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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-05-05 - Orange Coast Pilot--., • • SUNDAY YOL67, NO. 125, 7 SECTIONS, 106 PAGES ORANGE _COUNTY CALIFORNIA SUNDAY. MAY 5, 1974 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS r • I \ I . . COunty Roads Hold Secret of . Indian Nation ' ' By PA~~ HALLAN Of Ille DallV 'Hot Stiff A secret lies buried In the tons ol sand. gravel and cement that pave the highways and sidewalks of Orange County. It ls hidden in bits of stone that were once round nat metates use:<!. by Indian "''Omen to _'g;ind meal for the: braves of the JUaneno natiOn. . And i~ ls preserved now only In legend handed down from generatlon to gcneratlm. , It is a story about a migration and the the single most important site in Orange Cowrty," said Chris Drover. an expert on California Indians vr'ho d.id research for the new historical archeotoglcal element founding of a major settlement, a place archeologi.sts belleve ooce might }}ave existed at what is ·now-the site of the Livingston-Graham Sand · and Gravel c.ompany in Trabuco creek near San Clue! to the mystery amount to · · lumdreds of. Indian artifacts pullod from Sunday Special Juan Capistrano. f the pit. over the past . half-eentury. But single bowls and gtjndlng stones aren't ------------· enough. Experts need more -a ~te of 1San Juan's new general plan. "The untouched by the hands and shovels of persons responsible for its d·estruction man. may not have been aware of the true "'Ibis place may very well have been damage that ~red." ' • Drover believes it may have been the site of the 11city" of Putuiden menPoned in Juaneno mythology. And it had added importance beclu.se -if was still in existence when Mission San Juan Capistrano was fouQded,. Ac<;ord.Ulg, W111Hall~f tht Indians. in California" by A ... L. ~. tf:te, myth begins with arr Indian chief called Oyalson who was married to Sirorum. Whe n she. died, he and his daughter, Koronc, and ' a group oC followers migrated 30 miles south oC Hiwiti near San ~uan Capistrano and established the ew Ir ' • ' ~e.11., r1a..,..... 1w pttt1dl .,___.. IT'S A CROWDED SEA AS YACHTS FILL SAILS OFF NEWPORT lllACH AT START OF ;RUN oOWN COAST T.O ENSENA,DA 360 Boots I .... EnjoyM Swift ~lndJ Situ~. and r-Y~~ls Wore Expocted to Cross ,F,inlsh Lino This Morning • . , Time Donated • ·~ Speedy Skippers ·Ma y Hit Ense1tada For Breakfast C~t Lawmenf~hing·: President Opens Expo to F1-ien~y Spokane Cro~vd One of the fastest Ensenada races in recent years loomOO today after brisk westerly "'Inds conti nued well lnto the night Saturday. Stiff Sentence Issue SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -President Nixon opened the Expo '74 World's Fair on Saturday and told a mostly friendly audience that he is working for peace in the world and better funt;S at home. Lead yachts in the race were well past the Lo,, Coronados .islands at IO p.m. Saturday. This would place them well past the halfway mark. 'Ibe noon start was almost wllhout incident for the approximately 560 starters. · A yacht identifying herself as Doble D out of Marina del Rey radioed that she was taking on water at the start and asked to be towed back to Newport Harbor. If lhe winds hold, the lead yachts in the race reported, they were expecting to be in Enseuada by 9 a.m. today. They were identified' as Ragtime, N e w s b o y , Westerly and Serena. drange c.oast Jaw e n f or cement personnel are donating some or their off. duty hours . in a strong pu.sh to place the California f\1andatory S e n t e n c i n g Initiative on the November ba)JDt. The original legislatkJn authored by Attorney General Evelle Younger is designed to force stiff prison tenns for specific criminal convictions, as opposed to mere probation. Alarmed lawmen point to the period bet~een 1967 and 1972, when 71.2 percent ·of the state's convicted felooy offeni:lers were let off with probation instead of jail or prison. . California Peace Oflicers' Association members and the Califomia District Nixon Decides Not to Cut Calley's S~ntence Furthe1· WASHINGTON (UPI) -President NIJOn has notified the Anny he will not further reduce William L. Calley's 10- year sentence for the My Lai maMacre and the Anny promptly ,_e11 can.y from the ranks of commlaaioncd officers, Ptntagon spokesmen d Is c Io s e d 5aturday. • I They made public th< text 01 • ..,.._ sentence memorandum Nllon ~ ldlt to Anny Secretary Howard \f· C.llaway: "I have review~ the reOOrd of tbe cue of the United States vl!rsus Callay and have deckted that no· further action by me in this case ls necessary or appropriate." 'l11e spokesmen said the A r my ~"!:.~~~ :.:=,o~l~y p~ .. ~~~i'!l hil My Lal ntence that eoold not be ••eouled until Nixon completed nvl•wlOI th' case. They said thil means can.,. w,ho has been free on ball. will wcor the ' garb ol an ordinary military prisoner when and if he returm to cmtodY for completion of his sentence. It la not certain when that wlll be, because ca11ey·s lawyers art still trying to a~al his case through the civilian courts. Callaway three weeks ago reduced Ca lley·• sentence-for the murder of. at loast 22 South~elMie.e civilians at My Lal. In announcing his decision , Clllaway said, however, there was no doubt Calley committed Hacts of murder and assault against unonned clvtliMs . • • so abhorrent to those who accept the fundamental legal and moral be,.. !or thil republic that they Cllnnot he condonf!d or forgotten." As a result d the sentence redaction, Cilley become! tllglble for parole consideration In lea than six months . Eligibility comes once ont-lblrd ol a sentence has bttn served. -1·~- Altomeys' Association-both pot e n t forces in promoting law and order-are solidly bebiJ_ld it. They have begun a campa ign to place tbe demand for mandatory felony incarceration as a resuJt of failure of the Legislature to act oo the matter. Younger's bill was taken for The appearance· was part of Nixon's CWTent campaign to fake his Watergate case to the country in a series of public appearances. There were Si:attered boos, but m95i. ol the crowd was cheering as Nixon dedi cated the fair to cooperation of nations · and salvation of the world's consid eration by the Assembly Criminal Justice Committee but has remained bottled up for the entire legj$fative se~ion to date. ' • ~ environment. "The refusal of this committee to Sixty-two thousand colored balloons Present the bill to the Le Isl tur ha were released as Nixm declared the fair '-g a e s open, and 2,000 pigeons were freed to force (the two professional associ~tioos swoop over tile crowd estimated by Expo backing it) to pursue the iniUative officials as many as ·75,000. The stage means," says a statement by lbe New-.. was jammed with foreign digni taries. port Beach Police Emplo)'l!s' Association. While Nixon spoke, a crowd of a~t Off-duty police officers aloog the 150 d~trators marched l?ward the . . Expo site from a demonstration at the. Ora~ge COast are devoting their time to u.s. Courthouse. µ0 arrests or incidents h~lpmg gather -~e of' the 360,000-p~u.s were reported. s1gnature.s required by June 27 statewide Nixon made no direct reference to to p~ace it on the ballot. Watergate and h.ls dPmestic troubles. He Wives of Newport Beach polkemen will used the environmental theme as a set up booths at Newport Center this touchstone to key topics he has med to weekend for tbe purpose. '*' rally public support in recent weeks. "We11l get a11 many as We can above Nixon spoke of clean air and water, and beyond that," says Community parks, beautiful cities .and COWll.ryside, Relations Officer Atike Blitch. lSte NIXON, ~aie A!:I _ He said interested citizens may sign the initiative peUUon at the·commuuity relations office, ~lrs Crom operafions headquarters at US 3liid St.. Newport Beach. Costa M... Police 0 f f i c e rs ' Association President, Detective Jan Gustaveson 1 said her group's members will be pr<mollng the initiative drive on thelr own tlme too. Essentially, the Younger legislation "-'OOld make prison sentences mandatory for convicted offendc.ri under these circumstances: , -Use of guns during commission of violent felony crimes. -commission of a felony while armed by anyone previously <O<IYl\:!ed of any felooy. -Any pcnon convicted of the sale of the drugs heroin or cocal no. , ,• SAXBE SPEAKS -And speau and speau .. An attorney general who bas managed to ol!er)d just abouf everyooe In tile P"t r.w months Justilios it all by saying If he had kepi quiet he'd still tie bock In Mechanicsburg, Ohio. The oon- t.roveralal character of the nation's No. 1 lawyer ls analyzed on P~ A7. PRfVATE SCHOOLS -How and wily priva<tly SUJlllOlied sd!oolo SUrviYO In the "r1cll" Jl"blic school districts ol the Onlngc Coos! and what illey have to olfor If. reported l~ "'""YI and ln-dwth SIOrfes lly st11lf Writ•rs Alan Diitln Ind Jackie Hyman on Page Bl. .... • settlement called Putuiden. The name meant "navel of the earth." The name acoording to 'Krocber, comes from a mytOOJogical story about Korone wM was very fat. One night while sleeping, hfr body swelled and she turned. into a sma11 hill ·which remains to this day. The inhabitants .of the village then spread out ·1nto other settlements, some moving to the place where the rrJssion v.·as late r founded. Most of \vhat is known about tbc mythology and religious beliefs· of the Juanenos is described in detail in an • • early \vork by a Franciscan missionary, Father Geronimo Boscana, in his book "Chinigehinish.'• Drover said the myth or the "earth navel" Y.'as also found in the folklore of the Gabrleleno Indians, ~tho nccupied territory to the north. The possible sit_c of one of their early villages \Vas r'Cel'fltly discovered near Long Beach. \\lhether or not lhe sa nd and gravel pit '''as lhe actual site of the Juaneno J>utuiden is onl y t'Onjecture. But Drover (See INl>IAN RELICS , Page A41 an1s Last Seen QnFtjday --No Clues By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Fears for the safety of a winsome litUe brown-eyed blonde girl were grow- ing early today, nearly ~·o days after she warxlered down a Balboa Peninsula allef alooe and never reappeared. ·~Y Jlmise Wilson, 8, was only a-• balf-bloclt from her Newport Bead'I home and within sight or her yoi.mger sister y,.11en she vanished... Ne\¥91)11 Beach l'lllire Department inwetia3tors were reluctant to s~~ 5aturday night that foul play might be involved. "I wish we had a clue . . . " said Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson, following an overnight search for the Newport Elemeo(ary School third.grader. 'lie added that there was nothing to indicate whether she might have been abducted, wandered into Newport Harbor waters or perhaps nm away from home. Investigators stressed there w a s nothing to-indicate she vanished volun. tarily. The child's disappearance so close to the apartment home al 117 15th St.. s~ with her mother, grandmother, a brother and siste< added badly to a grow- ing family -In. Today is tentatively set as moving day for Mrs. Margaret Wilson, 36, who paid her deposits and rent Saturday on a Costa Mesa apartment for herself, her 'ehik!ren and her mother. She cannot believe Kimberly-Kinunie, they cell her-would run away willingly. The broken family is moving to "Our Mf~SING GIRL Kimbtrly Wilson, 8 Town," a Costa Nfesa family apartment complex at 2825 Fairview Road, including all sorts of attractions. ' Kimmie's father, Jackie Dale flilson s~ ... 35, has been hit doubly-hard ~ her dJ.Sappearan ce, according to h is estranged wife. He is a patient at the Long Beach Veterans' Administration Hospital, where he is reported In critical condition with pneumonia complicated by diabetes. "I ha\•e been all over the place looking for her," Mrs. \YUsoo said Saturday night," her voice cracking with tears. •·I'm going out now to walk again. ( want my daughter home:" A team of police officers sea rched (See !\IJSSJNG, Page A!l I ri,sh Police Recover $20 Millwn Paintings D.UBLIN (UPI ) -Police raided a remed country house Saturday and reo:>vered an • 19 masterpiece paintings stolen eight days ago from a diamond millionaire in history's biggest art theft . The old masters, valued at l20 million and inchldlng works by Vermeer, Rubens and Goya, were found in Glandor.e. a Vil~ge in' county cork on Ireland's south coast1 a police spokesman said. The paintings "·ere believed to be in good condition, he said. A "'OITl8n found In the house was being questioned by police, the spokesman said. She was identified as Dr. Rose Bridget Dugdale, an English university professor who ls wanted Jn "Britain on charges or sm~ anns Into Ireland. the lpOkesman said. Dr. Dugdale, 33, an ex-debutante and civil rights worker, speaks fluent French. Police "°~ said earlier the woman .. llORSIN' AROUNIL-Where to rdit • and ride horses (even yOUr own) In the Orange Olast aroa. The illustrated fea- lw'O re~ the arna's .-enticing honle CO<lntry. It's 5,500 acres surround· Ing the wlndmiU COJTai and nolioc!y -ll'I there, The story by staff Writ- er Tom Mccann will fix !hat. Page B8. SOMEONE TO TALK TO -At UC!, they o>U k "the people's phone" and 11loy'd rather K didn1 .....,,., • hot Jin• or help line -~ don 1 ha YO to ba•'e a prablm to can. Page B2. - ' I ) -. - theY found in !he Glandore house spoke with a French accent. A woman with a French accent led the five-member gang that stole t h c paintings April 26 in a slick seven-minute raid on the County \Vick1ow home of millionaire Sir Alfred Beit. Glandore, y,rhich lies about 40 miles west of Cork. is 200 miles sout h of Sir Blessington. Ireland. Some of the paintings. wrapped in brown paper, ·were found ln a cupboard in the ltxruse, police said. Others were discovered in the trunk of a car parked outside. Atithoril ies took the \\'Orks to a police station in Clonakilly, near Glandore. and threw a guard around the building, the police spokesman said. He said art experts \\'ere on their way from Dublin to confirm the identity of the works , which he said \\'ere believed to be in good condition. Inside Sunday ""' .__ At YtltH' S.,.Ylct 111N .. llllltcll CltqlflRI C•ll~ IJ A1111 l•lleltl"f N Clwirih. MeC·•M tit.OH Or1llft ~ c,.. • .,...,.. ., •HJ ... ,.,. Ot•!ll Jilltflt.. .... lltl .... ,, ... Dtl1•1t11t .. '"Ut. ltlt ...... 1 "*"' "" ... , '111tl'"' • l11fft1111met!t '"'' lr1•1f "ftlf!Ct C4 w .. tMr OoN Dtff !' ... It IJ WMlt Whll ".,...... .u .. .. .. "' ... 17 .. Ct-Cl• ,,. Ct.CS .. .. •• .. .. I ... A 2 DAIL t PILOT • .. • 1----!-l .. _Coa st Roundup thtre are plenty of open rlelds left in those areas and that should !ill the bill unUl the city can get some planned parks buill He sald 'lltlp ls on the l\'ay. but as in mo.st beauracratlc operations, it just takes time. tlomes have covered nearly all of the southeastern part of the city, an area that has been labeled -a dangerous flood r.one. If a 100.year Oood cornea: raging down the Santa Ann River, the whole arta could be under four to rive feet of water. Ii a 70..page report, i>suod last week by the planning department. the cl!yJs w•l'l!ed tha.t It will have to adopt Jonie mea'auret to protect any new constrw:Uon against tbellOOd threat and beef up · U1e protection for that v.·hlch ls already built. II plannltlg authorltlts don't develop aome protection for the flood ione, local hOme .,,.,,.,.. wjll loOte their chance to buy cheap federal flood lfisurance. solution to air Pollution. Action on the tpare as many fish as possible during elecnent won't come ror several the lengthy process of bringing Orange 'A'teks. COUntr wa;te treatment up to new ' . • I-' federal and !ilile standards. DR!OGB ACCESS -llesldents o( "' ' ONE ~IORE 00\YN -Jf everythin g ' goes according to plan, !he one remaining blockade or three put up last· summer on Mission Viejo streets will con1e down by 1nld.Ju!y. Before the county v.1.Jl 1ake down the barrier on MonUl\a Lane <it Jeronin10 Road. the new Alicia Parkway intereh3ngc at UJe San Diego Froo"·ay 1nust be flnilhed, a co~mlttet studying Viejo t.raUic probleQ'is agreed this v.·eek. The road closuces. put up last summer gull y near San Clemente High School. Philip \'entura, 44, told police 1lt apparen1Jy fell nsleep at the. wheel seconds after passi:Qg the Avenid11 Palize<J.3 orframp. The 9 p.m. crash star1led tenn is playen on high school coprts. "'ho said it sounded llke 11.n earthquake. The truck was the.second tunan'ay in San Clemente in less than a v.·eek. The Cirst, a diesel rig bearing a 21•ton bulldozer, Veered out of control on El Camino Real but no in juries resulted. 1 after ~1ontilla Lane r e s i d e n t s complained of spoo:lers. produced n series of angry reactions froin other mldent.s forced to drive extrn miles by the cul-de.sacs. They picketed, wrote letters. held toY.'Jl mretings and filed a class action suit against the county. Opening of the All c i a interchange is expected to relieve milch of the burden that caused the heavy traffic on residential streets. "' NO VIOLENCE? -City officials in lluntlngton Beach have downgraded warnlngs of swnmer violence in some of the area's lowe r in come neighborhoods. Police authorities and parks officials say they still expect the most enforcement trouble to icome from the beaches, despite warnings to the contrary from the advisory community services council. The week before, members of the advisory board told city leaders some of the area's youth are restless over the Jack of parks and recreational opportunities in their neighborhood. But Parks Director Norm Worthy says "' MINOR INJURY -A Long Beorh truckdriver escaped v.•ith only cuts and bruises Tuesday when his sandhooper rig phmged off the San DiQgo freeway north of San Clemente and landed upside do~n in a sleep Fro1n Pqe l MISS ING NEW PORT GIRL • • • throughout the night from Friday to Saturday after the \1t111son g i r 1 disappeared near 15th Street and West Oceanfront. No organized search effort was planl)E!d by authorities w1til some evidence might emerge to suggest foul play in the case of the missing girl. "We're devoting all our extra manpower to it at this time," sald Patrol Sgt. Bill Spei" late Saturday night. He sakl at the height of. the hwit, nearly 30 officers were inyolvtd, while all ")l8trolmen have photographs of the 1ittle girl, showing Her In double pony-lails. Her mother said she had her !orig hair down the day she disappeared after \Va1king almost all the way home from sdiool. She atSo discounted the possibility Kimberly might have gone somewhere with a stranger. 4 ''She's a very, very quiet person .. , I mean she just wouldn't," said Mrs. Wilson. adding that her daughter is a good student who like'S to read anti draw. During questioning, ~trs. Wilson also told police Kimberly looked forward to movini: and that she has been in good spirits and never disappeared before or tried to run away. "I tell her to be home by suppertime and she's never been out after dark." said the distraught Mrs. \yllson, who From Page l · NI XON ... ,oot said "environment also means other things to people." 0 n means, (pr example," he said, "for every family in America a job so that he can enjoy the environment around him." The President said that despite the apparent conflicts between ecology and industrv. America could have both "and we shah ha ve both. And the way we can have both is to develop the great resources of this country in a way that they will not pollute the atmosphere, that ttiey will contribute to a c I e a n environment" Nixon catalogued the efforts of his administration t9 develop coal resources into clean fuel and to promote solar energy and nuclear power. works as a housekeeper at Hoag t.temorial Hospital. Her husband Is a U.S. Air Force veteran, where he was employed as a fi reman and has worked as a garment· cutter and department store stock clerk. The couple moved to the Harbor Area from Alhambra in September and the family broke up in October. after which her husband became ill. Mrs. Wilson said. She discounted the move planned fgr • today as a factor in Kimntie's disappear· anoe. "I wanted to get her away· from the beach ... it's a bad environment . , ." the missing gi rl's mother explained. "She y.·as just thrilled to death about what was over there at the new apartment ... a S\Vimm ing pool and all." • Kimberly was wearing a green blouse. Ian swe<j,ter, and blue tennis shoes v•hen :;:he was last seen going down the alley near her home, accordipg to police. She is 4 feet, 6 ihches tall, weighs 52 pounds, and has a fair complexion and slim build. Immediately foJJoWing the ,report of her disappearance some five hours afterward, Police Officer Bud Bivins canvassed 21 locations in the area. They included a busy neighborhood market and many residences, but whjle many people knew the pretty little girl, nooe said they had seen her Friday. ,. "I'm just beside myself." said her ~mot.her, Mrs. Hazel Warren, who lives with the family. Patrolman Bivins ~id the la.st persons to see the Wilson girl besides her sister Sarah Jane, 7, were classmates Angela Ott, Laura Douglas 8nd Tammy Jafl4t. · They had walked home .after school ahd parted company with Kimmie before she entered the alley running between Balboa Boulevard and West Oceanfront. Her dis3.ppearance is the second One to go unexplained for any length of time witflin the past l'O months and the last turned out tragically. A m315ive police hunt continued early last July for Linda Ann O'Keefe, 11. of Corona del Mar. v.·bo left Lincoln Intermediate School and never arrived home. The O'Keefe girl's body \Vas found the follow ing day in a ditch beside Upper Nev·:porl Bay. y.•bere she had been molested, strangled and dumped. I "' FL YING tow -Tiny Meadowlark Airport In H11Dtington Beach, "'° of only two private airfields a t l 11 operating in Orange Cotmty, may be on its last wings. ·Last weele stnte aeronauti cs authorities informed the tlrport operator John Turner th~ , fleld11 license n1ay be revoked because nearby apartment coristruction will be too close to the runway. Turner, upon receiving the notice. abr upt I y announced the airp::irt's closure. He may not have the last word on it, however. The Nerio family, which owns the airport property, said it will fight to keep the field open:-Md Harbor Aviation. the state's second largest Cessna dealership v"hich Is based at Meadoy.•lark, has offered to manage the airport to keep It going. If they can convince the state that the minor obstructions c.an be overcome, the airport may still be flying high. "' FLOOD PLAN -The city ol Huntington Beach is groping for ways to reverse a situaLiQP · created years ago and now apparently out of hand. S LOCKS ON DoOR SLA Hideout Bandit Assaults ' . 't Newport Market Oerk fo r $400 A Newport Beach all·night market clerk is nursing her injuries today, after being bludgeoned by a bandit who clubbed her wiconscious Saturday as she gathered shelf stock. He helped himself to nearly $400 during !he early moming hours after sneaking .Into the Stop 'N Go ll!arket, 4555 W. Coast Highway, and clubbing his vict im. Alice V. Wi'ttig, 18, said she was in the back room getting cigarettes to re-stock. the shelves about 4::30 am. when she was assaulted. People Quotes The victim told Officer Gary Thompson she awakened about 15 minutes later and called polloe to "l'Ol'l tile -..y, Sht coold not .aive a descr!pCioo ol ber ... sailant ~ · · . -Rising to t11e occasion in a fort hright gesture of good\\'ill to President Nixon that may have seen1ed a slap in the face to his more militant brothers. ~layor Salem Shanab of ~fatanir, Egypt , offered to help pay the U.S. chief of state's back taxes. "[ know ... it is very little.'' Shanab said of his S2.500 donation offer. "But it Yt'as intended as a gesture of appreciation for the new United States policy in the ~liddle East and a snub to the Soviets.'' The \Vhit e House snubbed Shanab's shekels, · "' Vice President· Gerald R. Ford said a mouthful Saturday at the University of Michigan at AM Arbor, where his alma mater conferred an honorary doctor of la~·s degree upon him . He sa1d the tronscripts of President Nixon's Wa tergate tapes "do not exactly confer sainthood on anyone (.'(lfltemed." "' Speaking at Rep. Bclll 1\bzug's 1noual di.sb'ict community confertnce, coOsumet Advocate Ralph Nader tu.med his ~ongue to pollllcs Saturday saying he believed President .Xixon decided again.it quJhtng because "if you're (Oing to be a fui;iH\·e fron1 justice. f,here i1 no better plact to work out of than the White House.'' up like little pigs and this may be one more knot in the rope ... " He favors suing the state to block the required plan. Royal Na''Y petty officer Trevor Robinson set a record of sorts Satur· day by drinking 100 cups of bet. milky tea in a marathon organized to benefit the Scouish Spastics Appeal Fund. Robinson, 37, normally drinks only 20 cups a day during duty with a submarine unlt at ~Uand's Gare Loch. f~e SY.'illed aboUt 30 pints of tea all told in just under 10 ln.Jrs. "I feel awful," he re marked . ,,,. California Gov. Roalld Reagan Saturday in memorial services~ for some 6,000 men of the golden st.ate \\·ho died in Southeast Asia combat. ''Tbere are those \\'ho say that Vletnam was a "'ar wllhotlt heroes, because the connlct became a controversy that divided our people for SC) long, 11 be said during the Loe: Angeles address. "! do not acoept that .•. they were au heroes .• , ,,,. PatrolinM Thompson said It was obvioos M'lSS Wktlg had been strudt on the bead, hilt 8"e did not require hoapital treatment, preferring to go to her own doctor. DAILY PILOT l,.._ Oii~ Coll! 0.Nt ""°'· .... ~.,,-.ell • 00 ... DoOllO l"t Ntwt"''""' ~OlltlMf'td I:>)' 11>9 0rtll0fl t<>•I' Put>1''"'~ ~"Y Se~.it iM·•-.rt _,,.._.,, lo'Ofltl .... ""'OUQ" ffid1t. !of CO<tt """"· NtWOO<I 8-clo, -•"lllM Bttc•/F0!,1"' !I•~ ~I"••.!.""'"'°" DMc!t. !MtWl/8..,_tlt<• Ind s.., O•-"'•'Stn Juen Cl-ro. A tt"llJe "'900"-' ·~~>Dn " Pl<DI-~"°"'I" -Su,_. <i.ys l"t 0"~<·~1 P<lllllt••"lt ~•"' 1191 )JO Wto! &1vll~•.C....11~C.Mon'lll,in6a, R(>ben N. Weed ,,.,.,.,. -l"utlool- J.xk R. Ct.rl&,o v,...,,..l(IM-~M..-.otf ,.,.,..,,,, ..... ·~· fflQITl(ft A ~ "'•"'fl~E~""' C~H.L.oot Rit~P.Ncill A .. '"""~l4M />b>J.~ --....... ctr<!!~ M•'" .UC W41&1 &tvS!t~ "''"'Wt Belt" »3S ~_.,foul..,.,., l•OU"• 911..,. 2;2 F-r•-•"'"""~011 S.Mt!' '11 liO.tc:~ "°"'"""'~ i51nCi1"'t "1t >05Nomo f/C.G">l'IC ~ T...,.._17141142·4121 Cl111Hle4Ait'.,...MZ.5671 ''~'°'"''' ...... "°""'etl.IOllftl "-""' 4t J.4420 "' OUT THEY GO? -The SOuth Coal! Regional Zone Conservation Commission last v.·eek had Ila first public hearing on the coastal land environment -the second of a nine part coastal ma sJ.er plan. Stirring the most controversy were p o 11 c i e s proposing that no new freeways or fossil fuel power plants be located In the coastal zone and suggesting that at least some old plants be moved out. Utility and gas company officials p,rotested that the costs would be 'astronomicar• and not in the public interest. Environmentalists COlltet\d!d that the public's health demanded' the FBI Needed Help of SLA Bayshores In Newporf'lbursday that PARK PROGRESS -Laguna's their access to the Coast Highway at multimillion dollar Main Beacl\ Pa.rk Oover-DrlV.. may be cut.o!Lw"henien.~the!"--i))i...l!J. llrst. plank ol .exotlc_Kapur new bay brldge ,ls bltllt. The Pacl!le WOOd for the Park's undulating C6ast Highv.·ay Bay CroS&ing Planning bC!achtront boardwalk. TJie wood, from Committtt heard a repoft that traffic South East Asia. is extreln1'Jy \\'cal he.~ . from Bayshores Drive interferes with resistant. Other park p r o g r e s s through traffic at a co1npllcated included a facelift and refurbishlng for intersection at one end of the bridge the city's Main Beach JifegUJtrd tower. across ~w_port ~ay. If tbe Bayshor's The quaint structure, a 1930s gasoline Drive acce~ ls cut Qff, committee service statJM to~·er. is being \ members w re told. it may be feasible remodeled instead or demolisJ1ed . The to develop l e0present\y WlUsed Yl'CSt park. located In doYintown LagW\a exit to Bayshores, con1blning It with Beach, Is to be dedicated June 22. the exit from the Balboa Bay qub. ._, I-' . CONSULTANT HIRED -· The 'CURE' KILL -Orange Coaat lish Laguna Beach Board.of Education has may suffer more from polliition con· agreed to hire Leland Newcomer. trol monitoring than from pollution ii· president of La Verne College and self, a Newport Beach meeting of the former auperintcnden~ of the Newport· Ca!Kornia Regional Wall\{ Quality Mesa Unified School District, as a Control Board learned Friday. specia l consultant to help Laguna find A spokesman for the County a new schools superintendent. Dr. Sanitation Districts said ' t h a t Donald W o o d I n g t o n , present thousands of fish have been killed to superintendent, has resigned his post determine whether they are adversely to seek election as Orange County af.fected by' pollution from ~he Schools superintendent, a job now held county's Yl~te. treatment system. The by Dr. Robert Peterson. Peterson and spokesman a.sked that new \Voodington will face each other tn an monitoring methods be"'tleveloped to election June 4. Less Mideast, Fighting Expecwd ·by Kissinger .. ' 1 . • l Neighbors JERUSALE:>! !AP) ~ Secretary of ~ State Henry A. KissingM' returned to SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Sifting Israel on Saturday night, and U.S. American orficials \\'ith the secretary of state said, fiowever, that Kissinger . had no plans to meet Gromyko in : through a truckload of evidence in the officials said he expects Syria to begin inching its v.'ay toward a separaUQD.. 91 Patricia Hearst case on Saturday, FBI forces by scaling down the fighting on agents expressed regrets that-residents the Golan Heights. of an area where 1'-1i.ss Hearst apparently The officials said IGSsinger wm "very was living iYl'O wteks ago failed to come ronfident" of an eventual disengagement forward with their suspicions. pact, but they indicated that he mlgbt get Qlarles Bates, FBI agent in charge of oo more than a cease-fire for the preterit and take yet a.Oother peace miss.ion to the case, said he did pot want to criticize the Middle East -bis sixth -later in the shopkeeper and neighbors who failed the year. to tell police of their suspiciOM when On his arrival in IsrKel, the secretary Miss ·Hearst aod the Symbionese · of state was whisked away to a 3\-l-hoor Liberation Army were staying in a meeting with Premier Golda Meir and oockroadl-lnfested apartment. Ma n y other Israeli officials. More diaculilona citizens would act similarly, he said. were scheduled for today. "That's what we're faced with," he ·Spokesman Robert Ander!On would say said. But he addeil, "l think they should only that tbe talks ...,,. very delsiled have called us." and held "in a very constructive 'l11e shopkeeper, who declined to give atmo9pflere." Israeli sources said that her name to ~smen, said she and one for the first time in Kissinger's current of her friends saw a girl they believe was series o1. negotiations, maps ol the ~tiss Hearst in the store several times. disptlted terrain in the Golan Heights She said she once told the gir1 she were studied. resembled the 26--year~ld coed whom the Kiainger goei kl Jordan today, ~e SLA claims to have kidnaped Feti. 4. Ttie King.Hussein is (ryiirg for negotiatiotis .... to thopkeeper said the girl smiled and regain part of.:ltbe territory he lost to replied: "A lot of people think that.'' Israel in 19f7.·Tbe secretary of state then Tbe shopkeeper aald &he didn't teU.1 retiuns to Israel and plans to fly back lo police "because you just don't call the DaS1llaSa.15 late-Moo<fay or Tuesday. • police when yoµ. don't know what you'r~ Moscow Radio s<iid Soviet Foreign talking about. They11 come oui here and Minister Andrei Gromyko was expected make a fool out of you. They'll come out in the Syrian capital today at lbe and make you a criminal." · invitation of .President Hafez Assad. = .... ::I 0 Cl) Ill .... I _, e !!! Ill: Ill .. ilC .... -~ -~ z Ill Ill Hungry Tiger ~ Fawss l:f t-g_f_ ..... __ ~ The Red Bqulrref Jac k and Jill Damascus. Tt>ey added lhat Kissinger's wife,' Nancy, might go to Cairo Witbout ber husband on Monday for another look at the El:YJ1(ian capital. Judge Put.'! Ga g Over Zebra:-Case SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Under court order, J>Olice s\opped giving lnlonnatlon'. about , their controversial Z e b r a i?vesuiatim on Saturday. "I can't say a word about it," said Inspector Mortimer Mcinerney. "That gag order, as far as t understand, covers evecy aspect of anything amcerning Zebras.,,. ' He referred to 1'-tµnicipal Court Judge A&!>OJ 9'~ic Smith'• o\Qer on Friday proh!b-~partleo·in t1W cue ·lrom makintJ:•)u4icial" statements. 'Ille ¥1d ahe issued the order to assure a fair tria1 for three young blacks accused In 1tfte ol the 13 random street slayinp of white persons here that Police have code named "Operation Zebra." The name comes from a police radio band. • " El Shirla'1 l ' _,. 0 1-: Cl) • m · • ": . ilC : Ill -. >: Ill: -~ z Ill Ill ii=--.... : w : m : Ill: • w : !~ ~:· z ::I Cl) Longt ime Costa "esn <..i\'iC' ltader atld cny coundJman AJv!n L. Pinkie~· Is an aV0\\1.'!d foe of bigger go,•cmmcnt <!Onli-o1~ oVer or lntt!rlereooe with folks local affai" .. Following 'a s!lJ!IY "" sion on one ponJon of a new murudpat #tnt-ral plan required by state law.,he bad this 10 sny: "1'hey'Vt got us tied Oisto Mesa Fireman Phil Mellotl might hr I.hough! to have • lot lo say about the honor bestowed on him Thursdar night. He was not Jri>ent, however, 10 receive the American Red Cross' Cenlficate of ~ferlt. "In his OY.11 mind he doo.Vl't think ft was that biJ; ll thing." says Battalion 01tef Bob McClelland. Mellot was cited (Or off du1 r v;ilor in um vmcn he spotted :i '1re on his ~'3Y homt, stopped and re!iCUcd a crippled woman trapped in a blazing upstai~ npartment. "'""""°'"'°"""""'e.,,...,~ 140.1120 CoovrttM. 1tr•. °'"''' Cout 111~ai,."'11t ~ HO-..,..,~ '9'11of! "'1ntr o• H v.,!•lt"'•ft'• •••••~ ,,._,. .,. '10/'0llllttd ""''"°"" lllolUltl Mtro1 .. •1t11 ti z ...0 ~ • f ri! :.~ :'i \ • ,_ --· II"*"' i!llH OOlltQt Ptf'll .. C.111 i. .... ~ ..,~.,.-•ioo...-r. tl't .... j •• , 00 ~. jdlrlof1Y ""''*-1100 ,....,, • • I ~OPEN OAILY 10AM TO 9PM · SATURDAY IOAM TO 6PM ODAY 12AM TO SPM" : • •• ; I • .. I. .~ . : - I • --">--" ' ~ -18th .. ·, . ' .. '.' ... . . : . \' . . . . . : . . . . ; ; ' .... - l fild R id es They paid not only with the $35 per event entry fee, but also with numerous bumps and bruises. Rodeo cowboys com. peted Saturday and will ride and rope again today from 2. to 4:30 p.m. at the seeond am nual San Juan Capistrano Cinco de Mayo Celebration .. En· trants vie in bronc riding {left) steer · wrestling (above) and, well, some of those aniiTials . will just walk all over you.~ Besides a healthy battering, the. \\'inner wiJl take home a $600 purse . • ----·-------------- . Esr. 1955 IN cosr4 MESA ". ' .... : . : . , .. . ' ' ' ... . .. •' ' .i:· . .. : I I \ S11nday, May 5, 1974 OAll Y PILOT A 3 " • I y D•N& ,,,,., ,..,. Cll•l"'1 • -• ) • • Suno.y, M.i.y 5, 1974 Judge Gets • White House · ~. Tape Gap Over Testimony Analysis ·Dean .,. . Deltr Piiot Sl<lff PllOIOI HUNDREDS OF RELICS CRUSHED IN QUARRY Luis Sanchez Sr. With Artifacts H• Found WASHINGTON !AP ) -The White House said Saturday it has found "a nwnber of imix>rtant contradictions" between John W. Dean's sw orn recollections ol six conservations he b.ad with President Nixon and the transcript of those talks. Some of the contradictions, the White House said in a point-by-point argument involving If! passages. "bear. directly and materiall y on the central issue of the hearings: 'What did the President know and v.1len did he know It?' •· The comparison was made ~ Y contrasting Dean's statements during fi\•e days of testimony before. the Senate \\'atergate committee last year and t~e edited transcripts of the tapes the \\'h1te House published last l\'eek. l\1any of the claims in Satu~day's analy sis had already been made 1n the 00.pagc brief that preceded release ?f. the tape transcripts to the House Jud1c1ary Committee. The portions selected by the \Vhite llouse. hov.·ever, pulled singl e quotation s rom Dean's testimony and sought to ansv.'er them with coun te rpoint statements from the transcript. Supporters of Dean have argued that in context his testimony has largely been supported by the tape transcripts. Dean, \\'ho was fired as White House counsel April 30 last year, has since become the President's chief accuser in the Watergate cover-up -in1plying that the President knew about It as early as Sept. 15, 1972. The White House quoted Dean's testimony that he told Nixon on that day : .. t 'certainly could make no assurances that lhe day would not come when this matter would start to unravel." INDIAN RELICS -----'Fhat statement. and ·several-others--like- . ii. "is not only false ," the White House Mid olher ref'crenl"Cs pi nJX>int that place and the ' nwn ber of artifacts discovered there substantiate the fact that it must have been an important village. Louis Sanchez Sr. of El Tol'o. v.•ho has \vorked for the sand and gravel company for 15 years, said he personally knows of more than 400 Indian reHcs that \\'ere taken from the site. Some \\-ere sold ; many v.'ere given a\vay . "l tried to save as many as possiblP." £aid Sanchez. Y.'ho tr aces h.is O'\\'D. ancestry to Indians of the ·Mlchoacan provi nce of ~1exico. "l felt like they ~-ere part of my ov.'11 past, my own heritage,'' he said. Sanchez said the metates a nd molcajetes (deeper stones aJ5o used for grinding) v.·ere saved because they "·ere large and couldn't fall through the _slatted screens to a ronveyor bell. Bot be estimated that thousa nds of .smaller artifacts have been lost lo the jaws of the rock crushers. "Clarence Lobo (today's chief of the Juanenos) tried to protect the stones," reca1led Sanchez. "He didn't want them taken from lhe area. But he WIUI unsuccessful.'' Drover a1.rrees that artifacts, under • • • most circumstances. shouldn't be remo ved from a site. "People who collect artifacts on their o'>'·n un\\rit tingly ruin the chance for sci entific anal ysis,'' he said. "Un1vitting" seen1s lo be the \vord for the site in Trabuco Creek. George Kirk, manager of the plant. said Livingston-G raham took over the operation in 19'l9, and someone else had begun the dig in the early '20s. And . i>thers say rock was being remo ved as early as 1909. "The materi al deposit lent itself to the plant installation in that location." sai d Kirk. 11At the time ~·p dug up most. of the artifacts, there' \ra"1ft much interest." he said. Kirk lheoriu:d that most Indian seWements v.·ouhJ ha\'c been at the edge of the river !lt d n1any artifacts might have been \\'as hed into the river bed from other locations. Kirk said he regrets the loss of the histom:al site but has a more realistic vie""'PQint. ''The use of some or that material helped to make a living for a lot of families.·· he said. '·And it's paved a Jot of roarts:· Pollution Factor /(ills Trash-fired Power Plant By \\rlLLIA:\T SCllR£1B~R Of IM 0<1llY '°!IOI Sl•tf Orange CoW1 ty v.·ill ha\·c lo k~p dumping its trash in empty canyons for a v.-hile -at least until the techno logy fo r salvaging it as fuel impro\'es 'beyond its CUITent st.ate. That fmding by the county's Alternate Fuel Source Committee ma y indefinitely de lay construction ol a steam-creation plant ix>v.·erect by burnin g garbage. The facility couJd have been built next to Southern CaUfom ia Edison's power plant in ffun tington Beach. In a report lo supervisors, the committee said it had revlev.-ed six proposals for !rash d~I alternatives and none v•as satisfactory. Five of the six. includin~ one fro m .1 Santa Ana firm, were re1ectcd out of hand because they didn't meet the criteria laid do'ifJI. by supervisors la!l October. The sixth proposal mel all the county '!ii requirements but it bad a number of naws -among them the fact that it l\oold be a hea\')' air polluter and ,·ouJdn't meet even the nUnimwn Ai r fi lution Cootroi District standards. The proposal, s u b m i t 1 e d by vlronmenlaJ Oe\'ices of Berkeley. Ue.d for corn;truction of a massi\'e '°neration plant adjacr>nt to the !unting!OO Beach power plant . DAILY l'ILOT ~ DE LI VERY SERVICE :;.... ........... en .~ ....,...,..~ fl!'°" In W..) ~ ... ~ ~ ... 11', ,., r•l ~-V»I -~~":r,..c...., nw ... -•10C.1"' !>••....,,..,_ s.-. 11~ .. ....,-.. ,,.,.,~ f', ... .., !lr-J O'lt ,. 5-1..,., ... -·~ I ... 1111 .. ~10 -C..:.,.\M.OI"',<¥ ,~ ... l The incinerators would be used to b.Jm trash at a high temperature to heat water ht large containers and produce. steam that could be used for power generation by Edison. ~ · Envirmmental Devices' proposal was to build the plant and maintain it at the firm's expense and then charge tbe oounty to dispose of its trash there. Coonty Rood Cornmmionet' T e d McConville, chairman d the a1ternate fuel panel. said the coooty's Cll6t l'-'Ou1d have been $'3.25 per ton of v.--aste incinerated less the sale of steam and profits made Crom salvaged wastes such as glass and aJuminwn. The net cost to the county \\"Ould have been about $.S.50. which is still $1.83 cents per ton higher than the county now pays lo dump and process trash at its land fill sites. ,\fcConville said the proposed facili ty 1•:ould have some advantages. including production of energy. increased fife of land fill dumps, enhancement of lhf? lax "t.ase wllh a SS00,000 pov.·er plant and reclamation of natural resources. But 1he oommillee, '"·hich is comprised of various coun ty officials concerned v.ith the rrash disposal ope:rations. decided the disadvantages held the edge. Be.sides the APCD violations. such a plant couJd violate the Coastal l.one Conserva tion Act. 1'fcConviUe told supervisors it v.·ould also not completely disJX>se of waste matter such 3$ liquids and could be a major malntenanct problem. He said the mo\•e toward such a plant l~ .. J)OS.,ibly premature" because or rapid contlnu1ng llnprovc1nents In w a s c c d1£P0Sal technology. ~fcConville told supervisors the county wwld be better orr to seek new proposal~ after the t.K"lulology Improves. Bui he will ask supervisors.to eo ahead with another phase of the solid waJle dl!IJ>OSal anal)rsis -granting a $40,000 to '50.000 conceptual study of waste dL~I to one of 11 competing nnna. The frontrunner In lhe fiol d. "1llcl! incl~ companies from u far away as 1'ew Jiney and 11oridA. is the R.alph M. Pa1'0ll5 Company of l..os Angelu, which pttfonncd the first alternative sitlne study on Or•11i• CollnlY AJlJ)Ort several )"Catt-• !0:- • • ' analys is said . "It Is 180 degrees from the truth." The White House then qu oted this sequence from the transcripts made public Tuesday. ''Dean: Three months ago I would have had trouble predicting there \\'OU.Id be a day \\'hen this \\'Quid be forgotten. but I think I can sa y that 54 days from now nothing is going to come crashing down to our surprise." "The President : That what ? "Dean : Nothing Is going to come crashing down to our surprise." . First word of the analysis was given to nev•smeri by White House P r e s s Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler on the Nixon plane en route from Phoenix. Ariz.. to Spokane, \\'ash. The White House later released the analysis. Ziegler took sharp ex ception to COl'\,lments by Senate \V a t e r g a t e committee Chairman Sam J . Ervin. ([).. N.C.), Sen. Lo'!'·ell \\o'eicker, (R-Conn.) Kidnap Suspect W ou11ded in llead ri!INNEAPOLIS, MiM. (AP ) -A Lak eville contractor charged in the kidnaping of a ban ker's wife was shot in the head early Saturday m a highway sout:h ol ~linneapolis-St. PauJ, authorities reported. Investigators said they knew ol m ·suspects or motive for the shooting. · However. attorney Ronald h-teshbesher said ·after vi.siting Jame.. W. John9M in the University of ~tinnest>ta Hospitals that there Was no -indication Johnson might-have-known-his-assailants. -'There · \\'as no elabora tion. • • I 1 ' • and Sen. Howan! Baker CR-Tenn.I. who w s ' have said the tranS(fipts tend to back up A HINGTON CUP!) -U.S. Di.<tr~ Dean. Judge John J. Slrlca Saturday received' a, "Anyone who says the transcripts final expert's report on the J8¥.r minute: sUpJX>rt John Dean hasn't worked at bls gap in a key presidential ta'pe record!Dg reading or ls looking at It with a totally and gave the White House, Watergate! partisan or biased eye," Ziegler aakl. prosecutors and presidential secretary The analysis said some of the Rose Mary Woods 10 days to study It. · rhisstatcments are important because Affer legaJ comment from a!Mldes, the Dean claimed some of the conversations report of a six-man panel o( electronles that took place on P.1arch 21 , 1973, had experts could go to a grand jury assign4!d occurred on March 13. to dete rmine whether the niysterious ''The portions of Dean 's testimony that bun was caused deliberately to erase alleged presidential knowledge of the evidence, and who llid it cover-up prior to March 21 , 1973 ""-ere "We're going to take It back and dig~st among the most widely publicized ,it, but at thls point We don't know what'a portions of.Mr. Dean 's testtmooy during in the report," sa id \\'hite House his five days on the wltntsa St.anti," the Attorney John l\fcCahill, who •attended \Yhite House said, a'dding: "None of P.1r. 0ean·s statement ... is the meeting at which the erpert.1 confirmed in the tape of Sept. 15.,, delivered their vo~uminous report. The White House quotes Dean's hfCCahill said Sirica had forbidden testimony that Nixon wanted to know counsel from commenting on the when the case or the seven men indicted substance of the report. but he did say, in for the Watergate burglary on that day response to a question, that a tape expert \\'.Ould come to trlal. Dean said he toJd hired by the White House "is certainly NillUO "the Justice Department had going ID se. the report." held off as long as possible the return of The technical data supplied Saturday the ind ictments but much would depend was expected to support the panel's on which judge got the case," and that ori ginal conclusion that the buzz coiild ''the President said that he certainJy not bavc been caused accidentally. hoped that the case would not come to That report .suggested -although ll trial before the election." did not say so directly -th'at someone Says the White House: had deliberately erased the 18 ~ minutes "Tbe entire statement ls false : not a of conversation between President Nixon v.·ord of truth is contained in It. The and his then chief of staff, H.R. President did not ast when the criminal Haldeman, on Jun.e 20, 197'2. case would. come to triaJ. ~fost The conversation took place three days important, nowhere in the conversation after the attempted bugging o f did John Dean say that the Justice Democratic National Comm It tee Department bad held off the indictments headqunrte.rs in the \\'atergate, and as long as JX>SSible. The President Haldeman's ·personal notes show the. nowhere in the conversation eipressed missing· segment dealt with Watergate •be hope that the ~~®.ld...Mt .t2,m~J.o. _anc1_ 1~-need for ·"a public relaUons trial before election." offensive ~o lop ffiiS:-- • ... Stroll through a Victorian Garden ol Frogranccs during th!' Bullock's South Coasr Pl aza Floral and Fra.i;trance salute to Mother's Day May 6 through May 11 Cosmetics Fearured for MO!her's Day giving in our Fragrance Garden will be selected fragrances fron1 Norell • c:ha.MI Pttfums • Germaine Monceil • Roger &: Galet • Shistido • Frances Denney'• Esrtt Lauder • Charl<:s RMSOn • Pbig of Barcelona • Colonia .. 4711 " • Je:in Patnu • Hoohipnr • Parfum1 R~as • ~y • Nina Ricc:i • Htl~a Ruhin1ttin • Parfums Corday • ' Fabtr;:.c •·Parfums GiYt"nchy • Tuvachi: " Dana P11fu'"" • I • ,. I 1. I Pl Evo suppo Fry which Co beau overs! minl- wlth Com avail from the sl " imPo the Chib· "'hich endur l'fO ru1 In UN re vol dinn e chan pub Ii the p It' -8 D r.f.S u ....w S.lunl'1 ·~­-""'" lppl ·•!Id w--. lncfltii ,, __ --C1t11nlv. . .. ' I • reoorl'l'd _.,, . • • bf,10,.i $C81M C•rotl,... rePOrled V1IJt'+'. 11 Ctl'lll'•I ·-· .. "" ....... '°" 1'1'10. 1todll1s. ""''"'' pl1ltH ~. • ' , I Piiot ~gb,,Ok ., ~:i,eh S firv ings of Corn . -- Ma·ke .Fi:§h -Frr .. Si~zle By RUDI NlEDZIEUlKI Of ,... D•Ur 'u" St1!1 Area residents allow thcmSelves to be COllSUJTled by soniething totally passc for n1odem times. They buy fish dinners by the dozens, load up on homemade pies 'baked by · volunteer mothers in the conlDlunity, and spend dollars by the flstfUl to have their fish churned by lhe Till-A·Whlrl.. Even SOl'(le of the more enthusiastic supporters or Costa l\1esa's yearly Fish Fry concede that it is "com," not fish which seU.s the fry. Com in the form or cheese-cake at a beauty contest. Com ln -motion - oversized Shrincrs ridl,ng undersized mini-bikes hi a parade. Corn on stage, with amateur performances ln the park. All of this has immensely profited the Lions Club, and in a larger sense the colnmunlty. During the history of the Fish Fry,, the Lions have been able to raise about $400.000 for charities through lhe various events of the Fry. Oxn on a bot dog, available' on a sltck from a booth atong the sleazy midWay. . TIUS VEAR TREY hope lo gross $100,000 In profits. ·much of this from the expected sale o{ 12,000 to 14,000 fish diMcrs. "COminess'' is an important part . of the annual _ Lions Cub-fund raiser ·- which has not only endured 29 years but llfO\vn more success· ful tn spite of it all. Hl!Otl•LSKV The Lions have already placed lhC'ir grocery order for this year's l\1ay 31.Junc 2 edition of the Fish Fry; 4.000 pounds of fish. 1.500 poUlldS of cole sltH"'· 3,000 pounds of hol dogs and hamburgers. and enough syrup to make 50,000 soft drinks. UNCHANGED FR0~1 year to year. it revolves around the sale of two-buck fish dinners at the old downtown park and a chance for both the organizers and the public to forget about the pressures or the present for three days. This year's parade promises to follow the same formula as last year: A three- mile circuit through the downtown are.a wilh a Rams grand marshal. \oCaf politicians, bands, horsemen and the Tijuana Police motorcycle "suicide squad" as the main attractions. It's the faulL of the sophisticated present that makes the past look corn y: Baby contests at one time were taken quite seriously and no one Y.'Ou1d have questioned the need for a "Miss Mermaid'' to reign over a fish fry. 'l'here is nothing new in this year's Fish Fry. It's the same old corn. And the Lions Club is already counling the money. Yet evCry year thousands of 11arbor -Sh&w:@l!s-- Drench Arkansas ll~S. S•mmar11 U111t .. """' '""~"••' Heit'tY r•IM deluoed Ark•n1111 S..lun:l•'I' •• • lln. d tlluncle"lorm1 r09n'lfd tr. ,_ Ml11l11lll'OI v111..,, -Ito\ T_, nortMr11 Mll&IU. 10C11 ••1111' ftDrttlenl At1ama. Wltnvt $1W11191, Ark., ~19d ll IN:llti of ••11'1 Ourlng 1n Hrl'jl morning st-. Four tu "°' IN:hl'I -• com!l'IOflplM:I 1" Ark•flHI' SaYltr Coiinty. Thf 5•"1.. Ccounly 5her!W1 ollltt ' r~ tot1Md ... 1Dl1 •tin dim.~ To M"Clllld•rv ""'"' •1111 11ld ""er1t • ti.!dffl l'IK IJHn wllMd OYI. 5~111rlld "'-tr• •li.o dltn9Hled the C1rol'l ... 1 Ind I ,..., I~., -•I rePQrled In ll>e uJ>l)el' Ml11l11lpp! v111w. -· H-E"9111'111 •M """''"' cenrr1t C1lltontl1. L~1119lnQ dc111<11 1cllf{luded mlKll or tfle c1111ornl• co.11 •nd portions ol I"~. ttloulJll f1lr 1kl11 were llM rul1 tor mo.I ol The country _,, of 11'11 1todl;l11. Sunni' 1klff ind mite ._...,.tvrn MINd tilt IW!hlm pl1lffll end n. Roc:klt'1- s. California SOUTM&'ltH CALIFOllNIA COASTAL AND 1N\1!111.MEOIATE YALLEVS -Mo.tty ( oudl wlm Cllancl ol llr.• ~ .. r y Svni:tey. O«re.11111 clouft ,.."""' v•Ue.1 Su n cl • Y eft-•I'd Mondrf Souftltorn Vlllr,'\ ' con!lrttlll'IO wllh con1lder•t>hl cloudlntSI •1111 wlll'I • cl'ltnc1 of ""°"""r• Into Moncl•v ITIOl'Yllno. Clll'lfll'VM cool O.VI •ncl mild nlol'lh. Hloh• S~•v el'ld Mon111y SI to 6*. L(IW1; 11 n1ohl •• lo st. SOUTHERN C •Lll'Ollt NI .. MOUHT .. l"I •lllE•S -Mosllv cloudy Ow&\IOll SVftcl•v tlPKlll!V 1-lllvillen~. P1rt1v cloudv SIJllcl11v nlahl 11'd MOnd•v nortl'ltn'I r•noe• 1nd ctou4v In IOlthl•n r11'10ff. SC:11!1rtd 1now.r1 &l'ld IM11t~ lhuncltr·l-l'>0-1'! In nor!h IP•eldll'IO lo $0Ulh Ind lfl(llnQ 11 1111 flOr!h tty MOfld&V. Cool dl'fl'. Ov1•n1Qhl ,_. 31 10 ..s. HIOl'll Su1'd1v •Md Molldly '5 10 ll. SOUT Hl!!lltN C AL1FORNI• INTER IOR ANO DESERT REGIONS -Cloud1 •ncl s11ctwer1 l'IOrthern deurt d•C'111tll'lll S<lnd•Y bu! IP•l.Oin; Into 1outner11 deM!'t mou111tl111 Suftd•v 111'1d ~•v. C>ecr1•1l1111 cloud• In north on Slllld1v. F•I• MOfld1y In norih. Wlnclt l'IOI Ml 11.._ SU!ld•Y •Ml Mondi)'. Cooitr dl'fl In IOl.ltl'I Ind w1rmfr In -'l!. OYtrnlOht low. •.s to SI ";f1"" d ... rt 11'111 JS to 62 In llOUl1'Mrn. m . Hlohl SundlY 11'1d Mondl V 11'1 hlOh dtHrl 11'1d t<11 &OUtMrn desert. Temperatures M .. , SAVESSQ "Set" sale for Mom .. Diamond earrings '";., and pendant sets ~. .. Sale 5124or650monthly· v. ct. IO!al weight EarrinQS Pendant If purchased separately $77 $97 $174 Sale. s244 o•IOSOmonlhly • $127 $167 1h ct. total we1gh1 Earrings· ·· Pe.ridant U RUrchased separately $294 -. .. 1nu11•1Uons 1n11roee110 show det111. ~ Frne Jiw1lrtOS1>1i•lmfll'll. 1.tK gold settings. • n.1; •MCNlfJ "l't_it"I' 11\1 "'°"'Mr Pt J"'t"I 11!ildtr "'' 'J C. Pt""'' 11m• PIJlllt"! l•n lo• tllt pu1cn1tt ot t1u1111m. No I INANCE CNAAGE ••ti De u•cw"•d 1t tllt • Nt " 8A+1nct · 011111 •olounl '" 1111 11111 b•lllnt •1•1•mtf!t fll(;Jud•"9 "'' Po1Jcll1•• •I p11d '"twit b1lo•1 !II• "''t D1lhnt dllt ~llo•" '" '"•1 ""'""'"I 'w11~,. •nrvutd. "'"on1M1 'll'tANC[ CMAAQ( ••II bt dot~·"''"'" Dr •Of!y1ng mo11111I, ''''""'' 11t11f!!.' i•. !ANN\JAl •tlWEN!AQE 11,\Jl 1c, "•I on lllt 1~11 l!DO tnd 1'• !ANW Al PE"Clitt !AQ[ AAI[ ,,.,)on"'"' PO•ho n O•t• ISCO. lo lllt 'P•t.,Owl l1l1nct • thoul d•dwchng PIJ'"'"" 'jj"ii'li'ii"i"ii'••••••· -... ~ ..... c-_ ..... a.-, •• , ..... .....,_, ..... BUENA P~RK 1. -.. °"-..... • °"""_., •. ,., ..... , .. ~··~' ORANGE °" ................ .... a.. .. 10.t, ..... w,~r'"'"' Jet Lo ses· -~····~--.. Ehgine Hou sing l LOS ANGELES (API - l\1etal fragments showered dov.•n on portion!! of the San Gabriel Valley Sat.U{day ~hen · a Trans World Airlines 747 jumbo jet lost an engine housing after take-off fron1 Los A n g e I e s International Airport . Authorities said there were no reports · of injuries or propetty d11mage and the New York-bound airliner went on «>- Kansas City, wh ere· passengers and crew changed plw:ies. The largest fragmenl measured about five feet across. An off~uty fireman. Edward Castle, said be looked up and "all of a sUdden the sky w~s loaded v.'ltb debirs. It \\'as eerie watching the Stuff floating dO\\'n like paper in the \\'ind." Castle said one piece landed about 12 feet from him . S111tday, May 5, 1974 . CRL End;:orse,s F_wu-rnoy; -· ·---. . ·" ' VRoc · to Pick Reinecke? • • SAN ~{ATEO IAP) -Slat; IG.:~ '!es apart in San Maleo . Antronii, •1ousfen1 FJ04'o0Y a~Burllngarne on the San 'A'O'l a 10pSlded 314·17 victory Francisco Penins.ula. ·, over Lt. Gov. Ed Relnceke Other CRL endorsement.a before UROC. And there Flournoy received o n l y scattered polite applawe. Reineeke told !he UROC delegates that they should vote for a conservative who ··won't sel.Lo.pt hli principles to the other party In order to get something done.' Saturd.ay in the California -Re i),ubli c a n League'A enrlort;:Jng convention. :, Bui· backers of Reinecke, a stau nch conser\•ati•e predicted that their candidate 11•ould win an e qua 11 y i1n11resslve victory today when th'e rlva! United Republicans of California vote to ·endorse GOP cttndidates in the June • guQemat~rial primary. The CRL, \\'hich claims more than 1,000 members, is regarded as !he most liberal of California's grass roots Republic'an organizations, and UROC declares Itself to be the He said that he and other S.iturday \\'ent to Jo h ti Veneman· fOr 11 e u t c·n ant governor,. by a margin of 301· 22, O\'er · State Sen. John Harmer, llnd tQ Earl Brian for U.S. Scqak. who \\'On 212 votes against l~ for three other contenders. conservatives • • a r e not CRL -Jilso e n d o r s e d interested in compromises. Assemblyinan William Balley lhey want lo know where a of San Rafael fOi state man stands," an obViOU! controll~r; former st a t e reference to F o u r n o y • s cB•r,·an' Pv•ra .. lioCamns p 1000,~0lon13•ryi:. reputation as a \ i b e r a I --.... Republican who w o u I d of state, Incumbent Evelle compromise \\'ilh Democrats. Younger {or attomey general, But Reinecke won his and incuqtbent Paul N. "Pete" biggest applause when he Mc CI o s key in h ls attacked special Waterga te most conservative. congressional primary battle. Pro.5CC\Jtor Leon Jawarski and Two dozen ' candidates for In contrast io his CRL his . pred~essor, Archlbald statewide office scurried we I c 0 n\ e .. Which w&s Cox, for what Reinecke said back and forth between the restrained . and' low:'keyed, were politically motivated 1v.·o· co nventions. Vihich "'-'ere Reinecke received a standing indictments against him for being held at bay front hotels ovation in his appearan~ perjury. ~~~~~~~-"'---CL--'-:....:~~~~- SPORTSCAST 'Rosie Casals presents her tennis togs DAILY PILOT A IE ' . • .\pru·t1nent . ·-11eaaStain LOS ANGELES (Al') ·- Two gunmen apparently bent upan seliing rent money shot and killed an apartment fiousl!l manager and beat up bia ,wlfe, police said Satu't'day. '" Officers said the tw<> beat and 'tied Bea Lucero after she showed t h e "prwpectlvt renters" an empty apartment. Apparently the men shot manager Je!lse Lucero, 28, when lhey were ransacking the office, police sa.ld. Lucero may have caught them by surprise, officers theorized. r Son1e Hazard , SUNNYVALE .(AP) Alcyandcr Goldman dropped his golf club and $30 at the second tee. The 72-year-old retired Palo Aho man \\'&S ready to hit the ball whC'n t\.\.'O young bandit! pbpped out of the bushes at Sunken Gardens Golf Course h<'rc Friday and ordered Goldman lo put down his clul> and hand 01'er his wallet . first in the country at BulJock's.· Bright new designs in. white textured polyesrer. To celebrate the IOOth year of tennis. WraP piped in bright blue or b[ight green, 832 .Elastic waist, action ~;lecves, 834 Panels of bright blue or bright green alternat~ ing with'whico, $36 Each -wich p~nties. 6 to 14. Meet Rosie. May 6 in Santa Ana. SANTAANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA • Town and Tra\•el Active SpOrtsVi'car . --~--- • • ' ' .. ' .. .. • I ' . " ' •• . ShopMoiidaytf\r_u Friday, 10:00 a.m. r9'9: 30 p.m. I Bullock's Santa Ana. 1 fashion Squa"', 2800 N. Main Street, Sanra Ana, Telephone: '4'-7211 · .Saturday, 10:00a.m:llo6:~p.m. Bullock's Sourh Coast Plaza, San Diego Freeway at Bristol, Costa t.fesa, Telephone:·5~6-06ll 12-5 ~- 4 Departmt,~1 _:--Store·s Pl .us Many Other --. . ' ·Merchants· Open ·for, lo•r Shopping Convenience ' .. • • ,. I·. I ' ; • .._ • l •: I, • - • I • • AU DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The specter of machine-type partisan politics is hovering over Orange County governn1ent a.gain . Arter a long history oJ ,staying pretty well out or local elections. both parties -or at least leaders in both parties -have been getting n1ore and more in· volved in the past four year~ in what should be non· partisan campa igns. Last week. for example, a conservative Republ i.can organization, the Orange County Coordinating Republica n Assembly (CRA)~ endorsed ~andidates for district at· torney, sheriff, school superintendent and other poslS. All these races are, by tradition and by law. nonpartisan offices and supposedly free of political taint. On the Democratic side, Supervisor Ralph Diedrich was pulling a reversal: although he is a nonpartisan of· ficeholder, he apparenUy is taJcing a key role in a Dem· ocratic nomination by sponsoring a candidate in the 72nd Assembly DistricL And maybe that sho~ldn't be loo surprising. After ~11 , fellow S4pervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor. And Democratic leaderS and money were prominent in the supervisoriaJ campaigns of Battin. Died- rich and Ralph Clark . Certainly that sets a party.type atmosphere inside the supervisorial chambers. Politicians being politicians. it's no surpise to ~ind pal'ty-type activities intertwined with nonpartisan off1c~s and issues. But in Orflnge County the intertwining is getting tighter a.nd more obv ious. The CRA endorsements were particularly disturb- ing. Should the candidate~ endorsed ~in their el.e~tions, the · Republicans can claim son1e right lo pr1v1leges, whether or not they get them. The district attorney's race is pretty much the same pictu re, The CRA doesn't like the way DA Cecil Hicks has been handlin g things. so the en<lorse1nent went to William Hulsy. One can'{ help but wonder if flulsy would be unlett.ered in operating the office In view of the CRA push -and in view of the fact his finance manager is John G. Schmitz, former ltepublican state senator and congressman, safely back in the Republican fold after running for President on the American Independent Party ballot. The CRA also supported election of incumbent 'Rob- ert Peterson for .school superintendent, inc umbent 2nd District Supervisor Dave Baker, ~1arcia Bents for 5th District Supervisor, Ray Preston for tax assessor -and even a county school board candidate, John Harper. \Vbetber these endorsements mea.n much at the polls might be questioned. Chances· are the nonpartisan candidates so endorsed will be wise enough not to broad~ cast the fact they are being pushed by a group whose roots are deep in party-type soil. ?.fachlne politics once dominated local government in California. A 1911 amendment curtailed this corrup· lion. , Responsible citizens -jncluding those 'aci ive in their own parties -ought to do everything they can to keep it that way. - # % * & ' # s '% I Si !!! \Veil now, Assemblywoman J\1arch Fong. 'vhat the (expletive omitted) did you have in mind? (As the h1ac- Nelly cartoon below makes clear, bad words are, by presidential decree, subjett to heavy editing.) • ln the sheriff's race, the CRA came out flatly for Lt. Brad Gates, who is seeking the job of his retiring boss, Jim ?.tusick. One can hardly blame Gates for ac- cepting something he presumably did not ask for, but we'd like to see the sheriff's office aloof and completely separated from any party affairs. But Ms. Fong has introduced a bill in Sacramento that would make it legal to swear in front of women and children, -. ~ \Vhat kind of a (characterization deleted) perso n would push such a bill? Especially a (i naudible! Demo- crat? (Laughter.) To be perfectly honest, we here at the White House~ given some thought to the psychological benefits of the Mitchell-Stans acquittal.' _._:Nixon Ignored H~rlow at High Cost • By GODFREY SPERLING \VASHI NGTON -Bryce Harlo"" an exceedingly busy presidential adviser. still found time for a Jillie banter. There \Vas very little or this in the \\lhite House in the days of Haldeman and company. Some people think that the gri~ess. the intensity of purpose w h 1 c h surrounded the President somehow accounted for the calamity of \Vatergate. Perhaps. But a witty p r e s i d e n t surrounded by 1\·itty aide9" presided over 1~~ Bay of Pigs. That. ~resid n! was, or course, John Kennedy. Just before seeing ~Ir. Hatlow for a recent infer\'iew. I had twice within minutes encountered Henry Kissinger. just back from ~1oSC-Ow. In a period of no more than a quarter ' of an hour Dr. Kissinger had in two instances entered the waiting room downstairs in the White llouse from the west door and gone out ., the east door, apparently en route down the hall to see the President. He had never come back through the east door. Obviously, there were 1 connecting halls behind the waiting room ,, that made this possible. But it was sufficiently amusing that Dr. Kissinger . thought so too. His smile and shoulder shrug seemed to say that as be v.•alked by the second time. Soon this reporter "'as confrohting !\.1r. Harlow with this piece of information about the "strange double appearan ce" of Dr. Kissinger. I described the happening as "highly suspicious," and asked for an "explanation." "WELL," SAID TIIE oracle of Oklahoma City, "you know, you are onto something. No other reporter has ever found tttis out. But I must confess to you that there are two Henry Kissingers. "~1any people wonder how Henry can be moving all around the world all the time. They wonder how one man could possibly do it. And they are right. There_ is usually one Kissinger here resting \Yhile tbe other. one is out on the road. Sometimes we have them both out. ''Tell you the truth, while the one Henry was getting all that publicity in Moscow, we had another l1enry in Peking, traveling incognito and meeting Chinese leaders behind closed doors. No one knew he was ther e. But now you know. And you oOw know our great secret." But Mr. llarlow, who has now left government "for good" after years of adv~lng.both Presidents Eisenhower and Nixon. will be remembered for much more than his wry humor and quips. AL some point, some historian vdll note that !here "''as one counselor to !\Ir. Nixon who told hint in no un certa in terins that it y,·ould be a catastrophic mistake if he set up the Committee for the Re-election of the President. J\fr. Harlow's memo to J\ir. Nixon made these points: e That the establishment of a separ- ate rival organization to oversee the presidential campaign was bound to stir up hostility among those who ran the regular organization, the Republican 't\attonal Committee. · • 1'fiat CREEP .. as the organ ization later v.·as to become known. would tend to bring lhe amateurs' who \vould likely make all kind s of major campaign blunders. e ANO THAT THE new g r o u p , v.·orking outside regular parly channels. v.·ould tend to exhaust all the usual sources of campaign funds , thus leaving little in the v.·ay of financial help for candidates other than the President. Now :r.tr. Harlow did not, of course, predict Watergate. But he certainly warned th'e President against the amateurism and possible blunders that might occur as a result or skirting the regu1ar, profes&onal Rep u b Ii can organization in this v.·ay. F'urthern1ore, no one from reading lhe Harlov.' memo to the President \\·ould think that ~Ir. Harlov.• was overly surprised that Watergate occurred . ~Ir. Harlo"" an "old pro'' himself, knew Uiat great trouble lay ahead if ~tr. Nixon persisted in his plan to create CREEP_ Hoy,•ever. as we know. !be President persisted. First. some of the amateurs themselves -J\1essrs. HaJdeman and J\iitchell -overruled J\.tr. Harlow and his memo. But in the end it was Mr. Nil.on himself who made the final decision to go ahead v.·ith the formation of CREEP. This y,·as not the first time ~r. Harlow v.·as turt\,Cd down on advtce to 1 tHe President that could have hel ped Mr. Nixon avoid his \Vatergate woes. Much earlier. one of l\lr. Nixon's first acts as President was to fire the Republican National Chairman, Ray Bliss, another "old pro'' who almost single-handed had brought the Republican Party back from its wreckage in the 1964 campaign to play a ipectacular role in t b e presidential victory of 1968. :P.1r. Nixon ousted Mr. Bliss for political reasons. He felt Mr. Bliss had been too nonpartisan durit\g the years leading up to the 1968 campaign. lfe decided to move in someone v.·ho had shown all-out loyalty lo himself. He y,·anted to appoint his old political adviser, f\lurray Chollner, but that move v.·as blocked by a number ol key GOP figures. f\lr . Nixon then chose Rogers J\:lorton. But Mr. Bliss. perhaps the best and most highly respec led national chairman ever to come do\vn the GOP pike. was out. And in this instance too, Mr. Nizon had made this change in Republican leadership against the advice ol his aide, ~1r. HarlO\\'. ~tR. HARLOW TIONKS that if the President had kept f\-1r. Bliss on and used • bim as a dau,xilttcelipdviser and con· fldant. J\1r . Nixon would never have moved to a CREEP, organjzation - where all his troubles began!---- Mr. Harlow is saying a final "good· bye" to government. He has been a particularly able adviser to presidents and a very skil1£u1 liaison with members of Congress. But he will also he remembered for some very good advice that a Presldeot did not take. Mr. Godfrey Spclmg is chief of the Washington· bureau of the Chris· tian Scic1ice Monitor. Communi·cations Create Mass of Skepticism The y,•ord-manipulating professions ha ve of necessity grown in importance \Yith increasing econontic interdependency In a technological v.·orld. Th e more industrialized society becomes, the more carefully must human effort be coordinated -aod this coordination is achieved through language. · The result or this vast need for · communication is familiar to us all. The citizen ot today, Christian or Je,v or Mohammedan, fin · ander or farm hand . stockbroker or stock boy, has to interpret more v.'Ords per day than the citizen at any other thnc in 'vorld history. Literate or scmi- literate. \\'e arc as· sailed-by \\'Ords all day long: from ne\\S • commentators. soap operas. campaign . speeches, news papers, the propaganda of b· pressure groups or governments -all • lrying to sell us son1ething. t o • ·' ~ , DAILY PILOT Robfort N. \Vtcd, Publisher Thom os K ttuit, Edie or Barbara Krtibich Editorial Poge Editor -on. fditor11l 11"~ of 1he Daily P51ot .-.ks to lnrorm and r.tim ula!I'! rndttS by prtsenlll'IQ: 0n 11111 pqe dlvfl'tfl •comme-nt.ary on lopirs ot ln- tft'tlt by syndlc•tfd t'Olw-nn111!5 and artoonlstt, by provid1111;: a forum '°" ttadr"' vlew1 end by Pn'~!init this nc111'fP'Pt't''I opinklni &M idta.~ on CUll"t'nt toplca.. The t'dil0t1ll opinions o1 th~ 011.lly Pl)Qt appear C"nly in the ~itorit.J rohnnn Al tile ll'lp of tht paft. Opinions ~PITlllOO by the t'OJ. umrdftl and cartoonilt& .m Jeutr wfflmi an! thclr own and no tndorl~ mmt « their vkowt by Iha Dall)' Pilot -Id be lnltmd. Sunday. Moy 5, 1974 I I S. I. HAYAl_{AWA manipulate our beliefs, '\'hether about the kind of toothpaste to use or the kind or economic system to Support. \VE ARE TOlD these t h i D g s sometimes for our own good and sometimes for the good of those who tell us. We are Jiving in a time when billions of dollars a day are spent by people who v.•ant to make up our minds for us. It is natural that this kind of climate should generate widespread skepticism. Confronted by a thousand conttadictory voices, our temptation is to say, "Let's not believe anybody." We therefore have many skeptics in the modern world. people \\'ho sintply refuse to believe anything . In my own expe rience, I hnve found that these skeptics belong to t\110 large groups: first, the working class group of skeptics, who tend to disbelieve all newspapers, all the propaganda of the employing classes. and most or the propaganda of their union leaders. They are left bclievil)g, by and large. ooly ~t they team from face-to-face contact with people whom they have learned to trust. The SCl'Ond class o( skeptics is round among those who themselves are in the v.·ord-manipulating profession. They have seen. or been party to, ao many phony publicity stl.lnts. slanted news stories, decepth•e palitlcal campaigns, "pseudo- events,'· and lll·advlsed public relations dfives: that they take a kind nr professional pride in not believini;c anything. I SHOUl.D Al.50 Include In lhls da .. of skeptics some academic people of my a-cqua1ntance who are so clev@r that Jhey see through ·everything: the logk:al \Vcaknes.~ of lhe arguments f o r ca pitalism or: against it; the weakness of the arguments both ol theist! and athtists: the shortcomings o( ICience aJ ( l\'eU as of all the altemaUves to science. These 1ntcllect.ual skeptics are perhaps In an even sadder stale than the workfni • class skeptics. since the latter believe at least in each other as partners at work. and they believe in the reality of their v.·ork. \Vhen a man digs potatoes~ he does not doubt the reality and validity of potatoes. But the ,5keptic of the w o r d . manipulating classes is skeptical of the validity and worth of his own work, because if all communications are suspect, so are his own. But the problems of the skeptic, whether naive or sophisticated, are the problems of everyone who lives in the age or the loudspeaker, the power press and the mass circulation media. How does one find the needle of legitimate meaning among the haystacks of nonsense? It is in this situation that in our time the science or semantics has arisen. Briefly stated, the science of semantics is the stud y of relationships betv.·een words and things, between language and behavior, between language and reality. One of Ute basic questions of semaniics is therefore what kinds of meaning language can convey, U I may oversimplify the answers · to t h i s question, a useful v;ay of classifying the uses of language is to divide them into four. First there is the informative function, as in "The car is in the garage." The truth of an infonnative statement Is to be found in looking beyond the wl'lrds, into the garage, to see if the car is there. SECOND TIIERE is language that l::i used to 6et up language. "A bachelor Is an unmarried man.·· You don't have to conduct a surv ey to find how many bachelors are unmarried. Bachelors are unmarried by definition -which means by a rule of language. Third there is the directive use of language. A statement like "no parking," or "one-way street," says nothing descriptive about the world. It merely tries to control the future behavior of motorists. Fourth there Is evaluative o r expressive use of language, in which one expresses preferential feelings towards something or someone: "You are the most beautiful girl in the world," or "The free enterprise system Is the finest system on earth.11 What is important is not to get the four uses of language mixed' up. • HERE AA£ ALL THE. [1NAlll1/l!LE.] YOU'il NEED f0'2. YOUR [ aw<f'.~7Af/ON lfilTEV] l~UIR.V ... (IAVGHTER] WELL [EXPLETIVE OMITTED] MR PRESIDENT ... YOV'llE A REAL [UNINTELIGIBI£] F<ite Fails To B-e:ar-Biit- Future Facts Future facts are especially flavored by academics "'ho rejoice to announce the impending end ol the world. There are a lot of academics v.·ho rejoice in this kind d . thing. An example Is a Stanford prof "-hose credentials in this field are notable. lJe got his scient ific training in the study or butterOics. A few years ago this chap. Dr. Paul Ehrlich, V.1lS telling Ul lhat lhe supply m food for the v.11rld's population v.'00.ld run out by about 1975. Thi~ v.'as a splendid future fact . Feu• bavc been better. \Vhat a 1nan says about the future is irrefutable. since the future hasn't happened. And if !he patina of a Ph .D ls (CHARLES McCABE) laid oo the declaration, its force ls practically Aiosalc. Yoo would be astonished how many people took as solid fact the dire predictions of Dr. Ehrlicti. That any oC us will be eating next year is not ms fault. IP" THE PEOPLE who believed Dr. Ehrlich in 1967 lived in tbe late 18th and early 19th centuries, thfy v.·ould ha\•e believed one T. R. A1althus. He was saying the same thllig as the Stanford prof in those days -i.e._ that population naturally increased fas!cr than the means of livin g . Despite the' splendid future fact of Dr. ~falthus, we are all &ill around , rcgtettably or no. The human race has n habit of making mincemeat of this kind of future fact, which is merely an old· fashioned guess with a college education, to paraphrase ~tark Twain. AMERICAN population has incre.....t about 5().loid since the days when Dr. Malthus was pronouncing our end. Jn the pruit 50 years we have doubled ourselves. Tbis, one would expect, wooJd have inevitably result.d In a lethal affumalion of the Malthusian principle. We sbtQd not ooly be short of food, but short of land to eat it oo. But tllil hasn't happened al all. One percent ol our land is s u r e 1 y overpopulated. since three-quarters ot us live on it. But wt are not starving because the rarm worker of 1820, \Vho knocked himself out from dawn to dusk to grow food for himself and three other persons, today commands machinery v.•hich gives him the capacity to feed himself and 44 othe.-pcoplc. IF ZERO populatloo growth. a coneept which Dr. Ehrlich virtually invented, was officiaHy attained as or Dec. 4, 1972, according to the Census Bureau_ ThLs was done without any help at all from Dr. Ehrllcl!. Population growth w .. In ract slipping slgnificanUy since lll'lt, again according to the Cemus Bureeu, and again without any help fn>m tbe population zombies and their future facts. By lll70 oor populatlan rate had s!lpped to I.I percent, half iii whal it wu lnJIOO. You see future ract.s In the newspapen every day, and in vut quantities. Theee are seldom labeled as the guessing. speculation and uninformed gpeeulatloa that they are. "Diii pickles will In lime ca\l.10 Impotence to tf'o male. a study of 26 white l)ll ce by Dr. Henry lgnotu& ol Com•ll found yesterday." Anolber future fact ha• b«n born. That old Journalistic rascal, Drew Pearson, used to boOll that his predictions were "87 percent accur•te. 1' This 15 a pretty runny wey to mea!!ure a<Xllracy; but lhc batllog average or the old prognosUcaler was, as the academics say. "slgnUlcanll.V:' higher than the f\Jlure racts put oul by many ol our ocholars. • J -. Sax b·e-isms . . Rile By DAVID NYHAN WASHINGTON -William Bart Saxbc. Prestd~nt Nixon's fifth Attorney Genei;al" Is either a bluot, tell·it-lli e-it-is lawman or a blundering,'root-in·mouth pop-off. depending on whoin you beUeve. In recent weeks, the SS.yea r-old tobacco- chewing r:atUe fnr1n<:r from Ohio has stepped on the toes or sensibilltles of: -The FBI. -The Internal Revenue Service. -The parents of Patricia Hearst. ......: ll'he Senate Watergate commiltee. -The head of the American Bar Assn. -some spokeSmen !Or American Jewish organizations. The Unltcd~States's top law enrorcemcnt official bas raised furors not so much for what he's o[feJ;ed prosecutors to do, but for public statements that fall from his tlP-' wlth thunderous· re&ularlty. IGNQRING his predecessors' collective ) penchant for avoiding controversial public statements, Saxbe is plowing through his official duties with an 41ut.spoken attitude. Saxbe had pl anned to retire frotn the Senate_, to the life of counl"Y Squire In· Mechanicsburg, Ohio. J1e gavr thnl up, ho...,·ever, v.·hen President Nixon needed an attorney general qui ckly :ind decided to tak e a n1averick Republican fro1n the Senate -Saxbe_ :-lo avoid-a \englhy and perhaps pohlically dam&ging conOrmation battle. Saxbe first filed publisher Randolph Hearst two months ago by saying, and lhen qualifying his statement. that the FBI had identified suspects in the case. After viewing photograph5 of Miss Hearst apparently taking part ln a San Francisco bank robbery. Saxbc callL'd 1he robbers "co1nmon crin1inals." and "''hen pressed as to \vhet.her he Included Miss 1 learst Jn that category, added. ··And Miss 1-lc;.\rst is part of it." Chesterfield Srnith . president of t h L' Amt:rlcan Bar Assn., said Saxbe's ren1arks David Nyluni is" u writer for tht Bosco11 Globe, ill which this article appeared. were un eth ical nnd could J e o p a r d i z e prosecution or the bank robbers· if they are caught. ... 5axbe's widely quoted Monday-morning quarterbacking of the FBI probe of the Hearst kidnaping has embarrassed FBI agents on the scene and FBI Director Clarence Kelley. who oblique\~ rebuked his Justice Department superior. Kelley's discomfort mirrored that expressed last "'eek by Donald C. Alexander, IRS com missioner. Sax be had told a group of reporters that the IRS bad turned over results of its probe of President Nixon's tax rcturn .s lo the \Vatcrgatc spccinl prosecutor's office. TllE lllS LIKES lo operate behind th e scenes. and Snxbe's slatcment brought the affair to light. Sen. Sam J . Ervin Jr. I D-N.C. > has blasted Saxbe for taking an active role in the White House defense against impeachment investigations. ~ After Saxbe noted casually to reporters that ·' Friend in lhe 1950s ''the Je"•ish lntcllectu.o\'' "'as "enamored" or the Com munist Party. a stonn of criticisni broke. Saxbe said it had been taken out of context "God knows · I'm not anti· Scmltic. J\1y deputy's Jewish, my daughter·ln· lavr':; Je\vlsh .. ,,"he protested. lleacting to the stir he'd created, S:ixbe suid if he "had lcarnt.-d to keep my n1outh shut :ro years ago,'' he 'd stl ll be practicing la~ back in J\1cchan icsburg. '-The farm boy In the ?tttd"·est's COP heartland had gone to Ohio State, served In the Ohio National Guard, belonged to groups like the American Legion and Elks, and worked his \V8Y through the state legislature to the ·post o( attorney general of Ohio. In 1968, he was the GOP 's sacrificial·lamb candidate, expecting to run and lose to Democratic Sen. Frank Lausche, when Lausche was unexpectedly upset in the Democratic prtmarx by John Gilligan. SAXBE WENT ON TO beat Gilligan for the Senate seat by four percent of the vote and arrived, to his own surprise, in Washington. A l'ear later he admitted, "The first six 1nonths in the Senate. you wonder how you got here. The next six months, you 'vonder how the rest or them got here." 1-lis Senate voting record defies labeling. He \va.s with Prcsidenl Nixon on sonle .issues, against him on others. following vaguely .upon his pledge to Ohio voters to be "conservative on money and crime, and liberal on the rights of the people." Disillusioned with the results of his Senate career. and what he saw as the lethargy of that and Foe body, Saxbc announced last year he "'ooldn't seek re-election. He was quoted as referring to former White House aides J{. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman a!i "Naiis." and said \Vhitc •louse dentals or presidential involvement i n \Votergate "Is like a piano p\uyer in <1 ll'horehouse saying he doesn't kno1v what's going on upstairs." A n1an \\•ho dea lt regularly "''ilh Saxbe in th e Senate described him thu slv: .. He shoots fro1n lhc hip. calls lt like he sees ·it. some people feel hc"d make a better baseball wnpire than attorney general. He seems to be pretty straight. He's not the hardest y,·ork er In the world ." Last October he was quoted as saying of the embattled Administration, "Nixon is through, finished, in terms of his effectiveness over the ~xt three years." · ,_ Then, after the resignations of fonner Attorneys General John N. a.Iltchell, Rict\ard Kleindeinst and Elliot Richardson, and I.tie i!tlerim reign of Acting Attorney General Richard Bork. fl.1r. Nixon needed another one. and settled upon Saxbc. l'VE BEEN AftOUND here rive years. bitchihg about what f y,·ould do if r had th e opportunity.°' explained Saxbe, ··AH 11t once lhe.v gave 1ne the ball ... it's not something you just walk away fro1n." So OO\\' he's America's top la1\' enforccn1en t official. The sturdy Episco pa lian \\'ho once said he liked farming because "You run it out of your hip pocket" is at center stage during one of the weirdest periods or American history . OAJL y PILI/I A 7 11e's so far eS<"aped sustained attack because a nu1nbef of people fl'rl he"s a candid. r v-e .. g~t· nothing-lo-hide politicinn . a type that so111e feel is all too rare in these titn('s of doublt!·talkin g and double-dealing i11.)1lgh places. For Sax be. ii ·s just going to be a bit longer before he gets back to the farm. the cattle and the s1nall·t01\·n \a1\•ycring. As he explai ned "'hen he decided to leave the Senate. ··1 didn't "''ant to get o!rl in \Vashington." By RICllARD J. O'NEILL (i-iumptiant tnn~uguration Day ev~nts. diffi,cull enough to believe that Gerald no pat assumptions about victory. For fort watching reenforcement.s Mrive. For4'• seat \vpuld fall to the Den1ocrats. them the opinion polls of trtay cannot be CoWlly Democrats might also be the first . . "COUid have prech~ted the sure nemesis of --eafnlJ3ign-Ji4. vte~d -fr~arog:m?-~rrioc-cats:--whcr--w-e"1"-e-· perspective of ttte events folfowlng from thankful on that day to ~vc maint_ained Jan1cs l\lcCord 's revelations to Judge th.cir 1najority in tl~e Congr~ss. v1e"·cd but-the.spectacle..of.,the.President or the ___ colln1£!;1 _ on in P.redfcting ho\v th C: people to call any large scale Denu>erat United States ·personally campaigning electi;irate ,Yfl l-vOte-:--"'" irl 'NO\>etntrer.--vtctories-in-their-precinet.9-a-mlf.ager- and losing in a "sur'e '.' f\1ichigan ,• ~ fl.1it"age or not, the excitement and sense Jlepublican district has brought hoine a CA~IFORN_IA DEi\10CRATS kno\v ,311 o( victory-at-last is' evident this yea r. Democrats a re <ilso keenly aware that the one •issue Republicans h{IY.e usually bad· going ·for then1 -namely '' ~&Ga l--ri\li pom;ibl\i4'-'!-M·-a--4lilafleed---:__, budget·· -is tinder severe stress with J hn Siri a will revolve in large part with alarm_ the erosion of their ~st-~ew O c · . . Deal constituency v"bo had again. aided around one man -R1chanl lf~. Nl~on. Richard Nixon's bid for the presidency. All other issues. all strategies fllld the Republicans sa ... ,. new hope in the votes Prelldent at the pivotal core of what has President Nixon had garnered for become a •·national test ." The President-bimself in the work ing class suburbs and as--the-issUe inextricably cuts across the ethnic enclaves. For .them t.his w_as a m~n campaigns plans of any one running for who would transl.ate his diplom~lic office this ear. The ,isSue is 00 respecter suycesses and ~1elnam peace into of party: ~ touches Democrats perhaps unbeatable domestic advances. differently than it touches Republicans. THE SPECIAL elections for vacant but neither can avoid it. llouse seats have cast an ominous-sign of '\\'1o in January 1973. watching the defeat on the other party. People found ii. n1essa ge : The Repub lica n Party is in too \\ell the 11~dcpcn~ence o_f vot_ers '>'ho Individual Democratic candidates will trouble in a big way. seli!m t~ revel 1n proVUl~ ~ifornta as the n1E TE!\1PTATION at !hi:; point for Democrats is to think thnt the ripening ap ples or victory are just waiting to fall on them in November with perhaps only a little bit of judicious pruning. Whether or not Democrats nationally will fall to the temptation by skewering Watergate for all it's worth is open to question. California Democrats, particularly Orange CoWlly Democrats, are making exception to the op1n100 polls. The struggle \\'ith the issue of Richard Nixon popularity or Governor Reagan and the ei lher with certainty of their own solid Republican presence in the stale convictions or with the un certainty that Legisl;iture are forces that may not be so follo .... ·s from keeping too close an eye on easily defeated by mere association with the opinion polls. There is a sense of the Party of Watergate. "thank God this is theirs and not ours" Orange County Democrats, who have when they view their Republican seen each election pass them by barely opponents, and in isolated cases there victorious and almost demof31ized, view will be attempts to link the old tag of the any trend moving'\ in their direction with Party of the Depression to the new tag of the feeling .of besieged troops in a desert the Party of Watergate. " 'Pe rsec'u.~io 1i Relati:vely Recent' THE r.10ST BASIC Democrati c strategy that is developing on the issue of \Vatergate Is one that deplores the government of crisis v.•e now have. DemOcrats will offer a solld progtam that will demonstrate that the government of the typical taxpayer does not have to. be one of indecisiveness, but rather one that can provide intelligent and creative plaMing and take action. The emphasis will be one of contrasts. Soviet Jews Watch Mideast Talks MOSCOW -Exactly situation of Jey,·s loday Union? what is the lo: the ... Soviet Begin with histo<y. Antisemttism has a history of a thousand years in this part of the world. Even though the Soviet oonstitutioo o u t 1 a w s discrimination against minority groups, p r e j u d i c e against Jews, most of it on the le\'el of everyday relation· ships. has not been eradic:ited. Th i s prejudice, ho11•ever. bas not preventl'd Jews fron1 n1akin~ the mtr.lt of thf' edu· cational opportuni· li es ava il able lG them. As a result, many or them have earned in1~rt3nt po.. sitlons in science, educaUon, indus- try a n d government. In pvportlon to their total numbers, Jews have been atsle to achieve better jobs and ~ig~r average income than any other nunor1ty group in the Soviet Union. · ( NORMAN COUSINS ) homeland. Many Russian cilizens ha·ve regarded thi~ exception as preferential treatment for Jews Rnd have manlfestcd their resentment in va rious \Vays. Even more slgnirica nt Is the fac:t that heads or university departments of science laboratories or gove rnment bureaus have ceased hiri ng Je .... ·s for important positions. giving as their excuse the fact that they think it \Vise to fill the openings \\·Ith qualified personnel "'ho are no apt to create costly tw·nover problems. This situation has produced something of a chain reaction. Some Je\\'s who had had no intention or leaving the country are DOY.' applying for ex.it visas beeause <0£ the pm1ent difficulty in finding new jobs. But the greater the excxlus. the greater the. economic pressure on those who stay behind. At the time the Soviet laws ""ere changed to permit Jews to emigrate to Israel. government officials thought it only fair that Jews should be required to pay a departure tax covering the free education given them sin~ Soviet society "''ould no longer receive any benefit from its Investment in Lhat education. TllE T 1\X PRODUCED \Videspread protesls in the outside world, especially in the United States. with which the USSR \\'as seeking improved relations. Consequent ly. the tax \\'as rescinded . 'The removn l of the departure tax has not solved all emigration problems. howe\·er. The prOcess of applying for a visa is still cumbersome and in many cases unpl easant. Many Soviet clerks and functionaries \VhG interview the applicants regard emigration as proof that a citizen is lacking in patriotism, and they tend to be officious and uncooperative. ..Even so, some 60,000 J ews have left for Israel in the past year. How many more Jews would like to leave the. Soviet Union? There has been a considerable reduction in the nwnber o( applicants in recent months, largely the res;utt of the unsettled conditions in Israel produced by the war. Another factor is that letters are being received from Jews in Israel emphasiz- ing the difficulties or making the adjust- ment to a new country. Jewish leaders in the Soviet Union now estimate that not more than 75,000 to 100.000 -instead pf the hWldreds of thousands involved in earlier estimates -would sUll like to emigrate to Israel. ONE INTERESTl!\G side aspect to the situation is that there has been something or a black market in permits to emigrate. llundreds of non.Je.ws have falsified records of their ancest.ry, or have claimed marri age to Jewish partners. or have tried to pay money w1der the table for exit permits. ACcording lo available accounts. onJy a comparative few have been able to get through the net. In general, the problem of Je\.\-'S in the Soviet Union is enormously oornplicated and will be severl!fy affected. for better or worse, by the kind of settlement that is reached in the Middle East. It will be pointed out, for instance, that "''hile the administration maneuvered for its own self-preservation the country was experiencing devasting inflation, fuel shortages and mounting tmempklymerit. Sen. A I an Cran.5too's recent. actions on behalf of prote&µng veterans may well provide the scenario for other Democrats looking over the vulnerable terrain of a beleaguered administration. Watergate as an Wue has also cast the questlob of u..· int<grky of our public officia ls into the spotlight. Democrats will be calling for more stringent stan~ards of publi~ accountability for elec{ed officials and party fund raising. The question is becorp.ing one noi or claiming to be honest, but of performing as if one were honest. Americans, it is felt, resent financing superagencies of government t h a t produce very little. The superagencies are also increasingly seen as being out to get the little guy. The revelations surrounding "enemies lists," the IRS and the FBI have given Democrats the opportunity to cartipaign for refonn and redirection of the agencies the laxpayer is becoming more and more wary of. th.e !'l"ixo1~ Administration's problems \V1!h 1nnat1on. Democrats will not fail to br1n.g home to the An1erican working famil y a threatening danger is to M found in the future of their jobs and pocketbooks. The American people will need more than integrity in their government if the very welfare of their homes is threatened by a dollar squtieze they cannot cope with . Campaign '74 will see not only ·a ' Democratic o£fensive, on the is!llles, but ~lso a. more far-reaching tactic of 1ncreas1ng the ,number of registered Democrats. Republican registration Is reaching an all-time low and while all those who have defected from the Republican ranks are not running to the embr~c~ of the Dtmocratic Party, there are signs that a noticeable number of people are switching. J VIEW TIUS as one of the most rell· able signs of impending problen1s for the Republicans ·in this county. The move to increase the number of ·registered Democrats is or course being aided by the issues but it also seems to be growing out of a much more deeper discontent among Orange County voters from litlng in a one-party county. ' Jn a yea r when tncl.imbent caDdidates will have a much more thorough grilling from the. public there seems to be an equally noticeable trend to give the incumbent party the same going over. Pf!rty workers have reported in some J locations almost 7-to-1 registrations in favor of Democrats. Democrals see a reslrengtthening of the coalition they put together under Franklin RooseVelt. They know that the political "home " of most Americans has been the Democratic Party. The v.•ooing of Richard Nixon's "silent n1ajority" away from !he party appears at its end. Democrats are welcoming back people they view as only having had a middle-aged affair from a marriage that has lasted over 40 years and still has a lot more vitality in it. Richard J. O'Neill is chairman of the Ora!ige County Detnocratic Part11. Tn the last year or two, however, Jews have been experiencing more ·economic and social difficulties than they had previously knoWn . These problems are largely oonneCted to Israel and the general emigration situation. Moguls Wooed With 'T~x Breaks, Memo Shows ANY UNDERSTA~11>1NG of l h e controversy over emigration fhim the soviet Union to Israel must begin wilh the fact that Soviet Jaws ttave always prohibited emigration. An exception 'vas made for Soviet Jews seve[al years a~o on the grounds that Israel Was an ethnic WASllINGT6N -President Nixon ~ apparCnt!y arranged special tax breaks for th e movie industry. which his campaign aides used to squeeze political support from Hollywood stars in 1972. This is strongly suggested in confidential campaign memos, that we have just. uncovered. ~ The memos also speak or using actress All MacGraw to Jure ' Henry Kissinger to Hollywood. where ho might be persuaded to whisper pro-Ni x· on sentiments Into the ears of [lln1 celebrities. "We should ask Henry, sui;:gestcd one memo. "to say 89f11ethlng like, 'It W1>uld make ml! very happy if you could see your way clear to help re-elect. Prn- idtnt Nixon . t have great £Pith in Richard Nixon and l know you do. too.'·· As It happened . Kissinger flew off to Poking Instead of Hollywood, "o.<I Pat Nixon was rushed ln the la.st minute to woo the !Um folks. But ·tile tu btnofits apparently hod the btst effect. TIIE SCENARIO that tile Nixon 10- wrote ror tho pblttlcal conquest or Hollywood Is revealed In conlldenllal rnemos that "''ere shurned between ex.- Attorney General John Mitchell. ex-White House staff chief H. R. Haldeman and campaign aides Jeb fl.1agrudcr. Herbert Porter and Fred LaRue. The memos begin or\ Oct. 18,-1971. \vith a complaint from Porter to Mltdlell that the campaign was "short-of lists of celebrities." Porter suggested seeking celebrities rrom the movie industry wfllch, he confided, was 4eeply in Nixon 's debt. He explained that the President had n1et In San Clemente with the industry's top brass on April 5, 1971. They had 1'pleaded J •• f9f ~me sort of tax relic!," relared P,orter. The President obligingly had promlaed "~ "°"kl take a look at the 1'°5SlblltUe.o. . . . - • 1Shortly tbereaft.er,'' trlumphanlly ropor\ed Porter. "the JllS lllSlled • slatem'enl drapit1Ucally changing th~ amortization schcdule9: allowed for film production. In addltlon, there brive been .other changes regarding tax dt.ferral" "And flhally. lhe Admlnlstrotlon's lt1ve:slmeot Credit BUI will .be Qf l\lgniflcant benefit to the film production industry." Porter ad<\«! that ~port· Import Bank loans wert al>CJ golily to the 1 rtiovle Industry. . Some benefits for movieland, according tn Porter's memos , were obtain«! / personally by the President. Our own sources say that Nixon's Commerce Secretary h1aurice Stans also pushed through a tax concession for Hollywood. Stans was the chief campaign fund-raiser for Nlxon ln 1972. TO MAKE SURE the movie moguls understood where their blessings were c<lming from, Porter brought them together wlth •Mitehell. The purpooe or the meeting. Porter declared, was to 1'glve a ,ghofl men1ory course on ... \Vhat the Prealdent bas done for the film industry." Then Mite.hell "'as sup\X)Sed to ask the mdvle producers, ns a quid pro quo, how to "maxlmlie celebrily participation In the 197'1 campa ign." Every preeau tion "'as taken to keep the mOOting secret. Porter said the movie 1ne.n had assured him thnt Mitchell .. should not fear a n y unfavorable publicity fronl such a gatheriJlg.11 Attend.in( wert Warner Brothers' Dick Zanuck. MCA's Mike Ma i t ~· n d . Universal's Ta f l Schreiber. a.n d Universal Television's Frank Price. Colutnbia 's Peter Gubcr and Stu Irwin Jr. Zanuck \VaS na1ned chainnan O( the group. lt was agreed that Henry Kissinger \\'ould be the best drawing card to attract movJe stars to a political af£air. Because Kissinger had once dated Ali MacGraw and was still close to the actress and her then-husband, Paramount'& Bob Evans, Porter suggested using "EvPns ' and f\facGraw's friendship with H e n r y Kissinger" to bring the foreign policy cznr to Hollywood. BUT THERE· WAS one problem. ''Teddy KeMedy asked (Evans) at a cocktail patty r~tly IC he could count oo Evans' support If Ttddy made a run for the Presidency/' Porter Wrote to J~aldcman and r-.ta:gruder. • ' Ev ans committed his support to Kennedy.'' Neverthele~. Porter thought I h e Hollywood moguls mlght bring ~vans .. In to our camp." Kissjnger finally agreed to put in an a ppearance in Hollywood on June 17. 197 2. Porter wrot e Mltc·h c.11 enthusla1tlcally that "If Kls~ngcr could be persuaded to stay an extra day. it would be additional icing on the cake." The grand soiree wu h<ld at Tari ~hreiber's luxurl()lls Beverly Hills home. Among th< 150 guests. one of !hose present told us. were 130 major celcbrit lcs. They incl uded John Wayne Art l..ink\elter. Jack Benny. Charil~ Heston. Ronald R e~a g an . Fred Mac l\lurray, Irene Dunne, Ji mm y Stewart, Edger Bergen And Clint Easlwood . to name a few. But the guest of honor begged off and \Yil.s next heard from tn Peking. 'Ibe respected Schreiber was beginning to get edgy over the manipulation or Porter and Magruder. After Kisfilnger renegtd, SChreiber told us: "I tried to.cancel the affair." The White llouse, however, sent Pat Nixon to substitute for Kissinger and the party was held. It was. Scbrelber in5i!ted, ···run party ... no politics." BUT FUN OR not . the message of the memos is unmistakable : Ni.xon (l\te wind rans It) the movte indusiry and the movie industry gave him political suppi>rt. Footnote : Schreiber told my associate Les Whitten there 'A'as no quid pro quo, particularl y oo \ales. The only help Nixon personally gave the industry. said SChreiber. was a new rtgu\ati<I> aplnat film end rtCOrd pinllnJ.-lie a\Jo said Por1er's suggestion that Ali ~raw was 1i!Od to lure Khsingor to II~ was n '·piped.ream.". I • • t /'l B ·o•rLv PILOT Sorlday, May 5, iq74 Huntington LaJt.dcd D~ab"led: .. Veteran . ,· ~ ' Builds Full Life "I'm glad to be alJve and like to see buses d~ve'loped to doing the Lhings I can do," 1u.'COn11nodate v.·hccfchalrs, as says Martin Rainey. a 25-yeal'* well as improved parking ' old disabled veteran rro1n facilities for the handicapped. . 1 •• Huntington Beach. "J voant peopl e to realize ~ "I could sit around and that the handicapped don't r dream about the days v.·hen I want special treatment. They I could walk, but that's sell· just want things to be such · punishinent-that's dumb." that they can independently · Rainey, who lives wilh his enjoy them without havlng a · ~ , wife and four children, has doctor or nurse along." ~· built a full life since he was Rainey, who took on a built· ;~·~ injured in a m o t o r c y c I e in family of !oUr as wen as a '•; , accident four years ago while wife \"hen he was married -'E ~ stationed with the Army at lhree years ago, said the Palmdale. family responsibility didn't Now a contpoter science concern him. ;: major at UC Irvine, Rainey is "I DON'T TIUNK of it as a ~, an active parent, involved in responsibility,''· he • church affairs and_ a member commented, ''but as a of the Long Beach Flying challenge and a grea t, great \Vheels v.1heelch3ir basketball pleasure ." ' team. The .family, Bruce. 14; .... L A HU~'TINGTON Beach Stephanie, 12; \llanda, 10, and resident " for the past two Gayle. 8, enjoys 1n a n y ·" · years, Rainey said the city is activities together-\vorking a .good one for the puzzles, doing decoupage, .. ~ handicapped . drawing. writing poetry and ' j He pointed out. f o r even camping, e:tample, that the ne'v city And Rainey credits his wife, ~ ac c ommoda tio n s for Barbara, with helping him j wheelchairs, and m a n y adjust to his handicap. The : downtO\\on sidewalks h a v e couple met while he was a i wheelchair ramps. patient at the V r. t e r a n s 1 "But there still are streets Hospital in Long Beach and being built every da y without she was a nursing technician ~ ramps," said R a i n e y . there. ~ '"Illere's a shopping center "She just didn't let me rest I near my home and I'd gl.adly when she Lhought I WjlS doing ]eave my car at home and go something unhealthy mentally there, but there aren't any ·or ottlerwise," be said. ramps." '"Yoir eventually get over · In addition, fJe·said he would tx-ing handicapped." Rainey ' ~-----~-------'------'------'----~---~---' l • ' l l l I l I ' ! I I ' ' ' ) } • , l ' ! I I I I i I l l t . • • ASKABOlJT HA WAD FOR TWO •• FREE: (No Pureba!!ie Neee!!i!!iary) ALL-RISK INSURANCE • 5 YEAR WRITTEN GUARANTEC AND SPEAKER TRA DE B,A CK PLAN AVAILABLE G• TEAC. '''t.:: , Your Creativitv Room To ~love· 81099!0 Th• Tffc 4 -chlnnel 3340S is not juit a tape deck , •• it'i 1 c:rNlivity e11pandi"11 insuumtnl wilh 1bout' sv1rv f .. 1ur1 of 1 proft ssional r•cording studio. With Simul· Sync:®1nd 1c:c:euory mhuiown f)lnll (built· in) you ~n overdub, sw1111n, .c:ho. cro• echo, Pi"ll pong, f!lc:k tr1ekS, end on i nd on. You ~n wind up with 4 diser111 c:h1nn1l1 conttining 9 1r1cks of no mort than two g1ner11ion11! harman /kardon l,ist: 8869 ·'" N'ow5666. Look Out::: Al the 1ve ol this Quadraphonic Huu1c1n1 1s lhl H1rman Ktrdon SOO., 1 phlnomtNI AM/FM R1ceivl!!' 1ble 10 r19roduce •nv ktnd of 111isling or pottntlat fqur-chlnntl information with just 1M flip of 1 switch . , . th• 800+ dlivn 100 RMS Wtllf o f pure power (and all tour amps are ha•ne~d. t ven when you're fu st using st1reol ..• with an 1b10lut1 minimum of distortion, noi$t-lret tuning on FM, m1in tnd r1mot1 ipe1k1r swi1 ch11 that un control up to e•ghl soeaket1, and specs that 1r1 incomp1111bl1 to 1nvthin11 in its price l ield ... the 800+ w1U make 1we1t sweet mu1ic ro•' out of the lour sound-pumping Sonic 30 8" Two,Way Speakers ... !he Garr1rd 42MS Automttic Record Cti.nger (with b1st. pun cove•, ;tnd Shute Diamond ElliptiCll Stylus I compJttts this tint wsttm ... all in all, quilt e quad. 1/l,;r"w11 A or.Ion 81)()~ S.J9Q.95) Li!!it: 8234·41 ·····························: : SONIC • : (:lo--Out Sale l : BRAND NEW : : Five Year · : : Guarantee : 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EV20 GUARANTEE WH AT we SELL • RAPID FINANCING I COSTA MESA 1. 1829 Hewport Blvd. 17141 642·9531 \ • 'Maclw' A1:tthor to $.pl}.ak Concert Sched11led . ~ )~ . . Chicano ithor E d m u n d three sessions, a college ;:their attempts to find, work m VUlasenor, whose n o v e I 1potesm8.n ' said. •,1the farm 'lands of Squthcm "Macho" has been acclaimed 'Mle io a.m. lecture will be · CaHfornla . In Viej~ by critics and is in ~ as a in the television studio. The 11,. A self·trained author • college and high scb(lol text, a.m. rpeeeh will bP. in Rooni Villasenor _peMed eight 'fill speak at Sad4Jeback 139 .of the library. novels, 65 snort stories and 1be l..Dng Beach Junior COncert Band , winner of sorne 600 awards over the last 18 years. is scheduled to perform at 7::.l p.m. Tuesday in the 1'.1ission Viejo High School College at 10 and Jt a.m. ·~ three plays: befote. at~ining \Vednesday. "Macho sold Ol~t us flr5l success with "Macho." After addressing students, printing and is being used by . · He is coming to campus for Villasenor wUI be available at 100 rolleges, uni versities and La\in American history 11nd noon to talk to students and high schools. Tt probes the life ethnic cultures classes, both autograph copies of "Macho." of illegal Mexican nllen!I and taught by Mel Mitchell . gymnasium. The concert, sponsored by the El Toro and Mission Viejo High School boosters and the music office of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District, will be fol1owed · by a demonstration of marching and maneuvering techniques. The public Is Invited to all - Trivia? F u ·It's a reason R to read the N Dolly Piiot's I entertainment T page every u Saturday R E GRAND OPENING MIRRORS J ~\tt\ions of B<1/1J E w ~t o,, E "UNIQUE DECORATOR ITEMS" L 4iO E. &itio. B)Yd. E Balbol., CalllonM 926'1 R (714)673.aiJO y "COME SEE YOtJRSELF" Compos.ed of 175 member!, the Long Beach band has been California State Champion Youth Band for 15 consecutive years and has been the official l~~~~~;iiiii;i;i~~~----··········;;;:---Califomia Governor's Band at I the Portland, Ore. R ose OUR SUHDAY. HOURS Festival. It has been Ieatured in national telev isi on Navy·bt ue-dern~rn --eoordi-nate for mother on her day. ' The navy bl ue denim sh irt jac o f easy care cotton/polyester Red and white top stilch1ng !or added interest. Misses sizes 8-18. Malching navy blue denim pants in the saiTie easy care cotton/ pofyes1er. ~ronl pocket del~ling. 'Again. with red and wh ite top stitch detailing. Misses sizes 8-18 . s12 U1e your JCPOMIY charge card ' Mix well with a gingham shirt. s5 Tne per1ect mat ch-up Gingham checked shir ts 1n easy care polyesler/cotton Red and while. sizes 8-18 @'~))}, '1-=--__.. ~ The versatile, easy shoulder bag. ss Polyurethane in au the great basic colors. The go- everywhere bag with an adjustable strap. Have one in wh ite, navy.'bOne, black or tan. Better yet, have a couple at this IOw, low pr.Ice. ..,,. ' . ! -.. • -• Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at 8'e following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644 -23 13 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hu.ntington Beoch (714) 892·777 1. HARBOR ~E NTER, Cosio Mesa (71_4L646-502 L ' • • . . . . 1· . -~ . - .. ·---i • ' Sunday, May 5. 1q74 Press Names Carr Man of Year . "SAVES LIVES" Dr. Donald Martin • By Jacqueline Combs Lind Of IN D.ilr Plltl II.rt Gerald P. Carr, the Santa Ana boy who grew up to become an astronaut, was honored as Man of the Year by the Orange County Press Club during its 11th annual Headliners banquet Friday. Carr was the commander nl Skylab Ill, the third and finnl mission In the Skylab project and America's longest manned spaceflight. The award to the astronaut, who moved to Santa Ana at age 7 from his native Denve r, hig hlighted the county press club's annual salute to outstanding c o m m u n 1 t y members. Ten other individuals were honored in nine cateRories. Tu'O special awards went to the late Doo Wash , who was superintendent of the Gardea ~ Grove Unified School District, and to the City of La. Habrat one of 10 All-American cities for 1973 . In a tape re co rded interview, Carr said, "Orange County is my home and aJways has been. "It was there in that hotbed of aviation devel(;pmenl that I first became Interested in aviation. I do remember all kinds or strange afrplanes flylng over Orange County." His mother Mrs. Freda Carr of Santa Ana accepted the award. Other Headliner a Y.' a r d s "''inners by category are: HEROISl\I -A 17-ycar-old junior at Edison High School in Huntington Beach, Gregory Riddick · v.·as honored for saving the life ol Carol Niltson 'in February, 1973. Young Riddick was wakened by his parents, Mr. and ~frs. Sam Riddick, when a young j:!:i rl \\'as discovered drown ing orr 4oth Street in Newport BeaC'h. "A mother often wonders If she does the right thing," said Mrs. Riddick. "But when \\·e woke Greg we knew he had the capabilltles to help." Riddick also has e a r n e d recognition from the Americ:m Red Cross. the Costa Mesa VFW and the Newport. Beach Lifeguards. ' EJ\1TERTAINrt1ENT -Ozi.. ie and Harriet Nelson , residents of South Laguna since I~, were honored_ for launchtng a corneback l ast year with lhl'i r new television progra 1n, "Ozzie's Girls." The Nelsons and their tv•o sons, David and Rick, had previously spent 16 years in a television series. ' · Th i:i A<lventu:t·s of Ozzie and Jlarriet" \1thieh ended in 1966. ~1EDI CINE-A professor of 1nedicine at UC Irvine and head of the u r o I o g y department of Orange County Medical Center. Dr. Donald Martin performed the fir st sua:essful kidney transplant fron1 a deceased donor in California in 1964. He '>l'as honored for his research ip making the kidney transplanl operation safer and n1ore effective. PUBLIC SAFETY -J. \\'. "Bill" Verbeck, head of the Buena Park F'ire Dep(lrtmenL initiated and taught the first fire science course. Verbeck, STARTS -TODAY ~'ho will r.elire in June from a career which began in 1929 as a voluntee r flrefight~r for Compton. belie\•es thJt fire fighting techniques should be taught in the classroom along wilh µolie e science. lie has campaigned against <1rson, fol' equipment ln1pro"cn11.:nts and for firemen 's benl'l tt.:.. EDUCATION -u~· l>onald Shields, president of Cal Slate Fullerton \\"as honored for n1aking the university j community-ori ent ed one. At 34, Dr. Shields ~·as the youngest college rresidt>nt in the nation \\'hen he assumed the position in 1971. He has been personally involved in developing an arboretum. p 1 a c i n g the athletic program in a major confe rence a n d expanding teaching-related research. BU~INESS-Ncwport Beach resident Gary David.son is the president of lhe W or 1 d Football League. Davidson also was founder and first presidrnt of the American Basketball Assocatlon and ro- founder and first president of the \Yor!d Hockev Association. Davidson 1\·as honore-0: for bringing ne\\' challenges to the sports world. PROF~SSIONAL ATllLET· ICS -Nolan Ryan, the Angel pitcher \\·ho broke Sandy Koufax·s all-time one· season record. has \\OO 40 ga n1es for thre Angels. Nolan is the only the third n1an in history to strike out 300 in back-to-back seasons and he is attempting to become the first to do il in three consecutive years. •le placed second in the Cy Young award but won the inaugural Joe Cronin award for the most spectacular player. Al\IATt:UR ATHLETICS - Troy High School's A 11 • American basketball player, l\1ark \Vulfmeyer. is the highest scoring baskettall player in California history. !·le scored 2.608 points during I • •• ;~j <} t « ; .._; '* ,J 4 L, ·' ,. " '(-~. f. " 4'~ j1 0.11'1 "111! Sl11f 1'111• GREAT GUILDERSLEEVE MEETS YOUNG HERO H1I Pe1ry ind Gregory Riddick, 17, of Ed ison High hi s four years at the Fullerton SC"hoor surpassing the CIF career-high scoring reco rd by 504 points. \\'ulfmeyer \Vas na1ned Lo the national high All·Amcrican team. CO~fl\IUN IT"\' SERVICE - J\fike Clen1en ts is the found . ing director of a d ru g abuse counseling center which has gr01A11 to a full-scale commun ity sociaJ s er v Ice center since 1971. La 1-Iabra's Ga ry Center now. offers a broad rang:c oi services and program:; for the jobless, the transient. the un\\'ed mother and for all those in need . $750,000 _lMPORT_ED_~~~~~G_SAI~E · NEWPORT 0N1.Y! . ---, • Beginning today. yo u can choose from a magnificent cache of treasured Oriental rugs ... every type and ~i zc. many one-of-a -kind. a ll hand-woven in cen- turies-old tradition. You'l l di scover Kerman·s. Sa rouks. Kas hans . Bokhara ... all priced at magic al savings! Robinson's Rugs/Carpets. I~ Pl Kerman Dargaz1n . Baloogh ... Abaileh ...• ~. lslallilo lwk.Boihaa .. Alsll.;r ... Alsb •. PL lblm Ketrhan .. El'l?re~t .. S. Re~ha .. [lllCk ..... . Bai<MIOI Pr.11·er Ru~ . J.lesh~1n • An!IQVI! Ch1neM! .• C.-nel l1lllan .•.. ············· stATTER AND AIU RUGS Sm ~o I 3 i..r . .. I I '31 .... 10.1.10 ...... 5Jd6 ..... 11'33 ......... .~ll 1 ~) ,... .. .. ·/····~10 w ~J .~ ....... l i d / . 5.lt ll . .50'3.0 ... . .. 50d.O . ................ 5.0110 ....... 10 110 .........••...... ... ........ 5.9149 . ....•••. ,.. • ........ IJd.I .....• : •....•............. 5.0 d 10 ····••··· .... ; 10 130 .... 5.0 <3 0 ... .J.O '3.8 Fllff9El IOICHAIA IUGS 7•¥$99.00 7d'$150.00 ¥ .. ·$250.00 ...... $799.00 '"'7$1·299.oo Pl Kashan ............................................... .I. I x J I lloillilra .................................................. 5.0 1 J O Ashfaque ................................................ ~.Ox 3.0 S•W lblm .................. ·•·•· .•...•...••...... ., ..... .50I16 iiuraz' .................................................. l.l 13 8 RLPtSa~ .............................................. ~.J xJ.4 Pl.. !iameh ....................... ~········ ........ : ••. 5.4 x l.5 ni> Ct11nese .............................................. 5.0 13.0 H.Viav~ : •.•.•••••••.••.••••••••••.••••.•....•• ~ •••••••• 6.7 1 •!J S.uk ...•••..••••.••..••.•..•. ···········'···• ••••••••••• 6.81 C., Sa'aband •• ' ............................................... 6.514.• ~Pl..Koman ........................................... 1114.1 Koman .••..• : ......................................... .1.010 Viss ................................................... .1.114.10 l(~h ....•....•.••.••....••••••.•••.•..•••••.••.••••. 6.J 14.0 A/rnanibaft •••• , , •• , ". , •.• , •• , •• , , , , , •• , , , •••• , ••••••••. 1.l I J.9 Alm ...........••...•...•..........••••••••••••••••••.. 7315.J S/W lblm .• ; •••••••..• ." .................................. l.614.7 Pl. OIXwn •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 6.8 J 4.3 Alla4eh .: ............................................... 6.h 1.10 l~l llokhaa ........................................... .l.l x 4.11 liamedan ............................................... 6.1014.7 Saab.!nd ,, .......................... : ................... 6.10 I 4.4 Kashan ..... '... .. .. • .. ...... ..... • ............... 6.614.6 0.-gazin .............................................. .1.0 x 4.1 Slitaz ................................................... 6.411.10 ~.~lahall ................................................ 6.814.IO fllrQ ••••••.• , ............................ ···••••· ....••. ~614.7 sale Price 199.00 221-00 99.00 lll.OI 599.00 4511.111 211.IO 1!9.811 l99.00 215.0I 121.00 150.00 15.00 215.00 221.00 3511.0ll 215.0ll 150.00 215.00 l99.DO 111.00 . Ill.Oii 750.00 m.oo 491.DI 4ll.IO Ill.DI 2!9.DI 215.DI m.11 175.DI 4ll.DI 391.IO !71DI lllDI l21.DI 1411.DI 119.DI 51!.DI Ill.DI 215.1111 215.DI 3".DI 3".DI 215.DI 551.DI 4ll.DI HA.MADAN Au.ave OfSIGN 7•t6'" $35.00 7'•4' $69. 6o •·.r $175.00 ~re S Rekha .................................. . . .. 60' 40 !veresl .. . 1noo Chinese . Shahiad; . fabl11 . PraY£r Rug Bokhar a .• Ardet>il .. 81J'1! •.. Bak>Jch .... Balo;ht1ar .· C.:lllt.ls1an •. Meshkin .. l\;hak .. . 60 x 4 [J 6,014 0. ·····•••····· ..... 601 40 ... ··•·•········ .. 61•4l .............. 63•4!-v ............ . ... 60141 " .. , ..... ····· : ..... 68 14 5 . ..... 1.1x4.4 . .... 66 134 ....... 6.8146 . ..... 6.514 1 . ..... 65 •48 . ....•..... 6l •J J ROOM SIZE RUGS Pl Ooom . .• . . . .... . 8J154 81 I j; 80 'I 3 81 •I I .8.0 •ll . 88 111 Slmaz ........... . Imo Pl Kerman ............ . Alsh• . ... . ............. . Pl. Kasha~ . . . • . ............. . ~ IA<m . . • ................. . Caucas111n . • ............ . lklU1.ar a... . •....•......•....... 81 110 .. 86 1 I I .. 83 •I I .. 8.1156 £lol>;llara.. .. ................. . RI. Pl. 5.Jfuk • . . . . . . . . . .. . • • .. • • ... .. . . . . . . . . Tabriz..... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. •. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . ... .... 8.5151 1n00 Chme~-:-: . Shall1ada .... [\lefeS\ ., .. AshlaQllf All WOOl FRING£0 INDIA IUGS '"'$55.00 ,. ... s12s.oo •.••. $199.00 6'•V $350:00 1·.1a $550.00 v .. >$699.00 • ........... . ... 90 16.0 ....•...... . ... 9016.0 . . . . .. . . . . . . ................ 9.0 16.0 ............................ ~1 u RI.Pl.Saul< ............. -.. ." ................... :. ... 95163 .. .. 95 160 1111' Pl. Sauk .. • . . .. • . • . . . . . . . • . . . . .. .. . 1"1• ............................... . Pl. lslalian .•.••...•.......... , . . . . . . . . .. . Pl..illom ....................... . A. Kashan ................................ . Aldebll ...................................... . ~wshegll!n .. .. . . ' . . . . . . .• • . . . . . . .. .. .. . . ill>. Pl.. Koman... . .. . . ........ •. . . . .. . . 91 1 l.O . .. 131 197 .. 90151 q 1n ,~ J .. :: 9011.8. ........ 103 xl.8 .. 10919.10 SHOP TODAY 12 -5 Sale Pritt 199.0ll 199.00 215.00 215.0ll 399.00 215.0ll 125.00 5.10.00 550.00 221.0ll l99.00 il0.19 551.DI 275.1111 1899.00 l99.DO 199.00 451.00 11!19.00 1199.00 999.00 550.11 499.00 mo.oo 1199.00 599.00 l99.00 351.0I 3511.0I 13".00 1199.0I llO.Oll l199.DI 1199.00 1599.0ll 99!.0D 151.0I 1&!9.DI 2 FASHION ISL.AND SHOP SUNDAY 12:00-5:00 MOl'jOAY 10:00-9:30 ' . • Balooch . v,., Sarnk . Vis:; . Sll1r2t S. Rekha (~erest .............. . Ashliilue ................. . lndo Chinese • • • • • • . . • . . Shahzada •. Mir Saruk . . . . . . . . • • •.. Alg. 8okh., •......•... Golden Bokh .. I~. Pl Ker man ... Shar ab1.i11 . _ ~.Isiah.Jn . Pl. ~lahal ........ . Ba~hara Saruk . , Shirai . Size .•...... . . ..... 10511.I • 1010 <8.0 . 101 <15 .. ••.. ... .. . 100 <10 . .................. ,I00 11.l . . . . . . . . . ........ IO.O 1 8.0 ....................... 10.0 18.0 ......................... 10.0 18.0 ····•·················· 100•8 0 ··········· 10.018.0 .. . .. ... . .. . . .... . . 10.I 1 l.O .........•••............. 109 18.4 . . . . . . .•• ..•....... .. . . . 10.511.4 . . . .••••.....•.. . 10.3 I IO.O ·············· ··········· 10 10• 16 ....•........... 10118.3 .. I06 17.8 10.0 I 8.0 10.1 d .0 Imp. Pl. Kerman... . ••••.••..•.. 10.116.9 100 18.0 110 d .8 11.418.6 Ant Anatol . . . . .. • .•••••...••. V1ss . . ........ .. He111 , . . . • . . . . • . . . . . • • • • • • • • .. . • . . . .. .. •• • . • . . • . .11.10.1.10 Ketm.J1 .,......... •...•....... 1!.0xl.8 Rl.!erman....... 11.1018.ll &~kabad .•...... .. . ...••.•..... 11.8 1!.ll ·"·················· ····· ... . .••.•..•.... llJ1~ g,;lla<a.. . . . . .•. . . . . . .. .. • . . . . . .•. ....... 11.8 • 8 I ROOM l MANSION SIZES [ve1est • .•. • .. • . . . • • .•. .. . . . . . . .................. ·. Ashliilue • • . . . . • . . . . . . . . . .•.........•••..•.•..•..••. lndoC11uose ......................................... . Shahzada •• ·.: ••••..••.•........••••.••••.• " ••.•.•.••.. Sauk ...................................... : •••..•... S. Reklla ........................................... . ~erm;in . ·········· .......... ~ .•.•...••....•..•..•.. Mesllkabad . . . . . . . . . . . ........................... . Boin ................................... . ll0 190 110 •9.0· ll.0 19.0 . 11.0,90 1131810 11.0 '9.0 1/.6 d I 11.6• 9.6 11 8 d .I WA SHED WOOl INOO.CHINISI , .... $89.00 ,.,,. $165.00 •.••. $265.00 ···~$550.90 v.17 $1299.00 Chinese ............... .. ... . . . . . . .... ....... 11.019 0 Chinese ....•......• ~.............................. !?O x9G Bakhl1M .........••. .'.... . . . . ..... • .. .• ... . . .••... II I d O 0 ~azd ............................................... ll.1 184 him ...................... ....................... 119 191 Sauk .............................................. 13 J o9l Jabr1t .• ·••••....•. . • ••.••...•••.• !l&' 1,:,3 Ali llokhaa . .. . . . . . . .•. . . . . ... . . 11 dO I liafagmi......... ... ...... . ...........• I!. iO I Tabr iz........................... . ............. Ji;~911 Pl.. lslallan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . ;i; • 10 I lllll. ~. Kerman ..••....••.. , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . •• • . . . 13 5 .1 9 0 11.,,...n ........................................... . 14.0 1 IO.ll Pl. lslahan ................ ,............................. . 14.8 • 10.4 Sha1l1ada ................................................ 14.0. 10 0 ln00Ch1nese ....................•.•....•......•.......... 140110.0 heres! • • . . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . • . . .. • .. • • • • • • . . • • • • . • . . . . . .. I 4 O 1 IO.O Aslll"'" ••...•••.•..••.•.•.•. H.. . . . . . . . . . . •• . . . . 14.0 I 10.0 Ant Spaia ........................................... 15.10 111.10 lndo Clunese • • • • .. • ••• • •• • .. .. ... .. • • • • • •• • •• .. • . • • .. • . . .15.0 1 11.0 Koman .................................................. 168 111.10 ~.Kashan ............................................... 11.01 IOJ heres! ................................................. 18.0 x 11.0 1111l. PL Koman ............................................ 11.4 x 118 BakhiOI ................................................. 11.Jx 148 !nV. Pl Kerman ............................................ 26.4 x 11.10 llAU RUNNERS 113111" .............................................. 1111 IB RI A.S..ul< ...................................... 170'110 RI.Pl Sauk ........................ ,. ............ 1610d8 i!l1l. Pl. Ker""'1 .......................................... 1111 d I Meslliin ................................................. 148136 lllll. Pl Kelman ............................................ 110 1 3.3 RI. Pl. S..uk .............................................. 118 119 Ghala1el1 ................................................ 10.3 13.I Meshk1t1 ................................................. l~l lO 644-2800 ' >' I • ' Sole Price . 199.00 1050.00 lllllO !!!9.00 950.0I 1111.oa 550.0I SID.Oii 199.00 199.0ll 1399.00 599.811 9lUG 1!99.00 1399.00 2299.0ll 1!!!9.11 !!!9.DI !!!9.0I 199.00 1699.00 399.0ll 1199.00 1199.1111 1099.11& 1!!9.80 1399.DO 1199.0ll 1199.00 199.00 199.00 1199.0ll 1199.0ll 1199.00 199.0ll 1199.00 199.00 1199.0D 3199.0I 2!199.GG 1199.00 1199.11& 1199.11& 119!.0I 11!!.GD 11199.00 1151.0ll 14!!.llO 2199.0ll 2399.00 1599.0ll J4511.Dll ll5lOI ll51.0I 199.00 199.DI 999.IO 2211.11 24!!.ll 21!!.DI 1411.00 9511.11 299!.DI 7999.IO Ill.DI 1599.DI 1399.DI 115lGD Ill.DI 199.0I 11199.0I 4ll.DI 4ll.DI • • I • • • I ,\ 10 DAILY PILOT ' SUnday, May 5, l q14 • Lady Lu~k ,~,. ~elf' 8 ,.,., 'P M .. 6 l'lll " -- Rescuers Get New Dog LUCKY. LADY Will COME TO RESCUE Search Unit Gets New 81oodh6und -------------- SANTA ANA-Lost or injured hikers. a cc id c n t \·ictln1s and stray children languishing in 0 ran g e Cllu11 1v·!'. \\·i!demes.'> areas mHv s<YJll I) .. rclylni; on Lucky L<.tdy as .. .,.ell as Lady Luck. 1.ui.:ky Lady is the neY.CSI additifln to the Orange County Sheriff.Coroner's Search <ind nescue Re :ii e r v e Unit acwrding to Sheriff James Musick. The little purebred bloodhound will join h e r father, Cool Hand Luke, in sniffing out those lost « in pa1n and trouble. Her dad is the only bloodhound in the search and rescue unit and Is a veteran of many lost child missions with the Orange County team. lie will have a lot to teach Casper's 01lpo11ets Battle Ov e1· Pa1~tisa11 E11dorseme11t Dy 0 . C. II USTINGS 01 ti,,. 01111 Piiot Stilt Two candidates challenging Ron Cas p ers for his supposedly nonpartisan Fifth District super\•isor ial seat are • ~:~;~~aJ won her the The reason Ward made the speech, she said, is that she was home tending a son's chicken pox and could not attend. "I know you are upset over not being endorsed," she told Frizzelle in a return letter, "especially since you are a past state chairman of CR.A, but "when you are in the political arena, you mu st take 1 arguing over ho,,..· one of them bag- ged the en- dorsement or a . local He· publican grcup. _ Dr. Nolan Frizzelle is :iccusi ng NOUN l'RIZllLLE ~1r5 . .\l::ircia ---o--etsappoimmeDts-like-UUs. -in Bents of using machine tactics to gamer the endorsement of the Orange County Coordir.at- ing Republican Assembly, at its coovention April 27. Fri z zell c. the state chairman. of CRA in 1965, was recommended by the group's fad.·findlng committ£!e, but the t~thirds floor vote needed for the endorsement went to Mrs. Bents. Frizzclle wrote Mrs. Bents that he was "compelled to write to express my J apprehension about the ethical concepts involved in t h e activities conducled on your behalf" at the endorsng convention. "I witnessed Assemblyn1an Robert Badham'!I legi!!lative assistant (Ed '\\'ardJ, among AllBUCKLE & SON WISTCLlfF MORTUAllY 4'17 E. 17th Sr .• Cosio Me1a 646-4888 BAL TZ-BERGllON FUNERAL HOME Corona de! Mor Cosio Mesa 673-9450 646-2424 BELL BROADWAY MOITUAllY l !O Broodwoy. Cosro Meso 548.343 3 McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MOITUAIY 1795 loguno Canyon l!d 494-9 415 McCORMICK MISSION MOITUAIY 28832 Camino Coprs!rono Son Juo"· Cop•}tro"o 495.1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAllK ::emetery Morl~ory 3500 Poe .I : v.e.., Dr·~ Newpo1r ~Ii Col1!ornro 644 2700 PHK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolso Ave , We}tm•ns:e• 893.3525 SMITHS' MORTUARY 617 U.O·n s· Hu1111ngt0f> Beoch 536-0539 ORANGE COUNTY others. representing various pressure groups, lobbying on your behalf ~: ~ ror !be oc •--· ~.., CR . .\ super· · . ~ · ~·iSt>rial en-1 ~ ~ dcrsement. " ·~ • 1vrotf' Friz· 1 tclle in a lef· tcr that he ~ m.11de·public. • · "Th~ spec· ter of ma- chine JXllf· M.&•CIA "FN'f~ tics 'Operating to influen:::c .t county nonpartisan clf'elion." he said, "·as raised by \''Ork on Mrs. Bents' behalf by known politicians and their as- sistants, nilmely. in addition to Badham and Ward. Rep. Andrew Hinshaw and -his assistant, Chip Cleary, and state Sen. Dennis Carpenter's (R -~e wport Beach ) supporters. The reason 1-trs. Bents warrants all this high powered help. Fri1.zelle contends, is that if he is elected supervisor some poli ticos fear he might represent a future threat to other county officeholders by using the supervisor's office as a political stepping stone. Bot h ~frs. Bents and F'rizzelle sce1n· to be ignoring the quesrion of partisan participation in a nonpartisan c!eclion. ll "'as a charge of machine politics after the turn of lhe century that prompted a constitutional amendment in 1911 abolishing partisan local elections. . The CRA is a volunteer organization and is legally permitted to endorse candidates. NE ITHER OF lhe candidates sees any th i n g "Tong 1\·it h lhat. :'\lrs. Bents said she Is seckine the support of all groups. regardless of party, and Frizzelle sa-id he "'anted to pre\·cnt :\frs. Bents frt>m gelling ·'th c conservative crt"df'ntial !he ('RA has to offrr." All the indi\·iduals in1·olvcd nzrr·c th2t \\'ard made i.l:he floor prcsrntation in ~frs. Bents' behalf. bul ~trs. Bents contends it "'as Frizzelle's political inactivity in the past few years. not W a r d ' s yo~ sLride. "IT l\fUST be frusLrating to you that I have re<."eived such a ~·ide base of support -within the Republican P a r t y . Additionally, I am seeking and receiving support f r o m · Democrats and Independents as Well as others." Ward's JX)litlcal pull wa s downgraded by Ward and Joe Conrad , county CRA chainnan. Mrs.1t1ary Schmitz, -wife of John Schmitz, the lonner congressman a n d p r es id en ti a I candidate, led the floor fight for Mrs. Bents' endorsement. M rs . Schmitz said Ward's position did not sway the vote. Ward said be Is an old friend of f\irs Bents. So when ~1MI. Schmitz asked him to stand in for Mrs. Bents, he agreed. He had to be there all day anyway, he said. seeking Badham's endorsement in the morning and his own. to sit on the Republican c e n t r a I committee, in the afternoon... AS OONRAD descrlbed the situation: "Frtzzelle dropped out of politics after be was state chairman and bas done nothing since that time. He thought he could just come back in and get t h e endorsement. "Aft.er the committee recomnlellded him. t he delegates "'-ere locked up £or several votes and I suwose they V.'Cnt for Mrs. Bents so they wouldn't come up wilh a ~ndorsement. "The charge is totall y false," Conrad insisted, Ed (Ward) is not active in the ~up and I don't think more than a coup!!:! of the delegates .knew him." Talk on Flower ORANGE -The Orange County 1 branch of t he American Begonia Society will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the First Christian Church. 1130 E. 'Valnut Ave. here. ~1.rs. Paul Lee of San Diego will discuss rex begonias. For further information, c a I I Dorothy Porter al 663-0063. PSYCHO-CYBERtiETICS I.HD • SELF-HYPNOSIS IKOMt the '""°" yett w..t ta ~ HOW! Mo,r dy....,,.,,,r ,...., t Ol"C "'l(Jl'()tl lo-w C",\ ord ~~ Qve, Yo<J l+o& pow!I to l'>c..aw wlf '°"'ode«.. EARN MORE MONlY lrr>r•(l~t to:-"<e~1r 1'·'l•· De..-elop ypuo E$P. l11e•eo~ yo,,. ene<qy. ~AN'IASTIC SAt..fS MQTIVAIJON Portwtll !~ l<,_,, rh.o:Jic11 ") MTt•I• • lfTTH COHTIIOL OVH HAllTS Spetd Rtodittg'Prochott1nofln-We~Wony0SMOlllfNJ-Onlp-W.MOry·SIHp CltlATIVE U'IJWO WotlllHOP AH EVENT THAT MAT CHAMGI TOUR Ufll Cotle Mts1 .;.... l'llwt .. M., tMl-ttOllDAY I~ J 1 l t lrltlot 1405 ,,.ttwty et lri1lat l.dU 7~1 '"" .... I A"*I"' -Wtd., Mery ttlt -ROYAL IMM I IS.Ii S. Herttor 11 b1k. S.. of Kmlel 7:J I ..._,, Tlftioft:SJ.00 lficllidrtt H""41ovf MllttorW1 8MI Gai.I 5tftMt Gtl ... ' his daughter, who is quite aptly nained. Lucky Lady is the only pup to survive an1ong a litter of 13. 1 note:;; her trainr~ ""Hc:-.l'r\c ~her1(f's Dcput:i· l:HIJ Dua111 . ,,..·ho is one· fl'ason she <lid survt\'C'. 1 CA .-./ /o fie look Lucky Lady hornel and boule-fed her. pro\'iding Jove and affection in addition to nourishment, with instn1clions from the Orange County Animal Shelter. Deputy Boam and Lucky Lady will soon begin a four- month -Peace Officers Academy training p e r i o d e.speciaUy designed for little bloodhounds with a b i g mission in life. THIS ENVELOPE, POST MARKED AT COSTA MESA, cALIFORNIA, ANO DATED P.M. MARCH ti. 1973, W/oS RECEIVED IN THE OFFICE OF JAMES L DIXON.& COMPANY, .1144 18th STREET, N.W. WASHINGTON O.C. AT 8:00• A.M. SATURDAY MOANING, MARCH 10. 1973. TO THE SENDER .. OF THIS LmER Dog obedience will be one facet of the Academy. MRS. JEANE DIXON WOULD LiKE TO CONTACT YOU. Pll!ASE WRITE TO HER AT: 1144 18th ST., N.W. WASHINGTON O.C. - ' . .. . . . '. . . . "She is a very affectionate pup," says Deputy Boam. ··And. as with any other yoi.:n .· pup, she is quite mischievous at tin1cs." IF ANYONE CAN HELP WITH LOCATING THIS PERSON: P.LEASE·CALL &42-3330 AFTER 6 P.M. OR WRITE lO: "PEACE " c/o DAILY PILOT .. 40°10 LESS -than n1fg's suggested · retails for regular quality-merchandise U.S. CITATION ROLL-AWAYS~ PRO_DUCTION SPECIALS "Would be" prices 11re m11nuf1cturer's suggesled retails for regul1r merchandise. These are production specials meaning lhese are not In the regular color range, but ar.e regular in every olher way. • 61111-bearing caslers & pull slraps on large pieces. •Soll-side expand able luggage in three beaulilul co,lors. • Hercuron Plyhyde" vinyl wipes clean, resists sculls. Tote. Would be 534 .... 20,39 21· Cmy on. 23 69 Would be $39.50 _ ••• ·• • 24" Pullman. Would be $53.50 •••••• 32.09 27 · Roll·Awiiy ~. Would be 572.50 .••... 43,49 3o·Roll-Away~. 51 Would be $86 ..... . .. • .59 21H Men's carry-on. 3 49 Would be $52.50 . _.... 1. 25" Men's c1Hy .. n. 41 39 Would be $69 . . . . • • • • • • 25'· Roll·Awo,., 46 19 Would be S77 ... _ •• , • , • .•• • H Photo album 2/3.00 Reg. 1.77 Magnetic pages hold photos without: glue. Dusl-lree. 2 designs and colors. ORANGE .-. C~Dr. at ......... II• .. o,... I o.t p.a hi~ S-.f I 0 ta ' • ,1 • l . CHARGE IT with your JC Penney Charge c.ird I! you don'! hAvc 11 cha1ge. 1ust see how las1 we can open up YQur new account I .1 I PUBLIC NOTICE ----· --~ -- PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUl •OllNIS5 NAMI lTATIMl!NT TM fotlowlng "'"°" 11 11o1no t1111l111u ti: MERMAID WATER I EOS. lMll l••cll 1 1\ICI,, H11n!lt191on lt1cll, CA nu• Dofwld N ?•n-. 121 Mtdrld, S1nt1 .t..n., C1lltotnl1 '2103 Th!1 bull,,.U II COl'ldlKI.., by 111 111· dlv1CIU.l. -, Oon11IC1 N, Zenk Thh "lllme<lt Wll lllt'd wltn 1111 COii<\• ty Clerk ol Or•~ County on April n 1911. ' l'UOS1 Publl11>R Or1n111 Co.11 01lly P!lo!, APl'll u, n, 2': 1nd .....,vs, 1914 U11·71 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATIMliNT TM lollowl119 person 11 llolr19 bu$lnt11 llj SOUTH COAST Mdl llE l+OME IUIOKEA S, ~ lrvln. SI .. N ..... _, B1.i:11. C1lll. JOITI Jtrne1 W!lllno1r, 1"921 M11l•lolld1 lllvd., No. le. El Toro, C1!!1. 11111 b111loen It cond11elad by •n lndlvldutl. Jol\11 ~. Wllll~r ' This 1lt11,...ent w11 tlted wllll lht Coun1v Clerk ot Ori~ Coun!y on Aprlt 11, 1t14. l'-3J241 "ubllil'IM Or1ngec COltl D1l1v Pl\01, Aprlt 21, 21. •1111 IN<Y J. n. "'' 1)61-71 .PUBUC NOTICE ' f'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAMa STATllMINT The folkM'lnt;1 Plf1.0lll •rt dGll'lll butl""'• n : IU.1Ut£TT IROS. WOOD AND METAi. STJl:IPPING, 202 E. SltVtll.I, sutM E.. s.nt• At11, c.i11. nm Otflltl P•ul a ... r1ft, ISIJI M1c1Ctn1\t , El Toro. Ct lll. t2'» J1y 0..mond hrrtlt. 15171 MKktn· II•, (I Toro. Ctlll. ~2'30 Tnl1 bvllf!ff1 It col'lllucttd by 1 gtint!'tl p1rtMrlltlp. o.nltl PM11 81.-rttt Thll llt'-1 Wit 11'911 wllll 1111 County Ct1tk or or.,.. COuftry on Aprll 11,1t11. I A l'·U2'1 PvbllW!td Ortno-11 1 ly Pllol, ,t,prU 21, •• tnd M1y J, n, 111' ll·4"·1t PUBLIC NOTICE ------l'ICTITIOU$ IUSINl!SS HAMI! STATEMINT TM lollowlng PtrJ.Ql\1 trt da!1111 _ ..... ...bu"1De.lt....t•: -----. -TUSTIN PA C IFIC REALTY . OPElll:ATIOHS. 130) Avocado Avt .. Sullt 215, tltWPOrl Fln1ncl1I (inter, Newp.ort 116<11. c1 nwo Roy H. Olltrl>OUI, 26-tS Vi1t1 Or'illdt, Ht""llO'• 1e1cr1. c1. nwo C. AnlllO'>V PhliHPS, 9JO Lagu"I ltd .. Pti.to:ltnt, Ct . t l!GS Tl'lll Mlne11 11 ConchKltd b'I' t gt'Mrtl ptrlNrsl'llp. lltoy °'''"'°"' Tlllt 11111....,,1 w11 !l!ftl wltl'I !he c ..... 1., Cltrk or O••nae County an April '" 1'71. '""' PublllMd Dl"•no• COiis! Otlly PUO! April •· tnd MtY J, 12, If, 1911 1161-1• ·----------PUBLIC NOTICE S\ll'llllOll COUltT 011 THI STATE 01' CAltFOltNIA llOll Titl COUNT.)', OF OJl:ANGI Nt.. £n11t NOTICI 011 HllAIUNO 01' .. ITfTIOH l'Oll PJl:OIATI 01' WllL ANQ>alYOKI PllCHt OtlDIJt l•ON D WAIVWllJ E1t1te ol SPERO C. MA.ION, 1k• SPf.1'0 MASCH, 1k1 SPERO CHIUSTtl MAIOf(. Otcttlold. NOTICE IS HEltE&Y GIVEN t!ltl SHlll:Lf.VANHE H<lltl NE /\11 tlllod lltr1ln • pt.tl!lo!I •or PrObttl crl Wiii Ind llt'o'Clkt Prior Ordtr lbo<ld w1lvldl r1ltr9fOCt to wtllCl'I b m1d1 fOf Furlhlr p.orllcui.r1. 1nd 11111 1111 llmt Ind Plt<t ol hltrlno 11MP .. mt 1\11 bffft Ht tor Mty 14, 1f1t. ti f:ll .. m.. In ,.,. courlrOOtn of Dlptttmfnl No. J ol 111d t'OUf1, •I 10CI Civic: C1t1!1r Ori,.. W..t. In 1111 City of St nlt Al\I, C1lllornl1. OtlM April :15, 1'1t. WILLIAM I , SI JOHN, CMty Clerk SMll'Mll.O, SHIPMlaD AltO DUNDAS AltwMyl t i l9W 2112 °"'""'" Of' .. '"'" 17 N......., INCtl, C.Uf9rlillt '1464 Tth (114) llM6tt AftWMTt for Ptlltl- Publllfllll Or11191 Cot1! DtllY PHOl, Aprll 21, :tf, I nd Mty S, 1t74 106·74 PUBLIC NOTICE SUPllllOA COURT OP THI STATI 01' CAl..IPOINIA 1'011 THI COUfllTY 01' OJl:AltOI ...... Mfr4f NOTICI Of' ,.IAlllNO °' ... TfTION ,iott ... O&Ate or WILL AltD l'OJI: llTTIJl:I OP AOMINISTlATION WITH· THI-WILL AMMIXID f51tl1 of U:ONA GLAOYS HOGUE, .fkt 1..EOHA G. HOGUE. O.C1tlld. P+OT1Cle 15 HEJl:l!'lllY GIVEN. 11111 LEONA YVONNE LA &Otl OE htl fl11d lltrtln I petition for PrObtlt OI WtU tnd for l•-11«! ol Lttl1tt of Mm!nts1r1tlon wl!h·tlll-wllt tnM-•ftl ta !!It pe1111_.-,...,.tr1Ct lo """It!! I• ,...,,. for lvrlhtr Plrtlc\llart., 1nd ftllt Ill.-llmt tnd plKt of httrlht ,.,. .. '"4 hat btffl Mt tor Mly 14, lt1L t i t::ID 1.m .. It! , ... c°""troorn o1 Dtptrl'""'I No. ) ol .-Id COUM, 11 100 Civic: Cltlltr Ori .... Well. In !hi City ol Stlllt A111, Ctlllomla. Otltll April 2S, lfl'4 WILLIAM I . SI JOHN, C-IY Cltrll JtOSlltT N, •1tOXON AMnll' ti WW llSl2 ~""" """· hltt 4N lntllt. Ctil ....... tm1 Tt11 en•> t»tPt AHltM'f' r.r: P .. llleMr ,.lll>llslltd Drtf!Oe Cotlf Otlly llllot. April 2f, 1fj Ind MIY J, 1t7' • 1•74-14 PUBIJC NOTICE ILP-1mt NOT'.!Ca TO CJl:ll(UTOlllS SUPl"IOI. COUIT o,i THI STATt OP C ... Lll'Ol.JOA l'DJI: TWI CDUJittY Of' oaANOI ... ..,,,., E1!1l1 ,of HENRY MA ll T I H Tlll"ll&.TTI, OKN •. NOTICE IS H!Jl:EIY GIVEN hi lhl crHllOI'•. !If Ille 1tl<IY9 ntmtd dtcecltnl !ht! tit Jllnotll ht\lln; cl1lms .-;itlntt tllt ttld ~I lrt rtqUl•ld la lilt lh1tri. w.111 ltlt Mtt•urv v01K1MPrs, h1 11>1 olflc• of fl'll clll'llt tt lhl tboYt enl!tted court, or 10 pr9Mllt f!llm, wl111 !IMP n1c1swry vOl«;hlA, kl "" undtrslgl'lld It , ... LIW Off!~ of ,ft1Dll1CI( .. &.-.RNl!!S, liJO Wllr.hlrt llvd.,. Sit. 1000, Lot Al\fll .. , Clllfort'll1, Wlllc:h I• !hi pl1e1 OI bllllntH fl Ille undtf'slOntd 1,. 1t1 111o11ter1 ptr!tl"" 11111 lo 1111 111111 of wkl OKtdfnl, Wlll'lln f-ITIOllllll lftw !Ill llrtt publlttllon ol fl'llJ 11of109, 011,. APl'll 23, 197• GAil NOltl'llA TRIFll..ETTI 1M EDITH OOttOTNY llDEJtla Co-AOftllf1111r11rlx of !ht tt11i. ti 1111 1110vt IV!Md dlt.otlll ,illDlllCtl lo SAJl:Nlll nit WlhlllP'I ...... ttt. UOI .... ...,..... C:llltenll• (tlll M-fl• A"-"""YI ftr C:Nfll'llnlt1~11 • PWllllMPd O''"" C0.11 Otlly llllot, A,prll 11, Ind Ml1 5, 12, 1,, 1t74 U1'•1' You con Charge DAILY PILOT Cloulfled Adi 642•5671 Sunday, MilJ' S, 1974 DAIL V PILOT A l Communis~ May Prove Key Facwr French Election • in , PARIS (UPI) -When George Marchais, secretary • seneral of the French Communist porty, Mpped his pants climbing out or a friend 's car, he quickl y reassured the owner. "Don't worry,'' he said, "I have two pairs made every tin1c l order a suit." It left the friend wondering what sort of a revolutionary that made him. The same question -or the Frenchman's answer t.o it - mlghl decide who will ho !he next president of France. Thirty million voters go to the polls today to choose among Francois ~fltterTand, 57 the SoCtalist Party leader who is backed by t h e Communists, Jacques Chaban· Delmas. 59, the off I c I a I Gaullist c.-ndldate. a n d Finance Minister V a I e r y Glscard D'Estaing, 48, leader of the Gaulli s t·allied Independent Republican Party but a Gaullist oppooept on several issues. Opionlon polls put ~1itterrand clearly tn the lead with about 42-43 percent of the vote, which Is short of the 50 percent he needs for an outright first-round win. Since the conservative vote is split, ~11ttemnd It ~ven his best <:h.anee In the first round. Mitterrand has made much of the disamy ol the right compared lo the unity of the left , but he has not gone out of his way to stress t h e importance of his Con1mwtist support. The Communist.& for their part havt kept a deliberately low profile and up to the start of the last week o f cimpaignlng J\.1qrcha.ls only once had publicly shared a platfonn with the socialist leader. But he did make one Intervention that caught the headlines. After Mitterrand had equivocated on t h e ·composition of his cabinet if he ~·lns, J\.1archais announced the Co1nmu nlsts v.1ould expect six or seven ministeries in a c1binet or 21. In other words. • third. Anll·left forces e a g e r I y seized the staten1ent t o brandish before the voters. The French Communists today are the closest of any European party to Moscov.·. They ore v.•ell-organized and weal1hy. The party reeently acquired a steel and glass headquarters at a rum()re(I for ('hange after 16 rears of cost oC $48 1nillion. GauH1sn1 will override the But the record or il!! r~renchm:in·s Lraditional fears buslntSs·sulted leaders has and sv.·cep him to power. included n o revolutionary ·; :::..-:--~:.::::;-~=~~=:= assaults on the barricades. 1r The communist ministers of 'l'HZ the J11te 1940s opposed strikes1 and the pany showed no ta9te BJlRL'S for a pov.'cr bid in the turbulent riot-torn sum1ner of 1968. v.·hen De Gaulle tottered . · ~fitterrand is pinning h1:;1 hopes on the belief that a sober record and the drs1rr - ,111m111~. He•tlna Air ,,Ml, Tl-Sttrf1. 11 your'"' L1,11~1·Stdolltll6C~ All Dlltlf'J 495-0401 642·115) Polyester pantsui~s, specially priced. Charge 'em. • ' I --·-·-.. -........ . CHARGE IT with your JCt'enney Charge card. 11 you don'! have a charge, 1ust see !\ow last we can open up vqur new account 4.79 Re_g. 5.99 • All leather thong. Brown, whlle.Slo 10. • ' I ' . . 'Easycare polyester in 6 great styles. Short sleeve or sleeveless. Mixed and matched in summery prints and solids. 10to18. 7.99 Reg. 9.99 UrethanG wedge in while or c<:mel. 51010. BUEMA ·PARk ..................... 0,.. Delf t:lD. h t :lD P."'-S_,.y 11 le 1 .. -· . •I ' 7.99 Reg. 9.99 Sling back urethane In wh ite, camel, navy or blue denim fabric.510 10. ' ORANGE City Dr. et ........ ,.. .... 11.,;, 0,.. 10.t p& hlty S. .. y ID te I , 3.99 Reg. 4.99 Sting wedge ure thane wllh rope 1r1m. Assorted colors. 5 to 10 whole sizes. SANTA AMA ttaa se. Mttol. Ho. ei s .. c .. ,, "-"' .,,.. , .. , ,.... hly....., 10 .. ' • 3.99 Reg . 4.99 Step· in wedge, f>ofyureth.~ne with cork Wf!dge. Asllorted colors.Sto 10 whole sizes. ' I l • • .~ • ·. This Cop Know s About Kids .. By A RTJnJR R. VINSEL Study lndicaws Robbers Pick Weak, E lderly Victims· DAVIS (UPIJ ·-In any vulnerable in our society, the the female victims involved in , force . ~1ore than haU the , briefly -from 30 JeCOnds to gi\•en year there arc m(lrf' weak and the aged. street robberies were over the incidents resu lted In injury to more than three minutes. lhan 300.000 robbf'ries in the That was among the age of M, while 33 percent the victim, but of these less .Elghty percent ot 1 he l!nited1 States. findings or a three-year stud y were over the age of 65. than half required medical victims reported that the They occur on dark, -poorly or 93 robberies in Oakland, Most of th,e wom en trealme,nt. robber_got less than $50 and !5 lit streets in the core of the just released by the Center of .subject.ed'to the tudden attack In tJ1e sample1 seven victims percent said they lost money nation's cities, during daylight Administration of Criminal or a robber. or a band of required hospitalization. All or or property valued at Jess than hours In suburban shopping Justice at the Universily of them, were out of their homes lhese were (Iver the age of 61. $.10. centers and in ;\merica's California at Davis. because they were shopping or They remained In. the hospi.tal , , ph ys ic a 1 resistance." researchers wrote, "such as trving , to hit the robber, st rusglc or hold ooto property , generally led to more lnjury." But yelling and screaming, !he study revealed. generally bmugbt no adverse reaction nnd occasionally helped the situntlon. ---gasoline stations. banks, walk· University researchers, "''ho doing other necessary chores for a period ot t1rnc ranging -;.;;;;;;;;;= in diners. liquor stores and\ interviewed hundreds • of such as paying bills. from overnight to more than ,. chain drive-ins, robbers and 'their victims. Researchers also found that to days. INE CAR OWNERS 11e has a ra~her handsome. boyish appearance for a policeman \\'ith so• many FBI ACADEMY GRADUATE years' c x per j e nc c and Capt.~ Richar"d Hamilton The victims of th e s e reported 1that victims were 66 percent of the victims had Victims said they were in LEtri~ER. W...,. tt.tt l.Nltlr I fttrl cos· robberies often are_t'.':h'."e_mo'..'.'.'.s'.:1._~P''..'.edo".:'.m:'.'.'.'.in'.'.'.a~n'.'.tly:_~fe'.'.m .• '."'.'.'.l~e.:..._H'..'.:al'.'..f __'.bee~'.'.".:'"'.'.'b~j~eo'.'.t~ed~to:_:so'.'.:m~e'..'.kin~·'.'.:d~o'.'.'.f:..._:'."''.'."'.':ta~c:'.t~1'..'.v;'.'.'1h~the~'.::'°~b'.'.'.bc'.:r'..'s~o'.'.'.n~lyc.:_:~==~===.,='='=,.='="="'=='='="::'::~="=,..='='="='='='="='"=1=~ 11roressional a"Aards n n d crl'd its to his C'areer. Newport Beach P o I i c e Detective capt. Richard llamillon, 32, has a1ways-in fact-been youth-oriented as a policeman. Back in 1965, "Ailcn he "''as only 23, he was awarded an honorary lifetime membership in the California Congress of Parent.s and Teac h ers ( P'TA) in recognition of ou.t· standing ·service as a police juvenile ofricer. The following year he was a'varded 'an International Scholarship to slurty sociology in Stockholm , S\.\'eden. an i1n· portant field in police 1\.·ork \vilh young people. HE RE~tAftKED last \\·eek ln fact. following the arresl of a teenaged boy involved in a sex offense that rehabilitation -not punishn1ent-is the key concern. "Otherwise, you're tal king about years and years of his adult life wasted." Capt. llamiltoo said of the need to hetp the yc.uth obta in corrective theT"apy. And when it-comes lo kids · closer lo home. he a.nd his wire Nancy have daUghters "Kli~ttne,4, amt JUlle:-1._- He just returned from an intensive, three n~ o n t h ,, · / training class at the Nallonal FBI Academy In 'Vashington. D.C .. an honor reserved for few lawmen. The FBI Academy stresses primarily police management training for division commanct._ers, such as Capt. Hamilton, who commands the busy .detective bureau. Capt. Hantilton is the fourth Newport Beach ranking offi. cer to attend the Acad emy. "I HAVE TO screen all reporls that come through and oversee all investigations," notes the JO.year vcter;in of the Newport Beach Police Department . lie said the intensive studies of management , forensic science and other facets of sophisticated law en forcement \\'ill help stream· line the bureau's increasing \\'Ork load. ''The FBI facility really iln· pres.sed me on arrival.'' he said of the S33 million law en· forcement center , 'A1tich oir crates in clO£e conjunction voith the Un iversity or Vir; ginia. He is an honors graduate of I Cal State University . Los Angeles. and while at the FBI Academy he found time to do some graduate 'A'Ork at the Univers ity of Virginia. He and other graduates \\·ere addressed at commence· . ment by F'B I Oirt!clor Clar· ( ence Kelley and r .s .. <\t1on1cy General \Villian Sa xb e. A guest spea kcr 1\•as actor ~ Efrem Zimbalist Jr.. who • portrays Inspector Erskine on f "The FBI'' ,television series. JJE SAID Zimbalist wore the traditional conservatively cut and colored clot hini:: of the G man he plays. ''/·le commented that he has I, actually been forced into the role or policeman or FBI II agent by the sho"'-'' said Capt . Ham il ton. "So he kn0\1/S "''hat il's like to be in la\v en forcement." ' • I l{idiS G iYC ll I Energy Tips • • t Capito! fl-'c'A·s Servlre J "Energy and Kids:· a free 1 pubUcation listed in the spring ' edition ol the "Consun1cr In. I fonnation Index." describes .... mt children can do 10 save t energy. : The booklet. prepared by l lhe Department of the Inter· I ior. ·gives energy saving step~ "1ildren can lake at home. school and in the nc~bor· hood. Copies of the booklet i~ I available from Consumer In· 1 : formation . Pueblo, Colo. 81009. ' 1 DAILY PI LOT • JI •' Four Prong Set·. " . ' \ON .~D BU.Y OF A LIF .ETIME. At Fabulous All· Time· Low Investor Prices .; •• Take a close look at these prices ... you may neve r see them th is low again! Tavish McThrifty and Basco announce spectacular reductions ori brilliant, fiery diamond jewelry right from our csetalog ..• prices so lov .. • they make th is valuab~e 1ewelry an outstanding investment too. Sale prices apply only to jewelry currently in stock. Ouant1· ti es Limited ... so please be early. NQ DEALERS PLEASE. REMEMBER .. MOTHER 'S DAY IS SUNDAY, MAY 12TH MAVIS .. foe.y pear ~;iped . ung .-01.imond .. -- $Ol•lillfl! IJl .l clM· • JULIE ••• ~ -1 /i. Ct. d+itmond - i,ohfilire rngage· • HELENE ••. Dalllint rnin· -quiw·3/8 e1. di•· mond soli1ai•e ~I on ii delocale swirl mounting. M~tching wedding ring. 14K while gold. 380681WOC 595. V.Jlue 350 00 C•tillog Pnc• lrio ot rx hant Cliamon-d's in en. 911gemen1 ""9 underKored bv a l•io of diamonds n NANCY .· .• En~91!men1 ••ng . With ? brl!lllhl'3k,,- 'ng d1•monds and m•tCh•ng Wl!(I·' d1n9 b,1,.rt wuh 1 l1e1v d11mond. 111 Cl. Tot•I w111gh1. 14K 90fd. 321111WOC ' 1/3 C1. lilC mourn+ng, An eng.Jgem11n1 '"'Y of eve•l•stong b11au1v. . 265. V<1lue -Aoval 25035 1~\'DC 158.50 Cdt,,!09 Pnce lnwestmenl P"ce .. , .129 90 113 C1 -Selec1 5029 1~'VOC 2e ;,. Vi1lue 172.00C.italogPrice l •1ve~1menl Po ice ., .139 S 0 I 2 Cl. 450 V•lue -Roy.JI 60361WDC 279.50 C.i1alog Puce lnw~sttrll!Mt Price •. 2 2 95 0 117 C1 -Sr.lee\ 50311WO: 600 V ~!u" 364.50 C~1i•l'l<J Price f lnvl'~tmenl Pr111 .. 2 7. 9 9 0. 314 Ct -Selec:I 50331WOC 1 165. Value 697.50 C11alog p,,ce Investment Price .. 4 99 00 I KATHERINE ... Sparklong .JO ct. doamond sollt111• 4·pro09 i.111ing. Melching wed· ding ring. SwiM c.ut 141( wh111 gold, 390481WDC 325. V1lue 192.50 C11alog Prit• Investment Price .. 16 99 0 DAWN ... 1/2 ct. d1i1mOnd 11n9"19· ment ring. 4· ,prong Mlll"f. Metcho"g wed ding band, 141( yellow gold te•lu•ed centet with while gold l!dgl!S. 321153..IMT 625 Value 367.50 Cillllog Price lnvtument Pt1ce .. 29990 • PATR•COA •.. btl!d1 htdk•t1g "'"' \h~µ~d d1.omonol ~ol·t~··" "' .1 ''" lo,ed '""'nq ,·,t l dl( wh•tP. oold r>.~a1ch1ng .,..Pdrl•"9 11n<j. 3 8 Ct 3807fi llVOC !J'.)~ VJI"" 3!:10 00 c .. 1dlo9 P"ce 1,-. .. ,11n~11t p,.,, 2599 0 I 'l Cl 3807711.JOC l•w"''rn•nt P•oce 299 90 J .: Ci 380791 \VOC 117'J VJ!"" 79000Ca1al ogP11(e On• p,., Showroom '''"""'"'"'" 59990 180811\'JDC 1<'1·"• v ,,1,.~ 119!1 c~1,ol09 P11ct .;roe Pe• $ho.,.,.ruum 79990 318 C1 111~'11"'~~ d°'moncl $0hla"~ <.fl "' 141( whole gold rno<1"""g El egftnt M'!dl<h1n9 wed1h ng b~nd 38083\V~DC JSO 00 c.u.109 PHcr 25 990 • I . men! ring. Wed· ding ring is a slen· der swirl of 14K white gold. 380631WDC 750. Value 450.00 Catalog Price lnnsunenl Pr+c•.. 29990 OIAMONOEAR· RINGS. Petite 11· lu11>on seuongs of polished 14K white gold, eilch ~I w11h ii fie•v do.i mortd .. 10 c1. to11I weight. f~ piercld ••rs. 2901 lJMT 85.00 V •lue 49. 75 C11alog Price Investment Pr1ce .. 4490 ., I \ '" ' ' 72591WOC PEAR SHAPED PENDANT 'wi1h 2 gl1tte•inii d~· mond1 in • se1. ton!I of 14K white gold. 1/4 ct. 101•t weight. 166.50 Vitlue 99.50 Ca1alog Pflce lnvHllTlil"I Pflc• .. 899.0 • FAITH ... ~rklint di• mond Ml in •· Pt'Ont moun1ing with m.tching wedding rint. R1nts ••• sa11n ind poli$htd gold. 1/4 Cr. 380081WDC 270. Value 159.50 C1t1log Price lnvntmtnl P,,ce .. 11990 1/2 Ct. 38012lWOC 625. Valu• 369.50 Ciltalog P•ice lnv111'1m•n1 Puce .. 24990 Hea< r Pendant w+lh 16 di~· mo,.d5 1oti1l1M1} . 48 caral. 14K yellow gold. 16 13GWR 32~. Valu" 172.50 Ciltalog Pnce lnvrs!mem Price .• 154 90 4031JMT·Ho\ Wrddong Rings - wolh 3 'J)frkling d1~mond5 s11t on 1he d1•gon11I. A •ngs in pohstied 141( gold. 120. V1lue 69.50 C•tillog Proc• Investment P"t e 5990 4041JMT Ht•~ 115. V;tlue 6/ 50 Cdll10<J p,.ce, lnv1s1me .. 1 Pflce .• 57 90 1til9GWR 75.00 V•lue lnw1111ment Pttc•. 3 T1nv F1hg•ee Hear1s, eM:h \.ti Wolh f glo5111ntng d1i1mond. 141< yellow gold pen d•nl. 339 0 lnweument Proce ,. 24990 ~• M.,., O~mo"" Wedding Ring - 4 di;amonds s-t 1n 14K gold. 321072WOC 110. Value 64.75 Ca11109 Priee 1nfft11'1'1..,.l Price .. 5990 l2271JMT 41.50 V•lue MarquiH lllu11on PendanL. C1 .. u1c· •v simple. 14K wh1tegold setting fea1u1111 a .05 ti. diamond cenll!f. 24.97 Calillog P"ce lnvntmenl p.,~ . 1990 LESLIE Brillient 1/2 Ct. diam"bnd M)lit1ir11 In Flor•nlined 14K white told wning. Metcltint ~dintb.nd. 390841WOC 600. V1lue 347.50 Ca11l09 fi'ric• lnVHlm•nt Prict .. 24990 ~'7::~~ri~;:: di11mond1 mounted on it conce .... IMnd of Flor•ntinld 14K go , eighl .40 c1rilt. •. 252JMT-Hi' 339.50 Vet. 199.50 C111log Price lnves1m1n1 Pnce .. 16 9 9 0 4262JMT-Hers 330. V;ilue 194.50 Ci1lalo11 Pdce _, 16490 lnVi!stment Pr1c1 .. M1r•c._ Di•mond H•"' Soli- tair• 1n I m011nt· ing thll govH 1hll illusion ol 1 l11r11fr 11111 diilmOnd, Cat•t Roy•I Whi1e Gold 50651WDC 1495. Value 897.50 Cat~log Prict lnweslm•nt Price .. 19 99 0 . 42 C•ral Rov<1I Wh1111 Go!d S0631WOC 350. V.illue 210.00 C~1alog Pr1ee lnwestmenl Price .. 17 9 90 ROXANNE ... stunning 141<. 110ld eugagemenl rlng Wtlh 7 ditt. 1lin9 d iemondi. To11I weight 1f2 c•r.11. fllli in the c•f'ller of 1 14k yellow 90ld Flor11n1 ined w&ddlnt band. 3 1omt2WOC 595, V;tlue 349.SO Cet•log Price lnve;tment P:1c1 .-:--24 990 1n w"1ding ring. 11<1 Ct. 101111 w11igh1. l<IK !10ld , 3801 lWOC 275. Value 159.50 C.Jl:alog P111;e ln¥Ht!TH!nl P•iee .. 12450 3332WOC 220. V•lue 14k whitl gold 2051 woe G11nt'1 011mond Ring -1/5 Ct. Taul Weight. Solid back mounting ol 14K yellow gold. f'IERY Cf1AM0f)ID •'I surroundld "''th the ravs of i ge,.. u1n• sapphi•es. 1 ct. 101111 weoghl. 300. V.riue 179.50 C1tillog Proce hwl!lltmen1 Pflce .. 14990 GENTS RING 8tilli1nt 1/2 C1. dilmondto,t•ire. Handsome Swiu cut mountint m 14K yellow 901d with solid btdt. 3272WDC 367.50 C11ill0i Price lnvestrt1tntPric11 .. 29990 It FANCY RING - lmprtuiv• du•· tet ol bfilliilnt diaMonds. .SS ct. Tot1I W•ight. , 14K Gold . 639.80 Val. 453.75 Ciltllog Proce 972261 31990 lnvtslment P"ce .. 500. V;ilue 297.50 C .. talo1} P11ci! + .. vestment P"c•,. 23 990 • MELANY ... 3 d~mvnd'I on tlte llngil9fmtnl rong ht oo 5 +n the wed dong 1109. To1,11 weight 115 c .. ra1. l 41C Yellow Gold 310l02WDC 100. V1 lu11 119 50 C•1•lo9 Put:e I "ve$tmen1 Pr.er 8990 72361WOC Ooitmond Solo· ,.,;. Pend•nl "' gh51e n1n11 14K white gold. 162.50 Villue 97 80 C•l•log p,,c,. lnVftlrt1en1 Proc~ .. 8475 , • FANC'I' RING - Fi•r'I" 1uby pelills contr11t -b..u1i- fully with bf~ li1n1 d-nch. Total Gem Wloigtlt JS C1r11. 14K Gold. 12$4. V1lu11 752.50 C•t~OI Pron !~"*'' Proce., 54000 FANCY RING - 1 Cirll Total Weoght diamonds ~ in beautiful ar· , rilng•ment. 14K gold . 717. Val ue 4l4.50 C111i1l0f P•tc• 972136 35850 lnvatment P11ce .. ~~~t~i-~tQtQ£\!1h~tV&~~&(2t~&&Ov~t~t~11&i; DIAMOND GUARANTEE ~ ~ E~rv di•rnond uansaction is recorded and accomp· ~ anil!d by our Trubrite Guilr1nlff. A1 iln added go••· ~ ill'lll!e of pl1Sfilction, we will accepl the center Slone ~ of your Trubrite Oo•mond Ring 11•ny11m11 in your 0-.. ~ lite11me tor full v1lu11llowanc1 on the purchase uf ~ .:::...:9.. 1 lar;er Trubrne Oiilmortd Ring. 30 DAV RETURN ~""""':' ~ PRIVELEGE for full refund on trubfite Oi1monds. ~ --.,::;---=--· THE DIAMOND AS AN INVESTMENT ,__,. ' :;;: jl P':> Oi11monds'jwhich are wisely chosen.repay generou 'I" r:::: ~ in enfoyment and pride o f poSMSSlon. As ii l1niln· ~ '.:.--:::3 c1al investment, di1monds of good qu1lity have 11· ~ a ways maon111ned • level . of hi9h intrinsic v1lu•. & 01i1mond s have more rec:over•bl•· value than an\I C-:, -);~~-~;)l~)l)oLJW~1~~10i B FriendJhip Ring ol 10K gold W>1Us LOVE •.. 91!111 h W•lh • di1mond, 8820AC 22.50 Vil~Ut 12,97 C111l09 Pric;e lnwst!Mnt Ptiee .• 99 7 n 10016JMT 185. Valu• TIE TACK 1r1 horseshOf dnign of 14k while gold,9 diamOf'ds. • 27 Cira! totill ...... 9"11, 99,50 C11alog fi'riee lnllftlment Price .. 8990 e 2161w"o c ~50 V.d•• , H!Ntll Pend•"! of \4K wn.1e 901.t wllh 2!:! ddtlh<HJ clt.omond•. I \/4 C1 . Tot.•' 1\'""Jhl. Ot11' Pi!r Sho.v•uom, 39990 B FANCY R•NG • llt11 1C.1ll'. llownog <h!\•<I" ''"q~" W llh l.l'<V Clo.o t mnn1t• 5!.> Ct. _ I Ol ~I W'•'o(lhl. 14K Gold 968. V11u,. 972254 Jn111'\lml!nl p,,c~ 43500 Gent'• Oiemond Rln;. Sl•r dn+gn lnMI hokts I 11191 center di<tmond borditrld by 4 snulll!f diilrnorid9 14K yllflow told mounting. 1/2 Cl. 3'12WDC 375. V1lu1 225.00'Cilt•log Pr oce OM Per Showroom. J 9 9 9 0 lnw1111m11nt Price .. FANCY RING - Brofhl, flowong Pillltrn of 11mer- 1ld1 and dill• monds. 2.10 Ct . To111 G1on Wefght. l•K Gold. 907 .50. Val. 5•9.50 Cetalog Price 972256 lnw1111m11n1 Price .• 41250 • DIAMOND EARRINGS 101 pierced ears.. 1/2 c.r11. CleHH: 6· prone "'"1'19 of 14K whlllf gold. 3039tJMT 300. Villue 179.SO Ciltllog P1iee lnvn1men1 PTtc.. , 14990 '>. FANCY RING - 14K Golct. Tourm1hn1 ind diamond ctu1111n. A magnilocenl creation. 2.25 ct • 101111 91!m Wl'lghl. 365.00 C•t•log Price 600. Val11e 972158 Investment Price .. 29990 Gen1'1 Ol1mond Soti1a1re • • . 1n hand1eme SwoJS CUI J4K gold mOU'fll"f Wilh poU1hed ldfl!S • .22 Ct. 3572WOC 225, Villtoe 132.50 C111~lot Pr k«... lf'lveslmenl Prtce,, 11950 • CATALOG/SHOWROO MS NATIONWIDE ... AND NEAR YOU •These McThrift9 special prices are for' in·stock merchandise only. Quantity limited on some itemsi Sorry no :rainchecks . , S AN DIEGO 4444 Convoy Strfft Phone: 1714) 292-4240 • • • . ' S4NTAANA 3921 South Bristol Street, Bristol Shopping Center Phone : 1714) 666-7 111 • ( ' •Prices will rise on many items aft1r present inventories are exhaust1d · due to increased costs. ' -L • Sund.,~. t.1a) S, 1974 1 • • DAILV PICOT Ii l DAILY PILOT SECTION B Private· Schools: How And Why They Survive SMALL CLASSES, WHITE SHIRTS ARE FEATURES OF HARBOR DAY SCHOOL By JACKIE HYMAN 01 11'11 01llY l'HOI Sl1ff Orange Coast mudents v:ho attend private schools do so because they like the greater freedom and because they like the greater discipline. They go because the y are having troubl e in public schools and because they want more challenging schoolv.·ork. lf these statc'ments seen1 Contradictory. it's be<:ause there is as \\ide. a va riation in 1hC reasons .,.,.hy students attend private schools along-the Orange Coast .as there is among the schools themselves. But ror \l'hatever reason . each or five schools qµeried reported more applicants than openings and said that applications are increasing each year. TllESE SCllOOl.li represent a cross- scction of approximately 25 pri vate schools in olhe Orange Coast area. v.ith student enrollments ranging from under 25 to more than 250 and with students ranging from thE; girted to the educa- tionally handicapped. Although there are many variations among these schools, they can basically be divided into three. categories, not including nursery and special therapy schools. There is the private school, the Jlrotestant (or Christian) school and the Catholic parochial srhool. \Vhy do students. or their parents. choose to pay tuitions ranging as high as $2.100 a year to attend these schools when public education is available free? And v.•hv do teachers choose to teach in these schOOls. \\'hi ch frequently 1)ay IO\\ ~r salaries thnn the public schools? PerhapS' the best explanation is provided by a look at f(\'e very different schools in the area. (rour arc covered in this article. An in-depth look at 11arbor Day School, Coro na del .l\lar. a co-cd school \\'1th an enrollment of 230, is given in the accompanying article. I Huntington \'alley Christian 1-ligh Schoo!, located at 9779 Starfish Ave., Founlain Valley, is a three-year--0Jd nonsectarian school. It has 100 students of OOth sexes in grades 7-12, \\'ilh class size limited to 15 stud ents. THE SEVEN full -thne teachers at Huntington Valley, '"'ho must have at least a bachelor's degree. undergo 12 hours or inten,ie .... ·ing before being hired , including a visit by the principal lo their ho1nes. "\\"e feel that a teacher is really a substilu1c parent and must have a con1patiblc Christian life s I y I e . ' · ex plained principal \Villard ~lay. • ''Eighty-three percent of our teachers .ire husband's and v.·i\'es.'' he said. "\\·r-·re like a family unit." The teachers accept a lO\\"er pay scale because lhey like the greater frecd:>m and the absenCe of discipline problems, he said. "\\'e teach responsibilities. not rights." i\l ay said . ''\\'e feel nu1n finds hlntself in (jod's plan. not the re\'erse,'' A Bible course is requin'd and siudcnt.s study both evolution and the biblical story of creation. "\Ve gi ve a pretty strong case for creation." i\·tay said. Scholastically, the school stresses oceanog raphy. "We have several boats, do undcr.,·ater photography and tea.Ch scuba diving ," ~lay said. !\IA,,. FEEl...S that parents are willing lo pay the $800 tuition because the:,i. like (See PRIVATE SCHOOLS, Page DllU Harbor Day Off e,rs Safety in· Low ·Numbers -------~--'---------~----------- Ry ALAN DlRKfN 01 IM Olllf' P'llltl Iliff , David Braun taught math last yea r al a Pasadena public school that had l .500 students in the seventh and eighth grades. Now he is teaching al Harbor Day School. Corona del lt1ar, a private school 1o1ith 230 children from kindergarten through the eighth grade. To him. the difference in education at lhe schools is in the num bers. "11ere if I notice a change in a child's behavior one n1oming I can tell his Enclish te•ri)!r and all his othrr leachers aboUf" it in minute11. At the school in-Pasadena Whtrt'"ttlCre were 750 stw;lents in the seventh grade"'llnd 750 in the eighth grade and coruj)utcr-kheduicd classes. f didn 't even know who a student's English teacher might be. r\nd in the class m:tybc only one or the other studenls might knO\\' 1vherc the boy \Vas going nrxt . '' Many shnilar exan1ptcs are given by teachers al llarbor Day to explain the consequencres' of large cla5.$ sizes zind v.·hy they choose to v.·ork at a private school 'for less pay than th<>y could expect at 1l public school. "¥.'HE~1 "1E GIVE tests here there are no surprises,'' Braun said. "We already kno\v how the students are progressing. In tests I gave at public schools the re v.·ere al.,.,·ays aOOut five scores in a class 1hat surprised me." June Fenner, "'ho teaches English and Latin at liarbor, bay -there are orily three students in her Latin class -gave ano1her example. •'When you have only 20 or 40 compositions to grade a \l•etk compared with the 150 you might have , in a public school system, then the teacher is much more inc!tined to ask the kids to produce." Class size Is not the only differential between Harbor Day and Public schools. 'Il.lere is the tuition -from $950 a year 10 11 .800. l'berc is no cafetetjp at lhe private school, 'though there is nn outdoor luncheon area rumished \\'ith red\\'ood tables and benches. There is a milk progran1 but the students bring their lunches in brown bags. There is no gyn1nasium. though there arc softball. volleyball and basketball are.'.ls and a football rield. There is no program in home economics and the Princ;pal John 1.1arder admits the music department is not very good, stressing in the sa1ne breath, however. that he belH!ves the art department is good. "\\le can't afford the frills," be said simply. J>rayer and a Christian ,Chapel program are par; of the curriculum. A Your Service 1"eHl 1Uodel Set Jtlailed DEAR PAT: Our son received an Aurora AF'X Lclilans J\;lodel f\totorlng set for Chris1mas, and al1hough \\"e \\'ere very carefuJ \vith it, it has been useless to us. The ears didn 't_ v.·ork and the track "'as broken \\'het\ .,.,.e got it through the mall. The pnckagc was not damaged in any way and the rela· li ve who bought it has wri11cn to the con1pany, but no ans\ver has been re- ceived. I feel \\'C should either be sent a perfect set, or receive an $18.88 re- fund. O.G .• Irvine June Kunar, adJt!lnlstratlve assistant to Aurora's president, bas sent you a Daytona l80 aet, whlc~ tells for about $l5, since the set you bad is out of stock. James Klfby; ,..octuc& manager of the Pt1odel Pt1otortng: sets, said there have been no ebnnk! .problems with the track or can and Aurora has been 1upplylng metal clips "'Uh Ila 11ets to fasten the tracks togetber 1bo11ld the plastlc couplings become broken. Kirby say8 e.acb car Is tested on a 20-foot track before It Is packed. • · I s Tl1ia B11ren11 on Level? DEAR PAT: Enclosed Is a copy of a letter I received from the Florida Utnd 0'>''ners lnformRtion Bureau Inc. It suys they are "a concerned con· sumer protection agency" I.hot will furnish me \rith sta1e and county rulings, laws and jUpfclal and l<gl~allv• decisions that may nU<l<t my Florida lll!>d property values. The fee 18 $&.'Js 'thlJ on'•lhe level. or just another scheme to get nwney out or Florida1 land ov.'ners? 1 -• Jl.E .. Newport Btacll 1'ht Florida Land Owners lnformatJon Burcan Is a prl \•ale pub11$her. not associated '>''llh any governn1enlPI aaenC)'. launched in January \\'Ith tbc mall- ln11: of about %7,000 "Dear Consumtr" ue" letters such a1 the one you re· celvtd. On April 3, the firm '1''18 required by a N"sent agree.ment wUh the Florida attorney general to cease any promotion that woqld Imply af(JllaUon with eJlrnmentAI bodle& and to advise 1qbscrlbers Ibey might receive a 11ub1er{J>JJbn rtfund by sending a 11tamped, self.addrc$Std envelope. The IJrm 's new address Is i1110 So11lhwest ft'ourtb SI., Miami, Fla. 331.,., Albtrt C. Ulbe JU, a princl~I of the Orm, 11ay1 lbtrt-are· now about 11708 1ubscrl6ert, 11nd lhal lb• .. ll'Slelter wm be published qoarterly. The students also wpar uniforms. Gray slacks and "''hile sfiirts for the boys . .a plaid jumper and "'hite blouse for the girls up to the fifth grade and after that a plaid skirt and white blouse. Saddle shoes are required up to the fifth g-rade. TIIE UNlFORl\IS provide ano.tlu!r illustration of the traditional approach to education at Harbor Day School. Gray is no longer fashionable and because some ., 'The best way to teach fractions to a kid may not be in a. math class but when you have ... arm . over his shoulder as you walk out the door tog°'etli-e< ... ' parents are having difficulty finding gray slacks. the school plans to switch to khaki trousers for boys next year. "Uniforms make life easier for lhe 1 1perents," 1-fichael Grella , the assistant principal , .~id. '·It means girls don't have to ~on, Che phone deciding \\·hat to \\'ear Me next day:'' "Unifonns also democratize us. ?-.Jany families wl~ chj~ren here are very v.·ealthy whil~others 8re nol so trealthy . The WlifC¥Tn~.eliminate any differences in terms of clplhes.11 Ttie teachers say there is no dress code for the faculty. but a visitor to the school could observe that all the men .,..·ear lies and the women skirts. ' 1lJC 17 full-time teachers at Harbor Day musl have at least a BA in the teaching fifil_d aod more than half have an MA. -- Not all the leachers have a teaching credential. Only aOOut ha lf do . h1ath teacher Doug Hirsh defended t~11t situation by sa ying he considered so1ne 01 the courses required for the teaching certificate "].lickey Mouse." , ''They're not all that way," he said. -!.'but-~like 'flnything else .• To takr the good courses you also have to take the Mickey Mouse coilrses." ·;, ANOTHER DTFFERE~CE bet\\•een public schools and HarOOr Day is tha·t at 11arbor Day the teachers are not tenured . They have one-year contracts. They are paid less -about .i t.500 to $2.000 a year less on the a\·erage, according to Creli a -and there are no built-in raises for taking extra credits. Yet another uncommon factor is that at !{arbor Day there are no problem children, " those with emotional or Jeaming difficulties. "We're not equipped to handle them," ?t1arder, the principal, admitted. ·The school takes only children of normal or above nonnal intelligence. Some Pro111i•e• Need Folfo11lllp DEAR PAT : All of us think v.1e've soh1ed probJe1ns on our own, but some- times they seem ro "backfire." Does this ever happen to you? Are you ever assured by either a government agency or business that a problem from one of your readers is "solved." and then later told by the person see king assist· ance that the prom ised help has not been achieved? , T.l'., Costa ~fesa Occask)nally this does happen. \Vh en it does, the problem is follo"'·ed lhrougb until the original assurance of assistance is completed as Indicated. One current "lbom In the side" problem of this type finally bas bttn re- solved. On Jan. 13 this column published that Publix Circulation Service, Little Rock, Ark., promised to attend to an immediate delivery or send a $140 refund to T.D.1 Irvine. Since th en, the phone lines have buzzed, letters have been fired off lo Publix, and It was not until April U that the books were delivered. The salesman involved bad "split" taking numerous deposit and final payment cheeks made out to him pen§Onally, accordln1 to a Publix spokesman. Another current continuing problem involves a complaint by G.C., Costa Mesa. lie h~s bee n promised one more time by Consortium Press, \Vashington, D.C., that his June, 19i3 $79 payment for an unsatlsfll:tory research book u'iH be refunded. He 'i''fts told by the firm in November that lhe refund 1o1·ould be malled immediately. It "''as n't, .and sllll hasn't bef'n. Frank !\tcGralh, one or the firm 's nrst vice presidents, ts now being contacted oo behalf of G.C. lll•lory of Wedding Rhtfl DEAJ\ PAT: When did the \\'edding ring come into use as a nu~rriage •1inbol, and why ls II wom on 'tho third linger of the left hand! · -1:.N .. Q>rona dol M11r Tlte Romaos first used the ring ·~ f marria1e 1ymbol , accordln* to je'lf· c·lcr J. C. Humphrles,alt~ugb ·u 1l~nlfled a pledge.lor performt_ntt of a promise in Bibllcol tim es. 1'be nu1rrtage ring Wll8 11lways "·orn on the third fh111:er of the left h11nd because the ancients btlle\•td that a vein led fron1 there dlrcclly to the heart. /tlo1 le So11111t Trnck1 ha Demand DEAR PAT: F'or two years now t have perk>dicaJly attempted to locate the 90Und track of the movie "To Kiii A Mockingbird." None of the m&jor r<eord distributors I contacted were able lo help. Walllch's MUJlc Clly did ----------Also it is suggested to the parents of children .,.,.·ho . are having difficulty keeping up "·ith the academic demandi; that they send their children lo another school. This happens to about five students a year. Of this year's graduating class of 22. ~larder said five students "'iii go on to independent boarding schools. The rest will go to area high schools. \Viii they experience any shock in joining the mass nu1nbers of a public high school? "Jt means that \\'C have been asking fhese children to do something of which they are not capable. They go around with their chins do\vn . l\1ost frequently they go back to a public school system where they will have successes You don't develop intellectual curiosities by experiencing failure.'' Marder does not think they will have any difficulty. "When a student leaves here he is damned confident in a self- knowledge way. He has few questions about him self in terms of his ability. This feeling of confidence overrides any-big numbers." l\1arder contended t ha t standard· ized lest scores Jndlcatc that students performing the least \\'Cl\ at llarbor Day will perforni at an average level in a public school. Marder said that the philosophy of the school is to provide a student with surviva l skills and a positive attitude about himself. . >.larder said that hE' used to be a science teacher in a public school systen1 and left because he 1\'as frustrated by the chain or command. "By the time a nev.· 'Concept or curriculum change Ms cleared the bureaucracv, you have lo5t the teachable moment." \\'hy do parents send their chHaren to a private school? ?o.1arder said the reasons range from those who seek status to those \vho are dissatisfied with public schools. "They might tell me their kid got an A in English but they saw a lell~r ·to his grandmother and it was awful." i\fARD ER SAJD JIE respects the teacher training systems or public education but returned to emphasizing the benefits of small numbers. "The best way to teach fractions to a kid may not be in a math class but when you have an arm over his shoulder as you walk out the door together." AL.L THE Fi\CULTY member s contended that there are few discipline problems at Harbor Day. This is the way Grella put it: "Here there is a lot of personal respect between teachers and students and among students themselves. \Ile are living too closely nol to have it. \Ve have mischievous kids here of course -bein g mischievous is part of growing tSee llARBOR , Page 83) have the record a number of n1ont~ ago. but '>''hen I \\ol!nt in lo pick it up, it was not to be found . If you could possibly cotne up with any leads, rd be most grateful. K.H., Costa !\le1a Yours is the second request for tbis particular sound track. V.'llb the help of Wallich's i\fusic City and Rare Records, Glendale. a private party with an extensive collec tion of sound track records was located. V.'rite to !\1ed Roberts , 37~7 ~larylond ,Ave., Bald.win P.ark, Ca. 91706, to arrange you r purchase. Roberts says. that the major motion picture studios are btginnlng to release mov~ sound track recordings from old dramas and musicals in response lo increased public demand and the current "nostalgia" trend. ltaslah19 Afric<nt Violets DEAR PAT: I've always been told it's a good idea to wash off the leaves or African violent plants and I started to do this .,.,,ith mine. They s~m to be getting •·sick" and I can't figure out '>''hat I'm doing V.Tong. I asked a nursery if I should "'ash the leaves and was told this should help, not hurt the viol ets. i\l.S .. Corona del i\lar If }'OU ba\'e a hairJ-leafed African violtt. "'ashing: the leaves can 6pread bacltrlal diseases as v.·t ll as foliar nematodes t le:if \\·orlll5), aeco rding lo nurs eries J conlacted. \\1ost plants, Including some \•arietles of African \'io· lets, thrive 1o1'hen they-l"re kept rlean, especjally If they like a high humidity. 8;e: sure not to sprinkle late in the d:ty, or on cloudy days 'vben the foliage might not dry within an hour. Thl~Wnllpnper itl11.Yf Go DEAR PAT: \Ve just bought a hon1e and it's perfect in every '>''ay, except for some truly ugly \\•allpaper in the kitchen . ~ty first project in this house will be to get that paper removed. It has a glossy surface and I'm sure it's plastic. How can I rcn1ove it without hurting the wall? G.C., Fountain Valley Roughen tbe surface thoroughly \\'Ith coarse sand paper wrapped around a block of \\'OOd. Then rent a wallpaper 5teamer from a paint or hardware dealer, followin g lnslructions he gl\•es you. The 11nndpaper treatment should perforate tbt plastic, allowlug the steam to sofkn the gl ut. Repeated sand-- Ing and steaming may be necessary for easy peeling off the paper. ' . Para.,et T1·nh1h111 lfa111ed DEAR PAT: After rc:iding )'our coluntn ile1n about the availn bility of a Veteflnary Aide instruction program through the Capistrano-Lagiu1a Regi.onal Occupational Program. I contacted that office. Th<'n I round out 1h.1t the pro· gram Is currently ;:ivallnble only to ~kicnts of ellher the Laguna Beach or caplslrano Unified School Districts and .,.,.e here in Costa ~tesa aren't cligi· ble. Are there any other le11ds .I can follow? D.l\I., Cosht Altsa The Coaslllne HOP doe-s not offer 1 paravel program at lhl5 time and none Is planned for 1ht. Immediate future due to lack of demand and other \'~•tlonal \raining areas th.It rate blghtr priority. A Coaslllnt ROP rpollts· man said that IG-I0-1% courses ln tbe •'buman" health ncld Jfe 1vallible should you decide to change your art• of Interest. If not. Pierce College In \Voodland 111111 and Nort.bw~t College In \\'est Covin• offtr veterlnnry aide training, and some 11"lv1te veltrinarlans are wllllnr to offer on-tbe-jeb tfafn-- lng to pe:raons w~ co nta ct tbtm dlreclly. • ' • B 2 DAILY PILOT ~--------S•_'<l.:_•.::Y..:_M_a.;:y_5.c,_1_97_4 Good De ed P e ople f_;egal _t\.id _t\.d viser There are many \.vays to help others. Susan Ding· man has found 1 .... ·o. One ·aftemoon a wrek she works as a volunteer at the Legal Aid Society. 1930 W. 17th St., Santa Ana, helfr ing peop{e "'ho .... ·alk in the door asking for legal assist- ance. She £inds out ~·hcther they qualify for {£gal Aid Society assistance -those earning S42 a \reek: or less qualify -or \\'helhcr they simply want to be referred to an attorney. Al.so once a week ho1rs. Dingman. who lives in \\'est- minster, visil3 a hou!te-bound woman in Anahe im and takes hcr ~shopping. t-.1rs. Dingman has been helping . the elderly .,.,·oman. \\'ho suffers from a hip aihnent, 0---1 ~ ·tartwo·yeM'!:---~~-~.--·----· __ 4 "It's goOO to g<'t h<'r out of the house and take h<'r . ' r I to the market," f<.1rs. Dingman said. ;.Othervrisc she mopes." Inge Wagner, directo r of the Lawyers Referral Service, explained that persons who do not qualify for legal aid are sent to la wyers through the .referral serv· ice. These lawyers charge $10 for the first half-hour of consultation and $20 ror one hour. The fee for the first half·hour is given to the referral service \\-·hich in turn passes it on to the Legal ·Aid Society to fund the ca~ of indigents. In this manner, $130,000 was given to the aid society by the referral service last year. The aid society, which Lakes only civil cases, also is supported by lhe Lawyers Wives of Orange C.Ounty, which provides both fund s and vo!Wlteer interviewers. Law students also assist in the inter-Viewing or clients. '·Bul .,.,.c can always use more volunteers,., r.Is. \\·a gner said. The society's phone number is 8.15-88~1. lle lp for Y ooi F ur11i l11rc Relabeled f urniture shopping, at best a bewildering and ex- pensive experience. now may be a little less confusing -though no less costly -thanks to some new govern· ment rules. Basically the new guidelines say that if a piece of rumiture looks like something it isn't -plastic that appears to be oak. for instance. or vinyl that looks like leather -it must carry a tag clearly disclosing that lo the buyer. A~O PERllAPS more importantly. the rules are de- signed 10 end misleading advertising claims which in !he past, for example. have said a bedroom sel \.\'as available in "pecan, "'ainut or mahogany" but failed to mcnt ion that Y•as the color, not the v.·ood. Now the adve rtising must state "\\'alnut color'' or "fruitv•ood stain finish" if any reference to \.\ood type is used. Something fldvertised and tagged as "solid 1nap1e·• or solid anything must be exactly that. A~d a veneer must be idcntiried as such -"v.ralnut veneers and pecan solids." for exa1nple. The Federal Trade Commission guidelines took ef- fect !\1arch 21. One FTC officia l said he believes most of the manuf:lcturers have gollen the \\'Ord, although lherc arc indications it has not filtered down to all the retailers. f'URNITURE ON sllo\vroom rloors 1nust be retaggecl 10 con1pty \\"lth the rules. But it appears the FTC will make no effort to force furnit ure sto~e change labels in "'arehousc cartons intended for shipment directly to the consumer. The rules arc ,·oluntary in fhe sefl5e that the F7C put !hem out as guidelines; but they carry the force of la\1' because the agency could charge offenders \Vilh \"1olations of lhc Ja\1'S against false and misleading ad- \'Crllslng . \'011 C"" Ue lp Fair,1ie \v Neecls L\id F:i1rvie\I." State Hospi tal. Costa J\1csa, is always recruiting volunteers for many different areas. The Spe- cial Olympics fGr mentall y retardl'd children is coming up u1 June. Sports-minded volunteers, age 16 or over, arc nC('dcd to help train some of the children at Fair· view ror swimming and track and field events. Workoo13 art held i\·lond ay through TI1ursday from 2;30-4:30 p.m. F;:i1rview also needs a senio r life saver to v.-ork on ;i swimming program wilh blind and deaf retarded chil· drcn on Tuesday and ThurSday afternoons. More de- h1Hs Ofl these and other opportunities at Fairview can be obtained hy calling the South Orange County Volun- tary A"ttion Center at 642-0963. THE PHOVIOENCE Speech arKi !fearing Center is offering students (minimum age 13) an opportunity to gain experience by working in their summer voluntttr program. Volunteers will be y,•orking directly "'ith chil· dren under th<> direction or a spet.-ch pathotogist and must be able to co1ne on a regular basis throughout the 5Ummcr. For more infonnalion . calf 642--000.1. A new type of sum mer playground program is be· ina organized by the lluntington Beach ParkS and Rec· reation 'Dcpart1ncnt. Tiley 11re Interested In fi nding vol· untee.rs, age Hi or over 1 who wish to wo rk lri a natural play environment with kids, And who can give time on a regular bnslll throughGut the summer. The chll· drcn "'Ill be allowed to participate in such fhings as cluhhoose or shack building, digging, and constructing anylhi.n& th~y can imagine from raw materials, • • People's Phone VCI FoU:s Ready to Listen I f l'ou Give T he111 a Ca ll By J>OUG FRIT7.SCHE Of tM Dfll, ~li.t Slttf Some fol ks have troubl.c. others are asking for it, but there are relatively fe\v who advertise for trouble. A recent addition to this select group are the •·People's Phone·; people at UC Irvine and , while t.pey want to.talk to jl1St about anybody about \\-'hat's troubling them, they have problems 0£ their own. The key hitch in the month- old operation of the UCI soul soothers is getting their phone number to the people who need their help. It's 833-6552. \Vrite it down. It's not listed. The service-'.-aod they want to avoid words like "crisis" and "hotline" that might scare Qff ~a_De~ '!,.'hose_ p..r.ob1€:!1's ·don't seem too severe-is through the wlivcrsity S\~itch­ board . hence it's not in the phone book. 11lli SWITCHBO.\RO clo<>es at S p.m. and the "People's Phone" is open from 6 p.m. until midnight The gap leaves anyone who has not seen their posters or ad vertising in campus publications without the group's sympathetic ears and ready referral service. But that is another JX!rt of the problem. The group bas $500 from the school's special projects fund to kee p it going until June 30. Although the listeners arc all volunteers and there is no • personnel cost. the cost of installing the phones, a charge each time they call out. officr supplies and advertising ar·e quickly draining the slender purse. In spite of their 0\\111 problems, the group is lookin~ for more. v' •·we don't want to be just a campus hel p line." Leslie Kleinfeld, a UCI student doing graduate work after recently Teceiving her degree in social erology, said. "We're open to people in the community. To anybody who needs help." '·\\'E'RE OFFERING a listening service. A place people could call and know that someone wou ld be there to listen and to care," she said . A desk, a chair.. a short sofa aiid thfe"e.1clejihonCs QOminate the cramped room in wh ich she and 25 other volunteers take turns at three-hour shifts of listening. The service began April I. after three months o r submitting funding proposals, · gathering volunteers a n d holdj,ng training workshops. \Vhen the students began manning the phones, they erpected to wait up to three "'eeks before people nl'eding help found out about them and decided Ibey needed t h e ser•icc. The wait was two days. Since. received ranging the group has about 50 c :;i 1 I s from prob e1n PEOPLE'S PHONE FOUNDER LESLIE KLEINFIELD GETs lwoRD OUT pregnancies to people "just want someone to to." The firsl call, ln fa.ct, who talk \\'aS nn acaden1ic prob!c1n i.n· votving a student \\. h o wanted to change his major. "WE llA VE JIAD very few crisis intervention calls," said \Va lier l\fosaur. a volunteer. "We've had a probl em pregnancy on o cc a si on. Problems with a boyfriend or girllriend. Mainly, they want to have someone to talk lo so they can hear their O\vn ...,·ords and st raighten out their heads. "It's not so much a hotline. spend answering p h o n e s .1 attend weekly workshops in \\-Ulch they play the roles of caller, listl'ner and observer. The Sessions are designed to polish technique, so that when a call is received. a helpful response will be ready. The listeners also received initial training from UCI counselors and professionat hotline counselors. "We really have a good group of volunteers," llliss Kleinfeld said. ' • T b e y · r e cohesive and really excited about what they're doing." The service, she s a Id . originated from the needs of a friend. who needed someone to talk with. but couldn't find a listener. Any probl<'m you have. ~·e're .. Say somrone needed help there to help you find your a£ter live. when all the answer. You don 't even need coLmseling services close." she to have a problem. Some of said. •·1 began to .,.,,onder "'hy the people just want to talk," '"'~.didn"t ha\'e a hotli!]e. ~1osaur-sn i~· _ · _ _ _ -· __ I ~!Jl~ed that ~~-~~.ut one day antillien dcc10ed \\·c · "L:Cl is a very lonely place. should start on·l'. especially in the freshman and "Peopl<' should haven place sophomore year. A lot oi to call and know ifs their tlme people are juSt lonely.'' to talk without hav ing you can impro ve on nature - UNWANTED FACIAL AND BODY HAIR CAN BE PERMANENTLY REMOVED Buffums' full ·service Beauty Studio offers the safe, fast Dual-Action Electro-Blend method. It's performed by a licensed, experienced erectrologist. Make an appointment nOw for a complimenta ry consu ltation. Your qUestions wil l be answered in privacy without cost. • Regardless of cause, hair c~n be. removed permanently ---,.:.cosroii:redtmemrrs b~ctofi-ttme'.- . A treatment can be as short as 15 mi nutes. Bc.luty Studio, f'.:t-..,'POrt. c..i.i-2200 '"\Ve don·t just give referral someone interrupt them and information," llliss Kleinfeld steal the conversation away.'' said. "We try to find out How -..:;::==:;=;::;o==:=======================;...-:; they !eel about the problem. That gives them a chance to talk about it and get it out of their system." '"\\'e even had one for a Ouija board. Somebcxly called one night and asked if v•c had a ouija board and r felt terrible that \VC didn't have1 one ," !\losaur said. Tl!£ \'OLUNTEERS, in addilion to the t;me they ... ,. OCC Biology Instructor Tested by Snakes, Heat For most college professors a sabbatical represents an opportunity to visit the great cultural areas of the earth and to return to the classroom wilh new.found knt>"•ledge. Neither London, Paris nor Tokyo is the choice of Orange Coast College biology teacher Lloyd ti.1. Smith. Smith is taking his sabbatical in the "middle of nowhere" and he is thrilled about it. He is in the heart 0£ the Nambib ("place or nothing") desert of the western coast or Africa, tang l.~n g with poisonous s n a k e s and ski mming acros.s the sand in his Land Rover. t. ~l~ .. "'"'' . ~. .. >' IN NAMBIB DESERT Lloyd M: Sm ith • "·as exhausted. l must have hiked about 10 miles in that heal. The dip in the Kuiscb had been a life-saver. Smith closes his JengthYJ sab bat ical log on al philosophical note. ••().Jt here, in thi s great expanse of 'nothingness,' it is easy to have a deep feeling ot a\ve, a religious feeling if you will. one that I can only realize '"hen I am so remote and detached from all the material things of our 'civilization .' "The fact that I haven't heard any outside news at all for 1nearly a month, now is unimporta nt . What i~ important at the moment is to be alive and able to appreciate and be moved by all the ·simp le ' beauty and ... SAVE 11.00 ON OUR BEST SELLING ANDREA WIG FOR MOTHER'S DAY Regularly 35 .00, now 24.00 for one week only. Andrea is th e beautiful wig with everything going for it. "Wow brow" is elaborately hand-tied, lh e· most natural hairline imaginabl e. Styled in. Elura" modacrylic;, natural a,nd frosted shades Wi~ Salon, Ncwixwt aod San 0i£<go . "'ondenncnt about me. the fangs that have an opcnmg 11><.K.loO! ~ .. ..-~ •..iotV1JDts -wrwooo ~aHttJ lA~ ~111100 lAOUNA NUS < S~IJTH IS considered an expert on the world 's desert regions and this is his fourth visit to the Nan1bib. His m~ioo is to assist the Soutb- West African National Park Service in the preparation of a slide-lecture series lo be shown in schools. things ,,.e take for granted.'' ·11•11--. ... , rt···~~· 11101t11.Q• 11,..,,...,:11 11•..,-· Pill__. "'"'.-n:o 11'"'"'"'' v·•~• ,.,,._ . near their base, not their tip, -;:-:C:::O::=::=:::::::::':::::::::::::::::=---:::;--::._ -:::-..;:::..=-==-=-:....._;:-'-"-==-"-;:-;:-;..._-==---=-=-;:..:--"---=--""--"--====.,. so "·hen poison is ejected Smith is also laying out a self-gu ided nature trai l al the Nambib Research Station-and v.·riting a pamphlet to accompany it. lie ha s taken 2,000 slides during his tTip and plans to show many of them in OCC Evening COiiege lectures. Jfe Is scheduled to leave lhe Nambib in June and then head for the Near East and southern Siberia. ti.tean\\'hile. Smith is sending copies of his daily log to Orange Coast College to keep his colleagues lnfonned about how exciting if can be in the middle of nowhere. " "One of the things we had been warned about on arrival was the' fact that a couple of ringhe;Js had been driven up by the rl~ng waters of the Kulseb River and had taken refuge among the rocks around the station.•· 11T11AT S£E!\1S hannless enough until you __realize thUt the ringhals ls the spitting cobra. tTle one with special forcibly it hits a little shl'lf of bone below the hole and squirts poison out and up\\·ard "The snak e aims right for its enemy eyes! Ever since, J have been very alert at night in going to or from the labs and my cottage." Smith reporls later in his Jog that one of the natives .,.,.orking at the station caught and killed a spitting cobra. The snake. with a glistening black head and neck, was more than five feet tall . Another time, Smith nea rly conked out in the heat after studying the plant and insect life or a nearby canyon. He was left alone in the canyon for five hours• alld the· two scientists who "·ere supposed to pick him up didn't arrive. S~llTlf HIKED out ol the canyon, soaked himself m the Kulseb River to cool off, And paused under trees a n d overhanging rocks for 8hade. "At last. much to my relief. they a rr! ved-a b out 33 minutes late," he writes. " I \ • • • TAKE A SHORTCUT INTO SUMMER FOR 6.50-8.50! How super! How reasonable! The super hai rcut 1hafbreezes right lhru summer. Our Roux conditioning sl)ampoo treatment is includOO- : Blow Clll is just 8.50. Lamp cut, &.SO. Our Specbl SeMctos include: Elizabrth Atdtn fK~ls, an holx ol he.lven bthil'.ld ""Red Dool. 12.50. leg and body_,,. lndivid~I ~~. Li!lh and brow tintin& Manicures •nd ~!cures. &e.auty SCUdio, 1111 5lOM etcept Marina SOrry, Beauty Studio Not Open Sunday .. I .. • I B Pn> eno maj ii .. did ope it h lost sup .. tha wh c Re Co at spo .... --- I • . . . ~ • Sonday, May 5, 1q74 DAILY PILOT B :J UC I Professor Awarded Grant Bright Optimistic About Coast Planning An allista.ot P.;tOfCSSOr of Stephen J.I. While. o! 17~21 By CANDACE PEARSON Of Hie DM!r "'-' S1t11 since Nov. J, 1.972. .. .. commissions must develop by with hostility towards the new '1.976. controls by developers and physiology at UC Irvine has Paine Clrele, Irvine. has been been a .... ·arded a ~J.049 grant a.,1;arded the grant by the Na· benefit analysis can begin, he to study stabiJlty of fatly tional Institute or Neurology ''The broad concept or Propos!tion 20 W11s w e 11 enough defined that t h e majority of people voting for it knew what that was. On that date, 55 percent of the voters at the polls endorsed 1a bp.llot initiative known as Prop. 20, the 1972 coastal zone act. Jr the con1n1issions sit cities and wlth its own quie tly Jn a private room to philosophical split. adds. nct\'e linings. Diseases and Slrokl's. \Vhile that i:s g row in g ,lr=:::==~=======~=======1 Bright see!' the control over l I construction within t .ooo yards I {!,oflf.(; ''n Go I "But the n1ajority or people didn't understand how It would operate and what in1pllcatlons it bad. If they had. it "'ouJd·ve lost 10 to 15 percent or its support. "It's probably for tuitous that they didn't understand what was going on." Dr. Donald Bright ~ . chainnan or the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation commission, sat in his office at Cal State Fullerton and spoke of what has happened SINCE THAT time, a lot of people -especially those who live Inland -have foreottcn about the one statewide and six re g I o n a I commissions created by the initiative. Or. Bright, chairman of the biology department at Fullerton, thlnks this is a major problem. ··the general public doesn't· understand the p I a n n i n g process at all. It's very difficult. to explain," he said. referring to the nine-part coastal master plan l h e write the plan, emerging only But .Bright -wbo admits at the last n1inute , he sakl, in vl'ith a smile that he'd be two yea rs ''Mecca perfectfortllePeaceCorps - (Sac ramento ) will swallow it . is now optimistic. and you'll never see It again. Urilike<-Commissioner Louis "The only way to win is to Nowell, who thinks a final plan get the public fully awure," he will never be adopted, Bright a dd e d . ' ' and th al has "confidence it's going to unfortunately is a painful work." proc~ss." , But the plan has to be ~rig~ thinks ~ roygh acceptable to both the public going 1n the beg1M~£. was and politicians, he warns. partly because oomm1ss1oners Tbe commission has had "'ere ~~peeled by som~ ~pie he1trtngs on the plan's first to be in there swimming on two elements -marine life Nov . 9. "\Ve Couldn't." and coastal land envirorunent. THE !!·MEMBER ~me of the f"CC{)mmended " , • commission also had to deal po I i c le s have st irred · ·' ' controversy, but Bright saXJ,... 'REAL BATTLE AHEAD' "The real battle isn't here Or. Ronald Bright . . yet." ro1nc back for a seC<>nd public hearing. . I A great new look for your ey:es ! All the clements -including transportation, intensity of . land use, eilergy, recreation. design. pc)\vers and f11nding and geology -will go to the state to be con1bincd with other regions' "'ork and then AFTER ALL nine are done. \Vilh priorities listed at lt>ast inft'lrn1ally in each, t he compromises and the cost· .... ,- of the coastline as a brake. Critics contend lhal brake has too rarely been applied and point to .A 96 percent approval rate for f>C"!'nll s. Bright calls that nu1nber an "ill-gotten statistic that shows absolutely nothing .'' "You need to kno\v how many permits "'ere revised by the, developers b e r 0 r e submission : how many of the 96 percent were changed because of discussions \vith staff ; how in any were heard and then modified." He feels the C<>mmission has been able to look at permits and issues "with a regional awareness" when local control "'asn't enough. HE TJU NKS there isn't asl much opposition to t h e C<>rnmission as there \\'<isl when it began becliusc it has1· in<idc good use or i1 s \)O\l'f'r. GRAND OPENING MONDAY, MAY 6th • COME IM & SEE OUR EXCITING SHOWROOM -NEWEST STYLES 10% OFF OM AMY PURCHASE ' . ! ' ~ ~f o,.e S1nog Eville11ce Sou.ght by F o,.d , But he c..'Onccdes, nodding his 1 head, that "whatever posturel "·e take. y,•e'IJ always be able to muster up a nun1ber ofl people opposed to it " - simply because it came from the commission. L..-------------------' ' . individual eyelashes 100% human hair Cluster lashes \---------- -3so -Ntn removed atnight-oMtny--other·-timEh-.. Yo~ve.seen these __ on television as well as in your fashion magazine. .. Get them now and save! • JCPenney We know what you're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. !If the following stores: FASHION ISLAND. New po rt Beoch (714) 644·2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER. Huntington Beach (714) 892·777 l . 1.69 each is all you pay for professional color portraits of your child. Select either large 5x7'; or set of 4 wallet size, from several poses. • 2 children photogr,aphed together-1.69 each child • All portraits dellvered to you at our store • Age limit: 12 year~ SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) -would delay ~hem for up to Ford Motor Co. President Lee two more years. A. lacocca Friday said auto Jacocca r e p e a t e d the emission standards should be company's contention that the toughened only after scientific E n v i ronmental Protection evidenei? can show a Agency, the Na t i onal signifi cant health risk under l\caderny of' Scienei?S and the present standards. others \Should continue their lacocca said the 1975-model medical and atmospheric cars that go on sale this fall studies to determine the will eliminate 75 percent of the health effects of v eh i c I e three n1ajor po 11 utan t s bmissions. -~compar-ed...:to car~f seven-.... '''ffscientific-cvidence-sho\\'S· -· ye~s. ago. He re1>4:ated pa~t a significant health risk under cr1t1c1sm that the Clean ~1r the present standards, then Act of 1970 ··\\·~s passf'(l lnying and only then should tougher out .the solution before the standards be considered," deta!ls .~f the problem were lacocca said. .!.:.Even if the kno"'1l. I" standards in effect for 1975 J~cocca mad~ the remarks models were kept in place for dun~~ the opening or the Ford several years. the air "·ould E~hib1t at Ex~ '74 here. He continue to get deaner as old said ~a.ny businessmen are cars were retired in favor of not w1lbng to spend money new cars with the latest • called fo r by controls." environmentalists "when the added costs do not produce added benefits... ,. HARBOR The Ford president said that • • although the av e rage American is interested in a clean environment, he is "no! interested to the exclusion or his job. an adequate supply of gasoline and heating oil , or conei?m over the Tising cost of living." He said one area which requires careful re- examination is the Clean Air Act "which set what we think are unreasonably stringent standards f o r automotive emissions.'' The original 1975 clean air standards tor cars h a v e already been delayed one year in all states but California and a measure now in Congress (From Page BJ ) up-but we have no malicious mischief. All the cubbies Q.re open and there are no locked deiors. T'bere is no thievery." _ Despite all the oth~r differ- ences between Harbor Day and public schools, the faculty members insist that the key is small class sizes and a small school. "There is no lack or good will , professional expertise or desire to help the student at public schools." Grella said. 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Each piece reflects the tribal tradition of fine Silversmiths. Rings, earrings, bracelets, necklaces and pendants- '"" ,each one unique ... a treasure to cherish forever·;,· ~~'7 I Use your JCPenney charge-cird. Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores: . FASHION ISLAND , Newport Bea ch (7·14) 644·2313 . HUNT·INGTON CENTER . Huntington· Beach (7 14) 892·7771. ' ' ' l I ' I , , B=-_,-1,_o_.,_,_v_•_l_Lo_r ________ s_,_..,_,,_M_•_Y_~_. _i._r_• -Art Director By LAURIE KASPER °' ""' o.I,., "lkil l!tff As a. rtetpUoo i~I in a government office building, Lil fox asked an illustrator from upSUtlrs, "Hoy,• do you get into the art departn1cnl? I al v.iiys liked lo draw." ThC reply \lo'asn't at all encouraging but she did mnke it to the art department, as ;t secretury. And \\·hen she "'as finally given the chrince to finish a layouL , she changed it. ~O\\', 10 vears later. she Is associatt art director. of Hoad and Track magazine v.1th 1he rightful hope or someday being a magazine art director. ··So I guess tile secret 1s to be a pushy broad." she said. "Actuall y, I don 't care what anybody says, hard \\'ork is the aMWer." That simple fact is what she tries to impress on students and job seekers y;fiom she meets through Orange l , the county's junior advertising club of which she is president. And in the fall . she will begin teaching an advertising design course at ·Golden \\'est College, where the ('ntire graphic arts cu rriculum "'ill be offered 10....tjle evenings. GOOD TASTE Since she was never able to classes at night which \l'ould help she said, "I learned the hard v.•ay. ·. find her. ''What it really tak es. basically. is good taste v.•bich is a hard thing to lea rn and a hard thing to teach," she said. She plans to teach the basics in her class because "wlfh the basics you can go almost anypla~ in the business." Stud ents. she said, often think only of "fhe glories or being an art dlrector" and forget that 1'K'Y have to \l'Ork hard and prove thc1nsc!ves fir st. They also have to be "te rribly practical" and realize that time and money. limited by the client or employer , might restrict the greatest talent. ··•1ou just have to be con.sta nll)' on ... You've just got to be creative,'' she said . admitting "a lot of things I've done I don't like ... a lot of things I do."' Ifs "·ork that in('\udes pressure, both on the job and getting the job. "When you get out there," she warns, "it's very competitive." The artist should also know things he or she might consider mundane or unrelated. The advertising club has taken field trips to a variety oI places. including an outdoor ad\•ertising fi rm to · sec h o v.• architectural models and trade booth displays are made and an ink co111pany to see how ink is produced . f\1s. Fox expla ined . "Therc'i'I not hing you le am that can't be used or stored." She is cooce med ihat students realize these things, she said, because it "just e Illustrates makes ine sick" to see youn& people come oot of school full of enthuslasm , only to get knocked down and end up as paste-up artists. WO>IEN'S OPPORTUNITIES Frequently she is asked about the opportunities for "'Om<'Jl to g,et jobs in her business. "I alwa ys tell then\ it's v e r y easy because v.'omen wHI work for less but v.•hen it comes to promotions, women get overlooked." • She speaks from past e1perience. Of the present. she said, "I am very lucky." t.fs . Fox boasts that the magazine. which specializes in foreign cars and is published in Newport Beach, ls ''not bought by our advertisers. Tf we don 't like a car. "A'e say it whether they advertise or not." , And as for her job specifically, she said. "the only problem I e\•er have is ('n>pping an engine because I don't kno1v v.•hat's in it ." \Vhile in Los Angeles, she "·as a civ il service illustrator. ··it's a euphemism . bclie\'C me." she said. "''ou put charts together." After moving lo Orange Coonty. she found a job as an assistant art director but was "a SC('retary essentially ... For a u·hilc, she free-lanced because "that's v.·hat you're alwa ys doing between jobs" and. then she became promotional art director for a boa t company. She li ked the job because she likes boats. ln fa('\. her dream is to own a boat and go around the v.·orld in il. • • • MAN'S JOB former employer) right." she said. admitt ing some bitterness beca use she But there was a problem "A'ith the job. Jilted the place. "I was a v.·oman doing a man's job and I v.·asrl 'l getting paid for it," she explained. DIFFICULT TASK One reason she didn't get the salary She thinks things are beginning to ghe deserved. she believes. is because the loosen up for women in her field and office manager 'A'BS res ponsible for often tries to have a "'Oman speak at the givin g ra ises and "she couldn't see advertising club functions. beyond the fact that I was a woman." That, bo\.,.ever, is sometime! a diUicult \\'hen she left. two people . had to be task. 'Women can handle pressure just as well as men can . Me n, too , . have m.oods.'. Lil Fo x art directors. the men were asked u•hy said. "I rtally dol'l't tmderstand why there are no women holding positions like there aren't more renowned women art theirs. One said he kn ew of a woman in directors." New York . Another explained that the She also wanted a woman as master of pressure is too great ror v.·omen. ceremonies for the club's awards "Women can handle pressure just as banquet "l could not get a woman to do well as men can," she said. And she ii," she said. "I was furious." contends that men. too. have moods. She thinks women who have made it She admits to the "unfortunate·· fact seem to forget how important it \.\'&S for that some "·0111en "'ant ·'both "'orlds" -. them, to fikht. lhe pay and responsibility as 1\·ell as sick "That's scary.'' she . said . ''because BE'A -AND!RSON,-Edito~-----~-~ -trimHo replaee her . ....t.:.Served him· {her-·--At~ meef;tng., fealuring-il-JlQnel-6'---leave-fef-female--fH'Oblems"" But-!llih-she---thty1re the ones we look up to."-·· Site Shudders at Thought Of Beit1g Pl1otographed DEAR ANN LANDERS: Other people have aired their pet pcc\'eS and said they fell bclter for having done so. llerc 's 1uine. In the last couple of years I've put on "'·eight. This is especially dc\'astatini: to me because I ah,ays ate c1·cr~·th1ni:: r "'anted . never gained an ounce and had an excellent figure. I married into a family of ('an1era nuts. They take: pictures at e\'ery picni c. birthday , holiday and family gel· together. It's really "'ild. 1 Since I put on '-'"'eight I hate to have my picture taken. but they insist on getting me anyway. Why is it that the minute you tell someone )'OO don't want to be Photographed they insist on sneaking up artd getting you "'hen you aren't looking? They especially love lo catch you yawni ng. eating, or bcnd ins: over to pick up something. Need J tell you that nll the pi('lures arc exchanged? nicy make the f u 11 route-relatives and friends-and arc carried in purses lo show :i.t parties. lt seems to me that individuals who don't want to be photographed should have their wls~s respceted as a matter or good mAnners. What do you sny?- UlOK AT TH E BIRDIE DEA R BIRO: I •i:ree with you . Thl're i• something vulgar nnd· someYi h11t lto1tJle: In the sort of behavior you de scribe. I'm prfnUng your letter for those "'bo hl \'e the problem so they ('an C'Jfp ft 1nd bi nd It to their 1''\.\tll· I mea ning" friends and relatives who do Ibis to them. . DEAR ANN LANDERS: A rt. r numerous consultations our 19-yea r-old daughter finally lert home bag and baggage.' She has no job and ls about three months pregnant. The boy has said nothing about marriage. nor has he offe red to hel p her financially. 1 am the father of this girl and I need --- ~ .. ' , .. ... , to know my responsibilities. Should I insist thal she come home and offer to see her through? Can J take legal action against the boy? She docs not v.•ant to marry him and I'm not sure he "'ould marry her in any event. You will notice I arn not mcntionin~ the girl 's mo!h('r. Her atti tude is, "good riddanet .. , Of ('OUrsc this ('Ompli('ates the prohlem. I nrecl some a d v i c e . - PERPLEXED FATllE!l DEAR P.: Tbe boy bas a legal obll,;allon to btlp yo ur d a ug h I er fln11nctolly and 11upport bi1 child. Jf 11he doosn't want his help, however, you have ll serious obstacle. i\ly cur bston e opinion I~ thi s: It y;•ould be befil to urge your daughter to go kl a hflm, for un y;·ed mothers, ~ve up tbt. child for adoption an d start lift ag1ln. ' Rene Fiore uses her ba llet and mod ern dance t ra ining t o help othe r wom en slim down in CM program : • Ballet the Pound.s Away ~y ALLISON DEERR Of n. 0.ll'r Pilot St•ff Rene Fiore is ~tantly in motion. Bending, strelching, reaching. pointing, v.•arming up, toning up. Physical fitness · and prqper nutrition arc important lb her. Her classes for the Costa ~tesa Department of )Leisure S e r v i c e s incorporate hf!r training in modem dance and balle t and her love of music. Trim to Rhythm, an eight-week trimming course for women. is offered Mondays and Wednesdays at the C.OSta Mesa Recreat'ion Center and Tuesdays and Thursdays in the Harbor Area Boys Club. "I in('ludc lots of ballet because J'\•e always loved to dance. Calisthenics do nothing but exhaust you and build ugly, bulgy little muscles. And who wants those?" she sakl. The Himti.ngton Beach mother or three children. aged 8 to 12. feels that exercise should be part of daily routine "like brushing you r teeth." DAILY ltOUTINE She suggests 15 minutes of exercise. al least, every day. ~ler Costa 11esa classes and another in Santa Ana. begi n with w a r m · u p exercises. "No one can just walk in and start jumping up and down. "I don't walk into the ballet studio and put my foot on the ba r. our body must be relaxed and limbered up first " Exercises begin with gentle stretches to relax the neck arv:l. shoulders, "areas ol a lot of tension." Then, the group work! down to the toes, eventually relaxing every part of the body. "Only after the warm-up do we begin - to work on problem area!. Many women come in complaining ol. backaches. ,;Often. it is a combination of Incorrect wsture and poor stomach muscle control." "Can't .. is a word she doesn't like. "No one is too old to begin exercising. but ot course younger people have a n advantage, be<:a~ it is less work to lose a pound." Her rule of thwnb is: "do as many as you can . then do two more." l\fost of the exercises are gentle stretches or dance movements acn>ss the rocm to ballet music. Rock-or pop will accompany a set of s tr etc h es. "Sometimes v.-e play Neil Dia mond, or foc me, ballet tnusk:." AGES VARY lier stud ents range in age from young mothers (who bring a child aloog to waf('h ) to women above 00. They are~all shapes and sizes. Some are repeaters from other classes. Others have never been in an exercise program . · ··\Ve usually hav<' from 20 to 25 people in a class." r..trs. Fiore said. "I like to keep the class small <'nough so I can learn everyone's name and he!p each one individually." She recommends dieting, eating a sensible balancj.'d diet "without all the junk" for many of her students. You should definitely exercise if you diet. she said, or you'lt end up looking unattractively nabby. Students are urged lo . con tinue the program at home "because )'OU can't exercise two days a week and stay fit. It has to be a dally routine, a diaciplined part of your life." Because so many students wanted to continue the exercises at home. or couldn't aUcnd a chm, lr1rs. Fiore ~- ' designed a cassette tape program .and diet booklet wh ich she sells. These are available from T r i m to Rhythm lnc .. P.O. Box. 2l93, Costa Mesa. CA. She offered aome basic ru les for any V.'Olllan who wants to slim dOWTI and tooe up. NEED FREEDO~I "Ne\·er exercise in your pajamas. Wear shorts or a leotard so you have ,freedom to mc:ve. Pajamas a n d nightgoa are very restricting. !'Set as' e·a delinite Ume each day, at least l inutes, to exercise. Then list the parts of the body you need to work on. "I can't emphasize enough the need to warm up before you exercise. Do slow stretches. Stand up and reach for the ceiling. Slov.·ly bend and touch the noor. " 1 know it is -hard when you have chi ldren around the house . a.ad there are days \\'hen you just can't do it. but you should try to stick to a schedule." Rene Fiore thinks of her teaching :is "more fun than work. It's oot just a job, and 1 enjoy it as much as my students." She studied with the New Dance Group Studio and tbe ~tartha Graha111 Dance Stt>dio in her native New York City and now studies three nights a week with Anthony Sellers, fonnerly of the liouston Ball et. • Ballet lessons and her e1ercise ('lasses have helped keep her flve-foot·lhrce·inch frame slim. "Thia summer we hope to open the classes to teenagers. The series will last four weeks." Classes now run from 1:30 to 10:30 a.m. and further information is availa ble fro1n the CM Department oI Leisure Services, ~. Her rule of thumb is do tu many as you can, then do two mor e. Deily Pilot Photos by Richard Koehl er l F T LOS Cinco eeleb C.Ulor and p To mUll is mo lion o invad Mex! May 5 "Cin for all their truly pride.' p:esid cha Uni Citlze Mex made recent But Ame achie n<eds diffe was organ work -~-·_.agar Wi Marti Amer make long "N dema de • ablll In Lope cou He ?if e . not hi hyph Ang .. ~ here vou· S1a you The ing R Bak wor ac con 1951. As reca cele qui .. Air out hi• Ital 25. s spe n Ml d con Am say the SC .. mo Spa no • Cinco Festival ' Toda}· LOS ANGELES (API - Cinco de Mayo will be celebrated today a c r o s s c.alifornia v.·it h flesU:ls, dances and parades. To many of the state's 3.1 million P..1exican-Americans, it is more than a commemora- tion of lhe historic defeat of invading Fren(.tl troops by Mexican freedom fighters May S. 1862. "Cinco de 1-tayo is a time for all Chicanos· to rejoice at their accomplishments -it is truly a celebraUon of l\texlcan pride," said Frank l\1ontoya, president of Corona-Norco chapter of the Lcaguef of United Latin A m c r i ca n Citizens. Mexican·An1ertcans h a v e made ilnportant strides in recent years. Bu( every ~1 c x Le a ll'·_ Americlln s e es the achie vements -and what still needs to be done -in a different light. Fred 1'1artinez, 61, an area representative for the lluman Resources Development Institute of the AFL-CIO in San Diego, remembers what it was like v.•hen he began organizing California farm wockers 4 years ai.o : "IN TIIE • 30s, a ·Jol of employers who v•ere Anglo v.·ouldn't talk to me ... they thought I was inferior. "A t that time they didn't have blacks to discriminate against. The majorlty of people who did the labo r work in the fields v;ere P.1exicans. and they v:ere discriminated 'agifnst . ...--· ----_; With an 3ir of 11at1sraction Martinez notes "the Mexican- American has been able to make an impact. lie is no longer Invisible. "Now he Ls complaining and demanding, and he has been demonstrating that he has the • ability." In Los Angeles, Dr. David Lopez-Lee . 31, is an associate prof essor of public administration at U1e University of So uthern California. l..opez·lee is also a political acti v i s t who ran unsuccessfully in a recall e I e.c t i o n agaltllt city councilman Arthur Snyder. He is concerned some Me lC i can-Americans \\'ant nothing more than to lose the hyphen and vanl5h into the Anglo majority. · 0 'I'HE UNITED States is sometimes a melUng pot \vhere minorities are melted down into the Anglo mold," he says. "There are some people who want to deny what they are, ~'ho hesitate to say lhe word 'Atexican'." But in San Francisco, 1..1anuel C. Rodriguez, 51, takes the opposife \•ie\\'. "~1y philosophy is: you're here. You're bom here. You"rc part of lhe United States. You can't Identify yourself ~ith a certain group. The United States is a mell· ing pot and you're part of it.·· Rodriguez , born in Bakersfi eld . son of a farm worker, has oWned his own accounting and ta1 consultation business since 1951. A3 a boy and young man , he recalls Cinco de h-1 a y o celetrations but now he Is not quite s.Jre even what the date commemorates. "The regi mentation or the Air Force took the Mexican out of me," Rodriguez says of his World War ll service In Italy and England. "I'm glad now though that I know Spanish. It's good Io ' business." But his own children -ages 25, 22 and 19 -speak no Spa nish. He is against parents speaking Spanish, especially around their young children. RE MENTIONS " T he t.flssion," the San Francisco district with a I a r g e concentralion of h1 e x l c a n · Americans and LaUns, and says, "Everyone talks Spanish there so when the kids st.art sctX>Ol, they have problems. "But the Mexicans who have moved and try not to speak Spani sh -their children have no difficulty. 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MOTOROLA 25" ::::~i COLOR CO~S,LE 8489 COMPARE AT 529.97 • Thnlling life-like color • 100: sohd slate Quasar works 1n a draw· er chassis • lnsta-Matic tuning locks in perfect picture at the push ol a button • Walnut finished con· temporary cabinet • l year free 1n·home se~1cc. YOUR '!iATl!iFACTIOl\l l!i FULLY 6UARAl\ITEEO DR YOUR MONEY BACK ' t • I COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. • - • l .• " • ' • • ·' --- • 511flelay, Ml)' ~. • ;,., • ~ Dlllr Piii! Pll01• '"' LM P1r11• At Atagles This Moth e1·-M ean s Well .. , • • • • • • But She'll Never Make It • • • • :· f. ~ By ERMA DOMBECK Today at the: \\r aldorf- Astoria Hotel in Ne\Y York Cily. a wonuin will be honored as ?>.1other of the ''ear. tr tradition prevails. she 'viii be a gentle:faced. "'hite-haired lady who 'has bome five or six children v.i>o have all reached BOme degree of success. (One 1 remember delivered three doctors, a nun and a symphony conductor.) If it is any consolaUon. it is a coolest that bouts more losers than any o t h e r competition in the v.-orld. Some of you today may be asking yourself. "Why not me? Where did 1 fail as a mother?" To soften the hurt, I offer up this <'Otumn to the ~tolhcr Of the Year losers. name. AT WIT'S END You \rOre white socks in public, Yo11 took your son to the emergency ward and couldn't remember his age. You were the only n10thcr who made your son wear boots on a rainy day. You received a rain bonnet • • from your t'l·)'ear-old for! J\Iothcr's Day that w a S: s t a1nped. "'Complhncntary.; Citizens Bank." , -. Your fan1ily saw a three ... layer cake 11 1~ inches hlgh )! cr.:iC'kcd dO\l'll the middle and• held toi:ether· \\'Ith toot!ipicks: <111d inquired, "\VllOsc birt~! day is it?" • • Your "achiever" \Vants to be a tax deduction when he gro~s up. .• 'Vhen you try lo write Your acceptance speech for ~1other or the Y£>nr and someonejils used up all the dust !or pftone humbers ... try harder next ' ' _)car. • 1 .. .. KCET Gets 2 Grants KCET Channel ·fa. Los throughout the state awarded! Looking gracefull y like all arms aJld legs are 12 young girls from Huntington Beach llig h School. They will be performing in concert at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the high school gymnasium. 1905 ~1 ain St., Huntington Beach. Dancers include Jennifer f'airbanks, Betty Chambliss. Carol Kinnich. ·Patrice Terry. Candy Darlin~, ~:Jary · l''rye, Jan Boucher, Susan Sansum, Denise Sattlefield, 1'ern Gibbs. Billie Barnes and Kensy Massas. You kn~w you b!c\v it \.\'hen: Angeles public TV station. has a total of $951 ,000. Vou found three dozen received from the California The L1rgest of the. KCET A " Co · · grants. $21.951, \viU be used 1.9 diapers in pre-soak and your r..... mm1ss1on two grants complete l\\'O Los Angele~ bab.v is class valedictorian. totaling $36.324 £or progran1s Philharrnonic shov.·s: th r Horoscope: Sagittarius .Should Be Aware \ You scolded your son for featuring the Los Angeles \Vi\liarn Kraft Concerto for ~etting a D in Tragedies or Philharmonic and a pioncl'.'r Piano and Ot'Chcstra featuring Shakespeare anft he grabbed photographer. Y..1ona Golabek and ~1ahl.er's · the report card and said, "l The grants \~ere the largest Sy1nphony No. I in D Major; didn't know I v.·as taking it." in fh e communications and a special on lhc 19th MONDAY By SYDNEY O~IARR ARIES (~tarch 21-April 19): Check resources. D o n ' t promise more than can be delivered. Family member can aid if -you make diplomatic request. Take inventory. Get facts and figures. TAURUS (April 20-f\.1ay 20): Defer temporarily to judgment of others. You gain by waiting, listening and planning ahead. But direct action is not for you at this time. GEMINI tMay 21-June 20)o \Vork. rsepo11Sibility ar e featured -some asoociates lean on you . Key now is to be helpful without m a k i D g TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLI ~g1:~~~~1~=~-;.~:: , _ Now you can put finishing ..s19 here 19· Belie! , -port touches on personal efforts. Be 16 swffl,~--142lnjure--:~o-cnoii'-vo1-er-104""'RIVer----r-eady--for • encoWlter -o·f · 1 Exaggerated 77 Court 143 He was: 33 Egyptian-ducks romantic natW'e. ft out in e comedy officer Lalin soul 106 Suppress ch an g es . 6 Sunder 78 French 147 ~ummer .. 35 Joyful 108 By LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You 11 Slice mushroom so~venlr 37 land parcel way get nev>'s from individual who 16 Choose 79 leaping 148 Agriculture 39 Routes ol played important role in your 21 Assumed amphibian goddess 40 Assamese 109 Public1sl: , · name BO Opium 150 Behind tribe 2 past. \.ou c~n make. amends 22 Abscond flower schedule 42 Sacred words for unmtent1onal shght. la 23 Bay 82 P9elic 152 Swindles song 112 Remedy effect. you receive proverbial window conlraclion (var.) 44 tmpenetrable 113 Reveal serond chance. 24 Bishop's 83 Baseballer 154 Armpit 46 Fight ol 115 Flooding VIRGO (Aug. 23 ·Sept. 22): headdress Slaughter 155 Glacial honor 116 French Hunch. intuitive flash 25 Chinese 85 Perfidy ridge 48 Crush • iricome dominates. You know without porcelain 87 Marsh 156 Pronoun 50 Peer 118 A'tending knowing. You understand 26 Justice 88 Painter's 157 Bt istles curiously 119 Main • · V(ithout k.n o \Ying _ -You ·goddess stand 159 Conjunction 51 Pale point JlCrccive. see and touch 27 Rough 90 Cursed 160 Plural 53 Artless 120 Japanese without formally making an lava 91 Feline ending 55 Beyond parliament announcement or move. 28 Nol: 92 June beetle 161 Verb form 56 Respond 122 Heavy LIBRA (Sept. 23 _Oct. 22): prefix 93 Burma 163 Jn charge· 57 Restaurant swell A 29 Renowned Buddhist abbr. pa1ro11 123 -··de ccent is on inoney. personal 30 Carp 94 American 164 Customa'ry 58 Feel blindly, mer possessions. your ability· to 31 Hall an poet 166 Nautical 60 Prison 126 Sports protect valuables .• Highlight em 95 Slep "stop·· inmate part icipant versatility. Your instincts now 32 Printing 98 Clinging 167 Smiling 62 Liriuilied by 128 Water may be more valuable than fluid person 169 Char heat raiser 34 Unsightly 100 Brisk 171 Aggrega1e 04 Calc ium 130 On the 36 Merry energy 172 River of symbol back tune 101 Prevalent Hades 65 Fervor 132 Spanish 38 Build 105 let borrow 173 Brilish 66 Sublet aunt · 40 Hullabaloo 106 Chemical island 68 Chestnut 134 Awn 41 Gather salt 174 lncline horse 135 Strong 1 43 Piano 107 Refuge 69 lmnierse 136 Rope suppons 109 Waterfront DOWN 71 Man·s name 137 Forward 45 College cily 73 Kick: slang 139 Nettle s!udenl 110 Scottish Hindu 75 Mimic B d7 Theater explorer ascetic 79 Russian 141 esiege sign 11.1 At home 2 Unassisted tyrant 144 Egyptian 48 Wasteland 112 African cat 3 Japanese 80 Food fish god tract 114 Trap measure Bl Chinese 145 Jo1n a 49 Weaverbird 115 Seed 4 Eccenlric headquarters cause 52 Chinese coaling wheel 83 PHcher 146 Musical measure 116 Catholic 5 Jacob's 84 Japailese sign 54 Malayan tr ibunal bro!her drama 148 Compartment lree 117 Congealed 6 Sizing coal 86 Caustic 149 Guy- 56 Esleem 121 Reply 7 Recrealion 87 Enemy 59 Norweg ian 123 Valor award area 89 Soak saint 124 Complete 8 Behold1 90 Classify 61 Playing 125 Lamb's pen 9 Philippine 92 Blot out group name tree 94 Knifling 63 Scamp 127 Affirmat ive 10 Purposive stitch 67 Beforehand voles 11 Competition 95 Goll mishap 68 Destroyed 128 Jury lis!s 12 Nigerian 96 Mortise joint 70 Biggest 129 Dispatch people 97 One or any part· 2 131 Latvia 13 Ceremony 98 Liquid rock words native 14 Shilts 99 Witch 72 Minute 133 Onslaught direc!ions 100 Copper . particle 135 Narrow 15 Tribe ' coin 73 Un111ng Opening leaders 10 1 Coconut force 138 Capture: 16 Radiate fiber 74 Ir ish slang 17 Top 102 Eal away crowning 140 The one 18 And; Lalin 103 Brazilian I (• • . ' Ill Ii) i.i6 Ill lU .. II ·1 '" I : .i • JJ ·./'·II £ ' " 1'1 !tle Ill 114 . ':..J II I IZ IJ I• ·~ A 11 ·~ JO! rope 151 Silkworm 153 Backtalk 156 Barnyard sound 158 Cigar residue 162 Wire measure 165 Guido's note 168 Morindin dye 170 Conlinenl: abbr. II " li zo Ji /. 110 IU IU l~S I~ Your cleaning lady came out classiricatlon and the non· century California pioneef intellect. of your son's bedroom and commercial channel was one photographer Eadweard MuY· SCORPIO (OCl. 23-Nov. 21): said, .;That room doesn't need or 153 nonprofit organizations bridge. . : You will be dealing from bleach, it needs an exorcist." -·--------------·-------- position or strength. Realize You volun(eered 10 take tht-it, be confident. Take initiative in making new third grade to a ballgame and c ontacts. Emp h asize lost three or them 'in the originality; c re a t iv i t y , school hallv.·ay en route to the personal style. car. SAGIITARIUS (Nov, 22· You applied for a par t·timP Dec. 21): SomeoQe is job in a departmenl store and whispering, spreading rumors. listed your status as "single." This is more · childish than '/ou .,.,·ere the first woman in hannful. ·Neverthel~.~-it· will· -your block to .open a "charge" pay you to keep 111formed . at Jack-in-the-box. Make clear that you are aware _ do so without being You V.'Cnt to an open house belligerent. at school and gave your right CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Friends play significant role . Entertain at home and include family. Repay favors . Seek harmony. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis is on bow far you want to go and what you will do to arrive a t destination. Study values. See through sham. Select quality. . Association with professional superior proves fruiUul. PISCES tFeb. 19-Marcli 20)o Concenlralod study effort now will pay dividends: G ain indicated if horizons are broadened. Jl.{eans don't be satisfied with small corner. Bro,vn To P erform RoMie Brown. jazz pianist and entertainment director for the Balboa Bay Clubs, v.ili perfonn from l to 5 o'clock today during the opening of Sbef\ll"'OOCI Estates in Santa Ana. Brown will play on a grand piano in one of the model homes o{ the de\•clopment, located at Santa Clara Avenue and Old Grand Avenue. Barry Williams Co-Star of the Brady Bunch Sat & Sun-May 11 &-12 "t do~'t ;~ ~l'ltn I last was rtd~iO'hf1p1essTavghl!r · . Lucy Ms returned lriumphantly to the scent of l'ltr earlier hitvnts In tne bl'sl role of htr career." Ann Ttrrlll, Santa Ana Register ~'A. ~flo•liltlime rnov!e thar mall.es you ltave thf thfflrtwalkirig on itir. II you~ly $l'e0fle movie !his year, make if '~' .. -Norma McLain, Alter Dark Mitgitzine ' ) ~ , )WCIL!.E BAU.,\'~E"~"'~ •, C'O ··-...a 114, llfATlllCE ARTllUf! • BRUCE DAVISON· .!lYCE VAii PATIEN ..., J\ROO: ROBERT PREST~ as lifi'ngR". - Dellr 7:l0 I 9r4S WH., s.t., h•. 2. S, 7rJO, 914$ ... •• •• .. :~ •' ... • ,. . .. ... .,.. . ., -. "' ... _;$ •' .•. -. . .. . ~-- :~ '' .... ~·· .. · .. '·-·.·: '•! ... '"' .. ~~ :<: Agirlwithagreatfollowing , ;~ Every cop in the state was alter her. fNerybody else was behind her. IXGlUSIYI ORANG! COUNTY INGAGIMINT I !Wl/llllll inD .. HAWN. 111r•llfl••••Mncvnac~~ 1 n~ •a11n1.111ru lArnioo , NAT: 1 & !&M1 Yl.4l/H1Jill,1, 10,ao rp;:;i ••us· l!:.!!i . !IE.ST L'°'t-..J_ 1..,.,.1,A-/.CTH&.~ \.Js:llUB~t A 1'uh Of Class .. .. · .•. . · .. • " ... .-. ... . . .·. :· ' . • .. ., ... ., .. :s ., .:.• •:. :• •• if :· .. •' ... . .. . "'" ••• -., -. • • • . •, -· ... ' -. ·.;.ti .; .. · .. .•: 1=• . " -.. T~ ·~ .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!\ ••• . . . -, ., ... , .. --.... . ... -·-., GLINDA .;· IACICION :: ;. IA •• • ,i.i "A TOUCH • ~~ 0' CWI" ., """ , • ····-: ! ... ~ .... l1lt.f1t'-ll ... ·~ • •• . -... ... ' . ... .. . '• SEE CLASSIFIE D SECTION FOR ANSWERS " .• •' J!uona Park • Opon Every Day at 10 La. • (7H) 827-1776 l ' •! •• •• , :.,• . '' .:s I Co Sch : ban Moo T at ·gym ·can1 ban ·gro bao ~· iTl r. H ' I • • , ' ' ,. ENTERTAINMENT CclM Hi h -g . :Stage Band In Co11cert Corona de! 1\lar II i g h School's award·\\'inn ing stage ~band \11ill perrorm in concert l\1ooday. atay 13. . The concert 1.·111 take place at 7:30 p.n1. in the school ·gym nasiun1 on !he Eastbluff Can1pus. Tickets arc $2 . 'The Cl'l'nl \rill benrfit 1!i.: band's traveling fund . The ·group is one of 10 high school baods in the U.S. \1·ho will be :ea'rticpating in the A 11 • ~merican Stage Band Festival in l\lobi l<', Ala. in .June. The Cd~t Stage Band 1\•il\ be represcnling !he \\' c st c r n Unilcd States in the · competition. The fcst1\'<.il 11 l!I , include three days of clinics .,.,·i1h profcssion.:il musicians. " I THaATR•S .• · DRIV•·IN 9CINR SWA, ll•lln H~JllOR ILVO. Ori••·ln 'J>-p MMt & Allf•S....... .,.I.I $11,.,-ll"' I04JHll ~ANG• DrlYe·ln t I 2 ,"11..S•l..I S1111.-l1m 104p111 ""1lrt1S.1M11,,11 ... ..._ S••••~• :•! F•mllr Fun~ '!~llt1l e•re•in1 Qelor•! &·-'·····~ !il,·6212 -· -• IOlllT L UllNfZJ' ~ WHIRi THI LILIES ILOC* fll • :;fANTAITIC l.A.Htt 110 l"'D••!•I ._,., . ., .... h 1 1 ••• '"" ... ' 1 1 ••• 171·1M2 rtu'l SIU!JI lllf AMHIC• .. ClltAfflTI "" THIY SHOOT HOISIS OOH'T THN · • . - • DAil Y PILOT B 7 Actor James Caan Is an Urnan Rustic On the scTeen. as Sonny in the $ I ~ 2 mllllon·grossing "God.father," or as the dying f'oolba ll hero in TV '& Enuny· \\'inning "Brian's Song ,'' or, nlOrc rceentl y, as lhe Bill y Budd.Uh sailor in "Cinde rella l.iberty," J:unes Ca::u1 appears to be enormous.· burly. and jocundly rock·ribbed. But v.•hen he ansy,•ers lhc doorbell of the first house he's ever owned in 30 years or living in a not·very·big wuy. James Ca an (pronounced "Khan", as in Kubla 1 is a rather din1inutivc five-fool-ten, and not h.11lr the Trojan ont expects . IT'S HIS language lhat is chesty, and his good-hunored arrogance that puts muscle on his framc. lle's slim, taut, and "split up as ·high as a '{'exas COY.'boy." v.•hicl'r is what he play-acts "'hen he'g not ;1 mov ie star. lie sn1ilcs insouciantly ;ind offers blunt bread-and butter Introductions to his live-in brother. Ronn lc, and to his rooinmate for 1hc 1i.ast three years, former P 1 a y b o y centerfo ld C(lnn.ie Kresk i. l·lis broadside •·I n1eans" and "You kno\\·s·• sound like bronchial telegruphese. ll1s unfinis hed sentences a r e p u n ct u a t e d with !he hac kneyed profanity of honest rebellion. while the frequent, nice guy laughter has a patina of genlle war mlh. James C'..:ian is t ha t paradoxical hun1an product of American consumeris1n :--lhe urban rustic. llOT FROhl the lucky break of appearing in bolh ''The Godfather" and · ' B r i an 's Song" in one year. he has just fin ished three films in nine n1onths. two of the1n -"The Gambler" and "Freebie and the Benn" - still up.released. He's no\v in the enviable position of being able to turn dO\\'TI scripts. for alt hough he enjoys acting. it's his business. In the raw Rex Reed not his life. As a business, acting can only buy him the leisure time to do what he likes to do best. Sometimes. what he likes to do best is nothing. Other times , !\1ew York's M r e et· wise Jimmy is twirling a rope over a runn ing calf froin high up on a 1'exas quarter h<lrse in the strictly American. b o n e • crushing game called rodeo. Jaines Caan has signed to co-star \\'ilh the only million dollar box office female star in the United States, Barbra Streisand. in a sequel to '·funny Girl'' called "Funny l.ady." "Yeah. it kind looks like I'm gOMa be in a musical. I ah•tays preached I'd do so1nething different each pict ure, and now I gotta go ahead and do it, don't I? I'm playing Billy Rose. from my own age to 50 or so. Though Billy Rose was an in te resting character. not too many people know what he looked like. "I CAN 'T y.•a!t to work with Streisand. I turned down a not her Godfather-type gangster part for a lot of bread lo do 'Funny Lady.' "Lots of actors just do the same thing over and over. . afraid to cluu1gc 1hc formu la. Th~y just sell out. I gotta fight that. Actor$ let dollars and cents rul e their U\•es. l 'm always out to l1e different .. l'''i beco an Irishman with a brogue. an Italian heavy -f \1'3!'1 even a retarded football player with a metal plate in his skuU in 'The Rain People.' \Vorking wltlw>ut a script is all part of Caan's technique as an actor. }le likes to read the script first. then never re!er to it again, What he docs best is n1in1ic th~ .beh avior . speech and manneris1ns of s o m e o n ~ closest in . real life to the cha racter he's playing, for ''The G o d father . ' · he be!riend.xl 1he closest thine to the so:i: of a mafiosi 'padrone' he could find. In 'The Gambler.' I copied the professor's character from the au thor. James 1'oback. because I knew I~ scrip1 was autobiographical. He w a ~ loaded with physical and vocal ... lies. To me all that anguish he ¥GI from gambling w1:1s m(lre important than bow • "ell l spoke the English language. "And ln 'Freebie and the Bean ,' it ,1·a,s easy io !ind a Jarcenous cop to m i mi c . Listen. Tell )'Our cOp readers ·1•m just kidding." He uses the same talent for mimicry when he ropes in rodeo!'I. ''l always loved h(lrses and I just y.·atdled' champion rider work ou t, and thougb I have no Idea what J'rn doing -ya knO\v? -r just ape all his moves, and hell! I just do it. I ride mostly quarter. horses, which are trained for either calVes or steers, though a lotta horses nevc1· learn anything 'cause a horse is really stupid. Uh . : . apologize -"'NO SCRIPT" J ames Caan to your horse readers too . l l.:iJll:lilfi!lz:B:kfki~ ""'iilya? IP" ··\\'hat I like n1ost about 1 rodeos is the atmosphere. The! rough-and-ready li\'ing. The. outspoken. truthful JX.'<>Pll' "'ho say exactly V.'hat they 1nean. ·• -. MEW SAMURAI • A CTI OM I "ZATOICHI" Th• I/ind Swordsll'IOn .... SAMURAI HIT Circus Comes to Valley Cinco Fiesta Eugene o,.r1iandy To Conduct at VCI o... c o-.l'Uft """' ...... '"'' l.•CH .,.....,. -l:N ,,... ALL Sf.AT!. -S2.00 Lions, tigers and elephants -all friendly. or course - y.•jlJ tn(lve into Fountain V;il!cy l\1onday and Tuesday for a circus sponsored by t h c Fireman's Association. Tents for the three-ring circus \\'iii be set up in the vacant lot on the east side of Fountain Valley ~lospita l al \Varner Avenue and Euclid Street. Elephants will be used to •' '"'·' ~.,.., z,zt WILL CiUR ;, ··s1LEHCE" I~! fOUNIAIH VAUfl •• n ·~· "SERPICO" ... " ''KLUTE" H ! ' "Fh•t S........ Storie•" 5moVie.. 11-Y'"c:. ~ Re<ood c::11 *e Mesa Tt.eoir" Tree ....,.,. be i.ome 1eo'o" ,lor 1h,, Iii"' """""" MIW O•ft'-1 Wnk ()My w.,· 1-7-MeM n..tr. Htw,.n&...__. Co1t1~ 17141141-ISSZ Mey 2·5-1119·1 l eoctll HI w.Ml A..t. 62S Pewit Ave~I. Skwtl ........ :00,...... ... .-.~.sa Don1M·<1 tho""l. ' ~· -I I l I i s ... 1.1 .l'rk• ,.,,. •• 11•• ,,..., (ll•C .. , '"'·'-.I +llll-1 II .ff hoist lh(' poles !\1 on day n10rning in preparation for showtimc. y.·hich is at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. OOth days. The pcrfonnances "'ill also feature \Vhite horses with bare back riders. tightrope 1,1·a\kers. trapeze artists. a ringmaster and clOY.'nS. all ,·ia George Matthe.,.,·s' Great L o ndon Circus fro1n r..·lartincz. A mld1vav 11·ith :i. number Qt carnival r.idrs and booths wi11 open an hour before sho1\1imes each day. HOW PLAYING CHARIOTS OF THE •ODS? TECHNICOL~ ~ !lll!b¥5'J1Wt<rillwl ~IOll$~C "FANTASTIC PLANET" • • lotti Ill CoCor !GI Wttk HMJhh- Plo1ttf-7 & I 0:05 Choriotl-8:20 Sot. & S- "-1-J:40.6:4S.9:SS Choriot1-2-S:OW: 10 1'ic~ets for the circus are $3.5-0 fo r adults and $2 for At Center children. A representative of the In the mood for Mexican In celebration or the 20th Fireman's Associaticln in music? anniversary of the Orange v 11 td h County Philharmonic Society. 1''ountain a ey sa t at a Join the day.Jong CiflCO de the w 0 r J d -a cc Jaime d number of the Tuesday tickets M I b 1· t ••-Los ayo ee e ra ions a uie. Phlladelphia Qr chest r .a , have already been sold. An I '! · Cc t Plaza ge es " ustc n er l\faestro Eugene Ormandy The association is splitting today. conducting, will play a !he profits of the circus with Entertainment will be "Benefit For Youth" roncert ~1atthe\\'S. 'ded b I t and prov1 Y e emen ary at UC Irvine's Crawfo rd Hall, Thcrdfire 1 mcdn:s share \\'ill eo 1 high S<:hool students from at 7:30 p.m. Friday. ?\fay 31: to1va s un 1ng se ver a East side of Los Angeles. The musical event will charities. j n c I u ding a Appear;•g on an outdoor ... benefit Hoag item or i a 1 scholarship fund at local high stage before the ?-.1 u sic schools. boys clubs. and the Centtr's Pavilion Y.i ll be Hospital'.& Pedia~·i~ Unit ahd Salvation Army and Orange Garfield High Schoo I , s lhe Ph1lhannoruc s . Free-to- -Conn1y-Medicat·ec.nter. .,.lafflii!lg -Bahd -·ii:t-9,.~outh_~s Wll.ch _,h.!'!t_ The firemen in th e Roosevelt High will present reached ...ren o~er ~.000 from !he Ballet. "Daphnis £: Chloe,'' and Syn1phony No. 2 in 0 major, Op. 73 by Brahms. The supper dansant i s included V.'ith all main floor concert sca t tickets at S25. "Gold Circle" tickets at $100 include reserved seats and reserved parking. Balcon;.r seats at $6' for general adtnl~ and $5 fo, students. are for ftie concert only. Tickets are available at the Orange County Philharmonic office, 201 W. Coast }!igh\\·av. New}lOrt Beach. -92600, or -bv calling 64U411. · 2Ac .... y Award Winners! "PAPER CHASE"IPGI ... "CINDERELLA LIBERTY" Ill hthl nC OIW --- association have given away Mexican style to J k I 0 r i c Orang~ County children lll 536 some tickets to students at cntertalriments at 9 : 3 O . co~ s . H dn' ,----------------------- Plava n School in Fountain followed at 10 a.m. bv the program ~s ay . s \1alley and to the Keyettes. a mariachi ci Griffith ju:tior Symphony ~o. 88 in G maJor. girls service group a t High School. Kenned y TheRe .Fhio~nRatams 1, (lf "·~temNe b~ Fouatain Valley High School. Elementary School w i 1 J· sp1g . ve s "'" o. "' It plans to take needy children present entertainments a t'r~~~~~~;;;~;;;~ to the circus. 10:30 a.m. Oilieis will follow . r' - -• ·i •• SrADIUM I .· .. ~·.l.l=•D<:.!..• _.,._. ___ L .. STAO!Ultf ·? .... ..... .._,.,,., ! • .Ji/:.:.:• • ---·'--·~~· STADIUM J ,;'. • A.'.ll.l"I •.'..J;I.'. '• -·" -.... STAO!Ultf 4 " "' .. ~1>·1•..J c:.J.oJ • ... ''FANTASTIC Pl.ANH" IPGI loi..rt l-4f1rtl -Ml1 F•trow "THE GllAT GATSIY' IPGI "ALICE IN WONDllUND" ... "CHARLIE AND THI ANGIL" CG I ''THE STING" IPGJ ... "CHAllll'. YAl•ICl" IPCil "PAPILLON" IPGJ ... "FIST FULL OF D'f~AMnl" IPCil ''THE CONYllllATION .. (~~ .. .... "SUIPll.. i PS J ... J.Q .. ----- .... .:.::. ---- * IN CONCERT * BURT BA CHARA CH Pio~ Suppo1hnq i'\c! FRI., MAY 17 ' 9,30 p.m. Tic kels: SB.SO. 7,50. 6.50. 5.50 ~ ~4#/M CONVE NTION ~ ~IJ CENTER IOO ._,., lo•ollo a .... •~••••~. (olllo•••• Tickets on sale.at: Anaheim Conv. Center Box Office All Ticketron, Mulual. L1berty-Wallichs Agencies. Also~ U C B Orange Countv. Send Mail Orders to Convenhon Center Box Olhoe ' " · 800 W. Katella ... Ana heim, Calif. 9280~ Please enclose stamped . sell·adclressed Envelope SILENCE ROIKRT MWMAN RfDfORD ROBfRT6HAW ~t1/Matttl ProdUClioal ' .• where the lilies bloom sr" 11111NO Wlll GEER 'C""'4ndp~ Wal•o1\ .UI ... -•~Nt.or>tt•"'""'"''-'" "°)'GI 2nd At Botk Cin~mos '"CHARIOTS OF THE GODS'" H AltAC11-f -· __ ........ MJ.O -NT IO- --·· ,_."' ltJ-7511 STAlkC.......\lltto • .... WW.. Mii .,..,., ........ , ·-. ~ ... .. NEVER GtVI! A SAGA AH EVEN HEAK" ,.. .... .Al ......... 0,... "ffl"'""" "11 CHAIRS" 11 Gt01G( D0v Hilt fll' I THf6TIN6 P'lllfObl..t.flCI SCHtDUl.f M-, t.,._, Wff~ TI!on.-1:1S.t:ll J.!Ny -6:4 .. t •OO.l 111S \.+ .. S--IJ:OO.l:l ... 4:lM:4 ... t : ... 11·1• -<•~· '~' wn~••m,.••-2 en..:1• ::Jl\l:.\~"2·4tU WESTMINSTER AT G0i.OENW£f.T a. -·--lt2-44tl ltl-7511 ·--... 14 7-t•o• ..... --.-.,. .. - " •• .,~ .... '" 1., •• '""' ... ~"'"""'" ·-·~·M .,.;.,.......,.,......'.>., _., R<<>~""' .. '" ''Jiiiffj''. ~·, ••••• . . . . . . .. .• ' ' ~ : :• ' . ' ' ""llOI "' ...... o •7t-4141 97t-4456 converiot.on. Ii·~ tulen" Ofl 011eqvolled. I hl!y·vo olrl!ody been rtlpOnllbl. for th•H 'l!order1 , .. _,_,,_., <iene Hockman . ,,. • r-., "The COIWISdlon" ~,_,.·~·cw- ... ,,. J11 0... ....... tlll .......... AIKtitncts n standing up . and ............ ' • ,...._ .. ,.._,, fllft.. WM., fhr•. o,.~ .. 6:00 -"-• 1:00.t:JO ~rl -l:IO.t:Z0· 11:10 ~' J:OO f "•., •o .. •~o• ,. .. ••: !ow., l.00 4:J0-6:M :I · : 4:IO·~:so t'.JO.H:•o :' ••I : •:11 !II !., .. •" .'!!:\t:a '•• . .,:: M•~•o~ •• •-"•·c"'""''' .. _ ..... , ...... __ ,.... • - 8 8 DAILY PI LOT Sunday f;f,111 5, 1q74 Horsemen Find County Ha~ Many Happy Trail·s Bv TO'I i\lcCA\'S of 11\t 0•11'1 ,.1111 llllf Take 1nos1 ridt"tor.fun h ir~, µoopl!' to the \1indm1ll corr:il area ol the nev.• Starr . Virjo County P:1rk told S1:.rr Bauch\ and !hey'rl prob3t1ly lhink lht:.Y died and 11cnt 10 a hol':)C lo,·cr's hl'a1·c11. Al least until lh<' 11orr) gets around nnd tiH' in1·:i~ion be;iins. 1hic; eo11 country o(>('n space off Ortega ll1)!h11 ay cast of 5iln Juan Capis1r:u1r1 11·111 tx· one of the best rides to be tnund in Orange Count}'. 1t is. ho11 c1·1"r. tar frorn being the only ride for Orange C-0ast nrca horse ov.·ncrs or renters. Tr:iils and otht'r spaces on 111hich horses arc allov.·ed lo set hoof can be lound 1n '>u'tually 1111 p:in.-; of !he Orange L'oast. You jusl h:1vc 10 kno1v \\'here lo li.:ok. 1'hc eoun:y itst'lf h;1~ pl'u\ idcd n1uch ot lhc riding: Sj>.'.lCC. IT l\"CLUOES more 1h:ln 20 miles of lt•vrc rr111! al(1ng lhC' :-i<111\;1 :\na Hi\'cr bt•111c·cn '.\C\l'J)('lr! l\(\u:·h and I ht ll untington Bcach-Fo11n1;iin Valley nrca plus ano!hcr stretch nr n1orc lhan fl\"C 1niles along the San Juan Ci·tck Jcvet in the Capislrano Valley. Both of the~ tra il!'! are under Jurisdiction of the Orange County fo'lood Control District and are accessible. !'lupPrintend ent for lhl· cou111y, hin1srlr n residrnt ul !)an Juan C:1pL~t ru110 and ;1 ho rseman. furthermore t•O\\'S he \\'ill keep the \\ ildl•rnts1' 11-.pct·t vi tlll'. arcn •1' in ln('t a" po.~sih!<: It 's a \'1)\1 shar£>0 hr the lll'u rll'.'11 rtk>~t responsiblf' lur c:irr.\ ing ii out The p<1 rk range rs. Tony 1 ;lrn brone nnd Chark·s l.uc;1s. both horsl·tn en. :ire conunltt{'d 1u kctping thi· hor~i.>bnl'k 'istas 01 th1~1r 1err1torv as unclutt ered 111 the fu\Ufl' ;1' the\' \1·Cre on the fir~t ct;·1 ~ llic nc11· P•ll f. o~ncd just last n1onth . · • Pl~A1'"S Allfo: 10 lin1it use of 1he arl'a S('l aside for equestrians ICa n1pground "D"1 lo 50 t1\11Jcr un11s-JOO horses at a time. Th: :ire~ ea~i\~· <,:111 accon11ncdatc lh"t 1na11y hor$~·~ and rig~. It co11~i:-.1s ol ;1 "gr:1nd ccrra!"" hud 1 l:\' lhl' p;1rk 's en.:\ a!vn•!.;;ir!c 111·n td t!1u ~l ·~rr· H:incli's ul~I 11·ind1nitls 1\l11ci1 h1vc been put b:ick inttJ ~l'rVICt• •)nl' 11 iniJrnill pu1np~ fron1 a 350.fool 1\ell v.hich is l'Xpcch'd 10 fLu11i ~h 41or •1· 1\alcr :1!1 sun11111•r Ion~. The other \11.'ll rnny ro dry. al'cordi n:! 10 Cardel lo. iJ thl' seaso n has a Jong drou~t -as expcc!C'd. \o 11·atcr clcartd bv htalth oHicials tor lniman consurnp1ion ·i:; availabk· in 1ht· camping <irca. 11ark crc1\·n1cn cr1u1ion. and no opt.•n firrs nre pcnnittcd. generally speaking, front ;:iny road or ~ PARKl~G OF trailers and pitching of high\va:v crossing the river or creek camp3 in dcsignared areas only are rules ch;:inncls. that 11·ilt be rigidly cntorccd. promised Tilc riv er !rail can be ridden all the Cardello. lfc even chases d:iy use l\OY rrom the ocean to a point just picnickers off lhc feeder root s of lhe dO\\TIStrcam from the count y's Featherly park's trees. Regional Park in Santa Ana Canyon. From the \\'ind111ill corral area. MOST AREAS OF THE COUN· TY OFFER SOME OPEN SPACE FOR TRAIL RIDING BY HORSE FANS. INSERTS SHOW STARR ·VIEJO RE · GIONAL PARK AND O'NEILL REGIONAL PARK, WHERE EXTENSIVE LAND IS SET ASIDE FOR RIDERS AND THEIR F 0 UR . F 00 TED FRIENDS . ~IVIRSI~( ..':) M11ntin&lon ..,. C' . Stach 'I· I C' .-·-·-..? \'. l ' . '"' j I \ ( I I · ' . ..,. , I '-• ..1 ·~· I . I • I I . , ---~ I ...... , ! •) J • I I I . \ WlllDMIH.........:: ' .) I \ COlllll ./ ~ • I ; . l ) J. . ~~ ... '•• ,, lllCIOl\,\l Pf.llK I ' i llORS£ 1100,\LS But it's in two other Orange Coa.st arc~ horselll('n have acceS! to 10 ta 15 nllles of county parks that horse riders can really · 1n1provcd trails. 5ome of \\·hich 1vill be !urn 00\\'boy. signed for hikers m~ equestrians befor(' O'i\'eill Park. in 1'rabuoo CanyC1n sum1ncr's end . northeast of El Toro, has a rental stable, A'lany horsertlcn visiting the old ranch Rent-a~horse Services Abundant ~ • ' ' • an .cqUest riati camPillg area arid a 1rail. -aisocan ro1101v the ~·gra:<>ve''-lTiade bx-- Other trail and ridihg areas surround the cowboys and cattle durn1g the area 's park. many years as a ,,·orking cattle ranch. A caution. hO\\'CVer. goes along \\'ilb na~:gcr c:i~bron~ i:w:iinted out. . the trail inside the park. It's strictl y for five n1a1or trails 1n the new p.'.lrk \\"Jll Px pcrienced horses ;ind horsenten : the c:irry horS<'men into so1nc of the n1ost trail is narro\\· and \Vinds along the spine scenic OOW1try of South Orange County. In case you never thougri,t of leasing a late 1nodel horse. \\'ith option to buy. thafs only one of the deals available to the ocacasional horse rider in the Orange' Coast area. of a ridge for much or ils es1imated 7-. One. ride t~ out on a ridge \\i lh a mile length (including the loop at its simultaneous view of Saddleback Peak. end-see map J. the lO\\TIS of S..'ln Juan Capistrano and Capistrano Be<1ch \\"ith ("on a clear day"l San Clemente Island showing on th<' \restcrn horizon above an expanse of ,'ipnrkling Pacific Ocean. 1·11 E OTHt:R count ~· Jlark riding area-and currentl ,v the gern of them a.II bccau::.e of its ··untouched"' qualities-is 1he ~.50()..ac:rc por!ion o! the old Starr Hanch reccnlly acquired hy the county tor park use. Both 0\1·ncrs and renters of horses often rind themselves looking for the place v.·here they can spend an hour or l\1'0 on horseback l\'ithout lea,·ing ho1nc. so to speak. in the Ornnge Coast area. These are some of the nlac:es: S1\NTA ANA RIVER -The levees and adjoining land parcl•ls scattcreU along the Santa Ana River lron1 approxin1atcly First Street in Santa Ana t o .Joe Cardello. parks op c r a 1 ions Sun1mcr season fees range fr om 50 cints per car for day use to ·~ per campsite for overnight use ~Qlle \"ehicle l and $1 µer additional vehicle. 11 pproximately Ta lbert Avenue in , Honeymooners Few JVia gara Fulls Draius Jl1ostl.J· Faniilies ~ By ~1 L:RRA't' J . CRO\VN Uniled''rH1 lnl•r1111,.n11 Time "·as. in ,.,. or d association games, "Ni:igar.1 Falls·· \\'Ou\d J?Cncrally evoke a response or ··honeymoon." For the falls on I h c boundar~· of the rnlted States and Canada ";as the mecca f o r cou1ltle~s AmC'rican ne\\'lyweds f o 11 o ,,.. i n g a tradition historians said dated back to 1803. when Napoleon Bonaparte·s younger brother .Jerome brought his Baltimore· born bride there. But ti111cs. and people, have changed as I learned during il recent visit. TODA''· '\lith an cstin1ated 10 n1i11ion vi sitors annually. !he falls are ob1·iously a pri1nc Reel 1rood.~ Line Route One a1>proa ch to l:::xpo ·ii in SpokaJlC next sun1mer is !hrouhg one of 1\rnerica·s bt~t -kno1111 n:r1ura1 display.~. th(' ncchwmd 1·:n1p1rc. This 4:l<l·m11l· )>1ft•tch nf north\1·fl~l<'rn C'al1torn1.1 ;1 11 d !)OUt\'l\\('Stern Or··con 11ifl l'K' a favored route to Expo. \1·tyich run s fro n1 :.l ay through Octu· bcr anfl is f'Xpl'ctcd 1(1 11ttr11c;1 ri\'C 1n i!Hon 1·isitors. Expo ·74 i~ :td\·er1i~ec1 as the first \\'arid'~ ~,air on the cnvlrOnmC'nl, :ind 11Je rrgioo of the gi;in! red\\oocl<: ha1-long been fameri ris an cn\•1ron- mcntal g<'1n. atlr~ction to more th a n hon ey Ill o one rs . Recent surveys by tourism Niagara . Inc.. disclosed !hat f:in1ily groups (1vith an avera;c of 4.8 nrembcrs 1 comprise th e largest single srgn1enl of visit.ors. with ne\\-·lyweds far down the List. The first guidebook t o i\iagara Falls, published in 1829 by the minister of the falls' Fi r s t Presbyterian Church, stated thnt "the fa shionable, the opulent and the learned congregate here fron1 the principal C'itics of th e C.S., from South A1nerica . tJ1e \\'c~t Indies. the Can;:idas. all parts of Eu rope and indeed from all countries.'' Their descendants are slill coining:. Ret.'Cnt poll s amon g forC'ign visilors by the U.S. r)(>partmPnt Of C.onlmCrCC li~t Nia~ara f alls a strong third bl•hind i\e1v York City and !Jisnf'rland as a tour is t attraction TllE FfRST "'hitc man to see the falls \Vas Father Louis Henn epin. a French mf~sionary-explorcr. in 1678. Ht~ 1\'as so O\'cra\l·ed that he \1·rore lh<'y ;ippeared tn be t1hou t 600 feet in hei ght. Attually they arc ouly about one·third as high. but around 200,000 cubic .fcect 1>er second ot 1ra1cr thunderin~ do1\·n sheer precipices 1s a n ovell\1lcln1ing sight. On.i of the better paranomic view~ is from atop the 282· foot-high Prol'lpc.oct Park tower For closer looks at the Aineric:in Falls and I he Canadian Horseshoe Falls, !here arc the ~laid of the )fist trip. \\'hil'h sails virtually under the cascading w<1lers. and th e Cal'e o! th 1., \\lintls trip. whic:h end s at hurricane deck in the spray of the roa ring cataracts. Slickers are provided. There arc other anrnctions. too. \Vithin 1valking distance of the. falls is the aquarium .,,,·ith nlore than ~.000 creatures or the seas. including performing acrobatic dol phins. The museum is located in the Carborundum Co r fl. headquarters. the rirsl of thP ne1v slruclures that have risen i11 the do11•ntO\\'ll area as p:Jrt of the <'ity·s $2QO n1Hlion R.anro\I' Center rehabllitatiorl progra.111. The focal point. is lhc S-t3 million. 12.000-seat inter- national center opened in January. About five 111itcs north or thP city. the largest hydroelcc1ric fncllitv in the \\'csl rc:1 turcs a TI1om3s Harl Benton 1nural of lhc disco11ery of the fall s, a diorama of rhc n1nin power plant :ind a !'i\\·ccping: \·iew of the gorge fr nrn lhe JlOWer vista obs<:r\'R!ion b11ilding. C.'tnada is only ;:i five-minute stroll acroc;s nainho'v Bridge froni dO\\'nlo\\·n i\ia1-tnra Falls. Crossing is no problcn1 for U.S. citizens. A 1n c r i ca n s visiling canada for less than -t8 hoors are allowed to bring home up . to $10 "'·ontt of purchases free ol duty. F'or more than 48 hours the duty- frce allowance is $100. British Becls Do11 't il1eus u1·e l ip LONOO:-\ ! L:'PI 1 -If you'rr nlore than 6 feet tall. lo0k out when you come to Hr 1ta1n. \'ou m.ay suffer from an attack or col d fl'<'t becau1,e chances are your hale l l)f"<I 1.s 100 am.:111. That's why .a n of!iC'ial of tht• Drit·Jsh 1rot cl $ 1111(1 R~tauranls Assn . advil'led tall~r than averagt v\~ltors 10 order n double bed and sletil diaKOMllY a<:T0'5 IL "Rully It I! th• ooly •ay." ,.. ..... The plight or 6-rooiers and plus came to li ght when a 6· fO('lt·S.inch Cani:idin n hnd to squeeze into a 6.(oot·3 single bed In a rece nt stay In l..oodon and pa id $3.1 n night for the priviltgc. J.fe satd his feet go! Cf'lfd sric·k!ng 7 inches out or th (' l'nd (If thc~bccf. Ii Br ili~h friend or hL<>. ,/oseph Erhl'ards. co1npl;:iined to tour1'1 of(ichd~. They t'Qflfes.:st'd thf're was uute they could do r>'<C'<'PI advise doublr: bro11 and a diai:onal slcci1lng po~i11nn They s.tiid the problem was the. aticrage biggest British hotel bed is only abc'iut 611 feet long. A poll l('Ading Mtels showed different solution~. The Savoy seid it has speclally lonf? bods for speciany long ,ilUC!'il!i. The 1-lillon r.•ld ii p1'ufrrrcd I h ,. dingrrno l doublr:" an.~cr. 'People arc getllng taller. ,\iaybc ii is llmc t h c lx'tlmakers looked at people's ! heights agai n," said l h t 1 spokc.'!man. • ' TRAVEL County Prof Pla11s Ex1>0 (:e r err1onies A California State Fullerton theater profl'S.<;Or has been sc1ected as art director for opening day ceremonies of Expo ·7.\ \\'oriel's Fair ill Spoka ne. \Vash. D\\'ight Richard 0 d I e, associate professor of !healer and a profes sion:tl set ~nd costume d:!sisner. \\'ill be respons ible for lhc cntlre \•1sual a1>rc:irancc of the. ccrcrnonlcs. "'hich \\'as to be nat ionally telct1ised Sat urdny, Featured. in the ccrc1nonics. v.-·hich \Vl're tn focus on a 35- by 50-foot floating stage in thC south channel of the Spokane River. were the natioo 's First Lady, Pat Nixon , and ent ertainer Danny Kaye, as \\'ell as ambassadors and distinguished gu~ts from 10 nations. Odle, a Fullerton r<!.!ldent, \\'Orked with I.he Spokane l"loral Assn. and a $2$.000 budget to arrange fresh ctdar ga rlanding. ntore lhan 300 Oo\\·crinsi: plRnls 1111d eigh t l;:irge no.1ting gardens to express the lair's the.me,! '" Ce I ebrating Tomorrow's! Fresh New Environment.·· LAWSON & CAOAR, ltd. tl.&.l'*I If~ CW•ltfClft, e<>LIMeML•tll W' b~, •1111 l•fl lot .. ')~ et.11••11C .. I Oii r>.l""'IOt•~ ,.., '°"" al t111 _,,.. 111..,.. ''"'0' '"fl •l>f(lfe:i' ~,..,,,_ Jo()IOI Ol'lllf • arv£usACAU.' '-•c~1... r.o .... ,,,, I I 11 '•"" I C_, _, 0.-,.. C.t.. •1111 lllll 1ll•lt-11 lllJI l ... ltl,!_ • • . ' Fou111ain V;11le\1 offl'r rrn1als ::ind rides. JR \'INE EQi."ESTHIA:\ CE\T'EH -Off Pacific Coasl lli~h\\·ay in Corona d('I ~lar. this is one of the 0 r :1 n g ~· Coasrs biggest horse o~ra:ions. For S2 iwr horse and SI per traill'r. \lrivn tc 0\1Tiers can brin g tht•ir O\ITI anin1ats.and tnili?.e 200 acres or riding area. inl'luding a trail do\1'n lh<' face or the coastal palis;ide 10 ride on the beach. horses a1 the Cf'nrcr or in .. rid1»ynu r· 01\'11 .. horscrnen \1·ho ti·ailcr· th('ir n1ou111s 10 the center, ~I lles ot bavk countr' 1rail drc 01)(11 to• L.,k,• i"ll!'e'\I riclC'rS. . : • rr~EI LI. l'AHK -llental hcrse" for: LAKfo'. FOREST SAllOl.1-: t I.~ ·1:-,\r'1I' !he inh•rsection nf Trabuc.:i ;11l<I l~t ·ru•o rnads. !hi~ facilit v 1nah11;1i11~ a rr>n1:1l string or approxifnately 25 horses ror "on·your-0\\1f' riding at SJ Iler hour gu1dl·:I irad ridec; arl' :il':lil::illlr from a! 11ri1";1!t• conc£'s:-.1onai rr on Li\"<' O.:ik: t.::.nyhn Ro:1d i sec phone bQok ). ! Equ('"t rians <'an use d ~sign a t e d: <»1n1pi11~ :1re;1 '' ilhin lhc park for day use• (,r 01<•rniµh1 stn~s and hav•' aC'ccss to: A st ring of 50 r<'nlal ho~l'S is kl·~t avaHablc. nt $3.50 per hour . l11r "on-~'Otl !"- 0\1·n·· riding :.inyv.•here in lhc t'\Jntcr·s acrragl' on th e ocean side or th1· hi gh\\·ay---exccpt for 1hC' bt·:.tl'h. 11·hich is oµE'n only to 01\·ncrs \1 ho boJrd their I .a ke Forest h:ls the ll':lSl.'-<J·hnrsc pl:1n 11'hich offers t\\'O basic: prnµro1r11!'---.... 1'l per 1nonth for use of ;1 h•lr~c 1or :l:! 1\·eckdny hou rs C'ach 111011\h or ~5~1 rur exclusive use ol yo ur f:i\o•i:l' ilu1·~e 1•11 \1·eekends. You i:ilso ha \'1' the i1pt 1t111 to bu~· ~·our n1ount after trying hi.-, out •nr a\rhilC'. :::':;;1111:';:~;~t1ly ~\l'I\ n1ilcs of 1rail with-: 1.EISl Bl ·: \\'VIII.I) STAHt ES-F.asHv: 111" l1·:1<;l 1 ·.~1x·u~i1·1· hors e ride to be round: i:1 1h · Or1111·:'' ('(1;1~t {lr('<i j:i; Leisure: \\'..,r 1d'~ ~cnt b'Uid{"<I tr:lil nde (lo~ rc,1d\•11ts only 1 Travel Prices V p Even i1-i JJ1 exico By STAN DELAPLANE IiONOl..ULU -Blue sk y days in .. the lo11eli1.:i.:t flf'cl of islands anchored in any ocean." !l ~'i sh rd said that. ~l ark 'l'wain said it first.) t\ot cheap. But air fares getting here arc - $224 round trip fro1n the \\'est Coast if you fly r.londay through 'J'bursday. ·rhcre·s a cheaper youlh fal'c. ll igh cost of Jiving abrna.d is boosting vaca· tions lo ~l a\vaii. ~Icxico and Canada over the t:urope ran1blc. Japanese flood the islands -cheaper for thc1n than taking J\lama-san to the Japa nese seashore. lloncy1noon excursions to Guan1 cost Japanese less lhan \1:eekending at Atami, th e beloved hot springs outside Tokyo. A1nericans. already smashed by hon1e prices of hamburger and gas. don't find ba.rg:ains overseas.. Even ~lexico is up. Our Can1per !\Ian in l\lexico writes: '·Beans jun1ped last year 100 percent. Chicken's 1nore expensive than the US.\. Gasoline, 64 cents a gallon. \Ve found three n1arkings on a bottle of l\tex- ico run1 showing price increases wh ile it sat on the shelf: Jlesos 37.50: then 42 .50; fi nal marking. 50 pesos. That's $4 U.S. Used to be $1.50." Trailer parks all raised prices. \Vaterfronl park in l\lazatlan charges S75 a 1nonth. \\'Ill raise it to $120 next year. Or sooner. • • • "We can only take our vacation in the summer so will it be too hot in the Caribbean? How about rain? Hu rricanes?" I spent a s111nn1cr 1nonth in a houSe outside Alontego Bay in .Jan1aica. I dicln ·t find it too hot. TI1at's the north side of the island. Gets a fresh trade wind. Al so grounds the biting bugs. If yo u i::et into a place without breeze on the shore. you're bound to get the "no-~ee-ums·• that ca n fly right through sc reen 1nesh in for1nations of six. llurricane se.'lson J uly through September. Puts ;:i fringe of rain ;:ill around the edgcii but it's refreshing. rtain's usually tropical bursts -hea\'y for ;:i ha lf hour and then it's over. ('aribbe:?.n rrices fall off :I third in the sum1ncr. Though a th ire drop from the out.Jandish. winter prices doesn't mean you'll save enough to get rich. Best bets are the villas-for-rent with cook included. It'~ eating in hotels three thnes a day that murders you. • Stay away fro1n popular cruise ship to\vns like St. Thonlas in the \'lrgin.s. "Sometimes as m&ny as --Roi and Ruth La.mpe announce the opening of ~ BROOKHURST TRAVEL ~ ~ Tic~eting & Reservations ··· -UNITED -No Sorvice Char!!" AIR • CRUISE • RAil • LAND TOURS • GROUPS • Brookhurst·Adom• Center 10036 Adams Ave. Huntington Bc!och @ 963.3366 962·3345 three cruise ship.s unload l.:iOO people on five blocks ul 111:un :-.Lrcct. It's 1111t rc.~tlul. • • • ,. "We like a little night life but a less crowded beach than Wai kiki.,." Ka:u1apali .bcar h on ~l :iu i has good hOtels with -,• night ~hu\\'S. :\nd you can go do\\'ll to l.21laina town 111 hair an hou r. ('uJo rfuJ and !-thackr bul modified for the lourist trade. Sevc1·a1 good ~hops and bars With lllll SIC On Kaanap:a[i beach . the Roya l Lahalna has rottages "'ilh s111all kitchens. ital\ ou1 of bed and 111to the ocean.) ,\ ~nlall gourn1e1 store attached to the hotel. Four restaurants for n1other's night out. .. . ... "Whal do they mean in the ad s 'villa for re nt'?" Any house in reso11 areas or Europe and the t'aribbean is a .. villa." Like any resort hou se in French Canada is a ;,cha\el." rve seen some real 1.:racker boxes for re~1t under these attractive names. Se,·cral ILS. overseas rental fir111s have bro· rhures. But even so. it's a dicey proposition. Pie· lures don't gi\"C you the three·di111ensionaJ t•iew that walking: in and seeing: if the toilet flu shes does. On one "villa " I lu rked into ~0 111ething grand. On anothrr -san1c con1pa ny. s:i n1e price. same area -it v.·as di s1n:i.I. Often the LI ... fir1n is taking the listin g rro1n an overseas fir111 an d simply lack· 111 a fat con1111issio n ... "'1.n ... top----- lf you can chance il. go to the area you wanl and deal \Vllh a LOCAL agent. If southern Spain, get a guarantee 1he roof 1von't leak. In the Carib· bean. check for biting. flyh1g bugs. In ll'lexico, see if the plun1bing works. CRUISE TI:IE INSIDE PASSAGE AND ToUR CANADA &ALASKA. £. Sec ~r11.·ctacular Glacier ll:1y :..nd the breath- 1:.king bc;1u1y of the Inside Passage from 1hc n"IOSl luxurious cruise ~hips sailing 10 Canada and Alask:1, the Nol'\\·egian·rcgis1crcd Island Princess or Royal Viking Star. A Princess Tour of fers you a lu:\ury cnilsc and fascinatin~ inland c~plor:itions of C:innda · nnd Alaska. From May through September 1herc·s a v.·idc choice of Jcp:1rturc~ 11f 710 24 day tliurs. ''1'u can sec 1hc :1rctic oil !'otri\..c at Prudhoc liay: pan for gold in the Klondike: and vi\il an bkinlO 'illage ut Kot zebue . A'~ us fo r a hrochurc cir n10rc Jetail!>. , •• • • TRANS GLOBE TRAVEL BU~EAU ; 1880 Newport Blvd. Co1to Me10 , Coltf. 92626 c7'1 41 646-5006 1714) 545'°421 B Rrl di~ ~h i(t'( !Ito The_ Pretti_e8-t Princess But Caroli1tt> Will ~1arr)· 011.l y for Lot•e, . MONTE CARLO (UPI! - J?rincess Grace "'as happily discUssing plans ror the ~1ay 9 ,\ilvcr jubilee of her husband'.~ <(cccssion as ruling prince of .111on11(·0 11 h<->t1 :J :; h ~<Io 1v crossed the famous race. little <:hanged from the days when she was a reigning beauty of J/olly"·ood. Sh!' felt sad. she' said, v.•hen she thought of the efforts of -SEllV ICE--.. • Diomood and )lone wlling • E"•pert wotc.h repair • Engraving jewels by joseph • can iervic.e all your jewelry needs, f1om c.reoting an original ond ex citing ring to opprai\ing a vo,!ued heirloom. Professional SerYice by trlilted professionlls jewels by joseph • J°ewelry de1igning • Gemologic.al Diamond and jewelry appraiK115 • fifle jewelry repair ALL WORK DONE IN THE STORE All our 1kiUed croftsm•" work in the-1.lor•. Your p1..:iou' jewelry never leQve1 us. son1c people to brand her a thront!·hunting matron i n search of a splcndld n1atGh for her driu ghter. It ls toil~ she knows she ou~ht 10 i~nore but for :'l \.\'On1an 1l'ho learned to co1n1>etc for roles in the hard v.·orlcl of sho11' business she Is still susprisinglY' vulnerable. \\lhnt inu'Kcs II v.•orse, she said in an intrrvle\11 In thl! pastel palace of the Grimaldis. is that some or the critics are British. She likes Britain uod she and Prince -Rainier are counted among the friends of the British royal family. They were the only heads of state Invited to the wedding of Princess Anne, who bas been a guest of theirs here. So insinuauons that :she was ·guilty of competin g With the bride by \\'earing while (a -Y.'hitc coal) to Anne 's "'edding or f hllt her "Ultimrite ambition" .:... to guote one writer -is n n1arriage b e t w c c n her daughter. 17·.veer-o!d Princess Caroline , and the heir to the Brit ish crown , JJrin ce Charles, are doubly \vounding. They ·hurt h<'r and they involve cherished friendships. Su vs ft1ot l1 er ., ... in conunon. \Vho it is doesn't matter to nle." 111ere are limlttlt\ons fo th is. i\fooaco is a Roman Catholic country and. as the hereditary prince. Albert, her, 16.~·car~Jd son, "'ill ccrl'linly n1arry a Catho lic . Caro lin e, theoretically, has a wider choice but she is convent bred and, according to her friends, a "good Catholic." The y do not see her marrying out.side the faith , BY THE same token Prince Charles can marry only in the Church of England. Despite this · obvious barrier, despite the fact they have never met and may never meet, the speculation crops Lip fron1 time to time. Princess Grace said she regretted Prince C h a r I e s ' name had been drawn into ii. "Poor boy," she said. "He's going to have a lot of thlfi sort o( thing. ! hope he finds the right girl." The journalistic interest in Caroline goes beyond the vague possibility of a meeting with Charles. She is quite Sunday. Ma~ _Sc.' _1q_1_• ________ DAIL Y PILOT B Q_ 1 I 11tlu,stl"y De11 i<~s Le<icl Da11 ger • WASHINGTO.'l ~(AP.) - priv<ttc research s I u d y comrnissjoned by the paint lndui.try suggests that moden\ paints do not pose a Jeod· poisoning hazard to young children. ,. The ~1id\\1est ' R. cs ear ch Jnstih:te of Kansas Ci1y, ~lo .. suld its eight·month study Jnrol\ ing 200 rats; lndlc:ucd that lead chron1ate vpign1en1 COlf'S OltA,.EltY Cl.t:ANIHO GUAlfAHfEE ll"f'lfOOF CW Pflff'OltMAHC.t: •.. Oii 100% ,llf~LACfMfHT (IF CLfAHA•lfJ • Proft1sion1I Rtmo~•I & ll:e inst•tl•tion •No Shr inlt1ge Or Ftbric Dtt1,ior1tion • Perfect [~en Hems • Otcor1tor Pl11h • Fl1meproofin9 • Wtter St1in ll:emov1I • lnsur•nce Cl1imJ H•nd!ed f~f! fSflMA l(S and J('pd octoatc_ d_rlers re IC'ss readi v absorbed into c blood streiln1 than old white lead carbonate. The !\at1onal Paint and Coatings Association. a trad<' i.:rou1l "'hich paid for 1hc study. said it wns turninf! results over to the governnH.'111 1n hopes of hC'nding oft ;1 yt•nr-<'nd ho1n on ll'adc1l pa in!. An ('.!llinlall'd 001.0l~I !'11ne ·i· ca!L_ ehildren have ~IC!Vated blood·lea"-levels, 30,000 or tllem at potentially rlangcrous levels. J In addition. the gQvC'mmenl bt'lic\'es that as many ::is 2 5 million children living in pre· \\'odd \\"<1r II housing are at r\<:k of dr1 eloping rr1ppHnit. 110tt•nl1a!ly !:.ital IC'ad poi!">On· lllj,i, COIJ'S HIW OllA~Ell"I' Wll'llOOW ,.-ASl'llOHS HAVE AH fXCLUSIVf ..;: ~ "l'fAll GIJAllAHTEf .J • (u\lom & Re1dym1 de -'" ....... ;., ho.~ •••• •Complete 1ns11l111ion1 • Profession11 Assist•nce ~ ·• '•~· r<l. Ca••~·~·· o•< • Compl~•e f1bric Selec1ion1 • Decor1tor tl1 rdwlre (in111tled & R'p•iredl • Dr1per its Remade . Al!ered & Repaired !i ~Mi 4 ~~~/j ",f" .. ··wORLD'S LARGEST EXCLUSIVE GUARANTEED DRAPERY SERVICE" COIT d'apery c1eane1s and servic e 540~ 1366 1702 Newport 642·0270 Blvd ot 1711-t 51. Casto Meso Millff (~lftt • .l'"or!Uft l•,.-HI •H~.l•trOurl • ''"•••linl r.,,., SOUTH COAST PLAZA · ONE DAV nol Jong ago she decided lo do something about it. simply becoming the prcttiest i------- ,..,,.i., ~o..,. ,,__, COSTA MESA HOUll1 • '!111 IO-t :OO. h1. IM. Cle•'"" t.. S40.90H EXTEND YOUR LIFE EXTEND YOUR ARM BLOOD PRESSURE CHECK ~------------·------.......... FREE! in HUNTINGTON BEACH ~ TODAY, MAY 5th . FAITH LUTHERAN ELLIS & BEACH 9 AM-12 NOON .'\ Puhlic SC'n·ir~ rron1 • Jlu nlington Bearh Rotary Club and Orange Coun ty lie.art ;\ssoc. \Vith 'I'h11nks to: ., ALLEN REXAl,L DRUGS 5 POINTS • H.B. • "I kno"' l shouldn't be susceptible but I am," said the blonde former Grace Kelly. "I'm beginning to lllink the British like lo c r i t i z e Americans. One of them (very innuential) made me out as this great ambitious mother trying to marry my daughter to Prince Otarlcs and I wrote him and told him exactly what I thought of It. "I said this is one thing I am not and to lshe sn.1ppcd Otif"thCWOFdsTlay -orr. An-d t think he will." She 5.'lid anyone fnmil inr with the home life of the Kellys of Philadelphia \\'ould know she was the last person in the "'Orld to 1,1rge her dllldren into matrimony. "r..fy mother was something like Queen Victoria in that she didn't beijeve in marrlage for her girls,'' she said. "\\'hen I firs! heard of mothers trying to push their daughters into 1narriagc J thought. this can't · be true: do mothers really do th is ? i\1y mother was always the opposite. ah1,oa,vs !ryinq lo keep us as far a"•ay from ii as possible. And I'm a little bit the same way \Vilh my own children. I don 't want th em rushing into anything. What's ca lled a brlniant ma1Tiage isn't important. I want my children to marry for love, to marry someone they can bC princess in Europe and not only because her mother was one of the loveliest women in the world. She bears more resemblance to the bnmette beauty of Prince Rainier's mother, Princess Oiarlotte. She combines four attractions I.hat \1ill make her irristible at a time when glamor is in short supply -youth, wealth. .beauty and position. Caroline is tall (over S-8 ). da.rk, Ouent ~En g lish , German, French and Spanish, musical-( ptano-arfd ·Outet-and .a good student as well as a participaii.t in the sporting a'nd social pursuits of ~ihe young today . • SHE HOPES to ente!" college in Paris neit year and take a degree in political science or earn a certificate as an interpreter. • "We can't keep the photographers away r r om her.'' Prin cess Grace complained. "lt's too much . It's such a difficult time for her. It's hard to be only 17 aod to have everyone watching your every move. It should be a tirne to try your wings, lo make )'OUT little mistakes, to · -..~~"'-"'-"'-"""~-·-"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-""""""'"""~-"""!""""""""""""""""""~C.-:h:a:>:pp"."y'..._w'.::IL'.th::an:::d share interests be happy and free of responsibilities. Like m o s t m<Xl.ern girls her age, Caroline isn't thinking of marriage. She wants to drive with her friends to Yugoslavia and down to f\.1exioo and live before she settles down, things like that." ALL ABOARDI Sears 0 BIG 8'' x 1 O'' LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT • • GENUINE FULL NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS! Nol the old style 11nted or pai!lled btac~ & wh ite phO IOS. LIMITED OFFER! , One per subject, two per family . Child age limit: 1 week to 12 years GROUPS PHOTOGRAPHED at an additional 99c per subj&ct. This very ~cial offer is presented ar an eicpression of ou r thanks for vour patronag~. ADULT PORTRAITS Couples, l)~re111,. q11nclo11en1~. l1m1ly group' 1re wttcomt. Group1 at 99c per .dditiona1 wbject. PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS: TUESDAY, MAY 7 THRU SUNDAY, MAY 12 Dally S.turdoy • Sunday 12 Noon to 8 PM 9:30 AM to 5 PM 12 Noon to 4:30 PM 2.95 HOP AT SEARS AND SAVE lklen1 P1rk CoW.1 Sani. F• C1tton s s. IU/Odion GuoNH1tttd or Your J.foney Baclt Sears Ctttt!O& .. ~ .. ,. .... -,.. .. South Co.et , ... _ . ORANGE City Dr. it Garden Grove Blvd . BUENA PARK Oo<nt0-9p,m.D•llYSu~doy10to6 SANTA ANA SSA.Ill. ao11ua:: AHb CO. \ Btach tlt Oringethorpe , 3900 So. Bristol · No. of so. Co.st Plir• -Open Dally 9:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sunday 10 to 7 Open 10.9 p.m. Da ily Sundi11y 10 to 6 ' ' I ' . • I II I 0 DAIL y PILOT Sundar. May S, 1974 • ' t:>Rl'' . .\ TE SCHOOLS . Ban Mean~ Blacks Suppor~ing Wallace --- !From Pa1c Bl l the structure of !ht school. 11e also !l&id !ht> school has good word-<>f·mouth n1nong ifs !'lU· dcnts. u•ho oftl!fl ~ncouraqe prospective studenl s 10 ~prl~. 1'1ay said the ~hool has gro"n fror11 60 students /11~1 ytar to 100 at prl·scnt u:1<l \\'ill hl:I\'(' 150 ne:tt yt>ttr. lie rt .. ported reeeivin~ 1nnn~ :iprH· cations than th1· ·;chocl <'[Ill accept. "Son1et\n1es !>h1fi<'11•~ lC<.1\f' us." he addcxl. ·• ! I hin~ it'~ because H~y don't hn\·c enough self-disciolinc.'' • • ' handicaps. according 10 the spokesn1a11. She s.1id hou·evt-r . .ihat lhe school Is geared t \ w a r d students of average inlelligence. ~me or whom 1nay go on to college. There a re lhrec full-thnc teachers at Woolbright. A 11 1111,•c their lcach1ni; credentials. Quiet 4,fh H"4 t• t•lk .. ••• ... 7 A I ...... tttlHlll YIW bccaust t"'-· are rN'luircd to ,.,_ win 1i.m -11t1-. .... , ~"I (MllHftMll. .. Cfllor'M. be. I taln " I !he · !he Den1ocratic W ·ttn The bl ' '··' rr BIRJl.1J.~GllA~1. Ala. (UPJ) man s e gr e g at on o rs m ,, 1 c "'L" LIM• pu ic sc.,..,.,, ° CN a WASHINGTO~. IUP!l forever" In Alabama . \Vnllace primary contest 10 I ea di "Ml•1•""W"' 11• I.Mr"' nu m be r of d J st Inc t -Gov. George C. \\'allace, '"r•.-iwtwM• CJI~•. Americu1ts are in for a \\'ith su rprising suppon from hal!I said the last few monthslliAl~aba~ma~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;~~~~~~~~~~~ adYDnlages, such as a generally more d I v e r 5 e somewhat qu.ieter FouMh of sonle leading blacks, expects that his segregationist stance scle<:lioo or classes. much July. Alabama voters Tue!day to of I he I 9 6 O' " as NEW! •SHOWROOM OP.ENING•NEW! minimal cost and contact with The federdl government's 1n\'ard him an unprecedented 1nisunderslood , that it \\'as \ a "idcr variety of students. Conswner Product s a f e 1 y I hi rd term. providing the ain1e<I so I e 1 y nt big M d U, 13th The pr Iv a t e school. Commission la t ,,·eek issued pov.·er base he needs for g 0 v c r nm c n t and not 00 .rJ.y,. .••}_Oy ~ _ . hO\\CVrr, offeN both pare1ll :inolher bid for the presideney. S;olari"5 '"'' lower tl>an in and d1ild a choice of l<Rchlng a nalionwlde b non !he sul'5 "I'm more con/ident now individuals. \ WALLCOVERINGS BY KEN GERARD 1>Ub!ic schools. the spokesman nll'thods :t n d · educational of all firecrackers. effective in than 1 1vns four years ago," ,\ nun1ber of black \Caders\ said . but '·teachers tlere have philo.~hics. June. so as to rcn1ove the111 said \\1nl!ace, \Vho used .the including Ill mayor. a c:iunlYi featullng a feeling of dedication. \Ve"rll a F"or n1ost fan1ilies the total fron1 the n1arkct by the threat of a black bloc vote to probate judge, u sherif! and finest in Wallcoverings cloSt'ly knlt group .. , piclur(' l\'l\I alwa)'S nninl to Fourth. l\!lfTO'Nly d c re at 1hen·Gov. Personalized Service A r he f I lh ch I ,..~ · one p o I i t i c a I ornnnizaUon, ... ·-~--b s---tHCM etwft ....... s or t u urc. es· oo the public school as the best 1~1any slates have laws Albert Bre\\1!r in a l\Iay, 1970 " hfwrt -, ............ has 1nany applicants bul due choice. But the private school against the sale and discharge primary runoff. called for lhe govemor's re-JSI N.Hewportll.,d. 642-1 lfl ' A diflerent atn1GsphPre pre- \"a ils al Saucem1an School. 88 F'air Dri\'e, in Cost::i :\IPsa .. ll is housed in [\ rent ed building on the fairgrounds. t~ risin.g inflation f!~ances are as nn option is holding it.s own of firecrackers and other Despite that ca m pa i g n election, saying that he was He,,,.,.t ltoeh Aero•• frOM Ho-. Hospfftl tJght. ·we work u out from on~he~O~r;a~n~gegeo~a~s~1.::===~p~y~ro~1<e;h~ru~·c;de~\'l~·ces~~· ~~~~s~l~ra~t~eg~y~a~nd~a~I~963~·~v~ow~~1o~~be~t~te~r~~qua~li~fi~ed~~l~han~~f0<~1~r~;;~~~~~~~::;~~~~~~~~~in~ year to year," the spokesma.n -- said. A nwrc traditional type of school is St. Catherine-St. Nicholas School. a C.'.lthollc parochial school located at 3090 S. Coast Highway In The coed school is nve years old and has S.1 student;; in grades 1·12. \.\ilh no more than 12 to a group. Classes are not for1nally di\'ided by <lge . "\re specialize in progran1s tailorC'd to tht> individual chllrl." s.'.lid nrincipal :'lnd founder \\'i!lard 11. Saucrr- nu1n. \\ho has 11 Ph.!). in edu- c:ir io11. Laguna Beach. · St. CJtherine has 2 6 O students in grades 1-3. It is roed,-and classes have a size limit of 15 students. Unifor1ns are required. j •·Thr n1:i in re:?,,,n'l yf\ung- ~lrrs c[lnic is bl'.'cnusc of lhc sn,all gro1111~ arj 1 crsonnl at- tention." !':aid Dr. :;\'l11ccr1nan. \Yl"IO addrd that !hf' school dors not acCf'Pt rcl'lrded or emotionally disl11rhed .voung- sters. OF THE EIGHT ful!-ti1nc 1 ieachr:>rs. three are nuns and , l-. ___ _;~~~~;;;;;:::_..::,:;.;:;;;,.;~~~~~~~~~ five are lay teachers. The principal. Sister Florence. is a nun. All teachers have a( least a bachelor's degree. 'I have no desire to en- lorge the school. I know every kid here ond that's the way I like ii ... ' TJI E SCJIOOL curriculum n1akes extensive use of audio- \'isual equipn1ent. Dr. Saucennan said that students n1ake · !heir · own tapes and fihn s. -· ,.~uJl.tin1e tea c h e r s at Saucern1an n1ust have a teach- ing ci-edcnt ial. Despite ,lo11.·er salaries. teachers like the s:n1all classes, freedom and creativity, he says. As for the f~re, Dr. Saucennan said, • \Ve could be. larger. \\1e have a 11.•ai ring list but I have no desire 10 enlarge the school. "I kno11.• every kid here and lha1 ·s the 11•ay I like it,'' he said. Again pay scales are lo1vcr than in public schools. ··The teachf'rs teach here because they like the pleasurable environment," a spokesman Said. She described the environment as "a structured a1mosphere with individualization." "Sludenis like the discipline and the ordered classroori .s as \\·en as the fact that 1hcy can / get extra. help if Ibey need it.'' !ht• spokr.cn1an said. ( St. Cril\ierine requires 45 n1inu\C'S per da~· of r!'li!Ol ious in..,!rucrion for older students . Shortl'.'r ·p~riods arc held ro·r the lo\vcr gr;:1dcs. Tuilion :.it thr school. \rhich is supported b_v local parishes. is ~3!.10 per family. ""'e think enrolln1ent is increasing," the spokc<;n1an said. "There's a \\':tiling list for some grade lr\'cls.'' Clearly. the Ji\'C schools considered cover a range from small to medium size. \\•ith e~phases \•ar,\'lng from individun.l creativity to religious df'velopincnt. Another sn1all school \Vith /'\OT ALL SfllOOL typt.·~ grade 1·12 is \\'oolbright \\ere i:cprese111rd in th c Academy: 6432 Bolsfl Av .. informal sur,·c·\·: rn o s 1 Hunlingtun Ueiie!1. ob,iously rhc si1lgle-sex a11d \Voolbright. \~·hich ha s the nlilitary scho'll \1·ere 1101 existed for three years as a analyzed. .\iuny s c h o o I school and for six years betore principals said they \\'ere 10" that as a reading clinic. \!:is 22 busy \1•ith testing a n tl :.tudents and a\·cra;;c3 IJ !o JO adinission fqr next year to students per class. respond to c;uestlon~. I Psychological guld<ince is :\'cverthelcss. one of th': provided by \\'illlani .J · th ings almost all private \\loolbright. \\'ho has a l'h.D. schools have in comn1on is l!l l in educatiOllal psycholoftY· llis absence of the bureaucracy wife, Florence \Yoo bri~hl, that frequently characterizes ~1.A .. is director of the school. large school districts. !he '"L'r "\Ve'rc diffe rent from the Do11.'TI st a i r case ' · Saucerman School in that ~·e syndroinc, '\\'ith me m 0 e s . 11.•ill accept students with announcements. c 0 u n t e r learning disabilities and wild memos. and clarifications of emotional problems.·· said a IOf'nlos. spokestnan for the school. Ano ther )>Oin! is 1 h a r A proble1n among ntany children are in pri,·atc schools st ~d~nts is .dyslexia. or bceau~r ine,· or tht'.!ir parent> m1n11~um . brain d.\r.sf~nction \rant thcn1 • to he 1hcrc. 11")1 rcsul tmg 111 .a confusion of1_ __ _ __ _ letters in ' rcadlng. th el -RUffELL'S-spokcsn1an said . Audio-visual n1achincs and ' speech lherapi• arc uSod., UPHOLSTERY along I\' it h psychological Whe-11 Yo11 Wa11t counseling 10 offset feelings of l The lest · I d · f · · I l'ZZ Horbor Blvd. in<H equacy ;111 in enority Costo Meto -541:0259 resulting fro1n read in g1 FOOD GIFT PAKS_ ... FOR MOTHERS DAY THE ALL CHEESE PLUS 'Sl2.98 Chrrs1• ln1·rrs d;•hi;ht 1 Includes.; Bcll1• Fl~\1r Chrrse. Hulh•r K~r~1~ Chcrse. Ed<im Bur. Smoky !smoked cheese bar). four Cheesr SpteaUs. 111·11 (:oucl.15, Olii ·t'.\sh1onrtl C.:1.11 ~. l'fl. Ch1•t>!i1· Sl11.~s anf1 1mf111r11•d 1,,111rH1•.\ • • DON'T FORGET ••• NEXT SUNDAY IS 'MOTHER'S DA YI! make , ita 1IE 1':, IG ' ,, I ,, ' I ' I ~ I I l ~ ' ' ' --· ---· ----• WITH GREAT GIFT IDEAS FROM THE GRANT BOYS! BELTS BY BECHELLI ••• SUPER GIFTS!! '~~ -~~&~~ ~~~ i. ·~,,SUMMER DRESSES $6 4910 SUMMER COORDINATES -. ~) LONG RUFFLED by Aileen ,, ~' II \ , I ·'' I' I '\. ,, • BOTIOM S/S T-SHIRTS TANK TOPS PEASANT DRESSES by Fritzi GINGHAM CHECKS in Navy, Pink & Red Sizes 5·6 to 15· l 6 $12.99 SitesS, M & l In Yellow & Orange Sizes S,M,l . In White , Yellow, Oronge $13.99 $6.99 PULL~ON SHOltTS Sizes 7.7 to 13-l-4 f In 'Miite, Yellow, Orange I I ~;~,~\~:\HATS AND BAGS R r-•· f¢~~~~. CLOTH HATS & HAND BAGS ~ '\ N (N 1 BY FUNKY CHUNK ~ ' ~· Assorted Colors Potchwork Cloth HANDBAGS $5.99 to $9.99 CANVAS HANDBAGS Adjustable w-controsling .leather trim $6,99 TO $11,99 --, -- . I; ,, ,, f j, ,. ]II !' · l':i l·il \f , I • ~ " ' ' I ) ,, jl I ' ,I I I! ~ ~. HATS $4. 99 to $5. 99 f """'!'!Im I""'"'"''."'" 1111 ·'-"'"""'-· :::::::::=:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ LADIES' BOOTS AND SHOES :~:::~~~~ ~~:~~rL~~iioN oF ••• 1·,I ~ I I LADIES' FRYE LADIES' FRYE ~~~;~~~-::OWN ~~~~~~~-::OWN LEVI'S® /or ME l~lhe• lined •-<ound lOI:' 1.,..1h.,r lined .... Plotlorm Sole $J8.95 $47.95 ACME MISS "SUNNYSIDE" $28.95 harness boot S!o•ep.pe lop & Snool Toe . ACME MISS "WINDSOllG" $24.95 BLUE SUEDED COWHIDE ~H[ DENIM lOOl'tt . . . • .. . .• SANDALS BY • s15,99 THE SUNSHINE CD, &UP ( • Levi's~ lor Me SCOOTER SKIRTS IN VALLEY CHECKS 's; .. ,s~$15 00 to 13-14 I le;i'r® for M• WESTERN DENIM PANTS W,ft&RL IUiOllS .......... $1 00 in NCI")'.,...,._ I Levi's!' lor Mr Levi's& lor M• CHECKED D£N!M PANTS ''"'" .. $16 00 .. ,a.g.0111y I Levi's:ai loiMe CRINKLE DENIM WESTERN PAim ~:::!""$1 l .OO PATCH POCKET CHAMBRAY PAim $16.00 5'tei8to16il'llt.llue THE' GRANT BOYS ---- t ( I f s i • Sunaa1 May 5, jq]tl DAIL V PILOT C f Cannonade Rockets to Win in l(entucky Derby Overpaiveri1ig Start Bruins Roll Past I , . SC Spikers,-82-63 83 GLENN IVllI'{,E 01 1"9 P•lly l"llot $1•ff LOS ANGELES-Unbeaten UCLA got out to art overpowering 1tarl, piling a 31· 10 lead after' five eVents, ·and never looked back as the nat ional collegiate track ch3mplon Bruins smothered USC. 82.-6.1, ~turday afternoon. A CQ.ll~um ga thering of 10,27* watchnd coach Jlm.,Bu,ttl's corps ,ot talent riddle th~ Trojans Jn three events they had flguri!d ut1( dominate ·-U11:: 880, intermedlatt hurdles and long Jump. Bush. who told the Daily Pilot efterwa rd that · his personal prc-1neet dope sheet was only a point off the actual score, had figured UCLA would be out- scored 18-9 ·in those three events. Tnstea d UCLA held the l.'dge. 17-10. The 880 was a dogfight Yl'it h SC's James Baxter leading until they came off the final tum. Then UCLA's Ton y Veney surged ahep.d and overtook Baxter to win in 1:49.4 -8/lOth.s of a second ahead of the Trojans ace. '"inners. For SC, the last hope had disappeared. "This was as satisfying as any win we've ever had against USC," Bush, a former Newport Shores resident, said. ''Bul it was costly with i1axle Parks Jost with a slight muscle pull . You never · koow how serious something like this can be. It'll take a· t:OUple of days to tell." Parks bas run 45.8 in lhc 440 and without llim, UCLAJ lost the mUe ·relay-an eVe nt Bush admits he takes specicil prld~ ln. ·0 Loslng !~ mU e r~lay to them was the day':i b ig disappointment..'' he stated. ,;They took it to the Trojans today- lt's the same old story. the Bruins just won 't give up," he concluded . Three Orange Coast area products \Vere involved in the meet. Cost.a l\.1esa High grad Doug MacLean finished fiUh in the mile for USC -running 4: 10.5 -a personal best. ,. UPI TeftPllOIO USC's 1972 Olympic long ju m p cham~Randy Williatns-was upset in _his specialty as Bruln Jerry Herndon leaped 25--7 ~ for victory. Williams' best Saturday was. 24-11. Joe Tosti , a Co rona del Mar High alum, threw the javelin 198-11 on his first _atlempt. That held for third place. The UCLA freshman said he fell extra motivation competing against Troy. CANNONADE LEADS THE KENTUCKY DERBY FIELD AT THE FINISH . He feels he can extend his season best Then came the coup de grace only moments after the 880 had sent the Trojans to. their knees. It was in the 440 hurdles a:§'fa\l(lrile Ton1 Andrey,'s of USC seemed to }\ave a Win in ~ bag wiUr one hllrdle and the sprint to go. of 201..S to about 215 feet if he can correct technique pr'Qblems-especially planting his foot on rel~ of the spear. -Jim Ne~rt, a graduate of Newport }!arbor Righ, had to skip shot put competition because of a hyper-extended elbow he suffered in warmups at the recent l\.·lt. SAC Relays. Hard Work, Persistence Pay But he was'extended. He nearly had to -hlgn.1omfl O\iei'thCTaSt baT!'ler. Sl6ppmg;- thcn jumping over it. He ·was then overtaken by Lynnsey Guerrero of the -AnOl her fros J~rrormer:Neidhart-Said -- he hopes to be back in action wilhin two weeks. His season best of-63-6 is two f~et better than·satllrday's "'inning put. Hard "·ork and persistence still pay off. At least they have for llaul Contreras, sunset League basketball player of the year this past seaSQn. He says he expects to get out to 67 feet before the season ends. It was UCLA's third straight dual meet win over USC,.aod Bush"s record against Troy is M. UCLA 12, USC U hl>ol PUI -, • !i("1Hr, VI.LA, 61-3' '· 1. Fret>e ro. UCLA. 5"1-6'·· l. 81111vlet, use, SS.1111 ~ r~.tv -1. UCLA cwuwi, P.irk~. &,ow11, Peci~"J 39.1. 2. V$C • ..C.I. Milt -I. 81Kk. UCLA .:Q.l.1, 7 Ritlle•""'· use. (:(.6.6. l . Nhll, UCLA, .4:0l.7 I.~ 1um1> -~. MtrridOtl. ULLA.. 2~7\1. 1. Wllll1m1o. v~c.. 20-11. 3. Kotlne~. l)C..LA. )i.S. The talented Huntington Beach High guard signed a letter of intent to attend San Diego Slate this fall after receiving offers from 35 universities and colleges . including some from the Pacific 8 Conference. Big f::ight. So u t h we st Conference, Southeast C o n r e r e n c e . \\'este.111 Athletic Conference, among the more prominent loops. Thorpe Was V icti1rtized --Lindberg Editor·.~ Nn!P: :a~ midt>n1 era spQrts vista is p_rovidirt {1 el!- ti>rtoi11me11t. <1ua/lttf' rr11d OCC(1- sio nally co11trovers11 011 o scale 11ever before attained iri the rvorld of athletics. Yet sports of ~ys gone by also //ad great moments and star pe1Jormers. Today our loolt at these day:; focuses on E~wo.rd Lindberg. Jave1!11 -1. KoUnell., l)l;LA, 2(].10. 7. S!froer, IJ~C.. 31+2.;. loistl, UCLA,, 19'·11. , v HX!h hllrCI\ -1. :s:llOll· use. u .1. ?. a. Wllll•mt, -'OSG.l.10. t'(!ol . \JSC, 14.4 • • :4'0_ ~ 1. Brown. U LA..~1. 1 11:-..1. V$.C. ~··· 3. t:•mPDell, use., ...i.9 Al San Diego. he 'll be under tbe coaching of Didt Davis, fo1mer head "b;i~ketball boss at UC Irvine. By HOWARD L. llA!<DY Of t"'9 D9illy l"Hot lllH Jim Thorpe. Avery Brundage. Knute Rockne. all have crossed the life oC Edward Lindberg of Laguna Hills. And in more than a passing manner. Lindberg and Thorpe "·('re both members of the 1912 U.S. Olympic team and later introduced the game of base.ba ll to the people or S\\·edt'n in il series o( exhibition games. Brundagr "·as a Univer~ity of rllinois track teamtnatc 0 f Lindberg nnd litter a doubles Going Back IN SPORTS handball partner \\'hen the t"'O '"ere finished \vilh 1 he i r und ergrad"u11tr days and performing in Chicago. Rockne "'as a men1\Jer of the ri;otrc Dante varsity track tean1 11•hen Lindb<>rg was running for the Chicago Athletic Center. Thorpe. the famed Carlisle Indian who ,,·as s1 ripped or his Olympic n1edals less than a yc<1r aftl'r !he Games bccau~e he had been paid ror participat ion ·in a baseball game. was victi111ized acrording to Lindberg. ""! think they were \vrong' and it was a very small..,.th\ng to do to take those medal s away from Jim." Lindberg says without hesitation. "A Jot~of men got more 1noney as amateurs under assumed names than he did." 1XI -I. f>lll Yilfl, use.' 7. 7. Peop~··· UCLA, 9 1, ) WllMtn, UCLA. t.1 aeo -1. ven1v, UCLA 1-.ct .• 1 llaxve•. u~c. 1:so.1 J. Ker11, use. 1:11.1 Pole vault -1. Tr .. cenelll. UCLA, \6.j. 2 P11lh1rd, use, 16-6. J.. Jr11ooer1. ucu., lMI. lnti:trmedl•I• hllrdtn -I. G~rero. UCLA, ll I . 2 Anortws. u se. 51.1. 3 kl••. UCL.A,, JJt 01-.cus -1. Fr-~, UCLA. 1116·5. 2. Gvrlt,,.,r, UCLA. 112.11. l . Fr1111uv!l1111. use. 1u.s. 120 --1. P-11rs, UCLA. 21,\. l. Sfl1v1rs, UK, 111 3. Brovm. UCLA. ll.6. Two-mile -1. lnllft, UCLA. a: ... o. J. ••ow-n. u se. e:ss.1. 3. 11:11chef"M>fl, use, 1:S1.6. Trlple J11mp -I. Teylor, UCLA. ~.O. Z. Ed W•t.ht119!0fl, u se. ll·S. l . Cochee. UK SO.II. Hlvh ;ump -I, 0we<11. use. 7.0. 1. Culp, UK. 7.0. l . IC.ol!riel<, UCLA, 6·10. Mlle ~~v -1. u~c cs•own .-.o. C1mpbtll -.2. JOMS •7.4, R1ndle 5Cl.0) 1:11.6. 2. UCLA. l :1J.I. Dodgers Dealt 7-3 Setback ·ny Phillies PHILADELPHIA fAP I -W 1111 e 1 1\-Iontanez singled home the first run in a four-run fourth inning and tripled to key a three-run si xth . leading th e Philadelphia Ph illies to a 7-3 vi<'tory over the Los Angeles Dodgers Saturd ay night. Jim Lonborg, 2-2. picked up the victory On TV Toda11 Cf101111el 11 at 10:30 by scattering 10 hits. He had a shutout until Joe Ferguson hit his second home run of lhe baseball season to open the seventh. The Phillies took a 4-0 lead against loser Don Sutton. 4-2. In the fourth on consecutive RBI singles by ?\fonf.anez. Bill Robinson . Mike Schmidt and Bob Boone after Lai'ry Bow9. opened the inning with a bun! single and Greg Luzinski dre\v a one-out walk. l\font~1nez tripled to starl the sixth and. after an intentional walk to Schmidt, scored on a sing1e by Boone. Lonborg sacrificed the runners along and Dave Cash kayoed Sutton with a two-run double. Being that highly sought after is a rather amazing achievement r or Contreras. As a sophomore he was ~uch a poor shooter that the HB High va rsity coach, Elmer Combs, felt he "'as not much of a varsity prospect. \Vhile not a scoring threat at that time. Contreras "'as an intenSe oompetitor and he deeply JoVed basketball. So he worked . \\-'Orked. worked and worked some more. He shot at the basket over the family garage. He went to playgrounds. recreation department gyms o r anywhere else where he could shoot and perfect hl5 ball handling. He did so until, he "'as self-honed into a sharp performer. It earned him a varsity starting role as a junior and the 5-10 guard helped his mates to the Sunset League crtl\\11. And his performances \\'Oil him a place on the all-league team. But he \\'asn"t salisfied "'ith his scoring average of 12.5 per game. So he spent most of the summer and his off ti me drilling on shooti,ng and ball handling. The many hours paid off. He averaged 23.4 points per game. became the highest si ngle season scorer in school history. "·as AJl-ClF first team and loop player of the year. Davis says thP. little (5-10) Huntington Beach High guard has a chance to start for him as a freshman. , "He can run. shoot, pass and handle the ball. He's the most cooDdent kid I've ever seen." Davis lold this colwnn. Contreras \vill have to beat out ?\lark Oelsman . an upcoming junior "'ho started for the Aztecs last season. Oelsman is not the keen shoolc.r Contreras is. but he handles himself v.·eH in the other departments. Davis says. Davis says Contreras is so quick and releases his shots so quick ly that his comnaratively small size v:ill n'll handieap him ofrensively. "I don't think anvorie 14·ill ever block one or his shots," oa'vis claims. Defensively. Davis says Conlreras may have problems if the man he) guarding tries to take him inside . . * * • At Wf\Shington State Un Iv c rs i t y. former Anaheim H1gh and UCLA athlete Rick Sloa n is now an asslst;anl lruck coach. Among graduate assistants is Ralph Mann, bronze medalist in the 400 meter hurdles at the 1972 Ol)impics. •LENN WHITE WHITE WASH It was Mann \\'ho shaded Huntington Beach grlld Jim Seymour by .13 of a se· t'OllCI. for the silver a\\'ard in Lhat 1nen1orabte dash to the finish. Sand\\·ich· ed bchreen Seymour and Mann \1•as the 1968 Oly1npic champ from Great Britain, 5tli Straiglit lt'itt Dav id .Herncry, y,·ho "'as .01 behind f\.fann. John Vallely. former b a s k e t b a I I standout at UCL\, Orange Coast College and CdM lllgh, say~ be \\'as in no '\\'SY surprised to lea m that UCLA coach John Wooden "''ill retuin for another year as UruJns tutor. ''lie loves it ... I thi nk he'll be around another three years:· Vallely says. ''lie has a lot of fin e youn g players coming back and he's i:oin~ back to his disciplined stJ•le or coac hing. ~lany experts "'"'•re certain \\1oodrn '\Ould call it quits alter Bill \\'ah.on graduated this year. One of the area 's ne\vest prep riva lries is also one of its bitterest-that of San Cleinente and Dana Hills. • Singer Outduels Palmer; Angels Top Orioles, 3-1 Bo\> Oliver. whose error allowed Baltim-0re to tie the score ·in the sixtll inning. drove in the \\1nning run with a ground ball in the bottom of the sixth and lhr Cali.fornia Angels defeated the Orioles. 3-1, Saturday night at Anaheim S1adium. Oliver also knocked in the Angels' first run with a single and Bill Singer hurled a six-hitter in outdue\ing Jim Palmer . It "'as California 's fifth consecullve Angels Slate AH O_. 1111 KMPC (7101 .o.11v 5 a1nlmort 11 Aneho!lm MllY 6 ci.vtllrtd et An.tllelm MIY 1 Clewluld •• An111t11m l:SS o.m • 7:SS p.m. 7:S5 p.m. triumph. The Orio1es have dropped four in a row while scoring only t\\"O runs. Denny Doyle opened the Angels' fourth \vith a single and Bobby \1a1Cfltine sacrificed. \\1ith two out. Oliver singled for !he 51ame's first run. The Orioles broke a·--string of 31 !!.coreless inn ings in the sixth. Mark Belanger drew a leadoff \vai k, moved around to third on a sacrilice and an infield out and scored when third ba senian Oliver booted Bobby Grich's grounder. The Angels ca me right back to regain the lead in their half. Doyle and \1alcntine singled and Frank Robinson sacrificed. Oliver then grounded to second as Doyle crossed th e plate. The Angels added an unearntd run in the eighth on a single by Valentine, a stolen base. Oliver·s infield hit and an error by third baseman Brooks Robinson on -Morris Nettles' grounder. The setback evened Palmer"·S record at 2·2 and the Amertcan,, League's 1973 Cy \'oung A\\'ard \Vinner hasn't \Von in his Inst four starts. Singer is 4-2. Singer, who retired 10 batters in a row at one stretch . had to pitch out of b·ouble four times. Baltimore 1nanager Earl Weaver was ejected by first base umpire Larry Barnett in the fifth inning for yelling in protest from the dugout on a checked· swing ca ll on California's Dave Cha~~· , l ellJmore 111 r h i.I e ........ b<"v. II ] 0 I 0 C01Nlns. cl 4 O O O Grich. 1b • 0 0 0 JPowell, ltt • 0 2 0 Rlfl11ti.cfl, dtt ' O I 0 BeylCl'".rf lO O O ... e<Klrif~), p'1 I 0 ! O BRoblnWll. Jb ' o I 0 EW1\U1mi, c 3 O 0 O 8el.trtget. si 1 ! o 0 TOtvl1, ph 1 D 0 0 P"lmer,p 0000 Cllll«llill •• ' h w Rivers. t i ~ 0 I 0 DDovk'. ltl C 2 J 0 V.11~110., It 1 I I 0 FRooi"Mlrl. 1111 J 0 0 0 R:>Uve•. lb • 0 l l MNtttles, rl t I O a Mt'Craw. Ill l 0 I 0 E1Rd11rs. < 4 0 1 I c nalk. u 1 o o c Sl"9"r. p 0 0 I 0 8ll,y11<11di. p 0 0 0 0 lol•IJ l:l l ' I lOl•ll 30 J I 2 8ell1inore COO 001 000 -1 CJll!or11!1 000 101 01• -) E -R. Oliver, E. wl!lr11ms, B. Robinson, Chalk. OP -81IUmore 1, LOS -B1ltlrnor• I, C11Ulor~la I. 78 -J. Po-II. SB -Cflelk, V1lentlne. S - v~lentine, Bumt>ry, F. Roblnton, IP M • t:lt I• SO Palnwr IL. 1·21 II . llevnoldi Sf1>11er cw, 1 11 ' -2:06. ,.. -lS.(11•. Jl~tlll '1 o o o a t ' l 0 1 • • • When the 1wo introduced bascl:lall In Sweden, they played on opposite teams. ''I cnughl. on one team and he !)fayed on lhe other and lhey bcal US, 7-5. The Dodgers added !heir second run on Bill 'RusseJl's triple and Manny t.4ota1s sacrifice fly Mlcr Ferguson's homer in the seventh. They scored again in th e nintb on Rick Auerbach's single, Tum Paciorek's pindl double and B 111 Buckner's sacrifice fl y. 1"11111dff,fll# •It, " .. ' 0 , , 4 I I 0 4 0 II 0 ~ 1 0 ' ~ 2 2 ' 1 1 I I l 1 I 1 a I l 2 J a o o Confident Celti~s Fa~e Bu~ks "Later. Jim signed a profcs.c;ldnal contrnct with the New York Giants and t ~cd to go lo \\rrlgley Field ln Chicago to wntc.h him pla9. .. t'll never moke it because I caii't hit t~ curve ba\1," he told 1\1< ono ~ay at the ~rf:' I!.lndbtrg~ had gtoot respect for Thorp(! as a man and· as an athlete. ''Aver; Brundage wos ~ classmate nnd o discus thrower on the tr<lck team at lllinols. lie also pla«d high In the pentathlon. "Mtor we graduated w~ plRye<I handball In Chicago. I probably (Seo UNDBERG, Page C!l """" jl . 41} ; l""' I _. -· -C-OllbOl't fW, 1·fl 'f -):'1t, A -«I.JOI • ,. 'll ' ' " • lit •• 50 ' , , l • : : : ~ ~ ,0 3Jf 1 • BOSTON (AP > -The Booton Celtics, brin1n1in~ ,,.1 ,•, confidence. throw U>eir tenaclous defense against the Milwaukee Bucks again tc;:l tt" in a bid to hike a eommandirig lend. in lhe Nallonal Baskelball A5'0Ciatlon champlonshlp playorr. • "If we beat' thcnt then wr'll really put thc.nl tn a hole," Boston ooach Tommy •leinsohn said. Leading 2-1 tn the best-af"'5evcn series after whipping Miiwaukee 95-33 ~'rldoy night and seek1ng .. h(lir first NBA champlooshin 11ince u~ end or a dyn:isty in 1969. the C<ltlcs aret't "P"Ctcd to ao anything differc1lt than in the first lhrce games. That mt!ans a ball·hB\\'king press all over the ~on Garden court and a fasl· break olfense. The Bucks have been ON TV Tod . . ChanNel 2 at lJ :30 unab1e 10 enpc with Boston1s "'hirlwlnd , brcalh·taking tactics. even though they qianagcd an overtime victory )11 the second game cf the series In Mllwuaket. "We bad better oome up with somelt)tng, '' Milwaukee toach Larry Costeno said bt!fore scod1ng the Bucks through a late afternoon practice Saturd11y, "\Ve'vc got to get the ball up court 11nd at lcML get Oll(I ~t." The Celtics have bet'n lettlng 6-foot·9 Dave Cowen' pl ay 7·2 Kareen1 Abduk- Jabbar man-U>-man while trying lo shut off the other MJ\waukee players. Abdul- Jnbbar led the Bucks with 26 points, but was no .serious threat Friday night. \Vlth Lucius Allim out for !he season "''Ith a leg injury, tbe. Buck' have not been able to solve the Celtics' press. Veteran Oscar Robert.son has tried to nlove the ball up court. but age is er ping up on the all·Ume great C:ordero Boots Vic tor Through lleaV)' Traffic · • I LOL!ISVI U.E (AP l -John r-.1. Olh1'~ Cannonade. the "little brother" of thl' heavily favored Stephens <'ntry. zipped alon1: the Inside ra il Saturday for :in easy 23 '1-length victory in the IOOth Kentucky Derby. M the largest field in the history of tht Derby S\\'ung "'ide in the finol turn. jockC)' Angel Cordero said he saw the opening and took it. "I moved inside, outside and all al'OWld" looking for runnin it roon\ as he approached the tum.· then l\'ent to the 11•hip to ove[1ake the pace-setting lludsoo County. Cordero. like 1nost other riders in the race. complained of traffic troubles, having to \\-"Ork his \\'ay rronl. 12th to first In the '.?3-horse field to earn '1hc largest purse in Ameri~a n racing history - $27~.000--for John M. Olin. · Robert B. Cohen's Hudson Colu1ly. a n1en1ber or the mutuel field. finlsbed second. 314 lengths in front of the ~leeken Stable Agitate. J.R.'s Pet. was anolher lhree.quarters of a length to the rear witll the rest of the field spread " near and far up the track . "\Vas it a thrill?" Olin said from his St. Louis home after the race. ''Oh, God, yes." Olin. the 81-year~ld head of the Olin Matheson Chemical Corp .. wasn't able to be at the Derby because he "had a slight coronary recently.'' "':\1uch as I wanted to be there. doctors thought it was best that I remain home. But I saw e\•erything on telcvlsion and it was unbelievable. "Li ke the fello"' said on his t.Olnbstone. 'l expel'tcd this. but not so soon.' ·• Olin said. Cannonade had won onlv one or four rac.cs th~n 9'n4 ._mLstablemate Seth Hancock's Judier, got all the pre-- Derby headlines. But when it counted, Judger was eighth at the wire. Nol only was the $31.6,500 total pUrse the largest ever offered in a race in this country. but 163,61.8 fans crammed every nook and cranny of Churchill Downs. many just to say they were present for lhe lOOth Derby. \V.C. "Woody" Stephens. \Vho trains both Cannonade and Judger. said he pas pleased for Olin. "because he's ~n £O great to me over the years I trained:his horses.'' England's Princess l\1argaret and her husband. Lord S1101A•don. the 1nost famed roya lty -ever to attend ·the Derby. ,,·atched the race from atop a pagoda near the 1\'inner's circle. "lrresµcct.i1•e of the pronunciation, The Kentucky Derby is as important to you as our English Derby is to us and ( congrat ulate Mr. Olin." ·the princess said. The British prormounce the \VO l'd derby as "darby .'' Samuel Lehnnan's Triple Crown got away from the gate first and , with Hudson County in hot pursuit. led the field.._around the first tum and into the backstretch. After half a mile, Cordero had .worked ' Cannonade lo the I Ith 11lot and in two more furlongs was rifth , just ~1.2 lengths behind the leader. While most of the ri ders had traffic troubles. the only casua1ty was Turano and Cohen's Flip Sal. "'ho broke an ankle in a backstretch stun1ble and pulled up. Jockey Eddie Maple wRsn't injured. Dr. Ga ry Lavin, a veterinarian. said the gelding suffered multiple fractures of both sesa1noid bones in the left front ankle and had severe ligament injuries. OEltlY F.t,CTS, l"IGUllES Winne•: C1n!'Klfl..:!1. Ow"er: Joti11 M. Olin. Tf•iner: W. C. Stephens. Jockey: l\f!Qel Cordero. SecOt1<1: ttucllon Countr. OW111r: Roblri II. Cohtn. lrtll'lef: $. R. Sh•POfl. Jac:k11: MIU Ml,tll. T/'llrd: A111tate. OW11er: T~ M"ll.en Srtblt. Tr,,lne<: J•mes J!'Tlenez. Jockey: Biii SllCltm•k••· F1111rtll: J, 11:.'s Pel. Owf'er: W. C. P1rree. Trlintr• H~rod Tin~tr. JOCktY: 0.rrel MtH1r91H. · Mu111elt: U. SJ, U.401 s•.'ll. SJ,60; Sl.lll Groi& V.tl>H!: S:J26,50a (A....,lu11 rtoc0rd l Net to w!nntr: s:l7•,000 . .(Amerlun rKOr'dl Mccil'ld: '30,000. Third: Sl!,000. Tl'tlr<I! Sl,,)00. Olst1r>«: ,.,, ,.,un. Time: 2:04. Si.r•en: 23 (t>ertlY rtton'IJ AMfnCl,.IK•: 16M71 (A1I1etk1n rl'COl'd) Toda y's Sport~ . On T eleYisio11 10 a.m. (41 -WORLD Clt..\rtlPJONSRIP TENNIS -The. ~30.000 doubles final , live from btontrea1 . 10:30 p.m. Otl -DODGERS BASEBALL -The Lo,, Angeles Ilodgon meet the PhWJes In Philadelphia . 11 :30 a.m. (2) NBA PL~ YOFF -The Mltwaul<ee Bucks and the Boston Celtics meet in the lourth championship round game. . I p.m. (4) -STANLEY CUP PL.A YOFF -The seventh game In the semiBnal round bctv.-een the Nc'v York RAngers and the Phlladtlpltla Flyers. 1:30 p.m. 17) BYRON !<EU 0'< GOLF CLASSIC -Final round action in the $150,000 B)TOn Nelson Golf Classic. "1 p.m, t 21 -CBS SPORT!I ~PECTACULAR -The United S~1tcs National Boxing Tournament of Ch.1mpion.!i, ta~ ln Denvtr, Also. the National Synchronized S\\'lmmlnlif charnpionshlps taped ln Canton. Ohio. April 12.-13. 3:30 p.m. f7l -WORLD INVITATIONAL TENNIS Cl.ASSIO -Arthur Ashe meelS Ston Smith In a semifinal match. ·-FORMER OLYMPIAN EDWARD LINDBERG OF LAGUNA HILLS. • ~orts In Brief • ' Allin Holds Golf Lead; • Angels Release Epsteiri DALLAS -Tinv Buddv AUin blilze:I ~Preston Trail Golf ·Club wilh tight birdies "for a course-record eight-und er-par 6.'\ i Saturday lo hike a one-shot lead after 54 ~holes of the Byron Nelson Classic with a > 12-under-par 201 total. ~ The 29-year-old Allin. a deooratrd ~Army artOlery officer in Viel.flam. : charged from five shots of( the pace to •lap 36-hole leader Jim Sirnons in the 'Chase for the $30.000 first pri::c .. Today's final roWld is on TV (Channel 7 at 1:30). Tnl,,l·rotind !t•d&rl: BulSCJY Allin Homoro 61•rn:•• Tom W1tM111 ll1ucr Cr1mplon CM Tf.t vlno Jim S mon• BOb Cl'llrlrl C:~1rlt1 COOOy Hile 1rwtn G1y 8r1wer Jr. l(rrmlt Z1rltv Jr. Bot> pay"'9 I MI Wynn Jot lnmMI Jr. e Epstein Cut 'The Calilornia AngelJ Saturday asked \\."aivers on ~1ike Epstein for the purpose of releasing the veteran first ba.5eman from Uie American League team. Epsteln, 'J:T, was balling only .161 in 62 at-bats th is season, hi.s ninth in the major leagues. e Tr0Ja11s Stu1111ed LOS ANGELES -Stanford wed a four-hit pitching performance and a 12· hit attac k Saturday Lo stun Southern California l\1."i<:r, winning a Pacilic-8 ba"cball dou.blchc:id er. 7~ and 6-5. The ty,·in triu1nphs left the Cardinals in command in the Pi'lc-3 Southern Dl\·ision with a 9-6 reco rd. If Stanford wins its three re1naining Pnc-R games. the Cards \v iii meet the \\'inner ol the Northern Divi s ion. in the conference championships. e Shol P11t 1Uark SAN JOSE -i\1aren Seidler set an An1crlcan y,·omen's record in the shot put, bre<'lking a mark that stood 14 years, and Ji1n Bolding of the Pacific Coast Club recorded the best 4 4 0 • y a rd intcrn1ediate hurdles tin1e in the \\·orld this year Saturday at the eighth San Jose National invitational Track and Field Meet i\'fiss Seidler tossed lhe shot 54-10 1'2. The old record \4'as 54-9 set by Earlene Bro\vn in 1960. Bolding's victory here over Ralph ~-lann '\'<lS in 49.6. e Nets Tri11111pl1 . UNIONDALE, N.Y. -'The fired·up New York Nets, triggered by a losing fight in the opening minute ol play, parlayed Julius Ervlng's 32 points and • strong help fro1n thei r bench in routing the Utah Stars 118-94 Saturday night and grabbing a 2..(l lead in the A merlcan Basketball Association 's title series. I e Title to Evt>rt HU.TON fIEAD ISLAND. S.C. -Top· :::eeded Chri~ E\·crt easily dO\vned Ker ry ~fel\·illc of Australia Saturd:iy . 6-l. 6-3. to \\"in the first prize o!' $30.000 in this $100,000 loumament on the \von1cn·s pro tennis tour. LINDBERG ... (Continued From Page Cl ) J.;ney,· Avery as \1-rll as anyone and we \\ere doubles partners . \\1c came out to California to play in a tournament "nnd reached ~he l)(}mifinals in-doubles._ '·After he graduated fi'om T!linois. he becan1c very active in the Olicago Ama - teur Association and later in the state Olympic movement. He mov<'d oo up from there." Lindberg and Rockne crossed paths as runners. ·'I knew Rockne y,·hcn he was at Notre Dame. He used to nm against us and Not re Dame was aJy,·ays rugged compe-- 1i1ion. Rockne \\'as on the relay tean1. but he ran secone or ttrird and I y,·as ~ anchor man for oor team so v.·e didn't run against each other." Undberg recalls that his team \\OO ag:iinst l'\ctre Dame but adds: ··those fello"'s thought they y,·cre playing football."' f-le also ran in San Francisco three years 3'fter the devastating earthquake ;aid tinally quit in 1917 after .... inning the Central AA U 44-0 championship. "~lv lx:iss came to me and said. 'you ha\'C ·.,.,-on all the honors you can have. \\'e'd like you to keep your mind on business, now'." After he retired from business in 1956. he settled in Northern California near Stanford University before moving to Laguna Beach and evmtually Laguna Hills. Toon1ey lnducted LC Irvine track and field coach Bill Toon1cy y,·as among a group of eighl inducted into the Balboa Bay Club sp::ins hall of fame Saturday night. Joining Toon1ey arc Rudy Bukich. Larry f.lahan, Cathy Rigby . Carroll Shelby. Bill Shoemaker and AliL"C f\tarbl c. Vi nce Lon1bardi \YB5 inducted posthu1nously. ----·-------------------- NOW YOU CAN LEASE '74 VOLVO 164 4 DR. Automatic air cond. 6 cylinder. genuine leather 1nter1or. sieel radial tires Safety-Economy-Luxury. For only s139so ... MO. • WE HAVE ONLY * 15 * '74 TOYOTAS LEFT AT THE Ol.D PRICES! • Atfft. TOYOTA OWMt•S -MHftt of Me)' SJ"tlol s7so DISCOUNT _ ___.. ... ... ...... ---"" .. . ~ WITH..THll AD • Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Divlsian W I. Pel. GB NC\\' York 15 11 .577 Detroit 12 II .522 I'~ Ba.ltiinore l 1 11 .500 2 ~lih1·aukec 10 HJ .500 2 Cleveland I l 12 . 478 21 ~ Boston 10 1<1 .417 4 \Yest Divisioiy Tex<.1~ Angels Chicago Oakland i\!1nncsot<1 Kansas City 1'I 9 14 11 II 11 11 12 10 12 9 14 S_,11•ll•Y'• G•!l'let. l.\lnne,0111 10, Oe1ro11 1 CMc:aeo •, M!lw11vktt 1 Ttx111 1, &Mton O (11vP111nd I , Ollleland t A111111 3, ea111mor1 1 l(~n111~ C11Y j, Now York l THh''I G•ftlel .609 .:~o .:i00 21 ~ .4711 J .455 31.: .391 s Tt~IS (Hfrfffl l·l Ind Bi~V ~n •I lollOll (Tianl l·l and M•rltlu1t 0-ll Oelrall lL&l>rOW 1·2) 11 M\nMM)IO tAllOfl 0-GI C~k1190 uc1111 l·H 111 M11 .. 11uktl' rs11ton l-1! Ntw Yort (~ 2-l) Ill KIMI' Cliy (lh11by 3-)) Clt~elll'ld tJO"ln$0n O·l Ind ICl1f'le l·U 11 CH~· l1'1d (HvnMf •·2 .t"1S o.tooT\ 0.1 J 81Uifflore CMcN1lll' ,_J) 11 Allltl1 (Ry1n H I /rllt)l'ICl•y's G•mt1 c.111c1190 •• Oe•roU li~IJf Yor~ 11 TIKll ci,.,.e1~...i 11 A11tel1 811!1mor1 11 01-.11nd NATIONAL LEAGUE ~Iontreal St. Louis Philadelphia Cbicago Ne'o\' Yo rk Pittsburgh Dodger~ llouston Clncinn.:ili East Dlvta.ton W L 10 8 13 12 12 12 9 12 9 14 8 13 \\'tst Division 18 8 17 IO II 11 San Francisco 12 t3 Atlanta 12 1' S..1n Diego 1l 15 • l•lurd•y G•111tt Chlc190 3. Cincl"n1tl l ( n innhigsl Ml)lllreal 4, S1r1 Frftncll!O 2 Ntw Yorio; 6, $.an Diego l Pltt11M.1igh "4. A.!111111 3 Hcus!on !1, St. L111,1lt 2 Ph!11delplll1 7, Dod91r1 l TM..,·• 01mt1 Pct. .6.16 .S20 .500 .429 .31lt .331 .692 .630 .500 .!80 .462 .123 GB IV.! 5 5ll: 6 1 sa11 DI~ tCork!nt 1-G •nd Grell 2·•! 11 N•~ York K001.m1" l-11 ind Sw1n ~t). A!ll"t1 IR~ 4-2) 1! Pl!!1tH.orgh !B1etl ~.1). Doclg1rt fJON'I S-41 11 Phll1101IDhl1 Ot~111ven 1-1). $1" Frt"l:IKO tC1lctwel1 •1 llf'ld Br1dley 2.J) 11 MCl'ltrt1I Torr11 ~-1 I nd MtAIMllY 1-J). (II'(!""'" (B!lt!/191'11"" •n II ClllC•OO (l onl'llm 1-41. )I LOUii (Glblon 1-2) It HOVllO!I /Dltrktl' 2-0). Mel!<hy'1 0 1m91 SI A 01$ 111 P"lllld.illfli1 ~" Fr1ncl1co 11 New Yortt Dtottfl 11 Met1l1t1I Records . C1·m1tble At UCI UC Itvine set rour school records In splitting a double dual track and field m~t at UC! Saturday. The Anteaters routed United a te 1 Int e r n at.ion a I ivers.lty; 9%-41 , for t h e I r ond win of the season and fell just !hort tn losing, 77- 66.to Cal State (Fullerton ). David Wiiiiams PoSled an lmpress\vt double for UCI as the junior sped t.o a 9.$ ln the 100 and came back to aet a school rfltOrd in. the 220 with 1 %1.1. Will iams also got part of anolheT record as he ran on the uct 440 relay team which set a mark at 41.7. Freshmen Judd Binley ind Robert Goto collected·the final t~·o reoords, Blnley tossln g the diC'lus 157·9 and Goto vaulting 15·53 4. UCI ltll Ul)UIU cs Pull•".,. 1n1 uo ucr 100--1. Wllll•ms Cll l . LltY4 (Fl l . Turner (Fl. Tlmt: t.5. 221)..-1. wuu ... ,. cu 1. L!cYd ~F ) J. O'Adelti en . Tlmt : 21., (Stl'llOI Afft rdl. U).-1. G•cuf tll 2. Jtlf1rson (Fl 3. BYrnh''" CVSIU). Tlmt : 41.1. .. I) -1. W-1rd IF) t. Skk•fo!Mo fl) J. EMiii-Ct\ (USIU). Time: \:SJ.I). Mll-1. Woodt rd (Fl 2. l'rlldtrlc1tuon (USIUl l. IC.ntpt (I), Tl ..... : 4:11.l . 2-Mll-I. Sc"'"hllrUlh (F). Time: t :ts.1. 3-Mll-1. Frlffritk•-(USIUJ. Timi : '';1)1 .1. -no MH-1. r,,.,,.., CF) 1. H•"'Y <F1 3. Full.,. tl'l. Thr>1 : 1•4. 4tO t-1. HtMY (Fl J. Hu~s (F) J. Ml"I" (I). Tl"": S.1.4. 411 ll1l1y-1. UCI. Timi : 41.7 (School recl>l'dl. Miit llel1y-l. lKI. Tl,,..: l :ll.I. tlJ-1. Oeltney (Fl t. KlllgM IUSIUI S. 1Ce11!tr Ill. Mtlgllt: 6->\. • U -1. J_. (I) 2. Futi.r tFI 1-f lftlt {Fl. O\llt~t: tJ-1 \.'J. Sll'-1. Coffm1n !F) 2. l lnlty Cll 3. llvt~ (F ). Oi•l~tit: JO.t. OT-\. (oltrn•n l F ~ 2. Bln1ey {!) l .. icing 0·), Olsl.,>e:e; 1U-2. TJ-1, Jcne1 {I) 1. Fuller (Fl .J. Rutlck• (1). 0 111•"<•: ~s•-: .. PV-l . Goto (I) t. !•INllll'IO (I) ), ll•Ylell (ft}. Ht lOM: u .. J\O. (5cl'IOOI RKOrd), JT-1. PhlllltM Ol 1, lltyl~t (F) '· lltylftl CUSIV) lU"4~1. Mater Dei Spikers· Bag Angelus C~own ay RON EVANS 01 l~t 0•"' Plttt tit" WALN UT-Joe Dowlln& ran l.o a meet r~cord victory lb the mile run and won the two-ntHe to lead i\later Dei'~ Monarchs to the Angelus League tract and field cha1npionship at Mt. San An tonio College Saturday. ,_fater Oei scored 71 points to 50 for ruMerup Pius X 1n the varsity division. 1'be Monarchs also anne1ed the frosh crown and placed second In tbe soplt division to ho1l Bishop Amal. Dowlin1's perf.-rn.ances in t.be distance races where he poSted a 4:24.3 mark in the mile run , were thf: Mater Dti Record 37·7 spar that ignited o ther tca1 ates. Ch Martin placed second in th. sprint races. Greg Woe won the pole vault and v.'8s t lrd in !he high burdle1 and Mark Ftt.z.palrick placed second In the 880 in 1:58.l and third In the 4'10 In 51 .2'. In addition to Dowling's meet 1taodard in the mile. other marks were erased in tho 440, shot pu1 and 440 relay. Dowling broke a rpeet marl.: set by former Miter Dei High star, Jim Poettgen a year earlier In 1,30.5. 'Ibe Monarchs mile relay team, although clocked In the same tlme IS SL Paul (3,27.!), · was declared the winner. , Anteaters Down Chapman Twice The f\:lonarchs se rved 00111.-t or future greatncs.s in both the 90phomore and f r e s h m a n divisions. They \\'On the frosh scoring l\'ilh six l'Wlning vlctories and a pair of fie ld events firsts. · The ~fatc.r Oei soph.~ y,•cre second to host Bishop Amat in the team scoring. Vl l'lilY 100--1. Stm (l'Xl t.I t. M•rllll !MDl t .t l. Vt llln (SJ 100 4. S t ldOlll (PX l 10.• s, K1ll111,1g11 (l'JO 10.4. 220--1. Stm (PXI H.J 2. Mtrlln IMOI 22., J. ltl"""I Cl'Xl 21.1 •· V1llln !Sl 21.1 1. fltlM.IJ~ro (l'Xl U.J. .MO -I. Dflg1r11t1i. (flAJ n ,t (~I rto;on:ll t . Mtrtlntz fSPl JO.• J. Fl!Z• "lrlck IMO ) 51.2 4. Pllld"Cllm ISPI Sl.6 J. Swtrl""'" CS! 51.l. MO -I. Pllkl"tlon !SPI l:Jl.1 1. Fl!lp.1trlck CMO\ 1:51.2 J. Jltyt s fllAl t :02.I •· Rohr (BA ) 2:111.• S. Cltrk (l'X) 2:Dl.I. Miit -I. 0-11"" IMOI 4:1•.l lmtll r11;1><dl ). M. Eblro.r l llAl •:21.S J, 51. JOl'lll (MO) 4:1t.J t. NDYllV tPlO '::lf.2 S. 01vlll1on l llAl "•2.0. l·Mll1-l. Dowllllg !~l 1:)1.t 1, J, Eblntr (BA I t :Jt.J .J. St. JOl'ln tMDJ 1;44.t t. M. Eb!Mr l lAl 1~54.2 5. l ruflllo !llAI l ;Jl.J. no HH--1. Nt l1e11 IPXl 15.! 1. Fo~\ (SP ) IJ.1 3. Woeou (M01 ISt • Llnoqulll (MO) li.O S. ltgot lt 151 16.2. 110 LH-1. Ntl~O~ !PX) 1C,I 1. Je11"l"i1) (BA ) 20.• l. F1Dar (MOl 11.0 '· fO~) (SPl 21.4 !. KtllOUO~ fPXI 11.S. 440 rt!1v-1. Plus X n.• lmee! rttorlll 1. M1l1r Ot! 46 ). Servile U .6 •- 1111""'9 Amt! •S.O S. St. Ptul •S.1. Miit rtltY-1. Mtlet Otl 3:21.I 1 . .St l'1vl 3:11.1 l . !ll1110p Amit J;:J0,1 i 5t,...ltt 3:33.S S. l'h111 X )::W.6. HJ -1. S1rl-(IA) .._, ,. Tt+let• fl'XI i-G 3. Tt~t IMOI S-10 ' Slt mtMr CMOJ 5-10 S. LYlt (MOl )· ,. By -HOWARD L RANDY broueht the season record to LJ-1. G111"0 ISA > n-n 1. K••louoh Of .. Dll•r Plllt ,,.,. 37-7 with three --..11 r sea30TI Cl'XJ 21-t \' J. SPtln !MD) ,,,, .._ ,.,.,.. M1t1I" CMOl 21 .. \t S. Ort~lllt (SPl If tho UC lrvlne b.,eblll gamea r.malnlng. »•. ~ .• ~ f R P V-1. Wl>lj)M tMOl 134 2. 51Ytn0Uf team didn'l move into lhe •ut:M.1•Y t ternoon, a Y 1sA1 1w J. Fon 1sP1 124 ._Qui"" NCAA, \\'estem Reg lo n a I Humphries (10-2) will start the r1A1 U-4 i. L•llfflCI cPx1 1u . fi I ho · st C I SP-I. Sllnk1rd (SP! "·II !/T\ftl playoffs with a doubltheader ma me game agam a •11<1><111 1. T1111oe-1sA1 w-11 i.. l. vie•-.. over Chapman College State (Nortbridge) at 3. Tad Mcouu11" CB ... 1 »IOI~ '-Eck~ .... '''"I (IA) 51).1 ~· S. Slm11 !MO I '6-S ... Saturday, an lnvestlg1Uon Davis, who threw a no-hitter F1 ... 1 K orff: 1. M•tw oe1 n :z. ,,..,11 should be started inun«!.lately his last time out, will start x ~ i. 11Uqo """'' 11 •. s+. P1\if edn C I S U !. St. -'""'°"Y 17 6. Slf'llr1 11. into procedures for selecting W esd1y at a t a t e *',..,..._. team's. (Domingue~ HUia). Davis is 4-1cr.--1. Lo"' fB-'> 10.s 1. 11:1111 11"1 The -=;;,., ~ c-1-.....-.... ,,-..,_-~ort,he-~a,.,.. --·------.:•0.1 _3. M1rtln !SPJ 10.1 t. F•m• !S41 r,r, .. , ..... <UIU l .. I J~ ·1.!'0C:lcllifif.f1Xl"-"ITT . .....,_· ~-.---victories posted by Gary Wheelock set the pace· tor 220 -i. 1ee11w !BAI 14.o 1 A\fchl~h -, Vi'h-eelocl; an<l Jerry ,_taras, Sanmt~y'• twin t S.i _u mp h , --?.~' 1~nl. ~r··~_u0• :_s.-~~1~- fan the UCI consecutive same ·winning his 13th game of the tl'x1 ''·' k 22 ·'' to J lh II U «0 -I. Flt 1Nr (SA\ "·' l , "'"' !Sl "'inning strea to auu sea.son equa e a -me 5'·' J. Germ•fn <SP) !• s '· v111eroso most wln mark for an IMOl ss.1 s. e1n1111u• !SA> ss., •-t I L.. tlll -1. Alcl>lt (MOl t:f».4 1. L•lllt!IC l\ntta erl p tenet. (PX! 1:06.f ]. Poliquin !MO) 2;01.0 Yarwood, Blatterman He also broke up a scoreles,, •. w rm•m• fSA) J :Gl.o 5, 011v11r1 pltchln& duel with Chapman'! M(~1 .?.:°i:0ri, ri.1"'"" Gilb ia ... 1 •M Gary Lucas by blasting the c 1111110 !l"I •:4S.7 .J. O'H1rr1 (MD f first pitch of the eighth lnnlng ''513·0 '-OUl'st !MOl 4:17.1 s. Vt rdo (IAI •:~.i. S11arkle in Swin1f est ' LO S A NG E LES-Mike Yarwood placed loth In the 1DO breas tstroke and Larr y Blatterman l\'3S lllh in th~ 100 back to highlight OrangP. Coast College's performances in Saturday's concluding day of the record·shatlering state JC swimming and diving championships at East LA College. Yarwood had a time of 2:15.7 v.• hi I e Blattennan clocked 2:05.9. OCC finished 10th In the large field with Foothill easily winning the team title. Golden West and Saddleback failed to soore in the meet. The Pirates' Gene Tighe set school records of 10:25.2 in the 1.0Cl'.l Cree and 17: l&.7 in the 1,650 free , although he failed State JC G Vlllltastics J ltH1iwl•11o11 C"""-ltM/11,. (If lfffltll Wttf) F\qot e•trCll-1. DM111 (LOf'ICI ... ell CC); 2. (!Ill CDOlt (01111!0 V1ll1v1 tlld Sowell CLA H1rllO<'l: 4. Olt Mlt'ft /Ettl LA ! tf\d "'I'"" <L" Htrbl>r: •· Plt1tk P111dtn•l. Wlnnli\!.Y.,-~I 1.15. ,..,,,.. l t,_ , M(H,,. lLOfllJ ~'1"'1' ~}J • 1-.nt .lint ltKn 1 • rll ( ant 81Kh): •· wrt • ..... WMIJ I S. M1rtlll CLont ttchll '· Sdlllt (LCll'll •t1c11J Wl""h• l "ltfl'QI: I J. v1.11111,,._,.1· F-•n !LACCl/ '· Bl,... ( Krl lMlllO) I 3. o.ft L'"ll fl ... cllll ), Rt1tttfl (Pit.tel-I l , L•ltut {LOl!ll ... cll11 6. Tr.'"'' (Pt1"-)· Wtnnl"I •-•••: .31 1t:1no ..... 1. Scflnn (L«lt Buell 12. MllfVlll lLIJ! kldll1 S. -K'ffl (......_ WMI 1 I . (tit\ MMM ILel'll !ltKll} •!Id trlZlllY (Fulrtt1enJ; '· Oii ) ~I ILOM BMfll) 11\d W1llt c• LA v.n .... 1. w 111" I "fl '"''Mii: .2. P1•1l11f 11r>-I. L trn-fll (Long lttt~I ; t. Offd1 <Lono 11-1 ,"...,' J. M_1q111 (LOl'WI Bttdl); 4. t1t I lo.Miit WM! llld WI I I 0" P•-.111111)1 t. lltu1 (51tr1m1nt1J. W1~1ft0 1\lfr111r t .I. Hl9h M!"-1, Wllteri (P1MdtN); 2. W1111« !LA Vl llt r,>; l· Offer! lLtnt ll1tc 1)1 4. Vowtl 1 t A. VtlllV} S. e11:.n (S.Cr1m1"1e1: •· s111c:1t1n (L'"f lffdl). Wlllnfl'll tv.i-12•: t . .J. A11·,...,,._1. Dffd1 ILont iHC"ll ); l , !l•ion fk<ni'"tmo)/ J. ,_, IOoUtll Wttf)I .J. $thtfl llll'ICI lttcl'lll l. Ptr•dtt IL.A HtrMlf); '· Wl!tan !s..ct1rr1entol Wll'll'llnt IYll'• "°' :l.ttJ. Girls Volleyball AA Df•'hlM Golden wnt dtf. Ore• Coert 1U. lJ-17, 1~11). A DIYhltfl Or1nte C..tt dtf, Col•.,. •ttt JJ.n , IS-12. to gain a spot in tne top 12. In the 200 breast. the to p three S'o\'irnmers broke the national JC record . A t.otal of thirt~cn national marks were set in the three-day meet. St1t1 JC twl111 ~Ht I" 1E1tl LA Ctl 111) I.CO lrtt--1. JW.nt.., ! e o lll l!l l 1!:43.1: 1 Httvr.-Cf'ull1•!<:") 1!·.U.0; J, T0wn111'1111 (l"Olf"l/I) 6:11.•1 I, M. M(Q\rlde (F~l"ll l ~'"'·!' l. NIWICf\Kk !011 I! V•llt 16: J.71 I. Tur11er (ft lktro of d) 1': .4. 100 fr~l-!Footl'IUI) S. Mc0\IM1 U .1 "\lfcn~I rec~rd, .,.••r,· 9!6 m1rk ~f ~ , •ti bv 1"1111!' .. " LlM '"\' cc. 1t 1); f. l'•IMlll "°"' 11111) ~1. ! l. M1rwn rso11rio) c .t; . H••''* IPt .. Cle!ll) ... 1: i . M11r,nlw !l.A M1rllor) d .)J '· Olion (Ptlem1rl ..... . 100 boKk-lfD bt<k-1. S!IY-(Pltnl l:S1..i\ !. rltt1c !l Qfl!I llKlll 1:01.4; 3. 511 ey !f UI LAI 2:01.fl l. Cll~ly ~~l1b!a Vlllt ¥l 2:o.1,I: ,l liUOl.,tl. 1e;•tmtnt9/J:OJ.~ 6. 9,..r t A""~'· \lfrl ?·DS t"''' -11 . l l1Mrm111 t C) its.• ~ brt tll-1, 1'1111111 CF"t11tl 2:11.0 i1,.11tf!I! recorf, 'lf'fflq It m1rl ot :l J,J ,.,_,to ... 1.11 .... k ...... 1f , c, .. , ·~. " 19101; ~-Kr ... 1 (Sin JHI ) : I. I l. Don1v1n (Pi\'!" /:11.f ; 4, flrldoM tCvDrl!-tll : .J.1: . l11m1111 /Foo•l'llt'l 7:1]1: 4. t-1•1111 ((vl"'""·l 2:14.0. Ottie-rs -10. YI ...... COCCI 2111.7. Girls Tennis lflftfCll"'911l1 T•llflll UitlH ClllMM~fl~IA-""M"" ...... ........ f'lt .. lt Llllduy MIWll (UCO Cllff. 01•111 Dtslor (t;SC) '"'' l-0. A"" Lldedtfl ra "11 0 1eoo1 def, J11n Note:l'llT'd (UCI) '"2, 6-1, Lindi L1'0ll1 (UCl.A) dtf, Lt• A"" f llCfMf' CUG ll 6-0. t-3. l lnl W1t•Mbl /CS Lit A"\ltln) elf, Kiri!\ 11:.il\t1 CS Sin ~) N •... ,. .......... MerM dtf. W-'l"IM .. I. H . Liwlt ftl. L~f ~. 74. '°'· -MorM NICl'll~ IUCI) dlf. lkhl,..,._ OW-IHOl'tllrldtfl M, M . T11tn1.tldtr• >-utl 11. U(L.A '" use 17. CS S•lt O!• lt, CS l• Arllt ... n. 95 PENNZOIL over the left field fence for his 2-m11e -1. Mututm•" IB-'! 10:11 ,-1. ho f •L.-l uc.ho41 !SI 10:1'.S l. S"D<t •t n !IA\ seventh mer o u..:: year. 10.ll.o •. N1><r11 1M.01 11:«1.J s. This t1so equals a team l'l1rpe1r1c-!MD! 11 :01.s I 71l HH -1, lffllltfl fSI f.6 ). WUll1mJ individua !lel!On high set a (MO! t .I J. NoltA (SPI '' ' year aeo by Rod Spence. ?~1•11e~ (MDI 10 I s. O'Tooh (SI WhetlOck struck out 10 no LH -t. V-r CSAI u 1 2. Nol1ft Chapman bat•-, .. .nv hi'm !SP) "·' l . Belt•• (MDl u.o .. I.el e • e O'M1H1y !MDJ 1!.1 I. Vomtrt (PXI 106 for the seas:in. This bet-1s 1. •·n t"· all t'me 5;n•Je seas «0 rtl1y -1. M1t1r Oel "· 1 1. Bl111op IA: llC • 1 -.. -A"'ll ,1,2 l St. P1ul •I.I '· P!111 X on strikeout mark set by "-' s. s•""'' "·' M I st t 96 Mlle rtll\' -1. """'° Amt• J:.O.S 1 aras a year a . ,...., .. 0.1 J:l1.1 s. 51rv111 J:1:1.s '· The Anteaters added a pair Pl\ls x l: .... 1 s. s•. P1111 J.u .1. ol unearned runs In the frame HJ-1. 0 11""Y iM01 '-' 1. A11vm•11~ (BA J W no olll« oiu1lllltr1. and posted two more in the LJ-1. Looer rsA• »J 2. 01., «s"1 1, . th •·f Ch 0 l . Dft•os~ (S~l 11 .. '· O'M•tlt \' n1n uoi:: ore apman came IMOJ .,,.v, s. s1. P•11• (S) 11-s. up ~1th Its lone tally in its l'v -1. L'f""" (IA1 11., 1. se11, l PXI l••t ~-at bat. ll-4 l. Loll CIA! l!M •. S~<1otr ~ 1.&11ov IMOl 10.0 S. F<11Mt1 (S) 10.0. Jeff Mallnoff C011tinued bis sP-1. c1Dno1 (l'Xl ,, ... "' 1. itt•t !sP1 • al I 4-S~ 1. Morlt• ISi ., ... "4. l rld"'1cll stnsat1on consecut ve game (SA> •7-4 s. T•• bttwH~ Mc"••l•nd hitting streak with a pair of ISP) ~ Zt•llll>ll IBAl 4.W. dou.,_ lo "· __ and a "'""' K 1><11: 1. 11.r100 .,,,.., n~, 2. ~ LUi:: "'r-''""' Mtlll' Dtl U 3. St. P1ul 7'<~ I. single hls first trip to the plate s ....... 11. 11 s. Plv' x 21 '· s1. ""'"°"1 in the nightcap. He bu now '°· Frnt1n1111 hit safely in the last 'l1 games 100-1. '"''' !MOl 10., 1. Fltlcllll' and •--a .•M averag•. 1MD1 10.• i. 1-10 tSJ 10.1 '· 11:o1" ro i I~ '"" ,.. Ill.I S. Vlwltno CWO! 11.l, Malinotf had 1 pair of rbi to r.G-1. Ft11'""' !MDI 1•.1 2. c1o111 b · h' ot I •• IMO ! ''·3 1. Ho IS! 1'.l t . 11:1111'1 nna: JS &el!On t a to 'W to (MO) ''·' 5. Vlwl t "6 IMOt 2.i.l. take the team ltad in this 40-l. ,.,,,.111•0 1Mo1 "'' 1. ttb•tr• d.par\ment ' l flA ) "·' l . Ol11<1r011 !l"'l !t.S t. a .... tll l'IO (BA ) 16.6 S. Pr ... r 'MO) UC'l won with the aid or a "-'· I f ~1. lttlde tSP! 2:1'.l l. St ltggl pat o unearned runs lo back CMoi 2:11.1 i. Thl11t1n 1s"'1 ~faras' three-hitter in the 1:1t.s •. Bt111,.., <Px1 2:1t.1 s. ,.i.. Pltrl"tnt IMO\ 1.lt.O. se ven--1.nnln&nJ&<,tcap. Doubles Mii• -1 p.,,., 1e1ii ,;K S 1. eb1r.er by Wheeloc!c and Terry Stupy t 11A ) J:oo.t 1. M1r11,.., tsP1 5:111.1 4. Al"lli CMD) J:G7.l 5. Ktlly !SA) scored the runs after Bridges s.u.a. was !afe on a miscue with two 2 .... 11, -1. Gto""'"''n 1Mo1 10:11.11. F. Ebi"'' !ftAl 10;Jl .I J. Per11 (8Al 1&;$0.l 4. M••t:fll!I (SP ) 11 :11,1 J. L-1 lllAl 11:,..o away~ UC .11'\ilM tk•~" tlCettO eAMI UC INfM Ul • • ; l ,, , """ l rldtt'J, cf 1 I 0 0 ......,..lot_, dfl l , ' ' s1u..,..c j'' u~en. 111 l 1 o c,,11 I OC tfllt4, " ~ I . . .:i.':'..r.:· l'i , I s l'tlm.,..__ rr t 0 lven•.n ~ ! o M\"'I I o o O •te t 2S 4 1 vc '""lft• Ch•1,..,1n Set.rt ..., 11..;"11 ' .. "'!" ... ''' 600 19 0-! 3 ' Aztecs in Action LOS ANGELES-The Los Angelu Azte<S open North Amoricmt Soocer t.eacue play today, ladnr the SeatUe Sounders al Ea1t LA College. ll begins at 3 o'clock. 10 HH -I, WlMf1"" (.¥01 t.I 2. FOil !SP) 10.l l . Grten lPX l 10 ' 4. LtiptJ ~BAJ 11 .0 S. Loty !PX\ 11.1 110 LH -1. Wllll1m' !MO' 11., t. F"~i ISP) lS.1 3. AdiorMlk CIA) IS,1 &. Lllfltt (BAI IS.$ S. Rt~tl !IP! 15.7 .U0 N11y -l. Bl1111>Jo A'"1I CS.t.,. W. P1ul t7.f t. s.,...1,. •·• '· Pt111 x "'·' Ml!tr Oil lllllQUll!lftld. Mlle rt!•r -I. St. P11.1I J :.SO.$ 2 BIUqo ""'•' J:30.I l. Mt ttr Ott l:Jl .t 1. Plu• X 4:k( s. S•. Antllonv •:1J.ll HJ -1. Ooylt CS) 5-6 t C"t tl !MO) !· 2 .J. ~r!Mtt (MO' S4 '-Tit btt'#ltn Kr1m,1 llA1 Byrion (PX) 111111 Moir· lor'I IMDl 4·10. l J -1. ICtnitkl IMDl 11·1&!~ t. l rfflAlll ISi ll·S l. LOPll (IA • 11·1"1 '-Or1111 (PX) 11-2 S. VlwllllO CMDJ 1'-1\'), PV -1, Ok ki.o" !MDl lM 1. F(l;I~ 'SP! 10.0 l. L111ct1 (PX! t O •. lllltt1" CSA) 1"4 1. Left !l "'l I_.. SP -1. Q'-\ (BAI s1.2 1. Wllc1vn1-I (511'1 .q,.,~ 1. Ct•'-11.10> 1s-r•. , Futr11tJ (S) "·S'~ S. L11t111 (B"l ... ... Fh,..I l«W't•: 1. Mi ii• Otl tl 1. l ltl\o(I "'".i 5• l. SI. l'1ul 31 4, 5trv!lt 10 I, Plw1 )I. I•'· SI. Antt~cmy •· ---- THE VIKING tl,_...,OVftMMIWCnt. LUBE & OIL CHANGE '73 CAPRI COUPI 4 cyl, 111t. ... -.. ....... llM!tr, ••nr -.t1t11 .. c.,.tr w/1111""° .. '*..,.,,,, ,.,..,.,, AM· UNHEARD OF OFFER A VOLKSWAGEN OWNER CAM'T AFFORD TO TURM DO~ 'lf\CflillH"~°'"''"''*'"°"'"'"'' HARBOUR YW 11711 HACH ILVD. HUHTlllGTOH IU.CH $2889 1, • SE eig IB m B. D a cro the SY,'(' ann Sat T ·~ \';If and ann by s of to ~·e ap <ca ,,., ha ah .,... i lnt Sa pe R th I. Isa ,.. ih \\'' a lh A si " 0 a p 0 r 1, Bucs 4th . h-i Circuit Spikef es t SAN D I EGO-Bruce Clrasole won lhe 100-ya rd dash. Duane \V altmire t:aptured the three-mile and lfony Clarelll set a school record in ·the javelin in leading Orange Coast College to a fou rth place finish in the South Coast Conference track and field championships at San Diego r-1esa Co 11 e g e Saturday. ~un<f~y M~y :i 19/4 DAILY P!L01 (; :J.' ~--------- For Los Al 1, . CIUUS Title Harness Resu lts 'f o Rustler II'~ lllvr••Y (leo .. w. T'Kk l"a•t 11'1.IT •ACI. flM mllt Ptt• rlaoMln~i. Pll"I \\!00. tli lrt1h141 p.1ltt '"" Fla•ll~ Sly. le<ICI Jooi Alth•rd, Wini~"'\ Bon.,1e1 .¥1,•ilf, Wine TIME-1.06 ALIO ltAC.[0 -K S CrtA(!. l"•t~·p ~' ~' etn 8 11•1'1· ettl!llar Fair, S AIOI'" Miit 5CRATCHEO -El Dt ciwmt1r. Dfl OW' '11 EX•CT A S-!'1a"1y Sky t. .. J ot Rl(llltO, pllO 1.19.olO. SECOHD IACf. one milt . oace. cl11"11np, 1!1 agtl. Ctlll·l>lto. pu•~t 11!00 01nov eav la••· W•ne 1 00 WM Ctn o. 8aviti' s1,,..mv Oell•nce. Greoa•Y TIME -2.1)6·1/!, ALSO RACED -Outcn.11 Af!'19a. luct..Y SIXIT, Andy• E.,t, lt1n1t1 Stan Ten. 81itCk Wly. SCltATCHEO -t~ Err1;1r THIAO l•CE. -fl'lle. Plte cti;lml,.g. tll A9C$. purM !21Ul l.\vr'l-11 L-11. Leal 10.60 S :'O JM Ton~ Ton•, Oe..,.,,., •.00 l.U ill~O ll•CCD tl•"'llY O•"C:f' P•1Jdt l1rd, Rthin.ln11 C "tt. Up 6 " Tnarp \CR,.TC"l!D I•~·• 0·11 1J Ell.ACTA 1 Stal1 ~II~ I. 1·~l11•w•1 Wlaaw. pa\a 116• '.C SfVINTN •l>Cf . o<>t milt rrpl C.ancll!lan~ICD SI All •11•1. Pur~ ""' W41!fr MG!, J Llq"'nlll 10.70 < 70 1.00 OvN11'1 Htt1ner, ~ Coltmf" ).70 J llO J JS Fl•wl~u. R Altllmond J IQ T1ME -1Cll! AIMO rec ~ -Anov'1. s111toctr. o~~e Pt{l1111,, l"'muer Stir lei. SCRATCHED we1a~tr. Al\O~!. C:or>a Ale• \)EXACT A 1·1'11 M¥t.r FIUf & ~ 8oq Time palO 11•• 00 11· I L ~I I X G 10N-C.old"1 \Iles\ CoHese's ~tono Pa rktr ~aptured the !ii out he f:r Cuhfornia Conferf'ncc tcnnl~ singles <.·ro11'fl ar:d t h ~ n teamed l\'llh CarlOIS Poiso to n:i.b the (loubles title U1 the circuit' n1at('h{'s rit LA ll nrbor t:ot1f''l(' &lturdav. Parker. a s o.pho nl or c . dclciue•l S:1nta :\lonica CC's Jee EtLc·nnl' 1n 1he finals. 6-7. fi--0. 7 -fi, holding hi s scr\•e 1hrout'hcut thl' last set. l'ru·r..~'r anrl Posso topix:d :\lik1' ~i:-<:lev .::tnd John Biorktnan ( r San!a ~lon1ca in tht' doJbll'~ finale . 7-i 6--1. :'\o te;.H'n scoring \1~s kept. $outhern C1U•ar11!• C•nlfr•nre lN•nt• li1 LA Ml•lllO< I Slnaltf S1m11i1111• SECOND IN REGATTA -·rhe UC Irvine varsitv ei ght finii:hcd second to lhc Universitv of Californi8 (Berkele.Y ) Saturday 1n the Ne\vport ·1~egatta. Crew members. fron1 tCrl . arc l)ave Graha1n, Phil Pear· son. J{oy Bcven, Mike Sullivan. John Sutton. Rick l'eterson. John Davis, Bruce Ibbetson and coxsv.,ain !Job Porter. Girasole c-\ock<:'d 9.8 in the century. \Valt1nire had a season-best tin1c of 14:35.2 and Ciarelli tossed the ja velin 221· 8. breaking his ov.·n mark of 217·7. se t last season. Cia relli v.•as second behind l\tt. SAC's Dave Krough (236- 0/. A•mtlra Gut~!, la<l.1 '·00 TllAE -2.0S4f5. ALSO RACED -G•lllCI f!rat'•I, !.call Rider, V1Hanl'1 Hetrt, H1,tl'! e•tt, ~peedv Oat! NINTH •ACE. Otlt m!lt. PoKf. cl~·m•n.u hillCl•clP. •ii "II'' ""'"e ~J, n C•,n "'""' Auain J.20 J10 ! •o P~•~e-~(;VICI del. 8o~••m•n (kn'• 1•no.•tl) , ,, 1 5. ,., io••.-ila T• 1. Lont]O J . .0 lJO l oiJ S•a" G~•dO" • i.O E lien-.e IS•n1~ Man, c ,.1 dol' Sc·l'Ot<ll· 1R•a l!a"d~. e I. 6 J Fl*'ll F'ullcrton 't'.'On the team chan1pionship by nearly 100 points y,•ith OCC totaling 50, lhrce poil)IS ahead or Cerritos, a ican1 the Pirate~· lost to in dyal meet con1pctition. SCRATCl-IED -Gaod Gtt11a11 #. Ooog E Gralltn T!ME -2.ltJ.1/J. ALSO RACED /~.It llD!lnt• 8,otne•;nl•' r.·.t r 1."··'c Ou 8t 1u nopltr C11U<:~ Par"•' 1GWCI Oe' ISi.A(() •·T. 6 0. 1 ... Oo~bl•• ••nalt Cal Rows to ·Regatta Win FOUllH II.ACE. ant m'lr "dC ~ P~•~e•-PQ.!'<Q ((;V/(J .,~+ Ml\"- Hear s By HO"'ARD L. JI ANDY 01 ,,_ Dlll1 l"llel Sltll Dcspit~ choppy \\':ltcrs from a n1yriad of pleasure craf1 crossing :'-iorth Lido Channel repeatedly during the races, lhe University of C;11ifornia S\vept to \"ictory in the ninth annual r;ey,•port l{ e g at t a Saturday. Breeze , Despite Chopp y W alers UC Irvine's varsity eight l>o:11 finished better than l\\'O boa t len gths behind t he favored Bears i,1•hile Orange Coast v.·as a little less than I 11 o lengths behind in th e 1unior varsity action. lio\\•ing stroke for th c Califom ia varsity is for!ner Orange Coast star Ti n1 llodges. Hodges ro\v'ed for OCC for tv.·o yen rs and y,·as a 1ne n1ber of a Pirates team that perfo rmed in 11enle~·. C:ngland. break in rhythm . In a special elite singles match race bct\veen John Van Blom of the Long Beach Rov.•ing: Association and Jon l\·lartel. the $\vedish national chamoion. Van Blom was an easy l'ictor . The l\1arin Rowing association captured the high school eights race with t"·o Nt·"']Xlrt crews in second and third. A singles rov.•er from San Diego High "·on his eVent in 9:06.3. Cirasolc also ,~·as second in tht:: 220 (22.11 and teamined \Vilh Doug Mart in, Art Liddle and Rick Desmet to finish third in the 440 relay in 43.4. F'our con ference records '>''ere set. includlng a 7-0 high ju mp by Full erton's Tony l\ta· dcu . The top five finishers now advance to the Southern Cal preli ms \Vcdnesday at Chaffey College. 100 -!. Gtr1MM t IOCCJ ,_.; ?. T11relt IF/ •.9; 3. 1•~n~en iF) 10.0; 1. O"'t~s ~\S.0.(l 10.1; s. Rnue !SAi 10.1; '· Ot1mtl (OCCl 10.1. n o--l. &en1<111 !Fl ?I. '; L Girfftlt !OCC:) 22.1; J, H1nwn tFl 22.1: 4. JackSOfl IMS.O.Cl 22.6; S. Owens CM~AC \ T.1.0; 6. >lus•~11 !M~AC \ 13.~. 'fU11e!> for the 2.000-metcr course 11'ere \\'ell b e I o w a\·erage due to the lateness of the race and the numerous pleasure boats crui~ing down the sides and occasionally across the course in front of the competing•boal.s causing a 14G-l. Bt11Satr {F) 4 .!; 1. H11~n fMSACI .)0,1; l. Wh1ltn (II.SAC! SO.,, '· Ke!la<lfl {1!.&AC) /"i" 5. c;;n1om11n (f') 5\ G: 6. Dim~•· SA no time. V11"1i!V El~n11 lll0 -1. Ybarr• !SO At<ll 1:SS.6; 2. ccn~llit~~ ~C0-71. ~ year c.tt' & unat•. purse sr.ioo Tivtcr Pace. Pete-"'n J•. 1~;0 ~oo •~ 3.tJ J ' >OO A1alla Aoia.s. Qij~l!on Scottn.Cnat.e•, 81ac•.,..an TIME -?.M.J/S, ALSO RAC ED -Nat•~ Romante Ju•tin. Se~ 81y B. Sunnit Ah" onu• ~UMtlflr(, SCRATCHED -Jann E~d 1 .• , Sid S;;m D. F IFTH RACE. one mu, Pitt cl1lmin<1 nanalctp. 1lt 1oe1. pur<e i1i.oo f ly111g Ore;,m ~L Co:>!> •.60 '·~ .. ~ Nitki Painter, Oe~nls ).c:I 1.10 Flasi1 on Pk~. 01ullon 2 o.J TI ME -2.00-115. ALSO RACED -Yitn~te Sl!~le , Saini Clitlr Carl SIXTH •ACE. ~"' ,..111. P•te.I tlalm.r.o. 111 •~ti. riu•i.e l~Jr..o sca1s Silk. ''"" 1.10 •co l Ml Shla.,.ev I/Ji~~.-. Yall~ra 1 . .0 •-'1.t Sir Tona. William!. 5.60 1) EX A(TA 2·Cnn tlr~rv & ] ~c•rtn!o l"s. D•d \2&.)l ~lAYSALE' Wo need your Trade! Premium p(ices pa10 EXCELLENT SELECTION Immediate Deli very NABERS ~ OF"tN , 0•' I Please Call 540-9100 2600 Harbor Cos1a Mt>sa 1 N<i>l!V·JO~n 81or~m~n CSd~tB Marl cal 1 ;, •··~ LEASE -FROM DOT 260Z . '129 " '.' .>i.·,~· 710 .· . ' Pickup 210 '71 " '69 '' '66 " DOT DATSUN ·1.88J ~ Be'ocll'Bhd. .... Munt~.~ ~ocli S40·044l' · ' •. s42.11a 1 TIM£-l.~2 I------ JC Baseball WE 0015 YOUR CAR IDLE ROUGH? START HARD? lilVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN HELP The Be<Jrs from Berkeley \\"On the varsily c1gh1s, junior ,·arsit v 3nd freshman races and amassed 21 points lo annex the P. A. Paln1l.'r Cup by a wide margin . The Bears ha\"e app.1rently returned to the forni that 1nade 1hr.m the scourge of ro11·ing on th<' \Vest Coast under Ky Ebright in other yea r!'. They recently defeated the Uni\·ersily_!_>f \Va.<:hington, the n10sl recent domin;;int force in the rO\\·ing sport. ' ---_._ ____ -·---~--'"· ----· - ' ' ,., · ' El$.tnF>Arl (SO IM:lll l :S6.J; ], ~ 1 o•n•a ~:~ .e 1 II( l•vlnr 6·'°'/• 1-'tl~tQfl l~A) l :~.6: 4. Krenit• 3. CS ~""9 Seatn 6:!i<l.9 4. Loyall !MSACI 1:5'.\; S. Po<ICt (Cl l :Sl.9; --~-'"'"'-------6.Br1dlprd (F) l:Sl!.l. '>:-. • -1Ullor...Vam1v ..a:i.t1t._:::...::----=t.\Wi;-lci!!.f!i~:t!f"~1~ -~c Kw:::.:- i. c1111to•nla 6:•0.0 ;. or~r19t Coas1 ~'."'G'a11('<1n! (Fi i :11.6: s. Mt'Nr;.,a,. Standings THE .~~~~~~J~~::.~·~OP .SOJ.!TH COAST CONl'EIE"ICE J __ ............... ;.. ................................. -. ....................... .,L --1FilleO-i.,;;;;;.,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiim-.OiiiO .. .__. ... -...,_ .. ___ _,, SoCaz --r-orieits ~7 Came-s; 6;'6.0 3. CS LM<I 8e~tn 6:"5.? 1 (SAl <:11.6: 6. Edov !MS.0.Cl 4:32.1 UCLA. 6;'1·' !i. UC lrvlM 6:S!i ' J.,..;1~-L W1llmlrt (OCC) l':lS.2; ?. FrH~mlR Eitnll · · 8urae~s CF) u :l9.4• J. w111et (F) I C ff I 6· l 0 U:1St : I. CU.I! tF\ 1':"5.5; S. • l•a•na ·'·' 1 r1nge CN!I Frltlile !MSACl l'·SJ.6: 6. Dile (fl 6:46.1 l . UCLA 6:•8-2 4. l ayol• U :IS.l. C:e•rila1 r.I •. Sen An1anio ~an!s Anl Se~ Oie<io Mf$" l'Utlfr!On Or•nat Ca.~1 w L Ge l 11 .i -I ll 7 • ll 9 6 ' 1! ' 6 s ls i1 I l 17 14 The Harbor Area's Newest Robinso1i Ot1,t as Coac11 6:SJ.9 S. CS Lono;t Beach 7:1:1.4 6. 120ftH-1 Owen• OJ.SAC) U.6: 1. UC Irvine 7:07.i. Turek /Fl 1).1: l.Tucktr !SO Me•al L•lltwtl9hl E '~ht$ JS,];•. Sltl (IASAC! TS.J; J. 8 aQYle• .,,. (Cl Ht; 6. ll~rnev \MS,t!.C) 11.~. ! CS Lano lleacr> 6;J9 2 2. Sant~ Cla•ft HOIH-1: Von 1derste>11 lf l !J.I ; 7. 6°'5,9 l , UCLA 6'19.Q I C•!llar111~ 11•11!ff JF) S-;, l. ArOtrY (F l IS!: 5;1t11rdav'1 scorH s o Me5a 2·1. Fuller1on 1-e Ml5S10N CONF£•ENCI !l"lnalj 6:$j.l . 1 Le.Mia !MSAC! ~.I; S. Tie•11ev1 Vl f'111V Fo"''' ll~SAC) 57.3; 6 TU<:~tr (SO /Mi.Ill P~lO<nir W L 01 11 1 - 1 I I 1 H t 1 1• 10 l 1] 11 • 10 " 1 10 14 1 ' IS I A 1(1 IJ I SUBARU Dealer Factor y Authorized Sa les & Service Specializing in All European Car Repairs Suuthem California College of Cos1a ~1es3 has been forced to forfeit 17 baseball v.•ins this ~·ear and Jack Rob in son apparently will 001 coach the team for lhc balanct' nf lhc Sl'3SO n. The Vanguards. who would ha,·c been 22-18 on the season after splitting a doubleheader "'ith Unit e d Staie s lntcmational--lJ n i v e. rs i t y Saturd ay in r,amos played <JI sec. reported~v have be<>n using an ineli gible player. Robinson. "·ho v.·as in his second year of conching the team. has been replaced by Rick Falk, an nssistant. sec got a sterling lhrcc-hit performan('(' from ace Steve Rachunok in the first i::amc of the lv.'inbill, do\\•ning USIU. 2- 1. Rachunok fared only t1vo ballers over the minimum. v.·a\king none while fannin~ three. SoCal supported its pitcher \l'ilh a two-nu1 second inning and that '\'as all he needed. In that second fra n1c. Doug Adams and Joe 11 i g g i n s singled . A sacrifice and Willie JACK ROBINSON the second on single and a errors. Bob Johnson's pair of USJU Rut ""ith t\\'O out s. an error, tllr~ hits and two walks 1urned around the rlnse itan1c ill the sixth. ir1•ST GAME So<.a! Ill a•r nrtM , o t a 1 c a o 1 0 0 0 1 ' 1 0 1 I 1 0 l o a o l ' 3 ' J 0 1 0 1 0 0 I> a o o o 21 ' , ' Htl rtat\, rt .•~· "''lrl· 2b Lrbe't k, t i ~f,;';i',,"i, 11~ ~~::re$,1bdh [1•"•111"• Ii Sal"el. c R~'~unok , p To1111 u<!U sac:11 Callen~ l"nfnp!. ' DOG 100 0-1 020 000 •-1 • • ' ' ' ' SECO"IO GAMIE So<.11 (tl abrllrbl Hli're>n, rt Ja~n~on. 21> l~•:oPn. 2b LtDtt•. ct \ I J D 3 I l 0 l 1 0 0 ~lorales' !\\"&run s i n g I e ~~!;,';; i~1 co1nplC'led the' scoring. MUs1a. JD ~r.rtot\, an L • 1 I I ~ C 1 D l 0 0 I \ c l 0 l c 1 a I 0 o o • 0 1 0 o n o o i\loralcs. I he designated ~11~ .. ~:i.·~· 1~ hitter. had a prrfccl three-for-~~i::;~i-:in~ a three day at the plate in the Tat111 score opener usiu . • soc~• c~u~~ :J ~·1~ ~ Illy ,.,,.1,,.1 ()1)(1 ll'l6 !01-1 001 C\.CI 201--' '" ' " ' 1. Santa C1•rA 1:7t l 2. Calilorni~ 1:11}6 u~'-~,·,a~-1 l"ullerton n.~; 1.M.~,tl.C f.",",',,,.,0,·, 0 l UC Irvine 1:4a.l 4, L:~~ll &:JS ~ ,21: J, Orffltt C1nt !Marti,., Ct1al!,.y Fnshm1n FOi"' Gir11tlt, Liddle Ind o.11n11l 41.4; •· San O!roa 1 Calit;vnh 1:l i ~ 1. rs Lano lle~cn cerrltM 4-1.I; s. sanl• An~ ''·'· Souinwestern 1;'•-• J, Sa11ta Clari J:~-• •· Or111ge Milt •fl•v-•. Fullerloo l : 11 · • ~j"~~~I Coo11 1:5l.6 ). U( lrvlne I 01 J 6_ cconlt<"tntt recaro. brtl~!. aid m11rk U'• -o -1 • at 1·11.t . ""' t>Y Fulle•tcn 1" '111' '· Saoole'Ollt~ ...,. ,.,.,1 · .. oval~ 1:11.1. Ml.SAC J;U.1. ). SO Mes~ 3:26.1; '-SalurflY'I Storts Eli1t S111~les cerrl!Q! ];26 <; 1. Ora-CNS! ~1.~~~~i~KG~c,l1a~~:t~a S i Jo;'~ 2v•11 111om IL& Row.ng A•~.,.1 HJ~f-•· M11<1au !Fl l./I tc-;ntt•en-:-PalGtnar 7, sootll¥re,1.,.11 1 I .I . lllU Sloul fL8 llt wing lo··•",) •K<ird. brta•u aid mAfk of 6.9 '• bY s~n 5e•n1r<:•nt1 1, Rlve•"l<lt o I .It .I l. J(MI Mariel ISw..iltnl 1:2S.6. Midlu 111 nn1' 1. /.'iller 1'1-SAC I ~ -----14i'l.ll Scllool Elo;tnls I: J Gec:tde• (SO Mt~i) 6·1• •. E1d~1 Marin 11.awrnv A1511. 7:01.7 1 \Cl ·6-6 : J. Pt1mtr (Fl~:'· ~rlin Newp<1•! Sc-I 8ay1 A 1.10.1 l. 01'() 4·2. Newper1 s-:noor e ay1 a 1·0 l LJ-1. Wllklnsatr !SO Mesal 21-11.: 2. Harbor View Subaru 2100 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. 645·0660 Hlfll Sd1110I Slng1t1 l11•ek CF! 21·f : ll Bl~nd {/..'SAC\ S•~ OiNO Hl(ll'l f ;Ofl,J l . Marin 22·1~; 4. !"tell DCCI 21·11; S. Jl.owinQ A11<1Cla!ion 9:0fl.5 J. NewPOrl H1nii1n (F) '211-111:11; •• Gll:"er !MSAC) Sclloo! e1>Y1 As~"-10,:».3. T }:~:f:·•·Hvttan !Fl 11.11 , ltan•ertnct P. A. ~all!Mr C:i~ •eCQt"d, brAAkl old m11rll of <1·1 bY l . C:~lilt>r11la 21 l. cs lan~ 8e~th n 3 Y.'ll"('n al ~~!.!>ilC 1" '7''; 1 Stoll Or1nge Coa1t 12 '· UC Jrvint ll S (MSACl '6-S: 3. Miiie• t Fl ,4.1>1,; '· First time ever! UCLA 9 6. Loyall I. lll;u•d tMSACl u ...S'h; I. Sernl (Cl •J.f.',:O: 6. Salone lSD Me1a) '3.,\,. PV-1. Oo8e•o !Fl li-0: l. 1'.11tt1 !SO Colleg iate Golf 5oC•I C:OllRl'tn<• Gtlr TDUrMl Ill Slnglflt Hi Ill CC, Sift -Olt911 Team 'l(OrlllG-1. Senti Monlc1 (( 911, Goloen WHI ,.so, Ria Honda •SS. LA Hartior 9'1, Cyorr11 1.071. E1sl LA 1,()1;•. Lat. Anorles CC 1,114. ln(llvodual Kori11G-I. Hinds ISIACCl 1-19; Brammer (S,..CC) llO. Tl!f'IQ\er (SMCC l 1.SO. AIOt•tllt !Fl.HI '"· Mfl"'r C R~ l~l. Ptn<ler !GW / 1)'. Clllvt z (RH 153, Yaktl I MC 15.l, er-" r<; Cl 15111, Glllord 1ow'\ 151. PrUSJI IGWC:l 1~, Les GWC 159. H11!l!d 'GWCJ 16'. (GDldtA Wtst au~llfies la• <ect!a11~1 tournt~. M•y 13 II l.o5 l"Qse1 111 (tmtflllo). M~I) !'-6: J, Oe<:ull& 'Cl U.0; '· W~llth (F l U.j!; ~-ftle) frtntR '"'.SACl ftrn' St•r••y C•l~AC) 14.(1. SP-1. Adams ISO Me .. ) ~10!,~ tconterence re<:Ord. brtak1 aid m1r~ ,,/ $6-l. Ml bY Ad~m• in nrt 1lm1): 1. Ru!A !SO M1\tl !.1-lG\ : l. Murrav /Fl S;).10'•' 4 l<'h~e !Cl SO·l'~' S. Kll"e (Fl 50.1•,; 6. lacr.1·1iela U~AC) 19·1. DT --1 M11rr1v iF~ !69-ll: 7 . C'>~•rr•·'la, t~l J'O.•; • l'l ·~···· !Cl 1•9·1: 1, Z1cnwlt j1 (MSAC ) 111- '' S. Vin Bloem (F) 1.M-2; 6. Klin~ 'Cl 1•1·(. l JT-1. KrOllQ~ (MSAC.) ZJ6.C; L Ci1relli tOCCI 121"; J S"'O:)l~h• !C) 111.t : • llA(rarlt (Fl 20S.0; s .SM••er tSD ..Vesal 1'3-3: 6 .S•~laa lSAJ 1-::0-1. Fin~• tet.ni 1corl-l. Fullt•lon 11l: 1 ~'I SAC 1261 J . -60 Me•• 76: 4, Ol'lfttf CMlf Sil S. C!'rrllas 41: 6. Sant~ Ane 14. I · 8 l In the night c:ip. thr v1s1tors 1--- - collected si x runs in the sixth ,----------------------------------. inning. four of them on one swing of Joe Stedman's bat. C'll route to an 8-4 triumph. sec had taken a 1-0 lead in ACREAGE AVAILABLE AT HIDDEN MEADOWS UNIT # 2. Gauchos E11cl Sea~o11 HURRY OUT TODAY! <'0P•"o 1,11• ,o,,. it•'""· r1d1>,. 1 11~'.H!"'NI t••l I , I kd w11I, "h•l•'IV ',~ '"I .. 111• i"'"·, ! '1•! o •Uot•l•V ' ·,,, 1• n wnf'("( I•'/ 11•1"" f\,\,..1.J,1"' In<. H1flo:lf'" Witl1 7 -5 Baseball Wi11 SAN DIEC0-Sadd1eback College ended a long season with a 7-5 base ball victory over San Diego CC Saturday at San Diego State College. The Galichos took a 4-0 lead in the second inning thanks to four walks by the Kni ghts pitcher. Jack ~torse, Rich Douglass. Bob f\:toen and Carl Sandstedt all drew walks for one run. Mark King grounded out for another. Brian 11estcr's fly ball got the third tally home and Bill Springman singled in lhe fourth. ' The Gauchos broke a 4--4 tie in the fourth when Springman si ngled in King. \Vho had singled. Two more scored in the sc1.:enth on a walk. singles by Doug Pryor and ~1orse and a 1,rround out. Stu ~ia\mgren pitched well in relief for the Gauchos. st riking out one and walk ing none in the last s2~ innings. Saddleback finished the season \\'ith a 7-26 record. ~·•dltht• 171 alt r h rl>I l(loo,JI) o11;1 Hester, 11> $ O 1 O ~Q•l11nm•"· d A a , 1 Wll!l11m•, t ol 1 0 O l'rvor, r I I t O MD<Sf !I 31 11 ooou(•u. 111 'l 1 o o Mfe.,,lt 1100 S11nd1ted1, c:th 1 1 0 I llr"pe.~ 000 0 M11h"Qr111, n 0 c1 01 o1 Talftl1 31 SCfl't ~V fftAl ft4~ Sllckll,Mt• 0'0 100 100--1 10 I San Oleoo 004 000 010-1 11 f IT'S NOSTALGIA TIME U.S.A. AT LOS ALAM1ros THIS TUESDAY NIGHT! Six old.timers will compete on old-fosh ioned "hi gh-wheeled" sulkys, popular at the tur.n cf the century, in o non -wagering exhibition between the 5th end 6th rac:•s of the re"Qulor racing cord. The JACK I SHOOP GROUP , famou s Goy 90's bon d, will set the NOSTALGIC mood early and ploy lotel ·~on '.t miss. this fun -filled e vening or ony of them during this clos- '1 ng week of the Spring Harness Meet ct Los Alomilos. Hidden Meadows has something big in store fo r you. ·-·"" ., , 'hoJ+r •' p1" " '.t I"• ,,,..riv I' 1\ 1n '''' H• '' " 11 '" .I .,, •"'r1"r I 11 • ! I• l!l,OIJI Jd""I'"' I; Io o :> +r • · I I . 1 I o1 ~ I> " ' ' I t I ' • " • 1 .11 1, I I '" I '/', < ,, , '" '" ,, I f<)>I .t"•dl;lo• I ·I I •\ I l.i• • I l\11il· I v.1o11 •l'I··•" \ , Io• •·' .~1 ...... 1 ·"•1··· 11• 11 -/•l•I•" I'"'' • • ' ,, • • I'• C•·!Jl l'J" +I I ,, •'' I • •·I• •·I· d "~l!•lt~o ,I•!• I' t ''• q 11 "" +f• ,, • , I I 1 I l ' 1'· 1!l,i•1, ' "I , 11 l / 1r1t"l"' I••" w>l• !.ol'llc+ It,, , I I l •rflQn " • ' l,')O 1 ...... " California Yes1erd<tY . , . Califotni1 Tod ay! I 1'1(1 Ott1 f • "''J! "!1 • 11,ld"" Mt.,.,L "·'"' r.,, .. Lo "'·tPJ rl "C.1111 ""'" .,,, 11 1r _,.,J 11 1 \1<' ', Y ,.,·JI 1 hi' •rlJ~t'iJ. •"tf•1! 1 olll<· .!I ·11'11 ph,:hl tl1.1r ·"""o, Iii-· c~lil•H' I I II),) !<'.or ,, 0 V/!.11.· V·'" ... ,,,.,,. '-'~" '"•I•' ' I 1< '' Oco· ''/ Ion/' I!\,,. •. 111.oll 01<'·1l••'•·lYb"I""'" 1>1,,,1 11 '"'" .ot 111 Id··" l\li1• Id• 0 I ,'/,• ... ,., /' •J"ll " I ,~,r ''I'' I' o" '· ''· ' " 'l"M' f 11 I'• lir• ' ly '!t"l"i'll ••' o I 'l'\•111 .. "" .... "ll .+ 1!''"' ill" .!1\:,.,i If ~11'""'"' ol l"tr •' • I I "'-·'' o"j .,• ., • 1·!1 I•""' \\, 1 l<>·.1 I " 1 Pi!(.f n l • , 1 ,1 u·.-··o, , • • ""' hJlrlov ·J "' '"''" t lo t $\•n '1,,,.i., ()t, /•O .,,, <oi l j 1iol "'' •'' l '"'" Ito I I ' , 1 I Escape Ftom 1he City Pressures I '' 1•nt1.+r., " V•1'J1 •t•t,...,ol• " \.1' o•i 'IV', lq\ f)Y'l'h"'. Woll hdVI' "" o• ~11 ,oh1 . .,11rv li•i !I·•' ••f"'''·'t"'" •• '"·•"•1''""'"1 •ii !I'•• L..-1101"' 1 J,, I J· '" ':!,• 1(.1<>1·;··, fJ' f!O<H IV , owo>o>• '" l• 0 '"" ' '""' .. 1 "'' '. "1) '" 11 ... ""'•"V l.,11 l'/ltl , •ii• II•" lJ.IV"l"ll l>·'""T•'lll •t o'1 l'HIO o!HJll f,•,-d OI .. ~ ""'Iv W•Tl"'l IW•• /•'.It·· -I I,: p •'•' ,-,· t1dr,,n1,1""'' I• IJl d"' I"~ "'""''"·ol I" olo•"" ,. I n1rf'•I'•"' •I 'I • ,,, 1 I< 11l 1lol .d "'" 1'1 • '''•lU lf,..i., _,.,,., ,,unu t,.,_m•o• ,,.J, ... f\1.<1 •I loi. ,1 1t1·1•1"'' ·1,.,,J .. w ,,,_, 'fl•~""'"' •!I .... ' Hodden Meado~ i ···"··· ,,,.,, \!.'""'"" M•"I"~ Md ~ .E,cond1do p.,., "Ofi~ on 11~.1•'-!1"'' ... '"'' '""'"•••n r~ ... n'"'"" ,,. '. 11 .. ,o(l ,,.. "'l•I P, \;>.1Cf~h·• ll"(,11H1T1·,.f:lul., 1 t11· '"•i'f"I ,, 1· •l•p" ,, •It 1U."1 I" l 1:{ I ::. ,.."'''""'" '91 ......... ~ oo Hod••• '4oMi"'"' ...... ,,.c. ' , ' ' '"' -, '! 1 I l'H '" 1, r, l"I ot 11 ,,\/'1.IJOtJ, I ,1 !o, o"- •~h· lll•"d !'1'•lUI"~' '" +hllo'• I "i'''h /\IJ,'. J 1 • 1 '•'"•LI 111 1 h ,r l1·n,, ,. ' . 1"111 "'"'"'"""1 °"' "'"I I' ,!11 I • h·r \It' l u• ... 1 •I d i1n 1" 11!1 •, !t·- '" 1nlo11it , lu .. 1 ... 1 ... 11,.,,, 1!"1 '' n1 ,,, 11 11111, '" ... ' '"' ,.,.o,_,., ' ,, ' li.ilhJ .. ·1 , ••• i .~ l BurrJ to Bidden Meadows! Smiles north of Escondido on 395. CALL COLLICT (714J74S-2373 ""' mout lfl lum1•tlon wrilt~ tliltden \t ~•Jn"''· '·O Ro,11; '·tfl. );Jrun,hdo, r'A 920l!'o l_Jt•t111•1 l l!t!l ()1'~!1,1 ""ll"ll li·olH .t. ,•lnU<o ,,.J '1\•I ,, '•' ,.,. 1 U\o 't 'Y '<1 •lllQ1 ... 1rh·1 °!llf1'0Vt'\ll\ttn1111 01~ .. t'. ,q.,,nt'"'' 11 ... \.I< ,. .I•'' I,," • • • • ~ -·: • ·~ '• .• • • • • • ·t ... ., -, . • • -t • • ~ • • • • • • l • • .l ·: _. • •! •• •• -: • . -. ' ' -' • ' ' ' ' C ·I DAILY PILOT Sunday, May 5, 1~74 The Week's~ Market .·HigHJights ·1h1~ Week VOLUME, IJ;EA VY TRADERS NASD Quotations on Mutual Funds ., Uni•~ "'"' 1 ........ ,1¥@1 NIW YOlllll. fRt -tk 111 rtrltW NEW VoRI( IUlll) -TIM let\ -·· ••••w ol!K~J ''•"-0 on tlM Amttlt..-5toc' t•U11111ee '" '"' •ft' •lllHO ~V 3. lfl• "''"' VOt• F111 lO .. •~t t! • lo\I 01 11•a '"° •\•f'(t "" c•• o~ Mut~" , u~\ '' GUO"d tly IN NAS.0 froc ,..~. Mfy) 191' llf .... '"'"' c;., J 10 • 1, .t.am In< l11 JS. ,\<Im l>I\ 111 I ti 4ftv>W'• • ()l t.•l Aelnt Fii 6., I Al Aflnf I~ 11 1) U 11 A!ulv•t 8 tt I 10 4 GE !I'd • It • SI All\l~le 9 IJ 10 ... .t.•pn• ra 10 11 11.11 Am,•p ,-'1] •,!1 •m 8or•n t It 10 I• Am Ovr\ I I I I t.0 Am £qt1 •l1 •11 AM Ell l'AIEJS FUNDS (iPltl 6 01 6 '1 l"t01ft I It t II lllVl1M 1 OI 1 II "'""''' 661 l?J ~10<.~ 6 11 I ! I ol.m C:,.111 I'' l ti Am 111>1~ •.lS • u Am lnV\1 •II f .11 Am Mu1 I IJ 8.IS AmttJ C.• lOI 17• .t.ft(hOlt GltOUI" Grw!n !llCCll' qt\e•• \IN'U• FllQ In·• Wi N•I< '"!111n Aua~, r ~ 11 I 1] •6 •6 lot 10 11 I 1 71 J l'I • 16 • )6 '·'' 10 •1 11 1• !I I !1 1 • u I 11 "' ftOUGflTON Fun<!,\ •t 1~ •SI Fu..O 8 1>)1111 St<><• I U 6.0• 4•~ Su J.h 1 O'i 8L( Gth t Ml 10 ... BIDWln • II t II 8t y•O<. Sil •DJ 81TtkQt •1' l1' S.tcn Ml I It 1 1• S.teon t )I) •.JO S.r~lllt J.11 l ll BondJI~ ;1.ll ~.!1 ~S1 l'Clll l .lj t ,'1) Brown 1.16 1.IJ 8rn)'lfr! t .U t 11 CALVIN FUNDS· Bull Fd ~11.11 11 11 Cftn Fa •10.1• 11 ll O••\nr J DI JJl N.i.,d I ll '•I NY Ven ~ !J 10 11 CC, funa 1 11 ,,1~ c~nt sr.i 10 10 II t9 C.n•I 1~11 · /q,, 110 (HA,NNINt;. FUNDS: """' , 11 t ll 611n(d • 06 ~.~ Qnd Fd I ll 'Jl E_q1y Ct< 6.J.0 I 1G Eqlr Pt 1.S9 1 8J ff\d Am 6 le I 11 Ctr .. 1n •I\ • 19 111(0... •-1• • ll S11tcl I !! I •> V~Mur ' 19 1 01 CH-$£ BOST Oft -Fiia 1111> -. M-"1"fl l'ron(p •U •IJ SllT< 8\ •&1 111 ~llf(I S.U l.ll (~m fd 111 0 11 (NA MNG FOS: L•btly • 11 l 11 M~nM l 01 l ll Scnu• ~ ~ O I 01 "~ GllOUI" c• .. 1~ 1 n t.02 !n(O>M '•l t.A Sm'"'' I 10 1.u fflllnl st! l lO Sur·•r f' I.II 'lO , • ...., c; 1 11 en "'"" (•O 113 l k fl~Yl &A., t .()lo 4 fl Tudor "'·1 • ~• t ~ ~n CG> 11 IM 10!11 Cl 1 .. t O!-Un,lol'<I 1",) ll I al Vnil""d I t i I JI UNION SfltVICI! GltOUll. llra S I~ 11.14 •I •I N•!l Inv l:M •'I. Un(.tptl?OI .. Urou111 In 11 Ol !? 01 UHllf.0 FU"IDS: A.c<~"' 191 ISl B<><t f!I 11• 19] (On! 9 "' 1.61 I •I lont Int I loO t .ll Ill( Om IQ 11 1 I IJ Stf~1>1 1 ... 110 ....... 'I'll • " l.ll l/5.t.A.(I IU I" US Gv1S t.ll 9 11 U5Lll'f." FUNOS· "Pe • F •OI •11 e~1 Fn!I 1.01 / IJ (O<r> S1~ 10 10 11 It VALUE t.IN( FOS: V~I Ln• 171 ~II Vol Inc J-9~ •JI ltv c.1n 1.01 6 \t \/~I SPo: 1 '1 IOI VAN CE ·~· .. ! •It I 9• V Com ~•I ~I 6lt Vrotr!ll1 l H VtllQrd I 18 . " ' " •• ' ,. '" V.ion1 loti:l ~ •6 Vf<it<I I J °' J •I v.1n; G• •.Ml .. l.Q W•!IS! gr I I• I 11 W•\I• Mu 10 1111 10 Wting rq t l• 9 ?I Wl!Ll lftGlOft GROUI"; E•plO< It 1111.11 )Vt !! I 61 a!'JJ Morqn 10 10 11,(1.1 Tru\I t7J!06J Wt l~lv 10tl !161 Wfll1n 9 ll 10.41 ~!"'" ri JI t0.1• Wlna.. •I.IS l.H W•il Ind l.•• 1.•I W1!111 <ir t e• 1 •• Wo~ton\ • 91 ! JI lof<Jlfr t.10 O '"4 •·••·d+1tldend •·u~•·•,•ab••. It• '"-.-..11 111411,,. Mi, I, ,,,_, Dow ;Jones Stocks Dow Jones Bonds Opon Hltlt LtW Cltlt (IHI .. 111 ••.I.I It.ti H ,ft •t.lt-0.17 11' Jlllllt Sf.U II.ti S.O.H Sf.M-1.01 1"41 llllh 66.11 M.l1 66..U &•.Jl--•.tt UlllJ N.10 U.tl N.ll M.U -t .M IN1111111 U.00 11.0 11,11 n .11-t .11 Ill(. IUll ft.II l t.11 41.JI •I.JI-I.ti Tith -li't IMC-•tt11mt .. ,tlt,t l-0 Vtlll"'* ·-·k •'Ill 6t,IU,•ll Daily Volumes ........ ~ T11tl4•Y Wod1M1hy Tftu,.dfy Frll•V ''''" 11111 w• 10.111,no 10.tU,t>O 11,llt,M ll,1.U,ttll 11,0tl,J!O ''·'"·'" Weekly Sa les Ntw Yor~ Stock• N1w Yark aonos """'Ifill SIO<.IU Ml•wttl ,,.,k, l"•U W~. Yr "!' tt,••t,UO 11.IJ1,I I '"·•st.ooo sn.1n.too 7.IJJ,110 11,111,01 J.12.0,000 •.Ul,000 Yearl y Co mpari so n W\. Endff Ml t l , UH Aiprlt u. lt1' Mar 4, Ull Mar I. 1'1J Hl'lll LIW ,\dY Oet •I •U Ill '" l• Ml HS Ult JI Ill llOl UI lO 111 •O 11'1 Un<I'! "' "' "' '" Stai1dard and Poor O! l11ch .. 1r+.I• 11 1t1Uto111 60 Ulillllfl l.Qf S1tck1 totlt ft Uw (IMt Ce! 1u.t 1101.U101.11.1.1 Jt.JJ Jl.:M ll.ll•O.ll 10,IO •o.H 10.61-0,U '1.U t0.00 t 1.1t•1.!1 '"' nu ftltfl Wwl 51le1 Mlf~ Lt• (ltM (Mo, t.J 41'-$}'!'0!t• Corp 10l,IOO )I •71• d 'o. -f, ,. • • ,,.,.,,l'Ouq 8 102,100 J ••• 1• •. I ' o II~ Hu~-J OU ••l,100 ?Oh !I'• n o-· 1, )l'o 11'" lullt\ GtJ IJl,M)O 2l'• 11'1 ll'o , '• .01, J.2>1 Hou\IOll 011 111.XIO 4l'• ll'• 41''1• 1'• "• t •o AtMtvt OU t l,100 l'o I'• I'•• I" u •, !I G11111 Ytllow •.100 H•• u •o "'•···· 1t'o l'• Fly T!Qtr M U,000 611 l'o !<>-l'o ll'o lll'• l"'Dittlll 0 11 11,100 lt'1 Jt )l'I+-'• 1'• >'• 011mp 1-'omt 11.000 1•, •'• "' ---- $ilt1 Hll Ltw CltM (H, tll,JOll 1 •o t\'J t••--JI, H0.5CO n•o JS 1ll•-l 511.•00 11 •·1 H\'o ·~ -.. •'1:1.•00 Jiit 21~1 J)l,, '· Ut,OOG '''• •ll't '''•-, 110,JOO 110.. 10>1 70•• -11 r IM,100 1Jlo U lo ll'•-~, 101,JOO 3p,. 11 1'>, ~ Iii )111,ll!o lt\o 1/~i 11'1-· l•o Jlt.100 ,, II'• 11•.... •• NY, AMEX, OTC Gainers and Losers N~w l'Drk •UPl i lno lllllDW•n<J I·~· •now) t~ Slotkl 11ta! n•v• Qdlnr-G 1ne mou •nd t1t11 !flf mo~1 bto,eo on Pf"'"' o• '"""oP Oii I~ NP! •nd Pt•,•nt.191' (ltan~tl dr~ 11\e dojlt•fll(f belwHn li\1 '"'l!k ~ cio"nq p•or• •nd t~" "'••k"• (IO\lno prot• Nr"" York (UPI) Int !ollo,.,ng !<>1 Nt " York IUP•1 '"" 101•0••110 h\! Gl lNElt$ I lO•fl Corp l '>• Ull, 1 f;~'.:';~<: fl ~;!:: ~ .. ~: • NilO""I 1q II••• 9'• Up S G••~! W fo!l I • t P o Up &Oo,.Ol+VN 8 1•!'0 UP I 6"'"0il ]I ll >o• S'o Up I R••t110S JI JP ,. "• Up 9" CnMt .1)1'! !'•• 'o Up :~i~,.~~ 11~ 1:•: ?;: ~= 11 Tob+n Pat< t • 11, Up IJ COl'I St G~ I'.· 1•, Up 11 R~b"""' .ll ll • l , U11 •S !n1tUnP 1• !'a• • Up It VtlCll O!l>n 111< • 3', Vp 11 Kttr Mt 10 l»o• 9'o Up 11 qJh~g 1p! 1 • ''i Up 1t OvrS/\1111 .10 Tllo• l 'a UP JO OutlSOI !if U•, • 1 Uo 11 Wl!<DDI 1.15 '9'•• I~ UP 12 Te•Etr 1 10 l 11,' • Up ll NA Coal ~o Jl • J''i Up 11 M G M "·D 1''•• P o Uo 21 •vi• In( •0 IJl, • 11.o Up lOIEAS I (IO•D•(O 17 I J< ' 011 1 u \' lnd~\I ll'o-t 'o Otf l Mt•S!>llJfl to -lS'o OU I T1t~MOIOt l'o-l'o 011 s ton Ea .•Sn ',_ii.. 011 1 1 ra.r ptE • •• ·-" 011 1 flllllll NM •'•-p , Oii I SomP1t )) 17 ?" ott 9 AmlllV\! 1~ I'~-I 0 11 10 Aul o.i1 1oa JI •-• 0 11 II W~•nUn I~< ' 1-'• 011 U (NA U won l' o 011 ll lla\tEpf I OI 11 -IJ Otl u Uno"" Corp I•~-• Ott 11 W~1roC.~ 1 M 11•,-1~\ 00 16 (Ml Inv (O 16'•· l '' 0 11 11 HD \P(P .t6b 111. l'o Oft II fl•WOCllL ,, 1• l'' on Cffd!I ""'" •1---...-J... OU 10 N11$Ppl 4 1~ '1 t 0 11 11 Cl'!t<!burn •'o' ,~· •,, OJI 11 llllOOIGr . • l'o Oii IJ Pl lf"I fin .ll • '• 0 11 JI ~IDlll (p I 'o 0 11 U 8G51Ed l •• 11'• 1 , Oii , .. ?l.I '" JO.• ••• '" U .t 11.1 '" ''·' '" '" ,,, !•.• .. ' "·· , .. U_J 1l.• '" IJ.1 " ' 11.1 " . '" ., ' '" ". 1J.O '" " . '" H _I 1s.1 '" 11,J ll.I tJ.l t).l '" 11.0 1),0 l?.I '"' '" " ' " ' '" '" " . '""'"'' Ille •ICKk!o Ill.ti fl~yp !Ml•Md lllf M0\1 1na l~t !M mo$\ NH<I ,,.., 1>1•ttn~ at <llU'9" 11n IM •Ml•ltu • S!oc k E•tllan~. '"II"'' Ille 'lot•• !n•t lldVe cµ·n~d IM mo•I ""° 111~1 lne mo11 b••fJd Ol'I Pl'rtfn! o• 1n1noe on lh• O•tr0111e.(oull!•• fndrkft ., ctUOlfll b1 !hfo N.t.$0 Net ;ind 1>t•<ent"!I' tn•n~~ ''" '"" ll1 tle•t11C• ~1W<:"tn Id\! -•k '\ CIO\•n~ l>"<.,•rld Ill" ...etO"\ <16\.lnQ II"<" t1e1 •nd 11er<ell!.OQ<' tn•ng•' •r• I"• "'''''•enc• Dt!we-.n Th~ 11•~~'9~' IA>! ll•d l>"l" ~nd mt ,u.,1n1 •~•1 D'" P"'"· G&lfrtfllS Gol.U.UEltS I SG !oft \It> l'o• 1 U1> t)) I M•n ,,.. "'o!~n 1 • '.-I.JD 2 lnv\l(p Fl• J'o• 1 • Uo ~I l l'tlrml IOI) \'1• 1·, Up !I.I • Palon> Fin<! I • • Up •O 0 2 Ai u1tr 1ncoro 1 '· , UP "JC"•"'' 5nOP e'• • '• Up •(P l C:O!I> ••I Ull I MOullloflOJ I" /" • Up JS.I & (11n111•c Cp ,., • UD JI 8 \ Don ,;,,.c11orn 1 • • U11 ~ l •W\Ol'I P -0Sd 70 • Up I Grow C Jl<.1 •'• • I VP /),8 I Oelln Fii .S• !l • 1'o Up 11 l I Compu!r (011..,1 1· • • Up a KM!> 1n<1u>1t" • , • ·• I.lo •AllUC1p .. 1 ,, '•Up 110 :~ ~.~~v1 "f,.' r:~:).;~ :t: Jt8 n P•cSvln .?I •l • 1', un 13 s ~ W11rn 0 1q<ldl 10'•• '• Up 10 Btl!vnd Mone\ I•,• UP 11 ,\rpe1• Ct ! 10 I • Up ll (!a~\ fon•nCI ~ UP I) P&F lllllU'I 1 • l·I& Ull 2J I •l D~t• D•lo< Ir>< UP I• ~mt~ Mn 1•1• '• UP 111 !S Ptnlron ln<I 11·11• '• Up JI 1 11 c.avn ron CO •O.• "• Up 11 t · :~ ti1~:i1~e :i~ ~;:; 1:·: ~: ;:.; It Gl!tl11t!' Ill l'o • 1' / Up 10] 10 Vulc.t" Carp J • '' Up JOO 11 0Ntil Jonr>f < • Up U (••llr> fuel Mo I)>,. J, Ull ,_ Bob Ev•n\ .bO )1 •' 1•, UP 11 Ma9m• Pa.,., r • • '• UD II Hydro Cw11u1• ~I•• UP 19 Cob• L.Obrt10• •a '. UP 10 Ooll1r (,en (p I • • UP 11 Pl;l\t MoiN l l• • '• UP , 11 . .t 1l Elf C! Al~•>I 1•1· '• Up 111 1l G•e•nmn 5' r,. •, Up 11 1 14 C•m<o ln'p I I . " UP "I U T~•t<!vn• In 10 ,. l Up 11 ft 11 Aou~ Comp ~" UP n Frt mPH' ltd 11 • UP 1l Vo1>11nl (n•m• \ • • UP II Aeln•ll lndu• \ • · UP JS 810Mea•1•I '>< l• UP LOSER~ LOSE AS '• l·l6 Ott J) l I Montt ••m u.n I'• o .. OH 0" 1•, '1 on I, 1 0!! I 1 ' Ou , ., '• 011 ·-1·1' 011 11' t 1'• OH ''• '• on I' I 'o ()It 0.11 '• O U 1 . '· 011 '•t '• Of! l , OU I , 1 , O!! 1'' 011 1 , O!t J • 011 1 Otl 1'-, Oii n .o i T<1w1e Mlq .~ 1 • 1 , :&J J i.Mf> [~,., lo ) o 1& J • 0+~ E••ln .,., 11 • ' D~!lker Won" 10 0 o l'•ltnh l!I AUI ?Oo 'K•moo•ouno 11.t I M~l•n ldbl" lll •O:l/1111•• 0\.11 11 I 10 M• Tetn ln!lu• 11 l 11 Coi>t C•ltmd II? 11 °"'''"'" 0Ald 111 1J ""' e,o,.,.ao11 II 0 II (.!fll>l(lbb 0\.11 1• I ,, L•P< M!q Ola I• I I& M l " IV'MQ•,.,. I& I II M~rfyMQ 9>~ !) I II ,_redhmtlS \& IS • lt E •~<ull•t ln!I ' • . " " . ' ' .. 0" '" '" 0" OH o .. , on • • Cl" '" "" ... o .. 0" o .. "" OH ". '" '" " ' " ' '" '" .. " " . ' " " " .. . ' " .. " .. .. .. ,, " " '" " ' ". " I " . " . '" , .. .. " " " '' " " " -1~-•o--Oll • • •. on ' , -'• 011 .. _ '• 011 1-$.G -l'G..Gt•llllot. X~ 1s o n Mta'om •~< , . ~--· . ' 0"--o.. ·r U.l Jl M1t •OWlve j> 1:11 on '" •• O!! II,) 1l Si'6n Dtl• [p U J l• M11 ..... H (p \0. ll • li CCB!IM•A 11111 " " ... o .. '" 0" o .. '' '' Borrowing ll p in March Oil Firms May Lose • ~r- Some Tax Benefits 1 I \\'ASHJ!\1GTON The ,storied 22 percent oil depletion ~\lowance. target of ta x reformers for many years. htay flnally be passing into history·. The liouse \Yays and l\1'.eans Comrnittee recently voted lo phase the depletion allowance out over a five-year period for most oil produ ction, provided oil prices stay as high as the experts predict. But the oil co1npanies Y.'on'l be suffering. They \viii be getting about $8 a barrel for oil that brought $4 in pre- en1bargo days. And meanwhile they will not be hit with an excess-p rofits tax on their current profits bonanza as long as they plow the money ba'ck i n t o production. THE OlL TAX pack~gc started out as a way of getting at the 1\•indfall prof i ts companies arc experiencing from surging oil prices. The administ ration vetoed a priee roJlback. and proposed instead a v.•ind fall"profi!s rax that \vould net abo;.it $3 billion . But I h e iidministration '4'anted to leave lhe depiction .ellowance untooched. sn tha1 after the windfall tax ph ased out rive years from now the industry would still retain i1s spccii'.11 tax privilcccs. 1'hc. committee turned th .. concept around. Let th t. companies keep their new profits , the panel decided, as long as-they plow the money back in'to exploration , drilling and construction of refineries. But let the depletion allov.1nnce phase out -unless oil prices fall b8ck to their 01d level~. THEN FrvE years down the pi.ke the oil industry, after having built a lot of new capacity, will be taxed basically like other industries. Their inajor reinaining special benefit would be fast write-off for intanglble drllling costs, whi ch is a greater incentive for exploration than the depletion allO\\'ance anyway . The approach probably does not makl'! the oil industry unhappy. Some of the majors /1ad suggcslcd ending tile depiction allowance, figuring tha! H did their image more harm than It \\·as \\'Orth and that \\'ith higher prices they didn '1 need it anyway. But the Wa,vs and ri.Jcans package is psobably to o generous to the industry lO get State ,Jobless Rate Ju111p s to 7.6% in ApriJ SACRAJ\f ENTO 4 AP ' California's se a so n 11 I I y adjusted unemployment rate jumped from 7.4 percent to 7.6 porcent during April , but fc,ver people are losing jobs because of the energy crisis, stale officials ha\'e announced. The actual number o f unemployed persons ~·en t down for 1hc s econd ronsecuUve month and the nuinber of persons with jobs Increased for the second s1relgti1 n10nth, the s1nte • E 111 p loymc.nt Development Oeparln1cnt said. 'T'here \rert 8,272.300 million Calfforni<ins on the job during April. up from 8.206.600 in ~hirch. !he department said in a nc"~~ rclea!Je. The jobless t9tal 11•as 1152.&00, down rrom 715,000 In March. THE FIGURES are biued o n <t new m~thod c f cal<'uh1ting introduced I n California at the request or the federal BureAu of Labor EitarJstJcs. Mate employment t'htt:f Rici! Cimilll uid L:sing thr old slate method, lhc unen1p toyment rate would have been about 5.6 perct:nt. he said lie said Wlder 0 the • through Congress w i l ho u t so1ne chan,es. Libe rals \l'ili 1ry to get at least partial taxes 011 current profits ·by al\o,vin~ the companies only a 50 1*t"cenl tax ln~t~A<l of 100 percent credit. THAT \~'OUL.O te:ive sonic induce me n.t ·tor extra investment and still hit the industry 1vith some tax~s. That approach C•1uld he n1adc extremely :ippealing b,1 contbining the oil lax 1vith a personal income-tax cut. A spokesman ror T a x Analysts and Advocates, a public-interest law f i rm • figures the oil i n d u st r y ;,walked awa y'' 11•ith the \Vays and l\-1eans Committee but that son1c changes will be made tn hit windfnll profits before the bill emerges from Congress. "The industry may have had its hast hurrah in Ways and 1\1eans this week," he said. ' .......... ' Liberals argue that with n barrel of oil bringing two or three lin1es what it did in pre· en1bargo days. no further incentive is needed 1 o encourage investment THE OIL PUMP WILL NO LONGER BE SACRED Far West to Move in Fall TllE OFFICE portion will be faced with 1•1ood and mcLal ornnme nt at ion and the rcn1ainder \\'1th pre ca s t 'Kid Like to A ·k Audy ' Sfreel, lhe \\'haler. Lt. Roberl E. L.ee, lsadorr's, t h C! Sandpipt:r, !he Pl ankhou11e. the Sumn1er H o u s e and the J\loorings. , The architect and builder of the new headquartets Is the O. K. ~arl i.:o.. tnc.. of Pasadena . SILVER BARS lll~•r 1'111 ttlHll t v1r '"°' lr1 V1J11t 011•l"f Tiit "111 I MOl!llll, Cw.IMlt11tltl Ctr"r•lt 5tt•ttt Or ltn""'9iltt O.llv1ry IHTllll(OHTINIHT.t.L INVISTMIWT COMPANY Ml filtw"'1 C111111r Ori~ l lfltt 1U Tiit ,.111111tlal (tftllt ,. .... ,.,, ....... , ... 644-9410 \\',\SHL\'GTO\' 1AP 1 -The go vernment has announced Lhat consu1ner borro,vi ng rose S807 mill!on in l\1;'1rch, double tl\e February increa.se and al.\, indication that co n 5 um e ; spe nd ing has picked u p ronslderabl}. The an1oun1 of consumer borrowing is considered a di~ indic:tlion of huying activity by Americans. since it reflects charge account purch:ises. automobile loans • and other l ns!a !ln1r n 1 purchases. The seasonally a d ju 5 t e <t ~'larch Increase c o m p a r e d ~iltt a $385 milH<f\ gain in rebruery. atlhoueh I h e FedcFal Reser\li Board said !he growth in cdnsun1er credit during the ~st four months has averaRed less than one half the rate for the san1c period last year. INSTAL.Ll\-tEST rredi , f(lr purchase or 11utcmoblles and other goods. rose $61.7 n1illlon in March. although automobile credit declined $60 million. the 1hird decrease in four n1on1hs Ho1ne impn>ven1ent loans: rost! b} a near n:C'Q(d $1 l6 , P.,llllio11 ., the Feder ill Rtscr\'f' Board 5'lid. '.'ltoninstalJn1ent crt!dl! lnelud1n::: chorgt a ('co u 111 purchaseJi -rose '2a3 rnillion in ~l~rch after declining 111 ,Janu ary and F' e b r u a ry . r\oniQStalln1('1l1 credit was off by S286 m1lllon 1n ~·1.:l>ru11ry To1a l ourstand1n~ consuincr credit 111 the rnd of March v.•:1:i; 5177 .S billion. -----. . , Coast &deral has somedting for people widt big ideas · and a litde moo~ ..--. With tho help of Cout Fedor al there'• ao rcuon wby eVcrybody, slowly but au rely, c1n'l build up a bis 11vlnp account. Hleh lntemt Rates. e • .,. on 1n 1nnuaJ r1teof $.25 ~. our re,ul1r p1ubooi: 1ccounl1 yield $.JSI~ annually. And you can take money out 1nytlmc. Certil'llc1tt accounts return up to 7~ t/11 aye1r, the hl1he1t rate allowed by the 1overnmen1 . Federal rerulation1require1 1ubtlaali1J lntere• pcn1lty on 111 c:ertlftcate 1coounl w1tpdr1wal1 prior to maturity. Our tree booklet tel ls 111 ; 15k ~for one 111nyCo11totnce. Frlnp Beneflt1 Package. Here u. 1 few bencft11. Free Clleddaa Account. Freo pcraon1I cheekln& 1ccoont 111 m1jorblnk:;jus1keep1 mini- mum balance of $2,500.00. Free Safe Deposit Box. With a mlolmum b1l1nce of Sl,S00.00. Insider's Club. S.vc on appliWn, fumiturc, jewelry, tJ1;1kets for abows lfld 11mcs. All lt takes ls a S 1,000.00 minimum balanct". I Frte Travelers Checks. Insider's Clu b members do not p1y a urvlce chirtt: the 11mc 1pplic1 to money ordCf" Home Impra"~nt ~ Loans. From ca_rpo 10 till CltpflS. 6 Saturdays. We're-open Satur· day1 Crom Sl:OO 1.m. IQ 1 :00 p.m. (Fridays, all offictt ei1cept down- town Lot Anaelea, ire open until 6:00p,m.). • . ' ' • • qc)wtoget ·themoSt oUt. pf what , ·.'JOU~ . ' . - COAST FEo OERAL S AVINGS " Air.ti• Ml• • OM 81111~ Dol lt11 •• More for your money. H1u•ffltlt0e lutb Offltt: 91 H1U1.!ln1ton Center (7 1'4) 897• I 047 • i\l1ln Otfl<"t: 91h & ~!ill, 6, 1· I J'l Coovtnicnl Olfku Throu1hou1 Callfornta , I ' I \ -.! Dletri them I wish All l $53 mi Iota. unders be bui That going GAC says it In the large the. pre 11IE about whore 11,110 So I and I cha Hes in be"'!; • • SuodoY, M01 5, 1914 DAILY PILOT (: 5 J11<TmOU1 IUJJNUS Jll(TITIOUI •llSTlllCSI MAM.I ST•TmM•NT NAM• STATIMIMT FloriJJ:a lnvestrnents • PUB!JC NOTICE ' PUBIJC NOTICE P U BIJ8 NOTICE TM '°''°""'"'-.,._. h lllllnt ~ ""'low1t11-,..._ .,. .... ,.. ••. """111Mt •t : 111,CO INDIJSTltllS, ... 0. l o.1t f»3, 1'0UNTAIN VALLEY "LAZA, 1112' C•ll .IMt.I (11Hiorr!I• """ llt1 A-'""°"....,,'' F-1•1" v.ne ... C1lll llolpll "'"''·· Cott• ~ .... 01110t11lo mu ''""'" ksc:ot ,.,._, 11..;,..,1 hll" a'" L. Blrtll, ».ri Mt11.0. AV11Wt, d W ... 0 -' HOii .-.u ·-• ' in •• 1'lt ''''""'r o1 f'.tlli.otw•: co.t• Mna c.111orn10 m 2• ..,., · ~.i~ ...... 1• ..... ,,,.,ft, LESLI£ AN~ ,,.EAR lftd ltapondenl: Thl1 llllilM~I I• condllCltd O'f' 11'1 In• ":""~!:f'HWi"°'c~fi:'11'T1 IOYI• Ctll.RLIE.S Wl,$1..EY Sl"f:AltS dl111d1111. t;r,. tMlnell 11 ici1111Uc1:":... A To """ R ... ~i '"' pttl!!ontt NI lltfl L l lrcll Limited P1rln1•$hlp tllfd • ,.11t1or1 ~t11lno Y-""rrltff. Tnl1 tl.ai.rnenl w•1 111ec1 ... 1111 ttw Co..in-lrwln &oKot Ground Floor Damp WASlllNGTON 'AP) Marianna Schroeder, Earl Kiner Jr., Pete r E. Dietrich and lhousands of others like them Invested In Florida resort land and wish they hadn't. All tokl. land buyers paid more than $53 million for the waterlogged Florida lots. They bought It with I h • understanding tha~ communltles would be built thert. Thal bas not hapPened, and It Isn't gomg to. , GAC Corp., the land sates company, says: it bas oo plans to build communities In the swampy area. In fact, It Is selliJli a large section of land it still cont.rots to the state of Florida for an envlroomental preserve. THE STATE RAS agreed to pay GAC about $165 an acre for land ln a tract where the company was askina: between $1 ,440 and $4,424 an acre in the late 1960s. So for Kiner, Dietrich, ~!lss Schroeder and the clllen what could be a last chanee to get some kind or restitution lies .in a reeently negotiated agreement between GAC and the Federal Trade COminlsslon. 1be agreement, which Is being offered for public comment for another month, was selected by the FTC as an altematl" to lengthy Utlgatloq of a compla.1nt alleging deceptive s a l e 1 JnCllceo. The agreement reprell<Ots the C\ittlng edg~ of an lnvesUgation into the selling practtces of 30 companies in the $6 bllifun-a-year business of' inters tate Jand les. The agreement requires GAC to provide; clear notice In the future of its laad's development prospects and bars representin& land as a s u r e • f l r e investment. GAC SA VS IT bas bttn abiding by the principles of the agreement for some time now, anyway, in an effort to erase the Image of Its predecessor Jn land sales, Gull American Corp. • "We are committed to an attempt to buillj in a number of safeguards against pracUces which wouJd cause buyer ml5underatanding," GAC Vlce President Richard A. Warner said in a telephone interview. GAC took over Gulf American In 1969, along with Remuda Ranch Grants about 80 miles west of Miami and River Ranch Acres about the same dist3nce from Orlando iRCentral Florida. The two areas have accounted for most o( the headaches GAC inher ited from Gulf American. Albert E. West Jr. of the Rhode Island ~t of Business Regulation, which ordered $250,000 in refunds for GAC customers there in 1971, says now, YOU fl'MIY fllt • wtl!Mfl r11r."'w wllhln >I ty Cl••ll or Ot•nao-c-1y °" A!>fll ll. Thl1 t1.i-111 "'' llltd w!lll ,.,. 01r1 ot TM di,. lhll tn 1 1Ummon1 Is ltll CO\lftlY c11rk o1 Or•"9f Counlr on Aorll •-d Oii you. II YOl.I 1•11 IO Ill• I wrl!lfft ,UOY ll ltl• ,.~ Wll!llfl Slldl 11,,,., YIN' ffll\111 l"uDllslltd o .... ,. c.,.,, 0 111'1' Pllol, • . lt62·0C "In a ll fairness to GAC , the bulk or the m1y DI tnt.,-tid •!Id , .. toufl m•Y tflllt Apr!I u . 21. H. 11\d M..ar 1, 1174 131t·1• lllOll!lllT •••Ntll!IN 1 !1.1011t<YMnt c00111lflll'lfl lt1iu111:1lv. or _ __ lNI cenlllrY ,..,., l•tl, 111111 600 complaints \\'Cre of older vintage." otl!t• °"""'' eOt1C••1111111 envision °1 J'lJBLIC NOTICE L11 A11tei•t. c1Ul9t1ll• "°'' Pl'OPl•'Y· tp(K/111 1upparl, t nlhl CYlll)d~. Tt(,: )U•JJM • cfllld ~I, .lllOJMY'• IMt. ~-1 .. ..,d -----·~-I l'·Utlt TllE FTC agree;;i::nt, 3 J though REAL ESTATE 1lkri otllef rit1111 11 m1v DI 9r•t1tec1 ov SUl"l!llOlll cou1T OP TH • P~IPllJ!lfd orin1ii I COid o i!ly ,.1101 11\f to.,itt, IT.lTI 0' CALl,OINIA PO• ' 11 -s ll 191( un -rA narrower than the R e Island order, 11 YCMI w1111 to ..-t1141 ,,;~rc1 11 111 THI couHtv o, oa•NOI Ap• 1 '••· •-""-"-'-'-·-·---- ''"'""' ht !hit nlllltt, VIII 1lle11HI '' ti Nit, A·7f7SJ covers past buyers, too. A sizeable .,...,,11y M "'•' .,_ Wl'I"•" rtMNlflM, 11 ...aT1c1 o, w1A11t1No o, ,.•T•T10N P UBLIC NOTICE ber d t • I ' I 111r, lfl•V .. 11!'4 M thm. ,oa l'llO•ATI OP l'OltllOM WILL _ _ · num St8J}O 0 receive !)() res 1tut on. O•ltd M•Y 23. l97l ANO ,01 LITTlllS TISTAMIMTA•Y SUl"l!llllOlll cou•T 0,. TMI People like Kiner and Dietrich would •et w. E. 51 Johll. Clt•lr; Elll!t It! MARIAN H, BAYES. STATI! 0, CAl.illO•NtA PO• ti BY Flay R1y, Ot1>11!V Oec11itd. THI! COUNTY 0, OllANOI f ct .•• f their -· back and wi'll !SEAL! NOTICI! IS HEREBY GIVEN 111•1 Nt. A·l'f1441 a ra 1 o , .. ney • . N Pla ALtl•T M. oll!AHAM. J1. •tCHAllO 11:o ow1N ANO MARY a. NoTicr 0 , Hl!AatNO °" ,.1 T1t10"' have to Wait Up to 10 years tO get it. 0 ce ,.,,.,...., •I Lr# AYAH ·h•v• llled Mr1!11 I Pfll!IOl'I ltw FOii l"llO•AT1! OIP WILL .lNO "°" Otlnl .. iPllll, S\1111 Ito ProtNl1 It! F-l9t1 Will •1111 I« 111,,..l'ltl LITTl!lllS TISTAMINTAllY (IOND 'People like Miss Schroeder, skeptical 1m 1 ll"lllM '""'''~ of t111tr1 T1111ment~•v to 1111 "1111_.1 w•iveDJ oil L"k H z Tri.'r"~'!.~'""' rillrl!IU to wnlcft 11 mid• for h.wtllef e11111 01 THEL.MA LOlllAINE ICING, after her erperieDCe, Will be tred a W e ot·e ·-fw Pltttl P•llrlkultrl, •1111 lhtt tlll ti.,,. !Ind ~!act IOO"merty tnown 11 THELMA LOltlAIHE I G C Florid II ; -al 11t1•lng IM Wl'n4I 1111 Dltlll tel I« Mrt I AILEAUX Olet•wd swap for and in another A • PU!>lllhld 0.-1• (Hit 01Uy Pllltl, I(, lt7.t. at t :JO •.m., 1n Ille courtroom ol NOTICE '1$ HE1tEaY GIVEN th11 subdivision. I ,,..r ), U, 1'· .... 1''' 1•1• °"""'"""' No. l It! wld court, ,, 700 TATSUK O SHINNO Ml llltd l!trt Ln • The agr --ent Is est1·-ated by both TIVERTON, England c1vk c ... 11, or1v1 w111. In !ht City ot pe1illOt1 tor p,_11 ti' wu1 •lld lw ~" '" PUBLIC NOTICE S1t1t• An.a. Ci1llOO"l'lll. IJW1nc1 ol L1n1t1 Tnl..,..."'....,. to Ille GAC and the commission to be worth $17 <UPI) -For years the 11-----Dlltd April u. !974 jiellliofllf (oond Wllwd) rtfl•l'nC• to ·11· An f I kin GAC Ti'(erton Town Council a taeS4 WILLIAM •· 11 JOHN. wtilcn 11 mao• tw llH'llllr part1cu11 .. , 11111 ml ion. d a ter 00 g at 's IUP••10• COUlllT 0' CALl,OltNIA (Ollfl!Y Cl•~ In.ti !ht 11.,.,. •nd r>ltc• of N11tl119 ""' finances to make sure the company has tried to solve the housing COUNTY 0' oaANGf. WILLIAM WILCOXEN UIP\t! Pl.II bMfl HI for Ml'( ,,, 1'7(, •' h I f t Problem of the Wills rami· ,.. Ci'lk Ctfllfl' on ... Wfft .lllOl'M'I ., LIW f::rl •. ,,,.. In tht cau•troom ., enoug money e t to carry ou . 1,111, ,.... ia ,..nc A.,. Qep.ar1rnen1 No. l 01 .. 1c1 cOVff. 11 1e0 development .pJanS, the FJ'C staff has Jy, all 18 tf them. CASE NUMl•I DHtn Ll~llnl lt•<ll. Cilllwnll tllSI Civic Ct,.ler D•lvt Wtll, lfl lh1 City of 1be br k ~ h JUMMONS (MAa•IAOEI Tel . (1l() 4N•PUJ !.al'tl Arlt, C•Htotnl1. judged the set1le1nent fair and realistic. ea ame w ~n tn ,, 1ti. m•rrlt0• ot PttlllOlll•: A"'""' ._.: C•l"•tt11-n 011ec1 Ao•ll 2•. 1t1•• That judgmeat isn't shared by Kiner the nine-bedroom Star MARGARET STEWAltT HOOF.LANO 1nCI ,.ubllllleCI Or•flllt CO.II Oillv ll'llot W1LLIAAI. •• II JOHN. · "Hotel m' the' eentcr Of \O'"O ltesponelent: 110 9Ell:T JOMN HOGEL.Al'IO April 21, '9, I nd MtV 5. 1974 1•13·'4 County Ctt rk and Dietrich, two Cavalier, N .D .. fann-• To 111e R.11~111: 1:DwA1to H. sTONtr ers who took a Gulf American excursio:i went up for sole. The ™ penu-• n•s 11ttie1 • pe1111on con· PUBLIC NOTICE •1t«1t1Y '' L1w I bo h c1rt1!f\g rout m1rtl19e. You m1y 1111 .a 4\t NtwpOrt Ctnl1r Drive flight to Florida in 1968 to look over counci ug t it for wr111e11 rttP011s• wnn1n 1n1r1v 111v~ of tn. SL1"·10., N•w-1 111ct1. c1Ufol'1111 fttH th I d $28,800 and rented it to dire 1~11 11111 summons h 111r~111 ot1 you. NOltCI TO CllOITORS T•I: c1u J '40·tt0fl · e a n • II rou till to lit• • wrlt~n rt9POn5t SUl"EllO• COURT 0' THE Attorn.., for: 1"11111-r One Of the best published aids for a the Wills for $21 ti week. wlt~ln suc:h Ihm, your d1!1u!t m1y l>fl STATE Oii' CALIFOINIA ,.011: P~Dllsl'l.a' Or1r11111 Coa1t 01llv PllOfl •-.. ·~hunting fa-1'iy is free. To r-e1've "We have lived in a lot inte•ed '"" tl'lt court m.av i n1et • lucl11· TH• couNTY 01' OIANGE Ap•ll 21. lf, an.d M•v s, lt l' 1t1S-1\ ,...,...,.... ,,, ,.,,, m.nt conl•l(!lng !nlunttlv1 or o!Mr ordets Ht. A·1,Ul your copy of "F inding. the Right Home of rotten places, but at COflCf•nlng division of proptrtv. IP<>U••• E1!1lt ol ALICE. G &ERll:ISf Oll:O PUBLIC NOTICE f Y " · t "H h t , I I , t · wpporl, thlld euslocho, child aupporl, at. Ole••ttd · • or ou, \I.Tiie o ~ un er s eas we ve go a nice ~C:~!~ ;.te;;.:S.:i''b:~,,.S~'.h•r re1111 HOTicE is HEREBY GIVEN 10 111e1------, "-'" _____ _ Guide," State Farm Insurance Com-home." said Wills, a truck 11 YM Wlsll,. _tr; 1111 en1ci If ,1111• crat11tor1 oi 1t.e •boYI "'med oece0tn1 , · On state F Pl (~2) driver. l•MY ,, ""' :/':"" ''' ·-·• " •• 11w11 111 per-" 111vlng <111ms t0•!n11 111e NOTtCI! TO cal!DITOI pan1es, · e ann aza i;,. , ·-... -Id Cite u1,. 11.., 111 su••••oa cou111T o,. THI! I • IL 6170 ,,._,tty,. 111411 )'Olllr wrlllet1 ''''°"'''II w IClt11t 1r1 rM r to t m, ....STAT• 0' CALl,OaN1A ,0111 B oommgton, ·:_::!:. -------~=============:ll'"Y• """ .. 11\ld "' """· wllh lhl flKIH•rY vouc:lllr1, lt1 '"" offltt TH& COUNTY Of' oaANGI .-O.ltd Od-• lf, lt13 of tilt ctt•tr; ol ~ •bov• tntillld court.°' N., A,..... WILLIAM e . St JOHN, Cl1rk 10 l)rlSefll lhlm, wit/\ tilt M(flMrY E I • " ROBERT " SCHOlEFIELD 9y &env T111Q1rt, Otpvly VCll,ICllll'I. to lt.e yl'ldlfsilll\ld II th• LIW I • • (SE.AL) Oltlct o1 KAHN, STE RN&. BLANEY, $9)9 Ott;1aled. I, J , ,A.lllaLL Wtll Cffllury BtvCI,. LOI Arlgtlts. CiU· NOTICE IS HEIE9Y GIVEN lo llw An_., It Llw fcwnl• 90045, wtllcll Is 1111 pltce ot b!Jil· t•ldttors of tt11 IDDW Mmed otc:tdlfl~ Znt ...... tmi .. S\1111 JlS M'IS :\£"' l,lndlnlfl'ltd lfl Ill ,,,.lltfl !hit •II perlOtlt 11tvlt111 cl<llm1 "'1 ... t th( C"te Miii, CtN..,.lt ftlli ptrlll lo lhl 11t1t. of Wlcf Cleeldlftl, Mid df(:ICll!'lt 1t1 fltQlllrltd lo fllt! """" Tiil (TIO ,..... win.In r rnonltls 1tt1r Ille tl•st pullll· with lhl nKl'lllf'Y -..chlrs In tht ott'IH .lttOl'MY "" l"ltl""-c•llon ol n.11 no1k.1. at Ille cltrtr; of Ille 1boYI 1t1tltltd cout1. or ,.u&llshed or111111 C011t 01Uy ,.11.... O•lecl APIU L n. lf1• lo prtHnt tlMm. wl!l'I '"" nttesurv Alll'll 14 21, 21, 1fld MIV 5, 1974 IJ0$.1• JOHN H. Ml<OONALO, vouclllrs, lo tlll undlrll9'\ld II tM offlet .,,,,,lnl1tr1tw wltti ll'le wlll ot lllr 1ttonwv1. lllSFELD, IRSFELD • AllNXld Of tl'le &!111 Of tht YOUNGER, 7°'° Holl.-Boullvenl. 1Dcr.o1 MfMd dKedtnt Holtywooi:I, C11ltornl1 !0021. wl'lltfl I• ll'W --------------llCANN, ST•aN I ILAMIY pll<:I of bu1IM11ot1~1 undl•llQntd lt1 11r. SUl"l!ato• COU•T .0, THI itff WHI C111tu1"1' "'"" ,,,.""' ptrllllllflll lo tht 111111 of Mid STATE 0' CALl,DINIA ,0111 Lii A1191ift, CINftit!IU MMJ dlcecltnl, wllholn l1Nr rnonlhl llMr lflt THE COUNTY 0' OaA,.01! UUI n6-Urt first P!Jlllluotlon ot 11111 notlc1. Nt. AJHJO All-1' fw Acfn1l11l1tr1tor C>tled April 21. 1914 011101£111 TO SHOW CAUSl ON with IM wltl 111111Jlltl . BARllAllA J. COLLIER, CHANGE Of' NAMI! Pulllf1nld 0••1198 c.,.,, D.anv l"Hot, ElKUlrht of'"" Wiii of In the Mltlft' ot thlt AOPllc•llOll el April ll, 11\d M•v $. 12, 19, 1'74 1"81·16 l!\I •bOYt ·,..med die.Oen! JOHN MARTIN KlENEGGEll: •fld JERI llSl'f:LD, lltS,l:LD A YOUNOla PUBIJC NO'rICE KIENEGGEA:, nusbafld 1nd wlte, lo• P U BLIC NO'f!(,'E 7NO HOiiywood llvd. -·c~1t111e oi-N1me -H111.,,.0011. c111t. Mnl -" -I .1 Anaheim Hills is a decla- ration of Independence against crowded. harried ur- ban Hvin'g. There's no need to drive miles through heavy weekend traffic to get away from' it all In the country when you live at Anaheim Mills. You're there! Every day! It's easy to recog- ~,-,,,4!1 nlze the dollars-and· cents value of the variety' of homes being built in this master-planned "country in the city." Now let's talk about Intangibles that can't be measured In money. Like acres of parkland. Trees. Colorful native flora. Spirit-lifting views of rolling hills and gen- tle valleys clothed In na- ture's greens and golds. Trails to explore on toot, bicycle, or horMback. A chal- leng Ing 1 B·hole- golf course and B Propoud Ridlng and Hiking Tr•il• System D Park Sltet, Park Se"'ice Area One 1. Planned Anaheim Hills Racquet Club I. Planned Anaheim Hill• Saddle Club S. Anaheim HUia Municipal Goll Course '-Walnut Canyon Reservoir A. Weatrldge B. Oak Knoll C. eroadmoor Homes A O. Woodcrest II ~-~ E. Parkvlew spacious clubhouse. Sleep until 7:30 for your 8:00 tee-time! Soon, a racquet club with night-lighted courts; an equestrian center where horse lovers will board, ride and sh'Ow their animals; a villag~ shopping plaza. Of para- mount importance in the planning of Ana- heim Hills was the quality of the re si- dences placed in the superb environ- ment. The commu- ~ nities of Anaheim Hilts bear signatures of such re- spected homebuilders as Grant • Company of Callfornia. whose Westridge Homes were the first to be completed. Parkview, a towns home development, is now ready. .. And Oak Knoll is next. The •' .·. •' ... F. The Gaterie Q, Arboretum ······~· ,...... : ......... ":'.-···~····~·~·~·~'~· ~ ... ....... •···· .. _ .... , ••• ., '• .. '• '• '• •• . • • • • . • ~ Galerie by American Housing Guild is now open '. and Woodcrest II ·'.by Westlielq De- vel9pment Company. is not far behind. Now Broadmoor Homes is a · ~i. """ reality. And, there's more s •· to come. Save. yolJr energy anq visit the homes of Ana- heim Hills tod"1. You'll find everything you could ask for in home value, location, recreatioO and just good living in the "new land" of Anaheim Hills. r. ------------------, INFOllMATION COUl'ON I Wint lo know \rriofe 1bout whit Is 1v1i11b!• in I Anilhtim H"dls? Flll oul this coupon ll'ld ~r ti•me I wlll H gi'llfl IO Ille 111lio1111lly tr;nown l!ul!C11 rs wno I ire conslno1eling ~•• lfl "Ill• coumf'( In the cli.,." Yov )llhl •t<:llv• 1dV111C1 notic1 dlreetly lro m lntm. I cotM visit us. loo. 1t1d you'll see whal tl'll gooCI I tile It all 11>ou1. I ANAHEIM HILU. MIC. I 380 A1111Htlm HUis Ro1d • .-.t11Mtlm, C11ilornl1 92606 : I Natne I I MdlMS--------------I I City State lip __ I Pie>ase send lnlorm1lion on I LC:.~~~~:·~~~-o_::~~~~---j • • • • • • • . . • • • -·FREE! I bool 01 power-lull Ener&r Savin& Ideas . Write: "Eneru Sawin('. Anaheim Hills. Int • 380 Anah~m Hills Rd., whelm, c.. 921117 •• ••••• ···············•·· I WHEREAS John M1rllll K!lfl1t10tr afld NDTICI! TO Cll•DITO•S T1I: UIJ) 466-416~ Jtl"I Kleneo;er, huJblncl 11111 wlf1, hav. SUl"lllOlt COUit OIP THE AttorntVJ for Ex1cutrl• " !!ltd ltlelr peolltlOfl with "'9 Clerk of lhh ST.lTI! OP CALIFOaNIA 1'011: PubUi Flfd Orll'l(ll Cotti 01\IV ,.Ital, c'ourt tor permlul1111 to cl'lal'lllf tflelr TH• COUNTY OF OIANGE April 'lt, and Mir$, 12, lf, 1914 1681·1• """'" from Jonn M1rtln Klln19111t 1n.d Ne. A·l'ff2( Jtrl K1tnee11er 10 JoM M1ttl11 1Cltt111 tncl E1t1fll 01 FLOYO w, FL o II: A . PUBIJC NonCE Jl!'I Lolllfld KltnQ; now, llll•efor11 Dec1utd IT IS HERESY ORDERED tf11t Ill NOTICE I S HEREBY GIVEN to tile -----~·-----~--., l*'IOfll lnt1•1sleCI In Ille m1H1• 1for111ld creciltort of 1111 ibove nimed dlCtldent "OTICE 0' l"USl.IC Ml!AllNO IV' THI •PPN' In 0.,.rtment l of tht et>O ... thlt i ll PlflOOS hlYhlll cl•lms Ntln•I tlll DEl"A•TMl!NT OIP Hl!ALTH ON THI: lt'ltllted cOYrt, Ot\ Junt 11, 1f1•. •I 10:00 Mid dl<tdltlt i rt rtQulred lo lllt ttllm R~NEWAL 0, A ,.11,.AID HIALTH o'dock A.M. ol 111d dlV Ind thin •!Id w1lfl "" MCllMl'Y VOl.!Cllet'S. lfl 1111 ofllc; l"LAJI CONTlllACT . ~· --c1use, 11 1nv lht'I' l'llvt. wfly of Ille tltrk of Ille 1t>0vt tr1tltled court, or Notlte ls llll'tbV 11lvlfl th1t purs,,..nl to W•cf 11)t)llc1tlon for ch1ng19 aA nl.,,. 1o """'"' !hem, .,.;ih tht nteeutrv !hi 1IJlflcw1tv ~ llV Soectlon \Ult. should 1'1Dt DI 11r.t1'1ed. voutMn. to tN undtrsl!IMd 11 ti. olfk• Subdivision (1J. ot lfl• Wt1t1r1 ind IT IS FURTHER OltOEll:EO lllel • of Ills •tlor111y, JAMES ENSIGN, 1nsttluf10fl1'°'Coelt (11 l6dtd 0V C1141plt<" COJl'I'. of lftl1 Ol'dt!' lo sr-CIUW Ill AffCWfllV •t L1w, 363 So<.1111 M1ln $1rNI, 136' of the $11MI of 1172), tM publtlhed 111 '"' 01nv Piiot, I ~Pl' Svll• 211. Ot•fllll· C1Ufor11l1 9266t, Wl'lkfl [)epltrtmtnl ltl H .. 1111 PfopDHS to cOllCIUCI of gener11 cln::ullllOl'I, publllhold lfl Cos!• II ,,.,. pll(f ol btH!IW!U Of , .. llfldfrth;ir>ld I Pllbll< /\Hrl"ll on "" ,._., "' I Mn.a, C1llfwnf1, for ' COl'IWCu11¥• weeks In 111 m1lltr1 pert1lnlt111 to JM H!1l1 ol ~Id fletllh pllfl cantr1ct, aumm•rl!ld 1verv d,•v !tom Ille d<llt ot t!ll flrsr uk:I oec.tdlnt, wllfllt1 tour ITIOflthl 11ter '' IDll~: publ!catoOfl. . 1t11 nrtt pvbtlc1Hon o1 tl'llt notlct. Pl•fl N11M: Orwntt County Foulld•· DATED: M1y 2, 1t1• 01tld Aprll 21, 1974. !IOll FRANK DClf,IENICHCNI W. lit.. FLORA Prfnd11<1lt: Frtd K1y, M.D .. Roberl Juclllt ol fnj Supttltw C11,1rt E•IClllor o1 Ille Wiii of PtlerlOfl ALAN A. PU.IA tM 1bove n•mtd OKICltllt EnrolLmtnl M.lxlmum: J0.000 At11,,..., I f Lilw JA.MIEI •NllON Servk1 Are1: AH of Orll'llll C11,1nty Sult• nt All«MV It LIIW Nolkf II .also OIVtn lllet 111'1' Pl•- 1501 ~fflcUff Dflv• :NJ laulh ~In SttHI lnterftled m•v ~wnl 1t1llrntnll « N1wpirt te1cit, C1Utentl1 tH6t Slllll 211 ••11umtr1I• or1llv or !n wrltlrog r111tv1111 to 0141 64J.4.JJe Orll•lt• C•H..,.11 tU6I IM contrtct ,_.! 11 1 llflrll'lllll wl'llc~ AlttmtV fon f11!1tlontr'I T1h (710 Uf-1111 the Oepertmenl cl Hullll pr°"°'" to Pullllilltd or1r19e Cet1st 0111v ,.!lot, Anw.r 1or •i ec:Vler conduct 111 Ille Wt•t Comfl\Uflllv Servlclt May S. ll, It. 2&. 1t74 1586·74 Pulltllhf!d Otlflllt Cots! D~llv Piiot, Ctn!tr. ""°' W. 5111 Strfft, S.t1!1 Allll, April 78, •!Id M•Y 5, ll, lt, 197' ID•·74 Callfotnl1, ,, 10:00 1.m .• on M•V "· 1t74 .. Wrllllfl 1talernlflll, 11'9umlfll1, « PUBLIC NOTIC<E PUBLIC NOTICE conle11U-must bl ncelvfd b! 'I• Olpirtmlfll of Hullfl, 11• I" ltfll, SL,.·7424' sec:r1mtnto. C1lllOl'l'll• t511•, b'f 4:iU p.m. su,.1a10• COU•T OF CALll'o•N1A •• ,,,. ,•.=,,,.,,.,,. on ..IU1W s. lt74. COUNTY 0, OllANO• Davlp 1).-1,tln'on 7• Ci'li< '4ftllr DtM wt.? $Ul"lllllO• COUlllT 01' ,THI! Pl'OIJfllYI Manlglr SMl1 Au, Ctlltwwlt ST.lTI 01' CALl,O.:NIA Htlllh SYtt1n15 ,.rogr1m mil ,0. TN• COUNTY °" Ol:ANOI! D1tltd: APfll 29, 1974 CASI! NUM•l!I 21U1J "" A·"57' ,.ubll11\fd or111;1 COlll DlllV ,.Uot. SUMMONS li:sl1I• ot D. R. SMITH (1k1 DlLL.AltD /My S. 1974 lJ,..74 ,, PLAINTIFF; TRAN OINH PHUOC It. SM ITH), QKHsld, Ottlfldlnll: Pll:tCE DEVELOPMENT NOTICE IS HEll:EaY GIVEN lo the COMPANY, PRICE DEVELOPMENT crtdltorl of tlll lbove fllnwd 'IC'°"'! PUBLIC NOTICE COMPANY, 1 corpor1!10fl, OAV IO W. that 111 persont Nvlrog clelms HllrW lhl•J--~-,,---,,-,,,=~=7' - KIA:K&ll:IGHT, inol vldu•llY and dbl t.ald dlcedtnt lrt requlr~ lo fill tlllm. NOTICE 0, l"U•LIC HIAllln•O Of' THIE PRICE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, wlfll llW lllClllll"I' vouc:/\lrt. II\ tht office Oll"A•TM•NT 0, HEALTH Otll THI! OOES I lfl•OUVl'I V, lndU$IY'e. of 1111 clt!rkot111111»v1t 1t1lltlld cou•I. O• ••NliWAL. 0, A ,.l:El'AID Hl:ALTH TCI Ille O.f'lnden!i: A clvll tOl'fll)l•ltit lo prttelll tllem. wllll IN MCflll'Y l'U.N COtl!TIACT 1111 bffn ltltd b'I' the pl1lnt!lt •9•111$1 vou. VOUC1'of•t. to tfl.I uneltrslQnld " 11'11 offlct Nolle• 11 lltrltly lll'llfl th1t pursu1nt tq. It vou wllll to dettnd lftll l•'ftull, you al hll 11tcwn1v. AL.AN 0 . PAUW. INC., Ille IUl/\Ot!W ~ed bY $4cll0fl lQ'lt "'ust 1111 In t11l1 court 1 WTllllfl p1uc11no '°75 M1 ln Slrfll, si.111 SSS. 111~1. • • In ••$00tlW 1o the cornpl•lnt for 1 wr!lttn ~lfl)tnl1 '2501, wtili:ri Is 11'1e olKt of Svbdlvb•Ofl {1J, ot fhl W1lf1r• •nd or or11pltld!nQ,11 1 JU$!ICI C11,1rl) w11t!ln l!yllntU ol the. UllOl•11\f..O In 111 m•ltlrt l"st!lvtlons Codi {II lddld Dr Clwlpllf 30 oays 1tttr tftl1 wrnlnOfls 11 wrwd Oii ptf11lt1ll'IQI lo Ille 1sr111 Of 11o1icf decedent, 1366 o1 Ille Slttullt at 197ll lht DfJl•r'; vou Otl!trwltl YOUr def•ult w111 bl within tour lnOflll'l.!I 1lhlr ,,. f!rsl rntnl ot HNlth lll'OPOIH IO conduc ' ' OJl!ll II It! 11'11 notl • llllt>lk hffrlnp Ofl !ht ··-·· Of I 1nl1r$1 on 1~lc1tlon b'I' t!\l llltlfllllt 1n.d P c1 °" ' ci . pl'9Plid hffllh p11t1 conl••U. M1mm1rl11d the court may '"'"' 1 ludgon\fnt •ll•lt11! Olltd M1v 2. lt7•. follOW'I' you I« 1111 manay If Olhtr r1U11' OUENTIH II:. SMIT~ 11 p1111 !ftf'l'llt· Mtallh C1rt AllO(ftlH rfQUlll.O In 11141 COfl'IPl•l"t. E•ecut« Of thl will of tflt 1110v1 Midi 1 Gf'ou9 II YIMI wt.II to MP 11141 •'vlc1 ti' Ill ALAN ~lmed•AU:Ct':~flt Pt1~1Pl11: Allrld C•rino. M.O .. lhOl'ftlV In thil '"1tt1r, JOI 5""'"' ff M ' ' ' ! I · J G I I '""'ptly If ""' rour p11t1dh••· It 111y, 417J Mllfl SI., Sllltl us Mad Cl Director. Kk • v II . "''Y .. tiled en lifl'lt 1111...ni .. , Clllflrnl• nst1 Admlnl1tr1tor 01ttd Novembl• 21,' 1trJ T1l1 11141 .._..... Enrollnlltllt M••llflum: 1,000 W. £. St JOHN, Cltrlt AH111'111V fir •xtcwter Setvfce Ar11: Tl\al Pl•I of Or111g1 BY 9.ny T•11111rt. OtPutv ,.ubll1l'ltd Orlf!DI COit! DlllV Pl!ot, County boufldtd Oii 1"'9 Notlh llr 1111 CSEALI M•v s, 12, 19, 26, lt71 1510-1, lmptrfll Hlthw.1¥ (tit)); Ofl tn1 w11I !ly SAMUIL L M>SNA. Jlt. 8flcll 1!1oul1v1rC11 on 1111 South b'f' l~I A""""V 11 Lew PUBLIC NOTICE G1ttdlfl Grov• F• .. w•v !22); '"' 1111 thl ffl4I Wllllhll'I •lvoll .. Sit. ,... Ettl b'I' tht NIWDOfl Fr-1y. Lot Allttl-. (lllWllll M3' S !22lt A:tvlf't.lcf• Frff'"IY (91 ), I nd YOtbl 121JI m-&M• Lindi Frnw.ay (901. Altfl'MV fir l"lllllllft NOTICI! TD CllDITOttS Nolle• Is llSO glwn 11111 ln'f perion Publlshed Ot1<1'JI COit! Dally Piiot, SU,.tlllOlt couaT 0, TNlf lftllf'Hle-d mlY prt1111t Slllll'lllfll1 or April U. 1nd M1y $, 12, Jt, 1974 HID-11 •OOITTAHTOSC0o'u~'VL10•,o00H01AAHOI ,,..,_h or11tv If 111 wrllll'IQI •t(1v1nt lo .. ' Ille COfllfltt _.....1 II I ht•rlrt11 wlllch NI. A·1H412 Ille OefMl•!n'lfflt of Hulm propo ... '° Esl1!1 ot EDITH M. ARBUCKLE, conduct lfl !ht City Coulltll Chtrf\Olt$, -----~-,-~~---1oece11td. typrtsi Civic C111ltt'. sm Or•nct• FICTIOUS IUSINtrSS NOTICE ts HEll:EeY GIVEN lo the ·-· C~ll, C1!1f«nl1, •• 10 t .m .. PUBLIC NOTICE NAM• STAT•MINT crtdltors Of the 1bov1 fllmed dlC:t6e11t ~y 14 1974. Wrllt111 1lltt,,,.,,ll • The ICJllO'wiftll ptrlOM .,. dolr>O tnll Ill Plf'IOflt l\aVlflll Cllllftl tgalnsl 1111 1""1n\ffllS. If 'Cantentlon• lftUll N builnHt 11• 111d dec9dtfll ••• rt11ulred lo lllt lhefrl, tecelYltd 11y tfll Dfpenrnent of HMlfll. TI4 Wt1~ro0i. 01!¥el~I Co.. 1""7 won "" MCISllrY voucfllrl, In '"' offfCI p Strttf. S1Cr11Mfl!O. C•lllllfl'llf t.tlU. b'I' 'Wtstmh'll!tr AVtnUI. G11'Mfl Gn7YI, Of'"' clt!rk ol ""•bow lfllllled court. OI' 4:.(5 p.m. (lfl MIY 21, 1'74. Ctllfor!I ttoWJ to PflSllll lhftn, wltll 11'11 Mcelllf'f D•v1d A. $.lllnOfl N•lllU Ot'l/ISCll, 103 N. Ctll'Hhn vouctitrs. lo the vndtr$1fNd 11 11W ollk• 1"rogr1m Mlf'll!let" Orlve, &llvttly Miiii, Cl l!fllfnl1 90210 of his 11tom1Yt, MAURICE THORNER H .. 1111 Sv1i.m1 Pr.Im Dtvid M. Se<Olr, '627 LocklOf'd ANO THOMAS H. THOltNElt, ltn Oiied: Aptll :tt, 1'7• Street, LOI A1191le1, c.111. fQ01S. Westwood Blvd .. LOI Allglill, C:.allfornll Put>ffsfltd Or•1111 c.,. .. D•llY ,.not • SYl!lt serNr, ''l1 Loctr;totd srrttt. t002•. Which I• tilt ptecw al tMnl"''' ot M..ay s. lt1A 1511.:i'( LOI .lriotl<ls, C11!fot11l1 900lS 1n1 uncll•1loflfd I" •II m.aUt rs pert11nf119 AnlhOl'ly LOOrtco, 1aeo 1-lellOVtt lo tilt 111111 It! s1ld dlC:ldtflt, w!ttlln tour PUBLIC NOTICE S1rtll, LOI A1191ln. C1llfnrnl1 '°°'' m001tl'li lltet IM llrsl P11illk1llon DI 11111 J1rl"t L. Loortco, 11..a HaflOV.r notlt1. --~=-,.,-,,..,=,,..,-,-,,c-=c: Sltffl, lot AnQtleS. Ct lllornfl toDn 0111d MIY 2, 1'74 NDTtC! 0,. l'UILIC NIA•ING IV THE Shltlty J, R!b1ck, JSSO N, M•tv1rd WILLIAM S. AA:IUCKLE DEl"AtltTMIENT 0' Nl!ALTI4 ON TMt llloullVlrd Los AllOt!lls, Ctlllornli t002r EMICUhll' of lht Wiii al 1hl ltt:NIWAL 0, A ,.111.l"AID NIALTH 1 I 'I( fm1 ""' M tl 9 1bo¥1 r11med dectd111t ,.L,t.N CONTlllACT rv 1111 IU II 1 U rf ' MAUii.iC• THOllNl!I ANO N1t1c1 1, Mrtl)y •lvtn 11\al P\lrtlllflt let J!rbllek, 15 T•U$IHs al 1111 ' ,•L.M. THOMAS H THO•Nla tn1 1uthllfl"' vesttd bY $1ctl0fl 1411,, Oevttth Trv1t, t'lOO Sunwt loultv1rc1, nrs w11twii.i 11v• Slll>dlvhlOfl ·•1,1, Of tht wetli•I il\d Suite 411, Los Anotlel, C11lfornt1 tOD69 LOI """'"' C1H,.;,_l1 "°14 ,~,itilullons , ..... tis ltddfd bf Ch1pO" ll"tlnt ICll.lfmlfl ~fld M1rll11 a. ""-'' ,.. • " .. -lly!tac:t, II TtllllfHI It! IM N.D.-A.M. •Kii••' 1366 of lhl sr1111Jt1 Of ,,72), 1111 DIU!Kh Trv1t, f200 .sunslf s....t1u1rd, Pvbll~ Ofll\Ot C:oa1t Dll1V l"llot, Ofjl<lrtlfttnl of HNllll ptopl)ltl to cOl'lllUC:I Suitt '17, Los A,..tfl. C1Ufornl1 t«»t Mlv S. lJ, lt, 26, 1'7• 1589-71 1 oulllle ,,..riot °" tM r1111w1t of 1 1rv1111 1C1\llm1n ...,. M1rtlfl 9. --pr'"!d hNllh Df•n COl'llfl(.t, IU111m1rlied 111\'tllCk. 11 'Tn11t"' of Ille E.S.o .-PUBLIC NOTICE 11 tollows: Ltwrt!Kt M. Dtutlldl Ttvst. 9200 5111'1111 -"l•n N1ffll: f1mlly HMllll "'"''m IOU!tvltd, Svlt1 411. Lot AngtlH. NOTIC• TO CalDITOaS Of SOU!hem C•Hlon'll1 Ctllforl'lll to06f SUIPltltlOlll CDUlllT 0, TH• Pt111tlP1I,: ltoDlft G"'"tlll'\tt, lo\.O., lrvlftO KlutmMI ...,. Mtrtfn 9. STAT• 0, CALl,OINIA 11'011 Henr,Y kh\110 R'/ble.lt, ll Trv1!tt1 of 1111 1 .S.D.· THa COU"TY 0' OltAftOI: Enrollmlfll Ml•lmum: 70.000 J,.fldrtW M. Ol\llKh Trv1I, "°' Sun11! .... A·ttm $trYICI ArM: HUfllll'IQllofl ltlCl'I, loulltv1rd, Svlll 417, l.M ,t."91fu, Elflll toll MAllTHA I. llNHELL, lkl Wttlminsllf, lot Alt mltllf., Mlwtllan Cttllomll t006f MAaTHA IOELIA LINNELL, Ott;t1Md. G1rdlfls. CYPf'lll, 9111t11 P I r II;• lrvt1111 1(1ufnwn ...... Mlt'llfl •• NOTICE IS MEllEIY GIVEN 10 ""' Anllwlm. GI'*" G.-. '°""'"11 R'IMC•· IS Trutlln "' the M.0.-1.A. credltor1 of "" •bo ... Nl'l'llG cl«eellfll V•lle~, Cos•• .'MM, S1nt1 Ant, Tust111, OtvMfl Trl/$1, noo 1-.et eoi.Mv1rd, 11111 •n Pf!'-l\lvlfll elllin. 1111m1 11\f Ot•'ltf• Fvllt!rton, ere1. L• Htl!f1, Sul lol •17, Los A""4ft• Callfoml• '°°" t.ald tMCltCilftt trf 1'9QV1"ocl lo "II ll•m. NfW'Ollff 81.1(1! lrvfrt11 K1ufn'ltfl lllCI Mlrtl11 a. win. n. ntciutry ll'Ollthltl, lt1 !ht otrk• l al-Is~. C!"'rltot. Artflll, A:vbKlt. 11 Tnn.tett of n. ,..D • .Z.I. ot ttw u.rtr; ot uw •bow 1t1Utltd covrt. • L•tr;fWOOd, .s,,n•! H1t1. Nortll L.,.. Dtu!Kll fr\tll, 9* Sunttl --.it1wrd, to ,,_, tl'llftl wltn ttw lll(;U"1"f I NCJI. Qlmif'!qllft, I..,_.., Wlttorw 5~111 417. Lot. Anotlll• C.U,_.. "*9 _,.,.. fll ..,.. urlClert.lontd 11 '"" office &root., comoton. C11-. Wllfl'llfl9tC111. lnllfltl K.ilf/ftlfl Ind Matlin t. (Jll llh 1tt1t r n 1 W &. MICOONA.LD $.lfl l'fd•O, Hi t-City, LOl'l'lll .. llotll111 .yt)K .. , •• Tnntaet ot '"" E.s.o •• HAUTf:O •!Id L.AYIOUll:NE. AHOl'NVi Mint Eti•••· Ton1rft. 111.oomo tHCll. 9t!ll•lfltn A, C*lb<ll TrV1t, '100 $111\MI •I L1w. &~: n.om.1 C1trllu. Jr,, 1100 Htt't'nOI• ll<ftc ll. El '"°"'°' El Sttvnoo. 80Ult!v1rcj, $ulll '17, Loi Afl!MIM, Wllthlf'\ l hld., Los Anft6n, C1tllornl<I H1.,.ll'IOf"M, L•wnd•lf, G1rdlnl C•lltornll f006t 9001,, illll!Cll II tM pflct of !llnll'ltll Of NCJlltl 11 t lSO ti ..... 11111 l l'Y PIJIOl'I lrvlr>O K•uhN!'t llld M1rtl11 •• , ... Vl'IOfrtlol'lfll It\ Ill l'lltlt~ Pl•111fllf!O l11tlf'Hlld INV prff1111 sl•lltr!lltnh Ill' ll:rbtctr;, 1• Trvttltfl Of 1111 IE,l .D,• to lht t1t1lt If 1ald cftc«!lfll, ,,.1111111 loll!' lf'Oij,.......q 0t•Uror \o wt111l'IO tlie-1 lo 1KlltrY I. C*llscll Trwl, "°' Svn••I nlllfllh1 1lltr tM tl"tt public1ll011 ol lltli Ille c1111tr1Ct r1Mw11 •' I l'lffrlllO whlttl 6"t1'4n:I, avlte .,,, I.et """"• 110tlc1. 1111 oeo.rtm..,t ot HMlll'I prOClfl'M ~ ~!fohll• w.f a .O•ttd AptU '" 1'74. eOl'ICllXt In ltm. 301, City Hall, n.t West 'l'fllj tiull"'U Is Concl\IC~ 9y I gfftral ttOIElllT W, MICMAHON l rllldwlV, Lont •ttell. C1Utornl1 1t Pll(fl'ltrthlo. Ex1e.111or Of IM Wiii ot IG:OO 1.m. °" J-U, lf1t tllllttt Oeutwh Ille <lbOVt> 11•N'lfCI Oltecltfll Wrlllln 111t1mtnls. •l'9111Mnll. If l.111~ _ 11•~' WM fOld wllll IM MICDONALDO NALSTIO AMD contfT!l!oM lftft1 DI f'ICt lvtd IW tM CWlltf Cli,. ol Orlllll Cflll/lry on MIY 2. LAY•OUIN Otolrlmtnl ot H1411th, Tl t ,. Slf'Ht. 1'11 • ·1 AltwM'I II LIW S~<r•mtnfo. C1lll0tnll tYU b'I' 4:4l p.l'!I. ltVIN, COMI" MO JUSUP •r1 T'llllllll Cllrll\,, Jr, on Jlll'll '" 1'74, t4tl W'911Nl"I •lllf. 1* Wllli'lll'I llW. O.ttd: A.,1119, 1t7( a""'1Y Ml"' c,fff«lll• L• ,...,...._ C1IU1rnl1 M17 Dlvl>d A. StlnlOll Tlfl 1'Nm TM! UIS} 411·1M ,.fctllrl tfl M.lfllfff l'Uln Antni.y fir •xK111t>t' Hitlth SVltlfN ll'l'Offl fl'I ~ 0,~ C0t1t O.ltr #!IOI, l"llbllttllcf Of•f\fll Cot\! Otllf Piiot, ,.llbllthfO Ol'•l'lfl Cotti 0.1~ l"fltlt. ~1 S.12. tt, U, 1'74 1W~1' AIWll tt, •!Id MIY S. U. tt, lt1• \(17.t• MIV S, 111• ltJJ.1( • . ' .. -- • DAILY PILOT Cb.icago_>A rchitecture: Built to Stand . By WILUAM MARLIN C'"11!1111 i(llllCI ~!ti' 5..,.,1(1 For ketps. 11lat's how they built. "f"or kef"ps and a ~insle day," as author Nelson Algreu put it. The Chicago school o f architecture, spanning the last t\\'O decade~ of the 19th cen- tury. SJ)3"Ticd u fWldamen!.cil revoiu1 ion in its Arts and Sci· ence building. Fundamental in its use or ne"· materials and methods - the elevator. the steel frame, expanses of glass, those caissoo foWldations (the first Sure enough, lhls n e w building wi.11 pay more taxes than the old one did and earn far more. After all, ihe Stock Exchange was only 13 storirs high -hardly enough to meet the zoning (and profit) poten- tial of H.s La Salle Slrect site. Jo~ven though it qualifi ed for ofricla\ designation as a city landmark , its 9wners .said such swtus was a " con- fiscation" or their .rights. and demanded lh.at the city tither issue a demolition permit or •·com~nsate" then1 for the loss . ever) dri\'en deep Into the AL:ntOUGH 111E city's bedrock oI social and Landmark Com m is s ion technological change. F~ , roo>mmended official status damental, too. in its Impact on for the Stock Exchange, based the look, the outlook, the on overwhelming endorsement livelihood of urban America, at from experts around the least as fundamental as the \\'Orld, the City c.ouncil balked, Present day Cfaicago, seemh1gf11 d e11d set on disarray, fins all b11t 111r11ed lls big shoulders on these pio• 11 eerh19 b11lldh19•. after ii, both called for lots of new space -and fast. A3i the price ()f clowntO\loTI I a n d soared, so did the buildin&s - "'hat with the new means to nlake taU buildings possible . II. the process, economic in- centives created a cullural prese:nce which continues to inform and inspire people everyv.1here -coming, as they do by the thousands each year. lo get a handle on the Chlcago heritage. 1 t is only natural, then, that the Chicago Plan should seek oul these same incentives to save !he Chicago School. The prod (or the poker, depending on how charitable you are) is roriing. Incentive zoning, to be specific. Ac- cording to provisions ~'Orked out by John Co6tonls. pro- fessor of law at I.he University ol Illinois, development rights in excess of what regular zon- ing would normally pmnit on a landmark site could be trapsferred lo adjacent or nearby parcels more to t¥ city11 cclfers, them have the Chlcago Piao to while the recycled'landmark raUy round. Moll to Mayor would pay proportionally·less. Daley and to Rogers c. B. , Complemenili>jl thlt pro-vi.~!on -ooe which real-e~tate ~1orton, Secretary or the la\\')'ers 'call ''compen.satory Interior. has been heavily In zoning" -would be a de~)C)J>-favor or the plan -even frorn men( right. "bank" re those ~·ho have never studied unused rights wouWI • b e deposited and later sold. Vary. arcbi.lec\Ure, Ing chunks at a timt, under SO of~al I Chicago's so-far city supervision. Such sales reusal t accept would be in \rould create a revolving outright defiance ol keen pre.servation fund . Seed money local. na ional, even in- f or the bank and related fu nd temational, sentlment. I t would come from Congress wouJd also be In outright. ig- \vh.ich n1ust approve the nora.nt definance of Its own, cultural park concept ~·hen oft-stat.eel priority -meaning (and if) Chicago accepts it. "economic realities." Sadly, and in Contrast to the For the reality is that these enthusasm of local business, Chicago School buJldings, of· civic, and cullural leaders, ficlally designated, restOTed, city officials have been silting and adapted for new liM.'!S, on their hands for the put two would be a source of cold months, making little or no cash. As units In the national comment on the Interior o.dtural park, with speculative Department's overture. Even pres.sure and reaJ-estate tax the legal and real-estate com-burdem transferred 10 other munity is getting impatient . sites, they woold be.freed for After all, s'everal of. its new life -pl'aces lo "-'Ork, representatives have been in-places to learn from. volved "ith putting together ~~ SUCH TRANSFERS would and lobbying for Profqsor TtnS WOULD be so much t k I 'th. d "·stonis's study over •he' last more pertinent than putting lransccndentaJ no"·ering of :is it has on several other a e Pace w1 in an agree ~n v.i ~ at. d" t · t · th two years men like Ja-d the usual placiuc oo a l\1ew England , or the New commis.~lon recommendations preserv ion is r1c . w 1 -.... he. ht and d ·1 'd 1· •·hJaes ta real-<state men \ landmark, designating it as Orleans genesis of jazz . since then. 1g ens1 Y gu1 e ines .:x; The council's reasons for sel d0"-'11 and supervised by and Richard Miller (a lawyer such. Timely use, ~·h.ile ket!p. \\-'JTH THE Chicago school, construction became ex- pression. Stralghtfonvant elegantly simple, withou t a single dissenting line. the tall building was b o r n I t 't · t the and head of the Landmar•·-ing a landmark's design in-doing so are many_ the main re evan c1 Y !gencies. n iu one being ecooomie5~ Yet, it is bargain. economic pressure of Preservation Council). legrity intact -this i~ the the I nd k t t k Id test or relevance And 1·n the politicians' stubborn re(us· a mar a s a e '"'·ou be ··• ·r t eel "'--ARCHITECT w ILL t A l\t today's market. ii.he survival al to envision the moneymak-ea:,eu , 1 no remov . 1·111: l·n· -•-ttal of these land-sale of development right s Hartman of Skidmore, Owings of a eity~~-~ulture is no less " """"' Id bl th I d k & M ·u ·, heading a com relevant ut;\;duse it is rooted in marks which makes their ac· wou ena e e ::in mar · ern ' 1 • economics. tions 80 remarkable. Jn rnany O\vncr to clean up and main-mittee, appointed by Mayor ta in his building rather than Richard J . Daley last year, to The strength of the Chicago • . \ CHICAGO'S RELIANCE BUILDING-THE ORIGINAL 'CURTAIN WALL ' technology turned to human service, harbinger of a new age. It \I/as not fqr Otis (with his elev&tor) or for ~r (with his steel) to envislOO the school's ultimate significance, however. It was for architeet Louis Sullivan· -the school's legendary, beloved partriarch -to note: "The social significance of the tall building is. in finality, its most im· portant phase.,,.. parts of the country -in Bos-close it out. New projects see \\•hat might be done to Plan is th::it it looks at ton and San Fr.ancisco, especi· benefiting from the transfer of formulate a p:ickage deal for economics as Louis Sullivan oriented blend of science and past accomplishments can image to new developn1en t ally .-adapt~ve use of old develop1nent rights would, of saving t~ rem a In l n g and his peers looked nt art. It can only be hoped that (.'Ofllribute to its energetic and giving people a grip on the buildings for timely, revenue-course, pay proportionally masterv.·orks. Now, all of architecture: a h u 111 an· Chicago \\'iU recognize that its gro\vth, lending identity and city and its heritage. protlµclng purpoees has be-----~::;:;:;;;;::::..::::::::::;.:::;;;::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::;::..;-:..::::::..::-;:-;:-~;:::;::;::;::;::::::::::::::::::::....::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::--~~~ come almost a developmental For what Sullivan. hi s famous partner D a n k m a r Adler, and the Ir ron- temporariea Md In mind "'BS not just a new structural system, but a new ethical system by which to enhance the visual and fWlCtional harmony of city life. ·Perhaps they were asking too much. Present day Oticago. ~m­ ingly dead-set on disarray, has all but turned its big shoulders on these pioneering buildings -the very sources of it.<> reno"·n as an architectural mecca. and the benchmarks by which men have built since. ntERE IS mE Rooker\', designed by Daniel H _ Burnham and John Wellborn Root (1886 ), and their Monad - nock (1891) - a stwtningly spare cliff of brick. The Manhattan by William Le Baron Jenney (1890). The Marquette by Holal~inf' and Roche (1895 ). The "glassic" Reliance by Burnham (1895) -alternating ribbons of glass and terra cotta hWlg from steel, expressing its structure. the true "curtain \vall." These. and a 'dozen others around the downtown Loop (operating at or near full capacity) are living, worki:ig ties to Chicago's past. Yet one is in grave danger of being pulverized for the sake of speculative profit. Only last year. Adler & Sullivan's famed Stock Ex- change (1894) bit the dust. It was too dirty to clean up, too cluttered to clean out, its oWners said. It will be replac- ed by a 40-story high-rise of subsistent desigf!. • et hic. · Sadly . official Chicago's idea of gro"•th is to pull the city up by its roots' and. In 90 doing, lose the scale and charncter nf Hs streets. -excfianging its civic identity for bargain base- ment schemes. SO~IE OF m&1 are benign in themselves -the Sears Tower by Skidmore, Owings ..\: Menill. 'stretched sportingly to 1.450 feet. the Hancock (also by SOM), combined s-bal'tm!!flts and otnces, and 10-year-old Marina City by Bertrand Goldberg, a true ci!y within a city. But many more of them are blatantly banal of- fice and apartment complexes \\·hich insist on calling at- tention to their mediocrity \\'ith kitsch as tasteless as reheated coffee. can there be a balance between development a n d preservation of the past ? Or will Chicago opt for that ultimate condemnation o f W.H. Auden and settle for being "graceless" about urban growth? There is no reason it should not. Not now. The U.S. Department of the Interior has come up with a proposal which \.\'ouJd work Chicago school landmarks into the economic mainstream. setting them aside as units in a national cultural park -, An1erica's first. It is a concept V.'Orth stud y for cities and !owns across the United States "·here remnants of our architectural and u r b a n heritage are threatened . TO FULLY appreicate the value of the Inter io r Department's Chicago Plan, as it is being called, one must appreciate that the Chicago School was. itself, a result of eeonomic incentive. The great fire (1871), the frenetic growth FREE! REAL ESTATE SALES SEMINAR HEIL BU.TTY M._of c ....... ..... "CLOSING TECHNIQUES" al LI DO THEATER 3454 Via Udo Newport Beach MONDAY -MAY 13th 8:30 to HOON Featuring DAYE DIEGELMAM Nationally known -Real Estate Counselor. Educat or. Author and Lecturer. Recognized authority on Salesmanship . Tax Sheller. Exchanging and· Syndication. He leaches "Practical " solutions 10 sales problems. ' Sponsored hy STEWART TITLE COMPANY Call 17141 558·2932 900 H-lroodwoy, S-AM • · . •• -· · .. . . . .. , : . . . . -~ Spectacular Ocean Views in San Clemente! '; . . For the money, we say these are the finest garden-court homes in the finest location in all Southern California! TO NEWPORT TO SINTA ANA Dirtrllont: (~ii tht Sin Diego rrtcw•v •I [I C.mioo Rt•l •nd turn lr fl. l•kt fl C•mino llf'•I to M.1gd•ltn.t; prOfttd p,11! lht Golf Clubhou~ ,ind up the hill to Avt"nid• Adobe. Tum right•nd follow AYtnld• Adobe lo thf' Nltl offlct. S•lts Offict: S71 A\lenid.t Adobt .ft,: .5AlfS S.in Clemtnle ~4; 4. DfflCl Ttlephone: 1714) 492-2780 Dana Point Marina l@lji DGIUIJl' i i • Look at the location. But look quick. It's going fast! Al Presidential Heights, your fa r point is the sea horizon. From your hill-high home, you'll look down on the Western While House, the town of San Clemente, Dana Point Yacht Ha rbor and the San Clemente golf course. Sa n Clemente is a small town (pop. 20,36S); small, fun and friendly. Also, it is emerging as the strategic mid-point real estale between San Diego and Los Angeles. The beach is beautiful, there's pier or boat fishing, we have a community playhou se, AMTRAK stops here, we have parks for picnics, and we have sensational weather (temp. ' avg. 73" • 75 '). Whatever you remember or wish of sma ll town l ife, you'.!! find as an owner in Presidential Heights. from $30,990 to $54,990 IPRJESilDJENTilAIL 0 IHIIEilGJHI1rS I 't • - .. • ... • Give your house a good home in Ne. ort Be8.ch, 1llstin or Irvine. • With every home in a village by The Irvine Company, you get something extra. An ideal location. Your home lies right in the midst of the greatest recreation area In Southern California. You can leave the house and be on the sandy beaches of Corona del Mar, Newport or Laguna in just minutes. There 's great surfing, boating and water skiing. ' Closer to home, in Y/ll.lr neighbor· hood park or recreation area, you can toss around a volleyball or frisbee. Take a leisurely stroll. Enjoy swimming, or a workout at tennis and golf. Or. just soak up the sun and enjoy the famous Mediterranean climate .. We might add that other extras such as The Irvine Equestrian Cen1er, Seddle- back· Motorcycle Park and Lion Country Safari put a lot of wholesome enjoyment right on your doorstep. The Irvine Company knows how im· portent location can b'j. Being close to work,' to recreation, shopping and schools I leaves more time for living. It lets you get more things done, more easily. In villages by The Irvine Company, you'll find every- thing you need close at hand. , Via the three major freeways in the area· you can reach a1w point in the Los Angeles basin quickly and directly.' The potential for future growth is immense. But careful master planning by The Irvine Company will maintain the special liv- ability of this favored pert of Southern California. This Is the kind of place where you can put down roots. So come out now and see the fine new homes go ing up. You'll find the developers who build village homes listed on this page by village location. The opportunity for a richer ·me is here. A life with something extra. And the welcome mat is out. ·I --- ~illages·by---.. -1HE IRVINE <INA!WY Southern California the~ it should be. see.the Village Home Show-a multi· screen pre1entatton. At the 1ame iime get eales literature and maps and answers to any quet1lons you may have about our vlll1ge1. VILLAGE HOME SHOW 1. Santa Ana Freeway at the Myford Ad. ex it. .. • IN TUSTIN GREENWOOD VILLAGE 2. Peppertree Homes. By Frank H. Ayres & Son. 3. Lauretwood. By U.S. Oevelopment Ca<p. Townhomes. From $26,250. Patio Homes. From $37,990. · THE VILLAGE OF UNIVERSITY PARK a. Park II Homes. By Nttional Com· munity Bulldera. From $48,990. 9. The Tenace. By Standard Pacific Corp. From $37,990. 1 o. Deane Homes. By Deane Devel- opment Co. From $58,260. THE VILLAGE OF TURTLE ROCK 11 . New units coming In 1975. IN NEWPORT BEACH THE VILLAGE OF HARBOR VIEW 12. Harbor View Homes. By Donald l . Bren Co. From $55,990. 13. Spyglass Hill. By John O. Lusk l Son. From $101,900 I~ THE CITY OF IRVINE BIG CANYON WALNUT VILLAGE ,.. 1-4. Deane Homes. By Deane Devel· -4. College Park Homes. By S&SCon-opment co. From $125.000. &lructlon Company. From $44,990. 5. Colony Homea. By Kendall Devel· THE VILLAGE OF EASTBLUFF •opment co 15. Monaco Homes and Tannla Club THE VILLAGE ~F • VlHaa~y Ho1stei(l lndu1itrle1. From EL CAMINO REAL $&5, O. 8. Greentree Homes. By Donald L. BAYSIDE Bren co. From $35,495 18. Prom~nlory BayHomes.Byltvlne 1. Oeerfltld Patio Homes. By Irvine Pacific Developmtnl Co. From Pa.:lfl0Dev1\opmen1 c o. Opining $1.2,0,900. June 1974. Look for this symbol in 1d1 by our ?. De1rfleldTownkome1.ByBroed· vllltge homebuilders. moor Hom11, Inc. Opening Fell \l;l'--1... 197... r'" ._. .. f ____ 1. 7. Deerfield Perk Homes. By Ctnlury 1HE IRVWE milfWt{ Community Develope rs. Opening _ _ Ftll 1974. • • ' . .. • \ • ~ 8 DAILY PILOT Sunday, Mav 5 IQ74 After Lo11g Sl1a1t1p Housing Takes Off •._ "'911111 Srit!'n: M011ll!M' ,,,...1,1 •• BOSTO!'l -The housing ()fillOon is beginning to rise. -:.; After a long and bleak \t_\nt.er. U.S. borne builders arc ~vering 1hat the word op- tim.i.Sm Is still in the dlc- t!onlry and a fe\v of them b)ve been Heard to utter it. ·~A..,, one \observer of the ljuilding sce~c puts it.: ~ .. Builders are encouraiu.-d . ' that Pot~ntial buyer~ are at least ~ginning to . ~,look at houses once again." Clearly, the no-S:as-on-Sunday situation, plus , Jong lines at the gas pump in many parts of the country, had been keeping most people at home. The fact that people weren 't eve n cruising around and look· ing v.·as a depressing factor. ' "ALSO,''-ON'E builder ex· plains. •·more houses in in· ventory are being sold -and this 1nakes builders happy." A lot of builders had a huge stack of unsold houses .!lS they \\•enl into the winter -and they continued tO hold them till the recent slight shift in the mJr\.'.ct. Weekends, and notably Sun- day, always .has been a favorite househllllting t i m e because the whole family could pile into the family car and make a big time of it. Now, because of the energy squeeze, many builders are not even open for business on Sun- day, preferring instead to hold open house at their projects on \\'eek nights -Thusrday through Saturday -with some of them staying open till 10 p.m. or later. Some of them are running buses from cen- tral pickup areas to their pro- jects. ANOTHER NEW t a ck beginning to shape up is the central clearing h-e·u s e . Entrepreneurs. seeing an op. portunity in the coocept. are attracting builders to' put up modeli in an area with com- peting builders so that hou~ lookers don't have to drive from one development to another. The gas saving is substan- tial, builders say. As for the outh>ok, this year \\•Ill be a testing time for the proposition that f i n a n c i n g determines the housing treru:I. Plenty of money is expected, both for builders as well as buyers, according to the Advance h1ortgage Corpora- lion, Detroit, a subsidiary of the first National City Corporation. p a rent of Cilybank of New York. RATES WILL BE high, predicts Irving Rose. presi· dent of Advance Mortgage, although long-term rates arc beginning to ease as the prime continues t.o fall. Rose predicts a total of 1.8 million housing starts in 1974, down steeply from a year ago but higher than forecast by the National Association of Home Builders. M i c h a e l Sumichrast, chief economist for NAHB, ts sticking to his earlier forecast of 1.6 million starts for the year. The 1.8 million figure will be achieved, declares Ros e , unless "builders are swamped by all their other problems." IXINTJNUING. llE adds: Other Independent studies also shov•ed optimism. F. \V. Dodge Di \'ision of t.1cGraw-Hill declares: "It is probably safe to say that the decline has i,otto1ned out and we'll soon be seeing 11 recovery in thls important secto.r of the economy.·• The investment firn\ of Blyth Eastman Dillon & Co .. New York, repo'rts: "\Ve are again approaching the 1¥Jint where the market may be "''i!Ung to signal a period of in- creased housmg activit y beyond 1974." • AGREEING substantially with Rose of Advance t.-1ort- gage, the company adds: "\Ve expect the seasonally adjusted annual start rate to continue ~·eak through the first quarter of 1974. perhaps gett ing as low as L2 mitlion units and to begin tuming up"•ard again late in the third quarter, with a much stronger showing by ye arend. possibly reaching 1.8 to 1.9 million units." Meanwhile, a study by the Massachusel!s lnsUtute o f Technology-Harvard Joint C.enter for Urban Studies reports a need for 23 million new housing units betY.'een 1970 and 1980 "to satisfy popuJation growth, mobility, and changes in life-style." That figure exct'eds an earlier estimate by at least 20 per- cent. ''It's hard to recall a time . LAST YEAR, there were when builders had so many I 2.054,000 housing starts. fourth other problems.!' Builders. ar.e highest total ever, In the first harassed by rapidly escalatpi.g quarter of 1973; the ·iate-\Vas costs, a persistent shortage of running at an annual total of critical mater i a Is, en-2.445,000 but · fell, as money vironmcntal factors which are tightened, to 1,590iXlO in the making more and more land fourth quarter. - unlikely can didat es for The dropofl was the greatest development, and a gnawing in major U.S. markets than in energy crunch. ._ the less populolls areas. • .. -...... ~ ............... -...... -..... , ;: .... . . . ·• • 7 -non~t~ 0 uy in Ba~-te .Care Advised Whe11 Purchasing Hoiise REAL ESTATE Himtington Units Win By ROBERT EDWARDS CJ1ristia1i Science Monitor Service Buying a houSe ranks among the major purchases for a family. It represents a long-term big-dollar commitment in a nonllquid asset. Yet many buyers select a house and plunk down money without examining the property or alternatives thoroughly. Jf you are going to Jive with a house, it makes sense to know what you will be stuck \vitb. Typically, when a family is-uprooted and moved at the whim of corporate management, the husband 'reports to \vork at tlie new location alone. On 'Ao-eekends, he searches the housing market for something better than he left. car. you can trade It off: not so \vlth a house. ~ AVOID buy_in~ a ho.use that sooo reqwres expensive mamtcnance or paying more than you should for it, take a little time to sort out alternatives. An organized house-hunting plan involves these successive steps: • When you move to a new locality. rent a house or apartment for up to six months. The time you take renting will allow you and your family to check out nwner3altematives on your own. • Avoi looking at houses until you have. ed neighborhoods . Instead o1 depending only on agents, study the city plus several ouUying communities. _ Dig out an area map and locate im- port.ant elements -airport, WQfk loca· A REAL ESTATE agent chauffeurs tion(s). public transportation network, _The Sunset He i g h t s ·him around t~ houses ~c:e<l 10 to 20 J)el· shopping and cultural centers, reaea- a p a·r t m en ts, near in g ~nt above his stated hmtt. .When he has tional apportunities, es t ab Ii shed completion at 16672 Sims St., picked at least .three. can~idate hoo~s, neighborboc:$, and new developments. recently became the first teal <the company flies . his wife out for a • S e a re n through the range ~ available houses befol'e picking two or three candidate houses for a detailed in· sped.ion. Visit open houses on \\'eekends plus those houses available through an agent. Recognize from the outset that the dream house pictured in your minds pro- bably does not exist. After examining many houses and checking their prices, you wjll ·develop your own "feel of the mar'ket." • Inspect your candidate houses from top to b9ttom before sjgfil.ng anything. If poking into attics or furn3ce fireboxes is not your bag, hire one of tbe national firms to inspect one or two houses f~r condition -noti price. You will find in- spectors 1 is t e d under "Building Inspection Service" in the classified sec- tion of a local telephone directory. The inspector'& fee, usually less than $100, will usually be repaid several times over by faults he discovers. estate de v c Jo pm en t in week~~d of scouting houses '"'-and ASK YOUR business associates.about I~unl ington Beach to receive agoruzmg. A1t hour before her return the character and personality of various ASK ntE OWNER to correct these Southern California G as P.lane takes off, they swallo\v hard . and neighborhoods. Each sinall area or faults or use the infonnation in your Company's CONCERN A\vard sign ~ purchase agree~ent. They are district. develops its O\VTI unique qualities price negotiation. Every house exhibits for energy conservation. committed to a house neither know moch and reflects a distinctive lifestyle. Loe~-fli:nvs. Some are r.elatively minor. Others Th f · bu"ld' about. tion, as most agents readily repeat, is all can llJean a cash outlay of thousands or \Yhic~ ~~: H~~~u~i'th ~a~~::~ A ~th later, following a seemingly important while you are Jiving there and dollats to correct immediately or within Trust Realty for $\00,000 each, une~ding stre~. of ~per ~or~. ~he \\'hen you are ready to move on. later. months after you move in. mel stringent gas company farruly .~ve~ in . And the flva 1 • mcomhe Since few families Jive in a house long Only when you have all the fa cts should requirements for insulation hou~, 'UR': ne1~hborhood -e en he • enough to pay off the mortgage, consider you begin talking price. Don't sign a and other \ energy saving mun1ty-be~1n to surface. . . a house's salability. Appraise lhe trend of purchase agreement or sales contract features. A ~e logical system requires, fitSt. of a neighborhood. Is it trending up, down, tmtil vou're satisfied with all conditions, all, tune. The Internal Revenue Servicit or remaining stable? Only .when you have including the price -and then only after The two-stor y, con· allows up to a year to buy another house picked an up-trend neighborhood that a review by your lawyer. The closiQg and temporary --styled buildings \\ith the proceeds from the old house. So. suits your family's life-style should you signing of final documents only cOOfum each have four t ... :o-story, l ,~00 y,•hat is the rush? I f you buy the \\Tong begin looking at individual houses. the tenns agreed to in the sales contract. square-foot apartments with -----·------------~---'"---------------'- t.wo and a half baths. Each unit also has a private yard, fireplace and kitchen pass. through window to the patio. Other features include color- coordinated kitchens wUh gas range and sell-cleaning oven, Ju.minous ce.ilitlg. disposer and distnvasher. \Va 1 l·t O-\V a 11 ·carpeting and draperies are inc.luded in the sales-price. -- Located near schools and · shopping. the Sunset l-leights apartments can be reached by driving south on Bolsa Chica Street to Warner Avenue. Turn right on \Varner to Sims, then left to the development Lake Forest • • 0 Kee p layout Simple E)Motivate. Get Act ion Visually simple ads hav e greatest impact. Eslablish a & focal po1fit in the layout to grab a 1eader s eye. Keeo prices big and bold. E)Know Your Market Tie in merchandrse and . ads ~vt!h special dates. events. likes and dislikes o f your p oten li·al c us tomers a,nd thei r unique community. Shov1 1hem you know them. 0Use Easy-reading Type Faces Upoer and lower case lellers are usually· easier to read than all cap11a1s. Elaborate script, Old English or ot her fancy lype laces are hard to read. Use plenty or while space. I I ~ 0Sell With Headline Convince You r reader. at a glance. that you have ::iome!h1ng of value for him . Tell him what's in 1t !o r him . G e l him iri1eres!ed enough to read vour COPY- A good ad induces a lavorable action. Th is doesn't always mean making a sale -.some ads are s uccessful 11 they . only draw readers into your store or 1n1roduce you or your product. 0Write Copy That Sells, Compels Consumers are skeptical; '-'-' 'be sure your copy tells lh e m your good news int e r est ingly and completely. Be specific. Tell Jots of facts. Include prices. especially bargai" prices. 0 Make Artwor k Match Purpose· Cl) Develop<! Dist inct S\"l'.le A dorrunanl gfaph1c 1n yo ur la yout will in sure Qu1cR interest, bul 1emember tt'lat not all ads 1eou1re lols or graphics or huge graphics. Type alone can be ellec11ve. 100 0 ()Invest Some Time Pay attention to details; get back to basics: make every ad you r o wn 1nves!men1 in future sales. Powerlul advertising rests on your wi llingness lo c h eck o ut th e lundamen1a1s. Use a IYPe tace. a'~rder or a laYQ\11 techniQ e that makes vour,ads dist live and makes them restmb1e each othe'r. Re~ular readers should recoQn1ze )lo ur ads even without your name on !hem. I \ Wherever you put it and ._ regardless of 1ls size. be sure the reader can easily find your logo, your "signature." in every ad. Include details like store t'loUrs. location: phone number. too. I There's an 11th step -even simpl~r -iust call us· to put your . super ads to work for you 1 DAILY PILOT Advertising Dept 642-4321 • • 2,3 &4 bedrooin homes from $30~950 VA. FHA. Conv.Fu1ancing Here's your chance to have your own home on a .spa· cious lot with plenty of grow· ing room for you and your family. You 'll be part of. the dis· tinctive lake-count!Y'COm· munity of Lake Forest.-A short walk from picturesque shops, a market and lake· side restaurant. Take the San Diego or Santa Ana Freeway to the El Toro exit. Follow El Toro under the freeway to Muir- lands, lelt on Muirlands to Ridge Route. Or phone (714) 830·3250. ' , , M.J. BROCK It SONS, INC. o wholly owned sublldlory ol • ·' ' • •• hou. was tern In E ror \\rill ket or S1,1r in co loca As A 1ner in t ting pre " pub\ ente or the fC\'I and ma Ne\V fice pani SI.Ob " the • ' Sunday. May 5. 1CJ74 DAI LY PILOT_(~ nh-armed -by Crisis ' • - Siiruey Finds Ei1ergy Pinch. FucttJr in Feiv Areas The energy crisil1 had less effect on housing and construction patterns lhiln "'DS expected. Its chief .l•(fC(•t \\'US on shopping pat· terns and its contrlbutinit to a slov.·do\l'll in construction of lnrge shopping ce nters. E\'en if it's prolonged. it \\'Oll'l do murh for the revivlil or the ccntr:1l cltlei;;. It \\ill principally help the renl es tate 11Hlr· kel of tho near-In suburbs . These n\.e findings or the current Issue of Cotnmercial Construction ~1arkets S1,1rvey (CCf.15). the quarterly report on income·property construction in major local markets published by Shiefman and Associated of Detroit. Another CCMS finding: A record co1n- 1nercial and industrial construction boo1n in the nation's smaller markets is rcflec- Ung a nationwide flight front city pressures and city problc1ns. "TllE ENERGY crisis," says CC"IS publisher Saul Shicfn1an. •·secn1s lo have entered signiricnntly into the calculations of potential buyers and ten<ints only in the ~rcas -and they \\'ere rclalively fc\I'-v.·here gas station lines \Vere long and where there \Vas . an· accegtnble n1ass·translt alternative lo driving. ln New York . for example, the midtov.'n of· fice market \Vas slrengthened as com· panies backed a\~·ay from moves lo si.:burban office camp4ses. "But 've found very little to support the thesis that an energy shortage \\'ill ··~·- • • • bring a revival of the central Cities. The blight and the racial fears that con· tributcd to tbe suburban exodus "'ill not be. overcome by a gas shortage alone. The chief beneficiaries of a prolonged energy crisis v.·ould probably be the first ring of suburbs. They are nearer the center of metropolitan area population than the city. ''Even mass transit may help the near su burbs than the cities. In New York, t~ strongest olfice market is in the suburbs the first stop out on a commuter line. su~h as Great Neck and Garden City. They command higher rents than most new midtOwn space and have almost no vacancies. In an otherwise slow-moving l'\'ew Jersey market: a building opposite a commuter station is filling up rapidl y." ONE SIGNIFICANT change, CC~1S reports, was in patterns or car use in shopping, Volume in outl ying shopping centers trended do\.\'!l, espceial\y on gasless \\'eekends. Volume in older centers located in bulltup areas and in "stores served by 111ass transit shO\\•ed ga ins. "In a nun1bcr of local 1narkets," publisher Shiefman adds. "developers have been holding off on planned regional Centers in outlying areas and instead have been expanding and model'nizing their older centers, \\'here the contiguous areas are now heavily built up. "The energy shortage may be th e coup FR9 M Fash ion Island N ewport Beach • de grace for very large shopping centers. Center operators can no longer count on attracting traffic from their outer-most residential ring . This is waking it im· practical to build in the on!~ kind of areas v.•here sufficient land is readily available -outlying areas v.·hi ch n1ay not be mature for years to conle." A decline in reg ional ce nt er con· struction y,•as already under \1·ay in 1973, CCA1S reports. The regional-center share of all retail space permitted in 24 ma jor markets declined by a third. ' Another significant 1973 trend v.>as the boom in the nation's smaller markets. JlllMa il, office and industrial construction grew there at two to four times the rate of the major markets. This boom is ex· peeled to continue through 1974. But it v.•asn't visible in 1972. II appears to be a new trend. "OSE FACTOR behind the small·I0\1·n boo1n." Shiefman observes. •·js the ex· traordinary new prosperity of the rural economy as a result of higher food prices. -. ..Even more important. there is a nc\V pattern of population 1no1'emcnt in this country. ··Since 1970. in a reversal of a pattern that's at least 50 years old, more people have been n1oving out of the nation 's metropolitan areas than have been mov- ing in . At the same time. population is shifting from larger to smaller metro areas. The largest metro areas -not just their central cities-have been shO\\'ing minimal grO\\•th since 1970 or outrighl population losses. But the sinaller metro areas arc still growing strongly. "f.1uch of this new rnovcnienl is to iust a count y or l\YO beyond the farther suburbs. Son1e ~f it stretches rar fro1n .. any population <l,entcr. Sta~es like North\ , Dakota and West Virgini . v.·hic h suf- fered populalion losS<'s for decades. are now growing about as fast as the nation as a v.·hoJe. "THE TR E!\1> has deep roots in a spreading ennui "''ith city pressures and city problems. But it may be curbed somev.•hat by the energy shortage. There is no surplus of jobs in most of those rural retreats and no labor pools for the relocating industries. Thry depend on co1nn1uting. "A short-terrn component of the sma ll- \O\\'n boon1 is simply the search for greener pastures as the inajor matk('ts ,have become -s..1!uratcd and painfull y con1petitive . Dcvelopcrs and retailers have 1noved out to the sn1allrr markets and the non·metro area hinterlands 11•here costs arc \O\\"er. the competition less intense and often less sophisticated. and unmet needs may still exist. "But these markets can be saturated even more quickly than the large. It is doubtful they can absorb as much as two yca r-3 of their 1973 construction rate ... (. •• Goi1•r1 Dow11 'fhe Capital Garage in downtov.•n \\'ashingtOn. billed as the world'!' largest when it wa R built in 1926, crun1bles before 835 pounds of dynamite. 'fhe lO·story building had outlived its usefulness-money making ability. . ' , STEREO SOUND~1 0F THE HARBO.R • • • --------.- • , • .. . .. (; 1.fJ DAIL V PILOT .Moving Up In Real Estate Gerald E. Brock and David B. Kuhn Jr. httve been named numsgt rs for the Irvine C.0Jn· pany's residential division, wilh r es p o n s i bi I it y :t1r coordinating the land planning and deve1opn1ent fir1n 's single- famiJy projects, according to Douglas GfeUer. director of re s id e ntiai projecl 'i adm~istratiOn. \ Jn eir new positions. Brock I and uhn are responsible for the adm inistration of more \ than 20 or the firm 's single- ROD GILLILAND of Corona dcl Mar , until recen tly marketing d i r e c t o r for Ameri can Management and Marketing, Newport Beach, has been named marketing director at Broadmoor Homes, Inc .. il was a nnounc-- ed thi s .. veek. Gi I Ii· land's ne \v rcspun· sibilitics as director of s ales and m 3 r .k: e t· ing include marketing functions of projects and overseeing all sales programs. Before joining Broadmoor. Gilliland worked in sales and n1arketing for two hom e bu i lde r s: Eagle Development Co., and Vi'illiam ~yon Development Company, bOth of Ne .. vport Beach . His res ponsibilities with t he s e fi rms included 1n ark et research. advertising and p r o m o I ional ccx)rdination, sales supervi sion. marketing coordination, and m a r k e t research analyzing. .JON F. ~IARTIN of Costa Mesa has been appointed to the post . of genera! sales n1 a n a g e r . Neighborhoods Di vision. at the !\1ission Viejo Company, according to an announce1nent this week by J-JllillJoo, Ross Canon. r director or . \ o(>era · l _ ~ ti~~s. for the ',;;;.\ ,....... d1v1s1on. ~ .. '\ i\tartin, 1~)\ \~ho gre .. v up ~ ' in Ne\vpo rt Beach brings ""' nn impress-. -. b k MAR:TIN 1\'e 3 C • tion u•ltli Levitl and Sons of Califon1Ja, Inc. HERBERT D. STEELE has been elected assistant vice pres i dent of Ali s on Development Company according to Reed G.1Baur11an. pres.idel'!t. S tee I e' s responsibili ties include pro· j e ct man· :igetnent or $5.000,00U in luxury • res!· denlial de· vclop · anent and co· or d i n at- in~ AlisQn·~ [· ~ STEELE OJ a n a g t'· ment efforts in conne<'tion 'vilh a $3.000.000 joint t·cnture commercial ~.\!velopmenL A native 0, :\·lc l\eespon . Pa., Steele graduated from Duke University.with a n1ajor in 1£nglish literature and then attended the University of Connecticut. taking his master of b u s i n e s s administration degree in January. 1971. Prior to joining Alison early in 1973 he was with an insurance holding com fan y with responsibili11 in the management of real estate investments. \ . 1, I Older Hom e • Re1iovation . \ . Fu1ids .Slated ' Te11unts' Rights Pushed TRENTON. N.J. !UPI ) - Gov , Brendan Byrne has proposed a "tenants bill of rlgbts" which 'l\'OUid give a greater pt?tect.ion \o 3.8 million pryple who rent their homes and apartnients in New Jersey. The centriil fealurc of , a package of six bills Bent to the l eg i s lature ~ould ban landlords from e ~ i c I i n g tenants \vitOo~t good \feasons. The measur.e would allow . . evictions only for non.payment , of rent, destruction o r . . . .. '¥; •• property, disorderly conduct -·· _ -~'----..1..1-....., ~ • IS RAPIDLY SELLING OUT Most Popular Irvine's Colony -Selling Rapidly ' ~ The Colony, a popular home "The Colony continues to'l>e project in Irvine by Kendall one of our most popular d 1 ,Development Corporation, is successful projects," \V,. . nearing a sellout of its next-to-garden added. , las't phase of hon1es, according lfomes orrered at the Co · y to Elm Weingarden, senior are availpble in both one d 1 vice-Pres ident of the bullding lwo story models, wllh up~o firm. rour bedl'j)OmS and two t d elude step4own living and - According to Weingarden, one hall baths offered. In I, sale~ at the next and last unit 12 distinctive e I e vat i!R s to ~ bullt will begin in late featuring natural wood s1l9e April !or move-ins starting shingles and covered fo~l next September. 'In all. 406 entryways, are available. ~ ~mes have bee.n sold to date, -Priced from $41 ,490, ~the w1~ ~ last unit . tra.c~ 7040-4, l~mes reature a varietY; ~f to consist of , an add1t1onal 6~ custom extras. Features 1n homes. · · one or more of the mode~• · , ing areas, custom y,·ood· St H • N d B ild u ing fireplaces, complt e or repealed .violation of the INTERIOR OF COLONY HOME IN IRVINE WHICH l a ndlord s ru les and regulations. Other bills in the package v.·ould : -Make H. a crime for landlords to refuse to rent to people on welfare. 1·ess 011smg ee s, u ers . rge ~~~l-~n se~t~aht~n ra:S~ia ~ ' 1 in each model. -Requi re landlords to n)<lke their \Vaillng lists pu blic and select tenants !n o r rl e r . according to the list of applicants. Prevent mob ile ho1nc park owners from <:ha r gin g entrance fees. Require landlords to keep their properties secure so that tenants may obtain federal crime insuranC'e. Require landlords to regi ster with municipal clerk~ \VASMI NGTON.....:... 'I)le hous- ing needs of people 1nust be a y rin1e considerntion in any land use planning legislation. the oat ion's ho111e builders have told Congress. Testifying before a House subcon1mitlee on the en· vironment John C. Hart, of Indianapolis. vi ce president and treasurer of the National Association of Home Builders. said : ' "We beleive that any land use policy, whether fed eral. state, or locaJ. must balance the basic hwn an needs of a still expanding n n t i on a 1 population and legitin1ate en· vironmental concerns. " Hart said NAl-IB's pol icy called for any national legisla.- tion establishing broad na· tional land use policy to be consistent with national hous· ing goals. "Land use issues should be resolved at the IO\.\'est prac· Cathedral ceilings. cer ic ticable ~overnn1en1 al level ceptable. This an1end1nent tile in kit chens and \\'hich 'A'ill produce rational 1vould require that the state rounding tubs and ·sho ' and coordinated 1al1d use. We land use planning process takl! and 10\1' maintenance exte irs believe that, in n1ost cases, into account the land need s for featuring use or stained ro,tth this is the local \cvl'l \\•hich is a full range or housing within bca1ns an'cl siding are ·~d· 1nost knowledgeable or and ditional standard featur ior responsive to peopl e's needs." the state and the need for the homes. r· While expressing s ome community fa_cililies required Models at the Colony 1• reservations about the legisla· to support that housing. He open daily rrom IO a.m. ii tion before the committee, the urged also that the determina· dusk and can be reached ·a Land Use Planning Act of tion of land needed for housing the Culver .... Drive offra;j; •of 1974, (H.R. 10294) Hart pnr and related lacilities be based the Santa Ana FreewaY.~ t t posed an amendment which on ,projections of both present to the Southv.1Cst of Culver d would make the bill ac-._an_d_ru_tu_re__;popul_:._a_uoo_. ___ __.the::_f::r.:.••:..w::a:::y.:.. ____ ,:•~ ' to The Sea Terrace --has -differ~nt-homes enhance ocean-close living in different ways. • .. . ~ ·. '• • • • ; \ There's no set pattern of living at The Sea Terrace-California's newest coast town. Some people live fonnally and quite elegantly, and some do it in a rather casual , carefree manner. Th accommodate the many vari- ous approaches, The Sea Terrace has different homes for different living styles. The Sea Terrace Garden Home is for those who enjoy bringing the outdoors-indoors. Large expanses of glass are used every· where, and graceful "gardenwall" fencing and walkways , \ border your beautiful patio area. fireplaces, sunken living rooms, built.ins, and much more. Every resident of the Sea Terrace has their own Recreation Center with pool and lounge through member- ship in the Homeowners Associa- tion -for a monthly lee of $35. Gollersenjoy the private El Niguel Country Club. The courts of the Laguna Niguel Tennis Club are for tennis buffs. (Memberships are coast town -The Sea 'Thmce. See how beautifully we have anticipated and accommodated your style ol liviog, Directions: From Lo!! Angeles, g<> south <>n the San Diego/Santa Ana Freeway to Crown Valley Parkway exit. Right (approx. 6 miles} to Pacific Coast Highway. Left 1 mile to Niguel Road. Left on Niguel Road to models. rro"' ~c• AN!eleS <>'Ssnu~ ~ c ....... Va•"'1 P~vo ln1~r c~'""" -· ' ' • • 1-: !, • . • • • .. • • ,. ' , • ·' ~ I: ' ·I •• • 'I ' i • l ~ ,. ' . " • . ' " i ground in nt·\\' hrllnl' sales to his ne1Y post. Prior 10 joinin g the i\'lission Vl£'jo Company be \\·as Sou thern Ci1lifornia gen- eral sales manap:f'~ ~0~ K:1u£· n1an and Broad. Inf' . and rrior to tha1 he held ;i si:nilar posi· WASHJ'NGTON (lJPll f -1 Housing Secretary Jame!I T. Lyiln says the fedet•I ' government has set aside 2.7 \ \ 01 course all of the extra interior .,...,._ 1 and exterior luxtlry touches are \ included in these 2, 3 & 4 bedroom masterpieces. million over the next 15 n1onths to s timulll.te Ne'v Tract U11<ler Wav re novations of homes in older · cilv neighborhood s. \ Lynn stressed at a news ronference that the limited • prog ram was not a formul~ to The Grant Company ur snlv(' the ills of eve ry decaying California has begun run-urbnn neighborhood . but siid st ruction on l\lira Costa V1l!1Js. \iorking class neighborhoods a 20'l·unll to•vne hoine (.'UJn· •1·hcre homes are slighUy munlly in San Clemente. !'hilbby and where owners 'p 1\-fodel homes are expected is still rE'latlvely high could to be completed in nUd·Ylay helped. "'ith official openlng sl:ited ror L~·nn and Tho1nas R June. according to Anthony Ron1ur. chairman of th Allen, Grant Com pan y pres!· Fcdt•r;:il Jtomt' Loan Bnn d~~· .. t•·o •nd three ~droom Board !(;111d the thrust of tbt •n: I> '"' federril i n v o I v t' m e 11 t - homes are Jpcated high on the pfltlcmed ofter n prcgram ill bluff abo1r't the ocean and Pitt~bl.1rgh -\\'Oul d be to gi ve pnced ait $44.995 lD S51.995. loca~ honll'0\~1ners and local This tncludes a recreation f In a n c i a I .1 n st i tutions t:enter. swtmming pool ind confidence that inves tments in h yd r o • l h er a P Y pool for .A.he se\ccll \ c neighborhoods rt:Aide:U and lbcir gue!l.S. \\'Ould not be 'l\'astcd. ... \ \ Your Sea Terrace Horne is inspir· i ing in ii.'! elegant simplicity. 3 & 4 bedrooms with up to 3 baths, \carpeting (in major living areas), ~I • • Sci Terrace Garden Homes: From 154,~00 to 162,700 • • Put a lif l in yo u; life .. today come to Lag~!!,~c~_!guel Rancho~ and Vi1lap P.uk. other fut• NcwToWPI by Avco Community ~lopert. Jnc. a (71'4) •96--4040 _, • ACD'• Co'llt:nttot't Lie"' .. Mo, It 2:111~'1• LJtC Oo....U11tllon 1_,lffnM No. bl ltH5 4, • • • I I • FULt PRICE IMMEDIATE 'DELIVERY ' 2-DOOR .. cvl .. 4-speed, I disc) brakes, heater , vinyl Interior, bucket seats. delux e bumper group. Lie ... RIOX16SJJO 974 MUSTANG II FULL PRICE l_MMEDIATE HARDTOF - 2.3 litre, auto. trans .. radio, heater, whitewall fires . tinted Q.lass. License No . .4F02Y292896 Bucket se11ts, burn.,er 9u.rds, #YR11X16609t. 1 ~EL1VERY __ _ '68 CHEV~ Impala V-8, auto. trans .. power steering, radio. heater. Lie. No. WAH'nS. :~!oP9N~~utY~.'!. heal" La,~$1 ·ftj& family specia l. Lie. No. 892COT Vl ' ' :!!. ~/~M~~ •• ?. .. ~.~~c. No 777 ESE:_$1 48 158 .:!c9u.~~~~"!?.~~-li~ ~~•dy ,., $1 a camper. Lie. No.J70n& · · · ' •\ . " ' I BRAND NEW 1973 BUBBLE TO . -' ·~· CAMPER VAN V·I, auto. 1rans .• powff' stttring, power brakes. Mater, tinted glass, ·pass. seat, fully equipped wl!PI sinlt, ke bo11 , carpet, cwineling. etc. El.4GHR68906 7 TO CHOOSE 58 788 ,g;DIATE .$ DELIVERY 1.so· DISCOUNT •FROM SUGGESTED LIST PRICE ' 10 Paueng" wagon'. V~~?!~~~!o,y a;,$1 conditioning, power steering, power (disc) bf'akes, . radio, heater. tinted glass. Lie. No. 9SJOTT · 9 88 '70 FORD E3oo ·van Auto. trans., radio, heater. #AHH71110 '73 MAVERICK Air conditl!)nlog, automatic transmission, ~r stff'rlrigf·#21SGWV IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE ' . DELIVERY v~.~2388 • speed trans.,. ~ter, . whitewall fires; vinyl. in. terior; toot ' kit •. SGTANE52118 BOTH UNITS 6 cyl., ad!. pass. seat, gauges, solid state Ignition, tinted windshielf, sliding cargo coor, extra cooling radiator, F&R chrome cumpers, low -mount swing lok mirror. (EILBHU2090) ~.i.1J .. y, ... ~, .~ •• IMMEDIATE -DEUVER·---Y - uA1 LY PILOT D J VS, auto., trans., factory air, power steering, power disc brakes, heater, radial wh itewalls, tinted glass.· (.4J63A130340) 2300 cc, _. cyl., " speed, A78x13 whitewall _tires, tinted glass, metallic finish. (.4R12.416870.4J :r.~ul!f~n~!~.~~~!'!~,f.~ng, pow .. $2 •78 8-..._ steering, radio, heater. Lie. No. ,.9,.HOJ '73 MERC. Comet $ V-8, auto. trans .• factory air conditioning, powel'< 2 8 8 teerlng, radio, heater. vinyl roof, lo mlles. #f<MGJJ • ' '73 LTD 2 Dr. H.T. $' 2 98. --vs. ·auto. trans., factory air conditioning, power- steering, pc>wer" (disc) brakes, radijo. heater, ltewall tires, tinted glass. Lie. No. 676GUQ · ' -- :?.~ .. ~,~~!~~~ cono;11on;ng, power $2 9 8 8--, steering, radio, heater, tinted gl•ss. Ser. No.~ 3F91F135180 . ' ' • -'74' FORD PICKUP AND CAMPER THIS PICKUP TRUCK & CAMPER IS READY FOR YOUR PERSONAL TOUCH. ' .~ .,,,. _ __.. _ -·Custom Styleside, 3'° VI, gauges. • · ~.....,..?!-M)lid stale ignillon. cruise-o--malic --.-·· Ir ans., opt Iona I ratio rear a11le, PoWef" steering, rffio. tinled glass, vil'lyl seer . (FLOY'UT10017 1 \ . • I . . •. .. . D J! DAILV PILOT Real hlalt ••••...• 1000-2999 Rtn1al1 .......... 3000-4699 Bualnt11, lnvostmont & Financial ..•..•...• 5000-5049 Announcements, Penonala, lost & Found ...... 5050-5499 StrvicH & Reila;rs 6000-6099 . .... ' fmplor-t - l'Npaio~lon ...... 1000-7199 Mlf<handiM ....• , 8Q00.8099 Boats & Marino Equipment •••••••• 9000-9099 Automobll11 & othtr Tronaportotlon .... 9100-9099 1001Gontrol R.E. 1001 1001 G..,. .. 1 ·R.E. -1 Q02 Gononl lt.E. 1 1102 Gonorol R.E.-• _1001 Gononl R.I . I ~G.;.•_n.;..•r.;.•.;..I "R"'. E;;;•;__.;.1.;..001;;; 1 Gen.r 1 I R. E. ERRORS: Advortl .. rs thould chtck th91r ad• 1 dally & report error• BUY A . WARRANTY HOME I m !" • d 11 to 1 y. Tho I l BR DAil Y PILOT 111um11 POOL HOME lleblllty for tho first I An entertainer's paradise. n corr• ct lnMrtion Large county style home. 3 only. bcdroon1s, 2~ baths. tv .. o masah·e fireplaces. Large Very spacious pa!10 area r:~~~~~~~~ I h1mi\y room "'/lirtplaCt'. THE EASY LIFE-BLUFFS CONDO Dramatically decorated, spacious 3 bdrm., 21h: ba. model. Lge. famlly rm. area & for- mal dining rm. Very private wrap-around patio for the potted plant "Green-thumber ". Vaulted ceilings, decorator waJlpaper & lush carpets. Close to the co1nmunity pool. $75,000. ,suJTOUndlng · beaut i f u._I [ II te l heated & filtered pool. Call _ ..._.torsat . to see. 963-6ll c•. "• .. ., ' ,.,,. .. , .. General R.E. 1002 DON'T MISS THIS! I I \'.\IJ,E\' RL\1.1\ • btH ... f+H•Q I ~ .. '"''"""'''' ..... '"" .... DEFLATION SPECIAL 2 BR and den home, great fonily kitchen with ex· pensi ve 'eod pa ne I Ing, beautiful carpets, custom drapes, easy-care land~ap­ lng, near pool a n d MILLION S school. Ov.'ller 4 Bedroom, 2 balh, newly anxious and may carry 2nd painted inside & out. HurT}' T.D. Price reduced to on this on~! $65,500. Call immediately. Just Reduced To HARBOR VIEW SPEC I Al II New on the market & vacant! Super sha rp l\1onaco model with lge. n1str . suite, family bd_rm . & conver~ ,den or study. Cozy frpl.c. · & bit-in garden kitchen. Beau tifully land- scaped, y.•ith lge. covere4 patio. Nicer than new thruout. $69,500. C. · F. COLESWORTHY 640-0028 673-8550. $27 500 G•nera_l_R-:-E. 1002 ~T1t.9 •fT"SFWTOBENICE' I 1---;.....;;;;.;. __ ..;..:.;;; G•neral R.E. ij ,1 ~ 2~ BUY A WARRANTY HOME 1001 BUY A WARRANTY HOME Sun/Evoa. S4M871 5 BR _CUS.to.M BEAUTY --MAKE-OFFER- Beautiful custom built honie. Has many special features; cedar closets. almost new diMv.•ash<'r, harch••ood floors exc lu 11ive homoowncr's protection plan (one f1?ar service warranty). Ca 11 96 3-4 543 for more lnfonnation. [~lrtlEX ] FIX R1ld 53\'(! Tv.1> story executive home on huge cul-de-sac lol Tv.'O huge 5tcne fireplaces! M any extras. $-19,900 -A bargain. Agt. 841-<;010. YUCAIPA. Quiet country [ II~] home. Lovely View. Fruit , ttouNslors. _ I lrt'C!. $25.ooa. 644--lft)l. Clessificetiort I 000-1098 ' Sell ldle items wllh a Dally Pilot OassifJed ad. 642-5678 • --I~ GET Clessification 1100 Reat Estate. . I~ Gentr~I A Classification 1200-2999 I ---I~~ 'CHARGE' Classificetion 3100-3699 -1 Aport ............ J ~ Clessification 3700-3999 Cl•ssification 4000-4650 l'---'"""'_"_1 __,!~ Classific•tion 5000 I out of your DAILY PILOT r-1~r c1 .. sH icotio , 5 100-5299 WANT AD [Lolt~f-l[S]J C lassific ation 5300 I _ .......... __,~! Cla ss.fi cetion 5350-5499 1 [ ·-~-~]~ C lassif ic etion 6000-60q9 IL....:.[ . -""'""'-""'_!~ c1.s1ification 7005 ( --· I~ NOW HONORING Master Charre and BankAmericanl Clessilication 7000-7 1qq • I ·-lf§J1 Cle1 sificetlon 8000-8099 1 1 -~1~ Cla lsificttion 9000-9099 T-loft llil DIAL Cl•11iflc1llon 9r00-9499 * EXCLUSIVES * BAYFRONT lll-lll V2 BAYSIDE PL. On priva1e road, with pltt. Open bOuse Sat. & Sun. 1-5 PM. 1-0WNER HOME 3 Bdnns., 2 baths + out· side 1.2 bath: 2 pati05, dbl. gttrltgf', carpets, frplc.; close to No. bay. Never on market before! U" it up. E'\IOY the N. BA YfRONJ clubhouse. pool, jacuzzi and gauna. 2 story 3ooo &q. ft. Large custom home on_ 2. sep. home, Ra1sed entry. Huge lots that can be d1v1ded . livlng room. Ru stic }fu J>t:Ivate pier ttu>t can be fireplace. Formal dining. a shared pier in case of lot Family room "·ith wet ba.r. split. r.1usr SEE!! Call 963-tii67. 4 BEDROOM HOME A RARE ITEM · BALBOA ISLAND Vacant lot -$58,500 IRYINE TERRACE A qUallty medallion home v.1th tile entry touch plate REDUCED $30,0001 lights. lnd!ttct Hgb 11 ~·. , ·;l. OPEN SUN. 12·5 beams and room. for boet Ol' ~36 ~hin Terrace trail~~Of'a&e •. e ~od .Mantel " large fa m l l,y location, lots of t't>om, home· Qualily H &: F extra located in Tu.stin area just lge. Poo1. Chvner m~vlng . $-Ul,500, To see Call Red submit all offers. l>.fultiple Carpet, Realtors 546--864() listing 5033. NEWPORT ISLAND Duplex; 3 Bdrms.. 2 ba. each: on lovely comf'r lot; n1int rondilion. $120.000. Call 673-3663 675-8531 Eves. Waterfront Duplex 2 Bdnns. each; pier & float, On corner lot: good lo- ] cation. $149,000. I Call &13-3663 979 .. 1190 associated . BROKERS-REAL TORS · l 02S W 8olboa 67l·l6Al REALTY 315 t.IARINE AVE. BALBOA ISLAND * 673-6900 '* Baycrest , . Cathedral Style living room. unu11ual 3 hcdroom exN'uth-e horn~ on spacious ron1er lot. Great enclosed pool entertaining area. 1848 Con11noclore, open SUnday l...f1. Fnr ap p oi ntment ('all. .• WESTSIDE CHARMER Co1npletl'ly repainted on thr inside. 3 bedroonts and 2 baths. Lots. of fruit trees tn thr bark yard. $31,500. Call ~~rpct, H.ea I tor a ,· HOMES OPEN 1-5 THIS AFTER_NOON SEE ME -AND BACK BAY. I have 3 bed- r1ns & a breathtaking view of Newport Upper Bay. \Vind protected patio. See me at 340 otero, see me off Ornada. I'm '87,500. Jim Valenti will be there. SEE ME, l'M CONTEMPORARY -Brand new, ·exciting designs, skylights, courtyards, 10,000 sq. ft. lots. 3 and 4 bdrm models from $82,000 . See me on Irvine Bl vd .. corner pf Wi ndward, Newport Beach. Gil Ide will be there. SEE ME, l'M UNIQUE among the Unique. Stain glass windows. Rich wood panelling and bright green planting. Also views, pa· tios, imported tiles and a private beach. See me at 512 Seaward. Corona del Mar and love it ! I'm $149,500. and Dorothy Jot..son and I are waiting. SEE ME , l'M CARMEL ~ and cute! 3 Bedrms, big fa111 rm , bigger patio, arts & craftsy improvements, really nice at $74,950. See me at 1818 Port Wheeler: Vergilene Hull \viii be there. SEE ME, NO ONE ELSE HASI l'm a new listing! and rare! 5 bdrm single story in Har- bor Vie\\' Hills. Canyc;in vie\v. See me at 1034 Sandcastl e bring $991500 and give it to Bevis 1\-Ietzl er. I'm you rs! SEE ME , l'M SUPER DUPER DUPLEX - 5 bdrms in one. 4 in other, near new condi- tion, price reduced $6,000 to $129,000, now vacant at 618 Acacia. See me. h1arilyn Hodges \Yill be there. SEE ' ME ON THE WATER-A deluxe du- plex 2 bdrm and water bdrm units. Pier and slip for 28' boat. See me fo r only $129.900 at 3808 . River Street, Ne\l·port Beach. Linda Blue \viii be there. SEE ME , l'M MARY GOLD at 709 Marigold 1 Avenue , Corona de l ~far. I have 2 bdrms. 2 1b8ths, fam. rm. and I'm vacant. Zoe Ann 'Rhodes will be there too! $73 ,500. SEE ME , ON SANTIAGO-I'm new. vacant a nd very spacious. 4 bdrms, 2900 sq. ft., corner lot and room for your im agination. I'm at 2131 Santiago for onl y $87,500. Georgia Healey will be there. SEE ME, and I'm h8ppy! Private estate, courtyard garden. 3 bed rms, dining rm. cas- ual yet elegant. See me at 3036 Country Cl ub. New a\ $88,500 with Ogden Sogn. SEE ME, l'M CHOICE -Mesa Verde 14 acre lot, vacant 4 bedrooms with new paint. carpel. Estate sale, excell ent value at 1862 Elba Circle for $59,500. Martha Beynon will be there. SEE ME, l'M IN LAGUNA -Sitting pretty, true vie w, 3 bdrms, 2 bath s wit h beams bricks and beautiful, beautiful charm. Se~ me at 2828 Terry R-Oad, Laguna· Beach at $69,500. Jean DeMots will be there. SEE ME , l'M HOT -and have hardwood floo rs , copper plumbing, 4 bdrms, big kitchen and a 40' pool. I'm at' 1520 Dorothy Lane, Ha rbor Highlands for $79,950. Na dine Croul will be there. • U~ l()U ~ li()M~S ON TC>P OF THE REAL ESTATE MAAKET WITH TH E NICEST PEOPLE SELLIN G t~NEATEST HOMES ... f ... ·CORONA DEL .MAA; t76·6000 MESA VERDE, 54&5990 • CALL US 8 ••• r.I A.e . 1002 8 ... r.I U.£. NOTICE EASTER HILL ESTATt IS NOT .FOR :SALE To iu. Rff11~. Broker'll, & ln!ereided Private Parties. All or Acy Part ls Delinite- ly NOT FOR SALE AT ANY PH.ICE. TI!ANK YOtl, Mr. Pierre A. Poisson 1082 BUY A WARRANTY HOME ASSUME 7°/o Lovely 3 bedroom, 1~ hath8 ,,1u s famil y room . Firf'plaec, d\ulng r o om, blt-lns, FA hea t Ing, ('f!IR/drps. l.ru'g~ encl. pet~ cJn be used a1 a game room. Nt'ar wchools. and shopping. 1. ml. to the beach. A,sumable i1* GI !Oen. Full price only $36,IXX>. c.au 'trlJV( to &ee. ~ THE BLUFFS OPEN TOD"Y 1·5 301 Vlatt Suorte • $85,500 4 Bdrml. Ir: hlJle family rm., fonnal dlnlng rm. Ir: cowitry kitchen. 2500 Sq. ft. of eal)' llvlng. Ololce end unit, comer k»caUon, on lush Fttnbelt 6: only iteps to s parkllne pool from secluded brick patio. 2-t.1-t viAta del Oro Nowport Bead> 64.4.-113' ANYTIME 1 YR WARRAN TV • HOME WESTCLIFF Lovely '.l Bdrm, 2 b.i . home. $73.0l'Xl. OPEN Sot, Sun Ht .. 4, 1218 Dover Dr, 64&-ll35 CLASSIFIED HOURS Adim-Usen may '(>l&ce their ads by telephOne 8:00 a.m. to 5 :30 p.m. Monday thru Friday 8 to noon Saturday COSTA t.1ESA ·o m CE 33G W. Bay 642-5678 NE\VPORT BEACH 3333 Ne...,•port Blvd. 642.5678 HUNnNGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEAOl 222 Forest Ave. 494-94 66 SAN CLEl\tENTE 300 N. El Camino Real . 492-4420 NORTH COUNTY dial free 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES DeedllM. for copy a kUh Is 5:30 p.m. the day be· to re publloltion, except for Sunday A Mond"f Editions when deadline 1a Saturday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS; Advertiacn should cMck their adt daily 4 report tl'TOrt Immediately. THE DAILY Pll.OT assumea liablllty for the flnt tn· correct tnsertton only. CANCELLATIONS' When killing an. a4 be au.re to make a reco~ of the KILL NUMBER given you by your ad taker as receipt of your cancellation. Th1I kill number mw t be' pre- sented by the advertiser in case ol a diSpute. ..., CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECTION. OF NEW AD BEFORil RUNNING: EveiTe.UortS. ~to kill or eorrect a new t.d th• t l1_"f boon ordtnd;. but we cannOt ~ tee to do to unttr tht ad has a ppeared in the paper. DIME-A·UNE ADS: Theae ."ad• are 1trlctiY cuh In 1dvanct by mafl or at aey one ot our of· nm. NO phone orden. ~lne: 3 p.m. FridlY1 Colt& Mii& otflct 12 noon -Ill branch of· n .... TI!E DAILY PILOT re- se!'Vft the rt1ht to cl&1• slfy, ·edit, censor or re- fute any advertltement. and to cha~ lta rates & rerulatlnM without ptfor M tlct. CLASSIPll!> MAILING ADOllW P. O. BoJt lMO, Coit& Mesa 92626 *LUXURY WATERFRONT CONDO* GORGEOUS VIEW OF BAY & BOATS $89,500 FM Simple Loctttd in •••y to get to Corona dtl Mir. Beautiful 2 BR, 2 BA on 4th floor for C1t11in1 Vit'N & Sunsets. Ntwly Oecoreted. Poo l, ·jacuzzi, marina, security 9u1rcl. Best buy on 81y-St1 It. BLUFFS CONOO.OVERlOOK BAY & MTS. 3 BR, 21/2 BA. D•coreted thru-out in ri ch wtll• p•per5 , lush c•,.p•ts, custom dr•r••· Extras like air-purifier, in tercom & spec:la security sy s• tem & many othtrs. Near pool & tennis. Open House Sat./Sun. 1-5 2637 Vi1tt Omtda United Broken-REAL TORS '75-3535 .;;G.;;•;..n•:.;•.;;•;..I :..:R:..:.E;.;. __ ...;l.;_001:;; 1 Gener•f R.E. 1001 PRICED JUST A BIT ABOVE LOT VALUE 1 YR WARRANTY • HOM E 4 BEDROOM HOME 1 YEAR MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES DO YOUR THING Solidly bu ilt cusro m 4 or 5 bedroom homo w/ lovely lg. pool: Add your special flair for decoraling & yo u'll have a real winner! $108,700. Martha Macnab, 642-8235. (U36) BIG CANYON CONOOMINIUM Beautiful "Deauville" -large 4 bedroom home on pool sized grounds. Quiet street $134,500. Tom Queen, 644-6200. (U37) JUST RIGHTI Delightful 4 bedroom. 3'1.i bath home on ex· elusive Somerset Ln. Owner leaving Newport - so hufry fo r this one! Charles Arnold, 642-8235. (U38) BAYFRONT CONDOMINIUM 2 bedrooms -2 baths -large living/dining room. $110,000. Barbara Gothanl, 642-8235. (U391 BIG I. BEAUTIFUL Charming 5 bedroom, 3 bath home w/2 fir .. places. !luge lot w/room for pool & space left over. $120,000. Lois Egan, 644-6200. (U40) EVERYTHING GOOD IN EASTBIJJFF Lusk built 4 bedroom. large family room on oversized cul-de-sac lot. Secluded patio. $87,500. Larry Dyer, 642-8235. (U41 ) Cl,ISTOM HOME + INCOMEI Prestige location -Corona del Mar View Property. $189,500. Motlyated seller -call for appt. -Harriet Perry, 642-8235. (U42) "PLUSH I. COZV" 2 bedroom/den condominium w/fireplace & wet bar in living room. Prestigious area of Big Canyon. $92,800. Carol Berry, 644-6200. (U43) ALMOST A PRIVATE ISlANDI 117' of Bay!ron t! 2-story French Chateau. 5500 sq. ft. -5 bedrooms, 6 baths, famlly room, billJard roo m·-elevator to roof g~ den w/360' view. pier & sli p. $385,000 Fee. C. Schweickert, 642·8235. (U44) EVERYTHING MOTHER EVER DREAMID 4 bedrooms + fam ily room, formal dlnlng room, lg. gourmet kitc hen. laundry room & separate sewing room . OPEN SUN. 1·5 P.M. 1856 BRAEMAR WA Y, NEWPORT BCH. (U45) lllG CANYON CONOOMINIUM New Bordeaux model -all elec. kitchen, 3 bedrooms. 3 baths -wet bar & central air conditioni ng. $121 ,!IOO. O.PEN SUN. 2·5 P.M. #12 RUE CHATEAU ROYAL. (U46) SHORECllFF LOT • BY BEACH ' 60'x329' lot w/vlew of beach, jelly & C.talina. Plans avail. !or 4600 sq. It. home, City & Regional IJ>proved, $150,000. Ken Ha(tley, 642-8235. (.U47) PRIME IAYFRONT LOT 54' !ron!age -minutes !rom harbor· en- trance. $134,500. 1,!Dn Sherman, 64:1-8235. (U48) Ht -Dr"° IMJ·IUI I , .... MHMINf ...... UOI I New,.n ... ,~. Callrot"I• 121U ~!!!!!!! !!!'!!!!!!! ' ( • : • -• • . • • " ' ,,. • • " I l ' '" '" ' " !' • I. " • .. . r • • • • • • .. • .. • • 1 Costa Mesa Area FOUR BEDROOMS , CUSTOM POOl-$36,000 I• 11,. 1~11 r•·t~I 1 ,... , 10,.•I~ ,:, v~·l' , POOi ho,•·.-"'" 'lb~ .,,,,, '" b.. Ui> n•ocloled f,,., b•d•oo,... ,•/\lam 16.J'I' 1"~ ' C.<'l•!J">' ,.,,,. ''""'" rh.uo•" N .... »:;! "'11'' •IQQr/'1'1 • • (h~o <ffl•~ 'C."'' .,,.,. f'I ·" ..,. .. ",, ~ ...... h ,-~<:>nJ ffq ·~I 'l"I FUSSY BUYERS ONLY, PLEASE \, •. > ''" •• ,.,~)"!~ p,.••/."'"'G' 'I '1 ! " ""'''' o, I \ ,,,1/., l h'l•O ~ ~ ~ ! ·•i·1 ,,! ••tor.· om•r.o;:ul<:>I" < nr ; 0 , .......... ()I \J800Q ·~·!h '"' ',1 ····~IHA !oco .. 1;b;~I •f l4•.~~\'l~',ll BETIER THAN NEW FOR LESS THAN NEW Tho) b-,o,,iil1JI lo~• b\!droom h•:mie "onlv I v .. or olri Th .. t•o11•t'"'r'"d ow~r hos hod ,, 1u)I lonq l!nough 10 uoqrod•· '' bf'u w•dull ';'. f vt>P'\f!h•nq fro n1 ri'o,. heavy "ho> e root •o 11 ... !.«ur•o•J~ hoq CO'· pelonq O•od o or cond11,on.nq meon~ q•ocoo\;' !0"111v \,.•nq o• 11 IJ••'" j,.,, •h'l·1 1~ .. ')mf11>rob!• •l"" m::ori .. t, '1/0J~ TWO STORY CENTRAL HALL PLAN 4 BedrOOM 2 6o1I, $39.950 f ull Pro<e Tl.·~ bcou11!ul lie,,.. ;~ o cke>erful bl1tnd ol colonool fJ'OCe ond Co ltlo111 io ~un ,hone . t ve ry!h•nQ from 1h .. 4 huqe b-Jd•OOl'fl\. und lumlly room IQ t~ .. iorqe lor .. ;eon• rorn!or1oble lo1no!y l•v"'<J f;l839S ,'.i4S-9.t9 1 COLLEGE PA8K POOHfOME - AIR LONDIIIONEOJBYINE_ ASSUME 7% LOAN f,t1rytll1n1tn1~'' be,,u!ll"I livln• hor"• -0~' QffKOOV\ IQ!!l•ly ''""'l (:.,,,.,111 '"" J 'l lti.il<)lll ~OhO, f'Q! , V..,de\ <.10"" llfl"pl(J(fl O~<t 1 '"' •'•.J« A I ff t~' pl., "~ .,. ·~·,,..~ 1·'0 "" , '~·· J>OJ'"""'''-·''~~ ~'14 r ... .,._. ·•~ "910~ I f' .Js.0~<" IMMACULATE IRVINE • ASSUME 7% LOAN Jh•, b"!oui.t .. I ''"n" ho""' "''"' !>' ,,.,.,, •o II" OJll'"''..,'"d Co•ne•~ & d•nP"' •hfuou1 &-ou•1h1I po110 nn.d <1orden· c~n!•al O•i 'ood1hOO•n9 O•fl 1u,t o J .. ,.. ol 1h• leoh>ie\ al fe,.id by •h11 !111• hc><rv: All ot 1h1~ 111u, peyn ... r•!\ o ! \1 <121mo •' tl'IU rol" """' ,..,. G1 1,-,,,,. 49199 )4Sl./491 FIVE BEDROOM CALIF . RANCHER A11d $31 :.00 ·~ 1hf! lull P"•r w•tli no do ... 11 to Ver\1 Ju,1 o l..w of rh" lo~!'IV leaiu'"' •nc.lud~ !11ole roof, "fKl•OI'! dnHng •a01'1 buolt •II' tloa,10.ir '""nlocl', '0'1l"1~ ond drope> rftro10"!. covered pa!jo, hardwood floor>. orod ~h mur::h mOf&! Colt now1 118271 Founlain VallPr Area GOLF ANYONE? TRANSFER FORCES SALE 4 'PQCIOUl bedrOO"'\ 'l I ,II boil, ho..,.,., H~ fnmolv f'lO•ll •omol·1 ··sPtASH" t8.J8 O?VI pl1J5 I V"0' """" ? ~'Of'f hcrri .. ...,,1h l b.J111.,_ 4 W HTI'> "j (Of qoroqe h•1r1<' j,_1m,Jy room onrJ rno'"''" t .. eplo<'" 0...n'"• tro;in~ierr"d mu1t ~u All tor $47,900 ,;831? ,1 14) 54&-l /54 Huntington Beach Area 2 STORY SHOWCASE 4 BR + BONUS ROOM '..?400 ~q ti ,,1 r. n lor lh" ""'"~ lomoly (Ml';' 4 ~-~nr old 011d I ·II, ''PCl•od•d ~riutif ull1 lond1•on"ll Pool l•l'" vrird P••r"d o• onlv ~!ll 'iOO !'191 0321 ~•7'! lird1en. tl 'fear' lll"w, S!!'!P~ ro 1--------------· I rour \" .!-~'.. d ow•• fl 1,.rm~ S4l 600 1 14)96a:3311 '/14).>46-1754 ABANDONED POOL ESTATE V1"!w •oweflll'"j Cyor•~s & 11ollrnq PARKSIDE RESALE SINGLE STORY 8eou11lul 4 br holllP Oil cul-d ... o( '} blot~ l1om .. !emenlory ~d'lool Nearly '..?000 st1 h of ••legonce Lor!:fe !omdy rooni wi!h Jtr~nloc.'! Anor~ tor"f')IO(" on hlJ9'" fno11'"' bedroo!T'~ 0! .. rrd 01 ~9 oofJ #8548 .. 897.03?! NEED SPACE? Suoe• ~horr:i 3 bdr111 C Mid ,,,.1 lhe pr1<e •• r iqhr 01 $36.600 It•· o nly o~e year old w•th 1600 ~Q h , so hurry and coll, !ho~ cne won'! lost' ff90DI SHOWCASE BEAUTY 1.48.000 wor!il of 13 bd1m beau1iful1 Neorly '..?000 sq. ~ .. 011d only fo..,. yel'lr' \'OOJng! So ll'!Of\V '"tro. VOJ ""''' (0'11• 10 ~':f' fGr youf>t'lf P900.' '/I 4 I 64:! 4455 SOL VISTA - S40,000 4 D•droom ond l 600 oq. 11 f •t•' + .. nt loco•oo n n"o' oil ~clioolt ~hoop•nq \1)1~ ol O'•d" 01 o;,n .. , shio 1hows Coll todo~ REDUCED Jn,, S&S ho>ne ho~ on on••OU;, owne• H• ho~ reduceo lh'! p·•t• to \51.!iOO !or t h·~ Golckn 1/, .. ,. Porl... 3 ~room kl"o ••v f •"::IS !00 nunoe•O'J< . ., In• he-... C:cll LAKE FOREST RANCH l<.1~ h·,~~ oll1•t1 \-0 "''l"I ••If';· ·'' ·l .. nd I-.! !h~·"I oil ~,..,. ~ b.J•f'I •. :.: f.'!1i't< i.Jmt!'I rccm f -· ., 'oq .. ~"' oll on o""' l~;el f :, ,, •. ,-,.f•·:·••:l" w.111 h~m·d1f1f!r ·~•·u ,.,.~,. ,·11r:! "":! Jcca•ed on cu! d~ ''l' v.,. 'lJ!•:e1 •1 PANORAMIC VIEWS ~~•w I "·1·• ""'-'e• c l"<"1.c!10fl o+ien ~ t:I•~··. '".'; bo•n'. pies lo1mal don•"<J '0~"" 11·1 ·"o-ld de-<~'"°· lh•t ·~ eton, loca•~d " Lag~"IO 6eoch. Would vo~ b~l·f'~ 2400•., i•' oilo niori t•nyr-"''"o+ 5~1 5.:JJ' 1--------------·I •:16-9\:100 1iH1·4000 ATIENTION VETERANS! ii ~au hB,en"t b•,n 11bll'! l.J ·•1•·d1 ~::>~• b dqe•!ob.1;oha...-.vo.m ··••I'" ·h'l•"'·"1 ~ vt''"' h,d• o o; ",!••r1 "1n J .•1" C-!>n ""''~ "lo _.,., ':; '/•!· .. "•"" .:io YU.;) D6-40ULl 3 BDRMS & FAMILY RM . I~' •.por.o 11 ~'"'" ·~ •·d• .,e 'Jl•'''l" v.e1o n•·1k~ot.ood olf•r• 2 b::.••~ n~J • •oo•o•" fa..,.:Y'•rio-n. No down lo Voet1 c• ''l., riowo T!'"'' '" "" Q~ly ~ 16.900. ·,ao.9000 586-AOOO OCEAN VIEW-4·PLEX r,.,, l:ou1 ;, •.n·•, .,, .. ho.• , .... ~ N-!11 b"ldonq 0•1~r· I ut o ~n•• lo· o;l1on- rm3• Sc~1i'I ''"'· !•o"' c I ~" • /•oil~ ~a•p'l•!d. droo".:I ond le•d•coo~d Sf.aw\ qead r•'Y' .. '" o 'c "' '·'l ol LAKE FOREST 5BEOROQMS t n1ov no1ure from your door~tep whl'!n you move in1o this lovely 5 , bdrm . J both home wolf.r oil lh'! e•trOS fully oor tond,tioned, on•e• t'.:t'"'· "'et bor ond cen1rol '0'.0v"' '•"""' ':>0• ~65 000 ;;7478 71 4• S8b 9000 1-~~~~~~~-1 SPECTACULAR VIEW COUNTRY LIVING Cno<m1ng 3 bdrl'f'. 2 bolh hon'll' w<th outs1ondln9 view. Neo1 re.creo11on l entet ond wilderness oreor. Move 10 Miisio1 Viejo 011d en10Y coun1ry l1ving or''~ be511 #7754 (71 .t) 586.9000 BA YCREST NEWPORT :><UIU IJ '"l) ; .: • • SECLUDED · PRIVATE ESTATE Hor'~ pool, so uno c~'"'''"o !'l(ll•Q. 880 48 h ull 1rt11~ I. ,.,, tor ren11" tourt Spot•'lU• \•"''' I') Cl(l')On. QfOCH)US 11~'"9· on(l 1(/IO) for1nol d1n•ng, 101011!·1 • ·,m recreohon 1oom pl1Jsh c.o•P""'\ & d•OPl'I 0Nne• le'1 JIPI• & .... d1 n~­ t t"f)! fl'OiOMO!'li• .,u,., 1'5154 113?·6800 VA?? Y:/e r.o,• fl~ 0'5~''"'"~· -1 "'''" propl'!J1o~~ v() 10 .$80 000 '""'" "'"' deown ~0Y"'' WWII Ve!• ()IC fl3'2-6800 $24,900 3 BR 2 BA °'"''' • i"Q de11n '"lo .t 5.,,,,.., ,; • ., 1"' ,..t~ t·lq••• .... , ... ,,h-·· .. 1~ IJ-d•"""'" tOC"'fY 'ly1<" ~ .. 1 1 ''I~· .,1 ...,,,~" '00'" c1 .. ,1 t'(I(· , Dri 'J~r.,ie Jh;I ,,1 ~-fl" • l J 'l -," ~. r>o> -~" 0' :l•' ' l<• 41887 MINI ·FARM CITY OF ORANGE $31 ,250 Beo1 1nllotion. G•ow you• o.-.n °'"" 4/10 ol OC•e 30! ,. U..--·o lo! Good older home W>:h :l b• + 2 both Woll 10 ~c ho.;)I Q,,."'' w1LI helr:i l1"0""" 11886 \ ~ ll ... 800 OWNER TRANSFERRED REDUCED 4 BR + 3BATH En;ov the b-11 loca'•".!~ ll"io1> ,., ull ~1 hool~. 26 t"om•l 1 •-.o~ ,~fl den. p..., vlfo("' f"~!rol OH lrirQ'" CDS !:ir Mo.~•ve '""Plot ... Gorgeous most"• •.u•t .. Nr.w r"•'l'! meon5 m~·nqs 10 vou #8485 832-6000 $25,500 4 BR 2 BA .,,., ... , ""•1.1.1• JI.) SWIMMING POOL 4 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS • $33.500 ~ .. nllv ,hilfi"' ~:> ,,. n•..-. N" rt'lr ....... "t"" dHtO<'I co~·· .. rt tiQhO, IJ:>.:ld '1'"•(\riW•I '),j ··,.~.-nck>u b ,, toll 1 ,, 1,..,,, 1f8Q3Q i\<J~.1356 NEW ROOF . NEW KITCHEN NEW BATHS . NEW CARPETS $27,500 Mri 1 h-;o·.1,.111 d")I! ~'''•" 'n l•(XI :,•! n""'"•I' '"'"'II" ••"'I P! n b·nq.t~ '"·V. ,..,,,. i-;,1~. ,,._ •"v 'l"•Q!"OUS hJv~" ....... ' ~,.., II buv BIG FARM KITCHEN THREE BEDROOM TWO BATH S30.900 B19 ,,.,, "'Y 1 • .,.,.~ 8oq 1 ""'".., , tw.,.·• ,J. "o:eJ 11·n,·••\ I O<l' ! : I I'· I !'l 1 I "" / • '" :::a 1 ~, FOUR BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM S24.500 "" ' .V""'" ' ' '""fl',.-... ! 'c. IX1•0•, "' •·• vol! orii•". ""<'•'tl~''J''' Ii,·" • •' ''·t·' /. ._ "'I II •-o ,.,., f., .. ,. o• ;:.,,) I It "I ' CLEAN AIR SMELLS FUNNY • • ' ,, ' ' ' ' '" ' . , . . .. ' . ... I ' , ' ! 'I '"'" '"" ., . .:4() ' SHARP 4 BDRM' J,,o <IQ<V~~'.l.,60·1 10 • l cc•n, f(Jmilv roon1 wun .. .,. fh,, ~;so LI h. .~o>'" •oo;il and···.,.,, "'""' ~'~\JOO /~ j'll '·"''I roqe Cal1t. oclobt! w11h '!\'lde•n 'odai• 1--------------.. '" e·1~l'fNO"/ M:i,oe '" co~d'""" Leh ol COLLEGE PARK 2 SJORY .. , ' r r. ~· ,. '1 • • 2 As~umoble FHA l oon Sepo1ote llymoui Room Ju\! m!'!llli011 lhe nofl"! Coll~ .. Po1l on.ti wo~ch •hf> voll.l!I c~n~coo·J~ u.;y .. r "1\h 10 see ,, n1i1 ~...., ho~ 1t oil HLfo/ lot btoo•J"•ful ,,o,_,! l ;~ur100~ '"mou' room end b'!o•,11f,.1 n"•g~borhOQd. All 01 tn" pi~ on o"umobl" f Hll. 6~0., ko" ...,.,,~ rriv.-n1•. 01 • •" 51.!o? r"• ,,.,., .. H,ll, from !ho~ s"(I ded ·lLt\tO~ o-------------- today i;.87'..?:> R42-4455 S99 LlOO E~clu~•V'l!I live bedr~m and 1hr~ both home wilh loV'l!lly 101101 011d garden~. f'l.US pool l<lr .~umrner fun. locoted in Soycresl oreo with 3000 iQ ti. CALL lo r oppoif'llf'n!!nl •<>O"' 11ffh:I" & 0' '· L"<~ !)0'°'""' ···•i•Ot•!'•ftQ 1f!l'!I. Con•e"'""' 1,.,h.,~ le, "'"°"' t. lor,ol tlf•"'' tv• '"" ••o ;,.,.,., ;,,_,11 'loy!a• fl:i ""1 ,,,01 on /f<4. n• VA t.,, •. ' ,,,..., .,.,, ·d '3ooo ~ci. h ho,,... 0" 113 o·r'! ASSUME 7% LOAN 0------------I tre•'<I lo• 3 b<>d•oofl'i. lor9'· 1,,,,,,., 5~0.894• 6-46-77! r : ! ' ,. ' ••' I • • ' ' ,, .. >; awJ d o.,,nq •oorn1 POnel1-.d ton•11v S213/MONTH IU">~' '"" QO•OO" Po oil "" '" 'P0'•0'1' j 4-PLEX •. 11,1011 #864 '> S-45 9491 CALIFORNIA HACIENDA • B~'.:I ") 6t.,IH<; \JJOOO fULl Pl!IC[ 1 no< he.me mu..i b.-~"•n In b-b..J1•v"d N .. .y po1nr n-~hafJ, huq.e 14~16 ro ... rly 100'11 .... '011-d Iron• j:Ol•O lot u•nw:.<I f'l"H'l~Y onrl nlUCfl muc!1 m"Jrf' All at '"" pl" flO down term~ !,"'\ '/'"I< P6'..?80 /I 4l 968 .l.\J I /14)546·11)4 FOUR BEDROOM IRVINE $35, 900 FULL PRICE! L.';c;. Y·i" r1·1;1·' I"'"' ,.,, , •n~-, 1"'. ,,. ; ,,, .•• .i ~.y •. , l.o r •'Jr:>t• I • > ' ·•••.1 O-,,. r •·o~I , : •d• 1 ,, .• ; ,. •. • '"' .r~ .., ..... ~ <"~ 'l ""> .r••n'-.,/~,·I COSTA MESA POOL HOME ·--------------1, . .,. -,•.-. l1'""Q "'"''"'"'tu· "'In• BETTER THAN NEW LESS THAN NEW Y'lor Old $34,990 f oll Pr.cl' f h,. t•On}ler1ed own~r ho~ lo~e-d '" th•s h°'""" just lotiq •11ovqh to ut'grode ii !O bener !hon new lOn- d111on. fvery:hong lro m lhe shake root to !lie Corhedrol ce1l1nq 'lopell~ qro(IOU'I lrvonq o! 'l~ervo•l"• 0"''° eon now #8961 545.9 491 NEWPORT BEAUTY COSTA MESA PRICE NOT JUST A HOME -A LIFE STYLE · JI \'Ou , .. 1or.-d of lookinq '1! 1roC1 home\. !hl'n \'Oil ~~ould reollv roL 'l o lool 01 1~;~ ~01.11ilul ho""" 6eou1ilui l•Pe-~hod!d 101. Mod"'" ·~;1c_~ comptet .. with M1cf'O·wo.,,. oYe.i. trash (Omoo'1or and l'luch. rn...ch mo•~ #8833 545.9491 TREES, TREES.TREES FOUR'BRS • 2 BATH $19,995 fUll PRICE Here-·., o l>'Olue tho!'~ really fPl"!I on I~ morket. four bedroo111s, 2 baths. fom11y room, large work ~lioo in t~ gcroge and much, Muth moie. All ol lh•S pl111 Of! o~SIJ!'IOble VA. loon Bene• lwrrv ond Coll .1•8839 _).d_) 040 1 \42.500• Sl,:iJ.,. '""! n•a•" ,.,, . ., d•OP"'o ri,1-.,u•, b•JOll •" ' "'°'"' .,a.,1 ond m•<h mo.;ch n>O•c' A. I"' '>•I l~o; och '°" Tn :'000 q I! (!' I '""'Y '" o '"'"'" Co·.111 "'"a.,. .. ,, "'112~ I COLONIAL 2 STORY CHARMER <, 'P<YiO•is bdrm'.· :>1'! both•., :?200 •.ri It 1-(tl'dwood lleo<•. mo'· I• ,,. 111 .. olnv• h~ri•· lu• 7°10 0>- 11•r.obl .. 1001• nr !.?~8 ''>tol •hon •hly nm· f,l'';' ro-•1 d'l.~•• rot '46 900 1.~ .. ,. ......... ,,r,.,,,•1 o. ........ '' .: Ofil 1171 HERE'S YOUR HIDEAWAY -.. OWNER ANXIOUS Hos ,,qht Ol'Olher ond mvM \•\1. 4 :.po<:iaU\ bd•m.~ .• '.:" boths. (Or· ner 101 w;rh boot (omf)"lr QO!l'! A~­ sume 7% loon ot S'269 IOlot mon- thly. Ju~I 3 y..ors ""'"" o~d lc:x>ded w11h "v!ro1 S46,000. #7600 111'1)968-3371 VILLA MONTEREY • llun"' bd·,.,•. 2 bolh' ?000 •o Spo"O'·' i;.,~q '~om/d•l'•n'l a<"o r".,1 •Z•·d /(!! ~J~.~00 V'°I I~,,, ,,.,:11 El bo:dld:l"' ~ ,..-.... ~1 -,.,,.-., I:;: •~·In b orp ·ic.t•• ,,,.-,,j C<J "<r."'lt" boo!/ffo•I"' po:I S•ond r."w ••• 'ol" .. ,..., ~· 'o"'ro'"'<t nn1•'1 rind mo"y o:i•~•• ~"'"' f !I !''1~~ S11QQO ,.,.,, 0\1) SPRINGDALE HOME BUY GI · NO DOWN ·~ ,~. 1 ll"i•'>U"' ~....... " () d'I •ri• hu•'1 ·c i>'"O' v:;• ,~ .,, \30 Qf'O [ '"' "'' • '~' !,,.-,• l)U; ()'11 0311 GLEN MAR RESALE OUTSTANDING POOL HOME ~'!lie• ho• '(!Pn! SSS 1hot<1o•uh SSS Of! f)OCll londstOP•nq and on. teroor "pq1odes fho5 ho ...... " lobulou' It"" •• •odo~ (),er 2000 <,q It on ca<n•· 1nt d "':iSS•Y.. bedroom '"rl'll'a'" fomol\ room w•1f> l ""Plror" 11 f.n,. b"v n• 5!11 500 #<194 1 1'j0/ 01?1 GOLDENWEST PARK S53,500 ·~o"I rl '" ' ,,.,0 n"'ll' .,. ' '"<l' ~""' ~nnn•"O 'n·1••t 1.'10'"' """ """ ,..,_,. Q_,,,.~ .. ;, ··-·J' Qqro(!~, ·n,·rr• ;?87?? 807 .032 1 LA CUESTA HOME $52,950 lo~ly. 4 ~room ~ in H..,,,. tingion Beach·~ fine oreo ovoiloble now. f:vcellenl family home w;th best 5c.hool\ ond st.QP!)ing n'!Orby. #7657 897-0321 BEAUTIFUL CRESTWOOD S 'I"' .1 bd'"' \y,•h '''l\oodo-fll '"''''"•1· n" "1 'I ' ' I ·~ "' 0·' I > ) ..,, \10 o~ 11-l·G·H·l on •h•~ one. 10"• d o Nn ,,,,fl hcndle and rh• c:ro,·, ,. 1.660 o mon•h Un•y 3 vf'rir· .,1r1 Coil "0" GLEN MAR RESALE 4 BEDROOMS + FAM . RM. + PQOL 6f'Ol'toi,1ll•1 lond'.COl'JPO fl1•1 to'.'"1 "111 fln·o•'lll'!d :? •IO•v 1,0..,. '" Hqn'1ngton S..a<h jrn•,1 1 •0Q~ bo•O.n-,d Pr ••<1 •· ••'! o· }51 500 PARKSIDE ESTATES IOI RESALE "b•nlu••ly lonrostor 'J ,,,y 4 bedroom home w.1h 3 tor qorog". Overlool~ Mil~ SqOJore Par~ ""1on1 molly ~rrro~ S.56.900. #6068 897-0321 BEAUTIFUL C. MICHAEL ~-:0·11 1 oo .... ('ff C•:OOOf'""" t "'"" ·~ .. THE VIEW ..... •ro i:"--:IOJT·I• o ao'.' • 'l"' •_•''I (o.·1:1 [I .. :S;I J btir.,. : !:.~'' "O"l" ,. .. 'll:'' C'c • •a ·•· ·•;l' c• ·! ,, .. , o•d r:;oof,y ~ •nl'I!' l• ·•'" 1,. ·•~ 'I" • i'..• • H".~''" ,..,. SPACE ..... . 8~-9000 ae ~uoo •· ,., • ., ··~·o·~··· ~101) 'l" 4Qo"•o "'"/)"~'ff'·~ t'd'l ., "" 1~ • -~~.,. i-,,.,.0.0••·01·~: ·"~"-.:i·•·c~'"· ~ ,.; .• ,..,.,n '"' -~ , ·~ 9:X·J ''~'UOO Newport Beac h- Irvine Area • SPACIOUS 5 BDRMS! Greol fiv-r uop•r •r :·:oer area '''""'"~d·•,• rr•1••b;r.o.. rwn•• '' , .. 3dy1C-<l~"· Ln" ••o•~J ,,,,,~Joi t14ci-11 IJ r·· ·· • .. ,.,,, at 1·••' S36,600 Ir• ,,.r,., 1-------------- <> , '• , .,. ~ "" <'!~d ro'I li•' 8•.' ~4.:i.5 SOLVISTA 4 BDRM :,,. ''"~",. ry:,,.~.,.~ . , .. ' ,. ',,. . , . ... ' .,, ' (;.(•·,. '. , .. "BEAT HIGH INTEREST" LIDO ISLAND ., ... ,, ",. . ' . ,. ~EWPORJ SHORES CUTIE l.!parad•d 1• "''"'I wav'., .,;,-, ~ both , ! '-;• ~•orv de'o'o"o·, <.ea. 1~ TO Sff !~ JQSUY H "· FHA loon. COSTA MESA TRIPLEX NIGUEL TERRACE C"OSIOf V<'!W'I from oil fC.Ofll~ < vs1om Spon.~h riles throughout room !or Pool olus or.vote-beodo t. golf ~l,,b Coll no"' 646.77 1 I WOODSY LIVING Cy;torri thOrffl'"• nesile~ o'Y\O nq ,;, .. ""'!!' Neor 'A'e~iclill Maio. 3 be'lr oom~ '.! l:oo•fl~ or o •olv S54 Q50 Tustin Area 7% VA LOAN smMo 4 BR + 2 BATH Oniy 2 year~ old. Spanish 11le en· !ry, Gorqeo~' Shoq carpel for'T!OI lwi11r1 uirro oTOd'"'" .. 1~· bu'J1.in~ CoU n-:..1> #898.'l 8.3:!-6800 RENTAL SERVICE D' '"' '· • ro •'· ~100 '' o'a ~eler.• v:.. ' 1'o~i.e •o '""' 11240 171~ "' N••vpc-rr F'"''f) l v51•" 832-6800 • FIX & SAVE 7% FHA LOAN S28,5-0D 2 BR I BA [Jc.· ~OJ\" loco•.,.;l '" '1•""' ""'''"'" ~· ''"'·'" s;,~,. r. •.l•o" ..... ··tt" bo·ho.c.t VJ·H n:; V1' or fM.\ " , ... .._u., ·r · .. r..1,.1 r+-... ,.,. .. , :.•. J~~1' p<c.q•n"' ~, .. •? n .,,,;i•rT11( ''' r:./9'"/t. ll1i' "''.!"t> S24,500 3 BR 2 BA ~' oo"'""-d l. ·~•n.-.1 i.,.1,. de" f'J•IO ! • ~·•d tlt<:O '""fl•OC., P'•r">· land ., .. ,.,I.:> g•o.v your o"~ ... c,~·,_,;,.., n·•d i•Jo' Pav ,''·' \JQJ r.'"·" ',. • $23,900 2 BR I BA • NEED 4 BDRMS? ., .. ,,.' o·' lij'U ·1 1• • . ..-. "· bd \. <I" I , ,. 'I , • "" c.,, d" ., '~' ,,. ... ,' ,. . '' ' ;• .,., •I • 11 LARGE CORNER LOT. r ' r' · .. ,. .... , ., .. ., . ' ' ' n· '" " l •~ •l'> I ! FOURPLEX·Sb0,000 f 1 I ''" !I .. • · • ' r '1• . ,,.,.. f ,, .... ~. " .• ,.. . .,.,, , ,. i.1, •. -·,• \ "•'•• '"n' :Jn •"'I I f\'/·1 u61 I l.10"10'1 flel ·O·way ">~~'"'"'!' · ,..,. '· ••adv lo• Cl<~P""'Y· 1~<t "ll"' 1,,, l·:: r.,n,,.·~ !.:> ~· •.•0<led Ca•11P1. ~ drop~> 1h11J"O<.·I Huqe ~;,,r,..,, "'''" ti"' •11~9e (o-,,t; n•nt0sP~ .. ,,. l---------------- ,v-84 7;J 8 ,J.Q,_1Q CRAlY DE'SIRE? 11 y:iur mod. desire '' to <"I"" a home 1n th". 9orgeou5 T u<11n O•"u wi!h or•..., of tree< ""d .;,.,,i, her• '' '.1 froly lo~ely :1 bdr•n IT'Odf'I ho,.,.. Ankl• de,.ri torn'"'' ,,,,rh mo1eh.n9 d•an .. , fo•v ;,ol• ro \C"'°Ol!i.J or< a• 100"' ri~df'.'""'"0 10 ~ .. I!'°'' ~44 SQO 1!'8 58~ ·1.: 8'\ll 6;~n ABANDONED NODOWN , NO COST TO YOU 3 b•g bdnns. 2 lull botlls-to"""Y ~le l o•che11 huge-loi w.lh bao1 . camper g(l\e. New corpe•s ond fre!h(y pointed $31 . .SOO only #78'..?6 838-6256 Westminster Area CUSTOM HOME·S36,500 :; 1-.... , '.i h . .,,~.. ~' ,,., ~ 'J• •or. • • ·o ·-· ~ ~,.,,,,...,., .,..,,, . ....,od '" -·~· ,• ! ,, ''" ,,,,'1'f'l!\"lOl fl,.,,,.,~ •• I o/t~ H" \ oJ61 I NEW PAINT INSIDE & OUT 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH $31 ,95-0 ""·"I" ~.,,fl ~.,,,, .. on a . ., .. , .. , 'V' !.'po'" 1_,, b-~01 .-:ir "IJ""' ~H<lo Ir.on r "" h• n·" '"" t ·~ ll0~..,...n1, rl S,·.J s.-._. ,,,, . ...., o .. ,., .. 11,.n1 O''"n C.nll I ' ,,,.,a, S"~ /)')I I MANSION The Oorhonory 1 .. r ""' 'l "1~ '0" O\ a "S1a1,.1,,. h "' I• o,Q bold. bo-011tof JI n1<1r11 , q'I QI tho! 800 IQ h Mo\""' !).-!room wt!h 11 bolr:ioy l born, ·~ .. o rOffi<l n T I) 1 '' '0(/" l"epla " 1n• n~•·-• 1<,•; •oo•n ol,,, de" ·I li<•..:l•>JoVm, r:. 1 lot ;>1• 11'0•,. '' l• :iluvM .. fo• h<'il .. ., 11,,. ~omd " "~ ..•• ~ '":' ·--------------t-------------·I ~'''·'~'' i·'. "' I•' n•11 \,!J \t}I'! ,11~,,.,,_,, • ,, ·•'I("'' Mission Viejo- El Toro- Area Hord ro f,"d "~'!' '" ·"'~ 0-.iroi'.,. "''"" "'""' '~"<ll'l "IJ En lo•eci pa'od. ""-"It uo(l•oi~d ""n .. ,. '· ,·1 lor 'lnco·~11"•nt ·ad~. Liv• in beouttfu!, mode<n lr~i11e lof only S242 fl'Onlh O nl';' ? yeors o d l ond1cop>ng 1-eed5 h.,to f 111 P"'• SJ3 900 Coll ~ow #9!73 83~-6800 THREE BEDROOMS 2Yl BATHS .....,., 0 • ' Cl"")• COSTA MESA SHOWPLACE! WALK TO BEACH! fho~ C..o"''' ~ l,nn-• n11 ... , "IQOn 1 " ol 1,,. ..,., fn ~ ~ i • bd•'" l Io···-. \l!ct~• ro,,t_ •n•o•T n•d d•oro-1 ·~•·• ' Of'" tU 'OJ 1_,,,, ,j •!•"' f•oh ,•.-<O! ·~I<'"" ho.,.,,. '""'}' ·~·o•' I•' •qn••i• .,~, ·~·!ld.,.c.•q ,\00~ lf8<1JO {~1•\ ~·\ \1 1._ Own"' lin1 ourrh,.,..,.d nno•h•r o"d "'"II ~I J yf'Or """' hon"' J Ma\! ... , "7 .. d bdrlf1~, lonrcl d"1'"Q •oo"' and \1l"p •nv•no ~11chrn, fo.,,,1~, '"""'• loaded ""'h oevl •fl) W11h *<l!v I ~04 r .. rm• 10 $?74 ·-21315 Hlrll0•8t..., 7141!.31·!.901 ·-116 M.anot,. •'h .. llu" 1 141!>1~·~138 1141126-C600 ·-lnN 5t.11iCotte1Je&!wO ""'11•11111 114/111·!.1!>0 -9M4 f.1>tf 1o ..... 213192~!1?1 7141!.23>3111 ,_,.,., 112113 l l Palr'ltl AYl'f1UI l l3ff60.!.11 I 11t/!.~1·21!16 C'"'llku 11430EMI SOlltn SI 2131924.SSlt 114/"6.()1111 ._. t Qt wtll 1111 Str~ 114/73!Hl~1& 114(&47-071 1 --27to H.W8t~ ~1·~·~01 '14 •!.4~-046!. !Qlol OOy..,..nt R814!i MnJ.,. ,.,11 .. 11 !71 4jY68·3371 YOUR NEAREST WALKER & LEE OFFICE IS C•n•LM Al1niilet J<il)1 i<~!4ha lo, '"'""'Cl·• ~1.11430·1~1;4 ~,4 .. »7·2113 'OUl'IUlfl y 1111, 1 721)9•CIO~~u•.1 1141!141·11!.• 7 1~11169·331! ·-M 11•1W 0•1"""1"0•t>'IA\e 114 1171·t~? ~11Gfe•4 1 IM)I So</11< 8t1)1)~!\1p•t 11&.l~t·ll!>l 11 ... SJt..ea91 Hwil"'910n •e1t11 1181 ,Clongt•A~-f' 114/!4?~4:'!:'1 114{!1<10 !.140 ~91•" SO.?tfot~•Aven"" /14/ltl-03,, UIM ... ••ilfff 331 N l~rtN:W. l• l-lit1•4 7tlltlM-:H4t l14111•2t91 ""-• 100 BtlllhOWf• '1)1421+1!!11 ~·­·~•l l1l"Alrfl• 1•."1,eeo.l303 .. ,. 81t·l110 ' l0"9llfteh•ll"OJ ltnoM• •1 •l lono 8".K" e"'" ,'IJl4,:&.<i•~1 21314 .... ~924 L .... f.C:h•lOl AllO• ~e~·~-· .. ,.v~'J>6.••9l :13,~fHt-~1~1 Ml1MonV .. ~·EI fooo .'lSSI (I TOtO Rd 11 4 ~MOOO N ... jl0!1 lt.Cl'»lr~•nf "t•.~ Nt~'~!•ll p.,,_, 114/'-•0_,~, ,,, 646·1111 ... ~ >0l1 H .... ~f'f A•t' /1 4 1/J~ .• ~!>(l ,,,,\\<1 ,.06019 ~·l•M" ... ' , ·~ lot,11/1 "°"""'' ''3'161!.0811 /14/!.2l liA °'.,....111111 , .. ~ 1iS~'N lushn A,,.. 0••'"9" , 41'31 .. 110 O•Mtd·'lttl~ '6ll "'-'•In V"'lllu!4 Ro ~lil.>f'fl<'IT'lf' ~ 4'11~l4 1 ,,.Otwrt I 13168 "~-·~ 1 I 1 ,,. J•e-lil,1 ~40 l7lJ GOLDENWESTPARK YOUNG EXECUTIVES .... CULDESAC HUNTINGTON HARBOUR $22,500 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH $36,950 TWO STORY SHOWCASE 4 BEDROOM PLUS FAMILY ROOM Ow"•• 'On••(l·•i o-ld kM •ed· .. ..n II\' 1 bdn" r;.,1t1 .. nw,.•t Pa,l bon,oty • ., S~1 )00 !~• ~""" ·OQ•otl•rl ·~,,.,ttko • • ., '"''"~I•• '""' (!, 0 ·' , ... 01 • ...,.,11 ,,,.,... !~" l".!,•lv 1 bdrn ~ bu·• ~c-·" b-• M1•'l~ v .• .., l .,,.,, " 1 .... ,, d .. r.:i·~''"" • 10,,. '.l "'~·.,"-" nor~ B"ri ''""~01 V'' r•n'~t 0 .,..,., ( )0• ,..d•• "' ! """ '"~ H"· • ·n" o "'""' 11>-< f r SA ")Q All ""'v n•w lo,olv , ~•r~. OIY""'~ ~·' .!•ti! ••111:, .. ,.,oor •• [•d,,;, .. 1 .. ;napl-,, ,~, ..,,. r,,_, to. •t ''"0'"" "'1' Yr-• ~ .. .,, d•.on (nlil. ~on~lio. lo•~ol '•~e~ & O<>•d·" .... ,, .. N• ... CClrn~•i & -i•OO"'• 'I/'-. > 1'" "•' .!,; '1-J' \',.O I '' \7,5Q Go 1g eo l1~ townh o~I" n .. or """WOY 21h b!O<~< B<'Oo•t-'· I cor pel!nQ lort"ploc:e. ~"''"!I"" onrrt .' sior1~\ rore 1r,.. 1,~,<Kl ,~11 .. , lfOfl\jl!,.,.d of1d on'(•Oo• '"""''1 '' ~lie-v•nQ tho~ b'!ou•y ~°'on• ·•o-1~ ro ""'"'" •n Onl~ on• y.-o• o•n $51.500 ?.100 o 11 oi iu•U"OU} ; ... ,,o on " '' dP 'u lor [~ct"il"""1 \(hooi\ & "'"Ohborh(lod Co ll •or ~0.1, ''"''"" .. Cl'$ "'-''' """'' .. ,.9 .>1 !J,~1 ·l~•· PIMtfllol •'o<b• linH :04t Ynr1ul,·•t118••n "'•· '"'"' ''J ·:• o!!i.'-0 1111~ .. •"'f·Tyle• M.,tl 101~: .. ,.i'l'>O'·• 11411\IH JIJO 114 eJ~IJ6(1 ltlff'"l.0.·U"'v""•~Y • ~.:iu .. , ... ,,:, ...... l!4•t<IJ 'C31) '""""'""' 1! S-.,.•n !):1 .• •1,11:,1 >t4f ·~~¢/' ·-,,~•Oi•·tl'11< ~!Nl'·,.w•1'"' 71• &321>&0\I IUll"' 117~1 l'il'Cll-l•<l "w""'"' !1 4 &l~ (12•& ""tn'l"'flt'• &.<ll '11~ .lll'•'"if"•flil•n it• 8~•..:1611 Wl!tl""·MM:ientl• ~elt 161 2J l ~Jto<l\l•P~ 1";j. .. , ... , ''1~ '1 4 '1 111 '.'11 I '"'"~ °"'"'Otl It //<-M•n .1"1,-."'"' ~ ···~·\&~ r• •.• :it .,31 ~or ' . ' -··~· WALKER & LEE IS COMMUNITY-MINDED! Cllarity and golf will highligM Walker & Lee's community relations activities in the month ol May (National Mental Health Month) when the Walker & Lee Foundation wi ll SPOnsor two major amateur goll tournaments for the benelll of lhe Orange County Mental Heallh Association. WOMEN'S CHAMPIONSHIP MEN'S CHAMrtONSHIP May 13·14 May25,26•Z7 Mlss1onViejoGC AnaholmH11ls GC Green River GC Shoreclifl GC ' HunUngton SeaClillGC San Clemente GC Green River GC Riverview OC Entry lee Includes: green fees: hrs! round golf car1 ; victory party. and lrophtes and awards 0:1~) r•o"C.<1 r//5!0 8J8 6256 1#7790 8Q11.11 ~,, 11190? I 898· I 356 p-~----------------------~ I 197 4 Orange County Amateur Golf Championships I I for the benefit of the Orange County Mental Health Association I ID Women's Championship D Men's Championship I I $37.50 $50 I I I I Name Phone I Address -~~-,;~~~-,,,.,.,-,~~.::-~~~~~~~~~~~-I' Street -City State __ Z1p I I Handicap Club Affilial1on I I I I To:Oro"'l"C~GolfC-•• R,tser•t Cart May 14 I w.11i ... •LH,loc. R c rt 26 I 1477S.Mmdlt11ffA••· tstr¥t a May ---I I ' Aftahtlm. CA t210Z """ .-. &._~. ,.'91* t.! May 27 ___ _ ... ,..._._ ...... ~-M~~,.M.~~-":-.... 1-• I ------------------------~ DIRECTORY x .. , thl1 ho11dr dlrwtHy w!tll r•• rilh •Mli••d •yo~ t • h1w.-ti1Mth•t · .All rile IH1t1 ... ll&N4 ~I•• ore 4., tc.tibed i1 9rHt•r .. 111 lty -~ .0.W ... fo l• •od1y'1 DAILY PILOT WANT AOS. ,_.,_ •wlitt 0 ,.11 ho•* f\r 1011 or te r•'lt ore ,11 .. d to ll\t t1i1ch h1for111otl111 111 ttil1 c:el11fftll e<M:h f1Woy, $.t1tdo1 01114 S111doy. HOUSES FOR SALE 1967 Pt. Hamsgate IHV Homesl NB 640-0020 (Sal & Sun 1-51 2 BEDROOMS 239 lleliotrupc, Corona dcl ~l<!r ' 67J.4;10 S7 4.500 (Sal & Sun 1-51 4591 Greentree. Ir vine 675-7225 $48,500 1Sw1 1·51 2 BR & FAM RM or DEN • 1710 Kings f{d ., i\c~·port Beach 642-5200 1Sun 1·5) 709 1\farigold . Corona de.I ~rar 615-6000 $73 .500 (Sal & Sun 1-5 ) 929 En1erald Ba..)', La guna Beach 6i5-3000 (Sun 1-5) 414 \'isl• Grande !The Bluffs) NB 642·8235 $89,500 · 1Sun 14) 3 BEDROOMS ·2.811 Ocean Lane. Corona de! Alar 6i3-6510 $112,500 1Sun 1-5) 2815 Loreto Ave ., Costa li.lesa 979-6918 I Sat/Sun) 3104 Ocean Bl\·d .. Corona del ?\1ar 642-6472 $159.500 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ) 1130 Somerset (\\'estcli!fs) NB 644-1706 $134.500 1301 Keel (HV Hill s) Cd"I (Sun 1-4> 644-1766 S97.500 (Sat & Sun 1-51 1000 While Sails IHV Hills ) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-51 ••416 De Sota 1'erracc (Cor Hl ds) Cd~t 673-8550 $89,500 !Sun 1-5) 2450 l"ordham Dr. !College Park) CM 646-3928 S39,500 !Sun 1·51 2042 Con1n1odore (Baycrest) t\B 645-8400 $70,000 1Sun 1·5) 4 BEDROOMS 3039 Carob St., Newport Beach (Sal. & Sun. 10-5) 24-0 l·Jaze l Dr., Corona del !\1ar 8120.000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 4551 P;i nyon Tree. lr\'inc 642-2991 $i0,000 (Sal & Sun) 19422 tlarding, 'forktown l!\ev.·Jand , HB 546-5880 $32,000 -• ISal & Sun 1-51 5l2 Sea,rard Rd:. Corona llig hlands. Cdl\t 675-6000 .. $149.500 (Sun 1-5 ) 32975 A\·e nida de! RQsal. San Juan Capo 496-2492 $39.500 (Sat & Sun 11 :30-5 :30) 8801 Emerald , \Vcst1n inster • 1221 J>en1broke. l\evtport Beach ... 646-3255 $62 .500 (Sat & Sun 1-5 )' 897-1228 S35,500 !Sat & Sun) 493 Tia Juana. Laguna Beach 494-9704 $55 ,000 !Sal & Su n 124! 2101 Vista Umbrosa (The Bluffs) Nil 6444910 878.500 (Sat & Sun 1-5:301 6 Rue Chamonix (Big Canyon) NB 6444910 $132.500 (Sal & Sun 1-5 :30) 2828 Terry Rel., Arch Beach , Laguna Bch. 675-6000 $69,500 (Sun 1-5) • 1848 Commodo re, Baycrest, NB 640-3255 (Sun 1-5J 340 Otero, Bluffs, J\B 675-6000 $81 ,500 (Sun 1-5) 2116 Shell (China Cove) CdM 642-8235 !Sat 11·3 ; Sun 2-5) 223 East 19th Sl., Costa Mesa 646-6189 $36 ,950 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 631 Goldenrod , Corona del ti.t ar 644-7211 !Sat & Sun 1-5 ) 216 i>oppy Ave., Corona dcl iiar 644-1766 (Sun 2-6) 217 Via Orvielo. Lido Isle, J\B 646-74 14 $79,900 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ) •934 Junipero !Mesa de! Mar) CM 546·2313 $49,750 (Sun 12-4) 2631 Crestvie\v Dr. (Bayshores) NB 645-3431 Si9.500 (Su n 1·5) 12 Ru e Chateau Royal (Big Canyon) NB 644-6200 $121,500 !Sun 1·51 2024 S. Ca pella Court , Costa !\1esa 540·9321 $48,500 (Sun 1·6) 14663 Golden Glen, Irvin e 675-7225 $31 ,500 (Sun 1·5) 16622 Busby, J·luntin gton Beach 842·2535 $44 .900 !Sun 1·5) 1201 Dorset Ln. IHalecrest) Chi 546-2313 834.900 ISun 1·4 ) 3 BR & GU EST 6i5·3600 $129,500 (Sat & Sun 2-5) 3 BR & FAM RM or DEN 5-JO Via Lido Soud (Lido Jsle) N.B. 675-0123 $95,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1768 1 Laurel Tree Ln (Univ. Pk.) lrvine 552-8696 $59,500 (Sal & Sun 10-5 ) •223 Collon St.. NB 5434401 $48.500 (Sat & Sw1) 4527 Tremont Ln (Ca meo Shores) Cd~'1 6i5-0202 $138 .000-1Sal & Sun 1-5) 3005 Cleveland, Costa ~Icsa 557-3850 $36,000 (Sal 11-5 ; Sun 2-5) 915 Alder (Easlblull) J\B 675-4000 $19.950 (Sat & Sun 14) 203ti Com modore (BaycrestJ NB 640-1120 $68,000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 23 14 Fordham Hd., (College Park) CM 557-0271 (Sat & Sun 18-6) 1305 Skvli nc Drive. Lagu na Beach 494-1001 $154.500 (S un 1-5 ) 3375 l ... arkspur. Cos ta l\lc5 :l 1.13·1166-7055 $50.950 !Sat & Sun1 29591 An na l\Jaria, Laguna i\iguel 40.J-9i04 $63.500 I Sun 12-4 I 182 Chicory Way, Irvine 045-9491 S59,750 (Sat & Sun 12-5) 2200 \\lind1A1nrcl Lane. Back Bay, NB f..U-6841 $82,000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1818 Port Wheeler, (HVu Homes) NB 615-6000 $14,950 (S un 1-5) 3308 Ocean Blvd., Corona del Mar tii3-2222 $169,500 (Sat & Sun 1-51 3036 Country Club, Mesa Verde, CM 546·5990 $88,500 (Sun 1-5) 420 Len'l''ood Drive, Costa Mesa 642-5200 (Sun 1-5 ) 2162 R11ral L.111e, Costa tii'Jesa 646-3255 $32,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1337 Bonnie Doone (Irvine Terrace) NB 673-3.150 $68,000 (Sa t & Sun 1-5 ) * •J023 Dolphin 'fcr r .. (Irvine Terr.) NB 673-8550 !Sa t & Sun 1-5) 420 1 Trumbull, llunli nglon Harbour. HB 846--0641 167.500 (Sun 1-5 ) •4491 Sandbllr,i? \\'ay. L'111,·. Pk .. Irvine 5-l5-IJ.l 24 S62.9;o I Sat & Sun 1-5), 1788 Hawaii Cir .. Mesa l 'crde, CM 546·4141 $48,900 !Sun 1-51 •ri.19 Cameo Jlig:hlands. Coronil del r.1a r 644 -1270 $92,500 (Sat & Sun 1-51 1!10:1 Oonnie Doone llrv Tcrr.1 Cdhl ij75-3000 (Sat & Sun l-5) • 1948 Sa ntiago. l\:e"·port Beach 646-7711 SH0.000 (Sat & Sun 1·51 1700 1-lighland J)r., Co rona del 1\1ar 646-1711 S99,50B !Sat & Sun 1-51 1990 Port Seabourne \Vy (1-JVuHomes) NB 646-1711 S59,900 ISal & Sun 1-5) ••608 \'ia Lido f\ord (Lido Isle ) NB 644-1766 8275.000 (Sun 2-51 2001 Ba,·aderc (Irvine Terr.) Cd~J 6-14-1766 $235.000 ISat & Sun 2-61 ..-•844 \'ia l.ido l\nrd flido Isle) NB 644 ·1166 8295.000 !Sal&; Sun 2-6 1 ++ 1 ~21 Tahu na Terrace tlrv 1'err) Cdlil 67:l·R550 rsun 1·5) 550 Vista Flora . Nc\t·port Beach 646-0555 Si8.900 (Sun lZ.5) 4 BR & FAMILY RM or DEN 21002 Shepherd Lane, 1-luntington Beach 5Jli-l661 $46,900 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ) 2501 fJort \Vni toy Place, Nev.•port Beach 644-9425 (Sal & Sun 12-5) 2336 La Linda Place, Newport Beach 546-5880 $69,950 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 92·1 Alder Pi. I Easlblutls) NB G42·8~35 $81,500 (Sat 1·4 ; Sun 1-5) * * 31!11\lorning Star Ln (Do\'er ShrsJ NB 642-8235 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 2057 Comn1odore (Baycrcst) NB 644·6200 tSal & Sun 1-5) 1515 Priscilla( Harbor 1-l ighlands) NB 644-6200 ~.900 !Sat & Sun 1-51 49 Hoyal Sl. George Rd (Big Cyn1 NB 644-4910 $'295,()(Jt) (Sat & Sun 1-5 :30) 35 Burning 'free l{d (I3ig Ca nyon) NB 641-4910 ~159.500 1Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 2131 Santiago, Baycrest, NB ti75-6000 $81,500 !Sal & Sun 1-5 ) 1802 Elba Circle, Alesa Verde, C ~l 546·5990 $59,900 (Sun 1-5) •1520 Dorothy Lane (Harbor Bids.) NB 615-6000 S19,950 (Sal & Sun 1-5) •420 Kings Road, \Vestcliff, NB 642-5200 (Sat & Sun 1-5) •1536 Dolphin Terr. (Irvine 1'crr.) Cdl\."1 673-6900 (Sun 12-5) 2207 Windward Lane, Back Bay, NB 642-6841 $86,500 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 1133 El Camino. Mesa de! Mar, CM 546-4141 $44,900 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 128 Via llhaca (Lido Isle ) NB 642·1188 $189,900 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 1300 Saplanella (Irvine Terr.) CdM 673-3~ $89.500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) • •521 OeAnza Dr (Corona Hlds) CdM 673-8550 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 3001 Java (Mesa Verde) CM 546-2313 $68,000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2818 Loreto Ave .. Costa i\lesa 646-1111 !Sal & Sun 1-5) 2449'l Ovcrlake Dr. (Lake Foresl J El Toro 830·9201 $63.950 (Sat & Sun 10-7) 1528 Keel IHV Hills ) Co rona de! ~!ar 675-3000 (Sal & Sun 1-5 ) 101 65 SwallO\V Ave ., Fountain Valley 842-2535. (Sat & Sun 1-51 •2854 Cariob IEastbluff) NB 675-7225 S79,800 (Sal & Sun 1-51 3901 Park Green (HV Hills) CdM 644-1766 Sll9,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ) ••28 Linda Isle Dr. (Llnda Is le) NB 644-1766 S2i5,000 (Sat & Sun 2-6) 22 Hermltage !Big Canyon) NB 644-1766 $169,500 (Sat & Sun 2·6) 2 Polnl Loma I Spyglass Hill) NB 644-li66 $159,500 (Sat & Sun 2-6 ) 1856 Braemar Way, Newport Beach 642-8235 (Sun 1·5) 1252 Somerset Ln. (Wcstcllrf) 1'(Jl 642-8235 !Sun l-5) 2352 Rut~ers Or .. CVsta Uesa 545-1868 839.900 !Sun 12-6) 154 Ma sters Circle ISA Heights) SA 546-23 13 $61.450 !Sun 1·5) 11574 Quartz, ~·ou ntaln Valley 842-2335 855,400 IS un 1-5) 5 BEDROOMS 2006 Pt. Provence (HV Homes) NB 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ) 119 Via Or\•ielo, Newport Beach 646-7711 8139,500 (Sun 1·5) • . ' S BR & FAMILY RM or DEN 1896 Rhodes, Costa Me•a 646-3255 $77,500 (Sat & Sun 1-51 ••1 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB 644-4910 $250,000 (Sun 1-5:30) 1034 Sandcastle Dr.' (llVu Hills) CdM 675-6000 i99,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1812 Hu mmingbird Dr., Costa /\~esa 963-6728 $83,000 (Sat & Sun 1-51 2084 Tustin, Ne "'•port Beach 646-5602 $66,500 (Sal & Sun 2-5 ; Wed 7-9 pm.1 26 Hermitage Lane (Big Canyon) NB 644-8603 ~159,000 (Sal & Sun 1-5) ll Oakmont Lane (Big Canyon) NB 641-6200 $325.000 (Daily 1-5 1 901 Aleppo I Eastbluff) l\Il 673-8550 $93.500 !Sat & Sun 1-51 2780 lled \\'ing Ci rcle (Al esa Verde) CNI 646-7111 (Sat & Sun 1·51 430 \•ia Lido Soud I Lido Isle) NB 644-1766 Sl89.500 tSat & Sun 2-6 1 21941 Sea Side Dr .. Hunti.J1gton Beach 548-6197 (Sat & Sun 1·51 3940 Ocean Birch I HVu Hills) CdM 675-7225 8101,500 !Sal & Sun 1·51 * 1418 ?llariners r\\'estcliff) NB 642-8235 (Sun 1·5) 3729. Blue Key 1l1 V Hills) Cd M 644-6200 (Sun 1·51 6 BR & FAM RM or DEN 40162nd St:. Ne \l'port Shores, l\113 5-18-2211 $69.500 (Sat & Sun 1-6) DUPLEXES FOR SALE I BR EA 41 5 Orchid, C'orona del !\lar 675-5126 2 BR & I BR 3808 Rive-r. l\ewport Islqnd , NB (Sun 1-5) 615-6000 $129,900 (Sun 1-;1 2 BR "EA ••111-1111.2 Bayside PL. Corona de! !\.far 613·6900 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 329 Roches ter. Costa !\Iesa 642-1264 $64.000 (Sal & Sun 1-5 ) 10 6 Rea\'I. Balboa Island 546-2313 8109,900 3 BR & l BR 521 Iri s. Corona del !\Iar (Sun 1-5) 675-5726 (Sat & sun 1-51 3 AND 2 BEDROOMS 415 Iris, Corona de! !\.Jar 613·65 10 !Sat & Su11 1·51 422 Goldenrod . Corona del !\tar 673-2222 !Sal & Sun 1-51 715 Poppy, Corona de! h!ar 673-8550 (Sat & Sun 1-51 608 ~1arguerite. Corona del Iilar 613-7769 5139.500 (Sun 1·5) 3 BR EA 514 Dahlia Ave .. Corona del 1'.l ar 673-9010 Sl23,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5:30) 518 Fernleaf. Corona del !\.far 675-8550 Sl20.000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 505 & 505 11~ Acacia. Corona del l\lar 673-8550 SI29,000 rsunday) 3 BR & 4 BR 224 & 2241,2 Ap olena , Balboa Island 673-6454 (Open House) • 1008 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa 644-1166 5250 ,000 !Sat & Sun 2-6 1 317 Jasmin<;. Corona del l\1ar 613-8550 (Sat & Sun 1-51 4 BR & FAM !JJ.1 & S BR 618 Acacia, S. of Hwy .. Cdlll 675-60011 $129.000 !Sun 1-5) FOURPLEX 3 BR EA 520 Iris. Corona del J\far 644-1166 $250,000 • (Sun 2·6) APT. FOR RENT 3 BR. 317 Heliotrope, Corona de! Mar 6-10-0501 or 644-4174 (Sun 1-5) HOUSE FOR RENT 3 BR & FAM RM 4981 Paseo de Vega (Turtlerock) Irvine 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1-5) CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE 2 BR 1741 Tustin •4C, Costa ~lesa 642-5200 3 BR (Sun 1-5) 221i Vista Huerta (Bluffs Plaza) NB 644-1133 $45,500 (Sun 1-51 2637 Vista Ornada (The Bluffs) NB 6i5-3535 (Sat & Sun 1-51 •641 Vista Bonita, Blufls, NB 644-7270 $67,775 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ) 2119 Vista Laredo (The Bluffs) NB 673-6642 675-6459 (Sun 1·5) 31423 S. Paclfk Cst Hwy No. 79, Lag Bch • 642-1188 $89,950 (Sun 1·5) 3 BR & FAM RM 305 Vista Trucha (Tbe Bluffs) NB 640-0020 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 507 Playa (The Bluffs) NB 640·0020 4 BR (Sun 1-5) 362 Ylsta Madera n 'he Bluffs) NB 640-0020 (Sun 1-5) 4 BR I. FAM RM 301 Vista Suerte (North Blulls) NB 6H-ll33 $85,500 (Sun 1-5) S BR & FAM RM 835 Amigos Way •1 (Eastbluff Ter.) NB 644-1133 $-06,500 !Sat & Sun 10-5) CONDOMINIUMS FOR .RENT 3 BR 669 Vista Onlta IBlnffs) NB 640-1)672 S425t mo (Sat & Sun 1-51 •••• 1 •it Wtterlro1t * • * Wat1rlt111t &.. P.ol " .---. IACK IAY FM L•nd 2306 HEATHE R LANE-NEWPORT BEACH OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-S VIEW A FLOWERY BANK and SHIMMERING BLUE WATER In The SPECIAL PRIVACY of YOUR OWN HOME 3BR's-3 baths $94,750 CHARLOTIE R. LONG . Realtor Since 1950 PLEASE CALL ; 644-llSO EASTBLUFF General R.E. 1002Gener•I R.E. 1002 CONDOM IN I UM ::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::;;.;I 2950 Sq. ft. -6 bclm1., ~ ba1hs '°' o ""'"'· & •'"i. i UDO LIFE • VIA LIDO NORD ' C o 1n p I etl'ly refurblshtd thn10111. 1·our rhoiee of ne1,1,· 1 ACROSS FROM BALBOA BAY CLUB carPE'lin:.;. ne1v appli&Jl{.-e~. 3 New bayfront condominiu1ns will be ready 1!1df-elt!aning dbl. o" en . tor delive rv Oct. 15th . 1974. Subterrru1ean ga- i;arngc w ('h'<'.. openei·. y,·('r I rages, eie\·ator ser vice. Reservations now I bar, enc! unit & con1n1un ity I pool. Clos(' to 1narkc1, being taken. £.>riced at $215,000. """001 · <hopplog. '"""'""' RANCH • NEWPORT BEACH I & Fashion I sl 11nd .1 o u 1s 1 anding '' a I u c ·I 2.35 Ne t acres : lovely colonial atmosphere ; C'On1pal'e'. Sli6.500. Co. 11 1 1 6-l l-1133 10 10 j, Broker. 5 stalls-stable area. tack & feed rooms. SA IL HOME corrals. sep. gues t & servant's qUarters. IThi! 3BR. 3BA. cannl rront Property for sale to settle eslate. Listed at home feRtures crpl!', drps, $250.000. bri('k fiff'pl and n dock that "''ill accon1moda1e A 40' bottt. ,\nxious 01~·ner os:king SW;5bo. Submii lr11des. HARBOR C1\LL GP-8400 -INVESTMENT IRVINE 1 COMPANY REALTORS University Park 2841 E. CoH t Hwy., Coron• del Mar IPR'E\'IE\\' SHO\\'I'.\·c .. hnrd I "Selling Re•I Estate In Newport H1rbor to !ind" ~lnrquette :\trxlcl.. Since 1944" ~ln!i~h·" :lad lu:oi:urious 2 673 4400 I ~ru11·. :: hroroorn, 3 balh 1 • I Co1nlon1in1ur11 in v i c \\' i __ ..., ... _...,,,.._.,.. ... ,....,...,.. ____ I IN'.atfon °1 rolling hill~. 1 General R.E-.---1002-General-R-:-E:-1001 I Pn1·:1t.1 1.::il'dc>n entry, open bcani t'\'ilin:;, forinel dining. MIRACLE IN o ... ·ersize<l fan1ily room \\·Ith BAYSHOR£S * ""''1'."' ""0 .... """ MESA DEL MAR * Kp.irkhni; n1odern kitchen . . 1 and !argf' n1Rster bedroon1.l R.~ally sotnething !ipt.:!Ja.1~ J-OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 y.·\th flreplaC'E" and pril'ate 1 fine louch~s ot .design. and 2595 CRESTVIEW rlN'.".'!ini: roo1n. NO \\' 1 rle~"Or d1st1ngq111.sh this 3 . . \·,\CA:0-1 _ Cl"-iler inlf'N!s!ed 1 bed1wm home. Gt'n;>J"OUS I :o.;1rely drroruled 'l bdn~1., 1. i11 imn1edia1r sale'-SG'l.lf.il. ' U9:' of quality 'A'allpaper. bath, bl!-ln I'.~ kltc~e?, \o\\ C111\ :\IN'. llanna :;.1~.i24 custom drap<"s. prentium 1 le<1St>l~ld, l11ri;c pa.t.o. boat o. tic n , I qualil)' 5i..~-c"~t .,_,u!nc , storage n11•a .. 01JoC ol th<' ,..,,_,u 1 e>, 1 a ror!i. '""'6 ... ,,.. ' .. ~·· I e ·t ·ards tn Boyshores 1narblc In bathrooms. Call I 1ul:, s ) . · · J>.16-2313 for delail!i about 2 Pn\·ate SAndy beflchc!i f?r COSTA MESA I t"e neat !IY.imming pool and your plca.<>w;. Plans ~vall. FOUR-PLEX S<.parate TeCreation room I for . t>xpansK>n. 0 "' n er ·1th pool t bl nn.~1ous. $57,51)'.) Call U1'i nbout th is "' a (', ··c·· THOMAS hard-to-find I n v {' s t m ent oPE.'I TIL g • Jr s FU"/ TO 8£ NICE' opporttmHy m a bell" ~~ 11 REALTOR ""-estside location backi~ lo , , 714 \\'. C'st 11 .... 1.. fJ48-552i R golf tourse. $610/mo t: Nc\\'J)Or1 8Pach r:,·e 5"4!>-56-13 Income rould be nlOl'C 1 ~ 1 to~·:lo\1 vacancy on 1 Y -... · --W-HY RENT_! __ ~J,:-00 c1111 s.i-1-m1 Halec:rest ,,.i1h PN1Pf'11y 1·11 h.il's ~e ring buy rhi~ thlw bedroom I a nd has everything hon\c 'rilh !3n:;e fa mily ~ • !Iugl' 16x31 Rec Hooni l'l)"ITTl, and lake o\·tr lonn I -1 • L..1.the 8.: p\fl~ll'r subjPCI to existing 'fl.; ~ ' • Harcl\1-ood floors annual percentage rntc 1'itA ASSUME 73/4 ~. LOAN Ct1l•l»sat• stfl'ct S2l.~Jl0 Hurry on this onr, • -i :t &-l:lloonu; loan tOrnl mo. payment 0Aisy fl'l'~h 3BR. ?B,\, on Deluxl' 1:thn11t>d patio Call Red Carpet, Realtors huge trce-!iliadcd lo!! Crp\s, 1 Call & !!!:\' 1101,·: .)46...86.IO Prlctd at s:JG.000. drps. bltins--Jl;irbnr S<.·h·:ir>l ! Disl. Askini; $..%,9;1). ~ubrnil I ~ COATS 1 rlO\\'rl & takl' tl\'~r fantasuc I & 1 ln.o. I · W WALLACE C \LL G·l:>.S400 REAL TORS 9 a=f/C£. l '/,I/lo • ',V ! -546--4141- V, ~lt'.!a~ C.o. (Open Eve ni ngs) ~~~~~~~~ ----~~~~~ .. ·- WALXER & LEE IS COMMUNITY-MINDED! Charity and golf will highlight Walker & Lee's community relations activities in the month o f May (National Mental Health ~onth) when the Walker & Lee Foundation will sponsor two major' amateur golf tournaments for.the benefit of the Orange County Mental Heallh Association. WOMEM 'S CHAMPIOMSHIP ME+l'S CHAMPIOMSHIP Mey IJ-14 MeylS,26&27 Mission Vle}O GC Anaheim Hills GC Green ~iver GC Shored if! GC Hunl1ngton Seaclifl GC San Clemente GC Green River GC AiverviewGC Entry fee includes: green fees: firs! round golf car1 ; victory party, and trophie,and awards. ------------------------197 4 Orange County Amateur Golf Championships I I for lhe benefit of the Orange County Mental Htallh Assoclallon I ID Women 's Championship D Men's Championship I I $37 ,50 $50 I I I I Name Phone Address -· ---I I Street Cily State Zi~ I I Handicap Club liAmaiion --I II To:er.p ~GollC:oouillN Rt,.rnCot+Mey 14 1 1 W911tf'&LM,klc:. R CartM 2, I i•ns.-•... • .. ,.e er ---I I lul .. 1-.CAtllOJ ,..__."":::~._ Moy 27 __ _ --... I .. ... .... --... -.................. _ .. ,, .. ., ... , .... _, ___ "':t'' ...... -------------------------~ • . ' ' ' I Geno • EAS SH er to S4 STA $6 po Fe an r $1 BA H B ro E & ra a ca cu w 0 ti H Ml N B r 0 0 I f 2 r f • .. 1·, Ge=ne.::;•..;•;;.i .:;R.:;. E::;· __ .;:I 00:::.2 G:::;•::n::•.:.:r•::,l .:;R:;:. E;.:.. ~=,;;I 00;;,;2el:G~on;::"":,::.:•1..;R.::· E::·c__..;l.::;00:.::2 Gonon 1 R. "E. 1002 Gonorol R.E. 1002 ****** Heritage Collection . EASTSIDE INCOME PROPERTY SHAKE ROOF BEAUT I eS-8 garages, ev- erything in excellent condition. Big lot, clotie to everything. Call for more information . 540.1151. STATELY 2 STORY $69,950-Secluded 4 bedroom, 2 bal h, New- port Beach view home on quiet cul-de-sac. Featuring formal dining, separate faniily room with large brick fireplace and Jots of wood, 4 large bedroo.ms, newly decorated thruout. Beautiful family backyard. Com· plete with paddle tennis court and basket- ball & tennis back board. Just listed, won't last,call now! 546-5880. NEWPORT'S FINEST LIVE ON BALBOA PENINSULA POINT -We have the home for her now. Prestige location on Seville Ave. ne ar ocean and bay and tennis club. 5 Bedrooms, 31;., bath, family room, TV roo1n, BilUard room and wet bar. $114,500. Call for appointment. 540.1151 . BALBOA ISLAND HOME PLUS INCOM E -!or under $100,000. Balboa's shal'pest 2 bedroo1n ho1ne -t-1 bed- roon1 apartment. Like ne'v inside and out. Extensively remodeled with quality material & workmanship last year. Tastefully deco- rated and great location. T\VO blocks to beach and steps to shopping. Just listed, won't last, call now, 546-5880. CUSTOM BUILT EXECUTIVE HOME JN MESA VERDE'S MOST EXCLUSIVE AREA -5 Bedroom, huge family room with fireplace and terrazw noors. Formal dining room, sunken living room, heated swinuning pool separate 3rd car garage or shop in rear' yard. Ideal for the executive family that wants something extra or needs entertain- ment space. Call 541).1151 W'4TERFRONT LOT ONCE IN A Ufetime opportunity for vaca- tion homesite on !tesh water lake. Only $4950. Hurry, CALL 541).1151. MINI VIEW-MINI PRICE $32,000-Beautlful Huntington Beach 4 Bed,.. room 2· bath borne. Quiet tree-lined street, one biock elementary school. Gorgeous view of Huntington Beach from backyard. Won't last at this price. Open this weekend, call for-details. 546-5UO EASTSIDE DUPLEX CHARMING-Pride of ownership home and income property. Great Costa Mesa loca- tion. Just listed exclusively \Vith us . Large 2 bedroom units. Beautifull y finished and ready to move into. Full price $45,500 CALL 540-1151. NORTH COSTA MESA OWNER ANX IOUS -$40,500 quality built family home with shake roof, hardwood floors and plaster walls. Huge added 12'x24' bonus room complete with farge stone fire- place, paneling and real beam ceilings. Beau- tifuJ front kitchen with new double oven. 5 burner range and dishwasher. Great Costa Mesa location-Walk to everything!! CALL 546-SUO. 1 YR WARHANTY • HOM E HORSE RANCH Pele Barrell f<ea/t'J prejenb NEW USTINGS A cuatom 4 bdrni. beautifully appointed. 200) sq. fl. All undcrp"Otlnd utllill<""s iu and paid for. Just 3 ml. to "'"'Y 60. Full prl<""e only $44,500. Features Valley Realty'.s exclusive one year Sel'Vice waM'anly. f'M I u r lh • r EXECUTIVE TRANSFERRED 1nfornUtOon Call Vil 11 e y REA Really 963-4543. OUT OF A c• '\ :.:\ i~ i~r: \ :'•"' RI \I.I\ ""'"' ·'··~-· ... , .. , "~'''"''"''"~ ,,,, .. ~~~· PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT Take over subject to exilitlng &i~ annual percentage rate on VA loon total monthly payments $188.00. 'I1tis ls ooe of Oleta Mesa sharpest • bedroom hornet. Hurry won't last. Call Red Carpet, Realtors 54&1l).10 It's A Showc:osn $47,500 ANO ANXIOUS TO SELL -this nicely deccr rated, 3 bedroom home. Near Harbor Hi gh and walking distance to shops and parks. Many extras including new carpeting, drapes and copper plumbing. 420 Lenwood Dr., Costa Mesa Open Sun 1-5 CAREFREE LIVING NO FUSS, NO MUSS, NO WORRY -close the door and walk to shops, churches or take the bus to the beach. No stairs to climb in this 2 bedroom, 2 bath, newly decorated Condominium. 1741 Tustin, •4C, Cost1 Mew Open Sun 1-5 HARBOR HIGHLANDS WALK TO LIBRARY, park, schools and shops. Over 1700 sq. ft. Priced right, $50,950. Call for appt. WESTCLIFF ENJOY THE LUXUR Y -of hardwood floors and space in this tremendous 6 bedroon1 home. The Cape Cod exterior is enhanced by lush ivy. Ideal back yard for children and pool. Offered at $133,000. A lovely 4 BR + f11mily room home In move-in roodition lhroughout. Greal EXCLUSIVE location on quiet cul-de-sac, LOVELY LINCOLN LANE -a hou se that ~~ ~~."1:~~ ~ flows from garden to living areas -great br eezeway . May be for entertaining. 4 Bedrooms, plus den and com-et1ed toad d i t i o n a I formal dining room with a bonus workshop room. For add It i on a 1 off garage. Best area for schools and resi· infor matio n a n d dential living in Newport. Call us for an ~~T1ent, please pOOne appointment. O/'EH T"'"'"' FUHIOBElllC<I OCEANVIEW ~ 1~~~·1;·~·~ 4 BEDROOMS, FAMILY ROOM · -plus 1 a' lovely guest quarters. Rich carpets thruout, 1 ;VJ heated pool , bright patio,. all kitc~en appli· · ances stay. O"•ner desires qmck sale! BUY A WARRANTY HOME POOL HOME 1 YEAR WARRANTY Cl~ tiJ sbo~iry: an d schools. Sparkling Paint inside and out. Mature trees and shrubii. 4 Bedrooms, $123.95-0. 420 Kings Rd., We1tcliff, N .~. Sat/Sun 1·5 i . p~;~ ~~;;;;;s ~Es:~;~ J 1605 Westclilf Or., N.B. ~ 642-5200 Family Room, Dining Room I :G;one;;;;r;;•:I ;R;.E;;;.:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;;;002; 1 and Great Pool. Orferetl for] r S19.800. Call 646--050,;. BROAOMOOR-TURTLE ROCK Outstanding family home on quiet cul de sac; 3 Ige. bdnns., dining rm. & view! Ready to go at $58,900. Incl. land . HARBOR VIEW HOMES-PALERMO 4 Bdrms .. family rm .. dining rm. Quiet !er cation. This homo has everything for family llv\ng! Includes U1e Jand-$87,500. OPEN SUNDAY 1:30 to 5:30 1912 PORT WEYBRIDGE Gononl R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 6502 W. Oc H nfront NEWPORT HEIGHTS 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;,;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;~ Look at those tpms! • They Open Sat/Sun . 1-5 Duplex. Lovely 3 BR. CORONA DEj. MAR One hall block to ocean, custom 2 bedroom and den residence. Co mpletely equipped kit· chen. On 45' R-2 Jot. Duplex addition could have fan tastic harbor and ocean view. Ex· ceptional financing can be arranged. $99,500. BAYCREST Three bedroom, family room , 2\<z baths, Ire!· listed tile patio, large laundry room. Com- pletely painted inside & out. New urpets, new range. All this in prestige area for $68,000. CORONA DEL MAR TRIPLEX A legal triplex on l\\'o R-2 lots. near shopping and the beach. Currently a good investment or co uJd be expanded four units. Excellent rental record . $99,500. IJOJ AVOCADO DR., NEWPORT CENTER n1ay be history soon so don 't Sandy beach, \Vhite wa-owner's unit + 3 BR, hesitate. tf you want a.n ter view . 2 Units. What rental. Best Joe. Owner e.'l:ll'R sharp 2 BR 2 HA I ? Co POOL home in CORONA more can say . me itoa 500 642 7491 DEL f.1AR on a big fllxtOO see !! $155,000. 675-7060. anxious 'f'U"'• • - Jot \Vilh private eon1n1unity MODEL beach acce~. BALBOA Newtst & Mostest Ooly 169.500 3 BR., 2\<z baths All wood & glass. 4 BR CaJI 644-12ll Tiburon /Jn NJGEL nAILEY & ASS!JCIATES FAMILY PERFECT A -...U planned 3 bedroom home on qulel cul-de.sac. Spanish sl)'le Assu mab1e loan + fam.nn ., on Penin. $37 ,500 Pt. Drive by comer Bal- 556-8800 boa & I Stree~ 673-7420. m 4 Loc•I ~~!T~R!... You rn outside wtth a park 1 i n g l"!.---I R E 1002 Gener1I R.E. 1002 country kite am y room hen! ' l ;~;;;~;;r•;;;;·;·;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 inside. Just $51,500. for in[onnation Call R e d Carpet, Realtors 54&-fJG.W. ~nJa Jj/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 640-1120 Meso Verde 4 Bdrm Linda Isle Waterfront Custom SBR . 3 bath borne on 55 ft. lot. Garden view kitchen, waterfront living rm., I ~!!!!!!""!'~~!!!!!!"'!'!:!'~~~~f""'""'"'i'iii:I SUPER llOME! On a )! E 1002 Go-rol R.E. 1002 beautfiul pool-sized Jot. 2500 j~G;•;ne;r;•;I ;;R;· ~·;;;;;;;;:~~~·-~::;:===;;;;;;;;;;;;I sq, ft. Family n11, dining I~ r1n, chef's kitchen. 3 balhs. BEST IN BLUFFS Massive fireplace. Mesler suite wUh dresSing room, family rm ., Yacht $225,000. 70 Lind• Isle Drive Prime 45' lagoon lot· ~150 ,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR • '' ... , -.. " ·: Attend a Presentation o'- II II ' ' < • . Hear the dynamic, .world-famous speaker-educator JOHN LUMBLEAU President, Lumbleau Real · Estate Schools Presented by VALLEY .. REAL TY Operating 36 wholly owned offices -throughout California A Berg Enterprise American Stock Exchange Company . ' MEET-• the men and women · who can help your financial independence Scholarship programs for untrained people Advanced · training program for experienced people 8:00 P.M. SHARP TUESDAY, MAY 7th PACIFIC ROOM IN THE NEW TRI -LEVEL BAYFRONT Panoramic views, 2200 sq. ft. Huge mstr, bdrm. suite on it's own Jevcl. Another lge. bdrm., 21> ba., fam. rm., wet bar. Profess. decor & upgraded. A beauty for $87,500. OPEN SUN. 1·5 2963 QUEDADA HUGE PRIV. PATIO, GREENBELT BAY VU Dramatic. unique design. 3 Bdrms., 211 ba . Lower level in white brick tile nr .• levolor shades. Upstairs. plush carp. & shutters. Tremendous value at $93.500, Incl. land. Cathedral ceilln&. 3 -c a r g11rage. $67.500. Ca 11 5"'"lnl 2$5 Harbor Blvd. 3 Bedroom Home SIERRA -. TOWER ( EASTBLUFF-YOV OWN THE LANDI 0·1sNEYLAN 0 HOTEL Great famlly home, Lusk bullt. 3 Bdrms., • ·. _ _ 2 baUJS, large famUy room. $79,950. • 341 Boyaldo Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 Gononl R.E. 1002 Gononl R.E. 1002 * * * * * * BEAUTIFUL BAYFRONT - SACRIF ICE , $72,500 Spectacular views o! bay & Mts. Nearly new 3 bdrm., 21> ba. Lux. cpts. & drps ., wall· gw~ SUN. 1·5 426 VISTA PARADA $28,500 Anyone can 1uun1e this V1\ 7"l:i Joan. S1S4. Month tohil Pfi.Yl'l:!enl. CllU for dcl1tlli:. CENTURY 21*642-lnl OP EN ~~~;~:·0~: :::.RALDER • No .Admittance Charge • Free Prime R-2 loc~tion, with easlly modernized Refreshments , 2 bdrm home . Shown by npp't only. $59,500. CLARK SOMERS,. REALTOR "eh 11rr~,!y.~~; 306 Morin•. B•I* 1•l•nd 615-4000 Husbands and Wives invited. Family room. Comer lot. * * * * * * ltl~o~1~"."iru. C•"1 _ _,,..~--,...~...-;;:;;;u;I Limited Space -Call 639-1501 for Reservation ~1 34 s.n Id!• ll•m• wllh • °""r for Act1'on ••• Call 642-5678 ~~!!!!!!!!'!~~!!!!!!!' !!'!!'!!!!!!!'!!'!" 1 -;R;E;A;LT~O;R;;.....,, ........ _-~_ ........................... ~~~~l~M~O~ ... ~m~ro::...=•~d.~~~2~·:.6111~. ::: , HELEN . B. DOWD • • I I • -• l • • . -.. .~ . ---. . . Iol i-A1t• l'ILOl -5-1' May S,-l914 _ Gen.rot R.E. 1002General R.E. 1002 Genenl R.E. 1ilO:i' ~·Gineral R.E. i0021lo111rel R.'E. , BIG CANYON C.C.-4295,000 Just. completed! Beautiful NE\V custon1 bo111e \V great golf course vie\v. ·Enclos~d lge e<>urtytl entry. 5 BR. FR. lge DR , 5 baths Marble. oak paneling, air/cond + more. 49 HOYAL ST. GEORGE RD. Sal1Sun 1·5:30 BI G CANYON NEW CORNER "CONDO" Luxu rious 3 BR Bo rdeaux 111odel \vlth priv- acy. Prof decora ted thruout & prof. \dscp. cov. patios, A/C & air-purifier. 8132.500. 6 RUE CHAMONIX OPEN Sat 'Sun 1-5:30 LINDA ISLE BEAUTY! $250,000 Elegant and colorful bayfront home w/5 bdrms, fam rm W/\ret bar, lge DR & 4112 baths. Lge sunny r1ns. Pie,r & slip. I LINDA ISLE DR. OPEN Su n 1-5:30 . THE "BLUFFS"-478,500 Bra!V.-NEW I-story 3 BR 2 bath beautiful "Lin&o." model. Cathedral ceilings, lovely greenbelt view fro1n choice corner location. 2701 VISTA UMBROSA Sat/Sun 1-5:30 BIG CANYON C.C.-4159,500 Lovely view fron1 th is 6 month new 4 BR home. VanLuit papers, cust. draperies & cptng. OY.'ner 1noving to Palin Desert. 35 BURNING TREE RD . Sat/Sun 1-5:30 HARBOR .VIEW HOMES-476,900 Quick possession! 1-lurry for this beaut. dec- orated home. Like new! 4 BR, FR & DR. Choice ld scp. Lovely patio. Price incl. land. 1742 PORT MANLEIGH Sat. 1-5:30 BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Lovely 4 BR home with a park-like setting. Owner will sell, including antique pieces, furnished, $199,500, but \V /consider unfurn. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. 2111 San Joaquin Hills Rd. NOT A KING ·. • • • • ... but you can live like one -in this lovely '1E'' Plan, 2200 sq. ft. living space. Ne Y.'ly painted & wallpapered. Lge. encl. patio, upgraded carpeting. Lowest priced &plan on market. $74,900 $9500 PRICE REDUCTION ... on this spacious 4 bdrm. & family rm. home in Cameo Shores. Huge lot, 80x145 ... avail. in fee. Lge. filtered pool. Great for en· tertaining. Price now only $105,000. HIGHLY UPGRADED ... condon1inium -carpels, drapes & \\'all· paper installed by profess. decorator. 3 Bd- rms., dining area + brkfst. area 'in kitchen. \Vrought iron encl. patios. terrazzo tile in both . Garage comp, plastered. $69,500 OUR ;j 25 1~1\ y a 1lt1 1~1<~1 \C11 YE.AR Gen~ral R.E. REALTY CALL 675 ·3000 ANYTI M E 1002 t.ieneral R.E. 1002 HAPPY CINCO DE MA YO WEEKEND WATCH THE RACES START ... .. fro1n this ocean frontage home. 4 Bdrms., I-story, on choice Brighton Rd . in Cameo Shores. $279,500. Open 11 :30 to 4 Saturday, Sunday llo 5. 4541 Brighton Rd . MAGNIFICENT OCEAN VIEW Luxury At Budget Terms Just 83925 down pn thi s beaulifully decor- ated 3 bdrtn., 2 bath executive home. \Vith din ing 1·oon1, bu ilt-ins, di sh\vasher. Family roon1 & fireplace. Call 540-1720. Beyond Your Expectations Tremendous executive 4 bedroom, S bath home 'vith 2300 sq . ft. \\'ith formal dining room, chef's kitchen. fo'an1ily room, fireplace, sewing room . $58,950. Call 540-1720. Newport Riviera $3850 do\vn on this conte1nporary Newport !{iviera 3 bdrm., 3 bath to,vnhouse , just across from the pool & rec area. Has shag carpeLo;;, dining roo1n, built-ins, fireplace. Call 540-1720. Harbor View 3 Bedroom Do yourself a favo r & inspect this luxury-ap- pointed 3 bdr1n. 'vith for1nal dining roo1n, 1nodern kitche'l ~\'it h everything. Large fire- place. Patio, J;1<.h ;!rrcnery. Fee land. Call 644·8750. Keep Coel T~1is Summer In this modern-appoi·1!cd 3 lxlrn1 .. 2 bath to'''nhouse \\'ith cent ral air-conriitioning. Custo1n drapes. plush carpeting. Chef's ki t- chen. Just $2995 down . Call 644--8750. For the Fussy Buyer NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 130 Ft. frontage of choice oceanfront; 5 ,.,..,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,.., . bdrms ., den with frplc., dining rm., brkfsl. for Actl.OQ • • •.Call 642._5678 rm .; water view from almost every room. Beautiful tree shaded lel'r4ce. $385,000. This custom executive is the a1ts,ver! Cathe- dral ceilings, massive vie\v "'indo,,·s. Has 4 bdrms., 2 baths, fa1nily roon1 . full dining room. fireplace. Roorn for a pool. Call 644-8750. ' General R.E. 1002 General R.E. · 1002 Optn Sat. & Sun. 2-6-•28 Linda Isle Owner must liquidate immediately. \Vide open view of Harbor basin from this spacious bayfront home. 4 Bedrooms + conv. play- room \Vilh bath up, large dining roo1n, fam- ily room \Vith fireplace and maid's quarters. Pier and slip for large boat. 3 n1onths sum· mer rental available a t S8.500. Offering price . $275 ,000. LIDO'S EAST END Open Sat. & Sun 2-6--844 Via Lido Nord 4 bedrooms, 4 bath, bayfront \Vith pier and slip privileges. 4-0 fl. lot. $295,000. GRAND LIDO HOME Open Sat. & Sun. 2..6--430 Via Lido Soud ,-5 Bedrooms, 4 baths plus formal Jiving room. dining room and family room make this 3900• sq. ft. home ideal for a large active family. Near boat, garden and club. $189.500. FRONT ROW-IRVINE TERRACE Open Sat. & Sun. 2-6-2001 Bayadere A custom built home by a builder for his o\vn use. 4 bedroo1ns. 3 baths. 3 car garage. Finest Yie''' nf iettv and harbor. J\·Iany cus- tom extras. $235.000. CUSTOM BALBOA BAYFRONT DUPLE·X Open Sat. & Sun. 2-l>-1008 E. Balboa Blvd. Cut your costs in half. Prime sandv beach location. Custom built for O\\'ner. Dock for t"·o large boats. 6 Bedrooms plus guest. $250 ,000. READY FOR MOVE-IN Open Sun. 2·S-608 Via Lido Nord Lido's Jl reatest vie\\' property. Lovely ter- race and patit"J plus pier and slio. 4 bedroom home, recentl v redecorated. $275,000. · PRICED TO SELL !! 4 Bedroom , 21h bath, famil y room , cathe- d raJ Ceiling and fireplace in master bed- room . Near pool and tennis area, overlook- ing golf course. $56,950--land included. TAX SHEL TERI A neW 8 unit aparttnent building with prime ocean views. saunas. 800 yrds. from ocean· front in San Clemente. $235,000. Owner Ylill consider trade for com mercial or industrial property. OLD CORONA FOURPLEX Brand ne\V 3 .bedroorn 2 bath, each unit. °'vner \viii consider dividing these side by side st111cture:-.. \\'alk to stores and trans- portation. $250.000. CAP ISTR ANO SPANISH ESTATE 5 bedroo1ns, 31,.~ baths, se parate 2nd story, 33' master suite , 36' pool. Ocean views, wine ce11ar. On corner 1,.2 acre site. 2 years new. $159,500. NEW CUSTOM OCEANFRONT Private Dana Harbor location. Surf, fi sh, swim and boat from your front door. Great views. 3 bedrooms, 3 bath. excellent !inane· ing. $198,500. OCEANFRONT Right over lhe blue !Jacific in an exclusive private area. IJeauliful sandy beach. excel- lent 3 bedrOOITI , 3 bRfh home \\'ith (or1naJ dining room and family room . $350.000. SPYGLASS ~IDGE Lusk built "Sandpiper"' home. 4 ~edrooms fam ily r00m with wet bar. vaulted ceilings; landScll}led. L<>vely: $119.000. DIAL 644-1766 . 2161 S•n Joaquin Hlll1 Rd., N.B. A COLDWELL BANKER CO. SHORECLl°FFS J\rlagnificent old world cbar1n, on the ocean- front. Choice woods thruout. 6 Bdrn1s., din· ing rn1., lge. family rm., ideal for enter- taining. Sep. guest quarters. Private gated entry. Expansive ocean view. $550,000 -In· eluding the land. Specializing in Home1 of Distinction HUG HOMES, REALTORS S67 San Nicolai Drive, Suite 102 Newport Center 640-4050 General R.E. 1002 General R. E. 1002 Costa Mesa 29SS Harbor Blvd. 540-1720 Newport Beach 600 Np!. Ctr. Dr. 644-8750 General R.E. t0o2 General R.E. OPEN HOUSE SUN 2·5 P.M. 2084 TUSTIN ANANCING 81/2 °/o 1002 Distinctive family home with all the cher· ished comforts and privacy desires of the disc riminating family. There are SBR/3BA, lrg fan1rm, ultra kitch, livrm w/an aristo- cratic firepl. Unrivaled schools. Lot has am- ple roo1n for· pool. volleyball , boat·trailer. Price $66.500 . THE BLUFFS PLAZA ~ ~ 642•3962 3 BDRM. TOWNHOME -$45,500 l ~'~'{:~~~-··~··~~~~~w.e.~ .. :__--~-::56:20 OPEN TODAY 1-5 22 17 VISTA HUERTA General R.E. 1002 ·---------·1 General R.E. Newly c•rpeted; light, bright & sunny , .. 1002 Associated dues $42.50 per month Leasehold $200 Per year Taxes $450.30 Per year BEST BLUFFS BUDGET BU Y 2414 Vista del Oro Newport Beach 644·1133 Anytime "' . -J!!!, - fiunling,/011 fiarbou1• IMPRESSIVE ELEGANCE Deluxe in every detail. 4 Large bedrooms, 1Jlaster suite has handsome fireplace, sep.- arate dressing and bath. Living, dining, kitchen and family rooms overlook 97' of water!rontage. with 60' dock. All bltn s, Island cooking center. Wall w wall car- pets, custom drapes, beautiful wallpap.. ers thruout. 3~ Batlis. Jn area of fine homes. $175,000. Ask for Shirley Sherman SHOW STOPPER! Picture pretty on street of new homes. Less Utan one year old and one of our most sought afleM!oou>lans. Wood pan- elled family room \villi wet bar. Kitchen overlooks spectacular water view on lee side. 3 Bedrooms up + 2 baths. Master suite is/ magnificent with fireplace and large sundeck. Another bedroom and bath dow n. SE.E TODAY. Cannot be duplifaled on today's market at $159,500. Atk hir Sh irley Sherman . CHOICE WATERFRONT LOT •• 75 ft. overlooking junction o! 3 waterways. If you are looking for that SPECIAL stte, see this now. $68,500. A1k for Sh irley Sherman CALL: WILMA FITTS Huntington Harbour Realty 4241 Wu ner Avo., H.B. 146 0641 • • • -i 1 YR WARRANTY • HOME CLOSE TO BEACH & BAY Outstandi n g Con do in\·1$fmcnt \\'ith boat slip. 3 Bedroon1s, 2 Balhs. i\last<!r has Vie\\' Sr Pri\-ate Patio. i\fo\"e-in Condition. Bl!Y£'r Is oo\·rrt'd by 1 \-ca r \V111Tanty. Offered for $79,500. Call ~. EXCHANGE FRONT ROW IRVINE TERRACE For con1nlt'rcial, induslrlal or residenlial in come property. Thi!! fabulous 4 bedroom home. \11ith harbor & ocean view y,•il! satlsfy J the most dlscriminAling I buyer. Perfect tor Indoor & outdoo r li ving, A c:-ustom-built and you ow11 the land. Call for pril·ate sho\.\ing 673-85.XJ. SECLUDED EUROPEAN VILLA IRON GA TE entry. Cobblestone drive and wooden bridge leading to secluded villa with loads of charm and hand craftsman· ship. Veranda patio lo formal entry over· looking spacious interior. Rugged beam ceilings and unique custom wopdwork. Massive fireplace with wrought iron gates. Leaded & stained glass windows. Hide·a·way master quarters. Guest facili· ty. Maids room. Huge step down game room with pool table. French farm kit· chen and banquet formal dining. Enter· tainers patio and giant fire pit. Brand new listing. $44,950. Call 645-0303. MESA VERDE-SPANISH ESTATE ~Iagnificent Spanish estate on exclusi\'e private street in prime :h-1esa Verde. Huge interior decorated like a model. i\tassive bean1ed ceilings. 5 bedrooms including elegant master suite '"ith walJc·in closet and 3rd bath. Cantina kitchen overlooking fiesta party room with' bar. Entertainers living roo1n and banquet fo rmal dining with crackling fireplace. Large patio and sun deck. Brand new listing. BE'ITER HURRY ! Call 645-0303 . BEACH RmEAT:....$36,500 PRIVACY SUPREME In exclusive Park Udo. WALK TO OCEAN. Private e<>ur\o yard entry w 2 story luxury townhouso. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths. gourmet kitchen with built-Ins. Living room with crackling fireplace. Picturesq ue park·llke grounds and POOL. CaU 645-0303. FOREST E. OLSON INl. A COLDWEL L BANKER COMPANY 21" HARBOR BLVD., 64S.01Ql • /let4tUe S#dd, ~ • REALTORs'. VISIT THESE You Are Welcome 1.5 OCEAN VIEW DREAM HOME See this corner location 3 bedroom , family room home. Highly upgraded . Enjoy the placid pool or use the private beach. A super large ID!. 639 Cameo Highlandt Dr, CdM Viti! me, $92,500 VIEW IN THE BLUFFS A large and luxurious 3 bedroom. GREAT VIEW OF THE BAY AND CATALINA. New carpets and drapes · and fresh green astro turf on the patio. The IO\\'est priced vie\Y home. . 641 Vi sta Bonita ...... Vis it me, $67,7,7S NEAR THE COUNTRY CLUB A beautifully upgraded 2 story home in move in condition. Extra large 4 bedrooms. fam- ily room , formal dining room and private den._ Lovely, relaxing rear yard. A trul y BEST BUY al $52,900. Call w see, CALL 644-7270 282. E. Coast Hi9hway, Corona del Mar WE CAN HELP YOU IUY, lllL, O" TillADE A HOME ANYPLACE IN ntl NATION * IRVINE TERRACE * Great family ho1n e; 4 bdrms., family rm .. 2 1.~ baths. Some ocean \'iew from modern kitchen with brkfst. nook . Large 60x l16 lot. \rith 2 fenced yards. Land included in sales price of $89,500. · 1300 SANTANELLA TERRACE OPEN SAT I SUN. 1-S associa e BROKERS REALTORS BUY A WARRANT Y HOME GUARANmD SALE DO YOU \VANT TO BUY ANOTHER HOt.1E. SEl.J.., ''OUR!'i AND Bf; CU/\HANTF.F.D YOU \VON'T O\\IN T\\'0 H0~1E.~ \VITTI 'f"\\'0 PAYtitENTS \\IE \\'11.l. GUAJ\ANTEE 'l'HIS \\11111~ NOT OCCUR. FOR EITllER IT SEW OR \VE BUY 111E HOME. Call 646--0J55. . ' " ... ' ... ' ... \'.\I J J·:\· l{I \I.I \ . .. ,, " • ., " ' , • ' ' '"~ r .,, "'• COUNTRY COTTAGE 4 BEDROOMS Open Hou,. Dally 969 DAHLIA, CM Ni-. South C.oasl Plaza I (off Sunf!O\\'(•r: routh ol Fuchsia 1 in the Creenbrook I trnct in CMta ?i-tesa's 1 fustei;t J;:rowlng young 1 <:ouplcs ron1n1unity. Vacant. ' >.:Int financing! Call Anytime 646-3928 Eves: 675-1127 Lachenmyer Realtor POOL HOME I 1\11 rntett11inc.r's paradise: I L11rgc t·ountry style home in 11rrstige nrt'a. 3 bedrooms, 21 ~ bnlhs, t~·o massive IH-eplal'C!I. Large lamUy [ 1wn1 \\"/rirepll\l'C. \'ery "l"'l.eiOU!I p a t I o area sWTOUnding heated pool 1\·ith a bar. Just pttlC'ct for c-ntcrtalning:. Call tor privale sho\\·ing 96.)..4543. • c ''' '. ... .. • \'.\ l ,IJ·:\· l{I \I.I\ ' , .. " t '• • "'. • ~ .. l•L•"" •!•("I~ I .,. '•' ~25 w. BA LBO A BLVD. 673-3 66 ~ I EASTSIDE 4 Bedroom for Action •.. Call 642-5678 General R.E. 1002General R.E. 1002 Make an almost immediate move. Newport Crest la the exci ting townhome community that overlooks Newport Herbor and the ocean. Big, bold spacious homes. Residents' Swim and Tennis Center. Exterior maintenance provide d, Come - let ua show you how yo u can't afford not to live at Newpart Creal. 2·3-4 bedroom residences x~omllS,OOOtoSft,000. g From Paelflc Cont Highway tnd Superior Av.nut lnttrstctlon, ctrfY9 up supenor 10 Newport Crnt entrtn~. Salt otnct : #12 Robon Court. Open dally 10 A.M. to Sunstt. (714) &<U141. I Great location among lovely cared for homes. Close to M":hools. This orphan needs help at 267 Sher....ood, drive by only, then caJI us. Newport Beach View Duplex KINGS ROAD Vi<'w from every room! For builder/investor. l l 0 x 8 0 Lo!. 3 Car garage. Can add apartment ll b o v e . 3 Bedroom home to remodel or add-<in to, rn a n y posslbillti('s. No p ho n e information. Call t or appointn1cnt to inspect. Try us, we Tri-llarder a t Tri-HarhQr. 1 · Builder'1 Closeout 2 Hcd1'00n1, 2 bath, Adult Condornl11\un1. $21.000 full price, "'Ith only Sl.000 Down. Call 836-4206 oc 835-3846 Agcn1. $34.500 • Almost unhean:f..of price for ife&l Huntingtoo Bench home in excelltnl location. Good nssumabte lna.n. 1lun-y! Call 847~. Ag1. Belboe lt land 1006 OPEN HOUSE ·2'll I< 22411 APOlena. Thia 3250 sq. ft. duplex c811 ncvtt be duplicattd under n e w :zoning, ~ BR, 2 BA, plus 3 BR. 2 BJ\, Both comp!, tum. 5 yr11_old. Frpfc'11, lhhwhr'I. M.G. Elliott R.E. 673-$4M. Coron• dol Mar . 1022 -OUPLEX Elegant SpMlsh Mtylc, w/2 11ory I / 1 llL..:urious hOn\e, Men. lib &. Jt1cunl lub, wet bar, 3 rr,,lcs. 2t l Unh "'/•~~. 673-i71i'9. • DUPLEX o.I 611 Olirnatlon, So. or h(ghwt,y, p r I c • _!99,500. Broker, 675-$11 OtARMING Dupl". SO. ol • h1vy on 1* n,2 t..ot. By O.ncr 193,000, 61H169. ·. ' ( c H s w f \' READY FOR THIS? Magnificent custom built S'bedroom borne quiet tree-lined street PLUS income . ' i199,li00. -..• GRUBB & nus co. REALTORS~- Corona del Mir 1022 i Corona del Mar VIEW OF 1 YR WAHRANTY • HvME LUSK HOMES 1. Hillsboro -just like new, 5 hr. · *°4'0 11tory home In Spyglass Number O n e , '/Mn tnim many 01\,Jbe rooms, lqe formal dttmlg room and e1tceptlona l kitchen and family room with wet bar. Only $107,:'m -fee land. 2. Sandpiper-beaut I ru 11 y With a dramatlt 180 dea. pha ocean view, 1 beautifully decorated 3 BR & ~n Or• BR.custom built homl!"wlth huge game room, formal dining, aftd lu:rurlou1 master t>ulte . Outside ls ex· t.enaiw: ratio d t c k a , big trtes and a Kol pond. All at the end of a qui e t cul-de-sac. · A top value at $159,r,oo ean 644-1211 /.JD.NIGEL nAILEY & A55(][1Alf5 BU Y A WARRANTY HOME OCEAN & JETTY OPEN SAT/SUN. l·S 330I OCEAN BLVD. Beattt., 1pac\ou1 homJ with unusual Bta.lned g I a 11 windows, 3 bdnna.. dl!n, formal dining rm.,. 1unroom, 2 lrplcs. - • ·-- , OWNER TRANSFERRED ~L-thli....3 -·bedroom, family room home. Huge cul-de-sac lot. only 4 1/a yean old. Will sell all temu. Ce.II anytime SCOTT REAL TY 53'-7533 • DA.ILY PILOT I Hun t nglo n och 040 / ~lrv:::_l•:;:• ____ _:I::::; L1gun1 lltoc 1048 Logune Beech POOLHomeua .... ble71>'ll THE BIG BUYS V,< Loan,< l\R• 2 BA. ot>alce ARE AT roof, trplc, wrought Iron MISSION Rl!AL TY EXQUISITE A Plclflc ~-Ultra·modtrn kitchen appllancts to re- duce .YOW" ~rk. Sunn;y dl!ck area on the \Veat 1kle for 1 the afttrnoon rt..YJ. Large rooms tore nterta In I "J frltnda I: thlck c&l"Pf!ll 4 dra.Ptl for )'OUt evcry<illy enjoyn1ent, $58,500. tenet around pool, S308 mo, KICH UP AND I.OW A-lust scllS..~/Alt, , Spartdlna: 3' bedroom DOWN: lllgh IJP on the Hu nt. H•rbour ,.. HH ' ~ ~ decorated in a Rivkr3 wtl.h a vu:w ru~ 1~ I ctwmtns tuhlon wlth Ioli nm OCEAN belOw Owntr ot licht bright com. Ln.rp will take ll LOwiR ON. lani»caped pe.do aod a VH"j PYMT .. on this 2 BORti.f., z tnQtjvated seller. 0 Pen BATII llOftt E. Uv rn1. ha11 Sunaay 1-5 p.m.. 14663 Gold· bee.med ceillncs & s-....·~d l!th ht Gr,n. A~kln.1e Sll,950. r!rtpll.l~. auu1.1n kHchcn. .A-Slan Beach T 1x Shelter I Use I. !his 11umn1er · n.'nt It next Y."inttor. Just acros1 the 1;.lreet h'Orn n1il(!ll or sandy betlch. f'ornier model -ele- gantly funillht'd · tum·koy compll"t e. $'.6,750. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR REALlY Call 615-7225 PRICED al $47,500. Laguna Beach 1048 Ti lE BIG O.~E: Spachnt~ REAL ESTATE rustic !'\)•1('tl horn~, extl'l'lnr ..1190 Gll!nneyre St. or \O'OOd plru1k. usf'd brick & 494.9473 549'-0316 w~ ~h!lkP~. SP.ll.\\\'LING "''"''"'"!"!~'"''"'""!~ 3 BDR.i\I. ,. DEN + FA~t Laguna H ill s 1050 Rt.I., l'ctVll.'f'fl by 2~ f.:t!hs. Lix'atcd on li:r. lot \\1th an OUTSTANUIN<; O Ci-.; AN OWNER, New \\'orld 3 BR, 2 bn. bll\nM, shai:: erptq , Vl E\\'. 3L Ft. liv. nn .. with Assunie VA . Call 552-9503. opc:n beiun c e 1 J i n g s • 552-9503 fireplace & v.·et ba.r. A ,-C-'-=·-.,.,,.--c---,= BARGAIN al $89.500. la,un1 Niguel · 1052 • • LIOO.,....REALTY • , I I t ' " *673·7300 * OPEN SAT/SUN. l·S 128 VIA ITHACA Remodeled & Redecorated LArge 4 bdrm. & den, 3 baths; 45 ft. lot. Priced for lmmed. sale, $109,IJOO. Bcsl buy. large home • Medltel'- rancan 1tyle. 642,W8 ,,,;:::,.,,,, '/~ ~-\II'~ ' Sundar, MlY 5, 1974 ~.,..,.--..,.,..,..~.,..,.....,,.-,__,'.,---,.,-.,-.....,..,.._,."'"°"'"---,:-;;;-:-:~--::nx l-'-~;:~::~~~:,~=:::_-:_-:_-r:~~"N.!.;7•:.:w:,::polc..•:;-t:}.::BM~~it~~i~i'i-i;ii::-n iu.-n"'c="e=1,-n-. -=1=1:-:=-=="r-p"'1y--=1 ts for .. 1. . 2 HouM1 Un urnllhod HoUMt Unf1Wniahod , Ho~~· Un!urnl1h!jl Nowpo~ BNch. il6t 0:;:' ":""sM.!,"' ': C· 1 Lot $17 ,500 LA COSTA ~G..,...ol 3202 Cosio MoM 3224 Irvin. 32'4 ;;;;B;;:A:;;;C;:K;;;B;;;A:;Y;;;V;;;l;;,;E;;;W~ w/lrplc, beuL lndJcpd, llhl40' NcMI' t9lh A Pl>mona .nne Jl,.I lol. Out ot CoonQI S RENTERS $ •.. ol Wild U/c........,.., & over-l1Rd kit wfla. pado. Avt .• c.M. Priced low at OWM:r. ~ $18,500. w\th PATI~l BR dpl" $1!6. l'.91 2 bdnn., 2 b'S ••• ••• '3CO/M back "'1 view . .Beautitul 3 Pr1nc. only. 496-6&35. W12.so ,per ~· n.T lo Co Phonetttms. ..il_m.~onn1 . No. 368. neat' Utll pd. Vac 3 bdbdnnrm., !t. ba ·····,;....~ BR It 2 BA "Bhdfs" condo. Ivon! p rlc 1094 .. or .,. ~y r • --. NERY Nk:e 2Br1115 E. em. 3 ... • .. .... .....,_ S.porote dlnlns ,,...,-"""' ~~~er •• !. blkl. ride "U"•----ly ....... _. ___ __;.;.. REA1i!ORS . UVE HERE! lncd W/guo&e pet tine 5 bd-e.""" 2.\12,. ........... $450 balcony, are•• entortaintnr D.IVWN '-'\IV I.-e on a nu Sen Joaliuln HUis Rd. . FRPLC 3 Br Or 2 + den. 4 " n b& •••••••• $425 home. Un~m. yelll' Jeue Stmda.y l'itorntng, ~n Ne\\port Center 6«-t9JO 2 Br. Walnut Square $240 mo. All med, 2 car. LL 552-7500 rental. $425, mo. Owner h: ~~oe to u >~~·· ™;~'r OWNER FINANCED ~ :· ~=t~ &i;rtc = ~~~o:w~i:.2 ~.~ • VISION • R.E. ~~~ brundl Y.'ith a \'iew! ! +: ~~ 4 B~:i....~ninsuJa . ALA R•tilt '42-1313 Ustings Needed $110,000 lo $250,000 OPEN DAILY 601 Lido Park Ori"e 10 Af.1 TO 6 P~t Grubb&.Ellis 675•7080 Newport BH<h 1069 No:"~ ilMCh 10'9 ~ BEST BUY PORTOl'INO * * IN HARBOR VIEW * * ONLY ~Joo. F ... For ~nHlcont Homo Formal llvin'g room, formal · dining room, large kllcilen w /breakfast room, large fam- ily room, 3\lz Baths. Large master plus 3 Bedrooms , l BR is separate guest house acro ss private courtyard . AJl drapes, carpet, landscape and sprinklers. CALL FOR APPO I NTMENT ·~408 OPEN SUN 1.5 PM. 1157.Port Renwick, NB * C.pllal gaim Bllymmt l800 Red Hill Realty V~ry attractive one level • $20,000 Do\\'n 11\11> level commercl.al loU 4 Br. UdQ 8e.)1tont i1400 3 BEDROOMS REALTY · n.EAL1'0RS townhouise with lots of • F'ully ten~ on I.cs ~folinos, San .~ .. 675.-7225 !louse on lai·gc walled lot, Un.iv. Park Center, Jr\tinc -profeWona)ly dona.--up -.Real !.Mlnlics. Bkl-s. 615-6(00 Clemente. By ov.'ltr, 492-4506. _ paj.IQ,_qulet trte.·Unedslr.!!ct.I•_=========: I grades. \Vaa formerly a Oupltxts/Units Mowit'n, DtHrt, Stove and carpet like new,li model home. Be au t l t u I for site 800 Re10rt NEW PAINT inside. $275. FOR LEASE location bthi.·etn t wo --------l-'-1 ·--""-------2120 Continental. Ph one 4rge 3 bedroom, family !~5!~!~~~!1 greenbellil. Thill !s an ideal HOUSE + APT. LAKE Arrou'hd be11.ut mount 847-7591. room & formal dlning rrn. .. couples home. Use as a tv.'O _ homesite North Sh:>re view ' Turtle Ro c k townhouse~ bedroom or one and a den. NEW 3 BR, 2 BA hoWie + 2 trees, nea.r lake. $12,COO HARD to flndl J.BR, $200. Av a} I . tor i m med.. ~~ Fee Land. Call BR, 2Y. BA apt. l"rpls, terms 644 4i4j/59.H242 1 BR Hoose SI2J ~-2 BR Gar. Lrc )'rd tor kids. oc:c..-upancy. $<t65 l\1o. Vee $ RENTERS $ , \.\1.1.F\. 111 \I I \ .... " ' ' .. . Wutmlmtor 1098 patloe, garages ,yards. 214. A BEAUTIFUL view lot in $100 HB. 3 BR r(B $ZS. 2 HURRY! 2 BR, encl patio, Stinson 641 652-8235 (U20l . ~I.EV Look! 'Jl*at rt(l.lrbcd Knox St., C.M. 6464414. Tdyllwild + Jot in Arkansas. BR Horse Ranch, Npt H&ls, $185. Garage. Kid.a ok. Bach'll $1'15 yrly. 1 Be-$UO. HAVE CASH BUYERS Tenm:, 54J..4886. $175; Agt. Fee 9T&-84J:I CLOSE IN ! 2 BR, $190. Utll pd. Stv/ref, full klt. FOR UNITS, 25M. SOM £._ut of s1.1, Prpty. ~ Bolbo.1 Island 3206 Oplx. Fhcd lw ld<Wpet. ·--'t Co LOVELY 1 .kl, !!!''~.JI15. "': DAVIS, REALTOR 833-81.m Homeflncler1 * 642-9900 oic&i Y mpany °"'ater. Bl& t. .. ,,.ins. Income P--....._ 2000 HOTEIJBAR. Gd Income, * LITl'LE ISLAND * DELUXE adult 2 BR. 2 Ba. '42-12'5 644-6200 REALLY! 2 hr $250 yrly, Nu ,...,_.,7 Clean air. Limited 1 ...... 1 Channing, untum., 2 bdrm. "'-··-•-· Oub VWa .. ,_.._8 _ C&D, itv/ref, O/W., Now. ~-ho /"-' .._ .........ui .. 3 , ... .,,.....,. EXECUTIVE H N CHANNELFRONT 2 br 2 be.. TRIPLEX gam~. By owner. me w ... .,.,e., garage.,. S.150. mo. No pets . . ome, ew I bbq S I ok Micky Van Horn. Orum-patio. "/early. Immaculate! Pool. 1st ·& ell.sfum tlecorated, pro 1 1t1l ~~fils · ~2.a313 NEWPORT mond, Montana: Box 205. Wm. Wl,.ton R..E. 675-3331 last $100 cleaning Glendan lndscped, Townhoo5e, In TIRED OF HIGH PRICE & (400) 28S-35lt. • WANTED Reoalty, . 5'18-221.i, ca fl Turt~cl'?Ck, dNiignOO f.or. lhe \VESTO.ll-"F 3 BR! 214 ha. ~ =~:~. ~::e~ ~ °.~~~= . IO ACRES Beautiful UtAh * u~o!~ocs * anytime to*: ,· ~. ~~1ze~u ~~!13:tt.a~, '~~i ~.,,~1~rp·s·~. f!.n:nt~dif::, BR, 2 be home. Wallr thru umta Mesa -San Diego Forest Land. $850. per acre. , l!IESA VERO~ 3 BR. • ba.' see to beheve. L ell 5 e ft•nred ·d i~ Pet . 0 K ~ Garden EntrY·way to bright ~e~~~ h~J ~U:S· ;75--6608 eves. C1p1strano Be1ch 3218 fam rm. dtn rm. frplc. w/optlon to huy, Open I G!lrdf'llf'r ,) 11;cld. s.1'15. o'IO: speeious· room.1. New gold _ dining room _ Jarntly Rilnches, firms, . crpts, drps, fncd Yr d hojJ.se, 8am-6pn1 r.la.);' 4111 & I i;.i:µmi or 49-1_9007, • shag crpl. A huge backyard room _ orchid room _ ~ Groves 2700 RENt OR LEASE &.15-ii728 Stll. 18586 Paseo Pizzarro, -- just reseeded. Best of all lireplaccs. indoor BDQ. 36, :: BR, 212 BA, Pali5ade11. Dani Point 3226 ·of c1tll pvt ply 1 TI41 * "1 * SPACIOUS 3 B_R -. the 71,~ % G.I. Loan ls patio circled in wL'Ought iron 5 ACRE Homc!lite. Oak \\l\j~lt~ \\i:ter O<'t'11.nv1ew. Th2-li66 ' study, fu111lly rrn. 2~2 BA, alSumable. $35,500. Open _2nd patio_ plus gorgeous tJ~cs, util. ri1ain t'Oad. r~n ~ leach. 11..argj ~am 3 BR, Beach I-louse $275. + 2 BR condo AtC ... ~22~ "'T1. Uai·. 2 Ct·111~·~ Pool House, Snt. & Sun. 8801 n""re'. Both o•~-un•·ts ...... Plantable to avocados Good 'Id rp ' a1 b t 11 • $100 Security near JI.farina 2 BR Coodo 'A c '''' & $"'~ "Jll"Vllgs~ 11 .. rtio i· Vie\V al't:a. 1 V . "' ..,""' ..... · l'pls rps 2 car garage. ·~ ' • ' " · '"" rit . t: ·t • • $ r. t. o Emera d , ' estmuistcr 2 BR _ patios _ enek>sed tcrn1s. Call 714-833-3?!2. I Lots or st'orage .spact' rncd ff'nced yd, 4~/~1331 2 BR C.Ondo, A/C $26.l ,t· S:!7.i 11"} x tall. a a · 897-1228 Principals on1y. garages. All this for only 20 ACRE Avocado Ranch. 1 yd. S325. n10 4!J6_9700_ El Toro 3232 3 BR Homes .•... $295 & $315 •6-41---"-"'---·------~ 10% ~wn -asking $14,000 Very attractive te_nns. Fall· A.gt-Ray. . 3 BR Hon1 rs •• $325 & S:l35 I BIV\ND new Harbor VW~Y. N•wPort Be•ch 1069 Newport Be1ch 1069 r I~ full pnce. Take advantage -brook area. TI4-8.'\3-3212. Coll e P1rk 3220 lBR/2BA, famnn, upgraded 4 BR Homes ... '.$335 & $~25 $425. 3 Br, 2 Ba, frpl, ~Hr-.......... tilll Call r:>Z-1700. Real Est•te Wntd 2900 eg . crpts, drps, bltlns, comp rec 4 BR Home ........... s:ioo roi:e<1. v.·a1'Cirobes, pat 1 o, EXCLUSIVE•••• INVES™IMll!~i · Syracuse Model. Community lac inc swimming, boating ltANOI REALTY S\\·un g/ten~ls pr v I gs . . • • but priced right! One of -VIEW OF -~ ( (& PRIVATE PARTY \VANTS Pool, 4 BR, 2 BA, crpts, & tennis. 837-9ll5 •S.Sl-2000 * __ :~1i~~S1G-S72·l or &10-l500 Newpon Beach's finest FASHION ISLAND Mobile Homes DUPLEX, TRIPLE.X or drps, nr schls, cul-de-sac, 3 BR 2 BA, f.p., sprinklers, ·' BRAND NEW --·--· ------t areu:, where you own the ~.'::!". i:ee~~~. i!:1~t! f« Mlt 1100}? FOURPU::X with nice: $350 per mo, 640-4.114, patio, n\ce yard, "gar. lease, 3 ~R, 2 ba, Univ. Pk. \Vet-HPARarkBOR1 bvluk, 14BRpool. 2~_on land. Xlnt cond. C.Omer lot. .. ,, ...., ~"'V ,----=-~· owners unit. Will pay ea.sh 5.52-7800. $270. 496-3548. bar, scU-cln oven, Wik to • o • ._Uj Formal dining rm. It tamily It l't'&r yard of th I 1 MOBILE HOME to existing GI or FHA loan. Sy RAC u SE JI.I 0 de 1 , extensive rec. facility. NG prof decor & lndscpd, nn. Secluded rear yard with exquiglte Portotino home. FOR SALE: 12 UNITS • Principal• only please. COMJ.tUNITY Pool 4BR Fount11n V1llty 3234 yard wotit. oose shop & gardene!", soft wat-·, $575 bu;;.,,~.~ app't. :;:,,land..:..!•~";!.,;; SILVERCREST EASTSIDE COSTA 675--0ll6 ' Anytime 2BA. crpts, dfP',,,; schl•: LIKE Ncw.,ctn.lrg2BR. + Schls. $3'<> M<h. 641-<l593. .;l!-n 1c4&1"'1.-m-.-n-lo--=~. VIC STUA'.RT more euatom features, all MOBILE HOME HOME wANTiD By private cul-desac, $350 per mo, huge rumpus room· can be ~ 3276 ' 196 000 $175,000 party. No ........ $30,000. 640-4U4. 552-7800 used as lrg Bil, 2 BA, 2 car Logun• Btoch 3248 Re•I E1t•tt or Cali 64()-8672 20' x 53', 2 Bl> 2 B> carp., $45,COO Price Range. Costa. gar. Swlmpool. Kids ok. 2 BR, 1 BA, KOO<f 'neigbbor- 494-7531 MS-7674 Listings Needed ~J:'; &: e~~~~!!d Step Up tG this 12-unit Mesa-Newport area. h1ust Coron1 del Mir 3222 Only $269 per mo. No Feel. Custom built, 2 bdrm.. hood, fncd, walk to •1 14~ Glenneyre, Laguna 1 220 . nd kitch complex with 15% dGY.'11. have as 1umab1 1 e loan. Agt. 8424-Ul. home. w/w carpets, · ping, beach. $260. 492-3800. BALBOA ·~ sto~e cost~. ~ ~c;f ~ 5'i!f.inb:,~!'; 642-lOGO. No agents. Huntington Beach 3240 fireplace, lge, deck v.•tOCi!an Sin Ju1n PENINSULA sce.ped patio. Three yrs. old income. Red Carpet 2 OR 3 BOR.r.\f house . -:-.view. 2 ear garage. A-1 C1plstr1no 3271 , · • like nu. Localed ln new lnve.tment Di y i 510 n. .v.·/exi5ting ntA or VA $ RENTERS $ • condition thru-ouL · . - 3 bedroom, 2 bath borne plus adult pk. away from noiay 979-2550 loan. Prin. only, 556--03-17. LONELY Bich. $120 now. $350 MONTH NEW duplex 2 BR. 1 BA. bnchclor renlAI. Built-ln!'i, I St. One.half bl. from club-•• LIVE . ~ERE Close lo lx'ach. UtU pd. 2. Spacious -I B0Rli1S & epts/drps, range, pool & fireplace and patio. $61,000. house.· P.educed to $12,950. II JI>] 3 B.-.-b'8nd new _,75 PALM Tu>< J br dplx .1155. 2 FAM. rm. + DINING R~t. lishing lak $225. D).3{18. 646-Tin. 1 · Call EVES. 2J3..694.4.690, ""''* ~ 3 Br.-Harbor View $''50 blks bch, pet ok. A\•atl. Built-In kitchen. f il'cplace. LEASE NE\V 3 BR, 2 BA, OPENT/Lt •rr'SFIMTOB!NICEI 697-TI52. .2 Br.-Shoreclilf!i $430 UNBELIEVABLE 2 br &. W(\V C'ar pet s. Pati o crpt/drps, bit-ins, nbhd fi.~ . ~ CAN BE SEEN AT: 4 Br.-Hlll'bor Vie"'' $52a den. $225. Patio. gar. pet ok. w/bar--~. An excellent pool, patios. $~. 837-4740 . Sbr.Jba &-F•mlly Room CRESTMONT 2 Br . ..channel Reef $700 SEE NOW! 3 br 2 ba $285. family home. Large Jot, room for pool, We ESTATES Houses Furnished Call 6Ta-722:5 . lrpl, bl1n.s. 2 car, Jl(!t ok. $450 MONTH S11nt1 Anai Heights 32~ I dri'1'! tn back;yard Joe-boat. lOOl Site Or., Brea. (Central ALA Rentals 6424313 f.flSSION REAL TY 494--0731 ~·-•-Drlllwood 3102 2 BR, Ho~e Country. Do "FIRST CABl.N" This beautiful Dolorel model, 1A first class In ewry respect! Tut.efully dl'c· orated & be'a.utitully main- tained. Spacious 3 bdrms .. 2% baths, on the' loveliest greenbelt. Call now to see th isl MORGAN REALTY 673'6642 675-6459 BAYCREST CUSTOM 2 story 5 bedroom home in rxcellent achoo! district. 20d) separate family room plus formal dinin& room. Call today 646-ml Walker & Lee ~ REAL ESTATE MONTEGO MODEL • Bcdtooml, 2 Both Lee IQt next to greenbelt. HARBOR VIEW HOMES REAL TY 13J.07IO camper .... ...,....,,., Ave. across from Brea \VALK TO Beach • 2 BR $22>ATI1U\C l Br. hse, your own thing. Sun. lG-? rock fireplace. Sprinklon Comm. Hoop.) Lot #46. BALBOA UNITS 1210. \<Ill>•, yanl, deck. So. 20.112 Acacia, 5l2-09lll front & back. Covered patio. I CONTACI' RAY, PK. MGR., $195-IJTIL PD. I BR. trpl, Fncd for kids & pets. Laguna. Shair carpet. N ic ely , for sbow1fll. $19 000 BUYS! deck. vll'V.', l.nguna. 2 BR. $185. Custom Duplex. $2ro--l + Oflice or Studio. Condos Untvrn; 3425 decorated. Harbor High, 8'X24 ' TitAD..ER i t h ' SZ"J()...UTIL PD. Lrg l BR Beach area. Roof deck. Steps to ocean. 1----------I Kaiser &: Woodland Sehl , , w True! Very sharp triplex. hse, bl'aut. view! 1~ blk v· · Bea .... Dist. 1 blk. to Boy's Oub. 12 X24 built 00 L.J!.., & B.R. One block to bay -t1YO beach, Laguna. SINGLES [)('light! 2 BR. iclona """· $66,500. . ONner will take Exposed beam ceihnq, all blocks to ocean. OCEAN & $325-CHARJl.f & Privacy 2 2 BA, Condo. S2:11. $2'5-CHARMING 2 Br fr]:nc 2nd. Doi Tustin. 646-5602 v:ood panelling. $ 3 300 • BA y VIE\\'S~ G r eat BR. 2 BA, frplc, view home, OCEAN VIEW Homefinders * 642 .. 9900 honie. South Laguna. aft. 6 weekdays, anytime Newport Beach. ( 7 1 4 l appreciation are a . 3 Laguna. Lovely 4 bedroom, den (or 5 LUXURIOUS lrg 3 hr 2 ba I ~2 BR lrpl~1:JP· 1din. rm, weekends. 645--7118 hedroom owners unit plus 2-NU-VIEW RENTALS bedroom) home w/ocean ·' ' ec ' gar. c pe · OPEN HOUSE Sat •-SUn 10 x 50 1960 F Jee t ~. Tu'O bedroom units. Clo~--' vle1v -private beaches sty duplex ~me, like new, NU-VIEW RENTALS ... ,,......, 673-4040 or 494-3248 Avail. 5115 at $625/rno: ~l!l everything. Bltn stereo 673--4000 or 49-1·3248 2-5 pin. \\'ed 7-9 pm. eore. cond, Adlt park, nr g11ni~. Nev.' roof selll'r "''iii $65 COTIAGE, C.i\l. I BR !ltartha. Ma b 642-41231 -1 n t e i:c o m, llreµxaglar ~JOO ER N 7 H1irbor View Jewtl beach, 1wim pool, jacuzti, fln.ance. -~l9]lOClOOl1'1l. Full House Sl:O util pd, HB. 1 · 9 cna n1ann. ~ ~. ate to • r o o ni club house, 2 sheds, price $135,000. Heart of the IUl J appreciate. iierhr;-m3J"ried v.•/pa.noramic , ocean view Numel'O\IS custcm extras. skirting, awnlngs, 1 v in g Peninsola. Call today • BR Sl'p. garage unit, $l25 couple infant ok. S27S no fron1 Pa1os \ erdes to San EAST BLUFF , 4 Bdrms., beaut. garden • patio a pt. 2~S ba lh.s; ~ oe:w carpet, drapeK. apPliances & brick lrplc. Spacious 1850 , l!Q· It. In prime residential ; • area, $485 ritonty. MOVE IN TDDAYI ' G r eat home for area, 53&-'7236 752-l700. util pd, Lag. Beh. l BR hse dogs. 8"1Z-327G. • Clemente S395 mo. 4~ •ntertainlng. 3 b<dmoms, INVESTM~=i ulil pd braod ocw, CM. e v ea/weekeods. 833-3387 ~ f~~~f:;Jand.fgR Ni:11::·~~; •Iii'~ ]!~;~: ~~::: 642::::~=:oo ~oAEL=~ANUXE~~:21~B.,R~:,&~BA~: ~~E~~.!:£.:~~ really ....,...,sca.pulJ. Fee ! Call -_ _ Spectacular views! No. 67 • . • • $39S 494-9334 ' \ &M-8750. '72 MOBILE home, 12' x 60' ONE Elderly Man _ t BR Jl..tontecito Dr., open Sat. &: Nr. HuntingtOn Harbour. 241.f Vl8&a del Oro ( . ] w/expando. LIR.. Adult Pk, HOME & INCOME tum.$$. Placentia nr. 19th, Sun. 1-5. Brand new exec. Homefinders * 642°9900 OCEANFROl'n' LUXUR Y Newport Beach ~81 v.·/palio &: yard.· Pets ok. Live in one, rent the other. 5'i8-5891 home. 4 BR. + family rm., 400 .. YARDS tn Beach 3000 brand new penthowle, DX> 6"·1133 ANYTIME I~ 84'7·1181 Duplex near the beaeh. 2 & Lido Isle 3156 3 baths, 2 frpl.cs. & patio. ft. 5 BR. 3 BA. exec "I· ft. frplc, decks. Olff Or. , FOR LE••E ~ 12X60 2 BR's. Ad'ul.t·pet pa'rlc. J Bedroon1s. Shag carpets, Balboa Bay Prop. 615---7000 :!me. 1..e· Jot baa room for $600 MO. Yrty. i94-0615. · -~ , $5800. 193."JO Ward St, Hn1g. shake roof, double garage. UDO LIVING. 2 BR, 2 BA. Movl"9 Allow1nce boat storage. $575. mo. 2 BR, 2 BA Ncirtb End. Clote SHARP EASTBLUFF 4 BR 600 Newport Center Dr. Bch. Sp 46. ACT ON TIIIS NOW. Call Avail Summer. No JTts. $100 OU I.st Mo's Rent 838-2921 to beach, bus &: shopping. 2~ Ba, Frplc; 2 car gar w/ The Real Estate F11lr Call (213) 793-0427 NEW 3 Br, 2~~ ha, trplc, OPEN Sat & Sun. new 3BR, Call 494-7079 auto dr opener. Few steps NEWPORT SHORES GRAND OPENING AcrHge for 11lt 1200 ask for Jack T. or Jack H. Newport Buch 3169 , gar, super neighborhood!. 2be, fam rm, dbl car gar, LEASE 2 BR, Spectacular 10 cororn pool. Near Fashkln 3 Bdrms & den Newport B11y Towtrl 5J6.2551 $400. 6Trl076 aft S: $:)50, 1n1 Florida, Beach & vu. 3 ~ Ocean Town. J.sland. Elem.. Parochial, Walk ,0 1 & 2 BEDROOM Must Be Sold! THE CHANNEL REEF rn.2925. Adam•. 847_,,52 Deck. $350. *4-4934 Puhl IChb. Aloo C.D.M. Ill· Beact:. pools & tennis t"ONOOhllNIUJl.I HOl!IES 900 + ACRES ~---------2 Br 2 Ba Waterfront Condo P.EDE'CORATED, new drps, CLEAN 3 BR, 2 ba., cpts, L•gun1 HiUs 3250 ~i'J: m~'C:tu°:::i~~alnt. $46,500 ~sr1t Homes Put Your $$ to Work pool·jacuzzi·security·marina crpt & paint In & out. drpii range, encl yd. patio'.1 ;:;;;.==.;.;..;.;.: __ _:= -;;;===---,,.,--..,,---' CAYWOOD REAL TY Fullt ~llo: Highrlse lti\'cst in thl'se 5 unl!s in & boat. Summer $1600/mo. ''Shorecliff'' 3 + BR, 3 Ba. V i,.J. Garfield/Bushard, Nl!~V \Vorld· 3 BR. 2 ba, IRVINE Townhou5e, Univer· * ,Wl..1290 * 'Steel &: concrete conatruction $295,000 Hunrin1;ton Beach near tht' 1 w1000lnte1'm'ol.1000/mo. 6677~~ Yrly lease. 318 ri1orning Can-S275. ~ dep. 536--l'l56 bltJn!, shag nice lndscplng. ~lty Pa.k. all cpl'd, 2 BR, FIRST TIME Private Balcooies occ11n. Ea~·h uni1 ha!i .....,,..., yon Rd., CaU foe appt. 3 BR 2 BA close to beach. 2 crpt. $285/mo. Call 562-9503. lg:1·it~~e~~~~~g1:+ ~~~'. 2 garage spaces for n101t fireplace, bltns, g a I' ba g l' \\1ATERFRONT, very attrac. 213-432-fi647. chi';-n _; •. •~1•10. Call Lanun1 NMM .. I 3252 OFFERED . Near Yucaipa & Cheny dis1K1sal aod dishv.·asher. .....,."' "" ..,..., " -• •11-port. Nr. adult pool & rec. Bayfront prestige IBR apt. Wiils. Valley on 'Aide paved coun· $110,COJ. Don't delay in 2 BR. 2 bath house. 2BR. front h<>usc, 706 536-'1658. 3 BR coMo N;..,..,l Golt faclls. $350 mo. Lease . full balcony, gorgeous vi~. Roof top sundeek ty road bet\\'ffn Oak Glen seeing this p1\lpcrty. Call Acromniodate :: pi'll' boat. r.1argucritl', s275 mo.. 4BR. 2BA, block lrom school. course 2 car ..,..;.-y~~--.,,mo. ~ e\.oefl. Unusual Opportunity to 0_ a~ 1 Th R I E F . $500. n10. Yrly or will rent 613-Sffil, 833-5988 _i:. • .. ~ • ..,,., -~N~=,=~~R~T~~~--1 !!9~fJOO. 0\\11er, 673-1144 Purchase Baytront Propeny ;l~:~mr:'~ ;!!r..'h~ ~ e ea state air Sun1n1l'r/\Vinter. 673-8086 2 BR, l ba. Walk lo bch & 645-8213 ~ 962-7473 Bkr/ownr 493-5768 Luxu:;..-~. :;~Otp or t in Newport Beach. to 90 minutes f~;:; alniost 839.tl133 or 53(>..2551 NEWPORT BEACH stores. SUnny terrace. No -S300 mo-38R/2BA., mt vu. Crest. View. 2 BR, den. 2% I NE\V PORTOFINO 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. ""tJll or child. G73-73l5. 4 BR, 2 ba, bll·ins, crpts, $400 mo-Nu cstm bit hme. FaMutlc \•icw. All up 67s.&S51 anywhere ln So. Calil Hills 4 APT Units on 19,600 sq rt BeauL Linda Isle & Lido Isle .. ~ drpa, $320. mo. No pets. 6 PLACE REALTY 4M-9704 ~/:.le, 5~xi~·7 ronn~' ~· fee , landscaped k>t 6 BDRMS 4 family rm 01 ~~ =ti~'f~= lot -7.oned C-2 Newport Mft~:O~~ ~':;.~; 1~61 Cost1 M.., 3224 mo. lease. 847-7362 ·Newport Beach 3269 f16..8672 ~~ Tt·1~: Muter bdrm, family rm, hilltops:, 3500' to 5000' eleva· Blvd., c.ri.I . ~mo income. NEAR PARK. schools and 4 Bdrm, 2 Bath. Fittplace. "*~*'--'NEWPO=="'R"'T=-oBE=AOi=~nr-.1' .tj90 . by appointTMrrt 2501 ae~ rm. :11:!icJ~ark rm, dons. Water, electricity & =o~~o m « ~ r g ~QI 5im~~-J:::.• H= Boys Oub, a roomy 3 BR .2 r~ ok. $.125/MO. Q.F..AN~ 3 BR, 2 BA. New Hoag Kolp. OCEAN VIEW. Port Whitby PL 6*-9425. m rm. I rm or ~t torestry roads thru Owne Brok · ""' ...,,~ · Avail about 6-2>. "-nt Ba home wllh private yard, PlllDt carpe(. Frplc. Quiet BftAND NEW end unit, 1 any combinatioo. lnd"oor pioperty. SurTOUnded by r-er,~· "'6"' patio, and 5iJl2le ca r 4 BR Condo. crpta, ~ Newport area. Nr. 3BR~ BA, upcraded, -1 HOME WANTED by private plumblnr. Olliu!uml!y pool N tional F t . HOUSE TWO 642-5:00 Ex-'lenf ' __ ,._ pool cl ·~·-· -Mar)nOr<a Park. Adu!,., J P • rty , No age nts. •--1-Walk to •--~ •-m •. ores' llf!lll' tome + gara~e. ..~en e..,,....-:: ' Uui;....-::, . ~nbelt: '375. 644-1480 i ......... ~ nuu of Calif. finest apple erovea VIEW HOME. Avail June, locatJOn $300/mo Ag t . per mo. 5'8-1400. $.'m/roo. ,646-9564 $30,ll))..$45,COO price Range. for~ $69,500. Open .._ "--aut Y'-' n---},3 BR. 2 BA Holl5e plus July, Ano11•t. Adult.a. 644-7211 PALERMO BLUFFS area.. 4 BR, 2'ii BA i Costa Mesa-Newpon area. botise Sat 6 Sun .1-6. 401 ..: oir • new ...... ~· 2-2 BR, 2 BA Ap/.s. Patios, -o-BEAUT 3 BR home, trplc, Condotnlniwti Nr. HJ Sehl & Must haw a51Um8ble loan. Qnd St. ..,Newporl Shores. ~p. Fantutlc potenttal frplcs, yards. I au n dry' $650 642--$389 VACANT·3 BR. 2 BA, $250. Cl'pt$ d:.w. cuvd patio. $200 Harbor VU Homes. 4 BR, Catholic . church. $475/mo. ' ~1000. No apnts! Glendtm 'Realty,~~-:.i:=~r:c~c; garage11. 646-4414. -f--Newport Heights 3170 ~~= ~· 2 BA, $2%;. I~· 53s.31j7 or 5.16-7282 32 .... f~~~ ~~1:1 ~: yearly leaae. 644-500. View Paletfr!O BE AU T · ·WESTCLI FF Jjquldation with g r eat lndustri1I Prpty. 2100 2 BR, 1•,; Ba. ttpte, $300. vacant & fncd for kids. rV1ne -_..._,:;;,;0922;::=· ....,,,-.,,,.--,,,,. l:luntlngton Beach Harbor v.·/view. Principals terms or will consider trade A ll J 1 t EASl'SIDE-3 BR. l290 ;; 4 BR Townhouse, xlnt c:ond. only. 4.BR/3BA, famrm, 2 Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 hll. home. va un~i_'>25 · 2 BR, 2 BA encl townhouse. HARBOR Vu Phase llI, $250. Call 96M76.5 fpl, lo upkp yd. a.lany $73,000. Open Sat, SlDl 1~ -for'-lncome property. Lrg Yai:c' for kJd1 & pet. F'rplc & vaulted cell !Iv rm. 2~W ba, upgraded crpts & ~~~~~-~-- amenities. Xlnt e 0 n d . •· 1218 Dover 91', ~ll35 RICK ALDERETTE Houses U11fL!rnishtd Homef1nders * 642-9900 2 ear•gpr. E-Z malnt yards. drps, comm pool & tennis C.M. 2 br, 2 ba, wet bar. gar, · G bcl Blk ·I er<• "90 mo "" 'U4 bUins, pool. Newly -ta & Evr/v.·kcnds, 641).()1)9.J j . • 1850 E. 17th St., Santa Ana MESA VERDE teen Is, e t ra I s . ' .,.., , .. , .,...,..... ' _,, OIARMING TRADITIONAL I N1wporl Hofthll 1070 547·&169 General 3202 Adults only pool w/ jacuul.1:552-=,c7800~~~-~~-drP<. 54~. 2 Bil, 2 ba. rani mi/lrplc, OPEN HOUSE lnu_Y .p Viev.• Acre.s INDUSTRIAL 3 Br, 2 Ba, D.R. fr!?lc, bltn Tennis, shop'g near by. HARBOR VU, 4 BR, 21n BA, Townhouse Unfrn 3525 bbc.1. fenced yd. 2 children, 1 Lease. 552-9444 or 871-6101. 2 frplc \\'etbar beautiful lormal rm. lo-.ty yd. lSI R '"ON •·/seRSOnal •tream, adj. LAND & BLDGS. , ALA. JtENTALS pel ok. \Valor, gcl'dcncr pd. dJ• ' Brick beams. \\'ood throout. ~ A WAY small co 1n n1 unity . In $4Xi I 545-0Z!S rRVINE House for lease, 2 vu. A acent J>llf'k. comn1. $9!1,500. Ch\llcr G4Z-99-t9 Ofl 1'uirtln Ave. ~t,.,·~ 15th process of higher den!ity Usr the fnl'ilities for your Wf WKW.llt IH UIYl(I ' se BR, 2 ba. 1rg fnm nn, fonnl pool. SUP~ Decor. Mature l!Wllington Dcaeh • walk to b.!adl. 2 BR Tov.,nhouse, pool. $275. ll'IO. 962-7771. 1136 Somerset Ln 1 &. l61h St. Sat & SUn 12-5. IOlle change. Only 14 niin 10 ov.-n industry ('Ir a.~ n11 SllARP, 4 BR, 2 BA. l\Ieaa din rm, frpl c. $.125 mo., yard. AvRJI June. 6#;-4799 CATHEDRAL CEILING 3BR, mA, dining or film rm, Ne":"~rt Frwy. Te.rm s' linvcstmb'°'•· Thie o1~ncr n1uy f fiil HOUllS • del ,....r;!harl hoAm•,·, Ct.,.$350to avail approx June 1st. Ph. BEAUTIFUL Westclltl 3 Br, SI 0 . /rg pool, lot Ii" ~7. $62,000. Po8$1ble l!Ub-ordlnallon or l'RSC ac or ·1 ycnrJ!. • J Ans. eve•;,• ng. va now. · 551.2037 aft 6 p.m. 2 88, crpt. dprs bltos Newport X>re• as.sic 3 54S-ro3) Owner joint. venture.· C>wntt, ~ply Excellc111 locatkm In Snnla DW'LS.. • ~I month ~cner. NEW ,2 hr 2 ba Univ Pk ~ DIW, trplc, loveiY yard'. LAGUNA Beach, Lower ' I BR. under m:ui:et. s.m. P. O. Box 124, Huntington An;i. Cl05e. to l'11u·bor Blvd. NEWPOIT 1 UT, C.M. '4t•UU LfuTy N£W 3 br 2 ba Univ Pk $365 $395.,--in<:J .. prdener ~ Duplex furn, 2 BR, 11/3 BA, 3550 Dup,ex:es Furn handles.~ S•n Clemente 1~76 Bel.eh, 92648 :i,~-5~.B~; = $RENTERS~ MESA DEL MA.R.3 bdrm, 2 3Br3Ba +bonus Rm2sty 1 BU: to·tJcb. l ·BR. 2ba. ==le!::~::&~=~ 1 PR-ICED TO SELL FANTASI'IC Ocean,VJew ,to 40~U:_!~e:.:acns/.•t v':e°': u~ a1 ornamental iron \Ve service a.Uthe ·beaeh ~: =·~~iJ.'~~,ltUrllvPk ~:home.: -crpla,A·-" -J be~, North end. $250. IMMEDIATE Ly BY Point Loma! 38R,,2 ~·SA. ........._,,. • ......, • \\"Orks. A ereat opportunity cities & Inland Orange Co. 567913 aft 4 pm ~ Pft' mo. .... une Lease, 4~. OWNER. New Hllf'bcr Vu 1850 tq. ft. 2 •tor y frontage, $tiO per ac, for only $65,CKX>. C" 11 $ LANDLORDS $ . NEW 'l'Urqmd:, ~ . , Call·8464J728. ~H"o"'u""'PA=Y~WEEKEND====-, Montego.• Completely Medlterra_n·ean stylrt. awner,,&6-8080 646-0055. FEE FREE CallUsTOO!IYI BRAND new 3 BR. 2 Ba No.3.,•J BR,·2bu. +cocy3BR.2BA,bltns -OW water DELUXE Oceanfront 2 BR Landscaped, Private Poot 1 Coun.try kitchen. Fr plc . · · $1ALA RENTALS $ ~prncl ~~··nrJ:: den:.La~ 41 drapel._ icQncL, db1e tp1c,'Jae Cor lot. w/ttplc. By Week. Avail T-·••club ·~ooo ..,_ Qwrll,., dbl. g1 rase C.metort Loh/ N--~ & u •• CM"'""" ·-_ ua,.; pool pnv:-Jmmed. poea., 1;vs Mo. Aval! Moy .1.5. now -•••• ~Dr NB. ""-· -· · -wt,_ tr ll'allcr. Room C....,.. --~· ~· -~ -" _ $425. mo OWner, -Oimer/ Aacot -" 71~°"';'6'2;.25<6. BAYSHORES -lor pool. REDUCED tor = "RENTERS<!" 2 BR. lncd ynl, gar, quid, ONIVERS!TY Peri<. 2 1111;2 U.V. (Bn!n) 11ome8, 4BR, OWN E R DESPERATE-euty OCCIJPMC7. B k r . CE METE ft Y lot u.le • You . Get All The HOUll!I otf·str. AdJt cpte ,• No pets. ba. Townhoulre, xlnt loe, nr m,A, Spectacular w, p1Uo, 1 BR. util pd, No petl. Quiet, LEA VINC ARF.A. ~ BR. °"'1'>er. Open llOUA, 12-5, Grava C " D Meadow available for ~nt in 0 U R $185. $43--1405..,-5#-32Sl. j8.cuut, pool. tennis. S300 limcpd, l(rink,len, $flS, matllle ·man. $250. mo. 3BA + den. S 6 5 , O O O , Sunday: f.tay 5. 3900 Calle UWTI So. tn hdtk View BUU£J'IN PDATED 3 DELUXE~ br hie nice yd ./mo.. q&l:l ~-alt-2-prii 644-7311 Now b) Sept. B.l.,6~13. 642-3494. Real. 496-.lll6 MtfnorW·Pattc, Col'Ona del ttme1/,,•eek. I A ' ' wkend5 i:.Oc=::=;,-,,,,.,--,-,,,.--, NEWPORT BEACH 1 BR, BY O\\WER·EAM"D• •n.r-Mir. Sacrtnce Price. "Write Homtfind•r1 * '42·9900 ~ pr. dlts, no pell. or · $8!,IDI Splil level Newport neer beach. Adults only. 0 •-• • 0'"•'*'';-•d ~o97 ..._II l2 ~-b lllo CM 'H""· 556-7280/556-6171. NE\V Turtlerock home, 2 Cre~t twnlule. Panoramic I ,_ .,02, •• Dramatic & cleen 3 BR. 21{. 180 DEGREE VIEW ....,....QA " ~~, . ' """ y LOTS '\!ANTED-l .,... r ' ' . MESA del Mar 3 Br, 2 Ba, 1 BR, 2 ba.s, den. Gold Shi\& oeeon view. 3 BR, 2 ~~ Ba, .nquu~: .._.. ....,,. · ~n.::1~" J'aneaJn Ba~ By 0w$68.~~ .=:~?i. ~ "60, Costa =Ina~ .f:ymbe~\ 1 ~ LANDLORDS! ~ 1~.; .~~ail. 611!1. SJOO, ~ ~;:~72 oa.r i:ar., 2 reBnRt 1395+ d, 963-42~. 2 blk Duplexes Unfurn 3600 £\.-el! 641r-JS38. 302 San Pabk> 492-6688 CEMETERY LOT -Pklt In eustom homes in t'OUI area. \\'e Sl)felallte ln Newi;iorl '""· .,...,...._ · t!n, ..,., 1 lo L~ Spec. 3 BR, 2 BA 1: 2 LIKE new 3 BR ~-lli' EXTRA lpCC.. OCNI) vkv.'. establlabed .uea at Santa Vlewii prc.ttrrtd. but will Bcacfl e Corona del MA?' e EASTSIOE; 01annlna: 3 BR, TURTLEROCX new 3 & F'.R. beach, pool & tennis prlvl, BR. t be . F'rplc, shq, drDI, pr!v. boftt slip, fee JarVS. blk custom 2 BR. Ira: f.r. $59,500 Ana'• F'aJrhaven Memorial cons\der exclustve areas a1 & Laguna. Our R.tntal Ser. ~be. ~ EilCI. paUo, ~:·~n rte a re•· ~une$48-.lf~· lease, blt11t$. pr, encld pe.tlo. to heh, RJ~kle ov.ntr tOo/., dov.·n, 4S2'"'412l. bkr. Park. $175. &1M294. \l.1!11. 97S-l52S vice ie FREE to You! Try · n10. 107 · · • rmntae. East C.M. J335.. amloos, $8;%JOO.-( 714) C I'! I' ty l600 ESCONDIDQ.J~ bid lot Nu-View! ri·IESA VERDE 3 BR, 2 SA, UN IV. Park townliSC, 3 DR, NU H\T, 4 br/2 tpl, wetbar, $223. Aft fi oc-Wkends I ~iOI. Sin Ju1n Cpstrn. 1078 ommerc 11 rp w/ p&vtd 811~1. ~iew. NU·VIEW RENTALS 1rple, c rp t •g, • drpl. ramrm. 2 213 BA. Village 3. Vu, comm pool/tennle. $MO. 497-1978. BY OWNER Boyohoru OWNER'S PRIDE BAYFRONT SITE Room for Horses, iBSOO. 673-4030 . or •!M-3248 13SO/MO. *167!1. 1115. mo. 64<·1770. .l_f>YC', 00.1191, 642-82.15. ............ I BR w/olttlrc Cnr lot cuilc -""""" For boot repolr a .ai.. 644-1911. l'REE FREE 2 BR • -2 Ml BA'•· L/J\IELY 3 Ill. 2 Bo -· 3 BR, 2 BA Coodo..No malnt. nn.2bo.dwmlnlr.)llblkl 3 ·BR.·11\0BA, uJ>lrlCf<d Prim<N ........ Beachloc. HAMILTON ST .. CM. R-3. e l'l'Ote .. lonal-• Nr. l<·Mart. No pcta. beout.landlcaped,$4J5.mo. J1iory,pool.'400mo,!OO lr"!ll """"'-0pon liOa.e S..n """°"l, or <o cc 11 n I BUI Cnmdy !Utr. m.&61 :lti,250 aq. IL $47,000. Aa!· ' *LANDLORDS* $215/n><>. Wlr pd. -IS. Avail. May 15th. 615-61182 V1'<o SUerte, &M-7251. 1-4~1er..tvlow,66-Kll. mlmn a ponenlll, LJ>, QIOICE -n conun~'" 54U541, ... , 5IM!i62. Homoflndon * '41·9900 LRG 2 b<.1-, cpts, dl'po, TURn.E·Roctr;c2 belut. ,_ 2BR.'2'1r. deo. Wik to bcacl\, s.n l<l!e h<ma •1th I DallY .lmpmJN. •brielr ~ • 111<. 12lx.ltll crnr,' olli!y. Any day l• UiaBEST DAY to callfotnla'• JcJcst rrfl1s. fhQ1 )'<!, ..... Adl11'4. 3BR. 2 be, PWI 2 l 3. $!OtJ: pooj, ...... couru, l3ZI Piiot a ... l!led 1d. -zntn, $.19,500. -192,000. 49M12J bkr. run on ad! Don't del01. , , e RentAI S<rv1oo!e $18.I. rn-1827/6~. 1-125 Mo. -· 644-4910 mo.,,-ly, 64M2'73 evtl ' I ' BRAND new 2 BR. ttU--cont • prlv~ double earaae. dose to marina, San JOOll Cqro, .... teMll. 493-1686. 3 BR, den or• r.r, 2 bl. Gar New, lfl, Blt·tns . ~. Coot& M"8. 675-11110. '. • $JCI • Slud e TV Pho e Chll 2376 54 El I B No 1959 HO DEW 'turn ~ f',M'. furn 1blJ<• duties rw: Sunday, May 5, 1974 UAH Y PILOT 0 8 Ap.ertmenta l'urnltnea AP1rtment1 furnl1hed A1Mrtr1Mnt1 Unfurn. I Ap1rtment1 nfurn. Ap1rtment1 nturn. p1rtment1 Un urn. Ap1rtment1 Unfurn. • Ap1rtrMnt1 Unfurn. Apt1 Furn/Unfurn 3900 ~ lsi...d 3706 Colla Mesa 3n4 81lbo1 lslind 3806 Cost• Mo11 3824 c .... Mo11 3824 Huntington Bolch 3~ L1gun1 8Hch 3848 ' San Ju1n LA MANCHA APTS ':.':\~ 1.l...a. lovely 2BR. I BR, 1paclous. 6 unit bldg, NEW 2 BR •ara-t THE HUNT ENDS --------UPPER DUPLEX. ' 2 '" C•plstrono 3878 spw;ou. Adult ••""'" .... ~Til:m111 month • ~uly, l.IM new. Car, $160. AduJlJ, yrly ltue a't 116~ ~opaoz~ • • • UNDER N ..... Close to shOpping &: beit.cb. Vl.r" or 1 _,... no .. -Elden ... '" N "' EW an. vtry ll'I' llv rm, kit, $200. 2BR rondo, \V/W (.. ..... t. I Luxuriou!; •tw.a: crnl1, bttins .. .a•..., pe . &.UN , ~u Has stove, D/W, d~pl. o mort' apartment 11u.n•1-t 1 · "-1 "' ·• D.OL-p 1· I ;x • 6 -• NEW MGtotT. 10\tf!, re rig, <J(J, rg rano(o/oven. refrlg, 2 car Include di5hwashtt. J..e. IMllDOI, '" n1u a 31v7 -';-"-;,P,m_ . .,---:--.,-== OPEN HOUSE·Sat 10 to 3·, ""'hen )'OU i;ee our IP'f,Cb.1$, ·-_.~.. / t ·~ I .. ~ • 1 11\auu<:.. ... , KAI'., w w C'P S, gar. Pool, la\l.'n, fac-11, 2&-lZ1 poo It ga1 BBQ & .,..v1tt Huntington Beach 3740 Sun 10.ll::ll. spa,clou1i ay-out. Garden SPACIOUS APTS. drp,s, frplc, mountain ,vk:w, pa500 Carmel. Pll: (213J pu.tloll. I, 2 & 3 BR. $160-J sit APT. 11 bllt to Ba,y °' 1Je&ch. Carport, Wah.rm, $250. mo. Year leose. lll6 w. Balboa.. 6'1'54526. B•lboa Penln_tula 3807 apartmen t • with ADULT LIVING walk scl.xils. shop11, 1~ blk 681-46~ $%;()per n'IO. Oas & water Low WEEKLY RATES -----conv.ruenc<, but qul<I. ~-~ "-1 l 1 b'• ··• 2 ... _ l''rom $120 & UP. UIO&l.J•L"""' W't! t:P. re 111. '""· 2 BR Condo ·'-~ pa.iu. Executive Suites DELUXE duplex 3 br, 2 ba, * 3 Br or +TV '\.UU'" e 1 BR, 1 Nth good ref. ch.ildrt>n over1l6 • · l"rpts ...... ,""· 778 Scott PhiL'C n7 Yorktown Blvd. hlln~ frplt', gur. Le1t~eOl\l)'. : 21~'ull ~~t8 Entertainln& -e 2 BR, 2 bath -t.~~~·n<r~~~/rrio .. ~~l:· s::· ;!ii~. poo~: ==~-•li-~>m~~· ~~-1 Coron• del Mar 3722 Beach Slvd. at Y01•ktown No pets. S.100. 8.1S-49-i9 areas. Pl NEC REEK e 2 BR, I bath 11.i.-s.;o-1~39 l'vf'11 ,t, "'k~nds Nl'\\1, lgf' 1 BR, Utih1 il\CI. 1---------'= 536-0411 . COron1 del Mar 3822 • Country h'.ltchf.>n LIVES ~p • Heated Pool OCEANFRONT Santa Ana 3880 ~~~·alk to beach, $19;,, U»wt Utli. f\01\ Bach. non-STUbtOS & I BR's. 1'' X TR A . 1 Jui.:t $2'.!0 and N'ttdy lo move TO ITS NAME Adjn1 t·nt to 1111·11:<' ltJ\'i'l)' 1 j -0-------~= 1 :~~ o .~er.bu•~ ~o. 1 • Full :;ltt.•hen . • "Pe c 1 a ln10! 1w.1l'k . :i hlk11 to S.D. Fl'\1 y. Ji k 'Uli(' :l BH. '2 13/\. J.:Jt>1•a1or CHILDREN Room1 4000 i<~ tlew. Quiet/• t.$'hwy., e llc:-.tcl 1"100I i1n:hilt·ctun1lly ri('Si1-I111•<I 1 1~ THE· V.ENOOME Ovl'r 500 tall tree& und 10 lli'IV 11'1\ litorl' \\ll'i;t111; •1•·1· l'ool. Lounge. Gt1111t· J{utnn. A.'iO ADULTS LOVF', ---'-------~r old2BR duplC'Xll fll. Lotg lill~ums \\'llh ""1lcrlullti I' t t 'I I R .. -Bal ti .. · l 1 • l.aU11<1rY f11cilltlcg j A ' n1ul1 shoppiu" rcn1~·r. 1 Blk ·.n(· ~~S('( i;:u·ai;\'. L• r1lure PARK PLAZA 11 o""fl" II. . c 1 ng, own -of spa<,'!'.· ;ind lx·11u1Hul 1845 n-•e1'm' CM Ct'Ctl.le a relaxil•<> settin0• for .. 1 1 1 N 1 b t W ' deluxe bach./ W/kltcheJ\, • F1·1..-c utilities n at u r RI ..,,. o o d , flJJ • • • )'()Ur Spl.clous ~1\' l· ul' t· tu Coid1'n \\'est c;olil').!C. I n1r1r1·1et_ eoup l'. 110 111· "·. 2 & 3 Bil apt&. J f\IOn\. i r sore.~. us li ops. '1 blk to ""h. 1-. Call e f'rcc linens niill's lu lhl' bl•at·h !)NI ,. 2 I.At.UNA LIDO 1\PTS. l'I \ ~ "'llh 1\\.0 lioK1t1 ono "" ""' ll•x:IW't's-$325/1no. Shu w 11 ONE ONLY bedroont 1tparlme11t. 1''ron1 · · · · 31" •• "' c II •. "··I ay 1 rca ·-~.. tddl -• '61.S-2561 art :tpm.' ' • T.V. & inn.id lierv. avail. Sunday only IJ.\4-7211 Agt. ! $175. 1'"'un1Uu1-e ~vailable. v:.1l·an1· s left l:i (a1nily SC\:• i..i.J .7. lllU;I "'Y· ...,.,~ u.:1. l Pool, jacuzzi, irauna rl!th..-u iuan S. m ea,.=> z::!:::: • • • Bar-B-Que 0 . lion. ~ _ Rec. clubhouse \\'Orkin.I!: nian S:ll w k . C1;J·rE bll~helor ft pt•on bench. e Phon<• liCrvic~ ~ J Ped1oorn apt. o\'erlooking .-~~i::~~'.00, J~~~00~1;~ Spectacular, N•w I liccrused day care cent. 6.J&-6-19'7. Co~ta ~1cll8. SD>. Quiet penon. • l mile 10 oc-e1:1.n pool: Great location. Sl75 Phone: 5"&-2.100. HERMOSA VISTA Ocean Vu Townhouses Jo""ron1 $190.00 ROOf.IS Pl \~'.k up, "·ith CaU 615-1366. 1 BR. $155-$165 ~ , ' per month. $l80 LRG 2 BR 2BA. APTS. \Valk to bl.!1.u."~1. 'J. B_ll + den j PARK PLAZA 11 kitchen; S30 "'k up apt. LG. BR&: Den. frple, patio, NEW DEalR ._..._ THE VENOOME Rental 01c., 16-A + "·et bar, ule pa11os, frpll'. 805 West Stevens :.is-975;:1 or 64:>-3967. g"· Empl. married cple. or . Priy garage lmn1ac. In quiet 4-ple11:. 1 i••= Gold IV 11 B • 1 Sgl 673-9l23 Lndry rm. Newer Spanish 1 6R apt Marguerite St. $225. 1845 Anaheim, C'-f child ok, no pets. .,...,., en est, · · C1J:SIOm C(l\ls, '#rps, ao-(OU Sflnflower 1 BALBOA ls. $25. \l'k winter. ma ure e. Adult Complex. 2 mi. So. of Large atudio $175. util 2868 LaSalle, Apt 1. 54~'i524 892-5217 phBJl(..'t'!I, 814473,'!~r mo. Santa Ana 545-1121 Share bath & kitchen . Quiet BLET, 6/24 to 9/L Cute 1 San Diegu Frwy. 17301 included. 673-5503 or Place PORT D•n• Point 3826 ""'l-mature mun. 67:).3613. BR. Adults only. Rers., Keelson Ln, HB. 842-1848 Reii.lty 494-91M NEW CHILDREN 2 BR oc't'anfront apl in old South Lagun• 3886 1 1~,,~~N~-... --,---.~ 615-6755 aft .s & wkMs APARTMENTS Spa.Rish Villa. Beam cefi. I ' ewpo • um, pnv. BACHELOR apt, refrlg, no BAOf apL Large. Very nice. J UST REDUCED, 3 BR, 2 1 BR w/ F'rplc. $150. HILLTOP·pri-spac 3 or 2 br, and parents love the frplc, priv. beach. Afany LA~GE. Unfurn. 1 BR apt, ~j._::' patio, linens. Call kttd1en. Referef\C'efl. No Residential tract. So. -Of ba, F'rplc, near Qeach. $400. UTILITIES PAID fpl, gar; 4plx It mgmnt large, 5pacious •part· trees. Pref.er couplit or ut1I paid. lji blks to beach.1 ,---=-,--,---.,.,,~ I peta .. 615--8109 or 613-8432 tl::~to~= ~1iUo H~. llL~;iiotrope. 640-0501 or Adults, No ~ts ~~33~ptl . Keys 493-6970; ment5 at BI n b u r y mnlle adult. S 4 5 o Imo· I Woo pets .sl85 49C3-3930 38 [;S;;u;;m;;m;;;;o;;r;;R;;e;;n;;t;;a;;ls;;;;;;4;;2;;00~[ Costa Mesa ._.. Incl u.ntil 968-6925. · 2450 Newport Blvd, CM Crosi. Y~ars Lease. 4!»-2791 . estm1nster 98 ~,,,. LOVELY 2 BR & Den Call 642-7678 SUPER 2 BR Apts. Great .. TI-IE 001..PlllN I BALBOA $30 WEEK & UP e Studio &: I BR Apts. lagun• S.1t;h 3748 w/ga;. $300. mo., Calip "~R~IV~A-CT~=,-B"r=,"2"s"1-ory-. -,-~i M~a~~ntent toh;.m p son • Olild"en 6 &. younRer New 2 BR frpl<', terrace, 2 Br, 2 ba, nea~ Bolsa & EFFICIENCY Apts lrom $57 ~~~TI~4-53 __ ,_-17_M___ ba. Frplc-, dn area, bltins, 493-0141 0 State lic~nsed pre sch! pool. Ocean 1 Blk. ~a,l;Cs B~h~:..SS~pstairs. $160. OCEANFRONT e TV & Maid Servic.-e Avail. W k P I 'd h 1 FANTASTIC 3 BR~ 2 00 , patio, sundeck & dbl gar. • Childrens play area from $350. ·19-1--3.521 I nio. •· __ " · 00 ' m•>, P ' """'· · ri I LG 1 BR, Stove, refrig, • ' --2 & 3 BR ' A F /U I 390 NEW DUPLEXES Village IM, 494-9436, pnv. t • evel So. of Hwy. $250 mo. Avail now. No L.i.llgC apts. BEAUTlrUL OCt'an View I c.:cP<:etc:s..c._u:;r;,;Oc:,.::;n~U:.:r;;nc_:;:,::O Phone Service -Htd. pool • Children & Pet Secllon 2376 Ne"•port Blvd., CM $395. Pet OK. &12-9666. pets. 69-1 Center St. Cl\f l'rpts:, d~. $16.J. n1onth. e 2 adult rec. centers . · 1 -Newpo.r:_t_~each 3769 675-6614. 496-70.'l!! eves or \\'kt>nds. • Easy ncc.'ess to n1ost em· f'ront 2 _Br .,,"P' !n +.plex.: BRAND NEW J\\'1111. June, July &· /\u;.:. _ DELUXE 11'!\11 3 br, 2 ba, aJI ployinent aieai; Pool $27a. 615-6lla C\'es. 1 . Bf'aur1fully I urn 1" he d . bllns, fl'pl l', l\'alk lo shopg & E/slde 2 Br. I Ba duplex. HUGE t BR, all bltns, cloS<"d e N I M V d 3863 i)l'h11 s1•, garbagt• d Is fl, beach. $31j & $395. 673-2918. New paint & drps. Priv. gnrage. Ocean View. $18.i • f~.11111~~~-ng & b'\vys. esa er e VERSAILLES hltins, i\hl/Fl\1, l'Olot· T\·. 54&-9'1!>.1 °•· &1;.3'Mi1 , e LA PARISIENNE e El Puerto Mesa ' llR >'m~. 12-1; 1 BR . Furn. $165 Up All t>lect1·ic. Fireplace. 2 BR Studio, dbl gar, ne"•ly palio. $l.80. Ref's. Sml pet Adults. Pll : Bob, STa-S2l2. e ll0f.1E ATl\iOSPHERE l\1ust Sl'P. to ;ir1prcc·iuh'. All decorated, bltns, pool, nr. ok. 2653 Orange Ave. Apt NE"' 2 BR. Ot·ean View. \\'et BANBURY CROSS DeltLxe 2 & 3 BR. Rcnlttl Ofc, lhe ron1fo11s or hon11•. :~BR, All Util. Paid llcatl'd9~JsgAdult-.. beach. $25:i/n10. 615-3528. D, C~'I. 552-8343. Bar. Cpts/drps. Dsh11.•shr. (Near Beach Blvd&: Warner) 3095 Mace Ave. 546-1034 ON TIIE LAKF. 2 BA i\LSO 2 Br, 2 l:h\ & ~l 1 BR & LOFT APTS. Pool , Laundry facilities. 496-2921 16761 VIE\V POINT LANE Newport Beach 3869 At South Cmis1 Plaza I BR, 1 BA. Dnv{' by 700 E. No Children, No Pets Across from golf course. Pool & Recrealion 21).132 Santa Ana Ave. 3824 1959 Maple Av•, C.M. .,::./\VK UP. l Br, 2 Ba & --.,.... $210 • 2 BR. QUIET. Crpts, HOLIDAY PLAZA Bach. Color TV, maid serv. drps, bltns, clo!led gar. DEWXE Spa.cious l BR pool. THE MESA, 415 N. Priv. patio. No pet. 1 turn apt. $150. Pool. Ample Newport Bl, NB. 6-~I 2126 Thurln 675-5772 parking. Adults, no pets. 1 BR for female. Avail. June 1160 u 2 B 3 B I" Ba 1965 Po A Cfl.f P· r, r 7r , mona ve., & July. $250. mo., pool, pool, play yrd, cpts, drps, AP'f'. MANAGER for 12·2 br teMil It spa. 644-8490 2212 College No. 1. 645-6583. furn unll.s. No children-pets. 2 BR. sundeck, beach 1 blk. 3 BR ' ha All d Ll · 170 oil Ml • ·• -new ecor. 1 ve m. rent. n. Adults, no ""IS. $200/n10 f I tlo dbl 'd f Pref t .. ~ rp c., pa • e gar. u 1ea. er ma u re yearly. 645-6680. Westclirf, Adults., 642-1155 J woman 642-9520 aft 5 PAI. 1 Bl..K to bch 2 Br furn. Util BEAUT FURN l BR I r LRG 2 br, 2ba, din nn, · ots o pd. Kids/pets bk. Now thru cpt/drp, stv/N!f, p 0 o I . 1 ~t·tns: pool, "'.aik to shop-July 1st. $265. 646--4071. Adlts, no pets.$170. 645-896.5. 1, f1~mo~i9J1 tr:,r~ 1s:h c ~1'. San Cl•mente ·3n6 2 BR, 2~~-. ba, w/lrplc, 548-{)49:1_ enclO&ed gar, No pets. $240. · :! BR, den, .aJllO 2 BR.-both me s.-&ft55 SPAC}OUS 2 BR. bll·ln a~ 1 "'/white . "''a ter vie"'. · · · , pllances, 'A·lk·ln ck>set11. nr . HC'aled pool, c: a i p of 11 PRIVACY w/ 3 BR, 2 BA. Shop. ctr. Adulls, no dogs. lndry/BBQ areRs, close to frpl, gar, lndry, yrd. patio, $169.50. 536-5114 I heh & pier. 4~700 oo pets. $285. &16-4414 __ 1 BR, Newport Blvd nr, Del F'ABULOUS \Vhlle Wall>r PRJVACY & 2 BR, 2 BA. '~1at. $145. mo. \'ie11.·. HC'ated Pool. Near gar, patk> & yrd. No pels. 642·0590 beach. 2 Bil & 2 BR. den. S210/n10. 1).16..4.i14. • ELl\f GARDENS APTS. $225 to $250. 49'2-4700. ILG,.=.:.::,:2:.oB°'RO:.:.:.st.:ud'°i"'o.'--g-.,-.,-nr. FURN 2 BR. Apt ln shop'g, Adults, m pets. 2293 Family section. 1n E. Apartments U"fur!'. .For:dham Dr. 646-3-48.>. 2'lnd St., CM. ~ B•lboa lilind 3806 E/SIDE I BR, blt-ns, patio, $100.$™1NICELYturn1 & 2 l adult-no pet. $~/mo. util br trailers. Adults, no pets. NORTH Bav front, 3 BR 2 pd. 642·1960. 132 W. Wiliaon. 6G-4.;:IJ. 3 be .. cpl, drps, frplc, gar., 2 BR. I BA upstairs & 2 BR. Claulfied Adi Call Stl-5618 washer & dr)"e.r. $450. mo. 1 BA down. No· children or toda..y! Adults .. &l&-7213 pets. 557-9244. Gener1I 3802 Gen•ral 3802 Gen•ral 3802 jacuzzi, rent inclds all util, _E_•_•_tb_l_u_ll _____ :8_3~ iiiiiii.iiiiii8ii4iilii<lii604iiiiiiiiii.iiiiiil , Poot . Acapulco Aqua ·Bar 1· Oec rinfront or Call r elrig, encl gar. $190 & $225. PARK NEWPOR't ,t, Jacuzzi. Spcclfleular s 673-6720 or Gi.>-2234 Adults, no pets. 3 93 ON BEACH I A'CTC Lake Y.·l'Towerlng Hamilton, 645-4411. e DELUXE e • APARTMENTS r·ountalns • ~ ~lillion Dollar QUIET • Easts Ide 2 BR . 1 ~Ii 3 BR, 2 BA apt for lease. Clubhouse, Gym, Sauna, BA. P atio. Garage. % blk lncld spac. master suite, din 2 BR Unturn. Fr. S:M>9. Oft the bay Tota l Security. i;hopplng-Adults, no pel!;. rm & dbl garage. Auto door Covered Parking. Large J.uxury apa.runent llvin& hnmedi.ate Occupancy 271. CabriUo. 642-0461 aft. opener avail. Pool & Heated Pobl. Saunas and overlooking the wat~. En· • ADULTS Spm Recreation area. Adults on-Recreation Room joy $750,000 health spa, 1 Sorry, No Pets 28 2 , ly, no pelo. PH' 6448004 HUNTINGTON sw~n• pools, 7 ligh1ed· Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br's. R, BA, ocean vil:'w. • $307 • tenm.s courts, plw miles of I· from $175 per mo. HOUSE smER for June • Augusl, Mature fem teacher. "·ants location in Newport Beach. 696-2255 aft. 5 p.m. LIDO ISLE • House Comp. furn. 2 BR, 2 ba, Frplc, elec·klt. A\'8.il. June-Sept. !r..16-1300 or 673-3429 Dshwshr, refrig, c r Pt s. 865 Amigos Wily, NB PACIFIC bicycle trails, puttirv»,.· shul·i Santa Ana drps. $235 lBR/lBA, all ••----" b -·• I' 1180 .,._~ .......... g.,.. Y 7ll OCEAN Ave H B fleboard, ovquet. Junior l 'a J OO LIDO, lg comlortabli!, nicel" app s. · ~. \VlLL!AM WALTERS co. 17141 ~1487 · · Crom.$194.50 moi1thly; al!IO 1 7 Plaza Dr. rum, 3 BR. SUMy paUo. N~ 3 BR, 2111 ba, crpts, d~, Huntington Beach 3840 Ofc. opeu 10 am~m Daily and 2-bedrooni plana aud 714a55~ beaches. Summer or yearly. elect stv. freshly paint, nr WILLIAM WALTERS co. 2-atory town houses. Elec· ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiii I Agent &l2--5200 OCC •& l<bppng, chlldnm ok. $149 ·$1.69 2BR Irie ki!cbon' private patioo l A all J • t •0 •3473 I PALl.1 SPRINGS furn 3 Br, v une ..:-. • ~ S . CHILDREN le. PeLS ok. 2 BR., or blllcoriies, carpeting, dra· - lSR, pool, 1 responsible yng pac cpts. dr. gar. pool. $175 3 BR $265 16902 Lyn per1e1;. Suoterranean park· rS .... "" I pool. Day,' wee~ month. du! $''"" "r-3BR $209 pel/kid ok 17'361 ·s Cal, 1 1uO nc, · n 1ng with eleva tors.'Opuonal · 'll b 534-409B or 638-l · ' 1• 00· pets, • w.o....± • ......, Ko•l"'n Ne B•ach • Slat•r t. lJ'.J<J"~L " .... ,.. V t' R t I '250 I ~0 J 1Tih pt It "" maid service. Jut.I ~Orln u1 , ...,. .s acai ion '"as -. r f'p, "~ ace a lmo + •~ dcp. Move in EXTRA lrg 2 br 2 be d•luxe Ult! ...,.,, 1'-asnwn JslanJ at Jamilor~l' 11 842-4504 or 842-0389 poolside apt nr beach. $165. San J · u 'II "-2 Bb ~ hou r I F'OH. rent Qn P..acific Cst H..,., ATIRAC r 2 8J1CI oaqum •u s ,...,au. . ·n: 10\vn ire, rp t, .. ,, ~nl BR. lge 2 BDR.f.I , 1 BA, crpts, drps, 2320 Florida. 53&-5882.'· Telephone lil4) 6'&4·1000 -frtlib $2511. 1 BR. lrom $195. in Huntington Bch, trailer. sunny patio, gar. 1'.lature llMlildry, aarage. $150. mo. 506"11th Street. 2 BR, 1~ tijl, 1or renlal 1nionnat1on PooJ, tcm1is, .couti~ntal sleeps 3. $50. per wk. ~dull. no0pet:·,!?~;,.~ A · 7841 Slater Ave. C213J 1 pri\', gar, NO PETS. DREAM COTTAGE breakfast. Separate fan1Lly Respons.lble ·adults. ~nly. u!gers r. -...,.,...,n-f)lO<I. 530-1898 846:5617 section: Close to ;;hoJ?ping -~0'~"7-,--..,,---.,= 2 BR unlurn, Condo •-='-'±=--~-..,--on canal & fi ne beach. 644-26ll · "R -• 11 ·-, • crp...,., NE\V .APTS • \\'ALK TO 2 ~R. pvt fenced yard, Small 2 , BR shag bltns ent .. 1 to I •r1 -<\Il>I, bl~, pool, patio, BEAOf. 1 & 2 BR's from garage c:rp!s drps $165 ' ' ' garage, $235 'mo, 968-874;1 $175 to $23.). EXTRAS. 785S &nald ~d. 847~1!. · ~t;, ~';ls~~~1:Z,I~ ~e~~ Family Fun APti. TEACHER needs 1'00mmate. SPACIOUS New 3 BR, 1%. 536-2579. l•g_un• Beich 3848 $285/mo Yearly. 64!Hi680 Av<ard 11.int\ing 1, 2,:& :-t br ~os~"':!llD·~~~ BA, patio, frplc, pool. s175 UP. 2 & 3 Br 2 ha kids ok a pls \\'/family rms. No ,,~.. oo• ~ $300/mo. 64~7. 18881 Mora Kai Lane 2 BR · NEW VIEW A 1 BAYFRONT, Charming lrg lease. Sorry, no ~16. From Vince 497-a::>35 after 5pm. · P · 2BR, 2ba, plush crpting &: just $175. OUR TO\VN \\'ORKING Women mid 20s, Classified Ad! Call 642-5678 E. of Beach oU Garfield F'tplc, enclosed garage• drps, 2 car prking;-pool, Family Apts .. 1250 Adams \\'ill consider child or one loday! 962-8994. deck. $300. 830-9001. watch the boats sail by, slip A\-C. (Adams at F'airvie1\'), aninud. Large fenced yard. General 3802 Gener•I ~802 General 3802 avail, $575 mo., a sk for J1 Costa l\.1esa. Phone 557-4785. 2219 Santa Ana, O.t "Rusty", 67S--~. 'n-IE EXCITING YG \VORKING Girl to .ahare EXCWSIVE Westclill area, PALM MESA APTS. Jo\•ely 3 br home in CM w/ NB. 2 TO\\'llhouseS, 2 ~R. :l\11NUTES TO NJ>'I'. SCH. ·same. $'00. Call 9'f9.4l.90 or 212 BA, ~ F'rpl, cluhl:!oqse, Bach, t &. 2 BR~ from $151 :'A6-2315 pool. $295. & lJ25, PH; I . A<lults, No Peb! WANTED mature strajght &+6-1231. 1561 Mesa Dr. male to shr 4 Br hse '= utµ. SEACLIIT :1\1.ANOR API'S. j (5 blks fron1 Newport Blvd.) Ci to bch, HS, $100. WANTED: ,. IRVINE Village of University Park. Informal apartment living for adults and lamilies. Casual living flavored with wood and rlverstooe and boldered by two large parks. Pocket parks, bikepaths, pools and a recreatioo C!lnter. Deluxe shag carpeting, full-iength qrapes and all- eleelric kitchens. 17560 Jord8l) Avenue, Irvine. Leasing office hours: · 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. daily Telephone: (7f4) 552-0900 Now ••alleble: 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom from $185. .PARlCl1'@@0 • HIKERS. ' ~~ NEWPORT BEACH Village of Harbor View. Apartments and townhouses for adults and families .. Two -story groupings in rustic wood nestled at random among the trees. Nature park for a neighbor. A recreation center with lounges and game rooms. Two swimming pools. Private balcony·ot patio, deep-shag carpeting, deluxe appliances. Baywood Drive off San Joaquin Hills Road Leasing ottice hours: 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. daily Telephone: (714) 644-5555 Now avallable: 2 bedroom, 2 b•lhroom from $290. J SAN JOAQUIN l-11.1.S.RO, PACIFIC COAS I HW'I. • -' SPIKERS. 0 l JRVINE Village of University Park. A special apartment lffe for action-orienled families. Some sections for adults only, too. The ta sle of California in stucco and mellowed wood. Five swimming pools, courts for tennis, basketball, volleyball and handball. A health spa and a full recrealional staff. Central courtyards with.privale patios or balconies. Deep- shag carpeting, full-length drapes, air conditioning, all-electric kitchens. 3883 Parkview Lane, Irvine. Leasing office hours: 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. daily Telephone : (714) 552 -9200 Now •••I.fable: 2 bedroom, 2 b•lhroom from $235. ePARKWEST 2 BR, 1 ~2 BA. Studio. Pool. I ~9860 . 962-8668. Ask about our discount plan. HUNT. BEACH Dthrl:e adult '•"'A'=TU~ru:~s=r=R~T"'Pn>;,-.,.,,-,.-m-.,.ale 152.1 Placentia Ave., N.B. 'J)OOl!lide garden bungalo"'• sey\? same 3 BR. Oen Vu 548-2682. • nr ~an. frrlc, lrt patio, ' ' ... "01 374 Re \._ .m: • Ol'N'"l.L< x , s. BA YFRUNT 6 pools. &aWl'.I, tennis·. 846-494.2781, ' CHANNEL REEF. 0259. Also 1 Br. from '$135. 2 Br, 2 .Ba, wet bar, pool, 2 Br-spacioµs. Bltns:, pool, nr IR~f • Nl!w 3 BR 2 ba slips. $350. , lease. Owner, I $hop !t~ ~: .Ad\ta,:,,l941 !:'1~~ale~ 0 ' after 6, 673-2067 Potn~:erL ~. z BR,. '2 ~ 1195, 3 BR, 2 Ba, • t J • > 4 \\IO~G GIRL has ' 2 BR. •"""" 81•1~~ OW ~t.s Buy a ,ne,..~"7~1Y~ older 2 ba.·F .V. to share w/same ..,,.,., · ._... • "!:~ • model car 1111K 'b~lfeJ:Q4nd 979.(1314 at 962-1794 drps, patios, Adults, no .,..,11;. . ·-· Sell it fast ·With a 4224 Patrlce Rd, Nr. Hoag Dally Pilot Clas..slfled Ad! The fast8t draw tn the West. Hosp. o~ Sat/SUn 1-3. 642-5678. . ~ .a Dally Pilot Oassifled LIDO ISLE-Dram at i c A .;:.::.p:,,n""'F::.u-rn-/"U'°n""l'u-rn-...,3900= Apts Furn/U_nfurn 3900 View • Waterfront 1 BR 1 -'--'----'-'·---'-'.;._...;:...;:..--;_;;:_,::;;;.;.:.;,..;..;c.c.: Condo. Apt. $.175/rito incl. 1 uUI. By Qwner . 67s-<634. J OCEAN FRONT, 2 BR, 2 ba., Nr. new, security bldg, I Yrly $350. mo. 6Tj-6719 EAST BLUFF. 2 BR, 1 ba., I frplc, ne'" c.'Pts, pool, $215(). mo. Adults. ne pets, Call ; 6444767 DUPLEX, Nr beac:h 3 BR, 2ba., fprlc, crpts, drops, gar, yrly, aft 6 Owner 675-4644 1 BR, patio, blt-ins, shag, beach 1 blk. Adults, no pets. 1175. yrly. &l;.Q;S(). I Deluxe 2 & 3 BR Balboa. J>en. Frplc, D/W; 'Gar. Fr. $285. Yrly. 833-1288. ' 3 & 4 BR Prime units. 5leps to beach. Children ok. Rltr., 642-3857 . Newport Heights .. • U].O SPACIOUS 2 BR, smartly decorated, frpl c. upstairs \'1ew, ,crpt1, dl'PS, Quiet biding, adlts, no pets, $190. 6-W-4478 san C t•m_o_n_t•'----~76 ; NE\V CARDEN APTS. 2 BR. 2 BATH, $195. 3 BR. 2 BATH, dshwhr, lrplc, $200. Call 493-0141. NE\V, extra lge 2 BR1 2 bas, pool. Exciting city le. ocean Sun:u:ner means l~zy afternoons around the pool and exci11ng games of tennis or vol!eyba'!I. That's summer fu11 .al Oakwood. There's atso health clubs saunas bltllards . go}f driving range. shuffleboard.' color 1~ lheatre, ping pong, etc. Plus a ,re~d.&n~ )en'nis pro. pro shop & free lessons and. an .ac11v1!y !11recto.r. parties. BBC's, sports 1ourna- ments1 dinners anp compllmentaiy Sunday brunch. Not _to mention beaullfut singles, I & 2 bedrooms. furnrshed & unfurnished. Ask about our "NO RENT RAISE GUAAAN!.EE.'' Sorry, no one under 21 and no pets. Mode.JS open daily 10 lo 7. Move in !hfsweek6nd and spend..,.our summer a1 Oakwood-all year ·round! • Oakwood Garden Apartments Ntwport 8e1ch North lr'llM ind 16111 645·0550 Rents from $145 Newport 811ch Soutl'I 16th 11 Irvine 642·8170 Rents~rom $160 vie'A'. $251), 496-0016 _:::::;::;=:;;:~=::::;;:;;::=;=::;;::::;;;::;::::::;;;;~ 3900, I Ailts Furn/Unlurn :Apts Fur;,/Unlurn 3900Apts Furn/Unfum 3900 ~O .MAR~l.~ I -~-~ • BUT , EXCITING WATER-SIDE LIVING ~ _;;: .. • AOUlTS • SMALL PETS .-- • Yacht Club Facilities • Sauna1. Jacunie1 Value above the Others • ' ' • TeMis Courts ... Nigh! lighting • 3 Pvol• • Handball• Goll Driving Rong• '"'"°' COHVtNllNf~ • IACHELORS, 1 & 2 BR S17,5 to48S 540· 1800 ADAMS & MESA VERDE EAST · CO'STA MESA , • II lfJ DAIL V PILDl l .::'---0-T--~~--~ •en••• to • •r• 4100 S11ndi1J, M~ S, 1974 1 Busine-,-,~R"1-n~to-I 4450 Invest Opport'y 5015 \\'AN1'ED : Soph. e mJ:! I. fe male to share 4 BR ·1 pn_-stlgt N .B.. horq,e w/ Rtrai~hl cXf'i'. 1n 8.) e, s....m1. I \VJLJ. Sl!ARE. real IUpf!r 2BR/ 1 ~B,\ apt & 2 sn1I 1 s~.cm to $100,000 for wlid investment. Need pn.•nuum l'f'turn. l\1onlhly dm\'.', \\'rite Clas:s.lfled a.d No. l52 fJafly Pilot P.O. l~x 1560. Costa l\ll'sa, Colit 9262Al ~ 'Ailh nice 'A'Ot1dng gal, J -==::::=:==== Pool, 11.auna, etc. U11l'1 lnc. * '*' 5030 $160 ra. 557--4568 aft 1P~t. C-2. Newport Blvd at 19\h, ! . . ·.p JO•= SG00 n10., 1 )'t' lta"4:!, Isl &: 1.15(1. R.E A -... per,, mo. WORKING fl'male to share la.~t. IJ!clg approx 2,000 sq 11. ''" l l nK>ll., Total S~.!HO. Beach apt 1~ snrne. On dO!r-i;:n.r, storar.:e hlds;. 11rkg '''ell secured. Pt'nninsula. 6Tn795 aft 4 In rear & nl curb, I~ lol. 71~9933 1 Garages for Rent 43SO l'!,.125 Ml 11. Heavy !raffle e~-\VANT TO BORRO\V $25.COO ~ure. 45 to 50,000 can da1· on $99 cm trust deed MINI WAREHOUSES ly. '.\lay crui Uv~ in. Ideal ' 49!}..4588 STORAGE for ,\nlique11, Nursery, etc., 03S Avail. ifuy 10th Keep Mor t, Trust Deeds 5 No i\love·in or Move-out calling. 636·185.'I of a rt 5, - chan::crs. 1''1'01n $7.50 per !l"l&-6013. LOANS UP TO W I• =~~ "N\."llt'land St., HB STORE nr. N'pt. Post Olfice 1st TD Loans ALLSPACE I & Greyhound depot 587 Sq, 960-1'70 Fl. $160 r-.10. Agt . 646-2414 2 d TD L lndu1trl1I Ront1I 4500 n oa ns WANT GARAGE for Stonge I in S.J .C., Dana Poinl, or HUNTINGTON BEACH lowe1t r1t•s Or•n9• Co. San Oemente area. 49.1-6161 • S•ttler Mtg. Co. Moo.-s am·S pm SMALL SHOPS 642-2171 545-0611 1,~ OF 2 car garage In COl!ila ALL SIZES Sf>rving Jtarbor area 24 yr.i. J\.1esa, $20 month. 642-4952 $62,000. 2nd TD. 2 5 % $150/~10. & U~ disoou!ft, San Diego oHlce /!t10. East C.OS!a fllesa. MO. TO l\10 -OK Bldg. $100,000 do'A'll. Call 1 Easy access. Dbl garage. 1 r.fcF'adden & Produet'r or Oa\'e, Bkr. 5,17-7006 1 Storage only. &tZ-5999. Gothard & llcil !~~~~~~~~~~ I Please caU Chuck Sc.-hreibcrl: 1 Office Rental 4400 Ashwlll-Burke.& Co. I j(g] •1----------714:997-2100 Lost and Found \ LEASE OJo'FlCE SPACE I -~=="ti~~=:--1;mmmm;;;;;;;;~;!; ! New ai~ ~fn!;y oenter I NOW" LEASING ··office bldg. Furn. or unlum. Huntlneton Be•ch Lost & Found 5300 10Xl6 reception Rrell , NEW M-1 CALIF. ANIJ\.1AL CONTROL 15X15 cxee. offiCe. ·2 8X10 940 ~. Ft. &: UP · Huntinb'lon Beach ShC'llcr adjolnine oltices. Letie or Hamil1p~~!.1N97ew0Jand $1. 8521 Edison St. ~25ll rent monthly, With crptl &. nu-(Back of Humane Society) , drps S400frno. With crpts. , _ ' drps A fumitutt $450/mo. Animal Assistance ..... ~ue o .... ~ru Mr INDUSTRIAL Adoption, spaying .l Call for appt. ~ • · COMMERClAL neutering inform. 5.~~13 ·1 Smltb.N= OFFl.CES .OFFICE iSPACE AN~tALS IMPOUNDED cw. for lease 1n 'choice M~s11ion Cock-a-poo mix, B/W, F IN LAGUNA NIGUEL 1 1 Viejo area. Good fN'Y Germ Shep, Blk, fem. n..ly ~2c per ~· ft. acoeu at A.very Pricway. Spaniel mix, Blk, len1. .;·~. & UP. All Util Incl. Rellllo'r i parttclpaUon Chihuahua mix, BIW, f.·111 ~ · ba soliclted. 831-1~ Shep mbc. Bn1'TI/V.1ht, fen1 . .... ""11:: dm, air. wet r. 8 1 Tri r 27992 Carrlf!O ca1 l11trano CITY OF ORANGE eag; e, · em. Sa 0'-Frwy ,,.. , · Ten 1poo, \\'h!te, male n ""&0 "i' New 3,0QO sq. ll. u~lls_:. Chihuahua, Blk/Brwn, t~. • I Avery t'arkway :urn off. SP~mKLE:'D; 3 ~!r·con~. Ba!lsett nii.x, Tan, niale I 131-1600 . offices: Wood -...·orkinlf OJ \. Dachl'lhund, Blk/Red, mule !m· \Vinton R.E. li'r:>-3331 Poodle, white, male, • * COSTA MESA * \\'ire J.(r. TeIT mix. \Vht. F. 1100 -1300 -1710 -2500"sq ft Shep mix, -...·hlte, fem. int' :!!lrl!!I 1mlt!. SEE -Shep/Ten·. Blk/Wht. .male ROBERT NATTRf..:SS Eng. Sheep Dog, Sl/\Vht, F. Rcaltor-O>sta Mesa-97~71 Germ Shep, Blk/Tan, F. NEW B' ~ M-l 1200 11 Collie, Bno.71/~Yht, male ""-"" · IQ. · Awit Shep, Tri, fem. 1 $176. 2«IO sq: It. $355. 2'10-3 Doxie pip, Blkffan, fem. ph. fron1 QUice, ~rpts, large Shep/Terr mix, BIT, ?11. rear d0or11. Anaheim & Lab/Shep mix, Tri, fen1. Terminal Way, <".f\1. Days Poodlt>, Blk, Beige, F. For Lease, 384 sq. Ft. comm/ 646-5033 Of eves 646-0081 . Spaniel mix, \V/B, fem. buslni!s11. (2 offices pl us re-NEW M-1 !400-5000 Sq Ft Irish Setter, Red. male 1 • ception area & atorage). Ad-Shop & Offices. Ampl prkg Terrlel" n1ix, B/W, fem. I jattdt to ·orange County 2C8 3 phase pwr·trash ser Poodle. Charcoal, /cm. Airport. ! xlnt loc, nr S.D. Frwy, CATS ' Call 546-8801 I 646-12;2 Siame<o. Choe, Beige, M. 1 ?-.l·l BU>G "800 sq fl J-{\. Tri c.• Ing hair, male I ~ 1 MD. FREE REN't * Bap gooct' l6lh Sl .Ne~'J)Ort Blk, n1all' , No lease req. Dix. ottlce_s, Bea~h. Location. '1..ge rear AND OTHERS. 536-2513 I adJ, AirpoM er Hotel. 55c fenced yard. Avail 6/1. LOsr. S:lO Re-...·ard, fem. seal r Sq. ft. Incl. a/c, full 54S-1015 , point Siamese cat, 5 yrs. r 11ervice1. 2172. DuPonl rm. 8. · old, sml, slender, shy, in- 1 833-3223. (9 ti! noon). RENT new ?-.f.1, l200-M sq door cat lost in Fowitain DESK space avallable $50 ft , ~If~. \ym on th ' Valley Jlacienda tract near 100. Wlll provide furniture W/ottice. 29j() • Central. Falcon & \Vard, Fri. nite. at $5. mo. Answer Ing RA., bkr. 673-'l039, Please help grid sU1cken service available. 17875 NE\\'OORT Beach office & fanilly including'her 'lncon- Beaeh Blvd., Htmtbiiton "'arehouie, approx. 900 sq. solable brother, they have : , Beach. &12-4321 . fl. $150 mo. Mull.Ian Really, never bt'fo1>e beeo scparat· ' ONLY $150 3400 Irvine, NB. 54o-.2960 ed. 968-3264 ~ - ---------·· Gardening I04l I~ UJROPF.AN c. • rd e n e r . ~-~iiiiiiiiiiiii~~~-ii .l\_l:Jlntennnct • Lan<t.c•p\fll. -· ROOli"1 6082 Help Wonted, MiF 7100 I Help Wantid .• M&F 7100 REPAIRS. 11U types. Jteu. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j 1'"'1'etl es1. Uc'd. Ask for t ' ASSEMllLERS • , Trtt re mo val . Very Per1onaf'll 5350 rea110nabla, &az..s329 evet. ----------lrrofellJional Jap anese llt:I.P~ N'\.'"'f Id tll'l'H, ~'<I Gnn.lrl'lt'r. George Jbushl. jul1 lu•lpl~ ut )'Our hon1c or 1777 llJ~lrd Cir. CM. ;:~1i~~;~:;='* ACCOUNTING Process MARILYN'S Cuslom Clothes Cllnlc. DNlin, or redesign. 6"-4266. ''11rt1t. par1 1l>s or dlnl1('r~. M:>-m72 , C'lln l"nd &r. lll'I"\'tl, t'Uek·l'Bc""·a-,~tU7ul7-~Bo=b·~,-=c~.-rd~e-n-,& file 6091 1 ,111~. j,:kttuUeW' o~,? J 111 ;.t• 1'rff Service. ~la\ n t .1 ----------- n·u•'L ~gl fen-. l leal!<' let Land.scp. Prune clnup. Bob CER.J\~1 1C 1'JLE NE\V & 111•· hchr fron1 h'OOd !X'Oplt'. 557 9180 n>mOOel. l-'ree est. Sn1 jobs l111Vl' l'l'fS;, \\'rttf' Cla~11lned ------------voelcomc. 536-2.Qi. Atl ,\Jo. 117, Dally PUot, P .O. CAR~EN Service, clean-ups 6092 Box 1560, C~ta ~tesa, Calif. plantlng, la'A11 ft'MVatlon, Top Soll !l2ti26 ~ est. xper & rcliab. * TC '30lL * COJ\-1POST * ,\:ULCIJ t-RED\VOOD L'lCH.t:ASE )'OUI bustline, 1.3, ____ 1072__,·=,,.,==.---- cup sizes in 2 wks, 110 Jo'INE EDGE. Call-c x r r c Is t' s , pads or Yard r-.taintenance Service gimmicks. Custon1 fitting. cc~1~"~"~"~'~'/~H~•::ul~Jng""-''-'~""-=:: 1_T_r_•_e_S_e_rv_l_co ____ 609_J A I s o haltcrsls"1mwcf,r. PltOF'ESSIONAL yard main! REASONi\BL~; Juanita, &2--4Z72. Reasonable prices & con1ptitent tree trin1ming 1't TIRED Or LOO"i\INC Ask for Doug. 5-18-765-1 And rc1nl'.lvr\I. (II o r! , FOR A GOOD STYLIST? PROJo~P.SSlONAL Gardening Student! Call for free est. Thi:n ~'TQP. Coll John. setvi<.-e n1ow edge & clean 58&-8764 or MS-ti4:!8. &12-211!3. Shampoo, Cut & ups. 646.9239 1Free nl. School• & Instruction Style, $6. up. EXPERIENCED J 11 a n "A New Approach to Dieting gardener yard, malnter!nce & flgwoe problems." In-and clean up 963--1020 WE NEED 700S CLERK Two year1 experience in general office, prefer- ably Accounting, High 1chool grad with fl9u re 1ptilude, ID key by touch, light typing and keen interest-in d4tails. Good company benefits. Paid health/life lnsur- anc•, vacations and sick leave. Call for appoint- ment: 1714) 540-4020 PRIMARK - PRODUCTS COMPANY 2620 S. Susan Santa Ana, Calif Assemblers We need lndlvldua\1 10 11'0l'k 3nd shift. Related circuit board cleani111it & ttt1~'n1Uly E'Xperinix·1• <l<'- RirNI but not essenflMI. 1':Xl'fllOnt IX'ntllt:-1 p<11'k· Ilg<! lnC-ludlnJ.: 111t>dl(·a\ and denlal lnsumn('e 11.nd riaid l'Heul10111s und idc·k Jcn1'f'. Call or Apply In Ptr5on i1011day thru f 1'iday 8 iV.1 to 5 P<\t Transmask Corp. S11bsldiary of California Con1putcr Products, tnc. dividunl, Seml·pr1vate & '"'~"""-"""=='-'=-~ TR AV EL small group s e 8 11 i 0 n 5 • r.1ow & EDGE -n1onlhly ~ maintenance yard cleanup 1 3 .. 5 C1mpus Drive & hauling G 548-{;142 u.n equa op p o rtunity ~., . Help Wanted, MiF 71 00 BEAUTICIAN Assistant ot Shampoo Girl, Ma.le or •·~male. l..lcensed. 963--3433. UEAUTY Shop Jor sale. J.CXl \Y Coo.st Hwy. Newport ~ach. 6"2--0844 or 494-9907. BEA~Operator, busy shop. New license OK. Hi'J\DY 'S, 675-(),508 -BOA T-BUTLo'""'E~R~S-I Net'd t•xpcr. ('fU'(X'lll\'1"11 for 11u.nljty saJbout n1anuf. ., Uay .... k. Xlu'! ben~flbi. Drvp by for nn lnlcl'VMlw i\1on lhr{I 'l'huni, 9 u1n·f> p1u, We1ttail Corporation · ltjJg l 'l1u.:enlla, C.J\I. * BookkHPer -· $650 n.t.:. helpful *Gtn'I Accnt to $12K Cost Accountlng L'Xf><.'r. *Precis. Grndr to $1200 lloulng, OD 1't11'C11d l11g *Secretary $650 Shorthand required *Welder, Cls A to $1200 Arc, lle\lllrc, X-ruy HELEN SCllAf'FEk PERSONNEL AGENC\' 4262 Cainpus Dr .. B-4, N.li. 557-27U PREGNANT~ · eorge. AGENCY employer Newport Beach, C•. Caring, confklenlial counsel-YARD CLEANUPS n1/t (Near Or•nge ·county Ing & referral. Abortion, & complete malnt. 645-0309 • Airport) BOOKKEEPER AUTO adoption & keeping. General Services 6046 TRAINEES NOW (714). S40.6080 J\1u!ff have €'xper. ll'/AUIO APCARE 6.12-4436 · To 1nPet the many requc>sts A<.'t'Ountlng .)Our·nuls & p·u r cha 11 c VASECl'OMY , PLUJ\IBING, ELECI'RJCAL, by agencies !or qualified GENERAL Equal opportunily Clllployer. jourti.'l.ls. '-1odcrnte · 1YPin& Confidential into r mat I on CARPENTRY. No job too en1ployces, \\'C are oU«.>ring r-.t/F skills. Ca.II Rita Johmon. rounseling &: referral. small. r & B Home Repair, a i;pecia\ night c I a r. s OFf1CE S.KJ..6055, Coastal Personnt'I APCARE, lncorp. A Non· IH2-l~03. IX'gl nnin.c: 14 J\fay. Call oow A!:f'tk'Y, 2790 l£arbar Blvd. ProfH Agoocy., 00?--4436. 1--~H~O~M=E~R~E=P=A~IR~-for qualifications intervic1\', \" 1 . f Asseniblel's Ct\t TC iavc un opening or ii SPJRITU,\L READER Carpentry, Plun1b!ng lirni lcd enro\lmcnt . biight, l'ncri, ·lie go.getter 60CH\KJ<.:EPEH 'CASHI ER Open 10 Ai\I to 10 PJ\I Electrical. Reas. 549-1004 Pacific Travel School to handle a<.'rol.lnts Pft.Yabl<> ASS£MQLY ,\ u to 111 o ti v e, lnunedla1e Advice on a.II matters. Haulinn 60S1 610 E . 17th St., ass ls tan<.'<', switchboard Of,l f'nlng . r~xce lleu1 312 N. El Camino Real • Santa Anai reliE-r and n1i.St:ellaneous TRAINEES oppor1unlly for right penion. San Clem<'nte. For appt. GET RID or UNSIGllTL\' 543-6655 typing and tiling, t.1Ust be Exc1·1l1'lll wlary nnd sJI Call 492--9034 492-9136 TRi\SH s.. DEBRIS $12 ACCREDITED BY NATTS an a<.'Cllt'!lle t y p l st, eon1pnny benefits. Call J\.11'lt. MASSAGE & SAUNA L OAD . COL L EGE preferably ~·ith stat typing H;iu s!!r . CONNE:LL ESTABLISHED !963 ex""rl<>nco, ...... Joa,... I Electronic assC'mbly o' CH''VRO'E~ 0'0 1~ Oean rOOnts, pleasant at-STUDENT 548-6428. ,.. wK.I ... "' .,, ~· .n<r QJOJ Tennis lnstrueUon year's p1>evlou11 g e n e r A I prepping e x P e r i e n cc 000 EPEl\'S A mosphere, TV & low1ge, YARD, garage cleanups, KKE s 11 n t · Call Donna at 963-1247 remove trees, dirt, ivy, Pri. & sen1i·pri. lessons on olfice experil'nce. Please prefem!d, but not abMlutely Part time. Hrs ncxible. 8839 Adants Ave, Hnu:. Bch. d r l v e ways, stumps. /rt;r:,u:;s· 673-6559 Bob apply: neceSll8J)'. Pleaseapply: Approx. 25 hrs wk. 10 key LIFE or DEATH: Let our 847-2666. Standard Standard addl'r cxper. nee. Phone •-,o=c=-c:c-cc--,,,---, ORGAN LEs.50NS F 0 R "''' "~~9 f lnlm t babiert live. For alternative11~10VING, Hauling. Exper. Beginners. at my horne. .,;,.........,.. or appo en. to ABORTION can LIFE Rel iable. Reasonable. Free 642_2936 Kim Clark-Memories, Inc. Memories, Inc. BOOKKEEPER par1 ttme LrNE 541-5522, 24 hrs. est. 832-T:iSl. I -'-"-""=''=~=~--,\ Subsidiary of A Subsidiary of lor accounting of1Jce, H. B. INEXPENSIVE 1117· 0 '" * PALf\1 &: CARD READER MOVING? Local furn. or APPLIED J\.I AGNE TICS APPLIED J\.1 AGNE T I CS area. -oilJ.- AD/REDUCTION. gen. hauling. 32 Ft. furn. S~·ILl~~NS CORP. CORP. BOYS & GIRLS 10831 BEACH BLVD. van. &t2-(635. 2221 S. Anne St. 2"111 S, Anne Stn'<'t Newspaper Olrrien. J\.fln. STANTON 527-3400 H~A~U~LlN~G~11~0-.~--u-p-. -.-.,-8-ge Santa Ana, Calif. 92704 Santa Ana , Calif. 927(}.l age l O. Lido ,Js(e, &!boa BETIY, R.N. Nur!le, 53, clean up moving, big flat Jrpll Ail equal 0 p port u n it y An equal 0 pp 0 rt u n it y Peninsula & Balboa Pbint. 5'7", 130 .. seeking sincere '6ecl 're~. 642-4032. 1""'°'11••t .l!!J employer eniployer Contacl r-.tr. Backstron1 al guy, s·10" +to date. , t'>f"'., 1 & h u1· b "l::::=:::::zzc: the DAILY PILOT or call 537-3194 (Club\ LA.A.Ai... mov ng a ing Y • 642-4321 &: leave application. student. l.arge truck. Reas. Job W•nted Mtle 7015 w·4 bi 'int .... .. REST l\IASSAGE IN .N.B. Barry 531-1235 Of ~ , .. ... BURGLAR Ala.rm inst.Uer. :woo Irvine Ave., Suite 103~,. MOVi NG .A HAULING ATTENTION! ~per. Send Resume to Open 8 AM, Mon, \Vcd, Fri., --· E ~ , c= I' O u~-\A~~ "-sia Mesa Ann. 557--0539. $10 & up e 96.":-6452 e :>.:pi'11ence<1 1n!ls 1 ri1·lvcr. 9i:626.,.,.... .....,, '-"" · out of ~'ftrk due to company WORRY & FEAR eliminated Hou1ecleainlng 6054 folding. r-.1en1ber TeamftC' 3 ACCOUNTS PAYABLE i:.·""-BUSINESS ?t1R1l8.ger ""'anted forever instantly. Ca 11 LocaJ 952. \Viii go ~1lh op-~ I for busy 7 doctor medical anytlmc. 541)..48.14 HOUSE OF CLEAN port._i.ily. lf you "'ant a CLERK , ore In Orange Co. P.1ust ha\'e Japane!IC boy wants to Jive-in Carpel8, ~lndo-...·s, floors, reliable man, (·all Rob a c 1 son1e supervisory exper &: wilh family in exchange for uphol. Special rates for reg. X-16-1677 an~·time. Re-;ponr.ihlr for n1atching f\1'coun1lng skills. Mrdlc1d !i'Ome M:irk. 5'18-3354 serv. 642~24• ritOTEL manager would like purt:hese orders w/pal·k'ing olc expt:'r. desired, but not STEMt Cleaning, deep nianage motel in area or slip & suppliers invoi<.°t'S . ~ PERSC>NNEJ.. I net1!ss. Starting salary $91JO. extraction, dry wichin 3 hrs, can relocate. Ref's. 6G-l'19l Typing an asset but not a CCD\llrE$•1'rr ... v-v SHXX> per CJll>, depending on I I~ sanitizes, Sat i .11 fa ction requiren1ent. Sa1ary $5.30-JlJ\Jll\.. ~~I qualif1\.·&tions. W·6G4<1. Set'Wlcts -~ . guar.557~4.2 or 646-3632. Sfi()(l, mo. Located In N.B., Asst ?ttgr/Retall S500 I career 'iiiiiiiiiiiii::Oii~I J"'•-n~it-0-,~ia~l----606=~3 Job Wanted, Fmale 7050 across from o .C. Airport. Inclus/~tecll Engr S13K I f\fedic.al & Surgical benefits Boat ~tech/Diesel $865 Baby1itting 6008 JANITOR serviet! for Comm NEED help al hgme? We fully pd Send resume to F/C Bookkeeper S800 I OppOftUn'1tieS have aides, nur.::es, hskprs, P.O. &x 1876, l\'el\'port Scc/dictaph/1.>011.~tr h> STJ(l I R·\BYSITrING 1 mo. to ~ 01.fl~ famil.Y O'A1led & .Ins. companions Jiomemakers F' Id Cl t Ad ' VI.JO Cl•••'"" servo c e _ ·,,,.<', 8c11C'h, Cn . 9'266.'l. 1 K' a nl!I JU1;tcr I yrs. love babies days my ,, • ~--.. Upjohn ~H .--... Trnc degI"('e to S7'1J home. BrookhursllAdams _586-c-'-liOS~-'-'-'----="' ~c1-e1 ~1·1c!'I to S700 I PRINTED CIRCUIT .--. t:xperil'nCN! R.X. desi!'<'s full time 963-3278. M•1onry 6070 ))()l>ltinn in Dr's offic~. cl ini..: I ln .. c.~r Clai~ns As.~1sl;1 nl , TECHNOLOGY Ysl~ING , 1---~------ur lndu:-<trial. 646-6-117 t U'C' & CasunHy to $700 I BAB '' .. ty lxime Brick, Block & Stone ,..,..,..,..,..,.,...,.., ... 1 __ ,_ ___ _,.., ___ Salrs Rep/l\ll'ti1 S700 .+ Ai.;~1-es.sivC' rasl gr o 11• l n g days. 646-4223 n1 ea Is -p,, .. ,,,ll/' .. DI' •~, o'"''"" c0, .. 1_ .. El.,,.,_,,,,· .... -· included. Call art 5 Pi\t, 6~5-8266 ACCOUNTING " """' " ,,.... " • ~~ ... v ~·· -p--·--•/~P-~-.---I \\'OR!\ FOR A AC.COUNTING MGR. J.\t'ypull<'h Opr 11) $56:1 llrm nl'C'ds dMicatcd ~Ir-Carpenter 6015 aint1,rw aper1ng 6073 SP!::Ct~\LJST :\l'f'trl1!' Clrrk $600 11\artr r to tx· part of a tean1 -~--------! Jo't>e Paul. Outstlfndini; finn l?t'Cl'[l!/lyp1.::1 $500 10 forn1 a ne11' dil'ision !or CA R P ENTRY . J\f aster Crallsman-remodeling & finish work guaranteed. FREE ESTI~1ATES . 499-3105 bef. l Oam/after 6 pm. PATIO-Covers & Decks Custom designed expertly bui:t. Free estimates '46-T:i9S 846'-949ii PAINJJNG s C' c k s account u n t Scey!'l/lift' sh h'l S600 new 11..'Chnology application. v.· /ins.urnncC' background. I Ci\LL TRISll JIOPKI NS Cet in on the ground fioor & BY GARY PIAZZA Temporary As1i9nments Available For Sulary to $14K. ,\l~ rrll j' JEl~RI \\'ll l'l,'Ei\!ORE ,JOin a "'inner. Jobs. Call Sally Hart. 4118 E. 17t h Sc tat lrvineJ 01 Manufacturing -54()..Q}55, Coastal ~nonnel Suite 224 642~1470 Engineer Agency, 2790 Harbor Bll/d, llJI, ..-JL;u ...-4 lllPV ! Responsible 51"1(-starter 'A'ith CJ\1 3-6 S"ear.; experience ln ACTORS/ACTRESSES AUTO LOT MAN P''"'°" c i"" i t type I 450 8fl ft of crptd, drpd, A/C / NEWPORT, C.Jrt, ARE.A i.osr: male, 4 yr old Golden I office gpaee: visible tt> 1600' to .S.00'.I' Retriever. Ans to name of I street tralfic. Ample pi.... Call &15-3941) Sam, Vic. Edln<>er & Tum Your Garage into a G T R I 9-~-1533 . ..,. nice 1' ... amlly Room. $850 up. Quttlity work mans hip, RI H ea ty t7 $125 UP, Slo1"5, OUices, Euclid, r .v . • Re 'A'B. rd 20 yrs exp. ~7637 eves reason. retes. Complete int. NEW Indl\1dual·alr cond 8t. bath, s.19-7777 GENERAL CARPENTRY & ext. painting. Free est. Experienced ~el *BOOKKEEPERS *KEYPUNCH OPRS FOR FURTHER INFO- CALL Company pnxlucing medical For one of Orange County's production. i\tust h a v e film needs men & ll.'Omen LR.11.'t'st Ford Dealerships. broad background \\'It h tor actors. No exp nee. Men Experience preferred. Ap. strength in plam lti.)"OUl. ages 30-40, \\'omen varied. ply In per50n to George Ray equipment, a u to m a t i o n technlques & return 011 Must be avail Friday A1ay 2060 HARBOR BLVD. investinent ex: pert is e . 10th. For audition call COSTA 1\lESA Degree desirable. / Plush office Bldg .. 2 lo 6 Rm 17301 Beach, llB, S42-2S34. LOST Boys junior Stingray, . CUSTOM FINISH \\!ORK 842-9(68. . , _ ] suites. Confet'Cnce rn1. Schy,·inn, 20" ttd w/chrome Small ,.. bs ok. 8!).H858 PAINTING &: Repair, 3.l yrs I Rental1 Wanted 4600 fe n.de .cs. Fnme No. w km bl Xerox copier. Near O.C. air-DJ5U011. Vic. Mesa "'oods. ADD. remodel, alter, frame or ans p guar. Take port. 8l~3640. BALBOA PENIN. H.eward. 979-5636. & orlices, finish stores, ~~7~ of my ex P IRVINE -airport area. Offlce 305 PALM. 1500 sq ft bldg. LOST brown Alla.Che case in homes. 962-1961. ~pace d45c ~r. 5'l 1fl&ln~l1· for lease, near the bay. parking lol or Safeway on Carpet Service 6016 Res~Ye~~l~r~~~~:~int-t'l'pls. rps, ,JaJUtor1a ull. $300/nio. PH: 67"'r3819 Fair v I e w Rd., c.til. ,~. ~tULLAN Rcnlly, 3400 Inine Firt'man & family. IM. yrly, Reward. &12-8686. JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstc•v ing. Ex:t.-Int. ~II or part. 540-2960 Dr! ShAmpoo, (Soi 1 Call Lyle, 642·1569, 6•16-831! 1 t . SPACE now 3~ BR. ~.un. rni. 2 BALO ST, Col lie , fem . Retardants). Degreasers & Int. & Ext. Paintin g. I. OITICE E C min. Huntington Bch area. Sable/Wht, 5 mo old, all color brighteners ,f.: 10 C~ntry Service. Acoustic available on ast oast Exe. per. & prof. refs. Reward. Vic; Downtown mm· "le bl•a•h fnr whi·1e ceihngs renainted. Work H"'Y· Corona dC'I l\Jar. 213-285-2937 Q>llect HB ,..,C,~,.;,. .... .. ,...... IRWIN & 1 R WIN ! • ~......,,., carpels. Save your money guar. Call 8.~ anytime ' REALTORS. &!Hill 1 or 2 BR furn. Su!>-let for 2 FND: Small black, 'A'hile, by saving me extra trips. PROF. painter honest \\'Ork or 3 summer mos. Prefer silver female dog wired \\rill clean living rm., dining reas. Int /ext . .' tree esUmate'. * WATERFRONT * Park Newport or Oakv."OOd studded collar. Vic, Los rm., & hall SIS. Any nn. Refs. 548-2759, 642-3913. Prime Newport Beal'h Joe. Gardens. (1) JZ-4579. AJ SI -• ~ 0 -$7 50 h n o Ch •-$5 •• ----~----amos ., "v .. ..uo-.nor>. . , l'OUC .,, . au . .w PROF U . l Executi ve offices w/lrplc., LOST German Sho rt ha 1 r yrs. exp. is what counts not . . wa covenng, 111:ate I wet bar. private bo lh. method, 1 do work myseU. lie. No, 279514. Insur, all 341 Bayside Dr., NB 6T';,-61ln lr:;:i Potnter, fen1, liver & white, Good ref. 531-0101. types paper. 714/842-4386. Bf~tEDJATE OCCUPANCY tin.neill .~ ~ti!~."~~ ;r:1,!tin, CARPET &: u ph 0 I 1 t e r y *Wallpaper H•nver * Office & Storage, 11pprox. LOST . Re"·ard! 4 mo. old cleaning_ Ftnest equip, Call C. Rebko 646-Ut9 ~. ~i~iy.'v&:~~·po;:I Buiiness Oppor 5005 .male German Shep pup. CT~l ~~ est. Dennla, Pla•ter/Reeeir 60n 536-3856 Harbor & 1st St, S. A. C Cl , PATCH PLASTERING AIC't11 J-~l't'de1;ck, Mgr. 714/835-4103 An equal oppor. employer ACCOUNTING KEYPUNCH OPERATORS IBM 129 \\'e have lmmediatf' re qu i rement for {2J qualified IBM 129 operatoni. Experience on llccumalator dcs!rahle. Excellent co. benefit s. Day shift, THE IRVINE CO. Please Call 1714 ) 644-3319 9Ai'1 'til Noon Equal Oppor. Employer 1 NE\V OFFICE . Two rooms Office Equipment 5.Jl -t:iSJ arpet eaning All types. Free estlmatee 15 x 15 and 10 x l2. All 20 yr. old location, ~ta ;\na l\fIN1ATUHE Pood~e: . Lost Floor Care & Windows Call 54G-6825 ACCOUNTING utilities paid $lOO per locaLlon Netted , l'1J 0 0 0 about two weeks. V1cm1ly ot Dutch ~taint. Serv. 537-1508 M & L PLASTERING & All "'ill train. No e~rlenet! "--• · 'f ' hfcFadden and Ed'A·M'ds. 60 8 """'Uired 11.ges 17 34 $326 month. v.11>ta J\.1esa ai:ea. average last 5 yrs. Asldng p<..A-e 897_7791 or 897--5852 Ceilings 1 types of plt\stering ·~... · • · 548-7729 or &IZ-8372 $50,0CIO. Inc I u ct es $35,0CIO ,.,,, · 646-69-19 per month lo !!lart. free OFFICE Suites, 2·~-<I iwnis, I invi'n1ory. Reul Estate RISO LOST clipped white .~1alte~ * \\'It.LARD PAINTING * I=,.--,--,-------,-,:: roo111 and board and zoc fool l770 Ol'l1,nge Ci\1 I al'allnble fOT' only $18,!XXJ. male 4/30. itature. Shag . Ne"' Acoustical Ceillngs + Plumbing . 6071 medical. Suitable' D.H, Dent ,' Ins.'. I Cal! 675-72'2.'>. Vic. Beacon &y. Reward. repairs. Df'Y\'·all & Wall CaU ARMY Recruiting R.E.' ""lm 61;>-8617 or 644-872'2 text, patch: plastering. No. L.R. OTtS PLUJ.1BING tH5-116J', Costa f\1esa ~~ ~10.,o "·'" ·-Remodels & Repain. Weter S FOUND -\Vhite German w .)". ,,,. ..... :iii:i. beate,.,, dls.......,"is, furnaces. ACCT /PAY CLERK 2 OFFICES, paneled, ba r, ,...,.,.... shower, carpels, interroni Shep. Female. Vic. BoL'U\ .Cement/Concrete 6019 dshwaahnr. 642-6263 ht/C&-Irvlnr boat mfg. de11ires 112-549 1 Chica & Edlngl'r. GayJ..c -BIA. Complete Plumbing knowll'dgcnblc AIP Clerk. pl'lone! !!yslem in. ;:i. l, <utL.n•"" o A" """'-9 CE'!ENT WORK J • 97"2880 Superior, NB, &16-0034 1 O'w-vt.11 or O'IV""'JV\l • " : < nve-Servic2 Lie. 2726M. . .,... I LOST 1 ...... al IriAh "·ays ,1idev.·alk11. parkwH.YS.I ;;;;;;:..,~.'i,:i::OO:"'-==~;:;,:=o=,====== NE\\' OFFICES l : ....... e m e patio slsb!I. South Coax I 1200 Qua ii SI. ?'l'wport Ileoch Seiter, Oevi:: V~1~ Servi(.'('s. l r:;:;::;;;;;:;;;:~;-:;~:-::;:--::~:-::;:;;-.:;;;;;;'1~ 644-:2223 Preci1lon Tool & Die Advertising Asst. AVON M1ch1n1s1 AID, fem, Live-in for a working f~m invalid . Salary +. ~8.)5, 53'9-T;iOO. All night Shift, full or part time, no exper. nee age 2;). 45, Appl Mr. Donut )3S E. 17th Si, cr-.t APT MGR \Van t ed .. Opportunity for co up 1 e . Husband for maint & repair, plumbing etc. Nice lla.lary. l blli fo ocean, HB. Pool. 213-4.13-5424 or 960-2508. -APPRENTICE Live In J)Ol!ltlon. ShRtfe.r Laguna Bedch Monuary. 494·1535, 491·1835. MEDICAL Front ore & Ncept. exp'd only, mature. Type 60. Use Dictn.pl\l)ile, Hrs. 9-6, r.1on-Fri., H.B. 847-8585. ARTIST Say1 • , • ~fin. 3 years experiel'IC<' in P VT SOf\1E ZING prccl<iion machine 11t'Orir. INTO SPRrNG \1rith high dl'gree or sl<W 1n Del'ora1e your house or buy u~e of 11. v.•ide va,rlerv of machinl' tools. r.h11>1 be· able ne"' clothes -...·/the 111011ey you earn selling A\•on to make llet·up & jigx. A Pror:luC'ts. Flexible hrs. in self--slartcr that can work Call wllh R &. 0 pen;onnel .lron1 your oivn neight1!,2rhoorJ . \'t"rtlal ot• min. direction. 5-Kl-i04l. '· Buye r BABYSITTING & 1 J t e J aek Of all trades, buyer hou k · 9 Id 1 1 tamUiar vdth the Printed se eeprng, yro gr, Circuit Fabr ication my home, Mon-Fri, mature lnclustry_ Supplies & person, own trans, 2-6pm, equipmert h8.s exceUent longer hrs dW"ing summer, 111:art up opportUnily. II you tluntlngton Harbor, 846-3677. like to run fast in a new BABYSliI'lNG & I I t e t e c h nology ,atmosphere, h ousckeeping, Sumel/i'IB you'll wanl lo send in your area, l child, ~ton-Fri. 2:::,0 resume. until early eves, Sat d:iys, Planner $50 wk, 592-1430 & SSl-1510 A br1ght ~enu oriented BABYSITTF:R, 111 at u re plRnner with a flare [or \\'(•n1cn 10 sll son1e e11e11 & project & pnxluction system \\'Ct'k<>nds rail Conn I e, planni~. With 2-3 ymrs 5-18-3958 experienre is needed. The candidate i;hOalr:I h!l\1! a degree in bu st n<ii111 adminl~trallon or an active pun:ull of the il.Ul1e. BABYSI'ITEJ{, 2 ('hildrtn, nty ho1nt, 1nus1 haw own h1u1s, c~ll aft G wkda,ys, f{if,..00.18 BABY-s~1TT=E~R~w-1_u_H_l'd~,-or~9 ' 1nC1. old girl. C~i are11 . I Tf you'r1· 1)1~1· n1an. ~nd your Cr1111ac1 ~1n. St r Jc k 11 n I resun11' 11·11h !(11\111')• .V Job Local firm needs llrtlst 645-5791 hiSlory 10 Clas..<>ified Ad No. wl11trong graphi cs &: • r: I :-12, In C'arc of Dally Piiot rendering. ·Some drafting BABYSmER. Care of " yr P.O. Box 1560, CoslA J\.fcsu, helpful. Coll<.>ge grad JII'Cf'd . old boy. 5 dys ,vk. for C'l.llf. 92626 Please bring ix>rtfolio. Start ~g~l~n~,~~rll~ area. ~c'"A"S"H°"l"E'"R;i----t-o-,$"5007' $4 hr + depending on cxper. I iiiOiiiOiiiiOiiOiiiOiiiOiiiiiiiOiiim Fee Paid. Grtat spol 10 use \ O>mm 'J Brokce; "33'393 1 RUSTIC RESTAURANT = * 673-9006 * ~-ST AR GAZEK• .. ., I DARK Rm, shower wt lobc2·11 ExC'ltlng, channJng, profit-LOST blll.Clt & tan dachsbund CONCRETE Pattos. Patio lly CL\Y It. l'OLUN . ltorap Kar att. 165 2 nble. Beer-Wine lie .. Prime Covers. Quality work. Reas. J:.. You• Otrilr .4tfiWIJtGw;,/• ~ N~rt Blvd C~f W-9766 Ntv.l)t'lrt O<:h. 11re1t. $56,0CIO. !;~,!!!1•1 FvlcV. ""'-r!:n & U censerl. 642-8514. .4u.,,i1, .. 9 '" '"• siort. 1617 WESTCLIFF7NB-Cole ol Newport .,.._,...,. 8 • ' • -.r'""""' drlve8t To d,v,lop m''\ogc-k>r Mo"<!oy, 545 fiq ft & UP 541.·i1r:~ ftealtors LOST: \Vhtte Germ. Shep., ~~~~tJo, aaw le ·~~yotK~~=,~~~tolMri>t•' Call F.d Wolf, ~. BANKINC your PR Ir malh. No typing. Qxu!al Pel'90!U1<!1 Agency, UNION B •NK AJ., F"' """Ilion" Call 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM " Conlrol Carctr Employment l laa An Opcninsi: ror A Agcn1..'Y, ~. 3 4 O O TELLER Irvin< Blvd, N.B. ASSEMBLERS - --~ 675.5511 fem., 4 yn, Vie. Westside F 1 "" -61 ,_. Business Rental 4450 _ C.M. Reward 646--3798 remove. ree ts·~ ~~-~i~~u..ii'"'1 ·61v;;"' · 1· NOW LEASING ATTENTION ~ plant lovers, LOST arey/whlte k>ng hatred Contractor -6021 ~= flf,:'~,ion :!~~ :n.25-4'. In terior designmi, h 11. i r altered male CAT Vlc. s. { 1 5 111 JSAI•" &\Caotle Mew Verde Or. Plat• 1 F.tyhsls, <'I.e ...• PresUg , , ................ """" .TJ)ck Taultihe, pa o s . •S•o• kl'topll Mworo+,..i.11. S6-lf.79. ...... ~ ...... 'I~ rt'mOO add I IC B"I 260072 1/>M l1f.u •1 ~ SAl<TT.Ul\IS 1525 l\R.'U V~rde l)r. L<1:.l. I lot'llt~n. ~or~~ lnlo: C8 11 FOUND Dog-mWI blk & r.tv \"i-'ly eo: &u.:41til ' IYWU 310..-~l-· liO'f. 11 J Iden.I for Rtlt!~ron1. Llnuor. &Kl-1310 from 1().5 Suncia.ys wht iemer Male Sth & KARL K~NOALL Gen Contr. 1:~ :~&'Otl• ~~~ oK." 1f?i Dru~ Slore, ;xt'Vlcc Shol"'. t:81l (i.lfp:;oo;), _ 1-1 bo SA· 5Jl"667o 11 f•c •""ll •• 1u n To •·29..11-40 & Deluxe Office SJ><ll't'. ll1''-AI T l-l 1''00DS tlt r, · · RtsldeOCC! & Comn1ercht.1 110! ''°"" 11s,_,.,,., 6l-n c,11 :)1:"1"'1123 n i~AuTlft;L COUNmY FOUND -Dog, tmJ. Blk & * 5@-1537 * t~ti= :1~l"11n<1 ~!~ TOP i.OCATION·F.. 171 h STOllE. NEW P ORT wht morklnflll. 4·6 mofJOJd. Electric.al 6032 a~1otot !!~ ~!e--• Sr, C'\I . 720 SQ. rt. ,\cro:..<1 H~-ACll. 673-3409 nl'fl1" if{lrnl!ton, CM 642·1966 17Wct.... ,,,, n 111.., ltom &ircwfty, Th r t f t y, BJ-.AtiTI" ~hop for ~":ile. 300 J-"OUND; 1'1in. Brwn Doxie. £1.EC'I'RlCIAN Ucen~li;i:il!'l!ollJ~ :i~ ;tr;·-?:~' Alphn ~1n r. o -...· 11 c r , \\" Coost Jiii')", N'r""'JlOrt Red collar. Vic. Bayside Dr. ~~Int~~ .. · l~.m:M_5~~· ~~... ~~ ri~ r,.;.q .... ~1 1. }.\·rs ,,1~. I U":u·h, 61:!--0 . .,.11 or >l!).~9907. 644--li644 Oui~. 12 ""°""'°.. ~1"""°'' &2 .....,_.. A1TR..\C. Mon & t..o""tl•1n. I lnvUiOpport'Y-5015 LOST 1nnle orange ttaa-cat. Furniture 6041 }!e::"' ~!~~od<GI :!~:: ~l corner l?X.f!OtiUR! on 4/28, Vic. S1 n Rt:n10, B n..i '"'' s~o-bu't>' 1tn!ool, CM. U!iO sq. ft. i MUST SELLI Laguna 111111. 8JG..J45l. R~lr • Reiitore Now! Res!·~~~:!', .. !=!".-! ~~!'.t~i. i'~ 1t~*'t ~ .. ~ .... 11\lft• ~~11 , t~ t>u1l11•)1et S1nt1 Ana. ~,D : Ap/~ To~ f~j .. !tl~.1111~~"!..i:~bll~ ... .i, ~ J.llC. u ~= ~~ ::=., t\W ~· ~'rct Pf'r tl\O. \llllu $72l\l rvuwe, 'A' ta~...... "' '~ ut.'ll ............ ,..,,l,;.llU UIJI • un. II JOCNidtWI .OG.od '°'~ LEASE %100 sq ft.:RJ !t tron· UI •rt•~ price $63?of t'OllAr, lt.B. I.JU. 540-<!5&1. E•wd1 • largtil kilt '!_Oaldl .ll Wel~~~~~=-'°'~~G..r==·~Y'~;=.IJ~.-.="'=~'°'~'~{~~f,~.t~~~~~ ••-nNr N~--rt Beach $12M Cash tlCf!ded ...... -1n-.1 Adi Call 64).6678 st mate, P c tp 111 e \.'tt. ,..,.,.fl .• \9J \l.- p:,j OllJCt'. 6<2:iJ>. • 6'<" '" 5.13-71120 "t';;i' !1;7-6900,' 9!ll-430S -~-----~~- • • ' - ' Four day vrork \\'eek, 10 hnJ per day, 6 A.M. to 4:Xl P.M. Expclicnce helpful. but noc nettssnry. $2.00 per hour, good bcnelltS. Apply In per1011. PRIMARK PRODUCTS CO. ~~ S. Susan Santa Ana, Cullf., <Bct .... ~n Jlarbor & Fain.1ow. Soulh or Warnerl An eqUAI oriportunlty Employer mil ASSF:MBLEJtS P r ecl1lun olro-m~h. uttmbly. Requires: Strona m e eh . aptitudt. Assembly o r machine: shop e x p tr • helpM.' CM. - -I • •• E.xpcr. de s irabl e . C.ood appearnnce. Xln't -...'Orklng cond illons. For Jnt~iew Appoinln1cnt Call Dol111 Mltcht!'ll SM-!o280 Equnl Oppor. Employtr BARTENDER Experienced. I'll,¥ &<.'cording to ability. CASHIER HOSTESS Non student. \Viii train bUI prtf, c:<per. Apply bctwn 2::tl & 4::.lpm, lltllt'lbtlf'l:!'r llamlet, 15"5 Adnmis Ave., CM. Alli< for i\tr , 1111~"· T'um }'Olll" 1011 clubs lnlo 11· 11t't'CO. Sell lhml 'f"ilh 11nd u~ tha money for a stereo! Olli &U-5678 Today. a Dall)' Pl.lot Cl•.sslfled A'1 Clerical Ttmpomry * Secretaries *Typists * General Clerk• * Accounting Clerks Top ?11.~ Jobs For T Sklll!I'. \\lork A Day, A Wttk Or Lon,q: Term. C111l Us Today! Sell kll" l!t:ms w1th & 011Dy Pilot C1n51ffied Ml. iC-6678 Bi\l-p1ytn1 time? sen ''Don't n()f!d-'" fMt and f!ll!Q' with a o.1(y Pilot OUBl!li!d Adi ' . ~ Hel Hel \'11ri •• o"' ind I of l'X 1101( nliil !lo vnr '" a/\d ~l'O oon oUe * Ap Eq E• ,,,1 "' N la ' h & 0 • ' c c B '. ~ • 1-w;;;;:w:::;;;:;;-un..:;;;;;:r.:;.~~=-r:===--------..,.....,.,..,,.......,.,....,......,.....r.;==,.,..,.....,.,,.....,...,...,=.,...=,....,.;.·:,...=-o-..,...=""="""'="""':r~-.-r=..;su«1 ... May 5, 1914 DAIL y PILOT D J l ~ Help Wonted, M&F 7100Help Wonted, M&F 7100 Help Wonted, MiF 7100Help Wonted, M&F 7100 Help Wonted, M&F7100 1 Help W1nted; M&F-7100 Help w o nted, M&F 7100 Help W •nted, M&F 71 00 D I • S Help Wonted, M&F 7100 e 1very unday Only .. IV\NDYMAN for Uahline -• GENE.RA.I~ FUclure Co. Some elf'("tlciJ OF DAILY PILOT T O CARRIERS. RE-DRAPERY la Id' r. no FACTORY CAREER & )<"11°'1"1 c' P" I' '° < QUIRES TH , U rxpcrlence ne<..>e!illary. 1618 nt-l't~ry. Contact t h,. E SE OF A LARGE STA· Olnts Way, C..ln M.... OPPORTUNITIES \\'ood U•htlog l'Mut't' Co. T10N wAcoN oil VAN. coNTAcr MR. Hughes Hel"icopters c.·. P•y All F"' ,'Ill, South ""'' M.;, st. BENTON WILLIA MS 330 WEST BAY DRIVERS tn•lne ""'""'"Soll & ; pm. STREE'r, COS'l'A NESA. 1'ELEPHONE Cro11s-Coun1ry. No lpt'cla1 l\fond11.y thru Thursda)'. 6424321 t'OR APPOINTMENT. :~·~~ ~;";!,,MPIY bet•~ 100% FREE HELP ll'ANTED o FULL OR E M acGregor Yacht Corp I-las lm1nediate Requ irements 1'~or 1\: PART·Tll\·tE. An qu1I Opportunity Employer 1631 Placentia, Costa rilcsa. SECRETARY $675 • tn41 OOJ.-1415 • H I W d 7 H I W t d M&F 7100 STATIONARY ENGINEER E.ngin exp l)'f'C 10 Nto sh Tn'I HOSTF.SS IP anti 1 M&F 100 e P an 1 ' ELECTRONICS co \'nricty .\dvan1.'t For PAR'T Tli\IE \l.'EEKENDS. e COOl\S ' \'t•rsa1 U~ gal Y:ho lo\'eli \\'ill train, conta<"t Dave .a.t CLEIUCAI. ACCOUNTING CLERK Varian Datil l\tnchillC'I\ has Rn lmmcdi1ue opening ln our Aecounling a1'C1t for an indi\'idUnl with Ii n1inir11un1 of 2 yeara R:encrttl offk'C l'Xpcrienc>e. You nllltit I~ alJle lo use ll ll}.key adding nu1.chine and a t~k"uhtlOI', 110 light lypini: and .:?11joy a \'Arlety of duties. If you n\ft•t t11rse qualification.~ ;uid v.·ou\d like to join 11 gt'OV.'ing Oru.ngf' Co u 11 t y con1puter L"On1puny lhut olfl"rs: e \l.:AtTHESS~:s * * * · to keep busy. Call! Cbarlles Chll.i, 6T.:r7991 e 110:..1·E.SSl':S H" h p SECR_ETARY $750 HOUSKEEPER n«dctl. Lh·e ti('l' l\lr. Quinn, 3 to 5 ?-.Ion 19 ressure . in or out. T11 ke C'Bl'e of 1\1.'0 tht-u 1"1·!.. ASSEMBLY ~lfg exp 2 .~,.s n1:n. Top T)ye i boys, 9 .v 7 ytars of a~ft> LORENZO'S &: sh skills. Ne'v position Private room, TV. etc. Call :not E. Edinger AVe funiou~ 1 1~111"., 1,.'0. Creal dDyio 5')6...252·1 and eves S.'11lta Ana, 113>r.;T7 TRAINEES Three years boiler experience \\'ith license pote'!tial. NO\\· 968-9386 ask for Toni. COOK required. Air conditioning, background a plus. SECRETARY $600 JIOUSEKEEPER paM lime, \\'ill ttnin. No e.xpericnre V . Da •t ... h ?tlust be willing lo YlOrk any shift .. Military .or 1'ype 65, sh 90. Assist Ole over .xi, JiJ:ht invalid care, required. Ages 17-34. $326 annn ta 11 il'<l "M:s as civilian experience \\'ill be considered. nq;r be rect"ptionist Learo Ne .... 'Jl(lrt Beach 61.>-1363 pt_•\' ntOnlh IO start. Free several opt'n~ng11 ~or loan processing e.an~· HOUSEWlVES. ?i.1011I ERS rooin and board • and Assembl~r Tr a 1 nee s m-Excellent Rates and Benefits $SSO as part Ume ma 1 cl 5 • nit'<lical. terested 1n. becoming a part 3 SECRETARY Flexible hrs. Call Ne .... -port Call A!UilY Recruiting of the exciting computer In-Please apply in person or call 870-3 61 , exl. Reeeptionlsl to pre&. & J Oiannel Inn, 6030 \V. Coast 6.tJ...1163 Costa !\.1esn dustry. You must be ln good 7861 , ?t1r. Soderquist in our Culver City Em-VP' a Lile d1uties phone11 H........ N.B. Ask (o r • health and haW: good rt ·-ar -•e "' COOK TRAINEE Ployment Office. \\7eekdays 8A~1 to Noon and repo s .... ve '" n g · houseke-e-r, 64:.!·3030. • eyesight lcorrecti~ lenses Employee social club ln'l I ;i;iiiiiiiiiii.-iii.iiiiiiiiiiii ... J Salury ncL'Ording to e.xp. acceptablel and. must haw 1·5PM. \Vork·site is located in Long Beach. co. A super job! No .... ·! ,I' !»~for no '1udeots. E•per. m•nu•I dexterity. The abll> INSURANCE SALES prerd., but "'ill lt'.iin. Apply ty to read and wTite legibly H h H 1• t LEGAL SECY $750 bcl\\'een 2:30 I 4:30 pm . and knowledge or simple ug es e 1cop er 5 Yrs. leg l'xp. litigatkin II b II I ! "" 'th u bl h No exn nee .. earn \\'hlle )~U ·am ugcr -:un et. .... a an me e pro ems sue as Beautiful ofc's \.'C"" nice ,.. • c k d · 1 ""'' I 1 '3 team, pnrt tin1e. e\'e~ & .. t1a.n1s, J.1. As for !\tr. ec1ma 1 ''·"" r a e t on s bolss, top skills Future~ II If t C I \\'knds. full tinie \\hen quali· · ugen. necesSRry. you 1nee Di'l:ision of Summa orporat on COUNTE:R }IELP \\rANTED 1hese qualllleations and are 11940 w. Jefferson Blvd. I LEGAL SECY $675 r!::'1~1ers lnsuran~c Group NOW HIRING .CASHIERS & SALES PEOPLE For plumbing dept., e lectrica l dept., hard. ware dept., lumber dept., & maintenance personnel. All company benefits + medical & hospitelization. See Mr. Anderson on May 6th & 7th from 9 to 11 & 1 to 4. Ward & Harrington Lumber Co. 1275 Bristol St, Costa Mesa *Competitive Pay *Excellent Benefits ·*Modern Facilities Busic kJiowlcd"(' of se\\'ing. looking for a pot;itlon v.'ith • C 1•1 , 90lJO 2 Vn exp gen'\ Inv.• Typl' W E'.d , "n•' * •M_18.,1 • 0•" cow I -n•n Culver City, a 1 orn1a 1 01 ,, -..,... ..,.rv ,, E:o.p. pl-efert'Clt cit )' un .. nge 1 )' '-" ,,any !'tenoi;e!le. Love y e's .,y I;:::::::::::::==: Ch:1u1c rs 49.J-\jJB that oUe.rs: U.S. Citizenship l~equi rcd o.c. ,\lrpo11. 1-lurry! )i --" l""""""""""""""""""""""""-""""""'"'"""'""''"I COUNTER CIItL. 2 * Competitive Pay Equal Opportunity r:1nployer 1n1 f MTST OPER $600 11~~:s 071~~\ZI:o~~ · .n8.Lu;.aJ Help Wiinted, M&F 7100 I Help Wanted. M&F 7100 c:o.pcr!c11ceil girls needed for * Ex•ellent b1n1fllt Ch t I I I I , ~!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!'!l!!!ll!!l!l!ll!!!!l!!!!!!!IJ!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!~[!!!' ancc o earn c ga ability in raring for people • MEDICAL t:lcrinel's. 644-0932 between * Modern fo•llo't'oes t · I T -b O C ~-.. . --crm1no ogy op "" Y • • ha.."> tot->cn operlooke<l 8·12 a.111. Help W •nted, M&.F 7100 Help W a nted, M&F 7100 Airport Rapid ac c ur DON'T o\rERLOOK US!! MACHINISTS Employer R1 tain1d Apply in person or L'Onlnct: B. Krurke t714J 833-2400, ext. :;JU COUNTER HELP. 1''emale Reply in person or contact: :.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, understnnd n1achines Call! \rE NEED \'OU!~ In Physicians Offices over 21. Full or part-time B Kralka • EXPER Chrislian couple, J'Practical Nurses Ins bi-lin/SpAn to $6"'all days. 546-79.15 (Tiil 833-. 2400, ~·1. ·~ (4) I desires sinall co 1npl ex PERSONNEL $600 ./Nurse Aides WHY NOT7 Bk otc bi·lin/Span to $650 ~ """ ~~~7~o011ent Position · 2 Yrs exp req'd Even1hlng . • Scrub teeh It type $600 VDM Varian Data Machines COULD you use extra $35-$50 .,...,.., ., invo\\'ed \\'/claims Salety ! IConvales. A1de1 Fi'Ont Off ice to $550 :!;1 .~:t!\.l~~-e~ei ~~f. VOM ELECTRICIANS j FINANCE MGR Reports Intervi~\\in.g etc ./Visiting Housemothers CHECK OUR RATES R.N. p/thne hrly 10 s.t.!JO Z1Z2 ?i>lichcll;on Drive Irvine, Calif. 9'21364 Equal Opportunity I:::mployer !\l/F , Fee Paid. Due to the gro .... i.h Type 60 easy going V .... ·ell ./New Infant Care AND BENEFITS MEDI SEARCH •~Ut!:~~ ::3C: ~r=. Varian Data I NEEDED of this ro. they need groomed lrg co Advaoce \\'e offer you an oiJflOMw\ily * * Experie nced A Professional Agency 1 Salary &: apt . No h• sucees.<>ful manager to step F/C BKKPR $900 to do something special in MACHINISTS Stc235 18662 MneArthur . .Mac 1nes in .i.: n1a11age branch. Salary the hon1e health care field. Irvine 833-3331 child/pets. (ZlJ) 9-t9-7737. 2722 Mlcheli;on Ori\'e to $14K. AlS!) fee J obs. call Acctng exp. Excell ref. Fin Give us an opportW1ity to O.ERICAL CUSTOMER SERVICE CLERK Irvine, Calif. 9266'1 IMMEDIATELY Ed \\'oH. ~. Coastal stmts: Rare Oppor. r o1· top discuss our program with & I 'c1'SQnnl:!I Agent")', 2 7 9 O experience yoo. All "'ages pa.id weekly. Immed. op en Ing s for Equal Qppor. Employer n1 f VOLT 1 llurbor lil,·d. Otl F/C BKKPR $900 Apply Tues Wed Thurs Fri CREDIT CHECKERS MACHINE OPERATORS Type NJlcs ordl'rs 1:1 n cl quotations, operating tele· fax, T\VX 11nd ditto 1nachine. So nte telephone oon1act. Ex~llent ll'ingC ~nefits und salnl'y. LEAR SIEGLER TRANSPORT DYNAMICS ~131 \\I. St>ge1'1ilron1 individuals "'/lite typingl-:z=::::=:=i::z=:;: ----8:J0.12:30 & 1:30-4:30 skill!; to v.'Ol'k in leasi.ogl • -• Instant Personnel -FOOD-SERVICE Cons11-uction exp only Heavy HOMEMAKERS division. ELECTRONIC i\'li1,iol' l\ledit'al Plan P:11'I lin1c. ca. ... hier & \'Olu1ne As.~isl Con troller. UPJOHN .for Appt Contact , l\o"· Available \\a ilrr ~~ ~il 1uns opt>n. Top Company! 1 Carol Smith 1l'1nix.irary &1'\•lec !!rs. 11.;\~I tu :; J',\I, ;\Ion BKKPR "'SO N 32.0 "'· ~la<.-ent~~ "".,. ASSEMBLERS · 3SIB C11.u1pus lJr .. Suite JOG l111\1 ~·d., ~lu rting .~alary ~ ~rt Beac ~i 644-5800 · Neii• ...... rt Uuach :il&-414_1 1 ~~.:.U hr. Cont1:H'l H.ubcn ' Thru T rial Bal I-Ivy A/P (£ntra!"Ce o;irner of 1\\'CO i"inancial Service ,~ I LlanDs, "l Pacific l\lulutdt·eredil , Golleoet. __....Ge~" ---~lli'tntia & } .l.!!8Shl~) 0 lo E<1u11I UIJJJOI'. 1':1n plO)t'I' ,__. Lqual ppor. En1p~ yer . ========== 1:;1r1i)loyccs Catetel'ia. 700 • l..t><lgcr. Future! NO\V! ,\i;:;c1 nbll·1·., nC'<'<!l'd 11 l '( !\e\\·puii Cent er Dr. l'ashiun 1 * JANITOR · * l~i·d ~ ~hll'1:~1~!: .c~,~i'. L.11;1111.-cri ng F1-ec J oi>s : tsll . or c<i ll 6 ·I ·1 -7 7 6 I PBX OPER $600 For animal ho· s p It a I Data Proces1lng SOn1c 11 .Jncu pui-:111011s .u1 ~1. PROJECT M.E to $19M . ;.vytinie betivn g Al\t & 4 Gorgeous neY.' bldg. hvine 2 Ne\\'P<)rt. Days !\.1-F. Call EAM OPERATOR Pennancnl cn1plo~n1cnl Ill . .. • . ,' . I pt,1. ~l·f. Position board . Exper only. 64<1·5460 Bel\o\'Tl 9-5. o-nmg· exisls in l'\ewnnrt pleasrult SUl'l'OUll<llu,t;s. I \i Ill• :u1.aJ tllfl di\· 01.n1al?r --Famous nanie co. •-•-~,.-. .... 1.i..µd 1n 1nci 1 FRY COOK JUG 'N Gavel Re&taurant lk>ach hased fi nancial co. <l E • for r:MI op f' r a 1 o r Call 1'\r ,\,.fil . l pnxlu~·t cv.. I. , spec. l::x1.l<!r. 1"uU, p1thne BONDS $800 now hiring "-'ail.resses, bus i·xrierienced in the following ln<lust1•i;1I 1:1..1a1ions u1ach y. ~ti1bll" AAA-1 f1rn1 . Surf & Sirloin Commercial acc:ts ex P er bo)'l, help .U cocktail 161'1 e.iuipment. 00, osg, (714) 494-9401 I 0,R~FTSMAN . $866 ! 5930 \\'. Coast H."'Y·· NB Type 50, gd bond exper. All lounfe. 14100 Beach Blvd, ::il.f.. Kno.,.,·ledge of "-"nel Exp d l'lec. design. LoL"ai 1 F-ULL . ·al 211 35 co ben & F'uture! Westn1insler. Apply in ,.... uu1JOI' fim1. Co pd benefits. I unie " trcs,s. 0 person. "'iring helpful, but not TELONIC ,\lso Fee Jobs ~ old. Apply in ~FSO~n CAS RATER $650 .......... iiiiiiOiiOiiiOiii-· mandaton.•. Pl ease sub1nit • Go-'-a ler l pm Wed thru Jon El KEYPUNCH OPR ., INDUSTRIES ,.ngu,; l uun • · "'-aut;fuI Fash Island co 0 resume w/nx-ent salary Personnel ,\"'el""' Nigu~ Country Oub 2J700 Pt: Equa l J)portunity rn111loyer history to: "-33:.1 £. 11tl1 si.'.'tni'i3l5 Club House Dr., Laguna needs exp. Comm Casualty Data Process. Part-ti.me !1.1/F' Carol Smith Laguna Beach ~ :::"'·"':.•:J.t::""'i::::::oo.<;::::"":1 Niguel. raea1'1,er-auto Opportunit)'! 4-7 Daily I Nc11r Jh1rbClr & \\'nrncr ~ Sanl11 Ann ~ CLERK TYPIST CLERICAL I Avco F inancial Services Equal Oppor. Einployer Engineerin.; dept, f/time \VIII lnin No expc"rienct 620 Ne.,.,1X111 Clr Dr. I -:======== -* GARDENER * PERSONAL LINES $750 CLA-VAL CO. re<JUtred. '1A&"t~ 11•34. •$l26 Ne~·port Beach, Calif. 925l'..OI • ESCROW OFCR Bl! your O"-'Tl boss! Part or l'\e.,.,, ofc ltvine Personal J'l('r nionlh 10 :.;t.arl. ri·ee , J::quul Oppor. Einployf'r ELECTRONIC lmn1ediate opening. Expel'. I f/lime. Your 0\.\'11. area. lines exp pUlS you in 17th &: Pla1.-entia, Cl\t room and Uoanl and In sale & loan escro1\S. High Tncon1e. Guaranteed charge! Lovely p e 0 P 1 e ! Exper. req 'd, xln't .benefits, ·-'I I DA\'. "'OllKER Thurs or ASSEMBLER \\'ork in Sa nla Ana. Cuslon1ers. Earn Now. Pa)' llome owners pkg. Now! Free life & med in11. Paid llltv ca . • Call Mrs. Sc:h\\·er Later. absence & vacations. Profit Call 1\R:'-1\" Re<"ruiling fr!., l\tust be exp'd, SJ. hr. T d & Th sd K sharing. Equal 0 p p o r. lil:O.-llti.'\. co~tu ,\lrS<t 213-592-~.!9 Prefer exreriencc but \\•Ill ucs a§'rg...360() W" ay SJ4.7187 or 534-3144 CLAIMS EXAM $12 ___ • , 1 1 train. Sn1all Co111pany \o\'ith . ,...,,,.._...,...,..,,..,,,,,.., 12 yr.; exp .,.,·/oomp perin . emplo)'er. CLERK TYPIST DF.Ll\o:~R\ n1a11 or ear y pleasant sutTOW1dlngs. Near !\Ion, \Ved & Fridays GARDENER disability. E \"el'Y other Fri · I /\l\I l u11cs roule, Ad~lts the Ocean. in Ncv.•port (213) ~o--0203 of.f. Super co. Call! LABORER for ronslnlction job, exp with brick & block nee call aft 7, 644·7895. only. l\lu~t ha\'e et."O!lOmlcal Beach. Apply at ?':-Z\\'PORT Newpor t er Inn needs h1rge office in Coslll ;\ll'sa. ~heiw:i.e. n o collecung. 507 Superior. 5-18-26:!2. Exper. Fu11-time NO PHONE CA LL S Prestige firm needs e.xp 2nd Shift 3-ll Pti.t lOc Shift 'Premiun\. 3rd Shift 11-7 Al\1 • 30c'-Shttt-Premimn * \\'orl< 71 ~ flours Paid 1'-or 8 !:lours *MILLS *ENGINE & TURRET LATHE *GRINDERS *HONES * CHUCKERS * N /C DRILLS & MILLS P/Tin1e & Summer Openings \\'e are a v.·eJI established non W'lion company 1vith a history of NO LA YO ITS. EXCELLENT COti.tPM'Y PAID BENEFITS Apply In Person Monday thru Friday 8 :30AM 'til 4:30PM -SATURDAY INTERVIEWS NN'd n1<1lu1'C "·on1an fnr l ea1:-. ~ ¥ hn1 daily .. No !i.fARil\"E, 10 R.m.-4 p.1n. E SCROW OFFICE-R gardener for perm. position. LOAN CLOSER $700 •fu!fl be able 10 I)'""' \\t>slmtnster &. Hunt. Beh l !!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!""" S-urt'ly p-,·1,·,;; PLEASE Apply In person .d •• •·~ '-"~o <V>'>A -... "" ...... 7 3 ""' F Cl F H A -V A -c onven-res1 . (cl~lrie), use 10 key addini.: at'l'as . .,,,.,...."'"'''• ELECTRONIC k """'wn . or ay d I N.tlon.I • ·n Eu,·, 1107 Jambo-Rd Drawing rafts unding can machine, file, 11 n s \\'er e DELIVERY e _,.,..,,NICIAJN -'" ' 1 CA.on 550 N rt Ctr D NB N B become fwxling ofcr LAW ENFORCEMENT will train. No experience required. Ages 17-34. $326 Mar. 4th, 9AM-12 noon ~~:~~to t!a~· ~ BERTEA phones etc. J.lu.st bi• :iblc to l\Jco na"<icd 10 carry Will train. No experience ewpo r. 1 • • work an 0t"Cfl11_aon~1 clf1)' on nKJrning LA Times auto required. Ages 17·34. $326 6-W--OUJ, ext 265 "GARDENER the .... ·eekend. E .x c .e 11e.n 1 1• 0 u t e. H .B. Need per month to start. Free Equal Oppor. Employer ~pany ~nef11s. UICl~1ng dependable car. 2 1 hrs per room and board and Executive Secretarv paid ".1-catKJn, paid medical 1norning. $2--IO. per mo. ml"dical 1 J Full time. lmmed. Openlng. -Apply In Per.t0n HILTON INN I: retiren1ent .P ~ o g r a m . S1i--8979. Call ARJ,fY Reerultin& Opportun111es for . adYB.neetnent. PleMC "-'rile DEL IV E RY Man for &k>-U63 Oassilied ad No. 150, Daily upplian<:es. & TV. Heavy Costa 1'1esa Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Costa hning req d. Steady "'Or~. ELECTRONIC !\tesa. Calif. !121U6. DAV IS-BRO\V'N C0 .. 4ll E. ASSEMBLERS CLER l\. TY I' I S T TO l 7th St, C.!\.1. Sofdcring req'd. Day shift. to the President of this LAGUNA HILLS dyMn1ic firm. J\1ust possess 252Xl5 La Paz Rd . all the l'f'fined skills. in· iiii..iiLaiiguno~i.iliililiii'ii'.iCaiii;;iiiii GENERAL LABORERS !!.Q CHARGE TO YOU g33.9no * 100% FREE Cash Personnel Agency 4019 \\'esterly, N.B. No. 201 Pease Call For Directions Call ARJ\1Y &ec.ruitil\I 64TU63, Costa Mesa CORPORATION LEADING VALVE MANUFACTURER Needs 18001 Von Karman DRAFTSMAN Irvine, Calif. Exper. in vaJVe design. 133-1424; ext 294 · produ c ti on. too l in g, or 833-1425 tolerances & fits. !\lake ?-.1erch'g. SKILlED ' I OR UNSKILLED ; ' J.fEN Nl!:EDED ; -~ NO\V " I To .... ·ork for large eleeltieai ooncern In Orange County area. 1 IMMEDIATE f OPENINGS ' ' Exper. Not Necasar~' Due To Xlnt Tr•lning $150 WEEKL ; As per v.'Ork agreement ~ For more inlomia.tion * S4~9226 * NCR PROOF OPR Plush local branch. Grea benefits. ~ S4 Call Gloria Gray, - Coastal Personnel Agency 2790 Harb<»' Blvd, 0.1 NECECITA 0 p er ado r , d e ma q u Ina . Exelente l.rtlbajo. Uanla 6t5-1197 NEW ACCOUNTS : CLERK , Presently "'e havt an opening for new a<.'COWID> cl·~rk. · Prefer e.l(per. 1'-Iwit have good typing &kills. PLEASE CONTACr ~ Greg Nev."land ~ Bank of Amtricfl 500 Newport Center. Fashion Island 8J6.3SOS Equal Oppor employer. Nev.rspnper Carriers· BOYS & G'IRLS 10 yrs & Older PERFORi'\1 VAR I 0 US DELIVERY & P•I Electronics DUTI ES -TYPING 50 STOCKMEN 11820 \Vestem A\'C. eluding broad administrative backgtound. Salary open. StaM Unmedlately. Phone !\tar \e Ann Haze for ap-i pointment. 752-1700. 1 6 E.XPERIENCED Resin \\'ot·kcrs. Responsible & Knowledgable. Good pay, Skilled & Unskilled Temporary E1nployment Apply 6:30 AJ\f, ?i.-ton·Ft•I · GRAPHICS LEADMAN Exp'd .... ·anted for interior decor mfg. ro. ~sired b ackg round in Silk Screening, l\1ural painting, sculpture, resin work, and knowledge of letteriilg style. detail dra.,.,ings directly Equal Oppor. Emplo)-er m/f iron\ layout. Xln'l benelits. ~ 1 CLA-VAL co. MA DAILY PILOT \VPl\f -CALL !\IS. !\JC Full lime days Must be 18 or Garden Grove 1194-3301 CANN 6.'i!J--0.120 FOR APPT. over Neat . appear See El t I T h • • JlarOld, 40Ci E. 17th, Cl\!. IC ron c 1c n1c1an ~ 2 Years !'!Choo\ + 2 yean 524--0610 ' DEI:-IVERY J\1an~ early AM experience desirable, \VUI delivery of LA Tunes, O>Sta assist development o t Mesa & N .B. area. No medical Instruments. Send collecting, must h a v e resume to Bio Dynamics dependable car. 5411-47~2. Inc .. 11:>42 Armstrong Ave: EXPERIENCED \VAITRESS I 7 Bus Boys, See Miss !\IcLeod. Ben B-ro w n s 499--2663. I EXPERIENCED hospital in I patient insurance billing clerk. 648-8950. CLERK DELIVERY Boy or Girl.1""Iovme~· =· c;CC:alO"UC,. ,.--~--­ Jo'ree\vay Auto Supp I y , ELECI"RlClAN, Exp req, Avery Parkv.·ay at San salary open. Busy order desk at major Orange County boat builder needs mature. q u I ck thinking person to handle boat &. parts order !unction. Good telephone Pf"nlOMllty a must. Call !\Ion. for appt., 979-2880 Judy DeFr:lsco. Diego Frwy., !\fusion Viejo. 642-3482 Help Wonted, M&F 7100 DENTAL ofc. needs tront Help Wanted, M&F 7100 desk girl who is also ·.:;;~;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;======• qualified to take X·Rays & I assist at chair w he n ne c essary . Pleasant \\'Orldng oonditions. Call ?\Trs \Veils at fH8·3669 aft 3 CLERK-TYPIS-r-PM "'ill trnln ; rig hi 'l('nt0n for DENT AL Assistant, Newport ofc. ru;sis!. po!lilio11. ~Lust Bench Orthodontic ofllce, bf! 11ccu1·a1e. /No pcrronal chairside. Approx. 4 days/ proble1n~I. Apply 3 10 5, week. Top salary, liberal Hoyt. 190 Nf"-•ton \Vny, C.!\.f. fringe benefits. eongenlal enviroment. 011ho exper. COr.1P~IENT i\·tun f or requin.-'d. No sn1oki11g. Age · servlc;<' 11tationhnv.·~rk1 pun1 pk .20-:::;"':;·~S4:='-..-o26:::26CO-~-~-I gas light n1cc n1c11 \\'Or ':" Call 556--8760 or ~45--0861 DL'NTAl. Asst, min 5 yrs CONSTRUCTION chni..Nllde dental exper. N ray certificate. ?-.1ust be EQUIPMENT OPR neat, efficient, quick &..like Will trrun. No experience people. General dentistry in required. Ages 17·,34.. $326 N 8 p · modern ' . . rogrewve per monlh to 11t11.rt. 'tee ofc. Call ~70• "'g~·~~r<l~~~at. DENTAL ASSISTANT ~;64:;:!>-~U:063".~C=o::=~:;•,:M=•,.::;..:::: I ~1ostly chainide. Expcr. le CONSTR SECY $750 x-ray c<rttncatton pref~. Salary open. Call &U-6880. t~ce Pakl/AllO J:~ce Jobs After 7pm or wk n d a WESTCLIFF 613-3403. ~raonncl .i\gtlK')' DENTAL Sec .. Bookkeeper. t~fark Ill Ccnterl Reccpl. 20 to 35 exper. or 16.'>l '£. Edlngt'T. S.A. L'Olleg1?. S:l6-3000 (~l·l") ~ v.·kcnds (11).2) 536-8955 COOKS DENTAi. ASSISTANT, oral Apply in penon 9am-5pm, 1urgt'1')' le X·lilY lie. n must. 11an:v·• New \'ork Bar -\ Immed. opening. Crill. 4248 ~l•rt.lngaJc \Vay, 644~16\ Nf'\vport BC11eh. Dcnti.ol AMl,tant ehali:slde COOKS & \VAITRESSES cx.p. preferred, N~vp..rt Expe:rienccJ Bench, 642-7998. Carrow• R11taurant Dictaphone Typist 620 Avtnldn PIL'O r·ee Paid. Plush }'n.1hlon EXECUTIVES-MANAGERS "JOB OPPORTUNITIES'' St5M-$75M R-SAU.uts-HIGOTIAILI Are You UnemploYed Now-Are You Seeking A Change-Worried About Your Age-Tired ol llro~en Promises-Undecided As To A Proper Course of Action- ARE YOU UNDER PAtO? '" If YOtl c ... AMwtt' 1"' folowS.., Cmqorit\, M 1'1tt AfflrlMff••· 'W•'d uti. All w.t'TitW With, .. IF YOUR AHSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL -WE CAH HELi' YOU -' A. Do you have strono vocational dnve? 8. Do yau have good nallve intelhgence? C. Do You feel sulllc10nlly mohvaled to achieve? O. Do you have l/'le ability lo make decis10ns? E. Are ycu ready to set a realistic: career ot>ieclive? F. If yau were convinced that help was available would you accep1 ii. withOul delay? YO U S HO ULD KNOW • The belier jobs are not advertised •. Third par1y professional inlluenot fs 9Qm9tirnes nocesaarv. • Getl1nQ the right doors open, ·at the right level reauires techniaue, • EJcecullve posittOO!I are lllled through executive in1erviews. • Mass rosumo mailing, Is not a total answer. SEN D R ESUME O R CALL TODAY -FO R-• NO COST EXECUTIVE INTERVI EW MANPOWER, INC. ALFRL"'D M. GORDON DESIGNS, CORP. 250 Fischer St., C.l\I. r~or Interviews, 540-2860 GRAVEYARD SHIFT 4 Nights a "-eek. 12-8 a .m. JACK IN THE BOX, 1205 Baker St .. C.l\.1. 448 w. 19th Street GROCERY Cosio Mose 645-2043 SALESLADY 123 'N. Anaheim Blvd. \\'e need a mature & exp'd Anaheim n44000 person interested in good Equal \Jppor. Employer nutrition. !\lust be exp'd on ";=====O::C:=: I ca.sh register, ?i.f o d e m ii -health food store. No Sat. GENERAL Free Jobs. Irvine Cornplex S•c'y to pres to $7SO Sec'y no 1h to $S7S Mag Card opr $600 Persnl dept trne $500 Recept/Typist $SSO Also J.'ee J obs Angus Gordon Pe!'sonnt>I Agtncy 333 E. 17tl1 St., Unit 15 Costa Mep 64~720 night or Sun. v.'Ork. Pleasant v.'Orking conctitlons~nllonn rum. l\'lCdlcal & hospital benefits. Apply Lindberg Nutrition, Lov.-er Level So. Coast Plaza Shopping Center, C.!\.1. GUARDS SECURITY OFFICERS Full & p/timc. All uni!onns & equip, supplied. Top pay, rapid advancement. Apply 1330 17th St, S.A. May lllh, 9·12 only. GUARDS 17th & Placentia, 0 1 NAGER Has Rout11 Open Eou.i Oppor. Employer Dana Point LEATHER TRAINEES w;n ~.~R"~~T!:'~'" '°' ~ Full & p/tlm• Capistrano Beach 1·esponslble posll1on in grov.•· . . ;ng Co. Apply Sal.. May <th I n t .'. r v " w '" • Now for San Jua.n Capistrano only. 10 AM to 1 Pl\!. l loyt, positions in Orange Co: 790 Ne <ton \Va , C.l\l. Must be over. 21, bondable & " ) • In good phySJcal cond. Have CALL M Lo d LEGAL SEC'Y car & teleph<me. Go to Tk r. . W er Fee Paid. Prestigious law Toe !\larket nearest you or 492-4420 firm in S.A. ?-.1u:st have telephone our offices..... NITE AUDITOR litigation exper. Salary to 11141 ~7417 $50. Also Ftt Jobs. Call For Information Hotel or club exper. reqd. Tic Toe SYSTEMS Knov.'1edge of NCR 4200. Gloria Gray, 540·6055, Fftime. See P ersonne•J Coastal Personnel Agency, Equal ()ppor. Employer 1t1gr, 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM -Balboa Bay Club LEGAL SECY to $700 MANAGEMENT TRNE 1221 W, Coast Hwy, NB Foee • Paid._ AMlst attorney. S&L or bankin~ e.xpcr. NIG!fr CLERK, r /P time, Xln l tYpmg. No sh. Also desirable. t n d 1 v id u a I xlnt v.'Orkifll oond. Newpon F<'C Positions. Call Control \\'/potential & initiath·e to Beach Travelodge. 64W2>2. Careers ~-m~l .. o ymenl pr ogress 10 branch r\g~nc:y. 556-8505, 3 4 0 0 n1anagcr. 5 Dl\)'S + Sat NURSES 1 .. ,,,. Blvd. N.s. AM. --. RN's-LYN's LTNDSEY Nurse Rcgislry ~ ' Call Mr. Kelly L I NDSEY ~!e dlc a l • 979~3600 Jlave ''ou Ever "1anted To HOLD ON & LET GO 1\t The Same· 'l'lme! \VEU. YOU CAN!! llOLD ON 1'0 ''OUR I GENERAL OFFICE ' Accurate typing, lite postlng required for local jev.:4!1ry co. Xln't salary & benefita Jason Best Agency 17400 Brookhurst. F . Vly E1nployment Agency. Need!ll"'""""""""""'""""""''" RN 's, LVN's & Practicals. MAN ~OR \\' O ~1 AN 10 J\olale & fem. f'or pvt duty, call on ~larlne 1ndustry. stuff relief &: other medical Efficient \\'ell Ol'gl:lnlzcd fields. 646-4816, Costa ~lesn. 30-45. }~ree to ll'a\.'el s·n'. LIVE-IN care of Z yr old Calif. $12·$15,000. per ;•r. lmmed. employn'lent. full oo,.-. 11 g ht how;ckeeplng Call C.!\.1. 6".h1'82!1 time, part time. Inside d · · .....,rd \\'Orlc. \Vork any shift. uties, f.1,v. nn, UUl:l ··& MASSAGE TRAINEE Unlfonns furn ished . •t:1lary. ,un la.cnlly. Call for YoW1g lady (18-18) for Jc,?111- PROFESSION' '-t~O~~A;;m: NewpOl'l Beach, Coit.a Mesa Inter. appn.t; btw. 9arn-6pm n1a te full time ~Ilion. No Create YQ\lr Own area. Call Lou Vickery, only. 547-Sa5l . exp. n~. \\'C send 10 \\'orl< Wtek:J 1 ~~~!:AL oFnCE, Ex.p. 8334600, ext. 4693. 9 A!\f to L\f!ol -\Veekend rellcf. \\'cll 8(_il0ol. earn v.1hile y0u learn. 0 i.-.~'tlll -·-•• ''-f i-..~ry. Full time, 3 Pril run ~strict faclllt)'. Top Apply any 11ftemoon or ur ,..._.l -.u re..,. ' \Vilson's of Calif. $. Call 64i-24l0. e\'e, 2112 flarbor Wvd.. prognun " pri\'ate duty 12Sl Logan, Costa ?-.Ina HELP WAN""D Cosla i\lesa. nursing can provide • 1 ~ meaningM e>ppot'tWlty tor GIRL FRIDAY. 2 men MACHINIST It•>•• nune• •Mare ready loou•trlal ,.,., o t t1 c •, , . 'c MECHANICAL tor • change ot pace. Goocl located In WestcHU ato11. L.Grga ompany Expe,r. Engine lathe \IC'Ol'k. pay, peiod v.'!!t?idy. Nt'"''JIOM Beach. need!'! t.Xpd E d' Short lot. Your own llCf·UP. ASSEMBLER I .'rice "Alp. •tnlh appllt .... A i par\ 1n9 Tnp Pf'}» O\'tr time. Sl1J1ial A~Tue' \\'ed ThUl'll F'rl '"' '' uuu Hill. ,.\ppll;; l\ton-Frt. s.;,fm. E.xpe.rit'ntt \\'Ith h11nd tools nee. ~1etal11 bflckground f 1 s 11 Co :. 12:!\0& l:34H:30 he\pfvl. Sonlc l)'Pilll', NOW HIRING James 'estem , 2 1 ti P1" errtf · :ma mp111Q' HOMEMAKERS lOkey ca\culn.tor & TWX perm ll n en l .... 'Ork In Or1uige. Loni; 8et1ch. i l ,, wi lh J>leasant sun-oun(llngs UPJOHN 1kills. Good t •I e pho ne I nmnuC.cturlng, d.lstrlbotlng: mi. So. ol S.O. F\vy). ncnr lh"' Occun. In N~woort :UO \\'. Placmtia techniqoo n n111st. 6t2~1 &. 1n s ta11 • t Ion. No !O!!r!l'•,.'"'..,,,.',.",."'..,",.",.· !!!!!!!!!!!!I lica<"l"/.'11ply at NEWPOH.T -· ---e..'~ricnct n~Slll'Y dut> 10 lARrNE. 10 a.rti .·4 p.m. NeY.:~rt Beach 66-M.11 GIRL FRIDAY excellent trahtina: program l\IG'\tT Tnlf', x\11't future 507 SU.pe_l'ior. 5-4$.262'1. tEntranct comer or Suite 213 963-6775 I ::::::SM::::Cl:•:m:•;:";:'";;;;;:::;• ~l~,,°!~~~a~ ::~~~~~ Start $500. AJ90 Fee Jobs. Call Sally Harl, ~. Coa&tal Ptts'lnnel ~. 2790 If•-Blvd, CM +Hun 1hc llllO\\'! If ca v y !or nlcn & \\Vt'lletl IS & w/68 yr old ro. Rl:'\l('I, 21 ... s.J~~~'!"'~!"""!"~~"' '-..,;P1.;;,;"';;";;;";,;'la;,,;•mn;,;;;•"';;,;;h .. lpii) .. J EXECUTIVE SERVICES, INC. phone" modernte ll'l';nr. & over. HI guarn mao/lody. Mr. MEDICAi. T•cholclan.11 sh. Scniil bllllng. Start $j"f?I, Levi. 846-5·13.'"l. l' r ~ h n i c i a n Tra.\nece -HOME OFFICE -Call RUa Joh""°"' 540·00.W TOP WAGES po~ll"'"· ,.-·nllnbl• In i:>r n'e fa11eP dnlW \n tht West. • •. a O.Uf PlJoC Op..all\td ' I You con Charge DAILY PILOT Clanlfled Ado 642-5671 ' • (7 14) 547·9625 I Coestl'll Pet'l'Onnc\ A1ency. Ronald PhtlP." oUrct, No 888 N . Main St. santa Ana 2790 Hnrbor Bl\.-d, C~1 .. ~or i\fort tnfonnatlon 0'111 ••'2•4311 DlNcl ., c.il.ct CXJI 00(", ~)1>nd t be (SECURITY BANK BUH.DING SUITE 7021 I 536-159l .. ....-...... -."'9t "lllll\jUl~U 10 hl'\p 11 \ck fMOIOrco-11 .... -Not.,......,el.mlliO• .... "' ! 51':11 ldlt hl"m' \\ith II Oa.lly c.11 Mon & TUii Only --~"-~pll" ~t \\1'11. ~16, ~"!!"!!"!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!!"!!"!!!!!!"!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!"!!~\ ~Uni ~·~fltd Rd. 642-6678 ----------' 136 Bro!l.d\\1')'. Cosllt ~11$ .. ' ---. -· . • ,;ot a new flmlly rcom th&. ntt.'d matt tumltllt giop Dally Pilot OUlilltd Alh Cl\1!1')' day! NURSING , RJI{ Supcrvtsor, 3-11 f/tlme &. 11·7 p/tlme. Akin all Abifl5. lluntington Valley Conv. llOfp, 8~1. 2 O FFICE GIR-CS- NEEDED Radio lelopbooe du~patch litust ~ 2j, ablC' to dti\'l' Apply in l'(~~u YELLOW CAB CO. 186 i::. 16th, Cotitu .._\lo.>!>.'.1 ORDER PROCESSOR Fvr •ma.II mRnu fa1·1un'r of precision 1001~. ~ \ll 1.: 1• r t"Omputer '-'Xill.'1'. 111· el ' cl, PJ€asanl 1\'l"ltklng cotKI~ & &QOd co. paid !x>nellts. T 1 pmatic Corp. 18511\ettering, lrvlfl(' 97,_ ORNAJ\1ENTAI. IrtON WORKER, welder & In· 11taller. Exp. pr l'f e rr e d 49~7'6 PART time Sundays "'ednesdR)'s. En e r g c 11 ...: helper to 11•ash tr-Jcks. C3 11 846-~\0 PBX/TWX OPERATORS 1 l rnn'lediate open· ings 1 xi•t for on· c 1ll a nd perm a nent "!!BX/TWX Opera· tors. Must have ex· 'vperience on the 608 a utomatic c o r d board; typing re. qui,..<!. Apply in Person 3333 Horbor Blvd. Costa Me u , Calif. Equal 0ppor:--En1pluyer - ?i-f/f PRACTICAL nune. li~ln. $500. plus mom & boo.trl, llght h ou11ck1•t-p lng. B ea u 1 I I u I surroundings. 493-4J6'il. PRESCHOOL in C1\f.T nN'd! (' 0 0 K • H OUSf:Kt:E'PEK \1•(plea~anl t e I l• phone pt:•t'80nality. 6T::r40Z2. PrF.<CllOOL 1~·111·he 1·s. hlnng lnunf'tl. 111 Cd~t. Call tii~22. Pl\l.l\'Tl:R E'D('l'it•nccd "n P.ficle ROlftPrhll & A.B . fJick. !\lui;t l>i· ;1 proc.lucer tt1:1t c-;,in riot out ~rood cl~i111 qu11H1y \\'Ql'k c•n 1Jn1c. i\I a l u r it y & rlcp .. nd;1bll1ly \\'ilhvul "over the 11lJpuld\·r supervision" I)> 1·i;.~(·nli11l. If you hllvi" ~' 1' c l i n b I c J11-u1gu1nHvr :<oi·l1 sri.rt1ng pro1•e11 backgroutKL lht.'1 job can pay well.. 64&0198. PRODUCTION CONTROL CLERK/ EXPmlTER lligh ma th aptitude required. s~:hcduling & 1-'ollU\\··up . i\bll' to read blueprints .& type 40 w.p.n1. C:all For AJ)P I. l ntlu.'llnal Rcla1io1u; 17141 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Lagun1 Bea ch t::qunl Oppor. E1nploycr Grouhd 1'1oor OpportUnity m Cannon liai; " n StalflfllC New Oftk~ Immediate need tar a Of L.cudina iskllltd SterellU'Y· \Ye Mn tnsurance Company J~klns: for ft special ()('rt.On R.t·locat!ng Sa.le' Ofcs v:ho likes a chullcoglng In No. \Vt'11ern Sector por;i tion that Involves heavy E':<t.¥llent shor1 h&nd and SALES SECRETARY AOMINISTRA TIY£ SECRETARY THIS IS THE JOB YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR!! 4/40 Work Week-(4) 9 Hour Days MACHINISTS . ----·-- • TYPIST ........... Growlfi8 co. will t ra 1 n accurule typlsl to operate !\tCST machtne. Good Antlquea IOOS """'"" a&fary • xln't --- - - - .,.,..c ... J o.on Bost Agoncy ANTIQUE & 11400 Brookhunt, F. V\y COLLECTA BLE Suite 213 96U77> SHOW lo SALE Of OraJ:tJ;e County phOne co ntac t \vhh '"-Turret Lath'e & Screw Machine Operators F• I • · · Lo !""int 11kiu.3 ,._..i~ \n or All es"' Si'l'Yl\_"C l11 ng (."US10lllCr5 and I tt Ci Ii t Y ~,, '"'" .... ''"' E I n . I ed VET ERINARY ASST Ucach . \Vl'Slnilnirtcr · llw1t· f C d . d t ndd l! tl lo good lf:lf!phone xper ence .n.c.qu r 11. • ?i-11\y 4·5. C:O.mic A.ll;e Lori~<'. • ~"'111111' · an 1 a C' e•'~ucuc. t.1usl be nexible For cleanl.... du t I e 5 , 1n1 s. l·far•· .. 1·, Anahrtn1. in:ton areas. Leatl!i '" snot.aid be able lo ly*"" ~70 ""' ASSEMBLERS ·~ ~ t'Omplclc trnini~ fu.rn. to v•pm , ta.kf'l sllOl'lha~ ... at &l in aµp~h lo Ill(! Job nnd Nt-wpon. Prior cle~ (Nl'xt to Oilllnl'yl1tndl. Snt. quall[h:d ap11lirc1nt!'i. ,,~., .... ,, he lible to dA,.1 willinJt to ACCt'pl a ·va.rlet,y exper reqd Call 644-10-9, Sun. tt-6. Admlii81on SI. Nf> 1'1lliVIO US K."\.J!, "" .... ~.... of 1 n~ks ns th1• \'.'O rk load betwn 9-S. F'ree Purklng, Sunday 7:X: Nl'.:Cf;SS,\JtY "°·ith nll • I<' v"' I ~ · of deninndll". :; 11 b ,, tn.n 1 ta 1 Mechanically Inclined \\!AI'l'Rt~ss. over 21. lntmed. 11,ith lhllll ntl. 1 ~~=:~~gu~~~~~~s r~~~n::. ~u!:~:,·;~~:~ ~;~r~~·~i:" ~u~c. felarlal JOB i,;s-'cP•.Hr1.EncD•dU&L1nl•N•pGerienCceld ERK ~~~~~1. ;p;1~ e~ i:e~n~ _ .__._ .. _~ m11nux<'mcn t opportunities, 11 _ 1 efll 11 .• •ft•••· .. ,.,,,1 .. ,. sal•"" 3709 s. Bristol, S.A. I Bl k. Charil•• Tr1di"9 P ost oomn1issions fron1 C'Xct l'•n .ien s prograni. ' " " "' ~~ North of Sears, So. Co. 4$;1.l.61'J ••~$1600 h i Jr the above ~il ion is l>r 1u1d [dnge bencfiti; including ~ mont Y intett~'t 10 YoU. please vlait, company paid Ure and ./ Excellent Benefits Plaza WE BUY, WE SE LL f'o: r~oh~:::!Jcw \\lite or l'all: inedical tnsuranct'. ./ Com pany Paid Insurance (Life & Medical) WAITRESSES AnliquC11, r.1c111li1, J wtk C II C L B 'd ., p Id Ab "11 Boll Bunis Relitnurant OLD FASi'fION ICE CREAM a • • r • ges ITT Apply In P1r&on a sence rwowance 37 Fashion ls.lund, N.B. SODA f<~UNTAIN . Bei l (714) 635-7911 ., 9 P a id HoUdays & 2 Wee ks Vacation After 00<'. ms Newport Hill• Sales (No experlenceok) CANNON LEAR 1 Year APPLY lN PERSON Boys &w=:~~ Lagunn ~~-~~B. carW'<I oak ENGELHARD SILVER SIEGLER AQUA DIAL ~~~ ~1;.xt~a~~~~ sideboard, stained g!asi; $600. Wk. Commission ELECTRIC 1 Paper Route. Call r.tr. door, 3 heads Jn 1-eHcf on UKE FALLING TRANSPORT Lambert at 642-4.12L drawers $2l50 ~-1329 Otrr OF BED 666 Dyer Road 1741 Pl•centla Ave., Cost• Mesa WANTED P.tALE & ANTIQUES-In home sale in IF YOU SELL: Santa Ana, CallL DYNAMICS Equ al Opportunity E mployer t~EMALE • Part-time or Ne\\'JlOrf. Beach. Call after . FOR THE TOP COMPANY An equal opportunity :l!Jl \\I, Segcr.nrom Full-time Mlp. Apply aftt'r 3pm, 673-fi647. TI-IE TOP LINE! employer !Near 1-larbor & Warner} 1 p.m. KENTIJCKY FRJED e FRENCll IRON Day Bed \VJTII TOP INTEGRITY~ Santa Ana Help Wanted, M&F 7100 I CHICKEN 2929 E. Coast Oo\vn sett! Chr., AU.'1lri3n ENGELHARD hallmarks, ---~ -Equ<1.l opportunily entployer Help ~1nted, M&F 7100 Hwy, C.D.?if. · tltrbl top nt·strl. 6T.l""fi666 'eriali--, \'.·eig"I•. . "9 9 f.1/1' SERVICE Sta. Al t·~,,,, · M 0 '" " , lull & /llm 990 E~C~ t' TELECO"'fUNICATIONS \VAN. TED: . Assistant gr Appli1nce1 8010 fo'JAC cu. 5--10-2()..51)..100 or Secreta rt"es p e. . oos I ,. . ..... . trainee. PIZZ!l l\tan, l!Jro bar (1uxf E~,GELHARD is Secretary /Typist Hwy, N.B. \\ 11! . tmu1. No expenenc~ }~arbor, C.l\1. 6-12·!H52 Art ~ l.AD)' Kenmore Au I n ~~ ~·: ~Pi1~ ·).a~~ yo~~~ 11 d' . 1 1 • 11,. '-SE\\;:rr, S ,._. t I :ui:,lt~thA~~s s~!:.f.· 1-c~~ Pl\I. I \\'ashl'r s t·yclc, rel.JI\ ,( bu . . 1 11 m m e 1ate opening s ex~ !o s:.oo. l\lust hn\'e all the 1111 ro1nn11!n.:1a u1ai 11111c fl ~-> ............. d \VELDEH short arc 1 yt' guaranteed $Th, rrec d~l. SUK'~, p ease ca . I k 'lled '--. home Needed by locn.I imn1 auu Ulh.U11 an ' , . I "" ~12 01;;-21:11 or 5'17_8o 9s 1 •st or s 1 sec retar· i.l.1lls to """ a one gll'I gang ' niedical. _ ~·"'per i c 11 c r . !!Sal So. _a_~_o.,. ______ 1 AN\'TJl>IE! Trailung a11d ies. Ability to t ype 60--651 JJI a nl•al Estate office full • ~~a~~~~~~rer. Call S::.l --026-J Call AR.i\1Y Recruiting llrood\\·ay, Sanl a Ana llOTPOINT ltt'frigl'l'ator G assistnnce'? Cc rt u in 1 y ! wpm a nd t ake shor thand of _busy b r 0 k er 3 -&l~l163, C.Osta r.Jesa • \\'HO \\IANTS 1t1 \\'ORK'? rtios. old , under 11·1111·(1n1y, J\fanagcment avnituble. . • , llunllngton Harbor Realty. SJ-IORT order cook, part ~ DRJVE A CAB! "'hi1r !2 cu. 11. S16j, Al\IERJCAN at 80.90 wpm, Pos1 t1on1 Call Tuesday ONLY_ Janet lillM' now full time swniner. j TELEPJIONE Ans. Serv. Cll00Sl" 1 k ~:)..6..?QI. HERITAGE SILVER o pened in Engineering , 8•16--06•11. Apply in person ntter 1 pm,1 OflCf3~f5 ivant~9s-&~r for ~ bew~~r 1~~11 •• -Rf:BLT \\'asher. dry<'rs. SALES Purchasing and P erson· SE CRETARY \~1ed thru Fri. El Nii,'U<'I pre not nee. boss. Men ~r \'.1>mcn. Cau d~h/"°·i;h. $50 & up to I yr EXPERIENCE nel. No sh, but ~'OOCI typing skills. Cou~tcy Clo?, 23700. Club ' TELLERS EXPER be slightly ha11dlca.pped. gu!\ 54tr5218 or 839-7620. REAL ESTATE co. pre. fen< . someone v.·/ Hout1e Dr., Laguna Ntgll()L APP.LY • Neat . Cl~an Appearance. -'"-'-'":,=;:::__:::_~,..:.:=-I Es NOT NEEDED I I P V I Ag 25 10 R ent Washers/Dryers SAL MAN App y n e rson exper 1n typmg contracts. BANK OF NEWPORT ts .. ret rOO . c to · \Vhy not work in the hottest $.S25 Min. to $2400 monthly Xln't benefits Salary to Sr. Buyer Indus. lo $14K Supplement your inrome. $2. Wk. Full maint. are a, Hunting 1 0 n guaraQteed. Commission if 3333 Harbor Blvd. ~. Call coasinl Persormel Sr. Project engineer Dover at 16th, N. B. Drive a cab 6 hn or more a * 639-1202 * Beach / Fowitain Valley'? qualil~. C.Ompany vehicle', Costa Mes i , Calif. ,\geocy, afil...6ffi.1, 2790 Indus prod. develop $191-\ See Mr. Smith day. Apply in ~n, 1'~REE PICK UP. REFS. Let UI train you. c.a.u Phil repeat bu.sinesii, v.·eekly & Harbor Blvd CA1 Industrial Engr $13){ Equal Oppor. Employer Yellow C.b C.0 .. 186 E. 16th APPL. & SCRAP METAL Ate Naroee, VILL AGE monthly bonuses. Daytime ' Ship/Sched. Spec to S1?k: St., Costa :r.'lesa. ' * 615-5258 * REAL ESTATE, 963-4567. work. No eves. Local meat Legal Secy, probD.te STOO TELLER WORKEJµi NEEDED! 2 DR. Refrig/i''ree'ler, 14 <'I.I wholesaler. eeleseo SECUR'ITY J\C('fng Cashier $520 Beautiful modem bank. Able All types & sizes . fL, self-<letrost. Good cond. R.E. SALES J\ir ?.tartin, 21.3-71~ 1 Gen'I Ofc Trne $4:,0 to deal \\-"CU withe public. Choose }'our d1tys! $60. ~8-23-1? National but neighborly new FACT IS G 'c'tC Bkkpr. C.Onstr Sli~ Lile typirl:i. Salary ,,to~· Short / long tenn fR!GfDAm~. EI-·. "'"~"-• Century 21 Office in Mission Everyone Ea ts Meat UARDS !erk Typist s:.iO Call Glona Gray, 541J....6();)5, a1signmcnt.s . 11\..C• ~" .,...,,,K" Vit?jo has opening. Call' Equal Oppor. E niployC'r , Jnsurancr' Biller (o S600 C'onstal Penionnel Agen1:y, * Assembly & , dryer . $90. each. :xlnt A1an.in. 4~1121 or 830-0~ SALES l =:=:::::m:/:f ====I PayroU Clerk to $750 1 2790 Harbor Blvd C?l!f W ho • oond, n'lOviilg. 642-1561 ----• AGRESSIVE G I RLS Must b e able to wor k on i\l'cowitlng $600 * are use 36" STOvt_:. oven &tbh>ik'r. • -'" • f 1 fl 1· Clerk Typist lo J.j(J(J TEMPO'S * Pa cking )\,"'>•bf• for ap>, '" Call ............ inio or a .. u 1nie SECRETARY "shift ba s'>s, Former I E -' ~ pennancnl pe>s1llo11 111 a EXECUTIVE ~ Recept Typist $47:l * tc. fttS..l~Z 1·cry acti..-c IJoutiquc. Good ! milita ry t ra in ing deslr· Call Jeannie Sisco <..:al_I & Register Wllh T-em~ l -"'""'"F'---J<-IG-1-0-A-IRE ____ , P~X OPERATOR opportunily v.·/lots of roon1 a ble. Must be U.S. c it i·. & Sid Hoff1nan D I A J b' rr.·1ne S.10-4150 I ·f . . •·'"· T~~~naf'11!~c;~~ ns;~': Ior advall<'ement. ~lust hn\·e i:en a nd ha ve ba ck· 1 NEWPORT ·1a . . . Q • TEr.IPO Tempomry J-telp i~ rigct al~1 ...., exper. in boutique clothing SECRETARY nd • h d Personnel Agency )',\Rf) ca.re, Apt complex. Fashion ls.land, N.B. Exper. -.... sales & Need A Job NO\V. g rou to wit stan se-833 D D N B SE,\RS Electric dryer. Used only. Top pay & bC'nefits. RECEPTIONIST CaD foroa'i(intment Substantial ex~r. in the cur ity c heck for securi· over_ r ., • ' TEMPO offCTS n truly unique !"ced dependable student for 5 n10nths. Xlnt cond. $95. Call 10-4 Mon-Fri only. THE L K ,.. '500 I .1. . 642-70 ,_ time -vfn.• o-·n>'ty \1:eekly maintenance. A1ust cau S42-8'750. ~ -personnel fied hi g hl y ty c 11s1 1catton, ~ -"-"" ha eq · •1-644-?l,,Q;7, l !!"'""~""""l'""l'!!"'""~ 1 -'-'"~• ve u1p. "-·• 1 ,,0-"-="=~---~= I For f1,,nt office. ?.fust have I SALES de s i r ab I e . 5 Years State licensed Cleaner & or ,.,.w .. -.... · K .. E.Y. PUNCH 2610 Florida. H.B. Perini Clrk to $600 ty.plng skills & phone tech· Must ha·-•~. ,. mens experience al dept he11.d Apply in Pe r son all 1 Sell Idle items \\·ith a Daily ~ .. -....... ... Spotter, c or appt, SECRETARIES PU"t Cl••·"•'ed d '0"56"8 Jo~ee Paid, \Vork w/great n1que req. Alen, personable. clothing. Get in on the level a must De I a i I Kusters Quality Oeanen • Ct.ASS SELLS_ 642-5678 u su a · ~ ' • group in Irvine. Answe r Salary $500-$550. Xlnt Aled· ground fioor ot new store conscious, type 80 w.p.m., 3333 Ha rbor Blvd. 548-4243 or !)1S..7022 . \\'ho v.·ant dignilled "'l jiijjjjiijjiijjiiiijjiiijjiiiijji.mijiiiijjiiiijjjiijjjijjjiijjji~I phones, itat typing. Some !cal & Sui _icaJ benefits fully Ca.II Ed \Volt, 54().6('fj5: sh & nbility 10 draft letters Costa Mesa, Calif, stimulati1•g: king or sho~jl personnel experi. rcq'd. Also pd. Send resume to P.O. Coastal Personnel Agency & deal v.'/all levels. O term assignments -fcw F'ee Pt>&.ltions. Call C.Ontrol Box 1876, Newport Beach, 2790 Harbor Blvd CM • Call or send rc~n1e to: STEN days. couple v.·t>elo.s or few Ca,1'e(!I" Empl o ym ent Ca. 9'266.1. ' THE IRVINE CO. 1'~ee Fa.Kl poaition \\'/fund n1onths. you decide! Now Ag<'ncy, 556-8505. :! 4 O O SAbES •petSOnnel wanted :,,·i0 Newport Center Dr Celf!8C0 ra.isina: organization. Goorl )'OU ca.n , • , , . Irvine Bl, N.B. tor mens retail clothing. 1 """"" secretarial skills & flair tor APPLY BY PHONE Ne \1•pan Beac 1. "LRW · Al PERSONNEL SEC'Y Full & part time positions (714) 644-.3389 I n>cord keeping. so Fee Call 540-4450 &. Let us know avail. at Laguna HUis or Positions. "'hat '-"'ur skills are. r\o Busy personnel depl nee-els Costa ~lesa location. Foi· !lAf\1 'til Noon Equal Oppr. Employer JasOn Best Agency need lO'~n}t? in persoually . A OOH'itNll MT SHOl>PINC ANO SlWING GUIO£ roR rMl -:!ft:'~t~t;~ :~ ~~~~ ~~~'.ion s.&-fil:i2 or Equal Oppor. Em.pf~oy="'=:l '"~;;';;;;;""m/:c:!!f""'="""'""' St~~~1~rookhurst. 1'~~:; ~pon~I ;~~ha>~~ the 'just right' reeords &. sccrt"ta.rlal duties. ii Set:urlty Servlc~ c.o. c.II Rita Johnson, Slf).0055, """""""'"""~'"-'""~"'""I SALESGIRL, part time, E'P SECRETARY PART-TIME --NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO. GAl. ON THE GO. Coastal Pt>rsonnel Agency, RECEPTIONIST Ready to Wear. Satw'tiays WEEKENDS STOCK CONTROL Tempo Tt mporary Help -H ho Blvd CM F"ee Paid. Beautiful modern & sonie "·eekday hours. Ph. PRODUCT a.ERK 1-;i"iii~iiiiariiii'i.iiiOi'.iii""'-I &16-~ DEVELOPMENT NIGHTS Will train. No exper;ent'e For In 1d In Wam•n'• norld Coll ftlory Bolh 642-5671, oxt. 330 I' ofc. 4 Oo.y 11;ork 1veek. Alust 'red Ag !1-34 $.l26 T.EruitITE INSPECTOR be eUlclenl on push button Interesting O.C. area jobs reqw ' es • ?.lust be licensed. Xlnl oppty. Seamed-To-Slim Crochet Twins! console. Salary to $550. Also SECRETARY \Ve are a medium sized coni· J0-4() hoW'S per \veek per mo~ to ~'!~rt. Fl'eed ,,,,_1292 pany in a last moving, dy· Security !or •pecial room a.ai """""·' & n 1 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml f'ee Jobs. CaJJ Sally Hart, I' PHOTOGRAPHERS & SALES REPS 5-clt)..0055, Coost&I PersoMel namic industcy. You will be events, etc. medical TIMEKEEPER Agency, 2790 H!lJ'bor Blvd, Office Services \'.'Orklng in Rn nrea of the $2.25 hr. Cail bef 11 am Call ARMY Recruiting Cl\! Correspondence secretary corporate office 1hat 1-e· S.16-95TI ~ Gf)..ll6J, Costa Mesa wilh business college quires an attractive indlvid·l~S~E~C~U~R='ITY=-'~G~U"A~R~D~S~ STOCK & DELIVERY BOY $175 WHk Solory + Commistion Earn i,ngs $225-$300 P er Week RECEPTIONIST oa·"-··•. 2 Ye,,, ual .with .........,i typing, mod-'"18 -Part.,. lull time ~--•~ F/t;me. Contact Mr. F·~, ....,... J•a· • This is a \'.'ell established experience automatic typing crate shorthand, and excel· Security Supervhor wu Own trans. pref. Apply 10-2 N.B. linn. Prefer previous equipment desirable. Typing Jent phone skills. Apply in Ba lboa Bay Club p.m. 1802 S. Coost H"''Y·· recept. exper. Must have 70 w.p.m. Sh 100. Willing to person or send rcswne to: Laguna Beach. nice appearance & good learn )'10rd p r ocess 1221 W. Coast Hwy, N.B....:... STUDENTS Y,'Otk p/t nov.•, phone personality. Salary to equip men l . heavy GOLDEN WEST SERVICE station pen;onneil. f/t Summer. Neat, reliable, S500. Call Coastal Personnel 11· ans cribing, stalistical MOBILE HOMES 1-'ull or part time Expc.r M ru hard "'"om ;\gency 2790 Harbor Blvd, · · r. c s, .....,..........,, 0.1 typing. pref. Top pay & benefits. TEAOfERS for SilliUtlER CaUorsendresumeto: INC. Chevron Station, 3 000 DAY CAMP for elem. RECEPT/SEC to $550 THE IQVINE CO. l.'IDS E. \VakehRn1 f'nirv!ew, Costa. Mesa. children. Oll\-f. 675-4022. f f'c Paid. Work \\'/execs. 550 Newport Center Dr. Santa Ana, Ciili f, SERVICE Sta. l·telp, 2 men \l.'ill assist c:hlel timekeeper in all phases of timekeep- ing. Pick up & delivery of timecards:, com p u t Ing elapsell time for labor distribution & pay r o 11 . Previous job r e I a t e d t l m e keeping experience required. y,roric hours 12 Noon to 8Pl'>f. Salary range $3.56 lo $4.71 BERTEA CORP. The nation's leading & faste111t ~i{lg department i;torr photography company nieds sharp ded il'a t ed people who like herd 11·01•k & profits. E.xperienet' not necessary. II and I c t r a v e J Newport Beach, 9266.'.') f/riine nights. Ex(X'r. only. TELEPHONE Sa.let trainee. arrangenients. Xln't skills. (714) ~3389 ,\n Equal OJi[)(1rtunity Apply Boyt.l's 1\rco, 1100 E. ~~ji~nt O:.'.ce ~1~ ~~:I Also \V Fee Positions. Call 9AJ\f 'ti! Noon k:n1ployc-r 17th St., Cos la Mesn. 1)4.:Hil 11 Control Career Employment I :~E~q~ual~O~p;po;•·~E~n=,p~fo=y="=I ;=::;7i;;~;~~=:i f Appl y in l)E'rson t>Iondny thru Fridoy 8-4 18001 Von Karman Irvine, Calif, 833-1424, ... 294 Equal oppor. employer m/f \\IE \\'JU.. TR AIN P06itions a.re now open Jn the Los Angeles, :1rea. \\'HAT ABOUT \'OUR ,\gency. ~. 34 O O ___ _ _ _ SECRETARIES H•!P_ Wonted, M&F 7100 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 1 Irvine Blvd, N.B. HN·LVN·1\10E u -1 & I * Secretaries F'UTURE? WE PROMOTE F R 0 M WITHIN Benefits include compe.ny paid lit~. health, major medical & profit sharing. PHON El;.!<"'OR APPOINTMENT TODAY PHOTO others. Countywirle. Top pvr * Typi"sts du ty pay, lmmcd pay ror i.t<iff. lntervw &Ion thru Sat * BoOkkllNHMtrs 9·:->. Lescoullc Nurses --r-- Reg;stry, 3.11 HospHaf Rd, * Ac:c:tn9 Clrks N.B. Lobby Park Lldo Med * Gen'I 0 ..... Bldg. 642-9955 or 540-9954. t\i> ROBINSONS Fashion Is land I las Ol)E'ning fur * File Clrks VOLT Instant Personnel Major Medical Plan Now Available CORPORATION OF AMERICA WESTCOAST PORTER Apply Personnel Office 12-3 Pl\1, Mon lhru Fri t\o. 2 fA shlon lslA.ncJ, NB ~;qua! Oppor. Employer Temporary ServiC"e ~8 Campus Dr., Su.ite 100 Nev.-port Bea.ch 546-4i4l Equal Oppor. t·:n1 ployer 1714) 133-ll7S2 PHOTO 1..Al3 !fl::Cll~ICIA~ , H. Cliflon:I Thon1 I.· AS!<CIC. !'>K}...-1181 ·(4) PLUMBERS NEEDED NOW! HERE WE GROW AGAIN l\lf1gnol111..Adan1s Offu:l' Opt'n Soon l)ur n('W ornce a1 !he corner o! L\lagoolin 11.nd Adams "'i ll -I) \'lpcning. We have '•P<-:nings for c a re e r ll'IO!iv111rd salespeople: eit~ 111 cns•'ii nr y.·11nting to be tra 111~t.1 fur o liC('nse. Plea.~ 1·11J1 .Jh,~k A)1'•'·" a.t 545-9491 Walke r &le e llf•l tl1•1f -SAll...\IAKER ~P('lttd in11nOO. F.xpene'nce fiN'fl!rrcd. Snils hy ·"-·Jl()(:k. :.UI 29th St, ?\ew1X>r1 B<'h SAl.t.;$\\ Ol>IA.i\l'.f\.,...:l. I· 11111.na· Secretary SUPER-SECRE TARY \Vith top skills needed. If qualified r oJl No11•. R IVI ERA En1ploymcnt Agency, Inc. 20S2 Business Ctr Dr. Irvine SJ:HlllO 3187R Camino Capistrano San Juan Capistrano 4!XHi101 S.cretery Steno \Ve presentl.Y havtt n. position '°' secretary ste1l0, mugt have good lyplng & S/h skilhi-. PLEASE: CONTACT Grcr Newland Bonk of Amorlco SOO Newport Center Or. 1'~ashlon lslt.tnd 836-3505 Equal Oppor Employ« SECRJ.::TARY for R eal I VO LT Ins-tint P e rsonnel Major f.ll!dlcal Plllfl NO\v Ava.Uablr Temponiry · St-n•lcc 3848 Ca.mpu11 Dr .. Soil<' 100 tter. glfr 1-hops in Newpcrt & Cof.:11t. fll<·!.11. Pun 1ln1e or lull tin1e 1'><pd, mnlure. In· Eatate' firm 1yptna ,60 wpnt. j S~~Tth 11 nd 70 .wpm f\t>wpof'C Beach S.IG-47·ll l{'rv~,11 Thu", '-l;iy 9. 4.6 I nun1mum 3 yr! ~pcnence. Equal ()r.por. ]~mploytr pn1, G~llcon Cltl~. South l-)11:«llenl Co •• bf'netl tA. Coo.e:t l'la.:th, Costa ?.Iese, or Phone 6 3 9-·o 4 2 0 for PWMDFA~ Stnttt AtU~ ,.,';;calc;l,;8J&.lll~~I4-=,.--~-I <'#'ifa'l"i;fni'rmc~i;'nt~;;;;;;-n;;;;; haWI f'xptt Non union, l'IUt SAl.F.S: Jo~ Shop printer SF.CRETARY·Salc.s OUlce. o1 111.te OK. licst worldn11 needs exp oul.!lldC' ntan. E~p. required. M u 1 t Ct)nd, btnell14. ~llL'll h11.ve Good eommlt~lon, 646--019.11 he rei<J)OO.!lible & 'Pf'-l'llOt'lable IOl'll&. Top llCllle •. \\'arking Type G-WP)L Xlnt salAry from Anaheim. & ~ r v in" The faste11 draw m ttr-\V~t. ' benefits. Call tor a ppt.. 0raQCt County. The F..ar'I '• ••• a D11 ily Pilot Cl~uifJN 5-tO-Q. PlumlJlna: Inc, 7TM!ill. Ad. Call 642~~. f'l.ASS SELl.."> -642-SG'iR • ' I \\'c ha1•r immrdia!e open· ings for secre1apes wilh substantial experience in construction or f I nan c e . Finance candidate must be excellenl statistical typist & numbers oriented. Typing 10 \\'.p.m., Sh 80 w.p.m. Good pub.lie .~ telephone personality A P.1 U ST . Excellent co. benefits & \\'Orklng ronditions. T HE IRVIN E CO. Please C1.1ll (714) 644-3389 9Al\f 'lil Noon Equal Oppor. Employer SECRET1\RIAI. good oppor- portunity for bright girl \\'ho i'njoy)I <lealini:; \\'/the pub- lic, xln1 lf'lephgne voicr a rnust, ~'l'IOfl lyping skill~. . .;nine gen. offi ce dutlt·s. r.tin 2 ;n; offlre l'xp, apply in person. 500 N<'1\lfl0rl Center Or. NB, Suite 600. *Sec'ys, Bookkeopers Have 1110 tnn ny to list Liz Reinder's Agcnl'y 4020 Birch St., Suite 104 Newport Jk11ch 833-8100 Die l A Job 833-0ISS No Chargo To You E5tablb;hed 1965 SECRJ:."'TARY/Girl }"r\day, 11rchitecturnl pl1tnn ing firm, boauliful ottlces located in F"Mhlon llllAnd. Typing. "" acco.rate 7!'1. Si ii pret. enjoy a varlf'ty of duties, hours 8:30-3. c:tlt bet. tt & 12, IH4·9104. SECRETARY Busy sales offJce 11eed11 eJficienl lndl v. lo keep !he ofllc. running rmoolh.ly. Call Rita Johnson. ~. Coastal Personnel A~cy, 2'100 Ro.rbor Blvtl. CM SEX:RE:I'AnY E>cp'd, ] girl oflk:e, sell Alarter , nhlc to handle v&rlel,f of du.tie•. uood typfng, Snl hcfplul. ln-.urnncc ~xp helriful, good ltlephone penonallly good office appc&l'lnct, 8ll-2Stl CLASS SELLS • 642-6G7ll I San Juan Capistrano On Ma rch lllh, 1974 our 22 year old m edium sized electronics c ompany moved into our brand new facility in San Juan Capistrano. While many of our employees from oor Pasadena facilicy moved with us, we do have lhe following openin gs: * Draftsmen * Electronic Technicians * Transducer Assemblers * Calibrators * Inspectors * Electronic Assemblers ... * Test Technicians * Applications Engineer * Welded Module Assemblers We offer excellent working conditions & benefits, including profit sharing. Interested applicants arc u rged to call our Personnel Department for Interview ap- pointmonts .•. ENDEVCO (714) 493-8181 Ext. 221 An Equal Opportunity' Employer ... TRAlNEES NOW HIRING ---./. 'Y\ FULL & P/TIME l n-.!-.~\:d,I 2nd shift wwken nttded. No exper. necess. Tralnlng pro- vided if accepted. FULL TIME $45B-$640 PART-TIME $300-$410 SUPERVISORS $820 & UP ;. . ' ' I \ 7309 &tA<k~ 9262 lJ< Twin ~weaters lop lone. ~ZES 8.20 short skirts and pants! Ne\\·esl fashion! (l'O{'h('I •--11TMi'"'" 1lf"-",=-"'"' slecvelcs.ct pullover a 11 d '"f jacket with puffy look of ~mcr1,-e in10.1he mnshinc \'.'on;te<I. Directions for "°'ai&t I o o k I n jt' i;mooth and length 1111t1 lortster version. tsreamlillf'd in our nC'o'' PattC'r 7'.lO!I : r.1iJJ!leli' SlzeJJ g, Call 776-8551 "SEAMED·TO·SLIM" Style. 18 ln1·I. To l\lake Appointment Basically eiuy to spark with SF.VF.NT\'·"1\'f: CENTS \Vjth Pel'sonnel Dil'l'<:tor scarves. ror each pattern -add 2.i Call 10 AM·2 PM Priiited Pattern 9 2 6 2 : cents for each patte~ for -·-·----. MlslJes' Sizes 8, 10, 12, 15, 16, Air r.1all nnd Spe_<:lnl Han- 18,' 3:1. Size U (bu.« 34) takes dlJng; olhc.rwiS(' thlrd-elaa11 I 2 3/8 yards 45-lnch. delivery will truce three Sll:VENTl'·m"E DENTS weeks or more. Send to 1 w eadt pettem I< odd 25 Ailee Brooks, the DAILY f WUI train OOpeM&ble people ctnt1 for each pattern !or Pnm, 105, Needlecraft to become pluflc Injection Air Mall and Special Jtand-Dept., Box 163, Old Olie.lse!' I moldlng opera.ton. Must be Ung; otherwise thir1l·clas.ct Station, New York. N.Y. able to •land cnllro shift, If delivery will take three lOOll. Print Name. A.dcll'M5, I nettSAJ')'. Openings on 2nd weeks or more. Send to Zip. r.ttem Number, 5hiit $2.14 lo start Rai&e in ~tut•n Martin, U>e DAILY lt'ewl 150 most popular <Jt-. TRAINEES 30 & 90 days, PD.OT, 442, Pattern Oeut.. signs ln out 1114 Needlecraft APPLY 232 West 1!th St., New C.talOfl'! All cltlfl1! THR"EE * Orana:e Olast PluUcs .,, York. N.Y. 10011. Print f'rte dcJI• ns insltlc ..•• 75c 850 \\'est lSlh St. NAME. A 0 D R E $ S wUh N~i! Sew + Katt Book • CO M ~u1 ZIP, 81Zf: and S TYLE has B:isl· TIS.!11.tt' Pattmi "~~""'~,,csa~ ... ~~'!!· !I!!! I llt!MllER. .. .... 11.25 TRUC K DRIVE R ONE FREE PATIERN ot Ne.! N.,...e1>0lnt """' 11.00 ,YOUr dlOlcc t() tend for one lew! Fln ·e,. (:rochf!t Will train. No experlencf!' mt" pett~m Inside NEW Boot .. 00 rtQ'Uln:d. Ages 17~1. S3:i SPRINCrMU..fEJt CATA· ltalrpl~·~bt;1'~k·:. i i:oa per 1no11th to s1at1. Free LOG. 100 •~lc1, all 1izt1, 1r1~111nl Crochet Book , , st.00 rnom and boa1"d and frte po.tttm. coupon. Send lnttut i\t8crat1-.e Boot st.oo medJcal. 7'"'.JC oow. ln!tla nl Mnnt.r1 lkwilt '' llO Call ARMTI: Recnilttna 8J'i:W + KNrr Book wl!Jl Conlplflte Gift Book 11 'oo 66-116.1, COfll\ Metia buic U&luo patt.em •• $1.25 Con1plete A(Jbastt N"' 14 11:no 2 GTRl..S needt"d Jor In homa ltlMul Flilbkll !Jo()k •• $1.00 I Prl.e Afcfla1.11 No. 1J ft,IO ~!:Mt SR.les. Genera I l•tul 8ew15 Book •• $1.00 84>ol of JI Qnllt. No. l Mc Jcnowledge of tr>door & pntJo Atty city lt tht DESI' DAY to ~lu!!eum Qollt Bonll: No. t plants req. Must hftve own niq., t..n a1H Don't dt1ay •• J Quntt f11r Ttlday No. s ~ Ctu' A 2-3 £V8 per wk tree. o.11,y Pilot Oaulrted Ada Boole of t• "ur tt11r IOo Good comm. Ca.II Unda 64)...M'll Slo A11Jlcr, 6'D--.1693. ) ' • ' M., 5, 1q74 DAILY PILOt p f;j Appl ences _IO..!,! 1 Free To You 8045 Furniture IOSO Mi1ctll1neou1 8080 Ml,cel111 neou1 IOIO I Boats, S ip1 / otorcycle1/ I Truck s-9560 SAVE TIME , 2 rnEE KITTE~S ~\USf SEU..: 16 n cul'\-ro ~~ I ANTIQUE -I ..... ~~Ml lf ~ J \\ ,,,, }o"O 1li(l or 5jrlt' tit', t'i' ! Scoottrl 9uo111w;:"i (111-\", 1],.h\r;: ;;;-" MONE Y. & ENERGY I I tALL. AF'J'ER 7 J',\I &r>l!\, Ecru color, ttOO. BAR SWAP MEET . •;1\1 n .. tl'l'eO!.'t~ ll\'11;11 !\etd '66 HONDA 450" cvl, stlc:'k "\fl\\ hrk• k ~llOP f>UNLAP'S tor rei.~n·I -· e ~1~::38 • l~":..7~" beveled 9•" ul11~s ,. .. •1 1~1 · 1 •--! pp f l111111N. Rohizl. jj(,..{)320 ,.11)4•1.. ... '":ot'l 11r •1fr, Cl."-.i"lll di" d fl bl dbl I I ,,n11uay " fly '" I. ~n a '"'"'I I ...,1-0 Runs ~. R"'l.-·n• tu1M.-up -~ " o uonr 1111plln11cl'11, frcl~l1 1 l,Q\111.K LI~ r.111; Lab-l't• l'C' In" pece~tu, . . (.,l!tll:O 1~11.rklrv: tot. ener1 n1 \"A:\T ~"11·[)!)11 i>ip f•.a' ::,u· !\",,"''<'hllln•~pr-i-i(;ct'•. Vans --9$70 d11.t111\l:l!d .t· !~\· noor I lt1·11~1l\'(•I', l\ffd!i lil\'Q ' $15'1 IJron..:e a:uUdtd lan1p" IWaullfuJ Spa1t1J/1 bar \\ 12 Helll"l'\11.Uons U11.y 01' ('\C I l'ull l L' C1'\J!>l'r. ~~ lift * $375 * ----------1 snnipl('ll. ~ ho'J(e ~,.11,t. 67~~1 ;5 ~hatlc, S-W. Flrnr~ue<!n sU;,. s1oo.l11. Ulai:lc di 1 tr e '.\. ("i.l a.1_2 ... 1 .. iU <:ir 5 4 3 _ ~ o s 6: 1 ,\\'LJ"'\ 9' ){<'\JL•rc t i1101~1£Lbl~ .i p.111, 'JJ GMC VANO OUN.LA_;) APPI~l.\XCE co. Fl\l·:l-:-1u \OU ft'.o• lrtt.h b1J\ i.;p1· mtttr•frun1e. 2 i;et., 11'0CAI. fhl!I r::.hle-ld 111 frun1 f ~IJOlbored by s.; uiu i\n•i I n"'"' l \J. Asku11: ~!)J, Ju ---·------_£!:J-f:!l'l .\ll •f:11• 'i111-S•111 URA 181.lr.;C'll /)Qrl Uh·d., C')I 1,~tl('J' .... ll l t ~ht'<'I~. $1 j(). Pr of 11'/iiY.'Ol'd~. l.l;;hti; On UOth ltl~111rl(.'al JJl't'St'l'\'dflOO I \1vn,;:v1n.;o1;. Sll.l!Utg dutiohy Boats,Spe•d&Ski 9080 DUC\if __ _ .,,. :ll'I 77~ • _,, ' • '' ~T:i o' '11 I n1lrror1. 24"x5', $40. Antlqul' l'nds I l'A'Ot>dt. on bottom. s..:.c1t-1,· \JOnlJ.'Ollll'I)' :;aillni: din •ll) / 2:4'.I l-':i•·tor1• S.·ra111blel'. 1 . -i1/chi1J1·C'u t--Cl..S';iG litttln dri;pe11 1~· Ide + 2 \\'ould br ~autiful i u . ~ . -------).OC. 6/J.'itlli ., la .. \-;P.\H C::, John• fl II \\'lfh c.<ira [_)!lt't~. i11 .. 1,, ,, ·. pr111t 1· .~l>'l'r1nq, GAS ' STO\rr.: $30. ·I j 0 I HF.i\Ul~-2-....;--o\d M?ll lie bacb, 3' :1d~ ea + Spanish 11tyle hOI\)(', Cl't'll1tes Misc. w.nttd IOll B --M--,· I -9020 I 'r;,/'j/J, trh·. iiki l'QUlp, m!ln)' .\,~ ···"110-, \ ...... !.! ' I' llf'"I Jail'. 1;,,000 JIONDA, Chop!M'(l, ~·/xlr3 Oobernuui auru'd .. dog. U n:xJs. ~".i, :i4tr0469. alm0$phe1·~ for party \\'/lill o•t1, I 11t Ser. .\lrll~ lil.c nev.·. s 70 o. ~ J .ri~ 11111~' i~,l(f:::'.\ 1 O.\J,\' tra1ne It 1lrc1. $2 $120. MS-lnlcn!i;led cnn j3G.'.m· ""'-"~-"--='"-'-""-C,.-....,c..., lliht:i; uu1 except bar lights SILVER COINS -ii~. Motor Home\, $3377 7198 D.!ik for Carol, eves. .,J, ~PC. Kinit lldmt i;ultt. h11n'! .!.: c·111clles. l"alU $100. :'icll P.ll)'in~ Tilp Pric,· GO.\T Cu1·pentei·. 20 )1'R l" ~'JBFH I · 1 ,.~ Sale /Rent 9160 61~1131.i furniture a050 rOl'\'l!d , $700 C:\ble-Nt'lson for $200 or 1·cni;, ofLcr. C:tn PllOnl! 061.-36-~G. l'\pl't'. Only hlgl11·11l qualll~ '1 1 ' , ~ !i.«s ,,~~·i1 1 w -Pla)·e1· Piano SJSOO. AnH~l" see St S I 1 1~10 11ork. til!NG l1 aft. G Pl\L vr II.I . " '.'tier<'. rn,.. C?ni! • \'\CIT!O' e t lll::f'RI G., CE L'Oinl>,, 1Win~ -.. -... ,· ·,,:l OI' Ull llM)' n ' PllOTO Kl::G ATIVJ:::S, \Just ii'k('lld'> L'1n1pl••h1 11·f tl'lr. S 6.10. '" ' 1\ftlLtY .111~1 out shell-eN. 2 <Ir, frogt fl'<'<'. 1\J UST 1'CIJ:; Jk.'. "''alnut bdnii u1)hoh1 l'e<'liner, $150. Do1\·n \': :su1un1·~·pt, San1a ~\na. Llfl prc·lf>.IO. Lonn, :1v.11.Ji ur ·~ri•·i~ AT \'OLK O\r:'\ PA("J<:. --· WllO cleau ss:-i. Al.SO lll!.fJ•ig, lll'I. Like llC\\•. I~ I n JI t~~~~~ ... ~,~~tl~~ ~~Us"fOO. ~7~ ((,o UJI lh)rhi'lr Bh·d. Iv buy t>l6·130j Boets, Marin• Eq. 9030 1100.:: ·;~\SSIC 16' Ski ~.it (11l)l)tl1• fn1n1 !'n, Ct1hf, VOLVO \\fhl.rlpoo]. c1,, w I i ,. e \.\'/headboard, 2 11\ght tlb!J, :J _., \~'c11truinliter B!\'d., n\llkC' . . II O • II ··1.nrgt-s1 Sr!,'rl1•1n.·· • I d • . •llM \\' Phlloo TV, 1\(:W, $00. 271 l•ll, go do•·" I" .... ,, •. 1 ... ~. Mus.I cal ln1trum'ts. 1083 E\'INllUOE El•"I. 7"11<) \\'( H'll t!!· •. J -') r ~ f' 10 .. ,,. '" ~1,·,,·,, •• ', 1.11.·.,. n1ak11r, ck·an, .J.). &1~.".&L~ i· 1·esse1'll · n111·ror. """"'' " ,. ''~ v,.-"" J r II 'l't u .... $Sj() SG-2 17 "" • " '' 0 be l fl C II "t-m"·"~ Mun1iu.1! Canyon Hd, n1t1k¢ 1tnOU\f'r Jett t.· :.i\111· . ---::_ Ou1bourd ntotor. Con1pl ...:.___~ . 1 J '' 11 ,. l)Al.i·:s 1 ~. ''•II•••'"''· c· .• 11. 6"'"·""" ·.t E",'CELL•",~, .,,,.. r 5 o er. a .,., ~,),j Cdl'l •'1"'"'"'1 >ENUE'R /BOSTO" 11'11\LER ~., .. '"' '~' "' ...,..,,.,., ·' ""'' .)\/ gus tx>I. 9::!0.lni ur bt\v. 5:30 & "· <>~1'•" swept ilt 11>1 St . Tur11 lcfl -\1'/N'lntroJ , also 16' bo.11 !· ;" ' • • 1,,., . ..., A-IOTOR JIOr.·tE .-., --·--- btove, llo1paln1 cle<.· dryer 71\lll. SOFAS, 2 custoin lOO!ie 11gain 3rd hOu!llJ tNin 1.VI'· t:1t'c<l Jaza ~lttSter k C.ase trier, ti'F.>-5300 ;:.J()...82'.J9. I', h1~. 1•l~t1·1t• sta.rt ~ol~~son I RENTALS 4 • TbJc,c Vnn. C.'U~to111 $30. each. tili-6908 or 1 ·-'N~c==~-----pillow back, g· lon1:, perfect ner o~ right i;ide. f $SJ2. ~~cl~" TELECASTER r\E\r Set or boat seat~ Cur l1'i' I 11·1111 trnller $1Z-.:.O. 6tG-<I~ lt•dhlll ,, -"'"'' J1•••". l'u•. l•" l1!,1rlr 11J1nr. piu ,.1ripocl, no &12-8998 •.111 SIZB bed, xlra firn1, 1 1 •w 11:i.>--->3-.J • "'-"' '' •• 11111111111~. 13,000 111', eng LAD', 1· . nC\1', Incl. n1attrci;s, box o:."Orx .. 1in c cactus i::reen, ~B~R:T_L_E_T_T ~ Sldtbott1'mi.17s.,i2~ I [ in D i-3~-tl;llll u1•irl!f11•d 1G 11111::. thint ~cnnio.rt! i,:aK ll'hsr & , springs & h'amt . $l65. 1.'0lit SQJ(). ~n .. i;.ell $300. en. ,.. 1'.PIP/JO~E Elel't. gui101·. o>:>o JI•) --·-------1 IC< 1 d-y ll l•t '" t d s1= CoU,.table,'.•'"pl,,te&ln···· Colle<'lon:Hen1 Xln1oond. -1 •,·---,..· '70 CllE\', Hori1.on. ~I Ft, ~P111 ('t'. :' l, J~· au·, l!nl ca. Cr•• "dy .-.. ,,_ I •• top, c·--• walnut ba.,, •·?:!.or offer, Gl~MI. Ot s, owtr p11T. ~t\°'l.'r & it!'tk<',.. 1~1·"""' : 1~• . .;P<'t'ln n1:i:::~ · 11..-.;, • · · ·"-''~ con· ""/ tworth $350). n.1eenslze ... "° FLOOR COVERING B t P 9040 ...... ....., •• , 1 />Iv\ r1 1 & r _..,.. n. .. uloi·e e ec. Sl •L"1. Inc. dcll"ery. U•onlly ~ 7•• W If h CM ~ · I C I \\I ''\I l I II cl 'Y $150 Sts-444() • l3x65", cost •ANI., acll $175. oe •. t St., , .• "UIT,\R, 1,,_01_1,.,·,. in. on1r. 5eU-conl&.1ue<. ' · ·r npc-, u cusrarn 1 · · _ hon\e 832--2-188. 3 9..,...,. .,......., p al d 1 tall li<> 1 u ....... ..... .. 1973 BELl... BOY. 23' Sips l llQ g<'nerator, uir -t.,...ntl. 1111rnr,r 1111 fl>'~'1bll' r~tra~. COMPLETE KITCHEN 61 -»;r;i ,er son i:..:e ni> •. a 1 · Good t.-ondi!ion, i;:o. 6'-1 " cabin 1,1•/&nll•ry & din. C•mpert, Sale/ I k k ' 1 ff .. s -oo · 1 I k · DINING rooin sci, maple, lllUE·\-llED \\~Ito Na\'"· ~:ln\e Brand C .t 11>c t. .....,.,,618 1\ r me-. ,,f;i:y 11'111elo er.~ .•. 1111·csl?! i\!I. 1n &: Yo11nA"1tv~·11 ~!&·! l'llblnetii !SOiid rht•rry, lllrgedbl. drop • , " !bi.I \ Guaranteed O\·er 30 )rll J.»-_ lk..>I HP ~tercruist'r 110 Rtnt 9120 97S-3.l98 Sl.7il(J r1rn1, 2100 ~e~1>0r1 clf'l:I blt·ins. l> \\I, dlio;p\: leaf table, Hutch, 4 Captains hyde, Ork .Red c~r & rxp. . Ofc. Furn. & Equip. 8085 Compass, A.'fff?.t steroo. 11913 27' \VI'·"···,. B '' r. 0 .!_1~._r~t.:-. 2iii0 £·~t 21. di I °'S 1 k si~/\ '""-t't'<>n ''h . ..~= Ul!On>an, Na .. •ahyde. Excel, FREE ESTIMATES --I)"• !ull ... , •• , • "''"'' -"r.. ~ ' .>.:: s n · "''· <MJ-WOU. 1... air.; .,,,:;,, Lltrge maple -u1 , \ "'' ..., 'ii ROLL-A·LOKG. JI' mo1orho111e, has l"\t"t\'lhln1;. ·;o FOJ{D \'an, Cui1totn Bicycles 8-020 1. \Jar $27j, All Le1iut. t-ond. <:ond., Cnmera eq pin t, C".all S.lfr.\<IU SECRt:'l'AllY desk & chair nlhl'I' l'!lras. l\loving inland. li\lnt kilchen. Incl: A l:, lleHs. rates. !J62-4~7.· 1 1'.uil'lui~. rrptt.. rouch·l)l'd. 4.~.)..1101 1nlrrors, decorator Jtenis. PJ. r.todel 22 L:ndcf'\\ood· \lust Sl'll . Asking S~Z:il. I :'11 AN '~ 10 s1:i..!. \\'()ntl'n'~ ~1 J\JOVJ:-.'t;, 81•au tiful , °"" 1'Ufane t!Ulk l'Q()f deck & <·Ell 6 \loll•·•'\'" ~lu· 11·'1!~ sr,M J\1ovlng, 11\\l('h to St'll. ·1 SCRAM LETS Ullveni calc:uh:t lor 2 ili(.'<' \\'Ill help finance'. Boat is in alel"'l'O, gas/eiec ref, xtra I SH1\STA ~1otor home. !11•1"'~··1 sr:11~. ih·ps. rountl '1 .J 536-o:rJl. • opholl1tered chairs S:!J. &. V.'alcr al our honl<'. "" · ,.,!. : ' . ..; , · . ' • "' · _,......, ~J'(J. $30. I custon1 designed fWTiiture. , &2 c-'l •Ca.II 67-31c9 • lfl.rlder. Xtrn s1or. t1ki;. e:-;1t Call !li~li9 l..h.-1.n,.: __ .~==C~ .Yl."r l".~~ Like ne1r. Co n1 n1 o tJ es, D,\t\'ISll Lo1·est'aL b!u f;l'<"'11 I .,!.'>._ ~ ..::'.1SIJ~ >-J _ ) \' rn t, t I e . do 1\11 s, , ------·,·, LXil)t:E \\ ir\rlui\ \'<l ll \t-\NTEf) 10 spred guy'!! or ! htn1ps. , Oct;as,. ta h I es ' t.lull'hh11: ll'n1nul (11~1· !bl~. ANSWERS 1 YPE\VRITER Sale. Loi\"('»\! ~\SSIC Century Bay ~t I bo11 nl!t'-\\'8)'S, s h u r -l I c ! I rra1lers, Travel 9170 l•r1f nle..;h'I 111 I i gurs Uikr. i>it.--c\Lotw.s, chan-s. etc .. Ca.II comer tbl, la.nips, p1c1u1·e)<. I prk:e . .; on all brands. Ne\\· 18 , ·1-00 Gray eng. Rwi1 J,,",,',',,.'·,,,,,,.~'. 0101.,11.01."x'in.I ;01,•,u'." ,,. ''-'.\\' TR '\' c-L Tl\,\ll.Ell.-' 1 r :1 11._ ,,,u_o ~~6i2-3'l93 111 .J lS-2Sg(\ .1 r1 J r.,, !J6.S·tilt7. __ ~-l\l11ke o!fcl'. \\'a.sher ,,, clt)'t'i' f'Jc('I. portahlc.' S90, 5 yrs gr<'at; $1250. .. c " "'~ " L ·' I !I PC corner lxlrm ~'l'oup & 4 xhu cond. $7[> both. &4~·6~381 ~ick1.~t",.,,;-,,, U..:_kcr,,. 1 ;- 11 Lluyaft:_: _ ~ua~~l.!:::_E!Jl ~i96-199'J Ci7:'r!J.~. ____ G-J6:.l l!! S:J.~. Firn1. 6t~·j770. }"AC1'0ll,. DIHEL,. I·~·\ no11GE. J\lngs. 1·u~1on1 D '" 0 '" f)K . .,1-1• 1 1 BERTRAM ,5 TWIN DESPl::RATf: lo i;r!l' ur Full S ~ ll'itl! or 11i:h .. 111 ii;11101 .• ~IUJ.~t sc!l, 1-wst offer I ogl 8040 pc:. in :t t ch in g wltlte Garege Sile 80$5 I Bra1·er -llll.EAKf,\ST :.; ., JI~['· •• xe<-. S1\v ~ iril ~ U'fl.de for sall bofit. '6S Vord tvllel. 11 f() lS 1110<le\s I (nil i.1~728. 1-----------i·11mp1tir:n funi. Se!I .~300. f Tl h n · er Sl5/Zj, Se1y l'h r i; $812,J. Ex1.:elll'nt cond., ~IU.000. "l'O('U~LX)" --·--~-~ • Puppy WORLD • II Str:uoloun~.l·r chair, _ol n10s --ir o c.yn1oon is n1· i'icrcc S67 \\' 19 Ci\•! t.i7-8:-lG t 1011 IL'1ck~hass1s nwuntcd l\f'"Rt' 1'r1o'N· l'I Olll',...,....:1 ·~1 'rr:.n.o i·a11 •• short ~-1 1 ! C S260 1 1 10 Y ll S accu111ulalion: 11 hen the httle lady st;1r1~ (rl?-~ JCiS ' 'I ~ ~ c .. iniier Opco Road-sell . :; ··. . { . \'' .~'-· .. spd., .1lak1· of/('r \\'ntl·h dogs . G1'n11nn Shl'I)· 0 < • ost • S('J $18J. X nt Spo1·1i11g equiµ (ski, ski11 co111plainin1,; nlJout the n<lif>e ---'!.. -16' GLASPi\R /•\'alon, l:i I-IP c 0 11 \li i n c d-niechanically 12~~:·1 . :\t•l•on St: l•11t'1 ."n I 1'>1:-~:1 m or 49"..-2.'lfl:'.. ~ lf'k. herds, (1iihuahuus, Ti 11 y , cond. IH·l--017_9_8._____ c!i\·•' &. cainping,, 21' sell }'JH.1'<' n1a!d11E: 11·hen g~Hiug L,\HGE ·I dra"·~r ~lie cabillCI :\ler..:utJ'. Trailer. x!nt cond ncv.-.niany xlras. $:>Jill.. f,101 ~· 10 _0111 10 J p111 TUl?.\1 1 --- Poodle!!, PH Bull ~. cf)('kll-1 U r.10 old l\.ing size bed, xtra contained Tcn1 pcst sailboat, h(or Ullr'.1\KFAST. v.·lloeki;, $40. :smith Coror~_a ~109ii, 213-592-2752 aft 6 each v.·tek $100. knocked oU ! thl'I ' ~t 1 i\4 1 S.17--0111 Auto• Wanted 95901 1100. JBpancsc SJ1a11., Irish : firn1. Xlnt L'CltKI. $200. Work ; 10' 1upcr light glus.«pat, --e:A-Ri'-LETT s,iand~rd (Y!l(!ii:riter . $3..l. '.<i'2' OfllIS CRAfi', T .S., 11rice. 49.?.lm C\'l!s. 'llj Nl\tPJ't!J TE:~T 1'rlr. I Sf!llt'rli, llu~k lci:. Pug11, J3ull I ~!l'.!-£61 1 ext 239. ask for f\Jt'rc 5.l h.p. en,i:'., ron1n1. 1 FLOOR COVERING _&th 1;;.ood L'-'nd. '2;r187U sips 6, 31' JEf'.FRlf;S S(.11 l\ING •0 Th~ lloa rl I lee UO~. 1~1. cn.n1pin~ 1)11\ CADILLACS Dogs, 100 J\1lX£D PUPS.~ Tt•r1·yfRes: 847~ / C'Hl'l>Cl vaC\lum, f Io .or : 7 •• W lf h S CM' STF.1-.:L office desk, 3'6" x , f slu'. T.S.F.B. G-t+..;.JS!i. Cabo\-erfi, sec them befol'C' Sip~ 2-.i. C:.i. n~. tO\\t>•~. ti,.' I Largest Selection Stud Scrvlcl' Polos! BLttds.1 t·.1·.·.·c ll 'NCE, Sol•, cr,·,,,, clcanl!ts, paint, &h111n11 1 -. • t t., · · 16" 1\'0'h dr11v.·ers $.;() • .t::asy -.~---, \ 13~ I"'' "'~r.., 0 " " " ) ~ ... 11 12 A\iON Red Shank & 6' )'OU buy \\'<? also re n l I conipac car. ""' "~-....,.,,,, I 0 C __!!_I~'· 5.i1.JO'l7. Cab., f\lagnnvox T.V.· P ixie bike, ladies bike, gas ,...,1<u1t)'. . r~<>tOn\. 011r chair $25. <H4·2561. . _ _: · 6---3-"4 n range ounty \\'I R~llAll{ Fox Tcnier. I slcreolt:ldio. Et a•" e r e s' stove, dbl oven. Sun. 8 to l!. ro\'er1ng. }<'nlurin::: NafL'CI, ,::-LEC TYPE\'f'RITER T HP Sequll. S250_ea. for $-t1a c:unpers. i\lesa Can1Pf'r ~~1-:. . . C11ul>t' DeV1Ue~ -Sedan De- inalc, 1\f\C, .... 11h napers. &l2-lll2 16.17 Utah Circle Costa Arn1strung. & Co11golcu1n. ""'. r' bl • h ' '0c1" for both. 675--t~a. Sales, .. ~,.!!arbor, Costa I" 11 •. 10~1 fORI. E"'1'·el l.'Otl~. r1;](.', -E! Doratlos -Cot,• " ~-~-------~1 . rHS-9238 , Guaranteed installation &. ing a e . inatc in~ ' . :\lesa, <.HV4w' ~ -<'On a.Im'\. ~ N'Jl;" ft '.: \'"l'li!>ll'~. Al~ n1anv other O"''ller n\0\1ng, cannol keep. I SPANISH sofa, n1alchini; ~i;.~-:-.' I • · perforn1ancc. Ch er 30 yr5.1 ~t.i!.· loi· all. 5"l8·81J7. Boat1, Rent/Char. fGSO G~fC, :a• 1' !>,ti. ·n, I 5_,200. .1.i--,:itQ.. i.clN"t Cac1:11.1 .. 'T'r•<IC··i"~. ~ 11urst·11• chest ot drJ~·cn;. screened patio. CM1plng ' FRE. E ESTIMATES Pots t087 •I'.' '''I\' Cl•••'•·Crolt v:/Har1·est s~;· Ca.nipei·. ' / ' s ps ' tic ' ,,.--------... J\lust ha1·e lenced yd.11·ha.irs. Also Trundle bed & TE~'T. 10Xl2 ~' 1 0 X 8 cxper J IS' S/C I\ c I 4 H. h ' ""' GRUT PYRENEES, AKC, i\lake orrer. &ID-4218. equ!p'nil. siatue . amps call 646-1-142 • Fly-Bridge Sport Fisherman. 5.?7..s37J 616·~ 1"'81-" W\ loUU. 2 I I r.. • . A~k for ~tr. l·J ans 0 n • ;.Int co111I. S'i~;i. uaaeas '"DI" •. ,. 10 n'IO. J\l/t', Chonip i }::XECUTJVl: gold i\'el ""'fsbades. slide proJector, -*Security Pet Prod* Plui;h. Full electronics, full .~"'--." 2600 ....,....~...._ po1<',n1t11I. 1'1 $150., r·. S:!OO. i oH!ce t·halr $7;,: ~~~heel , roueh & lo1·e sea_t. Old stlllrf ANTIQL'E CLOCKS Beef 3,2(: lb. Coll. ch. 21e lb. galley, sho'>''flr, etc. .for Motorcycles/ !railers, Utility 9180 1 1!~~M~ll!llt~ll~ .... ~~·~·~! 586-_366 I t·hnir, S\00. 61"...-1510 bo1t\cs, Lg~ ;u1ti~f' ~!fee A1nerican (;erman f'renr·h [l .H .l~.'s $2.:,0. 10/n\Ol'C S2 .. chartrr by day or ll'eoek. 6 snia.!l D ' I \1 \ 1' I \ x I !3U!e, (']Olhuig, l ] gh I I 11 ~ t:ughsh.' ~ia nlle, 'Fl 00 r: 517-'.::177 14 1~ I:::. \~ ilshire S,\ pt'Op!e . 1nax. f~ish, cruii:;c -~S=c~oo.:::••~r~•:,_ ___ 9~1~5:.:0 6~i<1·.·1_.,~T,,.1~1.r,o,:, ... rr;~1.'· TOP D-OLLA-R PAID • ~ .' · • : "n1 · • :'\,\U(.;11. living r n1 . couch. flxtutt" &: mliie., 1S61 Ne1\ \rau. Don't take a l·han~· p · & O -aft6ft oockta1l, elc._ 64.:.>-?.!00 dnys, _ "' ..., .. Ll\'er/\\hllf'. 16 n10.' l\:lrUy s weepe r. au JcrM:~', c.~t. Bu)•.,,, ...... ,·ng. Cleaned, 1anos rgans VVTV 962-2301 e\'enu1gs l~·eck:<nd~. ll--1"•19,,.1,31~rt•to•· ~~~~~"4~·,~i:'~:~,~~~~ IMMEDIATELY •~!?;.1_)~C.,~,· RC'ru;. lo r.ood hon1c. attachrnen•·. Call .,,,. ~"'7'2. " ' "" '-) ''"' 3 " 1~1> llJ ''ORl'I 'N C n o ., • ., 11_.:· ..., O'fV'"'.w LADlES gold-lazy boy_ chair. oUed .t; repa.ittd 260 . PIANOS EXPLORE ISL.ANDS Sll550 ·u ' · · · t.i A...:-·-'.-'. ' I nox Spring & matt, dbl Green lazy boy tcchncr. 3 Victoria St, Costa Mess • J,~ '01) be,nu"t. j7' KETCH. :0.1nlt ~18-3122 aft1·r 6 pin. I~ ca.u O)' ('(!/\}(' "1 IO Sf'r. us. U1~1~~i1'~ ~upp_ie.~T12 ~~fghA1°1 · sit.fl, sp:irkling cll'an. $30. pc. comer bed _:;ct. 1 hlg!1 .blk. \\'.est of NeffiX>rt Blvd. • ORGANS rni.es, days or week ... 2 "ULT \"O 1 ~ 1, .. 1 Autos fOf' S..le • ~. • '} • • 1n1u .. r1i·o · Call 496-7SSO. hnck !-lpanl~h chair. Sniall Jlours 1Pi11-10piTI. ,,.:kda,)'!I. R tal--f $.5. -~serr:--ffli. -rm~ :.aa: 'too"k, -..' ~-uiT-, ~ n ~ri>~ ig, · ~~~~-$~. 962-ml afi 6 & 1 SoLtiJ T~,-,~k~b~,~d~f,~f.-.---table for sktrt. Hlll·k i:1 t:k & lOan1·lOJ1n1 Sat & Sun 80 $ r Balboa Is, Ca. 92662. p t'd o:: , • , ~. ! NEWPORT IMPORTS 1--.,--:0-~~~--~=-i $5j. Xlnt condition. rnnip ~101·c 6i3-02.12 or • or ' ne\et iac e ·Auto Ser. & Parts 9400 Air edale Pups AKC ' Cnll "'"1839. 673-&\48. . I au· Y!! l\IUST sell dau.{!htrr's '71 6T:r3428 aft 4 P~!, A1tk for ~ . Open Ni,hts 'tll ' KA\r,\SAKI 100. Good l't1/ld. .D"'"'o:'·c_ _____ _ Chaniplon sire t 6 I I EVER YTl-ll~G r.:IUST GO' - Id '· "~15~ • 9· SOFA, Black & \\'hlte 0 . · Goc.d, used iumihire k Sat: 'ti 5:30,Sun. 12-5 $~.Call646-3:>57. '72 llARLEY S portster . o l a/I 83S-50til I Checked. Xlnt ...... ndltion. Sit. & Sun 11 ;i.111. in. m1. p · & G d * B S 1-I ... <'A . ""' set iv/6 velvet chair•. misc. G~plinn··cs •Jr \Viii sr\I ror you * ••nos ran s oats, ail 9060 """""'c . c ect sta. ,er, ~n\I 1961 ECO~OLINB :t Spd 3100 \V. C'oo~t H1\)'., NB. 11'1!.ll~ $20, S1r1l'lt•\' S7 .. \l i~1·. 642-9405 Oachahund pups·Al\C l'Cg. ~=~·co_· ~"'~'~-S\~~46~·=~---rurn. 42.'il j Scavie11-, Lag MASTERS AUCTION Baldwin . Cable. Chickerir1g ehop~. :\lust see. Only sml, ·"~tl .• ~lk I.: T11.n &: A\\ COUCll Bch. '461616 or 13S.961S . Fisciit>r . Ka.11 ai. Kinihall 21' T!:~IP£ST ocean boat. :S175Q. Call '194-4317. ~11 1. Aif•'r I JJ.rn. , . . .~ . . . , 11 ;\1'T1'.n .l\\i;,'tl:ir Ro.:i.tll'itcr 196:.l .l-AtpJX :'ulu !L loll'S ~Ii.I in xlnl L'Oncl. Can be a 11y of tan. $9J. ;>J:.HX;J7. &!lid Blue sectional s.;o aft 6 or ~:1c!ay, . Knabe -l\l.1.:on & flnn•':•1 . I~ !b ket>I, ·c en o a "69 llONDA rm CL 17il, $32.i. JRISH Scllri·, fe tn .. AKC g 546-4193 \\~ATER i;o(lner, ~ISllars best, 83.-1 ~lus!Wll -Sohn1cr -Slt'in-Spinnaker, Self cont, sips 4, Good cond. Caro $1, r:;d10 SJ .. \fr ,. l rh::-fol!O\\'ill~ ~car~: '64 p.111. !:iciii4~71. thru '69. 1 1vill pay mos .. all shots. ~ han1e \\'Al..:"\t:T triple d r e 5 s e r , olfer; antique lelephone 11·ay • Sil.•)' & Cli.rk . \\"inter \', x nt O:.'Clll . 1rn1 Call 83(). 79-12 I S\00·. Hlde-s·bcd or best ~. -s.;;.:v.:oo · 5-18-634.9 110 ·6 I d 1· - a mus1. $65. 548-.itH. mirror & chest. Ne"' cond, SlOO; 847_2423. p I? INT SHOP-Leuerpress. • \\'urlitzer · Yamaha $2000. 5"40-9238. •72 SUZUKI. 125. f~xtras. Set Antiques & Class ic 9520 1 \lilult·~l' Blt1l' lloflk , \\'fall --_ al1'11111hot~ \Jl'tl.$ lll)"r. l".·t ':TI CHEV)' Spc..:ial. 4 on, p:111y. ~a~l 1'!:>.-~rij~l~ r~!~250S Sedan. E:>:. n1<'C h lYlnd. _h~frll't' .l:~._aftr1· ;),Jl-6J10. !\e<'ds paint .. \~kin~ $1200. TOP CASH ror t·lean used \\'Elf\IAIL\~t:R jlUJYii. AKC, I _S200. 830-7942. I ~LG::::. ~p-.~110.'"'-,~.=1,=.-,-rn-.-.. -rn-. m~ic late nlOdel C&P Snapper r.;eiv Spinets lr · ...... · $JOCi -10' SEA \\'QLF , wood hull, .for dirt, $300. l2 "''kii .. Sho\\' t. fl<'lrl 1M1t·k· co~-EE/•~I tat"•·, 1~~·-pres.«, Ne"'· 18'' paper Use<l froni · •· ·· · · · · · · · SflJ I imn1aculnte. lJ Bags of Snit. 673-2861 .r .r ~.... """ """l""' cloths, cameras, Sat/Sun b' 20 t Pia r " •~9--000 ground. Crill lt;9.3.-t90. · 1 dish"·a:.her, portable refrl&. i\'lagnolia ~-of \\'arner 1 cutter, lypt ca inet, onts ye s .. . ......... ~ ~ $.J;.i, •. Gangway 1, slip 2 ' ZlJN01\I~ 250 dirt bike B"'UTIFUL ". t "--·~ pictures, mise. S42-T.?8 I. n10stly ncv.· l)pe, metnl Grands ........... $395 Long Beach ?I-farina. 714 "·/extra ...,,,1s. Runs. $100. 1;.1, " °"""'Tl' blo(.'k. S.i'.?-1381 · paper cabinet. leaJ,;, slugs *ORGANS* 846-.3197 Call ~24-ii'L ' PCIPPies, 6 "'k!'; old, call I \rAN1 £D THREE 1-'amily G&. rage & cutter, Galleys, !unliture Baldwin . Conn. J-lan1n1ond . 171-1 ) 6*-0312, Hc111et. cru·~ lllkl h11cks Rec Vehicles 9530 Howard Chevrolet OO:t-3963 or &tz...<ISOO llft 5pnt * USED BRICKS • Sale. Lois -of household & n\ISc. $1750. CTI•1) Sl;;.-1149 Ka1\·a\. l\imbaU . Lo°"-rey -!SL,\NDER .30, 4 nlOs. old, -870. t:i().1 Ped. steer ing. extra 5, 1-ION'DA XL250. Fine shape. Only l!lXI miles. 1972. $795. ca11 673-lll8. \\1JJJ.. BUY YOU R HECllI::-~l;u"!'.rth111· :tllfl J11ntboree ATIONAL VEHICLE PAltJ Nl'vqicu1 t::i•ai·h 3 1Y1•1ati.A~ld ~1ood1 1•1 noed• LOVE E ' ilem~,""mlscc. ,,.,.I'd part,,.:; turns 1 . FREE. Send us 1 of the Rodgc1·.s. • :rhon1as · ·..: 1111-Beautiful. $l9,500. Firnl. a<u , .... ,1e ... a.e ca cup • SAT & sofn. custom etc . .>UUl 001 gc, .r 1 .. a . business cards you are no1v &.h .. -\\url1tzer. 838-00.1 aft 6. FOR OR NOT. CALL L'Sil----'-'-3--0_,_·~~----t FOR BES ' PR!Cf~. OPr:N :t ~ 81.JY size r<'gist. tree .W.-2055. 1nade • very gd qual, n.?ver \VAGON whe-els, motorcycle using & we 'A ill send you a Optlgan •. • ..•..•..•..•.. Sl~ ""'~~:.=::...::.. ___ _ 0 .... , o uall hm 968 7910 '·I '-S t s1= S,\BQT, Naples, \\'/Dolly, '12 SUZUKI, tsa CC Lnw miles, $400. &14-72.12 R01\D, l! UN TIN G -;()~ l'.\lPQRTED AUTOS Tl10R UCHBRED Cocker US<.'\.I, s Y • -raeks. furniture. di8hes & \':Jlua.v e b'C"e glfl. l':o ....,'ATCY pine • · · • · · • · ;JJ \I,' rt S I t $'99 Like ne\v. Glass & Teak. BEACH, !SSC! Boach 91,.d., BEST PRICES PAID! 842-'.!iOJ. Dean ltwl1 Imports Spaniel Pups, 7 v.·eek1, l\IUST St'll, refrig, queen misc. 540-2562, 6-IH074 s1rings. Lln1lted. Lido ·ur 1 ler P nc • ne.,.., • · " · Darron sail. Not race, Sli'Al. 6-1.>--0829 1 hide-n-bed, Maytag v.shr / 61~1 L..Afll\SPUR, Cdl\I, Sat i'.lailorder, Box SS.I, J-lw1ting· * WIN FREE * &l·l-a:l9l '12 SUZUKI, i:iO C C, fl!Al~E $1imoycd J yr old all j dryr, 1·hairs, bt-ds. 673-2423. J/<f. Fine furni!urc. Call ton Beach. 92648. ORGAN LESSONS Superior at. mac ht n e . ~lv.>L'!. Xlnt \\'/kids $50. SHHHI FURNITURE &1·1--81.76 FOR s,u.E ne\v W\Used F' ILLERTON MUSIC 1~1i.!6., 1-l~~~E C~~ I~ /&b ~I~ custom extra,, 839--0l-IO . SHARP SAND RAJL. ,10 1!:61) Hr.rbor. C.~1. 646·930: hsp. bli borl" kit c11n1, C,\~1~ FOR 8.))..0091. AT WHOLESALE! St'ars Electric Lnv.11 ~rov.·cr .,; I Sl6?5 H B ·n SUZUKr GT 7~, n1lnt con· PUREBRED \\'elmaranPr 89 .. ~ ~~~t ~~~~ ~= at L'OSt. \\'ill return to seller 18191 t:uclitl, Fountain Valley ~~-· · · dltion. $1500. chromed. Tr!r. S l 6 5 0 . YOUR CAR 6-16-3192 54&-7010 pops, 6 .,,ic~ old. After Gpin. ....INAV s:-io. lf unsold next five d~·s. Ko 557-4836 MONTGOhlERY 10 sailing can 962·9693 Cati 55Z-St06 (ll.U l'ASHIONEO BUt'''l'.T ~""===~==~~ rcdu(.'tion in prlce. Phone L">2 N. !!arbor, 1'1Jllerto11 l9'S N =• n -do . · · ~ .E\'E'RYTillNG CJfEAP. Sat. 496-~. 871·1105 dlnghy. Fast & stable. 1 yr I ~rton ·~ \,Alman GAS TANKS installed -b1· AUTOS IMPORTED ~lu.jor.1·ay. Trucks. liuportS.1---------- SJJELTIE temall', 2 )'rli, Good ronll. l\lake o~r. 1-.'.ir-&; Swl. 9-j, 3130 Killybroo~ ;f,~'i5ibfT~uiCiiii:V.il;iiiiiiiii;i;i.i;i;,;;ii;iiiiiiii old. Xlnt corn!. sac. ne1v nnp &. v a Ive 5 • Al\C, chnmp. sired. Beaut. <'hen thl & 6 dlrs, $40. a fr <off Baker) Costa Mesa. '70 SCOUT 4 1vhl. dr. JM-VS. C 0 N T 1 NU 0 US FREE 673-4618. oulstandlng oond. ~. .6, ., '"A l':OO 1 k ,_1 ~ \\'. 18th, C.h1. Alfa Romeo 9705 tri·color. f>ia--0997 4 -646-36.'1.CI 49,00> miles, Io ad e d ,.._,_ Spert1, R:ace Rods 9540 ·• 1u_r .. • ~u 1 s, .,.. · GARAGE SALE-llouaehold "'/access. E x c e 11 en t ORGAi'l CLASSES FOR ~· T-BIRD sloop, out boa.rd, }'OR ~: l970 Honda. 00 & ' 1uneup, vi" ;idJ. Runs gd . SCJ-fNAUZl:;RS -~!In. ;\KC. GA~1E Table, '.>11" Squrn'f', s Tu -· A n dinav -•:..AM fl 3 motor blke trailer. ,. -· 0 ~A"·""'' \ _, item5. Sat. Sun. Mon. & ccnditlon . $2195. Type"'Titer 1\DULT . 1:.1.'e!')' e""'ay vo _ . .....,, e ......... s. oN'tW· Pho . ~,,1 ., Formula Vee Jmpr S.il'XI frn1. G~I-~. 8 v.•ks. Champ sired. 2 malr. pens to '" -~ ·, \°;unul, """' ~ C •1 • 30p Start eek Call 962-9693 ne o;i.rJ '" xi 11 concl --~ 2j33 Tues . ._, r ,ov."Cr, · '" · table SJ. Chrome hubca(lS .: m. . any \\' · f\f~ST · aei°I daughter's .71 llcady 10 _rflce. Audi 9707 2 ren1. ~W-68M C,0,l'Cll ~':JJb<I-k l I Ilk 1 -,-,.~A-,.""c-,,.,-.-•• -Sa~le-.-TV-. lj" '>'ills $3. ~ an Tcom, D!e,tenc, h,.A~tacl!",~~-'69 CAL 25, no lll9, fully L"·\t\'ASAKI 100 Good-11 Good rompeutive car. TAIL. 11agglng J.O\",\BLl~ · ~ ac v ny e mov.·crs, couch, misc furn, 7PM or Sat·Sun. oas 1• 115 c ~ "' ... ;,Q. equipped, for racing & n.1. ~~ ... .,nc · "'Ith extras. Sl350 Al'DI '71 -1001.S :1uto, .i dr. ~·cn1 Springvr sr111ni~\. a 1 l\C\\'. ~ Fri, Sat, SW\, 6:>72 Shenlyn QUILTING & pateh'>''Ork Newport ~~~~lat Hnrbor. cruising $7,500. &15-457·1. $295. Call &iG-~17 I j.1$.1 ·187 nir. A~l /F'.\I Slcrt>O, Xlnr n10. S';.i "-'·1·5961. ' 491-lllot Or, llB. c\nlael. Sta.rt hlay 1th.1.,._,..,,..~·~· ................. 1 SABOT Xlnt cond New '6.) HARLEY DAVIDSON 4 Wh f D • 9'50 L"ind. i\"e;ir nc11· lire,, Pnt Free T0 Yov 804$ I Qt.:EE~ size berl for sn lr. & BOOKS, plants. bnkbcls, & 111nke your ov.'11 ·helrlooml\\tllTE STARR 8 A B Y ·paint '&·trim. aoo-i sails. Sprlnl 2.lOcc, Hot dirt Bike. ee rives ~ R:"L1-:mi7. 01· ~i:&-0278 l·vcs. nils~·. i1cn1s. furn. 4M Via Allegre, SC plllo\.\'!i, placl"mats & quilts. GllAi"ID PlAi,0, in mint $300. 546--£023 aft 9A:\I 'Xtnt con.d. $~. SS&-8493 L,,\)IDROVEH., 109" ~· h I -'UOI '73, 100 LS. auto. snrf. KEE."lfO:>;D tsn1:1l1 husky I ;)IS-6997 (Shorecliffs ) Sat/Sun. The Hall Tree, Cannecy cond 131~· FIBERGLASS Sailboat, 70 KA\\;ASKI 90. Dirt & hEt.se Sta. \\'ag. 1966 Cla~sic. ,~\lfF~I .• 61' ~10 ~\·arrant)'. type) fcn1atc. 4 n1onth5. DRf:.XEL bu tte!, hutch & CAR top rack SJZ. Chn.irs Village, N.B. 873-3240 or S.<oo · 67':rl276 trn!Jer included. S700 or ot-strttl. $150.. C!i?an, \1·e!J mn.int. 1 011.711·. S.1c. S499J. l7,,.-l0BG 6T;,-2.53.l rorner shelf, n.ltc, coffee 2/$lO. Broiler SU. Kitchen 64.>-2960 · fer. 675-0.129 eves or "'kends C&.11 549-25-1-t. $2,500. PH: 6-li-7000 7'2 /IUD! 1001..S. Automatic :-l'EED JOY in )'Our Jile? let ti.I!§, bl'd, bkcnse. 67'.>-2690. f"! """-'007 CAB!r.;ETS foe Kichen & Bath PRl\IJ\TI,; PAJlTY \\",\;'I/TS '72 HOND \ CL l T:i xlnt --1t·r111~n1isslo11 llunroor & u1en. 1~.J·•· ;J<JO-t • -TO BUY PIANO FOR 22' Santana, slps 4, outlxmrrl, ""'nd. lo" niileage,;i,, ·, •. ~,, ';,.i \VIY.t_\"S Stn \\'gn, 0/D, ' · · · . !his cnt streak· in. Inside Pu! your budgel baek on oH~.=,-',~0-'s:::.=..;.:~=c....,8060= Unfinished Preflnlshed CASI!. 5-17·9-l·l.J s p in n R. k er , Excel cond. '-" J.PJ 4 f!ipd, ?Pare tenk, 2 Chevy Al\11!?.!_. 831-2040 Dir. only. 549-18-16 the tr1tck ... ::·~·II idle ilen1s Counter Tops also. Pl •0 , ·-H nl b b $3700. 67l-31S5" 400-3701 engines. 64.>&I&. Autos, U sed 9900 J-fARDEN ENTERPRISES ,\:\'. . ..,,,vn· c y, a Y -Auction 8015 Auction 8015 REG. Qrtr llorse, 9 yrs old, SJS \V. l 8th St. C.~I. grand. New, Beaut. lone. 18' CATA?.IAR.Ai'I 1u 11icorn) HONDA Elsinore CR1 2:>, '70 WAGONEER. X111l t'Ond . • AUCTION Jewelry, Antiques, Furniture 1 The Southland's mo't elegant gallery is now holding public a uction sales ever y Monday and Tucsd:1y evenings. Qua lity merchand ise mostly fr om bankrupt s tocks, custom seizures. out· or-pawn, estate con s ig nments. F'r onl $5.00 lo S.S0.000 and up. Partial list : • LDn)f' 1eltction of w•ll·known crystal • Fin• porceloin--Se•rts, Dre-sden, Lhno9fs • lrontts l1i9ttdJ-4temlngton. Mtne, Rodin • Slttll119 Sllnr-llne plote • Orientol items • FIM ptriod furnitvr~ • -• $500,000 stock of quality i•welry, in· eluding dltllftOflds from I to I 0 cts. • -fowelry • Roltx. 0""9•· ,.,. ... Ii......._ • Rings & poiidOiifs-ndli••· •meralds, .,,.is • Antique jewelry • Top•9rodt India• r......,1 .. inuch, much inor. Terms : B of A. Master Charge, per- sonal checks, cash . lnspeelion:ll A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. Mon · day lhru Snturda ~ · Friday nites 'Lil 9:00 P.M. - Sales: Monday and Tuesday evenings at 8:00 P.M. S.1!109 "...-.olioos may be mode by f1MM DESERT GALLERIES WEST, INC. 2142 W. COtil Hlwoy. Mt..,... ltodl t2460 11141641-2200 NOTICE: Wt ore cash buyers for your un- wcmted j•wtlry, Oflti.,-s., sfl•tr. tfc., or '°"'" sign on convnlsslon to our Wttkly auction ...... • Excel. pleasure horse , &4Z..2&l2 Rest offer. 675-6116. ~·/trlr & l'xtras. $800. Xlnt cond. $700. 2 sels tires. air, private •• ~·----~-p-1,·,613-. ' .. • ..... A~TIQUE Brass Bed. dble, Sporting Good1 t094 ' .. ,,~~','="·~=--c--c t>.2 hands, $700. Pad. 162 BEAUTIFUL 12' Catan\aran, '72 YA.r.lAHA ~ Enduro, '70 \V'AGO!\EER. Xlnt oonJ. 7 ?-.IDS. old Qrtr h:lrse Filly, So1Tt'll, White Blaze. 3 \Vhltl" fee1. Real BeAuly. $150. Pndd. 5L Jtorscs locatt'd Irv i n e EqUcstrian Center, ·19-1-92'11 1; ARABIAN, beaut. Bay gelding. c:enlle, S 2 5 0. I Otler., Rib~1n8. , j3G...2'J..J2 HouHhold Goods i065 $200. Port. 11'' GE color TV · • . IT. s 0 •~M Good near l>Crfect 00 d B y ol St.i9. Standard size, Queen CATILE~fAN 45 ca!. S1ngl11 ca 1e n ('af, """"' • 11 • u 2 sets r.irt>s. air. Anne style Sc\.\ring machine action. Penn Big Gai:ne Reel cond. 562-7398. ..YoW' life, 536-6126 art 3pm 673-47ti table S2;i. All excel rond., i'.tocl~I 50 .. R em in g P"t»1 21' SLOOP, "''Clod fg. •n HONDA. XL ~. like Trucks 9S60 673-0154 or 673·9210 Sen11-Auto rine 963-6201. .l\IUSf SELL $ljt')(), ne'il', 1800 miles, Buy cf your ---'------= TOUIUttALINE mink & TV, Radio, HiFi St, 8098 __ ..coa=v-'id:::•,:54='-"".:::::.·--life, jJ{Hjlai aft 3pn1 leather_ battle jacket, won .,= .. ZENITH COLOR TV * 40 F'T. KE'TCJ I * TACO h1INt BIKE. on qua show. Creal for . '-.} ' Aln1oat !lnished. $12.:-ioo. Good condition, $80 Jl.fother's Day. Appraised at l'l:Clv plct~1re tube. guar. xlnt For ~tails call &l&-8792 Helmet Extra. ~102 $61J . SAVE! 838-3961. co.id. $-50· af&.l395 alt. l NE\\'PORT 16' Sloop, fixed P.'10VING l\1ust sell 'r;;(J HANDICAPPED? ~-.n~hilC"O Color Console Lk keel, cuddy cabin. sips 2. Norton. Comp. chopped. Elec. Stair Glide, Like ne1\•. iie"·· $!2i;i. or best ofier. 4.hp 1i7ll. $800, 673·7336. $13X>. CAll ~1312. '70 DATSUN PICKUP 4 spec.I, t'adlo l ~8111351 $1699 BAI/WICK DATSUN Call ft 3 P"I HOBIE Cal J.f Excellent 450 HONDA Xlnt cond CARPET. new ~lore not yet a ~ I c';47-'·~T'..24::,:_~-----wit.railer $89.j Best o~r 10,000 1nlle11, asking tG25 completed-no room. 2 I ~==~-"C:,::O:-'-~-~ 19" G.E. Black & \\'hlte f-..12-.'\llO 54G-M2(I ... . - 33375 CAMINO CAPISTRANO S4H NAH CA"'ftAHO ,,., ... -.,.., .. a..· .. i "°" .• SPnING SPECIAL. !t oft v.•fncw stand. Gd cond. $-lj. -"--"--------lt1.1t'kloort~ a\ref\dy 11rrivM. nonnal price on Stea111 SJS-l67l lf HOBIE CAT v.·/Trlr, lhigc rflitrounfs. Sh I\ g ~' Cleaning your cur p e I .::""""'-------• J ::\fotorc)·cle 1'8.mps. • fl USQUVARNA 400 8-speed, e.~C(lllcnt Lmidilion. You muh1 ,.;ee It $650. 5-18-'il)\2 493.3375 or lll·ll7S plush, hi-Jo, 8 colors. Phone 5.16-:>74j, GARRARD 40 B record Call Tony aft 6, 6J2-1432 Iii 11 49G--08!"/j. ---changer v.·/blUfe, carhidc '68 CHEVY -· -OLD FASH IO~ ICE CREAr>-1 ~ dust CO\'er. S:t:;. 5-18-S-16.S. Iiavr? son;cthlng-~·ou .\\'ant to The Instr.st draw In the \\'est. \\'ASllE!l, Dr)·C'r. T "' i n SODA J•'(IUNTAJN. Best sell? Classitlecf acl! do Jt ... It D:1ily Pilot Classified 1/2 TON PICKUP Beds, \\'r!'IUght lrun trct Offer. 18.16 Kei\'JlOrl J-llll' Dr 0.C;:'L;Ao:S:;S;S:;l;:J~.l-~S~-~fi;' '-;"·;'6~18;-~•;~;ll~·=o~o=ll~N;O~W~&;l2~-56;1'i~.;· '.;';;;'A~tl;. ;Co~l;I ~6!;2~-56;1~8~. ===o j ht'nch. 213--39.1-28.l.1. ,Eoo·,;• °"N'°'B°". =~~--~-I Jewelry I070 5 CHtPt'ENOALE ctnw fool CRlllP('I", E:-:11'!\il, ln1111acu!nlt". Goh! ~1t?lalic. $1295 ---'--------I rhilirs S75. ca. Zeigler facilll Of.:fll-'f.H <\TE. f_a'\<lfct'l rln!?, rxcrifricr $5(). (ne\v $2001 &lllPhlrcs, Dla.n1onds ontl 5~.ll-5&14 ltubit>!!, Rp'pr. $1&io. Sell ... ' . .. COT OATSUN ......... H "'"'' .,..,,. •• ,, ........ ,, $Afl0. 839-500-J GOLF clubs $2:>. Movie 8075 cnn1era $Ll. r..rovie projector '68 CHEVY Longhoni 14 h>u. >.-.0-D<><I~ ....... ...,., Livestock $20. B.tr stools $15, e&.ch. A \Ito, pis, p/b. a/c .. J 11:as ~761. I k T l . I BUCK & doe $3. ea. Bunnies -'-~--------nn ·s. rnnsn1 f<c;1on ('()(l l'r, $2. l'B. Bantam hens $2. ea, BUFf'ALO rtnc 4a.i0 1.11th camper ~hfll. Xln1 cond. 968-2J3I rolling boll, Xl11t den piece, SJWO. SG-43;)11. r'ICVt!r bttn fired. $200. l\tllST Sell Tc '"I..\', Bl'!U Mlscellantou1 8080 KEN~IORE Elect DryCT', $50, l..OC'k Ski mck A: lav.11 edger, 640-1047 OU!l.T·ln oven unit $30. 'tent \\11h !ICprate room $33. :>16-l!m \VATER 1-lealtr, used. $35. 61'2-866l l,A\\'Nh10 \VF:ll Senrs, great condition, just 11hul'f)efled, t'IO, &r;.~113 FRUIT & Vtti.: Juierr, perrpct as JI('\'" $36 $35 • &tl>1J73 492-4185. Offt"r, 100-4 Che,1· 6 c)'I 1 ~ Tl CRAn'&\J.Ai\' pt.>11·r:r 1n~'t!r, ) !~~e~...,shlf1.. ;ood 1n1ck. 1 reel type. clean &.nd runt ~'3.:111 good. 96&-49TI after 41'>111 1 1971 LLV 11·i1h f'lllnprr sllcll.j ELEC. PORTABLf_; Type · I ~rPf'1cd thruoul. \vrller un1,lff!<l. SEt.erafll"<", 61...-6326 83~·3');1 $100. (213) ~5'16--'-'l'-99'-3_. ___ 1 'GO C~tC Nt\\' tires. runt 9' round sbas atta rug. pale good, Sl'lO gold tll~ed. ).1nt cond. $.)0. tall aft I. 673-J,j,g &12-&TJO. .J 1!160 roflo Pi~kup, t; 'ton. 3 FOR Snle. Rock\\·ell 10 b1r.h cyl. rA ck. stick shift, go:>d tn.blc M\t.', like nc \V . rond. 61-1-7895 Accesiiorie1' S2"'.i0. M>--2561 s M 1-~ord p-u ttt'ently rtfu1ll l l\IAGNUS Elee. {)rgf\n. $'l!i. A M eng. .$600. Louks k Nl\I Pink flornl Ix-ti r;prt.A.d, S I C ~. 9GS-t660. Quet!n , ,15. 548-.42&1 N E '6f1.11 ton 60dge P.V. 318-l TEl.ESCOPE Xlnt c on d, L bn.1''1, ~Jl PH : ~'1003 *SPECIALS* Of the Week ''7 ,LYMOUTH CPL V6, 111 , PS. A, !ln42aJ $799 '69 fOlDCOU,l V 6 Auto. T1on{', S~ (YRGOS9J Pow•• $599 '69 CHEVY IMrALA en. ' Q \u•o. i•o.,• '••r1t1;r 1 !9St>A)Pt. p,,,..,... $899 '61 CHlVY STATION WAGON V 8, ll~ro Toon1 • Stt"fi!•,~ 1 (I' iAJ. p , ..... "'· $799 '64 l'ONTfAC Cl'IE. ~ ~::l toPGJ1 1J $399 '6l GRHHIR!Al ' .. OPE,.N MON THRU ~· !.AT 'T\L IO 'i U,..OA Y'S 'fll ft GROTH CHEVROLET 18111 BEACH BLVD 847·6087 S-141'-l) II HUNTINGTON 8EACH QUF;~N lll!l.tlrt .~. J!.~na:~ • )Oro new. Oreror 12 boat, I-;vlnrude 9 ~S hp. 673-iliS -· great tar <hildr.n CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWERS Claulff<d Ad' Call ~ TERRIFJC BUY. SJG.1611. ·-------------------------,_,lod=&;':.:.'------:...=======- • l • . ' ' ' •, I ,,. • b '"' DAILY PILOT Stlnd~Y. May 5, l QJ4 ------==~""""""-----~=------....;.~=~~--~-:----,=,....,,...~-----:rn,..,-=r.:-:=""'":---o.m-:-·.:::-------::::; BM 9712--.B=w,,------9712 'bahun 9no ·F lot 97il , Mnda t7311Morcedos Benz '740 ',Toyota t7iS I ilolk1wa9on 97701 1 c_ o_dill.•c 9915 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; ----------; I --:.:------'...;! CREVIER BM'\¥ •• '72 MAZDA RX-2 ' '73 TOYOTA '69 y w CAMPER '73 SEDAN OE VILLE ' ""· ...... ... IMl"-·iJ ATE LEASE 35 USED CORONA . . ,,.,,.., "''· ''"'""' ""'""·· ""'''"•~e ,11·,,e 1 ..... n.. l'f l CANCELLATION I r:"'"',,,,,.,. !13.r1l l••11 ,.. ~ M BAV~RIANi .(h \, u~"EO BMW~: ~ i' ...... ~l . t:1\. ON C'vllp(', 11\,1, Sr~ ...... :~;\!/:;~·!~ MERCEDES 1 .. Dr. Auto Tran•. Alr Cond. \~1·:~~l.1t1ll;\.,~z~:~ir1t.:"1\'~ ~~·l·~clh~::,~·: 1 i1r('~?.~ e ~al~ 08 &' . ' ·,1 ·.•••.' e '74 0:1"•TS \:ul!i"·"'· ''lll,\I T•·t•. :::,Jc ON DISPLAY \'ln)·I Top. t216ilSO!. )'uu"ll hu.v il' O~LY ,\;\l/F}.1 t-ter1.-o, poi1·er doo1· • " ,. ,., , ., ' $2899 $2477 l•~k<. "''"'"' 'o" iro 1, ./ 'iO :li•1.l A l 1 """'0"E'S '.! dr . • ' rlf"I. '' ~· 1 ..i! rta11•Jss t"Ondillon . 1QH.1GX\\'\ I "<• '"" •-"'' ~ • REAL SAVINGS $2:C:95 '72 MERCEDES BENZ _1 _·1_1 U._·_1 i_ri.i _ _ e ;:~·'I!!! LUXURY 4.5 SEDAN $5799 Capri 971S t~CI.' I (11! STOCK "'" r.,. ConliM• l!cat. U1• cli•b. '"'"' milt>< fl~JQY~IJllAM•I ., ... RS, • .,.,,•( '1974 BMWs 200:ft-, Bu1"t111ut:. :tu :-..\'.1o Order yllur c:.iir for 1!('1!\('11 in t :u1"11pe KO\\: · EXCELLENT PRE-OWNED BMWS • "69 2002 • 4 tlpee<J • 'il '.!aotJ ('-",\·>'UT\ 1..-, .. [ , e '72 J.O CS.\ • lv11 : lil\·s e 'i2 2002 -I i:raced e '72 0111 l"ia I ~jlf·t~I j ;·. 01· :,O.OOJ n•ih· \\;1J"l':i n !) ~1·aiJ;i l;!e 1;11 all nc.1· 19';'..i & '';''.: B'.\I\'.'", \~\ ~lit! :'-l:u i;ui'rl\P 1':11k ·.a. 'lls~i"ll \'i ·io t:f;J:; ,.'\\"ERY J'\\ ~-l..:IT 831·:!0i0 • l~f·· 1.1" -ORANGE-C~OUNT ~'S OLDEST 1974 BMW's in clock r~a(h• for i·11n1 .. ui· .. 1·• d<'.!\i\·ery. 1-::XC'C'llcn1 saYin'~' on rf'n1aini11-: 1~1ii ll\(1d<'i .... S \l.i>=·Sl::R\'f('J.-'_1: \•:f Ji CJ\'ET!SEAS OELl\'Ef!V ROY CARVER, Inc. RL'L! .. 3 H.O\'C~: 23·1 I·:. 14th St. Co21~1 i\\C'!;;J • i l&-4111 1Autos, New 9800 -"'---------· -· 1 JlC'r ~:;11011, Ucsl::,'l1 a· 1•11::J1c t.WIO "'"•" uunll.IA 'i:i C\PR.T. '.\lu:t l:..\l·1.•. t':1r. • :!_~9~r t 30 fol' 11.Y_.: tin1r-01~t1C:r1;J1!r>, 2'°1 Hti~ lh'"· 13.000 I 11 .• OUl<:l, Ill"\ t.k.;i.1 . LC ASE { ..;': D~Y ',:2 J~G"A~ .• xr •s I ·7~ :1J.\ZD1\ slat100\'.'11;:::.:in ,J;1~,,h: tii1es. nrlstocl":'lt~c c .......... f40..t1 l!1·in1.,. Lr•l"•1 :-..·1~.,J·· 1.11•1· • ,. U iJ 1 C')I & i·ll':tn! 1;;s.2 GIP\ J ~:.outy ;.111C: ~nfety, $8~~ 1(•1'. ,\~J.11u: ~.J.o: .•. :,,.-•; · ~ i:'lr.• $\\':~ tir .... :1700 Could nn·o1)ie ~~au for '73 LJNOCRUISER 196G 1111..r,bor, C.i\t._ 646·9.103 ,7-1 -CAD-ILLAC •·r :~'.·!·1 . .jltJ r>1 t"•. H ~~··H ~~T 'Uti"•l''"I!! ... 111 .. ri:indi!i,,,1111 ..... 1 _ '7·r r.~~ ~-, 1 :.Ull.i.llle party .-J1 .. GBZI. 71 VW I . I ' •.•• ~.\ ..... :..nu· ('l)j](, SEDAN DE VILLE ., c,,.,,, ",,,. ''"" r-,--. 'N ·;11,,. .. <,I f'• .... ,., ,.,,,,... WAGON , , • ,, , , I'-,.... , -,.., • • 11l'1·. l'll'.. IO""I··:!. !..ike ne,1, H f I ~.c.r-1 c1 ·. 1 ,.p l. iui-. 11 .. ··,.1· · .... ,, 1 '1''1\·~. ,,,.,i,, ·:l':'" ~".!t';.-.. ._,i::-:=ins • .:;1". ouse o mports · SUNROOF BUS J \'(I I \'I 1• d 1 f,' O\'' CE '·"· 1.·•'•' ,.,,. ,,.,,, r,,. " 0 I 1·.s. •\Lii" TrRM. A:'lrtr~r group. . 'i 1,.•, •" I:•.. ..L ., ',N .. ---·--523-7250 ~l.• .•. :;i~.-o.)::! •111 0 ;t,1 , , • t>· ~1·u. 1WIF:\'\'• 0:\1.Y J97~ -'I.\ZDA HX-:? Coupe.. \\'arn hubs. radkl. clt-11..Jl as 8 i Plls.!!Cngf'r, 1\ ~uir1· <·lenn ~,,.,.,,., 1• i1h !nJK' deck, I d • $6977 -1·.1,Ji:1!•. A'.\llF:'-1. $2300. 01·i• ~as SA\"C'I' hu1·ry Ht only 1 p .. 11•t 1· S1t"t·1·lni;:, 11·ind0\v~ _\\' ;n 1':._ • _ _ I pin. 13...'"'0llGlll . ~ ---l)l'st of!l.'r. 5'l1-Q%.~ 71 . MERCEDES $4477 $2995 11ud ~1·;1 1 ~. r o11ln\'R Top. • ·-::. 1 :.pt!. n!I "'1 ·u; .. ".:'!9'±!~~ ,.,.,_-;.Ce"deSBeMz --9740 J:;:t.1 Clnss. ~·artory Air llp·~s'. :'.1t.1J1;1 ~iii. >t:~ ~i1!t'(Jf 1 l --~!' J-"1~ •j ~1 2SOC COUPE. t 'pn·l. 1il1 .Iii 1.'lt'. lcathCI', b~!y 1,1k. $hil"1!. 61.-l\.;(1 f.fil!!~--·-_'::"'.""-=:!§ii.a· 91\ .. u lai . .:a ~1 ... Jiun1 blue 1\'ith factory t:i:!1CZ ll Datoun . ____ 9120 ,, ''I f OAT-;"N 510 IV...,. ...,io 73 MERCEDES '". "°'"''"'"'"•· & ""'"' 'f\ l•u.:• ~------,1 "' VOLVO I 4SOSL CPE. Rosi:R. ""'''"•·A'"' owncr101,.1 -Ult wio· ___ __ . __ 1!116aJ. ~ '1'2. DAT~UN 240Z I !!~r f.:r"i'•'. :-.11tfl''1a\\,· Ontr :i.000 n1iJ('.; nn !hi.; l'ar. li:;(j!lO~Z) I JOYQJA '61 V\V uu.s. rl'bll · '\iii \'O'~ &• . . .,, v• · 1 ·r.1 •1 ~.•1\•~tn n , ll' l ~H I C \1 G-JS-~:.OJ l!ull.~-H.o~·Ce 1r ~11!e-i 11 : $5995 trs11s. :'\C\\•: J r111l1 i:i l ;:,l -• • ''"··I ·~I. I.[. \11· .. ,,.,111 .,, '•i •, i aJio & __ ru~~· .. .:_··_._ •COBij~I • , SIL<X'ks ,.,_ 1"1-:i.;•·' ltl'::,i-o•n.(<.==""'=.,.==-'=~ t •,:·~.I:. t "h·~"·:• \\"11 .···l . ..,. .1 ~j,~1),.;;i'1 66 JAGUAR S12,750 'S?OY CARVER lnc.l 1fl61Jllur1.to1-.c.:..1. Gl&-9:10? 011nC'r ~tude-!11 __ 11e cds,1:1rnlJ&-1 1chBl .\\ci;1111i11~1t'!r l ..... ,.~. s :~s n.ou .. ~ RO\'CF. I sr.1\\'1-•73·-cott-ONA-.''~~>:'.· ~,950.E:.>-81;~' .-S!rl-0051~ -G3G·,?.)()() 3•8 SEDAN l'OY CARVER, Inc . "31 E 1111 s1 10 POI -TOI '·"· 10·'·12 COUPE DE VILLE L il.<' nC?•\' • n1<:s; s~, •• · 1 · St t' W niHeagC', $2.'PO. C:.ill G·l'.!-j!j.j31 · f'.\<;J. 6jB\\") ltOt.!.-: RO\'Cr. Bl\f\\' Costa '.llcsa * ~4-14 Q IOft GCJOn cluvs, 67:>-8121 l!\'l'S & \ l11yl lop, IC!l1thl'r interlo~, 33J7S CAMINO WISfAANO ) 2.1 1 E. l';'th f.i1. ~ ••• , _ _ , .~ .\ sptl, Fal''r>l)• Air C~ncl, 11.k.ends. full .. J"nyt'!r. fat'tory nu· \AM JIJAM CAl'ISTIAl>IO ' Cos! I 'lc11a • 51fr.-111-11 f,X .. (. c .. \'?"l FOR LEAS L. 61'0\\ll (o.J.illEU ). ••.• --.. -.~1nrht1nn1n,;,:, tilt II" h (' e J . • · ·· •• "• ~. • '"'""' I · -.-· · ~ -~----_ Ch11~ ,f' fru111 4 fully et1ul11· $3199 •. V\V BUS, Strrl H.1dtnl J A:..J/1'':'-1 stl·1·('(), po1rer dool' 49l-ll7S or lll~137S . f:•. i\l~;ftCEDES llenl 2..iD l "'(',f i ... , .. •nileage 4-j() SE Tires. S11111'00L i Jlass., k•eks. Jo11· 1nilr~. 1-:xcellent WIL •. L_B_U_" ·v·O-UR . 1 St:. ·I di· se<i(ln .. P.o\\·er. :'J -.~.., lt-1;;e S~W.'ill p..•i· , .. ,,. uther xtr:u .. Sill·SSS:!. da}s,. ~-o·iili!in11. 1s7tiEllP1 1 17.. DAT"'' "N _ .\It. 1~!/F,\>I ra1hr1. ~'.?'l"ll.j Ui'..L + Tn.\ Lie. St'l'i1! ll I jS{i-3001 eves. J0t~ Andl'rson. $4599 D ATSU~~OYOTA -' ,,. / J tJ 'ti:i Jag. l\I 2. :.s. Classic ... Gi:i-:~m Eves. P r i 1· ,1 1 ('1 :\o. illll·t Take ~·our t·Jt" i!1 ! j9416 V\\'. r<'blr -cni::-:-sunroof.1 ,-~~~'7.:':::::":':"" .0_R VO,LK~WA~EN, pf .:KUi> s~ ...... c.1.,sh ..... i\Jusl scll .1 ._0 _::;1.~-:::-7'":·-::, .--~ tr ;:,]('.. I I :-;Int co11<I ... tk'I\' 1:1·cc. &. tJ.t.8£RSCADtlLAC .,:., ,j ' . ' '.1. _I,! • \ J ·' t .\ I•! T~··" 'om , 1.1c.~. ['1:· ~ ~~n,,. J~':'.::'----l 66 .!:!OSI. C(l_1,VJ~1.118LE. Jim SJemons I batlerv. l"adto. hcOtL'I". SS[XJ.I ""' l.'.....11 I ~·,y .lJl1 ll0! .. \~'. ,. '.:. ,·r1· l'"•·t"·.· ·; •. ir: ~I !) Jct;,'! .1,\UUAl~ \'l:J ('Oll!X'," (:'l1nl~~·1'•' 1:)3-!IC~<. I 2600 ... rbOtl•..-a• .. ' ~.' .'.' .. ~-;· l~' ~:·. t'\i:!31r.i"1. a.1110 & ui1·._ 1~.000 1ni. s;;:;.:io. ~ " 0 Sl91J !'~ "1 '' I Imports '74 T,~·roTA I ~11 \1\\' BUG, J.00(~1. C•s•••M Sd·t1 J.•i.: D'.\TSt::\'. li !O \\":i~n I f·rr~. t!f.l-<i 101 1 _bf'.U~-r~1·L_G ..... :::::.__ .:l.11 Qt.::iil ., u.i ~t'!l'e ·cnllsok ._ . _ • • • Sih·f·1· lir<iy. I spd. nir.' --j~-JAGUAR --1 ·6:! 7\TCitCEDE S. 11m~t 1'.('l\ \c,,_. 11 ~-: .. a.-t I (i~;'"J~56 !!i • 6i::i·il'.?."1 '72 SEDAN OE VILLE 1·1<oi1·h. :-..ow 1,111r~. $3,t:i.J I ~ in1 1•1~rlia1ety. 1.i-;:.:=i1.;:; ~·all c.~3 .. :l•) , Best Deal Anywhere! v ·f-9772,vin~·l i.1ti. Jcuthrr in11:i1·io~·· .• :.:!·i~.~-' v.12. ROADSTER e1·cn~n;,;__ ----11 ·~!·~~_F!"!U~.::_·.r~TIILT! I LEASE OR BUY l 0 YO ! [1111 JlOl\'('t', fflvtory tlll' ·f~-D,\TSt.i~ ~.10S13!i011 C11ld • .: 0:11:.-8.00ll 111lle.~ (I) ~.rBZ 2SOSL rdstr. \ sf}Cc<l l<1 :\IHZ :!SO .s1:: 3.:i C'pt'. r '74 VOLVO 1 ·.,.,ndi!ion1n)l. 1111 11· he " I ,I \'.'<1i.:0 11. CLf:,\'.\:'. $$j(l. Call _ _ _ _ ___ 1 .''-"· 1_1ol:!1_. .-.: 1~h <.'!.'.1-2JIO o_lc. I .\.,!re.:;J~· " i:l:1$s1,· ,\.-ni<".-All Models! I \:'II/}",\! stt'!rro. J)l)11·rr cloor 1 r,,-r ti ~·'IUD! f[AN LEWjS l1)(·k~. •·ruisc contro l . r:-. ... ·~-1 :i :.:~ P'.'11. ___ ", ·. I),\"~"\ :'I: • .1'L'1'. I· .~ 1;111. ,.:; ~1 8Z ~w.-.1:: seiJ:111. fl ulo.j '-._v __ 1:·_______ !f n ri;i:.rux 1 ·;~. '1111 .. 1 .. 1~.1. 1na·~,_ ~;, ,,p: 1, 111·.. · I·:·_ •'Cl~!1t, • hel••'" ij 1 _ 1r·111 ..• ~· ,lii· s::t-~i~tG Vl r. MG 9742 Stst Deal Anywhere! $4599 \\hit·~ 11 / Dl:1"k .1.. r-:c.i '.•:.I"'· ~-....... 0. :1,~~-".'.11 , . " I!. . I \: -• -~-~. TOY TA LEASE OR BUY •·1~. ~ .... , .. -,i';'.-~ll';::o. ·v.~ n \T . .::r\. '.:O"O. C!t·an s;-• ' -•. ··•· . .";1 '.1~ ·~·;:i.··1~:,;,.;· ,i~1~~-l ··"',\~'6G ~rid6e1 :z~~ ini. 3.) ~ All Models! r.,-.,~--j'.,-~--~~UA-~C"'."!!" Clr-s~i1J1·rl ,\u: (';111 El:!-j()iS 1'h1•·1: :--,:, .. ,;11·:u,.&1Jra!~e:..'-- --·--'.(f\ !111" i1rn1 ~ 11·:1h a D:1il-. -•-.l'n<'n'Y!'O~ 1 on. j O'.'EHS£.\'.)ilt::Ll\'J·.J :\' ~ tr.J 1~ ~ :.:i:'1~1. •::i-7ix.). I ri ,\3:~ S~ ?ilot l'la.~sifit'd :1.d. 612·jtii'S1 • ~~"219 --. 1 1.1~.j 1!··1-t. .. n l '.' 6 '~!..~ ·:; ! SPfo:Cl.\!..T~TS 2'0... ,lf¥tl. , BARWICK DATSUN ...,on1 ... c AutOs; Ne;-9800 A1 •tos. New 9800 Autos, Ne.;, _J _ 9800 A·•to s, NftW" --9800 MGB 9744 r.c::,~:·: .\BRAXD \io;\'." '74 1 1 DEAN LEWIS C ... tMeM'.AW1 ---'------------'-----,--1-TllYt"lTA 1200 Co101l:1 Set.1.·111 .. -----------------------------------------69 MGB GT ,,.. only s;· •. c; •·e.· ""· J;. -1972 ELDORADO ROADSTER J,,,,;;, uuc:l ~:i.'. l.::i. r-. I VOLVO l'.OltGEOVS. CO~V El.tTIBLF. -*----*----*-·--- VEGA! • VEGA! I • HOW ARD Chevrolet in Newport Beach is selli119 out entire big stock of economical VEGAS HOW! ALL HEAVILY DISCOUNTED! LEASE or Buy Now and Save! J!ed & l'{"ady. (:-;..,, 11 311 ~ · l ~a••lory air •'Onil11 1oning, 1 ~ !I u:bor . C.:'I!. Ofu '· ·o:il fu ll ll':Jtl••r 111t1•1"iur. lu.11 • V"ll'('!', 1!11 •\'. li'll'~<'Opl(' · '70 VOLVO 140 , !il1'!'1"1!h~. Sll'r't"J. rloor l0t.·k~. . (J......--1~,.,,:k....• .• _ '''t>"I !'l"l'h<" ''"tlll•ol, all (lu• /\ll'aS },--.----. • • .. ~. ~ ·' • K· 1 ... ,.-,,.,] -. •~·>r. l:ut;:?!r.---- 1 -~ n "'t 11 r ·: .\u· Cu.id . !Orw.1 -9746-· • 1971 TO\'OTi\ lGOO • t l l~.\P-..:1. $S!99 I - 'illl'arl1 Jhnp1111~i .1..0. 1......, ... ·"' ... , .... , ~--~~· fl< er t.-1~ ~{>41,. .. , , . r--'Ne11· brakes. tires. b3tt. Koui , 1 • ' 73 OPEL GT I 'hocks. Dy,.o-nmed. Low 1-L· ...,,....,v .. NAIW•CADIUA(!< I n1ilf'a~e. Orig. 011·ner. ~ns H ~ I ,,'»tt)tnal~c & I•:\\' n1ilc~ 1 :\it .. :\Ja:<r ~ff·r ____ _E:>-28-_!.:.! I %iiiitf• -2600 arber I .. UJ9J I ·-;1 'fOl'Ol'.\. S:;Gj. Lo n11ll's, = ---·-'1f!J CostoMj~ 4~91 • I lljc in th~· faun'. Othr1..,1·is•? I 13600 He .. t.:h 131., \'."t"sln1i11~1er -~ -j 1 PEltFJ.:<.:r. Part~ r o r 1,g-_1 • .Jf-.'"11 r:::1:.:?;i0:1 '73 CCUPE OE VILLE I ; l~at,;uns, To~Olas. ti';'::-li-"1. l .-;-;-';'1 -\-:l)i:\·0 \\"fi-:;::on. n I" na\s~an,·~· ~nlr!/bla~·k I ·7i~IARIO:_i_< -srATJO~ ~ucvn1ati<.:. \'r'l"Y {!oorl o•nn· I 111\'l lop. (~1~1 1apcs11·y ~ -----·-----1 \\' GO ' r F , X1 dltivn i.J niil ~ :;)7 . ..;·,~; ]{'(!!her 1111rr101, full fJl.'\l'f't ,! I ·12 Ol'EL r:nH)e, auto tl'::ns. A ~· ,\/ ' ~.\, • nt ' · · · · -· -f·:<'triry air, rill whrf'i.I I S I "·I I 1· \ · 't~ c.'0,1d. Bcf. 10 a.n1. &H.fi0.l3 I I \.\l/f\f r.t<hl) po11'C'r <blr • tee ..,.. '"{ 11u 1'1 s. ,., 1.:rNl ---·•· ------AUTOS USED · · 1 I ,, ,'k. ~.Z!.~O ~ n1i"s: :\ \ n · r '71 TOY<?!•\ Co':°llA: Good i _ 1 lo1'k~. 1.;>11 111ih·s. I ~llFGX t 1 ,00J. ~2-i:t .... D·l~-68;;.'. cont! .. !-~:-,;eel g~s n11:, ne1v I General 9901 . S5799 CPLL n,\LL\"t: ·;j~\'inyl I bt"akes._ Be-st ?lie_:. 96.5-9188 • ' £ lop. ,\ut•J. !ralll'. 2j nip;;..' T . h 9761 1 Station Wa9ons ttAIEIS'~ 1 Priv1l!C' l'ly. 6-l~-l ·li2 I ~p ~-'73 PLYMOUTH i. 2.600 Hf!lr• -~ You'll «)et an outstandillCJ trade allowance, too! . Peugeot 9741 '69 TRIUMPH GT6 ';'"'11''' '""· ;,. ':"" r""'• co ... -54°'--· '·-·New PEUGEOT -~ I . . 1 I ~~:~,) .. :~.~u1·':'.1 /;.1;;~~-.~·ia .. ~.i i973 ELoORAoo-1 ' 4 ~1:.eed 11-o.nsm1s.~aon. ra<.Jlo. $3288 .(.( Ch k th VEGA mpl • DEALER l hf'!l.lfr, ni ... -e cil.r. (64Jl\'l i \"1n~I 10~. leather interior,' ec ese exa es: ' · o'L" ,,, PONTIAC 1 ,.,,.,, '""· ''"'""' ;,,.,;,,,.., Lu:11;.ilc1e S.-1.o;F; au<l ;,er.1...... $1577 ' f"ll [)'•11"•'1'. f:lL10l'Y air, Iii! 1 1----------------,r----------------,.-------------.;_--I 1. I \\a~on. T:L· •. I 1l1l"l·. L\1:1d 1•1I.' "h•"1. ,\',f/r:\,f ~lrreo nJu~I I ,,J ~VHl l•;(;.' .~ 0 .1 ( l.sp a~. ,. '74 Vega Hatchback '74 Vega Hatchback '73 Vega Hatchback I PACIFIC MOTOR ''""'0"$1sao ~~,'::.,~!:~1."' ... ~~il;';.;;:r1 Coupe! Coupe! Coupe! IMPORTS flt.o1tTOYlOtW1ATA' [ • ~;;~:,., ',~:~~~99~;":'221c~~~ '1 1 PEUGEOT /SUBARU - ·~~· ... 1.i •• .:Jill ...... DAVE ROSS I '~~~~!""~-... '·"·""'"' ,.,,., __ , 1'"6 ""'"''· c.11. ''"'9'°' PONTIAC I MAem ~c With radio . heater/d efroster. lour-speed lrans. 11nled glass. whites. dlx. bomoer. l1lters. BU lights. etc. No. 324700/3179 -' Wi th auto. trans .. exrer1or decor. radio. healer/delroster, tinted glass. lo miles .. BU - With heater/delroster, radro. tinted glass, lo miles. BU light s, auto. trans .. !liters. etc. No. 358286/1885 IPOrSche 9750 ·£1SPITF11iJ.:.~ ... E\r ,ran;, 1 · 2'°° ~---1 radial I iN"i; 11 'rire \\'hl;;, lj. ' , :.!-ISO ~.larhor lllv~L.. 4 Ce. tto MeNI MM1 1 73 PORSCHE Joints. eni:. pis & p.1int. (Ol'la :'lies. ~-"·SUI• I 91 .1 .1 s~,.JO. •1r oHl't . 67:-r.1~2 · • -----~ .·---o -------'69SEDANDEVILLE . _ -. -· conrl. :'llu.~1 sell. $1~. 1 . . . ··~ . . •. . . .c ... s r 1.111 -.vvv m cs. Jn) , Ornngc & Jikr. 111:-11-. 11\0. ?:::.1) 169 T'Rll.il\fPll TR-6. :-:Int . I .. I. '.l>l ~• II \" ·J 'ii' !11 li!I' &l:>-.\128161:>-1199 '>OJ< S.ILI ... ".' '"'"· ""· .'1 !Op .. I ·"'""' , '""""' $6795 ~ s2199 I ! ~ M 1::---;-;--' . I Ullls.11ecd~~\<1lb •. \l •U a,.1.~. Hllf'a'tfll'. full !))\\"('I" fRC'IOl}' $2399 ........ , , 1·1 lri. _TTt"'il .. G1·0\\ 1i er pRrl ~. Gl_-!JS IG :,ir '"'·1d11iri111ni;. til1 11.hN'l.I Only Mo. 11.w. . I !Y)fl\"t'.'!~· J.lilO tl~~ .. w~ ~~.; ---1\~l{F\I 1·adk1. full y l 173v;·~·~-;:~s;-;;t-ii·~-~·~-;~i ... i·i"i·i·~j-j1~~;;~""";"H~icii;t~cl;~~~Tl7iv;;;";';"-51~'""rt1'~·~·;-;w~~~-1 --· -----. ~~:'l_!__!:...::_!IJ!'!· ·.'~'~·.i...:.o..:.:::s-=-AMc 99os Cl[lli"'"·I. -'lin1 ('()r>dition. 1ignts. l1Uers. etc. No. 926KEE PURSC.1~1:: «2 !HJ Tar~a 1972 TP.l t:~IJ'l l TR-6 In1 ma<". • •~•1 w~·1:.1 73 Vega Station . 74 Vega Hatchback 2-dr.! 74 Vege Station Wagon! 1Llc ;;;; "°'''' ~ .. , . ., com\. Lo mn., p,, Pl)'. '72 HORNET ----...-, I ~~:;. l\"c11·por1 Ue11eh Dlr. 1 1 $3700. fir offl'r !:l.i2-.J:.:1~ SPORTABOUT NABERS CADfLLAC1'. W I 114/S'.ll-9:'.I){). -----. agon. ----. ·. .. ,---. Volkswagen 9770 I ·2toO IMo--.. I W11n estate wagon option. AM /FM radio. air c ond tinted gla ss prem. tites . hea1er1oe rros1ei. auto. transmission. Power steering 10 m iles. BU hghts etc. No . 317072/1894 ssr\84 ~ ,41 M9. °" ______ ..,......,.__~ Impala Custom aup• ~ •'' -l' "•"l' .-•o\.Otl powei sTee11r.::i. r.i.il.ei.. Wllh l1 nted glass. lour-speed trans ., heaterlde lroster. radio, GT e Quip.,. dht. bumpers, cuslom 1ntenor. etc. No. 3284 72/3175 .,,.., $7 628 .... o.~ .......... ....,..._ With tinted glass. aulo. trans., radio, whites. underseal. heaterld~froster. wheel covers, HO radiator. dtx. bumpers, elc. No. 26191 1/3038 Malibu Hardtop Coup• IPO!lSCl_ll·. 11 r. 1;~1 Jll . ·---~-~ G l'yl, ,\uto T1·nu·. P(J\\"{l"'. to,......54 t1 I I mags, :l spd. F'.'ll ta11.-: «eek, '(i; \'\"; ~L'S, n."\' lircs. f.:teerinoi. 1:z1 I.! a ss .I ~~~~~~~~~ \'ollo\1·. f73!Jj. il ·l-lit?-:.·~f;u, Ctcr.n. Lillle body 11·ork. Facton· ,\ir Co!ld1tionino;. -~------ l•t:0.-1766 Sl:t:-X... :;18-698 1 I 1-IG•tFYA ) .CAD. '71 FLEETWOOD 1970 911-T, A!tt/1'-)i, uit.;:;,,, 5 , ·r.s \l\' Camper \'an re-bit vi Lli.X UlllOUf' BROliGllAi\I s1x.i. Xlnt cond. Con·air en~. Xlnt cond, ~--LOllGl!/l.E Exquisite Ex1•c u1h·e bla<':. 6»-8368 1'.lusr set!! $1200. 6';'5-7696 ~ • 11 tlh blnok vinyl top, plush J•«• ... •ff'J black full lenlh!'r interior. Saab 9760 "65 BULi. R/H, Xlnt cond. _ -... -factory air cond .. full PD"'er SAAB We dare you to test drive the all new SAAB & compare cost end value I S700. Gij-~25 a rt . 5 all day 13600 Beach Bl., \Vestminstf'r s tCl'l'O, door lock.,, Ult & Sun. 892.QiSl 6'.',6.2500 lclescopit• Sl(.'('ring:. l..O"' ·~ V\\' CA:i\IPER. '69 Eng. "69 RA~IBLER 11.8g·on, 1 O\\'n-n1i_les & lotally cquipptd. ,\i\tfF~I. lo-mi, gd cond. er. lo nii, stick. 6 cyl. 20 (767CR:\ll xtras. $11;}(). 675-54j7 MPG, Gel. cond. S89.'J.l ... -:N~l~IE~EJS:::""::,.~&N~U~ .. ~ ..... ~ ·7~ \'\\' l~ug. Good condition, 616-5195. ~ · SI '100. or bc!st ofter. · .~63'"°"R'°A°')'°'1B"'1".c"1",.-.d-,.-t",.-.,-, "".\; i~ ~. I r1:=i1.:yio7 I body. $135. !tuns. S40..t1 I '67 \'\\' Bu.~·. cleru1 inside & S.Ji-0033 our. ('lnl.\' 1200 milPs qn rcbll Buick 9910 CA0.-·72. Sed OeVille 'l. ' 1 -., •ool. IO,., Jo., /l.~•ftn' !,._..,,,eo-~'0•»'11) ... l/{)<CI, b~:1-:< ... ,, ' t. 'l ' 'I''~·.,-,·, .... , .. •1'~1 1 c 1~.fi.t!M e 6.!;).G.100 ·s.~ V\\' Can1prr, pop top. new '73 CENTURY LUXUS hC'nutilut <:he1unu1 bro1\'n 299 72 52699 I _!.n;..._:_~'~:t. ~\~ !XiJ-1256 . LE~S THAN 2.100 ~Ill.ES m.re,--m-, ,,. ONLY ,Toyota -----:.9765 tires,(-bunrry. cng & 11".i.ns 2 Door hardlup. Air eontll· 1rith hcigr-vinyl top. 8acld1C' t-----~,.,-,,·.,·;.,·"-,·-'·;'::;';-,C=· .,,,,..,,. __ ..__O::;:M:.LY,_ _______ +-----;;•";.",,",;';,' ,;'':':.;;'P,;''~·'.;'•;.,· .,·,;''.;.".;..._.;.;.;;.;...,. ______ -I -~-------·I slnr. $1.:)j[), ph 64&-3839. lioning. po11c.1· ~tef'rint:. f·il\ IL•a!hl'\' inll'1·it)r, fat'tOlj' 73 73 NOVA COUPE BUICK SKYLARK •i:t: TOYOT.\ Cct·on1 1 dr. ~ 'IJG-\;,\7"0ug. rndlo, ne~v tires po~er br:tkc·!>. tint_cd gln~s. air cnnr! .. full 11011·1·r. rill & 599 72 H,:,,d1cr-C'.'.lu1,Q.AJ' .... P'.:,&r.11 t.,,,,,,,,,., ,52799 ! snd, 11-idc tirrs. n<'ii· <'n•;,•. ,1 .ucks. $(jj0. j wluh• 11·ah tires. 1•1nyl lop.! ll'lt'!<coptc steering, srerco, I\ .. ·~;·' ,,,. .. ,. .,,,...,,, l l<.1•"· l'•'·..-.O· •lo•., 7· 1 t".;].' .\ '"":J'eo ~"I •OC"' 0:1 .. ;) ,,,,. 'a"'f"''"·· l'~l~-· OHlT & con.o' .. ~"-·::i. ·y ........ ,.. , ~, '«°' 1a •)J c lJorl •>olld. f'6:.!-Ji :Jl.i. :i:ll -j 77:i CHOICE OF l rfoo1· locks .. '!·uly :o1ho"Toon1 -1-.1a1.:.r·.v,.,,· O"LY j --• .. -··---$3233 I fl'l'S h. (460J.,J1,Q ) '" "' " i Datsun 9720 1 Datsun 9720 Pl Yt,40UTH DUSTER 1-J> -.,.. I·"'"'"' ........ ~'· tJ-,,~~ •. '):!C:"'Y a:• ,,..~}'~ 'O'l.0 & ~t&, .., ... !Tl'<(!\, e.ouip- ' ·: '•1fl..• •J . • OHlT s...999 71 ~~~~!~!~?.f!>,,~,p·~-·oo> $4699 • ::..,-,..~ ·.A •ad'o & heo•e•" ~·/.,,, mle<u, l'<""Pt.0'"" -.. I DAVE ROSS ! c.de .... 140-91 "'""'~' (]{)KUj ONLY PONTIAC ---' 52599 '64 52499 '67 FORD 1;, TOH PICK·UP 4 \f..flf'd. ,,KJ;o & 1-.botto. l)l»d •IJtbc!· 1t .., ~$.(1-147183) ... OHlT Ford Must"""l Fasiback Mom.:it.::, power ,._c & tt>e1. ioaory a·. ·.:rd<> &-1-eo!f'•. r1em:i.m 1,•11\. o:u!fo ...;,e. tlJUKfll1l . -.. OMl.T CHEVROLET Mac Arthur and Jamboree Boulevards Ent~ hOlll M~Arth111 • l . - SS99 SJJ95 -oH.rs,_. j twu MaRd9f Moy 6 , .... D•pt. O,n Sot. "*"'"'I' 1971 -1972 -1973 I NS<J ""'"' Bl,d, '68 FLEETWOOD Co<;ta i\lesa su;.so11 BROUGHAM • \'htyl lop, leather Interior. 240Zs 1974 •• 260Zs OVER 100 NEW ANO USED CHOOSE FROM CARS TO _... .. .... ~' " COT CATSUN ...., ........ ~ ....... -........... ._ "'-~· !lo'lO•O<\-Q:J !)oW T1V1 ' J full po11.·er, factory air condiflonfrtjt. 1111 "'he e J , ,-7-"-B~l-k-E~,-~w~--I AAof /Fl\! !ltel't.'O. pcm·C'i door ~ u c I ate agon lock<i in• n1 a r o 1 A 1 r 9 PAs.iESGER-3 ~AT L !\VX~"'JG.11. • I Ft1ctorr eh· c.'l)nditionin". "'11 powe., h~a•:e l~Ck. t.UlfRS CADll •U"" \,c.'l(],11:1111., r 11h1l • ~t l"r1 .. , '""' l ..,.., 1 1·:ilh II\~ <Jec"i. lilt 11·'!"l'I. 2600 l .. 1W ~ J.101· 1o<-::s, c111i:-• CO"l l"l l. :OsteM ... 140..tl &port \'lhetls. i\lmt t>vtr·.'I ~~~~~~~;;,~ UI,, :\Ira_ &-IP!r!I lhan 1~.oOO ·1.1-(,\0 S«lan DeV\lle . r tlle!!. t~Cl'. 1()12831. I 1::.000 l\11 , J> t-: R l" EC T COND. /\It con<!. po\\!fr cvcrythln,i::, lc:itlwr, •"~I I t>1(ll'i!Q & 18f)l', \'lll)'I top-The JMO..-S I llj"'l"' ~'!l· Gl~4'62. ~~~~~~~~~:,'~l ~EO. 0.• Ville. 1.9.000 n1 I. ;-~IF.rt,\, ~'\"C<'pHon"l·I step! 1·nJhll l h-c~. nl I h· r·lc,:in, IG-lo m1le ~c, 1~· n,·a.lltlhlr •• ~~r~ .• qr i g . ·.,,, olt• • f ·II ~,.,,. Pl'IJ Ol\TCl". P59'.>. 64!;-4.j65 fl ft 6 fKu • · : "' . u. ,.... \\'k11ai;/11 1l rlny "'knds. 111)'. s119:1. OO:l-.lll15. ----I ~C:6 .j ·01-. SPf.(Ji\I •. Nl'1v 1960 ~Ai?ILLAC Uf'etl. $1W. 1 r 1 .... ~t oU~r. ~~7;-,oo _ j ~64."01 Cl.AS.~ ~t:l J..S -Fi 12-WS I ' ' Sunday, May S, lq74 C•m•ro 9917 Ch•vrolet 9'20 c~ivrolet tHo Chevrolet ~m=o -c"'on_tl_ne_n_l_•',---.,,99"'30=c_"'o:r_v-_e-:_1.,..te::::::::_99"'_"'32_.,...., ,c=-.-u-g.:.•-·===~·===-· _._ff_33 For ___ _ 9940 DAILY PILOT DJS, Pont ac 9965 ~i ·~ CAMARO. Ccori """"· R '73 CHEVELLE·. .'72 •CHEVY II '72 .,EL..cAMINO :1q CONT'N ~TA~ '71 CORVETIE "l'l xn Vil, lilt whl, ,,,,., '70 TORI NO WI H, ,tirw new lll't'1 MALI SU t 2 Door haril op. t ~<er, root, p/1, p/b, aJ.r., 1tereo w1rnqa. ~1250 or T.O.P. '-• th&.n S,OCKI mJle1. L NOYA V-3, 4 1pci, RAd\o, Power factor)' air condltionlnj:, V~. Auto Tran• ... AM/FM, tpe, lJ,000 ml, xlnt cood. Automatic trR1111mlulon, air PONTIAC SALE ~. --· Slef!rfnl,,E"ll OLA$9, n.any vinyl lop, Ult wheel, Mt/ ~·er S!eerln,s. Power 641rl19.1 condition i ng , po>4·er -SS Cabrkll~ top, factory air Sport Collpe, V-8, Al.Ito wnae1. CUsttw:n 1 n t, r Windows, EZl GI a 1 1, COUGAR ,'_ XRT ..., """' 1tffrlng, radio, & htater ,74 LE MANS I vi CAMAR.O, 1910, 350 con ditloolng, 1utoma1ic, Trani, Pt7wer Steer l n &: t (7961iM) ' ' FM Llereo, lelllhl'r interior. Factory Air Cond , Rall)' '"• • ••·.AN· (952VR!l I ~· Xlnt cond. $1400. or ~oer steering1 •pMl.'e1' disc Radial 3'~) only 19,000 tll5M!)). \\'h~ls, Tilt v.· h eo e I, Excel cond., many extnJ. $999 2 Door hard!op. A.tr condl· e oUer. 673-0526 brakes, lilt • wlfetl, rudlo, miles, sliver mehllic with -~--,------·-., $J9~8 t 7~fBH) 499-3291 or 499-2179. tlonlng, automatic, powe:r healer, Y:hltc' \Vall tires. 1~.'Ytk. tnljrloti imma late 1 O/l.J. Dodge 9935 slecrlni. power b r a k e t11, 1 Chovrolet 9920 (863.IEPI II/.""·~, '.J: ~'Alf • ~"""' if radio, healer, while wall I 'TI NOVA 1 ... $12195 ' ,.. ~ -=-1 m•-~ '69 0000£ DART. 2 dr .. 3&1, 33375 CAMINO CAPISTUMO tires, very low nllleti. tl.M- .!Wr c.t. M'ua~i ~!~· ~sk.. -:!, ..... 1, t '.: 1'000 Beach '81., Wettmi!Uter DAVE ROSSQ•LJhY.a blown head &asket, 4 speed, r!~~.~;'!'!~:.."!. 776l. ""' "" 81e·6651 ~2500 PON C ---' I po<\, heRders, $350 or Trade. 4tJ J)7 $3480 Auume I01.n. ~ TIA 13600 Beach 81., Wtstlt'llnster -• 5411-3417 • • 5 or lll·llll '6$ otEV .. c&price. 4 dr ~;=~~ Chrysl1r ,'92..5 2480 Harbor Blvd. ~l 636-2500 '65 DODGE 4dr, lull JIO''"'r & MUST SELL '67 CORTINA. '74 GRANO PRIX Excel. Mot.qt. air <.'Onct' Cos ta i\1eS1t 5-IG-S017 •~ II" 61 000 II C :l Door hardtQp. Factory air i Bara:ati1 $600 64f-145ti:I=~= . , CJ.fRYSLER '71, Tu'll 8.· \\'ILL PAY 'I'OP OOLLAR au, ,.e °'w, ·' m t'll, d. transp. car.'' gal\ snv-(.<ondil lonlnJ,AAJIFM slorro .• "f01A10NTE CAR:\Jj IOI.Mr 197U EL CAMfNO \V( top. S.1 Chevy ,Noyn, 6. cyl, 3 spc1 Ct.ry, Sln. \Vgi1. Lie. 553 ,.. • FOR YOUR VE'I"?'E dlr.,' 67&-7462 -er! . ~ or bes< olfc1'. Ph . pov.·er steering, Power i Good mlle11e. G~ cond· 454 hi perf., ituii)o "400~uto stick on )fli", 1£t o/nd· $400 ,'OGE.); £l...pl\!'l3et1gt!r1 radio, 8-l:Z...8844 t 1970 CJIARGER, anti V-8, 642·336;;1 brekes, raJJy \.\'httls. tilt ! Betl otter. 675-6116. · lrans, fact. air, new ·&-es, or ~81 off('t'. 50 64 Chevy htr., P,.S.. All·. $ 319 5. ~ vinyl tO'l, A/C. auto, xlnt ll\1l\1AC. '72 LTD Bn:iugham \1·heel, vinyl top. (101699). • • brakflll, Low miles. Must Mahl.iu , new ilres, tape Newport Beach p Ir -Sugar Bowl' Cotton ~·I Put your i>udaet b<lclf on i rood. Sl35ll. 83,3... 1288. "'/all oplionaJ equip. $2350. ! $4820 ' Outdoor &ports lOlt l t' sell $2300 oi:, best Offer, dec)c, good mlr, $300 or besl 7l4LB3J.-9300. Orange Bo.;,.l or any kind ll~e track .. , Sell Idle Items ! 0 tdoo ports lost Its Call \\'kdays: .Dick Ka.ye, 1ppe1.11 Sell your equipment 642-3773 .n ft! .DaYI 673-7350. <>Uer. 536-;!>823. •64 CHRYSLER 4 dr, full <>f bowl will sell with a w1lh a lov.·-cost Dally Piiot I u ~' s!u eq_ul1 rne t 87()-4;111 I '74 VENTURA witb a Jow-a>st Dally Pllot , • . Sell Idle Items with a Daily pov.·er It air, xlnt oond Dall,y Pilot Ousltled Ad! ~llS8l1Hed Ad! Call 642-567& 1' ~~~a._· m~'f oaul PU~r 'iD TOHl:\0, 2 dr, HIT. V-11, I Door. Very 10\v mileage. Claulfled Ad! 612-5678. 1CLASS SEU.S i 042-5618· Pilot Classified ad. 64.2-5678 lhruout, must self, HTh-7462 &U-5678. t ay. C1assilled Ad! 642-5678. ,\/C, lull p0 .... ·rr. Gd enncl, F1tctory . a.Ir rondition!ng, ' A N 9800 A 9•00 Autos, New 9"00 Autos, New . 9800 A I N 9800 i,:d g:1s n1ileas:c. SllJIJ. 1111!l1rnauc. j)O\\'Cr stee11ng, utos, ew 9800 Autos, Ne~\:·,.r '9800 ~uto1) ttew: uto1, N1w · ~ " _ ·--·. _ -~ . ~· _ ..;.._u_~!!. tW 833-31i~:l. j \\'hitt· v.·all tires. Loaded. DO YolR --FAMILY A FAVOR! . ' • 1974 CHEVROLET CAPRICE .. ~.r ·-DOWJ-· ~-~DESIRV-E-~JHE-... 8Em-. . _..._ -~ . ' ~:~ -t t-,.. • ----r--- AT A tllCE y·ou "CAii , EASIL y AFFORD? . '7 ... . ·( {, ... : .• :(i~ .. :i.,~ ' · • · l"''--. ..;~~) r• We Hav.1 An·Excelleili Selection Now At Connell's • w • f'ORD •\!1:;:.~1 1. &31)1 _ \\·ago n. :ur, new 53499 h'fl!lS., a ir 11hockll, Sl~l 1 tires $000/t;est off . 8~7~ [ • '70 Lid Broui;h11111. lo nu's,• all p11r. Sl:r.J?>. l Call 6k.i-·191i2 1 068 TORINO ~~u. ~tic. p/S , I p/b, $7aCI 846-<108 '71 F'ORD LTD sta-v.·ag. xlnt rond, lo n1\les, recent tune-up. bst offer 644-4088. '67 CORTINA 53,000 ntl, 30 mpg, tapedeck n1ags, xlnt cond. $U50. 842-9896. '65 FORD Falcon , 8 cyl. Auto. P\\T steering. Xlnt. rond, 644-7010 '70 FORD Wagon, LTD, fully equlp'd, $1175. &12-0500 Lincoln 9945 -------'66 CONTINENT AL. Low mileage. new trans, Very clean. $595. Call 67J....8732 . Mercury 9950 '72 l\fARQUIS Brghm. Po<.\•er seats, .... 1nrio11·s, A/C, et<:. $1800. 494-1719, 729 Gaviota L .B. '72 MERCURY f\tARQUIS, brghm. pl)\\'er, /\/C, am/fm. $2450 or bei;t orfer. '&ffi...8151 '68 COLONY Park, 9 pass a/c, stereo, 60,!XK) miles. 546-0864/ !>16-8195. '67 i\IEReURY.._ l\fonterey. Clean, 1 o .... •ner, Good 2nd car. $450. Call 536-98,72. Mustang· 9952 '74 GHIA II, auto, 11ir, P"T, radials. Sell/tl'tl,(lc sin l sports car. 962--0i56 '68 CALIF. SPECIAL, $1250. or befit offer • 646-5801 '70 MUSfANG, PS, air-<x>nd, Low mi., &mall eng. Ex~! cond. 615--8619/675--Jm Ofd1mobllt 9955 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC ::!ISO lltLl'bor Bl\'d, Costa i\leti11 546-8017 • ONLY 13 1973 PONTIACS LIFT llurry !or savings of a life- time. 30°/o OFF Factory suggested list price. • DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2840 Harbor Bl\'d. Costa Mesa 546-8017 • '73 FTRF-.:BJRD, formula 400, all v.·hitl', 4 !lpd, al~. p/g, p b. Rallye "'his, l 4, 00 D mi, like ne\\-. $3.iocl 494--8253 or 675-7283 .61 BONNEVILLE. good transporlation _ \vith n1 r cond. p/b, p/s asking $475. SOl-!S81._ '68 PONTIAC Ve n lu re hardtop, cht~. lo. n1ileage, ale. pvt ply, 962-8615 $795 'iO FIREBIRD, tonnula 400 , lull pv.•r, ExCt'I. cond., Orig, owner, 675-8896 Ew11\Vlmd1 1970 PONT. GTO Convert. cohlplete overhaul . $1400./ Best otter. 4.99-2169 Thunderbird 9970 , I Sall!,s"a Sl":'Vlce OLDSMOBILE .GMC TRUCKS -~HON~~ '73 THUNDERBIRD t.e.ndau. , Ha~top coupe. Vinyl top, leatller interlor; dual codlJort seat, fulJ power, factory air conditioning, tilt w·h e et; AM/}~"'1 stereo, power door ·. 73 IMPALA COUPE VS. auto .. air. vinyl roof, P.S., P .B ., th is is a good buy. (149GIH) $3199 . 73 MONTE CARLO Cpe. Landau. VS, auto.. P.S .. P.B., air, vinyl roof. nice . (820G· NM) s3999 . • '72 CAPRICE COUPE Etec. windows. AM/FM stereo. vi n~ roof. ai r, auto., this is a nice car. (343EYUl '72 IMPALA CUSTOM Cpe., VB . vinyl roof. air. P.S .. P.B .. auto. Good tow mileage car. (565FFBJ ~2699 '73 fORD·WAGON Gran Torir.o 6 pass. Like new. "" ~!110, VS.'"· P.Si.·"-f".8 .. a1r~J u<ggage rack. IB32GMJ) · ~ s3499 '72 FORD LTD Wagon Squrre 10 pass. Low miles. rack. va . auto .. air. P.S .. P.B .. 30.000 miles. (1 19BIV) 1 • $319.9 '72 CAPRI COUPE 16.72B _miles. ~uto .• int. & ext. decor. This coupe is a beauty. (2B5GRJI s3099 '71 BUICK WAGON Sk.ylar.k. sport wagon w/37.000 miles.' Rack, till wheel. ai r, VB. P.S .. P.8 .. super nice. (407DFDI .. . '72 BLAZER 4 WMtEL DRIVE Cheyenne cab. P.S .. P.8 .. auto .. air, super truck w/17,580 miles. Nice. (74566EI '72 CHEVY l4 TON P ickup. VB . air cond .. P.S .• P.B .. auto .• radio. Good buy. (10960LJ s2399 UNIVERSITY OLDS 28:!0 llafbor Bl .... a.ta Mioo;. ' 51\J.9641. '67 TORONADO DELUXE All pwr, auto, A1t1/FM 8 trk 1tereo. Xlnt cona. A buy at $1,000. fi73..866111. Pinto Hatchback '71. New tlre1. Private p8.r1y. 64~8083 ·n PII\"I'O, auto,alr. radials, rack. Deluxe. $1,650. PH.: 673-9251. locks. <724GWW) .( $5299 ' BARWICK DATSUN .. "' " 33375 CAMINO CMrSTRMO UM JUAH CUtSTUMO f---·-4tJ-JJ75 or IJl·I J75 '72 !ITA. \VGN. 4 spd. 25 ~..,,~~VE~C~~s~.-~-· AfPG. Lo ml. Xlnl oond. A 1at10n \'lagon $1995/offer. Prl/pty. 673-2380 GT option. 4 !lpet>Cj & 11ir fi76f'\\INJ '72 PINTO Squlrc Statkln (Olr) SAVE 64.5-5700 Wagon, rack. air, 4 spd, xlnt cond sm>, 548-2153. '72 HATCHBACK. Auto, Le> I ---~ 9960 miles. $1800. p r~m * 847-5298 * ~~~~~~~~~~~~-t~~~~~~-~---~1--~~~~--~--~+-~----~~~~~~-t~~~~~~~~~~~~.. ATLAS APPLY IRON-ON TAPE TO TROUSER POCKETS v.·heO '72 01EVY NOVA , '72 IMPALA 4 DR . HT '72 FORO LTD Brou~hom '69 PONTIAL LE MANS '72 CHEVY y, TON VAN tro""" are ocw. Thi' will 6 cyl., 17.000 miles. custom in· Vinyl roof. a•r. P.S .• P.8 .. VB. Cpe., VB . P.S .• P.ei .. 8 r co0ndF.. Coupe VB aulo p s 3,. con 15 794 miles Stick ve rad io Chry1l1r/Plymouth reJnforce the pockets and F p s sharp. (552ESA) vi nyl ·roof. low price too. (7 1 • · · ·· · ·· ' • · · · ' · lessen the chan('{! of holes\ fer .• AM I M, : .. air. auto . FX·J . drtioning. Super nice. (433ASK) super condition. (20107N) Open Daily & Sun. 'lll 10 Pi'd Enjoy niore closet sru.ce by (118FOJ) 2929 Harb:ir Blvd., r~ s2699 s2799 s2 99 s 1.99 . . s2999 546.1934 ~rl~~~'a":;;l:;~-::~ ~~~~~~~----~~-1~~~~~~~~~~~'1'"~....,·~~:":',.-···-·_.~~-t~~~~~~~~~~~"'l""...,~-::~~·~~~~~~-1 iA·-!ll!!~-·-N_1_w_~~9IOO-~A-u_1o_•_,_Ne_w ___ M011~ '72 CAMARO COUPE VS. auto .. P.S., P.B .• air. new tires, vinyl roof, nice. {1 2 1GI~) s3099 72 CHM NOVA II Coe .. VS, autom8tlc transmis- ston. new lires. (152EXE) s2399 l I ' ., '72 IMPALA WAGON 6 pass .• P.S .. P.8 .. air. VB . auto., low. low price. (657EMFJ '71 cMIAROC OUPE VB . aulo .. P.S., P.B .• air cond. . Low, low Price. (731CJG) si299 ' 2828 HARBOR Bl YD. • '·66 FORD'WAGON '72 FORD I TON Coun1ry sedan. 5B,324 miles. '73 BLAZER 4 WHEEL DRIVE Dual ,rear whls., 25,6 91 miles. "Ve. automatic. power steering. Auto .• P.S .. P.B . radio, l ow. low 14' stake bed. tuk away lift, 4 Pnce. Nice. (97617Nl speed VB PS P 8 rad,'o {BRZBSO) . · · · ., · .. · s 1099 s4599 Nice '53899 'll8 FORD CORTINA , 4 Or. Sed. 58.000 miles. This ie' a 4 speed with radio. Nice car. (X08939) ··· s999 . .. '73 CHEVY V2 TON PICKUP Cheyenne ·cab. auto .. P.S .• VB. b ody s ide mldg s. Nice . (39299N) $2699 COSTA MESA f ' . '72 CHEVY 1 TON Cab & dual rear wheel chassis. ve. 350 cu . 1n .. auto .. P.S .. P.B., with or wilhoul beet (99595K) 546-1200 ' 21st Anniversary Sale EVERY CAR IN STOCK SPECIALLY DISCOUNTE.D BRAND NEW ... DEMOS-USED ..• SA YE THOUSA.HDS of DOI.URS! ENTIRE MONTII of MAY 2626 HARBOR Bl VD. OF cAAS COSTA MESA S40<-5680 • • I .. . . . . . . , ·-· ' ~AILY PILOT ' . May 1974 -.. . . . ~range -Cou~ty's ::~~rges·t ·IMPORT. Reduction~· -SAlll . ~ ~ ' . . . . . . • . . • '4• )' I /~1~-== ---•. ~-!~ ·-. ORANGE COUN~·s 0z: RENA·.·urr d\ ~OORSHIP J.,;, ·«= LARGEST 71 ~,;r -~ • . . . IMMEDIA E DELIVERY UP TO 30 MPG . ) . • BRAND '7 4 RENAULT SEDAN · ··NEW . · 1 • 1 ro4 3 1) FULL . PRICE BRAND .. '74 RENAULT STATIO~ .. NEW · ,. · · WAGON · ·· f MMEDIATE .. DELIVERY + T & L . • Oll2\W60!BSI) .FULL PRICE . • • .. . IMMED~IE ----s:·· > .. DELIVERY . . . , -. ' ' .• ' \ • ' . ' COMPACT & ECONOMY CAR SUPERMARKET! . 1 ' . . . ' . • t . .• • "'" Orange County's largest Seledion· of Import & Economr Cars . T~ .. Choo~e . from!. :" EACH AND EVERY . CAR READY FOR IMMEDIAJI DELIVERY! . THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS! * Financing Available • ot11 uch & '"ft'Y c• ill stock. 'ft 48 Month Financincj Available OnHewOMIUHd 1973'sAr/MokeorModtlOR..,,.."4~ For Your Cot1¥erUenct-lowest Paymetds on Htar • Hew AlrtoMobi~s! ' • * No Minimum ar Maximum Down Payments · • ExperfCreditCOWts~stoHelpYoufitTitl' · _¥ ~ Car of"'.~ Choice hdo YourltadgeL ,~ FREE LIFETIME LUBE WITH EVERY NEW OR USED CAR PURCHASED AT WORLD WIDE IMPORTS FINANCING AVAILABLE ON: 1 " EYE&Y~:.';CAR IN SIOCK . ~ ' " ; .. • , I' ;, 73 I2!~!~~~!i~~si677 '12 WIPAYf~~~;,$1 ·977· 7· 3· ~!~I~nd ·h•at~,~$177· 7 radio heater {034JJFJ ., condrt1on1ng. 1ad10, {8S4GIV} heater.{47574J . . . · FULL PRICE + T & L FULL PRICE + T & L • FULL PRICE + T le i.»-. 72 ~"~~,~c~~L~~!.~.$1477 7. 1 ~ic~! s u NS ·137. ·J 71 !2,!.q!~~2!.·s 1377-. {204GIO) ·· Arr cond'11ton1ng, racho, , • • heater.(677068) heater. (25553V) . . , · . FULL PRICE + T & L . FUt~ PRICE + T & L . · FULL PRICE + T & L , 7o!!!c ... , cond .. s 1· 277 '67. !~-d~£?$,oo) s 1 ·2r· 7 71 ~Y!~'~matic. s 1 ·2·. 77 P.S., P.B .. tape player, .. , radio, heater. power (1 34221 · steerinO. (279CCP) ~ FULL PRICE + T & L FULL PRICE + T & L • • -FUl.W'RICE + T & L . •· . . ' . . I, . . • • • .l ·------WEEK -COSTA MESA SADDLEBACK LAGUNA BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY IRVINE SAN CLEMENTE WEEK OF MAY 5 ·MAY 11 ------ Ag -~C '»s ~ OSJAlGlliC com£DY THE DAILY PILOT, IV WEEK, MAY 5, 1974 SUNDAY MAY 5 MOR NI NG 6:15 m Chrlstot>Mrs/Blble Ansnt'S 6:45 Cl) Cflristopller Close·Up 7:00 B lblley's Comeb The Cflristopllers 6 Uncle Waldo I Ru Humbard • Parentvouth forum o America & Americans Unit Two (]) This Is '\he Ufe @ ·WalTtn Robe-rts :3Cf§1:MntnrC1J11r • · This Is the Ute Ch1pl1ln uf Bourbon Street r6l 8ullwfnllle !Billy J. Harfis Vision On Eltmtntlry News @ RH Humbard : Cl)) Town Hill Meetfna 1:00 B Ou.sty's Treehouse 0 The Jebons 0 Rer Humbird (6) Underdo1 I ~~ ws:nMy Feet Olvey l 6ollattl 6i Old Time Gospel Hour Wonderam1 Rtvlnl Fires (Qj ([)) Gospel Sin&1n1 Jubilee 8:15 @ CV S1e1ed Heart 8:30 f) @ loolc Up ind Uvt 060! 00 Johnny Quest I Campus Profile Meetina Time 1t Calvary @ @ Katllryn l(uhl1111n CV It Is Written 9:001 Camera Three . Settncllpity - (~ (j)) Oty of Dlscovtfy 6 Real E.statt Open House Project Asil • Ci) fij (I) Oral Roberti I It Is Written ~of Mirades lV Rmnl fires Pattern tor Llvlna 9:30 TodQ's Rellcfon ~ AcdM-b ILComunldld C111llen1e My Sermon Oral Roberts Domingo Let There Be Uiht Allluin1 Propfledts o Meet the PY1S1 / @ CV Old Timt Go""I How 00 First Baptist Cllurdl 6owrnOJ l tfle Stud•llh (Qi (j)) Antlll111 ca.11 aJ Muslca y Ptllbl'ls I Home Buy.f's Gulde (3) tcld Powtr TV a looks at leamlna Herald of Truth 01y of DlseovtfJ Oodaer Duput/W1rm·Up @ Christopher Qose.Up <t.W.l CJ)) Ca meta Tllm m Esb Es 11 Vida 10:301 (Qi (])) (I) face Ute Nation @@&)The Osmoncb • This Is Your llble Dodeer Bueball O o d e e rs at Philadelphia. IE Tony & Susan AJ1mo Qi Mideast An1lysl$ @I) Pentalla Dominic.I 11 :00 I Newsmakers Church With A Vision () Movie: "Home Sweet Homicide'' ia) '46-Randolph Scott. ...- @ (}) al H. R. Pufnstuf This Week In \tie NBA F'alttt for fod1y Church In tfle Home @ First 81ptist Church (~ ) lblley's C:O.rts ArlrRNO O N 10:00 f) Sunftowtr Company O ~ OO®H~ World Ch• ... lZ:OOIHet1ld of TNth plonslllp Tennis live ooveraie of the Vision On final doubles matches from Mont· Gene Autry real, where the w:nntnf team col· Your &ovemment Today lects $40,000. 1 (3) Dlrldlons 0 Hour of Power Ci SundlJ Celebr1tio11 LINDA RUTLEDGE: 12:30 0 Paetstttert Ci) Movie: "Ctll111t le1lon" (dra) '48-Bruce Cabot. O CD m Directions m "'"' Ci1.l CD Issues I AnANrs m Publi.c S.rtlu l:OOO QJCI>®J mNHL Ho cke y Stanley Cup Play-Offs. I Zane 5rey Tlleltrt (])al Issues I AnlWWI Mcme: "Ifs A Dot's Ufe,. (com) '55--Dean Jauer, JeH Richards. ! Daktlti Here Come tilt 111dts CI> Fllm f11tv~ "An1tomy of A ROid" 9 Revival Flru 1:30 8 1..usle @ @ &) IJ'l'Ofl NtllOn Golf Clesslc Live covere11· of 'the tln1I round of play from tM Preston Tr•ll -Golf Club in DelllS, TtH&.. Qi Biiiy J. Harif s 2:00 o <~ CJJ> cas Sports Sfedtcu· tar .. Tournament of Champions," featurin1 amateur boxl111 matchiS from Denver, Colo.; i nd The Ha· tional Indoor Synchronize Swim· ming Championships trom Clnton Ohio. 0 Movie: (C) "War of the Caraan- tuas" (sci-11) '66-Russ T•mblyn Ci) Movir i Air Power Outer U11its Movfe: "Ml l Pa l(fttit Oft YI· ution" (com) '53-Marforie Main. Percy Kilbride. MAKING IT IN THE WORLD "THI SMALL CAR EXPERTS"' FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALES -SERVICE -PARTS PHSONALIZID UASING -All MAKES .. Moons A flllE SEl.ECTION OF USED CMS 842-7781 540-0442 S ervin g _4.// Beac/, Cttiej 5 MINUTES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. 18835 1£A(ff BLVD. IH·~~~01 HUNTINGTON BEACH Page 4 Lindo Rutl~ge, Amenca·s Junior Miss 1913. In early fall, Linda Rutledge, America's Junior Miss 1973, was sw orn in as o midshipman in the United States Novy. "I om a midshipman not o mid- shipwoman," laughs Miss Rut- ledge, o pert young lady from Fort Leavenworth, Kan., who will relinquish her crow1l to the new title hold er on "America's Junior M iss Pageant." to be presented from Mobile, Alo., Monday ot 9PM on CBS. M iss Rutledge, who os losl year's Junior Miss won more than $1 0,000 in college schol· arships, received one of 14 no· vo l ROTC scho lorships awarded to women throughout the Unit· ed Stoles. Upon her graduation from Penn State University, where she is currently enrolled, she wi ll be commissioned as on ensign. "I hope to work in computer science with the space agency some day," she explains. "I feel a military b ackground will be the best step to words NASA." The doughier of a career Morine Corps officer, Miss Rut· ledge stresses that she should not be called a "beauty queen." "The pageant is con· cerned with inner beauty, not outer beauty," she soys. "But, of course, if you recognixe ydur own inner beauty, the outer b eaut y w i l l come through." 3 e 's e st re 1- on in he he ry est er ut· Id ixe the me Q:(W faith for Today 2:30 (8 Movie: (C) "Brld&H at Toko·RI" (dra) '54-William Holden, Grace Kelly. Qj fires of Evancellam 3:00 [6] Movie 0 Movie: (C) "The Last Voyaae" (dra) '60 -Robert Stack, Dorothy Malone. m Movie: "Public Enemf' (dra) 'JI-James Cagney El) Alerta/Grutlnes F'rom Germany ~ Jimmy sw.uart Show ID Bicentennial Lect11re Series "American Revolut10I\,: Democratic Politics & Popular [ducation" 3:30 0 CBS Eye on Spo.U 0 m Meet the Prm 0 1 (3) CD World Invitational Tennis Arthur Ashe vs. Stan Smith. 0) Newsm1kers (E) The Vir1ini1n (:l~ 00 F'llm feature ~Religious Town Hill ('19 18') L0<ett.1 Youna Thntre m Insight 4:00 tJ Medlx A demonstration ol stretch exercises used by pro athletes to m1ntm1ze in1ur1es O Insight • The Wrtn~le Squad" Three old men run afoul ol state bureaucracy when they open a child care center as a way of hall· '"" the feehng or uselessness that accompanies old age Edward Asner, John Marley, Edwt1rd Andrews and Knz Gar as star O Movie: "Wonder M•n" (com) '45-Danny Kaye. ;IQ) Hee Haw El) Korean Variety fj] @ Education at Work ~ Ch1risma ID Consultation g) Toros ~This Is the Lile Panorama Latino Campus Profile 4:30 iJ Last of the Mohlcans Part II Heyward's party 1s ambushed by lhe Huron Indians. but Hawkeye and the Moh1cans come lo the rescue. r3) Movie: "Pony Soldier" (dra) '52 -Tyrone Power O Sunday Today's show comes lrom KCET and covers the pre· auction act1v1ties O Head On I 81 Star Trtk (I) M1>Vie: "Foreian Correspondenr' (dra) '40-Joel McCrea. r11 (3) f ilm feature "Daytona" 12j (4) Meet the Press '261 Bob Wells Seminar fl!) Bladt Elperlence f59 (j)) Dr. Norman Vintent Peale m Sund1y Matinee m Corona Now 4:45 Ell) Wall Street Week 5:00 tJ World of Survivel A look at an ar11fietal city water reservoir that became a beautiful lake and animal sanr.tuary b Outer Limits O Great Adventure Gue$1 explorer Art Enckson dnves the Pan Amer 1can High way from El Paso. Texas to Panama. fJ The Aveneers ®)fl) News ID Daniel Boone @@Movi e: (C) "Capta i n Apache• (wes) '72-lee Van Cletf. Q) (!) America ' Ame11uns ® Hour of Delimance ID Wall Street Week (Qi @ > cas Eye on Sports &I) Roller Games m ln•rht m Yesterday 5:30 tJ It Tak11 All Kinds (i) News o Movie: (C) (2hr) ''The Tlme Machine" (sci·fi~ '60 -Rod Taylor, Yvette Mimieux. EE Dr1m1 ~ (!)Gamer fed Armstron& C2dj Day or Miradts ED Washir.gton Week in Review (Q! (j)) Animal Wor1d al Pentecostal Temple {f) Roller Games EVENING 6:00 e <ti? (i)) (j) Sixty Minutes ~Hhe Virainian O&I>El':)(l}News O Movie: (C) (2hr) ''The Streets of San Francisco" (dra) '72 -Karl Malden, Michael Oougl». Robert Wagner (6 J Twilight Zone 0 (l) Rusoner Report fJ Movie: (C) (90) "The Monitors" (adv) '69 -Guy Stockwell, Sunn Oliver. I Ni&ht Gallery Children's Cartoons (!) Dialo&u• Casey Santos Show fl[) KCET Auction '74 Scheduled to be sold tonight: A $2.000 marble fireplace from New York's Savoy Hotel. a tennis match with Robert Stack. and a day at the Ram's Cal State fullerton camp. Dlal (213) 663·8421 ai) Muiun Celebration (2hr) 6:30 O Animal Wor1d "Twentieth Cen· tury Ark" i Wor1d ot Sumval ~@ News Movie: (2hr) "Mutiny on tfle Bounty" (dra) '35 -Clark Gable, Charles Laughton. I Sun.stt fanfuri1 falcon A Better Wor1cl 7:000 News 0 MUTUAL OF OMAHA'S * WILD KINGDOM stars Marlin Perkins 0 Wild Kingdom A visit to Florida's Everglades to siudy the alligator. 00 Movie: (2hr) "Juarez" (dra) '39 -Paul Muni. Bette Davis. 0 Concentration t'i) Latin Profile ~ PaSS90rt to Travel @ Golden Voya1e Japanese Comedy ~ IJ) m Wiid Kln1dom a Voice of Victory THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, MAY 5, 1974 clde is the key to a darlna jewel robbery. O Carntr Ted Armstton1 ID Cruise, Household Items * YOURS FOR HIGH BIO! fJ 'THE KING IS COMING' * "TRANSLATION 7:30 fil) Kw Auction '74 (9 CI» Talk to the Manaaer em Esttlar •74 OF THE CHURCH" OR. HOWARD C. ESTEP 0 The Kina ls Comln1 U "APPLE'S WAY" *SEASON'S NEW HIT FROM THE PRODUCERS OF "THE WALTONS" ID ID KUT Auction '74 A one hour simulcast with KCOP, Channel 13. m Volct or Calvary • Dr. Nonn.n Vincent Peale 10:00 I Day of Dilcovery 1J (tjj (j)) Ci) A p p I e • a W a y m News George Apple's fight for a traffic 1 7~ Club sianal at a dangerous street corner • • Pratst the Lord Club gains uraency when Steven is in· Lou Cordon Show jured at I~ Intersection by a hit· 10:15 ti) Pro Women Golfers and-run dnver. 0 QJ (!)®)El':) Wor1d of OiSlfty 10:30 =The Protectors "Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar'' Reuoner Report .. Part 1 or a two part nature adven· • The Time Beine lure about how domesticity dulls a playtul couaar's instincts for sur· 0 'THE KING IS COMING' v1val in the wilds. Rex Allen nar· * "JERUSALEM- f)e@m Cl> ni. FBI ''The Big WORLD CAPITOL" Job" (R)The FBI makes aood use DR. HOWARD C. ESTEP pects 1n a skillfully executed rob· c:nema Six bery of an armored car firm. Richard The Evil Touch (R) of a computer in turnin& up sus· i The Klnc ls Comlna ~nderson and Marl D1Ua1 1&1esl Police Surceon fJ Million $ Movie: (C) (2hr) ''The Movie: (2hr) "Lord Jim" (dra) Court Jester'' (com) '56 -Danny '6~Peter O'Toole, James Mason Kaye. Glynis Johns I ID Three Passports to Advenhlr• San Diego Panorama 9 Lassie M~iui(i))l:::sibtt m International VarietJ Hour T.H.E. Cat Ellzabttll R "Shadow in the Sun" t:T!'I PICKUP PHONE & BID 8:00 I Am1ric.n Hone a. Horseman Forum NlpPon Mo Uta/News u.:1 Rt• Humbard * KCET'S Annual Auction : KCET Auction '74 "Art & An· .,,.rT ........ ,7 ... @I) Ctltsplrito • • Duf World m> Armenian TV Hour · N11hville Music tlques" 1· "~' ~·on " 10:45 This Is J~n 1:30 IJ ca Cl)) Cl) Mannix (R) Man-11:00 CI) 0 U Ci) ®J News nix flees crooked prison auards with Pacesetters an escaped con (Greg Morris). ~ KATHRYN KUHLMAN O Q)C!J®)&r='NIC Sunday ~ Mystery-CohHRbo (2hr) "A Friend * (IN COLOR) in Deed" Richard Kiiey stars as a ruthless police official who leads m Kattlryn l(uht•an Columbo through a maze of planted (fl) @ A Dlswssion Witt! • clues. Rescheduled from an earlier ,. KCET Auction '74 date. ( Cl)) News O @ Cl) ABC Sunday Movie: · • Fait1\ fOf TodaJ (C) (2hr) (R) "6oldfln1er'' (adv) '64 · It Is Written -Sean COnnery, Gert frobe. Honor • . Blackman, Shirley Eaton. Agent 007 11:15 (~Cf)) $C)an1sh Movie pits ~is skill~ against one o!. the 11:30 I Name of ttlt Game world s greediest and most v1c1ous • tiQl Sunday Tonlfht Show men. • .. , Movie: "Psydl·Out" (dra) '68-~ Movie: (90) Red Dust' (dra) Dean St1Xkwell, Susan Strasberg. 32-Clark Gable, Jean Harlow. 00 Telepulse m F11m Feature m Movie: "I'll Cry Tomoffow" 9:00 O Or1I Roberts (dra) '55-Susan Hayward, Richard (6) Seymour Presents Conte. m Wanderina Samurai (I) Mom: "The Wastrel" (dra) '63 @ The Ont Way -Van Heflin. a!) Trinity Bible School ID LIKE KCET PROGRAMS'r 12.00 ""' Rl .... t 0 * SUPPORT US-BIO HIGH · ~ •" n I KC£T Auction 74 Nocht de Gala International VarietY W Film "Headstart for Omar" 9:30 6 (Q!J(j))(j)Ba rnaby Jonu "Death Leap'' (R) An apparent sul· 12:30 @ New Dirtdtons 1 :00 O $9takin1 Freely (I) Movie: "Bloody Vampirt'' (hor) Jaims fernandez. 1:10 6 Movie: "Kin& of the Roarine Twntitt" (dra) '61-David Janssen. Page 5 ''Th• concept of Peter Puck. our animated boc:by puck." aaya Scotty ConnaL Execu- tin Producer, NBC Sports. "could be a major break- through in explaining the na1ee of all sports.'' NBC ia u.ing the Dew C:arlooD char- acter during its National ~ Hockey League c:olorcuts to acquaint .iewera with the rul• and buica of the fut .. t game on ice. Ac:c:ording to Mr. CoanaL who c:omldera hockey to be "a game which iDay look cWfic:ult buna really •ery simple.'' NBC decided during its 1972-73 NUOD of ·NHL co•era9e that"• cartoon approach ia a moet eflec:ti•e meana of educating the enr- age fan. while at the same time appealing to the 80phia· ticated bocby follower.'' Art Scott. an ...ociat• pro- chacer lar Huaa-larbera Pro- chac:tiom. crHton of Peter Puck. Mid thia new creation .. ia our lmow-it·all guy. our 8J)Obmnan for the 9ame. He pnMDta ·bocby in ; more interMtin9 fubion. be brings the aport to life.'' Mr. Connal noted that Peter Puck bu, in fact. been concmed u • meana of maldn9 tQC'a ex- planation of hockey . 'much mon interMdng. "The 80- phiaticated hockey .iewer,'' he u.icL "wouldn't ait still for many more blackboard-type pl'eeentatiom.'' "An almo9t instant in•ention of Joe Bar- bera." ac:c:ording to Mr. Scott. Peter Puck appean in differ. ent Mgmenta. each three· and-a-half to lour minut• 1oD9, tbrou9bout the Muon. He explalm the rules not only belwffn periods of NBC'a Game-of-tbe-WHk hockey telecuta. but a1lo on the .,.oday" prOCJram. oa afili. ated .tatiom and to pri•at• groupa and hocby c:Unica. Mr. Scott Mid that NBC prcmded . the fac:ta broken down into bocby'a aimpleet terms. while Hanna-Barbera wu ~ lor de•elop- ing the medium for pr ... nta- tioa. And what better means than utWainAJ the ID09t nec:etl- Nl'Y ingredient in a sport in which the hockey puck geta batterecl. llapped around and lbot at 1FHcl9gyer'100 milH .,..hour. 'A PRODUCT OF ENVIRONMENT' Whilt.> Pretty Boy Floyd wat4 known to the public as a n1thlf'i-!4 bank robber in tht> t"&rly 1930s, he was known to oth.-rs a" a Robin Hood of Oklahoma's Cookson Hills. A<'tor Martin Sheen be<'ame familiar with ·the latter view of Charley Arthur Floyd when he visited survivin~ mem- ht>ri-of Floyd's family recently at Sallisaw, Oklahoma. Sht>t>n, who stars in the title role of '"The Story of Pretty Boy f loyrl," the ABC Tuesday Movie of the Week at 8:30 PM, wai; a<'<'ompanied by writer ... lirector Clyde Ware. I ••Jn a sem.e, we had put the cart before the horse, he- cauM• filming had ended before we went to Sallisaw to do the prolo~ue, using "till photos of family members, whose rt><'ollt><'tion!'.' of Charley wt>rt> recorded for the voice-over," "aifl . heen . Explainin1t that Ware had previously woo the tru"t of tht" Floyd family while doin~ research for the "'"rf'f'n play, h et"n report NI, 44Thr mee ting with the family wa"' extraordinary. All of the i<urviving members of the imme•liate family wrre tht"rt" -hie four sisters, his one "'urvh·in~ brother, Bradley, and hii' unforgettable mother. Sht-wa" 93 years old this Marc>h and is as spry and aware al'> any of ue." eo-Thf' &<'tor, who has done some 200 television roles - er." incluclin,:r that of Gary McClain in ABC's "That Certain for . ummt>r" and the title rolr in the recent "Execution of Privatt> Slovik," commentecl that in the Cookson Hilh of s .. quoia CA unty, ••Charley it' remembered to thi day as a humanitarian and hero. ••from information Wt" obtained-and it was accurate-- he wai-tht> Robin Hood of the Cookson Hilli-. It is true that he-burned unrecorded mort~a~es whil~ he was rob. hinJt hank!', on the <'hance that it mi~ht help others hit hy the 0t"pre"'i-ion," he i;aicl. The actor 1.-arnecl that Charlt>y, who hated the "Pretty Roy" nirkname givf'n him by the raclio and press, robbecl both bank" in Sallisaw. "This wa!' because his father had loi<t all hi~ mont"y in thoi<e hanks. Charley told them the clatf's encl timt"l'> he would do it and thf'n went ahead and rohhNI them on schedule. "'Charlf'y, like all of u11, was a product of his environ· mt-nt. W.-can have no real ;,ympatby for what he did, and ht> himl'lelf admillf'd he wa"' wrong, but what he obje<'ted to wa" that thf'y heaped crimt-!' on him that he did not <'ommit. Som.-of them wt>re reported on radio while he Wal'! artually with his family. Bradley told u s thert-wert- hoo•llum"' who m~ed hi .. namt> he<'ause he was 1o10 well known." Th .. aetor i-trei-"t>'I that Charley did not like to ,,hoot J>f>Oplf', hut "h t> did <'onf ei>t' to killing three men and he clici not f>:X<'use himt'elf for what he did," said Shttn, who 1><>rtra~·i-Flo~·d from the-a11te of 18-30, when his life ended at the> hancf,. of 1awmf'n hc>aclt>cl hv Melvin Purvis of the Fill. . THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, MAY 5, 1974 ' Order Yours NOW • • • TT 1000 Beautiful Stick~on Labels • PERSONALIZED •.sJYUSH •EASY TO USE •ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND SHAPE AND SIZE OF LABEL Mra. John Doe 123 Mein Street Anytown, Anyatete 123<&5 Label• Do Not Have A Printed Border. Stylish Vogue type on fine quality white gummed paper, r---------------------, I L_ Al In this c~ dip and MOii with S 1.25 to: Piiot Printing Label Div., Post Office lox 1560 Coast Mesa. Callfomla 92626 le Sure to UM your Zip Cod• ______ _. Page 7 THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK, MAY 5, 1974 DAYTIME PROGRAMS MONDAY MORNIN G 10:20 @ (}) Joe Bu1tta Health Show 10:30 0 (5 00> a Lovt of Life 0 ~@( m Hollywood 6:00 O CiJ Sunrise Semester Si ares 0 Know I e d I e "Filmmakers on @(I) (D Brady Bunch F1lmmaking" Dennis the Men1c1 m University of the Air Features 6:301 Odys. sey 11:00 0 (Qt;. ,,, (j)) Younc I Restless . Not for Women Only I~ @ i m Jldlpot 6 Oay~ruk Movies: See Daytime Movies. . Phys1~11 ~eo1raphy Mon .. Wed.. 6 The Fu£i11ve Fn., Flmtly RIY M1n•aement Tues.. fJ @ CV m The Gir1 in My Life; Thurs. . One Life to live Wed. fU Educabonal futures I Ne.n Q Colle1e Credit Course Except Gomer Pyle Fn. Gold & Silver Rep0r1 @Gamer Ted Armstron1 : Electric tompany m Bullwinkle • 7:00 0 (~ ) ~ (j) News ' 11 :30 2 (~ 00> (j) Search for Tomor· 0 Q) I 6 0 m Today Show 0 ~ ~ (lQ) m Celebrity $Weep- @ Cartoons stakes 0 Michael Jackson Show O @@ (D DEBUT $10,000 0 Garner Ted Armstrong Pyramid Dick Clerk hosts. * TEEN DELINQU~NCY I let's Rap Petticoat Juncmn I Garner Ted Armstron1 World BuMness News New Zoo Rwue Mi Stock Elchanee : ster Ro"rs' Nel&hborllood m S.same street 7:30 00 lassie 0 Ralph StOff s AM 0 Davey & Goliath m Bu1s & His Buddies l!) Skip & Woofer El) Wor1d Business News 1:00 U (~ (jJ) Captain K1n11roo I Dennis the Menace Sunup Mel Knoepp Romper Room The Flintstones @ Bozo's Bia Top ml Hod1epod1e Lod1e 8:30 Colleae Credit Course 6 Ouie & Harriet I lick u Lanne Yoat l friends CI) Bullwinkle M1nn1 tID Yo11 for HealUI 9:00 I(~ (!)) (jJ The Joliet's Wild Eli) Sesame Street . Ci1 00 @) m Oin1h's PllCI ~The Gallery Ben Casey Movie: See Daytime Movies. M features I Love Lucy Gumby; Gentle Ben Fri. @ CV New Zoo Revue @featurtS 9:30 U (~ (j)) (!) Gambit 0 ~ 00 ( 0 m Jeoptrdy § ~~C' o.~m· M~1 ... ~ (1) Public Affairs 10:00 0 (~ 00> @ Now You Ste It 3 features ~ Ci) @) m Wizard ol Odds Run for Your Ute The Momin1 Show My flvori~ M1rti1n fe1tur11 CI) The AM Affair Stock [Jch1n1e 700 Club : Ectuution•I Proarams • News/P1nor1m1 del Valle AF TE RNOON 12:00 Noontime • m Three on A Mitch i er Bil!l.O (3) W Password G)News Features Movie: See Daytime Movies. l @ GetSm1tt Tenneuee Tuxedo Features ) Ann Gutcher Show 12:30 U (ei!; (jJ) (j) As th e W o r Id Tums O ~@~mo1ys ol Our Uvts I TruUI or Consequences U1J ~ (D Split Second featurts Dh lina for Dollars lullwlnlle' 1:00 I (~ ) The Guidin1 Urht , • ~ I 6 m The Doctors • ~hlng You Can Do (UJ ( (D All My Children • Make Room for Dlddy '~ Movie: See Daytime Movies. tID Educ1tional Proer1ms 1:30 I (~CI)) (j) Edre of Niaht · ~ ({) @) m Another World 6 Mike Do~u Show @ CI) W l et's Make A Dul; Afternoon Playbreak Wed. "last Bride of Salem" A young woman 1s '1orrlfied to find that her onoe care· free and happy family has inexplic· ably undergone an eerie transforma lion since its move to Sa.lem Village. Bradford Dillman and Lois Nettleton star. 0 C..ndid C..mm IE Gallopina Gourmet 2:00 tJ (~ 1) 00 New Price 11 Ria.ht Q Q1 @) m How to SuMve A Marriare 8 Sea Hunt CW @ (D Newlywed Game Ex· ~t Wed. ' 0 l!) Movie: See Daytime Movies. Eli) Features 2:20 m Ben Hunter Interviews 2:30 O (~ (8)) M•tch G1me '74 I tD 00 ®l m Someriet News @ CV m One Ufe to Uve U· cept We~. m features Eli) Yoga for Health 3:00 I (Q9 Ci)) Tattletales · Truth or Consequences ,. Hiahway Patrol 6 Pope e Cartoons • (i1) 3 (D &Metal Hospital l& (fQ) MoVie: See Daytime Movtes n Mothef"l·ln·LIW (i) 'Three on A Matdl '° Addams family I Day at Nliht D11m1 ClnN11 36 3:30 O CV Movie: See Daytime Mo'ltes 0 Mikt Dou1lu Show Butnce Ar lhur co-hosts.. ~ Onie ' Huriet Superman Movie: See Daytime Movies t m ®Green AtrU Nanny l the Professor 1 Q~ Movie: See Daytime Movies. ED._Featurts (09 00> Cartoons Cl) Wild Wild West •:oo O The Rifleman r6 ) leave It to Beaver l ~:~nrNun Gilli11n's Island Natach• Beverly Hillbillies I Sesame StrHt Sube Pelayo Felix the Cat •:30 i Father Knows But 6 Gilli&tn's Island • F Troop Bup & His Buddiu I Dream ol Jeannie Q~ I love Lucy <I& ) Movie: See Daytime Mov 1es (D Desert Theatre EE Underdo1 S:OO News Tues . Thurs 0 .9 News The Bir Valley I Love Lucy I Dream of Jeannie luve It to Beaver The Flintstones Hip Chaparral t C31 Green Acres Simplemente M1rl1 I ~~e~re:o1ers' Neieflborhood Or1m1 The Pioneers Hugfie Boy Entertainment Ef) Klmba 5:30 U 00 @ (3) ~ 00 News 00 Travel Fllms • 00 Courtship of Eddit's f ather I The tucy Show Bewitched Electric Company; Piycholoo Today Thurs. m Don Wilson's Town Talk m Three Stooaes MAY 6 For morning •nd' •fternoon listings, please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are ttte d'y's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 0 (C) ''Tht Pad (And How to U~ It)" (com) '6&-Brian Bedford. 9:30 O "Bl1ckout" (mys) '54 -Dane 1 Clark. 11:00 O "Our Hum Were Growi n& Up" (com) '46-Gail Russell "Second Fiddle" (com) '58-Lisa Sastoni 12:00 m '1'eus" (WU) '41-Glenn Fo1d Wilham Holden 1:00 1 6 (C} "April love" (mus) '57 Pat Boone 2.:00 0 ''The C<lttred Alf1lr" (com) 56 -Bette Davis IE) "Man From Bitter Ridat" (w~~) 55-Lex Barke/ 3:00 ' 8 (C) "Ceish1 Boy" {com) '58 - Jerry l ewis 10 (C) "l over Come Back" (com) '62 flock Hudson Dom Day 3:30 B (C) ''Charade" (adv) '63-Cary Giant Audrey Hepburn 3 1 (C) "Carousel" (mus) '56 - Gordon MacRae Shirley Jones 0 "The Slender Th1e1d" (dra) '66 -Sidney Po1t1er. Anne Bancroft 17 3 "N:ght Cargo" llnysl '36 l loyd Hui;!hes ll 6) (C) "I love A Mystery" (mysl '67-lda Lupino •:30 (l9 a--) "Dead Rect.onin(' (my,) ·47 -Humphrey Boaart E VfNI N <. 5:00 Q 0 10' News ~ Th• Bir Valley 6 I l ove Lucy rij I Drum of Jeannie 0 l uve It to Braver m The Flintstones l!) Hi&h Ch1p1rral ff 3) Green Acres fl) Simplemente M1ria "28 Star Trek Eli) Mister Ro1ers' Nei&hbortlood The Pionee~ I Oram• Huuie Boy Entertainment EE Kimb• 5;30 B re (!7 @' 23 fi') News r3 l Trnel Fllms, Ci) Courtship of Eddie's f'1ther 0 The Lucy Show m Bewitched Electric Company Don Wiison's Town T1lk Ef) Three Stooaes 6:00 B 0 D (i} m ~~ews (3~ 10 (17'3 ~3(6J(fj9 ~ ) Ntlln 0 Bon1nz1 (i) Hogan's Heroes I Beverly Hillbillies Mission: Impossible Mod Squid El Pobre Gonllltl 'l6' Movie Double feature: (C) (Ahr "l he Searchtfl" (adv) '56 -Joh Wayne (C) "We're No Angels (com) '55-Humphrey Bogart. Eil) KCET Auct!On '7' Dial (213 663·8421 (Continued) 74 are o Use d Dane I l Up" econd ) '56 (wes) '58- (com) -Cary '56 - es ra) '66 oft ) '36-- mood ent s ather lk News ) News (C) (4hr) 6 -Johr An&els" gart. 1al (213 THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, MAY 5. 1974 When it comes to sports reporting, almost anybody can stand up and reel off a bunch of box scores or recap the standings. Bui Ross Porter and Bryant Gumbel aren't just anybody. · Ross Porter is a sports reporting_ veteran with one of the · best earned viev..ring averages in Southern California. And a whole roomful of recognition awards. Bryant Gumbel is one of the fastest moving sports- casters ever to enter major league ·television. Bryant' and Ross make it their business to tell you who won what. When. Where. And by how much. Who trounced. or got toppled. Who zapped or got zonked. Who blasted or got blitzed. Who emerged victorious. And who managed to clutch defeat from the jaws of victory. If you'd like to know what's what in the world o f sports, catch Bryant Gumbel at 5 and Ross Porter at 6 and 11, weeknights on the KNBC Newservice. KMBC4 . The Whds Who of Who Won, Lost or Tied. · P•ge 9 KOCE~TV ORANGE COUNTY TELEVISION THIS WEEK ON CHANNEL 50 SATURDAY: MAY 4th (P.M.) 3:00 Dimensions In Cultu,_s (C) 3:30 Dimensions In Cwtllres (C) 4:00 Connie's Clothinc Comer (C) 4:30 Connie's Clothina Corner (C) 5:00 Freehand Stetchlnc (C) (KOC() 5:30 freehand Stetchln1 {C) (KOCE} 6:00 Zoom! (C) (PBS) 6:30 French Chef (C) (PTL) 7:00 Orance County Review (C) (KOCE) 7:30 Washin(ton Str1i1ht Talk (C) (PBS) 8:00 Wu and Puce (C) (PBS) 9:30 Book Beat (C) (PSS) SUNDAY: MAY SUI (PJU 3:00 l1ttr0duction to Physical Geo1· raphy (C) 3:30 Introduction to Physical .:eo1· raphy (C) 4:00 Introduction to Physical Geog· raphy (C) 4:30 flower Arran&in1 (C) 5:00 Family Risll M1n1aement (C) 5:30 family Rist M1na1ement (C) 6:00 Omnibus 50 (C) (KOCE) 6:30 stJl•b 4: The final M1nned Minion (C) (KOCE) 7:00 Theatre in America (C) (PBS) 9:30 focus Or1n1e County (C) (KOC() MONDAY: MAY 6tfl (P.M.) 12:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) 1:00 Educational School lnlorm.1tion (C) (KOCE) 1:10 Inside Out (C) (NIT) 1:25 I Can Read (C) (RETAC) 1:40 Cover to Cover (C) (NIT) 2:00 Ripples (C) (NIT} 2:15 All About You (C) (Nin 2:30 EJectrk Company (C) (CTW) 3;0J Introduction to Physical Geoe· raphy (C) . 3;30 freehand Slletdlin1 (C) (KOCE) 4:00 Connle~s Cloltlin& Comer (C) 4:30 EJedric Comp1ny (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame street (C) (CTW) 6:00 Focus Onnae County (C) (KOC£) 6:30 Dimensions in Cultures (C) 7:00 Introduction to Physical Geoe· raptly (C) 7:30 Or•nae County in Washin&1on (C) (KOCE) 8:00 Nova (C) (PBS) 9:00 The Devout Youn1 (C) (PBS) 9:30 Dimensions in Cultures (C) TIJESOAY: MAY 7th (P.M.) 12:00 SesarM strHt (C) (CTW) 1 :00 Educ.ational School lnform1tion (C) (KOCE) 1:10 All About You (C) (NIT) 1:25 Ripples (C) (NIT) 1:40 Inside/Out (C) (HIT) 1:55 Cover to Cover (C) (NID 2:151 Can Read (C) (RETAC) 2:30 Carrascolendas (C) (PBS) 3:00 Connie's Ciothlnr Corner (C) 3:30 Dimensions in Cultures (C) 4:00 Freehand Sketchini (C) (KOCE) 4:30 Electric Company (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame street (C) (CTW) 6:00 Oran1e Cou11ty Review (C) (KOCE) 6:30 Frffhand Sketchin& (C) (KOCE) 7:00 Aower Aruni!nr (C) 7:30 Connie's Clothln1 Corner (C) 8:00 Tht Enerry Crisis: End of the Berinninr? (C) (PBS) 9:00 The N1tion's Economy Out ot ~ Control (C) (PBS) 9:30 Bill Moyert' JournaJ (C) (P8S) Page 10 WEDNESDAY: MAJ SUI (P.M.) 12:00 S.same Street (C) (CTW) 1:00 Educatlon1I School Information (C) (KOCE) 1:10 Ripples (C) (NID 1:25 Inside Out (C) (Nin 1:40 All About You (C) (Nin 1:55 I Can Read (C) (RCTAC) 2:10 Com to Cover (C) (NIT) 2:30 Electric Company (C) (ClW) 3:00 lntrodudlon to Physical Geog· raphy (C) 3:30 Freehand Sketchin1 (C) (KOCE) 4:00 Connie's Cklthin& Corner (C) 4:30 Electric: Comp1ny (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) 6:00 family Rilk M1na1emeot (C) 6:30 Dimensions In CuUures (C) 7:00 Introduction to Physlcal Geoi· raphy (C) 7:30 fainily Rilk Manaaemeot (C) 8:00 Masterpiece Theatre (C) (PB~) 9:00 The lenH Quartet (C) (PBS) 9:30 Dimensions in Cultures (C) THURSDAY: MAY 9VI (P.M.) 12:00 Sesame strett (C) (ClW) 1 :00 Educ.ational School lnlormation 1:10 I Can Read (C) (RETAC) 1:25 Cover to Cover (C) (NIT) 1:45 Ripples (C) (NID 2:00 All About You (C) (NID 2:15 Inside/Out (C) (NIT) 2:30 Canascolenda.s (C) (PBS) 3:00 Connie's Clothin& Comer (C) 3:30 Dimensions in Cultures (C) 4:00 freth1nd Stetehin1 (C) (KOC[) 4:30 Electric Comp1ny (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesime Street (C) (CTW) 6:00 011np County in Washin&1on 6:30 freehand Sketdllne (C) (KOCE) 7:00 011n1e County Review (C) 7:30 Connie's Clothln& Corner (C) 8:00 focus Oranae County (C) (KOCE) 8:30 Woman (C) (PSS) 9:00 flrin& Line (C) (PBS) FRIDAY: MAY 10th (P.M.) 12:00 Seume Stttet (C) (CTW) 1:00 Edue1tion1I School Information (C) (KOCE) 1:10 Com to Cover (C) (NIT) 1:30 I Can Read (C) {RETAC) 1:45 All About You (C) (Ntn 2:00 Inside/Out (C) (NIT) 2:15 Ripples (C) (NIT} 2:30 Electric Comp1nr (C) (CTW) 3:00 lntroduc1ion to Physical Geot· raptly (C) 3:30 f lower Arnn&fn1 (C) 4:00 Book Beat (C) (PBS) 4:30 Electric Compeny (C) (ClW) S:OO Sesame Street (C) (CTW) 6!00 femity Risk Manaaement (C) 6:30 Weshfniton Connewon (t ) 7:00 Introduction to Physical Geo1· r1phy (C) 7:30 family Risk Manaaement (C) 8:00 The Advoutes (C) (PBS) 9:00 Masterpiece Theatre (C) (PBS) SATURD.\Y: May 11th (P.M.) 3:00 Dimensions in Cultures (C) 3:30 Dimensions In Cultures (C) 4:00 Connie's Clothing Comer (C) 4:30 Connie's Clothin& Corner (C) S:OO Freehand Sketching (C) (KOCE) 5:30 Freeh1nd Sketchinr (C) (KOCE) 6:00 Zoom! (C) (PBS) 6:30 French Chef (C) {PTL) 7:00 Oran11 County Review (C) 7:30 WaJ~inaton Stralrht Talk (C) 8:00 W1r and Peace (C) (PBS) 9:30 Booll Beat (C) (PBS) THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK, AUGUST 4, 1974 IMONOAY (Continued) m Speed Racer 6:30 6 Dealer's Choice • Dick Van Dyke Mtrv Griffin Show @ Hoa1n's HerOH • Travel Fllm • • Mar&1rlta O'f'anill Show Little Rascals 7:00 0 0 m (li) t:i) News O Bowline for Dollars Cil Movie: (C) (2hr) "Hour of the Gun" (wes) '67-Jason Robards. 8 Wiid World of Anlmab What's My line? I love Lucy II Takes A Thltf 1 @ I Dl't•m of Jeannie Eamer11da CI) Dn1n1t Qi) RALPH STORY & YOtJ * BID FOR INTERVIEW. ON KGET'.S AUCTION £D KCET Auction '74 .. Art & An tii!:!_es Night" (~ (j)) Bobby Gold1boro Show O)Drama a> Three Stoo1n 7:30 0 I SJWAU The 24tfl Ann111I P•bY Aw1rds Betty White and Allen Ludden co-host this special pr1· sented by the American Humane As.soc., which honors out$tanding performances by animals In tele vision and motion pictures for 1973. I Koran's He'"s ffi Pollet Surreon Heip Thy Nelrhbor Ne• Beat the Clod New lreasure Hunt Miiiion $ Movie: (90) "Pltb- burfh" (dra) '42 -John Wayne. Wild Klncdom S.wltchtd ~To Tell the Truth New Price Is Rlaht ( ) Ptashvllle Music • Jimmy Dean Show , • Esctnarfo Theatre ~ The Ghoul Gane a:oo o <Q9' CIJ> r-1 s""J""'lc .... 1...,A\"'I In· credible Flie,ht of the Snow GetM (R) Glen Campbell is balladeer· narrator for this documentary chronicling the remarkable 2.SOO· mile migratory habils or the snow goose. 0 ~@ m The Mariclan (R) During Blake's levitating act for a benefit show aboard the Queen Mary, robbers attempt to steal the funds. 0 Movie: (C) (Zhr) "Picture Mom- 1111 Dead" (susp) '66-Don Ameche, Martha ~r. 0 @(.V a) The Roo~ies (R) A retire d policeman, Lt. Ryker's ex· superior officer, creates problems when he investigates the ~rder of his best friend I Dealer's Choice Safari to Adventu~ Mexican Film Festini KCET Auction 74 Noso1ros los Pobres Movie: "F'rot1t Paee Women" (dra) 'JS.-8ette Davis. 8:30 m Mttv Griffin Show G) Movie: (C) (90) "Gorao" (sci Ii} '61-Biil Travers. (W) Penor1m1 Novel• 9:00 tJ TONITE-MIKE LANDON * HOSTS AMERICA'S JR MISS PAGEANT-LIVE! 1J (Ci!} Ci))()) ! IS1clMI Amert· ca's Junior Miss P1pant Michael Landon is host, from Mobile. Ala., for the l 71h annual Junior Miu Paaeant, with 50 high.school uniol'1 vying for the title end e $10,000 scholarship aw1rd. D ROSS MACDONALD'S * THRILLER-"THE UNDERGROUND MAN" 0 Q) (]) m NBC Monday Movie: (C) (2hr) "The Under1round Man" (mys) "73-Peter Graves. J1ck Klu&· man. Dame Judith Anderson. Celest1 Holm, Sharon Farrell, Vera Miles, Jo Ann Pfiua. Kay Lenz. Jim Hutton. A homicide must be solved based on the remembrance of an 18·year· old 1ir1 of a crime that took place when she was 3 years old. ~ The Bold Ones @ EE) ABC Monda~ lovlt: ( ) (2hrl5m n) ''The Kremlin litter'' (dfa) 'JO-Patrick O'Neal. Bibi Art· dersson, Richard BooM. A former US. Navy Commander 1s pre&Sured into becomin& a spy In order to re· tneve a letter lh1t could have di· sastrous repercussions around the world. 0 .... , s-,-u-1-Al-1 His Lind Movie: (C) (lhr) ''A Lovely Way to 0 e" (dra) '68-Kirk Ooualu. EE Colossos en el Rine tD 810 ON WILD, TAME * ITEMS-BUT BID NOW! ED Kt£1 Auction '74 "'Art & An· tiques .. m Entrt Amlfo a!) Varltty Show 9:10 0 Ntws al La Hlena 10:00 tJ (~ ') Ltl Med ical Ctnh• (R) A call firl. ieverely beaten. is discovered to be suffering from a more cnt1c:al ailment. Imm ®""" PerTy Mason Roller G1mt1 Orama PralM tM Lord ~ub Get Smart . 10:30 I Journey to Adventure : KCET Auction '74 TV Musletl 11:00 I 0 m &D News 8tst of Groucho 6 !JI t Gallery Q) Q) CJ) News · ovle: (C) ''Hoffman" (com) 7 1-Peter Sellers. m Mi~on: lmposaible lD lht Untouch1blu The Saint KCET Auction '74 ) Tbt Pioneet1 ll:lS I ;.=~ Fil• 11:30 ( ) CBS Late Movie: ( ) " 111 Order Bride" (wes) '64- Bud~ Ebsen Lois Nettleton 8 Q1 0 m Johnny Canon Movie: "The Hooded Terror" (hor) '53-Tod Slaughter. I Twlll.i!!t Zone ll:'S @W m Wide Wortd Mystery 12:00 One Step Beyond Movie: "Bad for heh other'' (dra) '54-Charlton Heston. I Bill Cosby ., 1:00 {fQ) Tomorrow 1:4S frovte: (C) "P1nd1 L the Maalc Scrpent"-antmated cartoon. 3:10 tJ Mme: CC) ""l'VJ V'S. th• Nialtt Monsitts" (sc1·fl) "SS-Bobby V•n. 4 erl- ael la .• iss iors .000 enter ten. is rom a (com) M11vie: s) '64- Carson Terro(' Myttery Othe(' e Ma&I' n. the Nlaht bby Van THE D,AILY PILOT, TV WEEK. AUGUST 4, 1974 " ' • KIDNAPPING: THE HUMAN GAMBLE -- .Is kidnapping something you have to fear or does it only happen to the wealthy? What are the victim 's chances of surviving? How many kidnappings involve a sex crime? What can you do to protect yourself and your family? What should you do if someone you know is kidnapped? All this w'eek KNXT News probes the terrifying business of kidnapping. You'll see exclusive interviews with a kidnapper and a kidnap victim. Learn the FBI' s rules of precaution. The do's and don'ts in family protection. And, you '11 see a special fi lm review of historic kidnap cases. ALL THIS WEEK ON • THE BIG NEWS &PM ~ NEWSROOM 11PM CBSS2 Page 11 HEARING LOSS? I Sears] E yeglass Hearing Ald--. - concealed in temple piece gives excellenl range and lone Economic-al to operate. allowing up to 150 hours of batterv life · Tru-Ear 27 Behind- the-Ear Hearing Aid Hi nged battery com- partment. easier to in- sert battery. Separate on-off switch prolongs battery life. Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Price Effective tbru Saturday, May JI Hearing Aids Are A\•allable at the Followln" Sears Stores S-u Park C1rsoot "'""" CompllHI I ''"°"" f:I ~ ... , r.1 .... 1. l•il••ood l.acn• Hiii• Page 12 ·-· ~ .... '-'ort•rld~• Puadf'u Pl('O 11 Rlmpn Pom-.....,,. Cont Plata TONll•<'• \'all•• THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK, MAY 5, 1974 'THE CiOOD OLD DAYS' Gasoline was 23 cents a gal- lon in the good old days of the Fifties. And there were hoola hoop and yo yo competitions, knock knock jokes. Millon Berle and Ernie Kovacs were on rele- vision and Chubby Checker wa::. doing The Twist. "I think kids had more fun then than they did when I wa., growing up in the Sixties:· ob- served Ron Howard, .who )tars as Richie Cunningham in ABC's Happy Days. The nostalgic com- -edy er-i~ eettte-ring-on-hig>t- schoolers, Richie an<l his world- lier friend Potsie Weber and on Richie's family. airs Tuesdays at 8PM. Tom Bosley stars as How- ard Cunningham. Ri chie's fa- ther. Marion Ross co-stars as his mother Marion Cunningham. and Anson Williams. Henry Winkler and Donny Most as his buddies Potsie, Fonzie and Ralph Malph. Gavah O'Herlihy is fea tured as Richie's older brother Chuck an<l Erin Mor an as his younger sbter Joanie. Ron Howard, who made hi professional debut in 1958 in the motion picture. "The Jour- ne}'" starring Yul Brynner and Deborah Kerr and whose hun- dreds of film and television cred- its include the current motion picture hit. "American Graffiti," was born March I, 1954 and has no recollection of the mid- Fifties. "Since I had little preparation for a series set in 1hat era, I have tried to obtain . a back- ground by looking rhrough old publications and discussing that period with people who were teenagers at that time," said Howard. He noted that co-ac- tress Enn Moran's father was among the most helpful, as were Patti Bereyso and BJ>b Walden. who function as technical ad- visors on the '\Cries. -01 iris seriff charaewr. he-f.C· vealed, "Richie is experiencing things outside the home for the firsr time. There are episodes about hi" first car. his first at· tempt to run his father\ hard- ware store alone. his fir t bache- lor part)', his first gig with a comho playing for a fraternity house. Although he i-; clo:.e to his family, he i~ kind of floun- dering on his own with such new experiences." In addition to hi' full ~erie~ ~chedule, Howan.I is in his soph- omore year as a Cinema Art ma- jor at the University of Southern California and wants to be a director eventual!}'. Howard, whose younger brother Clint Howard stars in ABC\ The Cowboys, indicated there are similarities between hi' -;crie'i family and his own family. Of his actor-writer far her. Rance Theo CunnJnahllml, a typical rao..kn.lt famlty of tbt! 1950'• and rt!nlraJ figuru In "Happy Oa.ys." uft to rtabt att: Roa Ho•1rd, as Rlrhk. an unworldly hlP srbool youlb wbOR ~pades wllb hh budd~ pro- vide-much of tht suws' artk>n: Marion Ros.s. u bis molhtr, Marion: Gavu O'Ht!.rtilly, u bis brodtu, Ca.uck, a coU. "man": Tom Boslt>" at bis falber, Howard, aad Erin Moru u Im younatr slstt!r, Joan~. stars as Pohlr Htnry WlnkJtr a.~ Fonzie Howard, he said. "M y Dad has a certain kind of sense of humor It\ nor a11 c;harp as Tom B<>'ilq \ in the '!enc<; Nevertheless. therl' 1, a \1m1lart1) thar makei. it ea!I\ and natural to do 'iccnes wilh T0m" Bo<iile.} rem e mbers the Flfties a' nnc of !he happiest time' of hi, life. Working in rhc rhca:er 1n Ne'' York al the time. he re called ... , w:ic; paid $20 a wcet.. and ir l:O'>t me $JO to live. hut I l'Ouldn·t have hcen happier he i.:au\c each lhi\ I knew I ..... ould be WPrking nri the 'lagc .. Bm le~ \Ol'n •if tern ardc; leapnl ll1 Bwa<l" .1\ \lar<lom rn the t1tk role ol "f1orcllo~ .. and hecal'llr lhc fl r,t ,1e1111 to "'ecp Ton\, Drama Crtt1c,, ANl A and 1\le.,..\p,1pcr (1utld Award' 1n om• \CilllOn. or the J.'iflies, he remarked, "W e had .i father image in thl White Hc1u,c whether we agreed with him poltt1cally or not. and rhc KMcan War wa-; O\Cr \.Vh1k lhe F1f11e' ''ere not without ctin trm cr\le'i, there was less pre,sure .rnd fewer complications rhan we cncounrl·rcd 1n rhe folio'' int dcl'adc .. TUESDAY MAY 1 For morning and afternoon llstlnp. please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MPVIES 9:00 0 (C) "Demon Pliner' (sci·fi) '65 -Darry Sullivan. Norma Bengel!. 9:30 0 "The Steel Helmet" (dra) '51- Gene Evans. Steve Brodie. 11 :00 0 "Hirh. Wide ind Handsome" (dra) '37-lrene Dunne. Randolph Scott. "Stolen Aulr nment" (susp) '55-John Bentley 12:00 m ''To flu~ A lady" (dra) '50- Clark Gable, Barbara Stanwyck. 1:00 @ (C) "A Certain Smile" (dra) '58 -Joan Fontaine, Rossano Braul. 2:00 0 (C) "for the Arit Time" (mus) '59-Marlo Lanza, Zsa Zsa Gabor. IE "Ud1 In A Jim" (com) '42 - Irene Dunne, Ralph Bellamy. 3:00 "Mi n W'i1h the Golden Arm" Part I (dra) '56 -frank Sinatra, Kim NOYak. ®) (C) "Mlreat" (dra) '6~regory Peck. Willer Matthau. 3:30 tJ (C) "Str1nre Bedfellows" (com) '65 -Rock Hudson. Gina Lollo bngida "Murdtf Inc." (myJ) '60 - Stuart Whitman. May Britt. 0 (C) "Come Blow Your Hom" (C-Om) '63 -Frank Sinatra Tony Bill, Barbara Rush. · (j7 (31 "Prisoner of Japan" (dra) '42-Alan Baxter. ID Cil "The Stri1>9er'' (dra) '63- Joanne Woodward, Richard Seymer. 4:30 (~ 00> "Dtstroyer'' {adv) '43-- Edward G. Robinson, Glenn Ford. EVENING Hocan's Herots Beverty Hillbillies Mission: Impossible Moel Squad £J Pobre Gon.111t1 Greatest Sports Lacends News : KCET Auction '74 Dial (213) 663·8421. EE Speed Racer NBA Basketball Play.Offs In tile event 1 5th 11n11 Is not neces· sary fOf the NBA BasktUt•ll pl11-otts, •II this evenln(s C8S prorramminr Is subject to ch•nre wtUtovt notice. 6:30 fJ (~ (})) Qi NBA Buktt· bill Ch1mplonshlp1 6 De1ler's Choice · Diel Ven Dyle Merv Gr1ffln Show Hopn's Heroes • Tr1vel Film · • News Uttle Ruuls 7:00 3 r:JOmGJNtws Bowline for Dollen THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. MAY 5, 1974 EE RUGS, STEREO & MORE * TONITE! AUCTION '74 I KCET Auction '74 "General" Nodles T1p1tl1s Teetn> del Martes 9:30 tJ <a (I)) M1ude (R) Carol's boyfriend is an ovemlfht guest, and Maude is insistinr on separate sleeping arrangements. ONews 6I) La Hiena 10:00 fJ trs A N:ce Piece (R) D QJ Cil Q9) m P o II ce Story "Death on Credit" (R) Officer Rick Calvelli, investigatinr a phony charge·plate ring, becomes a shop· lifter and is quickly brought into the group. John Saxon, David Canary. Rory Calhoun, Howard Duff Tina Louise .and latalne Stephens' star. ZOJ@News • Perry M1son @ (J) (D M1rcus Welby M.D. (R) Ors: Welby and Kiley race against time to determine what kind of medication a com atose woman · patient has taken so they can de· c1de how to counteract It. Joanna Barnes and Lynne Mirta guest. I Ci)) Hee Hew '. Orem• Prelse tile lord Club 10:30 I Journey to Adventure liet Smart Sp1nlsh Comedy News EE THE USUAL, UNUSUAL J * KCET AUCTION ACTION ~ EE KCET Auction 7 4 -------------------------6I) MusJcal Espedlculer @ Movie: (2hr) "Secret life of Walter Mitty" (com) '47 -Danny Kaye, Virginia Mayo. Whit's MJ Une? I love luq It T1kes A Thief Ci) I Drt1m of Jeennle Esmeratd1 @ Dflrnet tE E ffOPE IS YOURS FOR *HIGHEST AUCTION BID I KCET Auction '74 "General" Dr1m1 Usted J 11 Potlcl1 Three Stoo1es · QR) Hollywood Squires Help Tby Nelcflbor 7:30 I Ho(ln's Heroes Secrets of the Dee1) "Wonders of the Sea World" 0 Million $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "Donov1n's Reef" (com) '63 - John Wayne, Lee Marvin, Elizabeth Allen. I Bewitched @ To Tell the Truth @ let's Make A 0.11 Stlnd Up & CMtr Bobby Gofdsboro Show Tbe Ghoul G1nr 8:00 D Qj Cl)®) m Ad1m 12 (R) The officers face waterfront prob· lems. and ticket an astrology buff. Jayne Meadows guests. 0 Movie: (C) (2hr) "Voy111 Into 51>1ce" (sci·fi) '70-Akjo Ito. 0 @ (I) al Hippy D111 "Be the first on Your Block'' Howerd builds a bomb shelter but all his friends relatives and neighbors want space tn a shelter that will hold only a few people. •' I ~~~t~ c::~re u:oo $~BI~~:::: Melictn F11m feitival Best of Gro:l1: KCET Auction '74 "Art & An· 6 Perry Mason Ii ues" • Movie: (C) "The-life & De1th of Qulen? Colonel Blimp" (dra) '43 -Anton Comedy Walbrook, Deborah Kerr. Movie: "Captured" (dra) •33 _ (Mission: lmpouible Leslie Howard. Paul Lukas. The Untouchables 00 Secret file 8:30 B <9 Cl)) H1w1ii five-0 (R) A The Saint gambler becomes the central figure ICCET Auction '74 in a macabre lottery based on the (j)) The Pioneen projected hour of his deeth. 0 ID Ci)®) m N 8 C Tuesday 11:30 6 ~~ CIJ) Cl) CBS late Movie: Mystery-l1n1cek (R) Banacek in· (~) M1r1caibo" (dra) '58--{;omel vestigates the theft of a two·and·a· Wilde. Abbe Lan!.,.Jean Wallace. half·million·dollar computer that be· 0 @ ~ .. ltQ) w John~J Clrt0n longs to a wealthy hypochondriac. 0 Mov11: 'Room to ler (mys) '50 Anne Suter J!!.ests. -<:on~ance Smith. Jimmy Hinley. 0 @@ W AIC Tuesday Movie: @ Twill~ Zont (C) (90) "The Story of Pretty Boy 0 @ 00 al Wide World Mptery ~d" (dra) '73 -Martin Sheen, "One Deadly Owner'' (R) A photor· Ktm Darby, Michael Parks, Ellen rapher's model is inexplicably Corby. Desperate to escape from drawn to the purchase of 1n ex· poverty, an Oklahoma farm boy pensive ~utomobile which is to take leaves his close·knit family to better her, against her wlll. to the scene himself. Instead he is enmeshed in of a murder. Donna Miiis and Jeremy a life of crime and becomes a noto· Brett star. rious. bank robber in the early 12:00 w One Step Berond 1930 s. Movie: "Qut of the P•sf' (dra) ~Jerry Gross Sports Special ' 7-Kirk 0ou11as. Jane Greer. KS ::r.~1~n(::)~scarf1ce Mob" m Bill Cosb, (dra) -Robert Stack. 1:00 CV fJ Cl)@ Cl) News @ Movfe: (C) (2hr) "To Trap A D @) Tomorrow Spy" (susp) '6&-Robert Vaughn. 1:45 iJ Movie: ''It Had to Be You" e!) P1nor1m1 Novela (com) '47 -Ginger Rogers. Cornel 9:00 @ The Bold Onq Wiide. Ci) Movie: (C) (2hr) "Incident in 2:00 m All·Nlfht Show: "8100d I 811cl Sin Frendsco" (dra) '70-Christo· lac.," "P1nlc In tflt Streets" pher Georee. Dean Jauer. 3:10 fJ MOYie: ''The Bir st.al" (dra) fE Gorrion '49-Robert Mitchum. Jene Greer. Pa&e 13 George .Carlin Is host of NBC's Midnight Special at lAM. fol· lowing the Friday (l l :30PM) presentation of The Tonight Show. One of Carlin's guests is Buffy St. Marie. TIHD Of CAR 'AYMINTS? LEASE! ORDER YOURS NOW 1974 MODELS ALL MAKES t41l ot UI e GEORGE JOINER •DON CROSBY DUNTON FORD I ~.io ~ Mo•r, ~t '>11ntci Ana 546-7070 WEDNESDAY MAY 8 For morning and afternoon listings, please see DAYTIPAE PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 O (C) "I'll Tab SWeden" (com) '65 -Bob Hope, Tuesday Weld, Dina Memll. 9;30 0 "The Blad! Glove" (mys} '5-4- Alu Nicol. Eleanor Summerfield. 11:00 0 "Talle A letttr, Darlin(' (com) '42 -Rosalind Russell, Fred Mac· Murray, "The Marshal of Heldorado" (wes) '5~Jimmy Ellison 12:00 ID ''Kidnapped" "(classic) '38 - Warner Baxter. Freddie Bartholo· mew. 1:00 j6 "The Damned Don't Cry'' (dra) 'SO-David Bruin. Joan Crawford 2:00 0 (C) "The Scorpio letter!" (mys} '67-Alex Cord, Shuley Eaton. • (£) "Tangier" (adv) '46 -Maria Montez, Sabu. Preston Foster. 3:00 '"jj'1 "Man With the Golden Arm" Concl. (dra) '56 -Frank Sinatra. Kim Novak laurel & Hardy featur· ette. (C) "The Thrill of It All" (com) '62-James Garner, 00f1s Day. 3:30 8 (C) "The Devil at 4 O'Clotil" (dra) '61 -Spencer Tracy, Frank Sinatra. @ (C) "Back Strtet" (dra) '61 - Susan Hayward. John Gavin, Vera Miles. 0 "Three faces of Eve" (dra) ·57 -Joanne Woodward. lee J Cobb. David Wayne. J:l (1) "Mr. Celebrity" (dra) '41- Buuy Henry @ @ (C) "None But the Brave" (dra) '65 -Frank Sinatra, Clint Walker. 4:30 (Q9 (j)) "Face of A fu&ltlve" (wes) '59-Fred MacMurray, Lin McCarthy EV E NIN G 6:00 CJ 0 m m Cl) News 3 @@CV •6 1(~@) News Bon1nza 6 Hopn's Heroes Beverly Hillbilftes Mission: lmpoulble Moel S<ju1d El Pobre Gonz1lez ~ Movie Oouble Feature: (C) (4hr) "They Call It Murder" (susp) '7l- J1m Hutton. Lloyd Bochner. (C) "Day of the Wolves" (susp) '71-Richard Egan. Rick Jason. Et) KCfT Auction '74 Dial (2 13) 663·8421 EE Speed Racer 6:30 00 Dealer's Choice ~ Dick Van Dyke Merv Griffin Show ~ CI) Hogan's Heroes Travel Film News EE little Rascals 7:00 B m 0 0 mm News 0 Bowling for Dollars (i) Movie: (C) (2hr) "Vera Cruz" 1Ht OAILV PILOT. TV WEEK. AUGUST 4, 1974 (adv) '54-Gary Cooper. Burt Lan· tD HELP SUPPORT KC~T (:jt~~·umey * CALL IN AUCTION BID • Whars My Line? EI3 KCET Auctlon '74 "Art & An· I love Lucy fi.g_ues" It Takes A Thief ail Curusel del Mundo ~ Cil I Drum Of Junnle 9:30 0 IU Ci) (ig) m NBC 0 0 u b I e Esmeralda Future: Part II (C) (90) "In fin· 00 Draenet dem" (dra} '73 -Claude Akins, EI3 1975 ACADEMY AWARD Frank Converse. Richard Angarola. * TICKETS-BID TONITE A middle-aged free-lance truckinr £T:' KCET Auction ,74 ,,2nd Art & oontractor teams with 1 young u:.i Harvard law School aradua1e to Antiques Night" help an orange grower who is <ei?J 00> World of Surviv11 fighting to save his land from a> Drama commercial developers. CI;) Aaron Bereer Sho• I News EE Three Stoores Gomer P)le 7:30 O New Datin& Game · La Hien• (31 Hoe•n's Heroes lO·OO -("""" r.n) ( .., 1 · "T 0 Wait Till Your father «:ets Home • er I.IL~ ~f 8 °11k he Only .1~PJltJ Nel&llbor Way Out . Ko1ak helps a youngst.er let's M•kt A OHi look for his m1.ss1na lather ~nd dis· -a Bobby Goldsboro Show covers lher~ 1s a connection ~e· • Million $Movie; (C) (2hr) ''The tween .his d1~appear~nce and a thief ~archtrs" (dra) '56-John Wayne. now living in Brazil. Jeffrey Hunter Natalie Wood 0 ID @ tji News . · . · (i) Perry Mason o New. Pnce Is R1r11t 0 QT CI) tl) Doc Elliot "All y l~Bew~~h;e~I the Truth Need to Know" {R) Meredi th Bax.le~ Hollywood S<ju1tes guests as a .blind youne housew!f!, ) ·Police Surgeon whose marriage reaches a cn_s1s Other People, Other Places when Doc Elliot uraes a~ oper~t1on Celebrity Bowlin" that may restore the gul s eyesight. • I £1 Tomlllo EE The Ghoul Gane Or1ma 8:00 0 (~ 00 > So n n Y & C h e t Praise the Lord Club Comedy Hour Guests are Bob Hope and Ken Berry, and Heavywei&ht 10:30 ~ Journey to Adventure Boxing Cha'!!e!on Georae Foreman aJ Get Smart 0 ~ r6 Ilg) m NBC o o u b I e EID TRIPS, TREATS, TOYS feature: Part I "Lutas Tanner'' (90) * ALL ON KCET AUCTION (dra) '73 -David Hartman. Rose· 1 KCET Au....:on ,74 mary Murphy, Kathleen Quinlan, "u Nancy Malone. Joe Caraaiola. Hart· Dettctive de Hotel man stars as a small-town high 11:00 =CJ 0 g) m Cl) News school teacher whose progressive 3 fl) ®) fE @ r61 News ' methods threaten his job and pos1· Best of Groucho t1on in t~e community. , l6J Nl&flt G1llery ., M~vte: (~) (2hr} 'The Bounty O Movie: "The Man in the White Killer' (wes) 64-Dan Duryea, Rod Suit'' (com) '52-Alec Guinness. Cameron. ~ Mission: Impossible 0 @ tl) The Cowboys "Req · The Untouchables u1em for A lost Son'' Cimarron em· 1 , Secnt flit ploys a molasses·lovme burro 6 The Saint named Anrel to avert a trage~y ED KCO AuctiOfl •74 when a rugged mountain family (~ ) The Pioneers seeks revenge tor the loss of a son 11.15 &r.1 ,., I De1ler's Choice · w .,.nem1 34 Saf1.ri to Adventure 11 :30 O (fn (!)) Cl) CBS Lat• Movie: Me•1tan fl!m F~stlv~l • (C) "M1dline Cun McCain" (dra) KC£T Auction 74 Arts & An '70-John Casavettes Peter Falk tiques" 8 ll (6 o m Johhny Carson . €D Championship Wrestlln& Movie: "flyine Saucer'' (adv) EE Japanese Laneuaee Program '51-Pat Gamson. &:30 0 @@ al ABC Wtdnesd1y @ Twilieht Zone Movie: (C) (90) "Killdozer" (R) 0 1 CV m Wide World Speci•I (susp) '73-Clint Walher, Carl Betz, ''Salute to Redd Foxx" Foxx is Neville Brand, James Wainwright. roasted by celebrity euests Steve Engaged in a formidable assignment Allen, Milton Berle, Whitman Mayo, on a desolate island, six construe· Jayne Meadows, Demond Wilson. t1on men find their mission-and Slappy White. Richard Pryor and ~their hves-m jeopardy when a giant Ronnie Graham. 1 bull_dozer seemingly develops a !11~nd 12:00 Ci) One Step Beyond of its own and eoes on a k1lltng GJ Movie: (C) "The Black Knl&hr' ID~eg~. Griffin Show (advJ '54 -Alan Ladd. Patricia (£) Movie: (C) (90) "Hercules, Sam· ~d~~:,· Cosby son l Ulysses" (adv) '65 -Kirk 1.00 ,...... O (ft\ ~ m Morris. . I 3 I I 8 I a~ ~ News a!) Panorama Novela 0 l'\O Tomorrow 9:00 O (Qt (!)) Cannon (R) An 1:45 8 M~ie: (C) "W•y of A Ga.ll(ho" airline pilot. once mvolved in a (dra) 52-Rory Calhoun, Richard million-dollar sky1acking provides a Boone, Gene Tierney. clue 1n a bizarre case of harass· 2:00 ID A 11 • Ni g ht Show: "D.0.A.," ment and vandalism. "Thieves' Highw1y," "Whatta Stir" 00 The Bold Ones 3:10 B Movie: "Hotel Reserve'' (dra) £E Papa Corazon '46-James Mason, Patricia Medina. e al is e o. n. d I ia " d " (· a. THURSDAY MAY 9 fot momln1 and •ftemoon llattn11, pleaM lff DAYTIME PROGRAMS. .._.ow, for your convenience, are the days movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 U (C) ''nt Flylna Fontalnn" (dra) '59 -Michael Callan, Joan Evans, Evy Norlund. 9:30 IJ ''The Mad Doctor" (mys) '41- Basll Rathbone, Ellen Orew. 11:00 IJ "Waikiki Weddin(' (com) '37- Bing Crosby, Martha Raye. "Danger Zoat" (mys) '51-Huiih Be,eumont. 12:00 m "Champarne for Ciesar" (com) '50-Ronald Colman, Celeste Holm. 1:00 @ "llrifht Leaf" (dra) '50-Gary Cooper, Lauren Bacall. 2:00 O (C) "Seven Hills of Rome" (mus) '58-Mar1o Lanza. m "Next Time We love" (dra) '35 -Margaret Sullivan, James Stewart. 3:00 Cl) (C) "lndll«Ht'' (com) '58 - Ingrid Bergman, Cary Grant. (tQ) (C) "for Love or Money" (eom) ·SJ -Kirk Douglas, Mitzi Gaynor, Thelma Ritter. J:JO fl (C) "A IUu Before Dyln(' (dra) ·5~Jeffrey Hunter, Robert Wagner, Joanne Woodward. (]) (C) "Windlester 73" (was) '67 -Tom Tryon. John Saxon. U (C) ''The CindnnatJ Kid" (dra) '65 -Steve McQueen, Edward G. Robinson, Ann·Margret. @CV .. Double Cross" (mys) ·41 -Kane Richmond. Ci) (6 J (C) ''F11mln1 Star" (dra) '60-Elvis Presley, Barbara Eden, 4:30 (Qj CJ)) "Je1nn1 Elrlu" Part I (dra) '57-Kim Novak. rv r N I NC 6:00 fl (Qj Cl)) Cl) N B A Basketball Championships In the event a 6th Championship aame is not neces· sary, and there is no basketball scheduled for tonight, all subse· quent proaramming is subject to chan_I! without notice on CBS. OU@J)n;,News Bonanza 6 Hogan's Heroes Beve_!lt Hillbillies (ill W (j) CI) News Mission: Impossible Mod Squad' £1 Pobre Gonulez Movie Double feature: (4hr) "Libel" (dra) '59--0livia de Havll· land, Dirk Bogarde. (C) "An Affair to Remember" (rom) '57 -Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr. fI!) Auction '74 Di11I (213) 663 8421. m Speed Rater 6:30 I Otaler'1 Choiu • Dkk Ven O~e Merv Griffin Show (1) Hogan's Heroes • Travel film • • Vlajando Ef) Little RaW1ls 7:00 (]) D 0 m m News e Bowllnr for Dollars THE (')AILY Pll.OT, TV WEEK. AUGUST <I. 1974 6 Movie: (C) (2hr) "Boy Did I Get (dra) '60 -Elvis Presley, Barbara A ronr Number" (com) '66 -Bob Eden, Steve Forrest Hope, Phyllis 01ller, Elke Sommer. EE Gorrion ' IWharsMyUne? fI!) MOM'S DAY BARGAINS? :N::.~uA~htef * SHOP KCET AUCTION! CID I Dream of Jeannie ~m~~ET Auction '74 "General Esmeralda el) Acompan1me @ Dr•rnet ai) Japanese TV Hour m SKIERS TAKE A POWDER 9:30QNews * BID ON SKI TRIP! <~ 00> Movie: (C) (90) "The I KCET ~ction '74 Horse Soldiers" (adv) '59 -John Tele·Revista Musical Wayne, William Holden. Three Stooaes €fi) la Hiena ' ' 7:30 I Hocan's Heroes 10:00 D rD (!) [Q) m Music Country • New Pric. Is Ri&ht USA Jerry Reed 1s host to Charlie Help Th~ Neipbor Rich, Donna Fargo, Ray Stevens, Oule's Girls Doug Kershaw, Wayne Newton. Tom • Million $ Movie: (2hr) "Opera· T. Hall, 'Lynn Anderson, Mac Oavis. tlon Pacific'' (adv) '51 -John the Statler Brothers, Jeannie C. Wayne, Patricia Neal Riley and OeJ Reeves. o Let's M•kt A Deal O ID&J ~ New1 Bewitched 6~ Perry Mason 1 (j) To Tell the Trinh 0 (fl CV m Streets of San Fran· Q (6) Wild World of Animals cisco "Shield of Honor" (R) Oetec- • Jonalh1n Winters Show tives Stone and Keller investigate · The Protectors a murder they decide had to be set The Ghoul Gane up by one of their own. Mariette 8:00 fl The Waltons (R) An egotistical Hartley, Robert Foxworth and ·Peter young baseball pitcher invites him· Mark Richman guest. sel f to stay With the Waltons until m Dra_ma a major league scout comes to see ai) Praise the lord Club him. 10:30 1J Orson Welles Grnt Mysteries 0 12)@@) a;, f I i p W i Ison "The lnsp1ral1on of Mr. Budd" A Show Flip's guests are Jack Benny, quick-thinking hairdresser entraps Pearl Bailey and The Muppets. an escaping murderer by a most O Movie: (C) (2hr) ''Trape.ze" colorful method. Hugh Griffith (dra) '56 -Burt Lancaster, Tony guests. Curtis. Gina lollobri&ida. m Journey to Adventure 0 @ CI) m Chopper I "Strain of Get Smart Innocence" (R) A pregnant girl, Teatro ton Oswaldo Calvo ' whom . Don had on.ce be_friended, Ell) PRIME DODGER DUCATS goes mt.o labor wtule being held * TOP BIO WINS' CALL' hos1age in a holdup. • • i Jerry Gross Sports fI!) KCET Auction '74 Dealer's Choi.ce ~ Los Dias Felices Boxinf from the Olympic 11:00 ~ 0 0 el) a;, aJ News Mexlun fil.m f~s1Jv~~ 3 Cl) @)ti} Ci) @ News KCET Auction 71. Art & An· Best of Groucho tiques" . Night Gallery (~ Cl)) Jimmy Dean Show O Movie: (C) "The Singer, Not the a!) Car~111n~ Musiul Song" (dra) '61 -Dirk Bogarde, m ~ov1e: • Confessions Of a N~zl John Mills, Mylene Oemongeot Spy' (dra) 39-Edward G. Robin I Mission: Impossible son, Paul Lukas. The Untouchables &:30 0 @(3} al Firehouse (R) Ryer. (])Secret rile son and his men respond to a fire The Saint In an old theatre where a vault El!J KCET Auction '74 filled with old film threatens the (~ Cl)) The Pioneers entire neighborhood. ' 11:15 €fi) Cinema 34 Ito Be Announced £'111 ~rill '8'I 8 · · · Merv Griffin Show 11:30 ~ (ie l.!J.) 1..1.J c,, S ~t~ ~ovie. Ci)) The Waltons X-The Unknown (sc1·f1) 57- News/Sports Dean Jager. Leo McKern. . . . . . 0 ~1 l 6) ®) m Johnny Carson 9:00 fl Mo~:e: (C), (90) 'Seven C1~es 1J Movie: "Hard, fast & Beautiful" of Gold (adv) 55-Anthony Quinn, (dra) 'SI-Claire Trevor Sally For· Michael Rennie. Jeffrey Hunter, rest ' Richard Egan, Rita Moreno. The @ Twili&flt Zone story of the Spani~h. Conquistador~· O 1 CI) al Wide World Special 18th century expedition to California "Play 11 A2ain Bogie" A tribute to in search of the seven cities of gold. Humphrey Bogart hosted by Peter D 9 @ @) m Ironside "T h e Lawford with guests George Raft & Oouble·Edged Corner'' (R) Baffled Joan Blondell by a $100,000 heist during which • r£1 • two men were killed, Chie f Ironside 12·00 '-~ Or. !r~"!. Kas.sorla " ,57 resorts to a paid informer to get a m Movie. Under fire .<dra) hne on the perpetrators. -Rex Reason. Steve Brodie. (I) The Bold Ones m Bill Cosby 0 (jJ) 00 C!) Kunr Fu "The Spirit 1 :00 ffi 0 Ci) @ (6) News Helper" (R) Caine finds himself in 0 @) Tomorrow • the role of the muter as he at· 1:45 fl Movie: "Elopement" (com) '51 tempts to teach the futility of re· -Anne Francis, Willlam Lundigan. venge to an Indian boy whose moth 2:00 m All·Nlaht Show: "little Shop of er has been abducted by outlaw Horrors," "All About Evt" Comancheros. 3:10 fl Movie: "Brimstone" (wes) '49- (j) Movie: (C) (2hr) "F11mlna Star" Rod Cameron, Adrian Booth. Page 15 FRIDAY MAY 10 For morning and afternoon listings, please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 O "Desert Rats" (dra) '53-Rich· ard Burton, James Mason. 9:30 O "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch" (com) '34-Zazu fitts, W.C. Fields. ll :OO:o "The Narrowing Citcle" (mys) '55 -Paul Carpenter. "Meet Mr. Callaghan" (mys) '5$ -Derrick De Marney. 12:00 m "The Magnificent Ambersons" (dra) '42 -Joseph Cotten, Anne Baxter. 1:00 ezj (C) ''Woman's Worfd" (com) ·54-June Allyson, Clifton Webb. 2:00 O (C) "The Court Jester" (com) '56-0anny Kaye, lD "Fireman Save My Child" (com) '54-Spike Jones. 3:00 @ (C) ''Tales of Tenor" (hor) '62 -Vincent Price. ll!>l (C) "Petuli1" (dra) '68-Julie Chnstre, George C. Scott. 3:30 e (C) "A I Man Could Get Killed" (com) '66-James Garner. Sandra Dee. Tony Franciosa. ti) (C) "The Borgi1 Stick" (susp) '67-Don Murray, Inger Stevens. O (C) "Niagara" (susp) '53 - Joseph Cotten, Marilyn Monroe. 1-------------@ @ "Prison Girls'' (dra) '42- Rose Hobart. ~ 00 (C) "Brides of Fu Manchu" (dra) '67-Christopher Lee. 4:30 (®, (!)) "Jeanne fl&les" Concl. (dra) '57-Kim Novak. EVENIN G 6:00 eouoommm News C~@J@@@OO<Q!@) News O Bonanza ;:i) Hogan's Heroes O Beverly Hillbillies m Mission: Impossible Mod Squad El Pobre Gonzalez @ Movie: (C) (2hr) "Secret of My Success" (com) '65 -Shirley Jones, Stella Stevens. Page lfi Eli) KCET Auction '74 Dial (213) 663·8421 m Speed Racer 6:30 6 Dealer's Choice • Dick Van Dyke Merv Griffin Show 1 @ Hoean's Heroes • Travel film ·•News Little Rascals • Bowline tor Dollan 7:00,@ CJ 0 m al News 6 Movie: (C) (2hr) "The lnvlndbl• x" (dta) '70-Stuart Whitman. I ~~~~ :;1af ne1 I love Lucy It Takes A Thief @ I Dream of JeannJe Esme111da THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. MAY 5. 1974 (ij @ Draer_ift with such chores as new math fD SHOW BIZ BAUBLES! O"'@~®The Odd Couple (Rl * HIGHEST BIO WINS 'EM Felix directs his first tllm with IKCET Auction 74 oscar as "star" in an improvised ( @ ) Ameriun Horstman story built around a sexpot Dr1ma stewardess. £ventos utinos I News Three Stoo&es f'lshln' Hole 7:30 Bobby Goldsboro Show l 1 Hlena Hogan's Heroes 10:00 . h ~ @®) Ho111WOod Squares o Glen Campbell wrt Help Thy Nel&hbor * Omar, Peter, Dinah, Wild Rlfup d St Tbrillseeker1 Buddy an eve. • Million S Movie: (2hr) "Blood All From Chevrolet. Alley" (adv) 'SS -John Wayne. 0 @ (i) ®) m I sJlclXb I Th e Lauren Bacall. C.mpbeils Are Comln& Musi~ and ewitdled comedy with a Scottish flarr are @ To Tell the Truth spotlighled as l\ost Glen Campbell Un\4mecl World welcomes guests• Buddy Hackett, ntemation1I .Variety Steve Lawrence, Peter Sellers. urvival Dinah Shore and Omar Sharif. The --CliOu Ga'ilf JlD Ci)lf'iis - 8:00 f) <9 (j)) Dirty Sally (R~ Sally . Perry Mason sets out to get her old f11end, a @@ (!) Toma (R)" After a retired soldier (Gene Evans) olt the fellow officer allegedly murders a bottle and back in an Army job. black youth, Toma must ~Ind out o ID @ ®J m Sanford & Son whether or not the shooting was (R) When his TV goes on the bltnk, justified. Fred buys a "hot" one and gets into @ Alfred Hltctlto<k Presents some real hot Waler. m Drama O Movie: (C) (2hr) "Alaskan Sa· a;) Pr1ise the lord Club tari" (adv) '72-0utdoor adventure. 10:30 I Journey to Advtnture 0 @CID a> Brady ~unch (R) A Get Smart trip to Cincinnati's l<me's Island La Revlsta de M1rrone Amusement Park turns into a race News against the clock when Mike's busi· m AN ANTIQUE AFFAIR! ness .documents are lost on one of * COLLECTORS CALL NOW! the rides. I KCET Auction '74 i At Issue · Duler's Choice · loco Valdez Sports Speci1I "L.A. Aztecs: A 11:00 0 D mm al News Profile" 3 (j) ~ ~@ Ntws I Mexicilft film Festini Beit of Groucho The Champions ~ 6 Nipt Galr.ry K~ET Auction '74 "Art & An • friclrt Nipt tiques" Mission: Impossible m El Show de Rositl Peru Ci) .S. Marketing Presents m Japanese Lan1ua1e Pro1ram * THE TROY CORY SHOW 8:30 f) (~ (j)) Ci) Good Times §Troy Cory Show 0 @ 00 ®) m lotsl Luck (R) @ Secret File Stan "borrows" money from a Rotk Concert purse turned in to the lost and ,. KCET Auction '74 found department in order to place ( Cl)) The Pioneers a winning bet at the racetrack. 11-lS • Cinema 34 0 @ CV m Six 'Million $ Min u;30 <9 (j)) CIS late Movie: (C) (R) Steve must face a robot pro· "Brottlerllood of Sit.In" (hor) '71 - grammed to klll 1n order to save a Strother Martin, top secret f Uided missile system. Q Q} @ tfOJ €?;) Johnny C.raon I Merv Griffin Show 0 Movie: •ifiie Bed·Slttfna Room" Perry Mason (com) '69-Rit• Tushin&ham. Panorama Novel• 00 Twllicht Zone 9:00 (~ @ ) (i) CBS frid1y M?vle: fJ @CI) G) In Concert "Cali· (C) (2hr) ''Tiie McKenzie Break' (R) fornla Jam" The record·breaklng (dra) '70 -Brian Keith, Helm~t concert held at the Ontario Speed· Griem, tan Hendry .. ~n Army c.aptatn wi in earty April. is assigned by British lntelh~nce a Stir Trek to circumvent an escape attempt at The Untouchables a prlsoner·of·war camp in Scotland 12:00 6 Rodi Concert .. during World War II. Movie: "Sanae Wlldemm O @ @[Q)@m Girl With (wes) '56--Victor Mature. Somethine Extra (R) The offi~e 12:3011 Shock Theatre grapevine. seems sure that John is The Baron having an affair with his , se~retary, 1:00 , @) m Mldnl&flt Specl1I George causing Sally to get a bit green-Cartin hosts. ~d." O In Sen ion Host Phil Everly de· The Bold Ones parts from the regular format and El Padre dt Ml 81rrio explores the sound track session Em SO YOU LIKE KCET? with the Pat Williams Orchestra. *CALL US-AUCTION '74 O N1ttivt11e Music I ICCET Auction 74 1:45 6 Movie: (C) ''The Bamboo La Criada Bien Criada Saucef' (SCl·fi) '67;-0an Oury~; El Almanaq11e 2:00 IQ AJl-Ni&ht Show: Tht 811 Uft, 30 ~ ~ ~ @ m Brian Keith 'Tht l.acty & Utt Monster" 9 : 5'.ow~~Se~s stint as temporary 3:10 6 Movie: "Crack Up" (mys) '46- guardian' of a youngster saddles him Pat O'Brien, Claire Trevor. s " I g .. TV '~~.r Evening Movies 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 1:30 9:30 10:30 11 :30 SUNDAY, MAY 5 5 (C) "The lt,..ts of S.n franclKO" (dra) '72-l(arl Malden. Michael Oouftas, Robert Weaner. 9 (C) ''TIM MOf'lltora" (adv) '69-Guy Stockwell, Sunn Oliver U "MutJny on tfM 8oYnty'' (dra) '3~1ark Gable, Charles Laughton 6 "Juaru" (dra) '39--fl'aul Munl, Bette Davis. 9 (C) UTha Court Jester" (com) '56-Danny Kaye, Glyn" Johns 7 17 :l ICI "Gnlddn~er" (Cldv) '64-Sean Connery, Honor Blackman 11 ""-4 Dust" (dra) '32-Clark Gable, Jean Harlow. 6 (C) ""-•nt IV." (com) '65-Dlrk Bogarde, Sylva Kosclna. 9 "Lord Jim" (dni) '6!1-Peter O'Toole. Jamea Mason. 7 "'°'ycl\.Out" (dra) '68-0e1n Stockwell. Susan Struber&. 11 "I'll Cry Tomorrow" (dra) '55-SuHn Hayward. Richard Conte 13 ''Th• Wntrel" Cd••) '63-Van Hetlln MONDAY, MAY 6 6:00 26 tC) "The S.1rchers" (adv) '56-John Wayne (C) "We're No Angel•" (com) '55-Humphrey Bog~. Aldo Ray 7:00 6 ~C) ''Hour of the Gun" (wesl '67-Jason Robards, Jemu Garner 7:30 9 .. ,.Jnsbur1111h" ldr•) '42-lonn Wayne. Marlene 01etrich 1:00 5 (CJ "fl'lctura Mommy DtP,d" (s sp) '66-Don Amecht. Martha Hyer, -Suhf'I Gordo-.----------1:30 ll (C) "Gorse" (sci.fl) '61-Blll Travers 9:00 4 23 6 tCI "The Ur>deriuound Man" (mysl .-,-Peler Gra~er. Jack Klu1men, Dame Judith Andert.on. Celeste Holm, Vera Miles. Jo An Pflug, Key Lenz, Jim Hutton 7 17 3 IC) "The Kremlin utter" (dra) '7o--Patr1ck O'Neal, Bibo Ander' son, Richard Boone. · 10 (C) .. A Lowly Way to Die" (dra) '68--f<ttk Douglas. Ell Wallach 11:00 t (C) "Hoffman'' (com) '71-Peter Sellert. l 1:)0 2 (29 I ) I (C) "Mall Order 9rtcte" (wes) '64-Buddy EbHn, Lois Net. tleton, 5 ''The Hooded Terro,.. (hor) '53-TOd Slaughter TUESDAY, MAY 7 7:00 6 "Seem Ufe of W•"~ Mitty" (com) '47-Danny Kaye. Vorgonia Mayo. 7:30 9 (C) "Donovan'• Reef" (com) '63-John Wayne, Lee M arvin, Elizabeth Allen 1:00 5 (C) "Voyase Into $t>ace" (sci·li) '70--Ak10 Ito. 1!30 7 17 3 (C) °'T'he Story of ll'retty hy Floyd" (dra) '73-Mal1in Sheen, Kim Derby. Michael Parh, Ellen Corby. 13 (C) "Sc•rf•c• Mob" Cdr1)-Roba11 Stacie 26 (C) "To Trap A Spy" (1usp) '66--Robert Vaughn, Dennis Weave• 9:00 I (C) "Incident In San f'r•nclsco" (dra) '7~hrlstopher George, Dean Jauer. 11:00 9 IC) "The Llf• & Death of Colonel 911mp" (dra) '43-Anton Walb1001c. 11:30 2 (29 I ) I IC) "Mar11c•lbo" (dr1t) '58-Cornel Wilde. Abbe Lan, S (C) "Room to let" (mys) 'SG--Constance Smith, Jimmy Hanley Wt:DNCSDAY, M.AY I 6:00 26 (C) "They Call It Murder'' (susp) '7l-J1m Hut1on. (C) "Day ot the Wolvft" (suspl '71-Richard E&•n. 7:00 6 (C) "Vera Crvz" (adv) '54-Gary Cooper, Burt Lancaster 7:30 9 (C) ''Tiie SHrchers" (dra) 'S6-John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter, Natalte Wood. 1:00 4 23 6 10 (C) "Lucas Tinner" (dra) '73-Davld Hartmtn. Rosemary Murphy S (C) ''The hunty Kiiier" (wes) '64-Dan Duryea, Rod Cameron 1:30 7 17 3 (C) .. Kllldoier" (su5p) '73-Clint Walker. Carl detz, Neville Brend, Jamu Wainwright 13 (Cl "HerculH, S•mson & UlynH" (adv) '65-Kirk Moms. 9:30 4 23 6 10 CC) ••tn Tandem" (dra) '73-Claude Aluns. Frank Converse J I :00 9 "The Man In the White Sult" (com) '52--Alec GC11nness JI :JO 2 (~ I I I tC) "µ•chine Gun McCain" (dra) '70-John Cassavetu 5 "f'lyln1 S•ucer" (adv) '51-Pat Garrison. THURSDAY, MAY 9 "' 6:00 26 "Ubel" Cdra) '59--0llvla de Hevtllend. Oork Bogarde (C) "An Affair to Remember'' 1rom) '57-Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr 7:00 6 (C) "h )' Ohl I Get A Wrona Number" (com) '66-Bob Hope, Rhyllis Diller. Elke Sommer. 7:30 9 ••Operation ,.aclfk" (adv) '51-John Wayne, Patricia Neal. 1:00 S CC> "Trapeze" (dra) '56-Burt Lancaster. Tony Curtis, Gina Lollo· bn&•da 9:00 2 CC) "S.nn CHIH of Gold" (adv) 'SS-Anthony Quinn, Michael Ren nle, Jeftrer, Hunter. Rlchud [&an. I (C) "f'l•m n1 Star'' (dra) ·~Elvis Presley, Barbara Eden 9:30 (29 I) (Cl "The Horse Soldiers" (advl '59 -John W•yne. William Holden. 11:00 9 (C) "The Sln1er, Not the Soni:'' (dra) '61-Dtrk 8ogarde. 11:30 2 (29 I ) I "X-the Unknown" (sci·l l) '57-Dun Jaqer, Leo Mcl(ern 5 "Hird, Fast & Beautiful" (~r•) '51-Claire Trevor, Sally Forrest FRIDAY, MAY 10 6:00 26 (C) "Secret of My Succfft" (com) '6~Shlrley Jones. Stella Stevens 7:00 6 (C) "The lnwlnclble SI•" (dr•) '70-Stuart Whitman, Elke Sommer 7:30 t "91ood Alley" (adv) '55--John Wayne. Lauren Bacall. 1:00 5 CC) "AJasken S.far1" (outdoor) '72 9:00 2 (29 I) I (C) "The McKenzie Break" (dra) '70-Brlan Keith. 11:00 9 "Cre•ture of th• Walklns Dead" Chor) '63-Roc~ Madison. 11 :30 2 (29 I ) (C) "Brotherhood of Satan" (hor) '71-Strother Mar11n 5 "The .. d·Slttln1 Room" Ceom) '69-Rita Tushlnaham. Sir Ralph Richardson, Ron Moody. SATURDAY, MAY J 1 1:00 1l IC) "Fhthter Squadron" ldra) '48-Rober1 St11ck. Henry H ull 9:00 4 23 6 10 (C) "Gl•nt'' Part I (dra) '56 -Rock Hudson. Elizabeth Taylor, James Dean. 10:00 S "Atom Aa• Vampire" (hor) '62-S.ra10 Fanton1 11:00 (29 I) "Je1nne East"" (dra) '57-Kim Novak. Jetf Chandler. 11:15 3 (C) "ferry to Hems Kons" (dra) '61-Curt Jur&ens, Orsori Welles. 23 6 tC) "Inside Dalsv Clover" (dr11l '66-Natalie Wood Robert Redford 11:30 2 (C) "A Matter of HumanltlH" (dra) '69 -Robel1 Youn&. James Brolln, Anne Baxter, 6 "The Bleck Hind" (dra) '50-Gene Kelly. 7 ICI "Counterpoint" lelral '6A-Charllon Hf'slon, Mak1m1l13n Scherr 13 (C) "Tunes of Glory" (dral '60-Aler Gu1nnen. John Mills. THE 01\ILY PILOT, TV WECK MAY 5 1974 AA&D Combines three great names. You save 5270°0* JVC Model 5521 100 watt AM/FM FM Stereo receiver with patented S E A tone control system Superb sound. excellent sens1t1v1ty. and the best 11'1 sound control Housed 1n at1rac11ve wood grain cabinet S329.9S• 012-3V 12 3-way speaker system A speaker system of outstanding sound and Quahty leaturing 12 heavy magnet rolled edge woofer. 5 midrange and 2" super tweeter. with presence control for setting to your room Sl49.9S• Model 42 M/S advanced au1oma11c turntable with base. dust cover and Shure M 75ECS cartndge and diamond ellptrcal styles S9o.cs· Complete system s4499s • over manulactu1ers sugoesteo lost DfOC'CtS • Special bonus offer· Wrth purchase of this system or one of equivalent val ue. present copy of thr s ad and you may purchase one se t of Koss HV-1 h1gh-veloc1ty headphones for 51200 Regular '399!i value AA&D Electronics 275 E 1711-t STREET COSTA MESA 642-1882 Hou" Doily 9 ·6 11'1urs 9 9 Professional Service for all your home electronics TV · Radio · Stereo · Phono ·Tape Page 17 • SATURDAY MAY 11 00 Movie @ land of the Giants 9:00 I (~ (j)) Scoob, Doo • ~@ 1 i.Q.imS1amund Movie: "lite list ol the Wild Horsu" (wes) '49-Jimmy Ellison. O 1 (,}' lassie's Rescue Ranaers a---Elephant Boy ~ Mister Roprs' Neiellborhood 6:00 '-8 Sunrise Semester I 9:30 I ~ @:: QOl m Pink P1nther uz (J:1 Ghost Chasers 6:30 8 TV I Clnsroom a Dusty's Trail aJ Let's Rip Movie: "Mr. 830" (tom) 'S0- 7;00 0 'l~ ::_6J 10 er;, lidsv1lle Edmund Gwen, Burt Lancaster, !l} Ttnneuee Tuxedo Dorothy McGuire 0 11, (3 Buas Bunny @ Tnie Adventure m Brother Buu .t'D Sesame Street 7:30 I Sunrise Semester 10:00 f) (~ @) hvoritt M1rtl1n' . IU. 6 I (lg) m Addams Family 0 l:J 00 I 0 m Star Tr~k 'MormatrleberMde Cholr '6) Mpvie [6 Ultra M~n Q (ft (3; Br1 Y Os - @ (3) Yo&i's Gana 0 Movie: (C) "Suicide Comrnan~o" O Consumer Profile (dra) '68-Aldo Ray. m Elementary News @ Country Music 8:00 I (129 I 8 ,) '8 Hair Bear Bunch '26 Alfred Hitchcock Presents · tll r6) f10 er;, Emeraency +4 €l) Roller Gamu John Wayne Theatre 10:30 fJ Cai.~8)) Jeannie 6 The Scene 0 @ l..6 ) QI m Bu WI Cassidy 0 'f7 (3 Super Friends O Movie: "The Man from Cairo" O Movie: (C) "The Dey the Hot (adv) '54-George Raft. line Got Hot'' (dra) 69-Charles Q @@ Q) Mission: M•aic ~er, Robert Taylor '26 Movie: (C) "Master of Ballan-W Movie: "Ambush at Cimarron trae" (adv) 'SJ-Errol Flynn. Pass" (wes) '58-Stott Brady, Chnt ffi Mister Ro1ers' Neifhborhood Eastwood . 11:00 f) ('9 '8') CJ' Speed Buw @ Sl~red Hurt/Christophm 0 2~ Ci) lO m Major Luaue 26 Vorce of Tokyo Baseball Team s to be announced EID Sewme Street 0 (i1 (31 m Superstar M 0 v i e 8:30 f) (~ 8 ) f a-Sabrina "The Red Baron" (R) 0 2~ (61 O' m Inch Hlah, Pri· @News 1 , ute Eye fij) Senme Street Ann Rutherford guest stars as Emily's (Suzanne Pleshette) mother, on The Bob Newhart Show, a rebroadcast Saturday (Mny 11) at 9:30PM on CBS. 11 :30 f) ('29 .~ ) l-8 Josie Ii the Pussy· cat~· (6 ' Movie: "RocketJhip X-M" (adv) '51-lloyd Bridges. 0 Movie: 11P1nhandle" (wes) '48 -Rod Cameron. Cathy Downs. O)Ad Ub - IE Movie: "Ma & Pa Kettle Back on the F11m" (com) '54-Marjorie Main, Percy Kilbride. eI) Championship Wrestlint A F T r R N 0 0 ·~ 12:00 f) (~ (!) 8 Pebbles & Bamm ij 81mm I D Movie: "Beau Geste" (adv) '39 -Gary Cooper, Ray Mrlland. 0 (iZ @ al AmeriQn Bandstand m Lancer ffi Mister Roam' Nel&hborhood 1 12:30 O <ta! ) (8l Fat Albert 5dl Greatest Sports le1ends m St~me Street a'.) Kipi Cosas l :00 f) (~ ) (])Children's Fllm Festival @ Youth in the 70s l ( 6 Tijuana: Window to the South O Movie: ''The Mounuln Road" (dn1) 'GO-James Stewart. Lisa Lu. Harry Morgan, Glenn Corbell. O Movie: (C) "Slva1e Guns" (wes) '62-Richard Basehart. Alex NICOi. I Combat land ot the ~lints (I) Movie: ''Th• Franchise Al· fair'' (mysT'52-Mlchael Dennison. '6 Roller Gemes al Futbol-Soccer 1:30 00 University Dialotue (j) Movie THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. MAY 5, 1974 ED Carrastolenclas Z:OO ~Dusty's Trtehouse 3 Vole. of Aariculturt , · The Bralnworks A look at what's being done for children with speech and hearing problems at Redlands Un1vers1ty; the Roaring 20's at Mt. St. Mary's Colle&e; and a unique student participation in government at Laverne Colleae. D Movi.: (C) "Rebel~ Ofl tht Loose" (com) '67-1.ando Buzzanca. lntern1t1on1l Hour (lg) San Dleeo Happenlnr OJ Movit: ''The Ctoss of Lorraine" (dra) ·44 -Jean-Pierre Aumont. Gene Kelly. m Movie Clauics: Same as 11 30AM hsllng. ~ l Movie: (C) "Ramin& Star" (aelvl '60-.£1.m er~sley, -~ Ell) College Credit Course "Environ· mental Impact Reporting & Evalua - tion" <Ci9 CJ)) Loretta Youn& Theatre m Agriculture USA 2:30 ~Steps to Lnrning 3 Campus Profile · [Jpreulon: wt/West O Movie: (C) "forty Guns to Apache Pan" (wes) '67 -Audie Murphy 10 lnsl1ht EE Roller Games m Movie: "Run Uh A Tllief" 3:00 f) Bienvenidos 1 3 l Sketchbook 0 A(ritulture USA 6.., Movie 0 NFL Hl&hll&hts lj l Jimmr Deen Show !,g) Science Fiction Theetre IX (3) Roller Games .26 Wmttina ((.lCI ) Chellenflna Su m El Juldo tl)Movie 3:30 I Just Natural 3 Film Feature · Focus "Junior R.O. T.C." Grutest Sports le&ends I Uf'O G) The Vlrainian tl:t (6) Conc.rn (~ Ci ) Safari to Adventure 4:00 f) (Q! Ci)) C8S htf Chim· pionship Competitors this wetk are Gene Littler. Din Sykes & John Schlee. i Polo 1t Will Ro&ers' Rench fmpKto Mo~it: (C) 11A11slr1n Safari" (adv) '72~utdoor adventure him. ! C.lebrity Tennis Soul Trein Pro Tennis Brllie lean l<IRi & Chris E\'ert vs. Francoise Durr & Betty Stove. EE Cine Como tn Cine ~ (i) Eduution at Wort ~ Wiiburn Brothers I Mr. Wlurd Drama P1nor1m1 l1tlno Voice of A(riculture 4:301 What's Goin& On 6 Other Pc:c>ple, Other Places C.lebrilJ Bowlin& 8 Star Tret • A Place in the Countrr o It Pays to Be Ignorant ill 00 Voice of A(ricuJture ~61 Biil Anderson Show fil) PJJdlofoa Tocf17 I Rodi-On Show Car• Tract Corone Now 5:00 I Dusty's Trell • tnqufrr/Consumtrism ~ovr Prt,.nts @ CV &> ABC's Wktt Wtr1d of StMrts The lndi1napolls "500" Time Trials from the Speed••Y· m <9 Cl)) This Week In Ult NBA News Movie: (C) (21u) "Flpttr Squadron" (dra) '48-Robtrt Stacll, [dmond O'Brien. ~ The Pltrsuaden ottler reoplt, Otller Placn Nash11fllt Music ED Cltywatcllttt ''l.A.'s Fire Depart ment" --!Roller Q1mu Rici! Ward's Rock & Roll Klmtfr--- 5~30 f) Johnny Mann's St.end Up ' Cheer (R) l ou Rawls guests. ~~ ..... Dirty s.ur Untamed Wortd Movie: (C) (2hr) "Coo11n's BJ11tt" (dra) '68-Clint Eutwood ~ Porter Wagoner $how fr) Acclon Chicano <"59 ) Unbmtd World m Three s1001t1 £V[NING 6:00 I o a:> m ... ., a~ Htt Haw · Real Don Steele Show Nlpt Gallery Cine Como 111 Cine ~~ N1tional Geov1phlc ffi KC£T Auction '74 Ftnal Auction ntfhl. Items to be sold tonight are: a 51-day South American cruise: Rose Bowl tickets and Fred Astaire's "Fin11n's Rainbow" shoes. Dial (213) 663-8421. <elt (j)) Cllebrlty 8owlln1 Ef) Speed Racer 6:30 Q Hen 3) Sc>orts With Bertlla llNBC News Conference 6 Nfl Championship Games Reasoner Report ( ) Greatest Sports Legends • 801 de Medco . Lanie · MO'flt W Little Rasuls 7:00 Other hople, Ottltr rt1C1s Wild Klngdom Truth or Consequences Bowfln1 for Dollars Celebrity Tennis I Am Somebody World •t War • VldO!I_ at Sel (~ llJ) m Lawrence Welk It Tabs A Thief (J) John Wayne Theatre C,:.J CJ.) Dragnet ?j limmr Dean Show ED APPEAR ON KMPC FOR * lf2HR . AIR TIME, BUT BID HIGH TONITE EE) KC£T Auction '74 "General Items" m Sln&lts' Sane Ef) Three Stooaes 7:30 I Wild Wortd of Anlm1ls (R) Ltfs Make A Dul · ID Thrlllseeken l 's on e: e; 's ill ds rel THE DAILY PILDl , lV WEEK, MAY 5. 1974 I Plnbin1eu 0 (fiJ (I) al ABC Suspense Movie 0 Movie; "Atom Ate V1mplre" 11:30 tJ Movie: (C) "A Mitter or Human- Bnln& From the OIJmplc (C) (90) "Isn't It Shockina?" (R) (hor) '61-Sergio fanton1. ltits" (dra) '69 -Robert Young, Concentration (susp) '73-Alan Alda. When elderly 0 @ aJ 0-en Muah1U "A James Brohn, Anne Baxter, ® ABA Basketball Champion· citizens in a sleepy New England Lesson in Loving" (R) Owen Mar· Ci) Movie: "The Bl1cti Hind" (dra) ' ship Pl1y-Offs. town begin to die mysteriously, the shall's defense of a high school boy 'SO-Gene Kelly. (}OJ Oule's Cilrls inexperienced sheriff is confronted accused of murdering his teacher is O Movie: (C) "Counterpoint" {£) The Ghoul G1n1 with an 1n1enious killer complicated by the fact that the (dra) "68-Charlton Heston, Mu i· &:00 U <a ) All In Ute f1mlly 9:00 U (Qi Cf)) Cl) Mir, TJler Moore youth was her lover. Diana Muld1ur m11ian Schell, t<athryn Hays, Leslie (R) Another Bunker battle, this time Show (R) When Geosgette visit$. her and Kristoffer Tabori guest. Nielsen. over Mike's over-zealous reaction boyfriend Ted at work and finds him I Communify Fudbtck OC Star Trek to Glona's ··new look" in a black luss1ng another woman, she decides News O Manfred Mann Heads up wig. to pull out all the stops and make M700uslcCill bShow * Kirshner Rock Concert 0 ~ O m Emer1enc, "The herself a sought-after woman. · u Promotion" (R} DeSolo ponders a 0 Q1 (6) O e.r;) N BC S.turd•J GI;) Melodyland 0 Don Klrshner's Roell Concert promotion that would take him out Movie; (C) (2hrl5m) "Giant'' Part I a> Lou Gordon Show IE Movie; (C) "Tunes of Glory" of the paramedics: Or. Brackett (R) (dra) '56-Roc.k Hudson, Eliza· 10:30 CIJ Celebrity Bowlin& (dra) '60--Alec Guinness. John Mills. lectures a young patient who feigns beth Taylor, James Dean. The owner m EE News (1i) Happy Hunter a heart attack: and the entire hos· of a Texas cattle ranch and his wile EID BlDDERS LAST CHANCE aJ Rock Concert pital is jammed with people m-involve t~emselves in lhe plight of * FINAL NITE TO WIN! volved in a major freeway accident poor Mexican ranch workers and the . , 11 :45 D N1ncy Wilson Show ' ('fg) Movie: (C) "Marnie" (dra) '64- Tippi Hedren, Sean Connery. ~@00 (0 Tht Partridre flm· hie of their one-time renell-Nnd, Etl.KCET~uct1of1 74 lly "A Day of Honesty'' (R) The now a millionaire. The conclusion 11 :00 Cil 0 Ci) News family agrees to a day of telling the airs Monday (May 13) at 9PM. 6 Bill Anderson Stiow 11:50 0 Movie: "The Concrete Jungle" truth, the whole truth and nothing O One Step a.,ond • a!) Filth for Today (dra) '60 -Stanley Baker, Sam but the truth -with dismaying re· Em STAR'S MEMORABILIA Mfsslon: Impossible Wanamaker. suits. * ON KCET AUCTION '74 Tony & Susan Alimo 12:00 m Movie: "Macabre" (dra) '58-m Movie: (C) (2hr) "fiehter ~ KCET A tJ ,74 ''G I v Cil Roc.k Concert W1lllam Prince, Jim Backus, Chris· Squadron" (dra) '48-Robert Stack. Ftems"' uc on enera Samurai Story tine White. Henry Hull, Edmond O'Brien. : KC£T Auction '74 "fine Wines, I Cttamplonshlp Wrest11n& aJ Premier film General Items" Dial (213) 663·8421. 12:30 Spuk Euy Sp1nlsll Movie 9:30 U (~ 00> Bob Newhart Show ((j9 ) Movie: "Jeanne Eaafes" 1:00 0 Speak Easy KC£T Auction 174 "Art & An· (R) Ann . Rutherford a~d. John Ran· (dra ) '57 -Kim Novak, Jeff I!) Movie: "HigllWIJ Dragnet'' (dra) t1ques" dolph guest . as Emily s parents, Chandler. '54-R1chard Conte, Joan Bennett. I Super Show whose surpnse v1s1t makes Bob ~Cinema 34 . , ,, Mexican f ilm terri~ly uncomfortable. . It ls Written 1:15 U M~e: 'The Two Mrs. Carrolls J~nese Laneuaee Proerams '6J Roller Games 11:15 (3 Movie: (C) "f erry to Hone (mys) 47-Barbara Sta?wyck, Hum- 8:30 (~' ) M • A • S • H (R) 0 American LifestJle Kon(' (dra) '61 -Curt Jurgens, phrey Bo~art, Aleius s.~ith. .. Hawkeye and Trapper elect to lock ~Bobby Goldsboro Show Orson Welles. 1:30 m All·N1eht Show: Copper SkJ, horns WJ!h Army red lape IO pur· ~ m KC~ Auction '74 (60 min. a 0 News "fath~r Was A Fullbac;k," "Storm suit of a badly needed germ in· simulcast with KCOP/13) ~ 6 Movie: (C) "Inside Daisy Rider' cubator. 10:00 IJ (t2f (j'))@ Caro I Burnett Clover'' (dra) '66 -Natalie Wood, 2:40 0 Movie: (C) "At Gunpoint" (wes) O Jimmy Dean Show Show (R) Roddy McDowall and The Robert Redford. Christopher Plum· '55 -Fred MacMurray, Dorothy (6) Wrestlin& Jackson Five guest. mer. Malone. ·DAVID HARTMAN'S BICi BREAK David Hartman as Lucas with youngster Robbie Rist playing Glendon, a boy whom Lucas befriends in the neighborhood. David Hartman, who stars as a progressive high school teach er in the title role of "Lucas Tanner'' on the NBC Dou ble Feature Night at the Movies. Wednesday at · 8PM on NBC. has more than a dozen year s of professional acting experience. But the affable performer readily acknowledges that it was a 60-second television commercial that gave him his big break in Hollywood. Upon graduation from Duke University wi th a bachelor's degree in economics and after three years in the Air Force, David decided to try for a full-time acting career. He enrolled in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City. By the time he completed the course, David had appeared in summer stock, directed a product ion of "Plain and Fancy" and studied everything from opera and ballet to jazz dancing. He starred in an off-Broadway pro· duction, "Meet Peter Grant." toured for a year with the national company of ''My Fair Lady," essayed another off· Broadway role in ''Best Foot Forward" wi th Liza Minnelli, did two years with Carol Channing in "Hello. Dolly". toured in summer stock with "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," chalked up some six months of TV commercials and made a yea r- long, 80-city tour with the Harry Belafonte Singers. And after all that, in 1966, some six years after he launched his show business career and in need of some film of himself for a crack at Hollywood, David signed up for a 60-second Bell Telephone commercial. He appeared as cowboy on horseback, for just 13 seconds, and that did it. Th e film was seen by a producer from Universal Studios. Hartman was brought to the West Coast for a sc reen test ~hich won him a lo11g-term studio con tract and a rol e in his first movie-for-television. "I Love a Mystery." Any television viewer or moviegoer knows the rest of the story. In addition to film roles in "Ballad of Josie," and "No- body's Perfect." among others. David was a regular on NBC's The Virginian and , more recently, The Bold Ones. Page 19 --· 0 u m ( IE II Atlantic's Bargain Stereo Days ---- ·~•••.ii:,iioaaL.ii..a.. l GETASONY HP-161:fM·Stereo. AM, Phono System If you're loolun{l tor o big sound thol comes 1n small packages come hslen to the SONY HP·161 lnleQroted Cornponenl Music System and see t--ow well 11 fits 1n II s o rn.is1c system lhOI s smaller lhon 11 sounds Radio receoton on ltle HP 161 is superb The tuner hos o SONY FET front end for picking up weal< d•slont slol10ns while preventing d1slor hon to strong IOCol Stgnols A hght signals when o stor10n is broodcosl 1ng 1n stereo And lhe sohd stole all s1hcon amplifier dn"'ng two SONY 2-wor speolcers delivers o big h\/9·l1ke sound Re«J. Price SI 99.95 • A ir Suspension Enclosure CHECK ATLANTIC'S LOW PRICE • 10 Woofer Hem1sphencol Dome Tweeler • Frl"quency Ronge 30-20 000 Hz .. g. Priclr.SALE $75°0 $129.95 ® PIONEER. STEREO HEADSET $E-205 Reg. Price $24.95 ---® PIONEER. SX-525 .: ::c:o•ed AM FM Rec&vet SALE $1 9990 ~259.95 . !"• Gi;I \.6 SUPER$COPE AM-FM STEREO SYSTEM Pioneer SX-424 w/Cose 199.95 SAVE Corrord 408 Bo~ . SS.90 '7600 ~~~:::::·~ 16 !:::: $2497 5 325,75 ®PIONEERe CT-3131 Stereo Cassette Tape Deck • Au1omo1ic End-ol Tope Skuroff • Duo I Tope Boos Seleoor • Pouse Coorrol • r Ope Counler Reg. Price $1 99.95 Scotch HIVnlANOI A CASSE TT£ C-90 Rt'CJ. Price l /$6.00 ] l 2 PRICE /~ SALE NEW HOURS: Monday thru Fri. I I to a. Sat. I 0-5. Sun. 12-5 • 445 E. 17th, COST A MESA @PIONEER n,.,ass > z 0 rn •. DAILY PILOT Streisand as Seen The Ballots Are In, . . -By Three ·Frieiids: ---Ana These -stars-won - A Winner Dissected Our Celebrity Poll ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Get-to Know Your Home's ''Energy Rooms'' --A Special Section ---- l. . I I - k Them Yourself WW\t to ull • temou. puton • question? S.nd th• qu111tlon 1111 • po.t~. 10 ""-11." Femlly Weeki)', &41 Lu.inoton ,..,. , N-Yonc, N Y. 10022. We'll ~ SS tor publlahed qu111tlona Sorry, we cen·1 1nswer olh1ra FOR LORETTA SWIT, "Hot Up! Houlihan" in "'~'-"t• A •s• H" A lot of act or1 go to therapi8ts. Do you? -A. R., Rome, Ca. • J did, when l was in ~ew York. l went after people told me it wasn't nonna] to cry aU the time. I was always terribly independent, and different from the normal mold. My older FQR SEN. HOWARD BAKER (R-Te1m.) What has been the cost of the Watergate hearings, and where does the money come from?-E. Byron, \Vhittier, Calif. . • The Senate voted three app ropriations of $500,000 each in 1973 to provide fo r the operation of the Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities. :\aturally, that money comes from you and from me. FOR PAT MORROW, Rito Jach Harrington af UPeyton PloceN I read that you moved out of your parents' home, but still live next door to them. Why?-F. C., Santa Fe, N.M. • I'm not next door, but I'm only eigh t minutes away-be- cause I can't c:ool:! Mom is a lifesaver. She bas stuff in the refrige~tor all of the time. But I do iron and clean quite well. I had to ]earn that-I'm too stingy for a maid. 'FOR SEN. CAYWRD NELSON (D-Wis.) It's popular to denounce the oil industry's depletion allow- ance, but don't the companies need it for oew exploration?- A. DeWitt, Covington, Ky. •No. A 1969 Treasury Department study showed that $1.4 billion in depletion allowance resulted in additional oil re- serves valued at only $150 million. U the deple tion allow- ance is not changed, this tax gift to the oil companies could soar to $3 billion this year. FOR SALLY STRUTllERS What was the hardest thing you've had to do since coming -to Hollywood?-M. L. K., Los Angeles, Calif. • Lose ten pounds-which Warner Bros. made me gain for my first film. lt was a d isaster. I played a dumpy English girl. I was supposed to get push~ around on a cart and sing a song. Well, I was all ready to do the number when the director came up an<l said they had one number too many. So ess whose song got dumped! FOR THE ASK T H EM YOURSELF EDITOR Are Henry Kissinger's parents alive? Jf so, tell me some- thing about tbem.-A. Handcock, New Haven, Conn. • They are, and they make their hom e near the B.ronx in New York City. The reasM you see and hea.r so little about Paula and Louis Kissinger is because the Secretary of State naturaJJy tries -to protect them by shielding them from :>Ubllcity. They live in an older apartment house, with an unlisted phone, and the senior Kissinger is retired. For secu- rity reasons, requests for interviews arc channeled through Henry Kissinger's office. Co¥tr lllualratlon by Bl•-• H1mplon brother, on the other hand, was everything th:it parents would want a child to be. So J left home wnen I was 17. Mentally I was u 12-ycar-olcJ (I figure I'm about 15-and-a- haU now ). But my analyst said if I hadn't left and gooc out to become an actress, as I had always intended, J would have strangled in the home environment. Eventually, you have to be what you are. Since ltook the role in "M• A •s•H," my family has begun to understand that acting isn't just a hobby. FOR LARRY CSONK.A, football star I understand that you don't want your sons to play Little League football. ls this true?-John Davidson, Austin, Tuas • If they want to play footbaU, I don't sec how I can stop them. But I'll sec to it that it's Bag football. not tackle, until they're 12. I don't think any boy shoull be aUowcd to play tackle football untiJ he reaches puberty. FOR CAROL CH ANN INC You always seem so bright~yed and alert on.stage. How do you get "zinged" up for your performances? -A. A. F., Athens, Ga. •I don't. I work to keep on one level. That's the whole idea. l won't talce a drink or have any stimulation-even coffee- because that would put me higher for one show and let me down for the next. When I'm out there I want tu be able to depend on me. FOR HARRY REASONER, newscaster Do you feel that you can still be effective as a reporter now that you are a nationally recognized iwrsonality?-David Moore, Atlantic City, N. J. • It works both ways, and I think it balances out. I can't do much undercover digging. obviously. But if there is some- one I r<'a lly have to talk to, he'., morc lilcely to answer the phone for Harry Reasoner th:ln fo r some cub reporter. FORSUZANNEPLESH £17E How can an actress who spends a lot of time on locations feel at home in hotels and motels?-G. IC. C., Richland, Wash. • I US<' a f cw tricks. I bring along pictures of my dog, my family, my own personal instant coffee, my own brand of soap. I always buy Bowers wherever I am, aod invariably change the furniture around. The only thing I re aJly miss is that I'm not able to coolc. I'd bring a hot plate if they'd let me. M1y s. •974 /Uml(V ~ The Nevnpaper Magazine MORTON ~K, President lll'lcl Pubhher PATRICK II. UNSKEY, V.P.-Ad Director Sfd layeflkJ, Marbling Dir.; Oettld S. Wr~. Eastern Mgr.: Robert D. Qlfdt, Associate Eastern Mgr.; Joe Frazer, Jr., Chtcaoo Mgr.; JoMph Keltf, Detroit Mgr. ll'Ultl.ISHER RELATIONS: ROBERT 0 . CARNEY • and L.EE EWS, V.P.s and Co-Directors; Robert H. Marriott, Mgr.: Robert J. Chriatlan LEONARD S. DAVIDOW, CMlnun MOAT PERSKY, V.P.-Edltor-ln-Chlef Aeynolda Dod9on, Managing Editor fUch.,d Valdatl, Art Director Rosalyn Abr••8Ya. Women's Editor llatttrn HeftMn, Food Editor Joen Henrfdt•n, Pemela Howatd and Hal Lllndon, Auociate Editors; Ettelte Walpln, Art Asst.; Glorltl llMJ, Pictures Contributing Editors: p.., J. OPP9nhefmet, PU•LJI HER SERVICH; Robert Banker, Hollywood; Ulny "°"9teln, Sporta. Promotion; c.yt Eller, Merchandising; Loula '"ODUCTIOH: Melbowne Zlpptteh. Director: LAnlle, Distribution. Rldl•d w._.., Mgr.; Aobet1a ColMne, Makeup Headquarters: 641 Lexington Aw., N.V .• N.V. 10022C 1974 FAMILY WEEKLY, INC. All rights reserved. A ..-.ic.tlon Of Do-. c.,_nlcetlofl1, 111e. ~ R. 00-, Jr., Chlttl Encvtl~• Officer Rot.M I . ,,..,..,.., PrHldent Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. . 18 mg'. 'tar:' 1.2 mg. nicotine av. per cigarene. FTC Repon Sept'.73 ... .. - Streisand, Our Poll-Winner; As Seen by Three Friends The more one talu 10 peo pk .ibout B•ubra, the more ~ be- guu to look like the stOf) book princ~u v.bo hved ma casile surround- ed b) bnen that g.rev. unul tbe) cl~ eHf)One out Success has pro- \lded her the means to bu) anything .. ~ washe\. )Ct 11 hu trapped her in a rov.cr of 150lauon It i.s possible she u unawar~ that people tremble in her presence ... mce she herself i.s impris- oned b) her drive 10 excel in e ".Cl') • thing-from needlepeint 10 being a mother 10 s.ix-)ear-0Jd Jason. her son b) Elhot Gould. To dra'4 a v.ord picture of the man)-faceted superstar. FAMIU Wuu Y talked wnb three men who ha\e known Barbra both on ~nd otf the ~t director Sydney Pollack. actor .\41cbael Sarra.no and actor Br<sdford D illman Here's bow the~ see her. Sydney Pollack, v.ho directed her tn her fi~t completely dram.me role 1 'The Wa> We "ere-> soon found 1he) v.ere !DOR like collaboraton. than 11.lte stu and director. FAMILY WEEKLY: One hears stories JOOUt &rbra being temperamental Do ~ou thmk tb.afs true? POLLACK: People get 1be v.ro ng 1m- pres~n of Barbra. The point is, 1f a pc rson is real!) talented, there is al- "" a) s a reD.lon for temperament. FW: h sbe really bossy on rhe set? POLLACK: B:.rbra is professional enough to know &,be areu in which ~he·~ effective. And there is a differ- ence between being a perfcctionist- v. h1ch she is-who demands rhat thin~ be right-which she does-and bemg '>hrewash Talent and concentra- tion on doing the best )OU can give you the right to complain . Barbra's a learner She ·s mqu1sit1ve . extraorda- nanly curious. enthusiastic and a ver). vef) hard v.orker Sometimes J'd / want to ~). ·Wall )OU JUSl relax?" But she can·1 She work'> all day on the set and then she11 go home and go over the 1eript again and call every- one up with ideas on how 10 improve 90melhiog. FW: What sort or thin~ annoy her? • • FAMILY W££Kl.Y. U., s. 1974 B y P~r J. Oppe .. eimer "Sometimes I'd want to say, ·wm you just relax?' But she can't She works all day on the set and then she'll go home ... and call everyone up with ideas on how to improve something." -Sydney Pollack Other \\1nners or Our Celebrity \Ote BARBRA STREISAND is one of the si x winners of FAMILY WEEKLv's 1974 Celebrity Poll. sharing movie honors with third- time winner JOHN WAYNE. Other winners are ALAN ALDA and JEANETTE NOLAN, television: and MICHAEL LEARNED and RALPH WAITE, TV suppo'rting. For details. see Page 9. POLLACK: Mistakes. She gets up- tight when other people fail to do their jobs. FW: Did you encounter any problem working with Barbra? POLLACK: She has a tendency to take over a picture just by the size of her talent and larger-than-life pres.- ence. It's hard for a costar to stay in the s;.ime ring with her. Fortuna,teJy. Robert Redford can. FW : Do you fe-el that Barbra i.s at tht peak of her career? POLLACK: I tbiok she's in a transi- tional phase, a growing period, tn both her prof ess.ional and personal life. Professionally, I think she's stopped being an entertainer and i.s becoming an acJrt$$. Remember, she's still quite young. She's gotten eve ry award rherc is ro get She's weallhy- you know, s.he"s the highest paid nightclub entertainer in the world- and she's a devoted mother who work!. her schedule to create some sort or regularity for Jason. You can get aw- fully insulated in Hollywood. You gee totally involved with show-business people and it's bard to remove your- .self. But she's trying. FW: How is she trying? POLLACK: l thiok Redford and I had a big influence on her. Bob aod I hne been friends since 1960, and three years ago I bought some land and built in Sundance, Utah, where Bob has his home. During the ft.lming of ''The Way We Were .. we filled Bar- bra's head with stories of Sundance. snow. mountains a nd skiing. until ~ ended up going to Utah and kamins to ski! Now. you must realize what a big step this was for her. She's a city- brcd girl, and like most city people she's not about to kap on a horse for fear she'll break in two! This wa.s a big thing for her to conquer. I was so thrilled when she went off to Aspen and called me. all excited, and said. "I did the big run today!" Canadian-born Mlchffl Sarrazin, who made a name for himself playing opposite l :me Fonda in "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?", is Ba rbra's Continued • • Since 1897, Jell-0 Brand Gelatin ha8 : been an American institution. In 1973, two and a half billion servings of Jell-0 Gelatin were sold. Through the years, we've worked hard to make Jell-0 the brand name it's beoo~ At General Foods, we spend.a lot of time developing new flavors. Making Jell-0 Gelatin taste even better. Making it dissolve easier. And hold a mold better. And Jell-0 Gelatin is still less than 4¢ a serving. Even today, there's only one real Jell-0 Brand Gelatin .. Clip the coupon below and save 10¢ on America's favorite. Start~ m-an• 'lb make something good, start with something good. wnn ~ - r-----MAIL 10 DAY NO-RISK COUPON TODAY ------, I GREENLAND STUDIOS, 5891 Greenland Bldg., Miami, Fla. 33059 11 ·I I Kindly Hnd Deacon Shelf Units # 13804 Ind~ I I cated below. Enclosed la check or m.o. for Name I I I 1 1 O 1 Unit for $1.98 0 2 Units for $3.49 Adcltfta I I Add 65~ poat•a• .. handllna tor H ch Unit ~ I I H.Y. & fl•. res. pltue tcld 1119ropri1te ules tu. State • I L----~-----------~----------------__J Char111ing £~ ~tnerican -nEACON .SHELVES DECORATE ANY \NALL RICHLY e SOLID WOOD -WARM WALNUT PATINA I ~&.&.,y ""'cao, omy$J9e e NEARLY 2 FT. HIGH - 2 FT. WIDEI e 'SHELVES - 7 COMPA~,.-rSI 2 FOR aa.49 Here is a true treasure-in warmth of t raditional design ... in fine crafts- manship of another da}' ... in "good old days" low low price! Not wood veneer-not wood "toned"-but solid wood, ·and the warm walnut finish makes everything look so elegant. Ideal for showcasing your curios, flo-- ral displays, statuary, fine china. A magnificent focal point that enriches any room in your home. Two are ab- solutely breathtaking as they sweep majestically across five feet of wall space! Please order at once -offer may not be repeated at these incredi- ble low prices. Streisand, Our Poll-Winner Conlin11td the ability to· taJce a situation and in- ternaJize it so that the part I play be- comes me. Then it's easy. A piece of stage business comes naturally. Sh~ was used to studying everything over g and over and clinicnlly breaking i1 0 f down and picking it apart. g FW : Did you see much of each other a off the set? SydMy Pollick Mlch1el S1rr1zln leading man in the upcoming comedy, ··For Pele's Sake." Michael has a con- · tagious, easygoing attitude, and he discovered a ve ry different Barbra. FAMILY WEEKLY: What was your reaction when you learned you would play opposi1c Barbra Streisand? SARRAZIN: .Well, I'd heard she was temperamental, and everyone said she could be a mons1er, so I was a little scared. But we gol along fine right . from the beginning. l"d like to think it had something to do with me, but I dorft know. Maybe it was because the picture was a comedy. Whatever the reason, we sure had a lor of fun . We laughed all the time. She has the "If something Isn't right, she just won't do It. Period. It's as simple as that." -Michael Sarraz/n greatest sense of humor! Really fun- ny! In fact, we·d gel to laughing so hard we couldn't even do a take. FW: She has the reputation of being "ery tense. Did you find this true? SARRAZIN: She didn·t seem tense to me. She seemed quite relaxed, in fact. FW.: Then you don't lhink she's tem- peramental? SARRAZIN: No. What 11 really is, is striving for perfection. What I mean is, if something isn·t right she just won't do it. Period. Ifs as. simple as that. She's a perfe~tionist. That's where we differed. but she opened my eyes and I learned a lot from her. FW: Like what? SARRAZIN: Like not to .. scan-think.'' I want lhings right, too, but I never thought over every line, every word. every inflection, every gesture the way she does. Now I'll consider these things more thoughtfully. J think in the long run, however, we traded off in learning from each other. FW: What did she learn from you? SARRAZIN: She was amazed I could do things so easily. I can memorize cf. fortlessly, and I scan-read. I also have I • FAMILY WEEKl Y, Mty 5, 1074 SARRAZIN: Sure. I'd go over to her house and wa.tch movies in ~er pro- jcclioa room. She decorated it her- self, and it really is something. Too~ her two years. It's black and gray anti red. We had a great tiMc. Bradford Dillman, who electrified Hollywood with his sinister perform- ance in "Compulsion:· worked for almost four months with Barbra film· ing "The Way We Were." FAMILY WEEKLY: After spending s1.1 much ti me with Barbra, what w~ your impression of her? DIUMAN: She's a very sby person. And she·s very-conscious of her ap- pearance. She's very sensitive about it. It hurts her particularly when critics remark about her looks rather than her performance. One 9ay she wns wearing a dress in which she looked especially attractive, aod I happened to mention this. I thought she'd hug me, she was so pleased and touched FW: How did you get along togethe1 when you wa:en 't before the cameras'! DIUMAN: Barbra finds it very, vcl) difficult to socialize. She'd see me come on the set and she'd tum thi'i way and that and hem and haw and finally she'd get up the nerve to come over and say, ··u h ... how arc the children?" She found it hard to share even that commoo bond of interest. FW: Did you find that she ha" a sense of humor? DILLMAN: You know, she worked so hard, I really wondered if she enjoycJ anylhing. I think I saw her laugh twice during the months we were to· gcther. One time was after I wenl to a little Oriental restaurant where we sometimes ate. Barbra didn't go that night, and as I checked out, the cash· ier said, ··Next time you come, you bling Blabla, yes?" The next day I told her what happened, and she really laughed at that. From then on I kid· ded her by calling her ·0Blabla." FW: Would you say she·s insecure? DILLMAN: l think all superstars arc. That's one of the things that make~ them stars-the yearning for accept- ance. for recognition of their talent. But one thing disappointed me about Cnnti1111r11 We 're willing to lose money on this lowest-price ever sale because we want you to try StarCrest pantyhose! You 'll discover that: StarCrest pantyhose are elegantly sheer and promise you the best fit ANO the longest wear you've ever en,oyed. PLUS! You shop for them in the comfort of your own home. PLUS! You must be 100% ~atisf1ed, or Sta rCrest will send you a Bank of America refund check for every penny you paid! No strings attached ... you don't risk a cent. COMPARE PRICES OF THESE NATIONAL BRAN DS TO STARCREST PRICES Uri.-1 P•nly ~tyt~ $1.39 Burlington ~llet $1.00 ·------------ All N 11df• \tyle $1.49 $1.00 ______ __. Hanes STARCREST Beauty Mist Style'> 101 201 ------ $1.69 59¢• _$_1.691-59¢-· -.. per pair 1n lots of 3 You must be 100°10 s.it1 sf1ed·w1th St JrCrest pantyhose. If not, return them within 15 .days for a full refund. Order today! TWO MOST POPULAR STYLE S Style 101 -Sheer with brief panty. nude heel. demi toe Style 201 -All sheer. all nude, toe to wa ist Available in all shades but WH -Nurses White. THREE SIZES FOR PERFECT FIT SM ·Small 4·10·.5·2· 90 ·120 1bs. ME ·Med1um LO · Long 5'3" · 5'6• 110 · 140 lbs. 5'7" · 5·10· 130 · 160 lbs. Aveoleble on the ebo11e sizes only. II your w11shl e•ceeds th•t shown for h••shl. order the ne•t larser site STARCREST INTRODUCTORY PRICES 3PA!s1 77 6PAIR~348 . $684 12 PAIRS A S4. l 7 Value An $8.34 Value A $16.68 Value S1.1rCrest F.1sh1onable PANTYHOSE SHADES • SU -Sunglow (Pale Beige) • TA -Taupe (Pinky Taupe) • RH -Rhapsody (Warm Beige) • NB -Navy Blue (True Navy) • SP -Spice (Lively Cinnamon) • BM -Black Magic (Off Black) • CB -Coffee Bean (Deep Brown) • WH -Nurses White (Sparkling White) ----T ------- STYLE 511 SHEER QUEEN SIZE 5·r . 5'10" 5·r . 5·9 n 160 ·1901bs. 195·2451bs. Large seat panel, nude heel, demi toe. Available 1n RH, SP. CB and BM. (See color chart.) LA · Large XL · Ex. LargeJ Hips: 45" · 50" Hips: 47". 55 .. Nude heel, demi toe. control top panty. Available mall but NB and BM. STYLE 410 SHEER ~UPPORT SM · Small 4•10~.5·1 H ME · Me-a. 5'2"·5'4 " LO · Long 5'5"·5'7" 85·110 lbs. 1100·125 lbs. 1 120·145 lbs. XL · Ex. Long. 5'8"·5'10", 140·165 lbs. STARCREST LOW PRICES 88¢ PAIR PA~Rs $3.52 STARCREST LOW PRICES $1 .59PAIR PAiRs$6.·36 ,_------Detach Ord\•r Form Ht•re COMPlEH. ANO MAIL TODAY'----- ' YES! I WANT TO SAVE MONEY. SEND STARCREST PANTYHOSE! S p .:..__ . . 31~9 REDHILL AVE . ta1"\Jl~t vi Caljforq1a COSTA MESA. CALIF 92626 O Miss To Avoid Delay -Print Clearly 0 Mrs. 0091AL STYLE SIZE SHADE HOW NO. CODE COOE MANY PAlllS First Name Middle ln11tal Last N•me Address _____________ _ C1cy --------------~ State ______ z1p _______ _ esidents add 6% sales tax Calif. r Yt l\I t,1,\Y ~..11\ "l'rl I" <.,I, I" l\Ni) "'l•\111-.. $ $ Postage and Handling $ SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK CHARGE YOUR PURCHASE Check One: amount enclosed OR to be Total charg ed to my bank credit card MY BANK CREDIT CARO NUMBER IS $ 000191 TOTAL PlllCE .25 ri BankAmericard ' Master Charge ~ X INTE~~-ANK 6~f E MO VEAR ~ Sign Your Name as 1t appears on your Bank Credit Card G 118R·5 c 1974 St1rCresl Products ol C1hlorn11. Inc No portion ~n .,. reproduced without our written per1'li11ion. - &dvertleement How You Can Win Contests! Discover 14 Secrets to Winning . . . and Cash In On Exciting Vacations -Luxury Cars -Money and Thousands of Other Fabulous Prizes to Be Given Away This Year I f you Jream of hJ\'tn~ enough nt ra cash 10 <;pend an\ ''a~ you would like. I( you have lon~(.J for a few of the luxuries 111 lift hefore vou an• too olJ to L·njo" them. It You rt"l·ei,:l. n <.fx.'(·ial thrill "hen you arc narnl'll a winner. Then continue to read and lcarn how to make your <lrearn~ comC' 1 rut'. ' To be ii w'inn<:r. rhe firsi rhm~ \'(')u mu'St d1) 1-; for~ct ahout hc1n.l! luck\'. Pure lucl-ha <; Vl·rv little Ill do wi1h winning conte'''· If you folio\\ any kind of spans ac1iv1ry ~ly. you 1-n?" I he best prepared team wins. They don r leave :myrhing 10 chance. The o;amc 1>ys1em.11 IC approach q n help you win contests. If you prepare-if you have the proper tool' ti vou know how 10 make the law ol J\ erages work for you . . . you will soon ht· winning such valuallle pn1.es as color telrv1 <;ion sets -rape re- corder<; -radio" appli<lnce<-Even cash and vacation<; 10 exotic places. Why am I o;o conf 1dent vou can win - and "·in bij!? · Because I am doinx 1L I know the thrill of winnin~. I know what it takes to be a contest winn(•r. I know if you are determined vou can win too. YOU <;trUl ~ I( ri<·h. · So. for>!l"I alx1ut llein~ Im ky. 1)(111'1 1.1~1· us long a!> I did tu find our wha1 11 tal.t·' 111 be: a W'tcmaric winm:r. Give in to that impulS(:. Thcrt:s noth111,i.: to lost'. I'm not askin~ you to beli('v<: wh.11 I have s:iid. ju<;I try it. I ~uaranl('l' ynu will he.· a winnt.'r Ir\ as simple as that. Guaranteed Winne r - To pwn· t ht•rt· '' more to w innm,i.: t h.111 lud. ~ou h.l\'l' th•" l()()'J,, no r"k ,i.:u.11 ant(~ Order 01\' book "I low 10 Win Cnn 1c,1<;'.' If vou don't lik~ it when 1t .1mv1•, r('turn H lor .m immediate rcf un<l. No qun tion' a~h.J Or. kl"ep it and <:nu:r <;t•n•1 .11 tontl''t' u<;tn).! my 14 sucn:s.,ful nilt·' II in on<: \.car's 11mc YOU have not "'''n JI l{-a~t two nJt1nnJI coittc.':'t'i. rc.·turn tht· ~lC'k You ~till ~t·t ytiur S3.00 back . 3 R<.'ports -Free A 11t·w c.:11nrc't comes out almo:-1 ('\'<.'I"\' day thar )OU 1.an cnicr -and win. I ht·' be-;t .trl' in< ludl'tl in J monthly rl'port c 1llc·d thr "How Ill ;'\!t·w'\:· Jf you order my bool. ri).!ht nnw . \'1)11 will rcceive fret:, a thrl'l' month rn.ll '"hsniprion direct from tht· puhl1sh1·r. S1Jrt Winning Now! · But learnin,I! ho\\ ro win didn't ~vname is Ho;·U'oodKell)'.M;·u'ife t111d l boveu•ontho11s1111dso(dnlltJrsin1'tJl1111ble • .,_(;,Qme eas\. pri:.es. rnt1 con be 11 hiK 11·i1111er too -11 's easy when ;·ot1 t1se tbc 14 simrle ttc/H It is l':t~v w <\larl the winnin)! hah1r nnw S1mpl" u1mple1e anJ mJil the rn11pon t)4:l1m Jl1111,l! wi1h $ \ ()() ca'ih, chl'<:k or mnnc" order 11,· l INCOI N PHESS 41'1·1 South Sheridan Tulo;a. ( >l-IJhnm,1 7 11 •15. Thl· book (and vl1u1 f 1r!>t frl't' report I will hl· \t'llt to vou immc<l1ateh• h\ rt'turn mail. Until a few ye.ir-; J_l!O. m~ wile and I I h11t·e d1scot'l'red. were like the averaµl' per~n. We would occasionally Withou1 contests and a systematical way of winning. (•nte:-r a contt"\t rh:it cau>?h t our a11t n11on ... with always these priz~ were only a dream ... but now a dream 1he same re<;ult-.. :"\!othinµ. You may have experienced come true. thio; o;ame thin}!. Now \'Ou can make your dreams come true and ex· All nl\ effort' leh me frustrated. I knew 1 had to do penence the rhrill of winning. You can master in a few c;omcrh1n~ different to win. I decided co find out how I hours what It took me two full vears to discover. could improve nw ch.inces of winnin.£. I started by inter· The secret of winning. , ,·1ewin~ the people "ho knew what it wa'i aJI about. I have wriuen down every successful technique I Conte<;t 1udgcoe; have used. Every proven secret I have learned. And ha,•e I spent hou r~ in "ntin,I! letters and talking to judges. 1ncludc-d each of them in a book I have wrirten. ent 11k><l I studied carefully their advice and rhe techniques they "How to Win Contests:· suggested. With their help -and my own rnal and error Even though this book could mean hundreds. perhaps -I deH·lopc<l 14 simple but effecti,·e rules -for enter· thousands of dollars to you in valuable prizes, it is priced in~ and winninj.: conie-.rs. at only $ ~.00. Remember. winnin~ contests is not luck. Durin,1! the nexr three months my wife and I won Ir is SYSTEMATICAL PREPARATION. auable pritt'S in t('n national contests an avera_ge I will show you how to prepare. of winnin~ one pri1e every 10 days. I will teach you the fourteen rules you must follnw Believe me. thi'> is not luck. to he successful.· · To prove what I arn sayin~ is true, here are just a I will teach you che "golden rule" of winnmg. few of the lcttC'fs I received announcing my winnings: I will show you how to be selective and enter unly -You tl'i!I he hapf'..1· to knou· thot .rour entry hos been the contests that provide the best chance to win. selected or one n( the u inners in the P11ri11'\. Dog I will tell you how to u~ the rules of the contes l 10 C/1011• $ J 50, Ono Triple Trt'e1rnn· Sll·eepstoke your advantaAe. Spertor11/1,, I will give you the formula for a winnin~ strate~\'. -Your entn· hos been selected as ti 11•11mer in the I will show you how to be'Jt the law of avei a~es by Armour "Wm a Wish from the Waord" Su•cep· enterin~ more than once. The trick is in the timing of stakes. vour entrv. -Crmgra111/a110m' Your 11tJme htJr been drau•n as · I will .show you how to keep posred on current con 011e of the ... 11·in11ers m tbe A ll'ake "Free Grocen·es tescs so you won 'r accidentally mis-; out on t hr be~t for Life" SweeprttJkes opportunit1e<; to win. -Congratulatmns J'OU are a u·inner m the "007 I will -;how you a ~ret trick to make sure your entn<·' Colgate-Pt1lmolit•f! Sweepstakes." Please allou• six aren't overlooked. u•eeks for delive1) of )'<Jllr RCA Tape Recorder. I will teach you how to use lo.gic co take the "chann·" -Your Po!tJroid camera is heillR forworde~I to .rou out of winnin~. as a tl'tnner m the l.Jbby 's Fine Foods Contest. I will show you how to hit the jackpor timl' and -Co11grat11/ations 011 :"our e1uh prize. The Mm11tt rime again. Maid Company is forwarding o check lo J•Ou before At first you will find your winnin~s hard to heli1.·vc· /be holida;• setJson. Even your friends won't believe it -they will rhink ------Mail This Coupon Today------ Plr<1!><.· ru'h nw m' ,t:u:1rant1.""<.'<l copy of "flow io Win C(lntt'"'ih .. I kre " nw SHX) a' paymenr in lull. /\l'-0 \(.'n<l me· thl' "}low t(l News" rep<1rts for thret' month' free to keep me po$tt-<l on current contl''t '· It I hJve not won ut lea"I l wo national contt''I~ "1chin a vear. I may r1.·turn-1hc· rook for a full rdund. . l I' J'fl'.i~t' l'rtrH Mr """· "lam(' M"' ----------------~ Addrt·~s ------------------- ( llV--------------------- <;141(• -------------/_,,, ____ _ D I am encl1h1n~ .m additional S 1.00 for u <;('('()ml copy of your hook (and frc.-e "flow to News" rcpon'l for .1 friend who mi~li(-d thi" :iJ. l'l~ll'<' m.tk(' v~rnr <ht."-"-pavabl(' 10· t INC 0 1 N PIO·SS \ \4 I \ouch Sh1•ridan 1 ul-u, O klahom.i 71 1 ~~ Streisand~ Our Poll-Wlnnei- Contin11~d her: I never beard her sing the whole time we worked together. I guess I thought anyone with a voice like hers would be singing snatches o( songs or humming aJI the time. But she never does. It's as if singing is aU business for her. J think that's too bad. I decided a long time ago I didn't want to be just the best of ooe thing. I would be the best singer, best ac- tress, best recording star, best Broad- way star and best movie star." Erlichman relates bow Barbra took her son with her to Africa for the lo- ca~n of ''Up the Sandbox." Jason is a very erudite six-year-old who has been captivated by archaeology for over a year. He'd been told about the Lcakeys' discoveries in Africa. and he tiad his heart set on going on a dig of his own. Afraid that her son would be disappointed if be found nothing at all, Barbra packed some chicken bones and took them with her. She dropped them on the ground so J asoa would be sure 8rllCllOf'd Dllllfteft The side of Barbra that is never seen by the pu~lic is summed up in a story Marty Erllchmlln tells. Erticb- rnan is her personal manager and menlor who bas worke'1~r and with her atnce be found ber in Greenwich· Village when she was just ao unpol- i.shed kid ~ith a voice that sent shivers down bis back. Even then she dis- played a streak of determination that still drives her toward her goal, which is, to quote her," ... to be somebody. to find something. Who Won-An~Who Came Close-~. In Our Celebrity Poll T he readers of FAMILY WEBnY have cast their ballots-and here are the actors and actrcues they have chosen as their favorites: MOVIES: Barbra Streisand and John Wa yne. TELEVISION: .... nette ~ Ian of :.·Dirty Sally" and Ala n Alda Qf "M• A •s•H." Support- ing actors: Michael Learned and Ra lph Waite, John-Boy's parents on 1be WaJlons." • • • FAMILY WBEKLY's third an- nual Celebrity Poll had one old- standby winner, as readers pick- ed John Wayne as their favorite movie actor .for the third year. With this victory, he retires the FAMILY WBEKLY cup, and is ineligible nut year. lbere could have been no bigger surprise than the victory of Jeanette Nolan in a poll held only a few weeks after her 1V show went on the air. Voters over 50 brought her home by a whis~er over Su .. n Saint Jame9 of "McMjllan & Wife," last year's winner. Here's bow the voting went: M OVIE ACTOR. John Wayne, riding mainly oo bis popularity among older voters, woo handily but had bis stron- gest challenger in three yean- Robert Redford, who finished second but actually led lhe vot- ing on the West Coast and in the Northeast. Cllnt Eastwood finished third. Surprisingly strong: Charlton HMto.t. MOVIE ACTRESS: Barbra Streisand, who had done poorly in two previous polls, won con- vincingly over ,two old standbys -Julie Andrewa and one-time winner Dorta Da y. Ms. Strei- sand, who apparently gained enormous popularity through her recent movie, ''The Way We Were," had good support from au age groups. Also strong: Jo. a nne Woodward, Shelley Wlntera, All MacGraw. TV ACTOR: Alan Alda,.with support from voters of all ages, won the closest race of all from Richard Thomaa (John-Boy Walton), whose principal back· ing came from younger voters. Thomas carried the central Southern states, from Alabama to Texas. Also strong: last year's winner. Peter Fa lk; Telly Savala• ("Kojak"); Biii Bixby ("The Magician"). TV ACTRESS: No victory was so much the product of an age groop's bloc vote as Jean- ette Nolan's over Susan Saint James, whose backers were much younger. Next in the vot- ing: Mary Tyler Moore and Jean Stapleton (Mrs. Archie Bunker). Also strong: Carot Burnett and Suzanne Pfah. ..... Cher Bono, getting al- most all her votes from the un- der-18 group, was much more weakly supported than last year, when she finished second. TV SUPPORTING ACTOR: Ralph Waite, "Papa Walton," won thiJ one going away from Ed Asner of '"The Mary Tyler Moore Show," Ken Curtla ("Gunsmoke's" Festus), and Demond Wlleon (Sanford's son) . Curtis actually won in the Rocky Mountain states. Sur- prisingly strong: J ames Mac- Arthur of "Hawaii Five-0." TV SUPPORTING AC- TRESS: Michael Learned, who portrays "Mama Walton," r~ ceivcd the largest number of votes of any winner, by a long margin. So she bad little trouble beating off the second-place challenge of Valerie Ha rper '(Rhoda of .. Mary Tyler Moore"). Third and fourth: Gall Alher of "Mannix" and Sally Struthera (Gloria Bunker). FAMILY WEEKLY, May 5. 1074 • I ••Lord . , te8ch us to pray••· The need for prayer-especially in time of danger or an)(iety-is instinctive in almost everyone. Yet many people regard it chiefly as a means of oblaining God's favors. And when everything they pray for is not granted. they often wonder .if God is really listening. Christ's teachings on prayer. however. reveal that God does indeed hear and answer each of our prayers . . . but not necessarily by granting every favor we want or think we need. To help you understand why this is so, we· have pre- pared a special pemphlet e)(plaining the true meaning and purpose of prayer. You will learn from ii how Christ gave us the Lord's Prayer not merely as words to be recited. but as the model for perfect prayer. And you will learn. too. the truth of Our Lord's promise: "Ask. and 1t shall be given you'.' For your free copy of this pamphlet. just mail the coupon below. There is no obligation and nobody will call on you. .--FREE -Mail Coupon Today!-------------1 Please send Free Pamphlet entitled "Let Us Pray" This offer 11 limited to •n• free pamphlet. FM-59 I I I I I I I .- ·'- City __________ State ____ Zip. ___ _ CATHOLIC INFORMATION SERVICE • KRIGHTS OF COLUIDBUS ~ v v P. 0 . Box 1971, New Haven, Conn. 0 650 9 I I I I I I I I I L------------------------------- SalemS } • new ----c~-ush--~• . -- box. No matter how the road bends, our refreshing taste won't. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. C lt74 11. J lllTllOLDS TOIACCO CO ' . 19 mg. "tar". 1.3 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method. · Convert Your Garage One way to win the costly home· Improvement game Is to utilize what is already built-as by converting this attached single-car garage into an extra play/sleeping area. The pivotal points of this charming room, designed by Peg Walker, are the cheerful red-lacquer case units. which give needed storage; the bolstered bed, which provides comlortable daytime seating (Instead of a more expensive sofa); the striped pre- finished paneling: and the wood- burnl ng fireplace, which is freestand- ing, to radiate heat all around. (It's also Ideal for the kids to make pop(:om.) Furniture QY Stanley. PaneUng by-Evans. FoaiYl-rul>ber-- backed carpet tiles by Ollie. The "'Energy Rooms" in Your Home: Do Them Over~ Use Them BeUer B y Rosaly n Ahre vaya, Wome~'s Editor A Good Kitchen Saves Steps-and "Energy" A well-designed kitchen should be able to have an Imaginary triangle drawn through Its center to connect the work areas (storage, preparation and cleanup), as In this U·shaped G.E. kitchen. If you're curious about how efficient yours Is, measure It. The aides of the triangle may range from 3' 6" to 7' 3", with the total length of the three arms ranging from 13' to 22·. The work centers should be located so the work flows In an unimpeded sequence from storage to prep- aration to cleanup areas. If dimensional and flow requirements are met, complemented by adequate counter and work space, the kitchen should prove to be a good one. '"wL j2\tJlome Rooms that use water, large amounts of electricity and excess heat-these are your nome's '"Tenergy rooms." And here's why putting off remodeling them could be .-. costing you money! You don't have to be an "ecolo- gy freak" to know that water, electric and fuel bills are sky-. rocketing-and turning yesterday's "dream houses" into today•s night- mares. But you can fight back-and with- out sacrificing one iota of your home's beauty or graciousness. In fact, for many people this might be a good time to undertake a post- poned remodeling. Because if that outside wall you've been planning to panel isn't insulated -you reatf9 - can't afford lo delay the paneling any longer (putting insulation under it. of course). So hop to itl-and realize that every dollar spent wisely this year can save you ten dollars in the years ahead! Here are some energy-saving tips that can be implemented with- out too much disruption of your daily living: Heating and Cooling • Install shades, vertical louvers or awnings over windows facing south and west, for summertime' shadinA. -• Use exhaust fans in kitchens and laundries to pull heat and moisture outdoors. •Service the oil burner once a year, preferably in the fall. It is estimated that over four million of the nation's oil furnaces do not receive annual servicing. Inspection aod adjustment ·could save an average of ten per- cent in family fuel consumption. • Clean or replace filters in air-con- ditioning and hot-air heating sys- tems at least once a month . Co11tillued FAMILY WEEKLY, May,5, 1974 • 11 RevitaUze Yotir llooms With Energy 111 Mind Lighting • Remove one light bulb pe'Cmanent- {~•somewhere in the home. For safe- ty, replace it wjth a burned-Out bulb, so the socket is not left exposed. Then replace half of the other bulbs with those of the next lower wattage. Family electrical bills will drop without too much of a sacrifice. • Use fluorescent lights for kitchen am.I bathroom-they're lhree times more efficient than incandescent lights. And remember : A single long tube is more energy-efficient. • Use one large bulb rather than sev- eral smaller ones. One 100-watt in- candescent lamp, for example, pro- / d~1ces more light than two 60-watt bulbs. Laundry and Kitchen •Set water hea ter at I 10°F. H igher temperatures are not necessary. • Use clothes washers and dryers only when fully loaded, unless they have small-load attachments. • W ash clothes in cold water with cold-water detergent. • In cooking. use pots that cover the healing clement-so the heat enters the utensil rather than being dissi- pated. Use covers whenever possible. • Broiling is more efficient than bak- , 11 .J;:g. Jf you do bake, double up on recipes and freeze the excess. Insulation • Caulk and weather-strip doors and windows. . • I nstall slorm windo" s. They· will eventually pay for themselves by cutting healing costs as much as 15 percent. • Insulate the att1c This can reduce your heating bill by about 20 per- cent. "How-to" information follows in a later part of this section. 12 • FAMILY WEE Kl Y, Mey 6, 1974 When In the b .. hroom, ho•d hot w81er. lnat .. d of letting the w81er run, draw• bowttul. Bathroom With a .. Skylight" The transformation of this room, once an ordinary bath In a split-level home, began with the walls. Formica's laminate bath-wall paneling in a golden swirling pattern wasJnstalled directly over the old ceramic tile. The next project was the ropped-illumiAated beamed ceiling, whose translucent panels hide fluorescent fixtures (they use energy three times as efficiently as incandes- cents). On the floor, a carpet remnant adds luxury. The storage unit. another do-11- yourself project, is of particleboard lumber covered with the plastic laminate in a different design. The best part of the transformation is the price: Under $300 for eve rything, If you do it yourself. Con- struction details are avail- able from Formica Corp., Department FW, 120 E. 4th St.. Cincinnati, Ohio. Remodel With Shower Stall Color it latticework green, lavish with dollops of yellow, add shelves that "float." and you have this dream bathroom. Instead of having a glass door, the shower stall utilizes Plexi- glas. an approved safety glazing material. The look of this bathroom Is enhanced by see-through shelves of acrylic sheet thal can be crafted easily at home. For the energy-conscious: Did you know that the average shower requires only about half as much hot water as lhe average tub bath (five gallons per shower, ten gallons per bath)? Co111i1111r1I The Schick Fresh Air Machine is available at fine drug, discount and deparbnent stores. in your area. now. I -" ' Anderseri Windows. The beautiful, carefree way to save fuel ... In a typical home, more than 50% of an heat loss occurs through and around ordinary windows. But with quality, weathertight Andersen Windows, you can cut your annual fuel bill substantially. ----Wood's a natural insulator. ~ ~ .._, Andersen Perma-Shield® Windows feature ~ a vinyl-encfosed wood core ... one of nature's best insulators ... for year-'round comfort, year-'round energy savings. Fuel s11ving8 without storm window bother. -Optional dooble.-pan~~ conducted heat loss by 353 (compared with single glazed units without storm windows). Cuts cleaning chores in half. Will not warp or stick. Penna-Shield Windows won't bind either, thanb to a perfect combination of stable wood and a protective rigid vinyl sheath. It's draft-tight. Andersen weather- stripping is two times tighter than industry standards require. Helps prevent biting outside winds from becoming chilling inside drafts. No painting. Rigid Perma-Shield vinyl exterior won't rust, pit or corrode like metal. Won't need puttying, scraping or painting. • ... save time, save money. r -----------------------,,w.s.1 1 I I I I Clip your way to 2 FREE booklets: l = I. Plea~ und "How to Get Good Windows and Gliding I Doors," a 24-pace guide to selecting fuel-and money-saving I .-u1dows and 11idinr doors. I 2. P1eue wnd "~Window Installation," folder for simple-I to-loDow ste~ for instaJlinc wi ndows. I I I I I ~ame.------------------------------------------------------- 1 Address~~~~~~~--~~----~~----~~~--- City~~------~--~----~--~~~~~~--~--~ 9t.aU?...------------------~~--~Zip~--~~~~~ = J pl.an ti> build CJ I plan to remodel. 1 I I I I I ! k9~~~~~1•1 l------------~-----------------J Your dryer altould be vented uternaltJ to remove moisture, cut drying time. . :-' ---------. . -Step-Up Laundry Area A well-designed recreation room/ laundry features an elevated dryer to minimize the amount of bending required when loading or unloading. The 15-inch-high platform conceals a storage bin for cleaning supplies or bulky items. It's energy-wise to plan your laundry schedule. Run the washer and dryer with full loads only, using the shortest cycle possible . ._aut don't overload. By keeping th~t filters clean, you can cut down on drying lime and fuel use. Construction plans for the platform-drawer unit are available from: Consumer Information Center, , Dept. FW. The May1ag Co .. Newton, Iowa 50208. Kitehe11 a11d Basement Ideas Alfow space between onn and refrtgeretor tor lntulatfon purposn. 14 • FAMILY WEE Kl Y, May 5, 197.f Elegant Kitchen in a Narrow Space Barbara and David Spindel of Cong~rs. N.Y .. were tired of the small, drab kitchen they inherited as part of their old house. They opted to remodel with a color scheme that was warm and inviting-In appliances. resilient 11oor covering and noteworthy wall tre«tment. That's not really a brick wall you see. but an installation o~or oricks-composed of lightweight polyester- with the look and feel of the real thing I Energy tip: An oven needs ony ten minutes or less of pre· heating to reach a preset temperature. Preheat your oven only for foods that cook in less than an hour. F.oods requiring longer cooking may be placed In a cold oven. Continutd ' .... 7~" Circular Saw e ......... t......._ • ~· ~ If you're thinking about buying a circular saw, take a "6'~.9!., ~ look at this Black & Decker 7 V.." model. It's got a 1 V.. •"·":':f.I' ~ HP burnout·protected motor, a stUrdy shoe adjustable -;t;.:~~~-.,. .. fo~ depth (and bevel cuts) and a sawd·~st.e~ection chute "8.!.·"" __ th.at.keeps sawdust aw~y from the·cuttmg hne for better 1 v1Sibiltty . Besrofall, it's at a greatprice~$19.99.-It's-a great saw for just about any home carpentry pr,Wect. Combina- .. __ _ tion blade included. #73'01.1999 Yes. d that's not all. ~,,Variable Speed Drill Since it's variable speed, it'll drill in a wide variety of materials, from wood to metal to ceramic tile. With accessories, it'll also sand, buff, mix paint and drive screws. A great all·purpose power tool . Double insulated. #7014. 1699 Finishing Sander/ Poli sher This Black & Decker Finishing Sander can make almost any fini shing or refini shing project a lot ea~ier. Ifs high spee9 -10,000 ortlits per minute -for extrct-f a~t material. removal and smooth finishing. Optional soft pad for buffingllnd polishing. #7404.1499 ~HP Router If you're starting to get serious about woodworking, you 're going to need a router. And this is the router you should start with. It's only $36.99. It'll cut, rout, trim and groove in a wide variety of materials. It features a vertical depth adjustment to help simplify intricate inlay work, and a% HPburn- ---~out-protected motor. Complete how-to-use ~anualincluded. #7610. 3699 8-Gallon Wet & Dry Vacuum The perfect all-purpose vacuum. It picks up wet materials as well as dry. Great for pool, patio, cellar areas and even rug shampooing. #7665. 5299 Expect the best from Black & Decker, for less than you'd expect. Black & Decker. For your nearest Black & Decker Dealer, call 800-243-6000 FREE, day or night. In Connecticut, call 1-800-882-6500. ... ..... • So You Want to Refinish That Old Pie ee of Furniture ••• B y Roger Carnhaeh er How the experts make wood as smooth as glass C reating new furniture from old results in pieces that are totally an~ uniquely yours. AH£ f umi- ture that was made 50-or even 25"-years ago is more• durable than today's assembly-Une products. -M~ern refinishing tech- niques allow you to salvage al- most any piece of furniture. However, the difficult task of stripping often dampens the en- thusiasm of even the most ar- dent do-it-yourselfer. Stripping and refinishing furniture require great patience, time and energy. But there are some guidelines to foUow. ff it is an antique, a solvent- type stripping agent should be used. Methylene chloride solu- , bns are excellent. Use a scrap- .I'_ "n!l/ or a brass-or natural- bristte brush. Be sure to strip the furniture completely-get- ting into every serration or groove io the wood. Protect yourul/ during the stripping process. Broken glass or sharp putty scrapers can be dangerous. When using remov- ers, wear rubber gloves. Choose the proper work area. The yard or a garage is ideal. Good ventiJation is necessary to protect yourself from the toxic substances in the removing il&tots. 1 Many people are discouraged just by the thought of donning rubber gloves and doing battle with a stubborn coat of paint or varn isb. For these people, pro- fessional stripping centers• pro- vide an alternative. When you begin re.finishing, you should remember certain important basics. First, be sure you really want the wood stained or painted. Some woods are naturally beautiful when lef I in their original grains and colors. As for the varnishing: If pro- tection is more important ~an appearance, use polyurethane finishes. They do not penetrate 11 • FAMll. Y WEEKI. Y, M*Y 5, 1974 HEAVY DUTY STAPLE GUN Uses & T-50 Staple Sizes: ') 1/4", 5/16", 3/8", ') 1/2",9/16" " and CEILTILE. ;I~ l)IJ - SHOOTS A STAPLE WHEREVER YOU'D DRIVE A NAILi -~ America's BASIC ~e fix 'em fasten tool t The versatile tacking gun used by do-lt-yourulfers and professional contractors for 1001 flx-lt and remodeling jobsl Has the power to drive staples Into the hardest wood, plywood, composition board, plastic-- even llght metals! All-steel, Jam--proof with lasting ch.ome finish. Other Arrow models priced from $6.95. At Hardware, Building Supply, Stationery, DIKowrt. Variety and other Ae .. 11 Outleta. A&Ztf.i!Wsaauz•!i·UU w##il] 271 Mayhlll Street, Saddle Brooll, N. J. 07M3 ~ In CMada: 6505 Metropolitan East, Montreal 458, Que. lhc wood, but make a protective "jacket" on the surface. Jn other cases, however, old- f ashioned varnish may still be your best bet. Some people find it a little easier to spread. Whether you use polyure- thane or varnish, it is best to warm the finish first. Put the can in a pan of hot water (and be very careful not to overheat it!). This wm thin the varnish, help eliminate bubbles end brushstrokes. Another word of caution- avoid over-restoration. The beauty of' old furniture lies in its antique value. Carpenters' marlciop or signs of age and wear may lend charm, a nd they should not be obliterated. If you'd like more detailed information on stripping and refinishing furniture, write to Houck's Process, Dept. FW, 183 Delaware Street, Walton, N.Y. 13856. Expert Tips for a Professional Finish If you're like n lot of other Jo-it-yourself ers, you've lricd to refinish an old piece of f urni- ture only lo be disappointed in the resulls. Here are some tips you may not know : 1. A finished piece of wood is only as smooth as wbal's under- neath it. It is essential thal the previous surface be smoolh be- fore you progress lo the next coat of finish. Many people leavc'rough spots. thinking they will ''lake care of them 1atcr." T hat's a costly mistake. • 2. There is a "secret ingredi- ent" many cabine,tmakcrs use to attain a super-smooth finish. It's called ''wood paste fiJlcr" (not to be confused with "wood fill- er'' or "Plastic Wood"), and it can be bought at any hardware store. II is a paste that complete- ly seals the pores of raw wood so that it is as smooth as glass. 3. Here are the step! lo n pro- fessional finish: • Remove old finish. • Sand completely smooth with fine sandpaper; re- move sawdust with tacky cloth . • Apply "wood paste filler" with cheesecloth. • Remove paste with 000 (extra-fine) steel wool. • If still "nubby," rub with extra-fine garnet or jewel paper. • Remove steel-wool filings or debris with tacky cloth. • Apply rubbing stain (If wanted), followlng direc- tions on can. Be careful to avoid running or streaking! • After stain Is dry, rub with steel wool again; wipe with tacky cloth. • Brush on first coat of varnish, following direc- tions on can. • When varnish Is dry, rub with steel wool; wipe with tacky cloth. • Apply second coat of varnish, allow to dry. Then go over with ste~I wool and tacky cloth again. • Repeat process with third coat of varnish If needed. • Wax with paste wax, rub- bing wax to a shine with cheesecloth or soft pad. Bell&H p~ giant- & Howell Schools introduces a new learn-at-home in electronics that includes building a t-screen color 1V with these digital features: Digital clock that Channel nwnbers Automatic pre-set fun doin& it! a thrill to ba\'C an at-home educational pr<>- in which you actually build your own color TV! · a TV with fearurcs made possible by the """'UI. ~tions of digital electronics! channel munbers that flash right on the ! No l11'ft squinting to sec which channd on or want to rum to. on-sacm digital clock! Just a push of a and your TV tells you the time of day! automatic channel selector that you~ • ()YU .. dead" channels and go directly to the ls~ your choice. Plus ... silent, all-clcctronic nming, staU-C/-lM-an circuitry, Black Ma~ picture tube and solid-state chassis b a bright, sharp picture long lik and dependability. You learn valuable skills in electronics through · ts and leSting as you build this advanced- color 1V. Build it yourself! Bell & Howell's rewlutiooary new ~ 2S" diagonal color 'IV with diaital features! UI 0 I I flashes on the screen that fl ash on the screen channel selector • Do it for your future! Once you complcfe this new learn-at-home po. gram from Bell & Howell Schools, you'll have the spct:ialilfti skills to savK:c color TVs plus the knowl- edge that you can apply to repair a variety of home electronic equipment. No better or more pactical at-heme training in dearonics is available anywhcfc! These skills could open up new inaxne ~ portunities b you, full or pan time. While many of our students do not ask for employment ~ it is available. Of oourse, no usurance d inCome qlpClltUnities can be ~ed. Do it now! Find out how you can build and ~this Bell & Howell 2S-inch diagonal color 1V wilh digital fca.. rura-plus our exclusive Elearo-Lab~ c1ecttooics training sys1m1 with digital multimeter, solid-state ~ SW«Jf' oscilloscope and design coosolc. BUSINESS R E PLY MAIL P1~J.t 1!\' \\ 111 lw p.11d "' .... 8Ell £i HOWELL SCHOOLS 4141 Belmont Avenue, Find out, too, about the Lab Starter Kit that gives you "hands ocl' expcricncc with your first Jcsson-and about our toll-free phone-in assistance and in-person "help sessi~ to assist you every step of the way. Mail postage-free card t~y ! This Bell & Howell Schools pogram is approved by the state appoval agency for Veterans' Benefits. Please check the box on the card for free infonnation. .anl ....... _.... .... : Alt El.ctrollla H-Stlldy School ~ lf15TllUTf DFTBHD.DOY £1 BBi Ei HCJWELL SCHOOLS 4141 Belmont. Ch•c-oo. 11Hnola 60641 I flRST C l ASS PERMIT NO 4148 CH ICAtiO. 11 .1 .. 620Rl _ .. _, Ch1cai.to. Illinois 60641 - • • • • • I I I I L ___________________________________________ _ • • • • • •¢-• • By \\'ally Broner, Star of TV's "Wally's Workshop " I l"s spri.n~, and N atalie has already started in on me! Just recently she casually pointed out the missing shingles on our roof, the new brick wall she wants a round.our patio, the Oaking • paint on the house, and lhen innocently asl..ed ... Docs our blacktop driveway need a sealer o r something?" Dear. sweet Natalie! Well. I know from experience that /cn ri11>: a job is usuall)'. worse than do- i111: it. So this year I'm prepared for ha! For example: roofing. You probably think you're the only homeowner in your neighborhood ~·1h a worn-out roof. Wrong! Jn fac several million U.S. homes will have t ve new roofi. this year. These home ere buill righl aflcr World War JI , and 30 years is a long lime for. asphafl shingles to shed the weather. Take a look at thal old roof. and if time and weather have taken -their toll , then you need the fol- lowing information. Roofing comes in different styles, textures and grades. Whal you get is Fearing a job is usually worse than doing it. Here's help on two toughies: replacing your roof and sealing your driveway. generally dctcrmind by the price. High- , er priced brand-name roofing shin- gles arc by far the best buy. Roofin g is sold by two measurements, weight and coverage. The less expensive shin- gles might only weigh 150 pounds per 100 square feet and carry only a ten-year guarantee. More expen- sive roofing may weigh as much as 300 pounds per 100 square feet and carry a 25-year warra"'1. Since lahor costs will be the same, it's hardly worthwhile to save money on material. But speaking or labor, c;tudics show that nearly one-third of those several million roofs will be installed by home- owners as a do-it-yourself project! Since the average roofing job costs about $600, a homeowner can save up to $300 if he does It himself. You'll also discover that most roof- ing manufacturers !>upply do-it-your- 11 e FAMILY WEEKLY, Mey 5, 1974 ll,oof and Blacktop Re1>airs: What the "Man of the House" Should Know W•lly and Natalie Bruner •ppe• on their own syndicated TV show, "W811y't Worbhop." When W .. ly't not ~ fOf the show, he spends "busnu1n'• holkl•p" doing choret around the houM. 11elf information folders on how to in- ~tall roofin g. and of course there arc many books, in case; you've never tried the job before. Roofing is mostly just good old hard work-and the hardest part of the ,a, is carrying the new shingles up the ladder. Be sure you wear rubber-soled shoes and stay away from electric lines. Also, be sure you check the v.lleys in the roof before you start nailing 'hingles. If the valleys are worn o r torn, you must tackle that job before the ~hinglcs go on. While you're on the roof, take a good look at the gutters and downspouts, too. A stopped-up gullcr can sometimes be mistaken for a leaky roof. Now that you're finished with the roof and you're sitting up there admir- ing your work, you probably have a very good view o r your blacktop drive- way. ir it is starting to look gray in- 'itcad of black, if it has some crumbly areas, and if spider-web-like lines are -;tart ing to appear, then it's time to use a blacktop sealer. The black. gooey scaling material only costs about two . cents per square root, is available in five-gallon cnns and can be applied with either an old broom or a rubber / squeegee. Make sure you've removed all dirt, Just and other debris before you begin. then give the entire drive- way a liberal coating of sealer. It's a messy job, so wear throwaway shoes and clothes. It's also a good idea to check the weather forecast before · you begin. A hard rain can undo your efforts unless the sealer has had a good 12 hours to dry. For a badly checked driveway, you may need a new topping to put it in first-class shape. Don't expect the scaler to serve that purpose. All the sealer wilJ do is prevent future rains from damag- ing the driveway more. Also, oil leaks from parked cars d amage blacktop more than ice and snow. The oil will actuall y soften the asphalt surface and a pothole will result. Make your teen- agers park their jalopies on the street and your driveway will last a lot longer! What about the paint job on the house and the brick wall around the patio? Well. I lool: at it this way: If you make enough points on the roof and the driveway, chances are you can get out of doing the other two. Besides. who would really want everything around the house completely finished? FAMILY WEEKlY, Mey 5, 1974 • 11 l r " .. ... It's an m;o,.blt wsy ID limn or:w *iDt " ' I I I .;.I , • pMt .. a a•111 1 11 1 m•bRWpNllWi iD z't bunial ' I f • r NQW FOR THE FIRST TIME .ANYWHERE EX·OJIC BAMBOO ORCHIDS Flown Directly from Hawaii to you. This exotic Bamboo Orchid can grow anywhere in the home ONLY Bamboo Orchid (Arundine Bam- busifalicai) This magnificent white orchid with purple lips comes to you directly from Hawaii to bloom all year in your home or office. They are easy to grow anywhere with either natural or artificial light. You can grow them out-doors during the proper season and they need very little care. With proper watering you will have bloom after bloom of exotic o'rchids for corsage or table center-piece. Enjoy the beautiful foliage and exotic flower all year round. Your friends and family will admire and compliment its beauty. · The Orchid Plant sent to you will be 15" to 18" tall. In a very s~ort time the colorful flower will appear. A pure white orchid with dramatically contrasting purple edges that are ever- bloomlng! This Is the time of the year when we can ship these "Orchids" to you directly from our nurseries in Hawaii. There has never been a more beautiful, dramatic, exotic house plant. If you nave never grown plants before-these Bamboo Orchids are so easy and so simple to grow-yoy wlll be proud-almost like a trip to beautiful Hawaii Itself. So for a plant that Is really unusual and different-fill in the coupon and send today for yourself and for friends. Ideal for year round gifts r----------------------I I I GARY EVAN HAWAII NURSERY 175 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.10010 DeP.l fW-5 Please ship me the lollowlng: 0 1 Plant $2.00 + soe post. 0 2 Plants $4.00 + 75¢ post. O 4 Plants $7.00 + $1 .00 post. r 1 Veterans' Benefits 1Plta~ d10.k 1-ol'" (preaso orinn S1,11c .,. ,,."''°,.'" "'°"'' Stt1dr ~chool o. VR'I-insmuir °' rconllOCJ'<I 0 eeU. El HOWEU SCHOOLS 4 u 1 9.! _.., CH' "Yi "'"' •• f>Cl!.41 ''f' "[undry room" needn't conjure up an image of a hard day's work in the home's deepest recesses. Since the bulk o f the family wash collects in the bedroom/bath area, why not create a wash-and-dry cen- ter right in the bathroom, as in this Westinghouse-designed plan? Sixteen square feet can be adequate. If the bathroom is smaH, there are stackable washer and dryer units. Or, the equip- JO • FAMIL V WEEKL V, Mey 5, 1974 menl can be put side-by-side under the counter. When the dryer isn't in use, it can serve as a hamper. You can save on heating bills in this "en- ergy room" by followi ng these lips: Pre-soak heavily soiled garments in a detergent or soak-solution to save on washing time. Sort clothes by thick- ness so you won't have to run an addi- tional cycle for only one or two slow- drying items. .)"•Jlonw/What Your Appliances CosttoRun This guide is based on average usage of appliances and national average costs. Appliance Air Conditione r Light Bulbs Range Television (color) Television (black/white) Dishwasher (with heater) Fan (attic) Fluorescent Light (3 fix) Frying Pan Iron (hand) E~ctric Blanket Coffee Maker Electric Curlers Vacuum Cleaner Hair Dryer (with hood) Toaster Radio/Phonograph (solid state) Food Waste Disposal Hair Dryer (800 watt) Radio (solid state) Clock Hair Dryer Food Mixer Makeup Mirror Curling Iron Electric Toothbrush • Annual Energy Consumption (Kilowatt-Hours) 2,000 1,870 1,550 540 400 350 270 260 240 ... 150 150 100 87 45 42 40 40 30 23 20 17 15 10 7 7 5 ,,_ ............ !'111tn *, ,~ ...... ... _, > ~--·"" Annual Cost Of Energy Consumed $47.20 44.13 36.58 12.74 9.44 8.26 6.37 6.14 5.66 3.54 3.54 2.36 '· 2.10 1.06 .97 .94 .94 .71 .61 .47 .40 .35 .24 .18 .18 .12 3\~ ...... /How to Choose an Air-Condidoner A central unit costs about 20 per- cent less 10 operate than window unit'I wilh equivalent cooling capacity. And, in many cases, a window fan can be used in place of an air-condi- tioner and will not require nearly as much energy (a window fan needs only about 150 watts whiJe a typical window air-conditioner requires ten times as much). But if you ore shopping for a room air-conditioner, consider two factors: Cooling Capacity. This is the amount of heat (measured in BTU's) that an air-conditioning unit can re- move from the air in one hour. One BTU is the amount of heal needed 10 raise the tcniperature of one pound of water one degree. This is about the ' amount of heat generated by a wood- en match by the time it burns to ashes. A 12,000 BTU unit will, there- fore, remove 12,000 BTU's of heat (or the heat. of 12,000 matches!) from an area every hour. As a rough estimate, figure you'IJ need l ,800 BTU's per 100 square feet in an aver- age borne. Energy Efficiency Ratio ( EER ). High-efficiency room air-conditioners are more expensive to buy, but cheap- er to run. You can comp are units by analyzing their ratios. The EER is the model's capacity (BTU) divided by the number of watts it uses. The high- er the EER number,.the more efficient the unit. Look for the EER on the metal plate of the unit. The EER will be a number ranging from 4.7 to 12.2. If the number is above eight, it's pretty good. If it's above ten, it's ex- cellent! FAMILY WEEKLY, M•y 5, 11174 • 21 .J"Jlome/ Make the Air-CondidonerYou Have Work Better If you are already included in the majority of Americans who own air- conditioners, there are practicaJ 1hings yob can do to conserve power : 1. Protect your outdoor cooling units from the sun. They should be placed on the north, or shady, side of the house. Be careful that shrubbery or other obstacles such as leaves do not . restrict airflow. Th.is can greatly re- duce the efficiency of your units. 2. C lose or· cover all floor and wall registers so cool air does not escape joto the ducts of your heating system. 3. u~ heat-generating appliances as little as possible while your unit is working. Schedule such tasks as iron- ing, washing clothes and di$hes for the coolest hours of the day. 4. Consider getting an attic fan, even though you have an air-conditioner. On bot days, your attic te mperature can be as much as 35 degrees hiJ?her than the outside temperature. Your air-conditioner does not have to work as hard if a fan is helping to keep down the heat. 5. Keep outside doors closed. Every time the back or front door is opened in an air-conditioned home, heat en- ters, and that makes your air-condi- tioner work harder. 6. Select a medium setting for your air-conditioner. Some utiHty compa- nies estimate that for each additional degree of cooling your unit will use about five percent more energy. 7. If you turn your air-conditioner off in the morning, your house will prob- ably be hot when you get home. After you turn the uoit on, it will take a while for the temperature to go down. So why not use an automatic timer to turn on your air-conditioner shortly before you gel home? J ust be sure that both the amp and volt ratings of the timer arc correct for your unit. . . . . . . . . . . ·~· ~ . Mail thiS postage-~-~~-~~_Y -~?E_~-~~~~-~! ~ ~muLo1td IV l"'n•r< Build Bell & Howell's new I colorrv1 li••~ "".,am new lkilk • pmt of~ C&Df1* I m 111 ~-ome pl'Oiiml in eledloaics1 ... c a 0 . .. c :lo n r • "' Cl w I l LI c . ..., 0 I I I I I I I I I I Building Bell & Howelfs color TV with digual fearures sounds like a great idea! I want complete information about this first-0f-.a-kind color ~ training program employing di~t.al ~lectr<?rucs. And I understand there's no obhgauon ... tt' s absolutely free. Also give me details on: {please prll'll) Address llllC /.Jr /\ice ,.,; £t•dro,,.,c1 Hom• Stud'f 5tltoOf 14.µ>0222 lll\lm' lllSTll\Jft Of TEOnlllXJV 12oR ., .. .., '"' BEll Ei HOWEll SCHOOLS "'' •t .... tt ' ... : How to Insulate Your Attie and Save Dollars Place lntulat1on•• VllPOf barrier lace- down between lo .. ta. ' By Rosalyn Abrevaya Before the outside garden- ing chores begin to take up too much ti~e. you ought to plan to upgrade the insulation in your atlic. (II ~houldn't take more lhan a day.) To be effective, attic insula- tion should be at least six inche-; thick. The onl y tools you'll need to install the Fiberglas insula- tion shown here are: a straight- edge tape measure. a pai r of gloves and a sharp knife. First Step-Five Minutes Once up in the att ic, measure the distance between the joists. This will tell you how wide the insulation should be. Nex.t. measure the length nnd width of the atlic floor lo determine the number of square feet. Finally, if the attic already has some 'insulation, measure its depth. Buy enough new insula- tio n to bring it up to a full six inches. The job now becomes just a matter o( laying the batts be- tween the ceiling joists. What Kind to Buy? Insulation is manufactured in 15-and 23-incb widths to fit between the framing members in no rmal construction. Insula- tion packaging displays the squ;ire footages and the amount needed to cover them. The m njor types of insulation are fiber glass and rock wool. both of whicn can be laid down, pounid or blown (by a profes- sional contractor ). Blown insu- lation, of course, is best if your attic already has flooring. If you plan to upgrade exist- ing insulation to rhc full six.- inch standard, unfaced insula- tion should he laid directly on . top of the present Q'latcrial. Jf only faced insulation (the kind having kraft paper o r foil on o ne side) is available, rem ove the facing or slash it at regular intervals to allow rhe air to cir- culate through it. If your attic is uninsulated and you are installing faced in- sulation, place the vapor barrier face-down between the joists. 22 e FAMILY WfEl<LY, May 4, 1t74 It COJ11es with 350 horses, factory air, stereo, its own bed, and a fat paycheck. This powerful diesel tractor is qualified vet.eran,UncleSam will worth over S25,000. The trailer pick up most of the tab. After in back may carry a half-million you graduate, Ryder will h elp dollars in cargo. you find a job. And you could be its captain. Climb aboard. Write or call Roaring through the Rockies, toda y. barrelin g across t he ------------------------------- prairie towards Miami. : IB )RYDERTECHNICALINSTITUTE lt's thekindofjob : ~~!~~~~ a man can sink his teeth : Please send me information on becoming a diesel into. And it pa.ys hand-1 tractor/tr&iler operator. SOlllely. 1 Naam ...... e---~~---~-----Alfoe-~--Ryder Tec hn ic all nst i-: Address _____________ _ tutewill train you for it. : City/State/Zip ____________ _ First with home study. : Phone: Area CQde l 1 ---------- Then driving at a train-1 Veter&n? O Yes O No. ing <?enter. And if you're a : A division of Ryder System. tnc .. world's ~st truc k 1 rental and leasing company. T-75315-N The average cost of insulat- ing your attic should be about 12-14¢ a square fool. based on six-inch-thick insulation. The cost for a 1,200 square foot house, for example, would be about $140. But the average homeowner can realize fuel ------------------------------- savings of up to $200 a year. It's also important to be sure your attic is well ventilated. Good ventilation not only helps the insulation do a belier job, but jt gets rid of hot air in the summer and excess moisture in the winter. So make sure your Home Office: Atlanta. Oa. attic has louvered vents or open windows. One last word of caution: Insulation can interfere with a TV antenna's reception. If your antenna is in the a ttic. you might consider moving it before you insulate. Basie for Sprina T hi s is the kind of silhou- ette that's a breei.c to wear. II scales the hips lightly. almost like a comfort- able shift. But there the com- parison ends. because o f its un- usual top-stitched d~t~iling. It's perfect for the upcoming months when cardigans will be· gin repl<1cing coats. Make it in short sleeves, in ,1 colton. linen or li$htweight icrsef fabric. Size l 2 takes ap- proximately 31h yards o f 44- inch material. Standard body me.i~uremcnts for size 12 are: Bust 34. Waist 251/1 . l'i i ps 36. A PRINTED PATTERN ----~---------------Send to: FAMILY WEEKLY PATTERNS, Dept. 5457 • .isoo N.W. 135th St., Miami, Fla. 33054. PLEASE PRINT Be sure to give ZIP Code NAM'----~~----- STREET _______ ~ CITY _________ _ STAT ... e _____ .z1p __ Send $1.25 plus 25 cents for post- age and handling: cash, cheek or money order. Slzea 10, 12, 14, 18 (new alz/ng). F-2050 1-----i State Size L___J ~ .. _ _,· Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health . .. - . .. . Speetrum/74 Jobn18nshlp How to Get Your Superiors' Attention-Favorably! Anyone who works for a big company knows the danger of becoming just another face in the crowd. Since pay in- c reases, promotions and job security all depend on what others think of you, it's valu- able to know how to tactfully make your.self stand out. UnderetancHl)9 the real lines of . authority a~ communication in your depart1J'9nt and com- pany is an ab9olute necessity. In most firms there is the formal organization chart and then there are the facts. You should know which people support each o ther; who are members of cliques, and who Is In a position to reward your good job performance. If your work load fluctuates, being honest can be very useful. If, during slack peri- ods, you ask if there's aoy- thing to be done, your super- visor is more apt to believe you when, at other times, you say you're overloaded. And lhe extra tasks you undertake may lead to new aasignmenta. Sometimes, of course, you can be noticed for the wrong reasons. Gossiping about the "stupidity" of company - policies and taking sides in job disputes rnvolvingothers will tiring you to everyone's attention as a person who lacks job savvy. -By S. R. Redford Do you suffer fro m painful elim inatjon? F irst of all, you sho uld kno w that you are not a lo ne. T ho usands of peo pl e experie nce pain fro m d ry, hard stools. The reason is ofte n constipation o r he morrho ids. What ·s needed is something tha t wi ll soft en intestinal waste for smooth, comfort- a ble relief. A nd that ~s exactl y wha t Seruta n does. Seruta n is a softening laxa tive that he lps relieve pa in ful elimi natio n. It forms a smooth, mild gel that sup- plies moisture and bulk to bring effective relief witho ut s~rain or griping. Serutan is the same f o rn1ul a as the laxative prescribed by many doctors to give the ir patients the reli e f they want with real comfort. Do you suffer from painful e liminati on'? Try the Serutan way to gentle regul ari ty. Soor? you sho uld discover that e lin1ination can be as smooth, easy a nd comfortable a nature in tended. Girls: That Sylphlike Teenage Shape Could Be Deadly I Girls entering puberty-and older women, too-are beset at times with the mania to reduce. They may not be fat, but they see themselves as fat. Such women reduce too much-ocea1lonally to as low as 60 pounds! Girls with this ghostlike appearance are suf-• faring from anorexia nervosa (AN). This is Latin for nervous loss of appetite. But it is more than nervousness. AN Is based on a strong emotional disturbance, with a distortion of body image. Rapid and profound weight loss are accompanied by severe mental disturbance. Glandu- lar upset and loss of the menstrual cycle are also present. Women with AN lose muscle and tissue along with the fat The ghostlike gaunt- ness is p roduced by starva- tion .... AN la extremely rare in men, but it •• on the rise among women both here and abroad-especially among • welght-consclou1 teenagers. ... The treatment, which must be done in a hospital, is food; but equally Important ls attention. to the person's Why You Take to Some People More Readily Than Others You're outside your home and new neighbors stop to talk to you. "What nice peo- ple," you say after they leave. ''I didn't care for them," says another member of your family. Why the different reactions? You both heard the same conversation. Psy- 24 • FAMll V WEEl<l V, May 5. 1117.C psychological problems. With good treatment, most women with AN recover- but some do die, often from something as simple aa a cold •... AN-like its oppo- site. obesity-is not easy to overcome. Follow-up exami- nations may be needed for as long as five years. This is one reason why diets must be prescribed with caution for women who are emotionally unstable. They may flip into starvation. -By Erwin 01 Cyan, Ph.D. .. chologists have discovered that the cause of your reac- tion to others often Un inside yourseH. If you're frequently annoyed with yourself be- cause you don't talk up when you know you should, you may react strongly against any- one else who has the same difficulty. Or if you're troubled about mismanaging your family income, you may take an instant dislike to anyone who seems careless about money. This can also be turned around \he other way. When you have a character- istic that you like about your- self, you'll prob~bly be pleased with people w ho seem to appreciate that qual- ity in you. All of ua tend to chooMJ-a few traits of our own that •re of vaf ue to u1. Then we use thoM trail• as a yard- stick by which to judge evary- one elM. -By Shirley Sloan Fader ( wear zolatron. Sim.ulated Diamond Ring 30Days Free Without Risk or Obligation ~l'l~t:li\I~ ttl~l~l~I~ to readers of thfs magazine FU.LL ONE CARAT$-.j ·simulated DiamOnd ~ (Set in Ge~uine Silver Ring) · • Zolatron must convince everybody that it's a genuine diamond-or you pay nothing! The 30 Day Free Trial Certifi· cate shown below gives you the right to wear and enjoy - this ZOLATRON simulated diamond ring for an entire month-without risk You are Invited to wear It and judge for yourself Wear it! Prove it yourself -in the privacy of your own home. Marvel at the pure, dauling color and fiery sparkle! Show it to your best friends. Watch their eyes pop out with excite- ment!. After all they have no way to suspect it isn't the genuine article -a natural diamond worth a little fortune. ZOLATRON is completely diflerent Crom those phony looking paste or plastic stones glued into cheap cos- tume jewelry. It's distinctly different and you can prove it yourself. The tough, grueling test that follows will convince you: (A) Drop this dense, man-made stone into a cup of acetone nail polii;h remover. See for yourself how it comes out undamaged ! (B) Count each fa cet. It has a totaJ of 58 genuine face ts -the same number found in a natural diamond! (C) Ob- ~ how brightly a ZoLATRON shim- mers even in moonlight! (D) Examine 1t carefully under a rugh-powered, illu- minated magnifier. You won't find a single speck, crack or bubble. Yes! We dare you to compare its fiery sparkle with costly diamonds! Not even one diamond out of a hun· dred extracted from the fabulous Kim- berly Mines can beat it for color, clarity or flawless perfection. That's why even an expert might confuse it for a regular Kimberly diamond. Get yours for less than 1 % the value of a costly diamond! Believe it or not -now you can get a ONE CARAT ZOLATRON - set in a fabulous Lady's Solitaire Ring for Dnly $10. This is a LIMITED OPPER subject to the tenns and conditions printed below. The average retail price for a one carat diamond gem is $1250.00 or more. Yet the resem- blance between a diamond and a ZoLATRON is so striking that only an expert can really tell them apart! Don't let the low price confuse you! Just hecause ZOLATRON costs only $10, plear;e don't confuse it for a cheap, dull fake. This man-made stone is not another plastic or paste jewel. Zou-·' TRON is one of the world's most dazz. ling and convincing simulation s. Produced by Master Craftsmen, then · mounted by hand into a genuine, Ster· ling Silver Ring. When you see it, you 'll agree -:---it's truly an impressive ring of rare beauty and elegance! And each ring is made to give you a life': time of wear and enjoyment. Of course, ZOLATRON is different from natural di- amonds, but the most pleasant differ- ence of all is that you can own a ZOLATRON for only $10-not $1250.00. Even Mllllonalres Wear Simulated Diamonds Countless thousands of wealthy per- sons wear simulated diamonds but they keep the secret to themselves. Those "genuine" diamonds your friends are wearing may not be so genuine after all! ZoLATRONS are so un- believably real looking that they may even fool certain ~xperts at times! That's why so many rich persons, movie and TV actors and actresses, wear simulations. They impress their .._.. IMPORTANT: FOLLOW THESE SPECIAL ltRMS AND CONDmONS (1) UMJT -only l ring per reader at this low price. (2) Orders accepted for USA and Canada only. (3) Sold only by mail -none ttiru stores. (4) Guaranteed for life. Refund or replacement if ever defective. (5) No COD's or phooe orders. (6) NOTIC(; this is a strictly LJMlltD OFFER. Orders received after stocks are sold out will be returned to senders promptly. ~ friends and fans' -while avoiding t he risk of burglary or loss. Of course, wealthy people do own natural di- amonds. But they often lock them up in a bank safety box! MAKES LIFETIME GIFT FOR SOMEONE SPECtAl ZOLATRONS last a lifetll:ne and so do precious diamonds. ZoLATRONS make thrilling, exciting gifts for special oc- casions: an anniversary ... an engage- ment ... or just a delight{ ul surprise ZOLATRON is guaranteed for life against all defects. If found faulty during buyer's lifetime, it will be replaced or purchase price ·refunded. Lifetime Warranty is in IMti•• to 30 Day Money Back Guarantee. no risk at all. Our 2 guetrantees give you full protection. Please rearl full details below on how you can obtain this amazing ring for only $10. SO DAY FREE EXAMINATION 6 MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Wear and tftJCJY your lDUTIOM rinc up lO 30 days -Without ally oblialtion! Compare It. T t$l it. Show it to your be$t friends. II anyone can detect it lrOfn a 1enuint dlll'llOlld. simply return it and get your .... , Nck last.tty. for that someone special! She'll never RUSH ORDER AT ONCE TO know this ZOLATRON isn't a genuine AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT diamond -unless you tell her! Best of Our stocks on this beautiful ring are .all, this Gift of Happim!ss cos~ only very limited. Therefore we urge you to $10, while supplies are available. By clip the coupon and mail your order choosing a ZOLATRON ring you save today, by air mall, If possible. Thia plenty for a down payment on a car, way you're sure to get yours without or even stocks or real estate. S6 many delay. Addre11; smart people have switched to simu-lated diamonds! Now you too can Copyrlc11• 1974 STl»tECRAFT DIVISION 1235 switch at very small cost! You take 4649 Sunr ise Sta.,Ft. Lauderdale,n 33304 ~ ~mi;• Address: STONECRAFT DIVISION 1235 . 4649 Sunrise Sta. Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33304 Thi s certificate entitles reader to ONE Ring only for full month's trial. Send ·only $10 for prompt, prepaid delivery by parcel post. If not fully satis- fied within 30 days, return ring for money back by return mail. Your friends must actually believe that you are wear~ a 1enoine diamond ring. Otherwise you don't pay one penny. NOTICE: only one riog to each customer at this price. CHECK Off RllfG SIZE ll&J)W: O SIZI4 o stZ£5 O Slltl O ~Zl7 0 SIZE 8 0 SIZE 9 O S.Z£ 10 0 Otlltr Of ,.. dt1't kl•• sin, selld strip 11 paper) FLORIDA RCSIDDOS: Add 4% Salts Tu. PRINT NAME -------------------------, ADDRESS _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, TOWN STATE ZIP I o CHCCK Htat for Special Ak Mall Smice-onty $1 more (Total $11). Rushed within 24 hours by fastl L~~~~~r~~~~~~~~~-------------J .. . ;. A NewDollar-Earni1.g Tri(~k By Max Gunther S upposc you own a few shures of stock, and once in a while you get a dividend check for $20 or so. What do you do with the money? Obvjously one of the best thin&ll to do is reinvest it protitubly: Use the S'.!0 to buy more stock, so that the n1• rt dividend check will be slightly hisser. Unforlunatcly, as a small in- ves1or. you're up against practical problems. If you take your $20 to a broker and ask him to buy stock, he might only laugh at you. Most brokers prefer not to handle such a small tradl.'. If a broker docs agree to handle it, he will charge a hefty commis<iion. So what do you do? In all likeli- hood. you cash the check and pocket 1hc money, and in a few days it's gone. Rut cheer up. There is a new meth- od of keeping those dividends from getting away. Banks around the coun- try are offering a service that rein- vcl>ts your dividends automatically. For instance, First National City Bank of New York, which invented the idea in 1968, is now performing the service for about half a million people. Robert E. Brady, vice presi- dent in eharge o f dividend reinvest- Thousands of average people are collecting small divi- dends that stockbrokers consider "too measly" to reinvest. Here's a new way to make those dividends profitable. mcnt. estimates another half million arc gelling 'the same service at other bank" from coast to coast. Herc's how it works. Let's say you have a small bundle of AT&T stock. You turn the shares over to a bank, along with a form authorizing the hank to act as your agent. You sign another form authorizing AT&T to pay the dividends into the bank rath· er than mail them to ybu. (So far, ahout 250 larg"c companies like AT&T have agreed to cooperate in the program, and many others are ex- pected to sign up in the near future.) When the dividends come in, the bank takes your handful of money and adus it to the dividends of the other AT&T stockholders participat- ing in the program. With this larger amount. the bank can shop for low brokerage commissions. Through its broker, the bank buys AT&T stock at the prevailing price. The new stock 1s credited to your account, including f ruct1onal shares figured to three deci- mal places. Fractional shnres earn frac- tional dividends the next time around .. There are two main advantages to you as a small investor. The first is that you are no longer stymied by small dividend checks. No matter what their size, they automu1ically go toward increasing the size of your nest egg. The second advantage is the low cost. The cost to you is 1) your propor- tional share of the brokerage commis- sion, plus 2) a service fee ch arged by the bank. The standard bank service fee is five percent of the amount in- vested. up to a limit of $2.50. To show that this is less than you would pay a broker: Suppose your quarterly dividends are S 160. The bank's service charge for investing th is would be $2.50, the upper limit. Your prornted share of the brokerage commis ion would be 52¢, under the rate stn1ctures now in effect. (That figure could go up or down.) T hus your total cost would be $3.02. If you had invested through a broker, the commission would have been $1U6-nearly three times as mGch. Or suppose you're an even smaller investor. and your quarterly dividend is only $3.20. If you walked into a broker's office with that tiny wad, you would be back out on the sidewalk in short order. But the bank will handle ii for you. The cost: five percent of the amount, or 16', plus a brokerage commii.sion of 1 '1. That 17~ gets subtracted from the amount invested. and you end up with $3.03 worth of new stock. Maybe you aren't rich yet, but at least you're a little richer than you were before. ' FAMILY WEEKLY, May 5, 1974 • 27 Style l ....... ,.., .... ,c.tt... o.-.-&..-. WvWilw..,_ ...... ~ , WHYPAY~YOUSAYES7.02 ~-NOWPAYS 12'~ ONLY. • • c~ .. SAVI EVIN MOIEH Anr 1 OUTFITS $15 Stwle L (top left) -ICNOCK-IM-DfAD llP.flONT JUMPSUIT ... coHor Dpl up to becOfM a tvrtlen«k or ~ up with paints (as at-n). ~ .a--, unuwalty clrt.f belt. Slinv a chain or add yfNr awn touches to Mak• it you! f'Of arfNnd-tol#n a~. $12. 91 cu ...... Stott-lC ("°'1om riiht)-A HONIY- OJ-A -SKIMMll TUNIC-TOP PANTSUIT ... .plashy \illi·w:rMn P'"i•' on two O'i'er\iud patch poclieh, tinfoed·lo· match peorliud button5. Eloltic waill, i.emi·flored ponfl for ,..rfect f it. Sho,..ry smooth and chorrnift_il ... 2·pi9c.es coaw .... ONLY $U.91 kyle >C ~Wt) -AU PB 2.-..a ANTSIT ... "" _.. IOtil.-can b. WW" with ~. ~ Of turtlenecls Of ~ o&o-. lold white stitching ht--U.. the V-neck. button from ck*ng and ~patch p odiett. Elostic woitt. stroivht·lev pcinh few ~ fit ... 2-plecft ,cOMplet• ONlY$12.91 AU. ..... DBllM COLORS: .... ·--·-7to17 ltolO 14'h to 24'h actually thrive on neglect! GROW EXOTIC CACTIJS FLOWERS INDOORS OR OUTDOORS It's ttuel Fotpl to water most other p4ents-forpt to feed or to pemper them with speclal 1011 and they die. Our sturdy durable Cacti, from the unt•med deserts of the Great South· W9$t, need little care to thrive ln- doo1"5 or out! Uc:h produces its awn spectacular unique bloom. r MAIL 11-Mf MMllS« COlf'H fHAY1 I PALM co ..... 5896 I I 4Ml•.w.1nai1t.,.....,,na..-.1 Rudi 0 Cictus Set # 1165 (It only I $2.98 + 75C p0st11e a handllnc. I I 0 SAYE $1~ 2 sets, and we ( pay 111 posttae. I : Enclosed cflect 0< m.o. tor I I,,,_ I ·~ ~... r•••••••••••••••• .. ·-· [Rfil~~-f : PlllllTEllSI 5 Tiiis ._,, ,.ctet-sizt "K•• Pn" Met.Jet is.,..,. • fer "'41 akifll, c_,.illt•ts tf COl.f Mlpzlae. • Includes: How to play 111inst the wind ... how to • cure the slice and the hook ... play Ing from a trap... • the grip, the siance. using the irons, much more! • fill ii •eln, fur llt HtJrt 14 Hd Hl4 tt: • COLf Macazine, 1255 Portland Place, Bouldet", Col. 80302 • • • --------------------------~. ----------------------------· • ------------------------------· ------------------Zip • ·············-I . lt-:;;j~nr.;mi;i!iiiii.iiiiiii~t--~.w-.. .. ~;:;.r;;;;-~ ,....... ,. l ~ I lhlfl a, I IN.Y. & Fla. ru. add •~te stlfl tu.I ... ____________ _.. Doctors' Tests Show How You Can Actually Help Shrink Painful Swelling of Hemorrhoidal Tissues .•. Due to Infection. Also Get Prompt, Temporary Relief · in Many Cues from Pain, Itch in Such Tmues. Doctors have found a moat effec- tive medication that actually helps shrink painful swelling of bemorrhoidal tissues caused by infection. In many ca.sea~ the first applications give prompt relief for hours from such pain and burning itching. Tests by doctora on hundreds upon hundred a of pat i en ts l'"liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir.:ii showed thu to be true in many cases. The medication the docton used was Preparu.tioJt. Jl9-the aame Preparation H you can p t without a prescription. Ointment or suppositoriea. (It's made with smaller doses of two laxatives.) Some single ingredient laxatives work on the "Sunday punch" theory. One big dose of a strong laxative that can knock your system for a loop. Caroid & Bile Salts Tablets are made up of two separate laxatives that combine the surety of a strong laxative with the gentleness of a mild one. Tugether they help ease you to regularity without sudden urgency upset. And because the dosage is pre-measured, Caroid & Bile Salts Tablets are thorough and so predictabfe you can almost set your watch by them. Take two tablets at bedtime. Get a good night's sleep. And you can expect to be back on schedule in the morning. Gentle'Caroid & Bile Salts Tablets-the 'two-together' - laxative-to .mi helpputyour n system back on schedule. Cll'OM I 1118 Sib Tabl8IS 5 foreign coins, 10¢ w.,,..,...,.._,.,..,.,_...,__...,. .. .,,...,., '1U.114 ........ '-· hrb,r .... ~ •Ula. '1ua a ftl6orlvl ,...,_ Malt-... J-t.o --•-fewour-lilqlliot. We'U ~ ..,, ,,.. ........ "'eoe •. --·..a..- ._,. ........... 8ee4 '"·-·....-..ta: WTTLSTOH COIN 00., O.,.t. )18-18 u~. ,,_ U.....Wretau1 SIG) MINTS~ Now ,_, lmposall>le IO llnd In cm:ulatJOn W. olftf popular pacl\ets -..tth ·s· on eotns 22 Oil· let--s-Ceni. .ncludong Rare 19555. $1.lllS 10 0111 .. ..,1 ·s-.i.ttetMM'I niekett. s1 lllS 10 O•I· f9fetll ·s· Aoc>set411 O•m•• (1'4&S·l955S comp) '3 lllS 24 0.11 C.01a 11109-11139 (Plain· O.S) S1 116 30 ••II Uoc ,,,.., cotns-30 doll counlrOH $2 15 9uy 4 0< ,,_. C>Kkets 'Wt''ll IOU In • .carce Oki I~ cent• Who!e- ..,. ~ 1191 Illa• tUr!ling gold and JJl- 11110 } ineluOed wf111 orOef. ott>eninte 2SC ftOeT. HARRIS, 1J5I EJ ~ Sane. cw.. Calf. '5051 (ftl 1M) 4-flC. ~ta of vtctori1t1 P1rl0f flilnllture faltllfulfy SCJled l dttalltd In bf.cl wr°"Cflt 111111. "Tufted" soft; fltl back cf\elr; !foot· •tool; teblt ·4'C•. frOlll l~-~ II.; H~-3~" I'll. Order #14104 @ $4.98 ea. plus 750 Post. I llalldl. CUDIUMI tTUflDS, 5t3S Qreenlalld ltd&., Ml1mt. Fla. U05t. OeWIITS Pills ..:.... AnalgeM: to re41eYe badlame and joint pains. diuretic to help eliminate axcess body fluids. DEITURE SECUllTY Try the ~ Klutch Security Teal Every dly more people find th.It KLUTCH holds firmly, gently. Send ZSt for 1 pocket size container of KLUTCH. KLUTCH CO. Dept.~ ELMIRA, NEW YORK 14902 WHEN YC>U ORDER BY MAIL FROM FAMILY WEEKLY ••• Please allow up to four weeks for delivery on items ordered from companies that advertise in Family Weekly. Sometimes unintentional delays occur. If they do, jus1 write: Lynn Headley, Family Weekly, 641 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10022. ear1tis MAKING YOUR EARS HURT AND ITCH? ··[aritis"-annoying pain and itch in your ears-can be brought on by excess wax. But when you try to remove wax with pointed objects, you may injure your ears! TNere's a better, safer way to remove excess wu -with AURO Ear Drops. When excess wax is gone, pain and itch of "Earitis" is gone. qet auro• to help stop "Earilis." CUSHION MUMS in magnifi~nl giant balls of living color S<'t your landscape ablaze beautifull y! Na· lure sweeps· her decorative hand wi1h each plant drenched with masses of I" -2" blooms. Hardy nuncry grown root divisions in miud colon. IO for $1; 2S for $2.2S. Add 3Sti for hdlg. Send your name and address with rcmiuance to Family Gardens, Dept. CB-270. 134 Weston S. W., Grand ~apids, Ml 49S02. Weekend ShOpper .,,. ")'IHI I h•atdk,· GET A GRIP oo yourself with I< aratolt to develop ~-.Mw· band powal ~-.r Easy to uac. Karatolt taltu just five min· • ute s a day . Starts building power-packed ath· letc ·s bands. wrists. and forearms. A great way lo develop a &rip or iron and a big plus for enthusiasts of golf, 1cnnis. football, sclf-dcfm1e, etc. Results guaranteed. S9.9S. Send your order to Margracc Corpora- tion, Dept. K-24, 201 Lincoln Bou- levard, MiddlCKJt, NJ 081l-46. SPECIAi. sil- ver -plating sale! Now, sil- ver-plating can bring your own silver "back to li.fe." Your own items arc replatcd at salt' prl'cts through this very ap«iat silver-plat· ing we! Work guaranteed. For their free price lis1, write to the Senti· Metal Co., Dept. FW-4, 1919 Mcm· ory Lane, Columbus, OH -43209. A 8£AUT"l Maria Theresa Taler. One of the most beauti· fut coins ever made. J 780 date is muk of gen· uinencss 10 the natives of East Africa anti Arabia. Of high grade silver. Brilliant uncirculated. A must for collectors and great gifts! One fer $4.9S. Ten for S-47.SO. Send your order to Rohen Harris, Dept. FWE-S, 3350 EJ Camino, Santa Clara. CA 950S I. HABANO PRICE 2pair 11.95 This year, WHITE SHOES are IMPERATIVE and 1 GOOD-LOOKS NATURAL TOO, for office wear as well as your weekend and vacation dress-up occasions. Only the prevailing high prices (or the pesky trouble of shopping for them) can spoil the fun now. (Sur11, most sho11 stonts will haw• windowful of Whit11s out front, but try to g11t your siZ'll insid11/ It m_aktJS you wonder how thfly can even sr.y in YOU WILL business IJ Well, Ila band Company of Patenon. NJ hti ~en in bu~intll88in~ 1925 sellingexrellenl men's wear from roast lo coast lo men who ~ui~ good quality and yrt do not have lhl' time to waste runni~ around .-hopping.. Now, with the p->line crisis, we are doing eYen better business. We •II eJCcellent shoes in 111 the lat.i styl• end our speciahy Is having 111 liz• in stodt. rNdy to ship 1t once. For instance: IS YOUR SIZE ON THIS CHART? ~------------------------ IE SHOCKED WHEN YOU SEE OUI SHOESI ·what's This Easy Care Factor? Simply This: White Shoes have gained their tre,.,,.ndous popularity today beuustt the new materials are ., Hsy to cl#lllnl Just a quick wipe with • damp cloth rBstor•s th'1ir original ipotl#ISS white, and they myu l!l!d • lhlntl It's tMt simple, end what 1 plMlure at t his spectecullr low price I BROWN MONK STRAP WHITE MONK STRAP BURGUNDY Name........................... LOAFER Apt. ~-B-L_A_C_K---1-4--+-_.--* -OXFORD BROWN OXFORD City .: ............................................ . rlState ...•............... c~1~EDDDDD ~----------------- ' . . } 4, J SAFER THAN KNOTTED SHEETS Are reecue equipment · Chrf1tfne Runnall1, 20, demonstrates a brand-new kind of automatic rescue equjpment by dangling gleefully out of a hotel window to show how the newfangled contraption works. The idea is that if all emergen~y escape exits are blocked you can lower your- self out the window to safety. The mechanism comes with an invalid safety cradle so it can be used in hos- pitals. It is made of a hraid-covered steel cable with a safety belt at each end. It also has reversible gears for the automatic return of one belt while the other is in use. ARMOUR'S ARMOURY By Richard Armour .(0 ( .. S.~sef.J TAKING TURNS With sleepless nights I've been concerned. ''AU night," I say, "I tossed and turned." I've said it often, said it long, But now I see that f ve ~n wrong. It's true I turned. For sleep l bied By turning on my bac~ my side. 1 turned upon my stomach, too; l turned, indeed, the whole night through. 8ut though l turned. while sleep I lost, I swear I never, never tossed. 20 • FAMILY WEEKl V, May 5, 1974 tin the World! QUOTE: The authors of a book about golfer Arnold Palmer discuss his style: "The many people who have seen him in action will be familiar with it, the shoulders rounded, the crouch over the ball, the kn~ in. After the ball has been struck, that t bend of the knees and swing back on • the right foot as he ,, I! holds the club almost vertical watching :_ where his shot is goi,ng t o end .. (t is a ·~ style of hitting the golf ball that is ~ quite individual. But it works because he has immensely strong wrists, and these strong wrists enable Palmer to bring about the most valuable act in playing golf, tG bring the dub head into the baH squarely and at great SJ>eed. Nobody bas ever done this more efficiently than Palmer." From '7he Coif lmmorta1s," by Tom Scott and Geoffrey Cousins (Hart Publishing Company, Inc.. $2.95}. UNQUOTE. Men: Tomorrow morning, when you face yourself iti the mirror, consider these facts about shaving: • Man has been shaving for thou- snnds of years. • In his lifetime, the averngc man will spend 3,350 hours-equivalent to 139 days-shaving.· • A man's focc contains about 16,· ()()() whiskers. You may have as many as 300 to 500 whiskers per square inch. • A man's whiskers :ire c.'<>arsest nod <Jensest on the chin nn<l upper lip. • Men pref er wet shaving to dry ~having by more than two to one. • In Polynesia, natives remove their whiskers \\lith sharks' teeth ground to a 6n~·edge. ROSEY GRIER A teetotaler llnce ten RoHy Grier, footb•ll 1t•r and author of "Needlepoint for Men," hasn't touched a drop of liquor siilce he was ten. "My brother was selling moonshine in those days but he'd never let me in- to the ham where he made it. One day I sneaked in and hid in the loft . When _Quips & Quotes ·What would I toss? A doc~ a shoe? My poor wife would be blade and blue. ' BAD GNUS Little gnus are just like kids- They eat and drink and grow. And,.when it's time to go to bed, They teU their mothers gno. -Delaine Helwig HOSTESS AT DIRTllDAY PAR.TY: "I'm afraid .your little brother is shy. He hasn't moved from that one p lace all aftem oon." LITILE SISTER: "He's not shy. He's never had a necktie on before and he thinks he's tied to something." -Gene Y ascnok Some people 'Peak of their in-laws as if their spouses didn't haoe any. -Lane Olinghouse Two businessmen t.alking with each other : "Is your advertising getting re- sults?'' ~·It surely is," moaned the sec- ond man. "Last weeJc we advertised for a night watchman and the next night we were robbed!'' -Conrod FlorelJIJ THROUGH A CHILD'S EYES Kid• aee life differently. Send original contribuliOf'• co "Child," Family Weekly, &4f Le>clngton Ave., N.Y .. NY 10022. S10 If used-none returned. When my soo came home from kindergarten on his first day of school, he said, "The teacher asked me where I was born.'" "Of course you Jcnew the answer to that,'' I said-"St. Mary's Hospi- tal." He looked at me real serious, with his big brown eyes, then replied, "I didn't want to sound like a sissy so l said Yankee Sta- dium." -Mrs. George Houck Tiffen, Ohio ru tell you how bad tAing1 art . l fun bought a new car and the gaa tank waa optional. -Robert Orben he came in, I told him I was going to tell Papa about it if he didn't let me try some. He gave me a whole bottle-and cured me permanently. There's nothing like steam coming out of your ears for two weeks to cure you of drinking!" DATES: Sunday is the start of Nation- al Goodwill Week an<l National Family Week. It is also Humane Sunday. ANNIVERSARIES: The first Eyo Bank opened at New York Hospital 30 years ago Thurlder. BIRTHDAYS (all Taurus): Monday- Willie Mays 43; Orson Welles . 59. Tuesday-Anne Baxtex 51. Wednuctay -Bishop Fulton J. Sheen 79; Rick Nel- son 34; Don Rickles 48; Theodore Sor- ensen 46. Thurlday-Albert Finney 38; Pancho Gonzales 46. Friday-Fred ~ ta.ire 75. S.turday -Doug McClure 39; Irving Berlin 86; Phil Silvers 62. BIRTHDAY PEOPLE: Orson Welle and Fred Astaire LITTLE EMILY "They claim we're Infringing on lltek patent!" . nor cigarette. .. ..1 0 mg. nicotine. av ....... 14 mg. tar. • by FTC method. ' • Ora~ge Coa s t * * * * FINAL . SPORTS SUNDAY, MAY 5, 1974 'J ~ featuri110 . aa@ 09 .1(( . ©@@ ·@ -. I· / ~ ~~@U'~o&@~©~l@ ~~. . . . --. '. · -~ ~cf/tit<----~ - r--'-------?~~ 11 1 ll~ ~-!~------- • ' 1-Q•) u s "1' o• _,., .. , ... ,.,,.,.,.d ·--:;-, ; 11. ~ c, lJn"t d f '""''' ;, rtld•t•" lflt . - ' . . ' ~ ~;r · ~ . I .. ~V(..-. .,. -' ~ -. • -. I ,.. .......... ....... -- NANCY -- I EXCLUSIVB ORANGE COAST NEWS • .. _;z -=-=-= :::v_.;S.- • . -Se _.., .... , .::_.... :;::::;:&fa---=- -z-;_s: £&I By Ernie Bushmiller THEY SAY THAT NEW GIRL Tfft Fl&O U :, P,1 C~ -Jtd\ "9"1S rt SflrYed ,: \97• tly U"!lld ftllYr t Svnd1t&t1, lrw; HOW OLD ARE YOU? 15 A GENIUS WITH VERY SMART BRAINS .. THAT'S A VERY AMBIGUOUS QUl;STION, S C I ENT IFICALLY SPEAKING _, I ' . , .... : ..... -- I MY ANATOMICAL AGE 15 SIX --- IVlY PSYCHOLOGICAL AGE IS FIFTEEN AND· MY·----',_.,....__ CHRONOLOGICAL ~.-/ AGE IS SEV E N + G I I'S + 7 I • HOW OLD 15 SHE? ' • I I l ' I • K~i..L.i >cHOot.. l.A~IOl-l Afl'.THUI<:, Hi:.11'.E All:e AL.L. THE . !!>IAL.L.ET 1N? ON THE 916 • 1'10i IN TH E '5C.H00L.YA !ii:D ! WHI P THEM INTO A ?TOll:Y 1=011: OUI<' E XTl<'A .,._. ;>---~ ED ITION .'! i Nt:WS 1(1&11T, C.HIEF ! J'--~ --- { ~OOM -;--..., r.-~~ l ~ ' . ! • . -• • DENNIS . THE MENACE l-1 1, MR. W1 Lc;DN I ~ :-t._ I -- I> I>[> A~E THcR'E. ANY OPEN ING~ r:o11: Me ON /HE 7tH00L- PAPEll:, FR'ANC iNC. :" WEL.L., We Al'lE. 1..00KING 1=011: A GOOD R'EWR'ITE. /\I AN ..... • • i:io A 600D Jo9, AR!THtAFl -Ii'~ A HOT -sro "'( .~' OKAY, CHI EF, H E~E A~THvt ii:, · 1r 1-!o :" THE R'OSIO'> "TH E STOll:Y IN OVl !ii'. GAR'OEN . WA'7 AEJOlAT Alii'.E 9t.A001/'JG . VIOi.ENCE ~OON , Tl-ll<Y WILi.. IN THJ:. !S L.05$0M FOi<' ~Cl-4001,..· IA ? ALL. TO ... " YA"D.· .. • ")TOP i11E:. PFlS.~E.~, CHlf.F •1 • l l-I ATE. VI OLENCE:. ' ~IAJ..J..E. ii N : uHt,ibE. ~I OT EJRE.AK~ our I N .?CHOOJ.. YA~D !" /) - Aiii:TH IA !i: MAY NOT SE THE BE:?T , R'E Wl<'.ITE MAN IN THE' i?lvl ?INE::;.7 ; EJLA T HE ':; EJY FA!<: iHE ?Wt:t:Tfi.ST .... By Hank Ketch.am G OODBYE' l"FNN/SI ~- fHEREO£ NOTH rN ' Wi=!ONG WITf'l HIS HEAf:llN .'.. 131.JT, HI<; l.ISTENIN ISN'T TOO GCOD 1 ~IJDGE PARKER <J <J <J SIGN MY NAME TO YES, M R. IF YOU 'RE PLANN IN G ON SEE ING ERN IE STRAND IN THE MORNING, IT 'S SOME· THING W E HAD BE TTE R TALK OY ER , .JEAN! YOU CAN'T DO BUS INESS W ITH PEOPLE LIKE STRAND! DON'T YOU UN DERSTAND THAT? THE CH ECK. AND ADD DRIVER! FI FTEEN PERCENT, MAUR,CE! ?{\~', .... .., ~ TAKE ME HOME, I SAID! I 'M NOT BUDGING UNT IL YOU ANSWE R SOME 01= MY Q,UEST IONS.' • I CAN TAKE ~ A CAB.' ' • _ CALL ME ·. A CAB! • COME ON, GET BACK IN ! I 'l_.L DR IVE YOU TO YOU R HOTEL ! • . NO! I 'M TAKING A CAB! 1-----._ • I MUTT and JEFF ® OK. HOLD ~~.~~ WELL, 1-\0W MllCH GO, I'LL DRIVE ML.ITT! OUTToTHE '>rr-Tlrrll~ COUNTRY.' Bv Al Sn1ith IT, JEFF.' ~ .. -f . GAS DID YOU USE? -.:---7 .JUST A LITTLE )'OU ·1HROWAWAY M5AN JOKE, '3WEETIE . ME? , DOCTOR SMOCK YOLJ 'J'Zfii C'LJEii IN SLJJ'ZCSEii~Y IN FIV!ii MINIJ1"EiiS, M~S. Pl'f'1"5 ( ; 15.ASY.,, . ' ' ' T•~<il • M••k llet"lt•t.il A. MtN•1,111h1 Syn•i<•I• '''""' PO YOU 'f'H INK ISVS: J'2Y1"H I NCS WI(,.(,. GO SMOO"THL-Y? · r!>ESCALJSEii YOUJ'Z . POC'fO~ IS Pit. SMO.;K .:. '. 1.-IKIO . IHIS, WILLli:? ,. YOLJ 'VEii cso-r ·Pl<'. SMOCK-1-r'i...1- r!>Eii L-IKe !SA-r"INCS CAN PY .' =--,.,.. ' "-\.. ~· t ' ' -t • • ~ • • l ~ , . • . o • MADE -- . IT OUT IONIGHT, EH? VAST AUDIENCE ? , '-'~SH ; Bi;JT IIY- AF~All:> WHEN l ~o HOME 1 MAY ~ST SAWED IN TWo ... By George Lemont Wl1"H P~. SMOCK , YOU '~e;: A SHOO·IN , L-A PY.' Cr,~ ' ,~ i•t ~ Ii . - . ~- I ~ II ~ AND HEii PIPN '1" ASK FC~ HIS MONS:>" UP F~ON1".' II ' v e;A H' oi..., DOC SMOCK WON'1" MI SS ON "TH I S ON e;: .1 ,_ _ __, if_{ II ~ ., II .. I I I } - \ • 5-5' wµILE I'M TALKING TO MC!S. 5'/llT\4 '>Ol.ili'E , I TO SIT STILL .(>.NO .ef QUIET--NO RUNNING Al'lOUND -• D:lN'T TOUCH AN'ITHING --NO NOISE --& GCxx::> ·, CHILDRE.N . • -.. " -- }1 '1 . " ,, '. •, ' ~'\) '• u ,, ' I " ~---- L '---·--' I • l '· rr'-O-::tMt-ELE~EED~by TomK.Ryan. IT'S PROPER ~OR A 6ENTLE°MAN ~----r:f-,:;::;,..,._--~"""""'""' lO HEL P A L.A17V ,-"'- ' .. ' HI, POLL! HOW GALLANT OF , YOU lb CUSH ION. MY .FALL-'Wit1~ YOUR VE:RY ~OP '! YOU'VE WON MV HEART ANl7 HANl71 SU&AR ! --. - 5 ·5 c I ><><>L E~'"5' LOOK HOW BIG 'IH b MOON • IS -ro N I GHI, VROfE.':>50R ~ DOWN FROM HER ~ HORSE! ~ \70N'T 60 'WAY! AFTER MY 5HOPPIN& I'll !?E !?ACK ANP WElL POP OVER TO 1Hf. JUSTICE'.. OF THE PEACE'S ! Wf .WfRE BETlER OFF WITH THE r:XTF\A RIB ' ~ •• I .. • • - .•.·· •... r .... 1 •• •,...,~··· • •··· ••••• ei 1; ... ., ••••••• i;,.~,,. .... 1 ... 1~;• \\ ..,14 ... ~ ........... ,.·-, o• .I .. · -· ... ' . .. FUl.L.? 1sN'1' rr ALWAYS FULL? ., . • • ,J..,. ·!. -:: \ :-L . <> +<-.... v ~ -J:,.. JJ ·~ :- UNf'ORTUNATl.LY, No. You si::i::, IT HAS TH IS SLO'W LliAK... ,. ''"---~ • • -"' I '1' ·' -l'M SURE: Yo u'vi:: -SO 1'AU-l MONTH THIO'Y HAV£ TO FILL IT IHE'!<E's A WORD FOR AN E'XPLANATION LIKE: THAT, .. NOllCC:.D HOW II GRADUALLY SHRINKS .... ' ' • WITH 1-lfLILIAI\ -ro /(E'CP IT LI P lH ~Rf:. .... HENC E THE'.· l::OXPR[;~SI QN, "FLH.L.. MOO N" .. -LUNARCY OH URG • 'n; • -""'''· I ' ' .i.,_ ·r t ... ·~·-:.. I ' l ' ',,. " '" ·'•· • ' , ' ' ' ' I ' ' " . . . , . . . " . .. . ' ... '" '" ''•· • "' CAN YOU 1'RUST YOUR EYES? Thttf' arr 1t le1st 11i~ diffr1- r11r t !!. 111 dr1w1njl detail.~ between Top And hottnm p1ntb. llo"'' qu1l·kly can ynu find them? Check 1nswrr~ with those bt!IO"''· "1 111•~1111 \I J.of'ltUnN 'II ·1u1in;1w •1 ,.l<lll 't; ·p .. 11011150,1,.1 ~' !'"'.~ .. ·p,.UO!PVlfl "" "lflltl\ll ·r. '111"'<1111 ~ J .. l~lll 1UlljJ•.t "7, "l t1 1"1UI SI ....... "" I ·~·"'"'"Jl'fl MIXED SINGLES · -' HANO so1n1•n11l' a p1r ,·c-of ropc- ,,r ''\ lrni;:.1h 111 ,I nn~. 11 .,~·e hun hnl1l ,nnr l'l11l 1111'.1..:h h.11111. ('h.il - lcn)?r hirn tn IH' a lo.not 111 11 ""'llh- ---BULLETIN BO A RD --- .AGING PROCl::SS! Ask 1 fr1enrl lo adrl the fir,t and fourth dil[it..'i of tkr year in which hf' wa.~ born, and to multiply lh• rr.i;u lt by I 0, Now, hi.VP. him •rht !ht> th•rrl riie;it anrl reveal thv rP11ult. You t•an now n:tmr the ye;i r he wa.~ born. l·lnw'! 'I'""'" "' <; l. I ' Ii !I ltl<>JJ '".:; l 1n<i I'll • I J.>•JJfln~ '•"·""''• ""t .. ,,,.,,.M .Lc>t 's .~ay \\'. 'l'rrmhiPll'n1·p i.~ A i;uh-'lilulf' fnr \V. ShakrspParP. \Vhn. thrn, 11rr !hr.~,. 11utOO~: J,_ Autow11d, 1-1 . 'l'11ll1·h11.p, 1~. J.auahstickf'r'! ·~uJn1.11-"•1t 1.11u~'l1•N ji u• "'"1t-'1ano•1 AJ\r~n '11"•••.'1 "·"'•'! • Riddle·me-lhis: \Vhich &ame do clocks play'! Gn•P up'f How ahout Tick Tock Toe! •Math 'l'Pasf'r : If I hAd hJlf Ali much monP~ 11.\?aln a.~ I have now, I'd have $1.20. What have I nnw'! ·11111.>.J ~l'l•!~ '·•••1 I "111 Ir 11111): µn 1·1 t hc.r end. r-7"'.""-;:-:--• 'A'hc11 hr prnle~t' lh;it t /11, '' un pn,qt'llr, rra1.·h Piii IJUH'kl~· with hn:h h.111d' .1~ ~hnvr. i;:.1 :1~r r.-<\'"' th1• rnd' ,1n1l pull 111 r,J\/t-"'- nppo~tlt' d1n!l'l1nn,, A knn~ w1ll f0rm . J"hc-tn1;k '' tn p11~1- llfln hnth h.in1b r11<1..:t - ly .i• 'hnwn. (1111."\' your I rll'lld h:1' uh,1·rv1•d yn11r 'lll"l"(.''·'· i:r:1h hold nf tlh' rnp1· ,tnd .:h;1llc-nj.!I' h1111 fn [j~;~~[~~~~~~~~d~~~~~ 1tl1pl11·o11r ynut ,1,·!11111. ( 'h<1nr"' arr hr wilt l.11 L · u11lr'' hr rt·n1r111hrr' u1 1'\.1,·1 Ort ,111 h1'""' >'{lu FUNNY S1'Uf'F! Our artist cl1ims there are more thlln ll dozen l"r•1,,cJ your drm~. clowns in the scenP 11bove.Can you find. llli many as 10 or them'! • ' B 'I 9 9 WELL BEGUN ... Arlrl these cnlnrr. neally fnr ll tudden picture 11bovp: t -Red. 2-1.L hlu~. 3-Yt>llnw. 't -LI. brown. 5-Fle!>h. 6-Purpl~. 7-0k. hrown. R-Lt. vern. 9-0k . rrrPn. 10-Black. SPEllBINOER! SCORE JO points for using all the ----+---- letters in the word below to form ----+----two camplete wordii: SWINDl,f.R -. . . -... THEN ~re 2 points each for 111 ----+---- word., of four letten or more ----+----round amoni thf' letters. Try ht tcere; •t le•R S..t pnl.nti. ____ _... ___ _ 'f'.'•1•'0.0.1,.,.. :1111!.tll"''' ....... 115 ..... By Brown and Ca ss on DON T YOIJ 5UIZB . LfNDA .. K'NO(.() MJ Y OTM&lt. 50/\JGG , BoOM6'2 ?~~ G0006t,!e; , OL.' PAINT, I 'M L..fAv'IN ' ~;I Ci.J €Y€NN6 .. W€LL , WOW ABOLJ7: .. ~ WHi::N I /> WAS 1210/N ' Ti-1€ $T12fC:TG OF lAr<eoo .. Oi.l 81ZDTUflZ 1 g arz ... ~ 01.J ll-IAT STr<AW8€li'.l<cf fZOAN . OL-1 TL-IAT ST~AW8£f<Qr/ f<OAf\I ,., 1.' v'f GOT 5PIJl2'5 'THAT JIN GL E JANGLE JI /llGL..£ .. DON'T !.IOU KNOtu Ai'J1t n.l1NG M012E: Wl1M IT '? AIRCIHI II IE IS Th'AT THE I'M GOING AS COSTUM[ YOU GENERAL CUSTER.I RENTED FOR YOU KNOW .... Tt-tE.JUNIORS' "CUSTER'S LAST ''WESTERN-STAND".' -~ r ~ I 'D DESCRIBE YOU MORE A S A CUSTARD FRUIT STAND.' ARE YOU 601NGTO WEAR AN ARROW S HIRT? '1bLJ M€AN .. Ti-IAT'~ 11? N'Olll~ C(OLJ MfAN 10 SAY Ll'3T€NING TO SOM€ OF 'TH£ GOL 0£N OL DI f <& WA5N'T rur-J ? _,..,, 8oB 1T'5 TH€ i::1125T 11Mt r €v'EAZ GOT" i:1A OOL..€- 60Q€ PK'OM A CANO€ 121oe ! = - AS PRINCIPAL, I TH INK IT'S F ITTIN G I GO AS A GENERAL/ WHAT'S 7H/S? THE "ROLLING STONE" OF THE PRAIRIE ? CUSTER HAD LONS BLONDE. HAIR, DIDN'T ~- ~ H E'>' OFFICE = HERO DANC E'? I=~. . " DO YOU THINK I LOOK WH ICH PAR.T'? LIKE THE PART IN IHE ... HIS HORSE? ERROL FLYNN MOVIE '?11'1---~~ :f -, ~ • ARCHIE YOU MADE ;~~~~ 0~€ ELSE ,.Y_..E....,S~ I GENEAAL CUSTER! SIR, • ABOUT I W El\!TY OF US~ARE GOING AS INOIANS! ~-~ .. ~ -~ S ITTING BULL? cm-'t~8,;~~? A11..'C.RAFTOWNfl?S Q£COG'ONUM8ERS , • • O~ RADIO AND EL ECT"QONJC C.EASl. \' "2>';"-f ~U5 T"1ATE. TMIEV E'S BY A~~ING ~ UNIT 'S WIT~ 'SECCl:E T ll="ASrEMINC.S, .I SEE A~\ OMINOUS CLDUD ) CROSSING ~UR PATH!j ~ -----....\ )'-..,. - \.. ' ,.... /.;;>...,_ ~ -.. ~i ll ~rrf~ Tne Bloops se emed Now happy wit h what th eyl/ t hey had, Wa lt. till go me you t:Ju1l t ','Ours. one v-1~:,-f , be ttec ,_-..,, ~· "-eh 1 . _,, .,.:' ~~,.rr -_c~"' • --: GORDO "B IG BRASS ALWAVS BREAKS IN 0 1-4 ON~ 0~ TME R~GULAR CMANNELS . WELL MONITO R ALL Tl.411EE :' • ' Walt , have you noticed whats· qoing Jn next door 1 No, 1 hear h~E•actly 1 wants one How do exact ly li ke you know~ yours ' r i I . ' ' I. I \ I~-·t i, 1 / ~ 7J; :--c ~ ,' ··~ . I I ,' ~ ( (. . ., ~ I ~I, ~ ;,, '"'"' I) ' • °Ri;t._:_ \ \,. e / f 1' V~'-J _; HU r,<R'>' W Iii-I Ti4AT iLJNIC f I.1LL. f>E 1.AIE FOi< THI:: 'NAr<.! 'NH'/ e o Fl)SS'/f WA'R!5 NOif:-A PA'f<.I'/ f •• • • WAtz. 15 A e>IJMMl::lef AND SO • A~i:: HAM ACIO~s r • I 1M' &!-AD IT WAS ~AA~ ~:rn .. f:.' • GET COMFORTABLE . ~IS COMMEQC.IALS AR E S MOQ'T, B UT OUR COMPUTER IS F'AST. -OKAY. DOC! T"ATS W"AT I PAV l..IE'R F'O R: II=' M V SEER SAYS t'M G'10t.l~DED. IM GROUNDED! NO SO.WMIL'E TRACY ANO l='QIENO~ SIT ~r:lOtJGM A ~RUITl..ESS E\JEl>JI~. A DETACl-&ABLE TV ANTENNA 1-JANCS UNUSEO IN AN ABANOOMl!O SILO. -E ...... C R V$Tll<1 .. -:- AWAITING ANOTMER: NIG~T. -- ' ' Hes ne12r t:Je2n Not But we still dont know who left t hat side inside m~ c:ab.n I to your and neither t1~·~· J kno wledqe. Mrs. Bioo p. -~ II/alt. door of you rs open, 'lou 'NH ~N WIL.L '/Ol-MAC.f.IOS 0r<.0'/'/ L)p AND STOP 0.1..0i:<IFY IN0 \/101--t:ONQ:: 'f \i----, ...._____ \. do we ?;~ - ~(~ /, -~ --~ ( "~ 1¥'l;;i_ I ~-'/ ": (. By Gus Arriola RE E:NACT- IN& ii-IE. FAMOUS CINCO DE MAY0, 1862. D~FE:NS.E ~ATil-E OF PU B.Sl-A !SA Ir< I 13l)TE: 10 ctlr<. NATIONAL- 1-\~ROESf • TAKJ:: OFF TH05f; R.A"1S AND «1E::T IN "TllAI Tt.J.!5 f • ., IF YOU ~REAK A 1-~~, DOl-l1T COME RUNN ING 10 M'G:' ,, . 0AAAD P;()'{f • I I + , I I • Fl ra Lo R T EN 'O so On word (he Dally one in It ha pp If yo plac tho