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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-06-03 - Orange Coast PilotI .1 .. • -e zz.1e at ea Pair . Serve Up Bogus Agent • l ,32S fi&Dles . Of 'Frisks~ TWo J .. Ten Dis on Coast Coast Girls ' T UESDA Y AFTERNOON, JUNE 3, 1975 VOL ... HO. 154, 2 seCTIOHS, n l'AGES Record Netted O.lly l'llet,.... i.y l'atrkll O'O-• TENNlS PLAYERS MANN (LEFT), LARAE SAVOR CHAMPAGNE Marathon Effort fn Newport Beach Ends In tflJlnk• l _,325 Games CdM Pair Take World Record · By HI LARY KAYE Of Ille Dally Piiot Staff Things got pretty wet and wild in Corona del Mar Monday after- noon when two UC Irvine stu- dents broke the world's record .tor long distance te'Wis play. Bubbly champagne poured over the weary tennis players' heads and good natured cavort-inl in a nearby s wimming pool eapped off the marathon erfort, which lasted '80 hours and five minutes. Eric Mann, 23, and Eric Larre, 18, both members of the UCI ten- nis team, dumped UCl's Sports tnform a ti on Director Roy_ Englebrecht into the pool. Then, the t.wo young men dove in after him. Englebrecht is the man responsible for setting up the marathon, which lasted from 8 a.m. Friday until 4:05 p.m. Mon- day, The previous record, set Sun· <fay in Bakersfield, was 80 hours. Documentation of the UCI players' efforts will be lotwarded to the Guinness Book. otWorld Records. The marathon netted $800 for the campus athletic scholarship runcl. lt was donation from M._ J. Brock, builder of the Jasmme Creek development where the marathon took place. Observers s aid the tennis players were "exhilarated" when the motch Clnally came to an end and played ''very good tennis" during the lost few minutes. They play~ a total of 1,325 1-.mes bul no ono kept tac t.rnck nc who won the most .... I •I games. . The players: routine was one hour on the court and then a 15-minute break. During the breaks they changed socks, shoes and they ale. · Over the four days, the. two ~ me!) used 75 pairs of socks end consurned"" at least 50 4uarts or Gatorade, in addition to varied amounts of peanut butter, health food candy bars, fruits and tuna fish: . About 100 people w~re on hand when the marathon ended and all applauded when th~ players came of! tile courts. ·LarN;, a freshman pre-med student !tom Los Alamitos, left Ja~mine Creek about ··an hour after play had stopped. But. Mann, a junior · economics and sociolo'&y student remained several hours 1.<> u°'wind. A . straight A student, Mann had two final exams today and reportedly studied for them last week. llis main goal today was not answering tt. q\MltiGU correct· ly, tliqt teyinf tr> 1\;87.awake d\S· ingUleexaats. t Shriver ·'Thinking LOS ANGELES (UPI) Sargent Shriver, the Kennedy family in-law who wu George McGovern's second runnlr\g mate in the 1972 pHaldentlal campaign, said he has tho'4iht about seeking the Democratic presidential nomination but . doubts he could get it. -- - Last Stop Ford Confers .With Pontiff From Wil'e Services VATICAN CITY -President Ford ended a whfrlwind eight- hour visit to Italy todcty and went to the Vatican for talks with Pope Paul Vl. Every postwar U.S. president since Dwight D. Eisenhower has paid a call on the spiritual leader of Roman Catholicism at this city-slate across the Tiber from central Rome. Ford's agenda with Pope Paul included discussions on the Mid- dle East, U.S. food aid, refugee problems and other humanitarian issues, U.S. of- ficials said. · The Vatican visit was the last stop on Ford's week-long Euro- pean tour. In his talks with Italian officials he paid tribute to the "extraordinary ties of friendship" between the United States and Italy. Ford met with President Giovanni Leone and gave him Che message he has carried to other European leaders -that Washington is sticking by its Atlantic alliiJnce partners. Italian authorities carried out exceptional security measures. More than 5,000 heavily armed police officers and soldiers were posted in the city plus another 200 Two Girls Searched by Bogus Agent sharpshooters on roofto~ in the capital. Despite some fears of de- monstrations by Italian leftists, there was total calm in the city. Ford fl ew by helicopter from Rome's Ciampino airport to the Renaissance presidential palace, where he reviewed an honor guard of while -uni formed customs police and helmeted and mounted lfoops. "It is my pleasure to bring to you the greetings and high re- gard of the people of the United Slates for Ila ly," Ford told Leone. "In a world of rapid and dramatic cha n ge, Italian- American friendship stands out as a symbol of stability and re· solve." At Ciampino Airport, Ford seemed lo favor the trick knee that gave way and caused him to fall in Salzburg two days ago. He· <SeeTRIP, PageA2> Mesa Banning Billboards - In Seven Years Twenty-two years after in- corporation, the city of Costa Mesa voted Monday night to ban billboards from the city. The historic vote came after a 2lh-hour hearing and after months of study of a city staff pro- posal to rid Costa Mesa of billboards by declaring them a public nuisance. Councilmen balked at the staff Huntington Beach police today proposal last April 1, but Monday were searching for a man who night the positions of two council allegedly impersonated a Coast members changed and the ban G u ard investigator and carried on a 4·1 vote. In favor physically searched two 15-year-were Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, old girls. plus Councilmen Dom Raciti, Police said the man ap-· Jack Ham melt and Norma proached the girls at 11th Street Hertzog. Opposed was Coun- and Walnut Avenue in downtown cilman Robert Wilson. Huntington Beach, fla.sbed an Hammell and Mrs.. Hertzog ldentlfication card with "Coast kept the ordlnance from passing Guard" printed on it, and said two months ago -both then said he was checking the area for that they favored regulation but heroin use. not outright elimination -but He then allegedly took the Monday night they went along airls to their home, forced them with the ordinance in preference to di a robe and put on to three alternatives which were ntahteowns, while ·he searched regulatory only. their bodies tor heroin needle Chief Advance planner Arnold marks. Hamala said that most of the 33 He waa described as 3S to 40 billboards in the cily -the years old, five feet, 10 inches greatest concentration i~ on U.11, husky with dark, graying Newport Boulevard between 15th hair. Police said he is wanted on and 17th streets -will be re- charces of impersonating a law moved wlthln three years and the omcer and thlld annoyance. · reat withln seven years. t LONG CAREER ENOS Ozzie Nelson, 69 Cancer Claims Ozzie Nelso11 AtAge 6 9 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ozzie Nelson. 69, whose wholesome ''Adventures of Ozzie and Har- . riet" on television and radio amused a generation of Americans. died today. Harriet, his wife and partner, was at his bedside. He had under gone surgery for . cancer of the liver eight months ago. He died in his Hollywood home. "Ozzie knew he wa:.; going to go, and h e viewed it philosophically," a family friend said. "He was working on another book until the end." The Nelsons lived principally at thf!ir residence at 16 Lagunita, a private oceanfront community south or Laguna Beach. He had been moved to his Hollywood home to be closer to his doctor, ~ family spokesman said today. An athletic 170 pounds most or , his adult life, Nelson had thinned ~to 130 but continued to visit his of· fice until eight weeks ago. "The Adventures or Ozzie and J{arriet" set records for longevi- ty, beginning in 1944 on radio and then jumping to television in 1952, where it ran 14 years. The Nelsons' sons, Ricky and David, grew up on the show, and after they married, their wives joined the cast. On the series Nelson was the sunshiny, sometimes bemused father and hus band. Harriet was tl warm-voiced beauty who mar-. ried Nelson in 1935. At firs t their sons, David and Ricky, were portrayed by child actors. Then on Feb. 20, 1949, the (Set' NELSON, Pue A2) i - Las \'egas Unshaken By Shots MERCURY, Nev. (AP ) -Two ·underground nuclear le~ts-, each with a minimum destructive force equal to the atomic bomb that devastated Hiroshima ut the end of World War II. rocked the Nevada desert today. The weapons-related tests, which were fired 20 minutes a part. each ha d a yield of between 20.000 and 200.000 tons of TNT. the Energy Research and Uevelopment Administration said. The A-bomb dropped on the Japanese city had a yield of 20.000 tons of T.l\T. Las Veg.as police said they had no immediate reports of shock waves being felt in the resort city 90 miles south of the Nevada Test Site. The tests we•e not related and there was no significance that they were conducted on the s ame day, said ERDA spokesman Dave. J ackson. "They were separate tests. They just happened both to be scheduled on the same day," he said. The first test was fired at 7:20 a.m. PDT in the r emote Pahute Mesa area of the huge test site. Code-named "Stilton," the shot was fired a l the bottom of a 2.400-foot vertical shaft. There \\as no radiation leak, Jackson said. Or~g~,:•st We atller Night and morning low · ,. clouds with some hazy sun- , shine inland areas in the afternoon . Little tern· perature change. Highs from the upper 60s to the mid 70s. INSIDE TODA '' A survmor of the Gulf of Mexico oil rig mishap recalls the terror of pitch black u:iet- ness under 45 feet of t.OOter. See story. photo Page A4. Index ., .,. At Alt A4 A7 aM .... ", .. ,. •• Al ,.. ,.. 1\ J DAIL. Y PILOT S Tuesday, June 3, \975 , Se~ lntegr.pted G'fllll Classes Ruled 'WASHINGTON <UPI> -Gym Classes tn most schoels and col· le pa in the U oiled States must be integrated to include both boys and girls, except for bodily contact sports, the administra- tion announced today. Under the rules announced by th4l Depa rtment of Health, Edu cation and WelCare, any school receivingt' federal funds must demons trate i.l is "moving as expeditious ly as possible witbin the prescribed lime frame toward eliminating separate Paid Cash -for Ash STRATHMORE CAP) - Alex Douglas was making the last payment on his car al a bank here when a com- motion in the parking lot drew him lo a window. He saw people pointing al a burning car and shout- ed for someone to summon firemen. The car belonged to Douglas. Firemen said a lighted pipe left behind on the seat triggered the blaze Mon- day. Real E state Transfer Tax Ban Delayed ByTERRY COVILLE 0t Ule D•lly Pit« Slaff An effort to immediately end the Hunt in gt on Beach r eal estate transfer l<.ix failed Mon· day night on a 3 to 3 city council vote. While voters overwhelmingly knocked out the tax last Tues- tlay, it won't officially end until the secretary of state validates the election. City Attorney Don Bonfa said Monday that might take another week to lJ) days. Mcanwhi141, the city continues lo ~ollect the tax. Councilwoman H;Jrriett Wieder attempted to introduce :m emergency ordini.lnce to im· mediately halt use of the tax but the ordinance needed five af. firmative votes to p;JSS. With Councilman Al Coen absent, the motion failed on a 3 to 3 tie. Mrs. Wieder was joined by Jerry M atney and Ted Bartlett, but opposed by Norma Gibbs. Henry Duke and Don Shipley. .. We Josl. let's be good sports," Bal'tletl said before the ~'Vote. · Mrs. Wieder introduced the or-·~inance saying the city "was yar aty~d ' • because no one -would buy or sell homes while ~he t ax is still collected. . Shipley said he didn't think the :City was paralyzed, a nd Mrs. Gibbs said the election settled ~he issue, so why do anything d se. ... : Since the tax on prope1ty sales . •was imposed last August. the Ci· .:ty has coll ected more than :S846.000. : When the election results were :announced, a flood of calls were .received by the city treasurer's· ·office the fin ance department :and the city attorney, with ·callers asking about rcbi.iles. : But there is no rebate, accord- ing to the treasure r's office. iAnyone who has paid the real £state transfer tax has lost that ;money -it will not be reffunded. Tuesday's election prohibited 1he use of the lax in the future, ·but had nothing to do with re· Jundini! money a lready paid. ··w e'd be · bankrupt if we had ·lo pay that back now," City A~­ ministrator Dave Rowlands said today. ORA~GE COAST s DAILY PILOT l rw-Orctn9" C.w t 0~1ly r 1 ·' Nilt't wf'f1CPI 1\ <OM physical education ch1sses." The rules were prepared under Title IX of the Education Amend· ments of 1972 which bars dis· crimioation by sex m federally financed school programs. ..While gene rally prohibiting sex ~egregated physical educa· lion classes." HEW said, "the final regulations do allow separu- tion by sex in physical educulio1a classes during competition in wrestlin~. boxing, busketbull. football and olber s ports involv· 1ngbodilycontact." .. During the period schools are making the "necessary a<ljust· ments" for integrated gym classes, HEW said, they "must insure thnt physical education classes and nctivities which 1:1re separate are comparable for members of each sex." · . The rules do not, however, re· qui1:e that equal amounts of money be spent on girls' and boys' athletic programs. . Al the sa_me time, HEW said · classes on human sexuality could be segregated along with social fraternlties und sororities, hous- ing, locker rooms, toilets and showers. But. it declined to tackle the lssue of sex stereotyping in tcx· tbooks. "Equal education opj)Ortumty °for women is the Jaw of the land, and it will be enforced," Wein- berger said, adding he wan~ed to implement Title IX qu1c~ly "rather than undergo the seru~s of futile confrontations and end· less law suits." Acknowledging the law was Irv ine .Has Land Tour For Board ByDOUGLASFRrrz.5CHE Of 111<1 D•lly Pll_. Staff The Irvine Company opened its campaign to get approval for de- velopment of its 10,000 coastal acr es Monday with an all-day presentation and tour of the area for. county planning com· missioners. The ijlanning commission is the firs( major hurdle that must be cleared in a series of ap· provals needed before the com- pany can d~velop the land in the unincorporated area between Irvine, Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The company hopes to get ap- proval for land ~se plan cb~~es from the planning comllUSs1on late this summer, prior to a coun- ty general pl.an amendment to be considered by county supervisors in ~ovember. Before taking plans lo the plan- ning commission, company plan- ner Larry Moore told the group, another round of presentations will be made to city councils of Irvine, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The company also plans a pre- sentation ol a "refined plan" later this month to the members of 22 private and public organlza· tions who make up TICMAP, an acronym for the Irvine Company Multi-Agency Plaoning Pro- gram. The TICMAP members worked with company planners through a year of land use plan- ning for what has been called the Irvine Company's most valuable parcel or land. Little has c hanged in the plans , first unveiled by the company last October. A Do,rsLife · Cher~ Rupp of Middleton. Ohio: had the ideal pl~ce ~or keepmg her 2-ycar-old ~on , Brandy, ~u~ o.f '!11sch1cf \\ hilc s he groomed her entry for the M1:>s.1ss1pp1 ~alley Kenne l Club Dog Show <.1t \\'ushmgton Gmvers1ty in St. Loui s. Doctors in Three States SlQw Down By The Associated Press However, final plans will call for development of a maximum of 40 percent of the area, with the remainder to slay as open space, Moores aid. Additionally, population pro· jections in the refined plan a{e from 30,000 to 50,000 residents, down from a projection of 80,000 when plans for the area were firs t considered. "We 've got to quit doing plans," Moore quipped. "If we don't, the population is going down to zero.'' The large amount of open space, 1 ,345 acres of whlch is de- signated as a slate park, poses problems of its own. ··The Irvine Company is not in the open space maintenance business," said Moore, "so some public agency or combination of public agencies will have to ac- quire and maintain it." Within a month, said Moore, a special committee designed to resolve ,the question of open s pa.ce maintenance and ownership will begin meeting. "indeed far reachtng ln its sweep" and was impossible lo draft in a way •'1.bat 'Will pleue all or the people all of the time," Weinberger nonet..heless noted the rules were modified significantly from a previous draft. For example, the provision al- lowing separate teams in contact sports was new. ''Tbisisnol~requiremenl,nor1s ita suggestion that colleges can re· fuse to offer football, basketball or other contacts ports to members ~f each sex separately 1f tbere is eooughctudent in terestto warrant it, "Weinbergersaid. . "ln all, I think this regulation enhunceJi opportunity tor women in athletics, but lt will also allow schools the flextbiUty they need to keep competitive sports alive and well." He specifically mcnti6ned ten· ni~ track swimming und golf as s~rts wh'ich must be integrated because they do not involve bodi- ly contact. , ·Ford's Cane Doctor Cites Bad Knee JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI ) -A p~ysici~n who operated on President Ford's "football kne~ , which m~y have contributed to hidallinSalmurg, Austria Sunday. said today he gave Ford a cane in 1972. . Ford was a patient of Dr. John LoveJOY Jr. when Love- joy was a Navy lieuten ant commander al Bethesda, Mel., Naval Hospital in 1971-72 and Ford was a congressman. "The Preside nt had done exercises followin~ th~ sur· gery which gave him excellent motion and function 1~ the knee but the degree of changes present may have contc1but· ed to the fall," Lovejoy said. . "I took out the cartilage but there was still a lot of damage that couldn't be corrected." The Jacksonville physician said he gave Ford. a red, white and blue walking cane, which Ford used dunng the 1972 Republican convention. Voit Workers End Strike; 50 Lose Jobs Striking rubber workers re- versed an earlier decision on a wage offer by AMF Voit manage- ment Monday voling 182 to 162 to return to their jobs al the sport- ing goods firm in Santa Ana. But about 50 strikers will not have jobs to return lo, according to AMF Voit Vice President William Estres. During t he courseortbe strike, he said, about 50 ·replacements were hired and they will be kept on. •'These are not strikebrea)cers," he said. "They are people who were genuinely. interested in jobs." Those employes who were replaced during the strike, he said. will be put on a "preferen- tial rehire list" and be put. back to work as jobs open up. Terms of the agreement vary, depending on the classification of the employe, said ~tres, who declined to estimate a percen· tage on the wage boost. The strike began March 28 and involved about 600 members of the United Rubber Workers local 639. Movie Theater Burglarized Someone who sneaked into a Costa Mesa t heat er currently running "The Prisoner of Second Avenue" may become a prisoner of 99 Fair Ori ve, if police catch him. Cassius Jay Hart, manager of the Edwards Cinema, 2300 Harbor Blvd., called Monday to report an $85 burglary in which S60 in s mall change and a desk calculator were taken. Investigators said the intruder climbed to the roof of the movie house and found an unlocked trap door through which he entered the darkened premises. f'romPa~Al TRIP. • • descended the Air Force One ramp s lowly, following Mr.:i . Ford a nd holding tight lo the han- drail while U.S. Ambassador J ohn Volpe waited to escort them on the drive into Rome. On the flight from Salzburg, Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss· inger told reporters Ford's Euro· pean trip yielded 1ich foreign · policy dividends. •·u was an extremely s uc· cessful trip," Kissinger said. "II gave new sense. vitality ~nd direction to NATO. Uncertamt~ has been eliminated. ..The talks with Sadat were a new slep toward peace." f'rott1.Page Al NELSON .•• Nelson sons joined the show. The television s how went off the air in 1966. "It was getting pretty diffused because of the way the family had grown," Oz· zje said. . -·"We had Ricky' and Kris (his wife) going in one direction, David and J une in another, and then there was J{arriet and me, the other posse. It was getting hard to hoid everything together. Rick, now 35, went into singing and continued acting while David, now 39, became a television director. After t heir series ended, the · Nelson parents acted in such plays as "Marriage-Go-Round" and "The Impossible Years." They returned to television \n 1972 with a syndicated show, "Ozzie's Girls." Oswald Nelson was born ln Jersey City, N.J ., on March 20, 1906. Both his parents wete musical, and Ozzie appeared in amateur theatrical productio9s when he was 5. Al ra he was the young~t Eagle Scout in America and represented the United Slates at the first Boy Scout Jamboree 'n London. · Protesting the soaring cost of malpractice insuran ce pre- miums, doctors in three states continued s lowdo wns todii y. Phys icians in California ended a month of protest , but the threat of further action r e maine d. (Story, Page AS.) t>meri~ency s urgery, and col- le<agucs in Beaumont and El Paso have threatened similar ac· t10n. Jn Pennsylvania, the Bucks County medical association, bar i.ISSociation and hospital ad- minastralors urged their stale or- ~a n 1 za ti ons to "act on the mcdieal crisis in the state before 1t reaches emergency propor- tions." KNOW THE COST .. •• ' --.n<-d thr f'i.f•,,,., r•, •\ out11 tv d bY t"-o .. t)f\~ Slowdowns by. phy:;icians were under way in New York, Texas and Pennsylva ni a. and ad- ministrators of affected hosp1tc.ils said the loss of incotnc from pa- tients could quickly put them m an economic pinch. DON'T BUY C A R PET ING WI THOUT GETTING A COMPLETE PRICE BEFOREHAND. A PRICE PER YARD IS IN A DEQUATE. B E CA USE T HE YA RDAGE CAN BE MISFIGURED OR ERRONEOUS. , ( ,.,~ l t•uol "'" ' (. "'lhlny \.I c.. ., ·•h ('d1f1rm-... ,._. puhh..nt<I Mr·'td ty lh.t 6UO" • ,,,..y fur C,,.l• Ntl ..... ,..., WC ,, • ' ''"· Hunt.~''"'' l••tJj ,, , O\.lt'I• t.111'\ \I.1th 't' lr.,1ru. ~-tddltttNc• V11ll•y ttnd I ,,1,11n..t hr •< h ~uU• C.cht\t A ''noif' ff"Q•Of\.•f f-f'J1hM'\ I WJh'• h• d \•'"'"''" t I~ &;unfJIJY\ '""' P'H" 1p.1I f'lllf I t •nu ul tnl ' .,, Jo0 W\ \I Udy 5.,,,.. I U1 '"' M1 1 Cceli,orn"• •fltJi. Robert N. WP<'d f>rfl\•dfln• 1tnd Pu~••Nr J<1c.k R. Curley V1<C: Pr1•'\1<hf"I ttn<I (,,1·t'lr1.il /IN""'O"'f ThOma\ Kecvll E1111cir Thomas A M urphtne M •,.,..,~·no t d dur Charif''> H LOO!> Rte hard P. Nall A Ht ••• nt M.1tn•1o1 "" lOitOf) • Offices t n· t 1 '9' \ J W• q ,.o \tr'# t t•"""' "' r n J t ... #f"ll'°I tl04.I ,..,.,.,.d L"'QVI\"" t~ •CI\ 1 lf"i (,._.,.,,,...,,,. \UHi H""t•"Oton tir r. I 11 J.411,., f"I Uioulf'••• d ~""~""'~ V•llry 1HOI U P•t Ao.eel ,., .,.,. 0 • .-00' ,.,.._., Telepttone 014) .. 2-4J21 CIHttfiH Adver1ttJft9 M1·S611 ~~-· v .... , -011 •.• 511 ·'310 , ..... ~a.-• 49t-0430 hem -UI °'!"" c;,o-ty ~tie\ M0•1?10 In the melropohtan New York area, a work slowdown by doc- tors brought the cancclation of some elective s urgery and a drop in the incoming patient load at a number ofprivate hospitals. Hospital authorities described the itnpact of the doctors' aclion a s mix,ed n nd s potty. Some private hospitals were planning layoffs because of reduce d o~atiQg schedules. Muni c ipall y ope rated hospitals, whi c h pay the malpractice insurance pre- miums of their doctors, a ppeared to be unaffected, other than ex· perienceing a sharp increase in the number of a dmittances. The N~w York physicians are ~eklng r evisions lll a plan ap- proved by the state legislature to hold down the cost of maJprac· lice insurance. It calls for setting up an in- surance pool to provide coverage and shortens the tlme limit wilhm wblch malpractice suits can be filed. In Texu, ancstbcllologista in San Anton\o, Austin and Fort Wol"\h .•re llmtunr thelr work to If You Can't Trust.Yow Own Family. • • JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - A defeated write-in candidate (or mayor has asked election of· ficials to help him find out if his relatives lied to him. Mack M. Murray receivedonJy 84 votes last week when Mayor Hans Tanzler was re-elected with about 52,000 votes and Don Tred·· nick collected a bout 36,000. Murray filed a petition Monday contendtng the returns from· Precinct 14G were fraudulent and asking a recheck of all pre· CU1ClS. He said 13 members or bis im· mcdiatt> family live in Precinct J4G. mcludlng himself and his wife, and all s3id they voted for ham. Certified rcturnR ~how Murray rc<'t?lvcd three votes 1n that pre· dnct. ' WE HAVE TALKED TO PE;OPLE RECENTLY WHO BOUGHT CARPETING FROM A STORE WH ICH DID NOT PRE-MEASURE HOUSES. THE INSTALLERS WERE ASSIGNED rHE JOB OF FIGURIN G YARDA GE A ND TO TA L COST. U NTI L THE CARPETIN.G WAS CUT UP AND INSTALLED . THE CUSTOMER WAS-IN T H E DARK. THEN ti; WAS TOO LATE! •• AT A LDEN 'S WE MEASURE YOUR HOUSE AND GIVE YOU AN EXACT COST BEFORE WE WRITE UP A CONTRACT A ND INSTALL THE JOB. DON'T BUY IN THE DA RK! DEN'S : iiisiaJl~tian: ·custom draperies *•••• •• ca,rpe UC. Nu. 230422 1663 PLACENTIA AVE~UE • COSTA M~SA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646-.'838 -646 2355 I ll '" ,j I I .. Ill .,., ,, I <C , .,, "" II,., II') , .. ,,, ·~' Q £1£ Yf@lYJ.IE ®@[(WO©® The column appears dally except Saturday, and Monda)'I. iut a probl<tm '! Tl1cn wnte Pat Dunn. Pot will c11t rPd tape, g.it tl1t1 unswers arid ac- t 11111 you need to s(llt•e inequities in ~o vernment and busrn ess. Ma1l 1/'Jtlr qucstio11s to P a t D u r111 'A I ' You r Serv i ce. 0 ran ge Coast Daily Vilol. P.O. lJor 1560. Costa f Mesa. CA 92626. · I nclude telephohe numbe r. •Spaee Dollar DEAR PAT: I ordered and .~aid for a $3.50 Gold Apollo Space Dollar in February. U.S. Coin Co. o0f Charlotte, N .C. keeps telling . m~ a backlog of orders will delay shipment. 1 would appreciateim· mediate delivery or a refund. I'd : also like to knctt.r if this coin is legal tender. I.J., Newport Beach Your coin now bas been malled to you. Kathy Milnls, legal c ounsel to the U.S. Secret Service, reports that the coin ls a U.S. dollar coin that bas been electropla ted with gold and restamped. It is legal tender and worth $1. The . Space Dollar is legal because it has not been 'mutilated with Intent lo defraud. Old Dr11'er DEAR P AT: My ch ildren purchased a Re min'gton hair dryer for me last Christmas at a Thrifty drugstore. It's been a big. headache . The motor stopped working after j ust a few weeks. The service d ir ectory listed H &' H Service Center in Tustin as a repair source. I took t he dryer · there only to fi nd the store had moved to Santa Ana. I learned that the dryer was 1973 stock. After le aving it a week for r e- pairs, the motor went out again the first t ime I used it. Again I d rove to Santa Ana. A new motor had to be ordered and I was told to wait a week. I called and learned that the dryer had been returned to Remington. It's been a nother two weeks now and I still don't have my hair dryer. K.C., Laguna Niguel H & H a ccepted your hair dryer even though you bad no sales s lip and the warranty time had passed for this particular model. ll now has been re paired and has been ready for you to pick up for three weeks. H & H tore down its Tustin store more than two years ago, so you can see that the dryer was old stock. This ls often the case with sm~ll appliances sold al discount slores. Feu,, Sources? . l DEAR PAT: I paid for a ).'.~ar's subscriptfon to "SoTirce BOOR"· last J a n ua ry. T his mo11t h1y publication for interior designers lists whe re var ious decorator items m a y be purchased. I've made severa l p hone calls to Pasadena and have written three letters. So far, all I've received is the January issue. J .S., Costa Mesa This publication bas been in the process of being sold since F e bruary , a ccording to a spokesm an for the editor, Rex R. Goode. Two directories wUI be available this year, including the one you received and another to be publis hed in July. Regular publication Is planned to be re- sumed, but It may be cut back to five issues pe r year. .rrogra• Tra ... cript DEAR PAT: Channel 2 recent · 1y presented a rer un of an earli er program t hat featured Sandy Hill interviewing Dr . Charles 1Stone, a psyc h iatrist , and a : woul d-be transsexual. Is it possi- 1 ble to obtain a copy of Lhis pro- 1grams transcript? , J .B., Irvine 1 Yes, but it must be requested ,in writing. Send yom leUer to .KNXT Ne wa De partment, 6121 1 W. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 190028. I 1Dri.,eaea11 Craelu I DEAR PAT: We bought a new Pacesetter hom e in the Irvine :Ra nch tract in 1971. When we moved in we were told Lhat the cracked driveway slab was due tto settling. T hese cr acks now 1have becom e la rger and wider. 'One side is about one inch higher tthan the other a nd this poses a •safety hazard. A lot of other 'home owners have had their dr i veways r e pa ired by the 'builder. Can you find out what 1our chances arc of getting re· ;p~irs at this time? P.0 ., lrvine 1 Pacesetter's customer service •manager , Diane Honman, said 'your problem will be evaluated 1aad a representative will inspect 1your driveway to determine :wbdber or not the builder wUl ,snake r e paln. Before this is ,ctoae,/oa must provide a written arecor of the problem for record ,keeplnl purposes. AddJUB your ,letter to Hortman al Pacnetter , 1Box P, Newport Beacla, CA 9*0. 1Sbe added that due to new oc· 1cupancle1 at lbl1 Ume, the In· 11pec:tor may not" able to attend. alo your complaiat for several IWffk". --.. ' ' . .. Tuesday.June 3. 1975 DAILY PILOT .43 Biig~t To File, Snit . Seeks Coastal Post Dr. Don ald Bri ght, fir ed . Because· of the similarities, chairm a n of the South Coast Bright said be believes the three Regional Zone Conservation new lawsuits will be upheld. Commission , told commissioners The state attorney general's of· Monday he is filing a lawsuit and :lice ha s disputed the Mendocino expects to be reinstated to his derision, however , and has filed former position. · an appeal with t he state Supreme Bright s a id t hat Don a ld Court. P killips who was also fired by In ruling to reinstate Mayfield, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. two Judge Wetter said that members months ag?• p la ns to file a ,.. of the regional com mission were separat~ wr1~ of mandate, also appointfd for t he life of the com- requeshng reinst atement. miss ion -until Jan. 1, 197T. He ~long with that announcement , ruled that Governor Brown bad Bright warned commissioners no a uthority to remove and that decisions made ~ince be and replace commissioners. P hillips were r e moved and Governor Brown repl aced replaced. may prove to be illegal. Bright, Cal State Fullerton pro- Laws u1ts are anticipated from fessor, and Phillips, a Long Bea ch: thre~ ousted commissioners, in-city co uncilman, with David eluding a San Diego regional Commons and Fra n Casado. ·commissioner who was also re-Bright asked commissioners to moved by Go.v. Brown. . . hold off hea ring further permit The lawsuits are the direct re· applications because such de- suJt or a rul~ng m ade last mo~th cisions might be ruled illegal by Mendocino County Supenor later if his s uit is upheld. PLANS LAWSUIT Ousted Commissioner Bright Co~rt J udge Curtis Wetter, who 1 ·However, Deputy Attorney r e rn s tated J ohn Mayfield, a General A. R. Block told com- ·northern coastal com'missioner mission er s h e believes the also fired bv Governor Brown. replacements are legal and the commission the n went a head Seeurity Nightmare with the day's agenda._ According to the time table used in the Mendicino case, it may take only five days for a de· cision to be reached on bis writ, Bright said. He added that bis at- torney plans to file t he suit Floating Parking Lot Burnii:ig Up Secret Papers a Problem Wednesday. . Commissioners, who were ex· peeled to elect a new chairman Monday, postponed the election until next Monday. The flight deck of the aircraft carrier Ranger looks like a . parking lot as she heads toward t he Golden Gate Br idge en route to San Diego, her new home port. Vehicles on deck belong to members of the crew, who also loaded cats , fi sh, clothing and furniture aboard. 'Public Enema' FT. MEADE , Md . (AP) -The National Security Agency (NSA> is having trouble disposing or its secrets. Two years ago. NSA -the na- tion's electronic interception and code-breaking agency-installed a $1.2 million Cla ssified Waste Destructor to convert 20 tOns of. ~ secret material daily jnto gases and liquid that could be piped off. In adc:J ition, work is almost finished on a $1.8-million pneumatic tube system that will suck the · daily accumulation of cl ass ified t ras h from NSA 's headquarter s comple x to t he Class ified Wa ste Dest ructor across the s treet. But there's a problem. The Classified Wa s te Destructor doesn't work. On more.than one occasion, re- portedly, j'ackhammers have been needed to brctak up _a ro_ck- Jike residue that ac~ in . Lhe destr uctor. . And, des pite temperatures as high as 3,400 degrees Fa hrenheit, on at least one occasion some un - cooke d classified materia ls spewed unscathed from the Classified Waste Destructor's ex· hausl stack. NSA employes we re quickly detailed to poli ce the grounds and r e cove r t he materia l. The government , which h~s Two weeks ago the commission could not decide between elect- ing actin g chairman Russ Rubley and Robert Rooney. However , R ooney later withdrew his name from consideration. lllirwi.s S~pect Captured paid all but $70,ooO of the $1.2 million purchase price for the Clas sified Waste Destructor, wants its mon ey back fro m Proce.ss Plants Corp. of College Point; N . Y . the company that built the de structor. Norman Block, a Proce ss P lants director, CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) -A Manhattan, Kan., over the last 10 says litigation is likely. A S h Chicago-area man has been years, police said. ·The company s ays that the UtO .ID88 Up cbarge<t in the so-called "enema One detective close to the in· Army Corps of E ngineers, which bandit" case. vestigation said he had '·no doubt was responsible for construction Mich ael Ke n y on , 30, or whatsoever" that the bandit was of the des tructor , failed to ma ke Takes 4 lives Palatine surrendered Monday to thesamein each instance. sure that engineering 'specifica-DuPage County authorities west No enemas were administered tions were followed throughout DESERT SHORES (AP) _ of Chica go in connection with two in the Glen Ellyn robberies, but. construction. · · robberies in suburban Glen El· detectives ale rted Champa ign The Corps of Engineers says Four people were killed in a two-Jyn, officials said. police tha t the assailant used tac-car collis ion on state Highway 86 t ' · · 1 t t h f th that. despite numerous adjust-But Cha mpaign police officials ics s imi ar 0 ose 0 · e ments by the manufacturer , "the ~!ref. the Salton Sea, authorities issued t wo a rrest warrants on "enema bandit." destructor has never operated at Monday for Kenyon on charges of Ch a mpa ign officials ques· T he victims were identified t ' d K t h k · d its design capa city of s ix tons per armed robbery and battery in 10ne enyon over e wee en · hour nor has it operated con-Monday as Jerry Murphy, 36• and conne ction with a ttacks on He was una ble to post $10,000 t inuously for an extended period Ronald Arth ur Singleton, 46• both several Universit y of Illinois bond in DuPage County and was of Anaheim. Also killed were J ohn be' h Id · · ·1 I ff .. 1 oftime.,, coeds on May 3. P olice said the mg e m Ja1 l 1ere, o ic1a s Perez Colegio, 19, of Oasis and ·d Through last December, when robber administered en. emas to sai · Robert Henry J a nkla, 22, address So 1 t lh · t ' t he goverment c anceled its cori· the women before taking their urces c ose o e mves 1ga - tract for t he de structor, the unknown. • monev. lion said Kenyon joined the U.S. The accident occured over the J A ft · · h. d Corps of Engineers says "The The incidents near the Illinois rmy a er receiving is egrec equipment only o perated a total ~:=~e~~~n ~hi~:sdg:o~t\!1eo~a1~~~ campus were s imilar to ones in in accounting and was stationed of 51 days during the 17-month Riverside County line. the Ch a mpa ign-Urbana area, nearby when such robberies oc· period after construction com-Los Angeles, Norman, Okla., and . curred in Los Angeles, Maphat- pl e tion a nd e a ch operating .~~-:;::::=:=:=:=:=::=:=:==::::=:==:=:======================ta=n=·=K=a=n=·=·a=n=d==N=o=r=m=a~n~·-O~k~la~-~­pe rio d e nde d in m echn ical <I failure:· Meanwhile , NSA has been shi p· ping some of its classified tras h t o near b.y 1.. .HQlabird fo r storag~ -6,000 tons in all so far. Mesa Yout~ Guilty . In Shooting Case A youth who held Costa Mesa police at bay fo r nine hours after wounding his girl friend a nd holdin g her father hostage in her. horpe pleaded guilty Monday to reduced charges shortly before he was to face t rial in Orange County Supe rior Court. · Judge E ver ett W. Dickey set June 26 as the date he will sen· tence Roger Leig h Price, 18, of 2009 Charle St. The defendant pleaded guilty to charges or as- sault with a deadly weapon and possession of a firearm. Price faces a possible state prison ter m or not less than fi ve. years. Ch a r ges of burglary, armed robbery ~nd assault were dismissed. · All 'Tired' Out Price a nd a j uvenile male com· pani on surrendered to besieging police Feb. 5 after a nine-hour standoff in which Raymond M. Coppinger told officers he was held prisoner in bis home al 2920 . J acaranda St. Co ppinger 's d aughter, Beth, 15, and. her mother had ear lier fled fro m the home after the girl was shot in the wrist shortly after · Price and his companion entered the premises. Price told police and news men during the long s iege that he was not prepared to surrender until he had a promise from the city th a t mo re e nte rta inmen t facihties would be provided for juveniles living in the area. Th.is entertprising young man lets the scenic a nd r oaring J...ittM!"River ne ar Cude's Cove, Tenn., do his paddling work as he rides an old truck lire inner tube on a sunny , pleasan\ aJ\ernoon ln the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. • Every morning, daily interest is adqed to every Los Angeles Federal Savings Account. Passbook Savings -Certificates of Deposit- Investment Certificates All at highest rates L LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS Savings in sured to $40,000 Sate deposit box es and the most wanted savings services Newport Beach Office 3201 Newport Blvd. • 675-4500 (Across from City .Hall) Head Office Downtown : One Wilshire, Los Ang el es 90017 other offices throughout the area • • . UAll.T t"llU I '·· ~. ~ Israel P . Bilek jlt Peninsula .-. ?-. ~ But No Eg ypt Reciprocation wlf • T._ ~ ·R ecords To B e Broke n =· • : THE N EWSKAKEltS: There is something a bout um time of year that brings' out the record breakers 10 everything from "ping.pong to unde rwater brealh- , holding. I have my o~'D pet theory ~ onrtlis. Record breakers. you see, always tum out during the dog days just before school closes or at the other end of lhe s ummer. just before classes commence again. People are r estless. They start scanning the Guinness Book of Records for something to break. Sometimes they try to break themsel ,·ses. Over the past few days. for ex- a mple. two students named Eric t Eric Mano and Eric Larre} of . the liCI tennis team launched an effort to break the world's record for battering a ball back and forth across the net. TEL AVIV lUPI) -Israel bas ordered a pullback of troops, 'lank$, and arttllery in the Sinai peninsula to ease Middle Ea.st tension and sm ooth Egypt's re- opening or the-Suez Canal. Egypt's president Anwar Sadat said the gesture was a step in the right dire ction but not enough lo convince Egypt to al- low Israeli cargo through tbe- canal as Is rael bad hoped. P&IME MINISTER Yitzhak Rabin announced the withdrawal of baU the Is raeli front hne troops and supporting hardware Monday and said he hoped it will be completed by Thursday. the day Egypt ls scheduled to reopen the Sun Canal. closed in the 1967· Middle East war. Babin said be hoped F.cYJ1t wiU reciprocat.e by allowing Israeli· bound cargo through the canal. Sadat, however. said in an iJl. terview w ith the American Broadcasting Company in Salzburg. Austria that the pullback w~ot su({icient .. to let Israeli catio through the canal. • But be left the door open by saying, "If the ·conduct of Israel is continuing lo be like il started today. there will be no problem in this. The cargo problem is not a problem at all for me ... &ABIN SAID Israel i's pulling back' hall its 1.000 soldiers clo&est to the canal. all 36 cannoos, half ot th& 30 tank.a and all mlsailes except antitank missiles. "Israel hopes the results will convince Egypt that Israel really wants and intends peace in the area and hopes to advance toward it on a general basis or by interim agreement," he said. The pullback area, stretching from 13 to 25 miles east of the canal, is already lightly defended as a result of the thinning-of-. forces agreement signed by Israel and Egypt in January of }g7(. Rabin said the withdrawal was· "intended to contribute lo the easing or military tension in the Middle East," but added. "this step must not take the place of· ·political endeavors towards a s olution between Israel and Egypt." RESER VE M AJ. Gen. Chaim Herzog, former head of military intellige nce and a Jeading military commentator, said he· did not think the move bad military s ignificance. "Israel's military posture in the area is not predicated on the forces held in the front line under the disengagement agreement but on something far more sub- stantial, in the r earward areas where forces may be kept," be said. SUIZ CANAL EGYPT .... -. • t ' ".J ~ • • ' • • • SIN A I • • . • • ' ' ' • ' • • • • • • ~ • ' . . : : ~ : C:':'!")"~ I / 0 : 20 , ------,, M ILES Ul"IT• ....... ISRAEL TO CUT TROOPS ON SINAI FRONT LINE ~REAS Goodwill Gesture Coincides With Reopening of .Suez )!ASS ASD LARR.I:: ac- complished this feat up on lhe Jasmine Cree k courts in J';ewport Beach io punishing each other 10 1,325 games played O\'er 80 hours and five minutes. This eclipsed the old marathon mark of 73 hours and 25 minutes set up 10 Bakersfield. Prot~ster Files Kep- Meanwhile, out in Trabuco Ca- nyon at a wonderspot called Escape Country, a chap na med Kenny Wa rd claimed the world motorcycle jumping record of 252 feet when he l a unche d himself with a ha ng-glider at tached above h is two-wheeled machine. Updated Information Still at Pemagon? EVEN THOUGH WARD was 34 feel short of the rocket cycle jump of one Evel Knievel, the Escape Coun try aerobat is claiming the world mark. Maybe that's because Evel used a rocket. Mo matter . It is unlikely that Knievel will ever launch himself over the Sna ke River Ca- n yon agam. Alas for the rest of us. if we should develop a sudden craving for setting a world record, we must set our sights on something short of Oying a motorcycle. Do not desp air, however. There are numerous world's recor'ds you can shoot for rii;(ht. h e re along o u r very own coastline. F or example: -LONG EST ELAPSED time ~rossing Newport Bay Bridge on Coast Highway by automobile in July. Current. record : one hour, 43 minutes, 21 seconds. -Most continuous days spent • l'hewing bubblegum in downtown · Fountain Valley without break- ing the anti-noise law. Present ::.tandard : 1.25days . -The beachgoer arrested on : • the most number of consecutive days for nude sunbathing oh the Laguna Beach s horchne. No re· cord yet est a blishcd. -FI RST MOTORIST to find a parking place on Balboa Island · during the Sum mer of '75. -Greatest a mount of time spent s itting in a Costa Mesa left turn pocket waiting for the green arrow to come on. Present record of three d ays held by the late Gerald Z. Glitch , who died when· he starved lo death in the turn ·•pocket. Ul"1Te ........ • WASHINGTON (AP) - Surveillance files on thousands of antiwar protes ters have been up- dated by the Pentagon and dis· tributed to several government intelligence agencies despite of· ficial assurances four years ago lhe records would be destroyed. NBC Ne ws says. RESCUERS PULL D. R. REDMAN ABOARD PLATFORM. The fil es were compiled by 1,500 field agents under the Defense Department in response to the late President Lyndon B. Johnson's directive lo find who was behind antiwar protests in the late 1960s, NBC correspon· dent Ford Rowan reported Mon· day night. Crewman Spent 29 Hours and 45 Minutes Trapped in Rig 26 Hours of Borror Oil Rig 1(rap Recalled GALLIANO, La. (AP) -For 26 hours67oe Bellard per-ched desperately on a valve hanOTl! to keep has head inside a bubble of life-saving air. He was trapped 50 feet underwater in an upside-down offshore oil rig. One minute he was asleep in his bunk in the air- condittoned crew's quarters atop the mammoth $5 million oil well workovcr ri g. Progress Marine I\o. 2, which was being to\J.cd slowly across a placid sea. T HEN, SUDDENLY, T HE fou r men were scrambling in water and pitch-dark confusion, their air pocket fouled "ith s pilled diesl't oil and made hideous with the sound of the rig's stress and strain. "1 was just a bout gone when J saw a light," said Bellard. ''Then the diver came through. I thought, "Hallelujah'!" Five men were rescued from the overturned hulk and a company spokesman said seven divers walkedi''ever y inch" of the sunken hulk early today looking for one man stall missing. The Coast Guard also put up a helicopter at first light today to scan the sea around the sunken oil rig, having det<:rmined the missing man was not aboard il. The rig flipped in a slow, almost majestic, turnover Sunday afternoon ·in 60 feet of water 18 miles off the Louis iana coast . SIX OF THE 12 MEN ABOARD the rig jumped clear and were quickly picked up by the tugboat which had been towing the rig. Bellard, 43, or Opelousas, La., and DerreJ John Dore, 27, of Delcambre, La., were the first two rescued Monday. After s tints in a divers• decom- pression chamber , they were brought to a hos.pita! here for observation. . The other three, rescued later in the day and placed aboard a Coast Guard boat, were sent to the same hospital today. Don Ludvich of Lafayette. La., training director for Progress Marine Inc .• said divers also would try to complete a dam age estimate today to determine whether the huge jfil:kup drilling rig can ·be salvaged. THE RIG'S BOTTOM shows above the waves. Her four jackup legs, each 120 feet long, were driven deep into the soft seabottom mud and the helicopter landing pad, normally at the top of the three-story s upers tructure at the stern, was instead just a few feet above the seaweed. =w· d R . Hi Pl . Cuba Returns ~ ID . S, ams t ams 3 Suspected Mobile Ho111'3s Damaged in 98 MPH Gust,s Jet Hijackers Te.peraf. ures -'11.anta 8.t~1tnlleld 8o•W' 8o\IOtt (.Mrtotlfl °''~"QO ~"·' 0.n¥tr O.tr0<t .. 1 .... Honolulu Ind•.,.., POio\ K.-iw\ C11y U\V~\ Memphl\ M IM'nl MlntlHCIC)tl\ NoiwO<lf'•"' ..... "°'~ h im \orllWJ\ Jlhol-lpfu• ~· "'"'ouroh Pof11-.0r-Aeno AorllmOnd Ve, ~.-cr•....,nto Cjf Ulul\ 5"911 Ut•t City ~n O..vo SM>Ft-1\<0 W.WnttOll Hl91\ 8) 84 8, H' "' "' 8/ f ~ II/) 114 bY 16 10, ,. H ,. ti ., 101 ,, Hit 11 '• 13 to •• ,. " .. ,. •1 Lew S'I S6 S1 01 0 SI 0 SI 47 SJ 12 S1 H IS M 61 SI .. .3S I ·°' ·" .'4 .en 67 A2 71 ., 10 SI 1' .n .Ot 4 1 .. , S4 .., S4 '° Sl ... • 11 CaHfor•f• NloM end N rlr mot11lno 1o0 """ ... cl-dt 1t110 .. d lltt SoutMrn c..111or11I• (OUI , • ., .... '"''••It"! --nl .,., n'lldmornlno ones IN¥tftC1 "'"" 9"1eralty clear !Wt h•ty -. .,.,,. __ " ..-tdl<t•d le><~ dOy wllll te"'peroturn rtmalnl"9 4IOOllf IN .. me. i •-• -7S n~lndqultkly. l lle Wichita 5torm was part of .1 tMlnd Of hHvy -.llh•r lhAt 0.Ve'-d In <9t'llrtl end eHl•rn NebrHlul •I mioo.y Moftday alld roll•d M>Ulh and M1llhr0<19hl(•n•H•ndMlnourl. Basellletl-slre h•ll poundl!d •rtM ,..., Aft!ew. N•b., and northHst of Colby, Kan. Llrot h•ll h•m~ • MCtlOfl southust of Hullnos, Nev,. and a tornado dll)p.ld down n0r1'-it ,,. tq,•11"11•· Ml um.gt or lnjwlet _,...,tpOrted tlltre. Hell AMI 111911 winds AIM> battend Contordl•, Kan., aurlno '"-Monday afternoon alld •vtnl"QSIO<ms. W-1 Alvtr, Neb .. WU hit by t°'""' tl•I ••In, nearly 4 lnchu by unotlkl• .-ccounts. Coa•f.al -~ 1t'e af.laer l 1Qhl v•rlebte winds night and mo<nt"9 hours ~om I no wut«iy I to IS kt'IO" HIQhs IOda)' In the 60'L Coestal lt,,...ratvres wlll rMgt tMllwten st enCI 6S. Inland tem --------pereturH wtll ••"9t betw"n Ml ono ,n llle weter temotreture wlll bit~ 11.s.s .... ,.. • S un, Mo..., T ide• WASHINGTON {UPI) -Cuba has begun returning plane hijack suspects to the United States. The State Department , which Monday announced that Uµ·ee American citizens had been re· leased by Cuba to Barbados and .Jnto FBI llands, said it did not know yet whether the retease is a · new signal from the Castro gov- ernment of a thaw in relations. The three were the fint alleged hijacks to be sent home by Cuba since it signed an agreement with the United States more than two years ago either to bold persons who forced airlineri to carry them to asylum in Cuba or return them to the United States to stand trial. Only one other person bad been returned, a former Gl described as "mentally unstable.•• The State Department said it is studying the significance o( the move, coming at a Ume when the United States and other mem- bers of t he Organlzatlon of American States are considering llflin8' dlplomaUc and trade sane· lions imposed on Cuba in le&t. "IN 19'1t, SEN. Sam Ervin ex- posed the extent of Army spying. He got the Pentagon lo promise lo stop its surveillance program and to destroy the files. But four years after the promise to Sam Ervin, the Army's domestic sur- veillance files still exist," Rowan said. "By January of this year, the Army domestic s urveillance files had grown to 600,000 entries on Americans and their protest ac- tivities." "NBC News has learned that a new computer technology de - veloped by the Defense Depart· ment e~abled the Pentagon to copy, distribute and secretly up- date the Army files," Rowan said. "And -our sources say -the Army's information on thousand s of A m erican pro· testers bas been given to the CIA, and some of it is in CIA com- puters now." Rowan said some o f the material also is in FBI and Secret Service files. HE SAID THE network used to distribute the data "links com- puters at the CIA, the Defense In- telligence Agency, the National Security Agency. more than 20 universities and a doze n re- search centers, like the Rand Corp." Army Secretary Howard Callaway said last January some ' BusineSsman Sues Guards ForAssmilt LAS VEGAS. Nev. <UPI> Nathan Kaplan. president of United Rubber Corp., has filed battery charges against hote l security guards on grounds they dragged him out of a buffet room when he refused to put out a cigar as demanded by comedian Bud- dy Hackett, according to police. Kaplan said the guards jerked him out of bi.s seat and dragged him outside. He said the incident occurred after comedian Buddy Hackett yelled a t him to put out bis cigar. The Los Angeles business ex- ecutive said he was smoking in the upstairs buffet at the Sahara Hotel a nd drinking a cup of co(fee when the com edian yelled for him to put out the cigar. Kaplan said Hackett then walked over a nd spilled coffee on him. apologized sarcastically , and then called for t he security guards, police said Monday. D9MyP1totD•ery • lt G..,...t..d Monday--Frlday: lt you do not hllll9 )IOI.If Plil>4I' by 5:30 D m., call befofe 7 p.m. Md )'OIJr copy will be 0. livwed. ~Ind Sunday: If )'OU do not receiw yoor copy by 9 • m. S.Cut- de)'. « 8 1.m. S\incsay, caN before 10 &m. and )'()Ur copy will be OlllV9fed • ) r C.,...._T, .. p.HH Molt Ot•no• County At ... 64J-4Ut Notth...C Huntington Oe.tc:h, 1ndWettmln•l1t •.••...• ,.._Int San Oemente, Capt11r1no e .. ch. Sen Juen Capl•lrano. Dina Point South teouna. Laovn• Nlouel ••......•• ..._..,. 1 intelligence information on thd political activities of American civilians had been found in a microfilm library. He said then he was ordering t he microfilm to be screened for the purpose of re· moving all material on civilians not affiliated with the De!ense Department. 200 Maoists In Portugal March on Jail From Wire Services LISBON -Troops fired intc the air today to disperse about 200 Maoist de m o nstrators marching ori 0Portuga.J,'s biggest prison to demand the release ot t heir leaders. Io another incident police said a hand grenade thrown from a passing car damaged the offices of the ~tional Airlines of Brazil (_1_N_SH_O_R_T ___ : and Canada in downtown Lisbon almost at the same time as the demonstration, but there were no injuries. The demonstrators marched on Caxias prison demanding the release or the leaders of the Maoists, who call themselves the Reorganizing Movement of the Proletariat P arty, arrested in a raid against their headquarters last Thursday. Market l'oi~ LONDON -The battle for Bri· tain's June 5 Common Market r e· ferendum neared its end today amid a crescendo of last-minute appeals to voters and with both sides predicting victory. Opinion polls and Britis h newspapers almost unanimously predicted an overwhelming 'yes• vote, but anti market leaders said the polls were wrong and predict- ed a "no" vote that would take Britain out of the bine·nation European e conomic community. Slaootl•9Ellfls BEIRUT -The street fighting and shooting that t e rrorized Beirut for two weeks died do~ today, and premier-designate R~shid K.araroi reported some progress toward forming a ndW government. Lebanese security officers . cleared the streets of makeshift barricel d es of rubble a nd _automobile tires as the euns, mortars and rockets fell silent. v ..... s..u. WASHINGTON -TJle Supreme Court ruled that unJbn members can sue in federal court to force the Labor Depaft· ment to look into union actlviU~. Now the Department or Labor mny feel obliaed to lnvatJcate more union leadership electlOBs because of the ruHna Monday, an attorney in the case said. TM judges· ruled 8'-1 in thedeclalon~ ,, • ' • I • c ' t ' ' ' Unit Backs Repeal of NOx Bill t SACRAMENTO <UPI) -The • Senate Finance Committee Mon-i day ap.proved a bill to repeal the statewide requirement for the in- : stallation of l!ntismog devices on f _1966-70 .cars u pon c hange-of-t ownership. l The bill by Sen. John Holmdahl ' <D·Castro Valley), was sent to , lhe floor on an 8-4 vote. t It would wipe out the last rem- ' nant of Caltfornia's "NOx" an- j ( ___ s_i_a_t_e_~J I t • c ' t tismog program for used car~. The Legislature earlier this year passed and Gov. Edmund Cf . Brown Jr. s igned into Jaw a measure re pealing the require· ment for fitting 1966·70 cars in the • Los Angeles region with the $35 ' NOx devices on a monthly ' schedule. • • I • I t ' I { SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Hos pital operating rooms in California are getting back to normal with anesthesiologists re-. turning to work after a month long walkout. Medical spokesm en in both Sa n Francisco a nd Los Angeles said· it would be two or three days before full s urgical schedules are unde r way. Patients waiting as long as a month for elective sur- gery finally got into the operating ~·oom Monday. Gold..,ater Fa1'0red SAN FltANCISCO (UPI) The California Poll reported to- day tha t California Republicans c u rrently f avor Barry Goldwater, Jr., a nd Houston Flournoy among potential 1976 candidates for t he U.S. Senate seat now held by Democrat John Tunney. The poll f o und that Congressman Goldwater d rew support from 32 percent while Flournoy, form.er st ate con· troller, was backed by 25 per· cent. Forme r Lt. Gov. Robert Finch and former San Francisco State Presid ent S.I. Hayakawa drew 16 perce nt backing each. McDo.,aU Not Held LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The federal government will not br- ing charges against actor Roddy· McDowall in a crackdown on pirated movies a nd videotapes . FBI agents raided McDowall 's home in December , seizing .50Q films and tapes as part of a na- tionwide move against violations of copyright laws. Movie s tudios and television film makers have complained that unauthorized ~ copying or videotaping of their product~ was cheating them out. of millions of dollars a year. A federal grand jury last week in- dicted 16 persons in the case, but not McOowall. Bandits Kill Man In Store SACRAMENTO (AP) -The cle rk a t an adult bookstore was shot to de- ath Monday by two ban- dits w ho fled before of· Cicers reached the s cene, . police said. , Dead is Marvin Hub- . bard, 35. the coroner's ,, office said. Poli ce Lt. Robbie Waters said two yoWlg men were seen entering the store about 9 a.m. and were sought in con· nection with the killing. THER E WAS NO s ign .of a s truggle. Waters said, and the amount. of mon ey tak en f ro m Goldie's bookstor e on North 12th Street was not immediately known. . , Wa ters s aid that when j,the clerk opened the ,•store the burglar alarm ··ft\'BS sounding. He called • ithe ala r m company to .,.ilum it off. A few minutes later. according to the a larm 'company, the s tore's • 'silent burg lar a larm 11\\•ent oCC . . ~· The compuny called the bookstore but there was no answer. so police were notified. Water said. ,2-ye ar T e rm FRESNO (AP) -A Tulare County man, Pablo Munoz Cardenas ,~ Woodlake, was sen· ·•tenc:ad to two years lm· t>rtsonrnent after plead- , tn1 1ullty lo two count.'I ·-of transporti ng illel(al . aUens lnlo Tulorc and Fresno ~untles In June , ,1'174. I Tunney Opponent UPI TtlettllolO Tom Hayden, 35, anti-war uctivist who gained national attention as a defendant in the Chicago Seven Conspin\cy Trial, announced Monday he will run for the Democratic U.S. Senate n o mination against Sen. John Tunney. Actress Jane Fonda, Hayden's wiJe, accompanied him during a series of news conferences in San Francisco where Hayden lashed out at "Tunney a s a "packaged politician" with more ··image than substance." ~ A Dirty .'~rick ~ Cramp( ed) Prisoner Nabbed· ~ . },p k_ ~AN DIEGO (A P ) -William Ge1:a~d Cramp ga_ve up .his. ~ third attempt a t escape from county Jail out of consideration ,~ for a s heriff's de puty's clothes. i+ San Diego County Sheriff's officers s aid Cramp tried lo escape Monday by climbin g up through an access hatch in ~ . the ceiling of the prisoners' holding area to a crawl s pace behind the courtroom of Superior Court Judge Douglas R. Wood worth. Cr amp remained hidden in the crawl space for l1h hours while deputies searched the building for him and blocked off · all exits. Finally. De puty Charles Hahn noticed that t he access hatch to the C'rawls pacc was being he ld in place by shoestr· ings. He climbed a ladder and sta rted lo crawl in through it. As he got about halfway in. witnesses s aid they heard Cramp s ay .. Don't get your clothes dirty. I'm coming out." 2 Health Officers Fired in Shakeup LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two 'County Health officials were fired and three others suspended Mon- day because of reports of neglect · ed patients and-a ppalling condi· tions in nurs ing ho m es. Liston A. Witherill, County Health S ervices Director , a n· nounced the a ction after r cceiv· ing a report last Friday describ· ing "very ba d conditions" in some of the 42 sanitadums in the county. Witherill told Supervisor Bax· ter. Ward that Wa rd's four public hearings o n county nurs ing homes "dis closed· appalling con· ditions, a pparently the result or ineffective inspections and en· forcement." W a r d r·e s po n de d th a t Witherill's disciplinary actions "are s trong ones, but under the c irc um s tances, quite ap- propriate." Demoted from his $48,324 a · year post was Dr. Ralph Sachs, deputy director of community· health services. who was r e- lieved or duty and given a lower salaried position . HOW TO REDUCE YOUR .INCOME TAX LEGALLY! U you are not presently covered by a pension or retirement fund where you work, you can now save up lo l:i0o or your annual earned income (or $1.500. whichcv1!r is less) i11 ,1 Mutual Savings Individual Retirement Acr.ount (IHA). free or Federal incomn lax until you roliro. lntcresl enm1~cl cm your retircmm1t plan is alsu tn"<-deferred . This plan is eusy to understand.docs not require u lot of money, is fully Insured.and r.Rn he adjusted to meet individual needs. You will save moru munoy ... rmm mom interest... take no Msk ... pay · less tax with o Mutual sf.~11gs IRA account. If you ore soU·employod ,ymrnro uligihlc fo'r an HR-10 er.count (Keogh Plan).an~an save up to 15no(orS7.5t~l.whichevcr is loss) frorn your net earnings each year, f ren of Fcdural income tax un til you retim. lnterest f'Rrnoo on thl~ retimment pla11 is also tax -defcmxl. Start your roHrornunt plan today I For full dotnlls.contar.t •lllY Mutual Savin~s office. ~ ~ ' ' ~ ~ ii THE BIG M MUTUAL SAVINGS ~San Clemlnle ~<:am.node Estrella 493·~1 eoror. del M• 2867 Elll COllt H.gllway1675·5010 Fountain Vlley 1794? Milgf'Ol~i Slreel/963·8396 S...AN 7111 & North Main/547·9741 Dad Killed Over Tiireat To Kill Tot LONG BEAC H (AP) -Of- ficers s hot a nd killed a man who threatened to drop his 15-month- old child fro m h is second-story apartment, a uthorities said. A police s pokesman said John J eckel, 28, w as fa.tally shot Mon- day nig ht after officers rtlshed the apartment . The c hild , Mariah. was rescued and r e ported by SL Mary's Hospital officials to have s uffered only minor bruises. Authorities said the incident started when Jeckel's common- la w wife, Maureen Mercer . called the police to r eport she and JeC'kel had quarreled in a bar and that he had rushed away to t heir apartment threatening to h arm the child. Officer Larry Chowen said of- ficers surrounded the apartment a nd a tte mpted to pers uade Jeckel to s urrender. - Tu.dg.June 3. 1975 OAILYPILOT A:j '95 JtJfUion GOP Demands Cut In Brown Budget SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A drive for swUt legislative action on Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.'s first budget has been tripped up by demand s of Assembl y RepubliC'ans for net spending cuts of$95 million. · Outnumbered by morethan2·1 Re public ans blocked passag~ of the Assembly's $11.6 billion vers ion of the budget Monday and demanded De mocrats trim spending in a r ange of programs, including re nter's tax credits and school driver education pro- grams. Republicans also called for a year-long freeze on any cx- panded state hiring. GOP leader Robert Beverly of Manhattan Beach compla ined the budget threaten ed t o put the s tale •·seriously close to a deficit. leave ina dequate reserves to meet unforeseen expenditures and virtually mandate a tax in- crease for 1976· 77. '' Democratic Assembly Speaker Leo 1'. McCarthy 9£ San Frah · cisC'o said the Republicans were mistaken in their dire predic· tions, and he de nounced the GOP blockade a s a last-minute at· tempt at budgetary "sabotag_e." T H E SENATE, meantime, overwhe lmingly a pproved its Sll.5 billion version of the budget. The bipartisan vote was 33·1 Monday with no debate. The budget bill carried by F inance Committee Chairm an Anthony C. Beilenson < D·Los Angeles), now goes to the Assembly. Brown originally submitted an $11.3 billion "no n onsense" budget, to which he made addi- Huey Neldon . ~In Havana' OAKLAND (UPI ) -Fugitive Black Panther party co-founder Huey P. Newton is alive and well in Havana, Cub a, Attorney Ch arles Ga r ry t estified in Superior Court Monday. Garry said he received the in· formation by a phone call from Newton and from information gi\'en him by Angela..Davis. Newt.on has been missing s inC'c Aug. 23 when he forfeited $42,000 in bail by railing to show up in Municipal Court to answer a variety of felony charges against him. lions for a total of $11.4 billion· plus. Fiscal committees in both houses then ~dded other pro- grams. bringing the totals to $11.565 billion in the Senate and $11.649 in the Assembly. . Differences between the two budgets ultimately wiJl be de- cided in a ~o-hour conference committee ~r ior to a fina l legislative vote. The Republican move could thr-0w the Legislature past a June 15 constitutional deadline for passage of the budget. saul Democratic Asselnblyman Jotm Foran of San Francisco. chairman of the Ways and Means Committee and sporu;or of the Assembly budget bill. Foran added. however, he ex- peC'ted passage before July L when the fiscal year budget takt:s effect. Firemen Join In Walkout Over Salaries SANTA BARBARA <UPI) - Striking county firemen ''ex- t remely dissatisfied " with salaries a nd working cond itions left 170.000 r esidents without fire protection for a second d ay today despite warnings that they will be dismissed if they don't return to work. The firemen joined 800 othl·r county employes who strutk Monday for higher wages. Raymond D. Johnson, county administrative offi cer, said the firefighters have Ci ve days to n " turn to work or they would ''very definitely" be fired. He said t hu strike defies a permanent injunc- tion issued last year again st the Sa nt a B arbara Co un·t y Firemen's Union local. Meanwhile, thc-160 striking fire fighters and dis patchers left the county airport and the cam- pus of t h e University of California at Santa Ba rbara· without fil'e protection. United Air lines Mo nday cancelled flights to Santa Barbara Airport at Goleta because crash trucks were unmanned. The striking welfare. hospital. i"tobation, mental health a nd clerical workers remained on strike today des pite a temporary r estraining orde r issued Mond:iy prohibiting striking or picketing by public employcs. B edazzling body chains by Susagano, in a spectacular collection of links. Large · ch:idbclly. 1/20 12K gold-filled. ] 5 II J s 1 1• J 8 II J s 16 1 :j II J s 1 9 Square ·s: 1 /20 12K gold-filled. 15",SlO IS",12.50 2 i",Sl5 nakc chain. 1 /20 l 2K gold-filleJ. 18" length, S~6 And 2-i", 823 Small chaJbclly chain in sterling si lver or 1/20 J 2K gold-fi lkJ. 15",$10 18",12.50 21",SJ:> f ashion Jewelry Bullock's ~outh \~1a't Pina. San Oic1to frccwa}' at Drncol, Cu)ta M~a. H6-061 I J I I • ,\Q DA I LY PIL OT E DIT ORlAL PAGE' ~ig11res Flying .High (t 's getting to be budget time aguin for Orilngc Coun~)'. and the pe1·centage fig·ures are Oying through lhe air. . One that most likely ''ill have to fly a little lo,,·cr is the Orange County En1pJoyes Associati011 opening request for a 16 percent. raise for county ,,·orke.rs earning more than S804 a month and a Oat cash boost of $129 for those maki.J1g less (\\1hich \\'Ould amount to a 2(f percent raise in some cases). The OCEr\ points out }.hat Los Angeles County t:>mployes '''ere given a 12 percent pay raise-just about le,·el \\'ith current inflation rates. This ma)' b4.: \rue enough, but the raise still has to be financed by Oran ge Count)' taxpa,ycrs. many of ,,·horn arc 1\0\\'herc nt•ar keeping abreas t of inflation. · Without the employe raises, the proposed $413 million spending plan for the coming year already is $30 million above the curre nt budget. So even \\'ith another boos t in aswssed valuation, a substantial lax rate increase seems mevitable. County s upervisors are thinking in terms of pay 1n· creases af about 6 percent. This \\•ouldn ~t match the in· flutit>n raLc. but it may have to be closer t o the ultimate figure than the cmployes ,,·ould like . Begin a t Home Orat1gc County supervisors might do ,,·ell to look <..1t their 0\\"11 political liYing h abits as they try to ,,·hit· tle the county's proposed budget dO\\'ll to s ize. For one thing, the s upervisors might give some though t to eliJTl:~n ~ting the $50.000 .. constituent com- munications·· fund they e sti:lblis hed for themselves tast_yl'ar. vress. And \.\'bile the supervisor.) are looking ut their communications slush fund, they might also give so me lhou_ghl to reducing the mselves und county de· parlmenl 6eads t o econoiny c.ars. Except for ;i t'Om.Jm~t used by Supervisor Ralph Diedrich , the s upf;r'visors and department heads tool around tO\\'D in air:ronditioned, leased gas.guzzlers. The heads of county government could help save energy as well as dollars by s tepping down to economy cars as many others are doing these dayS. $350-a-month Clouds? \\1eather got }'OU dowh? Those overcast days giving you the bla h s? \Ve would like to say cheer up, it 's going to get bet- ter. Unfortunate ly, if you hav~ny memory about Southern California coastal \\'ealtier, we are in a more or lt.~s t ypical May-June rut. The s un won't be there mos t mornings and only if we are lucky will it burn through for some mid-afternoon cheer. The Nationa'I Weather-Service·s 30-year figures say ,,.e can expect only 10 days of clear wealhe r in the month or Ma y. If you are interested , we can a lso ex- pect eight completely cloudy days, and 13 partly cloudy days. 'fh:.it \\'as May. And DO\\' it is June . Are brighter, cheerier days a head ? Unfortunately, no. The "-'eather service says ,,.e can expect only_ one more clear day tha n in May. If _you are really dis pirited about the state or the sky 1n ee:1rly s ummer, thank the heavens you aren't one of those merr.y v acationers holed up'in a $350-per-munth bcachfront pad \\·ith evaporating vis ions of SP,a rkling ... surf a nd d eepening suntans. ' ~ I I ' I ' ' I I I I I I ,I ! I ' ' J 1'hc communications arc us u<-111.Y nothing more than thin!)· ,·eilcd public relations releases that con - tain nothing thi1t h<tsn 't already appeared in t he Unless you happen tu be one of those vacat1onl!l'!i )'OUl'Self. •. "I HAR.!:>LY KNOW INHER'E TO START ... " Legal Profession Sparks. Argument T o the Editor : Have I.he people of Ca lifornia and. beyond that. the ~ople of this nation. e ntrusted their destiny lo the "·rong type of in· dividual ? . La"'Ycrs h<i vc infiltrated every brunch of government. T he "·hole strul'turc of ~ovcrnment exists for the benefit of the legal profession. In my estimation this takt.'O \'cr amounts to the greatest tonflict of interest in the history of the \\·orld. ,\s a res ult. the-people of California 11rc being rip1><.-d -off in many \\•ays. J 'II mention t"·o. No-fault automobile insurance has decrea se ~ premiums dramatically in other states and, thereby , h as b enefited th e gene ral public. Our LcgiSlature has refu sed to pass any bill relat· ed to no-fault. That is not allo...,•ed since it \vould decrease the. backlog of cases on the court dockets and de prive la...,•yers of the 40-70 perce nl take they <1re :.1c- customed to getting in auto acci· dent C<-ISl'S . T he <:urrent question 1s the medical ma lpr:.ict!cc f:.ircc. The 1nnoccnl m<.1jority of people. those ne\"t:'r involved in this type of litigation. arc paying through the nusc so Lha t ia"'YCrs m:.ty t ake $600.000 to Sl .000.000 recs ror .:.i single cusc . r\s a result, physi· c1ans arc· puytng outl;tndish in · surancc premiums. some hi gher than $40,000 P,Cr )'Car. \\',\TERG ,\T E v.·as :.t mt<rc s cratch on the surf;_1cc .... ·here 35 ·1a .... ·ycrs at the top or our govern· mcnt \\'ere indicted for crimin:JI acti,·ity, Chief Jus tice Burger <Jf the U.S. Supreme Court h<is _publicly stated I.hat 50 percent or trial lawyers arc incompetent. ff you \\"ant to get thro\\·n out of court f<1s t <by a judge, before your case gc;ts lo thq1ury ). sue a la...,•yer. / My pro1>0s::i l is to call a halt to this <.id milted conflict or interest .ind banish l;p.~·ycrs rrom the 1cgis l utivc and executive branches of government. They c<.1n continue in the judicial branch ""hl·re the legislature and .executive :.irm of government can supervis e them and have .... ome control over them. Let engineers. secrt.:t:.iries, nurses. fruit pickers. ~al'baJ?C collectors. constr u ct i on ...,·orkers . .housc...,'1vc s. accountants. fi s· .hermen. ditch di.[!1-(ers , farme rs and lumbermen make the la .... •s They could ~ay in s traig ht ior"'ard English <not legalese) '''hat would be best for our ...,,:1y of life and our l'OUntry 1\nd. . furthermore. the pt.•opll' wou ld 1rus t them. R1\LPf-I C BLACKWELL De #e Nd• f,a!D1J<!r• To the Editor Jn defense of the Ja .... ·yers who are being made the ooliticat . ' . I ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. Let1ers of 300 words or less will be giuen preference. All letters muslin- clude signature and mailing address but names may be withheld on re- quest if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be published. sca pegoats of the doctorS and the 1nsuraiice companies I should like to make a few points. The la"·yers are the only ctd- vocates the cons umers have. T heir contingency rt»es are col- lected only when they .... ·in the case. You.will ne ver see a doctor- t<1ke a case on such a basis. The consumer advocate Ralph Nader has no counterpart in the medical field , The insurance eom p<Jn ics !second in \1:ealth only to the ,_\rahs) have been digging biUions of dollars out of the Con- sumer gold mines for Lhe past 20 years. Nobody ever got their in- surance rates lowered ·...,·hen the insurance companies .... ·ere mak- ing all that profit. THE INS URANCE companies <JP.parently thought that hitting the richest clients they have right in the pocketbook ...,,ould nail the la .... ·ycrs lo the "·:.ill . i.e. tell the doctors the fault is those big fc.-es ta .... ·yers get for s uing. The doc- Lors have fa ll en for it. f-lopcfully, the cons umer .... -11 1 not~ the doc- tors may be \\•illing to <1tt<1ck their best friends. the lawyers, but the consume r "·ill be al the mercy of both incompetent doc· tors and m ercenary insurance com panies if the~· a llow the lawyers to be squeezed out. Any second-yea r l:.i"' student could succcs'sfu lly dcrend a truly competent doctor :.ig:.1ins t a medical malpractice suit. It is the incompetents the be st la\\·yers in the country can find no defense for. These incompc· tents are the ones both the doc· tors and the ins urance com- panies seek to protect. Far from finding a doctor ...,·ho .... ·ill take a seriously ill patient on a contingency fee basis , it is next to impossibl e to find one who will take a Medi-Cal patient. Doctors don•t like l'tf edi ·Cal. There isn'.L enough m oney in it. But listen to them complain about the fees the la"'yer gets who \\-'orked o n a s ingle case for three years on ._. no ...,,in, no pay basis. Beware, Mr . and M s . Consume r ; the doctors a nd in · surance companies :ire colluding to deprive you of your only avenue lo just a nd fair settle- ments or your c laims. Today nedical m alpractice. tomorrow the rest or the insurance fi eld. DOLORES FERRELL "She '.1 hoarding ico.1' • Dear Gloomy GU!! In response to M.C. on doc- tors vs. publi c e mployes striking : Does n't he kno"· the doctors a re striking FOR the public? A doctor" can simply pass his rising costs to the public and ch<1rge more. He doesn't feel this is just-therefore the strike. c.u. GleDmJ Gm commeRl1 ••• --11, ,......,, _ 0. Roi -ce1urll,,....1«1 ll>e ¥ .. WS ol I ... ""Wl p;IPff. Se.., -pel ll'Mwt-. GIMmf Gtn, O•ilr Pilol. S lip•hod Laee7 To the Editor: In regard to your editorial or ,\pril 21. \\'ilh the head ··voter Rl'gistration . ·· \\le admit stale \a\\'S arL"n't v.·hat they should be in regard lo rCJ:listr:.ition but ...,,c lake cxccp. 11011 tQ onl' par agr<.1ph \\'hlch rt .. ;.ids :.ind \\"C quotl': ·· Jil·qu1rcml·nts for µr110f ,,r UJ:lc, res1dcncc and t·itizenship loo often are ignorc<l or brushed as ide b y uncont·erned re · gistr:.1 rs. · · TllE RE ,\RE no requ.ircmt:nt~ for proor of <1gc , residence or citizens hip in Lhc code -a ll tht• registrar can do is hope fM..'Oplc :.1rc truthful -all ~·<-· need for proof or Citizenship is the lO\\"n in "''hich Lhcy "·ere naturalized ;.inti Lhe d:.ill'. if ._. n:.itu r a Ii zed citizen. ltegistrars do rccci,•e a small amount of special t raining to m:.ikc s ure they kno"' ho...,· to han· _die various probl ems v.·hich may :.irisc. \\'e think a good percentage of rt.•gistrars arc conscientious and dedicated but. of course, there ""ill :.il .... ·:.iys be those ...,·ho are the execption to the r ule. It is the responsibility of the of· fice of the Registrar or Voters to conrirm an<l verify all rcgistra· lions submitted by deputies. ~1,\RGliER ITE E . BEENEY Cost a Mesa Republican Women Fedt>ratcd Since o ceriificate of ooler re- yistrallun, ubta111able u11 f('Quest by a11y rcg1slered 110Jer , ca11 be used for many 1de11tif1catio11 purpose$ (i1z. c/udin1. for example. by Americo11s re ·enlering lhe lJ.S. from Merico) the voling privilege supposedly being reftricted lo citizens of legal age , it 11X1uld appear that some strings l1t1ve been left untied. f;dllor _ To the Editor: This letter is to protest fed eral subsi dies fur local police, as the fed eral Lav.' Enforc~mcnt As - sistunee 1\dministration is at- tcmptin~ to do. They do this under the guise of assisting 10('111 law enforcement , but 1t ls an attempt to n;.ition<1li Zl' our locul police. The late Police Chief Willi~1m Parker "'arned against growing fcdcrul control of ou r loc.•al police. If('. said . "This kind of compromise is .... ·hat d<..-s troys nations. and certainly It will destroy po li ce morale ~that 1.!I something the IX'Qple or this nut1on had bt.~ttcr begin to \\-'orry about.•· r\o matter ho"' appealing those LE1\1\ funds may appear to finuncially pr~ssed local or· r1c1als. they must be made tq__re- :1liz(' that the consequences of federal subsid y ls al\\·ays (1,'()er<1I tontrol . And federal control leuds to eventua l dil1.atdrship. Is this "''hut .... ·u.w Hnt ? LA RA McCl.E LLAN '· ' · A Strange 'Blue Ribbon' Panel Pentagon'~ Watchdogs Jlit· \\1t\Sl-llt\'GTON Periodit·al· ly. a new device is tried out in · Washington to shoQ.. t he starlings £rom the eaves or government buildings. The sta rtled birds rise flutte ring · and twittering, then settle back after the alarm has passed. 1\tu ch the s ame effect is pro- duced on the Pentagon brass <>"very lime Congr<'ss ra1sl·S a ho...,·1 ~I b o u t mili t ary s pendin g . They fi1·~ off memos, issue stern d irec- t iv cs and o th erwise create the im- pression that changes \\'iii lK• . m:1dc . Ir Congress a ppears.to be real· \y serious about rnililary cuts. a blu~-ribbon._p:.inel is formed to uncover \\'aste :.ind to rc·examine spending policies. IT IS A n1easurc of the Pt'n· tagon 's _present a ppre he ns ion that another blue-ribbon group has been or ganized to go through lh<'" usual motions . As a signal to Cong1·css that no one will be im· munc. the blu(>-ribbon boys will even chcl'k u1>0n extr avagances in DcfcnSl' Secrelary Sc hles- 1ngcr ·s t1ff1c l·. Thi• l,l'ntago n h:.i s proudly hailed thl' inlcgrily and indcpen· · d(•nce of lhe Acquisition Ad· .yisory Group, as this latt.>st blue· ribbon p:.tnel is .called. But a closer examination reveals that every las t one o( tht' dis t· inguisht>d ...,·:.1tchdogs \\·a s recruited right out of the Pen· tagon',<; o...,•n kennels. l'i1en ...,,ho once served in lhl' Defense Dt•partmcnt, in other \\'Ords. <1rl' no"' callt.'CI UIMJn to bark -at their former m:.istt.·r:.. Some of the panel me1nbl>rs :u:- -tu:.i ll y served <lircctly under Schl es inger during the past yc:.ir. The di scove ry or th is backscratching operation ...,.ah made by the Senate Govcrnmenl Operations Repo1'ts subcommit· tee. A confidentia l report to it:; c hairman, Sen. Lee l'i1etcalf. D Mont ., is no .... · in our possession . T liF. RF.l~O RT calls the 1\c- quisition Advisory Group nothin~ more than .. an adviso1·y commit- lt"e reupion of former l)cntagon off ici<1ls, ·· Its Sl38·a·day tnenl· bcrs :.ire not · ·1nde1>cndcnl in any ordina ry sense or the \\'Ord," Lhl' study e harj!c•s. The chairm<1n is Dr. ,\Jexandcr F1 ax, \\'ho is listed as president of Lhe Ins tit ute for Defen se ,\nalyscs. No one has questioned Flax's <1b1lit y or patriotism ; he has even refused Lo accept the ·s138-a·day rec. I.Ju t his company happens lo bl' a major defense Contractor a nd he is a former as· s istanl sccrclar·y uf the 1\ir 1'1 orce. Herc are ._. re .... • of his as· sociates, \\'ho "'iii join him in re· viewing p olic ies affecti n g bi l li ons v.·orth o f· m1lit<1r y purchases: Don Brazier, identified as treasurer of the Na tiona l Rai lroad Pa sscn_gcr Corp. ·omitted is the fact that in 1974 he ~'as de1>uty assistant defense secretary. -Charles BO\\'Shcr. listed as :.tn :.1ccount1n g firm official. lie \\'as an :.1ss1Sl<1nl secretary or thl' Nav\· -·Philip Odc(•n, identified as \·il'e president of \\'ilson Sporting Goods. lie \\"<JS :.i deputy assistant" def t.•nsl• secrct::i ry. -Dr. Emory Cook. identified as a .. cons ultant." He .... ·as a pro- minent adviser to the Navy. Adm . Thomas 1\1oorer, the retired chairman of the J oint Chiers of Staff. :. TllER E ARE also l\\"O retired lieutenant genera ls on the pa'nel. :' -Its l'Xet·utive director is a retii:ed ' ad1niral. Not a sinj!IC member l!i :.i 11un-Pent<-1 gun s~ci<1list or <1 t•unsumc r advoe<Jt(·. Commented the Scnatt: stud y \\'Ondt>ringly : "The 1\cquisition ·' 1\_dvisory G ro1:1p is rn<1d.e u1_> or in· 1 s1de rs . ...,·ho ...,·111 be rev1e...,•1ng re- commendations on behalf of pre· sent <1nd rormer colle:.igues. As suc h. their rev ie\rs v.·ill be anything but an arm's-length tr<1ns:.1ction. '· Footnote : Dr. Fl ax politely but rorccfully defended the group, ' s:.iying : ··1 think that, although all of us \\'ere inCluenccd by our , , t•x pl•r 1cncc in \the Defense Dep:.1rtment, v.•c can no...,· sit oul- s1dc ...,·ith a certain amount of de· .. ta('hmcnt.'' The Wa.steful Court Mania What. do the following have in common : Gi rls who WaQt t.o try out for Little League baseball teams, and bus and cab drivers in San Francisco who wear their hair long? ,\nswer : t he rights of both girls and bus and cab drivers h:.t\'e beC'n de: cidcd in court , ...,,ith all the apparatus of the l aw , in- cl udin g d e - fense and pro· sec ution lawye rs, in· s tead of throug h th e workings of common sense, which could have handled both matters easily . This m<1tlcr of going lo court to settle trivial dis putes is one that 1s getting Increasingly out of hand. Let us examine these two matters brien y. Some time ago the New J ersey Civil Rights Division ruled girls in that stale could try ou_t for Lil · tic League basebal I teams. Tho. state's legislature a nd courl11 okayed that decision. Later, the Massachusetts Com· mission Against Discrimination. ruled that two lO·)'CilJ'-Old gtrts who had filed s uit hud to be given a chance to try out for the teams. The Lltlle r .• eague 's attorney ap- pea le d the decision ttJ a Massachu~ells Superior Court. Th~ t'Om mon aense view or the m atter. nol share<! by th~ t1dult· dominated Little League, was lhot of.one of the team players ln Ma11achusett.1. who said of ·a ' ' ( CHARLES McCABE ) girl recruit : ''ff she's good enough, s he should play.·· THAT was loo simple for lhe Little League. 1\s the presiding New Jersey judge said about his Little--.League case: "I can vis- ualize a \\'hole host of pro· blems ... a hue and cry will be made shortly by mothers of girls rt>jecled by teams, or by al· tqmeys for t eams. and then a lot of work will be created for the courts.·· Added the judge resignt.'<lly : ·'However that. is what the courts nre for." Are they, though? The highest court in the land has the right to si mply refuse lo consider cases; that is, throw them out or court, without giving any reason al all for its refusal.to decide. Why not all courts? Why s hould they not throw the ball back in the litigant's court, and say: "Settle It yourseJf, boys ... TllE San Francisco Jong hair decisions ·were even sillier, in a v..·ay, than the Little League cases. Two U.S. District Judges, Stanley A. We igel and George B. Harris, aaid employeris had the right to j ud ge the length of drivers' .hair and beards. Judge Weigel ruled for the Yellow Cab people, a nd Judge HarMl'i tor the Golden Gate Transit line. Both judeea. ir1 lhe manf!cr pf judges. elted a su'i>erlor outhortty -tha t is. a Judge or judges • higher in the legal peckin g order than they -in justification or their decision. This was an opi- nion of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ni nth Circuit ...,,hich said. in part: " .. A private employer may re· 1 quire male employes to adhere to different modes of dress and grooming than those required or female employes and such does not constitute a n unfair employ- ment practice. ·· Now, this is magnifying an is· sue to the 1>0i nt of absurdity_ 1 Such cases should never have r e· 1 ached any kind of court, or even ' , the company lawyer, ORANGE COAST· DAILY PILOT Roberl N. Wted. P11bllsMr Thomor Kt:fvil. f;dilnr Uarbo:ra l{reibich. . F.dilorlal Page Editor The editorial page or the Oaily Pilot seeks to In form and stimulate re<tdt'rs by fJrtsenting on this page ~ivt>r11e COlflmC!ntary ' on loples of interest h)· liyndieot· 1<d col umni~ts and cartoonists, by providing a forum for readers·. \'iC?'<''ll and by prc1entirig thl!I newsptapt!r '!I opinions 1md-tdees on current topie1. The editorial opinions of the Dally PUot appear M l)· In the editorial column at the lop of the p11ae. Opinion!! ex· pres1ed by the e<Jlumntst.s and csrtoonlst:. and letter wri ter. are lhcir own and hCJ endorsement or thei r vlc•'11 by the Dfli()· Pilot should be Inf err~. · Tuesd ay, June3, 1975 • Q I • 6· "\ m· --] Vt,..r ...... .... , "-"'"' Rtltll ...,, -..... VISS.tf ICenn ,._ Fry,J "''"'' c-, -Ol~I~ ,_ ... ~ -"'" ~'111 H••91' ~ Nlcloo K•llY! U wls ,~, G•tla Jamt! Vlllil'l Anli f 0 Fu• h e l Fn ... yea Cit) Con F Pai Thu B Ral and diet fer~ wa~ G guli Fro wa~ cri mu, ' fJ "' ,K. C. Ro "" ,,_ s. ... 1. •M' For• Brol~ ~·· m•Mt "'K "kl.I; .. ..., '· 1'1 ~~ ''" A!•'f '""' S.r~I ~"' "~ ~o• ••• P•ctt " •nvlo 1t1s, V!9y ,Newt cC ' I' ·' ( I I - • QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi - .. Tuesday, June 3. 1975 DAILY PILOT .-17 Se11iors .. ff<111dicapped Transit Fares Eased By GARY GRANVILLE • Ot 1k Dally ll'ttot Sutt SANTA ANA -The aged and handicapped were given a price break Mondp y whe n Orange County Transit .Disltict (OCTD) directors adopted a new. simplified basic rare policy. The cornerstone or that policy is still the 25-cent bus ride along fixed OCTD routes to any point in Orange County. · But senior cilizeris and han- dicapped persons will be able to travel the same routes for 10 cents. Under a federal revenue shanng social servi<..-es program. senior c illzens already receive county-paid free rides on OCTD's fixed route bu~es . ORANGE COUNTY fare break on OCTD's fixed bus routes, senior cit izens (anyone 65 or older} and handicapped were given reduced fares on dial·a- ride service by the directors. Regular riders will continue to pay 50 cents for portal t9 portal bus service on "the mini dial-a· ride buses. · The same service will cost the aged and handicapped 25 cents. And, unlike other dial-a-ride passengers, they will be given transfers to fixed route buses at no additional cost. Regular bus riders are given a price brea k on all forms or OCTD service under the new fare policy. ·THE EARL•s ~ ........ ••co.. 5-•&ceT'-S•wt• AtY-Door ( 495-CMOl) I 00 r.~U:\kf 21'21 c...i.. Cepktr- Cell 642-5678. Put• few words to work for ou. HYPNOSIS Learn To l:ontrol Your Jlubiti. Lose Weigh t • Stop Smo~ing • Rd1c\ e Insomnia • Guin Self-Confidence • Rel iCVl' T ension • l mpro,·e }our Memory and Con('cntration San C le me nte H ypnosis Center ' ''Walch 'em come running back to the screwballs like me when things get hot!" 't\CCORDJNG TO report given transit directors Monday. in the first six months of the coU11ty's free bus rides for the elderly pro· gram, 491,849 senior c itizen passengers had climbed aboard OCTD buses at a cost of $122,986 in county revenue sharing funds. ON Fl~ED ROUTES for ex- ample. a $)0 monthly pass for un- limited ridership will be availa- ble. Community college and un- iversity s tudents will pay from $6 to S8 for a monthly pass. And the sa me pass will cost senior <.'1t1zens and the handicap~d $4. 655 Camino D{' Lo5. ~Ian·~. Suill' l:!G \ft'fhCJlt1tJ/Of \fll• '1 ft111,,1l1'"h,'ll•lh f •IUl.1111n pt1JI I ~ . For The Record the e ligible-handicapped un· decided. And, what charge, if any, will be made for the use of OCTl> buses equipped with lifting de- vices for wheelchairs was not de· cided. Fares for all c lasses of riders at OCTD 1 s p a rk and ride facilities were pegged at 50 cents by transit directors. That charge tn C1'1dcs pa rking of a vehicle while the commuter continues his journey on an OCTD bus. P II 0 NE ·193·3332 Dissolutlo1111 0 I /ti arrlage l'INALDECAEES flfledMay1• Vener. Behl• Prestlooe •nO Robert Euoene Boney, Beverly anO Robert H1t1Jr. Cr-.Ck, Henen Rowi ano Hou>ton Per<etl Relgi., Glenoora ano WI Ill am Oaude G<tOol, lols •no Errol H. SuQden, Wuley Ou •nO Lind• Maro~ Pa119, S...ndr• P. ano Wai K. Visser, Wiima B. and An Ore J Kennel, ClnOy Joy and Erne.I Fredwlck Fry, John S.llnd Muy J Vrteland, Lynette P. and O•v•d E Cllftdland, HtnlMI Cleon •nd B<lrt»r• Ann Divis, Anthony IC. end Muriel L. Ttbbetts, Mary M. and Jamts Allen Bertonntau, Gcr•ld Ro1an0 •nO M!Jry Ann Kole, Ollw Elizabeth and Wiiiiam Martin Hargrove, Charles Garry t1nd Kera JHnette NlchOls, Nancy S and Robert M II Kelly, Carol Irene i\nd T.E Lewis, Kenneth Mex,._.11 and Oonnd June Gallagller, Marv Ev.t .tno Hank James VIiiamar, Victoria, i m inor. etc. inO Antonlov. ~~#:;:. Co1Kh, Sharon 0 . and Ronalo B. Garpenter, Ollvla J. •nd Bruce H. C<tptaln, Yvonne Jeannette and Evert &.rge, Robert W. anO Jeannette Estrlda, Raymond'eno Betty Jo Anne Markulls, Ma rquita Lynette and Cl'larlu George Worthy, Judith Lt!e and Jerry Joe Grlllner, Muy end Jay Barlett McKinney, Katllteen J. and Donn w HtnOricks, Donald Dean and B•rbar.t JHfl H•lfoetd. Mela"a Lee and Gera10 M.tr>h<lll F1ntroc._, Larry L. and Laver"" M E11tered IN/ y 1t Tur""'· Myra Nanc:y end Jam~ 1(11>- bee CanNro, Rick ThOmas and N~y Lvnne Bclhde, 01•na L. and Nor be fl L. Minster. Beverly Anne and Barry Lee Kennell, Emily K. and Martin Floyd Roberts, Regina M. ano Charles W Swanson, Anne Shirley and RicharO Horns Wolle, Euc;iene Joseph Jr. and LulOa Ann R!!e~. Fllcharo C. and Patricia A Fr.inklln, Tllomas Wesley and Pauline Romin9S, Joi! T. and Sherry A. Rotlln~on, Diane Ate ah and Jack Waller ""'°""·Charles H. and Jovce A McCormick, 1..aur• Bl!,Hroce .ino Robert Andrew Herrint,1, Gl•nda J . and Bruce A • Bennett, Joan and Harold Wrlt,1ht, Oo1a Jean a nd Richard Oorn~n La Rue, Jerry Lee and Leroy While the directors followed a staff recommendation by adopt- ing reduced fares for han- dicapped per sons, they left the determination of a definition for IN ADDITION TO gettmg a Cocaine Trial Set SANTA ANA Four persons jailed after they a ll egcdly sold an undercover o fficer cocaine valued by him at $75,000 have been orde red to face trial Aug. 25 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Everett W. Dickey set the trial date and a Jun~W pre- trial appearance for· Anthony Martino. 24 . of 337111 Olinda St. a nd Jack LL•e St. Dennis. 21, of 24830 La Paz Road, both of Dana Point: Louie PL•teque. 27, of 3174 1 Galano Way . San Juan Capistrano and Patricia Rum· mel. 18, of 24852 Calle El Toro Grande, El Toro. All were indicted by the Grand Jury o n multiple criminal charges that include sellin g and possessing cocaine. The arres ts ended un in· vcsllga ti on car l'ied out b y Newpo rt Beach a nd Laguna Beach police. federal offi cers atld agents of the Orange County Drug und Narcot ic Task Forc'e. Perez, Susan Cheryl artd Werner M. Al I • o . 11'"1 t Jonnson, Kathleen Elaine and John-" ono rclll!!C '-'OclS Also, the 50-cent park and ride fare includes transfers to fixed route or dial-a -ride buses at no additiona l cos t. The directors delayed adopting group fore structures for com· munity colleges a nd universities until the beginn ing of the fall semester. Prot·essor Shot POMONA (UPI> -Police s aid Sunday that Daniel Lee Miller. 33. a Cal Poly Pomona forensics professor. w<1s probably s hot to death when h e surprised a burglar in his home. A friend found Mille r 's body shqrtly after 8:30a.m HAVE YOU WRITTEN A BOOK? A s;uhlP1hH "l'Ul\t111,,l tt•ttft· .111h1tl\• \iill Ii.• 111 '101., \n.1 to .f<11~ II• ••II tlf' lnlf"rv1t"v.1ni.:, loc.•111 wuthor "' w qw t •rn n111 lw'I h11M1u n1°1 H" ,1,f, h~ l>•A J;Ubl1t."11illun 1,, t" .. rlloh l•n 111 ""'H li.01-.11,,._, \•H t.. puH1 ... l111t1 111w All "vb1~t' •1111.k' ~:1m ... 1•l•·1 ••I '" ltflJm ''' 1••111 111.11 •••1111 lh111 1~11 It\ •h .. u ... h:luuun µh&.lu.wvh> t..4 If \W h•'t" tomvh·I• •I ,, ••••I•"•" 1u.111u .. , 111' 11•t n• 1rh .. tH1 .Ht\ :i.Ubjf\.1., t1nd "'.U1d h kr .. Jllttlt >• ....... .:.t•ji~.il .. 1 1'41d ·•U\ Ill t HI ol1lo.:.-lu1UI ~l"~ '*"le tmm .. t.11 .. 1t h \.Ii .. , rtluo..: , "'' 1i11.1 , ... •ht 1,.,tir • ..,.. 'Ahr' h '•.trl "1 ttu da\ t1 m o' pm t )VU ""••ul.t _.,, •• r 1,,. •• n ••l'I"'''"'*'., ut ""'\<d \u1nt1' n .. 01u.M1 \OUI' phone numl>t.r \uu '#ltU i• 1uivU' ,,,, .. ,, .. • •t•••f111.1\h1U h1r"' d111ri.1.- \1nMt ••Mi P'•fC' Au\t\Uft. .. ,,h run.,.1. t. 11 11.1nU t rq1h Ull.•t I• lo 11'1 • ~· IU H l"IH) .... II du.,<tl) to th ... rrprt''U'1t\ .. ll\1 t t•hll•'' 1 •• t ~ '"' ·• 11•1 '' oarn-.. , •• f'\11luiaho·n llr v.1U •'''' iu "''"" 111 h~ .1r rr •II o ...... ._ho"' t t I .1n Y.Vt~t o11\ 6\tU 1n "4'•1.,,rt""" 1'11 .. ~· .Jtlttr• ALAN F. PATER 195 South Beverly Drive Benrly Hills, California 90212 Tel: l213) 271-5558 .~~~~~~~========================~ ~ Other \J . Park, 8-_ides Sites OK'd nie Mossom P-t £::::'. .. " Lundy, Oavld A. and Shirley J. 1 'Deaths DEL MAR (AP> - Funeral services were held h ere fo r W.R. Fawcett, a banker and oil executive who served two years on the Los.)rrtgcles City Water and Power Commission. Fa wcelt d 1ed in a Pas adena res t ho me Thursday at age 80. BERKELEY (UPI) - Ralph J. Gleason, jazz and pop mus ic columnist, died early today after suf · fering a heart attack. lie was58. Gleason wrote a re· gular column fo r the San Francisco Chronicle and was widely known as a critic in the modNn music field. ' Beotia Notl~ ROGERS LEAB. ROGERS. beloved mother of Jac.k B. Roger\; grandmotMr of Jack C. Rogers, Mrs Judith I.. Hammer and Lawrence w . Rovers; t,1re•t granc:tmother ot Gregory A R09ers Services will be held Wednesoay, 11 .lO PM at 1..1tlle Chllrcll ot The Flowers, Forest Lawn-Gle nd•te Bresee Brothers and J1llelle Mortu••Y direc· tors. In lieu of !lowers, lrlends m<1y m•ke donations to Shrlners Hose>1tal 1or Crippled Chlldrtl\, Lo~ Angele> Unit No.11 MANNING Kutht, Lynette Kay and Lewis Paul Sliva, Ehubeth anO Octavio Ramirez Huber. Herbert Anton and Anneliese Gretcllefl Anna J.tckm.tn, Mudia Lou and Melvin Ea rt Entered Mll y 21 Burroll, Evelyn Prescott •nd Stanton Mallalieu Ov~. Emily J. and Gary l Berleloot, Jos.,ph Warren and OebOra Warr~o Garrell, l..1nda O .tnd Gary J Thomsen, June D. and Edgar B Collar, Judy M• y and Jemes A. Vanoer Moe er, Stella A. and Robert H. Yunker, A"9ehne M . ano Thomas A Hcndrocks, Philip Henry and Rose J. P.~ce, Jo.tnne Mane •nd Gary Cle· ~nt Weyer, Norman 1..ee and Susan Marie Cline, Kenneth E. and Pa trlcoa Lee Holme\, Christie E ileen and Jonnoy Dale Steptwns. Karen Jo and Gary M. Alllter. Ursul• M. and James v. McC.lla, Charles Richard and Sturley LOU Pol•ne, Wilhelmina A. and Dirk Johannt'S Smllll, Lois M. and Charles E. Broder, M4•iM and Mark Ivan Richards, Marlene Dawn and Lewis Herman AbOotl. Urt<J.a Marn! <>nd Watter Scott , Schwart1, David H. Md Grace Hunt lker, L4Wrence Cra19 ano Wreatha Yvonne Po1>to, Herman R. and Glen ice l..ou•w Entered MllY 23 Pe1er;on, C.lorl<t R. and I homa\ D Steven\. Edith S ano Charle• T Pepper, Jennie K alld Garv I.. R1ch1c, E lhe le VerontCa """ Lawrence Pdlrtr._ Fey. Joel T1>oma\ and Barbdra Cl•ra Lankford, Gw.noo1vn Ma••ne .tnd Herbert C. Ctwmberla1n. C.tr la E. <1nd Ron J Nys.en, Margaret Merie ano Ben· •dm1n Oennl~ Lawrence, Shdrvl A dnd Fr•nc1; E Jr Mtll!'f f r;1nc1•\ Qp,ll dnd Calvin Allen Goo<IQdme. J~rrv w.,yne and bol;Ou· Janell Mellor. Ddwn M .ind Rogu W Hlloebr.ino, E1tw1>ttn ano l/'v1l1tdrn Edlklrd Wooo, Marqarel E .ind Ktt•th Ivan Ent,1ebre tson, Joan El11<11>dh and Mark Edw.iro Camp~ll. T~rnll Jdml'~ <1nd Jdn•t~ Ilene SANTA Al\A Siles gr ounds officials will for pa r k a n d rid c open 150 park mg stalls to facilities in San J uan bu s commuters June 15. (anyon fl1gh Sehm~ 1n 1~~-~}~II_~~~~~-~~~~~~~-~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~ Anaheim. Capis tranu. NC\\µort The fa11"grounds '"" .\PPROVED eurli1.•1'al-i Beach :rnd Cos ta Mt'sa recel\·e the s ume S4 ~1 l>ltes for motori!>ts to were approved Monday month payment for the p<.trk their turs free by Oran gt' County av<•ragenum bl•rofpark-bt.'fore contmumg thl'tr' Transit D1stn ct IOCTO> mg :,paces actually used Journe} b y bus ,,·en· directors as Pacific Theaters . commcrc1.il centers tn I n S a n J u <.t n Io addition lo the three La g u n <.t H 1 11 s a n d Ca pistrano, 50 auto park-Orange Coast s ites ap-Orangl'. WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th and Irvine -in Newport Beach Coming ••• Book Sale ...:.._June 6, 7 ,..8 -MARINER ·s LIONS CLUB Proceeds Benefit Child Guidance Center Old Books wanted Before Sale -Donate to any FfFe Station, or call for pick-up, 640-0333 or 545-9411 mg spaces will be pro-proved Mond ay. the Addition ally. OCTD vided bus commuters d irectors vot e d un-operates a $1 million beginning June 15 at the animously to install a 950-spacc park ::ind rid<• Mission Drive-in Theater park and ride <."enter at facility in Fullerton . on Del Obispo Road. ....::..~:.....=.:.....:.:._,....:....:._:__~~~~~~:__~~~~~~..'....J~~==~======================================================- OCTD'S d1r c•<:t or s agreed to pay Pacific Theaters. op<.•r ators of the drive-in. S4 u month for the a ver agc daily num b t•r of purkin J! sp<1Cl'S used. Ford Acronutronic of· fl c1a ls in Newport Beach agreed as a publi c service to make a por· t10n of the c·9m;pany·s Ph1)co Fot;.d par~ mg lot .UJl -J dm1>0 r <: e ,R 0 ad u\'9tlablc for use as a pC1rk and rtdt> fa(•1ltt~· stanmg July 7. I]-..; COSTA ML·s a . Orange County Fair· FRANK C. MANNING, res1delll OI ---:::::======:::::::===============:::::---1 Newp0rt Buch, c a. Date ot CX-ath June 1, 1975. Survived by Iii> wife, Anni!' M Mannlnv; brother. l..ewls Mannll'9 ot Peck, Kanws; sister. Ruth Tanner ot Atns:;dtro; n1ecu, Myrtle Hl'Stcr 01 Cerri and Connie Pace ol Sdn Diego Services Ill be lleld 12:00 noon Wl!O· nesday, Paclllc View Chapel. Ruv. Bru<t A. Kurrie ol!lclant. Entoml> ment, Pacl!lc View Memorlal Park. Ne wport Be1ch, Ce .. dlret le<l by Paclflc View MortUMV l'RANKEL LENA FRANKEL. r uldent ol Hunt· 1ng1on Buth. Ca. Date of doth Jun.. J, ltlS. ~rvlces ;ir e pending. Pacific 111ew Memorl•I P•n Mortu.trv. , Newporl IM!acn, C• IALTZ·IERGHOH fUHHALHOME Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Mesa 646·2424 IELLHOADWAY MORTUAU t 10 Broadway, Cosla Mesa 642·9 150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach 494-941 5 1 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 PACIFIC Yll'W t MlMOllAL , ... Cemetery Mortuary I Chapel I 13500 Pactl1c View Ori~e 1 Newpon Beach 1 Cahfornia 6'44-2700 PIHfAMllY COLOHIAL FUHHAL HOMI 7801 BolSft Ave Westminster 8~3·3515 SMITHS' MORTUUY 627 Metn St Huntington Bonch 536·6539 .. ' It ls not a simple task for a pollen! 10. reach and maintain "lean weight" for Ille. Fust the patient must have an honest desire lo cure his problem ... then accept professional guidance from trained Medical Doctors. llndoro's unique 10-week treatment and training program will tea¢h patients how to reac h and maintain their "lean weight" for life A safe and practical plan. with proper nutritional diet, and continual emotional support. New audio and sub·llminal visual aids ore used to motivate the patient. The entire program 1s under the strict supervision of Medical Doctors. sp ecial· 1sts In Boriatric Medicine L1ndoro Clinic$ ore owned and odmlnlsterect by Med1col Oo<:lors lho1 res1t1ct their proclice to 8o110111ca ALL Olnlc Pmsonnel ore Hcensed by the Stole of Cohlornio Call for information Monday thru Friday 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. Lindora~ MEDICAL CLINIC NEWPORT BEACH 645-3740 COSTA MESA 557-1893 Pace Professlonol MP.so Ve<de Bldg l'rolf!S$IOOOI Bldg son wnordlno • E. long Beocn • Mission Hiiis Howthom• • Orange • Newport Seoch Garcan Gfov• • Long 8ec>Ch • Posod no Lo Hobfa •Woodland ~fits • Shermon OOlcs West Covino •Fullerton • Rlvenlde • Sonto Monico Costa Meso • Pomona • Cerrltos • Hollywood t I on Wednesday, .June 4th It's our So come on in and celebrate with us. We've ...::::> 1-::::J really appreciated serving you during this past year, so we're having a party -and you're invited. \ Please stop in for cake, coffee and conversation. H you haven't discovered us yet, there's no better way-id begin another year. For you, we offer .last, fl'leddly and eHl- clent service, a variety of savings sen1ceS, and the nation's ldahest Interest rates on lnsared savt.nas. Plus, a piece ot birthday calce. OPEN TO'SEAVE YOU Mondays thru Thursdays 9-4 Fridays 9-6 Aaaeta ouer a Half a 811Hon Dollar• ..... _,. "\_ •ll•, ., ........ ' 1g~~··· .... 1\ : ' ~ . . ~ . ,-~ [}?o'~ci CYJiJ\1 c7~!~~~,~~10 N COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH 1655 HARBOR BOULEVARD COSTA MESA 645·4420 (NEAR NEWPORT BOULEVARD/ MAIN OFFICE -225 East Br oadway, Glendale Ja Offices to ser11e you Statewide. Reaerue.s more than rwfce Reqalred Amoant .• I , - .. [' A. DAIL v PILOT Tuesday June 3. , 975 . Tonight's TV Highlights NBC (4) 8 :30 ·"Where HiiVC All the P eople Gone." After a dcudly Yi rus kills mos t of t~e people ou earth a family wages u _grirc:i su ·uggle for surxival in this TV movw with .Pctc1· Gl'aves a nd Verna Bloom. ABC (7) 8 :30 -"Th'e Ha lfields mu.I the ~.IcC'oys. •• A Romeo un<l Juliet story st•t in the backwoods again s t the bLtL'kdrop of the most famous feud 111 Amcncun hbtory. Jack Palancc und StcYc Forrest head the cast. CBS ~2 ) 11 :30 -"Gunn." T he 19G7 mo,·1c n~r~wn . of tlH~~.Pcter Gunn TV sent·~ \\1th C'1·a 1g Stc\'cns recreating his f\·y LcaguL' µr1\'ate eye. Laura Dc\·on :md Ed\\ an.J .bncr ubo arc featured. ., TV DAILY LOG Lynn's Praise For the Pill ... <l : I can't believe that w untry ~Inger Loretta Lynn, whose recent record, "The Pill, .. ha~ been banned by some country music rad1o stations, ls re· all y a gra ndmother. -Cathy Eckhar',' Philadelphia. A: Well. it's t rue. Now in her mid·30s, Loretta 1riarr1 ~d at 14, had s ix ~tds ~fore she was 21. ··u the pill hCid been arnund when I first m arried ," she '( said. "I'd have popped ·em like popcorn." She ex-· plains thl' b1rth·control theme of her controvers ia l song lhis way: "H 's the woman telling the m¥n, 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn and Hy Gardner 'I 'm s ick a nd ltred of you staying out all the time and sltppmg around on me while you keep me home bar('foot and pl'cgnont -because now I'v~ got t_he ptll. ... <~: What was the name of the Viennese who drove us c r azy years back with his "Third l\l a n Them e"'! And what other hits did he compose? - ·Jenny T(•dorina, Pittsburgh. · J\: None . ,\nton Karas. who once estimated he , had played the "Thu·d Man Theme" on the zither more than 20,000 limes in 20 years, never wrote . anoth er hit. . Q : Watc hing Sinatra emceeing the Academy ,Awards, a lll>llywood rriend said the reason he won an Oscar back in 1953 for "From Here to Elernitv'' was due in part lo the coaching he received from its star, the late Montgomery Clift. Is this a fact? - Juesdoy Movie: (C) (90) "The lhtheldi, the Eleanor 6redncr, Portland, Ore. McCoriH (R) (dra) ·1• _ J"k Pa A: l"o. JUSt the opposite. "Frank was a born ac· lance, Stm forrc1t, Kuen Lamm, tor," Monty once told us. "lie knew how to d eli Vet• a N1charcMblch. hmes Kuch, john line, how to move and get into the character he was Calvin, Robert ~rraoone. Moraan playtn~. 1 d1dn 'l leach him . If an.Ything, he t a ught WOOdward T ... o youne people who ~· I ... ould uther ma~e tove than war me to play th<? l>ugle in my role and perfect my 6:00 0 f3 0 10 EDmCDNews sparkasavaiieo11fhct between their cadrncc.·· 0. !! l n_~(29 • ) "CW) I tamohes that uplodt$ onlo the most Q : Is it. true that Jimmy Durante once had his 0 6; kM11t1 lamDUS ftud in Ameucan h•story nO!>C insuntd hy his s tudio? Ins ured for what? - 0 lrtnside m Mm C:nlfrn st.ow Caro~" a rtz. Clevela nd. m l'•rtndce r11111fy ED Cvtn11c at S1mpht111 1 · ../ ,\: n ca::.e his schnoz was accidentally marre<l. @Mod Squad 9:000 17' 3 a H1wa11foe·O'Com· Lloyds of London was the policyholder for h alf a ffiM1rla Tmu purer Kiiier"' (R) McGamlt"s inm million. AnothN s tar whose outstanding features. 76 Stu Trek t1ga11on ol a murder is thwarted by l f d I h d \\Cl'<' tn::.urt'cl \\'as siknt movie comed1'an Ben EI!J EIK1rk Compuf compu er " ou s w en an ucuse murderer's m1lhona11e f11hcr plots Turpin fo r his C'rosscd c~·es. The beneficiary -his ffillockrl.fritndi ... 11huompu1eruperttofeederro-producer. !\lack Sennett -would have received 6:30 10 Merv C111fin Sllow neous rnlormalonn onto a compuler SJ00,000 t f T u rptn 's t>yes str aightened out. M arlcnc ' m Mlw,· C:rtttith in hopes ot diverting the guilt for D the cnme away horn his m . trtrich ·s legs ''ere ltkcwisc p1·otccktl bv a half· 111 3 t Sp1 ._6)The Untouchabiu m1llion·<l olla r polt c~·. • EI!l Zoom! (29 '. ) Duler'i ChoKe m The Bold Ones 'l.: Seute a hassle. I say that Gladys Knight and ED T11wel film Ell Eil Situatitn Comedy the Pips art.• one of the newest singing g roups to hit al Little llai.uls 1 9:30 0 News ~tardom. !Uy mother says no -'1tal they sa~ 7:00 0 0 0 ll r; er;) CD Nm i' EI!l fih11 ruturt together before I was born. I'm 19. "'1ho's right? - l tnu111de EIJu Titrra ~Is. Marjorie L ., Minneapolis. 0 ltwlr•1 tor 0orta11 ,\: 1'\I other is <ii most. This ve<.1 r Glad \'S and 6.,, Mo4 Squad 110:00 0 J.t 3 _a' 81rn1b1 Jones "Con I p · · re Tnrt1111 COAscqut11eu sprmy of Terror"' (R) r11tz weaver l lc tps t•t•lcbn.1tc 17 ~cars i.IS a group (beginning in f)WhariMr Lne? euestsas1publrsh1nrtycoonwhose high school I. Their first recording contract \\aS in m 1Lonl11t7 Pollllc~I 1mb1t1011S m threatened 1961. \\'hat's t•\'en more rcm<.1rkable is that they're m Tiit fll br lhe possible disclos;ire of (he '111 n:latcd. GI adys i.lnd Bubba arc brother and. "IS· Ei) u Muttr ,.rohiblda 1nu1cate scheme he planned 1n .., 'lo Tiit iit Vaiiey .. hoch another man Ja:epted cu•lt ter. \\hJIC t::d\\an.J Patl<.'n and William Guest arc EI!l Tht Silt11t SUter A 1pec1.1 prn tor 1ne murder of hos wile. ftJ'l>l cousins. gram 011 ahrure1u11na e•h•b•tion O ~ JJ 1Qi m,.01ice story Send 1101ir questw11s 1o lly Gard11cr. "Glatt You b1 fo,e oeaf younestcrs held at the "Year of the Dr•1on" Pan I. Robert Asked Tllat . ·· care of tllis newspaper. P.O. Box 1560. l'.orld l\'1ntet CamtS for the Deal Culp and Warne Maunder star as C 11 la~e Pl1e1d. New York 1.,0 cletectoves who frnd two )Oun& OSio Mesu 9262/i. Manl!J11 arid lly Garduer will answer as (29 I )~ Chonese-AmrrK<!ns who are w1llonf many Qllt!bllo11s as they can ttt tlleir column. but the EI)Ora1111 10 ttstoly a&••nst the tlanrerous , l'Olumenf mail makesperso11alreplresimpos1;ible. Evening JUNE 3 Lagunft's 'Spirj.t' Opens When Noel Coward's 1'Blithe Spirit" arrives on t~e 1Hugc of the Laguna Moulton Playhouse tonight, d1rectoi' Pali Tambellini will enjoy the rare disti'rfc. ti_on or having two productions on tho boards· simultaneously. . Miss Tambelllnl not only directs, but plays the role of Mada m e Aracati in the Laguna production, whlle ber melodrama at tbe Costa Mesa Civic P layhouse. •·He Ain't Done Right by Nell." con· eludes jts tbree·weekend engagement. Alan J ones and Mickey Claxton play the lead · tng roles in Laguna's "Blithe Spirit,". with Diana Spencer as the ghost o( Jones' first wife. Otners in the cast are A~ Lut· jeans and Annabelle Quif{ley. Performances will be given 1 Tuesdays through Saturdays for three weeks at the playhouse, lntermissiOn ,, -Tom Titus ;.... ________________________________ _,,, I -"NO NO, Nanette" continues at Sebastian's West Dinn;r P layhouse, 140 Ave nida Pico,. S~ Cleme nte, also playing eve.i·y night but Monday. Curtain times vary. Reservations 492·9950. , -•·cry for Charity," a musical melodrama. will be on stage this weekend only at the Fountain Valley Community Theat er, 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle, Fountain Vall ey. Written and directed by J a1 Conklin, the s how goes on at 8 o'clock. Reser valiolli 842·4981. ~ 606 Laguna Can yon Ro ad ,.,..,.--=-~ Laguna Beach, with an 8:30 p.m. lr.,J1trz!~Ci':i:fl.l'l!i_ ~ curtain. Reservations 494·0743. 11o TAMaELLIHI CLOSING THEIR respecfive ~uns in other com - munity t heaters al'e the Costa Mesa melodr ama and "Prisoner of Second Avenue" at the Westmins~r t.;;;;;;;;;m======;;.;.;==iJ Community Theater. The m eller, aceompaoied t!y a musi~al olio, gives its final perform an ces Friday and Saturday at 8:30 in the Community Center . auditorium on t he Orange County Fairgrounds in . Costa Mesa . Res~rvations 556-5391. Westmins te r's "Prisoner " spotlig hts the tal~nt~ of Stan .Pritchard and Darlene Cha ffee in the Neil Simon senocomedy. Curtain is 8:30 Friday and Saturd ~y at the playhouse, 7272 Maple Ave., . Westmmstcr. Reservations 893-8626. · IN OTHER li ving theater activity along the Orange Coast: -"Three Bags Full" enters its second c-hlc) Mext "CAPOHI"' ,, "AJolN loMly& .... ,. I ~ "DIRTY HARRY" . "V "MAGNUM FOllCI" Clt OpenMOn. '""" Fri. e:so p,m. S.t/Sut\/HOI. t 2.30 Mon. thN Fri. 10 7 p.m.-i I 25 • t weekend as the windup production of the Irvine "SHARKS TREASURE" Community Theater season, playing Fridays a nd l!!~~====~~~::::! .. +~.~.'!!1-.-~-··c:.··-,-,-1'19'!1"'~~ Saturdays at 8 : 30 and Sundays at 7: 30 in the Actor's Entertainment M ,., Pl bo Th " t. l C,_" , .. a~ x .eater on the Golden West College cam· Happenings ... pus m Huntington Beach. Reservations 557·7297. ~ ·~ hMty • llo'!wtfl6 five w:~~i'~Ssa~C~~:rH~t~~:O~'i:ai;hi~l~~.';;~~s~~ ~~~-~ ~~ms IA· .. ~:~:Y':::Y" w 2110 Main St .. Huntington Beach. Performan ces :i.. • eater "'V "MAG:-4UM FOllQ" 11t Friday and Saturday at 8:30. Reservations 842-5421. Dance Th C D 11 "TM Uoa 111 Wi11ter" -·• e ave we ers" is the fare at South Television . "Apn'I Foob" ll"GI . Coast Repcrlory. 1827 Newport Blvd .• Costa Mesa;.. lrtfltT&tHm six days a W<!e k <dark Monday). Martm Benson directs the Willia m Saroyan play. Curtain at 8 o'clock. R cscr vations646·1363. MOW PLAYING W.W.AlV'D TamDna• D••OlllUlVQS :J>G Q) -· : .... ~ .•• (ii) AIM> Dot1ald Swtti.nOt1d Eliott GCMlld ''M•A•S•H" W.W. is stlll raising. hell au OYer.SoutbernCalifornia lOllC W CN Cm! ~24 '/i :~ lOllC IE.ACM Los Altos Oro1e In 425 742Z PALOS YUD!S rot r • .,. J77-S403 SA.II PlOIO Strand" t 8l2 721t COSlUIUA lJA South COJU Pt.ua 714 ~00594 OWIGC Or.in~t lol1ll 'I 7t4t37 0340 fDUllTAlll YlllU ~All« Plott C1ly Ctnrtr =I 114 997-0831 fOllllllln Valley Oti""' 714·96?2481 ORAllGl St.Ml 11110!1tt '" =2 llH 398710 IUSSIOll VIEJO C111t•N V1ej0 714.AlO &990 WlSTMUISTH C1ntma Wul -2 714 892-4493 llCWPOIT IE.ACM Lido 714-673 &350 ..._,.,...,.,.<1 '''IO MC>ftOA• ''"" '.'°"' •oot JO ~1Ufll[)U ti )C)\OI) ~l .. (J4f 4 HC" l()At\ 11 JC' 1 U0 •-11111m • Mii a.lt• SHAM'°° rit -·-""" Cinderella Liberty r., 6 1 '. al Th1ct Sloo&u Yolllh 1an1s on an Orrefital com-rliiiiiP.!i!ii!i!i~ii!i!!i~~ilil~~~~~;;;;~--;--t munoty. -----------7:)0 I New Trusurc Hunt I 0 m t:"!'I Ne.11 · JO ~~ • 6, Hollyweo4 S4juaru I ui love AllletlClft Stylt 6 Pt!TJ lblOD Let's Make A Dul 0 1:CD lrbrtus Welby M.D. "The ,I 17 'lJ Te Ttll Ille T111tll Brittle War11or'' (R) Forrest l1Kker 0 Million $ Movie: (C) (2hr) ~uests as pohceman Andy Stewart, "Trad of Ille Car' (dra) ·~-Roben who pu1s his hie on the line by Milchum, Tab Hunter, Teiesa Wro&ht. relus1n11 treatment lor 1heumalo1d m !Mclft't HttffS arlhroli\ from Or. l\'1lby in Grder to ID Cltywatdlua ~eep hos rob. Pe1gy McCay and Patty ED u itH McCormack al10 ruesl. m l~IJ C:raham CruHdt 0 (Qi ,.() BillJ C:1ahlm Crusade CD Anl•al World (!) c:tt Smart rn Lrttlt llai.uls ~~ C:rccn Acru ~ I EI!J lnter1aa 1:00 i) J.t C1) I 'olll Timu (R) In p•ll ont of a hfo part episode, the 10:30 m ED NeWJ ·Satan s ~nights" street gang 1n-26 Allrtd Hi1dtcotk ~ills J J. io1n them 1n • 111nhght 'ftolh I rhil cana, and e.en J J.'s, 11:00 i) Q Q m w ICtWS rudy wit and tnst1nc1 tor surmal l •~ 10 lj ~6J News 1111 to keep him out of the rumble 0 Best or Groucllo Q l,J\.,6 JO Ada lll·l2 "VKtrm" 6 $(1. Bjl~ , tN) Amy Milner, d•uahter of M•mn 0 B~d Funllo s S~u111 "-"' Milner, auuts as a girl who com• ID Mistion: l111pos$1blt pla·ns about Reed s l~olure to t~lth W Mod Squid a thief who wounded her f~the1 on 17 3 Mr. l.ltcq a holdup 26 Thf Untolldlablts 0 Mtvit: (2hr) "Sullrvan's Trn· ~ ftehnc liood th" {•dv) '0 -Joel MtCrea, I '29 8 I Victory at Su Veroo~ lake 111:30 O 17 J a CBS Ute Movit: (C) l6 Wild ,Wold Wut "Cunn" (dra) '67 -Cm11 Ste<ens 0 (~ •~I 3 CD Happy Dap laura Devon [dward Asner ' "Haunted" (R) R1ch1e fights his 8 '23 6~ ;O m Johnnp ~rson furs O'ltr 111end1ng a Halloween Guessword p~r11 II a hOU1' where, alter check 6 1 Spp 1ng out the prcm1sts, he btloeves he• 0 ( 29 8 I '3 Wide world Spe· $''"a hudless ghost. I ml ''A-Prowler on the Hurt" (R) m Otaler's Choice Colleen Dewllurst and Martin Sheen Mtlld.tp Tllrv Friday ~tar El Show de Iris Ch1eon (J Movie: "Hunery Hill" (dra) '47 il6 MoM: (C) (Z~r) "The Bucca--Je,rn Sommons Margaret Lo"· nttr'' (adv) ·~8-Yur Brynner, Chari wood. Dennis Price tnn Heston, Clalre Bloom ID Yoea tor Health £J Sltotr d• Sylvia 'lnat 12:00 0 Movie: "Dkt Barton, Sptel1I I lntt1111tltul Anlm1tt0n Fut1v1I JaplHM une ... ae ,.101111111 Aeenr' (mys) '48 -Don Stannard, George f0<d l :JO 0 @ CV '•l M·A·S·H (R) A m Movit: "forbidden Stmt" (dra) thief IS caueht try1n1 lo sleal pen1 '49 -Maureen O'Hara, Oana An· c1llrn from th• unit's wpolJ 1enl dre .. s b11n11n1 to hlht • plot tho<k with m "' Smart aha~es. Colonel rl1u from the C t A 1s promptly on the scene, but 1:00 B "io Tomorrow M aclo00s only t~mphcate the (!, 8 i J .... ~ Nns mystery o :lj '6)'fO'm111c Tuudar ~: CC) C901 "Whert Have All tt1e '"-'' C:tttt" (R) (dra) '/4 Pew Gr.r;n, Verni Bloom. Peter G1ave1 i!lrs u the head of a family wd111na a e11m survival struule alter! • deadly wru,, produced by a mys · 1:45 0 Movie: "~no11 of ,.nsion• (dra) '6t -Ernest Borgnrne, Anne Butcr. 2:00 ID AH-Jelcht Show; "Cly Vu. lllll<t," "Station West," "Murdtr Cast" teroous r.;do•toon uplos1on, krllsl 3:30 O Movie: "fllfht It SM,allOft" most or the p~ople on [arth. (adv) '63 -Patric~ Allen. William 0 (" • ) (l CD AIC httd17 Hort Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES 126 (C) "Sttt111de" (musJ '56 -Mano Lanu, Joan font11ne. l:OO 0 (C) "To C.tch A Thltr (•d•) •)5 -c.,., Grinl, Grau Kelly. ~o" (C) "C:icot" (dra) '62-Jackie JO:OD O {C) "Tra, for Sn-en s,lfl" 1 Gleason, 11.ttherine ltlth (dra) '67 -Yvnnnt Bullen. I ,3 Ci) (C) "1.ile With hllltr" (i) "fta1111n1• Road" (dr•) ·49 _ ('°'11) '41. -W~h~m Powell, Irene JoH Cra,.ford. !.tdner Cr .. nSltttl j Ounnt, tJ111btlh hrtor. , 3JO rf) (C) "lihdltr W"' flfltta" lZ:OO 18 "Ytlln ~ (dra) •1-CrtfOll lmusJ ''7 _ Bttty C"ble Din Pck, Anne Suter, ll"1111d W1d Dail•y. ' marl. I 0 (C) ~ °'' ltt A Hlql.,.. 1:00 0 ...., tit A lfl(tit" (du) '36-Cwn) 'st -Fr" "'~untp, llob Ow• Tr«OI', °''" .IJUtr. Jitlt ttt V1ur1u1. Joan Blldm1n, Ma1 0.""'1. l lf Hayn. KOCE Televi ion TUHD'll' J :• Plr, er1W9 Wltll 1119 ·~· CCJ J.• MM ... Tlll ... 6,_ ICJ IP'Tll t :H Ytee WIUl ~ftll lle fCI CitOCC J 41• ,...,._ c.rttNttf ICI ICTWI J ,W ........ llrMt CC) l(lWI t• ....... Me,...((J IH rTI a:M 411U• elM l11wlrt•.l'IHlll fCI (Ml.,.,l ·D-l ".anr.udtnt\ ol COn ~..,., ProOltm~ · 1:• TMW•Y II W•t ICI 11'8$) The 1 ... N ll\y/H4V'f f'OGlb.1111 (;a~" 1 » l'rollle Wfflltll f(l KO<;l I Tiit TMn419e Wom•n 1·• S..CI"' ICI IPllSI "TIW' Tllin l dOt ~t.u•111y Tll~ Hu"11tt ,...,,,.~ .. t M ICOC I Sl"<•.tl ICJ I K()( I l "Thot TMn lo~ ~ollowuu -~, 11t• ... 1111t.-... ..... 1 .... _._..,..~,.._llM I 10·4 H -1 OS J•H tn4f1tr\ "THI UST AMUICAM HflO" J OS·•:H-t-40 F~TAW VALLEY• FOUNTAIN VALI...EV • ······-·,···-·· ..... """' Adults Only /.· •••-><.J., "U9\' •' f{.4.,. Iii .. ~ ~• en Bargain Matinees $1. 50 Til 2:30 SeniorC'it'zen ,1. Oat all ti e SOUTH COA~ PLAZA THEATRES $AH ru,rr&FW'f. AT IRISTOL ~S-0.-CO-A_S_T, V!W,: z=,, Pl &'7• 1. Jitt,__W~l:JM:1'-1._,~ """"" ~MILOT" i 546-1711 t>tt-S•JS-J:I .. ,, .. CL&HT EASTWOOD . ~'THE EIGER SANCTION" s.f., S.L • 7: I O·t : U . · 2:4M:5l-7· I O·t :20 t . ' Evenings From 7 C.Ont. Sot/Sun .-~ p.m. SAVE! ON THIS SUPER SHOW! 99c 1t.t lll!iiii Have something you want to sell ? Classified uds do it well -Ce11l !'\OW, 642·5678. (JACK ANDERSON J 4 ' Jock Michof'°" Moria SchHider "THI PASSIMGH" tPGI UHlA STHISAMD JAMES CAAM "FUMMY LADY" IPGI "RITWHOF THI Pit« PAMJHH,. IPGI .. TOMMY" "GODFA TIB-f'UT 11 .. llJ & "DU TH wt SH'° tlJ "W.W. & Tlae OW. Dec,. .... · & "S.P.Y.S." Cl'GI ••ttn••u•"..,":"' "'llHCAlHATIOH OF PIJI • ·I . . . rtOUD" llJ · "UGIND OF ~ILL HOUSI" 1~·1 "IUiH S.AHCTIOH'' IRI . & "NOM? PACH" ll'GI Af.Afll.4 ClllSlln "MllRIJIR O~ Tiil ORllNl llntlH .. Pll/SJAMH C.UM .. THI GAMIM.O" SPE Cl Al llMITf 0 RlTURNflCGAGFMtNT ....... , frmi1 hi• c.,,.111 ~r~~, PART II REVEALS In lhe DAILY PILOT • - Fly UI, Anywhere ~ In the · iiIJhJQ!rnJ , " ' I • ' • n , .. PVBLJC NOTICI; • • • .. PVBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBLIC .N011CB .· • • .. '· PUBLIC NOTICE l'IC.TITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMIENT Thi! 1onu ... 1no;i IN'""" llo doing~· ness&s· CORONA DEL MAR BU(E '!>HOP. ll21 E. C.0..\1 H111t"•ll>, Cor-0,,1 -·· C.hlornla '2•2S Ai<.I•"" L_.,...,n Jlltk">fl Jr., 332l e Coast H111hwa,,. Coro!\a Gel -·· Clll•lornla 'n6~S Tl'I•~ ~'""'~' Is cond1.1tted by an lrt· Cl!v+ouaJ. IUclwro L. J~O.Wtl Jr. Tl'l•s ~latemtnl ""~' folfCI ..!ti'! '""' Coun1y Cltrk 01 Or af>9e co .. nty Gn May i., l~l~. ~ Pub•·~d Oran<)e Cc.as! Daill Pllo1, -110,21,ana Junel, 10, 191~ 11'<3-IS PVBLIC NOTICE , ' DAIL. V PIL.Ol Wo.rkers Striking 1'""EW YORK (U Pl> Ne\\' York employcs of the R a il y,·ay Express Agency today ignored or ders from thl'ir union's international president that thc>y end a \l'ildcat strike called in protest over the bankrupt rirm·s plans for reorganization . Local mt:mbers or the Brotherhood of Rail\\·ay and Airline C lerks picket ed RE,\ 's facilities al Ke nn edy lnl('rn<1 tiona J Airport . po r t authority police said. REA's LO~G Island c ity terminal v.•as picket ed until midnight fl.ton day -long after BRAC International President C. L . Dennis ordered ; them back to y,·ork. , Y.'orkers in Chicago . also set up pickct lines l_foc the second duy. '"The drivers. und tho. others. they're still out thl·rc," sai d u te l ephone operator a l REA 's Chicago office. JtE,\ employs approxim<:1tely 1,000 v;ork ers 1n the ·Chicago area. Other job actions. mostly in thC' form or ··sick·ins, '' \l'erc report· ed in other cit ics. includ· ing Ci ncinnat i, 1)1..•Lroil and ,.\tlanta. ThC' 11·a lkout halted pickups and deliveries in J'\cv.• \'ork <ind Chic<igo. :i lthough p:ic k;.ig1..·s 11·cr1..· still being processed at RE,.\ counters in those cit ies. Ope r ations 111 01her areas \\'ere rt'port· eel near normal by the firm. TllF. COMPAN Y charged the "'alkout "'a~ ill l:'gal and un authorized by the employes' unions and its attorneys were studying possible legal action. The striking workers arc upset over REA's plans for rt.•orga nizatioo under Chapter 11 of the Federal IJa nkruptcy. la\\·s. The company, :is par1 or its reorganization, ha~ been \\•ithholding sine£ the middle of 1'-1areh If percent of the payroll rrom its union employ~ and up to 30 percent fron: non·union en1ployt·s . I .. ·" I 8 CAIL Y PILOT T1saay June 3. 1975 But No Delp t.o .JolJless Better ~conomy. Seen By Dlled Pre lnl~rn•tional The govem menl Su):. Cuctory or· dE>rs soured ;rnd t he ~upply of unsold good8 wus t•ut s hurply in April, pro· vidmg even more evidentc-of un end to the l'eceMHon . But millions of person~ ist1ll can't find jot.is. A l nn Green sp an . rhu1rman of Pres ldeot. l-'ord s CounC'il of F.C'onomic lAdvssers. told C'ongr(.':>s th~re wi•s "(i'ir ly <:lcu r t.'V1<l~lll'l' that th~ r ti- ccss1011':, ton.•cs urc ~pen\."• THF. TOCK MAltKh"T also \\:as en· co uragecl by thl' latl•st gov<'rnment r~· ports 011 the t•1:on omy. •mt.I prices on the J\e\\ Yo1·k Stu C'k E.x<-hange rose ~hurply for the ~econd consecutive tradini.,! du). )l urk Rob<'l'lS. t·h1d \.'l'Onomist for the AFL·CIO. ~u1d the muon \\.Us .. happy to :.cc• :iny md1CLJllon:. that the t>c·onom~ m .t.\ b"· turnang up. But "hat's !!Ood fur bu:,mc~~ an tlw ~hort term mJy t a kt• LJ long ttml' to trans l~1tc tt::,e lf 11\lO morl' Jobs for un· employed \\orJ..cr:;.. · In lhl· l:.ik:-l ~1g n iJI of ;m upturn. the CommL'l'l'l' lkp:.i1·tml'lll :-.:.ml nc\\' or· dcrs fu r l al'l or~ Ol'dl•l's po~tt-d thL·u· b1ggt,'st J!~lln 111 21 Yl'LJl'S 111 .\pnl while Jn\'l'lllOl'IL':> of unsold goods m :.lotk \\l'rt' n •ducl'd at the f:.i::,tt.•:,t l'i.lll' m 17 ~l':.11'!>. !'\F.\\' ORDERS inrn•usc>d S-l i l .btlhon to S78.:'i9 h1ll1on. ;1 1 .. I pt'rccnt mC're.,!'t.' Tlw ,\ pn I 11wn·;.i:-;t'. p<.1tcd I STOCK MARKET STUMBLES ~w YORK -The stock marktt experient:ed its second straight substantial fall to· day; profit laking wal> the key word for the session. The Dow- .Jones average of 30 indus· trials Ml 1 1.1~ points to wi nd by u 9. 7 pcrwnt. increase in orders ror durable good~, wus the sharpest since » 7.3 pet·cenl s urge in Oecembcr, 1954. During tbe same period, inventories dropped $1.15 billion or 0.8 percent. to $50.04 billion. ll was Uw steepest re· duction in inventories s ince u 1.1 per· cent dl'cline 1n M uy, 1958. Me~nwhile, shipments of goods in· ct~osed for the first time since last Augui.t, r1i:;ang 4 percent. Tht\ Com mer ce .Department also said construction spending increased 0.6 pcrcl'nl in April. HO\Vcve r, April spendin,:: of $121. 7 billion still was 18 pel'cent below April of last year. The de pa rtment originally reported a 0.2 percent galll in Murch over Ft.>br uary but 1\Jonday said public con· struction spending was lower than ex· peeled a nd revised lhe sLal IBtiC. Lo :.ho\\ a lo:.s of 4. 7 percent. F.C0~01'11STS \'IEWED the s urge m fuC'to r y orders. the reduction of in- \'entor1es :ind the slight gum in con- :str uct1on spending as con firma tion 'hat :.i r ecovery from the r ecession may be near, if not ulready un- derway. Roberts. the Al"'L·CIO econom ist , said jobless worke rs can take little immediate encouragem ent from the mcrease in bus tnl'SS activity because "the pickup in e mployment nnd the pickup in jobs Jags behinrl the pickup in bus ine ss act 1\'it y by scver<1l months·· Purchase Forum Set At College Ornnge Coa~t College FINANCE Division Of Hughes At Irvine Hughes Air cr aft Com· p a n y's C o nn ectin g Devi ces Division is movin g into its new 90 .000 -sq u a r e·f oot divisional headquarters a nd elt.'Ctronic assembly facility in the Irvine In· dustrial Complex CIJC> this month, according to Brian Hogg, JIC VlCC pres iden t of s ales und mcirketing. The JCC pla nt has been designed s pecifical· ly fo r the .di vis ion 's ·oper a tions which s up- phes inter connect com·~ p one nt s r o 1 severa l indus t r ia l ap- plicati on s, j ncludin g m 1 n i · ~ o m p u t .. e r s • geophyS.cal explorat ion e qu i p me nt an d p a sse ng er e nte rtain· ment sy!>t cms o n Jum bo Jets. , up lht! wt!ek with the largest I 1 net deC'lme mover a month. \\all host its 14th a nnual Pu rchas rng Foru m June 7 m t he OCC Science Varco Sets Stock Off er· Saving is a sure thing. Stocks. bonds and precious metals are all maybe's , But your m oney can earn up to 7t•0~ annually a t AVCO (a ccounts insure d to $40.000 each). and that's a sure thing. An AVCO Savings Counsellor can recommend the smartest p lan for yo u. And. a t the sa me time. tell y ou a bout a ll of the free services we ha ven't the room to Ii.st h e re. 1 lall. • T h e pro g r am runs from 7:30 a.m. to 12:35 p.m . and 1s co-sponsored by t h e Purc h a 5 ing Var<:o International. ~fona f!e m c nt ,\ssocht· Tn c., o f Ora n ge a n- tton of Orange County. nounced tha t it h as fil ed Rcgist ratfon fe~ for a rt.>gistration s t a tement th<.• event is SlO. Rescrva-with the Securities and lions may be made by Exchange Commission mLJil. Checks should be rel;,itmg to a proposed in- mudc payable· t o the nic.11 public offe r ing of Purc·het~1n g M a nage -500.000 s ha res of capital mc•nt Association of stock. Or:.i n gc Cou n t y a nd ThcFi r~tBostonCorp. ma1'ict1 to the OCC E\'l'n· h as be c n n a m t: d 1n g Co ll c~c. :not ma n age1· of t he un- f'-~urvicw Ro ad. Cos t:.i derwnting group. ,\lesa, Calif. 92626. Of the s ha res to be of- ,,AVCO~ SAVINGS ., ... :. ANO LOAN A,SSOCtATION Keyn otc ~pea k cr for fcred, 335,000 a r e being the forum 1s Dr. Jack sold by the com pany and Holland. 165.000 by shar eholders. Rcg 1~trut1on wall :.ilso P roct?eds from sale of be conducted at the door. t ht.' company's s hares F6r more in form a tion \\ 111 be used prim arily to writers. SeJJi.,g Ads 'l • Reader's Digest Has New Twist in Essay By MILTON MOSKOWl'n. Tr you a re o writer end happen to sell un article t.o the Reader's Dlkest, you can make as much as $3,000. The Digest is one of. the top payers in the business. On the other hand, writers wbo work full·timc for the Digest are represente d in the Ma y Issue with u three-pnge essay -and thilt effort yie lded about $150,000. You have to under stand, of course , that the $150,000 did not go Lo lhe writer s; it went to the magazine. The wfference is that the three·page essay in the May edition, while il looked like a r e- gular Diges t article, was an ad- ve rtisement. ENTITLED ''WHO Cheers When P roducts \Vo rk?" the arti- cle was slugged al the top of euch page tis an "udvcrt.isemcnt." But a n yon e leafing throug h the magazine could easily mistake it for a' normal Digest article. It looks like one. lt reads like one. And it's c.1ccompanied by a boxed notico offering the normal Digest ., rates for r~prints. The key that you had just read a commercial m essage was the mmouncement a t the bottom of the last page: "This message is prepared by the editors of The n eude r 's Digest and presented by The Busrness R oundtable." What this trans l at~s to is that The Business Roundtable, an or- gunizauon of the top corporat ions m the na tion , pa id the Digest to wnte this ad vertisement and run it m its pages. T he article itseH -the ad. that 1s -constitutes a defense of the product qua lity maintained by C .S. industry. We all know that product recalls ha ve becom e a wuy of hfe these days. But this ad works hard to per suade us that: American products ar~ r eally .. the gre atest bargains in the world today." . Money ·Tree THE BUSINESS Roundtnble has launched this campa ign to s hore up public confidence in the American economic system. A series of similar m essages will run throughout the year in the pages of the Digest , a maga zine with a circulation in excess of 18 million. The cost of the campaign is $1.2 million. There':. nothing new in pro· paganda thr us ts of this ksnd. In· dividu:.il compa nies do it. In- dustries do it. Tt·ade associations do it. No o ne i~ e vor sure. how many minds are changed by this Small Firms On Di.splay In Anaheim kind of eom91unication. Business people do 1'now. from surveys tukcn recently, that public ron- fidef\Ce in business h11s rea ched &Ill ult.Lt me low. What is new, though, is to have Read er 's Digest editors write nd- ve1·tiscmenls which appear in the' maguzhte. Advertisers usually' J>l'epare their ow~ !11essages .or have their advenasing ugenetes ps·epare them. Having latched onlD this ne~\ source of income, the Digest i~1 undoubtedly thinking of other;,, ways in which its w1i ters can seU>1 for advertisers . Indeed, when the Or ganization of Petroleum Ex111 pol'ting Countries <OPEC) m et ill1 Vwnnu last Junuary to t'011s ider their next moves, the Digest. sent u teum of people to propose thut . Saudi Arabia , Kuwait, Iran and other oil-produc ing nations spend u couple of million dollars to telJ.1 thcll' side o f the stor y in the pages of the Digest . IF OPEC CAN'T come up wi~1 s killful write rs, the Digest will, 1 am sure. be gladto fill this void from its staff. In fact, editorial staff membet·s went ~dong on th~ sales mission to Vienna. The Digest doesn 't believe iq import restrictions when it com:. Individuals investigating s mall cs t~ sellin~ advertising spac~, , business opportunities will find And tt doesn t see why poor bus 1· key m anagement from ·30-coffi.-ncssmcn ha-ve lo su~fcr compos· panics participating in the Own ing the~1". own ads ~'·hen it has al~ Your Own Business Show, June 13 this w ntang t ale nt m the house. thro u~h 15 t the Anahe im Sheraton Motor Inn. Di s pl a y e d will b e a supermarke t of s mall business products and services. ranging ~rom ins tant printing centers to ice cream s hops. The programs offere d involve dealerships, dis- lributors hips and franchises with m any op}>Ortunities pa rt time ventures. Manag e ment personnel will represent each exhibiting firm. Over The Counter NASO UstiftCJS Coldwell in Move Coldwe ll Banker Propert~ Management Co. has consolidat· cd its Orange County operations to a s ing le location a t 4040 MacArthur Blvd., Suite 200, iQ Newpo rt Bea ch according to Va ughn L . Brinkman, Orango County manager for the r eat esta te s~rvict! firm. Tht~ QUOl,)tton~ Brown Ar 3 3~l Execu In 61 • 6~ KMS Ind lh 41 • Ormonl S~, St,. t rn O<e" 11 11\. Wa~n NG 9'• tO' o supplied by the Na· Buckbe 5''• S> Extracp 13~1 IA''· Kna~ VI l ll• 12~. P•t>st Br 18''• 18~ Twin 01~ 71'·, 731 , Waxmn I 81• 8 , toonil AUOCl.ilton ol Bu< key 7'• 7!. Fair Liie S', Sl• Knuds Cp 6~• 1'·• Pecc•r 22'•• 231, Tymsllr 19'-• 201 111.eeoen 9 9' Securotoes OedlUS, Burnp SI S'• 61 •Fer ion El 12'• 131. K<>oer Pr 9 'I~. Pee Gam 2• 20. UB f 1nac 1 7>, Weigl Wt 12 12 : .ire bids and otten Buller M 2s1. 26·· arm Br 1611 16'• Krueger 8•1.1 111• Pac Lum SSh S7~1 Uni Capt 3•.. J• well• M 8 , 9'. QUOled by over Ille· CalWI Sv 2•'•· 2S1 •• Farm Gr S8'n S9~1 La<;led St 21'" 2'1'•· Parkt'r 0 2• 24l,1 U"'°" Spl 13 tJ>. Wi.tc':f Pl 411 4 ; • counter dealers 10 Cam Iron Fonc;rrhl 21, 21• Lan<ast 111 .• 91. Paul Rev 12 12:.. Un T Bnc 20 111 .. Ws KyGs n•. tl'• uch other a~ of Ht 146 Fst Bostn 10 :10\. Laoce 13 23•• Pvhs Cas 191 .. 20 UnArt Tr1 tJ>• t4~. wstmr Cl ~ S6 , close (Eastern Cam lag 291• JO 1st Cap.If 76 28 Lawsn Pr 2• 1S 1 Pay N Sv 20 20''· US Sugdr S• S6 Wt'ltr FO 14'• u • to~.) The quola Canon Ml 12'• 13•-. st lxF•n 11'~ 11~ LaW1er C 131 • 1• Pa Entrp 14'• t•>.~ US lr., L 12 t2'-. 111am1 1 t9 , t9 • loons do not include Cayman 1'·• t~ SI Unln< J.C1• 3~ Lazy Boy 8~) 9 Pen1 Oft 9\o• 10 Unt¥ f ds tS'·: t6'• W1lsn H J 14'·• tS retail m.arkup, mark CnMt9 RI •'' s•. ood Tw 33 34 U9oet Pl 6 6 · Pel H&H' 11'• l21h VaqM Ho •'• s" w1nns Str t7•, ti , oown or comm1s Cen VIPS 10•. 10~. orest 01 12 12~ L•I Cnmp I> I>'. Petrolte 73\: H Vance Sn l • 4\o w1n1 Pk T ••• 1 soon; and do not CFS Cnll 121, 13'. rank El a... 8 \. L•mtd Str 19 20 P1nkrtn 39' • 40 van Oyk tJ u WIK PLt t6 u,•4 reorese"t actual Cl\mp Pt 3~• 4 rav Mg I '• 9•,, Lin< Bost 6 1 11• P-HBd 3'»• JP" van Shck '"" s•, w-i Lth 20 101 tranwctlons Chanl Co H• 8' • rtend lc 22'• 73l,, LOC:hte 1411 1S'11 P10Mr W •"• S' • Vlcloro St t8 • t9 WorlO Sv S S•1 INDUSTIUALS CN m Cp 20 2t rol FdE 8~ 9 Lone Staf 9 91• Pitt Ncp 29 29\. VtSu.ll Sc 4 . S Wrlllht W 41• • • AND UTILITIES Ch• Br Ir 76''• 77~• uller H 13'• ll"t LOl\9Y Fb Preu Ml 9-. tO VOi She>.! S'o S', Velfo F'rt ll'• 34 J.;:~a1By917dS A•" CC:11"bbs SeCc 11!!',~. t3t97'r. :: .. Lf: r~ ~~~ Loews Co t2!'3•;, I~~'•> ~c:lrel•r ~.,, =~: "!'"o ETBkC 1Jt 0 1Mt '· loont s,,. Utl". 1~ 1S ... .. , .. p ..... ,, ICO Co 1l 1J'r. MO.:rm1 7l• 8"· Puln (dP o• AC &Vf> A(U1hnt It 121ia Ch FrChk 11•-. 13n n Autm 9 91; MilO Gas 1 Ho 11'. • 3·16 • 7-16 Volume 8td Asluld Cllf. AdWltt R 2'•~ 2 Ctll SoG• l>"t. 6'1 AutoP 2314 2•'• Mal Rlty ,._ l'o Quel<r Ch 271., 2317 "-nn .otls Gas 2t0,o00 91. tO -'• Ad Mtcro t t• .• 11~~Clttns UI 271,,27~ n Bit1d 18>; 19"'• Ma lic~t SO'·• SI ~en Ca lll1'•tl'l•Oorclle>ler Gds tlll>,800 1t1, tl~~t '• Phone 5'"~ 5880 repay inde btedness. 3310 BRISJOL ST .• COST,.A MESA. 540·7~91. EDWARD MARKS. MGR. .:._ ___ ·>_u_· __ ·-----r------------, AOvnt Co 61n 91,, Citz UIA 29.ft 29'• Energy 18'1-• 19'11 Marine C 2S 26'•• Ratnr Cp .S~• • Nall Pa lent 0.,v 91,200 8'• 9\t • 111 AIU Alli 31>1·1 17 Cl1rlo. Mf 21'• 28'1• n .Rein Mar•t Frt n , H, Raycm Penn l•le 9t,200 IS 16 11-16+1 16 Alell Bal 19~. 20 Cleveplo. 12•. 131, 171 17S Mark Tw 1s~. t6>• 2St 2S6 Govt Emply Ins t>S,300 2t~ 21'•+ 11 • Allco Inc 7i,, 8 Clh Trfv 2~. 3'!• 11;. ti~• Mary Kv 1t•1. 22'•· Raymd "'• 10'" .weathertord lnl l>).100 140 e•, + 'I.. .. . . . . . Probably not. These days, y ields of Treasury Bills, Bankers' Acceptances and Certif icates of Deposit are declining. That's why 1t will pay you to look into 10% interest bearing Trust Deed investments with Newport Equity Funds. Newport Equhy Funds 'offers you two elements vital to any good investmen t: High yield ~nd security. Your money can earn 10% annually while your investment is secured by low-risk real estate right here in the Newport Beach area -the fastest growing sect ion of California's fastest growing county. Right now. you can invest anywhere from $2500 to $250,000. Your funds will sta rt earning 10% from the day of deposit into escrow. All details, accounting and statements are handled by Newport Equity Fur:ids. And don't forget: It is possible to earn more than 10% on Trust Deeds paid off prior to maturity. In those certain cases, rt provides for a bonus of six months additional interest, as a11owed by state law. For more information, call Newport Equ1tv Funds today. Our phone number is 644-6600. Available to California residents only. Newport Equity'Funds Real Esta(4.8rokert AVCO FINANCIAL TOWER 620 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH , CALIFORNIA 92660 • r A, DEAN HOWARD ~cllrity C011Mllto11t FOil ALL YOUll SECURITY HEEDS Alarm Systems E.ntry I Access Controls Cosed Circuit T. V. SIGMA rtlOTECTIOH SHYICE 1714) 557.5333 THE SYMBOLS OF SATISFACTION ADD ... . The .ovantaoec 'ot ten lno • ltom • new car oealer. 8 SUITRACT ••• Tr.e l>eaotle:~ ot coming up wilh • b ig d o •n ~~ment. ® MUlTlf'LY ••• Tiie advantages ol our "49C11"Q. rna1n11lnlng & dlsOOSlnQ ol )'OUf YehtcMI tor yOu. e DIYlDE ••• Leu dO•" 10 lncraate -'<"'9~181. G EQUALS ... · Tiie reuon1 •llY ~ou lhOQ I O I•••• .... CONNELLEASE wayl CONNELlEASE . 546-1200 • Nabers Cadillac is having its June Sale. Nab9r'ICGdax 1600 Hal"llor 8""9., C-.a. Mew S4CMIOO WEEK!HDEft O.t1 It AU. together ,,fdaya '" '"• 1"4"'RwH Allon Phr 1S>... 16~. Clow Crp 8 9~o 22 13 Mc Cm<k Jlo•,, JH. RltM Pde 7~ 7(1 Wntmrlnd Cl 6J,llOO S6 SI>~•~ 31 .. Aiied enc 11:n. 18111 COC>e Lab 11 18 191., 2ov. McOwl E 91,, 9 Rtcog~ t.:q H• 6 t 1ooer .. ry Co 62.•00 6'• 7'·• • ~. Allied Tel 10'"' llV. Cliburn 0 1s1 .. IS>.:. 7V. 8'" McQvay 91,, 10'·• Re9 Elec 22 27'n Ind Lt & Ate S9.JOO 9i,, 9'•,. '• Am Aprsl ll• •'ll CbcilC La I Ho 18'1• 10\. 21' t Measur 22'1• 2H; Rell Univ n, 91,. Anhsr Busch SS,400 38~• 38~1 + '• ~~ f;'~'j m:: ~~~ ~~~ ~ u:~ ~~~: ~\:. ~~; =~~ .. ~~ .~r.~ ~:~t>PI~~ 2:~: ~~ NA'SO V0olume lod;r:-7.221,.o<> Am Ffelh 171,, 18~. Cml Shro 2S• 27 101/> 1 n, Merchnt 11"• 13._ Reyn &R 11 191,, Aov.m ces 609 " Am Furn ''• l'" Cwl NtGs 1S,,. 16>,.. 6 6''' Mervyn 39• > •O"' Rival Mf .O•t. 41 OeCllne~ 284 Am Gree 1S:V. 16V• CmwTI P 24 ''• 2S 13'1'1 U V. "Mye r Fr ti '• t9~ ROH 1:11 19 3'1~. UM.hdn9cd 1~90 Amini Gr CPI• Auto 7''• 7\oo 8•1, 8"" MtdTo C 11>.. 12"· Robrl 01s 12 1n; Total 2"83 .. •6•1~ 6S\J. Cplr•is 6V. 6'i\. 91 • 9~ M1llt1• HS 6>... H; Rolltrs B 19 20 (; A Mcrosy W n 1S Conn Fcl 13 13~ ·8l • 9• •• M1lhp0r 511" ~·'" Aoui.e Co J~o 31, •Giner• and Lo6erti Am Telev 1734 181/1 Conl'I Gen 4n1 41~. 16'" 111.. MnS.tll' A 4) 48 Ruor Pll 91, to•. GAINERS I Am Weld 81n 91 • Cns Par>r 391, 40' • IS IS>.. Minn Fab 8 8h Ausl Stov U '• IS • 1 Utils & Ind n tO• .. 2' • Up 27.l Anl'leusr 38:\oo 38', Cordis CJ> 441, 46''· t• IS Mo<lul Co 70~· 71J• Scher~r 11>. 13•• 2 Melaltzd Ceram t '• , •, Up 2s o ~•<O t9 20 Cousins J >• •''• 29'n 31' 1 Morex tn ?1>i.1 111., Scholl In U ' / 16'·• J Commun Prop l••, '• Up 22.r · APS 1ncp 12 13 Cron Co 12•., 13•..., 17'•• 12:11. Moore So 19 20 Scolt Inn tl• t '• ' west Comp IJ 12 + 2 IJp 20 o Aron Myf ""• 2 C111 t Noll u >, ts•. 29h 30'n Mo•dn Br 31, •'• S<ottsL G 1;., H. s Horin A5 Old J'•'" •• Up t82 Arv1da S'l-o 6 o.tnl Intl 23''• 24 uni Mfg 1) 13\<. Morrtsn ?l~• U~. Ser.pp;, H t11., 19 • Tt!lt Commun • • +. '• Up 11.l/ ~so Col• 1s•·, 16 Dart Org 8.t. 91'1 yatt C •'• SV. MoSlk Co IA~• 100 !.ea Wrld 10'• 11'.-1 Manitowoc 1 20• h 3 Up t11 All Gs Lt 17'• 13' • D.tt• too u 14'. ysler C 141•> IS M<>llon In Sv Mucn 9 '• 10\. a Rouse Comp l " T • Up tl.tk All St.el 17 11>.. Oaytn Ml 211n 24~. MS lnlnl 7li<. 81• ·,,-xt61 • 17 Svmaslr ,..,... 1~'n 9 Nat P•lent Ov 81<, 1'"" Up 14 e, Atwd Ou ll'., 131• OeC•S Oa S S11, nc:ta Wat 191e 19 • MolOt' Cl •'·• S Seven Up J.C ', lS'• tO Aclldy ln;.Grp 2 • •, Up t• I• 8dlrd Alo 4•. .. Oeklb AR 44 4S nds Nucl 41. so,. MS Smolh 1 t • , ... ShontyS t3'• 13\. tt At ... oodO<n wt 4 • • ' Up 1.i,i Baird Wr S ~·. Oelh• Intl 1~> 2~~ nforex l • • MSI 0111.i 8 > 9 Shorew 41 • 41, t2 Am mest Grp 7• • , • • Up 13.l Baker Br 31•• l h Oelu .. C 31> 31>1, nstr Lab •'• 71.-, Mulh~ 14 IS S1911elts 1 Ho 13 8tt>b Com~ 8' 1 t-1 Up 13.3 Bak~ Fe 2S• .. 26'1• 01•m Crs 9"• 10•,, ntel Crp 71 • 71'·• NII CnvSt •·· P• S•mp~n 10'• I t'• u Intl Basoc Ecn 2'• • "• Up 11~ Baldwn L 13111 14 01.im Hd 4'n S tnlurc En i.• 1 tH. Nal Ltbty 31 • 3\. S,,.p Tols lll• 321. tS NorOstrom .48 28• , 3•, Up 1"I Bally Mil 1S\• 16'" 0911 Cmp • 4>,.1ntmt Gs 10•• toi. NllMn Sv 40'. 41' So C•I Wt tOl• tt•. ti> Amterre Devi "'•, ,,. Up 12 ~ Bkam Rlt I>~ 6h Oocutel 9 9 '• tnl Alum 7 8 NI Palen I &l , 91 o So CnnGs 20•., 210,. t7 HamBrExp ut 1> + ~-Up 11.6 Barnet fl 13"-141/• Oollr ~n S'; Sh in BkW A J , • NCNB Cp Slnd Pap ta•,, 19 LOSER~ B.issttt F 18~ 191'> Donalds 19•,. 20 lnter~it 7'• 8'·• 1111'1t t2>. Si>ect•o t3 ll•• I Buildr ltwGp wt t·t6-1 16 B.tylt ss 8>~ 9•,. Dorch Gs lt•n 111;in1rst Cp ••• ••• Ntt<lhm •'• S•t Spe1~I N t6 ti>•• 2 GenF1nSy 06b 3'.-l'e llell,ln Cp "''' S Cow Jons 281• 29• .• la So Ulll 72 72'•> Nl'wll Co 61t 7"1, Sla,,.dy I u•,, II>'• 3 Niltl Ttleph 31 • r-111 Bently LS 20'' ?ti/• Ooy~ 08 10•,, 11 amub 11h 131• NJ Nc1t G 12 t2\, Sta Rt9•S t6\., 17t,, • B•rnWut 1.46<1 P •-•a Betz L...lb 42'• 41 Oucomn 10~ lt..,, asn Em s s:i... Nicolet In " H St.inl Km 9.., 1t S Advent Corp 6h-1 Btbl> Co 817 9v, Ounk1n 0 s•,, S't ol\ns EF 401•: 41Y> Nof'IStn A 70'• 2t"" Sito. N Ale 16'• 17~ 6 Campanelli Ind I>·-·'• Bord Som. 481 > Sl'h Earlh Sci 6\t I> .. oslyn M 16'• 17 Nielsen B 211 .. 27>• Stea k N S 8'·• 9 1 Ei1ecutove Ind 6'• -'• Bli.HI Pw 291n 30'1> Easlmt 17•> 18'·• Kaiser St 391,, 39 Nordstr 28 • 29 Strqe Ttc ts•,. 1~. a Aceto Chem ocl t••·•-7 Block 09 It 1W> Econ u b 31~o 31'1 Kalv•r C 3>• i North KQ 2S', 261,. Strw b Clo 23 241, 9 E S L lncorp 19 -2•., Btuec.tl S 8 8\. EDS Nuc 141·2 IS'n aman C 18~ 19'1oo Nws NIG 6>·, 1"-SUI>« El 4i,. 41, 10 Oatd Tethnol9y 7 --'• BMA Cp 11'1> 12 El Paso 9lo 9~ Kearn Tk S'1• H . Nooell Cp tJ 13\• Sy,..r Cp 8 a•. 11 AmNuCler Cp "'•-~, Bob Evns 1911> 70111 El Nucel H• 7-V. Kelly Sef 12"'• 131n Ocean Or 39'1• iO Tally Crp • i \,, 2 OtCI Slone Mlg 71., _ 11, ~ma 1 s~ 16''• Emersn 8\o •'• Kemrer 1s 1sv. ocean E • a '''• Tampalt 31~ 38~. J Bio Meo sct~n 10'. -1 Bootll NP 2l'n 2•~ Energy c S•· "'• Keuf Ess 13''• 1'11• Ottsh Lo• 13~ 14'+• Taylor w 1Ha t8 4 lslMphRI .IOb :n.-~. Brenco I 23>~ 24'1-' Equity 0 1 t8•1 in . Kf'Y Oala 2l'• 3><. Ogilvy M 20~. 2t1,, Tennant 29 3t S Research Fu~I ,..__ '• Br'"U In 12'·• 11~ lqu St.L 10 10111 Keyes Fb tl ll'o1 Ollio Fer 1J){, '''" T1llany S\:. 1>'1• 6 Rtuler lncorp 2~-•., Bro.>dv F. •I• SV• Ethan A 191,,. 20 K.evst. Int 2H'< 221/7 Opll Coal 8>:. 9~. Towle Ml 8 9 1 Sonoma Vlr>vd t~e-t,0 MUTUAL FUNDS 00 soo Oii 7S 1 Oft ,. 0 01,.....1811 Ott IJ) 011 I?\ Oii 11.J Oii 17 I 011 'l 6 Ott l I 011 q 3 Olt 9 I Oft 8.1 Oii 8.l 011 8.l Off 8 ) 0 11 8.l ~ . • 1'falpraetl~e C'rbfs . - Patients Behind Insurance 8-ball By SYLVIA PORTER (La,st Ina Series) Where do )'ou and I s tand In today s malpractlc@ crisis<> T)le doctors surely have their leglttmate complaints about the upsurge In malpractice insurance ralea the 'insurance companies have Just as ' lcg1t1mate complaints about a s tronomieul a wards to alleged v1c· t1ms or bungllng, lncom petence, etc , and the h!wyers can Just1Cy the ir fr es too Money's Worth But whnt a bout us -the patients who pay the bills in the long run, no matte r how \\ell the connections are hidden' The answer whe rewes tand 1s behmd the eight ball ARE YOU AWARE, FOR mstance, that no law iuaran- tees you basic r 1g hts as to be told when a treatment actually as experimental and may have senous s ide e rrects, To know \\hat mrormahon and 1mpress1ons are bemg recorded in )Our medical record' To refuse drugs or other treatment., f'o have privacy for yourself or records., The absence or these and other vital rights m the vast ma JOnty of health care instltut1ons well may be a maJor force behmd the health care cns 1s spreading Crom coast to coast Effective systems ot pallents rights and responsive gpevance mechanis ms were strongly recommended more tnan l\\ o years agQ when a blue ribbon Commission on Medical Malpractice reported to the then HEW Secretary El hot L Richardson Said the report. Many pallents are moved to hllgate because they are dissat1sf1ed with the outcome of medical tre~tment and lwve been frustrated m their efforts to obtain either ex planatJons, advice, or even a sympathellc ear, much less 1 <.'dress ..... t WHAT MIGHT BE INCLUDED man effecllv 1s t of Pa tl~nts' Rig hts that wouJd really help solve the alpracllce u 1s 1s? A provocatl\ e rundown is m a bill now before the ;\lassachusetts le gislature developed by George J Annas ot the Boston University Law Schools Center for Law & Health Scien ces a nd include<! m a new paperback, "The Rights of Hos pital Patients" <Avon, $1 50) Under th1s bill, }OU w ould have the n ght -To partl'c1pale fully m all dec1s1ons about your health care, lo know when a treatment 1s experimental, what your choices are and to have a reahsllc evaluation or ynur nsks -To the bel)l and most prompt care available, no matter ''ho 1s paying your b11l, tc an explanation of your b1ll -and immediate attention 111 an emergency -To know the name and quahf1caLions of anyone lreatmg ~ ou and to an rnte rpreter 1f you do not speak Enghsh -To any rnformat1on m your medical record, to take a copy of your rcco1 d home, mclud1ng X rays, and to check ~our doctors diagnosis with a specaahst -TO REFUSE ANY particular drug or medical pro cedure to leave a hospital at any time if you sign a state ment th_a.t you are leaving against your doctor's advice, or to s tay until a thorough exam shows you are well enough to il•ave -To as much privncy both for yourself and your records as can be provided and to v1s1tors around the clock 1f you are a child or terminally 111 -To the help of a patients' rights advocate around the clock -.,. peuson whose spec1£1c 1ob would be to make sure that you get your rights as a patient 10 a hospital, nursmg hom e etc -To the complete loyalty of this advocate who could be dis missed only by you and who would participate m dis cuss1on of your case, have access to your records, really help YOU This concept of a strong, ~ffect1ve system of pallents 11ghts as a solution to today's malpractice explosion 1~ ne1the1 radical no1 new As Joseph V Terenzio, president of the United llosp1tC:1l Fund of New York, put it ' The issue of nat1ents 11ghts 1s fast reveabng itself to be a mam theme m the rhapsody of Amencan health reform " TERENZIO WOULD FAVOR, in addillon to the nghts cit cd a bove s trong safely pa ograms m hospitals, s trong P1 ofess10nal Standards Review Orgamzallons lo monitor the quality of health care education o( hospital starrs on the 11ghts and r espons1b1ht1es of patients as well a s practJ l.loners In Minnesota, a lnll of patients nghts has become law In Massachusetts, Annas 5ays the bill has a' good" chance of passage and could become a powerful • antidote" to malpractice suits ctnsmg out or the patients' feelm_§ of powerlessness in inst1tut1ons Gftitu•rs cu1d IJos_.r" New Yor• IUPI I -Tne tollOWlng 11$1 \hO'°" th<! \IO<k\ llWI ndvl' 9flned mo~I onO 1~1 tne m o\t bd\~O on percent ol thange on Int N~w York Stock EJ<tnan9e ~ Net •nO pertt't1t.i11e cn•11qes e re t.~ 11tflere11Ct between T ne pre• ~ c~il'Q p{ICt •nO IM (Urt(!ll tlO\lnQ Pf tt GAIHEAS I Avco Cp wl~ IS 16 31• VP 250 1 Automl ln<IS • '• UP 7l l l ICN Pn•rnl H• t • Up. 23.l 6 Tennet Awl I • t 1• Up 18 2 7 o u ton 1~ 8 ' I Up 16 7 & ltlu Corp 7••' '• Up 1S 8 'i ~rlsl•r ltlC 2' f • ~ Vp U 0 10 Ton~eCp 40 10 t 1 VP U 3 11 WFMoe IOD 6 .... Up UJ 11 $Jn1nsC 88a 20 " 71• Up 13 S t)fy Storo 2 • • '• Up 12 ~ 14 1114 Tr Am J1, t ~. Up 17 S 1) Med t 01 p S • • Up 11 q Nt>W ¥.-rk I 5 Most A"' i vr Due t Q late transm1ss1on today s listing will not appear tn the Daily Pilot te,;i.MAX I 7S SI • • S • Up 11' 17 ... MAXpt S • 12• , 12, Up 11 • L----------------'m!attwav In 1 1 1 UP 11 1 I ~.ii lndu 2S I> • Up 11 1 1 "-wk 01 J • , • Up 10 7 LOSERS AmeHt-011 10 ~lost A rff .,, .. 1 COnll MIOC 1 EmOpfB .SO 3 E lblll Cp • nlon•m IS 16 7 1• ~ ->4 1 -1. OH Oft ()If OH OH Ott 011 Oft Oii Ott on Off Oft Oft Oft Off Oft Off Off Off NEW YORK (UPI I-TM 10 most •t tlve stocks tr~ on tilt AmerlcMt Stock E11 S •rlGO S2 6 CNA 1.Awtn 1 City Inv wt\ 8 RhreC 7SD q N\lrlonL d 10 Cl Re•llY In 11 P\v,Mt I Slid 12 Ot,OP w twl tJ MtCorO ~6 t• Pitlltl Cenlf IS USl.I FE JO i. c.oi>er Leb 11 Tci1>ln Pttll ti Ahton Ml9e 19 VICtOfCC SO 10 cmens Mtg '~ ~-~ I ·-•II ··-· " 11 ·-1 22 -1•. ~ ·-' 1\.-l. 10 -•• 10 ·-l '"·-. 11> -I . s -'e s -" J1 .. -,, .S '·-,., 2 -•• J\t~ l"f•rk SalPtr \lol11m_. ,- 1iwoatOl4ll Pftvlo-d•'I' WltkaQO -Moeln•oo YHUQO r-.tOY9'''"00 ~11od&lt 19/lCOdtlt 912 tOIUle chMqe~n<l•'I' McCullO<h OU tntl B•nknote Am Agronomlts CNmp Home Synltx Cp Oott• Prod All Rthfld "'1 KelMr Ind lid Corelon Intl t Loews Tllwl "91ts 120 soo 107 700 98 800 96 700 ., 000 78 M>O 6S 200 S4I JOO SJ M>O SlSOO a... s~. I ''• 4 • 4Jl; • •• IO• ~ • Buy th• Dally Piiot for ,.anut1 (and a lot of other great comlc1) delivered 7 days a WHK 642 ·4321 (Direct or collect) .... I Cllt + '• + ~. -11t1 + \1 + '• -.... + H\ + " + "" + h Monday's Closing Prices NEW N~ YO,_lt CUPll -FOl "9 .,. ~ ... -New w II 5 tock •""*'91 e4 Ci.Mr $111H Nel P I! UMltl d_, 0.. -AA-AO«loUL It• II 14' 7S +I~ ACl'lllCI UO ' 3' ~+ IA M.meCht JO s tt m + ._ ~Dr 02D t 7J J'4+ Iii Ml•llf .Sii> *' ~ + \lo MtmtMIUl ij J -\\ A00rt9fpll " 1.. ~ .... Adv111¥ IN> •2 ttAi+ ~ Alll\el.f la 11 !t9 U + ~ AelNl.I Pf 2 »\4+ IA A~1on ' " tnu. v. A 1"11 In~ 1 90 3~+ It. A r Prd .JOI 1t 1J6 7"'+ .. II\ A rcol"' tO • IJI " + \\ A J I nd111trs 3' H't AklOl\t '20 14 33 1~+ Y> Al• 0 .. 1 1' 7 lo il+e Al•tiu1 lntlt 12 t•7 16*-V• Alllft,11\1 60 6 Ill ~+ IQ AIDtfloC 36 1' ' •VJ , Alti.rhn to 10 11 I~+ V. Alc.ftAI AO 7 HI 2iY>+ _,. Alco $Id .. s '" H"-+ --Alcon Lo 24 21 IOI 27 .. + 1\lo Aleu11 166 t • sw AllSOll Mtge 1' 2• 3~ 1, All419(o 20D 10 21 10\.. + v. 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B•aler L 19 31 213 49 V• + 1 BeySIG 1 IO lo 7 1& " lilt Burll\OS 32 11 IJ 23~ • ~ Be•I FOS 72U ltl 231"+ V• 8HFCI c>f 4 • 11S'-" ·~ Beomn SO IS 9'I 36l• + ~ BectonO 40 20 229 3S\ t BffcnAr 10 6 2s1 1n1 + +. i:::~~nc~ s m 2:'-BelcoPI ISi> 3 2W 191.t IV. Belden 1 20 S 2 U I BeldQH 30g 10 SO 7~t Bell Hwl ... 8 196 11~ + ~ Btmls Co 19 • 78 141•+ '• Bencllx I IO I 1~ JS\.+ '• Bendix f.' J •• S4 + 2 8tn Cp 2S 5 341 20 " Vt BenC pf. 30 so so -~. 8tnC111>f •~• 1230 .. + ~ Ben Sid Mtg I 31't + Vt Be119t8 10. , 31 s 2~. + \. Ber~ey PM n s 3\o Besl Prock 1 11 49 7\-f + v. BelnStMI 7• 4 .0. l S'I. • 'lo f.~c~~ng ::n m n,.,! ~; Bl•lr Jlln 32 2J 7 ... 811ULll I 10 S 11 U Ya + V. Bloc.aHA 40 t 7M ll'lw-Vo BlueBell Ill I 111 7•¥1-~ Bobble Bru u• 21.o. + Vo Boeh'!! AO 9 12n JO"-+ IV. BolMCn U 7 45• 17 /4 t '\lit Booi. Mo lh • 1 11'• + llt Bor<Mll I JO 9 1'9 7• • -I 1 8org w 1 >S I 12) 11'•+ ~ BormtM In S 71 2'• ao.1 Ed 2 ._. 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"The moon i1 up there aomewhwe, but I guess they've got their lights out." L. M. Boyd ·How to Rate Those MOvies Was the cynical Mr. Thomas Fuller who said. ''Sorrow for a husband is like a pain in the elbow, s harp and short." Regretfully, our Love and War man agrees. His files contain numerous case histories that indicate wives are much better able than husbands to deal with the death or departure of a spouse. TAKES 72 different muscles to speak one word. AVERAGE teenage lad gets $15.45 worth of presents from his girl friend in a year. YOU MIGHT find useful this handy movie guide from Elston Brooks: ··u the picture is rated "G", the hero gets the girl. If it's rated "R", the viJlain gets her. If it's rat.ed ''X ", everybody gets her. ' WJUSKERS Q . "How many whjs kers on the average man ?" A. About 25,000. They grow l /lOOths of an inch every 24 hours. So if all the growth were confined to one whisker, sup- posedly it would be 250 inches long. That's a lot of whisker. Doesn 't sound right. Q . "HOW FAST is a tattoo needle? How deeply does it jab?" A. Moves up and down 50 times a s econd. Goes l /64lh of an inch into the skin. Q. "QUICK, Louje, was Galileo that scien- tist's first name or last name?" A. Fir!>t name. His last name was Galilei. COPPER Archeologists are certciin that Americans in the year 2.000 B.C. mined copper in northern M 1chigan. They dug about 10,000 pits. built bonfires in the m, poured cold water over the fires to split the rocks, then pounded out the copper with stone hammers.· No15ody knows what happened to that copper culture. Evidently it got wiped out about 1,000 B.C. And nobody knows, either, what happened to all that copper. Most mysterious. THAT WORD "school" originally meant "leisure" ... "NICE" originally meant ''stupid" ... AND "PRETTY" originally meant "tricky." A CONSTRUCTION man of lengthy ex· perience says the Great Pyramid in the Egyp- tian desert would cost $1.12 billion were it to be built today. DO YOU HA VE any notion of how crowded Harlem 1s? lf the entire population of the United States lived as close together as do the blilcks and Puerto Ricans there, the whole citizenry could be housed in just three of New York City's fi ve boroughs. •<klr~u mal110 L M. Boyd, P.O. Bo~ 1S60, ~111 Mesa '2616. Copyrigh1197S L.M. Boyd If you'.re currently collecting on 0 trust deed, personal note or real estate contract- or paying to hove one collected -we can help. We simply open o note collection account in y~r nome and toke on all the details. W~t' s the cost to you? Not one penny when you maintain o qualifying minimum balance. In fact. you get oil the money (with inter05t), and we do oil the work. Nice, huh? CiLENl4LE FEDERAL SAVINO§ Or-.I ......... _ • ..,,...... -.. .....i """' --..... ~ -SJ ~ If\ --' -· !l>Ofl '° ....... ., (al.I- ,.,..._porf e.odl lltonch 500 Newporf Center Or./~4·5300 1 ~ M9eo 8tonc:h 2300 Harbor Blvd I ~2 ·47 1 I Sontu Ano Branch . 5 I fashion SqVOf'e/ 5' I ·33" f~ 8ronch· 320 N. Harbor Blvd/526·8331 GQverno.-s_ Support Death Penalty By U•lted PreH latematlonal A majority of the na- tion's governors favor some form of apital punishment, m t of them on grounds t at i~ deters criminals. A United Press n- temational poll of the U.S. governors shows favor a death sentence and 17 ~re against it. The other five governors re- fused to take a stand. South, where only Gov.' JuhanM.CorrollofKcn-who flvor capHal "It tt ls a deterrent, cruel and unus ual or Ruy Blanton of Ten· •lucky who, as a private punishment, 18 sold It ii then let's make it a de-ther-is no appeal once nessee, which bas passed attorney, once defended. a deterrent. Others said terrent -by making it thelt~ecution has taken a death penalty law, op-the last man executed ln it is the will of the people widespread, by making place. posesit hisstate. or the death penalty ls1 ltpublic,b>;lnsuringthat. . _ . justified by b clnous1 every execulioll is on col-th1r.1y ·thre~ states Hl'VE ALWAYS been •·capital punish men\. crimes. : or television where it can· :have death ~natty·~~· opposed to ca pital has a strong deterrent have the maximum de· 'fhe electric ch•ar is punishment and I'm still value and as long as it is But Gov. Dan Evans or: terrenl effect," be said. authorized in 19 of those. opposed to it," he said. ·saving innocent lives, J Washington a strong op-I I s tates and the gas Opinions in 'each of am. for it," he said. "I ponent of' the death' OF THE 17 governors chamber in nine others .. three other regions -the believe if t~ere were a penalty, said it should! against the death sen· In Del .aware. New est, Midwest and referend.um an Kent~ky not be-used as a retribu·: tence, seven said it is not Hampshire, JdahQ and rtheast _broke about on ~he issue of capital tion since he said it is . a deterrent. Five said Montana death by hang. even. punishment, it would be against the Christian 1.hey have personal' .ing ~authorized by law. Support for capital· One of the strongest punishmept among gov-supporters of capital favored by a margin of ethic, and he scoffed ad aversion t'b capital AndmUtah,adea!hsen· 3·tO·l or better." arguments that capital· punishment. Others said t~nce could be carried out emors is heaviest in the punishment is Gov.. OF THE 28 governors punishment is a deter·· the state has no riglll to either by hanging or by a rent. 1 take a life, the penalty is firing squad • • I .I BLASTS FROM THE PAST. Get your ears and THE FOOD. AftD LOTS OF IT. Thrill your taste buds with everything from juicy Big Busters, our famous half·pound hamburgers, to more than generous portions of fried chicken, shrimp or fish. AU at.prices that'll thrill your budget There's a children's menu too. With more than they can eat For less than you'd expect POPCORftTO THEMOVIES. _......_ eyes ready! We've got All the fresh:popped popcorn you can eat while you catch some of the finest flicks this side of Hollywood Chaplin Laurel and Hardy. Abbott and Costello. The Three Stooges. Cartoons for the kids. Shown continuously, every day. THRillS FOR THE KIDS. old and new records in our juke box, and a collection of some of the funkiest nostalgic col· lectables, posters and pictures .; anywhere! l ~;,.:.. PEAftllTS! Gl1 YOUR FRESH ROUTED PEANUTS! All you can shell, all day long. They go great before, after or during a meal. Or just sitting around washing them down with your favorite beverage. So if you like peanuts, then skip on over to The Ground Rd\.Jnd t\ I t ,, I '· i :- 1 ~ Every Sunday, Bingo the Clown takes to the floor and spellbinds the kids. He's got free gifts for them too Combine that with our kid's special menu, and you've got a Sunday they'll never forget )·": -- 1· COSTA MESA 27'0 Heff>or BIYd (Nm to Pier I fmportl) 556-9"6 LET US ENTERTAlft mu. And you'll Q_ave a real good time with our nightJy and 0 weekend live entertainment No cover. No minimum. Just some of the hottest musicians around Watch for upcoming groups and dates of appearance. Bring In this coupon and get one~ Buster, our famous Mlf·pound hamburger, FREE (includes french fries and coie maw) when you buy one at the regular priced $2.2.5. How's that for Hot Stuff? This offer good until :J\me 9, 1975. ,OCPtl I ~1 I ~~-.... .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ........... . I ., - . ' Involve m e nt "Well Taught . . ,. By ALLISON DEERR • Of ... 0.11,~1 ... SUff ~eatrice Brockman has always been interested in children and school, in education and the future. When she started teaching the orthopedically handicapped in Orange County. the program consisted of one room in John Muir School, Santa Ana, one teacher and 21 students aged 3 to 21. Loc:_al Elks collected and donat- ed furniture. As the'(>rogram g_rew, teachers, aides, physical therapists and bungalows were added. "At one time we had to have double sess ions," Mi ss Brockman r emembers. "One teacher would take her class out- side under the pepper trees while the other used the bungalow for quiet study. . "When it rained, we managed somehow.'' In the mid 50s, the Carl Harvey School was built to meet· the needs of the expanding program. PROGR AM GREW Since that time, the school has come lo offer a physical therapy and occupational therapy depart- ment, a high school section, daily living classes, work experience and a clinic. ,.,.. There a r e prescriptive ,. pllys ical education classes and parent education sessions. Some 150 students now are bused to the school daily. While Carl Harvey once met the needs or all such special stu- dents in the county, several now do the job, such as Plavan School in Fountain Valley. A new school will open in the fall to serve the south county. she said. And, more and more, han- .. dicapped students are being inte- grated into regular classrooms for some or all of their academic work. When Miss Brockman looks back at her 30·plus years or teaching handicapped children. she is most proud of the progress made. "The big&est reward has been to see the students able to accept their handicaps and to be able to lake part in life, to go out and do things .. " she said. AWARD EARNED · Her outside involvement also played a part in her recent Wom an of Achievement Award from the Newport Harbor Zonla Club. The Balboa r esident has worked with Mexican youngsters in community centers since her coHege days and has always dovetailed her interest in art and her teaching. She i s a director i n t he California Art Education As· sociation and Orange County Art Association, as well as the Coun-. cil for Exceptional Children. In the area or kindergarten in· struction," Miss Brockman is ac· live in curriculum planning for the California State Board of Education. .. Outside the cla~room, you might find her arra•ging paint· ings for an e xhibit or student art or helping with an all-couftty wheelchair sports day. "Art is very important. For many of our students, it's the area in which they excel. Some or our students take top honors in competition with regular stu· dents." I.n her years as a teacher, she has developed soP'le pet projects, and one by one, she said, they . i s • ~ I l;\E AT RICE B ROCKMAN TEACH E S YClUNG PUP ILS AT CARL HARV E Y SCHOOL come to pass. But there are some mighty mou.ntains to conquer "We've had a fantastic in· crease in facilities, teachers. programs, but many parents and the public are unaware or what help is available," she said. GIVING HELP "Or. they don't realize all of the kinds of children we can help. A child who is handicapped is not handicapped in everything.·· The need for vocational high schools, using existing facilities, is another project she loudly espouses. ·we could operate schools along the Ellropean lines, with academic. vocational and com- bined schools Yes, most schools have vocational classes. but that doesn't do the job "There are always that top IO percent who are the leaders. the achievers Everyone else is in competition with them. College isn't what everyone wants "Why not give students a choice'' When they can see the why or a program. they will take to it and do well "They have confidence and more setf-esteem." Her d e t e rm in a ti on h asn't waned . And , she refuses to go into anything unprepared. When fir s t as ked to take charge or the physically han· dicapped class, she · refused to say yes u ntil she had "proper credentials." "I studied at Children's H ospita l a nd Orthopae dic Hospital in Los Angeles and in. Michigan where the top medical men in the fi eld wc:re at that time.·• Graduate work followed at Cal State Los Angeles, San Francisco State, UCLA and USC. She had done remedial work and seems to have found a way to get through lo students who needed help. "Every student should have a place to go, somewhere to ac- quire skills, to be somebody." Bea Brockman plans to keep on working for those places. "I've been teaching for a long time, but I started early. What I need now is some help. I can't keep up with it all." The Debate Goes On • • • . ' ERA Advocated AOSTIN, Tex. <U PI) -Diana Hobby doesn't believe she ever will need protection from s9x dis· crimination. but s he sup~ the Equal Rights Amendment be~ause or her daught~rs. "I think I'm a lready a very privileged and lucky person in every way." said the wife of Tex- as Lt. Gov. William Hobby. "But all or my divorced, widowed and single friends have to buck ine· quality in pay, jobs, credit and many times in education . ''I'd like to think my daughters will not be hampe red by the han- dicaps that would be laid upon them if the Equal Rights Amend· ment is not adopted," she said. The Hobbys have four children -girls 16 and 10 and boys 14 and 12. Mrs. Hobby works in her husband's office in the morning but goes horn e before the children get out of school. "I grew up in a family without men. There was no such thing as boy work or girl work because there weren't any boys. It never occurred to me that those things had t o be divided and separated." Mrs. Hobby, 44, is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Radcliffe and taught E nglish literature at Chatham Hall , a Virginia board· ing school, before her marriage in 1954 to the son of a former Tex· .... as governor and the publisher of the Houston Post. She has a master's degree from Georgetown Univer sity. She was the Post's book editor fo11 ia Fears, taklltg a -teave of absen~e to move to Austin when Hobby was elected lieutenant g~vernor in 1972. "I miss it a lot. I get the reeling that I 'm spinning _my wheels. There's nothing at the end of the week that I can lay out that I've accomplished." Mrs. Hobby never .even took m ater nity leave with her children. "I never went to the hospital without a typewriter." And s he even arranged her schedule to go home and breast feed her children. "Of course not everybody's job can be that flexible," she said. ·~In any employment situation your working wife has got to be the w eak est link and your employer knows that and leans on it." · She said women face the most discrimination in employment. "Being for ERA doesn't mean you take leave or your common senses," Mrs. Hobby said. "Men and women already use common. restrooms on airplanes," she points out, saying "It's never bothered me much." . BEA ANDERSON, Editor T.,.Ml•y,Ju"el, 1'7S P•,.81 -observation Diana Hobby with Billy Carr Who Needs It? WHITE PLAINS. N.Y·. (UPI> -Annette Stern never ques· tioned whether life as wife . mother a nd homemaker w9s worth it. "Women." she says pro· udly. ''are the heart of the home. and the home is the heart of America." She believes that raising her three sons and building a good family life is as important as any other contr ibution a woma n could m ake. She is staunchly against the Equal Rights Amendment. Over the years, as the women's liberation movement ~rew, Mrs. Stern came lo beheve that "'young women were constantly being propagandized out or the home. The role of homemaker was constan tly being deni· grated." A year ago, w~Ue listening to a radio program on "what women want," Mrs. Stern got mad because none of the women on the show wanted anything to do with the family way of life. She also heard a lot of talk about the need to pass the ERA. "I decided to do a little poll. Of the 93 women interviewed 87 never heard of ERA. and the others thought all it meant was 1 equal pay fo r e • She was v inced that "somcbodv had to r sent the type of woman I respect, the type of woman who feels the home is important.·· On May 8, 1974, Mrs. Stern hosted a me e tin g of 200 neighborhood housewives and mothers ir\ her home. The result of that meeting was the creation of WUNDER -Women United to Defend Existing Rights. Their slogan: "It's WUNDER·ful to be a Woman." Mrs. Stern s aid that "in the past" women were discriminat· ed agains t in three areas: employ ment, education and credit. ''We must take these pro· blems one at a time, each on its merits." she said. "There is no need to change the Constitution.•· According to WUNDER lite rature, ERA would . "in· validate all state laws which re· qwre the husband to financially support his wife ... will wipe out a woman's present freedom or choice to take a paying job or to be a fulltimc wife and mother supported by her husband ... (and) will wipe out protective la bor l a w s whic h benefit women." • • ' A Real Turkey DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your column is a great tool for educat- ing people. I have learned from it and now I want to educate others. Although I never gr,aduated from high school I am un authority on one subject. Turkeys. I have r aised turkeys for 33 years and discover ed something that most people do not know. From very close observation I have learned that turkeys breed through the nose. The Tom turkey has a sm all extension above his snoot which becomes visible when he struts. Humans are unaware of this but the he n turkey knows. Turkeys strut when they want to mate. It's n lot like a tribal dance. ff a hen turkey is interest· ed in mating she will join the dance and rub her nostril against the Tom's snoot. What occurs is the actual mating process. Some of your so-called experts will say this is not true. I say let them look in books. I look at turkeys.-TOPEKA READER DEAR TOPEKA: Since I'm unable to observe turkeys at close range <they aren't allowed in this apart.ment, Board of Health regulations) I must rely on books. According to ever· ytbing I have read, turkeys mate just like all other birch. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This letter is intended to be a violent reprobation to Martin's Ferry, the man who said, ··1 happen to be a guy who wouldn't marry a girl who s mokes -and there are m3lly more Hite me." The on ly printa ble reply to that statement I can think or is this: ... I happen to be a girl who wouldn't marry a narrow· minded guy like Ma rtin 's Ferry and there are.m a ny more like ME." Where is there a command· ment written for women that says. "Thou Shalt Not Smoke"? P.S. To Martin's wife: Honey, I feel sorry for you if you should ever decide to take up smoking. -ROCKFORD P UFFER DEAR ROCK: Thanks for your point of view. Here's a1lotber one: DEAR ANN : I lhoughlfor s ure my boyfriend wrote that letter and signed it "Martin's Ferry" although we live in another state. He swore on a Biblethathedidn't -and I believe him. When we fi-rst started to date I smoked like a chimney and it almost put an end to our rela- tionship. He made it plain that he thoroughly detested smoking and I had to make an important de· cision . Was he worth giving up cigarettes for? I decided he was and I quit. That was six months ago and I'm thrilled I chose him over the cigarettes. I feel so much better. My nasty cough is gone. It's as if I've been liberated from slavery. I want to s h out from the housetops, ··1 love that man!" - PETUNIA DEAR PET: Go ahead and shout. I'll bet it's music to his ears! DEAR ANN: Thanks for s ay- ing. "Not everyone belongs in college." Too many parents think it's a social disgrace if their children would prefer to go to work or, heaven forbid, attend a vocational school instead of following Dad to Dartmouth or Mom to Smith. About 80 percent of the jobs to- day require no college degr~ln fact the world needs more PhOs Uke I need a hole in my head. Please stress the dignity of work and the value of vocationJt l education. -OVER EDUCATE)> DEAR O.E.: .. The dlpJC..V ot work!" What a beautiful phrase! Thank you for a sane and soltd letter. It's a pleasure to print It. Don 't get burned by a "line" that's too hot to handle. Play it root with Ann Landers's guide to "Necking and Petting -What Are the Limits?" Send your~ quest to Ann Landers, P.O. Boie 1400, Elgin, Ill. 60120. encl~ing 50 cents in coin and a Iona, stamped. self·addrened en- velope. .. .. • •f DAILY PfLOT T\IMd!f June 3. 1975 Fresh Star·t Educational By AU.ISON DE ERR oe .. Deif'"._.....,. Shaded by 11 big tree, tJ:>e day care center at Comp S, Tent Ci- ty, Camp Pendleton, is llkea giant pl ~. A PIY"'ood platform surrounded by snow fencing is gradually Ulking on a more permanent feeling. Soon there will be tiny tables, low enough to kneel by, painted in bright colors. There are some 800 Vielnal'l'\ese children under six at Camp 5. They, and the children at seven other such centers in five othet camps, are the beneficiaries ol Fresh Start. · j .. •' League Guides City ·Tourists. Chartered tours of Newport. Beach, a new service in the area, has been adopted as a continuing tund·raisfng project by the As- sistance League of Newport Beach. The five-hour tour by bus and boal is designed to attract area groups as well as convention d~ legates and their spouses. ficials, hotel personnel, business und industrial leadens and the press will be guests. Tickets are $15 and reserva· lions may be made for large or small groups by call.mg 673-6130. Shorter, box-lunch tours also will be available. ) Monday through Saturday some 200 children attend both the morn mg and afternoon sessions .of the center. Fresh Start will make the experience more than just random pJay. Coordinator Nancy Elwood, a Red Cross volunteer from Corona del Mar, saad that the prO'gram will be educational. A small group of volunteers is beginning the teaching effort now, but m.iny more will be needed to reach all of the young re- fugees. s he s aid. ··we wall need teachers and aides for morning and afternoon sessions for al least the next six to nine months," s he said. .. All that is reqwred is a love of children. We'd love to have people with backgrounds in music and teaching, liut it isn't re- qwred. tour newport Some of the highlights or the bus tour include viewing the Up- per Bay, cradle of local history and one of the few remaining natural sanctUJ1ries for shore birds and migrants on the coaat; Irvine Industrial Park, the Sherman Gardena, deslp sbOps and restaurants. On the waterway as well as by highway, tourists will see col- orf u 1 landmarks, homes or celebrities and famous yachts. Proceeds will support the league's major philanthropies which are the Children's Dental Health Center and the Child Day Care Center for working mothers. The dental center bas treated 7,425 needy school children since its founding in 1975. The day care center has served preschool children of sing!~, working parents with low incomes for three years. It has a professional staff or fi ve. "My own background is in social work." The number of dedicated volunteers required is large, she• S3id. The project will be initiated Thursday. June 1'2, when city of- Tour chairman is Mrs. Sue Hitchman,· assisted by Mrs. William Spurgeon 111. ''Many of us ha\'e been working at the camps several days each week. but not everyone ban do that. It is an hour's drive each way and we can't get to all o' the camps in one day.'' This brochure cover will · become a familiar aid to tourists. The Fresh Start Nursery School, she s aid, would consist oft wo ~minulesessionseachdayateachcamp. With regular school out for the summer soon, s he hopes to recruit m any workin~ teachers. Those trained as teachers, but "not currently working. would be vciluableas \\'ell, she s aid. \\'hat Fresh Start is after is gi\'ing the "new Americans" some of the basic~ the :.t\'erage youngster is exposed lo before en- tering elementary school. Din~r Bags , the-L-ef-tever.s Bv E R MA BOMBECK ··Almost every American child attends some preschool. We "ant to ready these children for luter school experiences." The firs t time I asked (or a "doggy bag" 10 a restaurant, my . three-year-old jumped up and down, clapped her hands excited- ly and said ... Oh , Mommy, does that meun we'r e going to get a dog?" Children \\ill be taught ABCs, through singing and storytell· ing, colors, parts of the body and foods in English. "And, we think the children will lake what they learn back to their fam1hcs and the learning will continue." 1 stuffed a hard roll in the kid's mouth and set it.I , .. We are certain- ly going to talk about it when we get in the car." As the progr am proceeds, carpools and other arrangements "ill be made. s he s aid. ··we realize that not everyone can make the trip several t imes each week, but we know there are many people looking for a way to help,'' Mrs. Elwood said. And we certainly did. I ex· plained to her that I came from a family that not only ate ever- ything on their plate, but had to fi ght the compulsion to go around a nd eat what everyone else. had left. Informational meetings on the program and its needs will be offered Wednesday, June 11, at 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. in St. Mark Prcsby tt:nan Church. 2100 Mar Vista Drive, Newport Beach. .My determination to prove "you can take it with you when you go". has been a constant Further information is available from Mrs. Elwood at '646-1432. I Peering Around CHARLES ('l' RTIS, s hop in its first year of .15-yea r -o ld La g una operation. ·Bc<.1ch ccllas t, has won : More than 200 volun- first plct cc in the 1975 '.teers were honored for Young Artist Con<.'crto 1their efforts at a first Competition, s ponsored birthday luncheon at the by the Orange Br<.1nch, :hos pital. WiUiam C. :!\lu~1c Teachers Associa· :Edgar, president of the tion of California. •board of directors , ac- Other wann ers were .ccptt>d the donation from Shelly Landsbe rJ?, Foun-1Dorothy Colver, volun· ta in Va 11 <.' y. s c <.'Ond; !.teer president. Henry Curtis, Laguna ' Oectch, third ; Joanne , Kll\I CARLSON, Kon g, Huntingto n 'daughterofMr.andMrs. Reach, honorable men-Ken Carh;on of Irvine, tJOn . has been selected to ATllALIE IRVl~E CLA R K ha s been awarded an honora ry doctor of law d egree by Pepperdinc l'ntvers ity School of L ;.i w . Also rc- c c 1v1 n g honorctry degrees from the un· i\'crs1ty were Secret<Jry of Housing a nd l,;rban Development Carla An - derson Hills and Vincent S. Dalis mer, a Hunt-· in gt on Harbour resident who is Jud ge of the Supe rior Cour t in Nonrnlk. JANET MARY LANDER. a senior al Mater Dei fl igh School. has been rccogn1zcd for honors at entr a nce to M o unt S t . M~1ry 's C'oll e~c. Lus Angeles . The dLJughler of l\tr. and Mrs. W. K. Lc.1nder of Costa M e~a. "';,is ont·or27 !>tudents sci honored ' SADDLEBACK COM- =MUSITV hospital volun- t eers raised Sl00,000 in .contributions to the facility through the lhri~ pctrtici pate in Dallas Prcst!nts: Fa s hion Careers, C reating Through Consum erism, ·a career exploration event m Dallas. . During the June 12·27 event, which i s sponsored by the Tejas Gari Scout Council in Dallas, Miss Carlson will go through <.1 dress fac- tory to see how clothes are made, vis it the Dallas Apparel Mart. watch fumous designers ctl work, talk to pro- fessional models and go behind the scenes at a large department store. Only 125 Girl Scouts werc cho s en from •throughout the United State:.. ELECTED lo the La urel Wreath, which is based on service in co- cu rri cul a r programs, w a s Arlene Carol Rruner, fres hman al Mount St . Mary 's College . She i s the da ughter or Mr. and Mrs. Robe rt L. Bruner or Fountuin Valley. Weddings ~ and Engagements To avoid dihppointment . prospective . brides are remanded to have their wedding 11 tortes with hlnck and "hile glossy photoJ(r oph to the Daily Pilot People Depnrt m ent one "eek tw>forf' the "edding. • P1 cturel'I 1 <.'<'t'l\f'n arter that lime will not he used ror rngngemenl announcements it is imperatn·c thut the story. also <1ccom - pan1ed by a black and white glossy pk· Lure. be uhm1tled . Ix "eek~ or more twfnre lhe wcddinR dale. oth •r\\ ise it will not I><' publi~hcd. To h~lp fill requir~menl!' on h'lth wed- dlnJr and enJ(agement stont·~. (orm~ are a\•all.,blc 1n ult Dally Pilot orficcs f.ur tht>r que~t1onb "111 he anMvere<l by People ~pwrtment staff member~ rft 642·4321 Rite · Dates Told CONNIE SOWINSKI Sowinski-Holtz Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Sowinski of Huntington Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Connie Louise Sowinski and Dennis Lee Holtz, son or Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Holtz of Dana Point. Vows will be exchanged July 19 in Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic Church, Huntington Beach. . The bride-to·be attended Fountain Valley High School and Golden West College. Her fiance graduated from Servile High School and Cal Po- ly, San, Luis Obispo. * * * Former Orange Coast College students, Ka ren Lynn Holt and Rex Stuart Butler of Ne"."'J>Orl Be ach are planning lo marry Sept. 13 in St. Andrew's Presbyterictn Church. Miss Holt, daughter of Mrs. Cathecine Holt or Costa Mesa, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School. Her fian ce is a graduate of Herbert Hoover High School, Glendale and he is the son of the John Butlers of that city. * • • R iger-Ken igs<?n Mr. and Mrs. Hal Riger of Newport Beach have a nnounced the e ngagement of their daughte r , Nancy Lynn Riger to Lee Gene Kenigt;on, son of Mrs. Frieda Kenigson of Long Beach. Temple Beth Emel in Anaheim has been r~­ served for the Aug. 17 riles. The fiancc is a junior high s chool mathematics teacher, having earned his degree al UCLA and credential at Cal State University,. , source ot embarrassment to my family, Through the years, I have · · baggc:d" the following variety of goodies for my non-existent dogs: A chocolate eclair for my French Poodle. Stew for my Irish seller. Baked beans for my Boston ter- rier. ning. Why, even etiquette experts say it is all right to use doggy oags. Name one reason why I 'shouldn't take leftover food home." "The car s mells like liver." "Name another.'' I AT WIT'S. END . ~· Plum pudding for my Brittany spaniet: Potato pancakes for my German s hepherd. . ''Our refrigerator has rood with so many teeth marks, it looks like an orthodontist's workshop.'' ''Now you are being ridiculous. .Doggy bags are in. I got an invita· tion just the other llay that said BYOB -bring your own bag." The waitress appeared at the table. ·•couldn't eat all of your pizza, sir?" "Right," he s m ned, "butlueki. ly, l have this English sheep dog at home who has this craving for Italian food. Do you suppose she is ll'ying to tell us something?" An enchilada for my Mexican Chihuahua. ''That's bottle! '· . "So, whatever you want to br- ing home." The other night as I was negotiating to transport 'h. cup stale beer "for my St. Bernard with a problem " my husband grimaced and said, "This has got to stop." ''Stop ~" I s aid. "It's just begin· ·'All I know is J'd feel like a fool asking,"_ he sa id, "especially when we don't even have a dog." ''All you have to do is open your mouth and ask. It's easy." The waitress came back and handed him a slip of paper . •·Here's the name of a good vet. In the meantime, l'tl try a bland diet." Pisces Can Become A Bit . Wealthier KAREN HOLT N~NCY RIGER Long Beach where the bride-to· be studied before transferring to Golden West College. * * * Leenerts-Cunningham CC Irvine students Lois Leenerts and Arthur K. Cunningham plan to be married July 12 in the campus park. Their parents are Mrs. Nancy Leenerts and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Cunningham, all of Costa' Mesa. The affianced pair graduated from Estancia High School and attended Orange Coast College. He also studied at UC Santa Barbara. * ... * Lange-Strozier Mr. und Mrs. George H. Lange of Tustin have announced t.he engagement of their daughter, Phyllis Ann Lange to Hardy Matthew Strozier Ill of Irvine. The bride-to-be is a graduate of Tustin High School and California State Univer sity at Fullerton where she earned a BA in English. Currently, she is doing graduate work toward a teaching credential. Her fiance is a graduate of Lowell High School, Whittier and UCLA where he received a BA in political science and an MPA. He is a senior at Southwestern University of Law. A wedding is planned for July 12 in lbe Mis- sion Viejo First Christian Chu1·ch. .. WE DNESDAY, JUNE4 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (Mal'ch 21· April 19): A void l'ushing into accidents. Calm ap- proach is necessary especiall y in connectio~ with family affairs. T AUR US <April 20· May 20): What was hid- den, kept undercover springs forth with color~ flying. GEMINI CM ay 21- June 20): Friends are aggressive. Your whims cost money. NothiQg is movieland . Means the practical facts of life come home to roost. CANCER (June 21- July 22): You e ncounter aggressive people. Key is to maintain personal balan ce. Don 't com- pound errors by losing temper. LEO <July 2S·Aug. 22): I mpulsive actions dominate. Quick trips at·e featu1·ed. Plans are· changed. Check 'reserva. tions, costs. VIRGO CAug. 23-Sept. 22): One· who shares - and pulls purse strings - may feel In pugnacious mood. Don't attempt to bull your way. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Forces ue scat· Calvin ... From our~· Dept.. for Graduat ion. \ C.lvin sporteoat 1 srav flannel slacks, oxford bulton down ah1rt, Repp t.\f.. size.a e-20 §~o@@J~@ ............... -..t..., liM•l010 , I lered. Leave details, fine points for another timtt. Fot· now, gain overall view. I -I' I SCORP IO (Oct . 23- Nov. 21): Be specifk concerning details -re- model, get on more sond base. Accent is on work, health, generctl attitude towctrd important issues. SJ\GITfARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21 >: Emotional fireworks indicated. You could be involved with volatile individual who wants change fast. CAP R ICOR N (Dec., 22-Jan. 19): Strive to re· new contact with o~c ~,·ho was a "stabilizing in f 1 u e n-c e ' ' in p as t • Domestic harmony Js restored. AQUA R tUS (Jatf. 20·Feb. 18): Cancel UJ1· necessary trips. Be wa1'}' in crowds. Stay avaty from pugnaciou.s neighbors, relatives. P ISCES <Feb. !~­ March 20): Money log- jam is broken -you have more access to what you need and can be more financially ag- gres·sive. Your Search For The Perfect ·FATHER' DlY GIF.T - Ends At ff_~<t~ ~~~'· $out11 Coast -·-~ ._c._.. .. ....... .. ....... ~ COSTA MESA "'-'r. 14Mtt I ......... "" ...... _ ........ _ • ... IOOMER TUMBtEWEEDS ". U• •'"'.,_. -"" .. .. FUNKY WIHKERBEAN I FIGMENTS NANCY HI, SLUGGO, THIS LETTER MUST BE ~OM NANCY • (/ , VE.A~. SOT T SPE~ 50 MLJC~ T1~e wotJi;it'~ING WMAi 10 P01 IN IT ••• 1HE:RE:1 ~LJ'f FOR TIU:: 6RACE OF GOD, L.lE l ! 'by Wm. F. and Mel Casson by Tom K. Ryan ~ ... . -~~ by Tom Batiuck JL.B~B~ on. at lo.rM. ~ ~ J.R.S./ by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller NANCY'S LETTERS ALWAYS HAVE A SLIGHT SCENT OF PEANUT BUTTER PEANUTS • 'TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE HL/RR'{ VP. 'f'OU STVff D 6U6 ! DO '<OU WANNA 6CT STEPPEO ON? C ~~. '{()V'~f HOWIN6 Yeslerday·s Puzzle Solved: ,,, tJ I T J. A V I 0 • A I< A ,1 A T H S IL I T ! I I V 111 It N I rl~ 8 A I• < f I 11 11 ACROSS spirits 45 Swamp I' A s s ... r. r • I J C ( u S E R P I E A S •A £ T 0 P T f ····of Good 46 Dominated Hooe H Song of fOY .. 5 Recedes 49 Desrred goal 9 Passe 53 Of certain a 11 I~ IJ I lit I I£ •• 10 IE llll A T-A LA BAS.,! .!..! A 0 S II ... N l-~f ,R llM ,llAIRI) 11 ,_ ,p I I I I• £ II 0 II k E 0 14 Gem Arabs 15 Move about 57 Tropical no1s1ly c1tmb1ng 16 Expunge vine 17 Infamous 58 Grouchy 'C £ II I H I I S " 0 II E marQurs person L n n s C S T I 8 Put 1n pitch 59 ObltQue 19 Carr.ad type Abbr. 20 Teamsters 61 Thebes vehicle deity 22 Categorized 62 Aniseed · anew 'source 24 Declares 63 Half Prell~ .26 Composition 64 Behave ;( s l,O Y I E IE tJ ) I 9 Argue 10 Moved upward 11 Sailors· lnlormal 27 Author ···· furtively Chase 65 Grit maker 12 Anglo· 29 p Saxon eggv..or 66 Woody plant .. 0 . Plllky 67Holy pen 30Flounder persons Fr IJAct 11 0 I A IC Io 33 Notlh abbr. 21 Dancer Gene····· 23 First .: .............. ; DOWN ,mortgage, G n lnl~ Ir N n H I C D D I [ 0 H R E I H E Kit IS N IC IE I A house 37 Yard goods 40 Piano part 42 Greater 1n extent 43 W1t11c1sm 45 Supporter 4 7 Nova Scotia cape 48 Volume unit 50 Ex lent 51 Harden: Var. 52 M11ttary USA. resident 37Set1n motion 38 Angu ish 39HIOh explosive t Losses , incurred eg 25 lnduloe in a vehicles winter sport 53 Saurel ltsh 2 lnd1v1dually 3 llahan arty 4 USA 28 Adversary 54 Eurooean 30 RaltOll rivef " UP THE GM~ JUDGE PARKER NO GRAMMAR LESSON TONIGHT, WILLSON! WITH T.T. HIMSELF JN THE AUDIENCE, l'VE GOT , TO 8E E5PECIALL'f GOOD! 50 GET 1 ~ OUT WHILE 1 GET DRESSED! ' MISS PEACH BUT, DONNA ... 1DOOLErs . I • l : ""'-4...---., DR. SMOCK G'ORDO f .:.;T ue:;;:.:.::sd:..::.JYi....J;:;.;;u;:.;.nt;:.;3::......:..:19:.....7=-5 ------~DAIL 'I PILOT 11:1 woui...c> A SNOWMAN SOUNP NASAL, IF Hf; -rAL..-<f:P ™ROUGH HIS CARRO'f" ~ by G~rcJe Lemont 1'He: t..ONGESS1" r?AY OF MY L.-IFe 1s Ae>ou1'" -ro eeG1N ... by Gus Arriola . MOON MULLINS ( • by Ferd Johnson ANIMAL CRACKERS .. J\-E C()()lT 1'5TH~EE N-lDT~O Qt..lFER~K. -------.. ~~T />.. Mt~UTE ! HE'5 POlt-iT1N6 TO Tt-E CEITTeR FIELD Fct.JCE! HE'5 A.C.TOfa.U..4 ~LLfN(d HE.~E16 ~E PITCH ... STfi?IKE TH~E . .. 40JD Ti-111-l~ HE.'D '1-.TLE~srH~E SW~QAT\T. .. UG U)"4E:!<E H~ 60N@ TO Hlf THE' NEXT PITCH! ·~ by Charles M. Schulz -------~~~~---. LOVE -THIKN .. WE'RE FOUR-ALL IN THE ~IR5T SET I by Harold Le Doux by Mell :I . ~. 00 1t·3 '--~c=::L~~-:----------~ THE GIRLS 'I JU'I \\,tnl }"" 111 I.nm' I m l11•m..: .1ln11"1 .:'ll\ d,11 in '·"l ~•IU OlnJ ,1 \lllt.:1 . • 40 Los I luster 41 Men·ot experience November events 5 Lizard 6St~1n 3 I Slate 55 .. • ••• or 32 Furniture • shine· pieces 56 Arrived CHIL.Orl:EN, THl5 15 THE '5lAPEfi!INTENOENT OF ?CHCVL?. ME~ COME TO WATCH YOLA &.iARH !! -~ ~------1 •2 Pressure ., measuting t lllstruments t4 Low rn ~ ' 7 F1ffets 8 Kind of risk 1,111er 330verhes 34 City ot India 60 Goll . 35 Cruc1lt.( s1tua11on 36 Lodging . • \ J DICK TRACY CHECK ON THE OIRl!S STORY. WE'LL MOVE "THE WOMAN. by Chester Gould FREE HER MOUTH WHILE I CUT "THESE WRIST TAPES. ~ fa\~ .4a:lJT 'JOOR COO. M1STE.e. l NEVER AAO A Kf.TCMUP OOTTIE 00 THAT~ I" • I Tuesday, June3, 1975 8 f DAILYPILOT Ryan 'S Lif C Style Still Hasn't 'ehallged Sailors S e ek Title Newport Harbor High's mile relay team of Bryant Humann, Steve Foley, Vince Mulroy and Brian Theriot will be at the state prep track and field meet in San Diego Friday a nd Saturday after captur- ing the 4-A and Masters CIF Southern Section titles. It Was the Wrong Place ••• At the Wrong Time GUATEMALA CITY -To save you the trouble of skipping from here to the end to find out whether or not I was killed, I was not. · anything appeared danger.ous. He said there was a slight leak in the right gea-r's br;:ikes <1nd 1t would be fixed. . Then he in vited me to remain in the cockpit during the night. After several more minutes elapsed the entry door to the aircraft was closed and al that ume I told JTlYSelf I was an idiot for not having gotten off. ahzalion of the airplane's speed and its every movement. "As breakfast is served I keep my eyes glu ed on two large but- tons, one which reads1 'Master Caution,' the other which reads, 'Master Warning.' · By T he A11oclated Preas After Nolan Ryan pitched his fourth no hitter, tying Sandy Koutax' miijor le ague record and setting an American League re- cord, he celebrated by going to a co((ee shop with his wife, re- latives and neighbors. The next day Ryan got up early to drive his 3-year-old son Reid and a carload of other children to • a picnic and pony ride. When a reporte r arrived at Ryan's unpret entious three- bedroom suburban home in ....., Anaheim around noon, there were children's building blocks, toy ears and games strewn over the front porch. Through a front window, Ryan, 28, could be seen sitting shirtless, talking on the phone. His wife, Ruth, answered the door. Throughout an interview, Mrs. 'Ryan kept looking through a front window to keep an eye on Reid while he played. Suddenly, · the interview halted. Reid had ·stopped a passing ice cream truck and came running toward the house for money. His dad gave him a dollar but encouraged him to be quick i>J.?cause he was keeping the ice cream truck man waiting. Then he asked Ruth to get him a fudge bar. As the 6-foot-2, 195-pound Ryan ate the fudge bar, the in- terview continued. "We usually sp~nd our off time around the house or doing things together," Ryan said. "I feel that· I'm gone so much during the season that I try to spend as much time as possible with them · ... My family is my whole life. It's just the way l feel. · "I want to make the most of my career, but I don't want to sacrifice any more of my personal life than I have to. If it's financially worth it, or if it's good for the club, I 'll do extra things. But I try not to do any extra stuff just for the publicity. Itrytomake it worth while." While a family man and un- pretentious, Ryan also is unflap- pable. ··1 try net to get excited in a game like the no-hitter," he said. "I don't think I can afford to. You make one bad pitch and it could be the last one. I try not to put added pressure on myself." "He's always been like that," said Ruth. "I've known him since we were little. Even in high school, the more pressure there was, the better he did. Nothing really shakes him out there. "He's got a very even temper and takes things in stride oCf the field, too. He doesn't let little things bother him." Ryan and Ruth grew up in Alvin, Tex., where he led his team to the state high school baseball playoffs. He graduated from Alvin High in 1965 and mar- NOLAN RYAN ried Ruth in June two years later. "I never gave .a thought to . throwing a no-hiller in the big leagues," he s11id. "I thought I might pitch in the big leagues some day, but never had a vision of being a successful big league pitcher. ''Now that I've achieved the no-hitters, I don't feel any dif · ferent. It hasn't changed our life style anything at all." Ryan started his major league career with the New York Mets. But after a 29-34 record over (our seasons was traded to the Angels in 1971 with outfielder Lee Stan· ton. The Angels gave up infielder Jim Fregosi. "I was disappointed naturally leaving the franchise I grew up · with and the league where I knew the hitters~ to come here where· I knew absolutely no one and knew nothing about the club. And I guess everyone who's traded feels a little hurt because you feel the club bas given up on you," said Ryan. "But it was the biggest break of my career. It gave me the chance to pitch regularly and the club stuck with me when I was struggling.'' In three seasons in· Anaheim, Ryan is 71-51. His overall major league record is 100-85. "When I -came here I was a los- ing pitcher," tie said. "In my first three years here I lost 16 games each year. I think the re- ason is the types of clubs we had. If you don't score runs you're go- ing to lose a lot of ga~. But that's just part of ·the g'ID!e and you have to accept it and try to keep your team in the game." Ryan and his wife are happy to be in Anaheim. "Ruth and I both feel fortunate to be here," he said. •:we think that if we were in a media situa- tion like that in New York, Chicago or even in Los Angele.5 witil the Dodgers, the pressures would have been considerably more on us and more demanding on our time." Sports in Brief Halos Play· Tigers; Ex-Bucs Sparkle Frank T~nan a will take the mound for the California Angels tonight when they host the Detroit Tigers at Anaheim Stadium with ·Joe Coleman pitching for the vis· itors. The game will be on radio (KMPC, 710), beginningat7:30. Tanana is 2-3 for the season and will follow Nolan Ryan's fourth no-hit, no-run performance of Sunday. Coleman is 3-7 for the year for the Tigers. Young outfielder Dan Meyer, a graduate of Mater Dei High and a resident of El Toro, will be in the starting lineup for the Tigers. Quisen~rrg Sltarp ST. J OSEPH, Mo.-A Pair of former Orange Coast College standouts sparked La Verne College t o an 8-0 victory over Noft.h Carolina-Wilmington Mon- day in the winner 's bracket of the NAIA World Series of college baseball. Pitcher Dan Quisenberry and• first baseman Paul Fieming were .the s tars for La Verne. Quisenberry, who prepped at Costa Mesa High and then played. two seasons at OCC, fired a six- hitter at Wilmington to run his season record to 19-6. Quisen- berry has won his last 13 games. F1eming, also a two-year star at OCC and a graduate of Marina High, bad three hits, including a triple. · Second baseman Rich Fielder and pitcher Tim Kelly, both of whom played at OCC, also star for the Leopards. La Verne (31-17-1) faces Eas tern Connecticut State tonight. But l did d ic a few internal de· aths, the kind I've already suf· fered the hundred or so times I've fl own. Putting it simply, I dread fl ying. Yet job responsibilities a nd an over- whelming desire to travel leave me in a position of having to travel by air. So I suffer tremen· dous anxieties everytime I have to fly. That self-reprimand proved ·well deserved. ··If either goes on I will bail .ou t , wit hout a parachute. Meanwhile, the flight is nearly enjoyable. At least it is tolerable. Our first of three landings is coming up and thinking back to the horrendous fear I s uffered with t a keoff. I wonder if I can handle being up front for a land- ing. Dodgers Bow, 5-3 BUFFALO -The Buffalo Braves announced Monday that Tom McMillen, their No.'l pick in the National Basketball Associa- tion draft a year ago, had signed a multi-year contract. J have been on a plane that had an engine catch fin• as \\C were preparing to taxi to takeoff. .Another Jost power temporarily during its ascent. Another was thrown about the s ky mercilessly during an elt-ctrical storm. That's my background. More recently J cC:tmc to a new kind of horribl~ air experience, one which was made almost beara bl e b y two Mexican aviators whose concern for the welfare of a t errified passenger Cme> got me to my eventual destination in 21/:i hours instead of the like number of days it would have taken in overland ·travel. It all began in Mexico City as I prepared to board the aircraft, already suffering my us ual agomzing apprehensions about ·leaving the ground. As 1 mo\'cd to\\> a rd the porta- ble staJrway at the end of the DC9, I noticed a work crew bud· dled around the right wheel, ap- parently tinkering with it. This did not seem normal. The psych- out began. Then wh'en scheduled takeoff time passed a nd became 30 minutes overdue, I did. what', I would normally do under such cir~um stancc. I got up and walked off the airplane. One of the a irline's stafT mem- bers stationed at the Coot of the embarkmeot. s tairway asked where I was going. When l told her "to the bus depot" she asked if there was a problem. I confronted her with late takeoff and the crew still fiddling with the wheel. She tried to con- vmce me ll was a minor problem that was bemg corrected. sug- gested 1 calm do'' n and return tD ·my seat. When that plea fell upon deaf ears. she wPnt up to speak with the pilot, then asked If I would talk to him for a few minutes. I dld. He invited me fnnrlhe cockpit , put me tn a T'Ort:thle !lent and i.ho~ <'d r 'nts, expla1n1n I h 1 ~·on me• 1 • .Jl he and lht> ro pllol wou •. under no eircumst<1ncc r 1!1k their live~ or those of the p a . sc ngcrs if. I • \\'hen we moved lo position for . GLENN WHITE . -WHITE WASH the mad dash down the runway, I knew 1 was in the wrong place at . the wrong time. Being in the nose of that DC9 left me with sensations of s peed (and ·fear) I bad never before experienced in the passengers ' ca bin. I will pass on the ·thoughts of those mo- ments, which I jotted down as we str eaked down the runway for takeoff: "Can't be lieve how fas t it seems-the ground rushing by CJnd distant buildings at the end of the runway quickly becoming larger. When I feel the plane lift off the ground I think I quit breathing. If I didn't then, I sure- ly did when three red Ji ghts flashed on on the control panel. Tbey read: 'Left Gear unsafe, Right Gear Unsafe, Ndse Gear Unsafe .' •'The co-pilot offers me a cigarette. And while J am a non· s moker. l gave serious thought to accepting the offer. Then those red lights go off ond as we ~gan to level off, I almost feel secure. But there was that incredible re- FUNDS SOUGHI' FO~ SC<!IT, SERNA Funds to send dlstance ·stars Steve SCott and Ralph Serna to the national junior track meet ln Knoxville. Tenn. June 13-14 are being souaht today, according to UC Irvine track and field roach Len Miller- Scott Is a freshman who won the NCAA Division II mile nm last Saturday . Serna pre11ently attends Loara High and wut run for UCI next season. Anyone wishing to contribute may call Miller during lbc day at 8.13·6304. ·'When the moment of truth comes, I decide to stick it out. From the cockpit. coming down seems like a movie scene I've witnessed hundreds of time when you get a fighter pilot's view as he goes down to strafe. '·Everything seems okay until a horn on the instrument panel sounds. I look, and 'here, with landing only a few moments away, those cursed red lights are back on. The ones that read, 'Left Gear Uns afe, Right Gear Unsafe, Nose Gear Unsafe.' Time to bail out! ''Somehow I regain power of speech and ask the pilot if I might ask a question. He says I can. 'Why are the red lights on?: I say. I hope he won't answer. ·· Bu'-he does and says it's a warning" system so they won't forget to lower the landing gear. When time comes to lower the "heels , they do and the red lights . go off. Green ones (probably matching my facial cnloring) come on. They read, 'Left Land- ing Gear Safe, Right Landing Gear Safe, Nose Gear Safe.' "Then the runway is directly ahead of us. We touch down I sigh and wipe away the sweat. . ''The pilot, who admits he was afraid of planes as a kid, says the cause of most accidents is neglige nce or overconfidence, not machinery breakdown. The co-pilot. who aspired-t.p follow his· fathe r's fl ying career since childhood, nods agreement. "I completed the first third of this trip so I'll ride it out, but trom my regular seat. No more takeorts In that front row seat .... cver. "l suHer through the next two takeolfs and I and in gs and deplane a t the destination, ~rate!ul to take the ensuing &. hour bus ride which will take me J80 miles over brutal road , through tropical downpours and J"lll an erupting volcano to this city." With that behind I have the next decii;lon: fiy back to Mexico City or take that 2~ day bul/\r•ln journey? For the moment, the vercl(ct la lo Ii m bo. ~ ' I Mauch' s Advice ~ Aids Expos' Ace MONTREAL (AP) -Woody Fryman of· the Montreal Expos ·ngures no one -not even Manager Gene Mauch -cari teach an old left-hander new tricks. "I've had that s haky first in· ning all my career," said the 35-year-old tobacco farmer from Ewing, Ky., after surviving a two-run first inning and scatter- ing 10 hits· as the Expos downed the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-3 Monday night. "I've done everything-warm Dodger!f Slat~ • All .. meutt KAeC (791) --"-) Los Aft99leS ., MontrHI •June 'l.oSA"991H•IMontr• .. \June 4 L°' A1199leu1 Pllll.O.lllhl• 5p.m. Sp.m. 5p.m. . -up longer, warm up shorter: sit down after warming up - nothing ever helps." But Frymau. said Mauch has the touch to i mproye his perlormancc -and demonstrat· ed it in the ninth inning when he trotted to the mound for a chat after Tom Paciorek drilled a two- out scoring single. "Gene came out to give me a little encouragement," said Fryman. "He's a funny guy -he seems to know how' t.o pep me up a little bit. He always has. He makes me a better pltcber. •' With Mauch's ·advice in mind, Fryman 1ot Jimmy Wynn to around out to short.at.op Tim Foli, who made several fine fielding plays, to end the game. "I jUAl went out to give him a · chance to get things back together,·• sald Mauch, who managed Fryman with th.c Philadelphia Phillles. "It wouldn't 1urprise me it Woodle wins every game he pitches. I've neve r seen hJm do anything but win. He weighs 210 pound. -10 pounds of arm and 200 pounds or heart.,, Fryman pitched bis filth com· \ plete game or the season and im- proved his record to 5-2. The Dodgers got first-inning runs on Wynn's s ingle and a wiid pitch, but the Expos tied it in the bottom of the inning on a balk by loser Doug Rau, 5-5, and Larry Parrish 's hit. Larry Lintz delivered a run- scoring single in the third to give the Expos the lead, and Fryman • doubled home the eventual win- ning run in the fourth. Foli followed that by batting in another on a suicide squeeze. Lintz had entered the ball game in the first inning when he replaced starting second baseman Pete Mackanin. • Mackanin left the game aft.er ·drawing a walk and suffering an ankle injury while evading a run- down. The preliminary report was that the ankle was spraine<t. "I really don't think it's that bad," said M ackanin, who will undergo X-rays today. "I should have taker\· myself out of the game when it happened." Mackanin called it quits when he had to hold up at second on a hit by Parrish. "If I had run past second I would have been thrown put,'' LOS AHOILIS MOllT••Al • arltltl ••rllM LOClel 2b 5 l I 0 ' ... MM!tWll cf 4 0 t O ~lonlllf 5 0 l l Folls.s ' l • ' 'WyM •f S I 2 I CMIW rf J 2 l 0 G«wy11t 4 0 2 0 e.lleyll 3 0 t 0 Cay lll a • o o y. kotllf o o o o FtrO-rf J t I 0 M9<1l111l11bt 0 0 IO Y...-r< • o Q..O Unt.12t:1 a o t t ~ H I 0 l 0 .. .rrlNI Jb J O I l LKy21:1 1 1 1 0 Foolet 4 0 I 0 ftlu P 1 0 I 0 Jor~ 1111 I I t 0 =. '0 0 0 0 ''"""*'" .l I I I ,..,."' 1 0 0 0 .... 0 0 0 0 M.MMa"' 1 0 0 0 T...,_ iJ J 10 2 Tot•tt tt S t • lM Alleelel 200 000 001-0 ......... 101 -OOlr-d 1-CWW, LAllH. Purl,11. ~-Ut .,,...., t. ~ 1, LO•~ .. Anoeles •• MDl'ltrHI •. t•-~. MOtftWfl, Frym.n, ,_,, Jl-otrw;. $-ftfymM. Foll. IP H 9t 19' II IO R.t11 IL.,.S.J) )~ I S S a 1 ~ 11"> ' 0 0 2 ' OowMle a 00001 FrY!Nfl cw, s.n • 10 a a ' ' H,,.....,, "•u IP. Manoual), by HoUOfl IP•r· rl~I. WP-Fryman, Hou911. a.lk. Rau. T-2:29. A-11,427. The University of Maryland star passed up American pro- fessional basketball last season to accept a Rhodes scholarship at the University of Oxford in England. · /tl~K.etf to Colts • BALTIMORE -Tti e Baltimore Colts have acqulted running back Herb· Mul-lley from the Washington Redskw in a trade for an undisclosed 1977 National Football League dl'art choice, it was announced Mbn-day. c Mui-Key, a kickoff and pun~­tum specialist , was the Nati al Football Conference punt re leader in 1973 with 1,100 ~al yards. He was also selecle<l.Jor the Pro Bowl that year. · Free Tia....., Mark CUPERTINO, Cali!. -fted Newman, a San Jose comJJ*er programmer, is claiming a wtl-ld record for shooting basket ll free throws in large numbers. Newman, 38, finished 24 h of shooting Sunday with successful free· throws in 1 attempts at DeAnza Colle gym. He said it broke his o cord, established last yea Pasadena when he made 12, 13,097 tries in a 24-hour peri Prel••tf/IUte llUes • COOS BAY, Ore. -A 1· tacular running career tbah : ed 10 yeara ago in Mars Id High School'• Pirate Sta m ended there Monday for SWve Prefontaine as about 31100 friends, relattives and townaJIDO- ple paid their last respects. Pre!ontalne, 24, consid•ed America'• best distance runau-, dled Friday In a one-car acclant ln E\lgene hours after runtlnit the second f uleat 5,000 mt6rs by an American. He held every America~e· cord abovo tho 2,000 metoi'd wa11 considered thts coun '1 best hope for the 1976 Olym u. Montn:al. t . . ' -- 1uesd~y.June3 1975 .-DAILY PILOT B:i Laguna's Next Goal: SoCal Title Los AI Racing Lo~ Al Racing Resrilts MALIBU -l.a J;tuna .Sea ch H 1g h School's ;Artis t s. C I F ~ouLhern ~ctlon volluyball chum- )1iona, collide with L<m _;Angeles City S t·hools champ Unive rs ity Fri- day night at Pepperdine College for the Southern California <.'h ~m · pions hip. The game is billed for 8 :30 following a third place game that beglns -at ., between Santa :Tritons Golfers :Third · .. CORON A -S hooting one of its poor esl rounds in the past month, Mis· sion Viejo High failed to 'defend its CI F golf corwn ·'Monday aft e r n oon at Corona Nuliona l Go lf Course. The defending cham- pion Diablos s hot 322. 11 strokes be hind champion San Marcos which had 311. San Cleme nt e, which finished second to Mis- sion Viejo in South Coast League play, s hoL 317 to grab t hird place. Mission Viejo finished fifth. One of the reasons for the Diablos' do wnfall was because a ces Mark O'Meara and Ted Cum- ming had off d a ys. Cum· ming sho t a 77 and 0 ' Meara 78. 0 ·Mea ra had a 69 in the CIF pre· 'lims. "ff someone told me 311 would be lhc winning score I would have been i:;urc we would ha vc won 'before the matc h."' s<:1ys Dia blos' c o ac h Bo b Minier ... We peaked about three w eeks ago a nd just were n 'l in lop shape for this match." San Clemente was ko<.I by Graham Cowan (75) a nd Marty Morga nelJi (76). Cowan . Mor~anelh, ''Cumming a nd O'Mcara all advance to the slate meet Monda y a l L a •-cubre Country Club in 1 'Santa Barbara. Team s.c0te,: l. S•n Marro, 311, 7, Harl 3lS, 3. San Cl•~nle Jll-, •.Cl&rt?-mortl 310. s. Mission Vl•lo Jn, 1>. Son Muono 3U , 7, Harvard 328, 8. SI. Josepti 33S. lnd1vrdu•I chempionshlps: Ron • Comman, CAgour.il. John Cool\ CMlratule ). Jor>n Mccomish ISL Jost'ph) 73; John Cun,m1n9s (Crt1s1>11. • Gary 01\0n (Soulh H1llU H ; Mitrly Mor9•nelll (San Cltmenle), Kevin Co<hr•n (El Oor•dO). 7S : Ted Cum-' rnlflQl (Min ion Viejo), Dan Bakflr (Tustin) 11; Mark O'MUrll (MIUIOO 'Vi•lo > , Ctl arles While (Los Alamitos). Curl Thor11h1tl IMarln<1 ), Jeff V•nHerle IFoolhllll, Gll:nn Mdnner CEsperinHI 18. Monica and Palisades . Tho third place game 1s a best two of three' a f· fa ir , while Ure t1llu iasuc wlll be a three of five ~­ sue. Unive r s ity wa s un- defeated in le a gue play and s uffered its only loss of t he sea s on in the lnglewood tournament fina ls agains t Laguna ~ach when the latter came from behind to post a 10·15. 15·13, 15-13 decision. Beach's Rolf Eagen. S p earh ead i n g th ~ Neith~r a re o n the Un1vc1·sity i.llluc k 1s ex-faculty und are listed as Pulisadcs High star Jelf . Southcott (6·0). Others in a ~i;1shnt ~ to Bruce the Unlvers ity attack U1· G1.lbert (Univer sity) and elude Scott Steele (S-l ) . Mike Duncan (Laguna Danny Free man (6·1 ): Beuch). Willie Garc ia , Todd Laguna'a :r.f.'a cr< r e- Brown und Charles volv&# around Dusty Gol vin, all seniors. Dvorak, Matt A lbude Coaching the Universi· and 0 z Simm on s , t y outfit is Dave Schaef· although il 'li a complete fer, who operates in the a ttack w i t h Er 1 e same mold as La guna Daweon, ClifC Amsden and Cab..:Y Armstrong roundlng out the slltrting six. First o!f the bench are Wude Binley und Scott Entries Morgun for the undefeul-· La•Al•m1t•• •11tr•ttt••T ... ltflt d A t . t "Int li"•al I O'tlO<lt l' r IS s. . . l'lllST llACt -3\0 yera •. 3 Y<tclr Laguna B e ach w1llo10, & up. Cl•lmlno. P11rM 51800. have u height advantage g::~~1.':~~c~~~~i > 171 o( over Lwo inches per 11o11.' eer fftd IMvi.•J 112 • ·t rt 8Ytel l!ye IW•lker l 112 s a er. Fly Awn crunch c Rlchc1rdsl 1n Tickets for the con· GoMl•trJoe <C•rooi•I in l "".Altro Ze~I .. !PitQe) 122 front at on are $2 for SunC>oQo.o men11re1 m adults und $1 for slU· Apacllt P•uum <eenr•m> 1,21,, 8.11111'on Deck (Llphem) dents. Oyrwimo P11ro1 <Gui•> m SPORTS Pro Loop O...rtar Het'M RUlllh .... -..... , CIHr, lr•<k F.ul f'tllSt 11At£ no v•rO>. 1 yur Olf f'N•Cltn,. Purse \1800. Ml\>Ouonell• IH•tll 21,20 12 20 S.40 V1C1ory Joi lCltrlHt) •7 00 H 20 cn.ro• to Cll•ll<:• IW•"O•H 10.ao Tin.,. 1a.n Al'6 R•n -Serena'' hie, Oloty'' Sod4 8&r, Cnarger Go Bir. lop O•• E•o••. Min's Copy, Dickey''~. L•mll", Re91ros u Euct• 1·M•U 011lfltll• • •· Vklary j.t, P•ld $<41t.20. Costa "jfesa's Strength StOONO llACE. 3SO v•ros 3 yur OICH.. Cl•1Mlf\Q Pur~ \1900 CI061t'U111\j B Prtte »SOO. t x ar9CI B•r> IM"1es> 111 anque c:::! FlrstA<llC1er.-1 1n ~ Oldie Out GoOc11e (Welker> 1n H.IO•IMYOU CB•nksl 111 Fren<h Mtke CH•rll 122 In Actl.on SRCONORaca.-lSOv•rd• Jye•r old> Cl t1m1n9. Purse ~noo. 1(1no O r11 .. Road IOrtrcr I 100 •20 180 At UCI C.0 C.I King (C<lrdOl.11 l l> • .O s 10 Will Be Offensive Line For ..... ""' , .. ,. ... ,,.., c.r.r~.~niasn ~n'g~.~,o~ Athl t OICIS Cl•1m1n9. Puru 11900. Cl•1JY11rig Ar Se• ear c .. u. ILIPf\aml 111 Trlplt Ttd• IOrertrl 117 ea JelA<tounl IC•rdora ) in xero•ea <w•1sonl 1n Just. GIQOIO IW•rO I 1n 0.noy s Go 81Cl IRotMrOSI •.oO Time 1111 Alw R•n Oltkey\ Rock C...av Otner'l Cl\1el Del Rev Comel, Sllenl Trut,.,..,nt. Sol•r Cn.,Qt TKIRD RACE -lSO yard • 3 yur Olds & uo Cl•rm1ng Purse USOO Oi;wrung Gun (Clllfrbe l By DAVE ROMANO Ot Ille O•lly Pilot St1tf The Costa Mesa High Musta ngs have never had a winning football s eason , but if spring practice is any indica- tion of how things will go in the fall. 1975 .rould be a winning campaign. Coa ch Tom French · worked with 92 athletes during lhe s pring, 13 of whom we re starters at one point of the season in 1974. Fre nch concluded his workouts today and the Mus tange will hold a parent night tonight at 6. Mesa finis hed strong l as t yea r wi th im· pressivc wins ove r Estancia and Tustin and a 7-0 loss to Santa Ana. F h . . e es prl<U UOO frvin u Ope n lnlCl'IHI· r~nc 1s h op10 s the "•n,ss1ar1cru9er> 11n17 t ion ul Vollcyl)all A!>· momentum wjll carry K•uema11 ccier>ne> Over. PlenlyFUl<Trtu urel Ill SOCia tlOn lea gue pJ ;.ay E t ' Ne•tr Noticed IC•rdota 1 1"12 h 8 · th 0 ((en Si Ve 1 y the • On(! a Roye! hrSut COr"Ytrl 117 tonig l al af.{a lOSl l ' LtmHs 8ru<oll<C•lll Ill EI p 8 s 0 s 0 I at. u c Mustangs will have Tim Buddy Lorton . Howie ron1oe.mv1c cwmoni ',!2, Irvine's Cr.iwford ll<ill. Rosauer b~ck at Ratcliffe and J e>hn verquen•a<w•rd> quarterback. He C·"'m· Mr.$pefll ~ount <Hartl 122 A professional league, u Nisbet were na med most tl IV · 11 Pleted 72of156 passes for. valuable 1·n baseball, "Olf ~URTH RACE. S49 yards. l year lC A W I ope r a te b oldS &up,Altowance. P11rse S19(J(), t"ams 1·n El P ·1 S'ln 983 yards in 1974, but is a nd volleybali at Estan· ICl-Go (Ric herds) 11• D"' L l:IU, s • notasure starter .Chris c i a High i n s ports~~~~~~~~~:;:~» :~~ 1ego,LosAng dt•s. an· Ferrara threw the ball awards banquets. eunny,SGo•d cw.rd > m ta Barb11 ra and lrvmc very well in spring and Special award win-~::;~0t;.~~1~~~1u> :~~ this season. The teams could be a starter when ea., war Chic measure> m will consist of both male 27 80 S.60 l.60 OH·Jolly ~oow !Hartl 1 oO J oO OH Roc>.y Oucn Haf\k IP•9el Time 1801 Counl, a~rron 810, Sir !;•nd 7o0 J?G FOURTH RACE 3$0yords lrt•r olds t. up Cl11m1119. Purse "&00 S•v of Dl•mond <Treasvrel •.20 3.40 2.40 Uptde~<IO (V...o1lson) Spccoal Nolle~ (Myles I Ttme 18.00 •.OO 7.80 l 'IO Al!oO Ron '""'''"go. Marq111se11e, Pa te Mak er FIFTH RACE 910 yard\ J year olds & up AllOwdnCe Pu rs~ S..000. lheMoon\hlner CTrea•ur el El Toro Rebuilds; Moore Optinristic nerS: Knl9PllolGlory IWlll>.u) 118 and fe m ale playt'l"S. September rolls around. •AHULL Balllelan1l1Crea9er) 119 The Irvine <.'nlry will l ..0 J.10 1 •0 0 1..el'sC*IGoong IW.trOl Costa Mesa should Y•rtlly "'""IUCE.3SOy<Srds 3yearo1cn have a Strong Offensive C.0-tllPl•tns. Kevin LanQOale: &~.Allowance,f'ur~USOO. play eight hom e gamt>S L,tlleGoFteel IRkh.irdSI 1 .8:1 J IO 7 oO M1r1tDeven,MOst ll•lualll•: Y Hec1dWatson> ,,. <it Cl'a wfo rd Ha ll. T he Time .Siii> line. Cen ter Mark t..ono11. EIJ•lo(Tru surel na Atso Ran Gav~lm•n JoM~ M ll"k ' t l d I t JwnlorVutlty R k Lll,Rtauul!W•rdl Ill Bangers arc led by two Roc>.el,L>llh!Oup<.> I I 10 S ar e as year Co-o pt•ln\ rim Gr~en ~l;c Chick Ooolln (Hu ll 119 f 0 rm e r UC ( \ \I) ~IXTH RACE •00 Jard~. l yedr ·and COUid be Olle Of the T•ul>o;"">ll~~.':?~lloll y. MIUFlttlMoon (Llpllam> 111 '1 1 • olds & up. Classlllt <Sllowantt. strongest cente rs in the eep1•1n: Joa eec•; Mo" va1~111e! ~~:~~~:!r'f:~~~!» 112 America players, Toshi ~:~:~s:;~~~t~~~.~)'~uooo. Century League. Guard Eric AO~I"'· Moll Improved urry 117 Toyoda a nd John Iler -suo 11.90 6 ,._, Mac Moore and his El Toro High Chargers are in a unique s ituation at the Cha rge r s campus this spring -they must conduct footba ll drills without s uch s tanda rd items in their attack as qu.irterback Gary Key. f ullba c k Chuc k Van Liew, linebacker Jeff Green and receiver Charles Hicks. The Chargers wrupped up their s pring drills lo- d ay without a s pring game, and uppermost in priorities was the job of getting a replacement for K e y a t th e quarterback post. Scott Burkha rdt. who played in the secondary for El Tor o, d isplayed Wayne TC In Finals leadership qualities, and T K 1 b d Kr••u.. GOL"' SIXTH RACE.lSOvards Jy..arolds & ren. The learn is coached ea1e1>a1t11ward1 180 1 '° erry 0 en e r g an . Yarllly ~.c~1a1ming Pur~S.JOOO. Cla•m<""J by Craig T hompson. Oual M .. ~ !Cardoza ) 2 IO appears able to run and tackle Bob Turner were C•Pt•in: Jtfl ReynolOs; MOsl Fly1 avid IC•rOout) 122 !;~ Ra~12Go OulCne•s Go. Noon throw U/1.th effect1·veness 1 t t 1 t v.1~11••• Howl• R•1e1111e, MO$t 1m-- ·1 • a so s ar ers as s eason. ..,0...a: Tlm Ravno•d,. • <Mv••s> 11~ Weinert 'l'ltird 0>1t Go. rurnp1ke">J•'· Mdrv Jet Jet Be hin d Burkhctrdt is D B D ... CNlned R0<ket llr•u ure> 11~ s..1 Thre~,GoGo Too an eyers, an JIHllorV•rslly Tlny8art (Pa9e) liq SS Euct• f·Klply Broad & S· sophomore J eff Tolbert. Valentine and Larry Captain: Jim e .. rckle, Mos• 11•1oa· 0ues1tear1101w11"°n> 122 One race rem ains in c;..1ci.., .. 1,.,.111n11.oo. Ille : Jason lt ltlnhe1n. Mo'l Im· Mill T (W di 119 "It 's been a rebuilding Falke will be the ends for proved: Ro118etk. Ol'~a:~~rev!~> 119 the Amerae<i n Motorcy-SEVENTH ucE -400 vara' l type of s pring for us,'' Mesa and all have ex-voL.;.~:i~,ALL Moor. Fiver <Banks> m d e Association 250cc na· ~:~1~1~~~~r;~~!r"edallow•n<ir. says Moore. "We've lost perience. Most "alu•t>lr. JoM Nh~t; Mo\I ~-;';~~~a~:~~~«~~~"a11;.'11 :;; tional motocross c1rcwt Lantv'sJ•i IHarll 110 !·: ;: qujti: a few ID the s killed Probably the most. Improved· Jell ttrollnftldl; Most and Mission \'iejo'~ Jim MOOVtn MarvlTrusure) 3.20 lnle>lr•llonlll. M•ll RlchtrCIS. SEVENTH RACE. 3aQ yards. 2 vear u · . f h Time 70 04 positions. But we 're op-wide-open positions on Junlorvanltv olds. Pur;e S6000·ad11t>d T1>eJetOeck ••Cmert IS one o l r ee Atso Ran Loni .. T1n1 Go, Hot Onto, · · · f k"d Most V1 tuaDte. Ken Conner; MOsl Yorly <ward I 112 I I h tlmlSllC 3S ar 3S I S the team in the fall Wilt Improved : Keller Pl'nrod; MoSI S.ndRlver Rull<Sh <Dreyer) 110 ridl1rS W 10 la Ve ;.t S Ol ~It Ouplltal~Wln J · · t tJ "l f lnsplrtllonal : Sa•n Collons. h · I h EIGHTH RAtE -810 yards, ve1Jr commg ID O le vars1 Y be in t h e o fens i ve RuMlnQHot1Har11 in t L' n a t 1o n a c um-0,05 a.up eta1m1ng.Pu"o 1eoo. · 11 · A.·Mr. Alamllos I Ric hards) 122 R C 1 1 prog r am, CSpeCla Y backfield Where no One Jona lhOn CTreasure) 122 plOnShlp, Lillie vdT ide M 'feStibO HO Jl..O someoflheline men." has really sparkled this Laguna •--la HeslY Ktp'IGaria> no We ine rt. a d istant cash &rownCPa11•> a&0 6?<> ~ Ram1>ll119ReblWatwol 11S c~ •· !W dl 410 Despite the Loss of the spring. A·Hm1oca1thica111 121 third with 308 points to r.~~ .... ~:~1 "' · name playe r s . Moore Transfer Jeff Jones, Frank Wri g ht was FortvOuunstLlphimJ 120 450 fo r le ader Ton y uEuctaa.L1111eRtdT 1de &2.c.u11 .1 named most valuable On FulJudy !Clerisse> l72 S f d 3no f 81'own.Pa•dUl•.oo has a solid nucleus tu Jeff Babbitt a nd Matt . .A·J•mes or Royalee Harrison tnlry D1 le ano an ;J or NINTH RAt E JS() yard•. J Y~•r work around wilh the Dies are all in the run-Laguna Be a c h High's EIGKTK RACE. JSO yards. 3 vur r u n n c r u p K c n t 010, Allowante Purses2300 linemen-Tony Lundy, ning for starting spots in baseball team Monday o1as. c1•1m1ng. P11rse rnoo. c1a1m1ng Howerton. will <:O mpde Avn11.,tt 1Carao1a1" oo ioao 6.oo Jim Nel son , Pancho the offensive bac kfield. night at the school's ~!::~ooortGam> 111 in the final race J une 15 !>n"keM Oown BertrdrnJ 100 9111 Cas tillo. Kt>ith Mos by On defe nse. middle sports awar ds ba nquet. P•u1Scarieu CMylol 1 11177 ul Whitnc •·, Texa~. eawJet sSaqp 1orevN> •ow Specl.al •ard \l"l·n ll'saSur<!Th1n9<treasurel J and Steve Kachelein-guard Bill Ekstrand, · a"' ~ · T0e>MoonJolRithardsl m T•n* 1ao1 b ners : 8uel, s Loeli !Watson I 1n Tra-k a---. rd \) Ea.ocl• S·AunlttrU £ l·Si..ke M all who will c lhree· tackles Jim Showalte r U SEULL sioneveuq <ca11 i m '-~-0own.p1J•dS4 tuo year s tarte rs and ar~ and Greg Eastvedt. ends V•,.11• Pl•vttou~<c1erissei 111 Sh 11 1 f ll d S P k d G MoltV•l ... lllt. Frank Wrrgnl , MOsl Y•klly Yacl\ IHarO 172 a ron U SC 0 Unl-tWO·Way stan outs. teve ar an eorge lmprona. Jim Pe!llv: cipiaon-o.10pe1Po•5"1Pa11101 111 inglon Beach recently Kevin Urquhart and O u e I 1 e t t e a n d ~ckev Allen; Husue Aw.11ra. JoM 5nookumSam iwardl 122 set a world age group Vmce McCulloch are lhe line b a cke r s Darrell r•mer. JynlorV•rslly NINTH RACE. 3SO yaros l 1~ar k d f 2 I d . . . f R ... u....1 old• & up. Claiminn. Pur~ Sl'IOO. lraC r ecor 01' l ·)'Car · ea ing. rece i ver s 10 Hollano, Jef Frazier, Most v11..ab1e: •<h .... un.s; ~..,, • • Improved Stoll Hende rwn, W.al Cl•1mi1>9 proce12000. 1•7 olds Wtlh a 2: 13,8 in the camp a nd Craig Oriml Rick Miller, Gary lnsl)tr•Honal : John 8rolh•rlon. Mr. Mr.IUndyCharge<W•l!>Onl I and Lee Binde r appear MaLhieson and Dave Hus111A11ma,;,~~~~';.°'· eru<t<l•le CC•rdml in 880. Baseball Finals Set Tonight to be lhe ones to beat out Mollie a have all looked . i~!~1s1g~~~~~~~!!!er1 :;~ Co mpeti ng fo r the LOS ANGELES-The • AiA•I Valuable: Greg Smilh; MOSI ManO"Glow (Cteriss"' 171 P atriots of Huntin gton CIF 4 A d 3 ' baseb"ll The John Wayne Ten-at tail back a nd fullback. good in spring drills, re· im";~ve<1: Mark Dow, C•plain. Pete ~~vs1emove~"<'H'a'~1a19eJ :~~ Beach, Hulse sel the re· · an ·n · .... 8 ·111 Fa1·rbrother (5 9 ports French. Hau~r. -~· crowns will be decided n1 s Club of N e wport • • Roo1ngDuk1L1p11am) in cord at a meet in San Beach a nd the Clare-160) IS another tailback Mesa lost thr.ee of its ~~~~',~!~J;,murc> m Diego's Balboa Stadium. this evening a t Dodger candidate who can go at s ix games in 1974 by San Cl~te S l a d i u m w it h a mont Tennis Clu b meet d bl h d · 1 t d t linebacker. Fairbrother seve·n po1·nts or less and Brian Wood (track ) ou c ea e r s a e o Sunda y at Bear Valley D S F h R a n d Binder will be FrPnchfeelstheMesans ' and Scott Glaser (gym-• eep ea 1•8 eport bcg m at 4. Springs resort com muni· . T I 3 A r· I ·t'll '-~ Juniors in the fall. att1tud,. will be an impor· nasties) grabbed most ~ n · ina s 1 I.I\.' ly near Tehachapi in the ,. I d 1 · t Bi hop Don Wickham has tant item in September. valuable honors recently· ~EwPORT cart'• • ·ndln~l -b• LON" &EACH ce.1mon1.P1er) 2• .yn;woo agams is South c r n C a 1 i for n i a " ~ • ""' .. .... ... J · 1 th shown pro mise at de-"T he team started to al San Cle mente High's "1'91ers.ssand11a-s,1JorockcOC1,1..,111ers11 cowcoe1,J601or•coo 1nontgomery, w11 c c rmals of the Dart Resorts rNc>.erel. SAN OIEGO IMunltt p•I Pieri 17' 4 ' h ·on ·h1'p which b fcnSiVC back in his first feel near the end Of )aSt ''Sports awards banquets. SEAL BEACH -70 dngters: S86 ennler~· A7 wellowl3ol, llJ hdht>Ul 21 ·1.-. (' ampl ::; • Ca lifornia te nnis clu o " • f JI · t I G l • yearoulforfootball. season that they could Special award win· rochcoo.2cowcod.7 sanabilu,i ·~ktod.smac11er~1 o ows atapprox1maey YIDD88 ICS championships. ca11co 11ass. 1 h.111rou1. ear,. -"° MORRO BAY cv1r9's L•ndl"9> -6 30 features top rank(•d Th W t d "We've tried 10 make w in game s ,'' s a ys ners: .,nq1ers 11 oono10. s ~nd l>ilss, 11 21 angier' 161,n9<od,&o8roo.t0d : · · New~o~'!."::~~1:~"c.':°1' vanc:d tC:i~: fi~~lr; "~lh it a little m ore fun this French ... We s till have a TPACK ""~'~'•'~~~~e;e~ m anglers: 1 PARAD•~E cove Sl an11tm; ~akewood and Glendale Me, .. ,s-111(oe11em>s <et!ws in~lel&6.? ., 7-2 v1· "'lory over the year in s pring practice,., losing attitude to over-Mo•t V•lu•o~,.··~:r.in wood, Mo~t _"":..1...:'11u.:.1..:..._69_r_oc_"_c.:.Oc1 ________ ~_·oc __ kc_Oc1_.1_c_o_wc_od_. ______ ...:..:.:;OO='·.,;c~r~.=======::--'C:.!1~:.o::"K:e1er iLinc~1n'('.,~f.•s~ B a lboa '"T e n n is Club says Moore. ·'Primarily com e,bultheattitudeof 1,,..p;o vta cc1r1 r1 hman Mo•t t.-!Mnz19')r ITrW1nkle) I 6S. we've tried LO achieve the kids in spring ·was ex· ln•plr•hOnoll lerry Huddle•lon. une 1 t1e•m-1 MIOf!• <D• .. lsl • •s: 2. whil e Cl a remo nt d efeat-GYMNASTICS ' Miiier (hWlnklel •.•; l . Molllca the ide a of unity within cellent." V•rslly (0.vlsl 8.3S, 4. Kre1er CL1ncolnla.1S; cd Santa Barbara by the the squad. Mosl ValuaOlf" Stoll Gl.t~tr, Mo\I WANTED· ad1·11ac 6.8 ..... (TeW1n-le)7.'IS. sameSCOre. ltJSSCH£0ULE ln>prov"a Rrt l\ Ftrr~ord, MO•I • '•fT:~T:-~.1·~~~','.':,..;g~t 'j'C:,:!~) • B O th P IJ b 1 i C a n d mBCHEOULE ~X: "La Ou1n1a al 801sa Gra.-ln,p1ra11ona1 J1mMvrdy. YOUR MOTORCYCLE ~&~!·,:i';~~~.~~!~n<>L~n9ts~1~1~1~r private tennis clubs from ~~: ~~~~~:: ~~132~~~~~·1~;.~·eio·e Marina Sale Vaull-1. Mollie• <Davis) I .I ; ,, all sections o f the state Ocl 'Esptran1' al va1 ... nc1a 1 JO OCI. 9 Villa Par~ att<elly Field I.JO TO TEST Keli.ms (leWlnlllt) 8.65: 3. l(reltr have been co mpet ing in Otl 10 El Oor .. doal V•lenCtit' Oct, 17 Corone oel Mar • 8 Marina Hig h 's track (Ltncolnl I .SS; • Hllsttn I Lincoln I Otl 11 Al !.an Cltmtnte 1 JO Otl. 14 blolncoa• 8 and field and ctolf teams l.3S,S.Lonq(Llncolnl8.3 this s ing le e limination Ocl 24AI Ml\"&nv1e1ol JO Oct,31Tu•lln"8 ~ All·rovnd 1 Mollica IOavls)lJO: d d j Otl JIA1Lagun.\8tacn/ lO No•.&SanldAna'/•JO Wi lJ be fe ted With a 1. Mall"" IOavoS) 1'1.4; 3. ltr~lvr (Lin· tOUl'OCY esignc l0 ( C• Nov I Un1ver~11v· I JO Nov U Et Modena di K"llY F1eld8 Sports "'WUl'dS ba nquet cotnl J2.JS cide the best club in the rlov 14 Dana Hill' .ti Soln Clemenle ·Gam's playtd di Ne"'~~Hdrbor .. ' Tum scoring · 1. Lrncoln ISi 6S, 2. 1 )() H111n ton1·g ht Ill lh e SC hOOJ Slate. . _:T~•.:.:W::,:1n.:,:k::,:1•:_:1:.::.49:.:.·.:.:u:.:.::::3·_:0:.:•:..:.":.:.'s~1.:.:'6:_1:.:0.:.· __ ..:.:::.:::.:.. __________ •_·..:A..:1..:M..:••:;:s:..:•0..:n..:v..:..'~..:.1.:..0 --------------------, ca f ele ria beg inn ing al .. .,. .. ,, ... 1•1 f\), 111 FACTORY Demo ·SALE! • TOYOTA IXAMPLIE: '75 TOYOTA ~ Ooor, 4 epeed. heattr, wMe wall hfff ITE313091) • VOLVO Baseball Standings AM F.RICAN f,F:AGl'E East Division W I. P<"L Boston 24 rn .558 GB M1lwaukt'e 22 23 .489 3 N('w Yor k 22 24 .478 31 :! Detroit 20 22 .4.76 31.: Clevela nd 19 25 .432 Baltimore 18 'l:l .400 7 West Division 29 19 .604 29 20 .592 23 20 .535 23 24 .489 23 26 .469 22 25 .468 Oakland Kans as City Minnesota Tl•xas Angels Chicago Mon41•y"• SCOl'Ol ClliuQO 9, Boston 2 Mllw•ukee 6, O•kland 3 OnlV 9•mtl ~heOultd •:: NATIONAL l .EAGUE East Division W I.. Pct. Chi cago 26 20 .565 Pittsburgh 24 19 .558 Nt•w York 22 20 .52·1 Philade lphia 24 23 .511 St. Louis 20 25 .444 Montreal 16 25 .390 West Division Cincinnati 29 21 .580 Dodgers 30 22 .577 GB I 2 2 51 '.! 71 ;s San Francisco 24 22 San Diego 25 25 Atlanta 23.. 28 I louston 20 33 .522 3 .500 4 .451 6 1 ~ .377 101.:: Mo1M1.ty"1Scem Pllll•<Mll)hla S, Son DltQO I C1nc1nntll •I Plllsburoh. ppd., rarn MolllrHI s. LOS AnQtlH J 6:30. Mbslon Viejo Miss ion Viejo High's baseball and volleyball teams will be feted with sports awards bunquets tonight at the school's multipurpose r oom , beginning at 6: 30 . (Ann Landers~ ADVISES In lhe DAILY PILOT The California Highway Patrol will soon begin enforcing norse conlrols on all motorcycles The Motorcycle Industry Council tMIC, Newp ort Beach. representing lhe Motorcycle Industry 1n the United Stales. needs mo1orcyc1es for the establishment of fair and accurate testing procedures. Motorcycle enthusiasts' efforts on th1$ WAR ON NOISE are needed 11nd interested molorcycle owners should telephone !,.14) 752-7833 10 schedule a motorcycle for testing Molorcycles undergo approximately 30 minutes of testing in 1he hands ol McDonnell Douglas Sound Engineers at a Hunt1ng1on Beach tesl s11e Motorcycles manufactured from 1969 to 1974 are reouired and each accepted for l«>sllng must have an unallered 1nlake and e11haus1 system Call: (714) 752-7833 I" . , '74YOLYO 142 Auto, 1tr, ll•rao r•llyt wh&elt. Gl .._,no .,,,..1 t4or.1:1&1 ToCl•y'l GemH K•M•s City (8rllos • l or Leonard I II •I CltvolenCI IP<>lerson •·•I lu.u (H•r91n '4·21 al Bolltmorl' (Torrei S-ll ChlCIQO (AllnnO·OI ol 8oslon CC11 .. landJ·3) New York COob10n 4·S) ol Mlnnesole !Goll14·fl Detroit (Col~men l·1l "' Calilornl• CTan<tne 7°31 Milw•ukte (Slaton l·•> al Oeklend <Perry Hl New York 1. HouslOf\ 0 Sl L0111s I, All•"le 0 Only Qclmu Kheduled Today'sG•l'llH Swimwear ... always a total selection _, J I I.JI II I JI lhl •II' h11 ,. In tin ,,,, 'l htt 55888 • USED CAR ' SPECIALS '71 OLDS CUTLASS 'flt H T AlllOll'ltl>C •" Cl!M •~ IOO ll 10081<1 . '73 ffAT 121 S.L 4 tCIMd rlCIM> lle"'al CIO 11.,.8) '73 TOYOTA CELICA 4 ~ JlllJl(I 11ot1or 107MrO ~····~··········· i• I Wed11a1Uy'l O•met Chicago at Boston l<•nMs CllY 111 Cleveland le .. , •t l!lalllmore New Yo•-•I Mln,,...,1. O.ttoll ut C•llfornl• Mll"-aukH •I Oe-l•nd s•n Fr•ntlsto (Haliclll 1-1) .111 Chitaqo (Burris 6 ., S<ln Ote90 ISp1llntr 7·SI oil Pllll-IPl't1a tLon· b0f'9 7·11 Clnclnfl•ll (Norman ,.1) •l Plllsll\lrQPI IReuu ~) Los Angelo !Sulton •·31 •I MOnlrtal IR<!nkoO.J) Hou\lon CForicl'l 2·2> •I New York <H•llo.41 Allanl• tC.pr" ._6) et Sl Louis CRoe4•·$l Wt .. ftOSd.ty's 0..-S.n Fr•ncisco •l CPllc•go S•n o~ at Pllll•Oe1p111a Cincinnati at Plllsllur9h LO• A~a• ., MOnlreal H°"'lon •I Mew Yori. All•111a al Sl. LO..ll DEAN LEWIS I TOYOTA VOLVO 1966 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA ~46-9303 \rr•1rr-Porh-Body Shop Oprn r, Doy• a.,.,.,. .. l't:1rh Orpnrftnl'nl Oprn Saturdny' ~ o"' 2 pm .. .. ' Wl: MANE OVERSEAS OHIV ERIES 'IP•&~ mens and boys 44 faehk>n ..allfld 1 newport center Coupe de Vi I le Sedan de Ville Eldorado Nabers Codllloc 2600 Harbor Blvd., Cos1a Mesa S40-9100 ~===========: .. Sl·:Ll. Hill' 11 l•IH:-. \di h. .. • !Jo.Jily I 'ilul Cla!>:.ll iL'<l i\.J. SEVEN ADVANTAGES OUR PAGll OFHIS thcJt youri may not! 1 COM rLfTI OUNGI COUNTY COVERAGI '"'hrdtR,! &..9ttM ..... SH Cit_..., MlulH Viti•. De11a '•lat, • -11 ft &.Mt a.-11-4.-.tLA.- 2 MONTH TO MONTH HHTAL IASIS 3 NO DIP'OSIT HQUlHD ON Ar,llOVED CHDIT 4 ONLY $11 10 rll MONTH TOTAL COST c .. n ... tr.d '9tft1 5 NIW COM,ACT UNIT Sltf c 1 ' • ' 4 1 1'1 l 6 VOICI MUSAGI rAGIU ALSO AU AYAH.Alli 7 P:Ull P:Hf MAINTINANCI ORANGE COUNTY RAOIO'Tft l PHONf St HVICl Ill( 1714) llS·Jl05 _.. SO SANTA 'I. IAMTA AU 1-u,_ ... OI, Mll&lell 'lteft, DtM ""'It, tM (.._M, S-'-9 Ct,l\lrt -ll T-ffW ... """ .... uu ' ~ ............. _ .. ····-·· -· '• --···--' .... . . •• . ...... _ - B" DAIL V P•lOT Tuesdav Jul\e3.1975 \,..... The Bluest Ma"etplace on the Oranee Coast 1 Real E1tote .......• 1000-2999 -EqHlymenl & • p1101-Rt ntols ....••.... 3000-"699 DAILY ·CLASSIFIED · ADS Propo~k>n , .... , 7000-7199 Bvlin•11. lnve1tment & Mtrchandi1t ...••. S000.8099 f inonclo( .... . .~-5049 -Boots & Morine Announcenwnt1, Pe<&onal1, You Con Sell It, Find _ It, [ 642 _5678 J One Coll Service Equipment .......• 9000-9099 lo1t & found ...... SOSO-S499 Automobiles & othr'r Servic11 & Repoir1 6000-6099 Trade It With a Wont Ad Fast Credit Approval lronsportotion .... 9100-9999 . ...... ,..,..,...i1Hon .. ForS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ERRORS: AO...+isen G-ol IOOZ G....,.ol 1002 t.a.o..&d c. ... c.k ...... och • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• dolly lllMI ,.,..,. or· HO!ISf llAHCH IU.CH Yiu.A ""' 1-dldoty. -1/• Ac.-4 ta. 4 ll + 2 STY DAILY PILOT .u .... , J111t Sl4,7SO. POOL liClbitity fOf' ftllt first .. l:uslum 8 yr. viii honlc. correct i•MrlklR°"'f. l'e.ntr<il ;ur l'UtYhliotun~. ASSUME all Lu1ll ·1n k1 ll·~n . 2 ba. $26.800 •••••••••-~ ''1' Al'. & neeili 11wnllng & l'<1r11cl1n 1: l'otcntl;d SS .fhJO r ci.Jlt: profit ,\IJ rc0tl c:.tOilc ad\crt1,.1-<l 1n th1S ncwisr"1icr ii. l'>t1h· JCl'l l•1 the Ft.'fit-tJI Fair l l••w ,1 n i.: 1\l'l uf l!t(;~ >Alyl'll flJk~·1> 1t 1lh·;.:•l to .o•l1·crt1 1>C ·.,ny 1•rc lc1c11l c , lirn1t .. t1on. ''' d1 ~f11 rnat 1u n ha1>c•I on r,11 c t·olvr. rchgu..n . ">CK . 11r n .. t111h11I un;.:1n . vr an u1tcnt11111 t(J tn«ke l:IO)' "IJt h 1u·1·lcrt·nl·c , lunltJ lU•ll •1r ol1 ,.t·rrm:..11un lh 1~ 11c """f'"I"'' IO.llJ nul lo.r111v.•u :.!l)' Jl't'l'lll an:. J •l \o·rt 1-.111 :: fh1 fl'JI° ,.,\Jll' ""h1 «t1 1:0 ill \ 11J)J l1<111 •11 tile j;,•,1, Hov1es for Sdr l'.A LL UKlt ll,141963-4S4l sorHISTICATED S7' WA TfRfllOHT 1>h0Wplacc. View -1na1n c ha1111e/ 1.·1•t•f")' wu1dow lntc~r;;l µ;.rt of bo;ot1ni.: -.c cnc JJock l>JJil l'C dl'<11lalilc. f.i;oll.:d , set:ur1 l)' e state l11·1ni.: w1th1n walk1n J.: d11>tanec of 11hoµ1> llr re1>tuurauL.-. Sl'1\llLl ~(i Hl-:1\i.'l'IJllS HJ:i ;i.::,.iij $1900 TOTAL DOWN 41DRMS + FAMILYlOOM ~~;;~~;;~~I llG i:AMYOt< ~ 'l'olJlty (·ll ,J/'111111 ).! & Park like gruund !li cnhant·<: lor1nul double \,Joor e ntry. L>trge family "1Lc•I J1v1n g room . i.·urm;,I <lu11n:,: roorn, l:arden v1t:w k1tl'hen . t '1esl<1 p<irty room o~·er· looks w<illcd c1mrty<ird. Ur<im.ili l' "t"irs t o cJei.:anl 111a s t e r & l'h1l dreos swtt.>s . ·rake uvcr 7•_; V,\ loan. NU .~EW LU,\~ cosrs. $!411 IH.:r mo. µa y1> all. ftlu~I s;1l'r1/1(·(•. lfurry ; C;.IJ ~1·7tikl. ,. ... [~ . · .. " , TH£ REAL ESTllTERS OCEAMYIEW SU,900 OWMfR llKI dci.:rcc llt'eau v1c10.' 1.0 l ':..los Verde;,. J<~xccul1 VC S11<1n1sh '.J h:•l·I~. Oouhlc 1·11lry. l lui.:c 11\'ln~ r110111 h111>t.~ f<i11ta l'>l1l' oceun v iew. 1<'11rmal dine . IJ1dc<iw<i)' m a.,11.·r :.wtc :'>.l 1rrorcd wardrohc. :1rd le\t:I f1t•;,ta n.orn with view. llc.imert 1·c1lioi.,:. F1r1.·1d:..•·c Wt·t h;ir ·rhrcc 11at1•1s v.•1th 11t·w.,_ l'r1rnc l.a:.:"'llna Ht.'at·h JrH·a\11111 . Fu!! pr11'l' ~~.~111'1 S1•llt.'f IS 111' ltc:.I E 1>t ;1ll· 1\J.:1!1l l Cal l 1;.11 ~l :t1; t.olll·rt .. 1.1<1 I' 1'1 HUGE HOME HUGE LOT COROMA DB. MAit H·2 OLO~: Cd ~1. So. of Hwy. 3 BR. 2 bio. J(oom for ::!nd un1l. Nc"·ly remodcle<I, IX'<iUltfUI huy at ~J.500 \·1r:\\', 1,•;1th inc:on1t•. '[\,o on •• lvt. ·r ,\·1, scparaLcJ J3tlrm homl·~. sh<iri ng 1)1101. p<..1lJu~. Sl 77 .~ I{.:~ cc·r r: C;.1 r>e cud scl'.ond unit. <)nl y 2 J~H .. pl;JflS fur $1.$5 ,UOO LIDO ISU. \\'aterrront 4 BR .. 5 l)a .• rumpus Jl1cr & flo<..1 L. s an tl~· hc<.al·h. ~5.0(JO rm. llcaut. {j UR . 5 Ba . or 4 Ull . 4 Ba \\'ilh 2 BR. 1 ba. Apt. Sandylx:ach. courtyard, shore mooring . S,.>95 ,fXX• Sp;Jt:ious 4 Il l{. fun11iy rn1 ., dining sunny pri v 1>•ttio; 5l fl l1Jt . $179.000 W oterfront Lots .. r111. 1{·2 o c r>1,t-:x ; 2 1!1{. \\'llh IJal'hclcu· ti ll · .\ II . l~1vel y home \\11lh in('O!llt:. Soulh 40.'\W ft ~5fJ.IHJIJ ·1UX!JCJ fl . S!85.UOU BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR of I lig hV.'i.1)' $i2,UUO COMPANY • REALTORS 2865 E. Coast Hwy., Corono IHI Mar "Sellin9 Rfflll Estate in Newport Harbor Since 1944" 673-4400 34 1 Boy\•d<" D•"•" NB 67S 6161 l !:~!'! .......... ~?.~~ ~~!'! .......... ~?.~~ HOME IN IRVIHE Smetll :~ hdrm ., 2 baths. s urrounding bca uti f.ul at rium . 'fhis is a free Standlng h()me\.vith-no common "'alls, located (·Jose t<> everything. orfcr cd al S.5 1,500 II ([U~~IN-Mfl~TIN IHl) ~.--REALTORS-~ I 644-7662 COROMA DB. MAR ~~~~! .......... !~.o.~I ~~~!'! .......... !?.~~ !G .. "'""'""1 "'""'""'""'""1"0"0"2!!'!"'""'""'"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0! nera Ge-Mrol I 002 CDM-DUPLU l·---------·I··•••••••••••••••······ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BIG ONES! EASTSIOE EASTSIOE COSTA MESA LIMOA ISLE-$l9S,OOO 'J'ht:' U_, I,\' hr and ~I·:\\' hornl• for s ale on· thi~ l'.\:l'lu~i ' c i.s l:.1nfl. 'l'ruly lux. ur1ous thruoul. 5 UI(. J•'l{, IJ illiarll r m , .)1 :: 11:.iths, potil J<il·uz~..i. :..aun;1, 3-c:ur g:.ir. Cusl drp~ l·pt. l 'it.·r .~lip. 76 1,J:\'Ur\ IS l.1'.: 0 1{. ()pen \\'1.:d 1.;:, ~I I I San Joaqui,, Hills Road MEWPORT CEMTER, M.B. 644-4910 Getteral 1002 'GeMrol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPER CLEAN! 3 htlr1n \Tt•sa \'l·rdc n11•! il'.ulou.-.: Cul- <11:-sac l<1t ;.1111! u lot of l·la~s. rncrcdihlc lan<lsl'apin:_:. l'llrl\.l'llicnl lot·aLion tu schnots. shops . thurt:h l·S :.1111 ! l1l11·ary . S1.:c thl ~ one for ;11 1 l'.'\l'l·Hcnl. IJclo \\ !)50.UUO hollli._• i1l\"C~Lrlll'tll . i\O\V <ll S l7 . .500 . UNIQUE HOMES, Reoltors-546-5990 2880 Mesa Verde Dri,.e. Casto Mesa so WHAT 'S NEW WITH YOU? ~ ~l !'rCJlcd r,,,-J.!f:11•U1U,, 11 \·· 111;: L'lf1u1 ;11·u Hl•,.Jcl 1·11 ll·Jt ,1\cl} u11i.:r;1•l1.,/ thl'1111ut . :.i hdrn1-. , l11rm:1I 1li111n1: ·rnl . "'ct t1 ;1r, :1 ""r i:ara~c l'fl'Hltlllfl luc:.it1011 VII <jUIL'l 1'111 flt• 'JI' !oo.lfl'L't , "\1·rlook1ni.: the fa1r11.·:i) So!HI \;duo• at $J:o.'1,4.t1.t1J ~47.9SOFHA&YA ·rn1,. tar:.:c 4 t.cJrm z tiath hf•llli' with lov1•ty 1cfH'fost·d p:.tu, ''" 01cr ~l t.L·rl l•1t I!\ l1\;11lat.l e lot' •1u1ek 111·1·11p;1ne_\ S1,;n'l' !or h1tat "" tra1k·r Fur s•11n\·onl· v. h<• ,~ urcd 1.1 fc1·l1u g •·r:..111 1,,·d l tfl · rn:..\•ulule 1·1nld1t111n & l•i'A (lov.·n p :1y 1111·11l L':1IJ l.trxur1ou ... CIJM rlupJex' Suulh or h1ghw;1y J hdr1n & rurn)IU.'> roo111 ]•IU.~ <! t1dr111 unit ltpr_.n IH.:am~, & ltill> (I/ w•Hid Upgra1J1._"(i lhru11ul 1;r1~:..l IJl\'l!S t meot or honu~ & ln('ome cun he yuur~ Call for de· t ad:<> tili.i 771 1 ()pen t-:vcs ·r111 s J 111L· •I l1t:<lr11on1 , !'o.lllJ.:lc l>l<1r) home 1s only 1 1 ~ yc<irs NEW! Li.ll'alc41 fin ti l'>PJl'ltJU:O l'IJfllCr Int with ln\'cly lwu.J,.c;,.pu1.:. spnnkll·r;, :..nd SllAf\E Jt()(JF Vas tly up;.:r:..dcd 1ntcr1or w1,lh p<inclinp <i nd l'U!>tOtn dr;ipcS J'f'~ A lll-:AUTY A'I' Sl.8.~MI Ci1ll FIXER UPl'U :"\ccds work hut ~re:..t I J>olt:rlt1:..L 3 bdr1n. J h:..th hou "c w1lh s l •1rai.:1.: ronms & :.tu1ly or 11JJ) hou.-.c 111 l:..rgc yarrl. Zoned lt ·2 with room <or <1ddit1011<1 I unit. Only ' SJti .500 . J u!oo.l lis t ed .! &16·77 11 0 1.cn Eves. ... ju1>t orf Irvine A1·e, GeMral 1002 GeM"ral loo; ~. Only Ill• O••IV PUOI •••tl1 1•111 JOU wl>al'• Mw on JOU• local c:omrnunil~.w ..,.••J dar C. F. Colesworthv R~altor• 640-0o:fo TRANSFER FORCES SALE! 546-4141 .-,1;, '.Jl'.•I ·1 LACU~STA cl1.se to schlJl'tl.~. l1Lrary ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••· :..nd Wc.-.tchff shoppini.:. Twv hcdr1lom & panclt.'<l 1lcn ; ulrnol'>l .i c ar J.:ara.i.:c hobby shop, plus roo1n to µark a l':..tnpcr 1 lioat. Slti.'.k.NI. 675-SSI I Cole of Newport :!:1 15 !-;. Cua.st ii"')'. ABANDONED CHATEAU 2STYBUCH POOL $29,950 PEMIMSUL.APT. J li1!rms., 2 h<i lhs, p:..tio~ C\1o\ e·in l·undilllHJ. Step lu IJL':.l Ol'l•an ,'(.: IX'at:hL'.'I Jlnl'cd al Sl:ll .:ioo Call l11r;1pp't. /j'j;j.;16t);_J liJ;).~I!\ •' :..h.u J• L ti~·•l 1 rrl :i 11.1111 . !I I IC\l'l o•]\4 •1 lill\'l' ho 1llll' l~,z:~,!~lll:~l~f,}Dll l l ·''"11· p r 1 ~.d•· 1·11u 1itrv ,.11il1 11111••· 1.11n1ly !'•11.111~. ---------~ l•tt'lrl l.1 1 t/111111,: ""d •1 \t:I' Bra 4 BR+ FAMILY ASSUME $32,500 lla 1nld1n;.: :,! s tur'y •I b1:droo1n I.a t:uu!'.lta Cul de :.at· hu·a\1on-Spat·u111~ ll\'trlg an•I fortnal d1nl!l:! l'O(HOS St'p;1ratc \'ltll\ ilcn (i1 i.:.;111t11· f;11nl l> roo rn ""'Ith l1rc11J:.11:c . Scp;iratc 1·hddrcn und rnaster s u1ll·S. Scl'ludl·d i:ruu n d :. Chil1l -;,aft· s trcl·l He f1rl'>l tu SCI.' Jl. l:all !lfiJ·ti767 ABANDONED YILU Owner Vegos Bound L'llu,.1 :.ell onl)·. si;1,1~•1. 'l'ou JJ jfj\'~· lh1 .. \'XCl'Ullll' ;,l yle l':..te'>Cllt'r h1111lc Co1·una dcJ Mur l>ouhll· duor cnlry, dram<1t1c t1\'1n g r1H11ll. 1-'urm;.J duun,i.:. G:..nlcn view k1tl·hcn. Artis tic ----------•I 011en :.lairs to scpurale \'u ni jl l c [ c "'1 lh 1 IEASTelDE. c associated : BROKERS-REAL TORS 102~ W Bolboo t.11 )6t.) ,...--------~d ~111·d 1111 V"1) ll··~1ble l·---------•I CLASSIFIED l111.1ut·1111: l; .. u:-.11, :m1. 2 STY·41DR BEACH l1cdr11•1n1s , '.I baths: <!cu & ~ M formal rl1nin;:. F:..11tas l1l' L:..r4c dctache1I rumpus I ;it llL·c ""'ork pat 10 L'o1·L·r roorn w /hath & fplc. master ;ond child r cus s1.11tes. 2Z' hal\rwm Sl~.td party room Ol'L•rlookuu! courty urd. ll urry~ C;1ll 8'12·l5J5. HOURS A•h••M"•·r-. 111 ,,, J•l.11•· llw1r ... 1, 1,, • !••l•·1o!i .. 1w 11 1u .• rn lo·'. .11111 111 ,\1•1111l ,01 1lor11 t<r1•1.1' II 1,. '"""' :...11 unt;1 v • • 1 'flS'l'A \IESA l>F I· 11 ·•: :1:~1 W Jl;o• 1.1;: ;,o1;71<1 ."-t-:V.'f'OHT llFAf'll :tu.:i "''"'P<lrl H1 1·•t r .. 12 :-,.;711 111 ":...T1,1;·r11, 111.,,,·rr 1111;;, 11.·:11 tr Ill• r! r••lll l2;!ll f.A/;UNA llt:Af 'IJ J IH6 II l••nn1•yro• l..:111.uni. llr:oc·h 4:J4 ~•4til) SA I iUt .•: llAI 'I( :! ·~"I 1 .• o I•,,, 1!<1.ul l.:ii:uoo1 lhll11 SH I 1>:110 r.l lllTI I I '/ ii'' I'\' o!t11 l lr1·1• t~1n 1 :!~11 CLASSIFIED OUOLIHES I ~ .... 11tnc lnr ''"IJI' & k dis I' '• :IO \> 1n th" 11.t\ 1 •. 1,,,,, r1ul 1h•'.•f io111 , •·ot ''"I~ In• S~uui .o v & f.l•>tl 1!,1 • ••ltt1 .. 11 ~ v.h<'r1 •lo·.1rtl1r>" ,., ~.1l11rd :" 12 ••••ll CLASSIFIED REGULATIOMS 1':111u111s A<t~•·r11"''" '111~d•I •·l,..<'k ltu•1r '"h •1;111 11 Ao r••1•1rl •·rr11r~ 1m1111.,t1 ;1t••l\'. Tfl)-'. llAll.Y 1'11 .lff ;1~~11rn•·b llalultl 11 !or 1hr, fir,1 u1 ('I .rrl'(·t I UM'rl IOI\ '11l I\ ('i\NCt'.l,l .ATlllN:-1 Wh••n k1J11n..: 1111 ;1(! IN· ~nn• to 11fuk1• 11 r;·1·or•t "' thr KILi. '"lfMll t:J«i ~1111•n \Ou hv your ;"I l:ik••r :o~ rr1·•·1pt "' \HU T r11n1·rllat1on 1'hi ~ ~111 nun1ho:r mu.\l tl<• llfl'.'<'11 h•l liv thf' ;lfh • .. r1"1·r in 1•al<(>11( ;11!1\j)UI" l 'ANl 't:Ll.A'r/11" 1HI l 'Ol!Ht;(·Tlll'i nt· N)-:W A ll Ut:FOI( t'. IHJNNINfi •;vl•ry rlforl l!I In .uh• In kill nr rnrrr('t n n1·w ;ul lh1•t h1ui ho1•rn "rf\1•r1•1I, hul wr c:1i1nnot .i uar:1n t1•• l11 II•> sn unl1I tho' 11d ha1 llP.l,'"1trrd '" 1111• 1.s11J11r UIMl-:A l./N t:AllS Tht-1td~ urr ~lrll'lly 1·:u•h 111 "ll 11nn1.·r hy nuul nt 11t 1tn11 flflt• of (>Ur nf (11·o1•11 NII pho11•• ordt·r~ l>l'u dltnt· :t 1• m . t-'r11 l11y. l 'o11t;i Me.i11 nl · nr•' ,,. ll n"'°" 111 ull tr11nch 0Hlrr11 Tll .. ~ DAll.Y f'll.()T reaervet th" r111hl In t•l•uUy. t'dil, ('t"n-or or re fu•• 11n y 11 rtv,r· ll!ltlnefll, •ltfl to r han ,1114! 1h• rMlt\• & ri·~ut11t11ln11 wittwlut prior nnt1 r r ~HERITAGE REALTORS EASTSlDE TRIPLEX New. :J!tn1i;,1 f1111 :.h1·1I llu1lt111s . f1replat·c. car pet ,., v.•:olk 111 v.•artlrohc!>. \•1\•cly !ltl'ilf MESA VERDE Very ;1ttr.;u·l1\'c u1 and out 1111.:. lul Set: a11ytun1· lk:st \'aluc 1n ;,.II of Ctr..t.J PLUS Jliark J1kc 1lr1vc t u :0.1csu ,J ><111 ·1rn1.~,.,Jt~Call :J lkdrms,complclclyrc· i>t.'t·lu1Jcrl heach hrunc . :.-11;.~1 fur.t>1shcd. luc 10.'<1n lrulH.: Formal l.'ntry. Spacious · c·loscts, J1v rm·. d inlh i.: liv1n1: and d1n1n~ rooms . area. lup J.(r1:1dc s h.ii.: Sweepin g slat r !li 11; crpls & dr)IS. Jlo:..t "or 1Jr1v :..te rna stl·r and tr<11lcr /.!'1 l c on alley. ,1·. 4 eORM5 + POOL S41.SOO Fi1er·Uppn-,\sk1 11 i.: 5)1:1.suo l'."11 IUH w 1·arhc•lr:1I tam ::0411 JJ.',J r ni. Nl·t·rl:. !1ts1•J1):, 1·r1•ts, [~ . " .. l'hiltl rl'llS 11uarlcrs . Goodfinanl·1ng;n ·:..1I. L ;1v1s h r ear ,i.:round,.. CollAnyt;rne NOTICE ~ 11wncr rnu.,t s1.·ll. ()nl>' OPPORTUNITY U:Ui0Ncwi>0rtHlv.Cll.I hov.· IJ<iily 1'1lot eta!'>:.· .. Grc:il_la1n1!)'..hol1Ml of fcrs spal'iou~ txlrms. : h;ilhs, f1r~placc, built-111: & hcutcd pool ~ GI & Fil/ terms at only M-1 .500 C:1JJ H(;J.5ti7 1 or55ti-7U.151 p.11ul a111t lut ~ .. 1 'fl,(· ,\i;. / THE REAL ESTAT£RS S:U'i<Jdown. C:..ll~i:l·f;71,i7 . knoeks ol tcn when you i;.16.3!J2R.r:,·csf;jJ-.tSi 7 1J1cd <ids dis play th1.•1 r ·'"' ·,, , . , .,, · , , .. , , use rl·sull·J).etlln~ 0;,.1ly n1c,.s:1i.:es with lcJ.(ibd111 m .-Welker If lee Reel Eetete l +FAMILY m :1rki·1. i.:.1·t fl·sult s. i'hut1l' ''Hll•' 7'. 1 .. a11 ~" qu:..11 · _ I )'1111'. 1'1·1f'l.,I ~1.!•~1 011 it .·r 'irn1lar IH1U!'ol'~ llur I·---------•! t y \ ,,k.\· ,1ol 1 .111l:11!e C;111 l\t:Y II J·:/\L 'l'll ilS , PRIY A TE LAKE FISH ORIOAT [ ~ 1'1lot Cl<1.,,,1f1t.J Ads 111 :111d i1np:i('t'.' f)urad .... 11~· ~ rt:ac:h tile (/range Coa.,l 1 :Jrc pn1url tr• !'oay. rc:ill} Sl7,950 l'h•111et~l2·."~i71l ti-12·51i7K . This cha rmini.: J bdrrn. z 1.--_;;.._.;. __ .;;.~1:;:== ::_::_:::_ __ 1•-.... ----iiii~iiiiii Sell things f:isl V.'1Lh0;u!• l'1lot Wa ut ,\ds. :,(;2 771;1! ASSUME 7 112°/o LOAN In your uwn pnv:..tL· lakt'. 1-:lcJ,.iillltly upi.,:r;ulc<I . :1 lldrm . ~hat h h11111e, only t y cur old . Wh :1t .. l!rac1ous w:..y l'• live. ·rtus lovely hurnc near South. C11a~l l'l;;1,;1 h!oo.l•·•I ;ot un ly S l ~.:1.'>11 . Call ;,.i;, ~l·I~ I ~(~~~ 1ti~.~ea~~ey~1 1~m,111~t DO YOUR General I 002 Ge-ne-ral I ~02 ,~ ••• ~ •••• ~!'! .......... !?.~~·~~~~! .......... ~~.o.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··················•••••11 wh"l you :ire h•1k1ni.:. fur. SI 99 MO. PAYSAU. lrnn1.11·ulatc l'" \t•ar )'<>tu1;: :I hdrrn. ~ ~lor)' w1tl1 uul11.·l11·11.1hh· f111a111· 111g ! IJw11•·r l1•av1ng ;1re;i S,t}., hrini.: ;01 y .,ffer' ·r,. k ,. a <I 1 ,, 11 t :i i.: l' ,,, ·'l'arkhui.: k1t l hc11. lfc!oo.h a ... ;1 rt .. w .. r pJ1t1I 11111 1 de (•p p1J e ('.lfJH'l 1 ,\ S\IJ\ S/IHlC J101n c J•t .. t lor· }'t!U ! Fur .qqil t" ,,.,._ c·all 14-17 1;i1111 '" ' " 11111 M•wport hac:h C ule duplex nr. p:1rk Iii ucc:ui. Will tra1hi f1Jr J c .-.crt Hll'Omc. ~iJ.(l(.lfJ C.:01.y f1 rt:11lacc with ripen OWH THING beam l'C1llni.:s on a J.iri:c lot. A11 of lh1s &. r,ffcrcd with FllA &. VA Lt.'rms. Cull lo scc 5,1.).!Hl/L •11:1 "NEGLECTED" <.:o unlry Cluh arc;1 . l>ecoratc to Y(ll.i H l'Olor sense but ;1pprcl·1;itc thl· floor pl:..n a111I :<>pill'C 111 :J I bedroom . 2 1 ~ h:1th. f:un I rm, utihty r11urn . Jur).!c I h:.ll, l1e;1ut1ful cnlrant·c hornc. l}Jll'll I ~ •. 176:. Ua h:1m..i J.a11c. L'llc!oo.:1 Verde. ·~ ~ [~ THE REAL ESTATERS 4 IR·2 STY POOL BEACH $2B,900 ® herbert hawkfns REAlTORS ~ CALL 675-7060 l'urk like <1ppro:i1·h. GOY'T ovlHED 1.ari.:c family Sl't.e liv•nlll·----------1 '.1 lidrm s .2 Hath.~ room. Gourmet kitchen -------- 64 6 ·J2S5 llunUnt.:lon l-lc<1ch + dine. Sw('cp1ni.: stair~ 111 scparit lc master & HARD TOFINO 2 STORY S.:J.l.OOO · Lowdown c·ti lldrens suites. 1'ake 4 Bedroom Uradford CALL SSMBOO 1'1 · $~0 .9.'ill 1-'u lf 11 ,.11.1., 2 over ~·;., FtlA loan. NO ace Condo, I ~~ Years I Balboa Inv Prop. Nt:w LO•N •'()S~'S· . .,,., new. F111lli1!oo.lit· UP"l'a•I· Iii·~ t'rn . ~ t1atil. 1tll1~."· -1 · " "" '' " r11n g•1 t.. <1l'L'n , 11v1~rS ll.L"tl R•otfors per m onlh p<iy!I all. in i!. L1x1ks like a r11od1.•l. c\Oli •·\)j, Plt•1i1v 11 1· ll U llH Y fur th1 ~ l'o o l , cluhho u lic, s lOr;i i.:e . FA hcut·. iur llAllGAIN-.5acrificc. childrl'n's 11Jay arl';• & 1•on<l1t1<1n1nl(, y1111r :.clt·i· l•---------•I Hring 1>ainl &. m1tk e $$$. park <ill wi thin ·~ hlrn.'k. lion ul l'llrp•·I~ & driis. MESA VERDE C.ill 003·7"81. Must scc~o a)lprccialc. I S PARKLING FAMILY 1, .. ,,1'""' '•'• ·"'' 1• Pr1t·cd · t :.. mod es t •uyn1enr.~ lei'>.~ tha111'c11t . Call fl,in "r Ken ;i t IHJi\t t:-b1.i: J IK..J roo1n [® I $36,Ullll . ti Y now and model with 2 hall}lo; unll l llJ!l ;j!'UI SAVF' IQ!J~:l:!I Ag!. ::rri:i\~::;':1~;:J~ir~;r~i~~ -·1_ ~ fi@J1~ ~·· 0 1,1-'.lt lJ VA /FHA i.:olf euurs1· fro1n l1vin~ QM ES room. St•c this charm1ni.:. ~ ._ Repos squl•aky t·lcan 111.11-n c Only $4000 Down 3M• c•mpu• Na s•1-1&ss 11necd lo sell ••t $~.!K10, in f>r11n).!e U>only C11JJ ~O·ISJ I. to assume fantastic 7'ti ----- Keys 111 of(1cc -VA loan on immacul~te 4 WORLD bedroom home in Fourl· REAL ESTATE lain V11Jlcy. Un believu· Sp~l!l1ili11 ls in i.:ov<·rn · hie low price or onl}' 111c:nt j 1n1111ecrl ho1n<:11 ! $32,500. Vacunt. Ca I I 556':.7777...,tiMt Wor ld ll eat E s tul( $145,000. '"!-7771. HTTIR THAH HEW Sharp" yr old with loadt1 of uµJ;!radl'~. '!'his J8R, 21Hl St:l1~ct Pros"-!rty hu11 II ·"'Pll<'IOl,HI k•lch. f11 m rm Wllh u wull 1)( J.!IUS!I to 8 11ccJudc1I front co11 rty 11rd. Priced n14ht at 145. !IOO. with an l!l:<l• 11 umi1h1 c lo an . C ALL. ac kly, s.56-2000 SELECT PROPE RTIES WA TERFllOHT ·rw11 story 411lt & den,. forml din, 2 f1111e~. J car w11r, xlr• prk.:. Sulunlt your tr•de. JACOIS UAl.T'( 875·6670 WOllCOUfOF YOURUYEIH J-l ard lo rind double u~ re1nden c", Only one of IU kind <>n m ark,'l. Slfl.000 C•ll n ow It. aave 646-7171. Ot'f1" Ill 9 •ti S /Vil 10 Ill l>r((' [e!11illld 4 +FAMILY ROOM FHA-YA $40,250 This lar~e lovely home in Costa Mcs<1. has •I bdrms, 2 baths. larJ.:t! added f;imily room & is on a quiet deud end street. with a l.ir~'1 dof.( run. 'rhis has got lo be the best buy in Costa -Mesa. Call 545.9491. $145,000. macnab / lrvlne realty SUMDA y MORM iN SPYGLASS! Sun<lrifl pr1ol sidc! ()r sleep in ! (3 pca<.'.cful h1.:droon1s). Or hru nch lch<.•c r.v d in ing-r1H'l lll , family roon1 \\' 1h;1 r l. {)r see forc\·cr (fabulous ci . \,\' & ha1·bor \'LC\\'). Sl7·1,SOU .. Jal·k Cusl('r fi·l2-82:J5. ( IJfi::!) HAPPINESS! lluntl' \\ilh ;.i Vl1':\V ~ J,O\'L'I\' :J l)(:dro11111 . 2 1 :: hath ··J!luffs'' ~·o n ­ do n1iJ>h-l ni. View of N~•\\'f)()rt l ~uy - near pont .~ s hopping. S7:J.!l:l 0. .J eanne Nl'\\lll lan li112·~.:J5. (C~.1) A FAIRWAY SPECTACULAR!! Vc r::;o..1i llcs !\'1o<IL·l -l~xtra ordinai rc! E.xquisi tcly clcl'or:ttcd & furni.shcd 4 bedrooms. 4 1:: hOJ Lh .s. llc;1ulifullv lanclsc;JpCd \\'/pool & j:.icuzzi . Grt.:..it \'i c1.v <tf fail'"'ays. $320.00 U !furnis h ed). ll nh ()\\1cns li·l2·8235 . (UH.'ll " BLUFFS HOME. <)nl y e lc•ga ncc t·:111 dcSC l'ihc thi s tot;;1Hy c:uslo1nized 3 l>cdroon1 co11- don11 niun1 \V /viC\IJ & scn1i ·pri v•1le IK>OI . S..'9:l,5{>0 . liHrlHll'<J Aune 64~·M23.5. 10G6) OCEAHFROHT DUPLEX! Closl· to Ualhoa I,icr -ri ght on lhc bea ch ! Great sun1me r rental e1rca . 2 bc<lroon1 unit + I hcclroorn unit. SH5.000. Tom Qucen&44-6200. (067) SURF & SUH OM SAMOY BEACH. 2 bedroo111 duplex "-'/Oceunfronl location for surfin g ra mil y !!( Vacttlion here the ycar·roun-d ! As k· ing $149,000 Incl. land. Vee Stinson &42-8235. ( 068) HARBOR VIEW CARMEL 3 bed room. ~ bath. Vl'l'Y livable home on a quiet cul-de-sac street in Newport Beath. l•'or only $74.950 fee. CUSTOM BIG CAMYOM J)ramatic cus tom home overlooking Lhr cc hol es on gol f tours c . l ,ofl·sl y lc nias Le r bcdroon1 \\'ilh fircp l<.ite. l•'i ve hcdroon1s ,vith priv<.itc ba lc:o nics. Courrnct kill'.hen pool <tncl jacuzzi. S330,000 ' • OCEAM & JETTY YIEW Spacious family home across fro1n Big Corona llcach. 3 bc<lrooms guest room, f<Jn1il y roon1. f~ormai dinin.g, office. "'orkshop plus un1plc parking . Sl29,000. HOlfSE WITH GUEST 9UARTERS Bright, c:le<.in, fresh 1-Iarbor View home with sep<.irate guest quarters. 3 bedrooms, 2 1:! bath.s in n1 ain house. Den , bedroom & bath in guest house. S!l9,500. POOL-YIEW AMO PRACTICAL, TOO 4 bedroom. fam ily room in Harbor View l·lills. i ::; ex pen s iv e ly upgr aded. Vi e w of ha rbor, ocean . s unsets. night li ght s . Mi rrored wardrobes, deep deluxe sink, new 'hot wate r heater , covered patio g<Js 11BQ -just a few of the featur~s of this attractive home. $124,500. IOSTON WHALER FOR $250,000 11 Higher Lhcn normal for this boal but a fe w other items a re included -s uch · as a DOCK -a lovely, SJ>acious 5 be<lroom HOJ\.1E on 4S reet of fee fron t ~ge, making t his the best value on the l>ay. Will trade down. CUSSll'llD MAIUMG AODllSS St•ll•n~ ;1J1)'th10,i.: with \I I' c1 """ 1!rt¥1 IJ1t1I)' l'llnt Cl.1!oo.!oo.lf11.'CI ,\d HOW IS TitETIME for job 1eekli:ra to check the Daily PllDt Jlolp W•nted cla11iflcation. lf the job you want is not 1herc you mighl COhllkler of(er111g your services with on :id 1n the Job \Vantcd c ntcgory Phone M2·S6J" • TRJPLEX-Lrg , furn·d. units, xlnl rentals, mid Balboa. lie!ow ~place· WA TlllJlllOHT Two 1tor)I 48R • de n, torml din, 2 frple., 3 ca r gar, 11tlra prkg. Submit your tr•de: '4J.aJJI to1 ~Orlff NEWPORT IEACH 644-1766 LAGUNA IEACH 494-0749 ,·,,,111 ''"~1• l!I u ~1mpl{" maHl-r t'1111I >A•h.al )'fM.I want "'"""""":'""',,,,::;:,,,,,,,,,,,,~LJ_•_"_'_''_"_'_"_"_'"_._" ___ -.J..0-IJJ~ot t..:l as.~1f1t'<ls. in mc:nl 111 SI l~.500. COAST PROPEHTI ES, 67J.5410 JACOIS lllALT'f 675-SbiO A COLDWELL .IAMKER CO. • , I • • ' r ' " • • ' ,. ,,_ • ... '" ,, -' ~:!.~~.:: .... ,~:!.~~.~ ....... ~c::::!.~~-~ ...... . G.,.....Qt I 001 GeMral I 002 Costa Me1a I 024 ~!!!.':c:-;~~ ....... ,,~!!!.~~~c:'! ....... ~~!.~~.~~........ '-Tuesday June3 1975 OAILVPILOT 87 El Toro I 032 tnhtt' l 044 LCICJUftO H l;ue-1 I 052 Apartments lncom~ Pro~" 2000 HousH .Furnished · .•....•••••........... , ...........••.•........•••••••••.•....•...•... • ._. ••••••• •••• ••• •••••• ••• • •••••••• • ••• •• ••• •• •••••• •••••••• •••. ••••• for sale I l 00 • • • •• • • • ••• •••• •••• •• • • •••••• ••• ••. •••••. ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'WO 5 uni\ apt bid& jw.t .._. rt a.--1. 1169 II //~S~~ REALTORs' FANTASTIC OCEA.M VIEW MESA Ver<il' 4 Hr, lien, lgc pool. Newly p.unl<.><I tn & out lrnmcd o<· cupancy. $74,500. Owner ~-7630 HY owner vacanl J br, 2 4 & fAMJL Y I.la, family rm w/frpk, TT p pool & Jacuu1 Ass ume HEX O AR.IC s·~•'·o Joan. CaJI after 6 What a locat.100·! Next lo pm, 586·4275 l'ark. Pool & Te1UU) 1n a hcaul1ful pride of· By Owrwr 2 Jilt, sml fountain Vall~y I 034 owner:.~ 111 I rv 1 n c fenced yurtl ~.500 Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• pl,rnned commumty. A 4 646·0748. 55!:i Hamlllon, SPANISH 4 BR 1rn. tam r m. air cone! • WEKHOW• LAGUNA HIGUB. * IEST • • NORTltVI 1-:w 4 BR. 2ba, lorm.il d1ning /fam1 ly rcn, wet lltlr. <.;orocr lot. Like new SG<\.!SOO CM home that loo~ tjRANL> . +POOL , Ni!:W . $51 ,:.150. Call * HEAUTJl"UL "<!04 beaut1folly upgrade<! 4 644-7211 Agcnl l'lun" in Sea Terrace. 4 BEDROOM bedrm, f~m rm, 2 balh -------Highly upi;raded with BARG 'JN p C"' r ( l c•vmplt!ted for :.alt! CIOl>t! ..... wpo ~ ,, , r1 ~ or as h • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••• • • • ~ale. B\'aul t•otulo l'Om Io ma Jo r s ()p P 1 n g . • , plcx. 112 uniLs, rented a !) center. ht yr "nll' ulf ~.IV~ ON LIOO ISL.I-. apls Projected '75 in Sl<tM 5362!>79.~lSOJO 21lr 2 llaunly$450mo. com~ appro.i.. $300.000 12l:J> W3 W.27 Collccl Glanl pool. J·a··u··1.i, "ym , $2000. Tu Rebate ~ N rt ~ ~ ,.., :! Uh CullJgc, C"l>U n arages. 1''or :-.ale or 9 Ht.: Bch Tnplexe:. Jfo1.:ht::. ~00/MO trarll' ilown 7' < T )) By JUSl bll I 2 &.:llir Patto • II"-"" ''"I I owner. Mr. lJ . 400 N. 2002 llunt.Jnt.'1.oo · l:a ....., ""! A<:a(•ta. Fullerton. l71·1> Ope n'datly l 5 53!l li77!J H'"'Hs Unfumished 879 97 14 Businns Properly l 400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ASSUME 7°/o VA ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIUPLi-;x , Cottta MesJ Get.ual1 3202 w1owner ':. :J llH l 1•ba, + ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BATH home. Curix·ts, home on large lot. Crpls, EXCLUSIVi': Turtleroc·k ocean view, oncul·de·sac drapei;, ran~& and d11 ... drplj, bll.m;. Charming Terr. home by UCJ S Ur. Il l reel. Heci ealionul hwashcr. Ne<ir s<:hools & decor w1lh fplc, covered 21·7' Ba, den. frml drn J ltJt"ihlie~. µrivuh! IJ(!a<:h 1----------• markcl). ~IJ.000. p1tllo, prof. lunds<:apiog. car gar. Ulll. Im & PJI\ parkiug. SG9,950. OFFICE fq)lr Ct•ntral local1on. 1''REE J<'HEE Yea).!l'r Heally 556·1il71 •Prot'es:-.ional ~·rv11·l .. Roy McCcrdle Our best value!! $.56,000. t ry. Lg lot w /vu·w ol Laguna HI~ RJty. Realtorl810He--..6 Callto sce'Ukr!IG:l·785l. ~.t s h1uo I s l and & 496·4040 83"5050 BUILDING .. : • Catalina. Nr. i.chh, & ""' LARGE UNITS •LANDLORDS• 104 & 112 UNITS H 0 me f i" d. rs * lN ,FJ\NT/\STl C L agun tt . Looking down on FANTJ\ST1C Divers Cove. New 2 hl'd room , 2 hath, l'm .. ·plal'c Con- domini um. fi'urnishini.:s 1n<.'ludl'd. A i"ANTAS'f I<.; huy for $l.19,000. Also uvailablc for summer rcnt:TI . Costa Mesa5'18-7729 Huntington Beac.h I 040 shop·~. $1<15.000. Uy ai>Pl. • • : 1067 BY OWNER ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• on l . uu61 Woo<ltonJ Mission V1e10 ~---UY OWNEH-3 Br 2 full T y 833 osor. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent arl'as• 642-9900 Jo:xc1l111g presl1gc3)rold PYHAl\110 . Cahlorn1a's Largc:.l MES.A VERDE baths.dio.rm:on'culdc--err • • ' 1''or s ale by owne r . BY OWNER sue. Prime toe., closet GREENTHl::E/Brookf1cld Ueaul&lul LaPa.t San l CALL-644-7270 building. 10.500 sq Ct 1-:xchangor:. I03· 17fiX • Rental St:n tel·'· renlable Current lease:. .50/ :.q. ft. tn an area J :. SIN(;Lt-: story t!ipll'X nr Vacant 2 Hr $140. C :'11 :! Pean: & Quiel arc yours Bunning & Bushard. model, 4 Br. 21 ~ ba. lg model of M1:.s1on V1eJO. mth1s ncwly dctorJt('(IJ Landscaped yard w t pool+ sep 8'Jal·uu1& $5J.000.5!S6·5797. 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona del ~~~...--..P_ROP AGEM NT Mor ht ~h as 65/ sq. fl Harbor Bh d, C.:. M All 2 Br H.B. SI 70 2 Br 'I 11. Sell or Trodt' br, garage scp<1n.1t1on N H. Sl!f5. 2 Br T II ~­ 1111 llOMI\ 101 , .... , Ult, 2-U.t fam·rm hwme. s tone s lab patio. Walk t redwood d ecking. /\skin~ Corner Jo t , ni cely hcach.~.500.~·8-153. $67,500.Prtn.ortly.To -;ee llll·ome $580. nw !'nee CdM Agl ~79-84JU 4U ASSU MAHLE LOA,"IS BilJ Z ink 547-0869 S5t>.5UO. G 1.Lnl.t lleJll), -- llO(MUtl "'' Ulf ""' IOU 1ur me 01 IU~I ~1uruu ,. hU 1uuo,. landsc ap e d N ear call6-1 1·471U betwcl'n!}& Jn Saddlchack Valley 5S l 25Uor ~-IJ~ ll.8CH ~l411 lb1 .Jppb a1 c a . T ake O\'er pay------SA. 2 br, k11Js .1>cl schoob & :.hop ·g $1:.1.500 Painle-ss 5. weekends call 551·1117S menl) no quahl)tn/.:. no PRIMC: Commercial C 2, ----------•I SA. 3 br. k11b, pd GeMral I 002 Corona d el Mar 1022 t\ss umablc Loan. JlOl i\ll the work 1s done for Harbados . 7!>1 7!n1 or you on \hjs l'i: year old Mew Listing Your Own Jae uni new lo11n CQ)l3 H1.ncho MU:il Sell by Owner onl} PRICED TO SELL i"URNIS H i':U ~tio. ~ IJt, VtcJo Hcallo1·s i:s:11-02J.1 $62,500. 19M Newvurl 2 Hctrm & l bdrm . in sin gles. applns l•h"Bkr •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-lHn Landmark home! Tht Bl\CI. 11t l~th, c<·ntt'r ul \er} i.:ood rl·ntal Jrl'a . HOMEFIHDERS 11CAPECOO" NEWPORT HEIGHTS Cha rming 2 story Caµe Cod o n e>.c l us ivc sec luded hid 1!away s lrecl. WarmLlt of crackling fireplace fdl from e ntry t•1 lur111al 11111· ing. Large ll\ing rnocn. 4 bl~ bedroom:; µIll!> ckn. Pallo h as fccl111 g uf seclusion. Jus l $1,1:>0 "c:laims" und You're u1. Call646·717L 0 111 '' ru 1J ·' # ,, t • j GUARANTEE E.ASTSIDE J lidrms .• forma l dining rm., l>1lltard sitl' l<11tuly rm. w1Lh spat·mus hnck frplc.; u yrs old & in Ull· pie pie contl1l1on ! Owner sCtys, ·"bring me a n of. fer" $72,500 LIDO REALTY 3377 \iu Lido. N.B. *673-7300* l.ovclv l hclrm ltnust• &. l • B fr a p L t·: vs l s 1 d '-' , close-in C,11.000, O"'nt•r. [® THE REAL ESTATE RS Wl• g uarantee you'll ti-lti-88::.H ~IH!H·\l ~ wanl this .J Ult. J Ba, F ,H Uc tw1•t-I\ Ill ,\~J &6 l':'lt home for ) our own. <.:all - us tu :.cc Lhis exquis ite SP YGLASS ILILL homC' $3 4 950 BAYSIDE property ... perfect for bo~1l dock. Owner a nxtous. Sl64.WO. 1 Califomia LOTS an•!'i0''<100' ~CALL NOW ~/ 752-7315 DONALD M. BIRD Auoc1ote\, Reoltol\ THE QUIET VILLAGE STYLE Cull and lcl u:. :.how you o n e o f l It e f 1 n l':. l :1 bedroom homes al U11s ••••••••••• SAVE MONEY Buy lh1s 5 Bn. 4 IJa. F1 R homl" & gd income from the l HH llcnlal Un1l. Priced to sell al ~ll:!,SOU. ••••••••••••• DO IT YOURSELF i\thJ a scrnq<J unit for you cin l111s H·2 proper ly in Old C.:d M. There's a 1 Ult. I·'• Ha home on rear ol lot. $05,000. Call now. 673-7601 pncein J'hc Blulb. ln l''< ----------•I 11Paradise11 J usl $34 .:.150 for Lh1:. tnl orful home wtlh fn11L Lrccs & lu:-.h µret•ncry. i\ h1~ lalhe c·ovcn•d palw tor I lower:-.. Uoal & lt a tier g .tlc. Elcdnt· g arage door OJH'rH•r Woo<I C'abincts. built ins. 3 bedrooms, 2 huths , den are a Carpels. draµcs. An<l more! Ukr 540-1720 TARBELL t·ellenl c:ond1t111n . 111 tenor 1lccoralor':-; ow11 home. Convcnll'nt lo lcn· nts ('OUrt & pool Onlv S 7 2 :; ll II . C ;1 I I n 11 w Tl UV RON 11.V.ll. Ex t t•µL1onal va lue. 2955 Harbor Pric..-d i.l:.isht><I $123.500 ijl:J-1:15;;11 to $107,750. l:JOIJ &at·rc:.l um·l" l;.1-1 1!1:w Blvd C M l>upll''. l~c lot. :! BH . 2 •1 • • , . [~ THE -REAL ESTATERS CUL-DE-SAC ~ 11.t + I lit l'r"· pa l1os ASSUM 1': 7', Lo.in. Sarni ~.5011. ()y, n Ul..r pointc llme 2 SL). ·I UH . J li75 :lO:J I ui:J-22:!2 ha, :>Cl> fam & thn rm. Nr. So. Coa:.l Shopping & HV Hills·Chcrmin<j lr\'111C lndust !'ark Only Ocean Bay view. large $57.950 ownl'r 557 55X9 Neally luc ked a way 111 a l(IUCL :.lr<:cl ne:.llcd un <.lt:r a :.hake roof a nd wa1L1nj.! for )OU. Lh1s 4 bedroom. :.! hath homl' musl Ill' sold now s ince ow nl'rs ha\e houg hl anuthcr. Make an oiler, owne r a sk111J.: S52.5oo. wc·vc g<il another hornl' JUlil like il 1n llunt111gton lol. 3 Br . 4! Ba . formal dm • • • rm. 2 frpk:.. ;\h::;sion tile EASTSlUI!: :l Ur, frpk. + entrv famrm&ktkhl.'n· extra lri:: 150\1 sqll 1µa 1it'ry . Owner. ~.ooo. 1'101:.hed :.ho1> Bo;il & By Appl. Only 644-U5ZI camper prkg w/ alley al' Harbor View lulls. 3 Hr. den. ra m . rm. ot·ean view. µool. lW Uutrig. ger Or. SI l!J,500. Open Sal & Sun. li40·K!Sl!J. llcal·h for only $17.!JOO., 1----------•1 too. •.'-"Quail ~l lii l Plac• Prap•rti•• 752-1920 1400 QUAIL ST Nl WPORT II .I.CH Newport Heights C L I 1'' I" 0 H I V ~ DUPLl·:X 2 llorne:. on lar~e lol. L1 vc 1n one and renl th e other . 3 Heclroom. family room unit wi th view rrom master hcdro•>m, and 2 bedroom cottage Pnccll to sell a L $1 Hl,000. PETE BARRETT H.ARDTOTOP Duplex. 111 good l'Ondi · Lion: 2 bdrm s. cath unit. On Orchid, one of the hcs l r e ntal streets in Corona dcl ~1ar. Only Si7.000 ~ BAV ANO BEACH 675-3000 -o •e t"~ef .. ...,.. l ~U .... A : ... ..,,. ... 675-7225 DOLL HOUSE! Chotl'l' Cl>M location. <; r c a l l t• r r a c c d ,.~~~~"!._1111_111111111..-...__,.-..,~ ha cky a rd N cw ca rpel!i. Cathedrul l'cillng:., f1n:plaec. ~:.!.500. -REALTY- 642·5200 675· 4060 71/2°/o LOVE IS Love is whul you fl'11l lik1• whtn vuu first sc:c this s uper COM home w11h a s kinny dipping pool. i\ll a pp It a ll l' l's 1 n cl u <I c <I . Lots ot '11pgra<lcs "l\w IJrj.!c bl•clrnorn .... t\~O rull h.tlhs. $(ili.500. O.T.O. <:ess. Lrg c:orru:r lot. S.S·l.500. Uy OWl\l'f' 10:1 Flower St, CM ur call 6-12·•1-Mti. EASTRIDGE BEAUTY Prime easls1de lm·al1on 111 Costa Mesa. Lo..,ely lwo s tory mu<lern wllh 3 bedroom s plus larg e 1 family room plus an l''<· tra :.tucl~. EJ:.y matn tenance. Huom fur Lio.it s torage Only !:>111.UUO. Call fji:l-8550 .. [~ THE REAl ESTATE RS Pool! 3 Bdrms + Family $47.000 Abantlonc<I hy own1.•r s ave lhousund::;' ,\great at·tion urtentt•d ho ml' Fun ccnlcr w1lh :.w1111 pool. pat111. Spr111kll'r:. frunl & n-..r 11111.:c t•ot" ner lot -has room tor your lioat or t.nuit•r. Entry hall. :1 bdrtns. family rm, llrcplut·l'. & d1rung room. Wood t Jl.Jinl'ls . buill in::.. Ukr. 540-1720 TARBELL 2955 Harbor Bhd., C .M. ~:1.000, 7 '::'.I Fl IA lcwn P aym ents ~2'J. per mo. l'ITJ. 1''u II pm·e ~<~UlOO. :t UH. 2 BA, 1;.:c l\·nl!ed .> ard. ('lose lo :.tore:.. st•hoob. t·hun·h Clean & neat. Vucanl Mu\c 111 on nc<lit apprh\Jl. As · ,,oc1atcd S1111th ('11,1s t Hrokcr:.. 5 IS x.l~I. l'\ l':>. ti73· ii:l7. Oul or to" n own er wJnls -----------1 an olfl·r. Th1 cc bedroom HARBOR VIEW HILLS hume 111 Cl>:\1 -:.outh ol hlgh\\:.iy . Family room. Io rm a I d 1111 n ~ :1 re .1. gourmcl k1lt·hcn ~l.9f>O. Coll li"i:i· ii:!:>. •au 1, •PP . Fiift f!of•llU.1(' (•f ¥4\Vt \·_.\IJ~E\. l~E.\l ;ry 11 i g h I y up Ur u cl 1• II 4 hedroom. 3 bath ~ing ll• I e v e I h o m 1• • T h 1 s St\ N OP I P ~ R i\I OU I': L has been l·u:.lom d e· t•o rated ;.inti lll'O · less1onally l:u11lscapcd. Mag nifi1•cnt 11111111 ~ind __ _ viewin g d e<·k . :i <.:ar 2 Charmi n~ houses on A BERG ENTERPRISES CO J!arage. Ideally lot•.1tc.-.I 1 • rt CdM ncxl lo Spvi.:lass 11111 wt<le ol So. o \wy~ SJ23 ,900. YOU OWN 'l'llF. Bc~1u~. ~~rdc~. Sll.500. LAND. <.;all O\\ncr, ti7.HIID __ 640-6161 C osta M.sa I 024 Corona del Mer 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BR DUPLEX with 3 RR. 2 8a Rental Soulh ot Bayside Dr. with btaulllul nalurol wood textures. Only 1 year new. CaJI 644 7211 Agent Don't give lij) th• i.h11)! "L111t" it m 1•la::.s1rlcd Sh ip lo 11horc r1'!1Ults! &42·5671J. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Have somcthin~ lo sell'! Clasi;ificd ud:s doll well. It-- CUTE ASA BUTIOM! '.'Jcal :1s a pin! This ill• li g hlful homl' h;i s 3 bei.Jrooms. f:umly rt)('m. I" 1 haths Seduclccl d111 ing arcu O\ crlouk1ng roll ing green luwns. lush {!recncry uncl enter taint•r s put 111. I ltclc-.1way courtyard tor family lo romp and pluy. All t he privacy of lhl' t'OUnlry right here 111 lhe c1ly ! Ur· in~ th<.' whole family to sec this one . Won't last al S42.950. Ca 11 !>-Iii 2:11:1 C I tJ • > • I I I~ I '· . [® THE REAL ESTATERS Dana Poh•t 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thunderbird Home heated vool. 31:.rn. 2bth. fam rm . dct'orwto1!> home lklax and cnjo)' now $69.!.IOO. BONU Ri':ALTV INC. fl:tl 9411 1-'or (;la:.slfkd /\d Al"l'ION C.:a ll D U.11ly P1lol 1\ D VISOH 642·!i67K s1ngh: level J bdrm & family room model has hecn profe:.s1onally landscaped. under· grourrd sprinklers in· s tallt!d. i.wtios & extra concrete µourcd & highly upgraded 1nterwr w1lh c u:.lom d ra11eries & <-;H'pet111g II "on "l la~l loni.: al S..17,:JUO! !>li:l-5ti71 or ;>5G· 7035 . Bii I-' 0 H S A L E ll u s t t t· \11\DHIO -µlan 1;2. l'rnl. CM. Uusincss + liv1n;.:, l'O.:l't:Plional rtuplex IOI cl crnralcd & lncfscp 'd. gar, h~c Jul. µarktni.: rear only S5!1.SUO. l•:Jsy Tcrrn::. *642-9900• H1 v1c r ,1 "I'd OPEN & eurb. Sec or 1nlu al off Lhe mas ler Br. What llOUS I:: S..it & Sun 1 .~. 836·60l3 aft til'M. """B" ·· Balboa Island 3206 m r Id Y .., ll' , . I I • , ii ~~~·· ii• ................. A.. •• o c l'OU ou ~:11 . I ·or sac >Y owner /agt. • • -= • 11· • -Also 1nduded in lh1s I m:J-8008 Condom1n1urm ~ Lillie Isle J.17 B . ;1:.l S li K .~Otl homt• 1n - -forsale 1700 Bayfrout . Hay \lt·w . Turllerock arc 3 .other tH~wport B~ach I 069 •••••••••••1• ... •••••••• 1-• frplc, 2 br. :1 level. auto Br's. fam . rm. ;incl .a 1 ••••••••••••••·~··••••• •$19,950• Sale or Trade gurpark. 121:rnm;.21::!:1 lucat wn do:.e tu ~cnn1s .1 H~wport Heights Larg e 2 be<lrm. 2 hJ l-:1 1-:hl IX ) unit moll·I. Balboa ?e ninsula 3207 poul~ uncl park. Set lo PriceSlcashed W/l e n eecJ pallu Oii L.tkc 1:-.Jhclla r'ull ••••••••••••••••••••••• day lor s ummer fun' Your slrl'l~t 1:,, l&ned \\tlh l l>eaulifully lancbl-;ipcd pnl'c. ~90.01111 Wtl l JC· Mosl cxt·c1>t1onal homt· 011 RAISOfrS t uwcri 11 ;.: 1•11cal} plus groun<b w1pool. !>.etunty l'l'Pl local home ur 111 Point. 1:10 li>l. ~·It\ r 111, Lrt:l'S ll·ad111 g lo pro· gales & much more. ~::::u. 1·111t1l'. torml d1111111 . 4 UH.J I\,\, ~5GJ c;~t~~!~~.~ninc ! CJmpU!>. Valley Shop Clr CALL 833-8600 Cc!>s1on.illy landscapl·d 1 per mo. pays IL all 111l'ltl;.: HAL PIHCHIN RLTR. :.unrm, elev . garden~ & grounds Enlt·r 11110 ··rnt1 laxes. ins . & mamt fees-:!727 1·; Coasl llwy Ir!! cabana Magnll1nt"nt l'ounlry· atmos1)herc ol Call Dan al 8J:J 8:l:!l for 6 75.4392 punoram1c v1c·w ol ha,·. hcJrth:.. bc•1mt<l t·c1J t appllOSCl' A;.:t L:.c liv Ownt·r SllJOll mv ings, dce11 pile l'arpt.'tlll~ , 1 . I TOWN Jl();\J ES Lul\UI''.\ :.! I 538.·3998 or b75 96-H and unique decor K11u11 ~19,00 1 IBH. LuxuntJus Jrl'htlert un· 2 slorv de· :.1gn C1rcl1· ~t.11rwa'.\. w1Lh v1~w window leadsl•---------•I drapes c arPl'L'> k1L ch1..·n & :1 bdr Ill urnb. 1>ool. c· . -D -h 3218 try kitchen & l'O/\' larrnh • • · A Cond'.!. xlnl. tllliHl1l' op1strano ucoc roo m hl .. hlile. Lil i ... ·., 1\s:.uma_ble ~· 1 ' loJn Lo relrcal. Wood & board w h t:.JVY shah• roof + hl.i~:. extcnur l_llR·s. J Hi\'s, (Jm rm. J car ~ar :!' ·• yrs Owner movtni.: ~outh. New al ss:.i.0001 • Bkr9ti2·5at l Real Estate by MCVAY *CALL TO S.AVE • GREATV.ALUE Top quality carpel uncl tasLcrul decor thruoul. A family home )OU will II\.· proud lo own. ll 1s) our s CALI_, 84l·H3'11 CHEAP BUT MIGHTY RUN ROVER RUN rh1:. ones cqwp~'<i "tlh a dug run that drain:. . lar~c hrick 1l.1tt<> anll walks. g J :. BBQ and he<1ul1ful landsl·.1p1ng The homl' ts a 4 b<lrt11 , 2 balh w1lh lam1ly room I atrium and a sup1.•r ... h.11v appl'JrCtnCC. ~lJ.!!511 tlA. ·v1s1eN RI.ALTY 552-7500 UNIV. PARK Anxious Owner ·I Bdrm . 21 ~ l.Jalh:.. :! I r plc:. , new l"Ltrµcllll l-! & drapes. l<1\\c:.t pnt·c \I :11trm 1n lJ nt\' Park al ~5:1.:>00. Ask £or Lorratnl' , PETTIT REAL TY 552-7000 l-'1\:\llLY llOO.M AN D I Good loca1111n·Top tond1·• t&On Uct the mu:.l f11r youl' S~SS. Wl1 work lo full1ll your nl'ed:... w;rnts La<Juna Beach I 048 and dc:.l rl's CALL ••••••~•••••••••••••••• 1:1'12-!J:J7 l Garden Sdtin<J 121 FOURPLEXES Only one year old Ex· ll'ns 1 \ c ly up ~radcd . Uu1lt on large lols. Walk lu beaches & s hopping. Large :l l>l·drm. :!1 :! bath own ers unit. Priced rlghl. Liberal financing J Vailat}IC. Call unyt1me .. SCOTT REALTY 536-7533 Real Estate byM&AY JUST FORFUH . tour Lhts umquel~ ch• rnraled. almost a palat'l'. I htlrm 2 blhs. Lots ol ll'ntkr care anrl pnrte s hows Ex c ellent nl>rhoocl . Priced low. !JtilH l:ili IT'S A GOOD FE ELI HG i\ C1\T llE DRAL Cl.:IL ING. 111 LH. JJH . Fam rm! Unique slep·up lam r m with lrplc. & frt•cform gruµh1 c on wall. Slone cntrv.Gardc11 kitchen. Assumahle loan. Stroll tu beach• ONLY S.15.~1()0 968-1~56 On the fatn\ay of one ul So Caltf "s f1nl•q <:ourses; :1 bdrm. w1lh heamcd cc1lin;.::. & lrpk . private pool & p~1 l111 a rea. A jewel :.urrol1tHlcd by grce1wry .. \n xlnt l>Uy ut $109,JOO TWO FOHO"lll·. :J Bdrm .. 21,, Im. honw t- 1 Bit & haw k1ll'henl'lle. w :.ep. cnl rJnce & pn' l'IWI patio. ;\1.m> l''' 1 a .. ' Only 3 yr:.. old & a huy ,1 t only $58.250 ;\ll!>Sl0"1 HE.\1.1"'1' " * l!J I IJ"i:J I • • DR.AM.A TIC Sweeping ocean \ H'W:. add the finishing Lom·h lo l h I s s p l' l' t u I' I ti a r I .\ I beaullful hotnc \'1th 111:.:h h c J m l' ii l' 1· 1 I · " . sky It d1 ls. "ond p.1111.'1 1ng, wl't lt;11 hnl'k llrs., ·IOX21l pool \\1th j;t( \II.II. :1 l>drms . 31 ~ h:ilhs 1 u :.padous 111 .. t1· l1drrn. SUtle, W1lh hook linl·d study & frpll' $.!1~1.111111 TURNER ASSOC. 1105 N. Cst llwy. Laguna 494-1177 ~Ian REAL ESTATE 900 Glenn~yre SI. 494 9473 ~49 031(1 Charm Duplex Near lo" n un<l :-11rf, l'' c-cllcnl n>nd1t1un l1worne · ,.. " 1 -go K I t El Teno a1 l 'LI, IJ•. O\\ lll'r ••••••••••••••••••••••• b .. 1lroom u111>11rlu111L\ 'Ji ini.:sw!JI)( .alll'. J ~ Ill' u o I) • 8:10 7:>X I BLu FFS duplex:.! l>r I .! <; rapl' arbor l\ pc µ:.it10 '· Y T ~ n~·~ tl"" ba, ( rp k . 1..!l' pal111 ~x,; le.id :. lo 1mml.'11 se Je~r~~r e<.1>U!J!.IO'Jor Lotsfor s ale 2200 m o. t;;J :t:!~:!. h7J l~llli l1ac·k •0Jrtl \Vtllt 1.,w•1n lur 5·IG-l~ () h '-1 • , ~ ••• •• •••••• •••••••••••• pen ou:.e .,un => pla yground or pool. Duplexes/ Sclll'r bou_!!hl another Units sale 1800 huml•, 'a)'~ hl· '' t\l <ion ••••••••••••••••••••••• stclcr an) nlll•r For ----------<1u1ck ..ippo1ntrncnl to :..t'l', t•Jll 1!17 ·l~llll ·.' .. $775. Per Week [~ THE REAL ESTATERS PROMONTORY BAY HOMES ~ P o:-.s1hlc on :.um mer w111tcr schcdulc on l h I s k c e n B 1-: 1\ C 11 duplex. 4 llcdrooms, 2 baths up, 3 l)l·drooms. <! baths down. l·:ath has t.u xu rv "'a terfrunt hu1nl·:.· pril·t·d lrorn ~111.tiOIJ ~.:1 watc11ronls. tiU7 Ua v:.1<k l>ri\·1·, Newporl.UcJc.h. li73 J'JOO BAYFROMT :! l 'u:.lom I loml':> U \LBU,\ PE;>o;l~Sl"L.I\ OC EAN VI EW patios lipµ1..•r mas ter hcdruorn has pri \ate pal to. J<:,. lc>rior JU Sl patnll'd • U\\ ner anxwu."> to lcaH· a rl'a' As k tnJ.! SJ'J.~50. a11d will l'onsulc r a:..!-.1:.tanct· 1n t111a11 cing ' A:.k tor Ginn'.\. Hrukcr ,\~cnt .'Hli· 111 l. ExCl•ll(·nt location on the~ •w iort Beh l)uplt·x 2 & ·1 BJy & on.ly 12 blut·k to lhc Jr 11 irgl' s undcd. .. ·, ~ l>lk Ckcan 1'~ach homl' h<1-. 1 l l ·h 2 Car-"ar Xlnt 111 hdrm s l balh s & 11 H - liJllcP' · l f1r11nlat•1.·:.. come prup or lt\e Ill & J· " rcnl B y oY.ner . wc tb:.i r . ultra moclt'rn itJ 944 ·-ll:lll<I k1t1°hC'n & prH·aLe µll'r. 1 l·:cl' land. Sl'l' al l:!lHJ Income Property 2000 l·.a:.l Balboa Bhd . or ••••••••••••••••••••••• t·all IJiS til:W tor more dt• lJ ii::.. BIG C.AMYOH BUY I stun·, :, Br. :1 Ba. :1 ear )!Jragc. C..:pls. tlrps. full) landscaped 11wl pal111 trt'lhs $12·1.5110 Paul W Brumfield & Assoc. 549-8505 WILL BU Y ANY 11ousi-; 111 NU lur $2:!,500 CJ sh. ;; 18 668U PRIME 4-PLEX $83,750 C u v 1 n g l o n .1 · p I l· >.. Pcrft>d lon 1tw11 :SIUUll plus cash sµenJahle 011 SIMOO d1>Wrt pay ment 1-;arns :i..<ttJO per month. llurry, l'all (7 11 1 752 1 iOO I ;-.. v 1-:sn1 E:\T IHVISJ():'I/ TllE HEAL EST,\'l'EHS 1 11 UNT1 NG TO:": Beath I PORTAFtMA Corona del Mar 3222 LAGUNA ••••••••••••••••••••••• llHILC) vou Lo ins pi·t'l 1-;.x clus i\"l' Shon· Cl11 f Lhc1r panuram1t \ 1cw Ho.id :l Br.:.! B~. P\t <H s 1 l c:. 0 " c r 100 k 1 n g l'C:.:. to lkh ~I yrh 111 ht•aut1ful l.ai.:wia l~·adt s ummer .r.~·~1.al u111 UK It 1t!J4.9:~1:1. s 1dered 8·12 w!lw'h. Mobile hom~ / $350 .• ;rn H house. Wall .. to TrlrPrks 2300 l>l'ach Cyl:.. i.l ri>). ••••••••••••••••••••••• H c r 1 1 :-i l "~\. •. WCtshl'r c n t'r l1ar.1t'1' ~fobtlc hme. 2 lid. 2 UJ. s w~a gc r~orn t\\;.11 1: i:uslom b1111l, dO:.l' t u June If.I. 5Kl-Ol:~l !>.h u p111 i:. bus , oe.·an Adull park. all ti µm or TOP LOCATION & he.1111 \\Cel-.cnds 199l171 duplex un ocean:..1111· 111 Mountain, Desert, lla\stdc Dr. :1 hll..:-.. from 2400 Big Corona lkh. I ~ 1 old Resort l lir ~llHJ mo a\Jll .June ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ii l"all5:l7 o51:llroml(tu5 BIG Ul'.;,\HL\KE or551581li ;,1:>0>iX:.!1•q •,, Sh.irp cJhln. dbl lot. 11 ~ ~ rold. fpk. comp lum"d. 11.\". Ill LL~ J ht ' 1.im 1-·in·g J\atl. Slli.75lL Hk1 rm, 2 ha, lgl" l>Jlm ~~ti 835 8181 St95. rnu. b t-' t>l I~-;; Ul(; BE.'\ It Ol'" >..tra lgc Lusk :J hr. den, 2•, 1.Ja. Cabin, do:.1..· lo Lake. s ips Crpts. l>r p:. <..k:ea11 \ •1 6. Wa:.hl'r Dryer Week L :.e. ~51 :1 O\\ 11 1.•1 or Weekend. i\fl. ti. 4~~-:Jti3X 751 11:.!f Out of State Property :I Ult. lurmal dm rm .! liJ. :1 hlb lu l>e.ich \'1 h 2600 s.100 , mo. li~IH&i. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14 DELUXE UNITS 11 Dl· I u xc units for ltw w1:>l' 11n e!>.tOr. 4-l! br and 10 I hr units. &>cured tiy 1·11tlus l'd walls. Pnmc La:. V egas location Spark lln I-! pool. l:ood CL:TE I BH ' ~, l·'rph'. I 'pt:. & Orµs, 111t·e ,\al'd. dlll i::ar & worl..rnom ~1,,,. mu. Da.),.,, 5 1M :11:11 .• it l 11 pm. ti7:J-51J5 I li H &. I .1 m . :J c ;1 r l' a r. $700 mo :\\ad J ul~ I , II.\.' lltl b ll75·h~l\)\I s pendable ~·. loJn 3 OH . :! Ba . lrpl1· .\ llome ;1w:.iv lrom hom1.• g arage :>Lil\ l' l'l"P b 1\n>.1uus cl" rwr a:.ktnl! drps. l}.!L' l.'nd IJnJt :--.1. 0111) s:!l:!,000 Deluxe un ol H wy.\\ ;.ill-. 111111.·a• h ,\ NEWPORTSHORES s1x-plex .:!~rs nl'w.nr tb b.t1i.:Jtn ptlt"l'tl :-.hu11:. ~:10 m11 l'hut1l l.Jrgt• ~ s Lorr 4 BH. :1 ocean. ~:i .H4lll d11 ,\).!l 1 3 halh.s ... ·• ~. un-' .. rk~. p.illo !fi!l-1!5:JJ l'.1k l' a1h a nlagt• t'J I t>7 :!ll!l!l ·' "~ ~ now 1111 1 75:! 1111t1 WJlk t!' ht·~1.l'h .. ll.•nn1:..10FFIC E Ultlg ,lnl Im·. J~\.EST:'ll E:'o:T Costa Mesa 3224 t:lt 1 • ct•t!s • 111.l :. priced ='lpl Heh. Ll'a-.~·11 Lii u;.il I DIVIS ION ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11ghl ;.il $61 ,.l!'ll Ltll . co. Hcqutrl' SHiii.mo ca:.h Till:: HEAL EST.\TEHS MESA VERDE • CAYWOOD REALTY dn. tu.7', ncL rclurn on 4 BR. :! J \\·n d1·a11. • 5 48-1290 * 111\·cslmenl + apprc<·ta· Ranches, Farms, Fl.'nced ~c.I SJi5 5.)7 ;11:1X New Listin<J! 8.ACKBAY J11ghly up;.:rack•d, 1111 xl l'J lt.:l' lut, J & Fam l'l'gg1•d Flours & a ll new & new a p p I 1 • :. It 11 c> m I o r Tt a1ltr. Cjntpl·r & Boal. 11un & t llx :-.helll'L 0'A'Ucr Groves 2700 --H 5. 7l4 61::; ()..Im ••••••••••••••••••••••• Near Wl·std111 l'la1.;i :1 ur Sl3!i. !'EH .\CHE + lrg d1•n llnlwrl floor:.. PRIME lti·IO Ane:. lmpro\ e el frplc. hllns & crpl ~l::!.:i t·ullle rJnd1. Terms-or per mo. Km~:i.ircl Hea l MESA VERDE )t:llt•r w1ll lt•a:.l' hal'k. E:.latl'. Ii I:!:!'.!:!.:! TRIPLEX I CllAHLOTTE l.~>N<.:. Ncw~>O rl H 1' 11•1 a c1l.~ 2 1.lcdroom. 1 1 ~ b;tth upls Hltr. l7 llH;.\.l llSU 'l'o~nll(iUs('. :ilk, :1 H.1, ~l ,000 t\).!cnt huve generous g,inkn Real Estate den. lrplc-. \';iulled 1·1•11. s.1:1 081 :! pal1us. l·nl'losl'll gara;.:l':.. Exchan9e 2800 l'ool & lul:. 1mm:. ~J7.,. Walk1n;.: cJ1:.la11cc lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• V..l i!t;,\77 W hat Is A HCMAse? :. h u 11 s . th t' at c r s . Bui I walb <"'i .c root ·• reslauranls. l111st"> anti But.,, 1t"s Oil 1'1·:1'; 1.A;'o.U po:.t ollfl"t' Top rental fir TllAOl·: • S.IO.Ul~I. ,~, • It\ IHVINI.; 'l'Eltlt . & :.chcdul1·e.1ll~.1 :rn:1 L~·.J BHrmolhOml·.C \ MES/\ Vcnlc lwaul :1 hr. :t hJ. NC'\\ l'lpl. :! lrpll'..,, s-4:!5. Gar<ll'm'r ~ \\,1\1·r & ., • , ,. , . or SJll.000 M·IA prop. lhl· p rtl c 1:-. only SH:l.000 ~ Laguna Ul'h lor inn Hl1l' _ . ---1 1t has1· a1 POOL & hhas up· [® prop or ., l\i\GROUZK\' :\tES.\ DEL M.\H.ShJll,: I Jfl'I 'l'L"or you a\l' a HLTR. 494·1'.Uill br. 2 ba. LeJ:.l' sj;;u wl'll planm·d home & a ;\\·atl 6 IU S-15-6-175 g o od 111' cs Lmcnl µti. 9i!l-541i O"n J l-:l'nl ti755011i __ 2 THIPL!::XEShvO"ncr Rutals Slli52 br ,k1ds.slovl' · ••••••• • • •• • ••••••••• • • :)1871 l br locb. garai:c SanClemt'nte lu76 Xlnt loc. C.M. Pnm·1pals H Fu 'shed tlUIET I hr .• 1pplsSJ:>.1 BIG 5 BEDROOM Ncwl.'r 5 bedrm. J bt1lh home 1n tnp area dose to ocean . Carpet:,, orapes. bllns, wall·r sofll'lll·r . upg raded Lhruoul. ~tove 111 condition , r parks & seh oul s . :J t'ar g ar. S55,000 likr g.12 :&tl & la '< ~.~110 • • • • • • •• • • • • •••••• ••••• only pica:.<". !>-15·2!0-I ouses rn1 ".\CK BJ' J hr. l.11ls, ad\ Jlll'"ls,.!l.'S .. •) ur .. , ''a . Pool. Hivaera -••••••••••••••••••••••• l> "' J •• "0 • DELUXE 7 UNITS. I G.._.ral 3102 pl"l .. ln?<l . g ar;i gc. EASY TERMS lk'auLtful 2 :.lory. :i halh CQ11do with frni s ht•cl bonus room 111l'111cling s hower and wet bar. Walk lo :.t•hools. minutes to s hopping and freeway. You mus l sec Lhis one! $:11,000. ~ lTnrnr{11m1;;mm 962-4471 (~no)546·8103 4 BR ~ lg den $49.500 Mnstcr s uite & balh down. J BR 's-bath u1>. Corner lot w /boal i.:utt• Crpl.8, drps, bltns. fplc. Hike to beach. You moy Join pool /lenni~ club Call lo see!• Bkr 536·8836 .. ---- SURFSIDE COTT AGE 2 OR Tri level. cult' & cozy. 60 1-'t. lo surf Owner will help rmnnce. $39,900 Call quick. SOUTH COAST INVESTMENT !>49·01112 646·6710 SPANISH STYLE 2 s ty homt'. poob1. lot w 1ocearnu. :1 lg sun dl!cks . S hr, -1 ha. hugb fam rm. 3000 :.q ll By ownr ~1 IH ,500 S.tlly; 7 M·•l:J!:i·:J:.l~i7. 711 1:.:J!J :.1701 laquna Nique1 I 052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUST LISTEO! PcrfN·l for the lrun•ltng l'Uuplt or week end home• 1-: Z care 2 HH, panckd <il'n OJX•n bC'11m c<•ihngs l..1l • dmmg arcu I, H LUCKYYOll ll's ONt.Y . . Sl>l.000 Enfoy th~ Good Life Call 491-2513 llnvt' somethmft you want - to •1:'11? <..:l:uMht><l odR do SELL idle ill'fl'I:.. wtth a 1l well • Call NOW. Daily l11lol Cl;L't!lthl•d 1\1,l. 642 ~78. 642·~78 D1s tr1 c t Hy Owner. L' nk .iy2.0112 blk to ocean. t2> 3UH. (5 > •••••it••••••••••••••••• r cc .P r <!BR. Good c:oml Ocean \ il'w 1 BR h11t1~c. HOMEFINDERS San Juan Yeager Heally,5.1'\ li17l L.B Kttl pct:.. abt>:! Ur"s •642-9900• CapiJtrano 1078 --- -Sl-10. Mobile C.M s ngls ------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Try a Dai I y I' 1 I 0 l OK Bach units. b<.tlboa 3 BR. 2 RA. lrpl. bltns, 01'~/\UT I 1''lJL :1 br. 2 ba Clas!;1f1cd Ad lo huy, sell SIJS. N B $1-15. 11.li. Sl35 pa rtly I urn. 6' fe nC'e mrll home. Nr. sd1ls & or rent somellung, agt 979-~430 Quiel 1.;. :.11h.'. 1"um1I} lll•U ch. Lg rencl'd yd. ---w oul pets µrl'l"d. lknl Mus t se ll. $·t 5.!.150 . C.../N'-0 h),..,( _ y,-c_ ~C. negotiable Yrly. U\I 4!)!) 11HOall.5PM ~~ \.'-'1tJ ~). ~ µ(.{" \:] H,28.548-37ti_1 __ _ By Ow .... ER That Int riguing W ord Gome with o C huc/r.l e BACK BAY Lg. 11 br, :.! ba "" home Bltns. ti•11c1:d ~ d D .. lu.w" ''br cl"'n Twnhs. fdl,.d ~, c1.11Y R POIL4H • ''" " "' 12 mo. leasl'. s:l">ll m1\ poolside IOC' Cust cpls & 0 ltf'orrotto.. ,.,...... ,.., •he • 213-3'35-"1685 l'H'S drps Many Xl 1"3). 10'' '""' ""ambl~d wood> t ~ <In. :JOyr l'r1nc1pals only 1°"' '0 """' fou• ''"010 w0<di 3 BR, 2 BA Condo, Cam · P lu:.h' 836·4985 495·1346 RYETTA I rm .encl ~a1 .• >uol I' 12 I I I . 2-BR,-l HA. Ii:: fenccc Pl•n• out •f tun•f eu\. .... O·.~ r or CIA."IOtd Ad AC110N C.all A DAILY f'tLOT AO•VllOa ''°'""' I yard, dupll•x. Bltns. elec . water pd. 195 Jo~nn _ $255.per mo 62_3-77:17_ Fountain Valley 323' I ······················· Now thf'rf'\ 11 qroup that 3 BR, 2 ba, 2 t'l'.lr ~;1r won1, to flvot1dateo marhn•i. so bltns Comm swim pool you won·• 9"'' holn '" yovr 'Kids ok. No f~. ~-ls I orl< l A Y N . ~ I I I U M V A E I I I' I __ l_l_R_G_M_Y---.,-. ' ' Pioneer. 842·4'\21 I 15 I I 0 c-01~ ... •h~ rhvd l• llVOftd 4 BR, 2 BA, lg. eam1 . . . ,., "''"''! "' '"-' -... ..., .. 0"1 N hl "D .__ ........ __,.___,__. __ _, ,..,... dnelocl f,,.,,,, ''"" f'io J b•low room. r SC . & ;:,. • 1 fwy . nccess. $37~/mo 9ti8 1892 A UN~CtAl<ISlf .\!\CW( lllllQ\ V 10 (,[T ANSWI P In Clauiflcation 1080 <.;lassiCied Ads sell b1R 1t(•ms, small Ite m s or any tlem . 642 5678. _...:.--- B8 DAILY PILOT TuoSdey. Jun• 3. 1975 ~ l:wllh Uftfwft. Aparfwnenh ...... shed Office Rewt• 4400 lusinHI Lott & FoUftd 5300 .tp Woeted 7100 •h ,.. "'8fwlll1Md Co•d••I• a ..__-.__.. u-.a..·-•••••••••••••••••••••• or Uafuf'ftllMd 3900 •••••••••••••••••••••••. OpportulU!f 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• u.tw.ialted "114115 ..,._,,_.,...,. ~ '".... 3144 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROFESS'LCLASSA ••••••••••••• ••••••••• ~ .. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hldg, 2790 Harbor Ul(ld, WOMAN PIJITHll FOUND: Lao bl puppy' 8 AVON P1•teia Vtlley lZl ....................... Coato Meso 1124 LOVE L. y 2 br Cond C.M. Air cond., wood S.SOOO·Tot al lnv"~tmenl mos. Trabuco 4c Via Vic:· ••••••• ............... 3 ltft, 2 Ba, bltns. CU6tom ....................... witorrace, ~ mo. m · Vf~!I Jl(g > • pan ti I wull~. driapca, My adv e rtial na & wria M.V. 837-85i2oft2 VACA.Yr Uuge 4 Br, 2' cpta, drps, lrplc. P~l Off .. .._'-"' eludes wtr . ht & l<l!Sl re fiClllllG •l• COlla'f! carpel , \:lee , mu11k, publishing busines:i lit in· --:-- b a. Pr o a t' gt l?1Ati<1 , adult:.. $32,, 1, z & 3 JJr. Adults no c(t.I.-+ $100dumuJ(cdep. AOUlTlAlmlDlllVINC JonHor, parking. MR. Lerti1lln~. ~itablc, & F!>UN O : 1'omt-ran1~n. nelthborhood, MSO. pt 64~23-15 ""'lB,d"'hwh-,sl\•"'""ls, &$25. cleanup fee.Avail 1.MAUtt1ucm110 Stever. Mgr. ~7-0LJ6 or ncvcrhum-rum. S .0 . Fry /Wcs t.m r . mo A• k for K l -.. •.. ..., ~,, • •ochelot• 1>41J.gJ96 My 1>uru1er been £!13·63'J· l!ll9 7 14·963·~. THERE.SA WORLD WAITING FO YOU~. """··~47l C:I ft..-..1...llH Uftfunt 3600 CIOjjCd «ungc, fr1>lc , 6/30. 552·013_8 u • """ .. -..,...... • ----• 1 BR ., BR forced lo retire for health ---- ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• OUQ. Gas & waler pd. LCMJ1o91a leach 3148 • • £ 150 I Westclff Dr. reitson.s. J urg4muy nt..'t.'(I Penonal1 1350 A s u n 1\ V O N Huge 3 Ur. corner lot, HIW DUl'l.IX Pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• •l Ill & O.n Newport l"lnanrtalCtr 11omeono conl(cnial lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• REPRES~NTATIVt: l\',1be Optwn ok. New Oel"xe isplit·level : 1300 LA MANCHA APT$ No. 1'.:nd. 1 un . 1,11 Ltlk from $175•$48$ 1_ fflc run myCoslUMt!t:la ofc. PllEONAN"J'! You meet new JX.'<>PIO & cond. In s ide. Sln~les 11q rt. 2 bdrm w/lofl·dcn. 778 Scott Place, CM from beuch & :store. Mela V.rde Eost & Ada ms L.-s,..... 0 e Spoc• tnexperie nredok. bul Cur i n g confiden t! 111 have xlnt earnings. Bel· ~hddrco. l'e ls ok: frplc,plushcrptg,home-t>4i -507:1 incltl 'it util. Yr's Leusc:. 540•180 0 CallonSlteMW\a~er mustrelalewellw/s ales couni;el in~ & referrnl. lerthan sitting athome'! Harhara963·6739 like storuge. walk-in Adu1Lti,no pets.4!J7.2Jbi8.: • <714>642·3lllexl:MS peorle & cllenlli. Pleaise Abortion, adoption & Call:540.7041Qays. clo:1els. bath & ~uest CASA VICTOttlA Cal Dorothy, 631·0454 for kecpin~. ~~~~~~~~~~ bath, blln ga..; range & 1· 2&3Br. UnCum/r'um Apart for rent, Ocea _ personal appt. 9um·Spm. APCl\lt E 547-2563 tt.tiagtoa leach 3.140 ..••.•.........•.• , .... 1''ireplace, 3 BR. 2 UA, ,,.,.w paint. bl~n:s. cl~e to :.hopiling & schoolt>. sno. \11). Ask for Bev ur Joe. !.163·4569 oven, polio deck, 2 cu Ardr. $11G9N.50Pga8/Sewt.r. pd. Vi ew. $250. 1 Ur, nrS .._ . ""§lil~i1•11•1 o ,, k enclosed garage w/laun· u l.3· o el.s c. ~utc: 494·9W2. '[/ I •• JI' .i Vending ADAMS MASSAGE ..... n dry room. Pay only elec· Pool, Hee. Rm .• Elevator " 1.,~S.... --------·-CANDY ROUTE Clea n private rooms. ll'ie. Adults. So. of Coast 525 Victoria, 642-697fl LQ9Uft• Nltuel 385 .l'~=:.1:::=1a1 Excellent route of candy Mussage & Sauna. 8839 hfMrienced llwy, 5 bllui lrom beach. , _ _._ •ik •••••••••••••••••••••• COl'ONA DEL .. IAR .I'...,• & 11 naeka available in Adams Ave, HW>l. Bch. hll Tifnt S4:t5. 435 Col<leorotJ. S --·-'t;Tr· e ~1ELUX,E3,rBR.2.&NlCon ~ .. ~, ... ,..,. .. your area. Ideal way to 003·1247, Mon thru Sat T!UIR Corona cJel Mar. (714) urr~ uo. UI lst cc. !:;I guc 2 Ur Townhouse. fr11 k , /'" .. "','00• .. _• ~. • 1 I lam 'ltl m idnl~ht. 675·9337. DELUXE l. 2 &3 r Apts Country Club. Lea:;e from S!75. 1 lirfrom $20.5 ~ IK1 -·= ... ~. bUpp e ment salary or lr~~D~.BY~~cr;;·~~:· Aft-t ._ L-t-L.-..a Pvt Patios -Htd 1•001 11:)() 9:;44 J'wl, tc11nis. c:onhnenlul J _,.. ,...."" pens ion . Locations, PROl3LEMS? WE CARE UNITS> ..... ..,._anru Nr. Shop'g-AdJt.s Onl" Installations & Trwmn11 0 N E W A Y H EL P C•llfo-•a •...-1.. rne r fun . $295. mo. --1 ..... wport le--L. 3169 l>rcakru:.t. Some <x:eun & Curnished. Financing CE ER nw -<='>.4ccn ••••••••••••••••••••••• M--1 a-... .A...&. """ ~ '' II j NT .,,... .,.,.. ..-.. 11..,...... ..,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "ata nc1 v ews. Separate a vailable. Can be ex· -------lelboo P~1tlMllllG 3707 1777 Sunta Ana Ave, CM family section. Cloc;e to panded lo fuJI time in 24 hr Hol Line&iS-8800 Sharp, clean. 2 DR w/new ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mgl" Apt 113 646-5542 ft ARK NEWPORT shopping & r1ne beach. --come. For tnformatton DO YOUR OWN cpls. Drps. llltns, Sl!65. Yrly,JBr,util pdS145Sgl APARTMENTS 644-2611. 55'PERSQFI'.. ph.714-879·123.S DIVORCE _mo. ~-4569 man. no pe ls. 417 E . Bay. Bachelor 1 or:! 1Gl7 W ESTCLlFF-NB The Wave ProJecl 3 lrn. 1 .. ..., ba, no maint 5"7·11SS. 675-1066 Bedrooms a nd AOT. ~l-5032 lnYtstment OIVORCB <.;&NTEH. 1, 1 S37 Townhouses T HE EXCITING Opportunity 5015 Atty. Trainet.1 Cons ul· 6 Monarch Bay Plaz.t South LllHuna C714t496-1273 C7 I 4J 831°1970 rei.t ge karefa . L'S pehr Cost• Mesa 3724 Fr $'229.SOOpen 9-6 PALM MESA APTS. $140 up store-offices cpls ••••••••••0 ••••••••••• lants to Assist You. $75. An Equal mo . As or n C'l l ••••••••••••••••••••••• o I ""IN UT "' 'O dr1J~ u1r b"lh 17301 NEE !ill2·<W7l a1 y ••~ r.S'I NPT ~ u .. • D Investor with + lthnj.! fee. s.&S-4210 for Opportunity Employer LOW RATfS ::>pa l'ools-Tcnrus HCll lkach LU 11.H. 8-12·2834_ SI00,000. HandlinM in· appl 3 lln. 2 UA nr. Ocean $350. mo. S.19·249!1 an. 7 .305:>1-4300 ·~.60 Ni~ht &t:p Ar roliS fro m Fashion Hach, 1&2 BH .. from $165 tcrnutwnal gold & silver ' •StuJ1o & 1 HR Apt.:, lb land at Jamboree on Adults. No Pel:> N !-:W plush office bldg, 2 coins. Very luc rat ive Inc rease your bust hne I Bartend.r, Female S to G r m s uites. Con· •Water Beds 'an Joaquin Hills Hoad. · 1561 M~sa Dr. Principals only. Call Mr. to 3 cup s izes. 2 wks ur Waitress, ~---·d •TV&Ma1'dScrvAva1·1 PIHEClHk 1714,64 .. 1900 <-n1k "' t fN fcrcncc rm, xerox K II 832 '><13 b k _,.... • .,. a s""as o c.wport copior . Nr. (.)(;Airport c eyai ·'-' . your money ac . 25 Yrs or older Apply J lilt.~ HA , near Garfield •PhoneSer v.Hldpool UVES UP 5 1! 6 1v .. 11 .... ,i0~ 833.3640 M-•'(tolo-5025 S.16·W5!1or8!N·OOU Mitla's .Mexicu~ Resl. & Hus hard. ~ rno lo •Children & Pel Section TO ITS MAME LIVE Near The Ueach! .. .,.,. .... ,.,. -· :;.17 w. 19th St. CM i1ualJfietl t:.1m1ly. Ai.:t •S5. orr weeks rent w/ml Over 500 tall trees .ind Casa def Sol OFFICE SPACE HI ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wife wanted, widow, ---------- 962·4·171 ·Hoss. i376 Newport Blvd. CM 1 o s l re a m 5 w I l h Th.:autiful Adult Apts Wcstcllff Drive, 450 sq. IUSINESS LOA.HS nurse, teacher. pretty, IEAUTICIAH N e w 5 b r s i ~ n a 1 __ 548·9755 or645·3967 waterfalls create a re· Pt-om S 180 Rooms 4000 Ii.. private bathroom, $.50,000 to $600,000 no Cats. 30·45 yrs. 675.9637 Guarantee 1;-andmark home.~ :;tory HOLIDAY PLAZA laxing setting Cor your 21~1 Brookhurst, HU ••••••••••••••••••••••• uir. etc. $175. per mo. Business growth with TrCl••I 5450 Newport Area. 5"8·1311 1 i't>I cpls drps fc yd $l50. OE LUX I!: • . s pacious new 1 ·or i . 962-6653 UOOl\lS $20. wj< up with I (;::ill Gene Hill, 642-0lOO creative Cinancing. ••••••••••••••••h••••• I (J . 6 963 . 45H 1 e ·n !S; . S~acious 1 Ur. bedroom apartment. kitchen $30. wk up apl. I Call Mr. llryan SEE EUROPE --1•6461 k <l · furn .a1>t. loot. Ample From $195. f'urnitur · 1----------1 5-18 -9755or645 -39t.i7 . FREEREHT 835-7600 ,_.,_ ~n s. parkin>..:.Aclults.nopet.s, available. Sm ·'ll "eles Mir.s•v-DE <>le a · M' · "' BY CAR IEAUTICIAM- HAIR CUTTY Top location in lJUs) 5<>uth·Coast Plata mall. t'urchuse a ny ~uropcan Guaranteed wuge, 40 hr Ca r for delivery in wk, vacation beneJits. 1!>65 l A CM .. .. .. "' gll LlVEATTHE BEACH sp cc In 1ss1on wte· ,._ tructlon I ---i ~~H. Condo tor Lease. omona ve.:..__ .. ot\. Adults only. ~ Al\I 2 Bdrms .. 1 '" b..tlh cont.lo JO & Laguna Niguel a~ ,,.yftJ ~ fr1i;:.sto\e,crpLti&drJJ6 Fu-loch•· i 1r ic-to(if'M.2300 Fairv1C\\ withi>0ol.""''c:Mo. S30.wk&up.li73-o.wo lowa:s30csq(linncwofc Mr.Park 673-7348 p I •~. h '"" • -· RI ~ PINE KNOTM<Yl't::L oo.Jm1tou.:ac .~40. ti oH , ll c .. <.:osta Mcs a l'h,1nc STEPSTOIEACH U d hld g . Call Owner.Mort T t mo. 213·592-2203 up Oft y Nee. I 0 545-2300. 2 .l:iH. 1 ba. Winter ~35 -~~anage~enl 831·1400. oJ::H· rus 5035 H&-\UT."4hr . 2 ba, family Htwport II.,. CM. 2 HH. 1 bu. unf. $285 Guest Home 41 SO 444 N. Newport Blvd. Unit rm. Clo:.e to school & 2035'Fullerton. CM 2 BR. 2'2 BA Studio apl HEWPORTCREST ••••••••••••••••••••••• "ll" $9:>. "C" ~-Uul. beach. $450. 9b"2·2734 1 UH L'urn, 21r,, closets. Bltns. D /W. eptg & drp.-.. 2 Bil. 2 Ba t·oncto $.525 Private Room paid. 675-8457. r .. Patio. $265 mo. 7611 WE H y queen siL.e beJ. priv. Joann. AJ!t. IS38·~I A E for ambulatory pcr:.on. ------- lni1te 3244 drc:s:.ini,: rm, extra trg ---SUMMER RENTALS Good meals. Nice :.ur· Bu1lneu Rental 4450 •••••••••••••••••••••••rooms. e n cl. ga r . •2BR.1 Ba.Mc:>aVerc.le. roundings. E /s1de. CM.••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOANS up to 80% I st TD Loam..a1/l% 2nd TD Loans Lowesl rates Orange <..:o • Europe & let us plan your REGIS neauly Salon. individual lour. From 5"0-8888 . take·off to home-landin~. Apply in Person Only you'll be in the hands of1--;....::..-"-------=~ experts. Als o lease & ren· IEAUTICIAHS / tat cars. LUHAUTO. H"'IRc•.....-..i.s Lido Village, N .U. "' u ....... 073.4550 ~toney making salon ---------·-Top location, So. Coast ._. RENTALS * "'1storage . AdulLS only, Adults, ~ar, :ivail. $11SS. Ava il now. Ca~_548_·7_1_48. UNIV. PAHK nup_e_ts_. ______ Nop<.:~.ll~·897-1 Summer Rentals 4200 THE COLONY . .sattter Mtg. Co. . Employntent & 6;42·t~ 71 545-0611 Preparation 2 BH. 2 lla · · · · · ~/350 $105. to $150. l llll apt & E·SIDE large almost new ••••••••••••••••••••••• 30 RETAILSllOPS Serving Hcsrbor area 24 ••••••••••••••••••••••• yeurs Jobi Wanted, 7075 J UK. 2 Ua · · · ·· · · · ·. $425 W Wilson. 645-4530 2 e ncl. ~arugcs. patio, ---• NU. Lg sundet•k. Avl now available luq.:e & small. 3 li.K, 2 ~:i Ha · .. · $375/425 trailers. /\dulls only. 1:12 3 br, dshwhr. t•pLS, frtlk. 1''urn 2 br, blk lo ocean, I Prime reasonable s1>ace TUHTL.1-:HOC'K -------lnc.lry. $310. mo. M~r ~1S5.3Br.2~a.blktohch. lhruAug.673·0'.l:iG. Old world oharm with Isl T.D on M-1 lndust . ••••••••.••••••••••••••• Plaza Mall, C.M. 40 Hr wk. Guaranleed wage. Vac. benefits. Personal inlervws only. Crown & Glory Beauty Salon, Mgr Hobbie De Leon, Ph : 541i-71811. i BH, 2 ba, den .. $t00/·125 1 BH . 11rcfer middle age 642-3488 No pcts/c:h1ldrcn. Yrly. 1-'rcnt·h win1lows, gables Uldgs $37,000 at 9'.4%, Aust ra li an RN, fe m ., GHt:t:NTHt:E or retired. No child/pets. ~-----W-Newport. 642-15:11 S:~O. Hunt. Heh. :um 2ha, & trees /\c.ljacent to payable S390 per mo. incl widely exp'd. Avail for ---·----· 2BR.1Ha ........ $32.5 $155.6-12·58·1K 1&2 llR garc.lenapts,frpl. E· lbl ff 1, h b t dcn,lmi.tobcat h.<.:l11lc.I f es tival or Arl !i inl. Equity $10,700. Call p r ivate duty wo rk. Bicycle Mechanic.Expin TH E WILLOWS ---0 /W, pvt. patios. Nr. _as u n sc eau . OK. Ref's 6 /15·~/I. Groundll. 545·4818,548·86LM. 673·6819 repairs, some sales. Full J BR, 2 ba ........... $315 NEAT ~ HR. I BA. walk to Jrvine Ind. •1rca. $175 to ·•Pl. 2 Br_. 3 Ba. hltn.s, furn 'd. 1714) 962·7·108 51.10 BRO/\DWJ\Y -----------lime. 549-3647 1.lefore 1 OEEH1''1l::LO s hopptn!!. $180 mo. ~00 mo 557.~1 frplc, pal10. pool, uvatl ----- - -L/\G UNJ\ Ut:ACll Announcements/ Bookkeeper/Tax Consul· P,M Tues-Sat. 3 BR, 2 Ba ...... , .... $395 642-7154 · ~JS(). 644-0355 llalboa . 2 + den~ wk . P~rson•I•/ ta,ntbwilkl maintain.foll set,._ ________ _ "' . •Tropical'°°'* 2 lrn. 2 BA , yearly. Crpts. Bach. + sundctk. Sll.5 Lod Ii FoUnd o oo s a fter 5:30 &1• COZYl RR 2 br cpls d"'"' bltns d wk.Parking.675·6712 494-7915 ••••••••••••••••••••••• we e kends Reply lo Fenced yd. Adults . · '. . ....,. · · rps, hltns. no pets. ------L t & F d 5300 Cl assified ad no. 426, c/O V 642·'9tt!i ~;'~fc~lre~~i;,r~~i~~: g~~~ _SZ_IO/mo_._838_-_J.1_50_. ___ P IUVJ\TE llome on the ~~~~·--~------.~.' ••••• ~~•••••••••••• Daily Pilot , p O Hox ISleH Huntington ~llCh 3740 water pd 548-llti8 Li::e 2 Bit, 2 BA. bltns, new ;~r~~~~)~J. ~~.Ju~)~~ TOP LOCATION l.OSTtFOUNDA PET? ~~6 Costa Mesa, Calif. RIAi.TY • •• •• • ••• •• •••••••••••• T . C crt ps. n r I lo::i~ I losp. August. 673-2875 for appt. MESA VYDE 960-2900 Adopllon. l.ow 552-7500 NO INCREASE an sum-enms l. Apart .. w/pool 1\dulls. ~50. &l2·u5~ DRIVE PLAZA Cost Spay 1Neuter Info. EXCELLENTTYPlNG Rir.uT•LS mer rcnl. Beaut J hr furn ~~C:.·~~~1.1 ~~~.7.:J:~· den , I BALllOA Pcnin 2 br apt. for store or office J\mple ---1n my home. s::n "" apls $16.5 & $175. Spanish 1 blk Lo bity & ocean (larking Town & country L?ST Gray & blk Aust Call P <!l 675-4177 2 BR, 1 Ba ... · · Sll style bid~. pvt encl ~ar. 2 Br. pool. bllni. /\<lits. Sl20 wk July on ly almo:;pherc Shep/Setler n1Jx, male. --- 2 BH. 2 Ba. den ..... ~75 pool. sauna , lndry, adlt.s. NO DRUGS or pets. $l6S. I ~:!·8680 _ _ 1525 Me:.a Verile Dr ~ Vic 11th & Cst llwy llll. Typ1n~. m y home. 90 ·2 BR,2 Ba ....... S350/Jtro 17301 Keelson Ln. 1 blk 325-Jl7thPl.aftll am. • .. Cost a Mesa 545-4123 536·4~5. 892·1267 $100 w p.m electric. Eve :.I UR ,2 Ba ... ~/400 W.oflieach offSlater. *' N h W P 0 Rf Heward. work.559·4961aft6pm 3 RR. 2•,,, Ba ........ $400 842·7848 NEW BREEDAPTS WATEIU 'RONT <July & 2 SllOPS . tc.lcal location 3 BR,2 lla ........... ~25 Lge bach /loft apt, rml Adult J\ug J 2BH i ba, fully for bookstore candle 1'~0U ND Latly's l)ike H•lpWanted 7100 AtBr,2'i Ha.bonu.s •. $S25 Luxur y s tudio condo. pc.I. Applns, encl. gar. Garden lurn·d . sleeps 8. fo'rcc s ho p or arL g allery M1esa Verde Country••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 .. i UH. 1''\.lm.ished w I f r p I, a t b eac h Pool, jacuzzi. $165 /$:l05. Homos hoal dock $300 wk Located in the Mall at C ub area Call Brent AdmlnittraHYe Summe r lt<:ntals w /harbour view. S225 393 Hamilton. 642-196() 675·(i l69or7i4-438<1 The Factory NU Grcenat 557-2010. A•• t..t mo. 842·2"7 1. d 6A5 4411 G7:J.0006 "' -1AISQR'S ---u ays .. ,, · eves Hefrigerator. Securitv. Balboa Island North REWARD OFffRB> To $800 for enthusiastic LCIC)Uftaleach 3748 WESTIAYAPTS l'oul. Jacuui. Hee. utdg Uayfront down~ta1rs Prime Balboa Store 1''ormfoleadingto thcre· o r ga n ized m ature REALTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 2 Br , $2l5. Patio, w t exerci.se rm duplex rurn1s h ed 2 l''ront 37x20 on lialboa turn of a 19ti0Corvelle woman Mi n 7 y r s . . SUMMER or Winter r<.:n· Hilhards . Color: TV bedroom :;, fireplace . Blvd St75 Mr Weiler <new sil ver paint ) stolen gener a I ofe ex per 452JCampusOr .. ,lrvmc wlsun thclieach. beaut. g arden, hrand p:.i lio, ''asher & drier 61c;..:11~15 from NH area last Wee.I Perso nne l account s C V II Sh ''t new spn rltlinE! ::ipt . ~------11 I · ampus a ey op "r. 499-433l cves Adults, no pets. 527 W lrvrnc Avc.ALMcsa A\ailablc through June eve 5/21/75 6i5·<!'1•l5or pnyale/ purc1asang . CALL 833-8600 Newport leach · ·3769 Wilson. C. M. _54_5_·4&">5 ___ ~1-~l4~.15U per week ~~~~!!~~!.~~~~ .. !~.~~ U-\.1·9000 ~l~ssi~i~dd/\de;~~ c~~ TURTLt:HO<.:K 3l>r,2 ha, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-9614 LUX UHY llJ\Yl"llONT. ---NE W B U ILDINGS al LOST Larf?e Germ Short Daily Pilot , P. 0 . Box wet bitr. alrium Lea!>e$29.95 WK UP.llldr,2 Ba l -l IRLOFT~LY View, 2 DH. 2 &. $1i5. OC EANFRONT 1508 & o c Airport 2400to~ haired Po10ter.M Coast 156-0. Costa Mesa, Calif. S425 mo. 8JJ·lm & Bach. Color 1V, maid """ yrly. J\lso Lower Dplx. 2 1806 W Oceanfront. NB ~q ft a mple pa rktnj.!. Hwy & 7lh St. Hll. Beige 9£!626 6 Br. 4 lia. hou.sc for lease i.erv, pool. THE MESA, 1-2 IR W ft.OFT UR, 2 Ba, $JS(). yrly 233 tl 7;; 7 7 77 . 67 3 37 52, so ME u N ITS .,.0 It collar Reward! 960-3544. ---------- <1t SJ90 mo. a /"-i)ILns. 415 N. Newpor1. 81. Nil, PvlPatio.frpl,lyrlsc 6~975lh·6sl·6t3.Apt.C675·0236or 559·4221 SAL£ J\T I0'10 oow .. ~ Lost fe mal e. wh1'te AMATEUR ""' 646 9681 Available June 1st Koll /Ir e Cc t c II 752-7177 " · Deluxe 1 Br. CllM. com· vi!l n er a Persian Cat Vic. 2nd SL 5 .Ultupper,lowerduple."<. HAYLOFTAPTS Waterfront. boat dock ; pletelyforn.tncl 1V ut1I, Oan Curt1s 1714 >979·9205 & Flore nce, S. Laguna. NIGHT bltns. Summer rental nr 283 AYocado, CM carpets, drapes. Large gardener Mature adults. MISSIO ... VIEJO She's old, spade & hair is 8 ... 645 0143 t "~oo J 1 '""JO n h Amate ur eot ertainers LCMJUfta each 3248 yrly lse. Children & pets • bach. apt. Avail. now. no pe s. ~ · u y, .-11 c.I t S D' .,. eav11y· malled but we d d f ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,k. S-'8·3917 Sl25 Mo. Al!entb/3·3663 Auj.!. rate lo l party a n Y 0 an icgo "Y love her Very goot.I $ nee e lo pe r orm a t B 3 BR, 2 ba. lower . cpts. 673·l2ti5. 200 l o 2000 sq ft Call Re ward 49 •. 9-,.,1 8.5. Dana Point Red Onion 3 d : 2'i ba . frpl cc. 831 1400 .. ' R t t S d carpel s, dralk.>, bl tins & .ON the beach, studio apt. enc l. patio, gar .. nr. 3 HR, 2 RA. patio, gar. - -ow_!le~ ..:.. 4 !19 3 6 6 7 art 5 & es au ran on un ay \1ew, $i50. p. mo. /\\·ail St65. mo. lse. Ad,ults, no OCC. S220. 557-03.50aflti cish.whr, c.lrps & nu patnt Rentals to share 4300 Cosla Mes a-Santa Ana weekends. ni~hl. Call M1kc496·6311. t l o3 M Jo dd & cr pts. No pets. 545-07tiU ••• ••••• •• ••••••••••••• 6/15. Lc..i:.e. 4~ 0663 art. ~e s. c a en. 2 Br, crpt, drps, l>ltni., -3 Hr. 2 Ua Ucach llomc M·l , 1200/l:.120/17l6 sq It. FOUND· Mature (e le APT MANAGER. older ti pm. 675·1865 afler6pm. gar. Near shoppanJ!, r;. SU B Ll!:AS B, Park Nwpt. Duplex to 'llharc w/malc Ofc., Wurehse, prk'g. l20 c cl..ap~ buff I •· t m~ I· couple, exper'd No Newport leach 3269 Aportments s ide. Sl75. No pet s July 1-Nov. 30. mo:.t de-or rem.ale. siso mo. yrly p~r. 646-12:;2,sw.2228 l:~r. Seaview & 11~~ cJM. pets/c hildren. 27 uoits ••••••••••••••••••••••• Unfunti1hed 548·6357 :;ired pla n. I HH. S!l2_50 675-2319. NH. -'Nl::WPORT NEAR HOSP. 675·2048 eves. Hunt. Heh. 846-3166. ••••••••••••••••••••• mo. S.l4·1~78 aft. 5 p.m. -----63 8 RAND new Newport •• I:: SIOB 2 br. 1' ~ ha, encl 1''em 21·35 to shr. sm .' .oo sq ~tore mdus.·1. 3_cx L 0 S T . 1\1 a n . s l K ARE "'.uu Look in~, .l-:ur Terrace condo. 3 Ur. ·•1,:1 lalboa lsl•nd 180& "arage, patio. J\dut•·· on· 'fwo b"'d . 1 gar. Bea•·li M cc ores w/pvt baths & d' d h. JOli SECUHITY lhe ~ .. ..,, " " esa Ve rde home. nr .· ·, _ , . · . . 1a. mon rmg, w 1tc «old . . · . , Ua . SJSO. /\dulls. no pels. ·.····~··••••••••••••••• ly. 548·7692 or6-H·U!71'.! l'r1 \'. Lido s hopping area f'wy. Infant OK, NO drug '.1e w a Jr ext:c ore:.. w 1th black oxidi~e d ARMY, has ll·un.d pa)S 675-5800. Ukr. nofcu. Upstairs Apt, 2 Ur, 2 Ua. J\-DULT 1 ur• r 1 --1 ~US/mo. 67:1 -2828 users. Ref's. Avl. 611. ~onr. rm .. Hecept. area. mounting. Lost May 30lh well. Call 549·29~. ask - ---cpls. drps, frig. ~love. o •• rp c, poo . 540.3500 l rod. of cs. /\sscff!bly & ut Hiviera Hestauranl or for 105. •LUXURYCOHDO Ac1u lts$l75 onyrslcase. $185. mo. 1975 Pomona,2 BH.11 alla.f)·p1C".lblk rnanuf. area . Sound n· 1 , d · .M · kl ---------- NewportCrest 2 Br. 2 Ba. li75·0481iori52-()9..12 CM.Call 64!>·195ti to boac-h. Av:.ul. 7/l. $300. Will share 2 Bdrm hse. 12 studio optional. Brokers S 1,c ~·tr :> .~r. e or ART~ST wanted, textile 2 car gar. Wet bar. Ten· --645-7054 hi beach. furn $!35 Phil w e I c: om e Mo n -!-'r i tcward Men s Shop or des 1 g n s . 2 Yrs ex P. n 15 . p uo I. $37 51 mo . Corona del Mar 3822 2 BR. 2 Ba . blLns, util rm. c 10 Redtop 833_2124 s.i5.5400 · Warehouse Restaurant. minimum. Mon thru 1''r1. Boys &Girls 10 to 14 years of age. Dai ly Pilot delivery routes may be a\'ailable in your area. Barn profit for <le 11,·cries & cash, trips or me rchandise for :.clling new subscripl1on:;. F or information please eall 642-4321 . Fro m San Clemente-S:an Juan Capistrano area. call 495·0630 and Mission Vie jo -EI Toro area, call 581·6310. Equal Oppor. Employer IOA T BUILDERS W cstsai l Corp. h as \'acancies in Lhe follow ing categories: Hand Lominaton Gelcoot Touchup P /t Sec. Gucrd Top wages. x lnl co. benefits. good workJng c:onds. Please apply lo the gate guard at Westaoil~. 275 McCormick. <.:.M. BookkeTper wtarti~li c ability n eeded. Copy Cats. 33 3rtl, Lag. Bc:h. 494·7133. IOOKkEEPEJl Retail Fu rnilurc store. Paysel sys t em, re· ceh·ables, payroll. at" c u r ate t y pis t. Ca ll 642-2053 before lOam looldceeper A JRec F /time. Lite typing & t•x· per. on bkkpng machine & 10 key calculcllor re· I q 'd. l•'ull co. benefit:.. 1 C.M . location near 1 airport. Call 541MJG71 fo1 1 appt. ' 545.017 1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• encl gar, palt0. l\laturcJ Hr. i Ua Dupl ex. KEWAHD ~fore llam 540·3236.askforWalt. NEW DUPLEX artults.no pels.752Scott Oshwh r.crpt:>,drps.~ar, Female/male strnight, 1200 S4 . fo't. M-1 w/front or after 9:30pm call ---· luaboys&Girts ' Deluxe sphl·level : 1300 Pl. 645·5355 I yr old. 3 hlks o<:ean. No s mokers share :.m. offic-e, l~c r ear door. 24!0 979·5366. Uetwecn llam A'SSIM~Y J\pply in per.son. Thur~ I BLUFFS CONOO. 3 Rr. centrally located: $3i5 Mo. Broker 6"4· 113.'.l i..q fl. 2 bdrm w/loft·c.lc n, $.195/mo~3 /355·3'~ pad prv. bath, bl to ~!-Phase. Unit 16, $185. 629 & 9pm call M?l-5720· & LITE morning~ & Mon. morn· I f I I h h H t • ... leach 3•40 o"ean 6-,5 "".,.., 0 • Ibo '1'erm 1nal Way Co:;la · -------M/\NUfo'J\CTURING ings belwn lOam & 1·.• i rp c. Pus crplg. ome· ... in.,..Oft q A artment1 fumished " . ......,, oa a Mesa. l.>ays, 540-5710 1' OU ND : ~ac h s hund Positions open. 5 Days. noon. ' N. Blufrs Condo. Much like storage, walk-in ••••••••••••••••••••••• PorUnfur1tished 390 Penn. . 6460681 • male. on Sun 6/1 AM. $2hrlostarl.979-8600 All•yW--t sought after I sty end un closets• bath & gucsl llkE TO IEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• GarCICJ•I for Renf 4350 e' es . near Pacific Coast Hwy =::.......:======== • •• 1t 3 BR, 2 HA , charmtnf! h;ith. bltn g;.c, ran~e & HEAR SH<>rrlHG ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2500 sq ft shop in Orange & Newport lilvd. Cull Allracti\'C girl lo model 1 2106 W ·Oceanfront ly upgruded. $1!.15 /m•J oven. p~t10 deck. 2 car Beautiful new 2 HH n· •Sin~le-Harbor/ W/ ofr. & fncd storage 645·6519. afte rnoon a week. Musl Newport Bch 6i5·lil I t t'ranc only i;.w.2100. Ll.c enclosed ~ara:.!e w/laun-s tudio apls. Frplcs. J\d M V I yrd 2.W pwr.545-0760 L'OU''D · Cock poo have u n•ce figure & be C 'SH I ER P I 4 'd dry room. P ay only elec-· ams/ esa er( e. $'2.'l. " ,, · ·a · • ap-sophisticated Great p " • ussyca • req · tnr Adults. So. of Coasl bltns. dishwashers. 2 car ~e Storage only. 833·8974 Rentola WOftted 4600 ·pr? x 1 > r o Id. v.1 c Slriclly for fi'm. Priv:~; Theatre, ?uy~, 709 .i:; Lido Isle 4 hr. 2 ba. All llwy, 5 blks from beach. garage. Sundecks. f'rom SHARE S1n J!le. storage, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-l a m. 0 n a & 1'. 1 & discretion assured. Balboa l:Jhd. Balboa. elec kit.frplc.JJaUo,yr $425 4:J5 <:olc.lenrod , $260.S36·2579 l"cmule OCC student l~r es id e nt e, San Write describing ly lse. 673·47\IK Co ron a d c I Mar . LoY• At lat lit. BIG' $15. CM ~~a7~11 : needs ren~al .and room· Cleme nte. Call492-17!l8. yourself , Wnte ad #386, Classified ads :sell b1~ UPGRADED 4BR + 3 ha <~>675·9~37 1 & 2 Br avail. FUm & un SJNGLE G~RAG E $2S. ~~llt~s :~~g;rruUnpdg ~ueg u:0t2. F <°?\!NI): L g. BI k . 10560~ilyC PltlotM, P. !>.;,...,Box items. smull items or an) to wn home n r hea ch. Deluxe Apt, ,. lilt, 3 BA, furn. APPLE Al"TS. A · •· 1 • m1n1aturc male Poodle, • os a esa .. ~ item. Justcall642-5678. Tennis, pool. j:acuu1. nr beach. $750/MO unique ulca in adult apl • ~~~.ro~~~~d~n:.lc~,;tio H~y1c l~ St. Neenah. c hoke c hai n . vie. ,-----------L----:------~:;o. Lse. 642·2122 673·0092. living. 6700 Warner Ave, W1scons1n 54956 Newland & Heil, lflJ. SEEK & ~IND" Poeular Gal"llen ---Hu 0 li n g l 0 n He a ch Office Rental 4400 Refined Lady wants s mall 847·084l r. et.ab H HACK DAY View, 3 UH or Costa MH a 3824 847·6047. No lease. Sorry from $165 ••••••••••••••••••••••• apartment. Yt?arly rcn· 2, Oen. Pool & Tcnm:.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• no children or pcl'I. tal. 494 -2736. Los t: Fem. Calico. 2 yrs, C A tc H A T , N /I. E u A N I L i.; N N c· SW<> lease f.H4-oo:J4 I-' l d ed ----Oak woorl offcr11 the Newly decorated office. ---"Maggie " Vic: So. Coast .....:._. -· ~f s1 $·~opp.I r ec. ;, SPACJOUS 2 & a bdrm. finest Ill country club li v· Cct M. 275 sq. n. Pacific lu1ine11f1n••st/ . Plaza. Reward. MS-3736 A 8 R A o I s II S N 1 c No N ft o c o N EW PO JM' Tf.;Jt ltAC t: rm •. 1 . oo. Adults apts. Children OK. 17~1 in~ at a prlce you can ur-Cousl Hwy address. At.one• 8 E P 0 8 E H H l 0 A It ,\ A N N O A P Condo, 3 br. i• ~ ba. CALL646-1947 "A" Keelson. I blk. W. ol ford. There's $1 m illion Call 675·2051. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost: Stnl. Shell.le. black, A C o ; • R N O N S o H T t: 8 L R N R N lwnhouao liltns , lam 2 BR Duplex. gAr, patio, Beac h lll. urr !)lal l!r. m rec:.rettlion fuc11lt1es. lt.talneH female. While chi:st. Vic. rm., 13U'l'lry. p..uo, J("6r, 'l'rpls. drps, no pets 84.2·0.189 NIGHT LIGHTED n ;N FULL SHVICE O •iunt. Harbor. Muy be in· C A r s T V N C B N c e r. EM Q •~ R T r1tc & pool. $3fJ() mo 545·0760. NIS COURTS. A Cull time pportu.lty 5005 jured. Reward. 846-1291. t: R a.147357 - --NewdeluxeBeach1.1rea2 a c 1 t1v1llcs director who EXECSUITIS •••••••••••••••••••••••LOST : Red Billrotd. U lt~ E 1 ABAAA~S ll ASOO MJ!:SA Verde area:2 br. 1 Rr. 2 Ba, closed gar. oil pans parties. Uli(.fs. FROM $170. •MajCM' S•nlc.e Staff.-ladles, al S'i .. zl"r on C /I. L I M C (; N 8 MT E fl: A C Q M TM . )27• b bit I •· hltns. 5275 mo. incl. ul1I t •· • L' Su ..... .. "' • u. n e cc. runge .,. r1µs °" mort . .-rec n-Airport Arca 833-3610 n • t I $ 5 0' 0 0 0 . Harbor Bl , CM . Reward 8 c A R u EN Q I s A LB II u A I 8 .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• oYen, new crpl.J! & df'P6. 846·1311 : 846·4938 1.1~ No duy brunch C .. !U~A UT OC'e~n View, No chilrtrcn or pelq, 1st (ee. Plus beautiful stnJ:lcs, Beaut. private Newport SI 7,500. c• or return. !>4tl·21Mi days E A ft NT T U &. A n T 8 8 C T c N TT ~rand new. ups<r~d<"1 . 2 .!.!_oor.$UIO.mo.$49·10S8 TWO&. TllRl::E Ol>HM 1&2 bedroom upts. exec. O(Cl ce In s ui te •ftlnaTak .. Out ornft s .3o962'7520 Ao Toe A M 1 LA 0 Q c 0 N 1 ON 8 i; t y . 3 U It . 2 0 u . 2 UH p 1 dlta .._,., APTS 1 lo 4 blks . from furn1shell & unfu.mishc<I Rct•aonable. ~3700 · •For.Ip C•a.pair SI 00 RIWAl.Dll Townho.me. PlS. mo At Sl~c· .,.~J· al7th Pl'"°. o(~( ... S.· beach'. ALL U1,1, ITIL • .., Renl.3 from $165. Prict-s J I M:i E B R M H 8 N B l-. N U ft g C A t C M A l11ra Coil~ Viii ... Or A v..A ""';.._ h I I PA ID. 1-·m'pk's "pn v~t: vary by location. Model:. WATllf.l()M'T •HOewLLe ... '!..D Sl ... lSS Lo5Poodl 1Female Black Toy P A I 11 o 1. F. 8 1 A c s A M 1 L R 0 u · callowner,S57~ . ~e . .x:ean. um. P&tios. OPEN ·unus .. : open 10Lo7.Sorrynopel..' Hewport•och "'" " e. approx. '4-S lbs. ----"------2 Bk or children. £xecullveocticcs &45 417t>SAL~S4()..()G(M white collar. hu H.B. ID CE D C: I. t; A r I.ET T u c BM o T Q s..t.... 1210 . lltO\IC, rugs, drps. Sat/SUD l'M : 40G 42fl la jt. 18273. Ans lo LP. AFT 8 T F. E 0 0 ?'\I K ij A u b s ••••••••••••••••••••••• $Ul5. m o. 22nd St , or rtill TORIN $150·~Monlh HARDWARE STORE ••MI c h e I .'· C e 11 ... ··•replace 3BR+den,.a ~-4.SL2 ~Er:~_LTY. 846-1311. NU Viewo(boata&water Newporl Beac h. ol 714 -538 ·3381 or 0MR8HTtt I MGBF.AN~AMOA b.ilth. t'P~. d,,.. bll.nl, 4 Br. Crpl, blln RIO. crpL,. ,. c. llLL GRUNDY fHhlon <I 8torc (>4:1'. ro _1l3-597-&J11 txt2St. 1.. ,..1 n. ,._ _. w.w:..r, _.... •XJtl ,,.,,, ... ~........,. 0 k od Realtor 675·6161 couple . $40,000. com ~ "'· '°"'"·., •lliloMtr 11o dlt • E'l...A _..,: -·mo._......,..... Nr. Wilson $300. ~-2330 •NEWTRlf'S.t-:Xt:O'i • a. WO f>h:lc Owner. 675-7283 0 L 0 ST . D ob er man ....._ _ _.._ .... ,....,...: ~-- •. I I I I I l • I WH.......,. lJfl or&46·71Jl <Joan> 1.2.& 3 DH $19:> .. $295.. Garden Private Ortic~ tn s Of'rlc~ 494.g253 P1nacheT, femUmos, vk RHTS 1 .. f.At'l.tnl'CI RAD•Sl/t.8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S375. Pauo11. 1-·11•, 2002 A t t Suite. $100 mo. Westcllft. Monrovia le 17th, CM. ~"A""o' LIMA 111'AN8 H4il'All I 2 ~•-rv ... BR .......... ~ ... You don l ncl'<.I a rtun lo Jluntini.'lonSl_S39_ ~6?79 par mens 642·4097or8.l3·2616. • BROASTElt tuke·OU 6t 1.Rtward.6'5·079S. "~"~OU ONOl'fl l'IT9'1NOB~AS" 'f l .,....,. ' • °" ... .,.... · d ( " I " - --- - -----chicken. bur(ilc ra, etc + r Alf TOMATUt.8 I I drp1 , bltn,, close to · raw ast w wn you 2 BR. cpts, drps. new H.wplri IHch OFF ICE or Store Rent.al beer & wine. Vr round I.OST: lrlah Setter, 4 mo's 7-:--____ ,._o_M_o_R_o_"_':_f'_••_m_•_•_rw_·•-1-"----.!.J• j • 11chool1. a bopplo1 & plac~ An lltt In lh~ Daily painl, nur Cwy & m~jor lr11ino at 16th 700 11<1. (t. Ol!ellnvlew mid Unluoa. tl8,000 old. foml. Vic Huntln11ton F.njoy muc:h 1.,..., "Sttll & P1nd" puulta wltll ewer M) I r~waya . SJU. mo. AAak f>1lot Want Ads: Call now at h op p i"rl I . No J.I ~ l it . 645-0SSO 1111 S . El C8miDO, San .,..COAS'r PJtOPikTJES le F' ran ld u r t • ft 0 d1wwerlu per 1>u1tl l11 •n .11.,,.w urlu of 2•·~• boilltltt' I lot ltev or Jo., 183-4511 -542 5678 54~11760 Clemente 673-IMHI 536 74$6 Reward! To ordtr wilumtt I, II and 01, "nd $1 for each, m•ltl"' chtU. ::::.~=:::::::::::::::::::::ii~::::;J.:=:=.::::::::::::::::::::J~t====::::::=:=:=:===:J..:::::::::::::~:::::::::;&::::i:::~::::::::::::::::~:=.J~============:::::::::::l.:::::i:::::::;::::::::::~P~•~Y•~~~le~t:o~"~S~"~k~~~V~lnd~'~'~ln~(V~e~o~f~th~i:•:n•~w.~Pl'~Pll~'·:.:=::..~· J :1 • • Tuesday, June 3, 1975 Add It. .. Build Jt. .. Diaper it ... Hammer it ... car pet lt. .. Cement it... Wire lt...Hoe it ... Clean it...Move it...Press it ... Paint lt. .. Nal it ... Plaster it .•. Fix it. .. SERVIC DIRECTORY Ptum 1t •.. Patc pe 1 emo e 1 •• Roof it...Landscape 1t. .. T1le it ... Trim it. .. Sewit. .. Haul it ... Add It... Plant it... Alter it... Learn it... ~1 ~~~:~.~, .......... Carpe1der C_.,.ttdor Ciwct.nl•g • G ... rol Sen·k" HouteclH11U..9 PahdlftCJJPaperi9g rtaat.r ,11.,,-r !!I~ ................. .. ...•................... .......•.......•....•.. .......••••.•..•....... ...•.....•...•••• , •....••............. , •••..••............•••••••.••••...................... CS'fM Rt f!ldl. Addlliona.Cust~m Carpentry . Pa\10 covers. desks & •ROTOTILUNG• GeneralMtunt&remodel HOUSECLEANlNGlsour Prof ,Painter, hones• PA'rCHPLAS1't-;RlNG Ci!:RAMlC 1:1 Lt:. Ne""! & decor a t ive cxterlo Framing or riNish. Re fcnce1 . Competltlvu Well done. Large o Comm11ncomt!/residenlJo Bul>iness. Call Jaruce'lS work, reas. lnt/e~l. frc<i All T} pci. Free Es Rcrnod,&l . foree.~l .~ml woodwrk, concrole. model/Add1l1<>n$49·4U9 prices. Contractors lie. Smal1Plot.751·s.2SOM1ke MacNc111•640-829'l R11l:g~yAnns.675-6553 esl. Refs. 548·2759, umates.CallM0-6825 JObs..vcTl·omc s.:tti-~l'*i Com Pell t l ve rate. 1280294 Ron MarchcU.1 4 --64~ 3913 - IHCS '1017/848·5383 Gen. MASTER Craftsma 83().~ Dcp. h1wn & gardening. Creative iron gotesr:ul-Xlnt Housecleaning done • VERY NEAT PATCH Top Soil contr.lic.27$905 Specialty. Remodeling, Poojcleanlng·genmaiol ini::.s·wrnduw i.;ua rds. by l11dy w/exp. Depend, •THEHAMGMEH• JOBS & RESTUCCO ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-L.plNa.. finish work, refi;. Fr F.H. Gerwick &Son 842·8072or842·3600 213-436-5190 4.21-1005 own trans. 847·3637. D. Schw~rliSr. 558-llOl I'' ree B st. 554·24 81 , •Tup Sotl•Coml>Ol>l • -••• ...., eat. Guar work499-31~. ~dd /Remod 893·"1439 •Mulch • Redwood• •••••••••••••••••••••• «o. 81•114321 MIKE'SGARDENING Lovely family will house LCMdscaphtCJ Call 586-8}30 Mom will sit your child, c-.t Service G7J.604l 549.2170 AllServices &Quality sit June 28-Sepl 28. Hila ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Wallpaper Hunging• rtwnbiftCJ yrs & up. Pomona Schoo •• ;-.-;;................. NB, CdM, CM •MS-0930 67S.S213 Eves. Ford's Landscape. Sod By Former Instructor ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tl'ff Se"IC# M h "" 0 o D 1c1 -L s · 1 • · usT •LuM11~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• urea. Y Orne . .no· 127 Jon N • s c t •· re11ma --. E GI awns. prink ers ...... c/ Carl Rebko. 646-2449 J ,. ~ ~ , . a r g e .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• J a pa n es e x per l ass Insured 962.7817 Fast Serv Reu Rates Ford ~Tree Serv!<:i!· UphC?lstery.Dris ampoo 0 k' . lheE Landscape. Fre ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · R.L. SINOR.Slate lie/ in Just OneCallTo: Experienced Cr.:w luslMHSenlu <soil re l ard•.nt11 ). r:!a:1aMi~~~r J ~ E11limales & Designs. Wlndows/ScreensReplc'd ROTOTILLJNCS2S srd. 1-:xlerior.QUALITY J USTPLUMBING L1c,tosured.962·7tsl7 •••••••••••••••••••••• ~greasers & all color :pedal FREE a~m suit Specialized in patio cov Phone Est. Cheerfully Landscaping-Sod Sales. & ECONOMY. 979-3335. * 642.4111 * NANCY BARNES bnghtenera & 10 minute / $50 pant.! suit ers, fencing, l'ish pond. given. AAA,· Bob. 751·7286 Free est. Master charge __________ 1 'l'rcc Removal. 1.Jmb1ng & Typing Service. Rea bleach for your white w a_ny · . · Any other General yard Oays/evesOOQ.2170 Pa1nlini.;/Repair·35 yrs MARV'S PLUMBING Shrub clear1nJl. Cen'I rates by the pag carpet.a, Save money by Designed &dma~J~lfor work. 979-7731 aft3, HauUrtcJ work guar, take udvan· •S4a·980'7• cleanup. 516·6403 hour. 640·S88Sor548·~~ saving me extra trips. you by Cor •Y as •oos. 642-0895 aft 6. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Malnt•nanc• tageof my exp. 536-7056. NO JOB TOOSMALI. --- Clean llvinltroom. dining By applonly. 5i56-4232 Remove asph11lt . con· ••••••••••••••••••••••• N•• •••rta Consultant in financial rm & hall $1S. AJ\y rm Etectrical * 549 2015 crete, soil. Rough and Proressional house & win· •'I'OP QUALITY R•MOd•I & Repair management 30yrs exp. $7.~. couc_h $10, cha.Ir $5. •••••••••••,,•h•••••••• • final grading. 751·0338 dow cleaning. Complete l'AIN'flNG• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •4ul•••nt 1 in aerospace & rela lSyrsexpaswhatcounts. ElectricalMotorRcpair MOW & EDGE. $20 . hse maintenance lnleraor&Exlerior Custom Kilchen & hath mduslries.15yrsasSr not melhod. fdowork lndustrial&Residential MONTHLY. QUALITY MOVING , haulin g. service. Employed in CallLee 830-727b remodclin.:. Custom otficer in ma,Jor corp. myseU. Gd. rels."531-0101 Free Est. 646-1439 WORK·GEORGE. garage cleanup. Reliable area since '411. Dependa-Wallco,·enngs Cabinets Unique & un 536·4986. C •. U h 1 fast service. 963-6452 ble w /refs. Call bfr. 8 Installed/Removed us ual work welcome. ----------1 arpet "' p o slery Cleanups, Treewor k, ft 5 A<u 5827 Bar. C l ' St •-YOUCALL WEHAUL am.a · pm........ · J .E.Swensonc""6901 Me mber · .uureau C _.__ eaning. eam "'G•cle•l•g Gardening. Minor -__ .....,._ 962.8314 ..,.nnn-Shampoo. Free est. Lndscp'g 10 · ALWAYSAVAILABLE Maton"" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . yrs in aro!a. YARDWORK. ,.~ 0347 •' You Supply the llaint --.-----)AVE & Profit. Cuslom 646.7811 Quality /M aint/~dscpg 646·2693. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROOMS PAINTEDSJOea Roof1n9 od kl I C d HAULING* WILLIAM S & Son s ExleriorAlso.~"7""6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• remod, repair, add-on. s • s pr rs, soi on • • . ..,...,. l,. C~,c~_..._ I 6~2 3331 / EFFICIENT •. FAST Masonry. Brick/Block/ ROOFSCll~(,1<1':0 I insulation. Free esl. & ,..._.... _._ c ea nu P • , · · ~ Is I "' Pati · •••••••••••••••••••••• 646-4908 weMf'O er• Cft * * 556--0347 ** Stone. Call 581·7829 os Hepa ired & Replaced Designs. 645-3439. LEONITE CONCRETE . •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>1rect Facrory Service FinishC<>-..ntry ST AMPING. Cob C&J GARDENING HANDYMAN-Homes & Yard & Garage Movhtg Sunshade, covers, decks. LicenseC39-159't96 Remod~ra;,pair blestone, brick , tile, Completeandneat Apts . Conscientious Clea nup s/Hauling. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• firerinl(, benches.wood. PH:549·2961 Vi L h ff 536 t" t 640-4349 Clean ups, free est. Cr aftsman ~ REASONABLE. 645·0'798 Moving /llauling. Student brk, cone. <~uuhty. Fatr --nee en ° -8475 pa tos, e c. · 968·853l or847·1070 · · w /laq~e truc k. Reas. price. Creative designs. . . MINOR HOME REPAIR Block·Slumpstone Walls· "'THINGS" by Moose. B11rry 548·9723&839·57'J9. Remodeling lge/sm jobs. llave s~m,elh•r!i; you wanl P lumbing-<::arpenlry . PatioSlebs Find wriat you want in Gen woodwork, repairs, SELL idle items with a • Ken, eves 6421770. Hay, to !>Cit . Clas~1Cicd uds <.lo For Ctwiflf'd Ad ACTION Call A DAILY l'tl.OT AD·YISOI '42·'671 Ceramic Tile. 540-5560 Drives· Planters. 645-8720 Daily Pilot Classifieds. plumbing, etc. 642·56!3. Daily Pilot Classified Ad . Classified Ads __ 64_2_·56_7_8 days 675.9184. We Care. 1t well. 64_2_·56_7_8_. __ _ --H•lp Wont•d Help W•ted -7100 Htlp W•ted 7100 Help Wend.cl 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Htlp Wanted 7100 Hflp Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Cots 803S •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·~HIER DEMONSTRATORS ELECTRICAL MAN wanled to paint & Person 2 1·40, trn for SALES TYPIST Beautiful SIAMESE KJT· for fine ~ewelry slore. OVERWEIGKr ESTIMATOl INHA~TIOH cle~n apls. Gen'I main· mgml. Sl50 wk guarn: Auist SolKMCJr For Lex Itron Video TENS. 6 wks $W each.· ~okkee~1ng, flllni;, etc. Women-men wanted Top pay, good benefits. THERArYTECH te~anc~ work. 70 units, ~A~J 11;.,.pref. Mr. Levt Guys or-gals lo aissist Type Speed & accuracy _•_SS_l_·l_8_16_· ____ _ Willconsaderpar:tumell participate in new re· Send resume w/salary Min. 2 yrs exper o sw1mmmgpool,garages, .,...,. \l\M manager of high fashion 1mporlanl. Pleas ant DOCJ5 8040 hours are flexible. In volutionary weight con· re q u i-r e m en ts t 0 schooling. Salary com· recreation rm. laundry Photography Workshop men ·s boutique Must N. B. ofc. Ra~b, Oe1 0 n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Person Only. UJ..12 noon, lrol program . sweepin Classified ad no. 428, c 10 mensurate w /training rm. M usl be bondable, H I G 11 FASH 1 0 N & have good sales ex per Jo'ro~t & Associates, 14 1 • J . Herb er t Hall country.Nodrugs,diels Daily Pilot, P. o. Box exper. Contact Mr. neat&eHicaenl.Notools NUDE MODELS . lnterviews now.Calllcr Quail,N.B.83.10070 •PETWORLD• Jewelers, South Coast medication, shots, wr aps 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca Hamilton, 642·2734 ex needed. l''ull time. SJ. per l l Llasa-Ap:.o, Chihuahua, Plaza. o r therapy , etc. 92626. 387 Costa M esa hr. 5 paid holidays & 549·8660 appoinTmH~nLO,_, WaitbressWanted 2 \ El Poodl es, Shih·T.eu, ,, CASHIEAS Full·time. Over 18. Memoria l Hos pital. vacation Apply in PLUMBER NEEDED ~ Must e over &. Schnauzer. Cocker, Oox· Healthful, i,nexpens~ve. Experienced tow· truck EOE person 9am Lo 5 pm, 160 2 lo 3 Years Exper. 644-6500 Matador. 1768 Newport 1c, Pat Bulls, Cockapoo. :~~:s ~~~~·y.G~nsll~~'. driver. Must hue refs. Wesl Wilson, Apt 1. Mr. Cal1537·22ll Blvd, Costa Mesa. Pom. IOOm1xedPupp1c:.. Good pay. 5 Locations M•troC•Wmh 2950 Harbor Bl. C.M. For info, call M r . La gu n a Bch area Ward. SALESGIRL, fabnc ex-W/\ITRL'C"" Stud serv. most bree<h. 497 1735 R•al Est_._ r...a-s per. necess. • ~· "c25-W. 17th at Fairview, Ray/979.·2879. "··n. lhru · · ... uR' ~ c 11 l' cAc A'"'O F. · cd 0 I &..} .xJ INSP£CJ'nR E d a -.enry,.............. .xpenl.'nc n Y SA. Open EvesSJl-5027 Thurs. only. y 41 xper., mature, cpen--- -BLU 1-.; DOLP!UN t. EX. SECRETAR MEa...I Aa...tD dable, compal1ble real SALES~RL 3355 Via Lido. NB !dM Area·Resp. lady lo clean house. cook dinner for 3 children. S Days a week·3 Hrs a day. (714) 556·3766 DENTAL Ohairsine & For small Real EBtate Precl·Sl·On ....,. ....,. estate saleswoman for Fulltime for fabric shop. frnt. desk girl. For int. Develoi>er in N.B. near WOMEN sales & rentals; 5 day Apply in person call 645·5130 C.M. ~yi rpPf~tg. M&us~ ~a~i !'1~ Mechan1"cal week, incl Sul. & Sun. c. ABBOT'S FABRICS BORZOI (R u ss ian Wolfhound I AKC, J:: Wa1lress, cxp'd, over 21 , mos. Fem 642-MOS p /t or f/t , apply in person ---------- NO EXPERIENCE 2610 E. est. Hwy. Corona DCehn ~a 1.dA sst. Ort he Know I ~d ge. or &Rea I Req's 3.5 yrs QC exper. NECESSARY! Del Mar. a 1rs1 e, appr ox. 4 Estate fi nancing con· including 1st article in· 1r .vou like people and ----------1 3.5 pm, tolonial Kitt•hen. 512 W. 19th. CM ·---- PE MBROKt: Welch Corkie. Pups & Crown Dogs. AKC. 54649:!8 days wk. Ort.ho exp. req. s truction would be WHOWANTSTOWOHK"! Start ..,·$4 hr. depending helpful Xlnt frinae spection or machine & think you could s ell DIUVEACAB! CLEANl .... G LADY ... .. plastic parts Must have ca Ii r 0 r n I a. s N 0 1 " • on exp. No smoking, age benefits Send res ume knowledge of blueprint selling line or cars let 1\\1.00.\ ISl.1\'\D SALES·RETAIL CllOOSE your hours. DOG OBED I ENCE CLASS to Start Wed. June 25 . 7 :30 p .m. Newport Heh -Irvine area. 546·4928 Exper. 5 Niles a week, 20-30.642·2626 w/salary requ.iremenls dimensioning & use of us show how you can * 671·6900 • women's specialty shop work for yourself, he 6PM·2:30AM. Ne~rt Lo: Classified ad no 427, precision inspection make O\'er s2o.ooo a on Lado Island. Position your own hoi.s. Men or Bch ofc bldg. Steady c /o Daily Pilot. P 0 Box · · 1 avail for high booking Women. Can be sll~htly Work for reliable woman. De.a.r......._ Heeded l"'"', Costa Mesa, Calif measunng eqwpment year tn a P easanl. h d I " t d -rs· ....... /f,-J a.. .,.,,., enjoyable position• REAL ESTATE sales women •interested an 1cappec .. ,ea · ---- 644·0606week ays. * •cyt rrSQ 92626 Resume must be STACOSWITCH 1860Ne~ll in top Contemporary Clean ,\ppcarance SILKYTERRIERS Tempo Temporary Help recei~e·d by June 6th • fashions. Full or p/timc Vet-. . relircd. Age 25 to AKC 962-8377 CLERK· Typist wan_ted. 17802 Sky Park, Irvine INC. Our dealership training Coda Mesa S a 1 a r Y / c 0 m m . 10 Supplement your in- 60 wpm minimum. Most· Call5404455 FACTORY HELP 1139 Baker Costa Mesa classes are s tarting Well located RI!: office 714 1838.6264 • .A sk for l·omc Dme a cab 6 hrs Iris h Seller Puppies, Jy days but must be Needed Costa Mesa firm 549-3041 no\\ and we will needs 2 I 1 c ens e d Linda or more a day. Apply in AK C. "In l qua I 1 l Y • avail.fornight shift.Gd. "h be fls " E 10 E 1 I salespeople. Women --------person, Yellow Cab Co .. c hamp line. $100. Co. benefits. $a.SO hr to Dishwasher, f/time wal . company. ne 1 ts qua ppor mp oyer PAY YOlJ WlllLF. YOU welcome. Business is SALES-TROPICAL J8G I!:, 16th St., Costa 213-866-8390 start. Apply Pennysaver, Convalescent Hospital !ooking for a girl lo work L. E A H N /\ aood-neecl more help 1 ---------- d m the shop area $2 20 an ---,. 1-'ISH & Pet Store. r'1sh ~ esa. GOLDEN RETHIEVER 16161 Goth ar • H.8 . Call642·0593 C II ~ PROFF.SSIO~ WITll for our buyers! Call for k Id 6425522 Equaloppty.emptoyer. hour lo start 3 ID'VINE PERSONNE.l L; i-.; L I l\I I T I'.. D interview now e gereq. · Young lady with car. PUPS. Mr F. beautiful. 1 DISPATCHEa 545·040l " OP 1 PORTUNITY 1-:0H A • work 10·1. 6 days. good $60. 556·1482or968·5400 ;ol students, p/t sis. de· Graveyard Shill. Apply Fashion Consultant full SERVICESS-AGENCY AUVA;>.;CE~l ENT &16·;:~~Evis'167~4577 _m_on_e..:.y_._c_a_ll_&t_5_·0_1_t1s_-1Golden Retrac,·or, champ.. bv.Eves/Sat.C3r ,phone_m ~i me.,Wewill lrain. -<i'88E 17th(Alfrvine) SALES-4 WOMEN M•rch-di·.... lines. s hot:.. $1 :>U. -ru!CMTLft)nS1J48:1 YELLOWCAI Over 21. Call 963·2652or Su1te224 Costa Mesa In less than l\\O weeks c•· I food ) ... .... ...... '"2·5729. 'II b bl <1< a coup e o g men ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.., :oOK ·No experience 186 E.16th, Costa Mesa 846·7959 Call 642.-1470 you \\I e eh~• e to WE 01'~1'~ER : ---------=--- necessary. Prefer mld· NO PH-ONP! CALLS aclu<.tlly sell cars with 11. /\career in advertising Antiques 8005 Adorable Wire Fox Ter· die.aged lady. 548·9006 PLEASE Female, p /time. Apply ----------1 the constant help and ~~~~~~~~~~ & public relations w/a ••••••••••••••••••••••• raer .puppies. 10 wks. 2·4pm daily. Foster cooper.al ion of : . successful & fast grow. Antique Bulterkist Uncle AKC. watchdog. 842·1189. :ooK. full & p/lime. DISTRIBUTOR wante~. Freeze, 899 W 19th St. JUNIOR SALESMEN management. Real Estate, licensed ing l'O J oe Popcorn Machine. Conv. Hospital. Over 25. Interested in _C_M_________ Age 10_15 Earn $20-$40 • salespeople . Why not 2. Ea~y sales w/a down Sl ,295. Call Maureen AKC V1zsla pups. fan· Call 642·0598 earning up to.x> per mo FIGURE MODB.S per week nett1"n" new W F. II AV F. n F: EN work in the hottest .area to e arlh product that 675·283~ hours 9.5 Mon tasl12c2 dogs. $15 NOW. p/t.Call 639·6123. ., " SEHVl:"\G OHA:--ivf: lfuntmgton Bcach/hiu~· small hul>ines~t·s ap· thruFri _84_6·_0_1_. _____ _ COOK,Sous-Clwf LADIES18·40 Jlighpay, eustomersforlhcDAILYd COt:'.'\TY FOH 51 tain Valley. Call Phil preci ate&canafford L SAAP"'O r 8 Responsible &expcr'd in D~APERYSAL.~LAI?Y good working conditions. PILOT after school an YF:/\RS AND OFF'F:H .McNamec al Village 3 0 ·1vt1me work.· No TRUNK, 95 Yn:· old S50.. HA ., • em. mo. all phases of Continental walh sewing ability. 'Ym· No exp. nee. Phone Mr . Saturdays. You must be FRINGE BENEFITS Real Estate963·4567 Eves .. No weekends No Milk cans. $25 & lll.50. 64wh6/~;5n7'. 'Reasona~:2210 'faule Cuisine essential dow shades & Curtains. Gre"'n, any day incld',. out of school by 3:00 p.m. I . Call 548·7800or645-8161. ___ · '--------r 552 8803 .,;. .., and be able Lo work al T II 1\ T I l': C I. U 0 E ----------1 trave . for this exclusive award · Sun. leust 3 days per week.No f C'\ SU It A NC i-:, RECEPTIONIST 4 No gimmicks or h1~h Lli . 19th CENTURY AKC Male tn·color collie winning dinner house. Drinn,p~ 714/121.0180 dehvcrics or collecting. HE T I RE MEN T, Sharp ~irl needed for pressureselling. Sadebctard w/beveled available for ~Irin g . !~igg~ 1~1~=rit~~r +a~: wanted for l>ina Man. Floral Designer w/saJcs Transportation pro· ~.~: ~01 oGr-;.·E~!.'~,AR'l'OOUn.L: main lobhy or :\Hg. firm 5. ~hort. but complete mirre7T"ed top. Length 6', -~36-49~ after~:.:'I __ bilious s killed man Also,CounterHelp.App-exper. Must have refs. vided. Call 963-5011 in "so·'."'L:SPLA" .... ~. ., jn Ir vi ne ln <..lusl. tra1ning progra~.I I Hgt. 6'2'. Beaut. cond. lris hSctler.Fcm.l'-:)rs ' w/gOod refs . Apply Am· ly 1920 Harbor Bl, CM So. Coast area. Call Hunlin gt on Beach or ·' ,,.,, Com pie x area . M us l 6. Fasl pay:a so ute l $350. Ulr. 6464324 days, o Id w I Pc d . li o o rt ' br osia, Room 211, SOS beforenoon.714/493-8738 63l ·t495 inCoslaMesa • have addtn~. typin g ~~P t•o mmissions ' S..l5·3967 e\es_. ____ 1 w c hilclrcn Sjl .6734 30th St. Newport. Beach. Equal Opportun ity LET'S TALK skills, front office ap-• ..,n~sesl. -F -B_l_I _& Cl p· eves CookS~lsor Exper. pref d in insLi~u· lional cooking. AM shift. ·• Contact David R. Green, 847-9671 EL•CTRICl• .... s Food S•n Woner Employer • IOUT pearance plus personah· 7. E:\.c USl\'C t erritory inc a aw iano. -._. - .. """ ~ p X conlrob to I" c>lcd futu1 e Stool. Juno converled 00,. Obc"iencc Clas~. SI.>. Wanled. Service or con· 6:30-3 shaft & 1:30-8 shift. KITCHEN HS.PER YOUR ty · Will operate Br· · earn mg:.. kerosene lamp. plates & Co~la .\f'el>a J\rt>a. Start struction exper. req'd. Park Lido Conv. Center. Days. Tues thru Sun. FUTURE! Dial console & greet re-8. Sl!OU Weekly draw, b r1c·a ·br~c.Cash Pvt. Toppay&benefils.App· 466F1a&shipRrl,N.B. Call 548.7418• Ask for Call r.lr. John Felter qucnl 1ncomin~ visitors whenquahtied. Pty.673.1265. Junc9.S-1~23i·I ly m person al, lTI9SSky Ma urice. today for interview. and applicants Min. 2 yrs AN U MUCH MUCH --------Ulcl En~lish Sheep cJog :-; , ; Park Cr. SuiteG, Irvine. Harbor Arca related cxper. Apply in • MORE Appliances 80 I 0 mu. old. All papers and Get AHEAD In The Lady Companion. live-in, person. Edler ln<lustnes For personal appt call ••••••••••••••••••••••• shots. •l4G·6010 lf.tpW...t•d 710C>HelpWaMH 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• DEPT. STORE THE BROADWAY LAGUNA HILLS WILL OPEN AUG. 4 If you are Interested In being interviewed tor permanent employment in our new 1tore, please complete~ cllp out the coupon below.Mall to us at the addrHs Indicated. You w)ll receive an answer by phone or mall with!n thr" WMks set· ting a specific appointment time for an In· ttntltw wltfl yeu. Excellent opp0r1unltln for qualified applicants. Outstanding employ" beMtlb. ADDRESS TO: THE BROADWAY DEPT. STORE ATTN: CENTRAL PERSONNEL 3880 N. MISSION ROAD LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90031 L--------CUP HERE--------' I atn int.,Mtd In bting ltlt~ tor ompaoym~nl In the following areal•I: ~DEPT.MOR. SAUi fl.OOR STOCK HOUSIKHf'INO WRAf'ftlRS ar: Dav Shift Evening Shift I Have Su~ f.lt!*teoce I arn 0"91 18 yHra of age Na,,,. Slrte\ ~"HTAU .. ANT aEAUTY SALON CAGE CASHllRS CREDIT OfflCf BFull Time Part Tl~ v .. O y .. o NO B No City ----------~Zlp ___ _ Phon<t~--~~---,--------- ARMY. Call 549-2929 lite housework & cook· 642·00 IO Inc. 2101 Dove St. N.B 631 -0454 9am-6pm Kenmore wash.$50. Frig. --• Askforl06 ing.Call 642.4630_ Orange County Area Mon·Thurs. 7a m -5 :30~~~~~~~~~~J wash.SSU. Westinghouse St. Bernard. 11 m~ old. GIRL FRIDAY 540·82 I I pm. r: elec dryer.$6.5. Guu & Well trained Full time. General orncc LEGAL SECRETARY TllEODOHF. ~~~~~~~~~ SECRl::TARY. Part time. del. 5<16·8672 Call 645-2-106. C Ex Per. min · 3 Yr· ROBINS FORD general.;office. 494·9444 -. . work. Nr. O. · Airport. Wkdays, call 2060 HAR BO H BLVD. RECEPTfTYPIST by appofQJ.mentonly. ·74 Kelvinator side x side Mo1~·mf~ l\~ u1 sl1 Schll S8 lml ,0 $500 mo + mjr. med. 833·3622 ask for Karen COSTA MESA . . ----no frost, 19 cu fl. Refn g. o "· cma e n~ e er Write Ad #308, Daily 1 _______ ·----i Sharp,inlclhgenl,w/mm SECRETARY for Law $\_Q0.545.9882. Purc~red ':''/Pa~ers, Pilot . P .0 . Box 1560. LEGAL SEC'Y I yr continuous general Firm. Xlnt lYPlnl!. dit• -SIUO. C.all aft h 5-11 .JAAJ. Costa Mesa, CA92626. Exper'd. 642·9440 NEW LICENSEE ore ex per. Must be able tavhonc. prior legal Ml Sea rs 2ocr. Frosttrce ,,;:, t y 8045 GOOD JOB PENSIONERS MACHINIST Male, 2 days per wk. All around machinist to Musl have ca.r. No sell· work in med. sized pro- ing. Perm. Refs. 673-2289 duction shop. Able to do lile tooling & production. GRILL Cook wanted. 50 Hr work week. Co. Must have refs. Clean paid insurance. Apply in appearance. Jo'\)11 lime. person. Beach Manufac- Carmels. 497·~ luring, 15602 Container Ln, Hunl. Bch. (l mi. So. HAlR STYLIST·Exp'd. of McDonald Douglas 675-3701 o r 675·4232 or plant) 675-4315. ...;__.;_ _____ _ PART TIME & tu type 50~wpm & be able nee. liuo<I working en· Hcfrig. aulo ice maker. r..-te o ou FULL TIME to hand1e bu:.y phone virunmenl. Plense <'all Sl25. 837 ·8895. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Immediate floor time traffic cffic1cnLly. Apply Mrs . Hc)!ner al833·9031 ~·HEE to !!d hm w/fenccd In Person ON LY. In· ----91·cvcl•s 8020 ya r cL Extra s mall available with loads of 1 "' So F . Id · · ~ terviews Sal. Mornin~ SECRET A.RY ••••• •••• •••••••••••••• female Shepherd. per leads. 1e trammg a ff & 1 k d full time manager al 9am·l2 noon. ASSISTANT Used Bikes/Parts. $15/up a cctionale O\"es 1 s. ... 1 7 d l Allied Ai.phalt T p ·-~ ~ u uy /Se II /trade . 2488 no bad habils. 586·5950 your uasposa ay a 1409 1':. Warner . o ~01~ ~., u CM 2 7910 week to assisl you ny Sanla Ana 1 he Wilham Lyon Co' a Newport Bl. . &1 . FREE KITTEHS time of the day or night. '' o l Be a h c II c: "''"'"' Equal Oppor. Employer , .. ~ w P r \" Ne w po r l Cy c I cry . a 5-1.r""""' 70% comm1ss1011 t B 1·' de e1oper ., k~ • u1 uer , v see " Raleigh' Pe ujl?eol, & CUTL' k"1tlens ""'ancd & qualified persons. Cal a sellslarlingse<''y toas· /\Luka. 2116 Newport ."' · "' for interview. Limited R.E . SALESMAN sis L 1 2) Pro j c c I 81 •d NB 675 1700 lramed. _ openings. John PJ.~alo. For very successful Manas::ers . Background ' · 5l1H61.> Day 546·0022 or everungs adult commuruty. 40 To in OHi:: fil ing. l''llAl\'A Sun tour Azuki Racer. KITTENS 8 wks trml. 538·8409. Walker&Lce. 60 yrs ohl. Call btwn 10 filings, knowledge of $99.95. Cycle Works Ltd . . · • .. HOSTESS Exper'd for restauranl in leading Newport Bch re· sort hotel. Call J ohn 644·1700. ext 5S4 Equal Oppor. Employer A.M. & 2 P .M . Fri/Sal/or loan packaging & pro· 1822 NcwrorL Bl. CM Apn~ot. Orange & Gr .ly MACHINISTS New Sp~· Hunt; Dch. Al· Mon. 499.4509 cess1nf! & f'!>t·row ex 548-57~. tabbies. 646·60:!0 tr a cl 1 v e g 1 rl s for -----1 ...::..::.::..:....:..........:........------1 Smal l clean shop. masseuse & receptionist RNS·LVNS'andi\IDES trernely desirable. Send . Furniture 8050 StcacJy, 40 hr wk_ & top positions. No exper. nee, resume t o J oy cc -CO~SUMER GUIDES ••••••••••••••••••••••• pay for ver~a~1le all will train. Day & night in· Exp. Only·l'\lll Time Grigs by, 366 San Miguel. Newest, Best Buy Sunk beds. refrig. chest.s. around M ach1n1sts . for lervw 963•7723 or 9112.3934 Morgan Nurses Registry Su 1 t e 2 O 1 . New po rL ls Now Here! dinette set. teak tables. variety or tools, dies, betwn lOam·lOpm . 548'!:J6f ~~~-.C.M. Beud1, Ca 92660. 833-3600. T~c Super Le Man.'I lamps. bookshelves, mar· prototypes & short·ruo -------'--_...;'-----...::..=...:.:.:..:....:...:...:........-~---I By Centurion r 0 r s • p n i n t I n gs • Hoaecle ... Serv produclion.C.M.6428080 Nurses Aides. all shifts.1----------1Security Guard. Priv. CoronadelMarBlkcs F:iberwure Rot\ss .. + M a lure bondable Con v hos p ital. Call Comm . .needed..Militar)' 33231::.Coast Hwy. other household items. women. MUI) WANTED, part 642·05S3. RN-CCU or related exper. 30 hr Call675-7666 642·2060. T-S. 645-5 I 23 time. Call Mesa Motel. wk Company benefits. .....::....:.::...::.~------ -,.. · 646·008l 1 Nurses Aide, exper'd , Nights. full orp/time. Vehicle provided. Wri te 6' Traditional Sofa. $7.S. Housekeeper, mature ----------Bayview Conv. Hosp. D1Cferentlal pay. Xlnl classified Ad. No. 387 CaMer•s & A tumn colors M •10 WAHT8) benehts. Contact Mrs. Daily Pilot. P.O &>.. f.-.lplMllt 8030 u v-644.8090· r· , for g~l home. "' C.M. 64 2·3S-05. 642 27.,A c t ..- 3 .rt. 646-6716 Don Quixote Motel Jensen, · .,., os a 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2100 Newport Bl. CM Parkina Attendant: over Memorial Hospital. 301 Uousekeeper, (/time. Ap· Call$42.21670 18. Calif. drivers he. Call Victoria, C.M. EOE. (2) Service Sta ml'n, lsl ply Mou Verde C4nv. ------------betwn U :30am & 3 pm.·~~~~~~~~~~ c lass. Top wages + H-p, ~1 Cent.er C!• CM M ate Pet....__ 673 9775 . comm. Apply Ray Carey "" vv ~ °"~al Jr-~ Salutady wantt;d an Chevron Stat.ion. 604 S _. ~ required. 642-5522 , d k E IL RolleJ ·Sl, 66., w /t.e~ss plan.}r 2.8 lens . Mint cond. 6 wk!\ old. 2 yr war· ronty. $875. 645 1444 mom. or eves ----- Attractive. naugahyde sofa. EIJZht feet lonf{. dark reddi1>h-brown in color. £xcell~nt condt· lion. $125. 00. Ca II 6'75'-0342 Afters PM 1...1.-al Su-Job Tropica Fish knowledge PIX · ~s.n Laguna Bch. Part ~ml'. 4 Coast Hwy. Lag. Bch (Port-Time Hours) Afln 6.. i:Hs. nds an· ys 8 w · xper 10 se ------ d d I-;Ot: 540-l962 1ng ladies ready to-wear TELEPHONJo;SALES TOO MUCJS Furniture. • Work 4 hrs • dcay In our Masseuao neNied. exp. clu c · C>vtr 30. l'lease state age Part tame or full lime Cot• 1035 heavy c arved Span. 9 • new cool ofc ac"°"'5 from will trn. Call 646 0884 for w · .. """ 10 t 1 5pm to • O C A I l & earn & rl'fi;, r•t<' au no. ''"'" am 0 pm or •• •• •• •• ••. •••••••••••• drawer dreuer. Lg. mlr· . . rpor appointment. PBX D111ly Pilot. P 0 Rox llpm 1.-;x('cllenl earnings, REC 'D Pf': RSI AN Kit ror, 2 n1tcstands. 2 ~:'7u~ '&r ;~·e~111; ;~r~ 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca salar} or <'Ommisslon!'I G d Cul Dk drawers ea. $1.S(). Alum. people who enjoy puttina Exper'd , stronit PBX 92R2fl. 646·4100 oft. Spm __ ,~e::,~nct.ra~otenU:P~how Stora~ rm. $160. SU.~ • thtlr Vflrbal capabihUca To place your messo.gc Re('ept1onh1t. 8 1,lr day. SALF.S Pltrt t1mf' t-:xpr T•ltph AM wv • qual 1 f'l.'mDJ<.o wt)lte, l 2 STACK BOOKCASt;S in to work . Students, bcforclht• Manuf.,Beac.h aru Send 5:30to9.30pm Applyin Exper d only 1-'ull. ~ale cream 67~·2002 Oark0ak.3St'¥'k$l00,-t ho~sewlvea &c moon readlnapubllc, resum1 to Cla8:-.lf1~ ad peninn Thf' Sl.11rcnse p time. All s h1fll1. & S IAM 1-:~E Killen s. stack $220. Xfnt. cond. g:r1tef:r a~~r:e:~r:&; 0.':l;r~lot i~ t,~·io': P~~ b~~~; So. Coost P hm wknd<i. rvp wa.:ell t:.tll Chocolate Point, 10 wk!I Hard Lo Clod 1 01 r . peraonal Interview Time Classified, &&2·5018 Me:rn, Callr. !Y~. S1';1,t, idle •lt'm." w1lh tt !ti~ 1~2n0 !l 11 "' & 4P11'1 . $.10. 646 4324 daya, 545·3967 U(e Books, 833-809fl. Dully f'1lot Cl&~1f1cd ,\d · 673·6423 ..;e:...v..:e_s. ______ _ Tuesday June 3. 197S t'•CIMS • o,.._. •""'0 MotorcyclH/ Avtot W•ted 9UO Autos, haf"H"hd AMfoa, l•,orled Autos, UHit ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .... ,.. 9110 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··················~·~·1 ............................................. . 'wallue 1110 Mhcel••-IOIO Mbctl•tD91 1010 u11 Sob mer Grand ....................... W£PAYTOPOOLI.AR K• -•Ma Y7.S~ ValbwC19H 9770 .ttM•till 7930 .. ••••••••••••-••••-• •••••••••••••-•••••••• ·~··~·~··~-~·~ (Parlor> $1500/0fr. Mut Sell '14~ Honda CB .FORTOP USEDCARS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••;•••~••••• fl I U DAIL V PILOT Grea,Savlat(IGDUsed W_.......-rEft •---.--..-:..---..-497·J802 days -tM·zt.S2 380.Lomi's.$100.&as FOREIGN.~M~'TIC 19155KarmannGhla.New l 8UY JUNK VWlmmac. '73 Mark l V, f\arn, ApplUrMisc ~"' ~ Eves. sume balanco $&90 . orCL~CS englne, cood llres & ex· Eoglnea/Can. 979-0IW I 7 ooo m 1 Loaded WUsoo's Barpln Nook TOP CASH DOLLAR UPRIGHT Pl ood 646·3'72 Alan tr your car II cxtr<A dean cellent mile,ge. ~o. (8 to lOam or a.fl Spm) wti•tWht Inter. $69-53: S4S w. l90I St. C.M. p A l D F 0 R y 0 u R ano, g --------·Y see us fl rat 4'3 ~ 0 • JEWELRY. WATCH~. cond. $37S. '72 Honda 7501 equipped IAUl!R IUICK . . an. S~·3080aft6PM. ~UALITY sofa & lov ART OBJECTS, GOLO C111J873.Q70. w/$1680intounnga~eu. 29~Harbor81vd. ada 97JI 70 VW Bus, $1.:50, needs •73 "Town coupe ... Real eseat, beaut, never SILV~R SERVICE. KALLET&DAVISSpmet lmmac cond. $1600. Cost M m..~··••••••••••••••••••••• work.~1&ll&ft.6PM luxury.Attexwu•tm· ~ .• movlng .968-8822 l''I Nt; FURN & AN p·ano ....,5 645-4785. a esa '72 Maida RX 2. New 847·S859. mac. Dk. bro. w/tan TIQUES ~ 2200 1 • -· • TOP D"9 • •• eng .. tires-air, tape, very vinyl top. $4,Y&S. Q&n e Hard Rock Maple end · · 546-1435 750 Van '72, rUM lii<e new p ~ID clean. $1495. 675-8546. 69 VW Camp4'r, xlnl oond. fiman ce $481!. 636-0072 a.ables, $20 each. S48·7800. •--------1 S.willg Moc ..... 1093 $SOO, best offer ~ ~ $2300 or will trade for ..:........:--~----- or&t5-816l eve:io. CAIPIT IAllGAINS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ext.. S39. IMMEDIATB. y 72 Miaidll RX2. 5000 m~. Bug. 675·5856. l969 Mark"111, rull power t Spanjsh armofre che:.t.s ; Pecao dining table <no ebalrs). PH: 644-4476 TopQual MUI Seconds llrolhtirs Zig Zag port'bl '71 Suiuki 125, Dirt. New FOil AU. ~:Jf:.nt;u;:r ~f~~.1ci Volvo 9772 ~P·:rnce. JW.2-40$1 ail Used~.:ee:r.~~Saxe sewing machine, like eng. & trans. $295. FOlllCllMCARS owner Pvt. Pty. $1495. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....;"--------- new. $80. 640·6737 494·8944. CALL OR COM£lM HB. 846·1297. SPECIAL Corvette 9932 Call 67).7162 Radi ••••••••••••••••••••••• o, '71 Kawasaki soo. Show TO SEIUS M-... _ •-97 .. 0 HIR, St.no 1091 Bike. Many xtras. Lo •• :::!:..-.~:':!': .•••• ;:. VOLVO SAL£1. '69VETTE,nearlynew. tleywood· Wakefield chma ('1tb .• table, 6 chairs. 141~~~~~~~~~~1 Ft. ref rig.. xlnt cond. Coast Firewood Supply 833· 1761J $75. Cord delivered.. Expansive solid walnut ____ SS_l ·_1_122 ___ _ room divider, 8' x 8'x3', aquarium/ len-anum in mi.ddle. storage Cor stereo & books. Must see! Sacnfu~e $1285. Olg. $3000. 5.57-3732. Sofa & Loveseat. $150 MATTRESS •MADNESS• "Jc ALL SIZES* Priced to Move! 833.9625 & 646-8Qf6 Corree table. $6.S. Rall BED. King Sz. mattr~ Furn. Make orrer .. nusc Box sprang, frame. xtra _968 __ -284_o_. ______ -I firm; stall packag ed. $215 CiarogeSClk •••••••••••••••••••••• RUt.1MAG E SALK Ml. (Value $525);Queen $195, (Value $425). Incl. de· livery 631 -().188. Usuany Home. Carmel Parish Ladae ---------- Guild. Big !>Clect1on . EARTH WORMS Somelhing for ever· f'OR THEGARDl!:N y1Jody.1'hurs, l•'ri. &Sal. 1000for$:l.95 9:30·5pm. Parish Hall, Worm Castings S2 Lug 1441 W. Balt:Jba Bl vd. NB. 17364! Gothard, HS Jewelry 8070 SOFA HED Cor sale or ••••••••••••••••••••••• trade for I.win beds. 642·1~2 . WANTED TOP CASH DOLLAH TOP local Tennis Club P A I 0 to• O R y O U R full me.mbershlp. J SWE-1.RY, WATCHES. ____ 64_' _6_·7_882 ___ _ ART OBJECTS. GOLD, Chain Link Pen w/top SILVER SERVICE, 8'x10'x5'. $65. 493·471C FINE FU RN & AN aft. 6:30PM TIQUES. 645-2200 --------- . AM /FM Cassette player. OVAL Diamond n:?C. Ap. Hermes Add. m ach .. praised value $4,500. Sell Paymaster checkwnter. SJ.000. 673·527ti bet tH e 673· 1508 aft. 6 noon only. . A4uarium . Custom built Miscellaneous 8080 125 gal. Everylhrng inti ••• • • • • • • • • • ••••••••• •• $250. 835·2629 SCRAM-LETS G 0 LFM-e m-n 1)-e r-s h-1 p , I rv1ne Coast"' Country .., ANSWERS '?lub N .B. Ma.ke offer. ·r 1 ,1 644·1013 or 494-L231 eves. l'l';J y -·' ;JU\l' - J,..<Jn ky -r.riml) -r LIVEH Miscellaneous ! !h er«•"• ""'"" W-d 8081 \\ants l.o 11.uondall' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ini.s. '>o -1·11u won't $$CASH $$FOR . ho I c:. I n ) •Ju r Good used Cum/ref rigs L ~IL Frzrs/sloves. 546-0768. G~. fl e fr i ~. <! d r · Musical Babylilie Cnb. Childs Instruments 8083 hamp , Singer Sew ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mach. 557-6149 Quilter Guitar amp.100 ••••• • • •• • • •••••••••••• mi's. $850. 546·9340. 427 Eng, 4 spd w /~ Sell/trade Sony 1'C·650 Mercedes Benz Beat price increase. xtras. 968-4122 tape deck reel lo r~. Take over P~'?leflls on E • C Super stock, All models Value $400. 84.2·2'6B my 1974 S~zulu TM400. XeCutive Gr Priced to St:ll. Overseait __ ... -.940 $200 my eqwty. 546·2390 450 SE Delivery Specialists "'"' • Fashien Boatique 333 E. 17th St. 1or.;,.~:.-3100 W.Custltwy.ll 5252 BO ft~a.11 lA1n:1 ~~·~~·a·t:::·;:;::·~;~: Costa Mesa ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 HOHDAXR 75 642-9405 • lllO. .~, uuw air. aux tanlt, trlr pkg, loots, Malt1te..Ke/ Call Lynn499-1786. $1600. or orfer. Days, 1 Sttvlce f020 WE BUY Air. power window. VOLVO 673-8650oreves,67S-01 l~ l....,,.atiCNMll ••••••••••••••••••••••• T....Jle-Trav_. 9170 AM /f'M stl?reo, low u~--' -'•• "" IMPORTS miles, 36 month open end 1966 Hcubot c M 646 9303 '67 Sta. Wgn. New brakes. r-.--of P•cakes) £1ectracal-Woodworking ••••••••••••••••••••••• lease. ----------Good car. $400. offer or Plumbi!"g-lnstallation 16' Shasta, s leeps 6, stove Top Dollar For Any ORANGE COUNTY trade. Must. sell. 548-4192. ·NEW SHIPMENT OF TANK TOPS & SHORTS All Cotton or ' 100% Polyester SJ, s4, s5 & Repair. Inboard Eng. & refrig. $1150 farm. Make or Model. $15 ooo b b k Repair lln boat).5'.'0rpio 962·7312 ' cost.; uy-ac VOLVO '72 FORD Marine.548-9704 --------• JIM PANOS ~~~:3~;55~~~.~~'. EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO 9PAS~IHGH loots, MwiH 3 ·~c·~.Rs?!~ 415, ~~,!~nelte, MAZDA 029$214~ Sec. deposit; Ser. La,.nrgOer~~tnVgoel~~~tayl~r Wagon. Deolux,e Co36Wl0lry E • t 90 O ""' ~ 714 • """"' · Squire. n y • 00 .. pMen 557·0283 2001 S. Manchester HUY or LEASE mi'les. Beauti'rul litUe red ••••••••••••••••••••••• Anaheim 636-tiOOO DIRECT C Sh Lo .,... I J• SI wagon. Red vinyl in· JOHNSON SEAHORSE, 16 t. asta .... ates ps tm entonS · · ~!·•ood«MMli~i.11 !~!~~~=;.:~~rr~~~: 0~;;:~f= lmpOm ·~~· ~~!fo~~~~~.-a SEAGULL6HPO.B.long 011hnports (7141833-9300 '~-i-~-"-!:: ~ AM /FM s tereo radio, shaft. Like New. $240. Trailers, Utility -'9 I 8(l 1111 Max.tty T~ota 2025 S. Manchester. rad i a I tires, . etc. Call 645-8998 •••••··~-;~-.;~~·:••••••• Call8~~g~ ill R;~;,~~ ~~d:6.S ~~~~1~ Anaheim . 750-2011 <6.5-0J:!LE PRICED Boats, Power 9040 Used open Util. Trlr. $5000/bst ofr. 642·9ti66 Auto1 U1ed ~ if{! J ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·2259 FREE APPRAISAL Ponche 9750 ••••• .'................. ~. 19 ' EV INRUDE 1/0, _.utoS . & We buy used cars &••••••••••••••••••••••• A.MC ·9905 -'iii!i~ti~--~~~:: ovhld,200HP.trlr.~tof·"' er•1ce trucks. Call GROTH ,7A p h 911 Ch •••••••••••••••••••••••.._......._. fer. 846·3727: 213/592·2668 Parb 9400 CHEVROLET for a fr ' orsc e ......... oc. ___ -~.,.. .. _____ ,;..._, ____ , .............. ••••••••••• appraisal brown, tan int. 5 spd. S· * * ' 7 3 H 0 R N E T ~!!!!!!1!11!!!!"~,~~~~~~ 35' Sport Fisher & fish.ing TRUCK CRANE GROTH CHEVROLET inst. Am{Fm 8 trac~ H~tch~ack . silver/blue, •72 Gran Torino Fstbck, 4 eqwp. AM & VHF radios. . 18211 Beach Blvd. stereo. Alloys. 17000 ma. D tux ant. air C."<?Dd., 6 cyl, Spd. Lo mi's. Mint cond. sips 5, $6,800 or trade for (Loraan) 25,000 lb capac, Huntington Beach Un de r war ran l Y. St4 trns, new llres,. R/H, New rubber. $269 5. (smaller boat. ~·7645 Model MC424. ~10,SOO. 847_6087 549.3331 PERFECT! 493-2977. camper te nt, I~~· 2' + 675.8108 aft 6pm Ca 11 J a c k W 1 Ike o. mpg, well mamt.ained. 11-------'----- 4 8 • P a c e m a k e r weekdays, 549-9711. '73 Porsche 914 1.7. Ap· Owner. Asking $2625. Sportsflsher Twin 370 · Wanted lo Buy-1960 lhru pea ranee Group. A/C. p /P 642·4052 Mercury 9950 Cummins diesel. Bail Auto1 for Sale 1962 Jo'alcon Ranchero. Mags. Xlnt cond. Orig. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tank.ship lo shore radio, ••·~· •••••••••••••••••• running or not. Call afler owner. 673·5960 aft 6 PM luick , 9910 '72 Mercury Monterey 4 CB radio. VHF single An!iques/ Gp m . ask for Larry. Mon·i'·ri. ••••••••••••••••••••••• dr, P /s. p/b, a/c. $1500. :.1dc band, auto pilot. Clauics . 9520 908·4971 '74 Appollo. Xlnl cond. All 963·7408 Aulo direction Cinder. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1970 Porsche911 T. extras, new tires. $3000. -,-73-M-O_N_T_E_GQ_._W_A_GO_N_ Water maker & many Very RARE '53 Nash Auto1, lr11ported s_speed.Sterco. 548·0736. -other xtras. Low h'rs. Healey with '59 Cad ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUSTSELL!675-4456 ----------• Pricedtosellnow.Air Sips 8. Manl Cond. Orig. e n g ine. Make ofrer . IMW 9712 T . . ed 1 . Cadillac 9915 Ama/IFlemxtrst35ereo, 0 W · 11 s Ac 575 0970 k f u ·11 72, 911 . 1n1ecl • o ma. 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w? r • · · •as or \>1 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• spd., btack on black, bestorrer. 552·3728. 714·328·8555 '6l Classic T·Bird. Xlnt ORA.,.GE COUNTY'S stereo/Cm. nu XWX CADILLAC 14 ' SKI HOAT. 75 HP cond. OLDEST ~ti ch . conv'd 75 t ail Over 70 to choose Crom. Must•g 9952 t:vanrude Trailer Cov-Cal1536-982laft2pm. & lights. Im mac. $7200, From $1995. GMAC ••••••••••••••••••••••• e r Misc xtras $750, • 828·1438 aft 6 Financin asin '74 Mus tang JI V6, loaded. 640-4161 Recreatio11al Roll R 9756 ~ C • ,. $3950. J}ays 833·2400 ·Vehicles 953'0 Sales·Service·Leasing 1 oyce hwwr1• 1-X489, Eves 979-2966, Ken. ALLG LASS Pacemaker ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1 ...... llMi • , 25 ' 210HP Chry Many '73 Chevy Cheyenne ~4 T. Roy Carver, Inc. #1 DEALER IM U.S.A. C:.... .._ MO flll• 68 Mustang, power str. xlra:. $9695/bst ofr. p Up w /shell + •73 Rolls ~oyce BMW ~ ROY · Auto.58,000mi,xlntcond 644-6041 Vacationcer 20' Cully self 234 E.17lhSl. CARVER B/offer675·83~0 cont 'd trlr w/complete _£osta Mesa 546-4444 '66 CAD Convt, white. Ex 13' Whaler type boat, 40 hookup including sway ROUS-ROYCE con~. i cs 1 de/out. '67·6 CYL •. 3 spd, n~w HP Jqhnson, elcc start. bar, a tcond both units. 23Af.17thSt. Completely r estored. brakes, great on gas, fine $600 497·2940/ 675-8820 Both top cond $6800. COSTA MESA Leaving for Hawaii. $995. cond. $825. 675-6889 I• r • • W~dang Gown. sz 5-7, hkl' watts. 4·12" ~peake~. 6 oew. $100. lnsh Seller mo. old $300. Gary Puppy. 4 mo·~. lrame<l. 673·1004 ______ _ ~. 545·4027 Office Fu"'iture & l\e~~n B flat trumpet. Equipment 8085 ~ 1l • IAY IOAT * 548·6567 atl 6Pm CLOSE~=s 545·2094 '74MUSTANG11 hardtop, & I Sl & llOAOWAY A c p s p B 4 pd \I This 25' Classic launch is 4 Wheel Drins 9550 '73 ELDORADO I • I · I • ·S • one or the original Shorel ••••••••••••••••••••••• SANTA ANA Saab 9760 . COMVERTIILE saddle bronze, vinyl top, lioats used m Avalon 1973 Hl :V.Ton4 x 4,lruck. 835·3171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Luxury . Only 24 .000 styled wheels & more. Crom 1938 Lo 1970 $5,000. P /s P /b auto vu + THEUlTIMATEOf11v1NGMACtilNE 73 Saab EMS. Air cond. Im mac. $2950/offer. ,{{raft l ·channcl radio ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ontrol outfit. Complete Exe svl chrs $15/35. secy $1<l0. Gt:: ste reo $50. chrs $6/24. desks. dflg 'f5fl.-0817 stools /dks. exl· dks. · • P1erce·H67 W 19th, CM. 5' Gold Velvet IO\'e!>cat 645·741 l I>Yna·Gym exerciser 2 -------1 $Jar. 12 cu.' Philco refn. Good Office Furn.al.Ure :? .. 9 a m wet: k day s rorsale. -~-7530 714·631·llll For a1t Ad ift W01ntn's Worid • Cal Sue 642-5678, Ext. 330 .. . .. . •· .. Jn a Social Whirl • # -, \.' . . '·-. 4 .... •I SIZES 9240 1.19 L, 1ff M;,_..11fM~- ~NAPPY J<NOT RI 111 .. to11. Chen eenm• ahap<1 1•10~1· lo I hi' .... ·11l1L above a whlrllni; •kin . Sf>w thl• f~111lnhw. <J•ll«blfl.ll dr"u In r1ttW, )• 111ry, Print rd f';ot I•·• n ~~lo : .. H. M•••t"I' S&a,. .. ", 10, 1 ~ It lfi -18. 8l&tt u 11111•1 ~., l<tkt'- :: 1ard1 f~ In• h r~ho 11· fi<ond ,, 00 IOf' rw( h l>"lll'M J\c:ld :!::i.ccnl• tor nfh p11ll•rn ff/f rol'lt class motl •nd apei-1~1 handlln•. nlhf'rW•AI' third I <'Ins ck-hvl"ry ••II '"kf' thrH , -'•or'mor' S«<nd tu Man'n 1 I Man.II\. 442. llle 011ly Pilot. P•flf'l'ft De1M • m West IM.h St.. tie• Y«>rk N V 10011 "'1m f'IAMP.. AOOPP~'-" 7.IP, SIZfi •M ~Tvu; NUMO~!N ONr: f'IH:Y. PATI'~-:ANohour rtlOt~loM'nd (or,Ol'W' lrtt PJll C...-n ln•ldt NfW • f'RIN<: f.U MMF.R PATTl'!ICl'I i 11 L.f".ATAL00.100..cvln.11llt1ttt ,;_ ft'ff pMlf't'll coupon &net 1)c' • -S~ • KNrf 1Jootc •IUI ~ ...... ~1'4'1'11 _SI ZS • -fMUllll'a.-.-~• f l OU ii ,.• .,_.M~wtn1 I~ $1 UO ' Easy Shell-Stitch! TOM on •hi r, 111c ... 1 tr luni:ll' •ha1' I tor d111·Y"~u1un w•·nr. !<ha"I• ••• 111 hlonable """·· l'oJ!Ulnr •h••I •lll<'h r rl'ult• lt!11•I)' 0\0'11111 d<'~li;ll I IOl'H"I 1111 •·n~y "'~"I or l.1111110~ \\Ot"'''tt lu ''O•· rt1Jur l'tHktll 71(•7 nnr •It•· IH' nil. ~nd SI 00 lor l'll<'h pattern. Add 25' llW' Uth (llllll'rn for lint <'In s miul ~"'' ~1~ci11I handlln1t. St'nd to i\llrt- Rrnc-1b, IO:i. lht" O•lly Pilot, NC'l'dll.'fr11ft l>l'p4 • Al\s HU. Old C'hrlsu s1.,1um. ew Votk, N V. 10011 Print N•mt'. Adllrl'•ll, Zip, PaltM'n Numbu sa~I' dnllars ! C'n•le bfo.ulrful lhoftA~ ~(Of' Nrw 1m Nttdlttr•I\ <'•••l<lf' 3 fffoslAM prifttt'd Im• . . 'W Nfw ' l"rh)' f'olty Quilts SI 00 Ntw1 Ripple C'rothrl SI to ~ + Knit Hook ...... 51 2$ Nttdlfl!O'nl Roni< ..• SI tit rlowtt <'rochfl ~ • SI 00 llalrpln Cri>thtt 8oolt .. 51 00 lnet•nt C'mt"hM lln<lk SI 00 IMC•llt Macr•mt lllM* $1 00 lns1a111 Monty hoc* ... al 00 C'omplft•<:•n Rodi SI t» Complfte M1111-114 • SI 00 1: rrul' AlahaN 112 ..... 1H Uooll ofl8 Qu1llJ1 •1 lt1' MuU\lm Quill 8oola 12 . !If 1$ Quoth IM Ttldar '3 .. "1 8ooli or UI Jlfh .. UIC• • .. ::.ti I . I if ~) i l ~ FANTASTIC BARGAINS PANTS, BLOUSES, SHORTS, TOPS, PANT SUITS, DRESSES $2 I $4, $5 & $10 Fashion Boutique · ~33 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa o males. Full leather in· 833 1918 Ph Ball Barry, days; cam'perwi boot.548·4970. Stereo. Ex. cond. $330. te rior,allpower,Cactory •--·-------- 558·1000 / naghts675-7160 '75 BM~2 Possible trade645-8736 air conditioning, till '66 Mustang,6 cyl. '44 D 0 D G E o/.t lo n h I XI d 38 ·LAG UNA lwan diesel. Weapons carrier Winch 3000 Miles· S6200 Toyota 9765 w ee , AM /FM stereo, nt con . Low miles. mint cond Radar Cully metal top & doors ~.375: Call 642·1475. ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc. Couldn't be cleaner. $690. 496-6450. I p l pt ~ TOYOTAS (741KKY) • :1~~~fl e c v Y 557·0283 Dat...,. 9720 SALE PRICED Okls..obtle 9955 ---Trucks 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand Mew '14s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Boats, Sail 9060 .......... ............. WILL BUY YOUR OHL y IO LEFT .....,, ca•DC Sales and Service ••••••••••••••••••••••• DATSUN. TOYOTA ~ OLDSMOllLE 22· Herre.Shorr Amencan TOYOTA SA[E OR VOLKSWA-0£-N Also L4 Demos _HtO .._ ....., -GMC-'AUC:KS ~a,::le gaff rigged with PAID FOR OR NOT. at c..t9 Me9 MO HOHDACARS teak option al dealers N '74 Pi k WILL PAY T 0 P " TREMENDOUS cost/reduced !>16-7172. ew c UDS DOLLAR. CALL KENT SAVINGS '70 SEDAM U11lvenlty Olck ---STILL AVAILAW ALLEN, 540·0442 Example DE VILLE 2850 HarborBlvd. CLASSIC plus , '74 Corolla Wagon Vi'ny l top, cloth and Cost.a Mesa 540-9640 21 Sailing Dory w/sails HUGE 72 240 Z. Am/Fm radio. Auto .• radio, bumper & trailer. 778·1448. STOCK OF Air Mags. Radials. l guards. (6871) leather interior, full 1970 CUTLASS, new paint, 75'1 own~r. $4250. 493·7946. ~w~r. fact?rY air co~dl· trans & brks. XI cond. P28 Mahg. Sloop. excep-BuyorLeaseHOW! <2997 taonang, tall steering $1595.833-0730;640-6763 t1onally clean. Must sell 1973 240 Z. 4 spd. Air. .f wheel, etc. Looks and ---------- $7800 farm P vt Ply. I n.,,. .. t,.,n:. Am/Fm stereo W / tape. f\~,. .. LA1n:1 runsgre~t. <801AKK) '72 Olds 98 Luxury Cpe. 213/439-4501 aft4 PM. (f '-'11' UIJ\0 New tires & Koru shocks. (f '-'11' UUW 195 Orig. pvt owner. Like LUDERS 26' Sloop. active ~ $4650. 830·0174. ~ ..........., new. V-top, air, cruise, P- Racing Class Comp. ~ TOYOTA '74 B210, 4 dr. 4 spd. low ~ TOYOT.A ......... C•dll•c seats, FM stereo, nu rac'g. gear ancl'g. Jib mileage, xlnl cond. 2'Mlliiahr..... tires, 44.ooo mi's. $3200 • furl'g, spinnaker, 0 /B. 1966 Harbor.CM 646 9303 492·2195 1966 Horbor. CM 646 9303 c..t.a ... 540 91eo _64_5·_5_77_7_· _____ _ Int t:omp. rblt. new '67 FORD Cab.forward 1971 Dats un Station '72 Toyota. air, auto, PB. ---·73 Cutlass Supreme. Magh. ~.200. PPb/5·0743 Pickup, 43000 mi, A-1, Wagon. Very good conda-good cond. $1895. aft 5 '66 Cad. Loaded. Priced to sell. Lehman 12 trailer 2 sails Step bumper, lock boxes. lion. good gas mileage. PM & wknds 846-3915 Good condition SSOO. 213 /424-0348. (1 New ) Xlnt (~d. $700 646-2022 or 548·7482 Good paint & interior. . 552·00'J3. Phtto 9957 or trade ·for Laser . ·73 RancheroSquire. Pis.I $1400. Call ufter 7 pm. 7W1 Corolla deluxe Sta. Cantaro 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 545 0932 042·9338 a g .• auto. Clean. $1475. '74 p · Sq . W · · P t b. A /C. 20.00-0 m i. 556.1828. ••••••••••••••••••••••• into wre agon . F 1 N 1 s H M y $3450. Aft 5, 673·6214. '68 Dats un 510 Sedan. 28 '68 Camaro A/l, p/s, p/b. Auto. trans. 5500 mi. THIMARAN-30' Piver .60 Ch :y. . k MPG Good Isl car . Volkswagen 9770 a m /fm racl & air. Wide $3395. 642-4335 nimble, sips 6. 3 hulls + with ·~~ r;bl~e~.c ~ Reliable $500. 831·2897. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires & whls. 642·1282 1972 Pinto Runabout. ptai:is. needs g lass, Or bestoffer846-1810 690ATSUNWAGON '7EORANGE $1750. ca bin. & mast. $7-00 NEEDS WORK$.550 SUPERBEETLE Chevrolet 9920 494·9832. 636-6411 Dennis. Vans 9570 • • 673.5825 • * Call 839-3444 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• COHMB.L 72 Runabout, $1575 or of· Boats, Slips/ 1 9 7 J Dod ge van Fiat 9725 REPAIRS-SERVICE fer. Bright lime, clean, Docks 9070 Sportsman Mic helin ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exchange&Rebw'lds CHEVROLET am /fm, orig. Ownr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES & SERVICE 675-5233. SLIPS N rt Be h lires. Loaded. 24,000 mi. ORANGE COUNTY'S BROOKLYN BUG CO. ----------cwpo ac $3800. 673·7055 eves. ._.EWEST & 1 "'RGEST Estimates 548·9141 2828 Harbor llvd. Ith.mouth 9960 Saal or Power 673·3301 " -COSTA MESA '•r 673·5253 645· IMMEDIATE '70 BUG , runs xlnt-Gd 546 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thames "dbl. door panel" DELIVERY cond. Mus t sell. $1175. • loats, StorCIC)e 9090 Ready for Hot Rod Conv. All Models &Colors I Ask for Sue. 963-4173 66 Chevelle. SS. 396. 375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call after 10 am. 548·9698 • • hp. 4 speed. Balanced & Boat Storage-daily-D1ckMlllerMotors VW '72 Bu s. nu blue-printed eng. Many w eekly monlhty .'73 Chevy Camper con·morsn tires/brakes, body/en.d extras. Best orter! Secunty·24 hr launching· version. $3800 or trade. ~ xlnt, s t e reo, semi· 548-8538 ramp. Newport Dunes. 645-8379 caraper. $3100. or bslofr.1---------- 1131 Back Bay. 644-0510 VANE R • S D 1 120 ~.Warner 494·8301 Chry1ler 9925 Tr' rt......: ream . al!;;o Main ••••••••••••••••••••••• Clltlpo unon Complete custom work. S· . · ,. . . '63 VW Sq areback nds ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1800. PH : aft 6 :30, anta J\na ;x,7·2132 u • . Chrysler Station Wagon work. Best offer. 751-6559 'til9. Town & Country 9 C:rs. S•/ 9l lO 495·0344. '73 850 Spider, AM /FM or aft. 6, 646·6300 Pass. Rack. A.ir. F /pwr. '7JDodgeVa'n.Deluxe a·n· radio,2.JOOOnu,gdcond. '65 VWBug Like new . Priv.Ptv. ••••• • •••• • • ••••••••••• ~c.1"' /best off c:Ao 2543 ., ATW Cltrvst.r~aoutlt Oped Oaily &-· n. 'til 10 PM 2929 Harbor Blvd., CosLaMesa 546-1934 '68 PLY 4 Dr. lo miles. air, ~lean. $950. 5411-7482 or 1;46-2022 Tentcamper.sleeps5. Ice ter. Xlnt cond. $37~. ~ ~. er........ Goodcond.,newlires. _642 __ ·_2060 __ . _____ _ box. stove & sink. $275. 557-5674. 749 Olympic 1973 AAT $650. 673-7425 CCNMt 9927 '70 Duster V-8, mags, ** r AO ,<H<:C Ave. Costa Mesa. stick. Needs paint. $1200. ....., '""" '74 VW Bus. Orange, air ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 644-5061. END • Custom Ford Van Unique 124 Sport Coupe cond, radio, tinted wit\· '64 COMET Gd. cond. ~Cl\ PCMttlac WEEK . ER 81h'. Stv, MUSTSEE LOADED Mi tC d 64°8202 ~ k 1 n on <r dows. 5yr. warranty. or beat offer. 99'5 0 v e n • J a c s • e e c · Info Gary 67S·00701·7PM 9800 mi. 551-3270 645·5981 waterpump. X1nt cond. FIAT ·m $850. 675·4623 --. 1973 F..qrd Super 200. Can needs body work Motorcycles/ be used for construction . $260. • 536-5804 Scooters 9150 purposes or convert. Jp Howda 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s urfer. Call 67!>-6646. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti • •••••••••••••••••••••• '70 Bonn. Conv, Loaded. New tires. all elec:tri,c. Good cond 523-o300 Tony '67 GTO. Xlnt cond. Air. 4 spd. 2dr. bdtop. .. $975. *. 586-4S19 '68 OTO. Nu pnt/vyJ top, a /c, t ape dk w /FM. Chrom e whls. Turbo· hydro tran•. $1000. PP. 833·'1362 67 Tempest S.Cari Wgn ~ ~ .... v..-9974 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 VEGA Sta. Wan. Ora nae w /black lnt. Kuu g reat. $1795. 67$.-6866 '71 VEGA Hatchback, 4 11pd, radials, xlnl cond. $1200. or best oiler. 545-7645 , \. ~ c .. . . 1 ··--····· ........ ·--·~· . Today's a .. i.,*. ' N.Y.Stoek8 • I vot. 68, NO. 154, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T UESDAY, JUNE 3, 1975 TEN. CENTS. I Coastal Developfilent Drive Launched . ByDOUGLASFRITZSCllE ot ... 0.11~ ...... _,. The Irvine Company opened its t'ampalgn lo get approval for de· velopment of its 10,eoo coastal. acres Monday with an all-day presentation :ind tour of the area for county planning com- missioners. The planning commission is the first major hurdle that must be cleared in a series of ap- Traffic Routing Studied The Laguna Beach City Coun- cil will took at a circulation plan Wednesday that calls for routing traffic generated in the southern portion Irvine Company's pro· posed coastal development through Northern Laguna. Michael Gallant, acting city planner, said the city probably will have l-0 shoulder some of the tralfic burden if it Wishes to an- nex a portion of the coastal de· velopment. Previously, the council had re· viewed plans that showed no traf- fic tie-in to Laguna Beach. Gallant said there appears to be four places where a road con· necting the coastal development with Laguna Beach could be built. They include the upper end of Aster Street, Boat Canyon, Dartmoor Place and near Irvine Cove. . Gallant said the Irvine Com· pany wants to place about 10,000 persons in the southern portion of the coastal development behind Northern Laguna. Council members will consider the new plans when they meet at 4 : 30 p.m. in City Hall. , The road tributary to north Laguna would be among several roads serving t he entire S0,000 population development. Other roads have been pro- posed that would drop down toward the coast from the Jnland portion of the development, but would not intersect with Pacific Coast Highway. Rather, t hey would tie in with roads in Irvine. This would reduce the amount of traffic on the Coast Highway and, therefore, in Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. The Coastal circulation plan is among several traffic and park· (Wlg matters that will be taken up Dy the council. Also to be considered is a re· (8ee TRAFFIC, Page A2) :dare Jewelry, Coins Stolen In Clemente Rare coins and expensive jewelry valued ht more than $7,800 was stolen Monday from the home of San Clemente busi- nessman Milton Derman. Derman, owner of the Hobby, Arts and Crafts Shop, told police he returned home at 6:30 p.m. and discovered that the re · sidence at 4023 Calle Mayo had been ransacked. Items taken included valuable silver dollars and other old coins, and turquoise, s ilver, ivory and diamond jewelry. said Arden Saunders, San Clemente Police detectives commander. Saunders said the burglars gained entry to the home by re· moving louvers from a bedroom windo w . Once inside, they systematically rifled drawers and other storage areas. Laguna Paper Moves Office The.News-Post, a semi·weekly n ewspaper established in Laguna Beach in 1915, has moved from the Art Colony to a business park in Laguna Hills near El Toro. The newspaper's publisher , Vernon Spltaleri cited needs for additional space as the reason for &.he relocation. Departments of ecUtotial, circulation, advertis· log and production are cen· tralize d in the ne w lensed laclllties, although printing ls done off alto. Tho newspape r was founded as the South Coast News ln 1915, and meraed with a ser ies or La,una Beach pcriodl~als end· int wllb the Laguna Beach Post in 1987. provals needed before the com· P8.Ql' can develop lbe land in the unincorporated area between Irvine, Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The company hopes to get ap· proval for land use plan changes from the planning commission. late this sum mer , prior to a coun· ty general plan amendment to be considered by county sOpervisors in November. Before taking plans to the plan· ning commission. company plan· ner Larry Moore told the group, another round of presentations will be made to city councils of Irvine, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The company also plans a pre· sentat1on or a •'refined plan" later this month to the members of 22 private and public organiza- tions who make up'TICMAP, an ·acronym for the Irvine Company Multi-Agency Planning Pro- gram. The TICMAP members worked with company planners through a year of land use plan· ning for what has been called the Irvine Company's most valuable parcel of la nd. Little has cha nged in the plans first unve ile d by the company last October. However, final plans will call for develepment or a maximum of 40 percent of the area, with the remainder to stay as open space, Moore said. Additionally, population pro· jections in the refined plan a re from 30,000 to 50,000 residents , down from a projection oJ.80,000 when plans for the area were first conside red. ··we've got to quit doing plans,'' Moore quipped. "If we don't, tb.e popul~tion is going down to zero." The large amount of open space, 1,345 acres of which is de- signated as a st ate park, poses problems of its own. .. The Irvine Company is not in. the open space maintenance business," said Moore, "so some public agency or combination of public agencies will have to ac· <See JR VINE: Page A.2) Clemente chitect . LONG CAREER ENQS Ozzie Nelson, 69 Television Star Ozzie Nelson Dies LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ozzie Nelson, 69, whose wholesome "Adventures of Ozzie and Har· · riet" on television and radio · amused a generation of Americans, died today. Harriet, his wife and partner, was at his bedside. He bad undergone surgery for · cancer of the liver eight months ago. He died in his Hollywood home. ''Ozzie knew he was going to· go, a n d he viewed it philosophically,'' a family friend s aid. "He was working on another book until the end.'' The Nelsons lived principally at their residence at 16 Lagunita; a private oceanfront community south of Laguna Beach. He had been moved lo his Hollywood home to be closer to his doctor, a family spokesman· said today. . , An athletic 170 pounds most of his adult life, Nelson had thinned to 130 but continued to visit his of- fice until e ight weeks ago. ''The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet" set records for longevi- ty, beginning in 1944 on radio and then jumping to television in 1952, where it r an 14 years. The Nelsons' sons, Ricky and David, grew up on the show, and after they married, their wives joined the cast. On the series Nelson was the sunshiny, sometimes bemused father and h us band. Harriet was a warm-voiced beauty who mar- rie'ti Nelson in 1935. At first their sons, David and Ricky. were portrayed by child actors. Then on Fe b. 20, l949, the Nelson sons joined the show. The television show went off the air in 1966. "It was getting pretty diffused because of the way the family had grown," Oz- zie said. "We had Ricky and Kris (his wife) going in one direction, David and June in another, and then there was Harriet and me, the other posse. It was getting hard to hoid everything together. Riek, now 35, went into singing· and continued acting while <See NELSON, Pa1te A2> Raps Bank's Security 'Grade A.' A security expert called as the first witness for the defense testified today in Orange County Superior Court that the Monarch Bay Un ited California Bank had a "grade A " system in o peration w.h e n it was burglarized three years ago of $3.3 million in securities, cash and jewelry. Frank J oseph Meiners, a security s pecialist with Un· derwriters Laboratory-a safety organization created by America 's Ins uran ce Com- panies-challenged a statement earlier in the trial that a sophisticated "line security" System was availa ble to the bank March 10, 1972. . Meiners said the statement by a secority expert called by the plaintiffs was inaccurate. The system did not become available to Southern· California banks un· til after the Monarch Bay burg,Jary. It is alleged by 66 former patrons who seek nearly $50 million in damages from the bank, the Oreo Alarm Copmpany and the Diebold Safety Corpora· tion that negligence led to the looting of 450 s afety depos it boxes. Safety systems at the bank <See BANK. Page A2) · Two Girls S e arched by Bogus Agent Huntington Beach police today were searching for a man who allegedly impersonated a Coast Guard inves ti gator and physically searched two 15-year· old girls. Police said the m a n ap· proached the girls at 11th Street and Walnut A venue in downtown Huntington Beach, fl ashed an identification card with "Coast Guard" printied on it, and said he was checking the area for heroin use. He then allegedly took the girls to their home, forced them t o di sro b e and put on nightgowns, while ·he searched their bodies for heroin needle marks. He was described as 35 to 40 years old, five feet, 10 inches tall, husky with dark, graying hair. Police said be is wanted on charges of impersonating a law officer and child annoyance. Hitchhiker Flees Review Board Maki11g Tracks A San Cle mente beachgoer plods along the Atchison. Topeka a nd Santa Fe tracks between the city's T Street Beach ancJ the municipal pier. The coastal routing of the ra\lroad line has caused difficulties over the years fo r the city now underta king a redevelopment project for the pier. its bc lO\\ -track entrance and the surrounding bowl area. • Mixed Boy, Girl PE Class Decreed WASHI NGTON CU P[} -Gym Classes in most schools and col· leges in the United States must be integrated lo foclude both boys and girls, except for bodily contact spor ts . the administra· lion announced today. Under the rules announced by the Depa rlm c nt of Health, Education and Welfa r e, any school receiving federal funds must de monstrate it is ''moving as expeditious ly as possible within the prescribed time frame toward eliminating sepa r a te physical education classes." The rules were prepared under Tille lX of the Educ:ition Amend· ments of 1972 which bars dis- crimination by sex in federally financed s chool programs. ··While generally prohibiting sex segregated physical educa- tion classes." II EW !>aid. "the final regulations do allow separa· tion by sex in physical educatio11 classes du\"i ng competition in wrestling, boxing, basketball, Cootball a nd other sports involv· ingbodilycontact.'' During the period schools arc making the .. necessary aQ,Just· ments" for integrate d gym classes, HE W said, they "must insure that physical education classes and activities which are separate are comparable for members of each sex." Interest Conflict Charged A San Clem ente building de· signer has launched a blistering attack on the city's Architectural Review Board charging mem- bers with conflict of interest and callin g for r e moval of one member. Eric Boucher 111 a letter to the dly council sharply criticized the six-month old pa_nd and asked the council to curtail its powers, consic!er his charges of conflict or intc·est and fire member Marion Moon from t he board. Boucher cites continual frustrati911s of working with the. citizen panel made up of fo ur re· g is tered architects. two landscape architects and Mrs. Moon, who has been active in city conservation e fforts. Boucher ch<1.r ges that two ot the board members are local architects with whom he is in direct competition. .. One has spoken in opposition to several o-E my projects in the past. 1 can prove that l have taken a good deal of business from him. "One (is) a youn g architect who has been licensed only s ince ·October 1973 ... He sougbt employment with me several months back a nd l did not hire him. He most consistently makes the motion to delay my building designs a nd find much fault in them," Boucher said. Bo ucher sald that he had de· s igned the Sa n Clemente Co m- munity Clubhouse and aided with the lifeguard station ::it ··a frac· lion of the cost or station!> in municipalities to the north of us designed by arc h1tccls." He then n oted that the Architectura l Review Boartl established a poli cy of recom- mending all municipal buildings be designed in the future by only registered architects. "It would appear that the ARB members were trying to protect their interests.·· Boucher said. (An architect must have r~­ ce i ved a co llege degr ee iri architecture. A building designer may have learned the trade by working at it. Both arc registered (See CHARGES, Page A2) Or:·_·a~ :··· We atller Night a nd morning low clouds with some hazy sun· shine inland areas iri the a fte rnoon . Little te m· perature change. Highs from the upper 60s to the mid70s. San Juan Attack Probed The rules do not. however, re· quire that eqval amounts of money be s pent on girls' and boys' athletic programs. At the same lime, HEW said classes on human sexuaJity could be segregated along with social fraternities and sororities, hous· ing., locker rooms, toilets and showers. But it declined to tackle the issue of sex stereotyping in Le)('· tbooks. INSIDE TODAY A survivor of the Gulf· of Merico oil rig mishap recollt tlw tnTOr of pitch black u.~t­ ness under 45 feet of wot tr. See itorv. photo Page A4. Laguna &each police today are probing an assault and attempted rape of a 25·year-old San Juan Capistrano sec retary by a hitchhiker. · The attack on a quiet residen- tial street was cut s hort when the woman bonkc:d her car horn and screamed a ttracting attcntlon of retiTed Or. Wolloce Wickham who lntcrceded. The hltchhllce r fled. The incident took place Friday, but because of an ongoing police lnvestlaatton w as not made public. ~· The secretory. a Laguna resi- dent, said she had stopped after .work at a shopping complex at Th{llia and Glenneyre Streets and while leaving was ap· proached by the hitchhiker. She said while she has never given rides to hitchhikers before, l!ibe did this lime because he only wanted to go a s hort distance up Thalia Stret>t. The hitchhiker kept usklng the woman to drive a 11\tle further until they reached the 700 bloclt of Temple Hills Drive. I There she stopped lo let bim out but he refused. When she began demanding he leave. the hitchhiker exited the car went :iround to lbe driver's side and attempted to pull t he womat1 out. He told her he had a gun and to be quiet. " Thc ,womnn's shouts olcrtcd O'r Wickham who came from his house yclbng. •·what's iOlnR on here." The hitchhiker ned the car and Ulen ran through the yards of . nearby hotnea to w;i.on Street. Where be cli6appearcd from vt~w. "• •·Equal education opportunity for women is the luw of the land, and it will be enforced," Wcin· berger said. oddlng he wanted to implement Title IX quickly •·rather th8n undergo the series of futile confrontations and end· less law suiL,. ·• Acknowled11lng the law was <See CLAS SE , Page At) ·- ., "" •' •• "" M Al aM ... s ,,, .. " ,,. Al' • t ,,. •• • I •• t U ! -, . 12 DAILY ,PILOT L/SC Council To Study Fireirorks San Juan Capistruno city coun - ~ilmen are prepared to defuse ftrcwoa·ks problems Wednesday ni$hl by considering an urgency ol'dinance res tricting the sale of ~ J>Yrotcchnic devices. ~be ordinance. requested by County Fire Chief Carl Downs , wm be placed before <.'OuncillTfen al 7 o'clock whe n they meet in city council chllmbcrs. If adopted, the ordiJvln~ would make it unlawrul to sell fireworks before July 1 or after 10 p.m. on the Fourth of July. Jt also proposes to restrict the sale of fireworks to persons 16 and older a nd then only when a person at least 18 is in a llendanre. The age restr ictions parallel those afready adopted by lhe board of supervisors May20onso- called "safe and sane" fireworks .. Also scheduled for council ac- tion Wednesday is the establish- ment of a public hearing date for the city's proposed home warran- ty program. A part of San Juan's new Land Use Management Code, the war- ranty program would require the sellers of new r esidential units lo insure against fault y workmanship , construction de- f~ls, and faulty materials As presently cnv1s1oned. the warranty period would cover three years -two more than is common practice in the building )J1dustry. Laguna Fire Units Issue Bike License The Laguna Beac h Fire J)epartment is issuing bicycle Jicenses from 9 a .m . until noon Saturdays al a II three fire sta- tsons. Licenses cost SI and are valid for three yea rs . Previously is- sued licenses are valid until Sep- tember 1979. Bicycles that are sold must be report~ lo the city and the buyer must apply for a transfer of the license v.·ithin 10 days. The city should also be advised of any change of address of a bike owner. .. Licensing is the best possible too l lo aid police in recovering stole n bicycles. " Fire Chief Charley Kuhn said. Records are rna.intain ed on each licensed 1'ike. f Fire stations are located at 501 _,..ore~t Avenue. at the cornerof ~gale and G lenneyrc Streets, <and at 2900 Alta La gun a Boulevard. . . ,. ~ : AA UW Slates , ~Installation : The LCJguna Beach chapter of :the American Association of :University Wo m en will install new officers for the 1975-76 year at a brunch meeting at 10 a .m. Saturday at the Crown House Restaurant tn Laguna Niguel. New officers are Katherine Lindeman , pres ident; J ean Brotherton . firs t vice president; ·Marilyn Morgan, second vice president: Mary D~ane, record- ing secretary; Don s Patterson. • corresponding secretary; and , l<idd Stibbs, treasurer. Me mbers hip in the loca l 'branch is open and women may contact Mrs. Morgan , mem- bership chairman, concerning prospective members hp. I• ORANGE COAST L sc DAILY PILOT Tt... 0' t~ (.0.1· t 0~•'1 P1•ot Wtff'l••iutl'I 1~tO"i 1,eN flf OW Nt w I-r•\'t t< OVbfl~ tt OY lhf ()rM"~ V ftlf I I -Jt>f ninfJ (on,p.env \.·( 4111,th rcJ•l'O"' ••"fl> t-ur•1t·"" fJ Mi1fl\011t'r f P\rOUQl't t 'tlM¥' '°' (._fi'\1(1 Ml --~,, .,..o-J,,t ~.en • .,.un11MJltliA [tr .. M"n J QUf\ , .. .,, 'V•ll'°Y lrwtnf'. ~•OtJltWf" V•th 'I oJ"'O '"'1vn.t (V··•'"' ~U1n Ct)'" A \in.Qt" '"'>'~"' •<f'l•f•·..n 1 ~n'''""d ~tuto•v' """~v""·"' ""' pr ,,,t 1p.tl pyt)t .n1nq pl,.nt '' "' llJN ~>f li~y ~•o •\. <..c>'t• M# ,,., C.•lttorn1• •l•lf Robert N' Weed Prf'110f'f\t •f\d P~bhW r Ja<k R. Curley \11tf> Prt\•CW-nt •ncl ~n•r•I MllM"' Thom11s l(('C\/11 Ef'1•tor Thom.,., A M urph1ne M.tn...o•t\Q r ''''°" Char les H. Loos Rl<hard P._Nall A\\•"'1""' ~t\iliO'fW> (tJ+tbt\ Lclqun• Buctt Office ,, .. r.~vrf' St'f'ftt ,._, ........ ,,.,.... p 0 !It• .... t'4~2 Ot~r Offices (6'1• --.. 1:10 "'"' .. y \11 .. 1 ,.. • .,_, .. ., " >Ul "'••00'1 .,,.,.. ••. ., ,...,,.,,~1M fit#-AC n 110\ ~Mh fMvllf'••'d ~ ... _,.,,,.fW, i. V1 , .. ., 1 )'1)1 t ·• P•I At> -.1 At """ ntt?") r ,,. *llY Tetept,one C7t41 M2-4l21 Clan1f1ed Advertising "42-5671 Laquna h•ch All ~JNrtmtnts • T•J!.e!'f.~,!~-,~~b6 49S-0.30 1'.•prr ""' Ill~ 0•-1•9" Cn• I 1'~011\•t•t c..<t"••• •' t Hrt fWIW'\ \ICM';•\ tfly\tr•t'""' •OttOti•I mAUrr o' •O••'''"•m•nt rwi,,..,, "'•'f b• , 0'""'•0 • '"°"' ''"'' .... ,_."'"''o" or f...,l1qf"t<JWMt ~ •110 flH& tt•\lotQ~ P• II •I Chi• ""-••, (..1l1ti•,,ti• \wb\Lrltth~O.,, rtt1~t U OO"'°"'"ttt. "" ...... ~ OQ .......... y ""'""'' -··-·°"' u GI) "*'""' Tuesday. June 3.. 1975 Ford's CaDe Doctor Cita Bad Knee JACKSONVILLE. F1a. <UPI) -A P~1ysicl!in who operated on President Ford's "football knee , whtch may have contributed to bis Call m Salzburg, Austria Sunday, said today he gave Ford a cane in 1972. . Ford was a patient of Or. John LoyeJOY Jr. when Love· joy was a Navy lieutenant commander at Bethesda, Md., Naval Hospital'in 1971·72 and Ford was a congressman. "The President hud done exerc.ises following th~ sur- gery which gave him exceJlent motaon And function ·~the knee but the degree of changes present may have contribut- ed to the fall," Lovejoy said. · . •' 1 took out the cartilage but there was still a lot of damage that couldn't be co~r~cted. ': The Jacksonville phyatc1an said he gave Ford. a red, white and blue walking cane, which Ford used durtng the 1972 Republican convention. Tied to Stocks Scholarship Fund Earnings Reduced A repor:t to be presented to Laguna Beach school trustees tonight s hows that a scholarship trust fund bas fallen victim to the . uncertainties of the s tock · market. Two weeks ago trustees or- dered a detailed examination of the investment portfolio of the late Joseph Thurston, a Laguna Beaeh pionee4r Interest and dividc!nds on the investments each year are awarded in ,;he form of scholarships to d eserving Laguna Beach High School graduates. This year. $6,000 in earnings will be distributed. It was earned on a principal of $147,898. for a re- turn oC s lightly more than foui;. percent, said Business Manager Clyde Lovelady. . The principal a mount mcludes stock holdings purchased at a cost of $140,398, Lovelady said. Today, however, the issues have a sale value of about $87,000, he said. A question school trustees must answer is whether the stocks should be cas hed in and the cash used for other invest- ments that might pr~vide a FromPageAJ BANK ... were bypassed by a team of burglars during a carefully planned three-day operation in which the thieves camped on the roof of the bank as they prepared to enter the building. Members of the team are now serving federal prison terms. Most of the loot taken from the Laguna Niguel bank has since. been recovered by the FBI. Plaintiffs' attorney Arthur Hews closed his case late Mon· day after offering testimony from most of the 66 plaintiffs he represents in the clas~ action filed against the three defen- dants. H is witnesses unanimously agreed that they had been as- sured by the bank through its literature that their valuables would be absolutely sare and ''ere protected from intruders by a burglar proof vault. Most of the witnesses also stal- ed that they would not have used the UCB facilities had they known that they were not insured for loss and that the bank would not make restitution. Several witnesses testified that possessions of great sentimental value ha d been lodged with the bank and that those valuables were irr~pla cea ble. Lawyers for both sides believe their case will go to the jury in Jud ge C l aude M. Owens' courtroom in late June or early July. Rotary Club Auction Set For Saturday Merchandise ranging from trees to hand-made quilts will go on the block Saturday when the Dana Point Rotary Club hosts its annual auction. ,The items. donated by local merchants and the Rotary Anns will be sold beginning at 10~30 a.m . at ttie Captain's Anchorage at 24521 Del Prado. Carrying a retail value of more than $5,000 the collection of sale items includes 4,000 books, handcrafted .. bedspreads, small appliances, restaurant passes and shrubbery. Eight prizes will be given away during drawings held hourly with the lop prize consisting of a n eight-day Hawaiian vacation for two. Admission to the auction is $1 Proceeds from ticket sales and the ~a uction will be used -to establish a scho larship fund for seniors at Dana Hills Hlgh School. In addition lo the auction, ticket holder~ will be entitled to a ham and beans s upper att Richard ff. Dana School at 6 pm. following the end of the auction. higher yield. School trustees also serve as directors of the Thurston Foundation. .. I'm glad I'm not the one who has to make the decision," Lov- elady said. The trust fund currently is ad- m in is t e re d by the Bank of America. At least two trustees openly have questioned whether the bank is administering the fund to the foundation's best ad- vantage. The trust fund was established in 1968 when the Joseph Thurston Foundation, inc .• was dissolved. Other trust funds of $30,000 each were established for the YMCA ,, and the Laguna Beach School of Art. Since 1968, annual interest and dividend earnin gs ranging between $1,400 and $8,000 have been available for scholarships. A total of $39.550 has been dis- tributed among 133 students. Trustees will receive Lov- elady's report at 7:30 p.m. in the Education Center, 550 Blumont St. FronaPage Al NELSON ..• David, now 39, became a television director. After their series ended, the Nelson parents acted in such plays as "Marriage-Go-Round" and '"the Impossible Years." They returned to television in 1972 with a syndicated show, "Ozzie's Girls." Oswald Nelson was born in J ersey City, N.J., on March 20, 1906. Both tiis parents were musical, and Ozzie appeared in amateur theatrical productions when he was 5. At 13 he was the youngest Eagle Scout in America and represented the United States at the first Boy Scout Jamboree in London. -At Rutgers University he was a varsity quarterback for three years, a champion boxer· and captain of the debating team. · In his s pare time he played banjo and sang in a band. · After g raduation Nelson coached football at a Jersey City high school while attending law school. He earned his law degree 1 in 1930, but instead of practicing he formed a dance orchestra which made its debut at Glen Island Casino in New Rochelle, N.Y. Nelson admitted later he sang in an unabas hed imitation of Rudy Vallee -"l got myself a megaphone, lhrned all of Rudy's songs and didn'tobject in the least when someone would call up and ask if I was 'the guy who sang like Rudy Vallee'. The Nelson band toured the country, appearing in dance halls and on radio. In 1932 he hired a Des Moines girl , Harriet Hilliard, as a vocalist. They sang boy.girl duets that became national hits. Funeral services will be held Frida y at Forest Lawn . Hollywood Hills. FroMPageAl CLASSES •..• "indeed far reaching in its sweep" and was impossible to draft in a way "that will please all of the people a ll of the time," Weinberger nonetheless noted t h e rules were modified significantly from u previous draft. For example, the provision al· lowing separate teams ln contact s ports was new. "'This is not a requirement, nor is It a suggestion that colleges can re· fusetoo(fer football, basketball or othercontactsportstomtmbersof each sex separately if there is enough student interest to warrant it, "Weinberger said. "ln all, J think this regulation enhtinces opportunity for women in athJctics, but il will ala, allow schools the nexibUlty they need to ktep competitive 11poru alive and well." He specifically menUoned ten- nis, track, swim mlnt and iott as sport. which must be integrated because they do not Involve bodi- ly contact. Trustees · To View Demands By FREDERICK SCHOl!:MEllL Of 111• O~lly """ S&MI Capistrano Unlried School Dis· trlct trustees have called a s pecial meeti'ng Wednesday . night for a public airing of dif- ferences with district employes over multi-million dollar pay and fringe benefit demands. The meeting was called after teachers charged in a letter that salary negotiations that have been under way for months are • notgettUlg anywhere. Trus tees met in executive (secret) session for more than 30 minutes Mopday night to discuss the letter as scor es or teachers waited outside. GoodaDIU MoW! Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin announced Monday that Israel will cut forces by more than half on Sinai frontline as gesture of When trus tees emerged, Willia m Thompson, board presi- dent, announced that the board would m eet with e mploye represe natatives at 7 :30 p.m. Wednesday at the San Juan ·goodwill toward Egypt. See related story, map on Page A4. E lementary School cafet eria. 31642 El Camino Real, San Juan Capistrano. 1 He said the meeting would be " structured. It will be two hours long. One teacher rep1·esentative should, appear to ''kick things off," Thompson said. Tony Leon, a Dana Hills High School history instructor and president o f the Capistrano L'nified Educators Association. later said the board's decision to call the meeting was a step in the ri~ht direction. 1,.eon said negotiations must be speeded up because the end of school is only two weeks away. He complained that negolia- t ions h ave been hampered because no members of the board are involved in the negotiation process. Instead . the board gives its direction to Sum Chicas, dis- trict business manager, who then meets with the teacher represen- tatives. Leon said teachers want three of the sev~n t rustees to participate directly in negotia- tion sessions. Teachers are de manping 20 percent salary increases, im· proved fringe be nefits and changes in working conditions. The total cost of all requests to the distnct has not been com- puted. Chicas, however. recently said that demands made by elemen- tary school t eachers would cost the district about $8.5 million - largely due to demands for s maller class s izes that would re- quire more ste1ff and new facilities. Thompson said purl of the purpose of the s pecial meeting would be to discuss how the dis- trict could pay for the demands and what priorities teachers at- tached to the requests. Leon told reporters that he believes money can be found in the proposed $19.5 million budget for the upcoming school year to pay for raises. though conced- ing that it is unlikely teachers ·will receive everything they ·want. Chicas. however, slated in his budget m essage to trustees lh<Jl the spending program makes no provisions for salary increases. He said they could be awarded only if cuts are made in other ac- counts. . Leon also said that a survey of teachers s howed their top priori- ty in negotiations is for some type of salary increase. Lower on the priority list are r equest s for s maller class sizes , classroom preparation periods and teacher aides. Frona Page AJ CHARGES by the state. There is a historic animosity between the two.) Boucher char~es Mrs. Moon with behind the scenes moves to block one of his projects, an ocean-front development on land in the city's bowl area, despite her personal assurances that she would not block the project. Mrs. Moon could not be re· ached for comment today. The counc il will consider Boucher's allegations when it meets at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday at city hall. Diver Seized In Newport Money Fraud Newport Beach detectives ar· rested a commercial diver from Corona del Mar Monday. on charges that he stole cash from a middle-aged couple under the pretext of depositing the money in Mexican banks. Offlct·rs booked Carlos Del Valle. 45. of 614 Begonia Av.e.,_on grand thdl charges specifying ball of $5.000 It is alleged that Del Valle did business "llh Mr. and Mrs . William B. Bloodgood of Aptos and during on transaction ac- cepted $2 ,500 ~n ea~h on the pre- text of depositing in a bank that yielded extremely high interest rates. But instead of de positing valid checks. police asserted , Del Vallt? entered two check's which were forged. Those checks allc~edly were used as "evidence of lhe deposit" to show the victims. Navy Bonus Paid LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Tht.: Navy must pay $1.4 million in bonuses to 375 sailors who said they re·enlisted on the unfulfilled promise they would receive the money. The sa ilor s, serving aboard two s hips at Long Beach, each will reaeive an average of $4,100 in re-enlistment bonusc::. under the ruling. Pro• P..,,e A J IRVINE ... qulre aitd mainlaln it." Wlthln a month, said Moore, a speclul committee designed to resolve the Question ot ol)t!n s pa ce m a iJ\tcnance and ewners hip will begin met:tlng. , The land designated as a state park includes a 3.5·milc stretch of beuch and bluffs from Corona del Mar to Laguna Beach Hnu Moro Canyon from tbc coast to the Sun Joaquin Hills ridge. The $7.6 million rand sale ls tied up in a suit filed by ll'vine heiress Joan Irvine Smith, who contends the sale pr·ice is too low. Phms call for retaining the pre- sent route or Pacific Coast Highway and add~ng an _add!: tional "transportation corndor of unspecified dimension along the S.n Joaquin Hills ridge. The company, said Moore, wants to wait for a pending re- vision to the county arterial highways pla n Qefore working out final details of the transporta- tion system. The roads providing access to the area have been a sticky sub- ject with the adjacent cities. A committee of council members from Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and lrvine drafted a loop system of roads aimed at keep- ing traffic from the area off the congested Pacific Coasl Highway. The plan was endorsed by Irvine, but Newport Beach and Laguna Beach suggested further study. The Laguna council will consider the matter again Wed - nesday. Both Laguna and Newpol't have asked the Local Agency Formation Commission for per mission to annex parts of the la nd. But after protests by Ir vin e, where official s sometimes re fer to the land as a ··window to the sea". hearing!\ were put off until next April. Richard Munsell of the county Environmental Management Agency said Newport and· Laguna may kave been hesitant to back the tri-city road plan because it could be a barrier to annexation. To a nnex land, he said, cities mu st be wi lling to provide services. With the loop system, mos t trans portation service would be provide d throug h Irvine, making that a logit'ul jurisdiction to control the area, he said. * * * From Page Al TRAFFIC •.• solution that would raise parkinJ? meter rates near Heisler Park to 20 cents per hour; suggestions for improving downtown traffic flow during the summer season, and a recommendation for mak- ing Mermaid Street a one-way easterly thoroughfare between Glenneyre and Second Streets. The city s taff has. said the lat- ter actions would improve traffic flow from the south end of town to Laguna Canyon Road. Nuclear Arms Race Looming United Press International The possibility of a nuclear a rms race in South America in- tensified Monday, and an ap- p:.irently increased probability of nuclecir proliferation developed in the Middle Ea st. Brazil confirmed Monday it plans to use nuclear technology and equipment from a pending deal with West Germany to set off "peaceful" atomi c ~­ plosions. KNOW THE COST . ' DON 'T BUY CARPETING WITHOUT GETTING A COMPLETE PRICE BEFOREHAND. A PRICE PER YARD IS INADEQUATE. BECAUSE THE YARDAGE CAN BE MISFIGURED OR ERRONEOUS. WE HAVE TALKED TO PEOPLE RECENTLY WHO BOUGHT CARPETING FROM A STORE WHICH DID NOT PRE-MEASURE HOUSES. THE lNSTALLERS WERE ASSIGNED THE JOB OF FIGURING YA RDAGE AND TOTAL COST. UNTIL THE CARPETING WAS CU T UP AND INSTALLED. THE CUSTOMER WAS IN THE DARK. THEN IT WAS TOO LATE! AT. ALDEN'S WE ME)\SURE YOUR HOUSE ANO GI VE YOU AN EXACT COST BEFORE WE WRITE UP A CONTRACT AND INSTALL THE JOB. DON'T BUY IN THE DARK! DEN'S ' ••••••••••••••••• • -installation· custom draper1Bs *•••••• carpe LIC. NO 230412 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646-,838 -6'6·23 55 ) • .. • • • •• i . . . . . . .. .. • .. • .... • .. .. • .a • • T .June3. 1975 DAILY PILOT A P I D los11res FfC Se~khig Ad T uesd ay'• C losfug Prlcee NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Okay on Drugs WASKCNGTON CAP)-Thc Federal Trade Comm1ss1on has proposed rf.tgulations overturning state proh1bit1ons ugumst udveruslng prescr1pt1on drug prices. The FTC t~Umuted t hut compurison shopping for prescription drugs could buve consu m crsovcr$130 m1Uion a year The com '!11ss1on said such ad vertising as r est ricted by \larious laws in 34 states and etrectave1y blocked even in the 16 other states by pharmacists codes of ethics and consumer ignora n ce of wide divergence in prkas for lhe same drugs. FTC CHAIRMAN LEWI S A Engman, \\ho a nnounced his agency's move m a speech to ~ (CONSUMER J American Adverusing Federation, sau;l a survey by the ~orthern California Pharmaceutical Association m San F ranc1sco showed pnces rangmg from $2.50 to $1 1 75 for 100 t&iblcts of ruudin. a ~~h blood pressu1 e re mt:!d)'. A com· m1ss 1on staff study c ed s1m1lar res ults from surveys ' 1n <>th<!I' a1 eu!S. '' lt 1s a curious set of values which says that the con- sumer may be g iven f mfor ma tion a bout d ascret1onary purchases s uc h as deodorant and mouthwash but cannot be given mfor mal1on that wiU help him save money on non- discrehonary purchases such as drugs whic h a doctor has prescribed as essential to his good health," Engman said The FTC proposal would not only make its r egulation 'J h1ch has the force of law, superior to state laws but would ulso lay down gr ound rules for drugstores which choose to advert1se praces Among other thmgs, drug price ads would have lo warn that prices vary widely an d consumers should shop wisely. TUE P RINCI PLE OF PRICE adve rtising 1s endorsed by the Nat~na! A~sociati~ of Cham Drugstores and op- posed by lhe Amen can-Pharmace utfcal .Association, which represents the professionals who fill the prescriptions Carl Roberts, associate gener a l counsel for t he pha1 mdc1sts h ade assoc1auon s aid his orgun1zul1on do~:, not proh1b1t furnish mg consumers with price information on r e- Quest, but "ad ver t1smg is mtended to a nd has the effect of creating a demand " He said even though people cannot buy a prescqph.on without s pec1f1c order from a doctor, the advert1smg "'ould .pul p1·cssurt! on cond1t1ons and lead to drug abuse . Engman said. however, ''I ha ve no r eason lo belie ve that the end result of providing pnce mformation will be a bunch of kids s ingin g, 'I'd hke to buy the world a fix.' You're Just going to hear how much 1t cos ts, •rnd nobody ever got hu1 l bythat '' TllE FTC STA FF STUDY estimated Americans bought S6 79 billion worth of prescription drugs in 1973 The $130 mllhon estimate of what price a dvertasmg would save was made by a college professor on the basis of 1970 sales of nearly $3 b1lhon less FI'C off)C1als said t hat means current suvmgs could be m uch higher. Sugar Costs _Hurting U.S . CaTUly ITUlustries WASHINGTON (UPI) - Soaring sugar prices and the rl!cess10n made 1974 a sour year for the U S candy rn- d us try, t he Co m mer ce Department has announced. Output of confect1ona ry manufacturers dropped 4 per- cent to 3 65 mtlhon pounds. This \\Orks out to a n average 17 6 pounds of s weets con· sumed by each man. wom an :md child last year , 4 percent below a year earlier. Except for a s m all upturn m 1973. candy production has fa llen stead ily since 1969 The eff ccts of m flallon, howevel'. pus hed the vaJue of candy s hipments up 29 per - J(;(; ll11fi11~ cent m 1974 to $2 77 million in 1974 Prices of sugar, coconut m eat, cocoa beans, corn syrup and various kinds of nuts all advanced sharply so that 49 cents of every sales dollar in 1974 represented m- gred1ent costs, compared to Just 38 cents t he year before.· The Comm erce De pa rt- m ent report s uggested that the output decline m ay aJso reflect a change m candy buy- 10g hab it s by the public. '"With t he s lowdown rn population gr owth, this docs not bode well for reaching new output highs," the de- partment said. Bus, Train Fares Up 10%-Quietly WASHINGTON (UPI) - Jo~erstalc bus 1 ines have quietly r.11scd their fares 10 percent . a nd Amtrak has· .whounced ll '"ould raise fal e s on m :Jny o r i t s passenge r trams Jub· 1 fhghe1 1.:0::.ts fo1 fuel. labor :rnd mater1a1s was cited as the: 1 eason fot the tncreases, both by the bus Imes and Am- l1 ak, which ope1 ates most of the country's passenger tf'ams THE JO PERCENT across - the-board increase in in· ll'rstate bus fa res was ap- p1 oved by the Tnlc1 stale Com- merce Comm1ss1on last we(!k and \\l'tll Jnlo effect im- med1all'I~ Ne1thc1 the ICC nor the bus l111es made a ny announce- m~nl of the increase T here ,\\OS no 1mmed1ate explana- llOn of the official silence, <.1ltbouf{h -in confirming the tnl·reasc .i s pokesman for Gl'cyhouod s aid. "It hap- pened 80 raht t haL it was ac· c:omphsh~d beCorc we could t.1noouncc 1t " t An ICC spokesman said the incrensc \\as a llowed pending un mvcst1~tion , which must ~ <'ompleted within stvcn Money's Worth ·uvl!S your money In lhe l>AI LY Pl LOT months The increase could be rolled back 1f the ICC finds 1t unjust1f1ed. A mt rak's passen ger fore increases :.ire concen· trated m the northeast c:or· 11dor 'betwee n Washmgton, Ne\\ York and Rus ton In ad- d1t1on, first class fares only will be raised 10 percent on '>'cstern trams. those ope1 at- ing west or Chicago, St Louis and New Orleans. IN THE BO S TO N · W a s h i n g t o n corridor , Melrohner fares will be in- creased by $1 m couch and $2 in Metroclub, regardJess of the distance t ra velea. T ills means that a Washlngton- Ncw York Metroh ner tnp will cost $23 in coach und $38 m Me tr oc l ub w hil e a Washington-Balt imore coach ticket, for exam ple will nse from $6 to S7. In a ddition. fares on re- gular tra ins wlll n se by 60 cents in coach and $1 m parlor cars and sJeepers. Forty·sax nde commuter - typc tickets between New York and P h1ludclphu1 w ill ns~ 2S percent lo $107, and 10 percent between .Philadelphia and Harr1s burg to $134 Both fores still will be far below the cost of buying 46 in- d1viduoJ tlcJc ets. T ll E INCR E A SES in western train rares will not apply to coach travel or to room chargc.s in sleepers, on· ly to firs t rlass fores . For ln· 5Lancc. a Ch icago-Seattle ft rst clnss ticket which now cos ts $133.50 plus a $35.50 room charge wall cost $147 plus u $35 so room chaq~e. Amtrak swd. • N•w vo•c cu1111> flel~I~ •r• ftlot4 ell u. = et Stec tllCMr\tlt tt Stitt Net ~"l!.!... tl09e O'O A*ltL I ~ II 109 1S • ACC=Fll 1 to t JS 'S -~ """ ., .ao s a11 m .. Miii , 02b ' 1•1 • + v. AOaJCpr s>b • S1 lO\o\ ... ~mt Mllll • 11 J • AOdn trpfl U 14' ~ ...... ,. ... 16b • 11 Wt.+ .. 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His files contain numerous case histories that indicate wives a re much better a ble than husbands to deal with the death or departure of a spouse. TAKES 72 d ifferent muscles to s peak one word. AVERAGE teenage lad gets $15.45 worth of presents Crom his girl friend in a year. YOU MIGHT find useful this handy movie guide from Elston Brooks: "If the picture is rated "G ", the hero gets the girl. If it's rated "R". t he villain gets her. If it's rated "X''. everybody gets her. WIUSKERS Q . ''How man y whiskers on the average man'!'' A. About 25,000. They grow 1/IOOlhs of an inch every 24 hours. So if all the growth we re confin ed to one whis ker, s up- posedly it would be 250 inches long. That's a lot of whisker. Doesn't sound right. Q. "HOW FAST is a tattoo needle? How deeply does itjab?" A. Moves up and down 50 times a second. Goes 1 /64th of an in ch into the skin . Q. "QUICK, Louie, was Galileo that scien· list 's first name or last name?" A. Firs t na m e. His last name was Galilei. COPPER Archeologists arc certain that Americans in the year 2,000 B.C. mined copper in northern M 1chigan. They dug about 10,000 pits, built bonfires in them, poured cold water over the fires to s plit the rocks, then pounded out the copper with ston4l hammers. Nobody knows what happened to that copper culture. Evidently it got wiped out about 1,000 B.C. And nobody knows, either, what happened to all that copper. Most m ysterious. THAT WORD "school" originally meant "leis ure'' ... ''NICE" originally meant •·stupid " ... AND ''PRETTY" originally meant "tricky." A CONSTRUCTION man of lengthy ex· perience says the Great Pyramid in the Egyp- tian desert would cost Sl.12 billion were it to be built today. DO YOU HAVE any notion of how crowded Ha rlem is? lf the entire population of the United States lived as close together as do the blacks and Puerto Ricans there, the whole citizenry could be housed in just three of New York City's fi ve boroughs. A<ldreu mall lo LM Boyd, PO Box I~, Co$ta ~sa '11b16 Letus saveyc>u onmo•;L co lections. If you're currently collecting on a trust deed, personal note O<' real estate controct- or paying to have one collected -we can help. We simply open o note collection account in your name and toke on all the details. What's the cost to you? Not one penny when you maintain o qualifying minimum bolonce. In fact, you get all the money (with interest), and we do all the wO<'k. Nice. huh? CiLEl\DQLE FEDERAL 54VINc;S 0..elN __ ,.,,._.~ond"'°"--WMh -S?looll(wl"' _..-"',,_,..._~elf...-. "'(d.1...--• Newport Beoch Branch 500 Newp6rt Center Or./6«·5300 • Costa Meso Bronch 2300 Horbor Blvd.f 6'2·'711 Sonto ArWJ Branch: 51 foshoon Square/ $.t 1-331•, fulitttan 8'c:lndl. 320 N. Harbor Bfvd./526·8331 '\ Gov~rnors Snpp.ort Death· Penalty' By United PrHI lnteraaUonal A majority of the na· lion 's governors favor some form of capital punishment, most of them on grounds that it deters crimina ls. A Uaited Press In· ternational poll of the 50 U.S. governors shows 28 favor a death sentence and 17 are against it. The other five governors re- fused to take a stand. Support for capital· punishment among gov- ernors is heaviest in the ' South, where only Gov." JulianM.CarroJlofKen-who favor ca pita l "If it ts a deter.ren~ truel and unus ual or Ray Blanton of Ten· •tucky wbo, H a private. punishment, 16 said lt ii then let'• make it Al(e~ there ls no appeal once nessee, which has passed •attorney, once defended a deterrent. Others said terrent -by maklng it lhe e~ecution has taken a death penally law, op-t~e l~st man executed in it is the will of the peop~e: widespread •. by making place. posts it. his state. \ or th~ death penalty lS• lt public, by insuring that . . Ju.stified by heinous' every execution ls on col·' Thi~y-tbree · statea 0 1'VE ALWAYS been "Capata I punishment. cnme~ : or television where it can• have death penalty laws. o pposed to ca pH al has a strong deterrent . have the m aximum de-The electric chair is punishment and I 'm still value and as lone as it is But Gov. Dan Evans 0C1 terrent efrecl," he said. authorized in 19 of those opposedt.o it,"hesaid. ·saving innocent lives, r Washington, a strong op-I s t a tes a nd the gas· Opinions in each of three other regions -the West, M i dw est and Northeast -broke abOut even. One of the strongest s upporters of' capital am for it," he said. "I ponent of the d eath' OF THE 17 governors ·chamber in nine others .• believe ir there were a penalty, said it should! against the death sen-In D elaware, .New referendum in Kentucky not be used as a retribu-: tence, seven said it is not Hampshire, Ida ho and on the issue of capital tion since he said it is · a deterrent. F ive said Montana death by hang- punishment, It would be agains t the C hristian they have personal· ing is authorized by law. favored by a margin of ethic, and he scoffed at: aversion t o cgpital AndinUtah,adeathsen- 3·tO·l. or better." arguments that capital' punishment. Others said tence could be carried out punis hment i s Gov .. OF THE 28 governors punishment is a deter·· the sta te has no right -to either by hanging or by a rent. 1 take a life, the penalty is firing squad. • ·. THE FOOD. AftD LOTS OF IT. Thrill your taste buds with everything from juicy Big BLASTS FROM THE PAST. Get your ears and eyes ready! We've got old and new records in our juke box, and a collection of some of the funkiest nostalgic col- lect.ables, posters and pictures anywhere! Busters, our famous half-pound hamburgers, to more than generous portions of fried chicken, shrimp or fish. AU at prices that'D thrill your budget There's a children's menu too. With more than they can eat f.or less than you'd expect. .a POPCORft TO GO WITH THENJVIEs. All the fresh-popped PQpcom you can eat . while you catch some of the finest flicks this side of Hollywood. Chaplin. Laurel and Hardy. Abbott and Costello. The Three Stooges. Cartoons for the kids. Shown 1. continuously, every day. r PEANITS! Gf.1 YOUR FRESH ROUTED PEANITS! All you can shell, all day long. They go great before, after or during a meal. Or just sitting around washing them down with your favorite beverage. So if you 'ike peanuts, then skip on over to The Ground Round I THRILLS FOR THE KIDS. Every Sunday, Bingo the Clown takes to the floor and spellbinds the kids. He's got free gifts for them too Combine that with our kid's special menu, and you've got a Sunday they'll never forget LET US EftTERTAllt YOO. And you'll have a real good time with our nightly and 0 weekend live entertainment No cover. No minimum. • Just some of the hottest musicians around Watch for upcoming groups and dates of appearance. I 1. I I I THE m •nv B1'G'PAllD a_.. Bring in this coupon and get one Big Bustet', our famous mruw RWlllWUU1 a. hmf·pound ~.FREE (indudes french fries .I I I I I COSTA~ FUUERTON 8IYd. ~~ BM1. and co6e slaw) when l: buy one at the regular price of ~=t~l ~,;i1~ 542.6671 $2.25.How'sthatfor Stuff?Thlsoffergooduntil ..,. a:===========~~~;·:·------~ I l r e n 5 e s .. l · t a I I . I ,.. l 11 S~dd.lehaek . Today's Closlq N.Y. Stoekil .,. VOL. 68, NO. 154, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES O RANGE COUNTY, CALI FOR NIA T UESDAY, JUNE 3, 1975 "tEN CENTS Religious Big Top Evangelist Bill Lowery has set up this big tent on Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa for nightly revival meetiQ.gs. ·Lowery plans to preach nightly thrOllgh the month o f June. Tent holds 4,000. Lowery and about 140 of his followers moved into Costa Mesa over the weekend after stops in Anaheim and Riverside. , Trustees· View Demands CUSD &ard to Air Employe Differences By FR EDERICK SCH()EMEHL Oft!M Dally Pilot Sllllf Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict trus t ees have called a s pecia l m eeting Wednesday night for a public airing of dif- ferences with district employes over multi-million dollar pay and fringe benefit demands. The meeting was called after teachers charged in a let.ter tbat salary negotiations that have been under way tor months are not gelling anywhere. Trustees met in executive <secret) session for more than 30 minutes Monday night to discuss the letter as scores of teachers waited outside. When trustees emerged, William Thompson, board presi· dent, announced that the board would me e t w ith employe represenatatives at 7:30 p .m . Wednesday a l the San Juan Elementary School cafeteria, 31642 El Camino Real, San Juan Capistrano. He said the meeting would be structured. It will be two hours long. One teacher representative s hould appear to "kick things off," Thompson said. ~ Tony Leon, a Dana Hills High School history instructor and president of the Capistrano Unified Educators Association, later said the board's decision to call the meeting was a step in the right direction. Leon said negotiations must be speeded up because the end of school is only two weeks away. He complained that negotia- tions ha ve been hampered because no members of the board. are involved in the negotiation process. Instead, the board gives its direction to Sam Chicas, dis- trict business manager, who then meets with the teacher represe~· tatives. Leon said teachers want three of the seven trus tees t o participate directly in negotia- tion sessions. Teachers are demanding 20 percent salary increases, im- proved Cringe benefits and changes in working conditions. The total cost or all requests to the district bas not been com- puted. UPI Tefetlllot. Goodwill Jtlo.,e I sra e li Prime Minister Yitzhak R1lbin announced Monday that Israel will' cut forces by more than half on Sinai frontline as gesture of goodwill toward Egypt. See related story, map on Page A4. $15 Million Project Huntington 'Best' Waste Plant Site By GARY GR ANVILLE Of llle Dally l'llot SUH Orange County Road Com- imissioner T ed McCooville said I today that Huntington Beach is \the most likely site for the coun- ty's first privately owned and operated solid waste disposal plant. The proposed $15 mlllion plant would be used to reclaim reusa· ble material from the county'~ trash and lo convert th.al which is not usable to ener gy. Capacity of the plant would be from 1,000 to 2,000 tons or refUse dally, roughl y one third of what county residents discard each day, McConville said. In Orange County government, McCon· vWe'!i Road Department is in charge or dump operations. He went on lo explain that wnte treated at the proposed plant will produce the equivalent ot ono barrel of diesel fUcl from ' each ton ofrefuse. That fuel, Mcconville said, ·would be used to create ·steam ·that can be sold to a major user. · One such user he specified was the Water Factory 21 in Fountain Valley, which would make the : selection oC a Huntington Beach . site becessary. Another possible energy user that Mcconville cited was the · city-owned powe r company in Anaheim . making Anaheim another possible choi~ for the county's first private resource rtt0very plant. Mcconville said refuse de- livered to such a plant by trash haulers would first run throu1h a sorting process that would pick out such material as steel, aluminum and glass Cor rccycl· ma. What remains would then be converted to the low suJphur fuel CSee WASTE, Pap A2) Chicas, however, recently said that demands made by elemen- tary school teachers would cost the district about $8.5 million - large ly due to demands for smaller class sizes that would re· quire m ore staff and n ew facilities. Thompson said part of the purpose of the special meeting would be to discuss how the dis- <See D E MANDS, Page A2J ·; Advisory Unit Will Take Up Scho~l Study Members of the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council (MAC) will begin doing their homework Wednesday on plan· ning for new schools forthe60,000 new residents yet ta arrive in the planned community. A study session.on school plan· ning for Mission Viejo's remain· ing undeveloped acres will be held at 7:30 p._m . Wednesday at Viejo Elementary School, 26782 Via Grande, Mission Viejo. MAC members will meet with representatives of the Capistrano Unified School District. The public is invited. Most development yet to come in Mission Viejo is in the Capistr a no district. That in· eludes l an d south of Oso Parkway, east of Marguerite Parkway, north of Trabuco Road, and south of Los Alisos Boulevard. To date, most Mission Viejo re- side rfts send their children to Saddleback Valley Unified dis· trict schools. But when the planned com- munity is built out, two-thirds of it will be in the Capistrano dis· trict. The eventual population of the completed Mission Viejo is proiected at 90,000. The MAC has been involved in recent controversies on school developm ent, timing, location and capacity, especially regard· ing the over crowded Castille Elementary School, which has accommodated its extra students on an adjoining park site. The MAC also helped influence a decision by CUSD trustees to locate the next elementary school for Missic,n Viejo in the north end ra ther than the south. Jane Seeks Disclosrues LOS ANGELES <UPI> -Ac· tress Jane Fbnda asked a federal judge Monday to m ake public the information on her activities ·compiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Central ·lnte1U1ence Aaency during tbe ·NiJton admlnlatration. . Justice Department lawyers opposed the move on arounds rthat "third parties .. would be U• posed to barassmerit by such re- velations. CoedG Class~ U.S. Orders 'lnte~ation' WASHINGTOtl (U PI}-Gym Classes in most schools and col· leges in the United Slates must · be integrated to include both boys and girls, except for bodily contact sports, the administra- tion announced today. Under the rules announced by the Department of Health, Education and We lfare, any school receiving federal funds must demonstrate it is "moving Ford Ends Trip, Talks With Pope ftom Wire Services VATICAN CITY -President Ford ended a whirlwind eight- hour visit to Italy today and went to the Vatican for t alks with Pope Paul VI. Every postwar U.S. president since Dwight D. Eisenhower has paid a call on the spiritual leader of Roman Catholicism at this city-state across the Tiber Crom centra l Rome. Ford's agend a with Pope Paul includM discussions on the Mid· die East, U.S. food aid, refu gee problems a nd ot h er humanita rian issues, U.S. of· Cicials .said. He departed for the ·u.s. this afternoon. The Vatican visit was the last stop on Ford's week-long Euro- pean tour. In his talks with Italian oCCicia ls he paid tribute to the "extraordinary ties of friendship" between the United States and Italy. Ford met with President Giovanni Leone and gave him the message he has carried lo other E uropean lea ders -that .Was hington is sticking by its Atlantic alliance partners. Italian a-uthorities carried out exceptional security measures. More than 5,000 heavily armed police officers and soldiers wer e posted in the city plus al)other 200 sharpshooters on rooft~ps in the capital. Des pite some fears of de· monstrations by Italian leftists, there was tot a 1 ca 1 m in the city. Ford new by helicopter from Rome's Ciampino airport to the Renaissance presidential palace, where he reviewed an honor g uard of white-uniformed customs police and helmeted and mounted troops. "It is my pleasure to bring to you the greetings and high re- gard of the people of the United St ates for Italy," Ford told Leone. "In a world of rapid and dramatic change, Italian· American friends hip stands out as a symbol of stability and re· solve." At Ciampino Airport, Ford seemed to Ca vor the trick knee that gave way and caused him lo Call in Salzburg two days ago. He <SeeTRIP, Page A2> Ex pert Says Ni guel Bank Was Secure · A security expert called as the firs t witness fo r the defe nse testified today in Orange County Superior Court that the Monarch Bay Unit ed California Bank had a "grade A" system in operation whe n it was burglarized three years ago of $3.3 million in securities, cash and jewelry. Frank J oscph Meiners, a • security specialist with Un· derwriters LabQratory-a safety orga ni zation creat e d by America's l hsuranee Com· panics-challenged a statement earlie r in the trial that a sophisticated •'line security" syste m was available to the bank ·March 10, 1972. Meiners said the statement tr.>' a security expert called• by the plaintiffs was inaccurate. The system did not become available to Southern California banks un- til aher th e Monarch Bay burglary. Jt ls alleged by 66 rormer patronl'-wbo seek nurly $S0 million in damages Crom the bank. the Oreo Alarm Copmpany a~ the Diebold Safety Corpora· t1on that ne1Hgence led to the lo0Un1 of 4SO aarcty deposit bo . Sa!etf systems ot the bank Qtee MNIC. Pa1e AZ> as expeditiously as possible within the prescribed time frame toward eliminating separ ate physical education classes." The rules were prepared under Title IX of the Education Amend· ments of 1972 which bars dis· crimination by sex in federally financed school programs. ''While generally prohibiting sex segregated physical educa· tion classes," HEW said, "the final regulations do allow separa· tion by sex in physical educatiou. classes during competition in. wrestling, boxing, basketball. football and otner sports involv· ingbodilycontact." During the period schools are making the "necessary adJUSl· ments" for integrated gym classes, HEW said, they "must insure that physical education (See CLASSES, Pag~ A2) 2 Nuclear Tests Rock Nevada Site MERCURY, Nev. (AP) -Two underground nuclear tests, each with a minimum destructive force equal to the atomic bomb that devastated Hiroshima at tbe end of World War II. rocked the Nevada desert today. . The weapons-related tests, which were fired 20 minutes apart, each had a yiell:I of between 20,000 and 200,000 tons or TNT, the Energy Research and Uevelopment Ad ministration said. The A-bomb dropped on the Japanese city had a yield of LONG CAREER ENDS Ozzie N elson, 69 ~ 20.000 lons of TNT. Television Star Ozzie Nelson Dies LOt ANGELES (AP) -Ozzie Nelson, 69, whose wholesome "Adventures of Ozzie and Har- riet" on television and radio amu sed a ge n eration o f Americans, died today. Harriet, his wife and partner, was at his bedsid e. He had undergone surgery for . cancer of the liver eight months ago. He died in his Hollywood. . home. "Ozzie knew he was going to go. a nd he viewed it philosophically." a family friend said. "H e was work ing on another book until the end." The Nelsons lived principally at their residence al 16 Lagunita, a private oceanfront community south of Laguna Beach. He had been moved to his Hollywood home to be closer to his doctor. a family spokesman· said today. An athletic 170 pounds most of his adult life, Nelson had thinned to 130 but continued to visit his of· fice until eight weeks ago. ··The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet" set records for longevi· ty, beginning in 1944 on radio and then jumping lo television in 1952, where it ran 14 years. The Nelsons' sons: Ricky and David, gre w up on the show, and after they married, their wives joined the cast. On the series Nelson was the sunshiny, sometimes bemused father and husband. Harriet was a warm-voiced beauty who mar·. ried Nelson in 1935. CSee NELSON, Pa~e A2) Two Girls Searched by Bogus Agent Huntington Beach police today were searching for a man who allegedly impersonated a Coast Guard investigator and physically searched two IS-year. old girls. Police said the man ap· proached the girls at 11th Street and Walnut Avenue in downtown Huntington Beach, flashed an identification card with "Coast Guard'• printed on it, and said he was checking the area for heroin use. He then allegedly took tJ»l , girls to their home, forced them to disrob e and put on nightgowns, while ·he seatthed their bodies for heroin needle marks. • He was described as ~ to 40 years old, five feet, 10 inches tall, husky wlth dark, graying hair. Police said he ls wanted on charges or impersonating a law officer and child unnoyan~ .• Las Vegas police said they had' no immediate reports of shc;>ck waves being felt in the resort city 90 miles south of the Nevada Test Site. The tests were not related and there was no significance that they were conducted on the same day, said ERDA spokesman Dave. Jackson. · "They were separate tests. They just happened both to be scheduled on the same day," he• said. The first test was fired at 7:20 a.m. PDT in the remote Pa hute Mesa area of the huge test site. Code-named "Stilton," the shot was fired at t he bottom of a . 2,4()().foot vertica I shuft. There was no radiation leak. J ackson said. The second shot. ··Mizzen,'' was fi re d al Yucca Flat. 15 miles Crom Pahute Mesa, :.al the bottom of a 2, 100-Coot shaft. No radiation leak was reported in that shot. Viejo Picks Tree, Flmrer The olive tr ee and the Marguerite daisy won "by a landslide" in balloting for the or. ficial tree and Oower of Mission Viejo. Jeanne Crandall, chairman ..>f' the contes t sponsored by Mission Viejo Beautiful Commtllee, said about 100 ballots were turned in at local recreation centers. Other candidates were the Monterey pine, the jacaranda, the sycamore, and the oak trees; and Indian hawthorne, bougain· villea, gazania and Lily Qf the Nile-in the flower catego~y. Jeanne Gagnebin, head of Mis• sion Viejo Beautiful, said an of· .Cicial dedication ceremony will be scheduled soon. Or:.g~~•t 1t'eat ller Night and morning low clouds with some hazy sun- shine inland areas in the afternoon. Little tem- perature c hange. Hfghs. from the upper 60s to the· mid 70s. I NSIDE TODA V A 1urvivor of the Gulf of Mnico oil rig mishap recalls the terror of pitch blo.ck wet· min under 45 feet of wat~. See 1tory, photo P.age A4. f .. . .'\J DAILY PILOT SB .. T~achei-s, Students Honored • Three teachers and two stu- dents of the Saddle back Unified School Dis trict have been honored by the Exchange Club for outstanding performances. A selection committee chose the teachers on the basis of their classr oom performance. One was chosen from each educa- t ional level. Named outst a nding elemen- ta ry school t eacher was Chris Marks, 31, a fi rst , second and third grade teacher at Mission Viejo's Linda Vis ta Sehool. The honor of outstanding in- t ermediate school teache r was bestowed upon 28-year -old Jack Oakes. a car eer educa t ion t eacher at Los Alisos Sehool. Oakes t e a ch es seve nth and e ighth grades. El Toro High School Englis h t eacher Al Desmarais. 36, was given a plaque for his outsland· ing teachin ~ service at the high school level. Also honored at ceremonies re- <:ently a l the Mission Viejo Inn. were s t•vcnth g rade rs Rici\ Robinson and Liz Allott, bolh 12. Robinson , of La Pa z School, a nd Miss Allott, of Los Alisos School, won the top prizes in the Excha nge Club's oratory con- test. The subject was "Crime prevention is Everybody's Bus i- n ess.'' Frbnt Page AJ BANK ••• ' were bypassed by a learn of burglars du rin g a carefully planned three-day operation in which the thieves carnped'on the roof of the ba nk as they prepared to enter the building. Members of the team arc now serving federal prison terms. ·,Most of the loot taken from the Laguna Niguel bank has since been' recover ed by the FBI. Plaintiffs' a ttorney Arthur llews closed h is case late Mon- d ay a fter o ffering testimony from most of the 66 plaintiffs he represents in the <'lass action filed against the three defen- dants. His witnesses unanimously agreed that th~y had been as- s ured by the bank through its literature that their valuables would bt> absolutely safe and were protected from intruders by a burgla r proof vault. Mol>l of the witnesses a lso st.al· ed that they ,would not have used the UC B facili ties ha d they known that they were not insured for loss and that the bank would not make rest itut aor.. ; Several witnesses testified that ppos~essions of g r eat sentimental ' value had been lodged with the ~bank and that those valua bles ~were irreplaceable. • Lawyers for both sid('s believe thei r case will go to the jury in ·J"ud ge C l a ud e l\I . Owens' courtroom in late June or early J uly. :Viejo School . Gets Shrine A '·Freedom Shrine" will be : presented to the ::.tu dents of MIS· • sion Viejo H igh School Wedncs· .day night by the E xchange Club ·o f the Saddlcback Valley. The Freedom Shrine is a n ex· r h ibation of 28 re productions of -h istorical documents spanning ·the 325 yec.1rs of American his· :tory, from the Maynower Com · pact to the World War H s ur- render documents. Dedicat ion cer e monies fo r 'the n ew shrine arc scheduled for 7: JO p.m . ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT T"'" Ot•"-q-c.o .. 1 O..••v P11ot Wilh •""<" l\.cOim· b,.."CllfW>N•·w Pr-... *.. l\puOll ~b'Ythfo0fttn?"" <o •· 1 PlJ01t~ru.._'J Comr>An~ !>"'P<lr•lt l1'1hon\ 4tf! &.~•)l\•.0 Mctnd•Y U'\FOUQh r r1<MY f\Jlf' (mt4 ,,,,. "' Nfwport Bf...ch, Hu"tmqton SP.wh f oun 1 .•. n \/.tflt.., trvtt'I,. !.•ddt~M<ti. V•IJ• y "'nd • •-'lUM ~•<h South c..o.,. A ... nq1~ rt•Qton.I , .. J,111\n 1\ publt\f~ d S4h;rd.tyt., .no ~rfY T rw fl'•"" 1p.1I oubt1\.t\1n4 P'•"' •• •' JOO V\ilt>)I iUY ~ • • t <.o· 1• Mil..,. C•llfortuA 91•16 Robert N . Weed Pr•\10tnt .. "° Put>h....,.,,. r Jack R Curley \lie• Pre\IMnt •NI C,..~r.,1 MotMOtf' Thomas Keevil . ro1tor Thomcls A. M urph ine MaMqin'l(dltM Charles H. l oos ' Richard P. N all A\~\htll'\I M•f\•OinQ [O.tOf' Saddleback Valley Office ?UOI L• p., Ao..cl •I ~'°" 0<"90 f.rtt••'I Other Offices (& t• Mtit\A tJOW.'I O.y$tr,.l'I ,_.. Wl>O't ht .it " U1 Nf'M'IOr1 f\ovl V.t•d Hunhnq-U)f'I f't,..tt n 11tl\ ...,.il<.h Qoutttw ... rd l iltOU"'" f\• uh 11 .. (tifll'W'Wl'lr•~tfft t Telepttone (714) 642·4311 Cl.sslfied Advertlsln9 '42·S671 -.... 001e ~,' v.11 .. , N•r . <1tfflf• Sl1·U10 'rOfn ~ft (h ,...nt• 49S·0630 CepyflOlll "IS O••n9~ C "''' Pv1>•i~hl1>9 <.MnNnt No ,,.w• 00"~· mw '''"M>ft'\ edtt.,.l•t M•ttrf Of •Ov•rU••,,,.nh "•'"'" M•Y ... ,.~odvc•d .,,,...,, • .,.,,., perm1u1e11 01 «ll>Y' IOfll _,..,, ~co•od ''"" H\1-P•• 1 Al C.••" M•\•, ~110.n10, Jult>C•IPflOlllW<M••~• ~ 90monlloly, IW me11 t• 00 rllOfltnov, mlutMy ..,,111,•l>O'I• w 00 -""' Fro•PageAl NELSON •.. At first their sons, David and Ricky, we re portrayed by child actors. Then on Feb. 20, 1949, the Nelson sons j oined ~he show. The television s how went off the air in 1966. "It was getting pretty diffused because of the way the family had grown," Oz- zie said. "We had Ricky and Kris Chis wife) going in one direction, David and June in another, and then there was Harriet and me, the other_ posse. It was getting hard to hold everything togethe r. Rick, now 3~ went into singing and continue d act ing while Da vid , now 39 , became a television director . After their series ended, the Nelson parents acted in s uch plays as ''Marriage-Go-Round" and .. The Impossible Years." They returned to television in · 1972 with a syndicated show, ''Ozzie's Girls ." Oswald Nelson was born in J ersey City, N.J ., Qn March 20, 1906. Both his parents were musical, and Ozzie appeared in a mateur theatrical productions when he was 5. At 13 he was the youngest Eagle Scout in America and re presented the United States al the first Boy Scout Ja mboree in London. Al Rutger s University he was a varsity qua rte r back fo r three years. a cha mpion boxer and captain of the debating team. In his spare time he played banjo and sang in a band. After g r a du a t ion Nelson coached football a l a Jersey City hi gh school while attending law school. He earne d his law degree • in 19JO, but instead of practicing he formed a d a nce orchestra which m ade its debut at Glen island Casino in New RocheJle, N.Y. Nelson admitted later he sang in a n unabas hed imitation of Rudy Vallee --"I got myself a megaphone, le arned all of Rudy's songs and didn 't objcct in the least ,,.·hen someone would call up and ask if I was ·the guy who sang like Rudy Vallee'. T he Nelson band toured the country, a ppearin g in dance halls and on radio. In 1932 he hired a Des Moines girl , Ha r r ie t Hillia rd. as a vocalist. They sang boy-girl duets tha t became national hits. Funeral ser vices will be held Frid ay a t F orest L awn - HollywoodHills . From Page .4 l DEMANDS tri<.'t could pay for the demands and what pr io rities teachers at· tached to the requests. Leon told reporters that he believes m oney ca n be found in the proposed $19.5 million budget for the upcoming school year to pay for r a ises, though conced· ing that it is unlikely teachers ·will r ec eive e verything t hey ·want. Chicas. however. stated in his budget message Lo trustees that the spending progra m makes no provisions for salary increases. He said they could be awarded only if cuts ar e m a de in other ac- counts. Leon a lso said that a survey of teachers showed their top priori· ly in ne,goliations is for some type of salary incr ease. Lower on the priority list are requests for s malle r class s izes, classroom preparation periods and teacher aides. Fro•PageAI . CLASSES ••• classes and activities which a re sepa rate a r e comparable for members of e ach sex." The rules do not.. however, re quire that e qual amounts of money be s pent on girls' and boys' athletic-programs. At the same time, HEW said classes on huma n sexuality could be segregated along with social fTatemiUes and sororiU~. hous· ·ina. locker rooms. toilets and showers. But it de clined to tackle the lss ue of sex stereotyping in tex · tbooks. ' BEST INTERMEDIATE Jack Oakes HIGH SCHOOL LEADER Al Desmarais ORATOR HONORED Rick Robinson, 12 ·s() Hours of Tennis Fro11t~ageAI WASTE ..• Tivo VCI Students Break Maratlwn Record used to produce steam. The r oad commissioner said such a plant would help reduce the cost of trans fe rring the coun- ty's 6,000 tons of trash a day from collectors to county operated dis· posal sites. By HILARY KAYE 01111• Dolly Pilot Sl•ff Things got pre tty wet and wild in Corona del Mar Monday after- noon when two lJC Irvine stu· dents broke the world 's record for long distance te nnis play. Bubbly c hampagne poured over the weary tennis players' heads and good natured cavort- ing in .a nearby swimming pool capped off the marathon effort, which lasted 80 hours and five m inutes. Eric Mann, 23, a nd Eric Larre, 18, both membe rs of the UCI ten· nis t eam , dumped UCf's Sports Informa tio n Director Roy_ Englebrecht into the popl. Then, the two young m en dove in after him. . En g le b rec ht is t he man responsible for setting up t he marathon , w hich lasted from 8 D<illY Piiot Photo by P•lrlck O'Donnell a.m. Friday until 4:05 p.m. Mon· day. The previous record, set Sun· day in Bakers field, was 80 hours. Documentation of the UCI pl a y e r s' -e ffo rts w i ll b e forwar ded to the Guinness Book. of World Records. The marathon netted $800 for the campus athletic scholarship fund. It was don ation from M. J . Brock, builder of the Jasmine Creek development where the marathon took place. Obser vers said the t ennis player s w e r e "exhilar ated " when the match finally came to an end a nd played "very good t ennis" during the last few minutes. They played a total of 1,325 ga m~ but no one kept tac track of w ho won the m ost games. T he player s' routine was one hour on the court and then a 15-minute break. During the breaks they changed socks, shoes and they ate. Over the four days, the two men used 75 pairs of socks and consumed at least 50 5IUarts of Gator ade, in addition to varied amounts of peanut butter , health food candy bars, fruits and tuna fish. About 100 people were on hand when the m arathon ended a nd a ll a pplauded when t he pi.ayers came off the courts. Lar re. a freshman pre·med studenl from Los Alamitos, left J asmine Creek a bout an hour after play h ad stopped. But Mann, a j unior economics and sociology s tude nt r emained seve ral hours to unwind. A straight A s tudent, Mann had1wo final exams today and reportedly studied for the m last week. His main goal today was not answering the questions correct- ly, but trying to slay awake dur- ing theexams. The process would also add years of life to those dump sites by us ing r oughly 70 percent of discarded material either for r e· cyclin~ or the creation of fuel. He Pointed out that 'r oughly JO percent of what finds its way into ·-trash haulers, trucks is not res a· ble in any form. Concrete, dirt and Lree stumps were cited as ex· amples. The road co mmissioner said he will p1·esent fi ve proposals for the construction of the resource r e- cover y pla nt to the Board of Supervisors next week. Part of that presentation will include a wr itten report declar· ing the proposed plant to be of modern design a nd complying wit h environmental Protection Agency r equirements. Recently, County St!pervisor Ralph Diedrich loured such a plant in Ba ltimore, Md. Diedrich said that a contr act with the private operator could be dra wn that would provide the county with the needed protec- tion for the pla nt's operation. in· eluding fix ed fees for dispos ing of the waste . He said pri\'at e oper ators could save the county money and s how a profit through three sour ces of i nco me, sale o f e n e r gy, sa l ~ of r e cla imed materials and pa yment by the . county for the destruction of dis- posable materials. Diedrich s aid Orange County · will eventua lly r equire three to four resource r ecovery plants. From Page Al TENNIS PLAYERS MANN (L1:FT), LARAE SAVOR CHAMPAGNE Marathon Effort In Newport Peach Ends In Hljlnks Nuclear Arms Race looming TRIP. • • descended the Air Force One ramp s lo wly. following Mrs . Ford and holding light to the ban· drail while U.S. Ambassador John Volpe waite d to escort them on the drive into Rome. UC Irvine Senate Favors Air ROTC United Pres!rlnternational The possibility of a nuclear arms race in South America in· tensified Monday, and an ap- parently increased probability of nuclear proliferation developed On the flight from Salzburg, Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss- inger told r eporters Ford's Euro- pean trip yielded rich foreign The UC Irvine faculty senate reversed a reversal of a decision to have Air For ce Reserve Of· ficcr Training offered to CCI stu· dents. In results of a mail ballot re· leased tod ay, 142 faculty mem· bcrs favored the program and 139 wanted it canceled. Last fall the progrnm was ap· proved at a senate meeting with about 40 members in attendance. Su bsequently, another meeting was held at which about 40 mem- bers voted to terminate the pro- gram as soon a s possible. The mail vote, tallying the ballots of 281 members of the 468-membcr or ganization. re· comm e nds that C ha n cellor Daniel Aldrich retain the pro- gram. The R OTC program 1s a cooper ative venture with l!SC in which UCI students would travel to USC for their military training classes. Student opposition to the pro· gram was voiced through an C:Jd hoc "Committee to Stop ROTC at UCJ," which circulated a petition Exchange elub Picks Officers Newly elected ofri cers or the Exc h a n ge Club of the Sad- dleback VaJley will be formally installed June 14 in ceremonies at the Mission Viejo Co untry Cluo. Th e o ffi ce r s arc : Jan Bla n c ha r d , p r esid ent ; Dr. Ri.chard Welte. first vice presa· de nt; George P helps. second vice pres id e nt ; E d P elissier, secr e t a r y, a nd"' Bo b Miller, treasurer. Joinmg the club's board of directors a re Brad Denson, Bob Rrumffe l . Russ Green. Bill Kohler , Don Lasley,· and Tim Stockton. urging a ::,pec1al faculty senate in the Middle Eas t. meeting on tht' matter. Brazil confirmed Monday it Aldrich eould not be reached . plans to use nuclear technology tor comment today. In t he past. and equipment from a pending he ha::. s aid he would follow the deal with West Ger many to set rcrnmmcndation of the faculty off ··pea ceful '' a t o mic ex- · policy divide nds. ..It was an extre mely suc· cessful trip," Kissinger said. "It gave new sense , vitality and direction to NATO. Uncertainty has bee n eliminated. "The talks with Sadat were a new step toward peace.·• senate. plosi<!ns. ~~~~~~~~~~---...:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- KNOW THE COST DON 'T BUY CARPET IN G WITHOUT GETTING COMPLETE PRICE BEFOREHAND. A PRICE PER YARD INADEQUATE. BECAUSE THE YARDAGE CAN MI SFIGURED OR ERRONEOUS. A IS BE WE HAVE TALKED TO PEOPLE RECENTLY WHO BOUGHT CARPETING FROM A STORE WHICH DID NOT PRE-MEASURE HOUSES. THE INSTALLERS WERE ASSIGNED THE JOB OF FIGURING YARDAGE AND TOTAL COST. UNTIL THE CARPETING WAS CU T UP AND INSTALLED. THE CUSTOMER WAS IN THE DARK. THEN IT WAS TOO LATE! AT ALDEN'S WE MEASURE YOUR HOUSE AND GIVE YOU AN EXACT COST BEFORE WE WRITE UP A CONTRACT AND INSTALL THE JOB. DON'T BUY IN THE DARK! ... . DEN'S .. *®rPfi .......... ll • ...,,:iiisiail~tiaii:·custom draperies UC. NO. ll0422 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6 .. 6 ... 838 -6.46·23.5.S I l I I I j \. I 7 t.· • .. Irvine Today's £108 ...... N.Y. Stoektl .. .. ' . .. ., .. ., VO~. 68, NO. 154, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE couNi;-v, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1975 TEN CENT~ Coastal DevelopIDent .Drive Launched ByDOUGLASFRITlSCHE OUMOMIJl"lleellllft The Jrvlne Company openedits c.Pmpaign to get approval for de: velopment of its 10,000 coastaf acres Monday with ao all-day presentation and tour of the area for county planning com· missioners. The planning commission is lhe first major hurdle that must be cleared in a series or ap- provals needed before the com- pany can develop the land in the unincorporated area between Irvine, Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The company hopes to get ap- proval for land use plan changes from the planning· commission. late this summer, prior to a coun- ty general plan amendment to be considered by county sftpervisors in November. Before taking plans to the plan- ning commission, company plan- ner Larry Moore told the group,·• another round or presentations will be made to city council s of Irvine, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The company also plans a pre· sentation or a •·refined plan" later this month to the members of 22 private and public organiza. ti~ns who make up TICMAP, an ·aass U.S. Ortkrs 'Integration'· WASHINGTON (UPI) -Gym Classes in most schools and col· leges in the United States must be integrated to include both boys and girls, except for bodily contact sports, the administra- tion announced today. Under ,the rules announced by the Department or Health, Education and Welfare, a ny school receiving federal funds must demonstrate it is "moving as expeditiously as possible within the prescribed time frame toward eliminating s eparate physical education classes." The rules were prepartJ tc1der Title IX of the Education Amend· ments or1972 wnich bars dis- crimination by sex in federally financed school programs. "While generally prohibiting sex segregated physical educa- tiQn classes," HEW said, "the final regulations do allow separa- tion by sex in phys ical educatio11 classes during competition in wrestling, boxing, basketball, football and other sports involv- i ·.gbodilycontact." During the per1od schools are making th~ ··necessary ad1ust· men ts" for integrated gym classes, HEW said, they "must insure that physical education (See CLASSES, Page A2) Irvine Gets Requests Official Seeks Policy Study by City - The number or groups coming to Irvine with reques ts Cor financing, co-sponsorship and other forms of assistance has mounted sharply over the three years of city hood. · With the constant flow of re- quests, Community Services Director Paul Brady has asked the community services com· 'mission to consider a policy. aimed at handling such requests. The commission will consider the matter at its 7:30 p.m. meet· ing Wednesday at city hall, 4201 Campus Drive. • A main point in the policy will be whether the city will make financial contributions or offer other forms or support to the groups. The list of requests continues to grow, with recent entries includ- ing a UC Irvine student housing cooperative, Little League, Bob· bie Sox, pool lighting at Universi· ty High, Cross Roads, Orange County Fair Housing CouneU and . others. ··we need a consistent policy on how we will respond to these requests.'' said Brady this morn· ing. ... "If the policy is that we will co· s ponsor them and contribute to them financially, we need to·set an amount of money and not e x- ceed it," he said. - Radio and TV Star Brady has proposed a policy which would give groups that benefit some segment of the com· munily support ln "the form of consultation, publicity and as· s istance ill getting the use or facilities. But he did not address the question of contributions. Ozzie Nelson Dead "My only feeling on the mat· ter." he said, ''is that if we give it lo one, we s hould give it lo all." LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ozzie Nelson, 69, whose wholesome ''Adventures of Ozzie and Har- riet" on television and radio amused a ,generation of Americans, died today. Harriet, his wife and partner, was at his bedside. He had undergone surgery for cancer of the liver eight months ago. He died in his Hollywood home. ,., "Ozzie knew he was going to go, and he viewed it philosophically," a family friend said. "He wa s working on another book until the end." The Nelsons lived principally at their residence at 16 Lagunita; a private oceanfront community south of Laguna Beach. He had been moved to his Hollywood home to be closer to. his doctor, a family spokesman said today. An athletic 170 pounds most of his adult life, Nelson had thinned to 130 but continued to visit his of· <See NELSON, Paie A2) Or:·.:a:·· We•tller Night and morning low clouds with some hazy sun- shine inland areas in the afternoon. Little t ern· perature change. Highs from the upper 60s lo the mid 70s. INSIDE TODAY A 8Urvivor of the Gulf of Mexico oil rig mi1hop recalls the terror of pitch black wet· Mfl under 45 feet 'Jf waler. See story, photo Page A4. Index LONG CAREER ENDS Ozzie Nelson, 69 Monarch Bay The question of contributions to non-profit groups has become the focus or heated debate at re· cent city council sessions. Several gifts have been made over the objections or Coun· cilman John Burton, who con- siders such contributions "an ii· legal gift of public funds." Blast Rips Jet Aircraft MANILA (UPI)· -An ex· plosion ripped through the tail section of a Philippine Airlines jet passenger plane today shortly after it took off from .Manila In· ternational Airpo rt with 59 persons aboard. The government-run Philip· pine N e w s Age n c y s aid no passengers were killed and that the plane landed s afely at Manila Airport 30 minutes alter it too k off from the runway. Bank Expert Says System 'Grade A' A security expert called as the first witness for the defense testified tod~y in Orange County Superior Court that the Monarch Bay United California Bank had a .. grade A" system in operation w h e-Q it was burglarized three years a1go of $3.3 million in securities , cash and jewelry. Frank Jos eph Meiners, a security specialis t with Un· derwriters Laboratory-a safety organization created by America's Insurance Com· panies-<:hallenged a statement earlier in the trial that a sophisticated •'line security" s~tem was available to the bank "March 10, 1972. Meiners said the statement by a security expert called by the plalotif!s was inaccurate. The system did not become available to Southern California banks un- ,. til after the Monarc h Boy burglary. It is alleged by· 66 former patrons who see k nearly $50 million in damages from the bank, the Oreo Alarm Copmpany and the Diebold Safety Corpora- tion that negligence led to the lootin g of 450 s afety deposit boxes. Safety systems al the bank were bypassed by a team of burglars during a carefully planned three-day operation in which the thieves camped on the roof of the bank as they prepared to enter the building. Members of the team ore now serving re.dcral prison terms. Most of the loot taken from the Laguna Niguel bank has since been recovered by the FBI. . Plaintlffs' attorney Arthur Hews closed bis case late Mon· · <See BANK. Pagt A2) acronym for the Irvine Compaoy Multi-Agency Pla,11ning PrQ· gram. The TICMAP members worked with company planne{'S through a year of land use plan · ning for what has been called the Irvine Company's most valuable parcel of land. Little has changed in the plans first unveiled by the company last October. However, final plans will caJl (or development or a maximum of 40 percent of the area, with the remainder to stay as open space, Moore said. Additionally, population pro· jections in the refined plan are from 30,000 to 50,000 residents, down from a projection of 80,000 when plans for the area were first considered. ·'We 've got to quit doing plans," Moore quipped. "Ir we don't, the population is going down lo zero." The large amount of opMI space, l ,345 acres of which is de- signated as a st ate park, poses problems of its own. ·'The Irvine Company is not in. the open s pa ce maintenance bus;ness," said Moore , "so some public agency or combination of public agencies will have to ac- <See IRVINE, PageA2) Religious Big Top O••IY Ptlot SI.all P,,_ Evangelis t Bill Lowery has set up this big t e nt on Orange County F airgrounds in Costa Mesa for nightly revival meetings. Lowery plans to preach nightly throug h the month o f June. Tent holds 4,000. Lowei·y and a bout 140 of his followers moved into Costa Mesa over the weekend after s tops in Anaheim and Riverside. Huntington 'Best' SenatePBacks Waste Plant Site ROTC rogram Bv GARY GRANVILLE waste treated ul the proposed UCI Faculty The UC Irvine faculty senate· reversed a r e versal of a decision to have Air For ce Reserve Of. ficer Train ing offered lo UC I stu- dents. In resul ts of a m atl ballot re- leased today. 142 faculty mem· bers favored the progra m and 139 wanted it.canceled. Last fall the progra m was ap- proved at a senate meeting with about 40 mem bers in attendance. Subsequently, a nother meeting was held at which about 40 mem· bers voted to terminate the pro· gr a m as soon as possible. The m ail vote. tallying the ballots of 281 m embers of the 468-me mber organization, r e· co mmends that Chancellor Daniel Aldrich r E;lain the pro- gr am. The ROTC p rogram is a coope rative venture with USC in which UCI students would travel to USC for their m ilitary training classes. Student opposition to the pro· gram was voiced through an ad .floe .. Committee to Stop ROTC at UCI," which circulated a petition urging a special faculty senate meeting on lhe matter. Two 'Girls ... Searched by Bogus Ag~nt Huntington Beach police loday ~ere searching for a man who allegedly impersonated a Coast Guard inv e stigator and phys ically searched two 15-year- old girls. Police s aid the man ap- proached the girls at 11th Street and Walnut Avenue in downtown • 011,.. O•ily Pllo1s~11 plant will producC' t he equivalent Oran ge County Road Com· missioner Ted M cConvjlle s aid today that Hunlin1:,'1.on Beach is the most likely s ite for Ute coun- ty's fi rst privately owrt~d a nd operated solid waste -disposal plant. The proposed SlS million pl <1nt would be used to r eclaim reusa· ble ma terial from the county's trash and to convert that which is not usable to energy. or one barrel or die::.d fuel from each Lon of refusc. That fu e l, McConvillc said, would be used to create steam that can be sold to a maJor user. One such user he specified was the Water Factory 21 in Fountain Valley, which would make the selectio n of a Huntington Beach site necessary. Another poss1bil' energy user that McConvi llc cited was the city-owned power tompany in Anahci m. m uk ing ,\na heim another pos::.ible choice for the co unty•s fi rst pn \"ale n·source recovery plant. McConvill c s aid r cfu ::.c de-- Ii \"ercd to ::. u ch a plant by trash haulers would first run through a thal sorting process that would pick out s uc h m ateria l as s teel, Ca pacity of the plant would be from 'l .000 lo 2.000 tons of refuse daily, roughly one thfrd of what county residents discard each day, Mcconville sa id. In Orange County govern m c nt. McCon · ville's Road Department is in ('harge of dump operallons. He wen t on to explain Jane Seeks Disclosures LOS ANG ELES <U P [} -Ac· tress Jane Fonda asked a federal judge Mond ay to make public the Informa tion on her activities compiled by t he Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Central Intelligence Agency during the Nixon administration. Justice Department la wyer s opposed the move on grounds •that "third parties" would be ex· posed to harassment by such re- velations. aluminum and gl<1 ss for rccyd· ing. What rem a ans "ould then be converted to t he low sulphur fuel used to produce ste<.im. The road comm1ssiom•r said such <t plant would help rcduel the cost of trun::.fcrring the coun- ty's 6,000 tons of trash a day from collectors lo county operated dis· posal sites. The procc.•i;s would also add year::. of life to t hose dump sites by using roughly 70 percent or discarded material either for re .. cycling or the creation of fuel. · He pointed out that roughly ao; percent of what finds its way into. trash haulers. trucks is not resa• (See WASTE, Page A2) Ford's Cane • Doctor Cites Bad Knee Huntington Beach, flashed an JACKSONVILLE. F1 a . (UPI > -A physician wh<> · idenlification card with "Coast operated on President Ford's "football knee". which may · Guard" printed on it, and said have contributed to bis fall in Salzburg, Austria Sunday. said he was checking the area for today he gave Ford a cane in 1972. heroin use. F,prd was 8 patient of Or. John Lovejoy Jr. when Love- He then allegedly took the joy was a Navy lieutenanl commander at Bethesda, Md., girls lo their ho me. forced them Navu l Hospital in 1971-72 and Ford w~s a congrc~s man. to d is r o b e a n d p u t o n "The Preside nt had done exercises followtng the sur- nightgowns. while he searched gery which gave him excellent motion nnd function ln the their bodies for heroin needle knee but the degree of changes present may have contribut· marks. ed to lhe fall," Lovejoy suid. : · He was dcscri bed as 35 to 40 "l look out the cartilage but there "as stlll a lot or years old, five feet, 10 inches da mage that couldn't be corr~ted." · · Lall, husky with dark, graying T he Jacksonville physician said he gave Ford a Hd. halr. Police said he ts wanted on white and blue walkina eane, which Ford used durina the charges of imper sonating a law 1972 Republican con~Uon. ofOcer and child annoypnce ''"'"-------------------------, I I ' ' J , ' OAILYPILOf -Tige.-Gone Mesa's Old Sarge Dies By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Otl .. O.iollr f'l ... S..." ~ llc once cursed Gen. George S. Patton for kicking his tail as he napped after · a sleepless week of World War 11 combat, only to win a pat on lhe back Crom the legen· d ary battle slralcgist. He also won five Silver Star. medals over a 30-year career, a .Bronze Star and enough other military honors to make his ~ur­ ly chest look like the counter ma war souvenir s hop. Army Sgt. Maj. Karl R.H. Senn, 55, was six feet, lour inches and·255 pounds of man and proud of bis unilor m . From the way his long service record reads, he was a soldier's soldier and when the big man died Thursday, the mortuary ac- tuaUy had to order a special, larger casket to fit him. . ''He was a tiger," says htS widow Leona, with whom he lived at 2311 Elden Ave., CQsta. Mesa. "Bul he was also a sof· thearted man." • She says Sgt. Maj. Senn, besides being a blood-and· thunder com bat paratrooper, loved to cu ltivate flo~ers, build planter boxes, bak~ bread and concoct gourmet recipes. Once, he and his men lived on C-Rations -or less -and had to kill Germans with knives and bare hands fotlowirfg the D-Day invasion of Normandy, 31 years ago this Saturday. They parachuted 40 miles behind German lines, but their weapons cache land ed elsewhere, due to pilot error. so they bad to dog-trot the 40 miles to the front. They e liminated the enemy· a long the way, taking their guns to use. Records show Sgt. Maj. Senn also fought to take the bridge al Remagen, the last bottleneck for allled troops storming Berlln. .He was among the triumphant who marched loto the German capital. He also helped liberate Jewish prisoners at Dachau, ~no of the infamous concentration camps. Once in th·~ gruelling drive from the beaches toward Berlin, he took a nap on a break af\er five sleepless days of fighting, but was rudely awakened by a boot kick in the behind. .. Dammit, can't you let me get a UtUe rest?," he snapped, roll· ing over to stare up at Gen. George S. Patton. ··Soldier ... you've done a great job. Go back to sleep," the famous. general replied. . . : The incident was included in it he movie ·'Patton," and is an1ong parts of an unfinished autobiography begun by the Costa Mesan who rose to the highest enlisted rank in the army. . He fought in Sicily, the Middle East and North Africa, there agai~st troops under Nazi Gen. Erwin Rommel, "The Desert Fox." Service by S~. Maj. ~nn before his 1970 retirement 11~- . eluded three tours in Vietnam. "He used to cry when his young troopers were killed. He couldn't sleep the night before a battle and he would walk on the beach all night, planning the strategy," says his wife. Military funeral services will be Wednesday at 10 a.m. in Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel, Costa Mesa, with burial at Sawtelle N5tional Cemetery in West Los Angeles. Besides the widow, survivors include a stepson, Allen Neufeld, of Bakersfield; a stepdaughter, Barbara Means, of Agoura; a • brother, Hans, of Denver, Colo., C1nd eight grandchildren. 'Technician Guilty In Fairview Attack· A F a i rvicw · State Hos pital psychiatric technician fired for &Jlleged brutality against two of its mentally retarded residents )las been found guilty on two From Page Al ·~WASTE ... )>le in any form. Con~rctc, dirt. .and tree stumps were cited as ex-• amples. ! The road commissioner said he ~ will present five proposals for the ~ construction of t he resource re· • covery plant to the Board of ! Supervisors next week. Part of that presentation will l include a written report declar· : ing tne proposed plant to be. of modern desi~n and complying ' with environmental Protection 1 Agency requirements. · . f Recently. County S~perv1sor • , R alph Diedrich toured such a ; plant in Bal11more. Md. Diedrich said that a contract ; with the private operator could 1 be drawn that would provide the , county with the needed protcc- ' tion for the plant's operation, in- cluding fixed .fees for disposing of the waste. He said private operators could save the county money and • s how a profit through three sour ces of income, s a~e .of energy , sa te of reclaimed materials and payment by the county for the destruction of dis· posable materials. Diedrich said Qrange County will eventually require three to ' four resource recovery plants. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 1N' °'""not co .. t O@•fY P1tot w.th wt\•t" ts com .. bf""'11 IM N• wn Prt \' 1 pubh· rv1d by I"'«' °'M\Of"' (.o. I Publl Juno Como.-ny ~ p~r•k ld•tlom. •r• pul)llwd Mo'Wl•V llortuQlo F01d.ty IM C.0.1• Mltw_ N• woort tltft<h tiu-nl11"19fon Bl«r-r-oun t•1n V•Uf'y lro;1nt \"ddhb.-1 i. V•llttv •r\d lAQUM Belt<,.~ullo (.°"'' /4 \ll'qle r• 9•0NI t<tthO"\ t\ PVbh,P\lCJ ~h.trO•Y' ~ s,unr, .. .,, T'P'lf" ~tt'CfOtJI out>h\f\I~ pl.tnt t\ '"' i:1) Wrf\t O•~ )trt"V1, Go\I• Me\4, t•11torn1• H•>•. Robert N. Weed Prt·\teHnt .,.,... Pub41..,,,_r • Jac.k R. Curley """ "'"'""n' And c..,,.,.,, wl.,., Ttiomas Keevil Edllor 1'h<>mac; A. Murphine Mlfn•OH''IQ f;. OltOf Charles H. LOOS Richard P. Nall A\\.f •••nl M•n•o1no Ecktor• Offices (.MIA M•\• )JO W•\I kt Str .. t N"W(IM1 ~¥11 JUJ ...... _,_Htd L•OU"• !lo~"· II .. C.lt-•• Mr.,..1 M\lnfl"<!I.., "-•<lo 1111~ 9'o.t<ll 8oll•t•••lf ~··w .. 11•11•• HIOI l •Pu -••S."0 .. 99Fr-y " Tele~OM (714 ) M2-4Jl1 Cl.iuifltd Advertislnq '42-5'71 .,.!ld,•b• • "•"•• ,., ... omt• Sl1·'310 r rom '--" ('•"'"'"" 4ts.0.30 Copyrlf"I, 1'7$ 0.•"9' Co••I '"''"''"',.. ~''1Y "01W..,\t111hn '''"'''tf~.M•tttUtt • ...,. ... "' 0, ••"•'•••· ""•nh "fl:'"'" ""*" .,.. rtprHuc•• ••tflctvt •p.et••I ••""''''o" ot ,., ..... , ......... llecofld <l•Ht po\1•00 lltl4' ill to•lo M•••, CM1lernl• $wlM< ""'..,.,"" '""''*' 0 (l(l-•"1Y "'_.. ... oo lfltfllnly. mlltt.tty ••"'•llO,,. u 00 ,_,..., ' charges of assault and battery. Angel Hernandez, 35, of Alta Loma, was acquitted of four ad· ditional counts during his two- . week trial before Judge Robert C. Todd in Harbor Judicial Dis- trict Cou r t. The misdemeanor charges carry a maximum penalty of six months in jail and a $.500 fine on each count. Judge Todd o b serve d , h o wever , in co nvictin g Hernandex that he w<1s certain the incidents of heavy-handed discipline d id not involve malice or premeditation. Officials of the Costa Mesa facility for the mentally retarded c.ind severely physically hc.in - dicapped fired Hernandez aftff the occurrences, then the California Attorney General's Office ruled he could and should be prosecuted. He had been employed on Ward 42, which houses the hospital's Behavior Modification Program aod generally incl~des some so-called problem clients who occasionally cause trouble. The two Hernandez is accused of physically abusing are both young adult males, not children, according to Fairview Medical Director Dr. Anthony N. Toto. Durin g his non-jury tria l, Hernandez tes tified he began his . ccareer as a licensed psychiatric technician in 1958 and has tau~ht courses in Behavior Modification to other tra inees. E'rotn Page Al CLASSES .•. classes and activities which arc separate are comparable for members of each sex." The rules do not, however, rc·- quire that equal amounts of money be spent on girls' and boys' athletic programs. At the same lime. HEW said classes on huma n se"uality could be segregated along ~v~th social fraternities and sororities, hous- ing, locker rooms, toilets and s howers. But it d eclined to tackle the issue of sex stereotyping intex· tbooks. . • "Equal education opportunil~ Tor women is the law of the lund. und it will be enforced," Wein· beraer said, adding he wan~ed to implement Title IX quickly "rather tha n undergo the series ot futile confrontations and end· less law sult.s." Acknowledging the law was "indeed far renching in its sweep" and was impossible to draft in a way "that will please all of the people all of the time,·• Weinberger nonetheless noted the rules were modified sienificantly from a previous draft. .. For example , the provision etl lowlng separate teams in contact sp0rts was new. He specifi<"ally mentloned ten- nis, track, swlmmina :ind golf as sports which m ust be lntegruted because they do not Involve bodl· ly contact. OLD SOLDIER DIES Sgt. Maj. Kart Senn From Page AJ IRVINE ... quire and maintain it.'' • f Within a month, said Moore, a s pecial committee designed to resolve the question of open space mainte n a n c~ and ownership will begin meeting. The h .. 11d des ignated as a stale :park includes a 3.5-mile stretch of beach and bluffs from Corona del Mar to Laguna Beach and Moro Canyon from the coast to the San J oaquin Hills ridge. . The $7.6 million land sale 1s tied up in a suit filed by Irvine heiress J oan Irvine Smith, who contends the sale price is too low. Plans call for retaining the pre· sent route o f Pacific Coast Highway and add~g an _add!: tional "transportation comdor of unspecified dimension along the San Joaquin Hills ridge. The compan y, said Moore, wants to wait for ~ pending re- vision to the county arterial highways plan before working out final details of the transporta- tion system. The roads providing access to the area have been a sticky sub· ject with the adjacent cities. A committee of council members from Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and Irvine drafted a loop system of roads aimed at keep- ing traffic from the area off the congested Pacific Coast Highway. The plan was endorsed by lrvme, but J\e\\ port Beach and Laguna Beach s uggested f';!rth~r s tudy. The Laguna council wall consider the matter again Wed- nesday. Ra rd Munsell of the county ~ I I ps Tennis Players Set ~World Record By HILARY KAVE • Oftfle DfllJ "II ..... " Things got pretty wet and wUd in Corona del Mar Monday after- noon when two UC Irvine stu- dents broke the world's record for long distance tennis play. Bubbly champagne poured over the wep.ry tennis players' heads and good natured cavort- ing in a nearby swimming pool capped off the marathon elfc~rt, which lasted 80 hours and five minutes. Eric Mann , 23, and Eric Larre, 18 both members of the UCI ten· ni~ team dumped UCl's Sports I n form~ lion Director Roy. Englebrecht into the pool. Then, the two young men dove in after him. Englebl'echt is. the man responsible for sethng up the marathon, which lasted from 8 am. Friday until 4:05 p.m. Mon- day. S The previous record, set un- day in Bakersfield, was 80 hours. Documentation of th~ UCT player s ' e ffort ~ wil l be forwarded to the Gumness Book. of World Records. - · The 1'&ralhon netted $800 for the campus athletic scholarship. fund. It was donation from M .. J . Brock , builder of the Jasmine Creek development where the marathon took place. Observers said the tennis players were "exhilarated" when the lJliltCh fipally came lo an 'end and" played "very good ten nis" during the last few minutes. They played a total of 1,325 games but no one kept track of who won the most games. The players' routine was one hour on the court and then a 15-mi11ute break. During the breaks they changed socks, shoes and they ate. •.1 Over the four days, the two men used 75 pairs of socks and consumed at least 50 quarts of Gatorade, in addition to varied amounts of peanut butter, health food candy bars, fruits and tuna fish. About 100 people were on.hand when the marathon ended and all applaude d when the players came off the courts. Larre, a fres1hman pr_e-med student Crom Los Alamitos, left J asmine Creek about an hour after play had stopped . From Page Al BANK ... day after offering tes timony from most of the 66 plaintiffs he represents in the class action fil ed against the three defen- dants. ford Emls Europe Tour, Visits Pope From Wire Services VATICAN CITY -President "ford ended a whirlwind eight· hour visit to Italy today and went to the Vatican for talks with Pope Paul VI . Every postwar U.S. president since Dwight D. Eisenhower has paid a call on the sQjrilual lead~r of Roman Catholicism at this c Diver Seized In Newport ·Money Fraud city-st ate across the Tiber from 'f' central Rome. Ford's agenda with Pope P~ul included discussions on the Mtd· dle East, U.S. food aid, refugee prob l ems and ot h er humanitarian issues, U.S. of~ ficials said. He departed for the l!.S. this afternoon. The Vatican visit was the last stop on Ford's week-long Eu~o­ pean tour. In his _talk.s with Italian officials he prud tribute to the "extraordinary ties of friendship" between the United States aod Italy. Ford met with Pres_ident Giovanni Leone and gave him the message he has carried to other European l eati ers -th_at. Washington is slicking by its Atlantic alliance partners. Both Laguna and Newport have asked the Local Agency Formation Commission for permission to annex parts of the land. Ilul after protests by lrvane. where officia l s sometimes r efer to the land as a • ··window to the sea", hearings wc~ut off until next April. Enviro mental Management Age n c y s a id N e w port a n cf Laguna may kc.ive been hesitant to back the tri-city road plan because at could be a barrier to annexation. His witnesses unanimously agreed that they had been as- sured by the bank through its ·literature that their valuables , would be absolutely safe and were protected from intruders by a burglar proof vault. To annex land, he said, cities must be willing to provide • services. With the loop system, mos t trans portation service Newport Be<1ch detectives ar- rested a commercial diver from Cor ona del Mar Monday on charges that he stole cash from a middle-aged couple under the pretext of depositing the money in Mexican banks. Officers booked Carlos Del Valle 45 of 614 Begonia Ave., on grand theft charges specifying Italian authorities carried out exceptional security measures . More than 5,000 heavi~y armed police officers and soldiers were posted in the city plus another 200 sharpshooter s on rooftops in the capital. Despite some feat's or de- monstrations by Italian leftists, there was total calm in the city. \\ ould be provided through Irvine, making that a logical jurisdiction to control the area, he said. Fro1n Page Al NELSON ... fi ce until eight weeks ago. ··The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet" set records for longevi- . ty, beginning in 1944 on r~~io a~d then jumping lo telev1S1on in 1952, where it ran 14 years. ThP Nelsons' sons. Ricky and J)avid grew up on the show, and after they married, their wives joined the cast. On the series Nelson was the sunshiny, sometimes bemused father and husband. Harriet was a warm-voiced beauty who mar-. ried Nelson in 1935. Al first their sons, David and Ricky. were portrayed by child actors. Then on Feb. 20, 1949, the Nelson sons joined the show. The television show went off the air in 1966. ''It was getting pretty diffused because of the way the family had grown," Oz- zie said. . "We had Ricky and Kris (his wife> going in one direction, David and June in another, and then there was Harriet and me, the other posse. It was getting hard to hold everything together. · ·Rick, now 35, went into singing a nd continued acting while David. now 39 , became a television director. After their series ended, the Nelson parents acted in suth plays as "Marriage-Go-Round" and "The Impossible Years." . They returned.to television in 1972 with a syndicated show, ··Ozzie's Girls." Oswald Nelson was born ln Jeiwey City, N .J ., on March 20, 1906. Both his parents were musical, and Ozzie uppeared in amateur theatrical productions when he was s. At 13 he was the youngest E"aale Scout in America and represented the United Stat.es at th~ first Boy Scout Jamboree ln London. Most of the witnesses also stal· ed that they would not have used the l!CB fa cilities had they known that they were not insured for loss and that the bank would not make restitution. Several witnesses testified that possessions of great sentimental value had been lodged with the bank and that those valuables were irreplaceable. Lawyers for both sides believe their case will go to the jury in Judge Claude M. Owens' courtroom in late June or early July. bail of $5,000. . It is alleged that Del Valle did business w ith Mr. and Mrs. William B. Bloodgood of Aptos and during on transaction ae- cepted $2,500 in cash on the pr<'· text or depositing in a bank th~t yielded extremely high intere~t rates. But instead of depositing valatl checks, police asserted, Del Valle entered two checks which were forged. Those checks allegedly were used as ·'evidence of the deposit·· to show the viCtims. Ford flew by helicopter from Rome's Ciampino airport to the Renaissance presidential palace, where he reviewed an honor guard of white-uniformed customs police and helmeted and mounted troops. ·· 1t is my pleasure to b:ring to you ihe greetings and high re· g:.ird of the people of the United States for Italy," Ford told Leone. "In a world of rapid and dramatic c hange, Italian· American friendship stands out as a symbol of stability and re· ~olve ." KNOW THE COST • DON 'T BUY CARPETING WITHOUT GETTING A COM PLETE PRICE BEFOREHAND. A PRICE PER YARD IS INADEQUATE, BECAUSE TH E YARDAGE C AN BE MISFIGURED OR ERRGNEOUS. WE HAVE TALKED TO PEOPLE RE CE NTLY WHO BOUGHT CARPETING FROM A STORE WHICH DID NOT PRE-MEASURE HOUSES. THE INSTALLERS WERE ASSIGNED THE JOB OF FIGURING YARDAGf AND TOTAL COST. UNTIL THE CARPETING WAS CUT UP.AND INSTALLED, THE CUSTOMER WAS IN THE DARK. THEN IT.WAS TOO LATE! . AT ALDEN'S WE MEASURE YOUR HOUSE AND GIVE YOU AN EXACT COST BEFORE WE WAITE UP A CO NTRACT AND INSTALL THE JOB. DON 'T BUY IN THE QARK! .. UC. NO. 2l0422 l663 PlACENTIA A VENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646·.C838 -6.C6·2355 t ,..,, . - I T oday's Cl•hag N.Y.Stoeb .vol. 68, NO. 15", 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAG_ES ORA NGE COUNTY, CALI FORN I A TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1975_, TEN CENTS Huntington May Get Disposal Plant· By GARY GRANVILL£ Of'""' 0• 11 'f f't let 5c.l.ff Orange County Road Com- missioner Ted M cConville said today that Huntington Beach is the most likely site for thfi coun- ty's first privately owned and operated solid waste· disposal plant. The proposed $15 million plant would be used to reclaim reusa- ble material from the county's Gym Now A Mixed Affair WASHINGTON (UPI> -Gym Classes in most schools and col- leges in the United Stales must be integrated to include both boys and girls, except for bodily contact sports, the administra- tion announced today. Uqder the rules announced by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, any school receiving federal funds must demonstrate it is "moving as expeditiously as possible within the prescribed time frame toward eliminating separate physical education classes." The rules were prepared under· Title IX of the Education Amend- ments of 19'Z2 which bars dis- crimination by sex in federally financed school programs. "While generally prohibiting sex segregated physical educa- tion classes,"/ HEW said, "the final regulations do allow separa- tion by sex in physical educatior1 classes during competition in wrestling, boxing, basketball, football and other sports involv- ingbodily contact." During the period schools are ·making the "necessary act1ust- ments" for integrated gym classes, HEW said, they "must insure that physical education classes and activities which are separate are comparable for members of each sex.'' The rules do not, however. re· quire that equal amounts of money be spent on girls' and boys' athletic programs. At the same time, HEW said classes on human sexuality could be se~regated along with social fraternities and sororities, hous- ing, locker rooms, toilets and showers. But it declined to tackle the issue of sex stereotyping in tex- tbooks. "Equal education opportunity for women is the law of the land, and it will be enforced," Wein- berger said, adding he wanted to implement Title IX quickly "rather than undergo the series of futile confrontations and end- less law suits." Acknowledging the law was "indeed far reaching in its sweep" and was impossible to draft in a way "that will please all of the people all of the time," Weinberger nonetheless noted the rules were modified significantly from a previous draft. For example, the provision al- lowing separate teams in contact sports was new. He specifically mentioned ten- nis, track, swimming and golf as sports which must be integrated because they do not involve bodi· ly contact. •'Thisis notarequirement,noris <See CLASSES, Page A2) R etarded Students ~~:~:~~ ~:~~ .. group made up o mentally re- tarded students !~m Hope School in Anaheim, will perform June 10 at the monthly meeting of the Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce. The chamber's 12 o'clock luncheon meeting will be at the Fountain Valley Community Center, 10200 Slater Ave. Both chamber members a nd prospec- tive members arc invited to at- tend, and may phone reserva- tions to 962·444 t . Deadly Box Gone MONTREAL (UPI> -Police have launched a city-wide search !or an incubator Cilled with dead· !y radioactivity which vonished 'Monday from a university laboratory. Police sald the s mall metal box disappeared from the University of Monlrenl between lD a.m. and 5 p . m . trash and to convert that which is not usable to energy. Capacity of the plant would be from 1,000 to 2,000 tons of refuse daily, rollghly one third of what county residents discard each day, Mcconville said. In Orange County government, McCon- ville's Road Department is in charge of dump operations. He went on to explain that waste treated bl the pr6posed plant wUl produce the equivalent of one barrel or diesel fuel from · each ton of ref use. , That fuel, Mcconville said, would be used to create steam that can be sold to a major user. · One such user he specified was the Water Factory 21 in Fountain Valley, which would make the selection of a Huntington Beach site necessary. Another possible energy. user that Mcconville cited was the city-owned power company in Anaheim, making Anaheim another possible choice for the county's first private resource recovery plant. McConvUle sald refuse de- livered to such a plant by trash haulers would first run through a sorting process that would pick out such material as steel, aluminum and glass for recycl- ing. What remains would then be converted to the low sulphur fuel used to produce steam. , The road commissioner s:iid such a plant would help reduce the cost of transferring the coun- ty's 6,000 tons of trash a day from collectors to county operated dis- posal sites. The process would also add years or life to those dump sites by using roughly 70 l)t!rcent of discarded material either for re· cycling or the creation of ruel. He pointed out that roughly 30 percent of what finds its way in.to trash haulers, trucks is not resa- ble in any form. Concrete, dirt and tree stumps were cited as ex- amples. The road com missioner said he will present five proposals for lhe (See WASTE, Page A2) Tax ~Ban. Nixed Huntington Council Ho as Off Dilly Pi .. t f'tlole llf P1trkk 0'0.0.,.H By TERRY COVILLE Of tll• Diiiy Pllet SUlf An effort to immediately end the Huntington Beach· real estate transfer tax failed Mon- day night on a 3 to 3 city council· vote. While voters ovenvhelmingly knocked out the tax last Tues- day, it won't officially end until · the secretary of state validates the election. City Attorney Don Bonfa said Monday that might take another week to 10 days. Meanwhile, the city continues to collect the tax. No Strike ·For Valley Teachers TENNIS PLAYERS MANN (LEFT), LARAE SAVOR CHAMPAGNE M t?ralhon Effort in Newport Beac h Ends in Hijlnks A strike vote by teachers in the Fountain Valley School District failed this morning when less than half the district's classroom teachers agreed to support it. -~ ,32$ Games Judie Lowman, president of the Fountain Valley Education Association, said about 140 tO 150 teachers voted in favor of a strike. UCI P(.lir Take World Record The association has about 350 members, she said, and the dis- trict has about 430 classroom teachers. By HILARY KAYE Of lM Dilly Pilot 5'.lfl Things got pretty wet and wild in Corona del Mar Monday after- noon when two UC Irvine stu- dents broke the world's record for long distance tennis play. Bubbly c hampagne poured over the weary tennis players' heads and good natured cavort- ing in a nearby swimming pool capped off the marathon effort, which lasted 80 hours and five minutes. Eric Mann, 23, and Eric Larre, 18, both members or the UCI ten- nis team, dumped UCI's Sports lnformation Director Roy Englebrecht into the pool. Then. the two young men dove in after him. Englebrecht is the man responsible for setting up the marathon, which lasted from 8 a.m. Friday until 4:05 p.m. Mon- day. The previous record, set Sun· day in Bakersfield, was 80 hours. Documentation of the UCl players' eUorts will be forwarded to the Guinness Book of World Records. The marathon netted $800 for the campus athletic scholarship fund. It was donation from M. J. Brock, builder of the Jasmine Creek development where the marathon took place. Two Girls Search e d b y Bogus Agent Huntington Beach police today were searching for a man who alle~edly impers~mated a Coast G u a r d i n v e s ti f(a tor a n d phys'ically searched two 1$·year· old •Iris. Police said the man a-p- proached the girls at 11th Street and Walnut Avenue in downtown Huntington Beach, flashed an identification card with "Coast Guard" printed on it, and said he was c hecking the area for heroin use. lie then allegedly took the girls to their home, forced them t o disrobe and pwt-on n\ghtgowns. while ·.he searched their bodies for heroin needle marks. He was described as 35 lo 40 years old, five feet, 10 Inches tall, husky with dork, graying hatr. Pollce said ho Is wanted on charges of imperson:Jt.ing a law oUicer and child annoyance. ~bservers ~aid the tennis players were "exhilarated" when the match finally came to an end and played "very good tennis" during lhe last few minutes. They played a total of 1,325 games but no one kept track of who won the most games. The players' routine was one hour on the court and then a 15-minute break. During the breaks they changed socks, shoes and they ate. Over the four days, the two men used 75 pairs of socks and consumed a t least 50 quarts of Gatorade, in addition to varied amounts of peanut butter, health food candy bars, fruits and tuna fish. About 100 people were on hand when the marathon ended and all applauded when the players came off the courts. Larre, a freshman pre-med student from Los Alamitos, left Jasmine Creek about an hour after pl~y .had ~topped. But Mann, a junior economics and sociology student remained <See TENNIS, PageA2) Hun t ingto n School Board t9 Convene The Huntington Beach City School Board will meet at 7 o'clock tonight to discuss next year's $10. 7 million budget. The meeting will be at Dwyer School, 1502 Palm Ave. The board also is expected to go into executive session to dis· cuss teacher contract negotia- tions. Teachers in the district have been angered by a lack of pro- gress in contract talks. They have asked for a 10 percent pay boos t, while the district has made no pay offer, Mrs. Lowman said. The district has offered to give teachers 80 pe rcent of funds available under a proposed new sta te legis lation, but Mrs. Lowman said that still would give teachers only a one percent pay hike. And s he charged that teachers could have received some pay raise from part of the 'proceeds from the recent sale of a s urplus school site. · "At this point, it seems that things are more important to the dis trict than teachers," she said. But Mrs. Lowman said she was disappointed in the outcome of thue strike vote. Both she and the teacher negotiating team recom- mended the strike, she said. , However, they agreed ahead of time not to strike unless at least about 200 teachers -half the dis- trict staff -voted to support it. .. We we're a raid if there were just a few of us the district might take recriminations against us,'' s he said. She said after the strike vote, the negotiating team resigned. Mrs. Lowman plans to meet with them, as well as the FVEA board and "strategy" committee before recommending any other action. Superintendent Bob Read to· day expressed surprise at the strike vote, noting he believed (See STRIKE, PageA2) 'C.oup' Nixed May or Ouster Move Fails A bid by Huntington Beach City Councilman Jerry Matney to unseat Mayor Norm:i Gibbs fell flat Monday night. · Calling the mayor "arbitrary and capricious,.., Ma~ey off ere<l a Jaat-minute motion atll p.m. to vacate the chair. He lost 2·1 with Gibbs and Henry Duke voting against, and council members Harriett Wieder, Ted Bartlett and Don Shipley not even bothering to cast a ballot a~ the meet.- mg broke up. Matney bad complained all night that l\frs. Gibbs. ig- nored him when he wnnted to make a comment on any ls· s;uc, because she Call&t to notJce bis electronic call ll~ht was tumedon. Earlier ln lhe evening he called her .. blind" for mJsslng his liJ:bt, and sald "l don't kno" why we ~ven have a chairman." · Councilwoman Harriett Wieder attempted to introduce an emergency ordinance to im- mediately halt use of the tax but the ordinance needed five af- . firmative votes to pass. • With Councilman Al Coen absent, the motion failed on a 3 to 3 tie. Mrs. Wieder was joined 'by Jerry Matney and Ted Bartlett, but opposed by Norma Gibbs, Henry Duke and Don Shipley. "We los t, let's be good .sports," Bartlett said before the vote. · Mrs. Wieder introduced the or- LONG CAREER ENDS Ozzie Nelson, 69 Ozzie Ne lson D e ad at 69 From Cance r LOS ANGELES CAP) -Ozzie Nelson. 69, whose wholesome "Adventures of Ozzie and Har- . riet" on television and radio amused a . ge n eration of Americans, died today. Harriet, his wife and partner, was at his bedside. He had undergone surgery for . cancer of the live r eight months ago. He died in his Hollywood . bume. "Ozzie knew he was going to· go, and h e viewed it philosophically," a family friend said. "He was working on another book until the end." The Nelsons 1i ved principally al their residence at 16 La gunita, a private oceanfront community south of Laguna 'Beach. He had been moved to his Hollywood home lo be closer to his doctor , a family spokesman said today. An athletic 170 pounds most of his adult lire, Nelson had thinned : to 130 but continued to visit his of· fice until eight weeks ago. ''The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet" set records Cor longevi- • ty, beginning in 1944 on radio and then jumping to television in 1952, wbere it ran 14 years. The Nelsons' sons, Uicky and David, grew up on the show, and after they married, their wives joined the cast. On the series Nelson w:1s the <See NELSON, PateeA2> Cof C Allocation Figure Corr cted The Fountain Vulley City Council is expected to aJl~ate S29,000 to the chamber of com- merce next year, not $21,000 as reported in the Dolly Pilot Mon· day. b The figure is included in t e city's proposed $6 million budget, set for an 8 o'clock public hearing and possible adoption tonight by the clty ~ouncll. dinanc saying the city "was paraly 'ed'' because no on• would uy or sell hQmes while the tax s still collected. Shipley said he didn't think the city was paralyzed, and Mrs . Gibbs said the election settled the issue, so why do anything else. Since the tax on property sales· was imposed last August, the ci· ty has ~Jlected more than $846,000. When the election results were announced, a flood of calls were received by the city treasurer's (See TRANSFER, Page A2) Adventure Playground Seeks Aid The City o( Huntington Beach will seek help from the British.' among other sources, in an effort·, to keep open its popular Adven· ture Playground. City Administrator Dave RowlandS announced at Monday night's city council meeting that an effort will be made to insure the playground through Lloyd's of London. "They cover almost anything," Rowlands explained today. "They'll cover things other companies won 't." Some of the better known items covered by Lloyd's of London have included Betty Grable's legs and Raquel Welch's breasts. Adventure Playground was closed Saturday on orders from the city's insurance carrier, Insuran ce Company of the Pacific Coast, because of poten· tial hazards to children. About 20 to 30 parents attended Monday's council meeting to see what the city can do about re- opening the park at tl)e bottom of the Bruce Brothers gravel pit. They were assured by Mayor Norma Gibbs and Rowlands that the city will make every effort to get the park open again. ''This hit the city council and all the residents about the same time. I don 't know anyone who is not for maintaining Adventure Playground," said Mrs. Gibbs. Rowlands said today the city will also try talking again with the. city's current insurance car- rier to see if some changes could be made in the playground to make it insurable. (See HELP, Page A2) Weatller Night and morning low t:louds with some hazy sun- shine inland a reas in. the afternoon. Little tem- pel'atur·e ·change. Highs from the upper 60s to the· mid70s. I NSIDE .TODAY A survivor of tM Gulf of Mexico oil rig mishap recall$ tlu: terror of pitch black wt+ neJs under 4S feet of water. Ste 8tory, plwto P.age A4. Index ., A10 ,.. A10 A• A7 1!1·2 ..... A10.t1 ~· Al ,,. •• ... _,., .. I ,., .. v I H /F All-year Choice Offel-e d By KATHY CLANCY Of ltl• D•llr ~19' a.ff Trustees in Huntington Beach's Ocean View School Dis- trict aireed Monday night to of-ter both all-year and traditional school programs next fall at W~stmont School. Both Westmont and Crest View Schools have been on the all-yenr calendar tor tbe past three years. But an analysis presented to trustees Monday night showed that about halt the Westmont parenUi would prefer returning to a traditiona l program. The analysis was prepared by ·the Applied Technology Center in Anaheim. which &urveyed parents, staff and students at the district's two all-year schools. At Westmont, 8251 Heil Ave., 43 percent of the families said they wanted to keep the year-round program, while 42 percent want- ed the traditional nine-month s chool system instead. However, at Crest View, 18052 Lisa Lane, 50 percent want to keep the all-year schedule and 30 percent want to drop il, so dis- trict officials said they plan no. change there. The survey also showed most students like the all-year pro- gram, while the staff ••over- whelmingly" iupports it, district leaders said. In addition. it showed student performance im- proved with the program. But there were some increased busing costs since parents who d on't want the year-round pro- gram can bus their children to nearby s chools on traditional nine-month programs. Letters were being sent today to parents of 500 Wet;tmont stu- dents, asking them to state their sehedule preference. At present, 400 students attend the year-round classes, wrule 100 arc bused to M eadow View School. · F rom Page A l W A STE •.. construction of the r esource re- covery plant to the Board of Supervisors next week. Part of that presentation will include a written report declar- ing the proposed plant to be of modern design · and complying with environmental Protection Agency requirements. · Recently, County S~pervisor Ralph Diedrich toured such a plant in Baltimore, Md. Diedrich said that a contract with the private operator could be drawn that would provide the ~ounty with the needed protec- tion for the plant's operation, ln- ~luding fixed fees for disposing of 'lhewaste. : He saia private operators ~uld save the county money and )how a profit through three ,.ources of income. sale or ~n er gy, sale of reclaimed -materials and· payment by the ~unty for the destruction of dis- .:,posable materials. . Diedrich said Orange County will eventually r equire three to four resource recovery plants. 40 Fires Hit ~Brooklyn Area NEW YORK (AP) -Forty building fires occurred within three hours Monday night in a 50-block area or the South Bronx. A Fire Department spokesman said most of the fires were s us- picious and were fought by firemen brought in from all five boroughs of the city. ORANGE COAST HfF DAILY PILOT '"" Or•no-Co•"'' 0•11.-r~1tot ...,.thwhtd\liCorn· bt~ IN> N~w ._,ff),, 1\ C>\jbUM'wdbyUWOr•nQll! eo.,, I P\Jbh-.h•no Compttny \t-~rat,.f'd0t<W1\4rf­ pubh ""'" N orwt•Y tl'HOUQh , r.cS.y tor Co\I• ,,,,,, ..-. Nt w p&. t1 9lfl.Kf\, Hul"lflrvilM Bt'•t" Foun t.t,n V• ••• 1 r vlf\f, ~aftdh•b.ar '-V•lltv _,od l.ff1u,... ~i .... " 5-outh C.O•\t A ''"QI,.. rt ?•fln.tl f'fl•h'>" 1\ publ1\"f'd S.turd•Y\ .,_, t;un0.1y' l"f' r~•N"•e>el pubt ~'"'' 01,.,,t 1, "'' JOO Wl .\ li•Y Strttt1 C,.o\lct Mf' •d, '•'''"'"'• t1t11~ Robe rt N. Weed. Pr l"'\ldill'\t .. nd PubllW r J ack R Cur ley Vic'" Pro"°""'""° lit""'•' M.tlleOtf' Thomae; Keevll Editnr Thomil:. A ·Murphine M.tf1-tQ1nQ (<IHOf' Charle5 H Lllo~ Richard P. Nall ,..,.. , ',f'l, Mi "·•I••"? ( d1lor\ T"rry Coville · W.•1 '"•"II<!' Co..11ly l.d<I« Huntln9ton Beach Office 11tl\ 8't<ll Bouto"'d Molll"' ""°'"" P o eo. l'IO, .,_ Other Ofllcn t.Ato-o .... " ., .. "~-... ~ •••• c...w -...w uo -·· ... , s. .... H<'wUO•I ~·II ))llN•wfl0'1 Doul••- s.otflt"°"' • VJlll• y )1~1 U PU Ito.Ml ,, \.t" o .. 00> ',,,.. ..... Telephone 010 642,..U1 Cluslfled Advertising .,.3-5671 f rl1m Hof-th 0.•noe C:O\r\•'f ~,,., ,,.0.1210 Co••••ont, "II O••~o• C.•, t rut>ll•lllno Cttrneuf'\y H• ""'*'' uo,,., ''"''""'""'• MJ1t0t1•1 "''"•' or •c:t..,.ft!.-Motf'tt .-.,.,.,,. ,.,., '"' r•pruttvr• d 'lf •tftout ,,,. ••I .,._,,,, •• ,.~ •• C.G9'1tlllf'I OW~· f k(ond < •• • ._ ... .,.. •-•Cl •• Coit• Meu. t..ctl•tO•lh~ ,.VfJVntl'f•'W'lbV<•""rt , •tOOr're'ntP\ly • 1t¥ M•h '4 llO MO<llN~ ,.,.,,, .. ,I) >11"-'l'O"' W 00 "'°"'ftlr ' J I ..... I '• ,J With Pontiff From Wire Services VATICAN CIT'7 -President Ford ended a wbtrlwind elgbt· hour vilit to Italy today and w@nt .to the Vatican for talks with Pope Paul VI. Every ~twar U .S. president since Dwagbt D. Elaenbower has pald a call on the spllltual leader of Rom an CatbolicLtm at. thls city-state.across the Tiber trom central Rome. Ford's a1enda with Pope l>aul included discussions on the Mid· die East, U.S. food aid, refugee problems and other humanitarian issues. U.S. of· ficials Hid. He departed for the U.S. this afternoon. police officers and soldiers were posted in the cit y plus another 200 sharpshooters on rooftops In the capital. Despite S<'"ne tear s of de· monstratlons ,y Italian teftists, there was total calmint.hecity. Ford flew by helicopter from Rome's Ciampino airport to the Renaissance. presidential palace, where he reviewed an honor guard of white-uniformed cu.atoms Police and helmeted and mounted troops. "It is my pleasure to bring to you the greetings and high re- gard of the people of the United States for Italy." Ford told Leone. Religious Big Top The Vatican visit was the last stop on Ford's week-long Euro· pean tour. In hla talks with Italian officials he paid tribute to the "extraordinary ties of friendship" between the United Sta tea and Italy. For d m et with P resident Giovanni Leone and gave him the message he bas carried to other E uropean lead ers -that Washington is sticking by its Atlantic alliance partners. Council OKs Town Lots Downzoning Evangelist Bill Lowery has sel up this big tent on Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa for nightly revival meetings. Lowery plans to preach n~ghtly through the month of June. Tent holds 4,000. Lowery and about 140 of his followers moved into Costa Mesa over the weekend after stops in Anaheim and Riverside. Italian authorities carried out exceptional security measures. More than 5,000 heavily armed A downzoning measure for a 36-block portion of the Hunt· ington Beach Town Lots won un• animous support from the city council Monday night. F rom Page Al NELSON •.. sunshiny, sometimes bemused father and husf>and . Harriet was a warm-voiced beauty who mar-. ried Nelson in 1935. AL firs t their sons, David and Ricky. were portrayed by child actors. Then on Feb. 20, 1949, the Nelson sons joined the show. The television s how went off the air in 1966. "It was getting pretty diffused because of the way the family had grown," Oz- zie said . .. We had Ricky and Kris (his wife> going in one direction David and June in another, and then there was Harriet and me, the other _posse. It was getting bard to hold everything together. Rick, now 35, went into singing and continued acting while David, now 39, became a television director. After their series ended, the Nelson parents acted in such plays as "Marriage-Go-Round" and "The Impossible Years." They returned to television in 1972 with a syndicated show, "Ozzie's Girls." Oswald,. Nelson was ·born in Jersey City, N.J., on March 20, 1906. Both his parents wer e musical, and Ozzie appeared in amateur theatrical productions when he was 5. · At 13 he was the youngest Eagle Scout in Amefica and represented the United States at the first Boy Scout Jamboree in London. , At Rutgers University he was a varsity quarterback for three years, a champion boxer and captain of the debating team. In his spare time he played banjo and sang in a band. Aft er graduation Ne lson coached football at a J ersey City high school while attending law school. He earned his Jaw degree in 1930, but instead of practicing he formed a dance orchestra which made its debut at Glen Island Cas ino in New Rochelle, N.Y. Nelson admitted later he sang in an unabashed imitation of Rudy Vallee -"I got myself a megaphone, learned all of Rudy 's · songs and didn 'tobject in the least when someone would call up and a sk if I was ·the guy who sang like Rudy Vallee'. The Nelson band toured the country, appearing in dance haJls and on radio. Jn 1932 he hired a Des Moines girl, H~riet Hilliard, as a vocalis -!fhey sang boy-girl duets th became national hits. Funer 1 services will be held Friday ai Fores t Lawn - Hollywood Hills. c ·ouncil Action Here in capsule form are the major actions taken Mon· day night by the Huntington Beach City Council: TRANSFER TAX: Defeated an emergency ordinance proposed by Councilwoman Harriett Wieder to immediately stop collections on the real estate transfer tax. ADVENTURE PLAYGROUND: Assured 20·30 parents the city will make every effort to get new insurance so the popular playground can be reopened. TOWN LOTS: Unanimously approved a zone change for a portion of the Town Lots closest to the downtown. ANTIQUITIES: Ord~red the planning department to rewrite an ordinance proposed to protect ar cheological and paleontological sites. MA YOR: Defeated a last minute motion by Jerry Matney to remove Norma Gibbs from the mayor's post . AI RPORT: Allowed the owners of Meadowlark Airport lo reduce the size of a blast fence installed at the end of the airport runway. · INDUSTR Y: Refused lo change the zoning on 19 acres of industrial land on Gothard Street. The owner wanted to build homes on it. PRIVATE SCHOOL: Denied a conditional use permit to allow a Montessori School on Golden West Street, adjacent Lo a housing tract near Bceeland Drive. F rom Page A l CLASSES ... it a suggestion that colleges can re- fuse to off er football, basketball or othercontactsportstomembersof each sex separately if there is enough stµden tin le rest to warrant it, "Wein berger said. "In all, I think this regulation enhances opportunity for women in athletics, but it will also allow ·schools the flexibility they need to keep competitive sports alive and well." Brothers Get E' ram Page A l STRIKE ... the routine m eet and confer pro- cess was continuing "in good faith." But Mrs. Lowman said unless their negotiating learn re- considers resigning, or unless a new one is appointed, negotia- tions are halted. Teachers also have asked for reinstatement of the $50,000 noon duty aide prqgram, a greater voice in district decision-making and a revision of transfer and grievance procedures. P . ' FromPafJe A J ostponement . In Death Trial !~N~~~·un°wi:d .. A A four-month delay was grant- ed Monday in the Orange County Superior Court trial of two brothers who face the death penalty for their alleged slaying of star athlete Stephen "Mike" Finklea of Fo~ntain Valley. straight A student, Mann had two final exams today and reportedly· studied for them las t week. His main goal today was not answering the questions correct- . ly, but trying to s tay awake dur- ingtheexams. HELP ••• "We don1t really know how mueb it would cost to insure and we don't know exactly what cha•ges might be made." he said. One suggestion that parents sign ~aivers to a llow their children to play in it was eliminated by the city attorney ~who said such waivers are use- less in court. - Rowla nds said t here is a possibility the city could charge a small fee to use the park, which would pay for extra insurance. Adventur·e Playground was opened a year ago as an experi- ment to allow children free play in an open environment. The site is at the bottom of a gravel pit and has a srnall lake in it. Children are allowed to use hammers, nails, saws and other construction equipment to build their own shacks, rafts, rope bridges, or other objects. Attendan ce last s ummer averaged about 500 youngsters a day, and the playground's safety record was better than the city's grass-covered neighborhood pa1·ks. Charley Oncea, the playground director, told the council he felt the insurance com pany's evalua- tion of the potential hazard was incorrect. Possible landslides from the cliffs were cited as a major hazard, but Oncea said, "If we don't give them a place to play where it is supervised, then more children will be buried in empty lots where no one can watch them." He pointed out that some hazards cited by the insurance investigator were in parts of the gravel pit which are off limits to the children. The pit is 11 acres. Adventure Playground covers about2.5 acres. The discussion was ended with a vow by the city to explore all possibilities for keeping Adven- ture Playground open. For the moment, it remains closed. Nine property owners from the area told the council they sup- ported the measure, while two spoke against it. When hands were raised in the audience, the large majority, more than 30, favored the proposal. In essence, the downzoning, .which was given preliminary ap- proval Monday, eliminates the · possibility of building rourplex or larger apartment complexes. Single family homes, duplexes and triplexes will be allowed in what planners call Area 1 of the Town Lots, closest to the downtown shopping district. The area involved lies south of Palm Avenue to Pecan Avenue, between 12th and 16th streets; and south of Palm Avenue to Olive Avenue, between 6th and 12th streets. Planning Director Dick Harlow ,said the new rules-would ·reduce lhe maximum potential for the area from 1,500 units to .about 900. He also said 75 to 80 percent of the property already has housing on it. Fro• Page A l TRANSFER office, the Cina nce department and the city attorney, with callers asking about rebates. But there is no rebate, accord- ing to the tre~urer's office. Anyone who has paid the real estate transfer tax has lost that money -it will not be reffunded. Tuesday's election prohibited the use of the tax in the future, but had nothing to do with re- funding money already paid. "We'd be bankrupt if we had lo pay that back now," City Ad- ministrator Dave Rowlands said today. JFK Kin Honored CONCORD, Mass. (AP) - Caroline Kennedy, the 17-year- old daughter or the late President John F . Kennedy, will graduate from high school this week. Miss Kennedy will be one of 79 seniori graduating Thursday from Con- cord Academy. Judge Everett W. Dickey can- celled the trial that ~as to open Monday and set Oct. 14 as the new trial date for brothers Hugh Daniel Bean, 24, and Charles Dennis Bean, 22. KNOW THE COST Deputy public defenders as- signed to the Beans successfully argued that they needed more lime to prepare for a number of pretrial motions. Judge Dickey set July 18, Aug. 15 and Sept. 12 as pretrial dates. DON 'T BUY CARPE TI N G W ITHOUT GETTING A COMPLETE PRICE BEFOREHAND. A PR ICE PER YARD IS I NADEQU A TE, B EC A USE THE Y A RDAGE CAN BE MISFIGURED OR ERRONEOUS. UC Irvine Senate Favors Air ROTC WE HAVE TALKED TO PEPPLE RECENTLY WHO BOUGHT CARPETING FROM A STORE WHICH DID NOT PRE-MEASURE HOUSES. TH E INSTALLERS WERE ASSIGNED THE JO B OF FIGURING YARDAGE AND T O TAl COST. UNTI L T H E CARPETING WAS CUT UP AND INSTALLED. THE CUSTOMER WAS IN THE DARK. THEN IT WAS TOO LATE! The UC Irvine faculty senate· reversed a reversal or a decision .to have Air Force Reserve Of- ficer Training offered to UCI stu- dents. In results or a mail ballot r e- lea~ed today, 142 faculty mem- bers favored the program and 139 wanted it canceled. Last fall the program was ap- proved at a senate meeting with about 40 members in allendance. Subsequently, another meeting was held at which about 40 mem- bers voted to terminate the pro· aram as soon as possible. The mall vote, tallying the ballots of 281 members of the -468-m embe r organization. re- commends that Chancellor Daniel Aldrich retain the pro- iram. The ROTC program is 11 cooperaU vc venture with USC in , which UCI students would travel to use for their military training classes. Student opJ>O&ition to the pro- gra m was voiced through an ad hoc "Committee to St.op ROTC at UC I," which circulated a petition urging a special faculty senate meeting on the matter. Aldrich could not be reached tor comment today. In the past, he has said he would"1mlow tho recommendation of the faculty senate. . ?ro titute Fight LYON. Ftan~e (UPI) -More • than 300 prostitutes occupied a church Monday in a demonstra· tlon against whit they termed social discrjminatlon and police rC?prCS!llOn. AT ALDEN'S WE MEASURE YOUR HOUSE AND GIVE YOU AN EXACT COST BEFORE WE WRITE UP A CONTRACT AND INSTALL THE JOB. DON'T BUY IN THE DARK! DEN'S ~a,:Pii&J.•l•~: iiisiiJlitiiin: ·custom draperies UC. NO. 210422 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALlfl. 92627 • PHONE 646-4838 -6~6-23.55 . " •• II { I -J • .. Ora•ge ·t»ast ' • EDITION Today's.£1osl .. N.Y.Stoeks . ... VOL. 68, NO. 154, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1975 N :t'EN CENTS. ;tilA Coastal IleYelopnient Drive Launched • By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE Of ttie Dellr l"l let SUft The Jrvine Company opened its cllmpaign to get approval for de· velopment of its 10,000 coastaf •cres Monday with an all·day presentation and tour of the area lor county planning com· missioners. The planning commission is the first major hurdle that must" be clear ed in a series or ap· provals needed before the com· • pany can develop tbe land in tbe unincorpol'ated area between Irvine, Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The company hopes to get ap- proval for land use plan changes from the planning commission. late this summer, prior to a coun· ty general plan amendment to be cons ioe red by county supervisors in November. Before taking plant to the pl•n· nini comm1H.ioo. company plan- ner Larry Moore told the group, another round of presentations will be made to city councils of Irvine, 'Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The company also plans a pre· sentataon of a "refined plan" later this month to the members of 22 private and public organiza- ti~s who mak~ up TICMAP, an acronym for the Irvine Company Mulli·Aaency Plpnnina Pro· gram. The TICMAP members worked with company planners through a year or land use plan· ning for what has been called the· Irvine Company's most valuable parcel or land. Little has changed in the plans first unveiled by the company last October. However, (in al plans will call for development or a maximum or«> percent or the area, with the remainder to stay ~s open space, Moore said. · Additionally, PoPUlation pro· jections in the re fined plan are from 30,000 to 50,000 residents, down from a projection of 80,000 when plans for the area were first considered. ''We've g ot to quit doing plans," Moore quipped. "U we don't, the population is going down to zero." The large amount. or open space, 1,345 acres of which is de· signaled as a stale park, poses problems of its own. "The Irvin e Company is not in. the open space maintenance business," said Moore, "so some public agency or combination of public agencies will hav& to ac· <See l.RVlNE, PageA2) HuntingtOn May Get Solid · W 8ste Plant D•llY l"llet,._..W ... tnc•O'O...• TENNIS PLAYERS MANN (LEFT), LARRE SAVOR CHAMPAGNE Marathon Effort In Newport Beach Ends In Hljlnks 1,325 Games UCI Pair Take World Record By HILARY KAVE Of the O•llY Piiot Staff Things got pretty wet and wild in Corona del Mar Monday after- noon when two UC Irvine stu· dents broke the world's record for long distance tennis play. Bubbly champagne poured over the weary tennis players' heads and good natured cavort· ing in a nearby swimming pool c apped off the m arathon effort, whicn lasted 80 hours and fi ve minutes. Eric Mann. 23, and Eric Larre, 18, both mem bcrs of the UCI ten· Jlis team. dumped UCI's Sports Inform a tion Director Roy Englebrecht into the pool. Then, the two young men dove in after him. Englebrecht is the man responsible for setting up the marathon. which lasted from 8 a.m. Friday until 4:05 p.m. Mon· d ay. The previous record, set Sun· day in Bakersfield, was 80 hours. Docume ntation of the UCI players' e ff o rts will b e forwarded to the Guinness Book. of World Records. The m arathon netted $800 for the campus athletic scholarship fund. 1t was donation from M. J. Brock, builder of the :Jasmine orm::wlz:··· Weatlter Creek developme nt whe~ marathon took place. Observe rs said~h tennis players were "e"h. arated" when the match fin came lo an end and played " ery good tennis" during the last few minutes. They play a total or 1,325 games but no one kept track of who won the mos t games. The players' routine was one hour on the court and then a lS·minute break. During the breaks they changed socks, shoes and they ate. Over the four days, the two men used 75 pairs of socks and <See TENNIS, Page AZ) These Officers Were Howuled PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Portland police tangled with the : hounds of a Baskerville on Sun· day, and Officer Neil Gearheart, 32, has marks to show for it. He and two fellow narcotics of· ficers arrested Paul Thomas Baskerville, 27, Pauma Valley, Calif., after he allegedly sold them five pounds of marijuana. Police said he kicked one of the officers 'While they were :searching his car and two c$ogs who jumped from the car at· tacked the officers, biting Gearheart. He was not seriously .injured. ¥ Energy Savings Cited By GAJlY GRANVlllE Of Ille D•ilY Pllet SC.ft Orange County Road Com- missioner Ted M cConville said today that Huntington Beach is the most likely site for the coun· ty's first privately owned and operated solid waste disposal plant. The proposed $15 million plant would be used to reclaim reusa· ble material from the county's trash and to convert that which is not usable to energy. Capacity of the plant would be from 1,000 to 2,000 tons oLre!use daily, roughly one third of what county residents discard each day, McConv.Ule said. In Orange · County government, MeCon- ville's Road Department is in charge or dump operations. He went on to explain that . waste treated at the proposed . plant will produce the equivalent. · of one barrel of diesel fuel from each ton of refuse. . That fuel, Mcconville said, would be used to create steam that can be sold to a major user. ·One such user he specified was the Water Factory 21 in Fountain Valley, which would make tbe ·selection of a Huntington Beach site necessary. Another Possible energy user that Mcconville cited was the cily·owned p()Wer company in Anaheim , making Anaheim another Possible choice for the county's first private resourc~ recovery plant. Mcconville said refuse de· livered to such a plant by trash haulers would first run through a sorting process that would pick out s uc h mate rial as steel, aluminum and glass for recycl- ing. What remains would then be converted to the low sulphur fuel used to produce steam. · The road commissioner ·said such a plant would help reduce the cost of transferring the coun- ty's 6,000 tons of trash a day from collectors to county operal~<\.dis­ posal sites. The process would also add years of life to those dump sites by using roughly 70 percent of discarded material either for re- cycling or the creation of fuel. He pointed out that roughly 30 percent of what finds its way into trash haulers._ trucks is not resa· (See WASTE, PageA2) Night and morning low clouds with some hazy sun· shine inland areas in the , afternoon . Little tem- perature change. Highs from the upper 60s to tbe mid 70s. Long Slaowlriz Career INSIDE T_,DA Y A aurvioor of the Gulf of Mexico oil rig mishap recalls the terror of pitch block wet· ness under 45 feet of WClter. ·See story, photo Page A4. Index Ozzie Nelson Dies Of ~cer at 69 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ozzie Nelson , 69, whose wholesome "Adventures of Ozzie and Har- riet" on television and .radio a m u s e d a g e n e r a Hon of Americans, died today. Harriet, his wife and partner,' was at his bedside. He had undesgone surgery Cor cancer or the liver elght months ago. He died in bli Hollywood home. ''Ozzie knew be was goin1 to go, a nd be viewed it philosophically," a family trtcnd said. "He was working on another booki untU the end.'' .... : The Nelsons lived principally at their residence at 16 Lagunita, a private oceanfront community south of Laguna Beach. He had been moved to his Hollywood home to be closer to his doctor, a family spokesman said today. An athletic 170 poun& most of his adult life, Nelson had thinned to 130 but continued to visit his of· flee until eiaht weeks ago. ''The Adventures of Ozzie and Rarrtet'! aet records for lon1evl- ty, beginning ln 1944 on radlo an4. then jumptn1 to television in <See NELSON, Pa«e A!) • Religious Big Top Evangelist Bill Lowery has set up this big tent on Ora nge County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa for nightly revival meetings. . Lowery pl ans to preach nightly through the month of June. Tent holds 4,000. Lowery and about 140 of his followers moved into Costa Mesa over the weekend afte r stops in Anaheim and Riverside . . 7\ Coed Gym Now a 'Must' Share All but Showers, Contact Sports WASHINGTON (UPI) -Gym lion classes," HEW said, "lhe Classes in most schools and col· final regulations do allow separa· leges in the United States must lion by sex in physical educatio11 be integrated to include both classes during competition in boys and girls, except for bodily wrestling, boxing, basketball , contact sports, the adminislra· football and other s ports involv· tion announced today. ingbodilycontact." Under the rules announced by During the period schools are the Department of Health, making the "necessary adJUSt· Education and Welfare, any ments '' for integrated gym school receiving federal funds classes, HEW ~aid, they "must must demonstrate it is "moving insure tl'lat physical education as e xpeditiously as possible classes and activities which arc within the prescribed time frame separate are comparable for toward eliminating separate members of each sex." physical education classes." The rules do not, however, re- The rules were prepared under quire that equal a mounts of Tille IX of the Education Amend· money be spent on girls' and ments of 1972 which bars djs. boys' athletic programs. crimination by sex in federally At the same lime, HEW said financed school programs. classes on human sexuality could ''While generally prohibiting be segregated along with social sex segregated physical educa· ._ fraternities and sororities, hous· LONG CAREER ENDS Onie Nelaon, 89 ing, locker rooms, toilets and showers. But it declined to tackle the issue of sex ste reotyping in tex · tbooks .. "Equal education opportunity for women is the law of the land, and it will be enforced," Wein· berger said, adding he wanted to implement Title IX quickly "rather than undergo the series of fut,ile confrontations and end· JessJaw .suits ... Acknowledging the law was 40 Fires ffit ' Brooklyn Area NEW YORK CAP> -Forty building fires occurred within three hours Monday night in a SO.block area of the South Bronx. A Fire Department spokesman said most of the !ires were au.s- piclous and were fought by firemen brought ln &om all five borouebs of the city. ''indeed far r eaching in its. sweep" and was impossible to draft in a way "that will please a ll or the people all of the time." Weinber ger nonetheless noted the rules were mod i fied significantly from a previous draft. For example, the provision al- lowing separate teams in contact sports was new. He specifically mentioned ten- nis, track. swimming and golf as sports which must be integrated because they do not involve bodi· ly contact. ·'Thi s is not a req uj rement, nor is it a s uggestion that colleges can re· ruse to offerfootba II. basketball or othercontactsp()rtstomembersof each sex separ ately if there is enough student interest to warrant it,"Weinbergersaid. "In all, I think this regulation enhances opportunity for women in athletics, but it will also allow schools the fl exibility they need to keep competitive sports ali ve and well." Sl'OCK MARKET CLO,SES MIXED . NEW YORK (U PI> -The stock market, faced with profit taking pressures from r ecent gain~, closed mixed Tuesday in active trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial average, up and do\\'n within a two-point range throughQut the day, was off 0.47 to 846.14 at tile close. It had gained 31 points the previous two sessions. Advances ·led declines by about an eight-to- five margin among the 1,838 is· 'sues crossing the tape. Turnover amounted to about 26,900,000 shares, compand yilh 28,240,000 traded Monday. .. \ ' \ Al OMLYPILOT N • Last S to " Ford Confers With Pontiff Fl:OJ1l Wlre Servkes VATICAN CITY -President )'ol"d ended a whlrlwind eight· hour visll tG Italy today and went to the Vatican Cor talks with Pope Paul VL Every postwar U.S. president since Dwight D. Elsenhow#r has paid a call on the spiritual leader of Roman Cathollc~m at this city-state across the Tiber from central Rome. Ford's agenda with Pope Paul Sncluded discussions on the Mid· die East, U.S. food aid, refugee probl ems and other humanitarian issues. U.S. of· ficials said. He departed for the 'U.S. this a fternoon. The Vatican visit was the last stop on Ford's week-long Euro- pean tour. In his talks with "-'.Italian officials he paid tribute to the "extraordinary ties of friendship" between the United 5tates and lta ly . Ford m et with Preside nt Giovanni Leone and gave him the message he has carried to other European leaders -that Was hington is s licking by its Atlantic alliance partners. Italian authorit ies carried out exceptional security measures. More than 5,000 heavily armed police officers and soldiers were Frotn Page A J IRVINE ... quire and m a intain it.'' Within a month, said Moore, a special committee ®signed to resolve the question of open space maintenan ce an d ownership will begin meeting. • The h.11d designated as a state i)ark includes a 3.5-mile stretch ~f beach and blufCs from Corona del Mar to Laguna Beach and Moro Canyon from the coast to the San Joaquin Hills ridge. The $7.6 million land sale is tied up in a suit filed by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith, who contends the sale price is loo low. Plans call for re taining the pre· sent route of Pacific Coast Highway and adding an addi· tional "trans portation corridor" of unspeciCied dimension along the San Joaquin Hills ridge. The compan y. s aid Moore,. wants to wait for a pending re· vis ion to the county arterial highways plan before working , out final details of the transporta· lion s ystem. ·Commodore's 1 ~ B a ll Plwuied In Newport Tickets are on sale for Newport : Beach's annual Commodore's : Ball. . Spokesmen for the sponsoring :Commodore 's Club of the i Newport Harbor Chamber oC ~ Commerce said rescrvati<>lls arc : available throuµh chamber of· ; fices for $17.50 per person or $175 : for a ta ble of 10. : This year·~ edition will be held ; June 20 at the N ewporter Inn's : Monte Carlo Room. with · cocktails at 7:30 and dinner at •·8:30p.m . ; Miss I\ewporl Beach will be : crowned at the event. ' The fi ve vying for the title this ~ year are Brynne Bonner and Lis a . Creamer . both 17 and each a stu- ~ dent at Corona dcl Mar High • School; M ichc lle Dutton, 18, • Colleen Connell. 17, and Debbie : Vancleve, 16, all Crom Newport : lfarbor High School. ORANGE COAST N DAILY PILOT Tf'\• Or~n~ Co.i.\t O••IY Pflo• wfthwhfcl"t 1SCom• tl.•t'W d trw:i f'H "'' Pr r'\ .. I\ ouOlf\l'lie<I by 'ht Oritft9'-c.o.. ... Pubh .runq tom<;•f\Y ~•r•r•ff ~•ho,..."'~ p,,t!>fl\~ Mof'WfJ,.., t1'fOv1"' Ft d41v tor Coiit• ,,,,,., ·• ''' wc.t:'' £'1• •'" Munt1n'Vf0t' Ek>~" ~oun· ftt·" \/ t I•~ h #•"' ',.teldll t.•tt V41lf-V .. nd L•QJIH bt 4 "' Y,utr C.o• t A ~f"IQff' ft·91r;n.ief t-G ti~ 1•. Nib .tu '1 ').,tutdiAY, ·tNi \~v-. ff'tir pr1n<104I oubl .I\.,,, Ol•"'I I dt 1100 Wt)t (My ~trt'ft C. ,,. th. .• t..• 1tort11-1V1•1t. Robert N Weed Pt1 :• "+1 t4M ~UtA• ,,. t Jr1C le R Curlt>v \111 ,. p,.,,.10ff\I •l"IO (A"~tAI M.1""'9ff Thomas Keevil E~•to• Thomas A. Murbhin .. Charle'> H . Loos Rtehard P. Nall A \\l\t•f'lt Wt• f'leQtnQ ~~tor , NewPort 8U(h Office )l)J N ft#fWU'I .. CHlff'•Aofd M.o•hn9 •oo'"" Po laO• •us. •)k) Other Offices (O'\l• ""'° ·• UO W• .t .... \tu 4'1 \Attll'Wt l .. Mft t , .. C.,al'l'W"llf\fU \4t•f't Mvnh9'0tOI" Af•<tir ttlh &if..-.:" ~·•¥••d t.o<MltO.C• V•llry 1001 ~· P•/ 11-"$4n C..490 f , ..... , TtltpftOM 1714) ... 2~11 CIHllfltd Adv.rtiSlft9 MZ·S671 \. (;•O¥f•lnl 1t/S Or.,, .. '"'°'' ,..,."'"'~t c.orn.•"Y 1110,,•W\llOF~ 11111\lfll-Mlf .. 1•1 .... 11., ...... ,,,, ....... "h ... , •. ,. ,.. .. , •• ttOf~llUO wlll'tOvl -cl•I ,.,..,.,,.,.,.. ~I <-fifl'I-'· ~t<Oftd Cl•H "~1•9' f>lll• tf CMI• M• .... C..lllKl'll" $uOM11 .. ltll.., C«fW ~ 00,,..,..lllly by INlll .... 00 l'l'IOflllll,, l'l'lllWf*'lln•l•~I>' U 00 -'"''· ) ., posted in the city plus another 200 sharpshooters on rooftops in the capital. Despite some rears of de· monstrations by Italian lettlsts. there was total calm in the city. Ford flew by helicopter Crom Rome's Ciampino airport to the Renaissance presidential palace, where be reviewed an honor g uard of white-uniformed customs police and helmeted and mounted troops. "It is my pleasure to bring to you the greetings and high re- gard oC the people of the United States for Italy," Ford told· Leone. Mesa Barming B i llboards - ·Jn Seven Years Twenty-two years after in - corporation, the city of Co~ta Mesa voted Monday night to ban billboards from the city. The historic vote came after a 21:? -hour hearing and after months oC study of a city staff pro- posal to rid Costa Mesa of billboards by declaring them a public nuisance. Councilmen balked at the staff proposal last April 1, but Monday night the positions of two council members changed and the ban carried on a 4-1 vote. In favor were Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, plus Councilmen Dom Raciti, .Jack Hammett and Norma Hertzog. Opposed was. Coun- cilman Robert Wilson. Hammett and Mrs. Hertzog kept the ordinance from passing two months ago -both then said that they favored regulation but not outright e limination -but Monday night they went along with the ordinance in preCerence to three alternatives which were regulatory only. Chief Advance planner Arnold Hamala said that most of the 33 billboards in the city -the greatest concentration is on Newport Boulevard between 15tli and 17th streets -will be re· moved within three years and the rest within seven years. F ron1Page A I WASTE •.. ble in any form .. Concrete, dirt and tree stui:nps were cited as ex· .amples. · The road commissioner said he will present fi ve proposals for the construction of the resource re· covery plant to lhe Board of Supervisors next week. Part of that p re sentation will include a written report declar· ing the proposed plant to be of modern design and complying with environmental Protection Agency requirements. · Recently, County S~pervisor Ralph Diedrich toured such a plant in Baltimore. Md. Diedrich said that a contract with the private operator could be drawn that would provide the county with the needed protec- tion for the plant's operation, in· eluding fixed fees for disposing or the waste. He sa id pri vale operators could save the county money and show a profit t hrough three sources o f inco me. sale of e nergy, sale of reclaimed materials and payment by the county for the destructi on of dis- pos able materia ls. Diedrich said Orange County will eventually require three to four resource recovery plants. Landscaping Awar ds Given In Newport Two homeowners and Coul' 'bus inesses in the Newport Beach area have won beautification awards from the Women '§ oi~i;io~ or" ihe N~·~pc;rt.· ii~~-t>Or Chamber of Commerce. The Dolphin Civic Beaulirica· tion Awards are given &M\J,,~ly to local bu s inesses and homeowners in r ecognition of ef • forts to make Newport Beach more be3utiCul through landscaping. Winners in the homeowners division are Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Rapp, 310 Diamond Ave., Balboa Island and Mr. and M~. F)'ed N. Good, 34 Miss ion Bay, Corbna dcl Mar. The Bani< of Newport, at 16th Street 8nd Dover Drive, eod the Newport Plaza Office Building at 1601 Dove St. were awarded prizts in the bualnessdivt1ion. Lido Vlllage by the Don Koll Company won the sweepstakes award and a special award went to Rogers Gardens. at S.n Joa· <1uin Hills Road and MacArthur Boulevard. ' A Dog's Life School -Dinner Fetes Retirees A dinner lo honor 3' emptoyes of -the Newport-Mesa Unified School Dlstrict who are retiring at the end of this school year wlll be held at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Costa Mesa Women's Club. Local residents. former stu· dents and friends or the empJoyes are invited to the dinner. Reservations are $6 and may be made by phoning Rosalie King, 556-3251. The 34 employes have a total of .451 years.of service to the school district. They include teachers, secretaries and maintenance workers. Five employes have beel\ with (he "istrtct 20 or more years, but only three of those will be at Thursday's dinner. They are Marguerite Danziel, secretary in the maintenance department for 20 years; John Nieves. head groundsman at Corona del Mar High for 22 years; and Teresa Patterson, Costa Mesa High 'Spanish teacher for Z1 year s. ' The other two long-time employes retired in January and have already left the area. They are Mary Hall, Newport Harbor High foreign langualle teacher C9r· Expert Says Niguel Bank . Was Secure A security expert called as the first witness fot the defense testified today in Orange County Superior Court that the Monarch Bay United California Bank had a "grade A .. system in operation when it was burglarized three years ago or $3.3 million in securities. cash and jewelry. Frank Joseph Meiners. a security specialist with Un- derwriters Laboratory-ii saCely organization created by America's Insurance Com- panies-challenged a statement 27 years and James Miller, math. and draftlng teacher at Ne wport Harbor High Cor 28 years. . • ., Others to be honored indude: Walter Adrian, 16 ye an. Martha Blo6mberg, nine years. Marvin Brown, six years, Roy Cragg, 10 years. Elizabet)\~ Edwards, 18 years, Charlie Fegley, 15 years. Alice Fisher, 1.3 years, Howard France, 10 years. Marie E . Ha mmons, 15 years, William Hanrahan, six years: Darrel Jordan. 10 years, Mildred Kolves, 13 years, Patricia Lind- quist, eight years and Conley Marlow, six years. Also, ·wmfam Holt, 12 years, Helen McPhee, 14 years. Leon Meeks, 12 year s, James A. Nim· mo, eight years. Elizabeth Okulick, 15 years, Donato Otero; eight years, Frances Painter, seven years, Lewis R. Pal,.er.19 years, Arnold Papineau. 12 years, Orlando. Robinson, 16 .Years, Beulah Smith, 14 years. Harold Swinney, nine years, Myrtle Wa ggoner, 18 years, Charles Ward, Cive years and Michael Vulakovic, 13 years. The Second Annual Retirement and Recognition Dinner will begin at 6 p. m. with no-host cocktails, followed by a roas- beef dinner at 7 p.m. Proceeds Crom th~· dinner will benefit the scholarship funds or the California School Employes' Association and the Newport· Mesa Food Services Association . Reservations should be made no later than Wednesday. F rotnPage AI TENNIS •.. consumed at least 50 quarts of Gatorade, in addition to varjed amounts of peanut butter, health Cood candy bars, fruits and tuna fish. About 100 people were on hand when the marathon ended and all 'a ppla uded when the players came oCC the courts. Cheryl Rupp of Middleton, Ohio, had the ideal pl~ce ~or keeping he r· 2-year-old son, Brandy, ?U~ o_f ~11sch1ef while s he groomed her entry for the M1ss1ss1pp1 Valley Kennel Club Dog Show at Washington Universi.ty in St. Louis. ·earlier· in the trial that a sophisticated "line security" system was available to the bank March 10, 1972. Meiners sald the s tatement by a security expert called by the plaintiffs was inaccurate. The system did not become .;tvailable to Southern California banks un· til after the Monarch Bay burglary. Larr~;·' a freshman pre-med student from Los Alamitos, left Jasmine Creek about an hour after play had s lopped. But Mann, a junior economics and sociology student remained several hour& to unwind. A straight A student, Mann had two final exams today and reportedly .studied for them last week. UC Irvine Senate . His main goal today was not answering the questions correcl· _ly, but trying lo stay awake dur; ingtheexams. I Favors Air ROTC 1l is alleged by 66 former patrons who seek nearly $50 · million in damages Crom the bank, the Oreo Alarm Copmpany and the Diebold SaCety Corpora- tion that negligence led to the looting of 450 saCety deposit boxes. Police Set Crime Meet The uc · Irvine faculty senate· reversed a reversal of a decision to have Air Force Reserve Of· ficer Training offered to UC I stu· dents. In results oC a mail ballot re· leased today. 142 faculty mem· bers favored the program and 139 wanted it canceled. Last fall the program was ap· proveq ·at a senate meeting with about 40 members in attendance. Suosequently, another meeting was held at which about 40 mem- bers voted to terminate the pro· gram as s oon as possible. The mail vote, tallying the f'rona Page AI NELSON •.. 1952, where it ran 14 years. The Nelsons' sons, Ricky and. · David, grew up on the show, and arter they married. their wives joined the cast. On the series Nelson was the sunshiny, sometimes bemused father and husband. Harriet was a warm-voiced beauty who mar-. ried Nelson in 1995. At first their sons, David and Ricky; were portrayed by child actors. Then on Feb. 20, 1949, the Nelson sons joined the show. The television show went ofC the air in 1966. "It was getting pretty diffused because or the way the family had grown," Oz- . zie said. "We had Ricky and Kris (bis wife) going in one direction, David and' June in another. and then there was Harriet and me. the other _posse. It was getting hard to hol4 ~v~rythlngtogetber. · Rfck, now 35, went into singing and continued acting whlle David. now 39, became a television director. __ •. -After· their series ended, the Nellon parents acted in such plays as "Marriage-Go-Round" a.nd "The Impossible Years." • They returned to television In 1972 with a syndicated show, "Ozzie's Girls." Oswald Nelson we.s born ln Jersey City. N.J ., on March. 20. 1906. Both hls parent.a were mu.teal, and Onie appeared in •mateur theatrical productions when be was 5. At 13 he was t.be youngnl · E11le Seoul in America and rtpraented the United SUtes atl the first Boy Seoul Jlmboree in London. ballots oC 281 members of the 468-member organization, re· commends that Chancellor Daniel Aldrich retain the pro· gram. The ROTC program is a cooperative venture with USC in which UCI s tudents would travel to USC for their military training classes. Student opposition to ·the pro- gram was voiced through an ad hoc "Committee to Stop ROTC at liCI," which circulated a petition urglng a s pecial faculty senate meeting on the matter. Aldrich could not be reached for comment today. In the past, he has said he would follow the recommendation of the faculty senate. Safety systems at the bank were bypassed by a team or burglars during a carefully planned three-day operation in which the thieves camped on the rooC of the bank as they prepared to enter the building. Members of the team are now s erving federal prison terms. Most of the loot taken from the Laguna Niguel bank has since been recovered by the FBI. Plaintiffs' attorney Arthur Hews closed his case late Mon· day after oCfering testimony from most of the 66 plaintiffs he represents in the ch\ss action filed against the three defen· dants. The Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce and the police de· partment will jointly sponsor a ·seminar for retail businessmen Thursday in an effort to prevent crime. The 7:30 a.m. event will be held in the auditorium of the new police facility at Santa Barbara ·Drive and J amboree Road. Seat- ing is limited to 90. Police specialists will explain special problems facing busi· nessmen during the busy sum- mer months a s well as methods of avoiding or minimizing losses. Reservations for seating al the free event are available by call- ing644·8211. KNOW THE COST DON 'T BUY CARPETING W I T HOUT GETTING A COMPLETE PRICE BEFOREHAND. A PRICE PER YARD IS INADEQUATE , BECAUSE THE YARDAGE CAN BE MISFIGURED OR ERRONEOUS. WE HAVE TALKED TO PEOPLE RECENTLY WHO BOUGHT CARPETING FROM A STORE WHICH DID NOT PRE-MEASURE HOUSES. THE INSTALLERS WERE ASSIGNED THE JOB OF FIGURING YARDA GE ·A N D T OTAL COST. UNTIL THE CARPETING WAS CUT UP AND INSTALLED. THE CUSTOMER WAS IN THE DARK. THEN IT WAS TOO LATE! AT A LDEN'S WE MEASURE YOUR HOUSE A ND GIVE YOU AN EXA CT COST BEFORE WE WR ITE UP A CONTRACT AND INSTALL THE JOB. DON 'T BUY IN THE DARK! \. DEN'S :iiisiaJlatiaii:·custom draperies LIC. NO 230422 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA M!SA, CAllF. 92621 • PHONE 6-46--4838 -6.t6-2355 .. t I I I .. Price Dl1elosures' FfC Seeking Ad Okay on Drugs . WASHINGTON <AP)_;The Federal Trade Commission bas proposed regulations overturning state prohlbltions qa1nst adverhsing prescnpt1on drug prices. The FTC et1t1mated that comparison ahopping for prescription drugs ®Uld save consume rs over $130 million a ye11r. The commission said such advert~l.na is restricted by various laws in 34 states and ellecUvel blocke~ even in the 16 other states by pharmacists codes of tbics and consumer ignorance of wide dJvergence In prices tor lhes;;;d~u;:IRMAN ( CONSUMER J LEWIS A Engman, who _ _ announced his agency's move .m a s peech to the . Amencan Advertising Federation, said a survey by the Northern CalLfornia Pharmaceutical Assoc1allon in San Francisco showed prices ranging from $2.50 to $11.75 tor 100 tablets of raudm, a high blood pressure remedy. A com· mission staff study cited !ilmllar results from surveys m olher arc us. . . . "It is a curious set or values which says that the con- s umer may be given full information about discretionary purchases s uch as deodorant and mouthwash but cannot be · gJven information tbat wall help him save money on non- discret1onary purchases such as drugs which a doctor has prescribed as t:ssent1al to his good health," Engman sa1d. The FTC proposal would not only snake its regulation, which has the force of law, superior to st~ws but would a lso lay down ground rules for drugstores wliThb.choose to ~dvertise prices. Among other things, drug price ads would have to warn that pnces vary widely and consumers should shop wisely. THE PRINCIPLE OF PRICE advert1smg is endorsed by the National Association of Cham Drugstores and op- posed by t he American Pharmaceutical Assoc1allon, which represents the professionals who fill the prescrtpt1ons._ Carl Roberts, associate general counsel for the pharmuc1sts trade assot1at10n said his organization docs not proh1b1t furnishing consumers with price information on re- .quest. but .. advertlSlng is intended lo and has the etlect of creatmg a demand." He said even though people cannot buy a prescriptlon ,without specific order from a doctor, the advertismg would . put pressure on conditions and lead to drug abuse. Engman said , however, "l have no reason to believe that the end result of proVlding price information w1ll be a •bunch of kids smging. 'I'd bke to buy the world a fix.• You're Just going to hear how much it costs, and nobody ever got hurt by that." • THE FTC STAFF STUDY estimated Americans bought $6 79 b1lhon worth of prescription {!rugs in 1973. The $130 million estima te of what price advertising would save was made by a college professor on the basis of 1970 sales o( nearly $3 billton less FTC officials said that means current isavmgs could be m uchhJgher. Sugar Costs Hurting U.S. Candy lnd~tries WASHINGTON (UPT> - Soaring sugar prices and the recession m ade 1974 a sour year for the U.S. candy in· :f us try, the Comme rce Department bas announced. Output of confect1onary manufacturers dropped 4 per- rent to 3 65 million pounds. This works out to a n average 17.6 pounds of sweets con- ~umed by each man, woman 1:1nd child nlsl year . 4 percent below a year ear h er. Except for a small upturn in 1973, candy production has fallen steadily smce 1969. T he e ffects of mrtat1on, however, pushed the value or <!andy shipments up 29 per- cent in 1974 to $2.77 million in 1974. Prices of s ugar, coconut meat. cocoa beans, corn syrup and various kinds of nuts a ll advanced sharply so that 49 cents of every s~les dollar m 1974 represented in- gredient costs, compared to Just38 cents the year before.· The Commerce Depart· ment report suggested that the Ol,Jtput decltne may also reflect a change in candy buy- ing habits by the pubhc. .. With the s lowdown in population growth, this does not bode well for reaching new output highs," the de· partment said. MARKET HIGHLIGHTS NYSE Index ASE Index Dow.Jones Ind S&P 500 Stocks INDEXES 49.35 89 61 846.14 92.89 up up off up 0.17 0.11 0.47 0.31 Gffh1t•rN tu1d Lt••~rN New York CUPll -Tht lot40wt"9 lilt Sllows 1he sloe.ks lllet ll•v• 91lnect most end lost trio most bued on perc~t of cnenoe on Iha N.ew York !.tock • E•ch1n11t Net •nd perctnl11oe cnanoes ire the dllferen<e belWHn Tt>e orevlt>us c10Sl119 price end lht current closll'l!I Pf'l<e. GAIHE llS 1 C. C I COf'O 21'1 t--'it Up 41 7 2 Palm Bh 2S S'I\ .. I Up 2t 9 l Uni Tel wt• 1•1t+ 14 UP 20 0 4 Elgln H•ll 13'14 + lYt Up 19 J S Mytts l 40 714 t-j Up 1' 0 • Wllll11kr Cp 4 + Ya Up 14 J 7 Un H1Klt1r ltt\+ JV. Up II S I FllCllen OSb 12~ + 1v, Up IJ S t GUlltd Miii• 214 -t-1"11 Up 12 S 10 Aluin 16b Slo\+ " Up 11 t 11 Gull Ml Qt RI 2'1\ + V. Up 11 I ~H~l ~~dr1\i 4r: 4~ ~g l&I 14 RutkerC ?O 1124\o'cl + av. Up 10 ) IS Arlen AllOv i\O. + II• UP 10 0 lj Lth V•I Ind I~+ Vo Up 10 0 f1 Sixon Indus 41'11.. ~ Up 10 o 11 KteneCp 20 1 + ~ Up 9 8 It Groller Inc 2'• • v. Up 9 S 20 SlmPrcn 12 7'• 1 n Up 9 • 1 LMI lnveslr 2 kelAI pl ''" 3 ICN Pllarm LOSERS ,,,_ 14 Off 4!v.i= ,"" 8:1 11'1-v. Off 31\-v. Off 1i:= ~ fiOff l~-\4 6!-\I) l"-\to H·lt-Mt ~f I~-\lo Off 11* t ,6 L I LO 7.4 H " '' u •.s " 63 " " J\PH."' Y1Jrk l:i !tlost Acth•e ~ew YORI( IUPll -ThO IS most ICI ve stocks lt1de<I on Ille Hew Yortl Slod Exchlngt Tuesd•Y S.IH Clttoo °"' S.•rle G 0 •••• S3',700 21'1 :.. Otcdnll Pel ••.• 30 600 19~. ~~ Wllllltktr ... 269~ 4 + .,, Sou11'lel'll Co •••• 214, 11'1'• + .,, AMAX Inc .... "S·600 SIV. + "" Wll=S Cos ••• 19 ,000 :M'lli +Wt ws se ~le 181,IOO ltV. + ..... TtltPfOft\P er 111,000 '"' I/• Am Alr1lne1 171,000 914 + 't Teaeco 1"4,600 ,..,.. -It All'I Tel&Ttl "l.SOO 4'114 -\1 Gvtl 011 1Sl,SOO 21 + •;· NOflon Sli ISS,700 1r12 e+ 1 8I0<1c H 1.53,200 11~ Ttlt• COtp 136,800 3 + V• ~ Ameriea11 10 Mo11t A t•t it•t• NlW 'YOlll( fUPI) -Tllf 10 •ctlve uocu trlldtd 011 tll• American Slock EIKllll>lt Tvesciey 8 h ies Clltt Ol!I McCltll Oil 116,SOO S• • -t1 §e MQtl'll ID 600 41/• + ~. H COrP 71,IOO 43\~ -Vt •tff LIO SI, 100 101/• + ''" 1C1 1tr Ind 49,000 10"• Fly om 011 .a,100 :u~ :.. ••• \AtWt Th wit •••• 47,200 I • • • °"W"" . . . . ...60o 4 ~. 1"11 • •• • 0 ,600 1\111 + '• Hl" NO ti • • 43.SOO 3 'Yo ' Elec1 Assoc S ~lled MQ 6 MIQ<t Tr Am 1 Allco M !Sb I Chockl'ul 311 t NI Cllyl 90 10 fl'IOl\twk DI 11 HoCJIAlrl wt 12 UMET TrJ1 Ii ICllUAI I tO 14 Wleboldl ,. 1$ 1.. .. cb&H .SO 1' CAC>ot Cp '1 11 C.pMl9 Inv 11 S.v A Sloo tt C.00.Un 26e 20 Mob41e Hom j~~:g i t -\Ill 2 -Yo 2•1a-" •14-14 tii-~~~-----------1. Markrf Tr.,nd s .. H NYH MA1t1Cn TltaND --------------~. Mvenna .......... ~~'I~ . ~·ew York 0itc11nu ........... m 'i.1 Ult< lllfll'd . . . . • . • . 41 J M6 Snle11 \'olH•r Totei ......... • ... 1"' ,_.. Due to 1ete transm1ss1on today's listing will not appear 1n the Daily Pllo·t. Flf\11 Stk Ill 1'ot•• 1r 190 f'INl l>nd ''' ~yt1r190 AMIXIAl.ll AMl!X MUll(tf TlllNO Advllr!<U DtKllne\ Ufl(hfll~ Tolel .... , IPnllm1Nry (OUnl I '~·~l m ,., 1:? 1:l ' Tuesday. June 3. tm N CAIL y PtlOT A 11 Tuesday's Clo ing Prices NEW YO~K ·STOCK EXCHANGE H ~W YO It I( ' ll,Ufll) • $drl Htt ,...leWlno ~,. llt1Cml .,.. ,,. ,,, !lGl ao.. ti,o. New Yotk MO(J( t~ ,e ~ !i 61 ,flla Cl-. f,:1fl ,_. ~},.>~ h; ~ '1i ~ ... !::.!. ":'' dOlt OIO ITec t~ 4 U 1n. AOOottl 1 " " 109 15 • • • ri.rc nu S1 "" : : : ACF1"4UO t as •s -.. re)n!~~-? J ~ .. ·\, .ac""av so s 1111 m .,; ,,, , , lf'h-14 ~D• .e12a t 1u ' + w r.. lo u *"'-~ =:,;:'w.ff1t·: fl 1r' ::· ."J~ ... 't • . .. ,...pll .. 1.a ~ • • ~ ~ 6 S IS¥.-~ Inv 1~ • • t1 t\'e+ -• s r : .. a l~ =: : M\NL.ll•ll ~ ~.,.. lllp("efl •• l4 ~·'" Alt1!41Upl2 •• 6 40 +114 c I cw sot 1 '-~~-.JO • 11• 11,.. ••• c" '·~·s 10 1~ \II A I~ 1 to 9" •1_. •-.. J 6 '"" ~"· I Air rd 2 It 174 1~+ w --""+ AltCOlftC S 14S 18">-~ 1::rn' •• S )'2! l4t A J ll'ICIUll~ {. 40 I.. • .. nw11 "'_'/; ;t ~~ '\C, r: ~ I 20 4 1* 1~ V. Hiid 1 72 I 22 ~ -All GM 1 1a 1 12 12"-• 111 llll i 60 7 1' 15~ .,. 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ChlMlg l30 • • 2'7 4 • • Alld $Uclmkl • 31 2,.._ "' ~ ... ·* • 2 • -"' Ills C.~ 2' 6 23S lt~i-YI tr 1.10 S 1'1 33.,._IV. All glllA S6 7 7~ ltY 2 .. S IU U¥t ••• Al~ pt .72 s -4 ~+'fr; C 1,eo. 4 2 J:J\4+ IA Ar(OI I J4 10 US ~ V. g:s$$~ ;·~ t: I~ ~ ~ • =:'i5';'7i : 1J: r,v,t :: °'' Mllw Cp •• 17 1v. ... AAMXpf S•/•.. '9 127 +2~ CNMllCp pl " 6 12 -+ 111 AMll>K .. • JS 12 + ~ OI Pneum 2 • )4 ~+1111 Arnc«d 26 7 100 ~~ • • OlockFul lit • . 10 l*-IA Anwrtc I 20 .S 4 11~ ~ g:~~r·;~ s m ,;"': :t AlnHU ~ 4 447 1q + \Ill Cl'lroml pi s • 2 ST~+ y. ~rf!1J 44 13 1!~ ~; ~ C.hrYSlltr Cp , 470 11~ Am AlrllMS S2 1110 IV•+ ~. ~rsi.~.: . : ~ ::: .. : ~:,::::2 :: •• ~ ~t ~ Cl AUIV In 6 JV. •• AM Brest .IO 9 210 2S'h-"" g~ ~ : ~ ' ,J u: t-•\Ill ""'81119 .J4 • • 1~"' C.lnG f;" 21 . I.SO 97~+ \It A Cltl 2 20. • &3 32'/H \lo ClnMI a I 40 • 12 241/o I AC...npfl~ •• 322 •• CIT,.n2.201227~+1 ~~rn 't~i 4 4~ 1~ ~ Olko11> • 14 S30 ~+ "' AmCyan I'll 8 709 21 • 1111 C.llS.rv 2 tO 7 211 ~ .. YI ArnOstl 12h 13 2 ·~ • .. C.IUens Mt9 • 13 2\llli-\Ill AOlslTel S2 12 Jl3 25V•+ v. g~rnv ~ 14 I~ ~\4! ~ Z::2rt~~s~ 9 13l~ ,;~~ ~ cHv •nvwu .. uo ~ .• AFamily 2, 1 144 9~ •.4 Oty Inv pf 2 • 31 llV.-\Ill A FlnSys 2.0 27 2.8 5¥1 • g:~: ail·~ ~ ~ m';! r; :~t I~ • ~~ ~!lo=-~ CLC. Am 24 4 IS m ... A Gn Ins 60 6 42 12\li-,,.. Clv(.1112 60l 11 6 97V.-1'.4 A Gn pf 1 IO , 40 22"-+ "" C.lev El 2 41 1 110 V'A+ V. AlnHoist 70 6 100 14'!.--lit C.lnEI<!! 12 •• 1160 IGll'I+ YI Am Hotn 8829 903 42-N , ~~~IC p .: .'~ l~SJ 1!~t-~ A Home pl 2 • I 191\l'J+~ ClutttP P! I • • 3 l~i-1i'I Z::~!:ss~ ~~ 1li ~ '111 CMI Inv CP •• 160 121.<.-Vo • ..... d 7 CH-' FINKI • 110 ~ ••• ...... tel 12 I lit CHA pf 1 10.. 14 12v.-\Ill ~ -::,~:~ ~ m ~. CHA In .Slit .. lO 10'/H V. ·-.. Gs 2 ., 1 90 3 ........ + 'Ill CHA U wln.. 12 IV• ••• ........ "" '""' CHALof 2 10 • • S I + \Ill Am SHU~ 1' 10 1 -'!. 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ColonSI I U • lS 211;\ , • , Ameron 90 S SI I~+ 'A Coll Indus 2 J 15J 31'¥1+ \If ==~I~ i S~ 11:-•v; Coll~A '60 •• 4 2IM ••• AMF In I 24 IS 366 20\.11-'I• ~18~ 24: ·; J ID':+•~ Amie, Inc t 3 74 191,.._ ~ COIGs pf J~ • 1' S2 + Yt AMP nc 37 3' 2'4 40 -'I> Col Plclur11 21 224 a'h-•ta A~o .40 3 16 I~ • ColS Ot1 1 96 I 141 20"4li-"'° Ampe11 Cp 1 171 6.,.,_ 14 ColWllll Mlg . 2 1-\lo+ "' ~::r:,<:i ~ ft ir"! :~ ~:1E~ I~ ~ !: +l·• Amstr pf .. • • l 7Mo ••• CmE·pf 1 10 • 6 42 +4 A"lsted l to 1 "' 61 + 2 Cmwi:d 2 30 10 S60 261/J+ Yt Amtel In 32 ' M 6'h ••• Cw Edpt 2 17 •• lO 3 ••• Anecnd• 60 S 408 17\lo+I COmEd pr :r • J 21 + I/• AnchHc. t 20 t 9 ~-'i'I C.w Edpf l.•2,. 1l 17'4+ •n AnderC11y I 6 .U 211,,.. ... ~ Cwt Pf' 1 90 , • 22 1.-14 :::ru:1~ ~~ l 2~~ 2r4'+ ~ ~~~ :: ~ 1~··A Ao.t<heC SO 1 191> 11'At+ 'VI CWOtlpl 1.72 • l 19 + V. Apco 0 11 41 4 1M> 1114-t-I/• Comm Sit I I 17D l6 •+ Ya APIKO Corp 1SO 3\lo • ComC1U9t• 1 21 19\4 , • :~t f~'f.ol ~ 13t ~¥.+. ~ c.omwtr S<.i 21 283 s~+ V. 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Arm pf 2 10., 6 28VI t-\'I eon p pf 4V. • 1300 :sJ ••• ~~i:4:2) m ;!~:IV• ~rr:t'i"O:io I~~:~!~ Armc. pl a~ 110 4S • • • enuc..n uo 1 •)9 a + \Ill Armst Aubb 10 42 11 V• + \'I CnUGopp to 2 lS 11.4 ••• AroCotptn 1 s 4 12v.-"' ConllCP2 60 13 213 4114 .•• Arvin Indus 2J 7' 6~ + Vt CntlCp pf2Ya • • 1s ~.,... °" ASA Lid IO • 280 38'1\ +Hit C Cppl8 21'1 14 4S\4 +1'¥1 Aurco t'h 4 146 17'h+ \olt OllllCp 120 6 14 ~ 14 Mtllnoll l'h S llO 2151 • ClllllPr Mb .. 39 ~+ 14 AstllOpf 2 40 I 43 + ~ C.tl 111 Ally , • 17 2 •• AsOryG IAO 11 II 21 + :v. Conti Mtge • t3I 1 + 1 1' ~h~~ 1 :g ~ 8~ 2~-. v. ContlnllOH 2 9 1297 t.9 +1'h Altco M ISb • 33 3~-V• ~~g.~IP112 'i 20l n~s'-11 AllCIYEI 11h 7 38 18 + -lO Contrl Dall •• S?9 21~+ V. AllRlcht 2'h 13 111 100"'1 ConOtpf 4'h • ZIOO '4 AIRc pl 2 80 • 217 1>7 Conwood 2 I 1 29 • , All Reh prl J • 10 110 + l'h Coe* Un 2W • • 129 2'1.--AllH Corp • SSI 3 'h Coop In 1,'4 t 114 ~+1'"-ATO 1"' 20 6 as 8\11 Cooprln pl s ,. 1 122v.-I<. 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I• Zlyre Gorp I S•..-+ \'i Pope T ·-t 10 17\lt-~ SY!>ran .M 11 ,, ,,Ya Z.ntlhAld 1 •Di.~, u • ~ Port( Inc 1J 4 ~ 19~ 14 Syt>rn~ l-AO •• J 41 Z1>rn Ind 31 13 JU 10'.''I+ \, ~:~ ~:~ 1 ~ !t~ .. ·ii .Polaroid Sult Potl' • W• •• dOO s1.,.. • • • CHICAGO (AP) -A mulli·mllllo?c· ~ !!t. ~94 •• I.JOO ,,.,_.Iii ,P01t:t t~ ·, ~ =·'ii: dollar damage suit c.hargtng Polaro d '""'11nd » • " n .. ""' Corp. with breach or contrnct has ~~fo.~ii ,~p! ~ ~ been lUed in U.S. Di.strict Court by the ~., 1140 l 77 ilvi +-.. n-u nd J{ 11 c ,. i"" '"' •• ,s .-... ,. · ~ o o~e o. ' - l •• ' ~ I I .. .. • A 12 DAIL v f>tLOT Tuesday. June 11875 '"" .. . T}lE F IJyBilKe•0 • Govent~rs Support Death Penalty "The moon i• up there •omewhere, but I gue11 they've got their light• out." L. !ti. Bo11d How to.Rate Those Movies· Was the cynical Mr. Thomas FUiler who said, ''Sorrow for a husband is like a pain in the elbow, sharp and short." Regretfully, our Love and War man agrees. His files contain numerous case histories that indicate wives are much better able than husbands io deal with the death or departure of a spouse. TAKES 72 different muscles to speak one word. AVERAGE t eenage lad gets $15.45 worth of presents from his girl friend in a year. YOU MIGHT find useful this handy movie guide from Elston Brooks: "If the picture is rated "G ", the tu?ro gets the girl. If it's r ated "R", the viJiain gets her. If it's rated "X", everybody gets her. WIDSKERS Q. "How many whiskers on the average man?" A. About 25,000. They grow l /lOOths of an inch every 24 hours. So if all the growth were confined to one whisker, sup- posedly it would be 250 inches long. That's a lot of whis ker. Doesn't sound right. ! Q. "HOW FAST is a tattoo needle? How deeply does it jab?" A. Moves up and down 50 times a second. Goes l /64th of an inch into the s kin. Q. "QUICK, Louie, was Galileo that scien- tist's first name or last name?" A. First name. His last name was Galilei. COPPER Archeologists are certain that Americans in the year 2.000 B.C. mined copper in northern .Michigan. They dug about 10,000 pits, built bonfires in them, poured cold water over the fi res to split the rocks, then pounded out the copper with stone hammers. Noboqy knows what happened to that copper culture. Evidently it got wiped out about 1,000 B.C. And nobody knows, either, what h<Jppe ned to all that copper. Most m ysterious. THAT WORD "school" originally meant "leis ure'• ... "NICE,. origin a lly meant ''stupid" ... AND "PRETTY" originally m eayt "tricky." A CONSTRUCTION man of lengthy elC· perience says the Great Pyramid in the Egyp- tian desert would cost $1.12 billion were it to be built today. DO YO U HAVE any notion of how crowded Harlem is? If the entire population of · the United States lived as close together as do the blacks and Puerto Ricans there, the whole citizenry could be housed in just three of New York City 's five boroughs. Address mall lo L.M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa 9'2426. If you're currently collecting on a trust deed, personal note or real estate contract- or paying to hove one collected-we can help. We simply open o note collection account in your name and toke on all the details. What's the cost to you? Not one penny when you maintain a qualifying minimum balance. In fOCt, ~u get all the money (with intef°est), and we do all the work Nice, hoh? CiLENMLE FEDERAL SAVINCiS 0-"' ... ftOllDn • .....,._. -..... "-~ Wilfl -,, wi.o.. ... ---,.., • .,..., ~ °"-'-' "' (.ao ,.,,, • ,....,port a.och Branch 500 Newport Center Or./644·53001 Coeto MMo Bronc:h · 2300 Harbor Blvd./6•2·•711 $onto Ano Bronch: 51 Fosht0n Squcre/5'1-3314 ~!«ton Brc:wlch· 3~ N. Horbof' Blvd.f 526·8331 ' By Veiled Pres• Soulb. where only Gov.' Jultan M. Carroll of Ken· who favor ca pit al' "Ir lt ls 11 deterrent,' cruel and uo.usuel oi' lntematloHI . Ray Blanton of Ten· •tucky wbo, as a private punishment, 16 said it ls then let's malce it a de· there is no appeal once A majority of the na· nessee. which bas posed •attorney, once defende~f a deterrent . ..Others sajd terrent -by making it the execution bas taken tion's governors favor a death penalty law, op-the last man executed in it ls the will of the people. widespread, by making place. some Corm of capJtal poses it. . his state. or the death penalty ia1 it public, by insuring that _ punishment, most or justified by heinous every execution is on col·' Thir.ty·three· states them on grounds that it 41l'VE Al.WAYS ~n ··Capital punishment. crimes. · : or television where it can· 'have death penalty law~. deters C?riminals. opposed to ca pit al has a strong deterrent have the maximum de· The electric chair 1s .. A Unlted p r:ss Jn-~ punishment and I'm still. val':le and as long as it is But Gov. Dan Evans ofi terrent effect," he said. authorized in 19 of those. ternational poll or the 50 opposed to it," he said. saving i!1n~cent liyes,} Washington, a strong op-! .stetes r '::~in~ho~ti!:s U.S. governors s hows 28 Opinions in each of am. for it, he said. I ponent of. th.e death· O~ THE 17 govern9rs chambelaware Ne~ favor a death sentence three other regionSi-the believe if th.ere were a. penalty, sa1d it sh~ld I against the death sen· In. De . , and 17 are against it. The Wes t . Midwest and referend.um m Kentu~ky not be used as a retnbu·: tence, seven said it is not. ~~~:~·~~'attd~hoh=~ other five governors re· Northeast_ broke about on ~he issue. of capital tion . sine~ he sai~ lt is· a deterrent. Five said . . . y g tusedlotakeastand even pumshment, it would be against the Christian they have personal' .mg1~author1zedbylaw. · · · favored by a margin of ethic, and he scoffed ad avers ion to ca pit al And m Utah, a dea~h sen· Support for capital· One of the s trongest 3·to·lorbetter." arguments that capital' punishment. Others said l~ncecouldbecarr1edout punishment among gov-supporters of •capital punishment is a deter·· th~ state has no right to either by han,aing or by a ~mors is heaviest in the punishment is Gov .. OF THE 28 governors rent. I take a life, the penalty is firingsquad. THRD1S FOR THE KIDS. Every Sunday, Bingo the Gown takes to the floor and spellbinds the kids. He's got free gifts for them too Combine that with our kid's special menu, andyou:ve got a Sunday they'll never forget • THE FOOD. MD LOTS OF IT. Thrill your taste buds with everything from juicy Big Busters, our famous half-pound hamburgers, to more than generous portions of fried chicken, shrimp or fish. AU at prices that'll thrill your budget There's a children's menu too. Wrth more than they can eat BLASTS PROM THE PAST. · Get your ears and eyes ready! We've got old and new records in our juke box, and a coUection of some of the funkiest nostalgic col- lectables, posters and pictures anywhere! LET US ENTERTAIN 10U. And you'll have a real good time with our nightJy and For lessthan you'd expect .. POPCOR1t TO GO WITH THE*WIES. All the fresh-popped popcorn you can eat while you catch some of the finest flicks this side of Hollywood. Chaplin. Laurel and Hardy. Abbott and Costello. The Three Stooges. Cartoons for the kids. Shown continuously, every day. PWllTS! GET YOUR FRESH ROASTED PWllTS! All you can shell, all day long. They go great before, after or during a meal Or just sitting around washing them down with your favorite beverage. So if you like peanuts, then skip on over to The Ground Round weekend live entertainment 0 No cover. No minimum. Just some of the hottest musi~ around Watch for upcoming groups and dates of appearance. COSTA~ fW,BfTOl't Brtng In this coupon and get one Big Buster, our famous ~-pound hamburger, FREE (Includes french (lies and cole slaw) when you buy one at the regular price of $2.25. How's that for Hot Stuff? This offer good until I 1. I I I ·I I I I I 27'0 Hllbor 8Mt. (Nol'° Plet I lmflcn) ~ 2200 N. HaltXW 8IYd. 87().5310 ~;·;·-------~ =:::===::~::; . . J I I 1 t' 81.'ange · t=Ata.st " . EDITION I • V O L. 68, NO. 154, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A I Teday'• a .... 1% N.Y.Stoeks TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1975 c TEN CENTS. BU!ltington May Get Disposal Plant By G.\RY GRANVILLE Of Ult Oalfy ..... Molff Orange County Road Com- missioner Ted M cConville said today that Huntington Beach 'is the most likely site for the coun- ty's first privately owned a.nd operated solid waste disposal pJant. The proposed $15 million pfant would be used to reclaim reusa- \)le material from the county's trash and to convert that which is not uaabletoenergy. Capacity of the plant. would be from 1,000 to 2,000 tons of refuse daily, roughly one third of what county residents discard each day;McCQnvUle said. In Orange County government, McCon· ville's Road Department is in charge of dump operations. He went on to explain that i waste treated at the proposed· • plant will produce the equivalent ; of one barrel of diesel fuel from : each ton of refuse. : That fuel, Mcconville said, · would be used to create steam that can be sold to a major user. : One such user he specified was the Water Factory 21 in Fountain · Valley. which would make the· . selection of a Huntington Beach ; site necessary. Another possible energy user .. (. ·that McConville cited was the tity-owned power company in Anaheim, making Anaheim another possible choice for the county's first private resource · recovery plant. McConvill~ said refuse de· livered to such a plant by tras h haulers would first run through a sorting process that would pick out s uc h material as steel, aluminum and glass for recycl- Mesa Votes Ban On City B. Religious Big Top Evangelist Bill Lowery has set up this big tent on Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa for nightly revival meetings. Lowery pla ns to preach nightly through the month of June. Tent holds 4,000. Low.ery and about 140 of his followers moved into Costa Mesa over the weekend after stops in Anaheim and Riverside. Coed Gym Now a 'Must' Share ~l buJ, Showers, Comact Spo~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -Gym Classes in most schools and col- leges in the United States must be· integrated to include both boys a nd girls, except for bodily contact sports, the administra- tion announced today. Under the rules announced by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, any school receiving federal funds must demonstrate it is "moving as expeditious ly as possible within the prescribed time frame toward eliminating separate physical education classes." The rules were prepared under Title IX of the Education Amend· ments of 1972 which bars dis· crimination by sex in federally financed school programs. wrestling, boxing, basketball, football and other s ports involv- ingbodilycontact." During the period schools are making the "necessary adJUSt· ments" for integrated gym classes, HEW said, they "must insure that physical education classes and activities which are sepa'rate are comparable for members of each sex." Tile rules do not, however, re· quire that equal amounts of money. be s pent on girls' and boys' athletic programs. · At the same time, HEW said classes on human sexuality could be segregated along with social ·fraternities and sororities, hous· ing, locker rooms, loilet.s and showers. But it declined to tackle the issue of sex stereotyping in tex· tbooks. For example, the provision al- lowing separate teams in contact sports was new. He specifically mentioned ten- nis, track, swimming and golf as .sports which must be integrated because they do not involve bodi- ly contact. "This is not a requirement, nor is ita suggestion that colleges can re- fuseto offerfootba 11, basketball or othercontactsportstomembersof each sex separately if there is enough student interest to warrant it, "Weinbergersaid. "In all, I think this regulation enhances opportunity for women in athletics, but it will also allow schools the flexibility they need to keep competitive sports alive and well." ards 2 Switch Posiiions ·on Issue By ALAN DIRK.IN OtlM Oally Pilot Staff The Costa Mes a City Council voted Monday night to ba n billboards from the city. The historic vote came after a 21/2-hour public hearing, and after· months of study of a city staff pro· posal t o force removal of billboards by declaring them a public nuisance. The councilmen balked at the proposal last April I , but Monday night the pos itions of two council members -Jack Hammell and Nor111a Hertzog -changed and the ban carried on a 4-1 vote with only Councilman Robert Wilson opposed. Chief Advance Planner Arnold Hamala explained that under the ban most of t he 33 billboards in the city -the greatest concen· tration is on Newport Boulevard between 15 and 17th streets - wi·ll be removed within three years and the rest within seven years. The ordinance also changes the fee that outdoor advertising com- panies presently pay for having s tructures in Costa Mesa. Presently a tax of $32 a year is paid for a large billboard. Under the new ordinance the fee will be $67. I In past hearings, outdoor ad- vertising companies have said that a lawsuit would be brought if an outright ban were enacted, and Monday night City Attorney Roy June indicated that he expected to be in court to defend the or· • dinance. But he noted that although many Superior Court judgments have bee n passed on the billboard laws of other cities and counties in California, no ap- pellate court has yet rendered a verdict. . The vote to impose a ban on billboards was taken Monday night in preference to three alternatives to prohibition. One was to allow existing billboards to remain, but to allow no new ones except as r eplacements; another alternative wa!f to allow biJlboards within 200 feet of ma· jor intersections, and the third was to space out billboards and ban them from certain areas. The council scar cely discussed these alternatives, l)owever . The <See BILLBOARDS, Page A?> • ing. What remains would then be converted to the low sulphur fuel used to produce s team. The road commissioner said such a plant would help reduce the cost of transferring the coun· ty's 6,000 tons of trash a day from collectors to county operated dis· posal sites. The process would also add years of life to those dump sites by using roughly 70 percent oC discarded material either for re· cycling or the creation of fuel. He pointed out that roughly 30 ~rcent of what finds its way into trash haulers, trucks is not resa- ble in any Corfu . Concrete, dirt and tree stumps were cited as ex- amples. The road commissioner said he wUl present five proposals for the <SttWAS'PE, PageA2) IN COSTA M ESA, BILLBOARDS WILL COME DOWN Council Says Advertising Signs Must Go HalDlllett, HertzOg Explain 'Switches' Two months ago only two Costa Mesa councilmen were counted in favor of an ordinance to ban billboards. TwQ days ago, ap- parentty, the lineup had not changed. But Monday night there was a dramatic switch, and many ob- servors were surprised. What had been a 3·2 line up against pro- hibition became a 4·1 vote in favorofa ban. Most surprised by the reversal was Councilman Robert Wilson, who cast the lone vole against prohibition. Before voting he con· fessed that he was "still in shock" after hearing the com· ments of two council members and indicated that votes he had M o vie Theat er B urglarized Someone who s neaked into a Costa Mesa theater currently running "The Prisoner of Second Avenue" may become a prisoner of 99 Fair Drive, if police catch him. Cassius Jay Harl, manager of the Edwards Cinem a, 2300 Harbor Blvd., called Monday to: report an $85 burglary in which $60 in small change and a desk calculator were taken. Investigators s aid the intruder climbed to the roof of the movie house and fQund an unlocked trap door through which he entered the darkened premises. coUhted on had chunged '·in the · last 48 hours," Those who s witched, and moved into the corner of Dom Raciti and Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, were J ack Hammett and Norma Hertzog. Both had said at tht' last hear- ing on the billboard ban April 1 that they were in favor of greater controls over billboards but were against outright ehmina· tion. What changed their minds? At the hearing, Mn •. Hertzog commented that peopl~ are say- ing that fh ey wa nt more room. She said that ;,taking dO\·\TI some ·of the pollution" \\iJI help to achieve this. Hammett said that billboards are incongruous with today's em- phasis on esthetic design. He likened billboards to railroads and dinosaurs in being victims of c h a n g e . ' · W e h a v e t o be responsive to citizens' changing desires," he added. After these comments. Wilson expressed his s hock and then suggested ~n amendment to the ordinance, which would have made it regulatory rather than prohibitive and which would not have declared the billboards a, public nuisance. He said that h~s <See SWITCH, Page JU> . Or~C..et , ·---~. 1t'e a tller "While generally prohibiting sex segregated physical educa- tion classes," HEW said, "the final r egulations do allow separa- tion by sex in physical educatiota classes during competition in "Equal education opportunity for women is the law of the land, and it will be enforced," Wein-• berger said, adding he wanted to imple ment Title IX quickly "rather than undergo the series Lon g Showbiz Career Night and morning l ow clouds with some hazy sun- shine inland areas in the afternoon . Little tem- pe rature change. Highs from the upper 60s lo the mid70s. SFOCK M4RK1tI' . CLOSES MIXED NEW ¥ORK (UPI) -The stock market, faced with profit taking pressures from recent gains, closed m lxed Tuesday in active trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones Industrial average, up and down within a two-point range throughout the day, was off 0.47 to 846.H at the close. It had gained 31 points the previous two sedions. Advances · led declines by about an eight-to· five mareln among the 1,838 is·· sues croaslng the tape. 'rumover amounted lo about 26,900,000 shares, compared with 28,240,000 traded Monday. or futile confrontations and end· less law suits." Acknowled1ing the law was "indeed far re a Ching lo its sweep'' and was impossible-to draft in a way "that will please all of the people all of the time," Weinberger nonetheless noted the rules were modified significantly from a previous draft. li:ish Trio Shot LONG CAREER ENOS Ozzie N elaon, St Ozzie Nelson Dies O f Cancer at 69 • • LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ouie Nelson, 69, whose wholesome ''Adventures of Ozzie and Har· • · riet" on television and radio amused a generation of Americans. died today. Harriet, his wife and partner. was at his bedside. He had undergone surgery for cancer of the liv~r eight months ago. He died in his Hollywood home. "Ozzie knew he was going lo go, and h e vie wed it philosophically,'' a ramily friend said. "He was working on another book until the end." The Nelsons lived principally at their residence at 16 Lagunita, a private oceanfront community south of Laguna Beach. He bad been moved to his Hollywood home to be clOHr to his doctor, a family spokesman sald today. An athletic 170 poun'ai most or his adult life, Nelson had thinned : to 130 but continued to vi.sit bis of- fice until eight weeks ago. "The Adventures of Ouie and Harriet" set records for lontevi- . ty beginning in 1944 on radlo and then jumplnf to television ln (See NELSON. P1teA.2) I NSIDE TODAY · A survivor of the Gulf of Merico oil rig mishap recall& the terror of pitch block wtt· ness under 45 feet of wateT. See story, photo Page A4. llfflex .1 ' . ; BELFAST CUPI) -Three ·.Protestant men returning from a dog show in the Irish Republic early today were 1hot and killed, police sald. They were the rtrst fatalities In a week ln northern Ireland's contlnulni violence between Cathollc and· Protestant extremltts. ··"'' h .. , .. t • • • • ... . ... . • ,, 2 DAIL y PILOT c Tu.day. June 3, 1116 ·nger GODe Mesa's Old Sarge Dies By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of \tie 0.1111 ........... lte onee cursed Gen. George S. Patton ror kicking his tail as be ·napped after a s leepless week of World Warn combat, only to win a p,at on the back from the legen- dary battle strategist. He also won five Silver Star: medals over a so.year carff.I'. a Bron~e Star and enough other military honors to make his bur· ly chest look like the counter in a war souvenir s hop. Army Sgt. Maj. Karl R .H. Senn, SS, was six feet, rour inches and 2SS pounds of man and proud of bis uniform. From the way his long service record reads. he was a soldiev's soldier and when the big man died Thursday, the mortuary ac- . tually had to order a special, larger casket to fit him. "He was a tiger," says his widow Leona, with whom he Jived at 2311 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa . "But he was also a sof.' thearted m a n." • S he says Sgt. Maj. Senn ,. b esides b e ing a blood-and· thunder comba t parlrtrooper. loved to cultivate flowers, build planter boxes, bake bread a nd concoct gourmet recipes. Once, he a nd his men Jived on C-Rations -or less -and had to kill Germans with knives and bare hands following the D-Day invasion of Normandy, 31 years ago this Saturday. They parachuted 40 miles behind German Jines, but their weapo n s cac h e l a nd ed elsewhere, due t o pilot error. so they had to dog-trot the 40 miles to the front. They eliminated the eoemy a long the way, taking their guns to use. Records s how Sgt. Maj. Senn also fought to take the bridge al :Remageo, the las t botUerleck for allied troops storming Berlin. He was among the triumphant who marched lnto the German capital. He a lso helped liberate Jewi.lb prisoners at Duchau, one ot tbe infamous concentration camps. Once in the gruelling drlve from the beaches toward Berlin, he took a nap on a break a fter tive sleepless days of fighting, but was rudely awakened by a boot kick in the be bind. "Dammit, can't you let me get a little rest?," he snapped, roll· ing over to star e up at Geo. George S. Patton. "Soldier ... you've done a great job. Go back tosleep,''thefamous· general replied. · : The i.Dcident was included in •the movie ''P atton," a nd is among parts of an unfinished a utobiogr a phy begun by the Costa Mesan who rose to the highes t enlisted rank in the army. He fought in Sicily. the Middle East, and North Africa, there against troops under Nazi Gen. Erwin Romme l, "The Desert Fox." Service by Sgt. Maj. Senn •before his 1970 retirement in-• · ~luded three tours in Vietnam. .. He used to cry when his young troopers were killed. He couldn't: sleep the night before a battle and he would walk on the beach all night, planning-the strategy,'' says his wife. Military funeral services will be Wednesday at 10 a .m. in Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel, Costa Mesa , with burial a t Sawtelle National Cemetery in West Los Angeles. Besides the widow, survivors include a stepson, Allen Neufeld, of Bakersfield ; a stepdaughter, Barbara Means, of Agoura; a brother, Hans, of Denver, Colo., and eight grandchildren ~ Dinner Horwrs 34 ·School R 'etirees A dmner t o honor 34 employes of the Newport-Mesa Unified School Distr ict who are retiring at the end of this school year will be held at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Costa Mesa Women's Club. Local residents, former stu - dents and friends of the employes are invited t o the dinner. Reservations are $6 and may be m ade by phoning Rosalie King, 556-3251. The 34 employes have a total of 451 years of service to the school district. They include teachers, •ecretaries and maintenance -'vorkers. ~ Five e mployes h ave been with 1he district 20 or more years, but )>nly three of those. will be at ,-hursd~y·s dinner . They are ,.Xargue rite Danziel, secretary in the maintena nce department for ~ years ~ J ohn Nieves, head ~• ouodsman a t Corona del Mar gh for 22 years; and Teresa atter son , Costa Mesa High panish teache r for 27 years. The other two long-time employes retired in January and ~ave already left the ar ea. They .are Mary Hall, Newport Harbor ;High foreign language teacher for' ~years and James Miller, math nnd drafting teacher at Newport )!arbor High for 28 years. 1 Others to be honored include: l Walter Ad rian, 16 years, (Martha Bloomberg, nine years, -Marvin Brown. six years, Roy Cragg. 10 years. Elizabeth (Ed wards, 18 years, Charlie tFegley, 15 years. Ahce Fisher, 12 fyears, Howard F r ance, 10 years, 1Marie E. Ha mmons, 15 years, Willia m .Hanra han, six years, ~arrel Jordan. 10 years, Mildred :Xolve~, 13 years, Patricia Lind· Robert N. Wero Prt1\1drl\t •nd PubhVWr Jack R. Curley \11<11t "'"'"""' • ..., c..-•• MtfWl9'r lhomas l<eevi• t-di Int' 7 hom4s A. Murphlne M.on.oQlrtQ l.dllor Charles H. LOO'i Ricttard P. Nall lo\,._, • .,, M.o ,..Ol"'I Ed•lo" Costa Mew Offke )JOWhl ll•Y SI,.... .-... ...... A(IGl~U P.O ... 1)60 ~.,,. Other Offices ""wf'o"1 &t..,11 Jlll """"°'' 8'>v'l'•M0 l riUf".-t...-14.f" tt,.C',t. f'f/f'Wlyr~ h•"' H1_,,.h~tir· ft#• f"I 111r, ..... " ~11~0 ~, .... ,.~ ll•tt•Y )UOI I.A ,.Al l!oAd •• ~n Dw.oo Fr•"'"'' Tea.pMnt mo '42~n1 Cleulfled Advertising '42-5671 ( .. ,.~·lfltl, "'$ Or•-c,..,, Pubfl•llll ... ~ny H•---lllOl)l•4111....,,,Mlterijlj -u·' ., ..... ,, .... _,.." ,,., •. 11 .... , i.. ,,.,.41.,t..S ... ....,, -<·•· ............... . ~flOI\•--· le<..-41 c;l•it .,..,.,. ,...n ,., '"'• .,..,., C@llfoNllY.~•.,._.erc.,,...-u.01-t111r; • ,,...., ............. ,. 1!¥tl1MY ~ ..... , ..... .., .. ,_.,". • quist, eight years and Conley. Marlow, six years. AJso, ·William Holt, 12 years, Helen McPhee, 14 years, Leon Meeks, 12 years, James A. Nim- mo, eight years. Elizabeth Okulick, 15 years, Donato Otero; eight years, Frances Painter, ·seven years, Lewis R. P almer, 19 years, Arnold Papineau, 12 years, Orlando Robinson, 16 years, Beulah Smith, 14 years, Harold Swinney, nine years, Myrlie Waggoner, 18 years. Charles Ward, five years and Michael Vulakovic, 13 years. The Second Annual Retirement and R ecognition Dinner will begin at 6 p. m . with no-host cocktails, followed by a roast beef dinner at 7 p.m. Proceeds from the dinner will benefit the scholarship funds of the California School Employes' Association a nd the Newport- Mesa Food Services Association. Reservations should be made no later than Wednesday. Fro• Page Al ·wASTE ... construction of the resource re- covery plant to the .Board Of Supervisors next weelc. Part of that presentation will include a written report declar- mg the proposed pl ant to't>e or modern design and complying with e nvironm e ntal Protection Agency requirements. · Recently, County S1.:1pervisor Ralph Diedrich toured such a plant in Baltimor e, Md. · Diedrich said that a contract with the private operator could be drawn that would provide the county with the needed protec- tion for the plant's operation. in· eluding fixed fees for disposing of the waste. He said private operators could save the count~ money and s how a profit through three sources of income, sa le of energy. sale of r ecla imed materials and payment by the county for the dest ruct.Jon of dls· p<)sable materials. Diedrich said Orange County will eventually require three lo four resource recovery plants. These Office~ Were Hounded PORTLAND, Ore. CAP) - : Portland police tangled with the 'hounds of a Baskerville on Sun· ·day, and Officer Neil Gearheart, 32, bas mar ks to show !or It. Re and two fellow narcotics of- ficers arrested Poul Thomas 8askervWe, 27, Pauma Valley, Calli., arter be allegedly sold 't.Mm five pounds of marijuana. Police said he kicked one ot the orficers while they w e r e :searchlnf his car and two dogs 'wbo jumped from the car at· :tacked the otflcers, biting Gearheart. He was not seriously :injured~ ' ~ OLD SOLDIER DIES .Sgt. Maj. Kart.Senn TONIGHT COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL' -Regular meeting, City Ha ll, i6:30 p.m. 'UCI LECTtr RE -'1The American West," Room 251 Humanities Hall, 7 p.m. '·THE CAVE DWELLERS"- South Coast ·Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY,JUNE4 "ALCOHOLISM, AN ADDIC· TIVE DISEASE" -Dr. Robert Schmitz lecturer, Raleigh Hills Hos pital. 1507 E . 16th St .. Newport Beach, 6:15 p.m. In· formation : 645-5707. UC I LECTURES -"The Worlds Within Us," Room 101 P hysical Sciences Bldg. "Living Marine Reso ur ces of .California," Room 158 Physical Sciences Bldg. .. Poetry Writing W or k s _ho p , " Room 2 4 8. Humanities. Hall. "'the Heart a nd Circ ulatory System ," Freshman Lecture Hall, Medical St.ir ge 11 Bldg. All 7 p.m. . Fro•PageAl NELSON ... 1952, where it ran 14 years. The Nelsons' sons, Ricky and ·David, grew up on the show, and after they married, their wives joined the cast. On the series Nelson was the sunshiny, sometimes bemused· father and husband. Harriet was a warm-voiced beauty who m ar-. ried Nelson in 1935. At first their son s, David and Ricky, were portrayed by child actors. Then on Feb. 20, 1949, the Nelson sons joined the show. The television s how went off the air in 1966. ''It was getting pretty diffused because of the way the family ha d grown," Oz- zie said. "We had Ricky and Kris (his wife) going in one direction, David and June in another, and then there was Harriet and me, the other. posse. It was gelling hard to hold everything together . Rick, now 35, went into singing and continued acting while Da vid , now 39, beca m e a television ~irec~or. ·-... -After their ser ies ended, the Nelson parents acted in s ucb plays as "Marriage-Go-Round" and "The Impossible Years." They returned to television in 1972 with a syndicated show. "Ozzie's Girls." Oswald Nelson was born in Jersey City, N.J ., on March 20; 1906. Both his parents were musical, and Ozzie appeared in amateur theatrical productions when he was s: Voit Workers End Strike; 50 Lose Jobs Striking rubber ·workers re- versed a n earlier decision on a wage offer by AMF Voit manage- ment Monday voting 182 to 162 to r eturn to their jobs at the sport· ing goods firm in Santa Ana. But a bout SO strikers wiU not have jobs to return to, according to AMF Voit Vice President William Estres . During the courseorthe strike, besald, about 50 replacements were hired a nd theywUl be kept on. '•Th ese ar e not strikebreakers,'' he said. "They are people who were genuinely ,interested 1n jobs." Those empJoyes who were replaced during the strike, he said, wUI be put on a "pttferen· Ual rehire list'' and be put back to work as jobs open up. Terms of the a1reemenl vary, depending on the classification of the e mploye, uid ~tres,' who declined to estimate a percen· taee on the waae boOlt. · The 1tr:lke beaan March 28 and Involved about 600 memben of the United Rubber Workers local 639. Tennis Players Set World Record > By HILARY KAYE Ol U. 0.ll'r Pil•Uu" Things got pretty wet antt wild 1n Corona del Ma r Monday after· noon when two UC Irvine atu· dents broke the world's record tor long distance tennis play. Bubbly champagne poured over the weary tennis players' heads and good natured cavort· ing in a nearby swimming pool capped off the marathon effort, whlch lasted 80 hours and flve minutes.· Erle Mann, 23, and Erle Larre, 18, both members of the UCI ten- nis team, dumped UCl 's Sports Information Director Roy. Englebrecht into the pool. Then, the two young men dove in after him. Englebrecht. is the man responsible for set\ing up the maratt)on. which ·lasted from 8 · a .m. Friday until 4:05 p.m. Mon- .day. The previous record, set Sun- day in Bakersfield, was 80 hours. Documentation o( the UCf' p l a y e r s ' e ff o r t vw i 11 be forwarded to the Guinness .Book. of World Records. The marathon netted $800 for the campus athletic scholarship fund. It was donation from M. J . Brock, builder of the Jasmine ·Creek development where t he marathon took place. Obser ver s said the tennis players were "exhilarated" when the match finally came to an end and played "very gt90d tennis" during the last few minutes. They played a total of 1,325 games but no one kept track· of who won the most games. The players' routine was one· hour on · the court and then a 15-mioute break. During the breaks they changed socks, shoes and they ate. . Over the four days, the two men used 75 pairs of socks and consumed a t least 50 quarts of Gatorade, in addition to varied amounts or peanut butter, health food candy bars, fruits and tuna fish. · About'100 people were on hand when the mara thon ended and all applauded w he n the players came off the courts. Larre, a freshman pre-med student from Los Alamitos, left Jasmine Creek a bout an hour after play had stopped. But Mann, a junior economics and sociology s tudent remained. seve ral hours to unwind. A straight A student, Mann had two final exams today and reportedly studied for them last week. Tot Injured In Costa Mesa Auto Crash A Costa Mesa lot was recover· ing today from lacerations and bruises suffered Saturday when her m other's car was struck broadside by another vehicle on a two-block trip to see the Lions Club Fish Fry Parade. . Elizabeth Due r, 18 months, was lying on the front seat when the accident occurred al 20th and Wallace Avenue, according to police. .Investigators said the baby was hurled under the dashboard. where m et a l parts inflicted several gashes in her scalp, re- quiring emergen cy treatment at Costa Mesa Mem orial Hospital. Daily Pihlt "'"*•• htrkllO'O.-U TENNIS PLAYERS MANN (LEFT), LARAE SAVOR CHAMPAGNE Marathon Effort In Newport Beach Ends In Hljlnks SWITCH ... aim was to reduce the number and to upgrade the signs, but .. not to bur·y an industry."· But when it became apparent that his amendment was not drawing support, the successful vote was taken on the ordinance to eliminate the billboards. What brought a bout the change in positions? · Mrs. Hertzog had wanted to ·see the number re duced and in r ecent discussions had con- s idered allowing b'1lboards onl y in one small indus trial area, but she did not hold out for this option Monday night. Both Mrs. Hertzog and Ham- mett went on a tour or the city looking at billboards with Chief Advance Planner Arnold Haplala during lunch Monday and this m ay have had a n im- pact. Hamala had this explanation for the approval of U1e ordinance. .. I felt confident all along that on- ce the alternatives were spelled out that prohibition would be seen as the only way. Otherwise you would just be moving the problem from one part of town to another.·· Al the hearing Monday night three alternatives to p1·ohibition were put before the council. They had not been presented to the council April 1. Monday nigh t Councilman \\"tlson got into an exchange with a speaker and alleged that his in· tegnty was being questioned over the fact that the councilman's business in Santa Ana has a billboard localed on the property. \~ils~n P.Qinted out that City Attorney Roy June ha(I ruled that there was no conflict of interest. and Monday' night June again said there was no conflict because there was no way for Wilson to profit by voting on a Costa Mesa ordinance. Fro•PageAI BILLBOARDS emphasis at the hearing was on the original proposal. Among those who pushed for prohibition were Louise Napoli, representing the Costa Mesa Now group; Ann Mound, of Mesa Verde Homeowners Association; Ed McFarland, a former plan· ning commissioner; John De Witt, a student; .homeowners Marylin Voyer, Shirley Price, a nd Maureen DiDomenico; ~­ dall Mccardle, a Realtor; r. Thomas Nelson, an optqme 'st, a nd two downtown business en who argued that the billboards should be removed·becausethe ci· ty is compelling business men to reduce their signs. Opposed to a ban were James Kingry of' Pacific Outdoor Ad· vertising; Bob Reid of Foster a nd Kleiser ; Erne s t Goldsworthy, representing E.T. Legg and Company, another billboard (irm; Brian KeMedy of Ryan Advertising; James Perry representing a property owner whose property has a sign on it, and Willard Courtney, another property owner who draws in- co m c from leasing land. t o billbo~rd companies. Most of those opposed to pro- hibition took a position favoring regulation, such as spacing the boards out or banning them Crom specified areas. They argued that outdoor ad· vertising W<JS a legitimate busi- ness and a n outright ban would · be unconstitution al. They said that a ban would put people out of work, and that attrition was tak· ing care of the problem anyway. Propo nents of prohibition maintained that a ban was much desired by the community and that billboards were inconsistent with redevelopment plans downtown and beautification projects throughout the city. KNOW THE COST DON 'T BUY CARPETING WITH OUT GETTING A COMPLETE PRI CE BEFOREHAND. A PRICE PER YARD IS INADEQUATE, BECAUSE THE YARDAGE CAN BE MISFIGURED OR ERRONEOUS. WE HAVE TALKED TO PEOPLE RECENTLY WHO BOUGHT CARPETING FROM A STORE WHICH DID NOT PRE-MEASURE HOUSES. THE INSTALLERS WERE ASSIGNED THE JOB OF FIGURING YARDAGE AND TOTAL CO ST . UNTIL THE CARPETING WAS CUT UP AND INSTALLED. THE CUSTOMER WAS IN THE DARK. THEN IT WAS TOO LATE! AT ALDEN'S WE MEASURE YOUR HOUSE AND GIVE YOU AN EXACT COST B.EFORE WE WRITE UP A CONTRACT AND INSTALL THE JOB. DONT BUY IN THE DARK! • UC NO ?30422 ••• 1663 PlACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA M!SAc CALIF. 92621 • PHONE 646·-4838 -646-23.S.5 7