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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-05-30 - Orange Coast Pilot' ' .Runner A ~~ ---- . ----- • • I in Car Crash B1111tington Man ---. County Hospitals . ---. Held oil -Movie Baek to NorDtal .. -· • P -iraey Charges Sehetloles Mood DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 30, 1975 VOL .... NO. 150, 4 SE CTI OHS, J6 PAGES ' Workers bask in the sun on lhe Embarcadero in San ';Francisco as the. Bay. Area .sweltered on the fi.i:st .reaJIY ,Hot.day or the year. The mercufy reached 88 degrees in ;town and topped the 100 mark ·in outlying areas, with more hot weather' predicted. ~oDl).ty Hospitals ' 'Back to Normal' lly ALAN DIRKIN Of .. DallyPINtlUtt Oyeratfng rOo ms in Orange County ri021pita ls will be back on normal !lCl)~les Monda y. --4·---T h e-1J e ·c I l 0 n f 0 r anesthestolocts l s and oth e r pbystctans involved tn the sur· gd-i.&lowdown to-return to full soiiiduteS:was f'eacheC:l at a six· hOUr· meeting of the Orange CoUn_.ty Meaical Association ThUriKt~ynight. ,fy,e,reil ,Bannister, executive di~org(tbe 2,QOO-member OC· ~ •. ,cobfU'me.d today t.l}at for a w!!lle.."1£ was touch and go" on w·hjtbe:r the doctors would re· tani, ·• 1.-. . ·Tbe mee\Jnl hod been called • ., by OCMA president P h ilip McFarland to consider a 1cquest by doctors in the San Juan Gaplstrano and San Clemente area for stronger and more.con- certed action to resolve the malpractice insurance crisis. But. a resolution by these doc-· tors for all physicians in Orange County to withhold a ll but e mergency services for three \veeks was "resoundingly" de· feated, Ban'nister said. · Bannister said thai t here was much support ror coriUnuing the :;lowd.own, but when the vote came to return there was not n dissentlng vote. ,"But re member the vote was not tak~n until after six hour$ of debate." he added. <See NORMAL, Pago i\2) • ~Ollll I I 0 • n an I 'Eiir~pean ~ Distance Champ Leaders Prefontaine Killed Laud U.S. BR USSE L S CUP !) - Amerira's key European allies assure d President Ford today that U.S. credibility remains as strong as ever des pite the fall of Vietnam. and som e declared they never ha d any doubt or the continuing U.S. commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty ;:>rganization. · But a few noted politely but firmly that they must make their own decisio Ns, which in some in- stance:; may not fully coincide with the vision of unified defense which Ford painted in hi s open· ing s peech to the meeting of NATO heads of state. • Jn his opening speech Thurs- day. Ford r estated a ringing pledge th~t the United States wi ll com e to the defe nse of any NATO member subjected to armed at· tack, and will m aintain its pre· sent 310 ,000 troop strength in Europe. Prime Minister l'larold Wilson of ;Britain said he welcomes the president's assurances about the U.S. commitm ent to NATO, but said this commitment never real- ly had been in doubt. Chancellor l'lclmut Schmidt of \Vest Germany said in a speech that he '.'took note with satisfac- tion of the Am erica n commitment to uphold its military obligations and not to reduce unilaterally its troop strength in E urope. "Es pecially in times when the United States h·as to carry a heavy bur de n, it can count on Germany as well," Schmidt said. The expressions of support for Ford's position introduced a note of harmony a nd solidarity in an organi zation whose unity has been shaken by disputes between Greece and Turkey and by uncer· tainty over whether Portugal is drifting toward a pro-Communist stance. But some major speakers also restated the reservations their governments held toward the al· li ance before the summit began. Greek Premier Constantine Caramanl is said NATO's failure to block Torkey's invation of Cy prus las t summer forced Greece to quit NATO's military arm -a nd Gr eece 'Will remain outside at least for now. · On one of the hottest topics, Portugal's Premier Vasco dos Santos Goncalves declared his nation would stay in NATO despite allied suspicion!i it i!I drifting to""·ard the Communist sphere. EUGENE, Ore. (AP> -Steve Pr efontaine, this coun· try's fin est distance runner and one or its most con- troversial amate ur athletes, was killed in an a utomobile ac· cide nt early today, little more than four hours a fter he ra n the second fa s test 5,000 meters by an American. Police said Prefontaine. who was 24 , was pinned under his car after it hit a rock wall at about 12 :30 a .m. PDT. The former University of Oregon standout who finished fourth in the 5,000 meters at the 1972 Olympics had covered that distance in 13 minutes 23 .8 seconds in winning the event at an NCAA preparation meet Thursday night in Eugene. ·T he time "'as about I 1h seconds off Pre fontaine's American record. A hi gh school sensation in Coos Bay, Ore,, Pre fontaine \\·ent on to a brilliant career at the University of Oregon a nd . at the tim e or his death, owned U.S. records for every distance above 2,000 meters. Additiona l details today on Page 86. Coast Man Indicted • l;n Movie Piracy A 27 -year -o ld I.funtington Beach man was among 16 people indicted Thurs day by a Los Angeles federal grand jury in- vestigating motion picture and television rilm piracy. Richard H . Wesselink Jr., 27, of 19241 Brookhurst St., was charged with criminal copyright infring.emcnt. FBI officials said he appeared before a magistrate in Santa Ana and was released on his own recognizance. Wesselink was among s ix Southern Californians arrested after the indictment. The FBI listed him as the former owner of a firm called Video Dynamics. Assistant U .S. Attor n ey Cheste r L . Brown said today Wessclink's fi rm. at 10722 Trask Ave., Garden Grove, handled contracts for airline motion pie· lure showing. But he is accused of illegally making t hree copies or "The Ex- orcist" then s elling two of them . Brown declined to discuss other details ·or Wesselink 's case. Officials said the indictments were the firs t major crackdown on film piracy, which they said costs the motion picture industry Poll Backs Brown SAN FRANCISCO CU P!) - Californians think Gov. Edmund G. Brown J r . is doing a very good job, a survey by the California poll sa id toda y . ~li s job perrormancc rating is higher than the best scored by his fath erJ. e>t ·Gov . Edmund G. Brown:::ir. ·' from $100 million to $1 bill ion in losses each year. Those named in the indictment '''ere accus ed of illegal ly duplicating and transporting some o f 1-Iollywood's bi ggest money-makin g films. The U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles r e portedly seized "'hat were described as tons of film s during its several-month investigati on. Among film s reportedly copied and sold we re "The Sting," "The Exorcist ,'' "'Ameri can Graffiti.'' "Fiddler on the Roof," "The French Connection" and others. Jn additio n to sales to private U.S. collectors, s uch films also are reportedly marketed in South Afr ica, Great Britain and Australia. Mayor Hints At NY Firing NEW YORK (UPI) -Mayor Abraham Beame has proposed firing another 37 ,315 workers un- der an $11 .8 billion "crisis" budget that will drastically s lash a ll areas of city services. Beame said the dismissals will go into effect July 1 if $641 million needed to close a gap in the fiscal year beginning thut day is not found . Beame presented the latest 1975·76 budget Thursdaf at an un- precedented joint session of the City Council and Board of Estimate televised live from city hall.- • • 1es • Threats Precede Shooting A 16·year-old Stanton boy died Thursday of a g unshot \vound in the head inflicted \Vednesday night as he ran from the scene of a strce\ gang fight. Police said today Gerard Qui - jas, of 7702 Yorkshire St .. died Thursday morning al Stanton Community Hospit.il, about 12 hours after he was s hot. Norman J-laggstrom, 19. a lso of Stanton, is being held on murder char ges stemming from the incident. . Police said the shooting oc· curred at about 10 p.m. Wednes- day during a gang battle but there is :;till no indication Quijas \Vas involved. The mother of the murder sus- pect told police a nother fight had taken place outs ide her home aL 11822 S'anta Rosali a St. earlier in the day. She said several gang members had threatened to kill her son and burn down her house. A police spokesman said Mrs. Dorothy H aggstrom told them she asked her son to protect her against the gang, "•hich vowed to return. She said they came back that night, armed "'ith ~folotov cocktails a nd other "'eapons. (See SHOOTING, Page A2> Or:•_g.:c4 7 :••t Weather Lo \Y c l oud s night throug h' mid ·morning otherwise s unny Saturday "''ith s lightly warmer tem· peratures. 1-lighs wi ll range from 65 at the beaches to 78 inland. INSIDE TODA. Y II won't just be .another show when 2.800 music stu- dents from Saddlebac k" schools pul on a musical ex-. trovoganza at the Anaheim Convention Center ne::d week. See 1tory by Daily Pilot Staff Writer Jan \Vorlh on Page CI.· Al't'-~k• ... ,1 ... LM.a.y• C:.11"'711• C'-$1llletl 0c.mk1 er.s, .. ,4 °'"''" ""'lc•1 llllftwl•I '•9' P:IMM• -· .. 1..-nnl••••" ... a.a ... ,. ==· Index ' ' n, 1..1 ... 1t,.Y t"ILOT . ·. s Ffld•Y. May30, 187S ft fiitllttll 1'i1i1it FEA Outlines Gas P.lan ·. WASl-IINGTON CUPJ) -Federal energy planners have proposed an emergency ga.sollne rationing plan that would give drivers ln all parts of the natJon the same number o( gallons of fuel each week. "We don 't want to get caught like we did the last lime,'' a member or the Federal Ener1y Administration task force \\'hich ·drew up the proposal said tod3y. He referred to ll\e 1973-74 Arab oil embargo. The spokesman said today the plan was drafted as a · . st.andby and would be used only in the event of a major emergency. . The report g.o.ve no estimate how much gasoline would be provided to each licensed driver. Jn the past, however, U.S. officials have talked In term of nine gallons per week. Centerfold Jolt Male Bodies Get Mimu 2 Ratings LOS ANG ELl!:S CAPl -"We will not be able to use your body in our centerfold," the letter says. " ... On a scale of 0 lo 10, your body was rated ·2. '' The letter carries the name "Playgirl" at the top and ap· parently has been sent to men around the country. But a Playgirl magazine spokesman said Thursday it i s no\ responsible for the mailings· and described them as "a very cruet hoax• t I Phil Paladino, public relations director for th e women's Stolen Birds Back at Lion Country Safari Sonya, Scarlet and Happy are happy to be home again today al Lion Country Safari in Irvine, "'here they were to resume performances after being stolen six days ago and then necovered. ;'They roller skate, ride scooters and put out fires. things any normal red-blooded bird will do," explains Jerry Kobrin, vice president of the African wildlife park. Sonya, a Greater sulphur. •crested cockatoo from Australia, ll.appy, a hyac inthine macaw from Brazil and Scarlet , a scarlet macaw, also from Brazil, are still a few ranks above Spar- rows and barn swaJIO\VS in the social register of the world's [Ovil. Happy is worth $10,000 alone, jl.·hile total value of the three is jIS,000, according to Dr. Charles Jeffries, their owner. • He began a systematic check pr Southland dealers who handle rare and exotic birds and llnimals after the burglary and found his missing birds at Casa fie Pets in Stud lo City Tuesday. • No arrests have been made so tar in the ca&~ of fowl play at Lion Country. ~ Burglars brDke through a tri· Pie lock system which secured ihe birds in cages at the amuse· rnent park at 8800 Moulton Parkway, leaving three less· Valuable birds behind. · The brightly colored performers from Robelle Animal Productions Ltd., Norco, have delighted audiences duily (or rnonths. Lackner Okayed •· SACRAMENTO (U PI) -The Senate. without debate, Thurs- Oay easily confirmed Dr. Jerome J\. Lackner as state director or health and five other of Gov . Ed· mund G. Brown Jr. 's nominees to government office. ORANGE COAST ' DAILY PILOT l ... 0••11 .. CO<I •! O•lly "•llH, .,.!11""'4<"'"<-bl-IN t.l•••·Pr•"· ;, """''""IDyllw0...,91 C.00•1 Pullll~+no C.Om1uny. S•p.,•1• l!<tltlOM .. e Plltl'•--"""' """"'" F•l<Wy l0t Co•i.o ,..,.,.._,_..,Poll O..tell, H.,m+nqu"' llt•<"'"-· l•ln V•ll••· •••I"•· 1.1aa1,~c ~ v"""' """ Y9'JM IMMll,....,"111 (Of\I. A ••"O't ,.,,.,.,,., ~1101' I• putJO l .... d Sfh1tl<0Y• -~"''°"'" TN p<.r><lp.01 1Mllll>fll,.q Pl•M I\ II )00 -·· 8&y Sl•tt•. Co•t• ""-••, (flltotftl• th~ '. Rober I N. Weed ..... +klll ..... ,.. ......... Thom•\ Keevll 11'100' Thomas A. Murphine "'-Mtl~ l!•tor • Charles M. Loos Aich.1rd P. Nall ' "''1'1&111 W llt•l"t l•!0t• I ' Oft Ices c .. 1111M•• ''°_ ... ,,i, ... , ... ._1 .. ..c11 ~l,l)N1-1M .. •t •ll L...,.. .. ,,ll, 11 .. Gl9!wwy•t s.l'"I H""'liflt1on .. .t11 111/t .. l'tfl ...... •'"'" .....,.._.<.,,.11i.r JUCll~NJ~ ti )otfl Dlt'OG ,,_, C.11,,1,111 ,· ,,,, D''"'" (.11111 P~!)ll,.,1.,1 ~Pl"f NtMa1_i.,,Ul11•t•l••t1<1.t.,t dllO•lt ! l•lllltl I f t9~t•ll•t"'lfll) "''''" Mt f ti rt,.10Utt9 W!\llfl'I ---Clt l ptflllll lilh ti C:O.rr1oh10 .. 111r. ' S.tt•" '!tit 01t1•1 ,.10 11 Ctl1t 11111,1. c.i1 .... lllt Sdt<.•llll•loo ~!''"le• U ........ 11.i,; "'""u"° 06..,...,,,.,,IOli ·•••lfn••~•!I-u.oo _,,.,,, • , magazine which features photos of nude men. said Playgirl has received 44 inquiries about the letter -many rrom people who think It is legitimate. The lette rs bear postmarks from around the country and they obviously were composed on different typewriters. They show different logo styles at the top or the page, different mailing ad· dresses for Playgirl and are signed with different names, he said. But the text is almost identical on all the letters which Playgirl has seen in the l<tst few weeks. Paladino said. After thanking the individual for sending in hi s photographs - no one, of course. had done so - the letter goes on to say in part: "The rating was done by a panel or women ranging in age from 65 lo 75 years old . We tried to have our panel of women in the 25 to 35-year-old bracket rate you, but we could not get them to stop laughing long enough." Among the recipients have been a clergyman and an elderly \\'idow, Paladino said. He said Playgirl is sendin g apologies to every recipient of the hoax letter who can be local· ed . The magazine plans ·to turn the documents over to postal authorities for possible criminal investigation, he said. Amphetamines Admitted by Anne HeartJt BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -An~e Randolph Hearst, sister of fugitive newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court today to a misdemeanor drug charge and \\'as placed on probation for rou._r months. Judge John T. Curtin said if Miss Hearst successfully com· pletes her probation period, he would be willing to consider a motion to dismiss the charge. This, in effect, would remove the conviction from her record. ~1iss Hearst, 19, a student at Regis College in Denver, and Donald R. Moffett, 21, of Denver, were arrested al the Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls March 4 while driving from Canada into the United States. Federal drug authorities charged them with possession of a controlled substance, saying they had found 12 amphetamine pills or ''speed" in Moffetl's sock. Roger P. \Villiams, an assis· tanl U.S. attorney, told newsmen tod ay that the government Is dropping the charge against Mof. fett. WIUiams said that although the· tablets were found tn Moffett's sock, both Moffett and Miss Hearst said the table~ belona:ed to her. Williams said the maximum penalties for the charge are a fine of not more than $5,000, Im· prisonment for not more than one year, or both. Miss Hearst's appearance In federal court came earlier than had been expected. U.S . Magistrate Edmund F. Maxwell had twiee Postponed preliminary hearings for her and had set the latest hearing date for June 13. Woman Hurt In Mishap A youn1 Costa Mesa woman ls recovering from road bums to- day after a motorcycle towing accident. Patricia A. Barnes, 22, o( 950 W. 17th St., was treated at Hoaa Memorial Hospital (or mulUple abrasions and released. Police said her disabled bike was being lowed down Victoria Street at Valley Road by a (riend, Delbert W. Murphy, 28, or 1939 ·Wallace Ave., who tied them· to1ether with a nylon rope. Officers said ahe apparently lost control when tile rope wenl · slack at one point and then jerked her forward when Murphy IC· ceJerated to pl.ck up the slack. • ·• / . • -lleeesden -Worse -Ford -Paiilts -- Bleak Picture --WASHJNGTON (AP) ~ Tiie Ford administration setd today that unemployment and lbo re· cession will be worse this year than it estimated earlier, but should be followed by •stronger economic recovery next year. In its mld·year b\J(l&el and eaonomlc review, the ad· mln iatration predicted un· employment wlll averate 8.7 per· cent, or about 7.8 million wo1:kers, tor the year. The ad· ministration predicted as recent· ly as February that unemploy· ment would avera1e 8.1 percent this year. The forecast, if true, meail.s that the jobiess rate probably will rise above 9 percent later this year. The April rate of un· employment was 8.9 pereent. The report, which will be sent to Congress, also predicted that: -The nation 's economy will decline by 3.6 percent this year, compared with the administra· lion's original prediction of a 3.3 percent decline. · February flcurea, but the rePort said that the figures were ex· tremClf tentative and based on un ~conomlc growth rate of 6.5 per~ent durtna the four -year period. .. In tts February estimate, '""e administration had proJtcted un· employment at 7.5 terrent in 1977, e.9 percent In 1'"8, 6.2 per· cent In 1979 and 5.5 pucct an . 1980. Hulse IJue As Witness For Hurd? By TOM BARLEY OfllltD4111fflt ........ Real Cliff Ha11ger. -The economy will rebound \\'ith a strong 6.3 percent growth next year, better than the 4.8 per- cent growth forecast earlier. Reluctant witness Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse overca~o hi s reluctance Thursday 1n Orange CoUnty Superior Court but only after lawyers for ~th sides agreed that he could sw1Lch sides in the "Devll Cult" murder trial of Steven Craig H~d. Richard Dale Depas hans on d'3 best he can as he performs his \VindoW·\vashi ng job al this bank in Salem, Ore. The building is so ornate thal nobody wants to put s afety hooks into it. -The rate of in£1ation, as . reOected by consumer -prices, will increase 9.1 percent this year over 1974, compared with a February projection of a 10.8 per· cent increase. · Hulse, hustled froin the\._Wit· ness stand Wednesday after questions from prosec\.llor Frank Briseno produced obscenities rather than answers, will next appear in the courtroom as a de- fense witness, not a pn>1ecuUon wltne1s, if-tbe ... triat.. ia ..not declared a fulstrlal. Front Page Al NORMAL .•• The vole cam e after the mem· bership ''completely rejected" the concepts· of a stop-gap bill t h at se ttled the strike by Northern California doctors, who have been off work since May 1. "There \vas a feeling that the Northern California doctors bought a bad bill," Bannister said. · The OCMA director said that the motion agreed upon by the Orange County troctors was limited. It was to continue work- ing "until the end of the general session ·or the Legislature pro- vided that the legislators de· monstrate a strong desire to push legislation that will give answers lo lon g "·t er m 'pr~blems of malpractice insurance." ' "The feeling was that if no long-term solution is reached everybody in Orange County will go out," Bannister added. The bill that brought the """Northern California doctors, who · currently have no malpractice insurance coverage, back to work was to create a statewide pool of liability iusurance car· riers which will provide in· surance at lower rates while the Legislature tackles the problem. Orange County doctors have been pushing the bill of state Sen. Dennis Carpenter (ft-Newport Beach) that would set up com- pensation boards, instead or juries, to hear malpractice cases, limit the ·period when awards can be filed , limit the awards, and limit attorneys' fees . By l\.tonday some Orange County hospitals will have been on res tricted schedules for two weeks, some for about 10 days and some for a week. Cutting out elective surgeries has reduced patient loads at hospitals· by about 40 percent and sol\te hospitals have been putting staff members on four-day weeks and contemplating layoffs. Bannister said that the e(fcct the slowdown was having on hospitals was a "strong concern" of the doctors at Thursday ·night's meeting. Fr'ont Page Al • SHOOTING Witnesses said at least one other shot was fired during the confrontation besides the ratal bullet. Police went on patrol around Stanton and Garden Grove schools Thllrsday and a1ain to- day to guard aealnst violence erupting as the result or the shooting. The police spokesman said tO· day several fights were broken up Thursday a nd a rew schools dismissed classes early to pre· vent further campus inclden~. All the schools were open today. Two V esse/,s Collide at Sea NEW ORLEANS (AP) -An empty tunker collided with a cargo ship In the Gulf ot Mex.ico early today, but the Coast Gu&rd said neither vessel was in dan1er ofsinklna. Three crewmen aboard the- cargo ship \\'ere reported injured slightly . There were reports that motl of the 42-mcn crew aban· donrd the tanker and were taken aboard ves&el.s that wmstandin& by. • Laguna Police Nab Illegal I Weapon, Man Laguna Beach police seized an ancient oriental weapon and ar· rested a 21-ycar-old Mi ssion Vie· jo man at Laguna's Crescent Bay beach Thursday. William Brant Hunt of 26082 Via Pera was booked for alleged possession or "nunchaku sticks, .. an illegal weapon. Nunchakus are hardwood sticks joined al the center with a chain or nylon rope. Hunt, reportedly on parole from petty theft and armed rob· bery convictio.ns, was held on $2,500bal1. Offic er Carlene Ambrose re- ported she was on patrol near the beach and observed a man SW· inging and throwing the nunchakus. She reported she went to the beach and Hupt told her the sticks had been thrown in the ocean and lost. The officer said s he found the weapon under a maroon shirt sh'e had first seen· the man wearing. Nunchakus are considered ii· legal weapons under a slate. penal code section which also in· eludes slings. The weapQn was developed in Japan's samurai era and was considered an excellent weapon for use against the samurai sword, police said. The administration st6ck bY·l~ projected fiscal year 1976 budget deficit of nearly $60 billion, which is below the. $68 bllllon .. cleficit target set by Con1ras. The de· ficit in fiscal 1975 wtll be ~.6 million, the rePort.Said·. ' - Although the over·a·U economic outlook was somewhat lm· proved, there was litUe hope in the ne.w for1ecast for animproved unemployment rate. The report said unemployment will average 7.9 percent in 19'18, equal to 7.1 million workers, the same as forecast in the February economic Outlook. In Its outlook for the economy a fter 1976, the administration said unemployment could average 7.2 percent in 1977, 6.5 . percent in 1978, 5.8 percent in 1979 and 5.1 percent in 1980. These projections were somewhat improved from the Wabbits Workmg " SAN DIEGO (AP) -At first glance, it's a 6are· brained idea outlined in the official report titled "'Dollar Stretchine Ac· tivities" in the San Diego Community Colleae Dis· llict. Chancellor Dale Parnell ·reports that rabbits have replaced two gardenen at Miramar Collea:e. keeping the bermuda grass neatly ·trimmed. ' HE RITAG E CHINA Reg. 5969°0 SALE s799o o HERITAGE'S WINDWARD COLLECTION made with English brown oak burl,. pin knotty walnut and olive ash burl veneers. and pecan solids. The finish . done by hand, Is In the oldest European manner. These dis.llnctlve qualities give Windward a' look of Its own. Entire Collection on Sale Until End of May DINING ROOM. BEDROOM AND OCCASIONAL PIECES DREXEL-HERITAGE-HEN REOON-W000"1ARK-KARAST AN-BAKIR . . Ju~ge Frank Qomeqklllnl will make t~at decision Mcinday. Ir he decid~s the triarwill goon Hulse, 21, will become defense attorney WilUam Gamble's witness. Gamble moved for a mi1qial with the ar,1ument that HulJe's statement that he was round gull· ty or murder charges after plead· in( no\ guilty .and not (uilly by reuon of insanity to the hatchet killing or service station atten- dant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21, could prejudice Hurd's chances of a fair trial. Gamble argued that the Jury now knows that Hulse dre;N a life term in litate prison after filing the same pleas as Hurd. The In. Cerence.is ob.vlous, he lOld Judce Domenl.chini. Hurd, '25, is accused of first degree murder in the mutilaUan killing on June 3, 1970, or MluJon VjeJA , l~!l~.hor Florence .Nancy Brow,p. . , Mrs, Brown, 31, of El Toro, was dra11ed from her car by a 11ng as the car entered the Sand Ca· nyon Road offramp from the San- ta Ana Freeway. She was butchered In an Irvine oran1e grove. It is alle1ed that Hurd, assert· ed leader of a gane of drul·ualn1 drifters, played the major role in · her kllling and burial. Hulse ex· plained Thursday that he could face reprisals rrom fellow in· mates in Soledad State Pt11on when he returns there If he testifies in the current trial aa a p_roaecutlon witness. " NEWPORT BEACH• 17'7 WBSTCl,fff'.OK .. '42·:!GIO WlltCOATS I 5ATUIDAT5 t :H .. l :JO • LAGUNA BEACH • . :U.~ Nfllt1'11 \:(~AWi' H"W\·.. ·UM 6Ul TORRANCE.. . 23'Mt H~w:nlOaNF. hi.JD. (()1>tn >'(1, flt,~U.11. 124:.JO>, 310·1'1~ J [ th.: for or ym die I In I ""' lh• Ori Soo or , S hi m< sp1 , .. Tl I the in ye: ve1 COi ffi( to; vb m• SC' llE ae1 Re lh• It we .... yo "" vii or ve po IJll wl co re m r in ta no is c ., m ca wl p! e:: pa d< Pt st1 or (a ur ri1 P< m h< a • ., la ' H D m \V b• H "' d. C• b n· u .1 ·~ ~ b ti ~ .. I ~ l I I I I I Ttlecolumn appean dally except Saturdaya and Monday5. Ciot a 1Jrobten1? Tl1eri writ11 J.)al Our111. Pal u•ll/ t·ut rrd tape. gel the ' (J11$W.:t .s Ond CH.'· t 1011 y<ir.1 1iced to so /lie ineq11ities in 111J vt·r11,,1e11t and hu .~111t'.~s. A·la1/ 1111ur t111t•stion.<1 to /'111 /Ju11n JJ\I \'vu r Service . IJratAye Coa .<1 1 IJuily Pilot. f'.0 . JfuJ-1560. COSIO A11•.~11. (.',1 !Jtr.21;. Include your telt•1J111111c 111J111h1·r. 'Depressiofl f'lo.,,er' DEAR P~T : Someone told me lhat you'd published the recipe fo r an old-fas hioned coc.il garden or "depression r10 .. 1:er." Could Y?U possi~ly repeat the ingre- dients and method involved? L .J .,CostaMesa Put a small piece or coal or coke in a bow. Over this pour six tables- poons each or sa lt and w•ter, three tablespoons bluing and two or three drops or M ercurocbrome. Soon a rlower having all the tints or r ed and blue will begin to take shape. It will r esemble colored moss or a rose. •~or added color, sprinkle food coloring, colored lnkorrabric dye on the coal. The E'i rst f'b!a DEAR PAT: I found a flea in the house the othe r day. Are we in for another siege or them this year ? Last s umme r and fall were very bad and nothing seemed to control the flea epidemic. What m easures can I take at this point to avoid a horrible infestation? P.B. San J uan Capistrano Joseph K . Cortese , D. V.M ., ad· vises you to take preventative measures right now to avoid a M?vere infestation later on in the Ilea s e ason . Us e a fogging aerosol in your home. This kills neas, ticks and other insects In the home, carpets and furniture. It is effective for about four weeks. Your yard also should be trt8tect with a spray product and you should keep your' dog cJean, inspect him regularly and pro- vide him with a good flea collar or medallion. Consult your vetefiriaii'aii for rttoinmen'ded products. Cortese added that n ea infestation becomes a problem when temperature and humidity conditions are just right for fast reproduction. These parasites multiply rapidly a nd can cause Inte rnal parasites, s uch as tapeworms. Control, starling now, for the pet, home and yard is essential. Child-proof DEAR PAT : Now that almosl ever y drug or over ·lhe-counter m edicine has a "child·proof" cap, I'd like lo know ·what tests we re used to establis h tha t a pa rticul ar cap could not easily be easily ope ned by a child. J .C., Mission Viejo Standards for child·resistant packaging were established un- der the P oison Pre vention Packaging Ac t of 1970. These standards r equire that 85 petcent or a test group of 200 children (ages 41monthsto52 months) be unable to open lbe ·container in a rive·miaute period and that 80 perce nt fall In another flve- minute p·erlod after being shown how to open it. Ninety percent of a test groilp of 100 a dults must be able to Open a•d close the con· talner. Watclli·'.lh.clll'IN!d DEAR PAT : I purchased a •1eJbros w•lth ti'om Akron las\. December a s a Christmas gift for my daughter. The watch did not \\'ork properly and the band was broke n .:-lt w a-s ·returned to Helbros wttn a: notlac received noting Ja:b;;n'"dS-'the 'teCtption date. I had enClosed.the request- ed S2 ree....Wh 8n .it. it ·was mailed back. To hiS dal&th"e-w1:tlch has not been.:te Uined, and t' would app reciate ·You' IOoking into this situation . . / • M~. ~uJn)1ngton lleach __ ... .. lfelbros's New York .bead-,qU a rter. l a. 1J1.&Jllng your daughter•1 W...Jcb lo you tm· m edlatety. The delay was blamed oiiu.&..ra~&haltbe watcb band wa Mii(:~overed by warran· ty. A $3.15 l>ol1nce hi due. Why the witch wa1 not m•lled back with a bill for tht $3.75 charge re· mains .. mystery. Even now. Helbros hesitated to mat' the re· paired watch to you until It w1 s poblted out th1t you bliid no Idea lbttt the band w1 s nOr"coverf'CI by warrenly, ind th1t it seemed 10mtwhat u.nrea1on1ble to 1s- 1uitle you we re aw1rt1 ol this un· leu you bad been told; At this 'polllt, llelbro1 ls tnaatJng th1t )'OU '!Ill remit tht $3.1Schar1e. ~ • , .. -.. • - Dilly Pit.I Slaff ....... Both Face Summer In Court Co n g r ess m a n A nd re w tlinshaw a nd Orange County As· sessor J ack Valler ga face a long , hot summer in the courtroom. Each man was given two trial •dat es Thursd ay b.y Supe rior Court Judge E verett W. Di ckey after they pleaded innocent of multiple fe lony c-ounts contained in a Gra nd Jury indictment. Va ller ga will go on trial July 7 on charges that include grand theft, embezzle ment and viola- tion of government codes, all contained in the indictment is· sued earlie r this month. Hins haw will go on trial Aug. 18 on charges that include bribery, embezzle m ent a nd grand theft, all listed in the same indictment. Whatever th~ outcome of those charges both me n will face tri<1l Sept. 29 on ch i.l r ges also raced by ni ne e mploycs or the assessor 's office who will go on trial June 9. They include grand theft , con-· spiracy, su bmitting false claims and viol at ion of govern ment codes. Both m en refu sed to com- ment before or "!-fter the hearing on any of the cha rges contained in the two ind ictm ents. Friday. May JO, 1975 OAJLVPILOT A3 o.!11 Pilol St.Hf Plto(e ASSESSOR VALLERGA (2NO FROM LEFT) LEAVES COURT Faces Trial for Grand Theft, Embezzlement in July codes that "-'ere contained in an amended indictment. RESEARCHER CELEBRATES SUCCESS WITH PATIENTS Experimental Device Saved Lives-Of Teen, lnrant ''I will onl y say that I ha\'c hired Marshall Mor gan, the best attorney I could find, to repiesent nie in these actions," Hinshaw said. "I intend to let him do the talkjng . '.' Lawye rs for the nine men in· dieted during the assessor 's of· flee probe tha t eventually led to charges bein g filed a gainst Hinsh a w and Vall e rga unsuc- cessfully de m anded a delay of their tri a l Thursd ay. Judge Dickey rejected the sug- gestion that a thorough reading of the additional testimony mi ght help la wyers for the nine defen- da nts to offer a better defense. The a sse ssor wi ll a ppc<t.i- before Judge Dickey June 13 for pretria l action on those charges and the possible setting or a tri~ date. Lungs Saved It is a lleged that the county Vias billed for tim e a nd mileage whil e Hi nshaw was county as- sessor by em ploy es "'ho actually devoted that tim e a nd mileage to hi s congressiona l campaign. Boy Wins $100,000 Teen, lnfanl Give1i Hope Judge Dickey denied the mo· lion despite the "fact that lawyers fo r t wo de f end a nt s -Kirk Ar mi s t ead . 61 a nd Robert Plumlee, 47 -c.tre engaged in crimina l tria ls that will not be concluded by June 9. It is additionally all eged th at at least one employe accepted gifts of stereo equipment from a n Ora nge County c ompany cur- rently be ing inves tigated in con· ncctio n ''' ith th ose bribery cha rges. By DOUGLAS FRITZSCllE Of Ill• Diiiy Pilot Sb" A teenager from Albuquerque and an infant from Orange Coun - ty are a live today. Lynne Meyer, 17, and I-lope Pined a, two m onths, a re each · medical milestones, patients suc- cessfullY.Jr.e.at.e d by an e x· perimental life · support system be in g tri e d by UC Irvine· Cali fornia College of Medicine researchers a t Orange County Medical CenteF .• More iinportant, they a re alive. Not long ago. they were dying. Lynne "-'as a vict im of a rare dis- ease called Good pasturc's Syn- drome, which causes bleeding in - to the lungs. Hope was born a "blue ba by," a birth defect which prcvenls oxygen in the lungs from r eaching the blood stream . Under the care of a medical tea m head e d by Dr. Ro be rt Bartlett, they were pl aced on an experiment a l artificial life s up- port m achine called a n "ex· tracorporeaf mem bra ne oxy- genator." 'J'he machine takes over 80 to 90 per cent of the lung function. al· lowing oxygen to reach red blood cells through a thin rubber mem - bra ne outside the body, Dr. Ba rtlett explained. Lynne 's life reli ed on the de· vice for five days. 1-lope's for six. Thursd ay a fternoon, after both had recovered. the gi rls and the medical Learn celebrated in the Medi cal Center cafeteria. It was a n emoti onal scene as Lynne . distributing gifts lo mcm · bers or the m edical team that had saved he r life. broke into tea rs of . gratitude. She toured Disneyla nd , today, a ha ppy ending to a situa· tion th a t could have ended tragically. The life support system , a com- plex series of m achines that takes over m ost of the V.'ork of the heart a nd lungs, has been und er . develop m e nt al the Med ical ' Center s ince 1972 under a S.500,000 · gr<.i nt from the National Heart · and L ung Institute and the Na· tional Ins titutes of Health. The machine has been und er developme nt a t nine r esearch facilities throughout the countey. Al the Medical Center, 10 pa- tients have been treated on the machine . Thre e , including the tWb girls, have sut\!fved, said Dr. Bartle tt. Since the m achine is still ex- perimental, Dr. Ba rtlett said, its use is confi ned to severely ill pa- tients v.•ho have no chance of sur- vival by conventional medical tec-hniques. ··This v.·ould include patients ~·1 th severe respiratory fa ilure from pn eu m onia, drowning, s moke inhalati on , shoc k, or cer· lain types of surgery," said Dr. Bartlett . The le<'hniq uc is highly ex- pensl"-e· said Or . Ba rtl ett, declin· ing to estimate the cost of treat- me nt . T h e d evice mus t be custom built for each patient and is discarded a fter use. I-lope "'as the first infa nt suc- cessfully treated v.•ith the s upport system. Lynne was the first to be tr<1nsported a long distance while connected to the device. She "'as £!own to Orange Coun· ty on an Ai r Force jet while the machine was providing the basic funct io ns needed for life. Opera Performed TOKYO <U Pi l -New York's · famed Metropo litan Opera Com - pany gave its fi rst performa nce in As ia Thurs day night with 3 sparkling presentation or Verdi 's La Traviata. A sellout crowd of 2,600 a ppla uded for more tban 10 minutes, ending with a standing ovation, during a t least 12 final curtain calls. Judge Dickey suggested that the judge assigned to the trial on June 9 s hould deal "-'ilh the issue on that d a te. Lawyers for the nine defen- dants also unsuccessfully pro· tested that they had had little op- port unity t o exa mine the testimony before the Grand Jury . that led to the indictment or Hinshaw a nd Vallerga. .. '" . Suspended As sistant Assessor George Upton. 54, and Tandy Corporat ion executive J a mes Buxton, 48. have been additiona l· ly indicted on bribery charges stemming from those al\ega· tions. They race tr ial July 14 . Vallerga faces the possibil ity of a third tria l on four felony count• tllf f ¥>1a,ing government l\ERLIN, Co nn . (UPl )-·Dan- ny Steve nson, IO. is probably the 1ichest student in his fifth grade class at Nathan 1-lale School. The la d won $100,000 in the Con· nectic ut state lo ttery Thursda"Y night. Danny. of Coventry, C_onl\. took it a\\ in·stride, howeYer, an~ said he'll put the m oney in the bank. lie bought t he ticket at his father 's s tore, Tom 's Five and Ten in Coventry. .. NEW IN ORANGE COUNTY KIWI FRUITING VINE A MEW TASTY TROPICAL FRUIT GROWS AS A VIME A pineapple like fruit ~Sold in pairs -male & female. You , must have the pair. · • " Re9. 29.95 PETUNIAS ASSORTED COlORS Use as border plants hangi ng baskets or pots. TUIEROUS BEGONIA BULBS Bright fa ll colors for your shade garden . ""'" 49·-. ZOO PER KING OF PLANT FOOD Sound of Religion Hot Topic Sunday AUSTRALIAN TREE FERN ~_;ts 1.49 From l ion Country Safari (The Home of Frazier} nature·s rrost complete plant food -organic planter mix -contains all necessary nutrients. worm castings. The only food yaur plants need. IMTltODUCTORY OFffl ....... , "Sunday's Best " in.-ie Dai ly Pilot will in clude these/eatures: THE IMMIGRANTS'· -Viel· namese r efugees entering the · United States have r aised the is- sue o r w o rld i.mmi g r ation i>olicies. There a r e a Jot more aspects to it tha n appear on the e urface, a poi nt m a d e b y Unitarian Un ive rsalist minister Robert J ordan Ross, writing ror the Editoria l pages. RELIGION ON AIR -One of the hot\eSt topics to hit the FCC 1n years is the de bate over use of FM radio and UllF .television channels for the broadcasting of ••nar row" reli gious doctrines. Arca broadcasters involved. 'In s preading lhe ''conte mporary Christian·• sound via radio talk about wh at it all means in a YOU Section feature. NOBLE PROFESSION -Job , (suNDA Y'S BEST) JAPANESE BOX WOOD GAZANIAS Fiest• lted Rowen _,t a.,_ 2.2t r•• •r!Mlftd Ho ppe r columnis t Da nie l Hall igan finds one job he'd like to repeat -in fact , would maybe even opt for it as a lifetime career. He says teaching school really is a noble p rofession. Tht column is scheduled for YOU Sec." tion. · =----good border plant $ 1 • 1 9 it?$$ 4 50 .. : SiEEN Hf\VENJ=r--o-r "-;L-'~-' N-"""T_o•~-R-M-IX-+-H-0~-;E-PL-AN-T ... _4--t I UARDfNS -Good for planling shrubs and good soil SPECIAL for UMITID10 ·, .".· condil ioner. Combination redwood i,.. ••• ... S I sawdust, steer & mulch. 11 29 :;:i. '.. ZIZ~ NEWrOilJ BIYD _ ·~ ' .. • ~ •!. .'(,OSfA~!r-FRESH n .. 011H. •••••• ,, ... fl.. 0,..1.n HORSE RACING! -It's been ·ladLM,,_ .. low 9"'0...... h.._. c:~~:~p~rr:~:'f9rc~~~~:;:~: ~-~~ .. Lir...~.'2r-; C~tl·f 11.rf·;t•'· D.n.,,.... ~ $399 ti me seems fin ally to have reallf iiii C1ft1 :1 stolons = :=!;. c=~ f'ftist.t, arrived for hor5e race fans to ' . ': ..... W{() .:; make their pleas for racing at the ~ ~ • !~/VJ Qi7 SAMfA AMA 99 Orange County F airgrounds fell. tS::X4· :,. C7T .,.4-1 :7 1 8ERMUDA SOD !.. Besides all that, the proceeds · · ·· L "" ..._ rrom racing would pay ror new DICHO R SO s129 horse raciliUes that make a nice. Mus 0 ._. 1 ND A D ,... daydream for l·lorsint Around ll;....n...!!::.!w~"'::.· !'~t•~ __ ...;. _____ .!========================~J fans. '' • ( ' ' - . -. • "1r. "* u ""IL V PILOT • .lust • • ,">.; ~ . I . '•\.' ~:., .. ·''~. wUla · .• ~::1{:.,. T o• · -phine .. -·.·.·~::· .. ., A Diller ·A Dollar DOLLAK DAZE DEPT.-Our. good Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit, the Second District representative from Garden Grove, has now come up with the ultimate in county budget busting. · Schmit, a ne w man on the County Seat scene, has managed to develop an early reputation for efforts to slash county spending. He has made many county bureaucrats nervous by flam- boyant gyrations with the red pencil. ·~ .. Laotian Violence Bared Communists Fire on Thousands of Tribesmen VlENTIANE, i,aos <UPI> - T h~ Communist Pathet Lao opened fire on thousands or Meo hill tribes men fl eeing southward toward Vientiane, governmentol· fieials reported today. It was the first outbreak of violence during the Communist takeover or the country. The removal of U.S. officials and dependents from the coun- try, meanwhile, passed the 80 percent mark. American spokesmen said the number of U.S. official personnel ,in ~aos dropped to 162 and that Washington has urged further thinning. ·· REPORTS FROM the Long Cheng area 90 miles north or "Vientiane said the Meos, once part of a secret army funded by the U.S. Central lntelligente Agency, had demanded a meet· ing with government officials to end "exploitation" by the Com· munists. The report said the Meos claimed soldiers s hot at them . and forced them to sell livestock at substandard prices. Lane Pathammavong, a spokesman for the rightist de· legation to the joint peacekeep· ing commission, reported clashes with the hill tribes men who were streaming toward Vien- t,,iane by the tbous8ilds and said that, "many Meo have been killed" in an area about 5$ miles north of the.capital. Reliable .r.ep_o.rls f_r_om the scene indicated that at least five tribesmen were killed and about 3.0 wounded Thursday when Pathet Lao-controlled troops opened fire on a group or several hundred Meo who refused to obey their orders to return to their home area of north Laos. UPI PHOTOGRAPHER Anant Chomchuen reported that today Pathet Lao troops were marching groups of Meo back toward the hills at gunpoint. while other s melted into the coun- tryslde O(f the highway lO COD· tinue their trek toward the border wllh Thailand. The U.S. Embassy spokesman s.aJ.4 despite the evaeuatiQJl___of abOut. 850 Americans ln the past month, "Washington wants WI to cul down further. But we are cut- ting down as fast as wo can now." In addition to the 162, another 100 Americans, i ncludlng newsmen and businessmen, re· main in the country. Last week, taotian students seized the U.S. Agency for In· ternational Development com· pou nd , impris.oned three Americans and demanded an im- mediate end to AID operations in Laos. THE U.S. EMBASSY expects lo close the AID mission by June 30 in accordance with an eight point agreement worked out with government officials and stu· dents. :Rdea•ed James W. McCord, the first Watergate co11spirator to cooperate in the gover11ment investigation that led to President Nixon's resigna· lion, has been released from federal prison after serving less than four months. So it was that somebody snitched. Somebody in t.he Coun· ty Seat halls allowed word to leak out that Supervisor Schmit was overspending in his very own of- fice budget. THE COST-CUTTING supervisor has smelled a plot in all this. J-le declared the revela· lion was "an orchestrated behind· the-scenes attempt to embarrass my office .'' But then the supervisor came on "''ith the stroke or genius which look the play av.•ay from his own budget · vexations . Sniping Sparks Beirut Battles Schmit announced lhat in or- der to help balance his teetering office budget, he was culling everybody's salary to a single dollar for the month or June. And you cannot accuse him of being discriminatory in his salary slashes. New Washington Home UP I Ttl~pholo BEIRUT <UP!l -A sniper shot and killed a shop assistant in downtown Beirut today, touching orr new gun battles in the streets lhought to be returning to normal after eight days of civil strife. Shops and business offices hur- riedly closed. The shooting broke the shaky cease-fire est ablished Wednes- day with the appointment of Mos lem politician Rashid Ka r ami as premier-designate. 1-lis $2,000 a month salary drops to $1 just like his l\vo secretaries, \\'ho make $800 per month. Al so getting on ly a single buck this coming month are his four ad- mini strative aides, \11honormally <·hec k into the pay table fol" about SI.200 each. ALL OF TlllS s hould save roughly $8,500 minus, of cours~. the $7 that \Viii go to all seven!or June paychecks. Former South Vietnam Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky holds niece and sits with five of his children at his suburban \Vas hington, D.C. home. Ky S ~.)-'S he is penniless and that the move to America has imposed a change in his lifestyle. THE SHOP WORKER died outside his s tore in Debbas square, a st ronghold of the right· v.'ing Phalangist party. Rightist militiamen pou red into the streets to hunt the killer . The ki lling raised the casualty loll in eight days of street fight- i n g between Phalangist militiamen a nd. Palestinian guer- ri ll as to 104 d ead and 265 wounded. Now, certain Wrong Thinkers might suggest this entire doilar paycheck month was dreamed up by Schmit as a gaudy grandstand play calculated to convince the public of his honest behavior in the budget-cutting business. · These Wrong Thinkers might say it's okay for $2,000a monlhor Sl,200 a month people to miss a pay day but it just isn't right to put the same knock on a couple of Jower r.aid secretaries. \\'·el , \VC knO\Y this kind 0 £ wrong thinking fails to un. derstand the loyalty and devotion of Schmit's s taff. \\le know this because Schmit's chief aide, Loren Norton, has told us so, He says everybody in the office is ··being coopt'rative'' in the the budget-cutting campaign. In. your imagination. you might be able to hear how how Schmit's two secretaries enlhusiastically discuss their pay cuts: ''GEE, ISN'T IT wonderful that Mr. Schtnit has taken our payc.hecks and put them back in the general fund? I 'm so proud of him and the s acri£ices he makes." ''Yes. you're right. I un· derstand my paycheck \\1ill be used ror s ome s a l aries in Supervisor Riley's office and yours is goin g to pay a clerk over in the Social Welfare Depart· ment. .. Social Welfare? Isn 't that \\·here they hand out the food s tamps?" .. Wh y yes, that's the place." ··You happen to know \\•hich clerk it w as that they paid with my money? "Maybe hc ·d lo~n me a few food stamps .'' Black Vote Doubts Told by Fulbright LITTLE ROCK . Ark. (AP) -Former Arkansas Sen. J . W. Fulbright expressed doubts in an interview about whether ensur· ing blacks the right to vote was the right decision. Fulbright, a Democrat, discussed hi s civil rights stands dur· ing a review of his legislative career on Little Rock television sta- tion KTHV on Wednesday night. The program was filmed after Fulbright was defeated for re-election by Gov. Dale Bumpers. JAMES CRAIG, KTHV MANAGING editor, quoted a state· menl made by Fulbright during his first political race in 1942: ··1 am not for Negro participation in our primary elections and I do not approve of soci31 equality.'' · ·Fulbright responded that the quote was the "conventional \\'isdom of my state" under the conditions that existed at the time. But he said he now accepts the decision of the majority on civil rights as the law of the land. Asked ir giving blacks the right to vote was the correct de· cision , Fulbright said, "1 guess so." Then he amended that to, "J 'm nottoosure." . In the 1940s and 1950s that was the "most explosive question in my state and most of the South," Full;>right said. "'l believed then ... that the approach of education, help, upgrading the capacity of the black people to play a significant role in our socie· ty was the proper approuch. rather than passage or bills which said they were equal, without any adequat~ preparation for that role." FULBRIGJIT, CHAJ RMAN OF THE Senate Foreign Reta~ lions Committee, was considered a liberal on foreign pplicy mat~ ters and ~·as a sharp critic of administration policies iri·Vietnam. However, he usually voted with other Southern senators on civil rights. ' Craig asked Fulbright about his signing of the Southern Manifesto in 1956, which declared opposition to the 1954 Supreme Court decision ruling separate but equal pul;>lic school facilities , unconstitutional. "I was the r epresentative or a state v.•ith a clear m ajority of . people "'ho were against the civil rights bills .•. and they had demonstrated that not only in my own elections but in others • . • " he said. · Late Snows for Denver Rainstorms, Twisters Plague TeX<lS Areas A1~n, l>lllUQuef'Q .... An<"0••9' Atl•nl• .. ,~ SoUO<I e .. 11••0 C"•(•90 C•n<•nn.ii C!~¥11•nd 0.11•• OtnYtr Dlt•olt "F•••1Mn•1 ,,_ Honoluh.1 lllftj-tPOll$ •-w KtnNlCl!y w,v,..~ l,o\ Anos le I #19"'0fll~ Mltml Mll•&l<H Mll'WW•POlia "-•Orletl'I\ He"' Yori< ·0.••-.:1 t:::::""" cu., ... ,,,. Sop•( "9~ Pl'lll.o.itpf'll• -" ~11.0U•Qfl ,...,.,..,,o, •. lll•JWdClly ltH9h1ll :re:-.,. v .. SKr-l'llO $1. L.Wlt s,.llU••O tr Mlt!o " .. " " " " " .. " " " .. " .. " ., " .. ,. " " " .. " .. " •• .. " " .. .. ., " " " " " .. ... " " LOw ,. " " .. .. " " .. .. .. " " .. •• .. .. " .. .. .. .. " " .. " .. .. " " ,. .. .. .. ., .. " " " .. .. .. .. ... ... . .. ·" ... ·" ... ·" .... ........ s.n Fr•nc:l~o S..•111• ' --• ~ Tl!rf""""I W•lol!lllQton .. " " " ... .. .. " ,. .. .. " c,,,., ....... -t AIN ~IMOW' . ... .. ~~''' r1ow 1\111\.111,.. \1\o1.1td -·· lflfO<,IQfl u .. ...,.,,,.. ,,.,.., ov miomornlno. •Wm· lnQ temot•tlln•t uo 10 ,.,., 90 111ro.,.,_t tfll ••••· fl•lmy 0 ..... 1119111 IOw\,_tr.0 ... rt lorK•tl . illllll'f 'ltlet pr1'>'•llH o .... r l,ot ••te• •llfl V'f ,_ (IOUdt #riving enty In ll'le ltl• nlQfll •tld •••Ir,,....,.. ll'IO '*"''-W•rm1r temPttrtt1.1rn •llo LOlrCll:ludl lf'lll •Hft f•ftl OWl'<MI .....,,...., Wllfl tn. lllQI\ fl IM Clvl( 1J W. lo&itllwn C.llfOf'111• dllrlltQ 1111 ..,. Ctl'lltr Ml lor II 0.0'~•'· t omi»...O . ,, "*'Iii"' Murs 11111 Wffilt'O'ld,.... •flfl T1'111r•d•Y'• fl!gfl 0, 1•. Lo-. IOl'llQlll •Ill (la ne•r 60 bl.II Sthll'O.y (COC1$tOl wtathtr in/orma- IWn will be found today on Page Bi.) FBl's Ploys 'Foolish' ·Claims Levi WASHINGTON (AP) -Ally. Gen. Edward H. Levi says lhe counterespionage programs the FBI operated from 1956 to 1971 were foolish and sometimes out- rageous. The programs. called Coi n· telpro, involved FBI attempts to ·harass and disrupt dissident groups of the le ft and right through such t actics as mailing . fa lse and a nonymous letters to the target organizations. ·•There's enough dishonesty, lack of candor and incivility in our society as it is and I don 't think the government should add to that," the attorney general said. · Levi last week disclosed that the FBI had five counterin- telligence programs in addition to the seven disclos<..>d last Nov- e mber. He said he does not believe the FBI intentionally withheld in- formation about the fi ve addi~ tional Coinlelpro operations from him. "I think they didn't know about it themselves." BELL RINGING VENDOR GUILTY TROY, Mich. CAP) -Former ice cream man Victor Seaver, 18, pleaded guilty Thursday to ring· ing the bell on his truck and was fined $15. Seaver .had been·ticketed un- .der a city ordinance that makes 1 it illegal to "use !'iOUnd devices to attract attention.'· The guilty plea in municipal court. came despite earlier vows by Seaver lo fi !iht the ordinance, which he te rmed "absurd" and "un -A merican. ·· Life had returned lo normal in most parts of t_he ~apital but rriilny of the worst affected sub- ur ban battlegrounds remained deserted. -.Rashid's efforts to form a..gov. ef-nment or national unity ran in· to trouble toClay over lenist calls f or the eXclusion or the l;'halangists from his cabinet. BRIG. GEN. SAID Nasrall ah, interior minister in the outgojng military government which held office for barely three days, said Week-old Tot ·Dead; Police Holding Mom FORT WORTH. Tex. (AP)- The young wife' or an Air Force sergeant who says "God and the de•:il'' made her kill her 7·day· old son is being held in a psychiatric ward. Barbara P. Strickland, 21. was charged with murder after beat- ing police officers with the bloodied body of her son, Roland Jr. She was confined ·to the psychiatric ward of Peter Smith Hospital. Bond was set at $10,000. Police · were called to Mrs . Strickland's b lood -streaked apartment Wednesday night. They found her sitting amid shat.. tered window glass and disar· ranged rurniture . Officer R. G. Erwin said she was holding the bloody body of her infant and the officer asked her to give it to him. Erwin said she held the body by its ankles and began striking him with it, then ran into the bedroom, saying , "God and the devil made m e do it." He sa1d Mrs. Strickland then leaped onto the back of officer P . S. Olguin. She lhrew the baby's body to the floor and was ta ken into cus_tody, the offi cers said. Sporty Cops ·Patrolmen Get Stares SCOTTSDALE, Ari z. (AP) ~ Patrolmen, cruising around town in fl ashy new sports cars, say they are bridg· ing the gulf between mistrusting youngsters and lhe stereotyped image or a cop . ''It's the greatest thing that ever happened to our publie relatJons, '' patrolman BUI Long saya or the sleek, two-seat vehicles. "It breaks the ice. People say 'hi' now and talk to me." The change from regular sedans began a (ew "1onths ago when M alC"olm Bricklin offered three of his 59,500 sports cars to the city (or $1 a year. The vehjcles, with flip.top doors and a low profile are painted the 'traditional blue and "A'hite colors ot the it re· guter patrol vehicles. A large red light is perched atop each . I ' agreement had been reached to set up '"de-militarized zones .. between Palestinian and Phal<1ngist forces. Nasr~llah said the Lebanese army and Palestin ian guerrillas would form 1oint patrols to police the cease-fire in the suburban area$ of Chiah, Sin El Fil, Dikwaneh, Karantina and Maslakh. Cambodia Fliers ·Go Home ARANYAPRATHET, Thailand lAP> -Eighty-two Cambodian milita ry men, most of the m fliers, voluntarily re- turned to Cambodia on Friday ~a ft er s ix weeks of exile in 'Thailand. Many said they were going back because they had left ·their wives and children behind. ' "We're not afraid to go back to be ruled by the Khmer Rouge, even if we have to be forced to ( IN SHORT :J ~·ork in the jungles," said Group Capt. Kong Lach, who served in the Cambodian uir force for 14 years before lhe country fell to the Communists April 17. ··Mo stof us do not know the rate of our families, and ifourfamilies were with us we would not return to Cambodia," he told newsmen a t the border bridge linking Thailand and Cambodia. ·Veto O.,erride? WASHINGTON (API -Presi- dent Ford·s veto or a $5.3-billi'>n program designed to create 900,000 jobs will be overridden by Congress, House Speaker Carl Albert indicates. "The Congress will not allow the Pres ident's negative action to scuttle t his job-producing legislation," Albert said Thurs- day after t he White House an· nounced Ford's veto . Percy Ponders CHICAGO (UPIJ Sen. Charles Percy, who put his pre- sidential ambitions "on the back burner'' when President Ford took offi ce last year, is now tok~ ing another look at the stove. Jn a lun·cheon session wilh re- porters Thursday, the Illinois Republican said he m ay fight. Ford for the 1976 GOP presiden4 tial nomination. · Rengnatlon WASHINGTON (UPI) -J ohn Bartels Jr., head of Ule Drug En- forcement Administration since its creation in 1973, planned to submit his resignation today. sources said. · The DEA, which was set up by the Nixon Administration to con· solidate all federal cfrug enforce· ment e rrorts into a single agency, has been criticized .almost sin ce its formation because of internal strife and alleged Ineffi ciency. 4 Dolly Piiot Doll"'Y lsGfff'...tffd Mondt.,.·Frldav: II you dO no1 ti.wt your C>tC* by 5:30 o.m., ctil before 7 p,m, Ind 'tOUr COPY Wiii be 119-- tivoared. S11urd1y ind' Sund1y: If ~ do not receive your cooy bv 0 t .m. Sttur- da"t. or 8 a.m, Sund1r. can ~!Ore 10 a.m. tnd \'Ollf copy will bo" dellllftted.. Cltttl.tl• T•l•p' II ' Molt Orange County Areu '4MIZI NortflW911 Huntington &Mch, 1ndWetlf'llit11ter .••...• , .-.11n Sen Clemen le, Cet)ltlrtftO 8Mch, S•n .Nin Ctpltlreno • Dana Point, South tavuna. L11gun1 N lguet • , •• , , , , , • "'°"Jt LOS -Mar i_he bi Septer ad.Sb week baby stolen judge eihe ca 6hC Cfl be its else cl "All back 11hake1 em ere hearl c.:ourt. "Sh· her a1 imagi gone t MK; husbi; rushe1 'ternoc and < um in ii could the ~ Such1 thatU paren not. that ti Int Ni I close leav1 New U.S. tern: 1 cludi G., gath Cl en her€ B e ive~ Gov. the : to al bee• own th ey Tei disc mar Sen; SQU4 was Th• elin sh if Bas , Sys SOUi 200, ing poSI - lfll : D L D L DL D L 0 ( , .. ... URI ... "' ''" ... .... ... '"' I ·I - ' - ·Stolen B·~by Alive .. _ LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Mary Childs thought i_he b8by ahe had last September was born de· •d. She aaw a body. iaat week she :was told the baby lt:fed and was etoleo by a nurse. A judge told her Thursday 1he can have the child lf &he can prove she could be its mother und no one else claims it. "All J Want is my baby back,'' sobbed the llihaken Mrs. ChildS, 37, emerging from u closed 'hearing in juvenile court. "She's in shock," said her attorney·. "You can imagin e what she has gone through." MRS. CHILD and her husband William, 36, rushed out Thursday af. ternoon to get blood tests and other medical ex· uminations lo show they could be the parents of the 8-month·old girl. Such tests can prove only that they are possibly the parents, or that they are not, but cannot prove that they are. In the courtroom, l\.1rs. \ Ull"IT~ CHILD .STEALER? Norma Arml•tead Childs again saw Norma Armistead, 44 , the ob- stetrical" nurse detec· lives said tricked Mrs. Childs out or her baby. The case came to light when A1rs . Armistead was arrested last month on charges or stabbing to death a pregnant woman and cutting the unborn infant -which lived - from the victim's body: Detectives said the nurse appeared to have an •·inordinate desire" for babies. Nixon Eneouraged 'Leave Clemente' Landmark • Brown to Pen Farming Bill SACRAMENTO <AP> -The California legislature has passed a farm labor bill regarded as a landmark because it · haa the 11upport of most of the state's fruit and veget11ble growers and . both feuding farm un· ions. Arter ftnal legislative action on Thursday, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. said he would sign the measure next week and predicted a new era of ·order a nd stability in California agriculture. THE DEMOCRATIC· governor said the law wo uld guarantee , £arm · workers their right to or· ganize and ifi~e growers the stabJlitY a d predic· tability th e need in labor relations. ''It's a m ajor step £orward. It's something people have been trying to achieve for decades," h·e said. ''There have been strikes up and down t h e Califo rni a agricultural lands for years.'' tuce ha rvest in the Salinas Valley and the table grape harvest in the San Joaquin Valley, the center or most or the violence in California agriculture in the past decade. Chavez has said he will challenge the Teamsters contract at Gallo· in Sep- tember, an action that could bring an e nd to his nationwide Gal lo Wines boycott. THE BILL will requir stale·supervised secre elections before a labo union may be certified represent workers o any California ranch. I also authorizes harves time strikes and a limit· ed form of secondary boycotts by certified un· ions and outlaws re· cognitional strikes. Jury Gets SLA Trial SACRAMENTO <API -The case or two Sym. bionese Libera tion Army members acc used or SU P~RTING the bill plotting the ambush were most California murder of Oakland growers, including E l.t. J school s uperintendent Gallo winemakers, the Marcus Foster goes. to Stale Chamber of Com· the jury today. merce, the California Superior Court Judge AFL·CIO and the state's Elvin Sheehy told the two warring rarm unions eight women and rour LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Richard Nixon's -Cesar Chavez' United men Thursday to co me closest friends and advisers are encouraging him to Farm Workers and the to court prepared to be leave San Clemente for "a new base or operations in Teamsters Union. sequestered at a hotel New York" to be more accessible to international The legislation will and said he expected the leaders, the Los Angeles take erfe ct Aug. 28, in deliber'ations to continue ·~--------~ Times reported today. time ror the big rail let-over the weekend. [ S J Nixon has been in r:::iiii~turi~ri~§ii~iiiijiiiiiiiliisiiRUiiLj late contact with for1eign · ~--------leaders and has a lso re· ceived overtures rrom U.S. corporations lo serve as a consultant on in· ternational operations, the report said. A number or Nixon's closest con(i~ari.t::; -jn- 1 eluding former Attorney General John Mitchell, C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo and Robert J-1 .. Abplanalp - gathered recently at the Nixon estate at San Clemente, where he has spent most or his time since he resigned the presidency last Aug. 9. Beer on Ca111pus Mulled LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Catirornia state un· iver.ajty and colleges trustees, arter a lecture rrom Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., voted Thursday to let the 19 individual school presidents decide whether to allow beer to be sold on campuses. "It's a small issue, but -it's an important one, because people ought to be able to determine their own lifesiyles a nd what they think is good and what they think is bad," Brown said. Tenant Biil a_.,ked SACRAMENTO (AP.> -Landlords couldn •t discriminate agajnst tenants because or their sex or marital status under a bill that has passed the state Senate. The bill by Sen. Nichola s Petris (D·Oakland), squeaked through the Senate 2l·ll Thursday and ..... as sent to the Assembly. ·Shuttle Plan Re.,fsed VAN DENBERG AIR FORCE BASE <AP) The Air Force has revised its space shuttle plans lo eli minate possible dangers to the Los Angeles area, shirting the project here from Edwards Air Force Base. Spokesmen al the Air Force Space and Missile , Systems Organization here s aid Thursday a southerly approach from Edwards would take the 200,000·pound shultlecran over Los Angeles, result· ing in a heavy sonic boom over the city and posing a possible crash hazard. ' . .4 Greal Stltclion of Shiri1 Ol'd Titl fw G radvation or f..ttMn Day Shirts in S1111111tr Shadt1 of Owrablt Prttt Dacron ortd Coffon.. R.,, Stripe Tit1 fro111 Tolboff - W~co!M Glft1. HELP PREVENT BURGLARY OF YOUR HOME If die'°"""'"' 11u11D lik1 Y", ...... all !ho Sdildi w .... -..c.. .... RESIDENTIAL BURGLARY PREVENTION CLINIC ON THE MALL _ 0 Liil ""9l11fAST111 •ilk 0 Lest~ FAIT 111 llllt5 0 l11t-1FAST111w.t..-Nt 0 lMtMiP't fAST111hf,.M 0 Gli....iMlfl!t t.• EVERVTIM( FAST WEIGHT LOSS d: -LlllOST ALWAYS A DISMl'OllTllli FAIL· URE ._JM Iliff""" dN- et•llll hr .. -..... 1'9t .... yH l fM lel t Ill ttl1 ~ ..... klk• 1111 Ill --••.•• " .... u.......-•"*-11.•.• ..... 11Mt ... ti tM __ ..., ...... ....... l ... - CALLHOW . 558·8404 .~ .. Tewa IC......., - l'ly ••• Anrwh•r• In lh• l1t!11gp11.11 SATURDAY, MA'V'. 31, 12 Hoon· 3 p.m. Officer Stan Bressler. Newport Beach Police Department will explai n the best means of protecting your l'Jome from being burglarized. " Also see working displays and demonstrations of bu ~g lar alarms: and lock syst13ms for h·ome, car, boat, motor homes, and commercial businesses . 'I . HARBOR VIEW CENTER New MacArthur Blvd. and San Joaquin Hills Rd. ,,. Newport. Beach • • l·irr I ,.,.......... • ..-n.• ! i ..... ·~ ....... ,. .... ~.. t ' • ., TI1c C>('n1'ra! Ju111bo 71-.il, th1• s.n11c tire vou 11 ~._.,,,on n1,111v 1 •17.r, n~..,.. c.ir~ Built u.ith !V.O \}l<l~S l'I:\!~ ,1111! ,, tu.u riv pok'l')ll'f r\ud l1o.11.k tor '.Jl~'t11 r).•rf<1r11'1.u1c.:. A7M·l3 527.'15 Sl.77 C7K·l4 528.95 $2.111 1\7K.?':I S22.95 S l.7& IJ7~ JJ 52'.i.95 SI.Kil E7K-14 $30.95 S2.32 Value Priced. I, F78-14 533.95 S2 •17 G78-14 534.95 S2.ti2 Value Pri ced! 1:18.1-1 525.95 s2.21 F7S.14 527.95 52.40 $2795 H7S.14 S37.95 5'.114 £78-15 S31.95 52.41 f7S.15 $34.95 52.55 G7S.15 535.95 S2.6'1 H78-15 $38.95 52.92 J78-1 5 539.95 SJJJ'J $2295 G7K·14 528.95 52.!>& tl78-14 530.95 52.77 G7R-15 529.95 52.60 11 7S.J5 '31.95 S2.1!3 J7K-15' 536.'15 S2.99 L7H·l5' 537.1}5 Sl.11 SUeA78-13tubelessblackwi!ill L78-15 S41.95 53.21 plus Sl.77 Federal E)lch,e Td)I. Si11• A 78. Jl tubt•I+"~~ IJIACk11·all • A\·dil<tbli• in w.·hi!t'\11atl~ only. plus S 1.76 f"t•deral Ex1 i~ Ti!~. . Whit~lllls S310 S5 n10fe P'?l tir¥. \~'hilt'\l-'ill1l~ 52 tu S4 lfl()fe per hr~. ., American cars , 1•$•011 NEW ~•••; ou11 l•""ll on•'l ••"O~h· 2 A.t>..li:I •f><I t1'11na.,< en •U ....... 3 81""'1 br .. ~~_,n,1111 i'><l••Y °"'"'"' ... ft ..... . '""""""' "'""•'•'"'" """'"'' ~ fum aroi !•u• •II • Cl" .. t -6 R9-• 11()(11 ...... 1 W•n"'l1 7 .la1u<I b""" 1nU ~••c' -'9""'• i.n•o.Q• I F!OO<j lt$1io,,r1ul<;><n0b<le, Do>c 9•1>"" lhgn11, n.gr"" Value Priced! s1595 Sile 6.50-13 tubelt'!i~ blMk11.'idl plus S 1.77 Federal f.)[Cise Ta)[. 6.50·13 7.00.1] C18-14 f"7H·14 f 7K·l·I G78·14 ll7!i· 14 5.60·15 F78·15 G7S.15 H7S.15 L78-15" 111<.' ,_kt lV.r Ill h,1~ lon;J 1111l!:!d~ Durdgen • Tread Rubber.durable !our ply construct\on, .:ind fdmous rwin ttc.xi t!e!olgn for !rJCIJOn. Si5.95 Sl.77 S\8.'15 S2.00 Sl.,.95 52.04 _526.'!5 52.27 522.95 52.40 52J.95 52.56 525.95 52.77 518.95 Sl.7Q S21.95 52.45 523.95 52.60 525.95 52.8.l 532.95 SJ.I l •Available i11 whitewalls only. Whilewlllls S2 10 S4 more per nre. STEEL BELTED RADIAL BLIMS I SIZE I BR 78xl 3 s3 I SIZE I BR 70xl3 $4100 CR 78xl4 DR 78xl4 FR78xl4 ~ s4500 GR 70xl5 ~ s5000 HR 78xl5 JR 78xl5 . . ~ s5500 LR 78xl 5 PlUS S2.28 to $3.60 F.E.T. Each Tire -Depending on 511& ALIGNMENT SPECIAL SALE DELCO BATTERY COWP.4CTIST.4MDAID AMHIC.AMCAllS Extra charge for larger or air conditioned cars, setting torsion bars ... and parts if needed. RAI N CHECK: Shoo kl ou r supply of some sires Of hncs run short during I his L"l.1:'111, "'I! u.ill honor any orders ~ p!dced oo.v lor future dchwry di the ad~1:'1t1sed pnce . Prkld 4\ shcJ.,.n 111 Gtner.M 1in1 ''"'"''' Don Swedlund Inc. ....... • M.,._ Cllli•ll't .•811'U<--G =a.-·~ rn-rll •twtt11 AclBs md lotitr '"""'.:~~:~"'' 2855 Harbor Blvd.. . Costa Mesa COAST r.fNERAL TIRE l'liooo 540.5710 646-IOU- Cienerbl )l~n ------·Sooner or later, you'll own General's------• , .. •DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' ' • Teacher$ • Ill Action School board elections in California continue to reflect increasing teacher participation. State Jaw prohibits teachers from running for school board posts In the districts where they work. But thel'e is no prohibition against board membership in another dis trict. Thus many boards now include member s who ac- tually work in schools-and presumably reflect teacher attitudes. This may be beneficial up to a point, but a school board traditionally is supposed to represent the e ntire community a11d a board too heavily \veighted lo\vard faculty membership n1ight not mee t that crite1ion. Teacher organizations also are participating more and more actively in board elections by offering finan cial s upport t o favored candidates . The California Teachers Assoclation, for example, claims 115,000 teachers each made a voluntary $5 contribu· tion to its political-funding arm which selects CCJO · didates for teacher backing. And the backing may be substantial. l n the recent Huntington Beach school board election, fo r example, one winning candidate r eported receiving $1,950 of a $2,455 campaign chest from district teachers. The teachers' right to this political activity is un- deniable. But it does point up the need for increased school boar<t interest among the non-teaching com- munity if balance is to be maintained. Durable Bureaucracy r\ r ecent tl('\\'S story out of Washington told 110\\' bureaucrat Juba l Ha le is not having much luck get· ting Congress to abolish the do-nothing agency he heads, along with hi s $20,000-a-year job. In fact, he said, he can't understand why Congress hasn't passed any of several bills introduced to abolish his board-<llld his job. Now columnist Earl Waters has turned up a re,v similar ''do·nothing'' agencies living on tax funds up Sacramento \vay. Among them: -The Office of Emergency Services, created to plan the state's civil <)efens.e..11rngra m at the outset of the 'Korean war-and still plannjng away. -The state Aeronautics Commission, set up in 1947 and still operating on a million dollar budget to ''further and promote public interest in aeronautics." Unfortunately, none of this bureaucratic dead wood has requested legislative extinction. But it is ripe material for the gove1'1~'s economic ax. Grandstand Play J·li gl1 jinks among Orange County 's su11ervisors hit rock bpttom this week when Su pervisor Laurence Schmit put himself and his staff on a $1 salary budget fur the next m onth. The Garden Grove supervisor's grandstcind plci y was nothing more that a thinly veiled attempt to orrset lhC' embarrassment caused him a couple of \Veeks ago \Vhen it \ViJ S l~arnt>cl he \vas overspe11ding his offi ce budget. Rather thµ.n try to make public amends for the mis- manageme11t or his office by taking those who \vork for him off the public payroll for a month, the freshman s upervisor s hould : -Learn to manage his O\vn budget in a reasona- ble businesslike manner. -Not expect others, including th.ose who are beholden to him 'for their jobs, to pay for l1is O\\'n mis- takes. '· , .. I ''• ' . ' .• • •• j .. 1, ,'. • .. . .• . . . . .~~"','!" ... •. -. ·-~ ' ..... . ' " Ha le is ~xec utive secretary of the Federal l"i1etal and Non -Metallic Safety Board of Review, created four years ago Lo hear appeals from operators of mines ordered s hut down as unsafe. In the entire four years, the board has had nothing Lo review. When a p robing Congressman criticized the ilgen- cy a s "'totally useless," Hale agreed \Vholeheartedly. -Come up with some realistic and workable methods of cutting county spending rather than offer- ing hollow phrases about economy. If Schmit can't ma11age this much, maybe that Sl a month stipend he put on his own servic es is about right. "ih•y th 4t c~n ~•ve up tSSthi;o1.I hl>trty to o~t,.i n o. little t<mpor<>r)' 5•f•ty dtr.-ve Hii!h•r libe~ty hor ~afety ."(~e".iz,."';n Fro1.Hklih) Sometimes '.A Wizard Can't Help (..__A_R_T_u_o_r_r_E _ _.J Onc:e upon a time a little girl named Dorothy was_pirked up by a t or n ado and rarried somewhere over the rainbow to • The Wonderrul Land of Madison " Avenue. 1 There she made many new ., friends. First, she made friends with The Two Tin Woodsmen, Roc k y a nd Scoop. T hey Cl we're s a d o because they r wa nted new ~ hearts. ' ~ AWNG Tll E \VAY , she met ~ two lions \Vho wanted courage - t Edmund, The Compassionate ~ Lion. and George, The Other Kind of Lion. ~ "l want the courage to stop be -t ing so compassionate," sobbed t Edmund. ;<I keep crying all the time.'' ''l like people who can still cry,'' said Dorothy. "Other people s ure as heek r don't," said Edmund, wiping • away a tear. "I want the courage to be com · passionate .'' said George, "so 1 that l can love a ll people alike - while, yellow and even uppity nig ... Excuse me, poor colored folk ." "That "s ni ce," said Dorothy. "Follow me and \l.'C'll see the Wizards." Then she met two scarecrows Dear Gloomy .Gus I have a sol ution for the doc:t ors : Jus t stop treating insurance executives. 11.J.B. Gloomy Gut cornmenh .iore •ubmoil'-<! by reiodltf'S .io...:I Oo no• M<es•.iorily ren..:1 !he Yiew• ol Ille ntW>p.ll'er. !>tnd your pe1 Pft"" loGroomyGus. O•llt PolOI. \\'ho wanted brains. "I v•ant brains," said Jerry Scarecrow, "'because 1 think they'd make me look sm art ." .. t want the brains," said Hubert Scarecrow. '"to shut up once in a while ... And just for extras, Dorothy even met two bears who wanted new birthdays. '"I want to loo){' older." said Teddy Bear. "I want to look yo unger," s uid Ronnie Bear. Af'TER m<lny <1dventurcs, they found the Wonderful Wi zards of J\oJ adison Av enue and the Wizards did a wonderful job. They gave Ronnie Bear a bot- tle of Grecian Formula. They ga,·e Teddy Bear silver temples and a limousine "'ilh a driver. Brains were fortunately in short supply. So they gave Hubert Srareerow laryngitis in- stead. And they gave Jerry S ca r ecrow a \\"hole new "'ardrobe', which made him look very smart ind,eed. They added three feet to George the Lion's stature. And they put Edmund the Lion to \vork peeling onions until he didn't havt.o a tear left in his head. And best of a ll. they performed heart transplants on Rorky and Scoop -each serving as the donor for the other. At las t :.i ll Dorothy's nc\v frit•nds lined up in a row .and p1·oudly asked. ·'!--low do we look no .... -. Dorothy'.''' The little gi rl ins pected them carefully. "I say I'm going back lo Kansas and I say the hell with it," said Dorothy. "You a ll look alike tome.·· Still An1011g Washi11gto11's Smartest Politicia11s Kissinger Has Staying Power WASHINGTON -For a while not lon g ago, Secretary of Sta te 1-lenry Kissinger Jooked like lh'e shakiest domino in lhe domino theory . But he has regained a good deal of strength lately, and he probably "'ill stay on the job until President r•'ord ends his present term . This does not mean that Kiss- inger enjoys the unalloyed pre· stige that' he had during the heyday of \he Nixon ad- ministration's overtures to Moscow and Peking. His ·~ep u tation h as be e n tarnis hed by tales of covert American intervention in Chile, the Cyprus cris is, and, above all, the disaster in Indochina. Even so, Kissinger still is a powerful figure here in Washington, large ly because he is one of the s martest politicians in the capital. THE KEY to Kissinger's power is ·his proximity to the President. Rumors to the con- trary, he is Mr. Ford's closest ad- viser on foreign affairs. Kissinger briefs the President alone every morning, and this in- timate session gives him the chance to exert tremendous in· fluence, esperially since Mr. Ford's knowledge of foreign af·. fairs is limited. Al the sam e time, Kissinger is able to protect his authority by functioning both as Secretary of Slate and head of the National Security Coun cil. ThiS means that, in addition to controll ing the S t ate Department. h e ca n dominate all foreign policy pro- posals funneling into the White House from the Pentagon, the Treasury Department, the Cen- tra l Inte lligence Agency, and other government bureaus. STANLEY KAR NO"' Ki ssinger's l·iout is £urther re- inforced by his ability t o maneuver within the Washington bureaucracy, often by c::ircum. venting other Cabinet members. It 1s no secret , tor example, tha t Kissinger a nd Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger do not see eye-to-eye on a number of issues . NEVER'J'lfELESS, Ki ssinger exercises influence in the Pen- tagon by having his assistant,;-, Gen. Brent Scowcroft, com- municate directly with senior military offi cers who the mselves find it useful to work through Kissinger against Schlesinger. Ki ssinger also has succeeded in gr abbing the ball away from Secretary o( Treasury William Simon on international economic matters, even though hi s knowledge of economics is slim. I-le has achieved this by setting up his own State Dcpartmcnl economic t eam under Un- de1·sec:retary Thomas Enders. Although Ki ssinger no longer is the golden boy on Capitol Hill , he continues to hypnotize enough congressmen to give himself im· munity from legislative con- straints. His power over the' Congress stems from two main factors. ~'. In the firll place. he is skilled a.t fl attery, llnd' nothing can melt a congressman as easily as"being invited to breakfast with Kiss- in ger a nd briefed in con- s piratorial tasbion . Secondly, the Congress lacks the leadership lo ch a llenge Kissin ger. except perhaps on a few controversial questions. SO THERE is much grumbling about Ki ssinger on Capitol llill al the moment. But beyond a cou· pie or con gress m e n , lik e Senators Adlai Stevenson and Lloyd Bentsen, the ('riticis m of Kissing:er is muted. Kissinger <:tlso has managed to bul"•ark himself by maintaining good relations with th~ media. He carefully cultivates the most innuential television reporters, major n ewspa per represen· tatives and colu mnists, playing on their egos by dealing v.'ilh the m on a personal basis. Lately. Kissinger has gone further in bolstering hUi J)Osition by traveling into the ~die West to displa y his talents as a speaker, and he performed well recently in Kansas City and St. Louis. I-lis m otive behind this trip wus -to Show his detract.ors in \\'ashi ngton that he is populaL' among the people. l · Ki ss in ger may n ot, like Bi smarc:k, stay in office for 40 years. But he seems to be de- termined to keep operating as long as he can, and, judging from his present status, he is li kely lo fulfill that wish. New Twist for Doctors 'Crisis' Brings Some Ironic Changes Were it not for the tragic aspects of the drama being un- folded by California's physicians it would ri val among the greatest of comedies of human events. For the m edics, through the AMA, have been the very but· tress of free enterprlse to the nth degree , They have spe n t millions battling government in· terfere nre a nd "meddling" in the practice of medicine. They waged a fierce w ar against the extension or unemploy. ment in · ( EARL WATERS ) lion or not having lhe same Jiability for damages they cause that all others must bear, pro- fessionals and non-professionals . have seen they had lost the kind· Jy, fami ly doctor image through their high fees, refusals tO make house calls, and their unrele nting opposition to health insurance plans for the public. More impor- tant i£, as it is r la imed, it is, only s mall pe rcentage of doctors whose inC'ompetence causes all the problems, tbey ~bouJd have been clam oring for stricter laws to unliceose the troublemakers. Instead, they m alntail1~1l the stoic attitude that no ·one in the profession CQUld ev"r Cio wrong, ' . ERA Goes Down Amid Tears s urance to cover dis abili- ty. They have fought t ooth and nail against any and a ll gov· er nm ent The lawyers, of course, are fighting back a nd they need small help from this corner . T hey charge t h e current "crisis", brought about ~y in- s urance premium ris'es, is caused not by any upsurge of lawsuit losses but by poor stock investments which have depleted ins urance reserves. The ci te with considera ble w eight the argu.· ment that if the doctors didn 't make mistakes the courts wouldn 't He h anding down malpractice judgments. Rather than ste p forward and testify 'lfgainst another doctor charged with malprac\4ce, they would rally to hls &UP'PQtC.reg3rd- less of how wrong he might have been. It was a CBse of ';kick one of us and we all wear a ban· dagc". Little purpose is serVed by recounting wha t might have been were it not now possible,for them to remedy their own prb- blems. It is not loo late to prove they don't need government in, tel"ventiott. The Equal Rights Amendment for women is dead for this year. It was killed when the llouse half of :r the North Carolina Legislature changed its mind. Thal change involves someone you know. Congress approved i ERA in 1972, bul unle ss a three-fo urths of the SO United i• States ratify the a mend - • llJent be fore ' 1979itwilldie. ) The amend· ment was four states short of ) ratification in 1 .early April , ' bul it was still under considera· ~ Uoninfourstates. • i IF ANY ONE of the stales vot· t ed "no," lha amendment would be dead (or this yea r. I Jt was up to North Carolina to determine whether ERA was to I have a chance or whether it was I to be set aslde at lent until after tbe 1978 elections. 1'1e N9rtb·Carollna House vot- ed -80to58 -"yes. '' • But wait• moment. t .North CaroMna Jaw reqWres>a 1e~ond fa vorable vote and, • ( PAUL HARVEY) between Lhe Tuesday vote and the Wednesday vote, that state's lawmakers h eard from their homefolks. Th rye of them, under hl'avy pressu.reffrom their consti· tuents and from church groups in their rural dis tricts. changed their votes from ··yes'' to ''no.'' Thul was enough to kill ERA for this year. One of those three is somebody whose name you'll know: Rep. Myrtle Wiseman. YOU KNOW Mrs. Wisem an better under the name she used as an enterla\_ner on the NatlonBl Barn Dance tor almost two de- cades : Lulu Be lle, of Lulu Belle and Srotty. Retirement dldn't "take" for this conscientious lady. She ep- tercd politics and bc..-<:Bme an ef-. fective member of the North Carolina Le~isl:ttu re. The thing JS that she, personal· ly, favored lhe Equal Rights Amendment. But her homefolks dJd not. Sbe was the only one of 13 female lawmakers to vote "no" and, "after s he did, s he buried he r head in her arms and cried. Mrs. Wiseman said , "(believe in ERA. I do not think my consti· tue nts really know what it is a ll about. But as lo ng as I am e lected to represent them r wi ll represent them and vote not as I want but as they want ... I've thought a lot recently about this uncommon woman and her lonely decision . I hav e great faith in the American electorate and my old- fashioned conviction is that we, the people. are ultimately wise, it' onl y by ins tinct. PERHAPS It is because our silent majority has so effectively resisted the mJs leaders .. but it is gratifying to see an example or sctncss dedication to the obUga. tion of representation. 'that obligation, as Myrtle Wiseman a nd l .see it, is for an elected representative or the peo- ple' of any given district to reOect the will of them ajority of the pco. pie of lhut district. Government of, by und for THE PEOPLE ha• had to be nouris hed by a lot of tea.rs. health ins urance programs, terming a ll such as ''socialized medicine''. They have strenuous· ly object ed t o medi·care and many have refu sed to take pa- ticnt-s under that program. So, with apologies lo the many, many dedicated doctors, It st ill taxes one's emotions to find great sympathy for the plight which tias driven them to their knees . They are begging for govern- ment interjection to rescue lhem from the gouging they now claim they a re getting from the in- s urance compa nies. This is especially so when, in their desperation. theJr minds have become so be.fogged they now de· m:ind, for another profession. re- gulations by government which they lhem!Jelves wouldn't accept even In their present distress. TllEY NOT 'only are advocat· ing the regulation of fees for the legal profe.ssion but they would curtail the rights or cltlz-ens to legal redress for injuries re· ceived at the hands of lncompe. lent medical practitioners. They are asking the government to place them in the privileged posi· THE GREATEST tragedy of the whole s ituation is that the "cris is" could h ave easily been avoided by some prudent and im- agin ative a~tion s taken long ago. For, the doctors had adequate advance war ning of the trend up· "'ards of suits. The breakthrough in malpractice suits against doc- tors started 20 years ago. Judg- ments were being won more fre· quently an.Ji awards were getting increasingly lar ger way back then. And the insurance com· panies signall ed what 'f&I to come by their a lmost annual' rate increases. ' Unlike many others who must buy insura nce to protect against financial ruin, the doctors were financially able then. to eScape dependency uponln.aurance com- panies by the simple expedient of foundin g theJr own runcr. Sorhe of the more astute in the profession advocat~d this bul failed to gain support from safficfent numbers of their colleoguea. THEY ALSO could ha ve a:tepped back and taken a good look in the mirror. They would ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N Weed. Publiah~ Thoma" 1<,cvll. ~:ditar Borbora Kre1bich, Edilorial f•age i·d.:or The editorial page of lhe Dally J>ilot seeks lO 'i\ilorm and stimulate reilders by prescnUna on this page dlvtir.se eommentary on toplc:s Of interest by Jl)ndl<-t· ed c.olumnlsLa and cartoonlslJI by providing a forum for readers'- vlews and b)' presenUng this nev.•spaper's opiniomi· and Ideas on . currient topics,-the roltorial opinions O{ the Dall)' POot. appe11r only In lhe edi toriol c-c>lumn at the top of the _page. Oplnionl! tile.· pressl'd by the C'Olumni!lt!l Ind C'artoonlstit and lettcr writer. •re thtir ov.•n and no endorscrntnt-or lheir views by the Daily Pflat should !-!nf _, ,, -- Friday, May 30.1975 • < I I I I l I ' I I I .. ( ... Pl .... l""o~t L,...og""""""boolc--) . ' •, • Plaee Goes . , To the Cats • By Cff AllLES 11. LOOS Of'"" • ., ,. ... IUff There are these two cats that live at our houae. One ls a big, old mamu cali co that's been With us for sevel'al years. My wire got her at a cocktail party. She is a beautiful cat and haughty. THE OTHER ONE is the runt of someone else's litter. She is pure alley cat, but smart. ~ My daughter brought her home last summer. "Daddy, can't we keep her ?'' pleaded my daughter. ''The calico cat will chase her away,'' J said. I WAS WRONG, of course, as wise old daddies often are. ~ That's not to say the calico cat bas taken the runt to her bosom, but they seem to have reached some sort of de- tente. The cats come in at night to s leep. They an· nounce when they are ready to come in by clawing at the screen door on the balcony ot the master bedroom. Us ually, they wait until I am in bed. - 11LET llER IN before she tears the screen." my wife will say of whoever happens to be do- ing the clawing at the time. The other cat arrives a few moments later -just after I have settled back into bed. Our bed is the prime nighttime sleeping spot for the calico. She is the queen at the foot of our king-sized bed. _ S~!'fETI~ES, the runt dis{iutes this and this leads to a territorial dispute. These usual· ly are brief border skirmishes characterized by much tail swishing, a little growling and a hias, or two. Calico cat almost always pre- vails. But, the other ntght, runt cat got there first. .~aliF:~ ~~t. who had been sleeping in anothe r room, discovered this territorial indiscretion later. Wh at followed was a full scale, yowling, spitting, fur-flying cat fight in the master bedroom at three o'clock in the morning. I BOLTE D out or bed and chased them bot h out of the house. My wife's reaction to this in- cident cannot be printed. Even in the most peaceful times, cats that aleep in the house al night have to go out in the morning -early in the morning. So: they wake me up. CAUCO CAT walks across me, or cuffs me in the"face, or both . Runt cat is less subtle. She takes a flying leap and makes four-point land· tnis on various parts or my anatomy. Both ·met.hods do the jdb. "Do you realize both those cats have me programmed so that, at four o'clock in the morning, I'm lying there, half awake, wonder- ing when they are going to pounce," I com- plained to m y wife. "I 'm beginning to feel like Pavlov's dog." "Look at it this way, '0ear," s he said re- assuringly, ''at least they're housebroken.'' WE HAD ch icken £or dinner one night re- cently and there were some leftover pieces that I coveted for lunch the following day. But when I came downstairs lo put on the coffee in morning, there was calico cat, back in the house and munching cfi the chicken we had forgotte n to put in the refrigerator. I chased her out or the house, muttering un- printably. Lately. runt ca~ has taken _to sunning herself while swinging gently amid the begonias and asparagus ferns in one or my wife's favorite hanging b askets. "SHE'S RUINED it," wailed my wife. 0 Do you get the feeling," I s uggested, "that we just live here -that the cats really own this house and are running it?'' Everyones Talking About Alexande(s Banana! Only seeing is twtieving . Alexander's Banana is the exciting neWbar in the beautiful Sheraton NewPort Beach. Discover en exotic banana drink In Alexander's lush tropical atmosphere while a OJ plays favorites through cocktail hour. · Then in the evening Alex.ender's Banana really shakes to the sound of a fantastic new band. • Now Appearing CORNERSTONE Monday thru Saturday (9 :00 pm 111 1:30 am) . The Sheraton Newport · Beach, 4545 MacArthl.I Boulevard, Just South of Orange Co. Airport Newport Beach. Cali!. 92660. (71 •) 833·0570 • I . C.Old Cash! Sex Does't Pay Bill 'ST. PAUL, Minn. CAP) s maller one for labor and' :_:-A Juda:e bas ruled lhat materials. a woman who paid a bill UNFO RTUNATELY,, for electrical work by therewasnotestimonyto. engagJne In sexual In-he lp the court with. tercoUrae still owes $377 respect to 'the going rate because the arrange-charged by those ment wu ''performed engaged in one or the for t~e e,i;i.Joymenl of both. oldest professions known parties. to mankind," the judge's Judge Ronald Hach~y memorandum ta id. of Ramsey County Dis· The judge concluded lrlct Court ruled on Wed-that he could not give full nesd_ay In l~e case of faith to the defendant's the amorous installment assertion "that the whole p~a~. deal was to be wiped out with one experience with sex." He decided that the agreement was to do the work at cost ''and that the extracurricular ac- tivity, if any, was a side issue to be performed for · the enjoyment of both parti es and n o t necessarily £or hire." COURT PAPERS showed a suburban con- tra~or agreed to do elec- trical work for _t.he woman a s a gesture or friendship to h e r hiasband. Upon ie8.riung the couple was divorced, Hacbey's nlemorandum sald,.the contractor sub- mitted a bill to the woman for $62S. The con· tractor suggest ed the woman "take it out in tradC." He suggested she engage in sexual in- t ercourse whic h, the judge said, "she agreed to do and which the parties performed.'' The Contractor's wife, who does her husband's bookkeeping, sent two more bills to the woman but s h e threw them Hachey said the de£en· dant, by appearing in court dressed in overalls and a man 's s hirt, "made little or no at- tempt to convince the court of the value of her personal services i£ they were to be considered part of the evidence." Hachey sa id the woman's garb "covered her to such an extent that her assets, if any, were substantially hidden.'' .away . The Jawsuit r------------41 followed. Hachey was to decide whether the en· lire bill, including profit, was to be paid or a ENROLLNOW- Call 642-5678. Put a fewlwords lo work for ou. KINDERGARTEN THRU GRADE 8 New Classrooms-New Gym Child Care: Before & After School CALL: 548-6866 If 11tt foflowi .. IOI.Inds lit1 YCHI, ..... Clll tM Sc.hick Wli11t1 Cutrel~. 0 l11t ..... t FAST 1• pilk 0 Lott"'"etitFAST1n~111 0 ln1 ... tFAST1•wet.,•i11 0 LMi ...... tFAST1R'YlllM 0 c;-.....i,i.1tieck (VfflYTIMf FAST WEIGHT LOSS 1$ ALMOST ALWAYS A OISA,,OllllTllllO fAtl· Ulllf ~w "" nl11 ttn.1~1w11111 llll'lillf ,., ..... _ ,, ... tlilll "'"'' r•-M!Wfitlit Iii tlu Ii"! plKil. Sc:akl ._ 11 II-, ••. I Plllflllll tlMt ..... .,.. Mil 11 IM - 11,IOl,OO§. rtMlftlil 1hlt ~ It l/lt I•-Sdiick Sttp S1111klet "'9,.m. J11lly •ittt1t•I! CALL NOW 558·8404 . .. Town & Country o._ OLD PHOTOS RESTORED! CHRIST LUTHERAN SCHOOL 7150 Vlctorl•.St., Costa Mesa Last 2 Days! II UP TO 40% OFF I· ............ Bring 1n your pn•·('ll·s' f;1mi ly photos and our staff or ex JH.:rl s \j, ill n1ake jll'rft't"ll\· rl'SIOrl'fl l'Ol/ll"·' in 01ny si1.e. You r oi-igina1 is rclurnt•ll unh••rrn~. the Broadway 47 Fashion Island thru Son. June 1 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 ORANGE COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS'. BEST ART ALL THIS WEEK ~outh Coast ?la:za Public AUCTION· FRIDAY, SATIJRDAY, SUNDAY •I 8 P.M. Bargains on Fine Crystal. Sterlin g Silver. Porcelains, Oriental Objects d'Art. Paintings. J ewelry, Antiques. Bronzes. Furniture. Select Indian Turquoise .. - · Sl.000.000 INVENTORY l'ro111 Estatr.f. Co urts. Qur.of-Pa .... ·11, /Ja11krri11tri1'S VISITORS/ Corne and s ee what fun on AUCTION can bel FREE ADMISSION! . .. across the street from seven of the Southland's most elegant waterfront restaurants! ' HOURS , Inspection & Private Sales Hl-5 DAILY 1 -5 SATUR O,\Y & SU NO/\Y Oosed W(dncsday &. Tilurttl::iy AVCTIONS HELD EVERY· FRJDAY, SA1\JRDAY, SUNDAY •t 8 P.M. ' USE YOUR BANKAMERICARD. MASTER CHARGE. PERSONAL CHECK OR CASH 2542 W..c Coaot Highway N-nlleach, CalHomla 92660 (714) 645-2200 WE BUY FOR CASH OR SELL ON COMMISSION WHOLE ESTJIJ'ES OR SINGLEIT'DfS A RT Ll..V/,\'f . AlJCT/fJ,'"l/;'1-."R , I Friday. May 30. 1975 CAIL y PH.u r .tl 7 ~Ri NOW ONLY sf9°9 s237 FULL llZf. Conlempory! c1e1n criap The lush tuxedo styling IS accented by Iha end 11sn1on1ble . aotn tne 11y11ng end smooth back. waterlall cushions and rolt-over l1brh:: m1k111 1n11 1 11111!~• adc:1 lt1on. arms, in a strlklng plaid fabric . Sleepa two! Sleeps two! SAVE 2 "'SITIOM THE VIBRATOR NOW ONLY A complete cor11111mpo11ry comeor wnn: TWO lound1tl01"11. two met· tresse1, two bOl1ter1 end rwo quilted cover1el1. plu01. en 111leg1n1 corner t1bl1. s137 II , INCH FROMI\, •· WALL ..... T hat e:o:t ra ad ded ONLY plus ... 2 poslllon and · sgg a vibrator. A rein ing price tool $,, ... THE CABINET BEDJ-;'.l~"' LOOK UNDER YOUR RIVietC\ POSTURE PERFECT MATTRESS MANY YEARS OF COMFORTABLE SLEEPING BUENA PARK ORANGE 8531 STANTON AYE. 23'3 TUSTIN ......... _ ........... 0,,...... ..... •' o._ 827-4400 999.4570 TIME ONLY OPEN SUNDAY llAll~I,. • FREE DELIVERY • FREE PARKING ' FREE COFFEE COSTA MESA 3015 IR15TOl , ..... h _ _., ... ~........, 979-5040 • ... .. . .. :. . . . AB DAILY PILOT . • fridllY'· May30, '975 9Held • . In Vote Fra·ud SANTA ANA -Nine persons who "'orked (or .the election last year.of Demo<.·ratic As - semblyman Richard J.I . Robinson of Santa Ana have been ordered to ORANGE COUNTY face trial Aug. 18 on T . } S multiple c_rimina l . r1a et charges contained in an Orange County Grand Jury indictment. For Coed Superior Court Judge Everett \V. Dickey set thetrialdate.1-fcalsoor-Jn Dealll dcred all nine to r eturn to his l'Ourtroorn July 18 ·for pretriul action. Free on their promise to uppcar arc : Al anucl N. E!:icamilla, 26, of 7766 Arbor Circle, 1-luntington Beach. <.ind Anfhony, 30, and Sandra Bixler, 31, both of 14521 Ontario Dri\'e, We stminster. ..-\!s o accus ed are ~l aril yn A. P e lkofer, 45, and Julie Pelkofer, 19, SANTA ANA College student Ella Louise Johnson of Anaheim has been or- dered to face arraign- ment June 3 in Orange County Superior Courton murder c harges filed after her best friend's boy friend was s hot and killed. both of Orange ; Kim J\f . Judge Evcrell W , Karie. 20, of f>lacentia, Dickey set the arraign- Gcrald f'. Pickel. 32, of ment date for Miss Santa ,\11 <1; James L . Johnson, 18, \\.'ho is free Carrick, 38. or Corona, on$75.000bail . und Kuthy I .. Langston. 32, ofS<.inta 1\nu. ,\1n ong the ullegations f<.i ced by the nine arC' l'h<1rgcs of illcgii l voter registration. illcg:il \'Ot· ing, pcrjurr and obtain· ing a ballot in an un- authorized voting di s- trict. It \vas stressed '-"'hen the indictment was is- sued that Robinson is in no "·ay connected "'ilh the alleged criminal acts that pro duc e d the charges. l\liss J ohnson "'as <1 r- rested last April 14 after a month-long inv<.•stigu- tion by Anaheim police into the killing of Rieci Duan Knight, 18. who was s hot through the back of the head' as he sat <1l the wheel of his pickup truck. Police s aid they re- covered the rifle they believe was used in the killing from the home of J'l·tiss Johnson 's mother. Other Deaths m.:ina gcr of the Pacific t.>d ition o f Sta rs :.ind S tripes. died of em - phrs en1a :.il Juntendo Hos pital ThursdJy. l·le u·as 6J. County Eyes Newsracks SANTA AN A -Having dealt this week with public nudity, Orange County s upervisors will tum their attention Tuesday to two proposed ordinances dealing \\'ith allegedly obscene materials displayed in sidewalk newsracks. Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuyper has drafted Lwo alternatives for the board to con· s ider at its meeting. Both pro- posals are designed to curb publications that run front.page photos depicting nudity or sexual <!Ctivity. In a t.'over men'\o to supervisors, Kuyper said each measure has been adopted in one form or another by a number of county cities. THE PROPOSALS include: -An ordinance that would specifically ban display on public rights of way of photos, cartoons or drawings showing human genitals or fe male breast.s of anyone ·'over t"'be ae,,c of puberty." -An ordinance c lamping technical res trictions on the placement or sidewalk newspaper vending machines and placing a time limit on the materials being displayed. 1t1uch of the wording in the or- dinances is similar to meusures passed by city councils around the county and to the ordinance supervisors approved this week banning all public nudity in coun· ty territory. KUYPER HAS been working on the n ewsrack control measures alnce the beglnniog of April when the boar.d ordered an investigation of such curbs within its jurisdiction. · . .., · . The wordin,µ: of the strlct nudl-1 ty control P.rOposal , whlcb Kuyper calls ~lternative A, tu.. dicates that the primary purpose of the m easure is to elimlna.te a "public nuisance'' and keep such materials out or the hands or children. The other proposal , Alternative B, is longer and more detailed, but m'akes no reference at all to nudity or content of the materials sold in the vending machines. Record Check GRAND OPENING SALE! Under Attack SANTA ANA -A 17-year-old Orange County Board of Supervisors resolution ordering criminal record checks <.ind fingerprinting of new county employcs s hould be rescinded, the current board has been told . fn a request to supervisors for consideralion Tucsdny. Robert A . S~~unty personnel offi cer, s uid the resolution is !e~al\Y questionable and the procedure is costly and time-consuming. Under terms of the resolution, dated ;\ug. 19. 1958, lh C' pe r sonnel director Y.'a s ordered to fingC'rprint all ne\\' county workers and for\\'ard the prints to the s heriff for a record check. PRIOR POLICE records are then forw a rded to the hiring department to be used as the manage- 1n ent des ires . ' "Recent leg islative changes have made this <1uite restrictive in several regards." Scott said in his letter to th e board. ''Furthermore, the fingerprint and record clearance of <£11 e mploycs has not been found to be cost-effective." Scoti S<iid the procedure should be discontinued for all but "a limited number of ·~ensiti\'e' positions \\'hlch 1,1,;jll be handled us ut present." Supervisors \\'er<.• told that AB 2644 , appro\'cd by the Ll'g isl<1tu1·e last yei.lr, prohibits requesting ar1't.•st re('ords on initial employment ;.1pplications "·ith the excC'plion of µeacC' officers. ,\NOTll E R Jt1 Et\..!iili R E, AB IG87 , makes it il- il•gal for a pe r sonnel dC'parlmcnt to r C'ceive or possess criminal records of individuals from the Ci.lliforni<1 Depaptmentof Jus tice files. · 'Tht• personnel department is obviously no longer in a position to obtain and notify dep<.irt- ments of the content of employe criminal his- tories.,. Scott s <.iid. . JIM'S . JAPANESE MARKET 688 W. Baker St. at Bristol lehlod J .......... ..... Costa Mesa. 549· 1574 D•lly I 0:30 to 6:30. S-. I O:JO to 5 Kokuho Rice " •• . ................. 8.88 Hiyashi Ra men u.-.. ~ ~ .......... 29C , Tempura Batter Mix .............. 3/1.00 Butwl<oke Sobo ·-.,.. -...... 3/1.00 Asakusa Nori Ooban 1o.1.o1 s--...... -. 99' Moruchan Doshi •~ --...... 3/1.00 Yee Fu Mein Ramen ......•.•..... 5/1.00 Komabolco lfi .. c:••• ...........•........ IHC- Soba ~ "'·hrMI •...............•. 1.19 Shiyumoi ....................... : .... 1.19 FRESH & FROUH RSH OH SALE SUKtY AKI & TIRRIY AKI aEEF Pa~CES GOOD MAT lO THl.U JUME I Absolutely w.-I•_..• AUCTION Authentic AMERICAN INDIAH JEYJELRY AU Sterling Sil•.,. & Higll GrodeT ...... se LOS A!>;GELES ((;Pl/ -Actor Roy Roberts, 69, "'ho appco'.lred on such lele l'is io n s h o ~,·s a s "'McHale's Navy," "Th~ Dick Van Dyke Sho"·" und "Gunsm okc, .. died of ;1n undisclosed illness <.it St. Vincent ·s Hospita l. it "·as revealed Thursday. Ske.:.111 , a native of Gaines ville, Fla .. had held his post sinc e 1962. 1'hc personnel director noted that <1 recent court case determined it is also illegal to use criminal re· Funeral ser vices \\.'iii cor<.l s a s ;i basis for making hiring decisions if the T 0 KY 0 ( U Pl ) -be held Tuesd ay at the' record does not apply to the type of job being NEWPORT BEAOf MARRIOTT too.....,.... c..... Dr. Hewport INcJt. c.lff. FRI., MAY 30-8 P.M. Vlewilog of 7 ....... Gor don Skean, g:encr::il Tokyo Cn1011 Church. sought. Death 1\'011-·" I:\" Tll E CASE OF sensitivci'obs, Scott said only We•-lnfnlchcl lty •~cw.,,. ill •••••,,.... --~ KM...._.,..__,. .. ..,...,...c1 nw .. ,..,,.,..-.. w•DOELL 'Jr•ndcr..10,~n Me,....oroai _. .. 1c~ .. 111 :J Cl'iminal record deemed incompatible with •the. r w 41fffc...,., te ...... ...,... .,...... celectlM ef w•VNE c~•~1..es WAD DELL. •r· Dt-1>e1os..1.,,..,.,, M"~ 11, H1J .. 111 oo {·mploye 's assignmenlcan be used for action by a de-._.nrfted ;.wetry _. stricttr 1ry NAVAJO, ZUNI • ••tJenT 01 Sunset Beil< fl, C• 0 .. 1~ ot ~· AM, Sn•llrr 1.. .. qun" B& .. <n Mm-1....,1 pa rtn1ent head. ,._,,.. Al • llfol _. · -.... ~ M •tfl Mily 1b, !91S. Survivfd ov fl•• w•••. Cro,,pel. P<0v.tl• 1nlf"n~n1, ~1rr.1.<: ........-1. -·-HC.,till Of ,...-eli. -.Y of Su.I.an"'! w.aooeu; !.Oil, sr .. noon w.:WJ. Al>!>f'r, An.tnrom, ca M•• WroQ1'11 """' ''If the conviction is not grounds for any action, ..._.,.. coa.ctor'1 ptec.._ .. !II* wt11d to be wllwtdic • ..,.,,!l;lo~trr-mo!llle" RobOo& Aot>o.-.1.on, ii m•m~r OI La911n<1 lleatt\ WD~" • thC "0Uf[ I' 'COfd nd an ' f ffi t't0n rel-ot'tng tO the t 1 di -... ~ ....... __._f---'w..-•po"Ko .!.oervit•~ .. ,u !>e ~Id Sd!u•O,,y, M<oy )I C1ub"nd Tnt ReuutUtt<1n Cluo. ~tl~r '-~ ii y Ill Or a ., Y--T-" "1 1.10 PM. Prr~ f"m•1v co101u41 Ld'911"" ae...,11 Mo•1u"'' 0 ,,t-t!(>f'~ l'l'COrd is to be destroyed ,'' Scott sa id . cw•witli •Certtfk.,e fll ..,.....tkify. r~••1 ~ome •n W~•1m 0n••••. c.. BARK"' I le also told SUJlervi sors: it is his feeling lhat uny OWEN .JUl11' MtCANN BA RltA-, rt,oOent ot 0ecihr5, colecfOrl, jolllbeor-s• WIY.,........I •e wek:Ofllf. euN1ce 1-101..Mesow rN01ta9una 1.. .. 9 .. n .. Noque1,ca 0~1e n1ata1nM.<v further fingerprinting or record checks can be .. CAL'S CAMERAS "BALLOON BUSTIN '.' ' '' I SALE:!! Cor'f'e on across Newport Blvd. after the Fish fry ,put on by the CostO Mesa.Lions Saturday .•• Try Your · luck at Col 's • . . breok · o balloon ond WINA PRIZE! FREE For tht Kids • look for Cal· s -' Balloons White You"re At The Fish Fry. Whllt yeu'rt at 1t th• brand new . Cal's toke o IMk~ TRIMLITE Co 1 ~--.-:-: ... -:.;"1. ;,..,,. ICoi/alr -the west in pocket cameras with exciting new features. .TRlllUTE 11. . . . . '21.95 TRlllUTE 21 ..... 147.95 TRlllUTE 31 ..... '59.95 TRlllLIT£41 ... , '119.95 Ektaoound 140 Movie Camera .. 1239.95 Ektasound 160 .. 1329.95 • ~'-'""' Ektasound 245 . 4 " 7 'r 1 Movie Projector '239.95 Kodak Carousel Slide Projector . , -141--1179.9$~ --~ 1119.95 ~"'"·Ca. Da!eot deair. M"y ;a 1~1s. 11. 1~1s in Pnoe.,·~. Ariton;, Sur~,.,,~.., handled throu nh normal •"'rsonnel policies. without lion G Survived tty her nepne..-s • .Jonn ~lmt' Oy 100.r •••l,r•, Mr~ Agne• M<Cinn <:> ,...-T..-.s: Ceslil or clMck SpoNOr': .,..._ Pft AllC ......., or om~n ... Nt0••1~" ""o~rren r.a-11a1S~C••v,M,, Ro~M~~nr~t;h;•~n;c;c~d~f;o~r~a~n~e~w~~~·~~~r;m~o~l~u~l~~~n~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Holm~, o! '>an An'.elmo, Ca., n•~<t, EIJ. C..0011~ .. no ol Pn~·n1r Mo~~ Pd!r•C•d n~ H MdGdenol CofYdlll\, 0<P.QOf1, l...o M<Cdnn nt P..orn" itnd M<\ a.>r°"ra LOU"n~. Ht •be•I E Holmes o• W..!o• MtC .. nn ':outlc• O! V•end"I', Art1on11. Co"""· Cd. <1 nr:1 Sa r .. B. Culler u! oe~r t1 ... nd, Pegqy Callon• a1 So!Jtn Mil"''"''At• Wi\C. Se•~kc• .. ,11 be ""10 La~"""· Ca ReQuoem mai,, S...luroay "t 7 00 PM ':odlu•day, Pat•ltt v,,.,.,. ~ 00 AM ai Sdn Judn ""''"0" Cnu•<n Cnapel, Ot!1clan1. Rev. John Rrynold~. 1n1e1menl, A\ceni.oofl Cemetery lntr•ment, PaC•I•< 11,,. .. Me.mo''"! M<Co•m•t k Mo\\oon Mo•l116r7 oirro- P••k, Ne...-p011 Beien, c .... r:lorK\ed l>'l '·'·~"~'·----------1 P•t•ll< Vlew Mortuitrv. In lieu all" Uo-t>r\rMmor;•1< .... 1r1buti.on\,.....vt1e P UBLIC NOn CE tn..or la T~r Omar.• Home For So,.,, Omar. .. ,Nrhr•~~.. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO "UllD H0 WAR DE.HURO,rri.lOr nl CJ!Ml'· ENGAGE IN THE SALE Of ''on Vo tlo Cl D••o " O••lh ... "" ALCOHOLIC 8EllEAAGES . . -·· -·-1~.1~· !,.e""''''. •rr Pf!ndlnQ, P.oc1hc TO WHOM IT MA y CO NCER N· • v ... w Memo,.a1 Park Morlu••v. . · Nt! .. pOl't ~il<fl, C;i. • ~ubJeCI lo ••i.~nce or lhr toce.,..., ao- PAllK Ploed !or, not•<r '' nereoy govefl 1n.a1 ,,,,. PATR ICI "' PARi<, •esi d~nl ol :::!~:,fi:'~!~.;~.~~.:~~=~~ L•9un1 a e .. ch, C•. o .. te ot. dtilll• May loito ..... : 1100 H11bor e1~d. Buu.,;ng a ;Ki, ltli Serv'''' a•e oend•nq, P.-<,oh< Un•! 1 Co\t ~'" cai.to•noil "'""" Memo•••• P;irk Mof\ua1 y, • " · . · Nt'.,.P<>rl Be•cll. Cl. "'"""""' 10 sucn ontenl•on. trw hn• RICHARDS df!<>!Qn<!d t!o •oflly1n9 to ll'le 0.parl• BARBA RA 11 R IC~All D'>. •esr!lenl ..,.nl Ot Alcano1!c Be vr • •9e Control !or o' 111e .. par! fleacn c .. Datt ol dO!dll> '''Y""'" of "" a!colloh< 0eVe••9" Mily lO i91S ~,',.,,.,·, <>•r pen(lll>Q IKrni..t tor tne•r prem'""' "'fol"""' Pdcit ;t 11.~ .. Me mori,ol P<1r~ "4l"Oll S•lrBee•&Wone IPYDht E<l!· ••-• N ' ' " C •"!I Pldte I ~ 1""'Y• , .. :~IG~;c ' I> L-A P 0 S A D I> M E )f IC AN Ml> RV A. WR !C.~T . re\o(lcnt o! South R E':o l AU RANT L•Oun•, C•. Date o! deiltf\ M;,y 16• 1q1s PYD!,.lled0tanoe Co.11>1 0dl!y Pol~t. •t ,,,.. •ve ol 11. Su•v1.e o hl' ,,.., ions. M.i~J0.19/~ '100 -n Cerro<~ ol P"lm ')p.,nQs and JDlln of Cnono, Cl -. onr d•uqnter, Mrs. C!•rr nc~ K or~ ot f e$a\; t•~t Q•i1ndtn11dtt n ~nd l!Her 11rea1- IALTZ·llaGllltOM FUNHALHOME Corona del Mar 673-9450 Costa Mesa 6 46-2424 IELl IROADW A Y MOlTU4ll 110 Broadway. Co:.111 Mesa 642-9150 McCO•MtCK MOlTUAJl:T Lag una Beach 49 4-941 5 San J uan Capistrano 495-17 76 LEASE A aaaa The FIAT more for ·less lease. LE SS Money. DICK MILLER MOTORS FIAT FACTORY AUTHOlllED l .. ll'I., 'l.11\'ICL u.u.ltoil., & D\'ll;UAI OIU'tll'f 120 W. Warner at So. Main, Santo Ana557-2132 GENUINE ANTIQUE IVORY CARVINGS \ AD i::,. FIGURINES .> &;; VASES ~ 2Q 01o oYY ~ 3400 MO. Z 'llA OPOITO ll•U.l' .... I MIEWPOaT IEACH 17141 673-5651 MAY 30 THRU J UNE If ous~ PACIJIC VIEW MIMOll4L PA•lr Cemetery M0tluary Chapel 3500 Pacil1c View Drive Newoorl Beach. KIF'~=-.i'lh.-,,-.-.. 30 SPECIALTY SHOPS IN ·A TURN OF THE CEl'fTURY Car1ro rn1a 644·2700 rEOfAMIL'r COLONIAL fUHllAL HO Ml 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster I 893•3525 SMfTHS' MOITUAI 'r 027Maln St Huntlngron 8eaeh 531l.e539 ' / VILLAGE ATMOSPHERE ... ADJACENT TO ._.,.~~.l(A.;,,,THE FESTIVAL OF ARTS GROUNDS. OPENING JUNE. 1975 Some prime space avaUable ·- -58Q BROADWAY. LAGUNA_ BE°ACH,J:6LIFO_RNIA • 714 494-7915 CELEBRATION SALE ON THE GRAND OPENING OF OUR NEW LOCATION NORDIC TRENDS, LOS ANGELES SAVE 15% Come see Our new shiploads of fine, imported Scondinovi!Jn dining room furniture. Many new styles qnd designs. Finest quality Bonkok Teak and Rio Rosewood. to40% IT'S OUR BIGGEST SELECTION AND SALE EVER! • DINING ROOM SETS • BOOKCASES • CHAIRS • SIDEBOARDS • HUTCHES • MUCH, MUCH MORE WE HA VE THE RNEST QUALITY AND LARGEST SELECTION OF SCANDINAVIAN DINING ROOM FURNITURE IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY. Come join us for coffee and re.!reshments. SALE HOURS: FRI., SAT. & SUM. I 0 A.M. • 6 P.M. '. NORD(C LINE Fu~"!ishings 277 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa (714) 642-6653 Co tlo es R m .. sul lea th ch gr in in h a w fr M \ '"d•r, M•r JO. 1975 PIJBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOnCE PUBLIC NOncE IU,.EJllOJI COUJITOI' n+I IUP•J110JI COUllT OP CAl.llfiOllNIA plCTITIOUI IUllNlll ITAT•G,.UUl'OllNIA,._ COUNTTO,Oll;ANI• fll.Ul•ITAT•MllfT T ... QtUNTYe,OllAll.. CA.II fll\IMllaANIU Taefoli.wtflt ,.,_,,,, • .o!f'ltllutl· C... .... 1111• ltol,."'6t1tr•ll ... .,plk 1ll1111t1AN. ....... 1 MOTICI 0, IA&.• OP llCA&. Olll!W IC. GOODSON lw 0.....,. qi OJIANOF" COUNTY COLLISIOlril, "JIOlll'IJITY AT fllll'fllTI U.L.a N•,,... 111 ,., • ._to Jld .• H~l"t!Ofl lif«:PI Ito tflt WUtl' ti llN ,., ... ,..,_..,,,,.. o•o•Jt TO StiOW CAUSf: FOR CA. ' ti 1'-perMft •ftlll ., .... Of AMll.lrilCA CH ANOIOF NAME OWlll ~-· ..01 S .. tofonl A ... ELl&AllTMHOllJI WllNOAIC .l llRT.-lMl'tlrnll'IOI' Qol,.,.Gr•w cJi;-z141 '' Ntt!Ullhtl'tltt'91""1l11Yl ...... ilfl ... ANOJlf.W IC . CiOOOIOH h•I llltd • ltDb.-l't (dw.ird Tatoikl' 1111111 J-t, ltlJ, lht Uflffrll9'1fl1, Wiiiiam MtltlDl'l ifl lfll.\ (Ovrl IDt Ito Ot'"" •llow• .. llfl°"'r Aw .• l'ol<tllllfl' \lili;l' CA, NDl"r, et CMl-w•lw tf '""....,._Of 1"'91111111-r to (hanQ<e hh ,...,,. ,,om M10I ' ~ lllubet!I Nefr, (.Oft_,,...., ANOJll!W IC. OOOOSON lo ANOll EW Thi• hltlne•i ii tDl\dVCIMI b't • •otll Mil el ..-ho•W U.I• te lfle ,,..,_.. IC .lllJIT. 1i'l'fr•l 11«t11WU.lo -~.MIKI Ml tefltll'"*191... It I• IWt•IJT Ol' .. tMI INt 611 --O\tl\ "'°''' llllf ......... fttl!IM S..ritor c:-1, eH lnltr .. led In U. lnelWI' ''"'HDld 60> T1'111 ~elt......i W4ll llled ""'"' llW "-rl{il'lll, 0 111', IMtrt1I, an4 .....,.. ell Ottl" 11e19N lltl• cowrt 111 0.11111""""" °""""' Ctorti of Of-•"9t C.OVtoty~,.. tfltCOn...,,•IM 11the11_,, ..... 11. "*'· J •1 no Civic Getolol' 0,1 ... W.11, -.1'7s.. Y Ill n lt IMI t trtelll ro•I ~ '6ftt41 Ma.. C.Ulol't1l1, Dl'I J111, IS, 1tlS, ...... ·~ ... ' ••• PUBLIC NonCE l'ICTITIOUllUiilil•li , "AM• ITAT•M•fllT l,,. 1 .. Wwlnt ... , ..... II ..,1111 WW. l'lftllt ~ MOL "1100UCTS, 16f2 I-No. D,, Collt MeM, CA. tt624 Mtllftfw Olve11t Latlt•lf llo. 1"' Iowa Ho. o, C:.0.\1 -.WM, CA. m» · fhl1 IN1l~1 l1 (Oflfvc:\MI by en I~ 0.VIOl,MI. Mtitt.w 0 . LeUtrltilO T1!11 '1at11Mtol WI\ llltd MV. ti. t.llHUy Cit•• of°'""' .. (Mtol'fM .... ,. •. 1•1,. ...... ~ltfttcl 0r .... 11t C.oe1t o.ltf l'llM; Mlllw t, 1t. U, >01 1'1S "3-'S PUBLIC NOnCE leuMIO Ill tM C9"to1'1' ti°'"""· ...._ et 10 D'cll(., •.m., ol\tl then 111\d n..ro ,;,,._ltl'ltd Or1-11tt CM it O.U "'IOI otC..Ui.t-nl•~'lbtcl111oi~: .,_t ..... ,11.,..,1hewh1''·""'"10 w• 1, ,, ao ,,1s '1 .. 1.,,· "Jlltrlllwotttrl' JI.It lttt ti tllo oltlllefl IOr chen91 ot tollflO •Nlllld llOl l~"-"'.:::·.:::·=·-"'"-----'="'l hutllt••terty 111.10 1111 ol tho D19renltod ----,,=~=~--,----Mtttt...Wrt' 1tc1.oe IHI of Liit >ci, II 11 llll'irwr orNrtcl uw1 1 ~ ... OI PUBLIC NO'l1CE PICYITIOUS IUSIJll l!SS ........,Htltlll•••1Mrm111..,..,,. 1111tor0itl'lDll\OWC.-VMbe0Ublllhtdltol--------------l NAMaSTAT•M•JllT Cordt• 111 l•Dll 4, 11•1• ~. Mlt • 0rtnQ9 Coa1I 0.HW Pl i.t, 1 NOW$....,_ 1\1,aJllO• COUJITOl'TM• TM ltllow\119 "''°"' ll llDl/loQ bl/ii• "'~ ........ Jlt(Dt•t .. or.,,.. °' IMl•el dl'(Vlallon. Olilbll'11ed Ill thlt tT•T• 0' CALI l'O•NIA l'OJI neiJ tl : Ceutlll',C.IW...llll ... ~Ytl1Mtlorict1Wttlil. ... tourtan. TMICOUNTTOl'OJIAMGa THE MOTHERS ICl'fCH< ... "-•'•U•''----Wt»ocl: '11••11\I 11 .. J, c._..... 1tt11Uw -kl OtlW ti IM Nl' 1111 Mio Me.ll••tl E. CO.ii 111Qhwaw, CIM'°"'• dtl /'Hr.CA.. c-dlti.r.., l'Oltd(llol\t, rtMrvellOftt. 11Hrl119. NOTICI 01' .. IARIJllO 01' t'ltJf """''' l'lfll\11 fl way, Dlld ••-..!1ol ""'"""' lltltO J1t1 Ille !t!ll\Dl''t Blnh l'ITITIOM POii lll'J1011lTI 01' WU.L Slt'IOl'i J, Connell•, 1177 E_ Coat roctt.i. C..rllllcat• 11 1i.htr 11: JOSl!.PH IC. AlllD roJI L•TTln TUTAM•R· Mwr.,GorOf'l1ditlM1 r.CA.tl62S &ldtWDllo'1 .,.e ltowltffl lor llllf pro-GOOOION .t"llO• W•tt I mOl<lal TAJIY Thlt blltll\OJt II co"4uClld Dy ..,. ln- ""1W .. ""'" .,. .,. 11'1 twlllfll .... Hllll'W•,1.1itOffiioOOO, CelllornletO>OI Estate ol SHI RLI v N. Ml!VIJI, ..... dhlfU.11 . -................ IOIMOMM""'llll'"' 0.IH""-Yil 197$ iHlftLl!YNASTMl!.YEft,Oe<MMCI. SttYOtoJ ."Con11tll• It U. efflceoot Mt IOIM'.....,, "trkl• SAMU£LOftEtll!N fllOTICI II 1111•J1elY OtVlfll U.. Thlt ll•ltmtnl •ll llltd with tllft Htl'11111L :MillO I . CDDt.I "1"""''' c.or-J ..... ql the S11POrior c-t MO•MAlll JOSI,.. ..... .._ CWr11y Cltrk ot Or41tott Co11ntr °" Ml.y *4 Mer, Gelllorllle, Ill' ""' bt lllM 11'1 NAoot.D < -ESTO -otlkt or Ille tier II o1 IM ~-· ' -1111 '-"Ille,.., ......... ,...... .. •n U, ttlS. Ctllrt II •to' U'"o lllll' llW Jll'•I ~SlttOf"A-IHP,ND.lle .... 1.-oell..ettoWIT............,., IF .. 11'1 ~ie,1tion ol lhli notlco enc1 llffol'\v. ,........, \la111,,cA. '21M ... ~11i..tr ,........_. " -''" It Pvt>llshod Or1n90 Cu11 01;1, p;1«, fN•l"'90l 1"" WIO. "'*llhed Or•noo c ... st OaU, Pilot ....... fw l#dlel' ~ .... UiMM M.lw ll!I, ll'IO J""'t ~. ll, 10, l~IS lllOl.-IS Tormt.ot w i.: Cl'h In tawtlll _., w,».41nd Jofflt t, ll, 10, ltlS 1991·15 •II-... -'"" elllMnfleU. t.1- GltheUtolltdSl•le1ol Arntrlu; IO•t· -------------1-..... M4 lw -'-to. 1'7$, Mt: cent of"" tmOllnt bid 10 a«.,,...., PUBLIC None 1·"'·· i. u.. c .. rt-• Dt~ lhtGll•r D11C11M blltMt t• lit H14. E Mt. ; et wl• '°"'"' M ,. Owlc c..Metl ------------- ., <ontlrmtlltfl ti Nie flW IN s.rtor ---;-~::;::;::;:o"";:,::::-::--I IW.,,. Wo11. le Ille Qty el ,._la ..... Courl, T•Qt, rtl'IU, •Oltellfll n •tCTITIOUS IUll"lll CllilotlW•. NOTICE OIF PU ILIC H t:AJllHG 1\'1111"""""" t•Pl'H!K, .... ·~ •AMllTllTIMINT 0.t.OMtW 1!, ltlS ,,.QflCf IS, HER EBY GIVE ... owl on ltoJ11r111ct aC t tbl•blt If 111• """IOll-lft9 Otl'-11'1 dei"'9il<lll· WILLIAM I:. StJOio.N. tht Cl\¥ C.OVnc:ll 01 tt>t Cltl' ol '"wi:oort -<Msot" Mell' .. Pf'Ot'lltll " .. the IWllll: • C0\11\twC•••• S..teh •llt Mid. PijbUC l,e•rlno ,. !Ille of c0f'lllrm1Uot1 of Nit. Tflt O•-TOASTED EARTH S TONl!.WARI!, JIO•l!.JIT L. HUMPH Jll!YS ,,_rdi"9 PrillmlMrw BuclOtl ti 0<'11-...,,,..tlotl of UUt , rtc•rdilll ol c-Uill \lk\Ol'll , Colle Mow, CA '2i>~ Atlit!'lllW •I Uw ptorto by llw CllW M41toootr lo• lllt liiYI WYltl(I, •tod .,., Ill .. lt1"'t-tJ1Dllt, .BrlKO Norrll IC lrk1M11ll. 2M Vk· M1 ei.,,,.., Dl'ht wMr \ti).''· put"'lnl IO S.(lllll\ ll01of 'IAlll bl •I Ille ••ptollM el IN ,...d'IMff IOl'll , COlll """''•CA. '2t16 hit. U Thi '"wWt 8e41<PI Cily Ch41'11!f, PUBLIC NOnCE LIONS CUBS TRY OUT TRAILER FOR MOTORCYCLE TRIP TO MEXICALI Cliff Wesdorf, Penny Lee of Lion Country, Ml11 Mermaid Contellant SUeen Reade. or P11•t fla .. r1. Tilll bl!MMll II COlldllCtld bw 6h I,,. """°"' lo41<11, Cl111tftolatlMO ,..OTICE IS HE It E o y FURTHER 81ds m1Hl .. 1to4 and Wiii ........ dlvldll<ll. Ttl:014) M).1110 GIVEN tl'lol lhtll idpubllc htarll'IQIMll 411 lhl Diiie• ol Patrk lD Hlr&OQ. U0G I!. lrU(I Klrlli.1t1d•ll ......... ,I"': l"otlt5-" t. htld Oft !ht "lh doy ot June. "15, II Water Chief Sees Higher Tax, Rates The failure of the South Coast County Water District bond elec- tion m·ay mean hieh district tax- es end an incre ase in water rates, RaymJ>nd C. Miller, district manager, said Wednetday in an asseument of the election re· suits. However,"-Lorrell Long, a leadet"or i ·aroup which opposed that s:'t.5 .million bond measure, charged any ·attempt to fund growth inducing or accommodat- ing water projects by increases In rates or taxes will be subject to a clti2en referendum or other ac- tions against the water di strict 'board or diroctors. "As long as we have the. layhouse's 'T ...:.u;~ . 'nJi, ~--.!¥ -· _ng . {lockAgain ~. '"i.J>l!'ant~m er I~• p(~yhCC•.e has~ lft_~ .-... ~ ... _ ""; A ... ~lief;Ston8J ' "Ima whlc\t'1r1~toriously·dioappeared from"thel 'lobby ot the Laguna- Moulton Playhouse, just as my1tertously reappeared in its proper place Wednesday. The occurrence hi.s left playhouse o!ricials barned, but relieved that the $350 diorama, a depiction or the old Playhouse that stood on Ocean Avenue for more than 40 years, has been re· turned. "lt appeared as m)'!lteriously as it disappeared," Belly Jaao, Office manager said. There was no Sign of rorced en· try or any other clue in the case, aside from th e fact that ttic playhouse 's ne xt proiluctton opening Tues day is "Blithe Spirit." "We do have a couple PR peo- ple around here, but I don't think they'd pull anything like that. But, maybe we should check them for fingerprints," she . quipped. Mrs. Jago had discovered the diorama missing Tuesday and called police. Officers took a re- port on the 24·bY·l8 inch framed diorama's disappearance. Then Wednesday, as the playhouse was opene<l lor the day, the d iorama was found hanelng In its accu .. tomed spot. "I guess we'll never know wh at happened," Mrs. J1go1aid. political processes~necessary to make the citizens' voices heard, we are going to use them. The election 's lailure was a vote against the casual acceptance of district projects and policies which encourage unwanted growth,'' J\.flss Long said. Miller said in view of the close- ness of the vote Tuesday -the measure failed to garner the re· quired two-thirds approval necessary by only 11 votes -he feels the board will consider re- submitting the measure to the voters in November. "We are now evaluating other options which the bourd must weigh before taking definitive action . Prior to the election, we stated that railure or the bond is· sue could force the di strict into finding qther, more expensive means of financing a substantial port.ion of the proposed replace- ment and reinforcement pro- gram. • "We indicated>. that it is quite likely taxes a nd water rates would have i'o be increased to meet essential obligations; that is !ht: sttuitlotf".-t confronts the bOar.doow, "Jamr'said. · Tbe·'&iia-i'i&Ue had gone unop· poud unfil cthe last three days when over the Jong holiday weekend, a group called Citizens Acalnst Developmentsurlaced. It criticized inclus ion of a $640.000 water reservoir project in th e bond sale charging that the reservoir was needed to accom- modate projected gro\\1.h in the district. Barbara ll e iser. co- chai rwoman of the group, acknowledged many of the pro- jects ma~ked for funding by the bonds were necessary, but said by lumping all the projects under one bond sate: the dislrict had forced an "all or nothing" vote. Both Mrs. Heiser and Miss Long said any future bond clec· tion would be opposed unless it gave voters a chance to vote ~epurateiy on projects. College Collects Refugee Oothing Clothing collections for Vietnamese refugees will continue at Sliddleback College through June 6 at the campus information booth. The Items will benefit 18,000 refugees housed in tents at Camp Pendleton. Booth hours are from 9 a .m . to 5 p.m. NewptWt Bluffs Lions Club's Lion Cubs To Mexicali Lion cubs Octavio and Gisela ar~ getting ready to tut the trail. But it won't be an arduous trail. It should be just a breeze to ride in the trailer hitched to the motorcycle of Cliff .Wesdorf, an o(ficer of the Costa Mesa- Ne,wport Harbor Lions Club. After the club stages its 30th annual Fish Fry and Carnival in the newly-named Lions Park in downtown Costa Mesa this weekend, Wesdorf will tow the cubs to ·their new home in Mex- icali. There they will be given to the care of a new public zoo. The Li ons Club got into the business of givi ng away lions by chance. Wesdorf, a savings and loan association manager, ex - , plained that for several years lhe club has been helping the school diatrtct in Mexicali. ' During one visit, when local of- ficers were hosted by the Mex· icali Lions Club, the governor of Baja California m entioned that a zoowaa bein~ built and wondered if a Uon could be foundfoift. Wesdorf contacted Li.on Coun- try Safari, Irvine, and found that ., the par.I< could donat:e·two cubs. "They Were bottle babies who had been re~ected by their mother," he said. Co•st 11iQhw•'· Coto111 ffl Mat, Th.11 U•ltmetol WI$ Ill.., .. llh !ht P111Hlllltd O..anQt C00$1 Dall, PllOt, lht no.tr DI 7.)0 P.M, In tht COi.inci! C.lltornJo 11 IM hOur ol 10 a.m. el 11W ColH!tl' Clef'• DI Ot..,ltt Co11n1, GI\ Mii' Mtl'l>, 14, '.ID, It IS ltll•IS CNmblfl of 11\o Cllr M•n ol lhl City ol .oo ... ci.u. 2', lt7S. .... I Be h c Ill I k l! TM pr°"''' hortl11 deM:rlll..t 11 """' PUBLIC NO'nCE wpor ac ' • orto a , at ..,., cornmoroll' reftrrod 1o 11 2'1 ~~21'5t Publlllled 0t6!19' Coo•! o.ii, PllcM, ''"'"' .,.., 111..c.e •toy •Ml 4111 Ot•SGn~ ito- Strtel, Costa Met.a, Callfornl .. 11'11:..,... M6y 31, 41re1 Jut>t I, 1,, 11, l'1S 1,..1•1s.t------.~.,c,c,.~-~---I te•t•tod mil' •1111e•r 1 n4 too ,_,d =~1!:°:1':,~~:"" Int ri9til "°· l't}oc:t SUPl!.JllOJI COUJIT O" YMI thol'to11.L111r1 Ll'Jlol DattO:MoyJ9, 1t1s. PUBLIC NOTICE STATE 0, CilLIPOJIJlllA l'OJI CMy Cl••• /1/Wllll1m I!. Non-THE COU"TV Ol'OltAHGE City 01 Ne•PO•I 8••ch ,_ •• • ...... _ Ho. A·llUt PubUsneo Or•tooe Coau Daily Pl lOt, 11 ....... &0rl'1tor ... 111e -•'<TOTOOVIOV•Nass DI lbDVt•Mmed c .... i.erv.... HOTICI!. OP HIAlll IJllG 01' PETITION Mill' 30, 1915 wn.1s lll'ATJllCIAM IEJll:OG "AMl:STATlliMl"T l'OJI lll'JIOtATI OP WILL AND l'Olt An.r...w.iLa• The loUowlno l)erlOto h dolno bv!ol· LITYIJIS OIF AOMINISYJIATIOJll PUBLIC NOnCE JSOll!..CN•lHltitroway ">f't•ll : WIY11THl!WILLANHEXIEO ACTION AUTO AIR, 71t w. 111h l!•l•I• o f l!dw••d Goodm•to. ..,. C.C..Dl\I $1 M41r, cA "1•2S >l•MI, No. Ct, C01lt M11•, C.lllo•nla OKtased. IUlll'l!RIOJll COUJIT OI' THI T...,,..._: !1U J,1S-101' 11'21 NOTICE IS Mf Jlf8Y Gt\IEN lfllo1 STllTl:Ol'CALJl'ORHIAl"Cllll AtlDl'Mrr..-eon .. rvatM O.vld Lowre11ce P1ler1011, 1.-!11 JOl.ffoll GrtttoDl111 lloS llltd hotl lto 1 THlliCOUNTYOPOftAMOlli PubO~O Or•net Coost O.ill' Pllet St1n.-I SI., WtslmiAltlff", C.Hfornl• j»tlllon !or pr004lll ol will and tor ltl· N4', ll·•J* ,.,..WlO,l'ilS 1.-.1J n.U lt r1D1Aomtto lttr•Uonwllhlhl-'ll llll· HOTIC .• 0, H•AJllN• 0 ,, 1--------------1.'.-"•• "',. Mllft1 II~ .. .., M ;,,. ..... "' •f'l•••~I to wlll(h I• -•or ,..YITIOH l'OJI: A,.,OIJllTMaJfT OF 111r1~r !'IOrlic1.11•••. a.11<1 th<1t the time PUBLIC N011CE David L. P.IOH"IOll Incl 111•c1 of nt 1r+110 1ne '"'me ...,, btf:n YltUST•I Thi' 111 .. rntnl w•s !!ltd •Ith IM solll)tJune10,1915,'319:JO•.m .. lnll\e Etlal• Of MARGUERITE Z. Rl$0LUTIOJll NO. IS-SJ C-11 CIOI'• ol Or111ot Counly an,.,.., (_.!room ol.O.p.1rlmtnl No. lol wl MACKECHNJE, O.C..--. A Jl:l!.10&.UTIO" OIF THI! CITY 10,!tlS. cour1,11IOO Clvl<C1to\erOrl•o'l'fMl,l ~OTICE IS HEIU.JY (;l\lliN lllfl COUNCIL o" TME (ITY 01' COITA F'*t U.CJl'folkntaAll4l,Cllllorn141, GOttDON MILLl!R MA CKECHNIE MESA, CAL1-'0JIJ111A, ACTIHG •S Putlllll'IMI Ortnoe c ... st o..nw Pilot, 0.iod""-r2,.1.IS, ,,.. Uled ,,.rllto. M UUon '°'Ille Apo THI! EX·OFPICIO IOllJIO OIF ._,,,. ... a1.ao,1relJ1H>e•.ll,lt,s lllM-1S WILLIAMl.St,OHN. •111men1·o1 HlmHll l \,Trlll.lefl, rie- OIJIECTOJll 01' THI! COSTA MISA CDUtoly Cl•rk lt......:e I• wfll<ll b ~de lor !'urtlltf" p AR I( A" 0 JI EC R 1!. TIO N -------------·i•L.ANA. PL.AIA Otf"tk11l•rs,et\Ollllltllo limo ~pl..:o OISTRICT_1 Gl\llHG JllOTICI OF PUBLIC NOTICE ue1we11c1i11Dr.t•lt•21• 111 ""''1""' lho Mme ha s be11n ~IM IJllTEJllTIO" TO ANNEX, ANO Sl!T--------------·l,...,..., ... c ... c.111.tt... J11"• •. ,.,,, 41\ t :Of •. m., Ito"" YING A PUILIC HEARING FOR ft4t!i -•""'11ewlw: l"tlltltllOI' tDul'lroom ol Dt1>41rl .... nt No, J ol "'11d CONS!OI! JI A YI ON o F Wll IYTI 1111 ,.ICTIYIOUS IUSINESS Publlllltd Or•toot Co•~l Dally Piiot, tour\, •t 100Cl•k Cttol•r O•l•t Wttt, II\ PROTESTS AOA INST PAUU.JllNQ. JllAME STATE Ml!.NT May 1t, :IO, Ind Jlltoe S. ltlS l'IM·lS llW Citwol Slolll Al'l.OI. Cl lllorni•. IE A ft A N N E X AT I O J11 A J11 O Tiit lol!Ow1ng per~n ls dol"'i! ~· D.lttd M6y 11, 1'1S 0 THE JI w Is E p A 0 \I I 0 ING llt1ol 41S: PUBLIC NOTICE WIL&.lllM I . St JOHN, THEREFOJI. MOU NT PALOMAR WIN ERY, COUftll'CIOrtl THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY 7SU C.0.11 Hi91'>w1y , Coran<o del ,.,..,,1 --------------1 JlllWLIJll, TACllAMIJl'f OF COSTA MESA, ACTI NG AS THE C.lifornlat'l•lS NOTICE IN\llTING •IDS AJllOJOMJlllOJll EX·OFF IC10 BOARD OF DIREC· JDM Hl.ICllOI\ Pool•, 2100 P<otlllc ""' Counly s .,..u.uon 0 1llri<I• DI 711W.11hStrtott TORS OF THE COSTA MESA PARK Orlv!· Coron• dtl ,..,,.,., C.111Drl'll•926_2, Or""O' Co11n1w, C•llfornle, will ..... 1 .... LM ........... Ollt.r11i1 toCIU ANO RE CR EA TI 0 N 0 IS TR IC T, This buSIA11~ II COl\dl>(led by .,, 1.,. VI led tlldl unUI tUl!'ioOA Y, JUNE 10, !JUI 6n...7J05 001!.S HER EBY RESOLVE AS Olwld1 .. 1. 197$, •I 11:00 1,m , 8 lds mu\I bll re· All_y,lor:Polili•Mr FOLLOW'io : Joh/'+ HudlOI\ POOlt tol'"9d al the 01•1,lch ' AdmlnlltrallW PubllU..G Orltoot CO<l il Dally Pll°" WHEREAS,Ol'llfle 12thdl'l'Dl'M;lrch, Tlll1 Slatlrnetol was 111911 with !tie ollittl Dl' tht dale a"d t lm• Mlyll,16.30.1'11~ 1~1~·11 \t ,S. tM LDC411 Aotntr Form1t1Dr1 (;am. Col.Inly Clerk o! Oratoge Co11tol'f GI\ Milt hlroifllbowe Vt tortn, ot wlllcll Urne m1s11D1'1, •lier dltO noUco' and l'.IUl)lk l ,191S. t,,.., wltl De PYllll<ll' Ol)elltd -••· PUBLIC NOTICE hl••lnq 1.s •e-qulretl bW law. lpprow:d F...W ..,,..,,n«l •I lh• ofll<I OI the Ols!rkll,0 __ __, _ _.,,.., .... ,....,~--• 11'11 prOCIQWCI tnnt••Hon of lhl Co$t41 Publl~d Or•toO-Coo1t Dau, Pllol, 1*4 E.1111 Avonuo. Fo11t1!1lto \lolleW,I IT ATl:Ml"T OIF Mew Par-Incl R,tre•liDl'I 01111"1<1. •· IN• •. 16. J). JO. lt1S !foll.I C.•Htoml•, lor Int lollowlto!; WITH ORA WAL I' AOM Sl')l'illed •• Plul6/'lno-8tar ...,,,...... 'ioALEOFOIGES eo PAATNERSHIPOPERATING tlOl'l ,"<lnd PL.'BLIC NOTICE 5EWAGE SLUOGE u DEJI WHl!lltEAS, p11r1111tol lo S.ttlon SPECIF1CATIONN0.S.01J FICTITIOUS:USIHl!.SSNAME l SXIJ. Go,,..rnrnonl Codo, tl01 leu !Mn l'ICYITIOUI IUSIHl!SS Bids ""'" bl ~11bmi1tN1 °"!fie torm . Thi loll-inq Ptrl41'i h•s •ilhdl'"- DIM!·fourth ol Ille l•11c10wtotr1 ltoll'll lfr• MAME STATE.MINT """'"Lodoy tM 01•11'1<11 Ito KUlll'GNKa 11 • Qtl'IOrel P•l'll\lr lrom tho r11D•l' havt 11on•d 1nc1 llled with IN! c1. The lollowlno fM!•ID<l I~ oolno ~. *'lholl 11revl•IDl'l1ot tf\6 ICIKlll<.eti-.. •rtftlfl,..,10 operollno uncl•r 1,_. !IC• 1¥ C.l•r• 111!i1lor.s •9<lvt1Un<i M>ld .,,. .,.11•1: "'9clllC:•l'-S, bldll&Dftk1Mldtwti. lltlolll bvll"'''.....,. el THE STASH tt ne••liDl'l;tncl SUTTER'S MILL. SIO B•oocho•Y IMOfrnetlorl -v bf ot>lt lned •I,,,. 1'"60 So. Bfllto1 St. S."11 ""' CA. WHEREAS, lhe City Counc:H OeS!res LIQlll\I BoKh, CA. "265"1 ebD\11 4lddros1. leltOl'Mlrle 9tl·2'11 or '27fllll • , to ~t • dltt lor he•rl"9 of wrilll!n pro-Oo!Mts J11n1ue R0<.110, 1m S. J.I0.1'10. ' TM llctilious 1>vil11t11 toarnt 11.i11- tnl1, II "''· ag41ln1t u ld -""""": Klng 51 ., S.nl• Alla. CA. "1104 J. W•v11t s,1.f!'1le r ,,.,111 fOr tho 1>1rlno rllllp .,.. .. , llJeO "' •"" Tiiis 1>us1,,.1s II <D11d1.1ct1d by ato ; SoK.r.i0twolthl ,_tt-n Ito 11111 CountwolOt•-WHEAEAS, S.cllo!o l SJ07, eo ....... Ol~IOw•. 1 •, Boe•dsol OlttCllWI 1"1111 Name etld Alkll'I•• of,,;.~ me11t C-, ptD¥1dOs thot ••id riearlno On lores J. Aou•e Pub115htO Or.angt Co.ti Oallw PllOt, Wltl'ldrawlftll' \llc-w Anto.HlllllOOn ''°' lhlU bt nol IOSI U11to .0 nor rnore than T~IJ 1!<1!1rnetot w15 lllod 11111111 11'11 /'Hy», 1'1S . 19'1·1' Ol'lll~A'°".: LOfllJ Boac/I, CA. - 60 d•Ys •Ht• 1110 01ss19e ot said CoUr'lty C1tr1< DI' Or•"ll'I Cov"lron Mill Sogntd: \/ic•w Annl1unt_, Rf!'IOl11tiDft: IS, 191S. PUBLIC NOTICE" f'Jl:S27 NOW, 'fHER EFO RE, Bl! IT FUl21 Publl1JWdOl'•to1t<eC04IUOollyP11o1, --------------l,RESOLVEO 111•1 P1ul•rlno·Bf'lr Ato· Pvblilh•d OrltoQ<e CoaU 04111'f Pilot, Mew•.1,,2l.JO, 1175 l6'16·IS Mlt.lllOft, I lrue 41nd correct 10911 /!Ny J), J0. ll'4Jlltoe•, I) ltlS 1161·1} IN THI SUlll'l!.RIOA COUJITOIF oescrlOtlDl'I ot.wnlt n Is •ll•(lltd IO lhll THI STllTI 0" CALI l'Oll;JlllA I" Ro1oatutJDl'I m•rko4 E-hlOll "A", -PUBLIC N011CE A"D iroa THC COUNTY OP PUBLIC NO'nCE P UBLIC NOnCE -.::::0~,7"~•'°'•"•c,~,co17c7"="c'cAc,c,7•Coc1-lbl' this wrcilic rtltrenct madll 1 per1 OJIAJllGE SYUOY Sf.ISIO" riertol, is to bl 11\1\tXtd ID lht t.osi. "'· AUMI I •fl!l TO IE HELO ey THE Mew Park arel Rt crootlon Ol1trlct-l'ICTITIOUI IU'l"ISS OJIOl!.JI TO SHOW CAUH SUlll'llllOltCOUlllTOl'Tl1E ORANGE COU"Y'f ID bttome I H•I lolld por ll1;111 Of 113 tor-"AMI! STA TIMI!"' IFOJI CMAJlll)I OIF JllAMI 1 TATI! OIF CALll'OJI NIA FOR PL.ANNING COMMISSION llOro3\e llmlU. TM followlft9 pot"IOl'il •rt OOlno Ou$l-Ito tf\6 ""-11•• ol 11\o Aoplk.tUDl'I qi TJlll!. COU"T't' OP OJIA"Glli O" AMl!."OM&:"T HO. 1·11 BE IT FURT111!1t Rl!SOL VEO!htl 1 ht11 e': FJIEO TAOASHI SHIMA8UICUA01nd Ht. A-UU. 'fOTHI! Oublk ht••l11g,tortM1111rpoMol,,.1r-SEWING BOX IOUTIQUE, 18'116 JUOV ANNI! SHI MA Bu.iURO, HOTl(il OP HIAltlHG OI' lll'IT• OJIA"G• COU"TY •no .. ,.u en 11rot11l1 by OWl'l.OlfS of oro-lrooktllltll II ('j1rll11d. Fount<oin H11sb1tod ltod Wiit, lor Chlfl9' DI l'flO" "°" lll'lllOIATI 0 1" WIU..A"O Gl"IJlllLPLAN oerly W!thlto sa id •tono ~od t•rrUorw, \lalllW,C..lllotllle N-1. f'IO•LITtlltST•ITAMC"TAJIY Nolft0 11 ntreO,Oll'tn t~al onJ..,.,.t ~Ube ~t IDr lho 111 dll'OI Jiiiy, 1tlS, J.,,leOl:lerharl1ll. l02•1 Oli.ner d•• Thi •OOllCl llOto of IFREO TAOASHI 1!51111 o1 ALICE S. FltEf:MAN 41l<e' 1911, I I Hr\ ol ii$ ptOtJr•m to ,.,,: 116:l0 11.m., 111'.DI _,, IMfNft.r 11 tlt,H...,,tlflllDl'llOKll,O lllornl1'126"66 SHIMABUICUlltO atod JUDY ANNI!. ALICE SPIJtAGU&: FRll!MAH, '•U ti-Sir 11pd1le 11H1 re line lht Ol'.tnoe O<'KtiC•blO. Jioto CAmplllll, M,forglll, HWll• SMIMAIUICUftO, H1110.n«I lftd Witt, AL ICE T. f'Af.EMAN, OotoaMO. c-tw Gttoor•I Pl<on l~e Ot•"91 eo-. " BE IT FUJITHE" RE SOL \IEO lfllot l"91Gl\9tKh, CIUIDttole '2._.. lot ChM!Qt of M"'el, ha vino beltl ll NOflCI! IS HEJi E 8Y Gl\ll!N ttwt t1 PleMl1'19 COmml~llOft •ill hold 1 all Mari"'i!~ mHo rtloronce IO i.t'llfl f hl1 011lln••• II tOl\Chl(ltd bW I Ito Court, 11\d 11 1ppe1rlft9 trom '"'4111 H-l..oll l!l. ''"mtto l'ill lllld lllrolriat11ll· Pllbllc .,.1,l"Otlludy so•skMI to con-\l\IU la•e olect 11 the City Hall at 11 ..,...,,1 oarlMl'shl•. Pllcellon thot FRED TADA$HI 1lon for"'°°''' o1 .. 111 and for Lauer$ 1ldor Amotoomint ,,.0 , 1·15 10 lht FairOrive,CoUeMeu,Collfomi.a. J<otoloOOll'llll\'11 SHIMA8UICURO atoO JUOY ANHE Te•l41"*"1ory rtfert~e ID Wllkh II Ora1109 CDUt'lll' Gentr•I Pli1t •flee: Ung !IE IT FU ltTHElt ":~SOL VEO!fllt e Tiiis sl•temont w11 lllld with lhl SHIMABUll.UAO fl•ve tifNI a.to apOlltl · made for t1.1r!ner partit ulars, Ol'lll thol IM'ld I" t,. u11Jncorpor<olld lt rrltory DI CDP\' DI thll Aei.olvtlon, Wflln PftW:, C.OU"1' Cltrk of o,atoQ<e Countr.,, ,.,..y llOI\ P•OC>Olll\ll lhll their "arres bl the lil'i'lll ond pl•<• ol htlr l1tt1 lhe w ... ~=~ C.::\:lcal;'I', lht Commission ~~':~~ ~~11:::1~~~~;~n~to -:;~or U, 191 S.. IF4l11 ~~~~:=~Hi~~SHi SHI{"" ~!..~to1~'<:,t,':!n':i ~!:.:;~!: wlll CDl'llldtr varlout land ui.e t fllongtJ wMle 11 lncludtd Ito tho territory P\lblllhtd Orange CO•sl Oalrr Pilot Now, thtttlort, It 11 her1b' ordtr No. l ol said coun, II 100 Clvlt Center 11'1 IM El Toro LaQuna H iii~ MIO>Wll' lhou<)ht ID be lnt lu0e4 in Int Dilttid, M41y 16,2),l0,4lnc1J""'l 6. l9li H'l'l·I Md dlttclo'll, !hit 111 ptri.onl lftltrtlt Ori"' WIJI. Ito the CllW DI $Mle Al'll City N•woort' Stach Mi1s10... VltJO oroviding ••Id Stllool gG'IOrnll'lg boatd td In Mid m•ll•r dO IHOI, bl+Dl'e lflf CalllMtoll . • C.pi'11r1h0 Bolch o~na Po•tot 1nc1' i..s11....oe 1 wl'llltn '"uo111....,.tfor. PU BLJC NOTICE ~In 0.Mrtmotol ) Dl'l tf\6 ttll lllWGI O.tH Mtiv 2:\ lfll. Chin Qt Ito 01e1tto,itoO U<ollll 1~ lht BE IT F INALLY RESOL\IEO ttwl •1--------.,.,-----I Jiily, lt1~. at 10:00o'ct0(• A,M.,olll W!Ll.IAM'I.. StJOMJll, At1•lltl"' H Ills • nd IFoothllf CDt· <OPr ot lhls JllMllYl!Oft be Medit 1 °"'" "OYICE 01' fllO"•llaS,.ONll•ILITT lllV 10 ll'IOW c111~ •hl' 1111 <iOllllcaU (.ou.ntw C~• rldor ero•. o1 the permantnl·rt<ordt ol 1111 Otw of Nolle• 11 hl••b' glwto 11111 tho ...,.... for Ch•l\Qt of namo 1fl011ld "°' bl l'JIAHJC A.OLDMlli" Tiit llt•r lno wur commence •I 3·00 CO.t•Mt... dlr\IOl\td wlll toot OI rolC'Ofltlbll tor 11rDt1lfll. OlilrMw,JCl11t&Gr- P.M. or as 500to lllol'•.tller 111 l'Olslb., PASSl!O ANO AOO,.Tl!lO tllls :IOttl elll' lttbll DtblllbUIUtl cantreclll!d b• !I Is l11rthtr ordortd 11111 I copy ttt °'""'Or, lit, tto •nd win bll Mid Ito the Comm!nlon's dlyolMtiy, 1t1J, .,,....... otntfthoto mww u , on or ,,,.,. lfl•t Ordlt 111 oublllhod In lfM °'""" ~ .. ktl, C..111. n"" hllrlne room In the Countv En9!nt1r· A. L. PlnkllY thlldOlt . Coos! Oelll' PllDI, e ftfW1MOtl' ol il""""WtfwPetUID!Mr Ing 811llGl"9, .00 CiYlt Cen1or Orlw M,l,or DI IM O•tMI lhb Jtth d•Y ot M6'f. 1915. lltl'lt••I (l•CllllllDl'I, prln.::to Ml PubU1'1td Of-11\0f Coo1t Dell, P!IOf Wet 1, s.an11 Atoa, c.111orto11, All 1.,. cu,otC011eMet• l'totoTaylor c_1,,e11e1ston<•t•ch foll!' Mewtt,JO,•ftOJ11t1tS,ltlS l'Ml-ii lt•e1ltd P•rtltl •l'e invltod to llltnd ATTEST: 1•SJContlntnl411 lll«tUiW -•kl Otior t flew°'!------------- -bl neard. Vl l .. I• M, WIU Costa MtM, CA. t26JI Ml• Mir Int. Wr ltton <omm1nts 1r1 t li.o lmollt'd. OeJIU'.'w Cltw CIO•• DI P\ibll"'" 0t-on91 Cot II O.lly Piiot, Tiits• lllOuld OI MAI ID the Comml•slori lhoC•ll' of Costa Mesa ""-W JO, )I, •rel"'""'' •• ,,,, 1 .... 11 Oeled this ])rd G•r ol Maw. 1•1s. 41tlheo00Wadclri,1•llOonlSPOlllble StATEOl'CALIFOlltNIA I --SAMUELOltl!.IZEN SUl"IJllOJICOUllTOl"YHI: 1ftlll dlll ... rM Ito •nw 1wont prior to or COUNTY OF ORANGE ) SS Juclotolt•ldSuptrlorCourt STATI OIF CALI FO•NIA l'OJI •I I,,. commencement ot tho sched~teo CITVOFCOS'fA Ml!!oA I Pt:Bf,JC SOTICE MUJllNS, 11.0P•OJIO, HOFIFMAH, THC c;ouNTY Ol"OJIANGI! OUOil( Mariflg. I, l!ILEl!.N P. P11JN N EV, Cill' Clor• HUNT & TMftOC.11.MORYOJll Jll•. A·76711 Addltlonal ltolorm~l !on reoardl"9 ""'d tl>OlflCID Cler• ot tht CllW (;ouncll l't(YITIOUI •USIJlll!IS '" ......... LA••• l•lt.-JOO HOT 1 C. O, HI 4 It I" G 0 fl 11111 pub!lt he1rln9/study leSi•Dft may ol lht Clll' Of CoUI Mo$1 nerobw Cet111¥ fllAMI ITATIMl"T 111'1 ....... , Callfti"'le t 11f1 'ITIT!O" 1"011 OfllOI! ft OlllllCTING bl 00111...i:i by (Oftla<tlng 1"'° Advinc:e VIII IM IOOvt 11\d lo••OOlh9 RtlOlllUOll Tiit IDllowltog per IOI\ It dOl"'O Mj. Toll Utll Mt•U21 ... tt•t1)J T " a CO H \I a T A N ( I! A " o PlaMln~ Olvi$lon ol tne EtovirDftfntn· No.1S.SJ-111v1w1fldreo1.111rll'PMMll Mises: A....,..rttor..,..lcM11 TJIAHtl'IJI 01' Jll!A&. ,.IJtOlll'IJIT't' lal Man.ooemtnl All'lncw al IU4·"80. woe! ildo0le$1 bw !ho uld Cl ly Co<Mcll •I JACKS CAA BEA UTY, 1119 E. Ox· ""9tlllled OrenQ<e Coot I Ollt'f l"tlot, TO COMlll'LITI! OICIO•"T"S C:Ollf. P\lbll~d Ol'liltlge Co•St O•lll' Pilot, 1 rogul•r mtttlng IMreol, Mid an 11'1! lord, S.nlt An•, Cllitornl• ,1101 ~.,.JD, •rel JVl\DI, 11, :M, 1•11 1tu-1 TJIACT Mir JO, 191) 101 .. IS 20lh Illy OI M41l', ltlJ. JOFVI Mitton Oawls, Jr .• 1119 E. OX· E1i.ttol IELMIER E. a¥ERETT. ale ho'!v,.~~~I!!: ~:dE•~~~~tl~~w lord,Stnl1Al\1,c.au1or"11t2101 PUBLIC NO'nCE ILMEM IE\l!AITT, 1k1 ELMER PUBLIC NOTICE SHlollM Cllw otCOlt•Ml••lfllsJltl Thl$bl.tll11t11lstot'ldvcttdb'.,,1to· IOWtN l'vEllllTT, ••• E . E. --=-==--~----·I dlvldu61. IFICTITIOUSIUllH••s l\lf.lllETT, OeCtlted. • CALIPOJIJlllll JllaGIONAL cllyofMol', 1'IJ, JOhrl Miiion Oawls, Jr. ~AMI ITllTIMIJllT , To •II "-tt0111 <i.il'l'llne lt11••W1t in WAT•JI OUALITV (OJllTAOLaol.IJtO !llALI f:llffl\ P. "1'111'11'11' Tilll lt.1'*1Tltfll MS lllfll wlt!I lho Th• loUowlno plfM>r\I .,. doing 111111· ... I.,,. .. ,., htrtlflll""*"''bed: A AfllA llll!GIOJll City Cltrtro and tl•Ofll(IO C.OUtol' Ciffk Of Of"ellllt Covrlll'"" IMW l'ltl$ ••: NOTIC! IS HEJi 18Y Gt VEN 11111 HtUCeMt ... JS-1'4 ClerkoftMClll'CDlll\f.U 6.1'75. M, L. INVESTMENT COMPANY, ElWAYNE E. E\11!.lltETT. as £•• ro11 Ne. CA61""4 of tho c11, of CHI•""'"' ,.... 1uo N. er1s101 s1r111, H•woort Stach, tc111Gr o1 lht w111 ot '"' •bo"" N med "-» llldllt'll A,,..to.... Sy: \lelirlt M. Wiii '""'blllhed Or"'et CMll O..Jtw Piiot, Colltornle"2MO 111<.Httol, """' llttd heroin ., Pl!1•1'°" IM PUBLIC NOnCE 14i•resident Home ~It I OeoutyCll, Cltrtl ol Mlll't, 1l, II, JO, 1t7S 161t-7J O..tolol T. McSM-'f. 2061 Port Ordlr Dl•l(lln9 !fie ConveYanco and Jll-•ldl. CA ttl06 tllt Cllw or C01ta M<IM 11'11101 Cir( ii ' H• Wfl'll'l l••t ll. 1•-'0H" DI Jlt•lt Pt-rly lo torT"Olt'I• r1141'6MDO PAUU.JllHO-ll!AJI AHHIXATIOH PUBLIC NOTICE Ctlllorn11'16li dtc.ecltnt'I CDrllrKt. Properly;, •ill.loll• HOTICI!. TO YMI COITll Ml:SA ,AJIK WllU..,,.., C. L11.lor, tSJO kffl Sll'MI, eel Ito ,,,. COVtolW or Rlvtrsldt, Sl.tto 9' APPLICATION FOJI WASTE A"O lll•CflllATIO" OllTltlCT ,ICTITIOUSIUSIJlllU cor-c1e1 Mar,CalltDrl'li•tt62.S Celllornla•l'ld ll do\t,lbtod41~fot'lows: P~oject Approved Newport Be:t.ch councilmen gave their approval this week to a 14-house residential pl'll.lect In csl11bllshe4 areas of the~luff3, ending years of community pro- teaL over elimination of the grHn areas. Faced with a large set or 'alternat ives offered by 1poke1aaen ror .more than 800 re- aldenll or \he commUntty. coun- cilmen Clnally rr1nted lhe permlulon to build -wllh 1tron1 condition• -the reslden· llal unJta on am all acreages at Viola Entrad a and Vista Caudal. Ever alnce lhe orlllnal project wu-bull t; lhe land had ~matned 'I under control or developer Oeor1e Holaleln and later the IDH Corporation. But m alntenance •• a manlcurtd park ind (reeftbell had ~ borne..b¥ r111-t•Y1 - Included am ong dozens of de- velopment conditions were several stiff ones suggested by residents. Constructi on trucks will have to use public streets. not the priva.te ones controlled by the. community association, "whecev~r possible." Ri1td pro- vta!Ol'.11 were set up for rorrcctlng any dam11e cau1ed by the con· atrucUon process. Councilmen bumped one other condlUoh 1u1iuttd by lhe upaet retidenu, l\Owever :..... a SZ,QOO.. p~r·Un1t (et IU811!Sted II a mean• ·or romptn1atlpn ror eslabllthlng In an llre1df_1elUod. private comm'\4.nity. . The 1pproval ends 1e.ara or con· lioverey which surfaced lnlUally · When plan I Cl lied for hlab•rlsl rt- lidenllaJ con1tructlon on the pro- perty. • OISCMAlllOa Jllf:QUIAl!:Me.NTS ThoM porllOl\1 ol Lot 1, llOCll "C", JllAMI! STATl!Ml"T fl:obol'IA. Ktrelt11, 12'>'9 Kfft Ol'lw, Cio""rnmtllt Loi I, Ito Sl<:llon 11, :::~=~!~~~ . .'.,•,iscll41•91 E11rn1 .... ~1~~1'n, ~,;~~·ci,:~~sti::~ ,.'!.":,~11ow1111 .. ,_ 11 dOl1111......, eorio:,:~ ~'o;:,11,1:;~~~::::! c.1mo l.~e,n.';,~, :,",'."':,",',",',',~ ',,','.',· C11llorn11, a1 ..... -p tKordlllcl ill OOYL•'I GEHl!illlAL BUILOIH Otfw,l,..,l11t,C11Uortoll"166I " .. -· " 9lt<•M'1 .. 1tTerlll, IM. Boo• 9. P•96 ' ol Mlt t tllefteou MA.IHTINANCI!, ..Ot Talbllrl. HI.Ill IE. ThOl'i'l•1Grttlty, 1t2'SMIW6y, Htrthtl'ly DI the l•llowltoO dtKt~ •lac•ie'I &oil Yard. In(, has flied• Rocord$ DI LOI AllOt l•I C.lllll'fi ......... kh, C..Ut. n... SoNI lotch, C.tllfemla to7+o liht: 1't11W1 el W11to Obcn.rgo ltld 6C>Plled t.a11!ortoi1, descrlbtd 11 folt-l \ltl-G. P1.I,_ t+o:2 Tltlbtn OIMl'I fl. MtC..l'ltr, ttsn DlelO ... IMlfll II• llD\rll.,, lht IE•Ullf•' fol' ~11'-U for IM dlKllll"lll of Btoltonlno •t Ito •totll pOl1t1 In lllt H1•1UtlQIDl'l lteth, C.Uf'. .,.... Pt•t. s.r.1. Al\I, Celltortol•tfl'OS ly lll'lt ol Mii fOt , twn>frlw 1'G.00 lffl ""'~Into N.._oort 8•l'· t1dlllft9 bound arr U11t •I Costa Ml Tl'lll tiuti_, II Ctftdvett<I lt'l' M I 0tl9DI'' I!, Gelts, 16$2 ftoenolle, thtrODfl lrom the Hoflht•1I (_, ... ::~ ... ~~'om.,_~ ~~·-~to,~ d~~~= :;'~;'°"o~~c;;:1~.~~!~1<~:!~; fiwMMl~•t-o. '""'"'°'" 1'wet~to~~~~;hl:~::1•mbg•"· 11111 :;:::~~~·,';::N::~~r:~i~°!f ~:.: 1oc1lod 11 241' N•,.PDrl Boulevard, """rwl10t1 ll•1•t1111on Ho. •l•llU, Tl'lll '"""'.,,1 -• flltcl with !ht ~fol 1'1Kt, Setota AM, Gellfottol• ~: tllellct ~IMl'ly 141 IMt PM"•lltl Jlltwoort Bt•Ch,CA . ..ld ltoOll ooltot MOit dltlltol IDUlh"' Olunl: o.rtt: ol Ot c ...... wltft Int Wlllt•ll' 111\1 of MIO tot; Ori tilt t1e1!1 ol 11rollmlto••¥ 11111 ••· 0t9ree1 )7'S7" tis!, S-4).U IMl 11111 'f t"'9t evntwfll\ Mlly lllDtlttl W. \.OflO. )>01 • '° Cel'tlOll tlltfttt W11tet1y S1J.•2 lttl P1rlllol '''" •tod 1ppUc1llDr1 DI 11...tvl 11•1'1-IDUf7'1 0 dltrfft "'1S" ..... MO.oo '"' "ltll. NIM7 ""'°"' Jlo ... CflltlO, C11ilot'tol1tu10 with MIO Herthtl'ty Uflt lo tho w.. ... 1, ~d• 6nO •1t111•11on1, tho C11ttorN1 lromthlcentorUl\l ftoltr11cUonollt., Robort L. Spltol, 2!SI Nol'th lllltOlt.al•ltl. ft .. 1-l W•lor OueU1, Control Botrd, Slrl'll t!ld Ol•ltl' A-llO~ ,._..., ..... g,.~ ~II 0.tly Piiot, Celll .. to/e St Pl6t tntl41 C.ll!Ottlll ALSO l!XCI PT lht E•tltrly 40.00 ..,,,. Mt Jllt9lorl, tentellwoi w prOPOMt Tfleiw;e •IOllt tal• t •lstino OOUf'I· ~t. M,. u.-. 1' S 1"""7 niw.o ·• ' Ifft. ..1..-wHt• •1sc111r1tt reqvl,.....ntl dar' 111'11 ol co1.., ...,..,. P••-,.., L•r•'t 0 . lnhtldlr, JOS1 C..l'oto S.ld t•flll I• l11Chidtd with ._,.,,... lft(f..cllto9 •lllvtll\ llmll•Uon' ..,,Cl Atcrtallon Dlsltl(I, "' a1i.e1utioll No. P UBLJC NOTICE Slte•t. "•wport .. Kn. Ctll!ornla .,_.,,,me• fltff Ito Boek )t, ._.11 Jf«lol c«ICflllons. ,..,,1;111, wt9"1ng lo tl ·l t~. Al'IM••tltft tdop!MI bW thl tMM o11 Jlt<Of'd ol $u'""'1 Ito the olll<t ot ,,.. ~~-, .. ~t letllo~ C:O.tll! MttDCltl' CollMll,.r llt•hlllOfl PlntTIOUllUllflllSI o.r.111 r. \1""91tl1, J\14S ........ C011toly Jl•t••Cltr ol ••Id co.,...1,. d1Kfll'f9' f't411111'1Mtl'llS art l11wlled IO ND. O •l<!, 1"6\IJ•rll'll No,. ill'l,.1191iefl, UMllTllTIMaMT ...... Sen J,,,_n C..OISlrll'IO, Glllfol"lll• 1'1'-•tMt It wlllch 11 "'1111 for lurtl'llr wtmltM ... lto Wl'llltot IOtllO ebDwedo ..... bytlWCMll ....... 01.,c-11 ,,. ........ ,.. .. rMl'I • .,. ..i111 ,.,. W1k111ors.•l'ldtMllhOUmtDl'ldpt<o« "'"'llt 16let lllfltl J11to• 11, ltlS. All .. r llOMlllt/tfl" Ho •••• , ••• ,., .. 10 ....... ) Tl'IDMel J. Wllll•l'flltto, ttecll u of ....... 1111 tfM -hes Mm wt lot am1N11t1wo9Jt<t1on1rettl...Oorlor it.M111lltto Ne. •1·1144 tflr•lolfl'I n1 THI L.AllJI a•T• co •• 7MYt lit>f'l'•Dl'l,,..,Ml•11tin\lleJo,Cllllotl'll• J-10, 1t1s, et •~OO 1.m., In tfle .. J-11. 1tlS. Wiii bt (Ol\lldtrld ,,, 'fll'~(Ol.ll''MI Ito I 9'Mt•I MUIMtlw, ti. c...tNlttiw•w. 1.1 ....... ltetl\c.. *7S t-t~ ol 0.Mrlmtl'll Ht.'" t.lld Wll flfnllllatltlfl OI 1111•1 Ot11tmll'ltfldM ,..II!' tr, nwtMl'l'f. •eltllrty, ""1tltf ... , . • , , Tllcll'l\tt J. H6111Mrl, 100S WnN t..,1, 11 !il:IO (lwk Ce to tor OrlnW.Sl, 111 ""°'dlllltt.W•l .. dl..Cherge. lfMMlo l't, ........ l'l'I' •lttClllNl,11 e (llllll'lt Ito , Jtot C. '"'"'Ill, 111 w. .... M., WN.ia11t•At'16,C.IUotnl1 9210f thtClll'elSM\loAl\l,(llllor"""" IHllll'll .,. rtcelveG, tht """"I tlW h:llUl'ltl MllM&tl' UM ol ... OI• U,.... lffc"' Cetlfotiilent.tl Wini-~-Wt""''· llOI H&lldlw O.IH .,,., tt, 1t7J ....... Wiii •••wt •tl("9r .. '"""-ltltt llDlfll •••t•"t to•l'l" • ....,... .... s. ........... 1n ............. llMlll,Newt1trllt00\,c.llfofftl1t"60 WILLIAM•.s•JO"M, ~L '4 ~I( flff•l"I wlll M .......... Int'' Mii. »00,to fff1 lt'lfl'l llle llOll'll UlllMlliNcl\ C.1...,.1 ttUt O• a . Crow •M ltlt' J. Cl'tW C-IY Clor--~lof INl, l"i6totted .. ,_ .......... : -...... ,., '· J ... , 1,1 We .... It., """°""etlllllPlltt•ltlMl~l.11'3' IAJIMl!S.l(Ml.G,J•JllMSQJll, '"" ...... ef w .... OIM.....,,.,,. ~· '"'"'fftf""ta1•-••.llli/\11*Mo -......eMc"'"C.lltorM•tMll 'f't llOrwltoMI I.!,_, Calltorl'lll..,.. )tlMJlllDY AlllDCA•r..IC* ,., .. toc11fl'lefltl~ l•CI •llMlt. um-.,.,., .. ,.. ot c.111 M••• ,..,. .. 1'1• .......... CtfMlvclllf • ., • ,, ...... •11• Mii It condutltd bl'. ,,,....,... ....... . '"'to'-roctlvM, .. ,.. •lfll• lto1W1'1'16114t1 Jltc,.a'11..-i· Dl•ltl(I •ttl'lt ... ,. IMI ........ ....... •I Nrtflerlfl• IJI •f'lloftt J. le ..... "''· II.,. fllt 11111 "''"be l1t'fltCWtl w MlMM <OlitM tt11tll t ... Mt ..... G,...,., Lel'IYll'lllllcltr .... MKAr1filwll>H., «iiWM ti , .... ltlt'-411 ... ,,, Ofllot, ' ~"' too.00 ...... IN f'lol"'.. TMI ......... , 11... ... ... Tllk SI•"""'"' Wll f llld l'oith ,,,. '· o .... ,,.. t•ta l11tll•to• Ave1111e. S111t• I, ... illn/f19, • a.-tf Olft• Of°llll' c.uM,Oll_, CMirltr (lt,•tif 0.6119" CounlwOl\Mllw .......,.IHdl. Ctllffl"l'lletHU 111.,..,. .... 1;o ..... ...,,lto•t"'MW110I Mll'llf11M.11J&CI'" ....... rt.ms. T•1Uttlt,.. .... •it1 .. 1'11 ... S10C1111.M. •IU1111l"A'0 ...... ''"" ....... rtfw:l!etc ..... ""*'"'"' O,Mfl c .. n °'"" l"lleol. ... ...... °'"""'(Nit DilillT ll"lllt ,.... ... or.,.. C.Olt Doi.,,... "*19f!H Or.,...e CNtl °"'"' l"llof,, ~I ..... Ortlltt CMtl Ooolly "'"" ..., .. ,,,. 1,..,, ....... ..,. MIW ••• -. ..... ,.,. • ~ MITU.,.,allCI Jllftf,,1J,1t,, ....,. MtiTU.>4.•.ltts 1t\WS ' • A J !I DAILY PILOT F,ld1y, M1y30. 191_. • QUEENIE By Ph il l~terlandi ~ ~\M1@1h';;r ~ a..,..,,.,.,.., . , f ~' "They're not for me -they're for a fri end who's looking for 'Mr. Right' ... " L.M. Boyd Black Market For Playboy Si'r. hO\V much \vould you pay for t he privilege of reading "Playboy" magazine? It's banned in India. But men there now re· portedly pony up a S2 deposit plus a rental fee of SI per da}' for an under-the-counter copy of that periodical. Personally, I'm \\'illing to pay the price of a haircut for such an opportunity. if the haircut con1 cs with it. OUR ANNUAL limerick contest attracted this from P e nnsylvania 's Tom Basara : ''There once was a fellow named Paul ... Who went to a fancy dress ball ... lie thought he would risk it •.. And go as a biscuit ... But a dog ate him up in lhe hall." You think we ought to go on \Vith this contest'! CO'ITONGIN Q . ··ae r ore E l i \\1litney in vented the cotton g in , it took one man 10 hours lo separate three pounds or seeds from one pound of cotton fibers. l·low long did it t ake the e arly gin to do that?'' 1\. It's said the gin did the work of 1,000 men. If true, it could handle that job in 36 seconds, No? OUR CHIEF PROGNOSTICATOR sug.' gests that a firsl ·class pos tage s tamp hereabouts will cost 15 cents within the next t \\'O rears. TOLD YOU that J\.foses was a stutterer.- but did I mention that Aristotl e was, too? · WllAT O'fJIER sort of business. besides the p<1wn s hop, does better and be tter as any recession gets worse and \Vorse? ON THIS world, four-fifths of everything alive is in the sea. I 'm told. S PACE CITY Star City in the central Russ ian steppes h:.is i.I population of more than 100,000 people. Plus a university, a concert hall, movie theaters. numerous s hopping compl exes a nd a soccer s tadium. But no tourists. foreign or domestic, can visit there. And it's not listed on any m ap ever made public inside or outside the Soviet Union. It's the U.S.S.R.'s s pace center. AVERAGE l'IAN 50 years aga"'stood five· feet-nine·inches tall. Today, he 's five-feet-10- inches plus. Average woman 50 years ago was about fivc·fcet ·2'1.1·inches tall. Today s he's .ii most fi vc-fcet-4 i. :L File that. TllE CAMPER who beds do\\'n outdoors in a sleeping bag would do well to cat a cand y bar h:.ilf an hour berore dozing off. Such is the <idvice of a medical specialist. The huma n body, it's said, is like a furn ace. so should be stoked al ni ~hl to ~ener:.itcextra heat. Addf'911m•lt 10 L. "'· lloyd, P.O. 80• u~. Co\1• l>VM CA'26J6 Copyri9ll11t7Sl.. M. lloyO MOTHER'S DAT MAT II SEE A COOKING DEMONSTRATION WITH THE LITTON MICROWAVE OVEN SAT., MAY 31 ,,._,2_ to4p.a. ollOTH STORES COSTA MESA mod B. TORO Litton's Home Economist will show you all the great features of the Litton Micro-Browner'" -you can prepare a tender, juicy steak-seared brown & crisp outsi~e in just 1 ¥1 minutes! ·Marine Worm Fossils· May Be Oldest in U.S.- ' • DURHAM, N .C. (UPl)-Geologisls mapping volcanic rock dep<>Sits along the Little Rive r have unearthed fossils Lhey say may be the oldest ever dis· covered in the United States, and possibly North America. Polytechnic Institute and Smithsonian 1~7'.::5.tj~~2:;:'.:~Jt:2:tt::i.:!::Z7~A.!:f:-:;?.:7T officials. The fo ssils are the re mains of nar· row marine worms_. some nearly a foot long. Jn the pa'St few days the geologists have removed them from volcanic depos its for eventual ship· ment to the Smithsonian Institution for further study. · The work is being done by geologists from Duke University, Virg~i:iia The fossils were first discovered last year by geologists from VPI. Dr. Lynn Glover III said the rock de· posits, about 12 miles north o r here, where the fossils were found are · between 620 and 650 million years old. ''The worms probably lived in bur· rows on beaches alongvolcanicislands that once existed in this part of North ·Carolina,'' said Glover . • ··~ GALYIJllZED PIPE Be daring, walk into one of our places and say, "Hello Dere". What can you lose? We got guarantees coming out our ears and a 31 year family business reputation to be proud of. Unle•• my boolr: ol f<n"orite ilaying• fqila me now I belieTe thl• atuff i• ln 21 foot •length.. threaded both enda. · 22• 33• l" ...... 44• IL~ '1 72 .... 3/" 74 .... 11>4" ... 55• lih" ... 66° 2" ...... aa• IJNEALFOOT 518" COLOBITE PLASTIC BOSE HIE'I fit•5 .......... HO-"'' BEATER HOUSES 1997 Uaed to almoat gi•e theM thing• away. How I understand they are going to con•ert them to ' condominiums and lea .. th• land. WATER .BEATERS Light, but a• u•ual 25 It ...... 2.87 allhoaea with 4.97 a hole at so It .... " either end. 7511 ...... 6.97 NYLON REINFORCED BOSE Tough nylon web 5/8"x25' .. 3.97 to gl•e it 5/8''x50' .. 5.67 •trength . ~, I.'~~· weifbt. .: 6/l"x75' .. 8.97 ' <i • :io .··_ ·5:500. P.V.C. SPBlllLER PIPE l/2 "xlO ft ..... 33 c 3/" 44• 74 x!O ft ..... So -a•y to work with. No threading. Cut it with any old aaw.FuM it with .ome goop we •ell here. What could be eaaier? P.V.C. SCHEDULE 40 PIPE Thia i• the •hiif for continuoua prea•ure. I u M it ahead of solenoid •al••• etc. Some modem codea say olr:ay for boUM wetter pipe•. cbeelr: ·em. Ill INCH o/, INCH 9• 13• UllEALFOOT !INCH 19° CLOSE OUT ABllSmlG SPllllLEB BEADS Boy. if I had a bead Uk• thi• I'd go ... a brain •ur~eon (what doe• he mean here? Ha• he left ua , en~ely?). Pla•tic .. REG ...... 224 WHILESUPPLYLASTS POP-UP ... 44c SPllllLEI TDUIS ~a marnloua tblng. Doe• the •prinkler Mleaold TGln• automotically, ... ry day, •kip a day. any day. THREE 1977 STAT!Olf- SIX 2977 STATIO!f 10. II OSCll.LATllG SPllllLEI ·Why l• Jt r cdway• thinlr of klalDg wb"" I read tblo word oecUJot.e.(~at oae'• ..,.ti.cl-• ......_-) 297 • 1._GJIL.. .. '. -66oct 30 GAL. .... . 40GAL ..... 77oo SO GAL ...... aaoo U eVen you got a little tiny leak it may be the apring freshet be- fore the big flood. Our deala are 5 year unconditionally guarant..d. fully gla•• lined, automatic abut-off. auto temp controL and with today'• prices .. the.e1hould pleaaeyou. LAWI GENIE AITl-SIPBOI VALVE A guy told me If you didn't bGTe antl-•iphon •al•••· ,•prloJdet water could •lphoa back Into the · bou••· Do you thin.Ir: so? PEERLESS SllGLE RAIBLE FAUCET 197 1397 Th• big dUf-..nce l1 loalde the fauc9t (wbere you ccm't ... it>. Na looking. a:nd a .tog:t• le"' la eaal~ to work. COLOBITE..YllYJ. _ ~~ RUBBER BOSE · Lllc• you •ff the 5/8"x50' .... 8.97 gardener• uae aa they dlaconn9Ct your• with a •nffr. 5/8"x75' .. 13.97 EYEBAii BOSE REELS TAP MOUNT 797 WALLMOUNT .... 9 97 Talr:e your choice, both hGTe a full year guarantff (after that' it's u•ually th• ten cent 0 -ring that gi•e• out) .. 3 TUBE SPRl.llLER BOSE lllblh••••d 25' 1.97' "aoaker hoM", but with today'• ecOnomy rw 2 97 tb.y hy to GYold "" • that word. SULPB4TEOF AMMOllA Prices mbat he good or tb.y wouldn't make wttb that "While It Laa'"" ""'°· ln.•IGD.t g"'9D•Up • 20147= LB. 'LASTS I ' . • • ' ' • Family Copes With Drug_ Abuse ' BJ LAURIE KASPER .()t ... 0.11• ...... ""'" J ack R. doesn't talk about· Families Ano'ri~mous in any or · ganized way. Like a new convert, he just talk s about it. ''It's a religious program without a rell1ion really~" he ex· plained. ''You fe el a greater· strength and you do the right thing.'' But he is not a new convert. Jn fact, h e wa s the firsl" chairman o•t Fam i Ii es Anonymous which grew out of another, less successful, pro· gram in early 1971 to assist peo- ple whole lives have been affect· ed by the drug problem of a re· !alive or friend. He credits the program, which is s imil ar to Alcoholics Anonymous , with helping himself, his wife and, at least in - directly, his son who has been ··clean'' now for two years. And so he can't stop himself. from trying to spread the word. "I just feel vefy slrongly Bbout ~e organization. "It's a great beneficialtbing." . But he is concerned because .the organization hasn't attra~ted . . many participants ln these parts. And he fi(ures there is "1:1 heck of a lot of drug abuse" in the coon-· ty'1 coastal cities. Now there m ay not be as much· .talk about drug a buse as there was in the past but Doc Clarkson, a mental health worker with the South County Regional Mental Health drug abuse team , con-. firms Jack's belief. "It hasn't " gotten any better,'' he said. ·•we do an awful lot of business now." Most of their clients are between the ages of 19 and 25, he said, but they a lso have an adolescent program for youths aged 12 to 17 . And the staff i!1 "kind of out-numbered'' by the people who could use their help. PARENTS FORGOTTEN The drug abuse team asked Families Anonymous to meet in their Newport Beach office, Clarkson explained, because "a lot of people wa nt to help the drug abuser but they forget about the parents. "They have an awful lot of good information for these parents." A previous attempt to get the orcanti atton going in Laguna Beach failed. · "We just couldn't get enough people to come,'' J ack said. ••ft's the d arndest thing. ••1 think it's because you don't want your neighbors to know about it.'' Since m e mbers remain· anon>;mous (w hich is why we're refe'rring to him only as J ack), there shouldn't be lh.ls probleni, be said. '0It's something I've never been able to understand." "Cll keep on pounding doors if one person comes,'' he said. "But .there's a lot more who need help out there.'' Maybe, the people who need it don'tknow about it. Or, maybe they 're just not re~ ady for it . He understands this, be said. "I was a slow learner. I couldn't accept it.'' When things are intense, then they're hurting more and they come, he explained: When their rela tive or friend seems to be let. ting up on drugs for awhile, they think the problem is being·solved so they don't come. . They think their situation is different from everyone else's. ••J figure they'll be bark," Jack said. ', '"You can see it. Yo4 can sec it so plainly how they're riding for a fall." But members don't tell anyon e wl)at to do. They just relate their own experie nces. DID WRO NG _.I did so many things wrong even before my older son started using dr.ugs, to s ay nothing about what I did after he started using drugs," J ack said, "'He was the all·American boy." Honor student, Athlete. Good looking. And J ack, now a retired Los Angeles fireman living in Laguna Hills, fell he had done all the things a good father was sup- posed to do. He was a good pro- vider for the family. He sel a good example for his son. And he used to tell his son tha t it was his responsibility to use his gifts for the betterment of his country. Now he knows, he was setting: high goals which his son couldn 't .even conceive of achieving. Un · dernealh the boy's qui etness, he believes, was a load of guilt . ' eop e BEA ANDERSON, Editor Dora Pinon supervises home project in Home Start program for David Reyes. See story below. Now Jack espouses how parents can't make decisions tor• .their C'hildren . ··You're making them feel guilty because all children wanl to please their p;jrenls." Rather, the child should ho told, •·Whatever you want lo do, whatever makes you comforli.i· ble, it's okay by me." _ . Jack explained, "You mako the person responsible for his acts." •le believes this is the. ke). to helping the family as well as the drug user . But it often means physically pulling the person out of the house and refusing to give him any more help. J ack describes it as "tough love.'' He knows it 's hard to do. It took him and his wife three years. They were going to Hawaii for a vacation. His older son was supposed to lake them to the airport. But while they were gel· ting ready, thei r younger son called them into the bathroom. Their son had overdosed. Nee· die hanging out of his arm, bluish and semi-conscious, he said he wouldn't go to the hospital unless they went on their vacation. CAN'T LIVE HERE They agreed but.added, "When we come home, you can't be liv· ing here." That was three years ago. For a year, his son, who was the n 27, Vo.'as in and out ~ftrouble. Once he ca me to lhedooroflhe family home a nd held up his hands. They were bleeding and broken because he'd been in a fight . ··tr you can't come to your o"'n ramily for help, who can you come to," Jack asked. ··1 didn 't help him ... Believe me, my heart was t earing.''. Then, two years ago, h1s son was arrested and he wouldn't bail him out. The judge gave the. son a choice of jail or rehabilita· lion center. The young man chose the rehabilitation but heJn- tended to stay only a few weeks: I-le ended up s taying a year. After seven months, he got a JOb. The son is on his fourth job now and J ack boasts that each change has been a step up. "None of this would have been accomplis hed, I don't think, if we hadn't been able to tell him, 'We love you. But you're responsible for yo ur acts ,' ··He Lelis us now, when we quil helping him, that's when he began lo help himself." It helped J ack too. He said he had been plagued with the pto- (See COPI NG. Page 82) :Hom·e . Start Expands Work Choices By ALLISON DEERR Ot Ille O•Uy Pilot S~ Some were shy at first, in- :secure about leaving the relative secU'Ht y of their homes 'and un- , sure of their own abilities. ~ ··1 ihink I 've grown. I think all ! of us have. I'm more sure about what I can do and where I 'd like •togo." The 16 participants in Home 'Start nodded in agreement. ··1 wish you could have seen us , in October when we were just : getting started. You wouldn't believe how we 've become a group, how well we relate t.o each other. "We were s tranger s then. Now, everyone helps everyone else-with studies, transporla· lion, family problems," said pro· ject coordin ator Beverly Carpenter. · Home Start is a pilot project, federally funded under the Com· prehensive Employment and Training Act of 1973 through the Participants in Home Start· . program, Vir.ginia . ' ' • • • • , • f '• • Reyes, Aly . -Salsbfird and Dora Pinon leap group games at • • Reyes home. College c~sses I . • ·and;groop . ;1, • . . .. . ' ~ • . . • • Community Development Coun-. cil by the Manpower Com· mission. TRAINING The objective was lo r ecruit low income and welfare mothers who met CET A r equirements for training to be licensed in home· based day care. Partjcipants wanted more than the optiOn: of a $2 an hour job. Most wanted lo stay at home with their own children while earning enough to get off welfare or boosl the family income. "We knew that there were wOmen out there who wanted and needed this kind of a program. The problem was finding them. "I talked to.Head Start parents and they talked to their friends. Soon I was recruiting people who knew people who knew people," the coordinator explained. · The program includes group ~tings at Caia Delhi· in Santa• Ana twice each week, for dis- cussions and talks by conSultanls in nutrition, education, finances and child development. All participants attend tv.:o • ·classes at Santa Ana College m creative activities for children and in the legal and financial aspects of foster and day care licensing. HOME PROJECTS "We also develop home pro· jects working with our own childr.en," the coordinator ex· plained. With her bilingual aide, Aly Salsberd, she makes home visits to each Home Start mother. "What we want to do first and foremos t is reinforce the role of the mother in the home as a. teacher. The focus is on the children, their n eeds and how they develop," Ms. Carpenter said. The women agreed that child care s hould be m ore than keep· ing children.clean and fed. "We want to offer t he kind of place where they care about what's happening with the kids." We hope, they said, Home Start is developing just that kind of re- source. For many of the women, rang- 'ing in age from 20 through mid·50s, the· program is a· big step forwarCI, although initially tentative. Some already have set their sights on olh~r work than in the home. Two orthe original 20 have found work. Aµoth er is inte rest ed in specializing ip caring for ll\e vic- tims of child abuse;-, AnoOier Would like a degree in special education. REINFORCEMENT "We try to give as much rein- forcement as possible. For some of the women, it is an opportunity to take ~allege classes. Some didn't finish high school.'' One woman noted that finally attending college, and discover·. ing eVerything that was availa· ble to her , was the most reward- • ing part 01 the program. Ms. Salsberd makes the pro· gram easier for those who are more comfortable with Spanish. ·'She does research, lranslates resource m a terial into Spainish, \lint:ls Spanish sources of help. At SAt, she translates the tests and evaluations.'' The sense of rapport among the participants and two-person staff is e.vident by the sharing of credit for the successes thus far. '"Without Beverly,'' said Alicia, an articulate young . mother "we could never have gotten this off the ground. "She's a singJe parent. She knows and can understand what it's like to have to Jeave your children with someone you 're not s ure about." · NEED MOTIVATION ' 0 No,'' interje cted Ms. Carpenter, "I couldn't do it ir everyone wasn't motivated ; if we didn't want it to work .'' It has to work, all agreed. Amid disc.ussions on child de- velopment and learning are cons· tant reminders of why they're in- volved . ·'There is such a negative con- notation to the term ·welfare mother.' We don't want to be on welfare, but we don 't want to leave our children, They're im- partant." From another facet of lhe pro- ject, on -site visits to schools and child care centers, they've b ec ome more a ttuned to children, especially their own. In carefully chosen Spanis h, one woman said that s he was -haP.pier now. Her hus band and children were much closer and understood her need to be away from the home for a while each week. A black woman , who came into Home Start uns ure of herself, feels, "I 'm making progress. Now, I know how much there is to learn about child growth and de· velopment at different stages. '"Without this, I 'd be where I s tarted, blank." When the group "graduates" the diploma won't be a day care license. They could have applied for that without the training, Ms: Carpenter said. The gold star al the end, in·1 stead , is being able to offer more' .to parents and working mothers -dependability. : "We won't be BABYSITTERs . !Babysitters just sit. We'll be· ,teachers. Children we care for ·will be more ready for school. They'll know someone cares about them . ··w e'll be sometbing extra, like . . an extended fa mily.:• · . "Ms. Carpenter, whO look six·. -years· as a single parent e"aming .h er degr ee in home leconomics /chlld development ·from Oregon Stale UniversitY added : "Working mothers often have lo pay almost as much as they urn for child care which may rftOt be reliable . I know. l 've been •there." ' "Added one Home Starter. "I would base my fee on whatever the motJ\er made, so we could both make a decent living." "That's what we mean by car-ing." ·:.l.-• lJ.-.IL '( ~ILOT / Frld1y, M1y 30, 1975 •• Wife Flunking J l. Calendar 'Clubs Install Ann Landers •• Althou1h summer often signals a temporary halt for their activity, many Orange Coast or. ganizatlons have prepared for the fall by electing new orri cers. DEAi\ ANN . LANilERS: Me wtite to AM Landen! Never. But be re I am . J don't know what eood ii wlll do, bul maybe I 'U feel better. The problem is l\'Y wlle. lJeNl'S how I'd rate her: DEAB.llUFF: Y-lel&er-· -aa llllere•llal dao. -maket yMr wife ._.... ftU &llat'1 wllat I meald.. Tr9a, .. ,, ri;iiO••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiAiiAii;i~~~;;;;~;;;;i;-.- ..... INll ~II widow lo 111.., - ....... ~ .. 1oar11Ule111Ute roloe aad yery UIUe -·lied M: kM•• bet&er, M ...W Illa•• canted Ute 'ia••raace. Among those planning for the coming club ye•r are: Housekeeper -A. Cook -A. · NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN: Hilda Robinson: president; Adrienne Cohen, vice president; Ethel Kiss, treasurer , and Mary Hamilton, secretary. EconOmi1t -A. LOver -C· minus. The reason I don't flunk her completely ls because once in awhile she does me a big favor. Usually ft's when we return rrom a party Mnd she's bad more than her share of drtnks.1ben, l'd bet· ter be ready or I would never hear the end of it . meUI Ille laa• l•lllb&U.. aboat au lllal udoul>ledly 10 INldl lo btr early tblldbood. I • .,_ jol•t coaa1ella1. Ca•'t llllurt. M!Plllelp. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I mmt reprimand you for your crude reply to "His Widow." She wrote that her husband died Sud - denly, leaving her with several children to ra ise, and no In· surance. She said he believed it made better sense to ,put money in the bank where it would draw lnterest rather than pay it out in· insurance premiums. Tbe woman was very bitter when she learned the bank ba.Jance was $5,000. Ir he had carried life in· surance she would have collected over $50,000. DEAR ANN ' LANDERS: The letter from ''The Life Of the Par· 11 •.m.' .. p.m. · ty" prompted me to write my ~ ;'& NEWCOMERS CLUll OF IRVINE: Mrs. Sanrord Brickner, president; Mrs. John Willis, vice president ; Mrs . Mic h ael Axelrod, 15ecretary. and Mrs . Roger Buck, tre¥l:,lrer. CINDERELt,A GUILD OF NEWPORT BEACH: Mrs. Walter BeMett, president, assist· .eel by the Mmes. Richard Flamson and Carl '' ~ova, vice presidents; John. Ralphs a nd Ron~l~ :.Winterburn, secretaries. and R. R. Roseltin1 , treasurer. ANGELITOS DE ORO : Mrs. Paul M. Rogers, president, and the Mmes. Richard Bertea, vice president ; Richard J. Stoddard, (fea::;urer . and Alex Robert.sop Jr. and Robert M. ~rton. secretaries. QUEEN OF HEARTS GUILD: Mrs. William Wittman, pres ident, and the Mm es. Thomas Peden, EdY,.ard Smyth and Francoise Haravey, vice presidents ; Kemp Richardson and F.Brad- ford Gleason , secretaries, a nd Norma n Jacobson. treas urer. , Her usual routloe eoes like t.hla. Alter supper. in the middle or a TV program, she geu up and says, "I'm tired and I'm 1oing to bed. When you come in, doo't bother me.'' On weekends he r best excuses are: (1) your mother may drop in; (2) the kids are due home from the movies; (3) the in· suraoce man, paperboy or milkman is coming to collect: (4) l just had my hair done. I'm not the t ype to run around, but I dqn't know WHAT type I'll be in five years. (I 'm 38 now.) A word to you chicks who are sit· tin& around drying up : 1r there are enough treats at home, your man won't go oul looking for tricks. -UNDERFED AND LOOKING IN BUP'FALO You answered : "Put aside your resentment. In my opinion your hus band wasn 't i n· considerate, he was ignorant.•· What a lousy thing lo say! The man is dead. •le can't defend himselr. And YOU call him ig- norant! You owe every widow in the world a n a pology . -AP· PALLED . DEAR APP: Tbe man· WAS IC· aoraat. That's wbat I said aod rirst letter to a newspaper. .; Your advice was exactly rl&hl. . clM./11/4 · tknow, because I wuonce ''The - Llfe of the Party,'' willi.n.t to be 3424 Via Lido, NeWport Beach the butt of any joke ln exchanae I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ roe attention. It took a shattered t. maniage to get me lnto ther.,y. When 1 discovered the real me, I achieved a sense of personal worth I had never known before. When I tell friends that my new approi:ch to life is the result of counseling, I get looks of dis· belief. "Why would anyone so Joi· 1lY and outgoing need therapy?" they ask. Ir they onlv knew! Now my rriends· call .. ME. I don't chase them . I can be in a group and listen instead of trying to monopolize every conversa- tion and hogging the spotlight. , Sign me -SHOWING OFF LESS AND ENJOYING MYSELF MORE DEAR FRIEND: Less IS more. I doff my boa.ne&toyou! LA·ST 2 IAYSI MEM.ORIES ARE FOREVER TUE S DAY CLUB OF NEWPORT HARBOR : rt1rs. Hanson Puthufr. president, as. sisted by the Mmes . Arthur Cox, George Hall and W.P. Trox ler. vice presidents ; Ruth Kennedy, Cla ude Cotton and Ralph Cunnin g ham, secretari~a nd Emanuel Grody, treasurer. MISS N VIEJO WOMEN'S"CLUB: Linda ~lartin , p sident ; Doree Rudolph , Mary Nahas, Carole Mc uw and Claire llearst, vice presi- dents; Car ol Harvey, secretary, and ·rat Fitzpatrick, treasurer. EDELL CLUB OF LAGUNA BEACH : Mrs. Virgo:· Ideas Highlighted ' I : . ,.., j • ,, .. Richard Bo s well. president ; l\1rs. J ames Townsend, \'ice president; f.1r s. Del Upchur'c h, treasurer. and the Mm es. 1-lugh Blue and Raymond Schirm, s ecretaries. SATURDAY, MAV 31 By SYDNEY OMA RR CHILDREN'S THEATER GUILD OF NEWPORT HARBOR: Mrs. Newton Wayne, president, will be assisted by the Mmes. Richard Jordan, vice pres ident and Wynn Chapman, secrelarv·treasurer. ARIES <Ma r ch 21-April 19): A more greearious appr:oach to living is indicated. Com· munications open up. TA Ult US :(1\pril 2Q.May 20): Your ability to be a good g ue.!t is accented~ One who is con· cerned with your welfare makes generous gesture. EPSILON SIGMAN ALPHA INTERNATIONAL. ETA ETA CHAPTER: Mrs . Harold Shaw, president, and the Mmes . Melvin ~Godfrey, vice president; L. Z. Taylor. treasurer, and Thom as Simpson, secretary. GEMINI (f\.lay 21-June 20): Good lunar aspt"ct coinci<les now with philosophical concepts coining into £ocus. · • From Page 81 • • • Coping With Drugs blem 24 hours a day. "I didn't care if I lived or died." But a fter t he son left , "we started living." He had gone through a cycle of :feelings, he explained. ~or awhile, he d\d everything he -could to help hi s son. Once he reven nailed all his son's bedroom Windows shut and then s lept in a 'pla'ce his son would have to pass if tre tried to go out. But he admitted there were also times wh en "I just couldn't stand him." Now he s ays, "I love him. I un· .derstand. FRl'S UPHOLSTERY .._,._w_. ....... ltJZ......_...,, .. c........._.s ..... zst DIV<JRCE Only ,Jl,Q , WITHOUT AN ATTORNEY 24 HOUR SERVICE BBB ..... , .. _,,_ .. ..... _, .. GUARANTEE D ~-~~-~-~·-~~ 673-2345 ~01\l<JRCE SER\IJ~S Of:. CALIF· A emon·s SPORTsWEAR :BALBOAl9.Nl'.l 216McrineA'l'I. 675.1904 Money Tree "I don 't like "·hat he did and I never will. But I certainly won 't reel the way I did because I know more now.·• Yet the other night he dreamed that his son was on drugs again. .. In my dream, I couldn 't accept ilhe fact that l was powerless." And the rirsl of l2 steps in the Fa milies Anonymous program is the reali za tion that the person is powerless over drugs and other people's lives. He keeps involved in the group, he explained, because he needs the reinforcement. And he said it has helped him be much more tolerant, honest and realistic. "I don't know ptY son is going to stay clean," he said. "All I know he's been clean ror two years. "He's a nice person now. ''He was a horrible person.'' ·' Interested persons can attend the meeting held every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the drug abuse team's orficcs at 1441 Superior Ave., Newport Beach. Information can also be ob· tained by calling the organiza- tion's 24 -hour hotline at 213 -775- 3211. FRIDA V MAV 30, 9 A.M. 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SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You get invita- tion lo "relax and have fun." Accept. You have, in recent days, been under pressure. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Accent Is on ideas that can be trans(ormed into workable concepts. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): 111ak e in- quiries r egarding finance s, p e rsonal possessions, payments and collections. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): ili•hli•hl personality. Make personal a_.Ppearances. Trust judgment, intuit.ion. Family members become allies. · PISCES (Feb. 19-M·arch 20): Glamor and · discretion form allianc:e. You realize that being alone is not the same as being lonely. · Ir today ls y,our blrtlld.ay you were on your own at " relaliv_tl,y early ap-: You create your own traditions. You are stubborn,. versatile and charming. Large 11x14 PORTRAITS IN LIFE COLOR s14•s Decorate your home with Love ( For 4 davs only, our awarct-winntng photograph8f will be In our store wilh his lalesl photographic lechniques ind eqoioment. 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And Keystone's open 9-12 Saturdays. \ Drop In today and pick up your free "Guide to Interior Plant Care" by the Living Pfant Growers Assoclatlon . Ke,ttoft•'• interest CGm_POU,,.., dai'b WJth new $40,000 anauranc .. 7.75'11t • 6 Yun • $1000 Or More 7.50' • 7.79'11t 4 YNn • $1000 Or More 6.75'11t • 6.98' 2·112 Yean • $1000 Or More 6.JO'llt • 6.71'11t 1 Yur • $1000 Or More 5.75' • 5.9t'llt 90 Di~ · $1000 Or Men 5.U't • 5.J9'11t ~egul.lr paubooli; account ~ from day4ro to d&y~t 0 KEYSTONE SAVINGS Westminster Office, 14011 Beach Blvd. Airport Cen1er Office. 4301 MacArthur Blvd. Nt•tMMm Office, 555 Norlh Euclid Mi&tlon Viejo Office, 2-i041 Marguerite Parkway Atseli over S 75 million ·I • BOOMER by Wa F. lrowa and Mel CulOll TIJMBLEWEEDS '"' . . I HEAR 'IO!J HAP A.l'A'f'E, Wl'!H 1.IT!l.E Pl&EON I.AST NICiHT I POttr WANNA TAWii A1'0tJT IT. FUNKY WIMK~BEAN FIGMENTS ..,.... ~ ...... ,_ )o NANCY LOOK AT TH IS PHONE 6 1LL--- Y0U'VE 6EEN MAKING TQO MANY PHONE. ' • r;;AU..s ' lltU.,Mt WCILY fVfl\' VI({. ~OT · ON ~YS 111~€11 ~€ MA6 A GAW. ,. Ol1 A Pli'ACf1a Ol1 WMfN l)f,~J" ~t'S T~AvtLLI~ .. <,>00'1.L JUST HAVE. 10 DO WHllT I 00 Al<IO BllRt-1 '!HE. MIDNIGHT Oil! DID THE TELEPHONE RATES GO UP? TODAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLE PEANUTS UNITED Feature Syndicate ve11ercS.r"•P11u.1eSolvM: ACROSS lr•vel .left).11.L'Y', Mt MA'( llA~ ~t IT OMa. by Tom K. Ryan I CAN IMAEilNE HOW YOO MUST FEEi. Al1001' HIM I #~ .i1lli by Tom Batiuck I 'D LI KE A JAR OF MIDNl&HT OIL! by Dale Hale ·by &nie Bushmiller " !I .. I• C'" ,_ 45 Spokeam•n " 1 eremoo-47 Arm.cl stall conl1ict 5 Anw•r ··-··: 48 Become U.A.R. torn ptesident 49 State: I r ~ 1-----l 10 Pump, !or lnlormal one abbr. · 14 Flat 50 SQUander 15 SYmmon 53 Capuchin lorth monkey 16 Molten rock 54 Transparent 17 Mud depoait material 18 Flor Ida and 58 Peremptory ' ' Gaspe, IOf 61 Wat9rbound \wo 1,nd 9 Clock dial 39 Birdie plus 20Extempora· 62 Anan ias. tor number one ... neous one 10 Artlllcl•I 40 Rippling 22 No: French 63 Rail loser channel 42 Winter 23 Mounlain· 64 Close In 11 Vestibule sporlaman OU. 12 Elliptical 44 Origin at &p11ce 24 Cutthroat 65 Whlrlpool 13Not stiict Abbr. 26Scottlsh 66s 1 19Trim closely 46M1jor lege •re 2 1 Kind ol gun 1ranapor1atlon name pralhr 6 7 Large 27 Kind ot opening 25 Bellroom ' _woute trlangla dance -""ht.,llon•I 30 Turns aside DOWN 26 lnorganic relinQuishmenl 34 •••••• substance 49 Mutiny Francis: TV 1 Ar izona cily 27 Merehandis 11e1sa1 personallfY 2 Keenly ing even ls 50 Bit o1 35 Exh1u1led desirous 28 Boring tricilery 36 lndlgnallon 3 Organism per1on: 51 Among 37 Astrologlc•I 4 Allows Slang 52 Miner's n•ll orouP 5 Month: 29UntQUilled 53 Cause lo 38M1llciousitl Abbr. 30Mlnulespot ce1se will 6 Thorough· 31 L1rial . 55 Cruiling 40.$hower tire 32 One making 56 Blowol' the 41 Even: Pottle 7 "·· ••• 1 lest hand . 42 Dagger Tresp1as.. 33 Significance 57 Ory_ up: V11. thrust 8 Atlled by 36 Bearing 59 P,,.t 43 Roads tor n11ure plate 60 Epoeh ' 1 • • '"hrt-t- , .. ,. JUDGE PARKER • MISS PEACH " '.l ,- " • ' . . ' Frid!)'. May 30. 1975 • DAil Y PILOT .., DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK GORDO ii( Sl~T fO'? ANDT•£R li?M[ SfUOV C'OUl\.Sf ' ..... -'"'" .,.._~,.·· l'. WAM'f YO<J 'fO t..evet.. w11'H, Me.~ PR. SMOCK' .•• I - WM.A1" CAN YOU PO FOR A Sl!Vl!RI! CAse OF WHIPL-ASM? WHAT Stl&ICCT? """'"' l\lU l'<Ul;f e£LLY tli\N{tN(1? NO'f' MAL.FAS MUCH AS A G00'7 i...AwYeR CAN PO.'~~~ MOON MUUINS @ "'11A:ifol4 by Ferd Johnson BUT /NFL/l.TION BU STEP Tfl.4T BUBBLE·- ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Schut& ~------....; SINCE ~EN /'l.E PAACAJ(f5 SERVED 5TANDING ON END? ) it: -~·"''=~=r=;:~="' ...... ="' "-------~ by Mell c c by Cllester Gauld MEANWHILE, l'LL Pl1T UP THE BARRICADES 'IO l<EEP Ol1T CIJS10MERS WMO MIGHT CiET BIT. NOW ITT.AKES l'IOTH Of US w:>RJ<IN' );e;ii;;:::5$.;T .JUST TO LIVE AS C~EAPl-Yt. i:>' -AsoNE . ''J · DENNIS THE MENACE v • • • . -,, • - ,\ -+ \. •• ' .. .. •• • • -. HEADS NEW BRANCH Tetsuo Suzuki Tokyo Bank Branch Sets Friday, May 30. 1975 Pet HQtel Gets 0 1my For Laguna ... Charlie's Trading Post, the Lagun• Canyon fortreas of junkman Charlie. Peddicord, is on its way to becomina the ··Pampered Pet Holiday Hotel'.'' • The site has been purchased by David A. Tickner, a Laguna Beac.h resident and tObacco com- pany marketing executive, who now is oversee4tg construction ot a boardin& house for 100 docs and . - cats. TICl[NER SAID be decided lo open the boarding house because ·such a facility is "badly needed in the area." He said he plans to s taff the facility with four p. ~rsons. includ- ing a "kennel master.""Boarding rates will run from $3.50 to $4 per day for dogs, depending on si1:e-: and $3 a day for cats. . . -.... .. ... ,_ . ' Irvine Open Acquisition of the property and construction of the kennel will cost $150,000, Tickner said. He purchased the tradl;..1g post Crom Anthony DeLeo of Brooklyn, N.Y. DeLeo purchased the post from Peddicord three years ago. Peddicord, and his wife, Laura, packed up their junk collection. and moved to Laguna Hills a year. ago after 40 years in the junk busi· ness. Peddicord died May2. . DAVID T ICKNER WITH HIS AWARD WINNING BAS SETS L .. gunan Opening Pe t Holiday Hotel In Canyon The Bank of Tokyo of California wilJ open a full·service domestic and international bank- ing office in Irvine, June 6, ac- cording to bank president Masao Tsuyama. TICKNER SAID the facility . will include an enclm;ed area where dogs can be exercised and another enclosed ··recreational area" for cats. 3 A uto Make rs S ee He said Tetsuo Suzuki, former- ly vice president and manager of the Santa Ana branch, has been named head of the new office. l ncr e<lS ed Worke rs Temporary qu~rters for the Irvine branch are near comple- tion in the Food Park section of the Irvine Industrial Complex at 17951 MacArthur Boulevard and A conditional use permit for operation of the kennel was ap· proved April 29 by the Orange County Planning Commission. DETROIT (U PI) -General Motors, Chrysler Corp. and American Motors said long-term . layoffs at the three auto com- panies would be reduced by mprc than 3,600 workers by the end of today because of increased pro- duclionschedules. Main Street. . Irvine will be the 24th California branch of the bank, which currently reports assets in excess of$1 billion. SUzuki's initial staff will in- clude banking officers Sciichiro· Iwata, Allan ·K.awagoye and Harry Kilagaw~; Public Rela- tions Officer Ike Komoto; and olher locally·hired staff mem· hers. .Standard-Pacific Lists D ebentures The three a lS"o said all produc- . tion facilities would be open again Suzuk·i said a "'dov e ceremony" June 5, al 4:30 p.m ., will launch a monlh of festivilies which includes a grand prize drawing for a Hawaiian trip for two. Weekly prizes will also be awarded. Standard·Pacific Corp. of Costa Mesa announced that its 10 percent subordiirated sinking fund debentures, due 1989, were listed for trading on the Pacific Stock Exchaqge, effective May nexlweek. · The Ford Motor Co. was to re· JXlft its production plans for next \l."eek today. · GM said its indefinite layofrs .WiJI drop to 102,000 by the ~nd of "MaY. compared with the 105,000 the company counted on longterm layoffs at the end of April. It will be the 11th week in a row in which GM's 25 car and truck assembly plants will be ope rating. 27. . Pursuant lo the listing, trading on the Pacific Stock Exchange will be limited to units of $100 and Sl,000 principal amount of defen- tures .and integral multiples thereof. . . . We have to try a little harder. We 're an authorized Mercedes-Benz ·dealer. but we're new ·and we 're a. •little off the beaten track. We have to try harder. That means lower !lrices, good lease rates. and ·just plain good customer service. Come in and see Mission Viejo Imports San Dle<JO Fwy. A•ery Exit. 831·1 740 or 495-1 70~ New (:ompariy •In Newpo~t More than 200 guests were on hand to celebrate the recent grand opening o(_ Tel- T a .p e Systems in Newport Beach. will come into the·· message center 24 - hours·a ·day.'' The Newport Beach· based firm is also headed by Larry Levinson and Karen Martin, co-directors. Steve Braselton, general manager , "said the information-by- telephone-tape system, allows people to obtain data on subjects, by dial- ing a telephone number ~=========:::::;:::::;:::;;;:;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;;:;~1and requesting a specific tape by number or sub- ject matter. Escrott's D iscussed At College Lease the newest from the oldest. We're the oldest Lincoln /Mercury dealer in Orange County and do we have a car for you! The new Monarch; the luxury car without a luxury price. Lease one for S)J.30 per mo. JO -UL' LP .-~"'"' •o lo'Aol ;.,..,_ ..... Qoll;. ci.... ,,,...., -• lXlJ,_ • 1 • ~ .r·· ,, r*d OHNSON &:SON ~ LINCOl.N/MEllCURY ~ ~--. ... , .... ~ ••·-: "!.".:...=:_.:::: •. :. '=..':'~--, I "The Ultimate Car Phone" r; .. ~ .... . .. I' • .. • AUTOMATIC CHANNEL S~ARCH FOR INCOM ING CALLS AUTOMATIC .. AUTO-CALL .. FOR OUTGOING CALLS ELECTRONIC CHANNEL seLECTION Solid u a1e elec1ronic.c11culu are con1u1n1 ly sunning all eleven ch•nrieli W 1ha1 Qlls can be on ANY cNnnel, No longet" ·is 11 necesury i"or i:1111 10 be blocked by• single buty-d.an,,et. OUT-GOING CALLS When pl.-cH'llJ a call the user simply presses a convenie,,t bu non etec1ron1cattv ie1ec11ng •clear channel DUPLEX OPERATION Th11 rjtJplr.11 (two w:1vl c"cu•••v el •m1ri;;Hes 1he nttd 10 UM! lhe push•IO·t11l k bu ...... Thus rri1l-.nq the •1'10b•lt! !)hone II tliV 10 UH IU IHI olOce f)honti. LEASE OR PURCHASE. Desair COMMUNICATIONS 1001West17th Suite "F' • Costa Mesa Phone 645:1435 L "The program we of- fer can be used by gov- ernment agencies, schools and occupational programs, medical or· ganizations, and finan· cial institutions1'' said Braselton. "The student calling about class schedules. the tourist curious about local at· traction s ~ the busi· nessman with questions about the stock market ~re all typical calls that Newport Firm Get,s DesignBi.d The Reynolds Environ· mental Group, Newport Beach, has been selected to coordinate fesearch, planning and design of a 6,000 -acre urban re- gional park in San Diego County. The. Lake Murray, Cowles and Fortuna Mountain regional park complex Is perhaps the largest of ill kind un· dertaken In the Welt in recent years. A C!OlllOrtium or ftlms. Is auoc:lated with the Reynolds Gr0t•p, lpclud· Ing Envlro11mental Analysis Syat1 n1, Lake Manacement, Inc., the Nate1aon Company, and Design Etc. The Reynolds Group Is an environmental re- source and planning Orm whJch Is completing the lint phase or. the Open ·space · Coa I/ B enelil /\nalyail for the Coyot& Jlilil ln Fullerton. ''Legal Aspects of Escrow Problems in 1975" is the' title of a special educ•tion • seminar, sponsored by the or·ange County Escrow Association, June '7 at Orarige Coast College. · The seminar runs from 8:30 a.m . to 1 :30 p.m. in the OCC Science Lecture Hall. A tee of $8.50 covers re- gistration, morning cof- fee and a luncheon. Checks should be mailed to the Orange County Escrow Assn .. P .O. Box 749, Santa Ana CA 92702. Registration w'\11 also be conducted at the door. Guest sp~akers in· elude Marion Scott of the Bankof·America; Gerrie Pugh, president or CEA, and Barry Lawrence, an attorney for Mazirow, Schneider and Forer, Jnc. For more information, phone 5S6·5880. Sportwear Firm Open . ' ' /\ tactOry ouUet '1DNi 'for Junloc & mt11es 1portswear and lln&eric has been established at 1804 Newport Blvd .. •l the corner of Harbor BoulevarC:t in Costa Mesa. Mrs. Penny W. Myl!(!I. with backgroun'd In th8 loihlon Industry, 11 pre- sident of the new flrm,1 Manufacturers Factory OUtlet-Newport, l~c. Longterm .layoffs at Chrysler are down to 36, 750, the lowest since the first week of January but still more than 30 percent of the No. 3 auto company :s hourly work force . Its e ight car and truck as- sembly plants will be operating for a fifth straight week. New Yor11, -Fol· towlnt.J h • nu of llld -a1kfll rl· en on Nlulu.I , ..... , ill Quol•d by lflt NAS.O Int. .. ..... , INy 2', t IS alt "'II Adm Gw J.54 3 ... Mm In(. l.21 J.52 Adm 1111 6.55 7.11 .....,.M, I.• J.10 M1nil fil '·" 7.•2 ii.tne '"' 11.•s 12.J1 Atwtlwt J.M N.t.. AGE fld .. JJ •.n AllStil'I• t ... 10,'2 Aljlfll Fd 10.fJ N.L. Arftcap ,. •.61 S.10 ~ 9lnh ff.In 11.01 Am Eqlr •.35 •.11 AM •XPll:EJS •UNDS: C..pt11I S.H lntom 7.60 1nv1tm 116.74 So«• s.u Sloe It •.3~ "'" Grlll '-'6 '·'' l,m 1111111 4.l2 4.72 Am lnv1t l .6t f1.L< "'" ~ I.IS l.Y AmNI Gr 2, 16 2.J6 ••!Jo• 0 ,.! ~Ill IM-.. _ -" FrWi in'# ....... • . .. • • .. _ ...... . . • I .. Gra~~.T ·an~~F'~~ll Indictmen ts File d ~ ~ ' \ I '1 f NEW ORLEANS, La. (A P) Three men, including an inspec-, tor lot the New Orleans Board ot· Trader have been Indicted by a federal grand jury probing cor- ruption in graln transactions. The eight-count conspiracy in· d.ictment also named a Louisiana !fOybean company and ouUined .._ 4cheme of 10 "•host" truckloads ot soy~ns whlcb did not exist but were sold to the Peavy Co., of Alton, Ill. THE INDICTMENTS 1were banded . down shortly after Agriculture Secretary F;arl L. Butz said in Washington that gov· emment officials are investigal· log the possibility that organized crime may be involved in U.S. grain-export trade. ''We are looking for any evidence we can find," Butz said. "Whatever we find that is ii· legal, we are going to c:lean up." U.S. Attorney Gerald Gall- lnghouse, who directed the grand jury probe in New Orleans, said, however, he has not unco•ered any evidence of organized crime in his investigation. "We have no present reason to believ~ that organi~ed crime js involved in the grain transac- tions we are investigating," Gall· · inghouse said after the grand jury returned its indictments. However, he noted the in· vestigation was also under way in other areas. "It is clear that the Port of New Orleans is not the only area where there i s wrongful conduct in grain transactions ." HE SAID MAJOR aspects of the investigation were continu· ing. In Was hington, Butz said: "Shady practices may be a . . O ver 1~h e .Counter MASO UstifMJS ·" ' ' way of life ln internaUonil rrain trade around the world, but we're goin& to stop it tn this coun· try," But1 added."••we are look· ing at a ny port In this country where we have complalnta, or where we suspect that there i.s improper activity.'' The N.ew York Times quoted Butz in tod.ey's editiONI u saying that the investigation ol alle&ed corruption· in the handlln1 of grain shipments has spread to every major grain port in the na- tion . · The Times said Butz also told one of its reporters in an in- terview that there was evidence that organized crime was in- volved. Solon's Firm . ,To R ealtors Congressman C l air W. Burgener <R-Raqcho Santa Fe), has turned over controlling in· terest in Claii;-W. Burgener Co., a 10-office real estate firm, to Walker & Lee Inc., the real estate services company head· quartered in Anaheim. Burgener and Walker & Lee president William 0. Thagard, placed flags representing the 10 offices into a large San Diego county map, which alteady ron- tained 13 flags, representing Walker & Lee's present new homes sales offices in the county. The Burgener offices now will do business under a sign bearing the new name, Walker & Lee Burgener realtors. . ... .. .. ,,. '·" .... - I anna malJ not a .. ver I nou• cy c •.10< CU51 bel bee• tice i Cal Ar thre. insu· undt Who sum sue and! sum pre~ ' 1971 lhe carr tienl al tl dan1 ' und• win! 1.awa ol e1 suit: m0< lore futU sev1 .ing aw• groo tor. dro: too , wrc ced lhe! meo lice the "PJ b,' acr an~ gan tair hur. ti ct eve • 111. thi! pre dig fri( cor der ·1~ 1 Malpraetlee a.1 .. Doctor Crisis: Who's at Fault? I By SYLVIA PORTEii IS<eondmoSen.11 In New York , the Argonaut Insurance Co . or California announced severlll months ago its int.entJon to atop wriUne malpraclice ins~r~n,ce as of July 1 -since physlclana wou1d: not a1ree to a tr1phng ol their yearly premium cos la from an otverage $3,SOO in 1974 to more than SlO,OOOthis year. . Jn turn, New York 's doctors and anesthesiolo1ilt.s &n· nounced that as or July l they would provide only emercen· cy care ·for patients ln deep trouble. And on I.One laland •.100 physicia ns dis-' cussed a s lowdown · beginning June 1 because or the malprac- tice impasse. In north e rn C alifornia , wh e re Areonaut also ' Money's Worth • threatened boo1ts of aS' much as 400 percent ln malpractice insurance premiums, doctors recently launched a "strike''. under which they would treat only emergency cases. AND THERE HAVE been several "strikes" since then. Whose fault is it? Both the doctors and the insurance industry claim con· sumers are "demanding new rights" and are in tbe mood to sue for any-thinJ?. As medicine has become more complex and has tried to save lives formerly considered lost, the con· s umer has made growing demands on medicine to solve previously hopeless problems. Both forces claim that consumers fall to realize, as the 1971 Secretary's Commission on Medical Malpractice put It, the "inescapable fact that modern hi&h-quality medicine carries risks that unavoidably result in some Injuries to pa· tients ... No operation is absolutely safe. , .Any drug of re· al therapeutic value has unpleasant side effects or even dangers for some people." These groups condemn the "contingency fee" system under which a lawyer does not demand payment unless he wins the suit -in which cue he takes 30 lo SO percent of the 1award. (The patient is often left with only 16 to 38 cents out of each dollar awarded. J THEY DENOUNCE THE "long tall" or malpractice suits under which an injured person may bring a suit 10 or more years after the damaging incident has occurred - forcing the insurer to pay an unpredictable number of future claims in inflated dollars It now takes an average ol seven years to settle a suit And the insure:rs blame bleeding-heart juries for boost· .jng awards lo heiehts as steep as $4 million and for setting awards on emotional rather than rational dollar-value ground1. The disappearance of the family doctor has been a fac· tor. <Sue the family doctor.,> And the "Marcus Welby syn· drome," the miracle-maker. has had some impact. But there are other, less obvious but powerful factors too -and those bringing malpractice suits can't all be wrong. For in addition lo ever more complicated medical pro- cedures, there also has been a rise in sheer incompetence in these procedures and in disorders actually caused· by medications. and by diagnostic and treatment procedures. THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. insurers and state licensing boards have hardly moved agcressively to police the quality of medical care . Theoretically, tough ''Professional Stlndards Review Organization1'' mandated by the 1972 Social Security amendments are being set up across the U.S. to develop standards of care, ''peer review '' and other techniques (or monitoring quality. But the Or· ganizations are run by those whf?se basic interest is in main- taining tile status quo Many hospitals and physicians' o(fices have become de· humanized and arrogant Spurring patients to file malprac· tice suits are such·irritations as -Having to wait lor.g hours. especially in hospitals, even when a (irm appointment has been made; -Not having access lo medical' records, with the result "that many suiU are started because, in more than 40 states, this is the only way lo get into your own medical record ; -Being asked lo sign consent forms written in incom· prehensible legalese~ -SUFFERING A 'VARIETY of institutional in· dignities, being unreasonably separated from relatives and friends, and being a'isauJled in many hospitals by stressful commotion; -'Being a vi ctim of "ghost surgery" in which a resi dent, not the promised surgeon, performs the operation M AR KE T . 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May 30, 1975 . . . . . . . . ~ ....-. ,. . . . . . ... . .... . . ~ ..... . . . . ...... ,.. . '• ... ·~········'•· : . .' .... ··. . . . . Distance Star Prefontaine Dies·in Crash EUGENE. Ore. (/IP) -Sieve PrerontHino, America's best dis· lance running hope (or the 1976 Olympics und one or this coun· try's most controversial amateur athletes. died early Loday In u one-tar automobile accident here. He was 24. Prerontaine, holdur of every 1\merican distance record above 2,000 meters. was pinned under bis rar "'hen it hit a rock wall at ~bout 12 :30 a .m ., Eugei:ie police au id. A few hours earlier he had run the second fa stest S,000 meters in Amcriran histo1·y ;.1t the National Collegiate Athletic Association prepuration meet in Eugene. A native or Coos Bay, Ore .• Prefontaine was u graduate of the University of Oregon and ran for the Oregon Track Clu b. He was a mcrn ber or the U.S. Olym· pie team in l\.1 unirh in 1972. Preront;.iiile. wh9 traint.>d hard, was o£tcn bitter ove-r the treat· ment rc l'cived by ttmateur uthlel<'S in this country. Two 1nonth s ago, asked about running as :1n amuteur for his country , he ~aid : "To hL•ll \\'ith love or country. J {'Ompete for mysl !£." ln recent weeks Preroiltaine had txprcssed pleasure wi th his conditioning as he approached the NCAA met-t. ''I'm strong and my Citness Is com Ing along at a very ru st pace," he said. "I'm ex- t remely happy with my condi· Uoning." Prerontalnc. who ran distances from 2,000 m e ters to 10,000 meters, just missed winning' a bronze medal at Munich, despite being spiked and shoved during a critil•al r~~ Not winning a. medal.when ne h ad been expect · C'd to was a rnajor disappoint· ment for him. Top Area Spikers In Masters Meet By ED BU RGART Ol IM Dally PilOISl•ll NOR \\'1\LK -Four Or;,,in ge Coast hi gh school track and Cicld stars ~Ne"·port !·!arbor's Brian 'fheriot and David Kurrasch. Edison 's Tom Lloy Lind Lagu na Beach's Eric Huls t-try (or re- peat victories in the l\1astcrs meet ;.it Cerritos College tonight. The top CIF stars from the '1-A. 3-r\ and 2-1\ are comlX'ting with the first five finishers in each e vent qua li fyi ng for the state meet in San Diego, JW1e6-7. Action begins al G: 15 \\'ith the girls' long jump. The £irst run- ning event-the 330 lo\11s-gets under way at 7: 15. Jn addition to \Vinning their e vents in last ye;.ir 's --,...1astcrs. Theriot, Kurrasrh and Uoy Yoere 'also victorious in the CIF 4-A finals last \veek. Jl ulst \Von both his rares in th e 2-A finals. 'fheriot. one or Ca li£orni;.i 's premier quartermilers, ran a \\'inning 48 .6 here last year, and \\';.is .in easy 440 vietor (48.0) in the 4-A fina ls. •lis best thi s y~;.i1· is 47.4 . Kurrasrh erased many records l;.ist \veek when he threw the shot 68-5, the se(·ond bl.1st mark in CIF his tory. As a G;,,inta Ana High pro- duct l;.ist year, Kurrasch had a winning toss of 63-11 1f.? here. But Lloy may draw the most attention toni g ht. Despite sufrer- ing a mild case or mononucleosis last week, Ll oy stil l won the 4-A 880, running I : 54 .8, fifth rastest or the qualifiers. Lloy is not a dc£inite starter tonight, but-ir his blood tests pro- ve satisractory tod;iy, he will pro- bably run. f-l is coach, Gordon Team-by-team NBA Draft A 1e•m·bY·leiom bre<ikdown ol Thur§d•y'§ dtioll: A TL.ANT A HAWKS O•v•d Thompwn. I, Nonn C.iroliri.t Sl•te: M•rvon Wt!D~ler, C, Mor11<in St .. te; Woll i•m W1llou11hb¥, l·c, Ow1r,in1 Morrow HS. E,..gtewooo, N.J.; Monte t o .. e, Nortn C•r<>lilW Sl•le; WilDur HOiiand, 11. u. 01 New Or•t•n\. O.nny W•ll•iilm\, c-1. M•~~i\\oppi , GU5 Jonnwn. t . Wonon;a Stue. 0~<•• J.Kk...,,,, Q, Ouquevoe. Oave ';chle\!ol!•, t, Mornlnt,J\1oe, Voe Ktllf, o. Mi ""•"· BDSTDN CELTIC!. Tom Bo\•tll, t-t, S.Oull\ C••<M•IW : Jerome An- dt!<'>Ofl, ... We~! V"'il'"'·· (fr"\""""""·(, IU•-~; 'Oanyl Bro"'"· 1-t , f'orOh•m; Rit .. Col"""'"' g, .J;aoo...., .. n.,_ 'Al Bo\well, Q, Or•! Robefll; R<>Qtr Mo•n-lrog~T•r, I. IC.•n\•~. Rot>t!r! .Rl'IOOf!" I , AltMny 5W!t!, c. •.. e.11 End•tOll, o. M.t'!>«l'NWltS. ' BUFFAL.OBRAVES Gt!O<O< Bueti; r,i, Moonn•n•n. 6oO Flei~cN:r, t, Duke; S•m Serry. c-1. A•mslrong Sl•le; l•rry J•Ck\on, o, No rth Carotln.t·Ch•rlotle; M•ke frant<!ln, c, C•n<onn•ll, olll.., JOfle,, I, P1ppordiflt; Gt!orl}O! RauluY.., 9, Nio19•r.i, Art Alle11, g, Pepperc11 .... CHI CAGO BUL.L.$ Slt!'lt! Green, I, lnd••n•; JohnU~~lli,11-1. Jn· dliolW; Ron Hao9te•, I , Ptnn~yl~•nla; SOI:> IW"r...on, f, Norin le•a' Stale; Bill Andre.os. 1. on1-oS1•1e. Jann C.•otnow•lski, I, A\\umplion; J ohn Murptly, I, MilSW<hUM'll~; c,,.., Torrw!>leW'!lk" !, St.M•ry''· T1••\. CL.E V EL.A ND CAVAL.tERS JOlln UomMrl, t, So11l1Wr11 C..hlonM•: Oan Rou.n<l!otld, l·C, Central Motnio;,n; Ml!I UUey, g, St. Jonn''· N.Y.; l~d H•rnawir, r,i. Cl,e1e1anc1 'Sun Sued By Lomas T"·o rootball players who claim they "'e re orrered higher salaries and bonuses to sign three-year C'ontracts with the Southern CaJiCornia Sun sued the club, the World Football League and three individual o£ficers Thur sdav £or more tha'n $2 million in dama'ges. SI lie; Erl( Ft!rn\len, lot , S•n FrMKi!.Co. J,m Lee, r,i. Sfracuse; M•'" Odi!ms. I, Weilt!rn Kentucky; Htnry Wiord, I, J •cki.on St•te: Sll•wn • Lt!!IW•Ch, I, J•ct ...on .. 111e; Andre MtC..rtff, "'' UCLA. • Sk•P Ho .. •rd, I, Bowlino Greer.; Erle Allder-.on, Q, McAl•,11!r. DETROIT PISTONS W•lle• luckelt. 11. Ohio; Pt\e lr!l'l"itll, t1, UCLA; Londi.ey H•"•lon, 1-c. M1cnoo-on SI.ill!; Chi! P•all, q, Sn11w; Allen Sl>ru1U, 111, NQrtn U<ohn• A& T. l~e W•ll••m,. 9, A•m5"on11 S1<ite: John Kelley, 9, Dollard; Terry Tnom1,, I, Detroit; ""t key Fo•, 11-!i.I M•ry'\, NOvil !i.<:Ol1•. G6L.DEN STATE WARllUOllS Jo. 6rwan1, c. L• -...ue: Gift W\11~-••• "°"".,_ fffl c.antor11I•; 01\~Jonn•on, I-<, Steti.on; RObert HawM•n•, 01. !!lino•~ Stale , Silly T.iylo;>r, I, U. S...lle, L•rry Po ... ,...,~. 1, W••nin111on: Tony Style~. 9, !..on Fr•nCt!.C O; Sl•n Boyer, 1, wvomif"il; Mike Rol'tn~M•, I , SI, Mol•y's. Calo!.; S<on TrOOftl', t, S! .... ford; M.J u,.ce Harper, g, SI. ~ry'l, C•hf. HOUSTON ROCKETS JOI! Menwealher, l ·C, Sou1nern lllinol>; J im Bl.ink'• I. G1•dner Webb: Rudy Wnlle, 11. Arizona s t .. 11!; Ken s .. utn, I, Tu!""; Rit lt wt1111ow. 11. 11-""°'' St;ite. Wolll•m J ohn...on, I, Te~•\ l ecn; N.011 8ernen. r,i. Akron: Leon John,on, 11, ljnltn,.ry; Steve Sr•otner, r,i, P•ovldet1ce. KANSAS CITY KINGS Boll Rotun,.ne, 1-t, Ot!P•ul, 8ob 8o~low, t-11. Penn•ylv•n•.i. Glen H"n\en, l.fJ, L.Ot>•\•..,,. Sl•le; &b C.uyelle, l·C. Kentucl<y, Kevin Cleu)S, r,i, St. JOhft'~,N .V. Ed ~tahl, t , Noni\ Ca•olina; Clinl Ctwipm.111, I, Sovllllrll C.lilor111 .. ; Wafne C•olt, c-1, Cle...,,on; Jim Bo~li<, t, Nfw Me xoto ST•te. L.OS AN GEL.ES LAKERS O•vict Mey1r,, UCLA; J unoor Brld'll!man, Lou•'lv•lle , (.J . Kupec, Micni11an; Ch.or1e5 Ru1wll. Al•tMm•: Doti Ford, UCS.n11 S.rtl.lr•. Ro ck Sutl le, Kan\a ~; Mike C•,hman, W•ll•arneue . MIL.WAUKEE BUCKS Clyde M•yes, Furm•n, Corr..lou:. c.i.,,., Elowllng Green; 8ri•n Hammel, Ben11ey: Bill C..mpo.on, M.loh•ll•n:Olover Purn•ll.OldOomlnkln. - Wilbur Tncm.o\, Amerot •n; lloll McCu•dY. R1t llmond, Er.c Hif\, Mont•n.o; Romy Thornol'i, E•uCl•ore. NEWORL.EANSJAll Riek Kelle¥. St•nlord; Ru0¥ H.lckell, Sy••cur.e; Jim MtEl•O¥. Cont•al Mocno~n; ~ck Colem•n. Hou,ton 6•Pl•U ; Andre Ho11mpton, Kentucky St•le. Rock S<n-mldt, hllnois; Biii Hio;lns. A..n1M><I; H•r'lt!y (iorm,cn•t!I, l(entuctySl•te; Frotel Slot!!!\, !Wrber Scoll•; Aleksender 8"1<W, L.;anlnorff. R11~"•· NEW YORK KNICKS EU9f"' Shan , J •c•son St.ii!: L.utner Bur,,.,n, Ul•ll'; L.•"¥ For,ile, C•n·~lu1 ; Jonn R•ml4r. Seton Hall; C.vld V•uonn, Orel Roberts. Don Wa\h•noton, Norin C•rolln•: Henry · W•11.,m'I, J•ck~v• i; Pe1er Oavis, Mich-loan Slilt!; Jt"r Hon1•n, Ma<queue; Tom V•n 81om· m\eitl!yn, P•onctlon; Mo Rive•~. No;>rlh C..rolin• Sl•te. PNI LADE L.PH IA 76f.ltS D.irryle 0.owkons, Marn•rd Evilf>S H.S, Orlan- do, Fl.o .• Lloyd F•tt, Gulllord Coti.,...; Jorn 8.Jker, HdwiOu, (h••le\ c1eve1.ind, Al•Dilm.i; L.ouis O\ih· ""r· Ho ... \ton. Ke n Twter. Gonz•r,ia; Ken Al\!on, V•lelosl• Fitzel. says Lloy has shown.rapid. progress this week, even though he has been held outofwcrkouts. Lloy V.'On here last year in 1 :S2.8. i'lis competition is respectable tonight. Jn the 2-A £inals, San f\.farino's Carl Van F1eet (1 :54 .2) beat St. Joseph's David Magee (1 :54 .4) while in the 3-A £inal!; S unny H ill s" Larry H aden (1:54 .4) £inished a head or Notre Dame's Steve Mc'Kenna (1:54 .7) and Bruce Rocheleau (l :SS.4). Rocheleau, though, has run 1:54.6. 1-lulst was another' sharp victor hert• last yeali, wini:iing the two- milc in 8:54.0 as a sophomore. He will double to night and faces Loara 's Ralph Serna in the mile 6.lndtwo-mi l~. Serna has run 4 :07.0 a nd 8:58.2 this year; Hulst 4: 11.3 and 8:57 .0. The sprints are contentious too. 'Norris Jones or Kenned y (Barstow) ran a 9. 7 100 and a 21.3 220 in the 3-A fin a ls while Pasadena's Rick J ackson ran 9.7 and 21 .7 in the 4-A fin als. The 120 high hurdles features Saddleback 's John Peterson. who has run 13.7. Mission Vi ejo's Wilbur Gregory (14.1) is also en- tered. The high jump is another com· petitive event. Estancia's Ken Conner , who won the 4-A meet with a li£etim e best of 6·91.4 , and San Clemente 's Carl Eissman- second in the 2-A £inals at 6-8 - are among the entries. l~erc is how the Daily Pilot han- dic;.ips the m eet, with predicted marks: 100-1. J•t kson CP•s•Oen•l 9,S1, N, Jone$ (l(en· nedy, BarUowl '-' J. Z•k (Wtst Torri>ntt!l 9.B •. L.ynn /Muir) t.I S. Jenkins CNot•e D!lmel '·'· Jl'0-1. N, Jones (1(1nnedy. S..rstowl 1'-• 1. JICkl.Of't IP•wdt!n•l 11.S J . Zak IW.il Torr....CI) 2\.1 I, J9nkln• !Notre Oiomt!l 21.9 i. McGl-otl\ln ~~mplonl 22.0. .U0-1. TM riot I Newport H•rlillr) .,.2 2. Se.ton (Coml)lonJ ... J J, Smith tP•Wdt!NI ...... Gr•n. ville tLyn-149.2S. Brown CP.tcilkl"1.4. IMO-I , L.L•Y CElllMlll 1,SJ,J.2. Roct.ie... fN<>lrl C.mel l :S3.6. l . H•y,,.,n ISunny Hill\) 1 :~.o. •. van FIHI ISan Marinof 1:5-1.•, S. Flynn ISan Go•r,ionlol 1 :s~.o. Molt-I. Sern• IL.o••al 4:01.J. 2. H11l!A (1..1'911M .... d1I l:M .1 l. Artiol• CC..IVJ 4·10.0 •. "Qell !Foothill) •; 11.l 5. A ... 11 IHUlltl ..... BIKlll 1: IJ.O. '·Mile-I. H11l1I ll.;s.911n• -..ell)&:"·' 2, SerlW !Lo•ra> &:SJ.I J, HunM•tr tCoroM ctll ~rl 1:51.1 •· R. A11uirre CS•nla Ba<bior•I ':OL3 ). G. Ar,iulrre IS..nla S..rblr•I t ;(i l.J, UOHM -1. Pel•rson (S..Odleb.Kk) 11.• 1. Turne!' (Cypre~•I U .O J. Gr191ry CMh•i911 Vllj.ol II.I I, Fl-rs CElsenno...-er I 14.2 ~. Gocl•ntl !Wt!sl Cov· l1W)U.J. JJOLH-1. Huncer IP•S•de,..) 36.1 2. Tnomson • IMOrninqMdt!l JJ.O J. Cll•mben; !Muir) Jl.2 •. Miiier !SI. Bon•venturel 37.4 S. Turntt (Cyprc~il J7.l . l•O Rel•y-1. P•~iden;a 41.t 2. Kennedy, S..r\tow 41. I l. Muir 42.• 4, C.ompton 11.) S. L8 Po. ly42.I, Mlle ll'lel•y-1. NtWllOrt H1rbor J:IJ.O 2. Muor l :ll.1 l . L.o' Al•mil~ J : 19.J •-Notre C.me 3:20.l S. San Ber1Wrdlno l :21.l . HJ-1. JohnS<>n !Arroyo) '-10 1. Coane-r lEUa• c:i•l ._,, J . L.•w\on CEI Dor•O.Oll-16-l'l>. 4. S....n!h• {Arc .. 1:tl•I 6·1"1. S. Ill bllwteoen EIJ1man 15.111 CMtrlef!l1l a"<I C...e•vo {Welllfnl._I, LJ-1. WolMln CFonl•n•I 24<4. 2. Doublt!y IUn- .-.O•l 21-IO'h l. Slml>"On CB•nnil'll}I 21-t 4, Jenni no~ fOntiorlo) 11·' S. WeDl.lt!r CG1rerl 11-<I. PV-1. VllhlSHom CVllla P.or•! 1 .. 12. Goodmen IAoou••f 16-4 J. S<nlmmel CVitl• Part! l S~ •. l , Curr•n ICrl\pl I IS·O S, Worden CNo1r1O.me!1S-O. SP-1. Kurra"ll INeWpfft Kilf__, .,_10\1) 1. Yut IS..nta Cl;ar;a) 63·6 l . Slink•td CSI. P•ull 01·1 4. Mtl(in1it CHart) Ot ·l ~.Odoms t~ Putt>IMI .... ltaliota Opeta For the past t1everal months, Prcrontaine had been in Lrainlna, trying to decid e whether he should compete In the 1976 Olym· pi<.'$. ·• Peopl" say I should be run· ning ror u 1:old m edill for the old red, white and blue and all that bull, but i\'s not going to be that way,'' he said. "I'm the one who has made all the sacrifi ces. Those are MY American recor ds, noL the country's ." · The 1974 graduate or Oregon Sliid if he ·decided to coir.pete at Montreal next summer. "I'll be a poor ma11 . If you're not a - millionaire, there'• no wa.y, •• He suid he was not bitter, just· "outruged . American 1:1thleles, +.'Speclally distaoce runners, are at a bie dtsadV811t•1e against the retit or thu world. We're expected to live by 1:111 the rules, llkt not being able to coach, but still train .and make our own living.'' . Prefontaine held six American distance record$, In the two-mile, three-mile, slx·milc, 3,000 meters, ~.OOQ meters amt 10,000 mett:rs und he held the col leg late records in all those categories except for the three· mile run. His running career stretched UPI Tet.pflot1 CRASH VICTIM -Steve Prefontaine, (182) who was killed in an automobile accident early tod ay in Eugene, Ore., is sho"'n dereating Jim Ryun in the two-mile in 1972. Williams Thinking About Shakeup ., Manager Dick Willi a ms says there's nothing jinx·like about his Calirornia Angels losing 10 games in a row al home lo one team. But he adds some or his players AagelsSlat.i All~'"as•ICMPCU'!Col Moly JI' S..ltimore at C•lllornl• Miy JI 8•tllrnor1 •I Ca•llort1i• JUl'le 1 B•llimore "' C•litorni• 7:2Sp.•n. 1:2s,,.m. ll :SSp.m. might be inspectiil g new surroun- dings if the losing continues. The Angels, with hard-throw. Nolan Ryan being hit for l"'O home runs, lost to Cleveland 9-3 Wednesd ay night as Lhe Indians S\Vept a three-game series and \von their 10th straight here over three yea rs. "I don 't know anything about the streak, however it's an en· tirely different team this year so 1 don't think it's got anything to do \vi th it," Williams said. The matter is si mply. "We ha· ve n't been playing good ball." Williams added, ··we might be a little tig ht so we gave the pl;.iyers the day off Thursday since there \Vasn 't a game. Instead or coming in and working out they could spend the day \vith their fam ili es or go golCi ng. "We s hould be all business '"hen \Ve com e back Frida y night." · The An gels open a three.garn~ seri es \vith Ba ltimore tonight \vith Ed Figueroa facing J im Palmer or the Orioles. Willi ams warned the team thilt there \vould be some changes if play doesn't improve. "f( it continues this way,'' the manager said, ",we're de(initely going to make som echanges.u He said the changes could . come from the Angels rarm system or the team might look for a trade. batk n~arly a decade, and ho had been' setting recordl for four year$. For instance, he tied the col· le&late two·mila res:ord of 8:33.1 in Eugene, the town near which he died, on Murch 21, 1971. He was l;.ite r to cut 15 seconds orr that record, breakint: it s~veral times. In July 1971, a t Berkeley, he set the American record in the S,000 melers with a time of 13 :30.4, a. record he was to luter cut by more than ei!iht s econd!;. Mesan Captures Golf Title PALM SPRI NGS -Costa Mesa's Willie Barber, the 61· year-old brother of touMng pro J erry Barber, shot a three- under-par 68 for a 138 tot~l and won the U.S. N;.itiona\. senior golfers spring tournament. Barber, who won· the $75,000 Call senio.r classic last season in Las Vegas, was three strokes ahead of Jack Koennecker, the host professional at this Canyon Country Club, and Eddie Nowak of Arroyo Grande. Both were at 141. Warm but windy weather caused scores lo soar, but Barber shot a steady 34-34. K nirks Slfltl MrGbuals NEW YORK -The New York Knicks or the National Basket· ba ll Association have signed American Ba t>ketball Associa- tion s uperstar George McGinnis lo a mu lti-million dollar con- lr;.ict, The Associated P ress learned today. Published reports said the con· tr;,,i ct would be for $2 million and "'ould cover six yeLirs. The AP learned the Knicks had s igned the 6-foot-8, 23S-pound McGinnis -star of the ABA's In- dian.a Pacers -and were pre· pared to £ighlwhatever lcga,1 bat- tles were necessary to keep the 24 -year-old player on1heir roster. Thr.ie· S ... .-.. wad ATLANTA -U.S. Open chlfm· pion Hale Irwin birdied three or his last four holes for a 66 and moved iitto a tie for the rtrst· round lead Thursday in the $225,000 Atlanta GolCClas~ic. Irwin's six·unde r·par eCCort on the hilly, 6,883-yard Atla nta Country Club course gave him a share of the lead in this Designat- ed Tournament -all leading players a r e required to compete -with veteran Billy Casper and longshot Joe Inman. The thre~ leaders shared a two-stroke adv;.inlage over Jack Nick laus. J o hnny Mille r . Leonard Thompson and J ack Ewing, tied at68. Lee Trevino headed a large group al 69. lf.S. Coarh A lling TOKYO -Ailin g' Bob Giegengack w as trans(ered in a wheel cha ir from a Chinese to an Af?\erican airliner in Tokyo Fri· day as the U.S. track and field team Clew home after a two,week tour of the People's Republic of China. ~le was much improved. The 68·xear-old rormer Yale University coach awakened Fri- day morning in Peking, feverish a nd shaking, Lwo hours before the.team was to start home. i Walke r Cup Win Mark Arnold Lomas of 1-lunl· ington Beach and \Vil liam Mi chael Ferguson or San Diego claim in the ir Orange County Superior Court lawsuits th;.it the defendants do not have the assets to meet the terms or their con- tracts and did not have them at the time they were persuaded to leave the New York Jets. • St.ie: M•ke Flynn, IC.enluc•r: FrHm;an 8•-. Ea\l Mont•N , Larry Har1I""'-Or•ke; R•c• RerG, A1uw P1cll1C. PHOENDI. $UNS Alv•n Adam\, OM11noma ; Rlt• S•b<!•s. Evert Gains Finals The Ar.gels Thursday called up reli er pitcher Da ve Sells, 'vho Jed the team in saves in 1973. from S;.ilt Lake City. It \vasn't im· mediately decided who \vould be dropped rrom the roster to make room ror the right-hander. ST. h NDREWS, S<:<>lland The United States clinched the Walker ' Cup (or the 22nd time Thursday on singlCs victories by Gary Koch, Kurt Strange and Craig St adler. ft is alleged in the two actions that Sun and WFL o£Cicials - among them Santa Ana attorney Gary Davidson who once headed the WF'L -breached the con- fid entiality of the new contracts· by issuing press releases to the news media . ~ .Both players claim that the de- fend a nts' action was designed to aftract investment and promote interest in the Sun and the WFL. Loinas. who played at Golden West Coll ege, demands full pay· m ent on a three-year contract in which he \\-'a S' lo receive SSS,000 in the fir st year, $60,000 in the second and $75,000 in the third plus a $50.000. bonus for signing. Lou••v•lle; Jommy O•n Conner. Kentucky; 8.ar••d Forrftt, Grand Ca11yon. ~ MCC•nh, Or•• Rot>t!rl\; JOI! P•t e, (Oopin Sl•le: Boll••"""• Sc1111llarfl C..lltoooia; o.~ ECl-mun19', Wei t Georr,il•; Jeck S.Cnrtoer. Arl1on• S!•le; Owen Brown, M;aryl.ond; Miki Moon, Ar11an.1 St•le. "°ORT LANO TRAii. 9L.A.2ERS L.iontl Hollins, Ari101W Sl•le; lkoll Gffs1. L.o119 .. atll St.W; Tom Roy, M;ary1-; Gti1 Ger••d. Vtrg•nl•; PllllHlcl<,, T.,.1,.ne, M•uri~t Pre1ley, Hous•on; Gerald willell, Ore90"; Steve Fields, Moaml ol Olllo; Cll;ar~y Ne11, OrlQOn Stitt; Quenlon Br•.ton, Pol'lland; Tyree Fosle•, Poruanc1. SEATTL.E SUPERSONICS l'r..,,k Ol1wn1t•. Se•lllt!: Bruce Se.ol\, X•vier, l ouisian.o ; Jim MOO<e, Ul•h s 111e; Owain Govan, 8111\op Coll•9f; L.1"1 Smttn, North CarOllri.t ... Holli, Moller, Drury; Ktn McKtnlle. MOl'll•na ; R•t h H•ws, Ul.Oh State , Jerry BtllOlt!, S....I• Cl•••· WASHINGTON BULLETS Kevin Grev~,. Kenlut~r, Tom IC•OPfl, IC.•.on11r~ S1a1e. Ft\~O• Leon••d. F11rm..,,. Roch Jonn, Vlr01u'li•Common•t•llh; J ollnGarren. Pur~. Flet(her Jol\n\on, R•ndolllll Maton: 6ruo:;e H1mm1n9 , A1111usl •"•· Oou9 8roo•ln9\, Cr1111hton ; M•ke Flh~y. B•an<llo). * ROME -It took de(ending cha mpion Chris Evert less than an hour to beat Mirna Jausovec .of Yugoslavia 6-2, 6-0 today and quali Cy £or the Cina ! of the $120,000 Italian Open tennis tournam ent. Seco nd -se eded Martina Navratilova of Czechoslovakia edged Dianne Fromholtz of Australia,· 7·6. 6·3 in the other semi£inal match. The Evert-Navratilova £inal '\•ill be a re petition of last year's battle for the title. Evert. the top seed, reached the fin al arter conceding only 12. games to her opponents. ShC broke Jausove c 's service in every game the Yugoslav teen• ager, the 1974 Wimbledon jbnior champion, served. MEN'S51NGL.ES Third lltiotl<MI QnnY P•ru11, New Ze•l•nd, bell K.arl I.Wiler. W•hl Germ•n1. 1 ... ••. 1·S. . c..,;uermo Vll•1, Ar9fntl1W, bt•t Ni-kl Piii<, YUQOllavl•, i...•,6-2. 8J0<t1 Bo•o. Sw•d9n, M•l P.olo lll'rt<>l\ltcl, II• ly ... 1,6-1. lll1 N•1la1e. Rom•nl.o. b9•1 Phil C.nl. Au1tr"lla,6--l.•·I, M.W!Uel 0••11tat, SJMin, 111!11 Adrl""° P1ntt11, ll•ly,O·l .•·l . WOM EN'$ SING-L.IES ,..,.,lllft•li Ovl1 Ever·1 bl•I Mom•,J•U!oOW!<, Yugosla¥1a, .. ,_ .. ,, M;arllfl• N•wr•Ulo¥a. "'l!<hoskl"•~l•, !>eat DI.,.,. From110lt1, A11llr•1J., 1-•, .. :a. Meyers S11rprised, FlaUered· LOS ANGELES (AP) -All · American Dave Meyers or UCLA . said Thursday he was both s ur· prised and fl attered that the Los Angeles Laker$ or the National Basketball Association draftt.'<i him on the first round. Still, the 6-foot·8 forward sai ~ he wouldp't m ake up hls m ind Immediately on his future. "Ritht now I want to gr aduate from school and I 'm not thinking about profession I basketball," Meyers aald. • He's scheduled to receive his 'degree in sociology next month <.1nd contemplates graduate school In recreational work, busi· ness or law. "I've got a Jot or \ime to lhini} about it,'' he said. "l had heard that David T h ompson and Marvin Webster were on the Lakers• list a head or me.'' Thomp•on was drafted by Atlanta In the f irst pick but tben the La ke.rt went to the home town favorite Meyers: Weboter went I<> . . Atlanta on the ne'xt choice.' • Meyers s aid he was happy that teammale Pete Trgovtch was drafted high in t.he lis ts, by Detroit in the third round. ··p ~rsonal l y ,. I want t o graduate a nd then look over everything," the All American s:.1id. "I won 't r eally believe I've g r adu a t ed unti l I have the djpJoma in my hand: • ••f was sit.t ing home this mom· i ng thinking the draft Is a stranfe thing. J really dldn~ thlnk J'd have my ~hOice and I'm svr· prised, very surprised.'' Meyers wouldn't commit ~himselr on whether he would play professional basketball. but did say ..a.lso that he· would await the American BasketbaJJ AJ;socle· tion dr·art before making any de-- ci~ion . , ' "'I've got i ntcoUator ind he'll handle tba\ part or It," Me)'<!rs said. "I'm new to all ol' this and thal's why I 've eot u negotiator.'' Jn another move Williams an· noui-iced Ryan, \vho went sev~n innings Wednesday night, would pitch agains t tbe Orioles Sunday. "He can com e back after three ditys rest a nd 'pitch the rourth." Williams !'laid, "since we're ofr l\.1onday otherwise he'd have (ive days a nd com e back on the sixth." UCI Spikers Gain Semis SACRAMENTO-UC Irvine's BUI Cheadle, Jtussell Royston, Davi d Williams, Mike Sabatino and Robert Goto earned berths ln today's 1eml(inals ol the NCAA· track and fleJd· champlonahlps <college division) In qualifying Thursday. ' The U .S. team needed only thr.ee or the eight head-Lo-head afternoon matches to beat Bri- tain in the traditional rivalry or a mateur golCers, but victory was not assured until the lin.h match when St ad ler provided th e margin with a 3 and 2 triumph over George MacGregor. Rot h Leading DOWNEY -Mark Roth or Sl aten Isla nd, N.Y .. won seven or eight match games and shot into the lead Thurs day night in the $75,000 Pro Bowlers As5ociation NaJ;Io nal ChamPionship._ Tralaer·Ffaf!d NEW YORI,< -Frank ''Pancho'' M artin, one or the country 's lop thoroughbred trainers, has been nned $6,000, l1&iJest in the hist ry o( Now Yofk racing, o n char~es of drug- etJ:i& horses a£ New York trackl. Cheadl e won b,15' «o iTI · termedi1te hurdles heat in 53.6, Rgys lon a nd Wiiiiams both ·WTT Sal 1mm..Ws clockei! 9.9 In lOO·yanl heat. as ' bolh fh1l•~cd fourth'andSlbaUoo ,.,ma:::.,1~$~:"'~.,.. . and Gotovaulled tS..6toquallt • w.i."'' .-oue.1•1 -c;oe1•9'l'IO.fllll<N4 tPJ..,, The Anieate~" ~Y -~ ·cL Ytu11t·Hll'l'lt.1-•.•T1•m•keri.11. "I-. ~ , Iii w.mtn -Q.oo1a901111•" Dt•tHUl'll ._J, was ln t.be steepl r,:e ~"·' ooi.o••• -' N•M~ (PJ 11tt1 .v. • • -'flfliW•l·A. Arrnltr~,' 1. Ralph Staunton f1llecltoqu , f:Y,. MM-Co• 1Pl b1•1 v . Arrnl1ra1,w. F1nal1 are acbedul~1odav and .,~~ ~ -YMNtO·"" Annl"I Cll aiil« ., ~u!•ltlt.,~ Saturday at Sacramento State. ,,.~ •. ., .. • • r • Ch b• of Sii hii Le th• wi E< St He Bi Ri cl• So L< Go St -t ,Po P-p . c J lB 2B JB SS 01 0 1 OJ ui P- P-c: 1B 28 38 SS 0 1 0 1 0 1 UI A I BEl Hi.ii anC Poe rea the IOU jng Ma mi1 I Co1 og. losl c..; <>• Rltr Krl\ ·~ M<( .... ,.., Rosi """ ""' Ti I Mli: .... Frld1Y. May 30, 1975 OAILY PILOT B7 All-atea Team Desrosiers Top Player ists Seek CIF-Crown ... Edl1on Hl&h's Scott Desrosiers, who led the Chargers to a quarterfinals berth ln the CIF 4-A baseball playorra, i:1 the Orange Coast are&'s·ptayer of th~ year a1 selected by the Daily Pilot sports stalf. . And Costa Me11a Hla:h 's Jim Hagey, who guided his Muatang1 to the co·championship in the Century Leaa:ue, ls tho coach or the yec.r. · The selections arc dominated by area teams in the Sunset League-with Edison leading t..h.e way with three fir1t team picks and a second unit player. Joining Desrosiers on the first team from Edl1on are pitcher Mik e Macoy and outfielder Steve Hlnes. Second team honors go to Jon Holmblad. Fountain Va lley's Rick Woolard and Vince Bienek made first team as did Newport Harbor's Rick Dostal. Second team from Newport Harbor in- clude Art Sorce and Jeff Starr. · Mlasion Viejo was the dominant team from the Sou th-Coast area. The Diablos·, champions of the South C:O.st Leaaue, placed Jim Clouse on the first team and Greg Perry and Dave Schmidt on the second unit. · Mesa grabbed one first team spot-short.stop Steve Bernhardt. * * * * * .. ' ·Laguna, ,;Vikings '. .t.A Collide ' ' -:i By ROGER CARLSON .. , Ot .... Di lly ~itet St.II .SCOTT DESRQSIERS Unbeaten •nd No. 1 Pleyer·of th• Ye•r seeded Laguna Beach, the smalleal public high school in Orange County, .goes after th e CIF volleyball plum tonight at UC Irvine where de- fending CIF champion Santa Monica invades at JIM HAGEY Coach of the Year 7:30. Tic kets are $2 for adults and Sl for students at Crawford Hall, which seats in excess of 1,600. For coach Mike Dun· can (and his staff of Rolf Engen and Al Simmons) i t 's the final hurdle towards a perfect (21·0) campaign, which also in · eludes .the Inglewood lournarrienl title where Samohi fini sht>d fifth. • . 1 All-Oran1eCout Area . FlntTeam 1P01. Player, Scbool P-Don Fowler, Dana Hills P-Mike Macoy, Edison Mark 6-2 4-2 .:M;i; .320 .441 .384 .372 .265 .372 ·.391 .472 The Vikings of Santa Monica coach Ken Cl. Ed• Peterson are 14·2 for the Sr. Ison, season, with 1osses com· SEEK CIF TITLE-Laguna Beach High's powerful Artis ts captured the South Coast League volleyball championship and will seek the CIF title tonight. Kneeling (from le ft ) -John Burns, Dusty Dvorak, \Vade ~:. ~ Hinley, Scott Morgan, Matt Albade. Stand· ing -coaches Rolf Engen and Mike Dun· ... can·,~ Casey Armstrong, Jeff Plummer, Cliff Amsden, Eric Dawson, Oz Simmons, coach Al Simmons. C-Scatt Desrosien, F.dison lB-S!an Terry, Huntington Beach 28-Rick Dostal, Newport Harbor 38-J im Clouse, Mission Viejo $-Steve Bernhardt, Costa Mesa OF-Steve Hines, FAison OF-Vince Bienek, Fountain Valley OF-Bob Macauley, Mater Dei Ut-Rick Woolard, Fountain Valley Second Team P-Ray Craft, Fountain Valley P--Gary Key, El Toro C_:_Dave Schmidt, Mission Viejo 18-Art Sorce, Newport }larbor 28-Jon Holmblad, F.Wson 3B-Tim Wallach , University s.5-Ralph Ronquillo, &lancia OF-Mark Longnecker, Marin a OF-Jeff Starr, Newport Harbor OF-Greg Perry·, Mi ssion Viejo Ut-Moe 1-'leming, Estancia • Sr. ing to Mira Costa and Sr. MV G 1 CulverCity. Sr. I•r S "We were without our Sr., No. I player, Bob Pellic· Sr. ci, in those two losses," Sr. Advance explains Peterson, who Sr. coached his Vikings to Sr. the title last yeur in addi· Sr. Edison and Mi ssion lion to copping it in 1973, Jr. Viejo advanced lo the although volleyball was second round of the girls in a pilot program at that 3·2-Sr. CIF softba ll playofrs point and is not listed in 5 4 Sr the CJF annals. · · with victories over visit· .320 Sr. 'f' d S d Al so big in Santa .342 Sr. td.nlgbPacakc1 h'c,.ag hansrhoaols. Monica'S' game is Tron 343 Sr.. e · Burdick. Those two are · Thursday . . 480 Sr. Edison slop ped surrounded by John .351 Sr. Pacifica, 2.1, in 4.A ac-Moody and juniors . 382 Sr. tion to qualify for a berth George Dempsey, Carl .378 Sr. against Paramount, a 2.1 Scallig and Bob Leitell . 372 Sr. f' with Jose Audero and 4.1 J winner.over Paci ic~. Richard Santora coming ~ r. And Mission Viejo will off the bench to assist . ~- ROBERT ANGEL Area Girls Lose play t.op-scc1ded .val~ey Laguna Beach's out· Ch_r1 s~1an a ter scorin g look is somewhat d if· twice in the botto~ of the ·ferent as the Artists pre-s • seventh for a 3·2 Win over · · urpr1se Saddleback in J·A µlay. s~nt a sohd six-man at- Fountain Valley was ~a~~ with no one In CIF B d • eliminated in 4.A action md1v1dual counted on .. a llllnton "th S·l loss at Rolling The setters are Mall . F1· n1· sh w! a Albe.de and Dusty MANHATTA N BEACH-Mission Viejo High's Mary Diamond and Eslancia's Debbie Pool and Gigi D'Angelo reached the semifinals of the girls CIF badminton tournament before los· jng Thursday at the Manhattan Beach Bad· minlon Club. Diamond downed Corona del Mar 's Liz Ogden, 12·9, 11·8, ·then lost to Donna Corlett of ,Marlboro in th e semifinals, 11·2, 11-0. Coile'tt captured the singles title with an 11·3, 8·11, 11 -5 victory over Linda Ball of Mira Costa. Ball h ad advanced with an 11-0, 11·2 win over Costa Mesa's Margaret Behrens. In doubles play, Pool and D1Angelo defeated Alonso and Richardson of Troy, 15·8, 15·7, then lost to Jezza and Moore of Glendale .Hoover, 15·5, Le. gion Bas_ e_ball 1 5 " 6 1" n another Ml .. Noll VMI• C41 ·quarterfinals doubles ~ ""; match. Dianne R)lchie 1 1 and tt1arel Hauge of Coocotr, 111 Gfffley, tf lllk,..rciwn, il·P.Jb Kr-r,t; Robtrl•, rt #kC.rthy,Jb.p ec..1"', )b zon. 1t..•• 111~•.lf Oolt>y,p McOon•ld, '" Tolel1 .. ' . ' ' ' ' . ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' " . g ~ Marina fell to Price and 1 o Reynoso of Glendale g : Hoover, 15-12, 18·14. ' ' ' . ' . • • ' . k .... ..,..~q• The ·doubles crown w~nt to' Mira Costa's Ball <1nd McDOnald, who de· • (cat e d Price and ' Ml\\lon 'lftle W11lern ' . 040 000 0-il s lll 00) ·-· 10 2 Reynoso. Hills. .Dvorak, th e center Mliil..,Y~U~ ., rlll blockers are Cliff E ~:r::.'~·'' ~ ~ ~ ~Amsden and Eric 0 Angel GendoOo,lb J 0 I 0 Dawson and the off hand : r ~•v.11>1 ~ _j g ~ biller s are Casey ~~~o<oie.11 1 o o o Armstrong and Oz Sim· By EDBURGART . ~~;~p ~ ~ g g g mons. or.u .. °'"' l"IMI s1a11 Ross.11o,1>t o ' o o Peterson says his Robert Angel said he Arttou•,rl J O 0 0 • h · To1a1~ ,, J s 2 teams strengl is con · :really surprised himself. scere11,1nnln11 sistency . ''Lagun a .And his coach. Carter ' . . ~kb.it" 001 ooo 0-2 3 3 . Beach is taller than us ;Lewis, still can't beLieve Mlss1onv1eJo 001 ooo l-J s 2 and we 'll have to counter h t h d · th ico .... 1•1nv1111y (II :w a appene 1n e •11 r .. ni that by hitting .the ball iCIF 4·A track a nd field ~·~,~ ~ g ~ g smart and effectively. lf ifina ls last Friday a l Mtnoor1,10 1 o o o we don't, we 'll lose.'' 'Citrus College . ~':~1sf ~ J ~ g Duncan "Says Laguna \ Angel, running in sixth ~·=!;.'.'t•· ~ g g g must pe rform at the :place for the. first three s1o111tnt,111 1 o o o same high level of play laps of the mile, sudden· J-;;:::i::·''. ,~ ~ ~ : from the outset. •·santa ly burst out of the pack S<'""''""''ltl' Monica plays the same on the final turn like a ~1.1nv111., 010 ooo 0-'1 ~ 1~ kind of game that Corona dog chasing a r abbit. Aon.,...~111• 021 010 o-i > 2 del Mar does," says Dun· The r abbit, Loara's E•t.oN 121 e. c;,1bbl-n, P s. Grlbtlffl, )to O.vld, ii w., .•• Mel"ldeftlltl1, ( WitlherbH, rf Vonll,lltOW,11 IWICMll, lb Jl:~•.d •• r 11 ni can. "They don 't run a Ralph S e rn ", w asn't ~ g ~ g lot of Caney stuff." about to be caught, but 3 o 1 o This is the first·ever Angel a Huntington ~ ; ; g confrontation between Beach High senior, ran a ~ g g g Santa Mollica and lifetlmebestof4 :13.3in l o 2 1 Laguna Beach. The lat-fin ishing second. . 2• 0 1 1 . t.er has been extended to That was almost four Totfli 25 .212 s sc-11Y•11iNt1w• five games only by an seconds better than his oo1oooo-~ ~~Clement e during the previous b est , and ooo 010 1-1 1 o season . earned him a s pot in FACTORY- Demo SALE! Baseball Standings tonight's Masters meet al Cerritos College. If he can finish in the lop five, Angel will qualify for the slate meet in San Diego • TOYOTA AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Boston 22 11 .564 Milwaukee 21 20 .512 2 New .York 20 23 .465 4 Detroit 18 21 .462 4 Cleveland 18 23 .439 5 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Chicago 24 19 .558 Pittsburgh 22 18 .SSO New York 20 18 .526 Philadelphia 22 21 .512 St . Louis 18 23 .439 'h l i> 2 June6-7. And the 18-year-old has a good chance to qualify if he repeats last week's race. "That race gives me confidence.'' Angel says, "and I really think I can qualify. If I can run a nywhere n ear 4 :13 Girls Compete In Spike/ est NOR WALK ,Three Orange C-Oast area athletes and the Newport Harbor High 440 relay team will be among the favorites in tonight's CIF girls Ma sters track and field championships at Cerritos College here . BeckY Daniel of Newport llarbor, with a mark of 39·01/4 in last weekend's shot put qualifying meet at San Marcos High, is the favorite in that event while Debbie Vogel of Corona del Mar High also made the fin als with a toss of 36·1. ,,. Lisa Gourdine or El Toro fligh. a probable dou- ble victor until she hit a hurdle while leading by five yards last week at Claremont C-Ollege, is the top choice in the long jump. Gourdine leaped 17-11 1.4 last week and could go beyond the 18·foot mark tonight. She also had the best low hurdle mark in qualifying (1 1.0) but failed lo make the finals. The Newport r elay team ofNancyOlson, Karen Bradford, Barbara Benish and Joy Marioman had the fastest lime at either preliminary meel w1ilh a 48.9 clocking. They will be the team to beat tonight. The fourth possibility for a victory is Dale Keough, a middle distance runner from Corona del Mar. She posted a 58.1 mark in the 440 and e '2 :27.2 in the 880 to qualify for both finals. Joining Keough in the 880 is Linnea Boman of Dana 1-Iills who had a 2:27.4 lasl week a t Claremont. In the mile run, Cathy Anno of Fountain Valley qualified with a 5:21.6 effort while Linda Case of Laguna Beach breezed lo second place in her quali- fying heat r ace with a 5:25.7 clocking. Completing the list of Orange Coast area en· lranls are two high jum_pers, Kathy Ca ri co( of NewJX>rl Harbor High and Anne Erperibeck of Hunt· ington Beach. Five girls will qualify for the stale meet next weekend in San Diego in tonight's outing. following is the way the Daily Pilot handicaps the girls eve nts ~ lOD -1 HUf\ter ICe11t1nnl•I 10,12. EvAM (Mornir>Q~idel 10.9 l . Brown !Muir I 10.t •. Curra!'! IL• Rei,..) 11.Q .S. FIYflfi CSA 'l11lleJ I 11 .1. m -1 • .H<:k$0n !No•tll Riv.) 2S.l 3. Smoc-l81rilowl 2S.• l . Curr'" tu R1l11o1l U.• •. C•rter 1ont1riol u.• s. Huntt#' [(e-ntenni1I) JS.7. ....a -1. Smoc.t fB1rstowl se.o 2. K•°"'" IC•r..,• ••I Mlfl Sl.1 l. Mo0r1 (Roy•I) SI.••. 01nleis t!.lml Y•lltyl .14.• S, Ti11m11n !Muir ) S9.1. --I. MICllldO IArc•dl•) 1: 17.2 2. Jol\n'>Of\ IEsper•nr• I 1: 11,S l. Moore tl~OJlll J:lt.l •· P11riW. IT~ 0.kll 1:20.• S. ICe .... 11 IC•Ml 1:21.t, Miit -1. P•rrlsn (ThOllS•nclO&-•l S:n .• 1. Troller (Crescent• V1ll1yl S:ll.• 3. O.nCIO ~Rloh•llil S:U .l •. ~rter \Simi V1tleyl S: 16.0 S, A- IFo•t .. 11V1ll•yl J :lt.t , eo L.H -I, Moor1 ICet1leN1l•U lD.t 2. Winflewi\ser IBISl>GP 010:901 11.0 l. Sunnttnbllr9 !Up11nc1l 11.D 4. ,.._"" !Kennedy) 11.1 S. Str1el1r (NOrth Riv.I 11.1. UO M•llY -I. N•W'Plrt H1Aiora.1 1. Muir 41.t .l Mornlr>Qlldof ,t ,0 4. Dus PwOlM •t .2 S. Roy•l •t.J. llO Meel14Y lllll•y -I, Royll l :ft,0 2. Muir 1:4'.l l. SA V1lltW 1:.-..I •. C.n1tn11l1I 1:•9.t S. Oos P\ieblo~ 1;SO.•. HJ -I, lonq CG11llrl S·l 2. ""-"' (Moorptrkl S·J l . Ltf\Cll (Ro~fl) S.t •. Morris ICll Jnol S·I J. Er~Ntl tH-1"91..,hlCll)J.I. LI -I. GM,_IM IEI Tere) 1 ... 5 2. EveM (Mornl1'19Slde) 17·11 l . SWry 1c11remont ) 11 ·4 4. Curr•n ll• Rell'll) 11·4 ), Hl!lbole (AllllmlJr•l 11.J. SP -1. °'""'' lNtW"f,'I Hllrtllfl :n-t t. Norri\ IOu1rt1I 11·2 3. Gomer (8 1st">op 0 1190) 11•4 4. Fl~NI ILil Cln1<11J ll·l s. 1C1nll ll• Clnadll ll·ll, PrldlClfCI t11m Stores: I. Aoyll 1• 2. C1ntennl•I IS l . Tie bol1wee11 NtwPOrt H•rbor •11d Muir 12 S. Norn- li'lg~ 11 •· 81rstow 10 7. Tl!OuWl'ld 0.kl I I . Ue boll-tn El To•o, Gin• .-Id Arc.ell• • 14. Co'°"' Clel ...,..r S. &llol!ICt wl In 4 0#' IH~. Alamitos Results llAMPLI:. '7STOYOTA. Baltimore I& 26 .381 7\2 West OlvlslQri tt1on treal 14 24 .368 West Division s 71> again, I will be happy. I av.rt•rH~Hll•••tu l"••TlwrMllr Blot Sucte\t I01ri1wl S.00 3.60 1.eo t .60 •.eo .... t door ................. •1111•'"" '"- OE3130ll1) • VOLVO '74 VOLVO 142 -..io., 1lr, 1tllff0, r1I..,. •~ OT *'""' .r..1. i• 7)01 • USED CAR SPECJAlS '71 OLDS CUTLASS Oakland Kansas City Minnesota Texas Angels Chicago 27 17 .614 26 20 .565 2 22 t8 .550 3 22 22 .500 5 22 24 .478 ,6 20 23 .465 61> Tlllll't4fif't0-NewVork7, T•~•~S Only~·$ SCl\t'dut«t TMl•y'1G•fl'lft Cl\1(•9010.tttfl 1·51 at Delroit CLtt1fcPI S.)) 1(1o11ws (Uy (8YSDy J.)) •I Mllwa""'" (8r0blfr9 ... , . '°"°"' ITltt1t •·Sl 01 MinntlOta IGoll1 J-4l ,.... YOfk tMedltl'I ) .. ) oi leq1 IS1by !-41 8 •Ulmort CPtlrMr 1·31 .t (611forni• (l•~.....o. ... , Cltveltnd CKe r!'I 1•11,U 0.k1""8 IHo10:"'*" J.SI s.1 ..... .,·.0.-. Clt .... 1tl'ld atO.lr.IMWI C.ltktte at 0.lroil Kanws Clty tlMlh•t11kt• ~911 .. MlNMMI• New.,.,.lrl;olT•••• .. 11ifNN't 11 Ct UIOfA!t Dodgers 29 19 .604 Ci ncinnati 27 20 .574 11/a San Francisco 23 21 .523 4 San Diego 23 23 .500 5 Atlanta 22 25 .468 6'1.:t Houston 18 31 .367 111~ Tfl•rMloy'1 Gtmn N09flt'll$ M:l'led11l•d TM.lt•'1G1- Lot A"9flll IS.;lton t ·Jl •t Cl'llt.tOO ISi-So(!) SM Fr1ncluo Cll•r, .. Jl 11 Montre11 IA:00tr1 ,.., S.11 01190 I.Ion•• t-2) II ...... York (K_.. .... •·11 HO<AIOtl OConlt c1ny 2·•1 It PMlldlltlptll1 (Lon. )Ofl ,.,, Ail111I• IOpr1"·'I 11Pltllburth 1Reus• l·41 Clr•d-U l1Clrll,~·Jl1t St. LoulilGur!l~J·Jl Slh• .. •Y 'I Ge_,, lOI Afl.,.loei•I Chl<•IO A.111111111 P1111011rgh Ho111l0ti•I PtlUldelphl• CIMfMlll 11 St. l011i1 SM Fr.-.c1uo1t Mo!\lrt1I * oi.oe 11 Mt•"!''"' am just going lo try to C';M••· Tr.-c• Fa11 stay close for three laps ,.1111sT llACIE _ 3~ ,.,ds. l 'fffr and get a good time.'' oldsl.uP.Cl•iming. Purse $1800, A I Id r Sir O.c-• nge wou pre er a !Trus11rel 1t .N • . ..o "·'° similar race to the 4·A o...,1T.B••oofW1ro) 11.00 •.60 mile. 'Iller F1"t O.•u tC';1lll ... «! Time -19,02. ''That race was AIM1r1n -w 1M'w11ue,Hy8oond, JoHr Sh.OOw, 01>tnl11g Gun. King perfect for me," he says. v.n11,c;1, Lite~. Hom••· "The leaders went out uiucii -~$irO.c11iat-OYn1T s low, and it was a .... .-.~a1t1u•1.to. kicker's race.'' sl!COND 11,t,c11 -1.so.,1re1•. 2 yur Serna went by the 1320 o1dm11a.n1. Pur,es1'oo. • FOVrSCOOPS !H•rll 12.00 S.IO l .60 · ln 3:11, and An gel was 'Kluiwoouiortre•! 11,20 J.40 two seconds behind. uo.. 0t10~1, 1C•rdor•1 ~.oo • Tlmt -11.Sl . "J fell really Strong tn Aho r.n -Henk'\ Pa.,_, PlffH that race ., Angel says Ow, For Florene•. C!ndr 0ieroer. • • Oft Ll,..IU Bir, Tome TO Ch•rgii. Fenty All•lr (MJlesl Fire N' let {Wirt!) TllN -11.41. Aho r•n -Look Over Jordtn, Trutou. RotY Joyo..s, Oh C09y Me. TucwnJet. SIXTH lllACIE -110 y1rd1. l JHr otd'S & up. Cl•lmlng. P11r1e l 1900 . L•DIMrO IC.rCI011l 11.00 •. 10 • . .O HyMelorAUtn IC1etL•wl S.llO 4.60 T0ti10·1G11y tTr••surel •.oo • Tl,.,.-41.0.. Al.O r1n -Zipa90, Tr11•S1n, EA!l"I l1'111lnt1 , Suri Al ,.I, PIPPJ Voc:hvl'n. UE••<'I -1·ll Qlntf'I& t.hly~ • "'"''"· •• ,. '"'·'°· Los Al Racing Entries Oll.itrttr Herw Entries FtrTllllWfll Finl ,..111 o·c1oc1r oFIRST lll ACE -•40 Y•t<ll-3 nar 01~. Cl•lmo"Q. Pur~ '2000 <l•lm•ng l>f'•CeMOOO Chlc••moor {Ctr•11er ) Ho-'•Sonny tlov cw .. 1~on) Mi\\ Air JerlBertr•m I C•rOI Ot•r !6•n••I Cl.tch,.Ouln (MJlt•I Aoc:lln!lf• !Drerrr ! Ro.in Me tnllO (li,.rl I Go Dtllw B•r !Liph•m I Sherm IW•td) wtly,,.ul CP•lliol ... "' '" "' m "' "' "' "' '" SECOND lllACE -lSOy•rdl . 2ye.w old m.10.nt, Cl•lmln9, PIH'MI ,1800 cleirnl"!I pr lee '4000. Sc.Iller 0...nl IT rt1Ulrl ) Fil<>CJ F&rclie CM1le1) o,,...,...,W•lth Clll lcherdsl Supirfine tG•fl•l Brrel Br•in lC•rdor•l s.1111 O...r91r IC1 11 I A Ll!UeLlleMe (Willlloflfl) Sc.1r1111t BrittN!\ LACiair) Swi"!li,.All•ir !Cieri\,..) FunCOuntry IG•r1•l ... '" ... "' m "' '" '" "' "' TMltD RACE -4.0 Vill,dS. l .,..i Olds .. Oji. Cl•lming, P11ri.f S2:100 cl•lm if'l9prlce '3000. LwnnC.. IW•l••rl RO\y Jow ILipn.tm) A}Q.,. (Ricn..rdsl Re Del Clir..e<I Him (Ad•lr) ~ ... AU•<• CH1,tl Super!.Ol'I (Tret111ro:) '" ,,,. 11~ "' "' li9 l"OUllTH •ACE -JSO J8•d•. 2yf!ar olCI m1I011ns. Cl•imif19, Pur,.. l l81Xl cl•imi"!I prlcl! '6000. Jl:oloR1cer !"C11lrl Evtt0n!OrCIOr•I Prl~M1Jor IH•nl VIiify Rull• IW•lket) PrtlendAgaJt1 !Caul Tr-vie E11d fBtrtr1m) HaPJ!yC.I !G1r11l TISl<m.nl"° IW••dl '" ... ... "' '" "' "' "' FIFTH RACE -••O Y•rds, Jye..- ol~. Purff ,.SOOO, The LO~ "lillml!Oi O.rbr Trills CFlrSI Division I TheAmtwswoor !Tre•turel O\lplk•le Dre1m /Harli "' m S.r Q 111"!1 IC•e•oer I BtlC-Tl'M>u!lht IClfrltMtl CuPid.tCapy CAd•lr l Ollltk Green COro:yer I o.,,..,..., 8•• fSllsler I S<.~~~l\l (W•t>On) "' "' m "' "' "' SIXTH •AC€ -~ y1rcts. 3 ye•r old\. PUrff »000. Tiie l.01 Alemltot. 0.tb'f' t rl1h IS.t ond DlvlliOtl) Born to R11le IW•U.orll Fick I• Fr1111r IGlrCIOt• J , IN, Tl'IOUQhl IAICl'llrdil Het a..r.,.r CT,e1s11re) A·JetSpke CWtrdl AIM.hie CB1n1tsl Oe<k'em fOr1verl +iowd1 S!i (Liph•m) A·IV ... S E•sy Jel (Adair) A -lv1n l , Asllmenl et'llry m m "' "' "' "' "' "' "' SIEV€NTH lllACE -••O Yatd~. l Yl!lr olds. Purse SlOOO. Tiie los Al•mHos Oo:r by T1 lal• (JnlrCI Division) Go Pistol SllOl IAd•irl Mllll.OL•d !Nlcocl1mu•I RllJlhml< Pllvllis IRlth•rd'S) E•IJ 0.tt !Knlollll Tll•HOh'\WilCI IW.i;,sonl Wllldl WI Ith IMrtesl DltkeYI Fire Ris-((•II) FIHIN'Fit kle CC•rdOlll "' m '" '" "' '" "' •n EIG"TH lllACE -400 Jl!ots. l l'ffl' 0101 & ue>. Cl•imlrtq. Pur,.. s:MOO. c1111mino P<I<• ,,.SOO, Lo...,OWlrQ4t IW•lson) Jt11li~e P• !Drtyer I Hoillr v.,. ,;.1r ICiUCIO•I) Melltl'iC•.~•o•• iH•rt) &..rte1 PlllOI CLIPNom I N•nl ROYll IRlch-l•dl) FIHl"CopJ ITrt•s11rel R.C-Otl Mell IB•n•1l C•llll'I Otv11 IACl•lrl Mln•!t"-oal (W1rdl ... "' m "' "' "' ... ... "' m hllhlJH lllACE -3SO r•r<tL, yeat Oldi. & up. c11imln9. Puri.e l 1800 Clllrnlfl!l l)t'ICe '1600, Jo9urnti1 ICle•11i.el c.ountof Honor (ACla" I Tllirdltnil!le <W•rdl CcKmlc 1Rich1,a•l L• L1C1d.;J11 C6•n•1I R1que1t Little Bill CTre•s11rtl SIHCIY Ch•r91 !Llp11.im I O.f\Cly'5Je1 (~arn SomtOldM•n CMJle~I Go Min Too (Ore yt r) Cyclists In Action '" "' "' "' ... m "' "' ... '" Jeff Sexton will fa ce Sonny Nutter in the feature match race al .. *· ft T. IWIOINtlt. llr .............. -' ·-DEAN LEWIS "On the last lap, Serna and Malt Bell (o f Foothlll) took off, and on the final turn, I couldn't even see Serna. I just saw a pack of three and I was trying to get third. "So, I just kicked the last 220 to get close. I re· ally surprised myself.·· He surprised Le wi s 1118"TM a.t.c-;1: -•oo v••d~.JW'N• the Orange County Fair-"'.._ Al..,.MK.•. Pur'tf l llOO DHr~o:,,..,.,1 •.oo 1.0 3.10 grounds in Costa Mesa s 177.7 TOYOTA VOLVO . '73 FIAT 121 S.L 49"d, riMMo.,,...... (IM)IH,._I 52577 19A6 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA 6~6-9303 '73 TOYOTA CILICA I ,, f,,.·•, '~"r 1_1r····' I'• · ··•" 4 ....... r8dlo, ........ l4ffHll'DI • I .... ,, 1·>• ,.• ···''." ~ '"" .1-,, ; " ' , , .,- 52677 ... , •-oA ~\ 1_ •I-lo'\! A ' r•t• l •!l:•l • ( too. "I couJdn•t believe it," aaya Lewis. "They ran hil race and the pace ,.1nN ••c11 -1.so y1rot. 2 .,.., slowed down, but l (Udn'l otcts. P"""'1200· expect this rnuch of a drop." Angel 's beat of 4:17 came In the Arcadia Jn· vltetlonal where h e rinlshed far back. Fish Report D.&hlA WHA"I" -97 •'."IJ.er1: tV. Mu, 4 Mf'tKWO., I OOl'>lll, 4 n.!lllvt, ltroitllCOcl. • " NIWPO•T 10.¥ty'• Lecllwl -S7 lllo(ller\: 4·1 °"''· 11'0 HK• t ad, Ed°"' 1T,•1•ur1i •.oo J.eo tonight when the weekly ~Dll Aouswr 4H•rll 1.10 T1me -10.1s. speedway motorcycle AIMr.n -Ant Sam , Luc ky P•t Ber, I tr111yAW1111.sw-11,l19dot1. race program s present· NINTH lllAC• -I.SO yerdt.) ~·r OICl'l. Cl•lml119. Pvrw "2 100. P11A1MllOJIW IO.r1•l t•.•o 11.10 n.oo s . ..o 4.40 .. ~ Ol(kl J•I IW•rtfl Clllbbet'S Queen BH !C1!ll TllM -11.tO "!'° ,.., -llttlr An911•. Dun A LAIC!y, Gr•nclfl.lr'i l11, IClyll, I~ Mr•wT09, NOIMP!ldy._ IClno.lbpiO, •J luci. _ ... ,,,.""IM"''• s. 0Kk1J1I, ~11111 Ml... • ' edat8:1S. All o f the regular riders are expected for the pro1ram tonight In· eluding Rl•k Woods or Huntington Beach, Dan- ny Becker of Fountain Valley, Mike Bast and all of the others who rtcki re- gularly at the speedway races. • ' , , • , -:: ; •• . • " , . • • ' •• DAILYPILOT Frld!y, May 30. 1975 Chart wt Offere4, Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKAIEY Time was when qualifications for m e mbers hip in a unit of the United States Power Squadrons was to'p ass the e lementary piloting course for s mall boat handling. That is, if you were a male 18 years of age or older. • Women who passed the course examination were entitled only to a subsidiary organization known as "squadronettes" or some sim ilar de- 5ignution. • The USPS membership policy changed radical- ly and rapidly after a New Jersey woman instituted a class action suit demanding that women be al· lowed full squadron membership with the privilege of holding office, teaching classes, etc. TO BEAT THE SUIT, USPS declared itself a private organization with a riJ;!hl to accept or rej~ct applications for membership. The new poli cy states: "Me mbe r s hip in the USPS or individual squadrons is acquired ex.actly as it is in othf7r truly private organizations not open to the pubhc. The right to member ship in the USPS belongs to no one. "Candidates are proposed and seconded (en- dorsed) by m embers who are in good standing a nd know the candidate personally. Coas·t "Cl • South Shore Sailing Clu~ or >; ,---~~-~-;pi!;!I;.. Newport )leach a nd Dana l?'oint ..i \ Yacht Club will feature r'arge boa\ racing for the Performance llandicap · Racing Fle~t this weekend. SSSC will hold the second o{ its High Point Serles for PHRF yachts on Saturday a nd will com- bine with Dana Point Yacht Club in the latter's season long PHRF s eries on Sunday. Sm all boat sailors will see com- petition in Bahia Corinthian -aeht Club's .Jnvilational Regatta for- Lido-14s, P-Cats, Etchells·22s and Lasers on Saturday a nd Sun· day. SOUTltERN Calirornia Yacht· ing Association calendar: Los Angeles-Long Beach CABRILLO BEACH YACHT CLUB -Small boat regatta, ccn· terboard and keel to 20 n., Satur- day, Sunday. LONG BEACH YACfff CLtJB BOATING HltM Md l'MnW"tl 10w ,...,_ _. NI\' ~---1\IM IOdilY MIO SM.untty. • Llt"l ver1e1111 wln1!1 tOd,ty eino lOt\IOf'll. Hlohtt~w In 1ri1~r.o<t. c.Mt.I tttn"""''"'''' win ,.,... ••-• U •nd ''· ln••'M' te Sa DI "'1'MW9$ wlll ,.,... bllWMll,. oil'ICI D ego . IS. Tiltw.tff\elnNtlllo!AWllJbeU. SAN DIEGO NA VY SAILING ti 1'f CLUB -Armed Forces Day .., ..., . Regatta, Invitational, Satunlay. ftlles SOUTHWESTERN YACHT ••tO.v CLUB -HairDsohn Trophy race, S«Olllliow • 1:01ip.m. ·IOR, Saturday; Wolden P"lntl\19'1 JATU•0 t:'Li.m. ~-• Memorial Trophy, Little Rumsey F1nt1ow e:s.1.m. o.s Sant a Monica Bay 5e1ies, MORF. Saturday. SKonOlllQlt 4:t.tp.m. '·' · -Eagle Rock race (Catalina I sl and Seri es) I OR , PHRF; MORF, Sat1,1rday. CALIFORNIA YACHT CLUB 51<.ond~ SUNDA::•411·m• 2'6 -Commissioner's Trophy race, North and Inland · Flr1th1Qfl 2;•61.m. 2.6 h d. S d SANTA BARBARA Y.ACHT Fl"'1'-•=•11.m. o.t an tcap , atur ay. Slcondri1911 •:SIJ).m. •1 KING H·AR BO R YACHT CLUB -Wilson Series No. 3, SlcMCliow 11:1t p.m. , ·BOAT . 'HAND WAN'rED Te wwli 3 <l•J• a w ook -p •lot, .................. •1. 66 fl. ·1Jo op _.., ....... ,., .. 'Jack lallll• !'IL 675-1022 ''llOWEVER, NO ~ONE may be pr.oposed for membership or subsequently elected by a squadron executive ~ommittee un1ess he is qualified for elec- tion to membership under the constitution and bylaws of USPS." LITTLE SHI PS FLEET - Junior Sabot .Invitational, Sun· day. Sunday 5Ullrlt.11S:U 1.m .. Mii J:JJp,in. CLUB -New ~H~o;n;·;zo;n;s~r;a~c;e;, mmmm.mmmmmmii;immiiljlt•~,:'*~·;;;' ;;"H;;;;• ;;"~' ';';'~.m~·~· ;..,.;;;;';'';"~~~~~=====~ Qualifications are that the candidate be a m ale citizen of the United States, 18 years of age or older, who is able a nd Willing to contribute time, energy and skills to the objectives of USPS. Under the new policy, it is not necessary for a candidate to have passed the USPS piloting course. * rl OPERATORS OF RENTAL boatb1' n Newport Harbor m ay not know it, but they can held legal· Jy responsi ble for the Coast Guard sa ety equip· ment required to be aboard. The Coas t Guard says that both the rental agen· cy-owner and the renter-oper ator a re res pons ible and that in some cases the operator of a rental boat has been cited for violations such as the number of personal flotation devices <PFOs) fire extin- quis hers or no certificate of number or rental agreement aboard. . Although the ruling requires that the owner in· stall the proper equipment, it does not r elieve the operator fro m his responsibility for safety afloat. It m erely gives him some consumer protection. TO INSUR E THAT r ental boat agencies and . charter operators are not unjustly cited for e quip- ment deficiencies , the Coast Guard recommends that re ntal contracts or lease agreements specify the equipment provided by the rental agency -in· eluding the type and number of PFDs. The best protection for the user of a r ental boat is to learn the· requirements and make certain the boat is in full compliance with the la w be(ore he shoves off from the dock. New Trophy Due In Transpac Race A ne\v trophy has been added to the array or hard1vare to be presented at the conclusion of the 1975 Transpacific yacht race rrom Los Angeles to Honolulu. The Clem Stose·Lurline Award is a handsome s ilver cup set atop a sculptured swirl of sea arid bearing ha nd-en graved scenes of the 1912 Transpac fleet sailing bet1veen San Pedro and Diamond Head. T llE TR OPllY llONORS the late Clem Stose, veteran Southern Caliromia yachtsman, who died last year. It 'vas deeded to the Transpacific Yacht Club b y Stose 's daughters, Marjorie Stos e Flachsenhar a nd Patricia Stose Wyatt. Jt \V as formally presented to TPYC historian Fritz Ripley in ceremonies at San Diego Yacht Club May 1 . The trophy is 20 inches tall and dates back to 1912 \\-h en it \\'as aw01rded to r\. E. Davis,.owner of the 85-foot schooner Lurline for winning that year's Transpac. Lurline had previously won the inaugural 1906 Honolulu race and also the 1908 event under the o"·nershipof H . H.Sinclair. Stose had a lwaYs admired the tines or the state- ly schooner a nd ultimately received the trophy as a persona l gift from Davis. It re mained one of his most cherish ed possessions for the remainder of his Bellriuger Buys! Columbian Anchor or Dock Line Save $24.00 300 ft . of to p quality white nylon half-Inch line special this week only. Equal savings on other sizes. REG. $87 • $63 900 Wes I Coasl Hl!lh"'"Y opoa1lte Sal boa Bey Clllb. Slo•e Hou•S: Dally and Sa1urd11y 8 to$, SO)fldll'fS 9 10 } Newpor1 Beach T111lepnone: 6'1! .. 1111 Why should you buy your oew, fiat from ~? Well. let's face it: we are·a little off the beaten track. We have to do 1nore.·Wc have to offer the greatest savings and the best service. You know \vhat? \\'c do! C.Omc in today·;:i.nd browse around. aaaa Mission V"11ejo Imports Sari~FwyotAWKy.MlulonVJejo &JJ.1740 495--1 700 It is the owner 's responsibility to provide all re- ql.ired safety equipment and to see that it is in pro- per condition and working order. . JT IS THE RENTER'S r esponsibility to insure that all the equipment is present on the boat while he is operating it, where it is and how to use it. life. ~~~~~~~:'.:'.~::'.'.~~~~~~~~~~~~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:'.::=:=~ HIS DAUGllTERS selected it as a fitting memorial and stipulated tha\ it be awarded to the Federal requirements for recreational boats (CG-290) lists in d etail the requirements for each size and c)ass of boat. Both rental agencies and ren- t ers should h ave copies of the publication which is available free from the Coast Guard or the Coast Guard Auxiliary. incumbent TPYC commodor~'as pat::tial aP:precia· tion·and recognition or the amou!ll of ~ffort·and de- dication expended to,vard any Transpac activity. This year's r fcipient ,..,ill be'l!ays A. McClellan, formerly of Soiithern California and now a membe r of St. Francis Yacht Club of San Francisco. TOP OF THE LIN£ WXURY • ECONOMY, TOO! ~u@g_g ~¥a@) Gill JJrlrn~ MANY ~AT,-.DORS ·1N S T OCK. MANV EASV .WAYS TO DR\VE ONl!" ~OME . JEEPS,~EPS NEW$~ED . HUGE'N£W SCRVICE' DEPT. . NOW OPEN FROM 8AMTOSPM . KENDON · . ~@~@>NEWLOOK!N EW I \:fir"' ROOM AND COMFORT. WE MAKE .'EM EASY.TO OWN .. ~~MOM·FR~'~----- _,..EWJaT& ~ ~ D r;) !4l. 2.5 • _..J,··•~R ~-~~~~ r:J t:J ~ _lj~~~ITH EXTAA"S! o __ , ~~illl-RADIO •TINTCO .-' Gl.ASS ·.3 ~lP· . . ' ~~1'JI· OTHEl'IS : ::J N AMCnJEEP :VD.·CosrAME.SA·G45·7770 ·549 ·8 0 2.3 ' Now's the time to change up to ,the tire that changed the tire industry. Michelin. The original steel-belted radial Michelin dealers are featuring real tire values ,rightnow On Michel in ·x· Whilewalls for Amer ican cars. On Michelin ·zx · for impons. And on Michelin 'XAS' ' . tor imported, high performance sports cars. Ever since Michelin invented the steel-belled radial back in 1948. we 've been giving drivers whal they want in a tire. Long life. Michelin 'X' and 'ZX' tires for American and imported cars are wa rranted for 40.000 miles. (But many drivers say lhey get more. Thousands of miles more from lhei r Michetins.) Fuel savings. Fu~I tests prove you can expect measurable savings on your gasoline dollar. Assured traction. Our steel-braced tread really grips the road. Which means you'll get great handling, superb cornering, sure braking and a smoolh, quiet ride. , Steel·b9lled puncture protection ... lorsafety and security against road hazards. Need more reasons? See your dealer. . Seeltil Mlchellnd•lerrilll1'811you: CAiSOll MAlllK C.-..00.: 10~1 l ..... N . Ul·HOI • COITAllUA w .. -i:-.;,_ --co.. 1711 .......... MJ,Ulf ' HUNTlllGTOll BUCH .. _,,..._ •t ...... 111•11 iAGUNA BEACH !&'=co. • • ,• ' . • • • • i I ~ r I • • • ' ' , ' j • I· • I f, • • c • ' ' : ~ ' • ' ' • . < J I ! ' • ' • I ! ' i • • Arts/Dining Out Entertainment Friday, MayJ0, 1975 DAIL V PILOT Cf . '~ ••• . . . . . ' . He Sculpts Lucit~ By F.A. SCHOEM EHL Of tt. O.Ur ~It.I '1•11 An unknowing person seated in the li ving room of Bijan Bahar's Laguna Beach home might guess he's an cxperlon insects. All the elements arc there. In one corner, sus- pended from the ceiling, is a large plexiglass sphece full of colorful butterflies . ival of Arts. Recently, Bahar captured a five- figure contract lo con· struct a ple x i gla ss staircase in a multi - million-doll<.1r home un - der cons tructi o n in Laguna. months, Bajar and his· assistant, James Black of Newport Beach, have been preparing for the artist's first shoYI'. IT WILL take place tonight from 6 to 10 o'clock and Sat4_rday from noon to 6 p.fn . at .3861 S. !\lain St., Santa .Ana. Jn addition, private· :showings during the next ·10 days can be arranged :by calling 557-5S02. \\/hen an idea for a \\'Ork develops, Bahar said. he rirst 1n akcs a si"n<.ill·scale stud y. 'l'hl'n For the past four comes the arduous task of cutting the lucitc, sha1>· ing it, then polis hing it to _transparency. 0i1Uy Pilot ,._Db'/ Lie Pil'/M JOHN KREUTZER, TUBA PLAYER WITH THE EL TORO MARCHING BAND He'll Be Among 2,800 Performers at Saddleback Music Festiv al Saddlebaek Sho"7 Music Festival By JAN WORTH Of OMO.Uy Piiot St.ioll When th.e lights go down and the performers rev up into "Another Opening, 1\nothcr Show" Monday night, the entertainment to follow will be more th<.1n just a sho\V. It's an extravagant musical a nd theatrical production by 2,800 music students of the Sad- dleback Valley Unified School District and at least 100 teachers, parents, and volunteers. Next Week Ms. ll ar1·is, \Vho has nurttu:cd the festivul from. the days \Vhen it \\"as an elementarv school music 1?V_l'~ll fur _a bout 800 students, ·has the responsibility of tying it all together. · ··Thi s is our report card to the community,"' ~'l s. liarris said. '"We like to present the whole spectrum of our mtrsic offerings so that not only the community but the students can see Yl'hcrc they arc heading-as an ins piration." On a wall by the door h.in gs a plexiglass case containing r are beetles from allover the world. One or the first things that Bahar will tell you is that he is one or a very select few who has his own beetle dealer. But butterfli es and beetles arc not at the center or Babar's life. BAHAR is a sculptor. llis medium is acrylic plastic. better known as lucite or plcxiglass. Babar's work is ex- tremely contemporary. The rorms do not con- form to objects within the real world. ·'The problem is th~t. people want to look at something prett y like paintings of docks and boats,". said Bahar. "I can't make pretty things like th<it. I \vould r.ither make s omething pure, something simple." "If I get more than· :Jn eighth of an inch off. I have to start all over," saict' Bahar, notin ~ the acrylic is selling no'v for $50 a square root. ALTllOUGll Bahar is a narivc of Iran, his family settled in the 1-f arbor Area 15 vears ago . f-1 t.: a t ·t e 1\ d c.d .l\'C\\·port !!ar bor 1-figh School. Orang{' Coast College and the California College of Arts and Crafts. He first worked as a fashion photographer in ·San Francisco and Lon· ·don. "But I wanted lo takC' ,,.,.. up three-dim ensionul \\'Ork," Bahar, 33, said. D•ltr 1'1191 SWt !"Ml• lie s tarted ,,·it.ha piece or lucitc . It ended up in the hand s uf :.i l.011g SC'.ich interior designer "·ho helped U:.ih ar sell other \\'Ork s. It has g rown so big as it developed into a tradition over the last five years that it has to be ~eld in the Anaheim Convention Center. No place ~n the Saddleback Valley is big enough to hold IN SE EKING that go.ii. the festival includes choral and instrumental students from grades four through twelve. There is a market for his talent. One collector paid $600 to have one or Babar's works shipped to Israel. The artist has been s uccessrul year <irter year at the annual Laguna Beach Fest- BIJAN BAHAR WITH LUCITE SCULPTURE Exhibit Set Tonight and Saturday In 1970. he submitted his sc ulptu1·es t~ be juried for the Fcsli val of Arls. ~le received the second highest number or votes and sold out t'A-'O \\'eeks into the s ix -v.1eet exhibition. ll. ·~ •. ... ~ This year, with more students than ever in the dis.Lrit rilusic program, the musicale has been expanded to l\liO nights , with hair the slu· d~nts perror']n ing in each show. . ' The program includes audience singalongs led by Jerry Rouse on Monda.Y and by Barbara Arnold on Tuesday. Also on tap \Yill be.two standup s hows, one by the El Toro 1-ligh School Band Monday night in a sort of ··hair -time" cal)ed "Strike Up The Band," and one 1'ucsday night by the Mission Vi ejo 1-fi gh" • UCI Offers New Music. •• THE CONCE RT wi ll be held al 7:30 p.m. School band, call ed "BritishGrandioso." Monda~ and Tues day nighls~..Tickets at Sl ea_c~ho--~-Th.£§._e events wilJ feature the two hi gh school Stories by JACKIE HYMAN t ahre ·d".at1l~btlc arrt· all ~udLdleback ,valllley schools, at bands in ?Ulfregalia, complete wffl11neirr1a~gc__ __ M_ic_h_a_c,,.I S~°.;4~~:-~~~ .. 0-,-ed~.-.n- e is r1c o ice In aguna -11 s, and at the bearers and drum majors. -r ..._, d composing. a l the University of oor. . In pre-shows for the parents \\'ho have to Southern California but decided Jn addition to the hour-and·a-half program of come early to bririg their kids, Los Alisos In-singing and orchestra numbers, program plan-termediate School students Monday ni ght will he would be better off making his h dd d · r h · living as a pianist. .ners ave a e a vanety o t ealrical touches present a rock opera, "Joseph and J-li s including dancing, a performance by a Trinidad Technicolor Dre.im Coal." "I decided in my senior year steeldrumplayerandcolorfulcostumes. that the kirfd of music I was in- Th'.s year· thctheme1·s"AHol<.dayCru1·sc On TUESD \Y th M. . y ·. •1 · h Sh I lerested in writing was not the ' e .1ss1on 1eJo ,. ig c 00 kind of music the avant-garde the S.S. Musicale." The musical itinerary takes jazz band will perro1·m, directed by Terry musical est ablishment was in· the audience rrom Hawaii to ~1exico to Trinidad NeYl'man. The pre-s hows begin al 7 p.m. terested in s upporting,•• said 10Germany, Russia, England and Ireland. Overall, las t year's musicale cost S9,000. Saunders, a concert pianist and a The finale uses the theme songs "Small With all the bills paid from sales of a record pro-lecturer in music al UC Irvine . World'' and ~'This is My Country.'' duced. the district made Sl80 profit on the event. Coast audiences will get 3 rare This year, costs will be.much higher because THl!OVGHO.· UT, the audience.will be ~led on or expanding to tWo nights. Part or the expenses opportunity to hear one or hi s compositions on June6, when the their musiea.l ,lourltiy f<!ur nan-ators announcing arc being absorbed by the Mission Viejo Com-UCI wind ensemble conducted by each stop rrom a simulated ship's btidge:· pany, which is paying $2,0QO .toward the sound They are J on Marks, a teacher from Del system for one perrormance. Charles A1 . Atkinson will presenl C E l nl. t •-h I El" · b th Sh h r "For many ·0·1· ou· r mu·s,·c ·stude nts. th<·s a new work by Sanders, "The erro e en ary ..:;>\; oo; 1za e ee an o Hi ll Wire," set to five poems by Del Cerro; J anet Ziegler from Lo,,s Alisos In-eventisthethrillortheyear,"Ms.1-larrissaid . RobertFrost. termediate; and Mitchell Adams or Mission Vic-"Each year it's a challenge because each The piece will be sung by Deb- jol-ligh School. year something new is added. When it's all over -bie Struble. soprano, and Dennis And behind it all js Joanne J-larris, the dis-when Yo u hear the final notes or the final song -Fox, baritone. tricl musi c coordinator. you v.'ant to do it all over again." Japanese Drama In Irvine "I'M I NTER EST ED in writing things that connect with an au- . dience and that are i,[ltelligi~e to an audience," Sanders said: "I suppose when you get older, be- ing fashionable is not so impor- tant. "The music is tonal and in these days it's pretty con- servative," he added. The piec'e concentrates on combinations or wind ins tru- ments and voices. ··1 think the inspiration or my music is a lw ~ys literary text," MICHAEL SANDERS, WHOSE WORK PREMIERES JUNE 6 With Soloists Debbie Struble and Dennis Fox (right) Sanders said. "I "'as attracted by the poems ' s implicit y and con - ,·ersational quality and r tried to find a counte rpart ... This simple and deep style is a challenge to me as a composer .·· Tll E \\'ORK will be played on a program v.•ith three other pieces: ··rrelude and F'u gue info .. ~finor'" by Houston Bright. '"Petite Sym· phonic" by Charles Gounod , and, ··symphony ror Band, op. 69 ," by i \lincent Persichetti. The conce1·t \\"ill be at 8 p.m. June 6 in UC I 's 1''in e r\rt.s Village Theater. Admission is SI. ' ~ix hundred.year-old Japanese NOh Theater will come alive again at UC Irvine on June 5, 6, and 7, when student actors will don traditional masks a~ cos- tumes to perform "Kantan," a dream play, 8'nd ''Funa- .Benkei, a warrior drama, in the l..ittle Theater, Humanities Hall 161, al 8 p.m . Admission costs 75 cents. ... And' Unremarkable' Theater The dramas are being directed by Michele Chiappetta Garza, a master or fine arts candidate. Ms. Garza, who was not born Into the J apanese culture, got her £int rea' taste Cf Uapanese tradi- tions at the age, ot 11 wbe:n she. look a course on the Japaqese tea ceremony at the Joslln Art Center jn'TorranCe. • · She has pursued her studies on Japanese culture and traditions at Cal State San Francisco l\ad at UCI, where she received a fine arts degree in 1973. • ln ·edditlon to her work In oriental theater, she has directed three contemporary plays-at UCI 'llnd served as productJon assili· tant al the Mark Taper li'orum with the Theater for. NOW gro~p durlna the s ummer of IB73. , Ms.il'Oart• •1rn WOrks lls·~stu­ dent relations officer. for the Bank of America's Irvine office. MICHELE GAR:i!A (CE!ITER) DIRECTS NOH ORAMA Jed• Hu backer and Farah Kotroub11 to Ster The Unremarkable Human Be· ing Theater Company is actually somewhat remarkable. "To my knowledge, it's lhe rirst time anyone has put com· municati on theory into acting practice," said M ari1}11 Moohey, a graduate student in directing at UC Irvine. "The ·unren1arkable' comes rrom my rascination with the crazy things that people do every day and pay no attention lo, like waking up , eating breakras t, things like that,'' she said. "THE COMPANY was sup- posed to be like commedia dell'arte where we came up with our own scenes. The purpose was to develop a derinition of the· minimum required ror character and .dramatic action,'' Ms. Mooney explained. However , because of a shortage of time, "we got more performance-oriented and didn't get around to the derinition part al II." The group will perform at 4 p.m . June 2 outdoors at UC l between the library and Gateway Coinmons, and at 4 p.m . June 4 on the patio next to Concert Hall . "We"re working right now on hello and good-bye, trying to take apart the hello ritual. We're ar- ranging situations and we just have people walk across and say hello. Mos\ly they're runny," Ms. ~1ooney said. THE SCENES, \Vhi ch the ac- ·lors themselves create. are relal- cd to body language, "'how com- munication l akes place ... I want· ed to work with actors and see ir it would make any dirrerence to their acting." I...8nguage itself rascinates her, Ms . Mooney said. "One or the hardest things about knowing how la nguage works is not being able lo say things that don't mean anything anymore.'' s he cOmmented. "Like you say a person is hap- py. What that means is that you're 'Inferrin g from tha t person.'s behavior th a t he's something known as 'happy.'·· Ms . Mooney said she would like to teach language related to theater, prcrerably at a college Df.ltr ...... :i.Wt ....... MARILYN MOONEY Directs Company in Orange County. Members of the Unremarkable. Human Being Theater Company are Jane Gell er, Scott Manners .. Shelley Wilson, Sully Sweet, Roger Conboy, John J-latch.._ CbristiQa Woods, Sa.ndy Elliot, Elaine Kew. Dawn Spare and Laura Segui. · • ~ . • . .. . •• : . ' ' I f • I I Auditions are comina up soon for a variety cit theatrical per· formances.,. includinc musicals and children's theater. Tustin Theater Guild will hold readlac• for !Is first productloe, "Tiie Red Sh-." at T:30 ~· Mooida1 nd Tues . Addition1f inform at ion availab le by calling 832·2157 or 838-1971. , Clark Special Views Egypt 'Pl fl.--fl S uite' The ge nes is of civiliza· lion -whi<'h is said to Dale R aoul and Judson Earney. sho"·n here, play varied roles in the have taken place with the Neil Simon comedy, which will run June 5 through July 20 at the "suddenness of a sun . Muckentha le r Cultural Center, 1201 W. l\1alvern, F ullerton . Ad· rise" about 5,000 ye<:1rs mission , with a light supper, cos ts S6. Reservations may be made b}' ago and is r eflected in an· calling 879-6865 \veekday a fternoons. cient Egyptian art -will -----------------------------be explored by Lord Ken· SCR Tickets Offered Season tickets are now on sale for the 1975-76 season at South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., CQsta Mesa. The season includes six plays. Ticket prices are $19 ffrr S und ay Disneyland Day Includes Angels matinees, $22 for week nights and $28 for Friday and Saturday nights. -"!though the theate r has not yet chosen the season's plays, a list of those under cons idera· t i o n i n <':i..,.l u d e s Shakespeare~.'' Much Ado About Nothing," Tom Stoppard's "Jum· pcrs," C hekhov's "The Seag ull ," B e rtolt Brecht's ''Galileo'' ''Angels ·Disneyland View Level res erved Eugene O 'Neill's ··t.o~g Fun Day" will offer rans seats. Terrace boxes are (}ay 's J o urn ey Into a specially.priced ticket $7, with club and fi eld Ni ght'' a nd Thornton good for the June 8 boxes at $7 .50 per-Wilder 's "The Skin of California -Milwaukee person. OurTeeth." c~ntest, foll owed by Tickets are"on sale al Season subscribers are eight hours a t Di s · theAnaheinSladiumbox guaranteed seats at the neyl~nd . offi ce, as well as Liberty theate r , which is fre· Prices s tart al $6 for and Ticketron agencies quently sold out. Addi· throughout . S.outhern tio nal information is neth Cla rk on "In the Beginning ," a s pecial presentation a iring Mon- day, June 2 al 8 p.m . on Channel28. Lord Clark and a film crew travelled ex · tensively through Egypt and the Nile Va lley for ''In the Beginning," which is a personal re· cord of Lord Clark's odyssey throug h the art, culture. religion and society that flourished in Egypt at the dawn ol civilization. The noted a rt hi s· torian.-who wrote and narrated the special , sees Egyptian art as re· vealing all the qualities (hat ''we value in civiliza ti on." I-le believes these values to be a belief in the in· dividual as a moral be· ing, a Sense. of beauty and of the dignity or man, an appreciation of nature, a well or·ganized system of &OVft'tlment, and a joy in art rOr tts own sake. IA>rd Clark proceeds to trace the early hiitory of Egypt through Its visual arts. He lakes the viewer through Sakkara -"the real birthplace of civilization" -where a king named Zoser built the earliest stone build· ing in the world, a royal retreat and temple, in the middle Of which Zoser had his tomb, the earliest p:Yramid, bu.ill. The special, produced by Colin' Clark (son of Lord Clark) and directed by Michael Gill,_repeals on KCET Thursday, June S, at noon an~ Saturday, June 7, at 12:30 and 8 p.m , Music was specially composed by Herbert Chappell. J\.Tew Rev••n ·California. availa ble by ca ll ing 1 '1°' ~ The action will begin 646-3252· at I p . m : when Dick 1--;;:i--;;----:----;;;;:;:;;;;----,--- Opening Tlwrsday Williams' corps, Jed by Mickey River s , Dave Chalk and Bruce Bochte, meet Henry Aa ron and his Brewer teammates. includin g Southern California's Robin Yount "The Common Sense and veteran stars Don Novelty Company,'' a ~1oneyandG eorgeScott. new satirical comedy re· Following the game, vue directed by Shelley special ti<'ket holders Berman , will o pe n mayenjoyunlimlteduse Thursday, June 5, al ~:30 of Disneyla nd's more I ~;-:::======~~~~======~~ p.m . at the Meeting than ·so major a ttrac· I I-louse C~baret, 831 South lions (except shooting La Brea Avenue , Los galleries}, including Angeles. ''America Sii\gs •· Performances will be "Pirates of the Carib- W e d n es da ys and bean" and "It's A Small Thurs da ys at 8 :30 , World," from 4 p.m. to Fridays .and Saturdays-:ru~·'.:'.dn'.'.'.'.'ig~h'.'.::=====-_j at 7:30 and 9:30 and Sun- days at 7 and 9:30. WEEKENDER Tickets are on sale al Gets It ALL ·.all agencies. Box office · Phone number is (213) together Fridays 933-7383. Guitaris t : To Play • Popular concert :flamenco guitarist and ·instructor Mari a no ·.Cordoba will play Satur· ·day at 8 p.m . in Phillips '.Hall Theater at Santa :Ana College, 17th and Bristol Streets , Santa .Ana. Further progra m in· formation is available by contacting the Communi· ty Services Office at SAC at835·3000. ~Concert Swrday • Pianist M 'Jou Dietzer ~ •.and mezzo.sopra no Jane ,.,Westbrook will give a : · concert al 8 p. m . Sunday at Saddleback College's Building G on the lower ./.'" campus. ,, \:J~ •,;1' " . ' . L. ... ·-. ' • • • . -• . I . I·- ~ I.AVES your mon•y In lh• DAILY PILOT int he DAILY PILOT A Night of Great Entertainm ent Summer- Festival STARS -PM• audltloae ror Sinla f.na ColJe-e's sum~ pl'odu~Ulii or ~c•l t'Sho;t._,, ~ be held in th~ col· le-'e':S Phillipa Hall Theater on IJth ,a t Bristol Street\ Santa · AQa,~on June 4, 5 aad 6. Ai~Itlo~ 'will be at S and 7p.m . · • PerfoN11ers should br· ing a music selec\lOn 'to ·sine. -Alio, technfcf! u- lllOtante can attfPil· !lie audi\i<>U fOll lnlbrmallQn M open poottloni :l . "Sbow'boat" ti be Perforaie~ Jl(ly 23 through 27. Additional ln- rormatton ls available.by calling the Theater DepartD\ent at 835-3000. Tb1I SUnday (rom 1 tos· p .m . and on Tuesday from 7 : 30 to 10 p.m., tryouts will be held for a children's theater pro· duction of "Pied Piper." The a uditions for children and adult.I will be at the City Hall An· nex, 530 N . Ross St., San- ta Ana. Performances will be Aug. 2 through 9 at 7 p.m. Auditions are set for June 16through 20 at6:30 p.m. for Orange Coast Co llege's summer musical, "Cabaret." Tryouts will be in the college auditorium. The musical will be staged July 30 and 31 and Aug. 1 and2. • '(tlagie Shoac' Illusions, comedy and dancin'g mix In the new rock musical .coming to the Shubert Theater in Century City June 7 through July 2Q. Tickets at $5 to·s12 are available at agen- cies. Information can be obtained by calling (213) 553-9000. At Shop Centers Two Orange Coas t shopping centers will feature special e ntertain· ment this weekend and next week . At South Coast Village, Sunflower at Plaza· Drive,• Santa Ana, there will be free demonslra· lions of quilt, p illow and rag doll making from 11 a.m. 'to 4 p.m . Saturday and Sunday. Fashion I s land in Newport Center, Newport Beach, will pre- sent members of the Westwood High School honor choir in a free con· certat9:1Sp.m . Monday. FROM Fash ion I sland Newport Beach . . STEREO SOUN·DS OF THE HARBOR I • • Co111ed11 Tea111 "Al Lohma n and Roger Barkley well known as the rad~o comedy team o/ Lohman & Barktcr, w1ll 1>erform at Magic Mountain tn Valencia Saturday and Sunday and June 7 B •. 14 a nd 15 at J, 2:30 and 4 p.m. Admisslo~ ot $6,50 for udults and $5.50 tor children In· eludes rides. The park is local~ at ttie M.ag1c ~ounlu1n Parkway exit from the San Diego F recway north of Hollywood. . . . . . ' . . ' ... ' Arthur Lyman at Kam's For the past decade or so, what might be called the realm o r exotic sounds in mus ic has been· the province or one en. t er tain er -Arthur Lyman. Out 'n' About Norm.an Stanley of ''The Sting ," ''l liones tly Love You ," ''America ," ''Puka SheJls" <the title song from h is up coming album) and major pro- duction numbe rs like "Rhapsody in Blue" or "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue." Any musician who re- alizes sales topping 2 million copies ror one or his a lbu ms _obviously has a bulwark or dedical· ed fans . So don 't say you were n't warned if you get hooked after one visit to Arthur's c urre nt showplace here on the South Coast -Kam's r_eslaurant, 2121 E . Coast H ig hwa y <n ear MacArthur Bo ulevard), Coronadel Mar. llAVING take n tern· porary leave of his more f amiliar h a unts in Honolulu, Arthur has set- tled in for a spell (through Augu s t) at. Karo 's. Orange County will be hard put to come up with a better entertainment package for the sunlmer. With a SI cover charge on Friday and Saturday nights only, two shows are s taged nightly, Wed· nesday through Sunday, beginning at 9 p. m . Start· ing next week, however , these will be augmented by a third dinner show, at 7:30. For reservations, call673·4477. A stereo buff can de· monstrate on his home eq uipment why he takes de li ght in the distinctive musical sound effects of Lyman recordings. A live presentation doubles the audio satisfaction. Melodies familiar and new acquire a mistily ex· otic, suggestively Orien- tal flavor from unusual sources : a wailing conch shell, clattering bamboo sticks, thump·lhumping eonga drums. Other od- dities sLfStain the hyp. noti c rhythms : wOOden 30 I 0 L.tcrpttw, ... _, ... le•ll (Bayside on !he Lido Peninsula) SUHDA Y llUMCH-t ~·1:30 DIMMll H16HTLY- ,,._ S:OO p.a 675-5777 JAMAtcAH STiii. I IYHY SUMDAY Jte7P.M. IA c:;I IY POrUL\I: DIMAHD OASIS T .. 1."'"' w.-1,... to-l!H ------ s. .. & Moa.....0.. M...-. ~ 7~,J~O~~ili Present s . ~ """""' "GEHO" Thursday Friday Sa rurday Tue. &Wed. ' . COCKTAILS•OINING •DANCING•ENTEATAINMENT Daily Breaklast•Lunch•Dinner Twt1 ht'-d ot f/11111' ~ SOUTH l I I 06 C-f Hwy. LAGUHA I!! l!I P'l l!I IHl!lWl!l'T 226 S. Harbor Blvd .• San11 Afl8, California 92794 , ,t.ppearing Nlghlly (excopl Mon~•Yl in 1he. EAIJ·WEIT LOUNGE Tommy Song Trio -Luaal 8:30 pm to 1:00 am, f'ri. &.Sit. 'til 1:30 am " bl ocks , co r rugated gourds, Chinese gongs, castanets, chimes, tam- OOurines, cow bells - even the jawbone of an ass. WllENEVER ap · propriate , and quite spontaneous ly , Arthur and members of hi s group vocall y repr6duce the screeching calls of tropical birds, or perhaps bark like seals or whoop like cranes. And it all adds up to an astonishing, delicate, haunting soWld Cora varied and Immense repertory. songs ranging from Israeli folk music to rock 'n' roll , At Kam 's you 'II enjoy hearing Arthur perform past hits suc h as ''Taboo'' and "'Yellow Bird " But there's a lot to relish. too, in exciting arrangements ' Arthur is an ex traordinarily versatile mus ician I-l e plays vibes, marimba, congas, bon gos , gu itar and almost every other in· .slrument used b y the group And each of his three backup men is a talent· ed. professional artist in his own right They are pianist Paul Reid, from Manhatta n Beach ; Ran~ dy Allon, bass, a native of Honolulu , and drum· mer Pat Sombrio, who was born o n the bi g is land of Hawaii Also, a dazzling pre· sence al all limes is Arthur's beautiful yoWlg daughter·, K a piolani <See OUT, PageC4) DINNER SPECIALS ·.,1 NIGHTLY _TA_tEJ1kWllAtE,d 673 4633 • ,. t I I I ~~·~J>· --l!Al!blFF- RESTAURANT -f.,-.:..i; ~· Snw • ~ltlk ,,,.11110111trludtd, intitfWlt nlllWMI, moll °"' tM ~ o~btt • .,.,1cu,,, ""'Mil 11H ltult rom. ",,_YI biyotld -11w,,, nltlx In I/tr lo""I' wllrro ~ CWlll ., ,,..kl ~"' """tt 10 t'WlbraMlbh -·· Milt Sarli{f 1011 ipttt.11*« -'" tXtf'I ftw """"'" ,;tw, "'". ,....,,,..~""'" r=+;:.;'·.:;· • .,.... fro,,, llff ,.,..,, .. world of n111111rrr n>ws. .., .... 3000 PALM AVE. HUNTINGTON BEACH .,, (714) 536-8866 . . . ' . . . . . . . . . Friday. May 30. 1975 OAILVPILOT C:J Concerts at UCI, G WC TONl.~HT,MAY30 UC IRVINE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Richard Strauss, Beethoven and Marlos Nobre works, conducted by~ Alvaro Cassuto. Soloists Nancy Bra mlage and Arnold Juda. 8 p.m . tonight a nd Saturday, UCI Fine Arts VIiiage Theater. $2 . GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE SYMPHONIC BAND -Wo rk s by Scarlatti. Berns te in , Shostakovich, conducted by Wayman Walker . Soloists Darellyn Mc1illi , Rosanna. Patrona and David Dingman. 8 p.m. tonight and June 6, GWC College Theater in 1-lunlington Beach. Free. 'TllE EGG AND I ' -Comedy. at Fountain Valley Community Theater, 18280 Mt. Baldy Cir- ele. f'ountain Va lley. 7:30 p.m. tonight and Saturday, 2 p. m. Sunday. Reservations. 531·8602 <>r962·2551 . 'SllE LOVES 1'1f;' -Mus ical comedy, <il Ralph Freud P layhouse of A1acgowan llall , UC Los Angeles. Tonight through June 7. 8:30 p.m. Reservations, (213) 825·258 1. HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING -Robert Morse and Rudy Vallee, at the Los An geles Music Center Pavili on, tonight through June 28. Tickets at agencies or (213) 626·72 11 . Los Angeles Civic Light Opera. 'THE PRISONER OF SECOND AVENUE' - Neil Simon comedy, Westminster Co mmunity 'rhealer, 7272 Maple Ave., Westminster. 8:30 p.m . tonight through June 7 Reservations' 893·8626 \V cekl'ndsonl y 'AN EVENING OF MF.WORAMA' -Al the Costa Mesa Civic Pl:.1 yhouse, Orange County fo~airgrounds. Cost:.1 Mesa. 8:30 p.m. tonight through June 7 Reservations 55f>·5300. Weekends only ·GO DSPELL' -Rock musical. at Cypress College Fine Arts Building {Bernstein Jfouse), 9200 Valley View, Cypress. Tonight, Saturday, and June 1, 6. 7 and 8. 8:30 p.m. $2. Reservations , 826-2226 F ISll FRY AND CA RNIVAL -lnc;luding midway rides. stage entertainment ; various times tonight through June I , Lion's Park , Center Street and Park Avenue, Costa Mesa. In· formation. 548-2495 'PF:TF.R Pt\N' -Children's theater. al Laguna Beach lligh School auditorium . 625 Park Av e., Lagun a [-Scach 8 p.m. toni ght, 1and8 p.m . Sa~Ur­ day SJ adults. SI children • 'MY Q,\liG l1T ER, YOUR SON' -Comedy, TEMPLE GARDEN$ Q"WSSS Re11aurant LUNCHEON AHO DINNER DAILY Special Lunc11eon Mfet $1.85 Monday thru Fric;lay 11:30 lo 1 :30 RICllSHA COCKTAIL LOUHG.E ,Featurjng Exotic Tropical Drinks ' I SOO ADAMS lot Hllritort AMI, ltt Gw._. &ro•e COSTA MESA 12201 llOOKHUIST -S40-lt-J'7--54~1tl-J-.__.fAt.Cll f nl 6JJ,.7010 Bring vour family and all of your friends for a meal no one will forget! Times/Places tonight through June 14 , at Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St ., 8:30 p.m. Reserva· lions, 842-5421. Weekends only. 'THE CAVE DWELLERS' -William Saroyan comedy, at South Coast Repertory Theater, 18Z7 Newport Blvd ., Costa Mesa. 8 p.m . tonight through June 29. Reservations, 646·1363. $3 .25 to $5.25. 'NO, NO, NANETTE' -l\1usical, at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente . Tonight through Aug. 3 .. Rcscrvations, 492·9950. $10.95-$12.95, v.•ith dinner. 'THE KING AND 1· -l\Iusical. e:tl Newport f~a rbor liigh·School auditorium , 600 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. 8 p.m. tonight and Saturday. S2 . Reservations, 556·33 10. 'CABARET' -l\1usical, tonight through June 14 at Plummer Auditorium, Chapman and Lemon Streets. Full erton. $3 to $5. Reser vations, 879-1732. 'THREE BAGS FULL' -Comedy, presented by Irvine Community Theater al Actor's Playbox Theater at Golde n West College. Tonight through June 22. Resetvations, 557·7297. Weekends only. CONCERT AND CULTURAL ARTS FESTIVAL -Choir concerts, 8 p.m. tonight and Saturday: arts and er a rts exhibit 5 lo 8 o'clock tonight and noon to 8 p.m . Saturday, ilt the Church of J esus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 1919117th St., llunl· ington Beach. Free admission. ·G ARDEN OF THE FINZI-CONTINJS' -7 and 9:30 p.m. tonight and Saturday, UC J Science Lee· ture Hall . 1-'ilm by Vittorio De Sica. Sl .25 GUN AND I NDIAN SHOW -At the Great Western Exhibit Center, 2120 S. Eastern Ave .• Commerce (Atlantic Boulevard exit, Santa Ana Freeway). Includes fast draw contest, square dancing. Tonight, noon to 10 o'clock, Saturday, 9 a.m . lo 10 p.m ., Sunday, 9 a .m . to 5 p.m. S2 adults, 75 cents children. SATURDAY, MAY 31 ' HUES CORPORATION AND H.J. THO~IAS ,.\t Disneyland, 9 and 11 p.m. Saturday, Tomor- <See RODEO, PageC4l ~OOo ..... , . ' MONDAY thru THURSDAY SPECIALS (Friday, Saturday ~nd Synday until 6 P.M.J dinners include soup or salad, baked potato or rice · RED SNAPPER .................. 2.25 MAHI MAHI .. .. . .. . . .. .. .. .. • . . 2.65 GRILLED SEA BASS . • . . • • . • • . . . . 2.95 TOP SIRLOIN .................. , 3.25 NEW YORK STEAK .............. 3.75· LOBSTER TAIL . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 4.95 S1:EAK.AND LOB.SJ~ •.. , . • . . . . 5.~ LUNCHEON also served daily until 4 p.m. 16278 Pecif~ C<M111 Hwy • Hunli"f'on Bdt. • 12131 592· 1321 3901 E. COMt Hwy• COfOM O.i Mar • 1714) 17S.0900 llighest Quality Native ~1 ex ican foods Wee~ Day~: 11 :JO o.m. to I t p.m. Fri. and Sot. I 1:30 a.m. lo 12 p.m. Open 7 Days COCKTAILS MEXICAN RESTAURANT 296 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA 0 Hill.GREN SQUARE Phone 64597626 OpenDallyot ll:OOa,m. Here Is family dining at a price yo~ can afford. Bring a large party. We'll give you plenty of service and food to match. Be sure to notice our expanded cocktail lounge. Come to El.,, t~· " ' . .. ..... ,t-i~ Ml CaN, It means .. My Houff" and your meal wlll be a trip to Mexico) .... , ..... ~ .. ED IYAN & ROSEMARY CARUSO TUESDAY THRU SATUIDA T -9:00 P..M •• 2:00 A.M. <Mrigger Rooin-KONA LANES 2A99 HARBOR. cosrA ws~ S4S-1112 ' I • (;I DAILY PILOT Friday, May 30, 1975 THE CAPTAIN AND TENNILLE Co~tSinger Has Pop Hit The Captain a nd Tennille, one of the most popular new vocal·instrumental groups in the pop music field , will appear at Knoll's Berry Farm in Buena Park tonightlhroughSunday. The "Tennille" half of the duo is Toni Ten· nille, better known along the Orange Coast as Toni Shearer who, along with Ron Thronson, created South Coast Repertory'.s celebrated stage hit "Mother Earth" in 19'11 . Since then she has teamed both personally and professionally with the Captain (Daryl Dragon, son of sym. .phony conductor Carmen Dragon and lo whom she is now married). The pair were featured on Thursday night's Johnny Carson Show and will appear today on the Dinah Shore ~how. Next week they will go on tour with singer Mac Davis. The Captain and Tennille have just cut a new album called .. Love Will Keep Us Together," the title of their current hit single. Toni's three sis- ters -Melissa, J ane and Louisa -provide lbe background vocalizing on the disc. Mi ss Tennille is a former community theater actress on the Orange Coast who performed in "The Star Spangled Girl" and "Sweet Charity" at the Laguna Playhou.se and "Once Upon a Mat- tress" for the Rancho Community Players. She composed the music and was the featured singer for SCR's "Mother Earth," which spawned a na- tional touring company and a Broadway produc- tion. Showtimcs al Knoll's. are 8 and 10 o'clock tonight. 6. 8 and 10 p.m. Saturday and 3, Sand 7 p.m. Sunday. Intermission Tom Titus Irvine Group Seeking .Stage Just a year ago, the Irvine Comm_unl1.y Theater was preparing to close its fourth season and wondering where it might present the fifth. The Humanities; Hall Playhouse at UC frvine, where lCT had staged its first four seasons , was being taken over ' by the university for its own drama programs. Fortunately, thi! Irvine group was able to ac- quire the use of the Ac· tor's Playbox Theater on the campus of Golden West College -some 20 miles from home base. TONIGHT ICT1 opens the comedy "Thrte Bags FUii," its final production of what has been a highly successful 1974 ·75 season at Golden West, and again the outlook for the future is clouded. The Irvine players have been noti(ied by the college that the Actor's Playbox will not be available lo them next season due to the expansion of Golden West programs. The ba d ne"!S came less than two weeks afier ICT had announced its 1975·76 season , leading off in August with a re· vival of "The Bild Seed" and following with ''Jerfecl Pilch,'' Beginner's Luck," "That Championship Season'' and "Here Lies Jeremy .r~~st.ew kettle •• / \. Featuring ' IHTlltMA~ STIWS . · SOUPS SALADS SAMDWICHIS I OTHB Sl'ICIALTllS WATCH NEXT WEEK FOR AN EXCITING ANNOUNCEMENT MISA 0YHDI cena. COSTA MISA ADAMS AT HAllOI t7t•ll71 1111 c.i.. r.., HIMn« l•k•homo STAG CllllSE WID 111111! Pl.,NUl*l...... Olti. ...... .0poo...,11-tot ... -M_.W. .. ll:JI r RODEO, 'HORSE 0 RAMA' COMING • • • (f\"om P•I• C3) row land SIOK•· Wltll stlleo and Hend.,,,..,. CHORAL CONCERT -Orange Cout Colle&•· Chorale and Chomber Sinlers, 8 p.m . Saturday in the colle1e auditorium, 2701 Fairvlew Road, Costa Mesa. Free. IRVINE MASTER CHORALE -8 :30 p.m . Saturday at Finl BapU&t Church, 1!>10 W. 17th St., Santa Ana. $3.50 and $5. Reservations, SC8-80l9. SUND/\Y, IUNE 1 POPS CONCERT -Jan a nd <on«rl bands, 8 p.m. SU.nday at Santa Ana C.Ol leee Phillips ·Hall, 17th and Bristol Streets, S&nta Ana. 1'"'ree. NEW PL/\Y READINGS -Original plays, 7:30 p .m. Saturday in Orange Coast College's EX· perimental Theater. Free. Information, 556-5566. ' UNIVERSAL STUDIOS TOUR -Senior citizens week, Sunday through June 8. Discounts on tour of sets, animated s~ial effects. Ticket order forms at senior ciliten clubs or (213) 985·4 321 , ext.1423. M/\RIA MULD/\UR -With John Sebastian and Honk, 1 p.m . Sunday at Orange Coast College's football stadium. Gates open at noon. $5.50 and $5, lickets al agencies and college book slore. IRVJNE CONCERT -Plano, woodwind and str· ing music from the Irvine Conservatory of Music, 3 p.m . Sunday al UCI's Concert Hall. Free. lllONDAY,J UNE2 SADDLEB/\CK MUSICAL FESTIVAL -Mon · day and Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the Anaheim Con· venlion Center. $1 . <See Page Cl) T UESDAY,JUNEl CHORUS CONCERT -Saddleback Community College Chorus, works by Haydn and Brahms, 8 p.m . Tuesday at St. Mary's Episcopal Church, 428 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. Free. 'BLITHE SPIRIT' -Noel Coward comedy, Tuesday tllrough June 21 at Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 806 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna: Beach. 8:30 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. Reservations 494 ·0743. WEDNESDAY,JUNE4 CHAMPIONSHIP RODEO -Five·day competi- tion , 8 p.m. Wednesday through June 7 and 2 p.m. June 8. Saddle bronc, 8areback and bull riding, calf roping, etc. The Forum, Manchester and Prairie Streets, Inglewood. $3 .7S tp $6.75 . Ticketron and Mutual agencies. 'GUYS AND DOLlS' -Musical, Wednesday tbrou1h June 22 al The Playhouse, 172 N. Glassell St., Orange. 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, 2:30 p .m. Sunday. $1.75 to $5 .SO. Reservations, 997-3485. 'THE MUSIC MAN'-Faculty and students, 7:30 p .m. Wednesday and Thursday at Stephen R. Fitz Intermediate School, 4600 McFadden Ave., Santa Ana. $1 .25. Reservations, 638-6351 . HOW APPEARING PLAIN TRUTH- Ni9htly for danci"9 ettd ontertei"'""* It'• ell llio,,.nint et 1107 Jambore,1 Aoad, Newpof1 Beach (714)144·1100 THUllSD/\V,JuNEI 'J/\P/\NESE NOH Dll/\M/\' -· p.m. June 5, I Ind 7, UCI LltUe Theater, Humanlttes Hall, room 181. ~asters theses project. 15 centa. •P.LASA SUITE' -NeilSimoncomedy, Mucktn· .. tbaler Cultural Center, 1201 W. Malvern, Fllllerton. Tonight tllrouab July 20. 8 p.m. e~cept Sunday, 8 p.m . $6, Includes light supper. ReMrvallona, 879·686S. FIUD/\V, IUNEI Ua WIND ENSEMBLE .,.. Works by Michael Sander1, Gounod and other1, conducted by Char les M. /\tklnaon. 8 p .m. June 6 at UCI VlllOK• Th01tor. s1. (See Page i;11. 'llOllSE 0 a/\M/\' -Equestrian equipment show at the Great Western Extiibit Center, 2120 S. Eastern Ave., City of Commerce. 3 to 11 p.m. June 6, 11 a.m . to 11 p.m. June 7, 11 a.m. to7 p.m. June 8. $1 .75 adults, $1 .25 children 10·18, under 10 !l'ee. ORGAN RECITALS -Orange Coast Coll ege Stu· dents, 8 p.in . June 6 at First Methodist Church, Main and Stanford Streets, Garden Grove. Bach and 20th century composers. Free. ORANGE COAST COLLEGE CHOIR -Directed by C•role Boeller, 8 p.m . at the college auditorium. Free. SATURDAY, JUNE 7 DISNEYLAND 'DATE MTE' -The Pointer Sis· ters and others, 9 a nd 11 p.m. on the Tomor· rowlandStage. June7. 'nlE MAGIC SHOW' -Musical comedy, a l the Shubert Theater, 2020 Avenue of the Stars, Ce n· tury City, J une 7 through July 20. $5 to $12. Reservations, (2 13 ) 553·9000, tickets at agencies. 'ALL MY FRIENDS ARE MUS ICIA NS' - Variety s how at Cal Stale F\tllerton Campus Theater, 8 p.m June 7. Benefits college's choirs. $1.75. Information 870.3371 BENEFIT DANCE -J unior and the Preludes al the Monopoly Room of the Royal Inn, Anaheim. 8:30 p.~June 7, benefits Santa Ana College Mex:ica merican student scholarship fund. $4 adv'ance rom SAC Chicano Studies Dept., 835-3000), tdoor SUNDAV,JUNE8 'REQUIEM MASS' -Cherubini's masterwork. presented by Golden West College Community Chorale at St. Sim on and Jude Catholic Church, Magnolia at Indianapolis, Huntington Beach. 3 p.m Free. CHORALE /\ND ORCHESTRA -Orange Coast College groups, 4 p.m June 8 at college auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road. COsta Mesa. Works by Tchiakovsky, Berlioz, Handel and Hone11er $1.SO ' ·St0i ~ ...... Hf.II.Mil -.... llMustkateUaawe . .......... 1114161'·2"4 BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER COCKTAIL DANCING C,fiirporter CJn CJ/otel P~ENTS OUTSTANDINt DINING A ENTERTAINMENT .• * MEDITERRANEAN ROOM FOR EXQUISITE CUISINE-SERVICE DINNER SERVED FROM 5 PM LUNCH FROM 11:30 /\M CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH FROM It .u'I • J PM * CaptaiD's Table Caffee Sbop .DYING 11,llOIJRS * LOUNGE For Da•i•f'' ~ut · ,,, ...... ,...,...., wi, ...... ----IHTOfl'lllllDt 11700 ¥ocAITHllMflWPOIT Al-2770 .. • TV DAILY .. LOG Friday Evening MAY 30 Saturday Morning KOCE Television 'I'S S(llMI Dl1lrh:.l 11fl'" l(I ' I ~::.Mllfltll 'l I l •.lt•r11•I Ct ' 'i •n .... lht IC) Ii ~::.l~!.i71,....1c1 :1 ;~'.'A~~I I I lie:. !CJ • . . • , .. :~ ... • • • . • . ..; .:-' :- Child, Adult Cla·sses Set Thfs summer, Santa Ulemaelvts. Ana College und the San· The adult class w'ill tu Ana Recreation and D I t iii meet for 11ix weeks Park epar men w or. be. ginning June 18. Clas· s fer a course in children's t theater. 1met1 are from 7 to 10 lnclud'ed will be ull p.m. on Monday, Tues- • •1spects o. f this lY""'' of d ay and Wednesday ~ nights. · !heater. .. The children's classes · ln addition , lhure will which are free, will ~ 1.>c a creulive dramutics held from 1 to 4 p.m. on cla!iS for children. The Thur~days and Fridays goal is to provide both for s ix weeks during the ereative opportunities summer~ for children a nd , for Additional inlormation adults, a c hance to in·· about both classes can be crease understanding obtained by calling the and knowledge ot how R ecreation a nd Park to help children Pepartment at 834·414S .. JecllHlcltollOll ...... sc ... w..- 'THI PASSll Ila-IPGI IAIUA STlllSAMD JAMI$ CA.AH "'FUHMY LADY" IPGI "ll'l'\llM OF . THI Pl .. P.t.tma .. ,,., "TOMMY" "'.0DFA ~.t.IT 1,.. llJ & •DEATH WISH'" laJ "'W.W. & n. Dixie Omc ........ & "S.P.Y.S." IPGI ••• 00-"•llNCAIMATIOH OF PITI• . . ·NOUD'" CU -uGIHD QF HILL ~IPG- "IHloll SAHC:110M" IRI • -' ..,._ONT PA.Gr IPGI SAN DIEGO FWY. AT IRISTCl >:=-::~:--::~llTDISllET ~J"' SO.COAST WfitH ~#- • I p1 a 7& I . _,,..,...._..,.,_ ,,,,..,, ... ltS •.. ~ "CA.MILOT .. ~1711 · .,.._Utt-J:l~J:M l:llEIAUlll TllE == CLINT EASTWOOD. ''THE EIGER SAMCTIOM" . 7:1 0-t:25 S.t., S.•.' 2:40.4:5s.1:1 o-t;zo· J-· s... ....... . "MrWIM1r' .. 7.f: 15 Sot /S.•-2:lM:4S.7:00.t: 15 Back in 1957, W.W. liM in• 'SS °""'"""".._ """' caftrJ nuic. ~filin· .......... •rrt """"' DIU. "A VIII FUllllY Fllll TAltDllD P'!IFKTlY FOi llllT IEYIOlll." •UR'I' ~OLDS w. w. A1ID 'I'll• . Dl'XI• D•llCJmKi-S •-CONNY VAN OYl<E ·JERRY REED• NEDBEATIY _&a'l'U-mt 1_,.,_STEVI!~ • _StNol t.llfflll • -.. ~A""'-OSEN .,_.,1HC)MloSlllCl("'Jotf•-OAVl.Gf!USIH ~ . -_ .. ,.. -'"""'""' ~- @fiiiUi M.tlfll Ptal!N a-flffft A••ll•ll .. -Ca<IWf .-..... , w.w.1sst111nwac . hell .n-loudleraCalU....la t• ,. t • ROBERT MORSE AND RUDY VALLEE IN 'HOW TO SUCCEED' Musical Remains Fresh Some h it musicals with their original stars seem to have become a fixed part of the American theater scene. This is certainly the case w ith "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Tryin g." Robert Morse and Rudy Vallee are playing the leads, as they did on Broadway, in the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera production a l the Los Angeles Music Center Pavilion, a nd their performances make it clear why they remain so popular. Morse, despite having played the role m a ny tim es <instage and in the film, brings freshness and a feeling of spontaneity to the role or the calc ulat- ing but lovable Finch. He is delightful to watch and listen to. Rudy Vallee is engaging as the rascally J .B. Biggley, well matched ~.r Joy C la u ssen as Hedy. Miss Claussen, who also played her role on Broadway, vamps up her part and does it beautifully. Penny Worth as Rosemary performs well vocally but is too glib to make us believe she really loves Finch and suffers from his neglect. An unexpected joy is Christian Grey as Frump. He's superb as the villain who loses out all around, except with the a udien1,•c. T he m us ical itself holds up well, although a few aspects seem dated in light of the women·s moveme nt (the secretary who'd be "liappy to Keep His Dinner Warm " is a goOO exam- ple). But the cynical view of how to get ahead in a large company is still apt and the song "Brotherhood of Man" is s till a showstopper. "How to Succeed" will p lay through June 28 . -Jackir Hyman 'Panther' Hilarious his mos t hilarious. Let are the hilarious situa- the pseudo-sophisticates lions in whic h Sellers is sneer as they telephone placed; the ridiculous t h e doC'tor for extra disguises; the magnifi- couch time; you will love · cent accents ; t he effects. Frkfay. Msy30. 1975 DAIL V PILOT C§· Variety Films • in T llE PASSENGER - P.licheliiogelo Antonioni 's tale ls of :1. British n~·sman 1Jack Nicholson! running Crom his "•1ife and himself into the hands of an ex- traordinary young art stu- dent (r.taria Schneider). Placed in the s ands or · partly orrsel by t'xcelleat pcrCormance5 rrom Paul le Alat , Dianne l-lull and "nm r.l l"lnlire, and by a realistic portrayal of conteinporat)' 1-lolly"°·ood. With strongcl" direction, ll could have been a top·not(·h movie. CPG) l\'orthern Aftica, this 11 isuul · fo rget it. Onl,11 lhing new in THE Go D .~AT II ER l y magnifiC'cnt fi lln is this trite ren1ake or all the PART II -FranC'il Ford \veakcncd by a soft plot und circus or racini.i: movies. Coppolas prologue and COQ· certain camera gi1nm ickry, you've ever seen is a dazzl-tinuation of the fictional but rt·mains a spellbinder of ing set of aerial maneuvers Corl('Qne 1\laria family story hushed intrigue and cmo-no"'" by Orange County's is su~rio1· t?, the. rirst ·~ tional hones ty. t HI t'rank Tallman und stafr.. Godfather.. y1olef!CC ~s CAPONE -Ben Gazzara <PC J d?\•111. emoo~n 1s up 1n th~ as r\I hali his cheeks stufft'll l'1 u K 0 F. R 0 N T 11 E n l·h pr~uct1on . winch sLars like a chipmuuk, bul that ORlt:NT EXPRESS _ Bel-Al Pal'tno and ~ays a l?t doesn'ldrawattentionfron1 te r thao mos t all ·star aboutlht•los1ni,: 1nherentm ·--h1·n gly 0 te•eoty1>e·' 1· 1 h' s ·d Lu \\·innin1•atan)·cost.CR> .. ... " • '"' \'C lll' cs. t 1s 1 ney met c. dialogue and excessive, un-SC'reen .adaptation of the ,\llARCORD -Federico imaginative' machine.gun Agatha Christie novel lets f e llini, the v e nerable interludes. Catch a rerun of only AllK'rt Finney (and his Italian direl'tor With the" "The Untouchables'' on 1 · l h. 1 ·1 L 1a1r s 1ne, w 11 c aurcn matchless llll'mory, inflicts television instead or this, R 11 d ti 'th . aca an o ters y,•1 er or his baYid y, satiric vision on another blatant attem1>t at r· hi r ·1· Th 1g or recog1111on. e a pre-\1.'Wll f a mily in· cashing in on •·'fhe God-1 t ' t ti d · sou ion o it• 1nur er 1s an-northern llaly. Thjs Oscar· rather." CRI ticlimatic and the act-cni.::: y,·inncr for best foreign film ESCA P E TO WITCll JKOUNTAIN -· The kids outsmart the adults in this delightful Wa lt Disney film about a pair of orphans with magical powers. It's a li ve - ly, enjoyable film for the whole family. (G) THE GRE AT WALDO PEPPER -If you're a Robert Redford fan, tht're are blue eyes and beautiful closeups. If you 're a Oyi ng buff. there ;.ire blue skies and precision maneuvers beautifully photograph<.'<!. But if you 're looking foe anything of substance, Movie Review by Robert phony, but fast-pacing is \'lvid jn color a nd· kt·e1>S youenga"ged . <PGl charat'tC'r , but Fellini's: Tiit: PR ISONER oi:~ loose. patchwork arrange· St:eOl'\D 1\Yt:NUt: -1-he . 1nenl of scenes may not Sl·ript for r\cil Simon's com · thrill the average movie• t.•d r about a 1niddlt··aged· goer as much as it does the t·ouplc copini; 1vith c1ime real ~ilm_~uff.. (R) and the rcccssion sec1ns to ha\'e Uet·n pasted togclher 1ro1n Sl't'lli."S rejct·tt•d fro1n h1 ~ prc\·1ous 1rri lin ~s. Goocl at·llnJ.! IJr ,\nnc Baneroft and Jal'k l~c1n1non e;iu't eompcnsatc for lh l' :i111\_11a rd l'ombination of t·lunk1ng jokt.•s and ncr\·uus dra1na . 'PG) Tilt: REISC,\RJ\"A110N OF PETE R PROUD - Slrong performances and a g1ipp1 ng story make this a top·notch esi:apist mo"·ie. The story of a man \1·ho remc1nbcrs ;1 pasl life, il is UVE A LITTLE, STEAL A LOT -This thrilling, re- alistic and sometimes sen· t imenta l portrayal of Murph the Surf, the jey,·el thief. is proof again that fart makes at least as good material for movies as does fiction. Exciting boat t·hases and suspenseful stalking arc mixed just right with comment on criminal lack of sentiment and an uneven justice system. <PG) light on ~hllo!>ophy but has ,---,--------- a 11·cJ l -d~e vclopcd plot: ~l ich;ud S.:1rrazin, rilargot Kidder and Jennifer O'Neill ill"l' C'Xl'Cllcnt. ( R l. S ll A~I POO -\\'arren Bl·atly is lhc attractive .........,,.Cit!'° -OA•.-••1011•6GO•» "''""°"'I> WIHll It's b een about ten years since we last en· countered the redoubta - ble Iruipect or Clouseau in the person o( Peter Sellers, but it's been worth t he long wait. So raise the flags , Jet the trumpe t s blare and declare a national holi· day as we w e lco m e "The Return of the Pink Pan- ther." it. "The Pink Panther ," in case you didn't know, i s a m agn if ice nt diamond . It is s tolen on- .Ce again by a mys terious burglar and the bumbl- ing Clouseau is reinstat- ed by Chie f Ins pector Herbert Lorn to r etrieve The rest of the cast Hci·t•rl v llills Casanova hai rdrcSscr \1'ho spends as should have paid to be rating, don 't be a fraid lo inuch time in bed v.·ith his part of this ve ntur~; they make it a fa m ily affair t·us tomcrs as he docs on appear to be having as As for Peter Sellers: their hair. t.:nrcscr,·ed and r.o ..... ,, .... ,., .. su.101co -1Um1MU1-ra F or h e r e is a real, hones t (o goo dness people's picture, an out· rageously funny, s lap- slicky, pratfall-prone saga with Mr. Sellers at A '"DllTY HAllY .. '1 .. MA.HUM FOICI" Ill 011enMOn..,.,... Fri. 8;30 o.m. SM/&ln/Hol. 11:30 Mon. lhtv"l'ri. IO 1 p.m.-l t.2S ""' .......... " ... _,. ......... ....._._ ... _....., _.,,_. ........ tr .. ~ All MU .. nn• -·-ill'.· ®. -... ,, -lltl l"tl ...... .., ..., . ,_,..., ""'' . it. The fest of the Blake Edwards-Frank Waldman plot is entirely predictable; what is not ·'J_IE FllEST AOUL T ._ .EllTOTAINMENT MESA l 884 Newport C-tu ..Ww:i S4 d I '>'>l • . SUPER SHOW! 99c I•• HALF-HOUR 111!111 - • big a ball a s the au-, . . ·. occas1onally funny, "Sham· dience. And not to be · heres genius at work. poo'' is also the sad story or overlooked is the great -RobertQ.Lewis pt'O pll•'.s IJt'l'sonal lives oul anima t ion work of of t•on trol'. ~nd of a people Richard William s the Robert Q. l~ewi s is a \l"hose _1>0hlical leaders are · . . • . longtime Southern bt:g 1nn1ng toii:ctthatway.lt obvious hear to the L>is-Californ ia radio .and lakes place on C'lcction eve, ney crown . television personality. He 1968. <R ) · All in all, "The Return reviews films .and other i\LOHA, BOBBY AND or the Pink Panther" is forms of entertain ment for ROSF. -,\ predictable great fun and, with its G KPirad_io. rom antic s C'rcenplay is. IN TltE MOST LUXURIOUS TltEATAES PENTHOUSE GIRL BRIGITTE MAIER "BR1GITIE MAIER LAYS TO REST THE MYTH THAT ACTRE SSES IN PORNOGRAPHIC MOVIESARETOOOLO TOO FAT AND JUST PLAIN TOO UGLY' . CALL THEATRE FOR 2NO FEATURE '/!(/!) ..... , NUIUl.11,_ 1111 ..... -~ °""""""' 11- = NOT SINCE LO/E SIDRY.~. Tiie true story of Jill Kinmont. The American Olympic ski contender whose tragic fall took everything but her liie. And who found the co1.1rage to live through tlie love of one very special n:an. 'THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN' "llif0111£R SI()( Of ft;[ MOl.INl/lolS-s. ... , ... tARlll'N H ~~Sl TT "' !oN Kl--0. ...-dKAUl!lllUCJS .. 0.-1 ""l • MLINOA 1 MONT~lRV •SA..:M.U.llN, 0 /lolNl Yl()lU.1/loN • llLL \'l)H • \\'llll/loM llTANT A fll~IS/LA•R• ru•tr l'lll)l)U(l l()lol• !><....,.i.,~, O/loVIOSHTZU a.....i .... 1i...i-.1. /lo lONCl\/lofl:I' ~.r c l'AU"'S . _..,.(H/lo-.USfOJ; ~lo) lARHV l'l/Mll • r,..i,,,.,j ~, UJl','/loRlJS HlDM>.~ A Ufoilvt•)A1 rlCTUltl • ll(Hf'ICOl.Olt • BUaT lllfTN'OLD8 W.W. A.ND TIUI DIZlll '"· DANC:lllUNOB C"i .. ... , .. 11........,. ... ,._~CaU-•Mc l:JM:SM:OS _....,.. -nt1 LAST AMUICAH HHO" l:Os..&:2 ... 9:40 NOW PLAYING DOUILI ACTIOH AHD ADVEMT'Uli! lolMrtMlk"- lri• litlttll "The YAKUZA"(R) 1:45·5:JS·9:l0 GtHE HACIMAH "SCARECROW' ):40.7:)5 ----··-F OUNTAIN VALLEY• FOUNTAIN VALLEY • oW•••••••"I" •l'ol\" "~"<\"""~\1A!li>•N I~ Mi< ' GE NERAL CI NEMA CORPORATION ' SHAMPOO~ ·--··· _., ... _ ~,, ,,,. -·-.. ·-~ IKAH 10 wtlCH MOUNT A>N rGI lT. IOllN CIUSOI "" WEEKENDER Qelo 11 ALL together '•ld•J9 In the l1ZiiijQll1lJ .. I • • ; " , .. •• ·~ '.l " • . .. • ' .. > . .. ,, ' . J , • , I •' ., • ) 2 Openings in Laguna Turning on Scott Manchester Radio Show Aids Orphans KFWB 's attempt to from the various child focus attention on the care agencies who plight of thousands of manned s p e c i a 1 children over the age of 4 telephones from 10 a.m. who are living in the Los lo 6 p .m. Certainly a de· Angeles area and need serving project; one lhat permanent or temporary general manager Arthur homes by implementing A. Schrieber felt "tied in a ''KFWB -a -Par.ent withthecurrentsurgeof Day" has r esulted in pliblic interes t in the enormous public in· adoptionoforphans.'' terest. The new Walls The station set aside chapter of the NAACP three times per hour, h o n o r e d K M P C from 6 p.m. to rqidnight, newsman Lou Morton re· May 14, to air general in· cently for his news formation and in -specia l, ''The Next tervi e ws with foster Knock on Freedom,'s parents, parents who Door," the s tory of the have adopted children Los Angeles Police and represe ntatives Department's secret from various child care files on ghetto teenagers. agencies. Morton was bestowed Listeners were able to the NAACP 's ''Right call in questions on the On " award -the only subject and have them· member of the media to answered by experts be selected. P11r11de Ro11te COAST SCENE PAINTED BY ROGER KUNTZ Reception at Challis Galleries Sunday WATER COLOR BY FRANK LOUDIN He Wiii Be at Collector's Choice Oallery .The annual Fish Fry and Carni val sponsored by the Costa Mcsci- Newport Harbor Lions C!ub will have a parade at 10 :30 a.m . Satur- day on the route s hown above. Other activities include dinners and rides, s tarting at 5:30 o 'clock tonight at Costa Mesa City Pa rk, 18th and Park Avenue. Rides open at 10 a .m. Saturday, fi sh dinners will be served starling at noon and there will be dancers al 4: 15 p.m. and jazz at 6:30 p.m . Sunday events starJ, al noon, with all eve nts ending about 8 :30 p.m . Proceeds oenefit youth activities HtS UFB.lt*' HIRD IT THI ASSASSIN HE 1-MmD! bMT WORKS BY ROGER KUNTZ -With painUn10 by Armen Gaspartan, June 1 through 30 al Challis Galleries , 1390S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Reception for the artist, Sunday, 2 to 5 p.m. Gallery hours: 11 a.m. to s p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. WATER COLORS BY FRANK LOUDIN -June 1 through 29 at Collector's Choice Gallery, 666 N. Coast Highway, -La.gooa Beach. Reception for the artist Sunday, 4 to 7 p.m. Gallery hours: 10 a.m. to5 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. PRINTS BY TWO ARTISTS -Gustav Klimpt and Egon Schiele, at Ralph Leiman Fine Art Prints, 1492 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, through June 30. 10 a .m. toS:30 p.m . daily. PHOTOGRAPHS BY BRUSE ROSS -Through June at Lang Photography Gallery, 1450-A S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. 10 a .m. to S p.m. Thursday through Sunday. GRAPHIC ARTWORKS -Exhibition and sale of works from Ferdinand Rote n Galleries of Maryla.nd, Saturday from 10 a.m . to 4 p.m . at Charles W. Bowers Museum, 2002 N. l\olaln St., Santa Ana. PRIZE-WINNING WORKS -Winners from the recent city arts festival. at Newport Beach City 1-lall, 3300 Newport Blvd., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m . Mon· day through Fr:iday, now through June. PRINT AND DRAWING SHOW -By UC Irvine stude nts, now through J une 6 at the UCI liine Arts Gallery. Noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and Sunday. LUCITE SCULPTURES -By Bijan Bahar, 6 to ' \ . ...i...l.L ' Galleries /Exhibits 10 o'clock tonight and noon to 6 p.m. Saturday at 3861 S. Main St., Santa AnM. Private 1howings can be arranged, 557·5002. <See page Cl) ' HUNTINGTON BE ACHARTSHOW -10•.m. to , ·6 p.m. Sunday at Lake Park, betwe~D, 1.1th and 't l'2th streets, Huntington Beach. Paintings· and j cruft&. sponsored by Art League. Free. OILS BY DOROTHY KOsOFF -Through July ~ at Le Petite Louvre Art Oallet:Y. 302 Main St., i Balboa Peninsula. 1to6 p.m. Thursday, it a .m. to6 p.m . Friday, Saturday and Sunday. • YOUNG ARTISTS' WORKS -At the Newport ; Harbor Art Museum, 2211 W. Balboa Blvd,. ' Newport Beach, through June 15. Noon Lo 4 p.m.-! Tu~ay through Saturday, 6 to 9 p.m. Friday. Donation. GRAPHICS EXHIBrr -At the Lagun,a Beach Museum of Art,' 307 Cliff •Dr., Laguna. Beach. Through June 15. 11 :30 a.m . to 4;30 p.IJl'. daily.,.. ACADEMY AWARD WIHl'IH IHGRID BERGMAN' AUIRTFNfY UOOIW'.lll UIRTljllll/lj ~. llfl fl!I( l'J.l:il &MlllNll!Y ~'\'m -~llllli \lllill lllll/I\ == MO\tl Ill!< -...... .....,.... .. • --'INlll ·tmNI mms ---BEST ACTRESS ' • • ~ • • • • • EASTWDIJD TIEE&R .5AllCTillll "TH.I LOM•IST YAID'" - EXCLUSIVE OllAH~E COUNTY SHOWIH& I '• c°'"" ., c~ Win "1M OWi. I TMl MSYC.Ar .......aA STitllSANI _ ....... .... .. ,,.,, w.w. ""' ... 'I I OLDS , ..... IUllLI •11111. COUlllT I • MUSIC. 101· lttNe flLUN• ,,."°"'•NO •~N.41.MID .... •u&T .. WNOLDS ......... WWWD 1 *'• D••ow• ... • .... .... ILL IOT ..,.... DOM ALI -.. • Thr tn..-Royd /di Kinmort . TI.., Amcric•n Olympic !ki oontendrr whose-tragii:: f.iU took ("V('T)-thi~ Q.t fil.T life Ar..i wh> liound ~ rout¥' kl IM lhlo..t;h t~ b.M one wry tpt"Cill !Nh. EXCLUSIVE OlAHliE COUNTY SHOWIH& ~ ......... , • "IRAMMICiAHM • I ( ,, 1 .. ~ I ' •, • • ( • . ' l l ·1 • l j / DI DAILY PILOT . ' Friday, May 30, 1175 • IT'S NO GIMMICK-LOUIS REYES FILLS 'ER UP ON SKATEBOARD 'L ' • tiff rl}{!)fffl' tou ~:¥r ,. !.Eb ~Ali ao i!•i&);' { 'til(I F"tj • -< ' I M.F FVl!N AIDES.BOARD TO WORK~T CONSERVES ON GA,SOLINE J I - • OCC Students Collect $23,450 in Scholarsmp Money Awarded A record $23 ,450 in scholars hips was awarded to Orange Coast College students at the annu.al Honors Night pro· gram recently. ~ Students from the Orange Coast area winning awards were: Balboa-·rina Rascom l'w1ark ·H. Clark and RichardSchn1it Balboa Isla nd-Curt Fleming and Gerard Kohler Corona del Mar-Arda Gu- lesserian, Janice llopper and Bonnie Karleen Costa Mesa-Ronald Am. burgey. Linda Arkyns, James Ashworth, Chris Barnes, Laurel Battaglia, Paul Berli, Jennifer Bro\\1n , Scott Burkett, Virginia Burns, Stephen Carey. Tenya Cohen, Jan Crum , James Cullen, Robert Daley, Donald DeL~ny, Judy Lynne Dennis, Nancy Durham, Charles Eckmcier, J efr Edwards, Ben Epstein, Alan Fontes, A1arc l'"'redrick. Ruben Gonza lez. Lynn llalliwe ll, Patrick Hayes, David llc rring, Michael C . l linkl-'s, Robert Top Honors · Dispens.ed By College Orange Coast College honored area students for leadership and service to the school at the an· ·nual Honors Program. Ludmila Montoya, Seal Beach, Cynthia Munyon, Fountain Valley and Joseph Provost. Costa Mesa, received the coveted onyx pen set, symbolic or two years or Ol.ltStanding leadership and service to several organiza- tions. A special Dean's Award for outstanding service was present- ed to Millie Musolr. principal clerk for the college's Student Bookstore. • RECEIVING ONYX plaques for two years or service and com- . ·mendable leadership were: J err Edwards. Ch e ri Lackey and Agnes Sikes, Costa Mesa, and Anita Miknuk, Fountain Valley .. Receiving Key awards ror one year of outstanding servic.e were: Costa Mesa -Rosalie Barnes, Robin Burke, T . A . DeHart, Lisa Doleshal, Tina Easterling, Charles Eglett, Debbi Har- rington, Dave l·lerring, Meleina R. Hitso n , Alfre da l·loppe, Barbara Hurley, Lis a J ab- .ton, Susa n Janess, Jerrrey John son, Jul ia J ones , Gary Kerwin , Kure!): Kessler, J ames Kleck, Noel L!ane Ill , Barbara· Lawrence, Mi c helle Le Baron, Melaina Lee, Jud ith Leitne r, Rosaria Locasso. Rene Lopez, J ohnnie M. Matheny, Beverly A. Ateans , John ti-1 oor e, Robin Morgan , l.ydia Ol son, Bruce Oseland, Kathleen O'Toole , Nan- cy Plevin, Maxine Ri chey, Gary Ries, A1 andia Rittichotti, Susan Saunders, Christine Schmidt, Da vid Schy,,·artz, Laure n Shadeck , Ivan Shcrv.•ood, J o Anne Skell y, Anne Sloan. Jo Stanley, Elaine Stehly, Chriss Street, Su san 1'aylor, Kent Thix- ton . Corne li a Torres, Linda Troyer, Robert Turner, Carol Vice, David \V aite, Geraldine \\'arkentinc. James Wa tson , Patricia Wells, Stephen \\'hite . and Gary Wilson Fountain Valley-Gini;:er C<tr- roll, Will Holladay, Doris r\. Ka cerek, Cynthia J\.1unyon, 'foni Rowe, Penelope Sequine and Ronald Williams l·lunlington Beach-Richard·· Burke, Buddy Calbo, Carlos Cooper , Kathleen Crawford, Patricia Donovan, Susan Flem· ing, Lorraine Garcia, Roberta Hamilton. Diane Kay, Kevin Kel· ly, Vic Kerekes, Eric Klassen, Joan Macy, Phillipe Marchand, Grt.>tchen Marr ow, William J\.1artin , Gayla Sue Masters, Douglas Mattoon, Mary L.• Lyers, l'atrick Philbin, Meredith Piper, Patricia Power, Mary C. Russavage, Laurie Schiel, Teri Soeda, Steph e n Tracy and J ean West Irvine-Charlotte A. Taylor Laguna Beach-ti-1ary Beth Casson Nev.·port Beach-Linda Ax· telle, Robin Custer, Gary Ellis, Jill Freeman, Barbara Harris, Bo K em ble , Charl e s · l.auderbaugh, Waller McMinn, Eileen Mills. Sharolyn Moulton . A1ercedes Ruedas, Clay Smith, Ro ger Thompson and Urte Vaughan Seal Beach-John Carver. Patriotic Penners Laurie Lee nerts and Tom Pecoraro, both of Estancia High School, arc the s miling winners of $500 awards in Costa i\1esa Bicentenni<.il Committee's patriotic essay contest. The third \vinner, L.a,vrcnce Bro\\•nson , of Costa Mesa .l-ligh School, \Va s unable to. attend h'Ionday night's city eouncil meeting \Vhcn the awards and freedom plaques from the Ma rine Co11Js \Vere presented. ~~ S. Lee, Vincent Morgan, Sue Confidence Droops Among Californians Saunders. Chriss Street and Sarah Walter s Fountain Valley -Anne Okimoto Huntington Beach -Steve Dayton, Patti Donovan, Lorraine Garcia, J ames Hutton, Laura Schiel, Dana Strohbehn and Ray Van de Walker NEWPORT BEACH -Robin Aston, Deanna Clatwor;thy ·and Mark Lynd Seal Beach -John Carver. Receiving parchments ror one year or dependable service or leadership to the college were: Balboa -Debbie Pucillo Corona del Mar -Taryn Carlson and Gary Edwards Costa Mesa -Dianne Adams, Victor Anders on, Mary Ball- inger, Gregory Barnes, Jennirer Brown, George Cou, Shane Delaney, Diane Ferguson, Lori Fiori, Candace Garnier, Debbie. Grosz, Carol A. Helm, Jane Hundley, Ed Hurley, Alton Lee Johnson, Les lie Johnson, Shirley Jones, Steve Kennedy, Billie Kil- day, Virginia Krull, Richard Large, Michelle LeBaron, Diane Les ter, Gary Lewis, Rosario Locasso, Rene Lopez, Karin Malmquist, J o hn C. Moore, Cheryl Mullikin, Kim Nelson, Gilbert Perez, Mack Salesky, Robin Smith, Jo Stanley, Jon SzaOO, Cindy Taube, Kent Thix- ton, LuAnne Wheeler and Sue Wright FOUNTAIN VALLEY -Cindy .Allen, Marjorie Carroll , and Kath~Sternhagcn Huntington Beach -Guerin Butterworth, Bill Caldwell, Barbara Cale r , Simone Corbo, Fred Gonzales, Michelle I-loge,· Elizabeth Martin, Rick E . Moore, Mary L . Myers, Candy Neal, Lisa Phillips, Robb Pilk- ington and Mary Stratrord lr~ine -Luisa J . Canoi and, Newport Beach -Philip Cap· pello, Daryl Cox, Dale Dickinson,. April Franklin. James Graham, Tracy Hembree, Valerie Kuykendall and Judy Warren. Financier Jailed SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) Financier Qualland Tom. 40, who admitted embezzling at least $598,000 for gambling, liquor and women, was given a rive-year federal prison sentence. "I have to say that it's hard to conjure up more venal acts than those performed by you," U.S. District Court Judge William H. Orrick Jr. told Tom in handing Lhe max·· imum sentence, · • SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Public conridence in many basic· institutions is sagging as the na- tion approaches the bicentennial, lhe Calirornia Poll reported to- day. The survey of 506 Calirornians showed that only one group, re· search scientists, gets ··a lot or confidence" rating rrom more than 50 percent or lhose sur- veyed. The local police department re- ceived that high rating from over 40 percent of those surveyed, while the medical proression, consumer protection groups, the FBI and the Supreme Court got ''lot of conridence ratings" rrom more than 33 percent or those polled. The poll round that the favora- ble and unravorable reactions were balanced for news media; environmental protection groups and organizations , universities and colleges, organized reli gions and churches , the s tate legislature, Congress and fin an- cial institutions. The President or the United States, government regulilory agencies and the legal proression received ·'som ewhat unravora- ble" responses, but the ''most un · favorable'' were food companies, manuracturing corporations, labor unions, the public school system and public utilities. Fi1•e Figltier,; · 1'he poll, conducted by the Field Research Corp., suggested that some unfavorable response to doctors and lawyers may have ·stemmed rrom the medical malpractice insurance con- . troversy. lt said some negative sentiments towards doctors also stemmed rrom medical con· trbversies involving overcharg- ing, just as the image or lawyers was tarnished by Watergate. The poll found that publiC' utilities experienced the sharpest drop in public conridence. It not- ed that utilities have been the targets of consumer protests over rate increases prompted by fuel rate hikes. FAKE CARD JAILS MAN TOKUSlIIMA, Japan <AP) -Toshio Tamamoto has been sen- tenced to 14 months in prison for us ing a rake pa ss port to visit Thailand. He admitted he had been expelled rrom Tahiland two years· ago as an undesirable alien:-'and said he r e· turned with the phony document only to see his lOThai wives. Randall R. Bruno <iert), Huntington Beach, ~nd Michael° R. Lee, El Toro, have recently graduated from Los Angeles County recruit fire training school and are now stal!oned in the field. Oil DAIL y PILOT Friday ~ay 30, 1975 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE eH)flCl IHYITl•O 11-SWll NOTIC.IOl"TlltUITll~U.L.I Motke ..... Alty t lWfltN1tN ...,d l"ICTITIOUS IUSIMIUS Ol"tll.AL ll'ltO•lllfY .. ''""'~ ol 1111 CN\I C-.nlly N.\MISTATIMINr STA·Jlll Col .... Obl•ltl ol 0•1"9" C-IY. T .. toll0w!1'9Pllt!o0fll.,ldoiflg!NY. l'IAtklllfllM.MlaJ (.illO<'M• ...... fKll'ft HllH bldl""" nt\lo•U' NOTICEhlM•1Dyo1 ... nt1Wo1t.nJut1e i.11;001,"'.,Mefl4ty,J11t11 t,1tl~,11 Ct:HTUlt'f II, tOOfJ C.lrfl•ld ll.1tli,1lll'l9"0v•Olll.:OO AM .•nl"" '"-PWtM1lne CO.pl, et wllll KllOol Ok-•--. 14...,.11ft9lon .. Alfi, c:A. ftMl ~ Ot \fM ollk1 Qf Tt 1n1•nw•k• Tl· Irle! IMlltcl ti 131(1 Ad""'' A-. I. PPllllp H , Mc:Nimtt, 100i1 114' ff\Wftft<t {omNny ti •>O Norin C:..... ,._.,., C.l•lond1, •I wM<.fl lime Gtrlle!q A"" 14..,,UllflOll !M«.ti. CA. Milll'I StrHI, !>anl• An1, C1lllou1h Ylclbllhwllllle1Nblltlyo1>1"4lll~ ... ,,._ " l•t lf .,.lrlf\CI), TAANSAMll!llltc;.<i ..,_..,: 1. 0..11 SomDto, 10092 O.rll4111 TITl.E INSUllANCE C.OMl'ANY. 1 1'"'"' Pll.M PJIOC IS$1M0 AMO A,., H ..... l ll\Q'lllf\h~h,CA.~ (•UFornlt COrpor•llOl'I, 11 ptlMt>I T Pll IMT IHCO This but.I""' 11 (Ol\dutlllf ov . llmll· Thntff, Wiii 1411 It p .. Ollt l\OtllM 10 AU lrllCh 1rt to M l11 1ttorlllnC1 wltto tONortntrt.fl!p. 1111 1\,191'11il DiCIOtr tor c11to 111 llwlul 11'19 l"""'''l<HI' •no (Of\(\111-lllO ,,, ..,.111p H , M(N1,,...... _,Of lfll Un411a Slll•I. I"' lo.l!OW· S,.Clllc.1llofla which •r• now on 111• 'Tilll 11111~11, wit Hl'4 •ilh ,._ ll'IO Clfterlbtll r111pro1M•IJ 1lt1Hltd In ~ -~ bt 1o1ci;r.o In 1111 ofUc1of tn. Coutllv Clerk 01 Oi en~ count, on Moor 1111 Cltw ol tr~lnt. County ot Or1nvo. P1Ht ... M"9 A91nl 01 11111 ICllOOI d11· I !tit Sl:l ll ol C11lforni1, 1no dlKrU,1t11 11 trlct. • • l"QU4 to•~ lo•IC : !t<ll olOO.r mu1\ 1,.Dmlt w!lh hit tlkl •ullTON OAULl>iN THOMSON Lo\~1 ol Tr1t\ No. 1111. 111P1"r """P I Cl 9'1'9r't <h1tk, ttrtllltd t ,.,_k, °' ft "ILSON AttJt ' 'lltordld In BOOk 21S. P111e ~ 3 IO S. In· blcNw'• bond mMI• PIJIDI• to IN Of'· 1.i4\o ....... A~• C1Yll .... OI MIK•ll•n.o ... M•o1. IKOl!h °"'of IN Coo.i Comm .. nllv Coli...,. wtll".,;• C..UIOrfllt'°"1 llllOr•no-Co,.nlJ.C•lllorn!1. OU Irk I ioHl'ilof Tr111lffS In .. '!11mount Pl>blLtft.d Oriin9fc Co-'t 0.llJ Piiot, E•c1pl Ing 11 I I ol I, oU r l111\t,, nol le1a tno11 llvl 1M'•t1nt ''"'' ot 1ne Ml :liO t noJunlt l) 20, 19IS m1,.,,i., mlntr1I rlgflt,, n1111,r1I 90' ..im t>ld 111 QY•t•n111 •ll•t tlN bldlkr • • ' • 1fM-JS rlt llt1 1na 01111 r llJClroc .. r oon, ov will tfller ln!O u .. P•oPOMICI Contr1et II .,.,,..botv1r n11m1 known 11111 m.y bl the 11rr. 11 ••••Clld to lllm. In 1ne .,.1111111 Or •11nC11r '"-p1rc1I ot l•nd ,_, oi 1.u ... , 10 '""' 1n10 '"""con-P UBLIC NOTICE !llf11no0o,.. 111,cr10.c1. '"9<"'"'' ..;111 Ir.Ct, 1111 oroc.1HI 01 1111 Clll<lo win tit ,..,. Pl'fP91Y-iil r•llf'I ol drllhn9. mlnJnQ, tol'f.illO, Of In lhl CISI ol I-· llW • ,,... ••plorlng •nd Opotrllln11 ll'>1•1lOl'I and lull ....... 11111•.ot ... 111 bt 1ort111eo to 141d SU,l:lt!OR COUllT 01' THI! llotl"'O In MCI rtmov11111 "" ..... !rom M.1-' Oblrkl, STAT• OP CAL.I POltl.-lA l'Olt ~d 11no O• tnv 01ner land, lncludl"9 No l>ltlOtr m1y •ltll!lr11w 1111 old IOI' I Tltl COUNTY OP Oil ANGE ~ rlQl'll 10 •l'llpslotk 0< C11r1cll-!1y O.•loCI of torlr·tlv1 I'll Illy' •Her If-.. N•. A·t JMJ orllt 11'111 mlno lrom l1n111 ot"'r 11\M! 4111Ml lorlhl""""1"11ll'll,__ NOTIC E 011 HEAlllHG 01' ll'Wnlhlr1ln.1bov1oe1crlDl!O.ollur~· Tiii loiirCI Of Tn.tMI ·-·-tl'lt ".TIT' 0" • y c LA I MAH T ""'"· '""ne11 ll"ICI Sl\tl" Into, '"'OU9" ptlVl1"9olr1JKllno.nJ..a•llllodloo PUlllUAHT TO SICTIOH 151.J OP or l t,01\ '"' IU~Yrl•<• OI ,,... llnd IO •llvl 111, lrr.-;iu!lrollt\ or In THE "llO•ATE COOE l'leltlnobovt dtKrlr..d. 1no 10 bonom 1or,,...hU9"ln1nroldor1nll'lll>•Od11>e. Elit•le 01 EARi. BRUCE 'lvtn •hlos1oc•1a or direcuon1 11y :r.IQntlf; HO AMAN E. VORPAGEL, OtCli15ell. Clrhlefl -llJ, lunntl1 ilnll \lllfll UllOlr WATS.ON NOT1Ce IS. HERtl!iY GIVEN 11'1111 ..... t.nt•ln or l>e~ollll t ~ ...... or S.CIJ. lk>iinlol Tf\11!111 Rl(hiirCI Br,.tt VO•P•Otl hi' llli CI Um!" ll>trtol, Ind lo •tdrl!I, rt\unf'ltl. Qpe<'I : J""'t t, ltlS · 11 :DO t .m . netiln 1 potlil•OO bJ Cl•im•nl purwont 1q11Jp, m.lntlln, ••P•lr, .,.,ptn 1na era,: J""' 11 to 11t1ion 1~1.s 01 ""' pro1>111 toOI re· OPll•t• •n~ '"t h w111, o~ n>Ull'\, Plle.llWd OriinO-COil! Ot llJ Pilol, lfftntl to whitll 1, tn-lor h,irt .... r witl>CUtl. l\Owt~1r, ll'lt ••QM lo dtllt, Mort).)0,1tlS 1""1 p.iitllc .. I••' 1nd\l'l111,..tlme.nojl.111e1 tnln1. 11or1. IXPIOfl .. nd op1r111 o1 r..t1 rlno 'u1e ~,....., 111~ ~ sel lor tlllo"911 It'll ""'•ct or 1..., Ul>llill• 1oOO PUBLIC NOTICE Junt it, 1t1s. 1111 t ;OO 1.m., In t!\e leet of the 1 .. 11Jurl•t 1 or id1<1 l111d. rt· ------------l<Oll•lrOOm of 01oortmen1 No. lof w id tor<ltd Marc i\ 18, ltl2 !n Booll lOOSS, <our1, 11100 Cl•lc Ctnt1r e>r1 .. WtJI, P•QtllofOllltlt! Rtconh. FICTITIOUS BUSINl!SS In 11\0t CllJ 01 s..1111 An•, C•Ufornl•. SAID Jiit ... 111 be m111e to '"11'1J '"" NAME STA T•M•NT Oilltll,,.,.y l~, ltlS CIOlloel!on1 Mcurefl bJ tnO purtulnt !O Tiit lollo•lllll ptrlOfll trt Oolnq bvil· WILLIAM(. St JOHN, lhlt po-r ol Siii cOnf1rr~d 1n • tttl.o!n ntW.ll : Co .. n1yC!trll 0..0 ol Tr,.JI l •tCuteO by Jonn Htnu• TH E OEVtC KINOOOM, SB• llUSSELLICIOOEll ""111Glort1H1n11t0Hunt•notonl11w~t· l!irCNd..,•v. Sp0<1 20-I, '-"0""" S.t<h, ... Nt•llOrtCl•llrDrl•I ,...nl Corp0r1llon, ill Tru~I~•. tor tne c.lll.'26SI WlllOO 1>1111111 tnll 11cyrlty of Sttte w•de Ann PilJnt. 1111 Gtrll1ld, Apt. H, Mtw,.,-t .. t<ll, C:atlttrnl• t 2WO f'INnCI Compeny, 11 l!ienll lcoil•~. oat· Hunlll'lglon611th,C•llt.•2M6 At..,..,..yf.,: Plliti.itlr Id JYnl lS. 1914, 1nd ,ecorded <1!i W•lltr l!dw1rC1 N1.-u, :ZOO\ Sum-PuDUtMd Oll!'IOI C.O•ll 0.lly Pilot. ln1tr11m1n1 No . 12961 Of\ July 12, 1~14, In mtr Wlncl,$0nl1An1 ,C11IU. MIJ16, 21. 30, 1tlS 11'9t-JS l>Ook 1119$, p119t 1 S6 . ol Ollot1.JI Tfllll>us.ll'OM1 l•conduc1101>y1 Umlt-Rtcorll!i In lh1 olllct ol tilt County Mlptirtn1r'1\lp. p• "BLIC NOTICE Record•• ol Or11ng1 County, S11t1 ot Ann PIYM '-' Cllllorn111, Tl\1111111rr.nl wll fUt.:1 .,!\fl !ht THATnotLt1ol D,11cnot .. ldobll ..... c-t' Cl4r1'. of Or01101 co .. nly on,,.,. SLl'·lltll tlon•llO 1l1ttlon to i.11111 ld re•I pr-r- U, 1911. l'ICTITIOUS •u111111•ss ,, ... , ri!COrdlCI II 1n1trum1nt No.1 .. P ... 11 MAMI STAT•M•"T on f'tDr1MrJ S, ltlS. In-~ lllJS, PIQe PubU~CI C>r•lllle" Co.$1 OlllJ Pilot 1'l>I folio...1"9 Jll1'M>lll •r• OO!ng DI.II~ IUt, of 0111<1•1 R1 tord1i 1n tn1 lllfott ol Mir :ll0.•1'111 J..nt '· 11, 2a. 1t1S 1•1t-1 _. •: 1n1 County A1corckr ol Or1nge CountJ, O RANGE COUNTY RENEWAL Sl1t10IC11lllor n111. " COMMUNITIES, l)S\1 Wyrlnl Ori,.., THAT ••ill 1111 Iii m l ..., w11nou1 t~W· 'Ntl!m1Mter,CA.t1"1 n1n1 or w11rr1n1T r1oo1rd1nq 1111,., -·------------1 Soull'>lrn c.tllfornl11 R1-•I C-PD11tt1lon or t ncumDr•,.ce-. or t !i lo ,ICTITIOUSBUJINE5S m""l114l, I C1l11ornl1 Nol lor Profit 1n..,r•D1t•lroltit11. NAM• STATEMINT Corl)(l<l llon. IJSU WJrllll Orl~t, Tilt lleMllcl1ry Or lllJ oth<'!• Pl•loOn l hl loHowlnll perion!i 1r1 doh>11 Diis.i· -!ilmlnll1r, CA. '2.al or Pl''°"' m1y purcl\t't .ti -...;11 I.lie. "''' .,,: Thlt IMnl,.,ss ls l>elnt CQl\dl.l(llG DJ• DA r ED tnl1 tr11 dtr ol Ma ,, r~rs Q ' G CONSTRUCflON COM· Corpor•tlorl. TRANSAMERICA T!lLE PANY, lll• Monliriy AYI .• CoUI Sout ... rnC1lllOnll• INS.URAHC!.COM PANY WW Clrl lorni• '2t1• R,,.,,..,, Comm11nltl9" BJ ~ Ptul 5. Bto•n. ii ve J JOI 1pn SI 111n1r. 196• Tl\111!1t1m1nl 111111 wl!n !ht COunlr A1~l1l1nt Slt,ltil• Y RoiimtrJ P!ict, Coil• Mtll, C1trllolOr1f!0tCo~11tyonMly1,1tll. Publl1n111 N1wDOrl Harl>Or Pl'ei.1 CllUorn1 1 '2tll ....... camD!n1d •ltn O••nQe Coa~I Olily Altll•rd E•• 1 Gll"an. '" No Pl.tbl lihtd Or•not Co.st OtltJ Pllo\, PolOt, Mty 16, lJ. 30. 1•1s 1n1-11 P UBLIC NOTICE Gt Mr, Ctlvln11, OtUornl1t1n1 WJt. 11, ?l. JO. ltlJ 16fi3.IS JOl\n 0. Cumm11111s , 11J' Mont1rty, COll•MIMI, C.111Qrnl•91611 PUBLIC NOTICE Tfoh DY1iln•1$ II conllut\llO by I Jtl06 91Mrlt p1rt ... r11>lp. FICTITIOUS •US/NESS IH THlr. SUP.111011 COUllT OF l;IVtJJ. St11gn1• NAME STATEMENT THl! STATI[ OF CALIFOfthlA Rltn11rCI E. GlDson Tiie lollowinll Pl,_.. h OCl•hQ tluil· IN ANO l'OR JotonCumm!n9' n.Slill" THE COUNTY OP ORANGE Tfoll lliillmtnl ,.., 111111 with 11'19 K. 'a, !.. PROOUCTIONS. 1811 I"• No. At.Mii Counly Cltrk QI OrtllQI Couni.,o MiJJ 13, wrne'' Or., LO$ AJaml\0§, Cillilorn•~ OltOEll TO SHOW CAUSE l~IS. Fl.Jiii tono l'OR CHAHGE 01' NAME P UBLIC NOTICE PuDli$nell Or .. nQI COIU 0dlly Piiot, Witll•m AUrtll Stupy, 1111 • ._.,..,.~, In 11>1 Mltltr OI Ille Appllc1\lon ol M.ly16,1J.JO,Jynf6,1,IS lfl0·1J Or.,LosA•1m11.,,,c111tornla'°no LEWIS STEVEN $TRATTON •or Ttois 11 .. i/111§\ ;, conducted Dy an In 0..1>9t ol N1me. Oiv1dui1!, Tl'<I ilPPILCl !lon of Le•IS !.ttvtn w 111111m A. st .. PJ Str11ton ror tntnQ• ot name, """"'9 lfll\ $lllemen1 WI\ lllPCI witto U•e t11111 tll ltl in CoYrl, 11nd II •PPl!arinQ P UBLIC NOTICE FLCTITIOUS•USIN ESS CounlyC1tr•ofOr11noeCounlJOl'l"""J trom 11111 1ppllc111ion 1n1t Lewi\ "AME STATEMENT 20, 1915. SltWtn S1r1tton 1111 111111 ,.n tpC>llC•· llll' IOllow1ng 111ri.on ii d ol"'i! but<· FUtn ILon P•opo,lng 1n1t n ls namt De net\ a\; PubUM'led Or11n;e COl~I CtUJ Piiot. en.no.a lo L1wl1 MtMi111n Str1111on. MOllt Hl"G GlOAY NATURAL MIJ2J,J0,11ndJ.,ne6, 13, 1•1s 1 .... 15 Now. tr.trelorf, I\ I~ Mreby Drder.O FOODS CAFE, 2111 E. Cotll HIQllW•J, -dlr1tt1CI, tl'lilt 1111 person1 lnllre"· CotOl'ltklMlr,C•IUornl• PUBLIC NOTICE Id In Miii m1t11r 110 •PPllf l>ff<We Steven Je11 Con....,111. JS!6l(;ami1'1Q lfll1 Cour1 In O.oorl"'tnl J on 1111 111n Copos1r1no, s..n c11men11, c..111orn!1 "'' ot Jun•. ltlS, 11 10:00 o'tlOCll tltl1 8 611M A.M., of wld llilJ lo ll'IO• C...,M! """' TlllJ ~In.es' IS con<luc\td DJ,,,. In· IH THE SUPERIOR COURT OF "" ll»tlc.otlon ID< cll11no1 o1 llilmt dlvill<><ll. THE STA TE 01' CALIFORNIA V>OVld n.ot lie or•nltd. Sli-..nJ. Conn.I!~ COUHTY OFORAHGE ti h t11nher o,111r1d 111.ot I COll'f ol Tnl1 ll•i.menl w•s 111ed ,...,n 1'111 NO.AUl6) tllltOJo.r 1>e ""'&111.tlld '"the Or•noe CouOlty Ct.flt o1 Oren91 Co"nlT on"""' OlllOl'("c~~·:~.'r,f"USI! (Mtt De lly -PUol ... ,,,,.,.illl!>« 01 1J !tis ..,..,.1 drcvl•llM , pr1n1e11 In w id ' · F'l1ll In ll>t' Malle• ot 1111 ADPliceuor1 ol : c6untr. 11 l••'t one• •acll -• !or Publill>ed Or•ngt' (Oil\! Oil•IY Pilol, J E A N N E C A T H E R I N E 1ovr 1utte1,lv1 •ltlo.i prior ID !fie d.IJ M,jy 1~ iJ .)Cl i !'ld June6 19/} 1/Jl-1 MITCHEL TREE lot CllilnQt otN.Jme o1 Mid fleerfno. ' ' ' ' Wl"IEREAS, JEANNE CAlHEAINE D&l.O 11111.ih dlJ of Mty, ltlS. MITCHELTREE, P11,10011er, I person SAMUEL OREIZEN 0¥11 tnt ~ ot 18 ,,.,,, ,,., llled• oetl· Prt,idlno J"doe of )ilill ------------\!Ion wllh tne Clerk al tn1' Court to. iln Superior Court PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' NON-llESPOHSt BILITY Order <h•nQ1nQ Pelol•Ont,') name tr om JM•h I', C11n" NOllCI fl YlerlllJ lllvtn 11111t ... 1#'1· J EA N N E CA l l'1 ERIN E 147W".Gli11f1il1111SI . cltrll{lned will not bl ri\ponlll>ll tor MITCHELTREE 10 JEANNIE LEM· SlnDl ..... 1,C1.t \ll) ...,. Clll>O or U1bllltle1i contr•tted by MAY; Pl.IDll-"'11 Or1n11e Coa~\ O•lly Pllo\, ""~ olMr !Mn tnJlt lt o n .,. •!ltr Ir !S. OROE RE c Cl'lal •II ptrlol)n'l In· ...... , 16, 1). 30 ...... Jun• •. 191S Ill} IS ll'lhdiile. ' 11r11ottd In lhl 1bove-enlilltd metier Dtlldtl'lll 2td1 JolM1y. ltlS, •PPt•r tltlo•• ln1\ tourt ti 10:00 A.M Dl11nn10.li Pelt n.on on Jun1 24. 11/S In tnt <ourtroorn 01 1919 Wtll11t1Av1.Apl.lCO Otp.11rtment 3 II the 0,anoe (tlynl_Yl---o=====,,-,=---1 ColtlMIMl.Cllll.l'JtJI Cour1Nlu!>e, IO<tt.O ti /Oii W Ci ••t FICTITIOUl•USIN••S PvDlltMll OriinQt: COOll O•lty PllOI Cl<il1r Or., S.nt .. A.n,., C1hfornl1 lfld NAME STATEMENT Nott XI 31 •llO Jllf'll 6 It IS 1911•1~ '"°""' t •UM:, If lllJ, Wl'IJ the pe!lllon !or TM lotlow!119 i>e••on~ "'' ctolnq l>ul.1- • ' • ciw..11110! """'' ino .. 111notlie111a11\e'd. "''ISll; If !Sf'URTHEROROEREOlhltil l!iELCOR INVESTMENT COM· PUBLIC NOTICE tOPJ of 11111 Order to l.hO• ti....,. tit PANY, USON, a rl\\ol Sl•ttl, Newport p11Dl llntd In Tnt Ot!IJ PllOI, I 6ttcfl,Cillllornl19116G """'Sll•Ptroloeneralcir<"l•llor1pr1111-Wlhl•m c L1~11r, 1)30 Kell 51 ., PUBLIC NOTICE Id In Or•fl{le. CountJ. C11ll!orr>l11, onc.1 :'.O<<Hll del Mar, Cllllorrn.o•i6ll I w .. I lot tour ~ut<t)\••e WHl<.5 IN'<Of Jofln J . Rltlll•CI~, 1•22 Flr~t SltHI, ))16' lo lne 114\f set tar n11rlnQ on'"' pet1· CO.nlftQ, c.tlltor11!1 •60ll SUP•lltOft cou•TOll THE lion. O•nlft p, V11n91Ui.. JU•} Ao ... c•I• STATE OF CALI POJINIA llOll OAT EO Ml~ u . 19/S RNd, s.n J,.1n C1plUri1110, C.l1lornl1 THI COUNTY OP OllANO• S..tT>Uel Ore•1en n11s Ht, AU7tt JuOQI! O! tl'lt Robert W. Lon9, JlOl-60 Ctrtion GI 011101.11 TO iHOW CAUSI! Supt fl Or COY•! "Y'Oll Ro.t<I, Clllno, C11J,rotn1.o ~1 110 ,OR CHAN GI 0" HAME G. AllCHtlE •OSTER l1rrJ 0 , 1nn11d1r . JO~/ C11rob Ln 1111 Motllr ot 1n1 Appllcetlon O! AllorMJINS Slfttt, Nt wporl Bta<n, Clllforni1 THOMAS MICHAE L l!:ATO" For Cclllllfflltf'.t!Ulw 11M4 Chilnoeo!Name. Ttl•pll-: tll411Jl·tltl A•tll"' J. limb, ?311 E~•t lbth Thi 111l>llt1\ion ol Thom11 M!cn1e! \Or1n91: 014)4,S·Sl4tl !>tr111 . Nl•port 011c h, C111010,n1a E!•tDl'l lor """9" ol n .. m,, ha vino r.e.n 7M S.cenct Str11t 12660 tlll'd ln CoYrl, 1n11 It •01111r!nQ !•Om linclnll11, C•lllornia 911114 Oonillll R. Wlllllm\, 2111 Ftrn1!dl!. 141d IP11lic11!on 11\iil Tllom11 M!Cllffl AOOl'ntJIOrP1lllitfMIJ" Or1no&.C•11tornl••266S 11!!11ton n11 r.11d •n "•ool•c•tlon IN'OPO!i P,,1>1i11\ed Or11noe Coa•! 011Ur Piiot, Clyde E. Crew 1nd Bo!HJ J . Cr•••· ino tto111 n1, n•m• be chtnged to MIY 16, 23,lO.•nd Jun• 6, !91S 1198-IS 101111 ttnt nh, l ltJI Ye11ow1tont, E1 Tl'lomt'I M!th11L M1cOon1ld,. Toto, C11illO<nl1 •lt.JO Now, 11111,tforl, It Is l'll••Dy ordtrltl PUBLIC NOTICE Wllll11m H. WIQl!ne•. 18011'4ollday •NI dlr1cled, 111•1111! 1>fr1onJ ln\tre11-ROI<!, Nt•PD•I Btlcl'I, Cah!ornl,.'176&0 Ml Ln M id mt\ler do IPPllr l>tlore thlli FICTITIOUS IU!i1Nf5S Tll!J t1u1ln11• I\ conllutled II~ II ,(Ourl fn O.portm1nl J °" Ille Ith day <ol NAME STA Tl!MEHT 111n.ertl p1r\11tr'lnlo. J"IJ, ltlS.11! lO:OOo"clotk A.M.,ol 11l11 The IOltowino pen.on ;, llolr>Q bull· L11rry lnllollck• Gaytoll'IOW CIYM•~JtuClllpPllc111on "'''''' lllll 11111man1 ""'' lilfd ...,,\n Ille '~ c 111no11 (If n•m• 5no .. 111 no! be YONEXUS.ASPORTSCOMPANY, CountyC1tr•ot0•1noeC..ou,,lyonMty or1nlld. S11 Sl/P"roor ... venue Newl)(lrj 81'.cll, 19, 1•1S. II I' lvrlr..tr or111r1d 11>•1 • <DOY of Ctllfornl• 91660 ' this Otellr lo Sl'lllw '"""lie PlllJll'9'lltl y-~ Int., Sll Superior A""n"' J>l.l>UM'lell Or1noe Cot)! 01l1v PllOI, In'"" O,.nlll! Cool! 01Uy PllOI,. Nl•PG•1Be•c h C1Ulorn11•1~ M11ll,JO.andJi>n1t6.lJ.1•1s \IMl·IS M"'~' of 01n1r•1 clrc .. 11oon. r111, -!ilne1s' /1 tor1d,.cle<1 l>T • cor· print n11ld covnlJ,ll1ta1IOfltlllCll por1t1on, PUBLIC NOTICE -.t< lovr wtt11slv1 wt••i.IN'lor to 'rOM• Inc. , -------------! ,thtdt'Jof w!dl\oll~lno. Mo..., l!i, W•mel. 1- """ DllMlllll1i2CMllC1•t°' """'y· ltlS. \IP1!'ICIS..<r1t1rw fllCTITIOU.SBUS INIElS !.AMUELOlllEIZEN Thi1 lt111m1111 ••i. I Utd with 1ne N&MI STATEMENT J!ld9f of 11ld Sul>f'rlor Cowt Ok.inly C1t•• ol Or•no1 co .. ntJ..., """Y Tiii lllllowlno Pt•lion is OOlnQ 1>11\1 HOAOAN AND liltOllNt.ON 13, 191S. ntlllt; "-'Mfllt!P!Mr f'U llt AfAL ESTATE SERVICES,, .... •Wnt:Jldfll It~ Pvl>llll>t!d Oran91 CotU OlllJ Pltol, Vl&MltM•. No.A, Fuller\on,Ctl.tJ~ LMA•N•.C..lll1r11111,..11 Miiw 11.21,J0,1noJ .. n1l. ltlS 11U.1 1>1nn11 L•t B•aoer, 1•~• v11 1'11: -.11tt .Wrlldl, NO. A, Fulltrton. C11. 9;16.J.} ..,...,...Y1 .... AHllc1rlt P UBLIC NOTICE Tlll1 °"'"t'lt11 l1 conllutlod DJ 1n 1n-P\lb!llMCI Or111 .. C1111t Dally Piiot:, dl\llllviil. ,,,.J:llO,e nllJ-•. 1),to, tt75 1•1s 1-------------1 0111n11 L. ,._,., l'ICTITIOu's•uSINlt.S Tl'lll lllltment '11111 IHeO Wllto tlll HAMI' STAT•Ml.NT Counly Cllfll of Or11191 Co""'' on /Ny Tto11011owing P1rton111r1 CIOl/\Q Dt.i.i· 21, ttlJ. l\OJIOI: FM l U ------------1 ECONO-OPTIC, 12Jl E . Wllll'llrt, Pul>llll'IMI O•en91 COl\I O•llY Pl!OI, HOTIC• TO C"IOITOllS l'uU1r1on. CA. MIJJO. Ind Jynt '· IJ, to, 1•rs ttll-/j IU,111110 111 COUlllTG,TH• ECONO·OPT IC. •166 6ollil,, ------·-------1 tTAT• 0 , CAl,IPOllHIA KIA · Wt'tml11t11r, CA. 1· 'fllllCOUNTYOPOltANO• Soult11rn Ctfllor11l1 01111(11 Int .. • P L' Hf.IC NO'l'JCJ<; Me • ..-:rt C..tllOrl'lll corpor1t1on, 1910 H•,Do••-----. l.1t1t1 of ELIZABETH HOLMAN Bl~Cl.,S. Xll.Co'11M11•,CA.t21,. 1· l ffiil JiOWELL, Otcl'llld. l llli bu\1ntS• Ii cond11(IH DJ 1 tM• NOflCI TO C •DITOllS NOTICE IS HE! II 6•'f GI VEN to 1111 p011lion. IUPllllOll COUllT OP THI crldllOft o l 11141 t b0v1 n1m.ll Clf(.0.nl S.owt1>1rn C•!llor1111 ()pf1c1I, STAT I 0, CALIPOllNIA l'OA Ihle •ll llOflOrtl 1'11wl110 Cll l""i ... ln11 • Int, T"I COUNTY OP OllA"GE tl'>I lolld dt<lcknl ••• r11;i,.lrl'd lo 1111 l'.C Erl1"91rV.P . ....A.a. tl'llfl\ with 1111 l\OCllMlfJ """'""'"' •n Tnl1 \t•ltmtlll •• , llltd wllfl ,,.,. llliil•Oll l.MMA WILMA ICINO, Mil till •11<1 of1111Clll-Of1111 ~ ..... lft• Cour'llJ Cit•' Of Or1n91 Co11ntJ on Mty EMMA W. !UNO, t kt EMMA "IHO, tlt!tidtowl.~ l•t1r11tnl ll'llrtt,wlttotltl tJ, 191S. .U •. Wll.MA ICI NG, •M• MllS. M.O ~JYOVClltfl,IO l"'*"llCllrll{lnld ,,'11) ICING, t•B WILMA t!. ICI NG .t 1111 effl<t ol lllllr lll~ntJ, JoHN 8 . P\IOll&flld Or•nOI Cotti o.llJ PllOI, OKMtM. lllOEI., St!IOEL CllAIL ANO Mov>G.•nclJ""•'·''·'°·1•1s ''°'"'! NOTIClllHl.ll•IVOIVENIOtl llfll•l.111, All•rntfl ilt L11w. 1611 ' u.eltott.tlhetb1Yt 111'"'ddl<t0t11 WHttUff Ori,,., S11ll• 209, NIWOorT PUBLIC NOTICE °"'.ii llOf'-... Vl"O Cl•I~ .,.111 IHcl\, C.lltornl• t2tl0, •"le" Ji tht , e. Miii ~ ••• fl'Q11lred II 11 (llllCI ol bvtlnb1 1n 1111 m1 t11r1Plf'\1lf'I.. jl1CTTfi'OUSiU.:1N1lS " ' .-"*'"" wltft tlle rwc:"""'J vovc,.,,. 1nt•t1111111t1 ol111" dtC&etnl, '""tllln NAM• tTAT•MINT IN ""le.& ol ~ CMrll OI 1111 "l>Ovl WI· '°"" mol'lltlt '"'' ,,. llr1t oul>lk.lltion TM 1o1i..1r19 "'''°" " •no bolM· lltltlll<""""'M IO,,.tllnl tllem. lllltllUr fllfll1110flt1. nt•••: •-ry "911C1Wr1, II l!'lt undl't\IO'>I OIWCIMtpt1, ltlJ I} llOBl!llT E . llOllATS ~\-It 1• Via Clrllca . L111-BIKI llQtl•T U.Wlt INCi. .OCIATIS .. co. c.antontl•, """ltll II Ill• OIKI ol 111'6 l'OWILL... II CRS & COMPllfHINSlVE -oftl'lt lll'ICll'f'tl'"°"' In oll """'' llMl L.A~P•L.L :ii:'L s•11tv1ce:s CA OIYltlOl'I of 111rtt111l11t hi "" •• ,.,, ol Hid Ole• M lltS•llllAU I lia1 W.Ui:Ulf C>rlvtj Wlt 211, -..i, Wltlll11 tot;r rno11111, tlllf lhl 11.,1 C.••C1o1lor1 *1*1 a.~11. C.trlornre t MO jllUtlltallolt of tl'll• n011<1. •I 1111'#111«11'11 ft06tr1 •· Jloblrlt, •sn W1rburlon D41lacl Miil' ''''· · 1Mvtn1mtodtc1c1t111 Orlw , M11t1U"91on &t1c11. CtHkiml• M! YtHO,ICLN G JClllM•.SllO!JL t2MI liMCt;IWllllllt•lll H~DilL,. ca.AIL AHO Sl•llA TPlll fll.Hlntll 11 (Ol'lditClld t;y .n I"" of 11'111bf>W nt ""d dlCIOlnt ·r ... ,......... dlvldvfll. JAC«ICIN'~ ... ··.• .. T l:IN Mtt....-Orlw, 111o.,-11.Jtobtrl1 ,,., ... .,._,.... n = _ ... _' .. , Tiii• 1tallm1nt ••• l llH ,..Ill ii. ,..... '* =~•tt'61 Cawnl)l(l1f~otOr"'°'ttCOYnl'fll'I MI J ......... 1,C.,111.*'1 Tlii > ''m 0 111111 .... .... c.e..-.. . . . ,.,,.,, ....... , •• _ ...... >,... ... Or' .... Clli9M o.ir; illli.t,. f'Ulfl.lllff o....,._ C.'1 O.Hy Pliet. "*lltlllU.f o,.''"" C11111 l>l+IJ, .... ~'°',,· llWrn.•.-.1-. .. 11. tWS 1T11.1• Mtrt, 16-U.JO. !''s. ;. ..• 111t-11 Mmrt, 16, , , '''' P UBLIC NOTICE I 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p · I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ' • . Tiit lllcPot Morblploco on tho 0.-. C<lut , 'DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD ...,.,.,_, ~ ...... ~ ••• 7*tltt ...... _ ....... 1 .. ,,.. ·-· .......... _"..,, ..-...... -• ............... ~ ... ~ ..... ,......,. You Can Sell It, Find It, [ 842 _a a.a J One Call Service .Trade It. With a Want Ad ...V•.,. fast Credit Appl'9•a~ ....... _.. .... _., l.ofl • ....,._,,, ~ ~ . ._ ........... ... ~ """'""" ............ .... -·-'""""-..... 1 ....... I•••••••••••~.~.~.· ....... ~~~.'::~.~•••••••• !llRORS: JulnrllNn G-rol IOOJ G0011 ol • . IOOJ ihcMlld ch•ck their .. '"•••••••••••••• ... ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• dally ••d r..,..t .... rort hmMdiat.iy. n.o DAILY PI LOT•- Uoblllty for tloo flrtl lot- c orrec.t ln1erffon only. fla.ibll1h1r'1 Hoffee: All re11l estate itdverUsed in this newspuper is 1ub· ject to the io'ederal Fair J.Jousing Act of 1988 which mekes it illeaal to advertise "any pre- re rence, limitation, or discrimation based on llG CYH "DIAUVIUE" ~ Vll W NEW fantastic 4 BR model w /bonus rm. 2·Story enlry hall, lge DR, wet bar. Rm for pool. $139,500 2111 5., J.,...io HlH1 Rood HI WPORT CINTH, N.L 644·49 I 0 race, color, rcll1ion, sex,llfihlOM•r~olol 1002 or national OriKln. or an ••••••••••••••••••••••• intention to make any 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""IOTTLU- INTHl!f'OOL i>UCh preference, limita- tion, or d1scri ma lion,'· This newspaper will not knowingly ilccept any udvertising for real eslute which is in viola· ti on or the law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . 1002' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 BEDROOM POOL + JACUUI located In famous HALL Of' !-~AME bomea near s hopping & freeway. Owne r movina and anx· the yard Is a m C!:l!I, the c1t.rpeting is shot, the paint is peeling' and the place is filthy. A real flx· er-upper in a prime area. $51,000. Roll up your sleeves an·d call KEY REALTORS, 962·7788 ~~:Int: s et on his way. ''RANCHO OCEAN VllW $49, 750 CALlllOllNIA" S68,900 1Yt1/Sllil 54Ml40 ASSUMI OWNER. VA LOAN 180 dCJi!rCc ocean view lO ·li~' • I\. II £CH Palos Verdes. Executive ""' Spanish 3 le,·els. Double Rambling three bedroom entry. Huge Ii Ying room ranch house hop-skip and hosts fantastic ocean ANYTIME jump i n the ocea n . v ie w. Formal dine. : Separate high beamed Hideaway 1naster suite. j~~~~~~~~~~~j Hving room. EnormOU5 Bein~ remodeled : custom 5 BR. 5 Ba ... 6500 sq. fl. home on point, pool, dock: Lovely custom 3 BR & den, 31h ba, on lagoon. Boat slip . $225,0QO . Beautifully decorated S BR . 41f, ba., paneli ng, 3 frplcs . Boat sill>. S260.000. Custom 5 BR, 4 ba., View . 80 ft . lagoon. Ramp /float. $290,000. on BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ! 11 !l"'r''·"I' (h ,,,., N fl f1 ''> 01 61 rllVATI LUI FISH OR IOAT ·· In your own private lake. gleeantly upsraded. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath home, only 1 year old. What a gracious way to live. This lovely home near Soulh Coa11t Pla:w listed al on ly $49,9.50. Cali M.5·9491. -Walke1 & lee Real lslale AHIWWAY TO SELL YOUR HOME Our unique program pro· vldes callh for the .!ieller's equity, requires only a nominal down payment from the. buyer , UYOidli a need rot n~w 1lnanclng & prcser\le.S the existing loan. Details by app'l. only. Another extlusi"e J'rogra!'I from ~lirrored wardrobe. 3rd S 1900 nesta size family room . level £ics ta room with Ga rd e n k l t ch en . view. Beamed ceiling. TOTAL DOWN Spacious children.s room l-----4-+---- l"ircplace . Wet bar. with walk -in closets . 'fhree patios with views. 4 IDRMS + ~1assive kin~ size milslcr FAMILY ROOM Pri m e Laguna Bt:ach FAMILY ROOM suite. Assumc8"/o VA. No FHA · VA COM~ANY location. 1''ull prlce price slashed! Owner newloancosls.$249pays $4 1,950 Ht:AL'f OHS S68,900. Seller is li e. Reel desperate! This sharp 4 all. Call today. 963-6767 .• This large IO\'ely home in Sl:'\C ~-: lll·I.\ E·s·ta t c Agent Call CPfNJ>1 9 •1rs1uNro s1Nl(t 1 · bdrm and la rge spacious Costa Mesa has 4 bdrm:i, 673·4400 . 6"·2496a(tc'6,00P.M. famil y ,oom . Needs a 'llj 2 baths, I"'•• added ! .... ~~~~~~~~~ 2 STOIY fa mily. Quiet cul de sac :~' , ~ family room & is on a r S20,9.50 Full price, 2 street, tow.ering pines. ~~;;.,_.~ ... ,,:,,.,;: qUlet dead-end street. IASTSIDE bedrm , 2 bath, bltne. Walk to sc hools and This has got to be the COSTA MESA range & oven, overslzed shopping. Hurry! Call MeaaJ)KW. best buy in Costa Mei;a. One of those "better Cl osets, plenty of 847·60lO. Beaut1"fu l lour ~room, Call 545·949i. buys"! Owner \ca\'lng h · OPIN111\l•J/SfUNIO/l.f/o;1(/' ..._., storage, F.o1-eel, air 2 bath i mmacula t e area-musl sell quickly. conditioning. YO"' selec--home . Shows like a Ju'< oH l <'ine A,c.: lion of ~rpcts & drps. ~i: .. ,1' model. Appraised a t close to school.11, library, Payments less than rent. $47,500. Owner will sell at & Westc'liff shopping. Call D<1n or Ke n atj,;";·~~ii';i· ;:·""~::~>ii:i:iiiiiii~~:;;~ approtised price. Two bedroom & paneled 1!39-HJ21 Agt. Coll 548 1404 den ; bath tolotlly re · N rt H • HORS! RA.MCH modeled {new plumb· HARDTOFIHD eWDO ts 11, Ac.-4 IR. ing I. l"'gc ya•"d, almo" Immacu'fate 3 bd 0 rm. ™ J ust Sl 4,750. a 4-car garage-hobby 4 Bedroom Bradford Place Condo. 11h Years ne~._ f·antastic upgrad- ing. Looks like a model. Pool, clubho u se, children's play area & park all within ~ block. Must see to appreciate. Priced at a m odest $36,000. Buy now and SAVE! hom e; formel dining M M LA BOR E Custom 8 yr. old home, room. Extra payed area rm.; remodeled kitchen • central air-conditioning, lo park camper or l>oat. with new cabinets, bit-· , 1 all built-I n kitchen, 2 ba. Just $49.500. ins," copper plumbing ; · Mr Ac. & needs painting & 6 75-55 11 sprinklers. Alley access carpetin g. Potential Col•ofMewPorl for boat or trailer. New Only $4000 Down $5,000. resale profit. 2515 E. CoastAwy. on m arket. "'8,900 CALL BKR Cororfa dcl ~tar "C" THO•• ""S to assume 7°/o FHA loan ' ~ on big 4 bedroom Condo '7141963-4541 Sell idle items 642-5678 REAL TOR in Fountain Valley. Un· • . .• . ~U PE~~ F-fOMES 224 W C tH believable low price or G•Mr.. 1002'G...,... IOOJ N" Be · h 089 ::.r·.,.,'n only S32,SOO. Vacant. Call ••'•••••••••••••••••'!••1; ~··t ••••••t"'"'''"''''.' ~t Ev~· 5l5.J'ii-"{~ ·World B.••l.-~1&,_& ' -'556•7777. • I 3841 C•mou• Na 541·N55 l +FAMILY $]7,950 ·rhis' charming 3 bdrm. 2 bath la rge <1dded family rciom home 1nay be just whut you are looking (or: Coiy fireplace with open beam ceilings on a htrge lol. All of this & offered with f'HA & VA terms. c .. 11 to see 545-~91 ~ ... HorborVlow- You own the land ~ Best value in this prestige neig h borhood. Sharp Monaco m odel featuring 2 bdrms .. con vert. den, 2 balhs & lge. country kitchen; elegant dining area. Lgc. palio with ea sy maintenance landscaping. J ust $68,750 C. F. Colesworthv · Rl!.ALTORS '40.00fO 7BEDROOM lacklafHo. llTTER THANHI W $7 4,000! Sharp 4 yr old with loads Drive by \his larae and of up,grades. 'fhis 38R, charming family home, 2ba Select Property has 1T31 Orchard Dr. Then a spacious kiteh, tam rm call us to see It! :~he i :d11e 0:1 glr~s oU:. ~ l.1t\ttingham Rcalt9 courtyard. l'r1ced right l'EALTc:Ps ut $45.000. with an as-675-0 123 s u m a b I e I o an. CALL I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;; quickly. 556-21.ltiO I• C: SEL.ECT T'PROPERT IES rEHIH. l'OIHT Nearly new 2·1tory, 3 bedroom. 3 beths; enclosed poatiu, 2 rireph1ces. electric built- in11, garage door opener. Priced al $124.000. 673·3663 642-~ EYeS associated ll IJ ''I' I JI '. JI I '" r • IJ , / 'I W ~ •'' , , I' COLLEGE PARK Ken Koll 3 bedroom, 2 bath with bllns. good carpetin g, covered patio and "down to earth price" or just $42,500 h t1 /Suo !46-41 40 ~~ -ANYTIME . . llHA RIPO $34, 900 s 145,000. Take advantage, hll lOls WATIRPROMT youl' saln on th.is 3 bdrm Two 1tory fBR & den, 2 beth home! $1750 total forml din, 2 Crplca, 3 car down! Walk \Q bench. gar, xtra prks. Submit schooht: and shopping! yourtra de. Pric..-d below mu.rkct ! JACOIS RIAL.TY Offered tor \'ery limited 67.5·6670 time. Dun 't wall for thllj 1----'::.:c.:=c:.::. ___ I opportunlty ~-lrs-knoek· Ina. Call ror quick a ppt l 1:147·6010. Ol"t rl Ill 0 • H ' /1IN !iJ/11 r./ I' -' THE REAi. I ESTllTF.RS j W•nl • ........ •r••n r GltllNHOUSIS 4 Br, 3 Oa house + Com· mc rclal areenhoules for collector or bwilness , &c more. See to apprec. By Ownr. s11s,ooo, 5$7·1218 Have 1omethin.I to aeU? Clatalfled adt &:t It well. (or ot••r .. ..,1•1 IN•trw•nt) f'or Clualntd Ad ACTION C.11 ' A Dolly-~ MJ ... ,, orlH SAT /SUH I ·5 312c-.. Dutch Coloni111. LMe. 5 BR, 3 bu.. + din. rm. $89,500! 201 5 Catolifto Baycrest steal! 4 BR., 3 ba, + family + formal din. rm. $891500! CALL 6 75-7060 or1H SAT !SUH I ·5 NEWPORT BEACH Luxury bayfront. Lge. 2 BR. a pt. 611 Lido Park Dr .. A.pl. 3A CALL 556-1100 •• , .... loyProp. Roollon USE VA MESA VERDI HUGEl'OOL No money down plus elegance of wrought iron fe nced yard with gas lighting. formaJ entry hall. True trl·leve\ over· looks sun6wepl patio, 9' deep P<AJI, high diYlng boa.rd. Will go VA at only $79,950. C».11846-7171 . 'O'fN ll!ll•llS IUNIO ilfNl<:I' ·m·. ( .i " ' . '. ·. ,;.,,(/'¥; THf. REAi. 1 £STllT£RS I llq Cooyoo ltly Beaulllul Dover model. vac1nt . Must 1ell t 2 Bedroom 6 ,den. Slli$K). or lease 5700. mo, VA TlltMS I ASTllDI COST.AMIS.A CRV l• ln . OK ror vet purchase. 3 btdrobma, l ~ batha, hardwood noort. Call nowMS-1171. -bi'fN rrc e • 1t)•1UN ro Ill N/r;I' ,RI. i I ~ ~'>A. •'' TH[ RrM : ESTl\Tf.RS . r l RHCT for owner Joccu_pant. z Brand New Beach Duplexes, wllh 3 BR, a Ba Unit• each. Ample 1ar•1• & parkini wlt.h 1st owner deprecJatlon. $8$,000. CM. CllJ 6'4·7211 Aaent * TRlPLEX·Lrw, rum'd. unit•. xlnt ren&al}I. mid Balboa. Below rtPl•c:e· ment at $111,!00. COAST r ROPERTIES,6'1»410 IUILDIHG SITES -CHOICE BIG CANYON -Overlooks clubhouse. fa irways and greens. Premium location . $92,500 BIG CANYON luxury ; view greens. $69,900. of Surrounded by fa ir ways and EMERALD BAY -Dramatic view of white water. Private community -Only a few left. $75,000. HEWrORT CONDOMIHIUM Sharp three bedroom, three bath condo near Hoag Hospital. Full price just $49,900 -terms. ,. THAHKS FOR WAITIHG. Here is that splendid 5 bedroom Dover Shores waterfront. Water view from living room. dining roo m , kit c h en, 3 bedrooms (Including Master Suite). 4 baths. 42 foot dock. Terraced patio. An unexpected pleasure $245,000 rASTORAL VI EW OH IHLET ISLE Relax in this lovely 4 bedroom, famil y room home in Harbor View Hills. 2 fireplaces, beamed ceilings, enclosed cover ed entry. Large secluded yard. $99,500. srARllLIHG HEW IAYY OHT Never lived-i n 4 bedroom 4 bath home w /sandy beach, pier & slip p l us spectacular Har.bor & mountain views. Great location on fee land ror $269 ;500. OHi OF A KIHD CUSTOM View home In old Corona del Mar. Excellent locailon. Very spacious , absolute mov.e·in condition. 2 bedrooms and family room or 3 bedrooms. $125,000. THAT'S RI GHT-. $152,SQO buys this 4 bedroom. 3 bath view home in Dover S hores. Property has everything. Space. Location. Comfort. Cleanliness. . Low upkeep. Pool. Bar· Room. Familr Room. Dining Room. A specla place. A special offer. THI MO ST UHUSUAL Corona del1 Mar home now available. Over 'h acre -huge trees, ocean & bay view. Private beach. 5 bedrooms, 7 baths. pool. Take advanlaae of this al$249,500 .. MIWPOllT llAC H 644·176 6 ~UNA llACH ,. 494-0749 A C:OLllWKL IAMl8I C:01 . Fee ••••• I' .... Spaci story fircp enc to kilch lll SC( u·ith pri\':1 Neu· dU\l.'/l T Ii s· s I• b f, f s !!~~~::·.~~ ....... l~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... l!=!.'!';~ ........ ~!'::.~.~ ....... J~:.~.s.~.~....... Frtday.May30, 1975 -OAILYPtLOT ~3 ....... 1002G .. IOOZ -· 1ooza.--~ IOOZ. ~.. • 1002 .~ IOOZ_,..._ H---1--·For-9Mt" , 1::-::._._w:r _...._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••·•·••• ................................................................................................. ···'··················· ...................... . -:----VALLEY REALTY ....... 1002 ....... 1002 -IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• f) /) f PRESENTS (/.:Ja'ltron INVESTMENTS A.BA.HDOHID CHATV.U 2STYIU.CH POOL $29,950 '* *' * * *" * Heri~ge Collection: 6AL BOA P~NIN~ULA N ew cu~tom 2 ~IQf v homr;, 4 bedroom. 4 Bo1h & Gollery Pier for yacht to 60 ft . 2 <:.!Ory, 2 fir..:pk 1ri:oc;, wc-rbar Ultra mod· 'fn k;tchi:.:n BfJou11ful v;1~w ()( N1::1wpo1t Bay Fee Lend 5279 .000 OPEN HOUSE THIS WEEKEND G..wrol 1200 EAST BALBOA BLVD .• 675·8120 1002 G~ral -1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport leach 3 Room Studio PLUS SIN A. LITTI.E If you ... want to s teal u home, ta·y this alluring 1 bdrn1 Irvine Terrace estate. lt ha s a fantu stic vtew or all the a ction ; a scx.Y sunken living room. scnsu<>us mus te r s uite <And a seclud ed pool for s pe<:iu l 1)arties. This one is ~pra\\'ling all o ver one of the most prominc nl ltlts in NC \\'port Beach . Sl0,000 \\.'a:s just s li cc<l off the 1>ricc noYl o nly $17!1.500 ! i\n<.I il ·~ nude (y;ithout ·furn i ture ~) Hut ther e is a hc)u:;cful f1 f h e:.i utiful i11tc1·ior plants that \\'ii l be vou rs \Vhen you buy. It 's a l'rin1c not to't;.111 . Unique at 675 ·6000. PEMIMSULA POINT MEW PORT BEl(CH SURF-BAY J Dcdroo m, huge master , G -• I 002 'GeMrol I 002 2 buth ll\•1n•• & family ftter'lilll . Besl buy on thl' (Knnt ! Spacious four bcdruorn , 2 story IJcach homl'. 'l'wo fireplaces. 2UO s4 . ft. enclosed lunai. ~ourmcl kitchen, Swccpi11t-: stuirs to sccluclcd n1aslt•r suite ·with par(lnts retreat <111tl I·' Id" L •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• r1n . or1nil inc. arge pul10. J-1 & f Pool. Coll Anytimo li·16-'392K, f: ves 616'-4543 • Lachenmyer Realtor fl1'1V;.tlc s uudcck. llc:-1 1----Ncwport Jucullun. S!J~ --- down. <..:all ~ti:J-li7117 . OPEM SAT /SUM 1-5 Ol'll•lll'•··•·,i, ·' .... I 102LIHDAISLE f"'·,. _,_ * H.:\Y l•'ll ();'l;·r •IUH , • [" ' .>: rauuly roo1n . U5 ll 00;1t 11 · slip. :Sl!ld.OW __ · _._.:._· .. :-. Ken ll arltn;.in . Ht·altor CJ.ASSll''ll!:O \vlllscll it. til2·57W ti-W-Hi07 1002 Getteral 1002 ............................................... ma en ab I Irvine realty FINER HOMES FROM $4 1,500 TO $485,000 MISS CONCEPTION!! Totulty nc \v t<J n cept 1n i3ayfront living \V /88' front;_igc, pier. private Sandy beach . l'losc t!l tennis & shops . ln eonccivablc pril'.c of ONLY $?65,000. l y l'. n c ,v '. llurry! l.ois Miller 642·8235. 'UI II SUPERB ! J<'antiJ s lic •lc.1ycrt•:-.1 bu~''. 4 beclroom s. :1 haths + root & fantastic kitc h e n . Ne)\\' only S!J8.000. Evan Corkcll 642-8':!3.5. (01 21 DREAMS COME TRUE y;hen you s t e p into this bet1utifully & Li.JSl e fully upg r:_idccl 3 berlroo n1, 2 1,:! bath. fan1il y ruon1 ho n1e (>Jl secluded lol in llarl)(1r \'ic\\' ll ill s w/VIEW! SllS.000. Ucll c Ch""" Lee 644-6200. ! IH:l) LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT. Exqui s ite in every detail m agn-ifi cc nt n1 t1rbl l' c ntr:y & circular stail'\\·uy. ti bcdrootns, den & library . 4 m;_irble firCJ)laces. Gourm et kitch e n . J>i e r & s lip. A s king S485.000. l.ynnl' ll<>thel l 644 -6200. ( D 14 ) BIG CANYON VIEW. Ne\V Uc'-lne ho m e 2 hc<lruo1ns + d en \V 1s pccta c ular golf c·t>ursc vie \\', Quiet c ul -<le -s aC'. $127.500. Oonna Godshall 644 ·1;2UO.,t U1 5) AN EXPERIENCE IN LIVING! Vibrant. imm<JC'u latc ··some rset .. mod e l in l-larbor Vi e\\' Ho mes. Cus tom decoratc <.J 5 beclroom & family roon1. Su per pri vate yar<t, professidnally l;.indsc;_ipccl & low maintenanc:c . S prinkle rs & \vuler softener. S9!J.700 fee. llell'll 'v\:ood 644-6200. ( ll) u I IRVINE TERRACE -7 YRS. NEW. Dramalil' high bca ml'tl t·c ilings. pane led fan1il _y roorn \\1 1s Lonc fire place. gourn1ct island kttc:hen. 3 bedroon1s + con v. den . i\pµt . only. Dona Chicheste r 6-12-8235. (017) FAMILY RETREAT IN TURTLEROCK. 4 bedroom ··Preside nt I"lome'' w /POOL! C lose to parks. tennis courts & s choo ls! ONLY Sl25.000 w /land. ·L.aszlo Shark.any 644 -6200. !Dl8) BAYFROHT -136' FEE FRONTAGE. Fac ilities fo r l.c?. yn<'ht. 5500 s q .ft. of luxury cons trut'Lion & d cco1·. \Viii lease, lease /OJ)lion <>r exchange for comm crC'ia l pro perly AJlJ)1 .. only . l\'Jrs . F<.i y H4 2-82:l5. llJJH) LOCATION -LOCATION. 3 bedroon1 . f;.1n1ily roo1n home at $41 .500. lclc ully s itu;1lcd to freeway & So. Coast l"l<.i za . 1''i:1n1ily room off kitchen -lg . patio :.1re~1 -vuca n~ & read y for occupancy. \Va lter King 642·8235-( D20 > OCEANFRONT CORNER NEAR N.H. Y.C. ·s bedroom, 2 't=r + buths. Charming older home -n1odcrn kitc hen -lg. living room & sc p~r atc dinin g room. Sandy beach '"' t\victc vie\v up & down th (• cous t l\1rs . l"ay S.12-8235 .. <Di l ) 6424235 101 OO-Drl•• ~c. HUG HOMES 640-4050 J.INl)i\ ISl_,E: '1 J!r', 1-!-ilory + fo.1mi ly r 1n .: on lagoon . J>icr&~lip. $235.000 Chuil'c :3 Hclrn1 ., ·11 :.! bo.1.. on lagoon. 1-.ier & s lip. 0\Vll . 1110.1.Y tru<lc. SJl0,000 'J'HE HL.Ut··r·s. bright & ;_i11·:v end un1L : a ir-cond .• -1 BR .. 3 bil. O\\'n . w /lease op- tio n. S72.500 · Best 131uffs buy . :J l~drn1 .. · frplc . Nea r pool. $.54.500 SPYGJ.ASS : gorgeous ocea n , coastline & nig ht Views: 2-story 4 lldrm .. fumil y rrn. & bonus rm . $162.500 WE:s ·r c 1.11··1·· o.1rca ; g reat location! 'J'hi s :J BR cutie has it ;.di ; pool , near s ehools & s h o pping . $74 .500 Getteral I 002 Goe-nerol 1002 •••••.•.•.............. , ...................... . TIME IS RIPE •.. _ . to buy a lovely cluplcx in u good rt:nliil '-lrea, Joe . only steps to the ocean b each . 4 Bdrms. up & 2 bdrms. down . Bolh units arc 11icely furnished : "119.500 SHORECLIFF OPPORTUNITY ... 3 Bdrn1s .. viC\\' property. \.l.'ith g re at location! r>ro1>crty \\'arrant-s l'XP<.lllSiOn. $l:l8 . .'l00 :- • YEAR BAY ANO BEACH 675-3000 2<l07 l COAST H WY COl=IONA DEL MAI=! • Gt'M'ral 1002Generol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME IN IRVINE Small 3 bdrm., 2 baths. s urrounding beautiful atrium. Thi s i s a free stan<ling home with no common wall s, located close to everything. Offered at SSl ,500 ([U~~IN-Mfl~TIN IHl) L~. --REALTORS-~ 644-7662 CORONA DB. MAR General 10021G .... ro1 1002 ....................... :······················ ~ /Je~l /Ju'! /Ji'} Can11on By Owner $112,500 Nc\\1 3 bcclrn1 , 3 bath Condo. l\1'-lny upg r a des, includin):! i\ir condition- i11 g , builtin \\·<.1rdrobes. Corning s tov e t op. Automatic l aw n sprinklers. Pools ize lot . End of Cul- de-sac. Vie,v #12 Chatc au Royal. Busines.: 642.08 esidettce: 640..a022 G._.. IOOZ 1Go•rol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PERMANENT BAY VIEW This 3 bdrm .. 3 bath +wet bur + sep. n1aid "s or g uest quarters. is s ituated in front of the finest public bay beach, overlooking Lido I sle + a terrific night lights view. Remodeled & decorate d from top to bottom . Exclusive lis ting; principals only, please. A buy at $187,500. JEFF BRIERY. REALTOR 2602 Newport ll•d. Howport looch 675-' 111 24 HOUR SERVICE c ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• llCYCLE TOIEACH SOPHISTICATID S 7' WA TIRfRONT Lovely modcl·llke 4 Ahowplace. View-main bd rm hom e, new carpel-channel-c \•cry window. Ing. Only W ,9UO & you Integral part ot bo.-iling OWN th~ lund ! 646·7711. scene . Do c k s pace Open Eves. available. Gated, securt• wa lklna distance of .shops~& resLAUrant.s. , SPARLING REALTORS • 833·3548 A. TRIPLEX Good Coslu r.1 esa locution . 'l'\VO ne v,r lYlO bedroom units and a good three bedroom owner's unit. S77 .500. FOUR DUPLEXES Rare opportunity lo buy four CDM duplexes at one time. Asking about S82.SOO each. $68,500 of •ssumable Joans. each., "'ith only a $50. assun1ption fee. r...ots of tux· s helter and potentitl l capital gains. Owner \\IOUld also trade for a \\:eekend hicle u\\1i:lY with a fc,v acres. AM "APA.RTEL" 'l'hcse tv.'elvc, nicely furnished unils. can be oper:.ite d us both an 01partment house or a motel. On a mon1hly basi:; lhe gross c.1 s apartfficnts \\·oul<l be about Sl800. with a very nice O\vncr or nianagcr's unil <.1s ;_in extra. As king Sl2.5 .000 and O\vner \Viii c<.irry a large Isl. T.D. NEW BEA.CH DUPLEX Spacious units in an excellent area. for sum.mer and winter re ntals. An O\vner's-hideaway is an extra feature. Best ''real Newport'' duplex buy!. SIZl,900. GIA.HT CDM "DUPLEX" Actuall y two sp:.tciotlS three bcdroo111 cus tom h orhcs. Oil a 50' lot. l>crhaps l\\'O fan1ilics s hould buy this a s !)Oth I heir homes! Subn1it offers o.1 nd li ve on pretty Po1>P Y St. LAGUNA APARTMENTS Choice North l.ag una are a . Ocean ,·ie\\'S, lovely pool ;,_ind patio area. ·r,,·e lve units in perfect condition. 'fhis is a n area 'of zero vacancies. Asking S325.000. Call 675-7225 CAIL US FOR A FREE ESTIMATE OF VALUE VALLEY REALTY A BERG ENTERPRISES CO. • Geonerol I OOJiGetteral I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUR CHOICE OF Two Harbor View Homes Super hous e for young marrieds or young ret ircds. 1 .. oY.' mainte nan ce )'ard. See hO\ll muc h S70,000 "'ill buy. i\Io ntego Plan. upg raded ,,·ith n1irrors and upg raded carptes and tile in entry. Bring your O\\'n lantlscapi11g plans for the outdoors. $79 ,900 "E" PLAN -THE BLUfFS P opu l a r 1_.: ,,,·ith the 3 s pa cious b.c droom s. C h oi ce locatio n on gorgeous '''ide greenbelt. Sho,,·s pride of O\\'ners hip. !\'love right into this one . $8.1,900 RAISOR'S REALTORS CALL 833-8600 • Gt'tWrol 1002 Ge.erol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE Spacious 4 Br. family rm., dining rm , sunny priv piilio; 52 ft lot. Sl79,000 LIDO BA YFRONT F'urn. 4 Br., 5 ba., rumpus rm . Prime loc. Pier /float. Sandy beach. $295.000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B"y ~•d• Q,,..,, N B 67'J 6161 Double door entry , dramatic li vi ng room . Forffial dining. Garden view kitchen. Artistic open stairs to separate master and chi ldreqs suites . 22' ballroon1 sized party room O\'(~rlooking cou'ftyard. J.lurry! e~n 842·2535. O/J(IJ r•1 ~;ti S 'LIN 70 !I N/(( ,-., [ ~lfiliH\ll Wooded Paradise 3 Bedroom Doll I-louse loe;.ite d on a qu1e.t . secluded s treet. This l'olesa del l\t ar hotne is on an oversiz~d lot sur- rounded by many large tr~es. Professionally landscaped. TasleCully decorated lhruout . Out s tanding value . $44 ,950. 640·6161 BEA.CH VILLA 4BR + 2STY POOL ASSUME $26,800 Park. l i ke grounds enhance formal double door enlry. Lurge family s ized living room . Formal dining roo m, garden view ki lchen. Fiesta parly roon1 over· looks walled courtyard . Dramatic s tairs to elega n t mas te r & chil drens suites. T<ik c over 7',~ Vt\ lo<1n. NO Nr:w LOAN cos·rs. $2·18 per mo . pa ys all. i\tu st sat•rlfice . Hurry '. Call !JtiJ · i&IL 1>1r•;u Q-'l' id '.I(,. THE REiil ESTllTERS GORGEOUS DUPLEX .. MESA VERDE SPARKLING FAMILY HOME -big 3 bedroom model \Vith 2 b;.iths a nd large family room. View of l\Jes a Verde private qolf course-from living-r oom . Sec this charming. squeaky c le an home · priced -to sell al S45,950. Coll S40-l 151 . PRICED ONLY $36,000 ANYONE CAN ASSUME LOAN, PAYMENTS ONLY $271 . per montl1 in- t lu<.ling ta xes for Lhis sharp 3 bcdroon1 . 2 bulb Co~ta l\tcs a hornc. You "ll love the 1nassivc bl'i ck fireplatc. huge kitchen. separa te dinette area, CO\'- . eretl patio antl (;_irge rear )'ard s tudded \\'ilh fruit trCl'S. CaH 546-5880. ON THE OCEANFRONT SPECTACULAR, NEAR NEW -2 s tory home ;nagnificent vie-w Oftd beach. 3 J.ar ge bedrm s with room for 4 . Overs ized family room and living rm. l\Jodcrn kitchen and dining. Al l less than 3 years old. F'irst time offered at $199 ,000. Choice BallX>a location. CCIII 540-1151. OWNER VEGAS BOUND MUST SELL ONLY $64,000. You 'll love this CXC('Uli\·c style J:>accsctler home com1)lete \vith 4 be<lroon1s . 3 baths: <.lcn &.: for1nal dining:. 1'--.a11tastic latti('c ,,·ork 1>;.ilio cover . lest •olue in all of Cost<.i !\lcs<-1 . Don 't miss it!! Call 546-5880. SPLASH SPLASH POOL TIME -is just around the corne r and we have the perfect home for year ·rol1nd entertaining . 3 Bedroom, 2 bath . enclosed patio lwhot a greenhouse!!. Offered al $45 .500. Call 540-1151. EASTSIDE TRIPLEX NEW, ALMOST FINISHED -bltn>. fire 1)l<1te . car1>els, \\1alk·in \\·<.irdrobes . lovely clecor . V'ery attractive in a nd out. Bi9 lot. See onytin1e. As king S83 ,500. Coll 540-1151 . ERITAGE J Bedrooms, I' 1 baths each. Bui I l · 1 n s ·I·-------~-...... ----.. firepla ces. patios, qui el ..&. resi denti<1 I arc;.i. Won · 11. 4 . dcrrul tenants each pa y S3 15. µer month. 1\sk1ng 594.000. 546-4141 e ~ c A~~'Htid . "NEGLECTED" 4 BR-2 STY POOL BUCH $28,900 Park like apprua i.:h. L;.irge famil y si1.c living rooni. Gourmet kil i.:hcn + dine. Sweeping slairs REALTOR BEA.CH COTTA.GE JUST REDUCED \\':.i lk jus t one s hort block to either OC~;AN OH BAY . 2 Be drooms , fire place, i a.1 bath. You can \Va lk to everythin g Oil th e P c nins ul<.i . A terrific buy \Vi th a \O\V price of $54 ,500. CALL-644-7270 282& E. Coast Highway, Corona d el Mor PROPEJn'Y MANAGEMENT to separate master & .u~~'•"-childrcns suites. Take uw1~ over 9'k F'HA loan. NO,.~ .. ~~~~~,.~~~·~"~"~"~'·~"·~·~.,~·~~~~;;;; NEW LOAN cos·rs. $267 per mon\h pays all. HURRY for lhi s G 02 1002 BARGAIN --sacrifiee . eMral 10 GeMral . . & k c..,,. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Bring pa1nl ma e .,,_. BIG Call963-788t. OLDER 'QP1~rii 4•"S '1JNIOll!IJ,rl' COUPLEHHDED BEAUTIFUL ;.i.I.11.:: .. ·.:=_~.·.·· .•.. :· .. · ...•. ·.'· .•.•.. :.~.~l.!:.! ~:r~~~. ~ae~kc~a;dJr~ Sharp !~~,i~.0!1arged . house with firepla ce & living room + dining l~;:;:;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 lovely kitchen in lovely area, seals 12 + t7x20 G I 1002 IGeMral 1002 I• Californi a homes. Owner fie sta room . Cracklin g •• ~~~~•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAYE ON transferred. !\lust sell fireplace. Very gracious now! Call G-lli-7711. Open li ving fur ju!>t S-1 ,250 * * * * * * * 3 Bedroom Condo E"''lill" down. c.,, "'"·111 1. .,'EWPORT HEIGHTS 826,000. Assume for i35. l"'O an '18,000 >'HA loan ·. ' OPEM SAT. & SUM. I ·5 payable s194 includ ing 220 I E. 16th Street at I""-'fa:<es & Ins. Pool and tennis available. 19930 A Prime Family I-Iome Bushard , Huntington Bdrms. galore. 2 baths Beach. Open Sunday 1·5 &. a family room Pool & interior &exterior barbecues Dbl. gi.Jrage & s hop & extra guest room A fine offering at $70,550 CLARK SOMERS REALTOR 675-4000 ******* $©~4tl)A-~t,~re,· That lntr;g11ing Word Game wifh a Chuckle 0 ,_ .. ,".,. 1.r11 .. 1 ot n.. '°"' tc"'"'bled WO<d• H-~ .., l0t"' lour oitfll)\e wood•. HUBADO I I I I I I' S'YUUR Ii I I I I • e Ru rs I ~ I I I' I' FROHTROW IRVINE TERR. II 4000 l"t. or the best uf everything! Best view. large fee lot, large rooms. 3 car gara ge, huge master hcdroom + huge bath. t:vcrything in immacul ate condition ! H&F pool. l'roperty has to be seen to be ap-preciated. Shown by ap- poinlment only. 3 BR + den, ol ir. ba., loo o{ mar· ble . Bl.lilt by builder for his own use. §-•1lt!ih11rq ' • 315 MARINE AVE. BALBOA ISLAND • 673-6,00. DIRECTORY HOUSES FOR SALE llR & FAM RM or DEN 1943 Port Ne lson CHVHJ N.B. 541 -5032 $74,900 Sat/Sun 12· 15948 Mel)ermitt, ~'tn . Valley 554-2238 $66.500 Sat/Sun 10· 1114 White Sails Way, HV!lills , CdM 644-0523 $'96,000 Sat/Sun 12· 4 BEDROOM E. Wilson.,.Costa Mesa 642-9497 $411~~ Sat /Sun 1· Maple, Cost csa 548-7729 $39,900 Sal/Sun 1·5 41R & FAM RM or DEN ••1200 E. Balboa Pl (Bal Pen) NB 675-8120 Sat & Sun Z107 Blue Water Dr. CdM Broadmoor II Sal/Sun l · FOURPLEX FOR SALE 3 IR EACH . 033 Mission. Costa Mesa 892·3240 $85,000 * Pool '** w .... ,. ... . * * Wllhiofr ... & Pool - t.r e11l11te Jiving within l·c-·1-.~ .. ~i,~ied=A~d~,=~ ... ~.-.. -78 Want ;\ds Call "'5678 ) ' •• • ' . . . . . . . , .. . . . . ' .. . ' -. ~. D4 DIJLYPILOT tt i 11H,_.S. H••n ... ~ tt 111n,_S. P..S.. · _ Frtdey. M!Y 30. 1175-• ••••••••••·•• •-••·•-... ••·•••••••••••·-••-•••• ••••••• ••••••--•·•••·•• •••••••••••••••••••••'\• ,,, ••" .... se·· ,,.,.,., 2000 .............................................. .... ,....-19't PllMl.wl.IX •••••••••••••••·•••••••• SIJ.750 11.ACH HOUSI Covin&ton 4·plex. ~:~ .. ~.~~--··· ··-. --';~··,··o·u·· ~~~~··rai4. ~! .. :!.~~~.!!!? !! .. :~.~!'!~.!~ : .. it •• :~ ..... ~~ ~:'~~~---~~ .. C 1a11.. 1002 _._. -$4000. OOWNtornlce:a TWOFORONE • PIOMO......_Y •••••••••••·••·----···-••••••••••••••••••••••• home near We1tminlt "'- '•••••••••••·•-•••••-•. --3 Bd m 21< ... ho + t-------·•FI 2 DR R·2 Easl.wlc1 cuJ.oe. Mall All ~ r ·· ~ .... me 14 Y HOMIS 2 Bedroom &: l'Unv. Perrecl location. llOOO garage. 2 &lh. Blw. plut ca1h 1pt.ondabll3 on Only4'h yrsoJd. You own $1400 down payment. lbe land. R-2. Ocuan iilde. tarM t800 per month. 4601 8•11>0• Wvd. Will Hurry , c all C114 ) lo;aaH~/optlon . $S9,$00. l~·li~VESTMENT IACK IAY aac. Aa1u.meT~~-FuU · ' J·BR•baw/khcheneu.e., Luxury waterrront 8 3 • I I I price$3!000~ ASSUME 7% Ol 1oan. w/s~p.cntranceAtpriv. bomea priced from ... 4 r. a KJUW w poo • • Dulcb llavcn 4 br, 2 ba, encl. patio. ManyeJttrM! ~ lge yard. & r06m ror Collete Park, reduced Au.I £.state nr. Springdale & Slater. Only 3 yrs. o&d &a buy at $ZI01600· ~·waterfront.. fotn\tlJ l\ors es & t-.••..a•v .......,, 1 .,.., ... ~,. 607 B•»•lde Or1ve , hi~ .. « lot s.M,000.Uaedbrk~ntry.3 11171TIL-.U Att . .::1••~ ony-.~ N•*P< ... ee~ch.073-3000 (' c tNI , c . .,.. actt . u I I u 'llSSION hL'"''TY .. 1~· bl GI Loan r + ce. e-ge, v. rm., .. I ns:..r-. : "1.ssuma e din, rm .. 18 co\•ercd •l"YOU 5Plex,lncomc$13,200.No ••4!M-0731•• Open Sal/Sun l·~. DJVISlON TllE REAL.ESl'ATERS • ~7 0 ,.5 00 . By Owne r . patio, uaed bric (rpl. Hvy .-Ii deferred maint. Ed· SS7·1288 i hake. Remodeled 1'41 FUSSY? incerJ Beach. 113.$,000. 0«1ofront, Woods Cove, 2Cuatom ~ BAYFROHT ' ... -bo-.-,---.-,-.. -.--10_0_7-I Ba, dbl 1;,ir. Nu paint. Thi11 home~ ~lls it.selt.1_0-... ___ .M_7_-00l_<_. ___ 1 6 Bdrm. 4 BA home. BALBOA PENINSULA 0-S unit apt. bldg just ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sprinklers. Open SaL Z.S Up & rad e d c pta. & t:J.,50,000. Terms. 7 ~%. Elr:cellent l~alion on the completed ror 1a1e. Close NicedupleK.Npt.J.sl.2 &Sunl2·S.22Wc.ornell drapes. Bui lt ·ln Olt"ve Park bwn.49'·71..56. Bay&only \,bk>iektothe to major 1hoppin g HR, i i,., ba. ea. $00.SOO Or. CM. Owor~. breC 1a .. kfast nStook. ~ly =========-I Ocbdean . Eae4h hobmelhha.s ~ 179iOran&i.CM ceS14nMter; .. ~•!~,r9r ~~-o,0rr. Trlplex $1~.000 u -ue·sac .4....., •• .,.,2 rma , a • ... t6J .• ~·-, ...... ..., OPENSAT&SlJNl·S bUui.C.11 968-4456 Gallery, 2 fireplaces. 64Z•l77164S.2 Duple x $ll2,SOO GUARANTEE 243 1 Bowdoin. College IXICUTIY.E H wetbar, ultra modetnl~~~~~~~~~i $2000. Tn...,• .. i\J.arsh11ll ltll)' G75-4 . )'ark. Vac<ianl 3 br,2 ba, HOME,......... omes kilchen le private pte.r.litARBOR vu llMS 4 9 HtJ( BchTriple.1es c--,_1 Mer We gue rantee you 'll ram. rm .. Crpl, pool. ...-~ Fee land. See at 1200 · . 1 ju.st bit 1·2·&3Dr·l>.11tM> ---gw 1022 w1i1nt this 4 UR.3 Ba, 1"/R Owner. $«,BOO. Prin. on· & p• "'Y y••" ll'-.!d~Slorylcni £ast Balboa Blvd .. or 3 Bil , P.ahirmo. Man 20Q2Hunl1aetoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• home for your own. Call 1ym.so16eve1. ..-.-...... .., VERD.AMT call&7S·Bt20rormorede· •tras. ''educed $87,900. Opcndally -S.~-6779 ' f•MILYu-...J1llf: w; to see this excfuis itc 2500 sq It. of luxury. I ~tao~·ls!!:_. _______ l cl~84~1!'.P~o~•t::M~a~•B~•~le~.:--==~-==~~~;----,.. ~ SPYGLASSIUL.Lhome. JUSTPAlNTED Huge lot. CuslOm pool J,4 &-S.... Secluded botanlcal1-T RlrW PLUS INCOME o wner 11nxlous. $164,000. 3 Br, 2 Ba home in W. w Jfountain " jacuz.xi. C'--1& e--a... Ho.et paradi.s e . Waterfall, CUS TOM JACUJZI NEWPOllT CH.t-.:ST CON· Best value In North , Curona del ~far. AJmosl • • * • • • • * ••• t.:os la ftle1a. Dbl g•r. Sep. play yard +1 solid ..._.,. • -r atrium, bea.ms, clo.w·in + Pool DO. 2 8~, 2 83 upiraded Costa Mesa . s:;6.5 mo. In· ,.ne w , magnihl·ent, fi ve SAVE MONEY fncd.Asaume 1Mt'fc.1'"HA brickpatio+fuepit.Gas vu.$97,500 8 . C , b l 1· end Un1l on grcenl>elt. SSS 000 •• bedroom home, Two a l $203 mo. $33,000. BBQ. El ee~nt master IUILDERrAYSALL l~~~~~~~~~~~I •if ~nyon 8 es $63,S00.645·'M>OO come . ' ,,ee : 0 549 ~·• · 3 1 bd y Cl •'--...,-...£.. I· value. Elcgunt I story, 31 -'=="-'ccc~-"-----I $43,500. leaaehold. blocks from beac h. Uuythis 5BR,48a,F IR1 --"-"e_r_. __ ._._~ ____ swte+ rg rrm.21h OW o__,~q •JUST LISTED-Dig Br, 3 H:., Immaculate, Balboabayview2ynold HALPIMC .. MILTlt. Separate dining room home & get income from Lovely 2 bdrm. house & blh. l'ror. decor.~ PLUS, YOU GET family home, JBR, fam high I y up graded . 3 sty . $132,000 or l:se. 2727 E.Coaatlfwy PIU$ s pacious family the 2 lilt H.ental Unit. l ·Hlt apt . t_;a s tside, THETAXCIEDIT rm , 2V.. ba, bltns, 3 $135,000. Open.675·6621/646·2725. 675_4392 room. Two bedroom rcn· Priced to sell at il.22,500. I · n..-n decks. Coastal & City t I l All c ose-1n .$50,0CX>.vw1ro;;r. CUL DE SAC •-c•----•-1076 a 1n rea r uni . ••••••••••••• "'"·""~" ~~ ... ,. .... , • • Lights. ~7,500. -_....., ,_ b .1, n.· . ...... ......., ...... '7'¥1 Located on Springdale ••••••••••••••••••••••• L-leach'~ I CUSo.um Ul • IS lll a DO IT vou· RSELF Between IOA!tf&6PM . St. North or lleil, aeross ~ ne"' 1,,,,·n., and m"•l be Big lot with a fine 3 COSMOPOLITAN . SP•ClOUS S ~. i pts •· • ... & ..., b d h from St. Bona\'enture • tn ~ " .....:can v t:'"' II • .,.. .. Sttn lo be appreeiated, Add 3 second unit ror you MESA VERDE ' room ome + a Catholic Church every detail·3BR 2b.a , LIDO ISLE . BEACl11 C1 OTI'dulAlGE shopi;. 1/1 bloc k Coast Cctll 673·ti.550. on this R·2 ...........,rty 1n Executive tri·lcvel 4 Br. bonus room ··spec · JIUNTINGTON BEACll frplc. 5 undeck & patio. m peace u a com· fl.,.:y , rront.01f1:, no vacan· OPfN 111 'I •" s •u•110 1>1"1i..:f • .-·-..-3 Ba home. "'l"ben •. U cular" designed m lhe VI• ulCE muno'ty Only 132 ·~ . , •. 1 S42 500 Old CdM . 1'here's a 1 BR, n...i ... "' Jr SALIS OFFICEOPEH Big view. $87 ,500. ,,_" · ,<#VY. c1es. n s in.: on Y • ttC lfilllill ::; ~.:::.~·~~7=~· of [ic~1r:1~:~:~.·r~~! ~~f!:~~~a~I~? E~fI 84~~5~· T~~l56 ~-.~~·0b;~ .. '!,;~ h~~~ ~~=~~.:r··~~:.~~·i:::: ==:l.~~~RY :2"tJ££,~~r.~~\~~L~ ~~~74~7.4 ,900. Owner. one. 545,900 finance . Good view . 673·6489 Caplatr-... 1071 ~he i)(·11t t.aguna Beach DONT CALL ME l"ine 1044 $37,500. ....,.--_-_-_ ~ _--_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111comc prop~rty. Duplex ; h.:e. lot. 2 UR, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEAUTI FUL 3 br, 2 ba Rc0a~ono1n 1c11, Corp. A DUPLEX!! ba + t·lir. Priv. patios IYOWHIER a· Unt'•er-'lyP_._ • LA GUNITA·This Broklrs &75·6700 d h r 3 BR •' l d ~I I& " ..... mdl. home. Nr. schl.s &. l 'm a ellg l ul 2 BR & $99,500. Own /Bkr • am-rm, ge yar · • · Bright cheerful home ror warm & gracious home NEWPORT SHOllS De n owners residence 675·3031 673·2222 ~.soo. Open House Sat the growing family, rn has JBR, 3ba.11K! pool is 2·Sty A·frame ; 3 BR. & Beach. Lg. fenced yd. Dread & Butter ftfonev with b~autiful pz-ivate & Sun. 12·5. 2034 Con· one or Jr\•ine's most de· an added bonus. Wide sep gues t bouse w/l·Br, Must sel l . s45,95 o . Al akers 10 U 1i1ll 2 &od grounds. Co1ta M•sa I 024 L1nent0tl. G-lti·332ti ANYTIME sirable locations! This ocean view. $131 ,950 bath & kitch. Walk lo 499·1840 art. 5PM $138,000 Ideally located ;. . PLUS ••••••••••••••••••••d••• 1B-Y--'O-W-'-N-E~.-,.-$36--'~.5'l0-.-3-B-r-. home Ceaturei l bdrms. ~ beach , le nnis, e tc. IY OW'ta. in \\'estmlostl'r. Agent. <111 charming l HR Rental 1'1-11 ESA v1crNdc •1 Br,. e!i oe.w cpl 'g. i•f.i: Ba . Cop· 1·---------1 +large bonus room, that $64,900 Deluxe 2br den Twnhs, 968·9332. with private yard. Cur· ge poo · e"· Y paint per plumb'g. throughout,•----------< is a teenagers' par<1dise ~ne.water CAYWOOD R£ALTY poolside Joe. Cust cpts & ~ rently producing S2J5. in & out. Im med. OC· d • 1 1 (great for Atom& Dad, ~ * 548_1290 * d-. Many xtras, 10"' WALK TO OCEAN C P ooy $74 500 Owner in . rm, uuge am. rm. GI IUYEIS E S E .,. ·~ v 1mo. ·u a · · · w I r r p I . B k y d too !). $68,950 Including R AL E TAT ---------1 dn, JOyr. Principal.sonly. • TRIPLEX·2 Yrs. new. ALL &-a2·763o ------I w/pla)'house. Close to Unbelievable SBR 2ba land. SPYGLASS VIEW 49S·l346 choice area.' Owner :.tnit on a generous 47x llll ' lot Uy Owner· 2 BR, sml beach. schls & shop·g. 2·story, crpts, drps. huge PETTIT REALTY llS~:.cC:.°iS~:WY· HVH PRICES l --~-------1 38R + (2) 281l·all have 1n the bes t South·Of·l-lwy fenced yard. $26,SOO. Call &l8 Surf St.CM. 835·5586 yd, elose to ocean.· Best 552-7000 4 BR, 3 BA, din rm, ram Mobi• HollMI frplcs. Owner anxious, ; lo<:at1Un . SYl ,000. Call 646 .0748. 559 Hamilton. or496·2757. of <tll, only W ,500. BKR.1----------WOODED LOT rm. billiards rm, wet For Sole 1100 mus t lM! sold Ulls week . . 0-14 ·7211/\gent Ctit . l-D--,-.--.---- 6 968-4433or845-JJ01 EXCLUSIVE Turtlerock Unusually large, bar,3 car garagc.Occan ••••••••••••••••••••••• BKR.968·4433or846-3301 --------1 ana 0111+ 102 CH Terr.homebyUCl.SBr, enhances & giv e s &V 11 . $12SOOO An•ious Seller! Leaving CORONA Assume •••••••••••••••••••••••WALK TO BEA ·Beaut. 2!11 Ba, de n, £rm.I din. 3 a ey views. • · Vic. twautilul 10 x "2. FIXER UPPB at · mentry 4BR 2BA privacytothis delightful, Owner,540·1346. W DEl MAR DUPLEX ba rgains, Dana n u : ', · car gar .• Util. rm,& pan· contemporary home. Ex-1---~~~---~-I Lge . .Br, Bet, Liv. Rm. 4 P FHA Loan Point. llome & income, ~-~asking $52,500· try.· Lg lot w/vlew or citing ocean & cctnyon Adult Pk. No pets. Ren· lneome $8592. SP $60,000. TRIPLEX With rent l.ike payments New, from $68,950. $2000. • CF ash i 0 n Is I a nhdl ~ views : 3 bdrms., 3 baths ; tal s.p. $53.00, ea •• ·h "'e iee Agent, Dan Lee. 673·1&11 T e rrifi c loccttion. One on this beautiful Ranch tax credit applies. 34.121 For Sale By Owner.SlcS atalina. Nr. sc s ox sep. indoor/outdoor din· $4 , 00. 645·5 6 tw. block from beach. Even Coast 1-lwy, 496·3431 lath & plas\er, l 760sq. rt. shop'g, $145,000. By appt. ing rm. Family z-m. with S.12am, 6·9pm. R.E . SALESMAN, Lie. • ,,-,., r•om lhe up~, Style. Great assortment only 19161 Woodford Dana Point. Westbay ln-unit. Can' be financed" to or plants, shrubs and DANA POINT Beaeh Cot-3 BR, 2 BA, ~am rm, liv Terr. Saa:-0506. frplc.; 2 le vels of decks. NEWPOltT Deluxe Adull come Homes. Increase )'Our needs . prime pro· trees, Cedar hned front tage $39 950 rm. rorml din rm. As·1----------·I $115,000 Par k, Pool, J acuzzi & earnings by working l 'th t yard, s1>rin klers front & WEBBR,EALTY 493·0761 sumablc V~ 7 ~~o/o. UN IVERSl 'fY Park , Club House. Dbl wide+ small investment pro· .~er .Y .wi gre_a aOnp· rear. Loads of flowers? ----------1 Beaut. lnds cpd. fl1any Cardiff Pla n lerrace ~ encl. perch. New paint. pc •to'es . Mu l tip l e prec1at1on potcnt1<1l. · BT I 032 l D · b 6741 l y Sll9 ,s uo. Call now Covered patio, heavy oro ex ras. rive Y, homes. 2 br, 2 ba . frple, crpts,lcdrps.631·1490 member. Many listings. • t.ii J ·KSSO. shako roof. Gingerbread ••••••••••••••••••••••• La f 3 Ye11 e . Dr • H B · bltns, dbl ~a rage, Jge lot. .,Wr 496·3431or642·4905 0 1,,N 111 _,,11 ~ ,,1111..,11 .,,rr• s hutters. t:arpe t s . BY owner vacant 3 br, 2 $6 1,900. Pz-1ne . Only. fenced. Clubhouse & pool NEARLY new Dbl wide , 2 ---------- drapes, built·ins, wood ba, family rm w/frplc, 842·7168. privgs. t'ee simple. By ir •.• ,,,,_.,. BR. 2 Ba, very n.ice adult Costa M•M 4 Plt>x b. 3 bedroo 110S N.Coo1ot Hwy.,Loguno park downtown C-la ca 1nets. m, ex· pool le jacu:u..i. Assume Owner 'fransferred open owne r . $,16 .500. Ope n 494 1177 · "" Xlnt area. (4} 3 Br, 2 ua. tra baths, den area and 5%% loan. CaU after 6 til Sold! Prestige 2 sty 4 house Sat &Sun 1·5.17202 -!:~:r~·s!_l.~~~fi..~f3~e Ne wl y redecorated, fi replace. $42,500 bkr. pm, 586-4275 BR & huge bonus rm, Ches tnut North. 552·0051 L u · 1052 forced air, bltns. $85.000. 540·1720 k " "" r I forappl. l'rin.only. "'J""•n•guel BLUFFS CONDO .............. lO'k down . S9000 2nd. Fo.lnlaio Valloy 1034 <hum .. '" •n, o~~a ••,,••••••••••••••••••• ..,.... ·- Harbor View Hills TARBELL ••••••••••••••••••••••• din , be aut. lndse~d . S&S Tri-level4hr,21/2ba, Beautifully upgraded 3 forMIW 1300 892.324 ° Century 21 · VI t:: W ocean, harbor· llJ55 llarhor Blvd.,C .M. OHL Y Sll,000. ~act :cc~srs . SH7~~· ~: prof. landscaped. A/C, Bil, 2•,; Ba , F/H. Condo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5:)6.QHJJ n1i.:ht li i,:hls from 4 BR, 48Jt .huge ma sler·lrg. " ·· · wet bar, fully upgraded. Lands caped patio foz-BARGAIN priee fbr rast LOhforscll• 2200 :F lt. '/'r1 -lcvcl. l,lt ftbrhd Mesa Yerdt Cam rm·s uper sharp. 714/828· 7~07 Aj,'1.. Orf ere d by owner. E ·Z ma int. End unit sale. Beaut: condo com· ••••••••••••••••••••••• incldio priv comm. pool. 01 • s· d Agl. &t2.84&J C I I p . $65,900. 552·4669 w /priva c y & view . plex. 112 units, rented as ~ Walk to s chools. shops, ymp1c lie ornp e e nYocy apts P roj ~c1ed '75 in PORT AFIMA N In this enclosed corner oWuER • ~IOUS S76·500· . t: . • e w Po r t C..: c n t e r . Pool I BY OWNER; Meadows " --~ • •• • •••••••• come approx. _$300,000. LAG1Jtr4A Sl27 ,000. • Home Plan 5, 4 -eR,-21;, lot.Singlelevel.4bcdrm, Owner purchased a Giant pool, jacuzzi, gym, AK S REALTY Magnificent California Ba. Liv, Din & Fam-rm 2 bath SEACLll-'f'" model townhouse & must sell! HARBOR VIEW garages. For sale or invites you to inspect 640•5508 2·story, near Mesa Verde w/frplc. Upgraded. High ;it.h se pai'at~ r~mal Sha rp 3 bdrm., 1 :~4 ba.; trade down. 7'7o T.D. By their panoramic view · ----------1 Country Club. Has a big $60.'s. 968-2878 1n1ng rm, ge am Y rm ni cely lndsepd . Xlnt MONTEGO owner. Mr. 8 ., 400 N. ~!!tifuf ~acg~o~~~~ TIBURON lLV.1-1.. fun center with olympic·l-'--'-'-"'-'-"='----·I ,& sun2k1e 1 Sun lifvi~!_.r7m04.2Cen· cond. W1ll "scll VA/1'rii\, E . h VIEW 1 Acacia, FullerloP. (714) BKR<S4·"....,0 • "Excepliona'I value .' sizedpool,oversizedcov· lxqiiiUit•Sp.ilh . ury r ,_,. onlyS41,950 n1oy t e roml~879~-~97~4~4'-------11;;-::;:;;::-;:-:~=~---- l'r1l.'ed s lashed $123,500 ered pa tio & l.'Oncrele 3 br. Ponderosa_:Par k 8 R 1 N G y 0 U R MORGAH REALTY this 4 BR, 2 DA, f-'/R Mobil• ho11M/ t'rf~~~~j~~·1 ~:1 St:acrest ~!~r~ni t~:,:1~ vi~~~~; ;;:~e :~~m0e.t ~ 1UP· SQ U E E G I E AND 552·4222 ;?;1~w /many upgrades. ~~~~.':T.~ ... ~~-~~ Trlr Prk1 2300 h l d · d · u u : us om MOP-gel a free bottle ofl----------'• ... • • • • •• •• OPEN HOUSE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 15-415'/J IRIS NEW DUPLt:X Ren led $750 Month 1st ust:r 's write orr Bring cbe<:k. Ope n Sat. 1·5 SI 14 ,500 • University Realty !UXll E. Csl llwy b/3·6510 1 HV H ills-Chanril119 Ocl'an Ba y view, Jarge Jot. 3 Br, 2 Ba, formal din rm. 2 frplc:ii. Mission ti le entry, ram rm & kitchen· /pantry. Owner. ~.000. ,By Appt. Only. 644·05Z3 a l • 4 be rooms, en. c pts, d r ps, tile r oof, Lysol with this hard to GREEN'fREf_;/Brookfield Mobile hme. 2 .Bd, 2 Ba, massive fireplace, 3 Spanish tile nrs, much find, 3 bedrm "'Surfside model, 4 Br, 21/z ba, Jg 'JOIN OUR GROUP Sat&Sun 1·5PM custom built, close to baths.$74,500.bkr. more. Must see. $66.!IOO. Condominium''. l /4 Mile pool+ sep. ij' jacuzzi&· Al less than appraised shoping, bus , ocean. 540·1720 Open house Sat & Sun. to the O"ean, pn""ed lo redwooddeeking.Asking En1'oyllte GoodLt'fe R.E.Sal•slAA9'fl value. 1394 Magnolia, Ad I k I 6 TARBELL 15 948 McDcrmitt . " ... ..,,,7500 p · IT -r• Carlsbad, Ca. Ocean ulpar .at. pm.or sell. Cent ury 21 /Surf ..,., . . r1n . on y. o see Call 493·25 I 3 """'ded for our office. view. Beautiful 2S 'x60' weekends . 49'J·l171. 554·2238 536·7542 call 644 ·4781 between 9 &1---------Coll now: 671-7601 1 ------~---1 s, weekends call 551·1075 * *LUXURY .... ~~~~~~~~~I pool. Xlnt neighbornood. Mountain, Desert, 3 Ir + lonul Rm. OPEN Sat/Su~ 1·4: 9141 I-4 Br. 3 ba. 1.3 Acres . Resort 2400 $31,000 Less than $1100 mo\·es Re gatta, l·l .B. 4BH Tiled Roof • •LIVIMG llGCANYOH Horsc ok.Can splitoff3 •• ••••••••••••••••••••• tt • you in. Payments Jess l :Y.ba, fpl e . $5 5,900. One-0f·a·kind 48R, huge lrglots.AskingS96,SOO. BIG BEARLAKE A •Mioft than rent. l\gent, Dan RLTY.530·6565 Raised dining area wet fam rm, 2 .lrplc's, wet LUXURIOUS 5 BDR!\1', 1'"ennel&Christiansen Sharp cabin. dbl lot, 1111 GI or FHA lwen Lee, 673·1641. 1----------1 bar. cathedral ceilings & bar, jacuzzi in your own fam rm .w/wct bar. din· Realtors yr old, fplc , conlp furn'd. On a bi g, country rot with Hunt" _. S.ach 1040 SOUND a hideaway office. all yard. Relax and enjoy ing rm, billiard rm, heat· 714 /729-2301or729·5821 t-"in 'g avail. $lG,750. Bkr. room for your boat 0 Ul ... on IUTERESJIUG7 featuresofthis 3Br,2ba. the c\ubhse, tennis & edpool.$199,500. c--'--·.1-335·8484 trailer. Party patio. pie·••••••••••••••••••••••• " " home ; just one blk. from private beach. BOND -1---------- lure windows. Seclud BY OWNER·3 Br, 2 full 4 Comfort a ble size shopping. Asking only REALTY INC.&11·9411 for1ale 1700 BIG BEAR new xlra Jge back ya rd. Include baths, din. rm; on cul.de· bdrms, 2 baths, bWll·in $55,500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cabin, elose to Lake, sips carpe t s & drapes. s ac. Prime loc., close to kitchen, fireplace, heavy RAISOR'S Di vorce forces Sale North •S 19,950• 6. Washer/Oryer. Week bedroom s , country Banning & Bushard. s hake roof, cover ed View. "282 ''. 3 Br. 21h DONALOM.llRD Large 2 bedrm. 2 b;,i or Weekend. Alt. 6, 2955 1-larbor Blvd. C.!\f. kitchen · with r ange Lands ca ped yard w / patio, & offering GI & REALTORS Ba,Fam.Rm.Din .,Sun· A~••<iet.,,11 ... 11 •• , w /fen c ed patio on 7.51 ·1121 OPEN HOUSES oven, handy ~'Ork.areas . Slone slab patio. Walk to FHA terms at the price deck, w/view. Pool size 1 --======~--1 beauti£ully landscapedl---------- 0 · be h •••soo-0 •53 of$359SO Callo'fyou•o'n yd. By ownr. $59,500. 1.ovelyoceanview.2or3 d 1 · ~~of Stale Suuo•y 1-5 wncr ve ry a nxious. ac ._.., ............. · • · · 4523 Campus 0r.,lrvine groun sw/poo ,secunty "'"" " ~ I h · 1J. t e rested ? 963-5671 or 495·1164 . Br home. BY OWNER. Prope..._ 2600 p ease s u m1t ! .,...r. Campus Valley Shop Ctr. gates & much more. $220. • •r 4 13 c-.;Ho 540-1720 LA CUESTA VILLA. .556-7035. CALL 8ll..a600 LAGUNA Niguel home 31 -64-S-·0<80 __ o_r_l_-S46-42S8 _____ 1 per mo. pays il all incldg ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bdrms., pool, lge. lol ; TARBELL Immac. 3 BR, 2 BA, fam 1---------br, 2 ba W/(.'Cnlral air WATERFltOMT , taxes, ins, & maint fees. 14 DELUXE family rtn. $150,000 rm . Close to beach. •·---------•I Call Dan at 8J9..8321 (or U.,ITS Wrm~ 1· cond. on sp.acious lot TOWHHOME " 1906Pt. 295S HarborBlvd.,C.!\f. Uwner.Appt.900-1348. LOOKATTHIS! w /pool & spa. Only ap'pttosee.Agt. Sh<1rp Carme mo cl. OOL A 3 bdrm .. 2 balhhome in ~6J ,ffOO . c,-.11 495.5039 . IELOWMARKET 14 Deluxe unils for the 0:1 cross frorn com1nunily 4 + P Irvine ror only $42,:;oo. 29362 Via Ac a so. Owner i s anx i ous. 3 BR. l \.!t BATH. Assume wise investor. 4·2 br and J>ool & re l'. area. 3 4 IEDROOM Spacious 4 bdrm, 2 bath 1 1 h 1. i----------·I Beautifully dc(.'Orated 3 6~c;.,, t'ull price, $25,750. 10·1 br units. Seeured by "drms., fa mo'ly •m., 2 2 DATii h C ts home with large master It 's mmacu ate, as IV· h h H B 646 5632 I d II p · µ ome. arpe , Ste t\SSUME 6% VA LOAN. 4 ing.room fi repl ace, lots *WE KNOW * bdrm , 21h bat ome 1 ~·-·-----'-·-----I e nc ose wa s . rime baths. ~·12 ,500 dra pes. ran•e and dis· bedroom suite. P out Lg BR, 21< ba, all bllns. L•Guu •'"GUEL with 21 root boatslip. Hao Las Veg a s lotation. • h '2 of closets and sprinklers ,,_ ,..,,_"' TOWNHOUSI,. $31 900 2 1127 Sabrina Terr. · hwaShcr . Near schools & or fa mily areabeto l e xi. Joe. Village Jn v. 'l\lr. in the yard . Don't over· * IEST * been reduced to $77,500. BR, 2 Ba , i 'StorY. Air Sparkling pool. Good Outs tanding Irvine Ter· markets .~9,900. sparklingpoolw reyou Sa muelian ~-4:>67 or 1 kth' b · Owner will help finance. Cond.Likenew.64<1488'1 s pe ndabl e 9'7o loan, ~~~~;~!~ke~~i.e:i:~ R•;::~~~~wpart ~~~:~~~~~~:~ti:l~i -9611-:-:-L-·F_C_OU __ RSE ___ 1 00 ~· LOVELY t~5f~~~~e~2~~~s call ~x•s/ :~~~:s:~~~~~~?~ eli '5., l b<.lrms. & ram. Cosla Mes<1548·7729 Owner will sell GI or ...,.. 2 II. C......,DO -Units sale 1100 •m + play•m ., .. •~ 1""~~~~~~~~~1 ESTATEAlllA • """"' •••"••••••••••••••••••• its -bargain price d . ._ · .-uo·"""' I· 1-'llA for only $46,900. VISI H Vieworgolfcourse.Near T:i.ke :i.d vuntage. Call CALL TO SEE Call us lo• detao·ls al MODEL HOME 1 . . 1 DANA POINT •. 1 be h Jbd MESA.VERDE • a•At..TY new ower unit, n1 ce y DUPLEXES nowlil4)7!'>2·1700 . ... oseto ac ; rms., li97.0321. Copied exactly after the crpt'd & draped. Only . INVESTMENT fa m ily rm . home ; IYOWMER --.. mode l ! Every detail 552-7500 l--~--------1 lO newbeaut.duplexes beamed ceiUnge, wood & Peal.'e & Quiel are yours 1,--I• coordinate d .. drctpes.1~~~~~~~~~~1 S43.ooo4.IR. 2 I,. DELUXE eonOO Newport . Fabulousocea11 views THE R~i't'~~TERS .brick. $112,500 in t.h1 s newly decorated 3 ,· g. • I. w.all coveri.ngs, de~or TURTLE R O C I\.. By . p N -2 L Crest, Plan 4, 18&1 sq rt. t~ROM $68,9:i0, '6950Dn BR, 2 Ba fam·rm home,1 _,;;~lll;-;·-1L_ pieces. All 1n sunshine 0 3 Bit 2 BA 1n aee~etler o .. rg. $2000 in xtras. Xlnt Westbay,IncomeHomes HAWAII · Corn e r lo t, nieely c olors s unke n LR wne r · • fenced.in yard. many Terms. $6SOOO. 0"·ne• 34121Coast Hwy,D.P1. ' cuslom upgrctded prof .. Kuilima E st . Sale or landscap e d . Ne ar w /cathedral ceilings . . · . · trees. Owner lransfer·i.!"'~··~·":::._ __ • _____ 1 ____ 4~96-'-'-343-"-l'----I lndscp Fee land Prin ......., Lease Condo, 2 DR. 2 Ba • :sc hools & shop'&. $49,500. Isolated fam rm, paneled . · · · red.Vacant, VA terms -Assum a ble Loan. 3101 den, book ea s es , cipal.s only. s55.000. tool $53,500. r-FIXER UPPER 4 BR,2 MEW 4..rLEXES on Golf Course. Furn or 675 3.528 h unrurn. S40·3071 Harba do1. 751-7974 or breakrast rm. Gl-AN,·11 .:.:..::..:· =~·------HEW Ba,. 20x40 cwrtom pool, .• near t e ocean. Good ---------- 64.5·1872 master, c.ourtyar<!s , TOWNl-IOUSE, $Jl ,900. 2 LISTI~ quiet cul·de·tac, good t~x shelters, apprecia: lntals deck, pa~1 0~. ~PEN BR. 2 Bi\, 2 Slory, Air .....-. nclghborh oed for tion.$110,000.andup. ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE ReaJ Estate THIS WEEKEND. llk.r Cond. Like new. 644.4887 ..• at 30511 P.&seo del children. 642·.57!>2 or Hones Furwialwcl 3 Bdrm11., formal dining '-• •• _......, 962-SSll. Valle. Drive l)y. Over 642·5823 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 rm., bi lliard size family w,na;;wn.1 1---------ILCICJllftaleac h 1041 2000sq. fl., lotisapprox.1----------1 Gfttt>ral rm. with spacious· brick 1----------I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1h acre. Clubhouse area." LUFFS VIEW 3102 I 6 Id · VETE• • .. S S82 ,,,..... ••• •••• ••• •••••• ••••••• frp c.; yrs. o & in ap· """" LOOKll Vi•w the lather1 ,'7UV. Spacious Customiud srARKLIHG- . and sp:1e1ous! Exl·cp· \lun~lly 1111.:i Coron~ dcl 1'1ar hon1i.·: ''bl.Irma., 3 b;.lhs ; formal llining & fam lly rm . 180 l)i':(; H. EE VIEW OPEN SUN. 1·5 2 90 7 Ebbtide A SCOOP! Dell1htful muti·e&tale, So. or the Hw y .• with 11uiet. gu rden & oce1n •lew. '2 Bdrms., 1 ba. In auperb cond iliM ? • orltl SAT /SUM 1-5 J04 Pappy A••· I · d't' '0 L u l9'0illly REALTY INC " Ocean "'\'iew I UR house, pc pi e l'On 1 ion . wncr H Thi •• Whit e Wale r Across -·" · Condominium 3BR,3& · .. ,, r urry Oii • Wh t g , r 714/146 137l L.B. Kid/pets. u1so2 Br's l!IU)'~. .,ru1~ mt· :.in ° · a you c<1n c or from Viclor Jl .. ••o's. Blk. 830-5050 496--4040 View of Da y 4l2 Plata ·-~--~---~~~-I fer ".$72,500 FAMILY ROOM S28 .SQO. Great starter to s ho pp 'n g.~te ps to . $72,000 Owner675·3400'-$140. !\1ohile C.M. s ngls LIDO REALTY I r;-7 \1.1 I 1tl11 'I\ 1 *67J·7JOO* A CArE COD llOM E ·All lerms. Va· home in beautiruJ rondi· bcactt , ch arming lBR & MJasiOfl Yleio I 067 THREE HOMFS-all for OK. Uach units, balboa ca nt shortly. 'fop area on Uon. Sharp 2 bedrm, 11/:1 den. own your own apt. ·~··••••••••••••••••••• IY OWMEI fr;'!·91f. ~wde>llpri ccdin $13.597. N.~. $145. J-1 .B. $135. •... 1.de·s a" lot. T•uo OOlh Condo. Large palio 0 1. ed • 1 b Masso·,. s•-nc /•· st·~co ea or ·2 up ex an 2 agt 9·0130 .... .. • wner inane . , .... or s a e Y owner. "" • -bedrm house. All on .~ ...... ----------\P;llue fro m front to back. •rea with grass. Great Zagrodzky Rib-. 494-8611 Beautiful La Pai San·l home on beautl ul corner larae lot with fenced --a PHi•..... l 107 Don't delay!! &42·9371 loeation overlooking model or Mission Viejo. in Big Canyon, gor1eous yard. Good location-••••••••••••••••••••••• IRING YOUI gl'ecnbclt. Con,·enlcatto CUSTOMIUILT $.S3 ,900.586-S797. big pine~ & Coral trees exceUenleondltion. Summer .Rental, near KIDS ~ubhouse and pool. Call Quality, ocean view 2 40 •••uMABLELOANS surrounding home, &olf Barrett Rily &42-5200 park. 2 br hse. szo per s~. bdrm .. 2 bath home; ~ putting 1reen. Marble ' wk. 873·1197 to the 1chool md .(:ft: r.r.i!'.·IP..11( sep.11rate, extra lara:e 2 In Sad d leback Valley entry , 2 e•t ra largt a..c ... 'ro,.tiy 2000 ·---'--=-'------.J......._ ... _ ·-c•r ••r••e. c.~-n sci· area. T1kc over pa)'· -11•-r ... a .i.....,.._ ....... , CodaMe10 3124 park, which are only ooe • • •~ II in ,.. "' ......,., """'-• .__.. •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ' block away. ·cae.n aad ting wilh lots of privacy, menll no qual Y &. no bedroom 4 den + lara:e •••••••••••••••••••••••· nlu. Ready tor your mature trees.Areal1em new loan costs. Rancho family room. 2 huge HUNTINGTON Beach 2 BR mobll• home. famil)t to move lnlo and Ol'lfl SAT~ 1·5 at $67,$00 Viejo Realton.131-o:l'M stone fireplaces. 1 ln sun· slx·plex. 2 yrs new, nr Adulta, no children or J ken livina room ni.t, I in ocetn. $25,000 dn. A.gt. nots."--'"" ........ en ov . CALL NOW •-C"esl1, 'El Cajon" BY OWNER •-·"me 7"' 9 .,. -•r"" r --1 ...._ .. • • • -•• --. • rue.. ID family room, 3 baths, I !"'~·~~~------1;;;--;;;'.;;--;-;-::-:::::::--:-::-842·9371 w/pool . Stunnina: 4 BR, 11.~blf'& VA 3 br, 2 ba, din rm. Roman tub, beautlruuy 1 ~ CLEAN l br turn·a eot· l l TlllM&rr I I + bonus r m .. fa mily rm. ~1l17 f1m . rm/kit. Courtyard decora ted thruout, easily * •OwHr Wll Sell lllge orr ll•rbor Blvd. &t: formal di.fling rm. 3 499.1800 entry , Pror. landscpd. worth SZI!.OOO . wrt-r 10 quali t y :.pt1 I n Very pvt $1i:5, mo. All Excellthnt for C...w.dnlor t\111 baths, 1unken tub In ~1 .500. 830·8239 sa crifice for $l7B,OOO. Ntwport Beach. Approx. util incl. No pcL'!. Adu I Lt starter ome. lean, ce m a!iler. Lou ot quality Phoncowner&44-~S6 10 yrs old . Be aut . onl.y.ltllr.548 ' and a happy home to live In . Crispy clean & totally improved . 4 big bedrooms, choliCe ot two master suites, 2000 sq. fl., 2 11tory. formal din· ing. Ill In the South Coast Shoppin1 Community, Co11l_. Mesa schools. Just pla ced on the mlirkct for l•e Is l t i me . Own er ~r an s f e rred . Cull ijUI Ck. 546-ZllJ.. l":!:!ll!ll Of'J ll ru O• II ) 1\;N ru ~· Nl('f I ncilll'lborhood, walk to extraa. $79,500 LIASi-OPTIOH New port leech I 069 i---------I landscape, helltcd pool &: •tores, bike to bcaeh. a 201$1 llecf1 .. a nu 968-6404 OCIAM VIEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• more. Over $30,000 gross Mewpert leedl 3 16t Bedroom•, 2 bath.,, nlce1 --.--------·I $500 mo v, 1ppl'd to llARHOR View ltomes, pe.ryr. Xlntt.axihtltorlc •••••"•••••••••••••••• fenced yard, As1wnable SEACLIJ."'F Joe. 4 Bll, 2\t purch price. 3 Ur, 3 Sa, ~ILL BUY ANY HOUSE Carmel Model, 3 br. lam app.reclaUon pin. l'lua. l.lVE ON LJOO ISL.II loan. $42,000. Call tor Ba, Ice brick paLio, new, quleL atree:L Bkr. an NB for $22..500. Cas h. rm, nr . gr"lenbelt, caahOoweacbmo. 28r2ba ontyf4,50mo. ahowlng. Bkl'S36-1838.. comp. llld1epd. W.7m t79-J.2a8 S48·6680 $74,900. S4l·so:ta •I'· Mr. Krus 541·lm C21.3) 7tS-Oci7<:olJecl ' • • • ••••• """ ••••• • 2 BR HeJ1 ••••• ••••• C1 • V11oc111 Br~ N.B. CdM1 M.V. pet, I JI. B Stov~ t'U Ii $165., J:'eefr ~ lalba ••• .:.1 Little Bay1 frpl c- ~ Can> ·····1 ExclJ Rou cess • sum s ider $350. ! be• R e Wasl s tor 1 June roPl dupl1 Bity~ Big ( 2 Br ti.Ca or ss H.V. rm,: $49;;~ COZ\ draJ>: n ic l gard 644·8 Cost ••••• -c 3 81 rerr1 ' ~ar.1 $39S. mai1 Real C• -SO! 4 "' ste. Jg St to •1 Shg ~ GAU $16.5; sir\g• $185 M~ kids FUf p>l ,f I 4 Bl Fent Neari +Ir frpl1 per Estt $285. 2113 or6< ~ JlofE~ ma1 Full yar~ frpll 6 /1.. MES ••• • $425 pol.I Afesa 2 l!a D /Y "gar. inc\ 545·1 2 B drp: Gar gar Ad" Ri 21S I R~J firs, yar• 871· NEA Orp $32! Ln l 3 JI• par Qui, W/O ly . ~ Lr& trp' ... , So• 7PI ..~ ... 11<2· -'--' f.,.j •••• Hut lea cot Ch ~ - .-• H ........... d ""''' HMHtU•fwN••"'' Ho611etU•fwll•d Apetww•l1fw l1t1.t A I .t U........_ 1 F'1e111.M1y30.1975 ,,,.. ••••••••"•••·•••••••••• ,,,,·,,,!!;'' .,, . ,,, , lfl&W • Aratww.t1U....._ _ _ "-··-_ ' -. ••~tttet •o• ttttltttltttttttltttttt 1 t••••tttttlttttttt 00 0 T ; -M "ol .,_....._._, • ....=.. 'l " •••• ••••••••••••••·•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • 1A•.,r11 ..... 04Jls --•J l69 .....-Y ,1JJ4 Hs__.leacll 326' -.r ... 111011 3707 -~M... ••2• CosteM-· •••4 .,_,, ...... ,u.-... "f&liaaalthfwa. .......... .._.. 4lOI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ,................. ~r--· ...... ... ~ .... •••• ' •••••••••••••••• 1 2 All c l " . ••tt,.;. ' • .__ ' "•• ''''''''''''''''''''''' ''''''''''''''''''''''' ttttt·tttttttttltttt••• ''''''''''''''''''''''' '''' '''''''''''''' ''''''' ••••••••••••••••••••• .. ti""t j. o t•Ce, Ne-,port 4 "inf 2 BA. U". game ·LUXUIY CONDO Yrly, 1 Br, uUJ pdSJ.'55'1 ' • lls:etk:•N leedl 3140 Mew,.,. IHdt 3169 3 Br. Z B.lli,.Be1ch l·lotfte e 1 ta. t:#OO /MO. I roobt. Acr011 from 11\~hl on w1ter, t br . .a ba, vlew, man, no pelf. 417 E. Bly. '· Off .. .._,.... &SIDE large almo1t new ·~···~··•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duplex to sh•re w/m•k Cali548-30ll Avail 7 J 1, $4007irio. trpl. boa' •lip. '/::::I• :w7·Ll5S, 67,_1068 1 Br. Adults no peti, 3 br, dlbwhr, cpU, frplc, No· ;. TllR~·· BDRM · or female Sl.50 mo yrly 968-1892. dshwhrs, shaa cpt1, 2 encl. 1aragn patio • ..,.,, Eaatbluff Tl'lhse beaut. 675-2319 N.B · ' H J11cua:ai hobby• op I d r I d •3 " M ' APTS 1 lo -4 blb Crom l 2 8 3 Ba bJ · · -..1 u11~ ~ • __ .... 3 · • ·YEARLY bachelor ~ c ose earaae. rplc, n ry. • 10. mo. ar beach' ALL UTILlTIES ap · r.. , "":'· ••••••••••••••••••••••• r-._.,.011 ~ Z40 8Prtcdo r6c7d3uc0e~ ! Mr . block t.o beach, $12S/$l60. BBQ. Ga.a " wat.cr pd. 6'2·3488 PAID. F " 1 , . frplc, patio, pool, avail. l''emale Wants 2 femalel G at • •re•••••••••••••••••••• e11 • -7 22 eve, mo incl util b75-5800 Pool # · irep cs, pnvate $350. 64•-0JSS · to share he r home. eMr JZ02 t '1replace 3 Bit 2 B"' l /629-9061du.y•.A£ent. Bkr'"ootc-. • •M•Mcu• •-s ptttlos. OP£N HOUSJo: 523--."'"llunt.Uch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ' "I • ~ • ·"· -._ ""'_.-' 2 BR , 1 Ba •Ingle st.of'I, Sat /Sun ll'M: 406·426 -.N .1-~RL~E n(!W patnt, u ~1 4:lose to BRA NP new Ne t 778 Scott Place CM Shalt crpta dtp5 patio . ...._ '") . FREE ahop,plng &r: 1u:hool8 .. ri10: · wpor 1 BR apt, downstairs. ' be · • f ' ' U ud St .. or call TOBIN .... IMi'lttt ,_,.,IMcl ' G«rOC)IS for a...t 4350 •l roro&1uon.il Service• Mo. A&k for '&av o~oe Terr~ce condo. 3 Ur. 2\ll Pret. retJred or eldurly 642--5073 • Adau':'!s c;~lio. r~4 ~~.~; REALTY• 846-1311. NO Of' U.tw.1.a.d ltOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• *LANDLORDS• 963-4569 •. 1 Ba . $350. Adult.a, no pelB. people. Ne a r bus & CASA VtCTORIA Elden, 537 .312.S. FEE. •••••••••••••••••••••••STORAGE gar11ge for H 0 Mt f 111 d•r 1 * SUP~R S 6 8'1S·~, Bkr, no fee. lit.ores . 675-0343 l , 2 & 3Dr. Unlurn/Furn rent. 1959 Maple Ave, No. £. HARP ~ BR 2 • r S ~ 50 pd fxtra lge 2 br c•.t., & EX. l~e 2 br, 2 ba, dlx ~) 5 Cost M 642.~9900 Ba. bltns . block wull.'nr N,~,_WPOaRTMTasElRR. 3 br, ostaMtH l724 r. 1....-.. JJU.S/wtr. • • • _, pools1deaptnrbc:b. Adlt, ' a esa C llr .. .. .,.. b er suite Adulu-No Pet.sSec. gate drps fncd yard $195 $ 80 1101 .. 11W-.i1 1 11 ornua·sl.>llrgesl School.$325.WS-3612 bit . 1• · Incl • ••••••••••••••••••••••• p 1 R R El ' •. • · sorry no pets, 1 • Sngl.e garage space lor •Rent1.1IService•·· ns, am rm., ry., oo, ec. m., evalor m o . 3012 tallmore, $36·836? llllUl.AIWlltU•IK rent,CdM area.Storage ----'-'=:.:..:::::..:.:::::· __ 8 D'lr. 2 BA CPl2' d"rpe: paUo,.aa.r.~ocea.nvil.\w on _ LO,V(.UTE:S -• 525 V•ctoria,Ma-8970 .549·257S , ~ ""~"•o 1 V<1c1nt2Dr$t46.C.t.1 .2 'r /o,i>W,)'ard;sror1aum'. lS McrepMrkw/pool.$375 •S8.60Nig'b(&cUp Pork-Lille 2 BR , encl. patio & •NEWTRIPLEXES• •lochelort ony.6.t0·4 860. - Br Ji.a . $l?ll. 2 'Br ·r .lf. • .... r run. S"'"S. .,... mCI. 644 ·73S7 •Studio & l BltApts N S 1,2,& 3 BR. $195., $295., •I IR, 2 H · Sh.a re Jingle. storage. $1.S. N -~1> "' •WaterBed 5 • garage. o pets. mall ,....., .8 . $195. 2 .Br 1'.lt. ~-Wla-45&1 llARBOR y · M s WTO•: R91 childrenok. 00.7830 _.5. Patios. 1''/P, 2002 •2 IR & Den C.M. CdM. Agt.9lB-84JC'.I ~ 1ew, ontego. •TV & M1.1id Serv Avail DELUXE J, 2 &3 .Br Apts lluntington St. sa&-6779 f $ 1 $48.S Call 642·7671. ::-::--"'-''"'-;.;:;:_ __ I Sharp cleun zBRw/new 4 be, Exec. home. Lwib •t>honeServ,lltdpool PvtPatios--HtdPool tom 1 S -1 ---~=;_;:cc.:.;.o; __ M.V. 4 BR, 2 BA, KJOS, c•~.'Drps,' bllna, $265. l~dscp 'g. P~tige loca-•Children&PetStJ<.1ion Nr.Shop'g-AdltsOnly 2·l IRLOFTONLY LOCJ191altach .1141 MHov.n:MEolt&Adarm · OfficeRntal 4400 pct, fncd. garage mo 003·4569 t1on. $495. mo, 637·25Ce or •.SS. off weeks rent w/1td 1·2 IR W ft.OFT · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540-1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JI. BClf 3 br, kids gur ~ 9ij6.6tlll 237UNewport Blvd , CM Mcwtl11I .. Aph Pvt Patio, frpl, l )'r lse No, End. 1 BR. l ir.t blks --...;;=-"='----1 StClve, ftinced ' · Super Sharp 3 llr, filln:i 548-9755 or645·3967 1777 Santa Ana Ave, CM Av.11.ilable June li>t from·beach & store. $235•1 ----------1 FU RN 1$111-.lD It . Dch bloc~ fe11chii::· 963..3612 •LUXURY COMDO Mgr Apt tll 646-5542: HAYLOFT APTS incld 'g ulil. Yr 's Lease.l •--------•I SIGS. t br, util pd. Beach. aft4 wkdays. Newport Cresl2 Br, 2 Ba, HOLIDAY Pl.Ali ... HOLID •y 28l "1.wocodo, CM Adults, no pets, 497·2678. ' -... _,. !'ee/.8kr.. 3 BR i•L b . 2 car gar. Wet bar. ·ren· DELUXE Spacious l Br, """ ,,.._ 645 0143 n;EJI v HOMEFIMDERS ' . .,.,. a, no ma1nt.. nis. Pool. $375 /mo. furn 1tpt. Pool. Ample EVERYDAY! .. Ap3rt ror rent, Ocean '[)11 11 ~_r_~~·~ Preslige area. $175 per MS·<.1171. parking. Adults, nopels. Enjoy carefree living In View. $2.50. l Br, ,l-..~ .. ~~~ •642~9900• mo. Ask lor Ke ith lu&PomonaAve CM thi s w e ll l ocated COZY2Br,1Ba,lge rrpl, 494 -SWl. 962-4471 ~ewport Shores. J BR, 2 ·• townhouse. For adults lge. pvt. 31d. East.side. CORONA DELMA1t PROFESS 'L CL~A Bldg, 2700 l·larbor Blvd, C.M. Air cond., wood panel walls, dra pes, ca rpe t, elec., mus ic, janitor, parking. M.R. Stever , Aler-557-0136 or 1>46-8396 lal~a Island 3206 b" . .Lge. livjng rm_., sun-Furn. Bach & 1 Ir. Ex~ only. $260. mo. 675·2913. OCEAN view, spac. Z bt, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3BR,2BAnr.Ocean d ec k. New palnt &. 1• 1 nl 21 O Jbed 2b ...... . adults. 2607 Solana Way, Little Isle. 3:f1 n. E1.1s t $350.mo.549-2499 carpets.$475/Moyearly ctp 1onaly ce. I • rooms, &ul.'!i Spac_1ous 2 Br, bltns , L.B.$250.494.1419 Hliyfront. Bay view. .aft. 7:30551-4390 Davidson ft.Jty 615-7575 Newport II.,. CM. •Fresh paint &:carpels p a t to, Ya rd-no pets. f I •Cozy fireplace $195/mo. Call 968-3785. Newport leach 3869 2 Br Townhouse, frplc, 150 I Westcliff Dr. from $275. 1 Br from '2(k'). Newport 1''inanci<il Ctr Pool, tennis, continental Leasing Office Spoce breakfast. Some ocean'.!; Call on Site Manager rp c, 2 br, 3 level. auto . ~ .. gar pa rk. l2l3Jlf76.2723 3 BR, 2 BA , near Ga.rfield Exec. pos h 3 BR, 2Mz ba, 2035 FuUerton. CM •,.-,unny paliu ••••••••••••••••••••••• At Bushard. $285 mo l twnhse , rrplc, pool , Park BR F 1 •Garden setting w/pool ' l BR, 2 ba, lower, cpts, Catalina views. SeparalE (714 )642·3111 ext~6 famil)' section. Close tc _....:...c::..:.::::...:::..:.°":::.:::.:._ Corona del Mer ]222 qualified ramily. Agt Lld c.•:u1 c ....... l'tt\JI•• 1 urn, 2 rg closets, •Full garage w/stor.age encl. patio, gar., nr. o,.,_.,.,_.~, queen size bed, priv, Yoursfori··-t -K. OCC.$220.SS7-0350aft6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962-4471-Ross. d · 1 --.c.:..:::..::.=::..::.:c...=::..;::.:..::...1 ress1ng rm, extra rg THE VENOOME -• Ex~lu~~ve Sh~re Cllr.tN ew 5 br Signal llE rooms, en cl. ga r . 1845 Anaheim 545-8628 DGllCl,Otnt 3826 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS shopping & frne beach. 644·2611 . Roa.d J Br, 2 ~· Pvt. lit· Landmark home. 2 stor)' D.ROOM w/storage. Adults only, ••••••••••••••••••••••• on the bav cess to Bch. $tiM.I )'rly or frpl cpts drps fc yd $-450. ramil)' room, CARMEL no pets. Haciellda De Mesa Lease new 2 BO, 2 BA Luxury apartffiCnt living TllE EXCITING s_umm e r .rental ('On · 10,6 963 .4581 eves; MODEL. Harbor View 16 WW"--C co ndo . Swim pool , overlooking the water, PALMMESAA.PTS. s1dered. H42·202.G. 751_6461 wknds. Hills. $450. per mo, year-NEAT 2BR, 1 Ba, wal.k lo 0 • ..--. .M. sauna, lennis. Private Enjo)' 5750,000 health MINUTES TON PT =:-:;:--;:;;8-:;R'-h;-"=":::--::~·l ~~~~~~'----l Jy lease. s hopping. ~180• mo. BEAUTIFUL -mmuno·ty -83121'" ~a 7 sw1·mm1·ng pools 7 BCH. $350 2 ouse W lk t COLE OF NEWPORT f>.12·71:>4 GROUNDS '"" ~· -"" -r ' ' · · B o 3 BR Home. carpet'ed, or8ll·1678 lighted te nnis courts, Bach, 1&2 BR.from$16S. be w. c h. C pts • d rps . draped la ndscaped bll-REA4_TORS 675·5511 SlOS t $150 l BR & ADULTS-NO PETS 1 ~-'"-'-'--'-------1 plus miles or bicycle Adults, No Pets ~u~h!r /dr~e: 0G:ra~e-ins. $465 per mo. ·Call traite~s. Ad.ulls onl~~~2 ~O B";i~~~~~ ~o3~anW!\!~ DUPLEX New, very lg. 3 trails , putting, s hur. 1561 Mesa Dr. ~tor0tge rooi;,_ Av0til ' 213/434-8451, leave name BLUFFS CONOO. 3 Br, w. Wilson. 645-4530 incl. Draperies, carpets, ~ 2 ba& bltnssJs~~ts . Oeboard, croquel. Junior (5 Blks E:~~d.f)Ncwport June 10. 5tll-02J4 ... &. nun1;ber ror room 145, centrally located: $375 · • gas heat, gas stove, air mo. up. · l 's ftp, i2l9.SO monthly; 546_9860 will return c;,11. Mo. 8rokcr644-ll33 Charming I Ir conditioning, swimming New 2 Br , 2 Ba, s pacious alsO 1 a ud 2-bcdroom 1----.::..:=-==---! TOP LOCATION & beaut. lrwine 3244 • Paneled. yard.642-2986 pool. rec. room, washers brown shag, bllns, Ocean plans and 2·Slory lown dui>lex on Ot't!ansidc of •••••••••••••••••••••• N. Blufrs Condo. Mu ch -. &dr)'et s. Vie w. No cleaning fee or hou ses. Elec tri c • D1tys ide Dr. 3 blks. from . • soughl uftcr 1 sty end un-I llR, .prefer mt~dle age deposit if qualified. 33781 kitchens, privale patios n Big Corona n ch. 1 yr. old 3 BR, 2 B~. Jlome. ~r. it. 3 BR. 2 BA . charming-or rt't1red, No ch1ld /pet.s. t.t arianna.496-883). or balconies. carpeting, ~e 2 Br 5400 mo. avail June frplc, pal10., rccre.a\1on ly upg raded. $495/mo. $155. 642·5M8 draperies. Subterranean 6.Call 557-fi543froinKlo5 lac. Dbl. gar. $350 mo. Prine only. &14·2106. Lse Dana Point 3Br,2 Baduplex.ocean& parking with elevators. or 55 l·5846/545·0682evcs. 586-8688 req 'd. harbor view. $275 mo. Optional maid service. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Open House Sat & Sun. Just north of Fashion BIG' H.V. JJILLS 3 br + farn *RENTALS* WA 'f ER FR 0 N 1' • SUPElt $165, 1 Br Villa 33801 Silver Lanlcrn, Island at Jamboree and rm, 2 ba, Jge patio &yd, UN IV. J>ARK pier/float. 3 BR, form w /court)'d. 496-2119 ; D.P. (213)337-01"5 San Joaquin llillsRoad. · $49S. mo. lse. &44·2877 2 BR, 2 Ba • , •••• $335/350 dine, 2 bath, W /w cpt.s, 642-0042 : 34093Granada 1'elephone (714) 644·1900 • 3 BR. 21h Ba .... $315/425 fplc, dble gar. No pcls. Hur:ti~on a.ach 3740 -H...tint)ton leodt 3840 for rental information · 3 BR . 2 Ba . _ ..•..... $425 SSSO. mo. yrl)' lease, RJtr '"'11' -~1__, ••••••••••••••••••••••• TURTLEROCi< 642-5200. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 55a WESTCLIFF BLOG NEWPORT BE::ACH ....... " .. ·~·''""""'" Ca\\ ~~r Howard 6 4 5 6 10 1 55' rER Slj)FT 1617WES1'CLIFF-NB AG T . !>41-5032 $140 up store-0frices cpts drps air bath. 17301 Beach Bl It. B. S.i2·2834 * 1 MO. FREI£ RJo:N'r * 1·2-3 Rm . offices from $135 per mo. Nea r airport. Sect'y. scrv. on premises. No lease req, 833·3223 9Til noon 833-28-40 Afler noon COZY 2 lidr., carpets, drapes, fireplace, patio, n ice )'ard . Wate r, gardener pd. $285. Jease. 644·8.lo8 2Bil.2ba.den .. $400/425 . NO INCREASE ;n ••m· UVIS ur $100 IOHUS From $165 GREENntEE 3, <Br. l lh Ba. frplc , mer rent. Beaut! br rum TO m MAME t?akw.ood orrers t!te NEW plush office bldg, Z 2 BR, 1 Ba ..... ·'· ... $.125 dshwhr. patio, $300. 2427 ::1pls $165 & $175. Spanish Over 500 ta ll trees and Gua ranteed no rent fines t 1n country club hv· to 6 rm s uites. Con- Costa Mes• 'flfE WlLLOWS £.lt>thSt,64S·l048ev(.'!I. st)'le bldg,pvt encl gar, 10 s tream s with increasein1975 ingatapriceyoucan af. ferencc rm , xerox 3224 3BR,D2 bE'~aL~H· ·;.. 1 . ~;,· . 0 .. $315 Lldo Isle 4 br, 2 b.a. All pool, sauna, lndry, ::1dlts . waterfalls create a re· ford. There's $1 milliOn copier. Nr. OC Airport ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' .. """ 17301 Keelson Ln, l blk laxing setting for your ON BEA.CH in recr eation facilities, a 833·3640 •---------•I 3 BR 2 B· ~s elec. kit. fr1Jlc , patio, Yt· W. or Beach off Slater. · full time activities direc·l---'"------- COLLEGEP.ARK 842·7848 bedroom apa rtment. Bachelorfrom$z.15 Hoines ~i-who pl;:ins parties, OFFICESP"1.CEMI ""'a . · · · ·· · · .. ·-"' I)' lse. 1 6 0 73 4 47T98SIJP s pacious n ew 1-or 2-.. Luxury studio condo. From $195. Furniture 2 Br,1&2Bafrom$275 BBQ's, trips & more ! Weslcliff Drive, 450 sq. J BH, 2 BA, fpl (', r /o, ref rig., crtps, drps, dblc gar., Blue l·laven 1)()()1, $395. monlh inclds pool maint & gardener. ava,·1able Small pets * 2 WEllC.S FaEE FreeSundaybnmch. ft., pr ivate bathroom, is includedinthis2yrold w /frpl, at beach · VISleH 1900 sq. ft, 3 BR, :1 BA, w /harbour view. iZZS OK. Adults only .. 9 AM *Winter at the beach t.1ove in w /deposits Plus beautiful singles, air, etc. $175. per mo. lll •":rY frplc. Townhomc. 2 blks mo.842_267 1_ toGPM.2300 t'a1rview is beautiful only 1 BR $190 2 BR 1&2 bedroom apts, Call GeneHill,642-0200 ~• & · 1----------1 Rd., Cosla Mesa. l'honc •Views of ocean, Cata-$230 Refrig; Secur ity, furnished & unfwnished. 552 •7500 to ocean steps to sli p. p I J · R o k d G d A •·· FREE RENT Roy McCarcle Realtor I 810 Newport Costa Mesas.18·772!1 ' 'UI'" I b •140 + ,., ... .,~. 1o·na&PalosVerdes oo. a c uzz1. cc: a· woo ar en p...,; Pool, jacuzzi & security ..,~. r, <11 • u I · • .rw·W<1VU. · Of N h.ld •·· 11----------I •Large p,1·vatedecks Ridg w/Cxercise rm., offers an exclusive "'No cspaceinM1ssionVie-gatcs. Will 11.'ase furn. or 1 o c 1 ren or pc..;. . & RENTALS bl kbe h -ii••hSt •'"'11,Secur>"ty Billards,ColorTV. Rent Raise Guarantee". JO Lagun0t Niguel aa unrurn . S550 /MO . oc .ac ·"""' · 2BR,21h BASt··•,·oapl. -· 1 f · r 2BR, 1 lla ........... ~10 673.,,72'J . 81 D W uu d •Healed Pools-saunas We guarantee lhat your owasJOcsq t1nnewo c 2 BR,2Ba,t.len ...... $275 ----------Mewportleodl 3769 ln~, I ,cptg& rps. •Assignedcovered lrvineAve.al~sa rentwillnotberaisedfor bldg . Call ow·ner. S d 0 Lea · 2 HR,:! Ba ....... S3S0/360 lialboa hay view 2 yrs old ••••••••••••••••••••••• Patao. S265 mo. 768 parking 545-4855 ONE FULL YEAR &yoo l -'83=1·'-14~00=·------ 4 : · 2 -"'H~er "~te 3 BR, 2 Ba., ...•. $385 /400 J st)'. $610/mo. yr lse or $29.95 \VK UP. 1 Bdr, 2 Ba Joann. Agt. 83B-808l •Additional free parking •---~~~~-~-·• still have the flexibility 444 N N Bl d u · r, a:. Sep mas r 3 BR , 2\.-!t Ba ....•.... $400 sa le 675-6621 /646--2725 & Ba Ch. Color .'1."'· m~id LARGE Ground flr. 1 br *f.faid service avail. * LA PARISIEMME of month to month oc-. e wport v . nit sle. Cent. Kit & ~am rm, JBR,2 Ba ........... $425 . serv, pool. :J'HE MESA, Garden apt. Pool, rec •Furniture.avail. 2 Br. unfurn. S2IS. 2 Br cupanc)'. Rents from ··~·· $95, "C" $8.5. Uti.I lg screened pa.t10, walk , 4 Bi-, 2'.'.::! Ba, bonus.. 41S N. f'JewJl<lfl Bl, .NB, room. $175. 71018th St. furn $2:60. All electric. $165. Prices vary by loca-paid. 675·8457. lO all sch, tenrus: shops, .3_4 BR. Fornished Sa11 J.a. ! , &66-~l .,.,._ Open M-F l0-6 Fireplace. Heated pool. lion, Models open 10 to 7. Newly decorated offite' Shg crpt, d,J'1?S~.\~· StJmmert'ftentals · · Capii trono l278 •2 BR, l Ba, Mesa Verde. Sat 10·5, Sun 12-5 Adults. No pets. S ~ r r Y • no pe l s or CdM. 275 sq. n. Pacil.C $475 mo. Ref. m 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Two 5 br 2 ba dupleJCes. Adulls, gar, avail. $185. 979-1268 children . Coast Hwy address. .. GALS ! 2 br,'utiJ Pai!i.fh"•'-4 ., -RAJSOR~S .. , Beautiful ~1odel Home, 3 Com pl furn, Summer Nopets.833-8974 H t" igl Across from golf course Oa.kwood Call 675-2051. • · BR 3 B Bl rental/year round lease. . Uft lftOll 20432 Santa Ana Ave $16S. 2 br. k>dS, >tove. -REALTORS . a. ""· crpts. N " I Hghl Walk I Garden F R sin gles ok . · drps, Rec. Arca w/pool, P 4 5· 0 MESA VERDE area. Paci"fic or entorlease.4800s_q. beacb.5 8-3917 Home almosphe-2 & 3 LIVENearTheBeach! A~~..+ments ft. M-1 374 Ocean Ave. $185. 2 br. kids, J>t!\, gar. 4523Cetmpus Dr .. Irvine $325. 493·5955,493-7780 .... 711 Ocean Ave Casa .. Sol .,-.... "' Lagu B h Pl ••• MJ-.;SA Ve rde 4 br, 2 ba, Campus Valley Shop Q r. Oceanfront s ummer ren-br dlx apts. 54&.1004 na c · e kids , fncd, garage, $375. ; CALL lll-1600 3trB•d•h'mpd' ,2No"pe''1sW4a93t~!_:, ta! 1508 & 1806 W. Ocean· $ BR . I (714) 53&1487 Beaufrliful A$dlul8l0Apts ",~ ..... •ect. phone 494-2755. FURNISHED l br, ulil•i----------OJU• f t NB 675 _7777 175. 2 . , singe sty, 0111 rv1ne ar16th pd ~ Bk 31982Via BclardesS.J . ron • • beam cell.; cpt.s, drps, Managed by 21661 Brookhurst,HB 645-0550 EXEC sums • $I80. r eef r. l'UR1'LEROCK 3 br-2 ha 673-3752. 2(}49 ''C" Wallace. "Go Wi lliam Walters Co 962-665) HOMEFIMDERS 'A'et b0tr. atrium. Lea~ d · , • • 64 6 8883 --==--"-''-'--"---• L--'-"'-'-"'-'---' SOUTH SEA. FROM SI 70 BACHELOR, 1818 W. 1rec • · or •· *642·9900* $-125 . mo. 833-19'!7 SGllta Ana 3280 Oceanfront, $l60. mo. yr-·i -"='-·7~6'-28'-------! CHg~:i?a~::1"5 WESTCLIFF across fr Atmosphere , qui e t Airport Area. 833-3640 :I.JOST d bl V II ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jy Si n gle no peLs BR p · Coco 's.2 BR,2Ba,Frplc .• garden apartment, pvt.Office St Rt 1700 MES"1. VER.DE :' c.s1ra c ' age . BR d . • . •Tropical Pool• J,2&3 -nv. gar., pat1·0. crpts. d~. F/A patios 2 Br 2 Ba $195 or ore en a 4 BR , 2 b;i . Very clean. II. University l"ark. J br, Fireplace. 3 + ~n , 2 4!J.1·4029 2 br, cplS, drps, bltns, pool , was her, dryer, heal, "ar. walk.t.';shops, Leda St ., E. 'or Ha~borS: sE·qft. Ocean _view. ll~l S. Fenced Yd. S37'· ""7·ll:J8 ., I>" + cn•ii·moo>•. bon"" bath, cpls, drps, b tns, B r . 1 . 1 Clo•e lo beach <o•.0335 • 1 G d G Fw l C a m 1 no . Sa n .. "" "" " ·' ~ ay ront l Br. Ulil. paid. s p1r0t s taircase, rea ., ·~ $240. Adults. 1665 Irvine. o ar en rove y. o·oo m 0. n •"<coobelt. Ne<i ' $295 . mo. 963·45&1 K . v ·ii Clemente Near Westclif{ Plaza . 3 Br + lrg den. llrdwd fl oors. frplc. bltns & crpt. S42S pee mo. Kingaard Real Es tate, 642·2222 .. $200 mo. year!)', 311 frplc, refri g, patio, gas & llKETO a••cH 642·0239 am1a 1 age. 1-~-==· ----- 2 pools. F1.1r careful peq-Weslm1"nsler 3298 Ed t Ne t d "8 1168 ~ 534 5595 01r· s r · h-• I A 1 ••so gewa er , . . wa erp .... ·. H"•RSHOl'PIHG •---------•l---~_::::~·:.:_:.:_ __ · 1 ice pace urn1s "'4-Pe. ~«11 ··now . .,., · ••••••••••••••••••••••·'-~~--~----·I ---~------~ 1• Comfortable, reas. suita· Leas e . Nu pets. 43•11 2 st 4 BR 2 BA •. BALBOA BAY CL UB Prime Mesa Verde. 2 Br, Beautiful new 2 BR MESA VERDE: ROOtltl 4000 ble 2 desks. Perfect SandburgWay.°""•nSat or)', ' ,crp .. 'i, B h I" B G d ,. d . F I & Sun 11 .3. LT'Jolla drps, bltns, cl'?se lo ac · '~ a, ar en pa io, s tu JO apts. rp cs, 2Bdrms.,lir.t bath"condo ••••••••••••••••••••••• OrangeCty.loc.2212 DQ· (11459_4706 s·chools, s hopping&. Apt.$3SOmo. closed gar,hwalk to bltns,dishwashers,2car withpool.$335Mo. ROOMS $20. wk up with pont,Irv.T)'pwrtr,lelex, $285. 3 Br, I Ba, lge yard , freewuys . $31S. mo. Ask 1_~ __ 83_3_·_2_61_6_N_B_. __ 1 Theatres , s opping·, garage. Sundceks. From STE'S TO 11"1.CH kitchen $30. wk up apt.. copies access.833.()243 2 3M · •• s • forBevorJoe 963'"~ •-"=6~"~1.c88c..... ______ $260.536·2579 2BR.1ba.w1·n1er$235 S48-9755or645-3967. 11 onrov1a ...... 6-114 Laguna leach l248 • . ...,..... Cozy 1 Br, Bach. Halcon)'' or646·8480 ,••••••••••••••••••••••CondantlniumJ w /6cean & Bay view. OVELY 2 br, spac. LoweAtlstlite 2BR,lba,unl,S285 J\.tESA VERDE Im -OCEANFRONT Laguna Unfumished 3425 O~n Sat. & Sun. $190 rooms, cpl, nice kitch, l&2 Bravail.Furn&un-3BR,2 ba,rum.$375 I • t , JBR··28A Ro)'a le Condo.J br 2ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• mb. lse. 218 21st St. brick s nackbar. patio. furn. APPLE APTS. A MEWPORTCREST ~~l~uc:t·d & drp'd'. Fncd 2000 sq . ft. Bar, frpi. Sec: 3 Bit, 2 Ba, bltns, custom :>46·8030 x l 16 btwn 8-5. Xlnt. location, reas. rent. unique idea in adult apt Z BR , 2 Ba condo$525 yard. Covei;ed patio. D~t. guar~. S7Y5 m?., Lse. cpts_. drps, frplc, pvt •== IHtenfs Unfurn. 351 Vi ctoria, Apt. 357· living. 6700 Warner Ave, WE HAVE frplc. Lse_ S.360. Avi.ul. Adu\t:..only.714·499·2771 patio , adults. $325. ::':::•••••••••••••••••••l-":..::"...:·'='=52,_ ______ lluntington Bea c h . SUMMERRENTALS .I 5"6 56 645 2345 T 847-6047. No lease. Sorry LIVE AT THE BEACH $30. wk & up. 673·0440 PINE KNOT MOTEL Under new management Pvt er\t/K. priv. CM $25 /wk & $60/mo. up 548·5954 or 556-0058 1· .. ·I I eves. 2 BR. ra m rm, sunporch · CoronadelMcr 3822 enni s ~t. Apart.,w/pool nochildrenorpcts'.. l\1ESA Verdt' beaut. 3 I.Ir, 2 cot ta ge. Neat, clean , Attrac 1-lunt lich Condo. 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M~d. Village. ~Br, den, 1...:::..:======--Room, pvt bath. Pref ba. New crpt. 2 frplcs. crpld , S-1.25. mo. Years BR 1"'2 ba, end unit. pool, MEW DUnEX 2Ba. S245· 546-76.T/'. SPACIOUS 2 & 3 bdrm. mature young man_ Bch associated BPOKEP S P{t11TORS l : "" b , t " , ' • 'e Beaut. private Newport exec. ofrice in suite. Reasonable. 645-3700 WATERFROHT Newport leach Executive offices $150-$350 Month View or boats & water llLLGRUHDY Realtor 675-6t6i $425. Gardener & w:.ter lease. Drive b)'577 Lom· 2 mi to be0tch.$300 mo. Deluxe split-level; 1300 2 Br c rpts, garbage dis-apls. Children OK. l7391 1:~~~~~~~~~~1Ja~r~e~•~·~S~a~n~C~l~e:m~.~4~96~·~331~5'.I pd. 979.5417 bard Y Lan e & ca 11 1\vail Jul)' I. Adults pref. sq ft , 2 bdrm w/loft-den, posal. drps optional. 1 "A'' Keelson, 1 blk. W. of eves Private Ofrice in 5 Office 544-4457 1 ctMld OK 963-680-i frplc, plush crptg, home· sma ll child ok. $150. mo. !~~o'i:9 Bl. ore Slater. $3SS. 3 Br, 2 ba, blk lO bch. Suite. $100 mo. Weslcliff~ l\tesa Verde, immac. 3 Br, 2 Ha , fam. Rm. dbl lrpl , DJW, crpts, drps, dbl ·gar. fended. i425 mo lsc. Moss Point 2 Br, l lh Ba, Rancho Vie· like s tora ge, walk·in 642-7294 afterSpm. 1-'C:::.==-------No pets/children. Yrly. ~'!:!!.~~••••••~!.~::i ...:642:;::·...:409:::c7~o~r~833'.:0'....:·26~·~16~.-- 0cct1nfront·Lovely IO.rg'e ,· o, /\i r' attach. Gar' closets' bath & guest 2 l J New deluxe Beach area Z W-Newport. &12-1531 bath, bltn gas range & Br, poo • btns. Adl~s , Br, 2 Ba, c losed gar. all ho tn e on spa c i o u,s Pool. crpls/dJW. Avail oven. palio deck, 2 car NO DRUGS or pets. $165. bltns. S275 mo. incl. util. Spac. 2 Br, 2 Ba, dplx, $235 PriYafo ~ lllslness RelrtG 4459 r bl .... ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••• incl grdor. Av0til 7-1. 545·4740. grounds , privat~ tennis 7 /1, 848·8500or586-9563 enclosed garage w/laun-J25.J 17th Pi. uft ll am. 84&.1311: &46-49.38 agt. No upr/lwr £urn. $280 Nr. ~~c~\5 $~oJ°'o~~. t~e~ ToWftltouse d~)' room. P ay onl)' elec-2 Br. 1 Y:i bath. pvt. patio, fee. Bch, Ad il S48-8190. or am u a ..... " person ... 1 ----------Good meals. Nice sur~ DESIRAILE Rita My ers Real Eitate. Unfurnished 3525 tric. Adults. So. or Coast near 17th St . s hops. DELUXE roundings. E /side. CM . THE COLOMY. Avail now. Call 548-7148. JIOME 4~·5420 or 960·1701 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hwy, 5 bl ks from beach. Adults only. 548·5438. Surfer's Pcraclse Brand new 3 br. 3 ba Con · DELUXE 3 B do N $425. 435 Goldenrod •• l ~==:..:.=.:..::.;:_;_;:cc__ Big apt. across from d 5.,.....r ...... 420 2 Br, 2 Bu, Oen, cptd, 3 Bd 2 'h ba rrpl ce So C p'1 000 Se. r. Co rona del Mar . NEWBH.EEDAPTS Hunt.cliffs. Maximum4 o.View.Adults,nopets. •••••••••••••••••••••4• drps. forced air heat. : • . · . oas t azu. c., (714 )675.9337 L b h /I ft pt t"l l.!"'~~~~3'!1c.... __ J cS4::=25~.~548:;::~·0~7~57;_ ___ ~I Garb·disp, blt·ins, patio, c~rpets. dra1>es, bluns .& clubhouse1 pool, pvt lake. l-'-'-~-'-------1 ge ac 0 a ' u 1 people . 847·4387. t'urn 2 br, blk to ocean. •• '.gc. Wale r ' ·urn. view. $450 . p. mo. A. va1l. 979.0493 Del A BR 3 BA pd, Applns, encl. gar. 2 BR f 1 I NB.Lg sundeck.Avlno 0663 n I.:...:::...:=:.....______ uxe pt, 4 . , Pool i·acu•••· •1 •• 1-..... DELUXE 3 b'· I'" ba. ocean ron. ower Adu1lS only no .....+" 6/15. Lease. 494 · a · nr. beach. $750/MO. ' · """"' ~...-........ "' $330 I A I 6-1 lhru Aug. 673-0236. RATE REAfid'NABLE 6pm, • D .... x•t Unfunt 3600 673.6992. 393 Hamilton. 642·1960 washer/dryer incl. $325. )'r y, v · •gar . ..:::::..:.=""===---! Ac ross from CENTRAL LAGUNA ••••••••••••••••••••••· 1 ;r;;::-c.~:'";~~Jtiii;;d.l ~d~a~y~s~·~64;5~·~44~1~1~e~v~es~· :::::::::4:=638=·7=27~5=· 20~1~9~Dc~la~w~are~ll~SOOO~~\O~Se~a~•~bo~re~.~644~-0IO~~I $350. Hunt. Bch. 3BR Zba, Country Club 1 Blk from High School MEW DUl'LIX 1 Br, CdM, $195. Util pd. Duplex. walk to beach. 3 den. l mi. to beach. Child 30 RETAILSHOPS Prime reasonable space available large & small. Old world c harm with French windows, gablfk & t rees . Adjacent to Festiva l of Arts Grounds. S80BROADWAV LAGUNA BEACH 275 Mesa0r•S48-6706 Lar~· 3 bd,m. 3 balh·. Deluxe split-level ; 1300 Avai1June l.2 Br,28a, $£ K & flND'!l Notable Dam1 Br,?Ba&Gar.SMSyrly, OK . Ref's. 6/15-9/1. ·1 ft 2 bd /I ft-d W. Newpo"· $295. Block 54i·l290or'642-3579. fum'd . (714)962-7408 with ' I . Open ~med sq ' rm w 0 en, 494 79 5 , Jledec. 2 br, den, hrdwd ceo·i-.-· lgc. fam>"I r m. frplc, plush crptg, home · to sand, avail J uly 1. N r To x Go E v I p A It c E B c L 0 8 • Balboa 2 +den $250 k • I nrs.gu,., fn cd...i;chondra -· · l "k lorage wa lk ,·n 642·9666 2·2 R s, 1 bath, large, • w0~·~~~~~~~~~~ "" $S751do))'cai:l~i:,~~· 1 e s • · l-'=="-------1 pool. Children over 18. Bach. + s undeck, $1 yard. Patio. 646-8488 oi: TlJR·NER~. clodets. bath & g uest C teM ~··· RD PREACH ORO V 1 LL E JO R $2lOEvcsonlyS42·2J678 wk.Parklng.675-6712 871 ·914!J. llOS N . Cst llwy. t.uguna bath, bltn gas r1tnge & 01 ti• _, L E V A l ONT J C SM J A FT EMO oven, patio deck. 2 car •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• WESTCLIFF 2 hr. 1\.-i ha PRIVATE Home on lhe NEAT.C.:lean30R,CrpL<;, 494·1177 0 c z K 8 c HIE r J 0 s E p ff N 0 JI Orps. fed yd &.<.'OV. palio. . enclosed g1tr1tge w/laun-WESTIAY APTS to~·nhse. Adlts only, no waterfront, in Cd M . $32S. mo. 265 Camellin 2 Bd, Dupl_ex, charming, d,,",·c.rooAdm01.,,PaSoy '"'. 0})' ~:l New 2 Br, $2l5.· Patio, S N U pets. 1728 Bedford Ln. AS2000. ~=~~~-July & Ln.979-1·134 qutcl, patio, $300. 2 Bd, bea ut. garden, brand A c v A c AP A e H l E p $285 /mo.548-7533 ugu£ · -orappt. O c ean vie w apt . l-lwy,Sblksfrombeach. n ew s parkling a pt. RMI-' lo•-•JOO 3 e,. 2 Ba . frpl, b1tns, '"'iS .. 11:·175 , l Bd, .i;mall l425. 435 Golde nrod. E II G S ELM RA F v A Beachrront-great view. .,...1 l._.-c ~ . --C d 1 M ,714) Adults, no pets. 527 W. qui.et beach. 3 Bit, 2 BA. ••••••••••••••••••••••• partly I urn. 6' fenee. oce .. nrront, uUL':o, $200. ' orona · e ar. WU c M R I F H u o u K P 1 w N go N Quiet E. Side. f'amil)' 494.2001 . 675-9337. son, · · garage. S600 util incl'd. OCEAN VIEW, Share 64§ .. 9614 po c GM E g e N & T K 1 Ro J 645-0245 super s harp 2 Br dplx in TOP LOCATION MESAVEIOI DRIVE PL.AL\ ror slore or office. Ample parking. 1'own &country almospherl·. 1525 Mesa Verde Dr. E. Costa Mesa. 545--4123 W/Oulpetspreferred. Yr-L Hill 3250 NEW 3 BR 3 Da CdM. $225 mo. Avail. I., Avail 6/28.548-3761 .,.a 1 ' ' '1vR NEW Beamed-U ·ADDA IF S S · 2BR.l'' HEW .1 • • •••••,••••••••••••••••• Caplst.rano Beach, ocean • -• .... · pac1ous corner .,.. 6/10.Call675·1m. I-SIDE Rent or Lease •.11.R.~ view, dbl gar, frplc. nc w/frplc, 3 br, 2ba. oven, K No B T 1. AK blks beach.Courtyard IOAIL STOllS.t Lr" 4 Br,~ ba hO\ne.' {:,'$~ Hills. sa.1,-l59Q ichool.la90-1~1Ul' range, .dlsbwshr, shag J A 1i 8 AM H 8 0 0 , U a F CU pool, lock garage $MS. Fe male ~o sh.are 3 BR Now avail. FOR LB.Al.I • S I lQ.6 crpta, drps. Gmd, Qr, Adull llvln1. 146-5700 house with moUttr 6: 2 i n p , I m 0 C 0 1 • a frJYlc, bttn!: 12 ~0·1 on ru 8 ••· Afaalww11h Pwftithed teP encl 11r. Avail June c R & x y o $ p Q E 1 Ng w. o d au I h t e rs. t .. u r'n . Mesa/New-kL • • lea11e. $3SO mo. Showing L!fll'MIMI.... 3252 ••••••••••••••••••!•••• 1.$285.642-m<> EASTBLUFF a BR $280. c..._:..::~"'::..:.'•=-------1 San Ju1a'C;pl1lr1-. ~p~ ~~ia=.•2.. A~ ................................ .a.cl 370612-"B=R=.;:..::l=B'-A=. -.-.-,-1.-.-.-dl ~ ~ RP MA NS : Ac OR OD.· EL c :ec:~·J:.!~~ •dulls, ao Female 21~0 to share area. P'CM"'ialo. ...... bJ.I ' 4 BR. t"'a mlly room, ••l •••••••••••••••••••• e•raa:e. Quiel couple. " Condo. Own rm &r ba. broebYre, f::'ue COG• **$145 Older 2 Br home, (ll'.\eglace ,edcpts J,4_rps, BAYFRON'f, 2 bedroom, t ingle. $180/mo.846-7129 1., .. .-... n. ..... -...,. .,.. ~ • 2 BR. 2 BA, yearly. Crpta, Pool. Call $40.3590forde-tart : Frank blch, P.O. aar. oead end st. Kldsok. bit 'i\i, te.nc yd: ~ C~ r;arace. fireplace, paUo. ._ ... -4 • .,, --. • ~ 11 1t1t ,..._,.... _. drps, bltns, no peta. tails. Box 1515, Newport 84.2·2221, 646-9666 • garage. 1st, last, depoi:i\. Cor ni f' property , M'ESA OELMARAPTS ...._ _ _.••••• : $210 /mo. 838-3450. Be1c9', Ca • ...,_ Ma1 '9i9·2544. downst•lrs :n duplex. No 2 Br, 2 Ba. '200. Newly tU•A•uo MCNARY VA.IOflfT ..:::::C'.'::"'-=:.:::=---1 Fem. lO sh•~ 4 bt coodo '114 ·642·4000 Broker F ... toht Vetlley 3JJ4 I .._ ,267 dock, but beautiful view ~corated. Adult.. onJy, ~~:ltECK g~~:f~~ULltt a~~~~Ut£Na ~ Lge 2 BR, 2 BA, bltns,newl JC~h~l11d~o~k;·~S80~;+~-~C:al~l~pa;rJlc;;~Jpa~~~·!;!n~;-;~I~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mi ..... V • .... •1 ., over Norlh Baylf'ont. lrJl!I £1 Camlnd~'t · OA HE . 5ffA1"'A CHICFJ08EPH ,. crtps, nr lloag llO!l.P. »68·7150, HUnl Deb. Jlu&:e 3 ~r. eorn'er lbt. ••·•••••••••••••••••••-•• Fully furnls.bed. inelud ·'"""-""-'-'-'~-----1 TOMO•R0•1 ....,....,.."D" • l -'-A~d=•~"='~·~l25:.;:.:0~.=6'2::.:-0!00==--I le ate opt\on ok. New BARCELONA t bri t.pU", int '#llhtr and dr)'er. l 6.28R J&tdenepla, frpl, ·,-o]o-,-~-,-,-,-,-'.,",."'-,=.::.S.:;M;..t.;•.;;:;,::,,'-.'-' •• :: .. :o.. .. =,0-.-,-.. -..,-,-.. .;J llJf' roommele &o Man t cond. tn1lde. Slnlle!t, I dr'pS. bll.nt, a.Ir, peUo., 1 AYall.lbl• u · •rental D/W, .pvt.. pet.(09• Nr. c1-...rt,. ,,.,· pua1 i• •• •ll•MW..,.. 0(24 • .,e,. boc*IN. Park Newport-Sub Leue BR, tltlll St.•NB; •r. Cblldren , Pelf olc . fncd. yd., no ·~w$2'10. oowtoJwa•J.•SllOper lrvlnelad..ereLSl71&o "Toord•\'Of11ft'tlat,RMdlll..-ndll.,,16C.h.mlltlntc'-b lrglbr.Vlew,5))89119· oe•••-· $ltl + •tll. Bt.rbaraMJ-61311 ..._,_ -.... Lca11""t7G. aoomo.ss1-a11 ,.,..w.10 "&.Mar111d"'111 ..... lftliil .... ,..... ltis,pooll.'40-Dll t7$-ITl'7. '. I 1711 AN A(l l lM, Cll. GrDUDd llaor D aq, ft. 01r1ce,--.'""" 1nc.ttt.e11---. - ' • .. I' ' • • ". ' . . \ .. ..-\ ... .. ~ -. . " ... . .. . { . ' ... ; ' ' 'J• • . . ,; . . -. - DAILY PILOT Friday, M8Y 30, 1975~ .. ·~-.~ . ·~~It B • ·1 O · c 0 Plumb l t ...... atcn 11 ... r•Pe ·~ .. ., ... emooe.r 11•1• · """' ... u1ld I ... laper it ... Hammer ii ... arpet SERVICE Dl'RECT RY Roof it Landscape lt ... Tlte lt...Trim lt ... Sewlt .. . Jt...Cement It ... Wir e it ... Hoe it ... Clean 11 ... Move --Hau l ii::. Add it..: Plant It... Alter 11 ... Learn It .. . it. .. Press 11 ... Paintlt ... Nail lt...Plasler it...Fi• i t ... Consultant in financial & man~gement. 30yrs exp. in aerospace & related induatries. 15 yrs as Sr. officer in major corp. 5.36·49(\6. MASTER Cr arts man Specially. Remodeling', finish work, f't.fs. fo'ree t!S1. Guar work4!J9.31 05. MI NOR HOME REPAIR Plumbing-Carpentry Ceramic; Tile.5'0-SS60 Costa ~Ies a-Santa Ana 1'"1 ·1, 1~/1320/1716 sq ft. Ofc., Warehsc, prk'g. 220 pv.'r. 646 -1252/644·2228 2 or 3 BR Unrum. ttousc w/gar & red yd. Jo'or 2 Adults, 1 child. 751·1818 NEi':D 2 UR house near COMlruclioft'-5 Mr. Parle 673-7341 AVCO . Financiol Strvice5 620 Nowport Ctr Dr Nowpori llHch. Ca. Attn: Carol Smith Equal Oppor. Employer FRY COOK Expd for arternoon & ni;;ht shift. Apply in person at company of· rices, 2952 Randolph St, Costa Mesa. GRILL Cook wanted. Atust have refs. Clean appearance. 1''\ill time, Carmcls. 497·~. HAIR STYLIST·Exp'd. 675-3701 or 675·4232 or 675·4315. HOSTESS Exper 'd for restaurant in leading N ewpQrt Bch re· sort hotel. Call J ohn l>W-1700, ext 554 Equ<tl Oppor. Employer Daily Pilot. Mother & MoMy W...ted 5030 Daughter, both working ••••••••••••••••••••••• and 2 pe t cats..· Need Wa nted to borrow $5000. s mall garden & flower Secured by 2nd TO. Good area ir possible. Up to Costa Mesa Real Estate. S200. 645-5283 lO'i'o interest. Excellenl DENTALA.%1STi\NT HOUSEKEEPER to live· Exper'd , non·smoker. X· in, working family or two ADAMS ·MASSAGE AYON CASHIER ray lie req 'd. N.U. Call without children. Xlnt Clean private rooms . &14.9211. working arrangements, Massage & SaWla. 8839 (or fine jewelry store . ,iiiiiiOiiOiOii.,iiiOiiiiiiii salary open. 963·3511 or crcdilrcrernces.545-4289 Going away tor summer? Adams Ave, Hunt. Beh. THERE'S A Bookkeeping, filing. etc. 11 556.7896 Will rentyour2Bdrm MortCJCiges. Tnast 963·1247, Mon thru Sat WORLD WAmHG Will consider part ti me if DESIGN 1---------aptor house in H.B. Deids 5035 llam 'tilmidni&hL hours a re flexible. In Houseke eper. live-in, Maturecouplc.Xlntrefs. •••••••••••••••••••••••1 ------~----1 FOR YOU-Person Only, 10-12 noon. ENGINEER middle aged, settled 1·325·8396 PROBLEMS?WECARE J . H er b er t llal l woman. Wages open. LOANS Up to 800/0 ONE WAY H ELP , A s a n A V 0 N Jewe llers, South Coast Must have minimum of Rers. req'd. Call 496-4009 2 refi ncd I a dies need s ma ll furn /ptly furn apt . Corona del r.t ar 556·7459 2 BR unrurn house by Sept. 1st · for UC I asst Jlrofessor &: family. CdM, Lag Schor Tustin. 644-5342 art 4 pm /C CENTER REPRESENTATIVE. J>lar.a. · or494·8960 I st TD Lo...e'/t°/o 24 hr Hot Lik64.5.saoo You m eet new people &,I ~-"'=:_______ !-:i~!: etpO~~~e~~~~~ 1---------- 2.d TD •~ . have :xlnt earnings. Het· CASHIERS · Housekeep er, mature .-a. OOYOUROWN · · ho ., hydraulic equipment. 1 ho Lowelit rates Orange Co. DIVORCE ler than s1tt1ng at me. Full·time. Over 18. Send Resume to P.O. pers5ohn11 or guest me. S~-rM'-Co. Call :540·70410ays. Goodpay.51.ocations 3·11 t.64&-6716 en... • .,. The WaveProject MetroCarWash Box 2322 , Newpo rtr-~~--'-~'-''--- 642·2171 MS-0611 DIVORCE CENTER l~Be~a!°ch~,!°C!°o!°H!°l.!°9""!°"'!°3!°. "'!°~ Housekee per, (/time. AP· Serving Harbor area 24 Ally. Trained Consul · Babysitter , for 2 boys, 6 &,1 _....c29~"'"""~~·'~"°='~8~1~·= C.>~•~· _ i: ply Mesa Verde Conv. years tants to Assist Yoo. $75 .. JO , my h ome . 9·5 :dM Area·Resp. lady to DISTRIBUTOR wanted. Hosp,661CenterSt,CM MiscellwottS ""•am1e•....tl/ 11...ia11 46SQ '""°""''I + riling fee. 548·4216 for Wkdays. 968·943Saft. 6 clean house, cook dinner Over 25. Interested In Housemother/Assistant. appt. for 3 children. S Days a urnlng up to$800permo Alcohol Rehabilitation ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost & FoiMcl Increase your bust line l TRAILER space, tree ••••••••••••••••••••••• to 3 cup siies, 2 wks or Bank week-3 Hrs a day. (714) p/t. Call 639·61ZJ. hOu!le. Sober member SS&-3766 AA 2 yrs pref'd. SSS-9807 or 542·3686. shaded,to28'.$70.Co5La Lost&Fomd 5100 your money bac k . Experienced :hemical Jab technician, Mesa . .548·6173 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8'6·1959or 894-o641 r....llTI-oome extwor. in Po.lyme< I ni .. ~ M th · · ( H!lekpr11 v-in, cook, •--•--ssfln•esl/ LOST/FOUND A PET? Soc'~ c•-~, 5400 TEL 1 .a Chemistry helpful. Jorco U!I ave muumum o dn·ve, Np'I b-" 3 "''''· DRAASMAN -960-~Ad-Low "" -.,,_ Ch I I c s d 2·3 yrs exp. in detailing ~n .... Fl.-. ~ , ••••••••••••••••••••••• e m ca o . en h 1 1 ._ h d 1. 7 9 '-11 640-••-o< C t S /Neut Info R w 'le d 430 mee an ca ... Y rau 1c • • ~ • ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 05 · pay er · Free Dance Social Solo:oJ UMITID esume n a no. ' components . Send 1 ,;•;7;3';";9;1';;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Daily Pilot, P.O. Box lniMis REWARD 40+ ,S~t. May31.8P.\1 Collfornla... I560, Costa Mesa, Ca. Resume toP.O.BoxZJ22, Opport.ity 5005 LOST: Diamond Rine, 2 lo 12. Live band. Santa 92G26. Newport Beach, Calif. INHALATION ••••••••••••••••••••••• larger diamonds mount· Ana Coll ege St u~ent 6Monarch8ayPlaza =='--------192663 Vending cd with 2 sites ot smaller Lounge. 17th & Bnstol. South LagWla :01 students, p/t sls. de· ~~~~"""'"""'~"""'~ THERA,Y TICH CAHDY ROUTE ones.675·3675Ber.Sam&1.,c539_-885_1_._____ . liv. J=:vcs /Sat.Car,phone DYHAMITE lotin . 2 yrs exper. or Excellent route ot candy Aft. l :30pm. Tr.•ef 5450 17141496-1273 nee. Mr LyonsS48·JOOI Sales woman wanted ror ~=:~~af~ !~~~~";; & s nacks available in LOST: Gray&blk.Au.st. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1714JIJl .. 1970 :ooK, full & p/llme. adv./PRfirm.Musthave exper. Contact &tr. )'Our t1rea. Idea l way to Shep/Setter mix, male. SEE EUROPE Conv. •to11plt:il. background In PR. See Hamilton,, 642·2731 ext s upple ment salary or Vle ltth&Cst.Hwy HB. AnEqual Call642-0S98 DonE1tey,SuileaxJ,'300 387, Costa Meaa .pensio".I · Locali~rys . S36-4385; 892·1267 •• $100 BY CAR OppoolunityEmployer 1--C---'-'-""s"~'-"'=1"-_.--·lcampus Dr • Memorial Hoapi tal. lnstallat1ons & Tram1ng Reward -Eledri I ~ EOE. turnis he d, Financing.1----·-------1 Purt.hase any European Exper. pre din lnstilu· c • available. can he ex· FOUND: Doc cream Car tor d elivery in 8 1rtender_. Cook &: lionilcooking.AM ahlf\. Learnatrade. 3131 pa.nded tn full time in· rem ale Af1han. Vic. CM. Europe"-let us plan your CockLflll Wat\reu. Sum· Contact David R. Green, Exp'd. 1in1le .needle pro-INSURANCE AGENCY come. For inlormation 64&-8947 Individual tour. From mer or permanenUy. Ap-847-9671 du c t Jon 1owor1 . Girl. Personal line1 un· ph. 714·879·1284 Lake-oflLohome-landin1. ply Nwpt Bch. Tenni11----------1 Wome n'• wear. Casual derwrit er. Exp. nee. ,.<_=-:..:.:.=:...::=---I FOUND: m ale lrisb aet.-you'll be ID the hand& ol Club. 644-00SO ::ook wanted. Langlol1 atmoapbere. Quality 6. 49'·1087. Mn. Bradley. AmbitiousCouplenecding ter. well trained. Nr. exrrt.1.Alloleatolcttn· Frozen Foods, 2915 speed nee. Call 67~. more income. Unusual 22ndSt.CM.6'5-1740 ta cars. EURAUTO, ......... P1nat1 Laguna Canyon Rd, LB. THETREAOLER· huurance Atency Meda opportuni ty for good -Li do Villate. N.B. WllltrH-..__.tl 497·1741 . E I d t 1 k xper . clalm1 Un• earning1. Work together. FOUND: Neutered male 673-4550 25 Yrs or o~Appty1 ..:::.:...:.:..:.:.: _______ I d~e r ei;:e t .,:w· ru( d erwrlter .. Xlnt beneo Pa rt time or (ult time. German Shepherd, belgel----------·I Mltla ·• MexJcain Rest, D•ce lftlfructor · vtr. us VO re 11· Mrs. Bradley, 49'1·108f, ' Production Ii'+. Ford's Tree Service. -1:.xp t!rienced Crew. L.ict lnsured . 962-7817 EMPLOYEES WAHTED . FDR PERMANENT OPENINGS A LABllR DISPUTE CURRENTLY EXISTS AT THIS PLANT JOIS AV AILAILE IMMEDIATB. Y • IHCEHTIVE ,RODUCTIOM WOllllHS Pay range can go well over SS .00 per hour depending on employee's production " HOURLY FACTORY WORKERS • Pay range per hour from $4.12 (ball bagger) to $4 .81 (truck driver) • SKILLED TllADESM&I (Electricians, machinists, malnt, mechanics, tool & die makers, etc.) Pay range per ·hour from ~.91 (oiler) to $6.37 (prototype tool & mold ) In addition to excellent pay (as ex· .emplifi ed above) we offer com· ·prehensive fringe benefits such as: • Eleven Paid Holidays :~Company J>a.id Insurance for .employee,s & dependent.s (Life', . ho spitalization, major medical, etc.) ··Paid Vacations • Pens ion Plan : and many m ore ...• ;Multi-shift plant operation. ,ractory experience desirable. Prior . !This ad was placed by Mr. Don ':Gilpin , Supervisor of Employee : Relations, under the direction and ;authority of AMF Volt, Inc. • • ;.APPj' At Personnel Office 8:00 &.IJ), 1.to Noon · and 1:00 p.m. to ,f!:w : p.m., Monday thl'Ough Friday rll 67 Pl'L w/blk I 638-0546 • I !! Ch La1una Bch. area. 549.3058 ·: 5·6d84. . · ace.; :~~ 547 W.19thSt,CM Jazz Dancel oreo· 497.1735. · ti-,..._ 1 -----~----1 grapher lor new school of 1~~.!.'.:~----,---1•,..;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;I VOIT • SS,500 IUYS '"~?UN °J l.dadyc'• bl,ke ••••••••••••••••••••••• IEAUTICIAHS the ar11. Strong pro· FEMALE Vocalist, cx· ~ -~~ , Inc. E s ta bl i1h ed. mone)' Ci:r1a a rtear. Q.11°~e':. Scllaol1 &. Now lntervlewtn1 ror: feaslooal &/or ~uca· per. Travel. audlllons j~INE PERSONNEL; 3801 S. Harbor m akin 1 boutique In G<-nat °"l·~to. lutr.ctioft 7005 M•w__.!lf'lmS-... t lona l background. now 5361.S030f'538-3757 SE°'nrrc-.•rENCY SontaAna,Cali'f . • prime area. Inventory ..... ,,.., IN ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...-.. • P /tlmo now, I /time H ·k · . "v~l;..J..-~ · Cal1 :644 ·0661or54C).8582 .an · 488£.17th (AtlrvlneJ . nca:oUa ble. f'orcedaa.Jel Lo,t: Sa~)'ed male Sky Divin& Instruction. l a t e r . Con t act Mr. Female, p /time. Apply Sulte224 ,._,_ u ,.a .. G~ 5/:5/75, rUD &f'OWP. Vic. Learn to 1kydlve thU llAUTICl.AH 'Teemley , Newport 2.4pm daily. Foster C ..... -14-70~ An Equal Opportunity n~r:O~~nAve~ ~~nt~ll~~CY.$2Sre· ~U::rtca!~nlonna-Newpo~~'r::ee548-uu ~l~~~ or the Arta, ~eere, 891 w. l9lb St, ~ ~ . Employer-M/F ~~~~~~~~===~~~~~==~~~~~~l!!!!!!!!!!!~ • • • Ope c I ...... Mone 11 HolpW1 •••••••• I KITCt D•Y•· 1 Call 541 :M•urice Leather J.A,guna I time, p 494·2114. LIFE For CO i Certified ble of I Ju n e- >48·8348 f.IAID • time.Ca ~.anager cottages cpl or 5'8·1204,t M-t Tropical required t4asseus1 will trn. appoint~ HEEi •Sr. Dr *Dul9 Bolbw1 Tempo1 178025 C• New Spa tracti masseur p).ition1 will trail tervw 9E betwn 1{ Nurses ) Conv. 642-0593 . ,.x"' Aftn & cluded. l ~xper'1 Rtcepti• Manul.: resume no. 425, P. O. l Meaa,C Person mgmt. I Coll. I 848·1004 , ... Exper. needer e mploy relia, I .able to to Lim 549·116 Askfor1 Real Ex per .• dable, e&tate sales a ii 31S ! BA[ ... Real Et I I ... SALE unusual • x p Realtoi 545 -84 South C Real E saleap work h Hun Un, tain V Mc Na Real E; ESl Fantas ,o-.. tt ln1 " ·Carpet No lice I y . It. ,\leterai /i'o< II W -755 R.I For ' adult ' 60 yrs A.M.• Mon,·4 a.s : ! Jbna tome earnl _1mall p e rt ·=-~ Toi> • I ,.._ ' '. .. " •' . . . . . .. w-.i 1100·14o1pw .... 11 110 -···················· ..................... . uST UliNT Chailteclair· . A Pre1Hp R"lw•t 0,..lng Mlcl-J-. Newport Area C011thie11tal Food & 0 Slll'Ylce '-· & b c ..... r..,.. Huclld ......... " Apply ln Person Monday or Tuesday between 1 & 4PM 11912 MacArthur Blvd, Irvine Help W-.1 7100 MN .. 1 1005 lley0clo1 . I020 DOCJS 1040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WAITUSSIS PUILICAUCTIOH BICYCLESllOP ' BORZOI !Hu .,l on 21 &: Ove r. i!:xpcr'd niNhl '4ANY ITlCMS Ot" l-'IN -. ANNIV1£H.SARY Wollh<.tu nd I AKC.:, 12 help. 2 Shlrt.a: open. See t:STATE JEWELRY SPECIAL! R\Oli. lo'em .642.(MO:i John or Al, Ma Bark.er'•· A RT OBJECTS AN' A rree ael of Killng;iroo • 2 E 17 h o c • 1tand&ard Panni~r ' Dachshund pul)ti, AKC , 1 .. 1 . t o10t, CJllil TIQUES. FINE Jo"'URN, (worth $IS) will be gl\'Cn '!'alt!, $100. 1 (e1n. SIZS. Mes.a. ~TC. PHONE t>'OR lN· away with every new lO (1rm.842·033Jorli44·4444 YO. &. B ROClt URE. W eitre1a W..ted 6'5·2200 ~.~'ti bike pureh;s~ on Cuddly, liny purebred Mul l be over 21. E l l--'-'-------1 :>ut., ~t a y 31st or Mon .. mti.1 4:! YO H.KIE H wk M l d 17 .. N rt J un4:! 2nd from STOKES Id h . w· '. · s a a or, ewpo -".....UGllCOI IOI O SPOKt:S ll lC.:YCL~ ~ o , » 0 1s, 1ldw1cr hne, .. D~l~'~d~·~C~OS~l~a~M=cs~·~·'---IA..,... SlhSl HB • $100 lw/o papers/. !;1391 -••••••••••••••••••••••• · Po ts no tt D 118 ff WHO WANTSTO WORK? 536.594oorc'"'·7W7 r 1 u 1 r , lO DRIV E ACA"'· Coppertone Lady Ken· ......., Yorktown & 8UihardJ, .., mor~ Wa1her, $95. C.01>· CllOOSE your ho uri, pert.one Kenmore Elec. llCYCLE SHACK PE M 0 RO K !:: Wcl c h work for yoursell, be Dryer, $15. l''rigidaire or Peugeot U08 10 llpdi. a:>· Corkie, Pup!l & Grown your own bos1. Mun or Kenmore wa~her, $SQ, semhled, StatJ.!:15, rcii. Dogs . AKC. 516-49'l8 Wornen. C11n be 11lightly Gunrunteed & Delivtlrd. i.i15!1 .U5. Qualtiy 'r'" Gu in -h1t nd icapp e d . Nt:li t · .54S·8S72 'fire:1, $S. 11r., reg. rr,DOG ()Ut-;u 1 £NC~ (;Jea n A p pearanct!. Chrome Carriers $1.UK, CLASS to Sturl \.\'ed . Vets., r11lired. At.:c 2.5 lo Wesllnghouse elec oven. reg. s;:!.lltl. 1003 'Duker, June 25 . 7 : 30 p. 111 . 70. $upplcmenl your in· 1•ortable, cubln<:l, very C.t.1.<Btwn t•alrvlew & Ne wport Bch-lrv1nc W..ted -· come . Dri"e a C:.ib 8 hr• gd cond. 847 ·4016. Bristol I 546·4130 urea . 546-_'9_211:c_ ___ _ 7100 .)t9JpWR1ted . 7100 or more u day. Apply In ••••••••••••••••••••••1_'~'~"~'·'•'~·~·~··~·~·~·~·~··;·~·~·~·;••;j person, YellCJW Cab Co., 1''ri1id. washer & elec. SCHWINN & sears 20 " Dog 'fraining Clast>· San I"' 1K6 E . 16th Sl., Costa dryer ; green; lgc si:.t.e, Girls . S2S. eu. t.1an 's Uiego t'r ""·y & llarbor KITCHIHHll.Pllt REAL k:STA'fE ~t es~. x lnt cond, Moving. Englis h 10 spd. SJ S. Hlvdarca.54~-zn __ •· __ aya. Tuea thru Sun 1160 M 6'15·3039 SS1·2832 1111 548·7418, Ask fo; ewportll. Young Jud y with car, 1-=:.::..:='------~ SILKY TEllRl£1S aurice. Costa Mesa work 10·1, 6 days, good La r ge Copper l''t--..$/S Used Bikes/Parts. $15/Up. AK C ~·8377 F =='-------1 Well localed RE ofrice money.Call 00·014S Re lrig. S225 . Copper Buy /se ll /t rade . 24Kll . , . •ther C ra ftsmen for n ee d s 2 l ic en sedl..:::.:;::.:o"-':::::..::.=..;::.::....._ elecl. stove soo. King·O· NewportBLCM.642.71no lrls h Setlt!r I upp_1es, gunaLeathei'Shop.P· salespeople , Wome n Merc"-dlM Lawn mo wer $115 . 1\KC , xlnt quality , ime, possible f-lime. we lcome. Business is ••••••••••••••••••••••• S57·2679 • Nt!w por l Cyclery . c hamp . line. $100 . ~94-·_2_1_14_. _______ 1 good-need more help ........ , 1005 , lla lei_gh.' l'e ugcol , &1 ..:.2~13~·•="6:.:..:·•='="°.:..... _____ 1 for our buyers! CalJ for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chestrreezer upprox20cu A~uk1. 2 11 6 Newport LIFE GUARD · · fl •10 l'h "47 74·-B d ND 6 ~ m11.le J>it Hulls. 4 rcmale, · 1nlcrv1cw. A ,. 1 ks 1 1 • • . one · ~ Iv . . 75·1700 C n _1que c oc or sa e eves or wk.nds. ull AK C.:. 646·0142, after S or community pool. allAn~fM this week.end. G. fa ther . Sunto ur Azuki Racer. 6'15·281.11 'ertifled & knowled&ea'· &16-Jtl28,Evesl>7J-4577 w al I , man t I e & G Rerrig. Admiral Wh ile de-S!H.95, Cycle Works Ltd. -----------1 le of pool equipment. daugbter.1128lh St. H.B. lux 2dr. A·1 <..:ond. $80. 1822 Newport BL Cf\-1. While licFman Shep. pup· u.~~e p le mb a r . Exquisite Gold Thread 642-4063 .. _ s4s-57J>3. ~~~~G:~~ reg. &15-71W EMDRO ~D ERED, Silk. CONSUMER GUIDES GOLD "'N REl'ltl"'V"'lt AID WA NTED, part Ceremonia l Court Robe. Auction 80 15 r... .,, "' ·me.Call Mesa Motel, ~~~~~~~~~~~ Xlnt Cond. P11rnle Jo'ield ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newest, Best Huy PUPS,AKC -... Is Now llere! 36 646-9681 with C ELE S TIA L ••UILIC• 645-&I ',673·7400 DR A G O N S, Thun · r-TheSuperLc Muns anager for 20 erliciency RN-CCU derbolt.'i, Cloud forms & *FURNITURE• By Centurion •PET WORLD• ·ollages in C.M. older <SHOU) Cymhols. ""•·rt & Corona del Mar Bikes LI A Chih h Nights, full or p/lime. .,.. 3323 E . Coast Hwy. I asa· pso, ua ua, · pl or m a ture m ale. Differential pay. Xlnt w/blue , yellow & red *ANTIQUE* Call s75_7666 'tiny Poodles, Westie, f"C·l~21M=.'-------I benefits, Contact Mrs. stripes & FOO Lions-•AUCTION• 1---=:.::..:.:.:c:::=. __ Coc ker , Doxie. Pit Bulls, M:r, ...... .,....___ Jensen, 642-2734 Co$ta Ch'ing Dynasty. Collec-FRIDA 7 30PM RA RE Deal! Wind!>or 10 Cockapoo. Pom. 100 ~ Memorial Hospiial, 301 torsltem.,1200.00.2094. D 1 YW:l spd Racer It wght nil mixed Puppies. S tud pica E'Ish knowledge v · t · C M EO · ( ea ers e co me) 1• d 'm ser v. most breeds. 2525 [1eq~lll~·r~e~d~.~64~2~·~"~""~---~~·c~o~ro~a~·~·~-~~E~'."""~2 Germ a n Clock.a, Oak Open 9 lo 5 daily for in· etccess. x nt con . . W. 17 th at Fairview, SA. r Rocking Chair, Din-Rm spection. Large consign-~53ti=·~O~J8~l:_ _______ O~n Eves 531·5027 asseuse n eeded, exp. ALt:s Tbl &. 6 Chrs. Etc. Pri ment. _Antiques . from Cats 8035 .::!:=:~:..::::.:::=.::::::..,..,...~ ill trn. Call 64S..o864 for A salit Sales Mgr pty. 20362 Bayvi ew Ave. E a s t J us l a rr 1 v e d, ••• • • •. • • • ••• • ••••• •••• ee to You 1045 ~p~po~i;n;tm;;e;n;L;;;;;;;;;I Guya or gals to assist S.A.Hts.Sat&Sun. Ba nkruptcys & stock. Ii -Be ·r I SI MESE .... 1T ••••••••••••••••••••••• •uidations, Partial lisl-,a.uti_ u . A, "' ·POODLE /Terrier mix , manager of high fashlon R ·1 d s· I Lan 1 "'"S 6 wk• "0 each a1 roa 1gna tern, ing: Antiques, P ipe or-"'·"' • "· -· white tSwksold HEIDEDIMMBt. mh en 's boutique. Must 4-way. 318 E. 16th Pl.' g an s, l o t s o f oa k •~1-18 16 . • 842·2IJ0 ave good sales exper. Costa Mesa, d I lnlerviews now. Call fer ..:::::::.:::.:::=: _____ I ressers, chests, tables. REG 'D PE ltSIAN Kil· Sr. Dreft.-, appointment. Antique Butterki.s t Uncle stands, beds &. chairs. tens, Grand Champ. Bk· 2 lovable m ale cats n~ a Friday. May 30. 1°975 CAIL VPtLOT AMC 9905 AMC 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Fullerton AMC, Inc . , .l Wants to· buy you a Free Steak ·Dinner -JUST TO MEET OUR Flt.MIL Y - D7· CAM Dll..IVH MOW PACER LARGEST AMC SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY -: ~·,n..1 ... ~~ -~ SPOR TASOUT ~ (WS1'LER STEAK HOUSE ® REGISTER FOR FREE GO CART DRAWING Here's ho w. Just come in t o the showroom and test drive any one of the great A MC cars: Gremlin, H or net, Matador. or the all-new Pacer. We'll g ive you a special c oupon, li mit one per family, good for one Strip Steak Dinner at your · local Rustler Steak House. It's that easy. But ac t soon . Reme mber. coupons are limited . so it's first come. first served ... a Ru stler steak. (maybe 21 ). ., ' ' Detipla9"1 t THE LOOK Joe Popcorn Machine, Victrola, radios. china ground. Potential show good. home w/ lov1ngl l-~-=-+=~..-=--'.Jf\. Bothw/me.ch'l bck&md Sl ,295 • Call Maureen c u pboa rd s , ch urns , qual. 1 Female white, 1 ~am1l~. P leas e cal l e mpo Tem....,.,."'Help , ___ 6:.4'-4'-·~6;.;5~00C.:..--I 61 _,. h .. M sideboar ds, Glass door _m~a:"le'C'~':!' ... a~m~·.""'!'.5':'·269~2:__J ~•::.73'C·ii669~6i; . ..,.,.,,...--1 ~===!::=:::~~f~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~;;;~ ....,._., r-S·U»U ours ~ on book.cases. 17802 Sky Park, Irvine ALES, fu ll or part time . thru Fri SCRAM LETS ""'"""~C~a~U~54M<S.5"""~~""""""I Free training. Natural ...ccc..=cc _______ I Cut Glass Lovely kittens Angora ~ != Organic Product. Earn· I n t e r n a t io n a I ' s ham lottle & background. See to ap· ANSWERS ew Spa· Hunt. n-h. Al· in gs unlimite d. Call "RICHELIEU" 4 place Slel.....,lellCollection prec.$15.979·8978. AOOund -Usury - Bursl -lndut·e -~ 545 so~· Al 3p settings. $450. 837-8163 C ..,. r ac t ive g i r Is r or 1 __ · _•_•·..c.cl_ec_,~m.c.... --l locks or all kinds, pot •• seu&e & r -epti--'--t A · · bellied stoves. lanterns & 1''or Classified Ad ..... WB:> SA.LES nt1que Furniture for · ACTION · itions. No cxper. nee, Sale. 150 yr old newly up· scales, ox yokes, lifrany • ill train . Day &night in· 35 hrs a week. Exper'd & hol stered Federal couch type lamps, rockers, hall Call a er vw 963-7723or962-3934 Mature. & chair , parlor sel. 3 trees lard presses, cop-Dall y Pilot l .. n loam·lOm. LANZ 644·4411 M bl y · per broi lers. ;\.D·V ISOll K t.:0 1s·r ~.;, .~ •om.•thf"I .f••tf For ausifitd Ad ACTION Call ... o.ily .. Ket ... , •• ,_ ~2·5671 E=:'::-=;';';'~:;'.;;-:;:;;;::-[ __ _l'"·!!~~· ~!~~~'<!'--~ a r e top 1 ctori a n r as ion s an Loli of pro11 bock G42-567tS tables & pi ctures. 1016 W. urses Aides, all shirts. s 1 1 d. · · •· McFadden A'"' Sa l ch-'-onv. h os pit»l. Call a cs a ies, exciting °' .... n a 91,... !Che I 9920 Ch I t 9920 . 0593 _ e. asy s1.1.le. s even for the , ;:A:::•:::•:..·-------\ Re-..ilar Furniture hevrolet 9920 Chevrolet 9920 vro et evro e i==~='-------1 tnexp. Hig h pay, car re-i -BR sels"": LR sets, Jots or ••·•;.·~·~·-·~·~·-··-·~·~·-·.··-·-·-·-·-··.-,·~·~·-·~·~,,~·;.·.·.·-·.·-··-·-·.·-·-··-·.·,;._'.·-··.·-·.·-·-·.·-··.·-·.·-·-··-·-·.·-·.·-·-·-·.·-··-·-·-·.·-·.·-·-··-·.·-·-·.··-·.·,..··-·-·-·.·.·-··.·-·-·-·.·."-'·'-·-·.,••• I don't believe in rlying suucers. I only SD\\" <.1 rl .\·in g s aucl'r ont·c - "·hen a f'\l.iD IS'l. s pilled hot coffee in hi s il1 11. Chevrolet 9920 • · 1 J\.f Ad Ouncan Phyfe antiq.table ,. PIXA•1wetilMISerY qu,r c<. r_ ams & 6 chairs. Needs work. m a ple, trestle tabl es. & eves. ~ds in· 548-7479 Sell reas. 536_8544 rockers, chinas. ~~lu~d~ed~. E~O~E;. ;540-~1962~;;;\Sale5men for sales pro· lar &: lar stools I h USE T HE Drop LoofT~--mot on program w ere DA ILY PI LOT ~ rcsultaare guarornoob-."FAST •. Bunk be d s, re frig, PBX lig. lligh pay, days only. RESULT" washer &. dryer, small repeal bus. Mr. Adams S CE rreeier , lamps. color & Jtper 'd, s trong PBX 548.7479 · ERVI B/W TV's, Plus lots or epUonlst. 8 Ht day.'-'--'--'---------! DIRECTORY anut. Beach area. Send.-t'or Result misc items. e1ume to Classified ad SALES Service Call . Items s ubject to pre- 1 SICRETARY 642·S678 ext.3Z2 sa le. Food avail. We • 4.25, c /o Daily Pi ot, 1 win h o n o r B o r A & O Box 1560 CoN.a ~P dly 1ro gboalco, ' • C i·r ~· f ,. nfeds Sales Secretary. Don'L give up the ship! MasterCharge. ~~es~·~·~·~·~·~-~~-~"""~\ "List" it in classified. M•STERS •uc11~ able to work Wlder pre: """ """ ""'" saure & maintain gdod Ship to s hore resulls! 2057 ~ Newport Bl. CM er1o n 21·40, t rn for pu bli c r elations. Self 642·$7!!. 833·9625 or646-8686 mg mt. $150 wk guam. starter w /mandatory ~ Coll. p r ef. Mr. Levi wpm . Contact M r s. ,,848::::.·.:1004::::c._ _____ 1 Sheridan, 549·9711. r Wests ail Corp. ProduclioloCnw Exper. Seal Crew men SALIS-TROPICAL needed fo r im med . FISH & Pet Store. Fish e mployment. Must hive knowledge req.642-5522 r elia. tra ns p. Musl be able to travel from time to tim e, P lease call SAL[S-4 WOMEN 5<9·ll67 for inlecview. For tin Ad h1 WOMM'I Workl Ask for Char or J oe. (&.a couple or good men) F===:.=.='--i WE OFFER' . c"' Su• 642·5671. Ext. 330 Roal blahs.Ml Exper., mature, depen- dable, compatible real estate saleswom.wn for sales & re ntals; 5 day l . A career in advertising &. public . relations wfa successful & fast grow· Two Main Parts! Su ccess Stripes. I ._ • I ~i.llt!ihlll'll ' ingco. 2. Easy sales w/a down to earth product tha t s m all businesses ap· preciate & can afford. 3. Dayt ime work-No E ves-No weekends-No travel. 31SMARINEAVE. 4. No gim micks or high BALBOA ISLAND pressure selling. * 671·6900 * 5. Short, buL complele 1---..:.:..:....:..:..:..:c_--1 training program. * * * * 6.· Fast pay-absolutely Real Estate t op comm issions & IROICER OR bonuses. ASSOCIATE 7. Exclusive te rritory SAL ES O p EN I NG. Cllntrols to protect future unusual opportunity Cor earnings. e x p e r i e n c e d 8. $200 Weekly draw, Realtor/ Associale. call when qualiricd. 545·8424 , Associated A.ND t.I UC l-l l\1UC H South Coasl Brokers. l\I ORE ... * * * For person i i appt call 631·04549_,,... Real E state, licensed ""'"""""""""""""""""""""~"""I aalespe ople . Why aot J:: work in "lhe hot.test area SECRET ARY Hunllna:lon Beach/Foun-Mu s t h ave excellen_t lain Valley. Call Phil short hand & typing McNamee at Vi llage al>ililies. Office is locat-l·R=•=•l~E=''="~'=•=963;::.-<S67.=;c.... __ 1 cd in San Onolre. Equal Opportunity Employer ,'{-..::~;,;..,r.- REAL Conlnct ; Mr. Beasley ~', ,' ,, 7 ... """" ! -t };.1 •' 10,;· 733 6 14 /4 =..JV ·~· •• :j(~j:.-~· ESTATE SALES. SERVICE STATION ;~_:: :~lt~ \ ou~f~!"" ... ~1\f,1~t~:; ~~:~~ QUll't Fantastic oppor. for lhe CdM area, top pay. day Sl11lln• •trlpr• run .irnund go.p ter. urren 1 a -shift,w /Sal.,. n o • or ,11 ,_,.; ..... lll""'-r'-.ru11111011" 11Ht do1.1b1,. c:1<H.'h<'1 l C I l ( •·Su ff F r,,, ..,-rr '1fr ~erlAtlle veet end l:lnk 1011. fln g very active Red exper. m 1.1 n o ver 30. -1ean1 "''Ith 1111 nt11, 11c1rt ~. ·Carpet Realtors O!Fl ce. 675·0533 /640·1121 ask for l'1tl~rn 1336: ,\U11e1' 81•·"' Nollcenae neces1. to app·, ~D=i~ck~.'--------Cool, quick. low-eo•t In 1 K·I• tncl. 1:!11" 11 cbu•t 36). 1 y. Appr ov ed fo r•-bi•tiht bhiod: Juil i"·u 1niln Send ILOO for e1ch pallem. _yeterans. Free \ruining. (21 Service Sta men. 1st 11Rlll!'rn oirt• 10 cut out and Add 25' for each pattern· fOf' ~ II LI d Cla·s. To r wages + ,11re1111 .. -.. ·h10 ,011111 , ...... nr11t·cl111 mall •nd •pecl•1 · or info, ca n a , "" " h dll 1 s d t •11 comm: App y Ray carey lY drl!'•• ln ~ n10Palng: in n . en o " ce '=:::·~7$$5=~·=,~·~Si:..:88~•=•~·--·I Che.ron Station, 6(M s.-P1·tat•d Pattern t:isa: Brook•, 105, the Dally Pilot, 1• n11r SlJ•• 111•~. ii"", \11,1,. Nffdlecran Dept .. Box 163. R.E. SALESMAN Coast Hwy, Lag. Bch 16\i, 11 v11 . ~L•e 1~"" (bu1t Ii> Old Chel1ea Station, New For very s ucce11ful i.a1c .. 211,-d1,45·h1ch fab1·tc. York, N. V. 10011. Print edu.ll community. 40 To station Help wanted. (2) Send 11.00 for e1ch p1u1rn. Name, AddreN. Zip, Pauttn d C II bt 10 · · E ..... :_.,, It Add ZS HflU for each pau1rn Numkr. 60)'r1 ot . a wn men p/t1m e. v.., ...... _ for ftrst-cla1tmall1ndipecl1I .Sa•• doll1r11l ·Creat1 jA~-~M~.~&!!!2~P~.~M~. ·~'ri:::_/Sa:..,l~/o_r~-~w~e~e~ke~n~d~•~·~·~73;·~-~;:;--i hand lln•: otberwln th ird· beautiful lhln111. Send for New Mon.·6"-4509 -cllll deHveey Will talle lhree t975NHdlecr1ftC.taloll T_....A..SerT --.ormon.sndlo N1rl1n lchll1ntPrintMl!Ntde ,,,,1!1 J:l.E .'" SALESMAN, Lie. Exp~·;rd-onl)'. Full , Martin, 442. the Dally Pilot. Newt Nifty Fifty Qullta ll.OG Jhna Polnt. We1tba:r In· p /t lme All shlfta Al hu.rn Dept., m Wn t tllh New! Rlppl1Crvchct .... 11 .00 ~me Homes. lncre~se wknds . Top wages. Call S. .. New Yori!, N.Y. 10011 . Sew + Knit Book ........ II .IS I by Wor klR I . Prine.NAM E, A DORF .. ~. ZIP. Nftdlepolnt Boot ..•••••. 11.00 earn naa ,be t wn 9a m le ..f.pm, ~zt and STYLE NUMBE R. F1owttcrochttBM* .... 11 .00 ..1m1ll inve1tmen& PTO-M.f.·!M20 ON EFREE PATfERNofyour "•lrfilnC'r"OChetBoct .... 11.00 p ert I e 1 . M u-1 t l p I •t ... =· :::.=.::~------·! dlolttto H nd for.one freep11t· INlant Croe hftBook .••. a1.oo • member. Many 1i1lings. TJ-c...M&... tern ln1hle NF.W SPRING· ln1t111tt M•~rame Btic*. .. 51 .00 --11<a1 or6424905 r--_ •• ...., •-8 u MM & R p A TT ER N ln•t•nt Mon•1 Bo<* •••. $1.00 _., 1 Experienced manager • CATAL00.1oet1tyle11,111111e1. com plete Oi i\ k* ...... S\.OO • To place your meuage before the read Ina public, ph'"10 • DollyPllot C.lu alfiedt IG50'l8 lnpul /OulpulopcraLOr (OC' fmi pattern coopon. &nd 1k Complete Af1han1 114 •. Sl.00 M'fSRtMTSC maga&i.nt now. SEW + KNIT 8ooti wlt ll U Prlt•Af.hantlU ..... ~ type setting: departm(lnt. bu\ctluue p1Uern ...... SI.~ llof*of llQWlta 11 ........ 50' E II b Ill •-IMtant r a1hlOfl&ok ••.. Sl .00 MuRUmQulllBm*IZ .... 50' xce ent •RC I • INU1n1Slwln1Book •••• SI.Oil 1.5n.0•"8tor'hd•J t:J .... :.w work in g C!ondit lona. -C.B.S . Publications, BookofJl.lltt1 R"11 ·······• '714/846-44~. J, ' Here's what's new ... Hew '75 Mon:r;a 2 + 2 Hatchback! With auto. trans.. tinted glass. whites. radio. al um. wheels, stripes. etc No. 102632/5067 Only $.4399 Hew '7 5 1/2 Mon:r;a Towne Coupe! . Wi th tinted glass. power brakes. four-speed 1rans .. whites. radio, stripes, vin yl top, etc .. No. 217679/5465 O~ly $3899 MOW! BIG STOCK MOM'ZA TOWHE COUPES AND HATCHBACKS UP FOR SPECIAL SALE HOW! TOP ALLOWAHCE FOR YOUR OLD CAR, PAID FOR OR HOT! .. • ....... .. ··--' • ' ,. •11 \\ ... (~ 88 DAILY PILOT Friday, May 30.'1975 ~!':'!•••••••••!!>~~ •• ~.?~:••••••~~!~ !:~~.?~••••••~!.~! !:~~-~~••••••~!~.~ ~~.?~ ..... .'.!!.~! ~.~!= .. 1;~~~!!! ....... Y0tt 8045 Furniture 8050 FunNtwe 8050 2 Spanish,rmoire ches&I ;. PUILIC AUCTION Leavine Cou0try, ever: 4 Fa m lll~1. Sat. 10.-4 SAT. 219 J111mine, CdM . 21 " Reel mower $100., s.n.· .,...••••,••••t••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pecan dining table .(no ~~~X .J~E~:~~[JfvE ylhlna must KO-Sat/Sun. Clothe•, Houaeware, Antq oak tea ct ,. sew ~ dlApsr/btl $100.-.U.q. * 2 PUPPIES * QUALITY sofa & lov· Mattres15 , Box l:iPr & rr. chairs). PH: 6"4476 ART OBJECTS AN: 9-4. 1287 Conway Ave . Toy11 . .Rocker. Pilnt1. ma.eh, crvd cab, iron bd, dispt ~-64°'~· 611-01'16 642·3755 eseat. beaut, n ever Obi bed si;te, 2 yr old. Metlll desk, wardrobe, TIQUES f'lNE lti;RN CM.M9·3120. ;'o~~ftnoml~:~e. 18771 wckrfurn. McLl o8o''wEbRl·M~·o~~Rl .. ·. used., movin11. OOS..8822 Good cond S40 751·6498 • swivel chair, 2 chairs. ETC. PilONE l>"OR IN: VAR O SALE: Boal, ' Gare1e S11.le Sat. LA.l:avlnj throw-P ' • ·' ,.._eetogoodhoine,sm~ll . A1ED ITERllANEAN Drexel dining room set. Old carved desk, s ml FO. &: BROCHURE. Motor f'urn !"Olding Estate Sale: must sell Col.O'ltry. Washer/dryer, 968·1674or968-3064 .. l_emCockerSp.iuuelnux. SOFA&:LOVESEAT Xln t cond. 644 -1161 tables, credenia . 645·2200 Bed ~lolhing, lots or everythlnfi: from anti· booki &. misc. 9815 b 6,mo's. 979·5426 960·1289 wkdys aft 5. S.11 ·0986. stuti. Frl /S11t &:Si.tn. 10.5, ques lo knickknacks. 3l:W J amaica Circle, 11. 8 . TOfuri~a!~:~~ ltlttens Black&: 3rown . . . Bene rlt CG a rage ~ale 19841 Providence, H.B. 816lh Pl., CM. Sat. 5/31 968·8965. 646·71182 Tiger: Grey&: white 5 .p.1ece Wood D11ungroom CO~N.ER sleep set with Garage Sole 8055 Ora nge o. Preti& lub, (Ada ms&: Bushard in 10-4. male 10 wk s S46-5J92 st:l $150. built-in stcrco. Bcauttful. ••••••••••••••••••••••• f':.ntastic bargains on Glenmttr) .EVERYTl-llNG ! l>'urn, 00 Man y r•I an ls . · • · 547-311i2 559-om -fa &Joveseat, new cedar mercb".ndiseol all kinds. Patio Sale; furniture pie-appU '11 etc. M2·52.Sr:li or Bargllin Indoor & pottOO Ger. Shep. Pups, 7 wks , 2 11 dR k M 1 d All ,, 1 C Bed chest, washer &: dryer & &it. 6& SuE n. 9pam1-to 6pm. SAT &: SUN 1().6, Bikes, tu res, mirrors. pla nlli , Sat 9.4 1600 Superior, Cl\i patio plilnts. 2Sc•$2.50. • Wh / Bl k Gd Watch ar oc 11p e en ,. ap e aoopy , 2 1 28 O • Iii m Yr a, clot.hes, toys, misc. hshld etc. 1''ri. Sat. SW\. 10-5. ' J) 1 ~ CM , Dogs 568:47"2 • tab_lcs,$20eal'h.MS-7800. n1te tbls & dresser. New ~i!i~~l~~~no~~:·k~ Or11n ge. items. 9402 Comstock_.. 4280ahlia,CdM. Front I.brow lawnmower ; 209 e ar, · · or645-816t eves. $1200. At ust Sac. $400. H B 121f.3 tt pool w/ rlJter & Mi H_.ous Free Kittens , ltive ria $SO, Sofa & arm .546·7785. OLD trunks, coins, toy · · Pool l11ble, clothes, furn, ladder; recliner: twin ;::.. .. d 8011 Box TranK.>d. TllUN OL_E bt..-d, hi-rise, chr both $IOO. End tbls, 'arage-Estate ~ Family soldiers, D. F . radio, 6000 PLANTS, Exotic, 1'1ower, & misc. Sat 10 am. 721 matt . & box s prln.Kj, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842.087!! like new, $ll.5. or bt!st of. corfee tbls, 1~ .. tv wlan-1 Be 1 . 0 Co BTU window air. cond., TomiltO &. Strawberry. Nilrcissus. CdM. hedge trlmmer & misc. SH $$FOR -::--;~~'C"-"-:;'---;---1-"'e~'~· ~C~d~M~.~64~4~.S~544'_ __ 1 · b 1 · sa e. s in range · patio table & clWr.;, old 3105 Burbados Pl. C.M. . 3741 Sur, Irvine. Nr. SS CA ' •p od . l ~~9,-_64c8a .. " a 1nps. nusc. l\larble, Orient.al , Royal cedar chest, inflatable Terr1r1c Buys1 ·Garage Cu I ver & Wa ln u l . Good used turn/refrifS ' 0 . le -1'"'r iendly, oves t-'orSale :Cornerdcsk$50. """' " Doulton,Silver,llavelin, r s JS l&S l""' Hon ... ~ .. cb1ldreo_. free to loving •'orreetableSIO. kayak. Much more. 318SAT ONLY 10·4. So a, ae a un .,...,. · 551-0306 f'rtts/stoves . ..,, . .... Jewelry, Clothin• + c h · d k 0pu· dal75SL newSSbike+' ~'°""°':::...------·l-~c:::.::.;~='-'-:-:--bome.Call531-1I73 497.JlJJ. YELLOW Parsons table . ~ E. 16th P lace, ost a c air, es , l;lan or-. 1· ::;;::-;;-::;-:----::;--;:;:-::;1---_:_"'-'~~---I OO"xl7 lh"di..>ep x2ti"hi. much more. 1'T1 /Sat9-4, Mesll,Sat&Sun. gan, RCA tv, record loll:i c.f goodies. 473 E. Movin,g -Fanlali ti c WaKte d : Used do_wn Iris h Setler, needs Jot.s of 1\1 . S 1 1 0 . . $85: Antique oak coffl'r 14052 Gers hon Pl ,SA 17th . player, books&muny dc· 20th St, C.M. jusl off Bar gain ~. Good fa mily .slcepio" bttg, reas pnce, •r oom male 1112 yrs oving a e . 10!ng $11 0: 6'x8' whit.:! Greek &Holt. Everything mus t go! corator i tems. 190!1 lrvineDlvd. cJothing, kitchenw1:1res, gd cond.Cindy.536-4577. : shots.'<Dylan) 581 -7897 ' wr~~-~ c'ua"bto1'0", ,Bea·n~·uhlodru.~ wool r ug $130: Cherry G ianl }o~l ea Market & Yard Sale & Furniture. Bayside Dr .. Cdl\1 . SAT & SUN 10 10 4 . bikes. toys, baby iterris & M. • 1 "'"" .,. ~ .. ,. h 0 · 1 Sal & Sun (3l!lt & 1st) much more. Sat. 9.4 . us1co '(FREE to gd hm w/fenct.-d si~n. Oval. 6 chr.;, leaf. ...:nc S45: thcr mi:seel Bake Sale. 1-larbor High from 9.5_ 1995 Ronald Av, l\fOVING . Maple Din -rm Cl~~hing, books, iilerec:> &: 2807 Bluewater Dr, CdM . ln5trulftenh 8013 •yard . Extra s mall Almost new S875. Fust items. De ane 1-lomcs in f'ootball Boosters. Hav CM.&4&-7929. Set & ·p a d s , m a ple m15c:21922SummerC1r., ••••••••••••••••••••••• i female Shepherd. Super Sale. 645-7855evcs. UJli\·ers ity Park. l75I:? E\•erything You Ever kitchen table set, twin ~unt1nJ;_lon et:ach, Fran· BIK ES, Golf Clubs, Gibson t~es Paul CUlltom , affectionatc&loveskids, . Cottonwood St , lrvuu:. Wanted ! Bargai ns 8LUFF5~0VIMG bed complete, power c1scanFounta1nTrat.1. Archery Set, Cameras, Guitar , like new. $4~. •, no bad hab'•l·.·. <""·""50 N1aga.ra Cyl'lu-massage1_s_5'_· ·_09_8_5_______ Ga lore? Sports, camping S S · s 1 10 4 153tll C 112131277 1,.., "-~ h f d at & unl0lo5. mower, stereo, Coo-coo E'lale •ale. Quality •ds. m.isc. a · ·' a · -.,.,,, • c air, 1n e eo n ., cquip't.,l'lothing,planls, 222SV istaHog,.,Ne Cl k .... 1 2 .,. ., Argent Circle, Irvine :TINY blk male puppy, z sacrifice $150. 54~·3698 We llave a 1-lollll' 1-'ull of anit1quc:s, kitchen items. oc • stone uenc 1• Furn. Sal & Son. 18855 551 .2832 ORU1'1 set (Sonar). 4 : mo 's , l eft behind. aft6pm. t-'urniturc .1'opquality1n Sat-Sun . 10-Spm.1-larbor 644 ·5337or644-l@I smalldesks,2snowllres TomahawkF.V.968-4309 drums w /cymbals + , 552-7372 xlnt cond. Must sceloap· 1-lii:;h, Irvine Ave. btwn AMMUAL 15", garden tool , toys, & Refrig, dbl dr, Maytag high h11t. Near new $395. ----------IDI N ErrE Set. xlnt cond . prcc. No rcasonableuffc1 15th·l6lh. N li. much more. Sat. 10·5, Huge sale Sat &Sun. 16341 w as h er & or y c r, p /ply 644 .6851 i f.REE KITTENS 4 chrs. no -mar table. blk refused. Also 2. J sµd YARD SALE! 2'l28 1ioliday Rd. N.U. My rt I e wood •,. V . dressers. Office 'Desk &I -'~-'-------- : Ca ll5.:15-99'l7 wroughtirun&grnnaug. bike1i,.54·1·84 <!7. Garuge Sa le, Sat. & Sun. (1'heVilla) Bushard /Heil.839-1875 secty c hair Bxspi.! & WAN 'f ED : GUITAR • $150. 540·4032 9-6 frig, pwr mower, dbl 1605 E. 4th, S. Ana Swap Meet. Sal. Ma y 31. , matt., Ma Pie Hutc h, PLA YEH . Call 968-0024 tBlack kitlens, 2. mulched 7· <'onlc mporary s11ta, bt!d. & many items for Clothing-dishes-misc. 9-4pm. Talbert School. Sat & Sun. Many items. other misc. items. 843 betwee n !-5pm : set. To good llome. t-'1nd what you want Lil ~l ntcunthtion~IU. honle, kit. & camping. items-furniture. 9012 Brabha1n, 1-1 8, bargains, hurry. 16762 J\fagellan St. (Mesa dell -----~---- ', 642-3354 Dally Pilot Class1f1t.'lls. __ _64ti~1250 548-7134 929 Capital, Cl\1. l\1ay JO, 31, June Isl. 962-4429,962-8786 Bardon Ln . A. H.B. Marl C.1\1, 549_3728 LUDW JG CDR1UDoMS Like new. a l ug !.Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Auto5, Mew 9800 Auto5, Mew 9800 Auto5, Mew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Moving! Nice pieces-Lots, __ __::•.::4':_·7.::5:.:9::.2.::D.::•.::il,_Y __ •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• of 1'hin gs . 614 Gary 1• • Al~IEYlor . ~ . . ENGllE -CAR :.W.l'llMK , DOES MOT INCLUDE MEW 1975 MAZDAS'*Oit ADVERTISED SPECIAJ.S .... , ,f I:< • ·< THIS OFFER ENDS :SUNDAY.· :ioMe 1·. •·O:OO P.M. ' . i . -' '· ,. ~ . OVER 40 USED MAZDAS IN STOCK NEW '75 MAZDA 'PICKUP {S BNA6173723) IMMEDIATE s31 DELIVERY , 5 199Do~ 594~NTH ..-3UMi tu~ P<•Ct!I n• .. ..-1 •• & l>C ,94 8~ tolol "':I om ""'' I~· 6 '•C 6 "" CO!'l/•"Q c~g.e•"" on1. Oil rrot. O«le!r"' 119Y"'"'" pree ''7~1 80 An.,..•I Pe<c•nl-Rale 17 60'll. '73 RX3 WAGON Air conditioning. (S124W14041 1} 11111 IUll ""'" J>lus la• l h<: 16~ ~ '"'"'""' [lrnt ""'' la• l Ii<;. & all c.ry1r.g ct>•roe• lor onlt :lti ""'' Oele<.-..d pay,...,nl -125511.118 An....,•I P••c•nl-Rale 2 l •6 ... '72 HONDA CAR Coupe. ( 159A638J 51477 5199 •• 561~ 11•1711tll OI"" l>l\t' Ii • J. ht l hl -'010!91 "<:I""'' ..-.C! I&> 6 ioc 6 Ml c.,,.,,"9 t"a'°"' '"' on1, 30 rm• 0<>1.,,eo o;t"'"''"" II""" ,2041 00 Annual P111tuni.1111 FC1!e ~I 13..., '72 PINTO ( 152EJK) 11517 lull l>"C. Ctlus la• I l•C lft~ !>8 10ial ft<> pmt HICI ta• & lte l 111 U•'ll•f'!I ct>argtl ro r only JO """~ Oo"'"e<I p•yment pnc• 111&6.40 . .ilnnu11 P••c•nt~ !late 21.1~ '73 VEGA WAGON Automatic. (205HGL) 51677 5199 ••. S6J18 MO. 11977 tull Df>t• o1u• , •• I hC S61 ,, 1CMM""' ""'' ,,.,.,1 11> .. •c l •·> ~•"«"~ cn•r90s I<>< on1y Jll mos Oo:I••"•" P..1..,.nl Pl"C't 1~001 411 Annu1I P1•cen11~ R1t& 2 1 48'1j, '74 'MAZDA RX4 ' Coupe; Used, Low mi. (284K"SY) EQUIPPED $3199 Mot Stripped · . 5 19900~ 594~NTH i3199 lull proc;e l)lut 1U & he. llM.85 ICM9'""' pml, '""* 1aa l +>C I. 111 ~r'ry1r.g cNr1191 lor """1 49 ""'" °"*'"' ~nl pr>Ui 147!.l .llO. AnQ!,191 p.,c•ntave ~!• 11 80"' '72 DATSUN 1200 4 speed, radio, heater. (776346) 11477 lull P1o<:e 1>111s 11• & ~c nil 40 •otal rm """ "'>el !I• & ltC & 111 C11"1'•t1Q ch••Qll• tor oo\iy JO ...:is. Oe!e<•ed 119Ymtn1 pree s?<Mt.00, Annui! Ptrc•n•-A.att 21 73'1. '70 TOYOTA Mark 11 Coupe. (61 1CRN) 51377 SJ99 ••. $5614 MO. 113 11 lult price 111.,. ti• & Ill;. IStl 14 lol91 ""' P<!'I. lno;t, t10 6 1..: 6 Ml c:.tryl"G c".,~• lot on1~ JO ""'" o.,..,"' a.'J'menl P<M:e • 1 M3.20. Annu•t P...c.•nt-<M f'tll• 21. 7~.,. '72 RX2 COUPE FREE (200G8Y) 12 MOMTK-12.000 MIU FACT. EHGI'* W.AlllAh'TY '72 CHEV. PICKUP LUV. 4 speed, rad io. heater. (02126WJ 51877 SJ99 ••. $6~1 MO. 11877 lull ortc. lllu\ II• I lie. 11111,1 1 lalal m::i, Qml, incl , .. I Hcl. & all catf'Y•"9 ell••~• lor Ofll~ 30 m:ll Oel«r.O 119yment ~ 12e97.111. An11u•I Ptrgenll'l' R.llt 21.18'11. Pl.N 8. Sat-Sun. aft 9am Office Fournlture & Moving : Twin lx.>ds , sofas, Eqwiplftfft 1085 desks, $20 ea. •••••••• ••• •••••••••••• Call 979-9755 Exe svl chrs $15/35, secy ---~----.,,.-1 chrs $6 /24, deiks. dftg Jewelry 8070 s t ool5 /dks , exc dks. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pierce-867 W 19th. CM. WANTED 645-7-411 TOP CAS H DOLLAR Exec ut ive 7 ' solid PAID io'OR YOUR Rosewood d esk & JEWELRY, WATCH ES, credeni.a. Cost $2000 sell ART OBJECT'S, GOLD. S650. 673·7375 S I LVER SERVI CE, Us ED 0 i-· F 1 c E FINE FURN & AN· FUltNITURE, Factory TlQUES. 645-2200 Work Benches. & Odds & Diamond & opal ring, Ends,mustsell,leaseex· matc h earrings. Orig pires. All sales cash. U- $500. $300oroff. 960-3146 provide cartage. Sttle May 28 & 29, 4pm-6 pm. MA N 'S dia mo nd r ing Sat May 31, 9 am-4 pm. $250. or be.f;toffer. 3841 South Main St. S.A. 646 -7014 Ca. MisceUoneous 8080 IBM Exec. Mode l B .••••••••••••••••••••••• typewrite r, ca rbon rib· PUBLIC AUCTION bo n , $169. $50 . dn . MANY ITEMS OF l>~INE 979-8533 ·----------ESTATE JEWELRY, Pianos & OrgaM 8090 ART OBJECTS, AN·••••••••••••••••••••••• TIQUr::s. r,JNE FURN., F I EL D 'S w h E'fC , P l·IONE FOil. IN-~.re ouse F'O. & IJROCH U RE. Sale . 400 I 1anos & 64S-22UO C?r !!ans, new & used ----~-----l Spi n e t s. Gran d s , CARPET IARGAIHS Top Qua I Mill Seconds Used Carpets-Any Size "CHEAP!!" Call 673-7162 Player!>. Going out for business. Rent /opt to buy . K11wa i. Stienway, Baldwin, Chicke ring • Yamaha, Kimball, Wur .• etc. 1''JELO'S. · (714)638-2170 12072 Brook.hunt. GO . WANTED Delectable CoUectable. · TOP CASH DOLLA Mff5 Hardm.~ ·f~te PAID FOR YO"tiR •LIPJJght .wt,\iti Q<: .·l::Ji.. JEWELRY, WATCHES, celle.nt. ~50 ~~ Sale. ART OBJECl'S. GOLD 645-7855e~es. SILVER SERVICE. 1911 So hm e r· Graii d F~NE FURN &: AN· {Parlo r) $1500 /0fr. TIQUES. 6-45·2200 497 -2802 d ays 494-2652 Coast FifewoodSupply Eves. $75. Cord delivered. Sporti119 Gooch 8094 581-1122 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l---=="---1 MATTRESS *MADNESS* *ALL SIZES* Priced to Mo•e! 833-9625 &646-8686 GUH COLLECTORS Double Barrel Rifle and Genuine Mauser Orbendorf Sporter with rear scope base part of r e ceiver bridge. Ex· pensive, but reaSGnably priced. blo phone·call 5-48 -243 1 & l eave BED, King Sz, mattr~ss' meassage for Jim or Box spring,. frame, xtra Lonnie Ladd. Will pro- firm ; still packaged. $215 mptly correspond (Value $525);Queen $195, . (Value $425). JncL de· Shot Gun Jth1~:;i Model 37, livery 631-0488. Us ually pump, mod1f1ed. c~e. Home. Ideal ladles gun. Weighs EARTH WORMS FOR THE GARDEN 1000 for $4.95 Worm Castings $2 Lug 61h lbs. $95. 546-s:.?Of, aft. 6PM. TV, Radio,. HIFi, Ste..-8098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ___ 17_36_._2_G_o_L_h_a_rn_._H_B __ 1 p a n a so n i C ca s s el t e porch player. Aski ng $40 make offer 581-5687 eves or wknds Aluminum Screen 18 x 15. Best Offer. 962-6962 SOF'A BED for sale or Stereo Mcintosh system. tra!Je for twin be ds. Sac. Apt too small. Make 642-1982. offer . Phone552-5270 OLD wa rdrobe trunk $10. lo ... & Marine 2 Maple captain chairs, 2 Equf,.._t ash kit c h e n chairs,••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-8318. loots, Molntenmce/ l-'-"'-'='-----.-1 Ser•lce . f020 POOL TABLE· Massive ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4'. 9" X 9' tournament Electrical-Woodworkins'. 111e . Superb, cond,-Plumbing-Installation Sarouk rug 12 X 19 · &: Repair. Inboard Eng. 833-1144 Repair (i n boat). Scorpio REFRIG, $50. Desk cab. Marine. 548-9704 Sewinif Mach. $40. Erly Underwater Hull Clean- Amer1 ca n Sofa. $40. ing, inspection, replace 493-931-4 props, tines, etc. SC8· 12SS POOL, l2x24 oval loah MorlM . Doughboy, dome, heater, Eq;.l,....nt 9030 filter & access. 586-5250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eastern Ma ple Hi-Boy, ADF-Apelco (Raytheon) matching dresser. $100. OFR 200 A. $t.50. Good Call 963-3678 cond. 545·87·13 I .. ·-NI'!· "rl'\ OC1.N~ Te Sa . "'I 'Ac . - • ••• 3 I . so ·;,~ 675 : 19' • 20< .... 14' 1 fisl $57 35': eq• sl~ <•I • 8 Sp c. la< ca •Id Au WI olt s1, 0> 11~ ·14' Ev er . . .. , : 19 '1 Joi ••• '" 20 ' j lO • Go ex . ., 25' Cr' 0. . fea 6P, AL I 25' 'xl • 644 23 '1 Pl: rw Go 12' SJ{ 30' ! pr; Co ou· M> Pr ... ••• 22' Ea te; co: ~ Ml 7l 21~ SE m , b~ fr< '3 CO< . 21' &i Rh< cl< tr. P2'1 tiO $7. 21; p.( rit in' Sat XI LI W> pt: ... I ••• Trc • •• Ca I ••• ,. ca $51 Ca• wi .. -· ••• Ni< s l1 b• h• ~i MC ... 14 · " " -· '71 8 .. ' , .. , . . . . ... . ~·~ . . . . . . . ' • le•M~ Molwc 'le/ ' •• ~ •• ,.......... tOJ Sc .. r:" '. 9150 !~.~ ............ !~.~~ .~ ......... · .... !~!.~ ~~~-~~ .... !~.'.~ ~~~.~ .... !~.·-~ • •••••••••• •••••• JOKNSON S&AHORSE .••••••••••••••••• J y '73 Chev. l/2 Ton Van Wt-.: 11A y ·roP DOLLAR • WE BUY 9.5,Coodcond.IUon .• '12 Triumph Bonnevlllc. 0 OTA SALE Cu»l . int. $4000. Coa ll l<'OR 1'0P ust-;OCARS S360 • 6(2.7671 Locomplelely chopped. N 'J . MS-08l 7 or 327-Mal i'Ollt;JGN, OOMt:STIC IMPORTS -'-'--;;;;;;,;;;:;:;;-='-"j~~l>~O>!_C ~<h~r~om~•':;·_!m~-~·J 8W 4 Pi~S or Cl.ASSICS WUTSAIL 1 9 7 3 D o d 1 e Van Top 0011 .. r ;·or Any '74 KSl:S Kaw1£11lki $47$ STILL AVAi Sport s man ~t lch e l 111 lfyourcar i.sex.lrucl~llo Makl'or rtlodel. PATlOtSALI '74 Yamaha JOO $400: plus tires. Lo1:1ded. M,oo:l mi. see us first. JIM PANOS Sur~l111St~CI01>00Ut llolhxlntcond67S·682$ HUGE STOCK OF $3800. 673-7U5S "vc!i . IA.UIRIUICK .l::voryth1naCoe:s , , 673.3301 292S llarl>Or Bl vd. MAZDA At Coat 74 lfu.sky 12.S SC. Very 75 .1 Costo Mesa 979-2Soo Must Sell Sat. S/31 fM.11 l, r idden 4 limes, Xlnl lur or Lene HOW! '72 ,.~ord Van. ~ 'l'on. Ii -~OU ! S. Man.chester Anuhei t>:JG·tiOOO Friday.May30, 1975 0,t,tLY PILOT 09. • ·You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad • ~e~k DoorJ, Fa1n.entJrs, e6nd. M u•t 11ell, $700. " l • . cyl. Stick. $1950. TOP Dou.AR Sail•, knot Meters & Dennls,494·3792. · Mii "•~• 545·1YSJ P•ID Autos, Imported Loas. A1sorl.ad Marine M Se • I] W.H UUID '" · · Accus. ~st II 7~!h llonda C .~ ·• · . Thames "dbl. door punel" IMMEDIATB. y ••••••••••••••••••••••• fiat 9725 Rot '725 Fiat 9725 Wests all Corp 300. Lo ml s. $100. & as· . TOYOTA Ready for llot Rod Conv. FOR .. , 1 G-eMral 970 I ••••••••••••••••••••~•· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• 1638Pl U C.M i ume ba\ancti $990. C1itllafter lOam.S48·utn8 -••••••••••••••••••••••• • acen a, &4.6·3472 Alan • · FORIEIGH CARS , SEAGULL 8 HP0.8 . long 1966 """"·C M 646 93'" 1974 Dodg~ V>n, <u.<tom CALL OR COME IN ' LAMBORGHINI. · shaft. Like New. $240. Coo1t Moto Cyde 71 Dutsun Pickup w/shell, int. blt·1n.1ce box & stove. TO SEE US ,\:\:\Clt.,::\('1 ~G • Call84$.s998 S• I Ow ner, xlnt cond. 21,000 mt. Mag whls & AUTO Mikuni Carbs $1550. 581.5344 ruised white letler tires. ...... Power 9040 3-I M M, S29.9S $4200. $39·7611 aft ti PM . NLWPlll\T IMPUHTS CLASS ICS LTD. ••••••••••••••••••••••• JtiMM , $31.95 '73 Ran<'hero Squire. P f!;, 3 l ' 8 ER TR A t.1 23J4Newportlllvd.CM. P /b , A/C, 20,000 mi. • Spor tfisher, fully 645·8008 $3450.A(t S,613·6214. '73 Chevy Ca mpt.>r con· version, $J8tXl or lra<le. 645·8379 .equi pped'. Like ne w. . $28,000., 493·M44 duys, 2 Steen llodaka I~ c.c:s M,Y lo~s ·you r. gain. '75 lll72 Dodge Van , 6 r.:yl. 3100 W.CoaitHwy.N.8. 675·8226eves. $,150 & S20U . 552-7643 . Chevy P .U. 6 r.:yl, uutu, uuto · diu /llc<l ta p e 642 ·9405 g;,-.,;.;;;:;;;t;J;;Q:-;;,;i;i:I-'"~'~'~';_· -------1 Hi ll . 'fake over PY· 1 . · 52300 847 {HJ!j ---------: 19 ' Evinrude 1/0 , ovhld ,, nl cnls. Call afl J l.>J\f, _P uyer. · · · · 200HP, trlr, bst offer. 73 Bultaco 250 Pursang 847·2709. Autos Want.cl 9590 TOf' CASH! . 1:146·3727; 213/592-2668 Desert/l\1 x. Xlnt Cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fur r.:lcan us£'d cars & "7Fc)~;,;;;<;;;;;;ii;;;;;~j~16~2~5/~bc"'·~Sl'..'O~f~C.'.':r~b7~>-':'J9!'!'>J~j 74 Dodge \.~ Ton Pickup. tr u c ks ! II ow a rd 14' FG, clean 'umily ski or . 360·V8 En,w:. Big tires, Oronge Cow.ty'1 Chevrolet, Dove & Qu;ul rish. 45HP OB & trailer 63 USA A-10 model, must step bu1npers, P /S, p. H ighest Sluyer Streets. nr. :0.1:.icArthur. $.S75. 962·5618 · sell quick. $l50/ o!fer. di:;c brakt!s. Xtr:.i fuel on Imports Jamboree and Bristol. 7'S.:~~i;h:;:-:z;;-;h;::;l -'C~'h'."""'.'~k·~84~7~·7!'9~26~··c__ ___ l tank. ~.150. &&ti·ti238 aft lill Maxey Tobola Newport Beach. 1133·0555. 35' Sport J.'isher & fishing SPM ---,-equip. AM &VHi" radios, '72 YAMAllA360MX, C1:1ll Roger or ill WE MEED sip:; 5, $6,800 or trade for Xlnt cond. $600. '67 INTLScout. low mi, 847-8555 USED CARS! !smaller boat. 545-7645 540·9136 best offer. FREE Af'f'R.AISA.L ·ro p D 0 L LA It ;·o H 75l·ti952 "000 ·1 1 . "7"'AND •7·• We buy used cars & .... "' J lruc ks . Call GROTii DO J\I ESTICS CHEVROLE'I' for a free & IMPOR'fS appraisal. 'l'J I EOOOftl:'. GROTll CliEVROLET ROBIMS FORD 1821 1 Be ach Ulv<l. 2060 Harbor Bl vd. 1-luntinglon Beach COS'l'i\ i\.1£SA 847-60tl7 549·3331 642-0010 ---------- SELLING YOUR CAR? 4 8 • P a c e ma k e r •74 Yamaha Enduro. l Spoi-ts fis he r Twin 370 mi. Excellentoond. Must 19"8 Ford Panel Truck Cummins diesel. Bait Sell ! $800.548·4860 Classic. Gd body & runs Lank.ship lo shore radio, •72 H d 750 . ped good. i60Q. 642-ll514 CB radio. V•l1'" single on .8 " eqwp side band auto pilot w/ $680 111 tounng access. V•.1 9570 A l d " ·,. r· d · Im mac cond. $1600 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• u o 1rec ion 10 er . 645.47a.a VA N ,. R · s o ' Water maker & many · ~ r e am · other xl~as. Low hi-s . ,74 Yamaha yz l25. Xlnl C::omplcte c~st.om w~.rk. O r an ge Coun t y's nc ~·est , most modern authoril.t>d dcal<'r • SPt.:CIALI ZJNt; IN Sulr.:s Se1·vice Leas in~ l 'll E :\t'.W l!Ji.-. 1..\7\1BOHG11 1 :\I URRACO NOW (JN DISPL.\ Y The New Esoada's AllHIVINl; !iOON 011e n i\.1 on·St.1l. !I to 6 Closed Sun. AUTOCL,\SSICS, 1.1'1). 10591 Bech ler River, t'ountain Valley, Ca . 714/557·3345. 714 /963-8381 . G9 LOTUS ELAN Conv. 125 MPll,34MPG. He blt Eng. $3,SOO. 494.3973 ' Tor PRICES PAID Sips 8. Mint Cood. Orig. cond. Extras. lli.25. $1800. Pll . art 6 .JO, 0 w n t . W i 11 S AC . SS2·7147 _4_9'_·_034_4_· -----114·328-8555 f or Imports I Buy Junk Cars .... di 9707 ----"'-'-'-· '""'"'---1 ••· .•..•.••.••....••••• ---------ISOCC llonda dirt bike, $70. '66 r~ord Super Van. •Ii Paid for or Not .·14' SKI BOAT, 15 f-IP ca:11 847.7426 eves or Performance 240-6. Just D L • 1 We lluy Your Old Car. '7J Audi 100 LS 4 dr. Evinrude. 1'railer. Cov· weekend. r_eblt. C rp~, pane l, gd ean ewis ~l run n in g or not. Top Sunruor. a1n /fn1 . u /<:, e r . Mi sc x l ras. $750. --tires & paint, nu brks. l9S6 llarbor,C.J\t . Do ll ar 1>ai d Also 24hr .aga t e Ur n. X·cond . ·~ CO&if ~ .. HEADQUARTERS IM SAMTA AMA FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALES•SERYICE•PARTS•LEASIMG ~I!~"'-- -:__., -~· "a ·~ U , o I -•• I' .: :q _--. •'.JI SPORTS CAR CENTER URGE SELECTION OF HEW & USED IM!lOlTS 120 W . WARMER SANTA AMA ' 640-4161 '71 Suzuki 125, Dirt. New &14·2513. 646·9:.KIJ towing service. ~·S<&I 831·!fl07 e ng. & tra ns . $295.i---~.-----I I : 1J~~n~~~~~e:~?:. ~ft 4fM·8944. ~~·.~:.--: ••••••• !~.~~ ~"!.°.~·.~:.--: .•..... !~!!~~.°.~·.~:."! ....... !~~~~a:-.~~·.~:.": ....... !~~~~~~~·.~:.--: ....... !~!!~~"!:'.~·.~:.-: ....... !~~~~~·.~:.--: ....... !~~~ tank , fish /ski , $1700 . 197.5 Suzuki Tfl.1 125 very 546-5316 trick & very fast. $5SO. 642·0514 20' J /O with trlr. New f:.tc· tory e ng. & outdrive. '71250Yamahaw/getkit. Good fishing boat. l\1any ~. 1956 Anaheim St., extras . $2 500. Days Costa Mesa 645-7868/ Eves&31·15Z1 <---------! 25' Chris Craft, Cabin Motor Homes. Cruiser. Xlnt Cond. $2400 Sale /Rent '9160 o r make reasonable of. ••••••••••••••••••••••• , fer . Call . .>40·0378 a ft 1973 Dodge 21·. 14 ,000, mi. 6PM . like new, stove. oven. ALLG LASS Pac.-e maker ref ri g., gas ~ elec. tu~ & 25' 210HP Chry. Many s hower, toil et holdin g · xtra!:I . $9695/bs l orr. tank, lge dbl~, hot & 644·6041 cold a /c. Asking fl,000. 846-8173. 23' Chri s. Inboard.. .. •. b 11 ,1 .. Ply /glass. % wet deck 74 ,-ire .a ... l~l·~otor rwd. depth finder, on trlr. 1-lome_. 13,500 miles, self . Good diving. $000. Also contained: many extras. 12' glass s kiff, $SS. I-Ill. Days 55ti-~490 a sk for 536·2658. Phil; eves ~-9631 30' ELCO Classic, 1948 ex· Trailers, Travel 9170 press, T IS. Reblt Engs., ~····~··••••••••••••••• Comp. redone inside & 68 Aris tocrat Land Com· out. Cockpit couches , mander. 16112: ft . Travel Much More. XJnt Cond. Trailer. $350. 545-1953 Pri. Ply. $6,950.675·3238. 16· Shas ta, s leeps 6, stove loots Sail 9060 & re frig . SllSO firm .. ••••• ; ••••••••••••••••• 962·7312 !--~--~----! 22~ Herreshoff. Americ.an '72 Apac he Mesa, fully E.agle g~fr ngged with eqpt. Sips 6, xlnt cond. teak option at deale rs used 3xs. $2000/ofr cost/reduced. 546-7112. 493·8174 or 493·9811 • CATALINA 22, xtras. Aul Se •le & M u s t s e 11 . E v e , 0 r.-e 7 14 . 9 62 · 467 3 I D a y Ports 9400 • 213-594·2808 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------11\l ags for sa le. 4 Jug SEX SAIL ... 1942 all w/good tires. Bes t offer. m ahog -20 ' s loo p 8 ' 847 ·0824. beams, s ips 2, head , ---------! fresh waler sys. 2 sets Trans Axle-'64 VW Hu s. sails. Dry sailing, xlnt $75 I Pull & $5(1 you pull. cond. $2600. 64.5-1790. Ev es ti46-3609. Days 644·5404 ext 26. CLASSIC 21· Sailing Dory W/Sails Autos for s• &lrailer 778-1448 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . AMI I Rhodes 19. fully equip. in· cir:ics 9520 cld'g spinnaker gear & ••••••••••••••••••••••• trailer . 645-5137. 1950 Studeba ke r Com- P28 Mahg. Sloop, excep· mander 4 dr, xlnt cond. tionally clean. Mus l sell $495 536 0560 $7800 firm . P vt Ply. · 213/439·450laft4P~1 . Very RARE '53 Nas h P ·CAT , xlnt cond .. new Hea.ley wit h '59 Cad r igging&gear.Trlr.ask· ~n gt ne . i\1ake .orfe r . ing $1200. 642·8340 675·0970, ask for Bill . Sabot w /all racing gear. Xlnt cond. $200. 673·7489 1951 Ply m outh Coupe., driven under 46,000 mi. 1 Ownr liesl orr over $600. &l6·2562 Recreational VHiclr1 9530 SABOT DINGllY $225. 645·4445 ----'-"'-"-"'----I • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• •-•• • • • • LIDO 14 No . 3576 lfaveyour cake&eatit w/trailer . Xlnl cond. i>vt too? Charitableorganiza· ply. $1575 .644·2877 tion orrers year ,ro~nd free s torage, main· loafs, Slips/ teoance, s ubstantial tax · Docks 9070 write-off + your unlimit· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ed access in r eturn for occassional, insured use Tron1portation or your unit. f'or info call ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714 /645·1S80. c-rs,Sflle/ io:it 9120 Wheel Drhn 95SO ,...................... . •••......•....•...•.. I' Hideaway Cab.over '62 SCOUT, new trans, campe r , nu cushions, re blt motor. new paint, S.SOO. 846-0720 good wide tires, $1000. Ca ll 645·8474 an s PM. C1i1 m pcr Shell for 6' bedl---------1 with boot, like new $200. '73 Toyota Land Cruiser. 548·2738 Xlnt cond. Many xtras. · Mobla. Homes 9140 Lo mi's.$4500.536·192'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 Blazer , Corvette eng. 40'x8' 'fraile r. New s t v, auto. positracti9n, p/s, rerr &. hot waler t ank. big tires, cycle rack & Adult pk. $2200-i>pacc more. $3300531}-!il&leve. ~·.~~ $60mo. 557·5105 for Trwcks 9560 . ···················-·· Nice 8x35 Mobile Home. Must Sell Immediately! s ips 3·4. 1sn BR, kill· '73 Chev. L.U.V. Pickup ba/liV. Space hlr, wtr camper s hell. ore road htr, stove, rehig. Ample Tacoma Wheels, new s torage. $1 100. Prtv. P01t· wide oval tire, new ad· ty. ~·2388 aft~ pm. justable shocks. Clean! Mt!:':C:•/ $2300 /Best orfer: 493-3409 9150 70 Datsun Pi ck u p ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /camper shell, $1200 "72. YAMAJiA 100 MX 875·0178 art 3:3:1 BESTOft'FER '74 FORD :\.'1 Ton Ranger • 64$-8925. ----°"'O...C=---1 C•mpe r special. 18,000 74 vz Yamaha 12Scc. Xlnl mh-$4300. or best offer. cood . Call a rt. 5pm. 548-6577 548·2'138• $500. l.·.-,-f-O_R_D_C_o_b_·C-o-rw-ar_d_I '71 Kawasaki 500. Show Picku.p, 4SOOO mi1 A·l, Bike. Many xlraa. Lo Stlip bumper, k>ck DOJlet. mi's. $850. $4$.9340. 6f&.2022or $48-14112: 4 DA y SPECIAL! 7M!~~h~J~:~.fRl.-SAT.-SUN. ONLY! ANY NEW 1975FORD IN OUR TREMENDOUS INVENTORY! 0 N L y OVER DEALER'S COST! (Dealer's Cos( includes Freight, Prep., end fact. Hcldbacks) HUG• SELECTION! BIG CHOICE OF COLORS & MODELS! PLUS Terrific Discounts on ALL NEW CARS & TRUCKS! NO DOWN PAYMENTI NIW 1975 f·250 o/o TON CUSTOM ITYUllDE P.U. UST ..•. $4139 DISCOUNTED .... $944 SALE PRICE .... '3895 100% FINANCING On Appro...d C•itdlt lnclvdinlj Toa & Licen .. NIW 1975f·102 CUSTOM Y, TON STYUSIDI PICK0 UP Ind. ouhide "'irrou, •"tro coollnt rvdlator, (Ser. #~IO!llU001 46) UST •... $4355 DISCOUNTED •..• $860 SALE PRICE .....• •3495 Oa All NEW '74 & '75 CARS, TRUCKS & '74 Mo<lel USED VEHICLES * 36 or '48 Month1 to Pa y * No Sid• Loan1 -One Contract Onlyl * No Hidden Chorge1 or Balloon Poyment1! * 45 Ooy1 Before fir1t Poymentl SH'" today 1w th• H•Y woy lo buy thotlNHw cor °' trwk you've bHn wontingf . . NEW 1975 PORD BRONCO WAGON -• .. , •fOO "'· ovw pCI<...,., ·--~ -· _ .. 1 ........ ,Og ~'"-,i;, "JOOO OoNi" "°"'••I•, 07h l.S ,;,..,,-•II'" •• .,1.,, l••ln1 o"•J) H 0 SS ... , oh••"oto•. ~otdbo••d _._, HO 70 D'"'P bano•r Stoc• •I~~ !S.. •Vl:SGl,WlllOll LIST . $5199.80 DISCOUNTED . $104.10 SALE PRICE ...... '5095 NEW 1974 COURIER WITH 1800 CC CALIF. ENGINE 10• l ;. ..i...1 boo••·"'"~ . .;,""• ..... ,:.... l•d odo1 ......... . , •... -... ··•-11 ·~ ... ..,,, ........ ,... •.. f.,.,._.,.,..!Dc>o," '"'"" "-cl •• 1 ........... •~· ........... '""' '''· 00 ........ . ........ , . l.S o,..p olo .• •'"' '-"' !M• • SGTAl't)~.S•OJ LIST .... $3203 DISCOUNTED .... $308 SALE PRICE .... '2895 2Y2 ACRES OF TRADE-IN SPECIALS. NO "AS IS" SALES! •--.'.!! ~lllO 2,, ,.,.....~!~¥ERICK 2 \f4 -ri...i ............ i.w 099 ... _. --99 i.w ... .'t ...... 11.1\ ' (l OVl lJ) 'II CHm CAilAT 11 FORD FAIRLANlg 1...U.'l"l#OIT ....... _ feet. s 10. ............ -.-....... . :.J.:.--M'>--,.!11»/111 995 :t:'.,,.,..,. ••••~IJllCN) 99 .... ·-··~~ •• . ......... M; ... . 72 CHm llALll2 '"-··-·-···~·· s 495 •-11>1· ,.._ -··· .... ,. ... 1, (Jl ffOl'I) '74 CAPRI 53495 "'M/PM .... to, 4 1_.i, ,..,..,.. ................. . i-o111oo.111t JWI '72 COUUR 2 DOOR 72 FORD VAN '61 FORD GALAX1£ ··-'"" ...... 51199 '""'°''a'' <o...i, "°~o• ... _.,"II ' ...... , fWYW111! '68 TOYOTA CORONA lo~ .,,1...,.,. Ga1!o<o• .. 1 «•1 ... 00•1 51099 '73 FORD SURFER Vlll 53985 '72 DATSUN PICKUP '70 MUSTANG 2 ~R "'"'° """'" -,._...., ~·· """· ••• , ....;,.. $ 699 1•11c1~1 '73 BRONCO WAGON ...... -.-...... ""'· ... -.. ,..,,,_,.,....,.. <17•JE'I 54495 '75 F·250 UTILITY P.U. OM-r•.ooo"''"'" $AV• l·"""'"""""·' BIO (~10,911 '74 FORD f.100 4,4 12795 ~~· " '3395 ~;~· -· '2195 M~ '"""'"'-·-• "~'· 54994 po~o•u ... &boa••""-. 10.000 ..,,._, (1<'>71,U! WE LEASE ALL POPULAR.NMAK.ES OF CARS & TRUCKS • '"" ""'· ,..,.., . -................ -·· .......... -· .... --It .... .c. -'-·· .... _,, -........... . ..... _ .. _,, . -· -... . " ' ij 10 OAll Y PH.OT Fr ida Ma 30 1975 Autos, IMpOl"fred Ailto1, l111porttcl Autol, IMporftd Avt.1, l"'l'erted i.wto1, IM'I,..,.. •••••• y. y . I ............................................... ····"···················· ................. , ..... ················· ~-~•••••••••••••!!.~~ ~~-~•••••••••••••!!~~ ~~-~•••••••••••••!!.~~ ~~.: •••••• , •••••• !!~~ ~~••••••••••••••!?~~ Oatwn 9720 ~~•••••••••••:!?!.! ~~••••••••••••!?~~ · •••• ~·.~~ ••• !?~! , , . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Student mu11 t 111.111. 73 5 . 7 136 A00U0Dl foxp, t_op•d'"'"rd. WILL. BUY YOUR ~ Datsun 510, auto. reblt Datsun pickup. Ex. cood. 197 WA . D S LEE : .. m >. "~' or DATSUN. TOYOTA <UK. S9SO. $2000. 7'1· .. ~J DES qwck "le. 979·9008 011 VOLt<SWAGEN \l611.(l97< , -MER C ·E • e A•slia·H•al•y 9709 PA ID FOR OR NOT. Fial 9725 BENZ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• WILi.. PAY 1'Qp l973 l ~me green 240 e•••••••••••••••••••••• Wants to buy You a Steak dlnnerr • . .. Au.ton llealcy wia27 OOL~AR . CALL KENT Dal,su.n z. Auto .,,.n,., ORANCOE COUHTY'S EXEC. CAR • Chevy Engine, power-ALLEN, 540-Q.l.t! Anl/t m radio. 673 4331. NEWEST & L.tJlGEST l E glid~ trans . $1000. c.ash. '7:1 DATSUN 610Sta. Wi:n. '74 _8210, 4-0r, 4 spd, low IMM EDJA'f}!! 450 SE At M5·3457 tl/H,gdcond.~-m1le11ge, xlnt cond . OELIVEflY $252 SO mo • • MW 9712 962-&>SOeves: 492<.!195 All Models &Colors • Air ; power windows; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·12 240 z . A1n /Fm radio. '73 -240Z·Brown, luw Dick Miller Motors AM !F'M stereo ; low your ORANGE COUNTY'S Air. Mags. ltadials. l mileage, Mags. Xlnt ~ I mm miles; JG.mo. Open end OLDEST owner.$4250.493-7946. Condit ion. S<&,550. ~ lcase.$15,000-...w t;buy- 673·3750 back $10,354.00; Depree. ® STEAK HOUSE 52987 Here's how. Just come 1n to the showroom and test drive any one of the great AMC cars: Gremlin, Hornet, Matador, or the all-new Pacer. w e·u give you a special coupon. limit one pe r family, good for one Strip Steak Din ner at your local Rustler Steak House. It's that easy. But act soon. Remember. coupons are limited. so it's first come, first served . . a Rustler steak. B!\1W bug {sm ) Saies·Servicc-Leasu1g Roy CarYer, Inc. Rolls lloyce B!\tW 234 ~/.:17th St. Cosl:i Mesa :>-16 -44·14 •The all new 530 1 is available for itnrnl'diatl de livery & tesldri\'l' Sales •Sft-Tice ·Leasing• CreYierlMW 208 W. 1st Street Santa Ana 835-3111 •Closed Sunday • &$ '71 DATSUN 240 z Automalic transm1ss1on , .iir con ditioning. ,\~1 r;.idio with tape ptaycr t7"2G IVl $3477 <d~~~ , 1'1M Hurhor .I; M 641> 930~· 1973 240 Z . 4 spd. Air . Am /1-~m stereo w/ tape. New tires & Koni shocks. $4795. 830·0174. '74BMW2002Tii 197 1 Dats un Station '7 1 D<ats un pick-up v.·/ catnpcr s hell. 898-1~ 240Z SALE 4 la choose! SlL.:ks & 1\ulornal1cs. :.ill full y equipped ; mag v.·hcels. s poile r, air l'on- ditioning. A!\l /F'!\t 1·udio , &luw n1 iles! MUST SELL Ha Reasonable Offers Refused! NEWPllf{T IMPOR TS Pe·rfect cond ition , Wagon. Very good_condi· :.im /£m stereo, $1600/of-l~on, goo~ gas i_n1lc~ge . fe r . 497-313311333·675-l Good paint & 1nler1or. ±m_. _ ---~~~:i~C all :.iflcr 7 pm. JlOOW.CNstHwy.N.8. c It 97 17 ------642·9405 ••~•••••••••••••••••••• '71 2-IOZ Silvcr/Ulk . 1\ir. -,------ 1971 Dodge Coll. 2 Dr .. ~M -~'tl'1 . Cas. Xlnt cond. ·73 Ui\TSUN pickup . .i A1C, uuto tr<ans-1na g 075-5287 ------spd. lt&ll. 1na~s. IUOO. ;.~ s . yo v.· rn •I es -Want a~I r1:sult~ ti-12 ·5671'1 ~n\~ln~t;: s1~:. ;~'.;~11 l. . I I __ ,,...,. --~.~~·-~:.':' ....... !~.~~ ~~~~·.~:.v: ....... !~~~ I !"!.~':.~~.--: ....... !~~~ !~~·.~:.--: ....... !~~~ ~"!.~~·-~:.--: ....... !~.~~ ~':'.~~·. ~:.v: ....... !~~~ ~"!.~~·.~.e.v: ....... !~.~~ ''C~B. Radio'' 28 Channel with the purchase of any 4 ·Wheel Drive Unit at UNIVERSITY '75 JIMMY '75 GMC 112 TON '75 GMC 3,4 TON '·75 SUBURBAN • TERRA-VAN 4 WHEEL DRIVE 4 WHEEL DRIVE 4 WHEEL DRIVE 4 WHEEL DRIVE 4 WHEEL DRIVE ~ .tfilk ~i;:.;o, y·~ -' "J . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~~:~J~~~s~5 OVER 80 TRUCKS IN STOCK DRIVE YOURS HOME TODAY! TAKE YOUR CHOICE$877 BRAND NEW '75 GMC PICKUP '66 CHEV. '68 AMC '68 DODGE $3377 NOVA JAVELIN SST DART CPE. 6 cyl .• a uto., Automatic, Automatic, power steering, air cond., radio, heater. VIL941 . radio. heater. WBN765 radio. heater. ZVE 105 '69 MERCURY Morqui 5 lroughom Coupe llul"""'"''" -•' >t•••""> ...,.._., "'"""'' o•• •<"'<1.. , . ., whO<I '"""'''''°a!>&,.,,......,,.., JM/,JI '66 CHEV '68 OLDS DELTA 88 """''''"'" '''""" '"'"'""II· """"' ~'""'' l(>o"l"l "' '71 OPEL $1077 $1377 '70 DATSUN '68 FORD 5 10 GALAXIE H.T. """'" '" ·'"' • ""<:'<I 1<1•01' $1077 ""'"" ~ ... ,.,.. ''"'"~'·''" """'"• "'~'.""' '"'' '" HONDA CIVIC CVCC Sedan E.P.A. Lab Tests for Highway 4 speed • 38 ·mpg 5 speed • ~2 mpg " #510952. $3777 ORDER YOUR CHOICE OF COLORS See what the world is coming to at Orange County's • $4700 TAKE $s711 YOUR MO. '72 CHEVY WAGON CHOICE '72 CHEV. VEGA WAGON '71 CHEV MONTE CARlO Automatic, power steering, air cond ., vinyl lop. 979DCN. ~speed, radio, heater. whitewall tires. 09JFUH '71 BUICK '73 OLDS RIVIERA II IOYALE COUPE ""'""'"''°· ._ ......... "';I, -~· l>' ... h. .. .,..,.., ....................... ,,,, ........ b, ..... . ""<on<! ,., .. ., uo" & witl<I<>'"'' !l~C.JTI ~•nyl 1op. oor con!! lOll.JllE! $1977 $2277 '71 OLDS '72 CHRYSLER 98 L/S Coupe New Yorker ·1,,_,ha,,. HT •• ,>o "°"""'· oi. «>nd . Ii" Wl>ttl full -· lo<lory ~"<""d ,AM/~M.¥•"¥1 '°"· 111! -·· <'";,. "'''"°' (095"J~> '72 OLDS '74 FORD TORONADO PINTO >"u" _ _, "''•-'""!op,>'~, ... <12•HHVf il•~'n ""·''~'• • ""-"""'• AM<FAA ""'"" ""llOH No. 1 • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY HONDA Dealer. ' • • • 120 W. W;,1rlll't' $.1646.00: Int. $-W.55.00 + •ti So. l\'l:un tux & li e. $214J)(); Sec. de· S:1nt:1 Ana ~.'>7 i 1:1:! posit ; Se r . ff02lr111. '73 FIAT 128 SL Jim Slemons 1"1ports 833-9300 4 :-;_peed lri1nsmi ss1on, 'ti7 f\lcrccdes lienz w rcbll r1.1d10.heull'r.<80JJIPl3) eng\ne . ltuns rea l $2577 snlooth & 4uict. Extras J) l • in.:l clcc. sunroor, disc • "fl.II UDlA lJrukc:s. !\1ichelin lires, t\11\. Cle. S3 4UO. $1500 dn · S25 /wk bu l . Ca ll VOLVO anytin1c, 640-4438 or 1>44 ·167~ " 1~66 HotlJQI (I>, 64b 9301 73 128 Wagon, good look· M,B 74, 280C, Rare clb cp. ing economical. $lSUO Cr in Pu(f. Becker 536-518J eves. a 1n /fm s te r . F /Pwr. 1..:===='----I 450!)L trs. whJs . 6 mo. '73 850 Spider. AM /1''M new . 20 M fwy mi. Pr/P· radio, 2:1000 1ni, gd cond. ty. Days 213-753-lSAl Sat $25 75. /bes t offer. 548-215J Sun & eves. 714·b'75·1240. Dick Miller Motors aa1110 SPECIALS of the Week '69 FIAT 850 Spid•r (YJZ604 I $1399 '69 FIAT 850 Spider (448Al''T ) $1499 '72 FIAT 128 2 Dr. (:'i:11c; 11.1 $1799 '69 FIAT 124 Sport Coupe <ZMJ149) $1699 '71 FIAT . 124 Sport Coupe {3410NJI $2699 '73FIAT 128 SL Coupe tAC0029) $2799 '69 FIAT 124 Wa9on (ZAT799l S-1499 '68 FIAT 124 Spidor <XEN333) $1999 '69 FIAT 124 Sport Spid•r (~PS251) $2299 '71 FIAT 850 Sporl c_. C52JCXR) $1799 Dick Miller Motors .1101110 Factory Authorized Sales. Service. Leasing, & Overseas Delivery 120W.Warner -at So. Main SantaAna 557·2132 Honda 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Honda SGA&B I 0°/o Over Factory Invoice plus your (•hoicc of :.ic - cessories. T & L. Herb Frieclmtder 537 -5464 893-7566 JC19"•• 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hare ;?:10 SL 'GS Sharp! 2 'l'ops. 4 Sptl. !\tust sc\L S.S0001 bst orr. 642-9t:iti6 MG 9742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hl71)\1(; MIDGE'!' H.a ti lo I JI eater /'l'on · neau /Car cover Xlnt mechanic.al condition. Looks new /sil'!glc owner. $11375. 5-18-5821 Ponche 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7-1 Porsche 91·1. Choe. brown, tan int. 5 spd. S· inst . Am /1-~m 8 track stereo. Alloys. 17000 mi. U nder wa r ranty. PEH.F ECT! 493·2977. l%5 Pors.:he, xl nt cond. am /t'1n ta p e d ec k, radials, S3950. &16·808.5 POil. '69 91 l1', loaded, im- n1:.ic., 2~.000 1ni. :.iir. Best ol'fcr. t71,1)96J-61:!80 ·72 9 l ! l ' 1";:1rg.a, gold. loaded, $8400. 752 -7311 (9-5 Wkdays) Mazda 9738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f'.11\ZJ),\ • • NOW Brand New '74 MAZDAS OUR HUGE DISCOUNTED PRICE $3395 LESS $500 CISH REBATE FH6!\1 . Mazdi Mtr~ of America Your Price Only • $2895 Loaded v.·ilh: AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION IMMED. DELIVERY li'\C l.U DING ALI. ·r 111 s: I::CONOJ\ll CAL . P0\\'1-:rtF UL S I LKY SJ\10()'1'11 HOT ARY t.:NG INf; with 3 yr. fJ 0 .000 n1 ilc factory warranty -heater - recli pinR; NauJ?ahvde BUCKE1' SBA1'S with m c m o r y r r o n t • Passenger seat -S 7l Jag. XJ6, Low miles. RADII\':!. Pl,Y T IRES! Must Sell. Bes t offer. J>OWEn DISC brakes 1.:.:A:::"='oc., "A"i '.:.· •:c7cc•.:.· '="°":.:....__ ' -r u II c a r p e t i n g -TAC ll O!\I ETER --= Maada 9738 console -rear window ••••••••••••••••••••••• defo,g~er -Electric '72 Mazda H.X 2. New cloek -TINTED e ng., Lircs-air. tape, very <:I .ASS LOCK I NG c lean.$1495 .t>l5·K.<;.16. F'UEL CAP -s im . Mercedes IHZ 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t\.1ercedes Be nz 1972 220, Gas showroom condition, Mich X, A/C, Power . $6500. 49'-J-3808. • \\'l}(Jd s tt•crinJ? wheel. Al s o n1u c h mor e e quipment too numt'rnus to ment.ion HX3 Co v11 c <Ser: #l'38!15 .. Vlfl>; CAN G IVf; YOU Mercedes Benz AL L THE Executive Car C-R·E·D+T 450 SE Yoo Need & Still Save 's'ou !\t oney s2s2;ao mo. I -·-. ~~·1 /Mw :;e r~~~d Jow~ BEACH ~~~:: 36 month open end MAZDA SIS,000 cost : buy.t1atk SI0,354 ; Dcpret;, $41WG : Int. $1455. · + 1'ax & Lie. $214; Set. deposit ; Ser. 0297 14 Jim Slemons lmp,orts 17141 IJJ.9300 11331 HACH IUD. llUNllMCTON HACK call direcL or collect & SU\'(' 842-6666 •• • ~.l .. •rtM ................. .......u...i ....._u...i Auto1.U11<il Dfl •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• , Avtos, Used Friday, May 30. 1975 DAIL V PILOT ii Pwaclte • •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ~· 9750 v-~-C1~lloc 9915 llewrolel 9920 c-~ lal ,,30 fwd 9940 Autos. Uu d Autos, UHd Autos, UHd ········-·· .. -...... --.... 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• _.......... • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• \fl 74 POll~ .. 911 ;••;•~•;••;·~·~·••·~; '&e CAO Convt, white. Ex coM;;u•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;;,•·;~;;•;;;;.;,;;;~: M..-cwy . 9950 Ot•MOtalle 9955 ftlyMOUftl tt'it" Spt.f.· g.al.abe1lO)'f·5 Eniines/C• ~g.o915 cond . lnalde /out . CHIYIOLIT lmmac. 73 l\of11rk IV , 302V8 . RIH. Air. PS·PB. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••·'I· 1>p·4-I 1)-Wll'ed~row· <B + ... lO rs. n Completely restored. SALES 17 ,000 ml . Lo1t ded. 16mpl($800.&lZ·~l tives '72 Merc ury l\lontetty 4 SalesandServlce 111, mlleaa•·n ~~-_.cond!-D '?' am ot a !pm) Le1vln1forH11.wali.$99S. I •SERVICE Wht/Wht inter. $69S3. d~. P /1, p /b, a f.c. $1500. OLDSMOllLI ATLAS l cover lnct)544.98lt an. '84.S·m4 212 H..._. l&Yd. 55:!·308o afl tiP,.1. ·53 Jo-Ord. 15 cyl. Oriicinal, 963·7408 GMC TRUCKS '70 vw e COSTAMt'<."• -----good running condition (,lo," ~ ug , new '68 Cohvert, blk, loaded, i;:...,n Cor••tt• 9912 Mustw 9952 HOHD•c••s Chry1ler~ .. ise::.an:•oii!J; :A~t· transmission & brakes. xlnt eond. Id Urea k>w 546-1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·542·6353 ••••• ;;:............... U I ~lty'::..._ Open Oally &~~:-:lii" . Ma11. >tlht i:oncr: Or11: Gd cond. $1300. 645-3'42 mi. Good DejJ ! St&·:ie.56 '71 Che vy·· Impala. p/a, REW ARD OffllllD ·oo Chttteau Wagon. RIH. '74 rt1ustung II V6, loaded. . n Yert ~ p:i,1. , C owner. 673·6&00an 6 PM 70 VW Bui, $1450, needs Camero 99 17 p/b, air, 30,000 miles. ForinfoleadingLothe re-air, uux tank, trlr pk", $3950. Days 833·2400 .2~HarburBlvd. ~29 ~-Iarbor Blu•d., l\ton·F'rl. work. Call aft. 6PM fl$00. 673-7459 eve uft turn of .a 1900 Corvette $1600. or uffcr. J)ays, X489, Eves 979.2966 Ken. Collita Me1a 540-9640 Costa Mesa 847,c"~". ••••••••••••••••,.•••••• SPM . 673-8650 or e\•es, tl75-0IJ87 ' , 546 .. 1934 1970 Porsche !UI 'I'. ~ '68 C61moro All , p/i, p/b, (ne w silver pa1ntl s tolen . - ---'65 l\t ustang, 6 cyl, auto 71 CUTLASS .51peod.Stt1roo. am/fm rud & air. Wide from N.li. urc.a la_111 Wed 57 foord : xlnl l'01tJ. rebll tr<1nsm. relllt enK G rno·~ '68Pl.Y4 Dr, lonulcs, a1~ MUSTSEI,f.~67S-4466 s.sy___w B!;ijta.1tic,81-Erut. Yrcli&whJa.643-l.a&a ci..-.1&er 9925 eve. 5/21 /75. b/5-2445 or eng. $625 or best offer. ago . Pvt ply. SKUU . 4 DOOR HARDTOP cleiln. $950. 5'18-7482 new paint & fire9., Xl11l , .. J 644·9000 IW2-087~ 919·9657 aft tl1>m, 646-2022 . ,._ d •uiru. Ch•vrolet 9920 ••• •••••••.• ••••• • ••••• • ~ .....,n · """"'.496-9556. 174 C H "'S ., ,, Automatic trans1nission, __.,. 0r5C '64 VEEOUB '65 CO RV AlR CORSA cond. Blue w /whito vi11yl Good cur. S4W. offer or air , g d cu11J . $595. power stcc rin~. ai r con· ' · cy ' !lu ,7 3 p he ••••••••••••••••••••••• '69 New York.er, x 1 nt OrYe e 6 ta. \-.~IL N('w ..,rakes. '6S Mu s l a n ~. V M, ;.iuto, l!l64 V \LIAN·r 6 I i Ideal for school : some Convt. Over $1000 in veil-top. $900. 544·900!J Stingray trade. l\.l u:-;t iicll. 548·419'.l. 642-2920 ?~~~~i~f • viny I top . ~~~l~~ew paint & tire Taraa 911 scars, but personality: (.>d ln 140 cng. & drive .... ,., 1 11 R iil Bcautllul black in and dep e ndubJe. $450 . '84 Chrysler NY. Sta. ucau 1 u ye ow, · '69 Hancheru, PS/PB. OldtmobHe 9955 $1777 ·12 Gold Du ste r, 00 ..... 1 outside , Am t 1'~m'IS track _.,._._·_Uc!2'1'c.c.· _______ I train. Mech. xlnt. Body & Wag. Looks good, nee . uuto. 1ra11 s, P /S, 7600 A'l'/ AC. t:('nl top. $1 400. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eJ l • . ca s set tc. rad I u~ Int. guud·nced11 lop. Best tlrei, trans wk. $lOO. act. miles,Jic.907MMP. D ays 896-4195 i:::ves eOJ\ An.; a '·' •te reo ui.dlo, air, s spd, offer. Steve, -493-0041 or 642_.... Ji'm Slemons K-46.752.!I '68 Della 88 : Good rWling tw\O S2500/ofr. x Int. 111~ !j71 •1__. s1>ec. elloy wheel•. l .•c. IEPAIRS..SIRVICE 4994141 ~ <:ond, nc ~· llres & bat-1 . Exchan1e&' n'ebull·'· . ' I orts ., .• f'O HD ·1·0··· n o ""'· .... ~ '"'· "m/fm Pontiac 996 W73#llZH.m>15. 8 ~ '72Chc,.lerN.V.2dc, .. , mp . ~ .. -TOYOTA Jl'm Sl--s ROOKLYN BUG CO. '70 Monte Carlo, very & pwr, rad. ultra clean Sporlster 1'~astback. LolS .st er co rad 10. Ca 11 ••••••••••• •••••••••• v-.11U11 Estimate• 5'8·9141 clean. P /5, p/b. $1600. . / 2 O l!nO Harbor Blvd., CM of extras. Sim <Z BF4751 -494-0467. '67 Catahr1:., ~ooJ Oody I orts Days 213/448-4584. Eves In out, wner car. 631-LZ76 1900 Hurbor. CI,\ 6.16 9303 tires. New tran:.. En mp '69 VW Sqbck. xlntcond. 714/846-5039 Steel radials, 64:i.t , Johnson & ~Lincoln 1970 Olds Cullass, li t·y l, quit.Bestoffer.li73 18J.I.-; 1910HarborB\vd,C.M. $13UO or best offe r . Beaut.carfor$1900cash· 'WVETTE,ncarlyncw. ~tcrcury 2026 .1.larbo r auto, good ga:. mil 'g. 631-1218 613-7584 '71 Vega a l e. am/fm, pwr fo'irm. See al parking lot, 427 Eng, 4 spd w/many Hl~·d., c .:i.1. ~5631.l__ i'lew tires . $7CA1. 4~·2648. st,4 spd,tinledgl11.$14SO. 1670 Santa Ana 1\vc. xtras.968--4122 .73 GRAND 'f{)Hl-:~O . Pinto 9957 67 Pontiac good 1•unn11 ·~···~·•••••••••••••••• cond. Needs ~ork f 74 Pinto Sqwre Wagon. SJ5t)493-1680. Rall I Vol•o 9772 • oyc• 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S36-303Z. Cost,11 Mesa or Ofc II. whitc, I uwnr, f<icl u1 r. Auto. trans . 5$00 m1. ·········~············· *1 DEALER I" U.S.A .. llOY CAllVEll , ROllS·ROYCE ' wkdys. 548·7731. '&I Cor vette 1''astback :m , P;S, p /B, buckt seats. 1970 CUTLASS. new paint, trans & Orks .. XI cond. $1595. 833-0730 ; &I0-676.1 S C '66 Chevy 11. 3 spd. Stick. 4 s pd, A,_1 /1-'M, m:.1n y PE IAL Good tirei, 6 cyl. Depen· cusl extras. Runs good. 20·~ mi . S2~. 552-098.5 d bl ~oo 963 2008 fl C --• 99 •· 84 '12 Olds 98 Luxury Cpe. a e .,... . · a . o ...... , 27 S2650. or ..,.,i;l 2-87-43 Mercurv 9950 $.1395. &42·-4335 ThYnderbird 997 ••••••••••••••••••••• '7-4 PINTO Static::m ~agor_i. l96l 'f·BIRD con\·. l'h1s:. -4 spe,e~ t~ans1ru~s 1on, air style, needs "11.'ork, IJt: VOLVO SALE' • ·, Orig. pvt owner. Like • pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• c~ 9933 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 Comet 4 d 6 1 OUCJar ,,., ,1 _, new. V-top, iJ1r. cruise, p-cond1llon1 r_ig. W1 l_I make offer . 5-18.2753 ; 2M I .17th tt. COtTA MllA M6~44"' Beat price increase. Chev. '68 Caprh .. 'e Wgn. l " Gr cy ••••••••••••••••••••••• uu 1• ere . '1 ur. very clean. sc<.1 l s, Fl\1 stl'reo, nu Super ock, All models Extras! .Good transp. au omalic. d cond. '72 COUG All Xlt 7 Gll 1\-l ech. •:ond. ~00. llrcs, 4•1,000 1n1".s, $3200. some family a nice car. __ i Low m1l_c.s and ~ady to Ve90 997 Priced to Sell. Oversea.a $500. P .P . 548-1815 alt $.195.531·4399 J'l:.1tinum exterior "11.'1th Pvt . Pty . &15-2218 645·5777. DeliverySpeeialh1~ 4:30. Contln•ntal 9930 diJrk Olu e vinyl to1J . -----l -,ll6~."°'o~l~d,"-D-c_ll_a-.. -.-G-.-ood-I go. Rool ral'k will haul ••••••••••••••••••••• all_lhe vacation luggage. '72 VEGA Sta. \\11i1ti !his ~eekc nd only $2895 Orange w /blal"k 111 !869J I SJ Johnson & Son Run s great . ~1 7~ • l.incoln Me rcury ,2626 675·6866 ~ Har tior Bl vd ., t:.M .1----------.. 540·56:10 '72 Vega , 4 sjld, t11>·lqf CtOSID 11.JNDAYI Saab 9760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 ~Saab Sonet Ill. Xlnl cond . Am l l<;m MUST SELL Jmmcd. Asking ~295 or be11t uffer. Eves, Ml-3537 . ed. eOJ\ le.urtA" '66 CH EV ELLE' M•l•'bu ••••••••••••••••••••••• lealhcr interior. AM ll"M MOTICE . , h D ·1 ,,., .. Ci trans portatio n. Air , '73 "Town coupe". l?cal stereo r adio, factory air ow a• Y J 1,. ass-:Jl7, 2 dr, auto lruns & ,.,. d d d' 1 lh · power. S45U . 4W·Wll. luxury. All extras & im-co nJ1lion ing, power 1e a s isp ay e1r1c".'C::.':'..:.:::"~.::::.:'-"'--1ilerco, console, bucket m g ·1h 1 g·1 ·1·1 mac. Dk . brn. w/tan steering a nd brakes, Jo"' essa es WI e 1 ll l Y '7<1 ToronaJ o Cusf. 10.000 VOL VO · 1c•c•c•c1o'c·6c7c5c'o94c06:.:.' ----vinyl top. $4 ,995. Cun miles. S3 195 U~77f'NG J and imp.a cl 1 Our ad.Ii. we mi, beaut. hcii;c w/lan '63 Chevy Sta. Wagon. finance $4875 if desired J ohnson & Son Lincoln are proud to say, really vinyl top, loaded incl. -------1 cond. Fun Car ~ BclOJ '73 PIN'l"O ST1\WGN book. 613-368.2. '* 1!fi6 Ho1hor ( M. 6A6 9JOJ ORANGE COUNTY VQLVO EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO . Largest Volvo Dealer 40 00~. Auti;imall.C inOrangeQiunty! '72 SAAB 99 tr.ans r'11ssion., air contl1-BUY or LEASE t lon1 ng,I \"J n y l lup. DIRECT . (918HS1'~J , . . $2877 • [!:m?~~ ~eOJt le.wtb 2025 S. Manchester e TOY OT A . Anaheim . .750-2011 1•" ""'"·, "· .... ;,., '72 VOLV0 -164 Toyota 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Automatic transmiJsion, power steering, AM lf'M radio, air conditioRing. (77 11'~VZJ . TOYDTAS lr""d Htw '74s $3977 ONLY IOLtFT J) l • Also 14.Dtmos • eOJt WrtA TREM~~DOUS ~ VOLVO SA VINGS ~ Example ,74 Cor°'la Wagon 1~00 H11rhor CM. b46 930~; Auto .. radio, bumper Autos, Used 1uards. <687 1) ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 CEUCA 4 s peed trans mis5lon, flidlo u nd heater . t4521-fPD J $2677 -~eOJtl~ \II TOYOTA 1966 Hor hor. (I.I 646 9303 '71 Corolla del uxe Sla . Wttg., auto., 19,0UO mi. on ·motor . clean. $1415. 556·182M. Volk1wa9en 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 70 VW Hug, xlnt cond. Drown mct<1Jlic pi:1in job. 8 truek & fm stereo Call between t-4 & af 91,M . $1000. !162-59'..16. 69"VW Cumpcr, xlntcond. 52300 or will trade lo Bug. 675·5856. AMC f905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GOOD SILICTIOH USED GRl!MUHS 1973-1974 Four (4) to choose rrom, s tarting al , $1495 C1368XFJ WARDS.LEE S.A. 's Exclusive AMC Dir. 1234 S. Main 547·5826 SANTAANA '74 Homtl Sport-.t Full power, air, stereo, radial t ires, luggage rack. Custom interior & exterior. $3595 WARDS.LEE S.A. 's Exclusive AMC Dir. 1234 S . Main 547.5826 VWOWNERS·saveonre SAN'fAANA pu\rs cost. Tune ups, etc. --------~-­ $0:!0. up. Wo rk f.(uaran· lulclc tt I 0 teed. Steve . 556·9:.IOG ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1970 VW Bus. 9 Pass. Back 9ellt to bed conv('rsion. Low mileage. 968-70.S7. '68 Pop·lOP , reblteng. 8 lr· stereo. extras.ex cond. 52200. 536·2185 Myers Street Lcgul Dune Buggy. No eng. $400. 5'8·5189 & 5-46-1258 '72 Buick 4 door station wagon, R /H . automatic, P /S, air, low miles, priced lo sell, Lie. 864-FFG. Jim Slemolll Imports l9TOHar!Xlr Blvd, C.M. 631-1276 '71 IUG. SIOOO CHIU.c ttl5 ---'o":.:.·o••ooo::cSt:.c•cvc• ___ I • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • ••• • • •' '72 ORANGE CADI' • "'C SUPER BEETLE ~ over 70 to choOle from. <.:tillK.l9·3"44 l''ro m 11995. GMAC '7U VW Pot> Top Cilmpcr, l rcblt t:ni.:. Oil cooler. Very clean . S2300. 675·8993. £~....,_-....... .., I •' • . . ' '72 VW 5qbclv l'l /cond . Radio. Like ncw. l2600. C•ll 61S-19l!IO '73 COUPE Pt VILLE, --'-----1 BLACK. I 6-tt. 2',000 '73YW Conv lrilble A loiaJ, Ofale kctpCI car with only 30, 129 mlle1 ! Priced far bclo¥i' market valufl It • It ClL~g:wlM ml. New radial tires. Xlnt cond. 841-91.St . •1a Coupe de YUie, xlnt cond, 74000lnl, 14000. &75·2138 (~ 7 pm I '75 Coclllac C~upe .deVllie J"ully equi pped,' crW1e· control, leather lntttior, Ser. 4"291 • .-. ' JI!" Slema111 '11npom • 111'10Harllor Blvd, C,M . .,., UMJll ' + • Needs work. $150. or take over lease al Me r cu ry 2626 !!arbor :f,.~~56~:.s ult s. Phone Al\.1 /FM .stereo liiJle. Call 548-640'7 $137 .65 per mo. 636-0072 Dlvd., C.1\.1. S.10·563o_· __ Asking $5000. 4!J8-102ti Way below Blue Book 847-J0.15 '73 VEGA GT, 4 s l)d. \"t.•6 ____ ::_cc.:::_:::_ __ -1 c I ea n . c u s l . 1 n t c r i 01". Autol,H•w 9100 Autos, Hew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Auto1, H•w 9&00 Autos, H•w 9800 Autos, H•w 9100 S2100. 830·4ti81.i .1-==.cc=..ccc --~ '68 GALAXIE 500 2 door hit<dkip V ... WO. lr.m.. _,-llttrl119, l<ICMLPG $88 ""' <'! """ '"' --<nlCll!. Tot•I ct ... P'l«t tl"•-"11 lnet T&L. O.t..-...i pml. P<k:• H rtl .... A.P~ "'""• 9 1974 MUSTANG I......_ --AS lOWAS ... '7t fOllD flDO P.U. ino.s11 BRAND NEW '75 PINTO STATION WAGON Tan wl!h black interior. C•mper shell gives lt the t!n!shln9 1300 cc 4 cvl. engine, deluxe burnt:ier group, brown melatllc, '~'2918PE~8M~3!TH i2988 !§4~. lmnNtlla,. O.liv•ry ,., .. , :J ... ~!. ~.~t' °"''"'d ltnmedloN O.llnry ,.,..i' .~!! .. ~~~.~11. oe. RIGHI' JIOW ""''·Pf'<•· I01U ... "P.R. !J JO !o• • RIGHT NOW "'""" _,_ ..,.._. •~•"'· .o.P.11. ,...,., Ol<C OJ~!°' .......... OA.C, '73 PLYM .. ..,,,•"' 1975 MAVERICK RAND NEW '75 ELITE ~;~; ~:;·~,:;;:;:~:~ $258 4 DOOR SEDAN . 2 DOOR HARDTOP ~l~,i;-3· 688 l298j '-!,§g· ~4288rSJ}_f" • lnwnffklle Oe//Nry Tott•'~"'.,..><• 1,..1 ••L. •JJ•llt lmm.t/iofft De / rv To•••'""'""'•'""' ''L 1<10.11 $99.0 MO. • •.. _ JIOW 0.'e'fe<l-•.••1<•"'14'1 .... F.... ........ ~, o,,,.,,ed ...... 0''<• N•OJ ...... , ...... .. _:;::~-;:;;:;. ':...:.;:~~-. ... ..!~ •• ,.,.. • ., ••••. ,.,.~,·..,,..,,,.,,. __ ..., u" c ,. "It 11 ll!".. BRAND NEW '75 LTD BRAND NEW CUSTOM 500 ... .. -... --i.-.... u. """ ·-IO'i«I .IMJ Tl.I.. l.Jlll1 •• -Ill'!•-llflc• 141 ... 00. 2 DOOR P.H.T 4 DOOR P. HDTP. 8 5399-· PMf, 59910MO lot "'"*""''"' _.,.od <•""''· IOO•l ...... 0tlco i<>tl Tl.l.. S)01t.:M. o.tet"tO<I -· Pl"-'• lS1 ... CI. A.P 11 . .•.. ,.., 299.':.'.'" $13410 MO. .,,._,,......,. ..., __ <>e<I•• ............ P'lc•!ft<• . Tio~. "'°''·M °""''"' -· "'"'' Ul ... 10 A.l'.lt. 1•.1J<o.. A.~.11. lt ,I,,_ VI, euto. tr•nt .• •Ir $ ~illonlng, power 1teerlno. radio & tiff· t..-. L.lclrMl9tl·C•1t1 f4498SJi§~· i'378'8SJPii7. ~~$4~38=8 •299 DOWN '199 DOWN '72 PONT. Bonneville 10t • .._ .. --t -11. f lllol .-... le<> In<!. , .. l.. t111t.J1 Oofl.<--· P'l9o n ut.•. o..t.<"'" ...... .. kt IUU.'1" I',•. M.,... I IMMIO. OILIVllfY '"'•' ... n ... 1c. 1,.1. ,,~ ,,.n" lmmedlo,. 0.1/wry 1a••• '"'" ,.., .. 1 .. 1. ,,L '""""' ..,., 1 1 ...... NOW °"''"Mpmt,,•lc•.lotlf'l••••"fl'(t" •IGHI' NOW °"'"""'iim1,.,.1cr 1'1Jtl.1'lo•"-. i. auo, ''"$., l.w;:!ory $1988 "'"~RA.;;;.;N.;;;~D...;;.N;..;.E;,;.W--,~7-·-5-··(;·'•u•'•"".;...N_A __ D_A~l-!B~RA~;;N;;,~D,,;~N~E~W~.,..;"~,,,:,~,~5~·-···M~,·~~~u~·~S~T~.-:,~,:-1 ~r,:;~;~f:;.~±f; / GHIA 2 DOOR SEDAN Sliver ~T•l!it w!!ll ', ~lnyl rl)(lf. Sllv•r 0!111 moonrool, Avlo Traf'\s,, A.•<11el Tlrt~. Ltfll\tr Stterlrtv. Powtr Slter!nQ a. llrlk•!, 6 cyl. enQ!n.t, ~l •I Um!ltd edition llkq., unique ''"'lrtv wnetrl a. l!umpt>• Gue•d\. Fllclo•y Al" Lu •u•v Orovp, Alum. WMl!lt, etc. p,inel. P<l•nl $lrlpe•, delUl!I bumoer gr OU(). (SWl2L1161>1) ~ SFO•FlS'1•1J $3488 . ~~-gg~ I s7539MO .... )I-·· ... --···~" ,,,,, .......... ""'' ··~· 11110 111 °"""ed ......... ~. l ll10 1t °'' .. '"" -· llf><t U•l.'1 A.I'.•. :..oJ .. '73 LANDCRUISER i.::. ,:,:.:..:::-:$4388 ~~~l~H low low fl'lllft ' . • • '''-'""' 11•H11 I '73 OPEL OUISIANDllG USED CAR SPECIAlS '68 ME CURY MANTA COUPE Au!omat1c. AM/FM radio. power orakes. whire walls ;11r cond1!1on1ng, bucker seais. sunroof. vinyl 1op console. [206JRDJ 52695 '74 PONTIAC FIRE BIRO 6 Cylinder .iutrimatic AM r,1d10. power ~teP.,nq n{}wf·r brJ~•"S. wh11e walls. Bu c~f't SP:J!5. corw1e. !ape Player w rl',lr ~PCJk(·r :> t409K J!; PARKLANE WAGON VB. au!orna!!c AM radio w/lape Player power steering· brakes -win- dows -se<i t Whtie walls. air con<11- !1on1ng. tilt wheel v1ny1 l op_ (YAN13J: '74 PLYMOUTH VALIANT SEDAN VB. automa11c radio. healer. DOwer steering. oower brak.es. White walls. a1r cond1t1on1ng. vinyl lap, custom 1n!erior & exterior (4 lOMKKI '73 UNCOLN CONTIHEHTAL Coupe VB. aulomat1 c. AM/FM stereo, cruise control. vinyl rop, whtte wall s air cond11 1on1ng. (840HFPJ 5895 53395 · 54550 '70 FORD MAVERICK 6 cylinder, automahc Jransm1ss1on. radio. healer. white side walJ tires. vinyl IO!J. (324AHJ: '74 PLYMOUTH DUSTER COUPE 6 cylinder. automa11c. radio. heater. oower steering white walls. arr con- dr1ton1ng (678KZX: '72 MERCURY MARQUIS BROUGHAM· va. automahc. radio. '"'ttler. 00wer sreenng. POwer brakes. IXlWef" seat. while waUs. air condihornng, vinVI lop, hit wheel (029EHMJ 53595 51099 52888 52351 . . . ,, ' \ ,\ CLEA OFF ~ACTI1Ri!4S SUGSISTEO PRICE COlllplete "'hea•y duly': .ffl'Yice GYailalile for. y-R. V. Rec. TM best ser•ice in OrCll!ge Co. N.51, fl!ir & friencly! ' ' • I ., - • • ·Laguna/South C~ast T ... ay's C:losl_. :'. • N.Y.Stoeks • VOL . 68, NO. 150,4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1975 TEN CENTS: • Council Says Parking Structure Dead ~ By JACK CHAPPELL OftNDellWl"li.~tt A majority of the Laguna. Beach City Council now believes the proposed downtOY.'Jl 'parking structure is dead us a rl'SuJt of lhe negative vote on the structuri: bond election this week. Polled independently , Mayor Roy l:lolm. Vice Mayor Phyllis Sweeney and Councilman Jon Brand each expressed lhe opi- Economy Due to Worsen?· WASHINGTON CAP) -The Ford administration said tod?Y that unemployment ond .the re- cession will be worse t1tis year than it estimated earlier, but should'be followed by a stronger economic recovery next year. In its mid-year budget and economic review, the ad- ministration predi~ted un- •employment will avcrage8.7 per- cent, or about 7.8 mil li on workers, for the year. The ad- ministration predicted as recent- ly as February that unemploy- ment would average 8.1 percent this year. The forecast, if true, means that the jobless rate probably \l.'ill rise above 9 percent later this year. The Apri l rate of un- employme11t was 8.9 percent. The repart, which will be senL to Congress, also predicted that: -The nation 's economy will decline by 3.6 perc~nl this year, compared with the administra- tion 's original prediction of a 3.3 percent decline. -The economy will rebound will! ·a •\r••C 6.3 pefCf91 &n>wth next year, better than. the 4.~r­ cent growth fo recast earlier. -The rate of infl a tion, as reflected· by eoo1~1 prj,ces, will increase 9.1 per~ent this year over 1974, compared with a February projection of a 10.8 per- cent increase: The administration stuck by its projected fiscal year 1976 budget deficit of nearly $60 billion, which is below the $68 billion deficit target set by Congress. The de- ficit in fiscal 1975 will be $42.6 million, the repart said . Although the over-all economic outlook was Somewhat im- proved, there was little hope in the new foreclilsl for an improved (See ECONOMY,PageA2> Letter Rates 'Em -Then Forsakes 'em LOS ANGELES CAP) -"We will not be able to use your body in our c~nlerfold," the letter says. •• ... 0.n -a srule or o to 10, your body was raled-2." The letter carries the name "Playcilrl" at \he top and •P· parently b aa be~n sent to men around the country. .Bu't a Playgirl magazine spokesman said ThQrsday it is not responsible-ror th~ .mailings and desCribed theni as "a very cruel hoax." Phil Paladino, public relations director for the women's magazine which features photos of nude men, said Playgirl ha!;' received 44 inquiries .about the letter -many from People who think !tis legitimate. The letters bear postmarks froin around the country and they obviously were composed on different typewriters. They show different logo styles at the top or t he p8ge; d_iffere:nt maipng ad-dresses fo r Playgirl and are signed with different Dl\mes, he said. But the text Is e1most identical on. all Ufe letters which Playgirl has leftl in the last few weeks, Paladin0sald. lllee llATING, Pa .. AZI PUNISHMENT FITS CRIME . CINCINN A 'II (U l?I) -Trevor Scti'ml~t.; U,.ol Ctncln .. U, called a ~lice omcer a pla when hewas- stoPitdTor 1p"ee'dlng. So he's had to .C&oose . betwee'n spending one day on a "' fa,rm OI' 30 days in theworkbouae. Cincinnati !!1 unltlpal Court Judae Rupert Doan ordered the cbofce ctf sentences. Schmidt" ctioae a day on a J>l& farm. nion thaL further action on the structure was out or the question in view or the electorate's vote. Councilman Charlton Boyd vigorous ly disagreed. Coun· cilman Carl E . Johnson was in San Frari'cisco today and un· available for comrpcnt. Mayyr liolm 's comments ::ire typit"a or the majority coun- cilmanic opinion: "The Glenneyre Street purking ••'f'.)l_~ ~~l~TI ........ Slim Goodbody (John Burs· teinJ h as his body back. The singer·danger Jost the full leo\afd•with body organs on it which he uses to put on a t1calth· mus ical, but it \Va s found later near a New York school. Laguna Police Nab Illegal Weapon, Man Lag-una Beach police seized an ancient oriental weapon and ar· rested a 21 -year·old Mission Vie- jo man al Laguna's Crescent Bay .beach Thursday. William Brant Hunt or 26082 Via Pera was booked for alleged possession of ''nunchaku-sticks, '' an illegal weapon. Nunchakus a re hardwood sticks joined al lht! center with a chain or nylon ro1>e. J-lunl. reportedly on parole from petty theft and armed rob· bery convictions. was held on $2,SOObaiL ,, Officer Carlene Ambrose re- ported she was on patrol near the beach and observed a man sw- inging and throwing the nunchakus . She reported she went to the beach and Hunt told her the sticks had been thrown in the ocean and lost. The officer said she found the weapon under a maroon shirt she had firsL seen the man wearing. Nunchakus are considered il- lega l weapons under a stale penal code section which also in - cludes slings. The we·apon was developed in J apan's satnural era and was eonsidered an excellent weapon for use against the samurai sword, polic_e said: Laguna Man New Principal Laguria Beach resident George Nettlcman will be prin- cipal or Meadow View Elemen- tary School in Huntlngton Beach when school reopens in the faU . NetUeman. 35. was named to the po'l by trustees of Hunt· ington Beach's Ocean View School District. I He formerly taught in Laguna Beach schools and currently ts serving as an assistant princlp&l and coordinator or federal pro· • jects for the Santa Ana lJnified School District. structure as designed is dead. "I can 't help buL think that everyone who vot-ed was voting yes, I want a parking structure, or no. l don't. "They were not tbinking about the financing so much with the possible exception of the issue of public financing or private financing through an assessment district,'' 1\.1 ayor Holm sajp. The bond election, seeking authorization for the s ale of up to $800,000 in bonds to finance the two-tier, 233 -space struc ture. failed by 295 votes in an election at which 3,337 persons voted. ' Councilman Boyd said he re- garded the election as a mpney issue only.• "It '"''as a particular melhod of financing and the particular mode sugges ted was not suitable to the majority of the people. "The vote doesn 't nulliCy the \'ulidity or the need. Somclhlng is just going tp have to be done about cars.'' He said his de termination to press ahead '"''ilh the proposed strUcture had not C'hunged one "'hit by this vote, just as the Main Beach park was not side-tracked by l\\'O (negative) votes of the electorate. Those l'"''O elections needed a two thirds yes vote for passage. The parking structure funding involved a majority yes vote. "The needs must be Considered and there is a need for parking, a need to satisfy the coastal com· mission," "'hich ·he· s<ild had been promised by the city that something would be done to re- ·ueve conges tion and improve parking in the coastal area. !See PARKING, Page AZ) Stanton Teen Slain ,· In Gangland Violence Threats Precede Shooting A 16-year·old Stanton boy .died Thursday or a gunshot \\'OUnd in the head inflicted Wednesday night as he ran £rom the scene of a street gang fight. .... l)olice said today Gerard Qui - jas, of 7702 Yorkshire St., died Thursday morning al Stanton Community Hospital, about 12 hours after he was shot. Norman Haggstrom, 19, also of Stanton, is being held on murder charges stemming from the incident. Police &aid t.be-~ng OC"-, curred at about ~fo p .m . W~es· · day during a gang battle but there is still no indication Quijas was involved. l1ater1aotio1aol Days The mother of lhe murder sus- pect told police another fight had . taken place outside her home al 11822 Santa Rosalia St. earlier in the day. She said several gang members h ad threatened to kill her son and burn down her house. A police spokesman said Mrs. Dorothy Haggstrom told them she asked her son to protect her against the gang, which vowed to return . She said they came back ~hat night, armed with Molotov cocktails and other weapons. The Swiss Alps and African mas ks were among topics studied this , month by kin- dergarten through third grade students at Richard He nry Dana School, Dana Point. Scott Richter, 7, r egards a model of the Mat- terhorn while Tina Renfro. 9, smiles from behind a n ative mask. The ldternational Studies pFogram concludes at 7 o'clock tonight with a "Sweet treat Night" al the school, 24242 La Cresta. After songs and dances by s tudents , confections from . throughout the world will be sampled. Vi'itnesses s aid at least one other shot was fired di.:ring the ('Onfrontation besides the fatal bullet. oc· Doctors to Retu1·n Police \\'enl on patrol around Stanton and Garden Grove schools Thursday and again to- day to guard against violence erupting a s the res ult of the shooting. End Counly Walkouts After 6-hour Meet 'fhe police spokesman said lo- <See SHOOTING, P age A2) Cattle Prod Not 'Cruel' OTTAWA, Ill. (AP) -A state judge has ruled that it is not cruel for a teacher to use a battery· operated cattle prod on sixth grade students. .. This court does not condone this resort to a new disciplinary method but does not s ay it. amounts to cruelly in its use here." said Ci rcuit Court Judge Leonard Hoffman. Hoffman 's decision came Wed · nesday in a suit filed by Frank J, Roland, who was seeking re· instatement as a teacher with the Ogelsby Elementary School Dis- trict. By ALAN DIRKIN · 01 flll D.lllW PllOI St.Ill Operating reom s in Orange County hospjtals will be back on normal schedul es Monday. 'fhe decision for anesthesiologists and oth er physicians involved in the sur- ge ry slowdown lo return to full SC'hedules was reached al a~six­ hour meeting of the Orange County Medical Association Thursday night. Everett Bannister, executive director or the 2,000-member oc. MA, confirmed today that for a while "it was touch and go" on whether the doctors would re- turn. The meeting had been called by OCM A president Philip McFarland lo consider a request by doctors in the San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente area for stronger and more con- certed action lo resolve the malpractice insurance crisiS. But a resolution by these doc- Distance Champ ·Prefontaine Ki.lled EUGENE. Ore. (AP) -Steve Prefontaine, this coun- try's finest di"s tance runner and one of its most con- troversial amateur athletes, was killed in an automobile ac- cident early today, Little more than four hours after he ran lhe second fastest 5,000 meters by an American. Police said Prefontaine, who was 24, was pinned under his car alt er it'hit a rock wall at about 12 :30 a .m. PDT. The former University of Oregon standout who finished fourlh in the 5,000 meters at lhe 1972 Olympics had covered that distan'ti? tn ta minutes 23.8 s·econds In winning the event· al an NCAA preparation m~t Thursday nighl lo Eugene. ·The.time was about l'A seconds off Prefontaine's American ' record. A high school sensation in Coos Ba)', Ore., Prefontaine went on to a brilUanl career at the Unlversity of Oregon and, at lhe time of his death, owned U.S. records for every distance above 2,000 meters..Additiohil details today on e.aeBI. tors for all physicians in Orange County l o withhold all but emergency services for three wee}cs was "resoundingly" de- feated, Bannister said. Bannister suid lh<ft there was much SUPPort for continuing the s lowdown, but when the Vole !'ame to return there was not a dissenting vote. "But remember the vole was not taken until after six hours of debate," he added. The vole came after the mem- bership ,;completely rejected" the concepts of a stop-gap bill that s et tl e d the stri ke by Northern California doctors, who have been off work since May 1 . ':There was a feeling that the North ern California doctors Laguna Beach Reports Lag In Economy Economic indicators shoW that business revenue is up in Laguna Beach , but not up enough to keep pace with inflation. Louis Zitnik, treasurer of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Com· merce, told fellow n1embers of the chamber board or ditectors this week that the Art Colony's economic position has slipped. Zitnik, a Jtock broker, recited sales t ax flbures from nine monlhs ending in March 31 which showed that while sales doll.ar amounts are up more than five perc~nt, the Inflation rate Is up 12 percent from the same period a year ago. Ttie lnCre8sed sales tax also r~nects the effect of tM pi'esent six·eent.. tax versus the nvc-ce~ tax la.st.year, a 20 percentjump. When a ll things are C!on- sldered, Zitnik said he would have to conclude th.at sales are actually down. (See BUSI NESS, Pai:eAZI • • boUght a bad bill," Bannister said. The OCMA director said that the motion agreed upon by th~ Orange County doctors was lim'ited. It was to continue work.- ing "until the e nd of the general session of the Legislature prck vldeil that the legislators de.;. monstrale a strong desire lo pufiib legislation (hat will give answer~ to long-term problems of malpractice insurance." ··:the feeling was that if no long-term solution is reached everybody in Orange County wi ll go.out,'' Bannister added. The bill that brought the Northeni California doctors. who (See NORMAL, Poge AZI ·0r::·:ctL··:. 1l'eatl1er Low c louds ni ght through mid -morning otherwise s unny Saturda~ with slightly warmer tem~. pcratures. Highs will . range from GS at the beaches to 78 inland. INSIDE TODA y ·: I(·· won.it just be .another show whtn 2.BOO mW'ic .stu- dents from S4dd!tboc.,. schools put on . a m'U!ieol tzr traooganzo at the AD4Mitt11 .. Convention Ce"ter ne.zt weelQ Su 1tory by Daily Pilol Sta/I. Writt'rJa.n Wo!1honPogeC1 1• llHlex ' AtY-len9" Al ........ ~ ·~ _ ,., ................ _ &.~ A1t or .... t.nt, •• ··~ ••4 Q.luH~ 01~:~:~ ?al .. ~.· ..__ ., ........ t "' --" .. ............. ·I --.. T-CA .,_ ~ .... ~ . ... ........ ....... .. l ...... Mo~llA C:l .ll'f! ............ --It....,..,_.,,_ ...... -ct: "r'"-(04 -(' 1 ' • , . ·-• • •• • • • • . • • • • • • • • : • • ' • • ' ' " t. r _,"" ... C'leneente A·poppfn' ~Wild Evening " : For City Cops W'I( variety is the spice of life, tlaings were well seasoned for •n Clemente police Thursday <e:vening and early today: -Thursday night police were hlled by a frightened woman ~ho said an intoxicated man had -&me to ht!r door asking the way lO a San Clemente address. The !nan told the worn an he wanted to ~sit his father . The father, li>wever, died six days ago. -Just a few hours earlier, police were called by an anxious filher who claimed someone had just tried to rape hi s daughter. The som~e turned out to be the girl's boyfriend. Police suggest- ed counseling. Franc Page Al BUSINESS. •• "These are not a particularly encouraging set or figures," Zit· nik advised. Bed t ax figures showed an eight percent increase during the same period and there was no ·change in the taxing rate. ··Most .cities are suffering. The economy is definitely do\\'n for the first four months of this year. •·we might be a touch worse than average.'' Zitniksaid. · Uther disparities in the economic picture were presented by other chamber directors. Betty Robinson, owner of the Laguna Shores inn said that a number of hotels had their highest gross in history during the first four months of the year. However, the increases came as a re"Sult of an early Easter which this year put additional re- venues into th e first qwarter ac· counting period. Mrs. Robinson said her hotel has been hit by doubled utility rates and has been forced to in· crease its lodging rates. She noted that while second . quarter income is down, her summer reservations are run- ning well ahead of last year. . . Ser vices H e ld For Me dia Ad d. Man H. Witt ' Funeral services were con· ducted in Newport Beach this week for fiarry W. Witt, a , veteran radio and television ad- 1 vertising executive, who died at t his San Clemente home at the i ageof73. f A native or San Francisco, Mr. ~ Witt began his long career in ad- l vertising with the Foter-Kleiser ! outdoor sign company. ~ In the mid-1930s he became • manager of KGB Radio in San i Diego, follow ed by service as ad· .._ vertising director or KHJ Radio -: in Los Angeles. • 'In the late 194.0s, he \\'Orked as : assistant general manager for _ : the western division of CBS, then ' accepted an assignment of open- ing KTTV Channel 11, the original CBS-TV outlet in Los Angeles. He joined the Calkins-Holden advertising agency in the early 1950s as vice president and manager. The firm later became Reach-McClinton agency. Mr. Witt r e tired in 1967 to San Clemente. He is s urvived by his widO\\', Louisa, of the family home. 209 Via Ballena; a son. Harry W .. of Laguna Beach ; a sister, J\.1rs. Gerald Orr, of San Francisco, and three grandchildren. ORANGE COAST L/SC DAILY PILOT TheOt~ CW \I D•I'' Pllol.witllwN<!ll•<-· ~ t ... t<t,,.1·1'1•\I, 11 p<ll>UW" °' W 0.-C<N•I PuOli.,.,119 C..rnt:>•"• S•pao•te..,111""' •t DUl'I-AAll..0•• 111•ou911 f •l""y '°' Cotl• Nww, ,.. • .,_, k~I\, ~""!onolon 6'-Mllrf o.,,. t••n vane,. lr•ln•. !>•ddl•t>o<;~ ll~llt• •n(I/ L~OJU,.. l!.e .. 11/!.0utll Co•\t I<. ll<>Qlt •r11i-1 ftfltlon "j11,1bll,...., S.l\l•D••i -~ .. ...,~ ... Tiie pd"<ip.• w t1111n•"'J pl•"' +• ., JOO ...,..,, 11oo, !>1'~tl. CO.II Mt w. C•h!ornl• tl~l6. -Al 1:30 a.m . today, police were called by a man who report· ed a dead body at t1 Camino Capistrano construction site. Of- ficers round the body -a sleep- ing transient -who was told to sleep else\\•here. -Then , at 2:50 a .m., Officer Rick Rice was on patrol when he saw y,•hat appeared to be a body lying in the Avenida Presidio on-~ ramp to the San Diego Freeway. It turned out to be a Camp Pendleton Marine who imbibtd a bit too much earlier in the even- ing. He was given free lodging at city jai.1. -And, police are having a hard time believing the facts surrounding theft of a wa11e.t at the San Clemente bus depot Thursday afternoon. George Michael Keller, 19, re- cently discharged from the Marine Corps, set his wallet on the counter while purchasing a ticket for a trip home to Ohio. While Keller was lending to his suitcase, his wallet was stolen. Officers sent to the scene in- terviewed one possible suspect. but released him for Jack of any evidence and the man boarded the bus (or Santa Ana with a female companion and her baby child. · But after interviewing a wit- ness, San Clemente police telephoned their counterparts in Saota Ana and told them to ar· rest the suspect on suspicion of grand theft. The s uspect, his woman com· panion and her baby -all from Ohio -were taken lo the San Clemente police station. Police said they recovered the wallet from the woman's purse. The woman, however, likely will face more than a theft charge. A police matron changing the baby's diaper said she found two concealed baggies of marijuana. . . -NORMAL. • • currently have no malpractice insurance coverage, back to work was to create a sl..,t.ewide pool or liability iusurance car- riers which will provide in· surance at lower rates while the Legislature tackles the problem. Orange County ~oc;tprs have been pushing the bill of state Sen. Dennis Carpenter (ft -Newport Beach) that would set up com- pensation boards, instead of juries, to hear malpractice . cases, limit the period when awards can be filed, limit the awards, and limit attorneys' fees. By Monday some Orange County hospitals ¥;ill have been on restricted schedules for two weeks. some for about IO days and some for a \\'eek . Cutting out elective surgeries has reduced patient loads al hospitals by abouL 40 percent and some hospitals have been putting staff members on four-day weeks and contemplating layoffs. Mary Wright Service Set Funeral serv ic~ for Mary t\. Wright of Laguna Beach will be held at 11 a.m . Saturday at Shef- fer Laguna Beach Chapel. Mrs. Wright died Monday. She was 87. Mrs. Wright was a mem ber of the Laguna Beach Women's Club and a mem her of the Republican Women 's chapter. She is survived by two sons, Derrick of Palm Springs and John of Chino ; a daughter, Mrs. Clarence Kirk of Texas; five grandchildren and three great grandchildren. inter ment wil l follow at Melrose Abbey in Anaheim. Funeral arrangements are directed by S he ffer Laguna Beach Mortuary. P ip elitte Problems · Insta llation of a new 16-inch coastal water main by the Laguna Beach County Water District in Coast Highway ha s been plagued by numero11s and unexpected difficulties. The $225,000 job through the heart or Laguna Beach is also blamed for a downturn in busin~~s by some local merchants. The conll"lictor must finish all work in-the street highway by June 13. Hulse Due As Witness .For Hurd? By TOM BARLEY otUte ~•llW PllotSt.ltt Reluctant witness Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse o'Vercame his reluctance Thursday in Orange County Superior Court but only after lawyers tor both sides agreed that he could switch sides in the "Devil Cult" mu'rder triaJ of Steven Craig Hurd. 1-lulse, hustled from the wit- ness stand Wednesday after questions from prosecutor Frank Briseno produced obscenities rather than answers, will next appear in the courtroom as a de- fense witness, not a prosecutior witness, i( the trial is not declared a mistrial. Judge Frank Domenichini will make that decision Monday. If he decides the trial will goon,ffulse. 21. will become de[ense attorney William Gamble's witness. Gamble moved for a mistrial with the argument that Hulse's statement that he wa$ found guil· ty of murder charges after plead- ing not guilty and,not guilty by reason of insanity to the hatchet killing of service station atten- dant J erry Wayne Carlin, 21, could prejudice Hurd's chances o! a fair trial. Gamble argued that the jury now knows that Hulse drew a life term in state prison after filing the same pleas as Hurd. The in- ference is obvious, he tol~ Judge Domcnichini. Hurd, 25, is accused of first degree murder in the mutilation killing on June 3, 1970. of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown . Mrs . Brown, 31, of El Toro, was dragged from her car by a gang as the car entered the Sand Ca- nyon Road offramp from the San- ta Ana Freeway , She was butchered in an Irvine orange grove. • It is alleged that 1-lurd, assert· ed leader of a gang of drug-using drifters, played the major role in her killing and burial. Hulse ex- plained Thursday that he could face reprisals from fellow in· mates 1n Soledad State Prison when he returns there if he testifies in the current trial as a prosecution "'·itness. Hurd 's trial only became possi· ble l ast month when th e California Supreme Court ruled in a landmark decision that the previously mentally ill prisoner can be tried, provided he is kept under the influence of powerful tranquilizers. Gamble states that Hurd is on- ly capable of telling the truth un- der the influence or the pre· scribed drugs. 9 Gallon Li1nit FEA Outlirws Gm Plan WASHINGTON (UPI) -Federal energy planners have proposed an emergency gasoline rationing plan that would give drivers in all parts of the nation the same number or gallons ot fuel each week. "We ·don't want to get eaught like we did the last time," a member pf the Federal Energy Administration task force which drew up the proposal said today. He referred to the 1973·74 Arab oil embargo. ~he SJ>O:kesman said today the plan was drafted as a standby and would be used only in the event of a major . emergency. The report gave no estimate how much gasoline would be provided to each Ucensed driver. In the past, however, U.S. officials have talked in term of nine g3llons per week. Fro• Page A l ECONOMY •.• unemployment rate. The report said unemployment -will average 7.9 percent in 1976, equal to 7.1 million workers, the same as forecast in the February economic outlook. In Its outlook for the economy after 1976, ihe administration said u nemployment. could average 7.2 percent in 1977, 6.5 percent in 1978, 5.8 percent in 1979 and 5.1 percent in 1!8>. These projections were somewhat improved from the February figures, but the report said that the figures were ex- tremely tentative and based on an economic growth rate·of 6.5 percent during the four-year period. In its February estimate, the administration had projected un- employment at 7 .5 percent in 1977, 6.9 percent in 1978, 6.2 per· cent in 1979 and 5.5 percent in 1980. F ro•P age Al RATING ••• After thanking the individual for sending in his photographs - no one, of course, had done so - the letter goes on to say in part: "The ·rating-·was doi;ie: b'J' a panel of women ranging in age from 65 to 75 years old. We tried to have our panel of women in the 25 to 35-year-old bracket rate you, but we could nqt get Uiem to s top laughing long enough." Among the recipients have been a clergyman and an elderly widow, Paladino said. Ile said Playgirl is sending apologies to every recipient of the hoax letter who can be locat- ed. The magazine plans to turn the documents over to postal authorities for possible criminal investigation, he said. HERITAGE CHINA Re9. 5969°0 SALE s799oo . PAR KING. t. Boyd suggested the city might form a nonprofit corporation to nnance and build the structure, similar to the: way In which the Main Beach Park was acquJred and developed. "The problem ha11n 't tone uway by wishing it away anymore than the cars have," he concluded. Councilwoman Sweeney , however, remained unconvinced that a proble'M existed. She said a ".myth" of a parking pfoblem had been perpetuated. Mrs . Sweeney took issue with a private consultant hired by the city who told the council prior to the election tha t Laguna had u significant shortage or downtown parking places the majority of the year . ''We have a surplus most of the time. We never have pt-ope rly de· fined our parking problem. Until we do we can't solve it," Mrs. Sweeney said. She suggested a parking pro- gram for cars of employes work· ing downtown. She also said that "I think pro- bably the merchants in the CBD <Central Business Di s trict) should take the initiative as they have done in other cities. Cer- tainly the city will help," Mrs. Sv.·eeney said. Councilman Brand said he vol· ed for the parking sfructure, but did not publicly take a stand on the issue. "I voted for it because Forest Avenue is the heart of Laguna Beach and Forest Avenue need~ to be protected and not allowed to decay. I voted for it even though I was not convinced there was a tremendous parking shortage,'1 Brand said. He speculated the campaign had been lost when the downtown m erchants backing the bond election failed to responl positively to a plan tying the structure to creation of a mini· mall on the stub of Park Avenul below the library, a ton' smoldering and involved Issue. He said by t ying the twc together, the opposition a\ Village Laguna and other tow[ civic grotips may not have sul'I ·faced. , · "I think that's "'hy· they Josi the election," Brand said. F ronc P age Al SHOOTING day sev'eral fights were broken up Thursday and a few schools dismissed classes early to pre- ·vent •further-campus Incidents. All the schools were open today. Sp ring Concert Set At Laguna Church The Saddleback Collegt Chorus will present its annual spring concert at 8 p.m. TuesdaJ at St. J\.1ary 's Episcopal Churct in Laguna Beach. The concert, under the direeo lion of Glenn Pick, will featurl sacred and secu lar classics. There is no admission charge. Robert N. Weed P1e1I01n1 •n(I l'l>tltl.,..., Jack R. Curley lll<t Pfttldl .. , ..... c.e ....... -~ Thomas Keevil E"''"' Thoma-s A. Murphln@ """,..91n(I Ed+"" Water District Court Action S e t Monday HERITAGE·s WINDWARD COLLECTION made with English brown oak burl. pin knolly walnul and olive ash burl veneers. ·and pecan solids. The finish. done by hand . is in the oldest European manner. These distinctive qualities give Windward a look of its own . Olarlts H. L.oos Richard P. Nall A~l1>t1n• ~MOl~f"'l°'I TtltphoM (714) 642-4l21 Cl•sslflM Ad!•rllsl ng M2 -S671 UO\lna Bt•ch All De~rtments : hl••~tne 494·•466 ''"' ntlt...,nlt 495·0630 Ce11,rlt~1.-1tl1 Or•t1t• Ct•\! '°"b1!1t1int C-nJ. Nt "'"" Ml'ott. 111 .. 11r•1i-,nt, ... I~+•+ fntlltr tr 1•wrrU••m•nl\ n..rfl" "''' •• · ••••••1.1crf •IH .. \jl l1M<l t1 "'"'"''.,. •I <•v•ltfll Cl'Wllft, St<IM 'c lolltl ,..,,.,.. f•IO t i C1tll Mt1•. c.tl•..,-'•· Mtc:flltilltfl 'T<••ilf w.•-1111; "" 111•H M.• -IMW: !'1111/Uory dnUlltlltftt ll.00 -"''· L •' A hearing Js scheduled In South Oranee County Municipal Court Monday morning for disposition of charges that the Moulton· Niguel Water District and three oC iU: ranking employn violated state safety lawa that allea:edly contributed to the death of a worker in January 197-4 . Ted Millard, a deputy district attorney, said final details of a negotiated settlement between him and the attorney for the dla· tnet likely will be offered ·ror con· slderatlon by Judge Richard Hammon . Calvln Van Oorkum, a sewer maintenance man, was over· come by sewer gaa and died while attempllng to free an ob· { struction "in the bottom of a manhole. It ts alleged In a complaint filed by the district attorney's of. fice that Van Gorkum was not provided with ventilation ap-. pBr•tus and other safety equip- ment at the time ht: deiicended ln· to the manhole. The complaint was filed with the court following an Intensive investigation by the state In· dustrtol sa(ety inspectors. In addition to lhe district, the complainl na med Carl Kymla,, · general manager and (armer Newpart Beach city councilman; John A. Perry, director of opera- tions, and Donald Foell, a foreman. • Entire Collection on Sale Until End of May DINING ROOM. BEDROOM AND OCCASIONAL PIECES DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-l<ARASTAN-BAKER WIHDAYS & SATU•DATS ''00 lo S:JO NEWPORT BEACH • 11'1 W~"S1'C~IH' OR . 642·20!0 . LAGUNA BEACH • 3"S NC•1rr11 CtJA!fl' ll\\'\·., 4!M ·6"l TORRANCE • 23«1 HAwnlORNf. BLVD. tf)J>t"rt f"fi. llf9, ~Ull. 12·5;3(.)J 371·1279 I ! I Suit Solutions Malpractice Bids Cited llySVLVL\ PORTER tThlrdirtaSmeaJ Wbal mighl be arn'ong the lona·term solutions to the nialpractlce crisis which haa erupted across the l•nd - threatening lo undermine our nation's medical structure, endunscr many Jives and add to the relenUes& aplral in our health care cosl!i" '"' One po1nl Is s u.re· lhe please·nobody "solutions" put together by the legislature in New York, Indiana, M •. uyland, North Dakota, ldaho, llllnola:, Nevada and 1 lawuti are mer~ly hur· ... rlcd effort:; in the dlrCC· !Jon or answers. A-fore :-;1gnirt cant are s uch sug· ~es tl'd measures otS lhese Money's Worth A sys te m of PC'na lt1 cs against J.iY.'yers und clatmant5 for starting unfounded laWaulll and •tl!io a rt:'du ct1on 1n contingency rees which laW)'era agreeto <ict•cpt 1n payment for their services (the conUn1ency fee ls .in .igr ccd upon share of the award, i( apy) Propo1ed by the Ne w York B;:ir Assoc1a.t1on -A COMBINED UNDERWRITING aissoc1atlon which \\OU!d orrc1 n1alpruct1cc Insurance at "only" double the umounts doctors are now paying -plus mandatory arbltra· t1on, stntt hn11ls on Jury awards and "no fault" malprac· lice insurance along the lines of Workers .compen1etlon l'roposed by the insurance industry ln New York state -lmmun1z1ng docto1s via a new state law from clv1I hab1hty charges anywhere in the U.S., 1r a doctor performs accordin g to the standards now be1nc set b y the "Professional Sta nd~rds Review Organizations" (PSR0'11)1 mandated under the 1972 amendments to the Social Security 1\ct P1 oposed by the New York State Medical Society -REQUIRING PHYSICIANS to review the quality of their peers' work (as the law mandates) ao lhal the medical profession would police itself by establ11h1n1 standards <:1ga1nst ,,.. h1ch perrormanc~ could be measured, vahd l'r1t1c1s m could be leveled and incompetents could be barred Crom practice -Legal hm1ts on malpractice awards, compulsory arb1trat1on and ' mediation panels'' consisting or one Judge, one lawyer , one phys1c1an already provided for under a '74 New York Jaw Conspicuously absent patient represen· tatives Also proposed by the New York State Medical Society -Requ1r1n g patrents who are to undergo surgery to sign agreements pledging that they will not aue -before the surgeon will agree to operate This, though, might be a 'contract. struck under duress" which 1s no contract. at all, cr1t1cs charge Equully if not n1ore prom1s1ng -although far Jess ob· v1ous -a1 e recom mendal1ons submitted 1n 1973 of the Com· m1ss1on on Malpractice Insurance, apPo1nted by Health, Education and WelfareSecrelary EU1ot Rtchardson 101171 . -DEVELOPING WAYS TO make d1st1nct1ons between real negligence which does occur and poor med1cal results which can happen despite careful medical practice. -Using special arb1trat1on panels for small claims, "'Ith the pa nels including non·med1cal, non·legal people. -Expanding the authonly of state medical l1cens1ng bodies to suspend or revoke the licenses or incompetent physicians -and 1nst1tut1ng open d1sc1phne heanngs -Encouraging state or federal laws that would require periodic re licensing of doctors and other medical per1on· nel, plus formal programs for cont1nwng medical educa t1on I -Developing spec1f1c standards for 1nform1ng patients <or family members) of the risks of vanous medical pro cedures, so patients can give or not give lhejr "inrormed ~onsent " • -DEVELOPING STRO~G pubhc part1c1pat1on 1n all aspects or medical dec1s1on·mak1ng -state hcens1ng and• de hcens1ng or pract1t1oners, arb1trat1on and rned1at.1on panels, peer review mechanisms, grievance procedures, hospital boards In the comm1ss1on's woJdS doctors should not be ' the sole Judges of lhe effects of their professional performance on laymen " -Eslubllsh1ng an Office or Consumer Health Affairs in each .s tate and a legally.backed system of guaranteemg basic rights ror the receivers of health care -Asking medical soc1et1es to exercise "maximum moral suasion over phys1c1an s who avoid professional respons1b1ht1es on the basis or fear of malpractice hab1hty " -Encouraging the use or properly supervised allied health care personnel -t.echn1c1ans and registered nunes -who have not been s1gn1f1canlly involved 1n malpractice problems Public Equity Corp. New Corporation Sues Corporations in the business o( long-term f1nanc1ng," says Mechlln1, adding . ''It's 1mposs1ble to make long.range plans on short·term f1nanc1n1 " Ji'riday'~·•· Closing Prices Htlll! VOIUC IUPtJ - ,. .. lfW'lllV •r• r,ic .. _.. ... NI"' York '"°' • .,...,.. ti -..... Hit P E thou t .... 01C1 -A A-...... llL I ... 18 JI ,,.._ .... "C:Flll<l ?loO • 1 ...,.,_ .. 1_. MmlClv iO I 1 •11o+ .,.. MMOt 02b 16 j">-~ ..... ,, !'! . 21 v.. Vi .... m•MU I ,1,,,_ AOdrttrOll 8) 100 8+-.,.. Advlt1~ 161> '29 •~ , AllM!tl I OI 11 »S 24\t't" .... Allftll:.1 pf 2 I .. .,..., "°' :e:rl't Co I 1 S¥o-.... -10 8 24 11~ ..... leeft lnqt 1 49 ,.,...,. ..._ Air ftr• ?OD 11 •2• n11t-.._ Air(ollLC .tO a '' 11 .. +lloll A J lnd"'tr• • ,. lV. AkUM\1014 111$\lo•" "I• 0.1 I 18 1 ·~ 11 .. ,. 1M Al•U Intl! 12 lllf" 1t.!loi + ... Alllflyln1 '° • ' '"""'' .... AIOttlOC ,. II 1 t.VI t ,,,_ AIOttlltl Ml • lt.J 18"--V. Alc..nAJ IO• JCl6 '11-ilot .... Alco Sid M ' " u:w.-.-:w. 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"'"e:lcPw 1 I IOU II""+ ~ "Family 24 I ltl 10'/1 • ~ A Flt1Sy1 20 lS 41 s ..... .,. ~ A Gl'llM l1b >Cl ll -lrti 4Gtt1SC 1 J2 28 1$'-' • V. A Gn ln1 _.., • 42 11-. A(i.l'llltl.1'0 $21\lo+\la "'"Holt! 10 • 101 11'.lo .. v. "'" "°'" 1111 tOO ,1 .+ 1 :="'J21 1! 1~:1:: Nn 1nW1lm 1 JV. ,. Mldlcl 12 • 121 1 ....... A MtCJltorp S 11• !>t.-1,ti Anl Mo1or1 lll J.,.,.,. t'- ,t.mNGI 1 S4 I 91 ..._ • lll Anl SHll119 14 6 ,,,,_ + l'I "'""'!pl 111 2• '' 11 A.m !>11'111 10 S 121 12•1t+ •t. Am!>tdpt •~ 14 $2V. .. •t. AmSttrllllll 2l1 11>-V. Am Str 2 40 l 2J Jl'IOo-l'I AmT8.tJ40101~1 49\lo• 'l>'O A1T1T&Tp1• 71 Sl111+Vi ATTP'"I·•' J ~ AtTp!Bl 14 43 '4!1f An1W41tr .. S 1l 9/• ,t.WI• ol 1 •l 110 11 + '"' ...,..ron 90 s s1 llV.-i\.t Al'TW)SI .100 S 2t. 4""• .... Amtll-In 1 I IOI 11~ • ~ AMF In I l• 14 .l4 l'IV.,. V. Amil!: int I l 11 19 AMP lfK 31 JS 102 l9 .. \Ii Ampeo 40 J l 101-. ......,.,.•CP11l6 1t" Amrtp Gorp 4 12 l.\t Amil.It 2 40 2 all 21~-* ""'"' ..... ~ 112 1~ ....... Am1totd J t0 to J.I tS -V. "mlt! In lJ 4 11 •Vo-V. Ar141tflll41 loO • Ill U~1 + .,. Ancl\Ht 1 20 9 22 ZO'l>-t-'h AAOtrCi•Y 1 6 'S 114-. .. Vt Angelle• 12 t S6 1•1o-.-\lo Ato111I (.o •I 1 41 ltV.. .. V. AplthlC SO 1 121 ,. ...... \II AQl:o OH 41 4 IS IO'Wo,. It.; Amt o Corp 111 l 1M+ V. ..,;p-L Corp I • 40 20""• ~. Appllt d M11 1411 'l• AR" S1 I 4' 16 ' It Arc•t•N ,. I 101 llll1 Arc•1111c2 11 u -Vi A1clll'O 1SQ IS ,., 2tV.•I"' Ar<llt Et1tp ~· 9 2"" ...... , ••• ,(. .. ,ll'>-'"' ""°' PS 1.Jt 6 440 l.i + VI Ar-B•I 1lb 18 4'-'•-\/lo Ar•LIG 1 10 s si 111'>+ 'h Arltn AltDv 101 2~.--i,. Nrnc:o 1 loO<l 4 81 21~• + 'I> Armpf 210 20 21\•+ i, Ar(rLi(k I022 ti tll'i.+I A•mst ""bl> 10 tl to"•,. v.. ArOCotpj'n I S 3 12V. • V. Atv•n lnclu~ 13 S2 6~-t-'• ASALld 1 40 t.4 1t.\f1,. +• ASA Ltd w1 11 lth Al41fCO 1~' • 118 J1t•-'Ao Asl\lnOil l~J S 23t 21~ + 1\• Alf\l()pl 1 ..0 1 41~ + 11, A1DryG 1..011 146 2111•-'l>'O A~ 5'1r91 40 6 I 21\,\ • .,,. A111tPne (I) l 9S I~• t I > Allto M lSD 21 J'h -1 \'-AllCtvEt Hi I 41 11 + ~. "llAlcM ?1~ tt Ull ti • ]~ AAtll pf l :t.. 1SO •S • l AIAtof?IO 1'1M\ft +2 Atlls Co•p 11W9 J\~ ATO llLC 10 S 10 I AVIOil 10bl1 ll Sl~t1:i. A111om1 Inds • II J\• AVCO Co•P , 116 5l• • 'h Avco Cp wll SI >.;. .. \lo AvcoCorp pl 40 1•~" \'II ,.,,..ryPr 30 t1 211 ll ... -\,\ Awl) lflCOfP 12 4l 1>1-I• Avntllnc 411 4 1'1 7~•• V. AYOnP• I 41 l l •21 41\• .. 'h AllKOG 10 16 2Jt 19Yt. + h -··-Bab&Wil 10 1 ltO 10'• + ~ Bett\f: 10b 10 SO S1 • a.l<ff tn 1Q t llt 9' • + \~ BalitrOil •I 1t II 'S'•-Yo B4l!Ow1n 41 I I 10l1-y, Btll~rp '° I 10 11~-.+ \.\ Biii •~ 1 % 6 111 toho V. kfl•l1 1"'t 711 BendlJO Inc 11 11• l~+l~o BlngOr Pn 1• I'• , &lntlrP pfC 10 11 +-Vo ""'°°'Pl pl to 8 .. v, 9na')IY220 l 10 >0'1-.. "6 111111 VI II $ t 11Yt,. 'I• 81MTr11st l J 106 jJ + l'lo B1rb0il 1 lo<I 17 1 81rd CA 10 17 12 111>11+ ~ S.r111t1 Mt9 ll 2 -\4 8111c1nt 60 J 1$ 1ov:. + \o Bal11 Ml 20 l 423 '29 + f', B1usc:hL Ml 16 Jtl )JV." \\ 81.ter L 19 ll •:Ml •IV..,. 1'-Bay!>tG l IO • ' 151'11+ Vt l:•rlno1 32 11 1 13 ... ~. ·~ Fds 1t ll SSO 11 h cMmn SO 14 12 ,.~. -\r kctonO .010 113 lSV> llM<Mr 10 S II 11'111-'• lltklf' In 11 S 11S 21 .... +-<lot kl(OPI 1Sb l 1)1 11:t.. o :I.:. NEW YORK (APJ -Four years artcr being conceived n1ore 1n frustration than hope, the Public Eqwty Corp 1s about to emerge tnlo the 'vorld or business, a l1ttle cor· porale brat with a barbed st 1nger Public Equity hopes to make a living su1nq other cor· porat1ons, especially through triple.damage antitrust sWts. It plans Lo gather data on the system 's mulfunct1ons. Jt hopes to support consumer suits THECOMPANYISBASED ::lf;? ~1~ ! 1~~·.14 On the COnCept Of improvmg =~Is~~ ro ! 1't 1: .... ! ~ the IYlt.tm from Within, Of llnOI• I to 1 I 4 14+\,. 4" working with ttfe ayatem to t::Ot-""f~l ·i ~~ t: .... :1:;: th le' While lll'ICPPI !Vi I tO •I "IT'S OVERRIDING olm," says its 1nll1ators, "ls to OS· !>tsl corporati on. govemmen· tal agencl'es :.ind lnstlt\llions to b~comc more open, re· t1onal a nd responsive to c1t1zens' needs.'' Barring unfo1 escen delays, nnd there have been many, Public Equity hopes to re- ceive clearance June 9 (rom the Securities and Ex.change Commission to seek $2.4 m1lhon 1n public financing. Thereafter It would be .run hke any other corporaUon. Jt u1ll have officel"B and dii::et· tors, a product -public service -and lt will seek a profit If ll ls successful It \\ 111, 1n eJfect., put the p~bUC 1ntere$l law movement on a business bails. "In the post,•· says Thomas ;\tcchhng. the president and the man lar1ely credited with .. pa rking the Idea, "a publlc 1nteru1t lawyer hid thebptlon of selling oul to a law Orm or a corporation, or else ex!JUn1 1n a storeTront. offjce." roundaUons were the &Ole source or supPort, and they "ere unreliable. ''They're not Improve e sys 1..,,c ,,,, >0 1 so11>-~ that &eems innocen nn111rh, I:" s1a Mto s l -11a ·--noeB 10. • •1 t \'l-"'° somehow lt never bad been 11rk•.Y ""'° ss 1~ d Bl" Prodcl 10 l9 7V.. tne 11t11111 .. 121 • "°' 1s"" .. 1" In fact, there was tl:Ct~ng~~ 1:; ll::+1" w1despr~ad feeltna among 11t1rJhn 11 13 Jt •lt.-" r • a 11111.o i 10 s ,, •• -,,.. lawyers up to a couple of lkM:kHA .o ' 116 11~"-"" years ago that such a technl· t=~,:C: 1 ~! 2~~· ''• que for turtberina the public =:r;.111 ~ ~ ~~! i~~~: ~ good must.be illegal The SEC 1oo11Mo1v. 6 l •• I Bordfn 1 )0 e '" 2•4• t Va fouftd the ·issue particular y &oro w 1 3s 1 12 11v ... '" ticklish since It had little pre· R:~\":d\ 1~~ 1 i~ ~i\! ;:: cedent to-guide It. And many ~.:i'1~111u ! ,:1s '~.,. • "" people still feel Public Eqwty "'!'"' 1'°'1 1 •i~ • 1 d II A BriMy1M)!l Ito._. • ~ is ra 1ca y un· mencun B•j' M, ~11 s ,,._,.,.... Mechling maintains 11 1s t,1k~~ G~ f ~~~ ::tt; t? Amencan aa &lfY other re· .,.uno. 1 ,2 • 11 1sv.. 11o putable corporation. " e're ereruo 1.0 " 1 ~ .. 11'1 W .,_ '°'" I . '!". " back to the real revolution," t~i:'r\~ :811 ,l .~: ~ he st.ates, "a revoluUon that .. ""' ... -00 • 1s1 ,s ... "" "'"""" w '° s J 1]4't-,,.. was taken away In the dayw at •TMtt *> •1 " "" . the Robber Barons, ~'& E.,J 1, ~~ 4m•1"" AnUtruat le1lal1Uon 'iii ibe ll,:J :: ~ ~~:'~ late 19th 'and orly 20th eel\• ro 1~11 '1~ 1~f~ ·._ tury triM to' restore · some .. 1w 20 s l• ,.,._,,.. equilibrium of power betWffri ~,_1 ~ ;o ,: 1:~=::; buyer and aeller, 1aya Meiehl· ,,: 11~ 1i 1sl U tr-+-~ tna:. but lhea, he.fee!s1 thecoet t:'i:'J ~ si ,~!':;': or puttJnt aotiJl'Ult Into action rrtM IO,, 2J) 101 .-, .. 11111 negated the at.tem, pt. 1;.1~ c-lj J"-,. Clltti ,~., , • llld ,. Ill.-~ ''WE WANT TO aESTOllE ..,.ww 1 II ·~·"" •-l"'U .. h 11• ,1,..,..c. l~• " tndlvidual rn .... ns,.. ty, • ''""'·"I I'"-., ta1... ' IWI! )(If 10 !>I ~" • '° a -•· , mNt. '°' 1• tot "-" . ''Pubue••J!:quity wlU be a s '·'' ,, ,, ....... ,, channel tor elll1eno, bj!nded l 'o.'::: .~ ", ~~. ~ toce:th~ri to com munlcale t ~.:;. ~: .Ti ~. t\ their WU • "l~ wlll, he con· ~ a '"'•.,.. Unun, help m'k• tbe •~em ..,-:o,~ ~" jj;;'"'::., .. ·wal'I{ the~ lt.!l'•ll~ ,;l1·1 lo wcirk t61' the publlo rGocl· ;.., ., .. • l.t ' - , Frldty, May30, 1075 DAILY PILOT 8$ NEW .. YORK . . STOCK EXCHANGE Y ~ar'a High·l.owt1 Appear Evrry Salurday PtOC:I t.G• 1 21 no '' -+ 1 ~ ,...octlt•• JO s 19 ..,,_ .... Proltr I I 40 l •' 111 ... "" ~ S A Inc JJ •"---i.. PvS Col 1 20 I 11! It"',_ "" 1"$£ .. G I /1 I l:M U , • \'• PS.£ pl 12 l i 110 10/ ~S(tld l~IO 41 )l 't PSNl-l•l•t • :H It • PSNM• I 11 t 2~ II , • "'-Puo!lcktl ), 9 tl ,...,_ 1, ~1»101 )IM 10 J2 • • • PnoRC Ollo , 1 1 PvcllSP 2 It t 1• 1•~• + "' Pllfm•n I /0 10 IO !)It ' I\') ~t•CP U llt.213+ P\lr1IM F•n ·~ 1~. Purol.ttor I 10 JS ~' •• "" --<> 0-""''8'' 1(110 288 IS IJ t I > °"'' •1'11 J • •u.-•. Qu&kSOI 6.ol 13 ltl ti Jo ,_ +o 0..-•lOr 2k 11 t\>t • 1-. -··-RtfHOtl 90 16 109 41'-' ~ 1t Rt mta.i 11 lt !>iO 5 A~co In 40 S2 ti l~o I It AtpOAm SO Iii 19 f O,. ,_ '• Rtyr».\11 1 > I 11 1>"'° • ,.. 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Wi.rluor Co l l • S\'1-V•, W'rJY ~-T~!!_J -... , K•roit co 1 11 toO 11" .. ~-. Kit• lfl< 20! S ti 10',.. + ,,.. .... ,., ll'IClllJ • 21 ~ • Y119StOr t.O s > 11 i.!o • ~\ Z.ltCOro I• a 11 11,,.. • Z_,!41 10 ~ 411 JliWtol ola,re C:orp , •4 414• V. ltf'llll>A:H 1 IOI l>t. 1t • ,' Z:11rn 11'\d l2 11 no tit+ '4 &anta Anita LOS ANGELES (AP> -Santo· Anita Consolidated Inc , has sold Ila entire Interest in General ExploraUon Co \ ' . ' -· .... r-1Lvl Friday. May.10, 1975 Distance Star Prefontaine Dies-in Crash EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -Steve Pre(ontaint', America's best dis· t1J1ce running hope for the 1976 Olymplrs :.ind one of this coun- try's n1ost (•o ntroversial amateur athletes, died early today in u one-car oiutomobile accident here. He "'as 24. Prerontalne, holder or every 1\merican distance record above 2.000 mett>rs. "'as pinned under his car "·hen il hit u rock wall at about 12 :30 a .in ., Eugene police said. A fe"' hours earlier he had run Ulc second fastest 5,000 meters in Americun history at the National Collegiate Athlftic Associ&tion preparation meet in Eugene. A native of Coos Day, Ore., Prefontaine was a graduate of the University o( Oregon a.nd ran for the Oregon Track Club, tie was u member of the U.S. Olym· pie team in Munich In 1972. Prefontaine, who trained hard. was often bitter over the treut- ment received by amateur uthletes in this country. Two months ago, asked about running as an amateur for his country, he said: .. To hell with love o( ci>untry, l compete for mys< Jr.;· tn rec&nt weeks Prefontaine had expressed pleasure with his conditioning as he' approached the NCAA meet. "I 'm strong and my fitness is coming alone at ·a very (<1st pace-." he said. "I'm ex. tremely · happy with my condl· tiooing." · .. Prefontaine. who ran distances from 2,000 meters to 10,000 meters, just missed winning a bronze medal at Munich, despite being spiked and shoved during a critical ruce. Not winning a medal when he had beeit expect· t.'<l lo was u major disappoint,.. ment tor him. Top Area Spikers hi Masters ·Meet • Bv ED BURGART '01 ttit D•lty Pilol SW" NORWALK -Four Orange Coast high s t'hool track and field stars-Newport 1-larbor's Brian Theriot and David Kurrasch. Edison 's Tom Lloy and Laguna Beach's Eric llulst-try for re- peat victories in the l\1asters meet at Cerritos College tonight . The top CIF stars from the4-A, 3-A and 2-A are competing with the first five finis hers in each eyenl qualirying for the state meet in San Diego, June6·7. Action begins al G:l5 "''ith the girls' long jump. The first run· ning event-the 330 lows---gets under"'ay al 7;15. In addition t o \Yinning their events in last year's Masters, Theriot, Kurrasch and Uoy "'ere ·also victorious in the CJF 4-f\ fin~ls last week. Ilulsl won both his races in the 2-A finals. Theriot, one o( California's premier quartermilers, ran a winning 48.6 here last year, and was an easy 440 victor (48.0) in the 4-A finals. His best this year is 47 .4. Kurrasch erased many records last week when he threw the shot 68-5, the second best mark in CIF history. As a Santa Ana High pro· duct last year, Kurrasch had a "'inning toss or 63-11 lh here. But Lloy may draw the most attention tonight. Despite suffer· ing a mild case of mononucleosis last week, Lloy still won the 4-A 880, running I :54 .8, fifth fastest of the qualifiers. Lloy is not a definite starter tonight, but i( his blood tests pro- ve satisfactory today, he will pro- bably run. His coach, Gordon Tea~by-team NBA Draft A tt•m·bY·lt•m b•ta•"°"'" of Tnu•Sdar's •all: ATLANTA HAWltS D•vnt Ttiompi.on, I, Nortti Clrolin.a Stalt ; M••v•n We b~l er, c, Mor9an S1•tt; Willlarn WlllOOJ91\by, f·C, D••n9111 Morrow HS. En.gltWOO<I, N.J.; Mo<ltf To .. t , Nor111 Carolu>11 Stale, WilOlff 11o11-. g, U.ot Nfw Orlfan~. O.nnr Wllhams, C·I, Mossisslppi; V'6 JotlMOn, t , Wonon• Slate; Qi.car J•c""""· g, DUQ<.e11>e; ca~ S<llltsi.er, c, Morning~oe. VIC r:env, g. 1-t ....... ,;, 805TONCELTICS Tom Bo~well, I·<. S.Oulll C.itohna; J~r-,.,,._ lkr'°", 11. we~1 Vl•11•noil , Crru:1. Mi!M, c. llhno»: • oa .. y1 Bro"'"· l·c. Fo•O~•m; Rl<I< Colem.;on, g, J.o<l<,.,.,Y1tlf Al Bo1we11. 9, Crill Rotierrs: R09er Morn- f1>9sl••. 1. K•n~•s: Robert Rl'IOOI"· I, Altldnr Slt1e, G•.; 6 •II EnOoCOtl, lj, Mili.wo::llu:.eltS, 8UFFAL08RAVES GeGrt)e 8<1cci, 9, Ma n11<11ta.1; Bob Flei!.<l'ler. I, Qyl<e; ~am Berry, c.-t, Arm~!rong Slate; Larr~ Ja<k\On, 9, North Carolona·Charlolte; M1~e f••nkhn. c. C•nc1nn•I•. AllM JoM~, I, P•pp•rdi ... ; Ge<lrge Ra<1tins, g, Ni~ri; Ari AU111, 9, P•pperotine. CHICAGO 8ULl..S Sieve Green, I, lndlan•; Jolln LOl!ol!OW!.kl, Q·I, In- di..,.; Ron H.J•Qll•, t. Ptnn~ylvani•; Bob lve•loOR, t, Nonfl Te~•~ Sl•le; Bou Andre..,, t.OnioSl•te. John Groctiowal~~I. I, A~~umplion; J onn MurPf!y, I , ~~~•cn .. i.en s; Gary Tomi..U..-;l<o, I, !ot.Mary ·~. Te ••~. CLE YE LAND CAVALIERS J6"" Umber!, c, SoutlWrn Ql1lorni•; Oan ·RoundtielO, l·C, Centr•I M•ChU)iltl; ...... I Utley, g, st. Jotin's, N.Y ; Teot H•lllot .. ay, Q. Clt•'t:lond ·sun Sued By Lomas Two football players who claim they "'ere offered hi gher salaries and bonuses t.o sign three.year contracts \\•ith the Southern California Sun sued the {'lub, the World Footba 11 Lea ~ue and three individua l officers Thursdav for more than S2 million in damages. St.l>tt: Eti( Ftrnslen. I ·(, S•n Fr¥>C.•KO. J•m Let, g, S¥tilcui.e; M•~e Ode~. 1, Wnltrn 1ten1uc1<y ; Henry W••d, t. JKklOtl SW.If; s.r.,,...., , Lt ll•ICll, I, J•c-oonv1Ut; A"*9 Mc:CM1ef, 9, UCLA. !°>l<•P Howard, I. 8owllng Grffn; Eric Anclttson, g, M<;Alo"tr. DETRDIT PISTONS W•llff Luc~ttl, Q, Oru11; hte T'90"kll, t1, UCLA; L!ndWY Ha.rslon. 1-C, Nl o<h19'"fl St•t"; Chi! Pf•tt. q, Stoaw; Alltn Soni•ll, l·g, NOtlti Ciltolon.i A& l , ll<t Woll<•m~. g, Armstrong State; Jol'ln lteHey, Q, Dillard ; lt"Y TllOmas, I, Detroit; Nli<lo.eJ FoM, 11, St. M•ry'\, No~a Scolo.i. GOLOEH STATE WAllllll lDRS .Joe Brv•nt. c. La Sa•lt; Gu• Wl!Ua-. 9, s-tti- trn Cilitorl\ia; 01•S John)on. l·c. Steuo1; RObe•t Hawtons. 9, ll!ir>Ols Slate. 8illyT•y•or. I, U Salle. ~ Larr~ Pounos. I, was11on9ton; Tony Slytes, o. San Fr•nc1sca; Stan Ba'/e•. J, Wyomln11 ; Mike Ro•en,ki, I, SI. Mary's, Cali!.; S<ott TroGbf, I, StantorO; ~uritf H.J<Pfr .11. St M9.-,'l, C.111. HOUSTON ROCKETS JCMI Me•l wea1~er. I·(, ~u\IM!•n IH1nois; Jlm Blan•s. I. G•rdner Webb; Ru<!y Wllltt.11. A"I°""" S!•lt; Ktn Sm1t11. I, Tulsa; Rot k Wllotlow, g. 11- hn<"•Sld\fl. W•Ui•m JGlln~on. t, lt>..JS Tech; N•le Bar!'ll!tl, ~. A"ron: Leon Jolln~on, g, Cenlenary; Slev11 Slrottier, g, Pro\lidf'ncf. KANSAS CITY ICINGS B•ll Roo1n1ine. 1-c, OeP•ul; Botl Blt;1t10w, 1·9. Pt!nn•y!v•n••; Glen H ans~n. t.g, LOU1~11W1.o ~1•te ; 8otl G"rt1tf, 1-c, Kentu<~y; ICevln Cle..,,., g, St. Jonn'~.N.V. Ed Stal\!. t , NOrlh C••olina; O inl 0..-n. I, SoutMr• C..litorlli•; W•rnt Doll. t ·I, Cle""'on; J•m Bostic, c, New Mf•ico St•tf. LOS ANGELES l.AKERS David M•Y•••, UCLA; Junior 8 rl0gem•n. Lo,.1sv1t1e ~ C .J. Kuptc, Mlcnl11•n; Cti•rlf~ Ru~i.ell, Al•ri.,.mil; 0.11 Fofd, UCS....11 &lrri..r•. Ric k Sutllt, K•ns•'; Nllkf C•stim•n, W1lliamtllt . MILWAUltEE 8UCl'S Clyde M.Jre,, Furman; Co•nehU\ Cil-ll'I, &o .. hnq (;rflfl'I; 8'0.1n Ham met, Btnllfy, Btll C..m1>1on Mi1Ma1tan:Ot1ver Purnell,OldDom•nK>n, ·' WHbur Ttiom•'· Amer!c•n; Bob McCu•dv, Rotl\mond; E"c H•y\, Monl•n.a; Romy Tl'IOIYWIS, E•u Claore. NEWOllLEANSJAll . Rick Keller , Stanlo•d. Runy H.J<kell. Sr•.te:u!.<t; J •m MCE iroy, Ctntra! M.ClloQ.Jn; Moock Colem•n. Hou\ton Bapl1sl; AnOrf Hamplon, l(fnl1Kky S!a!e, Rock S<llm1dt, l111noh; 6•tl Hf99;M, ASlll•ncl; Har•ty C...•m•thae1, Mentuc ky Stot!e; FredS!oke~. 8a•1>er Scot•.J ; Al•k\•nde• Btlo•, l..lnonQrad, RuS~••· NEW YORlt KNICltS E"'ill'r>e SnorL Jac,son Sla1t; Lu!IM!• Buroen, Ut•h, Larry Fogle. C•,,ISIY\; Jon,, R•m1oe r, Seton Hall; D•w•d Y•uqhn. Oral Robert~. . Don W•sfl1n91on, Na r1 h Ca•ol!n1; Henr., W!U+•m~. J •c '"'""' •; Pt 1e• O"v•s, Moclllg"n Sl.Jle: Je''' Hom•n, MiltQ...,llt; l omV•n Slom• m'>l'\tewn, Ptinceton; Mo RoW!r~, Norin C.•Ol•f'W Sl•te. PHI LADE LPH IA 16ERS Darry1e D•wk1ns, M•yn•rd Ev•nS H.5 , Orlan· dO, F1•.; Llord Frtt, C.uolt1>r<1 C.Olie9f; Jlm 81ker, H•""•"; Cllarle\ C!tve1.1nd, Al•ri..m1; L.ou•S o .. n. b.ir. 11ouS1on. Fitzel, says Lloy has shown rapid. progress this week, even though. he has been held out or workouts. 1 Lloy won here last year in 1;52.8. His competition is respectable tonight. In the 2·A CinaJs, San Marino's Carl Van Fleet (1 :.54.2) beat St. Joseph's David Magee (1 ::>4.4) while in the 3-A final!; Sunny Hills ' Larry Haden (1:54.4 ) finished ahead o( Notre Dame's Steve MeKenna (1 :54.7) and Bruce Rocheleau (1 :55.4). Rocheleau , though, has run 1:54.6. Hulst "-·as another sharp victor here last year, winning the two- mile in 8:54.0 as a sophomore. He will double tonight and faces Loar a 's Ralph Serna in the mile and two-mile. Serna has run 4:07.0 and 8:58.2 this year; Hulst4:11 .3 and8:57.0. The spri nts are contentious too. Norris Jones of Kennedy <Barstow> ran a 9.7 lOOarid a 21 .3 220 in the 3-A f inals while Pasadena's Rick Jackson ran 9.7 and 21 .7 in the 4-A finals. • The 120 high hurdles features Saddleback 's John Peterson, who has run 13. 7. Mission Viejo's Wilbur Gregory (14 .l) is also en- tered. The high jump is another com- petitive event. Estancia's Ken Conner. who won the 4-A meet with a lifetime bes t of 6·9114 , and San Clemente's Carl Eissman- !iecond in the 2-A finals at 6-8 - are among the entries. Here is how the Daily Pilot han- dicaps the meet, \Yith predicted marks : 100-1. J•eklo<>n lPasaden•I 9.S 1. N. JoMs CICtn. n«ty, 8.ar$IOWl •.6 l . Z.11< {WfSI Torrill'l(t/ 9.1 I . LyfVI (Mulrl 9.1 S. Jenkln5 I Noire Dame) 9.9. 220-1. N. Jones flCennedy, Blrstow) 21.1 2. J.ckson IP•wdfn.ll 21.S J. Zak C'Nesl Torranctl 21.11. J1n1<l11s CNotre Dame) 21.9 S. McGI01hm 1Complonl 11.0. .W0--1. Tllefklt INtwMrt Hi1111oorl 41.2 2. Stirton {Complonl 41.1 l . Smi t~ lPilr.adfm.11 48.1 I. <;fan. "Ille IL.,nwoodl1•.2s. Brown (Pacific )19,1. llO -1. LIOY (EdiMlll 1:S).J.1. RoclW!lffU 4Nolrt Damt) l :S3.6. l . H.1yoen !Sunny HUI~) 1:)<1.0. I . V•n FIHt lSan M.1rino) l:Sl.1. S. FlyM ISan Gorqonio) 1: SS.O. M•ll-1. Sfrn.1 (Loara) f:Ol.3. 1. Huitt,.....,,_... ... <Ill -4 :M.1 J. Ardol• (C,..M) 1:10.0 I. lten !Foolflill) 1:12.J J, Allpl IHuMi,._ .. .Clll I : ll.t. l·Mite-1. Hlllll fLa911fl• hadl) l:~t 2. Serna Cloilfa l 8:S7.1 J. Ht111uker fC.oron.1 del M.lrl l :Y.I I. R. Aq<ilrtf !S..nl.1 B•rbir•I 9:01.l S. G. A<JU;,•f tS..nl• 8••bar1 J 9:01.3. l:IOHH-1. ~1•r\Otl ISad<lltbi<k) ll.6 2. lumtt ICyprnSI 11.0 l , Gl'•91"Y (MiW.. Yiljol 14.1 I, F-r~ (Eii.tnhower l 11.2 S. (;odiner {Wn\ Cov- 111.1) U ,J. 330LH-1. Hunttr (P•woen.l 36.2 1. Thlln'l\On. IMorningMMI 31.0 l . Cflambers CMllirl 37.2 I, MiHtf ISi. 8on1vtnturt) JI.I S. TIH'Mf ICyp<•••) 17.1. . 110 Rt!•y-1. P.1 •<10en1 IL• 1. 1te11nedy, 8a••tow 11.1 J. Muir 12.11, (_O<'J"ll)Con 11.S S. LB Po- ly 12.1. Mole Rtiay-1. H1wp0rt HI ... 1:17.I 2. Mui• l :ll.2 3. LOS Al•mllO\ 3:19.1 I. NOtre a.me l :10.J S. S.n Btrn•rdino 3:21 .2 . ci!'/.:t~·1~L~~':': ... 1tE'.'g~:!!.~0"~~: ~~~~ fArcldial 6·1'h. S. lit' bel .. Hn Eliiman IS...n Cltmenl•) •nd Cuervo IWt•ltrnJ•I. LJ-1, Wih <m 4Fonl•n•) 11·1. l . [)ovl)ley (Un· no•l ll·lO 'h J. Sim pi.on CB1nnongf 23·9 I. Jenn orig) tOntarlol 23·1 S. Websttr IGareyl 2J.•. PV-1. V•lllSlrom <Vlll.J Pirkl 1•) 2. Goodman (A'llOU•ll 1•.0 l . ~C~lmmel !V1111 Park) 1~ ~. T. Curran tCre~pi) 1S·O S. Wordt n (Nolr~ O;;ome11S.0. SP-1. Kurratcti !N•wport H-.r110rl .,.10Vr l . L•YI \S.nla Cl•••l •l·• l . SJhik•rd ISi. P•Yll 62·1 I MLl(iRl•f (Harl) 61-J s. Odo"'lo (Do!. Pvebl~) .... ltalia11 Open For the past several months, Pretont11ine had been in training, trying to decide. whelher he should 'tiompete Jn tht!: 1976 OJym· pies. "Pt>opl~ s'ay I should be run· ning for .-gold m edal tor the old r\!'d, white and blue und nll that bull, but It 's not going to be that way," he said. "I 'm the one who has made all the sacrifi ces. Those , are A1Y American records, not the country's." The 1974 graduate or Oregon s111.id if he decided to corr.pete at Montreal next summer, "1 '11 be u poor man. If you 're not u ~~\EGQf 'S2 • millionaire, lhere'1 noway.;, lle said he waa not bitter, just ••outraged. American athletes, especially distance runners. 11re ut u big disadvantoee against tbe rest of the wofld. We're expected to live by all the rules, like not being able lo couch, but stlll Lraln and make our own living." Prefontuine held six American distance records, In the two· mile, three-mile, s ix-mile, !l ,000 1ncters, S,000 meters and 10,000 meters and he held the collegiate records in all those categories except for the three-mile rwi. His running career stretched· • UPI T11e9Mte CRASH VICTIM -Steve Prefontaine, (182) who was killed in an automobile accident early today in Eugene. Ore., is shown defeating Jim Ryun in the t\vo-mile in 1972. Willia~ Thinking About Shakeup Manager Dick WilHams says there's nothing jinx·like about his California Angels losing 10 games in a row at home lo orie team. But he adds some o( his players A•gelsSlote AllGAITIHlflltMP(:l11~) M•y lO 8atl1mo•1 •t C•Hlornl• May ll 8alt!mort 11 Calllornl• June 1 Billtlmort ~I c;.i11orn1• 1:2S p,tn. 1:2S~.m. 11:S~p.M. might be in specting ne\v surroun- dings if the losing continues. The Angels, with hard-throw- Nolan Ryan being hit tor l\\IO home runs, lost to Cleveland 9-3 Wednesday night as the Indians S\vept a three-game seri es and \von their 10th straight here over thre e years. 1·1 don 't know a nything about tH'c streak , ho\vever it's an en- tirely different team this year so ' J don't think it's got anything to do\vith it,'' Williams said . The matter .is simply, "We ha- ven't been playing good ball . .'\_ Williams added, "We might be a little tight so we gave the players the day off Thursday since there \vasn 't a game. Instead or coming in and working out they could spend the day with their ramilies or go go!Cing. "We should be all business \Vhen \ve come back Friday night." · The Angels open a lhree-g_amc series \vith Baltimore tonight \Yith Ed Figueroa racing Jim Palmer of the Orioles. Williams warned the team that there \vould be some charlges if play doesn't improve. ··1f it continues this \va y," the manager said, "we're derinitely going to make some changes.'' lie said the changes could. come Crom the Angels farm system or the te am might look tor a trade. tNlek nearly a decade. and he had been aettlng records ror tour years. For INltance, he tied the col- leglate two·mile record<>{ 8:33 .1 ln Eugene, the town near which he died, on March 21, 1971. He was later to cut 15 seconds ofr thMt record, breaking it several times. Jn July 1971, at Berkeley, he set the Americun record in the 5,000 meters with a time of 13:30.4, a. record he was to later cut by more than eiliht seconds. Mes an Captures Golf Title PALM SPR I NGS -Costa Mesa's Will ie Barber, the 61· year-old brother or touring pro . Jerry Barber, s hot a three. under-par 68 for a 138 total and won the U.S. National senior goiters spring tournament. Barber, who won the $75 ,000 fall senior classic last season in Las Vegas, was three strokes ahead of Jack Koennecker, the host processional at this Canyon CourUry Club, and Eddie Nowak o( Arroyo Grande. Both were at 141. Warm but windy weather raused scores to soar, but Barber shot a steady 34-34 . Knirks Sign Mr Gin11is NEW YORK -The New York Knicks of the National Blfsket· ball Association have signed American Basketball Associa· lion superstar George McGinnis to a multi-million dollar con· tract, The Associated Press learned today. ' Published repor!s said the con- tract would be for S2 million and "'Ould cover six years . . The AP learned the Knicks had signed the 6-foot·8. 2J5·pound McGinnis -star of the AHA 's ln· diana Pacers -and were pre· pared to fighL.whatever legal bat- tles were necessary to keep the .; 24-year·old player on their roster. ! Thre e. S hare Le ad ATLANTA -U.S. Open cham- pion Hale lr\\-·in birdied three or I his last rour holes for a 66 and moved into a tie for the first- round lead Thursduy in the ' $225 ,000 Atlanta Golr Clussic. '1 Irwin's six-under· par erfort on 1 I t he hilly , 6,883-yard Atlanta Country Club cours e gave him a share or t he lead in this Designat- ed Tournament -all leading players are required to compete \ -with veteran Bi ll y Casper and long.shot Joe Inman. The three leaders s hared a two-stroke advantage over Jack Nicklaus , Johnny l\1iller. Leonard Thompson and Jack Ewing, tied at 68. Lee Trevino headed a large group at 69 . lf.S. Coarh A iffng TOKYO -Ailing Bob Giegengack ~·a s transfered in a wheel chair from a Chinese to an American airliner in Tokyo Fri- day as the U.S . track and field team fl ew home <ifter a two·"'eek tour of the People 's Republic of China. He was much improved. The 68-year·old former \'ale · University coach awakened Fri- day morning in Peking, feverish and shaking, two hour.; before the team was to start home. • Walker C11p Win Mark Arnold Lomas of 1-funt· ington Beach and \Villiam Michael t'erguson or San Diego claim in their Orange County Superior Court lawsuits that the defendants do not have the assets lo mee ~ th e terms of their con- tracts and did not have them al the time they "'ere persuaded to leave the New York Jets. lltn Trle•. Gon1a9•; ICtn ""l~lon, V•lo»!.lot •Staie; M•ke Flrnn, Ktnhxky; Freem.on Blolde, Easl Mont•n•; L•rrJ' H•••tlOtl, Drake; Ritk Rtt(I, AIYW P•c1f•C, PHOENIX SUNS Alv.1n Adams. Okl1~om1 ; lllck Sabers, Louosv1lle ; Jimm y D•n Conner, KtnhKky; 8ay•rO Forrt~1. C.••l'ICI C•nyon, Evert Gains Finals The Angels Thursday called up relier pitcher Dave Sells, who led the team in saves in 1973, Crom Salt Lake City. It \vasn'l im- rTiediately decided who would be dropped from the roster to make room (or the right-hander. ST. ANDREWS, Scotland The United States clinched the Walker Cup tor the 22nd time Thursday on singles victories by Gary Koch, Kurt Strange and, Craig Stadler. It is alleged in the two actions that Sun a nd WFL officials - 3mong them Santa Ana attorney Gary Davidson "'ho once headed the \VFL -breached the con· fidcntiality of the nl'w contracts by issuing press releases to the nl'ws media. • Both playrrs claim thut the de· !endants' <J t'tion v.•as designed to attract investment and promote interest in the Sun and the W FL. 1.omas, \\'ho pluycd at Golden West College, de mands full pay· mc.nt on a three-year contractw.·n '-"'h1ch he was to receive $55,000 i the fir.st year, $60,()()()...-hf' e s econd and $75,000 in the third plus a $50,000. bonus (or signing. Sorn McC•n1s, Oral Rot:>tru; Joe Pac., Coppin S1•tt ; &ill 9UfAll, So"llllrn C.11'-"'i•; O.~ EtJ. munas. West Gto•9••; J•ck S<M.-11•, Aro1on1 S1•1t; Owtn Brown, M••Jl•llCI; Mlkf Moon, Atilon.I Sl•le PD RT LAN 0 TlllAIL 8U.ZlllS L•one! HolUns, A"10n• Sl•I•; llob Gr-. l.91>9 8each Sta11; lom Roy, Maryl-; Gus Gt••rO Y"ll'"i"; Pno! H<tks. Tul<tnt. ' M•urict Pre.iev. Ho .. uan; Ge••!<I Wolieu , Ottqon: S1eve FotlO•. MoAml of Ol\lo; C~l•l•Y Ne.ti, Or190n Stille; Ouenlon B<a•lan Po•ll•nd· Tyrtt F o~lt•. Portl•nd. • ' SEATTLE SUf>EAM>NICS Fran~ Oieynot•, Sfilt\lf; l:lruc1 Sot.ti•, )("vier , Loo.HS!.Jf'la , J!m Moore, Ul•ti Slat'· Dwain C.Ovln !~~ C.OlltQe; L•rrJ Smun. Nortti C•,olln,' HOiiis Mi!ltr. o r,.•y; Ken Mc1<tn1l1, Mont1n.e; Rotti Haws, Ul•ti S .. t~. Jerry Btllotlo S.n!• Cl•••. ' WASHINGTON 8ULLIETS Kt"I" G•lvtr. M:tnlut,y; Tom KrOPP. lte•rnev Stitt ; Fts\or LtonarO, Furm.n· Roell JonH """Q+nla Cammanwt•l•ti; J o..,,c.a(,eu, P1Kdut. • Foett ntr Jol\n\an, R-'noo11>11 M.lcon; Brute H•mm1119, Aug .. \1111 •; t>ou9 erooklngi Crti{lltlClfl , Mi-• Faflty, 8••~·~ • * * * ROME -It took defending champion Chris Evert less than an hour to beat Mirna Jausovec of Yugoslavia 6-2, 6·0 today and qua lify for the final of the S120,000 Italia n Open t ennis tournament. Second .seeded M artlna Navratilova of Czechoslovakia edged Dianne Fromholtz of Australia, 7-6, 6·3 in the other semifinal match, The Evert-Navratilova final \,•ill be a repetition of last year's battle rorthetitle. Evert, the top seed, reached the final afte r conceding only 12. games to her opponents. She broke J ausovec 's service in every game the Yugoslav l~n· ager, the 1974 Wimbledon j6nior champion, served. MEN'S SINGLES T lllrd Round Onnv Par11n, N•w Z•e11nd, oeat 1C1rl Meiler, wesi Oerm•nv, 1·6, 1·6, 1-5. • G11Ut1,mo VIies. Arge11Una, Wa t Nik~I PIUc, YUQOsl•~ll, 6•1, 6·2, Bjorn eorg, s weoen, lle•I Paolo Bertoll.ictl, lta· 11 ... 1.•·'· 1111 N•Sl11e, R om1nlil, btal Pllll ptnl, Au111all•, ._,,•·I, M•""'I Or1nl•i , Sp,aln, bl•l Ado!-P•n.atll, ll•!'o', •·t •·J. WOM•N•s Slf!.GLll 5emit1Nli 0..1• Evert 111'11 Mirna J1ut0'1K. VU91Hltvl1, •• 2 ... 1. ~'tl"a N1vr tlllev1, C1K~lov•1<l1, bNt Ol.,_,.. FromflOtll, Al.Oltr•ll•, ,.,.,.,.,, In another move Williams an· nounced ~yan, who went seven innings Wednesday night, Would pitch against the Orioles Sunday. "He can <"ome back after three days rest and pitch the fourth," Will iams said, "since wC'rc o(( Mondily otherwise he'd ha'v e Ci.vc days and come buck on the sixth." UCI Spikers Gain Semis The U.S. team needed only three o( the eight head-to-head ~ afternoon matches to• beat Bri- tain in the traditional tivulry of amateur golfers, but victory was not assured until the fifth matchl wheh Stadler provided the' margin with a 3 und 2 triumph over George MacGregor. Rot h L e ading DQWN EV -Mark Roth or Stattn Island. N, Y ., won seYCn of · eight match games and shot into the lead Thursday night in the $75,000 Pro Bowlers Association NaUbnal Championship .. Meyers Surprised, Flattered SACRAMENTO-UC Irvine's J'roi•er'f'f•ed BUI Cheadle, )luaaell Rol'!J!On, , David Williams, Mlke Sabatino N·E W Y 0 R K -Frank • and Robert Goto earned berths in ''Pancho" Martin, one ot tl)c today's aemiJinala ot ·the NCAA·. country's top thoroughbred 1 LOS ANGELES IAP) -All· American Duve Meyers or UCLA 6eid Thursday he wa11 both sur- prised and flattered that __the Los Angeles. Lakers of the National Basketball Association draf~ed him on the firs t round. Still, the 6·foot·8 forward saitl he wouldn't make up his mind immediately on his future. "Rigtit now I want to graduate .from school and I'm not thlnklng »bout profe1,iona1 basketball." Jleyen 1ajd. He's scheduled to receive his degree in sociology next month and contem)>lates graduat e school in recreational work , busi· nessorlaw. "I've got oi lot of time to think about it,'' he s aid. "I had heard that David 'rho'mpson nnd Marvin Webster were on the Lakers' list ahead of me.'' Thomps on was drafted by Atlanta in the first pick but then the Lakers went to the home town favorite Meyers. WebstcrwcotlO . . Atlanta on the ne·xt cholce. • Meyers said he was happy that teammate Pete Trgovlch was drafted high in the li sts, by Detroit In the third round. ''Pers onally,. I want to graduate and then look over e verything," the All American s11i d. "I won't really believe J've g r ad uated until I have the diploma in my hand.' · ~ "I was sitting home this morn· ing thinking the dra~ ls a 1trangc lblng. l rcaUy didn't think I'd have my cholt:c and I 'm s u.r· track and field championihipc ·~ers, has been tined $6,000, prised, vory 1urpri1ed." (collece division) i~ qualifying · largest in the history of New i , Thursday. York; racing, on charges o(.drul· J: ,Meyer3 wouldn t comrnlt Cheadle won his 440 in· ainghorsesatNewYorkLraCka. t himself-on whether-he would play· • termediate hurdles Mat l9 S3 t \ ~~'~=~or:~L ~~·~~l~1~1Qw~t\ ~~ ' Royston· and Wiltfam' ,both ·ttTT Siiataaaarla I <looked 9.9 In lOO·y&rd beats u . Amer can Baakelball Associa· both !inithed fourth aDd-labaUfto At .-111\1>1u'f111; lion druh before making ony de· Mnd Golovaulted lM~qualify, ' ~ wotntn'•:!~~~,'!!' A'o!!:!,~!',,.11,.1 ... · eh1lun. t Th Ant••t·-' on •• ~ •• ..,. v...,...H11111, 1-1.1T••tior•.t-9"'°"-e v. ~•o _, 01:W.I IU.. """"9"-Gool•toflQ IPJ blelHuril,4"1, "I've-iota neaotlator and he'll was tn the 1teept 1 ech&H .. ~ ..:!3~~1.:,U:,!:.,~1 ~.;·w•""'" c~• tiff\ v • h11nd.le that part ot it," Meyers RalphStauntonf•l edtoqu-~. Mtn -C.O•tl"> .. •t'v.-.rml"•l.'-J. ••Id. "I'm new to all of this and Finals ire 1cbeCluled~y and ,.::;:""=:,·~.-:-vo1111t·.t.. Nmltr•J CJI..,.. that'• why I 've aolanegoUatot.'' Saturday atSacrameotoll.:M. Al lA16. I ( ••• I ' I Saddleback V.OL.'68, NO. 1.50, 4 SECTIONS, J6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A \ ..... ·., c.'°"r l'od ay's c•-•c; N.Y.Stoeks ~ FRIDAY, MAY JO, 1975 , . , •• TEN CENil ~ .. Huls~ Changes Sides • Ill Murder Trial By TOM BARLEY itH-Dtur,..i.e....,. Reluctant witness Arthur Craig "Moose" J-lulsc overcame his re-iuctance Thursday in Orange County Superior Court but only arter lawyers for both sides aereed that he could switch • sides in the ''Devil Cult" murder trial of Steven Craig Hurd. Hulse. hustled from the wit: ness stand Wednesday 'ufter 'Economy Due to Worsen? WASHINGTON (AP) -The Ford administration said today that unemployment and the re- cession will be "'orsc this year than it estimated earlier, but should be follo'A1cd by a stronger economic recovery next year. In its mid-year budget and econ omic review, the ad - ministration predicted un · employment will average 8.7 per- cent, or about 7 .8 million workers, for the year. The ad·· rninistration predicted as recent- ly as February that unemploy- ment would average 8.1 percent this year. The forecast, if true. means that the jobless rate probably °""·ill rise above 9 pe1·cent later this year. The April rate of un· employment was 8.9 percent. The report, which will be sent to Congress, also predicted that: -Ttie nation's economy will decline by 3.6 percent this year , compared with the administra- tion's original prediction of a 3.3 percent decline. -The 'econbm y will reOOund with a strong 6.3 percent growth 'next year, better than the 4.8 per· cent growth forecast earlier. -The ~rate of lnfl•tlon, as renected by consumer prices. will increase 9.1 percent this year over 1974, compared with a February projection of a 10.8 per- tent increase. : questions from prosecutor Frank Bri~eno produced obscenities -rather than answers, will next appear in the court room as a de· ren,se witDess, not a prosecutior witness , if the trial is not declared a mistrial. Judge Frank Domenichini will make that decision Monday. If he decides the trial will go on Hulse. 21, will become defense attorney ,William Gamble's witness. Slim Goodbody (John Burs· tein) has his body back. The singer-danger lost the full leotard with body brgans on it Which he uses to put on a health mus ical, but it was fo'und late r n ear a New York school. Lion Saf ari'.s Birds Home After Kidnap Sonya, Scarlet and Happy are happy to be home again today at Lion Country Safari in Irvine, where thdy were to r esume performances after being stolen six days ago and then r ecovered. ''They roller skate, ride scooters and put out fires, things any normal red-blooded bird will do," explains Jerry Kobrin. vice president of the African wildlife park. · · Sonya, a Gre ate r sulphur· crested cockatoo from Australia, Happy, a liiyacinthine macaw from Brazil and · ScarJet, a scarlet macaw, also from Brazil, are still a few ranks above spar- rows and barn swallows in the social register or the world's fowl. Happy is worth $10,000 alone, while total value or the three is $15,000, according to Dr. Charles Jeffries , their owner. He began a systematic check or Southland dealers who handle rare and exotic birds and Punishment Ban SACRAMENTO CAP) -A bill to ban corporal punishment in California's schools, ·except When approved by a parent, has sque·aked through lhe Assembly. animals after the burglary and fQund his missing bird.5 at Casa de Pets in Stuilio City Tuesday. No arrests have been made so far in the case of fo"''I play at Lion Country. Burglars broke through a tri- ple lock system which secured the birds in cages at the amuse- ment park at 8800 Moulton Parkway1 leaving three less- vahiable tiirds behind. The brightly colored performers from Robelle Animal Productions Ltd., Norco, have delighted audiences daily for months. P UNISHMENT FITS CRIME CINCINNATI <U PI) -Trevor Schmidt, 19, of Cincinnati, called a police officer a pig when he was stopped for speeding. So he's had to choose bet ween spending one day on a pig farm or 30 days in the workhouse, Cincinnati Municipal Court Judge Rupert Doan ordered the choice of sentences. Schmidt chose a day on a pig farm. Distance Champ P~~f'!~aine Killed EUGENE, Ore. (AP)-Steve Prefontaine, th.is coun· tri'a fjnest d.istance runner and one of its most con- troveralalamate.ur athletes, was killed in an automobile ac· cldent u.rly today, little more than four hours after he ran the second faitest 5,000 meters by an AmeHcan. Police said Prefontaine, who was 24, was pinned under hla car. lt'Wt It hit.a r"C)Ck wall al aboUt 12:30 a.m . PDT. The former University of Oregon standout who·finished fourt'1 in the 5,000 rqeters at the 1972 Ol)rmpica had covered lhal dis tance in 13 minutes 23.8 seconds in winning the event at an NCAA preparation meet :Ilhursday fl)g~l In EUgene. 'l"he Un;i.e wai about 1 ~~ seconds off Pr«ootalne ·s American record. : · • · ·A 'high s chool sensation in Coos Bay, Ore., Prefontaine went on to a brilliant car'eer at the University of Oreaon ud, ai the Uma of his duth, owned U.S. "'cords foc every dlstance. above 2,000 meters. Additional details today on h~U t • Gamble m oved (or a mistrial \\'ith the argument that Hulsc's .statement that he was round gui l· ty of murder charges after plead· ing not g uilty a nd not guilty by reason or insanity to the hatchet killing of service station atten· dant J e rry Wayne Carlin, 21 . could prejudice Hurd's chances or a fair tria l. Gamble argued that the jury now knows tha t Hulse drew a life term in state prison arter riling the s ame pleas as Hurd. The in· rerence is obvious, he told Judge Domenichini. J-lurd, 25, is accused of fi rst degree murder in the mutilation killing on June 3, 1970, or Mission Vi ejo teacher Florence Nancy Drown. Mrs. BroWn, 31, or El Toro, "'as dragged from he r car by a gang as the car entered the Sand Ca· nyon Road orrramp !rom the San- t a Ana Freeway. She was butchered in an Irvine orange grove. It is a lleged that l·lurd, assert- ed leader of a gang or drug-using drifters, pl ayed the major role in her killing and burial. Hulse ex- plained Thuisday that he could face reprisals from fellow in· mates in Soledad State Prison \\'he n he returns there if he testifies in the current trial as a prosecution "''itness. Hurd 's trial only became possi· bl e la s t m o nth when the California Supreme Court ruled in a landmark decision that the pre\'ious ly mentallY ill prisoner can be tried, prov.ided he is kept under the influence of IX>"''erful tranquilizers. (See HULSE, PageA2) Stanton Teen Slain In Gangland Violence Threats Precede Shooting A 16·year-old Stanton boy died Thursda y of a gunshot wound in the head inflicted Wednesday night as he r a n from the scene or a street gang fight. Police said today Gerard Qui· jas, Qf 7702 Yorks hire St., died Thursday morning at Stanton Community Hos pital. about 12 hours after he was s hot. Norman Haggs trom , 19, a lso or Stanton, is being held on murder charges stemming f rom.UJ;e ~nciGent . Police said the shooting oc- curred al about 10 p.m . Wednes- day during a gang battle but there is still no indication Quijas was involv.ed. The mother of the murder sus· peel told police another fi ght had taken place outside her home at 11822 Santa Rosalia St . earlier in the day. She said several gang members had threatened to kill her son and burn down her house. A police spokesman said Mrs. Dorothy Haggstrom told them she asked her son to protect her against the gang, which vowed to return. She said they came back that night, armed with Molotov cocktails and other "'eapons. Witnesses said at least one other shot was " fired during the confront ation bes id es the fatal bullet. Police went on patrol a round St anton and Garden Gr ove schools Thursday and again to- day to gua rd against violence erupting as the result or the shooting. The police s pokesman said to· day several fights were broken up Thursday and a fe\v schodls dismissed classes early to pre- vent further ca mpus incide nts. All the schools were open today. ~er Rates :~m -Then ! I • ! F o r sakes 'em I LOS ANGELES (AP) -"We wi ll not be a ble to use your body in our centerfold," the letter says. " ... On a scale of O to 10, your body was r ated ·2 ... The letter carries the name "Playgirl .. a l the top a nd ap- parently has been sent to men a round the country . Bul a Playgirl m agazine spokesman said Thursday it is not responsible for the mailings and desc ribed the m as "a very cruel hoax." Phil Paladino, public relations director for the wom e n 's magazine which fe atures photos of nude men, said Playgirl has received 44 inquiries about the letter -many from people who think it is legitimate. The letters bear postmarks from around the country a nd they obviously were composed on different typewriters. They show difrcrent logo s tyles at the top or the page, different mailing ad- dresses ror, Playgirl and a rc signed with different names. he !iHld. But the text is almost identical on all the letters which Pl8ygirl has seen In the last rew weeks, Palad.ino said. 1\fter tha nking the lndividµal lor synding in h iA photographs - no one. of course; bad done so - the letter goes on to say in ff.rt : (See llATING, l' ... ·6?1 9 Gallon Limit FEA Oullines Gm Plan WASI-llNGTQN (U PI) -Federal ener gy planners have proposed an emergency gasoline rationing plan that would give drivers in all pa rts of the nation the same number of gallons of ruel each week. "We don't want to gel c1.1ug ht like we did the las t time.'' a member of the Federal Energy Administration task force "'"hich drew up the proposal said tod ay. I-l e referred to the 1973·74 1\.raboil embargo. The s pokes man said today the plan was drafted as a standby and u•ou ld be used onl y in the event or a major emergency . The report gave nQ estimate how muc h gasolinC would be provided to each Hcensed driver. ln the past , however . U.S. orricials have talked in term of nine gallons pe r Y.'eek. Riley S e@s · Public . .Paramedic Control By RUDI NIEDZIEl.SKJ 01 IM Oitlly Pilot Shlf Supervisor Thomas F'. Riley predicted in E l Toro Thursday night that th e co unty 's paramedic service would remain under fire department control and not be turned over to private ambula nce firm s. He told leaders of the Sad· dl e ba c k Valley YMCA h e believed there we re enough votes on the Board of Supervisors to sustain a public ly operated paramedic s ys tem, at least in the unincorpora ted areas or Orange County. The campa'igni!Jg supervisor's remarks were apparently in· tended to be ·heard at nearby Leisure World where residents :a r e vigorous ly protesting the county 's consideration of letting ambulance companies provide pa ra medic service. "I cannot sec thiS in any \Vay being turned over to private en- ·* . * * terprise." said the fifth district. supervisor, although he admitted voting for a study determining the feas ibility of ambulance paramedics. Riley said he voled for the stud y. now in progress. only beca use h e knew that fellow supervisors had e nough votes to carry the m easure anyway. · As a result his orfice was inun· dated by letters. "There are 18,000 residents in Leisure World and I got 18,000 le tters," Riley said about his unpopular decis ion to join the study proposal. Riley told Y leaders gathered for the ir annual dinner that estimates ror private paramedic calls range betwe en $99 and $150, even if the ambul;.1nce companies were supported in part by a gov- ernment s ubsid y. .. Like the fire department and the police d e partme nt , the paramedics a re a lifesaving (See PUBLIC, PageA2) * * * YMCA Honors T rio At El Toro Rites ~., .................. O!DICATION R'EwAllOEl> 'Y'• Jan Marlie< • Jan ~1 a rk er a nd Mrs. and Mrs. Crawford Phillips were honored Thursday ni g ht a s the Sad- dleback Y!lt1 CA's "Woman or the Year" and "Couple of the Year " in ceremonies al El Taro's Villa S\\•eden restaurant. All three were cited for out- standing contributions to the YMCA and given tro1>hies to com"Tlemorate the event. Miss Mark er, 20, of 24622 Shadowfax St., El Toro was signaled out for "untold hours of service," many of them without pay, to YM CA programs such as youth a nd government activities, camp programs. ba ke sales, kite flying contests, and Christmas tree sales. Although s he is e mployed as a part-time YM CA program assis· tant, Miss Marker was la uded by past bo ard or m a na ge r s chairma;n Joe Peterson for "the many e xtra hours she puts in .. and her willing ness to go out of her way tOhclp people. In a departure fl'om tradition, YMCA leaders gave their first "Couple of the Year" ·award Th\lrsday night lo the Philips' because lhey consider them "in· separable''• In their dedlcatioh to the youth organization. Bobbie a nd Crawford Phillips, 24572 Mosquero Lane, Mission Vie;o, are actlve in the Gra.y-Y program a'nd SP.ent three )'UJ'S on the Y"s board QC managers. (See YMCA, ,oge .U) County Doctors Return B"· ALAN DIRKJN ·01 Ille D•ilY PUM SUtt Operating rooms in Orange County hospitals will be back on normal schedules Monday. The deci s ion for anesthes iologists a nd othe r physicians involved in the s ur- gery slowdown to return to full schedules was reached at a s ix · hour meeting of the Orange County Medical Association Thursday night. Everett Banniste r , executive director of the 2.000-membeP OC- MA. confirmed today that ror a· while "'it was touch and go·• on whether the doctors would re· turn. The meeting had been called by OCMA president Philip Mc Farland to consider a request by doctors in the San Juan Capistrano a nd San Clemente area for stronger and more con- certed aCtion lo resolve the malpractice ins urance crisis. But a resolution by these doc· tors for a ll physicians in Orange County to withhold al l but e mergency services for three weeks was "resoundingly" de· teated, Bannister said. Bannister said that there was much support for continuing the slowdo"·n ~ but when the vote came to return there was not a dissenting vote. "But remember the vote was not t aken until after six hours of debate.'' he added. The vote came after the mem- bership "completely rejected'• the concepts of a stop-gap bill that se ttled the s trik e by Northern California doctors, whO have been of( \\'Ork since Ma y 1. "There \\'as a feeling that the Northe rn California doctorS bought a bad bill," Bannister said. The OCl\1A director said that the motion agreed upon by the Oran ge County doctors was limited. It \\'as to continue work· ing "until the e nd of the general session or ·the Legislature pro· vided that the legislators de- monstrate a s trong desire to push legislation that will give answers t o l o n g-t er m problems o f <See NORMAL, Page A2l Or:~:~:··~~ 1"e atlller Low cloud s night through mid-m orning otherwise s unny Saturday "'ith sli ghtly warmer tem- peratures. Highs will range from 65 at t.h c beaches to 78 inland. INSIDE TODAY It· won't just bf onother show when 2 ,800 mu.sic .stu- dents /rom Saddlcback schools piit on a musical t:t· travagan:za .at fhe Ancheim Convention Center ne3'.'.Jll!6k . : S.. stor~ by Daily PiJ'l,Sla// Writer Jan Worth on ,,.Cl. ..... ,. ' ... ,............... .. ........ ,,..... ~ A10 Dr ..... CN11ty .t.• AS........ ..., •l•t 01·11 .. .-.,.._, CM It) IJIYN ....... t •S ., .... ..., .... MlllC.•Mllrlllt\ ••-s .... ,. ... ,,... C4 .._._ u.. •• WiNttlitl' .... CJ ...,._. • ._,,. M .. ..,_...... .... c:\ •" 11•r · i <11" • ' ... ·-"'' Friday, May 30. 1975 .... D.llly F'ti.t 548"1 l"Mt• YMCA'S COUPLE OF THE YEAR Viejo'• Crawford and Bobble Phillips MAC Plans Special Rec Meet A s pecial meeting or the Mi s· sion Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun c il (M1\C) ha s b een scheduled ror 7:30 tonight lo dis- cuss an areawide recreati on pro- gram. · The meeting was called by act- ing l\tAC Chairman Cal Neve to avoid conflicts \\•ith other meet- ing dates. In announ cing the special session, Neve pointed out that the Saddleback Valley Unl£ied School District had just joined the county to fund a year-long recreation program and that it \1:as time for the community to become involved in the planning. "The need for a recreation pro- gram was very well explained at tbe s chool board meeting, as was E;Yidenced by their decision," Neve said. "Now it is incumbent upon each of us to work together as a united voice lo ins1i1re our youth that the needed recreation pro· grams are available this sum- m er. 1 The s pecial meeting or the ad· Visory council is expected to in· \lolve representatives from all ~unty service areas in the Sad· dleback Valley and is set for 1'1AC headquarters in Suite E, <161 29 La Paz Road, Mission '\'iejo. : 111 action directly related lo lhe t'riday night recreation summit, Ole sc hoo l district's deputy ~i.iperinlendent , Richard Welte, lpst wee k appoi nted a n ad- ministrator for the new program. ·tie is Ed Mangan, who served as the school district's li aison of- ficer with the county service a,reas since 1973. Mangan's ~"'D iary will range from $24 ,000 to ~6,000. f'ro•P~Al HULSE .•. • J Gamble states that Hurd is on-JY capable of telling lhe truth Un· fler the influence of the pre· ~cribed drugs. ORANGE COAST se DAILY PILOT : Tti. 0t ... ge (N \I 0-..1 , Piiot, ..it• wt.«~ 1, con .. , blor>eo t,.,. ~W\·P•nl," pucn,,,.., o., 111t O•-' '°"" Pl.<l>tl"''"ll (omll•~• ~rP•••111~11en, ••~ , """'l"ht<I Mo<>d3• '"'°"~~ r .. .,., '"' ""''~ , Mow, Nr,.rio-1 BtM•, Hunl1f\Qlon llo>.otn1Fo....,. , 1•<1> V•>I~•. lt•lnt. l>•ddl~h<I•~ V•ue• """ ~.~1o~•1,0;;~;~;·;~1~~:~~. ~~'~a;~~"';"~ 1><">0:•~1 Pl<l>f•>~•no po~nt I\ a! )00 M"I 0•• !.l«"t\, '°''~Mt••. <•"'o•nl• '1oi. Robert N. Weed P••••OOnl .,.., Putlj•"""• Ja<k R. Curley Volt P•t•i!Mftf afld t.anoral ""'""'~' Thomas Keevll ld•IO• ThOmas A, Mvrpl"!ine _,...,,.,, Eaoror Ctiarles H. loos Richard P. Nall ·- ' A11,.laft1 ~naQ•f>9 EDllO<\ 5'ddleblcll V.t lleyOftlce IUCll L• Pa1 ~o.O ti .... o._., ,nt .. •1 other Offices (o\lt MO •• i>tlWt\1 8.o•!.l•ttl Nlt•l'(l<I !l,.a.\11 JUl "''-" -J.•••d • H-MflOll ll••<n 11UIOtao\118ou••.,.•d Wt-&eac11. t!kG._,,•M•t•I t Tetepfto:ne 17141642-4)21 f Cl•sslflW ~dvert11.1ng ...-2.s.11 I MOlll.ri.tl'<l•llf'"''"""Ol!l(t 511 ·6)10 t ,.,tl'ft ,. .. (11-l'ltt t 4tS-O•JO J a&M•l tlll, ltlJ 0.tl'I .. Ca•ll Pulllhlll111 ~ ... , NO lltWI ....... !ll .. tlfal""''' 1di~1tl ••O•• t• tl•t•U•1~111, 11•••111 m•t 11• ..... ,Oluttl •llflol<ll \tHlt••t HUfllt•loft ti ........ ,0 ...... 1. j,10111 clt 1• '"'"' tttd -' Cnt• Mt~t. £;,...~,, s .. -.cn.t1to111rc., ... ,w.001M1t1111,: ""''' '' otm...,11>1,; rn1u1..,.,. ~1iw1-w.eo llllp. • • Fro•PageAI YMCA ••• They "'ere active in the found· ing of the Saddleback Valley vr-.1c,\ and ,.,.er e responsible for the construction of its kitchen and the procureme nt of all its ap- pHances. Crawford Phillips has held ac- tive membership in Y's Men 's Clubs for 26 years with 15 years of perfect attendance and has held the offices of president, vice pres ident, treas urer, bulletin editor, lieutenant, dis- t rict governor, brotherhood chairman, and board member. Phillips ' dedication wa s drama tically pointed out last year . He was s tricken with a heart attack a fter working on the Y's ~1en ·s Club Christmas tree lot. Mrs. Phillips has held 6imilar offices with the Y's Menettes, an organization she helped establis h intheSaddleback Valley. The Phillips' have been mar- ried for 34 years and have one daughter and two grandchildren. l'ro•P~AJ· RATING ... "The rating was done by a panel of women ranging in age from 65 to 75 years old. We tried to have our panel of women in the 25 to 35-year -old bracket rate you, but .we could not gel them lo stop laughing long enough." Among the recipients have been a clergyman a nd an elderly widow, Paladino said . He said P laygirl is sending apologies to every recipient of the hoax letter who can be locat- ed. The magazine plans to turn the docume nts over to postal authorities for possible criminal investigation, he said. Courses Set In Self Care At Hospital Sad dl e ba c k Communit y Hospital in Laguna Hills will of- fer a self-care course for area re- sidents with respiratory pro· blems June 2, 4, 9 and 11. Classes will meet from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. in the r espiratory care center on the second floor of the hospital, located at 244~1 Via Estrada. The charge for a ll four classes is $6J, including a pulmonary screen with results forwarded to the participant's phys ician. A family member may attend class(!s with the participant without a dditional char1e to learn how to assist him in day-to- day living. Those Interested in attending are asked to call Pat Dunlap at the hospital, 837·4500, ext. 285, for additional inrormatlon or to ar· range ro r a preliminary in· terview. .. 'Potboiler' Play At Viejo School Mission Vlejo's adult education drama will present "The Pol· boiler." a cla1slc hero and vlllaln comedy. Tueaday nt1ht at Mis· sion Viejo High School. The 7:30 p.m. performance scheduled for Lecture Jiall 223 ls qpen ·to the public without • ~arge. ' " ' • 11_ p.1t1. Clesfng Residents Slap Eateries Hours A p r oposal t o ext e nd the operating hours of thr(!e Laguna Hills restaurants to 11 p.m. pro- mises to bring controversy before the Orange County Plan· ning Co mmission next week. John S . Simons o( 25186 Pike Road, resident of a nearb_y bous· ing tract, already indicated to· day he plans to protest plans to stretch nighttime hours by 30 minutes. And county planning aides ·have recommended against the va r i'a n ce shopping center manager Robert Kennedy will seek from the commission for his Mission Hills Plaza at 2 :30 p.m . Tuesday. Both are founded on the pre· sumption that a n increase in the operating hours will.disturb resi· dents who live in the vicinity of the complex at La Paz Road and r-,.tclntyre Street, The eateries involved a re the Brig, De l Taco and Angie's Pi22a , all o( which must close by 10:30 p.m . under existing zoning regulations. Kennedy points out that the ad- ditional operating hours are necessa ry not only for additional income. but because custom ers are demanding them. · In addition to the 30-minute ex- t ension he is asking the com: m ission to alllow Angie's Pitza to stay open two extra hours Friday ·Laguna Police Nab Illegal Weapon, Man Laguna Beach police s eized an ancient oriental weapon and ar· rested a 21-year·old Mission Vi e- jo man at Laguna's Crescent Bay beach Thursday. William Brant Hunt of 26082 Via Pera was booked for alleged possession of "nunchaku sticks," a n illegal weapon. Nunchakus are hardwood sticks joined at the center with a chain or nylon rope. Hunt, reportedly on parole from petty theft and armed rob- bery convictions, was held on $2,500 bail. Officer Carlene Ambrose re· ported she was on patrol nearthe beach and observed a man sw- inging and throwing the nunchakus. She reported s he went to the beach and Hunt told her the s ticks had bectJl thrown in the ocean a nd lost. The officer said she found the weapon under a maroon shirt she had first seen the m an wearing. Nunchakus are considered il - legal weapons under a slate penal code section which also in- cludes slings. The weapon was developed in Japan 's samura i era .and was considered an excellent weapon for use against the samurai sword, police said . l'ro•PogeAl PUBLIC .•• • ,service. r just can 'l see how you can put a dollar value on l(te" Riley said. • He added that he had "fan- tastic reports" about the quality of paramedic service in the Sad· dleback Valley and that he was · "convinced the proJX>Sal will be unacceptable to at least three 1s upervisors.'' And, he noted, "the fourth ap- pear~ to be changing his mind." Privat e ·ambulance companies are Ill prepared financially to ac- quire the communications system needed for an effective paramedic service, the .supervisor said. ' . ' . rn his keynote talk, Riley also stressed the need to utilize com· munlty resources such as the . YMCA to keep children out of :trouble rather than try to get • them out of trouble after they .have become juv.enileoffenders. "lf we are going to make the juvenile justice system work, we mu1t ))(! prepared to take some rather hars h steps with re1ardto those children who commit seriou s crimes of violence aealnst others or are involved In reptated sales of hard narcotics. "At the other end. we must be prepared to find new ways of de· aUn1 with the child who Is not responsive to the direction of his parent. -who runs away from home, who Is truant, who 11 pro- miscuous. · "I do not believe lh•t lockln1 lhne kld1 up 11 the answer, nor do J believe we can afford to," _(}told '.h• 1•~•r!n1 . a nd Saturday niehts. .. Angle'a Pl11a does 12 percent or its bu.slne11 between 11 p.m. and 1 a.m. and an earlier cla1io1 would cause a severe setback to their operation," Kennedy pre· dlcts. Flirt.her, he points out that a 7·Eleven convenience market located adjacent to the Del Taco ·and the Brie la allowed to remain open 24 hours a day under a v•rlance. Because the 7·Eleven operates under the same zoning regula· tlons, Ke nnedy sa ys, the restaurant owners say a denial of the time extension ''would deprive them of lhe privilege en· 1 joyed by others." Simons, a frequent thorn in the side of the s hopping center and th e planning co mmission because of his contin'uing com· plaints t·hat car headlights enter- ing and leaving the business dis· turb him , says he is protesting for d iffere nt reasons this time. "I can see nothing wrong with them staying open until 11, but next they'll apply. for liquor licenses and stay open till early In the morning," he predicts. , Simons says he doesn't want any .. joints" to s tart oper ating in his ne ighborhood which would disturb him with early morning bar traffic, s lamming car doors, a nd roaring automobile engines. Fairy Tale Death Fro•PageAI NORMAL .•. Shown with a stranglehold on the Emperor (left) <Paul Jarvis) is Death <Kory !'lorth). Both are fantasy charac· ters from ''Story Theater'' a piece of improvisation to be performed Saturday at 10 a .m . and 2 p.m . by Mission Viejo High School drama students in Mulitpurpose Room B at the school. Tickets Bf" 75 cents and are available at the door. malpractice insurance." "The feeling was that if no Jong-term solution is reached everybody in Orange County will go out,'' Bannister added. Water District Court The b ill that brought the Northern California doctors, who currently have no malpractice insurance coverage, back to work was lo create a statewide pool of liability iusurance car- riers which will provide in- surance at lower rates while the Legislature tackles the problem. Action Set Monday Orange County doctors have bee n pushing the bill of state Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) that would set up com- pensation boards' instead or juries, to hear malpractice cases, limit the period when awards can be filed, limit the awards, and limit attorneys' fees. By Monday some Orange County hospitals will have been on restricted schedules for two weeks. some for about 10 days and some for a week. Cutting out elective surgeries has reduced patient loads at hospitals by about 40 percent and some hospitals have been putting staff members on four-day weeks a nd contemplating layoffs. Bannister said that lhe effect the slowdown was having on hos pitals was a "strong concern" of the doctors a t Thursday night's meetin1. A hearing is scheduled in South Orange County Municipal Court Monday morning for disposition of charges that the Moulton- Niguel Water District and three of its ranking employes violated st ale safely laws that allegedly contributed lo the death or a worker in January 1974. Ted Millard, a deputy dlstM ct attorney, s aid final details of a negotiated settle ment between him and the attorney for the dis- trict likely will be offered for con· slderalion by Judge Richard Hamilton. Calvin Van Gorkum, a sewe r mainte na nce man. was over- come by sewer gas and died v.1hile attemptin g to free an ob- struction in the bottom of a manhole. , It is a lleged in a complaint filed by the district attorney's of- fice that Van Gorkui:n was not provided with ventilation ap· paratus and other safety equip· menl at the time he descended in· to the m anhole. , The complaint was filed with 1 the .court_ !.o.llowing an intensive HERITAGE CHINA Re9. '969°0 SALE s799oo HERITAGE 'S WINDWARD COLLECTION made with English brown oak burl, pin knotty walnut and olive ash burl veneers, ·and peca~ 1olida. The finish, done by hand. Is In the oldest European manner . Thete distinctive qualities give Windward a look of Its own. Entire Collection on Sale Until End of May DINING ROOM. BEDROOM AND OCCASIONAL PIECES DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-W.OOOMARK--t<ARASTAN-BAKER investigation by the state in· dustrial safety inspectors. rn addition to the dist1i cl, the complaint named Carl Kymla, general manager and former Newport Beach ci ty councilman: John A. Perry, director of opera· lions, a nd Donald Foell, a foreman. Aliso School Plans Carnival A combination swap meet, crafts sale a nd carnival wi ll be he ld Saturday by the Aliso Elementary School on th'e school grounds. Among the bargains to be of· rered rrom 9 a. m . to 4 p.m . al the El Toro campus are macrame, leather' goods, jewelry and T· s hirts. Members of the student council will use the swap meet as an op- portunity to collect recyclable aluminum caos. Cans should be rinsed and crushed. • NEWp(jRT BEACH • 17:r1 W~S1'CLlt'•' DR.. 641•2<00 -WIBDAYS A SATUIDAYS 9:00 le &:JD · LAGUNA BEACH, ..~ N<1111·11 t:llM,"I' HWY .• 4"4·6'51 TORRANCE• 33'49·ffAWl'llORNF. BLVD ((l~n •'ri. 111 t , Sl.li1. IZtS::MJi ..., t J7M·l279 ' ---.. ' •· .... • " Irvine VOL. 68, NO, lSO, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES • -. ' . .. -·- ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA Today's Cl-lag N.Y.Stoeks I FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1975 TEN CENTS Council Coneurs--lt Is His Garage ''lt':s my gurage and I thought I t'Ould do whut I wanted with it." said J ohn Ma rs hull of North lrvlne. After a l5·month legal hassle over .:. room he had built in his garage, hl" found out thut is nol the case. But the lrvlne City Council , with most m embcr!i expressing sympathy ror Marshall's pro- blemi;, put orr any prosecution 'Economy 1 Due to Worsen? WASHINGTON (AP> -The Ford administration said today that unemployment and the re· cess ion will be worse this ye<tr than it estimated earlier, but should be rollowed by a stronger economic recovery next year. In its mid-year budget and economic r evi e «.-, th e ad· minis tratio n predicted un· employment will avt!rage 8. 7 per· cent, or a bo ut 7 .8 million workers, ror the year. The ad· ministration predicted as recent· ly as February that unemploy· ment would· average 8.1 percent this year. The forecas t . if true, means that the jobless rate probably "'ill rise above 9 percent later this year. The April rate of un- employment was 8.9 percent. The report, which will be sent to Congress, also prL>dictcd that: -The n ation 's economy will declioe by 3.6 percent this year, compared with the ad ministra- tion's original prediction or a 3.3 percent decline. -The economy v.'ill rebound with a &trong 6.3 pe rcent growth next year, beltei-(han the 4.8 per- cent growth roreca&l earlier. .. -The rate or inrla tion, as r.eClecte:<S f)Y ~op&umcr pritj!s, will Increase d.1 percent 1his year over 1974, compared with a February projection or a 10.8 per- cent increase. · The administration stuck by its projected fi scal year 1976 btld get deficit or nearly $60 billion, which is below the $68 billion deficit Urget set by Congress. The de- ficit in fiscal 1975 "'ill be $42.6 million, the report said. Although the over·all economic outlook wa s somewhat im- proved, there was little hope in the new rorecast for an improved unemployment rate. The report said unemployment will average 7 .9 percent in 1976, equal to 7.1 million workers, the same as forecast in the February ecOnomic outlook. (See ECONOMY, PageA2) Pair Play For Record Two m embers or the UC Irvine tennis team began batting balls around this morning at a Newport Beach residential pro- ject and ir they keep it up until MondQY night, they'll have a new world record. Eric Mann and Eric Larre pl an to play continuously -except ror a 15·minute break a rter each hour's play -until 8 p.m . Mon· day. They hope lo break a Guin· ness world r ecord set in 1971 by college players in Reno. In connection with lhe marathon errort, developer M. J. Brook plans lo donate $1 for every persqn possing lhrougb his Jas mine Creek model hom es during the w eekend. The dona- tion will JO to the UCI Bthlt:tic schola rs hip rund. • · • until the ext ra room iij inspected ror compJlunce with sarety a nd bui lding codes. Mar11hall, a truck driver and (ather or rive, built the litUe roo1n in his garage so his 12-yeur -old son "could have a place or his o\l.'n. "Otherwise, he will have to move in with his 16-ycar-old sis· ter," A-farShall told' the council. The room is in violation or the t. l r~ St . -.... ,, .• '""' Slliii'b ' 16ody (Johil Bu..S- tein) ha~ bis body back. The singCr-danger lost the full leotard wj th body organs 011 it which be uses to p ut on u health musical, but it \Vas found later , n ear a Ne\v York school. Letter Rates 'Em -Then Forsakes 'em LOS ANGELES (AP) -,.We will not be able to. use your body in our centerrold," the letter says. " ... On a scale or 0 to IO, your body \\.'as rated ·2. '' The letter carries the name "Playgirl" at the top and ap- parently has been sent to m e n around the country. But a Pl ayg ir l magazine spokesman said Thursday it is not responsible for the mailings and described them as ··a very cruel hoax." Phil Paladino, public relations director for th e women 's magazine which reatures photos of nude men, said Playgirl has received 44 inquiries about the letter -many from people who think it is legitimate. The letters bear postmarks from around the country and they obviously were composed on dirrerent typewriters. They show dirferent logo styles at the top or the page, different m ailing ad- dresses for Playgirl and are signed with different names, he said. 'But the text is a lmost identical on a ll the letters which Playgirl has seen in the last rew weeks, P a ladino said . After thanking the individual (See RATING, Page A21 Di~tance Champ . Prefontai~ ~illed EUGENE, Ore. (AP> -Steve Prefontaine, this coun- try'• finest d istance runner and one of its tnost con- trove.nlal amateur athletes, was killed in an a~tomoblle ac- cident early today. little more than rour hours after he ran the second rastest 5,000'meters by an American. Police said Prerontulne, who was 24, was pinned under hls car after It hit a rock wall at about 12 :30 a .m. p ·oT. The former University or Oregon standout who finished fourth in the 5,000 meters at the 1972 Olympics had covered that distance ln 13 minutes 23.8 seconds in winning the event al an ...NCAA preparaUon meet Thursday nlaht in Eugene. 'l'he time was about l Visecond& orr rfetontaine's American """""'· A high school sc_nsatlon in Coos Bay, Ore., PreContalne wenl on to a .brilliant career at lhe University or Or-egon and.At the "'lme or his death, owned U.S. records ror every diltlnce above 21000 meten. Additional details today on P11eBB .. r • city's building codes, whieh re- quire garage space for two cars. Marshall maintains that he can get both cars in, "one straight in a nd the other o ne sideways behind it." Evidently. one of Marshall's neighbors was unhappy with his handiwork-he built the room himself-and complained. ;, l guess you wonder which one or your neighbors is the fink ,'' Councilman ·John Burton said. .. 1 sure do,'' Marshall replied. "J have three bedrooms and four kids," said Burton. "If there "'as some way I could sq ueeze a couple into the garage 11long "'ilh the books and boats and ever- ything, 1 \l.'OU ld." .. Mr. l\1arshall, in a sense, is everyman standing here before us,'' sa id Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor. "I'm sure there is not a street in Irvine where everybody parks all thei r curs in the garage all the time." i\1any garages in the city- including those or some council members -are so blocked "'ith stored items that they could not be used for cars . council mem- bers and !\1ars hall agrCl'd. But the la\\.' is the law, said City Attorney James Erickson. The city could be sued ir s ome calamity occurred and the city "·as 3\1.'are of the non-standard structure. The council directed clty plan· ners to take another look at city building codes to see whctl\cr some provision could be made to allO\I.' structures to be built., in garages. They also delayed cn- rorcement against !\1arshall until the overall subject is resolved. UCI Hospital Shaky Tight Budget, Oversupply Cited By DOUG LA S FRIT'.lSCll E Ol 111• Oaity Pilot SWll California's budget for the coming year is likely lo come out or the Assembly Ways and Means Committee "'ithout a $12 million appropriation for an on-campus hos pital at UC Irvine, according to legislative sources. A combination or a tight state financial situation and concern about Orange County's oversupp· ly or hos pital facilities has led to striking the money from the As· sembly version or the 1975-76 bud get . Assembl_yman Bruce Nestande (R-Anaheim) said in For lrvi11e an interview today. Walter Clark . aide to Senator Dennis Carpenter, conrirmed that the appropriation has been taken out. In its present form, they said, other appropriations for the UCl· California College or Medicine were made, providing funds for other campus buildings and the takeover or Orange County Medical Center as well as plan- ning for a string of outpatient clinics, according lo a source in the Department of Finance. Last year, Sll.700,000 was ap- propriated for construction of the OOspital. All but $100,000 was re· moved f1·om next year 's pro· posed budget. Nestande s aid "the status or things right no"' is ve1·y fluid. It could change any time." "lt is tough to sell the on· campus hospital id ea right no""" he sai d , ''because or the economic s ituation and because there is a feeling in Sacramento that Orange County already has enough hospital beds and this is not needed." The UC I hospital "'as approved recently by the Or ange County Health Planning Cou ncil, which simulta neously rejected an ap- plication by l"loag Memori al Teen Program Pushed A group call ed "Cross Roads'' wants to set up a mod~I Program in trvine this summer aim¢ at combating thi j'olienation or teenagers.'' The city co\lncil , over the ob· jecti on o( Coun cilman John Burtor;a, deci@ d ,it lik4l'.S the idea of such a program and agreed to consider contributing to it finan· cially in the .coming budget sessions. And the school board, after two trustees questioned the program, put orr a request lo allow it to use the SELF school building. The board will take up the matter again at its June 11 meeting. Trustees Frank Hurd and June Foley questioned whether the district had checked out the pro· gram be rore offering the use or the facilities. Board P resident Elizabeth Sicoli, who has become familiar witk the program during her stint on Supervisor Thomas Riley's District J uvenile Justice Committee. believes the pro· gram is needed. The program , according to its director, Gordon Yeaton, is ··a program committed to the uni· Stolen Birds Back at Lion Country Safari Sonya, Scarlet and Happy are happy to be hom e again today at Lion Country Safari in Irvine, where they were lo resu me performances after being stolen six days ago and then recovered. ''They roller s kate, rid e scooters and put out fires. things any normal red-blooded bird will do," explai ns Jerry Kobrin, vice preside nt or the African wildlife park. Sonya, a Greater sulphur- crested cockatoo from Australia, Happy, a hyacinthine macaw from Brazil a nd Scarle t, a scarlet mdcaw, also rrom Brazil, are still a few ranks above spar- rows and barn swallows in the social register of the world's fowl. H:,1ppy is wdrth $10,000 alone. while total vatue or the three is $15,000, according to Dr. Charles Jerrrtes, tbcir owner. lie began a s'ystematic check or Southland dealers who handle rar e and exotic birds and animals arter the burglary and round his missing birds at casa de Pets in Studio City Tuesday. No arrests have been made so rar ln the case of fowl play al .Uon Country 1 Burglars broke through a lri· pie lock system which secured the birds in cages at the amuse.. ment par!r at 8800 Mo ulton Parkway, leaving three less• valuuble birds behind. 1 T h e brfgblly col o r e d performers fro11,1 RobeUe Animal ProductionJ Ltd., Norco, have delighted audiences daily ror months. ;ll queness of each individual : a program designed to treat the ~is\llfilsionmen\ o~ Y?U~, ~e alienaUon from the mst1tu6ons of society. a program which tries to help with the loneliness of yoqth and assists the m in determining what kind of person to be.'' This sUmmer, the grouP wantS to recruit and train 20 teens who \\.•ill act as peer counselors for the program . The teens, according to Yeaton 's proposa l, would become friendly with youths in need of the group's serivces a nd direct them to a center where peer and proressional counselors wOJAA 1>41 'y•il•ble. Aicordlng to sfhools Superin· tendent A. Stanley Corey, "There is a great-need for this kind or as- ·sistance and th i's kind or program in this community." · Mrs. FoleY", ·however, won· dered about what liability the district would ha ve in allowing the group to use its facilities. Hurd said he had a variety or con· cerns about the program, but (See SUM MER, Page A2) f) fi-11.llttll 1"i111it FEA Outlines Gm Plan WASHINGTON (U PI > -Federal energy planners have proposed an emergency gasoline rationing plan that wou ld give drivers in all parts of the nation the sam e number or gallons or.fuel each week. "We'don 'l want to get caught like we did the last time,'' a member or the Federal E nergy Administration Lask force which drew up the proposal said today. I-le referred Lo the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo . The s pokes m an said today the plan was drafted as a s tandby and would be used only in the event of a major emergency. The report gave no estimate how much gasoline \\'Ould be provided to each licensed driver . In the past, however, U.S . offi cials have talked in term of nine gallons per week. Devil Cult Figure Becomes a Witness By TOM BARLEY bt tlM D•ilw Pli.tSt8ft R e lu c t ant witness Arthur Craig ''Moose" tlulse overcame his r e luc tance Thursday in Orange County Superior Court but only a rter lawyers for both sides agreed that he could switch sides in the "Devil Cult" murder trial or Steven Craig Hurd. Hulse, hustled rrom the wit~ ness stand Wednesday after questions from prosecutor Frank Briseno produced obscenities rather than answers, will next appear in the courtroom as a de· tense witness. not a prosecullor Witness, if the trial is not Burglar Gets Gems, Downs Can of Beer A beer-guzzling burglar broke into theJlome or an Irvine nurse a:n~ h.er husband Thursday, stealing ff50 in jewelry and cash, along wl\h t he man's wedding ring. ChrisUn• M. Tawelczyk, lold Officer Al Muir she. discovered the break·ln. M'{lr ~aid it ap· peared the tntruder,.whodowned a beer Crom th~· rerrlgerator . while browsl•&.lhl'Qilllh 'lh~ p~­ mlses'. used a d&vlee. to. slip a door-locking mechanism. I ' declared a mistrial. Judge Frank Domenichini will make that decision Monday. If he decides the trial will go on Hulse, 21, will become derense attorney Willia m Gamble's witness. Gamble mcived ror a mistrial with the argument that liulse's statement that he was round guil - ty or murder charges after plead- ing not guilty and not guilty by reason or 1insanity to the hatchet killing of service station atten· da nt Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21, could prejudice Hurd's chances of a ralr trial. Gamble argued that the jury now knows that Hulse drew a lire term in st ate prison after filing the same pleas as Hurd. The in- rerence is obvious, he told Judge Domenichlnl. Hurd, 25, is accused or first degree murder in the mutilation killing on June 3, 1970, or Mission Vlejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Mrs. Brown, 31, or El Toro, was dragged rrom her car by a gang as Lhe car entered the S3nd Ca· nyon Road ofrramp Cf9m the Son· ta An a Freeway. She was butchered in on Irvine orange erove. ll ls alleged that Hurd"nsserl· 'ed leader or a gang or drug-usill& drilten, played'lhe major role In (Se<! HULSE, r•se A2l • llospital and the \\'estern World l\1edical Fouhdation to build a hos pi tal in Irvine . l\1edical School Dean Stanl ey ''an den Noort promised a response to the development late today. He categorized the removal of the runds for construction of the on-campus hospital as "a breach of l'onridence with the voters or Orange County. During months or debate over whether a hospital should be built on the campus. Dr. van den Noort has mainta in ed that a $155.9 million 1972 health (See HOSPITAL, PageA2> Stanton Boy Dies In Fight A 16-year.·old Stanton boy died T hursday or a gunshot wound in the h ead in{licted Wednesday night as be ran fa:om the scene of· a street gang fight. Police said today Ger~rd Qui - jas, of 7702 Yorkshire St., died Thursday rhbrning at Stanton Community Hos pital, about 12 hours after he was shot. Norman 1-laggstrom. 19. also of Stanton, is being held on murder charges stemming from the incident. Police said the shooting OC· curred al about IO p.m. Wednes- day during a gang battle but there is s till no jndication Quijas "'as involved. The mother of the murder sus- pect told police another right had taken place out side her home nt 11822 Santa Rosali a St. earlie r in the day. She said several gang members h ad threatened to kill her son a nd burn do"'" her house. A police s pok·es man said Mrs. Dorothy Haggstrom told them she asked her son to protect her against the gang, whi ch vowed to return. She said they came back that night, armed with Molotov cocktails and other weapons. Witnesses said at least one other shot was fi red during th~ confrontation besides the fatal bullet. · Police wenL on patr~ around Stanto n and Garden Grove schools Thurs day and again lo· day to guard against violence erupting as the result or the shooting. The polil'e s pokesman s aid lo· day several fights were broken up Thursday and a few school s dismissed classes early to pre· vent (urther campus incidents. All the schools were open today. Ora•ge ,, Weatloer · Low c l o ud s n ig ht through mid-morning ulhl'rwise sunny Saturday wi th slightly warmer tem- peratures . H ig h s will range rrom 65 ut ' the beaches to 78 inland. INSIDE TODAY It won't just be another show when 2,800 mu.tic s1U- dents fr.om Saddlebac)c schools put on a musicol ez· travaganza at the Anaheim Convention Center nerf week . See story by Daily Pilot Stqff Writer Jan Worth on Page CZ. Index , Al'l'-"""'I<• At Mllhlll ....... 1 ••• ....._ ..... 1'9MllNe-. A4 ........ ,.. Alt Orr'_,.c:aw.1r Al t.11""111.t AJ ........ •1·t 0.Mil""f Ot·t1 h ..... r.tftt\ CJ-4 CIMlll<t aJ lyt'li.t Pontr II' er.·-· •. "*" ..... DMHI "'"IC" Al ,_II Mlttl"'t t M-t • .... i.1 .. ,.. M T••I.,_ " C4 .,._<, ... ,,........... CM HtfMC... • .. 'lllNllW ~ AC" •'*'""'... ct ........ .....,... •• AIMIUI....... U .......... ' A4 M.tlt9*& M ........... II C'l•6 ........ ... ,, ./ ' " . •' , Al DAILY PILOT ... ·f;ounty Doctors Be turn --By ALAN DIRKlN' S 01 lfl.f D.tll, ,1101 Sl,tlt !Operating r oon1s in Orange ·~unty hospitals will be back on iwmal schedules Monday. \<The deci s ion for ~esthesiologi s t s and other ®Sicians involved in the sur-~ry slowdov.•n to return to full ¥hedules ,~·as reached at a six- h0J1r m eeting of the Orange County Medical Association Thursday night. Everett Bunnister, executive director of the 2,000-member OC- MA, confirmed today that for a \l.•hile "i( was touch and go" on vohether the doctors would re- turn. The m eeting had been called by OCM ;\ p resident Phi lip l\1cF01rland to consider a request by doctors in t he San Juan Capistrano a nd San Clemente 01rea for st ronger and more con- ct>rl ed Ul'lion t o resol ve the malp ractice insu'rance crisis. But a resolution by these doc· tors for <ill physicians in Orange County to withhold all but t•mcrgency services for three \\'Cek.s "·as "resoundingly" de· feated, Bannister s aid. Bannister said that there v.•as nluch support for continWng the slov.·do\1tn, but when the vote came to rett.1rn there was not a dissenting vote. ''But remember the vote was not taken until after six hours of debate, .. he added. The vote came a n er the mem- bership "completely rejected" the concepts of a stop·gap bilJ th at se ttled the st ri k e by Northern California doctors, who have been o£f work since May l . "There was a feeli ng that the Northern Ca lifornia doctors bought a bad bill," Bannister said. The OCt\J 1\ director said that the motion agreed upon by the 0 1·ange County doctors was li mited. It v.·as to continue work- ing "until the end of the general session of the Legislature pro· vided that the legislators de· monstrate a strong desire to push legislation that will give ansY:ers t o lon g -term problem s or malpractice insurance.'' "The feeling \11as that i( no long-term solution is rcacht'd ~~'erybody in Orange County v.·ill go out, .. Bannister added. The bill th at brought the Northern California doctors, who currently have no malpractice insura nce cover age, back to work wus to ~reate a statewide pool of lia bility iusurance car· tlers v.•hi c h wi ll provide in· sura nce at lower r ates while the Jr.c~islature tackles the problem. I * * * I I I Fro• Page Al HOSPITAL .•. • iciences bond act was largely in- t ended to finance development or tnedical schools at UC l and UC Davis. 1 Inflation and other appropria- tions have reduced the amount avai lable, and UC I seems to be get.ting short changed, he has contended. Hov.•ever, the budget proJ)Osal does contain a n equally con- trove rsial $5 million for the t a keover o f Orange County f.1edical Center by the university .Plu s other funds to plan renova- ti On of the hospital. ''There seems to he a con- sens us to go ahead with the fi rst Phase of development or the medical sc hool -that was )omething that v.•as In doubt ~ore -and wait a year or two dov.·n the road to see if we have. ·money for t he on -campus hos pital ,'' As se mblyman '.Nestande obser ve.ct. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rober! N Wttd P•f>IOtnl t"CI Pw'"'""' Thomas Ke-e-vll lOOmas A. Murphlne ""-,...IJln9 f:O.lOf Charles M. Loos Richard P. Nall ,111.,>l•nl i.r.. n•g1119 E<lllOO" • , .. OlflCtS . '-'"' ,,_." "° ...... " ••• ~1., .. ... , ....... 1 ... -..;" JUJHO•_,lovlt•••d . u....,..s..~ ... ,, .. c.or-, •• ,,,"' f f Hliltl1.,.1.,.h•111 llflJ IH.tell ...... •••d ' I SHti.l>tt • .... 1 .. , Ul"O!~P·1~ tlW11D1..-,~''1"'•t' ' I I 'StleplloM (7141 '42-4221 • Classltllld Advertising M2·J671 .J-tddltlll¥;-v,1 ... 111 • .., OO•••• -U14J10 ' I ff' • l'r-""·" t••n•fllf 495-0630 11111. ,.,, °''" .. c .... tt111111, .. 1.,, "' "",_.,..,lt .. •ll11•!rllllMl1,tlllOfWll t Ot tCIVtfllMmtnh 1'19,tlfl lf\ff M •l~Od"!tCI "'ll"'f\;f ffl"tl••I "ra-1/fflOll ff U'l>'l'•!Vf!I _,,.,, t•c..,o1 Clflf lttl ... ,..,d •I C .. lf Mtt l , Gt1ltor11lt.. '""'"''"'""' 11y c•o "'' u.-~lllY; 8J .... II \.t •• _....,..,/ INltlM' ..,1~19M N.• _ .... ,. - • Friday. May 30. 197S Leaves Courthouse • 13 Indicted Movie Piracy • Cha~ges Aired A 27-year·old Huntln&tbn Beach man was omon116 people fndtcted Thursd ay by a Loa Anaeles federal graOd jury In· vestigatlng motion picture and · television rtlm piracy. Richard II. We11ellnk Jr., ti, of 19241 Brookhurat St., was chara;ed with criminal copyrt•ht infringement. FBI offlclals lllid he appeared before a mql1trate in Santa Ana and waa rele111ed on his own recoanlzance. Wesselink was arnona: six Southern Californians arre11.ed after· the indictroent. The FBI listed him as the former owner of a Cirm called Video Dynamics. Assistunt U .S. Attorney Chester L . Drown said today Wesselink'• firm, at 10722 Trask • Ave., Garden Grove, handled contracts ror airline motion pic- tureshowln•. . money-m aking t'i lm:s ... The U.S. uttorney·a office in Los Ana:elea reportedly seized what were. described aa tons nr films durtng its several·month investigat ion. New Films At Balboa Unmolested FJ<.inked b.Y attorneys Bill Anders on {left) and Marshall Morgan, Congressm a n An - dre\\' flin s h a "' s trides f ro m county Courthouse after pleading innocent to all charges contained in a Grand Jury indict- ment. The former Orange Count)' assessor and cu r1·e nt . cou nty Assessor J ack Vallcrga face more court appearunces tllis s ummer. See story, P·agc A3 . But he 11 accused ol lllea:atly making three copies of "The Ex- orcist'' then :selling two of them. Brown declined to discuss other details of Weasellnk's case. Officials said the Indictments were the first major crackdown on film piracy, which they s&td ooats lhe rnotion picture lndustrv from $100 million to $1 blliion in losses each year. Newport Beach vice officers paid another S3 apiece to see the movies at the Balboa Pussycat Theater Thursday. but they said today the new tamer features up- peared to be in conformance with state obscenity Jaws . The detectives said that the feature had c hanged Thursday and was considerably softer In content, compared to the two films which :sparked a raid last Tuesday riight . E'ro• Page Al HULSE •.• Water District Court Those named in the indictment were accused of lllee,ally duplicating. a nd t rancPortlng some of Hollywood's blgge&t Officers seized "French Bluo" a Porno (lick featuring a Pen - thouse Magazine model, and companion film, ''Dynamite.'' her killing and burial. Hulse ex- '-plained Thursday that he could face reprisals from fellow in· mates in Soledad State Prison when h e returns there if he testifies in the current trial as a prosecution witness. Action Set Monday Thursday's fare, said Detec- tive Al Epstein, was "French Poodle" and another film with n Zorro theme. P olice said the prints seized in the Tuesday raid are being stored in a jail cell at the new Harbor District Counhou:se. The reels were too large to fit in re- gular evidence locke rs, said Detective Capt. Rich Hamilton. Hurd 's trial only became possi- b I e la s t month wh e n th e California Supreme Court ruled in a landma rk decision that the previously mentall y ill prisoner can be tried, provided he is kept under the influence of po"'·erful tranquilizers. Gamble states that Hurd is on- ly capable of tellin g the truth un- der the influence of the pre- scribed drugs. Spring Concert Set . At Laguna Church The Saddl eback College Chorus "'ill present its annual spring concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday at St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Laguna Beach. The concert, under the direc· tion of Glenn Pick, will feature sacred a nd secul ar classics. There is no admission charge. War Threatened? SEOUL (U P() -So uth Korea's d efense minister said to- day that North Korea has moved artillery guns to the front line and constructed air bases along the frontier separating the two coun- tries, sparking _the threat of war. A hearing is scheduled in South Orange County Municipal Court Monday morning for disposition of charges th at the Moulton- Niguel Water District and three of its ranking e mployes violated st ate safety Jaws that allegedly contributed to the death of a \'-'Orker in January 1974. Ted A-tillard. a deputy district attorney. said fin al details of a negotiated settle ment belY.'een him and the a ttorney for the dis- trict likely y,·ill be offered for con· sider a tion by Judge Richard Hamilton. Calvin Van Gorkum, a sev.·er maintenance man. v.1as over· come by sewer gas and di~d while attempting to free an ob- Sadat Urging U.S. 'Role' By United Press Inte rnational Presid ent Anwar Sadat of Egypt, meeting with the leaders of Yugoslavia and Austria prior to scheduled talks "'ith President Ford Sunday, has called on the United Stales to play a more ac-· live role in solving the Middle East crisis. Sadat y.•as to arrive in Vienna today to m eel v.•ith Austrian chancellor Bruno Kriesky-and president Rudolf Kirchschlager prior .to th e Ford talks in Salzburg. Riley Sees Public Paramedic Control ., By R UDI NIEDZIELSKI Of lllt 0;1illy l"il-' $1111 Supervisor Thomas F. Riley predicted in El Toro Thursday night t h <ll th e co unty's paramedic service would remain under fire department control and not be turned over to private <lmbulance firms . He told leaders of the Sad· d lebac k Valley YMCA he believed \here were enough votes on the Board of Supervisors to sustain a publicly operated paramedic system , at least in the unincorporated areas of Orange County. The campaigning supervisor 's remarks were apparently in- tended to be heard at nearby Leisure World where residents are vigorous ly protesting the county's consideration or letting ambul a nce com panies provide paramedic service. "I cannot see this in any way being·turned over to private en· terprise," said the flf\h distrtct supervisor, although he admitted voting for a !iludy determining the feasibility of ambulance paramedics. Riley :said he voted for the study, now in r>rogre:ss, only because he kne w that fellow supervisors had enouah votes to carry the measure a nyway. As a result his orflce was inun- dated by letters. "There are 18,000 residents in Leisure World and I got 18,000 letters," Riiey said about his Un Popular decision to join the study proposal Riley told Y leaders aathered for their annuul dinner that estimates ror private paramedic calls range between $99 and •1so. even ir the ambulance companies were aupparted In part by a gov- ernment subsldy. "Like the1fJ re deoartment 3nd ' the police depa rtment , the paramedics are a life"'savi ng service. I just can't see how you can put a dollar value on life," Riley said. • He added that he had "fan- tastic reports'' about the quality of paramedic service in the Sad- dleback Valley and that he was "convinced the proposal will be unacceptable to at least three supervisors." And, he noted, "the fourth ap- pear~ to be changing his mind." Private a mbulance companies are Ill prepared financially to ac· quire th e co mmunications system need ed for an effecti ve paramedic se rvice, th e supervisor :said . Jn his keynote talk, Riley also stressed the need to utilize com. munlty resources such a:s t.he YMCA to keep children out or trouble rather than try to get them out or trouble after they have become juvenile orrenders. .. "I( we are going lo make the juvenile justice system work, we must be prepared to take some rather h ar~h steps with regard to those children who commit serious crimes of violence against other s or are involved in repeated sales of hard narcotics . "At th e other end, we must be prepared to find new ways of de- aling with the child who la not responsive to the direction of his parent.a -who runs away from home, w'ho ls truant, who Is pro- miscuous. · "I do not believe that locklna: these kids up fa t.he answer, nor do I believe' we ran afford to."' Rll•y told the aather1ne. struction in the bottom of a manhole. Jt is alleged in a complaint · fil ed by the district attorney's of- fi ce that Van Gorkum was not provided with ventilation ap- paratus and other safety equip- ment at the tim e he descended in· to the manhole. The complaint ·was filed with the court following an intensive inv.estifiSliOn by the state in- dustrial sa~ety inspectors. In addition to the district. the . complaint named Carl Kymla, gener al m a nager and former Newport Beach cit y councilman; John A. Perry, director of opera- tions, .and Do nald F oell , a foreman . E'ro• Page Al SUMMER ••• was not specific. The group,·said Yeaton, is or- ganized under the sponsorship or Irvine's Interfaith Foundation. The program's request ror the endorsement or the city council included a recommendation from the community services commission that its financing be considered when the city budget is drafted next month. Council members made clear that, consid e ring the tight city budget expected next year , there may be li ttle m oney available for such progr ams. . Fro• Pflfle Al ECONOMY •.• In its outlook for the economy after 1976, the administration said unemployment could average 7.2 percent in 1977, 6.5 percent in 1978, 5.8 percent In 1979 and 5.1 percent in 1980. These projections were somewhat improved from the February figures, bqt the report said that the figures were ex- tr~mely tentative and based on an economic growth rate of 6,5 percent during the four.year period. In its February estimate, the administration had projected un- e mployment at 7 .5 percent in 1977, 6.9 pe rcent in 1978, 6.2 per- cent in 1979 and 5.5 percent in 1980. PUNISHMENT .Fl1S CRIME CINCINNATI <UPI) -Trevor Sc hmidt, 19, of Cincinnati, called a police o(ficer a pig When he w1s stopped (or speeding. So he's had to choose bet we en spending one day on a pig fa rm or 30 ~ays in the workhouse . Cincinnati Municipal Court Judge Rupert Doan ocdered the choice of sentences.· Schmidt. chose a day on a pig farm. HERITAGE CHINA Reg. 5969°0 • SALE s799oo HERITAGE"S WINDWARD COLLECTION made with English brown oak burl. pin knotty walnut and olive ash burl veneers. and pecan solids. The finish. done by hand, Is in the oldest· European manner. These d istinctive qualities give Windward a look of its own. Entire Collection. on Sale Until End of May DINING ROOM. BEDROOM AND OCCASIONAL PIECES Ironically, lhe two latest blue rums have some historic com- pany at the county courthouse. A piece of cinematic • memorabilia in the form or a print or "l Am Curious, Yellow " also is s ti l l stored in the courthouse, and that was seized by Newport ofrlcers in a raid on the same Balboa movie house. Theil raid took place more tha n six years ago. . .RATING ••• for 1endJng in his photographs - no one. of course, had done so - the letter goes on to say in part: "The rating was done by a panel of women ranging in age from 65 to 75 years old. We tried to have our panel or women in the 25 to 35-year-old bracket rate you , but we could not get them to stop laughing long enoush." Among the recipients have been a c lergyman and an elderly widow, Paladino said. i"" He satd Playgirl is sending/ aPologies lo every recipient of the hoax letter who can be local· ed. The magazine plans to turn the documents over to postal authorities for possible criminal investig'ation, he said. DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOODMARK-KARA~;AN-BAKER -DAfS I SATUIDAfSt:OO le l :JI • NEWPORT BEACH• 1111 W~STCLlt'fo' OH., 642·~ LAGUNA BEACH. 34~ N4)H 'rl l C()/\S1' llW\·,. 41H·W l TORRANCE• 23149 ffAWMIORNI" 8 LVI> (Oprtn •"ri. tll 9, Sun.· 12·5:30i 371·1279 j ' I I I I ! ., • Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley T oday's Closing N.Y.Stoeks ·• ' l~l.:. 68'.'.NO. 150, 4 SECTIONS,_36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1975 TEN CENTS ICounty Medics Vote to Return Monday By ALAN OlllKIN 01 Ill• O•Ur f'llM SlllU Operating rooms in Orange County hospituls will be buck on normal schedules Monday. The det•ision f or anesthes iolog ists and other phyi;iclanr:t involved in the s ur· gery slo"•down to return lo full sche.dules wus 1·eat'hed at a six· hour m eetin g of the ()range Co unty Medic•tl Association Thursday nig ht. " Everett Bannister, executivt! director or the 2,000-m ember OC· Jlr1A, conflr,med today that for a while ''it was Louc h lind go" on wflether the doctors would re- turn. The meeting bud been ·called by OCMA president Philip McFarland to consider a request by docto r s in the S.an Juan ,Ca.pi ~trctnP and San· Clemente -D9itw 11t•M.tt~ DESPITE'GUARD TOWER PRECAUTIONS, PARK MUST CLOSE Insurance 8111°Too Hlgtflor Huntll)glon Playground · . ' Huntington Closing Adventure Play Area The_ pcpular Adventure Play· ground in Huntington Beach will be closed permane ntly after Saturday, it was . annou{lced to- day by the city. The closure was ordered by the city's insurance carrier, ,Insuran ce Company of the ; Pacific Coast, because of an in· vestigator's report on potential hazards. ·Bill Vance, a city recreation ,supervisor , s;;1id it could coSt the · city as much as $50,000 a year to linsure the playground On a separate policy. · · City officials are investigating 1other way.s to keep the play· 'ground open bot Vance said the ;pictu.re looks bleak. . Adventure Playground opened lin June or 1974 al the bottom of ,the old Bruce Brothers' gravel Drown Victim· Identified; No Address NewPorl Beach...pollce have identified lh.e bodyi,r a man who fell from the Balboa jetty rocks and drowned earlier in tl)e day as 42.year·old Thomas-MacDonald. But the J.ddress ot MacDonald has not been determined, and of .. licers appealed for help from anyol)e who may kriow informa- tion about the victim. pit, on Gotharl:I Street at Talbert Avenue. It was based on a concept popular in EuroPe of allowing ~hildren essentiall y Fi-ee play in a natural environment. · They are supplied with wood, construction materiaJs. old tires. disca1:ded fur niture, and other ii.ems and a llOwed to do essen· tially what they want. '.Vance said 't he playground averaged ~Sbo Children a ~~y 'last summer, a nd 100 to ISO a day'for after school hours during the winter ·-a much higher atten· dance rate th an other city parks. He also said the safety record al . Adventure P layground \11as better than m ost city parks over the year, with only two serious injuries -a broke n coll ar bone and a concussion. But an investigator for the in· surance company reported that the potential hazards were too great, especially with a 50.foot cliff and a lake. "He also.reported we had in· adequate s upervision," Vance. who proposed .the Adventure Playground, s aid. "And'he didn't .like the indiscriminate use ot ham mers and nails. But this was. the whole idea of the plaY.ground, a lack of 'authoritarian 'figures. We had plenty of supervision.'' Cent.erfold .Jolt a rea fQr stronger and more con· eerted action t o resolve the malpractice insurance crisis. But a resolution by these doc· tors for all.physicians in Orange County to withhold a ll but e mergency services for three weeks was "resoundingly" de· feated, Bannister said. Baflni ster said that there was much support for continuing the slowdown, b ut when the vote came to return there was not a dissenting vote. '"But remember the vote was not taken until after six hours of debate,'' he added. The vote came after the mem· bership "completely rejected" the concepts of a stop-gap bill tha t settle d th e strike by Northern C3Jifornia doctors, who h~ve been off work since May 1. "There was a feeling that the Northern California doctors bought a bad bill," Bannister said. The OCMA director said that the ·motion agreed up()n by the Or a nge Cou nty doctors was limited. It was to continue .,.._,ork· ing "until the end of the general session of the Legislature pro· vided that the legfslators de- monstrate a strong desire to pus h legislation that will give 3nswers to lon g ·term problem:s of malpractice insurance." ··The feeling was that if no long-term solution is r eached everybody in Orange County will go out," Banni ster added. The bill th a t brought the Northern California doctors, .,.._,hp currently h ave no malpractice in sura nce coverage, back to "'ork was to create a statewide pool of liability iusurance car· (See NORMAL, PageA2) Teacher Strike LoomS Huntington District Salary Talk Continues By KATHY CLANCY • CM IM D•llr Piiot SUlf The possibility of a teacher s trike loomed today in the five· campus Huntingt on Be ach Union High School District. Wage negotiations were conti· nu1n g tocJ ay between d1 str1ct leaders and teacher r epresen· tatives. But at a 6:30 meeting this morning teachers voted to allow a lO·member "crisis com- mittee" to call a strike at any time. Meanwhile. contract t alks are continuing in five West Orange Huntington Man Hit In 'Piracy' A 27-year-old Huntington Beach man was among 16 people indicted Thurs da·x bY. a Los Angeles fede r al i rand jury in· vestigating motiori 'Picture and· teleVision film pi'ra~y. . Richar(I H. Wiss~idk J r., 1:1, of 19241 Brookhurst St., was charged with crim1nafCOpyfiiht iQfringemeTit. FBI officials said he appeared before a magistrate in Santa Ana and was released on his own recognizance. Wesselink was among si x Southern Californians arrested after the indictment. The FBl listed him as the former owner of a firm called·Video Dynamics. A ssis tant U .S . Attorney Chester L . Brown said today Wesselink 's firm , at 10722 Tras k Ave., Garden Grove, handled contracts for airline motion pie· tures howing. But · he is accused of illegally making three copies of "The Ex· orcist" then selling two of them. Bro\\'n declined to discuss other details of Wesselink's case. Officials said the indictments were the first major crackdown on film piracy, which they said costs the motion picture industry from $100 m illion to St billion in losses each year. Those named in the indictment we r e accused of i l lega lly dupl icat ing and tra nsporting some of Hollywood's biggest money-making rilms. (See F I LMS-, ·Plge A2 ) Huntington Sch ools Plan Adult Classes Registration is now open for adult school classes in the Hunt· ingtOn Beach Union Hi gh School District. The six-week session opens June 16. The adult school office. 17200 Golden Wes t St ., is open from 9 a.m. to IO p.m. Monday through Thursf]ay and from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 P·f!l · Fridays. County elementary school dis- tricts in a mood one school of- ficial described today as "the most diffi cu lt we've ever faced." Slim school budgets, a n infla· tion rate of 11 to 13 percent and increased teache r militancy have all combined to produce lengthy and often bitter negotia· tfo ns. Teacher spokes man Linda :Ho1tano sa id more than 400 high school district t eache r s met at Murdy Park today to authorize a s trike, \Yhenever the committee feels it is needed. "There very well could be a strike on Monday ," she said. She said a voice vote, not \\'ritten tally, was t aken but the choice was "overwhelmingly" to a llo"' a strik e . She said there 1•oerc some ''no '' votes, ho\\1ever. The district has 779 teachers. District offi cials vowed tod ay to keep the schools open in ·the event of a strike, by use of sub· st1tute teachers and supervisory personnel. The last da y of school is June 12. Al last report. the district had Distance Champ Prefontaine Killed EUGENE, Ore. CAPJ -Steve Prefontaine. thiS coun· try's finest distance runner and one or its most con· troversial amateur athletes, was killed in an automobile ac· cident early today, little more than four hours after he r an Lhe second fastest 5,000 meters by an American. Police said Prefontaine, who was 24, was pinned under his c-ar after·ithit a rock wall at aboUt 12:30 a.m. PDT. The former University of.Oregon standout who fini~hed fourth in the.$.~000 11\elers at the 1972 Olympics had covered Plat distance in 13 m inutes 23.~ seconds in winning the event ll:t an NCAA· Preparation rheet--Thursday ni ght in Eugene. ·The time was about llh seconds off Prefontain e's American record. A high school sensation lri. Coos Bay, Ore., Prefontaine \\'ent on to a brilliant career" at the University of Oregon and, at the time of his death, owned U.S. records for every distance above 2,000 meters. Additional details today on PageB6. Administration Forecast Economy to Worsen Before It Recovers WASlllNGTON CAP) -The Ford administration said today that une mployment and the re· cession will be worse this year than it estimated earlier, but s hould be followed by ·a stronger economic recovery next year. Jn its mid·year budget and economic r e view, the ad· mini stration predicted un· e mployment will average8.7 per· cent, or about 7 .8 million workers, for the year. The ad· ministration predicted as recent· ly as February that unemp1oy· ment would average 8.1 percent this year. The forecast, if true, means that the jobless r ate proba.bly will rise a bove 9 Percent later t his year. The ~pri l rate of un· employment was 8.9 percent. The report, which will be sent to Congress, also predicted that: -T he nation's economy will decline by 3.6 percent t his year, compared with the administra· !ton's original prediction or a 3.3 percent decline . -The economy will rebound \\'ith a strong 6.3 perCent growth ne~t year, better than the4.8 per· cent gro\\1th forecast earlier. -The r a t e of inflation, as reflected by consumer prices, "'ill increase 9.1 percent this year over 1974, compared with a February projection of a 10.8 per· cent increase. The administration stuck by its projected fiscal year 1976 budget deficit of nearly $60 billion, which is below the $68 billion deficit target set by Congress. The de· ficit in fisca l 1975 wi ll be $42.6 million, the report said. Although the over·all economic Outlook was somewhat im· proved, the r e was little hope in the new forecas t for an improved uneQlploy m e nt rate. offered teachers a seven per· cent pay hike, but teachers want either 14 percent or 7.5 percent v.•ith a maximum three percent cost of living hike each quarter. The following list summarizes the status of contract t alk s in other \Vest Orange County dis· tricts: -Ocean View : District has offere d 4 .03 percent, while teachers want at least 15 per· cent. Trustees this week set a s ide a n extr a $40.000 fo r <See STRIKE, Page A2J Stanton Boy Slain Near Gang Fight A 16-year·old Stanton boy died Thursday of a g'unshot wound in the head inflicted Wednesday night as he ran from the scene of a streel gang fi ght. Police said today Gerard Qui· jas, of 7702 Yorkshire St., died Thursday morning at Stanton Community Hospit al, about 12 hours after he was shot. Norman Haggstrom, 19, also of Stanton, is being held on murder charges s temming from the incident. Police said the shooting oc· curred at about 10 p.m . Wednes· day during a gang battle but there is still no indication Quijas \\'as involved . The mother of the murder sus· pcct told police another fi ght had taken place outside her home al 11822 Santa Rosalia St. earlier in the· day. She said several gang members had threatened to kill her son and burn down her house. A police spokesman said Mrs. Dorothy Haggstrom told them she asked her son to protect her against the gan_g, which vowed to return. She said they came back that ni ght, armed with Molotov cocktails and other weapons. Witnesses said at least one olher shot was fired during the confrontation besides the fatal bullet. Police. went on patrol around · Stanton and Garden Grove schools Thursday and again· to· day to guard against· violence erupting as the result of the shooting. The · police spokesman said to. day se veral fights were broken up Thursday a nd a few schools dismissed classes early to pre- vent further campus incidents. All the schools were open today. Orange Ceast .,,,...,;:, .. ~ -.i-- Weather • MacDoOaJd aPperenl iy b.Jid been gatlierln g fis hing ba'll before dawn from· the .rocks at the jetty and lost his footing, Police said that a slender ureun~ was still tied to his waist and iashcd to a rock when the re· mains were discovered. But the fall apparently innicted head in· juries and t he man drowned without regaining consciousness. 1 :Besides. the ltfel1ne, police said, the man also had an empty Their Bodies a Minus ·2 Judge Denies Town Lot Appe al Move Applications for writs that \\'OUld have forced the Californi a Coastal Zone Conservation Com· mission to reconsider its rejec· tion of construction propos als in the "Town Lot" sector of Hunt· lngton Beach have been denied in Orange County Superior Court. L ow c l ouds 11i g ht through mi'd ·m o rnin g otherwise sunny Saturday; with slightly wa rmer tern·: pe ratures . Highs wil l l range from 65 at-the1 beuchcs to 78 inland. I NSIDE TODAY It· won't just be aoother show whe11 2.800 music shJ· 1 dent s fro,n Saddleba c k schools put on a musica.I ex· !ravaga,iia at the Aflaheim Convention Center next week. See story by Daily Pilot Stoff . Writer Jan Worth on Page Cl. • ice chest lashed to his wrist when he lelllnto the bay. · Newport Beach r eside nt Oakloy Hall of 2234 Channel Road first diicovered the noatlng body during a beach walk, 'Macdonald was identified by checks ol b is fin1erprint.s. or. ~rs said. Tbe ·remains are al Pacific View. Memorial Pa_rk. I I LOS ANGELES CAP) -"We will not be able to use your body In our centerfold,'' the letter says. ·• ... On a scale of o t9 10, your body was r ated -2:" ' The. Jetter carries the n;ime "'P1aYgirl0 ' al the top and ap- parenUy hBs · b&en ' sent to men around the coui1try. But a Play.girl m agazine spoke1man said Thursday it i& not respaniible tor the malling& and desc_ribed them as "a very cruet hoax.·· Phil Paladlnp, puwtc. relations d irector for ·Lhe w·omen's maicazlne wh\ch features: photos ol nuile m•n, uld Playgirl bas received 44 inquiries about the letter -m a ny from people who think it is legitimat e . no one, of course, had done so - the let~er goes on to say in part: "The ra_ting was done by a panel of women ranging in age The letters bear µostmarks from 6S to 75 years old. We tried from around the country and to have our panel of women in the they obviou,sly were composed on 25 to :{S-year·old bracket rate dlfterent typewriters. They show you, but we could not get them to different IOgo styles at lhe top of1 stop laughing long enough." the page, different mailing ad· Among the recipients have · dresses for Playgirl and ar e been a clergyman and an elderly si~n,ed with differe nt names, he widow, Paladino said. said. , . , He said Playgirl is sending But the text~ plma&t ~-1>, ~ •Pologl~ to every recipient of on all the letter;o wbl9) f'l•Yllrl ~ t1le h9ax !•Iler who can be local· .has:. s-:cn In tH 1~ eeb, eil. The.'m8gaz:lne plans to turn Paladino said. '..;. the documents over to postal Alter thanktn,-the lndlvidual. autboriUes tor possible criminal for sending !n•hll p~•nhs'-.lnv..Ugatlon, he said. ' !' ":!" .. • Judge Robert P. Kneeland ruled for the s t ate and against lawyers tor the Foxx DevJ!IOP· ment Corporation and Lowell D . Zl'hnder after h earings in his courtroom. The state's conservation agen· cy earlier had rejected Fox·x plans ror construction·of a tou r. unit apartment building on each of' five lots. Jt stm'ilarly dented Zehnder's p lans for construction ol 1 f0\1 r-unit apartment house on each of two lots. ----- ..... 1 .. 1 l"'H.V I ' ..... y ..... , ........ . European Leaders Laud U.S. BRUSSELS (UPI) - America 's key £uropeen allies asi;ured President 1'ord today th.at U.S~ ~redibilit.y r~ains as 'strong as ever desplle lhe Call of Vie tnam. and some decl•red they never had Mny doubt of the continuing U.S. commitment lo the North Atlanti c Treaty Oreanizatlon. But a few noted politely bul firmly thut they must make lh•lr own decisions, which ln aome In· stances may not Cully coincide with the vision or unified defense which Ford painted in his open· ing speech to the meetlne or NATO heads of slate. NEW PRINCIPAL Vl1te View'• Koeller Family Center .' Okayed The prospect of national fame and television exposure has con· vlnced Huntlntton Beach to open the doors or lta new library to the National Alliance for Family urc. Under a proposal made lhis week by NA FL president J ames J . Rue, lhe Huntington Beach library would ~come a national center for the Camily -the only one or Ila kind, according to Rue. The city council agreed Tues- day night to houso · up to eight NAFL slaff meinbers in the $3 mlllion central library. and to provide further housing In the old downtown civic cenler for addi· Uonal NAFL staff member·s. The NAFL would pay no rent lo 9 Gallon J,i111it . ( FEA. Outlines Gaa Plan •. WASHING TON <U PI > -Federal eneray plannars have proposed •n emergency ••aollne ratlonlng plan th•t would give drivers in a ll parts of the nation the same number or gallon& or fuel each week. . ''We don't want to•et c1u1ht like we dld lhe last time,'' a member of the Federal Energy Administration lask force whi ch drew up lhe proposal said loday. He reCerred to the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo. , .. The spqkeaman 1eld today the plan was drafted es o · standby and would be used only in the evenl or a major emergency.· The rePorl gave no estimate how much gasoline would be provided to each Ueensed driver. In the past, however, U.S. orfi cinls have talked in term of nine gallons per week. Tight ftllGtaea Budget May Omit ln his opening speech 1'hUts· day, Ford restated a rlnelng pledge th at the United Slates will come to the defense of any NATO member subjected lo armed al· tack, and will m aintain Its pre· sent 310,000 troop strength in Two New Principals Appoinled . the city, but would agree to supp· ly the library with a minimum or $4,000 worth or books, rums and other materials on family liCe each year. Irvine Hospital ByDOUGLASFRITZSCH~ the Departmerit of Finance. Bod11 Back UPI TtlfCIMIO Slim GOodbod y (John Bur~­ tcin ) has his body back. The singer .d a nge r lost the full leotard \\lith body organs on it \Vhich h e uses to put on a health musical, but it was found later near a Ne\v York school . Fro•PageAI NORMAL .•. riers whic h will provide in· surance at lower rates while the Lc,gislature t ackl es the proble m. Orange County doctors have been pushin g the bill or state Sen. Dennis Corpe nter (R·Ne\\•port Beach) that "'ould set up com· pensation boards, ins tead or j uries, to hear m alpra ctice cases. limit th e period when a"·ards c an be filed, limit the an·ards, a nd limit attorneys' fees. By ~1 o nda y some Orange County hospitals will have been on restricted schedules for two "·eeks, some for about 10 days and some for a "'eek. Cutting out elective surgeries has reduced patient loads at ' hospitals by about 40 percent and some hospitals h avc'been putting staff members on four.day weeks and contemplating layoffs. Bannister said that the effect the s lowdown was having on hospitals was a ''strong concern" or the doctors al Thursday j ni ght's meeting. Former Sixth • ~ Graders Meet '..To Pai1ll Pole • : • I I ' ! Members 0£ a £armer Fountain Va lley School Di strict s ixth grade class will hold their Ciflh reunion Saturday -but they'll reminisce on ladders between brush strokes. The students, now juniors al Edison and Fountain Valley Hi gh Schools. wil l meet to r epaint the totem pole they built at district offices while in Mrs. Deanna Smith's sixth g rade at Arevalos School. The class carved a 16·fo ot telephone vo le lo deoict the his· tory of Fountain Valley during the past 400 yea rs. They vowed then to meet again this year to re· paint it. The work will begin at 9 a.m. and is ex pected to continue th rough the morning. • ORANGE COAST "" DAILY PILOT 1"4r 0.• ..... Co••l D•llY Pllol, '""11> wN<h !~<om• t>j ...... '"" N•..., Ptt,., '' "'10'"~"" , ... 0.•-e,w,t PoJl>I""'"~ Comp•n• ~to•••1c 1111•1">'" lft pul>l"'"'d MDnd•y !l>rou..,n I "dooV ..... C.0"1 "'°'""· "'r""Po'I 811(1>, l'!<m1>nt;oton !lo:l(l>I~~""· '"'" v1l•t•. 1 ... 1n1, \1ddleb~<-v .. 11~. •n<I u..,un1 llt1<1>1\oU11> Co1•t fl ••"4'< "'l'"""' °"'''""I• p,oblill>td S..hlfd111 -\iund~''· 11111 P'"''"""' p,obl""'n"' o<tnl " ~• JOO Wl<•I till Mrt:1l, (O>ll Me\I, CtiolO•llll'1b~. Robert "I,. Weed P•t••Mnt 1n<1 Puoi.,,.., Jac k R, Curley \lic1"''""'"!1n<1 C..M•11 Monogorr Thomas Keev il Cdolor Thomas A, Murphine ...... n•Q•n9 EO!!or Charles H. Loos Ric hard P, Nall ... "' •11~! ..... "•9•flQ £e1o1 ... , Tl!rrv Coville wtll O•tttQO' Co.oMr £0ol"' Huntlnoton Beach Office 111•l s.1e~ ae .. 1•••u1 W lh"t•OCI•••• P.O 8cl•1i0,•- Oth•r Offic•s U Qwol\•0..•cll. 11 .. c;,.,,...,1t S1tMI c .......... ~ l.Ml'°"f" .,...~'"' Nt-1 11t1e111 IJJJ .,..,.._, ..._..•••O Stdall .. 1• Vtllt, !SHU Lo Ptl lllo.od fl S..I\ D .. 00 F•H••Y TtJtptlont {11 4) M2-4121 , C"IMfltd Adv•rtl~lng 642·5'71 ,.,."' NNlll °'""~ Co11ttt, (otnmvo'llli" 540·1220 t.p,rltlll, ltlJ 0'""0• (n1•t PuPll•lllttQ ~y, "'• f'f*'~o&rotl, •llw>l••!1M1•.fllll0f1.i r •Ut• ,, IOflt•lit .... MI ht•fltt "'f~ ... ,rpprefoittd .. 11 ..... 1 !.Pf't•t l p1•101hilt~ 01 fc.H'(fltfll IWllll r, • C."'41 ~!fl' jll~l•tt ptld •I Ctil• Mtll . e lt. 1-rlP'loll h' t t «,.• t J.00..._M,; .11.• ....... 111.,; Mlhl .. , ••••lll'l>On• tl.00 -•· I Europe. w ·i Prime Minister Harold 1 son of Britain said he welcomes the president's assurances aboul the U.S . commitment Lo NATO, but said this commitment never real- ly had been In doubt. Chancellor Helmut Schmidt of \Vest Germany satd in a speech that he "took note with satisfac· ti on of the American commitment to uphold its military obligalions and not to red~ce unilater'ally its troop strength in Europe. "Especially in times when the United States has to carry a heavy burden, it can count on Germany as well," Schmidt said. The expressions of supix>rt' for Ford's position introduced a note or harmony and solidarity in an organization whose unity has been shaken by dispules between Greece and Turkey and by uncer- tainty over whether Portugal _ Is drifting toward a pro-Communist stance. But some m ajor speakers also restated the reservations their governments held toward the al· liance before the summit began. Greek Premier Constanline' Caramanlis said NATO's failure to block Turkey's invation of Cyprus last s ummer forced Greece to quit NATO's military arm -and Greece will remain outside at least for now. On one of the holtest topics, Portugal's Premier Vasco dos Santos Goncalves declared his nation would stay in NATO despite allied suspicions it is drifting toward the Communist sphere. He pleaded Cor "more comprehension and less ap· prehension'' from the allies. French foreign minister Jean Sauvagnargues, standing in for Marilyn Koe ller, 40, and George Nettleman, 35, have been ap~inted school principals in the Ocean View School District . Mrs. Koeller. an Ocean View teacher since 1970, will become principal at Vista View School.in Fountain Valley, where she now is an administrative assistant. A Huntington Beach resident, she holds BS and MS degrees and previously taught in Pomona schools. Nettleman, currenUy en assis- tant principal and coordinator of federal projects for the Santa An a Unified School District , will be principal at Meadow View School in Huntington Beach. He is a resident of Laguna Beach and previously taught in Laguna Beach schools. Other principal reassignme"ts in the dis trict include: William Lesc her. curre ntly principal at Harbour View School, will move to Village View; Claude Beasley, Village View principal, will be reassigned tothe dislrict starr. Don · M·l11er ··~,i ll move from Park View to College VieY:; Sam Landes Crom Westmont to Park View ; Kent 1\.1'.cCli s h Crom Pleasant View to Wes tmont ; Leon House from l\.1eadow Vie¥.• to Pleasanl View ; Tom Griffith from Circle View to Glen View ; Mary Coe from Glen View to Sun View, and Norn\ Guith from Vista ·view to Circle View. Sun Vi ew Prinic pal Leon Hilton will retire at the end of ...,.is school year, and Patricia . President Valery Giscard d 'Es· taing, said France_"never enlei' tained any doubt a1 to the readi· ness or the American govern- ment and people regarding Jls Eucopean a llies." • Novolney, Harbour View prin· cipal, has resigned to accept a post with the Irvine Un ified School District. FroMPageAI STRIKE ••• teachers, and will m eet all day Saturday in negotiations. -Huntington Beach City : Teachers have a sked for 16.5 percent plus an automatic cost of living hike each quarter. The di strict has o ftered to keep them in the top 75 percent of Orange Cou nty elementary teachers. -Fountain Valley: Teachers reportedly have come down Crom their original 12 percent pay request, but district of. ficials declined lo discuss specifics because of a policy against doing so during contract talks. -We stm i ns ter: Teachers want a pay boost of lJ to 13 per- cent, equal to lhe hike in the cost of living, but lrusteesdon'lexpect to make any offer until late June and are considering a pay cut or freeze. -Seal Beach, te.-chen have asked for a 15 percent Increase. The school board has "auggeBl· ed" a two percent boost. Fro•PageAI FILMS ••• The U.S. attorney's office In l.os Angeles reportedly. seized what were de.sc ribed as tons of films during its several-month investigation. · Sadat Urging U.S. 'Role' By Unlletl Pre11 l•temaUOeal President Anwar Sad•t of Eeypl, meeting with the leaders of Yua:oslavia and Austria prior to s cheduled talkt with Preindent Ford Sunday, has called on the United Stales to play a more IC· live role In solvlns the Middle East crisis. Sad1l was to arrtve in Vienna Ocean View officials are seek· ing a new principal for the Harbour View post . Devil Cult Witness May Switch Sides By TOM BARLEY Oft111 Dalt' PllotSl<tll Relu ctant witness Ar thur Craig "Moose" Hulse overcame hi s reluctan ce Thurs day in Orange County Superior Co urt but only arter lawyers for both sides agreed that he could switch sides in the .. Devil Cu ll '' murder trial of Steven Craig Hurd. liulse, hustled from the wit~ ness stand. Wednesday after questions rrom prosecutor Frank Briseno produced obscenities rather th a n answers, will next appear in the courtroom as a de· Cense witness, not a prosecutior witness, if the trial is not declared a mistrial. Judge Frank Domenichini will make that decision Monday. If he decides the trial will goon 1-lulse, 21, will become defense attorney William Gamble's witness. Gamble mOved for a mistrial with the argument that Hulse's statement that he was round guil· ty or murder charges arter pl ead· ing not guilty and not gullty by reason of insanity to the hatchet killing or service st ati on atten· dant J erry Wayne Carlin, 21 , could prejudice 1-lurd's chances of a fair trial. Gamble argued that lhc jury now knows th at llulse drew a life term in state prison after filing the same pleas as Hurd. The in· Cerence is obvious, he told Judge Domenichlni. Hurd, 25, Is accused of first defree murder In the mutilation kil ing on June 3, 1970, or Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. · today to meet wtlh Autlrlan ch•ncellor Bruno Krleaky-and presldenl Rudolf Klrchachl1ger prior to the Ford t•lk1 In · Salibur1. Mrs. Brown, 31, or El Toro, was dragged from her car by a gang as the car entered the Sand Ca- nyon Road orrr8mp from tneSan· ta An a Freeway. She wa.!I butchered in an Irvine orange grove. It.ts alleged tha t Hurd, assert· ed leader of a gong of drug-using drifters, played the rnajor role In hor kllllna and burial. ( • Members of the city council agreed to the proPosal with two conditions: It doesn't cost the ci- ty any money, and the city at· torney a rrirms the legality or it. Rue also told the council his or- ganization would help the city seek outside funds to build a wing on the library which could be used as a permanent h ead· quarters Cor the N AFL, as well as other library purpases. He mentioned conslruction or such a wing within the next three lo five years. The NAFL is planning a three· hour television show on the fami- ly Crom 8 p.m . to 11 p.m., Wed· nesday, on KTLA , channel 5. Co· ho11ts for the show wilt be Pat Boone, Arl Linkletter, Danny Thomas and Marlo Thomas, all of whom are advisors to the NAFL. In an April 4th letter to the city. Rue wrote: "In my discussions with Mr. Rowlands <city ad· ministrator) I have outlined our intention to present a film seg· ment on the City of Huntington Beach, its landmarks, its historic sites and its city oCficials ... Our film segment would of course preview the location of the na· tional center for the family." Some or what the center "'o'uld represent involves: -A think tank, or gathering place for leaders in research on family lire. -It would house the nation's largest and most complete data bank "for all inCormation per· taining to the family." -It would include books, course outlines , pamphlets, magazines, films, cassettes, re- ports and other materials. -The center would develop television and radio programs on family life. In his April 4th letter Rue also said, "Our plan is to utilize every medium of communication with the goal of r eaching just about every member of our society with the good news that the mar· 1iage life-style and closely knit, loving family are still the ·best way of life.'' Jn a May 22 m eeting with the library board. Rue was quizzed about the point or view or the NAFL and what materials it might support, or oppose. Oflflt D•ll~ PUtlltefl California's budgel for the coming year is likely to come oul of the Assembly Wa)'I and Means Commlltee without a $1% million appropriation for. an on-c•mpUll hospital at UC Irvine, •ccordine to legislative sources. A combination of a tiehl st•le financial situation and concern aboul Orange Counly'a overaupp· ly or hospital facilities has led to striking the money from lhe As· sembly version or the 1875-78 budget, Assemblyman Bruce Nestande (R··Anahelm) said in an interview today. • Walter Clark, aide to Senator Dennis Carpenter, confirmed that the appropriation ha" been taken out. In its present form, they said, other approprlalion1 for the UCI· California College oC Medicine were made, providing Cunds Cor other campus buildings and the takeover of Orange County Medical Center as well as pl•n· ning for a string ot outpatie~t clinics, accordiqg to a source an City Reviews New Antique Law Monday A modiCied antiquities or- dinance will be submitted to \he Huntinaton Beach City Council Monday night for a public hear- ing. The proposed ordinance would establish a permit procedure to protect archeological sites iden- tified in the city. Such sites were listed in a citywide survey made in 1972 and arc recorded at city ha IL Developers would have to secure a pe rmil prior to con· struction on any ide ntiCied archeological s ites. ' The new law would not necessarily prevent develop· ment, but it would allow scien- tists to explore the site determine its real value before it is de- istrubed. HERITAGE CHINA Re9. 5969°0 SAL.E s799oo HERITAGE'S WINDWARD COLLECTION made with English brown oak burl, pin knotty walnut and olive ash burl veneers. and pecan solids. The finish, done by hand . is in the oldest European manner. These distinctive qualities give Windward a look of Its own. ... Entire Collection on Sale Un til End of May DINING ROOM. BEDROOM AND OCCASIONAL PIECES Last year. $11,700,0CIO wu ap. propriated for construction of lhe 'hospital. All but Sl00,000 wa• re· moved from next year's pro· poaed budget. Neatande said "the status of thtncs right now is very fiuid. It could change any lime.'' "It is toueh to sell the on· c•mpua hoepilal idea right now,'' he said, ''because of the economic silqation and becauae there is a feeling in Sacramento lhal Orange Counly already htts enou1h hospllal beds and this is not needed.'' The UCI hospital was approved recently by lhe Orange County Health Planning Council, which simultaneously rejected an ap- plication by Hoag Memorial HO$pilal and the Western World Medical Foundation to build a hospital in Irvine. Medical School Dean Stanley van den Noort promised a response to the developmenl late today. He categorized the removal of the funds for construction of lhc on-campus hospital as "a breach of confidence with lhe voters of Orange County. During months of debate over whelher a hospilal should be built on the campus, Dr. van den Noort has maintained that a. $155.9 rnilllon 1972 health sciences bond act was largely in- tended lo finance development or medical schools at UCI and UC D•vll. Inflation and other appropria- tions h•ve reduced lhe amounl av•ilable, and UCI seems to be getting short chanled, he has contended. However. the budgel proposal does contain an equally con· troversial $5 million for the takeover of Orange County Medical Center by lhe university plus other funds to plan renova- tion of the hospital. "There seems to be a con- sensus to lo ahead with the first phase of development of the medical school -that was something that was in doubt before -and wait a year or two down the road to see if we have money for the on-campus hospital ,'' Assemblyman Nestande observed. OREXEL-HER ITAGE-HENREDON-WOOOMAAK-!IAAASTAN-BAKER WlllDATS l SATUlDATS 9:00 h S:>o r NEWPORT BEACH • 17;17 W~1iTCLfff" OR ., "'2·2GSO LAGUNA BEACH • 34~ Nfllt1'11 Cl)AS'I' tlW'I' ., -4SMl·6Ml TORRANCE• 23841 HAWl'llORNE Bl.VD. lf)pt•n f'rl. 1r1 ~.Sun. ia . .s::tuJ 3711·127!f ' Orange Coast Tod ay's CI011lng ~ N. Y. Stoeks . . ~ EDITION VOL. 68, NO. 150, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1975 N TEN CENTS > County Medics Vote to Return Monday By ALAN DIRKIN Of llM D•ll'I ~let SW.II Operating rooms In Orange County hospitnls will be back on normal schedules Monday. T he d ecisio n ror anesthesiologists and other phy11icians involved in the sur· gery slowdown to return to rull S<'hedules wus reached at a six· hour meeting or the Orange County Medical Associ a tion ~· Europe.an Leaders Laud U.S. BR USSELS (U PI) - America's key European allies assured President Ford today that U.S. credibility remains as strong as ever despite th~ fall.or Vietnam, and some declared they never had any doubt or the continuing U.S. commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. But a rew noted politely but firmly that they musl make their own decisions, which in some in· stances may not fully coincide with the vision Of unified defense which Ford pa inted in his open· ing speech to the meeting of NATO heads of state. In his opening speech Thurs- day, Ford restated a ringing pledge that the United Stat.es will come to the defense or any NATO member subjected to armed at· tack., and will m aintain its pre- sent 310,000 troop strength in Europe. Prime Minister Harold Wilson of Britain .said he welcomes the president's assurances about the U.S. commitment to NATO, but said thfs commit ment never real- fy had beenindo~bt. · Chancellor 'l;felni'Ut Schmidt -or We~t Germany said in a speech that ·11e "look note with satisfac· ti on of the American commitment to.uphold its military obligations and not to reduce unilaterally its troop strength in Europe. • "Especially in time:; when the United States has to carry a heavy burde n, it can count on Germany as well,'' Schmidt said. The expressions of support for Ford's position introduced a note bf harmony and solidarity in an organization whose unity h as been shaken·by disputes between Greece and Turkey and by uncer· tainty over whether Portugal is drifting toward a pro-Communist stance. . But some m ajor speakers a lso restated the reservations their governments held toward the al- liance before the summit began. Greek Premier Constantine Caramanlis said NATO's failure t'o block Turkey's invation of Cyprus last s ummer forced Greece to quit NATO's military ii.rm -a nd Greece will remain outside at least for now. On one of the hottest topics, Portugal's Premier Vasco dos Santos Goncalves declared his ii alion would stay in NATO <tespite allied suspicions it is drifting toward the Communist Sphe re. Drown Victim 'Ide ntified; No Address · Newport Be ach police have \dentified the body of a man who 'tell from the Balboa jetty rocks and drowned earlier in the day as 42-year-old Thomas -MacDonald. But the address of MacDonald bas not been determined, and or- ficers appealed· for help from anyone who may know informa- .tion aboUt the victim . MacDonald apparently had ~ been gathering fishing balt - beforc dawn from the rocks at 1he jelly and lost hla !00Cln1. Police aald that a 1lender ll!eline was sUll tied 'lo bis waist Ond lashecUo a "°"k when the re· inain1 we.re dlscoverM. But the 'fall apparently inflicted head in· ·juries and the man drowned ·iri,thout regaining cORICiousness. ·? Besld .. the ll!ellne, police said, the man also had an empty k'e chest lashed to his wrist when be !ell Into tlie bay. • Newport B ench resident Oakley Hallo! 2234 Channel Road llistdiacovered the noaun1 body ''ni1abeachwalk, acdonald wao ldenttO,,.t by di k• of hi• rtngerprinla, or-ll<en aald. The remain• are 1t Pacific View Memorial Park. Thursday nighl. Everett Bannister, executive director of the 2,000-member OC· MA, confirmed today that tor a while :'i ( was touch and go " on whether the doctoNs would re- turn. T he m eeting had been called by OCMA president Philip McFarland lo consider a request by doctors in t be San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente al'ea for s tronger und more con. certcd action to resolve the malpractice insurance cris is. But a resolution by these doc· tors for a ll physicians in OrangC' County to withhold all but emef'g e ncy services for three weeks was "resoundingly" de· teated, Bannister said. . Bannist~r said that there was much support for continuing the ·slowdown, but when the vote came to return there v.·as not a dissenting vote. "But remember the vote was not taken until after tiix hours of debate," he added. The vote came after the mem· bcrship .. comple tely rejected" the concepts of a stop·gap bill that sett led the strike by Northern California doctors, who have been off work since J\1ay 1. "There was a feeling that the Northern Ca lifornia doctors bought a bad bill ." Bannister said. The 0Cf\1A director said that the motion agreed upon by the Orange County doct ors "'as limited. It v.•as to continue "'ork· ing "until the end or the general session of the Legislature pro· vided that the legislators de- monstrate a strong desire to push legislation that will give answers to long -term problems o f malpractice insurance.'' "The feeling v.·as that if no long·tern1 solution is rl!achcd everybody in Orange County \\'Ill go out," Banniste r added. The bill th:.it broug ht thc_o Northern California doctol's. \\'ho currently have no malpractice insurance coverage, back to "·ork "·as to create a statewide pool of liability iu surancl! car· (See NORMAL, PageA2) UCI Hospital Shaky / Tight Budget, Oversupply Cited 0 ......... .,siim7 GOodbody (John Burs- teinl'lias his ·body back The singer·dbnger lost 1he full leotard with bod y organs on it which .. he uses to put on Ll health musical~ but it \Vas found later near a New York school. Letter Rates 'Em -The n Fors akes 'em LOS ANGELES (AP> -"We will not be able to use your body in our centerfold ," the letter says. " ... On a scale of 0 to 10, your body was r ated ·2." The letter carries the name "Playgirl" at t he top and ap· parenlly has been sent to men around the country. But a Playgirl magazine spokesma n said Thursday it is. not respons ible for the mailings and described them as "a very· cruel hoax.'' Phil Paladino, public relations direc to r for the women's magazine which features photos of nude men. said Playgirl has received 44 inquiries about the leUer . -many from people who think it is legitim a te. The letters bear postmarks from around lhe country and they obviously were composed on different typew riters. They Show different logo styles at the top or the page, different mailing ad- dresses for Playgirl and are signed with different names, he said. But the text is a lmost identical on all the le tte rs which P laygirl has seen in lhe lasl few weeks. ·Paladino said. After tha nking the individual (See RATING, Page A2l By DO UG LAS FRITZSCHE Of lh• D•ilr Plk>I St•ll California·s budget for the coming year is likely to come out of the Assembly Ways and Means Committee V.'ithout a $12 mill ion appropriation for a n on·campus hospital at UC Irvine, according to legislative sources. A combinati on of a tight state financial situation and concern about Orange County's oversupp- ly of hospital facilities has led to striking the money from the As- sembly vers ion of the 1975·76 budget. Assemblyman Bruce Huntington Man Hit In 'Piracy' A 27 -yea r =old Huntington Beach man was among 16 people indicted Thursday by a Los Angeles federal grand jury in· vestigating motion picture and teJevision film piracy. Richard H . Wesselink Jr., 27, of 19241 Brookhurst St ., was charged with criminal copyright infringement. FBI officials said he appeared before a magistrate in Santa Ana and was released on his own recognizance. Wesselin k was among six Southern Californians arrested after the indictment. The FBI listE!d him as the former owner of a firm called Video Dynamics. Assista n t U .S. Attorney Chester L . Brown said today Wesselink's firm , at 10722 Trask Ave., Garden Grove, handled contracts for airline motion pic- ture showing. But he is accuScd or illegally making three copies of ''The Ex· orcisl" then selling tv.·oof them. Brown declined lo discuss (See FILMS, Page A2) STOCKS SCORE SHA RP ADVANCE NEW YORK (AP) -T he stock market reeled of( its biggest gain in a month today v.1ith a broad rally set off by signs of an im· proved economic outlook. T h e Dow J ones industrial average was up 17.29, closing at 832.29. · Analysts said the initial •spark for the buying seemed to come . from the government's report that its revamped index or lead- ing economic indicators took a big upward jump last month. Another push came shortly before noon in the Ford ad· ministration 's mid·year report on the economic outlook. The White House s aid the recessing evidently v.-·ould prove worse than its earlier estimates, but added it expected a sharper economic recovery next year than had been originally JJrO· jeeted. 1\'estande ( R·Anaheim) said in an interview today. Walter Clark, aide to Senator Dennis Carpenter. conrirmed that the appropriation has been taken out. In its present form. they said, other appropriations for the UC I· California College of Medicine were made, providing funds for other campus buildings and the takeover of Orange County Medical Cente r as well as plan· ning for a s tring or outpatient clinics, according to a source in the Department of Finance. Last year. Sll ,7 00.000 v.-•as ap· propriatcd for construction of the hospital. All but $100.000 was re· moved from next year's pro· posed budget. Nes tande said .. the status or things right now is very nuid. It could change any time." ··it is lough to sell the on. campus hospital idea ri ght no\\•,·· he s aid, '"b ecause of the economic situation and because there is a feeling in Sacramento that Orange County already has enou gh hospital beds and this is not needed.·• Distance Champ Prefontaine Killed EUGENE. Ore. <AP) -Sleve ·Prefontaine, this coun· try"s finest distance runner -and one of its most con- troversial aniateur alhletes, was killed in an automobile ac· cident ea1'ly tOday. little more than four hours after he ran the second fastest 5,000 meters by an American. Police~said Prefontaine, who was 24, was pinned under his car after it hit a rock wall at about 12 :30 a.m . PDT. The former University or Oregon standout who finished fourth in the 5,000 meters at the 1972 Olympics had covered that distance in 13 minutes 23.8 seconds in winning the event at a n NCAA preparation meet Thursday night in Eugene . ·The time wa s about 11h seconds off Prertaine·s American record. ~ _ A high school sensation in COO!-tia , Or e., Prefontaine v.·enl on lo a brilliant career at the Uni versity or Oregon and, at the lime of his death, owned U.S. "records for every distance above 2,000 meters. Additional details today on Page B6. A dmi11istrotio11 Forecast Economy to Worsen Before It Recovers WASHINGTON (AP) -The Ford administration said today that unemployment and the re· cession will be worse this year than it estim ated earlier , but s hould be followed by a stronger economic recovery next year. In its mid-year budget a nd economic review, the ad- mi n istration predicted un · employment wi ll average 8.7 per· cent, o r abo ut 7.8 million workers, for the year. The ad· ministration predicted as recent· ly as February that unemploy· ment would average 8.1 percent this year. The forecast, if true. means that lhe jobless rate probably will rise above 9 percent later this year. The April rate 0£ Un· employment was 8.9 percent. The report, which will be sent l6 Congress, also predicted that : -The nation's economy will decline by 3.6 i><:rce nt this y,ear, compared with the administra- tion 's origina l prediction of a 3.3 per cent d ecline. -The economy will rebound with a strong 6.3 percent gro"1.h next year, better than the 4.8 per. cent growth forecast earli er . :New Films At Pu.ssycat •No t Pomo? Newport Beach vice officers paid another S3 apiece to see the movies a t the Balboa Pussycat Theater Thursday. but lhey said today the new tamer features ap· peared to be in conformance with state obscenity laws. The ' detectives said that the feature had changed Thursday and was considerably sorter in content, compared to the two films which sparked a raid last Tuesday night. Be's A. warded Damages , OCficers seized "French Blue" a porno flick reaturing a Pen· thouse M agaiine model, and companion fil m, "Dynan1ite." Thursday's fa r e, said Detec- tive Al Epstein, was ''French Poodle" and another film with a Zorro theme. Boaty ard Owner Collects for Flooding . . lly IOHN V.ALTEllZ\ Of• o..tr ,.. ... ...., · It's not very often that so· meone ~mands that a cl_!y say "l'in soriy. Thlew 1L" And when pugna-ciou s boatyard owner Ar senc "Blackie" Gadorfa n made that l'tQuest of Newpo1't Beach clQt of· ficlals 'earlter thiJ year' they nat~ ly.salil "!:lo."' · TbJs week, that answer from City Manager Robert Wynn cost Newport Beach $155.31. That's what a small-claims oourt Judie awarded Gadarian ..Wot an original dalm ror Oood damages which the businessm&n So he sent a Jetter. had set at about $450. In it, he detailed the sequence The story goes like this: of events and asserted that tbe ci· Last Dec. 4, before dawn, the ty s taff blew it . heavens ope ned up above "I hereby offer to drop all Blackie's Boat Yard and the real claims to the cl&.y of Newport of the Orange Coast. In a very Beach (or damages due to the short while, the rainfall set re--Ooodl nJ: -contlagent. upon the cords. , receipt of 11 statement from The predawn torttnt Oooded 1 General S«vlces Direct.or Jake Blackle's and s urrounding pro--Myndersc lldmittJnk h.15 depf°rt: perties and the yard owner lnslst· m ent '1 ne,ligence conc~rnlog ed that the damage 'to bis clec-the cloatne of the storm d:ra.fn , trical syatem and 1058 ol opcrat-with a forrnal aoOlog)' ror·tbe'in· ingtJme lhatday wulhefaultof ~ convdJence ana ~dall\agd;r lie cil)I crews who roriiot lo open a . uld,lnclooln1. . .. ' . · storm draln . • 1 • ..i. ., "4 ) • I • Police said the prints seized in the Tuesday raid a re being stored in a jail cell at the new Harbor Dis trict Courthouse. The reels were too large to fit in re· gular evidence lockers, s aid Detective Capt. Rich Hamillon. Ironically, the two latest blue films have some historic com· pany at the county courthouse. A p i ece of ci n e mati c mtmorabllla in the form of n print.of "1 Am CurlouH, Yellow'' a lso is s'tlll s tored In th e coul1hou1e. a nd that was s eized by Newport officers In a raid on ·lhesame Balboa rrlovlehduse. 'That rald took place more than, six years ago . The UCI hos pital \\'as approved recently by the Orange County Health Planning Cou.ncil , v.•hicb simultaneously rejected an ap·· plication by Hoag t.1e morial Hospital and the Western World ~ledical Foundalion to build a hospital in lr\'ine. f\tedical School Dean Stanley van den Noort pfomised a rl.'sponsc to the development late today, He categorized the removal or the funds for construction or the on ·campus hospital as "a breach (See HOSPITAL, Page A2> No Changes Vie wed for Paramedics By R UDI NIEDZIELSKI Of U.. D•llJ Pil.t $t.llU Supervisor Thomas F. Riley predicted in El Toro Thursday night that the co unt y 's paramedic service would remain under fire d epartment control and not be turned over to 1u;vate ambulance firms . He told lead e rs of the Sad· d le back V a l l ey YMCA he believed there were enough votes on the Board of Supe1·visors to s us t a in a publi c ly oper ated paramedic system. at least in the unincorporated areas of Orange County. The campaigning supervisor 's remarks v.•ere apparently in· tended to be heard at nearby Leisure Wor!CI '''here residents are vigorous ly protesting the county's consideration of Jetting ambulance companies provide paramedic service. "I cannot see this in any V.'ay being turned over to private en· terprise," said the rifth district supervisor , a lthough he admitted voting for a study determining the feasibility of ambulance paramedics. Riley said he voted for the study. now in progress, only beca use he knev.• thal fellow supervisors had enough votes to carry the measure anyv.'ay, As a result hi s orrice was inun- dated by letters. ··There arc 18,000 residents in Leisure World and I got 18 ,000 letters," Ril ey said about his unpopular decision to join the study proposal. Riley told Y leaders gathered for their annual dinner that estimates for private paramedic calls range between $99 and $150, (See PUBLIC, Page AZ> Ora a ge c. ••• 'We atller Low cloud s ni gh t t hrough mid·m orning otherwise sunny Saturday v.'ith sli ghtly "-'armer tern·· pcratures. Highs wi ll range fr om 65 at th e bt-aches to 78 inland. I NSIDE TODAY It won't ju!t be another show when 2 .800 mu.Tic itu· dent s from Saddleback school! put on a musical er- lravaganz.a .at the Anaheim Convention Cenler nert week, Set i tory by Daily Pilot Staff l\lriter Jon Worth on Page Cl. AIT-krvic1 ...u ... L.M ... ~· c:.t+flTill .. a. ... , ... ........ o ... ...,. 0.1tlll ... llC1tt ldherkllP ... , ..... ft(. -· .. ,....,"'lttM<! _ .. _, ,,.,., .... ....... Index • I . i\Je• D/dl V PILOT N Fnday.M•r 30.1i7~ THESE ARE SOME OF THE 18 ENTRANTS IN THIS YEAR'.S MISS MERMAID CONTEST Lineup May Look Old Fashioned But It Showa Contest Has Regained Popularity E'rom Page Al HOSPITAL ... of confidenl'l' \\'ilh the voters of Orange County, During 1nonths of debate over ,,·hc ther a hospital s hould · be built on tht> ca mpus, Dr. v;.1n den Noo rt has maintained thut a $155.9 m i llio n 1972 hea lth sciences bond ~1 ct was largely in- tended to fin<in ce development of medical schools ttt UCl and UC Davis. Inflation .:i nd other appropria- tions ha ve reduced the amount availabl(', ~nd UC I seems to be getting short changed, he has contended . Jlo\\·eve1·, the budget proposal does cont<.1 in an equally con- trovers ial SS million for the t<.1keovcr of Orange County l\·Iedical Cente r by the university plus olhl•r funds to plan renova- tion of th e hospitul . "The re seems to be a con- sens us to go ahead 'with the first phase of development· or the medic a l s chool -that \\:a s something that was in doubt before -and \\"ail a yea.r or l\\'O do"'" the roi)d to see if "'e have money for the on-campu s h ospital ,'' Ass emblyman Ncstande obser ved. Pair Play For Recor'd T\A.•o mem hers of the UC Irvine tennis team began balling balls •round thi s morning at a Newport Beach residential pro- ject and if they keef it up until Monday night, they') have a new \i:orld record. Eric ~f ann and Eric Larre plan to play continuously -except for a 15-minute break after each hour's play -until 8 p.m. ri.ton- day. They hope to break a Guin· ness world record set in 1971 by· college players in Reno. In connec ti o n with th e marathon effort, developer M. J . Brook plans to donate $1 for every person pa ssing through his Jasmine Creek model homes during the weekend. The dona- tion will go to the UCI athletic scholarship fund . Crane Hatched WASHINGTON (AP) -The first "'hooping crane bred ·and hatched in captivity this decade has emerged from its shell al the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center in nearby Maryland. ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT l .... 0....,11' lW>! O••l"t P1!61, wot/> .mo<I> ,,,,,..... "'""'"'"""N• .. > p,~ ... l>P"b"•......,1>•1"'0r- C.0.'1 P\.ol>l1""•"<1 lOl'l1P01'• ~PM•!< f'G•l-•r .. p;1>1,......, -""•• '"'o~al> rroo.• •or CIM.t• M<w , '""""'""' !ffoKll, Hunlo"IJ!"" 0-~(h 1·0"'" Toon \loll••. ''"'""· !io<IOl•l>l(~ "''"'"• """ 100""" ll•·~(h ~~111 l oJ•I. A "f'llh ·~~·.,..~I "'"''"" "pui;1.,1>t<1 '!>o!u•ot••\ ~"" ~'"'"•''' ,,.,. 1>•+~<·11.ol wn+ .. 1uno "'""' "•• JOO w." lio r '!>l<ttl. lo•I• ~ ... C•loto•n•.,t1o1,, Robert N. Weed P•~"OOnl Ofl(J P.,bo'""'' Jae k R. Curley \l•C• "'~""""' o<>O C..nt•OI ....,,..WO• Thomas l<ee11il T homa~ A Murphine cnarles H. Loos Richard P. N att ,.. ""'""' M..o "'9'"9 l"''"'. NtwPOrt B••ch Office Jlll "'*"'llCl•I l\o"lo••t O Molfo"O •<N••" P O lo• tl l•, '1'*1 Other Officfl r ..... ~ ... >>0 -..... ,,...,. U.t ...... h •c l>. Ilk c; .. ,_,,, !ol•t+I "'""' •"910" h••,. 1 •••1 &o-oc" flou•••••d '6001tN(' V•llor 11101 l• ~I R-o4d "' .. " 01•90' ........ Telephone 17141642·4321 Cllllttifltd Advertisin9 M2·S611 Co111 t101u. 1t/J O••"ff Co•1• ""t11 .. ,.1~, c:.iio••11. HI M •r •ffl< ... , ..... \lr•t•D1'\. t O+IO•l•• -tlfr or •d,.•ll•M-1'h· nr1t 1n fll•f IHI r t llltH""'" "'!1110111 '""c'" Pl<mh"o" ol tOPrrlfl\111""""" IHM• Cl••\ ,.iH-PfllO ~I (OI .. MIM. C...1161'116-, .1 ... Mrl!ll-&w, ••, ,., tJ Dll -Mt; -, PIMd '4Ml'fl.,.llllf, ""111 .. , .S.•llft,.Cltntt.J,llO ,._,,,,,. Fish Fry Beauties Gaining in Number Is "'omen's liberation on its last legs? That may be an overstate· ment, but it is one way of looking at the lineup of lovelies in this year's Miss Mermaid Contest for Costa Mesa's 30th annual Fish Fry and Carnival. There're 18 of them, the highest entry for several years, according to Cliff Wesdorl, an of. ficer of the Costa Mesa-Newport • Harbor Lions Club, who or· Front Page Al PUBLIC •.• e ven if the am bu lance companies "·ere supported in part by a gov- l'rnment s ubsidy. .. Like the fire department and the police departme nt, th e paramedics are a lifesaving service. I just can't s ee how you can put a dollar value on life," Riley said . He added that he had "fan- tastic reports" about the quality or paramedic service in the Sad- dleback Valley and that he was "convinced the proposal will be unacceptable to at least three supervisors." And. he noted , "the fourth ap- pears to be changlrli his mind." Private ambulance companies are ill prepared financially to ac- quire th e communications system needed for an effective .paramedic service, the supervisor said. In his keynote talk, Riley also stressed the need to utilize com· munity resources such as the YMCA to keep children out of trouble rather than try to get them out or trouble after they have become juvenile offenders. "Ir "'e are going to make the juvenile justice s ys tem work, we must be prepared to take some rather harsh steps with regard to thos e childre n who commit s erious c rime s o f violence against others or are involved in repealed sales of hard narcotics. "At the other end, we must be prepared to find new ways o( de· aling with the child who is not responsive to the direction of his parents -who runs away from home. who is truant, who is pro- miscuous .. "I do not believe that locking these kids up is the answer. nor do l believe we can afford to," Ri ley told the gathering. E'ro111 Page Al BLACKIE ••• Nine days later, Wynn 's res ponse arrived. No way, he said. Any admission like that, Wynn added, would open the city for other claims for flood damage, and the city's insurance carrier recommends agai ns t any apologies. · Ho"•ever, Wynn did offer con· dolences. "The city, and especially sonie of us who have known you for so Jong, deeply regret the inconve- nience and the flooding you ex.· perienced, '' Wynn's reply said. But "regret" and "sorry" are two different things to Gadarian. He went to court. The judge Wednesday mailed hi s ruling grating actl.tal damage! caused by the rainwater. Gadarian 's claims of revenue losses were tossed out by the judge. ·Poll Backs Brown ganized the event in recent years. The entry is not a record, but it drew near the kind of numbers that used to enter in the early years of the Fish Fry when the town was small and many women would enter, Westlorfsaid. said. "Since women's lib, women have shied away from the contest but now we are getting a swing back," he said. ''They realize we can all do what we want to do. So now they can play golf, ride horses, enter the contest or do whatever they"' ant to do.·· Wesdor( said that he used to get entrants by calling a woman teacher al Orange Coast College but in recent years the teacher said that girl students would not enter because of peer pressure Ur. Bernard Simon, an op- tometrist, who arranged this year's contest, agreed that this year's entry total indicates that "the idea of women's liberation is being put more into perspec· tive." The contest is a basic beauty contest, Dr. Simon acknowledged, though tbe judges are asked also to obs erve "personality traits." Judges for this year's contest,' which is scheduled for 2 p.m. ~unday , are M a_yor Alvin L . Pinkley, Bob Reid, and Mrs. Barbara Van Holt, and Mrs. Maureen DiDomenico, head of Costa Mesa's beautification com- mittee. As for the other contest -the baby contest -Wesdorf said that there has always been a large en· try in that event, scheduled for J ;JO p.m . Sunday, and predicted that the fin al total will be about JOO. E'rom Page Al RATING ••• for sending in his photographs - no one, of course. had done so - the letter goes on to say in part: "The rating was done by a panel of women ranging in age from 65 to 75 years old. We tried to have our panel of women in the 25 to 35-year-old bracket rate y,.ou. but we could not get them to stop laughing long enough." Among the recipients have been a clergyman and an elderly widow, Paladino said. He said Playgirl is sending apologies to every recipient of the hoax letter who can be locat- ed. The magazine plans to turn the documents over to postal authorities for possible criminal investigation, he said. Fro• Poge Al FILMS .•• other details of Wesselink"s case. Officials said the indictment.5 were the first major crackdown on film piracy, which they said costs the motion picture indust11Y from $100 million to $1 billion In los\es each year. Those named in the indictment were accused of illegally duplicating and transporting some of Hollywood's biggest money-making films. Concert Set For Newport A performance of "Mass in G Minor,'' by Ralph Vaughn Wllliams, will highlight a conc~rt by high school music sludents at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Newport Harbor LuLheran Church in Newport Be ach. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Californians think Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. is doing a very good job. a survey by the Callfomla poll s aid today . lit s job performance rating Is hl 1h~r than the best acored by his father. ex -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Sr. V~al music groups rrom Cost.8 • Mesa and Estancia High Schools wtll perform lhe mass. In addition to the mass, vocal groui>s will perform splrituala, madrlaals, sacred songs, folk and popular songs. Ticket.a wilt be avallable at the door. The church is located at 798 Dover Drive. l Stanton Boy, 16 ·Shot Dead A 16·year·old Stanton boy died Thursday of a 1unshot wound Ip the head lnfllclcd Wednesday night as he ran from the scene of a street gang fiCht. Police said today Gerard Qul. jas, of 7702 Yorkshire St .. died Thursday morning at Stanton Community Hospital, about 12 hours after he was shot. Norman Haggstrom, 19, also of Stanton, is being held on murder charges stemming from the Incident. Police said the shooting oc· curred at about 10 p.m. Wednes. day during a gang battle but there Is still no indication Quijas was involved. The mother of the murder sus- pect told police another fight had taken place outside her home at ll822.Santa Rosalia St. earlier in the day. She said several gang members had threatened to kill her son and burn down her house. A police spokesman said Mrs. Dorothy Haggstrom told them she asked her son to protect her against the gang, which vowed to return. She said they came back that night, armed with Molotov cocktails and other weapons. Witnesses said al least one other shot was fired during the confrontation besides the fatal bullet. Police went on patrol around Stanton and Garden Grove schools Thursday and again to· day to guard against violence erupting as the result of the shooting. The police spokesman said to- day several fights were broken up Thursday and a few schools dismissed classes early to pre· vent further campus incidents. All the schools were open today. Band wncert Set Tonight ,\ special concert will be held at 8 o'clock tonight to raise money for a trip lo the Monterey Jazz Festival next month by the Corort.a... del Mar High School Stage Band. The band will perform at tonight's concert, at the Little Theater . at the high school. Tickets priced at $2 will be availa- ble at the door. The band was recenUy chosen one of the top ten jazz bands in the state and was invited to perform at lhe Monterey 7 azz Festival June 7. Last year, the Corona del Mar Stage Band placed second na· tionwide at the All-American Jazz Festival h eld in Mobile, Ala. War Threatened? SEOUL (U Pl) -South Korea's derense minister said to- day that North Korea has moved · artillery guns to the front line and constructed air bases along the frontier separating the two coun- : tries, sparkinJ: ~he threat of war. 9 Gallon I.,i1nit FEA Outlines Ga8 Plan; WASHINGTON (UPJl -Federal eneray plannert h11ve proposed •n emergency gaaollne rationing plan that would give drivers In all parts of the nl:ltion the s ame number of gallons of fuel each week. ·· ··we don't w•nt to aet eauaht like we did the last time,'' a member of the Federal Enera:y Administration task force which drew up the proposal said today. lte referred to the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo. The spqke1man said today the pion was drafted· as a standby and would be used only In the ev~nt of a major emer•eney. · · The repc>rt 1ave no estimate how much gasoline would be provided lo ea~h llcensed dMver. In the past, ho"'llver, U.S . officials have talked in term pr nine gallons per week. Devil Cult .Figure Becomes a Witness • lly TOM II ARLEY ~VMDaU~ ~li.4 Si.ff Reluctarit witness Arthu r Craig "Moo1e" Hulse overcame his reluctance Thursday in Oranae County Superior Court but only after lawyers for both sides agreed that he could switch sides in the "Devil Cult" murder trial of·Steven Craig Hurd. Hulse, hustled from the wit~ ness s tand· Wednesday after questions from prosecutor Frank Briseno produced obscenities rather than answers, will next appear in the courtroom as a de- fense witness, not a prosecutior witness, If the trial is not declared a mistrial. Judge Frank Domenichlni will make that decision Monday. If he decides the trial will go on Hulse, 21, will become defense attorney William Gamble's wit..neu. Gamble mOved for a mistrial with the argument that Hulse'a statement that he was found euil· ty of murder charges after plead· ing not guilty and not guilty by reason o( insanity to the hatchet killing of service station atten· dant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21. E'ro• Poge Al NORMAL ••• riers which will provide in- surance at lower rates While the- Legislature tackles the problem. Orange County doctors have been pushing the bill of state Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newpart Beach l that would set up com. pensation boards, Instead of juries, lo hear malpractice ·cases, limit the period when a.wards ca.o be Jll~, limit the awards, a nd limit attorneys' fees. By Monday some Orange County hospitals will have been on reslricted schedules for two weeks, some for about 10 dayi and some for a week. Cutting out elective surgeries has reduced patient loads at hospitals by about 40 percent and some hospitals have been putting staff members on four-day weeks and contemplating layoffs. Bannister Mid that the effect the slowdown was having on hospitals was a ''strong concern" of the doctors at Thursday night's meeting. could prejudice Hurd's chilnces of a fair trial. Gamble argued thut the jury now knows that l-lulse drew 41-ltre . term tn state pri!lon after filing the same pleas as Hurd. The in- ference is obvious, he told Judge Domenichh\i. Hurd, 25, Is accused of first degree murder in the mutilation killing on June 3, 1970, or Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Mrs. Brown, 31 , of El Toro, v.•us dragged from her car by a gang as the car entered the Sand Ca· nyon Road offramp from the San- ta Ana Freeway. She was butchered ill ah lrvine orange grove. It is alJeaed that Hurd, assert- ed leader of a gang of drug-uaina: drifters, played the major role in her killinJt and burial. Hulse ex- plained Thursday that he could face reprisals from fellow in· mates in Soledad State Prison when he returns there if he testifies in the current trial as a proaecutlon witness. Hurd's trial only became PD!Sl· ble last month when the ·california Supreme Court ruled in a landmark decision that the previously mentally Ill prisoner can be tried, provided he is kept under the influence or po._..·erful tranquilizers. Gamble states that Hurd is on- ly capable of telling the truth un- der the influence or lhe pre- scribed drugs. Library Unit Sets lAmcheon -A garden luncheon, featuring a talk by a local interior designer and the installation of new of- ficers, will be held Tuesday by the Newport Beach Friends of the Library. Reaervations for the 11 :30 a.m. luncheon are limited. They can be made by phoning Dorothea Sheely, city librarian, at642·86SO. Guest speaker will be Lucia Anderson. Officers to be installed include Mrs. R.L. Richardson, president (second term); Mrs. HenrY Ul- lman, vice president; Mrs. Charles Durway, secretary, and Mrs. Thomas Lumsdon , treasurer. · HERITAGE CHINA Re9. 5969°0 SALE s799oo HERITAGE'S WINDWARD COLLECTION made with English brown oak burl. pin knotty walnuj.-QQd olive ash burl veneers. ·and pecan solids. The linlsh, done by hand. is in the oldest European manner. These distinctive qualities give Windward a look of its own. · Entire Collection on Sale Until End of May DINING ROOM. BEDROOM AND OCCASIONAL PIECES OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-\'iOODMARK-KARASTAN-BAKER WUllDAYS & SATU•DAYS f:OO lo S:JO ' NEWPORT BEACH• 1727 W~TCLtr•· DR., ti-42·2050 . LAGUNA BEACH• 34.~ !"flK'l'll t.'CJAS'I' HW\' 41H·~I • • TORRANCE• 2"'49 HAwnlORNF. BLVD. cc>pen r-·n. HI s. Suu, 12·5:30~ • 37ff-l.279 I • I I ' ' Suit Solutions Malpractice Bids Cited B~ SYLVIA PORTER (Third 1na sme1) What might be among the long term solutions to the malpractice crisis which has erupted across the land - threatening to undermine our nolion s medlc•I slruclure, t'ndanaer muny lives and add to the relentless spiral in ou r hl' tlth care costs" One point 1i; su1e the please nobody 'soluttons' put tog ether by the legislature 111 New York, I ndiana l\1 ~11 yland Nor th Oakot.i Iduho Il linois Nevada and Jfawah :.ir e m e1 ely hur r1ed efforts 1n the d1 rec tn)n of answ er s l\1ore s1gn1flc.:a nt t1 1 e s uch sug ~lstc d m c 3 :;urcs i..I S thc:sc A !;)'S l e n1 o f ))t n a lt 1e1S u ga 1n s t Money's Worth li.1wve1 s and clai mants for starting unfounded laws wts and ll l:so a reduction tn contingency fees which lawyers agree to OJCC'I.' pl 1n payment for their services (the contingency fee 1s .in 1gr ecd upon share of the uward 1t any) Proposed by the New Y o1 k Bar Assoc1al1 un -A COMBINED VNDi':RWRITING association which '~ould orrc1 m<.1 lp1 actlce insurance at ''only" double the .imounts doctors are now paying -plus mandatory arb1tra t1on strict hm1ts on Jury awards and no fault malprac lice 1nsuruncc ulong the Jines of workers compens ation l'1oposti d by the insurance industry 1n New York slate lmn1un1 z1n g d~tors via a new state law from civil li ab1lit y chu1 ge!J anywhere 1n the US 1f a doctor performs c1cco rd 1ng t o the stc1n da rds no w being set by the Profess ional Stand"rds Review Organ1zat1ons (PSRO s), mandated undc1 the 1972 amendments to the Soctal Secunty \ct P1 oposed by the New York State Medical Society -' -RE QUIRING PllYSICIANS to review the quahty of the1 1 PC'<' rs work (as the law mandates) so that the medical profession would police itself by establ1s h1ng sta ndards J ga1nst \vh1 ch perfor mance could be m easured. valid c1 1t1 c1sm could be leveled and incompetents could be barred from pract ice -Legal hm1 ts on malpractice awards compulsory arb1trat1on and mcd1at1on panels cons1st1ng of one Judge, one lawver one phys1c1an already provided for under a 74 New York law Conspicuously a bsent patient represen tat1ves Also proposed by the New York State Mech cal Society ~ Rcqu1r1 ng patients who are to undergo surgery to :;1gn agreements p ledging that they will not sue -before the surgeon wi ll agree to operate This though might be a contract s truck under duress which ts no contr act at all cr1U cs charge Equally 1f not more prom1s1ng -although far less ob 'V1~s -a re re com mendat1ons subm itted tn 1973 of the Com mrss1on on Ma lpr actice Insurance appointed by Health Education and Welfare Secretary E l hot Ri chardson 1n 1971 -DEVE LO PING WAYS TO make d1st1nct1ons between real negll gen<:e "h1ch does occur and poor medical r esults \\h1ch can happen des pite careful medical practice -~sing spec1<:1I arbitration panels for s mall claims \\1th the..µanels including non medical non legal people -Expa nding the authority or state med ical hcens1ng bo<hes to :;u!Jpend or revoke the hcenses of incompetent phys1c1ans -and 1nst1tut1ng open d1sc1phne hearings -Enco uri.1 g1ng stale or rederal laws that would reqwre per1od1c re lic€!h s1ng of d~tors and other med1 cal person nel plus fo1 mal programs for cont1nwng medical educa t1 on -De V1!lop1n g spec1C1c standards for 1nform1ng patients (O• family members > of the risks or various medical pro cedures so patients can give or not give their informed consent -DE VE LOPING STRONG publtc part1c1pat1on 1n all .ispects or medical dec1s1on making -state l1 censmg a nd de hl'ens1n g of pract1t1oners arb1trat1 on and m ediation panels peer review mechani sms grieva nce procedures hospital boards In the comm1ss1on !j words doctors should not be the sole Judges of the effects or their professional performance on la ymen t -Estabhsh1n g an Office or Consumer lleallh Afrairs 1n each state <1nd a legally backed system or guaranteeing Qas1t ri ghts for the rece1vcr6 of health care -Asking m ed ical soc1et1es to exercise ' maximum m or al suasion over phys1c1ans who avoid proress1onal r espbns1b11Jt1 es on the basis of fear of malpractice J1 ab1hty -Encouraging the use or properly supervised a)hed health ca re pe rsonnel -technicians and r egistered nurses -who have not been s1gruf!cantly involved in m alpractice proble ms Buy the Daily Pilot for Peanuts (an\! a lot of other gre at comlu) de livered 7 days a weeK 642 -4321 (Direct or collect) (,11i111·r~ 1111d L••~•·r~ Nt .. 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(APJ -Steve ~rontai ne, America's best dis· lance running hope for the 1976 Olympics and one or this coun· try's nlosl controversittl umateur ulhletes, died e arly today in a one-ca r auto m obile accident here. lie ~~4. Prefontaine, holde r or every Am e rican dist ance record ubove 2.ooo 1neters, w as pinned under his car when it hit a rock wall at .ibout 12:30 a .m., Eugene police said. . A few hours earlier he had run the second fastest 5,000 meters in American histor y at the National Colltgiate Athletic Association pre paration meet in Eugene. A nutive or Coos Bay, Ore., Prerontain<' "'as a graduate of the Uni\ rsit y of Oregon and ron for th r1.•gu11 Track Club. I-le wus a t•m ber or the U.S. Olym· pi(' lean in ltl uni1.·h in 19Tl. Pr1.·ro1 tainc, who trained h.u.rd, ,,·as o!te bitte r over the treat· me nt rec eive d b y amate ur athletes in this country. Two \ months ago, a sked about running as an amateur for his country, he .said · ... fo hell with love of Country, I compete ror m ysl If." In recent weeks Prefontaine had expressed ple a sure with his ~onditlonl ng a s he approached the NCAA mee t. '"I 'm strong and my fitness is coming along at a \'ery fast pace," he said. "I'm ex· tremely happy with my condi· tloning." Prefontaine, who ran db'tanccs fro m 2,000 ro o te rs to 10,000 me ters, just ntissed winning 11. bronze medal at Munich, despite being spiked and shoved during a c ritic al race. Not winning a medal when he had been expect· ed lo w a.s a m ajor disaPPoint· mentforhim. Top Area Spikers Jn . Masters Meet By ED BU RGART Ol IPll D'ily Pilol St•ll ?\O R WALK-Four Ora nge Coast hig h school track c.1nd rield stars-NE'\\'port !-!arbor's Brian Thl-'riot and Da"id Ku r rasch, Edison's Tom Lloy a nd L agun a Beach 's Eric llulst---try for re· peat vic tories in the Masters meet at Cer ritos Coll ege tonight. The top CIF stars from the 4·A, 3·A and 2·A a rc competing with the first fi ve finishers in each event qualifyin g for the state meet in San Diego, June6·7. Actio n begins a t G: 15 with the girls' long j um p. The first run- nin g event-the 330 lows-gets under wayat 7:1S. In addition to winning their events in las t year 's Masters. Theriot. Ku rrasc h and Uoy were ·al so victorious in the CIF 4-A fina ls las t week. Hulst won both bis races in the 2·A finals. The riot , o ne of California's premie r quartermilers, ran a \\'inning 48.6 her e last year, and \\•as an easy 440 victor (48.0) in lhe 4·A finals. His best this year is 47.4. Ku rrasch erased many records last "'ee k whe n he thre'" the s hot 68·5, the second best mark in CIF history. As a Santa Ana High pro· duct last year, Kurrasch had a winning toss of 63· l 1 lf.! here. But Lloy may draw the most attention tonight. Despite suffer - ing a mild case of mononucleosis last week, Lloy s lill won the 4·A 880, running 1 :54.8, fifth fastest of the qualifiers. Lloy is not a defmite starter tonight. but if his blood tests pro- ve satisfactory today, he will pro- bably run. His coach, Gordon Tea~by-team NBA Draft A ltlm·bY·ttalTI breakdown QI Thur~day'~ •.ill; ATLANTA HAWKS O•wld TPIOm 1>5on, I, Nortr. Carolina S\illl': M o1rw1n WtllMe<, c, Morgan St&tt; W•lll&m W1Houo;ir.t1y, T·c. DwoQflt Mo .. ow !-IS, En1,11ewooa, ti.J.; Monlt To ... e, NO<ll\ Co1ro1!na Sldll', W!IDoJr Hotlaoel. 9, U. ot New Orleo1n•· Otnny Wlt11o1m5, t•I, M"SoS!itl)C)i; Cit.I\ Johnwn, <:, wonona State; Osco1r Jo1t•'lo0'1. 'ii-OUllUI!..,...; O.w '>c.nlei~r. c, MOr n1n11!»0t; V•t Kelly, 11. Nwai•. 110!.TO~CELTIC:S Torn aos .. eU, 1.c., s,o.,,,. C.•rgj1na; ;..,,,,.,.. AA· *non, 11. Wl'M ""9'"'"; Cyru• MOonn. c, 1111noos; • 0.rry! Brown, I-<, Forori1m; Rock Co!O"YWn, g, JIC~Wt!W•lle. Al Boswell. o. Orar Rolll'rl'i; Roger Morn· lngs1ar, I, ..:ans.3s; RoDert Rl'IO!le s, I, AID.lny $l1te, c;...: 6 •11 Endlcou, 9, M.!l•"""usens, llUFFALOBRAVES (;eorge Bucco, Q, M.!lnf\allan ; Boll Ftels.r:Pltr, I, Dulc e ; S.m Bl'rr¥, «I, Armstrong St.it; Lar ry JaCkiOtl, 9, Non r. Carolona·Char lol!e; M!•e fr1111<lln, c, Cinc1nna\1, AllMI JOHS, I, P1pp.rOi,..; Ciofo<111' R1utins, g, Nl~r•; Art All111,g, Peppe,,,;,,., CH ICAGO BUl..l..S Steve Green. t, lnd1;11n'; John Li~owski,g-1, tn- chana; Aon Ha191er. !, Ptnnsylwanl1 ; Boll IW•!.Oll, I. Nortll Te•IS State: Bolt AndrNS, I, QnloSlalt. Jo"n C.ro(PIO .. al\lc!, !, A~\umpUofl ; Jofl" M\ll'pl'IV, I, Ma\iioe Plui.etts; Garv TorN:s.uw-.••. t, St.Mary·~. Te•a\. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS """' L.am1>1r1. c, Sou1Mr11 CltHomia ; ~n Rou<idrleld, f.c, Central Mo<fl19"'1; Mel UTiey. Q, $1... Jor.n·~. N.Y.; Tt:d 1-latflawdy, g, Cl!!l.'tllfld 'Sun Sue d By Lomas Two football players "''ho claim they \1:ere offered higher salaries and bonuses lo s ign lhrce·year contract s with the Southern Catifornia Sun sued lhe club, the World Footba ll League and three individual officers Thursday for more than $2 million in damages. Stiltot; E•it F'e<ns\1tt1, l·t, San Fral'l(lSCo. J•m Let, g, !.yr1cu!>ll; Mike Odems, f, We5le•n Ke11h.c;~y; Henry WirO, I, Ja.tlc!.Ofl State; Shi)- ' Ll'ltw.cPI, I, J1cksonv11!e: Afldrot ~Ca..Wr, g, UCLA. • S0.011 Howard, f, Bowll119 Greeri; Erit Atlde1S011, g, M<Alister. DETROIT PISTONS Will•• 1..ut-ell, g , onoo; hie Tr90vi<1I, '"it. UCLA; Ll-y Ha,.\lon, lot, Mit ... Qa'> Statt: (loH Prill, ~. Sl\aw: Allen Sprwll, f.g, Nortr. Gilrgjon. A& T. 10.• Wilham\. 11. Armsl•o"g SI.ale; Jol\n Kelley, q, O!lla•d: Ter•¥ Tr.om.is. I, Ot.troot; M>t~ey Fo~, 9, SI. Nliry'•, Nov,. Scalod. GOl..OE N STATE WARRIORS Joe Brvant, t , lo.a SaUe; G11s Williams, g, Soutt>- ffn California ; Olo\ Jonni;on. I·<. Slel!.Ofl ; RQt.r1 Hil"'-'"'· 11. llllf101S !.lilt: Billy Taylor,'· La Salle. Larry Pounds, t, W1\nln1,11on; Tony Styles, Q, 5.Jn Frane<!.<:O ; S1 .. n Boyer, I, Wy0mln9; Mllo.e Ro1eMlcl, I, SI. M•ry's. C11IU.: Scon Tr-.'· Stanloro: Maurice Haroer , Q. SI. Mary·s, Cdl>I, HOUSTON ROCKETS Jot .Mtrl .. e•lhl'r, l·c, Southl'rn IUinol~; Jim Blan-\, I, (,ardnlr Wellb; Rll<ly Wll•te, g, An1on1 Slate; Ken Sm11n, I, Tulsa; Rici< Wl!otlow, 9, U· hnaisSt<1le. Wo lham JoPlt11.<>n, I, Te••S TttPI! Nale B.arno:tt, 9, •~•on: l..eOfl Jon11i.o11, Q, (,enlenary: Steve StrOU>e•.Q, Provloence. KAN!.A!.(ITYIUNG5 Bill ROblnl'M, f·C, OePaut; Boll Bi<Jl'low, l.g, Pefln\ylvan•a : Glen H•ns l!'fl, l.g, 1..0uis1......, St.alt; Bob Guvetle, I·(, K1n111e~y ; Ktvin OtY~s, 9, St. JoPln',,N.Y. Ed Slahl, (, Norin C••OIH•a. Cini ow,....,...n, '· So"1Pllr" Cllitor1111 ; Wa ynt (roll, C·I, Cltm1.<>n; Jim Bosllt. t. New Mt•ICO SI ale. lo.OS ANGELES LAKE RS David Mty1rs, UCLA ; J unior Bridgeman, LOU•SWil lt ; (,J , Kupec. M1<lll9an: C~atles Rus\eU, Alatllma ; Do" ForO, UC s.a .. ta BarWr•. R ot k Sutt le, Kan~a \, M lkt Casr.man, W1lh•melll'. Miio.WAUKEE BUCK S C.lyM M.!lyt\, Furman, C.ornel!Y'!. Ca!iPI, Bowl!"!! Gr.,..,n, BfOan Hammel. Bentley; Boll C..mP!Ofl, ManPlltlan. Oliver Pu•neU, Old0omin•Dr1. · WolD"r T~oma \, Ame .,can. Boe M(Curdy. R•t,,.,.,ond; Ero t HIV\, Montan<1; Romy TtKWnas, EauCllitt. NEW ORLEANSJAll Rock Kelley. Stanto•d; Rudy Hackett. Syr..K ulool": Jom McElror, C.tn l•dl Nl1CPl•11<1n : Mack Cole,,.,•n. Ho.,i ton Baptosl, Anor e Hampton, Ktnlu<kv Sta•e. R+tk S<hm•Ot. l!llnoh; a.n Hi99il'l5., Asnland; 1-la•ver Carm,t twtl, Kefl!U(ky Stale ; Frl'd Sto~e~. Bat tler Scoua; Aleks111<1er Below, Let1irigr.ci, Ru1"'· NEW YORK KNICKS E.,gene Sharl, Jackr.on Slate; Lulhl'r Bu•den, Olan; Lorry FOQ1t, C•nis•ui; J(>Pln Rimsey Seton Hall, Da,.id V•l>QPln, Oral Roberts. ' Oon Wasr.lngton, NorlPI C'rollrw: 1-1enry Wilham,, JK-W>w• 1: PelH Dawl$. Micf\l~n s.tatl', ..lerrr Harnan, """rquelle, Tfm V...n BIOm· ~\\eyt1, P"ntllon; Mo R•ver~. Norlt> Ci•OhlW Sl"t. PtOLADELPHIA 7•EltS 0.rryle Otwklns, Maynlld Evaru H.S., Ortitn• dO, F11,; l..loyd f rH , C.u!l!o•d Colle!llf; Jlm•Baker, Hawau ; Cr.1r111 Clev•l•nd, Alablma; LOu1\ Oo,m. Wr, HOYSIDrl. Fitzel , says Lloy has shown rapid . progress this week, even tho ugh he has been held out or\l.•orkouts. Lloy "'On here last year in 1:52.8. 1-lis competition is respectable toni ght. In the 2·A finals, San A1 arino's Carl Van fleet (1 !54 .2) beat St. J oseph's David Magae (1:54.4) \\0hile in the 3·A final~ Sunny Hill s ' ·Larry Haden (1 :54.4) finished ahead of Notre Dame's Steve McKenna (1 :54 .7) and Bruce Rocheleau (1 :55.4). Rocheleau, though, has run 1:54.6. 1-luls t Was another sharp victor here last year, winning the two- mile in 8:54.0 as a sophomore. He "'ill double tonight and faces Loara 's Ralph Serna in the mile and tv.·o·mile. Serna has run 4 :07.0 and 8:58.2 this yea r ; Hulsl4 :11.34nd8:57.0. The s prints are contentious too. Norris Jones of Kennedy (Barstow) ran a 9. 7 100 and a 2~.3 220 in lhe 3·A finals while P asadena's Rick Jackson ran 9.7 and 21 . 7 in the 4·A finals. The 120 hi g h hurdles features Saddle back 's John P eterson, "'ho has run 13 .7. Mission Viejo's Wilbur Gregory (14.1) is also e n- tered. The high jump is another com· pelitive event. Estancia's Ke n Conner . \Vho won the 4·A meet \l.'ith a lifetime best of 6·911.t, and San Clem ente's Carl Eissm an- sccond in the 2·A finals at 6·8 - are a mong tht> entrit>s. f-ler e is hO\I.' the Daily Pilot han· dicaps the m eet, with predicted marks: 100-1. JatkS.On !Pasadena! 9.S 2 .. N. Jofle'!. ~Ken­ nedy, B'rSlo .. f 9,to l. Zaic (Wf~t TOO"rlntt• 9.1 '· Lynn \Muir• 9.1 S. Jtfllclns (Notn Dame> 9,9." 120-1. N. Jone~ !Kenneov. Bar~tQWl 21.t 1. JIClo!.Oll !P•W.Oena l 21.S J. Zall C'M51 Torrl flCl'I 21.1 •· .Jenlc lns !Noire Ca me) 21.9 S. ~Glothi11 fComplon)l 7.0. ...0-1. TMrl91 1Newpo'1 HM'tlorl t1.a 2. 5e•10fl !Compton I 111.11. Smilri I Pasadena/ 111.t t, c;r.,.. vii~ (Lynwood) ,9.2S. Brown tPatlhc) "·'· ll0-1. Lio, 1£01~1111 :».J. 2. Rodlt~•u !Nol,. O.mel 1:n .•. J . H•10tn C!.UfVly Hln,1 1:)4.!I. "- Van Flttl !!.111 Marino! \;"'-'· S. Flynn CS..11 GorQOl'llol I: SS.O. Mot1-1. !.t•fll ILoar,J 4:01.J.1. HIM! C~ .. acll) ":Ol.l l . Artlola CGallrl •:10.0 '· Bell !FOOIPllU) ':11.J 5. AfltCI 04Ullll ....... Kii) •:IJ.I, 2°M1!1-I. Hulst (L1g11111 hKPI) l :Mo.9 2-Ser"" Cloar'I l :S1.I ), MYllWl<ff ICM_... cll'I Marl l :Ml.I 4. R. Aguirre (Santa Barb.tr•! 9:01.J S. G. A9ulrre (Saflt' B1rb<1ra) 9:01.3. 170HH -1 Peteri.on CS..dd!etwc~I 1l.to7.1ur!ll'f CCypre\sl 14.0 J, Gr1g0ry IMhWO<\ Yi9jo) H. t 4, Flowe•s (£1,enl\owtr l t•.1 S. (;odone1 (We\I Cow· 1n.) 14 J. lJOLH-1. Hunter !Pa\adtflll Jto.2 2. TllOM!.Ofl CMol'n111qs1oeJ l1.0 J, CPl•mbfrs tMulrl Jl.2 '· Moller tSt. Bon•wenCu•e • ll.• S. T"'f'M!r !Cypress) JI.I, ••O Re ldy-1. Pa11den1 '' 9 7. K111nedy, Ba•~low ,7,1 l. Muir ,7,, '· C.omlll°"'l,)S. LB P~ ly •7 1. Molt Rt!ay-1. Ntwpor1 Hatbor 3:11,I 1. Muir J 11.7 l . Lo~ AlamllO\ J: 19,I 4. Nol<t D.lme 3.10.l S. S.n Bernardino J: 21 .2. l"IJ-1. JoPl,,1.<>n (Arrovol 6·10 2. CollMr IEsllft· <•'1 •·I.], law~on !EI OoradoJ 8-81>-1°,,. 4. Sa.in Ina (A"ao••) t.·l v, S. t•e between £hHT~n C!..1111 Clenwrit1l 1n<1 Cuerwo !Wt\le•nl f>..8, l..J -1, Wolson !Fontana) 74·t. 7. Ooubll'Y !Ltn· llO,) 73·10'1o l. Simpson !Banning) 73'~ •. Jonn•ngS (Onta rio I 73·1 S. Wetl\le r !Garey) :zl.•. PV-1. VilllS!rom {V•ll• Par~) lr>-7 ?. Goodman (AQOUra) 16.(1 J. S.C.nlmme1 (l/ilta p,,k) \H '· T. Curran (Cr•lpd IS·O S. Wordl!'fl (Notre Damel 1s-<I. SP-I. Kurr1scPI IN1wpor1 HI .... ) .... tD'h 7. L.ut CS.11t' Clara) ~l·t. l . Slinkard IS,. P1ut) 62·1 '· Mt l(ini•e (Har tl t.1·3 s. Odom!> !Oo1. P\.lt"""I .... . Italian Open For the p ast several months, Prefont aine had been in t.rainina. lrylng to decide: whethe r he ·should compete in the 1976 Olym· pies. "People say 1 shouJd be r un- ning for a gold m edal for the old r t'd, white and blue a nd all thut bull, but it':.. not go.ing to be that way," he said. ''I'm the one who has made .<111 the sacrifices. Those are l\1Y American records, not the country's." The 1974 graduate of Oregon ~;1id if he d ecided to co1T1pete at Montreal next i:;umm~r. "I 'll be 11. poor man . If you 'a·c not a ' ml!Uonaire, lhere's noway." lie said he wa& not bitter, Ju.st ••outraged. American athletes, es peclu.lly distance runners, are al u big dis advantage again.st the re~t or tho world. We're expected to live by all' the rules, like nol being uble lo coach, but i>tiU train und muke our own living." Prefontaine held six American distunce records, in the two-mile, thr ee-mile , si x-mile, 3,000 meters, S,000 m eters and 10,000 meter 5 and he held the colle&iute rt!cords in a ll those categories except for the three-mile run. 1-lis running career stretched· UPI T•llPMI• CRASH VICTIM-Steve Prefontaine, (182 ) who was killed in an automobile accident early today in Eugene, Ore., is shown de fe ating Jim Ryun in the two-mile in 1972. William_s Thinking About Shakeup Manager Dick Williams says there's nothing jinx-like about his California Angels losing 10 games in a ro\Y at home to one team. But he adds some of his players AllG-a..,estNl 11.MPC 01'11 M1y lOBallimore '' C1Ulo,nl1 ,.,.Y 31 Ba1l1mort at C1tllotnl1 June I Baltimore II CalifOrflll 1:2}p.•n. l ;Ui:o.m. 11:SS p.m, might Qe in spect ing ne\Y surroun· dings if the losing continues. The An gels. \Yith ha rd-thrO\Y· Nolan R yan bein g hit for t\\'O home runs, Jost to Cleveland 9·3 Wednesday night as the India ns S\Yept a three-game series and \Yon their 10th straight here over three yea rs. "l don't kno \v a nything about the streak , however it's an en- ti rely di(ferent team this year so I don'l think it's got anything to do with it," Williams said. The matter is simply, "\Ve ha- ven't been playing good ball." Williams added, "We might be a little tight so \VC gave the players the day off Thursday s ince there .\vas n't a game. Instead of coming inc.ind \VOrking out Lhey could s pend the day with their families or go golfing. "We should be all business \Vh e n \Y e com e back Friday night." · The Ange ls open a three.gam~ series \Vilh Ballimorf! tonight \Yith Ed Figueroa facing Jim Palmer of the Orioles. Williams warned the Learn that there would be some changes if play doesn 't improve. "I( it continues this \Vay," the manager said, ''we 're definitely going to make some changes." He s aid the changes could come from the Angels farm· system or the team might look for a t'.rade. . Mark Arnold Lomas of 1-lunt· ingt o n Be a c h a nd Will iam Michael F erguson or San Diego claim in their Orange County Su perior Court lawsui ts that the defe ndants do not have the assets lo meet the te rm s of their con- tracts and did not have them at the lime they wer e persuaded to leave the New York Jets. .:en Tvler, Gon119a; Ken Ahl<lfl. Va!OO,l.io · Sto11e; Milo.1 Flynn, K1tnl1>t ky; Free"""' Blade. E••t Monl•flt; Latr r Har11--. Drake; Rock Re..O, Azusa P•cft,t. PHOENIKSUHS Jl.lv'n Ad•ms, Oklal\oma : Rlt k S<1Ctrs, Lo .. 1sv•lle , J •mmy Dan Conner, K1ntutlcy; Baya•O J'orre\!, Grand Canyon. Evert Gains . Finals The Angels Thursday called up relief pitcher Dave Sells, who led the team in saves in 1973, from Salt Lake City. It \Ya sn't im· m edi a t ely decided who woU!d be dropped fro m the roster to make r oom for the right-hander. It is a ll eged in the tv.·o actions that Sun a nd \\'FL officials - a mong them Santa Ana attorney Gary DaYi dson ,,·ho once headed the \\'FL -breachL'd the con· f1d ent1 alily or the nc"· contracts by issuing press rele.ns1.·s to the ne"'·s m l.'dia. • Both players claim I.hat the de· fcndants' a ction \\'<IS designl'd to .<1ttract investment and promote interest in t he Su n and the WFI .... Lomas, \\'ho played at Golden West College, demands full pay- ment on a three.year contract in which he was to receive $55,000 in the firs t year, S60,000 in the second and $75,000 in the thi rd plus a $SO ,OOO_ bonus ror signing. S..m Mt(ant\, Or11 Roberh· Joe Plte ~n s1,1e: 1i111 B11rren, S.ulPl•r~ ~lilomi•; O..ve Ed· m1>ncl!i, Wt\! Georg••. J at k Sc.Plriotr, A"roroa !.td1t; Ow•n Bro .. n, Maryland: Mike M<M>r>, Atozona Stilt. PORTLAND TRAIL BU.l.ER!. Li<>noe'I Hollins, AruOfla Slo1te; kb Go-ou, 1.o,.. ~acr. s1111; Tom Ror. Ma•ylMKI; c...s Gerard, "•'II"'''• Pr.•• Ho<k\, Tulane Nl•U.,<t Pre•l ~r. Houuon; Ger.iold Wllltlt, O•e90>n; !.ltve Field\, M1am1 ol Oll•o: O>••ley N<!a•, O•eqon !.l•te, Ouent•n B•••lon, Pon11ne1· Tr•tt FO\ter. P.o•tland. ' SE A TTl..1£ SUPERSONICS F•an~ Olevn•t k, Sea!Ue. Bruce <;.eals. )(avltr, l t>oJ•i•ana , Jim MOO••, Utari Sl1te: 0..,1"" c;ov,n, Bil.flop COllt q.e; L•rrr Sml1ri. North C.1011.,. AU HOiiis Moller, O•ury: Ken M<ICenzie, -•na; R1tn Ha .. s, utar. State. J11rr s..11a11! Santa C!atd, ' WASHINGTON I ULLl:TS Ke"'" C.revey, Ken111eky; Tom Kr-. Ke•r.,.,. !.l"e; Fli\O< Leon..t,d, fur.....,,· RkPI Joni'.!; \llf9oni1 Commonw•tltPI: John c;..'rl'll, Purtll.>I. • f le1<Ple• Jor.n,on. R1ndolpn Nia(Ofl ; B.ruc• t-11mm•n11. Augu,11,,1 ; Doug Brooki ng \, Crt1Ql>t0fl, Mllot FaPltJ, B•il\dlll\. * * * ROME -It took defending champion Chris E vert less than un hour to beat Mirna Jausovec or Yugosluv ia 6·2, 6·0 today and <rualiry for the fina l or the Sl20,000 Ita li an Open te nnis tournament. Sec ond ·see d e d Ma rtina Navratilova or Czechoslovakia e d ged Di a nn e f<'ro mholtz of Au stralia. 7 ·6, 6·3 in the other sehlifinal match. The .Evert-Navratilova final Wi ll be a r epe tition of last year's ·batUe for the title. E vert, the top seed, reached the fin al afte r conceding only 12. games to h er opponents. Sh'e broke J a usovec's service in ever y ga m e the Yugoslav teen• ager , the 1974 \Yimbledon jbnior champion, served. MEN'S SI NOLES TlllF'11 lt1un0 Onny Parun. N•w Ze l l•nd, beat 1C1rl Mllltr, wei1 Gtrmtf'ly, 1·0, •·O, 1.s. . c;u;n1rmo \1111\, Arg111Ur1•, be•! Nllo;kl Piii~, YllOO\levla,6·'·•·2. BIOi'!\ Boro, Sw1de11, 1>111 PIOl116er1oh..::cl, II• ly, ........ . 1111 Nait•s •, Ro m1t1I•. bt•I Prill O.r.I, AY,•••ti• ... ,, .. ,, Ml-I Of8tll•t. SHln, tM•I Adrleno P•M ll.a, lt.1.ly ... 1 ... 1. wDM•N ·s Slf!.G:l-ES &.fl'llllMft Owls E....rc bHt Mime .J•IAOY>K, Y119Kl8¥Wi, .. , ... ,. . """r t lfla Navr•lllov•, Crecllbskw•kl•, bNI OIMIM Fromllo!U, Au5lr•U•, 1.+,W. Meyers Surprised, Flatt~red LOS ANGELES (AP> -All· America n Dave Meyers or UCL A s aid Thursday he "'as both sur· prised and fl a ttered that the Los Angeles La ke r s of the National .Basketball AssociatJon drafted him on the first round. SUit. the 6·foot·8 forward S3i~ be wouldn 't m a ke up his mind immediately on his future. . ''.Riaht now I want lo graduate trom school and I 'm not thinking .-_ professional basketball," ..... aid. He's sche duled to receive his degree in s ociology next month a nd conte mpl ates g r 3duat e school in recre;itlortal work, buSi· ness or law. "I've got a lot or time to think about it," he said. "I had heard th a t David Th o mpson ~nd l!!ar vin We bste r we re on the .Lakers' li sl a head or me." _ Tho mpson w as drafted b y Atlanta in the fir st pick but then the Lake rs went to the home town favorite Meyers. Webster went to • • Atl anta on the next choice. • Meyers said he wJs happy thol teamma te P ele Trgovich was dra fte d high in the li sts, by Detroi t In the third round. ''Perso nally,. I want t o t:rudua le a nd lhen look over everything," the All American said. ··t won't really believe l 'vo g r adua ted until I havo the diploma In my hand.' · • "J was s itting home this morn· ing thinking the draft.is a strange thing. I really dldn'I lhlnk I 'd have m y choice and I 'm s ur· prised, very surprised." Mey ers w o uldn 't commi t himself on whethe r he would play professional basketball, but d id s ay also that he· would a wait the · America.n Basketball Associa· tion draft before n1aking any de· c:islon. ''I've got a negotiator and he'll handle thal part or it," Meye rs s aid. "I'm new to a.II of this and that's why I 've 1ot •negotiator.'' Jn a nother move Willia ms an· nounced R yan , \Vho went seven innings Wedne'sday night, would 1>ilch against the Orioles Sunday. "I-le can come back after three days rest and pitch the fourth," Williams s aid, "since we're off Monday other\vise he'd have five days and come back on the sixth.'' UCI Spikers Gain Semis SACRAMENTO-UC Irvine's BIU Cheadle, Jlussell Royston, David Wtlllams, Mike Sabatino and Robert Goto earned berths in today 's semtrlnali of th e NCAA· track and Cield championships (college division) in qualifying Thursday. Cheadle won his 440 In· termedlale hurdles beat. lo 53.8. Royston and Williams both clocked 9.9 fn 100.yard heats as both finished fourth and Sabatino and Goto vaulted 15·6toquallly. The Anteaters' only set.back was in the lteeplecb.ue where Ralph Staunton la tied loquallflc. Finals are acbiduled today IUld Salunfa1 11 Sacramenlo Slate. ~ck neorly a decade, and he had l>t-en settin' r ecords for four years. For instance. he lied the col· legivte two·mlle record or 8:ll.1 In Eugene, the iown near which he died, on March 21. 197 1. He was later to cut 15 second~ off that record, brcuking it several ti mt.ls. 111 July 1971, al Dc rkelt<y, he set the Americ lin record in the 5,000 met ers with a time of 13:30.4, a . record he was to later cut by more than eil{ht seconds. Mes an Captures Golf Title PALM SPRINGS -Cos ta Mesa's Willie Ba rber, the 61- year·uld brother of tou1ing pro Jerry Barber . s hot a lhrec- under-par 68 for u 138 total and won the U.S. National seni or golfers spring tournament. Barber, who won the $75.000 fall senior classic last season in Las Vegas, was three strokes ahead of Jack Koenneckcr, the host professional at this Canyon Country Club, and Eddie Nowak or Arroyo Grande. Both were at 141. Warm but windy we ather caus ed scores to soar , but Barber shot a ste ady 34 ·34 . Knlf!ks Sign McGhnds NEW YORK -The New York Knicks of the Na tional Baskel- ball Association have signed American Bas ketball Associa- tion superstar George McGinnis to a multi-million dollar con- tract, The Associatcq Press learned today. Publis hed reports said the con· tract would be for S2 million and \\'ould cover s i:c years. The AP learned the Knicks had signed the 6-fool-8, 235-pound McGinnis -star of the ABA 's In - diana Pacers -and wereJ>re· pared to righLwhate ver legaTbat· ties were necessary to keep the 24-year-old pl ayer on their roster. Thre e S hare wad ATLANTA -U.S . Open cham· pion Ha le Irwin birdied three of his last four holes for a 66 and moved into a tit! for the first· round lead Thursday in the $225,000 Atlanta Golr Classic. Irwin's s ix-under-pur effort on the hilly, 6 ,883.yard Atlanta Country Club course gave him a share of the le ad in this Designat- ed Tournament ·-all leading players are required to compete -with vete ran Billy Casper and longshot Joe Inman. The three leade r s shared a t\\'O·stroke advantage over Jac k Ni c k l aus, J o hnn y Mille r, Leonard Thompson and Jack Ewing, t ied at 68. Lee Trevino he::ided a large group at 69. lJ.S. Coa<!h Alling TOKYO -Ailin g B ob Gi egenga ck v.•as trans fered in a wheel chair from c.i Chinese to an American airline r in Tokyo Fri- day as the U.S. track and fi eld team flew home a fter a two.week tour of lhe P eople's Republic of China .. He was muc h improved. The 68-year-old former Yale University coac h awakened Fri· day morning in P eking, feverish and shaking, two hours before the team was to start home. ; Walker £',.. Win ST. ANDRli:WS, Scotland The United Stales clinched the Walker Cup for the 22nd lime Thursday on singlCs victories by Gary Koch, Kurt Strange arid Craig Stadler. The U.S. te am needed only three or the eight head-lo-head afternoon m atches to be;.it Bri- tain in the traditional rivalry of amateur golCer s , but vi ctory was not assured until the fifth match when Stadler Jlrovide d the margin with a 3 ;.ind 2 triumph over George Ma cGregor. Kotla L e ading I DOWNEY -Mork Roth or Staten Island, N.Y., won seven oC eight match games and shot into the lead Thursday night in the. $75,000 Pro Bowlers Association National Championship._ Traine r · Fine d NEW YORK -Frank "Pancho'' Martin, one o( the country's t o p thor oug hbred trainers , has been rincd $6,000. largest tn lhe h istory or New York racing, on charges of dru&- glng horses at New York tracks, ·ll'TT S•••••••rles . ' I I Orange Coast Today?s Closing N.Y.Stoeks EDITION ' VOL. 68, NO. 150, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1975 c TEN CENTS· • County Medics Vote to. Return Monday By ALAN DIRKIN 0t 1"9 D•ll't' "llool $lilt Operating roomi; in Orange Co4nty hospitals will be bttck on normal schedules Monday. The decision for unestheslologists and otl).er r>hyr;iciuns involved in the sur- gery s lowdown to return to fuU sehedules was reached etl a six· hour meeting or the Orange .Co unty Medical Association Economy Due to Worsen?· WASllJNGTON (AP) -The Ford administration said today that unemployment and the re- cession will be worse this year than it estimated earlier, but should be followed by a stronger economic recovery next year. 'In its mid-year budget and economic ;eview, the ad- ministration predicted un- employment will average 8. 7 per- cent, or abo ut 7 .8 million workers, for the year. The ad- ministration predicted as recent- ly as February that unemploy- ment \\'Ould average 8.1 percent this year. .- The forecast, if true, means that the jobless r<1te probably will rise above 9 percent later this year. The April rate of un- employment was 8.9 percent. The report, which will be sent lo Congress, also predicted that: -The nation:s economy wilt decline by 3.6 percent this year, compared with the administra- lion's original prediction of a 3.3 percent decline. -The econom y will rebound with a strong 6.3 percent growth next year. better than the 4.8 per- rent growth forecas t earlier. -The rate of inflati~n. as reflected by consumer prices. Will increase 9.1 percent this ye::ir over 1974, compared with a Febru::iry projection of a 10.8 per· eent increase. The administration stuck by its >rojected fiscal year 1976 budget . leficit of nearly $60 billion, which s below the S68 bilUon deficit .arget set by Congress. The de- 'icit in fiscal 1975 will be $42.6 nillion, the report said. Although the over-a ll economic 1u tlook was somewh at im- 1roved, there wa s little hope in he new forecast ror an improved The report said unemployment wi ll average 7.9 percent in 1976, :qual to 7.1 million 1,1:orkers, the 1amc as forecast in the Februa ry ~conomi c outlook . In its outlook for the economy ll fter 1976, the administration ;aid un emp loyment could average 7.2 percent in 1977, 6.5 percent in 1978, 5.8 percent in 1979 and 5.1 percent in 1980. The s e projections were ;omewhat improved from the February rigures, but the report ;aid that the figures were ex- 1remely te ntative ::ind based on 1n economic growth rate.of 6.5 ~ercent during the four-year ~riod. Drown Victim Ide ntifie d; No Ad(h.ess Newport Beach police have dentified the body of a man who iell fro1n the Balboa j etty rocks ind drowned earlier in the day as 12-year·old Thomas MacDonald . But the address of MacDonald 1as not been det ermined,' a nd of- \cers appealed for help from 1nyone who may know informa- ion about the victim. ~1 acDonald appar ently had )een gathering fis hing bait >efore dawn from the rocks at he jetty und lost his footing. Police said that a slender ifeline was still tied lo his waist ind lashed 1o~a rock when the re· nalns were dis covere,J. But the 'all apparenUy ln01cted head in· uries and t h e man drowned vithout regaining consciousness. Besides the lifeline, police :aid. the man a lso had an e mpty cc chest lashed to his wrist when 1e fell into the bay. New-port B e sch res id e nt )akley Hall of 2234 Channel Rood irst discovered the floating body luring a beach walk, Macdonold was identified by thttks of his fingerprtnta, of- !cers snid. The remains are at Paclric. View Memorial Par-k. Thursday night. Everett Ba nnis ter, executive director of the 2,000·meniber OC- MA, confirmed today that tor a while "lt was touch and go'' on whether the doci.ors would re- turn. The meeting had been called by OCMA presid e nt Philip McFarland to con1ider a request by doctors in the Sep Juan Capistrano· end ·San Clemente Bod11Baek . UP'I T .......... Slim Goodbody (John Burs- tein) has his body back. The singer-dange!r .foot -the full leotard wit~ body organs on it wlli~h he uses lo put on a health m usical, but it was found late r near a Ne\\' York school. Billboard Ordinance For Mesa? Cost a.Mesa m ay come up with a new billboa rd ordinance Monday night. The city counc il has scheduled a meeting for 7:30 p.m . to go over three alternative ordinances lo the one they rejected several weeks ago, one which would have banned billboards in the city. · One of the counterproposals has been submitted by two outdoor advertising companies, and the other two alternatives were put rorward by the city starf. T hese are the alternatives that will be considered: -A joint proposal by Foster and Kleiser and Pacific Outdoor Advertis in g· that would allow all the existing 35 billboards lo re- main, even those without valid permits. and prevent new ones be- ing erected except as replace- ments . City planner Arnold fl amala said that other com- panies may oppose this plan because it would prevent them rrom competing in Costa Mesa . -Another proposal is pal· terned after an ordinance in Anaheim . It would a llow -billboar ds to be put up within 200 Feet or major intersections . This would m ea n that up t o 87 billboards C'Ould be built in Costa Mesa, Ham ala said. Fish Fry <lrea ror stronger a nd more con· certed action to resolve the malpractice insura nce crisis . But a resolution by these doc· tors for all physicians in Orange Count y to withhold a ll but emergency services for three weeks was ''resoundingly" de· reated, Bannister said. Bannister said .that there was much support for continuing the slowdown, but when the vote ca me to return there was not a dissenllng vole. "But remem ber the vote wus not taken until arter six hours of debate," he added. The vote came artcr the mem- bership "completely rejected " the coDcepts of a stop-gap bill that settl ed the strike by Northern Catirorni a doctors, who have been oCf work since May I . "There was a reeling that the North~r n Califor nia doctors bought a bad bill." Bannister said. The OC~1A d irector said that the motion agreed upon the Orange Courtly doctors \\' s limited. It was to continue wor · ing "until the end. or the gencr<i session or the Legislature pro- vided that the legis lators dt-- monstrate a s trong desire to push legis lation that will give answers to long -t erm probl em :-; of malpracti ce ins urance ." .. The reeling \vus that if no long-term sol uti on is re<1ched . l•verybody in Orange County "'ill go out," Banniste r utld<.'tt . The bi ll th;1t brought the 1'orthcrn Cilliforniu doctors , \\•ho rurrcntly have no m<.1tpraclice ins ura n ce c o \·crage, back to \\'Ork v.·a s to creutc a statc\\iide JX>O I of liability iusuran<.·e car· ISce NORMAi~. Page A2) UCI Hospital Shaky Tight Budget, Oversupply Cited By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE Of I ... Dally f>li.I SWfl Californi a 's budget fdr the coming year is likely to come out of the Assembly Ways and Means Committee without a $12 millio n appropriation for an on-campus hospltsl at UC Irvine, according to legislative sources. A combination or a tight state financial situation and concern about Orange County's oversupp- ly of hospital facilities has 1¢ to striking the money from the As· sembly version of the 1975 -76 budget, Assemblyman Bruce Mesa Picks Planning Director Costa Mesa has hired Charles Roberts of Anaheim as the new city planning director. Roberts. cu.rrently zon ing supervisor in Anaheim's plan- ning department, bas been JP· pointed to re.place 'William L . Dunn, who has been appointed a.ljsisla n t ci.t y manager · community development direc- tor. Announcing the appointment today, City Manager Fred Sorsabal said that Robei:ts has had more than 10 years' planning experience, m ainly in Anaheim. He obtained his BA degree from Pepperdine University, and has done graduate work through the UC Extens ion at Irvine. Roberts, who is married with three children, lives in Yorba Linda. He will s tart work in Costa Mesa July 7. · Sorsabal said that Roberts was selecled from more than 35 appli- cants. Sors::ibal himself used lo work in the city manager's orfice in Anaheim. Dunn has been a planner with Costa Mesa for 20 years. He was apJX>inted planning director in 1958 and has been the city's only planning director. Dunn, who is paid $25 ,350 a year , will receive the same salary as the assistant c ity manager -community develop- ment director. STOCKS SCORE SHARP A DVANCE NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market reeled off its biggest gain in a month today 1,1,•ith a broad rally set off by s igns of an im- proved economic outlook. The Dow Jon es indus trial average was up 17.29, closing at 832.29. . Analysts sard the initial spark for the buying seemed to come rrom the government's report that its revamped index of lead- ing economic indicators took a 'bi g upward jump last month. Ncstande <R-Anaheim> said in an interview today. Walter Clark, aide to Senator Dennis Carpenter , confirmed that the appropriation has been taken out . In its present form, they said , other appropriations for the UCJ- California College of Medicine were m ade, providing funds ror other campus buildings and the takeover o f Orange County ~1edic al Center as well as plan· ning for a string of outpatient clini cs, according to a source in the Department of Finance_ Last year. Sll.700,<XX> v.·as :.1p- propriatcd ror construction or the hos pital. All but SI00 ,000 v.·as rc.-- moved from next year's pro- posed budgcl. Ncstandc s a id "the status of things right now is very fluid. It could change any time.·· "ft is tough to sell the on- <.'ampus hospital id e a right no\\',., h e s aid , ''becaus e or th e economic situa t ion and because there is a reeling in Sacramento th<.1l Orange County already has enough ho!,pital beds <.1nd this is not needed. '· Distance Champ Prefontaine Killed EUGENE, Ore. (A P) -Steve Prefontaine. this coun- try's finest dis tance runner and one or its most con· troversial amateur athletes, was killed in an automobile ac- cident early today, little more than four hours a fter he ran the second fastest 5,000 meters by an Ame rican. Police said Prerontaine, who was 24 , was pinned under his car arter'it hit a r~k wall at. abol(.t 12:30 a.m. PDT. 'l'he·tormer University or Oregon standout who finished fourth in-I.he 5,000 meters at the 1972 Ol ympics had covered ~at distance in 13 minutes ?J .8 secopds in w!nnin.g the event at an NGAA pr eparation meet Thursday night in Eugene. The time 1,1,•as about l 1h seconds off Prefontaine's American record. A high school sensation in Coos Bay, Ore., Prefont::iine 1,1,•ent on to a brilliant career at the Univers ity or Oregon and. at the time of hi s .death, owned U.S. records for every distance above 2,000 meters. Additional details tod ay on Page 86. Centerfold Jolt Male Bodies Get M il11lS 2 Ratings LOS ANGELES <AP! -.. We "'ill not be able to use your body in our centerfold," the le tter s ays. ·' ... On. a scale or 0 to lb, your body was rated -2. ·· The letter carries the name "Playgirl" at the top and ap- parently has been s ent to men around the country. But a Playgirl magazine spokesman said Thursday it is not respons ible for the mailings and described them as "a very cruel hoax." Phil Paladino, public relations direct or f or th e women's magazine which fe atures photos of nude men, said Playgirl has received 44 inquiries about the letter -many from people who think it is legitimate. The letters bear postmarks from around .the country and they obviously were composed on different typewriters. They show dtrferent logo styles at the top of the page , different mailing ad- dresses for Pla.ygirl and are signed with difCerent names, he said. But the text is almost identical on all the letters \V hic h Playgirl has seen in the last few weeks, Paladino said. After thanking the indi vidua l for sending in hi s photographs - no one, of course. h~1d done so - th e letter goes on to say in part: "The rating was done by a panel or women ranging in age from 65 to 75 years old. We tried <See R ATI NG, Page A2 ) Fish Dinner s ·To U sher In Mesa Festivity The fish wil l s tart crackling and 5jzzling in Costa ft1esa tonight. The 30th a nnual fi sh £r y and carnival will get undel' \\'UY al Lions Park at 5:39 p.m. "'hen the Cirst fi sh dinners go on sale for 32 .50 apiece. Carnival rides '-''ill begin at 6 J>.m . and the band con- test "'ill get under '\'ilY at 7:30 p.m . The UCI hospital v.•as approved recently by !ht! Orange Count~ Health Planning Council. \\'hi ch s imultaneously r ejected an a p· pl ication by H oag Memorial Hospital and the Western World ~tedical Foundation to build a hospilal in Irvine. M('dical School Dean Stanl ey van den Noo rt promised a response to the de velopment late today. lie categorized the removal or the funds for construction of the on-campus hos pital as .. a breach (See llOSPITAL, Page A2) M esa Pool Campaign To B e gin By lll LARY KAYE 01 lh• D;oily Pilot St;oll A door -to-d oor campaign 1 aimed at convincing local resi· .. dents to support plans to build an Olympic-sized pool at Costa A-1esa liigh 1,1,•ill begin Saturday. The campaign in Costa Mes a wiU be conducted by about 300 , swimming enthusiasts from the Costa Mes a Aquatics Club. the Costa A-lesa High School Aquatics Boosters and the E stancia l·Iigh I School Aquatics Boosters. They hope to gather enough community s upport on petitions to convince the Costa fl.1 esa City Council and Pla nning Co m-· mission and the Ne\\'JX.lrl-~lesa school board to spend local tax ' money on lhe pool project. Beginning Saturday and conti- nuin g r or the n ext three 1 \\'eeke nds , s wimming boosters \\'ill make door-to-door visits. br- inging J>etitions. bumper stickers and pamphlets . Their proposal is to transrorm l the existing pool at l\1esa High in-1 to an Olympic-sized pool, at a cost or about $250 ,000. The existing pool is 25 yards 1 and the new pool \VOu\d be 50-1 • meters. "Bui lding the pool a t tllesa lligh is the most logical idea because 've \vouldn't have lo buy extra land <.1nd there arc no build· ings in the \\'ay to knock dO\\'n," explained Charmaine Carlson, a campaign organizer. The s 1,1,•imming enthusiasts a p-' J>carcd before the school board at the end of las t year and made the - first pitc h for the new pool. Ho\\•e1,·er, school trustees told them th ey preferred to wait until a survey of the community is I See POOL, Page A2 ) Or~~jj~ast Weatller l.ow cloud s n i g ht throu g h mid -morning othc1'\\'ise sunny Saturday 1\·ith slightly w::irmer tem- pt>rat ur4!s . ll ighs wil l r<.1n g c frorn 65 at the bt.•a<.'hl'S to 78 inland. Mennaid Entries Soar liere's the rest or the schedule ror the fish Cry, staged by lhc Costa Mesa-Newport Har bor Lions and expected to draw 100,000 people over the weekend and raise nearly $30,000 £or youth prganiiations ; I NSIDE T ODAY If wo n't just be another sllcw t4ilien 2.800 music slu· dent s f r om Saddleback schools put 0 11 a musical ex- travaganza al the Anaheim Convention Center nezt week. See 3lOr-J! by Daily P ilot Slaff lrritcr Jan Worlh on Page Cl . ls women's liberation on its last legs? That maY be an overslate· ment, but it la one wa,y ot looking at the lineup ot lovellet in this year's Miss Merr;nald Cont.est for Costa Mesa ~s 30th a.MUii Fis h Fry and Ca.mivaJ. There'rc 18 ot them, tht highest entry for several years, according to CUN WHdorf, an of. ficer of th~ Costa Mesa·Ne wport Ha rbor Lions Club, who or· ganized the event ln recent years. ' .1. The entry ls not a record, but it drew near the klnd of numbers , .. • that used to enter in the early years of the Fish Fry when the town was small and many women would enter, Wesdorfsald. said. ''Since wome9's lib, women have shied away from the contest but. now we a re .cettl.Dg a swing back," he said . "They realize we· can an '9 wl'i at we want to do. So now Ul:ey can play &olt, ride horses. enter the cont.esl.-or do whatever they want lo do." • Wesdorf said that he used to get'entrant.8 by calling a WQman teacher at Orange Coast College but ln recent years the te9~e.r said that girl students would not enter because or peer pressure. Ur. Bernard Simon. an op· tometrist, who arranged this year's contest, agreed that this year's entry total indicates that "the idea o r women's liberation ls being put more into penpec- Uve." The contest is a basic beauty conte s t , Dr . Simon aclmOwledCed, lhough the Judces are ast.ed alao to obaerve "personality tr al ti." Judles for lhl1 year 's contest, which Is acheduled for 2 p .m . <See FISH PRY. Pap Al) • ... SATURDAY · 10 a .m ., carnival rides begin; 10 :30 a .m., t1,1,•o -hour parade begins; noon . ri sh dinners on sale; 3 p.m . 0 rarrle drawinJ;:; 4: 15 p.m ., Dorothy Jo d a ncers; Gp.m ,, drawing ; 6 :30 p .m ., Estancia l·ligh School jazz trio. 8 p.m., drawing. SUNDAY Noon, carniv1tl rid~ begin : fi sh dinners served: 2 p.m ., beauty rontest : 3 :30 p.m .. baby contest ; 5:30 p.m., dra1,1,·ing : 6:.15 p.m ., Arlee fligbec dancen; 8 p.m. drawing ror gra nd prize. a new ['ar. .~ \ _, __ • • THESE ARE SOME OF THE 1 B ENTRANTS IN THiS YEAR'S MISS MERMAID CONTEST Lineup May Look Old Fashioned But It Showa Contest Has Regained Popularity .. , FreaPageAl FISH FRY ... SunC!a y, are Mayor Alvin L . PJnkley, Bob Reid, and Mrs. Barbara Van Holt, and Mrs. Maureen DiDomenico, head of Costa Mesa's beautification com· mitlee. As for the other contest -the baby contest -Wesdorf said that ltij.t'e has always been a large en· try. in that event, scheduled (or 3:30 p.m . Sunday, and predicted that the final total will be about JOO. EuropeanAllies Say Credibility Remains B RU SSELS <U P!) - 1\merica 's key European a llies assured President Ford today that U.S. credibility remains as strong as ever despite the fall of Vietnam, and some declared they never had any doubt of the continuing U.S . commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization . But a fev,i noted politely but firmly that they must make their OY.'n decisions, which in somt! in· stances may not full y coincide wi th the vision of unified defense ~hich Ford painted in hi s open- ing speech to the m eeting of NATO heads of s tate. Riley Sees Public Paramedic Control In his opening speech Thurs- day, Ford restated a ringing pledge that th e United States will come to the defe nse of any NATO member subjected to a rmed a t- tack, and will maintain its pre- sent 310,000 troop strength in Europe. Prime Mini ster Harold-Wilson of Britain s aid he welcomes the president's .as surances about the U.S. comm itment to NATO, but said this commitment never real- ly had been in doubt. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ot tfM D•llr ~••oc SWtl Supervisor Thomas F. Riley predicted in El Toro Thursday night that the county's paramedic service would remain under fi re d epartment control and not be turned over to private ambulance firms. He told leaders of the Sad· dl ebac k Valley YMCA h e believed there were enough votes on the Board or Supervisors to su1tatn a publicly operated pa.-amedic system, at least in the Vhlncorporatcd areas of Orange County. . The campaigning supervisor's r emarks were apparently in- tended to be heard at nearby J.,.eisure World where residents ,re vigorously protesting the '<~aunty 's consideration of letting ~m,,ulance companies provide Paramedic service. : 1"I cannot see this in any way ~ing turned over lo private en- J.cC-prise," said the fifth district 1i'1pervisor, although he admitted "\'iting ror a stud y determining (tie feas ibility of ambul ance ;>i.ramedics. • !Riley said he voted £or the :Study, now in progress, only !because he knew that fellow :s~pervisors had e nough votes to •c!lrry the measure anyway. : As a result his offiee was iilun-• • Fro•P~AI ]ltATING ... ~d have our panel or women in the ?$ to JS-year-old bracket rate ~-bu, but we cou ld not gel them to '1>iop laughing long enough,'' ~ 'Among the recipients have ~en a clergyman and an elderly ~\\lido"" Paladino said. l 'He said Playgirl is sending ~logies to every recipient of t.t_e hoax letter who can be local- ' eil. • • ' • ' l • ' ! • • • • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT l1..., O••"or Co.o \I D••'Y Pllol, "''lrlwlll<ll h <-. 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H id " Ctsl• -"•••. C:-4l .... 11l•. 5<.iMoE I'-*' IT ,.,,.,, U.1111""'"4NJ; • !tw"l'u M.IO-INr1,,.,111 .. , 11n11 .... 1"-U-• " . dated by letters. "There are 18,000 residents in Leisure World and l got 18 ,000 letters," Riley said about his unpopular decision lo join the study proposal. Riley told Y leaders gathered for their annual dinner that estimates for private paramedic calls range between $99 and $150, even if the ambulance companies Viere supported in part by a gov· ernment subsidy. "Like the rire department and the poli c e d e partment, the paramedics are a lifesaving service. I just can't see bow you can put a dollar value on life," Riley said. He added that he had "fan- tastic reports" about the qua1ity or paramedic service in the Sad- dleback Valley and that he was ··convinced the proposal will be unacceptable to at least three supervisors ." And. he noted, "the fourth ap: pears to be changing his mind." Private ambulance companies are ill prepared fin anciall y to ac· q uire the com munications system needed for an effective param edic se r v i ce, th e supervisor said . ln his keynote talk, Ril ey also stressed the need to utilize com- munity resources such as the YMCA to keep children out of trouble rather than try to get them out of trouble after they have become juvenile offenders. From Page Al 1' POOL ... made by the city to determ"ine """hich projects are wanted most. That survey is now under way by the city and t he results should be a nnounced soon, according to l\lrs. Carlson . Along with the door-to·door conta ct. a ''dads speaker s bureau" is being formed, which "'iii arrange talks a t local service clubs by the fathers in the booster clubs. Mrs. Carlson said the pool ad- vocates believe the existing pools al J\.1esa and E s tancia Hi gh Sc hools are not sufficient for the s wimming needs of the com- munity. If built, the new pool would be used ror competitive swimmers and the wate r polo teams from 1\-Jesa and Estancia High Schools, the city's summer recreational program , th e Cos ta Mesa Aquatic Cl ub, lifesaving, diving and scuba classes ·and a senior adult swim prog~am . Concert Set For Newport A performance of "Mus ln G Minor." by Ralph Vaughn Williams , will hla:hlia:ht a concert by high school music students at 8 p.m . Sunday at the Newport !<{a rbor Lutheran Church tn Newport Beach. Vocal music groups Crom Costa Mesa and Estancia High Schools will Perform the ma11. In addition to the mass, vocal groups will perform aptrltuals, rn•drigala, sacred son11, folk and popularson1s. Ticket.a wtll be available at t he door. The church ls loceted at 798 Dover Drive. ( Chancellor Helm ut Schmidt of \\"est Germany said in a s peech that he ·'took note \\'ith satisra c· lion of the Am eri can commitment to uphold its military obli gations and not lo reduce unilaterally its troop strength in Europe. "Especially in ti mes when the United Sta tes has to carry a heavy burde n, it can count on Germany as we ll," Schmidt said. The expressions of support for Ford's position introduced a note of harmony and solidarity in an organization \\•hose unity has been shaken by di sputes between G~eece a nd Turkey and by uncer· ta1nt.Y ove r whether Portugal is drirt1ng toward a pro-Com munist · stance. But some major speakers a lso restated the reservations ttlelr governments held tov.•ard the al· liance be!orC the summit began. Greek Premier Constantine Caramanlis said NATO's failure to block Turkey's inv ation of Cypru s la s t s ummer for ced Greece to qu it NATO's military arm -and G rcece "'ill remain outside at least for now. On one or tbe hottest topics, Portugal's Premier Vasco dos . Santos Gonca lves declared his nation would stay in NATO despite allied suspicions it is drifting toward the Communist sphere. He pleaded for "mor e co mprehens ion and less ap- prehension'' from the allies. French foreign minister Jean . Sauvagnargues, standing in for President Valery Giscard d'Es· laing, said France "never enter· tained any doubt as to the readi· ness of the American govern- ment and people regarding its European a llies." Fro•P~Al HOSPITAL ••. of confidence w ith the voters of Orange County. During months of debate over \OJhether a hospital should be built on the campus, Dr. van de n Noort has maintained that a $155.9 milli on 1972 he a lth sciences bond act was largely in- tended to finance development of m edical schools at UC J and UC Davis. . lnOalion and other appropria- tions have reduced the amount available, and UCI seems to be getting short changed , he has contended . J-IO\\'ever, the budget proposal does contain a n equally con- troversial $5 million ror the takeover o r Orange Count y Medical Center by the univeraity plus other runds to plan renovB1· lion of the ho1pltal. "There seems to be a con· sensus to go ahead with the first phase o( deve lopment of the rnedlcal school -that was 'omethins th11t was In doubt before -and wult a yeP.r or two down the road to sec If we h11vc money f or the on-campus ho1pJtal , '' As1emblyman Nestande ob1erved. .• o..nw Plltl l"Mlo 9y LH ,.,, .. Some Other Fish to Fry • •• Flanked by U.S. Flag, carnival workers from Alabama work hi gh a bove Lions Park in do\vntown Costa Mesa as they prepare the hurricane racer for tonight's 6 · o'clock opening of the 30th annual Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club Fish Fry. The fry runs through Sunday. TONIGtrr • COSTA MESA FlS!I FRY Costa M e~a Park, 5 :30 p.m. Also Sat. and Sun. "TllE KING AND I " - Newpart Harbor High musical, Auditorium, May 30 and 31, 8 p.m. Tickets $2 . CO STA MESA C IVIC PLAYHOUSE -"He Ain't Done Ri ght By Nell ,'' Fri. and Sat. 8: 30 p.m . FRIDAY NIG HT FILMS - "Paper Moon," OCC Forum, 7:30 p.m . $1 . MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairgrounds, 8:15 p.m. "THE CAVE DWELLERS" - South Coast Repertory Theater , through Sun. 8 p.m. '\ SATURDAY, MAY 31 FISH FRY PARADE -10:30 a .m. FAIRVIEW BAZAAR -First Annual Bazaar. s pansored by co mmunity organizations, Fairview Hospita l Auditorium, 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. SPRING CHORAL CONCERT -· OCC Choral and Chamber Si ngers, Auditorium, 8 p.m . Free. ROCK CONCERT - ''Rockits '' and ''Rain," Fair· ground s, 8 p.m . Tickets $2. SUNDAY, JUNE I CHORAL CONCERT -Costa Mesa High and Estancia Hi1h c h ora l g roup s combined,· Newpo rt H a rbor Luthera n Church, 8 p.m . Donation Sl.50. New Films 4t Pussycat Not Pomo? Newpart Beach vice officers paid another $3 a piece to see the movies at the Balboa Pu11ycat Theater Thursday, but they 11ld today the new tamer features ap· peared to be in conrormance wilh state obscenity laws. The detectives said that the feature had changed Thunday and was considerably sorter in ('On tent, compared to the two films which sparked a raid last Tuesday night. or!icers seized "French Blue'' a porno flick featuring a Pen· thous e Magazine model, and companion £ilm, "Dynamite." Thursday's fare, said Detec- tive Al Epstein, was "French Poodle" and another fllm with a Zorro theme. Police said the prints 'seil~ iri the Tuesda y raid are being s tor ed in a jail cell at the new Harbor District Courthouse. The reels were too large to fit In re- gular e vidence Jockers, said Detective Capt. Rich Hamilton. IrOnically, the two latest blue films have some historic com· pany at the county courthouse. A piec e of c inematic memorabilia in the form of a print of ''I Am Curious, Yellow" also i s s till s tored in the courthouse, a nd that was seized by Newport officers in a raid on the same Ba lboa movie house. Punishment Ban SACRAMENTO CAP) -A bill lo ban corporal punishment in California's schools, except When approved by a parent, has squeaked Lhrough the Assembly. HERITAGE CHINA Reg. 5969°0 SALE s799oo HERITAGE'S WINDWARD COLLECTION made with English brown oak burl, pin knotty walnut arid olive ash burl veneers, and pecan solids. The finish. done by tiand , is in the oldest European manner. these distinctlye Qualities give Windward a look of its owl\. . . Entire Collection on Sale . Until End of May DINING ROOM. BEDROOM AND OCCASIONAL PIECES ' FroaPageAl .NORMAL ••• riers which will provide in· surance at lower rates while the Legislature tackles the problem. Orange County doctor& have been ptishing the bill of state Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach> that would set up com· pensation boards , instead of juries, to hear malpractice cases, lltnll the period when awards can be filed, limit the awards, and limit attorneys ' fees . By Monday some Orange County hospitals will have ~en on restricted !chedules ror two \\'eeks, some ror about 10 days and some (or a week. Cutting out e lective surgeries has reduced patient loads at hospitals by about 40 percent and some hospitals have been putting s taff members on four-day weeks and contemplatlng_layo!fs. Pair Play ·For Record Two members of the UC Irvine tennis team becan batting balls around thta. morning at a Newport. Beach residential pro· ject and if they_ keep it up until Monday nig-ht. they'll have a new world record. Eric Mann and Eric Larre plan to play continuously -except for a 15-minute break after each hour'11 play -until 8 p.m. Mon- day. f~ey hope to break a Guin- ness world record set in 1971 by college players in Reno. lo connection with the marathon effort, developer M. J . Brook plans lo donate $1 !or every person passing through his J asmine Creek rrtodel homes during the weekend. The dona· ti c>n will go to the UCI athletic scholar1hJpfund. . I OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOODMARK-l<ARASTAN-BAKER WHKDATS & S4TUID4YS t :OO .. 5:l0 ' NEWPORT BEACH• 11:17 Wt:STCLlt'I' OH.. ..2.2050 LA'1lUNA BEACH • 34! Nf~H1'11 Cito'\~ llW\'., 41H·G&.Sl TORRANCE• 23649 11:.l.wrtlORNt. BLVO Ctl'"-'" 'ri, Iii !J. Sun. 12.~:ao ) 37K-l:l1H ,\