Contact SECRETARY, · I . B . M . "1"i"-• • • • anytime. 675-5258 ~~~~~~~~~~~!
.F'ringe benefits. Fullerton. Personnel, 548-II44 Equa PAINT & METAL 1'ow Hiring Dictating Equip, 4 day/"'k, Excellent company Paid eye es 8020
Salary c ommen s ur·a 1c Sn-4527. Opper. EmployerM/F man wanted that can · xlnt opportunity with N. B. benefits & working --11 JIS
\\'/ability, e x P '~ i·. &. LVN 'i;, He'd Psy -Tech for I MALE & fem_. help wanted e~limate & be hla: own t>?~s. CHOOOSTKESSSES !\ttg. Banking Firm. Send condillons. BOYS BICYCLE 10 SPEED Frei to You
qualincations Scud resume charge nurse & medicine full & p/hmc. A r Ply Fine opp t y responsible R<:!lume to ClassUied ad No . Rate range $3.36-$3.96 MADE L'J FRANCE Sl50 '-------J
to po Bo 232'2 N nui'sc ~itions. park Kentucky FTied Clucken, person in Santa Ana area. P /TIME 176, Dally Pilot, P.O. Box f94-90'26 3 Lines 2 Times, $2.00
1 Bea.eh,·ca :2663.' c"'[IOrt Lido COnv. Hosp, 642-8044. :Sac~·. ~st Hwy, Laguna 540-1457. BOOKKEEPER 1560. Costa blesa, Ca. 92626. 1'f~Jd~~ 1~r:e;-;cr.ay 2v: fHC:t~1::nt~~ f:i~ •••'•••••••! j'!!!!!!~~~!!!!~~!!!!• I ;ii;iii;;;iiⅈ;iiii ... iiiiiiiiiio SECTY to GEN'L MGR. 9AM-12NOON & girls. OCJ6...24~ afl 10 am. I Free To You
GOOD JOB * * * MAN or·•oman to work n;105 PART TIME Apply '5 D•ilv ?r;vot• Club h8' ln>mrd BERTEA at Winchell's Donut House. 251 E. Coast Hwy opening for expei' &; v..'1!;11 lO·SPD Bikes $74 assembled
Retired men or pensioners \Viii teach. 202 N El Camino • Newport Beach qualified girl. Shorthand & StokC>s, SPokcs Bicycles ! 2 KITTENS. 1 all black, long
8045
who desire 2 days a \\'eek Real; SC. 49Z..al79 TELLER Equal Oppor. E1nploycr typing req. ~. start. HB, 536-6940 & 53~7697 I ~a~rcd64} f;";,Y r ~~e long ~~~~·6~~rUikcrs. Gem MACHINl·STS MANAGER ............ -.. , . -·-··-U .... N ... _IT··-E-D .......•... -lif'¥,t.'1~~ ;f/~;;g ~"::;;:.~~;~ -,!~~T!~~~~ ~~:~:: & :ui~:;,~7r ';i;~i~~:,~~~s~=~ ..... .
HELP WANTED E • d \Vaterfront loc. \Vkuds thru C.r.1. Atty, l girt office, seeks Retractor -Telescope, ::-...1111 557-8209 an:-6 & wknds. xper1ence TRAINEES CALIFORNIA \Ved. 101 N . .Bayside Dr, NB trinl \\-·ell groomed career Irvine, Calif. eond. l.tany extras. $150. 2 f'LUFFY KITl'ENS, 1
Large Company Immediate Openings 1144-0U) oriented girl l<'riday trainee 133-1424, Ext. 294 Ask ror Ste-re. 673-0695._ I Tiger ca1. 8_ "'ks old PH:
Expanding BANK R E c E PTJONISf/TYPlST· w/good S/H & typing Equ1I Opp. Employer Cats 8035 58&-3.198 El To1'0. 2nd Shift 3PM·11PM Full .& p/time ' detail work. ofc. exp, gd skills. Start $100 v.·eck' 211.band:f.kiucns.Savewhat
3rd Sh!ft 11PM.7AM : 1nterv 1ew 1 n g NO"' for 630 Newport Centtr Dr. typing {!kills. Mature, 979-8330 TYPIST I Tortoise Shell, 5 mo's fem. someone throv.· av.-·ay. Inside
NOW HIRING * Mills Positions in Orange Co. Newport Beach rellable person. Start $6,000 SECRETARY I Recepti.;nist, Fee Paid. young dynamic 1 ~la.le silvC>r tip, 5 mo's onl) 549-1846
p errn anent work ln * Chuckers M'ust be over. 2l, bon.dable & 644 6464 yrly. 640-1410 General Office \\'Ork. Sh tun office. Great benefits. 11.•/papers. All Shots. $100 cuc-'~ual-'-c~P=-,-"~--Co~l·I manufacturing, distributing 'd 1 c ., s ••= Al F ea r>-18-0031 nllll ups. t. oo::rn, • &installation.No cxpcrience ingoodphys1caleond.Have RN 1 to 3 Pr.l. 41 Bed not req. n osla. ,.esa. tart n""· so ee Jobs.1..-~·---·----.== lie & Shep. Bl"ed for besf
* Lath-car & telephone. Go to Tic An Equal Oppo1'tunity convalescent hospital. Good Send resume to. ·ciassifled cau Coastal Pe r son n e I Dogs 8040 qua!. Ideal fam. dog. 546-9912 net.'CsS.Jry due lo excellent .,. Toe Market nearest you or Employer ad No. 196 c/o Daily Pilot, Agency, 540-6055, 2 7 9 01--=---------'-
trainingt""""s nm for nicn & * Gr'inders telephone ow· office$ .. -• ,..,....,,...,.,..,...,.,.. .. 1;~"':::::1'~'Y~· ~"'~>-30&1c.:::=·-=~~ P.O. Box 1560, Costa :r.iesa. Harbor Blvd .. CM. OOBERMAN puppies 5 \\'ks, COCKAPOO, lovable. J ~ft yrs
old. Spayed. had all shotes.
1'ds yard. 536-7086
women & over. • <TI4l 835-741? ' Part-Time Job RN/LVN \\'eekenda 7·3, 3-11, ca. 92626 AKC. Black. res, & a rare * N/C Drills& For Information Flexible hotu'6~ Hospitality ~rl~~:BT&li..:io 1445 SECRETARY URGENTLY blue. :r.tother & father xlnt TOP WAGES
liELP WANTED, girls 10
learn silver so ldering of
small dental purls. :\1nt
\\'Orking <.'Ond. & bc'nl.'fits.
Apply E A 81.'ck & Co.
657'~ \Vest 19th $!, C r.1
64J..4072
HOSTESS-CASHIER
_E.'\pcrjcn~q, over 2J. AJlJl\Y
i11 person. V E L V I:: T
TURTLE RESTAURANT,
59 1'~11shion Island. Newport
Center.
*. M"n TIC TOC SYSTEMS Hoste5l! ScIV1ce needs ,,.. ' temp'mt. 714/495-48.U Furniture 8050
I$ Equal Oppor. Employ•r ,·nlelllgent, women to .. RO.UTE SALES Tl'.mporary or perm. for DACHSHUND ll ---------· \\ 11 T Sal Co dental office. Eve a:, NEEDED ·r • snia * Hones \\·elrome new families. You ·1 rain, ary, mm, 644-:m:>. Days 642~7. 1tandard, dark Nd, 6 mos 2 UPHOL Decoratol' chairs. MANAGER TRAINE_E_ will need a 'car & Bonus. Vehicle 1''urn, all old . Champion bred. AKC. Top qual.ity, deep blue lOc 2nd Shift Premium
. 30c 3nd Shift Premium
Longer Term Employment
\Vlth History Of
NO LAYOFFS
In Our Manufacturing Area
t•=•~lor. "·Ii "'7-309' ror exp. pd. Established. Bus. ~_,...._........ 642·3966 velvet, like nC\\', 642-!»(l.I Fee Paid. Bluechip flnn ln .. ,..... •• ...... ,,.. .. _. • ed Co s p,..·ec1 ~gt I d ·~~-~------interview appt. + te11,tory. ,,i . veragc r. J "'" neer-n us TYPISTS •• Jri:i.nc Complex. This finn Profit Sha.re. Retire at 57, Prod. Development $20K F"I:r-.1ALE Irish Setter. 7
needs lndiv. w /definite PAYROLL CLERK No Strike, Lay oU·75 """· Project Engineer Sl5K mo's old. $50.
QUTLTE D !lledilerranf'an
rouch & lovese;it. Nearly
l'l(OW $115 CASH. 557·1/a.1 goals-to move up the ladder ... ~ g E · "! h 1 S20K 54~2742 Fee ~aid .. International f~ 549-3ll0 ?.1r. Tu.cker 7.9 pm. r ng1neer," cc o
' in corp. structure. Start moving 111to plush ofcs 1n Equal Opportunity Employer Design draftsman/elec S17K VOLT GENTLE beaut puppies. ADJUSfA Bed, ncvt'r u.'ICd. $833. Also Fee Jobs. Cn!l i I · Co I M ~ •· Leg I Sec RE Cor S700 mother I• bo er h ·'11 Best 01-over-142'. Cal Betty Cutler, 5 4 0-6 O 5 5 , !Vine m11 ex. u.~L uave a -P · ·• ·• Ttmpor1ry Services a x ' cw iy. 645-5.100:' • --
Coastal Personnel Agency, 1 yr expe·r. in payroll. SALES Bookkeej)er A·P ··•·· .••. $650 t-1a)or !\1edical Plan 1.,::15:,..,:';'~· ;8~37~·0070:::::.,:""~'~'~· --·I -~~°'"'===---·I
2790 Harbor Blvd, cr.t Salary to $600. Also Fee EXPERIENCE SeG,"_YI FrBro, kCPeraAge ......... !~ Now Avallable SAA10YED, male, 7 mos., \V!\NTI:D Excellent \Vorking Conditions Jobs. Call Rita Johnson. S u-, ........... ....,.., Temporary Service Had shots. $100. * USED BRICKS * • ?-.!AN AGERS. EKper. needed 540-00'.'iS, Coastal Personnel NOT NECE SARY F-C Bookkeeper ....... ,$700 I 3S48 cam D s . lQi 831-2967 871H564
Compan P11id-benefits ol ... for full. setvice--car washeli. Agency, 2790 ~Harbor"l31vd, Multi llillion: S Wholeaal_t_ J\COOUf!li_ng grk_~.··~·.··JSSO , N rt-~ ,r.. ~1~e47,_ GREAT 0_ _ n.. • 1 , 1nedical, denial, life ins.. Xlnt pay & benefits. 9 O.C. Cr-.f meat co. needs productive Call Jeannie Sisco cwpo c J'fll+ ..... ane .--upp1es. al\ n
disability, profit sharing & locations. 644-4460. PBX Answering Service individuals TO SELL MEAT or Judie Steiner We have a complete package ri~lk 55~ Shots, AKC,
t•ctircmcnl. J\fGMT trne 21-30 $150. wk Da)'!I & aftns includ, wknds DIRECT TO ~E PUBLIC. NEWPORT --of employee benefits. we , · .
guarn st. College prel'd. Full p/l. EOE 540--l9&2. Incon;ie, be~ts, bonuM's & Personnel Agency pay top wages. A11 oUlce & AKC Siiky Temcr puppy.
* WVESEAT & &1fa custom made very gd qua!, never
used. usually h1n, 968-7910.
XL. COND. Si\fL. buffet,
Strato loun_ger chr. twin HOUSEKEEP£R 10 1 i v r
w/clderly Laguna Beach
lady. 497-2375
Immediate Opening
Dictaphone Opr
SATURDAY
INTERVWS
July 20th, Bam-4:30pm
i\tr. Richards, 846-5455. PERMANENT c I er i ca I ~~~~::u::;;.. °C:!~: 133 Dover Dr., NO. 30 industrial skills are needed. sm~·s:a~~· sire & dam.
MECHANIC Wanted. Oass A position. Min accurate 50 of advancement excellent. Newport Beach 642-3870 Equal Oppor. Employer
Smog License preferred. wpm typing req. SH Great training program. Perm. Placement Atl;ency
Top Pay.300APP!yEin perso7 h •81at desired. 493-8122 Additional training for top ~ WAITRESS
Food/Cocklails. DI n n e r
house exper. Lunch &
dinner shifts open. Apply
Jn person, Sam's SeafoOO
II, 3901 E. Coast Hwy, CdM
~-
55 w.p.rrt. 1\lature indlv.
High school di ploma.
Rate Trainee
Good math abW1y. High·
school diploma. Apply in
J)(_'t·son, 8:30 nm· Y.·eekdays
SnfC>co lnsurantt Co .. 17J70
Brookhurs t. Fountain Valley.
EOE.
IM!\1D openings, qualifiefl
5cho o l bu s d r ivers
pref. If not qual. training
will be provi ded. Xlnt job
for house"A'lfC in local area..
Call Mon-Fri 9·2 492-3873
Information Clerk
_ Apply In Person
~1ooday thru Frldny
SAM untir 4:30P~I
BERT EA
CORPORATION
18001 Von Kar1nan
Irvine~ Calif.
83:1-1424, Ext. 294
Equal Opp. Employer
UIACHIN ISTS
SCREW ·
Exxon, . 1 t ·• PERSON koowledge Boat producers. SERVICE Sta. A t t e n d . CO!lta Me'8. · •1r JohnBOn Hull Repair wtlling to \\'Ork " · P/Ume. ex-per. Neal i\1 ED IC AL Receptionist weekends. Call Collect 6P:\I (213) ~8543 appear. Avail 3PM Dally. ~~~~r.e·b~s1i4~: <TI4) ~. . ~ EVERYO:~~At~S 1.lEAT! ~ly 2590 Newport Blvd,
1\·kdays. 642-S566.
P.fOTEL ftIAIDS
WILL TRAIN
Full or p.time. Apply Costa
r.feiia Inn, 3205 Harbor
Blvd .• Costa J\-fesa.
~fUSIClANS or Groups
\Vanted
Call 646-2823
PLASTICS . \\1ANTED.Exp Cosmetician
MACHINE OPRS SALES SERVlCE station auend~t, Newport Beach area. Write
Ropid!y oxpanding pla.citic CON$1DER A CAREER tul ly exper, days. ~ Box No. 183. c-0 Daily Piiot, pay. Class A mechan1~· I p o Box 1560, Costa l.lesa, injection molding co. has WITH LARGE t'NTL Tuneup & carb .. exp. Xln t Calif. 92626 st at in g
perm. openings on 2nd & LIFE INSURANCE CO pay, 5 days. Reilly s Aroo, qualifications.
Jrd shifts , for "·orren. Development of tv.-o agent1 t9th & Newport C.~I. WANTED Practical nurse .
Exper. pref d, ~l oot required in area. $10,000./ SERV I CE ST AT I 0 N Full time. Live-in, 2 d)'!!
mandatory. Oppo~. . f 0 r year, plus commission. Attcndent. full or part tl mt;!. per wk. Very nice advanc~ment u n 11 m 1 1 ~ Xlnt fringe benefits. CHEVRON STATION, 3000 personable lad)'. No heavy w/gro~ng co. ~e.811 hte Call Joe Quintana F ·rv1 Co ta M 1vo_rk m n_cw build1J1g. Co. 5-l?-9207 . 8:30-4:30 ai ew. s esa., v.-ork. Phone 49'.J-1182. NEVER A FEE paid med insurance & good SERVICE slation attendant,-WHO WANTS 10 \VORK? vacation plan. SALES expcr. Days. Texaco, 1695 DRIVE A CAB!
Apply SAM·SPJ\-f 1/2 Day, Nice Pay Superior, Costa Mesa CH:OOSF<; your hours, work
•.
f#~f#~
For 1n 1d In Wom•n·s world
Call M1<y Btth 642-5678, ext. 330
Jtfultiple Choice! Light arul Cozy!
~ • 7179 . ,. ., Fee Paid. Grtti. visitors to
community . Take care o!
~<:es. Relieve on PBX.
l\1usrtmvc-t'YPing~skill5:
Starl $509. Great benelits.
Call Coastal P e r s onn e l
Agency, 541H)()55, 2 7 9 0
Hnrbor Blvd. CM
MACHINE
SET-UP
OPERATOR
1.ecJal Sec'y Bkkpr Cellf. Injection Molding 9AM·1PM or 5PM·9PM SERVICE Sta. Attendant for yourself, be your own ~ -575·0 ~Brlggw;co!rta""'Mesa--Enjoyable-phone order-work ~-Fiill-&-pan:Time---bolls. Men-or-wolilt!'Jf. C.-n ~ -
, ... i --1-
I N S P ECtQR-1\fECHAN'IC·
AL. exp in AC>m Space,
Edler tncl11stries Inc, 2101
Dove SI, Ne1vport Beach,
546-2101
INSURANCE
ExpcrienC<'d I n s u r !l n c e
Accounts Rcceivuble Clerk.
call ?.1rs. Ri c hardson ,
Empire Insurance Co .
~71i6.
·-
Air·Conditioned Plant
Prefer individuals exper-
lenced In !!elling up & op-
eraling Davenports. \Vill
consider lnllntng persons
"Ai.th reasonable dexterity & •
good mechanical aptitude.
Excellent benefit program in-
cludes:
• Group Medical & Ufe
Insurance .
• Paid Sick Leave
• Paid tlolidays & Vacatlon
<Irvine Indus. Complex) v.•/a good salary & bonuses. 990 E. Coast Hwy, N_.B. be allghtly bandlcappec!
{1 Blk S of Baker OU Redhill) Earn $100 wk + + +. Good ~-Neat • Clean Appearance. Legal Receptionist ' ""'~~~~'!!'!'""'~""I speaking voice & phone Vta:., retired. Age 25 to. 70.
$675 PRF.-SCHOOL teacher exper. hel pfu l. Call t--Ir. s' KIPPER Supplement your lnC'Ome.
I
needed. l-6, Mon_ F r i _ Hand, a.t Time/Lile Books, Drive a r.ab 6 tu's or more a
Nc,vport Beach. $2.25 hr. 833-8098. day. Apply in !JCfliOTI, Keypunch \Expo~€r:. ~&lo.s831~~.;::_:;;~l::'.::"""'"9"............ Yellmv Cab Co., 1116 E. 16lh
#uauc Accounting office Sales WANTED St.. Costa Mesa. r11&
To $605 needs book~eeper w/payro\l FOTOMAT WO~IENS HAIRSTYLISffor ;t exper .. typmg. 548-7040 for growing shOp. Golden Touch
MTST/MTSC Opr nppolntn1ent. Coiffut'rs, 31722 S. Coast
===='------!needs Sales girls lo work L. ed I IOO T """'Y So Laguna $650 REAL ESTATE v.·eekm:ts & varied hours 1cens or ons ~~· ~·~~-----
Accounting Clerk
Secretary
Steno
Personriel Clerk
IF YOU LIKE
PEOPLE
WE'D LIKE YOU
A l l Tu J l · Y ARO J\fAN lo \'l'Ol'k f/timc f' PP Y n person es. u Y_ or better. 137-' Gaff Rig---in rental ya.rd. Very neat J , 23. btwn 9 a.m.·3 p.m. at . handwriting & appear. Will
F'CYI'OJ'l.fAT, 201 E. l?th St. ged Ketch. Daily sails train. Apply 'morns 1930 il
C.M. ~ • Newport Blvd, C. M, . A I I
5ALE·s PERSONS off Waikiki in Hawaii. • "
'liiil -----'~-~ " \
DARTNEL~ AGENCY
Newport Btach 640-8470
O..ongt 547-1694
(Me n or wormm) can make
To consider a career with the $400 per \\'k selling Los
leader in real estate service. Vegas booth space to mfg
We provid'! the sales train· & service companies.' (Pftl't
Ing. Togcll:ier \\'e'll get you or full time) t-lr. Snyder,
where you \vanl to go. 639-5005.
Rush reply t o
I Antiques IOOS 8
• Profit Sharing Plan
• Credit Union
NEW FACTORY 1 ~~-------~
Branch outlets just opening OFFICES BELOW Sa6F F1CE TRAINEES Orange Co. Antiques
SANMAR
CRUISES
in area needs the following: ARE INTERESTED · Smile & Dial for good PtlY + Hundred~ of antiques, 9327 "'"'""'PERSONNEL Apply Employment ~t~mt Trne $185 wk IN YOU bonus. Ain & Pm shift~. 2427 Huntington D r. ~~~~ SlS a~, u~ 0;1!!s~ :1z~i ;"°'-o
U\.Vll"IL . Office Ser'\men 12} S3 hr Fun atmosphere. Commerce 838
. -
SER.YICES•ACIN::'f KAYNAR Snlcsn1en Open CALL MANAGER AT Bureau, 16612 Beach, 1-IB San Mar ino, Ca. 91108 ~1~':1a,psAna. ~pc~· 7b~a~: ~ -All benefits, Catet'r positions. <uo ll" (Sign '°" Ta• " 8 d II -~·1 n!'rnohalr n11lk"l!"lhft ca119 \Vine Tasting Ccllar 494-106S BUENA__l!ARIC _Ce°;;'terl' ......,s ·' (213) 684--2777 :• 10 a Y· J ___ "lff" -fff an ~~~~t f(lr ~II ~~•~olll! j
Manage~ (Couple) $800+ G CO INC 522 •• 56 -----flNE estate je"·clry. bron~,co.!I utf lltMi-lllMT...... ,,.,.., .. 1 :O:h~twr 1our ~boul·
Bookkeeper lo $lnl MF • ., NE\YSPAPER Auto Route ·"° Sales • Cashiers • Stock SPECIAL order jeweler porcelains, fine e r y 1 ta l , d~r11 sra<"ef,1lly• "-'t!T1 c•llf'-1
I S~kpr-legal $'™1 800 S. Sl•lt Coll-• (Jltg. Bch) t--Iu11t be--ow 18·""" COSTA MESA " Womana: Apparel Store in Nu dh:unond~ ru~., ., ·qu";.;::.c\i;f-~ .• n,.~ •• -.. ,.,ITT,~ ... ~.~ .• T.,.~,,,,.,..,,,n .. ,~ . .-~,~··~<c~10~1'"~11'~1 ~1·,~1.a,~·,·~•~•,~··~n''~+l--I
MTM 1-•• o h d dbl U• ~91 · · 111:n. ror1" q11 c "f o nc. P. • .':II,, '"° Blvd. "' ave epen n c car. ..,._....., Westminster Mall. Liberal waxer. Irvine area 979-612'2 much more to be sold at . nifty 1r10 to1<tthf'r. or <'Om· ~ll ky•#oft rnoh•lr. P•tie~11 I
Ex. Secretary $700 2ll-3 I-In dally. $200. -$3;.0. FOUNTAIN VALLEY Vacation & Beneli!s. Xlirt. ~--STOCK ROOM/ publlc aueUon. 645-2200. blne Jerkin, gh\rt ~nd ~nt8 7179: 0n,. ~l in t!t~ ~·21>. •·-y·R-pl·Lcgal $675 Fullerton mo. 84?-2300 bcf. 10 a.rn. ""1.1754 Opportun•·ty for Qu•ll"rd S with o1h11r riarto~r1. C'lloo.•· -111 •·,,,,,.,, ,,. ,,., .. ,,, .. -, ~ ..... ~ ~ u RECEIVING CLERK 'PAINT Ct VARNI H removal prh:ita. che(llt11 111u1 aoU<h. ' ' " ~ .. Recept·lite·sh $650 (714)871-1550 NURSES FULLERTON Pen;oru;. Apply AN I TA rota.le or rem. needed for Anlique !<Urniture our rr!otcd 1•11 ttl!ro 9~:;: ~~'~1;:1'.;1~~~~:~~!c!~~~ secy/RE Leasing $625 •Equal opportunlcy employer e CCU'S e 171 1542 SHOPS Los Cerritos Ctnter, Speci .. 1tu-5S7-Z736 MLt•t1• Slst>• ~. 10, 12. 1 ~, 16. ~andlln•. oth .. rw •M! ,,,.,,,
I 01~-ph Soc.• $600 "!/F • (2J3) 92' ~•9 fibe""'iass boot co. Apply in •q•,... 18, xi. SIM 1i lbu•l 141 pant• c~ ' " FUU or ... ~ ,,·me Ali sh"t• .,._,. •a ..r~~. •ltH\'f'fl' "11t t~kt. lhtflf Billi ..... clk·NCR 3100 10 $.),;O ............. !!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!! f r"""• • u ' HUNTINGTON BE4CH person at C11pper Marine 0 °KEEFE & MerriU ran~. •ult:,. )'ds, so•; •hlrL I''· \IM'kJ or nl(lfl'. ""•Id t• An,.· Cl_;,~Typlsl "=.:""' Xlnt benelil.!l, good SEAMSTRESS, Spanl s ti r-!SlSE ·~--·~ IS ,_ G ·ddl v · ........1 ,,. ., <•• -MACHINE 540-5140 sp•oklog • •·el-me. ""'I'• .-v... ... i..n:nta t., ~· n t'. ery l>"""' S.nt1s:.oofor e•fllP•l1~rn "rook~. IOS, 1111> 011ily rt101. Aecounl. Clerk!!: to $5Zi working conditions. EOE. S "" Santa Ana. cond. $50. 64&-7989. Add 2$ ~"nt' rot ea~h pan''"' 1'•"-'lllf•·r•r\ o~PI+. Jlfl~ 163,01!1 t-fed Front Oflice $500 $ Costa Mesa Mem , Hosp. TU TIN-REDHILL t.lachlne It hand \l"Ork. · r11rnr5l·t1i.1~m~il ~nd )j)<'l.'1~1 tll('bt• statl<'l11, St"' \'ork, i> T Gen. Oflici~ $.1.25 hr OPERA TOR 301 Victoria, 642-2734. 138-6256 Crochtit \\'Ork. 4 96-7 3 61 STUDENTS f/llme · now pit Bicycles I020 l>ilndlln~: nthl'rw ist th•rd ~ ,. ll'llll ! l'n111 N•ll'!f'. Ad· ~· JRAIN WESTMINSTER 1 ,~"'="'"~'"=~~· =-.,-.-=-l<'flll. Neat, ttlla, car, Ph fl •..,, dth'"'' .. ~n ti'lu1 !II«·•· dr-.1.tp, ratt~M'INYmlli'~ 4SS E, ltTh St. (ill fNtne l "'·" WILL NURSES AIDES Reliable· n,.,. 1'fr Uvl 8""' "~''"' co P 'P ER To NE Lady "-ttk1or-mntt,Sc-ridt'l.\1 1n:1n :-;,..,, 1so lt'lnu flOJ\~t•,.. Suite 224 642-1470 P,t at u re . Erx per l-enced 894-0611 SECRETA;"Y la\\' oUice. 1 ,;;;1;-~· ... ~·;iiiiii;';iii·~~-~i;ii~'iiiiiO Kenmore \Vasher & 1 GAS M•rtin. ~•2. tlM' t>•lly 1•111\1. t1t~111:n•1t1<"'r 1!1'11SttctlM'r•n.
11,. ., ... , ., ~"' •, &42-3505 O\'cr 25, typ/sh. spelling I' S ~ " ! f..atlt!,n lltpt., 232 ~;Mit l~tll 1.·•<•lo~' "'II trilfh 1 THRF.t: ''•~""~::-~··~::::-~·-:;:~~-·~!s hould h a ve ba si c --~--ki ll 1' I I Telephone Sales Pryer. 11 ;, \l'ulle l-AytAg "'·.~to"' York. r-. •0011 •fft•,1o, ... 1~h•lllJ;ld1! ••••.. 1)1! I· OFFICE TRAINEES Special progr11m for 11 • rcq, o ~a exp l't'<J. \Va sh<'r & Cas _Dryer $150, l'rintSAMK.ADllRf.:. s.z11>. /olf .. '8'•· • 1'11~t8oot -~M1> JANITOR & T RUCK understanding of me111Nrlng Snille •. 0101 1,, ~ P"Y + unliccn cd r-pplicants $125 "A'k. 540-0830. Costa Met l Area Gunr & del 546-8672 SJ7.Y. •!'Id ST"L•: Sl'Mllt!FI • J11u-1t1·1)cut l'~nern •• $Lf$ DRIVER tool!, gt:IUf.CS, & knowledge "' " """" "" t : ON t!FREt:l' ... :TTt:llSC'lf)ullr l\t<11·'S('(<Jlt<1oomt l~,...,11 •. 1100 -mblnotlon ~, , m.i 1 ol -••I bl 0 rl 11 Sn e bonu1 Am ,\ Pm 11hllts. Fun W k F GAFFERS St Sattler Bull tin thmt• tn~end f(Jf, 011t rrtr 11.11 s .... ' r111 .. ·trCtt,.:ht<t l'lk J1 .M
·m-"anuf. firm. •up l ea sa n t P .·;,"0 ~1 .. I u Ptoo"l!'l ' '..:!. atntOl\Phtrc. Co .m n1 e. r cc or rom Dlsh..,,·ash<'r J-tarvt5t Gold. 1 tf'rn ln•id~ Nt:'<'· SPRt\r. H .. 1r11111 Crfl\'htt •loolr.-s1 oo " • -• Bu-ou 16612 "·ach RB >T old 1100 Gu•r & dal s I.! M ~ t: 11 r ;, i T •: fl s 1n~1 .. 111 erochrt kill"-... 11.00 working cond11 &. ~ co. OppOrtunll)' to Pt08'f'<!t$ IO 8 ."'11'' cs ·' ....., 'T Your Hom• • ' CAT ... l.OG.IOOJ1~1t,.1u .. ,..... lflMAn\ \lst·ramtllk .... f.1 .00
paid beneflt11. Tapmatic machinl~t. s m"ll comJl1'ny 4~ ..... ign ga.ys ax Walker & LBB You can Charge 546-8672;.,.~~---~I <""" P•lltrn •'(111pon !'fond:~ 1111)tun1 "'"""Y Booi.: ••. s1 .ou
Corp 13.il Kettering St atm09P~re .,,,. big compo:ny Cr.nter). II••~ 1,,~,, DAILY PILOT Top Commissions 'A'LM5ST Ntw Penney ·• """' i:;t:w .. KNIT 6t!olt "'1'11 ComplC'l~r.if\lk:Wl~ · .. ,,1.oo· trvlnt. ~' . . bencfl~. Apely -OFFIC-ECLEANING-Clo11lfled Alls * ~13U * \\'ASher k dryer, 3 mo. old. ~~1i~t~:::~~ :: ~ :rrr:.~!~'rr~~~h~.":1~1~ ... s.1~
JANITOR Needed full time, P rosser 1nclustrlet Approx. 4 hrs evt's. EXpcr \\T:'RE PART Of Equal OppQr. ~mploytt All fe!\tUrts. t-1uiit sell; 111~11n1 5rel''ln18001t , 61 w~ llo!'lk (t(tG Q11n1,•1 ..... ~
tor CQrMJe_~nl h~it111 ...,1\11don of Purox Corp. r couple, $3 hr ea. +-auto YOUn FUTURE __ ,_64.2~5671 moving. $250. 960-1189. • ~1u,~umQv1h l\l,lo~•l ~ ... .tOt:
E nQ"liah PQt nee. 8cVCI' l·~~I J,lall Rd, Ann.hcim I exp. C./111. & N2wpt. area. Cla&ailied Ad ! Call 642-5678 Sell idle ite:rulv.i th. Datl)' re~~~ij'~fr~R~.·,3 ::::::=
I ""'M"a,..oor~. '-40~V_lr_to_r_i.~, _C_M_ 1 .. ._,uul QJlpOrtunltY emplo)ler Collc<'l Cll 1 ... ok. I 13) 92?·0115 1 ~Eq.:.UA~I °"O"ppo=rt'-'u_nl_,IY'-"'hm=pl"o'-yt'-r>---------today! Pilot Classified ad. fl42-Sli7H1 ·------------------
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• Monday,.July 22, 1974 .... ------·· ~~·~~~,:-s~,~piiil'~~~-~r9DIO~~T!T~ruc~~~·~~~~~~~~;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~t~7~12~~~·::::::::'..'!~~·~•~w~.,~-~!·~===-~'l770~~1~F~o~rd~=========}~!
l.RG Rttt Dlnlnc Rm Tabl SCRAM-LETS I · .....::-:~~---.l, .. lP) StrtcUy Ski., Claspt.r C3,'t5 t9n 0A1'S,~N P U. leaving '73 Pit11.1:da HX·2 " dr &e<.1&11. 67 -vw BUG '6Ei rono Cl.lltm. !iOO. Xlnl Solkl Mahogany, p eca n . J 1'.-·Jobrulon E ec, 'J'nlilcr to"'l'I· Ptn.'e IW be f' n .,,,., w.tt r• Air. Llke new. JG,000 n1i. t.'Ond. ~. Ask for ,Cannon.
dlarressed \\•/2 lea\•es. will exlras, 6T;>-8511 1'tdu.t.'('(t ror q1.tlek tale, Bes1 BAVARIAN f\1ust sell. Sacrifice.' Lltlle ol' "'dy troin Pl\'8denn I &16--2231
24 DAILY PILOT
Nre
&eat 16, SlOO. T\vin beds ANSWERS 14' Jo'ISJl Ski Boat. 50 P.lerc, offor. ~2I07 '* 493-0TI& * 1~-pc! SHARP IVOZ.'166) ;,GS:;:..:;::TO"~R~lN~0".-7AJ"•7./Pawe~-r-ll
S:SO. New l\tt1.1,\e Triple Gener•I 9010 w/traller, $475. '13 CJIEV. Pf\l \\'/ahort M & i '72 P.1AZOA RX2. Alr, 11eroo, Only $1095 "°°· or &&J .,?,_, ffer. drcutr & mirror, Xlnt, 962·1593 box, 6 cyl, 3 ..fipd ll'llr\$, ; .,. Jealhtt \•lt~roof •oo t·"ll.. ..,.~ $1.50 2 \\' rdrobc ..... Exen1pt -Image -Suite -8!2' Krn'Yf\1ARAN Dinghy, ti L ' " ' ,.. '" ' a "'""st f\1Rrro'v -"Gl1'1t'ltEE" " hif ?i1C'rc 0/B, deck chrS. &o.ts, Storage 9090 R/ll,+ ' UV, 4 spd paint. SS4-· St>eS. a, &: lit isc, 6-12-Si49 Shortaget1 ha.ve cumed us & 1b1., davits, SlJ anchQr, lrun.,, R/11 . Pit:, 847·3452_ Mercedes hnz ~ Mercury tt50
ummer Warl'house all Into "Glt\1MEE" pig!I. chain. line, dir. finder. 713. SKI BOAT S TORAG E , 1'"'0RD P/U, 4 "'hl dr. New • HM-aW ti.MS·•
Clearance DRAPES. 1~·/backing, ...-.Id. 781....a292 Se<:urity Yard. llORNET bh.1~pMnt motor \\•/headers. 1,14 ?ilE:RCEDEs 400 SE • + 1008 f\fERC. Air, powe r
New qullft'd rebuilt mattrcs~ $25 o-Jl' BOSTON \VJIALER 11.,120 l\tARlNE. 94fl \Y, 17th St. Pl!. 961)..2135 N I Stock f\ LL C 0 , -~---f br&kes l: lllK'rlng. Goo ti
&: box spri11£1 se~•~· ~f'~w~I ~&~· f~~~·:...,~,~~id~e.;~·;r;or;J'~'!lr~.+~l~U~' ~·~1~,"~'~"'~~·~lo~to~r:. ~X~l;nt:.l/-·C~.~M~.~64;.S690~·~~~~~; "72 INTERNATIONAi.. \<: T(ln OW ft 11~A J G LO Exccu·, '66 VW BUS fOOd cond Cond. 675-851l. -IW'·n ,,·-. ......,..,JO.,. 4 pd 18 000 II •<1•HV1 • '74 3.0 CS &. 3.0 CSA I \e car . one only iSER. Price Ftex.iblc. 673-0653 I .... l'Ond. 673·:'l676 evrs. 11 • · rn e11, -..vu NO 0180001 · low JG.mo 1,,i;:iiiji,:::~;'ij~;.:5";: l----l---'6~4()..8686 or 833-9625 Misc...W•nted Bo:ats;-Powir-t040· • beforo noon-llft-&, 646-12&3. =~B~Rt~ 11TJ1 ope'n te '1.1.~yi..: ~ ,-Y..etlow ill',, Must• ~ Ofstfl\f~ll ,,....,.,.,.. -e '74 BAVARIA:\ Al.If~ n10: fully equippOO. NO AM/FJ\J radio. New t~~. '"
MOVING! Doub!~ bed, box SILVER Coins \\'alltt>d at c A !\t p BELL Io.lORRIS Vans 9570 e •74 3 O S It. 5'1• · capital reduction l'Loquh-ed . shockB, lt1gg. rack. 554-2368, 65 CLASSIC 2+2. StJck.
spring & l'llSl!l't'U $40. 7' bulk prires. CRUISl!:R 24' Ou;ton\ built XL.NT u: SI:! ; s . v I 9772 I &nog CCl'L .iJ~hl(! aNal. da,-enpol'I, b1'011.'11 hvet>d $50. Call MS-:m2 • 418 Chey., EnK. blurprintcd'. C•mpers, Sale/ • '71 DODGE · · A LAN • Jim Slemons 0 vo 1 !''fol radio, $275. D'm-2792
Both Yeiy good cond: &16-\VAi~TED: Professional used Bar, Sink, Stereo, step, ELC Rent 9120 CAMPER VAN EXCElJ.E~T SERVICE lmportl '74 VOLVO , Oidsmoblle ttSS I 6936 a f!. 5 ex£>1'Cycle. GAV Plate Like new. Lo --• I 1...,;---1CONTEritEOJL\R.Y 8' _sola. SJ6-t~ ..... hxi~ CQ_st US,500. Jn~ldg_ Spot·tsca.b ca1nper ~ h c 11 , 3000 Tr11rlesn1an Caniper. VS. 1301 Qu11.ll Sate• 6 ~
• $50., Kiilg sr. wate1· bed Music•I lnstrum'ts 80&3 eust. Trlr. &le \VU! trade ('llTgO door. vents, "'1ndo,1·s. J>O\\t'r stttring, ref ri g. , Ne"''J)Ol·t Beat:h -aest Deal-OLDSMOeJkE_
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\\'/liner, frame, pe<lc!ilal, snuill boat or Real Estate. $100. 963·3379 stOYc, etc, Jtcady for fun . ~=b~ :I:' I 833-9300 GMC TRUCKS ~l~. foo.1n pad. $100. \\'E specialize in quality 673-7022 eyes. Prl Ply Motorcycles/ \287696) ~ ENTER FRO~I MocARTllUR Anywhere! · HONDA CARS
exper. iMlrnmcolJ. "''' 35• SPORTSFISHER , _.;;S.;.;cooc;.;.;t•_";_-"_9:.;l.;;.;SO SAVE ~ OVER LEASE OR BUY UNIVERSITY OLDS
G•r•ge Sale 8055 "·eek S P e c i a 1 s are Fl)'bridge, auto pilot, fatho, 1 • tx:. OVERSEAS OEUVERV
1--------1,1.ndnunond ,.~12 Organ. \\'/ nor radios, (\\·In 11cre\\', '69"'-IPKA\3~~' ~1, 350 2C)b','· * "'-="'-===>'-'=:!I 35 USED SPECIALISTS ,.__,.:18;'6,, .. "atbar Blvd.-
4 h\in beds .. Good for 5un1· e er Les ic $150. '36 !\Jar· 210 gal fuel, 60 gal \\'ater, 4"~ ' 1 mi es on re 1 MERCEDES ~ " mer honie, ladder, patio Tin 017 \\'/case $22:i Drop stove, refrig, ivlnc...ti. 2 0011 eng. Xlnt cond, $500/oUer. THEODORE Z'i4IJ2 ?ttarguertte Parkv;ay 4\111.,.., llli& 'G9 CUTLASS w/air, am·fm ~~3-152'20 River ,\\l!. N.B.11 ~ddte. ~ ~b~~o.~':: ~,~:.u.nsleepg 6. sn,000.1,H,;:>lSo;,o;,"::o;'".,"•,...,•"oo"',"•1".-i~n-rog·'°"'·d' I ROBINS FORD USE ~~~~ ~~~f EXIT. ON DISPLAY 911/WAYOLYO !'lteroo, Orig. oo·ne.r. 673-$76
03. ~ -'31· -·· • •= '"'" -'"'.,",..·-----~=
Y Rogers S.piecesei. All stands. 3UPER Sld-FishJBay Baul! \\'/trade for Yett. &1;r.1621 2000 lla1·bor Bl\'d. House of Imports · Pinto tts7 J.w.lr 8070 I Alesa. 64>-. 17 !-''-'-='-------frnn1e. Lots of chron'ie. ........, ....,.....__, •
ROLEX \Vatch, dla mo n d ped11.ls. etc. Qoocl Cond. J':o ~~~io.n Jb~t~~ ~ c~;~!~ ·73 HONDA, 350 G, 2500 tni, 5 Costa MeSH 642-0010 LEASING . 523.7250 !966 Httrbor~C.i\l._ &16-930~ '72 PINTO
cluster ring, d i a nl 0 n d C>'!:"b:8ls. $31a .• 839-9408 or l/B. l\tany xtras. $6500. or ruos. old, $&>(}. Fir nt . '73 OODGE VAN, W,000 SPECIALISTS , '72 VOLVO llOO COUPE
i;oliuUre, •silver set & ntany I 83S--0606. TraM: for late ?.t D L 49-t-4728 miles, lots of xtra.s. Se:vlce during lease period 68 r.mz ~ Sedan, sll~r Automatic air condi(k>nlng I 3 DOOR
more iteins of estate Ofc. Furn. & Equip. IOIS l\tcrcedes, ~774.l "''kdays, '13 HODAKA dil't bike. * &15-2242 * i:. Important. Crevier 8~1\Y "'/black int ., & xlnt. Al\1·F~1 fadlo, rad.IOI tires;
je\\·elry to be sold at public --548-4200 eves &. wknds. Knobbie tires + extras. $-17;) '74 OODGE van, uuto, V·S, was awardl .i the BMW , Sll-2040 -In1maculatc. con d It Ion . Runabout , rad!O, heat~ r •
auction. 645-2200. DESK . Hie dra\\•cr. 'Vaiunt. ** 24' SEACA!\tPER, 1973. 645-4712 cust. int. & ext. $4900 or Service A"·ard by HoUn\an n ~18 280 SE. Full po\\·er (4038591 auto. Irani;., 200) cc, red.
8075
Good ('Ondition. SSO or best 30 h l'k V 8 & t I best oiler. 152-1073 !\lotors. We are dedicated incl . air&: spollesi! 83l-20:IO $AVE {973EDIJ
Livestock offer. Call 963-4567 ask ror 111, I e new, . r r. '73 HD Sportster. Elect. to give )'OU L'OOd service on DI DEAN·-l.EWIS $1609
LI d ~ Sleeps 4, head, sho\\·er, stait. Very clean. $2000. '14 OODGE van, econ. 6 cy.t. your "''" BM\V. •--"' ·73 •IBZ 450S~ Luxu•' IMPORTS ~ BcY or n a, "ton thn.i Fri. galli'.!y-Cost $17,000. Be~t · Call 6Ta-2fi04. Xlnt :ond $3000 497 26S3 • ~ ~ ~ · * ofr. oYer •nunn. Fin. avall. f -"':::.C~_:::;.;:.,.=~--· I c · · -bclore you leEtse any 81\1\V. Se da II. 21, 0 0 0 m I ,, J9ti6 Harbor. C.M. '"" ,,.,,,., EXEC. s"·yl chrs $1:)/25 ~ !97! 750 llONDA niter 5 pn\ l la Ill 250 p · ~-Back. Bay Area. Box st~lls Dks Sl5 up, Se<-y chrs $8/24 7l416T.Hil88 eves. 497-2024 • * * . . Large shipment of '14 BM\V's Ptmyn."s;~1"-2028!e, . ' . ri AUTOS USED i
HORSE BOARDING
available. Call for delflds. Pien .. -e 867 \V 19 O! 642.34()! "ED". Xlnt t'Ond. 11.000 n1i. '63 VW VAN $350 firm just arri\•ed. Most models THEODORE M~ 660011 . •11•11 ! ARP 'ariyssey s~~thesizer. 22' DIESEL, Super Sport, 4!J6.8a98/492·Tl84 (bus) * 6411·5160 * av. ]able for immediate de-'72 r.tERCEDES 250 Sed. AMC 9905 ROBINS FORD
n1any xt.ras included. J\lini DREAl\.l , CREVIER BMW car. $6.'0J. S40-4000 or NEW AMC/JEEP 11ce •neous -· Xlnt cond. $!KIO. Ca 11 Cutty Cabin, SpoL1 Fisher, J\10TORCYCLE '62 JtONDA '72 FORD F250 ll\•('ry. ' I Auto, a/cond, lo mi's, loco.I
:HS--04i9. 9= "~ CAMPER 208 \V. l S.t St ., S.A. S35-3tn 673-5408 eves. . 2060 Hnrbor Bh•d. Rarely US<'d! Like Kc11·! .... To,,·er, lie\\' l11ct0t1· den10. ..,...,...go Dealerrh1p
C"••om, Sl•n•l,0,,,. '''''b'" AN;,AFONE. !\lust sell my Sl'OOO Do ,, >I"•~ e 0 .-,4 "·\\\',\$!\Kl ~z J. Like •n l\JERCEDES 4 50SL . . Costa !llc~a &12-0010
nation clt'.'Ctlic BAJt.B.(}, ansa one, SOnle \varranty .. .-nu, lo nii, xtrs. $250/tk ov " ..,..,,... "' 1971 PINTO 28 000 n1l Air -' f &'.:.,nd· ,,·6>,,3103..,.....,.,..· "s iv '1\IV"" Air, 4. 11pced, 2 tanks plus 8' Datsun tnO ~spo-• c-·:... ·x·int co·-i. NOW OPEN IN
BROILER ,,·Ith bas k ct l left . 835-7732. . New 65' Motor Yacht pyn1ts 558-0972. (~::E~r can1pcr. Sleeps 6 . ·-Pri. party. SI.I.750. 979-31>!0. Hunlington Beach ~uto, vinyl . toP. Xlnt 'cond'.
rotiSserie, pronged fork fol' Pets 8087 ' 53688 N•wport Beach or ~3275 eves. . ~ Orfcr. 4.96-6476 aft 4:30 or
h t d d . 11 ---------!\'.rly comp 65x20x7, slps 16. 6 'i2 HONDA CKtOD, Xlnt \ k nd o o gs an g l' 1 . -11, 1 1 189 500 nd $lll95 • *DATSUN* 1 1972 • 280 S.B. 4.5 _,".'°''=.':· ~.,.-c-.--.==-HeaV)11uty bL'onze enamel POODLES · · coinpai s. ' · oi· co · · Sed Cl a -;;71 PINTO 4 pd 2000
•-. er.,· r. Pert-• t•blo "'"'' C Bl k Cudd! o!{('t'. Pri. ply, &12-7444 aft. 5 p.m. * an c n C E , Ii , cc ,,, .... " ...... ute • ac · y 536-\60& -LEASE-97S-1797 AA1 /JE P Inc. eng., mdk>/henler, xlnt
9%" x 151 •• " high. Only' 6-\\'ks old 1 ---~~=----1 1971 \Vestcoaster, Vy aharp, or MGB 9744 1?751 Beach Blvd. cond .. $1575. 613-4705.
$?.O.OO.-Phone-642-6840. Gen-Only -i for Inform. 19' THUNDERBIRD 19TI $595. or Belt Oiler. THEODORE BUY 112 mile so. of S. D. Fv.'Y •• ~n PINTO Runab:MJt air--
eraJ Electric bonnel-st)'le can 546-414:; Tri·hull Cutty Cabin, l'» -~=~"'=-·~'-="'==--1 ROBINS FORD HUNTINGTON BEACH 6 000 . 01a' I ladies hall" dryer !try it p· & Or 8090 O . ~t . C . l / O , Tr Ir -•n l-IONDA XL250 Specials !llGB '66 39rit actual miles. 848-8066 cond. l . nu. nl first) only si5.oo. Phone 1anos gans \v/bcakes & ,\\1!11Ch. $42.j(>, 260 z 5,37 Like new. new top, tonneau, . Day 496-TlTI Eve 49>-8154
642-6840. Pola1'0id Land ~2'ZZ2 News:_~,J875· 2060 Harbor Bl Yd. ' etc, et<". 1'1ust see 10 apprtc. Buick '!!8 I '73 PINTO Runabout, m
Camera. Big S"•inger No. • PIANOS CLASSIC 18' s 0 u th coas t =..,......,..,===---Costa f\Iesa 642·0010 Pr. P.lon!h + Tx & Llc Sl950. 642-1999 -'68 Burgundy . Grandsport. cc's. Best ofter. Must Sell.
300l. Black·\\'hite on I y, • ORGANS Lapstrake, bay c r u I g er, Motor Homes, Autos W•nted .9590 N~W 1~4 Opel 9746 Super clean, low miles, $100) Call 615-7lli<"
carrying case . gadget bag !\lint cond, Inboard eng, Sale/Rent 9160 --61 O 2 4 D or betit offer. 498-1986 Plymouth · 9960
combinntion 3nd extra flash Rentals fr $5 t·over, new navy top, xtras. CADILLACS or r. ! '73 Opel Manta Luxus c d"ll 9915 -~-----
bulbs. All for $15.00. Phone $29j(), or best offer. 64~ •VACATION • <I Spd. Trans. !ll('luded Like new. 9,000 n1i!es. Vinyl a 1 ac '73 DUSTER
642-6840. Revere \\'are Pots, h , 30• CHRIS CONNIE .67 AT YOUR O\"N PJ\CE . . • Largest Selection Any or all op1,·0,,, '""'~ stUll'OOf, automarlc, .
ff k d · "---Ni~ ts til 9 · ,..,_ ___ ...,_m So. ea1,·1. I 0 C "1'' 2 GOLD Cu.dillars private pans, co ce ma er an nusc ...,_., 11 b ·d tri 1 "" •-It '-'""'""' uu n range ounty dul'in.-. 1his sal" radio, hea1e1·.. <116JRDJ ~ ''
I Pho «ooo.•• Sot·. 'ti 5.·30, Sun. 12-5 Y 11 ge, nt a · .... "' n-0 st Select•'on." .. n"rty 1968 Eldot •do 1971 len1s ne .,...........,,,.,, tank, canvas rm, S\\'ini stP.p. ~6'" Coupe DeVllJe~ · Sedan De· ONLY !\!UST Sli:E Only ,.~ · '" ·
LP & 45 Records, Tape *Pi•nos & Grands* $12,500. firm. 213-181-429'1 {Oi·er 40 ~~{~: M.H.'sJ. Vllles • Et DorAdos · Con· AUTOi'llATIC ··-... ·: ... $96 EANj23l77EWIS ~~~~ ~~l(i~t3-~3l& xi~; 1
recorders, 1,.. recording Baldwin • Cable· Chickering BOSTON \\'HALER ".145' MOTOR -HOME vertible2' .. Also ninny. other AIR CONDITIONING •• $00 D art 7pnt 213-592-1985 t TV b' t /d • Fischer· Kawai · Kimball . I I t C 111 Tra I Ailt Fi\! STEREO $26 ll\1PORTS ;!"; poJi~e~~ ;t~~ ·Knabe· ~f;-.:on & Hall'_.,,· ~Pwy ~~ili;ie& ~!tt ~I RENTALS seec.:lt.ae aJ~ slD.E
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ro.tOLDING ::::::: $ G 1966 Harbor, c .r..1. 646-9303 :-73xl st::DAndN °', Vi~~· l~~~· b~ler ca--· old '1""'"l! • Sohmer · Ste1"-• ! • R-~"'oll .-. San Juan, ~·-tin ta=~ UNDERCOATl"G $ I nt '-'O • o mi g .,.. """· •"' • """'''''" "........., ~.-offer 675-3().;9 ICU.II -.. ..., _.. • " •••••• SEE TO BELEIVE ! '"·'" 9791 or 968-9392 after bottles, rocks, collectable way • Storey & Clark • \Vin-, . . (n4l 838-0!0I ., · . \V1th copy of ad only! j RED '69 RJ::D OPEL GT '{i"
odds ·n· e:nds, adu It er . Wurlitzer . Ya.ma.ha 17 CABIN Cruiser Outboard. •-• I D•~ °'" o~ PIDo•~·==~---,=-~
ba. _,_ il '74 Shasta, 20' Motor Home .....,w ~ ,-paperbacks. 673-81C6 New Spinets r. ........ $595 it la, ... ,. cover, Ira er. lor rent. 1175. Per \\·eek. NEW 1974 Eves 644--0lS4.' ·13 ~AN De . Ville, fully Used from $95 1 etc, Sl.900. or trade for • eqwp incl cnt1se c.wt & 5 hp OB nlOtor, Ai T Play< ...... ••••••.•••.••·•·•·•·.• t~no:: travel l.r:l.ile.r. 64~155 Priv part)'. 554-4828. PICKUP -p----L-9750 ~ 000 · "= ' Com""""' w/tank & •• .,.,.., .,.....,. TOP DOLLAR l!AID $2969 or~ :¥::.~pe, ••· nu,~
motor, misc. electric Grands " ........... $395 17' Inboard Bay Boat Very ,;::.::...::~~=-~..,..-IMMEDl4TELY moton, 'Ford Dual Point *ORGANS* old, but sound hull, engine New 1973 Zl' motDrhome, FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS FULL PRICE + T & L '67 COCO bt"O\vn, new run'g. '73 EL. OORAOO, loaded.
Distributor for 289 Hi-Pert Baldwin. Conn. Hammond. runs but needs work $250. air/gen, red interior, $9'J50. cau or come in to see us. NEW 1974 gear, Kon! shocks, fog $6700. or take over lease, at
VS, radio, heater, nutomatlc,
power steering, vtnyl roof,
IOI\.' miles. (37$.J'f"UJ
$2888
* THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
2060 Harbor mvd.
Costa Mesa 642.0010
ATLAS Eng. 673-810.5 Xawai • Kimball • Lowrey . Call 6T~S10 or Oiler 642'-frol. B210 2 DR. lights. Very neg. $4300. $225. mo. 67f>.6676.
I BUYll Rodgers . Thomis. ·Yamaha lOTI.-Glasspar runabout. Trailersr Travel-9170-$2570 49&-ml ..... Camaro 9917 Chrytler/l!ly.11"'-U.th_
•• • \Vurlitzer · Gulbransen • Steering wheel & cr:bles. 1971 SILVER TARGA, In xlnt _ Open Daily & Sun. 'til 10 PM
Good, used furniture &: ~. At:en. $175. 61~9'280 FACTORY close out on 2 FULL PRICE + T & L cond, Very k> mileage, eves '68 CAI\1ARO ConYertible,, 2929 Harb:>r Blvd., appli~soruil,sellfory~u Optig•• SJ" OSTON--'---1 show units. 1-14'-4 sleeper NEW 1974 714 -644-5113. da-Eo~-out ol c••. ""••I ~ .. -M,.. 'I .... ................ ..... 13' B WHALER ,vtdual power etc&: martne 711 2 DR ~~ ,..,... ... .,_, "' \.A1lrla ~·STERS AUCTION Low..y Spinet ··~ • TIHJ3.93ll trnde. w3417 54L1934 ~ Wurl!'-Sp'--... ., .. ,·.:·.·. S~ $4.iO. 646-4187 toilet. 1·16' ·5 sleeper dual .,,,.. V-l46'l6l6 or 133-9625 = ·~· . = I W/ 'thou! 3100 w. eo. .. Hwy., NJ!. $2969 Roll• Royce 9756 '70 CAMARO. Sharp! Bro.,.
aft. 6 01• Sunday 339--0974 l-lan1mond A·lOO .•....• Save SKI/FISH 16' 50HP, boat ~=~~e !~!Yet. R:,,;,1 Rec-.. J..9405 FUl..L PRlCJ!: + T & L B . I '70 DUSfER, R/H, A/C, . * WIN FREE * "'ilh lnliler. $650. WE BUY USED CARS . '55 R TYPE BENTLEY, extcr. rown \'In)' lop. A/T. 6 cyl, 20 !\1PG. Runs CADJl..J.,AC 6.1 extra clean 54;;.-3924 reation Products, 12691 Nel· $8500. Xlnt cond. $2100. 1493-5.321 & looks xlnt. $1395. 675-6568
$400. Corner table 2 beds ORGAN LESSONS ---=~ son st., Garden Grove, Ca. AND TRUCKS Newport Datsun 613-6619 aft. Gp.m. C-h-ovrolot 9920
SJOO Poker table n""' ~-1t1 FULLERTON MUSIC BcMits, Rent/Char. 9G50 SJ0.2191 or 847-074.1. 9 am· c · e 1 for a •-~ isal '65 BARRACUDA, V-8, 4 spd Girl~ dresser & he;d~ 6"'°p:,:mc..•::•=cep~t-'S"und=•,,Y.::'·c_~ I toom GR~ CHE~~. NE~~EB~CH Toyota 9765 '67 lmpal• S.S. Convert: stk, A/C, orig. owner. $3(.'0. ~"" Porta Pottle S.lO Twin 1h91 EucUd, Fountain Va lley FOR RENT, DAY, WEEK, ~ER!BA trru'ler. Ideal for 18211 "··ch Blvd Hunt Bch 968-4966 all 6 ;-:._·ngc velvet cha.its $Kl. 122 N. H5arbo57~8. 3Full6 --on MO. C?~~N~~· Call compact cars. Lg. bed, 2 847«il" " 549.3331 Betw~t ~=~i:= it:dristol '74 . TOYOTA ~:d~o ;~a ~a~e~~~k~~)· -P"o"n"t1"0"-c.:0::.::...----~-1
each. 968-819.'i after 5 pm. t:.1< burner stove, ice box, & TOP CASH to<' dean used Near OC Mrport ' \ .$671
THE en1ire furnishings from 871·1805 Boats, Sail 9060 other extras. 1 Yl' old. cars and trucks CALL 833>'1300 lest D--• DEAN LEWIS •73 Pontiac Le M.ns
a lrg. home 10 be sold at a 646-2939 dys, 499-2631. eves. H d Ch •-t ..,. public sale by oompetitive CONTIN UOUS FREE owar evro.. '72 DATSUN A he t IMPORTS Automatic, power •lee.ring,
b'ddln A I' ORGAN CLASSES FOR f\11DOLE of sum mer Travel, 1973 14' Cardinal, "l•cA-• ... --· Jambo-PICKUP nyw re. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 64()..9303 air oondlllonlng. (213GJU) 1 g. PP s., stereos, Savings. 2 New custom built Xlnt Cond, Comp. kitchen, '"' iui ... as11& '""' S2871 TV's, bicycles i
1
nc . 456 Vista ADULTS. Beginners Duffield racing s ab 0 t 5 . tollel, Sips 6. Bst oiler over Newport Beach LEASE OR BUY '69N Elcab mlkno. -~ bodyeng. DEAN LEWIS
Roma, N.B. Juy 23rd. 10:00 7:00PM, Intermediates 8:15, Id . al ,73 bo l9llll "'"200l 833--0555 Radio, heater, 4 speed, All Models( ew ra es, '"""""" Al\-f 10 5:00 Pt'll. 644--0350 Costa Mesa . Tuesday enuc to 's 58 t · .....,... ---=iO-C""'~--seYeral other Econo pickups work. $1300. or best oiler. IMPORTS "'-ts f •-· Vall nal1011als \l.'inncr. Pvt pty. f \VA NTED: AIRSTREA!\1, \VE HUY ,A c•--•-m. c~o) n l -0 •000 1-• H0 •bor C 'I •~ --BEAi.ITY SHOP Qua 111 y .. '6 " • ounu:.in ey . 67l-1012. \1.-ell equipped recent model. Il\1PORTl.:O AlITOS .,, "' ,...,._,. "'" -Wl ai..:.1 ~· """ ... ' "'. .....,...~
equipment for 3 Chr. shop. Wednesday nights. Start any I BEST PRICES PAIDI $2288 -W10 ·&1 1'1PALA. Needs 'engine '69 Lel\lans I owner, lo mUes, .. k ~->II ,. n CHARACTER B o o t . _,~ °'15 after_·<P~·~··~=• I Color machine, shampoo \\ . r .... , cus ,.,...,.. • " L I I TOYOTA \\'Ork. $100. air cond. $1095. Call bet\lttn
chair, sinks, roll-a·11•ays, charge. Coast 111uslc Cosla Good cond. Sloop rig· Auto Ser. & Parts 9400 Dean •w 1 mportt * , Phone 557-2343 S.S pm. 6Ta-8916
reception desk. & dryers. ~fesa. Ne\\'JX)rt .Bl\'d, at ged. With engine. Lan. l:.6S Hr.rbor, C.l\J. •646-93o:: '68 OIEVY l\tAL!BU -Thu-•-rb'ord 9t79
'72 T·BIRD
12000 Call ~ -Harbor. r SUPERJOR Auto :Foreign CASH FOR -1 ~~·~~0·~·~j~'.t:e12~1 ... ~ ... ~&l2~-~2S>:l ... ~!!!!!I str•ke. 6734441. Parts has hunruws of used • YOUR CAR THEODORE NEEDS TRANS S300 Firm FINE estate j ewe I ry, f I ••~~o ROBINS FORD ~.1510 · Hobitt Cat '16, HY)' dut y ore gn auto parts at ......--.... brof\U's poreelaini;, line j C04ST MUSIC Highlander ga Iv an; ze d reasonable prices & fr ee l----------Ford 9940 ~~~:~ & = m~~ ~~ht; Now Open Evenings Trailer X1nt. Cond $1150. dellverly. 752-1656, 113 1 AUTOS IMPORTE_~ 2060 Harbor mvd.
,_ __ 4 _aoijl._aJ._ RUblic auction... ~19N.JJ:llJRS..J:RL10:,L+-"&i&-!:!· >;i!i9'!!:70~======i~-SU_pefaL..J ~ ------('.b;~-if.MU
645-2200. OPEN SAT 10-6; SUN 12-5 HOBIE Cat, 14' light blu & General 9510 General 9701 WtalLML"!.' ~ YO&IU2R O
-•72-FORD--
4DOOR
Loodcd. J\laroon & \\'hite.
Air, P.S., P.8., many more
optlons.-\231GA1)
$4288
BANKRUPTCY . \l'holesale Cor. Newport-& Harbor, CM gold, trapeze and othor rBUY or LEASE gov I prices. nu color TV 's, 19" 646--0'l71 xtras with car lop carrier WANTED DATSUN. TOYOTA
$225, d!x gas ranges. Brookhurst at Talbert, FV 497-25n CASH PAID SAAB OR VOLKSWAGEN
54().-0154 ~°'733 33' COAST RHODES SLOOP For Your Junk Automobiles. & PAID FOR OR NOT. \\'D4L -PE:~R~S~IA~N~R~U~G~5-PRIVATE PARTY WANTS No. 37. 2 '"'of sails, .. me can 642-4930. ALFA ROMEO PAY TOP DO!LAR. C.'LL
BUY·SELL-TRADE ~SH~UY PIANO FOR cruising gear. Aft. 5' a-IINOOK·TOYOTAS round KENT AlLEN, 540-0442.
213-6.59-4'180, eves 714.537.sg27 ~ f>17-9445 * .:6::;7'>-0924'-"=~~~---tripper now on display. . . •t DATSUN engines. 1-lenr them 1 ---'0...:::.:...:=c..:.-~ '66 GLASSPAR w/cabin, Ready for vacation trips. • . run! 72/73 !llodel 1600cc
SANO\VICH GlaM, 107 pc CONN CTheatert'tte 5 5 2) sips 2, bill! tank w/pump, Buy now! •.. Inspect and S.150. 1300cc $178. Tra.ns. $15
Set. $630.6,,.,.76 wai11n1"2t.;.,,3 ~~~o~ .... ~e"-. J\tust rigged for li.shlng, 1000 drive out., .See bow you & $125. Also Toyota eng.
lK" • """· ~eves Men." 0 /8, $2500. 846-47:!0 can save dollars at Bill parts. lin-1784
(2) McLane Pov.·cr ~lo11·crs. S AIL B 0 AT p 2 8. l\laxey Toyota, 18881 Beach '10 DATSUN 510. Sta. Wgn.,
Sl25 ea. (ll Power Edger Sporto'ng Good• I094 EXCE"ElNT CONOITION Blvd.. Huntington Beach. "D•'-tly a-· !rom the new tires ...i sh•pe 11600
S35. 645-5855. }UR SERIOUS SAil.OH.. 847·8.555. '&iooa Ba';' Club" 642-2913 ' '"u · · · ·
LARGE R 0 T 0 TILLER HUi\'TERS! 12 ga. i;hot ~·=9l-.:.ZI07=·=:.·,.:4::92:.;-88'15.='-----I ritUST Sell, $2300 or bes! Sales e Ser\lice '72 DATSUN '2-IOZ. Perlect
wanted. Reasonably priced. shells, misc. rifle &: pistol w ANTE 0 , ~-ounce oHer, Dune BuU;y, new V\V 645-6406 645-6400 cond . LoaCled! Stick shift
call 493--Z190. ammo., brass cartridge Spinnaker, luff 40', gtrth 25', cng, l900cc, dual port heads A-udi 9707 Orig. owner. 1493-s,111
Exceptl Reg. Appy Brood case s, bulk lead. or 80. Pttf IMue &: v.·hite. lnclds trailer Ir 2'2"· Sand 1973 DATSUN PU, 10
r.tare/ Riding Horse, 5 )'rs. l-"R='":o"'=°'=b'-'le'-. ="=,...w.;..:.:::;_ __ 1 Cruising. ~ ~~~ rims. call Ted, 72 ·Audi 1 OOLS mileage, clean, need to sell!
$1000. 67l-2l9t TV R-~-HIFI S -LEHl'oiAN 12, no. 280, Super ~~~~,..----~='' $2500, 979-2251. IRVINE Const Country Club • -IV, t. race equip, immac, mini Rec Vehlcl11 9530 2 DOOR '73 240Z 4 speed AM FM
membership, $UOO. AKAi, 28()0-SS, 412 channel 1 .c'o;"'cc"="'-''-'21":H>H455'-""-"=·---Full factory equlpmc.nt . ln-slereo, ~Ir. mags. 'Must 'see.
675-4000 . 644-2788 Strroo tape deck. $300. XLNT. Udo 14. No. 1886 BOATS-TRAILERS eluding alr condluon111£. Will trade. 831-3)40 Dir
DRESSER 6 DRAWER S15 968-0740. w/lrlr, 2 sels snils & xtras. RV STORAGE t2l7GJIB~HARPI .
9 Drawer dresser S2S COLOR TV, 21" \Vulnut.1 _,l:::ltl:::9'':::·,;P_:H;;',.:6:,:7::.:l-.::37:;:3::_1~--24 Hour Secvrity F iat 9725
\\'all healer $10. 642-5666 Consolelte, Good piclurc. 15. VENTURE Cat, dacron & In & Out Service $3395
CLASSl!',E'D will sell It! _962-1523 aft 8pm $alls, w/trls. (beautiful) Monthly Rates
pri pty, 979-4!99, 919-l268 Propane Statk..n
MUST .. n Viklog 20· cla"lc COMPLETE RV ~-··-,, ... _,,_, -
STAR G .,.,,.E..,,•"" •ood "bin •loop. Slip. $950. -··~"~-•••••• hW" ~ ... Clill 645-1108. SERVIC& & RE~AIR •11t11111t11aw.c.1. MS·IMI \
i:-:==C..---a>· CLAY~. POLLA;.;N=~~~'~"~"~~-=Jlll~'~A~l~h•~C~at~o~m~a~ra;inC::::::i~·~C~E~N~T~E~R~~S~T~O~R~E~~;~fe~A~ot~m~-~~~~~ 1..,----1~.<JlM.'f"'t--';...,~o~.,-:.,..~.~".'.~"'::::'~~"::.~::'."::;;~;J=:~ ~ 2;' ~~:~~ ~ s;~i;[~ccd • ~~\I}~ ~J, ~j 1) '~Al~il:d~~~~t~nbo~
ot yourZodioc:birthslgr\ 10 move. Extras. Call - ---- --·--· -or tnke over pay. 6% Xtras Hanel•
'""-• J!Pe>-" 61~ 997 ·-::: ~·37-10or.1 J?Gov""' 62T., ~ af1er 6Pf\1 -Santa AM f'rwy at """""'or u; _,.,..
31.... llNow'~ 63 ~~ HOii E Sand Canyon Exit BMW 9712 .,..,.., lolc.... ,........., I 14 (71•) 551·1171 .!IOI J)S...C• 6)l•.. •~ 675-25'13 ~ .,...,.. 36€ot1 661--ORANGE COUNTY'S
1 w._ 37,. 61 "'""'-Ne\\mnrt sllp Included. $2800/ 4 Wheel Drlv11 KSO •You 38 1(-&!,.....,... ..-OLDEST _
•-,.,_ . '"-CAL 20 Ext. No. Ill. '71 JEEP 4· X4
11 .,._.. .. 1 A 7 I Tho!•• O'tOO t2Nfwt •1.,...• 7)T., l:S' Sl..OOP, "'y eqp 'd . Loaded. Yellow & ••bite.
llKW9 •ln.t ll>l""CI ......A d i I• YIM ••Opp, 1• \lo!VI c.utlCOI" o/brd. $4.10. firm. 6.a-0094 llub8, 4 11;,,.,~. ra o ,
VS, automatic. po we r
steering, radio, heater,
extra clean. (284ELA)
$1688 * THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
sn7 * 2060 llarbor Blvd.
DEAN LEWIS THEODORE Co<ta M"• . &12.0010
IMPORTS ROBINS FORD '&I T·Bird, original owner $500. '&I Chrygler "300'. 1966 1-tarbor, C.M. 646-9303 -c 1-· $500. Eve. 673.ll43, Da_va '71 TOYOTA . c 1ca Like 2060 Harbor Blvd. 675-4630
ncy". Low miles, niany Costa Mesa 6t!-0010 -,65=T~.~.~,R-0-.-,-'IJ-ll_po_wc-r,-a-tr-1
~~2 !\-just sell! Offers, '61 FORD Galnxie 500, 2 co nd I Ii on Ing . Good
971 TOY.OTA Co 4 dr dr hardtp. Recent. rebll .390 condition. $595 Call 8l2-lcm.
l ~· . ·• eng, near nev..< tires, $595. y 997' 1:tuto, new bi:k&, tires,. a1r, 644-551S. 91• ,. ~~ ~:mpg. $l275.l,·68=w"'•"'GO°""N~eo~.-n-try~Sed~,-.-,r-.1 SACRIFICE '73 Vega G.T.
~~=· radio, lug. rack, xlnt cond. Loaded. 10,000 miles. Air
Volktw•pn tn0 Orig. ownr. $675. 640--0293 coral., !ape deck. $600 and
'61 VoLKSWAGEN·-·53 FORD WGN, RIH, P/S, aaume payment of $100.00
Automatic stick sh.If!, radio ~an. $265. or oUer. ~ Ji_;;_~lhl. Call 630-lllO
•nd heater. (826GMXJ T 9765 T $1077 oyot a oyot •
DEAN LEWIS
l1'.1J.)()R'l'S
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303
·Gs-sQuAREBACK, 11.mllm--;
nc\v engine 30,IXXl nil ago,
tmmac. $1000 536--0407 ult
'57 VW, $250. or bcsl oiler
Gd transpol1atlon.
847-8679
·n vw-BUS. Jo ml, xlnt
inside, mechanlcally, 110me
dents. $2350. 497-1286
"ltl VW S qu areback,
AN/n.1, tape deck, J"W\$
~-Bl'St ofler. ~6
'67 SQUAlJ,EBAO<,
rcblt eng, It.flt $1000.
546-S358
'67 VW Radio, new tires, xlnt
YOU GET MORE
FOR YOUR MONEY AT
SA~~TA ANA TOYOTA!
. WE GIVE THIS
$14995 VALUE
-.'fACICAGI
WITH IVHY FREE NEWTOTOTA WI SILL
DTPIO TUNI I ALIOfllMNT I
t765
10~ ..0'•-.dl¥ 10._.. oiler. 55~0·~. $
t.s e. ·~1~ 1.s1.ut~ °"'" 4\, or 6T>-.1224 heat~r. llkc.new! (U9Kh.'V)
16 f,,... '6M 16"'"""'°' ' " $3488 """' ., ..... ,.._ n1 ...... __ '""· '' Needs Slip for 35' &llbo3t. 18lr1fll .a1-o1-110-., a.f.IWI 11 ~-rd ~~~
J•9uar 9730 _Jt1nn1ng cond. $750. ,_...________ .... UJlllj
UHDllJIAL e "llMA CM.AU e DOOi
1001 OUAIDI e LO(llC t..U CM' I ANO
I YL ... ICIOOOMIUWAIUHl'I'.
1•"-'tec1 .. ,,,o<t .,,,1;1 J.W6 no \-e aUlRI • "°' . ......., *
200! .SOY..., toNi!NH After 5 pm ... _~~~= 21 You ~1 ~ It 0.f,..,i. . -,,_ ,,.., .,o •. ., Boats, Sllp1/Dock1 9070 THEODORE 2J k16ot: SJ .,,,_ &If....., -· ----· •
l;:t.. !:.'..";;' r,:::::;... IS' """ 11• '" moio boy. ROBINS FORD '6"'-~o.....w-16"'°"' Nt wpo11. Call week day1, ,, y.,,, ,,,..,..,,"'lit ''°"' ...... ,,....,.. 211 .. .,,., ll°""" 1& 11'dlr:otfd .,,;rvv,,., ' :o"-" r-tt~1~la Outdoor "!J"rrs 1081 11 8 • ltlll'bor Blvd. 30 To • toTo 00Mot• Co!iiA rilesa 642.0010 o,,.__. IOI .. ,_ Jf"\.._,1tn 1 • sppul! Se I your llCl'Ul~mcnt '"l;::;:::111,11.1g1::::;.;;-;;;..~:=:,,;," ___ .,,:::;."_'""'-..1~~...::ll<I I with s low-coat 011ily J>tlot Claal!led Adt call 60--5618
-"C~lus::::::l~fled:::.A"d"l-'~:..=..:::71.::.._ •. _t::od~oy::<.:.!--~~~-~
' • ----· I,
1974 BMW's ·11 JAGUAR 'xKE. v.12. ,71 suPERBE_E_T_L_E_1
In stock rtody for lmmedlall' 2+2. Ai r, Au!o , Ai\l/FM, xi t nd call art 5-:l:l 6tllvt'ry. Eictt:ll~nt Mvlng1 xl11t thro-out. 5 5 T -6 I 5 O -" ' '
on rtn111lnln1i 197l models. an.6:30 p.n1. ="""""·~--~--1
SAf,ES.SERVI CE !..f;,\.~l~I(. Mazda 9731 '71 i;qback wR,gon. l..ugga.ge
OVERSF.AS DELIVERY rock, air condllioh, f'JC(.'el.
ROY CARVER, Inc. ·n MA1.DA RX 3 cpc. Au101 cond. 8J t-13t•
llOUS ROYCE Otif\V air, lo 1111. ?ofovlng, n1u::1t •72 VW SUP. BEETI..E. EX,
234 E. 17th st. ~II. Pit: 55T-4000 CEL COND. $.1895 .or besl
Ollla Men e w.+M4 You'll find il In Clns:lflrcl offer. lWG-~185
'
CHICKOUll SAVINGS
IEfORE TOU IUY!
. . ~ ~ -· . \' '. • • • • • ... .. ;,• ~ ''·' ....
,
• ·San · Clemenie . ---· ~Today's Flna----1
•
I
I
. . .. Capistrano EDITION
(), 203, "ECTI@, 4 \l:'GES~--------oR:.tiNGE-e()UN'FY0GAblFORNIA
N.Y. Stoeks.
MONDAY, JULY 22, 1974 TEN CENTS
Mesa Dad ·--------
Saves Girl,
'
• I Loses Life
ki-rmishes -on
Follow Truce
Cypr-a-s -
Deadline
I
l
I
I
'I
J
-
By L. PETER KRIEG
.. Of lie 0111¥ l"Htf lllM •
A Costa Afesa man drowned Sunday
evening near the Newport Pier after
saving his 9-year-old daughter 's lire ~by
telling her to float on her back until
help afrived.
Newport Beach lifeguards said Dennis
McArthur, 28, 0£ 1028 Valencia St., was
swimming with .his daughter, Dorothy,
about 8 p.m .. when they began having
difficulty about 100 yards off shore due
to rlptides and 25-mile-an-hour wind&.
According to the da ug6ter, McArthur
fold her to noat on her back while
he went for help. He never made it.
According to lileguard supervisor
Larry Gibson another swimmer alerted
lifeguards to the fact that two people
were in trouble. Lifeguard John Sutton
swam out and rescued Do~y, but
saw no sign of McArthur. f
Lifeguards promptly called the police
helicopter, which spotted McArthUr's
body about 200 yards offshore. The
helicoj:iter then made two trips to the
lifeguard station and dropped lifeguards
Ken Rouse and Larry Gibson into the
water near li1cArthur while the third
lifeguard, Matt Greer, swam out by
himsel f.
An Orange County Harbor Patrol boat,
summoned by the lifguards, arrived with
lifegtiard Greg Long on board . and
canied McArthur to harbor department
headquarters, where he was transferred
to an ambulance.
Lifeguards attempted resuscitation
thrOugbout the rescue and transportation
ol. the victim, according to Gibson, but
be w·u piofiounced dead on anival at
Hoag Memorial Hospital at 8:50 p.m. -
SENATE 'DOVE' DEAD
Ex·tolon Wayne MorM, 73
Ex-Senate
Do11eMorse
Dies at 73
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Former
Sen. Wayne Morse, one of the first
members qf Coogreas to speak out
against U.S. involvement In Vietnam ,
died today at the age of 73.
Death cut short his second atte1~1pt
at a political comeback since kl6ing
his Senate 9e8t in 1968.
Hospital officials saMi Morse had been
suffering from a urinary tract infection.
They said he died ol kidney and heart
failure.
Morse was ousted by· Republtcan Sen.
U.N. Says
It's Trying
For Accord
By UnJted Pren Intmlltioul
Bitter batUes raged in and a~
Nicosia today long after pawge of a
7·a.m. PDT cease-fire deadline agreed
to by Greek and Turkey. U.N. Secret.ary
General Kurt Waldheim reported a
Turkish air raid on Nicosia an hour
and 15 minutes after the truce deadline.
Radio reports said Turkish planes hit
a hotel in the port of Famagusta, killing
at. least 20 foreign tourists, and UPI
correspondent Michael Keats saMi in a
dispatch from Nocosia that the truce
· deadline came and went with no sign
of any relaxation in the fighting.
Greek National Guard units, refnforced
by troops from 11 Greek plane3 which
slipped into etnbatUed Nicosia during
the night, kept up a steady pounding
of the corridor, Keats said. Turkish
troopa ¥.'ere attempting to drive to the
capital from the Kyrenia area where
they landed reinforcemeru by air and
sea today. • Ii. United Nations cmnmand spoi:emlan
in Nicosia said no official orders en ·
• ceaoe-flre had. 11een received a• yet Bruh . Fire Controlled
,,
•
~-...
·1 Dorothy and McArlhur's two younger
children, who -had waited on the beach,
were taken home by a police officer.
Bob Packwood in a cklee contest. Four
years later, Mor1e, then 71, was beaten
~y__ in a race agaii}tt ~..__MM:k
0. Hatfield IR-Ore.).
Two montba aao. Mol'8e again '\\'00
the Detuo~::ratk: 11n1tortal DOlftlnatlon -w-the right to chan,.._ Plctwood
and that "We will contmut domg whit
we have been trying to do all along,. ·
to t.ve the Oreei: ad Tmtilb
C8111'111ltmitim obltl'we tbe 1alt ceaae-fire," he said. _
A fa&t·mo'(ipg bntsh Ii~, ..,.rtedly ca~ by ·boys
pla)'lli«.witb matches, .burned.about 40 acres of San
Juln1Capistrano'1 easterijr hillS Sunday afternoon.
Bulldozers, aerial ~kers and ground crews 'batUed
the flames near San Juan Hills Country Club. A
lucky, wind shift kept it from mo vi ng into open
17 hills toward Ortega Highway. ·
-by deleatin( lllale Senafe President.
Ja90rt Boe, ff, in Oregon's primary
election.
"We wfJI teep 1111 trying." County Boy, 14,
Hero for Saving
Three From Surf
GEARHART, Ore. (UPI) -Jeff
Mone, known for his unpopular views
and 1.11willingness to compromUe on
issues, was one or the first members
of Congress to oppose U.S. involvement
in Vietnam.
l:le and former Sen. Ernest Gruening
(D-Alaska). who died last month at
the age of lr1, were the only two senators
who voted against the Tonkin Gulf
resolution in 1964. President Lyndon E.
Jobn9on used the measure as a functional
declaration of war in Southeast Asia.
Waldheim said MB). Geo. D. Pmn
Chand ol India, commander ol the U.N.
peace keeping force in Cyprus., and Luis
Wcclunan-Muooz tJ. Mexico, the
secretary geoeral's persona) repreeema~
Ii ve in Cyprus, repcined lh.al fighting also
was going Oil in other part! of the
Mediterranean Island.
At 7 a.m., .KeatS said: Greet artillery
units near NiC'Olia airport pumped a
ceaaeless barrage into Turkish positlms
down the JS-mile road from Kyrenia
to the capital.
Anotlier Perjury
Count Against
Reinecke Nixed
Nixo11, Lawyer St. Oair
Confer in San Cleme11te
Burget, 14, ol Villa Park, Calif., swam
I
1 300 yards jnto the Pacific Ocean surf.
~ ~ to rucue three 10..year..olds.
"This lad did a heroic thing and I'm
WASHING TON CAP) -One ol the
two perjury coonts against ·California
U. Gov. Ed Reinecke was dismissed
today by U~S'. District Court Judge
Barrington D; Parker.
By HELEN mo~IAS
UP'I Wiii• N1i11M •-11r
going to recommend him for any
lifesaving award I can,". Pollce Otlef
ILill Eddy said. "I'm convinced he saved one life and possibly all three."
Burget and his CO!Jsln, Charlie Shea,
4, of San Jose, were digging on the
bead! near the mouth of the Necanicum
ruver when they heard screams from lhe ... ...----
Morse's age was a major campaign
issue during the lttay primary, but he
cou ntered by saying that many great
U.S. senalors had performed the~ beot
serV:ioe arter they wefe 70 years old.
But, be added, "I think ev~body
reallies that it isn't lo be ixpected
that I would run for re-election· In 1980."
Being a one term senator would not
be-a-liability-for Oregon, said Mone.-
who already bad served 2t yean in
the Senate.
United Natioo.s troops, working 12
hours on and 12 bOurs off "If we are
lucky," dug new machine gun positions
at Blueberry camp, their military police
Unit base camp.
Finnish Lt. Lettala Teuro, %7, <A.
(See CYPRUS, P•1e Z)
AD BRINGS MORE
But Parker denied a defense motion
to grant a judgment of acquittal on
a second COWlt as the defense prepared
to begin .its case today. ,
~ coon! dismil!sed at lhe request
of defen_,e attorney James E. Cox alleged
~hat-Relnecke-teatili«l_Lalsely lo (he
Senate-Judiciary Comnil~
ago when he said he had . no way of
President Nixon, pledging to withstand
the "very grave assault" en his conduct
of" the presidency, was to confer today
\11ilh his chief defense lawyer on anti·
impeachment strategy.
Nixon planned his first face--lo-face
nieeting in 10 days with James D. St.
Clair, who argued Nixon's case before
the House Judiciary Committee. The
imP:_achmenf panel is beginning-what
may be its--:-iast weelr,"with debate on--
arlicles of i mpeachment scheduled to
begin Wednesday.
While-Shea ran 'half a ..mile to the
nearest house for help, Burget plunged
into the water, swam out about 300
yards and brought back Rodney Allen
of Portland. Then he went out again
• AND MORE CALLS -knowing whether former Atty. Gen. John
1 j and brought back Toni Heinnings of
Portland and Cindy Rasmussen tJ. Castle
Rock, Wash. 1 ...
Morse, cnce a Republican himself,
switched to independent in 1952 when
he and party leaders agreed he was
too liberal for the GOP. Three years
later, he became a Democrat and was
"Yes. the apartment was rented. And, H.. M~tchell knew Of a financial
to a Daily Pilat reader, too. commitment by a subsMiiary of
"We had more calls than we CO!Jld International Tele~ & Telegraph
handle. I think I was asking too little," Copr. to the 1972 Republican National
Nixqn planned to see St. Clair in
the morning, and St. Clair was expected
to give the President a complete
rundown on his chances of defeating
Impeachment. The two girls were examined at a
Sle8Side hospital and released but Rodney
was held overnight In the h>spital.
-rHlected in 1956. the happy Westmmster I and Io rd Convention prior to July 31, 1971 .
OO!erved. Se~. Edward K~y (0.Masa. ), a
Here's the ad which started his phone member of the Judiciary Gommittee,
ringing: asked Reinecke about M I t c he 11 ' s
st. Clair told reporters Sunday he
nhasn't a clue" when the Supreme Court
will n.ik! on Nixon 's defiance of a
(See NIXON, P1ge Z)
"They were out way too far," said
Burget, who does not have a,. lifesaving
certificate, "But I had to help as no
;
'1 one el!e was around." -Lifeguards are on duty on aome Oregon
cout beaches but not In the area where
the children were.
His detractors claimed that Morse.
who earned the nickname "Tiger of
the Senate ," was too cantankero\LS and
too much of a loner to accomplish
anything for Oregon in a single six·year
term.
In 1944, when Morse first ran for
the Senate, his campaign slogan was
"~pie above Politics.'' 'Three
decades later the slogan was buicolly
the same: "I shall work and fight foe
the restoration of integrity in our own
government."
$234. mo + $100. securitv.
z BR & den, 1 bo . newly
painted. dble ~r. lmmed.
occupancy. Refs., XXX· xxxx.
koowk!dge cf the ITr pledge .while the
panel" was considering the nomination
otrudt1rd G. J<leimienst to be attorney
general.
"The qUest.;on is put ·aomewhat
ambiguously," the judge. &aid of
Kennedy's queation.
Secret Service
Swar1ns 011 Boy,
Drives H ini Home ,I
I•
110,000 Relax
On Coast Beaches
'nae 11111 of a Wisconsin firmer, Mon
was born in Madi90l'I on Oct. 20, 1900.
• (See MORSE, Pa1e Z)
We can't tell yoo how much lo ask,
but we can promJX renters to ring
your chimes. Ring ours at 642-M78
and let a Deily Pilot ad work for you.
Cox bad argued that Kennedy's
ciuest.1on. apeclf1C.alty called fot an
impression. ,
"It was vague and uncertain and that
(See REINECKE, Pip !)
Coincidence and lhe U.S. Secret
Ideal sunner bead! conditions p · Ii G _ _. SL~-· F Service cauRtit up with a San Clemente
prevailed along !be South Coast over 0 ce, UGrnS •SV"Rl orce youngster Sunday night as he beaded
the weekend as an estlm1ted 110,000 on loot to hl.s tmCle's house next door'
pen!Cll1S Wen! lo lhe beach from South _A._fifi-s £ ch A. -to (he W ... ern White HouS<. -.--~u~re"'gu._a;,n1a'>fl'"'",.ci1c1""""pl<Man(~~;-.,,w-a-;1..,·-=,---Lj:IUU 11. r. T.CrS D OW J:U.1ge ... r ..... __ -;had:r.Pol;..:~~m~e::~ ~th~:s w~:i:s g:1~~
I temperatures lured most of the hi m a lift""l.Otl'iel!tJtra:nce-to-""---belChgoers and 50 rescueS were logged VJt" u"
I
j
in moderate surf. Shores at about the same time President
Slight. concentralloos of red tide -About 400 surf en in Newport Beach year with lOS,000 people and surfboards A roundup by the police helicopter, N"u:on was arriving by helicopter from
accumulations of planldf~L....~ .the sea , became unruly Sunday morning and a presented a safety hazard,.. Loe. kabey a lifeguard boat and two Harbor Patrol the Bel Air party thrown by his budget water -were noted of 311111 e m some boats plm individual lifeguards brought di display ol l«ce by police, llfeguanla said. ~• -·J ho .11 redor. 8J'NS. in the n:vcuk>ul aw ler"S W were SU 1be youth was can-ying a walkie-talkie. Harbor patrolmen at Dana Point aid and 1he Orange County Harbor Pl"'°' He explained that surfers were also in the water. And that was all it took to prompt
the "mlrlna was jam.med both days. was required. to prevent the dlltwt..D cauanc I problem by surfing around "We gave a Jot of citations but I a hurried visit by agents protcting
but other than routine bolt ton and from enrptinc into a full ICl1t rtot, 18th Street, which is off limits to surfers. don't know the ex.act number," Lockabey President Nlxoo.
catamaran capslzinp, 1he weekend was authorities said. The surfing area begins at 19th Street said .. "We ~ 1 _problem like this in Adding to the mudd1e was a .22-caliber
''ODeventful." There were no &m11ls but nmnerous and ext.end!! westward. WHl Ndport 1 mcwith or IO ago but bullet the youth had In his pocket.
Witnesses Gather
OAKLA ND (UPI) -About 49,000
persons were on hand Sunday for the
final day or the Jehovah's Witnesses
convenlion that drew delegates from
Northern cautomla \Ind Nevada.
~.
•
citatiON were given. "A lot cf tbe surfers stayed in the . l.bb wu mudl worse." iPolict sald that interviews established
Trouble began ab<Klt 10:30 1.m. when water and refused to obey our oommandl tknifever, tbe troutile between surfers that the boy and his uncle have a
lifeguards had to cloee the beach around to come in," Lockabey said. "We called and 1uthoritie1 didn't end wttb Sunday habit of using walkie·talkies to
19th Street to surfers during normal ln the .police and the Harbor Patrol." momlng'a ne..:not:"' commwtlcate. .. -
surfing hours because of the unusually "At that point a number of surfers "1bat evening the police told us they'd The teenager insisted he did not know
large number of swimmers, according who were on the beach began chanting heard rumors that surlers v.·ere going thai the President was arriving at the
to Lt. Logan Lock:abCy o[ the Merine and throwing sand but were fin1lly to bum IOme ot out lifeguard t.owe~. time.
Safety Department. ~lspe.rsed by three lifeguard jeeps and 'IO u.e, beglll petrolllna th e m , ' ' Age.fits were convinced and they gave
"We hid oor biggest crowd or t~ three police cars.'1 l«kabef uJd.. the )'OUnlSter a. lift home.
J r . J. '
VP'IT .......
CONFERS WITH PRESIDENT
Attorney St. Clair
Orange Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy at times Tuesday
but othe™'ise mostJy swmy skies,
Not-mueh-temperature-chao&
Beach highs in the low 70s risin:'.'.g--t-,-----1
to the mid.OOS inland,
Fe1n i11ist Betty t'riedmi says
tile womert's 1novement is get-
ri11g to n1e1t. She says males stop
her Otl the slreet to teU her how
the movement has changed Clieir
lives. See story, Page 17, '
INSIDE TODAY
At Yevr Stf"l'kt l Allll L ....... 1 IJ
.. 111119 11 MOMY T.... II
L. M. 11~• 1 M1.n.t ti
C1Hftrft11 S Natl-I ,.__ 4
CltHlllM ... n Or•-C11111rr ,,
C1mlc1 U ""'" U•H Cnnww.t II s-tt ,.,
Dtlllt Ntlkff U Stoel! M11'111" 1 .. 11
E11ltrtllllmtnl It Ttlt¥11111n 1i P'lnll!Ct 1 .. 11 W111Mr I
"tnK-14 WOfl• NIWI I
'
-•
1
2 DAILV rlLDT SC Mondlt, Juty 2.2, 197'4
-
--
·--·-
te
NIXON.... s . · ..
subpoena for Whit• House tapes •nd • treet . Clos1· ng documents 1011ght by lhe s p e c i a I ,
Wateraate prosecutor. The Preaideat ba1
ttfu.Nd to 11y bow be wlll respond
to an 1dverte ruling . s ' k I! t et e
'Ibe Prealdent was among old friends, par S e I IOll Callfomts's elite bUslne1Smen , Sunday -
night whtn he attended a dinner party -\ -
In his honor at the fashionabl e Bel l I
lf OOm r Blfd'get DlriR:'tofm\ 'Ii•'"'. -'--..,IP«itions count.er;petltion are r-home, ..... ehe-sai . 1 ahouldn'tkbe·---1
The convivial setting with Jong-time being circulated ln two Juan closed without a good reason." -
political supporters and b ea v y ca...i,._._ A! p contributors gave Nla:on a chanc:e to l"'"W ....... netghboriM>oda: where a' fi&ht · rs. arker said she beHevea: the
• reaffirm his intention to rtmaln In office. b brewing over 'a street c::loalng. reque~t stems from a deJire to keep
-.. ~, am often ailia, 'How-dir"you Resident1~of the Cultaa development-~~ t~·o~~hbor~s separate .
. re11ly take the burden of the Presidency, have petltloned the city to close Calle 1~ra~r ~ice people live here ," she
particularly y,·hen at times it seems Resplendor at the point where it joins ~t · We re not a sh.un area, and
th I Ir 1 never wlll be "
to be wider very, \'Cry grave assault ?' Ho'!... act lo the Westport ~arden Other P. roble~s to be dis-·· .. ,.., at
Let me say it Isn't new for us lo -........ th '"~ be under assault, because sincf! the According to City Manager Donald e. meeting include traffic on Loa
time I came into office, for five year.s, G. Weidner, the Caaitu residents beJJeve ~a!dros, a street that leads from the
•-h d bl the w~~ •-· 1opm a en Homes into the c a a a 1 we nave a pro ems. ~ • ~e ent generates too d I 1 4'Tbere have been people marching much tra!fic throgh their area ev~,opmen • pool _ problems in lbe
around the White House when we were ~ -atreet cloaure rtquesi-;-slope aSlt_as IU'_ea, _andJoose dogs.
trying to brlhg the ,(\'ietnam) war to mamt.enance and other grievancts will
an end, and we have withstood that be aired at a city-eponsored meeting
and we will withstand the problems of the homeowners' .uaociallona of the
of the future. Casitas, Garden HOm~, and Casas
"People wonder," he added, "how does Wedne9d'ay at 7:30 p.m. In councU
any individual these days, when we chambers.
have very high-pressure campaigns In Residents of Garden Homes are also
tbe media to ·take on public figures, signing petitions, but thelr petitions ask
how does any individual take it how the city to keep the street open.
does he survive It, how does he' keep "I think It would be a terrilile thing
bis composure, his strength and the to cloee the strttl," said Mn. Al Parker, rest." wife of the homeowners' association
Nixon said he has been able to survive president fo r the Garden Homes. "We
Oran ge County's 1 •
1974 Fair Sets .. ' ,, '
Attendance Mark
. ' '
Joint Effort Entry the Watergate onslaught and maintain need the street open In case of lire,
his cOmposure because "I have a strong for children who wait to the bus stop
family and I am very proud of it; and foc convenience.
The 1911 Orange County Fair, with
a t~I attendance of 213,244, set an
all-time record.
Attendance zoomed by more than 4,000
over last year which up lo then had
been the most ~ul fair since the
event started in 1890.
F1oat sponsored by joint service clubs in San
Clemente heads along parade route in Fiesta La
Christian.ita Parade. Entry placed second in civic
floats category. \Vinner was Bicentennial Commit·
tee's entry; third-place winner was float carrying
new fl.-Ji.st' San Clemente and court Thousands of
bystanders viewed Saturday morning parade, high-
light of week-long festival commemorating first
Christian baptism in California.
I have a lot of good friends who write Mrs. Parker said people in the
and call and say 'We're sticking by Westport tract hope the city won't agree
you.' to the Casi.las request.
"I assure you no man in public life "The strett was there when we bought
has ever had a more loyal group of
friends who stood by in g~ and tough
days. .. " ~
. GOP Counsel Quizzing f'rem P .. e J
MORSE •••
Nixon was exhilarated during the
even!ng by the meQ;ages he was
receiving by te lephone from Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger i n
Washington, who Informed him that a
cease fire was imminent in Cyprus.
5 San Diego
l 1i'niates F"lee
Fair organizers had hoped to crack
the 250,000 barrier this year. 1bey
blamed extremely hot weiilher during
two days-Of the lo-<lay eYent for not
reaching that goal.
The threat of a major raimtonn
Frklay in Costa Mesa also had an effect
on the people count, according to Marvin ·
Bryan, a spokesman for the fair.
Panel on Public Interest He earned AB and MA degrees from
the University of Wisconsin, a law degree
from the University of Minnesota and
a doctor of jurisprudence degree at
Columbia University.
Among the guests was J a m e s
Roosevelt of Newport Beach, son of
the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
who sai~ he was a Nixon supporter.
Roosevelt declined to t:0m..ment oo im-
peaclunent prooeedings, but said: "If I
had to make the same choice as I l*1 to
make in 1972, I'd make it again."
WASlflNGTON (UPI) Sam
Garri.900, newly installed ch i e t·
Republican counsel for the House
Judiciary Committee, told the panel
today it must consider "whether the
public interest will be served or
d.isserved by removal of the President
fron\ office."
Garrison told reporters as he entered
the closed committee session thal his
~miuute "balanced summary" o f
evidenq would be a description of the
WAS NIXON PREPARED
TO DEFY COURT? PAGE 4 -role of polilics with a capital 'p' in
the impeachment process."
-If is "not-a narrow question of what
the President did on a particular date
or whether there was comp1icity in a
crime," GarrilOD, "but whether the
public interest will be served or
disserved by removal of the President
from office."
Garrison was informally installed to
represent the Republican side in the
inquiry into possible impeachment of
President Nixon to replace Albert E.
Jenner because JeMer "seems to have
forgotten who his client is in this case,"
according to two committee Republicans.
Some Republicans felt Jenner deserted
Oemente Eatery
Sued for Damage
_ A patron ll.'ho claims he suffered
serious injuries to his mouth and head
when he bit into food containing "hard,
foreign particl e•" sued the operators
of a San Clemente restaurant Friday
for $3.10,000.
James Anthony Giordano states in his
Orange County Superior Court actl<>n
that he was served the allegedly
contaminated food at Howard Johnsons
Motor Lodge on July 29. 1973.
He further claims that he has required
sub&tantial medical attention as a result
<t the incident. ·
O&AMMCOAST
DAILY PILOT
1,.. o..r.oe Coo•, o.,.,. Nl:l4. '*"" ""*". -bi...itr.tH~'" .,.__ O,.W.. Or1-
eo.l l'vtlrlfllfto eo..-r.., S.0..111 --.,.
Do.1111111>9<1. lol<l<M:t1r '"'Clu'1~ rndlr. "" Coll•
"-. -8"th, Huf'J1<111111r1 flltdtlf-
1-V1lln, ll{I,,.,. 91K1\ 1,...111161-•M
Sin 0.-"ltl!IMI Mn Clp.•n-"' tii'O'I
•f9'0"tl ttiloen '' PJbi,._ &ton.yo •'Id s..n-
.,." ll'>t'pnncfOI! ~"II~,.., uow111
lll)'SltMI. Coi!I "'9M. Cliolamo1, IH1'.
Rot;,,rt N. V.'eed
1'111•-Incl,.. ... ._,,.,
-l~l(-..;i ·-Hcimct1 ~ Mitpl-"fl
""'11Qona l<Nor
OICll!nH.Loc~ R_.dood p_Ncj
A..,.ltril MMlo'l'!I C4'11:Sl
s .. c....,..Offfc,
~ r q,ti ~ Camno Reoi
Oflllr Offkt• Ccot.1,j.W. »Ol'f ..... ,e:!fwl w.-....,, 1lll •-16'.1-•-.wo "'"""'""°" ..... ~ l71111tlV!lbH~d lft\1'11 .. ~ t1t '°""" ... _
T ...... 17141641·4l21
C"'4'fitcl ~ ••2·S•7t s.. c ............. Dt,.m,...t.:
,...,.......,J.4410
~ ,., •. °''"'"Gott!~~ '*'' "'°-·-'"""'"-.. ~ .... ,. IW H"9fl•-MI ,..,, ... , M r~ Mn'IOoll-ltl--•~"'1-.
8-111 tltll pMI• -.i Cool• l,j..-, (;eH!Of'o flll luDKl•~~,dl"l'IJllO/Mrll!'W, tf ... ~
.... '~"'f,"'~"-Ydt'lh"tl-')00~ . -
them by endorsing s~ng arguments
Friday by the chief commiltee counsel,
John ).f. Doar for a recommendation
for Nixon's impeachment.
Doar said he felt the evidence laid
out by the committee ataff for the
members provided a foundation under
which "reasonable men a c t in g
reasonably would find the ac<:used guilty
of the crime as charged."
Doar said he concluded that Nixon
decided soon _after ~~atergate
burglary in 197'2 on a policy "to cover
this up • • • and he's been in charge of the cover-up from that day forward."
On June 18, 1924, he married Mildred
Downie of J.fadisoa, who mhe bad known since his grade school days and always
called "Midge." She was a home econ-
omic teacher. They had three children,
Nancy, Judith and Amy.
Morse taught at Wisconsin, Minnesota
and boiumbia, then moved to Oregon
in 19Z9 and became dean <t the
University of Oregon Law School at tbe
8R of 31.
* * * President Thanks
El Toro Marine
For His Service
Morse 's lifelong b:lbby was n.IJing
and_ !llolting ~. He raised bones
and cattle on a l"Arm in Monfgomery
County, Md. while serving In the Senate
and Jived on a ranch near Eu~ne.
Following Doar's presentation Friday, Ore. unlil his death. Before President. Nixm left by
helicopter Sunday for a party In Los
Angeles, be thanked a Marine who has
worked since 1969 in a special unit
1hat Watcfiei Ovef"'"""residenUal takeoffs
and landings at the E'J Toro Marine
Q)rps air station.
Jenner told the ~mittee, "I join with His hobby had political repertJWlom
him in all the remarks he has made," however. In 1959, Morse became involved
and said that "w ere there Js secrecy -1,,----a feud -wilh-Claire-Boothe-Luce,
and concealment, you must draw whMe confirmation as an ambassador
inferences." to Brazil he had foug ht unsuccessfully.
Jenner added: "You don't have -"l\-fy difficulties, of course. go some Gunnery Sgt. Gerald Gotchie, 34, who
is being 1.ransferred to Japan, said, "the
Preaident thanked me for serving him
and said he thought I would ~n}oy his
hand. I was really nervous about meeting
you can't find the man ••• with hi!t years back and began when Sen. Wayne
hand in the cookie jar when you open Morse was ticked in the bead by a
the door suddenly, but you can see horse," said Mrs. Lu~.
the pieces of the cookie, the crumbs, In 1951, & mare named Missie broke
perhaps off in the comer of lbe room Morse's jaw during a horse show at
when you suddenly open that door." Orkney Springs Va. h. " un.
After all tbe arguments are heard,. . Funeral arrangements for Morse were
the committee later this week will start mcomplete.
Gotchie is one of seven Marines at
El Toro who worked in the presidential
crash, f1re and rescue unlt. debating articles of im~achm~t.
FrotnP8ffeJ
REINECKE ••.
question called for an impression,'' Cox
argued.
The one remaining count against
Reinecke accuses him of lying to the
committee about when he first discussed
the convention site with Mitchell.
Reinecke told the committee that he
first discussed San Diego as a site
of the convention in September, 1971
-afler an out-0f-court settlement of
an IIT antitrust case.
But the prosecution cont.ends that
Reinecke discussed the convention with
~1itchell in a telephone call on May
2L 1971. before the rrr case wM settled.
The J'JT case was resolved out of court
in July 1971.
Parker said lhe remaining count had
enough merit so that a jury should
decide on it. The judge's ruling on
the l'A'o oounts WM made before the
jury entered the courthouse.
Several weeks ,ago ~ s pecial
prosecutor's office dropped another
perjury count against Reinecke, saying
it would ·ha\·e been necessary to call
former White llouse aide H.R. Haldeman
as a witness if the charge were pre51!1ed.
H<lldcman is slated to go on trial Sept.
9 in the Watergate cover-up case.
That count alleged that Reinecke lied
to the ludlciary Commlllee when .he
said he first di,t;cw;sed the pO!l!libilit:Y
of bringing the 1972 Republ ica n
convention Lo San Dlego in April , 1971 .
Reinecke t<Md the Judiciary Committee
that on that date he was in Washington
and attended a social recepUon 10
promote economic develop!Jlent in his
state. "ind we discussed the _pol!.Sibillty
at fha! point and that was where the
idea Y.'as really hatched."
The .. charge remaining a g a I n s t
Reinecke carries a maximum penaJty or five years in prlson and a fine of
12.000.
Life Begins a l 20
MANILA IUPll -Amporo Muno:,
20, of Spain today began her year's
rtlgn ::i,s f\flss Univenc, a title th•t
brought her $10,000 cash, a $10,000
J>C®nal <l(>r!Carance contract and tM
use of a resort Isla nd for a year. ,
Arthur. L. Sloan
'
Succumbs at 65
ArUwr L. Sloan, a San Clemente
resident since 1932, died (Sunday in
San Clemente. He wu 85.
1ifr. Sloan, a cook at the Coffee Hut
resturant in San aemente, Jived at
107 E. Mariposa.
He leaves. a brother, Jamee· E. Sloan
of San Clemente.
Servics will be held Wednesday at
11 a.m. in Lemeski Mortuary Chapel
with the Rev. William Davenport of
Capistrano Valley Baptist C h u·r ch
officiating.
Burial will follow irl El Toro
Cemetery.
Boat Kills Sw immer
PINE FLAT RESERVOIR (UPI)
Donald Ray Arnold, 28, Visalia, waa
killed this weekend when he wu atruck
by a speedboat while swimming. Fresno
County coroner's officials said Arnold
had Jert his own boat for a swim
Saturday when he was nm over by
a 17-foot power boat driven by Jimmy
Tyler of Orosi.
"I hate to even think about it, but
if the l'n!6ident's helicopta-crashes, wo
are trained to put the fire out and res-
cue th?se aboerd." he said. "We are
trained in everything a clvtlian fireman ·
learns."
Gotdtie said he had 14 ~ of train--
ing before being assigned to the unit.
From P8ffe J
CYPRUS .••
Helsinki. returned from bringing a
wounded comrade to the U.N, base at
Tziklos. He sajd Turkish troops there
were withstanding a rain of artillery
and mortar shells from Greek units In
NIC06ia.
In the capital itself patrol units of
the Greek National Guard, in vehicles
disguised with foliage, moved up and
do,.11 the streets. Others turned out
oo motorcycles. Two pedaled bicycles,
rifles slung from their shoulders.
Ankara radio said an Athens coup
overthrew the Greek government today
but the Greek Embassy in Washington
said the report was totally unfounded.
UPI correspondent John Rlgoo reported
from Athens that I.he Gree.k military
junta remained in power and the clty
• was nonnal.
·1 Count Du111ped
Elirli cl111ian Verdict Reve rsed
W ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell
today threw out the conviction of John D. EhrUchman on one of
three perjury counts against him.
Gesell, in a brief order and accompanying memorandum, said
tb1 t lbe statute under which Ehrlichm1.n_ was charged and conVicted
-a fe0eral law against lying to the FBI -"was not properly in·
voked In this case.11
He ordered the guilty verdict set aside and a "verdict of acquit·
tal set In its place." ·
Ehrlichman·was convicted 10 days ago or perjury and one cou nt
of violating the civil rights of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist, Dr.
Lewis F. Flelding, growing out of the breakln of Fielding's ol!lce
~1n1 . .
The jury found Ebrllchman Innocent of a fourth perjury count.
'The perjury count. Which Gesell threw out carried a maximum
·penalty o! rive years In prison and a line or $10,000.
.
t
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The escape
of live more federaJ prisoners from
the City Jail was disclosed today
as a · search began along the
Mexican border and in Southern
California.
It was the jail's third break
in .seven mor¥.hs and brought the
total number of escapes to 33.
Most or those fugitlves have been
recaptured.
The five used ._, smuggled
_ hacksaw to cut '°" bars Sunday
night in a cellb1~~"'1n which Ibey were housed ~ 42 o th e r
priaoners, then !!fa.shed 1 window
on a stairway lea&ng to the roof.
'Ivy' Heading
For Ho1ig Kong
HONG KONG (UPI) -Tropica l afAlmt
Ivy headed toward Hong Kong today
after blowiog down hooses and public
buildlngs, detlroying crops a n d
triggering landslides in a destructive
sweep at:t'OSS the rice-rich provinces in
the mab1 iPhiltppine Island ol LuUJO .
The Royal Observatory issued a
tropical cyclone warning and said
present lndlcatlons sh>wed Ivy v.·ould
pass about 100.150 miles southftst of
Hong Koog aom<tlme today.
Reports from police, Philippine Nation·
al Red Q-oss and ille dUcial Philippine
news agency said six persom were
killed and Jl others injured.
'
Bryan said the highest ooe-day count .; .
for the 84-year~Id fair was Swxlay,~r
~uly 14, when a total of 27,298 people .
came through the tumsllles.
Jlow the fair fared in terms of ~:;.t ~·--I
will DOr6e wn or severil ;ys.
Mrs. Dorwan
Succmllhs at 90
Mrs. Alma Blomkvlst Dorwan, a
resident of the South Coast for the
past nine years, died Saturday at a
oonvaie9Cellt hMpital in Capistrano •.
Beach. 1be resident ol 33M>2 Diana Driw
Dana-POint; -was 90. '
Mrs. Dotwan leaves a nephew, Ralph
Lars:>n of West Covina , and a niece, '
Edna Sime of Abenleen, S.D.
Private emtombment is scheduled at
t.-1elrose Abbey in Anaheim. Lesneski
l\-fortuary is in charge of arrangements. -----~ -___.
• Museun1 of Art '.f aps !
' Three New Directors
The Laguna Beach Mu.sewn of Art
has selected three persons as members
o{ the Acquisition Committee t 0
determine value of donated art works'
and review the memorial collection,
upgrading and adding to It.
Memben are Mrs. Nick B. Willlamt
of Laguna Beach and Leslie L. Johnlon.
and Edward Behme o( Laguna Hills •.
Museum director Thomas Enman is an
ex officio member.
· Knot "11 a Dam Site
A group of tourists converges al the top of the Grand Coulee Dam
in 'Vashlngton aa pa.rt of the Bureau of Reclamation's visltor.pr_o--
gram durl.ng the Expo '74 period. Co nducted tours are being routed
from the pumping plant to a point where visi tors can View the
thundering tall or water over the spillway.
)
I
I
1i
onday's
Cloeing Pricee
\
' .. . . . . ' ' • 1 ·-~
Mond11, J,ly 22,._1_"1_4 ____ __,::SC::__;O:..Al::L:..Y...:P.::ll:.:O_T-"-J
•
NEW YORK STQCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Low s
Appear Every Saturday . ..
Market 'Drifts,
Slight-Gain Ha
A•erfea11
l 0 llfo•t Aeth'e
I • •
(
•
I
I
' ,_ -.----
•
DAILY PILOT MO!lday, July 22, 1974
Irvine ltl an RAB Bin J---j---i.Llal.'tl<lld_h.s --!,L-l[~IC"--'-I~F--a.aceS-Space Shor_tage
Elseivltere • · F-ac7!s"liuw -+-=~~iN'SU°RANc'~e--·1
~ 1914 HartMr .........
NEWTOWN. O>nn. tUPJ) By 0t ~U~11:!~HE cutbacks in many elementarl' be crw·ded to an intolerable hopes to get plarutlng fuods TJ•eft Trr.a'l 'lb C~!lA_55M54n_•,_&.· .
-Funeral ser.ices \\ill be schools throughout the sta te. extent during the late 10!5 and for new biological science and 11 · -
held Tuesdav for frt"derlck UC Irvine will face ·a·s;po~--;;;;;--;;;:;;;:;;--::-;;--.,'°""-1hn>'" bQut the 80s," be said..:--line arta '!dings. :li~~~~~~~~~f--1 H. RURll, 8. fom'lt"r Mi19f short ~e fOf' the rest of thi.;; BUT nrrcu said t e The Irvine crunpus opooed U om r o:>tte-ge-"Dt-SANTA ANA -An lrvine
with the Bridgeport Post v•ho dee~ and into the 1980s 9jectlons are \VTOng and the in 1965 "ilh an enrollmenl hfeclicine s $43 million set man has been ordered to face died Saturday nl the nge of the ne. San Diego, Santa Cruz tria l today in Or :in 111:! LEASE A '74 DATSUN
73 in nearby Danbury unless campus building or 1,528. Including medical aside for It building progran1, County Superior Court 00 710 2 dr. '19u ,._
llospilal. progra l is speeded up, UC santa Barbara campuses stu~ts, added to theca1npus but-the ru do not apply charges that he was Involved "1••••·0 .u.
Russell, a nath·~ of l]'tsident Cllarles Hitch has in particuJar v.•ill rxinUnue to in 1967, enrolhnent no1v tot <ils to construction of facilities for in the theft of a Newport. COSTA MIU DATSUN.-
I. 'y · h grow Beach "'*' I I , Zt41 HAllOl ILVD,.C.M. Bur J~gton. t.. JOi~ I e told universil~egents. . 8,050. the general campus. on•llGE COUNTY ,...ys can s car that 140-t4 IO
a ir.u:e CO» ~w campµi.-is•.ooe.-,.,"·o\.! \\'e took a harder aOd Despite the steady gii:>wth ~Cal iJornia-wid_e_ Mn was destroyed by fire In the l;~~~~~~~~~~~--1 editor and became television. ·-tter-look it 'enrollment --\ TUrlle Rock area .
radio and theat er editor and of four which \\'ill face projections. It looks like v.-e'll of the crimpus:-tlC SC!tlio enrollment projectioos do not "--------""" Judge Everett W. Dickey set
\\'?'Ole a \\'etkly eolumn 00 overcro1\1ling unless n1 ore be on a platt>au in the 1980s architect Ray ~,landers snid, accurately reflect Ule probable the trlal date after Elbert L. THE
the Bridgeport arts scene. laboratories and cJllSSrooms insead of ha\1ing a dip," he the only currently budgeted gro\\'th C>f UCI, llitcb said. system's three 1arge 8 t F\o\ve?-s, 19, ·of 191~2 Sierra Nc~.!.~~,!_~OC,!!,~Y
. Before joining the Post are built. Hitch said at .the siid._ eµimcd_aLcamtructioo. ,-==c::--,,--.,.,,, Maris Rnad, Irvine, pleaded """" .iue~tteR" -----'°R~ussel\ had \\'Orkcd for the regents·-JU!r meeting in San Enrollment a.t the Irvine of general can1pus learning WIULE THE number ol pustSJ Betkeley, k-o s-innocCOflOCiiarges of gran -~~=-c=-~...-.u::;-
Knickerbocker p r es 5 in . Francisco. campus, ,he pn>jected, v.""OU\d facilities is $35,000 earnIBrked high school ,graduates Angeles and Davis are tither Lhf1ft and \'ehlc\e theft. "-••I c ..... ,,..,. ,.,....,.
Albany. N.Y .. the Pilot of rise modcrate\'y during the f()(' prelhninary plans for a througOOut the state is .at or near their enrollment It Is allefted that Flowers 24 How Senko . 714·•••·74JI
BrunS\\'ick. Ga.. and the Pre\riouS projections ha\'e I9i0s. le,·el out in the next 750-seat lecture hall. expected to decline, he said, limits.· "'as in\'01\•ed in the theft of al'============'
Telegram or \\'orcester, f\lass. indicated tha1 enrollmt'nt in decade and rise again in Oh! Orange County high school B ·1 0 c ~ n g 8 dd 1 tional cnr that caught fire f.Iay 21 at the nine-eampus uni•ersity 1990s. TllE EARLIEST the ball grads, which should 1nake up . Turtle Rock and Sierra Lane Death Notices \\'ill decline in the 1980s could be ready, be said, is much or UCl's enrollment, are enroll~t m these.campuses, in Irvine shortly after it
because of the drop in the "lF ""E DO not build new in the fall of 1977. likely to continue lo increase. he said, Will shunt more slammed into a fence and
IGds Llke lo
Ask Andy Jl!flF•ll!I l oulN L. Jflfl'ltl ol Ht..._, BllCI\.
CA. Servlct1 Ptftdlng. P1cllk Vie ..
AW<nOrlll P1rk MOl'"lu.rv. o .. v1s
tHY t. D1vl• o1 L1911N ae ... 11. CA. SefvlCtl llt'f>dJng, P1cll/c View Mtmorl1I
Pitt Mort111rv.
SILSal!E
Flo-( M. S!lsbtt o1 Reo:ll1nd1, CA. Servlct1
pef'OCll"!J, P1clllc VI-Mtmorl1I P1rk
Morlu1rv.
HAWORTH
JIM w. H1wor•11 ol Tu1tl11, CA. ~rvlc"
pel!d!119, P•Clllc 111-Mtmorlll P1rk
Morlulf)'.
MOOVl!I:
Mtrecllrh 8. Hoover, rttldr~I ot l19u111
Hllll-O_,it of de1th Julv 11. 191•. SllrVIW<I llY hll Viillt M1do!on 0 . Hgover;
llVN brolf\t!"l, Cll1r111 Hoava-r of
'JeOue1l1 Vl!lagt. Florid•. Ke<>Mlll Incl
FreG Hoover of MlnMl~ls, Mll!Mtoll.
Funitr•I .arVICtl MOl!dav 1:30 PM,
McCormlc~ L1g11111 Be.tell (1!11111 wltll
Tiie Rrv. Ot". L1wreiw:r F. H1w1tv.
Unlit<! MtlhodlJI Ch..,rth, Offlcl1!1ng. In
llru of flower•. <IOll1tlons m1v Pt ...-'° Ille Sllrintr1' H~l•I for CrlPC>ltd
Cl>lldr..,. Mc.Cormlc-L1;un1 BtKll
Morllllry dlreclll!'l..
SULLIVAN
WIH11m T. S11Ulv111, M.O. O.tt ol death
Juty 16. 191•. Grtvnloe Nrvkn ""Ill
bl held Tl.llld1y 2:30 PM, N1tlon1I
cemettrv, WtJI UK Angr!n, CA.
Mc;Connicic Lli!....WO IJ.ttcll Morl~ry.
dlreclor.._ McCALLl!"N
Anlll L McC1Utn. 01!9 of CINll'I J uly
70, 1t7•, tormtr retlderll of Ctsl• MIU.
Surv!ftd l>Y l!t!" 1b1er, "'••· M1rg1ret Cti.MY of EICOtld!do. CA. Vl1ltlli011
wlll be held 11111 .....,;"9, Monc11y, 4;00
lo 1:30 PM. Gr1Yffk11 141rv!c1s TUHCllY
11);00 AM, Hofv $tpU1Chet Ctme!er,,
0r111g1, CA. Bell 8n»dw1y Mortu1rv
Cllrl!l:ICl'S. ...
AmbmQolo Pro, rn!cMnl of 10805 Goldtn
Eyl Awnue, fl oun11ln V1llty, CA. O.t•
OI de1lh July 20, 1'74. Survlvtd bV
It/I d1u;hf«,' Mrl. Ptlm1 Pers,; -
son, Or. Julld Pro; -t>rot,,.., Otvld
Pro; HYtrll trlncklllld,...... RM.Irv
MOl!d•V 1:30 PM. Coll• M1sa c111pel.
Mes •:OD AM Tutte11Y, Our l1dy of
Mt, Cl,.,,..., 1""""9M, MlUIOI! Sal!
FerMndO C1me1erv. 81!II·Btr91r011 C0$11
Mell Mor111ary dlrtcl'On.
lEOlilMA•OT
G.rlld W. L.onl'Mlntt, rnleltllf tJI ""
N•YI' H1""""111 .. , C0$11 Mr'°', CA. °"" ol 11e1111 Julv lt. 1t7L S11rvlVeG llV
l'lis Witt Ml~ LIOl!lllrdt; !N"M lOfli.
Riv. Miies 1rd E1111; tWo d1V1Jhter1.
Eve 1ftd Bl1lr. MO!,,.., June LAullllrdl;
twD brotlwr1, RllPll Ind 0on llOnlllrdt.
M1morl1I -vlcrs TU11C11y. COiii /Nia Cb.I~. lnltrrMl!I Pa<;ltlc C r 1 I I
C1metitrY. 81lll·ller9tr011 CDSll f.IHI
Mortwry, dlrec!Ot,.
MIUCKU&SON
WHTCLIFF MORTUARY
427 t, 171h Sr., Cos10 Meso
640-4888 -·-IALT7-IEaGERON
FUNEaAL HOME
Corono del Mor
Costa Mesa -·-
673·9450
646·2424
llLL HOAllWAY
MOITUAllY
l"!O Broodw:iy. Co$'a Mesa.
64 2-91 50 -·-DILDAY UOTMEIS
MOITUMY
17911 Beach Blvd.
Hun!ington 8eoch 842-7771
244R~Ave.
long Seoth (2 1J) 438-1 145 -·-M<COIMICK LAGUNA
HACH MORTUMY
1795 logu110 Co11yon Rd.
'494-94 15 -·-M.COllMICIC
MISSION MORTUARY
28832 Comino Cop11trono
Son Juo11 Cop•~trono
495.1776 -·-,. PACIFIC VIEW
MEMOllALl'ARK
Ceme!ery Mortl.l(Jry
Chapel
3500 Poc:iflc \liew Drive
Newpor1 Beoch, Gol1lornio
644-2700 -·-PHKfAMILY
COLONIAL fUNEllAL
HCWE
7801 BolsC1 Ave., Wesiminuer
893-3525 -·-SMITHS' MORTUMY
627 Moin SI.
WISTMIMSTH MIMOalAL PAIK
-Cemetery Mortoory
°""" 1480 I l!eac~ Slvd.
~I-We1tmiml11<. Colitomict
531-1725 .
--------PUBUC NOTICE
Kids Like to
Ask A11d)'
birth rate \\:hi:ch is now fors:IDg f~ilitit>s no .... -,'£.( v.·ill actunlly Th t._ Jryine campus also Ack!jtioraj!y, the university students to the newer ones. !hw"ec;t olJ tw9 ~.J. __
,
Special Pvrchoso!
HOUll PLANTS . . .,.......,... ....... -· • 2K"(lllitl-Wt.I ....
lrM'r•i•s,thli~,• ......... ..,,....
llG .... IA.
4
Brass Atomizer
PLANTIPUYD ..... _ ..... _ w,. ~ ...............
•Ahe9'h.,..1._...ef
.. ,..... ...... Sa'dM\: -
WIG •• , ••
'2.ft
Plastic
FANIP•AYI• ...... -.... ., ...... • '-tty .... n .._ .,..,_. ......
llG. 69C 1~ h.
75 foot
GA•Dlll HOii
........ . . ,....._
• 2 • ~ ..........
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• 75 ft ..... _ ......... ................. _,....
• Viilyl NW.M -_.,
uod< ......... -· llG. •9•• 'IS.'9
• . .~:-I u..: '°lb. Bog .
STEER
MANURE
o Ftrtilin MW t.r • t.... tt.t
will 1tey t.sll & ....... .
• CottweM lff, tM1p11W
......... --.i... .
":.·49c..,
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vi~· 11-
S.1.N lf:INAllDINO fW'f.
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6 Inch Pot1 ""'-~"'
COL'IUI
OR BEGONIA.
• FlllM llGOllA -a ll'Mf ... , ...
• _...,' t.11 '"""' prllen & ,.......,,. • COi.HiS -kiltl.tty colore4 I.nos -n1 n
• ...._" iMlof conMr,...,
<•n llG.11.St ...... RIG. 'l.4t
'I '9 99~
... ,. .
Cordless Etedri(
'GRAii SHEAR . ,. .......... "'~·......... • ._., ... s ............. ~
.,.. :.llkklf ~~--· ..... ...... °""SOI tt.n .
• Wety •wftdt Wr,,....,.. ..... -...,.. .. ,.:""'· s 14 9 9
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I
• ~agu~a Bea~h
EDI TIO "!
YOL. 67, NO. 20~. 2 SfCJIQNS, i4 PA GES ORt NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
• . ' . ' . '• ' '·
_1Q_daY-'8: Final
N.Y. St0eks
• TEN CENTS
r . . • -,_Rash of Blurglar1es Plagues_ Laguna Residents
•
1r
Dy JACK CHAPPELL
nt ti. Delh• l'llft Heft
• In one or the most burglary.ridden
• weekends within recent memory, Laguna
·.Beach· police received 11 theft reports
as Laguna burglars took everything from _
.an antique woodstove to sophisticated
· ttereo equipment.
Jn· one theft, a cat burglar took $7
from the puree. of a sleepigng middle--
aged woman, calmly removlng small
bills from her wallet, replacing it in
the purse and e:r:iting her apartment
via the front door.
Bunny Breitenstein, 209 Cedar \Vay,
Apt. C., told offi«rs she heard nothing
as the burglar removed a window screen,
climbed a six4 foot wall lo reach• the
window, stole the money and departed.
Officers later retraced the burglar's
steps in the crime reported Sunday.
Nearby, on Cliff Drive, two apartmenls
were hit as· a burglar apparently went
from residence to residence.
Gregory Smith of 204 Cliff Drive,
reported a loss of $1,084 with lhe theft
of his color televis1on and an expensive
camera. Entry was made through a
bedroom windo\lo' ,-
As reconstructed by police, the burglar
left the Smith residence, walked acro.u
a patio and a low wall to reach the
apartment of Eric Deitch, 2CM Cliff Drive, Apt. I.
Deitch reported _i,tie. !heft of ' $347
color tele•lslon. Entry w~s via an
unlocked sliding door.
Bolb crimes were reported to police Sunday. .
A National City man reported the
theft of his c.ar Sunday by a hitchhiker
he had given a ride to the beach.
Richard Martinez said he parked the
car, and left to cash a check. ~
he returned, the car, hitchhiker and
Martinez' clothes 8nd identification were gone.
A Newport Beach maµ \'isiting Laguna
Saturday reported the theft of $400 in
stereo tape ca rtridges from his van
parked in the %100 block of Laguna
Canyon Road.
Kenneth R. Carpenter. 1814 Port
Charles Place. told officers 64 tapes
were stoleo along with the two carrying
eases they "'ere in. Entry was , made
by forcing a wind wing, poli~ said.
· In another Laguna Canyon auto
burglary, Saturday William Dalton,
address unknown, reported the theft of
a $70 stereo, and $100 in clothing from
his car pa rked in the 1900 block. Entry
l\'as forced .
A small wood-burn ing antique stove
was among $315 in antiques stolen from
!he home of· Elmer G. Snyder, 290
Diamond Street.
Snyder discovered the theft Saturday
and believ~ it may have occurred
betY:een then and July 6. EntrY was
(See BURGLARIES, Page %)
Mesa Dad
Saves Girl, Skirmishes on Cyprus
Deadline Loses Life
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of ""' Dellr l'lltt SlaH
A Costa Mesa man drowned Sunday
evening near "'the Newport Pier after
saving his 9-ycar-old daughter's life by
telling her to noat on her back unlil
help arrived.
Newport Beach lifeguards said Dennis
McArthur, 28, of 1028 Valencia St., w8s1 swimming with his daughter, Dorothy,
about 8 p.m. when they began having
dirficulty abouL 100 yards off shore due
to riptides and 25-milc-an-hour winds.
, According to the daughter, McArthur
told her to noat on her back while
he wen t for help. He never made it.
According to Ulcguard supervisor
Larry Gibson another swimmer alerted
lifeguards to the fact _that two people
were in trouble. Ufeguan:I John Sutton
swam Mout and rescued Dorothy, but
saw no sign of McArthur.
Llteguards promptly called the police
helicopter, which spOtted McArtbur 's
body about 200 yards otflbore. The
llelicopt.r then made two lripo lo Ille
lifeguard station and dropped lifeguards
Ken Rouse and Larry Gibson into the
Water near McArthur while the third
lifeguard, Matt Greer, swam ·out by
himRelf. .
· An Orange County 11arbor Patrol boat,
summoned by the Hrguards1 arrived with
lifeguard Greg Long on board and
carried McArthur to harbor department
headquarters, where he was transferred to an ambulance.
Lifeguards attempted resuscitation
throughout the rescue and transportation
of the victim, according to Gi~, but
he was pronounced dead on arrival at
Hoag l\fcmorial Hospital at 8:50 p.m:·
Dorothy and l\1cArthur's two younger
children. who had waited on the beach,
were taken home by a police officer.
Top of World Fii·e
Volun teers Sought
The Laguna Beach Fire Department
is seeking Top or the World residents
as Volunteer firemen to \Vork \Vith
professional fire-fighting p e rson n i i
stationed at the Top of the World station.
Women as well as inen are eligible.
Uniforms and some m on e t a r y
reimmbursement are provided. There
are periodic trainin~ se.!ll!ions. Furthtr
information is available by calling 494-
1708 or 494-1709.
Wiblesses Gather
OAKLAND (UPI) -Abou• 46,000
persons were on hand Sunday for the
final day of the Jehovah 's Witnesses
convention that drew delegates from
Northern California and Nevada .
Coast
Weat•er
Partly ck>udy at times Tuesday
but otherwise mostly sunny skies.
~ot much temperature change.
Beach highs in the low 70s rising
· to the micf.805 inland.
Femiuist Betty Friedan sau.t
the women's movement Is get-
ting to men. She say.t nwles stop
her on the street to teU her 11010
the mo11tmenc l1as changed t11eir
lives. See story, Page 17.
INSIDE TODA V
Al Y-s.nk1 I '"""" ,, L, M .• ..,. 7 C•""""• J
Altfl L....,._ 1J
::;.'. Tf'M :: .
N•l'-4 ..... 4 C119tlflMI 1,_H
Conilct lJ °'-'""" ,, ,..... U•l4
,,....... lJ '"'11 ••• Dt•lll NiftlQt ,, Sl9dl MltrlNll 1•11 •11twrttl'"""" 1• '•"''""... ,, Ll'INll(I lt-11 WH!lltt 4 -" WtrN Mtwl 4
Follow Truce
V'I T"""'"
SENATE 'DOVE' DEAD
Ex-salon W1yne Morse, 73
Ex-Senate
Dove Morse
Dies at 73
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Fonner
Sen. Wayrie Morse, one of the first
members of Congress to speak out
against U.S. involvement in Vietnam,
died today. at the age of 73.
Death cut short his second attempt
at a political comeback since losing
his Senate seat in 1968.
Hospital officials said Morse had been
suffering from a urinary tract infection.
They said he died of kidney and heart
failure .
Morse was ousted by Republican Sen .
Bob Packwood in a close contest. Four
years later, Morse, then 71, was beaten
handily in a nee against Sen. Mark
o. Hatfield fR-Ore .).
Two months ago, l\forse again y;on
the Democratic senatorial nomination
-and the right to challenge Packwood
-by defeating state Senate President
Jason Boe, 44 , in Oregon's primary
election.
MorsC, tnown for his unpopula r views
and unwillingness to compromise on
i'ssues, was one of the first members
of Congress to oppose U.S. involvement
in Vietnam.
He and tormer Sen. Ernest Gruening
CD-Alaska), who died last moiith at
the age o( fr1, were the only two senators
who voted against the Tonkin Gulf
resolution in 1964. President Lyndon E.
John9on used the measure as a functional
declaration of war in Southeast Asia.
Morse's age was a major campaign
issue during the May priJrul?'Y, but he
countered by saying that many great
U.S. oenalors liad "jlet'formed the~ best
(See MORSE, P111e !)
U.N. Says
It's Trying
For Accord
By United Press lnterutional-
Bitter ~ttles raged in and around
Nicosia today long after pa~ge or a
7 a.m. PDT cease-fire deadline agreed
to by G-and Turkey. U.N. Secre<ary
General Kurt WOktbeim repoMI a
Turkish air raid on Nicosia an hour
and 15 minutes after the truce-deadline..
Radio reporU •id ~ planes .hit
a hotel in -the port of 1amagusta, killing
at least 20 lonign tourists, and UPI
correspondent Michael Keats said in a
dispatch from. Nocosia that the truce
deadline came and went with no sign
of any relaxation in the fighting.
Greek National Guard units, reinforced
by troops from 11 Greek planes which
slipped into embattled Nicosia during
the night, kept up a Steady pounding
of the ccrridor, Ktats sakt. Turkish
troops were attempting to drive to the
capital from the Kyrenia area where
they landed reinforcements by air and
sea today.
A United Nations command spokesman
in Nicosia said no official orders m
a cease-fire bad been received as yet
and that "We will continue doing what
?•e have been trying to do all along.
to have the Greek and Turkish
communities observe the last cease-nre,"
he said.
"We will keep on trying."
Waldheim said Maj. Gen. D. Prem
Chand of India, commander of the U.N.
peace keeping force .in Cyprus. and Luis
Wcchman-Munoz of Mexico, t h e
secretary general's persooal representa-
tive in Cyprus, reported that figh ting also
was going on in other parts of the
Mediterranean Island.
At 7 a.m., Keats said Greek aliillery
units near Nicosia airport pumped a
ceaseless barrage into Turkish positions
down the 16-mile road from Kyrenia
to the capital.
United Nations troops. working 12
hours on and 12 hours off "If we are
lucky," dug new machine gun positions
at Blueberry camp. their military police
(See CYPRUS, l'lge Z) ·
Laguna Planners Mull
Dr~g· Center Proposals
Laguna Beach planning commissionel'8
will discuss tonlg{lt whether a
controversial drug rehabililatk>n center
should be allowed in the c i t y ' s
commerical {C-1) 7.IDne.
The question has arisen over a
proposed drug ceoter at 1289 South Coaat
Highway, formerly the Del Camino Hotel
and the scene of former drug raids
by Laguna police. 11le diJCUSSkln will
at the commission 's reg u I a r
meeting at 7:30 at city hall.
The Orange County Mental Health
Department and an Upland organir.atlon,
Straight Ahead, Inc.. would like to
convert the old hotel Into a 40-bed facility
for drug rehabilitation.
Planning commissioners will not be
ruling on the merits-of the propoted
center, but on whether such an
establishment shoul<I be permitted In
the C.1 Wile. •
The speci£ications of the C-1 zone
do not list drug center usage but S<lveral
(
. '
uses are close e n o u g h that
commissioner's may interpret them
diffCfently. Hospitals, medical clinics,
and rest homes could be allowed and
commissioners might agree that the drug
renter would fall into one of these
categories.
Representatives from Straight Ahead
and from the county \\till . be at the
meeting to amwer questk>os.
In olher action, commissioners , will
look al a number of requests for action,
but no public hearinn are scheduled.
Action requests include :•
-Resolving a subdivision variance
requested by Ellen and Stuart-Dudley
RI 1325 Baja St. in Arch Buch ffelgbta.
Commissioners ini tially approved the
variance on July 8, but later advice
from counsel recommends they not
finalize approval and deny the request
-A request to have medk:al
consultation in a home at 2$9 JAwer
C\ill Drive, by Dr. Konstllntin Sparkuhl.
. ..
BO Degrees and Crowded
' , I: t/ . ·~ ' 'I
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I •
• • '
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D•llr 'Uol Slaff .....
Laguna Beach's lrlain Beach Park, like other Art
Colony beaches, was jammed during the weekend.
Llfeguards estimated beach attendance for the two
days at 56,000. Air temperatures exceeded ·ao de-
grees and the water was a balmy 67. The surf ran
about four feet. Guards pulled ou t about 60 per-
sons but reported no seriou-s incidents.
Hea vy Traffic •
In Laguna Beach
Brings Siga.lt!rt
For the scconcl festival \lreekend in
a row, Laguna Beach police declared
a sigalert as heavy traffic d)oked
Laguna Canyon Road and C'.oast Highway
Sunday.
Police logged 11 \lo'eekend traffic
acciden ts. two of them involving injuries,
one of those accidents serio"uslY injuring
two Indio youths who rammed a utility
pole in Laguna Canyon early Saturday.
Doniel L. Howell. 18, and Steve Vargas,
16, were reported in fair condition today
at Orange County Medical Center. Howell
broke ~h legs. Vargas broke an ankle
and received severe facial cuts in the
mishap,
Police identified Howell as the driver
of the vehicle, a small foreign car,
Laguna Beach • Police Sgt. Norm
Babcoct: •said the two yooths were west·
bound on Laguna Canyon Road when
the car v1ent out ~ control. swerved
and veered for aboi.tt 50 feet, then struck
a utilily pole head:on • ....The ,.car was
destroyed.
The 1"70 youths v.'ere taken first to
South coast Community Hospital by
ambulance. and then transferred to the
county facility.
The slgalert, IOlled at 2;14 p.m.
Sanday, la9Ced several houn as vtsicors
jammed the Art Colony during the run
of the city's three art fdl.lvall.
A sigalert Is an ofticlal detignatlon
applied · by law enforcement agencies
to wam mOIOl'lsts of congetted areas.
The wamlng1 are carried by ~ traffic
report ,broadcasting radio stations.
\
New· Laguna School Chief
To Be Disclosed at Meet?
School trustees may make a final
decision on the new superintendent for
the Laguna Beach Unified School District
when they meet Tuesday night in
executive scsSion to discuss t h e i r
visitations to the top can d Id ate s '
oommunities.
At that lime, trustees may choose
to re-intervie1v one or both of the lop
contenders, or make ·a decision on which
man to hire.
One candidate is an a s s I s, t a n t
superintendent in an Orange County
school district, and the other is a
superinlendent in a town near Sen Jose
in northern California.
Candidates' names are being "''ithheld
pending final decision.
l\teeting with trustees will be 1he five-
person citizens conuniuee that has been
interviewing the candidates along with
the trustees and also participatmg Jn
the commy.nity visitations.
During the past two weeks, trustees
and members or the committee ha\•e
visited the candidates' communities,
questioning per10ns they now work with.
Trustee Jane Boyd commented tod11y
that based on the trustee's findings in
the men's hometowns, "We've chosen
two men very well lhougl>l of in their
communittes."
"Now it11 jutt a matter of 111\Ulng
down and deciding which one will be
'·'
best for us," l\frs. Boyd said.
Trustees are slili shooting for an Aug.
6 hiring date. \\'hen the board will hold
its next regular mee ting.
The new superintendent will replace
Dr. Don \Voodin.gton, who resigned,
effective Sept. IS, when he un successfully
ran for Orans·e County Superintendent
or Schools.
.41) BRINGS ~/ORE
AND ~JORE CA LL S
"Yes, the apartment \va s rented. And,
to a Daily Pilot rea'der. too.
"\Ve had more calls than we could
handle. I th ink I Y.'as ask ing too little,"
the happy \Vest minster I a nd Io rd
observed.
Here's the ad Wllich started his phone
ringing: ...
t2J4. mo + $100. securitv.
2 BR & den, 1 ba. ne"·ty
painted. dble ~ar. ln11nl'd.
occupancy. Refs., XXX-
XXXX.
We can't tell you how much to ask,
but \lo'e can prompt renters to ring
you r chimes. Ring ours at 642-5671
and let a Daily Pilot ad work for you.
f
• . . ' •• -~~-~·--"==-..;..:......:....:..,'. .. .· •• • •
LB Mon.day, Jul)' 22. 1974 r
~-·--
€ounsel---1--.of 2 ~rjury Ch:arges ,
rnpjled' AgainsLReiaecke~. Questio11s
Impeaching
1---'IVASHINGTON UPI) &a
I
Garrison, ne\.\·ly installed
Republican counsel for the House
Judiciary Committee. told the panel
today it must consider '1whethcr the
-public-intere wi ll be served o
disserved by removal of the President
from office."
Garrison told reporters as he entered
the closed committee session that his
90-minule "balanced summary" of
evidence \.\·outd be a descriplion of_ the
WAS NIXON PREPAREO
TO DEFY COURT? PAGE 4
role or politics with a capital 'p' in
the impeachment process."
It is "not a narrow question of what
the President did on a particular d:itc
or whether there "'as complicity in a
crime," Garrison. ''but ·whether the
public interest "'Ill be served , or
disserved by removal or the President
from office.''
Garrison \\·as informally installed to
represent the Republican side in the
inquiry into possible impeachment of
President Nixon lo replace Albert E.
J enner because Jenner "seems to have
forgotten ~·ho his client is in this cue,"
according to tlli·o committee Republicans.
. .\ltemate Choice
•,or Crisis House
Sought in Lag11na
'lbe new committee chosen last week
by the Laguna Beach City C.Ouncil to
pick an alternate house for the proposed
crisis center for ·Laguna yoqtbs has
issued a plea for help.
A ccmmittee representative explained
a house must be found b e f o r e
Wednesday's council meeting to provide
an alternate choice to the house selected
by the county at 1324 Pitcairn Place
in ihe Mystic Hills area.
Controversy oo the Mystic Hills house
arose at Wednesday's council meeting
when oeiahbon protested and caused
C'(U')Cilmen to form the new committee.
1be new house mllSt be a three or
km bedroom house in a residential
area within the city limits, with rent
not more than SllOO per month.
'Ibe cri.!l.is hoose would be run by
the county's Youth Services Center, and
would provide a "home environment"
JO< troubled Laguna youthll 13 to 17
years-old.
Anyone who knows ol a suitable house
is asked to call 494-3144 or 497-1459.
Fro•P .. el
BURGLARIES •••
made by forcing open a window.
Ttx>mas Muntz of 2617' Victoria Drive
reported the theft of $1,140 in stereo
equipment. indudini a special speaker . and amplifier. Two men are sought
by police. Witnesses saw the two youthful
men load equipment into a van.
Thomas G. Haggenmake r. 340 Cypres.s ·
Drive, apt. 6. reported the theft of
$3.787 worth of jewelry and silver coins.
The theft included a $1,~ diamond
ring.
Entry to the Haggenmaker residence
was gained by prying open the door,
pq\ice said.
Investi gators seek a man of medium
height and weight, blond hair and about
23 years of age, seen leaving the
residence. The theft occurred Friday.
Pau1a P. Fiedler. 992 Cliff Drive.
Friday reported the theft of a $350:
color television from her apartment
residenct. Entry was made by prying
open the front door. Police have no -·
· O.ANCH COAST la
DAILY PILOT
Ti.. Ott-CMtl 0.., ll'llOI _,." -lo <0'!0-"',...,"" -.p, .... -~ btl"90t•"" Cou! .._,,,.,.,., eor_... ~ • .., __ .,.
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'
WAStnNGTON CAP) -One or the "The quesUon ls put &omewhat the two cowils was made before the
two perjury counts against C11lifomia amblguousl~y,~"~the~~jU~d&;•~&IJ;d::Lo~f~.!jur~y;.•~nle~red~tiiheGcourthoule~;~~;;~I.(-~ , 1.-;:Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke w1i1 clismiued. KeMedy's uesllon. ""': OitaY-ti . . tstrtcrcourr-ttg cox noa: argu at ennedj''S era weeks ago the a p e c I a I
C.ltt PllM 51tff Plitt.
Diver Missing
Sheriff's Deputy Floyd Trebil investigated after this air tank was
fou,nd floatin g at Scotchman's Cove Sunday evening. It was feared for
a time that a drowning might have occurred. However, as a search
was to resume today, John Connell, 1633 Santiago, Newport Beach,
claimed the tank from lifeguards.
Two Girls Lead Field
Barrington D. Parker. question specifically ~!led for an prosecutor's office dropped another
But Parker denied a defense motion impression . I perjury count against Reinecke, aiy1ng
to grant a juqment o( acquittal on "lt was vague and uncertain and that !t would have been neceuary to call
a second count as the defense prepared question called for an lmpreukm," Cox former Whlte Ho• aide H.R. llaldeman
to begin Its case today. argued. u a witness lf the ch&rge were presaed.
-.l1le count dismissed-a the request-The--one-mnalnln1 eoum against Haldeman is slated-to go on trtal Sept.
of defell,ie attorney James E. Cox alleged Reinecke accu1e1 him of lying to the 9 in the Watergate coVer·up case.
that Reinecke 1estified falsely to the cOmm iltee about when be first discuued That count alleged that Reinecke li«I
Senate Judi ciary Committee two years the conVMlion site wittl Mitchell. to the Judiciary Committee when he
ago when he said he had no way of Relnecke told the committee that he said 'he first dLscussed the possibility
knowing whether former Atty. Gen. John first diacus5ed San Diego u a site of bringin1 the 1972 R e p u b I l c a n
N. MHchell knew of a financial of the conventkln ln September, 1971 convention to San Diego in April, 1'71. ~:
commitment by a subsidiary o f -alter an out-of-court settlement of Reinecke told the Judiciary Committee
International Telephone & Telegraph an 11T antltnaat ca.at. that on that date he wu in Wuhlngton
Copr. to the 1972 Republican National But the ~Uon conl:ends that and a~ a aoclal reception to
Convention prior to July 31, 1971.' Reinecke dlscuued. the convention with promote economic development Jn hi.I ·
Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mas&.'), a Mitchell lri a telephone call on May state, "and we dlacussed the pouibilily
member of the Judiciary Conunittee, 21, 1971. before the lTr cue wu .ettled. at that point and that was where tbe
asked Reinecke about M I t c h 1e 11 • s T1le ITI' cue was resolved out of court idea was rtally hatched."
knowledge of the I'M' pledge while the in July 1971. The charge remaining a g a In It.
panel was considering t!lc. nominaHon Parker said the remaining cwnt bid Reinecke carrie.!I a maximum penally
of Richard G. Kleindienst to be auomey enough merit so that • jury 1hould of five years In prison and a fine of
general. decide on jt. The judge's .ruling on $2,CW.
Nixon, Lawyer St. Oair
Conf e1· in San Clemente
By HELEN THOMAS
UP'I Wlllt9 ,._. ......,...
President Nixon, plc:dging to withstand
the "very grave assault" on his conduct
of the presidency, was to confer today
\\'Ith his chief defense lawyer on antl-
impeachm.ent strategy.
Nixon planned his first face-to-face
meeting in 10 days with Jarpes D. St.
Clair. who argued Nixon's case before
the Hou.!le Judiciary Committee. The
impeachment panel Is ,beginning what
may be its last week, with debate on
articles or impeachment scheduled to
begin Wednesday.
Nixon planned to see St. Clair in
the morning, and St. Clair was expected
the la<e President Franklin D. Roolev<lt,
who said he was a Nima support~
Roosevelt declined ta commtnt on iJll.
peadlment ~·· but &lld: "If I
had to make the same dace u I bad to
make in 1972, I'd make It again."
* * * President Thanks
El Toro Marine
For His Service
FroMP .. el
MORSE ..•
service alter tbey were 70 years old.
But, he added, "I think everybody
realizes that it isn't to be expected
that 1 would run for ~ledion in 1990."
Being a one term senator would not
be a liability for Oregon, said Mone.,
who already had served 24 years in
the Senate.
Mone, Orlce a Republican hlmlelf,
switched to independent in 195Z when
he and party leaders agreed be was
too liberal for the GOP. Three years
later. he became a Democrat and was
re~lected in 195'.
His detractora claimed that Morse,·
who earned the mclalame "Tiger of
the Senate," was too cantankerou1 and ·
too much of a lon<r to """""plllh
anything for Oregon ln a single lix·year
ttnn.
At Soap Box I;Jerby R~e __ to give the President a complete Before President Nixon left by
rundo~11 on his chances or defeating heli"""'er Sunday for a party In IAo
In 1944, when Mol'!e first ran for
the Senate, his campaign ak>gan wu
''Principle above Politics." Three ..
decades later. ~ alOlll'.ID was buicall}'
the same: "l shall work and fight IOI'
the restoration of integrity in our own
government."
.
Another former bastion of male
chauvinism. Orange County's Soap Box
Derby. fell to feminine ooslaughts
Sunday as two teenage girls bagged
the tOp prizes.
After the gravity-pov.·ered racers had
all roUed dovm the slope at Irvine Park
SUnda.y, ·Julie Cubbison, 15, of Orange,
emerged undefeated to take the first
place award. .~Janel Larsen, 13, of Oran ge, took the
second place award and Brian Kennode,
12, of Glendale was third.
Fourth place was won by Jeff Weston,
15, of Whittier, fifth by Larry Garrison,
12, ol Orange and sixth by Paul Hoover,
13. of Orange.
The good sportsmanship tropliy went
County Boy, 14,
Hero for Saving
Three From Surf
GEARHART, Ore. (UPI ) -Jef(
Burget, 14, of Villa Parlt. Calif., swam
JOO yards into the Pacific Ocean surf
Sunday to rescue three IO-year-olds.
-"'Iltis-Iad did a-heroic thing-a:nd I'm
going to r~mmend him for any
lifesaving award I can," Police · Chief
Bill Eddy said. "rm convinced he saved
one life and possibly all three."
Burge t and his cousin, Charlie Shea,
14, of San Jose, "'ere digging on the
beach near the mouth of the Necanicum
River when they heard screams from
the ocean.
Wh ile Shea ran halr a mile to the
nearest house for help, Burget plunged
into the water, swam out about 300
yards and brought back Rodney Allen
of Portland. Then he went out again
and brought back Toni lleinnings of
Portland and Cindy Rasmussen of Castle
Rock, Wash.
The t~-o girls were examined at a
seaside tmpilal and released but Rodney
was held overnight In the hospital.
'·They were out way too far," said
Burget, who does not have a lifesaving
ctrlificate, "But I had to help as no
one else was around."
to Randy Bales, 14, of Orange.
In trial racing Saturday, Brian Clary.
12, of Anaheim, demolished his car when
bis helmet fell foreward, blocking his
vision. He was not burt. in the mishap.
Ju1ie, the derby's first girl winner, who
has raced in soap box derbies since 1972,
sai dthe IO gi!'Js l nthe u:car fleld -Wtnt
into the race thinkinff, "We're going to
show them Ulla time. '
They did and, she. said, "the boys were all upeet about it. ..
1be winning car, she said, was two
pounds under tile 260-pound optimum
weight for the entries and w,as "the
easiest car I've ever made."
Except for .some advice from her
father oo the design, she said, she
built the car-htrstlf.
Thurston School
Iguana 'Igor'
Still Missing
Igor -who's green, two and one-half
feet long and friendly -is missing,
mi tbe students_at ...... ..T..b.u r:.s to n
Intermediate School are broken hearted
The pet-iguana ran away from t~
Laguna Beach school when classes ended
in June. Igor was sitting in a student's
hands when all of a sudden he decided
to go exploring and leaped into the
bushes.
Students scooted the area for a week
bcfoce abandoning the searCh. They've
waited for him to show up, but so
far, Jgor hasn 't sluck his green nose
back on campus. ·
The students, and teacher Art Filher
of the science det><lrtrntnt, are asking
anyon.e who1s seen Jgor, or knows
any thing about his wbereabouta to
contact the school. '
Igor, who was a familiar face at
Thurston for two years, was seen by
students who took the class "Thurston
Zoo." and by others who dropped _by
lo say hello to him.
Anyone with info nnation may call 4&f.
8505 or 4~ and leave a message.
Police,-G11ard• Show Force-
impeachment. '-""'
St. Clair told reporters Sunday he Angeles, he thanked a Marine who bu
"hasn't a clue" when the Supreme Court worked since 1969 in a special unit
will rule · on Nixon's defiance of a that watches over ft!SidentiaJ takeoffs
subpoena for Whlte House tapes and' and Jandinp at the El Toro Marine
docwnents sought by the s p e c i a l Watergat~ prosecutor. The President has Corps air atatlon.
refused to say how he will respond Gunnery Sgt. Gerald Gotchle, 34, who
to an adverse ruling. • is beil!B transferred to Japan, said,• "The
The President was among old friends, rr.stden~ tl.aN..d mt for ....lh, him
California's elite businessmen, Sw>day and said he thought l would enjoy bis
night when he attended a dinner party in his bonbr at the fashionable Bel ~~·, 1 was really nenroua about meet1n1
Air home of Budget Director Roy Ash. Gotchle IA one or seven Marines at
The convivial setting with Jong-time El Toro who worked in the preiidential
political supporters and h e a v y crash, fire and resCUfl unit. , contributors gave Nixon a chance to reaffirm his intention to remain in office. "I hate to even think about it, but . if the President's helicopter crashes, we . " ... I am o!len asked, 'How do you are trained to put the fire out and r~
really take the burden of the presidency. cue ttae aboard" he said· "We are particularly when at times It seems trained in _... .. '1.... ·v1u&n n to be under very, very grave assault?' ,. ev .... , .. _.. • ci reman
Let me say it isn't new fo.r us ~~le said he had 14 weeks of train-
be under assault, because smce the in before i-i. ... asal--' to the ·t time 1 came into of~ice, for five years, g. --& ............ uni ·
we have bad problems.
"Tbe•e have been people marching Secret Serv: ,,.,, around the White House when we were ~
The sou of a Wlsmn!lin farmer, Mon
was born In Madison on Oct. 20, 1900.
He earned AB and MA degrees from
the University of Wlsconain, a law de1ree
from the University of Minnesota and
a dOCU!r of Jurilpnldenco detlrtt at Colwnbla University.
On June 11, 1924, he man1ed Miidred
Downie of Madi.Ion, who mhe bid blown
.since his grade school days and always
called "Mid11:e." She was a home econ-'
omlc teacher. They had three children,
Nancy, Judith and Amy.
Morse taught. at Wisconsin, Minnesota
and Columbia, then moved to Oregcn
In 1929 and l>t<:ame dean of the
Uiilverslty' of Ore1<11 Law Sd>ool at the
"" of 31.
Fro•P .. el
CYPRUS. ••
trying to bring the (Vietnam) war to unit base camp.
an end, and we have withstood that S B Fimish U . Lettala Teuro, ti, at.
and we-wtll wtthsland the problem> Warms 011, oy, Helsinki. returned from bringing a
of the future . wOWlded comrade to the U.N. bUe at
"People wonder," he added, "how does D • H • H Tzildos. He said Turkish troops there
any individual these days, wben we rives ini om.e_were Willistaodlni a_raln..of -arllllery-
have v.ery_bigb:pressure__campaignl<-"'----~ ------ariil mortar shells from Greek units in
the media to take on public figures, Coincidence and the U.S. Secret Nlroeia.
how does any Individual take it, how In the capital ltaelf patrol unill ot.
does he Survive it, bow does he keep Service caught up with a San Cleriiente the Greek National Guard, In vehlcle1
his composure, his strength and the youngster Sunday ni~ he headed disguLsed with foliage, tnoved up and
rest." on foot to hla urn:I s nelt door down the streets. Others turned oqt
Nlxon said he has been able to survive to the Western White H . on motorcycles. Two pedaled bicycles,
the Watergate onslaught and maintain Pol.ice aid the youth, 15 years old, rifles slung from their shoulders,
his composure because "I have a strong had emerged from a car which gave Ankara radio said an Athens coup
family and I am very Proud of It; ov~w the Greek government todaJ
1 have a lot of good friends who write him a lift to the entrance to Cyprus but the Greek Embassy in Wa1hingtm
and call and say 'We're sticking by Shorts at about the 11me Ume President said the report was totally unfounded.
you.' Nt.on ,. .. arriving by hellcopttr from UPI correipondent John Rlgoo "'!>Orted
'1I assure you no man in pubJlc. life the Bel Alr party thrown by bl.a budget from Athens that the Greek milltaq
has ever had a more loyal group of d1recto junta remained. in power IDd the c_lt1
friends who stood by in good and toulh The ~th wu can"Yinl a waJkl6-talkie. was normal. ·
days. · ·" And that was all .it toot to prompt
Nixon was exhilarated during the a hurried vlait by aientt protcting
evening by the messages he was Preskient Niron.
receiving by telephone from Secretary Addia& to the muddle was a .22..caliber
of Stale Henry A .. Ki.ulnger I n bulltt the yoUlh bad In bis pocket.
Washington , who Informed him that a iPoUce said that interviews ettablilhed
cease fire was imminent in Cyprus. that the boy and his uncle have 1
Among the guests was J a m e s habit of using walkie-lalkies t o
Roosevelt of Newport Beach, son or communic.ate.
-
The -Insisted he did not koow that the President was. arriving at the
!j~. --Agents were convinced and they gave
I.he youngster a lift home.
Dr. Sullivan
Service Tuesday
Funeral services will be held TUestay
for retired phy.tlclan William T. Sullivan,
8r. IS-year resident of South Laguna who
_died at his home 'l\letday a~er suffering
a heart attack.
400 Surfers Show Anger 'Ivy' Heading
For Hong Kong
Or. Sullivan, 85, had practiced
medicine in -Torrance. He retlN!d to -
South Llguna.
Fontnl servlceo will be held 11
National Cemetery ta IVtst IAo Angel ...
McConntcl: Morlulry of Liguna Beach
is in cfwge of arrangements.
About 400 surfers in Newport Beach
became unrul y Sunday morning and a
display of force by poliet, lifeguards
and the Orange County llarbor Patrol
·was requirt'd to P~vent the disturbance
from empting into a full scile riot,
BU!horities said.
There were oo arrests but numerous
citation.<; were given.
Trouble began about 10:30 a.m. when
lifeguards had to close the beach around
19th Street lo 11urfers during normal
surfing hours because of the unusually
latg num ber of swimmers. aceordlnfil
to Lt. Logan Lockabcy or the "tarlne
Safety Department. ·
"We . had ou r blggcst crowd of the
•
year with 105,000 people and surfboard.t
presented a safety hazard," Lock.Ibey
aaid.
He explained that surfers were also
ca!Wng ·a problem by surfing around
18th Street, which is off limits to surfers ..
The surfing are-a begins at 19th Street
and extends westward.
"A lot ot the surfers stayed In the
water and refused to obey our oommMds
to come in," Lockabey said. "We called
ln the police and the Harbor Patrol."
"At that poinl a number of surfers
who were on the. beach began cbantln1
and throwing Wld bul were finally
dlspcued by three Jlfeguanl j,.po and
1 hree police cars."
,
A roundup by tho police hellcopttr.
a lifeguard boat and tvtO Harbor Patrol
boab plus Individual llfeguonll -ght
ln the rebellk>us turfers who were still
In the water.
"We 1ave a lot of citations but I
don't know the exact number," Lockabey
salCI. "We had 1 problem like thl1 In
WHt Newport a month or so ago but
lh!I WIS mudl wone."
However, the trouble. between surfers
and aulhorltl's didn't end with Sunday
morning's near-riot. •
"That evening the .police told us they'd
heard rumors that surfers were going
to burn some of our lifeguard tOwl:rs,
so they began patrollln& th • m, ' '
Lockobey said.
HONG KONG (UPI) -Troo!eal ......,
Iry headed towanl Hong J<..,. today
aft« blowing -bau ... and .public
bulldlop, delt?'OYlnl •"'Pl • n d trtperin« landalldes In a cltllntctlve
•weep acrou the rk:e-r1ch provtncft: in
the main .Philippine Island of Lwm.
The Royal Otioervatory lalued •
tropical cyclone nmlnl and sold
pr-I tndlcatlon1 lllowed Ivy """1d
paso eboul !llt).UO mtl" --of "°"' Kong 10metlme todty. ~<11 fn>m pollco, Philtoolne Nation-
al 'Red er.a and tile otrtcia1 Phillpplne
news, 11ency tald 1111: ?>ertOnt were
ktlled and ti olh•,. Injured.
•
Still Time to Sign
For Volleyball
The third amual "A" \'Oll.,,,.U
tournament f« women "frill be held 1D
Llgllna Boach on Au1. 3 and I oo
1he Mailn Beach courts.
It will be a doubln tournament, and
entranll must bt ll(llled up by Aug.
t. -EntrY blanU are available In the
Recreation °'"rtment, ~70 Gltnl!OY"
St. The entry r .. Is . l.l. and tndtvlilual
•wards will be presented to I.he top
four team.a.
,. . . ~ .. . .,. .. .. • t • • • 1¥ • ' ,,. . . . . . ' ....
• -
Saddlehaek
EDITION
NO. Ol;-2-SE<:;TTON1<"·,"""2°.6A~G~E"'S---------=:ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
' . ... ·-
•
, .. , ..
\
•
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
I TEN CENTS
Skirmishes· on Cyprus
Follow Truce Deadline
\
" r'
¥ '
Irvine Fats
Dellr 'li.t Sllll ,,_,.
By United Press Jntemalloml
Bitter battles raged In and around
Nicosia today long after passage or a
7 a.m, YJl'Lc.eas_~fire_d.c,adl_ine agreed__
to by Greek and Turkey. U.N. Secretary
General Kurt Waldheim reported a
Turkish air raid on Nicosia an hour irld 15 minufcs after the trUce deadline.
Radio reports said Turkish planes hit
a hotel in the port of Famagusta, killing
at least 20 foreign tourists, and UPI
correspondent Afichael Keats said in a
Earliest Dove
dispatch from Nocosia that the truce
deadline came and went with no ·sign
of any relaxation in the fighting .
Greek National Guard.units,..reinforctd
by troops from 11 Greek planes which
slipped into embattled Nico$ dlD'ing
the night, kept up a steady pounding
or the corridor, Keats sakl. Turkish
troops v.·cre attempting to drive to the
capital from the Kyrenia area where
they 18.nded ·reinforcements by air and
sea today. 1
Former Senator
Morse . Succumbs
f.1ayor Gabrielle PrYor tries' out the pool table at the Irvine Teen
Center which opened over the weekend. The dedication ceremonies
attracted teens and city council members to the relocatable building
on Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course near Culver Drive and Sand-
burg Way.
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Former
Sen. Ylayne ~1orse, one of the first
members of Congress to speak out
agairtst U.S. in\'olvement in Vietnam,
died today at the age of 73.
Death cut short his second attempt
..
at a political comeback since. losing
his Senate seat in 1968.
Hospital officials said Alone had been
suffering from a urinary tract infection.
They said be died ol kidney and heart
failu~.
M<ne W8ll ousted by Republican Sen.
Girl Saved; Fathe~ Drowns Bob Packwood in a clOiSe contest. Four
years iater, Morse, then 71, was beaten
handily in a race against Sen. Mark
0 . Hatfiekl (R-Ore.). :rwo months ago, Morse . again 'v."On
the DemDcratic ~seoatorial nomination
-and llJe rilbt !O Chan<llge Packwood Mesan Loses Life in Surf Off lVe·wport Pier -bf delellJo& &late Senate President
Ja90n Boe, 44, in Oregoh's Primary
elecllm.
By L. PETER KRIEG he went for help . He never made it. hirtl.'Jelf.
An Orange County Harbor Patrol boat,
summoned by the li(guards, arrived with
lifeguard Greg Long on board and
carried McArthur to harbor department
headquarters, where he was transferred
to ·an ambulance.
Mone, known for his unpopular views
and lDlwill.ingness to compromise on
Issues, was one or the fi,~ members
of Congress to Oppose U.S. utvOlvement
Of ,... 0a11F '"9t •tiff Aceording to Uleguard supervisor
·A Costa Mesa man drowned Sunday · Larry Gibson another swimmer alerted
evening near the Newport Pier after ·lifeguards to the fact that two people .mnc his 9-year-old daughter's life by were In trouble. Lifeguard John Sutton
telling her to fioat on her back until swam out aod rescued Dorothy, but
In Vietnam. •
He and former Sen. Ernest Gruening
(D-Alaska), who died last month at
the age of 87, were the only two senatOrs
who voted against the Tonkin Gulf
resolution in 1964. Preiiident Lyndon E.
JoM9oa ~ the measure as a functional
declaration of war in Southeast Asia •.
help arrived. saw no sign or McArthur.
·Newport Beach lifeguards Said Dennis Lifeguards promptly called the police Lifeguards attempted resuscitation
throughout the resrue and transportation
of the victim, according to Gibson, but
he was pronounced dead on anival at
Hoag Memorial Hospital at 1:50 p.m.
McArthur, 28, of J<n8 Valencia St., was helicopter, which spotted McArthur's
iwimming with his daughter, Dorothy, body about 200 yards offshore. The
about I p.m. when they began having helicopter then made two trips to the
difficulty about 100 yards off shore-due-lifeguard-station-and dropped lifeguards
to riptides and 25-mile-an-hour wiOO&. Ken Rouse and Larry Gibson into the
· Accon:ling to the daughter, McArthur water near McArthur while the third
Dorothy and McArthur's two younger
children, who had waited on the beach,
\\'ere taken home by a police officer.
Mane's age was a major campaign
issue during the May primary, but he
countered by saying that many great
U.S. senators bad performed their best
service after they were 70 years old.
~ her to float on her back while lifeguard, Matt Greer, swam out by
Irvine District
Aided on Early
Childl1ood Plan
The Irvine Unified School District has
received a $115,883 Mate grant to extend
its early childhood education program
to Culverdale Elementary School.
The program was initiated at Turtle
Rock Elementary School last year. The
procram wu successful, Inf was ranted
15th ol the 206 such programs· in the
state by the State Department of
:Education, aceordlng to' Marilyn Harris,
educaUGnal llqiporl l<nicea adminiatrao
lo'· 'Ibe early childhood educ at i o n
program, she aalcl, Is designed lo give
children in tbe primary grades a head
start at achieving high levels of
1c1demic 3kills.
A1ainly, the program Involves more
adults working with the children.
Parent assistants, teaching aides,
specialist teachers and more regular
teachers are added to the staff under
the program,. she said.
Hei;-o · at Age 14
County Y outli Saves 3 Frorn Ocean
But, he added, "I think everybody
realizes that it isn't to be expected
that J would run for ~lection in 1980."
Being a one term senator woukl not
be a liability for Oregon, said Morse,
who already had served 24 years in
the Senate.
Aforse, once . a Republican himself,
~witched to indepBldent in 1952 when
GE!ARHART, -Ore. {UPI) -Jert. was held overnight In the hospital. he and party Jeade{s agreed he was
Burget, 14, of Villa Park, Calif., swam "'Ibey were out way too far," said too liberal for the GOP. Three _ years
300 yards 'Into the Pacific Ocean surf Bureet, who does not have a lifesaving later, he became a Democrat and was
certificate, "But l had to help as no re-elected in 1956. Sunday to rescue three !~year-olds. one else was around." His 'detractors claimed that Morse,
"This lad did a heroic thing and I'm Lifeguards are on duty on some Oregon who earned the nickname "Tiger of
going to recommend him for any 0035t beeches but not in the area where the Senate,'' was too cantankerous and
lifesaving award I can,'' Police tbief the dlildren were. too much ol a loner to accomplish
Bill Eddy said. "I'm oonvinced he saved anything ror Oregon in a single six·year ooe life and pmibly all three."
Burget and bis .cousin, Charlie Sliea, Police P1"cketed te;::i· 1944, when Mone nm ran for 14, of San Joee, were digging on the the Senate, his campaign slogan· was
beach near the mouth of the Neam.icum River when they beard screama from "Principle above Politics." Three
B I • T decades later-, the slogan was basically
thewb\:ansi.ea ran hair a mile lo !he y rvme eellS the same: "I shall work and fight for
nearest house for help, Burget plunged _, the mtoration or integrity in our own
irito the water swam out about 300 A small knot of lrvtne teenagers government."
Yafds and ~ght back Rodney Allen picketed the Costa Aiesa Police Station 1be son of a Wisconsin farmer, Mors . was born in Madison on QCt. 20, 1900. of Portland. Then he went out agaili'---SUnday afternoon, protesting t h e He earned AB and MA degrees from
and brought back Toni Heinnings of activities of Officer Robert Berg. the University of Wisconsin, a law degree
Portland and Cindy Rasmussen ol castle Berg was involved in the "Operation from the University of Minnesota and
Rock, Wash. Irv' ,, ..i-. sts 1 1-..1-a doctor or ,·uns ..... "'ence degree at The two girls were examined at a 1ng mass uiug arre n 1v11111: .,. ..... the sub. Columbia University. seaside bospit.al and released but Rodney March 27 and has been ,ect On June 18, 1924, he married Mildred
Work is concentrated on helping ~ childrenJn the firS three grades.improve ---~--------
their basic skills of reading, writing AD BRINGS MORE
and m1themat.lca.
of several youth protests since. Downie of fl.fadi90l1, who mhe had .known
Bet.ween 21 and 15 teenagers, police since his grade school days and always
Exchange Visit Set
Robin Loe Davia, daupter ol Mrs.
, Bobbie JMo Davi1 of Irvine has been
seleded as 1 foreign exchange student
by the Jtsperiment in International
Liviftl.
The UC Irvine senior will spend two
mcmthl with a family ln f'rance.
lruuate's Wife Held
• SAN QUENTIN CUP!) -San Quentin
prlsan authorities have charged an
<>akland housewife with trying to
smuggle a pistol to hor convict husband .
Mazie D&Vis, 32, was t;eld at Marin
County Jall in lieu of $50.000 bail, a
prison spokesman said SUnday.
AND MORE CALLS
"Yes, the apartment was rented. And,
lo s ·Dally Pilot reader, too.
"We had more calls than we could
handle. I think I was ask.Inf too llUle," the happy Westminster rad lord
oboerv<d.
<Jere'• tJt<! ad which otarted ll1a t>:i-
ringing;
$234. mo .., $100. securitv.
2 BR & den, I ba. newly
painted. dble .i:ar. Jmmed.
occupancy, Re111., XX X-
XXXX.
We can't tell you how, much to ask,
bur we can prompt renters to ring
your c.blmcs. Ring outs at 642-6678
and let a Daily Pilot ad ·"°"' for yooi.
said, picketed the station from 1 to called "Mic!Re." She Was a home econ-
3 p.m. omic teacher. They had three1children,
The pM;est was quiet and without Nancy, Judith and Amy.
incident, ~ said. M<ne taught at Wisconsin, Minnesota
An American Civil Liberties Union and Columbia, then . moved to Oregon
investigation of the March 27 arretta In 1!'29 and became dean of the
concluded that Berg had condllCled \lnlverslty of Oreton Low School at the
raids properly. &«of II. · Morse's lifelong bobby was raising
and showing horats. He raised hones
and catlle on a farm , in Montgomery
County, Md. while serving in the Senate
and lived on a ranch near Eugene,
Ore. until his death.
Juvenile-Officer Set ·
For Aliso Unit Talk
The featured speaker tonight at the
Aliso Valley Homeowners As90Clatlon
monthly meeting_ will be Lt. R.E. •
Griffeth, head of the Orange County
Sheriff's Department Juvenile Bureau.
The meelin~ wUl be at the Los Allsos
Intermediate School at 7:30 p.m. Griffeth
will also answer questions concerning
the Sheri(f Department's . youth opera-
tions in the. El T050 .area.
'
Jlis hobby had political repercussions,
(See MORSE, Pa1e Z)
Witnesses Gather
OAKLAND (UPI) -About 48.000
perkKlS were on hand Sunday for the
final day or lhc Jehovah's WllneUCS
convention that drtw delegates from
Northern Callf-omia and Nevada.
A United Nations command spokesman
in Nicosia said no official orders on
a cease-fire had been received as yet
and that ·~we_wlll continue doing what
\\'e hilve ~n trying to do all along,
to have the Greek and Turkish
communiti~s observe the last cease-fire,"
he said.
"We will keep on trying.''
Waldheim said ~1aj .. Gen. D. Prem'
Chand of Ind ia. con1mandcr of the U.N.
peace keeping force in Cyprus, and Luis
SENATE 'DOVE' DEAD
·lx-soktn Wayne MoN, n
A1iotlier Perjury
Count Against
Reinecke Nixed
.•
WASHINGTON (AP) -One of the
two perjury counts against Calirornia
U . Gov. Ed Reinecke was dismis9ed
today by U.S. Di&trlct Coor! Judge
Barrington D. Parker.
But Parker denied 1 d~ense motion
to grant a judgment. of 8-cquittal on
a secona count as the defeMC prep:..1. rti
to begin its case today.
The count dismi.<>sed at the request
of defense attorney James E. Cox alleged
that Reinecke testified falsely to the
Senate Judiciary Committee l\\'o years
ago when he said he had no way of
knowing whether former Atty. Gen. John
N. Mitchell knew Of a financial
commitment by a subsidiary o f
International Telephone & Telegraph
Copr. to the 1972 Republican National
C.OnventiQn prior to July 31, 1971.
Sen. Edward Kennedy (J)..Mas.s.), a
member of the Judiciary Committee,
asked Reinecke about M i t c he 11 ' s
knowledge of the JTI' pledge while the
panel was coosidertng tX nomination
of Ridlard G. Kleindienst to be attorney
general.
"The question is put somewhat
ambiguously." the judge said or
Kennedy's question.
Cox had argued that Kennedy's
qaestion specifically called for an
impression.
"Il was vague and uncertain and that
question called for an impression,·· Cox
argued.
The one remaining count against
Reinecke accuses him of lying to the
committee about when he first discussed
the convention site wiftl Mitchell.
Beinecke told tht committee that he
(See REINJ!CKE, P11e I)
I
Irvine Moto1;ist
Injured in Crash
James Gregory White of Irvine was
Critically Injured Sunday when his sports'
car went out of control and slammed
into a power pole.
White, r7, 14600 Kazan St., remains
in guarded condition in the intensive
care unit at Tustin Community Hospital
where he was taken following the 1:15
p.m. accident at CUiver Drive near the
Santa Ana Freeway.
Police said While suffered head
injuries and cuts on his face and body
when he .made a turn which sent his
car skidding out of rontrol and put
It on a collision course with the utility
pole.
Traffic Investigators are ,checking into ··
tht circum.ttanccs ol the Accident. .
)
Wechman·l\1unoz of A1exico, th e
secretary general's personal representa~
tive in Cyprus, reported that fighting also
"'as. going on in other-parts-of the
A1editerranean Isla nd .
At 7 .a.m., Keats said Greek artillery
units near •. Nicosia airport pWTiped a
ceaseless barrage into Turkish positions
dov.11 the 16-mile road from Kyrenia
to the capital.
United Nations troops. working 12
!See CYPRUS, Page %) •
Newport
Surfers
'Unruly'
Abou t 400 surfers in Newport Beach
became unruly Sunday morning and a
display of force by police, lifeguards
and the Orange County Harbor Patrol
was required to prevent the disturbance
from empting into a full scale riot,
atithorities said.
There were no arrests but numerous
citations were given.
Trouble began about 10 :30 a.m. when
lifeguards had to close the beach around
19th Street to surfers during normal
surfing, hours because ol the unusually
large number of swimmers. according
to Lt. Logan Lockabey of the 1.farine
Safety Department.
"We had our biggest crowd of the
year with 105,000 people and surfboards
presented a safety hazard," Lockabey
said.
He explainl!tl that surfers were also
causing a problem by surfing around
18th Street, which is off limits to surfers.
The surfing area begins at l!tth Street
and· extends westward.
"A lot o( the surfers stayed In the
water and refused to obey our commands
to come in," Lockabey said. "We called
in the police and the Harbor Patrol."
"At that point a number of surfers
who were ?A the beach began chanting
a!Jci throwing sand but were finally
dispersed by three lifeguard jeeps and
three police cars."
A rotllldup by the police helicopter
a lifeguard boat and two Harbor Patroi
boats plus individual lifeguards brought
in the rebellious surfers who were still
in the water.
"\Ve ga ve a lot of citations but I
don't know thC ex-act number," Lockabey
said. "We had a •problem like this in
West Nev.'port ri month or so ago but
this was much worse."
However, the trouble between surfers
and authorities didn't end with Sunday
mornin g's near·riot.
"That evening the police told us they'd
heard rumors that surrers were going
to bum some of our lifeguard towers
so they began patrolling th e m • ;
lockabey said. '
Reel Rule Celebrated
WARSAW (AP) -The government
today celebrated tbc 30th anniversary
of Communist rule in Poland with a
big. mil.itary parade in \Varsaw, Oy-pasts
of Jet fighters and helicopter (ormations.
Orange Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy at times Tuesday
but otherwise mo~tly sunny skies.
Not much temperature change.
Beach highs ln the low 70s rising
to the mid-805 inland.
Fer11i11ist Betty Friedan says
the worneti's n1ovement ls gl!t-
~ti11g to n1e11. Sile says n1alea stop
her on tl1e street to tell lier l1ow
tile niovemeut has cha11ged tlieir
lives. See story. Page 17.
INSIDE TODAY
Al Yevr S1r\'k1 l AIHI l1 .... r1 II
···""' 11 '°""'" Trw It l . M. ltYtil 1 M1wlt1 U
C•liftrftl1 I N1tlontl NtWI 4
Clfl,1illt4I -1'·'1 DrlllM C:t1111lr If
C:eftllu u ,.,.. 11•14
CreflWWll If '""" ... D .. 111 Notic11 IJ SIO<lf Mil'lltll 1 .. 11
•11t11"11l11111tlll ,, T11tvl\lt11 1~
F!MftCI 10-11 Wtltlter 4'
..... ~. 14 WMHI Nnn f
•
---
2 DAILY PILOT IS
Plot Trial
Of Popeil
U11cle1· Way
1-----
LOS ANGELES -Opening stalemcnt
v.·erc sc heduled in Superior Court here
today in 1he trial of Eloise Popr!I of
Ne\\'port Beach and her boyfri end,
charged \\'ith conspiring lo murder her
estranged husband, kitchen .gadget
rn ullfmilliOO:ilre Samuel ~I.
Prosecuting Deputy Dlstrirt Attorney
Peter Bregman is expected to call
Robert Pl'eler as his first vdtness.
~lrs. Popcil. 48. and Daniel Ayers,
37, of Santa Ana. have pleaded ~~t
to charges of conspiracy and sohc1ta t1on
to cotnmit murder. Both spent several
days in custody before belng released
on bail in January.
Peeler and a second prosecution
witness. Don Reed, alleged to authorities
that 11rs. Popeil and her boyfri end
provided jewelry as securjty and agreed
10 pay them $50,000 to eliminate Po~il.
~·ho operates his kitchen gadget empire
out-of Chicago. Popeil is also noted for.....
having invented and marketed a popular
pocket fishing rod setup.
Ayers and Mrs. Popeil "·r-re arrested
J an. 8 by a team of Long Beach homicide
detectives at her former home at Si9
Harbor Island Road, Nel'+'port Beach.
Authorities have said that Peeler and
Reed tipped km olf along. with. the
intended victim. alter becoming fright·
ned at the consequences of 'l'+'hat lhey
were allegedly being solicited to do.
A key element in the trial to ~
heard before Judge· Mark Brandler is
a series of .tape recordings alleged to
include murder contract discussions
among the principals.
Popeil and his wife "·ere in the midst
of divorce proceedings but she stood
10 inherit a third of his fortune if
he died before .issuance of the final
decree. .
Just last v.·eek. a divorce court Judge
in Chicago ordered Popeil to pay m.ooo
in temporary support and legal costs
to his v.ifc. pending the outcome of the
murder-for-hire trial.
Proceedings being held in t h e
ooortroopl, 111 N. Hill St. in downto"".n
IAS Angeles, is expected to !ake six
v.·eeks, with Peeler's t e s t 1 mo n y 1
• ----of this l'+'eek. I alllSUlllll1g .. ~.
· Secret Service
Swarms on Bo y,
Drives Hint Home
Coincidence and the U.S. Secret
Service cau,cllt up with a San Clen1ente
yotmgster SUnday night as he headed
on foot to bis uncle's house next door
to the \Vestern White llouse. ~
Police said the youth, 15 years old,
had emerged from a car which gave
him a lift to the entrance to Cyprus
Shores at about the same lime President
Nixon was arriving by helicopter from
the Bel Air party thrown by his budget
director.
The youth was carrying a walkie-talkie.
And that was all it took to prompt
a hunicd visit by agents protcting
President Nixon.
Adding to the muddle v.·as a .22-<:aliber
bullet the youth had in his pocket.
iPol.ice said. that interviews established
that the boy and his W'IC!e have a
habit of using walkie-talkies to
communicate.
The teenager insisted he did not know
that the President Was arriving at the
time.
Agents were convinced and they gave
the youngster a lift home.
Life Begins at ·20
MANILA (UPI) -Amparo Munoz,
20, of Spain today began her year's
reign as Miss Universe, a title that
brougtt her Sl0,000 ca sh, a $10.000
personal appearance contract and the
use of a resort island (or a year .
ORAMGI COAST IS
DAILY PILOT
T"' Ort• Coetl OMy Not w.!ft *"'c~ " c:bo<>-
-ll'ot H-·P'fto."lll.ltllot"""'l>yl"'tO.""""
Cor.t Pulllo111"" C:.:...-• ~P'I'"'• .-.~-tte
-1/:M. MonGly !,,,_ft f~llf1 IDt to.lo
hlfil. H•-8Mcr\. _.,..,,., 8-fltN~°"""
•.to~ V1!...,. lallV'W llNcio IM,...,S--.o """
Stft o.-i.is..n ...._ C".tPIMro"" A ~
._.,. tdohl>ft """"'"""" S..UllltV' """ s.,._. no,,.. 11'1tll">ICIPI~ p11rt1 11 .. 3.XIWtll
11t1 sr-. c...i1 ~Cl!'"""'"' t2tte.
)or;\ It C...lty
""" ........ 11111 o.-'11...__
l~K:"'~ ....
OooleiH.locx P.itfodP.("°' A_trll., ..... ngl-
·-
Tivo Girls Lead Field
At Soap Box Derby Race
Another former bastion of male
chauvinism. Orange County's Soap Box
Derby, fell to feminine onslaughts
Sunday as two teenage girls bagged
the top prizes.
After the gravity-powered racers had
all rolled dov.n the slope at Irvine Park
SUnday, Julie Cubbison. 15, of Orange,
emerged undefeated to take the first
place award.
Janel Larsen, 13, of Orange. took the
secood place award and Brian Kennode,
12, of Glendale was third.
Fourth place was ~'On by Jeff Weston,
15, of Whittier, fifth by Larry Garrison,
12, of Orange and sixth by Paul Hoover,
13. of Orange.
The good sportsmanship trophy ~·ent
lo Randy Bales, 14, of Orange.
In trial racing Saturday, Brian Clary,
12, of Anaheim. demolished his car when
his helmet fell foreward, blocking his
vision. He was not hurt in the mishap.
Julie, the derby's first Rirl winner, who
has raced in soap box derbies since 1972,
sai dthe 10 !!iris i nthe 42-<:ar field went
into the race thinking, "We're going to
show them this time."
They did and , she said, "the boys
were all upset about it:'
From Page 1
CYPRUS ...
hours on and 12 hours off "If we are
lucky," dug new mach.ine gun positions
at Blueberry camp, their mil itary police
unit base camp.
Finnish U. Lettala Teuro, 27, of
Helsinki, returned from bringing a
wounded comrade to the U.N. base at
Tziklos. He said Turkish troops there
v.•ere withstanding a rain of artillery
and mortar shells from Greek units in
Ni1Xl5ia.
In the capital itself patrol units of
the Gr~k National Guard. in vehicle!
disguised with foli~gc. moved up and
do~11 the streets. Others turned out
on motorcycles, Two pedaled bicycles,
rines slung from their shou lders.
Ankara radio said an Athens coup
overthrew the Greek government today
but the Greek Embassy in Washington
said the report was totally unfounded.
UPI correspondent John Rigos reported
from Athens that the Greek mili tary
junta remained in J)(l\\/Cr and the city
was normal.
Publisher Sue~
Bv UCI Teacher
The winning car, she said, was two
pounds under the 260-pound optimum
weight for the entries and was "the
easiest car I've e\•er made."
· Except for !I011le advice from her
father on the design, she said, she
built the car henell.
5 San Diego
Inmates F"lee
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The e!Cape
of five more federal prisoners from
the City Jail was disdosed today
as a search began a1ong the
Mexican border and in Southern
California.
It was the jail's third break
in .seven mori.hs and brought the
total number of escapes to 33.
t.fost of those fugitives have been
reoaptured.
The fi ve used a smuggled
hacksaw to cut four bars Sunday
night in a cellblock in which they
~-ere housed with 42 o t h e r
prisoners. then smashed a window
on a stairway leading lo the roof.
$225,000 Blaze
Hits PSA~ Plant
MIRAMAR NAS (UPI) -Fire caused
an estimated $225,000 damage Sunday
to the new Pacific Southwest Airlines
engine rebuilding plant at Kearney 1ofesa
near here and released deadly cyanide
fumes into the building.
Firemen used special b r e a t h i n g
equipment to fight the blaze which
started under hydrocyanic acid vats.
Authorities said an electrical short
ci rcuit caused the fire.
It took firemen one hour to extinguish tne flames and another three hou rs
to drive out the deadly fumes from
the building.
There were no injuries .
From Pagel
MORSE ...
A UC Irvine leather wants $265.000 °""'" •---·•---c-...,.._ a.-e.,~·---1-in-damages rom-11-New-York-firm
ho~11ver. In 1959, Morse became involved.
in a feud with Claire Boothe Luce,
1vhose confirmation as an amhassador
lo Brazil he had fought unsuccessfully.
'"rttv difficulties. of course. ao some
years back arxl began,when Sen. Wayne i\torse wasKicked-in-thetiadDy a
hor9C," said Mrs. Luce.
HfWOOl'l lllt.c~ ».lJ ,,..."""' "°""" ...... L-a.-11?,CO"~A-v.·hich allegedly reneged on its promise ............. lllttcJo 1111'$9'~"~4 • s-Ot111ent• >06~uc-11..i to PLihlish a second edition of his book In 1951. a mare named Missie broke
i\1orsc's jaw during a horse. show at T...,....17141642·4]21
Cl••.m.4 """'"""" 642·56 71
'-c ............ o.,. , •• ,, .. :
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(Ir ..,,...,._.,,. ""-'" "y .. -~ ""1Nlul-11tMo_Ol_.,..9"'_.
8-flll Clllt -· fllld 11 eo-. "'-· Clhfoo. fllt 3w......cMIOlll'f-130D-ll'lt)r,llJ,..I!
It ODlllOllllll~1111>1jt1ry ""°""!-1~.0D ~
'
on plants.
Dr. Joseph Ardilti names !loll.
Rine.hart and Winston of 1'1adison A\•enue
as de.fendanls In his Orange Coun1y
Superior Court ac tion .
Orknty Springs Va. ,
Funeral arrangem\..nt$ for l\torse v.·erc
lnc.'tln1p!ete.
'T'he ieacher-author claimii t he I' p •
delendonts ossurc<I him in July. 1970, .' rauco rogrcss1ng
Jhat they \\'anted a ~ edition · of •
hit book, "ExJ>(!rlmc.ntnl Pl anl ~I AORTD (U PI )·-Alling
Physio lQRy.'·' He states he /earned nine <it'flCralLuimo Fr.mcisCQ Franco b
months later that the proJc<\_t had lx.oen prugresslng faVOfably, a medical bull~ln
abandoned by the _publisher$. ---"h,_y "'hi'Cs nhyslcians_sajd, lQday~
I I ' . •
. -··
. • Ne-w .Re-pu~lican Counsel-
Summarizes Impeachment
'WAS~INGTON (UPI ) Sam forgotten who his client is in this case," the pieces of the cookie, the crumb~.
Garrl10n, newly installed ch le f aceordlng to two conHnlttee Republicans. perhaps off In the corner of the room
Republlciln cowisct for !he llouse Some RepubllCans felt Jenner deserted l'+·hcn you suddenly open that door."
Judic iary Conm1ltt~, tol~ the panel thi-m bv endorsing _ strong argunients After ntl the arguments are ea(.d.
tOda ust cons1der--""lvhcthcr-the-~O!."¥da ~:fi m ~ . he-committee atcr1til wee will start Publi c interest \Yill be served or I· ri Y Y e c e co ltt~ou~ ' deballng art1'cles of 1·mpeachment. · b h p 'de John 11-1. Doar for a recom1nendalio11 d1sserved Y removal of t e res1 nt for N' n's im achm I Jenner who has riled the committee from office." ixo pe el) . . , . . _ . . . .
Garrison told reP.!!rters as Cllkrtd~ -~ar _!lid~~~ the evidence la~~~!gr:~Qr C:U~\~:f~,~~':!----the closed committee session thot hi s out by the comrruttee-ilafflorlfie 1 h
1
'
M • "b 1-ed " f members provided a foundation under o ser~e on t e lega staff, but as _.minute a anc summary o ..._. an asSJstant to Doar serond·ranking evidence \\'Ould be a description of the i1·n1ch "reasonable men a c t I n g R bl' R bert McC'i id rea90ltlbly v.·ould find the accused guilty epu 1can o ory .sa . WAS NIXON PREPARED
TO DEFY COURT? PAGE 4 of the crime aa charged." ln a broadcast interview Sunday
role of politics with a capital 'p'
the impeachment proceM."
Doar said he concluded th<1t Nixon (ABC's ~ssues and Answers) MC:Cl~ry .•
decided aoon after the Watergate of • Ill1!101s_ ~ Rep. Charles W1ggms -
in burglary in 1972 on a policy "to cover R·Calif.):-sa~d Jenner Was not
!his up •.. and he's been in char11e represetruna ~!if: Republl~ns. It is "not a narrow question of "'hat
the President did on a particula1· date
or whether there l'+'as complicity in a
crime," Garrison , .. but l'+1hethe:r the
public interest will be se r\'ed or
dis.ierved by r.emoval of the President
from office."
Garrison was in!or1nally installed lo
represent the Republican side in the
inquiry lnto possible in1 pcach1nent or
President Nixon lo replace Albert E.
Jenner because Jenner "seems to have
From Page 1
REINECKE ...
President Thanks
El Toro Marine
For His .Service
or the cover-up from that day forward .y, ,McClory said .Jenner 1s out or tune
, . . with the Republican members, and 1'1r. Following Doar s presenta~~on ~r1d~y, Garrison, by I "'ould say unanimous J~M~r told the committee, J join wi~ action or the minority members, Is bein&
him 1n all the remarks he has made , designated as the minority counsel "
and said that "\vhere there is secreey The move to dump Jenner cam~ after ~nd conc~alment, you must draw the Chicago lawyer joined ,with Doar
in ferences. . in recommending several proposed .·
Jenner added : .. You don 't have - arti cles of·impcachment. "We're moving
you Cl_!n't rind ~he .man ... with his him out because he's not reprcs~aUve
hand tn the cookie Jar when you open of the Republican members " McCory 1 the door suddenly, but you can ,.. said. ' ~·
I l;ount Du111ped
Elirlichnian Verdict "Reversed
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell
today threw out the conviction of John 0. Ehrlichman on one of
three perjury counts against Jiim.
Gesell, in a brief order and accompanying memorandum, said
that the statute under which Ehrlichman. was charged and convicted
- a federal law' against lying to the FBI -"was not properly in-voked in this case." •
He ordered the giillty verdict set aside and a "verdict of acquit· tal set in its place."
Ehrlichman was convicted 10 days ago of perjury and one count
of violating the civil rights oC Daniel Ell sberg's psychiatrist, Dr.
Lewis F. Fielding, growing out of the breakin of Fielding's office in 1971.
The jury found Ehrlichman innocent of a (ourth perjury count.
The perjury count which Gesell threw out carried a maximum
penalty of five years in prison and a fine of $10,000.
Nixon, Lawyer St. Oair
Confer in .San Oemente
:
Before President Nixon left by By HELEN THOMAS · subpoena for White House tapes and
helicopter Sunday for a party in Los u1"1 Wiiii. ..._ Jl•-ier documents sought by the s p e c 1 a 1 · .
Angeles, he thanked a l\1arine who has President Nixon, pledging to withstand d ked I 1969 · · t ·t Watergate prosecutor, The Presi ent ha• · wor s nee 1n a spec1a uni the "very grave assault" on his conduct
that watches over residential takeolfs of the presidency, was to confer today refused to say how he will respond ·
· and landings at the El Toro Manne with his chief defense lawyer on anti· to an adverse ruling.
Corps air .station . impeachment strategy. The President was among otd friends,·.
Gunnery Sgt. Gerald Gotchie, 34, who Nixon planned his first face-to--face California's elite businessmen, Sunday
is being transferred to Japan, said, "The meeting in IO days with James D. St. night ~n he attended a dinner party'.
President thanked me for serving him Clair, who argued Nixon's case before in his honor at the fashionable Bel
and said he thought l would enjoy his the llouse Judiciary Committee. 1be Air home of Budget Director Roy Ash. .
hand. I was really nervous about meeting impeachment panel Is beginning what The convivial setting with long·time . him." may be it.! last week, with debate on political supporters and h e a v y.
Gotchie " one of seven Marines at articles of impe-achment scheduled to contribulors gave Nixon a chance to
El Toro who worked In the presidential begin Wednesday. reaffirm his intention to remain in office.
crash, fire and rescue unit. Nixon planned to see SI . Clair in " ... I am often asked, '!low do you
"I · hate lo even think about it. but the morning. and St Clair was expected really take the burden of the presidency.
if the President's helicopter crashes, we ... to give the President a complete particularly when al tim es it seems
are trained to put the fire out and res-rundown on his chances of defeating to be under very, very grave assault?' cue those aboard," he said. "We are impeachment. . Let me say it isn't new for us to trained in ' everything a civilian firem an nd h be under assault, because since the learns." St . Clair told reporters Su ay e
I " ··• th Su Court time I came into office, for five years, Gotchie said he had 14 ~·eeks of train· "hasn't a c ue wuen· e preme
· befor be' g assi ed to thre un it wi ll rule on Nixon's defiance_ of a we have had problems. i~n!g..."':'.".:•..."'~m'!.~~gn~~"'_~~"'.':·_.:::::_:.:::_~.:.:_..:.::::::..:....:::::::::.;....::... _______ ..c... _______ ~ -
,
UJll Ttl ......
S•rro11nded by Bodyguards
Queen Elizabeth poses with members of the Bucking.
ham Palace yeomen oC the. guard after making her four.year!~ iirnpcctlon or the bodyguard. The cere·
I
mony goes back to 1485 when the guard was formed
by King Henry VII. ·
. .
•
... .. • . -. ' i. 1... • . " "• -· ...... ~
•
-Bun-ingio-=o'-=n~~=======--
Founiain
VO,L. 67, NO. 203, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNT~, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 22, 1974
•
ot 111e CMtJr •a.r •• · do," Shirley c.ommons, president of the a ~·eek, she said, calling for a special 1j There will apparently be no Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board election and a .charter amendment to
compromile between real e 1t8 t e o( Realtort, said today. "And that's prohibit the use of this,' or any future 1 interests and city officials in Huntington not the .... point. We don't feel this is transfer tax. ·
-J.-----aeach--over --the-.-hotly-contested-real-a proper tax.-W do~t---want-it...-at-~e-want_an.__ele.ction_as soon-.as
estate transfer tax. all." possible. our lawyers have drawn up
A public pledge to avoid any increase Mrs. Commons said the realty board the petitions, and our board will have
in the new half percent tax, made last intends to conti nue its effort to force to look them over_," Mrs. Commons
week by <Sy councilmen, r u failed a special election on the transfer tax . explained. "We should start in about
to soften QPP01ition to the tax. issue. a week." .
"They certainly have no way of Realtors and other opponents of the Jim Larkin, vice president of the realty
'
'
board, asked the council last week to organization. CANT (Citizens Against
put the issue on the November ballot, New Taxes), to handle the petition drive.
but his request was unanimously turned A simi\af organization was formed 00.':"~~ will still ·try to ll'Ork with the recently in Fresno to fight the same
council_and _ get an election· _in _ tax'. __ _ _
November," Mrs. Commons said. "We Huntington Beach was the first city
want to save the city the expense of in Orange County to develop a real
a special election. I don 't really think estate transfer tax, although Santa Ana
they understand how easy it will be is now considering the same move.
for' us (to· get signatures)." City officials expect the tax to raise
The realty board has-formed a new • about 'l.2· million for a $31.8 million
I
•
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
• \ TEN CENTS
.
budget which had been about $2.5 million
short on revenue.
City Administrator Dave Ro\vlands told
the council last week he thought lhe
major concern of the opposition was .
the possibility of the tax being raised
in future years. His advice prompted
councilmen to make their public pledge
against future raises.
But Mrs. Commons made it clear
the real. estate board wants the 'tax
· {See NEW TAX, Page 2) J
.
F~ghting Slackens
Cyprus Cease-fire Hopes Fl-icker'
•
By United Press Inttmatlonal
Fighting continued in and a r o u n d
Nicosia but appeared to be easing up !ah>:
today after passage of a 7 a.m. PDT
cease-fire deadline agreed to by Greek
and Turkey. U.N. Secretary General
Kurt Waldheim reported a Turkish air
raid on Nicosia an hour and 15 minutes
after the truce deadline.
Radio reports said Turkish planes hit
a hotel in the port of Famagusta, killing
at least 20 foreign tourists, and UPI
correspondent Michael Keats said in a
dispatch from Nocosia that the truce
deadlll:te came and went with no sign
of any relaxation in the fighting.
The U.S. later reported the cease-fire
had begun to take effect.
Greek National Guard units, reinforced
by troops from 11 Greek planes which
slipped into embattled Nicosia during
the night, kept up a steady pounding
and mortar shells from Greek units in
Nicosia.
In the capital itself patrol units of
tile Greek National Guard, in vehicles
disguised with foliage, moved up and
down the streets. Others· turned out
on motorcycles. Tw.o pedaled bicycl~s,
rifles slung from their shoulders.
Ankara radio said an Athens coup
overthrew the Greek government today
but the Greek Embassy in Washington
said the report was totally unfounded.
UPI correspondent John Rigos reported
from Athens that the Greek military
junta remained in po~·er and the city
was nonnal.
"The ce,ase-fire on Cyprus is effective
as of now," Turkish premier Bulent . '
THIH'~'NIVllt SHORTAGE OP l'ATtENTS AT HUN'l:INGTON pu;CH'S FREI CLll!ctc
from Left, 11+..,.m Coordln1t~r f!'lke Lyoft, li.turt. Ja"'!' (seated), Debbie Mcintosh
of the corridor, Keats said. Turkish
troops were attempting to drive to the
capital from the Kyrenia are!k where
they-landed -reinforcements-by-air -and-
sea today. ...
A United Na_tkms command. spokesman
I' itJ NiQaia said no officiJI orders on
a cease..'flre b8d been received as yet
and that "We' will continue doing what
we have been tryin'g to do all along,
to have the Greek and Turkish
communities obsel'Ve the last cease-fire,"
he said.-
Huntington Free
Clinic a Help
To Low-inco1ners
John and Susan walked lnto the Free
Help-ctinic in Huntington Beach for
medical treatment.
. 'Ibey bad to seek treatment there,
John had recently lost his job, and
the pair were out of cash.
, Tn addition, Susan was upset over
the recent death of a close relative,
the couple t\ad lost theii-home and
furniture because of non~payment of bills
8nd their marriage was faltering.
At the clinic, they received the medical
care they needed. In addition . Steve
~. counaelor and ooe of four full
time staff members, said the clinic
helped John find a job, got them
emergency funds and -furniture-and
Worked with them to solve their marital
Problems. · • John and Susan are among 5,001
persons who receive medical help and
counseling at the dmaUm-supported
<:llnic eaCh year. ~ Mike Lyon, a graduate student at
Ca.1 State LOn«i Beach who's been clin!c
program coordinator for a year, said
the clinic could treat more if-more
volwi.teer ph)'aicians oould'be-scheduled.
"Yle've new had a doctor on duty
complain about not having enough people
to treat," Lyon said. :
A doctor is on duty at the clinic
an average ·of three days a week, Lypn
pointed out: even though ·the clinic tries
to have four consultation days a week.
One problein is, he •pointed out, th11t
a .volunteer doctor often is called away
on an emergency and cancels his clinic
(See aJNIC, Pa1e %) ,
AD BRINGS MORE
AND MORE CALLS
"Yes, the apertme(lt was rented. And,
to a· Daily Pilot reader, too.
"We had more calls than we could
handle. I think, I was asking too little,"
'lh< hippy w.-er landlord
oo-ved.
t-, Here:• f.lle ad which started his phone
·ringin1 :
$%34. mo. + $100. securilv.
2 BR & dell, I ba, newly
painted. dble iar. lmmed.
occupancy, Hers., XXX-
XXXX,
We can't tell you how much to ask,
but we can prompt renters to ring
your chimes. Rtng ours at 642-5678
and let a Daily Pilot ad work for you.
Reinecke Case
U.S. ]~dge Dismisses
One Perjury Count
"We will keep on trying."
Waldheim said Maj. Gen. D. Prem
Chand of India, commander of the U.N.
peace keeping force-in Cyprus,-and Luis
Wechman-Munoz of Mexico, t h e
secretary general's personal representa-
tive in Cyprus, reported that fighting also
was going on in other parts of the
Mediterranean Island. WASHINGTON !AP) -One or the
two perjury counts against California
Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke was dismissed
today by U.S. District Court Judge
Barrington D. Parker.
But Parker denied a defense motion
to grant a judgment of acquittal on
a second count as the defense prepared
to begin its case today.
The count dismissed at the request
ot defense attorney James E. Cox ·alleged
that Reinecke testified falsely to the
Senate Judiciary Committee two years
ago when he said he had no way of
knowing whether former Atty. Gen. Jo~
N. Mitchell knew of a financial
commitment by a subsidiary . ·O f
International Telephone & Telegraph
Copr. to the 1972 Republican NaUonal
Convention prior to July 31, 1971.
Sen. Edward Kennedy (O-Mas.t;.), a
member of the Judiciary Committee,
asked Reinecke about Mi t_c he 11 's
k:OO'wiedge o the !TI pledge while the
panel was considering-the nomination
of Ridlard G. Kleindienst to be at~ey
general. l •
-"The question is put somewhat
ambiguously," the judge .said of
Trustees W eigl1
Unificatioi1,
Overcrowding
Unification and the co n t in u e ~
overcrowding at Fountain Valley High
Scho6t will be discussed at a 7:30
meeting tonight of the Fountain Valley
city council and scllOOI board.
The meeting, at the. city's comrounity
center, u.rzoo Slater Ave., was called
by councilmen early this month to keep
communication between the two bodies
open.
t.a.3'. Thursday. Fountain Va 11 e y
trustees called for a study of ways
the district might secede from the
Huntington Beach Union 1-tlgh School
District · and fonn its own uni tied, K·12
system.
But Board Pre.t;ident Fred Voss said
trustees still are willing to. hold
unification talks with all ~ districts
if the high school districl will load the
way.
. '
Kennedy's question .
Cox had argued
question specifically
impression.
that Kennedy's
called for an
"It wa's vague and uncertain and that
question called for an impre.ssion," Cox
argued.
The one remaining count against
Reinecke accuses him of lying to the
committee about when he. first discussed
the convention site with Mitchell.
Reinecke told the oommittee that he
firsT discussed San Diego B s a site
of the convention in September, 1971
-after an out-of-court settlement of
an ·IIT antitrust case.
But ·the prosecution contends that
Reinecke discussed the convention with
Mitchell in a telephone call on May
21, 1971, before the ITI case was settled.
The rrr case was resolved out of court
in July 1971.
Parker said the remaining count had
enough merit so that a 'jury_ should
decide on -it. The judge's ruling on
the two counts wa.;: made · before the
jurY entered the courthouse.
Several weeks ago Ul!;: s p e c i a I
prosecutor's office dropped another
perjury count against Reinecke, ·saying
it would have been neeessary to call
former While House aide H.R. Haldeman
(See REINECKE, Page %)
At 7 a.m., Keats said Greek artillery
units near Nicosia airport pumped a
ceaseles,t; barrage into Turkish positions
down the 16-mile road from Kyrenia
to the capital.
United Nations troops. working . 12
hours on and 12 hours off "If we are
lucky," dug new machine gun positions
at Blueberry camp, their military police
unit base camp.
Fiooish Lt. Lettala Teuro, 27, of
Helsinki, returned from bringing a
wounded comrade to the U.N. base at
Tziklos. He said Turkish troops there
were withstanding a rain of artillery
Grove Motorist
Killed in Crash
Feli9!1'1Q ~j!!_lo of Garden Grove
suffered fatal injuries Sunday night when
his car went out.of control and slammed
into a pylon supporting a shopp"ing center
sign in \Vestminster. "
Coroner's dt!:puties said Trujillo, 32,
of 13092 Ne lson Ave., was dead at the
scene of the accident.
California Highway Patrol officers said
the accident occurred on \Vestminster
Boulevard at Hope Street.
I Count Du1nped
Eltrlich1nan Verdict Reversed
WASHINGTON (UPI) -U,S. District Judge Gerhard A, Gesell
today threw out the conviction of John D. Ehrl1chman on one of
'three ~rjurr counts agains_!. him. _.... . .
Gesell 1n a brief order and accompanying _memorandum, sa1Cl
that the st~tule under which Ehrlichman w_as charged and cov,vict~d
-a federal law against lying to the FBI -"was not properly in·
voked~in this Case." .. .
J-fe ordered the guilty verdict set aside and a verdict of acquit·
tal set in its filace." • · . EhrliChm3n was convicted 10 day_s ago or per}ury and. on~ count
of violating the civil rights of Daniel Ells~rg s p~ych.1at~1st, Dr.
Lewis F. Fielding, grewitlg out of the break1n of Fielding s office
in 1971. . t l h J t • The jury founO Ehrlichman innocent o a o~urt . per ury ~oun .
The perjury count which Gesell ~brew out carried a maximum
penalty of five years in prison and a fine of $10,000. ,
• ·~ '
\IPIT ..........
SENATE 'DOVE' DEAD
Ex-salon Wayne Morse, 73
Former Senator
Wayne Morse
Succumbs at 73
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Former
Sen. Wayne Morse, one of the first
members of Congress to speak out
against U.S. involvement in Vietnam,
died today at the age of 73.
Death cut short his second attempt
at i political comeback since . losing
his Senate seat in 1968.
Hospit31 officials said ~1orse~had been
suffering from a urinary tract in(ection.
They said he died or kidney and heart
failure.
Morse was ousted by Republ ican Sen.
Bob Packwood in a close coot.est. Four
years later, Morse, then 71 , was beaten
handily in a race against Sen. Mark
0. Hatfield (R-Ore.).
Two months ago, Morse again \\·on
the Oemcicratic senatorial nomination
-and the rjght to challenge Packwood
-by defeating state Senate President
Jason Boe, 44, in Oregon's primary
(See MORSE, Page I)
New Playground
-seeRs Volunteers
Housewives, students. or any other
v61unteers who would like to \\'Ork with
children arc need to help supervise the
new Huntingtoo Beach a d v c n t u r e
playground.
With 200-300 children a da y visiting
the rugged playground at, the bottom
of the Bruce Brothers gravel pit, more
volunteers are urger.tty needed. .
For more infonnalion phone Cliarlcy
Onccn. supervisor or ad v e n t u r e
playground, at 536-5486 or 536-9566.
' •
Ecevit told a 7 a.m. PDT news oonfer-
ence. "But if the reports we P:re getting
are true, the political vacuum in Athens
will make political discussions difficult
an dmake keeping the cease.fire ex-
tremely difficult," Ecevit said.
He said :£hat in three days of fierce
fighting on the · island the Turkish
invasion force had achieved all of its
objectives -capture of the Gree'.<
Cypriot port of Kyrenia and control
of the road to Nicosia, giving the Turkish
community there an outlet to the sea .
Asked if Kyrenia would remair..
Turkish, Ecevit replied in a loud clear
voice, "yes!"
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W •
(See CYPRUS, Page 2)
Valley Police
Nab Suspect
' Sought by FBI
A man the FBI alleged was "armed
and extremely dangerous" and his rour
companions remained in Orange County
Jail today facing charges of possession
or dangerous weapons and marijuana
for sale.
Vernon Kortsen, 29, who had eluded the' FBI since 1971 on charges of seJllng
cocaine and other da11gerous drugs, lf•s
arrested Friday in a carefully planned
stakeout by Fountain Valley Police in a city residential area.
Detective Victor Deutsh said officer:;
recovered two pounds of marijuana. a
sawed-off shotgun, a machinegun, three
pistols and a large amount of
am munition at Kortsen's home, 10407
Nighlingale~Ave.
Also arrested on charges of possessing
the weapons and marijuana were Larry
Gleason, 27; Guylcne Monks, 26; Mitzi
Gleason, 22, who shared Kortsen's home;
and David Ritzier, 19, who gave a San
Diego address.
Police said their bond was set at
$5,000 each. and Kortsen also faces a
$15,000 bond on federal charge.
Deutsch said the police stakeout was
arrangetj· through a tip supplied by an
informant claiming there was a shotgun
and ma'rijuana in the home.
"Our primary concern was safety for
the · neighborhood in the event of
gunfire," Deutsch cxpl3iiied, saying,
however, the arrests were without
incident.
Neigh-hors on both sides of Kortsen's
home were e.vacuatcd , he pointed · out.
and 13 offiCers were throughout the
neighborhood. \vatching the home and
(See SUSPECT, Page %)
Orange Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy at times Tuesday
but otherwise mostly sunny skies.
Not much temperature change.
Beach highs in the low 70s rising
to the mid-80s inland.
Femi11ise Betty F'riedan says
tli.e woniITTi's movenient is get.
ting to men. Slie says-males stop-
1ier 01l the st·reet to tell lier /low
-the i1fovenien"111as clrange(t their •
lives. See story, Page 17.
INSIDE TODA V
At Ytur ltl"tl'l<t J Al!R L1Mlt!'s 1J •••fl1111 ,, L. M. 8ov• 1
Mon11 Tl'ff 11
Mo¥1ts • If
c.n .. rlll• s H1llO,._I NtWt I
CltHill.. 1~22
Ct"'I<• lS (AU°Wm tS
Orlllfl CtYRI)' lJ
Peoplt 11•14 SpOl'I• ... ,
Eh11lh Nell<ft 11
l'nttrlll-nl U
,l_t 1t<11
Mtn1-1•
flotk Mlr~th 10·11
T11t¥1\lt11 16
Wt.11Mr ~
Wfflll NI°" 4
2 DAILY PILDl ,, Monday, J11ly 22, 1'74 ------
Nixon Plans
'S trategy'
q£ Defe11se ·
By REI.EN THOM~S
Ul'I Wllilt HfUlt l •Hrltf
Plot Trial
Of Popeil
Under · Way
s---'"l'i'irndcnrNll<•n. lcctglng;o-wllh'"'n
the ''very grave &S&'lulf' on his cond uct
or the presidency, v.•as to confer today
with his chlef defen se lawyer on anti·
impeachment strategy:-
LOS ANGELES -Opening llalemen(s
"Were scheduled In Superior Court here
lo4ly-.ln-lhe-lrial"'<lf-Eloisc-Popeit-~r--r
Newport Beach and her boyfriend,
charged with <.'Oflsplrini to murder her
est~ed~bandJltchtn •IBt
. '
Nixon planned his first face-to-face
meeting in 10 days with Jantrs D. St.
'Clair, who argued Nixon's case before
the House Judiciary Commilt.ee. The
impeachment panel is beginning "'ha t
may be Its last week , with debate on
articles of impeachment scheduled to
begin Wedne!lday.
Nixon planned to see St. Clair In
the momi.ng, and St. Clair was expected
to give the President a complete
' rundown on his chances of defeating
impeachment.
mukhnlllionaire samuel Popeil. ~
Prosecuting Deputy pistrict Attorney
Peter Brt1maa ls e1pected to c1U
Robert Potier u Iii flnl wllneu.
Mrs. P<lpell, 48, and Daniel Ayers,
37, of Sanla Ana, have pleaded Innocent
to chargea of conspiracy and 10llclt1Uon
-to commit murder. Both spent 1evera1
days in cuatody before being ttleued on ball 1n January, .
St. Clair told reporters Sunday he
"hasn't a rl ue" v.•hen the Supreme Court
"''ill ru le on Nixon's defiance of a
subpoena for \\:hite 11ouse tapes and
.documents sought by the spec i a I
\\'alergalc prosecutor. The President has
re!u~ lo say how he will respond
lo an ad,•erse ruling.
LIFEGUARD MATT GREER TR IES MOUTH-TO-MOUTH REsusc1TATION IN TRAN·s1~· ....... ..
Costa Mesa Man Dies Despite Rescu e Efforts, But Hl1 Daughter is S1ved ·
Pee.ler and a · eecond proRCUtlon
witness. Don Reed, alleged to authorities
lhal Mrs. Popell and her boyfriend
provided jewelry as Stturlty and agreed
to pay them •:rio,ooo to eliminate Popeil
·Who ope~tes h.is kitchen gadget empi~
out ol Qucago. Popeil is also ooted for
having invenled and marteled a J'OPUljir
The President was among <lid friends,
California ·s elite. businessmen, Sunday
night v.·hen he attended a d"IMer party 1 in his honor at the _ fashionable Bel
Air home of Budget Director Roy Ash.
The convivial setting with loog-time
1 political supporters and heav y
contributors gave Nixon a chance to
reaffirm his int ention to remain in office.
t " .• .J am often asked, 'How do you
reallY take~ burden of lhe presidency, panicularly when at limes it seems
to be under very, very grave assault?'
Let me say it isn't new for us to
be under assault, because since the
time I ca me into office, for (ive years,
we have had problems.
"There have been people marebing
around the \Vhite House ~'hen we were
trying to bring the (Vietnam) war to
an end, anit--we have withstood that
and we will withstand the problems
1 or the future.
"People wonder." be added, "how does
any individual these days, when we
have very high-pressure campaJgns in
I the media to take on public figures,
bow does any individual take it, bow
does be surv:ive it, bow does he keep
his composure, his strength and the
rest."
Nixon said he has been able to survive
the Watergate onslaught and maintain
' his composure because "I have a strong
family and I am very proud of it;
I have a lot of good friends who write
and call and say 'We're stick ing by
you.'
"1 assure you no man in public life
has ever had a more Joyal group of
friends ·who stood by in good and tough days .• ,"
Niz:on was exhilarated during the
evening by the messages he was
receiving by telephone froin Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger i n
Washington, Who Wonned him that a
cease fire was imminent in Cyprus.
Among the guests was James
Roosevelt of Newport Beach, a>n of
the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt
"'ho said be was a Nixon supporter:
Roosevelt declined to comment on im-
peachment proceedings, but said: "If I
had to make the same choice as I bad to
make in 1972, I'd mak e it again."
Library Planning
, Kids' Arts Meet
The Graham Street annex <i the
Huntingtoo Beach public library is
sponsoring a fine arts contest for
children during August.
M y local youths in pre«hooJ through ~igh school can enter any or all of fiv~ .categories: story writing, poetry,
pamtmgs, drawings and phoJoiraphy.
Entries will be accepted from Aug.
1 through Aug. 24, with a special party
for the winner> scheduled Sept. 7.
OlAHGICOAST
DAILY PILOT
l"-D-•nt• eoo,1 0.,1, "'iol ~I"""'(",. COol\o
lloneil tM N•'" ,,_, .. Pllbl-bvlllo Or•PWH
GcA" ~ w..r-S.0.-t<~ -•• ,.
-.. ... a. "'°"Ot' ti••-• r.,..~ "" C.011• ~-, N4"'°"" Bu<" !iU"'1f'fll!e• S.aU11r.,.,,..
"" V-1' Ltll'U•• !llil<~ '""""'~I •M
Safi °""""'_,,SM JIMft C.-1"" A -19
..,_1..,,r'°" "~'1 .. ...0.,,..,"'s..,,,.
..,. '~ "'""'...-pUClo"""O p1,a"''"" m w.,. fllyS1re.t.Coo!a -C.loklt'"•· !0'676.
Joel 'f c ... ~ ... Vot•l"rt-at"'O.'*tl~ .......
·~,., ,...,F-....... M-e-"9(-
0oiei H. Loti, F11:~ P, I-bl
Girl Saved; Father Drowns
Mesa n Loses Life in, Surf Off 1Vewport Pier
By L. PE:TER KRIEG
01 "'-EMllY f'ilet ll•ff
A Costa J\.resa man dro\.\'Tled Sunday
evening near the Newport Pier after
saving his 9-year-old daughter's !Ue by
telling her to float on her back W1Ul
help arrived.
Newport Beach lifeguards-said Dennis
J\fcArthur. 28. of 1028 Valencia St., was
swimming with hls daughter, Dorothy,
about a p.m. when they began having
difficulty about 100 yards off shore due
to riptides and 25-inUe-an-hour wlndil.
Acrording to the daughter, McArthur
told her to float on her back while
he ~·ent for help. He never made it.
According to lifetuard supervisor
Larry Gibson another awlmmer alerted
lifeguards lo tbe fact that two people
were In trouble. Lifeguard John Sutton
swam out and rescued Dorothy, but
saw no sign of McArthur.
Llfei'U'fds promptly called lhe poll«
helicopter, which spotted McArthur's
body about 200 yards offshore. The
helicopter then made two trips to the
liloguard slallon and dropped IUeguaros
Ken Rouse and Larry Gibson into the
water near McArthur while the third
lifeguard, Matt Greer, swam out by
hlJMelf.
An Orange County Har;bor Palrol boat,
summoned by the lifguards, arrived with
lifeguard Gr.g Long on board and
carried McArthur to harbor department
headquarters, where he wu transferred
to an ambulance.
Lifeguards attempted reauscltaUon
throughout the reacue and transportaUon
of the victim, according to Gibson, but
he was pronounced dead on 1rrival at
Hoar Memorial HospitaJ •t a:so p.m.
Dorothy and r.1cArthur's two youn1er
children, Who had waited on the beach,
were taken home by a police officer.
l'ro•P-.e J
HUN TI NG TON CLI NIC. ••
visil her daughler was daling, lllie needed
He explained 75 percent of those the pills.
treated at the clinic. which starting The girl told doctors she didn't want
~ Oran ge Count y's
1-97 4 Fair Sets
Attendance Mark
in April 1971, receive birth control llelp the-pills, and the, staff convinced her
or treatment for venere.al disease. mother th~y wercn t needed. . .. Lyon 38Jd ihe staff hopes to im~e ~ other 2$ percent receive general • service this fall when the cl.Uc moves·
medical or psychological counseling. from cramped quarters at m Fltth
Lyoo noted counseling and medical St. lo a 3,000-squar~foot faclUty in the
treatment of the elderly are t~·o of former civic center.
the clinic's rapidly ez:P!Ulding areas. The move will be helped by a $5,000
Laurie James, medical coordinator, grant from the city and '34.000 from
said dooation.s from patienU range fn:m county revenue sharing f\mds. The c11n1c
25 cents lo an occ.asional $25. She also also receives $3.600 from the city each
noted a reent patient sent the clinic year fc.-operationl and '15,000 frcm
a potted plant In thanks for treabnent; various federal agencies..
and another gav~ a painting to one "People aomet.imes thklk we 1 re
of the counselors. treating people wbo could a f Io r d
She said ~.clinic handles a variety tl'adiUonal medical care," Lym added,
of cases, pointing out, for example, a noting that a recent MJrVey revealed
recent instance when the clinic staff 90 percent of thc»e-ireated have lnccnes
helped a 14-year-old girl refuse birth of less than $3,400 a year for a family
cootrol pills. ot two.
The girl had been brought to lhe
clinic by her mother, who said the
family had just moved here from the east.
"She a9sumed everyone in California
"·as promiSCUOWI and thought that if
F ron1Page1
SUSPECT ...
sealing off escape routes.
MORSE ...
however. In 1959, Morse became Involved
in a feud with Claire Boothe Luce,
whose confinnalion as an amb&Mador
to Brazil he had fought unsuccessfully.
"My dlfftcultles, of course. go some
years back and began when Sen. Wayne
Mone was kicked in the head by 1
horse," sajd Mrs. Luce.
The 1974 Oranp County Fair, with
a total attendance of 213,244, set an
all-time record.
Attendance zoomed by more lhan 4.000
over last year wh ich up to then had
been the most successful fair since the
event started in 1890.
Fair 1organiz~rs had hoped to crack
the 250,000 barrier this year. They
blamed extremely hot "·eather during
·tWo days of the IQ.day event for. not
reaching that goal.
The threat of a major . raiMtorm
Friday in Costa Mesa also bad an effect
on the people count, according to Marvin
Bryan, a spokesman for the fair.
Bryan said the highest. ooe-day count
tor the 8~year-old fair was Sunday,
July 14, when a total of 27,298 people
came through the turnstiles.
How the fair fared In terms of profit
will not be known for several days.
Fr anco P rogressing
MADRID (U Pf ) -Alllng
Generalissimo Francisco Franco ls
progre111ing favora~y. a rnedlcal bulletin
by bh: physicians said today.
'
• pocl<et fishing rod setup.
Well Prese r.,e d Ayen and Mn. Popiell wen ar .. sled
Jan. a by • team of Long Beach homicide
detectJvea at her former home at 519
Harbor Island Road, Newport Beach.
Authorities hive Hid that Peeler and
Rffd Upped lliem off oloog with the •
-Yictlm, after ~ lrl(ht.
ned .. ""' OOlll<q...-of ""'' lhey w.re allepdly being IOl!dted to do.
· A key ehimtnt In the trial to be
heard before Judie Mark Brandler is
Hazel Courreges of Fountain & ,
Valley has won. the sweepstakes
award in preseFVed foods at ..
the Orange County Fair. Out •
of her 24 entries, 22 received 1'
blue ribbon1. '
• series of lape reoonUncs alleged to
include murder contract di.scual.ons
among the princlpaf1.
POpetJ and hls wile ,..... In the midst
of divorce proceedlng1 bul llbe 11ood
to, Inherit a third of his fortune If
be <Jled before lalUanoe of Jbe IInaJ
decr"'ee.
JUlt lut week, a divorce court judge
In Chicago ordered Popell lo pay 127,000
in temporary aapport and le1al costs
lo hls wile, P!lldinc the outcome of tile
munler-for-blre trial.
Proceedlnp being held In ! h e
courtroom. Ill N. HUI 51. In clownlown
Lat Anplet, Ia upected to t.ue str
weeks, with Peeler's t e 1 t I mo n y
OCllllUJDIJV -moot of tIU weel:.
l' ..... P .. el
NEW TAX •.•
eliminated.
The Bulkllng lnduatrle1 of America
·cBIAl has pledged Its suppart to flghl
the transfer tax, and several Huntington
Beach organizations have indicated they
may help the realton In aeeting a
special election.
While the petition drive ls proceeding
with the backing of the real estate
board, Mrs. Common.1 aid h e r
or1antu.Uon bas DO connect.ioo with
another action again.st the council -
a recall movement.
The recaJI effort WIS latmehed by
the Pet Owners Coalitioo, which is
currently proposing rewritten animal
control ordinances for the city.
l're•P .. el
CYPRUS ... '
Friedlieim aald about 350 'Americans
on Cyprus w:lll be evacuated to the
helicopter carritt Inchon 11 t a n d l n g
offshore. He said Marines woukl try
to complete the evacuaUon in daylight
houn loday and that an addltlooal 360
Americana were believed remaining oo
lhe IJland.
Westminster's
All Star Team
Beats Huntington ·
The Westmlns1"r Nallonal l.oague'ti
all stan beat HW1ti~ Valley 9-1.
Saturday, I<> capture lhe senior dlvtoion ·
(1:1-15) of the DllU!ct 12 Little League
All Star Tournament.
WestmJnster'a tam will reprf.Senl
District a again.st Buena Park at 5:30
p.rn .. Tueeday, at Walker Junior High
.in Buena Park, as they begin state .
oompellllon for a berth In lhe World
Series at Gary, Ind.
A team composed o( District u all
stas In the Big League division (16-18 ),
will play an all star team from the
Pomona Valley at 11 a .m., Saturday;
in La lPalma Park. Anaheim.
Teanw in the · Big League tight for -
a .World Series birth at Ft . Lauderdale. ,
1.leanwhile, the main course of Little '
League competition, the major divisioo
(9-12), gets under way at 1:30 p.m.;
Saturday, in. the Ocean View LiW.e ·
League park at Hell Avenue and Grahan\
Sired(
An all star team from the Bolsa
L<Ogue will Jangle wilh lhe bet! from ·
Hun11n«i1<>n Beach's Sea View League .
to determine the bes t District 62
r<1"'9"1'tatlve In stale playoffs.
The major division teams, the
tradillonal compooent o( Utlle League
bueball, fight for births in lhe UUJe ·
League World Series at Williamspr>rt,
Pa.
Hispanic Aide Picked :
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -FemandO •
Debaca, West Coast director of the U.S.
Department of Health, Education and
Welfare has been named to the White
House staff as special assistant for
Hispanic affairs. Debaca, · 35, is a
Mez:lcan-American..
Deutsch and Detective Ma rt in
Engquist, wearing street clothes and
bullet-proof vests. first arrested the two
women. Then officers waited Inside a
few minutes and arrested Glea.!IOn when
he returned home.
A short time later, Kortsen and Ritzier arrived.
Deut!ch said Kort.9en first started to
bllt when he saw officers but police
grabbed him and Uwre were no further
lncidentl.
In 1951, a mare named Missie broke
P.1orse's jaw during a horse show al
Orkney Springs Va. .
Funeral arrangem1.J1ts for Mone were
incomplete.
election.
Morse, 'known for his unpop;llar views
and unwillingness to compiomise on
issues. was one ·of the flm members
of Congress to oppoee U.S. involvement
in Vletnam.
Two ·Murders Unsolved
· Poli~e; Se cret Witness , Still Seeking Clues
Treasury and Internal Revenue Service
officials ~·i!l be contacted by police later,
Deutsch said, for investigation of gold
and jewelry found In the house.
Deutsch said v.·hat appeared to be
tools for melting gold as ~-en as a
tlx-ounoc gold block, gold and sliver
cocaine spoons and a diamond ring,
we~e found in the home, leading
policemen to think the group may have
been receiving stolen jewelry.
Conce rts Close
Va lley Progra111
He and former Sen. Ernest Gruening
(0-Alas k.a ),. who died last mOQth at
the age or 87, were the only two senators
~·ho voted against the Tonkin Gulf
resolution In 1964. Prttident Lyndon E.
Johnson u.sed the measure as a f\.lnctional
decla ration of war In Southeast Asia.
." ~lorse's age was a major campaign
issue during the ~ay primary, but he
countered by saying that many great
U.S. 9Ct'latol'! had performed their best
servi ce. after they were .70 yean old.
FromP-.el
REINECKE ...
One WIS I well:known gas statioo
owner In Fountain Valley, the other
an apparent misfit youth whose body
was dumped and rorgotten on a
deserted road in H1.mtingt.on Beach.
Their common bond Is brutal death
and a !isling on police logs as wu1<1lved
murders.
Lou Lovko was stabbed 17 times
at his Shell Service station at Talbert
Avenue and Bushard Street in
Fountain Valley on a September night
in 1972.
~ seven homemade tattoos which could
S · w• aerve aa Jdentlf\caUon marks. ecrel llft8SS The laUooo are: a spider on lbe in ner left forea rm, tour dots on the
top of his left wrist, an "F" ()fl
his left shoulder. a swa!lllka on his
iMer left calf, the Initials "DF'' on
his Inner right calf, and the number
13 oo his tnner left calf.
'Ibere were eye wltnesees, but ........ ,,. .... _,...,,. ..... _....,,,. .... _
investigakn hive still been unabl e
The boy 's body was dumped along
Ellis Avenue, between Golden West
and Gothard streets. in April 1973.
He had appal'ellUy beed brutally
attacked and homosexually assaulted.
A ISO ,....rd '' offered i. anyone just for the Identity of the youth. to turn any valkl Information as to
who did It. All they know is two
)'oulhl, pouibly Mexican-American,
got blto a verbal hassle with Lovko
and me of them knifed him.
the Secret W1tnes1 at 642-0700, or
write to: Dally Piiot, Semi Wllnesl,
P.O. Bor 790, HuntJnrton Beach
(91141).
His death may be part of. a string or similar murders In Long Beach
and I.As Angeles which have been
called the "mutUatloo murdert."
"""'""'M~CCMOI'
19!fY(o..;a.,
WINI 0-..,. teolN~ [-
............... llOffkr-
• 181S!kw..~ eo..c."°"d
~ AMe·~ PO, Bo. m. 01~
Free vocal and instrumental concerts
this "·eek \\'ill mark-the end of the
_ fountain Vallgi School DI s t r I ct' s summ~r musle program. -
as a witness lt the char1e wtre' Pft9Md.
Haldeman Is slated to go on lrlal Sept.
9 In tile Y.'ater1ate &ver-up cue.
11ult OO<U\( alleged lhlt Relaocke 11<!<1. to the Judlciary Committee when -he
said he flrtt discussed the poaalbillty
of bringing the 1972 R e pu bl le an
convention to San Diego In April, 1971.
To protect your klentity, sign the
lnformall<ln with a 1lmpl1 111-dlglt A half do«n llpa lo lhe Dally
Piiot'• Stem Witness have given
pollce faint glimmen of '-· but code Ullnl anycomblnatloo "Ie!lors
none ol the information 10lved the and mnnben, IUCh 11: ABClt'. Then
crime ---watch J'~h Mondar. for further
Such major, bNtal crimes as the
LOvko 11abb1n1 and 1be youth'• klDlni
are not c:ommon In this area . but •1
llWll' other crimes -•'!><clally
bur&lary and rol>bery -are, Bnd
the rate may be increasing as the
!ll"ell l(T'OWS. °"""" Offlc•1 l ......... ~ ''''" ......... ... C.tit Iott-.. »th·-.... , ... , ,,,..._ '""' ~ ~ ..,.,..~ ... 5..iO.-•.m-l1C-11..i
'!=:e::f714164Z·4)ZI
Cle--...,.....4.1·1•7• f_N....,,()r .... ~~ ... ..... ,,.
~· ,,,., er.,. l))MI """"""'"" c-. _., ,.._ ........ ...,alO'lt.M40!Jlll ... !•
........ 4 1•1 .....-... , ... ~"" ...,_..-toll ......... OIOlll¥lfl'I-
......, ct. ......... "°""' ....... QWO<--...,_.,~130Q_.,.i,,m""' M OO .-"'41-1)00,..,,..,,.,
Both wlll begin at 7 p.m. in the
paUo area of Jfarpcr School , 1S68S Santa
Ynez St.
On \\'tdne:sday the gui l!ir and choral
groups ~'ill perform. p r esent I n g
highlights from the mustcals. "You 'rt
a Good Man, Charlie Brown" and
"Oklahon1a."
Thursday the beginning and advanced
band and orehe:!Jtra students will perform a variety ot music. ~ ,
About 450 Children from third through
seventh grades attended clas11 ln !ht
music program ~'hich startt'd.July 1.
Reinecke told the: Judiciary Committee
that on that date he was in WUhini\00
ond attended a aoclal reception to
promote economic development In his
stale, "and we discussed the J>OMlblllty
at th11t point and lh1t was where the
idea was really hatched."
The charge remaining 1 I • I n s t
Reinttke carries a mallmum penally
of live years in prison and a fine of
$2.000.
·-.
Polk:. are •Ill Jnveotlpting ond Information on lhe crime. -
the Seer« Wltneu Lt 1tlll looking 1! we want to eontact a ·~witnell tor anyone who might have solkl for further infonn11Llon1 or to eel
Information On the Lovko killing. up • pay off, we will publish the
There Is a $500 cash reward for flrsJ three dlatta of the code and
lnfonnatlon which leads to the capture llY what we want
and conviction or Lovko'1 kllltrs. And In addition to the Uivko reward,
there Is 11l1c> a guarantee or complete there Is allO a J,500 price tag dfered
anonymity -no involvement wilh fM lnlorm.tloo whJch leads to t.he
tht police or Myone else. 110l11tlon ot a youth's killing ln
Police helleve the killers might bo l11U1UnJton Belch.
known by tomeone in the community. In thlt c•te, pollce don't even know
If )'OU know anything about it, phone who the yooth was, but he dk! have
Anotf'ltr facet of S«:ret Wltne53
involve& generel community support,
to fight crime. Jr you hive good
information on 1ny slgnlflcant crime,
but for wl'latever rum don 't wnnt to become Involved with police, tell
it to the Stcrel Witness.
In tome cases, small cash reward.!!
of llS or 15\l, or poulbly more, will
bo pold at lhe dlocretlon of lhe Seer<!
Witness, f<lr unt01lctted Information. /
;
. . -
At Your
-t-P-Se rv1ce
ASUaday, Monday, Wedne$clay
and Friday Feature ~
Of the Dally Pilot
Cot a J)Toblem ? Then write Pat
Du11y. Pat will cut red ta~. (Jfttha
answer$ and
acfio11 you need lo
.~oh.ie inequities in
govern ment and
/)1.1 lfi11t!s, ·A-fail
yo_ur quutions .. 1011--,~
Pot Dunrt I At
Your Service,
• Orange Coast
~ l)ai/y Pilot, P. 0.
-r-----.J.JpL.J:HJ. C.O.sta•t---1='~
1 • Alesa. CA 92626. Include your
telep/1011e numbt>r.
Motclng ·Injuries
DEAR PAT: I've let m,y son take
over lawn mowing chores at our house
this swnmer. When I tell him to be 1-+-icaiirefUr·-wnen US1ffg tile poWer -JJll)'ftf, -
he says I worry too much. I doubt
that this is the case and I'd appreciate
an '1official11 injury figure to back ¥P
my warning.
L. N., Irvine
Youv•e got ii. The U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission esUmate11
some 1%3,500 persons will wind up in
bospllal emergency rooms nationwide
this year as a result of accidents
associated with yard and garden
e_q_uJpmenl .
~Teeth Don't Fit
r DEAR PAT: I paid my dentist a
tot or money for dentures and they
don't fit properJy.' I've complained to
him repeatedly to no avail and Dow I'd
like to contact some offici3t agency, but
J don't kno\v ho wto go about it. .
H.C., IJuntiuglon Be-ach
~ ' f '
Struggle Through Surf
•
•• ' ...
,
•
' l ' • ' • • .• --
Monday, July 22, lll74
Pilot Logbook
, •• J•t .......... __ ... ~ •• _.
H OAILY PILOT :J
Reading Power Meter's
No Simple Undertaking
,By CHARLES ff. LOOS
Of lllt P•llV Piiot S11U ~~~~:'..!::::;'.--:~~~ . I · y wife ancfr.J are having-this-problem with the.Edison Company.
Actually, it's\ all my dog's fault.
We have a big, black standard poodle named Beauregard who, in his
usual unkempt state, looks something like a bear. \Vhen he barks, he sounds
ferocious. Actually, he is fa irly-'friendly. but the Edison
Company meter reader doesn't know that. And access to
our meter happens to be through the portion or our ya rd • ---set askie--fol'" Beauregard. ~ ----
r
A few monthll back, we got a letter from the Edison
Company. It said there had ,been a problem in reading
our meter. There was a card encl05ed with instructions
on how to read our oWn meter. We were to mail in our
findings fl> we coold be billed, the Jetter explained.
The letter and the card got buried under a stack or
other papers on my desk and J forgot about it. Then Loos
another Jetter from the Edison Company· arrived. If we didn't shape up, It
said,. Edison would be forced to cut off our electricity.
SHOCKED AT my uncharacteristic carelessness and, at the urging of my
wife, who likes things like dishwashers and washing machines to work when
she pushes the buttons, I hastened to read the meter. The card was in the
,..tnail the next morning.
... Two wee ks later, we got another Jetter from the Edison folks. Darkness
was about to fall on the Loos hou9ehold.
''What gives?" I 3.sked the Edison service supervisor who answered the
~· "I sent in tha t card two weeks ago.'·
He ' said he Y•outd check it out. ·
WHEN I arrived home that nighl, my \Vife gteeted me with a smirk on
her face.
'"The-Edison Company called," she announced haughtily. ''You read the
gas meter."
J was speechless.
"THEY'RE sending another card," she went on, "and this time, I'll read
the meter.''
She did and the bill came the other day. It was for $349.25. Taking into
account the e.1tra month during which all of this had been going on. the bill
is still about four times our normal charge.
"My god,'' I said, "you must have read every meter in the neighborhood.''
My wife giggled sheepishly at her apparent wrong reading of the right
meter.
MR. KENT, a \'ery patient and understanding man at the Eclison Company answered my call.
"Oh, l remember you," be said. "You're the guy who read the gas meter."
!\1r. Kent is sending us a new card.
TlUS TThtE, I think I'll let Beauregard read the meter.
Any problem in dentistry lhat concerns
incompetent, lraudulent or criminal
conduct, ma)' be directed to the State
Board or Dental Examiners, IOZG N.
St., Sacramento, Cali£. 95814 (pbone:
911445-&&07). Before c~ntacttng tbe
board, you ·might coosider contacting
the Orange County Dental Society, %95
"8. Flower, Orang!.
Oarsmen from several Southern Ca1ifornia lifeguard
agencies battle through San Clemente surf in an-
nual dory races which were part of weekend wind-
up to Fiesta La Christianita. One of the two boats
from Los Angeles County Lifeguards won race Sat· 'Space ,Window' Feted
Land for Sale?
i PEAR PAT: ls there any public land
still available ror sale through the federal
government? If so, where can I get
tract descriptions. sale information and
how one goes about mal\ing a pun:haesc?
1 C.W., Costa Mesa
1 :rttost pubuC land sun •''ailable for
sale 11 ,located lo the Western states,
with small parcels offered ·~the South
and :rttldwest. The best information ,
aoDrce Is "Oar Public Lands," a
quarterly magazine .selling for $t a year
from the Superintendent of Documents,
Government Printing Office, Washington,
D.C. ZfMOZ. It lists public lands kt be
sold In the near future, a descrlplion.
blcludiug location, appraised price and
otfir ueflll data. Additional lnformaUon
700 speci fic parcels can be obtained -by
wriUog tbe Bureau of Land Management
offlee for the stale Jn which the parcel
Js located. Ask for a prospectus glvbtg
complele detcrtplloa, the dale of sale
and a bid form. Purdutse must be 1 through public auct19g !Bies held in
any of the 10 land offices of the Bureau
ol LaDd Management. You can send
in a sealed bid with full payment
included, appear in person. or have
a representative appear for you .
' Worn• Farming
DEAR PAT: I'm interested i n
contacting \Vestern Bait Farms ,
describe« in a recent Daily Pilot article
as a company that sells starter wonn
fanns to private growers, then buys
back any worms raised. Whal's the
address of this firm and what kind
of a business reputation does it have?
B.D., Costa Mesa
1be basl.ness reputation ls good and
the addreu is 8981 Walnut Ave., Alta
Loma, caw. 917tlt. Western Bait
O>rporation Is send.Ing a brocbure kt
you, explaining its business setup
proctdares for novice worm farmers.
China Doll Kit
DEAR PAT: Some time ago I clipped
out an adverti~ment jn a magazine
for a china-head doll kit. .but I've
mis'placed it. This would make an ideal
because she loves dolls and has become'
interested in sewin~. Can yot1 find out
the name of the comP\)ny offering this
doll?
rtt.J., Laguna Hills
Write lo Yield Jlouse, Dept. 03103,
N. Con\\'.ay, N.H. 0386&.
'Meals on Wheels!
DEAR PAT; ls there such a· thing
as "meals on wheels" in our Costa Mesa-Newport Beach area? If so, mw
do we contact it, wtiat kind of serv¥:e
is available and how much does .it cost?
My elderly parents ~ like more
available to them than "pizza man"
\vhen they are shu t in.
,.._ , l\f.C., Costa Mesa
Although there is a :''meals on wbetls"
progfam strVing the Laguna Beach to
San Clemente coast arta, none Is
available in Coda Men-Newport Beach.
\""our parenl5 8i'e'Jpv1led...t0_j0Jn-otb'lt'
~tnlor citizen• at PmJttt TLC. This
frte luucbffn and afternoon activities
program, admlldttercd by feedback
Foundation, Inc., through the CalJfornla
Ofrtce on Aging, is held at Si. .Job11
The Divine Episcopal Church, ZM.1
Onlnjle Ave .. Cotti l\tesa. 1'here. Is a
Wahlnf II. I for bomt-dtllv6td meals •t lhll time, but your pertnts can 11lgn
,., for this service and obttln furtlttr
Information about Project TLC from
-Dick Kincaid.
• urday around city pier. Local agency entered two
dories, and placed fourth and fifth.
House. Okays Television
For lmpeacliment case
WASHrNGTON (AP) -The House
voted today to allow Jive television and
radio coverage of the House Judiciary
Committee 's impeachment debate and
vote .
The final decision on whether to allow
Jive broadcast coverage was up to the
committee itself. Committee appi:.oval
was expected
'Ille commit.lee is scheduled to begin
debating articles or impeachment again&
Two Girls Grab
Top Prizes in
Soap Box Derby
Another former bastion of male
chauvinism. Orange County's Soap Box
Derby, fell to feminine onslaughts
Sunday as two teenage girls bagged
the top prizes.
After the gravity-]'.>Owered racers had
all roiled down the slope at Irvine Park
Sunday, Julie Cubbison, 15, of Orange,
emerged undefeated to take the first
place award.
Janel Larsen, 13, of Orange, took the
second place award and Brian KennOOe,
12, of Glendale was third.
Fourth place was won by Jeff Weston,
15, or Whittler, fifth by Larry Garrison,
·12. of Orange and sixth by Paul Hoover,
13, of Orange. _
"-ThC good sportsmanship trophy went
to Randy Bales, 14, of Orange .
In trial racing Saturday, Brian Clary,
12, of Anaheim, demolished his ca r when
his helmet f<'ll forc\rard, blocking his
vision . He was not hurt in the mishap.
Julie. the derby's first girl winner, \vho
has raced in soap box derbies since 1972,
sai dthe 10 girls i nthe 42-<'ar field \vent
into the race thinking, "We're going lo
show them this time."
President Nixon Wednesday, with a final
committee vote expected by early next
week.
The House approved a rule premitting
Jive broadcast coverage of all House
C.Ommittee meetings over objections by
opponent. that it would tum the
impeadunent proceedings into a cirrus
or at least a rhetorical debate.
But proponents including Rep. William
L . Hungate (D-Mo.) said the historic
proceeding must be open i... viewing
by the full nation.
"It's the public's ·business,'' Hungate
said, "and we ought to let the public
in."
Judiciary. Committee ·Chairman Feter
W. Rodino Jr. (0.N.J!' put television
and radio networks on notice under
questioning from opponents that House
f'!Jles would prohibit commercials during
live coverage.
The chairman also said it is his
intention to ensure gave I · to.gave I
coverage so that all sides will be heard
during the debate.
House GOP Cooferenee Chainnan John
B. Anderam of Illinois opposed the live
coverage as a threat to judicious
hand.ling of jmpeachment articles by
the committee members. .
"If you put them in the structure
of the electronic box," Anderson said
"it is going to be a stilted structured
debate, in which members give their
fore-ordained views."
Rep. Qave Martin (R·Neb.) oomplained
that Democrats will get three more
hours of Jive radio and television
coverage than Republicans because there
are 21 Democrats and 17 Republicans
Oil the c6mmittee.
"Republicans could make a good
argument for demanding three hours
of addi tional time," Martin said.
Meanwhllc, Special Cowlsel John
Doar's ease for impe.achment was
attacked before the House Judiciary
Corrunittce as baJCd oo inferences, not
evidence. ·
Bero al, Age 14
County Y outli Saves 3 f ro1n Ocean,
GE>:RHART, Ore: (UPI\ -Jerr
Burget. 14, ot Villa Park, Ca lif., swam
300 yards into the . PacifiC Ocean surf
Sunday lo r~scue-UU-te-10-yeaf=OI~.
"This lad did a heroic thing and I'm
going to recommend hlm for any
li fesaving award t can," Police Chief
Bill Eddy said. •·rm convinced he saved
one life and possibly.all three."
Burget and his cousin, CharUe Shea,
14, or San Jose. were digging on the
beach near tl)C mouth of the N~snlcum
~ver when they heard screams from
tJlC ocean.
While Shea ran half a mile to the
nearest house for help, Burget plunged
into the wa ter, swam out about 300
yards and bl'bllght b3ck Rodney Alle_n
or Portland. Then he went out again
aftCI brou£11l '~Tonf Heinnin&:s Of
Portland and Cindy Rasmlissen of C8stle
Rock, \VaSh.
Th'! tY.'O girlS were examinNI at a
seaside hospital and released but Rodney
vras held overnight lri the hospital.
"They were out way too far," said
Burget, who docs not have a llfmving
certificate. "But I had to help as no
one else was around." ·
Litt!guards~ 8re on duty OC'I $Orne Oregt)n
a>ast beaches but not in the area where
ll1c d)ild""1 were.
,.
'
County Glider
Pilot Killed
By First U. S. Moon Men
SAN BERNARDINO (UPI)
,JQ6eph 1tf. Gilmaker, 18, of Villa
Park was killed Sunday \\'hen he
lost control of his bang eJider and
plummeted 150 feet to lhe ground.
Gilmaker. "'ho took off from the
Little Mountain area north of here,
apparently lost control of his craft
when he tried to crawl into a
seat on the glider after laking
off.
He was pronounced dead on
a_rrival at San Bernardino
• C:Ommunity Hospital.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Th• Apollo
11 astronauts had just dedicated a new
"space window" in the \Vashington
CathedraL wben a crowd of several
hi.itidred people suddenly surged around
tbem. singin~ "America the Beautiful.''
Neil A. Armstrong. F.dllt'in E. Aldrin
and MJcbael C.Ollins joined in. "'l1le eyes
of all three glistened.
The ceremony Sunday climaxed a
weekend of events in Washington
commemorating ttie fifth anniversary
of man 's first landing on the moon.
Armstrong and Aldrin stepped onto the
lunar Sea of Tranquility July 20, 1969,
while Collins circled overhead .
For imbedding in the space window.
the astronauts presented the dean of
f;ities Get Funds
Orange Coast cities will receive a
total of $847,000 in the most recent
distribution of local sales and use taxes
funds, State Board of Equalization
member John W. Lynck announced
recently. ·
Jn addition, Orange C o u n t y ' s
transportation fund is receiving $700,000
from state sales and use tax funds.
The two sums are part of more tha,n_
$45.7 million in tax funds beinC
distributed to every city and cowity
in ''~alifornia. The payments are the
second advance of 1974's second quarter.
Orange Coast cities are receiving the
following sums:
Costa Mesa -$227 500.
Fountain Valley -$40,ooo.
Huntington Beach -$186,250.
Irvine -$61,250.
Laguna Beach -$31.000.
Los Alamitos -$29,000.
Newport Beach -$145,000.
San Clemente -$27,000.
San Juan Capistrano -$15,000.
Westminster -$85,000. ..
Orange County received an additional
$140,000 for its unincorporated a reas.
THE RED BALLOON LTD. IS HAVING A
the cathedral. the Very Rev. f"rancis
B. Sayre. with a small rock they. had
brought to earth.
Making the presentation at the high
altar, Armstrong said :
"On behalf of the President and the ·
people of the United States, ~·e present
unto you !his fragment of creation from
beyond the earth to be imbedded in
the fabric of this house of prayer for
all people."
.~rmed Robbery
Suspect Given
Ten-year Term
A man once lKnted throughout
Southern CalifomJa for a string of armed
robberies and burglaries that included
a $4,500 OO!dup at a San Clemente
market has been sentenced to serve
not Jess than 10 years in state prison.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
Raymx"Jd Thompson ordered t h e
maximwn term for Ralph James
Whittaker, 39. formerly oC Rosemead,
after a jury found, the defendant guilty
of armed robbery and burglary.
Whittaker was arrested in December.
1972. shortly after he and Joseph Ductii.
38,.of r-.nlpitas, calif., held up the Alpha
Beta market in San Clemente. --
tHE RED
BALLOON
LTD.
50% OFF SALE!
ON $UMMER~·MERCHANDISE FROM THE
"DESIGN ER COLLECTIONS. OF PICCOLI NO ,
JOHNSTON. FISCHEL, FLORE·NCE
MILLBROOK, IMP, BETTI TERRELL ,
RUTH OF CAROLINA AND OTHER
CHILDREN 'S .DESIGNERS. .
EISEMAN,
DANS KIN .
QUALITY
FASHION ISLAND LOCATION ONLY!
•
-'
. .
1--f-,1-·-· ..... •
·;;~'-with ··:;;.:;·. To•
"· arphine
~··•:::· ..
'
·------------------·
Monday, J.i•Y 22, .. 'J.
C11pru Invasion
U.S:-Mfsjuaged
Turkish Threat ..
By FRF;D S, HOFFMAN had closed off the area around the
-
WASHINGTON (AP -U .S . I"" of Mersin, exclu~ll.alctleL-4-i
1-----------------lnteUigence isread-'Nfrklstr .. "mili~-am-other"'Otis~~ers. .
intentions towards Cyprus, administration Pentagon off1c1al3 insisted all last week .l F tlJ H offocials a~nowlfda:e. that the United States was not conducting ."\. I OIJSe "It was our conventional wisdom thnt aerial' reconnaissance O\'er southern
the Turks could be talked out of landing Turke)'. and pllJ$.,_Ol'_tbe aten.-.11-Th-e-Beach--~o~n Cftji'ijS, ·one omt .• r .. 1a. ··ou.10uS!r. wween. They said 1hey were c1ependlJlg v.·e were wrong." · on the 8 r i t I sh for • that kind of
History played a part in t he information as the United States stmoe
W'E.Glr\.E.'1> TH.AT WAS: The )'OOl1g
Laguna Bt3C'h hftpiard "ilo manned
his posl jw1 northerly of t h e
beadquaners to""er on ~tain Beach
summed up !he "ttkend pretty .,.,·ell
as he SUM't)'ed the emptying sands at
5:30 p.m. Sundav.
"You shouJd\:e seen this place tv."O
hours ago.'' he sighed. "'.)Ian. h v.'8s,
frantic. It Y.'8S v.-all-to-"<all people. It
\ras a :r.oo out there .. :·
That probably 1ells the storr as "'·ell
as anything.
It has been es1imatcd that 25(\000
\':isitors escaped their inoperative air
coMitioning in Los Angeles and the
general heat \\11\'e elsev.'here to drop
in on oor shoreline.
That's a good estimate. give or t.ake
a couple of hundred thousand .
I knew "''e v.·ere in for a cro"11
Saturday "'hen at noon the radio
announced it Vt'as 95 degrees in dov.11town
Santa Ana .
Driving o\·er the \\'eekend was more
like crawling. ·
EVEN 'MIEN YOU oould see some
sights. Like the guy in his pickup camper
in Corona del ~tar who displayed a
large bumper sticker pro c I aiming .
"SA VE IBE \\'HALES -Boycott
Japanese Goods... His pickup. t~k is
a Toyota.
We had the big surf sometimes.
riptides upon occassion bot tilt Jure
of the ocea n \\'as great. \Va t e r
temperature hovered near 70 degrees
both Saturday and Sunday.
That's even v.·arm enough to get me
in.
It was also tepid enough to get
Ne'A'}>Ort Beach l\larine Safety Director
Bob Reed into the surfline. It's not
too tough for him since he jmt has
to step off his front porch near 40lh
Street beach.
REED, SOMEm1F.S known as the
"Oki \\'alrus" of Newport's \\'aterfront.
\"O\\·ed to ride only one v.•ave as he
v;as gloriously deeked 001 in green s>Aim
rtunks and matching sv.imfins.
Nev;port ?>.layor Don l\1clnnis li ves
right next door to Reed and r even he
jwnped into the surf. Swam out to
Councilman Howard Rogers' boat \\'hich
"'SS playing just outside.
Some of ,fbese city officials \\ill go
IQ any length to hold a secret meeting.
So l swam out to stop all that. About
the time I got to Rogers' boat, tbe
lifeguard ashore came on his loudspeaJter
and ordered Rogers to get back outside.
Rogers left with l\1clnnis aboa rd. I got
to swim in alone. l\taybe it was some
kind of conspiracy bct\\·een Mc!Mi.s,
Rogers and that lifeguard .
MEANWHILE CHIEF .Reed JlU{fed
back out of the .... ·ater. declaring he'd
actually ridden two v.·aves. "The hike.
up the beach was the worst part,"
he admiUed.
The whole day seemed to be a saga
of the old men in the sea.
Back in Laguna late Sunday afternoon,
when the v.·hote population seemed to
be sirting back inland. t decided to
try the ocean again. Just to as.5Ure
that v.·ann \lo'ater was for real. It was.
Inquiring of the lifeguard, you learn
the yellow nag is flying because they
had experienced some sets or heavY
waves . I looked at the tiny SUTf and
giggled . So I selected one of the bigger
waves and gave It a go.
JT UFTED J\1E up, then over the
falls, then sideways and finally, buried
me up to my nose in the sand.
And Uiat. my friends, is why YoU
should listen to lifeguards along th is
best of all possible ~sts.
misjudgment by U.S. intelligenct and to maintain a low military profile in
the situation.
( )
. But even v.'ith knowledge that the NEWS .A.N.4LYSIS Turkish rorce had sailed, o1ricia1s said
they had no way of knowing what lhe ___________ ...... Turks intended.
by intelligence experts of a number
of governments, inclu<Hng the British,
•·llh whom the United S~tse consulted
as the crisis deepened .•
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger
recalled Saturday that during the 1964
and 1967 Cyprus crisL-; the Turks
embarked troops but did not invade the.
island.
Therefore, Ki s.o;inger said. m a n y
members of the intelligence communh,v
and foreign governments thought thi s
.sailing of troops from southern Turkey
might again be a maneuver to bring
pressure on Greeee in diplom atic
negotiations, rather than a forerunner
of invasion.
Earlier. the sailing itself came as
a surprise to many U.S. officials,
although they 1''ere aware Turkey had
concentrated troop& and tanks on its
southern coast.
Pentagon sources reported tbe Turks
U.S. intelligenCe bu come under
criticism in two major crisel in the
past six years. It was accused of rawn1
to anUclpate the Soviet invasion ol
Czechoslovakia in , 1988 and of
misinterpreting the &ign, of an.imminent
Arab attack oo Israel. last October.
Meanwhile, there are Jodi cat Jons
Turkey may have reconsidered brieny
before taking the plunge into Cyprus.
Kissinger said he first was inlonned
Friday evening rthat the TUrkish neet
was heading for shore, bu.t that later
infonnation indicated the ships bad
.turned around and withdrawn.
But Kissinger said that about 25
minutes later, antid frantic efforts to
gain a -43-hour respite for last-ditch
negotiations, he got word that the
Turkish force had reversed courae again
and a special U.S. envoy was informed
that the Turkish government had decided to land tnq>s. .
•
TURKISH TROOPS CROSS COUNTRYSIOE NEAR KYRENIA ON FIRST OAY OF INVASION
lnt1lligt;nc1 Experts Admit They Mlsl'Hd Turkish Intent tons to Land Troops on Cyprus
'Help, Help,· Help' .
Restaurant Robbers
Welfru·~ Can Make It Pay
For F atl1ers to Desert
Execute Patrolman
FORT LAUDERDALl!l, Fla. (UPI) -gurunan wheeled and fired twl<>!.
.The radio crackled with Patrolmari wounding llyankof! in the chest ant
Walter D. llyankofrs desperate appeal: stomach.
"Help, help, help, I've been · · · ," Dyankoff fell but freed his walkie then it v.-ent silent.
\VASHINGTON (UPI ) -The nation's
welfare system actually encoora ges
unemployed and low·income fathers to
desert their families and avoid work.
according to a congressional study of
welfare programs.
The same is true for Aid for Dependent
Church Funds
Briirg Deatli
WORCESTER, Ma..,, (UPI) -
The W'o.al!ppers at the · 11 a.m.
service at the Church of Ascension
dropped their dollar bills and
change in the collection plates and
passed them on.
Clester F. Sklarz. 51, a factory
foreman with a wife and three
~ldren. put the money in a
sack aruf left to bring the offering
lot.be nearby church rectory for
safe keeping .
Before he got there, police said.
a man sitting in a first.noor
apartment across the street shot
Sklarz once in the chest with a
.22 caliber rifle. Another man
standing nearby grabbed the sack
and. ran as Stan slumped to the
ground and died shortly after 11 :30 •
a.m. Sunday.
Police later recovered the sack
and arrested Peter L. t.tartin, 33,
his wife, Joan Ann, 32, and George
Farland, 23. All were charged with
first-degree murder and · armed
robbery.
"It's the most senseless thing
I've ever heard of," said Detective
Sgt. John Killoran. "There couldn't
have been more than several
hundred dollars in there."
Before he c:ould finish the sentence, talkie and began his appeal fer help.
a third bullet was pumped into the Before ~ could ~plete the call, Children (AFDC) programs w h ich
provide financial incenti ves for women
head of the twice-wounded F or t--_Brophy said, a bandit walked over and
to have a first child. '
Lauderdale policeman Sunday, other pumped. ~ Uiird shot into Ilyaotoff's
officers said. bead, kilhng him.
The report showed that an unemployed.
childless woman can almost double her
\lo'elfare benefits -with an additional
$1,159-a year in cash and foo:I payments
-by having her first child. Th~
assistance value of additionaJ children
was $756 for the second and $628 for the
tbin!.
"He didn 't even have time to draw The four bandits ned, one ol them
bis gun,'' police spokesman Tom Brophy in Jlyankoff's patrol car, which was
said. found abandoned a few blocks away.
llyankoff, 40, a IS.year police veteran, Nearly 100 men equipped w1th dogs
was patroUing alone in his police cruiser and ~ helicopten joined the massive
when a radio dispatcher repx1ed a manhunt.
robbery In progress at a searoo:I house. About 90 minutes after the shooting,
llyankoff dro\'e up behind t h e a suspect 1 idenlified as George ~lo
-While welfare benefits vary-fr'Om-state
lo state, the study said. the . "average
amount potentially available to the
fatherless welfare family beg.ins to
compare favorably with what people
earn.''
restaurant and opened a rear door to de O>sta, 25, ol Jacbonville, Fla, was
;_=,..---0•1nd four masked bandits tl:ltding foo:r -fffiSbed lrofu a -rock pit in a Wooded
restaurant employee: at &Lq>Oial One area '"''O miles west ol tOO res'4urint.
• . I '
For exampte,r a non·working welfare
mother of three can gross 10 percent
more than the average income for all r-v.·omen workecs, and when a n
unemployed father deserts his family, I
Dean Says Nixon Willing
To Defy Court on N-test
their welfare benefits increase about u•i 1...,..,. NEW YOlUt (AP) -Time ma1azine
33 percenl quoted John W. Dean Ill as saying
The SW'Vey showed that if an Ent?rgy Saver --President-Nixon -was prepared in t97f
tmemployed father d*"8 his family, Federal Energy Administrator to defy the U.S. Supreme Court if it
the wife gained from Sl,004 to $1 ,318 John Sawhill pedals home had ruled against. a proposed nuclear
in food and v."elfare payments depending after a television interview test.
on the number of children. Su.nday in which he \\'arned But the high court ruled 1-1 in the government's fa vor in a suit brought The subcommittee's fmdings disclosed consumers not to expect a by envirorunentalists who wanted lo halt
that a non·working •·eUare mother ol break in energY prices in near an atomic bomb test on AmchKka Island
three, getting cash, food and housing future. in the Aleutian chain off Alaska.
benefits, could re<!eive an average o( The magazine quoted Dean, a fonner
$4.579, equal to about $5,006 in taxable White House aide and counsel to Nixon,
The sources say the guard was
assigned there after a secretary caught
a 'well-dressed" man trying to pick
the lock on the office door last week.
The subcommittee Is looking into
charges that the Justice Department
dropped an investigafion of a mull i·
million dolla r heroin operation when
( IN SHOR.T .•• )
m!':1,e .... ,, more _,than 30 _~nt or Poll Makes Ford as saying m an interVtew Uui.t "the l 1u .. >""'"~ .~ w.as_pr:epared-to-defy-the-fugiUve-financier-Robert ~Vesco was
.,.,·hat v.'Omen workin g Cull tune earn~~ =.=_::=-.:=.:..:c.::.cc_-"'--Supreme Court it it ruled against uthe;.._._,im,.,~pl,,,ic'."a-"ted,,.,.. ~~.~~~c.__
and $398 above-the nredian earnings ·n--::-~Amchitka-blastlll wi:-He-WU-piig
or .11 women in 1972. Favorite co· .. say 'pull the trigger· and then explain
-The study, coMucted by the jolnt tha t he had taken the action because
fiscal policy subcommittee, was based 6 it was vital to the military position
on 1972 statistics and questionnaires sent Clio ice for 197 of the United States v!S-a·vls Russia," ·to 100 areas around the COUJ\try. he was quoted. Payments wx!er many p r o gr a m s ,
lnclOOiog food stamp benefits, have since PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) -Vice • Bre•klft Tlllll•rtetl
been changed. . President Gerald R. Ford is the front· WASHINGTON lUPl) -An armed
rwtncr smong members of his . ~y
• OU Talk• 0"4!r
KUWAIT (UPI) -Treasury Secretary
William E. Simon left for West Germany
today at the end of a nine-day Middle
East tour capped by a last·minute
d!SCU§ton of oil prices which Kuwait
wants to keep high.
Central States Dampened
and independents for the 1976 Repubhcan ~rd is now stationed outsid~ the offices G II of the Sen. Henry M. Jacbon'a Senate presidential nomination, the latest a up permanent investlgatkla • subcommittee,
Poll shows. rd' Twenty-seven percent of Republicans acco mg to Senate IOUl"CH.
surveyed said Ford was their cl)oice
for the 1976 presidential nominatkln.
In a brief departure statement, Simon
said his talks with crown Prince' and
Premier lilleikh Jaber Al -Ahmed and
other leod<irs ol the oU·rich shelkhbn
were "fruitful, beneficial and frank .''
Wind Gusts of 72-MPH Buffet Ott.umwa, Iowa
Only three others received more than
5 percent. with Sen. Barry Goldwater
of Arizona and California Gov. Ronald
Reagan tied at 16 percent ~ach, and
former New York Gov. Nelson
Rockefelter with 12 percent.
Torture Charged
i
HA1tOH~L WlA,IMlf.ll tYl(I '0 tl(Al1I•1Alll IS1 7 ·l)• 1~ 1..-nptf't!Ufft Mid mucl'I ""9Clld ••In
IO .somt trMI bul "'°'' yloll!'ll -•lhtr lo otllef"t.
Tl•• ltlul'ldtrlMMr1 141rHc1 ''"'" lower Mlclllpn 10 "''-"'" cor ... 111o. Wl'ICI gus" W 10 12 mitts _.
"""'' -·· ~l(Orclld " Ottumw1. IO'WI, wflerl l'lllTIY tr''" llUll'ltt'I OI IA
Inch OI r1ln •IM kl!. TornlldoH
-· llfhlftl •I Poto. •S.o .. fl'ld Mir T1m1, tow1. Abwo.111, s,p,, rt00r19d
wll'ld '1Ults llP IO 51 milts Pl!' hour. '''°"" lhvndll'1torm1 1lllO PIHl•I 11\roug" .. lltl'n Co!Of'ldo. The low"
ol 0.... Trtll r11Wr19f '"'" 11111rltr1 <ii 111 ~'l<ll ol rtrn In 4S mlnulft
•tong w111'1 Nill. r-fnchH ol r1111
!tit I! 81"9rl, CDIO., 111 -flOUr, tnCI N•YV rt \11 ctUHd 1loodl1'19 Ind
c!Mlng OI lfll.nt1t• 10 In "" Din._.,
lt'ff IOI' I .iior1 wNlt. Wtttr'IOO.
IC1¥11,' rtctl"911 matll tt.111 -Ind!
of r1ln. tl'ld 1'111flY 111 Inell of r1ln fell 11 l t (l'IJH , Wlt-
Sul!..,911 ll>yr111tr.i-.r1 I I ' o occwrl'9d In "'9 ~ pl11ftv nglon
llld In TM gtnltft Ind "'"""' llUll "'""" M'l'll _.. tMMl...,h•• _,, .,,.,.,,
l'IJl10U H I.• ;-sllNOW
m"'7I .... ~ .. ~)lotOWll• ·~ liOW
-f:.,...l•I Weallter
70
llfl wtAttft t01()(.i.lt f.I
bf' In IOI ~'-
The Nll~al W~1trie• Stf'llce llWH I _j.. fl•sll flood WllCll bulletin s...nu.,. dwn,. PQffl-°' s ... Pl.,
h!IW\91. $111 kr111rdl110 lflll ltl'l'l'f'llde "'"""· For..:.11" W••llf McC1rttJ", 11 the l os Anqtlts W.111'otf' Se!''lla Olilc ..
w ld "" ""1Wl1n wn lu...., 11 1 ~'-'Y ll'IMWB-.. y,,. 61~ 11 11\al I •lont'I COUid
oo;tut ..,..,,, mUn •Wt'\' lrom 1
clfr or 1 hltllw•• ...ci 11ooaw1t1r•
could Jirik• ~· pe01111 ...,,,,
•
111' ... P'fd for II,'' Me.Ctr ltf' 1tk1. 11•1" m1y ll'rlw 111 tllllsl ,,..,
11\0 klnltflt,
El_,,.,1, ~Illy w1rm -..tllff'
II l•l*:!M 11 CO'lllfl_,., wtlh 11\oM
•111111"1 '""" .,,. mlt 10s •long "'' CINlll lo lht low ~ 111 dO'wnlown
l<* Anqe!n 11111 Dn IJO lfllO 1111
l'Oi ,,,.. 100. lfl "" 6'1tr1t.
IJ.S. Sum_.,,
A Piil• OI colt ff011!1 tH-..1 ~.,..,.... ttro\1 "" te11lr ..
111111 lod••· 11rr1111ne coo I , r
ftlr ,JOoMY. llfltlt w1rlltltt wll'llll
nltfit "'"' ,,....r,. lllurl btc.oml"I
Wtl"'1y la to 1, ·~ In ttt.r_,.
tooky .11141 lllftdt~. H'911 todty ""' 10, (M"lt lwrnptr11'ures r•rige ftOll'I
" to 11, '"""'° "'""""''lurft ''"" from "1 to to. Wiier lwmptr1""" 1'.
SMa, /llnoR, Tides
lli\OttO~Y ~ tlltfl ' ' 12:11 p.m. ,.
kctfld low •:U '·"'· l.J · 'fVISOAY
Fft'll "1911 , , 1:12 p.m. I.~
l'lrtl IOw • . ' •:• ''"'' .... :.et""" low • ~ 1131 "·'"· l.t Su" riMS Stl7 l,fl'I, Sii• 1:01 p.m,
Moot! rtttt f:4S 1,rn, kh IOrOI p,11,,
Ford was selected by 20 percent or Psycliiatric Care l1i'Vestigated
the independents surveyed while Reagan WASHJNGTON'(UPll _ 'lbe Pentasoo
and Rockefeller each got . 13 percent. Is paying for psychiatric care. for
Eleveri percent of the 1ndcpendeats 5ervicemen'i chlldren at iMtltutions that
qucstk>ned July-1·2 chose Goldwater. ... a llegedly eorture the young petierits,
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Oeliveryof ihe Daily Pilot !s guaranteed
~h1<IMW •nd 5'.1""'1y II l'OW 00 fl04 Ft'({'o¥f )'Oii<
C0Ch' Irr t""' S.l ... IM•, OI" t •'"' ~ ••. <Ill ot<>0 • lOCIW "'ltl lioo l><ow\thl l<I yOu, G.tlt• ""' l••.•fl ""''' .... "'·
Telephone-;
N0•1~ .. ~,t llun!•flOIOll Se•c~ .ilOWt,l"lb'l!t r
....... .,.,,,»,
• .. ••• lofll.1110
t.•"Cltll'I•"''· ('Ill"''-tlt•t~. S.11 J~~n C.fPl~tran11,..,...,.. ea..:i.1, -S'oullfl.•01>n•, I ~IWNI ,.,_l • ' o~ OJ<r
•
..
according to a Senate subcommittee staff
report.
Sen. Henry M. JaclulOO (IJ.Wash.) said
his permanent Investig atio n s
subcommittee beginl hearing• Tueoday
oo the diaries.
Jackal caJlel:I the a 11ega1..1 on s
"shoctinc" Ind •kl the Defeme
l)ep8rtment ''rrwJl be held acaiuntable.''
Penc.gon llpat......, Aid K -be
"inaPIJl'OPrlale" to comment on
Jacban'• dilelOSW't, but they
lclaiowledged Iha! olllclal! of the
Civilian Heal!h and Medial PtolTam
for the Uniformed S..Vlces (CllAMPUS ),
a medical insurance program for
military dependentt, had been IUITlmoned
to teolily.
Tht spok..mm1 could nol •Y whether
military doctcn hod rele!Ted dependent
patients to the bi9tltuUon1 Involved, or
wn.ther the p41'el1ll had """ t!leii1 and CHAMPUS waa merely picl<lng up
the bills.
•
Jackson s,.id two ps yc hiatri c
lnatilutions, the Green Valley Sch:>ol in
Orange Oty, Fla., and the Univen!ty •
Center in Ann Arbor, M6ctt , would be
probed. Without saying specifically t'1at
abuse . and ICJU&lor existed at the two
faciUtles, Jackaon aakt a "prellmlnary
staff investJgation" has found condlt.lom
such as:
-The_]!!le of the lnstrum<nl! of
torture.
-VU.. fil!h and squalor of the lat1Jl-
des -bited by flMli children.
-Phyalcal ·-Jncluding mock borlall and Ille ol chains
--The rampant ""' ol drugs.
-Questionable psychillrlc treotment
incloding' heavy dOlet of vitamins,
questionable U9e of carboo dioxide In
lhenpy and ir1j<ctioM of urine and 'dll!t'
.. nnns.
-1so1a11on ol children In aolllory
cmfinement.
7 Lack ol supt!r•lfloo •nd education
of children entruatt!d to !he lnttKutlona.
-Quetlionable billing techniques i.
receive eovemment funds. ·
... ' ..
• \
' \.
-------Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
---··-VOL. 67, NO. 203 , 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES N TEN CENTS
Mesa Views New~or! Freeway Route ·change
By RUDI NIEDZIEl.'iKI
ot Ille Dll~ ...... l t9tf
Costa Mesa city councilmen are
looking into the possibility ol reviving
the "Green Route" alignment of the
Newport Freeway which \\'OUld funnel
all trarnc down Newport Boulevard to
Newport Beach. .
A!Jhough "they look no dlrect action
W change the route alignment from
the presently adopted "Red Route.'' a
majority of council m~mbers meeting
in special aesalm Sunday appeared to
be in favor of exploring it al an
upcoming ltudy 1e11km.
The "Green Route'' was abandoned
in favor of the "Red Route" ln 1969.
11be-"Green Route'' calls for the freeway
to follow the )l"Heflt alignment of
Newport Boulevard lnW Newport Beach.
· The "Red Route," or present freeway
plans, would take the Newport Freeway
on a westerly loop through Costa Atesa,
lil}king with Newport Bouelvard again
at 15th Street, v..tiere it voould end.
As originally planned, the "Red Route"
was ' to have continued farther west to
Superior Avenue where it was to have
joined the Pacific Coast Freeway,
The Pacific Coast Freeway was deleted
from the state freeway system in 1972
shortly after a majority of voters passed
an initiative which prohibits any freeway
from crossing into Newport Bea.ch city
limits.
Costa J\fesa city C-Ounci\ members,
looking at a map of the proposed "Red
Route " Sunday, determined it would
make little sense to swing. the. freeway
through west Costa Mesa, destrbynig
a part o! thei r city.,, only _to_link it
up agiii!With Newport Boulevard.
"The citizens of Costa A1esa might
hang us in e£fi gy if we do this,"
~mmented Vice fl.1ayor Jack Hammett.
. who said, 'The Green Route' is looking
better all the time."
CounciJy.·oman Nonna Hertzog agreed
with part of his statement. She said
she wanted to look at some other
alternatives because "the red line never
d'Ki make that much sense."
~fayor Robert P.f. Wil~n a n d
Councilman Alvin Pinkl ey who both said
they advocated the "Greene Line"
rou ting all along, maintained that
position.
The risk of irritating Ne\\'J)Ort Beach
city officials by resUrrecting the old
es an rowns
. .,
Sponulie ComfHlt
Cyprus Fighting
..
Eases With Truce
< . • By U•lted Presa laternatioul
Fighting cont":wed in and a r o u n d
Nicosia but appeared to be easin51; up late
today after passage of. a 7 3.m. POT
cease-fire deadline 8f(reed to by Greek
and Turkey. U.N. Secretary Gener!!!
Kurt Waldheim reported a Turkish air
raid on Nioosia an hour and 15 minutes
after the truce deodline.
Radio reports said Turkish planes hit
a !xK.el in the port of Famagusta, tiUing
at least 20 Joreign. tourists, and UPI
~r1ceau-said in a
'dispatch from Nccoela that the truce
deadl8' f:UDe and .went wilb no aign
or uy reluatloa In the fightln1. •
The U.s, I-reported the ceue·fire
had beDm to take errect.
Greek National Guard units, reinfll"ct'd
by 'troops from 11 Gree)( planes which
slipped into embattled Nicosia during
the night, kept up a steady pounding
of the corridor, Keats said. Turkish
troops were aUemptlng to drive to the
LIFEGUARD MATT GREER TRIES MOUTH·To.MOUTH RESUSCITATION IN TRANSIT
Cost• Meu Man Diu Despite Rescue Efforts, But His Daughter is Saved
cap.ital from~ the Kyrenla area where
-they landed reinforcement• by air · and R . k , . ,.,, . , 400 s urfers
.. ~L':'~Na11o111cunmand•Pok-••--.einec . '3'cS-..L€Stimon~---=--
... ""-"' In Nicoria said no official orders ... . Ca 11se Hass-----e a cease-fire had been received as yet ... I C
SENATE 'DOVE' DEAD and that "We will ccctlnue doing what D "ff F M • h ll' Ex·tolon Wayne Mono, 73 we· have been trying to do all alccg, l ers rom itc e s I N
to have the Greek and Turkllh l1 ewport
~ communities observe the last cease-fire," r orrner Se nator he said. al I h About 400 surfer.; in Newport Beach "We will keep oo trying.'' BULLETIN that Reinecke testifit'd f se Y to t e became unruly Swlday morning and a
•' Waldheim said Maj. Gen. O. Prem WASHI NGTON (API -Clliiornla Ll. Senate Judiciary Commitlee two yeafs
W M d h h d r display of force by police, li£eguards ay ne Ors e . Chand c:l India, conunander of the U.N. Gov. Ed Reinecke took the "'hness stan ago "'hen he said e a no way o
peace keeping force in Cyprus, and Luis In hls__own._dclense-today-and i;akl he knowing whether former Atty. Gen. John and the Orange County Harbor Patrol
Wechman-Munoz-of-Mexico, the iRiOimed former Atty. Gen. ~ohn N. N. ~11tchell knew of a financial was required to prevent the distus:bance
j---S l.'CC l'ml:S at 73~--secretary general's personal representa-Mitchell In ~lay. 1971 of a finan~hil commitment by a subsidiary of from erupting into a full scale riot ,
11 _ 11 U tive in Cyprus reported that fighting also pledge to underwr1te tbe 197% Repubhcun International Telephone & Telegraph authorities said. "8r'going-~-in---other-parts-Of the.. Nailoaal Convention. Copr. to the 1972 Republican National ------
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Former
Sen. Wayne Morse, one of Ute finlt
members o! Congress 1o aruk out
against U.S. involvement In Vietnam,
died today at the age of 73.
Dea th cut short his second attempt
at a political comeback since losing
bis Senate seat in 1968.
Hospital officials said Morse had been
suffering from a urinary tract infection.
They said he died ol kidney and heart
failure.
Morse was ousted by Republican Sen.
Bob Packwood in a cloee contest. Four
years later, Mor!e, then 71, wu beaten
handily in a race agalMt. Sen. Mark
O. Hatfield (R-Ore.).
Two months ago, Morse again won
the Democratic senatorial nomination
-and the right to challenge Packwood
-by deC..tlng state Senate l'?osldent .
Jam Boe, 44, in Oregon's primary
(See MORSE, ..... 2)
AD BRINGS MORE
' AND MORE CALLS
"Yes, the apartment was rented. And,
to a Daily Pilot reader, too.
"We had more calls than we could
handle. I think I was asking too little,"
the hippy Westminster I a n d 1 o r d
-.ved.
tiere'1 the ad which started his phone
r!J!glng' -
p.34. mo + $100. securltv.
2 BR &. den, 1 ba. newly
painted. dble gar. lmmed.
occupancy. Refs.. XXX· xxxx.
We can't tell you how much to ask,
but we can prompt renters to ring
your chimes. Ring ours at 64~7&
and le! a Oafly Piiot ad worlt for you.
'
' ,.
Mediterranean Island -ae1n·ecke·•rtestboou,-c-o·n·t"r a·d 1-e,t s-eonventioiflftio-r-io-July-·3i-:-197,, _____ ,,,,~er~_no ~rrests but nu~us
At 7 a.m., Keats .;kl Greek artillery testimony by Mi&cbell before the Senate Sen. Edward Kennedy 'co.MaM.). a citations were gi(len.
units near Nicosia airport pumped a f!!1:~?'tb~==~~~:ro~ S~l:r.a:~! member ~f the Judiciary . Committ~, Trouble began about 10:30 a.m. when
(See CYPRUS, Paget) Corp. antll aifer Ute Justice Departmen t asked Reinecke about M 1_tc h ~ l l s lifeguards had to close the beach around
Newport Council
Studi.es Bal,boa
Fun. Zo1ie Project
A propooal to amend the city's cew
general plan to reclassify the Balboa
FUn 1.one property to commercial status
will be cxmidered by Ne¥.·port Beach
cooncilmen tonight.
A variety or othtt ltemi will also
face the eotmeil at its 7:30 p.m. meeting
in City Hall.
But the Fun 1.one amendmect probably
has the .-wldellpmad lnteftst
because of the ClOO!roV<ny lllhTed last
year when owner Jolm Konwiser won
city council approval to bu I 1 d
concbniniwns on the property.
Kcnwber's pl1n1 Mre aublequently
thwarted by the South Coal! Regional
7.one a.-vation Comm!-. Konwiser
bad won tbe change from the city after
buyon for the pniprty under COlfU1!<I"
dallOOin(.
Because of the cout~I commission's
refusll to oilow high deNity ...-11.1
uses, however, Konwi#r told pmring commi-. that the only bul'l"'S
available want. it for commercial
purpooes.
Plamlng Commillioners. who opposed
the residential classifk:IUon in the first
place. Mve reoommended the change
back to commercial 1tatu1.
Councilmen toniJ:tt will al~ be
·coroldet1ng t-other general plan
changes, two dealing with traffic plans
(Seo FUN ZONE, P11e 1)
l
'
had aeUled an antitrust suit against knowledge of th~ rr:t pledge w~le !he 19th Street .to. surfers during normal
lnl.eraatioiuil Telepltone I: Telegraph panel was considenng l'lt nomination sur£ing hours bicause of the unusually
Corp. in July 1171. Sheraton Is a sub-or Richard G. Kleindienst to be attorney aktlary of m . general. large number or swimmers, according
"The question is put somewhat to Lt. Logan Lockabey of the. Marine
WASHINGTON (AP ) -One or the
two perjury counts against California
U. Gov. Ed Reinecke was dismissed
today by U.S. DL')trict Court Judge
Barrington D. Parker.
ambiguously'" the judge said 0 r Sa£ety Department. .
Kennedy's question. ,;We had our biggest cro\vd 0£ the Cox had argued that Kennedy's question specifically called for an year with 105,000 people a-na-surfboards
inlpression. presented a safcty-h<izard," Ux:kabey
But Parker denied a defense moijgn
lo grant a judgment of JICQUittal 00
a second count as the defense prepared
to begin its case today.
.. It "'as vague and uncertain and that said. -~
question called for an impr~ion," Cox: !·le explained that surfers were also
argued. causing a problem by surfing around The One remaining count against
The count dismissed at the request
or defense aUorney James E. Cox allegt'd
Reinecke accuses him of lying to the 18th Street, which is off limits to surfers.
(See REINECl:{E, Page %) The surfing area begins al 19th Street
I Count Do111ped
Ehrlicl11nan V crdi ct Revers ed
WASIIlNGTON (UPO -U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell
today threw out the conviction of John D. Ehrlichman on one of
three perjury counts against him . . · .
Gesell, in a brief order and accompanying memorandum,. said
that the statute under which Ehrlichman was charged and convicted
-a federal law against lyin g to the FBI -"was not property In·
voked in this case ." , . . He ordered the guilty verdict set aside and a 'verdict of acquit·
tal set in its place." . • EhrJichman was co nvicted 10 days ago of perjury and. on~ count
of violating the civil right s or Daniel Ellsberg's p~ych1at~1st. J?r.
Lewis F. Fielding1 growing out of the breakin of F1eldJng s office
in 1971. h · I The jury found Ehrlichman innocent ot a.fourt . pef)ury ~oun .
:rrtie perjury cou~t w~ich Gesell ~hrew out earned a maximum
penalty of five yea rs 1n pnson and a fine of $101000.
f •
•
and extends westward.
"A lot o! the surfers stayed in the
water and refused to obe)l-out commands
to come in," Lockabey said. ''We called
in the police and the llarbor Patrol."
"At that point a number of surfers
who were on the beach began chanting
and throwing .sand but were finally
dispersed by three lifegua rd jeeps and
three police cars."
A roundup by the police helicopter,
a lifeguard boat and two Harbor Patrol
boats plus individual lifeguards brought
in the rebellious surfers who were still
in the water.
"We g3ve a lot of citations but I
don't know the exact number." Lockabey
said ... \\'e had a problem like this in
\Vest Newport a month or so ago but
this '!''as much 'l''Orse."
Ho\\·ever, the trouble between surfers
and authorities didn't end with Sunday
morning's near·riot.
"That evening the police told us they'd
heard rumors that surfers were going
to bum some of our lifeguard lowers,
so they began patrolling them, ' '
Lockabey said.
.. .
alignment was minim ited by Pinkley
\\'ho said that ii was time for Costa
~1esa to decide what it was going to
do with lhe free\\·ay, regardless of what
other cities want.
Pinkley said no purpose \\'Ould be
served by l'Ollcem over Newport Beach.
"You ca n't believe what they say. Their
signed statements are no good before
the ink is even dry. There is just
no way you can get along with those
(See ROUTE, Page ZJ
• Ir
Lifeguards'
Revival
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of !ht 0 1111 Piie! Siil!
A Costa Mesa man drowned Sunday
evening near the Newport Pier after
saving his 9-year~ld daughter's li£e by
telling her to noat on her back W11il
help arrived.
Newport B~ch lifeguards said Dennis
fl.1cArthur, 28, of 1028 Valencia St., was
swimming with his daughter, Dorothy,
about 8 p.m. When they began having
difficulty about 100 yards off shore due
t.o riptides and ii-mile-an-hour "'inM.
Accord ing to the daughter. ~1cArthur
told her to noat on her back 'o\'hi\e
he \\'ent for help. He never macte ii.
According to liteguard supervisor
Larry Gibson another swimmer alerted
lifeguards to the fact that two people
were in trouble. Lifeguard John Sutton
swam out and rescued Dorothy, but
saw no sign of McArthur.
Lifeguards promptly called the police
helic:opter, which spotted McArthur's
body aOOut 200 yards offshore. The
helicopter then made two trips to Jhe
lifeguard station and dropped lifeguards
Ken Rouse and Larry Gibson into the
water near McArthur· while \he third
lifeguard, Matt Greer, swam out by
himself .
~ Orange County Rar00rl>3troll>oa ,
summoned by the lifguards, arrived with
lifeguard Greg Long on board and
carried fl.1cArthur to harbor department
(See DROWNING, Page %)
Blast Oaims·
.T wo More Li ves
DECATUR, Ill. (UPI) -The massive
tank car exJ:!losion.and fir~ which ragect._ __ ~···I
through this central Illinois city Friday
has claimed two more li.ves ..
A Norfolk and Western Railroad
engineer and a switchman died Sunday
in · Springfield Memorial Hospital. the
latest victims of the holocaust, which
fl9W has claimed four lives and left
at least 140 persons injured.
Three persons remained in critical
condition and a fourth \\'as in serious
condition today at the Springfield
hospital bums uni t.
Engineer Bobby \V. Olinger. 33,
~1exico. Ind.. and S\\'ilchman Clyde
Rucker. 26. ~1oUnt Zion, Ill.. \\'ere the
latest fatalities.
Orange Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy at times Tuesday
but othcl'\\•lse mostl y SW1ny skies.
Not much temperature chailge.
Beach highs in the low 70s rising
to the mid..aos inland.
Femi nist Betty Friedan says
lhe u·on1e,t's 1no11ement is get·
ti11g to n1e11 . She says rnales stop
lier 011 the street to tell her 11010
the mo11enteJ1t has c/ia11ged their
_li11es. See story ... Pafl!L_l i .
INSID E T ODAY
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,
2 DAILY PILOT •N ..
Plot Trial
Of Popeil l ' I .
Under Way
•
LOS ANGELES -Opening s1aten1ents
\\'ere scheduled in S11)>('rior C-Ourt here
today in the trial of Eloise 'Popeil of
NC\\'pl)rt Beach and her boyfriend ,
charpd wiY:t conspiring to murder he~~
estranged husband. kitchen ga dg e t
multimillionaire Samuel Pop.-il.
Prosecuting ~put)' District Attorney
Peter Bregman is ezpected to call
Robert Peeler as his first \\'itntss.
Mrs. Popeil. 48. and Daniel Ayers.
37. or Santa Ana. havt plended innocent
to charges of conspiracy nnd solicitation
to commit murder. Both spent se\·eral
days in custody before being released
on bail in January.
Peeler and a second pros.ecution
witnes."i, Don Reed . alleged to authorilies
that ~1rs. Popeil and her boyfri end
pro\'ided jeY:e!ry as security and agreed
to pay them $W.OOO to £'liminaie Popt>il.
\\'ho operates his kitchen _gadget empire
out of Chicago. Popeil is al so noted ror
having jn\•ented and n1orketed a popular
pocket "fishing rod setup.
Ayers and ~1rs. Popeil 'rerc ar _strd
Jan. 8 by a team of Long Beach homicide
detectives at her former hon1e at 519
'Harbor.JslaOO Road . NeY.-port Beach.
Authorities have said that Peeler and
Reed tipped them off along \\i th the
intended victim. alter becoming fright-
ned at the consequences of y,fiat they
\Vere allegedly being solicited to do.
A key element in the trial to be
heard before Judge ~fark Brandler is
a series of tape recordings alleged 10
include murder contract discussions
among the principals.
Popeil and his wife v:ere in the midst
of divorce proceedingg but she stood
to inherit a third of his fortune if
he died before issuance of the final
decree.
Just last \\'eek. a divorce court judge
in Chicago ordered Popeil to pay $27.000
in temporary support arid legal costs
to his wife. pending the outcome of the
nrurder-for-hire trial.
Proceedings being held in t h e
cwrtroom. 111 N. Hill St. in downtown
Los Angeles, is expected to take six
weeks. with Peeler's t e s t i m on y
consuming most of this \1!'ee':.
Jlro111 Pqe J
REINECKE ...
•----committee about v.·hen he first discussed..
the convention site \\i lti 1'UtcheU.
Reinecke to4d the committee that he
first di&cussed San Diego as a site
of the convention In September, 1971
-after an outo(lf-court settlement of
an I'M' antitrust case.
But the prosecution contends that
Reinecke discussed the convention with
Mitchell in a telephone call on May
21, 1971, before the ITI case w&s setUed.
The I'IT case was resolved out of court
in July 1971.
Parker said the remaining court had
enough merit so that a jury should
decide on: it. The judge's ruling on
the tv.·o counts WM made tiefffi'e the
jury entered tlJe_ ~rttiouse. _
Several ·weeks ago the spec lat
prosecutor's office dropped another
perjury count against Reinecke, saying
it would have been necessary to call
former White How;e aide H.R. Haldeman
as a witness if the charge were pre~.
Haldeman is slated to go on trial Sept.
9 in the \\'atergate cover-up case.
That count alleged that Reinecke lied
to 1he Judi ciary Committee v.·hen he
said he first discussed the possibility
of bringing the 1972 Republican
convention to San Diego in April, 1971.
Reinecke told the Judiciary Comm ittee
that on that date he was in Washington
and attended a social reception to
promote economic development in his
state, "and we discussed the possibility
at that point and that was \\"here the
idea was really hatched."
The charge remaining a g a I n s t
Reinecke carries a maxi mum penalty
of fiv e years in prison and a fine of
12,000.
OIA.,..E COAST M
DAILY PILOT
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R~N Wt!!ed ,.,..._ • ...,"'°'~r.t•
CMrltil H. l.OOI Ric.food P. Neil
A1...C ... Merlftol'llJ Ed.W.
-
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• --
MondaJ, July 22. 1974
,. ..... r .. eJ
MORSE ...
however. In 1959, tlforse be.tame in\'Ol\'ed
in·' a feud y,·ith Claire Boothe Luce,
v.·hose confirmallon as an Ambassador
to Brasil he had fought WlSUcctsslu.IJy.
"Aly diUiculties. or courR. «o some
\'t·ani-back and began v.•hea ~n. Wa~ ·~lorse v.•as kicked In , the head by ll
horS<'." Slid rtlrs. Luce.
ln 1951, a mare. named ~Usslt broke._
:-itors!.''s j:n1• during n horse shov.• at
Orkney Springs Va.
Funeral arrangem...nts for i1orse \.\'trc
inromplete.
rlection.
!\fOrse. 'OO\\TI for his unpopular ·\'ie\.\'S
and wtwillingness to compromise on
issues. \\'as one of the first members
of Congress to oppose U.S. in\'Qlvement
in Vlttnam.
He and former Sen. Ernest Gruening
(0-Alaska ), v.'ho died last month at
1~ age of 87, \.\"ere the only tv.'O senators
v.•ho \'Oted against the Tonkin Gulf
resolution in 19&1. President Lyndon E.
Johnson used the measure as a functional
declaration of war In Southeast Asia .
. :O.lorse's age u•as a major campaign
Issue during the i\Iay primary, but he
a:iunte.red by saying that many great
U.S. st'ltators had performed th eir ~t
service arter they ~·ere 70 years old.
But. he added. '"l think everybody
realizes A.hat it isn't lo be cxpecled
that I l\'ould run for re-election in 1980.''
· Being a one term senator would not
be a liability for Oregon, said 1'.torse,
voho already had sen-ed 24 years in
the Senate.
l\forse. once a Republican hinlSelf.
switched to independent in 1952 \\'hen
he and party leaders agreed he was
too liberal for the GOP. Three years
later, he became a Democrat and was
rHlected in 1956.
His detracton claimed that Morse.
who earned the nickname "Tiger of
the Senate," was too cantankerous am
too muCH" of a loner to accomplish
anything for Oregon in .a single si1-yea r
term.
Jn 1944, when Morse first ran for
the Senate, his campaign slogan was
''Principle above Politics.'' T hr e e
decades later the slogan was besicall~·
the same: "i shall work and fight for
the restoration of integrity In our own
government."
Tbe son of a Wisconsin farmer, 1'1ors
was born in 1'fadison on Oct. 20, 1900.
He earned AB and MA degrees from
the University of Wisconsin, a law degree
from the University of Minnesota and
a doctor of jurisprudence degrtt al
Columbia University.
. -
Beaeh Peril
ory Fishing Flet!t Hurt
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of .. 0 .. 1'1' '"" lt•ll
sand ttoslon has ealtn a\\·ay so much
-orme-Newport--Beach.dory fishin fleet's
,•
Cl!Ni.~[l ~
I OClAll IL\'O :10 .JO
W.IN $T•tr I
Ul.IOA ll~ Ill) .u ;ll
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beach area near the Newport Pier that--r.=:"";;;;;:::t::-t-t-t-+++-f--j (l~lflll$[
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l._
RUNNING OUT OF SAND.
Dory Fisherman Phegley
Secret Service
Swarms on Boy,
Drives Him Home
Coincidenc< and the U.S. Secn!t
Service catllbt u-p with a San Clemente
youngster Sunday night as he Meded
on foot to his uncle's house nelt door
to the Western White House.
Police said the yout!i, IS years old,
had emerged from a car which gave
him a lilt to the entrance to Cyprus
Shores at about the same time President
Ni:Jon was arriving by helicopter from
the Bel Ail' party thrown by h1s budget
direclor.
The youth was carrying a walkie-talk~.
And that was all ti took lo prunpt
• hurried vistt by .... ts protcting
Preeident Ni:JCll.
the tis1jCrn1en n1ay have to move. n LT,~ii;i;.--f~~~f;;:F,;f;f,;f.~flli~IT".'."<f*iiJ:;f;Jaf;;;Ef.1 apokesman &1..id today. I : '"""" .. l)r• SIMl'll I ... .. :49 Sf.UHORE OR
~11 :r1 ;21 "' ,z; -:fl .,, 'II • JAl'llOAJ:t
J,,,_Ollit & :4& SAllT• IAll!AV. Paul Phegley, a 39-ye!lr veteran of
the dory fleet . ·said that only seven
of Jhe fleet's 13 boats can presently
fit Into the area allotted the.in.
"The others either don't ~o fishing
or they have to beach their boats down
below where the tide comes in and
washes av.•ay their garbage cans,'' he
said.
Phegley said if the fishennen have
to make some kind of move, they might
prefer to spread out along .the beach
and occupy the space between the fleet's
current 1lte and the pier. ,
"But ol course that would have to
go through Ille Newport Beach City
Council and we haven't even talked
to our councilmen yet..'..' Phegley said.
"\Ye k~p hoping the beach \\'ill build
b..1ck up like it usually does in the
sutnmer. It's usually about 200 feel y,•ider
than it is no\\·.''
11c ajd_the Nev•port Bc:ach General
Services Department dumped about 20
feet of ~nd in front or the dory neet
last Wednesday evening, but that was
all washed out by the high tide that
night.
High tides o! up to 7.1 feet, surf up
io eight feet "high and strong riptides
. have been recorded at NeYrix>rt Beach
this week, adding to an erosion problem
which hes tlreatened lhe li!eguanl sta-
tion u well as lhe dor}'.flshing fleet all
year.
"It looks like we have a trend of
deteriorating beach line ," commented
Marine Safety Directoi'1liitii't Reed.
However, city officials say they're
aware of the erosion problem and are
trying to do something about it.
"Three months ago, the city council
pessed a resolution calling for both a
short-term and a long-range solution to
the problem," said City Manager Robert
L. Wynn.
"We've asked the U.S. Corps of
Engineers to make a study on what
will be the best way to stop the erosion
in the long nm," he explained.
"Meanwhile, the coopcil okayed the
eitension of nne wooden groins near
the lifeguard Ila.lion which will give
the dory fleet 80lne relief."
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• TkAllSft~ PO!~l J(T\j({N I ll.IE ·~o a~f[N llMtS. OTHtlS •-t Al STA~Tl H~ '°lNTS •
f Bus Schedule · I
This is the schedule for the Harbor Hopper, NeWport Beach's experi-t
mental bus line. The schedule has just been printed, although the
bus Jine has been running all summer. Ci ty officials said the sched-
ules are now available at city hall. all libraries1 chamber or com-'
merce offices and at the parks. beaches and recreation department.
To save yourself a trip you may w:tnt to clip this one .
Nixon, Lawyer St. Oaii·
Confer in San Oemente
By HELEN THOr-IAS The President v.·a~ among old friendi;, ·
u,1 w1111e Hou1• •-mr California's elite businessmen , Sunday
President Nixon . pledging to withstand night v.tien he attended a dinner party
the "very grave assault" 6n his conduct in his honor at the fashionable Bel ·
of the presidency, was to confer today Air home of Budget Director Roy Ash.
\\'ith hfs chief defense lawyer on anti-The convivial selling u•ith long-time
impeachment strategy. political supporters and h eav y
Nixon plannl'd his first face-t1>face contributors gave Nixon a chance ld meeting in 10 days with James D. St. Clair, who argued Nixon's case before reaffirm his intention to remain in office.
the House Judiciary Committee. The ''. . .I am often asked, 'How do you
impeachment panel is beginning what really take. the burden of the presidency.
On June 18, 1924, be married Mildred
Downie of Madi!OO, v.ilo mhe had tnown
since his grade school days and alway1
called "Midge." She was a home econ-
omic teacher. They had three chlldrtn,
Nancy, Judith and Amy.
Adding to the muddle was a .2kaliber
• bullet the youth had in his pockel
He said the council appropriated about
$30,000 in the bLJdget to provide
emergency short-tenn erosion control may be its lait week, wilh debate on particularly when at times it seems
articles of impeachment acbeduled to to be under very, \'cry grave assault?' begin Wednesday.
1'.torse taught at WiJconsin, Minnesota
and Columbia, then moved to Ortgon
m -1929 aria becime dean " the
University o! Oreaon Law School at the
ajl of 31. Morse's lifelong hobby, was raising
and Slowing horses. He raised borMI
and cattle on a farm in Montgomery
County, Md. while serving in the Senate
and lived on a ranch near Eugene,
Ore. until 'his death.
f'ro111 Pqe J
CYPRUS ...
ceaseless barrage Into Turkish positions
down the 16-mile road from Kyrenia...
to the capital.
United Nations troops. •mking 12
hours on and 12 hours off "If we are
lucky," dug new machine gun positions
at Blueberry camp, their military police
unit base camp.
Finnish U . Lettala Teuro. 27, of
Helsinki. returned from bringing a
wounded comrade to the U.N. base at
Tziklos. He said Turkish troops there
were withstanding a rain 0( artillery
and mortar shells from Greek units in
Nicosia .
In the capital itse1f patrol un its of
tile Greek National Guard. In vehicles
disguised with foliage, moved up and
down the streets. Others turned ·out
on motorcycles. Two pedaled bicycles,
r!nes slung from thei r shoulders.
Ankara radio said an Athens coup
overthrew lhe Greek government t~y
but the Greek Embassy in Washington
said the report was totally unfounded.
UPI correspondent John Rigos reported
iPollce Wd that interviews establiahed.
that-the bOy and bis uncle have a
habit ~ ualng walkle-lalkies t o
commurUeate.
'!be teenager llllisled be did not know
that the Preaideut was arriving at the
Ume.
Afretlts were convinced IOd they gave
the yowi11ster a lift home.
Orange County's
1974 Fair Sets
Atte1ulance_ Mark
The 1974 Orange
a total attendance
all~time record.
County Fair, wi th
of 213,244, set an
Attendance zoomed by more thari 4,000
ove r last yea r which up to then had
been the most suecessful fair since the
event started in 1890.
Fair organizers had hoped to crack
the 250,000 barrier this year. They
blamed extremely hot weather durin&
two days of the Uktay event for not
reaching that goal.
~The threat of a major rainstorm
Friday in Costa Mesa also had an effect
on the people count, according to Marvin
Bryan, a spokesman for the fair.
Bryan said the highest ooe-day count
for the 84-year~d fair was Sunday,
July 14, when a !<UI ol 27,291 people
came through the turnstiles.
How the fair fared in terms of profit
will not be kno\\ll for aeveral days.
from Athens that the Greek -military ----f', :-p J
junla remained in poy,'er and the city rotn •1e
~·as nonnal. ROUTE "The cease-fire on C)'PnJS is effective • • •
as of now ," Turkish premier Bulent
Ecevit told a 7 a.m. PD'J' news confer·
ence. "But if the reports we Pre getting
are true, the polltical vacuum in Athens
\\i ll make political discussions difficult
:an dmake keeping the cease-fire ex-
tremely dl£ficull." Ecevit said.
fie said that In three days of fierce
fighting on the island the Turkish
invasion force had achieved all of 113
ob}e<.'tives -capture of the Greek
Cypriot port of Kyrenia and control
of the road to Nicosia, giving the Twidsh
community there an outlet to the sea.
f'romPqeJ
FUN ZONE ...
and the third dealing with an Irvine
Company request to amend the land
use elemenl to permit the construction
ol offices opposite the new rire station
on &mta Barhara Drive.
The vacancy on the p I a n n I n g
commission created by the resignation
of Joseph Rosener rmiy or may not
be filled tonight, but councilmen are
reportedly divided as to whether It should
be rilled immediately or more time
taken to screen applicants .
1'00 prol)06ed AMexalion of the 132-lot
Bay Knolls subd ivision also will be
wtlghcd.
people down there:o..• he fwned.
Of the five members of the council.
the only one not interested in studying
the route change was Councilman Dom
Racfti. His position is that Co!la 1'tesa
should keep the "Red. Route" because
it is adopted.
"The only way we'll ever get that ~
freeway moving is to keep going the
way we have been. If we change the
routing now t believe we will hurt our
chances to get the Corona del Mar
f"reeway completed and we will !let
our relationship with the mate and
Newport Beach back 20 )'ears," he sald
today.
Public Services Director J a m e s
Eldridge cau tioned t.he city council in
changing its freeway policy becauae ot
his belief that the state Division of
l{ighways would "get awfully tensltive"
about dealing with Co!ta ~!esa after
It had lnvesled five yean of plaMlng
on the "Red Route."
Life Begins at 20
MANILA (UPI) -Amparo Mlinoz,
20. of Spain today began .her year's
reign as MiM Universe, a title that
brought her i101000 callh, a tl0,000
pr:rsonat a~ranc::e contract and I.he
use of a resort lsJand (or 81 year.
'
measures.
He said the city ~·ill call for bids
this month oo the ertension of the groins,
v"hich protect the sand from side-t1>side
moving ocean and wind currents, the
ctilef culprib In the erosion.
"We hope to have the extension
complete by the end ot the aummer,"
Wynn said.
I
Officer Injured
In Balboa Chase
Nixon planned Jo see St. Clair in Let me say it isn't new for us to
the morning, and St. Clair was expected be un~er assault, because since the
to give the President a Comjilfte---ume I came into office, for five years,
rundown on his chances of defeating we have had problems.
impeachment. ,;There have been people marching St. Clair told reporters Sunday he · · . . "hasn't a clue" when the Supreme Court aro:und the ~bite Ho~ when we were ,
will rule on Nixon's defiance of a trying to bring the (Vietnam) war to .
d an end, and \\'e have withstood that subpoena for White House tapes an nd -11 ·thstand the problem• documents sought by the s p e c I a I a we w1 w1
Th Pr 'd t ha of the future. Watergate prose:cutor. e es1 en s "People wonder ," he add ed, "how does .
refused to say how he will respond any individual these days, when we
to an adverse ruling. have very high-pressure campaigns 111
tbe media to take on public figurei, · Front P-e. 1 how-does any individual take it, how
New'port Beach police officer Robert -. does he survive it, how does he keep ·
Parker was. injured Ulis mornin_g while DROWNING • his Composure, his strength and the •
subduing two youths following a foot • • -rest." --chase in Balboa. .Nixon said he has been able to sun-ive -
Police said Parker received facial headquarters. where he was tr8nsferred the Watergate onslaught and maintain
· · · hen h sl k h' he d lo an ambulance. his composure because "I have a strong ~ inJunes w e rue is a on fam '•I" and 1 am very proud of it :·.· .•
th ment alter dl·v••g and calching Life01uirds attempted resuscitation .• e pave ... a-I hav'e a lot ol good ~friends who write I ~ neelng youlhs who were wanted throughout the re!IC\Je and transportation "'" . and call and say ·\Ve're sticking by on suspicion of possession of marijuana. of the victim, according to Gibson, but you.'
0th Ir. ho arr1·vec1 al the scene he \\'as nl'nnounccd dead on arrival at er o 1cers w r •w "I assure you no ma n in public life . I k th I •out•· 1'nlo custody and lfoag Memorial Hospi tal at 8:50 p.m. 00 e wo ' ,.., has ever h•d a more lo)•al group ol k P k to H •1 · I Hospital Dorothy and McArthur's two younger too ar er oag 1• emor1a h be h fri'ends who stood by in good and tough where he was undergoing trea!_ment late children, who had waited on t e ac ,
this morning. ______ -__ w:e:::r.::e_.:l:•.,::::n_:ho:::m:•_.:h::Y__;a;,po;=;li:::c•:::::ol=ll=ce=r::. ===da~y~·~· =· =· ·=· ======-----·
•
Surrounded' fJy Bodyguards
Q~cen Elizabeth poses with members of the Bucking-
ham Palace yeomen o! the guard aftor making her
four-yearly lnspcctlon of, the bodyg uard . The cere·
I •
mony goes back to 1485 when the guard was Conned
by King Henry Vil.
• '
I
I
•
Today's-Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 203, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 22, (974 TEN CENTS
_Me_s_a-3{iews Newport Freeway Route Chang,-=---e -1
• By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Ot 1111 Delly ,lllH .....
Costa Mesa city councilmen are
looking into the possibility o( reviving
the_ "Green. R®le" alignment _of_ the
Newport Freeway which would funnel 8tt traffic down Newport BouJevard to
Newport Beacp.
in special session Sunday appeared to
be in favor of exploring it at an
,. upcoming study session.
The "Green' Route" was abandoned
in favor of the 4'Red-Route" in 1969.
The "Green Route" calls for the freeway
to follow the present alignment of
Newport BooJevard into Newport Beach.
linking with Newport BoUelvard again Costa fi1esa city council members, C.Ouncilwoman Nonna Hertzog agreed
at 15th Street, \vhere it would end. looking at a map <>( the proposed "Red v.'ith. part of his statement. She said
As originally J)lannedi the "Red Route" Route" Sunday, delermincxl it would she wanted to look at some other
was to have continued farther ~-est to mak'e little sense to swing the Creeway alternatives because "the red line never
Superior Avenue where it was to have through_ west Costa Mesa , destroynig did make. that much sense."
)ljlned the Pacific Coast Freeway. --a part ()( their-city, onl y to link it 1'.1ayor-Robert M.. 'A'ilson a.n..d
The Pacirlc Coast Freeway was deleted up again with Newport Boulevard~ Councilman Alvin PinkJey who both said
from the state freeway 'System in 1972 "The citizens of Costa ?>.Iesa might they advocated the "Greene Line"
shortly after a maj<>rity of voters passed hang us in effigy if ~·e do this," routing all along, maintained that
an initiative which prohibits any freeway _commented Vice Mayor Jack Hammett, position.
alignrrient was minim ized by Pinkley
who said that it was time for Costa
Mesa to1 decide what it was going to
do with the freeway, regardless of what
other cities want.
Althouflh they took no direct action
to change the route alignment from
the presently adopted "Red Route ," a
majority of council members meeting
The "Red Route," or present freeway
plans, would take the Newport Freeway
on a westerly loop through ~ta Mesa,
from crossing .into Newport Beach city • who ~._:_The Gree!!_ Roule ' is looking _ The risk of irritating ~e?:rl Beach
limit!!. better all the time." city officials by resurr · g ttie Ola
Pinkley saiLno purpose lmYlsLJ~
served by concern <>Ver Newport Beach. ·
"You can't believe what they say. Their
signed statements .are no good before
the ltik is even dry. Ther~ is just
no way yoo .can ge t along with th<>se (See1tOUTE;;-Pa-ge-z1------I
es an rowns
Sporadic Combat
Cyprus Fighting
Eases With Truce
'
By United Press Internatlobal
Fighting continued in and a r o u n d
Nicosia but appea~ to be easing up late
today after passage of a 7 a.m. PDT
cease-fire deadline agreed to by Greek
and Turkey. U.N. Secretary General
Kurt Waldheim reparted a Turkish air
raid Oil Nicosia an hour and 15 minutes
after the truce deadline.
• Ir
• Lifeguards'
Revival
Try Fails
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 ffll 0.11., 'Hot 51111
A Costa ?>.1esa man drowned Sunday
evening near the Newport Pier after
saving his 9'-year--0ld daughter 's life by
telling her to float on her back until
help 9rrived.
Newport Beach lifeguards said Dennis
McArthur, 28, of 1028 Valen cia St., was
swimming with his daughter, Dorothy,
about 8 p.m .. when they began having
difficulty about 100 yards off sh<>re due
lo riptides and 25-mile-an·hour winds. Radio reports said Turkish planes hit
,..--,a botel in the port of Famagusta, killing ~ -
at lealt llO fonip inurbts, and UPI
~ ·MIChael Keats said In a ~ from Nocosia that the truce
deadllne came and went with no sign
of any relaution In lbe fighting.
According to the daughter, McArthur
-told her ..... to ·noa:tti111\er-ba·eir-·while-
he went for help. He never made it.
" V .. I T""""t9
SENATE 'DOVE' DEAD .
Ex-soloi1 Wayne Morse.
11te U.S. later ~ the cease-fire
had bet!un lo lake effect.~-
Greek National Guard Units, reinforced
by troops from Jl Greek planes which
slipped btto embattled Nicosia during
the night, kept up a steady pounding
of the corridor, Keats sakl. Turkish
troops were attempting to drive to the
capital from the Kyrenia area where
they landed reinforcements -by air and
sea loday.
A United Nations command spokesman
in Nicosia said no official orders on
a cease-fire had been re<:eived as yet
and that ••we will continue doing ·what
we· have been trying to do au along,
to have the Greek and Turkish
0.1,, 'lllt Stiff ,,...
LIFEGUARD MATT GREER TRIES MOUTH·TO.MOUTH RESUSCITATION IN TRANSIT
'Costa Mesa Min Dies Despite Rescue Efforts, But His Daughter is Saved •
Reinecke' s Testimony
Differs Fro1n Mitchell's
Coun~il Stages
l\'laratl1on Meet
In Costa Mesa
S communities observe the last cease-fire,'' Fornier enator he said. . . . !.reeling in a maralhon ·12-h~ir speci•I "We will keep on trying." BUUETIN that Reme~k.e« teshfted :falsely l<> the session SWlday. Costa Mesa city council·
Waldhe d · G o p WASH1NGTON (AP) -California Lt Senate Judiciary Comm1ltee two years -. . .
W M im sai MaJ. en. . rem _.. ago when he sa•d he had no way of men dlsc us.sed a wide range. of city proJ-orSe Chand of India, cormiumder of the U.N. Gov. Ed Reinecke took tbe witness stanu d bl f ayne peace keeping force in Cyprus, and Luis ~ his own defense today and said be knowing whether former.Atty. Gen. Jo~ ects an pro ems, ranging ron1 a
Wechman-Muooz of Mexico the mformed former Atty. Gen. John N. N. Mitchell knew of a financial cons~ruction of a new library to the
' (;;! b f. "'19 secretary general's per:sonal rePrescnta-Mitchell In May 1971 of a fin 11ncial commitment by a subsidiary of upgrading of side\\'a\ks. ~==i~:f_igcu-m : S==-lli;-l=t>l===uve m.-cypn:rs,-~·ura:t ffghting ai90-·ple~e..to..under.wrlte.tbe 197.!.RepubJic.an._ Intemational-Telephone-~-Tele~aph--The-all-day meeting.,held--at--the
was going ~ in other parts of the NaRlloalna!.i_ ~nvl~'::; t d . t C<>pr. to the 1972 Republican National Holiday Inn , was· convened as an official
PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) -Fonner
Sen. Wayne Morse, one oC the first
members <>f Congress t<> speak oot
against U.S. inv<>lvement in Vietnam,
died today a\ the age of 73,
Death cut short his second attempt
at a political comeback since losing
bi! Senate seat in 1968.
Hospital officials s8id Morse had been
,._suffering fr9m a urinary tract lnfecti~n. They~said he died of kidney and heart
failure. Morse was loustcd by Republican Sen.
Bob Packwood in a close contest. Four
years later1 Morse, then .71, was beaten
handily in a rice agaimt Sen. Mark"
O. Hatfield (R-Ore.). '-.../
Two months ag<>, Morse again won
the Democratic senatorial · oomination
-and the right to challenge Packwood
-by defeating state Senate President '
Jason Boe. 44, in Oregon's primary
-(See MORSE, Page I)
AD BRINGS MORE
AND MORE CALLS
"Yes, the apartment was rented. And,
to a Daily Pilot reader, too.
"We had more calls than we could
handle. I thlnk I was asking too little,"
the happy Westminster I and lord
oboerved.
Here's the ad which started hi.s phone
ringing:
$2.14. mo -+ $100. security.
2 BR & den , 1 ba. ne\vly
painted. dble gar. Itnmcd.
occupancy. Refs., XXX· xxxx.
'Ve can't tell you how· much to ask,
but we can prompt rent~ to ring
your chimes. Ring ours at 642-~78
lm<l let a Daily Pilot ad work for you.
'
Medit J·'and e e..-ae 8 e ny con r 8 1 c ll Convention prior to July 31, 1971. council meeting during which action erranean ;,, · . testimony by Mlt.cbeQ before the Senate eo .. _ Ed -~ K d (D-Mass) At 7 a.m., Keats said Greek artillery Judiciary Committee that be did noC .>en. WiUu enn~ .Y ·. • a could be taken. Only two citizens at-
101lts near Nicosia airport pumped a learn of the commitment from Sber.aton member ~f the Jud1c1ary . Comm1tt~e, tended .
ceaseles,, barrage int<> TUrkish positions Corp. UDUI after the Justice Department asked Reinecke ab<>ut M 1 t c h ~ l I s Mayor Robert M. Wilson praised' the
down the 16-mile road from Kyrenia bad settled an antitrust suit aiatnst knowledge of th~ l'J! pledge w~le !he meeting with city aides as highly
(See CYPRUS Page 1) International Telephone & Telegraph panel was considering t'.H .. nommatioo constructive and described it as the
' Corp. tn July 1971. Sberaion ls 8 sub-of Richard G. Kleindienst t<> be attorney first of its kind in califomia.
sldlary of ITr. general. sOme of the hi ghlights are:
Tivo Gunmen
Rob Tic Toe's
Mesa Market
A gunman aided by an accomplice
held up a Costa Mesa convenit'OCe
market late Sunday and escaped with
a shilpping bag stuffed will! cash. The
loss was estimated between $45 and
$50. Marlin R. Sigford, clerk at the Tic
Toe market .. at 2271 Fairview Roa~.
told police lhe -ry ocourred aroo..t
11 p.m. when one ol the men entered
the store to buy three cartons of
cigarettes.
When t<>Mi what the prict was, the
man unbuttoned the ·bottom button of
his Hawaiian shirt as if he were reaching
for-his wallet but in.stead pulled out a
.38 caliber revolver ..
A> he ordered Slgford In empty the
cash rtgistef. a-seooiid. man who had
been hid.irig behind a nearby fee cream
counter popped up and threw over a
brown shopping bag, police said.
After placing the money in the .bag,
the gunma n told him to lay on the
floor for JO minutes and both he and
his accomplice escaped bn root, Sigford
told police.
The gunman was described as being
tn his early 20's, about five feet scven1
weighing l7t pounds and we~rin~ a .blond
n1ustache. There was no <H!scr\ptlO,!\ of
tho accomplice.
l
"The question is put somewhat -The drafting of amendments to
WASHINGTON (AP) -One of lhe
two perjury-coonts agalns California
Lt. Gov . Ed Reinecke was dismissed
today J:iy U:S. District C<>urt Judge
Barrington D. Parker.
ambiguously," the judge 'said o .f the city's Home Occupations Ordinance
Kennedy's question. which would make applicants for home
Cox had argued that Kenned)i 's business ~permits prove that a ha~dship
question specifically called for an \Vas involved. Criteria for hardships are
imp"res'sion. to be defined by city aides.
"It was vague and uncertain and that -An agreement to have Planning But Parker1 denied a defense motion
to grant a·. Judgment of acquittal on
a second count as the defense prepared
to begin its case today.
question called for an impression,'' Cox DirectOr William Dunn ass em b 1 e
d information which may e v e n tu a 11 y argue . . The one remaining count against become the foundation of a billboard
Reinecke accuses him of lying to the ordinance. A majority of co u n c i I
'
The count dismU)sed at the request
of defense attorney James,E. C.Ox alleged (See REINECKE, Page Zl me1nberS appeared to favor the gradual
reduction of billboards rather than
(See T\tARATHON, Page Z)
I Count . Dun1ped
Ehrlichntan Verdict Reversed
WASHINGTON .(UPI) -U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell
today threw out the conviction of John D. Ehrlichman on one o(
three perjury counts against him. . . ·Gesell, in a brief order and accompanying memorandum ,. said
that the statute under which Ehrlichman was charged and convicted
-a. federal law against lying to the FBI -"was not properly in·
voked in this case." .
He ordered the guilty verdict set aside and a "verdict of acqu1t·
ta! set in its place." • · . .
Ehrlichman was convicted 10 days ago of perJUfY and. on~ count
of violating the civil rights or Daniel Ell s~tg's p~ych.1at;1st, I,>r.
Lewis F. Fielding1 growing out of the break.in of F1eld1ng s office
in1971. --,,..... .
The j ury found Ehrlichman innOcent of a fourt~ perJury ~unt.
'the perjury cou nt which Gesell threw,out carried a maximum
penalty of five years in prison and a fine of $10,000.
,
\ •• •·
\
Police Picketed
By Irvine Tee11s
A small knot of Irvine t~agers
picketed the Costa fi!esa Police Station
Sunday afternoon , protesting t h c·
activities of Officer Robert Berg.
.Berg was iJ;lvolved . in the "Operation ,
Irving'' mass drtig arTests in Irvine
MarCh 27 and has been the subject
' of several y<>ulh protests since.
'
Bet~·een 21 and 15 teenagers, police
said, , picketed the stati<>ll !roin 1 to
3 p.m.
The protest was quiet and without
incident. police said.
An American Civil Liberties Union
investigation vr the 1'.tarch 27 arrests
conciuded that Berg had tonducted the
rl!'ids properly. ~ -
• -1 •
ACC<>rd.ing to lifeguard supervisor
Larry Gibson another swimmer alerted
lifeguards to the fact that two pe<>ple
were in trouble. Lifeguard John Sutton
swam out and rescued ~nor<>thy, but
saw no sign of McArthur.
Lifeguards promptly called the police
helicopter. which spotted· McArthur's
body · about 200 yards offsh<>re. The
helicopter then made two trips to the
lifeguard station and dropped lifeguards
Ken Rouse and Larry Gibson into the '
v.'ater near McArthur while the lhird
lifeguard, 1'.Iatt Greer, swam out by
himse lf. :
An Orange County Harbor Patrol boat,'
summoned by the lifguards, arrived with.
lifeguard Greg Long on board and
carried T\1cArthur· to harbor department
rs.et: DROWNING, Page 2)
Blast Claims
Two More Lives
1:>il:"C/\rtJR-;-tll:-(UP1) ~ The mas!lve-
tank car explosion and fire which raged
through this central Illinois city Friday
has claimed two more lives.
A ~ Norfolk and Western Railroad
engineer and a switchman died Sunday
in Springfield Memorial Hospital, the
. latest victims <>f the holocaust, which
now has claimed four lives and left
at least 140 persons injured.
Three persons remained in critical
condition and a fourth ~·as in serious
conditivn-today-at the Springfield
hospital burns un it.
Engineer Bobby W. Olinger, 33,
Mexico, lnd ., and switchman Clyde
Rucker. 26. i\:lount Zion, Ill., were the
latest fatalities.
Orange Coast
' Weather
Partly cloud y at times Tuesday
but olherwise mostly swmy skies.
Not much temperature change.
Beach highs in the low 70s rising
to the mid.OOS inland.
Femi1List Betty Friedan says
a~e women's 1noveme11t is get-
ri1117 to 1ne1l. She says 1nales stop
her 011 the street to tell her llOW
the niovemenL has changed their
lives. See story, Page 17,
INSIDE TODAY
Al Yovr StNk.t l autlnt ' 11
L. M. l tw• 7
Ctlllonll• J
Cl•UlllH lt-U
Ctll'llt$ U (,......... u
Dl•lll Mellett " l"n .. tt11111n1n1 ,,
Flnffltt lf.11
MentctH 14
""" t.111dltrt u Ml!nt., Tl'ff n
Mov1tt 1i
1'1•11-1 ,...... 4
Or1nw (WftlY 11
P'.Oplt U•14
5"r'I• ••• Sit<-Mtr•ttt 1 .. 11
T .. 1vl.ie11 If
WHl!ltr t
Wit" Ntwi 4
• '
,.
•
,.
Clow1ii11g A 1·0111i1l
Orange County Fair clown "Charlie Chuckles'' iRichard Smith of
Costa fi'lesa) congratulates Reese Eva11s, 9~ also of Costa fi1e sa, win·
ner of the fair's clown competilion. Reese JS the son of Mr. and ?ltrs.
Gary Evans.
Nixo11, La,¥ye1· St. Clan·
Co11fe1· i11 Sa11 Clemente
By lJELEN THOl\1..\S
U~I Whll• Hou.-ll1oorur
President Nixon, pledging lo \Yithstand
the "very grave assault'' on his conduct
of the presidency. ·wa s to confer today
\\1ilh his chief defense lawyer on anti·
impeachment strategy.
Nixon pl anned his first face-to-face
meeting in 10 days with James D. St.
Claird who argued Nixon's case before
the House Judiciary Commit tee. The
impeachment panel is beginning what
may be its last "'eek, with debate on
articles of impeachment scheduled to
begin Wednesday.
Nixon planned to see St. Clair in
the morning. and St. Clair ""'as expected
to give lhe President a complete
nmdown on his chanct!s of defeating
impeachment.
(r
From Pagel
CYPRUS ....
to the capital.
United Nations troops, working 12
hours on and 12 hours off "If we are
lucky," dug new machine gun positions
at Blueberry camp,' their military police
unit base camp.
Finnish U . Lettala Teuro, 27, of
Helsinki. returned from bringing a
wounded comrade to the U.N. base at
Tziklos. He said Turkish troops there
were withstanding a rain of artillery
and mortar shells from Greek units in
Nicosia.
' I
T
From Page 1
MORSE ...
hoy,·e\•cr. ln 1.959. l\torse became involved
in a feud with Claire Boothe Luce,
\\'hose confirma1 ion as an ·ambassador
to Brazil he had fought unsuccessfully.
"f.1y difficulties, of course. ~o some
years back and began when Sen. Wayne
Morse was kicked in the head by a
horse." said l\.trs. i,uce.
In 1951, a mare named t1issie broke
Morse's jaw during a horse show at
Orkney Springs Va.
Funeral arrangem ... nts for Morse v.·ere
incomplete.
DAILY PILOT
l ... 0-•"')e COii I Do.1y P.W '"""•l>ot~., t-
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I• 00/lltllll'llT IPl•l•IM'I 41!91tf!ll't"' IJ tlOOft<lnlti<'t
SL Clair told reporters Sunday he
"hasn't a clue" when the Supreme COurt
\\'ill rule on Nixon 's defiance of a
subpoena for White House tapes and
documents sought by the s p e c i a 1
Watergate prosecutor. The President has
refused lo say how he will respond
to an adverse ruling.
The President was among old friends ,
California's elite businessmen, Sunday
night when he attended a diMer party
in his honor at the fashionable Bel
Air home of Budget Director Roy Ash.
The convivial setting with long-Ume
political supporters and h e a v y
contributors gave Nixon a chance to
realfirm his intention to remain in office.
. ·· ... I am often asked, 'How do you
really take the burden of the presidency.
particularly \\'hen at times it seems
to be under very, very grave assault?'
Let me say it isn 't new for us to
be under a.Maul!, because since the
time I came into office, for five years,
\\'e have had problems.
"There have been' people marching
around the \Vhite House when wie were
trying to bring the (Vietnam) war to
an end, and we have withstood that
and we will withstand the problems
of the future.
"People wonder." be added, "how does
any individual these days, when we
have very high-pressure campaigns in
the media to take on public figures,
ho\v does any individual take ii, how
does he survive it, how does he keep
his composure, his strength and the
rest. ..
Nixon said he has been able to su rvive
the \\'atergale onslaught and maintain
his composure because "l have a strong
family and I am very proud of il;
J have a lot of good friends who write
and call and say 'We're sticking by
you.'
"I assu re you no man in public life
has ever had a more loya l group of
friends-Who stOOd by in good and tough
days ... "
Nixon was exhilarated during the
e\'ening by the ""Tnessages he was
receiving by telephone from Secretary
of State · Henry A. Ki ssin ge r I n
Washington , who infonned him that a
cease fire was imminent in Cyprus.
Among the guests was J a m e ~
Roosevelt of Newport Beach, son 0£
the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
who said be was a Nixon supporter.
Roosevelt declined lo comment on lm-
J>eachmenf proceedings. but said: "If I
had to make the same choice as I had to
make in 1972, I'd make it again."
Orange County's
1974 Fair Sets
A tteuda.nce Mark
The 1974 Orange County Fair. V.'ith
a total attendance of 213,244, set an
all-time record.
Attendance zoomed by more than 4,000
O\'er Jasi year \\'hich up to then had
been the most successful fair since the
CVl'nt started in 1890.
Fair organizers had hoped lo crack
the 250,000 barrier th is year. They
blamed extremely hot. wc;Hher during
two days of the lo.day event ror not
reaching that goel.
The threat of a major rainstorm
Friday in Costa l\1esa also had an effect
on the people count. according to ~larvin
Bryan. a spokesman for the fair.
Bryan said the highest one-day count
for lhc 84-year~ld fair \\'as ·Sunday.
JuJy 1~. when a total or 27,298 people
ca me throu~h the turnsri\es.
How the fa ir fared in terms of profit
will not be known for several days. '----:==---===------
(
•
• • I
•
' ....,.., ......... _ .. ____ . ' . • • • if
Plot Trial
Of Popeil
Under Way
LOS ANGELES -Opening statements
·were scheduled in Superior Court here
tbda'y-in-the rial"'of-Eloise,..Popeil -of
Newport Beach and her boyfriend,
charged with conspiring to murder her
estranged -husband , kitchen g-1 ell et
multimillionl_irc Samuel Poptil.
Prosecuting Deputy District Attorney
Peter Bregman is et.peeled to call
Robert Peeler aJ his first witness.
l\1rs. Popeil , 48, and Daniel Ayen,
37, of Santa Ana, have pleaded Innocent
to charges of consptracy and solicitation
to commit murder. Both spent several
days in custody before being re1eued
on bail in January.
Peeler and a second prosecution
\l'itne~i Don J!~, alleged to authoritits
that l\1rs. Popell and her boyfriend
provided jewelry as securi ty and a~reed
to pay them $50,000 to eliminate Popeil ,
'>''ho operates his kitchen gadget empire
out of Chicago. Popeil is also noted for
having invented and marketed a popular
0pocket fishing rod setup.
Ayers and lrfrs. Popeil \\'~ ar .sled
Jan. 8 by a team of Long Beach homicide
detec1ives at her former home at Sl9
Harbor Island Road. Ne\Yport Beach.
Authorities have said that Peeler and
Reed tipped tbem off along with the
intended victim, after beaJm1ni ~
ned at the coooequenc.. ol what t1ier
were allegedly being 10licited to do.
A key element in the trill to be
beard before Judge Mark BrandJer is
a series of tape recordings allepd to
fhclude murder contract dilcuJlionl
among the principals.
Popeil and his wife ...,.. Jn the midst
of divorce proceedings but she stood
to inherit a third of hl1 fortune if
he died before issuance of the final
decree.
Just last week, a divorce court judge
in Chicago ordered Popeil to pay $27 ,000
in temporary support and legal costs
to his wife, pending the oulalme ol !be ·
murder-for-hire trial.
Proceedings being held in t h e .
courtroom. 111 N. Hill St. in downtown
I.as: Angeles, is expected to take 1ix
weeks, with Peeler's t e s t l mo n y
cmsuming most of this wee"".
'.l'ONJGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING
COMMISSION -Regular mettJni, City
Hall, 6:30 p_,m. _
UC! LECTURES -"Family Afoot
in the West," Room 178 Humanities
Hall, 7 p.m. "Rock-Sod.al P-,. for
the Seventies," Room 178 Humanities
Hall, l·S p.m. ~
TUESDAY, JULY Z3
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB
Community Recreation Center, 11 a.m.-
3 p.m. UCJ LECTURES -"Rock-Social
Poetry for the Seventies," Room 171
Humanities Hall 1-5 p.m . "Management
Development for Women," Room 160
Steinhaus Hall, 7 p.m.
Rol>ber·rapist
Found Guilty
In Mesa C.rimes
A transient who raped and robbed
a Tustin woman 1n the parktnl Jot
of a Costa Mesa -line alley ""1
gave her two '5 food stamps before
he ned. from the sceoe was lound guilty
Friday on the rape alleptioo.
Judge Raymond 'Ibotnpson set Aug.
8 I S the dale he Will tentence Robert
Ed ward SleiruneLr. rr, abo known .s
Douglas Edward Slevens, to What could
a state prison term ol. not less than
three years.
The jury returned its verdict after
hearing testimony that Stelnmeir, known
to arresting officers as SteveM, was
the man who last March 25 raped,
robbed and beat his 27·year-old viotim
as she left the bar at a Harbor Boulevard
bowling alley.
The woman stated that SteiMleir,
whose last known permanent home was
in San Francisco, took a $20 bill from
her purse and gave her brek $12 In
change and two $$ food stamps.
Steinmeier was arrttled on the
rape, robbery allegations later that week
when officers who booked him on · a
traffic warrari found a number of food
stamps ln his )XISSeSSklo.
Fro•P .. el
REINECKE ...
commiuet about when he llrst dlscuued
the convention site Vii"' Mitchtll.
Heinecke told the committee that he
· fir t dl.wlsscd San Oieg~ is a site
of the convention In Septtn,lbt:r, 1971
-after an out-0r-tourt settlement or
11n Irr anUtrust case.
.
I
FM RADIO THAT DOESN'T PLAY GETS CHECKED OVER AT DAVIS SCHOOL
H•plon H1JIJ (loft) Troublnhooll With Holp fn>m Julie We!more
,
Noise •sheer Delight"·
Students 'Tur1i On' in Mesct Electro1iics Class
By RUDI NlEDZIEUiKI
OI ,._ o.ltr Plllt ltett
"Getting baned on" It Costa Mesa's
Davis School means belni lucky enough
to aet a seat in teacher Jim Canary'•
summer school clw in electroniea.
·Sometimes so much ii turned on all at
once that the classroom sounds like it is belna: radio-jammed by unfrienclly forces.
Sirens, buzzers and radios honk out a
cacophony of strained noises.
To Canary, however, all that nolse ii
sheer delight because it-means that his
charges are truly interested in learning
about transistors and toggle switcbea.
The class, which concent rates
prlmarlly on building wO r kl ng
component1 from kits or scratch_ parts,
t'NtltP .. eJ
MARATHON •••
impoottkii ol an Immediate ban.
-Policy changes in the operation o!
the Planning Depa..._ which will
require developers to draw landscaping
plans to aeale, show full dimensions
of their project, and required them ·to
1Jgn their plons. .
-Action to '"'1d the special sign
~gulations study released last week to
the PlaMing Commissioo and ·to the
chamber of commerce for evaluation
and recrom1endatlon.
-A decision ·to tackle the Housing
Elemtnt to the c.ost.a Mesa General
Plan council at the Sept. 3 meeting.
However, the likely outcome is only
an acceptance of the goals in the
controversial Hou&lng Element, no1
necessarily the implemeniation o f
remedies to Improve low~ housing.
-Authorization of a 26-city survey to
delennine how much other m1.micipalities
chirp for house moving fees and the
criteria they use in granting move-in
permits:. The results of the survey will
be used to detennlne Costa Mesa's fee
requirement.
-Discussion of '205.000 In Revenue
Sharing funds for 1974-75 which are not
presently allocated. The amowit has betn
tentatively tabbed for a new downtown
lltnry by City Manager Fred S<nabal,
bl.it councilmen were Invited to aubmit
their own shopping list! for the funds.
-Diacusslon, but no action, on a
request by local PTA s to provide
crossing guards near sch o o Is.
cOuncllmen heard a presentation from
Public Services Director James Eldridge
Jn oppooitlon to the guards. Pupil safety
requlrtments, Eldridge said, are being
met adequately with stoplights at
lntenectloos.
-An agreement to lnvetllgate the
comparative merits of pubUc v1. private
"Dltl·A·Rlde transportation sy>tems. The
study wUI involve the city of El Cajon
where a new Dial-1·Ride system has
,been intltituted throujh a subsidy to
Yellow Cab CO.
-A 1peclat study to determine the
bt:st approaches to build sidewalks,
especially in the older sections of Costa
Mesa where there are Jong gaps in
sidewalks.
-Discussion of the possibility of hiring
a landscape architect or techn ician to
assist in the checking of landscape plans
for new developments, planning or
beaulitication projects, and development
of Fairview Park. Councilmen instructed
the city manager to make a
recommendation.
-A requeat for an investigatlon into
the poutbillty of delegating authority
to the planning commlaalon and ttaff
members to handle routine items.
t'NtltPepl-.
DROWNING •. ·•
headquarters. where he wy lransrerred
to an ambulance. •
Lifeguards attempted resuscitation
throughout lhe' rescue and traneportaUon
ol the victim, ac<onling to Gibson, but
he was pronounced dtad on arrival at
Hoag Memorlal Hoopltal at 1:60 p.m.
Dorothy and McArthur's two yoonger
children, who had waited on the beach,
has been 90 popular with &th, 7th and 8th graders that there has been a waiting
Ii>!.
"Some or thern line up outside the
classroom as early as 7:30 a.m.," says
Canary, who teaches his ttudenll to build
!UCh thlnp .. tlectrooJc 11..... light
ala_nns, lie detecton, automatic night
lights, burglar alanns, aircraft r adios
and several other fun gizmos.
"This ia a valuable experienoe for
!hem. Before they ClfTle in here many of
them didn't even know what a transistor
or a resistor looked like." added Canary
who worked in aerospace electronics for
two years before becoming a teacher.
"This has tremendous career interest.
Kids art always interested in this kind of
thing. Here they learn by doing. 1bey
get a basic background In electronics but
the thing I'm trying to stress i5 actually
'doing IOmething'."
One attribute of the class which makes
it more fun for the kids ls: that aJl
projects built in the clus ... going to
work. There will be no-silent radios and
no electronic lirtns which won't wall.
!f .,melhinl doesn't wark, Canary will
firid the problem, ei:plain what's wrong,
and have the student correct the
mistake. Nobody goes home unhappy.
"I'm here to make sure µitngs will
work and that the kids doo't become di>aPIJOintln~ ... Canary ezpialnCd.
Sometimes he will give a dead kit to
another 111uc1en1 to try and fisur• out
what's wrong.
Soldering away, lJ..ye&Mld Hapton
Halli had his earphone plugged Into an
FM radio durina: 1 recent session wonder·
in• why the mUJic doesn't play.
"Mr. Canary said I could have it if I
oould make it work. I'm going to check it
out with an olmmeter and look for lhorU:
and wires that haven't been comected,''
he explained.
HaW graduated to the troublHhooting
job af\tr first buildin« a two transistor
amplifier and a ''Goofy-Lite." Though he
admits he m "Just fooling around" with
his gizmos, he has expressed an interest
of someday beiTIJt professionally involved
in electronics.
The two class sessions, numbering
about 85, also contain a number of girls
who prefer hand.ling a soldering gun to
knitting needles.
Julie Wetmore, a seventh grader, Just
bui lt a light alann, a device which makes ·
a buzzing 80lDld v.ilenever its ph:lto cell ·
is ob8cured.
"I'm going to take it home and show
my mom. She'll probabl y be happy,'' said
Julie. She added she thought her home-
built alann_lwl no real u,,c but that she
put it together because -.. J-likC fo OOild
things."
Canary said he hoped there would be
more. girls enrolling ror the course than
actually did. but the fact ·j,s that aome
girl! in junior high school sWJ tend to be
shy around boys.
FromP .. el
ROUTE ••.
people down there," he !urned.
Of the five memben of. tHe council,
the only cne not interested ~ studying ,
the route change was Councilman Dom
Raciti. His poslOoo ia that Costa Mesa ,
should keep the "Red Route" because
k Is adopted. '
"The only way we 'll ever get that
freeway moving is to keep going the
way we have been. If we change the
routjng now !_believe we will hurt our
chances to get the COrona del Mar-
Freeway completed and we will Jet
our relatlc:mshlp with the lltate and
Newport Beach back 20 years," he said
today.
Public Services Director J a m e s .
Eldridge cautioned the city council in
changing its freeway poncy because of
his belief t.hit the stale Division of
Highways would "get awfully sensitive"
about dealing with Co91a litcsa after
it had invested five years ci planning
on the 0 Red Route."
Erosion Putting Squeeze
On Newport's Dory Fleet
By JACKIE RYMAN
Of .. Dltfr """ .....
Sand erosion has eaten away so much
of the Newport Beach dory fishing flett'1
beach area near the Newport Pier that
the fishermen may hl•e to move, a
spokesman 111\ld today.
Paul Phegley, a n.year veteran of
the dory flrttt, •id that onJy aeven
of the fleet's 13 boats can presently
fit into the area 11Jotted them,
"The others either don't ~· fishing
or they have to beach their boats do""'TI
below where the Ude comes in and
washes away their garbage cans," he
said.
Phegley said If the flshennen have
to make some ldnd of move, they might
prefer to spretd out along the beach
and occupy the space between the neet'11
curTent alte and the pier.
"But of. CJJW'H that WQtlld have to
go lhmlgh tile Newport Beach City
Council and we hlven't even talked
to our councilmen yet," Phegley said.·
"We keep hoping the beach will build
bock up lite ~ lllUl!ly does In the
.....,.,, It'• UIUlily •-lllO feet wider
thin lt 11 now."
He Aid the Nowport llolch Gtnenl
Servictl Depol1lnent dumped 1boolt 20
1eo1 o1 ....i 1n 11ont o1 the dory neet
l•lt Wtdntldly ev!Wlln&, but that was
all washed out by the hllh tide that
nlghL
Hl'h tidn ol up to 7.1 feet, surf up
to elCht feet high and strong rtotkt•
lflVe been t«.1)1ded at Newport-1teach
this week, 1utdlng to an tl'Oflion problem
which hes threatened the Ill-rd st•·
lion •• ~•ii .. the dory fiahlng n .. t all
)'Pr. .
"It l~s like wt have a trend of
deterloratln~ beach line," commented
Marine S.a(t:ty Director Robert Reed.
I
RUNNING OUT OF SAND
Dory Fl1herm1n Phegley
However, city ofrleia.ls &ay they're
aware of the erosion problC!m and :ire
tr.ying lo do something about It.
"Three months a10. lhe city council
paMed. a re90Ju lion calling for both 11
ahort·term and a long-range .solution 10
the problem," l'l&id City [\,tanager Rober&
L. Wynn.
>
' ..