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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-05-13 - Orange Coast Pilot• • ooe Ill srae • Dower' Shore:~~ . West~liff Hit By Cat Bnr·glar~s MONDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 13, 1974 VOi.. ''' NO. l:U. I SICTIONS, U PAGIS' His Finest Hour .. :\Vinston Chtlrchill, grandson of the late British statesman, stands ·i?side a huge bust of Sir Winston Churchill while attending a wivate viewing of the Churchill Centenary Exhibition at Somerset House in London. N ewp grt Police Probe Rash of Cat Burglnr~es Newport Beach police are investigating a rash or cat burglaries which apparently ~took place early today in lhe Westcliff !ind Dover Shores areas. !.;."We've had five reported th is 'morning," a police spokesman said. ~-·lie said the first two cases investigated were at the home of Jack Harris, 1934 .ftlghland Drive, and the home of Artyv ~1. 1808 Commodore \Vay, both In ·wcstcurr. : A' tho ~larris home , a burglar had ~rcntly entered through a rear porch .door and made of( with fl50 in cash while the rC31dcnts were sleeping. The burglary took pince between 2 a,m. and 5:30 a.m. A burglar entered through a den 'vihdow al the Tlsdall home . -police said, maklng off v.•lth. $89 In cash and several credit cards. el50 v.hl le rtSldents v.·erc sleeping. The thief had entered the 111\'mc •omellmc between midnight ar<I 7 a"'m. Police said \ate this (Tloming they ore still investigating the additional three reported burglaries. They said so far they have no clues as te whether the same person or persons v.-ert responsible for the thefts. TWO LINES SOLD GLASP A R DI NG HY Here's an ad p1aeed by a 11man of few words" In the Dally Pilot that really did \he job: 9' GLASPAR DINGHY $45. (Phone No,) The nnt caller bought \he dinghy. You can get your advertising job done, too , •i th ;•a rew words In \he rtC: place" In \he classuted 11tttlon o! the Dally Pilot. Dial \he direc\ line to resulta. Phone 642· 5678. Kissinger .Gets Boos In Israel JERUSALEM (AP) - I s r a e 1 i demonstrators booed Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger today and Premier Golda l\1eir's government held an urgent cabinet session on K issinger's detennined truce negotiations to end the war with Syria. Jerusalem sources said Israel would surrender no more captured Syrian land in exchange tor the disengagement pact Kissinger seeks, but the cabinet kept its. deliberations secret and a government minister said only that negotiations would continue. Kissinger is to Oy back to Damascus Tuesday with Israel's latest terms. b11t indications were the Israelis were refusing to budge beyond the undisclosed truce offer they made three days ago. About 100 protesters -Some of them pioneer settlers on the Golan Heights within sight of the dail y artillery war with Syria - shouted out the feelings of many Is r a e Ii s by yelling "Boo lo Kissinger" as the secretary's car arrived at l\1rs. ~feir's office· for the morning talks. Doi.ens more Israeli settlers defiantly moved into war4>1asted houses in the abandoned Golan capital of Quneitra lo prevent the government from relinquishing the ghost town for a truce treaty. Israel has reportedly offered to turn over half of Quneitra to U.N. forces as a buffer zone, and permit civilian Syrian res ktents to return to the town they ned during the 1967 Mid~ast war. The exact official terms of the Israeli offer are still secret, however. It wu the 16th day of Kissinger's Mideast mission, m a k I n g the diseiigagement quest th e I o n g e st diplomatic effort he bas made outside the United States since he became secretary of State. Israeli sources said earlier the gap in the disenga gements negoliauons with Syria is as wide as ever despite a report by Kissinger of some progress toward an agreement. Meanwhile, Israeli warplanes struck south Lebanon ,today, and eyewitnesses said the ancestral village of United States Sen. James G. Abourezk took the brunt of lhe attack. The Lebanese defense ministry said roor penoos wer< klUed In K!elr village, · inctudlng a woman, her sl1-month-old son ar<I elght·ytar~ daughter: rive other chiklrtl'l between 2 and a years old were wounded . .end five houses were (Ste KISSINGER, Page t) B ·oston Poli~~JDen I Streak Ni·ght Club~ Wreak SI~OOO Loss Dor111 Beior1n Coeds Lose Higli Court PlelL \V ASHING TON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court today refused to hear a plea that universities discriminate against women students when they require them to obey dormitory curfews not imposed on men studeli.ts. , The hig"a court let stand a lower co urt decision endorsing the curfew imposed by Eastern Kentucky University. The U.S. Circuit Court in Cincinnati agreed with the university that the curfew was a proper step designed to protect women from harm and that no similar rules were necessary to protect men. A university senior from Lexington, Ruth Robinson, challenged the curfew as unconstitutionally d.i'scriminating irr a class-action suit she filed as a freshman. The Richmond, Ky .. school allows men dormitory residents, re- gardless of age or class, to come and go as they please. Boston Cops Damag·e Night Club in Streak PORTSMOUTH, R.I. (AP) - A Portsmouth motel owner says a group of Booton policemen ran naked through his Ramada Inn night club and took part in a disturbance that resulted in about $1,000 damage. Threat of Dcatl1 Jails Santa Ana S11spect in l\l esa Charges of assault v.·ith a deadly weapon are pending today against a 41- year..old santa Ana man who police allege threatl'fled to kill his ex-girl friend Sunday during a scuffle at her C-Ostf MeS3. home. Donald E. Baker , 1010 N. Gales St., is being held in Costa l\tesa city jail ag'ajnst lt0,000 bail and the gun he allegedly trained on Mrs. Dollee Campbell was taken as evidence. . Police arrived at l\lrs. Campbell's home on 1121 El Camino Drive While the confrootatioo was still in progress. They had been alerted by the woman's current boyfriend, Charles C. Twalte. who had been upst.alrs and overheard t h c argument. Mrs. C.mpbctl told police or!ie<n that during hls visit Baker had pulled the \vettpon out of his coat pocket, cocking the hammer and announcing, "I'm going lo kill }'OU." She said she thought originally \he v.<tapon wa.s unloaded bot I a t e r examination of a revolve'r police 58)' ~·as dropped on a chest of dra"'·ers when they onlered 8"ker to "drop the gun" revealed six cartridges In the cylinder. ' Peter Stilphen said about two dozen of the JOO Bo.~ton policemen stayin g al the motel Friday night participated in the . alleged incidents. The policemen came here to march in a police parade Saturday. Jean Lawler, motel manager, said she called local police twice and state police once aboul the matter, but no arrests were made. A spokesman for the Boston Police Department, Frank Carpenito, said today the department is looking into the n1atter. Stilphen said he is coMidering filing a complaint with the Boston police commissioner's office. l\lrs. Lawler claimed at least haU a dozen policemen stripped at the side of the motel 's swimming pool within si ght of the night club aud ience and jumped in. Other police ran naked lhrough the night club, with wme going up on the stage and others jumping on tables, J'l.lrs. Lawler and Stilphen charged. Three or four naked policemen also came in and stood in the motel lobby at the front desk, l\1rs. Lawler said. "That's not streaking, that's indecent exposure," she said. l\frs. Lawler claimed 1hat some of the police arrived at the motel that artemoon drunk and continued drinking through the night. Pictures and other niotel property were tossed out of second story wlndO\\S 1tnd firecrackers "'·~e set off in hallway!, Stilphen soid. ln,ulatitfn was ripped from the ceilings and a security camera wat tom frotn Its stand. l\1 rs. La"•ler said. A llquo r cabi°'1 In the nigh t club ~·as broken and some liquor was stolen. 11he lidded. "The only complai nt "''e had was !See POLICE, Pag• !I , Statement An11ou11ced At Hearing WASHlNGTON (APJ -A Watergat e assistant prosecutor testified today that he never offered California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke immunity from prosecution if he cooperated in the m investigation. Joseph J . Connolly made the statement during a hearing before U.S. Distri ct Court Judge Barrington Parker nn defense motions to dismiss the perjttry case against Reinecke. 1£ the case is not dismissed, the defense attorneys planned to argue that the trial should ~ moved to California. One of Rein€cke's three attorneys, James E. Cox, contended that the defendant was "misled and entrapped by agents or the govern ment",. during interviews with th e special Watergate prosecutor's office. Connoliy, und er cross-examination on the witness stand. denied that there was any discussion with frank Pagliaro Jr., Reinecke's attorney at that time, about oossible im munity from prosecution if Reinecke told all he knew about an alleged offer from <1n I'M' subsidiary to bring the 1972 . Republican National Convention to Sa n Diego. "l don 't remember !\tr. Pagliaro m1ilring any suggestions that h e (ReineckeJ not be indicted," said Connofiy. But Connolly said "it was clear to me tSce REINECKE, Page %) • Orange Coast Weather l\fost ly sunny Tuesday, believe it or not. \l.ilh warmer tempera- tures. to boot. llighs in the Jow 70s at the beaches rising to 75 inland, Overnight IO\l.'S in the SCls. INSllll•: TOOi\ l' Spiro Ag11e1() Is in Athens this week, allegedly looki'ng for a 1ob with Greek sh ipowners. Greeks. who cheered hi.t ar· rtool iti 1971. appear to tiol rec-- ognize r11e former U.S. vice pres- ident toda y. See story, Page 4. 1t111111 1t •M Ltflftf't tt I,, M. loY• t Me"" Tf'M 1t Clli .. r11I• I Ml'flt' lf C:lfU..llM 21<16 N•llMfll Ntw• t Ct,...lct II OAllM C91111" 1 (,.l,,,..,,. II IYl'llt PtriW tt 0..111 Httlcts 1 • '""' 1..,11 ••• ,..,.,.. 1"1"9 • ,..... 11Ut11.1tt lt-11 IE'1l~ti:.i-t It ,,...lllM lt l"llltMt 1 .. 1 TllM,_., tt .. ....... lttur9 ........ • ""'*~ w.tMin ...... .... ' It IN lffWtn f ·-i114'Wt 4 • r • ' _2~AILY PILOT ___ S ______ M __ oo_d_cay_, M.1~:_1q74 Ul"I Ttl .. llol• • • • than in frolic. ~lale cubs were born to Holly at the zoo one month ago. Playful lion cub at the Denver Zoo gro\'-'ls with great ferocity and slaps a paw in effort to wake his lazy brother, clearly 1nore interested in 40 winks ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Ruchell ~lllgee Changes illincl SAN JOSE f AP) -Citing ''harassment and intimidation.'' black convict Ruchell l\1agee asked a judge today for permission to withdraw a guilty plea t o aggravated assault c h a r g e s stemmlng from the bloody 1970 Jl.tarin Courthouse shootout. Santa Clara ~· Superior Court Judge Ylilliam A. Ingram scheduled a hearing Wc<lnesday on l\1agee's argun1ent for the plea ~hange. A judge and three other men were killed in the shootout. "I wish to withdraw my1 plea of guilty on groWldS that it las LlTllawCul and illegal," ti.tagee told the coort. Inflation Hurts State's Surplus In Tight Budget SACRAMENT(),;(AP ) -Inflalion is giving state government a $188.3 million shot in the ann, state Finance Director Verne Orr said today. But inflation also i.5 partly responsible for a new $78.8 million drain in the slate's pocketbook because of rising J\JediCal <:osts. That, and other cost hikes, trims the new budget surplus back to about $100 million. Orr said prices in California have been increasing thi s year at the equivalent of an 8.8 percent annual inflation rate. Jn the short run, that is easing the fiscal pains in Gov. Ronald Reagan's tight $9.8 billion 1974-75 budget proposal. The ·biggest Increase in state income is an estimated $100 million hike in sales tax revenues, ~·hich is a direct result of I inflation. PeTsOnal"income taxes are up $70 mill ion over earlier estimates. and all other Income sources are up $16.3 1 million. Orr said. "Spurred on by inflati on. California's economy and that of the nation arc I, booming,'' Orr told a joint meeting of the Assembly and Senate budget·v.Titin g . committees. I i r I . ' Russians Threatcnc<l SPOKANE. Wash. (AP) -Police evacuated the Russian pavilion Sunday at Expo '74 after a tele phoned bomb threat. Police and Soviet pavilion security agents searched the pavilion but found no trace of a bomb, an Expo spokesman said. 01.t.MGI COAST sr DAILY PILOT I•• Oro"'J@ C.•» .t l':h, '"'"' ,...h '""'"'~"co­ l ....., !"°'No.,, p,.,,, "i>J'" ,,..,, try !hit 0r•"ll9 (.no\I Py~ '""' ,._,...,.,.., '\l!po111e ·~""'"' .,8 ""ti!••,..~ "''·"~'' •~•""'°~ '"dll~ b Co01• ....... W••"" '' 11•1 ' ><y<•l•"ll'On 6"111:~/r°""· l••n ~1·1•1 L•,.uno ;,.,, " I•,.,.,, '.o1d~••OO<• 11"~ t.o• Cl•m•·«• r ••• J·••~ f .,~ '"""" " •i"l!•• •• ,..,~·· "'1 '<>" '* ""'''''....., '''"'~.,, '"" ~"· ~·" l "~ ~·1nt•fM Pill>"" ''9 pl>"' " ., JlO 1'1~$! llf1l5tr,..\ Cotti.,...,. C.hle.tn • ~.11>1~ "'*"""'J w.~ • r .... .,..,,.r<1 1'\11o<"'' J1 ' " c.~1·1 \'.a. ...... _ •llll0..-·1'""*'l« 1, .. ,,.....,.,., 11 ,,~.,,. "'.....-.i·~t(M,• Offlct1 ~·"'-).Vlwt-811&·-N ..... ~811·~ 1>.'JN....-pnolflo"•·•~ l.,,,,,. 8w·~ 1~,,,....,, ,.,.,.,,. ,..,..,,,"OIOO'llHl<I' 1 n11~eo..:n9" . ...,.,~ $e~C.M-ft!• .IO!l""'1•\1W"''l>llle_, r.i.,h..-11141 ••2·4J2t _Cl•ttlfltd Ad•trtltlPMJ •42·5611 rrO"'W•l•IAl•U!b~•·,•l11Y,,.I!••" .,J,4420 ·" ~. ttr•, ~ Con i ~ e,.... Pl/l'f No-....... oft\111••·-~"'­.. ~IV-"'' NI .... ,.., lit ~ ........ ~....-ot~- ~~-'"""_,,, .. e.a..._ ~ '"..,_,,.,..., "arr•l1CIO~ .,,... t•OO_.,,,.., """i'*'W°'"'-t)CIC_., New H11nti11gton Harbour Robbery Probecl l1y Police lluntington Beach detectives v.·ere looking for clues today at the scene of the latest robbery to hit the exclusive commWlity of Hun tington Harbour. Police reported Friday that two gunmen tied up Deborah Uniack and her male visitor at 3332 Bounty Cicle on Gilbert Island at about 12 :30 p.m. before ransacking the house. The robbers fled v.·ilh a "'allet and about $33. The couple, unhurt, managed to get free after half an hour. Detective Richard Nolan sa id today the latest robbery doesn't appear to be conn~ted with a tv.·o-hour robbery- kidnaping incident involving four homes on Humboldt Island the week before. The description of the suspects in the latest crime doesn't match that of those men involved in the first lengthy escapade, he said. One of the gunmen Friday had a receding hairline, police said . The second Fro111 Page 1 KISSINGER. • • destroyed. A communique accused th e Israelis o[ aggression. Abourczk. South Dakota Democre1l, received a hero·s v.·elcome home in Kfeir last year during a tour of the i\tiddle East. The Israeli military command said i'·" air force made a 20-minute attack O!l Arab guerrilla concentrations just north of the Israeli-Lebanese border nea r ti.tt. Hermon. The command said all planes returned safely. Jn Damascus. the Syrian command repo rted that its troops engaged Israe1i forces in tank and artillery battles on 1\lt. llermon and along the 40-mile Golan Heights front for the 63rd day. Fron• Pagel POLICE ... noise," Lt. llenrv J. ~Hiler of the Port smouth stale Police barracks said . \Vhen state troopers arrived at the motel around 3:30 a.m. Sat urday, he said there \Vas no noise. just a few men drinking in their room'i. Five bottles of liquor v.'erc stolen from the cabinet he said, but investigation of the incident is a local po I ice respon sib ility. Port smout h Pol ice Chief John T. Pierce said. "There is going to be something done about this matter." Driver Arrested is described as having a must.ache. Nolan said he hopes to have more leads into the case after interviewing the \'ictims and neighbors and searching the area today. The men forced lheir way inside the home in the channel-laced community after acting as if they "·ere responding to a "for sale" sign outside and then pulling guns, police said. Patient Le.aves Hospital, Dies Of Heart Attack A heart patient v.·ho left Hoag f\temorial Hospital in f\ewport Beach Sunday afternoon against doctors orders collapsed and died later that afternoon or an apparent heart attack. Charles Rogers, 52, of Costa ?i-1esa, ~·as given emergency resuscitation at 5:30 p.m. in the parking Jot of the Market Basket at 3100 Balboa Blvd. in Ne\vport Beach. He v.•as then moved to the emergency room at Hoag, \\'here efforts 10' revive him proved unsuccessful. A hospital wakesman said today that Rogers had been admitted at noon Sunday suffering from chest pains. He \ras taken to a sub-intensive care unit ttut left against doctors orders at about 3 p.m., the spokesman sald. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Baltz Bergeron Funeral Home in Costa Jl.tesa. l\food Hardening • .\gai11st Nixo11 SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The mood ol the California public has hardened against President Nixon in the wake of the release of th e Watergate tape transcripts, the California Poll reporled today. A statewide survey or 738 adults sho...,·ed that a majority of the pulblic - 55 percent -said they believed Nixon knew and approved of the Water'gate affair or that he took an active part in the planning. Pollster J\lervin Field said 32 percent felt the President had some idea of what v.·as going on. v.•hile only 8 percent believed he knew nothing at all about it. Stolen Newport Auto Demolishes Park Shed A l<ite model luxury car stolen from a Xe"·port Beach restaurant demolished a cons1ruclion shed on Laguna Be8ch's i\·tain Beach Park early Sunday when the driver failed . to negotiate a curve on Coast lligh""·ay. Laguna Beach polict arrested Michael R. Dellinger. 22, of Washington. lie was ·booked on suspicion of grand theft auto and turned over to Ne-wport Beach authorilies. Extensive damage was done to the 1973 Cadillac Eldorado stolen from the parklng lot of the f"ive Crowns Restaurant. An estimated $2,000 damage was done to the tool shed and equipment belonging to t\.1allcrart, park C()ntractor. The automobile was regl!lt~red to a business firm in Alhambra. Police Sgt. Victor Sagan said the car, southbowld on South Coast highway at a high rate of speed, ripped out about 100 feet of fence and demolished the construcUon site shod. I, Although no drunk driving charges v.·ere lodged, police said the driver appeared to have been drinking. Cycle Helmet Latv Protested HARTFORD. CoM. (UPI) - l\1otorcycle enthusiasts, among them members of groups Jlke the "Hen·~ Angels." burned a hc!lmet In the state capitol parking lot to protest a new law requiring them lo wear the protective headgear. The bikers, who came Sonday from all over the state, al.so burned the traffic tickets they got on their way Into town for rldlna wlthoUt helmets. ' Findings on Tape GaR • . Will Be Made Public .. . t WASHINGTON IAP ) -U.S. District Judge Jolm J. Sirica said today he will make public in about tv.-·o \\'eeks the final re~rl by 1a panel of experts on the 1812· minute gap in a cruet.al \\lhite House \\'atergate tape. Th~ ga p occurred in a tape recording of a conversation betv.·een President Nlxoo and then-\\'hite House chief of staff H. R. l!aldeman on June 20, 1972. just three days after the break-in at the Democratic National headquarters in the Watergate office building in Y.'ashington. Sirica met for tv.·o hours toda y ~·ith representati\'eS of the \Vhite llouse spe~ial \Vatergate prosecufor Leo~ RUMORS, RUMORS EVERYWHERE ON CAPITOL HILL, Page 4 WHAT SHAKESPEARE 'SAID' ABOUT TRANSCRIPTS -Page 8 Ja~·orskl, and members of the experts panel. Then Sirica Issued this b r i e f statement: "The final com prehensive report of the court's advisory panel concerning the June 20, 1972 EOB (Executive Office Building) \Vhite House tape is to be printed as soon as possible fo r formal submission lo the court. .. Upon receipt of the report, it ""iii be entered in the publ ic record. .. The court ex pects to receive the report in approximately tv.·o v.·eeks. ·'There are no plans to conduct hea rings related to the report. u At e e t i n g ~ith reporters aflf'r the conference, Sirica shov.·ed an inch-thick document which he said was the final report. Ile "\li'Ould not comment on its content. Just before the meeting, ~1ichael lleckcr, the Stanford University exPf'rt v;orking on behalf of the \Vhite House. entered the court v.·ith papers he indicated were his report on the same tape. Slrtca would not comm ent on whether H~ker submitted a report to the court but said the White llouse v.·as free to discuss it. Sirica said tbe report covered the tape ,,;th the IB 'h·minutc gap but that the From Pagel REINECKE ... .. that \vhat .\1r. Pagliaro v.•anted v.·as tha t his client wouldn 't be charged." Connolly said he ~·amed Prigliaro that Reinecke could be indicted in the case. "Did you tell Mr. Pagliaro that the investiga tion \Yas proceeding rapidly and if Reinec ke wanted to cooperate he had better do it right away?" Conuolly 'vas asked. tape panel was continuing to v.'Ork for the court on other tapes. l{e declined to say how 111uch longer the panel would continue its "·ork . • meeting after he raised with the President "the steadily i n c re as i n i dru1nbeat of resignation talk .. , 1 .,,\, \\lelnbl'rger said he expressed the ho~ the President v.'Ollld not reslgn. and "he. said, 'Don't v.·orry. There isn't any chance of that v.·hatcver .' " ~leanwhile, i'\1xo11 v.·as quoted by a Cabinet n1e.mber today as declaring ''there isn 'I any chance ... ~·hatever" that he will resign from the nation's highest off ice. Secretary or llealth. EUucation and \\'elfare Caspar \\'einberger said Nixon made t11e de<.'la ration in an Oval Offi <.'C The secretary's con1mcnts Wierc ~ continuation -0f \Vhite !·louse a n d Adn1inist ration denials that Nixon ~ considering heeding increasing dcf1"l<llld,s for his resignalLon. Ha111burg~r 0 K~ Lag1111c111 Raps 'Naturol Foods' Frim Wire Services Ronald Deutsch, a LagWla Beach nutrition educator, thinks natural fooda are not as healthy as son1e people claim and says a hamburger with every· thing on it and an orde r or fr ies might be as nutrit ional as a school cafeteria lunch. DEUl'SCll OFFERED his theories over the ~'eekend at the Texas hiedlcal Association's 107th aruiual meeting in Houston. "As people push tov.'ard good nutrition they are misguided and they suffer for It," Deutsch said Satu'.rday before a gathering of pediatrici ans. "When we consume our important foods \\'e choose badly.'' He said the obsession for natural foods has become a fad with a boomer· ang effect. ''TllE \\'ORD 'natural' is the most attractive v.·ord in food marketing to- day.'' he said. "Quite often so called natural foods have no additives, bot they also have none of the needed vitamins and minerals." He said a recent study of three major fast food hamburger chalrui re- vealed a jumbo hamburger. French fries :ind 1na!led milk could have the same nutritional value as the a\·erage school lunch -armea\ he said is nutritionally lacking. But he said it is not the producers of foods "\li'ho are to blame. "J\1arkeling just responds to the misguided wishes of consumers," he said, Hearst Says Blindfold Bolsters Convictions • HILLSBOROUGH (AP) -P a I r..i <' i a Hearst's father says th e reported discovery of a blindfold that ma\' ha,·e been used on his daughter only cOnfirms his belief she is acHng undcr duress. "I've aJ"·ays k.no\\'Jl that she v.·as taken aga inst her "ill fron1 the v e r v beginning, II newspaper e X e C U t i Ve Randolph A. Hearst loid nev.·smen Sunday at his mansion in this San Francisco suburb. "I always felt she's been coerced.'' ~1iss Hearst,· 20, has said in t~'O taped mt>Ssagcs that she decided to join the terrorist Sym biooesc Uberatlon Arric/: v.hich kidnaped her Feb. 4. She is sought by the FB I as a material witness to an SLA b.1nk robbery, v.ilich v.-i tness to ID joined in voluntarily . ' Parents' Murder The blindfold is one of the Items which The Chica go Tribune said Sunday Wll found by federal Investigators in a Ma1 J raid on a San Francisco apartment that had been used by the SLA . ., The prosecutor replied tha t he did not have any recollcctton of making tha t remark. \Vhen Cox presScd for a yes or no answer. c.nnolly said. "I didn"t make Chara:e Dropped a statement that it was a now or never v The FBI has declined comment on the report., v.·hich quoted federal soorces M saying: that a bloodhound trained to pick up Jl.'l.i!S Hearst's scent identified tho bHndlold. made of sponges. Other itenw.· reportedly found included a bag possibl.y usecl as a face covering. ' situation." Judge Parker has set the trial date for SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -ltte July 15, but Reinecke repeatedly said he parents of a boy v.·hose mum mified bodv v.·ants the trial compl eted before voters v.·as found In their back)•ard ha ve decide on his bid for the GOP nomination pleaded no contest lo charges of June 4. disposing of human remains Ylithin city Reinecke has pleaded innocent to the limits. perjury counts and charged that the Daniel Harrington. 35, and his v.1ife. nidictment .,.,.as politically motivated. Maria Theresa, 33, originally v.·ere Reinecke, 50, contends that it would charged with murder. The body of their cost him at least SI0.000 to bring 20 son Dean. 6, wa s found cement.ed in a Hearst said he had not been notlfied by the FBI of any such findings, but added '"It's not surprising they found it." .'. He also.said. "I'm not encouragtd," by the report. "I v."Quld be a dnmn sight more encouraged if they ~·ould get her back." .. Bov, ;{, Suffocates defense witnesses to \Vashington and that planter box ~·ith a tedd y bear he should be judged by his peers in The char.it v.·as dropped because TRACY (U PI ) -Three-year-okt Califon1la . pathologists could not determine cause o! Raymond 1'.1oreno died Sunday when be Once vie~·ed as the leading contender the boy 's death. closed himsel f into an old refrigerator. in the C-alilornia GOP primary, Sentencing v.•as set for June 25 in North The boy's body ~·as found ln the Reinecke's :itanding In public opinion District J\1unicipal Court here. The refrigerator five hours after 8 search po!lshs slipped r sincc he was indicted offense Is punisha.9Je by a $500 fine, six began for him near his home south of April 3. months in jail or f>Oth . here. ------------------------------· ' ' UPI T•l ..... lt Governt1ae1at Wo,.k Flow "Joe, did you turn on that fire hydra nt?" "Neh, 'I'm just standin' here watch in' it." "Aren 't you afraid it will flood the street?'' "Nah, it's not my department. l1y foreman's over on the next street." • I Thus was a slice of government Ille recently in ~Id Montreal, Canada. The water Is clearly going through bur lhc mail may be another question.. • Ge .i)clion , S?ddlebac campus student re expected trustees Trustees unoffi cial policy en controver on the sa different But Tru that a fin· afler a s procedure Jl.1eanwh tlc Assoc· ptoceed S:lddlebac dim pus. " 'Several would ha speakers' years ha contention ttustees. The "hether stud en I brought Trustees The p roonths a Voting y Brannon . 11-vision, 11elieve t q:illege s •Other i p.m. mee ~ -Discu r!evision t at com ~ -Consi funds u program. -Re po Associat budget a -Dis services Sad Off 'Fa A coo newest o YJ\.tCA , i Titled program among t way to being pa Y111CA dancer police s friends i safety. Kirov by offi ex pre s (Edit i1i a se for tltr College ,~ :'It ll. ~ iFi. that ca ~the vol ~~ aci1vt • "lf rabble i.ntcres ~· w1aer TbC • ~addleback • • ~Policies Get Airh1g ,.i>ction on ty,·o policies affecting S~ddleback College students -rules on campus speakers and a non-voting · student representative on the board-is expected tonight at the reguar board of trustees meeting. Tru.st_ees lhave already given their unoff1c1al approval to a revised speakers policy ending the requirement that any controversial speaker must be balanced on' the sarr.e platform with a speaker of a different persuasion. But Trustee Norrisa Brandt requested that a final vote on the revision be ma~ after a second reading as a' n1atter of procedure. Pi.1eanwhile, trustees gave leaders of ttie Associated Student Body the okay to ptoceed v.•ilh pla ns for "Up With 91.ddleback \Veck" which began today on OOmpus. 'Several of the programs featured Would have been limited unClcr the old speakers' policy rule, which through the years has been a recurrent bone or contention between students a n d ttustees. \The second student-related i t em . \fhether or not to ha\'e a non-voting ~udent member on lhe board,· is being brought up for reconsideration by trustees Norrisa Brandt and Hans Vogel. The proposal ~·as defeated 3 to 2 t\\'O months ago with Mrs. Brandt and Vogel Wting yes. \\'ith lame duck trustee Alyn Brannon. a strong opponent of the policy ~vision, now in jail, Brandt and Vose! ~lieve they may get a different vote, a ~liege spokesman said. ; Other items on the agenda for the 8 J1.m. meeting include: l -Discussion of a possible policy revision to end compensatory attendence at commencement by graduates. : -Consideration or applying for federal funds up to $41.000 for a veterans program. -Report by representatives of the Associated Student Body on their ASB budget and parking fees . -Discussion of the school's eomn1unity services budget Saddleback's Y Offers Cour se in 'Family Focus' A course in family dynamics. the newest offering of the Saddleback Valley YMCA , is scheduled to start May 22. Titled "Family Focus." the six-session program is based on t~ premise that among the skills people develop on their way to becoming adults, the skills fo r being p.'lrents are neglected. . Y1\1CA spokesmen said "In a time of crisis and untold pressures on the family as a Wlit. the course offers a positive technique for dealing with the intricacies of parenthood." The instructor will be \Vilson Gilinsky. executive rurector of the Saddleback Y. He has just returned from a training program in family Focus and transactional analysis "'hich forms the basis of the program. ~1ore infonnation on the program may be obtained by C'alling the Y at 8.10-Yli.1CA. Russ iau Dancer llel<l LONDON (AP) -Russian ballet dancer Valery Panov was called to a poliCi! station in Leningrad today and friends in London said they feared for his sa~ty. The former star of Leningrad's Ktrov ballet company has been hounded by officials for two years sinCi! he expre§ed a wish to emigrate to Israel. Beating Victi11a Recove1·i11g Robert Hanson , the 10-year-old Oakland news boy who was savagely beaten over two n1onths ago and given only a three percent chance of survival. is con1ing along just fine. Here Robert enjoys car races with his 5-year-old sister, Jennifer. slot Ma1·tinis Probably I-lar111 Stomach, Researchers S.ay flOt:STON. Tex. IAPI -Those tv.·o or --··the stomach lining is rotted away by the three 1nartinis you have before lunch or dinner may make you feel great, but . . they also may be killing off part of your stomach. according to tv.·o rnedical researchers. Dr. Linda L. Shanbour. a University of Texas physiologist, and Larry L. Tague, a research associate, said studies of animals show that rapid consumption of cocktails causes the lining of the stomach to erode and start bleeding. The researchers based their comment!': on laboratory studies done with dogs. but Dr. Shanbour said she felt the effect •·probably occurs in humans also." The alcohol itself ls not doing the mL&chief, the researehers said in an interview. The alcohol breaks down a complex transportation system within cells whi ch normally carry acids into the stomach. As a result the ackis start acting on the ~stric mucosa. or stomach lining. acid and hemorrhaging occurs. "If it v.·ere not for the rapid regenerative capacity of the gastric mucosa." said Tague. '·the incidence of perforation and bleeding \\'Ould probably cause ethanol !alcohol / lo b:: classified as a poisonous material.,. The damage is healed 1\•ithin 48 to 72 hours. they said. but v.·iU recur with the next binge of drinking ... Erosion of the stomach membrane may be the primary cause of gastritis, an ailmenl she described as .. one of the major symptoms of !he daitv drinker." '.\lorning-after habits of niany drinkers nierC'ly aggravate the ailment , said Tague. l\1ost drinkers suffering a hangover vo'ill reach for an aspirin-based drug. "Aspirin after drinking heavily is actually the v:orst thing you could do," said Tague. "Here you've got a mucosa 1 stoniach lining) trying to repair itself and aspirin aggravates the problem." 'S ite 25 ' Sc 1iool lri lrvirie Area Still 1Va meless . Site 25, a new elementary school being built by the Irvine Unified School Distrh .. '1 in College Park, needs a name. For tv.·o consecutive meetings, 1he board of education has tussled \\'ith the problem of picking a name that is suitable, pronouncable and retains a Spanish flavor. At its last meeting. the board requested suggestions from residents to add to its list of possibilities v.•hich include: University Terrace. University Village. Terrace Village, Park Terrace. Ranch TerraCi!, Ranchito, Rodeo, Children's, The Hayloft, The School, La Escuela de los Ninos, The Corral. \\'illiam F. Fischbach. Susan B. Anthony. Corey's Corral, Vista, Leaming T.~e, ~1odjeska and Gabrielino. A flame for Site 25 \Yil l be se!ecied at the board's !\-lay 22 meeting. ' Within 30 minutes after consumption of two or three martinis. they said, part of Coiv Chip To ss Recor<ls N otc lied Losing Streak~ ATLANTA (UPI) -Two ~1ercer University students claim the world's cow chip tossing title tor both men and women. Sylvester Sekyere. 19. of Ghana. Africa. tossed one of the deodorized and dehydrated chunks 229 feet and Debbie Strycula, 20. of nearby Decatur, heaved one 106 feet Saturday. Sponsors of !he charily fund-raising affair Friday said the old records of 161.9 feet for men and 99 feet for women were al Beaver. Okla .. \•:here the annual cov.• chip throwing contest is held. Dashirig Dorvn; Pot Puffirig Up PRINCETON. N.J. (A P) -Streaker~ remain a decided minority, according to the latest Gallup po11 on bt?havior patterns among college students. The poll of l .100 students surveyed in January and March found that four percent had shed their clothes for a run. The survey also showed that more nf those were men than women -six percent compared with two percent of those polled. A Gallup spokesman said the percentage of nude runners projects to a quarter of a n1illion streakers for the total college population. The pqll also surveyed marijuana smoking among the students and found that the number who tried the drug increased 11 times since 1967. Of those polled, SS percent said they had tried marijuana, compared with five percent in 1967. In l!n'I the percentage v.·as 51, compared with 42 percent in 1970 and 22 percent in 1969. The survey showed that males and students from relatively affluent famil ies are more likely to ha\'e tried the drug than are females or students from poorer families. The polt shov.'ed that 62 percent or the male students and 42 percent of female students had smoked it. Monday, Mily 13, 1974 s DAIL V PILOT Tt•fff ·f ic Plata Golden Lantern_ Extension Qrged · A traffic conrrJ plan for Laguna Niguel calling for extension of Avenue of the Golden Lantern to Crown Valley Parkway has been proposed to the Orange County Planning Commission by the Niguel liomeowners and Community Association. The plan 1\·as presented 'as an alternative to Uic Laguna Niguel portion of a proposal by the planning rirm of Chapman. Phillips, and Brandt for a 20- mile long "scenic corridor" connecting Laguna Niguel and the Saddleback Valley with Newport Beach. _"After viewing the proposal by Chapman, Phillips, and Brandt, it appears that the scenic corridor is a form of high speed freev.•ay in another guise and u·e must oppose it ," a letter from the Association stated. '''Ve are also opposed to allou·ing Crown Valley Park\1·ay to develop into a free1vay or tO develop into a high speed throughway carrying son1e 40,000 cars per day,'' the leuer continued. The alternate plan y,·outd make Golden Lantern in Dana Point a primary road from Dana Point across Crov.'TJ \'alley Parkway, have it interchange with Oso Parkway and ronnect into ~1oulton Par~""·ay in Laguna Hills. ~nd, the Association suggested making a fork to the right off Golden Lantern .to conne<:t \\'ith the San Diego Free .... ·ay. "The advantage of this plan is that it is !ar l~s costly th~n building a high speed scenic corridor \\'hose need is not proven from our point of vie\\'," said the letter. "It upgrades existing planned roads and minimizes the disruption of existing landscape in undeveloped areas." A further opposition to the Chapman. Phillips and Brandt plan is that it cuts ·) I I i i , I \ ( . l: ( Standi119 Ovntimi through a 1>roposed Cro"'TI Valley Co1nn1unity Park. '"\Vith the need for parks in Laguna Niguel. ~'e don't need any major roads to cut through them," tht> letter stated. The hcuneov.'rlers s p o k e s m e n , Pr~ident-Elcct Frankie V.'ilcox. past president P<1t ~lancini. and traffic chairman Gaylord Inge. said bus service starting today v.•ill diminish the need for a n1ajor highv.•ay. "It is rather obvious from the energy crisis and its long range implications of shortages. th..11 an alternative to 'freev,.ays' is needed," they said. Instead, they suggested parking Jots along existing freeways-so that P.OOJ>le can leave their cars 8nd board romffluter buses. They also suggest more sidewalks on the "'est side: of Cro11·n \lalJey Parkl\'JY from the freev.•ay to Pacific Coast lfigh11·ay . Educatio11 Post To Do1ma Berrv • Donna Berry of ~1ission Viejo, a Saddleback College trustee, has been appointed lo the Orange Co:.intv Com- mittee of School District Organization. She replaces John Lund of Laguna Beach, who resigned both h i s post on the countv committee and as trustee at SaddlebaCk College several months ago. The county committee hears propooals for school district boundary changes and unifications. T\\.'O representatives from each county supervisorial area are appointed to the panel, plus one at-large member . Singer Vikki Carr weeps as a crowd of 600 in San Antonio Texas gi.ves. her a .10-mjnute standing ovation at Holy Cross High' School'. ".1kk1 .. a n?t1ve of .El Paso, is credited with saving the school irom f1nanc1al disaster with benefit performances since 1968. Kreber Vows Devotion ---- Saddleback Carididcite Sa)'·s College 1\'eeds Variety (Editor's tiotc: This is the seventli in a series of stories about candidates for three openings on the Saddteback Colter1e board of trustees. All district \ vMri are eligible to help select the three new trustees -one from La~ Q1'na Be4c1& mid t1vo from Tustin - iii the J191e 4 electfrn1.) By JAN WORTH Of ftll DtHr .. llet Sl•tf ~lllO things Saddleback College candi· Ronald Kreber of Laguna Be a c b ses: if elected. he \\•ill attend the gs falthfu\ly aDd "devote a lol or ' t to the job." 1~ty district attorney and fonncr :1g,~:e~ar:T!a~de~h~:! l value on doing somett-' g mean- with his spare time. t ''WhY am 1 runnlng?11 he asked. "Well. :'k. a guy has some spare time on 'his ~ does he spend It at the local bar or ~ mCthlng else? I'd rather do · g else," -~ eber was defeated last year in his :41r a seat on the Laguna Beach board . eaucation. But he discovered during thal campaign that taking time to read ' the volumes of backup material given to fl!ChooJ. trustees and other citl1.cns Is an 1m~rlanl part nl helng an Intelligent aCtivlst. "If I am elected, t won't he a rabblerooscr," Krcber said. "I would be Interested In getting ttllngs d:oe. Saddl" bad<., needs many thing& -especially wiHM programs ror senior citizens." 1 TfiC school has to determine why so • • Dllllr 'llOI St1fl f'tioto SADDLEBACK CANDIDATE L1gun.'1 Ron1ld Krebtr many student.; want to transfer out or the Saddlebllck district Into other community college districts. he added. "ln the f I e Id of law or any other business. it is difficult lo make decisions if you don't trave a total graso of the problem.'' Krcber sald. j'Even though I believe the school should specialize in basics, I think Saddleback needs to offer a b i g g e r variety of relevant courses." A policeman for eight years in the Los Angeles Poli Ce Department, Kreber 37, has been an attorney for two arxi a half years-all \Vith the district aU.omey's office. He and his wife Virginia have t~·o children and have lived in Lag\ina sinti! he left Los Angeles. Asked his opinion about the image of S3ddlcback College and what if anything could be done to improve the atmosphere at the school, Krebcr replied, "It's up to the students t6 create their own atmosphere. .• "I don 't see bow one trustee Is going to changcjt that much. I'm not interested In controll ing them. If they are not satisfied wllh the school, lhey should bring about a change. "I{ the students "'ant to become bums scientists, or educators. it'!! thci; decision. ~ a board member I don't sec m}'3el! becoming Involved In areas that you can't enforce." Krtbcr said he favors building on ~c present campus, aod though he \'i'Mled to make oo comments on ex Is 11 n g architecture. he said1 "It seems to me if ytill ""' going to build a large, expensive building ii ought to he bcautllul." "Saddleba.ck will have to continue to grow with the COmmunlty. And the new buildings should be 'sthetlc," he said. , A birthday party is a cake. presents. and a Ruth of Carolina dress lrom The Red Balloon. Ltd. Andrea Coates 1s wearing a party dress trom the Ruth's Original Couture Collection. Andrea 1s a student at Carden Country Day School and the daughter ol Mr & Mrs. Norman Coales of Yorba Linda. THE RED BALLOON LTD. ( tONff • COUNftll'f Or9fWM [114'1 MMe.M HUWT1l<t010H~ "''} .... 1- , I , I ' .f DAILY PILOT ----------".:."_:':::''-f!_a.:.y _l_l_l 9_74 Just Coasting 16<~ ,t ('''' @ with Tom urphine ~ Chippi11g In For Ca spers RICKY TICKY POLmC: Some t"\ 1dcncc exists today thal the election ra<.·c for our coastal Fifth District supcrVisoria\ scat is heating up. f\1oncy -the root of all politics -may be the ca use of the warn1ing up, Ju.-;t over this p;:t5t ~l'cckcnd il was ctivulgcd in 1hc pubPl't: prints that the ~·ifth Disr1ict incumbent, Ronald C<tspcrs of Lido Islt'. \\'ill he having a little 44th birthday party do,...·n in San DiC'go. It may be son1cthing spe<:ial. Guests \\'ere i.nvill'd by1 ha vi n g c.hspatchcd unto thcn1 a dozen long- stemmcd roses and a classy 1wchmen1 paper invite. TIIE CllOSEN ONF...S will then be no"''" via chan cred jct from Orange County Airport lo San Diego whereu pon limousines will tr11nsport them to the Westgate Plaza •lotel for a liUle gounnct shack. Oh, yes. there was one little item . Because of the lu!ih[)('.<;s of this \\'hole affair. the guests are going to be picking up the tab. The price of admission·in this case is $1,000 per couple. Al that going r-ale, it's a good thing I wasn't invited. On my pocketbook, 1 couJdn't cvrn finger the finger bowl. IF 1.000 CLA~tS is the price of jetting Lo dinner. I could n't park at the airpo r1. Jn 1.1ddilion to the $1,00J in 1-lappy Birthdays to Ronald, recent news report.s have indicated that an outfit named !he "Friends of Ronald Cllspers" has, so far, gathered some $124,000 for use in getting their fri end re-elected Fift't District Supervisor. Sketchy Evide11ce . ' Of that sum collected by these frien~. it was also reported that the treasury has a surplus of more than $80,000. HA VJNG. FRIENDS like these has to leave Supervisor Caspers with a very \\'&rm feeling inside. If not in his heart. at least in his wallet pocket. Although injured by the hit and n1n auto that killed his companion. Ja1nes R. Seara ttop left) scratched the auto's license number into the guard rail !shown below) with his fishing knife Saturday. Bruce Bedell (top right), 15. wa.." killed as he and James walked on the shoulder of the highw ay near Chicago. A Chicago woman was later arrested at her home. With friends like these, you may never ha ve to worry abou t your enemies. As a matter or fact, you may not have any. Hu1nors ----------------- Abound on Hill Of course, Caspers docs have some political opponents in this election who must look on all his campaign cash with considerable envy and d i s m a y . ONE OF IDS PRIME competitors is Marcia Bents or Newport Beach, the fonncr grand jury foreman who has said considerable in the past about excesses in spending of campaign funds. Tales Range Fro1n Resignation to Tri1Jle Splitu.ps It has further been reported tha t J\1n;. Bents has called a press conference today to speak words upon the same subject. • You have to suspect Utat some o! 1'.1rs. Bent's v.•ords \\i ll be dispatched in the direction of the Friends of Ronald Caspers and what they've done with their treasury. THE ANNOUNCED purpose of 1'.-frs. Bents' press confa b it to ta lk about can1pa.ign spending of her opponent. I don't know how much spending J\fr. Caspers ha.s done so far in this cantpaign but one thing is for sure. ' llc'.s doing :1 great job of collecting. \laoazine l)y11a111itcd "' . !ll!Ai\-11 IUJ'I) -The offices of Cuban ex ile n1agazine "Replica'··. .,... c ! e dynamired early today in what police sources said \Vas a continuation of politic;Jl unrest in 1'.-tiami's "Little IJ(j\'ana" section. Dam.:ij:le to the door. a\\'ning and the office inside \1•as \ 1.!Xlensh•e. \V ASffiNGTON (UPI ) -Washington. a IOY.11 that thrives on rumor. is beset by ajX)CTYPhal stories about President ~i.x<ln -he is about 10 resign : he is ill -and \Vhite lfouse denials that !hey are "y.TO!ig. absolu!ely wrong." "There's no panic do"·n here.'' one Locusts Drive F a1nilies Out OLD FORT. N£. <UPI) -A horde of locusts sy,·armed over a rlu·al area near here today, threa tening to pester a fey.· families to the point of leaving their homes. ' ·Th c y ' r r just all O\'rr everything." sa id retired school leach<>r !\!rs. r.eorge Grindstaff. ''You 1vould.n't believe il unless you S3\\' it." She said the locusts f i r s I appeared about ty.·o \Vecks .:igo and now cover a!n1osl e\'erylhing abo\'c ground in a 100..ac~e area. \\'hite llousc official said . ''Everyone is eonremed, yes. I sense more panic outside than inside." TllE RESIGNATION rumoT built up last v.·eck as a few Republican lea ders began to suggest the president step a:.ide. On three separate days this "''eek. deputy press secretary Gerald L. \\1art'('fl responded to reporters J2! saying Nixon had no intention of res~ng and every intention of rompleting his tenn of office . One \\llite House aide said he v.·as geUing exasperated. "J don 't kno\\' how I can emphasize that morale is high here and the President is continuing v.ith the business of the people," he said. "The President believes t h a t \Vatcrgate is a constituticna! problem "'·hich \\-ill be settled in the House, and if not there then in the Senate." Another \ridespread rumor .,..·as thal J<1mes D. St. Clair, 1'ixon's chief \Vatergate la"'yer. trad become dis· enchanted and \vanted to resign. It "''as perhaps based on a coouncnt at the opening of impeachment proceedings Thursday \rhcn St. Clair said, "I'd rather IX' back 'in Boston practicing law." "A BSOLUTELY Y.'rong:· said a high \\'hi1c House official. "St. Clair is North Contin.ent's W e.t Gal e-st.rengt/1 • , Wi1id s Si.vee p .4cros s Eastern Great La.kes S!•OllCI 1111s1v winos in fl'ot a.ser!• tiUH•:I 1T•larda11• drivina ~Ond l!lon1 d11e la 11l~w1na ''"d and d11U. b11! Ille wl11<11 represcniing the Pres ident. We're hoping the true facts will romc. The ofricial responded \1·ith the ans.,.,·er "absolu1ely wrong and totajly V.'rong" to these olher rumors \\'hich ha\'e hit the \Vhite J{ouse in the past fe\I: days : -That Nixoo had suffered a slight stroke nea r his right eye. -That Senate and House Republican leaders had come to the \Vbite House to urge Nixon 10 resign in order to save the Republican Pany in the fa 11 rongr(?SS.ional elections. -That Nixon had summoned his cabinet to aMOUnce Utat he \\"aS quitting. -That S«:Tetary cl State Henry A. Kissinger had been summoned back from his !\fi ddle East mission to be on band for an imminent resignation. -TllAT THE f\TJXON'S daughters and sons-in-Jay,·, Julie and Davi d Eiscnho.,..'t'r and Tricia and Ed\\·ard Cox:, v.·ere brea king up. The rumor about breaking up also spread to 1he President and his v.ife. Julie responded to it Saturday in a nev.·s conference \\'hen she said her mother told her, ''This \\'OUld be exciting if we could find a third party." Te11111er11 f.11 re·" Hltll Low Pc~. VII(• ••DeC!ed 10 die d<l'Nll bv TUllOIV.. f Albl~• /,tl~M~ fl01!~~ l•~f!~IO (l>A<IMlt l;n•c"'" ',,,,.~~ ... 59 4' I •i " S1 I< !oJ " . .. I~ ~ •I ., J~ 19 i i (_li'yplt~·l O~PI•• oe~"" ' t•~" H-lu•~ ,. ,~,.,, C !v L" v""~' I ""I~ ,.,., .... 1 .... ·~ i.·.~"t'tlOh '<~ 0•1~•"' .. ,. " ~ ' .. .. " I ' ,, ,, .. " " .. " " " ~ r. ~ " l •tll!J~l!tll DELIVERY SERVICE Oeh1·ery of th< Daily f11i.1 n guara;1red ~ frtUy. M ,.. II 1111 Q11 rm ,1~ ~ 5:Jt ' II . UI *" !tit C"1 •:~ to! •OtEbt II !• till Ill !DIA ~I' 1 )8 '"' 1a1wU, ~ SMt1f n ftl II 1111 rlCtln !M C.,, ~· ! I.Ill. Sf!lllU,. 41 t 1,-'I Su!CiJ ul ,.. J Cfff •• 111 91Wf~I to tlli bl1•1lilt.1Mt•ll1' ll'IC(llr111 ~ ~II Glfftl Cat!ltr Arm 6•2·4l21 "9rlh .. lt hl!Mft.., kxl .. .,,_,. '40· 1120 SM~~llNkdi S.lt•t•• ... ,.l .... u, .. , ... ...., m~m • " 1#'1 wt "MI tOIOC.UT • t.tw Yor-" I• . !I 0~11!\0l'!'ll Cl!v .~ ll • ~mlrMI •Im S~l"Ct' ~ P<llltcltlPITll " ·" '"M:!'<h u f' ll1Wrllll • ~ ·ff ~~llef'>d, Or~ • " < IT 'l'OllO , \11 " ~ w··Jfl· .. ,o n ~ ' ' " n ft.o.t Cllv ~ H <! f l!ldKO '"" ~ .. T11trm11 ll tl W1111111a1cn I l1 S. Califor11 ia (<)ot\111 .... (I0\111\ .. d"IJ'l't Cnmt.nl We athe r Clouify wrm 1 tlltf'I<• Ill "1111 .... Moll!v W"""V lwtdn. HlvJK In ftil 71h.. Llot'it v1r11bll wl~ ~l!'IO -11tt<1v ~, "' 919111 kl'IOtl fonJ9111 • One to three ll:lol ""'d""'I' -'' w!tll wJM wlV_, 11'1 lfll tlltrl'IOOfll, lnl111d letllOl't lures 71 Wt!tr •~•fvn Jt. Sun, ltloon, Tlcfe• MONDAY 5.-(0l'id' l<ftll S:l5 p.m, J • M<:O!'td low 11:10 p,m. 1.1 TUI SOAY Fll'lf lllftl J;SI I·"'· l S ili'lr•t low 10:40 o,m. 0 t Stcond hlt'I $:ft p..m, ... o S«Ol'ld low 11:'7 11.m. , , s~n rltt' 1:$4 1.m .• Mh 1 ..i 11.m MOOll rhff LOO 1 m,, wll If·°' II·"'· I 'lle's n Talker.' ' I Dolly Saxbe, wlfo of outspoken 1\ttornc.y General \Vi lliatn B. Sax be, says it's awfully hard to ~hut him up. The attorney gen· cral's remarks have gotten him into repeated controversy and earned hinl tl1e reputauon as the new Martha Mil <heii. ' • ' S1tpre111e Co1irt Wiretap Method ~ ' Termed 'Illegal' WASHINGTON (UPll -The Supreme Court niled unanlously tod.<ly that the JtEtice Department under f o r m e r attorney general John N. ~tltchell consistently violated the law in its procedures for obtaining w i r c t a P e\idence. The 9 to o decision probably kills narcotics and gambl ing prosecutions involving hundreds of persons which have been pending ln various courts a\\'aiting a ruling on v.·helhcr 1he cv~ can be used . The department had argued that at v.·orst it had committed only "harmless error'' which had not endangered anyone's (rivacy. .. JUSTICE BRYON R. \Vhite \\TOie 6i)iniOllS in .f.\\'O highly complex cases on the department's handling oC \\i rctaps. In the other the department v.·as upheld by 8 l)-4 \'Ole. The dec~ion hinged on an interpretation of the omnibus Crime Control Act of 1968, \\·hidt con tains very specific provisions fo r applying to a trial judge for a v.·iretap order. Tornadoes La sh 3 Soutl1 States; 3 Persons Killecl 8)' United Press Jnlernatloaal Tornados hit Florid.1. Grorgia and South Carolina Sunday, klll ing at least three persons find causing nearly SI mil· lion in damages. Georgia was hardest hit. All four \\'ho died res ided there. At least 18 others v.·erc injured \\'hen a tornado struck trafler honle parks in Glenn ville and Savannah. ONE PERSON was hurt in f'lorida and ;inother in South Carolina. and the r\a tional WeaU1er Service issued tornado y,·amlngs for parts of North Carolina. \'irginia, ~taryland. Delaware. Ne"' Jersey. New York. V c rm on t, f\.1assachusetts and Connectirut. Civil defense spok esmen estimated dama ge at $500,000 in South Carolina and at least $200,000 in Georgia. There "'as no immediate damage estimate for lhc Flori da area. but several frame houses and a number of mobile homes \vcrc eithe r-destroyed or damaged. Antimissile Gun Ain1s in on Isle, Frie11clly Vessel \Vi\SlllNGTO N {AP\ -A Gener:il Accounting 0£fice report says the Navy·s new Phalanx a n timissile gun mal£unctioned so badly in its first test that it "threa tenro to sink'' a California isla nd and a friendly ship. The report, released Sunday by Rep. U:s Aspin ([).\Vis.), said the radar· controlled. self.firing gun "trapped , locked onto and declared as a threat" th e U.S. !\aVy ship US.S Hollister. Also. the gun's electronic aimin;: sys tem zeroed in on Santa Barbara Island. off the Southern California coast. confusing the island far a fast-moving target. according to the GAO report. \Vh ile the Phal an x is designed mainl;" as a "last ditch defense" against enemy mis.sil es, It can also fire on planes and other ships, the GAO said. Aspin. a member of the l{ouse Armed Services Committee, said the initial tests cast serious doubt \\ilcther the Phalanx is worth any further fund s "out of our already-bloated defense budget." He added: "Certainly. y,•e hare no urgent requirements for an automatic gun that attacks island s and friendly ships." The statute requires nuthoriwtion by the U.S. Attorney General himself or •lt "spcc1nl assistant 11ttorn~y _general." ~1any of ~1it«hcll's :11,1thotiza~1on .. , \\'ere issued by hi;-; rxct·ullve assJSt.'Ull. Sol Undenbaum . A second issue rocu.~ed on \\'hat ha11t bc('Ome kncm•n as "\Viii \\Iii.son Letters" -\l.'irc<ap permissions to U.S. at~ in the field y.•hich fonncr assLStaol ottorncy general \Viii \YilSOfl \\"as obliga.I under lJ \I' to si~'lt. Instead they \\'ere signed by deputies. 7 Da11gerous Me11 Soug lit ,4fter Escct.pe .,XPSILANTI, f\1ich. ~t,;Pll -Police carried out an intensive 1nanhunt today in southen1 !\>1ichigan. seeking seven {'Xtrcn1t·ly dangerous n1cn who fled lw: slate's faci lity for the criminally insane in tv.·o .<;eparalc Sunday breakouts. fire other prisoners ,1·ho esc<ipcd 1\·ert recaptured within hours. Police \\·an1ed n1ot nrists thC'y should flot stO[) for hitchhtk('rs and said the ' (..__IN_S_H_O_R_T._ .. _) se,•en men al large \1·ere "cxtremcly dangerous." TI1rce of them \\'ere Detroit nlen being held on n1u1·der charges. e (l/1if• Jriof ATHENS. Ohio lUPTJ -Al least ~ pcr.<;ans v.•rrr arrested and 20 otht-rs, including thrC'e policemen. in J u r e. d Sunday in the serond day of confrontations bj·111·ren youths and police nea r Ohio l'nivrrsit~·. Polil'e fought 11 1th 01er 1.0 0 0 1oun gs1ers after about 500 young people. 1including student.~. blocked a major rioy.·nto\1't1 interS4.~(·t1on near can1pus. Sgt. Oonald Atwell said police tried to kttp lhr cro11·cl on the t·ampus and out ol lhe city of 20.000 e Capsi::ed ~llA\ll (L'PI I -Fifty.four pcrsoo,1;, and seven goats \rere rescued' from the stormy Gulf Stream Sunday after a small freighter capsized on a rock 2'ro 1niles southeast of !\firuni. The 45 pas.wngers and nine crew mentbcrs aboa rd the 1notorship San Salvador Express spent se\'l'f'<ll hours clinging to the JO.by-2()..fool rock after fhe 112-foot nitt'r-island freighter sank s!Drt- ly after sailing from Nassau. Bahamaa, early Sunday. e Ga/brail/1 Talk NOR\1:\~. Okhi . I API -Jlarva,r:d eronontist John Kenn('fh Galbraith',; co1nmeflC'emcnt speech at the Univertiily of Oklahoma \\'as interrupted several ti1nes by boos as he blasted President Nixon aod lus beleaguered <"!dministra- tion. (~albraith's Sunday :iddrcss came one day after the l'rcsid('nt "'IL" 11·annlJ greeted al Oklahorna State L:nlversity in Still .,..·ater, "·here he delivered that school's commC'nce1nent a d d r cs s Saturday night . • Cl1011 AlllHfl ' I PEKING (UPI ) -Chinese Pr<!miC{ Chou En-la i, "'ho co mplained earlier Of not feeling "·ell because of his age1 conceled a round of talks today wiUi Pakistani Prirne ~1inister Zulfikar All Bhutto. a P'1kbtani gov c r nm en t ,..pokesman said The spo~esn1an said only that lhe 75- year..ald Chou was convalescing follo"•ing "a reeent indisposit ion." \\,hen Bhutto and his delegation arrived Saturday £or a four.day offi cial visit. Chou told him : "I am n()( very \1.-'ell because I am old." Agnew Who~ I' ' ~ -Ex-VP Unnoticed in A the1is ATHENS (UPI) -The waiter at the Athens llilton tu rned to the ta ll tanned man sipping a dtink at the hotel bar. ' "There's a phone chu for a Mr. Agnew.'· the wai ter said . "You know "'ho he is?" "Yes:• the mM replied, putting down his drink . "That's me." .- ·' ll :> It was a far cry from 1971 when Spiro T. Agnt'\\' ,;siled Greece as vice- president, receiving a hero's welcome and a key to the city of Athens. Agnew, 300 of a Greek barber, 1vas virt ually unnoticed Sunday when he 1 returned to his anceslral homeland. There-were no parades. no wreaths none o( the ceremonial trappings ol. hb earlier visit. ' t "I ari\ on business," Agnew told a newsm an who approached him at tM f:.i. HJ\ton bar. Asked to elaborate, he said. "private" and abruptly ended the con· t.j versatlon. So~ at the Hilton said he is looking r~ employment with Greek ~ shipowners. "fie ls on his own," a U.S. embas.'!y spokesman Sllkl . "lie did not make cootact with us and we do not expect him to. lfe is just like any other visitor." ~ Agnew resigned as vice president last yenr. pl<!ading no rontest to a ~ charge of income tai evasion in a l\1aryland kickback 11eandn1. • l{e checked into a sl rfglc room at the Athen!I Hilto n. which assigned him a whole Oo;or three yea rs before to accommod.atc S<.'Orcs ol American and Greek securi ty guards. Agnew still has many relatives 1rr Gargalianoi , whc.r his rather. Ted Anng. nost.apoulos, worked as a bArber be fore migrating to the Unitod Sta tes. \Vhen Agnew visited the town in 1971, bra.c:.s bands j>hiyed and children " dressed In th eir Sunday best held "'Tealhs: ror him to wa k under. J~ls Greek friends and relatives expressed shock on hoorln& of his resignation bul said lh<y were sUll prood of hnn. . "He -.111 always be wrlaime here," G11rgalianoi mayor Olonysios Pana· ghopoulonald at lhe Umc. , ' • ..,., p c I SA A drive supe 'l'sa ilrrai Pol Ange same Carl Anne VlclAl lllll Ca ho rn !hen and jewel hou stiU was ,l!)U and ·• ST Unit Unio1 in · tS.S A •Uni !adm' per very and spok • 54 1675 Cos •• °"' ..... .... ... .Gl.,1t ,, I DAILY PILOT 5 Postman Charged InMm·der $1 Mill·io11 Haul 'Burglary Ring' Broken SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A 25-yearold postal truck driver accused ot slaying a supennarket cmploye a n d ~ulUng his wife will be arraigned Tuesday. Police said the suspect, Angelo Pa\'ageau, lived in the same block where Frank C;lrlson, 25, and his wife, Annette, 24, owned a restored Victorian home in the Potrero 1-Ull district. Carlson was slain in his home April 19 by a man who ( BRIEFS ) then raped and beat his wife Happy La11ding Paul Donin, an inexperienced sailor when he left Denmark with a green crew in October, 1973, climbs aown the mast of his gaff.rigged ketch ,;Cloudia," after a seven-month voyage which landed safely in San Diego over ~he week- end. Donin, of Los Angeles, traveled with his friend, Charlotte Thell, 19, of Denmark. and stole several pieces or r----------1 ---------------------- jewelry before setting the house on fire. Mrs. Carlson is still hospilalized. Pavagcau was charged Saturday with .Jl1.urder, rape, rC>bbery, assault CQtd arson. ' ·• Sta11ford Strike BIKERS REVOLT Milk Boycott Launched; Called 'h·respon sible ' BEVERl,Y lllU.S (AP I - Four 1x:rsons have b 11 e n arrcstt.-d 1n <.'Onnection v.·ith a ring police say netted more than $1 million from break-ins at exclusive homes while ca using the death of at !east one of its victims, a spokesman said. Police said the four persons were booked for in'\'cst!gation of robbery , conspiracy and murder Sunday following an early morning robbery here. The ring entered and robbed more than a dozen homei; since last July , the spokesman said. The murder accusation stemmed from the shootin~ death April 29 of Kent Graham, 33. who was shot April 29 after he surprised a burg1ar in hi:S parent<;' apartment in \Vest Los Angeles. BOOKED WERE Robert Bell, 21, Kenneth Comstock, 33, Deborah Sprinkle. 23, of West Hollywood ; and Mack M. Winston , 73, Beverly Hill s. The spokesman said the three West Holly wood residents were arrested shortly after the Sunday robbery near the scene at 285 Summit Drive here. \\ 1nston wa s arrested later when he started lo enter all apartn1ent , nuthoril il's said Officers said two men and A woman, wearing ski musks ,1 nd brandish ing pistols. forl'>·rl opl•o a \vindo\v ::it the ho1t1 t· T h c unidcotifiC'd t'C'Sidrnt" <t \\'Okl' and "'er<' bound ¥.1tl1 rope l\'hilC' !he b ti r ~ r .! r ra11silC'kl·d lilt· house for two hours. the spokesman sald. .\vne of the victims was in jured . 1\11 undisclosed quantity ol jewel ry and money w as rl·covcrcd , offictrs said. Punishing Por1iographers; 'Futile and F1·ustrating' SACRA~1ENTO I AP) Prosecutors say !hev'\'e ju~t about given up trying 10 punish the pur\'eyors o' pornography bcr.'.lu~c of the 101v ratio of success and th<' high costs. They say other counties indicate they're backing off too. Prosecut \ng pornographe rs is "£utile, frustrating and extremely cos tly ,'' Sacramento County prosecutor Darrel W. Lewis said Sunday in an interview in t h e Sacramento Union. He said the low success ratio on pornography leads county officf.'rs to ff"l'l 1hat "pornogrnp hy and other \1irro crin1cs \\'ill inrrrase. Th r\' frf'l or~anizl'<f crinH' y.•ill 'movl? in." John ~I. Price. t h c Sarramrnto County dislril't attorney. has dismissed more lhan 50 obscenity charges during the past month. and indicates he may dismiss 1nore than 160 others. But, Price added, "I don't v.·ant to give the impression the town is wide open and anything goes. That just isn't true. \Ve're n1eet.ing each case as it comes." Lewis Said' Sacramento Cily and County I a w enforcC"mcnt officials have bern in~tructed not to waste 1n:inpo\\'rr trying to enforce thf' s1.'.lle's obscenity statutes. lit~ sa!d it costs l h e taxpayers $8,000 to $12,000 to prosecute for obscenity, a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 and up to six mo nths jail for a first offense. Private attorneys who specialize in d efending accused pornographers say a bout the only time there is a conviction is when the defendant pleads guilty or no contest. STANFORD (UP I) -The UnitC'd Stanford Employees Union called a strike Sunday in Its demands for an average 15.S percent pay raise . HARTFORD I UPI) Some500motorcycle enthusiasts. most of them meplbcrs of motorcycle "cfUbs" like the Hell's Angcls1 rallied Sunday on the steps of the state capitol to protest a new la\v that requires them to v•ear safety helmets. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A1--- v.·eek-long statewide boycott or ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A spokesman for t h c •university said the !administration has offered a 7 percent increase. "\Ve'rc very, very far apart on both wage and fringe issues," th c spokesm;m said. The bikers, who rode in fro1n all parts of the state under strong s h o ""' e r s . burned a helmet in the capitol parking lot aloog "'ith surrunonses t h e y received on their way into town ror their failure to wear helmets. No violence was reported. e Frlei1dl11 Forger~------~ SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -The "friendly forger" has l been 5efltenccd to one lo 14 years in prisoo after pleading guilty in Superior Court here 1to two counts of check forger}>, authorities say. Walter Paul, 43. of San 'Bernardino was named the .. ""friendly forger'' by 'authorities because of the ease with Which he COn\•lnced bank tellers to accept his checks as legitimate without identification, authorities said Sunday. The man has rorged an estimated !60.000 in checks throoghout Southern California since 1971, police said. e $300,000 Fire RANCHO MffiAGE (AP)·- A workman using steel wool in scraping varnish off a wall caused a short-circuit fire that destroyed a $300,000 home, £ire .. Officials said. One fireman suffered smoke Inhalation and was treated at ··the scene, the fire department IK!dod. Police Halt 'Graffiti' Portrayal ESCONDIDO (APl -All the dis k jockeys at stalion KOWN v.·anted was a nostalgic reenactment or the street cruising in the m o v l e "American GraffJ.ti." But 300 cars with l ,000 participants ended up taking part, and police were called in to settle things down. "The youths involved. acted pretty much as in the movie." disk: jockey Chip Helps said later. ··At st-Op lights, they got out one door of a car and ran around to get in the other side. They sprayed eadi other with foamy products from aerosol cans and pelted each other with \•tater-filled balloons." As the youths listened to ca r JOE CARLOS radios playing theme music PLUMllHG CO. from "American Graffiti ," l~ No 2,'»211 there was at least one rear-54~558 end collision. Another car hit a light pole. Still a n o t h e r 1675 Supenor collided with a motorcycle. Cosla Mesa A force of 60 police o!ficers RtP'oc•....., \veari.ng helmc:!i and carry- Ow ~Wly ing nightsticks broke it up late Saturday. They cited "For A W•ttr Hntff' • A Kit-20 juveniles for violation of cMtt or A Iott. Mt Styl• -curfew and two adults fo r ..t For Rtlll 9-lclr. 5-r•ic• i n t er fer in g with law ~-:::~='"="::'"="::A::Dlol=":-::=-::::::'..!._:en::fo::r.:ceml'flt officers. 1" Coastwise, Nobody But Nobody, ls More -Coast Wise milk began on Mother's Day in protest of huge increases in milk prices. A coalition of consum- er groups led by Fight JnOation Together (FIT ) has urged citizens lo purchase poy.·dered milk instead of fluid milk in an aUempt. to lower n1ilk prices. "Consumers must now take matters into their own hands as we did during the meat boycott." said Roy Alpher, a coalition spokesman. TH E BOYCO:IT was started on ~1other's Day to dramatize the vita1 need humans 'have for milk, according to FIT Olairman Rut.h Vanatta. The dairy industry says the boyrotl is "irresponsible and dangerous" to the system whidl produces and delivers the 1.7 million gallons of milk consumed daily by Califor- nians. "A milk boycott will not loweT prices and will actually do great damage to the dairy industry and the public in- terest, ·· said tbe California Milk Advisory Boord. which industry and I.he JXJblic interest." said the California ~tilk Advisory Board. The boycott was called after the State Department of Food and Agriculture last month approved a five-<""f'rtt prr half gallon increa..<:.e in the price of fluid milk. FIT organized the 1973 meat bove<itt wh.ich spread from California across the nation. IN LOS ANC,;ELES, boycott leade!'s reportedly drove thro1:1gh neighborhoods in a truck with 11. purple paper mache cow mounted on top "'ith the label, "C. Brunel C.OW." It was named afte r C. B. Ouistensen. head of the st.ate department w h i c h approves price hikes. The Milk Advisory Board blamed the recent p r i c e increases on rising reed costs, which it said had doubled in the past year. In a statement, the board said: "A~ricu!lure officials hold some hope that a downtwn In feed prices may occur during the conting months as crops are har- vested." Son of San Clemente's first police chief, winner of mony 0 hot rod run on Bolboa Peninsula's sand dunes, con· tribulor to Tin Can Beach as a youth and now a resident of La9una Beach, Mana9in9 Ed itor Tom Murphine has spent o lifetime 9ellin9 ready lo show the world lo reoders of his column from the peculiar perspective of the OrarKJe Coast. ''Just Coasting'' Murphine's Almost Daily Column in the DAILY PILOT • GLORIA MARSHALL METHOD OF REDUCING COMES TO COSTA .MESA Being A Worron, Gloria Marshall Understands l adies' Figure Problems -She Is In Constant Conloct With Her Over 70 Salons Across The Country. And you're invited lo help us celebnle the Grand Opening of the most modern and relaxing figure salon ever, with lhe ultimate in reducing equipment. 'we can assure you of a pleasant way to lose pounds and inche s. And lhere are no rirorous exercises or disrobing, so you don 't have lo wo rry aboul ruining you r ha irdo. We 1ive personalized attention in semi·Drivale fa cil ities. and you will be surprised at our reasonable rates. Ju'lt call the Gloria Marshall Sa!on nearest you for your per!.Onolized figure analysi s and complimentary treatment. There is no obligation. says ••• "/have never met a woman yet whose figure I could not improve." HOW THE GLORIA MARSHALL SYSTEM WORKS: On your first visit, for which th e re is no Charge or obli ga tion, you w ill receive a complete demonstration end sample treatment. You wil l be weighed ond measu red (this does not require disrobing) a nd o trained specia list will onolyze your figure a nd p repare a pers6nalized program for you. Gloria Marshall Salons ore not spa s or gym s. The Gloria Marshall system is desig ned for the busy, modern WOIJ10n. Many working women find the salon a mo re rewording w·ay of spending their lunch hours. Mothers and grandmothers enjoy · the relaxtng, almost ef· fortless way of reducing, a lso, the added benefit of increased circulation a nd energy. Since Figure Problems Are Difterent.Resulls Will Ditter Accordingly ulie /ace and figure tranJ/ormation o/ Pa·t CliaJ . . . throug.h the nationally. /aniouJ filoria Jl,arJhall methoJJ fJ ~ "~ ., 'Aff10AVIT5 OF AUTHENTICITY AR# ON fllE IN THE HOME OFFICE •• worlds leading l1g1.110 control sy~t(!m Open daily 9 to 9, Saturday 9 lo 4 Onr 70 Salons natlonally to ....,.1u Y""' ' • • • . Orange The City Shopping Center 997-021 1 ' I ' I t ."i() ,-o·r1: ·r111: DH -1.\f..I TI(' ( II I.\(, f.' I.\' f " l ( f 11. 1·1-; IT( 'HI: .... ( 111111111 I ) ll ''"" 1'111flt11•/11f11rll•rl "' f,_Juriu .ll•1r.•lrull \ .•h•· 11·1•i11lu•1/ :!:!:! lh~- ' 11h11 10 :.! J I IJ ,.;,,,,. 1111.-r 11h.-l1111/ 11 I. Tf'f/tl_\' /u.•I f :-i111·h1•.•, ( /Jhn lo .'l) /11 r1•rurlf lin1 f' .clr1• h11.c l1111( (J:J lb.~ .• ,,,.,/ :;;; i111·h1·.~ ••• hn.• NOt1e• (r11n1 ,, 1/rp1111 .•ist> :!·1·11:! ''' 11 l•I 0 11nd iit 11•,.fl "" ht>r 11·11~· h 1 hl'r p Pr-f Pf'I 1/rf'1111 •i:p .•. 11 I :!. Pnt ""'.'· "I rrlrd Prrn·rhirr, to l1111t> 11·1•i,hi. b 111 no 1hin, 1~·orkt'd .. \'o•r. 1hunl.·• lo f:loritr \lnr.chufl. I nm 11h/1> to 11ho11 fur 111ul bll.'' rlotlut• 1n ro/nr.c 11nd .•f\ 11•.• I 1c'fl.' ll#'l't'f' 11b/,. ftl 1r f'nr bt>(11rf'. Rt'lif't'fl' "'"'• 1rhv11 ynn 11·"'1r ,; »i:.t> :!-I./ I :!. ~·111r llf1 r1• 110 r huirP! '' • \ • • ;: .· . ' .. •' :; ;. ;: .. ' • --f I: • :: :· .• •' DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE F ( . ' und1ng the-Freeway- The fact that the second phase or the Corona de! l!far Freeway , a link between the Newport and San Diego 1'"'reeways, was at the bottotn of a priority list approved by 9range County supervisors last week, does not neces· sarily mean it will wind up last in line ror a share of federal funding. The list of 13 priority items prepared by the 31 · ine~n.ber U1'.ban-D Comm ittee, n1ade up of city and co unty officials, w1U serve as the county's for1nal clai1n for its $6.8 miUjon first-year share of Federal Aid Urban !FAU) inoncy. Over a three.year period, lhe county stands to receive up to $21 million fro1n the fund. ~ut the federal agency requires that proposed proj- ects 1n order to be eligible for this year's fu nd s, n1ust be ready to go lo bid by ~lay 24. Those that are not ready -and the $2.2 1nil.lion widening of Pacific Coast 1-lig h- 'vay in Huntington Beach is known to be one, though it is on the priority list -will be eliminated from this year's funding. . A.lso in dqubt, for example, is the proposed $680,000 w1denmg of Brookhurst Street in 1:ountain Valley, for which plans have been subn1itted to the state, but not yet approved. · The Co rona del Mar Freeway plans will be ,ready to go, but since the local share of that $18 million proj· est is set at $8.8 million -1nore than the total year's federal funds -the selection committee hesitated to place it high on the list for fear of eHminating other nee<led projects. 1-lowever, it is felt the county 's willingness to alloca.te at least some of its FAU money to the freeway nlay encourage the state to look favorably on coming up ~ith additional funding for the second phase of the prOJCCt. Phase one, the relocation of MacArthur Boulevard, already has been funded by the state. The second ph ase y,•ill be the link fron1 the San Diego Freeway near South Coast Plaza to Newport Freeway near Bristol Street. J>hase three would be constructJon of the segmenl be- tween th e Newport Freeway '3nd MacArthur Boulevard. If none of the other projects on the priority list can meet the ~lay 24 deadline. the freeway could stand to receive the entire $6.8 million, or a lesser amount if other projects qualify. . Jn _any case, approval of the list gets the machinery 1n. nt~t1on for . receipt of Ute federal aid, which w~s the prmc1pal consideration of the supervisors last week. No Female Cl1auvinists The renowned League of \Vomen Voters. founded 54 years ago when the won1an 's suffrage move1nent was in _full swing, n1a~ have to consider changing 'its name at its nex t convention in 1976. La st week !n San Francisco, by a 835-433 vote, the League co~vent1on. agreed to adn1it men to full voti•g n1embersh1p. Previously, n1 en had been admitted only as nonvoting associate members. Harking back to earlier days. 1he drive to give the gentlemen voling rights, which had failed at the 1972 convention, was pushed by a group calling itself the Ma le Sulirage Caucus. Pamphlets picturing a pig with a bow around its neck urged members, "Don 't be a FCS - FemaJe Chauvin ist Sow" as votes were rounded up. . The League, which devotes itself to political edu· ~at1on of voters .of bo_th. sexes, \Vil! be obliged, under its bylaws. to wait unt.Jl its next convention to consider a change in its name to accomn1odate the new members. Meanwhile, speakers will have to remember to ad- dress meetings wi th the somewhat cumbersome, "Ladies and gentlemen of lhe League of \Vomen Voters ... " Hughes Donation Haunting Rehozo ll'hite Ho11se Backs Atcto l11d11st1·y WASHINGTON -The ubiquitous Bebe Rebozo, v.·ho mixes martinis and collects cash for President Nixon, has been hard- pressed to explain what he did with $100.000 that he recei ved from billionaire Howard Hughes in 1970. The money, ea rm arkL'<I for the President, was de- livered in two $50.000 consignm ents dircct- 1y to the presiden- tial estates at San Clemente and Key Biscayne. There on presiden- tial property, the ca s h \Vas rel in· quished by ~lughes emissary Richard Danner to th e President 's man Bebe. \Ve uncovered this peculiar transaction in the summer of 1971. But not until two years later did it attract official attention. • REBOZO y,•as prepared with an alibi. He had squirreled the money away in a safe deposit box. where it had gathered dust instead of interest for three yea rs, he ave rred. Now his alibi is con1ing unstitched . We helped with the unraveling in a wa y that has no1v taken on special significance. \Ve learned from a sour ce close to the ovaJ office that Rebozo had not held on to the ..a.·Jughes ntoney at all but had ributcd it to President Nixon 's ~ others, Donald and Ecl\vard, and to the F'resident's secretary. Rose ll1ary Woods. flul "'e could not prove, amd therefore could nol print. the story. limited to no 1nore than a penc.U and a notE:.book to compel the facts. v.·e decided to turn the information over to someone with ;1 subpoena. \\'E TOLD v.•hat \\'e kne1\'. therefor('. to the Senate \Vatergat~ Con1mittee. \Ve also suggested the witnesses who should be put under oath, and provided a list of questions thal should be asked. The committee's crack investigator, Terry Lenmer, took over the hunt. His search for cridence led him to President Nixon's personal attorney. Herbe rt Kalmba ch, who refused to answer questions on the grounds that he had an attorney-client relationship with Rebozo. But the shrewd Lenzner asked Rebozo \l'hether he had gone to Kalmbach for legal advice on the Hughes $100,000. The light-lipped Bebe denied he had consulted Kalm bach. BOTll KALMBACll and Rebozo we re summoned to Capitol llill and were questioned simultaneously under oath in separate rooms. Again, Kalmbach tried to claim attorney-client privilege. But Olairman Sam Ervin. D-N.C .. noting Rebozo's denial that he had sought Kalmbach's legal a'dvice, ruled against Kalmbach. Threatened v.•ith contempt if he didn 't testify, the President 's attorney acknowled ged he had met at the White House with an anguished Rebozo on April 30, 1973. REBOZO related that the $100,000 llughes payment was under investigation by the Internal Revenue Service and that he couldn't reveal v.•hat he had done with the money. Kalmbach testified. He said Rebozo told him that he had passed out lhe money lo Rose Mary Woods the Nixon brothers and "others.'' ' The President had asked him to seek K~lmbach 's advice, I(Cbozo allegedly said. Ka lmbach advised him to tell the IRS the full story but offered to con.suit a tax attorney for his expert opinion. \VE LEAR NED about Kalmbach's explosive testimony from Senate sources and immediately sought Re bozo ' s CO"'!ments. ~e reached Rebozo through an 1ntermed1ary, whom we had used in lhe pasl. \Ve told the intermediary only lhat an attorney. whom Rebozo had con- sulted , tiad testified abo ut the Hughes money going to the President's secre. Dear Gloo1ny Gus When the embattled President Nixon thinks of Hunt and Liddy, does he see them as POWs - Prisoners of Wate rgate? -A.J.D. Gloomy GUI "°"'m111h ••• !WDmrttH b'I' ruc11r1 11111 do -~1u1rily rtlltd tht ~~w1 ti !ht new1111Hr. S1t1tlf your Pt! JlletYt lo Gloomy G111, Cl.Ill'!' Pllot. tary and his brothers. \Ve positively did not menti o n KalmbaCh's name. This Is the recollection. too. of the intermediary. Yet v.·e ha ve now learned that Rebozo immediately tried to reach Kalmbach. The call was retumed the next day bv Kalmbach's attorney. James O'Connor Or Phoenix. who told Rebozo that Kalmbach was under Senate injunction not to discuss the Hughes case with anyone. Rebozo pleaded desperately that he had an attomey-elient relationship with Kalmbach. The chairman had ruled otherwise and had ordered Kalmbach to testify "under penalt:Y of contempt " O'Connor informed Rebozo. ' "Oii GOD." "'a iled Rebozo. "This is the \\'Orst thing that has happeped to me.·· The President"s confidant had good reason for his anguish. lie had sworn under oath that he had kept •lughes' $100,000 gift on ice for three years .and, therefore. had no need to seek Kalmbach's legal advice. Yet '~·hen he learned through us that an attorney had divulged how tTie money had been distributed, Rebozo didn't need to be told \l'hich attorney. lf e immediately tried tG get hold of Kalmbach. Senate investiga tors have also checked \~ith Stanley Ebner, who has confirmed Kalmbach·s story. THE l!\1 PLICATIONS for President Nixon could ,be more dangerous tha n any olher Wa tergate revelation. For if Rebozo distributl'd $100,000 in Hughes cash to the Presidenl's secretary and fafi\;Lv, it strains ·all credulity to suggest that Richard Nixon was told nothing about it by his bosom friend and constant shadow .. Campaign to Weaken EPA \VASlflNGTON -A vicious backstage assault by the \Vhite House and the powerful auto industry against the Environmental Protection Agency tEPA l has been mastermind ed by federal budget chief Roy Ash without once talking lo EPA director Russell Train . The fight is over whether EP.A should be stripped of pc:w.·er lo test nevi automobiles for "fuel economy"-that is, how man y miles- per-gallon they can get. Long despised by the auto industry as being run by sophomoric fa natics. EPA has been meas- uring mile's-per-gal- lon efficiency of new cars for the past year as an off- shoot of its legal mandate to control auto pollution. "If you took a poll in Detroit. no agency in Washington would be more unpopular than EPA," a top·level A~h aide told us. The auto moguls claim EPA findings are unfair and amateurish. So. in accord with the Nixon administration's v.·eJl-established rule of cottoning to big business and ignoring the consumer. Ash's Office of !\1anagement and Budget t0~1B) has been plotting a switch of lhe fuel-economy -role from EPA to eith er lhe Cornmerce De pa r t men t or Transportation Department-both safely industry-oriented. BUT BEHIND the White House effort to strip testing from the consumer- oriented EPA is a more dangerous game y,·hich looks suspiciously Hire a "landestine administration effort to gut 1LS own auto-pollution controls program. The target was spelled out by an EPA emission-cont rols expert in the terse language of this confidenlia i memorandum to Train A~l 26 : ''Whal we see as really involved in the proposed move of fu el economy testing out of EPA is an effort to emasculate EPA in any fut ure fight over the auto emission standards ... All re:il influence depe nds on the ability IG obtain. assimi- lale and use information." That memo, signed by deputy assistant ( EVANS·NOVAK J admin istrator Eric Slork . said that v.·hal saved the Clean Air Standard s Act during last winter's critical gasoline shortage was EPA 's control of enginre riog and tec hnological data on \\·hk·h emission standa rds are based. IN SHORT, once it loses po\\'('r to tell consumers how n1any miles·per·gallon a new car 1,1.·i!l make, EPA is C'On\•incf'd it \\'ill next be plundered of its 1\holc emission-controls authority. The likely benefactor : the Commerce Department. never famed £or protecting ronsumers. Throughout this backdoor attack on EPA, Ash himself has never once discussed the problem wiU1 Tr;i in (although !or the first time last v.·Ct!k lov."er-level 0~18 officials began talks \.\"ith EPA). In contrast. Ash has had len gthy chats abou t EPA l\'ith Oetrolt moguls, such as Ford's president Lee Iarocca . who came to see Ash in his office the first week in March. Ash told us he also bas discussed the rap<> of EPA with Secretary of Transportation Claude Brinegar. \rho might "'in the milenge- tcsting progran1, and v.ilh top commerce Oepartmcnt officials. AS ll. '''hose immense power in the t\ixon \\'hite House is still growing. told us that ··satisfying the ronsunter" is the main reason ror the projected shakcu1). During th e peak of the energy shortage. Ash "'as Mr. Nixon's chief henchman In .,.\\·aming EPA that its emission slandards were v:asting vast amount.$ or scarce gasolinc. Ind isputable car-oy,·ner angd:r ovt!r EPA's en1 isslon controls wag exploited by Ash to pressur~ EP.J\ to relax ils congressional-imposed start· dnrds. EPA admits shortcomings in its C..\\"O mileage-testing and is now correcting them. But the most compelling part of its <;tr~ument for . retaining m.ile.age-testing 1s 1nrontro\•ert1ble : the testing is done in Delroit as pa rt ot EPA's c·rnission con- trohi; tl'Sting and co!ls virl ually nothing. As Stork sai d in his mcn1ol'andum to Train : "Any other agency v:ould face: a marrunoth job or selling up f<1 cilities." To Ash, as guardian of.the President '!! budget. that would seem to be good reason in ilself for leaving EPA in charge. But Ash's goal in thi~ matter is nol saving money but satisfying the automotive chiefl~•ins in Detroit. Sleeping· Pills Tricky \\'hen I was in hospital last fall , sonic over-zealous nurse. papped a sleeping-pill into my mouth one nlght. and I couldn't 'get to sleep for four hours. My friends laughed skepticall y when t told them , but it was true. Just as true as the tact -thaL many years ago, when I took my one and o n 1 y tranquilizer pill, it agi tated me so much that T felt like cli mbing the wall. Pills evldent- ly have a reverse ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ leS!I re lief at the same level or dooagc. \\'E ARE fast becoming a drug.addict-.. ed culture, even in something as medl· cally approved as antibiotics which arc ad1ninl stercd in more than ha.lf the cases si n1ply because the patient imagines they 1vill help. and not because the doctor reels they. arc called for. Poor patients are parllcularly victimized in ' this respect. requesting and getting expensive "shots " . for conditions tot n 11 y unresponsive to such t'herapy. I .. f Diabolical Plot to Discourage Parenthood crrect on people like me. (And like some hyperkinetlc children . who are given "pep'' pills to calm down their restless activity.) I was glad to be vindicated. in part at least, by a recent report from the "sleep labora tory" at Penn State, where researchers found that dleeplng pills can not only keep people awake but actually bring on chronic insomnia If they arc used more than a couple of weeks. Insomnia, like headaches. is almost aJways caused b~ psychological pres- ~ures, oo~ by physical malfunctions. Us- ing chemicals to straighten out the mind is as futile as using _hypnotism to set a broken leg. But as !Ong as everyone ex- cept the patient prnrits from promiscuou!I drug Ulking. -wtv:i is to call a halt to this medical lunacy? In ilS di.1bolical a plot as ever <..'011ce1ved by the mind ol 111an. The l.cag11r for Tota l Birt.h Control has issued <1 pa1nphlc1 entitk.'<I "The Joys of Ra1i.1111t Childr('n. ·· ' Th is ls !'iurpr1sing a~ the n1ilitant do- goodl'rS of lhc League ure dt'd lcatcd not to r;iising chil- dren. but lo elimi- n;1t1ng thcn1 -their theory bE'ing th;it while limited birth conirol \1·n1 sol"c SOml' of thP pro~ lems of lhe human ~ r a c e. only total birth control \Vil/ l. soh·e all of the prob· ' lcm!I of lbe human race. And in a single gcnt'ralion, too. I '_'\Ve fclt It Y11as only falr . hCw('ver," saJd the League's Director. Dr. J1omer 1 T . Pettibone. with a sinister smile. "to point out ~ht joys of parenlhood so young couples could make up their own minds." Excerpts front the pumphl~t fotlow. PK.OUABLV the suprc.me moment of Joy come!! with th hir1h ot Yout little one tlhc pan1phlct lh in.t,, At last lhe long nint! monlh1 of mornlnJ ''c:kne11. ' ( ART HOPPE J specialists, ugly mnternity clothes, alarnts and labor arc over. In the weeks ·that follow. Father has the satisfaction or paylng the mt'dical bills and seeing i\lother become fit to ret urn to her hou sehold chores again. Then. afk!r several months, comes that moment or sheer elation \\'hen your little one first sleeps through the night and you don't have to !llaggcr to the stove to "''arm the 2 a.m. boUle. Joy f<Mlows joy. Sooner or later that day ol high happlnw arrives when you no longe r have lo slruggle with messy diapers and bal'ky pins. As your Iii.Uc ()llC!:'S derterity tn<..Tooscs you can look forward to the delightful moment when It can finally tie, but.ton and tipper itsdf. lrnaginc )Our rapture wht!n. after five mtenninable years. you pack It off lo school for lhe first ·time where it wlll be oot of the .noose for hours. By then. you can pleasurabl)' envision the liummcr you will put il in U1e Happy • Days Kennel camp \reeks of freedom . ror two glorious J\.IEANWlllLE, yo ur little one giv~ you innumerable occasions to rejoice. It learns to cross the street by Itself, to take the bus to iLs piano tcssons. ~o stop hounding you for help with HS homework and. evenlually. It even stop!! growing out of everything you buy for ti. lligh school oilers mnny halcvon days. Yoo don't have to go to schooi' pagoonls any more. Nor host large birthday and slumber parties. And its $2000 braces t.'Ome off. \Vhat blessings these nre! At long last, it goes av.'llY to college lo find Itself. The thing to keep in mind here ls that it goes away, bestowing on you the same daily peace and quiet you enjoyf.'d 18 years earlier. The agonies "' adolescence are all but over. \Vhat blissful relief fills your soul! Then -oh, seventh heaven! -it rinds :i job. You are once agnin financially Independent,' if fS0,000 poorer. nut ev£1n 00'4'. the Joys of Raising Children are far from ended. ' For lt, too, vdlt become o parent. · And you can be sure it ·wUJ bring its liule ones t.o you to care far. So j y~u can . look. forward to the joys all over again. DR. PEITIBONE hopes every young couple will read the League's pamphlet. "\Ve ha ve long felt that if young couples could foresee what the joys arc In raising children ," he says, ".the human race would die out overnight." As a practical method of birth control for those who still think the cnncert pleasurable, he suggests they bit themselves over 4.he head with hamm<m; instead. Isn 't It the Truth! Tryest are Umes that not only try men's souls but send them to bed at night wondering what awful thing will race them in the morning; 11.ke waking up to the fa ct that the wife with her eyes squeezed shut Is in fact not oversleeping but pretending to be dead to lhe world so that he will get up and get the breakfast. "Th.trt js only ont tl1h1g people likt U101 is good for them :. o good nig1t,:s sleep.'' -f, IV. llOtDt • ,. TEN INSOJ\.fNIACS were studied in the lab. under normal sleeping conditions. While the pills were fairly effective for a few nights, a comparison group of insomniacs who didn't use dru.gs slept far longer than those who did. The pill· poppers awakened scores or times during the night, sleeping qnly 57 to 74 percent of the time; the non·Wke.rs slep~ from 78 to 83 per0<nt of tbc time. ln addition lo the "cmtrary" people like l!l!!. who respond nerr. lively lo chemlcals. there ls also the dangerous- ly · fgoor«! fact that most drugs opcr. Ale undor a law o! dimJn!st1tng returm. In the Peoo Slate exP,Orlment It wns found that rou.r out of nve or Ure sleeping pllll used ''showed • marked drop In effecUveness by the second week." Then, as the pills become less cfrecUvt, the popper tends to - increase the dosage, and finally becomes lmpe:rvi~s to any amount that ls not fatal. I !loppt<I laking hay.fever silo<• after a few yean tn my adolescence because. as my body became accustomed to the ;bola, ~ affordpd me less and DAILY PILOT .Robert N. Wr.ed, Publisher Thomas Ketvil, Editor Barbara Kreibich .Editorial Page Editor The Mitori•l . ~ or 1he Daily Pilot sttk1 to lntonT\ and A:Umul11itc ~adtrs by Prttcnling on thi1 page d1Vtt'M'i•commentary'on IOpic:s ot in. tn'l'at. h:r' $Yndlcated <'Olwnnl1ts &nd cmoonbts, by priMdina a forum I« ttadt'n' vWw-1 and by prt~tntlnar 1hl1 ntW.!)IJ)t'r's oplniorul and ideu on cuft't'nt toplca. The e<H torlll.I opinkMt1 ol 1~ Dally Piiot •PIJ't'u only 'in the edltorla.1 t1Xumn a1 thtt top ot the ' paae. Opinions cxprened by the: rof. umn\111 and cartoonlsta and letter \\Tltm are their own ind no e"W:lorv-- ment or O\c!lr vi~ by the Daily Piiot -"' inlft'ftd. Monday, May 13, 1974 • / ; .- ,r I - • '\ ' • r.,o.nday, May 13 1974 DAILY PILOT ~~~~~~~-:.::.C..:..:.::..-!., Gubler Accu.ses lliiislia1v ---· Fund MiScl!se Charged ORANGE COUNTY Dea ti is Utlier ~y 0 . C. UUSTINGS Ot .... Dilll, .. lltt ll•ff David Gubler of Mission Viejo, the so- called "walking candid ate" for Congress, has charged lhal incumbent congressman Andrew Hinshaw misused public funds and employes when he was county asses- sor. Gubter, who wants to unseat the freshman 40th District representative, said he has asked the grand jury to l19vestigate "one of the most arrogant rq.isuses of power: I' have ever seen." ·1-ie claims Hinshaw used pu blic .ALBANY', N.Y. (AP) -equipment and assessor's o f f l c e Bishop \\il llam ~1. , WU born, personnel on his successful 1972 primary 74, head of lhe nations largest election campaign black t.'Ongregation, d i e d ' Friday. Albany's first black ~ubl~r pre~nted three s worn bishop, he was head of the affidavits fro1n peo ple be clal~ ~re central New York region of present or former . assessor: s offi ce the Church of God in Christ cmployes to support his contentions. for 39 years. Death Notlres Schmitz to Gubler and maybe next lime Schmitz v.ill bring them in himself," Cleary said. DURING A PRESS conference in Santa - Ana Gubler said he feels like he ls "sitting on a powder keg of information which is full y documented ." Ile said the affidavits, two of which are signed by former Hinshaw employes and one of which is anonymous, "show strong evidence to support a very heavy and qu ick investigation." Gubler said the anonymous affidavit \li'as sworn out by a person who is currently still working fo r the assessor's office. The affidavits claim that Hinshaw used offi ce personnel to send out political mailings, do precinct work and use COW1ty office equipment such as Xerox machines. .... Gu bl er says he knew of the malpractice for I wo Y.ears but had no conclusive evidence until now-less than two months before the primary election . llE SAJO he decided to bring his rhar· 11tes fo rward OOY.' "because I'm runnu1g for Congress." Cleary said Gubler is being cast in the role of "the man wearing the white hat" and is simply mak lng thl' charges to gain notoriety. ' " Co cnine Suspect Will Fnce Trial SANTA ANA -A Laguna Beach man who allegedly sold a quantity of cocaine to an undercover officer fo r $900 has "THE XEROX \\'as used for hours on been ord ered to face trial July 15 in end making literally thou sands of copies Orange County Superior Court. for his purposes," Gubler said. Judge James Turner set the trial date Gubler '~harged that depa r tme n t for Carl John Russo Jr., 19, of 3033 a ppraisers were used as political errand Nestall Road. The defendant is free on boys and were sent to hang campaign bail. signs and man Hinshaw's headqu arters. Russo was arrested Aug. 16 after he Gubler said he estimates the total cost allegedly met an undercover fede ral of suc h misuse is $30,000 and that as officer in an auto supWy store in Laguna many as 150 of the assessor's offi ce staff Beach and handed over an ounce of of 325 were u s e d by Hinsha\v for cocaine. It is alleged that Ru sso accepted ANA~IElti.1-0rtngc County ar11s.ans. musiC'ian-; 1111 ct craftsn1en 1\•ill di~play their C!'cations 1111d t;.1lents .1t !he "Carous<'l of Anaheim" 111 lhl' Anaheim Convention Cenl<'r ~l:iy 21 to June ~ Dis pluys <ind C'll!C'rlain111enr \\·ill begin .\l:i/ :11 frun1 fi l•l 10 p.1n . an•! r.oon to 1'1 p 111 June l un I '.!. Thf'rr i.; 1111 charge for :1chr1sslon 01· purk· Ill~. ,,,Tr •~1s '., • ! ' "r'·'· " E .... ,y S111ud1y In th• DAILY PILOT ~torC' than 50.000 visirors ;irr t'Xpl'1.:ted to nttrnd tht• H di :innual fes tival. accordin): tu Huth Salacts chairrnun of th ,· c11ent. \ i;tui.lc nt·:1rotlu1"~1 t·1i;ht n11 llitnf'l ('r f1l n1 "'S\t \.I l \~11 1 1 bt· hl•ld !he ··V<'1u11g of ~·1~v 1 JI und th1• r\nah r•iw l 111•1n L...-----------' High School ~1st r1ct F''~ f1 )·I tivtt\ v1ill hr 1·eld Junt• I PHARMACY WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE CHECK THESE SUf'fR SALE SPECIALS-# Bufferin Tablets. ;t 100 . . . . . . . Allergan '"L1Qu1hlm" We111ng Sain . 2 oz Oral .. B Toothbrushes. Aduit 40's & 60s Bact1ne Ant1sept1c. 2 oz. ~ .... 1 6 7 1 75 9Bc 73c o ....... P"4C• 1.4 7 1 59 B9c 59c s ....... 1.17 1.29 "' 49c 2700 E. Coast Highway at Fernleaf, Corona de Mar AMl'l.EPARl<ING IN llEAlt . H_,. -9:JO • 6:00 Doily Clo$ed Swldoy5 and Holiday~ 644-7575 poli tical purposes. a paymen t of $900 for the drug. -~~~~-~~~-'--:~c..:__c..:__c:.:._c.c:._-"-~~~~~~~~~~ WARNl!ilt VJr-ol11l1 W1<ner. A~ U . O•Tt of dNlll. MIY n . 1'''· w•• • rHICIHll of ~702 C1tllfl Or., H""!ll'IO!Of' Beach. !>11rvlvltd bv t>er •on. Wiiiiam Warner, Jr._._ I dt\IQhltr. S1llv Mc Ll11tock: br'vrnef, Bruce Acinrtwt Sr.; sl•ler J1,111e ~n!; '"'" vr1n«hlldrtn. !.ervlcts wlll bt hekl Wt<lnei.<11v. MIY 11, 1t7' II 2:)0 PM. PH-1"1mily Coloi111I fll'!Wrll Home. V/ntmll>ilt r . AllUCKLE & SON WISTCLIFF -TU.UY 427 E. I 71h 51., Co"o Melo 646.4888 -·-IALTZ-lllGllON FUNERAi. HOMI CorotTo del Mor Cosio Mesa -·- 673-9450 6 46-2424 llLL llOADWAY MOllTUAllY 110 Broodway. Co\10 Me'° 548-3433 -·- McCORMICK LAGUNA llACH MOllTUAllY 1795 l ogL1na ConVon Rd. 494.94 15 -·-McCOllMICK MISSION MOllTUARY 18832 Com1no CopoitrollO Son Juon Copis1rono 49~· 1776 PAc1l~Vi1w MIMOllAL PARK Ceme1ery Morr uory Chopel J.SOO PCKllk VlflN Ortvtl Newporr e.och. California 644·2700 -·-I PIEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNaAL HOMI 7801 Solso A.-. .• W"lmitllolf' 893-352.S -·- SMITHS' MOllTVMY 627 Moi11 St. H11n1111gtan Becxh 536.6539 Rites Down For Arniell Forces Day By DOUG LAS FRITZCHE Of rlM DlllY f'li.t Iliff The energy cri sis has toned' down plans for Anned Forces Day along the Orange Coast but activi ties are scheduled at El Toro l\farine Corps Air Station and Camp Pendleton. Los Alamitos Naval Air Station and the Newport Beach Coast Guard Station have planned no on-base activities for Armed Forces Day, l\1ay 18 but thC air station will take part in the City of Torrance Armed Forces Day parade. Fuel conservation h a s broken the tnictition of air shows that have marked El Toro's Anued Forces Day celebrations since its opening in 1943, Ma j. Sally Pritchett, public in£ormation off i c ~ r . said. 11llS JS THE s e.cond consecutive year the air show has been canceled. Last year, crashes "-the Navy Blue Angels aerial acrobatics team , precluded holding the alr show. The El Toro air station will hol d an open house ti.1ay 18 from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. including displays oC aircraft, wea por1 s. crash cre'of equipment, air traffic control equipment and a v I a t i o n physiology, 1\1 a j , Pritchett sa id. The Santa Ana M a rin e Corps Helicopter Air Station will hold its Armed Forces Day ac t i v i ti es in con- junction with the El Toro open house. CAMP PENDLETON w i 1 J hold its Armed Forces Day ceremonies at the auxiliary landing field , beginning with a parade by base and division 1\1arines at 9:30 a.m. A· vari ety of static exhibits Incl uding v e h i c 1 e s and weapons \Yill also be on display. Pl1otog Has Fair Post COSTA MESA -Frank Kingaard, an Orange County photographer. has b e e n appointed photography show supervisor for the 1974 Orange County Fair. scheduled to run in Costa l\1esa July 12-21. (" ~ · ) SOotlon SHADE TRIES • a..,......,..,,,, 11h, .. ,., ....... _., ... ,.. l fG. '5.4t Wrought Iron PLANTERS • l...rif.! ..... W.<k .,.,... ... ""-" .. ., ... -::CACI PU~~"' lfG. '11.H llG. 't.Jf s999 '6" IA""9K PlAlfTU TOUI lfCi. s349 CMOIG ''·" ~"OhDm UGHT FlXTURIS • CWc1'1fJW91., ...... .~ ....... 511 "--.I ,.,. ...... ~ .. /ttft,.A. • °'"' .., ..,. ,..,. -""""'"' ..... ..,._,,., ltif ~ .......... YOUI CltOtCI , .... '1499 111.tt • • ' Klngaard, president of the Coast Camera Club, o f Newport Beach, is planning a series of profe s siona l ~~1;£;::::::~=~------------....J photography exhibits a n d '--- demonstraLions at the fair. CompeUtlon will be offered in both amateur and professional categories. S1onley" FORGED STEIL PRY BAR • f..-114 1..i o .. 1 wini ,.r.w.I l knlH llJfti .. 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'34.tt '---'-----------_;:__:.:_ ____ :::__-! • • • • • ZJ UAI L\ PJLUI , 'Deatla Ro1v' • News to Te1~1ninal THE FAMILY CIRCUS l~ast W'or1l 't By Bil Keane Tiny Village ~f Granite Picking l! p t 1~e Pi eces r Patients Debated ()n Ct.LJJe r GRANITE, Om IU PI Y - Granite, once a goldrush town in eastern Oregon. has made it back from the grave. but he died later and for a rev• \Vest of Baker in the eastern part of !he st:.ite rind is nes'.lrd ~·rans the only inhabitant was on the ~'c~t side of a pine· Otis Ford. no'v 9~. who movPd overed hill 4.800 feet above to Sumpter. 15 miles dO\Yn the ~t·a levt'I in lhc BI u e impending death as a hum<111 rigl'lt " Dy DICK WEST DETROIT (AP l -Telling some termihall y ill patients or their fate may be as cruel as . '. keeping a prisoner on death row before his execution. a Philadelphia psychiatrist says . Sorne people sink i n to depression or fear when told. v.•hill" others take the news calmly, the psychiatrist said. Others react with anger and some refuse to '·hear" the message. he said. \\' . .\SlllNGTOi\' IUP lf -If anyone ls to have the last word on the \\'atergale tape. trcinscripts. Jrl it be \\'illiam Shakespeare. Last \Veek, the smallest incorporated city in Oregon and possi bly the n a t l o n . rlected its first government in highway toward Baker. · ~tountafns. Granite is located 43 miles ---,=:--::::=~-=.;:;--TH£ Dr. Edw~rd Gottheil made the statement in proposing a study of one of the 1nedica\ Vi"Orld's most important questions: Should a terminally The.re have bc>en so m:tn\' conflicting analyses of the tr11nscripfs, v.:e badtv nejW a EARL'S 16 years. Granite has a popul8tion of MAMNLNG~S eight and nearly everybody in ·COLLECTORS P•umA~~"t.=~""' town got elected to city · SHOP. •.}kt~ Tim• Sfj•h government. . •t 'f'll' ooor ~4ll-~fr.f;C!~l1.~~vo. All 01111~ · ill patient be told he or she is dying? Gotthcil said he and his associates had found a n increase in cases of n1cntal deprcssiun paralleling t he incr('aslng p r a c t i c e of "1forn1ing dying pa1ients of U1eir fnte. \ G HTe4 \> SIDE '"\Ve are not a ghost town," .~·~ 51, .,.,. •. u.e:'o 642·17 51 ::;nid the new treasurer Joanne 'i~~~~~~~~~~b-:~~~==-=-~-~c'.!-'~ Lucas. "and we don't wan t · In a report tD the An1('rican Psychia tric Association . he •. called for research to develop difft•rcn t perspccll\'t'. So let us view thern from the vantage point of someone \1·!10 has been people corr1lng in and ripping .. -------------------... boards off buildings or trying · guildelines as to '"''ho can ·: safely be told. Telling a patient so he can wind up his affairs may be \velcon1e<l by some. Gottheil snid. But son1conc loo ill to , GO'ITllETL QUESTI0f\1EO take a 1<1st trip to see a ne\\' ~the current school or thought grandchild might have his or ~. that it is more humanitarinn her hope shattered. And he : to be truthful with the fatally said hope is a strong ally in ; ·ill,, ''treating knowledg~--~thc_~tient's will to fight. ~ ADV£Rl1SOIEITT :liit"Al.TH NEWS ... !Asthma Is A Killer;. ·A~thma Can Be Killed I f you h ave ever see n :isthmn attacks," says Dr. anyone desperately ri ght ing Couture. dead for 358 years. , "" ,.,..,,,_ h _,,-~,-... I' Below, gleaned fro1n is many deathless lines. are a "Grandma wrote 'Wm.' on my' envelope. Is that on fcv• Shakespearian quotes old·foshioned woy to spell 'Billy'?" to find souvenirs. \Ve want to be a city again and v>'ith the grov.·th or recreationa l activities we will be." quitable to the QC'('asion . The,_________ IT \\'AS RECREATIONAL "S" is I.he immortal bnrd and the "\V" is Y'r H'nlbl' activity that revived the ar.ea C'rr'sp'nd'nt. T ~ S and to\vn, which had been IV. Mc. Shakespeace. a gceat J" . T <IXJJaycrs 'H onorablc' ~fd' )~~;. ~:~~~;~.t~d 1';~ number of expletives \Vere 1901 with a population of 3,500 deleted from the transcripts. SA..'J FI{ANCJSCO (U PI ) -were "tnking all kinds of that lasted untU the mid 1930s. \Vhat is an expletive? the nation·s to1> tax-collector questionable deductions, the then died when population s. "A good ~outh·filling sa.ys I.he U.S. taxpayer is still average refund thi s year reached ' 3 in 1960 tt n d oath," a good citizen who paid his would have risen dra1naticalty eventually dy,ind!ed to I. \V. Do you find it shocking fair share this yea r. over what we projected." ·· ... The last official of record that the President ol the IRS Director Donald C. But Alexander said the lRS v.·as A.J . Perard. acting United States ~·ould use such Alexander said in a talk here predicted an increase of about recorder, \.:ho n1ade his last language? that he noted •·no v.•ave of 5 percent based on norm al entry in the city's book.<;; on noncompliance" this year. economic factors, and this Oct. 10. 19.58. At the tin1e. Hair Slaves, Go Free! ... .,..,.., .. ,.. , ............. ,..., .. clryen. ... lllffl"•'' ._.._ et .... inc ,.ii.r N9tb • ,... cott .. c•dv '"'" ,..,.rM ,.__ a..t •• ..-d,..,. y•• wltti ,.,.. tcllMr styli ... ,._ thon .,.. ,""4oll _. .,_. ..... 01r MiMp cvn. "'"'' CMtlo .... 8114 ... ,, .,. fer ttilt ..., GiN4 for ••Y •9"• _., ..... ...... ,..:w ,...,... .... w •••. "" ,.,...,.,, 110 piltl. 't'•lt IMIJ ""' ..,. ,. Mt p11r •ullr ot•I .. T\• •••rol potwtlol ttMt "9fY t.911 9f .. ., It-. In ..... ,. to ~I to ttio .. .,.ho <•• 11Ht It. We 1'9 ttri ... ltytW.. A little bft HtMr ttiaa tM 'I.rt -· JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING '564 Kaoilltoo Ave .. lhlntl119ton leacr.-968·3334 JOS H. -ll¥d1 Ful-~Ph. 87'·38'3 MOW FOi TOUI CONYIN llNCI ••• OP'IN DAIL'f ·8 AM. to 10 P.M-sAT. & SUNDAY. 9 to 5 P.M 1 ror br Calh throu gh a ll\• t:ikes isi;uc \\•il h those terrorizing iJltack· of asthma \\'ho hehe\·e that asthma is sou know the ·condition is a simply :.in ;1llcr)'.!y. Attacks can S. "TllAT IN TllE captain '.~ hut a choleric \vord which in __ i_r_e_s,_ai_d_th_a_t_i_r 1_h_e_u_'"...:P_'_::_Y'_'_'___.:Pc."'_d_i_ct_io_n_h_a_s_h_e_ld_u_.:p_. ____ '_'l_b_ert __ P_a_u1_se_n._1_"_'_m_a...:y_o.'_·.:..... ___________________ ~-- <·a use. ror real concern. h e t r 1 g g: e r e d b y · llov; serious is asthma'? hyperi;e-nsi ti~lo normally ··Few peo le rea lize that harmless Mngs like pollen. asthma, as a food s or dust, but not iJl ~·ays. k i I I e r , ··n csid (•s. people in good- outranks h ea lth do not h a ve an l e uk emia , a llergenic or asthmati c po I i o, and reaction to pollen or dust. And t•onge nit al and if your hody is functio ning rh e um a tic properl y you won't have "" h e ' a r l ·allergies." lf,it, ' • disea se '' .. What actually happens in f'f.k "'-,, ·.~i.J slates Or. a n ast hma att ack i s a tJ,,• '~ Couture of the contraction of the muscular . Dr. G.-y C o u t u r e bn nds in the v.•alls of the ~. D.c.: Chiropractic bronchiat 1tubeS, culling down office. on the supply of ai r to the ''Asthma is not to be Jun gs. Nol enough air means 1.olerated or tnned with. And not enough oxyi.:e n. y e t people will g<>" years "Th:1t's "''hY tbe asthma \vilhout effective treatment for suffcrl·r forgets everything themselve s, or \\'orse yet , for except his frantic struggle to their children,"· bemoans Dr. breathe. His mind and body Couture. are sign allin~ desperately for· .. Jt's as if they build up an th e oxyz::cn they must have to lrnmunity ·to effective care a:o; survive." says Dr. Couture. t hey become morr and more Should you y,·::it until you d'e1>e nde nt on bronchia l have an atta<"k before you·sec dilators oind olhcr '\.vheezing a "hiropractor? medicines." ''Its. nonscnsC' to put orr , ''It's very frustrating to erfcct i \·e treatment for tn eel someone who takes asthma. Aner all, it can be U Sffi ma for granted,"-:fays Dr. direl'{·\Y faf.'ll -by st ranj!ulfilion Couture. durin)..( a s1>asm or indirectly "On the other hand, some of so because nf the tl'rrific m y mo s t rewardin g strain each <ittack places ou exPer iences in chiropractic. your heart.'' • have come in the treatment of Jn short, lhc a::;th malic who an as thmatic, gasping for t!oes \\'ilhout ~1gnificant care breath during an attac:k." can look 1or\1·ard to mi sery and Jn a lm ost all l'ases of higher r i:-k of permanent b ·r on ch i a I a s thma• damage with caC'h rerurring 'Chiropractors find tbat there is attacl\. "Let's t;.ice .,it, :i~lhma a slight dis location of is adoit today'problcm."' vertebrae in the shoulder area. This is the exit-point of nerves JCading to the bronchial tubes. .. "In many cases. gently nud g in g the dis lo ca ted vert ebrae bark towa rd their normal position has given iin mediatc relief from severe Dr. Couture mainta ins offi ces at 'fhc Couture Chiropractic Office, 20·13 \Vestcliff Dr., Nc~'Jl(>rl Bra<"h !l'nriit•r 17th & lrvu1c -. near Coc:o'sJ . Jlhonc 6-15-5300. tCJ ,\RS l :J7·l th<.' soldier ls f!at blasphemy." \V. \\ihat y,·ould you sav was the general tenor of the conversations between t h e Presi dent and his aides as they discussed y,·hat to do about Watergate? S. ''Machinations . hollowness. treacherv, and all ruinous disorders. A deal of skimble·skamble stuff. 0 ! ·\Vhat men dare do! What men may do! What men daily do, not knowing what thev do!" W. How did the President react when John Dean first told him ttie extent of White House iuvolvement'? S. "Big round tears coursed one another down his innocent nose in piteous chase." IV. Do y00 think the President had any part in arranging or approving the cover·up'? S. •11 Ai\T CABtN'D, cribb'd. confined, bound in to saucy doubts and fear s." W. What do I.he transcripts show with respect to the White House aides? S. "They that touch pitch ,,·ill be defiled." ~ \V. How did the White House apnroach the problem? S. "One foot in sea and one on shore; to one thing constant ne\'er." \V. But didn't John Dean give the impression he had the situation well in hand ? S. "Hear him debate of corn!T'.On wealth affairs. you \\'Ould say it hath been all in nil his study. Tum him to any cnuse of poli cy. the Gordlan knot of it he will unloose.'' Two steak brochette 1 dinners for $5.95. • Have dinner ......;1h a triend. The Jolly Roger haS an inviting a Her lor you. Dine vJith the pirate and enjoy two complete teriyaki sleak brochellc dinners for 1ust $5.95 when you bring in the coupon below. 1 his special bf'ochette dinner of skewered bell pepper slices. pea rt o nions, rnushroom caps and cherry tomato between generous ;)eces al Choice USDA sreak,is brO!led to your taste and served on a bed of rice with an extra p:>nion of our leriyaki sauce. Included is soup du jour or fresh garden salad with sliced cucumbers and 1nat1 nated rn1xed beans, pipi·ng ho! homemade bread and a t bottOfntes.s cup of our special blend coffee. The Jolly Roger would like the.Pleasure of your company. 'Ne hope you·u accept our inv1fation. flfSTAURAHfS I/ • Ma Ice Yourself A Promise ~n'744 reshape, firm 'n trim with a body that's fit to live in. • .. • you don't .just · &9et a shape ''you get.in sliape'' , I • Diel Alone Can't Do II .•• While you shed pounds Iha! cul down ugly fa t, you 've got to l1rm up to eliminate unsighlly I lab. The result, a shapel y figure trimmed down, w1lh texture light as a drum. It's au here-d1eta1y and exercise programs designed f or your individual need. Instructors and exercise machines that gel maximum results in the shortest possible time. Pt us Sauna. Steam, WhirlpooJ. Sun Rooms, and Swimming Pool to make !he complele change, Before you know ii. you'll be lirm, slim and lr1m. You'll look great, !eel great Remember you don't JUSI get a shape : you get in shape. Make yourself a promise-Call Today! I I There are SEVEN different programs to choose from to suit your Individual needs. Beginning as low as •.•• 2 weeks at the $1 Q Spa toronly H@~nd©\~ s,i ~~~~~Hw~~~BS c.llltoday. BUENA PARK 510 S. 811eh 8oul1.,1rd, South of Lincoln A'ttnu1 826·0381 ORANGE 622 E11t K1!1/11 Av1nu~, Wttl 01 Tustin Av1nu1 639-2441 'COSTA MESA 2300 H1rbor Boul1v1rd, Htrbor center 549·3388 WESTMINSTER 6757 W1ttmln1t1r A•tnue, We1tmlntt1r C1nt1r 894~3387 HUNTINGTON BEACH 18585 M1ln St•Ht, M1ln St. 11 B11eh 01 ... 842·1451 LONG BEACH 4101 At11ntle Bou11w1rd 1 Corner of C1r1on 426-8874 ENCINO 17031 Venture Boul1w1rd, W111 of 81lbo1 986--6330 r • • ' • • Boga1·t Seco11d Piel\: f 01· Roles If the origi~al llolty\vood plnnnt'rS had Hnd lht>ir way, Edward G. Robinson v.·ou!d h:.ivc st:irrctl in "The Pctriried F'orest." Ronald Beagan ln "Casablf111ca." t:corgf' Haft In "The twtallesc F~lton." And C:rcgory 1_,(!(!k in "The Afrieart Queen.'' Details _ that cxpluin how 1iun1phrcy Hogurt wound up as the ~l<ir 111 t·arh of !he for1•going fil111s ~ire lengthy 11nd roniphcnted . Hut he die!, in fncL /\'lore r·oc-ently, Ute lat.e 1'1r. Uognrt turn1.'tl into a scrt or tull worshipers' hero. 1lut the old pros in IIolly"'OOd say he alrnost nrvcr 1,•;as !he first choice of the custu1g rnogul s. That's hard to understand, isn't it? The boys \vho get i;ct back in S(•hool to re1X'at a grade oul.numbcr the !(iris \\•ho do so hy 6.1 to one .. No! all historians realize that Thomas Jf'ffcrson so..1ked hL'> !t·ct t'Vcry day in a !uh of ice \\'aler ... Son1e mer- chants el;iim !hey could drop their prices by about 15 percent if !hey L·ou!d ~l.!t rid of the shopli(ters. lll~AL NA~1ES Q. "\Vh:lt are the real names of the Uniroya l stunt drivers?" • A, Uni, Kuyc Kaiser. Roy, .Jack Plumstead. Al. Cliff Cudney. 'I'hat last OJlC, Cudnry, did the trick driving in films !'uch as "The F'rench C.Onncctlon." "The Anderson TJpc!'," "Cops and Hobbcrs" nnd "Shaft's Big Score." Q. "\\lhnt sort of injury is 1nost c:ornmon a1nong p1.:o- plc hit by lightning?" A. A partial and temporary loss of hearing. Believe you already know that morc ~Lightning victims survive than die, no? Q. "How <.'Q1nc nwst \\'allpapcr comes 201,: inches \\'Ide?" A. &>causC' that \.\'i'.lS the irides! the old hand-crank presses could print up in the early days. TlllEVES A third of lhc $2 million worth of grub that Rarxlolph llearst intendOO to give nway in Califomia recently "'as ~-wiped off the trucks before it t'Ould be passed out. Lud Kramer is quoted as saying that. finally took a dozen men to guard il nightly. Whal makes the sky blue. daddy? Should your off. spring deliver that line. sir, Ix-prepared. The sky is filled with 1nUlions or tiny dust particles plus . gases. They ab- sorb a lot or the red rays of the sun. but scartcr the rays of other colors. And like mixed paint, "'hen those un· aboorbed rays combine, they come out blue. It's cl~med a man could live longer on fresh "'ater and plain saJt than on "·ioe and any sort of food abso- luttly v.ithout So'.lit. Police say appi-ox imalcly half of the ex-convicts change UlCir names at least lhttc times. 1\ddrcss moil !o l . AJ. Boyd. P.O. Box 1875, New. rort Beach 92660. ····' ~..., ,,_.,.. " 111 Serviee Airman !\llcb1cl It Allen, son of t.trs . Barbara L. Osborne of 9(M2 Carrolltov.'T'l D r i v e , lfunlington Beach. h.as bcC1l assigned to Lov.·ry-AF'B, Colo ., afte r completing Air F'orce basic training. \Valtcr C. Garland, son of ~tr. and l\trs. William J. Garlnnd, 18391 D c I aw a r e Slrcct. Huntington Beach. \\'aS promoted to Amry Specialist F'our at Ft. Laoton. \\lash. C.RAFW:ITr ............. ,·.-1~ F (t.tlie,., So11 Seek .Slirne Secit \'ORK. Pa. (UPI I -1\lrs. Dorothy Norris says she has never had so much interest in an election -or a greater need ror ''co1np l et e neutrality." Her only son and her husband both are seeking the same congressional seat. John C. Norris. 31. is seeking the Rep u b I i can nominalion in the ~lay 21 primary for the 19th district congressional seat, b e i n g vacated by retiring Rep. George A. Goodling. Mrs. Norris' husband, John H.. 53. is seeking t h e candidacy fo r the. same seat on the Democratic ballot. Both \\Wk at !he family- o'o\'Ued radio station. \\'GCB. at nearby Red Lion. John H. is the owner and John C. a salesman. "They're not a c t u a 11 y competing against each other yet." ~1rs. Norris said. "but if thev should both \\'in thl' prilnary nominations. \\'ell. things could change." The Norris campaigners are two or a total of 6 Democrats. 7 Republicans and o n e Constitutional party candidate seeking the GOP scat held by Good.ling. California's Deaths Drop SACRAMENTO (UPI) The number of person'l killed in , traflic accidents i n California during April drop- ped for the fourth consecuti\'P month. the California High"·ay Patrol has reportetl. The total of 317 deaths last month \~:ere 90 Jess than the 407 victims claimed during April, 1973. the CHP said . Tile airman has 'b cc n assigix'd to the Technical Training frmer at Lowry for specialized !raining in the armament systems field. Airman Drnnlii J . ~1etiger. son of f\fr. a11d Mrs. JOhn E. ~tctzger. 3196 Bern Drive. Laguna Beach, has'graduated 21 Sheppard AFB, Tex., from the U.S. Air Force aircraft mechanic course conducted by !he Air Training Command, s-.rious about Losing Weight? Airman ~1etzger. \\'ho was trained to repair current Air force jef aircrnlt, is being assigned to an Air F'orce support unit at tncirlik AB. Turkey. U.S. Air Force Second TJicutenant Dnnny E. \\'llkin , son or l\lrs. Patricia L. Shnon , 17752 Collins Ci r cle . lluntington 8 ea air. has received his M.S. degl't'C in electrical engineering rrom !he Air FOf"Ce Institute or Technology (AFIT). ·Wright · Patterson AFB. Ohio. AFIT provides accredited g r a d u a t e · level re!ident education for selected military and key government employes In scientific, technological and other fields. Anny Private David K. Nicolson, son of ~1r. Rnd l\1rs. Robert A. Nicolson. 17261 Bredo Lane, Hun Ii n gt on Beach. was assigned to the 9th in fantry division at Fl. Lewis, \\'ash. Pvt. Nicolson is an armor crewman in Company A, 2d BaUalion1 77th Armor of the division's 2d Infantry brlgndc. Army Private First Clau Patrjck Hedrick, Mn of ~fr. and Mrs. Thom~ R. Hedrick . 17402 Meer Circle. HunUn,l'l;tt>n Beach, recently arriVed at Ft. t.ewls. \Vssh .• for duty wl1h the 9th Infantry Division under the Arm v'a station of choice enlistment pr'ogrntn. . ., RABBln _..I, I/ AUTO-MOMIOWHlltl ~ \.!-J INSURANCE ··) ~ 1fl4 HartMt lo111levord ~::Fl COSTA MISA & ~ ,, 549.5554 -_..... "· Medical .W~ight ·Reduction Lindor~nique program is a safe and practical method for the entire family to lose weight and learn how to maintain proper weight ... under the strict supervision of Medical Doctors. Coll for Information Monday thru Friday 8 AM. to 6 P. M. NEWPORT BEACH . 645·3740 COSTA MESA 557•1893 Poc:c Pro(essionol Old(} Meso IJettJc Prdc$~ Olde} Son Demordino • Long Deoch • Sherman Oaks Newport Deoch • West Covino • Sonto Monico Woodland Hills • Pomono • Mission Hills Costo Mesa • Howthorne • Oronge E. Long Deoch • Posodeno • Lo Habra Gorden Grove • Fullerton • Riverside Cerritos • Son Diego • Hollywood Clolremont • Chula Vista · Lindora MEDICAL CLINIC I ' . .\lnr111lng Rise' • Teen-agers Make Tztrn to Liquor BOSfO:'I 1UP1l There has been "a recent, dra1natic anrl alarming rise" in the incidence of alcoholism among lt.>tn·agers, according to Officials of the ~lassaehusetts J>ublic Health Department. lreated' at a center in Boston's south ~nd during a six-month period JJ>o"•ed that 18. 19 and 2().ye-ar-okbi ranked f I rs t , second and third in the number of incidences. "This is the nlOSI dram.itic and .:ilarming factor \\'C1\'C l'Ollle across." said Ronald C'.cddes. director of the center. Geddes said at least a Monday, Moty 13 11J74 DAIL V PILOT I) ~unuc l\'OTJC~ PlJBl.IC Nf)T I C I~ PUBLIC NOT ICI'; JUf'l:IUO• COU•T 0, tALll'ORflllA, (HANOI' 01' 10"1 SUl"••IOll COUlll T 0, TM• J COU N1'V Of' 0.AH01 NOTt(I' OI' l'Ulll( HEAlllNO TO JTATI 01' CAL11'0llP•IJA 11'0 11 100 Wttl Cl•IG. ,..,,.,..Drift, It HILO OH fHli l'llOf'Oll!D LAH01 THfi COUNTY 0' OllANOI: i •M• A111, C•Uftornl• VSI! OISTlllCT (HA1"0EJ [ N•. "'·'"'°" < .. SI HUMll• 21t(IM P u• IU""' IO 1nt Pt~<1nlrg .,,., Zrr·'"O NOTICI! OF Hf!AIUNO OF P•TlrlOH IUMMOHI LIN. " ~"',r~..a. ~ 1 <>111•• uf 1,, '•I 11'011: "ltOBATE 011' WILL AHO FO• P!lllnl·tr· • [AT It t c E LANG. ol l/V•nt Pl'"""; ,,.., 'fll•\ICon, flo:)lj(I ., LEnElllS TESTAMENTAlllY (101'10 tlt'ill"d*"I; WA,j..U.Cli IUCHAll:O LA"IO ""'~1111v1n '"•' 'llV~"' t ft•ll'lll 1111 ~· WAIVEOI To, ... °'4t'lldetll; A ,1 .. 01 ,amp11lnl hi) Nlllf bV 111(1 c°"'""•l tDft Otl • loo>•! E1•1•• ol OPAL c S.CH ... Ul'P -n 1119tl ~ 1111 pl1lnlltl f Otlni l t r>ol. II en.-. P•Ol>Ol;r>g '10 •lflill!O !$ ... ·l•""'•I Oecf<lwd. -~ !Ill "'°"l"'loll !04.t.nd Ull• ~w1.1,1ll, wou must CluttL<I MIO llU t]4J 01•'111•1•tt f'1,1nntd NOTICI! IS HERE~IVh~i +ll".d 1111 Tn '"I• (-1 1 wr1!1i<1 f'lt.U•f'IO 1<1 '°''""U"ltf [DAWN ·LliNoaE Ji °' -.J111 M ' flN>Ol'M lo !ht (Ofl'lpltll\I lor 1 wr!1ttn or Rr;ul1TI~"~ e• 1n1 ltv "" 7~nlno 1 11'"1" • JKllllon 1°" •or•~~mentor~• to or.i Ptt<1l119, ll 1 J,,..1ic1 Courtl w111>l11 Jt O•u•tWne• •• '" •"CtJ l•v "'· <•hlo•n•• I :t 1~1~f~r0' !~:!r'W,1~~1 re+ere..t• 011'1 I M-'" "'It wmmon1 l1 MtVec:l on YOU. St ld Pl111 11 Of\1Qn1lecl Cl w N' 13 lC· 10 "'l\!cft h midi /or •urlh<tr i;.iirl·tl·l•I', °' .......... ,., rou• Ot .. ull w1U DI \'lll1•f<j on I] 0 R • "(; l r R E E . PLP.NNEDl •o'ICI 11\11 , .... l•fll<e •ncl t!IAo:~ ttl <111•!•.q 1ppllt1tl011 bY I ... pl1lnrlll 11ld 1111 t:oun C0\11.\UNIJV ($tcllontl 0'''"(1 l~p IR$ I~ ~1,.11 n.as -yt for Mt~ !I, Jt1'· m1~ tntt r 1 IV119m.,.11Q1infl ~ou lot r~ ll<tl ~n" 1>1090~1<1 •o t ntllllf "om Jn1 /J. 1111 •·).)1 m,. In tl\I cour••rl(lm OI OIPI" mont y or otntt 11lltf 1~e•led In !fl• AQl'l111ltvr1I OhHotl 10 Int l'C P11nn~d flltn• No. 1 of ·~!d ~~~''· 11! 100 (lv•r ton•O!tlnt. -C'O•""'U"''Y o .. i,111 C1nt1r D•IVI 'll•~r. 111 lhf (l•Y of Stnl~ lf Jiit wlai. It MM. "-M YICt of 1n l~ •~otttl •~n~ '"~110<! 0'0P0,.., I t.G !>n~, C11llornl1 11ttr<11y In tt>lt m1rtw, yw ~IC 00 14 ..:•e •tt•1H"llltl <;Wv.,loptn~r. 011 <;e•••·n1 WILLIAM E... SI JDHH ,,.,..,11, ,. 1n11 y1111 .,ltHint, 11 '"f• P•PIM•lf toc1te<1 on 1n1 .ouine•1v tltJf> cl t.OU<lll Cieri( 11'11~ ... flltod ti! fllTlf, M<luUO<'I Pt•~WIY '1'•0..,tV ot!V.ttll )f/lel lfVltWIT.t, tiUll!WITl ANO llEMElt o.r.a ~"" lt. I"' (111yon •••1111e •n!l J1llrtv llo~a. Af!onltVI II LIW WILLIAM E. SI JOHN , (l.,o;. R EQIJE~IEO f\V, Tn1 P 1 t ~I~ yJ llO lJn.; lt•~ftl By Oonnt W!1111tn, PtPuly Comru'"1 , 1 "· 0 ll O• IUS . HAltlY I HICKS S1ld llUbl•r ~tArlnn M !II~ "'fl0>~ NtWPOtl , ... ,h. Cthlorntt ,,.'° 11111 ••• (~ l lvf V OCKJtt<I p1, .. w,u bl Mlo I I /•)I) D,.. I Ttl1 11 \1) UJ·to2G Hunt1..,1ooi lt1<1i. c 1U,..nle n.u or 11 "°°" the•eafler •• po\>iblt, on Attor11tY1 !or "•11110<\lf' (114) M1·!401 l hvrt.c!•Y· M~y 13, 1971, ;" "'• pr.,nnono Puohtllt1 Dr .. nwt Co•!I O~!ly l'iltl. An11r111v lor ""ln!UI Com,.,!11.l0t1 "''""II Room. l (lw11 centtr M~ ll T•. :Ml, It!• 1711-)~ P~ollJMd Ort11Qe Co.111 Ototy Piie!. Bullolno. 1101 C1mP\11 Drtv1. l•viM, Mtr IJ, 20. 1r. 1no June J. 1974 11u .11 C1lltornl 1, •' which ll•11t •"!I pl1c~ ~11 PUBLIC N01'TCE l'hc inc reased rate 0 r problen\ drinking in the youths 20 years or nge or younger has be<>n reported as .. a general trend" in the 22 nc\\'IY oprncd state alcohol detoxlficatloo centers. ----------\11rrM>n1 eltht r 1tvorl110 or O!IP<>•in? 11•<1 partial factor in the rising PUBLIC NOTICE 11•~e.i i:>t~n w.11 DI hta•<1. 1• I• ••· 1 1tt11 Problem among the i·oung is --------~ jCl...,11til '"·" •llY .... 111111 reWOll•• IO '"·• HOTICI 01' 0 Is 5 0 L ll TI 0 N 0" ''f\Iore and more youths are going into alcohol for a variet~· of reasons." said Joseph Frecm~ of the department's alcoholism division. . ILP·142117 l ""ollc 111)f1ce "' IVbmlHtd 'O "'' Pia... PAITHEIStllP ANO C'ONrlNUt,HC:e the new state law which IUl'lllCMI C:OUIT OF CALl,OllNJA lllnq Comml1tlOO'I P•ior' to 1111 llt~rlno OF IUSl,NESS I • • 'r!o\1e NOTICE •• 11"''" iioittv~M r~ S<J,tl C!ll lw-ered the dnnk1ng age fronl COUNTY 0' 0-AHGE. r.Q; luf!ntt detliill rt0trdl"'° utl HOl5 S oJ 11>1! Co•0<.,,~llOf\\ (';O<:!• 1n1r II•~ 21 !O 18 • 7(1(1 !Chic C ... llf' °rl .... IWll/, Prol>O•Ki plfr., 111 lnlfrt•!~lf ll"'\011~ ~'" l>illrl<lt•jlllp f Ompo'ed Of 0fl\ll;S IV, · '"'' ""'· c.i 1""' l11v1ttd 10 ct!I 11 tnt o111ce of the Cl1y ,,1 T~1 1~•. S Jn<111 )llutti. ,,,,, W••nt T CASIE HUMIEll 0 ·'1f0t l•ylne PllMl<IQ OPp~•lmrnt ltV•l>I! Tc• 11 1 fld!ts. hertlol(l<'e °'olnq t>v••~tts under lhe "THF' LAW fl,\S d 't lUMMOl'IS (MAltilllAGEt Ce11•tr O\ll C1mpu, Drive trvlnt \"'"" owme Of lll!•t'll (o.,.u•w:re ~I • ma C l Jn •• 1111 m•"l"G• ol Pttll!roe•: C•+i!O:ri•• w,..,, ,110 proPO ea 'p11., I\ ri; lrttrlor~. loc~•~ "' u:;.:i M()l'l•ovl<0, ~~·11 SOCia!ty aeceptable and easier Cermtn .L. 8arr11.i 1na ll:l">POlldtnl: lil:a~o lilt 111!1 1'v11!1t1lf lor public '1ns~ct!on ,.,. .. , Co•lo Mtst (1!1tgf11i~ I• dll•OIVf J M. 81rr•lil CI TY OF lRVINE •• o! Ap•TI L 197• bv muTu•I tOll,fr.!, for youlhs to drink And that's To !t'oe lil:tW>OnOenl! TM ~ltloner ..... PLANN ING COIAMISSION . s Jann s~v·~·· re•l<ll<llJ "' ,01• E~,, SURVEY OF · Ille<! • petl!lon cO<'l<:trnln11 '°'" m1Hll(le. Pultl!!lnlld Or•nll• c~11 Oallv p 11,, 1 T~~c~rrv. WtV Cov•n •. ':J•ile<n••, •"1 ""TSOnS what they're doing," he said. 'I'°"' m1y 111e • wrlntn '~'• wi lt!!" 241 M•v ,,, 1911 . 1710 ,. ...... ~.,, T. e111t• . ''~·0•1111 111 1101 P•~•., :":..=:.::=======.:====-=::..; OIJI ot Ille o•ll 11111 1nrs 1ummons 11 _ _ Al'"'°'' 5•11 O•'"••· Ca!llor .. 11 n1ve -------wrvltd on yc.u. II YO\I 11!1 lo 1111 I wrlne11 PUBLIC 1".0TJCE W•lll<l•1w11 trom •"O llf'JP ce•l<l<I lo .,~ r1~1• Wllhll'I 1vcll llmt, yo11r dtll~ll 1,socl~ltil In me carrying o" ot r ,t A JIM'S INTERNATIONAL HAIR STYLING CENTER NEW Dl~1ENSlONS IN'HAJR ME:N-WOMEN----CHILOREN • A" l'liv,1e Boo•~,• Sty11no i 0.1.,•g~ • faco.a1 Stf\ldvmJ IOFR.11 SCUL"UI KUT METHOD •t.'o:t l lono~Sl'flll>lt • C\l::l()tTIHMP- f01 ~...rmwo1C'lll .•• 642·2631 222 l.17HlSl.-C..t.Mrlll Does More Than Help Shrink Swelling Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Due To Infection Also Gives Prompt, T empor~ry Relief in Many Cases from P~in, Itching in Such Tissues. Doctors have found a remark· ablv succeS11ful m edication that actUatly helpt shrink swelling of tu.•morrhoidal tis.su('S when inft-clrd and inn amed. And it 1lc~s morr. In many ease• it gives relief for hours from pain and itchinr in the1e ti11ues. TcilS by doc::tors proved thil true in many cue.. The medication used wu Prep- aration H. And no prcKription is needed for Preparation H•. Ointment or 1uppotitoriea. ENTER TODAY! A Photo contest for People wt1o love dads The Daily Pilol's People Secti~n .will ma~e both th e winner and the lather 1n his/her pic- tures famous by_ publishing the best of the snapshots in a Father's Ca)' picture page on June 16. IT'S EASY 1 Take a oicture ol the dad ycu want 10 make famou s. He can be alone. with his kids or w ith fnend :;. but catch him in the act or being a dad and pho1ograph him. 2. Have a black-and-white print made lor the ~ lest (any size. mounted or unmounted ). 3.. Mail ii or deliver it lo Daily Pilot People Sect ion before Jvne 5. {Use eoupon below or s£1nd 1n infor-mation on ycur own paper with the prinf Of prints.) r----------------------1 1 understand this en1ry must be received at one ot th e Daily Pilot oll1ces by Noon on Wednesday, June 5. lo be ehglble lor judging and that all prints become the property of the Daily Pilot and. cannot be returned . My name •...•••.. ···;-· Age. Relalionshio to lather in photo I I I I I I I I I My address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I Clly ....... Zio .......... Phone ............... \ Name ot lalher In phOIO ......................... I His address (II d1trerenl) Entries 11 m;,1lod should be sent to: Da ily P 1IO! Peooie So c11on. P.O. Boi 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 I I I I I L----------------------~ DAILY ' PILOT ' m11y oe ~11•1reoo 1r>d Intl cour! m1y •~•tr -------Wtinet1. 1 llKIOmtnl c0flt1inl1111 l11l11n,riv1 or o!l'ler Slf' 1•1n o~n!s M. Tavlc•. r11•dl"'11 01 116-G OtOor1 tunt.HnillQ Olvhlon ot prQllf!ty, $U,.Elt101t COUltT O' THe Atnelllysr Slrttl, CuC /LfnlmlllL• CMofornl" 'POUlll lUppor!. thlld custody. cn!ld STATE 01' CALI FOllNtA FOlt will llere•lltr carry en 11>1! bltlit>e~s. •n•I suppo..-r, 1nornev•1 lttf1, coils, 11ld s!tCn TtlE COUNTY O' OltANGE j"• It t nrhltd !ci dll ol 1<11 ·~""'l ot ,,,.. otllet rehel '' m1v tie 01anttil riy !ht He. A·1t6" ~~rrw:u •r>O wlH '''~""' •I'd pay ~11 ol covn. HOTICI OF tlEAllll'IG OF ,.ET1TIO"I '"" ovlst1..ar1111 !l•1:>ltl1les 01 t~~ ou1·"'~1 U Yeti Will! It NIM !ht 1~vle1 ~ tn 1'011 "llOIATE 011' WILL A~O FOi t>ttolotore and l'letr~!lcr lncutrfd. lllOl'MY In 11'111 m•"•r, w .... Jhel.llO .. Mt Ll!TTe•s TESTAMeNTAIY 01tl(f April :o. 1914, •r1m~lf .. lft.t y-Wfllt" l'IJpoMt, •I E1t1!1 ol WALLACE '1 . SMITH Otnnls M. T•vlor 1ny. ""'' M HtH 111 !Im.. 0«e11td. S, John Sh1J!ts 01t..:1 Ot<:t!Tlbtr '· ltn NOTICE IS HER EIY GIVEN ll>J! WIY"f T, Bares (SEAL) MATJIE C. S.Y.ITH htl !lied 1>erein a P11l>llslltd Or<0"'118 Co&ll Oailv Pilot, W, E. ST JOHN. Clt•M "°"ll!Ofl for Probtlt of w;n Ind lor M•Y 13, 117' USl·f4 B~ Bllty T111g1rt, Oepuly l11uencr ot Lell1rt Te1r1,,,.,n!arv to !he ------- ILllOY a . GIOOlfll oetlrlor..•, rtlerence lo which Is m10e tor PUBLIC NOTICE Alltr<MY al L•• lurlfttr p1rl!cul1ri, af\d tn11 !lie !I m# and ---- SJJ IE••• ll'h'•I SI .. itt. lH Pll Ct ol neerlno •roe Slmt ht\ be"" :le! HOTICE OF AVAILAIJLITY Tvtlln. Clllftnlil '16M lor N.1v 21. ,., •• ,, t :JO t.rn •• In '"' OF Al'INUAL llEf'ORT 17141 &n·1• (our'lroom o1 Oeoartm~• No. J ot Mi<I Pur1u1nt 10 $.ecllon 610<t(<I) or 1t.t ""Ol'MY llf' Plll"lllft' CCVO't, 11 1t10 Civic Center Orlv1 W111, !11 1n11rnal Havf11ve Codi. llOllce Is 1>1rtb>' Publl1hed Ori~ Co.111 Oally "llot, !hi C.l!'v ol S&nl1 "'"•· Cali fornia. glv1n tha! lho innuil rePol'I 10~ 'rt MIY IJ, :IO, 11. I nd Junt 3, 191~ 1116·7' 011~ MIV 9, 1'1' CALENOA" vea• 1973 ol M.ARJOll WILLIAM E. 51 JOHN MOSHER SCHMIOT FOUNOATION. • ~ueuc NOTICE county cit•lt . , . , c eOWIH w. CHAFll'EI! pr1v1tt IOllllOal Oft, •S 1v11 l11:111 II TtM. -----·---------1 P.O. aolt Ml foul'ICl1l lOt1., prlr1d pat otflce tor Inspection Sl,.·112" SAfl CLeMIEHTE. CALlll'OINIA rull lfurlnv r111u11r bu1l11111 hours from 9 e.m.· f'ICTITIOUI 1u11-.e11 lo S p.m. DY anv clll1111 who req1H11l1 rt· NAM!! STATEMENT 010 4n ... 111 wllnln ISC days Illar !he dare Of 1111,· Th• loll-111(1 PtrM>nt t rl 0011111 ""°""v 1"'' f'illli•~•' publlc<0llo11. !Wllnt1I es: Publlllltd O••not Ca.ti Oallv Piiot r.\ay Tho loundotl011's prillclp•I ottlce 11 lllVINE HOST MOTOR HOTEL ll. 1'· 70• 1'1' l '1~-TI loc1!td 11 610 NtNPOrl C"'tt<-Orlvt COMPANY. A P1r!Mr•nip, 1 6 1 6 -------;------Suill ti>S, c·o M1trlt SCvdOer. Ntwoort Pu!lmitn Avenue, Senti A.111. c111torn11. PUBLIC NOTICE BNcn. Ctlllorni1 •1660. ~ANTA ANA VALLEY IRRIGATION -TllC 1>rlnclo.ol man,.ger of Ille lou..O.llon COMPANY, 1 corpor1llO!\, I~ Horii! SL,.·141'0 ft Marl< Scu.ioer. Gleu .. u. Or•~· C11ltornl1 9"1666. su•111101t COURT OF Ttl£ M~r~ Scuooe•, Prl11cll)al Maneoer MARI NE CAPITAL. tNC.. • STATE 01' CALIFOll!NIA ll'Olt ClllHOLE. SWIFT, Gll!IMLE'I' AHO CO. COl'POr•llon. 2092 Butlrll:IS Cenler Drive. THE cou-.TY OF ORANGE C1rtJlllMI Public Accou111.1n11 lrvl,,., C1Utotnl1 '2664 ..._ A·ffftl llt N1Wpor1 Cff!ltr Orfl'I. Sllik SU JOHN A. 1nd PENELOPE A. HOTtCI! OF tiEAlllNG OF PETITIOl'I H--1 l e1cll, cati'-1111 '26'0 HULBERT, 17Sll lrvlne l lvd., Tl.ISi!", l'OI: "llOIATE OF WILL ANO FOR 10414 C'1lfornl1 i'/6il0 Ll!TTlll TESTAMIE-.TAlllY Publlshe<I Oro11oe C~sl Delly Pllo/. Tnlt bvlln~s Is eonducte<I by 1 E,,111 ol PATTIE POLK BENNETT , May U, 1914 1611·74 : ptrt.-slllp. 0.CNnd. JOHN A. HULIERT, l"lr!Mr NOTICt: 15 HEREBY GIVEN 1na1 P UBLIC NOTICE This 1111emen1 w11 llled wiln ln1 ROIERT L. BENNETT ha1 tl!N l!Ht •" aj--c:ccc:-:-,.,.-,.,-.,------- County Clert. o1 Or11111e County C!11 ,,,.y pt!lll0<> for ProtMlt of Wiii llld lor SUPERIOR COURT OF Tt!E •• 1914. IUVlllCI ol Le!ttrl lt1U1r;nenrary IO IM• STATE OF CALl,ORHIA FOlt lllllMAN I.NO ICHMllJtlll• P11ltl011et. referet'ICt lo wnocn 11 mM!e for THE COUNTY OF ORANGE m o.wr Drtft, 111He ' lurthef" P9rtltultr1, .•nd 11111 the, time an<I Ho. A·7tstt H_,.,t 1HU1. (.llll+erwll ,.,... pl1c1 ol llC1rlno l'tll i.ame ~ .. , been ~I NOTICE 01' Hl!ARIHG OF PETITION'" l'Wn for Mlov H. 1911. II •::JO I .fl' .. 1 .. '"" l'Olt ... ,.,.OINTMENT OF CONSER· Pvblllhl'd Or1noe C011I 01Hy Piiot. cwrlrootn ol ~rtment No. l ol 11'.<' VA.TOI OF THI! ESTAT& OF AllTHUlll• M1y IJ. JD, 27, 1...:1 J"""' .J, 197, 1115·1' court. 11 1t!O Civic Cenltt O•l11t Viti!, on P. WOLVIN . I-----------------lll'le CllY o1 S1nt1 An•. C1ll1w ni1. IN THE MAfTElt OF< THE • 01!td MIY a. 1914. CONSERVATORSHIP OF THE ESTATE PUBLIC NOTICE WILLIAM E. SI JOHU, OF ARTHUR P.· WOLVIN, Conserv1N!e.: County Cleo~ No·ncE IS HEREBY GIVEN Illar MILAN M, OOSTAL SUZETTE WOLVIN, hls wife. 1111 llltd• 'ICTITIOUI •us1Hes1 A Pr.ftt~ontl (lfllOl'lllon tltreln 1 petl!i"" for 10QOl11tment of llllAMI STATl"-'&NT M SMlll! Mila SI., SI•, Uot coni.ervelor, re!er1nce to which it m1f11 lolkno'lllll Plf_, 11 <IOll'lll bUsllll".S Ort ..... (1/lflf'Ma '2UI lcr lurtller p1rllcul1r1, •nd 111.,JI lllC 11...,..· 11: 1114) 115-ztU 1nd place ol tw:lri"ll !ht 11111e nes "'"' '"' NEEDLEPOI NT JUNCTI~. 6066 AttttnieYI fer PITITtOlfll 1tl !or J\l!ll •· 1914, 11 tl .'JG a.m .• In Ille 'Wlmff'--A-.-Hllfltln;IOA l .. Ut. ·~-·-Or.-f\QI-C:0.11. 01ily J'llel. o:.ourlroom of __ ,OfPl!rlrntnl HP-.l ... .of~Ul!i ' C1llfornl1 nwr. M1y ll. 14. 20. 1'71 111»·74 court, al 100 CIYlttC11tlt1' Orlve W1&t, lti '· C. 11.11111, ICllll 8N;tOllll,._ 11~, Seti tllr City of Senla A111. Celllornle . eucn. c11ifflrnl1. PUBL1C NOTICE 01re<1 April it. 111t. Tn!s bullnlM II corlducted tJr 1n _ _, _ ---WILLIAM E. 11 JOHN. lnolvkh.tll HOTICI IHVITIHO llOS County Clttk ' S. C. l lel11 NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN th<OI MITCH8LL. SILllEatl'.110 I KNUI'" Thl1 •l•lamet1t w11 flied wlm tn. .,11.., P•Oll'M•ls wil l ot re-celveo ny lht UOI C111l11ry P•rtl lint County Cl.rt; of Or1noe Counl'f' G'I M9y 9, City ot COST• Mt)i ii ltlt office of tn. UIJI SU.SON 1 10n,· .... L IOO•ll City Cll'rk 11 lllC (l!'v t11ll, n F1lr Drive, All-YI tor: Pltlll-r Coile Mtw. C1l!loml1. until 111e hour of Let ,.,._., .. C1lllonl!1 t1N7 AllW"' II LIW 11:00 '·"'· G'I June'· 1'14, II wt>lcll time Pltbll11>1d Or•noe COISI Deily Piiot. U•n lffcll l fyf,. flley will be Ol>fllC'O oublldY ind read Mav 6. 1. 1], 197' ISW..1~ M11t1"11tlt11 l1Kh, C:1lffltnlf1 N41 1loud In Int Coun<ll au1mbl!rs lot' Teti !PHI •n .... 1 fllrn!tt1l1111 111 l1bor. m.t1rl1l1, eQuloment, 'll711 Tr1ntl)Ort1llon 1nd """ oll'!rr ltcl!lnes 11 PUBLIC NOTICE P11bll1hed Or1"9I Co1st Oally Pflol, m1y be reQl.rirld for lht llt\<IKIPlllll ol l'IOTtCE INVITING llOS M1y ll. 20. 27. 11'1<1 June 3. 1'7• 171}>7• H1rb0r l outt v11d trom "'•cArinut Nolle• 1, llr••bJ 111.,..., lhlt '"* So.ird af 1---------------IBoull"ll"ll to Ori-t r I !Fltsl two Tru,ten of lllr Coe~! Con'l"'unitv Coneoe. PUBLIC NOTICE l1l1nds..Soum ol MKA.rttiur Boulev1rd). Oislrk l ol Orenoe coun1,, C1lifotni1. wlU A Ml "1 pl1n1, ll)l'Cllk1lfons tM 011111' •ectl\'1! 1.e1ltd bid• up to 11 ·00 .:1 m 1---------------lcontrKI Uocll.,...,11 m1r be obt1lnld al Tuesday. M~v 11. 1914, ,., '"* P~rcnas'1nii ' SU"l"lotl COURT Of' TH• TM olllc1 ol lllC 01rtclor of L1ltvr1 Otpl. of s.Kf Kl'IOOI dlslrltl lOCa1e<I at. ITATI Of CAl.l,OltHIA Foti: !trvlet1. 11 F1lr Orl11t, (0111 MHI. 13111 Adotml Av-. Coste M°'I' THI COUllllt'Y 01' 0-AHOI C11Jrornl1, "flO'\ t l'IOl'l-rrtund11>11 p1ymenl C11Uor11f1• ti wtok n lime 1o1i<1 flid1 wlll be' 1111 .. A•1'Ul of W.CIO. JtUl>llclr OPIMd aM rtld lor; HOTICI OF MeAlllHO 01' "ITITION Eich bk:t.111111 bl mldt' O<'l lllt Pl'OPM•I PRINTING E~ENING COLLEGC 1'011 \l'lllOIATI! 01' WILL AMD FOii lorm l f\d In ll'le mlllMr prOY~ In !ht BROCH URE, FALL 197.i.p. LITT•1ts TESTAMt:NTAllY CPl'tr1ct ctoc:umenrs. •nd •h•ll . ~ All t1i1U a•e !o 'be In accordance with E1t1t1 f1f ltOSE II.. ROM&ECK, 1kl K comPlflled tJr 1 ctrlllleo or t l&ll•er' !!If ln,uuclioo~. Candllions a tl f llOSE ROMBECK. 0.CMHd. CllKk or I bid bond for no! ltu !hall 10'!9 Soeclllclli0!'1~ Wll<tll a re llOW on me ~nd HOTICE IS HEREI Y GIVEM 11111 o! nw 1mounl ot l!>t bid, mlde p,tytble lo "''Y be i.e<ure<I In !he olficr ol l'hf ALIEAT C. ROMIECK AHO CLEO 11:. Jiii City of Costa Mtsl. Pu•cn11l119 A<Jelll Of i.ald Kllool dlJlricr. ROMI ECK hit llltd htnln I petlllPI' fflr NOTICE .IS FURTHER GIVEN 11111 IM 'E•ch bidder mutl iVb!Tl!I wiln nos Ci~• PrOl>lll1 ol WlH lt'ld tor IM<llflCt of City C°"'nc'I ol Mid City his htr1folor1 c"shler'i Cl\ttl(. certltltd C/llCk, L1rt1r1 Test1IM'llt1rv to the oetlll011tr. u!inuir • prtYiHl1111 rile •n<I J<:tl• ol bidd•r"s bond m.w.t oaYable to 111e orJ:r rtft•e!'ltl 10 which' 11 m-'"' tur1ne-waon, " l <XOtd.•n<• with law, lo be p.1ld ot lllC Cotti Commu11lry Col\e'ije Dlt1rlct ~rtkvltf .. •..cl !hit Ille "1111 •lld Pllce In ltM l;Ol!•!r!,11;;!1on ol tht lt>ol'I "'lllltd lo.ird ol Trvllttt In tn 1mou11! not '*» Ill 11t1rln9 lhl tlmt htt ~ Mt tor lm~b. TMP Mid rile Jlncl Ktl• u ... ,. llVI perc1111 (5"iol of !hi sum bi<I )• I-• " I w" l(loollMI ll'f nr. City Council by AfSO-I , ... , ..... ,. II I MAY 7'. n 4, 11 : •.m.. ri lt>e lullon 7~1 °" Ille 2r>d dtY of Jimrary I ou1r1n •• "" '"" usoer w I tnler ti19 courtroom ol Ollllrlment No. i ot 111d ltTl. •n<I 11 C!ll 1111 In tt>e ottict 01 1111 the prppo...:. CrorrKI II !hi ,,..,. ·11 covr1. 11 100 Clv!c Cent.,. Ol'lv1 Wtsl, lri Cllv Cll'rlt of uld City. Thtl i1id r111 I nd tw•refld to him. In'"* eVW11r of t1!1urt "10 ll>t City ol S1nt1.....,... (1111.,..,.11. tc1\e 11 htreln rlllrtld to 1nd adopted lri ff!lllf' Into SlKll COtllr<0cl, lht proc~s 'of D•tfd Mrf f, 1914 11111M1lc111 lf\olJVft tunv and cornpl1t1ly 1111 d!lck will ~ lorl1l1e<1. or I" thl c~ WILLIAM E. St JOliN WI for111 -fin, Incl '"'' i.ald Kiit. II ot a bond. "" tun 1um •hlrl!of W•ll ... Ct:llnly Cllrk 1~1111 riv teld RHOluUO<\, Is '1'1de 1 forfellld lo s1id Knool <1l1!ricl. • • A"TMVlt O. GUY. Jlt. """ ol tni1 110tlce bY rt11rtnct . No biddH mav wlrlldr•"' his bid ~-- 13J DOVIEll Dll., STI. I rh1 C0<>traclor 1h1tl. ln I ne period "1 fonv·llYe fill d•ys 1!1tr tM fllW"O"T 11.t.CH, CA.l.111'0-HIA ttUf pllf'formtncl Clf Ille wcrlt t 11 d dilll HI for !tit opening !l'ICrl!'Ot. 1 (114) W ·US1 lmpf'ov1m1nt1, cooform lo Ille L1bor Codt The Boara of Trutrns resrrves tne """"" Ion "ellll•lll'f' of th• s1111 ot C1llfornl1 1nd oll\lor 11ws prlv!leoe ol r1itctln11 ~ny 1...:1 111 bids '" Putllllhld Orll!O• (Mil Dtllv Piiaf. 01 11>1 s1111 ol C1lllor11i1 1D()lkablt Thert-lo wal\'1! any !rreov11rl!1e1 a r MIJ 13. 14, 21), lt1' 1''25-14 lo. with tht 111ceptlon Of'fy of 1uch ••r· lnform1lhles 111 1ny l>iO or In rne Clddortg; .:_:.:._.::_ ___ _; __________ J11ttom •• m•v bl ftctUffto Vf\Olr ""' Slgflld: NORMAN E. WATSON . PUBIJC NOTICE so.cl11 sl1Mts P1tr1u1n.I lo Wiiiet. pro-Sl<h. flo.arct ol Tru1!ees '"'111111• l'llreu!!der 1r1 taken 1nd wt>lc h Ooen: M1w 21, 1974 . 11100 1.m. ·---------I n•vt no! ~ IUOlr~ by !ht provl· Board: M1y 12 ------. ttJ•t tl111>S Of Tile l 1bor Code. Pr1!1T"nct to P11bll1lled Or•nllfl COl51 Daily Pll61~ SUl'llttOa COUltT Of' Tfll! ~~d:•~ ~ • .:~veri only In !he men...,. M1y ,, IJ. 1914 1s11.}f STA.Tl! OF CALll•QalflA POI H• IN 911111 11t1 c"'sl~ 11nl1H 11 Is - THI COUNTY 0, °""NOii "'"' ........ ,.. '-"'111.-ii llY I"" PUBLIC NOTICE : Ha. A-""17 C:tty If c .. 11 M91e, •11111 19 lftl llt 111 MOTICa Of" MIAlllNO Of" PIETITIOH ~~~ W1tt1 11M 11rtvlslon• ~ 1111 --- POii P•O.ATl 01' WILL A.MD FOlt !'l'IHlll ""Vl..-nll-SUPalllOll: COUllT 0' TtlE • , Lllnlllt TfSTAM•HTAlt'I' Ei ch bidder '1'Utl bl tlctn!ec:t Ind •lso STATE OF CALIFOltNIA FOR Esllll of RVTH J EAN NETTE pr1qv1t!f!C'd 11 required bV law. THf COUNTY 011' ORANGE CA.MUSE. 1t1 llUTH J. CA.MUSE, TPll CllV COUllCH of tM City of Cos11 l'lo. A 1'141 OK11Wd. Mftl rnerws ll!t rlOlll lo tellCI •llV or Otll OEa TO StlOW CAUSE " NOTICE 1S HEii.Ei'!' GIVEN ""' all bid's. ll'OR CHANGE OF NAME Pti1LLI~ WESLY CAMVSE 1\.11 l'llC'd CITY OF COSTA MESA 111 lllt M1llef' of Ille AoollcUlon ti1~ hl••fn I jM!llllC!ll lor PrOl>lll' ol Wiit Ind 01!M: MIY lJ. lef' ROSALYN r<OHN SHER. rw c n111111 pl. tor L1!11<1 Tn t1m1n111y fo ll>t ptlltlontt Pul>l!•lled Oranv• COll•I Dilly Piiot, N1mt, r1l.,tnc• to wnlch Is mMlt tor f\/rtl>lrr Mly 11. 13. 1974 1'1~1• •WtlE-EAS. ll>r ar:io!let !IOtl of R0$11!~ 1>1rlltul1r .. tlnd lholt ll'l<t 111111 IM pll(:I --Koton Siter tor c111no1 ot 111m1 1111 IM 11, Of 11t1rlno TM ,....,. h11 t>ttfl ,.t lot M1v PUBLIC NOTICE duly llllMI wlln tllr clerk of '"'' Coot!. ~9"' n, 1'74. 11 9:30 '·"'·· In "" covrtt°'"' f1f -' It 1P1>11rlf!O from wld 1POlfc1tlon 11111• Oll)lrlm"'I No. J ot 111<1 ~. 1t 700 IL~nw $lllf •11P1lt111t Oe\lr" lo !\Iv! roer 111nw:' Civic Ctnlll' Or!,,. Wttl. In lllC CHv of IV,,llllotl COUit Ofl nll! Chel!gtd to 1111 Pf0!!0$td name of ltl!lltyn; St11!1 A.111, C1lltornl1. • 5111m1n1~y Sht•. • Otlld 1'\IY 10. 1914 STATI O CALlllOaNlA flO" NOW. TH EREFORE. I! 11 htre1:1y Ol"dor • WILLIA/,\ E. SI JOHN THI COUNTY 0, OllAllllOI td and dlrirc:llcl 1n1t 111 11tr1ort1 inlt rttlfod" flt. A·16111 • County Clerk fl OTIC:I o, .. IAllN• Oii' ,.&TITIOH 111 IM Mid manfr ol tlll~I ~ 11.11,,..... •P-- MIAO ANO IUEfl 'Oil OllOell OllllCTIHO TH I Pll • Dt/Ol'e IDO\'e tnh!lto Coutr. I~, 11tl Dovt St., 11111• 111 COMVIY.lt,NCt: A-.o TltAHSPlll OF Df'Plrlllllnl 3 Iller.of. loc11ec1 at 100 Clvot• HewjlOrt l11tll, CIU!or"I' "''° leAL "ROPlRT'r TO COMPLITE Cenltr 0,IYI Wnr m !l\t 11111 d~y 111· 'hh (7\0 W-tti, OECIDlNT'I COflTlllM:T J111'1. 1914. ~I !M "°"' ol \G llO l'CIO(I.' """' .. WI .... l pt!llll111t ESTATE OF ELMlill E • EVERETT 1.m , 111111 ttld tllert lo '"tlW c~u•~. tf •~1 PUbll111Cd Or•llCll COil! ~lly •Hot. lkl EL!l.Elt EVEltETT, fki EL.MER tnt¥ h•¥1. wllv Ille 110Pllt•l•on tor cne"I( M1y ll. 14, 'Xt, 1t11 111'·14 EOWIN EVERETT• t ktl E. C . ol n~m• .iiou1c Ml ne 11•tn11tt. • l!VERElT, lkoc•••llf ll IS FURT HER OAOEREO 1n~r •: PUBUC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREIV GIVEN Thu COllV al this O<'M• W 11UbllV>ed In Ille, ------· • ·--IEL.W .lt,YNE .,, EVEllETT l'lt fllt<I llt rPln 0• .. Mllt CO<O'! 0~•1>' P1lol, • ~WipllPtr ot, MOflCI TO CllOITO"S 1 11111t1on for order dlrecllno 1~ orn9rt1 C"CUI""°"· ~r1n1td 1nd P~bll•lltd• SU••1tlOI COV IT Of' THI co,.,vtv•nt• end lr1nlltf ol 11:111 Prcpeny •n IPlt (•Iv ol (O<IA Mfi~. c,,..,,,1y "': JTATI 0, CAl.U'OafllA l'Ol 10 COl"ll)itll Ot1:totnl'> cMlrl(I on Ot•n11t . S .. lt of C1hfot"l1 O"<t tl?lil TMI! COUNTY 01' OllV.H•t pr091<ty lol::•t~ In "'' counr 0, Rtvi• •"•~1 •o• ,'PY' (•) h•<t~••••• "'~•• 1rle<"• fl•. A·79• ltdt, S!lfl ol C•lllOrnlt . 0ntril:lld 1, tol· 1 '11 ."\I di ~ ario~• '"1 10"' •tot htll•NI '!'• F1l11t ol All(E C. LISTEll. Oec.111ofil, loWI; •~ J •llOll<"''Oll ,•; NOTICE IS HEll.lilY GIVE N IO the Thi So11tll ll11f of '"' "IOrln h,111 el rnt Oatecl A.llv l.,..~~1 1 '• Crtdllort f1f IM lbclVt "'"'ed dlt t\ltnl '"'IOll 1. Town1h!p 1 SOvl,., .,not l F'""'" .,.,, ... , ... c ~ II) •• 1n.1 111 ~ lllwlr11 tlelm' ... 11111 '"" l'11r. $111 l <Jr111rdino B••• '"°I Jud'1111 o! 0•~ ~upeilor Cou•t • • Mid cttc:Mtlll ttt rlQ!Jlrld to !lit !him, Qutrlf'I' oit !he J°'i!ll!Wttl qu1n1r el ,",,~•N1G .. ~. R05~EN5, 0 w11n IN ne<tu1ry V0111;h1<1-In Ille olllct Mf•ldl1n. · '..,,.. " •· .. ol !hi t ll•-ol lftt •boft 1n"lllld cou•t "' T ... o 1M one "•II UI\) M:,.,, ,,_.or, Dow111y. <•Wlor~" ttH! to p11nn1 ttwm, with lhl n1et1•1•r It~, lntlvcflflO wen. ""-" flf' "•1•tl- '<IWCl'\t'I, 10 !he ul'1tl•r1I011IMI 11 !ht ofllc1 l~tttnct lo which I• midi for f\H'!l'lfrl Ttltl""'t 111~1 t1MMt ;t l\tl' •"orrwy, A-THUil 0. OUY, J-. pertlcvli t1. and tnlt 1111 flr!ll i nd 1111 Pub111111d Ot.1~ Co111 PtllV \1'1111'1.1 At!Ol ntY 1'1 l,1w, Ill Dovtt Otlvt, Sut11 pt1c1 of llfltrln1 !ht ,,..,. 111-1 btln 11• M11w •· ll, '°· ll, 1'1• ,,., )1. t. Nt .. oorl &..en, C1h!otnl1 '1660. whiCl'I fOt Mty ''· IJ74, 11 t o'cloc:~ '·"' , In l'tlt --- - - . ~ 't 11\t !'IKI et lwslnt J' Pl Tht vndlr1lg111<1 Nortl'le11I QIHrttr of I,,. Seulh\\,.111 PUBl,JC 'OTICE • .• In 111 mllflrt pert1!11fllf lo !tit h lllf of tounroom OI ~•rtrn111t Nn J ••• tald dlttit.nt, wllflln IOU' f!lon tn' 1l1er tour!, et 100 CIVIC Ct n..., Drive Wtst, In ------- ll>t ""' publlUlllon of .,.,,, nollc• lht city ol .S•nl1 Ml C•lllo•l'!t .. OTICI 0, f'UILIC HtAalNO • Otltd MIY J. 1t11 D•ltd Apr!I )0, 111: ' NOl 1CC IS l•EltCBY (l.lVE N 111.t..-: "V.R1L VH A. llOW6 PuOli•tlld 0.1rooe COit! 0111¥ "l!OI. l)Ubfle ~!n11 will too• ntltt '" (Cn\!lft(lii l •tClllrl• af"" Will g( .l.0<!1 u . llCl, Ind M•y r. "· ltfl 1>01-l' wt•~ "" P•OllOHd ~1 .... •01 lll'l•llt411{1r9 ll>t 1l!O'YI Pltlftld dlt_,t~I WI LLIAM f , St JOHN tl\f OC1.-n U-khocl 0 \tlflt t ' AltTHUl 0.. •UY, JR, Counl't' Cl1r'l ~IY tvt,.1"'1 Mtw 1(1, 1•11.. ti '1400 "'rt!KMW It Llw IAllNIS. ICMAO. JOHNSON, Kll'lfllOY ~.MI~ ll>IL ll'ir' H""'11 XI lltoot.~, IJI a.¥'11' OrWt I CARLSON ~lllJ I .ane. un ""'<.WI ---,• Slfllt • _j OU MlcAlTMU• llVD. CAlfl'Ornl• _,~ ,. ...... ''""· C•l!'-1• ,,... NIW,.OllT ti.ACM, CALl,O•fllA .,... O•ltti '"''11th d•• or Allf!I, 1914, -.... T.t fn41 M1-tff) 011) ,.,..,... II 0 Hirl"'ll l\i ~IW ' 0rlfl9t C-'Y An.,11•• lff •1tcvtl11 A"""""• ltr t1'lt f'•1111....,. s-1nllT'<llfll a1 k""IOt• Putill•nfd °''"" c.-,1 o.u, l'll01. ,.\IOll1Pltd O.•'llli '""'' 0111, •·kit i-111:11 1rw~ o·~-'"'" o.,i. P•l"t M1Y 6, 13. )0. 11, 1914 1111·14 Mty .. '· IJ, 1~11 11.U I! .I.of~! 7'. t "<l MtJ 1, 1J, It,, 11~\.-r• I • • lflo11ey's tt'orth l11flatio11 Takes By SYL\'IA PClllTCll Perhaps lx'forc 1h1~ uµsurge in inleresl rates t•uds. thr U.S. Treasurv \t·i\l be fortc-d to set an interest coupon r vt'1t htghcr than the 8~ 1~rcen1 it placed las1 v.•cek on new notes due in less than fi\'C ,\'ear:o;: perhllpl) ilif. highest-g rade corporations of this count ry \l'i!l ha\'(' 10 pay C\'Cn n1ore than today's 11-1 2 perctnt for short-IPr111 bank loans and n1orc· th:1n 91 1 to 91.~ percc.11t foi• long-tern1 money in the open 1narket ; perhaps our toirrated states and citles y,·lil soon be issuin~ securities \Vith la:-<-rxl'n1p' coupons of more th an 6 .,ercent (.equi valent to n1ore than 12 percent to all those in the 50 percent income taJC bracket). Perhaps. Tn tod ay· s , explosive atinospherf' of douhle--di- git inflation .and exces- sive de- mand:> for mone y , many cru- .cial go0ds and ies:o;en· lia! commo· ditic~. ou r h1onetary policvn1a kers are ,gi~·ing top priori!v to curbing lhe supply or credit \Vhich : uels our murderous inflation ,Spiral and piivlng 1 i t t 1 e ialtention 10 the stupefyi ng }nlerest-ratc spirnt. ! TJIE'\' ARE 1n;iking it clear 1that thcv u·ill take the blame . !for business failures \Vh ich IJ'n.ight resu lt fro rn a shortage of funds if, as they tum the k-redit screws. lhe-V succeed in }ringing inOatlon under some ,ieontrol. They insist thev will :not reverse their painful imonev·ti~hlening policies just '·to bail out isolated ·bankruotcies. no matter ~·hat '·the size of the bankruot ~companies. Their fun ction . the ~monetary policvmakers stress ~is not to preserve inefficient 'I businesses. : 1-. have spent my adult life :specializing in the money and ~bond markets and I an1 far too :much au' are or the t complexities to nla ke a guess L.A. CALLS 4 1 ?c f!rich, f', , •. ,,,. l1n•'' b•nonc"' ,,.,.;c,· .-,n•i •_c:I lcr (J<lo l•: . .:>II "'""lt•ly · ot•· \Qo Fro"'"')f Ion.·, ol_;,~: J •·J•IQbk ._ • .. _'i'; TE L'.EPHQN[ <j~~PA NY Of ·CALtf · :1" 'I /'I-' 214 • JOO!. R~d Holl. ·C.M.' TRACT BUILDERS Pennanent Finonc:inq 1.5°.fo CommittMftts up to 'S,ooo.ooooii W. R. DuBois Inc. 494-3188 CONNELLEASE ~ [i Yo11r FottOf'Y A11ttlorbed ChMrolet Lea1i119 Deoler • Hew '74 Y~a Hotchback S6840 PER MO,..TH Ph1t 1a~ &•Lie. 011 Aopr, Gredi1 14 Mo, 0.E.I.., CONNELL CHEYROLn 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA !:46-1200 ll boUl lhe prt>CISC d<ites and precise levels at "·hich the historic pe<iks in interest rates fir t1\ly \\'ill be reached for this i.:cono1n1c era. !\evertheless, if you believe -as I do -that ""e will have the brains, the courage and . e\·ent.uall y, the leadership to .get our douhle-dh;it inf!;ition do1\1\ into tit least the sin~!t'~ digit range as the nit!.,lhs roll 011 and tha t this horrible pt>riod v.i ll not permanently distort our lives. tht'n }'OU also 1nu~t believe that interest rates nre 1noving into the upper r11ngcs. IF YOU BELIE\1E -as I do -that. ove r the lifetime of millio ns of dollars of the highest ·grade securities now being sold. today's interest rates \\•i ll turn out to be \Vhat \Val! Strcrt calls a ''lh·ing \\':ige," lhen you also n1ust believe it is time to start pu t- ting al least part or your nes tegg in hi~her-grade bonds at these levels. A Ji\'ing wage 1neans that interes t coupons of 8 -l O ~rcent over the long-ternl should more than cover the an!icipated annual rise in liv ing costs. !light now. with the cost of living ri sing at an annual rate of l<I to 15 percent , just about any investment gives you a negative rate of return - 1nean ing the erosion fron1 loday's inflation plus the bite from taxes more than f'at U!l \\•hat you earn i.n interest. But my assumption is that this will not persist indefinitely. At these interest rates. high- quality, r i xe d · in c o me investments in t h e obligations of the U.S. Treasury, federal agencies. states and cities, U . S . corporations -take on some of the characterislics 0 f "gro v.th secur ities." lf you invest in a bond that pays you 9 perc,ent and if you reinvl'3t the accumulated interest at the same rate. your investment will double in about eight years: if you invest at 8 percent and reinvest the accumulated interest. your 11cstegg wi ll double in about nine years. AT TJIESE rates. 'high- grade bonds are rivaling the Jong-term growth record for con1mon stocks. Jn sum. an investment that can double in ei qht to IO vears is growing by an v definition. A E:eneration aE:o. vields on stocks were about twice those <>n bonds. Since the s1art of this decade. yields on highest- trrade bonds have been more rhan twice those on common stocks ..... and today's 9 percent-nlus rates compare "'i th tvoical rates on top-rated corporate bonds of 3 to 31'2 oe rcent not so many years a110. If vou buy these hiE:h rates r.r return. you can count on them every .vear until vour bonds are calleci or finallv mature -and that can be five. 10, 15, 20. or even 30 years from your purchase date. You have the advantaees of fixed annual rates of return and of greater protection a~ainst. adverse e c on om i c c<>nrl itions than in riskier stocks. WHETHER THESE a r e near or at the rate peaks, I repeat I am not fool enough to guess out loud. But the lures are very real. Credit's Due I Wo Jn eu. ~t•ed 1,J1e K 11011.J·l1oiv Headqua1•te1•s Additio1a ~IicrodatNorporation is constructing a 48.000 n1uch of the firn1 's engineering and manufacturing square--foot addition to its Irvine heMlquarters fa ci-activities. Don Koll Con1pany of Newport Beach will lily. The two-story building is an architectural dupli-serve as general contractors on the $750,000 project cate of the exciting headquarters and will house targeted for a Oecen1ber con1pletion. ~~~--"'--~~~~~·~~-'--~-·-~~~~~ Panel Savs . .; Economy To Sta y I~cvel !ICY!' SPRINGS, Va. (AP) - An economic foreca st from a group of top business leaders says the nation's economy either will remain steady or decline in 1974. The forecast differed from official Nixon admini strat.ion predictions that the country's gross national product \viii show real growth for lhe re st of the year of about one percent. The GNP declined by 5.8 percent in the first three n1onths of 1974. The new forecast, from the Business Council, released at the group's biennial meeting here, said there should be some improvement in economic growth during the second half of the year. But it said that for the entire year, "the real GNP will average al or slightly below the 1973 level." The forecast also said the major concern of American businessmen is the nation ·s high inflation rate. It said the rate of inflation sh o u 1 d decrease to about six percent at the end of the year, compared to about six percent at the end of the year, compared with 10.8 pe rcent in the first three months. ,..... Bur.ns Clai1ns Sovie.t Vnion 1 Ready tor Trade Expansion ~10SCO\V (APJ -Federal Reserve Board C h a i r m a n Arthur F. Bums says !he Soviet government is "quite impatient " .to expand tr8de \1·ith America . and said he thought a ''reasonab l e acconunodation·· could be reached on the question of granting Russia equal tariff status. In an exclusive interview v.·ith The Associated Press at the end of his week's vi sit to the Soviet Union, \Y h i ch included a three-hour meeting \Yith Premier Alexei N . Kosygin, Bums said he had round the Russians "in a very practical mood ." HE \VAS optimistic a:bout a solution to the problem of lO\Yering U.S. tariffs on Soviet goods. a move that has been linked in Congress to more liberal Soviet emigra t ion practices. In public. the So\.iets have refused to bend, insisting that emigration of Soviet citizens is an internal maUer. Bums, whose post is similar to that of president of a central bank . said "of course" the Soviet Union had raised the issue of most favored nation tariff status with him and ~ad requested his vie\vs. Const Firni FINANCE Asked about this. he replied: "\\le!!, my vie\V is simply that this is a political proble1n that the Russians. being in a very practical mood. and \':e . in our turn , being also eager to y,·ork the problem out and I think that the po l i t i ca 1 authorities of our I\\' o countries will be able to \\'Ork out a reasona b le accommodation." "DID )'OU GET an y support (or this vie"'' from your Soviet hosts? Some optimism about \1·orking out a reasonable accon1modation?" he \Vas asked. "I v.'Ould interprel my conversations in that \\<ly.'' he said. During his visit here as the guest ol State Bank J>resldent ~1efodiy Sveshnikov . Burns conversed with his host . Kosygin. Finance Minister Vasily GarbuzOv, F ~r e ign Trade Bank President )'Uri Ivanov and other officials. It .,..·as the first trip to the Soviet Union by a U.S. Federal Reserve Board chainnan. Relating his impressions. Bums said. "It's highly clear that the governn\ent of the Soviet Union is very eager to expand trade with the United States . . . In fact they are quite impatient to do that." He said the senior officials he talked to felt that "considerable progress·• had been made in -the growth of Soviet-Arnerican trade ';but that progress has not been fast enough. and it's not gone as far as they would like it." BUIL\'S CITED two factors hampering faster expansion of commercial exc h a n ges bel'.\'een the superpowers: financing and absence of an American political decision about how the United States is going to organize its sources of energy supplies. The Soviets are interested in massive U.S. capital investment to develop Soviet Cue! reserves. Tbe investments u·ould be repaid b!t' deliveries to the United States of oil and natural gas extracted at the!e projects, Burns Said t he United States must first define its own energy policy . NE\\1 \'ORK ~ L'Pll American u'omcn h:11c long controlled the 1>un;e s!rh~gs but until recently \.\'Crl' dt~n1ed credit Nov.· 1hrtt n e \I' legislation has u~hflrt'd 111 financial equa 1l1y for ll'Onten. ma nv nt'Cd tt ll!i\l't'rs to qucs.tlons they n~ver dared ask. ('l)n~umrr Hankin~." it urg~ 11•01nt'n to establish ('red1~ 1.n tht•ir own 11uu1e allg hnut cr,,_-di1 payments .to 20 percent or their n1011thly 1ncon1e. '1 \Von\en rnust hti "\Vornt11 11·itJ1 Hille previous tredlt background should open a checkh1g or sttvi ngs uct'Ount, upptv for a bfl nk char~e ('ard, and ·lake n sn1all instalhnent 1 loan us building bl()(·ks tov.•ard. a crt'<IH ruling," says Ms. Pttu l. ern..'Ouraged to drofl ! h e stereotype role of ·1he little woman' and bect111le big ,1·omen about their finances." says Aileen Paul. thr firSI representative for the Nl!V.' con s umer a r fairs representative for \hi.' NC\\' York State Ban k e r Assoclatio1l (NYSSA ). EVEN A~IONG businesswomen there ls :i ·surprising l{ap in their grasp of personal finance .'' ~Is. Paul sa id. · ;,~1en often appear to under s tand c onsun1er banking," she says, "but not as clearly as they should ." In her travels. ~ts. Paul has been nooded with questions from v.·omen concerned about their credit status following a Federal Housing Authority ban· on discrimination ag ainst \\'On\en seeking mortages, and the American Banking Associatio~ vow to extend equal loan lreat1nent to both sexes. In Apri l. the Ne\1' York legislature passed a b i 11 guaranteeing women equal access to credit. But the nev.· econ o1nic freedom for \1'omen has lls pitlalls. "The imj}ortance of credit has been o v e r - e1nphasized for "'omen in their rush for e<Juality.'i \vams ~ts. Paul. "Vile mustn 't be led into the san1e trap as nlen - over-extension.'' TO HELP '.'-'Omen develop financial know-how and avoid the danger ZOiles of easier credit, ~Is. Paul ha s introduced a free booklet prepared by the NYSBA . Entitled "What Every \Vo1nan (and Man ) ShoU!d Kn'ow About BofA Ups Lend llate to 11 V2% SAN FRANCISCO (.<\.? 1 - The world 's l ar g e s ! commercial bank. Bank of America;-has boosted -its prime lending rate to a redird high 11 1,~ percent. T h e increase, from 11 percent, was effective Friday. She advises ~111rried wom t?t to opc11 ('harge accounts 1n tht ir own narnc and to pa y sonic of the fan1ily bills through a pcrsorull checking ~1c(:ount. "1\ won11.1n ·s credit rating Is. iinport<lnt to joint t't't'Clit," says ~1s. Pnul. "since !-lhc tnust be prepared to lake over in the f'Vt.>nl of 11'ido\1•hood or divor'-~· ·• Wl'fll 35 n1illion "·on1t!l1 in · thC U.S. labor force. the banking i n<t u s t r y now r~cognizcs that v.·on1c11 wield t>oono1nic rlout. Ac1,.-ord ing to ~1 s. Paul. ba nks.have fi nally agreed to include a n1arried .,..·0111an's salary in the joint famil y inco1ne, \Vh ich has been based largely on ~r husband's earnings. Tro ·v Furul ., Tell s 58% Sale Return The Troy lnvestn1ent Fund has announ<'td a rt'turn on investment of approxin1ately 58 percent on the sale of its _ Or Pan vi ew ~1 e adows de1·clooment pro j e c t Jn Oceanside. Charles A. Smit h and Roy J. \\lard. gener11! partners for t\1C funri , a l so reported distribution of a 2 pel"C('nt or $2 per investn1ent unit , for the first quarter of 1974 . A tetal of -t, 132,000 units of the C<1lifomia l i m i I e d partnership ha\'e bren sold to investors. as of April 30. \\'ith the units valued at $100 _each. this represents a tot a 1 C:ll)i ta li1..aiion of $4.132.000. Crocker Bank also increased its prime rate by 1/4 percent to t I J)e'"rent. The gefk>ral partners stated that ihe tot;,11 ma rket \'alue of <Ill projec ts in the Troy ln\'f'~l men t Fund's diversi fied -portfolio--is $ I 6 , 7--1 7 , I 6 0 . I n vest m en t in equity ov.1\ership is $6,49'2,JSO. $5.325,000 i n join!-\'t•nturt! deve]OO'l'ents. $4 .!l00 .000 in ,....n~trurtion financin~ and rll(•~f' is a cash rescr\·e of t265 f'l(l(I. The foreca s t said unemployment should average about 5.6 percent and will he close to 6 percent at the end of the year. Average tmemployment last year was 4.7 percent. lnvc1itory Loss Tol<l Complete Mid-day American Stock List Businessmen e x p e c t a continuing strong den1and for basic materials and capital equipment, b u t anticipate ''softness" in co n sume r buying, the forecast said. • Pl us Pro1l 11cts Sales Increase Plus Products. I rvine, processor and distributor of vitamins and health foods has reported net income o f $232.000 or 15 cents per share and sales of $3.198,000 for the first three months ended March 31. This compares with net income of $207,00l, equal to 13 cents per share, on sales of $2.567.000 for the first quarter a year ago. First Builders Bancorp of Newport Beach reported that, after reserve for inventory losses of $1.830.000. it had a loss for 1973 of $2,324,000. In 1972 the company had a loss or $1,734,000. Jn the first quarter of 1974 First Builders had a n unaudited loss of $70 ,000, or 8 cents per share. as compared lo a profit of $26,000, or 3 cents per share. in the first quarter of the previous year. First Builders Bancorp also reported it had r e a c h e d agreement with its ma jl'Jr lenders for an additional $4.2 million in loans and an expanded repayment period. Colmto 1'><0 1 " .• Cam pb Cl"b U 6 1·!6-1·1~ C,,,, E• ('.,a\ 18 1·t-1·16 Cdn Hm\!ed I~ 4'•--'1·16 Cdn HVO .1~ 3 1'-~ >,1 Cdn Occ1dnl 1 10', , , , (dn Suo O•I 1 4~ .. -~. C¥>09a lnoH } ' • C.is>ftd•I Co 2 ~'II , 'll. earn.ti" .% J !>I>'-, • .. C..rl~rC W'I 4 1'•-'• Ca"ol5 DrY 1 2' 1-\" C..5tl~l<>n '" 2 1 C.Stl~wd 111 s 10 -'" Ollu craft :'! "•-'• Cl'" <;.: .1Sd I 4' • ... Cedron Cp 13 -· Ch,1dMill ·" •lO S -'·• (hmpH O?d •5 ~', en~,,~, 11<1 J l', CHU Fd~I!. 10 :•, C KCCorp I Jo cnmE.•1> .2~ •1• •'•· Cnn,1na Co I ''• c.nema ~ l ! l l ', (rn~"•mol 1Sl 1'• , .. ,1, I( 16 2 •'•-'. Ci!<it;on ea~ 2 s•u-• • (•!1Fin .Ooln 19 2 -•1, C•tl"Mq wh S ...... . (,L Fin<I (p 1 J'll .. . Clolta!>l~l M 5 • :• \, Clop.iy(p 4, 1 ' , . CM! Inv w•~ SS ~ .. -1, Co.><h-" ~ ,..__Vt (ohu 1".1SD lS ) ... (Go1 l"tl '"' 11 I"'"-.... Colem.1n .41 12 9J..., l<lo Coron ... + Cm 138 6~•. !'4 Comoo Com 1~ IO -~. ComD Ecuio Ill 1 5'~-'• cmn<o 1.20.1 I 19''1 , .. Camdor BM • S'·•-'• . -- If YOU LIKE BEING A REGISTERED REPRESENTATIVE .. SEC Ends Stock Trade Ex-treasury Secretary 111 SF Post Comm P.,I'(_ S ~· •-" eomP!.1.62 1 11•,-1, Comooln .31 I 1'~' '1 ComOY O'f'I ) l'lt <,, Comp EQOJiO l l'•o liut you clt•ll0 ! l1k•· 1111• up-. ;11HI d 0 "-'11'>. lht· \\'nrn•·'>, lhl' n.tt!AIOI! plHHH' .. nd ,\(Ill 11\'1' lll I ii•' ;\t'\I p1>1'I ,1ff'.I. .\'llll h,1\'C ,I ]'l•·.1~.1111, l)u ... 1flt:" ... ~-!1 kt~ a1i1 •t.·<1r;1 1a·~· :i 11 rl ·• kn o wJ1•d i,: ..... 1 1111\•,1n1ents _ .• 1h1•rf• I ''.~ pl..Hc 11ht•rc your t ;d1·11l'> .J J'I' Ill l•fl ;,_•d OJ 1111 t 11<' 1·1J1nr,,•11 ,:1tton is ri•ll,:J bl<> \~ li1·..:111n:.i l f)1!11·1· \l.111.10.:<'I 1111' ;1 \~'1•ll l..1Hl\\ll ~\ .. 1•·1 .d :-..11111~-. \,~,,, • I IHI 11 I ,1 kt• 111·111 1• ill kTI"\\ 1!\1; \h ;1l \!!II! 1·H~t .. 111• 1· , our 111 •1,.1~11 .,r~. For Franlilin. National SAN FRANCISCO IAP) - Forn1er Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz has accepted a job as executive vice president of the huge Bechtel Corp. of San Francisco. ' . . j • \ "'" 1 1 ... ~·· Coll Chortf.1 Shryoc;k 12 111625'-714 1 ot lhr Htod Offi«. I Wi\,hire, Loi A~ NEW YORK IUP!l -The Securities and Exchange Commisslon today suspended 1radlng in the common and preferred stocks. of Franklin Nt\\' York Corp. and its subsidiary. Frankl\n National Uank. 1'11£ C0\1PAN'' omitted its divi dends. a virtuallv uPheard nf step ht the h 'a n kin g inrlu5t rv. Friday And later disclosed that 1t had S\l(fcred losses or $14 million in the bank, 1nainly because of · · u 11 a u t h orized" roreign MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS -MERCEDES BEN Z - Sales • Service • Leosmg 2871l1 MARGUERITE PARKWAY 495-1700 MI SSION VIEJO 831·1740 S. Ditto fwy. t. A.,rry "'wy. ••ti. rip! Cl<'! MorlfllrrOe : ...................... lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ....... . • • I currency transactions. Franklin New York also announced its board would meet today to make some management changes and .that it would seek to raise $50 million in fresh capital by two stock rights offerings. There also was talk in \Vall Street that Franklin National might be taken ove r by anoth e r b ig ba nk , ?\1anufacturers !lanover Trust, which loaned Franklin New York $30 r illion two mon ths ago, was suggested In scme banking circles as a possible merger partner. A spokesman for t h e international construction firm and engineering finn said Shultz. who served longer than anyone else in the Nh:on cabinet, will be on Bechtel's executive and f i n a n c c c.>ommitt~ and becon1e a director. Shultz said in \Vashington that he will remain in the Capitol until the middle of this . week lO complete his business. LAWSON & CADAR, LTD. DEALERS IN FOREIGN CURRENCIES. GOLD & SILVER We buy and sell l0teign currencies in banknotes and coins of all coun tries. Planning a tnp abroad? Just returned from one? GIVE USA CA~ Towti •Country Eost 111 t fo,.n • COunhy Rd. 17141 SS8°2&87 ,,O,lox l9H Oraog<. Co. 92&&1 121ll610.2tl7 Ct.I( ""''°' (.,11/IM 1)0 t•I (0!"11'• C•l•rrl 1iir11 (Offill lfl\lt 8 1'i; ~ 1.< Como 1"v~t 10 ? C<mtrO Fall , 2 -'o Co"tOf ltK I I 1 '• ... eon~Oll c..~ S& 11~ •. • • • - ' • . -• " • . . • • • NO MADER WHAT they're in the market for, our readers find the DAILY PILOT is the best place to put the bite on bargains. And they do it with the same gusto as the gourmet here showing how much he appreciates the wares of the famed Alkmaar Cheese Market in The Netherlands. You don't have to travel so far to find good things to eat, ni~e things to wear, new ·appliances at bargain prices, a real car buy-or even a chunk of cheese . Just shop the "armchair market," the one our advertisers deliver to your door every day. ~ , I < • i ' '' • DAILY PILOT ' ... I f .. -"~ , Too Pretty ~ She~s Fired .-------;,1~-..... ,...,, __ """''" .· , .. .,,,..;L;:l'l':-;: tt TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS ROCK JSLAi\'l1Nll. J AP 1 - Peggy Hughes ~~ys ... he \1;1s not cnllrcly displeased "·hen International Jlarvcster fired her fron1 its s h i pp ing de.partnteilt . Co:npany off1c1al~. she S<Jid. h a d concluded she v.·as too pretty . "In a \vay. I felt sorl of <"omp!in1cnted ." s~i id t h c blonde i\liss lfughcs. 28 ... , never thought of myself as a prc ny girl. I'm jus! an avel"agc looking 11·omcn." l!nr1·estrr's Farnlall plant hen· Shi.' was rircd March 13. "The pcrsoMel m.:inagcr lo!cl n1" I 11·ould be rt•ins!<:tll"I 11 hen " nl·111 job opened up.'' she said. But litter. she said, !he general foren1an told <in official of Local 1390 Qf the United Auto \Vorkers that she recei ved "too much 1nalc 111tenllon." Suuaay Hazard 1nvcstiga~or for the local s ome ti mes her m"ale eonm11ss1on. said co1np<iny co"·orkcrs would ask her how BUENOS AIBES (UP I) officials 1old him !\Liss l·lughes the job was going and lift _ A shatp increase in the h<id good \\Ork and attendance something for her. nunlber of heart attacks n!co rds but added th at "n1alc "The)' \\·ouldn 't ev~ask. on Sunday afternoons can C0\1·orkers found her so they would just do it. ould be directly attributed to at tra c t ive they "'ere say, 'You better get ck to ·the national f-ootball chs!racted from their normal your own job,' " she said. lottery, the newspaper La duti es." Some of the men asked her Ra1.0n said. Woods contended the (iring-out, but she said she-always 'l1le paper said that the \'iolated sex discriminalion refused: "I.just didn't see any nonnally, slack periods at laws. that I liked ." cardiological clinics on A Jlar,·estcr spokes man said "l'in not "·onlen's lib." said Sunday afternoons ha\'e 1hc c:on1pa11y "·ould have no !\1iss lluglles. v.·ho also has becGme "peak" periods eornmcnt. There \\'ere about 10 v.•orked as a forkli(t operator. ror heart failure sincr. the 1rotnen and 15-20 n1en in the "I'm proud lo be a v.•01nan ... loltery began tv.·o years ~ l ~ NBC 0 9,0o _ "Giant." The. second part of r~ George Stevens' epic screen version ~ ~f the E~n~ Ferber novel , starring Rock 1-ludson, Ehzabeth 1 a)· t lor and James Dean. AB C o 9:00 -"Ice Station. Zebra.' '.Rork Hud· -d son again, with Ernest Borgnme, ~atr1ck ~IcGoo-n ban Jim Brown anP Lloyd Nolan _m the c~nclud· ing 'episode of the 1968 movie'of confrontation un· ~ der the North Pole. ,, l\1iss Hughe;;. about 5 foot 5 and 110 pound~. 'vorked for a 1nonth packin g hea\y 1nachinery at $5.ll an hour 10 'the union failed to sclllc the dispute an d the Hock Island lluman Relations Con1 n1 ission voted last \\'Cck to take 1hc caS<' to the Ill inois Fai r E rn· ployn1ent PraclLer!> Con11n. H e nr y \Vood s. an department. But I just think if you have a ~liss llughes co.n~c':'e<l~e<l"...'lh'."a'.'.t __ .!'po'.'.in'."t'._:Y".'"""'...'shoo"'.".'.'.'l~d..'f~ig'.'h'._t '.'fo':r..'Jt'.:..'_'_::='=g=o=. ========'i TV DAILY LOG Sometimes small is ri ' ODel Minta. (Length: 176.1.; Width: _,.,3; Wheelbase: 95.7".I A sportycar for the imported or 541><:ompai::t b!Jyer. P9rlect for.singles or young marrieds, too. . I . " J , .... .. . , . l . . rt .. ,-It '¥·.• . . l , •, • , " , Apollo. (Length: 200.2; Width:«'2.7;'.· ' •. ·· Wheelbase: 111 .o~)"n1e .Bulcl(of ematl CMS.. Six eyllnders; oix paasengeja;.An Iile.i ., • city /suburban runabout. For medlufll"alzed or 2-car famliies. ,. ' • I . ' ..,_ , Century Regel Coupe. (Lenlrth: 212.0; Width: 79.0; Wheelbase: 112 .0~) A fuxurious mld1lze car Ior buyers torn between "small "and "blg'", , A smart buy for the personal car lover. too. • Sometimes big is ri • Century Luxus Wagon. (Length: 21a.2; • Width : 79.0; Wheelbase : 116.0~) Creature co mfort plus cargo capacity make It a wise choice for the mid-size wagon buyer. ' LeSabre. (Length: 225.9; Width: 79.9; •. ·Wheelbase: 124.0~I Generous trunkroom for large one'C8r families, businessmen, traveling. • -1 Electra 225. (Len~th: 231 .5; Width : 79.9.i. . Wheelbase : 127.0. I Uke other full-'l!ze tsUicks It's most at home on the 'Open road. Where its cruising capacity and roomlllfta can be Iully apprecjat~ ' Bu ick ma kes both ri Pick the size that lits the way you drive. Today's gasoline situation is forcing all of us to take a long, analytical look at the cars we're driving. The intelligent way to pick the right one Is to look at how you use your car. For some people, a small car like our Opel is perfect. Others who drive more or carry more i'i'l!ed more car. And Buick has them in all shapes and sizes. How about you? Think about how BUICK , . you use your car and pick the size that"• right for the way you drive. Then vltilt your Buick dealer. With Opel, Apollo, Century, LeSabre, Riviera and Electra ·- he's sure to have th.e right car for you. · g ~· From Opel to Electra 225, Buick hes a car for the way you drive. < 11 r I • Mondoy Evening MAY 13 ... ~;19cHJ~'a.i~Wi~H. .. D 1on1n11 (6) Ho11R'S He10U I km1J HillbillitJ MW!oll: l•ptu!Wt ... _ D robr. C.ZllU @ M1jo1 L11111e h~b•!I C~nt'd f1om 5PM. Gi1nb vs. C1nt1nn1h. ED HNppodp Ltdp ID""'""' l:JO @ ONl1r's Ctlokt Q Oictr. Vin Dyke ind Lucy must come up •ith 1 solution to 1et the 1il11 ot1 Lucy betore 1 prtu rtception 1h•t even· ing. 0 QJ (j)@) ~ ~ I,~ Mond•Y Mo•ir· (C) (Zhr) 'G11nt Conti. (II) (dial ··ss-11otk HudilOn, [liz1beth Taylor James Dt1n. Th• epic dr1m1 tracini 1ne h1slo1Y ol 1 we1llhy 1and·O'ljn•na family in mode1n Teias. . 0 (lj) (J) CD ABC M111cl1y Moite: (Cl (90) "let St.Ilion Zrb11" COnct. (R) (dr1) '6S--Rock Hudwn. [rn~st Boranine, P11r1Ck McGoohan, Jim Brown, Tony Bill, tloyd NOiin. The Story ol 1 U.S. nuclear sub speedm1 under the Arctic ice c1p on the way to 1 danitrous t0nt1onl1\lon. fl) CtltSSH rn .el. ltin& • I Artist ol ~w1\r11 E11tr1 Amico V1ritty Slwil I Men G1itfi1 Show ell H111A's Ht1oes tM.! lll'ltl filll r.a1111nta o•r11rin show Utile 1nc111 ,..,~rn oommm •m ltwli•& IOI Dtllln 9:l0 0 15 (j)) Ci) Dick Vin Dy\1 Show (RI [lick dK1des thal he doesn't hivr enoul'!ll .. manly pu1· suits" in his hie. i.o ht jumps 11 lhe ch111te 10 become 1 111ee~ly poke1 playei. • · 6 MM: (C) (2h1) "Don't i;o Ntar tM W1tff"' (com) '57-Glenn fOfd. GI' Seali. • Wliat'1 MJ Unt? c:JNews m ! lflC1ll I l in Cosbr: A Day 11 ~1t1!11rd Bill Cosby ta lks to pnS· ohers to show the important• ol educ1t1on 1s 1 crime deteuent. al 0111111 I Wild W..lcl of Animls '""""' n TIMI-A Thiel 10;0~ I (}) I lk•Mlll ti Jeannie [uM1aldl I f:t1 (i) Dn11tt I) Why Me~ Breast Cancer * Special Sponsored By Blue Cross of So. Cal. ~ Wnllillf* Sti1l11tt Talk I (j)) lobbJ Ctliabtro SllOw O llNXT Speti1I Nwtry Me?'" Ac· D11u 1ress Lee G11nf narr1tts this hour tll1H stNpl specill about breast cancer. ltn 7:30II1'1111M• W11tt1S Show (R) Andy women who hive II.Id bre1st cancu Griffth I 1el! tllell vtry prr!>Onll tlOl•tS about H.,~:~: ~ d1SCO'l1!fY. $Ullf'Y and SUIY!Vll. m Pollet s.110. (R) o m m 'l "'ews Hoi, Tiry Mti&M* (6) Perry M11111 rwluttlltOod ll tH (JJ Mtdiul Ctnter "tiS· tw T11111111 Hunt u1:1y" (Ii) ibi01 $ IMwie; (C) (2hr) EL) la ltlfisll Dwf Dlri111(' (com) '63 --a;J l't•iw tM Lo1d Club Ootis D•J. hmH G~irner. IO:lO 0 11 ()}CD, i Io t , 1tj1 c I I lllMd IDnPf• ''!lhuls/ Sl1ns" Oliver C11rk, Wilham • ltwitdlM CkV•nt, ltcnard Irey, At.n Opptn· 1 Tell tltt Trvttl llt1me1. John Pleshette and Robut Nn Price Is ltltht Samp$0n 1!11. tjj : (C) (Z'lall1) "Horth 11 O klllflllJ to Advtntvre M19:1• (adv) '60 -John Wayne. Q) l !H CosbJ l[J' te [JI "P1lnt1n1 the TOiiin" ED Th11l1t in Mi11ica (2111) "'The ((}) MISJMlll Muik W100w1n1 of Mrs. Hcl!oYd" Gerald· .11•1111' DIM Slllw ine fillitllld, Joyce Ebert, Re• ltc91ril Tilatl• Robbins ind F11nl Convrru s!1r 1n n. -..i '"'' tlus sltlry cen1enn1 on Mrs. Hol· l:GO 1J (9 Cl)) (I) G 1111•I•1 "A loyd's h1!11d of her crude hus~~nd, r1mllJ ol KillersN (RI A d1 rin11 jail· and !ht esu?t she sttks 1n J. break reunltn 1 l1mily of 'lieious youn1e1. more uns111ve m1nei. outlaws who woond 1 pursuinR U.S. £tl Muskal totMct, M11Wt, kin hi s depUly, then waitlll:OO ft 0 0 eil m CD Nnn 0 Q) (I) @I £?:) TM M1fic:iin 1111 ti liroudlt in 1mbusll IOI Mlrsllll Dillon. il Ci) ®J Efj ~ (i) Ntwi "'Ille Ulu~n ol the Curious Coun· • Nl1•t li1lltfJ' tellait" Part I (R) Lloyd Nolan I · MIMt: (Cl "'The Tifli•ld Tlru•· Carol LynltJ and John concos 1ues1 d1rbolt" (c<M!'I) 'S3-S11nl11 Hollo· tn 1 d11ma about 1 sh1ct, prison w1y. offlCial's 1tttmpl lo pull oll I roll· Q) Mission: htipeuiblt bery. tEI lllt Unloucbablts 0 Mtvit: (C) {2h1) "Houst Ill (!z1 (_l) $tt1tl filt ,, .. ,.,pit INd'' (mys) '70 -~ Tht Saint Christopher Geor11. Jantl l ei1ll. (2f (jJ) The Pioneers Q @(}) t:E The ltotkies "Blood 11:30 £) (2' (I:)(£' CBS late Movie: Brother" {R)lerry lllts to help hlsl "'The World 1111 .nesh l tllt De•ir cousin. Jimm1. 1 r11ur~td 11111 vt~· (dra) ·~!)...'..Harry Be!alonle, 1n2u eran, wllo blames 50CltlJ for h11 1 Srevens. Me! ferrer. pre>b!tms wilh the law and his 0 ~CI! :l2) fD Johnny Carson inability to find employment Glynn Florence Hendrrwn is 11u1st llosl. •• Turman 111ts11. . O Movie: "'The Cool l the CrazJ'' I 0u1er1 ChotCe (dr•) '58--G111 l'ereau • Stl1n ti Ad'l'lfrturt (ii Twili&hl Zone llluiul flllll Ftslhal 11J1c11,1 Soulldst11e: Stals & 0 WIDE WORLD M~STERY Crolb Tiie popular votJI duo blends * Ed Nelson stars 1n Jan, rock. country and 1eli1iou1 Police Headquarters mllSk in concert. Q @ (}) EI) Wide Woild MJlttrJ Ell P1ntlltosl "P I H d rt .. m Mov11: ........ tf Missin1 Per· 0 ice ea (lUI !IS sons" (dra) '3 3-Settt 01vls. Pit 12:00 00 One Step ltyond O'l1len. m .Movie: "Rl1ht Cron" (du) 'SO -01ek Powtll. June Allyson. 1:30 m Mt"! lirifli• Show , ID W1nde,lust 6) Mmt: ~) "Tiit ~HPfnl Un· l%·l0 fD Day at Nicht knowll" (SC1·!1) ·s&-Bn1n Don levy, 1·00 D ·~ r · M1r1111 Otan. : · w.u 1m011ow a;i '•ntt1m1 N1¥et1 1:4S fJ Movil: "The L1ntl)ihe1rts" (dra) 9:00 II (19 ({)) ({) Ktr1'r Luer (RI '53 -Mont1t1meiy Clill. Robert Lucy 1ets Uizabr!h Taylor's famous Ryan, Dolores Hart, Myrn1 toy. diamond rin1 stuck on 1111 lin11r, 3:10 6 MO'flt: "TM Lest lalldit" (wes) an' Richard Burton, Miss Taylor '49-WltH1111 Elliott, fonest Tucker. Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES t :OO O (C) "ltllH'" (adv) '64-Hany Guardino, Roll•rt Culp, Shirley Eaton. t :](I e "Kid Mllli111s" (com) '35 - [ddit Cantor, Ann Sothern. 11:00 0 "Hen Sqllld" (d11) 'SB-Wa!IJ Clmpo. "Clnd,.ntd" (dral '30- Ronald Colman. az:• m "Anti 111t1 Tittrt w.,.. "°"•" (lilJl) '4~uis Harward, Judi!h Ande1son, B1r11 F1tzi111ld. J:CIO 9 (C) wn. lost of £wt!JW~1" (di•) '59-HOPI lan1•. Sltphen lloJd, Jo.In Crl'llllord. 2:00 fJ "Duirt Under th1 Elms" {dra) 'SI-Sophi• Loren. Anthony P11· tins, Burl lvts. m (C) "litUt Emf' (dr1) 'Sl - Rlland1 rlemin11. M11k Slntl'IS. 3;00 (I) (C) "Shine" Part I (wts) '53- Alan Ladd, Vin Hellin. @) (t) ''Return of th• GvnJifhltr'1•, (wes) '66 - Robert l1yl01, Clll~~. (l'tflll. ~ 3:30 11 (C) "Madlme l" (dra) '66 .., l1n1 Turner. John rGnythe, Kelf Du llea. '•·t CII "The Glau M1na11rit" (dr1} I I' ·so -Ki1k Dou11u. J1n1 Wrm11\ • Q (C) "Gici" Cond. {1om) '58 - L1sll1 Caron, Louis Jourdan, Maur· k:e Cllev1ll1r. @(])"K.trd CUJ" (mys) '41 - J1tk L1Rue, M111 He1!1. ' ID (i) (C) "Colt,.ts!M .. (dra) 'SD -Orson WtY"-Olan Stockwel. Brldlord Diftman. · • 4:30 (9 CJ)l "The Movnt1!11 110W- (d11) 60-Jfomn St1111111., Usa 1,;1.1. • • KOCE TELEVl~ION LOG ltr .. SISAMI'. ITltll'.T (C) 156 (CTW! 160 mjilJ 1 1 ''° rlrL CAT IONAl SCHOOL •:IO FQJ:US OltANGI COUNTY lCI INFOR~TtOH IC\~KOC.E l, (KOCEI "Phllt0eJOhl1 Orchel!r• Jn llM INSll +OUT I( Nif) In MY Orlncit COl/l'llv -/4. BtMllt" - MafNll ' -H•fps c ldrtn ex11lort Hast Jim Caoper wll/ ''~'"' "' 1111 m11nl ot dllll'I Ind dt'YllOll u oml P.,lt•dtloh, rclleslr1 w•V1 ollffr:l!nq wllh !ht dlllh of 1 yf:i1 fg "3ronq.e tounlv on IY lb!. Defll(lll or Dll lheY loYtd. •nd !ht btntlll PllfllOStd tor ' l\iij l;U ICAlf 1t•it.D tCJ lAETAC I \'lllllh ~onttrls bv tile Ort""• "E..,....YbOdY Counl1" -FocUSH on C~!l; Phllh•rmonlc ~let~ .' ~ l :AO~f11:r11f~o\1Elt ICl (NIT) Ol~ort\OJ:lloc~~ c~~;o!,Y~ t,,~ :-r,;·s1111n11vs" -A c11u1c --u Jn Cfllldran's IU•r1rvr11. 7:00 l~ltODUCTION TO Pt>YSl~AL t :OO ltlPPlES (Cl NITI "SS Tg i;.1 GE >ll:APHY JCI 100 At. lttldv" -HIPf c h llllrtn co s91tTIUM) 'TPM Hvdro I ~ undtrtllnd 1111 to«lll 1kltl1 al'd (Kit' -l -S. j «Kl!"dln1llen !lllldOCI to"' alt! 7:30 vMNI BUS SO !C) ll(OC.El to nv "Or•llCll COl/l'lttl Youth ComPli!W'" Jill A•0UT YOU !Cl NIT I -11' Ort C011nl't"1 newtSI • Tllr" G'•" -H1l111 c11f111rtn 111i.rt1'1ntntnt":1m midi uco QI h unclll'lllnd 1111 rt111IOl'I Cl/ CKIOd IOl'ld toll ,,_ !•lent '" !PM count:/-~ "II orow111. l'lld llOOd ,...111o S!!llllf)q~·n:lno, Ind comtdv 2:30 Jt1c COMPANY !Cl J1i 1100 HOV, llt IPISl (~· irifl.\ (C "1'11t F r1 linf ofWaslloi' - S:ll I ODUt:TIO~ T O .. HYSICAt 1rn11lna chime 'lllllo commv~k g ll:A .. HY ) ISO CA wit I YO:.. ~•• ut tn~rl II\; '' NS9ftTIUM)' ht H.,.rrtl l c W01'1h -Alrlll'lc1n Skirt ll ' :M' -LfllOll -lrt lt!lllll<lql ol I 1 J:Jt lf1tllM.IHD slt1TCMtHO IC) t :OO wH/Jlf .AFfl:AIO ~,. 't·~· IKOCE) •'iiildtPlll Ind SflldOWS" -OPE••' IC 101 1'l'as1 ''1'~ ' l Tr1vl1!1" -din 511! trllnd 1 lid 4·11 'l~~tlr·s Cl O!MllfG COINllt mt roll 01 vlollll• w~ll~ • tr• J . ~CJ-I~ ~I "Tll Mina Sk!rll and %u:?1i'' d Kl.Ill !ht •torv tlilt' ~ .• ~"'c 1!1c1"c"OJ-~1~231c1 111 f·JO ~·~NllONS IN CULTu1t!Y l . · ( • IKOC€i J! m1n l "kcl11 Ccillt 1111 ,t.MI! StallT I() IS. fC-TW I -LntOll lf J ap c:hu equ B in t T I p I I va ho la e<I co pr iru N Ce da m tw ll<'i SU lh " 0 h Ii f a q u n c d • Chu re Equality RecoQ Once • n1ze es By JO OLSON Of ,..._ Ptlly ,.llol ~!foll Jesus, "'hen he wa!> rt'sur rected, <1pptared first to won1en. NC\\' Tcst anwnt (•hurc'hes accepted \\'0111cn <l:nd ga \'e thc111 equality. Uut today, \\'Onl cn have bce11 forgotten in the church, It seems. They hove been organized right out of places of n-sponslbillty in th~ chw·ch. according t.o Irina Berger, associate prolessor of RuMian and histGry at Orange Coast Colle ge, "'ho discussed \Vomen in Rel'igion-East and West . She chose to t'Oricentrate on Women's Role in Christianity because it is more familiar to Westerners lht:in the Eastern religions. e BEA ANDERSON , Editor Mor1'•1, M•Y 1), 1'14 \VorMn h.'lve ai"'a,vs been associated with fertili ty, the moon a •l d mcnstn1ation. Jhe snld. and noted tJ1a1 "we now huve1 !he 11·on1en's movement tulfi ecolui;:y together. 't is it a t"Oincidence?" she asked "l don't think so." LOOK BACK Though y,·omen seem to have more important roles in the EastE'rn religion~. she beUevcs th:.i t "lf we could go back, perhaps we Yt'ould find that Christianity \\'as not so rnalc-dominatt.'d." In !he Old Testiunf'nt . f\1rs. &>rg~r said, y,·omen \\'ere "altA•ays very !!oocl or very bad, but human." She related a theory whereby man 11·as supposed lo have re·"'ritten the Adan1 and Eve story. E\•e at first was created as an equal to Adam , ·r.1rs. Berger explained , but 1vhcn man found this threatening, he changed it so she wu'f made from Adam's rib. · "Jn the patriarchal period there v.•ere mort than 125 "'omen, all very 'im\lOfta~t. Jn terms or \\'Orks they were more like 20th century "'omen," Airs. Working Mothers Share Both Individual, Common Prob_lems lly ALLISON DEERR Of It. O•lly ,.llol Stttf \\'orking mothers share some common problems. \Vhy docs a mother work'.' \\itlat arc the advantages tind disad· vant ages? "1hnt are 1hc logislics of keeping a home running? And. what aOOut ch ild care? Four working mothe rs. all on lh._e faculty of Orange Coast College, diseu~ cd these questions. Speaking v.·ere Dr. Geraldine Pickart, a counselor ; f\;linctle Carter, assistant professor of English: Unda llain\ine, instructor in home economics, and Nancy Noble, director of the CX::C Children's Center. 1'1rs. Noble, mother of a 19-year-old daughter Susan , ~isted three rrasons why mothers v.·ork. "First. out of necessity. orten . it takes ly,·o incomes to make ends meet. And. with divorce. v.·omen suddenly ha"c to support a family . '·Second. I feel, is £u1fillment of self, the category I fell into when I started v."Orking. OLDER WO~!EN "f"or the older woman , whose c-hildren have gro"'n or nown the coop, perhaps lire is no longer full enough . So she goes back to \\-'Ork , or often , first to school then to \\'Ork." ' Dr. Pick art, v.·ho has children eight months and 32 months old , prefaced her discussion or a d van t i:I g e s and disadvantages by saying "I have enormous respect for women who stay in the home and are fulfill ed by ii. "I think it is the condition ing of our society thnt makes v.romen feel they are 'just a housewife.' The Diclionary of Occupational Titles lists 2 5 , 0 0 0 occupations. and the lowest Is 'housewife .' "I feel it should be the highest. After all , you are responsible for form ing pcopJe's personalities." She agrees that it Is "the quality, not quantity of mothering that counts." No one questiom, she asserted, w~1en upper class leaves their children to nanpies and maids. "But when a middle class mother goes lo \Vork. thafs different. !jo one thinks ;:inything's wrong wittl th e Rockefellers or the Kennedys." She cited studies that found no difference in the mental health of children or v.·orking and non"'orking 1nothers. "Cl111dren or mothers v.•ho "'orked five or six hours a day did better than any other group in the studies.'' The group that fared v.·orst i.\·cre chll· dren of mothers v.-ho stayed in the home "because of guilt fe elings or a sense or duty," said Dr. Pickart. "Thal's tragic." She feels that lhe mother working outside of the home c:in be healthy. •'\\le ha\'C guilt feelings about leaving our children. while mel\ do not. No one •• ~ h thinks anytbmg about a man. "''ho as enough money, hiring <r housekeeper to take care or his children. He's not accused, as a woman is. of leaving them nat. .. The disadvantages, she concluded. then, begin v.•ilh the guilt feelin gs won1en have about leaving their chi ldren. ''I can tell myself intellectually that the children are not suffering, but emotion31Jy J stitl have guilt feelings ?l va rious times. &lt v.•hy should I? r..1en don't.'' She related three comments from ':ll cn that she heard ~·hi!e expecttn,g her second child: "How could you ever leave your baby?" She asked him, "How can you leave yours?" "Do you know what you're doing to tha t child?" ''You just don't like your children ?" said a man she described as "one or the mo.st liberal, supposedly, on Campus." COOPERATION She added that if your husband doesn't cooperate, there vl'i!I be problems and that reliable baby·sitters are hard to find . She quoted a •larvard Univer!lty study that Indicated the ideal would be lo spe nd half or a child's waking hours ~·ith him. '·That ahnost recommends a part-time job." Linda Hainline, who has a 12-year-old son. said it is importaf'i to come to terms "with your pe.rson~litf and the child's personality. "Most or our Husbends wer' not raised v.•ith this new concept of a woman's right to work. It was oot a part of their upbringing. "ff he is v.•illing to do hal f of the \1•ork, it niakes a big difference. In any case, it takes a great deal of planning.'' J\lr:5. Hainline, \\Cho teaches, is \\'Orking on her n1astcrs degree at Long Beach State and \\'Orking in real estate, said that you niust sec that your ti;ne is used as t'f liciently as possible. •·Every n1c mbcr of the family should be responsible for his owo things. J\,lea!s should be sin1ple and planned ahead so if you aren't there. anyone can prepare it." She emphasized meeting the nutritional needs of the family. SCHEDULE POSTED l\lrs. Hainline posts a schedule of y,·hrre she will be and where she can be reached at all tin1es. Schedule lime, she urged, with each of ')'our children. time to be spent exclusively \\'ilh them. Train your children to help, but make sure they Jeam "the safety things ." Other suggestions v.·ere to fake time for yourself, even just a few minutes. lo relax . And , take time lo exercise. "Take a modem dance class or play tennis. Housework isn't enough exercise to keep fit. Set priorities. they said. Do you know what your standard of housekeeping is? Your husband's? Your children's? Find out aod proceed accordingly. Also suggested were finding qualified licensed child care through the county department of welfare and tak ing the child there rather than having help in the home. Participants in the discussion with panelists felt each situation must be judged individually. "It's different with one child or two. You can ask a IZ..year-old to help, Wt what do you do with an infant?" Women \\'ho have children at 25 or 30 or 35 tend to keep on working, more so than the 20-year-old, it was agreed. Daughters of mothers "'ho stayed home and those who worked felt it best that the mother work if that is what she needs to be fuUilled. One only child felt overprotected by a mother who never worked. Another orily child, whose mother worked. fell alone, but now feels it helped her become independent. ,;When a child is bcim, the man doesn't think he has to stop "~rking for five )'\!ars. \\lhy should a v..'Oman ?" I ·pe~dulum Swinging • Br LAURIE KASPER 01 ll!t 0.11, ,llOI Stilt \VoTncn , minority groups and others cu rr"Mitly In the proceu of "coining out" are· ''more Important as teachers today than'\1hose of us 'A'ho have tr11ditionally been1 teachers,''. according to Terry nrrunOns, an Orange Coast College l~ruCtor In soc:i:>logy and anthropology. lie ,explained bis theory to his regular class a; well as scvcrAI othen r.ib'J had aet!fJi\e<t his invitation to hea r a sp~a\ lro1ure on "Consciousness, l'coplC! rnd EtohiUon A Macrosociologlcal AjJJ)l"tlt\Ch to Sex Roles." Women who leave thei r husba.nds nnd ehfldrtm and find new roles in the "'orlii create more "shOCk waves" than the traditional teacher, he explained. ''It creates a type of re-evaluation of what we bclleve in society.'• ffo b.ickcd his hellcf with a throry by William Thompson, authoi-of "Al the Edge of History," ~ credits \\-'00\en with Initiating the change from the primatlve hunter·gathertr society to an a(!T'arian society, nmmons explalned' lo his studenta and \'1~ltor! that al\ social structures and r"•lturP are believed 10 lla"e begun at and evolved from aome primitive tribnl level. Using slldel lo ilfutratc this, he ,.Id m1..on were the hunters bot "what real ly !!UStalned Uie group were the 'Vt'Omen." They were the ones who provided the staple food by digging roots and picking berries. FlRST FARMERS Thompson's belief, the teacher said, Is that won1en first realized that seeds, if dropped, v..'Ould germinate and produce other seeds. 1-le believes that womcri convinced t.lle men to give up the ir nomadiC lives so they c:>uld grow their food rather than seart'h for it ln U1e early sta geS or the agrarlaQ society, Timmons explained, farm work was ~·omen's y,·ork but eventually mt n gave up their hunting nnd took it over. Society has gone through several Berger revealed. An ex:impl e of lhls kind of Old Testamc.nt y,"'mnn y,•as Rebecca , \\ho I taught her sons how to cook. y,•orkcd on a l'unn and "out"·ittcd her hu!ihand '' ' "Lots of (Biblical ) "·otnen oul\\iHrd their husbands." ~1rs. Berger su1d. "It's there. \Ve just have to look." She cornmeoted that the Hebrev.·. Christian culture has the biggest religion and the only one truly male-oriented. ONE WOi\IAN As la te as 1963, lhl're y,•as only on•• v.·oman delegate to a 1\·orldwide nH.-eting of churches, she said \\1omen figured heavil y in the li fe of T\.Ioses. Hjs mother saved his life and his siste r T\.1iriam brought him up and helped him become great, ~frs. Berger said . She mentioned the story of Ruth. \\•hich "everyone knows. This is the story of how a woman should be ("\\'hither thou . goest, I will go"l. She sees her life as being submissive and dependent." Deborah, on the other hand. "moved Israel. She was a slates1nan , prophet and warrior." ,\lrs. Berger as ked . "\\'hy ha\·en't 1ve bc'fn strl'SS1ng t>eborah·1 ·~· Jciebcl, sh<' said, y,·as I "Joi\' point r f -®n1co in thi::,.Bihle," but imply ~au~e she hud "bad press.·• She 11•ns just doing \i711'l t nrr tlllSband said, l\1rs. Bcr~C[" C:fpl:iined. but she 11·as aJ y,ays 1n1e to ~r husband. The Ne\\' 'l'es tament broug ht a "nc\I' deal" (or \\'Otnen. ~lrs. Berger contend-.. "The early records 1of th e church are filled with \\'011lt'll, 1na11y of 111honl "·erL· charged 1\•ilh fasting and prayer. \\10 7\IEN DEACl>~S "You had y,•omcn as deacons unti l the third century. Then, v.·on\en \1ere est ranged from the ministry afier Chrslianity became the offic ial religion of !he Roman Empire. "Perhaps \voman 1n the Chri s1 ian tradition ,1·asn'l as \veak as she seen1cd lo us as 11·e \\'ere {.'l'O\\'ing up," l\lrs. Berger suge:esll'<I . I-low then did the church or ga niza11011 become all male? "r.-taybc ii \\'JS an antidote because there \1·ere so n1a11y ,\·omen cults," l\trs. Berger said. \ \ -;> • She also theorized that when bishops y,·1·rc seni to Christ1anl1e the bnrbtlrian.-.. 1111:!11 1\ ere sent ~£·a use I hey had to go "'1th no y,·eapons and possibly "'ere considered stronl!cr. l:lut all the y,·ttllc. Airs. B~11ger pointed 001 , y,·ornen 11eri.:-working i:i and founclinj! orphanages fi nd t1ospital~. \\Iha! are lhe cooclusions? "I ha~·e oo conclu.s1ons. 11\trc aren't any," r..rrs. aer~cr said. "It'; up ·to v.0111(11 to go back to our own scripturei and fi nd those asp1tts of religion nnd life znost useful in our contemporary "''Orld. "\\'c c:in't bo.'a t 1nen o\'cr the heads and s11y \\'e \l'[u)t a 11e11· church.·· :O.lr~. f.k·rgt'r suggL'Sted th at often.cited Biblical quotations used to prove that "llll'rl ;ire .superior to y,·omen" are often only half quoted. She in vited the students lo do further rcSl'arch on the role of "·omen In Chris tianity, \\'h!le pointing out that the OCC student body now is 51 percent v.·oincn. Then she bribed them by then offering ~ extra credit in one of her classes. ,.I don '! know v.•hy ~Is. ma~azine hasn't f:Ol a hold of that." _,/, 01l1Y P'llot 111v11r•ntft !»Y Tim .....,_ A series of topical lec t ures and discussions comprised the week-long CelebrationofWomen at Orange Coast College . People Section feature ·writers report on part of the programs. Favor / transformations since then. throu gh the Industrial and post Industrial, but "women are just as important toda y as they were then," he asserted. From the per90nal r>oint of "iew, Timmoni1 • explained that "·omen hnv e done things v.·hlch have made hi m stop and think. , "~ten harbor a lot bf old informa tion," he told the students. but Y.:omen. 1'ccause or their "consciousnes,, and awa rt'fless of th mselyes as unlq.ue i'ndlvlduals bolh In· tellectually and physically" alried by birtb control. arc see king a change in . today 's society. "Because of technology, primarily, and industrinJizatlon, in many cases ll seems a l\'8sto of good brain 'pcl\rer to keep ' • • of Women wr-men in the traditlonal domestic role,'' SAME TRIBAi. 1'EEDS Society retains the same needs as they did in lhe tribal days. he said. "\\re just can our hwltlng expeditions business.'' Timmons crrdi1ed his Aud ience as being ·~atypical" fo r their interest ln \Vomen's \Veek und clai med that "middle Am eric1t" still has the woma n In the tradiliQn:il pl ~~. as indicated by rommcrcial s which hti\'~ ::i hu.!band congratulating his IA'ife on her diSCO\'ery of a llt\V hamburger mix. Vet he predicted this ''middle An\erica" too y,•\\I take interest In the movement in a few years. One young man. hD\li'f!\'U, dld express • C"neern over the cllange5 \\'Omen are making. "If .rou're a male. white C'..aucaslan you dOn't a stand a chance on :i job rtght now. I can't get in any labor union right now." He said, "\\'e're getting It back in our faces." But Tlmn1ons advised him. "The>''\•e got plenty of \VASPs like )'OU in the union'' and suggested that it's simply an indicatiOfl of where the pendulum Is right now. lie said the J>')tential and promise for wonien attaining so percent of the participation ln societv as v.~I as a "prcdlsposiUon to act falrly toward people regardlm of religion, race or stJ " is coming. But , he sakl, "It's up to each and t Yft'7 one of us lo bring out the potential." J I C&ll Y PILOT ' Clubs Concluding Proiects Gardens On Tour fT\"f! h 1f l..iA~ ~-r~.I..i\'!' ~/''! selecttd by lOI' ll.:.rY.1r \ • "' IL . Gardt.n (,1ub fr1r its <innU<i! v11:r fro:n I :o 4 p.m \\'f"1r,~~ \l.'.lY 15 Some tif it.f: h.ghiig..~u <ii\\<1111 ..... ~ .. "M:-..,crs lOClud.-. 1:1 '.!i-d1t,.rra.ri~ri·.•.!:.!~ Wormol 1.1arden ·A1'.h a fr1ur,·1:11n all th,. focal point at th~ Mm"' rif \Ir ond \frt Jamt.ll E. Rodgrr5 and a ,,\r1:am th1:1t Oov:~ pa~t a putt 1 ~1~ i;rr·en and paddJ1- t.cnn1s court on the mu1tJ·~'""'tlt-d tt-rrac··~ of the \\'ill fllg;;:1n'i Tht: !helteri.-d f'n:ry gard«n 11f th" J ames V Pecks t11 ,;.-c; on an Ori1-nt:..l Oetvor v.·ith o plantin~ of Japanest moplr. na!ldlna, azaleas and ct1VJ a surroundmg a B!TlaU guldfi.sh pond. To bt M:en in '\fie gardtn or iJJUIS" SchY.t:nnt~n ori: C.L rll'\· streom OC-d banked "'1th railroad tit~ and o pult1n~ green. A Oou.ri!hing displl:ly of hanging pol'i and other container plants h11 thr~ p<i l1C1 of the \\ <irren Tom ans, '\lo here <1 ~:01 pcit•I i5 fed by 1:1 rvcky \.\<itcrfoll <it the b:is•~ r..f a raised dtc:k, 111 ph<Ao ri~hL It is here that light rtfre<:ohmt'nt.s v.1!1 be ~ed and t:l!rarnic: C'lnta 1n1~r!I ond hanging baskets "'ill he of[~r<.-d fr1r Sdt1~ Tickets, at S'.! 51J. 1no:1 bi; purch<.is•<i from any club membtr <ir ot <Jny t1f the homes on the tour thf· da~· cf thi· t-\'r n! • Tour chairm<in is \Ir~. 1.>0nak! T Smith. MMES . WARREN TOMAN, DONALD YAHN VIEW GARDEN Alumnae AMu.al bndge b ene f It, s:JXW«ed for 1he Or~e Cu.mty Branch of the Arthntis foonda!IOO. has been planned by the Southern 0 r a n g e County Alumnae. A I p ha Orrucron Pi ro t.a\.:e place at 7·~ p.m. \\.edne!day. ~lay 15, m LetsUre \l.'orld, Laguna Hills. NOW !X-bb1<' \\'Uliams. student at I.a Paz Intermediate ScOOiol. ~1lS51C>r1 \ 1e;o. \\'Lil re iehe a ij() Sci\ rngs bond as the fU"Sl pl..JCE a11oard IJl the Susan B. Anthoo\' essav contest. SponSor 1s · the 0 r a n g .e County Chapter of t be :'\at1onal Organization for \ron1en. ~tembers \\'ill meet at ;-30 pm. Thursday. '.\lay 16. at Chapman COllege. Al~ on the agenda v.·i\l be a slide sho\\·ing. entitled Sexism in Edutation. Laguna Beach· Chapter v.i ll met:t at 7·30 p.m. \\'ednesda~. :\lay 15. in the Laguna Federal Sa\ Lngs building. \Von1en in Prison 1S ihc topic Qf the meetrng. Committee Orange County Ch a pt er , Danger's the Hitch UE..\R A~\' L\\UEJ{S I r..tg o! you. don't stvp '.l<1rn1ng girls abo\tt the dongers of hnchhiking. I knov. } uu \ c printed 5e\'eral lettt'rS in }Our colu!T'.n on this i;ub1c_.c~. hut mine might make a stron ger impn:ssH1n than most bccau~e I can tcll them firsth<ind \\ 1101 1t'; like to be rapt-<!. It v. as midnight. .\'ol r.iuc:h traffic. The car v.·as nc.,., The man lookt-d middle-agl'd <irul respet:tohle. T\liO min u t l'" after l got iruo his car I kne,~· l \las in fdr rt . --- '4•.L~ ~~ me out of thE.: c<ir :ind threv.· nic t•J the ground. l \\'as no match for hi!11. Besidc3. he !o(lki.!d crll1.:-l v;a3 afraid 1[ I fought h1n1. he'd i.:hohc rnl' to dt1-11i"i. Sn I cooperated . ' v nee\.:. I could ha re endeq up like dozens of other gi rls l'\'e read about in the ney,·spapers -r:ipc'd -and murcl~red. ThC' bus fare to the place I \\'as going •••ould ha re cost me M.50. How's that for an 0 . Jlenry ending? -C:XHIBIT A Going to a v•eddlng? Gh•ing one? Or s1anding up in one? Even if you're already mar- ried Ann Landers's completely Brandeis t·mveni.ty Xauona.J Yt'Olllfil's Committee .,.,·ill NI\·~ an installatim luocheon at 11 :30 a.m. V.'edoelday, ~y U , m the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub. Mn. Manball fi.sllec will be Ille new president. Voters ~trs. Kathryn Chl·istopher· son. \ice president o! the Lea· gue of \l;omen \'ot~!"S of 1he Cnited Stales and head of 1he O\'erseas Educa1ion Fund of the league, \I' ill keyno1e a meeting of the League o! \\'omen \'oters or Orange County. The group \1i ll meet at 9:30 a.m. Thunday. ~fay 16. in the F irst Congregational Church , Santa Ana. The iroming session \\·ill be a panej. discussi-On on the Local •ncy Formation Commission. Speaking y,·ill be Dick Turner. L.\FCO executi1,·e director; Ra I p h Diedrich, chairman , and Stan \orthrop. member. Harbor Key ~-o major e\'('f}ls are planned in \lay by Harbor Key. a support group of the Child Guidance ('.enter or Orange County. Officers ~·ill be installed and -"l'\·ice award pins presetlted at a 10 a.m. meeting Tuesday. . \lay 14. in the lrYinc Coast Country Club. Girard's Beauty College SPECIAL K1thryn Christopher10n Patrons of the 10th annual Empire Dcbutante Ball vdll be honored at a champagne buffet at 7 p.m. Saturday, \,ay 18, in the :'\ewport Bt>ach home of the John R. Youngs. The debotantes, .. rho vlill be presen1ed to society Saturday, June 15, in the :'\t"'AlX>rler lnn , vd ll be entertained v.·ith I.heir (>S('Ol'ts at a brunch and S\lim party Sunday. '.\l ay 19. in the i\'ev.-port Beach TemJs Club. Hostesses .,.,.ill be ~frs. Taylor Chappell and ~trs. Briggs Riley. Assistants Self Protection \\ill be th£' TUESDAY PERMW.t.VE SiyJ[ng includes Hait c(.11. ShamPOO and Set. ·~ SIS.00 ·~ s7so :.:: .. 'nllS. topic of Laguna Beach Police Officer Da vkt Ern(I)' v.'hen he speaks before the Or~nge Shores Chapter, American Assx::iatlon of Me d I cat Assistants Tuesday, 1i1ay 17, in Ille Airporter Inn. ~ieeting at 7 p.m. the same day in tl1< Anaheim Hyatt House •ill be th< Orange County Cllapter members 'A'ho v.ill be joined by the r.1edical .sttvices Society of Orange County. Rav Reider, director or the paraffiedlcs program for t.he county v.·ill ~ak about ~lob1\e Intensive Care. . ABWA Recipient ol the scholarship, presented by the American Business Women's Msociatioo v.·ill be announced during a dinner meeti~ 1'uesday, ~lay 14, in the Alrporter Inn. Irvine GOP ~!eeting tomorro"' at 10:39 a.m. In the Linda I, s I f clubhouse v.-ill be Irvine Coa~ Republican \\1on1cn. ~1 rs ~ Duncan Ste"•art "·ill !;i lk aOOut \\'omcnpov1cr and !ht primer)'. AARP Huntington Beach Chap!£·~. A.rncrican Association oJ Relirffi Pf>l"sortS v.ill t!<t lhl'r 111 l p.m. \\'ednesday , ~lay 15, ill ;\furdv Cnmnl'J.,itv r ... rilrf' Speaker l\'ill be JarOcs Toollu . tra,•el consultant for AARP, • WED"'E$0A Y ---·---COLORO.t.Y Any color pholce in Roux Product: w/sha"1>0Q & set ., ·~·$5_,,. . . .., .w~. 3021 So. Bristol, Santa Ana DAYS FOR SPECIALS Girard's Beauty College f /10 Mile M. of S.. c .. tt l'kl• S4~0667 J56-tlJO Al _.,.. ..._ llr ,._...l. All •~ Mlf""r•itff ll' ilnfnlc._.,, I was hop1n~ he'd slov.• dov.·n just enough for me to open the door ond jum p out, but he neve r did. Before I knew it, \IC v.·ere parked on a side road and his h;ind5 \\1•re around nl\ throat "I c:an k1tl yl'lu ln JO !'ICL'Onl1" ... he stiid ca!n1I.\ ' or you coin he a good girl and cooperutc." \\'h1. .. n he hnished v.·ith 111e. he t·arT1ed me back 10 the c:..r. drove onto the tiighy,·ay and sho\'ed me out on t h e grading. I v.·as in a state of shock but I remember thanking God for ·sparing my 11[(' A middlL"-aglil criuple picked rne up within a ft\\' minute s. They dro\e me straight to the emergency room of a hospital. The doctor said I \\'as a vcrv lucky girl. i\lt I had y,•as threC broken ribs and a sprained nc\.\ "The Bride's Guide" \\•ill ans\\'Cr questions a b o u tl------- La st Year's Barga in Forest 1-lome Women 's Auxiliary will have a fashion auction Thursday, l\1ay 16. in the Disneyl and Hotel to benefit underprivileged children. !i1rs. ltachelle Albany eyes a bargain .modeled by ~t rs. Connie Gordon . I tr ied to scream but my throat v.•as dry. I had no voice. Jlis hands were pov•erful. lie \\'as like a jungle animal. the "'''Y he moved. lie draggi.:d today's \\'eddings. F'or a copy. send a dollar bill. plus a long. self-addressed, stam ped envelope (20 cents postage I to Ann Landers. P.O. Box 3346, Chicago. Ill. 60654 .. -Libra Gains Freedom W£Sl 011/ PLAZA. Newf.i:iJI l\t>ocl1 !>48·4121 OAtllOf• 1'.t fo.T:O 216Mrlr•n•·f.,,., 6J'J.1r,-0.1 PORTRAIT OF A HAIR HUNTER ·Any color is th e right color ... ir 1\ is red. (according to Kathy) ;ill til e wuy from 1us r barely to the deepest amber. At presonf KathY Is crea·11ng manv !;f'n~alronal ne w color v.i11at1on '> \Vilh !tld! .1qf·" old · l-t1~nna" Yfi';, Ht<nn,1 ul 1110 .1ges -Light. Or1ril">t t.r Cl·l'~ \vhol e;vPr yu111 dcs11es. Kalhy can do it ~ ~·_,.!S P.S. "Hcooa' os" ''°'""' J,'tP;, na1urJ.I r.onr11!10n••f S1gnc;'Cl l ovr- l~j KJll1y I.I 70 Fashion Island• 644-21 51 TUESDAY MAY 14 Hy SYl)Nl!:Y 0:0.IAHrl AHIES 1:0.larch 21 -1\pril 1'.11: Pcrcch e mo\l ves. Friendly, gesture could he l'01·erup for ulterior n1or1vri; Bl~ rc<1dy :ind willing to 111i11;1tc changes. !\!ember of opposite sex could b1· rumanlic but i1npractical. Ti\Ultl'S I April 2fl · ,\1 a y 20!: Build t1J11<1rd go<1J. Your n;1tu ral qunlillcs sur gr !o fnrl'front. Persons in ;i11s1tio11., ol authority are in!rrcs!cd in ,\•1U. lie rcccpt1ve. d1plomaric. But also 1n5ist on kno"•ing 11hcrr: you :.ire going -and why. t;t-:,\11.\J i:'\lay 2J~;une 2flJ: \\!hat appe;.irt.'d solid 1na~· actually ·be rlu~i\'c. !\now it <1nd do some double checking. Perceive n1canings. n1oti ves. You rc(·eivc con1rnunlctJtion 11 hi eh rorlif1es beliefs and llll)l'~lt·. CANl'l·:rt t.Junc 2t .Julv ?2 ): This 1s pr<':.surc point ..:_ the chips ar(' do11•n and money is ill escrow. l.i':O t.luly 2JAu~. 221: Y(\u find out th111g~ whit'n ordinar- ily 1~·ot1ld ('!".C<l l>c your <lllcn- !1•111. saDBtEUCK-'CllNrCS DUI NIW CLINIC -+--U~•I 11-=~ l l•f lt'llatsllt! .... ffts-.Stff · IMl111111<11 , .. . .... _ ...... .. MEDICA~CONTROL ..... 1 .... ~ .... .,. °""" • • ... ,,. '-''· ' NEWPORT COSTA MESA 1619 H 1wparl l l•d. 646·16)) . ANAHEIM 166h'. l rood•llJ 771-4141 SANTA ANA TUSTIN I Jt2J fttttill A••· 547-6JJt r LA HABRA 750 w. u. ......... 121Jl 6t7·17tl 171 41170-tJ47 \'IHGO 1 Aug. 2.1-Scpl. 221: Ne11o· approach to work and heulth is featured. \' o u improve re lations 1\· i th associates. I.I lilt A 1 S£'pl. ~~-·1ct. :2 1: \\'ha t had been rcpre:.sed is released. \'ou ha ve more freedom 10 create, to 1n1print your ow11 style. St:OH l'IO ~Oct. 21·:\01·. :!I !: \\'hat appears to be a rest ri ction is due to boo1ner:1ng 1n ~our favor. SAG ITTARIUS 1 ;'>;o~·. 2!- lkc::. 21 1: lte!<.1t1ve could prepare Sl·nsa ti onal dinner. F:n}oy yourself. \'ou\·e earned the rept1st ! CA l'Jt ll:<>R.,\ 1 J)cc :'.2-.11n 1~1. C11<1ngc 1s profitable. Guard possessions while in transit. Fast·lalking individual may be trying to "pump'' you for in formation. Tell what should be told -no more, not Jess. A(~UA RIUS (.Ja n. 20.-Feb. 181: Bright colors are favored. Be COflSpicuous. A s s e r t yourself -express opinions in direct, positive maMer. Lead rather lhan follow. family member is ready to make peace. Be receptive:. PISCES (Feb. 19-~larch 20 ): Hospitals, institutions, clubs and organiza t ions are featured. Coopera te in project designed to aid s pec i a I cha rity. Visit persons confined to home. Avoid brooding. Outgrow Bedwetting ·When? It is Quite pos!.ibl e that your child will EVENTU· All Y ou tgrow bedwetling. but what happens until that time conies? Medical authorities have slated thar a bedwett1ng ch1td fee ls that he is a disgrace to his famil y. Statistics prove tha t a bedwelling child achi eves below his real ability in school. And J the child is cn1barrassed 18? and ashan1ed. • 30?•:6'f;;.f' Pacific International has ended bedwetting for hundreds or thousands in the past 20 years, and, if not caused by oreanic defect or dise;ise, we ca n end the problem. Forever. Our me thod is endorsed by many doctors. ~ Read their statements in ou r 16 pa"e bro· !Ji'•,""•'' . ,·"· ... ' ... '' .. ···,, chure: ··ts There A Solution?" Also read what !T.. :~ other people say .who have had !he same PARENTS' problem. Send this coupon for your flee copy. .. ........ . No cost or obligation. \~.=i~.rE.,~: .... ----····~'3,.U!_~~~ .. '-!!..~~~·~ .. E-~~-'!_~~~~~! ............... :.~ .. . Mail lo: PACIFIC INTE .. NATIONAL PO Box99133 Patents' San O•ego, Ca. 92109 Nam'-----------------~ Add rets _______________ _ Clly _________ s111e ______ _ Zip ____ Phone ______ Child's Ag•~=,,.-o, '°' 1 (Mull1 be -4 or old t r) RECO MMEHOEO AND USED BY MANY MD s • I «l 1•H PJtlt.I 1•-ot-tlllf, cool Summer sewing SAVINGS FOR THE BRID E AND GRAD PRINTS KNITS Bold , co1orlul iCrten printed designs on a fine cotton crepe. Machir'le waihable, 44"/45 .. wMie REG . S2.29 VD. SAVE .79 YD. D ouble knit solids and fa ncies, heather s1n9le kn it fa ncies. Mach•ne wa~h poly· esters, acrylic and c.otton blerid5. 54"/ 60" wide. VALUE$ TO S3.98 Yd. Save SL Yd. 2 yds. $3 29§ .. ·NYLON CHIFFON }39 yd. ·DOTIED SWISS }69 yd. ·VOILE PRINTS J69 yd. ·CREPE SATINS }69 yd. ·FLOCKED NYLONS 198 yd. ·"ROM ANCE" SATIN 1~ l . SPARK LE ORGANZA }98 I\ 'EMBROIDERED 2;~ /1 j I EYt:.LETS & LACE . ~LI> i: ·BRIDAL HATS 598 to 2998l_f(1 Nylons, Rayons, Cottons and blends. All a1e washable , 36"/45" Wide --11!!:-:::_J :~ l!HOUSE oF Fa BR1cs 9 alwa ys first qualit y fabrics ~Coestrtou ~ ................ ~ Cott. M.,.....S4S...l 516 o-pfolr Mtll °' p• ............. ""lfli-526·22l4 .....Ck'O•• 11111 .......,._""""' Jl0-1141 llwllwkzC ...... ...... ....... k.......,. ... lt7 .. 0IJ • ' ' . --.. - MIXED SINGLES by Wm •. f : Brown and Mel Casson DOOLEY'S WORLD L<f'S SEe.10~\0~IW«I l'M ~~VI NG L.UNCH .. COC<TAILn /AllTH Gqrx;y, DINN6'2 WIT~ JO'/, A NIGHTCAP WITH 5LJ~ .. -AND 111-'ir Ll-D 10 AN ARGUMI NT W 11 H 1f.I~ MINl;,Tf.I~ by Roger Bradfield' · PAn CLAIMl.D j H ~ WAS A v1cnM l OF Pl.ANN ED · OBSOJ !iSCl-NC!i I Wiii.\ L l~DA ... WHAT ~e 'rbu f1GUl11NG OVT, !iOoMEe, '/OU~ FI MANG&S ? TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan Dr. SMOCK HOW COME? ' . ' j 1 j J • ii ) l IMl'OS51llUo. l'M ALU:R&IC 10 M/\NUAL.1AOOR. I MY H/\Nl>S !lRl'AK our 1N 'i\L.l 511'RS. 1"HIS IS SO fS°""'e>Ai:::l!'i:lAS~ tNG. Miss c~s.sse:-1si-.f-r 'fH6'2'5 SOM.S 01'H!SR PL-ACS YOLJ co1 .. 1t ... P GIV.S M6 1'HAI 5H01"? HOW ABOtrf" ON 1";-;e 5 11?.SWAL...K I N F~ONI oi= -r;-;e; • .. ·. • 1 "' • ·-• MUTT AND JEFF WHAT OO I DO. MUTT? { ; "' r •·'·',,' I '<, . ' " ' FIGMENTS NANCY -t .. '"' DON'T JUST STAND THERE-- MAKE THAT SHOVEL USEFUL TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACRO SS 1 Shade ot green 5 Oklahoma ""' Minne sota 45 E~1steo talsely.3 words 48 Inclined 50 Sterile 51 Flowers: " ' " ' ' ( ' 0 ' ' .. I ' • 1 • ' 0 I " "' ' 1 " 1 ,. " . .. ' ' ' I •, .. I ' ' " ' j ;. ~~I. •' ' ' ( [ ,, ... . ' ' ,. ' ( , . ., " t ,. ' [ •. towns 9 Beer """g 14 In a murderous Informal 54 Linen latlf1CS 58 Hum1hat1ng 62 Opinion , . .., •. , p1 1r r o ~ ~;; ·11> ~ ( , > f >I • ~ r S PL ~ l·,: ~ L ~ P -~~ ~ . mar1ner 15 Apply, as pow def 16 Expunge 17 Maz o-·· 63 Imbecile 64 Ch1va11y 1.u~I;. ;.P C(,[f 66 S1gn1hcancc 67 Plastics '. ' I • t. * t I· p ~ • •1 " ' . "" r f ' .. ' ' ' ' 1ngred1ent r ii ( ,,, ti : ' r ' . ' ' ~~ 613 Seed ' Canadian appendage 11 As•a authOr 69 l acking 12 Capri 19 Passageway delicacy 13 ·---·do· 20 Marble 70 Quick well 21 Measuring rook 18 Ot !he device 71 Tard kidneys ;?3 Boal basin DOWY 22 Sovereign: 25 Certain N Abbi 1ruc:~s : 1 "Call Me 24 Rugby·s lnlormal -·--11ver 28 Church 2 Greek 27 lntamous part lel\et 29 Environ· 28 Aclors 3 01 !he mcn1al Falk and sun .science Sellers .t Gliding Abbr 32 Handle · on ice 30 Ra1a·s w1te with ··· 5Fuss 31 Gralvon 6 Tubular 37 AeC°ondilioned passage Ure 7 EXlreme German admiral 40 Pe1 s1a Abbr 43 Absorb wholly 44 Naira!es 46 Sayings 47 Kind ol g!and 49 Fam•lv member Informal 52 Discover 2 words 53 Trapping device 55 Within Pre!+x 56 leg1onot 57 Design ,•' 38 Gilbert pallor 32 European canal 58 Com abbr 59 German " and 8 Inscribed Sullivan stone princess 39 Tumbler"s maneuver 4 1 lndtvidUB1 42 Smell lree 'I ' • .. 17 slab 9 More sordid 10 CUy of Italy 33 Lazy 34 Child's early word 35 On: Comb. form 36 C11y of Fijl " nver 60 Actress···· Lollobrlg1da 61 Mirth 65 Enwrap ' BLJ IL-D 1NG ~ ' ~ .,, l'\\l'>\11 1 ~>Ll'.ll'>Ytl.,I ~ ''-.~ Cl ~~ ·~= :;f!ifr by Al S.mith by Dale Hale ·¢., ·iw J -13 GORDO WO/I/DEi( WJ.IO WAS 1J.IE Fl~sr ~ G(.fY 10,.SLtPON A SANANA P E'"ELf' MOON MULLINS S·13 THAT DLO &AG PllOB'LY OATES BACK.,, TD AOAM: OON'r i/4/NK SO ! -~~ . " .... "',¥"4_. .. ,,J . Yo:s , SIR-·'TH EY'RO: OWTHE HOUSE, 511~· by Ernie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS THllT 8(XI OF t,O!JR-S IS THE: ISPITTIN' IMAGE OF <rA f PEAH!JTS .;.,,.-----, JUDGE PARKER W ATC;.\ING ER.NI~ MAKE A PHONE CALL, SAM DRIVER IS UN,t..WARE TMAT I. HE HAS CALLED MONIC,t., AND ~A.S TOLD liER THAT J EAN CALVIN DID NOT Jl..PPEAA W ITM THE $50,000.' \ I I 4E5112EE , f'~ED} ... • · . I II by Charles M. Schul1 ,----------'; {i)l-l..\T K';-.ID CF . .l. ~.:.:ivr .J..f\E :.:Vu ,.l.~l.{W..Xlf? A lENCERP.~!IJ .1 ?'.( . - 1.ET'5 5EE NOW ... wHERE S.HOULD I GO ? MAYBE THE RIVIERA? l WONDER WHAT SOUTH AMERICA'S L.!KE TH IS TIME OF THE YEAR ? by Harold Le Doux I 'LL JU!>T STOP AT A TRAVEL AGENCY ANO GET SOME FIRST· Cl..A65 JNFORMATION! , - _, by Gus Arriola· AN APPLE! CAUSED HIS .[)()WNF,AJ.Lf ·' by Ferd Johnsori by R09er Bollen GEE, I DONNO ... 'L JOSr CAl.\'T SEE THE 111:SEMBl.Fli.ls:E. MISS PEACH by Mell "'\Veit, so n1uch for all m~· problems-no\v lhen. what aboul y our husban d?" i \ i Ill:A , ""-< SAY Y()!.l ><AVE. A LOW Ol'INION OF YOIAC~fl.~ S'fCJ.UfE YOUR PA lt&Niio OIO Al.I.. DICK TRACY TM' WltON'1 1'HIN"S IN ~liolNW YO W ? DON'T" ee "..-"'y AT" T"><£M , tltA. A~Tl!lt A•~. YOU" PAl<fNT-S AIU ><<AMAN llllN~ ... YG>LA. CAN1i L P~OVE. 1T 9YM£. [ DENNIS THE MENACE I -I j ! 81 ' ' . " by Chester Gould I ' 35 J6 . ' JI ' ,J '' 4S .. .. • -- ; . " . " " " lJNAWAAE Ol'TH• . FICHT IN Tl-IE ·COPTER .TRACY ANO SAM REJOICE" IN THE: FRUITS OF THEIR NICMTLY PA1RDL- 'Dltl'r l~T IT GET YA D7.'IN ... SCWC ~YS M\!tt1)' CAH !Wlt)l.E llF.R .• .t. P' Bucl{s Tell the Story: Boston Outplayed Us !llfl.\\'AL'KEE (AP) -Boston Ccl11ts C'fMCh Torn llclnlC)bn ha d tild l.ut move. and 11 !lptlled checkma.te for tbc .\l ilwauJMi Rucki. In a ch.dmp1ociship w iea hlgl\lictitOO b~· the cerebral e>mnastics, adjustments .and COltnttrmovt-s of a c.hess m111ch. Htinsohn·s !Ith h6ur tactical chanae paid off &Jn<lay in the Celtics' 12lh Nation.al Uask:clba!I kisoc1atlon title. (lid pro John llavllcek drew t~' Duck~' dt.·Ji.:nse '"·ay fron1 ~ middle. a!\o11,,in!l D::nc C'-0wens 1.0 i;hoot over and slash through it for 28 poi nl-s as the Celt.cs hur1ed the Bucks 1n the seventh and det·id ing aame 102~7 . Cov.·en!, while spott ing Milwaukee's 7·3 Korccn1 Abdul-Jabbar six incht'I in height , alM> pulle.d down a game high 1~ rebou nd•. Bolton'• 47..U board control fueled a fa.sl break altack which, along v•1th cc:a1eless pre.')sure de fense, final]~· v.·orc down the Buekl in the f1~rth quarter. "This v.'aS the gr~atest serlc~ ever," f'XU!ted Heinsohn, a sta r forvio·ard for the Celllcs during their dyna1ty of the 1960s. l-b1vlic:ck, voted the 1-0rltii' r.lotit V11l uabte Player, lllnk cnly slJ of 20 lhot5 SUnday after havinc averagBd is points in the Ur1t 1ix games. Hut with the Bucks double.teaming Jla vllcek almost every time he ad\'anced to the from coun, Heinsohn ordered the Bo5ton captain to decoy Milwaukee·s defenae away from the middle . "We totally conlu.sed tbeir defense ." llelr4iiohn said. "We ran stuff we never ran before. "We knew Oley '4'Q\Jld ~ntrate on stl)ppina llavllcek becnuse he was getting <lw11 alon1 ~ baseline and creating 100 rnany 1huation.s." he said. ··we v;·ere v.orklng down the mickUc inatead of along the baselines." Bucks reserve guard Jon ~lcGlofilln, v;ho sank six of eight iihot& despi~ a painful calf injury, inalfted the Celtics had 11hown nothing new, "I don't lhirtk they \\:ent to the middle any more than in all the series ," he said. '·They couldn't call a play t.(·e didn 11 know." Still, hfcGlocklln paid the Celtles full credit. "They outplJyed lJI. ~ outhustled LA's Toy Cannon Goes 13 for , 18 SAN DIEGO (API -Walter Alitoo lias heen arou nd baseball many years and he says, "lt'i the best series I've ever seen ;:i player have." Jln1 Wynn ha fln1t been around that long but he says, "ll'• the big~est seriei I've ever had." !loth remark s rhight be undtr1tatement1. Wynn, hit ting .2-44 when he \'lent lntp Dodger# Sla te ,,~ •·"'· f t ,. .... 5:1 •• M. 7;2$ D·l'I· San Diego Intl Thunday, Clime out today hitting n solid .a24 and it waa his 1ingle to left v.'lth two out in the 13th innln.c of Sunday's game with San Diego that helped produce the go-ahead .run in a v.·ild 15-9 Dodger victory. Alston praised the Padres, saying, '·You dnn·t see many gRmcs like that - they battle you dovm to the win!." lk:forc submitting to their fifth straight lfJSll. the Pndr('S battled back from 1 ~-2 deficit to knot the score at 9-9 Y.'ith a 11~· run sc\·cnlh inning. The S\~·ccp of th e four-1ame serte1 here \\'as rnostly the v.·ork of t\'ynn. the fellow they call the Toy Ca nnon. \V yn n had 13 hits in 18 a! bats and hit four homers. He 11as no\v hit seven homers against the !'ad rcs and the season is only 32 garne11 old. \\·ynn praised lhe P11dr~ for beina a fai r tcan1 and gi ving him· a chance to h;ive lht.• big series. "Some teams ~·ill knock you dov.11 just Sports in Brief to let you know they're out there , but this team doesn't," said Wynn. "I've never seen any hitter as hot as \\lynn was ttle last four days," !aid Sa n Diego manager John ?o.1cNama ra. "We know how to pitch him, but we didn't pitch him prope rly. AlmOlt every pitch WU hijh." • 1111 Dodgen, who have won 10 straight games from the Padres over a twi:ryear span, decimated the San Diego pitching staff in the series, scoring 37 runs and getting 58 h.its, 23 of them Sunday. Utt AHlll.l f SAN DIEGO ,.,,.,.. ..., .. ,..,. \.._,,. I I l I D't9'0"1il 1 2 2 0 llvclu>tr, II 7 2 l 1 EH'111nclt, s~ ~ 1 l l Wynn, cl 6 l ' 2 ,,,~co~ev, II> 6 o t o G•rvey, II> 1 l 4 3 Colc.r1, U l O o a '"r'b 6 I J J Gr~bO.ll J t , I fl~Wlllr.,rl 4 0 I 0 Wit\t\914,tf i I 2 2 IAOT&, ti 2 I 0 0 O••IO<I, rl ' 0 I ~ llusvl!,M 6 I O I K~•ll,( i O O I 'l'e•11tr. t 1 2 '1 1 liltlOI'!, lD 4 I 0 0 Do'Mll,...,p 1 1 2 O rtomo.p o o o o M.trsllall,p 0 0 O O Tolin, Cl!! 1 O O O Br~,• I o II O CQrkit\i,p o Co o McM-.•llft\, ph 1 0 0 0 lier<,!, p 0 0 0 0 liouoh, p 0 0 0 I •Moffitt, pl'I I 0 0 0 wc:r-i...o.r.ii 2 o I I ltJ-,p l a 1 o Z..lln, p 0 0 O O MLANJrtw, p O O O O J Wll tlams, pl! 1 O o o H1•CIV.P O O 0 0 MAfOl,i, jlll O 1 0 ll O.lt-""3b , 0 1 0 TMeli ~ 1J Jl 14 'l'Olili " t 11 t pooftl'l JU lOl O<'iO etlO '-U r.s18 'IOll 001 '°° ooo o-t E-Ke<>e11!1, JMGtwy, Rtnsell. Ofl-U. Al\oel!'S 1, s_. Diego I. 1.01-LM ~ 10, ~ Oie<Jo 7. 28-(;1rvey 7, Y•l•f 3, L,.tNS. f~JWI'. Grut~. l"IR-W~M f12l. 111-Laf*, W~11n. J-.Oown•l19. ~F­ K~ll. •• H • • • .. , . 00...nl"'I • • • • ' • M1rsne11 " ' ' ' ' • Brewer 2 21i ' • • • ' l"IOU\ln {YI, 2·)) ' ' • ' ' ' Zin" ' ' • • ' ' A, JOt!M 1 111 • ' • • ' Mf.WrtMt " ' ' ' ' ' ' Hi<Cl1 ' ' ' ' .4. =115 u .. \.2) ' ' ' • ' • , ~ll ' ' • ' ' ""' "' ' • • ' • W,.-MtArdrNt, T-J:l4. A-Jf,1)0. Boston Crushes Flyers; FittizJaldi Captures Prix PllltAnf:J.Pl-ITA -Frustrations of three prevlOUA Stanley Cup appearances h.1vc all been "'lpcd out for l'hil1ldelphla'1 Terry Crl1p aa the f1yers took ;:i 2· I aerie• leud O\'Cr the Bosto n llruins Sunday , 4·1, In National Hockey [.r·;iguc pla~off acuon. ,\.h1;n Cri sp wa1 v.•ith the St. Louis Blues. the cxpan1ton d\vi1\Qn team Jost fr.ur straight in th.e opening series of the p!;ivoffs three successive !itasont. - ''The big difference lQls time is that J rr·allv feel \~·c ha ve an honi:it chance at the Stanley Cup. \I/hen I was at St. Lool s, I ""'·as just happy to be In the final1. We 1:-0ul d have 8iVl!ft 110 ptrc.tnt and ~Ill cornc up 1hort." Rls:1. Tallin and Ki ev. where the tour endl May 23. 11'e United States lost Game I, 89-85, at P..foscow'1 Sport5 palace Saturday. • 7.3:14 111111• Jump COPENHAGEN -Jcs per Toming, a 2.').-year-old medical student, ~t a Scandinavian high jump rO®rd and achieved the-.best jump in the world thi11 year, leaping 7.33~ Sunday at a track and field meet in Aarhus. e Bad ll'eel<end INGLE\VOOD -Unhappiness heaped upon tragedy doesn't come close to descrtblng the kind of 'veekend Aaron t;. .Jone1 aurtered through , .. WI.'' he tald. "They're probably the most fltnollon•I letm in the leaiue. Maybe t~"re betltr than we are. Obviously 1hcy are. They beat IJI," The Bucki, 17 poin!Ji duwia midw;v in the third quarter, stormed behind Abdul· Jabbar and P..tickey l)avis t.o within 71-68 in the nrst minute ol the fourth period But Cmrens retaliated v.·ith a running hoc;k &hot. tt>uching off a strlJ\g of eight oonsecuti\'e Boston points a11 the Cel!ics regained momentwn. Da\'JS . ~ho scored 13 of his 15 points 111 the second half. converted a three-point play as ~tl\waukee closed to \l'ithin 83-i6 with 6;H to pl~Ho~·e\er, the Bucks go1 no cloier. "E\1t r)'bod)' krpt their poise,·· JJein&0hn said. ''They f!'lade a good run at u1. but t~Y had a g"'9 diitance l4) come from and 1hey expended a 101 of energ)· trying to catch up.•· . Tfie tireless Co;l'ens. \\'hO scored eight poinis after con1mlttiflg his fifth foul-13 seconds into 1he fourlh qy,arter. played do"TI the Bucks' home court ad\·antD ge. He also scoffed at a suggestion the Bucks' doub!HJvertim~ victory to square the series in Boston Frida\· had phvsicall}' ar.d emotional\v drarried the Celtics. • "TI1at 's al! in your head ," he ~id . pa using to dou se teammate Don Selson with champagne a& the two cro~·dNt into a cubicle in the ·cramped. teeming locker room. "In the seventh gantc. you can always go a little further than }'OU think." Cowens said, "And "'hat's the home· court advan tage? \\'e \1·on three gaines cm their home floor." Bucks coach Larry Costello said the Celtics' constantly pressing defense v.-·as more effective than any offensive adjustments they had made. ''Their defense beat us -lt beat us 1he v.·hole series," Costello said. "Their defense had us out of our offense. Oscar \V8sn't doing it and our forwards \\·cren't getting the ball." llO~TOH <11111' H~vlke• 1,, ,,_el.on 6. We~tr>n•! \1, Sill• U, Hlnkit!W~ ,, A. WllTla""' 1 'Tc••l• . .olJ n !>- /,',11.WAU!(EE !!II: O•nd ;i1,~ ll, Warner 1. ,.t>dul· Je!lClr JO, D~vi• l\, Rg~rl'°" ~. P~rr 1 ~. 1:,~c;1oc:~11" 13, It w1111•rn1 ~. Orl1~oll i. To•al•. 36 l~·U. ll~!on tt JI 19 3t-\CJ ' /,".il"'l~kH 10 'Q ~ ll-~I Foui8<1 Oii" 01n11•idQ~. TQtil FWll': &M!on 10. 1.111wau~te ts. A. 1~.931!. 01'1 'Tt!tpMIO DANDRIDGE OUT OF ROOM . A TURNOUT OF 3,000 W!LCOM&S WORLD CHAMPION CELTIC S BACK TO BOST_ON_. __ _ Newcombe Realizes Goal Ove rco1n es De fi cit to Do1rn Borg DALLAS (AP \ -The future may belong to v.'onderchild Bjorn Borg of s"·eden. but big John \"e"·combe capped a nine-month campaign Sunday to prove he's the current king of tennis . The 29-year..old m ustachioed Nev.·combe, Jookinp; much like a gunfight.er with his duck walk and dark features, overcame a d;Jz:r.Jing start by the 17·year-old Scandinavian sensation to cnpture the World Champion.&11ip 0£ Tennis. 4-'. 6-3. 6-3 , 6·2. r\ev.·rombe. "ho earntd s~.000~ a diamond ring. a Cadillac. and a fur coat for his "·lfe en >lo!h('r's Da~·. Ml'ki "Xine months ago I \\·:tnted to win this tournament and ho.>come fl:c.. I and no~· I've don~ It ." In upping his prize money to S174.0i!S for the year' xe~·combe became the second Australian to .,,.m this presligious e\·cnt. Ken Rose"all won the first l\\O \VCT finals and Stan Smith of the United States took it last yea r. ~ell''c:Qml>e. playing the noppy·haired Bofb for the firil tin1e. said ··1 think it'~ obvious that he's ao ing. 10 be one of the leading players for many years. lie has ('('rtain\y achieved a lot al an early age:· ~ewcombe ailW offer~ Borg some fa1herly advice, telling the teen-age r; "l think there'» a great danger of overplaying, and I think beeausc he's 80 good at 17 everyone ~'ants him to play everv \l'C<:k . If he's really smart aboUt it he'll just take a 1nonth off no\\' and then. lie'i got plenty of time. The "'aY he hits the ball he's golng to have a !ot of irouble with his arm in a fe\\' years unle11 he ret1ts now and th en.'' Ex-h oc kev Star " Maki Dead at 29 NORTH VA NC 0 ti VE R , 8.C. (APJ -\Vayne J\taki, "'hJ gained ootoriety for hl1 part In one of the lllOlt vicious 1tick·11wingtng duels in Nationol Hockey' League hiitory, died S..nday in a Vancouver hospital after a long Ulnet8. ~1akl, 29, was forced to retire rrom the NHL's Vancouver Canucks in 1972 because of a brain tulTIQr. He had been working as an apprentice electrician. At the time or the stick-swlngtng incident durin' an exhib ilion game ln Ottawa on Sept. 20, 1969. Maki was .try· ing to make the NHL with the St. Louis Blues and Ted Green wa1 a defen.eman "'Ith the Boston Bruins . In thl! fraca1, Green suffered a fra cturl'd skull that almost ended hi• career, both player1 were handed stiff suspensions by the NHL and both faced criminal cha rges. Maid was acquitted of assault causing bodlly harm and Green was cleared of charges of common 8!&8Ult. );e"·combc said he hopes his fh·c•·sear· old son, Clint. ~ill become as fine ··a genUeman, sportsman and ctuunpion as Borg. "ft's a pleuure to see a young men now who doesn't get the big head \\<'Ith auccess," Nev.'COfllbe auid. "There arc so many young aportsmeri around who ge; very big headed at 17 wilh a few ~·ins . I don't kno"· Borg that well but from -.·hat l'\'e obser\'ed he appears not to be bigheadcd ... I thiJ)_k he '• a pleasure to have around." Borg, ~·ho v•on the fiiggest payche<:k ol his life \lith the $20.000 runner-up pril(', said. "He "·as too good for me. Therl' is na doubt he is the i\o. I tcnrus player in the 1\'0rld ... Halos Lose Two The idol of the 'A'orid's teen~rs said. he became physically drained after the first set. · "I th ink today l v.·as first a little bi' tired in my body." Bori '"id. "Tbc flrot »el J played well , but he 1Ulrted playin1 better and better. I had pressure on Ille to hh a good return every' time at1d that wos too much for rne." Borg uppt'd his \1 innings to f76.645 for the year in !he 1natch played before a sellout crO\\'d of 9.071 In ~Ioody Coliseum. Nev.'OOmbc said his next outing "'ill be in the Alan KlnK Tournnrncnt and then ht 11ill pla~· \\'orld Team Teruiis unlll '\'1mb!edon. Borg is off to hel p S"·adc'n in tht D:1vi1 Cup. Fans Take Out Wrath By Peppering Winkles The longest day had JUI!! f'nded for Bobby \Vinkles. His California Angels had juit bcc0111e the \'ictim11 of a doubleheodtr sweep by Kan881 City and it was doubly frustrating. \\'inkles said. because of the \\'ay the Royals play the ga1ne. "It's tough to gl't heaten by a tl'a1n that jUit ieems to drag around." the Angels manager declared after the Angeli fell 3·2 and C.-2 to the red-hot Royals. who have "'on seven of their lasl elgh1 games. The twin reversal drop~ the Angel• one game below .500 nt 16-17 and gave them liix setbacks In their last seven IMing1. Winkle& iii a devout hustler and likes A119eb S la le All G•me1 o~ KM't 111tl M•Y 1l Calllorn1!) fl 1'e•~• Mii¥ u e.111.,..i1 •• Te'Xa1 Mav 11 C1lllornl$ fl 'T ~•~s May 1 CtlUornl1 ~' Mln~esot~ his player! to di&play plenty of lt. • l :U CJ.m. 5:SJ p_m. i :iS p ,m , 5:2.1 p.m. 1'he Royals nu1y not appear as cnUlu1ia1tlc at ti n1es, they were full of fire when they had to be. Like the ninth inning or the first game and the eighth Jnnlng of the nightcap, for Instance. U>ckcd in a 2-2 tie in the opener, Amos Otis opened the ninth against IGICI' Frank Tanana, M, ,\·ith a single and &t.ole his 1econd of three bases. Then Hal McRfle won it with his third straiibt lilt, a single to right. 'IR$T OAMi ICANSAS CITY CAt.IFOJIN1A •" r hrbl '' r~rbl Pd•~~. n WQllllOl'd, II 0!11,d ••1bt•,Y, 11) Mc •t. dn ~0,1-. 1b !iea ly, c FWn•t•. lb Cowni., rf Fohm.•;!. p M i,,gorr. 11 Bird. p 4 0 1 Q Rlve<"S. cf .) 0 1 D 4QQ 0000~1t.1D JO ii )l\OV1l'"f1"1,ll •01 0 •O OOhncn,1111 101 0 J 1 l 1 Al~"'''· Cl" I 0 0 0 4 0 ? Q ROliver, lb J 0 0 O J 1 1 1 McC•~w. d J O O 0 JO I 0 Schadl,)t) 4 0 0 11 lOO OE~an.c 1 1op 0 0 0 I) L•toQ<.o:I. pn l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (,~di~. H 4 1 1 0 GOOO 'Tan•na,11 ooo t SellS,p o O O O 'Tot•h 30 S t J Tollli :12 2 B I K•~"'s City 000 Ol'fl 001-J C:tllto•ni• 001 010 000--1 f -Hll'flv. F. w~ue. OP-K-•• Ci•v 1, C11ilornia 2. LOll-K11ns.i1 Cl!y 4, Cali!Oft\111 t . !ll-V81entl"e. Hlt-M(Rlt UI, HNIY l'l. SR-P4"Jll., Otdl1t, 0116 3. 5-IUvfrs 2, CowfnS.. ,. " • • • .. ,. Fll1,o10!'r1' 'l•J • ' ' • ' Mfng.od , ' • ,, • • lll•d (W, 1·1) 7 7/J ' • • ' • le~1n1 (L, ).4) I Ill • l ' ' • "'" '" • 0 • • • WP-Mln.c,,,.I. l-2:51. ll!COMO GAMlf KAJlllAI CITY CALtfl(l•NIA ••, ~rtl tb rnro1 "•tllt, '~ S l I II MNtlllt, (I 4 11 l o flO!"...,, d S 11 0 O V~l..-,!lnf, ph 1 O O O 011•,d 4 1 1 0 OOoyle,lb ' O I O Sol&l!I, \I) l 0 ] 0 l af>oud, II ) 1 LJ Ht•ly,c JOOQ Sand1,d11 "' •0~ Ml;A••· 11 ' 1 I t ROfl~er, lb ' O I $(hnbl11m, dh J I II O McC1ew, rf ' 1 Marline•. e l 0 0 II Scnau. lit l II M•l'W•v. Ill 0 1 (j 0 ElltC1rg11, t ' 0 ~· Flo\lt:I. 1b 1 o o o cn11~, u J o . Roj1a,lb J 0 I I Lange,P O O O•r•H.ltl l O o o RM.Iv,"' o o I Wohlford,"" 1 D II 0 Setme, p 0 0 fWMft. JD 1 0 I 2 Gill>ftlh, p o 11 0.1.:Mton. p 0 II II O Sflll, p 11 0 QI.I Gerb«f,p 0 II 0 O ~ Hi>etN r, P 0 II II 0 .. l l'd1ll 0000 T01ah 36 5 1 s T~Tals -3• l 6, Kan,_.s Ci1y 000 OllO 1150-S ... C~!ilorni1 010 fl 000-1. r~:~w. ,., ''.] ! i T 'f I L•noe 13111 II:. M1y 2/J II , 1 11 Selma !L, '·'l O 1 2 l I G11twe1n o o 1 1 1 S1H1 1 1/)l llOI ktP.-lly It. MIY (01111. WP-0.tC:tnlOn 2. p M'"1friei J. T-41l9. A-ll,162, e Drnnl(llit• "'in NIVEL LES. Otlgium -Br a z i I's Erncrson Fittlpa ld i. in a :-OtcLaren, St·ort:d a dramatic wheel·tO-"'heel victory ovt!r Austria's Nikki Lauda in I.he Belginn Grand Prix Sunday for his season triumph of 1974 and the lead in the \vorld driving championshi p. The Eugene, ~ lumber king, v.-·ho lnve•ted nearly $2 million in Linda's Chief, Jost a potential super horse Saturday when the J1andsorne 4-yenr-olrJ lhorooghbred stumbled end fell o.,.er a railing at Hollywood Park. An autop5y perronned Sunday ab<nvcd that Linda 's C..'hief had sustalned a OCoken back and shattered pelvis. He wa1 paralyzed and the decision was made to have hin1 Wfry Hill Get s Revenge Doug Bird pitc~ Ike final two and t'W·o-thirds to pick up his first win in the opener and savtd the second game for teammate Joe Hoerner after the Royals 'viped out a 2-0 deficit with a flve--run burst in the ei&hth innina. McRae 'vas instrumental in the second game victory for Kansas City, delivering a two-out double off Dick Selma, the third of ~ive Ang~! pitchers empl?yed .by Winkles 1n the e1ghlh Inning. which tied the score. • Checki11g Out : lie crn~scd the line just ahead of J_,uurla. in a l;-err.arL after expe rt driving put the pair tihea d of lhe early group of lcsdcrs in the J!l6.69·mile race. A bitterly disappotnted Clay llegar.1.on L 1,ho Jed the race in hi• P'crrari from the ~tart to almos t tht halfway mark, was !.ieatcri out or th ird place Jn the last la11 bv Soutb African Jody Scbcckter In a T ~·rel!. T<cuazzoni ran out of fuel ln tho final mile nnd Schookter Pfll&M him 111 th e , 1~11t 100 yard• oli Reg1z1,onl O)Qllt'd :1rrn!;S the finish llne. e IJ .. If. Cn 11ers Rall MOSC0\\1 -An Arnatcur Athletic I 'n1on lcnm troni th<' Un1tl'<l State!\ •lrJeal.ed Soviet NAtiOfl[jl. 83·Tl , Sunday in the lll(.'ond ~ame ol lhfl Americans' nine• g<tfT'I(' ba•krtball tour of tht Soviet Union. Tht< 1 l·man U.S. sqund travels J.Q L.cn1nr.r:1d ;or Ill next game•, then to humanely destroyed. + The accident came during the n1nning ol the 1&4,700 Los Aogcles llandlcap, e Brul1ts 011 Top SANTA DARDAllA -UC 1. A' s round ball success is v.'idely known : !ht. J!rulni; have won nine NCAA basketball li!le!. But how many people know about their other roundba ll succes!I, In volleyball? ·rtlC Bruin• won their fourth NCAA volleyball charnpiorwhlp In the rive-year history of the sport Sa turd111y night, comlnt from behind to defeat University of Califomla at SantD Barbara in five games. Led by ""'11or Bob L<.•oMr<I , UCLA lost the flr5l game 10.I&, won the second 15-8 but llropp<'<i the third Ill-I!, Bui UC l.A camr bark 10 '"in tha fourth gr.in1c l>tl ~ml the flrth1 15·12. Witl1 Victory at Houston HOUSTON f AP) -Dave Hill , an alley. fighter tou gh looking for a chanC'e to a\·engc a yea r-old slight, storntcd out of a n1assive scramble '"ith a seven-under· par 85 Sundny and won lhc llou1Hon Open golf tournan1cnt. The wiry little veteran. 'vho Aol<l he came to ttils tournament "just becHu~e J 'vantod to get even,'' put together u 72- hole tot.al or 270, 11 under par in tbe mu~gy heat thot hung over the &.~·yard Quall Vnlley Go lf Club courac, Hiii secured the S.10.000 Orst-placa r:hcck and hlJ 11th tour title wllh round1 of 74..f.5 In a 3&-hole windup that WBI' forced when Friday's play wits washed out by n serle1 of thundor&howcrs. llill , e sklMY 13s..pnunder who hat bee" the center or CQuntlcs1 s o 1 t I h g controversies, 'von by one slroke over Steve r..tclnyk : Rod Curl and Andy North after 10 men -at one time or another - shared the lead over the last 18 holes. A pair of walk& loaded the baecs before Cookie Rojas, running hls hltth,g streak to JO games, beat out a slow roller to third to score McRae wllh the 'vtnnlng ruo . Frank \\'hlte added a two.run single for insurance. Dick Lanae, making his first pitching appearance of the year and hi! flnt si nce toeing a oolle~c team in an April 3 exhibition game, did a remarkable job for !he Angell, yleldlna iWll three •inales before he w" lifted arter Fred P•tek opened the eighth wljh 1 bl,. bit "He WM exhaUlttd," Winkles said, 0 but he gave us a heUuva Job.'' Winkle! was boOed when he removed l.1ngc and there were more bi1$e.1 when be wen t IQ the mound three more llmeo in the unwieldy inning. Some Irate fans eve• 1howered hiJ!l with debrio. "I could have tipped my cap If I w111ted lo be buoil about It bui I fl&UI" I'm Jough<f lh•n Ibey are." • WTT SummariJ I'~ -y--, ' ,. .... 17 Dana Hills, Royal .Oak To Clash UCl's Wheelock Does It All Dana lfills fligh makes Jts nebul In ·c1F playoff com.pctiton when the Dolphins baseball lenm takes on Royal Oak in ~ first round 2·A division game Tuesday at 3: 15 at Dana Jiills. Coach Denni!: Nespor 's Dolphins baseballers cllnclled lhe first varsity championship in lhe school's lwo -yea r history by winning 11 of 14 games In the course of the Orange League season to earn the playoff spot. Pitching is generally the key In any baseball pla y oCf silualion , and Tuesday's game should prove no exce ption. Both reams are expected lo open with their aces, a pair ·ot rlghthanded throwing juniors '"ho were tops in their leagues. Royal Oak is expected to " pitch John Breaux, who led the Cov ina-based Roni:ins to second place behind Bonita in the Hacienda League. Royal Oak v.·on nine of 14 league g11me.s '\\'hile Bot1ita finistied 13'1. UC IRVINE'S VERSATILE STAR GARY WHEELOCK. Dana llills, mean w h i I e --------------------------------- counters with Rick Hallsted. '\\'ho '\\·on five games \\'ithout defeat and posled a 1.21 earned run average aga inst league rompetition. Pro Net, Soccer lJ11der<log: l11<lia Bags 2-1 Le<1<l Over Aussies .11tlellters Star /las 13-2 .~lark, 7 llo111 ers By HOWARD L. HANDY Of lflit Otll, Piiot St1H One of the n1ost \'ersatile playfrs on the UC Jrvine baseball team lhis season, and perhaps the most iniprov1.id, Is Uie team's designated hitter and I ea d i n g pitcher-Qary \Vheelock. signing a profess io nal contract? "I wasn't drafted oul of high sehool and 1 don't know if they "''ill draft n1e this su1umcr. But ir I don't sign, I'll pl ay (M Fairbanks, Alaska again." \\'heclock isn 't exqctly • johnny come-lately orl t h l! pitching mound eve n though he didn 't pitch In high school. He had an ~4 record "-'ith \Vheelock is romple ing his third year of pitcflin~ for ucr but his role as des ignated hitter during 1he first yeac Anteal<>.r•s, that the coll eges have adcpted • the rule. brings him even greater satisfaction. s D lie has already posted 13 an •. a:. ··o victories thi s season, equalling "'b the all·tim~ single season high F'n.lrbanks last summer ~'hen it v.·on the National AAU. toun1amenl in W i chit a , Kans<1$. He also pitched for th<-Anteaters in the NCAA chan1pionships and \\'On the key regional gan1e fron1 Cll State (7'orthMdgeJ in 14 in· nings last yeJr. What are his thought!\ nbout this year's tearn con1pared to a year ago'! . "This ls a,;~uch better team U1 every \\'HY, We have better pit<hhlg and hilting and OUT defense is at least as good as it wa s last year." Wht-re does the toughest ron1petl tioo come once a team rt!aches the playoffs? "Probably iJ. the regional!!. r think the team~ OfJ the \\'e!-t Coast are tougher because they pluy a longer seaS011." :lrelt Telt111.s Garner CIF Pltt)·off Bertlis set a yea r 'ago by Ray NJJ•J}"' Clash Orange Co<1st area teams Harbor is the No. 2 seed and llumphrics. "~ Nev.l)Ort HarOOr, :\fission dra"·s a home assignment \\rith the Anteaters heading Viejo, Ediso11 and \later DE'i against Glendale Hoover. for the NCAA \Vester n Pnter CJ~~ 4 .. .\ baseball playoff Irvine League ch amp Regionals, he is assured of Gary \Vheelock. ace of the action Friday fn the first nwe starting assignments UC lr\ine pitching staff this round of the 3 2 _ 1 ea m Corona del ~tar ho s l s and a chance at the record all season, \vill be seeking his l.Jth eliminations. 1\lontcbelJo and Irvine League alone. victory or the yea r Tu esday And in t<'nnis Edison has runnerup Edlson is at No. 1 · But it's his hitting that he afternoon when the Anteaters qualified lor a berth in the 4-A seeded Palos Verdes. · prefefs to talk about. journey to the University of playoffs along \\•ith Ne,vport ... ••11H 1t San Diego to complete the b d Miu.ion vier• 11 Uiktwood "I'd rather hit because you flar or an Corona del Mar. P•lcn VfcfOH 11 P~•r are playing every game. I regular season. rn 3-A tennis La gun a ~:i~ri!' :: ~-=I:m1s much prefer to be a part of \Vheelock V.'ill become the Beach's 1973 CIF' 2·A champs Edi"so11 11 A111em11r• the game than sitting on the first pitcher in UCI history to are at Gahr 11·hi1e Orange ~~~=1•!,c~. bench and playing every \\'in 14 games in a sin~le Lea2Ue runnerup Universi!y is i~~~~;~~1t•0.•~:~:i:v P•rk fourth game as a pitcher." season if suceessful. llis at No. I seed La Quinta. ~:::..,":!~·J.~: !1't~ Mir<t1• \Vhere did he get the power record is l:J..2 \1'ith a l.84 e.r.a. Ne\''port llarOOr's Sailors ~i:~t!t1i' };8L~ .. ~~:~1, .. that has made him lhe leading He is also the strikeout leader draw a +A baseball road Elsenl\oW~• 11 LOI AUos NeW-1 H1rtoor &t 11!"1 Modlrht home run hitter for lhe team "'ilh 107, a learn record. assignment against Crestvie\V Ch•H•v 11 M•t•t Del all season (currenlly he has Jn the only meeting of the League champion El r.1odena Ginr 11 Ei s.vr..ti"' seven home runs to tie that tv.·o teams this season . and are e")>ected to have ace ::~~~,· .1'L= team mark )? \\'heelock posted a 15 • 2 hurler A1organ Abbott ready s.n a..-~•rdlno 11 MDl'l•t111r ood Mon•ovi• II Nageltls "I've always had g tr iumph. Tuesday's game is a on the mound. Norw~1~ •' G•rOl<'I Grav~ po"'er," he .~r.,·ns. "But you k t'Jt lh l ined M' . v· . h' h . r 11;..,neav (81r1tow) II Coron. ... "" ma cup 1 a v.•as ra 1ss1on 1eJo. \\' 1c tied or LO$ Am!<m •1 uo1~ can't be a good hitter unless out in early 1'-1arch. · second in the Crestview lt.0~~fn::$":1' ... 1.,1on Tl needed, Royal Oak ha s lt'ft • hander Bcb Cochran available for dllty, "'hile Dana llills' other hurlers include Don Fowler and Jer ry Emory . In the hitting department, Rora! Oak's IOll men arr catCher Doug liolt, second baseman Larry Legind and first baseman Joe Harv.wet. Standings CALCUTTA, Ind ia IAP ) - Underdog Jnd ia took a 2-1 lead over defending ch a mp ion yoo play everyday." UCJ's season record is 4G--7. League with Foothill, is at No. o.m;.., 11 Anttloe>t Vi lley \Vh h he d lo ch C1nllol 11 Arrl>'l'O and J airo Velasco 6-3, IM>. 6-3 at as one ange The Anteaters have v.·on 25 I seeded Lake"·ood. s1n11eOG •t Uvz1,... th. nd this S a G!el\01!& Hoo...-r 11 Sin Glbrl•I in doubles. mgs arou • season a straight against college teams. Edison is at Alhambra and E•ce1s1or •' s.rr• 't h , IA a a~ "' was Culver \!Iv I I LomP<M; Colo1nbia , which had v.;on P1 c er · ye r ,,-Jeff h-1alinoff will be trying A1ater Dei hosts Chaffey. ·• 11 .. 11111 ITIMW.VI the right to face South Afri c11 II-4 with a 2.70 c.r.a. Thi s to keep his consecutive game Jn 4-A tennis Ne \V po r t ~~~e;p~~c'o wor1d T1arn Te111111 Australia in the Eastern Zone Ea11trn Olvl1fOl'I A111111~ s1c~1011 Ptt. Ge Davis Cup tennis finals toda y, by defeating the United States season he is 13-2 witlt a l.84 hitting streak intact. He has 5:~, ~~11c!'rt~"~1 "111• 4-2. lost its first match whe~ e.r.a.). hit in 30 straight and his t!i.:~1i1c;,~~r'..,1em•nv Dana ~!ills has received ron~isl ent hitting and solid defensive play from infielders r;:t('vf': !'11iklos, John Ulloa. Milch McComb and B i 11 Springman and outfielder Bill =~~r~;1,~,M• t ? 1:~ 1 "'inning the crucial doubles 80\IO<I 1 2 .J.33 2' r New Vorli; l 2 ,Jl3 2\1 match. be M 1. co "1 think I feel better on the _..1 48 F J • Bo•ca re-en •' e111 G1,a1n1 Ray Moore at o 1na v-v. I· mound. And I'm pitching a average has soar~ to .3 . :-1 te1·111e1 e1·s R111 Meu ., '°"" 6, 6-3. 7·5, 6-3. Then Hewitt little more from a sidearnl Already assured to a berth '"'" T-I• Ct11rr11 Sl(llOll V:~:110-811u110 ~ i :~ , , Ind ia's Amritraj brothers -beat Velasco in the second in the NCAA \Vestern Regional , Edison •t Pe1os veran singles m"atch 6-1, 6-3, 6-2. position," he adds. playoffs, UCI will await word ~' i 11 .Ne t Tit le ~n~;::ll~1 :~=-.. Mer PIM1butoh 2 J • ..00 1 A d and ,. r ha . c1eve1anc1 1 1 .UJ 1 nan na Lona c mp1on Wt1t.r11 Oi¥h!Ofl • d (ed h Gulf-P1111K Section ViJay -eJea Jo n South Alrica will face the Why has he switched to a of where the tournament 1''ill ~!~l~·Ji:,,rc~•1'-~~'.nd o.u sidearm delivery? • B d nd J hn F I Lovt1l1 •l,,Slnl& 11.,... v.·inner or European Zone A. "~l 11 . J'tU be staged. ra a o a tenneier sunnv w111s 11 Rt....,."" PCll'V "lOUli!cf'I J 0 \.OOCI c,,;c"°o ~ r .aoo Alexander and Colin Dibley of ~i;'ro.'OI• l i :H1 ~ Australia 17-15. 6.fl. 6-3, 16-18. Pacific SKHOOI . Vangalis. · The French doubles team of '"y ann "'as ge ing a 1 e or University High School woo G,.l\dit• ~OOV\~t~=.i._, HirWf' fr nd P. tired after l pitched in Alaska un1v1r11ty 11 y o111n11 Francois Jou ret a ierre last summer and 1 guess it College Colf 1he 18-year-<>ld di vision v1c1°" v.n .... 11 Norf,, 111._-1rot Golllff? G1ters I l .5CO ~ .4 Haw••I l l fOO '> ~. l.IK AnOtltc• 1 .m , , °"""tr o 1 .ooo ,, , The reverse singles v•ere Area Ne t Barthes defeated Hans Kary v"as just a natural reaction. doubles championship of the ~~~·,:~'.1'J:::':C~ and Peter Pokorny 7-5. 6-4, 6-2, "I think rm oeuina my $outll C11st Corti.-· T-v ~:~ ca:.:,.1~f'8~1rlfl0 Swl'ldlrs M1kllu NtY• York JI. (leV"•nd lO scheduled Tuesday, · · F 2 t t h "' "' ,., ,...... s,,11111 cc> eighth annual Adoption Guild g1v1ng ranee a -ma c control down a little better Te~rn 1eor1no---1 . sin!! An• tll: 5•n Btc1ll1owtr 11 Whlttr..,. ,, A t · 0'-:1 Mn.11 t41 : Cerr 1os 9'1; Or•not tenn•'s tournament Sunday at Har~erd •' S.n L11l1 Ollhoo • Oelrol• 19. eo,1on 2~ k•w•ii lJ, Pinstiuro"' 1s The Netherlands and South Cllk.ooo )6. Mlnnno11 lO ~ge over us ria. '14'ilh this type of delivery. And c 1 tn F\11~'1°" 1,01 M• s •-A t .n1111 1runc1ev1 G I,, S . 2 A::8i:..1a 1ln1. •: . In the Ba lboa B R~ l Cl b Noratlolt .i aJmop Dtf90 \Vest ermany ~ pain -1 probably my slider is more 1nc1rv1d11e1 Korino-1. w1m1m1 CSAI ay -.. 'iue U · r .... ,, unJO!'I •• Mono e1v O!lrv '"'"'"'"' ,.cMdul~ Africa clinched UM!ir Davis T ...... , M1'1;Mi B111lmore II PhU.odelDl'MI c I rr s d 111w1il v5, Tor0t110-111111110 11 11utt11o up zone p ayo s un ay Sta1-s Fall after winning the doubles effective and I seem to be ;:;; c~~.1.i ~~ilf:J-1 1 \5f : The Faltenneier brothers f~·.~~1 b~-· m a t c h \V i t h J u e r g e n throwing a little harder." ~~~1t11?56~c~~' ~;::e 1~:.r;ri "'On the 16-year-<)!d division a ~~1.f'W~ Min-11 1r Hointon r-~1t1en a..1..-, 11 _Fl91"kl1 V•hile Franci! and \V est Only rn•tttlH J.dlf'dultd -CC Irvine's Lindsay ~torse Tundio'f"• M11c11tt Germany took the lead in its Fassbender and Hans-Juergen \Vhat are his thoughts about 157· 1A11 01.1•1ltv tor MCflon•1• year ago. cvo ... m 11 !r." DI~• Pohmann de£eating Manuel ,--------"'------""-'-"~'-· ---------'---''---------~·~-,,,,,,,,_~•:::.·~"~'~'~"':=:,,"~"---­flMton ii C>ertoll lost in the finals of the F1or!o1 M oen._. European Zone tennis match. Onlv ml!Cl!n KNdule<:r I Southern California sectional NASL Zeljko Franulovic competed Orantes and Antonio Munoz, 6- 3, 6-4, .... 6-4. tennis championships at the ,..,.,,...,. 01"""W1.TOPTP a 7-5, 6-3 victory over Aly ~ Los An~efes Tennis Club 1:~11 1 & ~ ~ H Da~'Udy today that gave Aztecs Stthdue ~u~ay to Kathy ~-l ay of ~~11,;~.-g J ~ l l Yugoslavia a :J..2 lrium"Pil over Beverly flil ls. fi..4. 7-6. 88111m.,..e £•11tr11 01v1t1o111 1 0 , 19 Egypt in the European Zooe B , Bob Duesler of Costa ~lesa P11n~1or.;1 2 o ~ 6 '' Davis OJp tennis semifinals. Tornado, 3-2 Jost in the 35 men's singles to :!~::1"°1°" J ~ o t 't The match had been halted CenfT1r Olrhlot1 '---kn Forrest Stewart or Bever!y p,~1~~1, 1 ' o .J 'f l Sunday 1,11;:\;ause or dar ess !LOS ANGELES _ The Los JUlls. 2-6. 7-5, &-.1. o.n,,.r wuiirn oiv1.i:,, i g 1 2 vtith Franulovic leading fi..2 in Angeles Aztecs overcame a 2-0 In the women's 40 singles. LM Ange/ft 1 o 1 s " lhe first set. first-half Dallas lead and Evelyn House man of f:;ttt.,cne l ? J ~ /: George Berner of Finland remained undefeated Sunday Sepu]veda topped ~1 a r y v1ncouwr l•tfH'd•V'' G1W:.1, o ' • scored hi s country 's only with a 3·2 North American Radabaugh of Costa Mesa , 6-J , eo1ton l , w1~1nv1on o victory in their mate h . Soccer League victory over 6-2. r:~=~· '2~:~ o defeating Rolf Thung 64. 2-G, the Tornado before 5,768 rans • UC Irvine's top doubles duo '· L 1 1's11:i~:eG!,,_ 6-3. ~. Jan Hordijk of The at Ecist Los Angeles College of ~1ike Fi shback and Scott ~'t.Je1zn. 'b:-1t.i!·/!~f::!:~Cf' Nethe rlands beat Finland's stadium Sunday. Carnahan lost to Alex Olmedo $t.nie "' °""....,. 0 Pekka Saila &-0, 6-1 , 6-I. Los Angeles got its chan<:e 'and Billy ~lartin in the finals completing the -4·1 match after Kyle Rote Jr.'s shot was of the men 's open doubles, 6-:?. F" I R victory and sending T he saved by Los Angele; goalie 6--1. IS l eport Netherlands into tbe European Kelvin Harclay. Rote was the Gertrude and Doreen Irish Zone quarter-finals. 15th player with a one-on-one • NEW"'ORT (0.W'('J l octtr) -17 ._.._ th A r . 1·~· ,,, \\'On the mother • daugh1er ~1en: 21 wno r.es1, ," cow coo:1. 1 ouu r IC a c 11n1na 1..-u opportunity against the goalie. doubles crown over Delores 11a11t>ut. tArT"s L•lllllflt'I -170 e1191eri: Colombia 3-0 in the American Aztecs defender Ricardo 1 tlonllo, IS C811Co bll11. 1'6 fO(k cod. , Zo ,.,. h th and Lucia Fernandez-, 6--4 , 6-4. 11,.nbu1, 1 11~a c">d. ne compe 1 ion w en e DeRienzo then slammed the Doreen is lhe girls tenn is DANA WHAllll" -11' ·~lers: '11 Frew McMillan-Bob Hewitt ball past Dallas goalie Ken c•llco b1$i, 7 WrrKlld•, I ()onflO, 4 OO d f OO f '1)ach at UC Irvine. 11e11tw1, , v,11.,.,..1 .. 11. ta em e ea t Ivan fl.fo ina Cooper for the winning score. ~~~~-=::::.::..:_:.:c::.::::.::..:~~~~~~~~~~~:.:_:_~---=~~-=~1 ATTN.TOYOTA OWNERS Moftttlof Moy Special s7so DISCOUNT .-...-.... ..... lt ...... - WITH THtS AG • NOW YOU CAN LEASE , '74 VOLVO 164 4 DR. ('utomatic, a ir co nd., 6 cylinder, genuine leather interior: steel radial tires. Safety-Economy-luit.ury. For only 31 Mo, O.l.l. ().A.C • WE HAVE ONLY '* 15 * '74 TOYOTAS !EFT AT THE OlD PRICES! Baseball Standings NATIOl'iAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE East East w L Pel GB w L Pct GB Philadelphia 17 14 .548 Baltimore 15 13 .536 St. Louis 16 14 .533 y. New York 18 17 .514 'h Montreal 12 II .522 I Cleveland 15 15 .500 1 Chicago J2 JS .#1 3 tt1ilwaukee 13 13 .500 1 Ne\V York 13 J8 .-419 4 Boston · J5 16 .484 112 Pittsburgh 9 19 .321 6\1 Detroit J< IS .483 l'' ,, Wtst \Vest U.. Angeles 23 9 .719 Chicago J5 J3 .536 Houston 20 JS .S71 41' Oakland J6 JS .Sl6 1,1 San Francisco J9 JS .5.19 5 Kansas City JS JS .500 J Cincinnati JS II .517 6Y. Texas 16 J6 .500 J Atlanta " J9 .42! 91\ California 16 17 .48,\ l\I San Diego II 21 .4(JO lOY. Minnesota 12 15 .#1 211 SllMll't''J G&lllH s11nd,:r:s G•!M$ Clnct11111t1 s..r, Hou1ton 0-1 11111..,.ort 1t Cltvelt , ,, ~ .• r1ln A111nt1 w, S.n l"t11.,clco 1-6 Mltw111~tt 7·S, Ntw York l-1, 21\d O&ml I Innings Chkeoo '· Ntw York 3 Goi;lon •," Oe!rolt 3, 10 ln11!r,g1 Ch!cego S, Ttt•$ • $1. I.GI.lb ti Montrttl, ppd., r11ln IC1m11 C!ly J.$", CIUfornl• 2·2 LM A:t!I" u. s.n.= ,, 13 lnn11111 01ttlnd f, Mln""C111 2 Phil& Dl'lll I, Piii 1 TedtY's O•""" Ted-1'('1 Gl ll'lfJ Mliw&ukM ISPr1we 0.01 If ••lrltnort rGrill'ltll'I' s.tn Fr•ntilCO tO'Ac1111l1lo 2"31 11 Cl!'ldnn&H ... (Guilt! 2-J) 8o&forl (Tl•11f 1·•1 &I ClllW'•nd (J. Ptrrv 2·'1 Ntw York fAoodl(I 0·2) 11 $1, louls (G!btofl 1·21 Mlnnttol• ~Golft G<OJ ti Chic• l!•~ni..n ..,,, At~n11 {Htrr1$0l'I 2·51 .i S..n Olrvo (Arlfn l.J) Ctllfornll C l~r 4· ) 11 Ttc••s (llll)bl S--41 HOU$IOl'I CA:otlertl 5.J) 11 LOS Mog>tl" (Mt!lltc'1oll'llll1 K&n$1t City C •llln \.1) •I 01kl•nd ! lllfc 1.0 ,., or11r\t1mft 11Cl'ltdultd Onlv ~ Ktltd\lltd ' T_.,,. 0-T"'*1'' Gt lMI MH"'1ulltt ti !111tlmort Monlrttl 1t l"hllldtlplll• lolton ti C .. vellnd Wn l"rt11e.ltce ti Cl!>tll'lnlll 0t1ro11 .i New Y«t Chi<~ 11 Plltsbl.li'fh MlnflHQ ll &I Chlc:r.: N-Ofk ti SI. ~fl KtnM1 CllV &I O.~ Ind Alllnlt •I s.n ~ Ctllfof11!1 •I Tu" ttoultcn 11 LOI Anoe{t!I • FORD COURIER: THE GUTSY LITTLE ECONOMY PICKUP.. "' :1' ... Economical? Yes! But don't think Ford's hot- sell lng Courier Isn't plenty gutsy, too. Courier's extra·husky frame, for example, features box-section side rails anchored by seven crossmembers. The roomy 74 .5 in. x 62.2 in. box is au steel, au welded. Upfront, Courier rides on an independent 'suspension with . big coil springs and a stabilizer bar. Rear springs are long, wide •.. wilh six leaves. There are double acting shocks, fro nt and rear. And Courier Is as comrortab18 as II it rugged. A roomy cab has excellent visibility and insu- lated quiet. Courier's wheelbase Is a loNg , 104.3 inches to help smooth the ride. There's eve n-en optional dress-up package ... stripes, wheel covers, mirror, rear step, the works ••• tor speclal sports appeal. And you get all th is with an honest payload-and-people capacity of up to 1,400 pounds. See your local Ford Dealer Rugged frame backbones a solid curb welgl"ll ol 2,555 lbs. Dua1-cYUnder brakes give you 2 brake cylil'lders at eacl"I wheel. '- Courier shown with optional striping, wheel covert and mlrrora. •·cylinder 1800-cc. overhead cam engine has 5" maln bearing1 !or rigidity and strength. Snep-down bed liner option cushions Courier's roomy all-welded steel box. . FORD COURIER FORD DIVISION •• ' - f B DAILY PILOT Monaay "'"'~ I ,;I 1 I -------; •' ' I 1, ~ I' \ . ~ ' • ~ ' • ' J • ' • ·IL'' ,- Ji Newport Celebrates ~ Opening of Season PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 11.1'·7_,.. SL"·l'2'1 f SUl'•IUOll COUllT el' THI I Ul'llllOll COUllT Of' THI S'l'ATI 0,. CALlflOINIA ,Oii "STATI 01' CALl,OllNIA ,Oil THI COUNTY 01' OllAN•I THI COVNT'f 01' 09.ANOI Ne. A·Hrll NI. A•1tt0t HOTICI 01' NIAlllNe OP' PITITION NOTICI 01' HIAllNO 01' PllTITIOW 1'011 0110111 Ollll:CTINO TH I ,Oii l'llOIATI 01' WILL ANO CODICIL C:OHVIYAHCI AHO TllANll'lll 01' ANO FOii LITTllll TllTAMINTAllY lllAL, l'llOl'llTY TO COMl'LITI E1l1I• of FRANK N, 11.USH, DM;tl ffd.. OICIDINT'I CONTRACT NOTICE IS H5111!1Y GI VEN rl'\11 ESTATE 01' £LM£11 E. EVEltEn. ELOISE SWENEltlON n;n flied ..... 1" • 11\.11 Et.MEit l!VEREn. •k• lt.MEJI ptll!IOl'I lo• Ptob•I• of Wiii 1nd Cod!(ll EOWtN EVEltETl. •k• E. c . •nd •or IH1,tll'ICI of L1t1en l11lln'llflll!'V <fVEJll!lT, de<11Hd 10 n.. pet111_..., "'"'""' to w111cn 11 NOTtCE IS HEltEll'I' GIVEN IMI mtde 10< lurrhlr p1rtlcvl1t1. 11'1d lhel lhe ELWAYNE E. EVt;:RElT hes lllld hlreln Timi 1"'1 pl•ct of Mtrln.; 1111 1•JYlll h.-! .. Hr Al,\ION LOCKA HE\' • &6•tl"' Ellllor 1naintaincd pcra·er boat wider • petlllon tor '""' dlrtcllnt the belo *" 1or Mllv 11, 111•. •• •:ll:I 1.m .. In 4G-feel. t0flv1v1oc1 •fld tr1nsftr ol ltt•I Pr~•1r•v lh• cwrtroom of 0'9••1mtnl Na. J 01 10 compltt1 0tc..,tfll'1 coo"act, an it!d covrt, 11 100 Civic Ctflftr Or1v1 proeierty 1oc1ted In tt'lt tOU11ty ot Lot w111, In tne cnv of S1n!1 An•• C1lllat~lt. ZAPATA n. W<>\\'Yled by Anotl11, ~!lf'e of C:1lllorn\1, dlscrltlld •• Ot lld APl'll )I),''''· l0Uow1· WILLIAM I , ST JOHN, Andy Zimbaldi and R. \V, p,;,11 1: Tiit narthe111~rly $tvtntv Cavnty Cieri. Long \\'as awarded the prize t1 .... i.11 of IM llOflr>wtll °"' h1,tl\d<ed. NICHOLAS. KOLLINllt. MYl!Jl,, . . ltVtl\IY on• IHI C)I LCll 11111 In ~tocle, O'ANGELO & OIVINS for the best ov.ner-mamtamed 111r" 01 1rac1 »J •Kcrd..:1 1n book is UllJ Wlhhltt 11vt1., sre. '" sailboat over 40 feet. Zapata II PAOe• •~ ,...., H 01 rn11n In'"" CJ1tk1 ar ~1~~1•1~:.;. C•Hternl• "'1* . Calk' ,_. ed 11'\t COU/'llY rKO<Cl~r 01 ttlll covolY. fl ~ 1111- IS a ~foot ms~-,,1gn P1rc11 11 : ltie ~ln,....51 11vtnly llv1 A~:'"tl~ly;ld ro,,:.e, Co.i~t Di lly Pllol, l'fi\l'i fe•I of trw .,..1i.e111 Oflt hundred !Inv ,, • , '' 111• 1Jll·r• ' 1 .. 1 of 11'\t I rorthw.Sl .,,. l'lut\Ortd ""'v ' ' ' \VCnner of the best owner· wv1n1v one 1t11 of tC11 so In 01ac~ l C)• ---'f~~~::~ i, \ ~~ F1ft~"!:IC\t·n ~l'ars of scr\'i<'l' ,,, '.\ewporl Brach and I tht.' ~.1<hl111g tr;iternity \\'~re t.'t:lt·bratcd by :\C?\1-pon lfarbor Y<iC'hl C'!ulJ Sunda~· a ~ hlu1drecl~ of n1en1bcrs and gUt'~!s atll:n<ll'd the rolorful fla;: r111s111i.: 1· l' r c mo n i c s ~\ 111l:ol1e of the :-.1u rt of a nc11· ) o~h1in~ sca~on. ' I ined '!boat nd 4 tr1c1 SOJ rtt«a«I I" t>oot 1J P•O•I f j ' PUBLIC NOTltE 111arn a sai u er •!"Id ts of m•Pf 1n '"'' cfflt• of 1n1 fee-t v.•as !he Columbia-34 sloop covnty rec:«<Mr 01 ••lo cwnty. ------ Dari\ star \1, ov.-ned by Jeff ~.~:::-.•, .. kl .~r.ic,~.:· ,:·",~rn': .::::'~~; SUPl!•to:L:~j~';. OP THI: \ D••lV Pilot \11!1 Pnoto5 01nn1odorf' Don Ed I c r de i<'atcd the 5ilh Opening J)a~· to 1hc late !>on \\'a t!son 11 h0 died ~horllv a ft c r a$'SUllling the Officr ~) r l'0111111odorc for 197~. \lusic for !he gala e\"cnt \1·n-: furnished by the ~e\1'po11 ll<irbor l·llgh School 1nidship- n1en tand. 'l'ltAOITIONAL highli~ht of ~l!YC's Opening Day is the fleet inspL:c1 ion and open houst' aboa rd the yachts. BOATING fff·t \\'as Dulciana, a SO-fool Grand Banks cruiser O\Vl'Jed by \\1illia1n and nucl Johnson. \Vinner of the best OY.ner· maintained pov.-er boat O\'er 40.fcet \\'as Adri.nna, O\\Tied by Hov.'ard C:Unningham. Kismet Ill. ov.11e<I by Bill Clarke, v.-as the "'inner of !he trophy for the besl owner· f::u""·ell PIKt of httrlno Int '''"' II•• been ••t STATI Of' C&Ltll(MlNIA 'Oil • IOr May n, If/(, 11 'o'clock 1.m., In 11'1 THE COUNTY 0' Oll,,HGI l\·1adne.s.s a Rt.>des-33 sloop cOUJ1room or 01p1rtmtflt No. i of 111d N1. A·1P I• --• b •G ,· j( ~rt j covrl, 11 1al Civic Ct nlff Dr!"9 Wt1!, In H0TICI Of' HIA•ING 0' PITITtON OV.11t:u y a\ln e1\}\'.'. r., 11>9 city of ~ .... 11 Ant, C1lltornl1. POlt OJtOlilt Olltl!CTtlf• TH I v.•ns nv.·arded the trophy for 01!1td Aptll 30 191( COHVIYAHCI ANO TllANS,11 01' · ' • WILLIAM E St JOH~ •ll"L PllOPl!JITY TO COM,LIT8 the best maintained daysaller; County c1 .. k DlCl'.DliNT'S CONTI ACT. Tom \Vilder's electric-poy,·ered •A•llltS. SCMAO, J010N, KINlrtlDY !;:STATE Of EL.Ml:A: E. EVERETT. & CAJtUON 11<1 ELME R EVERETT. 1k1 ElMEll ].'.lunch E.S. Eveready, v.·as the 4SU MICAJtTHUll ILV ' EOWIN EVEltETT. '"' E. f.. y,·inncr f9r !he best-maintained ~~:r~~:~IACH, c .,Oii.NiA tJHf E~~~~~T, ~·~i:::Ell'I' GIVEN 11111 bay lauoch. . AltwMyt kl' 1111 Ptlil'-' ELWA'l'NE E., EVERt:TT hi> Ille<! 1111"91 .. · · · \ h Puolhl>td Or1~t Co.isl 01!1v Pllol, I petllion ·!CW' crClef dlt1c!log It • Junior \\'inners ill e Miy ,, 1, 13, lt74 1~.7~ ccnvey1fl<e 1oa 1r1n11er,c1 M11t l"roperrv insnt.;>lion \Vere· • '" compltt1 0t<t111ot 1 cootr1ct, ~ ~-' LI NOTICE properly loc:I~ In 11'1 covnty of A l~tf· JUNIOR NON·CALl\1 -tie PUB C 11d1. s1111 C)f (111rorn11. 1111(rlt>ee1 ''IOI· belV.'CC'n !\1ellificent (Sabot. SLl"-14Ht lowileoinnlocl ,, 11'!1 NorthwHt cOI',..... o1 !\folly O'Jtara. and Annpil su,.1•101t cou•t o' THI'. int Nor1he1s1 Qu1r11r 01 f1ll NatthWlst Sabo ) H 'f k j J STATI'. Ofl CALU•O•tOA 'OR Qutrltr ol Se<llon 11, TOWlltl'l!p I SOI/I'll. ( t • enry ll ac e r. TMI CCWNTY Of' OJIANlll 1t1ngt l E11t, St,, lll'f'nt•lllr•O BIM I nd SENIOR NON.CAL.\f " .. A·1'111 Mtr!dl1n: nwnc• Soult1erly ~oo teei · (S bot •t'k S · HO'TICI Of' MliAllMG 0' PITITIOM tlono tnt Wetlt:rly 11,,. ol 1111 N0<111111t Slreakmg a ) 1• I e pam. 'OJI OllDl!lt 0111.ECTINO TH l Qvtrter o1 '"'' N«tllwe1t Quirttt <'II 11111 IN FULL DRESS -Office 1·s. 111e111bcrs ;ind ~uC'~l s nf ~t:\\'port !!arbor ''acht ('\ub line the ramp for fornlal f\a g.r;1 i ... ing ~<·rcn1{1!lll"' before ho:irilin;.( the tlub's "full dress" flcC't rafted :.il nn;:!sidc !he ;.:ul'~t dul·\.; ronunodorc !)on Edler introduced officers anti staff rnn1n1<1durc~. s~·et'psla kes winner in this year's ins pection \\'as the 36- 'car-old yawl Odyssey. owned hv l\lr. and l\lrs. AlphOn.~c Burnand. She also \\'HS the "inner of the prize for the best 1>rofess ionally n1ain lainea s;1iJ yacht over 40 feet. Cabrillo's Walsh COHVE'l'ANCI AMO T•ANlfl:ll Of SecliOI\ n: rtwncf E11terly '°'·'' '"' ltEAL l"JIOf"f.llTY TO COMPLETE 1Jong 1 liflf thiil 11 per•llel wltll Ille OECEOINT'S CONT•ACT Natlnt<IY llflf cl 11ld Se.;llon 111 E$T1'll:. Of ELMER E. EVERETT, Tl'ltn<t Ncrthfrly SJt,DO IHI 1lono I 1k1 ELMER EVERETT, •~• EL~ER lint thtl IJ P1r1llel with the E11t.,.Jv EDWIN EVEltEll, •k• e. E. lil\I ~I '"'' NO<ll'IWt'' ciuttlt r ol 11ld EVERETT, Clll'tll oed SKl!Ofl 11 10 I point In Ill• narttttr!y NOl l(E IS HERE&'!' Gl'iEN lti.., 111'e ot i i id St Clkln I; TNntt Wt11 ... 1y ELWAY/IEE. EVER ETT hes filed htr•i" ~.00 tffl tl0"9 ll'!e Norll\.l!flY llne ot 1 Ptllllon 10< oreer Gl•«!lno •he u ld St<Uon 11 10 1 P<>l"I of DeQlnn!n.;. COl'l~Yln<t! •l'MI 1r1n1ler Of Retl Properly EXC.EPT TttE•EFROM lhll QOttlcn 10 (ompl,I• OKl!<l!nl'' (Grllrlcl, oo Clee<le<l lo lltlv1r1ldt Cavh'!y, C1lllotr1I .. --- Anterica I Jane II Triumpl1s The race is a tradition:il prelude to NHYC's form<il Opening Day ceremonies. held annually on !\lother's Day. Runncru p in ·the Ocran R:.icing Class \\"as Tontcr1n. skippered by Bob \Vallers. l~os Angele<; Yacht f1ub. Third \\ a.s ~JI Fick er in Ycllo\v Brick ~nd. \\"innrr in thL· Perfonnance Jtandicap R<ic1111; Fleet c\n-:5 1ras \'cntariL·s. sailed by :\l<1rtin Green . L11t lc Ships Flee! of Long Beach: secon.I v.·as Konn. cosk1ppcrcd by Henry 0"~\l'lveny and ,John Franck . J..A'i'C. and third .1·:1<; \'o!ans. skippered b:-.10:111 J:.:ndcr lc. LSF Hcd l>ug, sailed h\ Charl•·s Sparkuhl. Balbo;1 Yacht Cluh. \1·as the "'mner 111 ihc :\l 1dgf'l Ocean Racing Fleet. Second ,~·as ,\quarius. l~oy Bos!a rd. Sea l Beach YC. ;ind third 1vas SunJn. liob llicknu111. AHYC. Rock Race Ca1>turetl By Puff Da\'C S:one"s l)uff \1:1 .. lhfl Class A \\'1nncr ~undd~ in Bahia Corinthian 'i':t<'h\ l"lulf.~ Indian Rock Race. the fourth r;u·c in !he Angr ln1an Sf•flL'S for J>rrformanti' Handict.1p l/;ltlll.I? FtPC'I yctChl~ 'fhr fll·f'! raced lo (:;lla!1n:t 1~!;u1d 1111 \:iturda\ for :1n O\ f'r!111-h1 rPndrz\ o'us bt?for1• .,;1!1111·~ h0111t· the fo1!01ving" d:l.\ llolh r:11·t•s \1·1·rc sc-orrd :1~ Olll' ("l,\~S \ -111 Puff. 121 \ ;11• 1 .t·. Frc-d !'• 11l·IL B('\ t 1~1 f'l'IC. Jim ~:nuni. 13C)t l l. \'.'-iS B -1 I 1 ~11i011l'US~·r C"l 11rv Cunn"ll. SSSC: •t1 C'h1rancr\. Ernie .Joh011~fll! \'ii" ("l,1\SS r -(I~ Ch :1ns1r1:1. Kurl''l \l:is1Jn BC:'i'!' t1• lfu~k~'. Flint Smith. UYC • \l1rror Bright Poll<:h C'11 •1' lr\'1nc has com" nut \\11h • nl'W wax for m:iint C'ncnC'c-flf fibcrgla!'S boats. Thi· n•'I\ producl is f\leRu1ar. :i 1xil111h d1•signcd to re1no\·e oxida!l<111 11'alcr spots :ind ~iv1• 111·w iu<:ler lri old ti1111t., l .. ,.d 1,·1 nrw bo:il'i 1t slo~s O\u.la11 ,., f'"or furlhf'r i Tl f <1 r Ill ;l 1 • II fl lOnlnrt \hrr·or Hrirht P11l h ({• l'.C). lioli. C·T 111111 fl2tiH. You. can Charge DAILY PILOT , Classlffi.d Ads 642·5678 \ • " 4, ~ I I .. f ; • . I I I .. • ' RACE WINNER -George ·roob.v. owner of the cus- tom One 'f on s!oor> America .Jane ll. nctepts trophy for Opening Uay race fron1 Newport l·lurbor ''acht C'lub vif·e con1n1od ore J·lar,·c\' So1ncrs. L • i \\'l."i'NER OF the prize for rhe bt's~ professionally 1nain- tt:tincd po"·cr boat over 40 Deboral1 W:U1s Both Race Legs Deborah . an aging "R" boat skippered by Richa rd Rauff of the host club, was the Class 1\ "'inner of both legs of South Shore Sailing Cl ub's Dana Point and Return r ace Saturday and Sunday. The races v.·cre the second and third of the !·Ii-Point Series for Performance lfandjcap Racing Fleet yactits. Nel'·port lo Dana Point CLASS A -! l l Deborah : 121 Big Kahuna, i\lark 'fo"'nS<'nd~ DPYC. CLASS B-(!) Olarlolte. L. Painter. UCI Sailing Club: {21 Pegasus, J erry Mootgo1ncry. BCYC. CLASS C -(I) Tigress. C:il Knudsen, SSSC ; (2 1 Hampshire Rose, Dennis Burnett. SSSC. Dana Point to Newport CLASS A -t I \ Deborah: (2) i\laggi J. Andy Anderson. CLASS 8 -(I! Charlo!tt'; (21 Pegasus. CLASS C -(II Sunda. Graham Gibbons. BYC: t21 Lillie Oly, Jack Bodorck. sssc. Outl)oards Get Okay CHfC:\GO fU Pf ) -The long debate over the effect or outbotird motors on th c ecology has been sellled in part by the release of a 21~­ year study finding no evidence outboards harm water or' its life systems. • .I, " ,. The $750.000 study v.•as financed jointly by I h c Environmental Protection Agency and boating industry associations. i .\ , ' .I' ,r r .i. .J ' . ..t. -~ ., "The conc lusions arr preliminary subject lo re\'iew by !ht' EPA an d additional statistic<i! analysis -but scientists tell mt' there is no reason to bt•licve that basic findin,!!s \l'ill• ch ange," !'aid \!alt Kaufn1:in. project dirt'clnr for the boa I i n g industry group. " · .. "~ .., PROUD WINNER~ -.1 fr, and ~lrs. ,\!phonsc Bur- n;ind ;Jn(! daughicr .\l~·.son tl1sp!<i.\ the coveted S1\·1·cpst;:1 kc.~ '1'r(1\ihy sy1nbol!t. of 111(' be~I kept ya~ht at .\ewport I ta r Joi' \'a<'hl ' Jub s annual Opcn1n,L! 11a\' <'erc1110111ci;. The \acht 1:> lhe 58·foot )"<.11vl 1lc(,~i-e\. J1uill u1 I9:J8. She :tl"o \\Oil !he a\\1;1rd for 111c he~l pru11;-.sio11;:1!ly n1a1111;11nc<I ~ail y:u ht over If I I 1•t•\ LEASE A '74 610 WAGON $99.89 mo. • 1~~311~ OE.I.. COSTA MESA DATSUN 2145 HAllOl ILVD. C.M. 5'0.6410 ------DOES YOUR CAR !DU ROUGH? WE Sunday IS START HARD? CAN HELP GI VE POOR MILE AGEJ THE CARBURETOR SHOP ttof MU-ll .... «KfA 11111 t•l·l l tl I ll w .. 1 -... ·-I-· ....... .OIM raao-Ar Wins 2 Straigh.t IPfCPtt1Y lac1tl!<I In IT1e cClunl' of Al~· S~OIKI lo cavtnlf!l1, car.dlliM:., •!oe. S11tt of C1llfornl•, Ot~rlt>ed 11 fol. ttJtrnt n" Ind r11trw1lloot of rttara. it IOWi: . any. Loi 41 of Tri(! No. 15011 It lie' "''P r!'ltr~c• to wl'liC"' t1 m1dt tor llol'!Mr rKatctltd in boo~ 31l PI0-1 35 ind l6 Cl! p&rll~1,tll•t, •rid !nit tt>e rime 1fld ll'!e m1P'i 1., lr.t O'lllre of ll'!e UNn!y pla<t ol l'>ltrlno tM 11rne -1111 _,, 1t1I Ste\·e \Valc;h of Cabrillo B<'ach )'acht C~ub, at the ht'lm of the Ca l-25 A'Te. \\'OO 11,·o straight races Sunday in the Los An,geles ~I a r b or eliminations for the Prince of \Vales Bov.'I. symbolic of the North American Yacht Racing Union's .match racing championship. Runner-up v.'as Jeff Brauch of Los Angeles \'acht Cl ub In Lupi Ti. f{csul1 s or Cabrillo Beaeh Yacht Club's Opening Day Point Fermin race: FIRST TO F I NISH PERPETUAL -Chaparral. tcataniara.n\ Roger Jev.·cit and Geor~e V.'ood, CBYC. 'PERPF..IUAL {first single hull over 20 feel) -Sy,·eet Pea. Norm Apperin. CBYC. GHEER PERPETUAL Ir l . gl I II oder 40 ) •tcordtt ol 111d Covnlw. tor M1y n 1t14 II' ()'Clock ..... '"""' , \CS Sin e lU U -relertr1ct la wllkh 11 m1ae far l\111her cwrtrQoCtn 'c:o1 O~PlrTrntnl No.·, ·;., ~•llf f errafl. P1rUcvl•••· 11'4 !hit ltw lime Ir.I IN C<lUrt, 11 100 Civic Ctn!er Orlvt Wist, '" MULTIHULL PERPETUAL QllCt <'II l>ttr!l>Q lht 11""' hit blt'I ••I ttw citv of S1nl1 Ant, C1lltoro!•. for l.\1v 2J. lt1', 11 t o'c1«k 1.rn., 111 !ht De!M Al>fll )0, 1914 -Chapparnl. -courtrDDrn of O.p1r1ment No. l of 11111 WILLIAM E. SI JOHN S IITY'S '!1JG (f' court, 11 700 Clwlc Ct nttr Or lv1 WH!, In Countv Cler~ :\I :• I ltSt Ille city ell Stnt• Ant , C1litcrnl1. lAllHES, S(HAO, JOMMSOH, ll[llfllllOl' l\fercurr) Drambui, Pa r k D•Jd AP•ll >o. 1'1• & CA•uo111 • WILLIAM E. !it JOI-IN IJJt Mt cAITMUJI ILVD. Dcnsn1ore, CBYC. CCl<ln1v c•""" HEWPOJtT 11AcH, cALlf'OJIMIA nue <•EARY 18 PeM-w>fual -IAllHl!:S, SCMAO, JOHNSON, KIH•IOY 17141 .,, ..... • r-a CAii.LS.ON Atttflllfl ..... tht PtlllltMr Confusion, John Sew b I er. uu M•cAllTMUI tLVo. P1,1btlil'IOCI Or•no• c ... st 01ny 1"1111. CBYC NEWPORT &EACH. C"LlfOllNIA tU't Mty '· 1, IJ, "'' 1~•·14 · 111•1 rn.,... --·--··-------CAL-20 11 0 N E V ~f O O N AnMMY1 tw tM P1t11i- PE!u'ETUAL T . II PvOtl5l'lflCI 0r•"'99 COit! 0•11Y '1101. -ens1on , M•v '· '· 1J, "" 1»0-i. PUBLIC NOTICE Dave Hill. CBYC. '"' .. uu1 UNDER •• FEET (35 PUBLIC NOTICE 1\1,EJltOll COUllT "' THI ""' STATE C' CALIFOllNIA 'Oil entries) -~"'errari: 12) No s..,.,uu THI cou•TY o" 011..ut•• !'>ame. Bob Sjostedl. CO\'C: ~~:~:':: c~~~:J11;~~A !~: NoT1c 1 o' 1t"1 .. A:;~~1'0, PntTION <3) Lemon Douche Jeff TM& COUNTY Of OltAMOI l'Oll OROEI: OlltliCTU•• "T" I B h LAYC. (4) ' Su N .. A·f•n• CONVl'l',,MCI. ANO TllANSFIR cu• ra uc . . gar NOTICI!: 0' Hl.t.JllNG 0, PITITIOH llEAL PllOf>lllTY TO COMf>LETI Plum, Dan Clapp, CBYC; {5)1 FOi 0•0111; 011ttCT1•0 T"' E DECEDENT'S COHTJIAC"T The \Vorld Is F1at Alan CONVEYANCE AND TllANSl'lll 0, ESTATE OF ELMER (. EVERETT. • •EAL PJIOf"IRT'I' TO COMPLITE 1k1 tLMElt EVERETT, •~• ELMliilt Johnson, CBYC. 01.c 1011NT's coHT11.1.cT c:ow1N eve11trT. •k• E. L. OVER FEET ,26\ EST .. TE OF ELMEJI E. EVE RETT , EVERETT, aKt t led -' 20 -(!) ak1 ELMER EVEJIETT, 1k1 ELMCR NOllCE 1~ liEREB'I' C.IVE N lllM S\\'CE'l Pea : (2) Scalla\\'ag. EDIVIN EVEREn, ·~· E. [. EL'NAYNE E. EVERETT "''' tl!e<J hel'ell'I CB EVEAEll, dK:l•ted 1 pelltloo ~or orCHr dlrlctlno lt.t I first single hull under 20 feet I Sieve Jost. YC: ( 3) NoT•cE 1s 1-<EREBV GIVEN 111.1t ,oov,11nce tr.1 1r..-i1m o1 11111 P•°""v "Ferrari. John Bro\\'n, 'l\talihini Ed Zimmerman ELWAYNE E. CVEJIETT ~·• 111t11 htrtln to tomolu• OK1<1~ c0fltr1c1. ~n ' • • pelltloo lor ordtr C1lrKll119 the or-r!y Ioctl.cf In the covn1v of IUv!!f'o BCYC. CBYC: (41 Westerly II. Ray '""""'"'ce '""' .,_.., tr1 R••I ••-•IV ,Iott, s1111 ,, c.o111Q<n11, 11-.c:r1Md 1t Mo AUDRE BRO\\'N PERPE r~~tl CBYC· (5) Ahsan•~ ta cam11let1 o.c:-n•'• c011tr1e1. GI\~= • ! • ......,, l.11.'. • • I.<:"' prO()eftY locl1tld In tne u•vntv of Jllwtr. N ~·· of N ..., of MW 14 of SW 'Ao of TUAL (first sing le huJI under L<>u Comyns. CBYC. sloe. s1111 01 (.111or .. 11, a1Kribtll •• fol. ~non n . 1w 1S, it•• )e SllM, 60 f t) F · '!ULTIJIULL (3) f"h...__... lowt: rtlt'vlno 111tr1fr0fl'I l!w NO<ll'\trly JO ee -crrar1. n '-',...,.,.,... TM E11t htll ol the Scut""""'' '""' 1cr ..., ..... ct1,1•lve 11s-1 tor Kl':N Dt\ VIS PERPETUAL ral. ~u•rter cl tht Nort1111 1t Q\Nlrttt of '"'" rnor•u 1"4 ""''''tor ro1d it'd v111t111~. ______ ·--·--------·--No•tl>l!asl Q\lt•ler of l~t Hatll>l!••I rtllf'"tn<t lo ... ~ICl'I It rn..it for ll"'"'r INE CAR OWNERS w..,., fillelf IMAlr-. v-,. c •• ,, Q1,11rter of Sec:tloo 2J, TOWl\lhlp 1 $0\l!l'I, "rllcut1rt, 11"1d 1n11 ll>t lime tnd '"" lt1f'!Ge 3 E111, S.n Btrl\1ra1..., 811e tnd p!tcf of Mt•lno "'' t•me h11 bltn "' A\lrle1l1n. {lltlno i•.:. 1crr\ mart or tOt M1y u. Jt7(, 11 t o'clock 1.m .• '"'!tit len). tcvrlr(l(!nl ~I 0."rlment No. l of t1ld •• l .. h el ... ...., w ~ IZIJl lt~lttJ RESEltVING THER£Flt01A I "'on· tClur1 11 100 C:ivlc Ctottr D•kt Wt1!, In •~tlv1lv1 tlMmtnl ovtr i nd 1crau tt>e tne cll'r c:of S1"11 Ao1, C1lllornl1. We found a way to bottle it. To rnd the day. or to $tart the evening. To share with friend.$ at a par1y or wi1h a frirnd , alom:. The joy of Scotland. Distilled and brought to petfc:clion in evtry bottle of J & B Rare Scotch . • ' ! i • ' t l I I • J'll RARE SCOTCH · JllSTERlf"l &IROOKS ,...,,,,, Sautlltrlv lO Jett ..,. ln9r111, tQ•tn. Oatlld Aorll J'l. 1t11 .plfl>llC •Cid•. PVL'iic ulllltln Ind "'" of WILLIAM E. ,, J()liN l!'!e P11Dllc, AL~O RESER\11NG IN Cntm!'r Clt rk NMi>erly 10 ltll 11 1 "'°" .. •clu1lve 1AllN1!S, SCHAO, JONNSON, KINNIOY '''""'"' '"' P1,tbllc ulll\lln. & CAllLM)lf Gr1n!0t r.e-.ln 'l!lllVt l 1'11 rl;M la OJl M1<.t.llTHUa ILVO. 1r1Md trld/or COflY"IY ta ot!ltr• Ille u1e ol NEWf>OllT lliACH. CALlflOJINIA ""' 11id e1-.itnh, •r.d 011ntor htrtln (1U) ,,,_,... m1-11 11'111 '''"' w11tl Ille rig~! 11111 lht A"-"* ..,. the ,. .. itl-r •-CHKrtt>eG ffHrntl\h mty bt PUOlhhtCI Orl"ll Co11I Dt!IY PU,,, 11r1nttd Oy Ille or1rrt11 11tr.in to tr.d/0< Mty 1, 7, IJ, 1t11 llH·71 IO< fM btl\tlll d l!'lf IH !lilt "oldtr ----- 1"4/or holders of otl'I" D•""'1'11ts r$r1nc1 kl wtt1c11 11 m1111 far 111r"""' PUB! IC NOTICE p1rtlcvt1r1, ll>d th1! fll<t llrnt t r.I !ht ------' -------pl act al .,..,1,.,, lht 11rn1 h11 been tel SL,.·1'114 lor Ml'r 2J, 1'7', t i t a'clocl. •.rn., In lhl •Ul'EJllOll COU•T 0, TM'E CC\lrlrocrn of Otptrtmen! Hn.. l ol tl ld <OIJ!"I, 11 100 Civic Ctriltr Orlvt Wtll, In STATI 01' CALl,ORNIA 'Oil 11'!1 cltv c:o1 S.n11 An•, Ctllfornl•. TN1! CO\IMT'I' 0' OJIANOI "'· A·''"' Otltd April li:I. "'4 NOT\C8 O' MIAltlHO O' PITITION WILLIAM E. SI JOl-lN FOil Oii.Diil DIJIECTING TM• Cauoty Cltrl. IAJIN•I, SCMAG, JONNSON, llCINNEOY CONVaY•MCE AND TllAMl'I" 01' & CAllUON •EAL P•O,.I JITY "TO COMf'l.IT• UU MecA•TMUJI llVO. OECEDf.HT'S CONTJIACT' Nl[W,.OllT llACM, CALIFOJINIA nut E5T .. TE OF E1:MER e. EVEIE"TT. \ !114) JTf•ttOI t~I ELMElt EVt:REJT, 1~1 ELMEll; i AtlorMn l1r , ... Pt!lll-r EOWtN EVERETT, 1~1 E. E", ,.1 PW!f '*' O c I 0 Tl \Wit• EVE RETT, d«.1111d 1 ' '1"111 011 1 y ' NOTICE 1$ HEii.EB'!' GIVEN th1t Mty" I, ll. lt1( lJ.46-74 ElWA'l'NE E. EllEREtT h11 lllfd '-"'l~ ~ PUBI,JC ~OTICE • pell!lcn ror orOlr dlrt cllng ,,.. 1 -=======~==--iCOf\Wy1nce l l'!CI lr1Mht a! llt tt Pr-Ty 1 SUl'lltlOlt CCUllT Of' TNI hi cornpll'lt Ott..,.,,1'1 con1r1t1, o .. STATE 01' CALlfOllNIA 'Oil oropef1y IK11td In lh• COUl\tv al 111 ...... THI COU"ITY OF 0RAH08 •ldt. S••lt of C11\+arol1, e!i!Krlbtd 11 fol,. No. A·ftll4 lows: NOTICE O' HllAllMG Cf' f>IT ITION lHAT P 0 II T I 0 N Of Tl-IC l'Oll l'IOIATf: 0' WILL aNO l'OJI NORTHEA ST -QU .. RT ER OF Tl-lE LETTlllS TISTAMINTARY !IONO NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION WAIVl!DI 11, TOWNSHIP I SOUTl-l, AANGE ~ { Eat1te ol llUTH 0 , 1NGOLD. O.ct•1..:I. EAST, s.-.N 8 ERNAADINO &ASE ANO !. NOTICE 1$ HE ltEBY GIVEN lhtl MElt1DIA!.I, IN THE COi.iNT'!' OF DOROTHY I. ltEICliLE htt !II..:! hert!" t RIVERSIDE, STATE OF CALIFOltMIA, ; . pe!ltlcn +or Probllt cl Wiii t rod !er DESCR18EO AS FOLLOWS: ' bsu•r>e• C)f lthffs Ttt!IMlnllfY 11 !ht IEGINNING ti '"' Narll'!t11! ICOl'MF • pe!ltlantr rtllftn<t lo which h "1.1111 !or of lht North~•t Qvarter ol S8C!IOfl 11. ) f1,1!11>tr P1rtlcllltfl, 11'1d lhtl !ht tlrnt 11\d Th...Ct Wt 1t1rty, 110119 lht Northltrlv · ~ ~llCt c:ol l'letrln(I lhl 11m1 1'111 bHn set HM Cll ttid Stctlon, 140.0l ltfl TO T"ll r }' for M1y ll, 1t71, 11 9:30 •.m., II\ lht TRUE POINT Of IEGtNNtNG: 'l<ll f l-. . covritoorn of D~r!mtnt Mo. 3 of 11111 TMnce Sovli>trly, Sla.00 feet iln 1 • ca1,1rt, II 100 Clwlc Ct"1tr Orlvt Weir, In llnt th1I 11 p1r1lltl with the N"'1ll ~ ,. '·· !ht C11y ol 51"11 Ant, Ctlll«,,I•. line of !ht Ncflh·Ntl! QU~rtar ~ uJCI. ~ ;~~'~ OettCI M•~ 2, ltll, , Sttl!on \1; Tllenct Westtrlv TU.SJ 'flitf 1 , ~f. WILLIAM I . It JOHN, 111ng 1 Unt 111111 It 111•11111 with -_, « C°""tv Cllr~ Narlhtfl'r lint o1 1tld Stc!IM-11: I j OLINCY AND O\INCY lMnct Northerly, Sll.00 let! Ta • pll~I : ~=~~~L:'vti. J lll lt 116 In "'-Norr11ertv llN! of 11111 ~tcltc11 Jll ' L" """'''• c.tltwlll• tOtlt Tl'ltrlC• Ellflrly Ul.U ~ •IOQll !hi " Tel: 12111 1n.ua Norther!~ 11111 ol ••Ill Stdlon 11 fa lht \ - "°'"'' ol bfllnnlng. " • Alt ... IMWI IW1 Pt!lt EXCEP1 lllt•tfrO!'ll 1>orl!OM dttclM >"" P1,1bll11'11d Or11111 Celt \! Otllt P110f, ~ ltlwer1ld1 CaU!lly, C1lllo101•. • M•v '· 1, n . 1t74 1~91·7~ Svlllttl to coven1n11, cOllO!t!on1, / PUBUC NOTICE :~~nil •"' rt1trv1t1<1111 or ,....., .,,' : 1-------------1•.m.nc1 kl wMch 11 "'-'" for fllrtl'I« ~ ,ICTITIOUI tUSINf.$1 J11rllcvltr1, l l\tl tfttl IN t1lflot .........,....., NI.Ml lTATl!MENT pllal OI hffrl119 tht Mrnt 11t1 bM11 111 'I Tht lollll'Wil'!O ptrsotll trt dcll'19 fOf Mty 2l. 1'14, 11 t e'<*-•·"'%Ji WSIMH Ill cwrtrtof'! el OtllirtrNlll Mo, J "fir WE$T COS"T EQUIPMEHT Jl£Nf.t,L covrt, ., 700 c1.;i"c Ctn.., Drive CO., 12,.,, ~th St., Newcort t nch, lht city ol Stnlt "'nt, CllllOl'nlt, C1tll. Oiied Aprll )0. lt7• • l abltl M. Mo11, 1,7\~ '-Ith SI., WI LLl-"M E. St JOHN ,l 1t NtwPC>fl ltl(h. Ctllf. C:ol/llty C1'1rk ' ~ LIQyd A. DM!I. 117') """ St .. l""NIJ, •CM,,O. JOHNSON, l(IHMllfilv N1wpa.rl ll11ch, C•lll, t CAJIUOH Tl'lb bl.rllhtll !1 cond\ldercl bY I ttnttl l •2t M1cAllTMU" llVO. p1rt,.,..hlp. N8W,.01T tl,,CH, CALIFO•H'l.t°'2'41 JIObert M.. Moll '"'' ,,,..... ' Thlt 1l1ttrntfll _, !UM with "'-AlttrMyt tw 111t h llllt!ltt \...< C°""tv Cltrt. llf Or1!'!09 Co!.tflty .. AIH'll Pllblllheof Ortr.,t Cotll O "· lt74. Ntr, '· 1, u. ,,,, ')141••----::::::::-:-:::-,:c-:-,--= r---------------~------_:;._ __ .:;:,_:;:~1&::.;; __ :;::::;::;::;::;::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:~::;:'';;;;;;;i~~"!!i'''"~-~~o.~....,e co.11 0111¥ Pnoi,1· PUBLIC NOTICV. ----April,,, 11'\d Ml~ I, ll. JO, lt11 1#1·11 ----·;;;;;;;;-;;;,;;;;:;;-C~:i_~ [ ./ PUBLIC NOTICE ''CTITIOVI IUt!NfSt SOMETHING IS HAPPENING WEDNC:SDA Y, MAVIS ..-Surprise! Surprise! §E -,:!ifmnN'----------=-------=---------1 =I G (-.... ~' CHECK TUESDA v·s DAIL y PILOT See what "THE OTHER GUYS" are up to N.\MI STATIMINT t.rt-~-.,,CTITIO\IS IUllHli l-oU:~ •• ':!~lit ,,.,"°""' •r• NAM8 ITATEMllf"T CALICO COVNTAY Tl:XTIC TIMI lollow!"f "'*' l tt dCllllO M1tntll1, l"-11111 Vtllty, 4' tl\lllnffl It! '7"9 CWI AOrn1111ttr•tor .. nn w, Co.ti Tttry R '-\Hid•"· lt1n HWY .. lt""""Ol'I llM<l'I, C1tllornt1 f'?UI Lot11r11t11 Clrcl•• ,Olllll1ln ~btrl 0: Cootl, ~ Stvll11, l1ltlol, Ct llklr/111 '1JOI C.t1\ll:ll'nl1 f:t661 HlflCY L. ltlill'den, 11111 Arlin G. Wytrft, ) Wlnatd f'Olll L-. L1Vttlllt Clrclt , '°""'ll!ii" • H-oort llldl. Ctntorllf• ttMO Ctllfortllt '110I t T~ll IMJ .. lt 11 condlJdlf W I ttMFll · fl'lh ~11n .. 1 II CGNUC!ld 11y ;.r1-11!1p ""''""''~· ~btl'I O. CooAI. "'"'" L. l-.ter1 Tltlt tltlfl"Mil'!I Wll flllf wll!I Ille Tl'lll 11111"""' w11 flltd wit!\ !\i1!.l!l' Cwntv C1'trtl ef Or.,,.. C-IY 11'1 M¥'f S. 1Y ~ OI 0rll'tll Cto.infy ...... "· "'' ,,,, '111n 'hbfi ft\IOUMM ~ C:O.tl 01lfy Pttat, l"ubllll!td Off1'19t CMll 0111'1' fl'lt.t. L----~----------------------------------------------------------... IMIY .. lS, JO,,,, lf76 IJ1l.J4 "9rfl "· "· MIY •• 13. ltlf ,.,.,, . I . Steve 2. -Th 3. -!\·! 4, Gran 5. ON llllnh· 8. J~TS 7. Poul (;api .8. OAS! llepri 9. SEA eh.le Ii 10. Slyii ~ l . Soun . 2. Budd box, 3. Reprt •• Great :,, Shjn' 8. AND Run, "'I. VII , W. Good MCA ' T CA So NE ~! ... .. a·N be. prese - ' -. " "'By the AsMClated Preu The following nre Blllboard's hot record hits tor ttl!! y,·C(!k cndlng r.1ay 18. as they appear in next week's 1'suc ot BlllOOurd magazine. HOT SINGLES , 1. 11H; STREAK -Ray Stevens, Barnaby 2. DANCING MACHI NE -1110 Jackson 5, !\1oto\\'n 3. THE ENTERTAINEH -i\larvin Haml isch. r.1c,\ 4. 111E LOCO.A-10TION - Crand Funk, Capitol 5. TIIE SHOW MUST C:O ON -Three Dog Night , O\Jnhill 6. DENNIE A N D TH E J~TS -I.Elton John. MCA 7. BAND ON THE HUN - Poul !\lcC.artncy and \\'ings, capitol. .8. MIDNIGHT AT TllE OASIS -Maria ~fuldaur, Reprise, • 9. l 'VE BEEN SEARCHIN ' SO LONG - Chicago, Columbia 10. YOU MAKE ME FEEL BRANO NEW -T h c Stylistics, Avco . TOP I.PS :1. THE STING Soundtrack, MCA ·2. CAT STEVENS Buddah and The Oiocolate bo" A&M 3. MAR IA MUL DAUR Reprise 4. JOHN DENVER Greatest Hits, RCA. 5. GRAND FU N K ~nin' On, Capitol 6. PAUL McCARTNEY AND WINGS -Band On The Run, Apple 9. JONI ~DTCl!ELL Court And Spark, Asylum 10. MIKE O!JlFIELD Tubular Bells, ATLANTIC COUNTRY SINGLES I. COUNTRY BUMPKIN - Cat Sniith. !\1CA 2. NO CllAHGE -Melba !\lo11!gon1C'ry. El('ktra 3. PURE LOVE -Ronnie ~·!slap, RCA 4. llONEY!\IOON FEELIN -Roy Clark, Dot 5. IS IT WRONG For Loving You -Sonny James, . Co\umbia \6. THE smEAK -R a y S¥vcns. ~arnaby 7. S0~1R'rHING -Johnny HOl!riGUl'I.. i\lercury 8. I \\'ILL AL\\'1\YS LOVE YOU -Dolly Par1on. RCA 9. ON TllE COVE R OF TllE ~tUSIC crrv NE\l.'S -Buck Owens . Capitol JO. LAST TIME I S A W Ill!\! -l>ollie \Vest, RCA EASY LISTENING I. THE Ef\''TERTAINER !\farvin Hamli sch, !\1CA 2. HELP ME !\-fltchcll, Asylum 3. I WON'T LAST A DAY WITHOUT YOU CarpentcrJ, A&f.f 4. TSOP-MFSB, Columbia 5. KEEP ON SING ING Helen Reddy, Capitol 6. OH VERY YOUNG Cat Stevens, Ali!\t 7. YOU WON'T SEE )JE - Anne ~turray, Capitol 8. I'LL HAVE TO SAY I LOVE YOU l:'I A SONG - J im CrOC<'. ABC 9. IF YOU LOVE ME Lei !\1e Know -Olivia Ne't\'lon- John, MCA - --. ' ' •Gatsby~ the Worst llarvard Lanipoon '/louurs' llolly1rood CAMBRIDCE, Mass . (AP I -"The Great Gatsby" took top honors in the Harvard Lampoon's 34th annual ~tovie Worsts Awards and was cited Cor "making the Jazz Age look like the ti.1uzak Era." Editors of the L3n1poon , describe<.! as lhe nation 's oldest humor maga zine. said the film \\'On for "cynically strli>-mlnlng another \'Cin in the nostalgia n1arkct anti having the acquisitive gall to market lines of G a t s b y products. of which 'Gatsby poy,·er tool s' and 'Gatsby· burgers' can't be far off." Leading lady l\1ia Farro\v \l'AS honored \vith ''The OK Doc, BrC'ak the An11 Again Award " for miscasting in her portrayal of Daisy Buchanan, "reducing Gatsby to a Jnzz Age Sinatra ." OTHER ~10VlES cited by the Lampoon in its worst ay,'ardsai-r "Day of the Dolphin ' ''Jonathan Li vings gull," "A Touch HELD OVER! 2 Acadtmy Award WlnMn! "PAPER CHASE"1~GI aod "CINDERELLA LIBERTY" IRI lotft in Color of Class,'' "Blume in Love." "The Way \Ve \\'ere." "S..'l\'e the Tiger.'' "The Excorcist." "A1nerican Grafltti." and "The Seven Ups." Critic l'enelopc Gilliall of the New Yorker was awarded "The Bosley," givc.n annually to the mC'J\1C l'fl!lc "whose writ ing coi;isistcn lly explores the farthest limtl.S of bad tast('." OthC'r ay,·ards and their recipients : ''TllE f'\ATA LIE \Vo o d Ay,•ard for the \\'orst Actress of the Year" to Burb:ira streisand fur ''The \Vay \\'c Were." Peter Bh1ny for · ' The Ex0tcist." · -"Tltf<: \\'ILDE Oscar," C'Ollfcrred upon the pt>rfom1er ""ho h:.is been wilHng to flout ronvent ion <ind ri~k worldly dnmnation in the pursuit of artistic fulfilln1cnt" to Jolin \V:irnc for "A1cQ.'' --"'fhc Piltdo"·n Mand ible." presented lo "the n1 o st obviously and unabashedly s pur ious scientific phenomenon," lo F.ric \'OO l)anik(·n (or, ''Chariots of the Gods." . -"The \\'rong \\'ay Corri· gnn l\te1norinJ Flight .Jacket ," for "the worst direction of a Uhn in the p..1st year," to ~'li ke !\'ichols for ··J).:iy of the Dolpltin ~---· _ "The Kirk Douglas Avt':ird for the \\'orst Actor of the Year" to Jack Lctnmon for ''Save the Tiger." -Worst supporting actor to l ~ilr:iil!S~ Dustin Hoffman for "Papillon . -Worst supportin~ actress to Dyan Cannon for "Shamus'' and "The Last of Sheila ." --"The Cheap at Jlalf the Price Ay,•ard" to \Vl\liam 673-8350 TWO OF THE IEST M9VIES EVER! Me1rlon lrattdo '"THE GODFATHER " IRI • Dl•M •a11 "LADY SIMCiS THE ILUIS" IRI fllOM klW ll"I( CINlMA. P~• JIMI HEMDll.IX i11 "JIMI PLAYS IERKELEY" COMl'lf"fl u;ow IMINi •:oo ,Joi. -U ~lAlS U .011-&AT'lt !GI ********* l • ...... ..... ~Zl·t91D ........ WOOi.fi ... ,_,. ILAZINO SADDlll 111 WHllE DOii IT HUIT si -.-. ......... -..,- .. M•ATR•a "'!. CHICAGO -Chicago VI I, Columbia ~. ELTON JOH:'I Cfoodbye Yel!O\V Brick lload, MCA JO. MIDNIGHT AT THE !~~~~~~~~~ OASIS -!\1aria !\1uldaur, Reprise 1 ..... Fr-7 SundCJJ from 2 DRIV•-IN IUNR IW&P M•llTI KAReOR eLVD.Drhte·1n ,._,Meet &Mt. hop s.i.a SWI.-•-ta "'"" OtlAMGa Dr ... ·ln 111 'Red Ryder' to Fil11i Texas Lawmen M 01,ie CALVERT, Tex. (UPI I - Don ''Red '' Barry . a HoU)'111'00d producer who "'-as "'°° better known •• "R<d Ryder" of the movies and televlskln, has s I g n e d alfttmentJ with l\4o1> Texas lallt'ITlell to use t h e i r erptriences tn a movie and a te1evlsloo series. qmcnls or 'his enforcement career in a television series to be called "Por1rait of a Texas La""'ll'UlJ1." Elliott has had 2.8 years in law enforcement. Sl.J ... &MTMOtl'f ...-.WI "L,oyift' Molty" Ill! -"LoYt • '•lit •fMI tftt WMltD-th=" --n~IJ?!l "SlllMCE" -"Cherioh of HM-God1" IGI T ... .,. CHr,. Sovth e .. ,. L-'" & S... Clh. 10' 'TM Z m MANN THEATRES r I OINI HACk.MAN ''THE CONYllUTION" Co ti 1·11. Sll.·Suo. 1:»1•1~1 ·• 0.-WI_.....,.,__ H .. TOUCH Of CU.II" I Ioli I I ti• Sit-Joi. ll .. H .. 11 ). Sheriff E.P. "Sonny" Elliott of Rooer13on Coonty signed With Barry for use o r Elliott and his special investigator. Cecil Wingo. also signed for use or their experient'es :md tech n i cal assistance in the filming of a movie, "Johnny and \\'ingo," which is expected to be filmed l.:l.,."--'.i:~~.:..l:""'"--.1 on location around August I. WiJlio, 45, is a cherokee Indian .... no has spent 25 years in enforcement. Barry said George Shcnnen, NEW YORK (UPI) \Vho directed John Wayne tn •--· .... lllEI .. I ··~ , ' "ell;: '" .. '·1•.• I o_,_.....,.._.._ ·A TOU04 Cf aMS" Wit l4.-. !JI l-!• Sqphia Loren will make her "Big Jake," \\'OU)d direct the televl.!lon drama debut next movie season in "Brief Encounter." ----·---------1 •~."i-'"'""'"""'====='"'I a· Noel Coward play thal will "COHIACl" "Sf.11,ll" l,GI be a Hallmark Hall of Fame presentalloo on NBC. -----1 IRI -"'TM Twtht Chlirt' is 1pr11riau1 ·""Ao!Jrvtfllof .r~·~ ~(Jn 11 IH It. ... .., .. .............. - ......... MM4flM . "Ff•• s-Sfoori••" Smashes 23--year House Record at the Mesa Theatre. There must be some reason tor th is film's populerlty. • .. •' -. -··"· C!#IODM/ 11 :·, ' ,,. . "' "' ... , 2 SHOWS l41ClHTLY 7 & 9 P.M. "li.IDOI" 111 + ''fAHTASTIC '1.AM!T'' l'GI '"THI! GlllAT GATSIY" l,GI -. "SOMlflMIS A GRIATNOTIOM• "AUCI IM WONDllUND" -"CHAILll A.HD THI ....,...a .. te I "THI! STIH•" 1,GI -"CHAILllE VAlllCK'' IP<SI "'A'ILLOM'' l'GI -''PiST,ULl OF DYMAMITl" IPGI ( '1'Hlll MUSl(ltlllS" -•12 CHAllS" • ..,Af'lllOM" "DAY FOA MIGHT" IPGI "Sllfl'ER" "IAHAHAS" INf • ''Tri.tty b STIU My,.._. .. ''Tlwy CCIII ~ Trtiilty" IGI • l'i ·1Hl rANI CHA.SI" "CIHDIERllLA LllERTY" A, "'l0VIH' MOUY"lll V ...... T1w Orum Slowly" M--... _ '"THI PAHi CHAii" ~ 1 l II.ti. ... l·lf_U ·-(i ....... n.l...,,. ...... us, ..... , ... S"clll PflCt 12tl0 lo 2100 p.m. {t•Ctpl S11n: • Hoh .) 11 .oo • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • ·=~~ • : TECHN!Co10RI rrom Wl•M• 9101 Cl A W.fr>tf Commu1,,c11•ons Com111n~ : • • • • • • • • • • • • STARTS WEDNESDAY FOR A LIMITED ENGAGEMENT! • • • • SAN CLEMENTE MIRAMAR 492·0056 • I JOO NORT~; EL Cl\MINO REAL • SANTA ANA PAULO DRIVE ·IN 545-3313 • NEWPORT t"AlEWAV, &A..,EA E>Ctf • SEAL BEACH BAY 431 -6551 • J ll MAIN !.T AE(T • WESTMINSTER CINEMA WEST 4. 892 .. 493 • f,/8 1 Wf;'ST MINSTER AVENUE • • WESTMINSTER WESTBROOK 5304401 • e 10141 WESTMINSTER AVENUE. • • LONG BEACH PLAZA 42g.J0 12 • • PALO VlRDE AND SPRING • • LONG BEACH STATE 437·2721 • • OCt:AN AND PINC ST Rt( rs • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • hi.. Sat.a lvtl.• •am ta""" ,,.,, ""S....,..11 ~ ,,.,_ F•mllw Fun! 'roflt•f ._.•lno QelON! """"" SERPICO 111 l'llll AOUl.I AmOM All THI YOUNG WIVES!., ............. .... , .. , .... o.-,, .... , S:M·l 212 llOU&ll AcnoH lllTJI --THE TEACHER ttl YOUNG GRADUATES lfO! liOUIM1 Kn0H Hrnl -·-THI TEACHEI tt1 YOUNG GRADUATES 1,.1 I, STOHi t(M..Llt llf 2. Dlll.ANOID Ill i. MIDNIGHT COWIOY !'1 ::,,.·; -~ ~~'fli •• • CAPISJ.RANO .. ,. Olt9e ,.,, Copiol"N ...~ .... . • "'n111v1<1.,. · .. , ..... . • • • • • IAMY 1/lfl11TAIHMIHI Wl.l ... "OUllOPA WAI.TON" SlllNCI tGI llHO Of IRfGHT WATll llf1 ' THE THREE MUSKETEERS STAIS Ol1¥ll •llD IAQUfL WllCH • llCHAlD CHAMlfRlAIN "AM All-STAR CAST 111.IMGS IA.CIC TH( HEYDAY OF IUCICLE SWASH, THlllllS, SPtllS l HAlllSIRU.DTH ESCAPES" PL.A. YBOY M°'G. ····--· ..... ··· OWAIOD HARBOR-"'-1 ~k .... ,.,.....,.n. GIH •<U ... P.Wl NfWlll..lN ROBf:RT ~H.<\W I',~· ,,.,. ll• AGlOQGE ROl'°~lL~tr..1 1Hf:~11N6 ..,.. ....... • PUUI IHa&.....a PllelCftlM ~t.1IMautlProductioJ111 -.,.., where the lilies bloom \ , .. _ ........ --·~ -'" .. ,.. __ '"'''' U/ ,;. ' ~.LO I I !J Hf!l<n AlA<K /COTT UlllJ0(1 /AITl IOOlWlOt'l lOl/(HllE/,.13/UE 00\n Tom ,llfOllolAMCIS MOM .• l Vl\., WIO., THURS. 0,IM Al 6:00 SHOW 1:00-•,lO fll. ':IO·f:JO· I I :SO SAT. J:GO 4:20·6:SO MAI 'OM 1TOOW llllM IU11l'f" JASOM Mlllll lll J, COii '" •:JO·l 1:10 :r······ SDW& .. a• ······: SUH. J:GO ,; : 4,lt.6:10 : • (I i : t:lO :1 : -: .... "........ .... ,: •••• •••·llCll .... """eo" •'..., ..... co•••,., •• .. -............... __ .. .. ,,_ lPI• p•epto .,ho 1••• 7e11 "Th• J••• Jlllltr,. ~ or never gfve a 1090 on 11tn br~ .STAIS MIL llOOl.S HAIVI' lOlMAH lolAIMillH lAMH (.I.AUDI tMMll ITAtllTT JI. Ill 2MO AT WISTllOOl MIL 11001\ TWELVE CHAIRS MAN ON A SWING CLIFF ROBERTSON JOEL GREY DIDIPAGDEI ~ YlllT UITI ti ''"'' JloMli C-A,t,H llCIDT TIUlt lllWAli.JCH' .... ,MA MASO o .. ..i...,,,,._,..1 ~ "'"'""·---" ....... .,,~ ..... , _ _..,..., CHARIOTS OfTHE •ODS?,., -AllO- ;m~rf · uprr· C!t~ttlit1 JOHH l'IOlolSfMAH A1'10 l!NOTHT IOTIO .. S * * * * * * * * * * * * * it-· * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ' (, • l 1· • • • 2iJ DAIL V PJLO I Monday, M<'Y 13. 1'174 QUEENIE By Ph il lnterland i PUBLIC J'IOT IC£ PUBLIC NOTICE -· .. .'c!r .. ~· ·'·' "" .. ., • " O Klo1 F • ., ... !.pM.,,,._ I-lift. Wo•hl fith<o ,. .... ,,, AEROOATA SYSTCMS COMl>ANY, 11 :itll Birch sir..-1, Newport Beach, Ca. PUBLIC NOTICE .... 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~ ''I had them eating ·out of my hand ·When things look a Lum for the worse." suddenly Sill(Qr'I CMa, 1oc .. :11133 8 1•d• Slrte!, SUPElllO• cou•T OP THE NeNJ>Ofl Boacn, Ca 92660 STATE OF CALll'ORNIA FOR . TM~ bv1lne11 Ii COflch1c:ttd bV a. THE COUNTY 01' O•ANOE (GtOOral•Oll. No. A-7'1'1 -·~. .w ... S•llcll!I Oe!a, Inc . NOTICE OF . HEAlllNG OP 'ETITION I Thil 1t1l•me"t w1s lllftl wi1h Int l"OR l'ROIATE OP WILL ANO CO· Coun!Y Clerk Ill Or•no;ie CO\lnty °" April OICIL ANO OOCUM"•NT INCO•l"O•· 16, 197(. ATED THE•EIN lllY •EFEllENCE Fo1· tl1e Record l'lJ.IU ANO FO• LIETTE•I Tl!STAMENTA•Y PuDl t1111!d Or1nge Co&sl C•llY Pflol, E111te o! CATHARINE GREGORY, Ar>•ll lt. and Mav t., ll, 20, 197' 1~·7• Dece&Md. ------·-NOTICE -15 HEREllV GIVEN !hit C. HEltOLO GREGORY his llltd f.treln 1 0tlllloo lar P•obil• ol Wm and (.odlc!I PUBLIC NOTICE -------~-&~d 60Cvrnent incorPOrlltd 1hereln by FICTITIOUS 9U51NESS reltrinct ind for IJSulnct o1 Lflltr• HI.ME STATEMENT I •~"--" • .,, I 1 •·• 1 Te11a,.,.nlarv lo IM Pe!ll -r, retert nc11 _... .•• ...:-... :>'ti; J.: •llt '"'owing lltt'lOn t da ng""'"''' lo wll!th 11 made for lvrlholr 01rllcultr1. ., . . Jtlar1·iage Lice1ases MARCH 'It, 1t1• MAYT ·BEE, Bruct Don~ld. 70, 11132 Fiorld•, Apl. 1(1, H11nllnqlot1 llNCll •nd RGMrt• Ja,,e. l~, lll&l2 F!orld•. AP!. 20. Hun!lnoton BffCl'I. LEIDNER<HILORESS, Ste D ll r n Edw1r11s.. JO, 61S'tl Marg~rllr, Coroo1 !lei Mir 1....i Jullt Lvnne, 11, 17(1;1 M<trourrl111, CorOlla dt l Mi r. CALOERON-BENSON, Victor Ferer.de. 27, 1119 81lb0fl tll'f<:I., NewPQrl 8t•cll <11nd Oet.>orllh Ann, 26, 1129 81lbo1 e1v11 .• ~wi>Ort 811ch. PASSANTINO-BEISNER, R-rl Louil , :n. 13111 Euclid, Ga,oen Grove, Ind ~~~r .. ~~'t~!:;ro,, lf;1c111:1'12 vrnv~ PlllCE-PRICE, &yrO!I Ho,...11, 48. U7!l H1r1111r, r.11aw11v Clly 1>nd Kllllrvn Kav, .)0, U151 Harl)lr, M1dw1v Cltv. BIHE[·BERNSTEIN. tlllchael, :l(l •• )lll)O •r,r view Lfne, Ao1. u .o, lrvlnt and L ode JOYCll, 15, J9W Par~vlew Lint, Apr. l•·O. lrY/l\t. CHEW-INMP.N, 1.IWIO!l Rov. 11, 178 k oll Pta<:t, ADI. ll\ c.,.1. Meio1 and M1rl1 Ma.rle. It, Miil Bt1cnmoot, S,,11!1 Ana. llARNHILL-THOM50N, Garv Oean. ll, •ZJO Pa.rk NtftllD'I, NeviDGrl Be1c11 '"" JIM! Young, 31. ,,JO P1rk Newport. NO'WPOrl 8e1cll. EBERl.E·GUSfAFSON. C1lvl11 Jolin. 3', 375 llll SI., Cott• Mesa and Eva Oulla, :).(, T.l'! Om...,1, Anaheim, TORRES-PORTALES. Manvrl Plc&do, 35, 17291 s,,.,1h Ward s1., Fwnt1ln Vatlev al'l!I M.lrla ~ !1 Crvt. 28. 113•S W&•d St .. Fovntaln Vallrv. SCHUllEMAN-THOMPSON, SI t "I n Allen, 20. 117.1 E. Encanlo, Mes•, Arlzooa and S.nora Elil inf, 11, 1:169 Pllala rOl)e Coon, (~la Mtta. JEWEl::L-CALHOUN R<>Mrl Joseph, r.z, 9101 Crocu•, i:'ouotaln 'llll&v and Melinda Jo, JI, 4017 WHI RObllr!I Orive. San!& Anil. ORTEGA-ALONSO. Aroal!lo, 41!. 193!1 McLaren Lar>t. Hvnhr>Qlon Be1ch •nd E•lhlr F'"41cla, ~5, 11~1 Ktn~l11Rl1>n, Gardtn Gro~f. r.1c HUGH·Tt10MAS, Tom M••tln, '3. 1090 N-PO•I 81vd .. Co~I• Mesi and J'ldllh Lee, rJ, :Ml80 Neww •I Blvd .• CDS.ta MHJ. MECH L ING·ENGELHAROT, Jello Terrence, J'l, 100& Sooth Co111I Hlptiway, L1111 un1 Be..cn 111d Bf'" Olane, 17, llU Trwrston Or ve, L11111111 Beach. llOGUE..MORRIS. Oaniel Kfi!h, 11, IN Wiiton 51 .. c~•• Mesa and PAtrlda Lv1111, :io. 111 N. Berkeley, Fuller1on. ~COTT-GARRETT, William Mcintyre, 16, 109 Perk Ave., Balbo.1 Island 1nd Pamela Jovce, 1~. 110 E. Oce1n1ron1, Bat boll. MELITO-ANOERSON, L 1 w rt n c t Raymoll<I, u, .105 S4~'" 1ne1, San Clemef'lt ano Riche "'ge1n, 20, !OS S111t1 ln1!l, !.an Cl une,,le. HUGHES-LILLY. Jamts Michael , 11, 6551 W&r,,er. Ap t. in , t1unl111QIO!I Beach iliwl Sanora, 25, 65Sl Warr>tr, :Ill. 173. Huntlnolon Stach. CH LOERS·t1ECK, Gar~ Oee, ~. 95Sl·I 1dl'IOn Ave., Weumin51er and W&nd& JNn, 18, l)tn Y011eml!f, W"1.lm inster EVANS.O'HARA, Michael Wllllarn, u. 105, Na1a1 or1 .. e. Apt. 1 1 11 Wrsrmin1~ •P"KI Ci!llllr it>e. 7'. 105 Natal Orive, ,11p1. l!J. WHtml1>sler. ROGEllS·VERGOT. Jame• William, 161 1'1Sll Vja Pera, Mh•lon Vlt io ana Lind" Ma•it. n, 6807 Jar<1lne1 Orlve, HvnllnQ!on Beat h. e ANN I N G ·H u II BELL W\lll1m Tht'Odorr, :lO, ~.IO' Chann~I Place, Newpar1 B~i(h and Jovte Lvnn, 11, ~7-7Sth SI .. Elmhur~I. tltw York. CALL·PAnERSON, Grenon-Alan, 26, 9791 Stanford Ave .• G11r!ltn Grove Ind (hrlsHrie Ann, 21, 9J.61 Pollack Drlvt, Hvnll11Dlon Beach. ROGERS·WESELICH. Harl~n Eawa•d, 19, 1601 !Slh St .. Ao•. B. NewJ)(>l"I Beach aod Lvnn Ann. 28, 1019 N. Grandview, Fvllrr!on. WAT SON·BUZZO, John Ei;qene, J.6, •()80 We•t First, S1>o1ce 181, Santa Ana ind Tiied& Thelma. S6, 1091 Tr111l, We"min1rrr. AJCELROO.Cl.AU5EN, Oanltl Eoward, 21, 1" ChiDVila St, lagvna 8~Mll and Le~ne Pauline, 21, ?IS Chldilltt SI .. L11<1una l!tich. GIBSON-HANLEY, Sco!I Cochran, 1S, 16917 B Calle Oolore5, C~n!1trano Beach and Rotella Made, 26, 11 020 P iOl!ftr Blvd., Norwal~. BirtJas A~oen Tree Lane. frYfr>f!, l'lOY. THE PIRATES INN . ._.0 Heliol'Ope Ind !hat the time tnd PllCI of l!s1nn11 I Mr. and Mrs. Rk h1rd Pt ae, 667 Vic· Avenue, Corona del Mar. Ct!Uarnii ... ma hi• been iel for Mav 21, 1111•, •I tori• SI.. No. c. Coll& Me•11. olrl. 91621 9:XI a.m., lo '~' court,oom ot M<. and Mrs Ric111rc1 Foster. 1988 JES Vtn-t 11 Inc 1 C Illa 1 Oepa.rlmtol No. 3 of 11ld court. 11 700 MPt lic11> PJ1c11, c,~,.,,," ,~81a. al•I. _., corooraUOfO ur..O Heiiotr ... ~ .. .;;":.e1 Clvle Cenier !:!•Ive Wt1t, In the Cl!y at r I nd Mrs. rOQDt•, r>U ' • Si>ola Ant Cahlorola P1or1 LI,,... New1>orl ~~en, o+rl Coron• del Mar, Calltornl& 916)! 0 led A' II XI 1914 M• an(I Mrs Cl>/lrle1 Fnotr, Jlll This bv1ln1s1 h otiog conduc:ltd bV a 1 Ill' ' • Killarnev Lane. C~l• Mesa. Twin COfPOf'lllor>. WILLIAM E SI JOHN, bOYS. April S, 1f74 John E SO\lker¥ C0\111ty Clerk M•. and Mrs. Garv Bae~. "' llTh SI., Thls st1ttme 0 nt filed with 1111! County IUllTON, G.1.ULOJN, TH OMSON Aot. C, Hvntln<1ton Beacn. q(rl, Cler~ Of Orange COVl>IV on Mly 3, 197( tn:L:~n~ ll!Udlllf M•. and Mrs. Lawrenc e Brace. 1'162 . F)lSK 'le Ne..,..., Ctnltr Or., lit. lSU M~utz~ A~;.,~· ~~~::n S~~J!k.b0r776l Pvbhllll!d Ort~ Coas1 Dally Piiot, Newport a .. cll. Ct l!Mnlt '1"61 Ac.c:lt T.-...t-, lnolne. glrl. May 6, 13, 2!1. 21, 191• Un-1' !114) Hf.1t7e /\\f'":' •1'111 Mri. Wl!Uam McLl<:lllan. lHO Alrarnt11 tor: Ptllllofttr Wall1c1. Aof. f, Cll61• 1.1ti1. bl!V. PUBLIC NOTICE Publl~h«I Orange C011I 011tv PllOI, Mr. tnd "'"· JeUrev 5elifld/l, 1)12 N, Ma' '-'~lJ, 1114 lS~I• Lovl111, Santa Ana, g;rl. _ APrll • ,1t1• PICTITIOUS BUSINESS UBLIC NOTICE M~·o:t~d If::;.. Yll~~li.o 1 ... 11. 1lJ9"'• Eloen, T~e 1011!.:E~rT~~~::~ bv1in1u•l----"-~-------- Mr. alld M~. Jo~ol> Trolio, 9081 &s: SUl'E•10it COURT 01' THE Chrhtint Or., H""ling!on Beach, boy. THE VERY ORY FLORIST, •25 :JO!h STATE OF t'.ALIFORNIA FOR Mr and Mrf. Woltlam M«Joy, 800 5. 51reel, NtWporl 8e1cn, CaUtom+a 9'2660 THI! COUNTY OF ORANGE Sulllva,,, No. H-1. Santi Ana, olrl. 81r1>1rt K. Ken19v. ISS Santiago <•-.. A >>>--· --. -Mr. end Mr1. Elmer Loranct, 3101 ». R.Olld, C0\11 Mew, C1lilornl1 1'162,. NOTICE 01" ACMINISTRATltlX'S SALE Svc&mort . Sanr, Ana, DOV. This business 11 coPldvc1td bY an in· oF ltEAL PROPE•TY AT PltlVATE Mf·,,'."",,,11.~1·. Nw,•.111~, •,•,~,,'·. n0,.',',. Pott dlvldu1I SA1..E ~ ~ h 81roar1 K. Ktn1gv ESTATE OF OOROTHY LILLIAN ORR., f,\r 11\d Mrl , Ro1!frl C~ru!~r5, ll~S Tiiis sltltmeot WI! !lied with 11\e (oun· Ollc:tt$1d M~.lu~aM~i~'V:~n ~~l:~j ~~nstleo!d. 11 CllrK ol Orangt CO<H1!Y on Apr/I I~. NOTtCf IS HERE8Y GIVE N thtl 19161 Waooward Ln. Hu1>llnQIO!I 197, SHARIE LEE CU /lo/\\ I NG S , •1 Beach, bl!V.Aprit • 1,11 FU2H ect"'!nbtr1rrlx cf the 1i14t11 ol Oorot111 Mr. lll'ld fl.rs. Plllllo Rat>ln'IOll, I.!! Pvbl•sl>ed Orange Coasl Qtrtv Piiot, Lllrl&n Orr. dKelMd, will M!ll 11 Drlv•I• Corlri. C<>1ta Mesa. olrL April 72, 29, May 6, 1l, 1974 ltClJ.1' •ale, to !tie higl'ltsl •1'111 bf•I blddtr. vnoer Mr. &lld M•1. Thi!"O Georoe Rol<Oli. 11()(1 Int term• Ind condll!on1 herrlntller Serenade T1rr1ct, CotO!lt del Mar, PUBLIC NOTICE mt<1tloned, 1nd ~ublact to contlrm~!lon bv Mr1viind Mn. Af!hur Anlhor>Y, lllt31 !ht Svperlar Court, on JuM 11, 197', 1! Glacie.-Cir, Hunlln<1IO!I &l•ch, qffl. •ESOLUTION NO. not !he hoor cl t ;OO o'clocli: A.M, or !Mralltr A•rll f, lt14 A •ESOLUTION OF THE CITY within Tile time 111..-d bl' law, •! Ille Mr. and Mrs, B. Ot<1nis l l"f!ller, 9145 COUNCIL OF THIE CITY OF otllce ol Harry E. Hick1.'lltiotne1 tar said Wlnlerar•n Cir, Faunllln Vtllev. FOUNTAIN VALLEY, CALIFO•Nl.ft, &dmlnlstrator. at 111n Btach Bovlevard, Twin b0y1. Mr. and M.,. Rlcllard Thorne, J..lll s . OECLA•ING ITS tMTINTION TO Huollnoton Stach, C1lllor11l1, t it 1111 Lowe-II, S1nl• Ana, glrl. VACAT E A STREET l!ASll!:MINT FO• right, !Hie. lnrtresl, a~d 11lal1 of lhe Mr. aod Mrs. Dennis Jonts, ~641 Olvm-CONDITIONAL USE ,l!RMIT NO. 27, dece&sed. tl'ld all the r!Rhl. lilte. !nltte1t olc Orlv~ Hunrlnoton Beacll, olrl Sl!TTING THE TIME AND 'LACE tnd 11tale Iha! lht ts11t1 ol Oorothy Lii· Mr •l)d Mrs Rlaer Frlu11111, ~(1(1 FOR PUILIC HEARING THEllEON, !ltn Orr, dec:e11td, h•1 &eoulred tv OPt ,a· Salon11. Ml11lon Vleio, bOV , ANO ,ROYIDING FO• TH I! lion ol law or Olhtrwli.e, olher th11n Of lo Mr. and Mri. 9f'l"tld R1lv1, 900 5'!1 PERFORMANCI! OF ALL Ac T S acldl!IOfO to. !Ml ol wld deceas'!<f. 11 ll'lfl lint, No '1p..~:"~,.t1~~M1r, olr!, •IECIUIREO aY LAW. lime o1 her d11th, In 1rod to 1ll lh11 cff· Mr. 111d M_,. Ltvls!O!I Collins, 1102 So. WHEREAS, the C1Ufornl1 Governnwnl laln rtal 11"-•'Y' •llv.i1 In lht Cl!y ol Pacific. San•A Ant t)QV. (Ode, SecUon IXIO et H"Q .. known 1, 1111! Huntlnoton Stach, Or11111t C01111ty, CtU· Mr. tll(I Mr1. Ernie Bow. :)9(11 Street Vaci!lon Ac1 ol 1941, prOY!dn tor foro!a, dlKr!bed as '<>ll()WS: P1ri<vltw Ln. 2A·A, lrvl~I. bOV. !he procedure whertDV IM Clly ma~ A!1 !ha! c'"'lllln r11I orooertv ln !ht Mr. and Mrs, 5co11 l!urktt!. 116S A. vacale 1 l)VO!lc easerne"I' aod Coun!y of Or1nv1. SI"• of C111llcrnl1 Charle Ori.,e, Coll• Ml'11, bov. WHE REAS !he Cl•• ~·~entl• ~ues•as descrlbe-d as follows: APfil \1, 1t14 . • "" ,.... -PARCEL 1: The Etsl half Cf tile Mr. •nd Mr1. AawnN!d Re!l!oro. 7.118 t DUol.C llM!mef'I tor strHI t~d hlgnwav North-st 11v1rter cl the N11rlhwe1! S, Attrsi&, San!a Anl, boV. °"'-klcatl"d north ol St•rt1i.h AV~ t f thf Norlh II II of kit 1 I A'111 lL lt1' 1rw:I IDPfOklmalelv l.SO tee! tail o! Ba,,yan 11ver tr o 1 n Mr. ind Mfs. Jelfrev Frl11tedl. 609 Street. more pertk ularly descrlbe-d as Block It of Traci No. t6, as $1\0wll °"a Cut"'*' Ave .. S<11nta Ana. bO~. loll~ Ind !l'lown on E•hlbll A allachf'd m11) tl>ere-ol' rtcordtd In !look 10, P111e1 Mr. Ind Mr1. P1vl Line, 2324 El~n hfrllo and mMI r1 Mrl:Of.' 35 Incl 36 .of Mhclll1n-.os Mll)I, Aw:. Na ,, COlll Mesa bOV e 1 DI rtcor<ll of ...,1!1 O'll'lllf County, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ebv. 9Si1 L1nd!11! Thal portion. of !he 'IOUlh 11 icres ot PAllCEL 2: Tho! Etsl htll of •~e Qr .. Hvn!loaton Bt1cll, tiov. lhf Soolholisl Ov•ltr of Ille Northeast SO\llhWtll auarter ol Tiii! Northw1:1! Mr. aod Mrs. Jlmt$ Gardner, lil'.I? Ou1r1er ol Stcllon 30, Town1hlp S Soulh, ui•ltr 01 lht Ho Ill hill and the Vbt"bl. Tuslln. Qlrl. Range 10 Wts!, In lhol R1nc:llo La• q . r Mr. •tld Mrl. J~ Pal11mbo, 2631 Bolsas, In 1111! Clty ol Fount&ln V&lley, SovlllfHI qv1rler ol the Horthwell Oflan No. J, Santi Ana .girl. c,,.,nrv o1 Oringe, i s "'°""n on 1 map ou1rter o1 Ille North 11111 of le! 1 In Dissoltitio1as of Marriage recorcied In Boot<. SL PIOt n . c,1 lllock 19 ol Tr1c1 Na. M. n shown on • MisctllarttDllS Ma;n, In !hf olllce of ·~ M1p lhfreol recorded In Book 10, o-age1 Coonty Rtcoroer of Or111Q1 covnry, J~ i nd 36 o1 Mlocell11110U• ~ips. C1litornl1, dnc:Tlbed 1 follows: rec:o,ds of s1ld Or•l'!Ve Countv. Beginning 11 1~ oorthweit corne~ or PAR CEL 3: Tiit West htU of 1119 !Ile '°""' 11 1c1e1 of 1ald SOl/!heas! Sovlhwest _ ovarter al the Norlhwesl Quart1n thloc• aloog thl we11 line o1 ov1r1rr ol !hi North hill ol Loi l, 11> uid Soolllusl Quarll( Soulh o• JS' rf!" lllock 19 of Tr1ct Ne. 86, ~s !hown °" 1 Ea•! "·00 lttl; !~nee North u o 10' 18" map ti..reof record~ In Book 10, Paoe1 J"ltt"10Allln' De~'"· E••T p1r1llel lo !l>e north tine Ill stid 3S Ind )6 ol M11Ulllnt0US MaDI· Ente<ed APrll 16 SCM!lh 11 tcres 242.12 fffl. to the true records ol said Or1Mt Counlv. ESQurr· Joieh and Oeborfth K. po1,,1 of beginning; ~e continuing . EXCEPTING THEREFROM !rom I Fenech. An!t•otw tnd Oororhv Ann aloog Slid ~rallrl llM North 1110 10' 28" Sl•d P•r«ls l, 2 and 3 all ur1nivm, Melendr11, Judith L. a.nd Theodore A, East JO.al feel; tntnce Sol.Ith o• ll' 01" r11orll1m 1nd oth~r mat1rl1l1 delermlned Hindman, Rlch1rd L. tnd Vlci11rl1 L. East pa.rallel lo the tis! tine of iaid pursv1nt ta Sect100 S(bl 1 of !ht Atomic Nelson, Cvnlhll T. al'lll Keooerh E. 5,,.,111ei~• Qvir!rr 35<& 13 flt! ID 11>1 Ener91 Act ol 1961!, lo De pe-cul!arlv Boseke, Roy Lftl Ind Sarah LI Vtroe north l(ne al that pro~rtv '°""eyed to fS'ltflll&! lo I~ IJ"oducllon o! l!s1ionabl1 L1rte. SY!vla-Hllen aod Oonald W11!er Ille 51111 ol Callfornlt by 6ffd recorded m1!erl1t, con111ned In w ld l1rod, with 11>1 Nedd, ROll'11e H. tnd Palrlcla ln Boolr. 7171, PIQH 206 llN"OOgh 209, right lo tnle~ VilO'I il ld land Ir.cf IJ"MPCct 8agfamas. Palrxenr lnd Georg• itie~e s-Ah u • •• ,... W••• ,,.., 1 ... for, mine and remavr 1n.i 11rne, or ta Varela, Robef'IO llod Imelda '"" '"" '"" Co~. John R-rl al'ICI earbl•ll Joan norlhlrlv line of wid st1!11 prgperty require dell.,..rv llll!reol when prod11eed by Vauoht. Jvanna aod 0on .. 1d R. '6.66 lee! to 1 1~1 curve coocave ethers, as resel'\ltd In Ille !!Nd 1,orn 1111 Crct>ph. OOnald w. and 0111ne L. norrn-11er1v· hiving 11 r&dlv' of 11.00 unlled S11111 ol Amerlc1 lo Geor;e W. I McGehe~. Laony P. and Melll'lda L teet; !hence ea1ter1v afld oorther1v Tacke!!, <11ted Augu1t IO. 19(9 and ~~t\lllhlln. Carol Anne Ind S!even along ,•Id c11r.,.. lhro;igh 1 central angle recordtd In Boo!t. 119.f, Page It• of St nders, Ptlrfcl< o . ind Carol Ann or 81' 4 ' 35" ao ire distanca ol 76.JS Oltlclal Records, '" !ht Ollie• of Ille 1 Mo!•, RCldrloo H. •nd Ma rla c1111 feel to • tangtflt line; tlll!nc:e Nortll o• Covnty Rec::orotr ol Or1ng1 County, Brolher1. Jean LQ\11•1 Ind Wltllam 38' 01" Wnl lJl,18 lee! la !tie !rut: point CaUtornla. Cla•eoce of btgloolng , ALSO EXCE~ING THER.EFllOM Nasror. ll udY Valoez and Vicki Ann WHEREAS, 11kt pUbti t 111emenl 11 any right, !Ille or mttrn l In tile Wtsterlv Yee. Verlvn E, a"" Herbert unnecesurv tor pre.seol or protpe~li.,.. 2S !ell ol Ptrcel 3 1coulrfll by !he Caunty S~b.'er1Rutll M1rv11vn 111d Cnarle1 vse bfCIUst o1 new develapment In TM al Orlll>QI bV 011!1ct1lm dttd from the J~hns, LvcU1e ll. •~d Georoe 1. Area not r&qv!r!ng 1hls r1gM-cf-w1v tor Uolltd Slates ol Amerlc1, oaled Augusl 31, Wl•IGc:l<i. Ctrole Lvn" and Rot>ert 1treel pUrPOHJ.. !~''· pUrPOrtlng lo conv1v !he strip of Eoward NOW, T HI!. REF 0 RE' eE IT land 50 Itel wide ioclur:ted Wllhin the "t:::i'3i~.•rdv1'?!r;;1~e 't·e:nd 1~onn'A:!i;.rt RESOLYEO ov !he c 11y Council o1 th• Private Road e•terodlng ••ono thf I vrrnon Cl!v ol Fovnttln V1ll•v lhll 11 shlH l>old • We5!1r!y skte of Block it 11'1d 11\e """· Warr.n Geor0tt ind M ... lt Pllolk l\Nrlng IOI" P\lfpa$11 al ~""sldllrine Easlt rlv Side of Block 11 as shown on lhol Woolworlll, l1ura L •P"KI Rlt~1rd L, Wllflhe'I" lo "•c1fl 11\e descrlbfd public m1p of Tract No. M; wl'llCh deed ha$ l'IOI HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL G!b1>s. Rnnal!I Paul and ElalM Marie 11.ement. Saki heiring 1hlll bt M id in been recorded. but 1 copy al w!'llc~ hi• M1rcn 1•, Ul4 ~~f!:.'s:,1;:c~ k~~n·d~AJ~~e~ F. Ille CO\lncll cn1mbe<'s of C1tv Hau, 10100 tieeo 1111>mlttl!'d to tile Compenv for Mr. al'lll Mrs. 1errv Tuchnllln. 310'2 o·~eilt, c""'hf~ T. '"d Ronal d A. Sh1ter Avenue. F01111laln Vall1v. on tx1ml111t1011. Sooth P&rlon Sen•A Aoa bOV Atl•td, Lools R. ind l l'da R. T~y. MtV 21. 191'-&1 8:00 p.m. or ts EXCEPTING ANO R.ES&RVING llf"llO Mi~h 15, 1174 ' Eskina. Tari end oavld .oon tl!Mlal!er 11 1111! agl'fldl 1>1rmlts. tMI or1>11!or1 herei~ 111 ell, l)ltraleum 1nd Mr. 111d Mrs. Robert Vao Sweden, 254 Sownko, Ptllr 1fld Doro!~" BE IT FURTHER RESOLVEO that 1111 other hydrocarbon 1vb1lancn 111, on or 'l•!.sau ROid. Cotta Mfls<11. 11111 PA<1•ll1, Marv Helen •P"KI wm11m 8111 City Clerk 111111 ctvse it to bf 1>11bUJhed llflder w td land. -I/Ir 1nd Mrl. Gf'llflrtv Yarnton, 20661 Al~lns, Cancllce a~ Cla•~ I "'-I p· EU11Delll Ln. 1-'uo"na"''"' Stach. Ve•nCY, Mlldllvne R. and v i,oil Lee n lhl ..,.1,,g11 C~st 01 tv riot Svbltcl To; C11rrr"l ll•IS, 1covenanh, Mtrcll ti, 1t14 lle~er. Lloda M. tnd Je•ru L. Nt-W\pa.per dvrlng the lwo s11tc1Hlve con dfl!on1, resrrit!lons, r-.v1tlons, Ml. 111d Mr1. lerrv Coe. 1119 71,,.,er. Bonole Je&n 111:1 Erf'I~•' lw:f~' prior lo !he hearing alld sl!all rfghl$, rigMs ol way, 11stmtnll and I W1stmlr.1trr Ave.. Ao•. A. Costa Ga!er. Arftflld C. and Liod" R turllll!r cau11 notlca of Tile lime tod place ed!11"9 encvmbrancei; of record. Mesi. bO" Loc ke, K11r.1111e A. ,1nd Prlc~ E. ot hlarlng to bf POSll!'d In 11 le11t thrre Thi termi; 111d condlllon1 ol Slit 1r1: I Mr. t l'ld Mrs. Larry WOOC11, 1611 S. Smith, Tl!Mi~\ M J~d J1c~....,11ne A. (3) plAce1 along !he 11rte ol IMI t111me111 Caill In 11w1111 money of tl>e Unlll!'d srat~1 M~al~~~w ~i~' ~:;~:nA"J;.;i;!·1, 1651 X.'i:":.~~. Jt:1e~~~ce'~1. '.."ndd s/:1?~~:.iL•cn orDPOM!d ta De v1c11e11. of .Am1tlca or pert c•1h 1nd part c•edlt, Mitchell. Aal. H.J , l u>!ln, aitl. 5lrrrl. Judv Lit a....i 11.amon PASSEO ANO ADOPTEO 11 an the lerm1 ol such credit to bf 1cceplable Mtrtll 21, 1t7• Ad lovrntd Regular meeTlllQ of tllfl C!tv la llM' tdminillrtlTlx I nd lo t~ Covrl. Mr. I nd Mri.. J1.,..1 Hutter. 110 W. PUBLIC NOT ICE Council thf1 16t~ day of April, 1'1•. Ten ptrct<1T of !he unovnl bid ro llln St .• A11t 19. CO$Ta Mesa, ctitl. GEORGE 8. SCOTT aecomr,1n~ tilt offer t rod tho! bal1R~1 le Mr and /\Ir• Steven Whl!Kre, 119 W. Mayor '"" WllloOO, Cot.II Mesa1 bOY. SLP·1'2't ATTEST; be P• d on conlirm11lon ol sale bV tht Mr. 111d Mrs. Ro~r! Smit/!. ~39'!1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS Covrt. Tht e,1minal!Of' ol llllt: recording Lane~. Irvin~. bt>v SUPElllO• t:OURT OF THE EVELYN H. GRIPPO of con~1y1nc1 aod lf'l1 tl!lt ln1urtnct • Mlrcb H, 1'1' STATE 011' CALll'ORNlA l'OR O!Kl~tv City Clerk ~llCV 1h1U be II !ht •-Pff'l$f Cf lhe Mr ~nd Mrs. Rt• LH Wal~rr. 2035 THE COUNTY OI' ORANGE STATE OF CA LIFORN IA ) P\frtllaser. M•Ful:,:,,on·M;~~!IH~::va, :.o:~res. 'i71 No. A·mt) ~?TUvN6~ ~~UON\~~~EVALLEYJJ 11. All bld1 and of!!fS must bt In wrllll'IQ lllamon&, No. I, Lagunt lleach, tooy. E•!11tt of JOSEPH J ICLESS. Dtceased. I. EVELYN H GRIPPO ~l>ll'Y Cllv l lld will bl! received al lhe otllct Of Mr. aod Mri.. Rubtn Ru\i. ti!!? San NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo tho! Clerk ol lhol C;I of Foi°m!i ln Valle HARRY E. HICKS. atlornty for 1ald Ltandro, Hunllr><llon BeJt h, l)Oy. credllotl of IM <11bove named llrce!lllnl Calllor"ii , da ~;ebv cerllty that ,:.; 111ml11Jslr11rlk, •I 11811 l11ach B1111lev1rd. r.v '"'d Mr1. Jt me• ari n1on 191, tllllt 111 l)tr'lotl, having ch1lms aq~lnit !ht loreoolng reM1!ullon wai re 0 111 ar 1 Hvntl119ton lltacll'. C1lllornl1 916.11, 1t •nY Wtll•tt No;>. 0, Coit• Me~ .. l)O~. sAlll deceden! are reoulreo lo tile ttoem. lnlrOducl"d lo lhe Cily Covncll 11 II time a!ttr Ille ''"' Ptibl!c1!lon of 11'1!• Mlfch lCI, U1' wl!h the tcesstrv YOUChfrl In t9'e !II no!le11 end l)elore Ille miking 0111ld 1111. Mr. '11d Mrs. How1rd Levv, •nl Via 1 n : c ce Adjoorneo RtQUIJr m11!1ng held °" lh• For f~rlhtr lnlorma1lan &nd bid forrni CorDNI. Hvn!lngton Biacll, girt. of lht c trK of the •t>Ove eototlod courl, or it.th dav 01 April, 1914, aod w1>1 11 11ld ~• !ht Office 01 llld l ltornt' ,., ,,. ·~ ,_ to ll'ttef'I tllem. wltn lht nece111rv ,.,.tllng regul1r1v p1ul!'d tnd odoptecl bv • H r I r.cf M•s .. Dav"' Fl•hl!'r, 11v1• YCtl(~rl 10 the Uf!.(lersigotd 11 1111 llW tilt lo!I 1 1 1 wll · .tam!nl1tral11i, Btrtlldot. ,!;:~~!~nci,'11'."1f1~•th. Qltl, ollice 01 JAMES E. MASON. 1111 1.v:S:flll CotNt lt , .. leN: Ad I t r, Tho! rlglll It r11e~ ta reject any tnd M~ •nd Mrs R.obl'rl Yoo,..,, r.zt W1l"UI Westmlnslfr Avt .. We1lmlnster, Calltornla Sltnton, Smit. Holl\ndtfl, Svthltd 11~ bid~. A 11 24 1,1 Strttl, NewPGr_!, Bea~hl a"I '1U3, wlllch f1 Ille Dll te of bus!1>e11 ot NAYES· COUNCILMEN· N-ate. rw ' '· M d /\\ AP•i•111• s\'1' • 7 the ul'l!lerilOnl!d Jn 811 m1!!tr1 pertalnlog AllSENl· COU NCILMEN· Noni /iJMRS, SHARIE LEE CUMMINGS Win1;,.,..wJ1·c ~n·H~~nf'IQ~~v, el~, to !he es!ttle ol 1110 oeceoenl. wlrMn fovr evELYN H. GRIPPO. ~mlnlstr~/1jl• O:, lht E51&1t ot oirt. monlh1 •lier lilt 1lr11 publlc1llon 111 th!• 0tp1,1ty cnv Clerll roth~ L an rr, Dectl$td Mr. •nd MN. R09er R1tlll1n, IHJIO ~-"Otltt. Publlllled Ortnge Coa)I Oalt't' Piiot HA•lllY II", ICKS M",.",',.,,'• 00~.,,','.lo~.,!:"_ i•••••o. I•<'> O&tl'd Aitrfl 11. 191•. MIY t, JJ, 1'74 ll1f·74 AttanMf II Llw G ~~-. .... SUZANNE M. KLESS 111n BtKll Bwltvlrlll Grt na C1n11, N1woc11 e~r11. atri Aomlnt1tr1h'h• o1 lhl !!1tete ol PUBLIC NOTICE Hlll'lll ftf!M ltKll. Clllltr11l1 Mr, an~ Mr~ J1m11 dttOOfl'I, •Sri 11.., ,!)Ow. ni mect dec:edllnl 0141 "'1·14t1 N1lhf,wt• Or, Hun!l'IC!rn'! I•~ nl•L JAM ES E. MASO N NOTICI TO C•aOITOllS Ali.mtv ler Admlnlttrtlrl• MM.,1.:11c t:r: J'ri~''a1~1~11• 1~1 COO.II 1111 Wt1lml111!11r AYt, SUl'Elt:IOlt COUllT 01' THE P1,1\lllM'ltd Oll"l)t Cotll 01nv P11at, Mr. Ind Mrs All""! MOUtr 71fB? '!+1m-Wt1trnlnt t11, C1Uf0!'11l1 t2ffl Sl'ATa 01" CALtl"OllNIA FOil Ml't' ,, 1, 13, 1'14 ISlJ..14 mer C!rc11, Mu~t!11glOt1 BeKh, t ;rl. !11'1 fH.Jjll TH& COUNTY 01" OllANGI ~ A)rl! t. lt 74 All1rt11r lor Adrnlnl,tr••ri• No. A·7'Ut l>UBLIC NOTICE --a.<iiO Mr~ Jo/In l.lo11ttOQ1. 6601 Lu-Puollllll!I Oraogp COl'I OlilY 'llol E1la!t ct! WILLIA,\\ TOUGH Otc11std. 1---------------1.I~, .~OM;,H1ir:~Tc:'°Mct"~~tt~j,UI April ?t, tl'ld M•t t, IJ.10. 1'1' t•~-1· NOTICE IS HEREtY GIVEN IO Ille ,tCTITIOUS IUSINESS C l T 11 ---(tednor1 Pl the IDOVI n1med dll(.IOlnl NAME STATIMINT Mr ''~ t-.~, n, lJ,f;~,.1 Bur\t, 16911 PUBLIC NOTICE 1~1 111 Pf'IC'n toivifl1) ~talms ~1,,'1 !flt TM lollowlno .--i• '"' dolllO PlllU Pltcf. Co•1• Mt•"'· DIV. l&tll dteldtnl 1r• "411•ntd lo 11111 '"'""· builnftl It" Mr. elld Mfl. I.OU, Y0t~. 16761 Vie\'\ wl!ll the nllClllMry Y-helt, I,, lhl 11111<1 1106 iiALOO(IC AND SOI< .. , ,olnt No lu, Hv~•111111n~ 911<:!1, 17'> FICTITIOUS IUSINESS O! trwt 'IVk of 11\e allow llf'llll!fld covrt. or ' Mr, et'd Mri. Tavlor G ran I, 27.tO NAMe STATEMENT to pre .. nl !Mm, with the 11«n11ry R.edlllll, llulkllng '· S11lt1 204, COlll Golden Clrcl,, l'l l'f/09!"1 llllth. t)Qy Tiit lollow1no '"'''°"'' ar• Going YOllC"4• .. to IM lllWH"lghlld 11 QO nnd Mt11. CIUIO!'nl t .,~,, .l.1>ril J, ,,,. twllt>eH a1· ~Ir"' p 0 lo• Ill$ Newport Oetcll Golf CDllrM! Al'(lllttt.:lut"•I co .. Inc.. I M~ 1tnd ~r1NJOf!11 1Mr.lllft~ I~. Pllrt TENNI S pqo SHQI', >OlJ E (Olli (111iom11' nt.o, Wllkn' 11 11>1 pltc• ai Ct lllarnlt Carpar1tlon, J001 ftedhlll, Mr t '::ci M•,~n• .,'eci /..!, rl »13 H,.,y, C-1 1111 Mir, C1t!larni1 nt<S but.lntu of lhll ur>1111rslontd In 111 m1"trt llulldl"i 4, ~ulle 104. Cot.II Mew, Ltrk"lll/1' S1 . .'C01l1 Mne, Doy'. Wllltam Arth11r lkwlas. )10 LOOkout pttlllnlng la,,,. t slllf ot H kl Ille..,_,.,, Call lOl"lllt ntlt Mf, tflCI Mr$. ~··~ r.utro.i:IRllO l !tJ Or . L~un• Stach. C1tllornl1 '14$1 Wl!hln four rnonlh1 4fltf '"' ""'' Thi• bullfllSS ,, (Of'ICl\IC1Cd ltY • Nlcll'ld~ No. , Mlt1wav (111, t.o~ Gt•otd MlllOV, 1ros S"tarlngloo No. ii!Jl)lletllfl'! of lttl1 notice c.orw1llon. M~ kiwj Mt~. ,8 !lv OPll1r~fe1t. l)oltt '°'· Ntwporl !leach. CalHdr'f"lt1 0 1ttd Apr!t '' 1174 ' Ooll CovrM A•clllrttt11r1I Co . .'lnt. Mt lt!_.J~·,.,r11if:.. .. ~4 llOf'OtYC " 10!0 ' JttQVI R Gflgry, 3120 M11rynooo, lllOBER.T' R. Mv•wnz. lllOblrt l . Balod«k, VICI Ptllldltll u ~ it I A II ' Ori~. Callforn!a t2"1 E11ec11lor OI thf W!U Thll li&ltn'tllftl Wll lllfod wflh the I no•n hrt• ~' 1., "'\ ' '"1-Tn;, Min"" 11 t'Ollduclfod ov • tlmltt(J Of tlle 1bov• ,,..,.,1111 dtctdtnl C01111ly c 111,11 ol Ota"" covnrv on i'Prlt H'. and Mr1. H1tr'r ttlll, lU I Pl•tner1nlp HUlllWITL fl'UllWITl & llllMl!ll l(t, 191• . -rt~' 1'f4 ~Al•. Gori. Wm. A ~ llCI l11Mll St'"! SONINSHIME & A•MITRONO Mr ....r ,,, Otnltl, I)' w t1111 it111rfnfnl wit lllld ""1•tl !tie Couro ,,0, t ar UJJ ste 1111111'"'9 Cit, Dr. Wl!IOh, ~ • Olll , QJ1I. ly Clerk ol Or•nwt CO\il!Y fol Aprll 11, Ntwtllrf ••ttll, (t lil«'lllt '1"61 NtwP'tl BNOI. C•lfl. M~'--·Mld ~ -r er. ISl•J ltlt (7\t) 11'·""' Tth ...... ,. .-h11t • .,, "'" Mr aflll "'"' C'Of! C1111oro, ,,., N ,mJe AtlOfllt,. IM ll•tcirlw ,4m1 lf!'Mllf, All! Xrt, An11111m. o\tl l'~b11'~ Ortl'lll9 C .. ll Dlil'r Pflo! Publlllltd Orl fl(ll CCI.Id O•!IT Piiot, P1,11)1!1hlld Ota"" COoUl Oallv PUol, ·~· •net Mri .. tllflll 111rhch, I~ AJll'll n. 19 Mty •• ., lt14 14CM-1• Ar>l!I ,,, ?t, .,.,, Mt~ • IS. ,,,, 1,.,.,, Ao11I :n, lllCI M•v 6. ''· !O. 191' 1'41-1, I I The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT C.LASSIFIED ADS 16·' '.1 1. 4 1 OU Can S~ll It , Find It, [ 642-5678) Trade \lt With a Want Ad Reol Estate ........ 1000-2999 Announce ments. Personals, last & Found .....• 5050·5499 Services & Repairs 6000-6099 Employment & One Call Service Fast Credit Approval Merchandise ..•... 8000·.8099 Boats & Marino 2 D A I Rentals .......... 3000-4699 Business, Investment & Financial .......... 5000.5049 Preparation . . . . . . 7000-7199 Equipment •.•••..• 'J000.9099 Automobiles & other Transportation .... 9100·9099 _ ....... I~ General R.E. 1002 Pair of Plexes 10°/o Down On Golf Course 2 duplcxC's o n prin11' locution of ~tr L'(ltu·sC'. J>ROVIDES f': XCE.1.J..l::NT l{f:rURN. Tr1•n1cndoLL~ \'RI u t in t<xlay's nutrkcl O 11 I .)' Sl fll,000. Take advantage - t•ail s.12-253.i OPfN 71l g • 11 S FUN TO BC NICE' ·~ ~I THE REAL ESTATE RS MR SELLER If you feel D,\JLY classified nds on your home \vould he lp its sale nnd if you npprecia le IOJl f I i gh t e n t husiastic p roress ionaJ representation .. Call u:-; ~.J-7211 G-'-'-en..ce;..r_a_l _R_.E_. ---1~~ j General R.E. 1002 1 Genera l R.E. 1002 Horse Ranches in Riverside • A ('US!Om 4 Bdrin, IJl•[11.U lfuUy rtppotntl'd 2000 sq. ft. All u11dt'r-gl'ound ulilit\cs In & paid lor . Just 3 '•nilei;i 10 fn;>y,·11y 60. Full ririt.'E' ·Only $44,500. Featu1'1's Viltlcy Really's exclusive onl' year s('1·h·cP "'·arrant y. C11ll !~· lul'!hrr infor n1utkin. e Cllstoni 4 &lrn1, 3 cnr ~ara,Ac. Ncur 11('"" Full hnlf 11t·1·c -\101. l..oc11 1t>d clos..· lo f1x-e"''a}' 60. ~·utl 11r!re o nly S42.~. plus 'Valley Reolly's c.-:clusive 011(.' yea!' ser1'i('(' w11t·1·anty, Call '"' v~ •u" • onu o ~''"'~'! n• '"u! V1\l ,l .~~y Rl .. \l.r\ A BU« .. l •<HHl'k •l ... ! H'' ·~~TO<~ l Ol ""'''·' ( (,M9M .. BAYCREST BONANZA BACK BAY FINAL OPPORTUNITY Open 1·5 Sat. & Sun. 2300 Ht"itthl!r Lat u.'. r\pt Bch. NEWPORT (JEACH I CONDOMINIUM $49,900 \711:_:\\' IlowC'ry bank ~ntl 1 Till':. V lll.1\ (.;!tANAl';>A,. s hunmt•r1ng blu" \I"/\ I 1• 1· spa1:1ous ·I Bit.. 21 ~ l>;i .. 1 ll>.lltl fro rn lhC' pl"'1vacy of )Olli' !:!>![. fl. 1u11 nhvn11·. IJl•lu.\• 011·11 hon1<>. :{ Bn. :i BA. «usttHn f(.,1lufl'-~; i;o~ (11t11·11t• rurluly roorn. vl<'11·s , cnrnn1unity 1)()111 -1 r onrenil'nl 10 s e h 11 u1l !I . 1•hureh1•s, :.ho1111lng ,\ 1 l'l'Cl1'lllio1t. IM 'lllo'd in 1hf' •·fr"1('ndl.v·· 11·vinl' plunn•'<\ 1~1111n1 u111ly of l~nstblorl. $94,750 Jo'C'l' l...:1ncl CHARLOTTE LO NG Please Cull &l~ll~:oO MODEL OPEN DAILY s:;.-, A111 ii.:;n~ \Vi1y No. l\ 1.J 11n1l~ir1'•' H<I. tn E11.~1hJufl !Jr.. lo r-.lur, V1~1a, hi lJonuni;:o, 10 Ar11lgo.~ \\'nyl. !'!n" in for111 u1ion, 1>4-1-1133 OWNER DESPERATE i\lust sell this 11·t~·k . Ultru· I plush North Costa ~lcsa \\·i1h 4 kingsill' ht.'ih\x1n1~ I F'or $35,950. ('all R c rl i .,,....,..,...,.,....,...,...,..,1 C11rpct, P.!lnltors 5,1U-81l40 -------- A tiOl,IE TO BE PROUD OF mgn Trans!e1Ted <.'x eculive forcl'd to liquidate !his 3 BR, 3 BA jc11·l•I. Quality f t' a t u r e s Include huge Jiving room, forinal clinin~ roorn. ceiling to floor nx·k fireplace, ii(htnd ld !C'he n, pool size y11rd. p1~:'l il.!1~ nci.e:hbor- hOCH:!~ Just tii;tl'd at $69,500. Subn .it your offf'r today. I::xccllcnl firu1neing. Ca I I 6-l:>-8400. L I POOL HOME Y A~;~~~~~~r~~ylrI>fi:n~~s[i; ltS ' Sp.1111sh i;1y1.. 3 IX"(lroi\111 dn·tuu ju~t one )t·itt' olct iliAh C('illng.~ U1~ t'UU11t1'_1 kill'hi•n l\f'llr ~1111h C.:ou:-l Plu1:i. ,\ l;rl':tl f11 n1ily hon1•· 011 qu1C't cu\ dt .. sac. $51.900, Cu ll Reel Cur1M'I, llf'ttltori. a.u;.sow. p I L 0 T 1C L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 prestige area. :i l>eclroon1s, \~ •:. Jl°"1ud & f.o. CUSTOM BU IL T EXECUTIVE HOME IN J\1ESA VERDJ.:'S i\fOST l::XCLUS!Vt: AREA -:i Bi?d1'00n1, hu~e fantily roon1 212 ba!hS, h\'O /lHISSi\•(' ff,,ol t:.;.,.~ fireplaces. I...a rgl' fa n1i!y I _le~~======~~ roon1 1~·/fire11lncl'. \'Pry spod ous pa ti 0 .,.,.,I COSTA MESA surrounding hca1rd !)JOI 1\•ith lireplat'<' and tl'rraz.ro J~~~~~~~~~~~I "1th a bar. Just prrfect fol' FOUR-PLEX floors. Forn1al dining roo1n · I entertain ing . Call Io r Call us about t h'i 5 private sho"'ing 963-4~3. hnl'rl-to-Jind i n v cs t nt ent sunken living rooin, hcaL1•d <•< U~HJ••l•lti511 .. •TtQl-•Al.U( \':\LL~:y. RL \IJ' •"''I(, (°'llRP~<SI ' Mo" Qt< A~ ; lr>CK flC~A .. C.l o.Ol.fl>~>;¥ SPARKLING CLEAN AND VACANT 011o'flcrs just readic>d this 3 bcod1'00n1, 2 ba th home , for mn1·ket. Bloi:k 1vall for pril·acy ! F ruit t r f' e s ~ Terrific assun1Able lonn t 1''ind out about this one eall and ask us. $.11,500. Red Carpet, Realtors fl.16-8640 Budget Balancer Daisy fresh 3BR. 2BA, on huge tree shatled I o t ~ Carpets, drapes, l~1n1plctl'ly fe nced, boat gate. 1-Jarhor Hi. Dist. Asking $?.6.9Ei0. Submit clo\\·n-Takc O\'Ci' fantastiC' loan. CALL 645·8400 BUST BUY COSTA MESA Would you believe 4 king size bcdroon1s niode l h o n1 e condition North s ide location. for only $35,950! This one \\·on't last Call Red Carpet, Realtors 546-86-W. 3 + FM11LY roonl + p00I. SJ0,000! Super 1ownhom c v.·11h Ol3 of clbalv room! Call 847.0010. Agl. oppon unity ln a better \\Csts irle loratKln back ing to 8 golf L'OUl'~C. $610/nlo incon1c could be n1ore lo"'-IO\!J vacancy on 1 y $61.JOO Call 64-l--72l1 s11'in11ning pool, separute 3NI car garage or sho p in r ear yard. Irlcal ro r th.- l'Xceutivt' fa m ily that v.·anl ~ something extra or lll"-'(ls l'ntc rtainrnC'11I spa('i'. CALL l4G-ltlt ~HERITAGE •.• REALTORS ~1 1 ........................... .... Look al tllOSt' ternis ~ ! The~· nl:l y be history soon oo don'! hC'~ll tl.\l'· II you wanl ;~n co;lra shl\rp 2 Blt 2 It\ POOL honte in CORONA Dl·:L !\11\R on u btg 61):(100 lo t \\'ilh pl'i\'atc ct>n1munity bcat:h acl'css. PRICE REDUCED TO $89,500 Just try dupJirating !his la r.i:c and hval.ilr 1·u~ton1 hon1~ in Corona d.~1 ~lar on l o dhy 's n1nrkt•I , ·l Bedrooms, study, spnciou& Only $6!!,500 Call 6-H-72ll ~ Wm ily roon1. \'if'v.' o f 11('f'an EASTSIOE MANSION Classification I 000-1098 1 Rnd C;itnlinn. Choice ol 2SOO sqft 2 slory :1 hdnn, 3 financing and only !I y1•a r:o; ba. forn1al dining, laundry ~ old i-~or 11ppo1ntn1cnt to 1w n1• \~ i\crl' lot on l'Ul ·d l·- 1 Mobile Homll I I !ns 1x>ct. call 673-&i50. s11e \\·/:.!O'x·ti' 1~1 F pool. [~INDEX ] I _ .. , ..... J ~ , I OPrNTll 9 • fT S FUN ro BE' NICF.' playhousl· and nl:lll)', 1111111!1 Classification I J 00 I f·~ ~ (')o.ll"as! rru·t'fl to sell la~I · Only $;1.1,!XXl.-20': tlo1vn I CALL &l'>G&16 ·~.~:~:·.. ~I '-__ 4 rR€1TIG€ DUPLEX-1'12 YRS HOM€1 Classific1tio'n 1200-2999 13 bedroom & 2 hedrootn & I · Classification '---··_· .. _· _,J j...s j Classification 4000-4650 .__·~_ ... _ .. _ __Jll •I Classification 5000 '=-=-'"""'°"-'~'""-=i)[i] Class ification 9100°9499 , ,_·_-_,,,,._-__ ][ .. ) Cl•sJifictfion 9501)-9999 e nc h oversized :! c a r i.:a rage.s . Sh11kc 1· o o f , lnndscaped sprink1£>rs. Onl)' 558.IXX.l. Call Red Carpet. Reo.l tors 546-8640. ATIENTION VETERANS \'l'tl'rnn$ call 11<)1v' ! Grt>a! fan1ily hon1e . .J llNlroon1s . ~ bath. Large corner lei. T railer And camper ;1cccss 10 bt1ckyard. Only $'.!"J,000. Sec it now. 96:Hi767. QPfN rll g • IT'S Fl.JN TO Bf NICfl ~~ [ CORONA DEL MAR VIEW Two fanta stic Rrl Iola wllh neve1· ending ocean vjew. One block to beach. Asking $121,500. DIAL 644-1766 2161 San Jooquln Hiii• Rd., N.B. A COLDWELL BANKER CO • • I ' I •• • " • ,, • , • " ' I l • I I ! I ' I ..... o7C:':'.~;-;;,.,,.--....,.=...,...,---,.,,....---==,-=--,.,,-=---,=-=---:--.:,..,.----:-=,-..,,.---;-;:-'7---;-; ~11onday, M.iy lJ, 1974 l·G;;•";;";;:r;;a;;I ;;it;;:-:-;;:E;;. ;;;;;;;;;;1:00:2:G:•:;";•;;r•:l;R:;·;E:.:;;;;;;:::;1002=~ I Gener i i R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 General R. E. 100~2"G"e_n_e_r_a'"1 :R"'. E=-.--1002 Corona d-' Mir DAILY PILOT ~I 1022Co ron1 del Mar 1022 1 nflnJa _9j/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda l5le Waterfront Custom 5BR., . 3 bath home on 55 ft . lot. Garden vte\v kitchen, waterfront Jiving r1n ., lamUy rm., Yachl-$225,000. 70 Linda Isle Drive ~·ime 45' lagoon lol · $150,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy1 ide Dr,. Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 General R.E. 1002 ~eneral R.E. 1002- I A U~IC)Uf: ti()Mf:\ CALL ME , t'M COLORFUL-Contemporary Span_ish two story wi th 4 bed rooms, 3 baths, spacious family room and exquisite land- scaping. Near new park! Ol e~ Al $85.950. UNIQUE HOMES Real1ors, 675-6000 2443 E__. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar MIRACLE IN * Balboa Bay Properties * MESA DEL MAR 1 -~B~A~LBc.,O~ACOVES NEWPORT HEIGHTS Rl'ally liQmclhlnv; 11p1.·.;lr1t ~ Vl111· touchrs or design und Like new! t>ier privil. Duplex . Lovely 3 BR. t.it'l'Or distingulii:h this 3 'frade for units O\vner's unit --! 3 DR .. I lx'droon1 honie. Cefli•1'Uu11o en1al Be•1 I O \' $129,900. Call 675.7060 r · "' nc:. WI ur usi· CJf qualily ~·1:tllpap<>r. anxious $89,500. 642-7491 custo1u draJ)l.'!I, prcn11u111 l------~--- r1ulll1ty sl\Hg t·arpc1, gc11ultic BALBOA MODEL * OCEAN VIEW * 1narblc ln balhroon1~. Cnll 3 BR 2'' b h 5-16-2313 for detail~ about ·• r.1 at s T\VO 3 Udr1n., 2 b ath tlie neat swin1mlng pool 11nd Tiburon units. $119,500. i;cparate recreation roon1 Assumable loan \1•hh pool table. $37 ,500 Renta l: 2 BR, yrly. Cpl. I only, $225 Mo. 673-7420. OPEN TIL U • IT'S FUN ro 8£ NICE/ 556·8800 THE REAL: ESTATERS'. . " 1 YRWARRANTY • HOME m 1 REALTORS· S Local Offices To Serve You 1_G_e_n_e_ra_l~R""'. E;.;. __ _;.;10:;0~2 General R.E_. ___ 1_~_; · General R.E. 1002 Gen .. al R.E. 1002 REDUCED $2000 J.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;, I This !Ionic carries uur dowrt I \ • !'I~ Smid, r:tM~ REALTOR SOUTH OF HIGHWAY. DUPLEX Con1p lctel y ren1odcled O\V!lCrs uni( Evfl'y- tlling is ne\\'. A secluded dcacl·end s treet lo- cation. Brings in $520 1110. incon1e. Exclusi\'e at S83.500. Call to sec! O\\•ner says make offer! SUPERB SEASIDE CHALET I 11 -nesUed a1nong trees . 0 1>en beams; spec .. tacular bar room : separate master bedroo1n suite: 2 massive fireplaces & a view from all 3 be<Jrooms. GRUBB & ELLIS CO. REALTORS 675-7080 Coron• def Mar 1022 Costa Meia 1-'-'-'--"------1024 BUY A WARRANTY HOME ASSUME 7°/o LOAN THE REAL ESTATERS Fountain Valley 1034 BUY A WARRANTY HOME 3 BR. TIBURON LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT-$250,000 Lux urious 'varn1th in th.is meticulously ma.intaiaed 5 bdrm hon1e '\'/FR lge' DR & 41f..i baths. Wide lot. P.ier & slip. 'call to see. 1''.xelusivC' I YF.All li U YER S \VA RR.ANT\'. l'.:xct'llent Villa l)ark f\l'C'a. Corner Honit', -I Bcdroon1s, 2 B;11h.~. l\l<tuv t'Xtras intlud111g u1lercorli syst('n1, J-:lrct. ~arage <IOOI' o[lC'n"r t111il Sprinklf'r Sys l c n1 . OH1't\'tl for $'13,WO. Cal l G-l&-m55: WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 1----=== A sma11 price 1D 1Dpay_ to movema I $27,950 -P aint and c leaning \Yill m ake a worlds difference here. Costa ~lesa's best buy-3 BR. 1 BA, on la rge lot plenty o! stor- age bere for boat, trailer & so forth, quiet tree lined cul-de-sac. to,v do\vn payments. terms available, C a I l quick, won't last! 546-5880. ~HERITAGE • ' REALTORS S46-S880 Open Eves • Very sharp 3 bcdroon1 plu~ dining or den rondo. Centi-al air conditoning:, t't.•frigCr'dlor. \\'a".her /dryer. dclu.xe double Oven range int·luded in sales price. All lhl'.' convl'.'nienec of O\\'ning a ho1ne \vithout the headaches. g a u t i f u I 1he l'On\'enlence of 01vning a l11ndscaping and recre1ttion· al faciliti('s. Located in de- sirable F.V. area. dose to new shopping' center aild be11eh. Call OO\V lo sec 963·4543. 211 1 San Joaquin Hill' Road N~WPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 BROAD MOOR T TLE ROCK O.,,i.taJl<li· njg(ifa m ii y 3 lge. bdrm:;., dini go al $58,900. Incl . I ome on quiet cul de sac; rn1. & view! R eady to d. CORf!IN°MART1N, INC. EALTORS 644-7662 Corona del Mar CALIFORNIA RANCHER 4 BEDROOMS- 2 BATHS S33.000 l-lJLL PRICE I ~OTHJNG ON TO VETS ' \\"O\\". You value conscious shoppers had better take a look at this one. Shake roof, b1ick fireplace, separate den, huge tree &haded lot, dining room and 1nuch, n111ch. niore. For furfhe1· infol'nU1.fion ask abou t hsliflA'. No. 6280. WALKER & LEE REAL ESTAT'.fo..: COSTA MESA General R.E. 02 '===54=5-=9=49=1-~=I 1.::.=:;.;;.:...:..=--...J.C:.:: General R. E. 1002 1 Air Conditioned I vine $34,450 Full Pr co BETWEEN BA y & SEA Harbor Vi ew Hornes 1\S~Ui\lE FllA 1 ~· i $2'20/J\JO. P,\ YJ\ ~NTS This hcautilul h,: e is a "f\1ust See" for ev ry horne buyt>r. Bcnutiful shag carpels lhtu0ut. C't' 1ral ai.r eondit10ning, phis 1 or 1he other atn<"niti~ oHe d by a 2•~ yr, old borne. Better hurry & ask us about isting No. !1236-60. WALKER & LE ftBAL ESTATE; 545-94 1 LIVE ON BALBOA PENINSULA POINT -\\'t• have tbe ho-rnt' for her noy.-. Prestige location on Seville Ave. near ocPan and bay 81~ teMiS club. :) Bedroom, 3~i: bath, family rooin. 1V room, Billiurd roon1 and .,.,'el bar. $U4,500. CnJl for appoin1men1. CALL 54~1151 "f~ HERITAGE Exceptional 4 b e d r o o n1 , fa 111 i I y room hon1e. J> r o fcssionally decora ted an d l andscaped. J\t e. ticulous.ly maintruned. Absolutely move-In oorxliUon. Country kitcheil, sunken living r o o m , separate dining ruom. Near schools and recreation. r·ec land. $81,500. 640-1120 REALTORS TRY THIS N FOR SIGHS l !!!!!!!!!~~~!"!"!~I WARM, ELEGANT Newport He;ghl; VIEW R-2 SPANISH & FUNCTIONAL zoni njil;. 4 BR. 3 BA. 2 firepl8.cl's, f111nily room HACIENDA Unbelievable home on corner hon1e plus 3 car g~. lot .,.,·ith manicu r e ct Built for additional un it Sp1'nish 3 bed ro 0 m · lnndscaping. F an 111 "tic: above. FEE. Pe1i<'Ct fo1· Cathedral ceiling in family custom interior. Custom I . room, .,.,·ith fireplace, ln-e b, .• k d t ambiliou~ coupe. Just l'l~ I '& 1.., an s one ware for buildl•r im•estor with comer lot. Room for boat lhroughout. Huge family vision • brinf::' sketch poll. gate. Pr o.f es 1' i 0 n a I I Y roorn. Impressive \\'Cl bar. 2011 Kin~s Road landsca1l(>d \Vitb Spanish Loads of Spanish tile. Must 400 L17• fOR 'LL l'OUlty:ird. For a little of old see. Includes 4 bedrooms t " f\1cxico. cnll 963-6767. ond 2 stories. J-lurry, only C.M. . . . • . AIW 152.500. cau 842-2535, _,, ..... ·~ ''\!!'"'!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!~ ... 1 'General R.E. . 1002 General R.E. 1002-Costa Mesa- Make an almost immediate move. Newport Crest is the exciling townhome community that overlooks Newport Harbor and the ocean. Big, bold spacious homes. Residents' Swim and Te nnis Center. Exterior maintenance provided. Come- let us show you how you can't afford not to live at Newport Crest. 2-3·4 bedroom residences .HJwom m .ooo ,. S93,ooo. g From Pacific Coast Highway and Superior Avenue inlersection, drive up Superior to Newport Crest entrance. Sale office: .#12 Robon Court. Open daity 10 A.M. to Sunset. (714) 6454141. TOWNHOMES ' •e.7~% eonvenlional lin1ncino ol 30 year loan. cash p11c11 of Pl1n 1, $63.000: 10111 down payment ol $3150.00; 360 monthly p11ymen1s ol $495.81 (pflnclp11 1nd Cn1eres1): taxes and asso· ' 1;111>on tees add:•l•onal. 9.25% ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE. NewpOtt c .. st 11 1 projK1 ol P1tllle N. C., Inc. @-= R~l'I H. GN11t Corpo11tlon. G1119r1I Conlrec101. • . ---. - , ~~--~~---"'~'-'-..:;.:.;;;..:.;.:..;:.o __ _;.:;;c: EMERALD BAY * * * * * TIBURON CONDO TERRY DORZ 3 Bed 2' · ba bar rn1., ,., , v.'et , OCEAN VIEW som 381h s1.. 1orma1 dITTing. , u P • r B eautifully decor. 2 bdrm. & covert. den Newport Beach upgraded. Elec garage door. h · h f air cond., brick BBQ. ome, "'It ormal dining r1n. The mstr. 'You arf' the 11'111ner of assume loan. Q u I e k bdrm., living rm. & den have ocean view. TWO FREE TICKETS possession. Less than year This is one of the coast's most exclusive to lhe old. areas, '\ilh its guarded entrance, tennis & Southern Californi a 1 BRASHEAR REAL TY beach. $110,000 MOBILE HOME SHOW ' 842-7411 ; eve. 968-4377 ,----======:!::=======:.I J\lay 18th 111111 !\lay 27th ASSUME 7°/o LOAN OUA U~ • 25~ ANAHEIM STADIUM 2 story 3 BR, 2 BA. huge "'-g11n1e roon1. large oounlry 2000 State Col~ege Blvd. kitchen, fireplace, over YE AR Anaheim sized lot, close to every-\---========:!!:!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:!!!!~ !Please call 642-5678. ext. 333 J 1hing. Needs TLC. Make II) claim your tickets. (North offer. "!!!!!!!!!!241>~7~E!!. !!C!!o!!a!!st~H~w~y!!.,~C!!o!!r!!on!!'!'!a!l!d~e!l!l!!M!!!!!a!!r!!!!!~I County toll h-ee nun1bcr is BRASHEAR REAL TY General R.E. 1002 G 1 R E 'I002 5-W-I220). 842-7411 ; eves. 961-1171 :;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I enera . . * * * * * 1 'h MILES COMFY COZY HUGE SHADE TO BEACH CORONA TREES $27,500 2 bedrOom confection, perfect IN C M for the sniall fan1ily \\'ith an "' • • $5,000 DOWN C'ASll TO LOAN ·I-luge 2 story + bonus nn. Best loc:. XJnt Jdscpg. Ph. 842·9378 wkends & aft 6: 30 \\'kdays. \Valk to beach & everything. Ne.,.,•ly redecorated 2 story home in great a r e n . Covf'red palio & all tht- l11ndscaping DONE Only $39,995. }!urry, julit listed!! eye to the future. A darlhig-Hurry, this first t i me open bea1n cottage on R·2 adver1iscd three bedroorn Huntington Beach 1040 p r op e r I y . The n'IOsl hon1e on a tree lined strel;'t reasonable \vay .,.,.e know of \\'On'I last long. 6-16-71TI. VACANT !o j<l1n Cahfrirn1a 's l{l'Catt>st OPEH rlL o • IT'S F-UN ro BE NICE' r-,1uST SELL 1 ~ . COATS small to.,.,'fl. Call . u s ~ ~ THIS \VEEK END & unmcchat .. ly for __ q u 1.c k 1 1 Close to beach & school. 3 . WALLACE posse~10_!l-673-8550. No\v I BR 2 BA lau....i-. ruom ooly $58 5(X) _, • ' , ...... ,. • REAL TORS . brand nc\\' cnrpets &: paint OPt..'Y •IL 9 • "s F-UN TO Bl N ' -· --• Priced belo\V market 1011; -546-4141-~~ ~ ~ Shows Like A Dream do11·n ew terms. Cal l (Open Evenings) I ~ 1. 1 ·(.., J u~t 1 ~T old! Fabulous 4 anytime , I • txlrn1. 2. t;iath beauty "'!th SCOTT REALTY formal d1n1ng room. Fan11ly 536-7533 room. [h'eplace. Gour1net kit chen. Cathedral ceilings GREAT POTENTIAL ------'----"--I & large view windO\\'S. On a pool-sized lot. $53.500. Call LOW TAX AREA . OFFICE CONDO! R;oom t~ add 8:00ther unit or 1 Outstanding opportunity to JUst.cn10y a ni~ 3 Br, 2 BA I build an office condo at lhis fa1:'11ly honll.' with room f~r grent address on l\1ain c,tuldren & pet_s. Located in Street in Sa t A na . Cou!11,v COtTidOI' o n I y Cooperative se~:r 11• i 11 ~42PETE BARRETT financ~l~~i~};~~5000• -REALTOR- 642-5200 S.ID-1720 (~'-'] 2955 Harbor Blvd. EASTSIDE, COTTAGE REPOSSESSIONS For information and location of these FHA & VA homes, contact • KASABIAN 962-6644 Real Estate I PAY CASH For Your Home [·~ THE REllL ESTATERS P1ic1 QllOlld oar pl111 1nd 1t1~11ion is,.,. bl" pun:n1se ptlc1 or ~ Irle norn1 to '°"ich woll bl 1dllld 1ny 1dllitt011ll eti11011 IOI IOI P"· I Pool hon1e plus family room. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. Fent-eel pool yard, new carpels. \Von't last at $37,500. Call No hidden costs. de lays. No obligations. 15 yrs exp. BRASHEAR REAL TY 842-7411 Eves 9'1-1178 G~I inspired. Family dream m1um1 01 ocition1J lttmt; •• ote111111 l>Y &y.r. tn.e Slt14or. P.c•hc N. c ., --------- home. 1 n-e bedruoms. Cot-lnc:. ,. ........ 11"9 110111 10 Chll\QI Pf!(;ll, hnt~lli •l'ld bu1101110 pl1n1 [ "BED OF ROSES" --========:1 no"' 646-7TI1 -6 ~==~::::::i . al'ld 191ClUt1llon$ Wil/loul nouee,. $Lfl<-•(;.. ..... t'K'r lot. Su""r area nt-ar 126 900 LOW ••h 10 ., •• ,,~ ' . c ... ~ .__unie . $19,900 nc\v !!hopping center. $.U,950 $188 mo. Tot11 l payments. 3 - Axt. 8•17·6010 bedrooms. Huge Jot. NlCC' EASTSIDE \~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vic,1·~ from picturc \\•lndo11•. **DUPLEX** 1-lere·s a Y:ay for you to help O\VNER anx. Pool home. ::t bdrrr¥>. 2 ba. Shag carpet lhruout. 2 f i replace~. Enclosed patio. $3990 do~·n. bkr Call S46--0604 Cla~ified Ad t Cnll &t2-5678 flrea. l·!urry! Call 847·6010, INCOME PROPERTY ---Have grandparents nearby ,,lode::::u,_y:._! ~""°',...---== Ai;t . -in sparkling 1 bcdroon1 ' beat the cost of living! A Walk & l lovely 3 bdrm .. 2 bath homo . er ee in xln{ cond .. + a ne\ver 2 ~IA\. '''1 '1 O\VNER Iv~ .. Bike IO !he General R.E. 1001 ' General R.£. 1002 6 SHAKE ROOF BEAUTIES --adult condo. \Valk to s:iops. l ;~~rr~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l . 8 garages. everything, in bus stop. Growids iu1ri bdrm., 1-hath , plush cond·. - --~'ach. 4 bd1·m.. 3 bnt h Live in one & rent the olher. BLUE RIBBON condg. Dining rni. huilt-ins. MACNAB IRVINE RANCHO ALMOST Charming 5 bedroom, ra 1nily room home w/2 fireplaces -3 baths. On nearly one- hall acre in lovely Corona del Mar. $120 .000 Lois Egan 64H200. (V42) POOLSIDE/BAYSIDE CONDOMINIUM Look across the bay al $400,000 homes from this lovely 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo- minium. $110,000. Barbara Gothard 642; 8'l35. (V43) FREE LIVING CONDOMINIUM Tennis -pool -sauna -view to ocean - this charming 2 bedroom /den home ls for easy life. Owner moving & selling below market at $66,500. Barbara Aune 642-3235. (V U ) Irvine . tDI DcMr Drlv• f.42 •12l.S 1"4 M•c.Artttvr 144· 12ao N .. port h•ch, C.llfornl• 121fl cxct'llcnt condition. Big lot. con1n1unity pool in1pcccably c-lose to everything. Call ror 1 kept. Call 5-16-2313. Don't Call no11• to st'(>! Sharp :ind clean 4Bl't/2BA. Prestige area. S3995 do11·n. more infonnation, miss lt! MORGAN REAL TY .~pie & span elect b!tin kilch., brk Call 96~865 673-6642 675-6459 Pri~ne location nr. So. Coast ~;;:;;:,_:::;"=0:::.,--"7'c l OPEN nL g • rrs FUN TO BE NCEI Plaia. $42,900. RANOIO La Questa model. CALL 540-1151 ~~HERITAGE REALTORS HARBOR-VIEW HI LLS tmn1aculale 2 bedrootn 2 OOth firepl ace & 11ntki. Many other extras make! this an outstanding value for land\ cau 646-mJ Walker&Lee llll.l lit -Tl FIXER-UPPER DUPLEX Clos!;' to bay & ~an, "'aJk IO IJdo shopping. Frlced al $34.950. associated llROK ERS-Rf AL TORS 1 2\ W Batboo ~1l·!&L) Eastside Costa Mesa I Small classified ads ·· doa big selling job. ~ ~ j 2 BR, 1 BA. xlnl cond. CALL 968-4441 Qv.•ner, 4 BR 2 ba. 1~ mi i, ,' i '-~1 co;;"';io::1,;;,~an~;"3-489'J :o~:::E R;:~ ?.;:;'.:J;;2"'.',;;~'."~; ~ Pilot dassilied ad. 642-5678 O\\fXER sa~rHice. Hu ge --I-teated pool, centra1 alr ·Sp.1nish 4 bdrm. 3 balhs. -------...,....-~---------rond, 3 BR. den/dining 1 family mi, dining rm. Cl'IE!f'S • -"" 557-9860 or 557--0277. 2314 J C•":11· . " • .._ .. s ·~ •• · S©\t~lv\ °'£~~... area, 2 Ba. frplc. By O\\•net". k"I •• P•-•1' .. ,-,, Fordhan1 Or., C.l\-1. S44.900. ~~f. tile roof. \irk Call .Thal Intr iguin g Word Gam e wilh a Chuck/1 2183 PUENTE, 1''1! "' fl. HUGE CUS1'0M 2 BR POOL fti ltecl i.., aAY It. POUAN ------Co~r lot. 3 BR, 2BA. IlO'IE \1.' 4 BR ""'nvertcd ~--~ ,_......_ 15x1:> sep guest o r ' '!s ... v 9 11.orranoe letten of the _,..-.._ -playhouse-. A;;unie GI •---, lo a spacious .t: b<!11.utllully four Krombfed W01d1 b.. KlllI• d'Cd 2 BR Ide I for low to l0<m four slfll91e W'Old' $235 per mo. $36. 750. Va rant. upgra . . · a ~ Bkr 5'JS·iill' evp· 557·4617 <'nletiauun~. Only 53.\!fj() l1 t 1 1 Li 0 1' GI I' ~11 I 1 t YI' T IE 1 1 I ~ ·1 0 U N E W I i Cocktail lounge scene: When I ! J 1 J Ii) a men bought her champagne . end got her high as a k1re. ~he ~---~---dtdn't suspect,lhcre was a - · ' · · Bkr. 96:!·2-GG or ;;Jl..j..ltOO MESA Verde 2932 Rcd1vood, htll 4 br, 2 ba. 15ic33 cov LA CUESTA VIU...\ A patio + lanai. 19.""lO sq. ft. beautiful 3 RR 011ly I year 14 • 990 Qu" k ne\\' & upgraded th.ruOut -1, • • IC OC'('Up'.\OCy. Bier =•~ 7711 557 4617 l\loHvat<'d seller has prit'1'd · .....,,. : eve: • · !hi~ to sell fast $.l:l.500. Bkr. l\-rE&\ Verde 161•1 Co1'5ic1', 962-2(16 or 531 ... 1800 bt(I pool, fil'~it, 3 br, 2 ba, .:::c:::..:::=..:o.;:::;c.:o:::.. __ re.rurblshcd like n ,. 1v. EN1'ERTAIN'~IE~T H0~1E $45,500. Va ca r1 t . Bkr.. 4 BR _bomi? \\'\th k>tl of 5-18·7711 : e\'e: 557-4617. dro;irating & hUJte CO\'tred l\1ESA VERDE. trn1nttculate 3 BR. 1-~am. 2 B.\. 11· hx>n1 for boat. Prime eul de snc. $"2.900. Agt. 642-8550. 1mho wt1h BBQ, Only 1 $32,!XK>. Bkr 5":"11-0800 or 962-""'6 11 O U G T E R I attaclled to ir. r SIJ Phon• 642•5678 J' J I J I 0 "-'"" "" ''"'"' •~"• 5 Bedrooms, 4 bath•, 3400 e., by l1llln11 in 1he m+n r11g wOfd ~ I ~ll~ denilOJ) irom 1111p No 3 b1110"'. 3 BEDROOl\t, 2 BATil, family roo1n . 249 \\.'ak1: f orest Rd. Ci\1. s.6-Tl-13 0 \VNER trans. Assume 71,e;, loan. 3 bdnns, 2 bfl.tht. Olntng area. k I t c h e a buil1-in11. Pulto. FA he•t. bkr Coll 962-1373. R-2 LOT f: tlC'BI 3 llR t Ba O\VNER ms. S.1'100 dolln. hsl'.' 11• 1fpl , t:t'Pl!I., drps. Close \\1s\k. to U~ 001\Ch. l bdr~, ln, $31.500 .. Qnr. 642·?583 2 Mitts. Bis den with 4 BR 2 ba cu\-dc·NIC', Rn1. flrcpl11ce. Built-Ins, Uvtns: for boat I JlOOI. Mesa rm tw: fireplact. bkr. Call \'erdr. $ol5,000. 5't(l-4349. .31~2-am-'~·~----­ Pllot ClasstOed ad. 6-12 5618 \ CL.A.-& !\ELl-1\ -&'2-~ Ft., hu11:c 3 car garage, $69.~. e rlllNT r-.U\1fj[~f0 t~l"f~~ IN 1 ,. I I t Roy M~~C;•irdil~t~R~·~·~l:to~r:I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1H[5E !tQUl\~fS 1110 NtwpoH Bl vd., CM ----C) UNSC-.M8t! •80VE Hl\ftl I I I I J J I 541-7729 ~~~·~0:..G~-E~l~•~N~l~W~l:..'~-~~·-"·L....~.~~.-L . ...J . ......J. SEU..'i -00-66183 -. \ ...cS:..C:..R:..AM:c::.:..·l:..E:..T:..S::..:cA...:n:..•w:..•:..r.::.•.:.in_C:..;l•:.:•_•i_fl_c_•t_io...:n_8_0_8_0--' ,_ ( • \ ;.~n.:nolon 8e1cti 16ioT 1rvin• '--1~41Ntwport B••ch 1069 APt1. for s.1. 130011ncom• P,:;p.rty 2~1 tiouses Unfurnished Houses Unfurnished Housei UnfurnistMd 1 Oupl•••• Unf\irn 3ii' -·r ;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;; $49.~. "·pie.~. s~ dwn WANT AN -Gener ii 3202 Coste Meu Jn4· 'l11un1 811ch 3241 ! 2 BR , Ea!!it:lldt. C.flf. nr. 1 YR WARRANTY . • HOME 5 BR TWO STORY l'('llUll(LLI 1·11<110111 1·111(: hi!lllt' in ~Oll(I nn•n. Tl11• 1~11111' iM 1 11nlqu1• 11 Ith IU1l'lh1ni:J<I flNrH I ancl c1-dar ck1111·1~. Ct1!'to1n nu\de drnprrir~. F r••Pllll'C', All ell'elrlc:. h\l·lns I n kilcht'n, riin1n~ roo111 o.n1I tlt'tt. If;,~ pa1lo ln l•1<:k y1t1•!1 11111t block 11'flll h•1K't'. C:dl lo St'•' !~i:\-1!°11:1. . '"'"''"" '"'"" ..... , Greenbelt Jewel -VIEW OF -Prime n-ntal ~l't'u ~r. al'hhi: INVESTMENT? 1-· -ftPI I: b1.&1lnt••. Ol~r University Pirk FASHION ISLAND & shppn~. lfunt 1n1t 1on Mk I I RARto: Find Br $17.S. * 43$0 MONTH* couple 9t ainate. $17!1. mo. 3 Bit 2 .i\ 1111 11111 l! 11n1 1111 f\jK'n~I\•' linporrc•I til<' In B1•a(·h. 114~·t-Ul'l9 ur :lll-•· 1 •~your 11 ect ~"·· 1 Vacllnl. 84~ I I kl I c.·" .. 9-'o·'.I'·. •110~·\F~ & INCO~tf •. ·. Uill pd. Kid• ok. Cu•tom bull/ 2 bdnn <-,,. e:::::::=------! lfahh• ui>,rtid~I llu"I' r1111,_, 1t'('etl' 11ny, t1·1i.'n , .. ,.," ti I I · •~• -• ' " 1 --L . VP 111 one, rent the ot it•r. JIURRYI 2 Br. 11 •• Vaconl. ~'f\V Clll"nl>ll! llrep\l\c(" A t t f I h-, hr i l.' k Jl n • i o' ! n iv ,\: l'• .1r ).1nl ur th I II Cemetery ots./ Duvlrx !ll'ltl' th1• lJi'uCh. 2 lr D I '"ld • w l"I!. deck i~lth Ocean vlf'\\'. i par men I urns , - 1nn.h111•11unt'l' yard. M_•r 1h1i.! I >'\'•tul,111· l'111't+Jfin" hornt'. Crypts 1500 ., Bit 1 h k LIVE HERE up ex . ..., 11 • Vtll•. ,, \' ·u 1 r r $1\') •)(•J F•·t· land' ;; RH, 1 BA + ·· · s iag rarpcrs, /'' u l' PRJVAcY PJu11·2 l"lR, $200. Cnr i:ttu'.-i"e, A-1 Cood. l1lboa Island 3706 ou :~;;11 f,1~12'. . l~H1t1i. ,.......,01 A~!l rn11ny Con1p.1r11011 <'r:-pt , :'\oJ. ·~;i 111 ronl, ~oubl1· ~~r:•kl'·, ~~.rioo. 2 B1· \\'11lnu1 &{ufln' $240. Gtir, 1')1<:<1 for kid& &c 1w•1 . lhruout Llst111;:; !\i'i:ded I 11111~· 1·11•1•1111 f1•:1tur<·11. ull i.Rgui1!1a ('oui·t, J> 111. i 1 1 <' 'Ill .\llNI . l'.'11\ ~};Ttlts. · · '3 Br. t:nll'f'1"~!1)' Park S3l!{l, Homeflnder1 * 642·9900 f.11.SSION REALTY 494--0731 XI.NT ot;AL! 2 RR Apt. ' f,,1· $96,())) I \'le11· ~lt'1l'k'J1'1al l•:1rk, C'rl\I i.tart ~uur l'1>1J\l1· l>u!Jdh'.g ;i Rr. Baylrunt-i!lip $~DELUXE 2'BR hse, nice yd. Laguna Niguel 3252 217\i Apoleoa. Avtill !I.toy 15 .;' Ciill 6~()-8672 ::6. 1671! 01. \ITll~ C.:!f'nu pi~r~r.s\ "111! '111" du plrx •n 4 Br. P<'nlnsuhl·&y .-vv I lhru June l~tb. $240. Ulll LlAtlngs Net.'4'!t'tl HflllC'y, Bo.~ 1077, Yucc.:11 ~"·nu1u1 Gan.lea~. Onl)' ·I Br. Lido BHylront Sl<liOO. f225~ ~7~~ul~~7i. pct1. 3 BR 2-ba YIE\\', liv. nn. l'~ld. or Jjest OUcr. ?itr. V:1Jl1•)' 922!YI *' • 1i~·DY TO BUILD! . , I Ctdl 6T:>--7:!f.S D p i t 3226 tlln. ar'h&, lrplc, bllins, SchoMt, 673-6126. . 1 p it.;~ 1,.,, ln Anuhehu Zl,125 ana 0 n 1·pt8/drptl, 2 car gar., t er. ul~. No pet•. Quiet Commerc1a _!J!_,ty 1600 sq. IL $2:i.m. 3 Blt, Beach HOU5e $2T5. + Stortiie llttd tra!itt &: rt, mature ulll. $250 mo now O WNER FINANCED • C·I . , 4.ll nt·rl'JS In $100 Security, near f\Jarlnn, n1ln. yr . ~ma nt .I lG Sepl .. S200/mo. yrly. ~· i!UJ11lf\){IOt1 tlP/u·h. Tmn1arul11.te. SJ.-J/0\0, Isl, 67r3613 * Tuf) 1~~"i1 inn * L:NDEH CON!'THUCT!f)N , fpnccd yd. 49H186/·199-1331 last & di~po,;it. Avail, J une .:'..!:..::."-"~-------' . -I * Tux Shcll\:I' ' F t I v II -3234 r I ·19(}.:z:j.1·1 c M 3724 ~ .. , th1n1i n~'11')n Hr11rh l·plt•x·1 oun an a ty · · 01t1 ••• \':\I.Lt:\· RI. \I.I\ • ~·"v ·~··~'"'~l ... ,., ... '! ••• "•" ! •Ult .. < • • Cnpit1it ~llins n1·:i 1• U1l' , ... nh·r i•f 101111 SEA TERRACE ---------- ! • f.l1J.ooo 1.>o11 11 LANDLORDS' RENT LEASE s I ('r.-'<ilt tn bu~l'r a.o; rl1•f.'tlru1or11 * l'·uily !t·11st?rt SI05~000r I ·1 . . . . • La>•c 4 ""n~ \\'-f•n>U" rn1. Sll1klng: ocean '~e"''· Ne1Y J LOW WEEKLY RATE II II GRA -N·D-OP&ENINsG= I f(, .. I ..... ,., •• "''-'"· ,-,· --,,,, •Jt;.· ,];-. •t:IJ .. ' 6 1.11111~ II 0 I II ... e Pll ~ BB .. S600 l"RflC or rtnl. Coll Executive Sult•• .'i ow1u1r1·• 1<4' 1·1· force<I to ... "''' ~ ....., -+ IT,'.l lo llunt1og1u11 lit'hCh l' .,ye..: 11 zc in :"eivp()r: ~ ni.o. f'or n1.01•e details 493-5769 tor pnss 1hru llC!Cur· • irnnie<t!Atl! 1111le. Large 2 BAY FRONT SITE 1111 1w"' Bc11ch • Ct1rona del f.lar • 1-11 67' _,_ 1 20IO Newport Blvd. Price Reduced $2,400. 2 Bdrm. + Pool Newport Bay Towers ... ~IV La 0 R _, Se n ...... £J IY i(U8l'ded &:ate. M 111ory, ~ BR. 3 BA condo THE REAL ESTATE &:. bunu. u1· ent.... r. • Costa ... I h I I di i 1 ~ 2 llFDHOO~I For llll<tl ll'P111r & [\Ale~ vice ls l"HLE lo You~ Try H•rbor View H1l11 3238 3 B1t condo Niguel Got t : "'1 ,0m111 . nng-, hui;:e LO:-iulJ~ll~ll Ji\t H6:-.u·:s 1'1·1111r :\l•11pnr1 Bl·111·h IC11·. FAIR Nu.Vie"'~ roul'lle, 2 car gar, $JZ;frno. '4052·241I R'S ~~1~!t &_ 2 ~1~~~~~·i ~~1~ I ~)fro~I llOntC's Bill Gn111rl~:._l{tr~r.1~1 Slt.-2551 or 839-6133 NU-VIEW RENTALS C1\MtEL i_ww M~tion, 3 Br. Ukrfov.•nr 493-57M. STUDI I. 1 B Boni SJ ins l))IJ' L·no~T \Cf" :.. 161 .. 1 _1030 f 'l 2 Ba, lannly mt, view. $440. . e fllEE J,h\C!u!I pol!S\:~Sion -$62,9;JO. Call • ,. . , . r"' ' ~· . a11 TRIPLEX ----or -19'·3-·'8 ino. Lse. &14·583.1: 644·1759.1 4 ~It, 2 bus, ~rplc, dble gn.r. • }"'ree Urilltics $22 600' l\l r.~. ll.1!!1111 5"1:>·8·12-1 S.·1uth ~ull Security H1ghr1sc (..'lt•n1entl', c••ntt·td I01·ali1Jn. "l(''.,NTf'.Jl.S•.•." lf.~ ni·t'l'_. fn Bt ~ees, Beaut. • <>uJI <-'t•'l>c•• • C n 1 I SIC'f'I & conl:'rctc tonstl'U ction ~111) 000 • .\<ll-~'l\i1 NEWPORT '--H ti I B h 3240 -1· r ...., \'nu C'i'lt\ p11y S'..'\,(K\ 111ur1• than I 11·· n.t•a_ ~5· Private JJ<olronlC'!I ·-· -• . '· ' Yo11 Get All The !·rouses un ng on eac _ ''1r 11" $:J.j(). 6'1.,..-·•19 e •reate1.I l'ool ihis fnr u nt'\\' unit or you J·::-;c·1r1i\G 1\1•\\' 213/t 2BA, 2 g:u·nge spnccs for mo11t Condom1n1um5 J util off Newport. Bh·d . -11v11!l;\b.~~ f?I' .~~f i? 0 U R LUXURIOUS I.tog 3 I.Jr, 2 ba, t Mesa Verde 3263 f • Laundry ~·ncillties C"nn huv inv Ul'e-rnrl(•fl unit 1 T"1\nl101111\ U n i v el' s i t v unit~. for sale 1700 G00tl :ll'L'e~s to 1'.ie11·pnrt ~ BU~~t. .1 .'~ I DA rED 3 Nt y duplex honie, like ne~', 1-----------e TV l 1nu1d. sel'\'. avail. for $2,00l 1~1011• 1't·plneen1c11! ; Piirl<, Su1•·l' Loe, lndscr11n~. I Roof 1011 sundeck Cos111 ,l'itrsn -~an JJ!ei::u 1 11111•:; \\ti k: lms everything. Bltn stereo I 3 lilt, ::! BA rani rm., Jrg 1 e l'hone &.•rv1C'e cos!. ;Irv~ & 111~'1·11de1! C'rpts ~·on Unusua Opportun!iy t o BY 011·nr r T11~1 !n, l.u>.:urious F\1:Y·. ~t'nlral J\t_e~H locAtlon: Hom!flnders * 642-9900 1n 1 e r c 0 111 , tirl!/burglnr yurct. Ganh"!nf'r & \\'sler pd. •30 WE'oE~K~&-U7P~-I 2 B<lnn rondo.. ries1M1.hle I h1· 111,·Jd By 01vnrr, S·l·l,!lOC'I P11rch11...o;e Bayfront Property Lg. N">ndo, 2 JlR. '2 BA, Air O\\tiC-.1 ;~ unit hus 3 bedroon11; 1.12 Cabrlllo, ('.~I. alarm l\lu!!it see 10 I ChildN'n f>els ok $350 l\10. if ground le\'rl noor plan. 11,i lrM"·ludC:t land 552--0736 ' In Ne\\'port Beach. {.'flll(l, hl!l11~. d sh II' R r ' -dlrung 1'00111 -lam!ly I . ·~ . ' . • Studio&. I 'BR Apts. )'tU'S new, Freshly P11.lntl'<l 1 I. 310 1'-crnando Rd., N.B. wcurity a;:11r, pool, 1•lbh.'1C', room -orchid room -2 I I apprttlate. Perm. married "'17·1247. •TV & !I.laid Service A\•sil. i1·ith taslt'!ully panelcu 11.nd Laguna aeach 1048 I 675-8551 i.;ar, $3o,500. 1or~ do\\•n, 'irepl11.t>e!i. indoor BCQ. 36'' Ba boa sland 3206 couple, int11nt ok, $2'15, no I • LOVELY 4BR I 2BA, • Phone Service -Jltd. pool mirrored l!vl ng room, plush · Bl P .f .-&1:...7t92 patio ciIT!e<I in \\TOught Iron I * UALBOA ISLAND * ~s. 8'.1Z...3276. .,_ crimpletcly ~ec. Ava11 e Children I: Pet Section ~1aUpaperod dini11g area, 1 LEISURE LIFE . ue ~c1 1c Sun1et1 Duplexes/Units -2nd pauo -plus gorgoou!I Ch l f 2 bell SINGLl:S l Br. S1::. 111k. now. C.~f. Art. ~7327 2316 Ne1vport mvd., Cl\t !lhag carpets & i·u11tom, \ rty prlVll!~ h l 111 11 fl f I BOO inore! Both other w1lt11.11re nrm ng un urn., m . 4 proplc ok. \\'nlk beach! Ml I VI I -9267 1 54H'15I) or~ di·:qir.s, 01·cNizer! pnntry :!.o('!UnJ:eawaytheday lnrhc l 1o\111ho11~c.\\lth2txlrn1i;;,2 orsae 1 2 BR-patios -cnclosed 1 honir ~y/trplc., garage &\VON'T Ln!il' 2 Br 2 B,\ tton •O El p M nt•e:1, ruston1 tile ('<•11n!t'r 1 IJullt·in sauna thul goes hllthll. Din!nl' roorn. Sunkr11 t;H t'{ll,C!'S. All I.his for only : ~Ho. ~eurfY; -.• $210 Condo .. Kids & pC't ok. U9rf0 e5C1 1n1J:;, shnkl' f'l)(•f, 11 ea r 11 t1h 1hls l·lxllill. + gul'~I 11\'!ng 1-i:~1n1 11·ith fh'l'pln<"e. DUPLEXES 10',~ rln11'n -usking $74,900 I \\ m. \\lnron h .F-. 67:>33ll DELUXE 2 Br 2 Ba $230 Nt.;W 3 Br, 2 Ba 1Wnhse, 1 BR. Furn. $165 Up Si·h .. 111s. 11·11 lkin1t 1\1iu:in<·" 111 1 1~~u11 hnn11· In 1hc Ull{unri \~'et h'.u" ~hef:s kl.l~·~.11·::· i <'tilt' un1l pri1·;1l1'. Gnor! full Pl'!(~c. Take advuntage -1 .'·~i\NTl:.I), CondG. Kids & pets ok. ~0t'1~!~.M·s~ :~~1183r;:,~~:· All Utll. P1id llun1i111: on r:cut(•r, ~111111· f·~1th\lls, rhen ~l'u(•cfully ~ 1:!'11 &. li'lU l•l:H I) d\ i l,:tn,.., l11coml' In 11 t·!ns•··u1 nri'n. Cnll 7J-·l7'.XI. * USE':> B_!l.ICKS * Hom1flnders * 642-9900 No Chlldrtn, No Peti; 111lr1i.: 11(1()] nnd many park 1111!11 r1111 l)f lht· hot roon1 ~'.'1 ~n 1~!()!· ~Huna §· tC"nn ts.I S:l8,7W. 1te11 . l_t1~p 1•t INYF:Sill~tV!l~l 1 Si()..a j(i l ---HoUHI Unfurnished Pool le RecreaUon nr••J\S, :-\(ill' S20Cil l>t·lO\\' t'O~I fll\1ft thf• brh·k pi•tlO to pine•' $6 l,ti00, C.ill fi.l4-K750. ' /n\IC'!llll1C'r11 n I \' Is 10 ti ' [ti: ___ .. I ___ ~I I \\'Al.K Bellch 3 Hr S250. 3269 1959 Maple Av• C.M. nr11-. ti' r in,. i 1111t 11 only du111C?r upon the u11r!)('1·u,. r' [ 979-2Jj{). OJX'n \\'C'l.'kend~ : ' 1 Corona de Mir 3222 l\otn~\lr !1.~1· S!igls, kld~/[W!\Ji, Newport Be1ch ' 09 Condo. Kids .t. '"'l ok. "!ODE"" •·ch-$1ll •·-I 'l•t··-,~, -847·3 5 111hlle ~\inner l'QOks H\\'ll)'. , I ,.~ " , .. , on ....... IOI'™'. " ....... 1• • "" pll'.'11,., .. , ('1111 1oduv 1h11! 11djoinft rhe l\Ou!4e. Anrl, TA~D~lL.J 1 . . . , , SINGLF.S. 2 Br $200. ?\('iv $140-~IO. 1 br iil,; mob. ========== l•njoy the be\·ei·ui;:e of )'Our I <=... BEACll ttre11. 2 Br. $195. utll pd, nr octan Ir shop. chUdrenlno pcl.9. Quiet A BUY A WARRANTY HOME ASSUME 7°/o i:hn!r~ (!)t'epll.l'('(i Ht the 11.;>1 4-Ple:ic. Sngls. Kid11/pet ok. llIGHT On! 2 br $285 yrly AC<.'W'e. Pondel"Olll Atob. hnt'I, 0 1\ either or. 2 dl'cks ri00 Ni!\\'""rt Centrr lJnll.' HOUSE + TWO Homeftnd•r• * 642-9900 t'P , pier It Dt, sundk loo! E1t., 1991 Ne-A-port Bl, Q.I. !hflt h11 ve 01:co11 v1c11·11. ,\11 1 1~ I 1·3 OR, 2 BA 110115(' plus 4 BR Condo, crpts. drp1, O IANNELbbq2 b~ ~ $15V _64J>.83::.;:~~T3'=~~=~=-I thls f(JI' jui;t S76,9j(I. 1 BALBOA 2·2 BR, 2 BA Apts. Pallos, LIVE HERE pool, clubhouse, patio. $2j0 ~;ril~~ 3 br furn ·~· HOLIDAY PLAZA t. PENINSULA I frplcs, yal'd~. l ii u n dry, 3 Br. hrnnd nC'\\. S·100. per mo. 5'1~1405. rP. ave!l's. kid• & pet1. DELUXE SpacM>\11 l BR .IY -I I /.(Brfl(:'.e!I. IH6-441·1· 3 Bl'. lilll'hor ViCIY .~,-~ VACAl\'T· f~enced 3 Br •. sno. ALA Rtntal1 642.Q13 ' fum apt. $150. Pool. Ample Lov<·ly '.i bl'1lr<lllrn, 1~. b;lrh~ q,11,,1 , 3 bcdrooin, z bath home plus 12 Br. ShorcclHr~ ~ ,N. 2 Bit $16 & 2 BR Ci\t parking. Adult1, oo pet•. r l u ~ r H 111 l ! ~· I' 0" 11 1 '' REAL ESTA'JE 1~1 hellr l'{' l!fll B 'It . 2200 4 Br. ll<irbor Vle\V s··)• J. ! I 1'"LA\\'LESS Carn1el plll.11 ' 1963 Pomona Ave. CM Fll'•'1)l,'\1•(', ninlnc: ro•l l\l . II'\ I l 1rt~pla:'l' il!ll: 11;:1io. 1~1~~:: Income Property I 2 Br. Channel }{{'Cf s100: $l50. Agt. Fee. 97s.8430. H.arl.or View H 0 m fl II • hll ir1'. F.\ 11" n 1 \ n?:. 11911 GlennC"yre St. t.IG-71il. j C11 1l 67~722:> U.l~IACULATE 3 Br, 2 be., !!qUeftky clean 3 BR 2 BA AfPT. ~~A~ERJiifre 12-2 br ,.1,tsfdrps. U1ri;:(' l!tlCI pa1 io 494-~73 ~9--0316 1 OPfN rn ,. fTS FUN ro B£ ri/Cr• I l 0 UNITS VIEW LOT ne11r beach, S295. mo. 1 11on1l' \\'llh formal dining, urn un 1· 0 c n·rits· l'nn be u!lt'd a..o; H i.:nn1e I , 5145 O * $21,950. nJGm for 2 honi~ ~8091 or 96Z4195 farntly room lovely yard Uve In. $70 off rent. Un. roo1n. Near M.·ht'>Ols, 1•nd Catalina View &.J; .OO irith a Int split. lrvlne 3244 525fn'IO Incl a11.i-dener . dullM. Pre~t'r m~ture 1ho11plng. I n1ilc I?. the Slup<>n!t.1u~ h"lll" v.llh n 1,,, • Geoni:eous i;::nrden setting • R·2 li(l x 2Q5 tnkes four 64~7211 Al{t. woman 642•9~20 aft::. Plll. bC?uch. f\gsumable 7 ' Cl s\\·,'('p111~ ('a TH J i un & ~~1 I and 10 shal'P unl!s. Best units 1967 Anaheim. Don't BRAND nC"w llartxir View. 1 BR, lum. lrg, w/terraCf'. loon. F'ullpr1ce~nly$36,000.] ;nouri!t1ln ' v i e 11·. . "\' _ _ looking place on the hlock. hothC'r occupants. Agent TURTLE ROCK $12.l. 3 Br. 2 Ba, frpl,I Ideal for Bachelors. Adult11. Call to Sl'C! 963-45-iJ. 1 1.uxt11·s -111111oln!1·d floor plri n ON THE WATER LIDO Tl\'G five unit buildings. &16-3255. I 2 BR. 2 bft. den fJ1:1 n1il'mred \\'ardrobe1, patkl, $165. 1993 Oiurch. 518-9633 . .... irh :\ 1~1rms, 2 bnths. <kl·uu /1·,fnt honie 011 111,, Income Sl443 IJ"r n1on rh. 3 BR .. 2 ba. S400 11winfcttenni11 pr\' l g 1. UTIL. pd. BAOi. Prtvate . ..Al•'·'".""'' .. "'•""' \'.\ l.IJ·:\· Rl .\1.1\ . ''-"' '"'•'·~ ,, G 0 . $245-2 RR, brick trplc, bltns, UNIVERSITY PARK <= ~· 1 di 1 "J.I Vau11ly l'lll•ni.. lir~'plucc-.1 Nnnd 3 bedl'Of)ills plusJ nrages. \\'ner 1~ anxious. 1 blk be.> 1 Cd!\! 640-132 7 I J00'5•vt or a I ony, M pet•.~ · Dinu11.; l\JOll\, \\oi'\.,:Fho11 .~· I Sf'!hll'.t!(' 11n•t OVf'r gf1r11ge I !:rlntt' luc.11!011. Call 11011· 28 Ocean Vitw Lots •?'".,J\ UT!f"'P'd· o' -f l 2 HR 2 baths S3?'i &ll>-1500 e111t. 1~. 548-1406, MS-8251 rrl rl I ·• • !ti t -I I • 11 ''' 1100 ~,N· ·• -<'ean iT.1nl 3 Bil .. 2'-balh• I'"'" I , ~\\ 1:~'· pooi'.I t~~I;, Prt~~~,~ I ~1~~;;1~•\\ ... :u Ui< for 3ppl. l xrffi:sill~Rfl\~I READ\' TO BUILD I ~~ Gar, prlv. patio. yrly. 3 BR.'. 2~: ba., turn. sffi 5 $:~ J! .. ilo~:s~~:*j ' 1 B~O~E'~R:oJL'r~GE 1!('111 .i \\ulkui~. 1:cl·1-eat1011 [~ ---·-~' Sc.>ll nil or pnrt S2i5·2 BR. frplc. hou.~"'. WALNUT SQUARE BR. run1pus rn1, aC"t-ea'"'· &'6-1339 farlb1les inclucling lennl!I. 1 • ' ' ~· ·• " BR 2 ba lr \d •'It:\ SEABURY I ~ c· 11 40, 0~3 1 Call evt's aft 7 P~f child/pet ok. Cd~!. · " " " I\ eot · _...... $350. S.A. Canyon. Aat· Ftt .. Huntl-ton BMC:h 3740 $114_!,,..,. 11 ,,.....,,.,..,,, • • ' '.\lr Gorin TI·l-199-3111 NU-VIEW RENTALS 979·S43ll. ··• $39,500. [TARBELL.] Wa,l.~~.t~.Lee * * * * * 17"p Rf v ATE B E A cw· GT'.r-'11)30 ., 494--32'8 CL~ •• "'~"-~,=~"-c,---BR~,:-h.~~-.. -;.-·~.-~ NEW' o':U!l5~1~ '"'' •-·~ ~·u • f" '"'' • • ..,, '"' $239. per month ~ • li0Xl20' 101. Cyprus Shores REAt:T'i"2hrT-h.sc$2"J(J. Ne vi port area . Nr . L.ndry N v,5 anise w~u~~ * OCEAN VIEW* ROBERT DAVIS i11 .-:n11 l!l eme111e. (h1·nt>r 1 2 blk 0<.'f'an. D/\V, child ok. !ilnrlnt'r's PIU'k. Adults. rm. ev.'t'r P h ELEG.\NT .TR. E X EC. -. Fn:-m every rm. of th is lge, 3 1 Jnusl sC'll. Price $58.000. BONUS Rn1 & 2 BR $350. $375/mo. 646-9564 Adult Comple:ic. 2 mi. SO. of l11JOood!\fl-..'.111°1 1 ~11•J' frnn~1 111'•1',u11•,,~ 1920 S:...Co_nst_H_i\·~· L:J3.:.. HBl t., 2 ~a., fnn1. rn1. ho111"· I c'211~.,11','"r"1r;11l T('r111.~. l~ro!1t'rs, 61~12'10. 2 car, frpl. kids ,t, pr1s. l !;t Western Bank Bldg. PAI ER'tO r.1",,~_:>JeLn1<0 HBFrw)'84.;_.,.!!30l 1 o•c \ " cnnu C' Jf.: ---uge kL!. \l'/brkfst. lll'i'U; O!f, 1 ese i'\\'Ofcve! commercial lQl!l I l iNIQl.!1-..'. :; br ~-R S:J!ltl. Vu. Univel'llity Park, Irvine ·· 1' I ne ....,.., ' ' .i;-,.,.,., din. GLAS.S r: ,\I{ D F. N NE\\' DP..A~f,\TJC \'IY..:\\' 1 dbl. door entry. Pl'iv. bC'ach II 1,p! bh IS g r fr\ -1 Days 552_7000 Nights H~rbor Vu ,~lonu~s. 4 BR, Beautiful O•rden Aptl. kitchC'n, indoor laund1"'. 1, All r1>rh\d ext. spi'.'cl vu '.i\U . GEM \\)U !ll't" !ht 1\·inncr or on Loll J\IG nos, San ' 1 · n · ' llll y. F an1 nn 2 bit '>'·et bar ' -TWO FREE TICKETS l'k•n1C"ntC".Byo11mr,4924506. ALA Rentals 642·8383 ' J ' • 6 Poo.11 Tennil Sa nH.". 1\LL DE:-i' ~17.J·:: Baldy to oct'an. S1l1r11\ 1 ----Jn111111c., pool prlvl1s. $550. J'r1 · 1'.._I ·fndlvld~~; DECOIV\TOR DEC'OI! f<IAh'\\'llY, Rlass, beanu ,'-.:, 1 :ro.rTu~ti.. A1·e .. N.ll. lu the -~ ---,, ·-ti.W-592'.l Vllcy .... c. Ca. thniout! Assume f H A r!eck. 3 BR/3 BA/3 fpl. T{E,\LTORS 612-162:; Southern California Real Est1te Exchge 2800 * SPYGLASS HILi. * 2 bdrm.,~ b'\ •·••·• $3C013ti5 paliol. Nr. Ocean. 'I'cnific 1 +1~·r 11'111t1 hr.I. '11 ;:our1111•1 kit, huge gnm<'rn1, Lovely Harbor View I MOBILE HOME SHOW Spi'(·lnC"ular 11('\!.'s! No 613 bdrm., l H1 ba ........ $300 lLUWOR VU, 4 BR, 2~ BA, Deal. S.)6-1323'. $26.5:17.fpaymnti; onl}' s~::!I. >.:!ra.~ galore. S 1 ::i 4 . 5 0 0 . JlO:\IF ~lllnv custom extras !ii ISlh lh ,1 ~,h DESERT l\tGntcC"1to Dr., open Sat. & 3 3 ~·· 22,!"ba· · · · •• $295~~ I !u ~~i~=tt~~ bt!u!'!1 BACH apt, J..&rre. Very nlce. rnnn. PIT! 101o1·11er 111nv h1·l11 OPL:-J ~UNDAY 1-f> P'.\[ <Im' \ .. J 1 "'~ r· I . II ' 1 RY ru: 11Y ~• Sun. 1·5. Arand nciv C'XCC, .,....m., n ........ ~ ' ~ . ..,.... .. , . Re1ldential tract. So. ol f . .,10 . • , l30'Sk •I' ..... J •• ~ ....... 1pCY<&. 111 ntthc HIDE·AWAY home4BR +f1U11\ly i·ni 4bdnn.,21:aba ........ $4:5 pool.SUPEROecor.~lalure )'OU uuint •. '· )ou nu1nl .:> ) inc..,,,. llvln~ rn1. full din, rn1. All ANAHEIM STADIUM I , . ., CALL 552 7500 yard, Avail June, 644-4799 Hamilton near EdiJOn Hl&h, your ti•rnu;. O"N YOUR O\\N ,\pt. 2j 1 kl 1 . . ~ De _ I-I s • ,. :I hllth~. 2 frplcs. & patio. • Under prt~ at $lSO mo. RED CARPET ' J\R/2 BA fl c f'an tr on t . nlOl ~l'n 1: i::: 1'.1!Jl 'cn1: : 20CO Stair College Blvd. ,:11r .1 '1'1-1 Sol lpnng!i, Ballxi11 Bay Prop. 67:'>-7000 • v fSI ON • II.\'. <Bren) HomeJ, 4BR, Incl unUI 9611-69%>, I -· (I owe I sphCIOUS i::;unc t Ill. 1p\:;, A11rihein1 ....,.·sel ot pr n gs . . . . 2BA Spe tacular tlo REAL TORS SjJ,~1~-RIC \N°11~(J'\I E · dq111, 20X W en1e1"taining Please call 642.~iS ex! 333 ron1pletcly furn Is h ed 'I l::i\RL \ 3 Br 3 _Ba $400. lndaCPd. c i prlnkle:.· ~i:>. La9un1 leach 3748 11 lninil1•lll a1 Hushn1~l) l ' 1 ·HE \l.TOP · p11tlu. l n d;; cpd . aulo I 10 elaini your t lckei~ ; Ko~·ih r·nrta.gC' , :;Jeeps 8 . Price ) l>C'h~x~ <!uplex Kids Qk. Red Hill R lty &W-TJJJ fl!i2-3511 o!!l-1--513 I • 494-1001 sp111klr11, r('(' l1u1tl. 6-14-07S6 County toll free n ·i;nbC'r j;i 515,000. or. \\'111 C'XChangr, I LP'. J::L \ 3 Hr 2 Ba $390. ea l EFFIOENCY Apt• from $57 ---• 1 e1es, or 97'J.4191. 1 "ll).tiroi l 1.nrry P£1ster, p ET EI !\id:; ok11.y REALTY REALTORS WESTCLIIT Love Y 3 BR, 2 Week. Pool, m'lld, ph, lndl')'. SHARP _ SHARP [ IMMACULATE! I NEWPORT SHORES '' · B,\]{l~F:IT RE ALTY . R_Al.BOA Cove~·l •. Br. 2 B11. t,;111..,. Park Center, Jrvlne BA, crpt, drps, bltrui, Dtw. Vlltaae Inn 4M-!M3S ? Bdrni 2 bnth horn<'· .. Bd & * * * * * r .. 11-.i::J:; S::OO. Boat •lip. Kids ok. Frplc. Beaut.ya.rd. $395. incl N ~·--h · •LI • .. , .. n11s . den Homefinde * 642 9900 '&"a.rdenC?r . &il-+126. I twport DfllC 3,VJ' 0 • • 1 111.ndscaped, \\'ilh lge. trecs 1 \\'l'llk Ill f-2 u·N!T-5 E-A-ST-SID_E_ Real Estate Wntd. 2900 rs • 2 Bit Conrlo .••. $235fn10 Lsc ' I .. BR, 1 RA .. 11 ~ re11r .. 1.1 & ,,rick p11.1lo. Close to ne\\' lieHl'h pools & tcnni . -e SINGLJ'" !!ou.s.. .. 3BR rlcn 2 BR Condos ••••. S'.!&I le $Zi5 TOWNHO~tE LUXURY. 2BR, ·• LA P.ARISIENNE • horn_<'. \'(IU 9\\':'\ . TH E marina. llurry on thls one ' S4'1 500 :; j COST A MESA $175,000 \\'ILi. Trade 40 acres of ·" 2ba. b1rn~. ";/ti. 'ftpl.: 3 BR Condos , .... s~ & SZ15 Tri·le\•el ;fr-pie, enclosed dbl 2 BR Furn. Uts 1.A:\D, Con1'£•nt10nnl r11JitlK'· I st SJC>,500. CAYWOOD REAL TY Stf•ri 1111 10 thi~ 12-unit unin1!)roved land n ea r I y,·fgar. 1valk 10 shopg. &: 3 Bil Homes · $300, ~· $335 pr, 6"5-61<11 dayJ, e\'t'I All eltctrlc. F'lreplatt. Ill).!, I m·· ': ; . tl.~ SU..129 l cnn1plc.-.: 11·ith 15'.~ dn11·n. ,\lhuqUel'l'.IUe Ne1v tltexl\'O bch. 1\ppt,~· r,7::..2:.;;:n. 506 ~Bk llomes. S38f:!,$37~, $3f6 ' 99S-1S37 Jleated Pool. Adultl. $32 500 ,,;,;(; · 'f'W')~Y'1fhwP * 0 * Clo~e !o shopping. Q11·nf'r f•.11• equity in ~ BR ho1n~ 1n Larkspur $.11J lnn ____ ~BR Homes .. $3:\.a,$3.l)J, S4Zi •BRAND ne'w Tennis VUla 9'i'S-1268 ' ~·u MONTEGO MODEL 11111 ra1·ry 2nd. s20i.·, 111•" O_r11n1.:c County, C"llll jJ4-LOVEL'i" fnniily home. 3 l{A~i't.~EALTY 3BR'2\.fHA upgraded thru· Across from eolf coune. · I 1nt"On1l'. Rrd CRq>et Jn1·r ... 1· 9,9.57~1. BR t BA. f'amily nn RA ·~· E * out A1•all 6n sa:x>. 644-6483 »lJ2 Santa Ana A1-. I 4flcl 2Bll JJ •I· 9-,?-~" 1 ' •• ' N\..n RALTY " "'"·S•lt 499.2100.. l lwnis, 11 1 11l('fll 1' ~ion. J -~,1·"'· 2 OR 3 BDR:\-1 house 1 frp!c. On Po1n settu1 near * 506-6800 * HOUSE to rt:nt. Cllff Dr. 3 $35/\VK UP. 1 Br. 2 Ba • 2211 Newr;;,~ 1---. Lge lot t\l~XI lo g l'f!C'!ll!elt . 11 /exi~li~ll:!' FHA OJ' VA : QC('IUl. Sol'!?', no JX•1s. TUSTIN REALT\' BR, 3 BA&. ~I. $475 mo. BaC'h. Color TV, maid aer:. ~:,,.~ 646•lltJ11 : No Down-Brand New HARBOR VIEW lo_nn. Pnn. only. 556--0347. 61a-0367 • 8.12·5lll * &l:>-150'J. V pool. TJtE lltESA. 415 N. 1·.x('it\n~ l'OA!<llini> \'iC'\\' !l'otn REAHLTOYME83S.0780 Rb~PONSffil.E party '-"'ants I S3ci5. 2 BR l2 BA + sep I l~R NE\\' lrg J Br. 2 Ba. sis. Santi Anl 3280 Ne'l.-port Bl, NB. 646-9681 Sun/Eves.. l'<l1n1li·t·k~ orr hug1~ niastcr .r 10 huy hon1e for low do~·n 1 BA. Ideal for teen or in· Condo \\'f dbl gar.Univ. BAO-lELOR at Oakwood, 54 6- 4871 Ill: ~ /11111 ruon1 11·i!h Ue~n1 p:iyrnenl, 67~7679 IR\\'. Gara.cc. patio._ ~ll ln Prk. Cor ner lot v.•f prlv .. I 3 BR, 2 BA. Irr fenced yard: avail. from ~fay 9 to June l . ceilings -_C"xcellent location BLUFrs-.~ase option. \rHik _:fln~c. ,\\'atl J une 1. 613·.!91 frplc, 11·etbar. fom1. dln nn. Air oond. Elec air ftlter. Nr. s.a&-2ZS and fl nanc!ng to n1n ll.'h :.~our to tcn111s rourts Jron1 a I~ /1\1,\tl. June 10th, \\'lk to nook, ~ag cpfs, drps, .sU-cln ~I lle &J· Park. $275 per mo. ~~'=i'-------~.n=, bud;!e1. S:>!i,500 to $66,500. bt·uut. u1•11· .,C'nd unit on 1,c::r ;IJ I hC'ac h, 2BR .\: 1 h 11 . oven, rhshwr, prv pp.tio. Nr. &U--0565. S•n ClenMnte " JOB TRANSFER? [ <1nly 3 left, hurry: I i.:~cn .bel~." ~R. 21.~ b~. !~e ~t\'('/J'i'fris;:, 11·asheridryrr, rec t ntr 11• /pool. Jecuzll. Condos Furn 3400 Red Carpet, Realtors I p~·1v: pat.~~. u pg r a i.l rd , 48 UNITS $2ro, 67;,.7189. Call l\1/F, btlYn 1 & 2 BR, den. Also 2 BR. Both ll11·orce, rlelinqucn1 p11~·n1t~. 497·1761 $!8,300. 64.J.-(,48.~ H F I h d -, 5, 636-4120. wl \\·hlte v.·a!er vie\\', Htd JI i·ou neetl in1nJ<•dln1o· :lr··I POPULAl'f. }!arbor v-;1 ASSUME 51/20/o ouses urns e 2 BR, 1 ba. \.\-alk to bch & :>132 Alder, At ?-.tlchelson. BEAlITirULL\' furnished 2 p:.iol, ('n.rport. ln<lry/bbq 1!v1i, yvu nC'NI 111 cnH :--11·. I -M h B II Homes, Pnlernio, <113R, 11.e1 , , . ·i . ,. General 3102 stol'el't. Sunny tl';ra,"e. No $385 BR 2 ba m·erlooklng Lacuna Rreal't . Clo1e to bch & pier. Snit!C"r or ~Ir. Daly. onarc ay ~~ bar 2 frplcs Jovel 1 , 1 HI\11 , l.(>G\T!~:'\ ... IH'L< ~. pct11 or chUd . $29:i. 613·73.15. SYRACUSE f.lODEL-\V 1 Nl&uel Goll Co u r 1 e , -•~92~-l-"'100=. --~~---I I' Tht• 1~·~t in cnn:-ti't'e ll\'!ng. 1 n\nint. yard,' sid.! Y ~~ I ,1~ , < :.u,~;«n 1 "",,11 ~.d "'1~~1 '1"1(' Sl·l5·1JTIL Pd. Bach. pri.1· PLUSH Cd~f 2 BR home for Village. Community ~tu~ ~~ 0 ~.iall' faTc.EN•~•1~·. Apartments Unturn. 1 ~~t~~~i:is · l-~~!11('~1111 ~~· 1~:~:~ storage, 64~·4741. ·1 ~ ' 1 ~~i" ., b l"t; · LI 1Y putio, nu cp!s, drps. l'o. lense to r ight couple. $280. BR, 2 BA, crpt1, drpg, nr. 1 ' Full~"~ulppcd·WD, color I Balboa Island f62·447J { :::: J 546·1103 Jo.~: t (' r . la II ds Cll p i.n [: BAYSHORES l ~~I!;~~. ·.'ll~iosi 11 1~' ~:~;:Pl':. s~~~lrri.;~u;~i 1 BR lrpl n"IO., 6T.>-8839 sch\1, cul-de-sa~~ $410 per TV, etc. ~·/everything for 3806 111a1111a111o1I hv As<:0e1t11!011. o \\' N ER DESPEP.J\Tf:. 11ni1 F'11rn~ \73.1~ ;lt'r m11111h. g'ar hi•uut d~k 'una ' 2 BR, rumpm nn, [rplC', nio. 64o-ill4, 55 7800 K?'RClous, happy l l v Ing ·; LARGE 2BR, lbs. tum. or 1 ............................. ~ sw.r~IO . LI-:AVING AH.EA .• 4 HI{. ,\~kini.: •inly s:1T.i,tn.1· 6.!t $2:10.UT!L Pd. ~1:ilront' 1 1 f~cd yrd, 3 ~lk.~ to bC??11.ch. I ~~\Y 2 br 2 hR Un~v Pk S325. I Lease $375/nlG. tnclu~· unfurn. S375 mo., yearly, 2Hi Hunt. Harbour 1042 ! TURNER ASSOC. JBA + clen. s 6 J' 0 0 0' I !Il l~~. C'0111·1;H'I •)I salt·~ OF. r.u . p;il \(1, l!IU', vrlv. NB. I )r. lC'llSC!, $3j(), 675-JO. I. NEW 3 hr 2 ba Univ Pk S365. ' -~~ care. PltO."iE Cr>'•lal n.s-728-2749 ' -'-----ll()j N. Coast lh1'Y .• Lagunll G~Z-3491. , T111\l' ri 11vnn1 a .! t', C':1ll NU-VIEW RENTALS Cost• Me11 3224 3 Or 3 Ba + bonus Rn1 2 ~ty """'""'......, Capistrano Btich 3111 I·---------· 494-1177 llnrbor \'i('I\' l-lo1ne. 2 Bit ,\. 1 i··1 ·1i~''· [fi7J.-l030 or 49-1-3148 ~ MJ . fl. Univ Pk s4;io. Condos Unturn. 34ll _ 1 $1'£CTACULAR C'lif! drii'e r!en. Nicely lnrlsc11'i.l. J.c;i~i' $fl0 l RH. I l'I _1 C~t i I flEJ\LLY! nice Bach $110 Ov.flC'r 644-8813. OCEAN VIEW J BR, 2 BA, ~ ' 1. 1 0 n_plion. Own c r I Bk r .1 ~ · isc u 1 fl"• ' · 1101\l. Pool. furn.~ garn"". 3BR/2B1\f $200 mo. in * * * * * b·'-ny, crpts, d-bit••. HH 1«Jas1 1n1· "c11·. 1\'ll ~011r Bn !!lot He $100/ 1-IB .. -...... v • .,... '"' ~ 1111.11 11111. s39,soo. \\'allace f"., f>13-l!!9!). I , "' ! · mo. f,\NT.\SflC \. bt' n1obilc hn1 Culverdale nt 17691 Loyola, Wuhertdryer. 642-1155 . .._ :\1•fr, Hltl'. ~~9318 1 r 1 llOust' Sl.10 utll pd, Lllguna i $1 50. nu furn·mnture only. Irvine. &1rll03 or eves. I ROBERT GRISSON 1 C u. N t Hol ht 1070 R£':1<.:h. 01·r 1·lr.11Jks o c can, CO~IFY·L br 1tpl\' S15.i noi\ 67:)..201!1 • .,.71 VI J ,_ oronl dtl m.r 3122 I OCEAN V l-ido Isle , 1056 1 •w.por . g ' I S150. 1\B 11·fllk lo 11·atl.'r SIGJ. turn 11· s;:nr, pct & child. • I .w" e ICudO I EW JBI' 28 \ _, 1 ki1ls/(>1'1s. Ai;t. r c (' . st·.r; t•vlay! 2 hr ..,.,._ TURTI..EROCK. la11t 4 P lan Lapu HWs LOVELY 2 BR & Df'n \\':'!\'<' 11·utch111~ 111 >111 you1· BETTER BU LT · •· 1. uuung or n1n rn1, I DA~PO NT !li!t-S l:'.O. 1._, 1 ~ I 'lrl & ~',°"i... avsll 18741 Pa~ Corte2:, for '>''/ga..•. $300. mo., Call ciining rnorn. fiirl \1.1tchin:.: I lri; pool lot & 1v. $G2.000 . I __ •u 01 l.'ll pc· g111. appt 644·"683 m-4029 You art tht' winner of '114-537-TIO.J rruill \'Our ilrc.-k. :\lat:ie:l [).~111nt'd b:-· Rit•l-1111,.1 1..1 51'!--0:>20 &4&-15l<t0\\11rr. I D 'PLEX Lido Isle 3156 1 UN OELll::VABLE 3 br 2 ba 2l3-Q4-2l95 ' 'TWO FR!I TICKITS t1l<IHl<'r;1~ n1n 1,.rinl1!(• ht•l1'Jr" ~1·1itr;i. \\'Ide, ~lrC!f'I to rabulous Ocean Vle11·s S250. to the DELUXE new 3 br. 2 ba, all th1· fh'f' ln ~·our 1nhrl1ni pi! street .. 3, hrlrn1.s .. f~1n1ily rn1.: Westminit•r 1098 9 i'rii• Beautiful Duplexes LIDO LIVIN G. 2 BR, 2 BA. FP, Df\V, l11cd, pet & child. TURTLEROCK new 3 &c F.R. So h C II bltnl, lrplc. walk to 'holJ h'(}n\-.'J"~alh)n nn·:11 All th '" 1 + 1nn1d ~ rn1 . ~131,.000 S61.9'10 1o $73,9'.'iO A\·all Stu11n1er. Nn Pris. ! ALA RentaJ5 642-8383 ~1~·~kin rec a re a· MoB:LE'HoM:.Os'"HIOWa beach. S373 &. $395. 67J. · Int' $2li.:lk'I. 11·i1h p11.1 1111·n1s , NEAR EVERYTHING I t1nn1 S!l,'.'J)(l do11•n (';ill 121:~1 793-!W27 F\."l'SIDF. I Br $lli0 \7 nt · v' · I BRAND New. So Of Hwy. 2 l\k.1~ 1·1 n1. &•lh'r !1t11·1·~. 1 Z Bd1·n1~.. fun1ily rn1.. 2 VACANT 4-PLEXES -.:fOuses Unf urnished , :(_1;i.,~. Si~g!es & kicis :k".41 Turtlerock l.ovi>ly 3 BR 2 BA ~lay 18th thru f.1ay 17th BR, 2 BA. Frplc. Sundeck. HUNTllNGTON HARBOIJD I h1t1h.~: h1 1 • 1 11u1! 1 ru1 hnnd lriirl O~'t.:L'Svn· 1~~9~ S7:l,!l:iO ti} s9:i.!l."il [ HUltltY! 2 Br S190. E f,lrle. hflnt<', ten~i! ~il?°l p1·tvlg11. !1 ANAHEl'M""s'TADIUM f350. 673--4.ln or 644-6274. nr 11.i"" 1' 11u111·r,i· 1 P 11 klt('ht;>n .V. '" 1-~. -· ' Of/if'<' flr1•11 Dnily 1.:, General 3202 Llu·g.: yrtl. Kld11 & pell . S425/mo. ti7~'1'10"· NEW 2 BR, t bn, dl,;bw11.sher, I ~· 111111il; rn1. S~.500. I:: Bl~. dl·u. 2 ~i\, i1t·w cnrprt~' \\°1'"k•'nd~ lO·!i 111 1 \'AC,\NT 2 Ur 2 bn $18.i. Laguna Beach 3248 2000 Stntc ~2~ege Bl\'d. g11rage bea.m c:eUln•• cua- 1021 I <'01\~T ll\\'Y ;"' ~\nt, l\''~·~1 ~ov~hop,11.inl;, :r:.;61 <.:op11t!r l..nn11•r11 ALA RENTALS To11•nhs_e. Gar. K!di( & pr1~. Ans'"'·"! tom 1nier1or, 61l>{WJ98 '. 'ii I: 11.1r.-1'.\S4 & 21'.:: :til '.?.'lj •JY. c 01"'11• 1 • A h 1 111~' ·ll'·'.J.131 612· !!)(( Hom1f1nders * 642·9900 1160·lff!L PD NI 1 BR Please call 642•5618• ext. 333 • """",...,_,.,,,c,---,-.,=-'c~ Cttll 11nyt1rne "1 ' · ·> w1 »tC••uu 11<1 HMCI ' Cf' • to claim your Ucket1. (NOMh 1 2 BR Caragt Apt., refrla'., -• -t I SCOTT REAL TY n nno llurtnr Jn1"0nu· 1101111·1 1,:;;;~~;~ MESA VERDE huae fncd )Id, kld11/pets Counly loll lree number 11 : stove. \Valk to beach. $250. r.lUST !\ELL: 01\'" 2 '"''11c.~. Newport Beach 1069 5J6.ia,t1 VA_4_Pl-EX---f iit HOUSIS 3 br, 2 ba, top location -::_e.;0';,,.0Wood11S:!Nl&CE"'1 1""8tdR. 540·1220>. mo. 566-3127/SC'itm, Li.:c ~tud1n C'ondr., 1'()t111•r.,a.1 [ ·--... n J~ ,.,.. tlr.n pl!, fl•flll', p:olill. Af'i~·~~ 11 ... 0 1 110 .. -E •~ I I .t."s. Water & Gardener Paid ne&r be11.ch, No. end . * * * * * Cotti Meu 3124 wi v::i S:>l.JVU Acreage for sale 1200· .. _.._ .. .-.... DU,ls. I "25 Loooo. "' M28 P1·lvn1' patio . ....,"UT!L PD :i.t ll'l'.l1n l1t.•1tch; Pyn1t~ lil:r Pi 11·111·y Char11<'tt•r Ill I 11 ·1 ' lo ~ _.,.11, •d~I SllARP p k Udo $160 Up. 2 Br. 3 Br 1~ Ba rr·nt s2:;,2'¥1. Ity 011 nl.'1-. CAii Ol\l\('r lnfn & a .1 LAND OPPORTUNITY ·~ 1 :1.11.~u1na • t' 1 ' nn. NIWl'ORT & IAY, c.M. •42·1JtJ PltJ~1t ritesa Del t.tar 38-R; L1'1{ l Br, ~p. n rm, b\11111. · ar lO\\TlhouM 1 1 yrd , 2\'.l.:IY2<~20'2 j,q2.1:1;i11 fl .OC.ll ··(7l 1 lZS-.,'l:l'P ! ~lll 11to1Hh~f)('tl d abl C'. 111,ck. $27!,.CHAR:\IING 2 with built In tape/phono ~2·~)~ • cpts, dt'pl, Irvine -·-·-~. ()! •• l . J2 3 I A11p1~x 15 n~·1-e.~ \'lstfl 111'('/l, 011nr rs \l'ill curry 2nd . RENTERS! 211>1, ln1n111r'. C'Ond. r or I!!(', Br. frplc ho\UIC, So. Ll1.:una. SIM"OO, Ol11hw11.1her And er No. 1. 66-6583, l,;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:':0;4:4 ( !lOJ(.i;_ LOT . $3965 .. f>t'r ~err. fiOCI fr Ill &JO $7 .. 21)0 for 4.2 bdr'n\ unll~. S.'1'· iiur li'l!ini::~ uniler i'illl"!I. $.t~/1~":· \.(t & lui::t + $100. S.1:ll-NE\\'ER 3 Hr, 2 Ba, other goodl<!s. JBR 2~l BA 3 BR. 2 ba.1 All new decor I IlO~ION1'0RY l f! C'I~\. Ot>\elop lo liv11c11d11N vnly 4 ycers old. Red Car(ll't lli1:h or Loi\', lii" or 1.lltll'. ~N u_nt) & • C!n~ng dep. trpl~, dbl g:nr, Ir.I( fncc1 yd, noar pool $350/ruo Act. frplc,, patio, rlhlfl gar: FAMIL y HOME l~AY. }Cl'. Sacrifil'<'. 1 ~r c•1l ru.•. Or 21 ~ ncrc ran~h J111·c~1n1rnt Di,. is j 0 n. \\'t• li•Jt'tin or \\If' Ct't'eni.1 1\vJ111.J!i:2e_2::__.~l:i-6475. rhlldrn & pell> \\'l'IC. ~'"" 644--721 1 ! \Vestclllf, Adulll., 642-115!S In \'illll~r J, ll l'.1tll1ihle r,11 -~llJ,®. Chi·ncr 5.JS-9G9j I slle. LE , !179--2:>50. CALL US TODAY! 1 !<;11,\l'tl'. I RH, 2 BA, tl1('1Ut Viejo. ** NEWPORT BEAOI nr. UtG 2 br, 2ba, din rm, 1·lrw1• (If ~r·hool. ·l hdrn1s' I Pt).'J], & nn~t·~ in l)llck rrd I E_D RIDD Realtor. : I 1\l'T l'nitll on 19,600 !llJ fl LANDLORDS I llC'l 1\lnr hon1C', CJof;;(' IC) NU.VIEW RENTALS l;loes Ho!p, OCEAN VIE\V. cptldrp, stvtref, p_o_ol . 2'a hlitll~. 2 ln't"pl1ttt8. l(t)>1I 1\orth Blurrl' C"ontlo. Pmr. ~II or ~\~In 5-1.,-6~ I'll _ 7.oned C-2 Nf'\\lXlrl FEf: rHEE C"t1ll Uit T01l:1v'. £'\·er;. thin~. A1·si/ now, sr,o. 673-4030 or 494-32411 Bit.ANO NE\V tnd un1t, Adlta, no petl.$170. Su-3965. 1nrk t•"'nl ion rlt>:§t' ,,., JlO'il dt'f'"r .. 4 UH. 3 ba, lo SiO"H. 1 NEWPORT BEACH Bl\'iL. C.!1.1. Sf>411 mo lnt;nm('. ALA Rt ntals 642+8383 pi>r 111nn1h incldg ln!J'tlener . 38R/2"' BA, uprn.ded, on 1 BR apti a:! toe. $130-fltO ;i11.t ~1·11111.-; <!'.Uri~. $c'C! it f.14-111 n. i t.Si l\rn"t In C' x c 1-,1 5 1 v,. f:ootl ror r o 111 "'."r.r (' l "'l l'lfl·:J>: f"JtEE Coll Larry ~~ COZY Bech $150. Avall. arttnbo.lt. $315. G#-1430 Somfl lurn. No pet•. m• rrflffi}. ~)nly ~.cro I;: Rn . 2 12 bn. 1\'C'1v C'rpl~ ,\ 1 r.•111tr•. !\111gniflccnl l.k1C"k 1t1·1rl(lpn1f'nt. S 6 .1_, o 00 e Pnifi·1e,.lt)nal Sc<rvl<'t! e lBlt·2B.\-:-f'rplr. B 1 t. ins, lurn le utU pd, \\'alk ocean. I.GE 3 Br. Xlnt n!ll, arta. or 61:>--2333 bl\\'n 9 Al, bkr. CALL 552-7500 I ~Ul! th r u . 0 u t' 2006 ! 811.y I it'I\' hluff, rct ~~m11lf', o~.!:~.~-:-r~1ki:::._~2:Q~ *LANDLORDS* C(ontr11I alr. Nr. s.c. Plaza. PL~SH 1 ~r. o . Area $.21». Nr. s. Ctt P\za.. A/C, pool, I Sl00.1 sn 4.prex. clean. iJ I • VISION • I < om1nr1d,:1:;. H'I. yr• r 1~., 1_, I lOnC'!'I for Mn-•"~~ $2.if'l,OO). TR IPl.I-.X-~ood c .:.I lex.·. ,,I! Homef inders * 642•9900 A1·ai1 6f8. $300 1110. lit le f~R 11 ~pl~U~ &r atirid etc. Resp. &dill. $~-1 adult non-.moker. No pets. I $r~1 .. .()'1 111.,-fl,llJ;t or 8..~i O\\nf'r, 711-M&-la-18 [f no I 2 BR ·~ ., 11:11 1n~. 1u· ,.hopR. ('riJ!f 1 , 1 1st. ~'-2187 U. 11 ' br O er 67>7312. 948-A Weit 17th.~- • \lfJKll .• ~-;-!f,'lnlC' C:llbll.na & I ~\'('r~.nll a ft 6 r~r I \'['~\Gl :J{ H~~,\l,T,. ~1.:!_1 .!l~~r::ir ~r ... t:!lre"' \'AC ANT 2 Br, $t;:in, kirl~I :·. ~'Cvcl f)flllo, fncd & gar-I I.Sf: July I, 2 BR. Air. Pooi AR.AGE APT E. lkle Red Hill Realty put1n, 1111y v1"1'" Artuu,., J 1 Hi BE;AT,;T \Voocll>d flCt't'~" on I Ou1door sports 1M1 1111 ·:--:-w-1 Jl('I., Ali.o 3 RR JIB. $210. ALA Rentals 642..nlJ 1lcle. $235. or v.·f \\' & 8J'Oadway. 2 BR =· r:F:At,TY nY.;ALTOl~S ~~prt . Cnll 67~7275. r-our11y ro11d 11· Ir t ,. r r npJl('u l'.' S4-ll )'Otlr cqulpittrnt NB'1t 2 TB~' c:,;k c'1:J"h 2 Agt. f'ee. 9'/9.-MJ(). D, $250. 495-6.'l-46. alt 8 pm. n10. M&--2"3> ar fi46...3928 l.'11\\', 1'.1l'k °'"lt'r, lt'\ll'lf' 13IG CANYON CC. IX'1111,11t" lrornoge, $4::.0 per tit:, 11 !th _n. lov.·~sr D~lly Pilol r .,,(, romi)acoor', 2~t1r ~: .. ~ 3lln:-1BJ'll'r yard, In 1)11.l"k 2 BR, 2 BA North End. Clole Nl-.\VPORT CREST Blll·~lnl time? SelJ "Don't n1od . I BR, ff)('f'!. \lit\\'. ~11•1lC'r, 64~ _£11u;i;\hed Ad. &42-5678. 9"11 clean oven· $ l 7 5, 1tt1\n!(. $US. Avail. 6f l/i4. to beach, bul A ahOpplna. VI~. loictW 3 BR, 3 bl., all Med•" fut and eAI)' wtth \~Iii~ -641-5618 $159.000 611·Rl21 or (i~~-49~ ('LASS SY.;t.J.S -MZ-56'78 lliln1 (1a.s~irled ad. 6~2.5fi7it 6n-$'117. ~8-7437. Call 41"-7079 t:<tnu, $42$. nlO .. 6t2-3490. • Dail,y Pllut Oata1Ded Ad! \ ' • CA ill d " f " Ju "' A• ~ 2l " " c & 213 d A ' b D • A ' N s E J ,,..,Ill,\."</, !Ill ) 1.J, •~I I '"'" f r '"'J' .(of :Ae•rlmtnll Onlu;n, 1, _A;,:i:.P•:.:rt.;.m..:" .:.'"o:'.:.'..:0:.:;.:.:1.::u:.:rn.::_. Apt1 '••n/Unl\lrn )fOi Olllu Rontol ' '4-00illGO""~iiii~t.iiii'~~'"~~~~:O:~'il~if~ii!j°~P~•~·•~on~o~l~•===J5~3~50~/°5G~o~r~do~n~l~n2L==~ 6045-Jo W0ntecl;-Fmli07~ Help Won1td, M&F~· Cost• Me11 3824 La9um. B•ac.h 3841 NEW OPFl~l!s -r JNN:Uil l!. j ~~ COLLF.CF~ fr11JnC'1I i,:an:\1•n('r llOUSESfITINC by \L'lh.:.he1·. _;:.. _____ ....;..;..,,; BRAND NEW IN LAGUNA N'"10UEL \ -y,•ho \11 proud or h~ qunllty \VIJI ..... lllC'r 11!1nl~. t:lt' y,•h1h· Spectacular, N•w / / "ol'k. C•>1nplch• n1,11n1. <1r you 11re n\\Jt)'. f 21 31 NM Ocean Vu Townhouse$ VERS "ILL£$ Only 42c per s,q, ft. -..fafanpt·I 11ww & "'<IJl;e • ~lc.i11u1»1 ·Ivy 447~3861. llP~·lt(•fcrcnct"~. All POSITIONS AT A~M~S 1, 2 & 3 BEDROOM \\Jatk Ill beoi•h, 2 UR + den M @ ft, ft UP. All utU Incl. Bullnlll Oppor SOOS \ I-j d n10 .... '1(!. NEED t1elp at honll'? \Yl' Split Level Apts Unf. 1 + wrt bar, 1Uc !)lllt08, frplr ,' Ci'pll, dr,io, a1J', "-'trbar. I Bt r;t;Q I< ~1-; S.t9-2flW have a11lc~. ntlt1lri>, h~k11r ... OCCUPANCY JUNt; 1 j l'u_r.toni. l..''":'I•. drpli. ro--ON 111~ l.AKE 2i~9'l Carrll'.ID Ca '•trano * * * * * J /. { Lawnc•r• by "l G~s " I <..'Q1npru11~lfl1>, llu1ncu1ukel'!t fl'"i1IUJ'i11w: Lofl ll dr In R. phlUlC'l!I, $130 per nio. Pllo~t ~~.=t f!:ll ·av Av~" .~J!·a~"orf. t:LKE KEIL irl'ltc. ay. ·~1·k!y!ttrv1('~U£!..~2 9'1()7 Uv.J'ihn ~7--068-~1'-. --- HtU-t.'llU ul fo~n1pluy11wn1 fl.1i:ency tT'l!lc's, r: e rnn1 I c 111t• 1 K-17--1871 1. Jiu.iw:t. SIXtCliu.'Ular 8 p1 .. 1600 ltnt Sanlll Kot• G• 1"•1 Sorvlcts 60_46_ Help Wanted, M&F 7100 ldtclw..·n11, F.XPOSl;:o IX"a1n 2 BR oc-enntront 11.pt ln oh.I Arre Lake 1i.'/Towerlnw ____ ;;;c,c,;.=---Coil.a rtles11. Dr. Frank Kreitler ----""~-------100% FREE cclll11i!I, t'nclol"t'll J)t\flos, Svanllh Vil111 . 13cll'.m ceU, ;'ountait11 • 1,i ~UIUon Dollar 1 \\'{' n1ay only 11ty 11 on1..'t' a PLU~1nl'Nc, t:LEf'Tl{ICAl., * * * * * 1wl ' n11Jny o I he 1· tr11I(', rrlv. OOach. Ma.ny Clubhou~. Gyn1, B•una, Yoo ttre 111~ wlnnttr of I y~·ur, hut "e l<n<' rou t•V1•ry C.\!lPE.'NTR\'. No JOb IOll L't)/lvenlt'n1·CJo1. 1 tN"r11. J>rt>fer couple or 1'otnl Secur ity. TWO FREE TICKETS d1ty? 1-lappy Blrthd.1iy frurn am1H . r It B llon11! JUJpuir, llAR\IP.V HAHDISON Co'1 Pay All 213 Avoc•do, 1 islngle udull. S 4 So I mo . lntmodlatc> Occupancy tci the Cal'ma, J~·ff. (' n r I t'" n , IW.~1403. '7~ lluds(ln &::rtfl Agency Fe11 Cotta Mesa l._!UN Leitie. 494--27tll. AOUL TS Southtrn C•lifornia 1'lmn1y. Alina It l't1•pht:-o\'I . 11ori1E nEr,Am Costu ~tt"sa ''SECR ETARIES" NOltnr END. 1BR.11h Bl~ Sorry, No Pllh1 MOBILE HOME SHOW ~ CarP'nn·y. ?lun1bltli: Off The Beaten Path j ~k':.!.o~~~:~.~ .• ~~o,r~.~.·.Oyt"etl··,,·.~ a1,ch11or,.171J, l & l Br '•· Mfl HIU1 ,thl'U "h1y :l7th LONELY IBACl lF.Thill I J·:IC'('lrll'll. J{etill. r;GJ00-1 r~OI ~R~E w+ICK~rs ;.~;,,',,.;,~i,.~~~Ry;~ lnokh1<~7f~ . 1 h'a' u. $:!l~i. i"·:'id utll1:1. rom per mo. et the &fnla c1u1('uR 1111 ext>t·ut \'<'.1 f'Oi\S"!' 110:-.11·~ f!EPAIR l!i lh<> ..... 1 ... ,.11. eli,U"ml"' hu .. u;. 'f11 ~ .... Santa Ana *Deluxe Off1'ces * EIM STADIUM 11we 50 yr5. like•• hr1tnt'.1 CarpcnU·)', Eli:1·. Plumb. s th c Ill nl• ,.. t Spac\ou• Aduh Gnrclr l\plM, '1!l4-12Jl M<.·l:al life. iravc-1. \VouJd • 64~11197 e OU ern a or 11r.rk 11s h s llCl"r'' ary • l.uxuriu~s shn11 cu ·pu111 2 ll R. NE\\'. VJE)V. Frplc-. 3700 Plaza Dr• u1~~11S~~/~~e lilvd. hke to ml'<!t \\'01nttn, uat> HANDYMA .,vilh ',. u r", MOBILE HOME SHOW \~·/pnpuhtr N.B. loc111 lnn. • Blt·ln• 111r::I Ol11hw hf'r Deek. f;ncl. GW'll~te ~. 714-S5"°466 For lea111.\ 384 1iq. Ft. Ploaae t'Mll 6'12·!i678, ext. 311 l111m141t•rlt1l. r:11rrlttLCC · 01111 tnoli. $5()-S\OO per day. ,\la) llllh thru 1\tay ZTlh ''Record Co'' $600 * I .• ': ~rl)~o~ i~:~~~~ iQ'1 !.;veii. 83()..9001 . comm/business. l2 officc..11 to cla.l 11 your tlcke1 1. !North n1!ndcd with ri~ht i1·unu1n Call (Ii lot I f>7~72'J. 673-0:?\3. ANAH E 1'Mt1 thS,TAD I UM T01> ik1ll s qun!lfy y!>u for thh1 ;~ plui f('ception nruu It. Cow1 toll (l'('e nu1nbcr 1:! 'l'/\11> ad J)('rson1.il to tutt i" 6011 , , . progr1•J11S11v1• ('(), 1n Ur1tnt:t~ l (~A; il~~;1~~7f;<fl~i Mesa Verde 863 ,. -~torttge), Adja<;enl I c:i 540-l2'!Q L ('J;\l'<l 1ia\·1le11 cinly. Pk•:t11l' Hauling 2t.o1 ~I.I!(' Cnll1•~1· l!h1I. t 'LO. ini·olvl'd 111 php ?\'('Ord ~bv Orange County Airport. 1·all ;\·lt'. AlbC'n, 997.!Jl..i.'Jl. A11~h~·11n .. ,., fli-IU Jo:nrl. CRr'l\~rt. e llO~tE AT~lOSPl-1 RB ,. "',.,. Call 546·8801 * * * * * I MASSAGE & SAUNA 11.iulln~ $HI ,>;.: up. r-.tovinJ:, Pll"IH•" t·all !.ill·[',r,78, f'!lll. .t .. LA MANCHA APTS. Deluxe 2 le 3 BR. Rcnl.al Ofc , h1o..·1rl ,-:i: ? Y11rd, gnra"e to 1•lulm ynur !lf'k .. u:. jNnrU1 "Finance" $650 7'18 St.'011 Plu1·1" c.rit. J()IJ:l M!it:.'t Ave. S.~1034 2 RR . Townhou.c, f-lc, *Deluxe Off'1ces* * PARTNER * (..,t'tt!I room1, v I 1•" • ti n I «1(•:111\JjJ. Bl~ f I u I IJ c rl . Countv toll frt (! number I' I td ' 1/h•-r h"-:-id on !>lr11t .. hl &12·1007 •IH I n!moJ11phl•1·1•, TV & l<•Urll(l', ]{f'llt\ble 6-1%-4032 ~H>-l:!'J.01 "' 1 1 C• . ., frorn $~. I Git, from $195. Call Oonna et 91i'.\-l:!.t7 .-' i·;,n l"'~'i'ltll\ lor st't' Y 11') CAJltfRF.E lownhoUM! llv· Newport Stich 3169 P 11 ool, tonni11, oontinen~oi~ for Lease, 384 sq. Fl. CQmm/ LITE MFG l!<lll9 Ad;itnll Ave lint~. !l(:h. 'l 1\ It D , garart:l' c!eMTups, * * * * * hu.') \ lP •rl N.JJ. )fgnil Ing. 3 BH, 21,11 U11, pa11ld reakftu1t. Separate f(l.J11il) buRlnl!IS. {2 ofllcc• plus r"· . ' 1~move t!'Ct'•. dlM , l\'y, po!1•nt111J. den 11('\\' dq>ii & 1'11JI~ llC!C~l()n, CJQM to ihoppln& ceptlon ·-· • •tora•·> ..... Active \Vllh $2.J,000 c;~h & PREGNAllll? rl r l v (o \\' u y s. II t ump:i. J,\\l;n pool, ··h1hh~ & rt•r: CHANNELFRONT A tine be.-ch 644-2611 . • ... Gt " " l!lan~~emcnt 8hi11 t y ·1Car1ng. (' 0 n r I <.It' n Ii a I 1 M7-2&il.i. ACCOUNT ING "SPECIALS" 1 ti' CO l!n l!l'lt 6'1.r. Mi):> I '> R 1 .... ' jaCE'nt to Orunge Co u n t y Sturt1nw: $300. ~ k, & cquu.1 1 CQunRling & r 0 r f' r r u 1 . • 1 iu: !I. nv i . .,,,,., -! -rt, uu . Room for bo4tt. Air1K>rt. i;harc of profits. Should Abortion ad '' p t ion & I WCAL niov111g & hnullng by Sf'«> VP $1.l() or 646-3.Wi • $375 Un!., yearly. Roomi ~ 00 C II 546 8801 l'asily n('I part)' JiC'IC'ch·d k , · s1uctenl. I.<1rge truck. Rras. S6•" I BR in ·quicl -t -plc.'(, WALK TO BEACH 0 a • l)\l!'r _$35,000 1st yc-nr. ~lust A;~1~7.: &i2-'l·IS6 1 Barry, ~i:11-1z.i:; or 5.19-94311 CLERK :'llfi.:. ~ .... ·~ ~· On1rty11.rd11~1~1'otl11~1" 1 IPool ,t 3 P.dnHs., z baths. BALBOA 111. S20 v"k "-'inter. 1501 Westcllff Dr. bl' \\'llllnl( i1•orkcr & l·.Z lo , . li10VING? Loc11l fu111. or 1-'.\t'l·. l\ll'd $6511 juc:ux:il. ""., . t"K: < s a! Yew'iy lcaso. $3~ l\1o. ' $25 wk iummcr. Shr Ba & NE \V p 0 n. T F'lNANCIAL gl'l ulone ivith, \\' r l t r INCftl::~SF. )'OUt' .1:ustl1n1·. 1·3 g('n. haullnA'.. ;12 !\. hll'TI. U.111k St·L ·~ $650 uli1'1, rcfriii lo l'J\l•l ~11r. kllch. Qulct 'mature ll\an. CENTER 1·hu;sif\et1 ad No. 124, Dally C\Jp lllll:'IO 111 ~ \l'kl'. 1:u \'an. r.12~05:!5. I C' 1 , St , WJO Adht Ill} P<'l!t 3 9 3 0 l 3 ' I t ,~ "13 Pilu1, P .O. Box 156(), Collla <'X('rc!I01!s, p11ds ur ::.:ir11111lt·ks Ut ING ND Two vears experience In r,n~' ~ ,'<! Y .. u 1·1 645-4411 ·· · II llS·:, l~H. -ha, l'fl · '"""" Leising office space r.tesu, Cullf. ~26 for Al~SO a.istvin, fltt ing. LIGHT .HA • A., 1 , • i\lcU. ~·c )' S60ll ~·11111 ton. · ' (',,,. •"''· "111·11, $100 MOMS •~ ·wk up, w'ith CALL ON-SJTE 'IANAGEI\ MOVING LOCAL/OR ••ral ff< prefer -.. " .-" pel'sonal <;Onf ldcntlttl h<1lters/11v.·in11v('al'. Juanlln, ·• 1• · 9e,..., o I e, • ,1 ,, 2 Ult, bltru. C..'f/)\ll, drp11. NI'. Alo111h, Y('nrJy. kitchen; $30 wk up apt. 1714J642-Jlll Ext. :Z.16 lntervle.nclutlc p:.onr. no. 8:!2~27'1. • &l.>-8·19.> • •bly Accounting. High BOOKKEEPERS ~·11te~~~h 1J~· w~~l~~~i ~111 . r..is-9T:J5 or &1~7. Ot'l"JCE' SPACE: r o R & best Ume 10 c-ontac·t. SPIRITUAL Rl':ADf:rt Housecleaning 6054 'school grad with fig ure '_'ConStr F /C" $80~ c. 01. $ J 6 ~ / ~1 o. Summer Rtnfelt 4200 REN"f. Costa Mesa. 11arbor Money to Loan 5025 Oocn 10 A~1 to 10 Pl\t · a ptitude 10 key by Sti'011" background tn cornrn I J;;ddy, 642·8181 <.lays or at Adams. Be au ti tu l • Advice on all mal11'ri. HOUSE OF CLEAN t h r' ht t ping a nd &. apt <lcveloptnt•n!. New 614--13.19 l..'VeS. Furn. 11ouse $250 mo. June modern. Air, mu !Ii c, 93{ OLO 312 N. F:I Crunino Reul Carpe\1, \\'ltl<io"'''• floorll , kouc i ig r d t .1 firr;. t'lo9e In l 1' v I n c 16-Scpt I. All utll. pd. 2 or 3 jani!orial, Class A. \Valkf't' 74 7C San Clemente. ror 11.ppt. ui,hol. Spi't'tal l'!lll'!I for rt•g, een nterest n e at s. C1in1p!cx. Abll' 10 assume :/BR, 2BA, ocean view. ,,. __ .,._..,..,...,.,.,., bedrooo1, patlo, dt."!l, l'h & Le<.> Bldg. Call Gene Jlill, Call 492-9034 492-8136 !Wtv. 64:.!-682·1 Good co mpany benefits. full n·sp. lftihwsht', rcfriA:. 1; r Pl•• PARK NEWPORT ml . to OOach. la Co11tt1. 557--0136 or 6-1~. I ~ONEY AV.AILABL. E l p 'd h lth /l'f · s r ti-S"" JBtt/IBA ult M ... ~ . 111ous1·:C:.1..EAN IN G, o 1\· n a• ea . 1 e tn u. -"Finance Bkkpr" $750 i .,... 40l.t , APARTMENTS cSR St. CM.~ Jox~cur1VE SUITE for .2nd T.0 . s on StnitlC' d k . . . . Cdr.1 • Nr. & .. ch. 2 BR + Overlookiiu• N,B. Harbor, GOO ra1111l.y, Duplexes, Lm1ts up u '" •ppt'< 1180 979-5099 -'""" I I~ I tJ·ani.p., Cal,! nfH•r ~ Pl\1 ance, va cations in . •.•c ,\"t.· to ,·0 thr<o 1·s. H·~ $175 LRG 2 ~R . ._2 e 1 A. B&ch~l~~ Tl ~-~ ..... ~llUI gul'!ll "'.rv w/ pool " .,,... U, also ... others 600 10 1300 10 J6. 714-833-1909. S.W.. and~ 645-75411 leave. Call for appoint· L'Ort!ltr e1.p. Som t' on e Jnun.c 11, .u••t p l'~ fi'l'U uw1""'_... ba t J 1 "~ k ~ ~iiiiijiij Poo'ntlng/P•perinn 6073 m ent : \\'/land dov. or CPA · ... · · f'l'. $19-1.50 Open M Daily ca n~. v u~ -.......,. w · sq ft. Ceotlnela Bank Bldi. Mort, Trust Deeds S035 • hckgrnd ~'Ould be ideal. t ehlld ok. No Pets. S Pool Te:nui1 I 615-T.a; on Coast Hl\-'Y & Ne\\.-port _·.::,:.<..,;,:.;::.:;..::=;..:..;.;;;:,;;,I 1JIM LltS&ll ... Apt t M9-3M-'. ~t'Olli tro1n tash'ton lsb.nd 2 BR, frplc, 2 BA. Nr. pi.rk, Blvd. LOANS UP TO 909/o Babytittinp 6008 PAINTING&: Repair, 35 yrs l7l4l S4().4020 "Constr Bkkpr" $100 2 BR 11~ r.-...t !I d""' be ·~ k 642-4&14 1 Workmanship {.'liar. 'fake PRIMARK ( • ' .......... 'I'"" at Jambor~on SanJoaq\ll.11 Pa""rkh ,':,.""'6 ;r.""73,w. 3606 st TD Loans LET your kids spend the 11.(.h'antaga of my exp PRODUCTS tldiv. IV/b ckgrnd itl hltns. Single !'l!ory, I'Wan\ ililll Road ~ 67:rv• * l ?.10. FREE RENT * summer on the b@ach, 1 S36-70J6. l11Vt'A1mn!JI, RE, or con.tr. a clngi;:. Snl£!Cfcd pct Ot\. (7f4j '""1900 Vacation Rental• 4250 No /('ll&Q req, Dix, oHicc!I, Jovl.r1f cori• on ScAshorc 1 _ , COMPANY mu1t. Stable. Does nm 646-924.'\ Ol' ~ BAYWOOD adj. Airporter Hotel. 55c 2nd TD Loans Dr., NCl\'fl0t1. Chll 64S.70C.7 QUALITY 1..0\V cc 1 26:.!0 s. S\l!l:'lll fl('t't"SSllrily hR\'e to be F /C. IJEt...UXE qull't 2 br 2 b:1. APARTMENTS FOR rent on Po.drtc Cit Hwy Sq. ft. Incl. AJC, full ar1 6 pnl. Rl'sitlcnt111l or comm. paint· Santa Ana, Caht ''SPECIALS'' 111r, 11r S. Ot Pia~ & OC In lluntlnl,>10n Bch tralll!r services. 2'1'12 DuPont nn. 8 C ~ 6015 ing. Exl.-lnt. All or pllrt. uirporl. Adult.it. $19 ~. to Pl111e Adults , • • ll]etps 3_ $5(). Per wk'. 83$-3223 f9 Iii noon ) Lowe1t ret11 O ra nge Co. areen er Call L_vlc, 642·1569. ti-16-8.119 an <'qUJ.tl o 1• port uni t y F /C l\lruiuf. $700 :~zm. '.!BR., 2 BA, adult apts. now Responsible iulults only. DESK •pace available $50 Sattler Mtg. Co. Turn Your Gantge Into a PHOF. palnter, hnne!<t \1'0rk, employer 1 (;al Ok: $000 LG 3 UR ftp!. 2 BA, 1i1•1·, a\'ail fro1n $.'l:JO. Sales Olfit·11 548-4087 mo. \Viii provide rumiture 642-2171 54s.o611 nice Family Room. $850 up. l'eas. Jnt1 ~xl., free e!<lin1atl'·.1 ;:::::"':' :' :::: As!il Bkkpr $500 do1~·n ttalr'I. fenced yd. SlR:J. oµcn 9 am to !l:SO pm d:tily. Rent•I• to thire 4300 at ~ .. mo. A n awe r I n g Serving lfarbor ~a 24 yni. 21l yrs exp. ~18-7637 eves l'tefs. 5-lS-2759, 642-39\J. \ n10. 1st, last & cl~an up. 64·~&J5f). Lo c at c d a t Mtl'V1oe available .. l 7 8 7 5 ADD, remodel. 1tlter, tranie I P!WI'' .. wllllC!>vering, state 1 C!'!ng Clrk ~ C11ll 54~. l Baywood Dr.. off Sa.11 3BR furn houlC! to llhr in J-f Beac.h Blvd., Huntington llSJ I I: finish stores, offlcet1. Ile. No. 279514. Jnsur, all Account1n~ rns. Biller .,..,. Nit. New l Brj lil\llli, crpls. Joaquin HUI• Rd., NB. 8 $85mO il beach Beach. 642-4321. l Lott Md Feund 1 homes, 9GZ-l001. types paper, 7141842-4..186. 1\led Hkkpr $5SO 1h1'5. pool, trJl , gar. Adults, * • BAYFRONT·charmln", fi;cd yr;i, in It;lc~ gar'. 01-'Jo'JCC: SPACE unique 150 GENERAL f'ORMICA P.lAN r· REE EST. P lt 0 1-~. GENERAL i\Jll Cll'rk $600 no JX"ls. 376 \V. B11y, C?.1 lrli( 2 UR, 2 BA. plu11" 536-0002 Ill· ft. space downtown s & B Entrrprises, C.1\1. PAINTING. tN·r • f.:XT. OFflCE ''RECEPT/G. OFC" Dan. Point 3926 crpling Ii drpti, 2 car ' W 1 LB b'llna Beach 492--0160 c II 61~ 24"" 8 1 5 • 5!17.-4274 • uurkin&, pool. ANTED mature 8lrtt. p;~t Lost & Found 5300 a ~ '" 0 • pm "R 1· · t'' $500 " I to lh 4 hi' h & t I C S I 6016 PROFESSIONAL Painting \\'c hnve 11n Opl!nin~ ror a tctp ionts SUPER ~ SR Ai>IL ere.it Watch the bo•lJS sail by! rna a r i.e u 1 • Buslnes1 Rt,,til 4450 arpet erv ce . · bo·o'ght, •-•· u·c ...... ,.,,,,,,, Crea..'· N.B. 1pot w/lot1 ol SU~ M.l'all. $5~/mo. Ask tor Cl to bch, HB. $100. CALlt' ANJ/.fAL CONTROL Ca ll for frtl! e•tima tc. "" .,,,....,, b ,, Mana I{• men l Cmi> 962.8668 H · S JOHN'S r~-....t I: u ho! I 8,3:).0609 An lime to handle accounts payable ac11vJ!l<'. un U10Y u'tlt desk. 493--014.1 ., " usly", fl75-8ML . NEW LEASING untin1,'1.on Beach hellf"r I ..._I"' p 9ll!n' y <ts sis tance, s111itchboard \rery hit> typln&" &; lots ol . '11 38lO OIOICE locat io n In YOUNG man~ to lhattVJE'\V. ~l Oblapo Road, ll5ZlBdl1tOnSt.~Tall Ori Shampoo, (Soil INT/EXT PAINTING relil'f and miscellaneous phones. Fun1 job! Eastblu Wetatclitt. Lge t &. 2 Bdm1, 2BR 1pt, C.t.J . w/~male. Dana PQinf. 2 story, ortlC'C'i>, rRack of 1-l~manl! Society) Retflrd&tnts). Degrt>Me!"!I & All Orange Co. Jim 675-35&.I be crpts, drps, pool. Adult1, No ~7 aft !IP~l. suitable tor doc ton; ' Anlrnlll ~111tanec League all car brl(htenen & 10 ~ting u~~~:~ng. ir.;~f s I ' •:M~ Recept'' $600 e DE LUXE • pe11. liOO A Uedtcrd Lil. ~lALE TO PIA.R.E bea.ut. denUsts, archile<:li, etc., Adop~n. · 1 11 pa Y ~!l.,.1'1::13 & mi nut~ ~eat'h ~ ~~~~ * Wallpiper Hanger * and have t year's pre\·1011,, r ashlOn I1l!lnd l_oc. Work for 3 DR, 2 BA 1p! for lee.sl'. 646-60'75 1i ('1\· bcacti home, Sll!l 1ocl, BlOJ'fS, boutiques. Excluslve ~~G\.f~n 1°M";oUNo1D ~~ving ~e ~tra trii>S'. C. Rebko • 646-2¥.9 general oUlt·e expcrlenl't'. bu:-;y pedlatrlc110. Able lo lncld spa~. mv;tcr 1u!lt, din BAY VIEW, 2 Br, 2 ba, Su~ ulil. S. Laguna 499--4329 non com p e Utive area. Germ. Sht llr. Pt. L/W, i\l \Yill cleA.n living rm .. dining Pl1.1ter/Rtpa1r 6077 Please apply· h:l ndle frnt ofc. U>ts ot rm &: dbl ran~e. Auto door let llll ()l;:t. or ! Park QUIET female to llh!U'e 2 Br ·Occupancy end o( 1974. lrish Selll!r, Red. fl!m. rn1 .. & hall $15. Any rm. · ;i,(·tivity. Bkkpng & billing opener 8\'all. Pool & Newport $349.50 mo. Furn apt near ocean. $1U.SO incl 0 w n er I Broker, Boston Tl'IT. BJ\V, rne.le $7.50, couch $10. Chair $5. 15 PATCH PLASTERING Standard Included. Recreation a.nJft. Adult~ on· or Unfum Al\1'• ~286. util. 61l-48ll Wllian <TI4J842.-0'ieO. I..ab mix, Blk. pup, fen1. yrs. exp. l.s ~·hat counts no! All type1. Fl"l!e estim11.t1<s M . I ··~a riety'' $SOO ly, no pet1. Pl-I: 644-80&1 ' PM '• 6.w...8565 Allan Ger-I for Ront 4150 00\VNTOWN t.a.,.,•na Beach AND OTI{ERS, 536-2.113 ml!thod. I do "'Ork myself. Call 540-6825 emorl&S, nC. NB I kl f e $307 e 1 c..:c.'-'~=""'='----·-1650 1 •p-· k. Good ref. 531--0lOl. ' .. ore: oo ns 1or sharp LASJ'BLUFF 2 BR, 1 BA, --=--------! itore, sq. t. ar 1na: SUBSTANTIAL HOUSE $2-4.!Q Rooin $4. h1 & L PL/L.STERlNG A: All ,\ Subsidiary of person who can he.ndle some 86.1 ~=edW'b~: NR fr,1lc. new crpta, pool. $260 MINI WAR!HOUSES NEYlPORT I: 17th St .. Colla REWARD Steam houSC' $39.95. Uphol. types of pla1ter\ng APPLIED MA GNE TIC S lite figure work &: typing. \VlLLlA?.1 \V1\LTERS CO. ~~i~~u/lS. no peta. Call N STORAGI '.\1esa: 1100 "'1· lt. store, pkg. For Info i.eadlnK to !he Lie, ina, gUar. 776-5170. 64&-694 9 mt f.O~~ St. ~;:~1~ act u rcccpt. H • 8 h 3840 o lttove-ln « Move-out , recovery of a larac n1odcl 018 Plumbl"g 6078 San!a An.1 , Calli. 9270-1 · untington eac EASTBLUJ'f'·Lovely l BR. <.itAt¥ctl. Frgm $7.50 per CORONA De.I ).Jar dellLxe boot belonA:ini to the R1.111ty Ceilings 6 ''SPECIALS'' i\dulti, no pet. $115. Shu\\.·n month. suite, 325 sq. ft. Pelican Ilci>laurant. No 1t \VILLARD PAINTING * L.R. OTIS PL\ThfBING An equal opp or tun it Y New LuJCurious F1mlJy by appt. 640--0349. Hwnilto"" Newllnrt St., l·m Rea.looomics, Bkri. 675.{;700 que.5t.ions aakcd, 'NC iusl New A(Xluitical Ceilings + ~modelid~ ne~4· Water employer ~~~ F/Orc Apta.17 Unit Complex. Avull . ALLSPACE NOW LEASING~ \l'an1 it hack. Cali etl N"paifl. Drywall & \val! d:~::!!b.·':~'is,,~;~t'~ ADMITTING Clrk. p/t ~ GC'ueral Qtflcc for immed. occupy. Cl<Mie lo Sin Clemente 3876 1 960-1970 Mesi Verde Dr, Plezi 64:l--3431 anytime text, patch plutaring. No. B/A. Complete Plun1hing n\les ,.....1'!1Dnnel dept lloag P..C'cl'ptlon1st new llunlin&"ton Ui!r1tch Clv•c -ON-LY A FEW Office Rental 4400 1525 J\fcsa Verde Dr. F..<ist. L.Oif Alten.d Male <;./IT. 281038. 642-5715. Service. Lie. 772694. H ···,"t NB , Clerk Centl'r, bellch, liChtXll• & Ideal torReslaurant, Uuuor, Grey w /blk bold ah'tpe:ti, C t/C I 6019 ospt a' . . KcypW\Ch shoppi~~EA·run 1Nr. 2 BDRM. 2 BATH & NEW OPTJCE • Two room• Drua; Store, Service Shops, Wht . chMt _&. p11~. An~1vs emtn oncrt e Pool Service 6079 All Shllt.i Open Loan Procts.wr • • tl''.'"' t~"roon>• : l~DRAI, 2 BATH Apts. 15. ?'. 1.S ~ lD 1' 12. Alt & Deluxe OffiC'e Space. to Tiaer. vic. Bomia V1:>1a CONCRETE Patio•. Patio Cleani""'S start :it $12. I VACATION$$ • "" util t d 1100 tract 837-883l ·~ PART·TIME ADMINISTRATIVE e DI l"IM l'tlflm QUII':T. NORTll SAN 1 iea pai · per Call 545-4123 · Covefi. Qualit)' worli:. Reas. Compfett' t' e pa Ir s & e Dix el.t(!trlc kilch('ns CLEMENTE AllEA . .1-·1nn month. Colt.a 1'1eu. area. COSTA MESA FOUND: Smull. white puppy L!(.'('naed. 642-851~. dl500unti for suppl!tts. WEEKENDS MALE DIVISION e r ·uuv C""'lf'/ed lhruoul $19:). I iwg..7729 or 6U43'12 nude, P11rkg lot of Cornmer-CE'IENT • B'··k \\' k 566-8338 ....... ~ntngll for Security Gue.rd• ''P1r1,,I Asst" $800 • s..~ .... j.'.eilln,··s 1'hcunpson r.ta~ement Corp NEW Ortlcc and stor~ room $150. cinl Natl Bftnk, Warner .l/i i. °' ~ or ' vtl"<'n o. c. ,-a. l 0..40 Hrl/"''k. Op por, for degttcd person ... , ... Call 493--0141 Pt h 11,_ Bid 2 1 6 R A_lao_ 1toraac. 6 4 6 • 31O9, Brlitol, SA. Call 9?9-Ml2 or \\'alls. palioslo sidewalks, Roof in@ 6082 '" 1 • UIW!wuherli ui; o .... ~ g., o m 557_1g,;s o:A""''"' rtt·. By tu-. or b. 646-6915. $2.25 hr. No exper. neccss. ~·/tome expcr n vocational • t.ae enc.IOM'd palioi NE.W, exlr.i. larac 2 BR, 2 aulles. Confl!r'Cnce m1. .,...,....,,.~ REPAIRS, all t~s. Reas. call 4-6 pm, 546-9571 . testing pr oce dur es to e Sepanl8 encl. Kllfllieii liA pooi. Exeitlng cit)' & Xerox eoph!r. Near O.C. air· STORE Bldgs. on lfarbor LOST C"at. Black & \\.'hitc CDfENT~ Patio, drives, f"rcc est. Lic'd . Ai1k for SF:CURITY SERVICES CO. bcco~le a.sst to _personnel • Atldltlonal pnrkin11: 101 oce11n viN', $240. 496--0616. port. A3J..l640. Blvd. nr. 19th St, CM. 1.8x51; "Buttons" Nr. "D.rookhunl & ;~~~~st.~&: Walt. 541-3388, 83!}-5020. APPRENTICE • Learn lhe n11:r m manul. envrronmcnt. e Compl. luundry (iu.:il. S.n Juan * WATl!R•RONT ;!, l 2 2 5 1 MO· le l4x54,, Slatl!r, F.V. Plea1e call 5 ndbl t' 6083 1 & urt tndl ad •• /E • • BBQ IH11K 3878 . r-Sl70JMO. 673-0017 <2131 !J22.6205, Joyce. JESS Cement Contractor. a II '"I too ~ er gr ng tr c. Accnt stim' $850 • Jte1.:re1ttlon room C•pistrano Prime Newport Beach , 1..EASE ~ l<I ft·30 ft tron· Drlvew11y1, s id cw a I ks' Ne\\• air rond .. Plant w/~ Orange Co. aulomotivc co e Con 1 l ialitd ti t ----------ExecutJve offitet 1v/Crplc., !age near Newport S(sch LOST; Big gray cal, male. paliOI, 839 .. .Jlfi6. \VOOO Text., Bld;-s. houses, frinRe . benefit•. Da t I Y lookinK (or itrong indiv. 1P11.~~I ......... iruou $2()5.l BR. Condo, w/w \\'Cl bar, privste bllth n-. 1 Ollt 642 ''"""' 1trlped., Vic., Garfield & boat•, pntlot, swim pools. ll'!du1triRl Tool•. 3197 1D, "'ho can ill lhru TB & P&L. 417 y kt" A HB carpet, ran1e1cwen. ntfrig. 341 Bay1ide Dr., NB 61:,.6161 rui . ce, -;:i-.w..r. Bl'rt.Ch, Huntinaton crest, Contractor 6021 Shop for 1maller ilems. Airpol'l Loop Dr. Cos \Viii lraln in estimating, or own ve, 1; t·a.r gar. Pool, .laundry IRVINE· airport erca. Offk·e lndustr11I Rent11 4500 H.B. Reward, S.-tS-8007 * * * * * Quiclc Sand Co. 64&-4296. WO Mesa. 540-6622. Sal!\ry fll!xible. CHILDREN racil 26424 Puoo CarnlCI LOST I' blklt '\k ,Y, 18th SI, c. P..1ua i\PARTl\fEN! ~lanagers, 98 ind parents love tha large, 1paclou1 apart· mints at Banbury Crots. e Chlld''t'n 6 & younger O Slate lh.:"nsed pre u:hl • Chlldrens pl1•y Are11 • La.rg:e 2 " 3 en 11pl1. e 2 adult m•. c.'t'nters • 1lA1y aCC'e!">I tu rrtoat en1· ployn1ent 8J'l!rt.1 • Nr. ahopping & Jrw)'I. • from $16.5. BANIURY CROSS (Naar Bc11ch Blvd A \Vl.n'V!f) 16761 VIEW POINT LAHE • 142.6604 • Buutllvl Gordon Apt•. · 213 68~ ' space 45c J.>Cr. sq_ ft in~I . HUNTINGTON BEACH : em., an si Y Units, Garden Gmvl', expd ''Cost Accnt'' $15K Ph: I . J • crpti, drps, Janitorial & util. terrier. vie. 351h & i\larcus, ~tARSllAl.L FANT Tile 6091 S1nta Ana 3180 MULLAN Re~'.·y, 3400 lrvinr NOW \.EASING N.B. R~'ARD. K a.thy. 33091 ChrisUna Dr. );'3i$f36 714-8 4 6 -3 7 21, N:c<lkr~~r::; ~~~t.ra~~~ ---------!j..11).7980, Hunti~on D-och 67~/~-ork, 540-6155 Dana Point CERAMIC TILE NE\V &- CHILOREN -Sh d syslem!!I. Hvy trutnu(. r xper 2 OYYICt::S, paneled, bar, N M-l LOST; ,.~ml. pt . cp on I remodel. Free o~llrna!l's. nece!I. AND AOUL.TS LOVE shower, carpcta, intercom 940 Sq .F't & UP collie. Blk W/\Vhilfl. Vic. You are the winner of Sn1 jnbt, "'·r<lcome. 538·2"·1:!5 PARK PLAZA II phone_ ll)'St('m in, sm. 1Sl9 JtamU1on" Newtand St. \Valnut ' Culver. Irvine TWO FREE TICKETS Top Soil 6092 ASSEMBLERS ''Accnt Mg r" $l6K 2 & 3 BR apts. Supert0r, NB. ~. f60..1970 5.5l-3&l2 ro the Degree in ace.Ing w/stro~tg Play Ana NEW OFFIC!:S li'OUNO: Cat, female, long Southern C1liforni1 * TC 'SOIL • COMPOST 1upervisory l"X~. SJ-1111 Pool, jacuai, sauna 120: Quail St. Newport Beach INDUSTRIAL he..ir blk I: wht. 1-1.B. Florida MOBILE HOME SHOW • Pt~ULCll 1-REDWOOD sleeve type'. tiot nfraid to Rec. clubhouM Comm'I Brokers 8.U.8393 COMMERCIAL & Owen•. IJ00.211.1 aft. 5. A1ay 18th lhru May 27th --~C'-at_J ~5S'-6"6~930=---,Four da.)' ~·ark week, 10 work. Ex11t1r. In c o s I l..icenHd day cate cent. DARK 'ltm, !lhower wJ 14x24 OFJ"ICE l!PACE FOUND female Slamt'se cat. !II the W indow Cleaning 6098 hours pf't day, 6A~-t to ac:cntna. PA~KmPr:zc1. IJ m:on.ge gar att. 16 5 2for lease tn cholce Mlulon Vic. \Valnut sq. Cati ANAHEIM STADIUM 4:30Pl\.1, Expericncl!helpful, "ToQcco Sis" $11K Ntwport Blvd, O.f ~ Viejo af'M. Good ~'Y 551-5--$49, 200) State College Blvd. * * * * * but nol ll('Cessary. $2.00 per Aggressil"C' indl\'. l\'/strona 805 West Stev1n1 u 17 WISTCLIP'F-NB acceu at Avery Prkwa)'. FND: Orange tabby. l\lale. Anahein1 Mur . .,. Good. company expcor. In sBlet to work So. (OU SunDowcrl 54. !t & "P ••i u..,,., Re a I tor a partlcipatlo" YoW1i cat. Vic: Highland Plettae call 642-5678, ext. 333 CltARLES POMO ~nl!Olit. Paid he8.lth, l_lfe C11.lif 11.n'.'11.. Will take Santa Ana 5'.S..1121 a Ml _.., '" ·""""" solicited. SJP.1400 Dr. I: Irvine NB. MS--7477 lo claln1 your tic·Jwt1. <North 450 Cmnbrld&e CtrcJe insurance, vaca.Uorui & 11ck eo1ml!tic or 1 ro car)' Apts Furn/Unfurn 3900 ~AC!p~t~1~F;•;'";';U;n;f~u;r~n;3;900~1 CITY OF ORANGE LOST, 6 mo. old Great Dane, County toll tree nun1ber is • Cost.a !\lcsa \l!ave. backgrnd. Able lo denl N 3 000 I · block, white oaw1. ~1220). \\·/slol1l Ch(l.hl hends &. e'v , liq. t. units. You are the \Vlnncr of $155 & UP SPRINKLEDo l ''"'°nd. R<w•Nl. SC 49'J-458t * * * * * TWO FREE TICKETS Apply In Per"'n <li<'<1buto"· oUiecs. Wood \\'Orking Q.K. FND. Red 1'rlun1ph Boys ~~-00--,~-~~~-1 "Sal11 /Serv" $12K Wm. \Vinton R.E. ~l Blkl! Vie. Bel. ~n. 673·TI52 Jack Taulane, patios, lo the M-t BLOG. 4800 sq. rt. ~•o:!t...:Sc.· -------! remod, add. Lie. B-1 269072. 5outhtrn C1liforni1 PRIMARK Expcr. 111a11 In he1t &euling 6 Pools. TcnnlS. Sauna. GIGANTIC l & 2 BR. Priv1cy. Frp\c, Indlv\dual They're Underprice<l! Lots patJos. Nr. ocean. Tcrfllic of gtWn lawn. Covered Oc11I. 8-1&-Ull. R:IU'aa:llS. Adults. Na pets. Hi-Bay, ~ 16th St. FOUND: Bili.ck mAle dscha-·M~y,7W'i•~Y,,;°':;:;,· ;:64;;2-4,.;;lfl3;:::_, =:::: MOBILE HOME SHOW ~i~rdc ;;~~:. ~~~~·. \V:l1~ Ne...,'J>Ort Beach location. hund. Jl11r bor Vie1v Ui\11. KARL K'"":NDALL Gen Q)ntr. ?i!ay 18th lhru rt!Ay 271h PRODUCTS CO. :icr.<>p! elec. ba('kground .R CPTS ~ Fullerton Avt. ( l blk $149 2 E. or N"'l""' Blvd & t blk Lge rr11r fenced yard. Avail ~64~+;16'.'3::<~,_""---,-ReAidenc:e &:. Commercial Ill lhe 6/1. MS-1015. LOST; hish Seiter, n111le. • 54&-1537 * ANAHEIM STADIUM 2620 s. Su.<snn nlso. drtpea, a11r, pool .. !ll)•clous 3 So. of BM') CoJtn. !ltese.. Bit t 199. Mi--0389 or ..... Loc90 RENT new M·l, 1200-2&10 sq Bia: P~l'Y· Vic t.iesa Verde R.oo1n Additions, Alterations. m> Still~ College Blvd, S.."lnta f\11A, CnlH. ''Med Sal11'' $12K /t. $1'70. •<141'1 -lh \V/ofc. C'I """" LIC". Reliable. Free E1t. Juy Anaheim (BelW~I\ tlarOOr & fitlllt i;:-rowl ng ro. looking for 2950 w. c;;~;-8'.A. 1' • ' ".JOU ~J.,_o~""..,'~"',-"~64o"'2-'-14=03 _ _,== 1 Pleni;c call 642-5678, C!X!. 333 F'ahvfP\I', t , <> p i 1• d Iv I rl u A I 11 !WH5()1 .. ~ .. ~ ....... _____ ._I NEW APTS • WALK TO LAS BRISA5 APTI Blo;ACJJ. l Ii: 2 BR's frotl'l 5515 R ' A ND $17~ to $l35. EX'fRAS. tvtr ve. ~ LAKE-SIDE LIVING Robert Muller R.E. 673-7039 LOST · White Samoyed puppy Electrical 6032 10 clnlm your ticket•. (NOt'lh South bf \Varn\"1') 1\·loutstendllig J)f'rsonallty. NEW ,.,1•11,~5000 NJ fl shop 64S.0365 •95-4474 County toll 't1'C!e nu1nbcr Is An ('{!Ual opportunity ~1ne cOlif');:C & good ~io.2579. 642"15'6 • - d Furn. &ch. $21$ to Jm, kg "" 3 ELECTRICIAN Li<.'t'll9C $40-1220J. En1ptoyer m /I n1!111;11-y r cc or d itt'r & ofUces. Ampl pr . n1audlltory. pWc pv.T-truh ser., xlnt ll I~ No. 2331M. Sm11.ll jolw, * * * * * 2 DR, 1 JJA, rps. Cl'l)ts, comp!, ldLChen, walk·Uiru JnundtY. 1tara11e. $150. mo. cbiel1. O ns rrri/btth. 1Ml Slale.r Avt. (21.1) Fum 2 Bt'drm. $310 •• toe, nr. s .o. trwy. 646--1252. . Ptnonaf1 ma.Int k rl'ptii~. 648-5:.!03. * SUN~lfTNE' * ..,..,,.. __ ..,,....,.,.,,,..1 "Plent Mgmt'' S12k $l:li UP, 810tN, OUice•. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\iiii Gardtning 6045 Window Servlco. free est A!SEM.Bt.EH.S Exper. JIC'r10n \J1 food Ol' 5.10-l'l'GT. Adults·No Pets. Yrly Lease EXCITING VALUE tndlvtdu1'1 air eond A bath. I call 642-«IJt P r e c I 1 i on elec1ro-mech. clairy proceP. environment. 17301 Beach, JiB, 842-2834 P er1onal1 5350 EUROPEA.i"i G 11. rd en e' r. ussombly. Abl e lO a11J1wne h.11! rtsp 1n LR0 3 BR .. $1~ Shill orpt1, blttM, d·lM'· llft 6 or wkendi, 842-?37\ or 67!M869. CHtLDRJEN " Pct1 ok. :I: BR. $17&. 3 BR, $1GS. 16902 Lynn St. Ca.II IMi-0631, l..O\VER 2 BR. 2 ba, .$1:!0 1'381 Koledo l11 Apt C f'oo or r-a.ll M7-5S54 or 9©-1!1J1 . E:'\'THA !rs 2 br 2 bfi deluxo pool!ddl! 1pt nr hellch. Sl.66. :lm Florl41. -· Laguno IN<~ 3848 l B(l Ii: den PlnlhO\Ult, Cliff Or. Spectacular Oc~l\n vu . .1400/mo lie. 494--8385, ros.-0197 fVM, BEAtmFUI.. ~an Vltw. FronJ 2 Br QP:l ln 4·plex. Pool1 $m. m.:6145 CVtfl. PA'& ,rei~~TS. "dulh·=--ll l'ot1 $65. -4-10 SQ. Ft.. Lge ;_:::.:;:.;V;:A:.;S;.E_CTO_M_Y_;= ¥::ten~~ l~a~~~ Sc~~·u~tlon 7005 R~i'j9: Stron~ ~cc h . Onuli:'C Co. ttrm. "" ~ overhead door + sin. door. Confldcntlnl Info r mn t l an reasonable. &12-5!29 Cl'ts. ::.:~~~ ,~m~ ~Pe~~ "Buy,r" $16K =UT· i r: 2WR.~in BCJ115~· lachtlor . NC\\J)l)rt Beach. 64&1TJ4. coun!it'llng ~ rcfl'mil. ORGAN LESSONS FOR helpful. c.r.-t. 642_8080. Jltavlly f.'0Jtpcr. man In~ * 2500'--TILT-VP--APCARE, lncorp. A Non-ProfessK>itil J a p" n l's e a ... ..i. t ~ I ~ t t Adults, No Peta.. ~ p (I A "" ·l·•~.c Gardener. Ceorge lbulhl. ~·nnort:. a rny ,..,111r . ASST 800-KKE-EPER or <:nP •n •ore opera 10t'J 1561 Mou. Or. One \\'/yard, M.2-.1583, &Tl-7375 ro t g('11cy., ~ -· 11i'1 Ul~bird Cir. C~f. SU-2936 Kirn Clark. at'llln1: bid" • ~arde~ ~s blkl trom Newport Blvd.) LIFE or DEATH; Let our ~70i.l Fee Paid. J\1Ullt hnvt' good ltl'rns. M&-G860 •!Id Rtnt1l1 W1rited 4600 bl: bl II F It 1 ""='""'==:-_,.-,....,..,, t'xpcr, In payroll. \\'ork only two ri es ve. or n rme.t W!!I EXPERIENCEO J11panese I ][)JJ 4 da)' l\'k. Siils.ry to $600. QUO VADIS APTS, Fum. & 1 l .R. L.A. ntty needs part tinu~ to A}30RTION call UFE 1 prdoner )'lrtl. mllinl enance ll11 .. 7'1•A t Also F('(' Johll. Cnll Sn.Uy Onfum. Sachtlor 1 & 2 BR .· office in law or buSineSll LINE Ml-5522, 2-t hl'!I. I and clean up 963-10'20 "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·~~ llar1, M(l...005.'i. Co a• t • I Dial A Job! 556-1100 Pool, Snun.'\, Jacuul, Volley A suite ln N.B. for occ1u1lonal • PALlii I: CARD RUOER I Pensonnel A-ncy, 2 7 9 O Still Court, ff«, flm ,, conlerence. Wr1te O assttl<..od AD/REDUCl'lON. · 11\lO\! & EDGE -monthly Job W1nttd, Male 7015 Ho.rbor 81\\J, Mr Security C•tt9. F'rorn $150. Ad No. 125. Daily Pllo1, l'.0 . 10831 BEAC~I BLVD mnlntcn1nce yn.rd cleanup -~--...;;.... ___ .;. f:;S!ST:;:""';;;,,,.,:..::: ____ I mo. 18992 Florid&, 175 Box 1Ml, Co.ta Me!W, <Ca. Sl't\NTON 527.3400' .~ hAullng. George. 5-iS.Sl•t2 l\!OTEL m11.n11.g~ "'"'Id lik ~~nee~~~~:,:,.n;1~:,rf~ 2700 •rarbor1lJ& Suite ~7 JtunHngton Beach, 847-4448 I to 926l8. =a~F..sT=""'"M;;.A.:,SSA::;c.~G-=E""1."-N:;._N_.B_. Yllrd ~~~n~~E Scrvir.t' I man;gl! rnotl!I 1~ ~a o~ tXIQkg, clflY• & n It l' 1 . Cu•tl\ 1 e~ NEW, lara:e 1 BR, Utll1. • US BALBOA. ISLAND 3400 trvlnc Ave .. Suite 1033. Clenoups/I-lauling. ~8-862:i · c11n n!locnle. Ref 1. 64~1791 OraVt"yd ahtft1 O~ tun &: 600 No. Furlldi, Anaheim Incl.,_ pool; Walk to beuh. Yearly 2 or 3 SR. 01)('11 S A1t1 , Mon, Wed, Fri., ---_:O;:.'.:""":::::::>l::::rl:;._____ p/1. Apply Jack in th41 Box. C11.ll 7'16-!\l2U San Oern•nt< SW>. <!lli"l! ~. 642'3.Ul d"ll" 646-5.1tl'l Ann. ~7-«o311. I YARD CLEANUPS TAh'}~ oU •nd Prlcln" c:en. 38!1 E. 17th so., CM. CLE/lN J or 2 hr, adltt, no Meto'lffd9 .... otAdorns•11w'~A'°'NT"'="'3"'-or=::,,"-=9-0R'-"1>ow<e"""-, WORRY & YEAR eliminated • rompW!tt nwlnt. 66-0.109 En~r. proj, All phases s.llo '11i-a"',~..,;;.so_n_1•"th"t"'ng~yo"'u=w-.,-ll~to 2153:'1 •la\\1horne !Uvd. pet1, t&e kit. 1140-$180. 2-Ut I 540-1100 torona. del Mar or Newport fOrwtr ln1111.ntly. Ca 11 I Sell \dle l!ems with a Oarl)' Pl~p. lllJl}JWflllJ. t: t e.. sell~ Cla..s!'lifted ads 00 ll TOrTD.nce ::U/50-Tr\2 !E::.!'.l6~U1!,1._!N~B~.!'4G-!t)UIO!!,!l:,_• --~========='I Beach. &4•f..e913 snytltne. 540-4844 rnot ClAu!OM ad. 60-66TR "54&-<i~"SM"-".------\\'ell -call NO\V&l2·~8. ----- l 2.f DAILY PILOT 1'¥10fldi y, Mlf lJ, 1974 Holj>Wonl.cl,'1.l&F 7100 Holp Wonted, M&F7iOo'.-/ ""H"o-rlp""W""o0n""t-odr,°"M""&"~Fr.;7l"'OO=no71p~W=a'°'n-=,-n-~rF..-.1=1uu! Holp Wont o p Wontod, M&F 7100 Holp Wontod, MiF 7100 / Holp Wonted, MIF 7100 1 Holp WontOCl, MlF 7100 AUDIT CLE!t~ . •'-'<lll•l'•:~ D r ery Sunday Only r:Nl-:R(~F.'TIC t.'Ollplc ll&.."ded INf'PEC'TtlH TJiAINEJ-: LEGAi. Set:ly! N t" \\' p 0 rt I MEDICAL Jleurc ttp1!1udc, .lll'•'t;t BOAT BUILDERS I e IV -j lo 1ntu1a~f' i.11 ln1 'i; r,~iJ & ~~rl To !lf>er•I• I BM f.lf'l'll't)tlil·~ l\nn. o.c. !•ir I ~·~11t~r. E'<p'd !' {' r I 0 n a 11 E"'ployer Retained Clf'MCtl! np. f11 nulu•:"l1 lioe.1 1).Jrup.any li11~ 01M:nlni'.,'.~1 o·· ) II y P ILOT ·ro (' 'RRJERS Rrl> :1.ftft, llU. 114--1!11.14$9.> or Bdhri.g Equ;rmr.nt. ~·Xl-2.00, pot1 ttrf'a Co0tl \\Orltu1..: U\J~l'i!l~~;il .> In J)h~!ilci11n2' OH\ctt H •1fh ""'nl•"t•• o"lpttl 1vr .. ~·~·r.intt·ri•·r 1·01•f"'i<'I', r I i\• n. •· c.• 21 l-1':\!j....5J9. Y" r Nl l II Ill I I It t: h1•11t·flts "" I s t ~u ..., ,, ' .-~ " "' " (:'\• "Jl"'.S' ·1·1 1•· USE OF ,\ l.A"GE s·r.\. · " · '· !1 ur · " " ro n. I corv 1 •1111' •· LINDSE\' t\u1'l'>t'.'~ H";.;b11') .-.. t In~ lll·l 11/ pun o .,,..,.,.., helpful. lnleN-~11 n~ "url.., 1·;,rpc·nh'l'l'I, dl·..-k uic~t·111bl· ·t u '£ i:. 1' Engineerin9 Secretary $2,j() hi· !>.lure ,\1lr.1lr lyp1n1.: 1\/lVll1·an1 .. 11'"~ aprl1Y 111 1 1.1 N lJ s E \' ~I" 1! it' 1+ l BN $700-$800 JOOd OPPorlunity. XI 111 l'l'S, eni;ine i11 .. 111.Hen., li;t'll· 'l'ION \\'.\GON Olt \t'r\l\, l'ON'l'1\( 'T l\llt. 50 1\11111 l'cq. S1111ill fl'lf"ndly I S ~ ~: ,\tl\'illl(~' l'J('kt11:l11:: i-~111ployn1i'nl /\!:Cur~·. N1·1">1ls I ti.led SN')'. ""l''d ~!~SSUl \1:ork lng COl'lc'L ,t· cu . t ('nil ht'll"'~. lio11drr & dl·· B~:N1'0N \\."ILl .. IAl\IS. 330 \VE$'1' BAY 's.!i7:i. t-\:e PKid . Enlry !pol 10 C'omµany ncur !'11 C'(>a!o.I ::O'iO Al~1 ·'~ !'l.r, 'I 11~·~. LV N's ,'1 Pnu·rk·u l). 1"'1vn1 ore. , ,,,.LI s;JOO.fi L . I'\ ., .. ,.. t I r··-~·~· ··~ U~t' )uur st:1t I) u[n,.· ' Pl"''" ,..,_II JW"' '· 1+._7101 ·-"' "". •-"= ~ne I !I. U' ,._., I Ill t'C ............ 11)ll1J,N11\y ...... ,,... STREl-.:'f , c·o '1'1\ ~1~SA . 1'EI .EPl--tONE h.'t'hllic11I l':..p. Al~ ioct' 0ef"' \..'1 ... J--t...---.>..,..J.;..,• I J\l11 ll' .(· f1·m. f'or pvt dut~', I Frnt/llc:k C~Jll'r IO .,...::... AUTO SALESMAN I 1ni1. Sto..:k purclu.tioc, pruhr 642-43 21FO!t 1\PPOJNTltfENT. i i'us111on11. C-.ill Cuntrol o1~noi:t11 SA LATION MEN ~t:.rr t"-'hl•f & o!h1'1· n1L'(h,.al MedlSearch New lmpcrt dealer needs sht1ru1~. µ..od n1cd1L·~I . I ,\gl·n~y. 3100 lr\'lne lilv<I. GIRL lor ma I l room. IN T L ' riL'l<H . 611i·l!!:1G, ('11i-IJ :\h•.,1. ,, Pr11tl'&s1011ul Ai.:tnry )'OOn&: aggressl\'e st1lt-sn1an. l::qual Oppu~~~J~Y .t:u'lpluyr r An E9,U l l Opportunity Employ1r C1t1't:1:r E n1 p Io y n1 on t 0 1..,11, <'liuisity .t distribulC l L1VE-l:-0:-+1atlr.--ci1't! -t •••. t Sui lt: :!:;:.; l~"1 t\t:i•:Arthur I \\llll train. Xln't oppor. Pa.ua:,~makcr Tro~·lrr OL\' ,\gency, J.100 lrvlne Bh'd, nuiU. hundlc Mlllling t..'Quip.. BRAKE & FRONT END 1 1•ldel'l) lady & i;on. Cookini:: 1 lr\·111~ ___ 833-3338 I Unlimited corning potential J'-'l\SE'".'. '· IAHI,,._ Holp W•nted, M&F 7100 H elp Wa nted, M&F 7100 N.l!. ~. 11•il! •r11i11. I ;1v11!nu fln.anc!.tl XI t d 111 .. s, $:::00. tit'r 1111./. i\I ... ~ r c" t. Ass T •• r g PC-rllOn. '7iJ-"00• 2:{') .F1s..:her, Costa i\lci.:l · ... Engineers Wa nted 01~0.nk.ation. Xlnt 11·orklng "'. a 1 u r y & 11 u r k, 11 i.: _ _. _._____ <'Ill II si<ls l • or r.t .,. for I ht .,,,. 7""" ,,;~~:::;··~=~~;,../;~7,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I --l1n11H•d1;1tr• u1n.•n1n1:~. : II Gl:r-:)62J ;\It lpm I '1 .. OI · I lro I • · OEST.\L .\ss1s.ta.nt, ,,r\\·porl 1 , be 11 " N I ' k 11! for ri.11sslo AVON _ CLJ..lt lrAL li<':>f'lt OrthodontlC' offii.:e, Jnte1"~i!lh'1! In a 2nd \nl'on1r. c."On1 1 ·"._,.~'Vn~p;Jny Cne ts. ('01KH1lo11 ... 0[lpor•un1ty ror LL:BE ~It\:• cxper. Bro11·n·~ ,;nl· Opt~ lri 'htn Ell: 11 1 ) Boat Repairman NEVER A FEE rh:iu•;;:idt', Approx. 4 dnys/ l\lanug<·u1~·111 . Cull IJ39..til.23. Apr1 Y •NV N'-'11'port enter nd1·1u1c·('nit'n1 . LI brr u I Nt•11·port Center Shell. 99'.J i~·w cc: 111 c · p. S~I ,. \\'Ork fl)r lhe i\lea11ci;1 infln hi i1 f.'t·k Top .-alal'y libcora.1 1 ----Dr. Suilc GOO f'0111lo.1 ''" tM•n('flt~ iucludl·: I ~;. Co..'lst ll wy, N.B. l.01::11 1-esldc1~t & r" f . PUT SOME' .ZisG I to11 11. J~l'rn1. onl~'· ~lust be , • ' 11·1n-.:;· t1£>11cfit<:, ;'Otlf;l'llial ESCROW -GIRLS-GI R LS·GIRLS Paid llospltr1I lns1u·nnl1-'. !..· 1 [VN·\Vkn1I relief. \\'t~ll run P.l'cferred. 4 9 J -0 3 0 0 & INTO sPrtlNG l!l:<i t & t·lct1n. l"Receptionist •·n11r.,mrnt. orrhn "xJ't'r.1 Easy run j'1 U, dny or 11 iicht. / l'f'n1>1lou ~·1u1d. Avply 111 i.:•~l'!a1ril:s ftui.ill!y. Top s. ~.:\l -2·100 I Oooorate )""" hou•" or b"v l:U.it.:k1es lklaryard •-*'S 1 l'l'<r11\r,.d :-;v ~'l11oliin1.t. ''~·· OFFICER ~u r-.:i.i. t1t•r('f-.:lr,i'. \Y(' triilii pl'L'$)n 111 P l:P BOYS, IJ~l l'ritl ii·l:!-2'110. l\l~:l)l('Al., il~<0rtls-ll(l(:~pll · new cloth~; 11'/lh; lllO!l~' --l\c1~pu1t_li~U\.'h ·-.,....-ecretary :•o.'.\IJ.~l:t-~'ti26 '·'I ~ fH'llt.:•'d, f/111111• YIJll, 'IJIJ 11111s! llkf' lX't•)i\1• G.· 1 li('Ul'.h Bl vd~·o"F.·~·sl 111h1~1l·1·. rih· t..1 1·k. r /I i Ill f' II. \ BOAT S U"XTIL . I I ' ''''l't SECURITY PACIFIC lir al 10"1•! 1~. ,\111",\' :•11.1· .,.. • MACHINIST l'f'l'!IOlllll'l Ucpl, llOOK:llaip. you earn ,S('. !11!; I \'UU I BUILDER vcust Relat'1ons .... , a:>S!:. an ....:1.; I ' ========== Prod F,_ bl \ ' 11111 ''[ 1'o-A1·~·• af1rr11""·11 or <'\'I'. '.'!t'O \\.-.sl N.B. ucts. . ... ·!oi:t c n·~ .. 111 i\l't:d e.'""1'. tur1)1.·n1crs 101· !1. • .-. "' c.-.. NATIONAL BANK ·~ I ~==~°"'="°"===-I ghbo •--• C II "' VK h I~ ""' ..... ,,._.. ..~, ·-· O""'ll C'o.'1~1 I l!:!h\rt1'·" Nc\1"'"1·t '11'.DICAL FRNT O•'F'ICE )'OUi:.O\\'ll llCI r ........... •l 11u 'ii" .s<.i .. bv<,1 1nu1oul. ·I eypun' •,-.;, .. 111·1 ._-.. ... ,. ;'\;U:u ,• .. -. r ' l N'U c ,.. INSURANCE SALES " ~'ilHl .J k .... Rt'p)1t's (' 0 n f id(' n 1 HI 1 • o;:A,J Nl•\\\Nl'l tr l)I', n .. ·r11·h. P/tin1e. cnn lOam·lpm. · I J~i•J 1 .. ,XJnt Lt!nl:llli.. ~JllSal ~::0-I \)) 6•11-tJIJJ, l'.\t 1(.., -Gr. \\'F.\' t r.I)\\'. P.0.1\. ,.11 6813 L>lujJ Uy (vr <in inLcl'\'J('\\ ......-es I ~""Olli OjJl)lll'. l-,111plo)'Cr I • , • I . ' -·11tri"~s. -~=~..,c"cc.,'cc.c.,...~--· 1·----------I ,1h>11 111111. 111w·s, 9 anJ·~ j}nl. ~ Jtlf elex Twx --1)j:;,""\TAL RECEPT. ....... n ; h t a • n I n.n ('I' :..; l1 l r I . No f!SP nee .. l"{l rtl \1hili' )OU ilt.\ClllNE Tool B ui I cl c r iroT~L J\laid\\'Ork, l..agUl'lll BAl\1' Westsail Corpor•tion .,....--l·:-.;1"'1".•all ph;isr~ of front C'a:;h1cr/J lo:;.1r,.;~. ,\ppl~' 111 lrnrn, fll\l'I liuu~. l'\'l'N & n•~ds l':-.pcri('nN.•d gl'nl'ral RrnC'h n e 11 0 rt, neat, Here Are The Jobs PROOF OPERS. SWITCHBOARD OPRS. NOTE TELLERS NOTE TELLERS (Full or Part-Time) 1,~:, 1 l.i•'\•uu,i, L . .-. Cartnell Personnel 11~"~ ,\· c:1kt'0~-l'tt~~·~· :'ltis~\vn Executive Secretary pl•l"<:(ln, ,\irrxi1·t1•r Inn llo1h•I, I 11knds, lull tln1e \1hl·11 t1ut1H· 111r1chlni~1 !or \11rle \'a1ie1y C'nrrgeti!' "·onicn. 6 ~ 8 R , -~ -I Service Agency \ 11·J<1. r ii n i_.:,:Q..\ .. J,• $833-$1033 Month l'i~111 ''11i-.\rrl1111· BI 1·d . f1l'1I. i•I wnrk Ln ~111all C'l1•1111 ~IJtJp. \l'i't'k, -19-1-1 196 , 1 , ~~~ JUl~~~~in~:r:~~~. Ne wport Bea ch 640.8470 J'l~.'.'T.\L--r.~--;:-rpt .-, -1117' !< r l·.\l'1·1lt.ut 11!•\, h, .i , 1 , 1 :) , lr\'tll(' -~ -1 Furnll'l'!I lnsuru1iee Grou p ~1~°':'. ~ui:; .011 t'ni:;in<' lalh<' .\,; il!OTll!'.:lt'S helprr to care 1 , 1 bl:· 1 I... ,!Orange 547-1694 1 k:lo.i1\' In!<., :"\l'11rort f.1-irh. 1111111". l lu;n1ublU•• ,,,,1rul GRAVEYARD SHIFT ~.tl Lani * =>-10·l83 I \trlltn null. f.1r h,'lbit·!I 2 11rternoons °'t ·'11'-'-' .. uuuL 11ll iu .. ·t.Nu.,\..'11.ti\V-lltl IL n,:11 M:hw ! lH~t1.r1 , .... 1~ I '\1 :111 .. 11 11 ... ·~, 1:!·11•11.111. MACHINIST I 11·l~·k. llllrl.lor Vie\11. .~~.~-;,;;~·HI. l..A 11 l}I -('()Cf\"T.\ll. &· + • -IH·::'\T1\L c11.\ll1"ll'I·'-j ll<"l'~:)l\U\,d )>l:CI Cl.11,\ '"'I .l.\t'i\. 1_\' T_111: 1:nx. l!ll."1 • ..-Jlfa lil0-·'~·"'~·-'.--,,.,...--,..--1 " '~1 ~.-. 1 I I 1·nf1, • \'. ,\11 !~!-:~' ;•~si.~11111, t~X!-Jl'nru•·l.J " l ~ l r • l' t suvl'I u11c ... J,1111. 1. "" t st., C .'.'IL -NCR Proof Ope r•tor ........ ~ ~·1\1 '"'0'·1t; 1;~1x. tu;;)· ru1· p ;,.r 0 1;;,1· ,11 l l•lli'I '*: :J ll').7!-i\7 • IA•,,in..! :I. )IS l·u!ll:t;c ,\ :,. HAIR-STYLIST-TRAINEE 1 F1-c l'a!rl . rwa111Jful nl0dm 1 olll<•' ·l ·CL ... ," :., u "'I !.: • .:1i11,t .. \r11l y 1!1 P"l~nn. 11•1 ---)Lill:. l'.\j.lt'i'. .llU~\ "1:1ll'wh·11•d l)uc!lt'lh' I~ !11'11' \11 11f1• 11·/tuu1~im: plnnt!I. Can i'·u • ••lit.:, ,,s-,,.,,' I II 1··· • Coo I l)!-~h'. CL}'.F::J{ so11H' lli~ht l"'r:>u11,LIJ1t,:, i'c~p ,\ pus:.•~:. ' . \ \ btt k ~ · 1 ll 1u11t• co.1 •. •J .~. i. ~ 1 , 1 kilo 1. 1,.,,1• 0 1 11~ C"qmn~it•ll pt'fli.,:1·:1111, H!\\I 1 .1n11 rnng ne 11. 11 i.;1V1n2 1> ()vi{ I\ J:, t. I ' t: l:. Jr.1 lhi·.i !.;i>;. JJeh. 1111•·k. Apply !'iurf S:. :· nt ., V< ,,. s. ~ ., 1 , . , . . . l\ . l<..,1·f'll1•nt OPJl()l'tunlty tut• J>rl I ~nu your 011.n offl<-e? They I llvh·I 1;:..·{) C: Coast H11·v ,,,J, ,\H I 11l"1·1• s 1 <' UJ '·'·" .·11'" inh'r\'h~11.11':.:. :.ur Shtl'h'I' 11· 111•'•·l1:111i1"\ ;1 '·lJ , • ·1tl11''" ".1 11~11 ~ ... ,,.1;.;,1,11 --COM-PU_T_E_R RM·-· · · •· ··· .. ,1 .1 1 ,11 11 11111 ..... ~ " v 11lll If ~·(lu !111,·r h11d 6 mo'!'I ""''' :1 , l'u ~l·lllj\.111), I IA'IJ.:tu!:i_lil'n•·h ·19-1:6:Jil. -a[ljJ!ii,;.u h :. l\INI'\ lt.1' •l'-U•·· \r~ 1~(~ I 1;1'1"111..:·~ G iry. l'\[1''1', Al~o fef' Jobs. call' • ,\1usl Le copa.lilC 1!4-uui,;11 OPERATIONS MGR. li.:i.t ,... possihlc 1111 .. L·u1 . n;;i~i ,,~·. . . . II I • 0..00 Con.& ' D' t h T . t l'\;.iul ~1.\:\1 ~l l :\!:1"' J,:,ll!, Cl:!-::!\jfl Cu11l i1CI l'alll ])O:<icl' J\~.~C!(:• Sri y I •1rt, J I ~. la\ ll'tu1 •1<u<t111 ...... f'v:)ltrun <n~u For;; !ihift acih·liv. j \rs ::GO • I~ ~p one, yprs . " · , 2 .. 10 R 1 1 1 \ r1•ri;o1111cl .\~ency, 2 7 9 O . . I I' 111 I 1w111 '/.,/}. l'.:d1~v11 !11b"I ia es, .,. t1n10 111 J i·'-'·· \1 ·11·~,.131,·11 C'I ,,,u,1LS .... 1<...·_1 •• :~.".'L!1-~t..1·1·, OO.' r."p, ,.,,1,, 1 ,.,,,. 'C'l'· .. '.11<+.,',p1i1 _y .::1~_•11~-".:: HELP W NTED c 1 '\ c 1·1 ,-.1,-0~· · "" " ,, ·' , k , ;,l'11uul, ~. 100 .11ug:1iuua .11L. A os a 1, esll, a 1 . ;:i....,-j 1.1 . .---'-• , i""'"·~ 111,,1 'u;,11J.:lvi:). S111lf'rl'i .. ion r n'lt•rt'(•d, i1ill ro. 1_ ~~e. ng ~."Jlrl. J.er~c ~1 H1u11u1t;lvu licai.:Ji. l'.tllli.ll IR\llNE ~ MACHINE-TRAINE·E-NEW FAC ~T~O~R~Y~-·l bOOKKEEP-ER/-c' p (' r. in lic11 ()f ~ J ~a tn .• s~ :o\ : ~ 1 , .,, U'\YI\.. --~...,,_ 1 ·' " -' .. 1 _....,.,.",w --·--ron,idl"r sl1'(111-;: vpc r11tio11... 1;)30;\o\k ~'.1 .'.h· .:~ ~u&h ~;(·i Llpµui'. i:.11111Ju~l·r. l•rge Co-paoy SCD\itrfS -.Arc• v-v / ·''•'t·li. .,,.11 0, .". ,.1,001 ,.11 ... 1r .. 1"1111·h ••utlrts JU~! upening1 Typl'T Sup e rvlsi()n. r:qu ipnil'nl bl'nPf!1:;. ,\bo l·t'•~ l 'll.l llons. 1 J.C.'\!'ll 10 grind ri·ank~h:ifl ~ 111 :1l'i•;1. ll"<'ds lhr foll•)\\ Ing· 0 " I • Ja on Be t Ag ncy t:.:X.Pi:Hli:.NL'i:.u \1·aur1.::)::.\::)I Expand'ong ''""t i\lf.'T/H.i'!oil s:ioo Int· t•I\"~.·. c1111 c0111 ... ,1 i\.1i.:11i1 I "nr $.IS:J "·k Penlngs n• i11(·]11df'~ :1 60-::0: s s e I I I /\\ I •.. !llt'I " "" ' . • ._.t.-,) ! t,u'J til l•l:l'. i~a1,iJly Dat1.1 gr:irh\:o. ·l'.;60 CO'.\!: li·100 Brookhurst,l-',\'lr ,\pply u1 p .... 1·:.un. cu.r·l1lW» n1u~.1~t.'1 .-.ni::r ·.~ C111'N't' E11111l o y101 l'l!I -~·1·1·1111•111"..• $Jhr e-•'·•1111., ,.....,J t.v111p1uiy. l..<••I '·'~ ,,,,,., .•.. ,1, ... "·i·"' ~uit~ :!!: !)t)~~71;1 ~··'c"··s1.aw·un1; tl"..0 Ave. Pll'V; NOW HIRING l~ial :'ll<'rh/D1e~'l ~.~GJ ,\~i·n{'y, '.\l(•I ll"\'illt.> ll\\'d .. 1,:o.al11 \11i.·11. .Open B h t>)o)o•.,,,, .~ ~ ·"" "' ., F/C' Bookke<·1X'r S:->00 I "'1• ~:JG--SJO:i 1\ll b\.'nrfJ!.~. c:n1'N·r positions. Newport eac --l't'!iU!l1(' int:ludifl(_.: salary ------------l'l'r 111;,f\f•!ll 'l•>l'k Ill Ill.pr :'l'1•y Cons1r 10 $.~00 1-'. '·-·-'-. --. ---I 494-1064 lkNr\K£!::1'1:.lt, 10yl's C}l;p, history to Cl;u;sificd Ad. l\o. Dictaphone Typist L:\PJ::h. ti\'l\h;c :3CalLllti ni<iJil n1:1 1u1:a.·r11ri11c. 1li~1nh•1P11~ S.:i·/dii·taph/l'On.s\r to Si30 1-.1,,10 \\A:l"TJ::D. Plt:'ai.c Irvine L•"' lOI' ull <i.ppu1nt n1t:'n1, 68, Daily Pilr;t, P.O. Box Fe.. Paid. Plush F;:ishion IUI llliL' ~llJIL. .\la l .. ,,, .... ·or·\ .t i11 .. 1:1 J la r \on. :--: .. r1 .. l1l Cla1n1s Adjuster I n1111ly ill pt'l'SL111. Scac:lirf I NEWPORT La B h '"•1 11lllt:,.Jll!· • ..-u ll,UlJu1 l:lll. Co~ta l\lc:.n. Cali f . !!'land fi t iit. Grrat t.'V-••111·1.:. tNJlJ 11. Cui..:.t 1111)., r\IM'l'lt'nC·•·l1•'{'r~ .. 111·yd\L•"'" Trnl•.d1•_b'l'C1' 10$72;1 :'110!t•l4!»-4lS92. STATIONERS guna eac . Hil} 91626. Replies held CQtlfi· \\·orkl'rs & outsandin g _i\.LJ, -• --I ··xc1•ll1·nl tr1h11111: [11'(1'.!l':l"I 'i<'t'l'C!.l ri~" . IU S700 1:'11AID for !\!otcl , ll'«'kdny.s Jr ... 1rphone and other ottice : . ..e-.Jru~t;~i'l.J.t L U C1\ L •lentinl. benefits. Stan s:.:i0. Also FIBERGLASS 1u1· 111C'n i 1"11n,•11 I~ .1 lno;:~u· Clanns As.ststont _ )\lu t i\·orklng cundi1ions. 1tut1t•s. t-·uu tin1e. CaJI for Req U ·,rem e nt· 'j ,r,~·J\ UIJJCC neeu,, l u 11 COOKS . Fa~! hv &. line Fl·e Jo~. C<tll Sally Hart, TOOL ING •l\'Cl', t U1' & Casualty to $r00 -1'11·:<:321 app!. l\lr. Barry "'flt, . : s·d.l.;e buotJU.!o,!pt:I', Cdll 1nan. Nigh! .shill. 'Top pay.I j J(}-fA)'J."1, Coastal Pl'l'SOIUJ<'l ~alro;: ltrp/illl'Ch $100 + ' s:17+~212 • 1 • ·U<lHl._ See chef at Dl"lane~··s, 630 1 i\g-ency, ~ l!arlJor Blv•i. T>\O )r!>. 111u11111un1 C'\jl('I'. T OP WAGES F1111 Ofi· :\lrdil'nl S1J50 M , ;---;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.' Previous, e,cperi· i; r\hl:.Et'Elt for CP,\ Oil'. Lido Park Or, N.B. I C~I I 19,;0~~-~!~~. s~.~,~~llti I ~-ur :'-101'1' !ll(!ll'!J \a1ion Call ?-.~~p~i·s;r,i~~~ • .-;t~:~I\' 1;: ~ a1 ntena nee NOTE CLERK ence in a bank or '" l-<oe.w1a ue<te11. 1-'wl ti.!11e, -• -DllAl'IS~JAi\, h1nds,·ape t 536-2 91 - L..;. ""I "· ;>i-<t!..J. COOKS h · t \ I · . FINAN{IAL I S s,,,.·,., liie '" 10 ""1 s' • savings & loan. --I a.r.l! I ec t ura . SU )ffilt ' ASSISTANT Call Mon & Tues Only h:c·~plllllh Orw to Sjti'.11 uperv1sor i..L!v 111.J>..b .Sdlc.:> G 11· 1, I resume, or cal! z.·ong, Jw1~. , . PB:-; i:i'tf'j)ll•11Usl S5.'1(), , W Off L.'I'~·· •/11\llh.'i, St>LJl'lb\\>.<tl . f\akal:H:1, p 0 Box, 2i00 ln~n1t'l11alc O~JlJI\~ fl)l' a H f.l.P--11·-alli-.• d-r u I' .\,·1·(lu11rin.c.: Clt·k.~ to s:;:.>:1 \\'t' p1't'~rn1ly l111v" a n (•1lt'n111·..: in our f\otc Depl., \lu't br i,:<1()(1 \\'ith ~ & like detail '>l'Ot'k. Prior f:\1 ;c"r. h1•lpful, but U e er: .•l\l.>I ue ~1-.,u. ti1.:r 4JOIJ. -.\pnly In P('J',<(J!l Ne11·port Il<'ach. &;.1-~23 lu~l1ly lll1Jtt.1·ated UUh\'Ldual l St'nli-in\·aJid Judy. s I :t ,V ,\"~' 1;kk1JI', p I S3 hr I Orange County ! ~UY:>~ GIRL~ The San Francisca n 1 DRAPERY MFG. 11 u11 a . $60:'11:'.1 '-"111PJll} niqhls. so111l' 11•'lp da 1· C.\l.l. ·rn1:-::u 110 PKINS I 1lo l''l"i"'a1t'I' L..uT1ers. i'lin. Restaurant 1 Expei·iencf'tl ot· t rain r ,~, lo..:a.t~d 111 J\cy,·port Beui.:h;I' lin1e.~. r.arat:l' a 1 u • (. .JFl·:Jtl \\'!lli l'E:\IOHE Under limited supervi· !l('<'<'.C,.~, Fine starting Silla· ries, an excellent new benefits pro- gram, pleasant con· temporary working .nvironment a n d opportunity for ad- vancement. Please call for •ppointment Lynda Kendall (714 ) 644.tlll SECURITY PACIFIC BANK <•.,.: iv. Ltdu !Sil·, U<ll.Wh. l617 Westcliff Drive J\t:iehin" Opr~. u J·: Ac I{ 1 . l'o!HtK>n rei1u1r~'s d B.s San (')('111c nie ·l!l6·6n"..'9. I ·1~8 ~:. 171h S1 (at Irvine \ C!ll sion a Facility EnginHr ; ,,11usu!a ~ Ualoua l 'Ulllt. Newport Beach nn,\PF:HI ~S. m \\'. 17th dei;L'('f ,It lllllliLlllllll I )1'111001\:.\ D[\·ers: \,_ Lli1r , .. ,I;;?. I Suite 224 642·1470 : will be responsible for I .._,vutu1.:t 1\!1. iJaL'Kl>ifuJU al 1 1 '[ }'' . 9 ~ ' SL. C.i\I. al0·6~6·1. 1 ~~~~~fo~2p1.:~c;~11.:~~1,1'. a ~~~i{i~~,~,· t'rs 11 _011·i:i ir~r ,\· .c r111~r. ~I preventive maintenance 1.1c 1J.\ILr l·U.vt' ur c1HJ ,10"r11'1"0''~:1'."c"·,1'! 'S "1~111~~1?~1E >.on Y Cl.E.'NE_R_S · 'lalc I ,,... " Boat ,.1,: an· furn ~cl. Jl<l\' 1 f od · · , r 1 ' ,, ... .,..,..,., "' • "' or l' u r po r a L c c11i;h , "'·"· ,,,:·,··'"·'"•'··' · · · + -· o pr uct1on equip-' U....:+_"'--~ •_ca_\'t: UJ1J1_nc_al•v_,,_. • ' 4 • • , 1, Li':t:'ilScc:I Cl''"'' & s -11cr.1 I 1~ • 11' s \L\"'\''" I nt nd . t If t ' . ~ .~ n1 a ua;,:l·111en r.\lll'nc11cl'. --· ---· A. c. 1•\•· • • • • • me a rns a a ion · I 'lca.~e Contact l;rl'~ Nl'1~·h01d Bank Of Americ11 :\l'11 port Ccnu·r Office f nshlon 1.slnnd C:dl 8.'.:6-3.i05 ~:11u<1l Op1Y1r. Employ.,. SUSBOY COOK I f.'.a!l for a P P.o in I n1 c n I · 1 I:.: Hect1\'C 1..vn1nHu1h.:iatwn l llOSTE.55 & \\'AITRESS i101~ . u~ten }'Out· natw·ttl i and repair of produc- l:.:>.J.icr. Pii'!ter.:\nicr. cilizcn. EN'ilcr. Fry, f:nnil~· nnin. !'ust~r~ ~a~1ty ,,.p eaners. skills, ur,s:a nit{tl1t111.1J abi\11~·.• F.spl'1~it>nt('c1 Only nbU1ty 1n i·ar1nl!' for pl"Of•lr tion machinery Will ' I .41..,.u.-n or hpwu~n SIJl:D.li· ;\lusl OCo f:ist & e ... per. See .,.1s-1.:z.13 _o: a4_3--10::-. ,-.: i:1:t:)h/financ1al analysis I BLL1F. DOLPHIN I has been O\•erlwkPd. h ·f :~\ n:-;~:;0; 111,,, • .::ia.ltu·y accu1d1u .. IU (.11ef. IQl F.. 171!} SI, C:\1. r-;o skills n1andatOI'). :) en dl '.::..:J:1 \'i:i Lido, ;o.;,G. oo:-.i·T 0\7J·:RLOOK r s:' ave support 0 two RN ' LYN' \ ., ~·· ·•PiJIY uet11n •. ..u phone cans. ELECTRONIC L·ci;u111c tneludin.-; cducat ion,l 11or~KlF.l~F:R n~i~~i-:-·u1-;; • \\'F. Ni':l::D YOU~! people and will handle S-S - "' l:.A.1pn1 J-i a in bur I: e r ---+ -·--c'pen.:-nce, p1:1'M:ln.il d;ll;.1, 1n ,,r uut. T:ikr 1·:1 rc 11f 111·0 1 /Practical Nursu plumbing, electrical 1 1H1u1lCI , W-iJ i\danu;, c...11 COOK.CHEF "a! a r y , h 1 ~ 1 u r y & ,...,,ii, 1 .t 7 \'Cars of at:P \ :/Nurse A ides boilers, compressed air, 'I·" , .. , ,\Jc. 1 '""en. Qua!Ui<:'I.! n1an for ,i,.:nall ASSEMBLERS , .. .,,,·,.,111°110 I·" \ R-1"' 1 · n • c 11 1 · d " · -" "' n --o c.., t ... ~ "· ' • v~~. rJ\'a e 1wn1. . i'\C. 1 1 :/Convales. Aides air con 1t 1oning motors, .. • --· clinner house. ! ~f an P. O. Box :JtJIO, ~C\\purl d:i 1·.c. al&.-2'21 and c1 es d 'II s I llUYER kitchen. i\. B. 6'i'3--7i?l. l:k'aL·h, Calif 9~. 9;g.9386 a~k Int' Toni. I :/Visiting Housemothers rl S, etc., etc: .. a ary Retail Nursery cooKs---,,-,.-cOOks.-Top ' ,\i,;:>C'n1bl1:rs n~dc.J i1 PC FRY-COOK 1[Q[~i::1..:EEPERfivC'-; :/New Infant Care commensurate with e lt· i.u;,,.._1" C..<u·dcns, l'\ciii;on 1rages. \\'f' 11·itl train. Pref. U<111rJ & solrlr1in~ C:'<J>C'l'. l'.:Xj)t:i'. Full , fl lluic I dependable n 1 \\'e offt'r you ~n oppn1'tn;1i;r Gpeoodriencbe, f b v o:.11.:JI, C..o,,ta :'lil·:..a &. exp . .\ppl~' in p e r s o n . Soil1t' trainee oo!>itions oocn. ..,01.1· ,, ..,,.11,.,,1 _,1, ·,-0., 1 io do ~ml'lh1no:: spc<"i:i 11 • ene its, sta le .., ... ., 4 -=~;"~---' " 111e ho0 1r \1e•\1 l1 "•''" 11010. 1 .l ll&i.lun "1cjtJ, Ill! o! d s Carro11"s Re:)ta11ra11t: Pil'O Perinanent cn1plo~·n1l'nt in ,,,.,n \\' Co 1 I I '" _--: -" " ' company, near t h • I I I · "' e .. Cl JJ.>U • as 11 )·• · -'JIOL'SEKF:EPF-.n,.Ji1·e o • ~,,·, ... •1<.' •, 11 np1-1'•111o'I,<' '" •ro e,,s1011"--' l> u ye r · tum-on . .:>i.i.l • cn1en1e. ple-asant surroundin"'s I ,..,,.....,._ __ ..;. ___ I " '' ·-" ,.. O C t A ' rt "' ~ H · u1 · ... · 1 TMJ!o'1\1or1h,_·, rll'""l'Klablc d 1~u~c; 01u· p1m::r.1111 1\'ith range oun Y 1r po • ' .. -.;pci·ic~c"u OJtlc turist,.CQon. \\'llnted for busv GARDENER '" A I ll.11" \'011 J:\·l'r \\'antf'd To I HJI .n u~ & L!:."T' GO At ThC' ~3LTil' Time? II 1.l.L YOU CAN:! llOLD ON TO YOUR PJtOFESSJON L!:."'T GO OF 111E \\'ORK LOAD Crcarc Your Own \\'ork \\'eek! I \ll»UP1Jhe1· contacts. ,\Just! c<•fl'C .~hop l·::.:p'd top "°Y. C'nll ~·or 1\pp1. , * * ;,;.:1..01~ ~ou. ,\II 11'!1 !?"" raid 1\'f"••kl~·. PP y : lie <ti;:'!!l'eSJ>l\'e & c 0 s1 "'· • ·. 1~· lndus1rial P.<"lations Be your 0\11l bo"s! l'arl or H 'tt 1 ,\1)11!.1· ,\Jon. lhn• Fri. Equal opportuui1y ,e11111luJ C:1'• L\Jl!;;clll~S. Xlnt f 1·i11 gt'I forr~glit n1;1;11.•·llsluf!~·call f/lir11c. You r 01\11 Ll\'C;J.I ouses1 ers ~::-:n.12::-:0 .~· l :':0-1:::0 DICEON !\l/~' · b ene f i t s & sa la 1. y bet ~-& 11 <111i. fi l·l·!f!S:zq {714) 494-94Ql I lli:;ll Ill>..'OHlC. GuarantCL><I 1 HOMEMAKERS u11r 11'~pira l 11talr l"f'I!~ l ri'O::i·anl " private duty nul':"irl£" can provide a 111ra11i11glul opi;orlunity for 1 rho . .;e nuri;es \1•ho are 1'1!'9dy BANl\lNG UNION BANK NEWPORT BEACH Has '}, 011o.:rungs {;ll'l'11.:al J>o:.ilLO/IS, PROOI:_, OPR CREDIT VERIFIER P",'!,,~)1: •. 1.~.n\t1<w' '<~,Y. ','\v\l\w•IYin1011 \ CORRESPONDENCE ' [ Lus\on1crs. l:::.u·n 1'1lll', Puyl .111~1 f'-1ld •)!II' JI u u .~c UP JOHN El ' .. ~ .. "'-.J TELONIC l..a!cr. I .\!:1rril•t1 l\•ll:>li' in r;il'l;· f ~:~! \\'. Pl11rr111i11 ectron1cs ve1·,,cut or .se1td rl:swnc tu , INDUSTRIES : 534-7187 or 534-3144 i11i.t·1ic~. nu Lhildr r n. N\'i\'JYli·r Bra<'h r,r~.-•. ·~~1 ' ~~:!I l'<tit-..'IC"' l,U, <.:o~ta ' 1 JfuJ;band S1ockbroker. \Yill I n::ntr.111(•(' ('nrnrr .. r I ~~~~t~~~~~"~-LS-... -n-1in:-2)TS SECRETARY I L •guna Beach ' GENE RA L OFF I c E t~,'1~~~1~.·~l~~,,',o'.1~ "';~~o .. ;:~.',\' c f~,'.1-Pl11JcoA11Nti:l•Tl.O· RF\11IA:t~Lhi[l I n c. l' .'> 11 e r , e u n tin u o u s 1 1 Fast n1ovin... office needs .. .... Uhl .., o 1.-Gl.' Vun l\11r111un r:qua Oppor. Employer I I euiplo)n1cnt, top v•<q;:cs & Alert i::han1 1·1u'N"I' n1i•1<lr•t 1.:1.trcer nilnded indh·. lo ~-i:m'.!. f)ro]ll'ndiibtr woznt\ll f 0 1• l'\'i1tt:, CuliC. Licuc1us. Apply \\i'illard Uo.a.t person 1<,'/t'Xl'Cllcnt typing. + j as-.i.,t husy e:>.cr. ,\1·~ 1rpin~ ~lp·\dv ni:.:ht ,, ntk 1 n Hll t11u:1! u ll 11 o r l llll 1 I Y \\urh~, llOO Logan~\'C, ~\I lr<1nst:rihin; & gl'a?_1~1ar! ELECTRICAL . & lite hkkpni:; 1rill s1art yuu IF Y·OU LIKE PEOPLE 'I ni('•li~:1l h!<i::, N.r.. I~ hrs ··inplu~t:r in/f C,\lIBEll Opply \\'/dynanllc skll.1~ for <"ha I 1 ~n., Lil g \\·urk1n2 in1111<'<.liatl'ly. , i\k. f!<·nr fl1ii. Ph.f..1\J)".00 ---------- 1 1or 11 l'hani;" or pace. Ga)d p.1~·. p;1id .,.,·cekly. r ' .\pply .\Ion. Thni Fri. 11:~.0-12:3U ,(· 1;30-4:30 HOMEMAKEllS UP JOHN :~~ll \\', Plaernti11 :"\•'•11 jX111 Hl'llCh 6.i~l I~'?('r. rC11u11't't.l . av1J1:ttrauce. Xlu'L <.-OnLls. ., 1. 0 ,.... tn i·eal es tate pos1t1on. Opportunity _10 1 ASSEMBLERS • Jason Best Agency WED LIKE YOU J,\\'ITO!l ii·ani ~-lor L'<Jt1\·. :'!li\L\fr4l\'.\~CJ-: :\!Al\', FL 7i1\'1!Sl111cnt lirin. Secretary· lea111 11·ord pT'Oc.'t'<;Sln~. lil()(J Ur0ukhur.<:\ F. \h l ) . I \ I 11:1-1~. ,\· Rl:.l.IEF UFFICl-~ Li O ll ti h'lcphonc position to be Plea!'allt a I n1 O" [l h c ~£'' :'ui1e 21:: !l6J--G7;;, To C'Jn~idcr ;l c:u'Cer \\'ith lhr J ~~:~~1'-~: . er ri.\ n ::\.,/)Cl'~~~) lill:L. Apl. ..-uril '~ ..- 11 urk111.; fillt<l \Vhich is of key exccllo:-nl l11mpany benclit~. J l:R~E:\11..Y 1:-"C't.'(l!"fl. I \\'Orlds finrst Heal J-;slt\le \'irlnri.;i, ('.h111 ,\It·-:,, !o..1!;1r~. I'll: Ml_ .. _9.'_.,, __ _ I T:nl1<•nt'f' C'Orn<'r of P!:i.1·f'11!i11 .f.: Flag.!hipt f Qr An 1111.er-.:11· Appt . Call Doris M itchell 558-5280 I::qu;1] 011p.11·. En111Ju)l!' • uupol'ta.nce to operation. ~·5 Plrasc Call E'7p. 1n. n1ob!lc llontr -G-ENERAL OFffCE-Con1pnny, 'You supply the ::,....,..,.., .. -.,.._ ____ 11,IA."\AGEi\ll:::ilol :"\L:RSI-::.~ AI DES, will tnJn. I years exp e r . Salary THE IRVINE CO. ! c.'Onstruclloi.i rer(d. :'l lusl h~nc ~oocl typing skill~ drsire and v.·e'll supply the I Kl::\'PUl\'Cl l I Sharp Aggressive Gal t ln1r r.;1• \\'t'd 5 / 15 / 7 4 , \onunensw-ate w/ability .1:. (714) 644-3389 I Apply 111 per.-.on at &· lisure tt111itude, to handle !raining. Together, \\·c·u Tv manage a very active 911 n1-lp1n. Claee5 b t>gl n ' t' . .;1ici·1ence .. for appnt Call 9AM 'til NOON GOLDr.~ \\'EST ordl't-s and billing. on e:in1 you S l 5 0 0 I 111 0 1: I KEYPUNCH / boutlque. t\1ust h.a \·c to1ro 1 I !\Ion. 5/20/74. No phone l!.>J.-~ll i. ~tOBILE 1-iO~IES F1iden1Singer Coinputcr. r {" o n1 m i s s i o n L F'o re1a1I ex per., be ah!t• to take I calls plea~e. Parle: Lido -t:q.1:1! O[lpor . Ltnployer 1929 E .St. Andrei\· p]. Snial! offict•. inforn1ation concerning our OPERATOR I l/L·h;; ul resporvnbili tie.s. Conv. 466 F'la~hlp Rd, N.B. CASH IER Santa Ana S3:J..-0909 T a pmatic Corp. licensing progr am please I >.Jn't opportu1111y for right :-; I! H SJ.: S A f D Es , COUNTER GIRL 1 1s:ii Ki·1IC'r in,t!:. lrl'ine call Jack Ayers at s.-l!>-9491 I pc1-:;;on 1vho is inr ercs-lcrl 111 EX p E r:. I f: N c E &rnk ATTENDANT FULL TIME ELECTRONIC I ~=-9'-'79-603.0_c__ W ALKER & LEE a penn. I/time P'"'"o"' l'ta:n :m:>:n. '" ,0tttL P Ti Q\·l'r 21 , sfa M J un e lsL l ---:-+-REAL EST ATE I BM 129, Day Shift S.1.lary S.: conunisi;io11. It yuu U1•1.,·•r!y l'ilanor, 24-152 Via art 1me \\'c \\'ill 1rain m atlU'C', nc:tt, Appl y in J>rl'SOn only. 2 to 4 ASSEMBLER I c~::'llEP ... \L o rrice hCl[l. Typ· fn11nl.'di11tl' nprnin~.~ lor l~I 11ualiiy ..:ull IOI' appt. ' l·:sll'acla. J.;1gun11. I/ills. Commercial Teller I 11·el~. g1:oon.1e.tl indivit.Jual to P ti.t. Deli _Shel ~lii.:a re~~e~. Prr rcr experience but I\ 111 i1l~. or<lc r <lesk. oct·usional · qu.'llifi.C'<I lB:'ll 1~'9 nr)('n1111r~. TME LOOK 644·6500 . NURSES. P.N's for VJP "''O~ J.; n1tc .s.h1ft as Cas.luer 111 Brookhur..t & Ada.n1s., 11.E. 1 lr:iin. Sniall Conipany \l'itli I ~.rrand:-;. ADV1\NCE D i\IE R· fnRpec:tor Experience O!l arc11 111ulntor MA-NAGEMENT-T RNE llrl':t~. oprr:itini;: rnt, TCU, UNITED ~ut _!l~W hl·\''!lwnl'. Coin·?P Nr. &1\' -Ou. . plrns:int ~urroundinL'E. ·:t'nr l .;11,\ND!Slr.;G, 2921 S. Kil· D rt t de.~lr:iblc. l::xcel!ent co.1 T . 1 . 11 Rli ~hlfl.' ror expansion I Ser,\ tee Station zn C?Sta COU"NTER GIRL lor ,.,1,11 llir ~.·e•·. .111 , .• ,,._11 , sun, A Sn nta Ana. epa men bl'nefils. I rain ll t'Cslauranl 111 tt p I ,, CALIFORNIA BANK >I •1 h d I I V\ " "" '"' I THE IRVINE CO. I tu'l:.is oC 111ana,.e111 e n t p1'oi;run1. r rsonnc uapt. · c.::i . .,oncy an 111 & airITaft n,,, .. 1, t'.'eat _. Be I \ I Nrtt'i'Ol'T GENERAL OFFICE " Hoa" Jloc;pl!al NB c-;.cpcr. helpful, hut not ,,~ · ' . Bl' 1. ,'PP Y a t r. • I l ;1·cat 1''utwi'!! Slal't at $700. '.. ' ' · 201 Aventda' del Mar I 1.l'\'l'1'-'>. ~ starti!l.g salar y _Plei;~ant ll (' r 5 0 n a l 1 l r I ~1J\RINE .. 10. ,~·~~;;:,1 p.n1. E -.:pcr iPt\(•('rl. Bkkpg, Typing, nspector Please Call I call ConlJ:ol c II r el' r i\L'l1SES 1'111\', f/time, 1·3. San Clemente , 11.: bc·nefL!s. ,\pply 111 1)(_>rson ::H0-1.191. , :J07 Superior.·>~··"'--· Ph:.~1!0-S IOI ~lon·Frl. for in· 9AM 'tll NOON J J·.,nployn1e11t 1\~ency,I ~·1 1. t\1aturc w/ex p•r Lt·twn S<1.n1 & 2p111 at 296 E. COULi) you use t'Xtra $3~~s50 . lf'r.'i\!ii· u1111L linmediate openings for pre-(714) 644-3389 ... ~~j. J IOO li'VHJ(' Hl1·J, prl'f'd. Xln'1 ('(lndR. 642-2410. (714) 492-5123 lith StJ, C.i\I. Ask: !or Bill \\'k? P it e\·es & ~tc;, Pref. ELECTRONIC ciskln 1nechanical inspect Equal Opf!Qr. F:n1plo,\t'r _i'-.IJ. · / NURSf; ,\j,[;" for expan5ioa lfcnry._ ernpl'd. :\Ir. Ll'\'i 846-015;;. ASSEMBLERS ors Prefer a n1i nimun1 of 2 ·-1\1\J:'llT TnJC, )(]Jft IUILU'C Ptni:riun. 1t1 i111r. Pftr'S()nnei An Equal .op P o r I u n it Yr C i JEl'llJ CAL OPERATORS CREDIT VERIFIER Soldering: req'd. Ua~· Shift. You can Charge years cxpe1·i('ncc. l'.:xcell!'.'nt -\11\iil yr old c.."'O. Hclia, :ll·lo. rtt'pl, lll'!l2" llo~p. NB E1n ployer 1 ior t•xpandipg i\letal flefin-Frf' Paid. Fin;lllC\" dl'pt of PAL ELECTRONICS I DAILY PILOT lringc benefits and sala ry KEYPUNCH CPR Iii bUarn 1~1a.r1!l!i_dy w1cai·. NURSES AIDES 1 cry in San'la 1--e Springs. pl ush b.ink in 1'';ishion 11820 \\'p~\ern Ai·r. Classified Ads ,\PPl.Y IN P ERSON Dali• Pi'()('f'S..". Part-linic ti.Ir. Lt>\·i, IS'6-545S. Conv. !tome 642-«i93 ' ' Cill'nt. ba,..i,,......,.,nd in iichool Island nef'd.~ j n d i,,. Garden Gt'()1·c. 89i-J."Jll 4.7 Daily ~--· Good I I d · 1 Cl f"·' d 642 5678 S J\l\I . 6 Pi\t, l\fonday thru CLERK TYPIST MAST I OFf'ICt~. full rime, \\'ith 10 or 11astt'.!Xp.net't!ssary. \\'<'"P<'r. n e r e 1 a.i;.~i 1,_.,_. A: Call 612-:i6iS I -Friday ~ k dd B1\f'\K PART TIME NEW ACCOU_NTS '.c.o ..... be .. n ... •fi .. " .. · .. 21,._ .. _9'!1,. ................ _ ~:,;~\~~~~~· .~~~h~~l~.r~~~ ~-'_ .. _1'~'-''-.....c·=--====..:.' .'.:=::::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;~ t 9 /\~T . 12 llOO!l, Saturdny Eng~~~:VA1[1:1c~.''n\e I ASSEMBLER l'~r11:1~e ~a~~~~ a f':~· i ~ 'l ' ~l (J•" .. \L ••;o. Also '''" .. ...i,:;. Call ,1 ---~------~---------~, \rr.·r h<Jur;;;; c·•ll Plant Sup1 1·11 • I'\ ,. C\I llr.dli rec .. &: ~me t.y~lng. """' " 'It"'.. ""' ro ,. I 1 1 "' 111·en Ill. . BOAT :'llA~'T ASS J·:l'll HJ.Ell. 1 t Bkl< r 1·~ I I .Sally Hn11. f,.W..60J:J, C0.1!-'!al SEEK & FIND' \IJ,.,k T,,, I :•l 1 ~I\1 J U).-11:11. f>iper. rrq'd, ...,ln't IX'n•'fllii. p It I 0 ft J-: X p ER. • c IW. :-..p P~ ni. Wit P '' . .,· nnel ,,., .. , .. ,., 2 ·, 9 ·' .. LEAR f' 1.. ' • . p Id R he quick, l\ccurate ' p' " u f !'L'(' II(' '. ml'" 11\S. a l'REt'Efi t:o. BUT NOT kl . ll'l·bo1· "'''''· C\I ' h • ,. P l't I R""QUIH<'O E ~ n;i; ca1-cer wilh future: . I •l :.;, ut ·c 1>: \'11\'ll 1on~. ro 1 "' "' . P H.:\IAN t.:NT 1 Ni'\\'flOl'I Bea(:h, Call ~tr. CUSTODJ;\N/Handynian fur D Pot·~ U R S C P C F S C F F F J S S J SIEGLER I ~1i11rln~. Equal 0 p fl o r . JOB, i\.1AN\." HENEFJ'TS. SIHl\\', S.12-9262 CLERK . JOBS UNITED CAL IFORNIA BANK I I S;1n1;i An11 Iii ii "li·~.>$l An ~:qual 011P01'tu11i1y Emplo;.·rr J.!!"'""'!a!'!A~H~l'l'E~,!'!'D~b!'!'.R!"'!!! .. ; COCr\TAlL \\'1\ITI~LS.S must lie over 21 . 54~9J•Ki LUO<Y LJO!'< liOO PlacenUa, Cmta ~fcsit BC:AUTY OPERATORS Huntington Beach &. Sant;, Ana &alon11. FUJI time. part time. iOr t.\-n. ~ 008·8080 JJ.8. or 97~ S.A. BEAUTY OPEIL\'iUR Mu~I hf' ltctn~d. As1nstan11, Md aliiO ~IUimPoO f,iirl for bu~y ~Ion, 1610 \V. Coost Jf1<,')', N.B. 642-3970. BEAOTY ()perat;1r, bu1<y I !!hop. Neto\' license 01\.. Hf::ADY'S, 6~ BEER Bar ~!aid \\'antM, lliii;hls S u n da y thru ~ Call Nancy at Don't gl\'t' 11p !he sl'tlp! "Liit" i1 in clautfiOO, Ship / to S}l(ft Rerull1! 642-5678. JOBS JOBS TYPISTS Good 1~·ping skills :JJ v.•.p.m. pll.IS CLERK ?olnth oriented & good Eni.tlish l'OmfJO!iition ~b1llly MATH CLERKS Good math rea:ionlng: and calculations Apply Jn Per sonnel Dt'pt 9 to 11 8in, :-Olon-1'-r1 PACIFIC MUTUAL 100 l\'f'w(K111 t:en1c-r Ur Ne\.\-porl Beach Eqtu.L] Oppor. Employer priv. Club. English n~. ! R u o G N o c E E C A A N A A v u o S / cniptoycr. I LE RELL -•2°'o"'F"'F"'1'"'C"'E'"""G"'l"R"L"'S~ ~/:,~1!~ pe~~ l~l~l~~~~ i ~t D 0 \' N E E K Y ;N NM V D A t.I U S l~NO\\ILEDG E1\ULE Pl:i11; NEEDED Dr., L.iguna Nigul'I. TRANSPORT I Lover 1 \\':inl1•d. llouliQllt' MFG. CO. l"l.1dlo telepl'IOn" dispatch 0 AR J 0 E Y 0 C N G A I 0 N I 0 C A I , •• 'Ill 'I 1 I -bl t ·•~-CUST SERV. $600 1 DYNAMICS I sri:_-~ .... .::.__ _ _, ___ 13i00 F'in'.'ston" Blvd. Snnta ,,us lCJ>.J, a e o....-ivoi: I A R V K L N L • I " S O G N S G • 11 L 1 L.\IJY OP.l\·r·:R f1)t' Dn n1·c I t°t' ~)ri n;,?~. C:i. Ct1 1•11\cnl!~ Apply ln Person t-re Pnid /,\l~u t'ee J1Jlis " ., " ''I'! IV "·grr"ro•11 C Qfl S A F' I' I ··" · ,...., '" / Studlo. p;.t'l •tlnir•. U!· · · 1;\')', '..Q Ull YELLOW CAB CO. C.'o118w""E'·sTf'.\_P"Lrl.FTFy pln~ 1 S C E Y L O O r S· O C N G N F v N 1 l~('n r lfarhor k \rarnt•r1 uc .. •Hi:! Oppor1u11 i1y Eniploycr i\.11r 1o .. F' CL ~/ ~nta Ana ...., •· ltl!h, Co.ta 1'1tN. s-PA v ~ ?\I B 1/-"'C K coo O S O•l! \Equnl 011JlQl1J\;~~~Y en1riloy('r l Ol<"FICE lll"lp. Some typlnr , A E J F A R ;10 C A 0 C N G R J N J Leading Valve Maoufactur1r NMd1 MEAT CUTTERS 11 '11 0111"' work. MOWlll'>l f>t-rs.)Jlllt'I i\g(•111._·y ''lark Il l (:,•rurr• 16.:il Jo.:. F:din,s:l'r. ,. ' ~12-Sfl:'.6 Dela Proceftslng c o N G A zj!o H E N • G u • " E c; • INSPECTOR A KV J J NKD OTC NTV OO KMA 1 or X-Hny~. (Should enpy I "·orking \V/hand11, Appty Safeway Stores Or:inge O:>as.1 Dental X·Ra.y, ll.1~ /I" r nuin 1•n t lfl!!,l Z2IU F'oll'Vlew, SuJte 7, llRAFTSMAN EAM OPERATOR Opening exists in Ne\\-p0t1 Beach bftsed firntnc\RI l\). fur E Ai\I opcre t o r experienced In !he follov..lnt; JB:\I cqul11m1"nt. 053. OS.~. 514. !\00\t'led~t> of !)allCI "·iring h Jpful . but nol n\;ndl\IQf')'. P EE R NENNN UI OOA tS RAD E &APPYBIRTH DAY ~A R YP HDJCNNBANUMV E P S U ROF . O S O MR OF UOCA UJ RAD S UP EU J AR C CSAJ SSSO VA R S S l11murdolls: 'tPlc htdtl'" 11.unu l~tcd be.lo" arl!f~I forwa1d. btck•ud. ufl, da-.n, Of di.ttO"tlly ln Iii puidt. f.lnd tach 1Udlk11 n"1Tlt and bo~ h in aa thO'&'n: .-~~\! 00\'Ml!I J\\'\ For Appt . Conta1·L Carol Smith 644.5900 F'I I" , i f'l,\Hl'I t'.\111~1"•~~ Pl:.l>:OE ;. A\'C:O n11nc ft.I .-,PT'\ ~ (:lt\l.(•t ··011~0!iA !'()1'1110'" o! 1st Shift I Jo;\l>f'I'. 111 \'eh·" tll"s!gn, 1)1'6\IU('livn looling, lolf'r· 1111~'('5 & flll'!. rtukc detail .\11•11, n::c:rcs.-:ive pt"rson 11·Hh ilt'l\\iinw; rlh'f'1·11~· rrom lny- c\fll'l1l'n<'C in r h £' t' k I 11 1;: I out~. Xln'I IK'nefllii 11111te1·i11.I t1> s1111lfl11n l~ fl 1 In pmc."CM<, 121 flSlCl..Rg'.f' g'.f'lf)(l'i, I •:P cus101nrr ~hipn1cnt .i I· ,,•f'llrnl \>l'll('fil!i, r11\d heAh h. life In !i u 1·1111 cc, \'ll«tt1l•1n<: !: sirk lrn\c, Appl~· Jo l't'rit()n CLA-VAL CO. 171h & Pla('('ntlr1, C'll x1n't bMM:fiTs. F~c 111<" &i nied in.~. PnttJ ob!K<ncc & \'nett! klnll. Proft sharing. fAuitl Qppor. cn1pl~f?r o p en lnJ::s f nr g ood ! Costa J\lesa.. jou11lt>~ n1en meat cuue~. If , b"1~.o"E~R"LA°"~D~Y,...,lo-,..-,l-1t-,.tn )OU h111·1• ov1'r 2 yri; me~! Guest Ho1ne. Uv .. ln o: (' u t I 111 g \' x P e r . 111 Jlve-OUt. 5.i7-87M .<:Ufl('rnu'l1~c-ts con !l ld f' r l"tunhn{ 10 &ifC''.\11)'. \Vr otfr1· ;.cln'i 1\· o r k In si: r<1ndil ion.<1, union IJf'n{'ftl~. I 01i11or t un t 1 y ro r /1fl Vl\r1/•('1\JClll k 51'.00f.i jc)I) set'\ll•il). 'Coll 1714) 637-8200 t·or ,\Jure Infll1'1111'11ion · Trivia? lt't a reason \\'IIE;-1 Fl\lTl.JNG £GGS tN Equ11I . Oppor. EmPl11ycr Equal Oppor. Eniployer , 011Ut.u.1'c f\l:llA ·"l'f\TllA PRIMARK PRODUCTS CLET-tli ro1 door sales & ~ T,,,,,_i ~•~11~"'01 J1.,.11.. ~ \ L..----------2620 S. Su~nn • 1\L.U~tlNU:\I POTS •dd a 1.., .. '~'~11~1'·..,r,~r!!!"F•'"·'~"'~"-_,, hlfl(' ,;ne1:11r. 1'h l!1 w\11 kttp to read the Dally Piiot', , .. , entertolnment ' page every & er\' cc n t' f?d ed h Y DF.Nl'AL RJo.:CEP'TIONIST To onln 111ny or all of lht t~p1nded "Sttk & Find" boob, Sa I A O+l!f Au!C•moll\'t: Pt.'I. i\.fl'i. PlanL EXJ!(!rle~. N.B. aru. ' numbns 2 dirouuh 6 , &end SO ttnrs for nch, rnakina chtt b Near i1;~l~r ~-"\vllnlf'~ A\'f'. J !li;:h~M1ool tj r ad\t81,, 557-8161 ~ 1 1 • " ·12 :n.~ -payablt lo ''Sttk & Find,'' .Jtar•Tele1r11m SyncUc11c. Addtns 1114! ~w.4020 u. • • C.'laislficd Ad i Oil 6 1 5678 kum in~ of thii Oftl'llN9U· F'..quAl O~por. Employer CLASS SELLS • ~u.618 t _od~ay.,,,_! -----------------'------)"",,;,..,.,.;,..,...,.!.! ..... • 1 Saturday pan IfTlnl d1t11kc11\ng, Useful Sug::tr &wl, Co11on Bo\\•I, but t'IO 1onJ;t"•~r nei"dtl(f itemr. Oroni_(l' Bo~l or ltl!}' kind sell fa.<;t with " o11Hy Pilot of bo"·l will 111'11 1vlth A. Cla~ifil'fl Ad. 6u.-s67S. Ot11ly Pllot Classified 1\d! 1 •--------J 642-5618. t • PA ( I h• u "' p '·' 83 <-0 p TC p " , ru N •• I' & • • R y l ' I ' " •• ' • • " •• ' .. ~ -..... 1!)'11 ' ' L • Help Wentod M&F 71ii0ifl Mo"'"· M•r 11, 1974 OAIL v PILOT 25 ' •. P Wanted, M&F 7100 Help Wented, MlF 7100 1 Help W1nted, M&F 7100 I Help Wented. M&F 7100 I Help Wanted, M&F 7100JHelp W1nted, M&F 7100 Help Wanted M&F 7100 Cati IO-··s· ORDER DESK ... -• -' ' • j-"'"-----.;.;'cc1 ecau1ltul '"""'"" ""' In RECEIVING RECEPTIONIST / Sal" •No""""~' okl SECRETARY SECRETARIES I 11110 \\'ANTS ;n ll'nRJ<: 111'1.ALAYAN Kl'tfENS & ,.;,..., 'Compl<". Mu" haw I ENGELHARD SILVER 1 TOOL MAKER I DRIVE A CAR' "ud ' """""'· Re•l'1crtd J[aod phont> 11t.•rson:1\11y & CLERK . $600. Wk. Commission " \ Cl lOOSJ.' you r hours. ~·nrk &11lpointJ1, 4 gen c r• t I on gJ.X){J •• cll·r~ .. 1 i1k11l~. Sular;y TYPIST I l .Jl\./". FALL!r\G 1 TOOL ROOM I for younr.elf, tW' )-ou r 01~·11 an<-c:.try. $80. & up . 10 I'~, Coll !lot• Johm•»>. 5 d"y fm·k we<k. s hou" 1 ,.., Olff m· BED DOUBLE DUTY , 11·, "' "'"""• q•"l'I""' MACHINISTS "°''" >:en or ''°meo. C>u,I i71<•'7i>-81!10 1>1()-(Ai.5, ,<'u11~tHl Pt1·!>'11111e1 day., 1 11.n1. tu :1:30 11 .in . ... If \'OU SEU.· ' :-t'<·rcturiC!> \\ lhE' lollo\1111~· 1 be i;!ightly ha11dil'tl1"1pi'd 0,_-,=-'-''"'------=~ Ai.~ney, :1790 Jl nrh 11 r Hlvd, tal!n1~u1n o! 2 yr"' r i.; 0 1 1 , I FOR TllE TOP Cf)~tPANY \\'c e urr1•n1ly have 11.11 1~·lr11ed r x pc r J 1•11 cl'. \,, 1111,/ 2n!I sh!f1.~. Pah l Neat • C\~1111 1\ppt!arAn(•r ~. (.')t 1•x1>1-•i·icni·e in a rcrei 'ln perat e e t'Clron 1 : •• npe n1ng foral'l'[lal>ll•, hard-f'.x,i•ll!'nt t)ping & .!ih rrlrdii·al and life ini;uranl"t•.1 Vt*'" rt"lired. Age 25 tu 70. e PUPPY WORLD e a n ct I 0 r ~ 1 1 ~ K .~\\'1\chboar1I. Ac cu rn t t 1111~ TOP LIN~.! \\'1lrk1n11 St-<·retary \VhO Cl\fl n.<qu ir('l f. Ovt>t·unic. Sup1ilen1enf .vour in1'0me. PAINTER dci~irlrneut. ro11,kPP 11 .'\~ !)pis!. ?i1'111. tiO \\',p,n1. ,\\'1Tll .TOP INTEGRITY! kt't'P u11 .,.,.\lh the paL'e ol /Finance Secretary Drive a csb Ghrsormoi-e 11 \Vt1tch dOgA -GcrmMn Sh!'!p. E.-.:pcr. Only Apply •'):l~·rillno.:~ llel·i:ssiuy, he:ivy l'lf'ttr!r rypcY.T1t<·r. ! !'...: .c ~I. KAJtJ) halln1arks. 1 .... ·o busy drp1111n1rrrt!l. The Nurnt>c•i·s 1irlf'll\L-ct y, /:..:lift EVENING & SAT. day. Apply in wn;on, he1'(111, Chihut1hu1t:ii, Tl n Y St>r Personnr•J ~lllnt•1<l'I' hft1ng. {rtxi<J bcncJits Piud (' 11 F A · , ~ _r1uhzes, \\<elg!1~.s. . 9 9 9 ll(!ltcled l111'flvidu!il \\' 11 11 i'ilttt typing .~kills. Yf'llO\\' Otb Co .• 11!6 t:. 16th 1Joodll11, Pl! Uul\11, CO..lui· Balboa Ba y Club tu•al lh If · a or Pill . F'1nl' ca. 5·10.2;:,.5().100 O't. l'rport both to the \\'estrrn .1c t ti f INTERVIEWS St Costa •1-• 1~. J11••e11esc S11un., Irish .. 1 • '. c ,1 n s u r all o.: c, Inr!u~t rlul Htlatl(lnl! 1,,,,. 1,,,d ENGELHARD ts" , · ' .. ons rue on " """' · 1221 \V. Const][\\')'. Nij, ~o11·u ions , Sil·k lea\C ltf'glonlll Saloa J\lana1;er n.nrt M k t' S , \\'O!\l \N Sct1crs, lllL,kl~.,;. Pugs, Bull lNTl .ll 11 NT -.----Aplly in person; ' (71 4) 494-9401 .• /\LL \VI' srll'.!J. lf you are C0ntr<>llf'r, exeri'islng llOIWI ar e ing ec Y 8,\;\I . SPJ\I, l\!oni\tiy 1hru 111\:ai'ic~ ~~1.1 .1ak,1c10n','',,'1~; 1°f l>O_t:l'I, LOO i\1lXED PUPS.: J'i\ " A tD, l·:xp'd hon dub l c and mean typinK anti sh011hand skills THE IRVINE CO ~·r1dny I . ' . " 0 !-;tud Scrvk·c i\tOJ)t Breeds. 11011-w1ion, i:llU ult 4:30, ' PRIMARK l'lusiness, pleaM? "a 11 nrid 1>lcasan1 "r,one n1rinnf'r. • '!\:\I J' N "·1 d :iun. e\·c. Call nltr r 5 pn1 0""n Ev<'i. ~"l .fi027. ~8 27J!t TELONIC .. . r p1 .. a··• CaJI ·'' · ~ oon, . .,,,,. ur ny ::,lui.. ht\Y tlrll(' rlu ru1r• \\·k. .,.. "" · ' PRODUC r.7""21~1 or 5 47-8096 Your dutiei n the Sa.h·s ... = "' OoGOBED!ENO: CLASS PART TIME HELP TS CO. 1NDUSTRIES ANYTl~lE! Training and l\.llll'kcting ~/)f. 1v 111 (714) 644-3389 l\lt\;·r hOUr:> call Plant SuVl I • -lfl:{-9',lj~ • 'J'O Siar! Wed. Ju~ S, in Ule ('o()l<s & d!'lvi·r:s, tiVl'r 21 , 2(;20 S. Susan Rssistunce? cc r 1 a Inly! Incl ude handling 1·u~ton1e1· I !l:\i\1 'Iii NOON at 17141 546-:H:ll. y,\RlJ 1•arr. Apt con1plex. i'\;C\\'poi·t / Irvine area. Ca.II /fr!t ~J2, CH!l f. 11 ,. 1 ,. 1 • 1 ,., ~111ta l\11u. ('all!. 92i0.I ;\l;1nagcment available. liaison, sales booking and I r;qual l)ppor. En1ployer LEAR N1~d d~pcndabk• .!itudent r•lr ~\0-l!l~~. I N ,\11 l'Qual 01 , 111 u·!unhv Laguna Beach Ai\1ERICAN interface \1-ith En !It e r n \\'e(•kly n1a!11tenan('c .. \lli~l ::_:::::::_ _____ ~ I 1't'nsr. Cul So f)l'l~nuhlc. • J::q ual 0 11por. i.:n1plovl'r ~1·po 1 11· J Ii I S R T " · J fJt lSll Setter Pup,. AKC. 9 UU !::. 11th St., ro~tri t'.l<·~a cn1pl<1yc·r 111/I ~ HERITAGE SILVE:R 1: r1t.e o u't'. n 1c ECU I y 1111\1' rqu1p.-' gr .. • C»sta 1'lrsu & Sonta J\nfl aecount1ng Area, you \\lll GUARDS SIEGLER 1 2\ilO Florida. !I.E. \\'k!I. 1'hend e rln. Top RECEPTIONIST -S,\LtS handle son1e figure \\·ork as Quality. S7~$l2j, i\1a\es. StorC'. t>~Tl:'.6. i;ha i·p ,.,. 1 "" i ·" 1 . RECEPT/LEGAL E XPERIENCE ,,·ell as n10rtthly repo1111, .~0ef'd pJ!lcn.11' guards fQr .,;~lS.o...:?~16!!:::... ------ PBX $600 eo ' .re. t.'u or main Grt'ill chance to start a range o. area. For -·'"°"Y rxp. ';! Jlf').~lr!nn !Jnnr<I lolohy of u1:inof. linn, in t'fl l'\•i·r in the legal field. NOT NEEDED It you'd Ilk(' a tine starting inlervie\v Call t 21 31 TRANSPORT [ :...~ • ...,, ll ~l A~'GJIAN Puppit'.'i;, iUi.C, le'\ n1c lrldu11. Con1plex l\N'fl. Sll1r1 ;is reccpl. nit'f!tlllg , • . SHlary, g~fringl" benc:liti;, 4 3 5 -S 9 j 9. La\.\' r c n c e DYNAMICS _......, · .!ihOY.' qualily. i\1/F. !11h nf'•I hkl(: in Irvin,... • t-.lli:.I have <>ood t"p•'ng 1,.1 •. ,1,,,1 ,.1.,.,,1,1•. Good $82:> i\11n. to $2-lOO .n1onlhly nlodern 11ork cn\·lronm('nl ,.,..,. ·1 1 • • n .. h "!31 11, I 6i3-2a.:i2, iti:>-19LL "3" 9770 * 100"'• FREE " " '... ... ... t ed ~ ,,.. if ..:""~y~C"_. _LAJn1; 0<:ac . " . Scgerstrom " .r 11 "k1lJ b, f1unt ore <i.ppcaL" ,\r typuig skillll. Call H.ila guar_a!l e · ._...mmtss'"":.' and an opportunity to gro\Y ~t-ar H11rbo1· & \Vaml'r 1\~'G !IAN Pups, show or Jli.'1 , Cash P(•l'.Wnn('I Al{l'IJ('V ple;u;ant per.wnalu,y. \Vlll .Johnson. :>.!0--60:x>, Cnast11I qualified. <;ompany. vehicle,! \\'ilh It i;nuill t:omputer· Sr. Bu~r Indus. to $14K Sama Ana A • 8005 I he-st ~:ni:;lish & ero .... ·n (.'rest .-41)19 '''"st('J'ly, /\H. !\n. ":lo! opt>rutc PBX:Oial oonsolC', J>('n,ul\rl('l Ag('ncy, 2 7 9 o repeat bus1nes~, \\~kl)'. & oricnt"d firm. send yoor Sr. J>roject engineer ntiq~u~•~•c_ ____ _:::::: lines. fleas. 645-2235 Pk>~~ Cull For l)h·•·clLons A•_'f'i•1 rrl·iiurnL inc.'OininA Jl:irbor Blvd, c~-I mo~thly bo~uses. ~ayllme resume or apply lo: Indus in'Od . develop 519K £qual opportunity C'mployer * * * * * I PBX OPJo:R,\TOR--v1i;ltorll & a1nillc11n1i;. ~fin of woik. No e\es. Local meal Industrial Engr Sl3K i\l/F Free To You Tc>l1•pho11(' 1111s1\"t'rlui:: M'J''" 2 )I'S relatcrl ('Xficl'. "'holesaler: ., _ p Standard Ship1Sched. S!)('c 10 "'"K ·~~~""""'"'"""""""""I t:OIE STEVESSO~ 222 '.\larine' A\e, Uni boa 8045 ' . I I Apply In 1> . R('Ct'plion!st i\11· .r-.tar!Ul, 213-711}-8543 '~ I o.... b t '11"00 TYPIST. n1ust hRV(' good pro """~1<"113 ,. x c· 111 n g ('. · erson FACT IS Memor· S I C f ""ga ~-..:)', pro a e t;~tuon ltil11nd, N.B. Exp1'r, Eril•'I' lnduslri('S, lnc PBX 1e I n • ~,IC Bkkpr, Consll' $850 ('QITesponi.l('ll('f" -~· vnrted 01 1!y. Top }:ltty .~ bC'nt~fils. 2101 Dovt> $1. N, B. Everyone Eat.s M eat A Suh.~idiiuy of Insurance Biller to $600 1 Y P ing s k 1 I I s · t~t;RJ\IAN Sl!EP. Puppy, ll ''ks. to .gd home. ~~ G~:lt~l.\J'J SHEP. Puppy, 11 ''ks. 10 ~d home. ;w;,..66l4 <?Jll 6.j.l-i!Xi9. ---R ; $1U.ES represenlative for · APPLIEI) ~ .. 1 AG N ET I C S · Payroll Clerk to $750 ~X:,~,~~1~;~!cd~ies &·in v•~; 1· You t11'e the \\ i1111er •Jf PRACTICAl. , NUllS1'.> ci r Recept/Gen Ofc $SOO ecept1"on1"st n1ajor !\.lfg. of concrete ' , CORP. ~kkpr, Sec)·/ConStr 1 ;)0 117,0070 ,d•·pt. . or 11 nan c i.n I TWO FREE TICKETS nuf'!le's aldt'. Liv",·,,. Top Trrrific pince to strirt. \VIU products. AI_ust be 2221S.Ann~S1._ Genera.10.Uice, ,. 0 ,,.0 ,.,,1101 lnt•r··••og 1 ,1 ' I · 11 Sunl Ana Cal I 92 IH Reloept1on1st Sec ""M .:: ... n.. 1 • "' .. i; 1 0 ie · salary. Lovely l!ving cond. rHJn on r is 1>0s11ton. Fi.:11 aggressive & l!\'e in Orange a. • 1 • ' , . Y to ~ v.·ork. Xlnt v.·orking conds. Southern Cal'•forn'ia · 493-4168. ""''"' lo type. No sh mfd. Pcne< offer' p e r man, n 1 County. Esper. desired but Cl.,·k TYP"' ,~ & Ix 111 GH-43Gil ··i:css" need' a homo. lie -Lo; ('all Ann 835-327:) Pmplo.v1nent, paid V8Cn tion nol necessaty. Senti rcsunie An eq~~ f P";;~tun\ty Ree~pt/Sec"y, H.B. S550 · co. •ne s. · · MOBILE HOM.E SHOW is u l1oust'broken JO v.·k old PRODUC 1 ION CaJ.\l/cstrrn aftr·r 6 nionths, plus l ..... el•k & salary expecled 10 P.O. n P oy I f.lcc.l1cal lrnt ofc to S700 VALVE il'tay 18th rhru ~l;iy 27th klU;,,c"~"~"~''~"'~'~'----- ARTIST F:n1plo,Yn1t>nt Agenl.'y pair] t1n1e off at Chrlstmas. Box Ll4-F 256 S. Robertson, 1 -, Sec Y to pres. $650 at lhc I.l\1\S,\ Apso pure breed. NttdNI Pu rt lim•· 1vork. for 1631 Nu. Bdstol Sre. 311 Cflmpany paid liff', hospital,, lieverly Hills. .All replies I Secretary ' St;cy, ~e~:"pt Orange $700 ANAHEIM STADIUM '.) yN . \'cry people oriented. ~ paste up artl~t. f'f11l Sen l.lnl'Oln &tvings Bldg, SA surgit•11t, n1crtical and dental I <.'Qnfidenlial Girl F'r1/1nter lo $i00 MANUFACTURER 2000 St<itc College B\\'d. 1·0 g1 I. hon1e. 64.J-1·198 P.1n(la:r.inc, ~1~·Wl ask ror benrfils., 1• du cat i o na I . 1 Ad • Call Jeannie Sisco , . .. Anr.h.•'.hn . • · •. ,-,1 0 o RA 8 LE CAT S, n ,11 c·.i,· .. ,·-· RECEPTIONIST-nsslstall{'e, & (' nl p I oy (' e SALES ~elp neencd, expc!''c.1.' m1 n-& Sid lloffman 11 '" ~ I " ., A111 l ''' ~-·n Ja k' ease. call lN'l-.. ,.178, ('XI. 333 !i"-")'t'd IL'!11 .... ,_ ln'en<ily. \ r ... 1oc·k purchaS(' plan . , , ~ ··-'""" • r 1' lS NEWPORT t I · ,..,. v• " PRODUCTION '\'ood\o:ol'krr ec Paid. ln1aginc only Ex,. t' 11 e n 1 \\' 0 r k in it F ash~on cent" r, j .) • t 1. NEEDS 0 c aim your Uckt'ts. (NOl'lh t•r hath. 6 l2-TIB8 rK>On to 5 & Plastic ~loldlns~. \\'ill ~:?rk.in~ 3 ·1. ;IA)' v.k. i\lu~t t'Otldilkln.s 11nd g ro \\'th _Huntington Ctr, 11.B. IS ra 1ve Personnel Agency MACHINIST Coun~v loll b·ee flUJll ber i.'i -FREEPUPPT ES-- ···'n Cail "'" '116 ,•ck t'or \Ct)' cffu:1c11t on 11ush ,. I SALES \I' , . . 833 Dover Dr N D. ft.IO-l.101. ~........ . ,,.~ "" h.u.non ~'011:-.Jle. S11!ary to polrn ia . . • omens 1~t1n1ate ·• ,u . ASSEMBLER 89i-7i71 '*"'ll· l S.JJO. Cull ~ll\' II art \\' ~ I · k' appal'e.I. No exp necessa1y. Secretary 642-3870 * * * * * I '---JttWGR~IVE' Elt'Clrouli ·s I '""' ,,,.,.. . ·. : c ll.""'. P_I" sent .> SC<' 10~ n • r utl or part tune 832-4172 1''ull Or P /thue ---F · 8050 ,,..,v-uu.)J. ,\lso ~et> Jobs. Nt<'ept1ornst v.·1rh prE'V1ous , _ . , • 4,40 \l'cck l\IAG:'-l lFICJ::NT Displa y: urn1ture t'1mpany has i111111cdlatc Coast·' p I '" S"'A'1Sf0 L•<-<-,.. ,. p & I I SEllVICE Sta. -\ttendant, • .;;_. __ ' "' ('r!iOOne "'6eney, rnx expt>rieJl<.'c. This c. " iu:..~. ... " . -.... Periocl fll!"'li\UI"C. Oak ' I Kll\!GSIZE """' -:---,. Me-nlng for 11ccounl!i ruy· J -~IO II arbor Blvd, Ci\1 posll ion requires g 0 0 d 1 !"a.1necs. Davr C ~ r !'? 11 Exccl/Pnt shorthand a n d lull & p!time. 990 E. Coast C LA-VAL CO. Bronzes. fme c r y s ta I • . . .,...,,, x1ra inn. Ahlf! clerk, 2·3 yrs pl't'vious typ1ni;: ~kills, i1nmaculalt> :sailmakers, C.~1. 641-85W tyjling skills required 1n H'N")', N.B. 17th & Placentia C:\l porcelain. 01ienlal art, etc .. i~eii, uicl. 111~.ttress, 00 :'( l'!XJl prrl. Xlnt bent-Ill~. l"On· 1 RECEPTIONIST grooming. in1"lligencl' and ud rhtion to good telephone SERVICE station personnel. ' · ere., S 5 O O, O O O lnvcnlo1)'. springs &_ flarne. $1~. tact Arlene. Ne \Y ll ~ .. I Ff'<' Pa1d·Chl'C'rful telephonl' tal'lh1lncss in J:i't'Ctin11; and ..6...Cecretaries rliquelle. ~fu.'it be flexible I Full or part time. EXper. Exper. req. Xlnt benelils Southland'!'> most elegant !v.·orth S 3 " 0 . 1 • Queensize 1.abornro~C'~. &i I • E.~~1 ,·111c(' & lilt! typing skills n'fl'rin~ company vendor<i, Jiii( ~ in_ approach to thf' joh ~d pref. Top pay & benefits. • Free Ille &. med Ins. auction gallery, '\le buy for St-1 5 • Inc. dchvery. Usually ;young, Santn Ann, :.I0.4!114 I v.·1lJ lan1J this fun ~pot. Loi.~ t·ui;torncr and e.1nployment *PBX Operators \\·111\ng to accept a vanety C..'hevron Station 3 O o O * Paicl absence & vac rn sh o r a cc~ pt ltinie 8J2...2-IS8c Kqua! opporlunhy ('1t11JI0~1·1· 11r public contact. Also f"r <' ;1pplican!s. t.linlmum. of 1 , 0f tasks as the \\'ork 1.oad fairvie\\', Costa .r-.t~sa. * Profit Sha1;ng consignments. 645-2200 1 SHHHI FURNITURE l'osi tion.~. yi·nr rehlt"d cxpcriencc.·1 *Bookkeepers tlrn1ands. S ub s tRnt 1aJ j Sll\MPOO .1. 1 Steady En1ployment i:;,\RLY Victoriao 6• AT WHOLESALE! REAL ESTATE Jason Best Agency ,\pply: *A Cl k 1 previous sccrf'tarial : &, 1g1~~ & ass~tants Q\\tl Tools Required Ynu ha\•e your 01\-n prh·alt' 17-100 Brookhursl. r·. Viv. CCtng er 5 , experienc(' required. , . genera . e p. App Y lll lo\•eseat, beaut i I u 11 y 894-2020 dcrk & phone. Sanie locallun "' . 2 · PERT EC I I person, !-lair Hunters, No. Equal Opper. Emp!O)'er reupholstered. 673-6108 aft 6 18 yrs. Ne\\' or f'XJ'l'd l'i':il ... uitc 13 9fi3-677j f *General Ofc \\"('. offrr rxC'r·l!~nt s~lary ~net 70, Fahion lslasd. pn1 BEAUTll,UL Things.Sofa .t: e~tale ic:1!cs p e o Pl c RE I *f"I Cl k fnngl' 1Jcnef11s incluchn~ SHIPPING & \\larehouse man VERY SPECIAL SIT 0 love seat. tables, lamps, 6 wol<omo: c,. 11 10 ,. CEPT/SECY to$550 BUSINESS SYSTEMS I e er 5 '""'"""' P''" lifo and w/,,,mc e<p >'ull time 1 · 1 d U~TI N Appliances 8010 pc. Ddnn "'" 1V, b.r & inlt•r.·iP""" fee Ptiid. u:-e ~'Our t<11l't11 j 17)12 Armstrong Ave. *Clerk Typ"sts n1edical insurance. \\'ilsons of. C~ifornia, 128i or gdentech la YT"' ~c,hool n1in'QN. Tustin. 54..\-69U. W • LI v.·/job lhnt fil.$ you. Brl~hr I f • I Lo C~f age aug trr. op sa ary FRE!Gl!T D >\:lfAGE SALE, -PC -. r.. u·hrnn1y<'r, Ju1u1·e Jn Irvine Also FCI' Santa Ana, Ca I • i *S T • Apply In Person 2an . for chee11ul concc111ed !)('r· I ~. . .> L'Omer "'nlnut bdrm ;:~ Newpurc U!vrl., C./\.f. Puliitions Cati . Control an pque! opportunity , r. yp1sts SfATISTlC1\L CLERK, part son. Business sldtls in nenr-new !o\\'~tnt Re f r I g-set \\'/bltin stereo l: record .,._.3921 or Eve. 673-4577 C'at·l·l'r · F nl P Inv 111 " 01 e1nployl'r n1/f I *Stat Typ"tsts LEAR tinic. Builder. small office. by office in A~f. Lire home·c 0~~0';'· h as iers~.; Drye1rs & player. $175. Best oUer. • • ,, ... , kno ·ct· bl , .• d Ii i r>I h 1 l-\11\\as ers, <'"' Var-&W-l{j38 or 64-J..8380 eves. A.L;cnCT 3100 lrvinc Bl ·d _ _ ' "" 1v ac s paya e. n1a in u es n .. oUS· Cred' B N.B. i-i6-~J0."1. \ 'R. EST AU H. ANT now *Repro Typists SIEGLER Figure aplil~~e. chec k in~ss COUf:>le w/~irls 6 & 10 ~~nt~· 1~t 0 LiA, 36 23 KING SIZL BED. xlnt cond. inter.1e"1ng for fast fry voucher v.·n!mg. a cc t. \\'111 pro,·1de private <1uar-· arner, a a, near xtra firm. $21)(). 847-0865 RE~PTION~.)1-ASSNT for 2nd breakfast cook & young. VOLT posting, light typing, other ters, food, in lovely home !{arbor. 979-292l. ~·~"~n~i~n·~·~·-------I animal Hos1 i:i:cal. Nt>Y.·po1:t exp. "'llitttAs over 21. clerical. Call &l2--U21. v.·/pool, pi11no, car, and WHITE. deluxe, portable S' VELVET sofa, avocado Full or pwt time. Eves. ~ill Beach Jlouse Inn 497_11.SS Instant Personnel TRANSPORT share C'hild-\\·atch\ng, cook· Kit c hen aid Dish.,..·a.sher, 10pm. or \\·kends· \\'ntl' .\la)O· r ~1edlcal Plan DYNAMICS STENO i XI t n ·1 f cu11·oog •--·d to I ~ Id green, $'15. B' velvet sofa, REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Cl ·rm Id' ~ o · . RN-LVN-AIOE 11-7 & '~g. · n oppo uni Y or ....,.... p .. ~· 0 · oli\·e green $100. 962-6727 _11s..~1 l / . o. lv.; , atl) 1 l\O\v Available 3131 \\'. Segemrom 'A:>sist exec. seeretary in d1,·orcee or \Vidow. In San Excel. rond., \\lute gas Why not n-orlt Jn !he hottest a r ea , Huntingt on Bellch I Fountnin Valle)·" 1.A:!I llll train you. Call Phil J.fc Naml'C. V l LL A G l: REAL ESl'ATt:, 96J.4:,S7. P1I~~· P.0: Box 1560, Costa nlhc.rs. Counl~">A1df'. To~ P''. i Temporary Scrvil'e !Xear Jl<irbor & \\"amer1 busy presidential s ui 1 e . Juan Capistrano, rlosc to slo\·c, 10 mos. old. EX('CI \VANTED /\IP~. C;d1 t, 92626. dut~ pa~. h~inl<'<I pa~ f~I .~If: Campus Dr., Suite 106 Sanla Ana ,\ccuratC' IY!Jing & hie sh s1·hools. 496-115.1 A.i\.t. or rond .. ~loving, don "t need. "* USED BRICKS* REf'F:PTlONISf . n1ust hr it~H. iilll'IVI\. ~Ion !hni 5•11 Ne\\ port Beach 546-174.1 1 Equal opportunity en1p!o)er req'd. Xln't starting sn.Jarv 493-3052 P !\I ~2 B70--lS64 II•! I h ho 9·a. LeS('OUhe N u r ~es ,-I 0 E lo ' ,,,,. •J ,j . -==""~--~~-- \ 11 1 •· n ype. ravy p nc, 1n He,.istr). 351 HO!'.JJital Rd, .qua ppor. nip yC'r " & great benefits. WAITRESS l\IATCHING set, J(enniore •LOVESEAT ~sofa custom Sell idlC' itrm~ \\'ilh a Daily lhn11inglon Beach area, call " I J B t A. h d made •\'!'!"" gd -··•, nevor Pilot Claulfled ad. 642-5678 bet 9 & 5, 900-ll30 N.B. Lohby Park J..ldo ~led S ason es ..._ency :\lust be "·ell groomed & eavy uty v,oash machine & • ., .,. ...... ii iii .. iillli______ Blvd. 612-~ or 5-ID-9954. ecret•ry ~7400 Brookhurst, F .Vly • reliable. Expcr helpful . gas dryer. I :yr. olcj. Xlnt .used. usually lun, 96S-791D RN , v ... nipunctun.> for lab. SECRET.RY I I Steno Suite Zl3 963-677a Sw·f & Sirloin <:ond. $150 pr. 640-1963 5 Pc. King Bdrm Set, .. -Uays, f/tin1e. Personnel RECEPTlONlST '''e presenlly have a posiUon -----5930 W. Coast Hwy, NB ** REBLT washer, dryers, Thom a s-v 111 e, yellow l ,;d;•P;';· ;";oa;:g;,l;lo;';P;· N;';i.B;.;;;;;;. I . bor secretfY ~teno.& mu~ STOCK & \\'AITRESS needed. E>t:per. dsh/\l.'Sh. $50 & up to). yr w/ ..... ·hlte. OUcr. 4*--8664 'kl " 1 ' 1 ',. gOOt typing · s/ INVENTORY over 21. Apply Odles Rest.. gar. 54&-5218 or 839-7620. KING size bed, xtra firm, Corporatt' staff located in I d $ 00 "2 ROBINSONS Oraoge County, h» an in· PLEASE CONTACT Clear minded young per'°" ~fuJ7"' SL, Costa""'" Rent Washers/Dryers ;,~; ,''::'k"'8.' · ~ ·lGM te!'rsting, ~hallenging posl· Greg Newland to \vork in Bulboa Island · $2. \Vk. Full n1aint. lion rcpo11i11g 10 director of Bank of America s1ore. Ability to \\·ork \\'Ar\TJ:;D, 3 \\'om "n, * 639-1202 •· SOLID walnut custon1 buUet product development. Ahli· I 500 Nev"pott Center Dr. \\•/people, do stock \\·ork, e11thus1~11tlc, ~·en groon~ed. KENMORE Elccll'ie Dryer, (credenza). Also ~ o Ii d i!y to ml!C't and deal erfccr-• Fashion Island inventory etc.Potent i a I aggrrsi11ve. Son1e n1us1cal white, good condition, s75. ,,·al nut storage box. &IG-0099 Fashion Island Has Opening For For 1n •d In Call Miry Beth WorT,an·s V't orld 642·5678, ext. 330 DISPLAY DEPT. h·e!y \1·ith people. 1\Hracl_i\'c I 836.-3505 assistant n1 an age men t kno ..... ·l~gc helpful b~l not 646--4762 LOVBSEAT hidl'!-8.-bed, SZJ. appca~ance and pcrsonah.ty,. Equal Oppor Employ1!r position w/ good future for re q u .1 r ~ · . Sta r I queen-size Sealy bed , In high csS<'nUal. Excellent typing I , right person Call 540-H50 lmn1cd1at('ly, flexi ble hours, FREE PICK UP. REFS. complete, $85, 49J.-.l843 and mode.rate shorthand re-*Sec ys, Bookkeeper5 Never A Fee At Tempo full . or part tin1e. Top APPL. &: SCRAP 1'.1.ETAL LG. vlnyl recliner. Dark l\lust be exper. fashion. quired. Compcliti\'e starting Jlavc loo many t~ list TEMPO Temporary Help ea1T1u1gs v,·lth 1 of Orange * 6rrl258 * Avocado -n. $65. or best salary plus benefits. Apply Lil. Re.inder's Agency County's largest J\tusic l\1AYTAG or Kenmore auto &·-~ Three to Go! .. . t; '9001 ' " a.is ';,11f..,.i-11f .... -r- ' ., ·, ;it'" bt> ra•hloll'll pret.tlo&t tide· • bow· lrlmmeJ 1011 OYt'I" ~ dtt• or J*ftU for •olnll' b,. .. , .• 'tfl~. f!Yflr)"Wherill C:hOOIO wttdnow•r print.a. Printed P1.tLf.rt1 tlOOl: '11JQD•~ Sire• ll. JO, lZ. 11, 16, t~"'Sllfl 1% {bu11t 34) tOP, 'atidl't• 1% yard' 60·1neh. . .-Stnd $1.00 for l!ach patiem. Aad· 2.sc ror each pattrrn for ~1111111 mall 11nd 11pecl1I hand\1111 · Olhctwlff' third· ela111 delivery wlll u1kC! three >A'tek• or more. Send 10 Mar· Ill!\ rtl arlin, 4.f.2, the Daily Piiot, Pliltletll OtpL, ~JS \Vr~t 1Sth BL. NfJW York. N. Y. 10011. Print NA.M l. ADDAiSS. J:I P, 111! 1t1d ITVl..I NUM91A. ON~f OHf: PA 'l'1'J•:UN 11ryour c.nOI~ In .-t"i'l!I ''"" nno• rt't>o1 J;&Uetl\ lnahl" Nt;\V MPlll~O· 8UM?i1J.:n l'A'rTr.HN Ci\'1'"-' LOO. 100 117 IP11o, 11ll 11l xr~. tte11 pAltern C.Olll'O"· """rt 1r.~ nnlY'. ::.-:tKNIT IJook 'll'lth h:11lc J)llttrn. , , ...... $1.2j ,,..,.,., '••lllott not1lt ..... $1.00 lfllt.tnt l1wln11 nook "'"~1.00 . So Feminine! Apply f?er50nnel OUicc 12-3 Pi\1. ~ton lhru Fri ~o. 2 F11!hion Island, NB Equttl Oppor. Employer In pcr.;on or ~end l"C5Ume 4020 Birch S1 .. Suite 104 STORE CLl;RKS Stores. \Yasher. S50 each, Guar, oiler. 543-8393 alt 6 Pnl. to: Neu•;:iort Bench S3J·81!l0 C hi St k CI ks F FuUerton i\Jusic Compan.v free delivery. 546-8672. ~ DON'T hassle "'/gamgl'! sale. Dial A Job 83• .. 05 as ers. oc er ·, Joor 557--4836 1 u·ill buy enlitt stock of G S ~ Cl('rks. Good future. Xln't Auction MIS bl 1 • °'~ OLDEN WE T · No Charge To You benefits. Pcnnanent I/time. \\'ANTED: Someone \\'ith .,.. Will e terns. 5<1().....,,,.,. S,\Ll~S MOBILE HOMES I __ F:~h1bli&hed !965 O'·"r 21. No f It i me TI~IB & ENEHGY to deal ~~ Horses 1060 students. Apply in pe~n. in the \\'Orld'11 grea!esl AUCTION f Rl::G. Appy mare spirited but gentle S150. days/eves. AGGRESSIVE GIRLS Interested In a career in f 11. s h ion n1erchandising. Exper. in clothing sales a INC. 11 .,,.,sEcR,.,E,TARmYon ur . PJCNSAVE ANTI -INFLAT!Ot-OARY • 175 E. 17th, Costa i\.lesa producls. Interested? Call .\dn1inislration of wear t'<l. Mr. "'ii.son in Santa Ana. Bargains on fine crysbl, 963-7132. 1'.XIS E. \\~akeha 111 &inta Ana, caJif. 9'17:~, in ln•lne rom11Jex. Good STUDENTS \vork p/t no\\•, 835-3567 · & od I II Ut Summer. Neat, reliable. -=~""~=~-=--porcelain, oriental objects, 4 YR Qtr bay mare. Xlnt painting, jewelry, antiques, buy. $300. typing · m e1·ate s 1, Ca .. , M" -WAREHOUSE Sally llart, 5-1D-6055, Coastnl .. tr. Richards, .,.5'155. Personnel Agency, 27 90 1'ELEPHONE SALES SHIPPER/PACKER period furniture. $1,tm,<XXJ Call 537.u:i1 lnventory. Every l\1on &: : ·J.,..--'I ~"'-::'.!-"'"'--=- ::..:>-1 niust. }'ull & p I 1 i ni c posi1ions available now, : Call rl)\' ,\ppointmenl I 1\n £c1ual Opportuniry THE LOOK 644-6500 .... ..,...,.E,.",.",.1°',.'',.'..,...,.,,, Harbor Blvd, C~I ! STUDENTS (2) lJosiliQns Avail<1ble.. 'Summer Is coming, \ve have Pal Electronics Tues. e\·e. at 8 P.1\J. i .:..:.ew;.;.c.e _r.,y ____ .....;8~0::7~0 1 Inspection & private sales JE\\'ELRY, l\1a gn 1 f i cent J\lon. thru Sat. 12 Noon to IO di s p la y , D ia m 0 nd s , Smart 1n:a.llorm outline liOl'I. bow·(l'ltherf'd top. Top orr or Jayer over panlll, skltt.1. Crocbet of ll 1lrani11 C?Gtton or 1 1tr11.nd aporl yarn In eUY·lo-memortio pattrm 1tJtch.. PatUll'D 7061! l1Jtlt41'3' 8111 .. 8•16 IO(:l. 75 CENTS ror earh pattern . Ade.I 2s• ror ench patttrn rot ftri1l-c:l111s mail and 11poci;at h11tidling; oll'lerwlse third· class delivery will take thrtt weck1 or more. Send lO Alier nrooks, 10$, the D1ily PUot, Needlocrafl Depl.. Bos 161. Old Cttc111ea St•tJon, N'o•Yorll • ~. Y. 10011. Pr!Dl N1'"1, Addr11., lip. Patttfn Nu'"btr. Ntwl 150 l'DOll pcpul11.r dll!' 11ol1n1 In our 1174 N11dl1cr1fl Calflogl All cr11tu/ THHE~ Free d1i~l1tn• Int.Ide ....... -.. 78' New! StV'll' +Knit Book-bA• lllltile T11,1111e Paltern $1_:!!, New! Needltpol'# !looll $1.00 New! Flowtr Croc!'ltt Bkl1.00 Hairpin Crochtt Book-11.00 lnet.tnt Crochtt Book ... ~.$1.00 ln1t.ant M1cf•m• Book -f1.00 ln1t1nt Monty Book ... ~ .... 1.00 Complttt Gift Book ......... .$1.00 Complttt Afgha"t #14 .... $1.00 12 Prlte Afgh1ne #12 ........ 50f Booll: of 11 Qu!ltt a 1 ..... ~-~Of Muteum Quilt look #2 "" &elf 15 Ou lltt fof Today n .... 50f: Boolt Of 11 Jiffy Rug•,,_, 601 Each DAILY PILOT Winner Gets T.wo $2 Value Tickets 2nd Annual Southern Californ~a MOBILE , HOME SHOW c . ':> MAY 18 MAY 27 ANAHEIM STADIUM "The West's only ·show exclusively designed for manufactured housing ." Doors open 12 noon weekends & Memorial · Day ; 2 P.M. wee kdays •. Admission $2.00 adults; $1.00 .youngsters 10 to 16 Tli.o OAILY_ .PILOT makes lt easy. Jus l check throughout !he classified section to r "a'ds" !Is ling wln· ners' names. II you Und your name just cnll 642·5678. Ext. 314. bolwcen 9 a .m . ond 1 p .m. to make :Ir· rangome,,ts to pick up yoor lii:kctts ol ltny convenh!nl DAILY PILOT ollice. I n few n1ore openings for 16 11R20 'Vestern Ave yr olds & up. Part time ~G~ard;;;•~n~G;;;;ro~'~':;;;:;;;;;:894:;:·330;;;1 tiE~ERT GALLERIES En1eralds, Rubies, Opals, e1np\o.YJT1ent. $1. 7j hr to 1 start +bonus. 892-2258. TELEPHONE Ans. Serv. operators uwted. Exper pref but not nee. 496--&102 TELEPl!ONE OPERATOR Ans,,·ering service, 2 shifts 228 l"orcst. Laguna Beach Just a few words In the right place ••• Dally Pilot Clauified Ads Dlal the direct line 642-5678 Top nan1e \Vatchcs/ Omega, . WEST H.olex, J\olovado, Cori 111 , 2j.12 \V. Coast I-I\\')', N.B. Many Antique pieces, 6-15-2"200 pocket v.·atches' $.)00,(XXI • NOTICE ! • Inventory. Southland's n10st \Ve "'ill buy your unv<antcd elegant Auction Gallery. I furniture. jcv.·elry, antiques Ca1'h, Tf'1nis or trndc. \Ve or sell for you on buy your jC'A·eJ.ry, anliques. cons lgnn1ent. f u rn i t u r e or accept ~ t.'Onsignment.s. Call Io r Cameras & Equip. 8030 information, 714-&l:>-2200 •· Machinery 8071 Schnider Lens, 9 V2'' Ne-v.'. S200. l.J. a-12--1762 TELEX OPERATOR To $515 NEYER A FEE Antiques 8005 , Antiques 8005 \Vholcsale Da.yton motoni, pUmp paint, tools, griod('rs, meUic fastcnJ?r, air hose, pop rivets, elPCtrical \\'ire, S'o•.;tches, boxes, hubbe11, connectors. grinding \\•heels, tool boxes & rol\a"'ays. Open 8:J0.5Pi\t. Sat. noon. GSll. 1658i6.1 Superior, C~t. \\'C' buy scrap copper.brass· alumltium For internalional Ii r n1 Young corp ofc. G. O. + S\\'itchboard rcli"L lmmed. hire. Dartnell Personnel Service Agency . Newport Beach 64o.8470 Orange 547-1694 TEMPO'S Dial· A· Job~ TE'.\lPO oUin a truly unique & tin1e saving opportunlt)' ror skilled ..... KEYPUNCH SECRETARIES "'ho .... ·ant dignified &: ~rtmul;\tii1g long or shOn term a.<1s\gnmcnts • few days, rouple 1\"C'('i.~ or fe1v months • you decide: No"' ,\'O\t (':In ....• APPLY BY PHONE Cnll f>.10-4450 & l..el u.s know whllt your skills are. No nc<'d 10 con11~ in fl('rsonally • unrH 1\'(' have the 'just r li,:ht' spot for you' NE'IER A rl~E AT TE~tPO femfJO Tomporary Help FOR ACTION ••• CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 ANTIQUE AUCTION TWO SESSIONS THURSDAY HIGHT: MAY 16 •• 7:00 P.M. FRIDAY HIGHT: MAY 17 •••••• 7:00 P.M. AT t630 H. STAn COUlGE ILVD., AHAHtlM, CALIF. lhtf Mrffl •ff of ftw llftl"ll• lfll fntweyJ We have been commissioned to liQUidate at auction the entire contents of "The Sumnet Trading Posf' which is being shipped to our main warehouse in Ana~i m from Mempl'l1s, Tennessee. A mosl outstanding inventory of all American ant1Ques including hundreds ot hard to find oak lurn1lure items. We are ollering in this sale otie of the most t1xceuenr se1ectr0ns ol Amercian ant1Qves e"'8r sold in lh!s area. · .................... WIST COAST AUCtlO" • WHOLISALI COMPANY lk:ensed & Bonded Aopralsers llQUIClators Audloneers 11 141 ttz.11to • 111•1tt2.11M • Mlsct lleneous I Charlies Trading Post 49"1·1629 WE BUY, WE SELL 1\ntlques. Afel.llls, Junk 4' fluo1"H«nt lites, ~ gal Go1-. gus cans, gas h!rs. CABIN.l'TS tor Kit l'hf'n Ir Bnlh Unifinshed, Prtlinl~ Countc.r Tops alao. HARDF.:N ENTERPRISES I 8.1~ \\'. 18th SI. C.)t 6-l'i-2.S-12 SPRING SPECL~L 11 oU norm111l price on Steam Cleaning your c a r p ~ t ~'6-5i-L). PAIR of bril.nd new Del i\1n I "'¢\'{'ll \\()(){IS, gold I: )'elJow totlf' yarn on v,·1lln1:n 'A'OOd, 83.'\"2 .l OOX-tl. 962-1864. or 968--01 "°- f.l.EGAiVT ~-edlsh baby strol\rr11 IK. • sml. mOOel.s, 11.poktt \\'ht.•tL11, umbrtlla. 49.1-2130. PATCll"'ORK & qullllf'll 1..'00lll'luoUS (la"'9. Th l' Halltrtt, 6il--~ 1 ~ Ml ;c;naneous ____ aoao I Pia nos & Organs 8090 eo .. ts, Power 9040 I Moto r Homes, I Autos Wante.d 9590 I Oat;;.;-9720-M U ced11 Benz 9740 "°!~wagtn --9770 'C -:::h::•.:.•;.;'o;.;I:•.:.• ___ ....;992c;·.;;-co1 · Sale/Rent 9160 , ' ---------SCR AM-LETS ~'.~l'.,~.~ .. ~!~1~E !~1~r~ .. ~ .. ~%rk;,~~'~!'I~ ';;\'~~::;·i~:~,n:~ • \'.\<'ATlt)N • I CADILLAC::S '73 DATSUN '74 N1 ~ccor:s '12 V\V ~n~~l~~ bus or ~Xl~~:Ji:\~101~:'..')l·I~~~ ~'!)~:;: • 1.1~ ... ., That 0111, l'(·/jd~ 1np. \\lndo"~· , .• 1r,,.,.d nllt·r ,\'r Yf)t·n O\\N PAC'!::. Largest S1l1ct1on 1200 FASTBACK 1 450 SL t.ua L'oUv<'nclon l':lnl·~r. Bar•:t•tn SOOl. 641)..1456, 11hou1, 01~· fi•t'I 1• tlu1I s::·ia1. l11\e1'th'l'I lk•<I t•ff··r Ch••·"~' rron1 So Cnllf In Orenge .,County -I S{ll«"d~ B.nd\o, & hi'Ah·r Full lflCIOl'V CQUiprK'd. air, Hi'AllOnAble In(')(, con fl . t'On1p1 .. :t11un kt"'-'11" lll"li't'·" or 1ru1!e. G~~Z-'l.Jlt day.-. "l,.1rA(<',;t Sclt>1·1inn " Cou1>e Ot>Vllle"' · St-dan o.;.. 1032.JU\' au t omutic 1rnn~1n1s~lon, 962·7689, Continental 9930 11bout lh•· ~n1c 11h~·rt• 1·t1•r ' · ... -i .,.,... 1c1,,.,, 10 .'11·n1· ·" 1\J .ll.'>I. Ville.• · E' n.·T,"l"fi•• • C.oJ $2395 I"••~· ,, .. ,.,.,,", A'l/''''· & -CobUn -Tl"sl)' -U1111·ed -1 ' I . I f I ·' ,. ,,. uv """ " '• ~ ' ...., " .-, , T H ING .. ' 1500 "·'"· ··71 '1ARK Ill, '···11led. 'lu•I .)'f\U s1~>Jl. \'(' 00~' vrry C'\1 --! 1AJ.J·:s v1•r111)Je~. Also n11H1y o1hcr fn('lory Y<'1il'ran1y. Ouly 3,972 " ...,. " Trudi:·· -STltJNC liln.les b1 l:w•11ix un1l1'1·sold J DUFFIELD 20' 1\IO"fOR 110'1E 5elec tC d"ll 1' I>! n1lles! INo .1""' i\J\1/fJ\·1, cust()m 101111ng 'I N • I "'f''<!<i t:O('klnil loull{;c scene . \\'i";·(·,dit f('rt•nlht·i·ut1.~t~oui·1 1..:1r<'.hnyluunrh " '!'.' : n.nc ru<i:·•Hi. ! .,., top,cus1.seat,llrtoveri11g. l'lt'. "ca~.i '9 .n \\'hen a n1an boui.:ht hl.'r 11.:ih.-llnit>n h~trn hard to j l.lkC' nt•11 1-ond1!11Jt1 fl:EN'fALS I 3l375 CAMINO CAPISTRAHO cu~!. roinmand 1l'h1S. lh'l'll ll!)Pl'ovM r·i't"!d!t. 8 2--0&lG ANSW ERS 1•han1pn~n1• and ~UI hi!l' hi~h I\ ha! iou :-. .. y lh<'y'n•i ('.111 fr,11 111(01111 Olllt l', 1:vdh1ll & S:1n Juun, Tu~tln NABERS CADILLA \.&fol JUA" C.&l'l\T'IAl40 & 11aint job. S32til. 673~10 C 99,, as a kilt'. i>hl' did11°t SUSIK'\:l M•1L .. lll1·~ to \\ h,11 'you 1'£'ally SJJ--0123 fJ I' 673-:s!J:>:t ('\'l'~. 1--1111 1 ~·O'.KXI_ 2.aG ......... UN. 4f3~n1;:. ... i.~il1s '70 V\\' Pop 'fop C11.n1pin1;: __ orvette n I(). lti<'n.'11-lit.aSfHINGallaeht.'d "11111 & th<-') h111'<' lht>IBoats, Rent/Char. 9050 SHARE WINNEBAGO 1 C:O.. .... ,.._., Vi!.11. Orig. Q"'nt·r. L()y.·11..L PAY 1'0P DOLl-"B IU 11. I h11·entt1ry 111 n1:1kl' 111~·1 20,, inll•rt'~t \U!l' 10 "'~ks 11 WILL BUY YOUR 01H<'11g<'. Perr<>et co n d. Jo--On YOUR VE'n'E dlr"I J J\P 11\l'e n1ai,:s ·" tires sm. pel"ff'<'I Jll<all"h h (>I II(' \"II .i:t NF:\\' f"·n~.rr11n I , .. l'hll : (;.K}-Gt._tz TOP DOLLAR PA 3100 \Y. Ql(UJI l!wy .. N.B. IV tolll'I, sink, i\~ box, see 842-8844. 1't'l:l..ill'r hitch . '71 -'73 ' Ot):ll n & Or).(a111s1. 1•u1110 & NO SKIPPER IF _.\ .','1.;_, •1~-,---.:..,......-ID DATSUN, T OYOTA 642-9405 101111prec. 963-4002. "-''-'-'-'------- 1'1ustang S30. Third mcn1bcr I P1w1LSI. If .>vu_ !lfl' 11i1nl<u!i; YOU'RE QUALi F IED 11!17., .1 \\ l~NEBA~O n1olol'· IMMEDIATEL y OR VOLKSWAGEN BXEC. CARS FUR LEAS". c:..:c.&"1::.B::U::.G::..::::..X::;ln°"<::.,-0/-,-1.-ID -.:od.:...9•;;_ ____ _;99.:..;.35'1 Po.'illra\;llon unit t I t ll :j b o u I i. kl" Y U o;.1 rd • hQntt\ hll'> t'\'erythlng. H.ea:s. FOR ALL F'OR'E1GN CARS PAID }"'QR OR NO'f. \\'ILL "' -J\lustani.: Tvi·uio c.i:n. !n~trun1e11t. give us u 11·y. i'lf·Brit1i:::.f' Sport F"l~~t'l'lllun . rurt·~-002·,1587. Call ()r conic in to see us . PAY TOP OOQ.AR. CALL Oioose IJ'Unl 4_f\ill,y equip-t700. ' 'G6 DODGE t\'lonaoo Sip. P· . • .. ,. "':" \\"1• !11111k you'll 11g1-ce 1hill I lu:<h. 1'ul1 t·le1.'l11JIUC!i, ruH -.-~---=~ '1 "ENT All.EN, ~-A,,,....... pcd low mlle8J,?e 450 SE &15-85()4 \Vng. HUtO, lo.'.1t1cd. CoOd ,",'1~:1,<1h81·t1.u.:k1 b.1 1 '111~11,01 \ll'"l't' illfferrnt. i.:-allo·y. ~1)0"£'1', t•lt'. l>'or Tra ile rs, Travel 9170 " .rt\MN'U 36 ~10 lease $215~78 per mo. "13 SUPt..:R BUG. 20,000 nli, condition. $:>-15. &14-1127 i; ''" ~rl_! a ~ '. t'OA!'!1' ~lUSIC ehnrt"r hy dH) .(Ir 11t'<'I.:. Ii , _ . . '12 2402, Stick. ,.\ir, !\lags, OEL + Tax Lie. Serial Clean. Al\l/FA1 l'lldio. $2700. F d -• ~ro_i-e 3 rni !l!h-271:l, nltt'I :\c·i,pin'1 I'll Harbor, Cill. 1x-opk·. rnax. ~~:-.h, l'l'U1~· :'\1•11• 19,1 \li· $U1'.'un1 tffltlers 25,000 mi, lnlntaC', $4650. No. 00.116. ·rake .>'Oor car in Call 536-0407 or """' ' BruokhlU':.I al Talbert, rv 962·2301 ~l!'lling:. 11·et'k"nd.>1. 1 l"l'llll"r has JU:S\ '"' l' t1 J' SI 19&1 TR4. Runs good, needs '60 FORD P.U. (; ood 99 1-1916. I til&-OZ7\ 1'fl(·k11ul, rt('. &l.,.2'2(1() du.1 .~. Hill Ba n)' Ponuac RV ~lJ.3897 or 544-1440 l!adc. ---- 71Toyota1600 %'.1-li7:13 EXPLORE ISLANDS I a1 11101nll"cl 1\ir Sl1 i•u111"1'1 '70 DATSUN 1m emons body111)l'k$600.&l-H26Jaft. l'Olldition. vs, 01·hd rack. I Or•111i.:1· C'oun1) 11•··•'•"1". 3100 \\'. f~2:91.~~vy., N.B. . 1 PICKUP Imports 4:30Pal. L·run. Ile, $fi50. r.~2006 O f;t f"('\1' hr:ike!', 11rcs & b11t1. , •.. On bl'aut. j7' l~IITCl-1 . Xl111 ,\lolllt.:\\lthllii,..;;i)>Jlflllllllli'n!, -~ ll 1100 l~oni ;.hocks. JJyno-turh'd. C 0 ~ T ,IN U 0 U~ ~ 1' ~J::t~ rrdt·s. days 01• '" c Pk · I \\•" iii·n• :ihh· 10 nl,ik,• ;; TOP ()\Sii for cl~·an used •I i;p(•t•d radio ,{;;. henler i J30l Quall '69 V\\'· J\·Iust i!<' . S · or '7·1 FORD rtanchero. Fuljy [.hit' 1111Jc;i."c. :'ltany extr·~-1 ORGAN Cl.AS!::il::s . 1' 01{ ll•''· .,.,., .,,1_ '""· C.lij, I (811 l \3S) • Be h bei;t offcl'. Runs good. equip'd. One o"'n<-'r, Shown .. , T ... ' I .,.,,, I '~11n•· on ',. ..,.,,., ,.,,,,1 '""''' .-C\\'j>Clrl llC 675-398·' 01'1g. O\\·ner. Pn. pa11y. A~ULTS. E\'ery ue..u;iy B<1!h1111L~.c11.926(ii. ~Jl 11 1._ ,,... 1111 .... ~ • 0 I $1495 83::19300 .• ., byappl only,833-8320 Bc~I offl'r b 15-13 4"1 1 7:3011111. Start any "'eek. B -.-5~1 9060 1 1'171 ,\it' Slf('tlOlS .anrl lil"l' Howard Chevrolet n y ' ENTERFR01'1 ri:JacARTHUR 'Gl V\\', l''l'bll cng. Clean . '68 LTD. "ood t'Ond. All Anytime. · Toin Dieterich In charge, oa s, a1 1 p.1 .. ~111g the hi~ Sa\ 1ni::s on I !550 • Coast l\lu sic Costa J\tci;a. I In 11.U F:\;unpl ·: .!3 fl. 111111, J\laeA~thur and Jambort'e '68 .P.1ERCEDES Benz 250 · cxlras. $600. 4 ,\p \\'ire JTIO.bS & lirc~.S:!'->fl. I Nc\1porL ~~v.d._ at J-larbor. /IJ(_;f.I :;!)(', .1'(\ 1~·. 1 ti;,i~g ~.''.t. n11i1pll't(•ly r-quippcd l\ith Nt•\t'JIOl1 • ~ach SE. 4 dr. sedan. Power, 65 39ltl bi5-0ll)j Trailer hllth • -71 .. 13 -Alus· fi • .!·:li:ktl :'llu.~1 Slt to l~ILl'\r ·~ Gi1 .. t 1nq.:C'd nlun1inum 11·hcels. 1:13.1--0:W 333!?"~~~~S!!oAHO AJC, Al\1/FM radio. $2950. '6' VW XLNT COND Maverick · 99 lung 5:{(J. Thil'd nicnihcr , . , •. . f(l~' 11.u'. r:1n11ly. $199J. C1111 1 t:111d••n1 U\lt• hnl·Jntk:-;, \VE HUY , .. .,...._"""~•:...-,..-~73·58i'4 duyK 67J..2379 Eves. $1,000 6•14-1:U5 1 Positi-a..:11011 unll flt,; J\·Jus·) TV, Ra dio, HiFi St, 8098 6:j---(i~il1., . ~:d1·ty group. ·rv <1111•11. J~1PORTED AITT'OS 493.3375 or 831°1375 Priv11tc 011•rier. Volvo 97 72 '70 1'1AVERICK. Auto', vinYl 1 lHng·Tonn 11 stiO. l'anruoonic 20 RACl:->G Cn1. B. Lloo. 1u ('(111\·1·ni<'t11·e. lo;ul~«l! SIG8·1 BEST PRICES PAIDI I top, ne\v pa int & ti1'l's, lo\\!--• !l·tt·ack ,\)I F~·I stl'rro it·ith I b'Tl::J{l::O CLOSEOUT·&.'lu11 It. ix'a n1. Tra1X"i\C, 11·niler. Si!IJ i)o\in. SllN.33 pr nionth. Dean Lewis Imports Fiat 9n5 i Peugeot 9748 '74 VOLVO ~1~i.u.i:t.3"'9199 dys, eves • Euro ta hie SI 10. Before 3 pn1 , .. ,s1 J larn1 un h11J~~"n. ~··•,r :\lint 1"1nll. $1 l!M. 64j.3S61. fut.ld"1"111111~1 111'K'.'-' s77$91101~~;11· 1r.66 11::.rl:wJr, C.;).J. 545.930: ---------'-= NEW PEUGEOT 9':J7.27 1~; alter 997·7916. 1 :'\.ui~ui. n1any nioi~. ALL :'It ;i:iti-.''i:U. 1' t· f'r"f'I prtc•· '1" · '71 r·1AT 85(1 Spyder. 2:;,000 Mustang "52 I i\lun11. ~tr1·1'Q·l't1k, .ri:,.~ \\'. --BOAT MAST 8 1'11i"·L11L1·75 .s.tBmAonrtR>>-RY ~3~~ 1'~~ 1ni, nc1v clu1ch. 51600. or ? ·Best Deal ---"'-----,.C.."'l'l-• I BUY!! '"""' llwy., Np1. &h. ASSEMBLER Si&-1o1o ca11 <21i1 .,,_29n. Dl;ALER A h 1 '67 Mustang Good, used !urnuurc ~ 6i.r-l7:>:7 . . . '' . T -' • • • ' Con1pl0te Sales and Service.. nyw ere. 11111.11,:uiccs or ivill r>cll ior you 1 , , 1 , , ~ f;f'~~1ndct_.'.._l.i~:; No. ~l')O ~J 13:u1Ch. Skylur~ .. Black Honda 9727 50 eoiupacts on di splay. 1 faslhnck -11u!onuuic, po"•cr MAS TERS AUCTION BA~KRUPTCY. -\\ holc.,alc ·Jfi" T-BIRD .1 1 b<'•, 1 R.V. CENTER 1111crior. Good conditioa 838. • ;::c:::;.::_ ____ __;::.::. PACIFIC MOTOR LEASE OR BUY steering, b r11 k r s , uir Color TVs Toshiba -' s oop, ou i. tf • \S Tl\l'llt }-":\Cl U"lVI' 1-•9 -0\'i::HSEAS DELIVERY 1:ondilioninrr. p1't'n1ium til'""'• ,., •••6 83'9625 :-• :; • S ·~ ' Avon 1lit1ID'. <-'Xtras. $ .. ,..\UU. · • ". .. ~ .. • .. • 1 -~·~··:..,_ ________ ·70 J-IOND1\ Sedan. Clean, "d " ""' -~ or ~ I Ze1111h,_ s1a1·1 ~22J. h.:IB!s, C:ill !)62.9693 1 (1HA:..1;t. CO. OE,\l.EH ., IMPORTr, SPECl1\LlSTS extra nice (UUK 9021 all b or ~-1,tay, Ol}n1p1t'. Tusluba. stan $.l6. . . . . - . ! jJ,1 si. n1 .o.::'111111 Anrt Fr.1 y.' AUT OS IMPORTED COND. Rt'n.sonabll'. !l63-l·I09 ~· .() ( $995 839--09 ..• 5'.j.:roa(} • 5-18·.6349 Gu:u·uniee. Ca:.h o u I y KIT!· .. :l i..a1J,,, yan:_t _trlr. !1<'<1 1 2000 t.:. J_,.1 Rt., sanitt 1\na aft 6pm. 1-1.B. PEUGEOT /SUBARU -1\UJl Lf.l.UiA• n y :>KJ.-OL}.I hlol·k;;, Good t'011d11Lon. S500. I -.. ~.,,., J 9730 I"7 w. "·1-1n Av·.. IU Howard Chevrolet Misc Wanted 8081 1 ___ i;i:l-720:1 ,},>: "· BMW 9712 aguar "" ...... ._., .. • ZE~ITll 2j.. \'O:fl:-T\'. -.-. -. • 1 • • • I l\E\\ TR,\Vl-:L TRA!l.ERS -----------1 Anahl'im 5.1J-S2'10 YOLYO l\tac1\rthur n11d .Jamboree Lihf/\'hf. :'llED. r'Qn~olt" 1s. C,\r,\l\JA~AN 1Lituc-otni , FACTOR)" DIRECT '70 JAGUAR Porsche 9750 Ne1vportBcach -' SILVER COINS I .lii.~t i;~·riu:ed. Sli;.. Call 11~~1.11 _t1·aile1· & l'X1n_1 s. SSOO. I 1-'Hll SC 11,ilh 01. 1111~iout ORANGE COUNTY'S ,, R33--0555 l'uying ToJl Pl'iet'. 6~~1-~3:.t'J. s.~:l-r030 I l,,ill•L 1:1" 10 JS' rnod(•ls. ,,. OLDEST XJ6 '71 91·1 POlt.5CJ-IE, xlnt cond, l9G6 1-farbor, C.M. S.l£.fUO.i ' .. l-'hon" 962 ·1"'" J" 11 · h bl ' k · · 1973 '\'O L\'0 161, l'/S,P B, 'f~~, l\!USTANG Convl'rL 289, --.. ____:.,.,••u. c".:01.UI< 1·v. ,,,.,,., .. ,.,1 u .. 11. Boats, Slips/Docks 9070 "ROCO:>:DO" e oiv \\:II ae 1n1cr1or, asking $4.CXMJ. days 673-3077, ·,\ TO BUY; 'l.-.-· CoiJ.•"I". "~. HEC.'l!E:ATION PHODUCTS ,, a.. 'Y t' q u 1 Pine n · 1'\"l'S .:... " .._ ~ • II. NT " ' & lull I "''' . I 673-°'90 ' ". ,\ T, ""o•ool. \-8. ll&ll, PS. Good tolld., P ' T ~ ...... ' """'' 0 T I \b I , •·fl I h. I Ai\l/f'i\1, i·ad<" .. J•, I .. ,,1,ln•· Ortg 111\"lll't' must :i;ell, $!!$. u.\ E BUH.1'\J:;lt anoi 61j...6902 <lft 6 P:'lt 13 A" , co··k for l'C'nt. Cp 1121.i!ll Nrlson St, Garden 1 :«> 11 c.J' 3'" es!l. 1 is O\\' Toyota 9765 6r.~J8JS "" " '" ~3228 afl 6 •1o: ~IULTI iany condJ. '.~. ~'iJ. S100 n1unth. Call ) (;ro\'C'. \0 ani lo ;j prn Tues n1il<>agQ. a U to ni obi I e. •.;----* iWl-3-111 * _!)1 .-r1lll or 4!•~1110. 1 !hti Snt 17111 S-17---07-11 (2°ljBZTl '74 TOYOTA '72 VOLVO P ·1800 ES. '66" 1\IUSTANG, Arr. P ~· S $5 695 Air. new everything • $9j(J. prov inc ia I Bcdroon1 _Bo,its a;nd 1974 BMW' J GU 6T..>-J98.\ \\"AKTF.:lJ.\\'hitc i--I" en o.: h (t,! I Boats, peed & Ski 9080 I 1 Call 613-0J73 ~~·n!..~., Dixie Tcencttc. I Mlr1n1 Equipment * * * * * I I ''''' fo·"·to I I ~] S . A AR DE1\LE ll Best Deal __ :.A:::U:.T:..O::::S_U:;:::S.:E,:D:__l '68 fl1USTANG. Super Sharp . ........-«Ah>O . •"' _ in s1ock ready ror inunediate General l\lust sell. No cash needed \VA~T 1u BUY: 1 JA:'llfo~S TURNER delivery. Excellent savings Anywhere! 9901 on appro\·cd l'rt'dit. S'J2.C316 NEWPORT IMPORTS PLATE BURNER i111d General 9010 1·1• ., Id B I on rcmainin1: 1973 n1odels. LEASE OR BUY "" -Oldsmobil 9955 , " " .,.mera ay Auio Ser. & Par ts 9400 I S.,\LES·SERVICE ~EASING ~~ • »IU~T~1~~~~t7 t~lldJ , l\IO~T.(;?~11;:r.\-. ~· ~.-c; Laguna Beach ' OVERS&\S DELIVERY All Models! GAS SAVER Sa!H I. Sf':'v\oe . I lt1pst111kC' ~'OIV 1)().:11. Oar;;_~\· . . . Cll~:v' 90 Bra111t spanknu:: ROY CARVER Inc :noo \Y. Coast 1-1"')'., N.B. I n l . Ofc. Furn.& Equip.8085 cov<·r. Like JlC\I", S~rJ. )ou :Ill' Iii·· 111nnl'I" of I n,•11 cu11111letc ~1n111l v.s 1 • 642-9405 -e41l f.WIA ---------675-1.f.>1.l."1. TWO FREE TlCKETS ' ROLLS ROYCE BJ\T\V niotor~ V1!s all Chevy"!<. ~ ) OKS $15 up. Exet'. s11·vl ..:hrs NE\\111" 80STON \\'haler 10 !he S-l!J;, t•.1 dt>l1\'e1ed fl'C<-'. 21:;) 231 F •. 17th Sf. J9.",J l\IARK \.'fl Sedan, rchlt TOYOTA 1973 PJ..Y:'l·lOUTll UUSTER OLDSMOBILE Std. trnns., gr<'at gas niilc· GMC TRUCKS ngc .(Ol"Cl' l2 !'llPGI Onl)' 1.1,000 01ilf's. $2195. Priv11.tc HONDA CARS $15/25, SC"l~y eh r s $,o\/24. I sa\'e $:l!l0, :'llotor available,' Southern California :165-1719 I C()sla l\lcsA • 546-4441 enl,C. ~v carpel.;, sunroof, • l'itrcc Stii \V 19, Cl\!, I 612·1572 MOBJ LE HOME SHOW 1961 ECON OLINE -3 Spd CREVIER BMW ' ;,1;~~·;terior, clean, s2;,oo, 11966 Harbor. c.~t. 6-l6-!!Zl'3 &!2-3-108 Boats, Maint/Ser. 9020 .\!11.v t.>:th thru J\lay 27U1 trllns S1;) Siarll-'r St :\IL~c '-'-I e o •• ,,.,·1-e PR"Y· UNIVERSITY OLDS * 551-5151 * 2850 Harbor Blvd. ---~ Costa ~!es.a 540-9640 P ianos & Organs 8090 I oil !ht• ~mil Aflf'r fl IH.· -~,es ~ .. u-_asing 19i2 JAGUAR Vl12 ('OUJX'. LEASE,\ BRAl'tD NE\Y '74 -----"'-----S:ilvugc shi p rrpi11r. hull ANAHEIM STADIUM 20S \V. !st, S.A. S»JITI auto & air.17,000 n1i, $.>850. TOYOTA 1200CorollaSNl.:m • PIANOS I General 9510 USED BMWs fimi. -19-1-6701 for only S.i5.25 JX>I' mo. 36 Ca d illac 9915 P into 9957 1 <'k:a11~11g. i.11spc~t~Jn r~pnll", 2000 S1111l' Col~f't;f' Eh·d. ./ '11 ZOO:.! Ma•da nios. 0,..,11 enrl lease. • G I p1opi;, t.inc:, ett: .. tl8·12:i.1. .\nHh ... 1111 ./ .70 :!O<rl ... 9738 .,... '72 Coupe DeVille '72 Pinto OR ANS BOats:-M arine eq.-9030 l'l<':i~c. ('illl 61:!·_;x;jS, f''\t. :;:"::'\ '71 TOYOTA ./ '69 ;t;l()O I lhtnahoul lJU I 0 n1a I j Rentals fr $5 lol"la111iyo1u·111·kl'ls. 1i\'orth . . ./ '71 Bavaria ... '71 Mazda Bronze "'' \'inyl top& tcalhrr ll'llll,.111iss1011 -radio & ' CHEY 1narine 1' n g: inc . C'ounlv toll frC'C" nun1l>t'r h; I lfi('() rng-nlt'. r-;<'"" hrak"il, ' I lrit. II p11·r, till & tel. Sll"'l'r· he:itC"r . r-:.:lrn niee, l'lcan . \\/Innis., Jots or e.,lras. )J0.122-01 . lircs & lml\. t\oni shocks. ·71 E:'lif\\' :l!l02, 8:>00 inilt·s. RX2 Coupe Ing, .Slt'l"('(l, dr loc.'k. lwi· good n11les t937FA\\"I I Open Nights '"til 9 114-889-6043 aft ti D~ t111-1unM . L,o1\· n11leai;<'. I like ne\\". Air, sh'l'OO, Sl'Ol Sat: 'til 5 : 30, Sun. 12_5 20. •ii·or.o ··csJ·l PL."N'", * * * * * 1\11\NY E:XTR.\S. Or; g. 1 covers. 642·3193 l'\"l'~. 4 !lpd -radio & _ht>ater -,_.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:~I :~~'. ;fa"~-~'~:~· ,,,"',uo'''u•,''",,",~ Only $1695 " .-~" ----------n\1nr1·. Pr11·a1c patt). &st C . 9715 1 £h~cor g1uup -''uiyl _rnol "" *Pianos & Grands* stainless ~tecl h u ck ct . 1970-Li' ·;' Cu1·111·1•llr Tnl-lull. olk·i·. a pr1 n1usl sec -exccp!1onaJ I , 30.IXKI 111 L Howard Chevrolet Balchvln. Cable. Chickering 9i9-27iS or f>lj....6'.?:.!.> 50 !1p :'ll••rt·. fl/B. Xlnt cond 645-2342 • 1 throughout 197~F:AD• 71 Toyota 1600 $4,39S -FiScher. Ka1l'ai. Kin1ball Boats, Power 9040 s11;11f. !l62-l:rl7 I a11yti111c '72 Capri I Only $1795 "11 N~\\" brakes, tires & ball. I illaC'Ar1hur and J11mbortt ·Knabe· J\la:on & Ha~·=·1 • VG coupe _ autonlalil", r<idio I H d Ch I Koni ~hocks. D.vno·1unro. Wahlco Ind., Inc. Nc"~ •• ~.~~;ach l\IUSS('tl -Sohmer .. S!~ill· 1 ·69 16fl~-Thw1de1 bin I All r Antiques & Classic 9520 I • heatf'r. llC'\\' r;idial tires, owar evro et I Lo~\' nulen!':e. l'llat~y cx lras. I t{()" II I B! · j ...,, ~ 1vay·~tor~y& CJ,~rk· \\1n· ~las:-,~ hp Johnson, big ' !Im] . deh"''"'"'°'-lowmiles-"""'"'""'and Jambon'C Ong. owoe<. p,.,_ pa'1y. C ,1 · ,j', '"'" ';c~._ ·72 PINTO R"M"°"'-4 ,,,.,: l<'r -\~ruhl1.l'r • )a1n:'lh11 uhl. 1r11 1ler, covers, radio. Trt1nsportt1tion II AUCTION sharp (852FNI! Ne"·port Bcal'h &-st orler. 645-23421 °( n .7cpA tJ, 1300 clelw.:ecxtra.s.27,000mi.orlg NC'11· Spine!s Jr ....... , s:>95 ro1npasi<._ ele~ stal'~. ~ 2_ga:. CARS OF STARS .> Onl 52795 SJ.:H)5.j;; , Anytime. -, \ 11 lcr ~~ \\"eekcnds oy,•ncr, S2200. 64D--OZ77 Used front ............ $91 lanks. SI100t:all l~t-.I011. y ·-· '·JAZD\ RX'' · 191' PINTO •·11°on auto,~ Pl " $S9 -----A. f 911 I Se1·ond annual antique .~· il ,. ; , , -· ;nT": St(•r1"ll, ·-..i 1U''O p . k '74 SEDAN DE VIL . .. , ' " Gi~'Jss .. :.:'.:·.:·.'.'.'. $39~ c~:ss1c Cl·.ntury Bay boat •rcra t. 0 i·l<1ssi..: ear auction con· Howa r d Chevrolet lc<irhcr. vin~I roof. l'lt•c.1· ~1. Jibe> 1 .1 .J"'~am ~ c sh~lr . ~LE t'ond. l\takc olfl'r. *ORGANS* llS • 4-W _Gray eng. H.un.s . -rh1t·tcd by Don UritL 1\lay I r.tac1\rthur anc1 J-11nborcC :.ir1tt•nnv 839-0440. L. 1 .. ~ j~"· "".ffi pe · ·JD e 1:11° n s 1.ra 1 0~1>. F !111Y SOl---0999 <'V<' & "'knd1' ).(Tl'al . $12JO. \\'ANTED: Pv1 . plkt or high· IS h & 19 h 10 \ . . 1 , ' • i:.xC1a.~ ... 1-.,, <>quippc'{I 111clud1ng \•111yl Pl th 9960 Baldwin· Conn. Ha1nmond • 67.'1·9-IS·I 6·16-1171 er .in .st~L. airplan<'s. I() ea'ialog ls' s'1.~>0. a~11~~~,~~~~~ I Nei\~~ach I ~ercedes Benz 9740 ·71 :'IL-\P.K II. A/, .• fai·. ::iir, top, faclory ~ air, til1 ·1clc,1 __ y~m_ou ________ , Kawai-Kimball·U.nvrey-NE'\\' 30' a· IT I sha1e ll1gh!l1n1c&C'XpellSE'S . F " ~1 17h "9 I like 11"'1" 1·~"' "11 O:iP \\'h('("I, Al\:l/FJ\I s ter eo '73 D Rodgers . Thomas • : .nl· ' -• : IC~I' raw er, DiSl'U.SS details. Can TO:'ll, pre\'IC\I' :i ... "ay t . ?"' I SEXY '73 Capri 2000. Auto •73 M E R CEDES I O\\Tl('r S?i30 j.36-!)662. ' po"·cr door locks, tw ilig:hi uster aha • \\"urlitzer. 8 Slpsk ',·. 11Y1b.!;~·,, .~r5a_~~ 642·5--114 ~111" 1 Ad~•s,~;o50n ~~ 11•1th 1, shirt. Leaving _for n1ilit1H!-'. 450 SL I T , · ·h · ' 9767 sentuwl. ren'IOte lrunk loek, 6 ryl aulomalir, JIO"'f'r Op!igan $lri0 a n s )pe, 40;;r,....,.,. <No.I-';).') il'l a og ol -· · .-Ol lll()re n1ust st'll ~269;> 6~()..S2'.J9 01" r1Ump CIC etc Cho' f? 1ll4.'lil6 " brak f ' · · · ·· ·' · ·'' •••• • · 675-89·1:'>. Campers, Sale/ info1111ation, eHll :'II o vie I 121~17~.~)153 · --Dark green 11·i111 natur;1I 1 ii'mli ~c~ 0 -1 1 1 stttnd~· & ;s. t acl~ry i!!!: WLo"-re1.Y sp,in_et ........ $195 so· DIESEL T I P'I Rent 9120 \\'orld, 6900 Or_ong_ethorpc_ ···-~ c' ,·PR! ··6 !1000 ... inl(>rloc, (ull r a('tor_y '73 TR STAG m1l•ago Xft'mey O\\' m-,"',."',· .. , e',,'.'·u la l urllzer .p1nct,ne1Y .. $.J!l9 ~. ', ra11·er, .101 ~ucnaBark.90620,;,23_1.,20_ 1.~ r \, • _ 1111s., equlppr'd. aulor.in t tc . ~ . " m '- *WIN FREE* House, 0 h1; sulon G1a11dSURPRISE youi· \\lfe, buy • ~ I J._\'l'l'Y xlra ··.~c~·pt ;ur. ,\ft , trnnsmission. all' Convt>r11hle 1\'ith re1no..t1ble $7199 (8371-IEVI ORGAN LESSONS Banks fype, S 3 2 ·;; O O · hrr a c;1n1pcr for J\lothe1"s Rec Vehicles 9530 6. hl'f 9, 6'11-S.l9,1. I cundilionin".. A i\l f F ?-I , ha rd • to. 1i · A u tomark· Only $2795 Gr:r.'1'94:>, &15-5755 . I I · u.a..-e. ,. .. FULLERTON Music BERTRA TWIN Dciy, l\lng o· '.fhc H.oad \\"llJ~ BUY YOUR RECRJ'.'". Da tsun 9720 1 eTC'ctric v;indC'\\·s, & only ti·a~smi.ssl 0d1.1 .· powe~ ""~-"" Howard Chevrolet M 25 C-<tbo\·ers. none fln_rr. l\lesu ' ATIONAL VEHICLE PAID I 11.94G n11lcs. !No. 58,~\ s!cenng. nn· t'.f'l!l 1t1on1ng. '" ~~'::INW .... 181911:.uclid, Fountain V<iUcy l::xccllent l'Otl<I., SlO,IQ.l. Camper S;1IC'!>, 2036 HarWr. FOR OR NOT. CALL US · 240Z' 1 I 1· lo a_d e d "·_i ~ h ex tr a J\lncArthur anrl Jamboree 1 557-4836 s1~!J5-l6 . c.i I ror. BES· PRICE. OPEN S / l~'~j ~I~' · "'"'""''"'-'"'"'"'-c-"°"" N'"l~'),,~;"'h 122 N. llarhor, Fullerton 1971 :r.r SE1\R.J\Y. fully ··quf.t. 62 . <7hev. Canl?t;I", a [I ROAD. I'. u NT I NG.~ 0 N I ,. u ' 111~'~ f 11~· I ~ WJPE Di;; VILL.!::, 871·1805 VHF radio, An1er. 4-\\"hcc! equipdSl~lee_pi-ooti.3 Good BI::ACH, 18&.1 Beaeh Blvd., 240Z's ; ~ ' IJ ~ · 1 l , ... Londed. J\1ust sell . N() ca:sh ATLAS ;\l.i.\fOST Nc1v f-.:\'errlt trailor. 493-lMl cond.. ..&I .. !I 842·'.!5Q.-I.-I •1 I I Yl}r needed ()n approved crt'dit. Console Pinno, Cost 51.100. SllARP 32. Luhrs •67. Jo'/B, S Foot Can1per.Shel! or_tr~c~e s u l\l l\I ER TI !'11 t: run. • '70 • 4 specd, air, & mags 3!CO \'.'. Cn-~· !ht'.)'., N.B.L I 11 ,89>-0646_ Chrysler/Plymouth .' Sell for SSj()/n1ake oiler, diesel, rbgls. l\1any extras. for 12.16.5 !ires. 645---03aS Strcet-leg;:i! dun bu ggy .1 . . . 642·9405 -··--••• • -12 S~E~D=-------5J&...646.I $11.500. 01\ner. fi.12-5583. cifter 5:30. Coi_"l"ilil' e1ig. Runs perfC('\.1 • 72 -4 speed, aa, & 1nags -I 3100 \\'. r"n~1 ~''Yr-'· N.8. AN DEVILLE. Xtra Open Daily & Sun. 'Iii 10 r~ OVER 642 9405 i·h:111. tnust st'lL N" cash 2929 J-la.rbJr Blvd., PIANO, Lyo11.Hca!y, baby 24. Ci\BTN Cruiser. need:<1 Motorcycles/ S1050!1.lt'Sl oUe~ or trade for • ·n -4 speed, air, & mags i • • _ needed on approved credit. Costa Mesa grand. Ne11·, l:Wnut. t()ne. co~n1etil·S. $950. or bcsl Scooters 9150 slo l)OO.t. 492-72H!. 35 USED Volkswagen 9770 892-0646 Best offer. 61:Hill6. offer. 894-6511 GAS T~\NKS instrillcd by LOTS OF T.l SE ·546-1934 Autos, New 9800 Autos, Nt!w 9800 J\lHJtil"l\"ay. Trucks, Imports. S * steel radial tires, a 11 • S PRING • 240Z' r MERCEDES * * * * . . D. De Ville, 19.000 mil. Ll.GHSTAILVF.E-.JG.HT 808 II'. lSlh, C.M. TO CHOOSE FROM ON D ISPLAY o"wv·,",1:";,,95'."~:~'.~':',111•6· GAS SAVER ', I ]96!) V.\\'. Dunc Buggy, TRY US BEFORE YOU I MARGARET SCREES , ....., VI.,.....,..., 21st Anniversary. Sale! - Our FAMOUS "Golden Touch" New Cars! Immaculate "Previously Driven" Corsi Demonstrators -Executive Cars! · ENTIRE MONTH OF MAY 2626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS COSTA·MESA 540-5680 \\'e sc1"1•iec 11•hat \l'e sell. :;oft lop & to"' bar. , 4151·5 Seavlew wkdus/all day wknds. 1973 PLYl\IOUTll DUSfEJ\. I Buy now y,IJile ~ood select.ion 963-1664 or 968---0140 . BU\ House of Imports Laguna Beach .67 ELDO stereo cnf St~. trans., great g~· is still ;iv·•~:•hlt'! 19i0 J:ti'RU:.J' Dunt! BuE.:_!>iY· I 1iJ~j~jt' I~ 'I 523-7250 YQU are the winl'lf'r l"'f t.~'11 .. · .. i ... ~.1.ur~. ;,_.,, ~: Q~11~g~4.~e~U~. ~J-' HARLEY DAVIDSON ''"' -nd. N""' ,,,~._ $1'"'· I I ~ O R E ,,,, .. 1 ii lo" $llll0 "" ·~1 "" ..... ..... ....rv • '66 •1 B • pd J v TW F EE TICK TS ..... ' · .,..~ • Pri\·ate nartv. 551-5151. I or \,'estminster 1-'ll: 546-73Lti I , , ' "· ""' s . sunroo. ery eves 5-18-4157 ..... ~ 9.10G Buls,1. \':estrninSt('r I h , 955 I I 11·ell c:u'ed for, 75 l\IPC, lo lhe -----J·---..,,.;,..,..,..,.,.-1 Bct11·~ Bl"ookhui·s1 & :'ll!~g:n?,li;i 4 ~-~·el Drives 0 1 .,, .. • $1700. 831-1211 aft 6. or on Southern California Camaro 9917 Pontia c 9965 893·6!7.J .. J , .10 1 •61 . Jt-;:t., Scout., 4X4• hubs, I 3100 W. ( 11 t Hwy., N.B. "·knd, 64f>-2909 MOBILE HOME SHOW 1--· ·s1 FIREBIRD 400 N . AWARD n•'I\' radials, roll h;ir. Huns I 642-9405 '10 280 SL, 2 tops, »lay 18th 1111,1 !\'lay t7th CA.1\1All0 SS '11, ,BeautUul, paint i·arliaioi· hrak~s cf:i1 1 MOTORCYCLES _\"cry good $!JOO. &l:j-7411 1 •73 D ATSUN !~~a_o6u75~a':~,6AtC, Lo\Y 1ni, nr the loo<1ed. r .S. a!r cond., 6-~lGaJl 6 ;11 · .,.,.,.,.., J-o..J'f ANAHEIM STADIUM auto., vinyl top. Very low -Th_d..;...b _..J'_· __ __, 1-londa. Triumph. Yaaiaha '67 JEEP \Vacmneer •1X4, V· 240 un e• d 99-•-z ··1 250 C JI · J 20)() State Coll...,e Blvd. nil. New 1tide rubber, A-1 • 1r ,., 16.'10 Ne11·port Blv<I, Costa ;-;, air. auto, PS/PB, Priv. i • n poy,-e_r. air, m ~., 1---------~~1 l\lcsa . Ply, 5.18-0063 aft 6 ,'f.: 1vknds. radio, very clean, $5800. Annhelm mech., $2295. 5«l-l.466 '65 T B' d 642-4345 iveckdays 833-8300 Please call 642-5678. ext. 333 ;-68-C~R.o SS •I spd • Ir ~ i ___ Trucks 9560 Coco h1'0"'n, 4 spcl'<l, air, to claim your tickets. (North P/B PIS A11U1t s'en Need~ . t 1971 llONDA lT~ \;j(J. One Al\l!F~l . & niag.s. jSTK N<>. '72 350 SL, Maroon, very Coun!y toll free number Is I littl~ ~·o~k $700 ~r best A~tomntlc trans, po 1v • r ·oivnrr. Lo\v in i l cage. '1:1 COURIE!l. Tacon1a \\'hl ~.1 2·1!l!i~ 1 <'lean, AH xtras, quick sale 1 540.12'.lOJ, ~ 64.a-ri!l'l st~ertng, brakes, p o w~r Excellent cond. S6:i0. Tl6 \\'. Special Suspension. 1:; ·' $5295 c!rsis.cd. 673-3120 644-7454 f ' * -t~er._ I 992 winc~ws, air conditioni g, \V ilson St., Costa ;\Jcsa. Ph: tires, :\l\llfi\1 Tap c, 1 'TI 1\,87. 280 SE 3.!'i cpc. * * * * evro et 0 \' ny hi> roof -c l c 1 6-UH514._ ------F.0t·':I;!. : 117 .0.:11{';1 .J. ::':I I .'lrc11dy a classic .re. nice --;-69-V-.W-.-B-ug-.-"1-,,,-co-nd~ ··~ --··,:,., N -· · ttu:oug0 u<1<NCC$Sl09 9 i 5 1 '73 1-IONDA 3;)0.4 l'U <".VI, 11.'JO nipg. ll'"t\>'"11 R3 I 8.":1-2040 Dir. New 1·ear brak<>s, $1200. I~ ova n y I 1=1 J • J 3.1375 CAMINO CAPISTRANO o•oo~ n1i, lmniac (,1nd, S109:l. "'-'· n1emat1ona l\letro-\.t.PI JU.t.PI c .t.'1STtAPIO 1 ·70 l'\·IBZ 280SL rdstr. 4 spePd .........,.,4 aft 6 Pi\l Coupe_ -Automali~, p<>1ver Howard Chev~t Save $300 over 11,•w cost. i\litc. l\l~:-hanic1:1lly sound. ,.,,,. ....... ,...,i.ooo.,-.... & ai r 8.11-2040 Dlr. '67 vw Sqback. Ne1v P.Bint, stl'l!ring, brakes, vinyl root, '.> 6--12-5957 C\"l"S Body g~I. $650. "93-3375 or 831-1175 ( ..,...... --·' 1 h b k '"--k 11 dclLLxe exterior decor -10111 i\'IRcArthur and Jambor !J00.2660 or 549·3710 "".':':'~~~~~==~~I 'fi3 J\lBZ ""vSE M."U!Ul, :'luto. c utc ' ra t ..:, g,""' s, res loy,• miles exce p t i o nA I NewpoI1 Beach l 1972 SUZUKI 400 T :'II. ,,..11z 2~...,. l . Ii k tr,111~. & Rir 831-2040 D!l'. $750 or brs1 ortcr. 613-6483 (4.52GAS) 833--0555 .1 SU""r<:lc;in, n1ust sf' r ! ·~ (11EV ~:o.t. ton pickup, ~1111 "'' .JV!• rn' air, 5 c ' I $2295 V .,~ d d S.t50 A,\l/F:\1, stereo. t I\ pc On y es• 9974 ~~!:, for bf'st offer. g ' con · 493-1843 ;\>heh. lire.'!, mags, custom ' '71 HONDA 7::.0, Full dress, Xlnt rond, Bt'uutifut, 6-lN!S2 af!rmoons '74 J-londn.'i 750 & 55Cl xu·as. $1950 & s1100 49'!-0039 ·:15 Cl!EVY '2 T. Tl'Ut'k. \'('ry cll'An. Rcblt eng, nu tJ1'f'S & pa int, 64;')-7"°6. J!lj:l Cheey Luv Pick Up. 28,000 1niles. Light hh1e. $1993. ~:>-6157. '7'1 330 ):"A~tAllA strf'<'\, xl"I Vans 9570 ~~· or best ()ffer., "61 fORD-6 cyl, JS !\!PG, 1..;::.:.."'"~===-~250~-8.1 11 u!o trans, mttJ:t!'I, :iir p:.tl()(•lo; '71 HUSQVARNA . & new hl"lcs. $&"JO, 536-8187 !\peed. N<-'Wf raC'f.'d. Beaut. nl! 6 rohd. $7CIO. Ph: 646-1.36.i '.,~,'--'00=1=x;=E,--"-, ... ln ... ,,'o-w-,-,-n. '72 SUZUKI, r.-,o CC. Perr. n1eth'l rond. Lo nll. Soperlor st. m 11 c hin.~· H IL RUlo S79:i. 6'12·3'193 or t'USIOOl i'"Xlr!lll, S.VJ-0440 612·3493. ·7:: HONDA Cl. ;'00, ~~~ ~291~1. Ne"· con<!. '7:1 St '7.Ul<I GT 700, mint l'rindltlf)n, Sl500. -~~'("'1111 9G2-96"93"---- '7a U.O 'f AMAi°lA Jo:nduro, \"1"1') .:oorl rond, snao 01' brsr I nrrf'r. &ll-5010 Ray. T\\ll. l'rt>mirr ht-lmrlll, lge. 19iG V\V Bus, $2600. or b ~1 off<'r. Nc"'' eng. 23 n1J110:· &12·91R3 9 lo J. "&I-Clff:V. V'7A~N~.~v'°.R'. "'1'on-< 1\hcl'l bu.~(>. 3 spd stk . $S:)()_ I'll: R31--093.-j IMJ-rORD . .,--,T'"n-n--01" ... •"'•I Tru('k , I o~ner. PC'rlcct rond. $1100. 64.>-795."l ""'"" ,.,,,,.'" 1n1,,i o•. 0~( STAR GA'ZEK•l<.,. H oward Chevrolet '73 Vega Est""" S6Z:iO. Orii.:. owner, 6~10 )...~·:.;Jf A\ ~ ~r I fl, 1 I.Ar 11. l'Ol.I-\N fl.tncArthur and Jamboree A11ton1atlc, poo'<'r stee~. ~fOVING OVERSF.A S. ·~· .. ~·~11:1 Ji.. l'-0~1-fA""'''rw.Je J:t. un l~~·:il Ne"'JX!rt11,,~ach ta<:101')' air, deluxe inte r , MUST SF.I~!., li\1,\lf:D. '72 f ,,..,..... '1.•" Arcor01n1110 r~t Sto•r, oci 11 £.J --~-"8J.)..u_, estate cxt~rm plu{ - 1'>111s11n !200 2 1lr, auto,I ·.:il l ~?'I· lo d•Yelop ..,~~~ogl'forlucsdoy, 41 •• ,.,1.~ e LEASE e pl'eml\.lm tlres _like-pew 12,5(1(1 n1i. Xlnt . oond. $2000 ,·~R 6~1l ·~-<i<lw<>1dscorrei.ponding •on1lfTlbc'' 61 :61.10 -~ lo nHes 1"34HHU) l !'"ash l!l·l·.'~541 bf•I. 9 & 9. 1 . l.t.U•us '''your Zocr.oc b111h $lgro. --1 1972 Chevy ~ T Plcku~. V·S, w I ' t • l "' l''"('~ 6!f.fn... sco•"0 aut9 tr ns. Clean. 24 n10. Only $2795-, DAT:::UN 2-10 ?.·5.000 mt ii· ~'~ /!, is..,.,~ l1 ~"'' &l~,1.i..11~ OC"I 11· " lse al $Tl 50 mo • · j E;.;1.J'lll:. Ucsl oHrr. Pll: I j.......: .. ~r HI ·~ )1l., 6l M•'ltlaced HO• II ... _ FO.R SA.LE Howard Chevro et ~."J'' ''"11 )4j7.bll •C"""9"~ l•&Q·n &1Md lll'<lll .,u-,.,_y' -------i J7'9_·8i )C°T•v• J~llt &)l aM'¥ >-• • 1970 Qalom }o;J Camino ~JacAJ1hUr &nd J,..,.•' j ---p· k 6"•• J&W••'"'\l 66Cooo>W •l>o" ;18.84.88 .¥, ...,.,DOfee DATSUN ttiOO 1910 IC UP., 4 c;1,,.1N1 1M..rr \IS. &/w,,~ 1~1ckUp, V·8, Rir, Ral lye NeWp(lrt Beach 'j spd., 0.C,, blue. $137J. 1 1-• .,,, n & v•.,, 38 0. l)S C"""<~ "·heels, llUI() trans, PIS. 833-«i55 • 6 ~ -f#-' 9f•h•" ~R~ie (o'1Ta "~"'==~~~--..... ,.., iv"1 10 1 0 ,~ ,01~ roca11 AJ\11&;l\1. Xlnt cond. $1850. '·73 Vega 1970-QATSUN 2407.. Orangc. 1 1 '·1321·lO·J1 11 v-t•10°"' •1 ~-11 c..1a·~ SO COAST CA:Il l.~ASING . ~ ,,~~80 86 l)•<feol •20 • 12"~" 64 21 H air, 1nags, 4!1pcl, S3.4j() IJ R..:•MI ..... •l l•o-d 1)"'1-',.., ... W-, -~ 82 Rftt:r 5 pnl 673-8269 atchback 831 9334 (APICf• I• No-''flt I• r.,...a, 72 rl -• ~----iu111 '' 1so.,,, ·~ "-·~ 1~ ...__ • Cop c:e Au 1 o n1a t I c 1ransrnldilon, 1\I ·72 Dalsun 2'10Z 4SP 111Lr 11 :;~.'." :~!·t" ~~t.,.. 1~ rd l 1 11 radkl A heater, e)Cttfior YcllO\v * l\1int t'(lnditioo I 1 1 9 11 '"' •I y,a, ... a., it ~· I 8 op coupe -llU oma c, decor group -low lo miles 54G-!ll38 fl(h•r ~P-'"'--:-~e.l!O ll 19'"'""'1¥ te1-1,,. 790! '~'"-"--'""" power •leering, brakes, lmmaculste (944.JDHl ' _ 1 10o,.;-ni"'ll !iOOul toz .. ·•~1 1-power window•. po'A·er ICAt, O I $ '73 DATSUN Sia . \\'11s;-. t\/C, llO 21 \c>'"I !I"" ""'''""' .&QU•-IUl vln,yl roof, AM-FM -TILT n y 1895 00(} d • \.. JU(P 1l '' Moql ~~ """'' 81 A>t" J~H jO ..,_ .. si~i0: 1~11.~L Xlnt con · r .. •II~ ,, ~~ ~ : .. ' ~? ::, I!~ '''-II ,~...; ;it~~i!;;;t e(&lUd/ 0 n a I ~l,.,watd Chev,~let _ __ • · 70 '' ll J~ 1~ V., or S' J\n•Wf"• ~5 T6 ~. '·10·14f.. o I $'J 5 95 '73 DATSUN Sia. Wllg. A iC, 'i:-4J$0 61 1e .... 1 St\I.. H°"" ~ ~~ n y .. l\-11\cAf1hur l\lld J!lrnbOret :~~~· 16,(W)) ITll , :·n~~,'°-~.: .... _GO ~t.~ ~z:ffl :e~ t•SCfi I r" c-!1evralAt Ncw..':!'1-~ch No...,.,, .,.1 ~ (( ~~!l 11 lfFo.-• ~.,,., 8'i:;.•·•ll Ill . II );tf.• ... _ 15' ~::=~:.._ __ _ • "" 11 30 11~ (W)\J>oll '° ,,_ ........ " '~ h1 .. "Ar:~ur Md Jamboree 'i3 VEOA Station \Vaaoo GT. I l1k1• rn...i.. SL ~a. \..ull .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"' ........ ~~~--...... ~ -'~"'-·'~'-"''------- HA\'e somcthlnA you warll IOI '17:1 3'1~ • • 1 .,,_. • 11 ~ 6-17 1, .• sell! Clllll~n(l(f ~rls do It ':::"":':':":"':::'"::·':' :c:~==··::·='J:':"-':::'C:=':':":'":'=="':""::"::""~ New~rt,,,,,~ach 1~~:.~J •P.16621~ ~k. well -call NO\V 642-567'1L • ~~ UllJ"'\1 499-_ ' , " ' ' t l r s i ' r ' \ Today's Final San Cle111ente Ca istrano ED IT I ON N.Y. Stocks VQL. 67, NO. 133, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 13, 1974 TEJ-.l CENTS .. Scientists W elco·me De ad Whale in Clemente lly JOHN VALTF.RZA ot '"' o ... , .. llot 5111! Four tons of deud :Ind ripening California gray 1vhale ran1c ashore at the San Clen1entc pier this 1norning runic.I fanfare and celebration . And an exultant crew of scientists and students fron1 lhe Los Angeles County 1'1useum of Nalural 1-listory v.·cnt to work immediately to dissect the careass. of a young female levia than .. ~:hich had ' been floating off 1he South Coast throughout the weekend . Yachtsmen first spotted the whale on Saturday, said spokesmen for the harbor patrol at Dana l-larbor and by Sunday nig~t thC remains had drifted to the pier area. "\Ye had a few options," sai~ San Clemente Lifeguard Chief Dick Hazard, "but htis one is by far ttJe best, because it creates the fewest problems." Ch11rclai.ll Ho1ao1·ed \Vinslon Ch urchill. grandson of the late Brilish statesman, stands beside a hu ge bust of Sir \\linston Ch urchill v..·hiJe attending a pri\"ale viewin g of the Churchill Centenary Exhibition at Somersel llou ~c in London. ~(issinger flears Bo'l_s . . . Fron i Unhappy Israelis JERUS1\Lt::-.1 IAP \ I s r a e 1 i deftlonstrntors booed Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger today and Premier $olda Mcir"s government held an urgcnl cabinet session on K i s s i rl g e r · s determined truce negotiations lo end the War with Syria. ·:.Jerusalem sources said Israel would 5lll't'Cnder no more captured Syrian land Ut exchange for the disengagement pact 1\issingcr seeks. but the cabine t kept ils deliberalions secret and a government rninlster said only that negotiatiOns w'&Uld continue. ·Kissinger is to fly back to Damascus Tuesday with Israel's latest terms. b11t lridicaUons were the Israelis were relusing lo budge beyond the undisclosed tnicc offer they made three d:iys ago. :About too protesters -some or them pioneer settlers on the Golan Heights wfrhln sight or the daily artillery war with Syria -shouted out the feelings of many I s r a e I i s by yelling "Boo to T WO LINES SOLD GLAS PAI( DI NG HY ltere 's an aa placed by a "man or £cw Words" in the Dally Piiot that really did tho Job: 9· GLASPAR DINGHY $45. (Phone No.) The first caller bought the dinghy. You ron get your adverli!iing job done , too. with "a few ~rds in the rig' ~lace'' in the classified section of lhe Daily Pilot. Dial the dl recl line to resul15. Phone 642· 5678. Kissinger" as the secretary's car arrived at ~irs. ~teir's office for the morning talks. Dozens more Israeli settlers defiantly moved into war..t>lasted houses in the abandoned Golan capital of Quneitra to prevent the .. government from relinquishing the ghost t0\\11 for a troce treaty. Israel has reporte41y offered to turn over half of Quneltra kl U.N. forces as a buffer zone , and permit civilian Syrian residents to return to the town they ned during the 1967 Mideast war. The exact · official terms of the Israeli offer are still secret, however. It was the 16th day of Kiss inger's Mideast mission, m a k i n g the disengagement quest t h e I o n g e st diplomatic effort he has made outside the United States since he became secretary of State. Israeli sources said earlier the gap in the · disengagements negotiations with Syria is as wide as ever despite a report by Kissinger of some progress toward an (See KISSINGER, Page l) Two Live Whales Take Spotlight Although it was a dead whale which caused a stir among bystanders on a San Clemente beach today, two live ones dkl a perfonnance of their own downcoast this past weekend. At 8an Onofre Stale Park J pair of young CAiifornia gray whales cavorted near the surf llnc throughout most or the day while hundreds ol guest& walched in amazement. Park rangers said the baby mammals disappeared !ale In the afternoon. The crew from the county museum, he said, is especially interested in saving the complete skeleton of the mammal. "They were excited because this find is so rare. Moot of the time the carcasses are only partial and much farther gone than this one," he added. Although the crews worked undaunted amid jellyfish at the water's edge and a powerful aroma surrounded t h e mammal, changing puffs of wind caused the less hardy to scurry up the beach on occasion. Spokem1en for the crew termed !he discovery "a real find," however because the animal had only been dead for several days and \\'as perfect for scientific purposes. No theories were offered on the ~ible cause of death of the young whale. but Hazard said accidents v.·ith vessels at sea are common during v.•hale migrations. Judging fro1n the age of the 18-foot animal. scientists said it appeared she was born during the Sou t h"•a rd migration of the California gray \\'hale herd. That jaunt ended early this year. The youngster died, apparently. du ring the Northward migration of the ht'rd aft er the females gave birth to their young in Scammon's L.a.goon off Ba1a CalUornia. llazard said the scientific effort today y,·as a boon to his dcpartplent and others. "Usually, 1vhcn these things v.·ash up "·c've got nothing but problems trying to get rid of them . ~lo.st of the time they'll stink up an entire section of beach before the probl{'m gets solved," he said. "This way v.·e'rc h{'lping science along and soml'One else will get rid of the problem for us." he added. Spending for Luxuries At Nixon Sites Claimed Sa1i Juan Adobe Plea Schedu,led A formal plea lo save San Juan Capistrano's historic adobe buildings will be made tonight at the 7 o'clock meeting of the city (X)Unci1. fl.1rs. ?-.1ary Jane Forstt;r, who has Jed the fight to save' the structures. will pfesent councilmen with a petition by hundreds of residents asking that an emergency ordinance be passed to protect adobes In san Juan. Specifically. the proposal is for the council to "provide conditions and regu lations for the ' protectio n , enhancement, and preservation of adobe buildings and other structures and places which have special, historical, or esthetic interest or value." The petition also asks that the '-1.iguel Parra adobe be saved. The structure, located on the property of Leadership Homes. was eannarked ror destruction until a group of citizens brought it to the attention of the former council. The Parra ado.be was then given a year's reprieve. But the tract to be built around it was recently denied and the fate of the building, which goes back at least as far as the 1860s, is still in limbo. Mrs. Forster, who is the v.i.fe of fonner ~1ayor Thomcss A. Forster, will also ask the city to contact county officials and ask that any unallocated funds that might come to the county from the passage of Proposition One be used for historical preservation. Saving historical buildings is one of the purposes of the measure which is on the June ballot. The city has a dozen adobe buildings, most of which are privately owned. Some, like Dan Rios (v.•hose adobe dates back to 1795), have indicated an interest in preservation, but others have admitted that they will destroy their buildings if it is economically beneficial. Cowicilmen, conscious of the city's heritage, have authorized a committee. to ponder formation of a hi s t o r i c a I commission. Other items on the heavy agenda include: - A public hearing on weed abatement . -A review of the land use permit of Capistrano Mobilehome Pageant, a business.. that is suppcsed to be only a (See ADOBE, Page %) Poli~e Streak l1ui Also Damagerl--0,wner PORTSMOUTH, R.I. (AP) -A Portsmouth motel ov.ner says a group of Boston policemen ra.n naked through his Ramada lM night club and took part in a disturbance that resulted in about $1 ,000 damage. Peter Stilphen said about two dozen of the 100 Boston policemen staying at the motel Friday night participated in the alleged incidents. The policemen came here to march in a police parade Saturday. Jean Lawler. motel manager, said she ca lled -local police twice and state police once abouf the ma tier, but no arrests were made. A spokesman for the Boston Police Department , Frank Carpenito, said today the department is looking into the matter. Stil phen said he is CORiidering filing a l'Omplaint with the Boston police commissioner's office. ~frs. Lawler clainied at least half a dozen policemen stripped at the side of the motel's swimming pool within sight of the night club audience and jumped in. Other police ran naked through the night club, v.•ith some going up on the stage and others jum ping on tables, Mrs. Lawler and Stilphen charged. Three or four n.aked policemen also came in and stood in the motel lobby at the front de sk, ~1 rs. Lawler said. "That's not streaking, that's indecent exposure," she said. J\lrs. Lawler claimed that some of the police arrived al the motel that afte rnoon drunk and continued drinking through the night. Pictures and other motel property were tossed out of second story windolvs and firecrackers were set off in hallways, Stilphen said. Insulation was ripped from the ceilings and a security camera was 'lorn from its stand, Mrs. Lawler said. A liquor cabinet in the night club "·as broken and some liquor was stolen, she added. "The only complaint we had was noise." Lt. Henry J. Miller of the Portsmouth state police barracks said. When sta~ troopers arrived al the motel around 3:30 a.m. Saturday, he said there was no noise, just a few men drinking in their rooms. Five bottles of liquor were stolen from the cabinet, he said, but investigation of the incident is a local p o I i c e responsibility. Portsmout h Police Chier John T. Pierce said, ''There is going to be something done about this matter." Ex;.milk Co-op Leader Hints Help by Connally By BROOKS JACKSON AIMcll_., l"rtll Wrlltr WASHINGTON -John B, Connally may have assisted the nation's biggest dairy cooperative in a tax ::audit !~at failed to uncover the dairymen 's massive illegal political donations and alleged kickbacks, the co-op 's former lobbyist is quoted as saying. Bob A. Lilly, former lobbyist for Associated J\1ilk Producers, Inc., said Connally, then Treasury secretary a~ in command of the Internal Revenue Service, "may have resolved" the tax matter according to notes taken by a lawyer who Interviewed Lilly. Among the items that the IRS d~dn't find was $100.000 paid in cash to Nixon fundraiser Herbert L. Kalmb.nch of Ne\\'- ..port Beach in 1'69. The co-op recently asserted that thi~ donation was an illegal use of corporate money. The co-op has asked for a refund. On the Connally question, co-<1p lawyer Jake Jacobsen once told the milk producers' leaders that Cor.oall" had written about the matter directly to R. L. Phinney, the lRS district director in Austin, Tex., an informed source said. Phinney, a long~time friend and fonner business partner of Co n n a I I y . acknowledged that he had been involved in the 1971 audit, but denied that Connally or anyone in Washington had contacted him about the matter. Temporary Water Use Connally couldn't be reached and hi! lawyer. Edward Bennett W i 11 i a m s , (See CONNALLY, Pagel) !' Bo y, 2, Struck Restored • in A broken water line -still unrepaired -interrupted water service to residents of the Alto Capistrano development In San Juan Capistrano on Mother's Day. The entire 1,..Tew or Orange County \Vaterworks District Number Four v.:Orked from ti p.m. Saturday until 5 p.m. Sunday to restore water to the tract In southeastern San Juan capistrano. "Some homes were without water all day," said T.J . Meadows , Water District Manager. Water service has temporarily been restored by use of l,700 feet of hote line supplied by the Orange County Fire Department. 1'A broken line doesn't usually take so much time to repair," said ~teadows. San Juan "But t~ problem was compounded by a violation of district rules by the company that built this tract." Meadows said the pipe was buried IS feet deeper than it was supposed to be. That means It's 20 feet underground and water di"lrlct equipment isn't designed to dig that tar. Thfs n111ru~ng the source of the brea k wasn't y(!t round , but l\.1eadows sa id special equipment \\'Ould be brought in to locate the leak. He said he had also contacted the Meredith Company of Tustin, contractors for Alto Capistrano, to Inform them of the violation of rules. He ,.Id the company will be required to remove the 15 feet al dirt on top of the line and to install a temporary water line until I.he entire situation ls recllfled . By Cycle, Hurt A 2-year-old boy injured "'ir:le vtsiting San Onofre State Park ov~ tht l\'eekend was reported in guarded coodltion today after being struck by a motorcycle. Park rangers saki Kenneth Richard Prees suffered multiple injuries Saturday evening when he ran into a roadway near his ramlly's campsite and -v.·as struck by the cycle. The boy was lakcn to Orange County ~1cdical Cen ter in a private car after the. collision. The cycle's driver. Camp Pendleton l\1ariue Larry Edward De.slinger, was not clled after the 8 p.m. mishap. The accident occurred only a fev.· feet fron1 the area where the boy's father, Arnold Prees of El Monte had !et up camp. " Judgment Of Aides Under Fire WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep. Robert E. Jones (0-Ala.) of the House committee probing use of lax revmues on presidential homes has accused the administration of spending for "frivolous luxuries" at President Nixon's San aemente apd Key Biscayne homes. "Tho P"5ident's aides have shown poor judgment in the excessive spending of tax dQUars for improvement of presidential vacation {aCillties," said Jones. Jones said executive branch agel)Cies have spent more than $17 million in connection with three privately O't'ned. properties and orfice co· m p I e x e s , including Nixon's homes at San Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. A spokesman for Jones said the third property was the New York City cooperative apartment that Nixon sold several month!I af ter becoming president. but the findings at\d recommendations of a House committee report listed the third property as a Bahamian retreat ov.-ned by a Nixon friend. The report's findings make no mention of the New YofJ<: apartment. The flnal draft or a proposed report to be considered by the House Government Operations Committee. says that Nixon's homes have cost $17.1 million in federal funds. The repart also said the federal agencies ., should try to rerover any improper expenditures. Copies 0£ the report have been distributed t o committee. members. The Associated Pres,, was permitted to take notes from one copy. The report says the total includes $9 million for San Clemente, $8 million fOf' Key Biscayne and $176,000 for a retreat on Grand Cay in the Bahamas which is owned by Nixon 's friend, Robert H. Abplanalp. While House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Thursday night that the total includes such items as security costs, lhe cost of paper; desks and typewriters and the five-year cumulative cost of maintaining presidential commu· nicatioru. ''An honest report would show that out !See HOMES, Page %1 Orange Cout Weather 1'.1ostly sunny Tuesday, believe it or not, with warmer tempera- tures, to boot. Highs in the low 70s al the beaches rising to 75 inland. Overnight lows in the SOs. INS lllF. TODAY Spiro Ag11e10 is in Athtns thb week, allegedly looking for a job with Greek shipowners. Greeks, who cheered his a,... rivol i11 19 71. appear to not rec- Oflllize the forrner U.S. vice pres- ident toOOy. See story, Page 4. INllM L. M.. 1..,11 Calllenlfa , Cl••tlli.11 Ctmltt Cttn-' 0.ltll "•"ut ••·ttttll ..... l•ltf'llillllMl!t ,,_,Mt l'tf 19111 ...... ... ..._. 111 t11t lfnl(lf • ' • " • ' •H " " ' • ,. lt-11 • .. ' AMIL ....... .. ,,....., ,,... " Mil\lltt " ··--• Drllltlt Ct11MJ1 ' IYtlll• ,......,, ,. ...... , .. ,., Stw.11 ~I 't-11 ... _ " --" WN-• ~· ...... ,,., . .... -• I ,2 OAIL ~ l'ILOt Reinecke Deal Not Made-U.S . \VASlUNCTON {APJ -A \Vatcrg<HC assistant prosecutor testified tod ay thnt be never offered California LI. Gov. Ed Reinecke immunity fro1n prost>cution lf he cooperated in the ITT in••esligatlon. Joseph J. Connolly made the state ment during a hearing before U.S. D1str1Cl Court Judge Barrington P<irkcr on defense motions~ lo dismiss the perjury case against Reinecke. tr the case . is not disn1isst'd, the defense attorneys planned to argue that the trial should be moved 10 California . One of Rein cckc's . three auorncrs. James E. Cox, contended that the defendant was "misled and ent rapped by agent! of the government" durini;:: interviews with fhe special Wat.crgate prosecu tor's office. Conno1iy, under cross-examination on the vo'itness stand, denied that there \fas any discussion wit h Frank Pagliaro Jr .. --... Rcinecke's atlorney at that time, about possibk!: immunity from prosecu1io n if Reinecke told all he knew about a:i alleged offer from an TIT subsidiarv to bring the 1972 Republican ,\'atiOnal Convention lo San Diego. "I don't remember ~tr. Pagliaro making any suggestions th at hr (Reinecke) not be indicted," said - Coonolly. But Connolly sa id "it was clear to me that what ri.tr. Pagliaro v.·anted was that his client wouJdn 't be charged.'' Connolly said he warned Pagliaro that Reinecke could be indicted in the case. "Did you tell i\1r . Pagliaro that the. in vestigation was proceeding rapidly and lf Reinecke wanted to cooperate he had better do it right aYla y?" Connolly was asked. The prosecutor replied that he did not have any recolleciton of making that remark. When Cox pressed for a yes or no answer. Connolly said, "I didn't make a statement U1at it was a now or never situation." Judge Parker has set the trial date for July 15, but Reinecke repeatedly said he wants the trial completed before voters decide on his bid for the GOP nomination June 4. Reinecke has pleaded innocent to the perjury counts and charged that the nidictment was politically motiva1ed. Reinecke, 50. contends that it woul d cost him at least $10.<XXI to bring 20 defense witnesses to Washington and that he should be judged by his peers in Cl.lifonUa. ' Once viewed ai the leading contender i!J.. the i;atifomia GOP primary, Rttnecke11 'standing tn · public opinion pblls has slipped since he w:",; indictW April 3. Summer Caravan Leaders-Sought The South Coast Y~1CA is tiunting for men and women v.·i th group \\'ork and camping experience to serve as leaders on summer caravans. Leaders must be more than 18 years or age. Food and transportati<ln expense will be paid by the YMCA. Caravans arc for junior high and high school aged youth. They are planned for Baja California, h-tam1noth Lakes, Yosemite, Sequoia , the Colorado River. San Francisco and a tw~\vcek trip to Canada. Volunteer leaders may call Bill Davis at the Yti.fCA. 831-9622, for furthe r infor· mation. Those accep!OO will receive spe- cial training before lhc first caravan. Bpy, 3, Suffocates TRACY (U PI ) Three-yea r-old Raymond f\1oreno died Sunday ...-.·hen he closed himself into an old refrigerator. The boy's body was found in the refrigerator fi ve hours after a search began for hin1 near hls home south of here. OIAHGI COAST SC DAILY PILOT ,,.. ou~oe c~v 0o11v "11o1 ... ,~ .. ~'°" ·~ (oO.,,. I>-Ille Ne,.•·P1'1.., ,.11\Jbl<ON!d ~y !r. 0.1~ '-"'~··~·"II c.o.-o. .... S..11111!• ..,,,.,.,. ••• nu~"·"•" Mo"O•y !"'°''°" ~"O•• '°' (')<I• MtM. Nt""'°" 8"cfi, i.lunl•~(llO~ Elf11~nrfO.ft• t1·~ Valltt l19""' SeKn. 1 ......... 1s 1on••""•' ,.,., Sift O•"'""i.1S.ft .NI~ C.1>1olra"" A ••<>QI• lf9<0'\ll "'">Oii ,, ~-S.01U<0.)'I. .,,., ~ ... ft. O•l'I '"" "''~e•iw tlYl>f••"•"9 ol""' .. "'' 3:IO W••t flr/Slreet Colt•,,....,._ C.htc<t111. 916~e T~·A~ ""'~lo!Ot ~l H. l..oa1 R<lood P, Noi1 ...... l! .... ~[d ...... s ... °"'*""" otffc• JO~ 1-bt~ f;J~ Rtd Othtf-Offfcn c""'""'~'"' 3JOWftla..,.&1...-1 "''•f<>'I•• .. ~ :i...Jl l•~,.,,v~v..., 1-<M•"'Jt'""""...., !r~r~&o-..-~8ov~v•rd l.lfV"• i;....,.. ,,1,0<~•! ... _,"" T•trph-1114164Z·4JZI C!.11lflW A.41 .. t'rfl~ l 4Z·l,71 s... c~ •11..Dt,,.....-.tt: f~,,._.. 4tZ-44ZO ~l'V' llfl 0....,.. ~ l'llbl"MIO C.-1..t-., ,..,...,.. -Mt<.,_ ..i~a.-111..i1• .... --· -.... ~ Doi~­.. ;--·-oc:~~~A¥191'1t - ~ Cit•! O'!flq-I' t.,.., -Ql~f!I" -~""'""'"'""'ft .. 11 '.Cl"'O"'I'"" " ... ~ .... 00-.... .,. ..... _..._,.)(llJ'°°""""'" • Monday, May 13, 1974 • 'Al111ost F1cll' . ' "' ' - Bus Service Off ~; To Good Start New bus service by lhl' Orange County Transit District to the Saddlcback Valley . San Juan Capistrano. :ind San Cle1nente began today ""ith "almost full" reports fro1n early 1noming cou11nuter run drivers. The heralded transit expansion, linking lhe South County 1vilh Sant:t Ana and the beach fron1 a JlC\V hub Ht th e Laguna Strilie Call Br.i1shed Off lt'ake lJp, La%ybotaes ••• By Truckers Playful lio~1 cub at the Denver Zoo gro\vls with great ferocity and slaps a paw in effort to wake /1is lazy brother. clearly more interested in 40 winks than in frolic. A1ale cu bs were born to I-1:olly at the zoo one n1onth agu. By United Press lnternatJonal The country's independent t ru ck dri vers today all but ignorl'd a ca ll for n nationwide strike to force a rollback in fuc.1 prices nnd an increase in the 55· miles-per-hour speed limit. Newport Police Probe Rucliell -~Io.gee C/1,<1 n,ges j1Jind The strike resulted in sorn e violence in Pennsyl\'ania but had almost no effect on truck traffic in that state. regarded as the focal point in the truckers' protest. Rash of Cat Burg·laries SAN' JOSE (AP I -Citing ''harassment and intimidation," black convict Ruchell Jl.1agee asked a judge today for permission 10 1vithdral'o' a guilty plea I o aggra\"ated assault ch a r g cs Stenuning from the bloody 19i0 1'.tarin Courthouse shootout. Strike coordina tors said truck traffic \1·as •·do"11 appreciably '' in Utah, but else"·here across the countrv the situation was reported normal. · Newport Beach police are investiga ting a rash of cal burglaries "'hich apparently took place early today in the \Vestcli£f and Dover Shores areas. "\\'e've had fi\"c reported t his Official Sees Re<l Roofs In Cle1nente Probably lhe most wides pr cad legend about San Clemente of old \\'3S the city's original requirement that every house had to have a red tile roof. That la'"'' bit the dust in the late 1930s. But ~Iayor Thomas O'Keefe ha s suggested the exhumation of the Jong· dead requirement as a fresh method of assuring architectural compatibility in new construction. ''There is a 101 we cJn do.'' the Mayor told fellow councilmen recently, "to improve the \Jppea rance of lhe city and build a sense of comn1unity prid e.,. Councilmen took no action on O'Kcefe's suggestion at the session Wednesday. The • mayor suggested the C<Jncept so ,that fellow councilmen could mull its merits. The suggestion follov.·s ear I i c r sugges tions from O'Keefe whic h councilmen did accept S\riftl,y. Shortly after assuming the top council JXlSl last JI.larch O'Keefc v.·on council concurrence for the setting up or a forma1 architectural-review board v.•hich currently is being studit'd by planning commissioners. The planners thus far h3Ye not conic up v.•ith a complete recommendation on the projecl . City officials arc n1aintaining that because growth is boon1ing in the community, strict controls are needed soon. San Clemente has thousands of residential units on the dra wing boards and even in the framin g stages v.•itb rnany n1ore still subj~t to architectural revic\'J. t:nder O'Keefe's idea, ihc red tile requirement should be applied not to single-family houses -as the old la1v did -but to commercial ai:id multiple sl ructures, v.·hcrc the most frequent criticism ari~"'S in regard to esthctics. Bloodn1ohi le Set In Sa11 Clemc11te The Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit San Clemente Wednesday to accept dona· lions of 1vhole blood from volunteer donors. 111e appearance 1vill be spansorcd by the United Presbyte rian Church which hass offered ils parking lot and other facilities for the blood drive from 3 to 7 p.1n . Individuals or groups \\·ishing IQ donate are cnt'Ouragcd to m<.ike rescrva11ons to avoid any unnecessary delays. Appointn1e:nt.s arc available by calling 492-2889. All donation~. unless otherwise specified, will so into the CQ1nmunity bloodbank and are dee~ned extremely important because of a chronic increase in demand ror blood reserves. • South Coasl Ho-pital Ccts 3 New Doctors Three ~ doctors ha11e Joinl'd the 16&- member medic11I st.arr of South Coast Community Jfospital. Dr. Anthony \V. Orlandella, chic( of sl.iff, annoUnced rccen tl >-. The new men are Dr. Garv D. Kt'!tron. granted associate stafr pt-ivllegc.s in practi<Xl of 'general and vascular surgtry; Dr Sutter A. GardanJer, ptllholo~l~I : and Dr. John R. Burnham, wanted :lSSOt'UllC !"olaff pr1vllcgn In prac11cc <Jf psychi alr}. morning." a police spokesman said . tie said the first t'4'0 CAS('S investigated \rcre at the home of Jack Harris, 1!13-t ll ighland Drive, and the home of Anyv Tisdail. 1808 Commodore \Vay, bolh 1n \\1estcliff. At the Harris home. a burglar had apparently ente red through a rear porch door and made off with $250 in cash ,~·hHe !he residents '"'·ere sleeping. The burglary look place betv.·ecn 2 a.nl. and 5:30 a.in . A burglar entered through a df'n ,,;ndow at the Tisdail home. police s;iid, making off \\"ith 589 in cash and several credi t cards, also \\"hi!e residents v.·ere sleeping. The thief had ente red the OOme sometime between midn igh t and 7 a.m. Police said late this morning the y are still investigating the additional three reported burgla ries. 'They said so far they have no clues as to v.·hether the same person or persons v.·ere respansi b!c for the thefts. Froan POfle 1 1101\tES ... Santa Cla ra County Superior Court Judge \V illiam A. Ingram scheduled a hearing \\fedncsday on ~tagee·s argun1ent for the pica ~·hange. A judge and three other 1ncn were killed in the shootout. "I wish to \\'ithdraw n1y plea of guilty on grounds that it las ~nlav.·fu\ and i!Jega1, ·• 1\1ag~ told the C<lurt. Stanley Allen, A11to Dealer, Rites W ednesday • Funeral services for Stanley C. Allen. O\\Tler of Allen Oldsmobile-Cadillac in Laguna Niguel, \Vil\ be held at 2 p.m . The call for a nationwide truck shutdown, scheduled to have started Sunday midnight, was issued by Overdrive h-tagazine, \\'hose editor, r.-tichael Parkhurst. predicted more than 90,000 drivers would ta~e part. Overdrive is an independent truckers' publication. In addition to lower fuel prices and higher speed limits, Parkhurst said, the truckers sought an audit of oil C<1mpany books and the right for small tru ckers to haul manufactured goods in competition ""ith the big trucking compan ies. Pennsylvania Gov. ti.tilton Shapp. who doubted the strike would take hold in bis state, \\'arned the truckers not lo resort to violence. as occurred during a ""idespread tv.-o-week walkout in early February. In the Februarv v.·alkout. t"·o truck drivers were killed. scores injured , and vaiidalism was frequent. Despite Shapp's "'aming that the Kational Guard would b e called if needed. there v.·as sporadic violence in PeMslylvania in the ea rly hours of today's strike. \Vcdnesday a t Pacific View ti.1emorial of the $17.I million referred to. only approximately $205.482 \\'38 spen t on the Chapel in Newport Beach. r.tr. Allen died A sniper on a bridge over Uie Pennsylvania Turnpike near Breezev.·ood, a major highv.•ay intersection. fired a bullet through the \\"indshield of a Slate Police patrol car. The bullet missed trooper Donald Caldwell. 28, and he brought his vehicle to a safe halt. President's homes," Ziegler said. Sa turday at South Coast Community Pennsylvania State Police reported at least IO incidenl.s of rock throv.·ing and slashing of air hoses,' but there \\'ere no injuries and no arrests. In comparison to federal expenditures I-lospital. He was 66. '?fl Nr.ton 's prope~ties, Jones said. lhe A resident of the Laguna area for 42 cost for protectlOtl and r e la t e d , . , . . improvements during pr esident ~\ears, ~Jr. 1\llen s dealership wa~ first Johnson's terms \\.38 $5.9 million . And, he ~ l< ated 1n Laguna Beac~_. Rece ntl y 11 "·as added. funds used in behalf of earlier ~ ~le~ to Laguna. Niguel. ~lr. Allen presidents "v.·as far less." res1d~ ~ Laguna N1gu:1. . In Uta h, stron g winds gusting up to 51 miles per hour helped keep truckers off the road, but coordinators of the Utah shutdo1~n sajd the strike ...-.·ould be 75 prrcent effec tive regardless of "'Cather conditions. "In the desire lo provide the maximum .Off1c1ating at the services."'111 be Rev. protection possible for the nalion's R1_char.d Ree.ves of Dana ~otnl. leaders. the C.Ongress has permitted the Survivors include hts ...-.·1fe, ~~th : sons, Secret Service lo oper~te ''irtually free of Stanl~y C. Jr .. of La~_na Niguel ~nd restraint," said Jones. Dennis ~ .. of Laguna Niguel aod eight "The abuses in expend itures of fund s grandch1ldr~n. . 27 in, Cle111ente Get Sc liolcirsliips at vacation faci lities indicate greater The. f~m1ly suggests memo r 1 a l management guidance is needed 10 conlr1buuons to the Heart Fund. . pre\'cnt such occurrences in the future." Fune~~! a~a rangements arc di rected '·Secret Service officials, and other by Pacific Vtc\v. federal agencies acting with them, have abused the di scretion given them by spending lax revenues fo r frivolous luxuries un related to real security matters," Jones concluded. Jones said the corrunittee report \\'ill make specific recommcndatioos for imprO\'ement of management procedures and limitations on the number of privlltc facilities \Vhich could be •proYided ...-.·ith security measures. From Page 1 KISSINGER. •• agreement. r.teanwhile. Israeli warplanes struck south Lebanon today, and eyewitnesses said the ancestral village of United States Sen. James G. AbourezlC took the brunt or thiattack. The Lebanese defense minist ry said four ~rsons we re .killed in Kfeir village, including a woman, her six-month-old son and eig ht-year-old daughter; five other children between 2 and 8 years old were 1~·oundcd. and five houses w c r e destroyed . A e<>n1munique accused the Israelis of aggression . 1\bourczk, South Dakota Democrat rccei11ed a hero's welcome home ln Kfel; last year durlng a tour of the l\fiddlc East The Israeli military command said l~q air force made a 20-minute attack on Arab guerrilla concentrations just north of the Israeli-Lebanese border near ?o.1t. llermon. The command said all planes returned safety. In Damascus, the Syrian command reported that Its troops engaged Israeli forces in tank and artillery battles on ti.-lt. Hermon and along the 40-mlle Colan !~eights front for the 63rd day. Jlussiaus Threatened SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -Police e\'ocuated the Russian pavilion Sunday at Expo '74 after a telephoned bomb threat. Police and Soviet pavilion security agents M!archcd the pavlllon but found no tncc or a bomb, an Ex1>0 spokesman said . ' Froan Page 1 'J'\venty-seven members of the San ADOBE • • • showroom for mobile holnes. but that has allegedly been selling Heins from the properly. -Consideration of reprisal for violation of a condition of approval in the \\lestport-lrata trac t off Del Obispo Road in which a tree was cut down which was supposed to be saved. Consideration of several requests to be exempted from the· current deferral on new bui lding applications. -Re\'icw of traffic sigi al backplates '"''hich Councilman Jack K. Welhers \\'ould like to see installed for esthetic reasons. -Q)nsideralion of several ma.tiers relating to wirking and traffic control. Clemente liigh School graduating class of 1974 have been awa rded major state scholarships to colleges and unive rsities. The honorees named t h i s week by Triton Counselor Richard Bus1vell are Uave Burien. Lorie ' Estes Harmon, Donna Ca1npbell , Briann Halmiru;ki, Kathleen llerrcra, Kristine lierrera, Joe .Janton. Tim Junetre, Carolyn Cole, and Patrick Lineback. Also Jl.1aria Linnebach. ~1ary Ann 1\lainero. Kathy 1\-fartin, Lucia r.-teredith, i\tark ti.torales. Tom ti.-torales, Nanci Pierce. Bob Prohaska, Rod Roberts, John Robin!'!On, Kathy Roland, Bob Sheppard , Kelly Smith, Lonr.ie Thayer. Pat van der Kaay, Duncan Wilson and ~ta:lcolm Wilson. The University or Southe.:n California was the nistitut1on named mMt often in tbe scholarships. Hamburger OK? Lll g u11£11t Rll ps 'N c1,tiiral Foods' \ Fthn Wlre Servi~ Ronild Deutsch, a Laguna Beach nutrition educator, thinks natural foods are not as healthy as some peopk? claim and says a hamburger with every· thing on It and an order of fri es might be as nutritional as a school cafeteria lu och. DEUTSCH OFFERED his theories over the weekend at the Texas Medical Association's IO'Tth aMual meeting in Houston. "As people push toward good nutrition they Brl! misguided and they sulfer for It," Deutsch said Saturday before a gathering of ped iatricians. "When we consume our important foods we choOse badly." ~le said the obsession for natural foods has become a fad with a boomer· ang effect. "THE WORD 'natural' Is the most attrnctive "-'Ord In food marketing to- day," he said. "Quite often .!IO called natural foods havt'! no additives, but they also have none of the needed vitamins and minerals ." tic snld a recent study of three major fast food ham burger chains re- vealed a jumbo hamburger, French rrtes and malted milk could ha ve the same nutritional value a~ the average school lunch -a meal he said is nutrltlonally lacking. But he said it is not the producm of foods who are to blame. "Marketing Just responds to the misguided wishes of conaumers," be said. • llills Mttll. has been ttu:ide possible by tl'te' purchase of 63 new buses for the county • fleet. • The new ~outcs. nuinbc r 85 ond 9t. wilt • run on on hourly stbcdu\e f\1ond&y • through Stlturday (ro1n 6 o.tn. to 7 p.ro. '"'·Ith free lransrers and a 25 cen t charge .. • •·\\'e expect ridership to pick up." said ' an OC'I'D operations d t> pa r t n1 e n:l spok11sn1an ... A lot o( inforn1ation ha s '1'101.• brt•n distributed ye t and we are tnkU\lf C\'i'rv chance to do that." R0ute 91 begins at Laguna Hillii 1\lalJ, ('Omcs lhrough l\lission Viejo via El Toro Road, 1\luirlands Boulevard, La Pai ' Road , ~targuctitc l'ark1vay, 'Avery Park\\'3Y and on to Saddleback College! ll continues lhrough San Ju an Capistrano \'iA Gamino Capistrano a.rid 1 Del Obispo and ends at Grants fJtaza Jr( Capistrano Beach, where it tums around and rE'lurns to 1he Lagu11r1 llills Mall. " Jtoutc 85 travels along Paseo de ' \1alencia. La Paz fl oad, and Cro\\il \'alley Parkway, then on to Coast High\l:ay. It conti nues southward thrOOgti Dana Point. Capistrano Beach, and en¢1 in San Clcn1ente. A free tr;insfcr can be made from Route 85 to the nev.· route 91 In Capistrano Beach if a trip to San Juan Capistrano or ~tission Viejo is desired. ' Roule· 85 could also take a rider to Laguna 11Tl ls Pttall. v.·herc a transfer to the express bus route 74 could tak~ one directly lo lhe Civic Center in Santa An.ti~' Route 57, also origi nating at Laguna Hills r.Jall. takes local residents bf Laguna Beach via LagWla Canyon. Tt~ continues to Fashiori Island and then (o South Coast Plaza in Co.sta Mesa by w3y of Orange County Airport. More information on the routes may f>C' obtained by calling 547-6004. Chlldr,n under 12 ride fr ee '-''hen \\'ith a fare-- pa;i ng adult. · · l'roan Page 1 CONNALLY • declined comment. Jacobsen, once a friendi of Connal~ hired one of Connally's senior Ja'fi partners, ~tarvin K. Collie of Houston. lt handle the tax matter. Jacobse n haJ testified lo Watergate investigators that be cti~cked Connally in advance! to ";e if it v.·as OK'' to hire Collie, several sources s3:id . Geo rg' L. Jl.1ehren, the milk producers' chief executive, is quoted In court papers -as saying that Collie •·got them off 011 tha t one but said he could not do lti again." Collie, Jn a telephone interview~ said hs role was to give legal advice to the co-op. .., ntehren and Lilly v.·erc intervie"'4"ed by law yers conducting an indepen:dent probe of the milk producers' politic:• activiti5'- The notes of those interviews we.re recently subpoenaed and made public rn court records. ' Also made public \\·as a letter ttint Lilly wrot~ to Jacobs~ when the t.n- audit bcg"n. The letter v•as dated Aug. 26. 1971. ·1 fe\\' months after Jacob.9"rt had enlisted C.0Mally to help persuade President Nixon to raise milk pricr1:. Lilly asked Jacobticn to help again. Lilly said Doyle Bond, an IRS agent from San Antonio . Tex.. the mUf producers' headquarters. \\'as asking questions about sonle suspicious checks. Lilly said Bond had indicated he might get a promotion if he could "raise ·an iss~e over our que st lonabl• expenditures.'' Those qu estionabl e expenditures may total several million dollars, recent disclosures indicate. But when the audit v.·as over, nothing new had bttn uncovered -and the n1ilk producers O\Vcd no extra t.1xcs. The IRS disallo"·ed one deduction for the expend iture that Bond had discovered before the audit began. This \\'as a $90,711.07 payment (or a picture book or President L;11don B. JoMson's messages to Congress. appa rcnlly printed at the requesl of someone in the White House and intended for use at a Democratic party fu nd-raising diMer in 1968. AJthough this expenditure w a..a disallowed as a business expense, it co5' the milk producers oothing at !he tune because the item merely was subtracied from Uie co-op's loss carryfonyard. which is the sum of Its unclaim deductions reserved for future years. · What the IRS didn't find includes: --$91,691 or more in corporate money and service~ donated to 11uber1 ll. lfumphrey's 1968 presidential cnmpslan. Although the IRS found nont al this Ill Ill 1971 audit, onother Investigation byr,JRS agents in Arkansas turned up 122.000 'Ofdt after Connally left office. As n result1·it.v.io lop co-op officials have pleaded gul1ty110 federal charges and a third is urxkr Indictment. --$34,500 or more ln COrp<tr1'te mme.,. for Humphrey's 11110 senatorial camoain in Minnesota. r""" -UllCOWltod swns to other stato end federal candidates, and to pay Salntee and expenses for the milk producert' poU Ucet trust. • -, • In addltlon to the· corporate paltlfl!.al ~pending, there Is recent evldeJlt'!t tt\at the co!op also v.·as paying huge sums u \cjckbacks to dail1es that were relucwnt lo pa y the high prlct1 the <.'O<lj> demanded for milk produced b)t ill member tanners. . .... Federal law prohibits corpor&l'fl spending In political campaigns and .Also forbids kickbacks of the kind the mUk producers allegedly paid, 5uch tllepl expenditures c>nnot tegelly be deduc"" on t .. returns but the ms turned .... none al thi91n It. 1971 probe. ' , \ ' ,.., \ t l I i • I ~ \ ' ' I \ I I I I • J 0 Mondav's . Closing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE . SC DAILY Pl':_0'._Jj f Ye ar's High-Lows App ear Ever y Saturday ~--···-·-~- Do'v Drop s Again h1 Ligl1t T1·ading NE\\' YORK 1UPI1 -Pnces retreated along a broad front on 1he New 'ork Stock Exchange l\iton day re0ect1ng 111\/eSlOr C'Oncc rn a.bout flS IOg 111tcr est rates and 1nflat1011 11 ad1 11 g \va s slow 1he Dow Jones 1ndl1 st111l a\eragc was dO\Vll 4 81> points to 84:> 59 l>ecl1nes topped advances by about a 3 to 1 mar gin among the n101e than l 725 issues The lurnover a.inounted to about t I n11lhon shares con1 pared with 15 270 000 traded Friday f'r1ce s also \\Cre lower on the American Stock Exchange where trading wa s slow Adding worry to \Vall Street was the pllght of Franklin National Bank -1t omitted its d1v1dend and reported a $14 m11!1on loss 1n forei gn transaC' Uons whi ch were nol authorized Frankhn is one of the na11on s major banks e IB/tl Re1>lew WASHINGtON (AP) -, Intern a ti on a I Bustness fl.tach1nes Corp ~fonday lost a bid for Supreme Court review: of a lower court order that 1t turn O\ er some 700 documents lo government a n t 1 I r u s t laW)ers or face a fi ne of $150 000 a da y At Lhe same ltme the court refused to consider the request of IBM s allome~s Crava1h s~a1ne and Moore of l\ew York for perrrussion to intervene 1n the case e Dollar Losh1g LONDON (UP!) -n,. US dollar suf fering \4 hat dealers described as lhe effects of the growing demand s for President Nixon 5: resignatton opened markedly down 1n Pa ris ri.tonday and lost ground on other European forttgn currency exchanges In Paris th< dollnr began the day at 4 805 francs against Friday s closing rate of 4 8311 francs Iii: '· , Too Pretty" She"s Fir e d Su11.day · Hazard ROCK ISLAND, Il l. (API - Peggy Hughes says she v.·as not en11rely displeased when lnternational l·larvcster fired her rron1 its 1._h i pp Ing de pa rt m en t . Company offic1a!s. she said, h ad concludt'd she was too prl'tty. "In a 111ay. I felt sort of con1plin1cntcd ," said the blonde ~1iss ~lughcs. 28. ··t never thought of myself as a pretty girl. I'm just an average look ing \\'Omen." l~arvestcr's Farmall planL here. She was fired r.tarch 15. "The personnel n'Wnager told me I y.·ould be reinstatt>d when a new job opened up.'' she said. But later. she said, the general foreman told an official of Local 1390 of the L'nited Auto \\'orkers that she received "too n1uch male attention.'' investigator ror the local som e ti mes her male commission, said company coworkers v.·ould ask her how BUENOS AlRES (lTPl) officials 10\d twn .\tiss liughes the job wa s going and lift _A sharp increase in the had good "'ork and attendance somet hing for her. number of heart attacks records but added that ··male "They "·ouldn't .even ask. on Sunday afternoons can coworker~ round her s o they "'OU!d just do it. l "·oold be directly attributed to attractive !hey 11i·ere say, 'You better get back to the national fo otball distracted from their normal your own job.' ·~she said. k>tlel')'. the newspaper La duties."' Some of the men asked her Razon said. \\loods contended the firing out, but she said she always 'the paper said that the violated sex discrimination refused : "I just didn't see any normall•, slack -iods at Jaws. that I liked." .1 ,..... cardiologlcal clinics on A Harvester spokesman said .. I'm not women's lib,'' said Sunday afternoons have the company v.·ould have no 1.fiss llughes, who also has become "peak" periods comment. There v.·ere about 10 worked as a fork.lift aper a tor. for heart failure since the women and 15-20 men in the "I'm proud to be a 'A'oman ... lottery began t'A'O years TONIGHT'S ~ T\T HIGHLIGHTS ~~ NBC D 9:00 -"Giant.'' The second part of ' George Stevens' epic screen version <!r the Edna ferber novel, starring Rock Hudson, Elizabeth Tay- lor and James Dean. • •• ' ABC O 9:00 -"lee Stalion Zebra.' 'Rocl(.Ut1d-~ son again, with Ernest Borgnine, ~atrick ltrcGoo-~ {I han Jim Brown and Lloyd Nolan 1n the conclud-1 ~ ing 'episode of the 1968 movie of confrontation un-~ der the North Pole. • I "Nl\TURALLY l'I.\ A REAL c:.o o o scour! ·· i\·fiss Hughes. about 5 foot 5 and 110 pounds. v."Orked for a month pa ck i n g heavy machinery at $5.11 an hour in The union failed to settle the disj:MJte and the !lock Island lluman Relations Commission voted last w~k to take the case to the Illinois fflir En1- ployment Practices Cnmm. ~lenry \V oods, an department . But I just think if you have a !_l_is_s _Hughes conc~ed~ed::_~lh:a~t·-'"°':'.'.m:t~y~ou:_:shou:::~ld:,::!i!g~ht~f:•~r ~it:.'_'.':::='=~:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'I TV DAILY LOG ' Sometimes small · is ri Opel Manta, (Length: 176.1; Width: 64.3; Wheelbase: 95.7".) A 51>0rty car for the imported or sub-compact buyer. l'.erlect for singles or ypung marrieds, too, '• · , ; ' Apollo. (Length: 200.2; Width: 72.7; Wheelbase : )11.0~) The Buick of sm111·cars. Six cylinders; six passengers. AA Ideal' city/suburban runatiout:For medium-sized or 2-car families. " Century Regld Coupe. (Length : 212.0; Width: 79.0; Wheelbase : 112.0~) A luxurious micklze car for buyers torn between"small"and"big". A smart buy tor the personal car lover, too. Sometimes big is ri • • , Century Luxus Wllgori, (Length: 218.2; Width : 79.0; Wheelbase : .118.0~) Creature comfort plus cargo capacJty make it a wise choice for the mid-size )Y~goif boyer. . •• l.eSabre, (Length: 225.9; Width: 79:9; Wheelbase : 124.0~) Generous trunkroom for large one-car families, ~usinenmen, traveling. • Etectr1 225. (Le'.'jth: 231.5; Width :.79.9; · ' Wheelbase : 127.0 . );Uke other lulH1lze Bulcks it's most at home on the open road , where its cruising capacity 8nd roominess can be fully appreclatell. Buick makes both ri ' ' Pick the size that fits the way you drive, Today's gasoline situation is forcing all 'of us to take a long, analytical look at the cars we're driving. The intelligent way to pick the right one is to· look at how you use your car. For some people, a small car like our Opel is perfect. Others who drive more or carry more need more car. A nd Buick has them in all shapes and sizes. How about you? Think about how BUICK • ' I '' you use your car ·and:plck'the·slze that'• · . ·right for the way you driile:T~n visit.. your Buick dealer. With Opeh Apollo,· Century, LeSabre, Rivl11ra and Electra ' he's sure to have the rlght,car for you .. ' . . •' ··~ From Opel to Electra 225, Buick has a car for the way you drive, • -• ' • Monday Evening MAY 13 ' and Lllt'Y must come llP with 1 solulion to l'l the riri& oH Lucy betore 1 prtSS rectplion tbat even- l"J. D @ (i) @I) £n N I C lilo11chy Mtflt: (C) (lbr) ''Ciani" Conti. (R) (dr•) '56-Rock Hudson. [1i11btlh 1:00 I 0 CJ) it) C,°laJ Hen • Ta~lor. James ~an. The1 epic dra1,m,• ( M)(l)@CllllltOO> "'ws tr1cln1 the t11story o a wt• 1 k111nn l1nd·O'/jnin1 l1mily in modeu1 Mlf111's Ht11tt Te1as. . llvtt'IJ HIUbllHtt 0 @ (jJ a) AIC Monday MO'lie! Mluiofl: l11pouiMe (Ct 190) "Ice Station Z1b11 .. CG11tl. Mtd ~Miii (A) (d11) '6&-Rock Hudson. [rnest o hibft GMl:Mu: Bo11nine. Pa tuck MtGootlln, Jim M•i« Lt1111t tneball Cont'd Bro"'"· Tony Bill, Uoyd Nolin. The lrom SPM. G11nli vt. Cillcinn1ti. slQl'Y of a U.S. nocleu sub speed1n1 Eil) lfo41tpod1e ltdlf. undtl Ille AstllC ice UP on !ht (f) $ptt4 RKff way to I danre1011s conlron\alton. ED ColtsMs en el Rill( ':JG Dt11et'1 Clloice I Artist of S1fibi1 Did V1~ OJkt £11\re Amlit Merv Grillin Show Variety Show m Ko11n'1 Heroes !Ol11! 9:30 0 19 Ci)) I]) Dick Van Dr';t Tm•1 Fllm Show (A) Dick decides that ht , • M111111t1 O'f1rrill Show doesn'l tll~• enough ~m1nly pul· Utt11 ltastll1 suits" In his life, so he jumps ti t.OOl(])QOmJa::l(l)NtwS Ille ch1nct to become I wttklf hwli•c* Dollars Poktf pl11u. Mowit: (C) 12111) "Don'! ,, M rmclll ! 8ill Ctst11: A Day ti Hui tilt W1ttf'" (tom) '57-Glenn G11l11fMd Bill Cosbr tatks lo pri1- F01d. G11 Scala. oners to ~ the impartanct ol i WiW '#ofW 11 Aliilu ls tducttion as a c1imt deteuent. · wurs MJ Line? EE Dr11111 I lM lllq it TM.ts A Tllld lO:OJ I (I) I Oie1111 •I k1nnie o Why Me? Breast Cancer bnlet1ld1 * Special Sponsored 81 l'i1 Dr1101t I C 1 Wistilnittn stui1ht t11k Blue Cross of So. a . I (j)) lollb)' G•kbboio Show 0 KMXT Specill "Why Mer· o\c· Dl'IN treu lee Gnni natratts tllis ho111 TbrH St•fll sp«.111 1botlt breast c1ncer. Ten 7·l0 O .1tu\h111 Wintus Show (R) And~• 'liOmtn who have ll1d b1e1sl t111ter • Grilfilh 1uesls. I tell thei1 very pe1sonal slor~s aballt (f) Mf111·s Heron discovery, su11ery and suMYll. IQl""' "'"" (Rl ~mm s •m = ~~"~':~ t:J r;'@')~edkll Ctllllf "Cas· Nnr TrtlSU/I Hunt 111:ty" !JI) Mill~• $ Md; (C) (2111) fi) La ltvisll m O....r D111i11(' (com) '63 -1 a!,) h1iie IN lord Club Doris D1y, James Garner. 1D;JOO iJJ(})(l)P'il1 t Pr•jt tl ®)Wild Klnfde111 "3tlirts/S•1ns" 011Vtf Ctatk. W1lh1m CD lftitthM OtYane. Leonard Irey. Alan Oppen· (!.ll 00 Tl TtH tilt Trvth lleimer. John Plt~tttt 1nd RolH:rl C2J • Ntw l°ri<t 11 Rithl SAmpson slar. ~ t'tit: (C) 121/1111) "North t1 1 O kllllltJ I• ,\dventu11 AllW" (adv) '60 -John Wayne. W l ill CoibJ Eil) [I!. II £,. "P1int1n1 the Town" 1 Eil) Tllt1t1e in Allleriu (2h1l ''Tiit (1}t llJ) Naslwillt Music . 1 W1dcl'li1n1 ol Mrs. Hol1oyd .. Geuld· I lillllll' D1111 SMw 1n1 f1tz1111ld, Joyce Ebert, 1!11 [Sc1Mri9 Th11t11 Aobl11n1 1nd Fran• Convtf:n sur 111 Tiit Doll G•nt i 11111 story ctnl1rin1 on Mrs. Hol· &:00 O (i:i:j (f)I (jJ ' u 11111 t kt "A royd's ha!led of htt uude ll111b1nd, F1milJ' of l\illers., (A) A duina jail· I and lht •~ape she 5fe~ 111 1 b1e1~ re11nitas 1 !amity of 'tldous youn1er. more 11ns1t1Ve m1nt1. oullan wllo wound 1 pursuint U.S. a> MllSlcal Com•dJ' M1rs>!1I, kill his depu!J, .then 'lilll ll l:OO 0 0 0 &r;l ma) Nrws In 1mbush !Of Marsl\1! D1i\l)(l. (3) (I) llj EB f.ll@ NIWI 0 fj) Ci) @I mJ Tht M1rici1n ~lest tf 'rwche ·1111lllililori ol the Curious Coun· ( Nlpt Glllt11 telfeif' P1rt I (A) Lloyd Nolin · Mcrfll: (Cl -rllt TitfttW Tllull• Cuol l)'!l!t)' 1nd John ColtCOI 1ues1 lltrVIH" (com) 'Sl-St1n1t1 Hollo- Jn 1 dr1m1 1bol.ll 1 sllacty priSOft "'''· olrici1l's attempt to pu ll oil 1 rob· ~ Miuiff: lapeulblt btry. TM Unte1Kll1bln 0 Mtvit: IC) ('Zhr) "Ho1111 en ~ m Sterr! Filt G11tnappl1 Road" (mys) ·70 -! ~6' Th• Stint Christopher Geor1e. Jartt1 le111h. 1 ( 1' ([)) Tht Pioneers 0 @(J) al Tiit ltoollits "Blood 11:30 0 Cit ([,) (!)CBS lite Movir: Brother" (R) Terry tries t~ help his "The World, tl!eJltsll a. the Dt~ll" cousin, Jimmy. 1 return.ed 'lill vel·j (d!I) '59-Harry 8el1fon1e, lnau er1n. who blames society ror 1111 Stevens. Mel furer. probttms with the liW ind his 0 ii) @ l2l m lohnn1 C1rson in1bilit)' lo find eml)loymen!. Glynn florena ~endenon 1s 1u1sl tlo$t. Tu1m1n 1uests. . I O Movie: "TM Cool l tllt Cialf' I D11l1.1'1 Clltl(e 1 1 (dral '58--G111 Pere111. Sllm ti A1h111tart (!) TwiW1ht Z.111 r;:rv:n1:::~~.: St1l1 'I 0 WIDE WORLD M~STERY Crolb Tiit pop11l11 voul duo blends * Ed Nelson stars 1n jw, rock. country and 11n1H>u1 , Police Headquarters. music in concert. I 0 @rn m Wid• World MrsttrJ ti ~~lflll tf Misslnt Per-"Police He1dqu1rters" sonl" (drl) 'Jl-Bettt Divis, Pit 12:00 00 Ont Slep l1yo11d O'B1itn m Mowit: "ll(ht Cross" {dn) '50 • -Dick Po..,t!I, Junt Allyson. 1:30 m MtN Grillin Show . m W1ndtrlu1t CE) M"ll: (90) "Tiie Cretp1n1 Un-12·30 ED DIJ 11 Nithl kllOWll" (sti·fi) '56--Bnan Donlevr. 1~ D ~ T M1r111 De1n. . . ~ OlllOITOW al) P111111u111 Novtl1 1:45 0 Merit: "lilt lontfytltutl" (lira) 1:00 0 I~ (JJI (V Htrt 'i Lucy (II) '!>! -Mont2omtry Cl11!, Robert LllCJ 11ts (lizabtlh Ja~lor's l1mous Ryan. Dolorts Hirt, My1n1 Loy. diamond rint shlck on her fineer. l :ID 0 Mnlt: "TM last l•ftdit" !wes) and Richa rd Burton, Miss Twylor '4~Willillll EJ!iott,.fouul Tucli.u •. Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES t:1lO 0 (C) ~Jltllno" (1dv) '64-Harl')' Guardino, Rollert Culp, Shirley Eaton. 1:30 O "KW MiniOlll" (com) '35 ~ Eddie Canlol, Ann Scthtrn. ll:OO U "Htn Sllu.d" (dr1) '58-W•llf Campo. "Collitllned" (dr1) ·30- llon1ld Colm•"· l2:00 m "And Then Thtrt Wtrt Nont" (mys) '4S-lou1~ Hayward, J11d1!h Anderson. Barry r1urer1ld. l:Oo tfil (C) "Tiit lest ol Eweiytllln(' (di1) '59-Hope L•n&:e, Stephen ~ • .loan Crtwlord. 2:00 0 "Dnirt Undtr tM E11111" (d11J •Si.-Sopllll lore11, Anthon>' Pu· kins, Burl Ives. ID (C) "llttlt [fypt'' (d11) '51 - Rhond1 flemi111, Mir~ Stevens. 3:00 ([) (C) "Slll11t" P1rt I (1111s) 'Sh Al111 l.ldd, Vin Heflin. (1Ql (C) "Rthlr~ ti tht Cunflpt11.. _ (lits) '66 -Robtrt T1ylor1 Cllld Evtr1tl. !:SO 0 (C) "M1dl11tt X" (dr1) '66 - L1n1 Turner, John fOllylht, l(tlt Oul1e1. CJ) "Tiit Qlm Mt1111trlt" (drt~• · '50 -Klr• Dou111s, J1n1 Wyma,, _ O IC) NGl&i" CGncl. (rom) ·sa - lesllt Ci1on. Louis .lourd1n, M1 u1. Ice Chev11ier. @(1)"H1rd GUJ'° (1111s) '41 .- Jick L1Rue, Miry Healy. ~@ (C) "ttllpulllon" (dra) '50 -Orson Wtllti, Dean SlotkweH, Brlltlo1d Oil11111n. 4:30 (9 (JJI "Tllt Mtulltliit IMd" (ll11) ·~mu St1111rt.. I.Ill Lu. KOCE TELEVISION LOG 160 '"In) •~te f'OCUS OllAHOE COUHTY (CJ (l(OCllJ "Pl!llade!Dhla Orc11111r1 In O"'"l C\:tv -A 8et11lll" -· Host I'" OOCMr wlll dlscut1 tilt uocorn no ,,.,Uldelf!hl• Orc1111tr• v1111 10 or1nae COll!llv on M1v l~ Ind 1111 ~fll IWrtlOlid !or yo;ith conc:trtl by l'1t ora '""'fl PhllMt!TIOlllC~ltly, 011!"" \OHS IN C\JL yAi:s '1c;• l<OC "SOCltl Cot1lr • -la...., l ·'j·• 1;Dll l'l;t\~Q.~C,llOHC)T{) ~YS1~Jr . ~!'1.~2'~~1;,. J v d r o ,7 Q 1:JO ,,. Hiii'~ '0 1 l fl(Q(:I!\ "Orll!llt County Youlh (OITl~Y' -11•1 Oi'lllCll Coun1v•1 llt'liltlt ent.r111nmont 111m mlOt 1111 Of ll!t too vounct 11.IMI In tl'le coun~T ... I ''11''"~"1"'"· ""' '~· l :te OV 110 t !I I ( 1111~ " .. ' ,.\ · ''"' ;i;: ..... ·;-{:~ 1111•tlna cfllmp wl!o CO<T'lm1111lt wll~ 1 'IOC irv Ill mQre ti!~" _.dt -All'll!'lcan Slon LI -In lilt 1•'10\l:tOt ol I~"' l "'° WHO'j .A .. AID F ~ PEI A IC 101 ! IS) •i. Qr1vr111" -'lo-" s111t.tr11no:t X: ~ 1111 rote of ~It-""ll• 1 tr"J:l INOMl1 dl11t1111 11'11: IHWY 111111 j f ........ ~ ~ t:lll DIM NS'iHt IN CUL,TUll8" CKOC C lft!nl "SOci11 COlll -LIUOll 'I I ' ' 17 I - - ' Iner by_tru Scjiool cuts e;cpen ·Trus 7:30 p The r~uct cliitric tbe ( • " I nre thi lun an da a ve sa nu to D s Fou C.alifo san fuifar ·And ,tude Muse IVvn Y9'1ng Jloati o\e w -Yac Satur patrol night area. "W Clem ,a pe this , At youn near day .amaz r-Pa disap "!' can with the c Ilia! I 1\678. . \ LagUna Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks • 'j".bL. 67, NO. 133, 2 SECTIONS, 0 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' MONDAY, MAY 13, 1974 TEN CENTS i .. Larger Laguna Class Sizes to Be Considered .... By HILARY KAYE 01 II•• D1llr .. Uol Sl•!l Increased class sizes \Viii be considered by trustees of the Laguna Beach Unified Srj)ool District Tuesday as one of the Cl!.ts to bring upcoming b u d g e t q:pcnditures in line with revenue. ·Trustees will confer In study session at 7:30 p.m. The .board .'i''ill receive a list of budget r~ucuons recommended by the school dlttrict totaling $365,551. tr approved by tbt trustees, this would bring the .,. proposed budget in line with the projected income of $4,653,000. , The biggest single cut would come from the proposed reduction of school staffing units -the number of teaching and nonadministrative personnel . in proportion to the number of students Jn each classroom. The reduction from· these cutbacks at all £ive schools amounts to $107,727. At the high school, the : staffing ratio this year is 15.62 starr members to l student, and would be increased to 16.50 to 1 next year. At Thurston, it is 15.84 to I this yeor, with an Increase to 17 to l seen for next 'Year. All three elementary schools were 25.48 to 1 this yea r and would be increased to about 26.SO to 1 next year. Some or the other major cutbacks recommended include the d a t a processing p"rogram, $24,000; the high school educable mentaUy r e t a r .de d program, $17,340; the district's learning center, SS,194 ; the aphasic program, $6,810; maintenance services, $52,092 ; and transportation, $8,000. Trustees \vi ii also be considering \Vhich se rvices to reinstate if the rax override election on June 4 is successful . A total of $271 ,600 would go to the district if voters approve the increase request. Much or it is already earmarked for higher teacher salaries. First on the list of propose d rt:instatements is a l\Yo percent salary increase to au employes in the di'strict. The district has also p r o p o s c .d increasing the reserves to five percent of • the total budget. or $264.169. This "'ould call for a reinstatcn1cnt of $62.l!IG. \\'ithollt the increase. the reserves 11rL· listed a1 $202,063 . Trustees will also consider an additional $10.000 for darn processing services If the election is successful for a total of $19.000 for the computer servicl's. Without the increase, data processing \vould be rC'st rict'ed to s<'hedu\lng J1ul gr&de reporting contrac1ed to an out side agency. Trustees also have rht· option ol purchasing the distri ct's O\\'ll conlpuler :.er' ices again this yea r. This would call for 1'1111.r.qton Intermediate School and Laguna 13cnch lli gh School to pa y 1ogetht<r ano!her SI0,000 out of their stuffing unils funds for a to1al of $29,000 in school monev Other rl"instaicrnents recommended by 1hc distril't include continuation school staffing. S6.650: transportation supplies and cc1ui 1>mcnt. S.1.000; ' instructional inatcrials center. $15,000 : high school girls arhletic allocation. $5,600; new reading progran1, $6,000 : conferences, S2.200: <ind staffing units, $104 ,000. Kissinger Dr·aws Boos Ill Jerusalem Hantburger OK? Lagu 11,c11i Raps 'Natural Foods ' From \\'ire Services Ronald Deutsch, a Laguna Beach nutrition educator. thinks natural foods are not as healthy as some people clai1n and says a hamburger with every- thing on it and an order of fries might be as nutritional as a school cafeteria lunch. DEUTSCH OFFERED his theories over the "·eekend at the Texas ?-.1edical As.sociation's I07th annual meeling in Houston . '·As people push IO\\'ard good nutrition they arc misguided and they suffer for it." Deutsch said Saturday before a gathering of pediatricians. "When we consume our importan~ foods "'e choose badlyr'' He said the obsession for natural foods has become a fad with a boomer· ang effect. "TllE ~'ORD 'natural' i~ the most attractive "·ord in food marketing to- d<iy," he said. "Quite often so called natural foods have no additives, but they also have none of the needed vitamins and minerals." He said a recent study of three major fast food hamburger chain! re- vealed a jumbo haroburger. French fries and ma lted milk could have the same nutritional value as the average school lunch - a meal he said is nutritionally lacking. But he said it is not the producer! of foods who are to blam~ "~tarketlng just responds to the in is guided wishes of consumers," he uid. . ' - Dead Gray Whale Get,s Scientific Reception By JOHN VALTERZA Of llM 01111 f'llol Sl1H Four tons of dead and ripening California gray "·hale came ashore at the San Clemente pier this morning amid fanfare 11.nd celebration. · And an exultant crew of sc ientists and $tudcnts from the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History "'ent to work lovnediately to dissect the c.::ircass of a ypung female leviathan which had been floating off the South Coast throughout Uie weekend. :Yachtsmen first spotted the whale on Saturday. said spo kesmen for the harbor patrol at Dana Harbor and by Sunday night the remains had drifted to the pier ..... "We had a few options.'' said San Clemente Lifeguard Chief Dick Hazard, "but htis one is by far the best. because it creates the fewest pro_.blems " The ·crew from the @tfnty mu seum, he * * *. Two Live Wliales . , [Take Sp otlig ht ; Although it was a dead whale "·hlch .caused a stir among bystanders on a San Clemente beach today. two live ones did .a performance of their O\Vll downcoast this past weekend. , At San Onofre State Park a pair 0£ young ca!lfomla gray whales cavorted near the surf line throughout most of the day while hundreds of guests watched in .-amazement Park rangers said the baby mammals disappeared late in the afternoon. .TWO LINES SOLD 'GLASP AR DINGHY 'Here·~ an ad p1accd by a "man of few wprds'" in the Dally Piiot that really did ,11\e job: 9' GLASPAR DINGHY 145. (Phone No.) 1'he first caller bought the dinghy. You can get your advertising job done. too, wtth "a few word,, in the rig· place" In the elossifltd section or the Dally Piiot. Dial the direct line to r..ults. Phone 642· ~- said. is especially interested in saving the con1plete skeleton of the mammal. "They were excited because this find is so rare. Most of the time the carcasses are only partin.l and much farther gone than th\s one," he added. Although the crews worked undaunted amid jellyfish at the water's edge and a powerful aroma surrounded the mammaJ, changing puffs Of wind caused the less hardy to 1;CUrry up the beach on occasion. Spokesmen for the crew termed the discovery 1'a real find," however because the animal had on1y been den.d for se\!eral days and was per(ect for scientific purposes. ·No theories were offered on the possible cause of death of the young whale, but Hazard said accidents with vessels at sea are common during whale mlgralions. Judging from the age of the 18-foot animal, scientists said it appeared she was born during the Southward migration of the California gray whale herd. That jaunt ended early Ws year. The youngster diOO, apparently, during the Northward migration of the herd after th'e females gave . birth to their young in Scammen's Lagoon off Baja California. Hazard said the scientific effort todn.y \\'as a boon to his department and others . ''Usually, when these things wash .•up we've got nothing but prob lems trying to get rid or them . f\.1 ost or the time they'll stink up an entire section or beach before the problem gets solved," he said. "This way we're helping science along and someone else will get rid of the problem for us." he added. ' Lagtma Bus Line Stops at Hospital Laguna Beach municipal 00.<es now hove a rogtilorly schedultd stop at South coast Community lfospital with serVice schcdultd w0<~day1 and S.tunlay. Scheduled run• wtll be made between 9:13 a.m. and 7:28 p.m. weekdays. The fare i. IS ceni. for senior cltium (65 years of age or older) and youngsters 12 years o7 younger. Regular fare ls 2S cents "'1th 75 cent all-daY passes available. Transfers are available to Orange County Transit District buse!. Tho Ezchange Club of Laguna beach has providOO a passenger -wailing bench near the bosp!tal atop. La9111aa Bid Planners Face Tract Proposal A proposed 287-unit hou sing development in Bluebird Canyon. and proposed ordinances to reduce density in residential and light commercial zones. will be discussed tonight by Laguna Beach planning commission",· at 7: 30 in the council chambers. A housing tract with 287 single-family homes has been proposed for 121 acres in upper Bluebird Canyon between Arch Beach Hei ghts and Top of the World. Commissioners wifi' be asked tonlght lo cei:tify the environmentaJ impact rePort fElR), and to approve the tentative tract for City Council considiratlon. The plaMing ~taff has recommended, however, that more study be given to the EIR, par11y to allow the preparer of the report, Envista, Inc., lime lo respond to comments made by comm un ity members. The staff also recom mended the commissioners. hold off approva l of the tentative tract until they are satisfied uith the ErR . Tonight is the last time commissioners can act on the tentative map withoul it being automatically approved by action of law . Since commissioners v.rould have to deny the plan to stop the automa tic approval, it is expected the developer. CST Engineering, Inc., will ask for a continuance fo r further study. Various community groups, agencies and individuals have criticized the proposed development. The planning staff expressed dissatisfaction with the EIR response to thei r complaints. This is the first lime the proposal has come before the planning body, and will probably be examined further in a study session be.fore a new public hearing is scheduled. Perjury Heari119 Commissioners will also hold publl hearings tonight on : -Density reductions in the R-2, R·3 (See PLANNERS, Page ZJ Stole11 Auto Derrtolislies Beach Shed A lite model luxury car stolen from a Newport Beach restaurant demolished a construction shed on Laguna. Beach's J\.fain Beach Park early Sunday when the ... driver failed to negotiate a curve on Coast Highway. Laguna Beach police arrested f\.-fichael R. Dellinger. 22, of \Vashington. He was booked on suspicion of grand theft auto and t___U[ned over to . Ne"'~ Beach authorities. Extensive damage was done to the 1973 Cadillac Eldorado stolen from the parking lot or the Five Crowns Restaurapt. An estimated $2,000 damage "'as done to the tool shed and equipment belonging to MaUcraft, park contractor. The automobile was registered to a business firm in Alhambra. Police Sgt. Victor Sagan said the car, southboWKI on South Coast highway at a high rate of speOO, ripped out about 100 feet of fence and demolished the construction site shed. • Although no drunk driving charges "'ere lodged, police said the driver appea red lo have been drinking. No l1nmunity Offered - To Reinecke, Says U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) -A Watergate assistant prosecutor testified today that he never ofrered Cali fornia Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke immunity from prosecution If he oooperated in the m investigation. Joseph J. Connolly made the statement Ruchell ~lagec Cliarlges ~lind SAN JOSE (AP) -Citing "harassment and intimidation," black convict Ruchell f\.fagce asked a judge today for permission to withdraw a guilty plea t o aggravated kidnaping charges !ltrnming from the bloody l970 Marin Courthouse shootout. Santa Clara County SupeMor Court Judge Wiiiiam A. Ingram sch<dultd a hearing Wednesday on M11ge-e's argument for the pica change. A judge and three other men were killed In the shootout. '1 wish to wtlhdraw my plea of guilty on grounds that It las unlawful and UlegaJ/' Magee told the oourt. ·-. during a htaring before U.S. District Court Judge Barrington Parker 'ln defense motions to dismiss the perjury case against Reinecke. If the case is not dismissed, the defense attorneys planned lo argue that the trial should be moved to California. One of Reinecke's three attorney!!:, James E. Cox, contended that the defendant was "misled and entrapped by agents or the government" durini; Interviews with the special Watergate prosecutor's office. Connoliy, under cross-examination on the witness stand, denied that there was any discu.ssifn with Frank Pagliaro Jr .. Reinecke's attorney at that time, about pcmlble Immunity from prosecution lf Reinecke told all he knew about an alleged offer from an t1i' subsidiary lo bring the 1972 Republican Natlonnl Convention lo San Diego. "I don't remember !\>Ir. Pagliaro making any suggestions tha t h e (Reinecke) not be indi cted," ~aid Coonolly. \.But Contfolly said "it was clear to 1ne utat what Mr. Pagliaro wanted was that hla cllent wouJdn 't be charged." Connolly said he warned Pagliaro that Reinecke could be Indicted in the case. ''Did you tell Mr. Pagliaro that the (S.. REINECKE, Page !) I UPI Ttlellbtt. Graud Opening · Model Jane Seymour ha s a novel way of showing a bottle opener of gold and blue and white diamonds, worth $250, at -a-torrdmrshow-sponsored, ap- propriately enough, by De Beers Co nsolidated Limited. Stanley Allen, A 11to Dealer, Rites Wed11esdav • Funeral services for Stanley C. Allen, owner of Allen Oldsmobile-Cadillac in Laguna Niguel, will be held at 2 p.n1 . •\Vednesda y at Pacific View Memorial Chapel in Newport Beach. Mr. Allen died Saturday at South Coast Community Hospital. He was 66. A resident of the Laguna area for 42 years. J\lr. Allen's dealersh ip was first located in Laguna Beach. Recently it was relocated to Laguna Niguel. Mr. Allen n!Sided in Laguna Niguel. Officiating at the services will be Rev. Richard Reeves of Dana Point. Survivors include his \\'ife, Ruth; sons, Stanley C. Jr .. of Laguna Niguel and Dennis B .. of Laguna Niguel and eight grandchildren. The family suggests m e m o r i a I contributions to the Heart Fund. Funeral ararangements arc directed by Pacific Vic\v. Seve1i Retiring Firen1c1i Horiored Seven veteran m4!mbcrs of the Laguna Beach Fire Dcpartm~l 's volunteer for<ie were honored Saturday in a special diMer marking the men's reUrtment rrom the ttnll The men. members <>f lhc force prior to the creaOon or a ful l-time fire d<'partmcot, are Roger Tew, who served from 1"° to 1973: Tom Ross. 1951 to 1974: Henry \Voerner, 1953 to 1974; Pete l..ambtirs. 1957 to 1974: Charlie Nelson. 19;7 to 1973; Bill Parsley. 1958 10 t974 and Jim Gllloon. t960 to 1974. The dinner at 1~ A~nte Street fire station was emceed by Brennan McClt!l· land, Award5 were given for .service to the community. • Golda Men~ Governn1ent Mulls Plan JER USALE~t (AP) -I s r a e 1 i demonstrators booed Secretary of State 1-fenry A. Kissinger toda y and Premier --O<ild;a-Metrs-gove1 n111ent-held-an-urger.:t cabinet session on K iss inger's determined truce negotiations to end the \Var "'ith Syria. Jerusalem sources said Israel would surrender no more captured Syrian land in exchange for the disengagement pact Kissinger seeks, but the cabinet kepi its deliberations secret and a government minister said only that negotiation s would continue. Kissinger is to fly back to Damascus Tuesday with Israel's latest terms, but indicalions were the Israelis were refusing to budge beyond the undisclosed truce offer they made three days ago. About 100 protesters -some or them pioneer settlers on the Golan Heights "'ilhin sight of the daily artillery war with Syria -shouted out the feelings of many Is r a e Ii s by yelling "Boo to Kissinger" as the secretary's car arrived at ~Irs. f\tcir's office for the morning talks. Dozens more Isrit_eli settlers defiantly movOO into war-blasted houses in th e abandoned Golan capital or Quneitra to prevent the govern m en t from relinquishing the ghost town for a truce treaty. Israel has reportedly offered to turn over hair of Quneitra to U.N. forces as a buffer zone, and permit civilian Syrian residents to return to the town thev ned during the 1967 Mideast war. The "exact official terms of tile Israeli offer are sti ll secret, however. It was the 16th day of Kissinger's Mideast mission, m a k i n g the d:isengag~ment que st t h e I o n g e s t d1plomauc effort he has made outside the United States since he be<:amc secretary of State. Israeli sources said earlier the gap in the disengagements negotiations wil :1 Syria is as ~·ide as ever despite a report by Kissinger of some progress toward an agreement. Meanwhile. Israeli warplanes struck south Lebanon today. and eyewitnesses said the ancestral village or United States Sen. James G. Abourezk took the brunt of the attack . The Lebanese defense ministry said four persons were killed in Kfeir village, !See KISSINGER, Page II Orange Coast Weather f¥1ostly slmny Tuesday. believe ll or not , with \Vllrmcr tempera- tures. lo boot. Highs in the low 70s at !he beaches rising to 75 Inland. Ovcirnight lows in the SOS. JNSlllF. TODA\' Spiro Ag11ew is iii Arlzens 1l1i.s week, alltgedty lookhlg for a job 1vitlt Gree k sliipowrieTs. Greeks. who c/1tered /tis ar· rival h t 1971, appear 10 not rte· og11ize 1/1e forn1er U.S. vice pres· lde11t today. See story, Paf}e: 4. ..a tint II L, M, tt1• ' C1Ut.n.11 I (laulflHI •M C1mla 11 Cr.»........ 11 0.1lfl M1ll(et 1 l•itw11I ..... 4 lftttmlllm•U ~ l'INM:I 1•11 "" "" lllin!'C ,. "-rttc'" 14 Ill l"9 knlce t l •1111 \.11J11er1 11 ,,,,.,.., TrM 11 ,,,,.VM It Nltltfltl "'""' I °'',... c""" 1 S1lvl1 f'ertlf' '' s..m 1'-1' lllC:ll lr!Ulrttl• 1•11 l'1ilt¥1llt11 1l TllM!tn lt WMtllef 4 W-...'I ,.... U.'4 . .,.. '"'" . - 2 DAIL V PILOT LB Mond1y1 Mity 13, 1~74 Dor111 Refor1n Coeds Lose Higli Cor£rt Ple<1 WASHINGTON !AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court today refused to hear a plea lhal universities disc riminate aga.inst women students "·he n they require them to obey dormitory curfews not imposed on n1en stude~t.i:. 1. Th~ hi gh court let stand a lower court decision endorsing the curfew imposed by Eastern Kentucky University. 1'he U.S. Ci rcuit Coun in Cincinnati agreed with the university that t.he curfew was a proper step designed to protect women Crom barl'fl and that no similar rules were nece ssary to protect men . A university senior from Lexington, Ruth Robinson, challenged the curfew as unconstitutionally discriminating in a class·action suit she filed as a fre sh man . The Rich1nond. Ky., school alJows men dormitory residents, re· gardless of age or cla ss, to come a.nd go as they please. Ex-milk Co-op Leader Hints Help by Connall y By BROOKS JACKSON A•1oci•IM ,., ••• WrilH \\'ASHINGTON -John B. Connally may have assisted the nation's biggeS\ dairy cooperative in a tax .:iudit t!:rat failed to uncover the dairymen's massive illegal political donations and alleged kickbacks, the co-op's former lobbyist is quoted as saying. Bob A. Ully, fonner lobbyist for Associated ti.1ilk Producers, In c., said Connally, then Treasury secretary and in command of the · Internal Revenue Service, "may have resolved" the tax: matter according to notes taken by a lawyer who interviewed. Lilly. Among lhft items that the IRS didn't find was $100,00> paid in cash to Nixon fundraiser Herbert L. Kalmb<'ch of New· port Beach in 1969. The co-op recently asserted that thi'i donation was an illegal use of corporate money. The cCH>p has asked for a refund . On the Connally question, C<H>p lawyer Jake Jacobsen once told the milk producers' leaders that Cor.nali" had written about the matter dir.ectly to R. L. Phinney, the IRS dlstri ct director in Austin, Tex., an informed source said. Phinney, a long-time friend and former business partner of C o n n a l I y , acknowledged that he had been involved in the 1971 audit, but denied that Connally or anyone in \Yashington had con1.acted him about the matter. Connally couldn't be reached and his lawyer, Edward Bennett W i 11 i a m s , declint?d comment. Jacobsen, once a friend of C.Onnally, hired one or -C.Onnally's senior law PB!f1.oers. Marvi n K. Collie of Houston. to ha'ndle the tax Inf.iler. Jacobsen has te§tified lo Watergate in~estigators that he" dfecied Connally in ll(lvanct to "see Jf n was OK" to hire Collie, several source3 said. George L. Mehren, the milk produce r'i' chief executive, is quoted in court papers as saying that Collie "got them of( on that one but said he could not do it again." Collie, in a telephoile interview, said hs role was to give legal advice to the co-op. hiehren and Lilly were interviewed by lawyers conducting an independent probe of the milk producers' politic;' activities. The notes of those interviev.·s wer'? recently subpoenaed and made public in court rCcords. AJso n1ade public y,•as a letter that Lilly \Vrote to Jacobsen v;hen the tax audit began. The letter \\'as dated Aug. 26. 1971 , a few months after JacobsP.n had enlisted Connally to help persuade President Nixon to raise milk prices. Lilly asked Jacot.sen to help again. lJUy said Doyle Bond, an IRS agent from San Antonio, Tex.. the milk producers' headquarters. \Vas asking questions about some suspicious checks. Ully said Bond had indicated he might get a promotion if he could ''raise an issue over our quest i onable expenditures." 'T'ho.sc questionable expenditures may total several million dof!ars, recent disclosures indicate. But when the audit was over, nothing new had been uncovered -and the milk producers, ov.·ed no extra taxes. The JRS disallowed one deduction for the expenditure that Bond had discovered before the audit began. This v.·as a oaAMGI COAST l9 DAILY PILOT f"" 0->"0f' ((!~" 0.•lv l'o•t!' ••T~ "~"~ •< r.~­ ~""'""" Nt.,. l'•f"I~ "l'UI" <"'·~tr,!"'°"' •• c.o.11 "vn• ·~·~1 "'""'•''. ,~r•'•'" ~~""'' , ... ,...,,. .. , ... 1,1 ,..1.1 ·~~ .... i;. 1,,. '4·10 ~··u t.it•OO•! 6".oi:~ ><u.,,•!'11100' boo.te~·r.,,,,,. 1,-.,v.·1 .. , L~~uRa S-0.-~ !Tv!n• £,.,,, .. r .. • ~"1 '..~ t.,,..,.,~t•IS•~ JIJ•~ C..t-•I•• :O ,, ' 1•~ ~'" t~•von " rvt>•..,....,, :;.c.,ni.,. •"' ··~ tl••, I~" 1.<1nr.·~ .. tom'""~ r>l•~I ,! \JOWn I e...~""f! (tlttl~ t.ohfl)fn •'•.•:"I. 11.eobo-'r ti v ..... ; "'··~···~,,.,,~,.- kd ll. (.,..,.~ \lftt ,.,_,,.,,,,,. -c..-............. ,... ~IPc•Offk• 112 F-aetl 11 ... ~ MoiWoq Adcm" P.0 Pi:_, !iA ;u,~7 O-.<>Hkfl (Of!l ""H.t »cl-8oyS·-,_DQ<I .. o(JI )3.XI~ e.,~· .. ·•"' ~•";'tl'I !14.ct' ''&15 Bfor~ ..,_,'"''""' :;.CNIM"I• J06.N01nL1C.-kt .. ' ,!90,711.07 payment for a picture book of President Lyndon B. Johnson's messages to Congress. apparently prin:ed at the request of someone in the \\'hile House and intended for use at a Democratic party fund-raising dinner in 1968. Although th is e:ii:penditure was disal!ov,.ed as a business expense, it cost the milk producers nothing at the time because the item merely "'as subt racted from the co-0p's Joss carryforward. \\·hich is the sum of its unclai med deductions resC'rved for future vcars. What th e IRS didn'l (ind inclUdes: -$91,691 or more in corporal&, money and services donated to HtJ't>ert · H. Humphrey 's 1968 presidential campaign. Although the IRS found none of this in its 1971 audit, another investigation by ms agents in Arkansas turned up $22,000 of it after Connally left office . As a result, two top CO-Op officials have pleaded guilty to fede ral charges and a third is under indictment. Strike Call Brushed Off By Truckers By United Press Jnternatio"na1 The country's independen t l r u ck drivers today all but ignored a call for a nationwide, strike to force a rollback in fuel prices and an increase In the 55- miles-per-hour speed limit. 'I'he strike resulted in some violence in Pennsylvania but had almost no effect on truck traffic in that state, regarded as the focal poin t in the truckers' protest. Strike coordinators sa id truck traffic was "down appreciably" in Utah and about 80 percent effective in Montana and Colorado. but elsewhere across the country the situation \\'as reported nor~ ma!. The call for a nationv,.1de truck shutdown, scheduled to have started Sunday midnight. was issued b y Overdrive J\1agaiine, v.'hose editor, !\lichae\ Parkhurst. predicted more than 90,000 drivers \\'Ouid take part. Overdrive is an independent truckers' publication. In addition to lower fuel prices and higher speed limits, Parkhurst said, the truckers sought an audit of oil company books and the right for small truckers to haul manufactured goods in competition with the big trucking companies. Pennsylvania Gov. !\1ilton Shapp, 'vho doubted lhe strike would take hold in his state,...,varned the truckers not to resort to violence, as occurred du ring a \\'[despread two-week walkout in ea rly February. In the Februarv walkou t. two truck drivers were killed. scores injured, and vandalism "'as fr equent. Despite Shapp's "·arning that the National Guard would b c called if needed, there \\"as sporadic violence in Pennsly!vania in the early hours of tcxlay·s strike. · 'A sniper on a bridge over the Pennsylvania Turnpike near Breezewood, a major highway intersection, fired a bullet through the windshield of a State Police patrol car. The bullet missed 1roopcr Donald Caldwell. 28. and he brought his vehicle to a safe halt. Pennsylvania Stale Police reported at lt'ast 10 incidents of rock throwing and slashing of air hoses. but there ""ere no in juries and no arrests. In Utah, strong winds gusting up to 51 mi!('S per hour helped keep truckers off lhe road, but coordinators of the Uta h .!ihutdov.·n said lhe strike would be 75 pe rcent effective regardless of v.·cather conditions. Bo y, 2, Str uck By Cycle, Hurt A 2·rear..()\d boy Injured wh:le visiting San Onofre State Park ove the \\'Cekend v.·as reported in guarded condition today alter being struck by a motorcycle. Park rangers said Kenneth Richard Prees suffered mult\ple injuries Saturday evening when he ren into a roa dw3y near his family's campsite and was struck by the cycle. ~ The boy was taken to Orange County 1'-ledical Center in a private car after the colllsion. The cycle's driver. Cam p Pendleton !\tarine Lerry Edward Desltnger "''as not cited after the 8 p.m. mi!hap, ' The acl:ldent occurred only a few fttt from the area where the boy·a father, Arnold Pree:s of El Monte had set up camp ~ A lniost Full' Bus Service Off To Good Start New bus service by the Orange County Transit District to the Saddlcback Valley, San Juan Capi8trano, and San Clemente began today with .. almost full" report! from early mornlng commuter run drivers. The heralded transit expansion, linklng the South County with Santa Ana and the beach from a new hub at the Laguna Hills !\1all, has been made pos.1lble by the purchase of 63 new buses for the county fleet. The new routes, number 85 and 91, will rwi on an hourly schedule Monday lhroogh Saturday from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. with free transfers alld a 2S cent charge "We expect ridership to pick up," said an aero operations d e p a r t m e n t spokesman. ''A lot of information has not been distcibuted_ ye t and we are taking every chance to do that." Route 91 begins at Lagi1na Hll'..; Mall, comes through 1'-Ussion VI. jo via El Toro Road, l\fuirlands Boulevard, La Pai lload, l\farguerile Parkway, A very Parkway and on to Saddleback College. It continues through San J u a n Capistrano via Camino Capistrano and Del Obispo and ends at Grants Plaza in capistrano Beach, where it turns around and retums to the Laguna Hills Mall . Route 85 lravels along Paseo de Valencia. l..a Paz Road. and Crown ''alley Parky,•ay, then on to Coast Highway. It conlinues south\.\·ard through Dana Point, Capistrano Beach, and ends in San Clemente. A free transfer can be made from Route 85 to the new route 91 in Capistrano Beach if a trip to San Juan Capistrano or Mission Viejo is desired. Route 85 could also take a rider to Laguna Hiils Mall where a transfer to the express bus route 74 could take one From Pagel KISSINGER. •• including a v.·oman, her six-month-old son and ·eight-year-old daughter; fi ve other children between 2 and 8 years old were wounded, and five houses w e r e de stroyed. A communique accused the Israelis of aggression. Abourezk, South Dakota Democrat, received a hero's welcome home in Kfeir last year during a lour or the iliddlc East, The Israeli military .command said i~s air force made a 20-minute attack on Arab guerrilla concentrations just north of the Israeli-Lebanese border near ti.ft. Hermon. The command said all planes returned. safe1y. In Damascus, the Syrian command reported that its troops engaged Jsrae!i forces in tank and artillery battles on ~ft. Hermon and along the ~mile Golan Heights front for the 63rd day. From Pagel PLfNNERS. •• and C· 1 zones. -Densi1y-slope standards in the R-1 zone. -A proposal to pr!zone, dMCX and land divide an area at 2222 Laguna Canyon Road to relocate the Laguna School or Art and Design. -A temporary use pennit for Art·a- Fair for operating arts and crafts display and sales during the summer In the C.2 ZOrti?. Boy, 3, Suffocates TRACY !UP!) Thr<e·year-old Raymond 11oreno died Sunday '4.'hen he closed himself into an old refrigerator. The boy's body \Vas found in the ref rigerator five hours after a search began !or him near his borne south of here. directly to the Civic Center In Santa Ana. Roule 57, also originating at Laguna Hills ti.1all, lakes local residents In Laguna Beach via Laguna Canyon. It conlinues to Fashion Island and then to South Coast Plai.a in Costa Mesa by way of Orange County Airport. ~1ore information on the routes may be obtained by calling 547-6004. Children under 12 ride free when with a fare- paying adult Cycle Helme.t Lat.v Protes ted HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) - J\1otorcycle enthusiasts, among them members of groups like the "Hell's Angels ." purned a helmet in the state capitdl parking lot to protest a new law requiring them to -n•ear ttM! protective headgear. , The bikers. who came Sunday from all over the state, also burned the traffic tickets they got on their way into town for riding without helmets. From Pagel REINECKE ... investigation was proceeding rapidly and if Reinecke wanted to cooperate he had better do it right away?" Connolly was asked. 'The prosecutor replied that he did nt?t have any recolleciton of making that remark. When Cox pressed !or a yes or no answer. C.Onnolly said, "I didn't n'lake a statement tha t it was a now or never situation." Judge Parker has set the trial date for July 15, but Reinecke repeatedly said he v.·ants the trial completed be fore voters decide on his bid for the GOP nomination June 4. Reinecke has pleaded innocent to the perjury counts and charged that the nidictment y,·as politically motivated. Reinecke, 50, contends that it v.·ould cost him at least $10,000 to bring 20 defense witnesses to \\'ashington and that he should be judged by his peers in California. Once viewed as the leading contender in the Cali fornia GOP primary, Reinccke's standing in public opinion polls has slipped since he \\': ; indicted April 3. Libhers Stage Abortion Stand CINCINNATI (UPI) -Women. s libbers here used l\tlother's Day for a pro- abortion demonstration outside a Catholic church. The group of about 35 wore masks and feigned pregnancies - drawing the ire 0£ some persons arriving for J\tass . Although there were no physical confrontations, there were jeers and one man slipped into the line of marchers and tried to hand anti-abortion literature to the women. A Catholic priest walked out of the church, spotted the marchers and shou ted, "Butchers, skinners, Fascists, Communists -go home." ---R uss ia ns Tlu·eatencd SPOKANE, \Vash. (AP) -Police evacuated the Russian pavilion Simday at E:ii:po '74 after a telephoned bomb threat. Police and Soviet paviliOQ security agents searched the pavilion bu t found oo trace of a bomb, an Expo spokesman said. Poliee Streak l 1i1i Also Damaged·· Owner PORTSMOUTH, R.I. (AP) -A Portsmouth motel owner says a group of Boston policemen. ran naked through his Ramada Inn night club and took part In a disturbance that resulted ln about $1,000 damage. Peter Stilphen sald about two dozen of the 100 Bo6ton policemen staying at lhe motel Friday night participated In Ille alleged incidents. The policemen came here to march in a police parade Saturday. Jean Lawler, motel manager, said she called local police twlct and state police once about the matter, but no a1Tests were made. A spokesman for the Boston Police Department, Frank carpenito, said toC:iay the department Is looking Into lhe matter. Slllphen said he Is considering filing • complaint "1th Che Boston police commissioner's office. ~1rs. Lawler claimed at least hair a dozen policemen sltlpped ot the aide of lhe mot.l's sw'lmmlng pool within alghl of Ille niglll club audience and jumped In. Olher police ran naked througll the nlghl club. ·with aomt golng up on the stage and others jumping on tab!.,, Mrs. Lawler and Slilphen charged. Three or four naked policemen also came in and stood in the motel lobby at the front, desk, Mrs, Lawler said. "That's not streaking, lhat's Indecent elposure," she said. J\.1rs. Lawler claimed that some of the police arrived at the motel that afternoon drunk and continued drinking through the night. Pictures and othtr motel property "'ere tossed out of second story windO\.\'S and firecrackers were set off in hallways, Stilphen said. fMUlatlon was ripped from the ceilings and a secwity camera WI! torn fronl its stand. ~1rs. Lawler sald. A liquor cabinet in the night club was broken and some li9uor wns stolen , .ahe added. "The only ~mplaint we bnd was noise," Lt. Henry J. Mii ier of the Portsmouth state police barracks said. When state troopers anlved at the mote.I around 3::!0 a.m. Saturday, he said there was no noise, just a few men dr'inklng in their room.'i. • Five bottles or liquor v.-ere stolen from the cabinet, he ~id, but investigation of the incident is a local po 11 c e rcsporu:ibility. Portsmouth Police Chief John T. Pierce said, 1'There is going to bC! something done about this mauer." • Cl111rcl1ill llo11ored \Vin .ston Churc hill. grandson of the late British statesman, stands beside a huge bu st ol Sir \Vinston Churchill while attending a private vie\ving of the Churchill Centenary Exhibition at Somerset !lo use in London. Ne wport Police Probe Rash of Cat Burglaries •I · N'£'\'1Xlrt Bea ch polie1! are investigating a rash of cat burglaries which apparently took place early today in the \\1estcliff and Do\'er Shores areas. ··Yle've had five rC'portcd this moming." a police spokesman said. J-te said the rirst two cases invM>'tigated "·ere at the home of Jack llanis. ·193.i Highland Drive. and the home of Artyv Tisdail. 1808 Con1n1odorc \\'ay. both in \Ve!itctiff. At the l·larris home. a burglar had apparently entered through a rear porch door and made off \\'ith $250 in cash v•hile lhC' residents were slc('!llng. The burglary . took pla ce bct\\·cen 2 a.m. and 5:30 a.m. A burglar cnlcr('<i through a den \\'indow <ii the Tisdail home. police said. making off \\ ith S89 in cash and several credit cards, also \\'hlle residents \\'ere sleeping. The 1hicf had enlC'red the home sometime bclv.·een midnight and i' a_.m. lnflatio1i Hurts State 's Surplus In Ti ght Buclget SACRA?-.1ENTO (AP) -Inflation is giving state go\'ernment a $188.3 million shot in the ann. state Finance Director Verne Orr said today. But inflation also ls partly responsible for a ne\\' $78.8 million drain in the state's pocketbook because of rising J\1edi·Cal costs. That, and other cost hikes. trims the new bJdget surplus back to about SIOO million. Orr said prices in California have been increasing this yea t' at the equiv alent of an 8.8 .,PCrcent annual inflation rate. Jn the stbrt run, that is ea5ing the fiscal pains in Gov. Ronald Reagan's tight $9.8 billion 1974-75 budget proposal. The biggest increase in state Income is an estimated $100 million hike in sales tax revenues, which is a direct resull of inflation. Personal inCQme taxes are up $70 million over earlier estimates, and all other income sources arc up $18.3 million, Orr said. "Spurred on by innation, C31Uomia's economy and that of the nation are booming." OIT told a jofnt meeting of the Assembly and Senate budget·wrltlng con1mittee:s. Summer Caravan Lead ers Sought Th< i;outh Coast YM~ i.. hunting for men and women with group work and camping experience to serve as leaders on summer caravans. Leaders must be more than 18 .years of age. FOOd and transportation expense will be paid by lhe YMCA. Caravans are for junior high and high school ag~ youth. Thoy are planned lor Bllja Gallfom ia, Mammoth Lakes, Yosemite, Sequoia1 the Colorado River, San Francisco and a twoo-week trip to Canada. Volunteer leaders may call Bill Davis at ti.. YMCA. 831-9622, for further lnfor- m11tion. Thme acceptt:d will receive spe.- cial training before the rirsl caravan. Polic(' said late this morning they ar(j still in\•estigating the additional thrtt reported burglaries. They said so far they ha\'C no clues as to "·hethcr ttitt same person or pcrsoos "·ere responsible for the thefts. Patient {,eaves H ospital, Dies Of Heart Attack ' A heart patient v.·ho left lloag , !\1emorial Hospital in Newport Beach Sundfl y afternoon against doctors ordef'3 collapsed and died later !hat afternoon of an apparent heart attack. Charles liogers. 52, of Costa ~1csa. \l.'i'I:! given emergency resuscitation at 5:3!0 p.m. in the parking lot of the l\farket Basket at 3100 Balboa 81\'d. in Newport · Beach. He "·as then moved to the cmcrgen~ room at ifoag, v.·he re· efforts to reviVd him proved unsuccessful . A hospital spokesman said today !hat Rogers had been admitted at nOOff Sunday suffering from chest pains. fie was taken to a sub-intensive care unit but left against doctors orders at about 3 p.nl., the spokesman said. Funeral arrangements arc pending at1 the Baltz Bergeron 1'"uneral Home In Costa !\·lesa. . . Hunting ton Girl Still Recove ring Af ter SJ1oo tin g A 13·year"old girl who shot hersel! while at school Friday Is s t i 11' recuperating frQm her \\'OUQds today ~t Pacifica Hosp ital In Huntington Be11ch.1 llospital officials Sunday described hec condition as "stable." The girl, v.·hose nan1e was not released by police, was at SowCrs Intermediate School before noon Friday when she shot herself in the stomach. police said. . .. The .22 caliber pistol she used belonged to her father, polh:e reported. , r.. She walked to the ofrice ol the schdbl after the shooting. Officials there rush· cd her to tho hospital. " Huntington Stach police saki the. youn( student apparently was despondent oVli,Ji some problems at schoGI. South Coast. l lospi tat. .~. Gets 3 New Doctors ,. . ~· Three ncw·doctors have Joined the I~ member medical staff of South C'.oa~t Communlly Hospital. Dr. Anthony IV. Orlandclla, chle.f of staff, announcctl recently. The nt!!W men are Dr. Cary p, Ke.troO, granted associate stat( privileges ·'in practice of aenernl and v4scular aurgery; Dr. Sutter A. Garda~·r1 palhologist; and Dr. John R. Burnh'll'- granted 1s110Ciatc staff privileges ·ln practice of psychlotry. • ,. Pe ' WAS assi.!tan he neve Reinec Jt he :Josep R c SA men "I guil .tiWlla • the ' c ~ J:d. f!.oOo T 141 Viejo· epace or ~! count '!'he l>r• origin in tens ~-· ,...,.,'I .o.• t + 4· I ~· "1th the e Dial 56~· S'addleba~k EDIT I ON YbL. 67, NO. 133, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES Perjury Trial ·'Immunity' Not 7Given Reinecke " WASlUNGTON (AP) -A Watergate assistant prosecutor testified today that he never offered California Lt. Gov. Ed. Reinecke Immunity from prosecution ~he cooperated in the 111' investigation. Joseph J. Connolly made lhe statement Ruchell ~lcigec Clinn ge s ~lind SAN JOSE (AP) -Citing '1harassment .and intimidation,"· . black convict Ruchell Magee asked a judge today for permiMion to withdraw a guilty plea t o aggravated kidnaping charges stemming from the bloody 1970 Marin Courthouse shootout. Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge William A. Ingram .scheduled a hearing Wednesday on Magee's argument for the plea change. A judge and three other men were killed in the shootout. "I wish to withdraw my plea of guilty on grou~ that it las ..unlawful and illegal," Magee told ,.-the court. ' Costa Mesa ... ' Cou11cilman 's florneBurgled :lturglar1 ran.ucked the home of tatidtr Costa Mesa Mayor Willard T. JOrdan Sunday night , getting away \\'ilh $:1,000 worth of jewelry and cash and seYml1 prized family keepsal-s. J'?f-dan . or 2269 Santa Ana A ... c., and his wife, Ruth. were at a 1.1other 's Day din- ntT' \\ith ~1aYor and ~1n. Robert M. Wil- son \\tien the burglary took place. '.'They came in with only one thing in mind and that was to get the jewelry and the cash," Mrs. Jordan said. "They IS.. JO RDAN, Page %) d.uring a hearing before U.S. District ~rt Judge Barrington Parker nn defense motions to dismiss the perjury case against Reinecke. If the case is not dismissed, the defen~ attorneys planned to argue that the trial should be moved to California. ' One of Reinecke's three attorneys, James E. Cox, contended that the defendant was "misled and entrapped by ~gents of ~he government'' during interviews with the special Watergate prosecutor's office. Connoliy, under cross-examination on the witness stand, denied that there was an~ di~ion with Frank Pagliaro Jr .. Reinecke s attorney at that time, about possible immwiity from prosecution if Reinecke told all he knew about an all.eged offer from an ITT subsidiary to bring the 1972 Republican National ConvenUon to San Diego. "I. don't remember l.lr. Pagliaro makmg any suggestions that h e (Reinecke ) not be indicted " said Connolly., ' But CoMolly said "it was clear to me that what Mr. Pagliaro wanted was that his clieot wouldn 't be charged." <?<>nnolly said he warned Pagliaro that Reinecke could be indicted in the case. "Did you tell ~1r. Pagliaro that the investigation was proceeding rapidly and if Reinecke wanted to cooperate he had better do it right away?" Connolly was asked. The prosecutor replied that he did not have any recolleclton of making that remark. When Cox pressed for a yes or no answer, Connolly said, ''I didn 't make a statement that it "-'as a now or never situation.'' Jlld.ge Parker has set the trial date for July 15, but Reinecke repeatedly said he wants the trial completed before voters decide on bis bid for the OOP nomination J lU'fi!" 4. • -ke bas pl•adtd inllocent to the periury counls and charged that the n1d1ctment was politically motivated . Reinecke, 50, contends lhat ft would cost him at least $10,000 lo bring 20 defense witnesses to Washinglon and that he should be judged by hls peers in Ca lifornia. Once viewed as the leading contender in . the. California GCP primary. Re1nccke's standing in public opinion polls has slipped since he w-:. indicted April 3. Treatment Center Set ' At Hospital in f iejo 1'ssion Community llospital in t-.tission \!'ielD· has donated 1.500 square feet of space to the Orange County Department of li1enlal Health to establish a south coUnty treatment center. 'I'he unused 1space at the hospital will btt:tvailable f11r at least a year and was otlglnally planned as the facility 's intensive care unit. ~ Ronald Caspers, who repfuent> the board on the MentAI Health Advisory Board, said the facility wjll J>rovide the first direct mentAI health "' T;wo Speedboats ollide; 6 Hurt • i..;;,~,,.,RIPoSA (APl -Two speedboats servi.~s in the SaddJeback Valley area. lnll1al persoMel wi ll include a staff of s~x prof~ionals providing comprehen.- s1ve scrvtces including individual and group psychotheraDv. psychiatric evalua- tion ,training or school officials, teachers and counselors on request. "The primary emphasis of this community team will be on family and child counseling,'' Caspers said. "One or my personal priorities is in the area or drug abuse counseling and I have been assured um area will receive special attention." Ca.pen and the Menial Healt h Advisory Board began looking for a south county Site In January and the offer of rent-free space on a temporary. basis was made in April. The space includes a ccnLral recept ion area atid five separate counseling rooms. Counseling services are due to begin near the end of this month. - Today's Fin a l N.Y. Sto cks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 13, 1974 TEN CENTS VPI TthPl'IOI• Grand Opening Model Jane Seymour has a novel way of showing a bottle opener of gold and blue and white diamonds, worth $250, at a Londott show sponsored, ap- propriately enough, by De Beers ConsoHdated Limited. Boston Cops S treak Club , JJ7 reak Havoc , PORTSMOUTH., R.I. (API -A Portsmou1h mot.el Owner says a group of Boston policemen ran ' naked through his Rmulda lM night club and took part in a. ' disturbance that resulted in about $1,000 damage. Peter Stilphen s&id about two dozen of the 100 Bollton policemen staying at the motel Friday night participated in the alleged inc idents. The policemen came here to march in a police parade Saturday. Jean Lawler. motel manager. said she called local police twice and state police once about the matter, bul no arrests were made . A spokesman for the Boston Police Department, Frank Carpenito, said today the department is looking into the matter. Stilphen said he is coMidering fiUng a complaint with the Boston police commissioner 's office. Mrs. Lawler claimed at le&st half a,. doren policemen stripped at the side of lhe motel's swimming pool within sight of the night club audience and jumped in. other police ran naked through the night club, with some going up on the stage and others jumping on tables, 1'-1rs. Lawler and Stilphen charged. '.J'hree or four naked policemen also came in and stood in the motel lobby at the front desk, Mrs. Lawler said. "That's not streaking, that's indecent exposure," she said. Mrs. Lawler claimed. that so1ne or the police arrived at the motel that afternoon drunk and continued' drinkin g through the night. Pictures and other motel property were tossed out of second story windows and firecrackers were set off in hallways, Stilphen said. Insulation \vas ripped from the ceilings and a securily camera was torn from its stand, Mrs. Lawler sa id. A liquor cabinet in !he night club was broken and some liquor was stolen, she &dded. l(issinger Booed I srael Holds E1nergency W a r Me et < JERUSALEM (API -I s raeli demonstrators booed Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger today and Premier Golda ri.teir's government held an urger.! cabinel session on Kissinger's determined truce negotiations to end the war with Syria. ' • Jerusalem sources said Israel v.·ou!d surrender no more captured Syrian land in exchange for the disengagel'!:!ent pact Kissinger see ks, but the cabinet kept its deliberations secret and a government minister said only that negotiations \vould continue. Kissinger is to fly back to Damascus Buses 'Nearly F11ll' in Debut 011 South Coast New bus service by the Orange ~aunty Transit District to the Saddleback Valley, San Juan Captstrano, and San Clemente began today with "almost full" reports from early morning co1nmutcr run drivers. The heralded transit expansion . linking the South County with Santa Ana and the beach from a new hub at the Laguna Hills t.1all , has been made possible by the purchase of 63 new buses for the county lleet. The ne\v routes, number 85 and 91, \\'ilI run on an hourly schedule Monday through Saturday from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. with free transfers and a 25 cent charge. "·WJ •xpecl r~ship to pick pp," i;;iid an OC'l'D operations d e p a r t m e n t spokesman. "A lot of information ha s not been distributed. yet aJ\d we are taking every chance to do that." Route 91 begins at Lagi1na Hi::,, i\tall, comes through Mission Vi. jo via El Toro Road, t.1uirlands Boulevard, La Paz Road . t.1arguerite Park.way, Avery Parkway and on to Saddleback College. It continues through San J u a n Capistrano via Camino Capistrano and Del Obispo and ends at Grants Plaza in Capistrano Beach, where it turns af.ound and returns to the Laguna Hills Mall . Route 85 travels along Paseo de Valencia, La Paz Road. and Cro'A-·n Valley Parkway, then on to Coast Highway. It continues southward through Dana Point. Capistrano Beach, and ends in San Clemente_ A free transfer can be made from Route 85 to the new route 91 in Capistrano Beach if a trip to San Juan Capistrano or Mission Viejo is desired. Route 85 cou1d also take a rider to Laguna Hllls Ma11, where a transfer to the express bus route 74 could take one directly to the Civic Center iii Santa Ana. Route 57, also originating at Laguna Hills Mall , lakes local residents in Laguna Beach via Laguna Canyon. It continues to Fashion Island and then to South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa by way of Orange County Airport. ~lore infonnation on the routes may be obtained by calling 547-0004. Children under 12 ride tree· when with a fare-. paying adult. Boy, 3, Suftocales TRACY (UPI) -Th,....year-old Raymond Moreno died. Suqday when he closed himself into an old refrigerator. The boy's body was round in the refrigerator five hours after a search began for him near his home south of here. Tuesday with Israel's latest terms, b11t indications were t.he Israelis \\'ere refusing to budge beyond the undisclosed truce ofter they made three days ago. · About 100 protes ters -some of them pioneer settlers on the Golan Heights within sight of the daily artillery war with Syria -shoutlXI out the feelin gs of ~an)' I ~; a e Ii s by yelling "Boo to Ki ssinger as the secretary's car arrived at Mrs. Meir's offi ce for the morn ing lalks. Dozen~ more lsrae!i settlers defiantly moved into war-blasted houses in the abandoned Golan capi tal of Quneitra to prevent the govern n1e n t from relinquishing the ghost to\v n for 3 truce treaty. Israel has reportedly offered to turn over half of Quneitra to U.N. forc es as a buffer' zone. and permit civilian Syrian residents to return to the to·.11n they ned during the 1967 ~l idcast war. The exact official terms or the Israeli offer are still secret, however . It \\'as the 16th day of Kissinger's ~·l ideast mission. m a k i n g the disengagem(!flt quest the long es t diplomatic effort he has made outside the United States since he became secretary of Sta te. Israeli sources said earlier the ga p in (See KISS INGE R, Page Z) Dor111 Reform Coeds Lose Hi g 1i Court Plea WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court today refused to hear a plea t~at universities discriminate against women students when they require them to obey dormitory cu rfews not imposed on men students. Tht; high court let stand a lower court decision endorsing the curfew imposed by Eastern Kentucky University . The U.S. Circuit Court in Cincinnati agreed with the university that the curfew was a proper step designed to protect women from harm and. that. no sif!lilar rules were necessary to protect men. A university Jerfl~r !'.om Lexi.ngt?n~ Ru.th ~obinson, challenged the curfew as u~st1tutionally discnm1nat1ng 111 a class-action suit she filed as a fr~man. The Richmond, Ky., school allows men dormitofy residents, re- gardless of age or class, to con1e and go as they please. Strike Aciion Considered • By County Carpenters Representatives of the Carpenters District Council of Orange County met in Santa Ana this morning to discuss local act ion in a planned 'strike ·~rhich may affect 40.000 carpenters throughout Southern California. · Council employes refused to give out eny information pending the outcome of the meeting. A statement by the organization \Vas expected late this afternoon. The act ion is being considered by carpenters over a 30-<:ent-an-hour pay increase \\'On last year, but eliminated later ,by the fed eral Pay Board. Negotiating with contractors last year, the wiion \\'On an 85 cent an h6ur raise which the pay board subsequenUy reduced to 55 cents. Terry Slauson, an administrative assistant for the Los Angeles County carpenter's council said that the effect of strike action on local contractors is hard to predict. "It depends on how many individual contractors go along with our position and how many go along with the co~tractors association's position," he sa id . Dan Peter9ln, chairman of the bargaining committee for four employers associations, Sunday termed the strike "clearly illegal." Contractors are expected to seek a court injunction to stop the walkout. The carpenter's contract does not expire until Jwie 15, but , because the pay board and federal ecommic controls have been abolished, they want the raise immediately. Paul Miller, head ' of the Southern California Carpenters Council said "If the industry tries to hold 'out in a prolonged strike against just propo531s. then we will have no choice but to seek parity with the Northern California carpenters." Current wages for Southern California carpenters are $7 .05 an hour with an additional $2.41 in fringe ' benefits. Northern California carpenters receive about $1.50 an hour more. According to union spokesmen, some carpenters have already refused to go to (S.. STRIKE, Page 11 Bt1rg lars St11ke At Irvine l lome Silverware. radio· equipment and other valuables were taken fr'om the home of an Irvine man Sunday while he was in San Diego for ~1other's Day. 'Ibe items were burglarized from the home of Gilbert Lyle Cllallet. 33, by thieves \Vho \\Tenchcd open the front door. Police believe lhe thieves were anxious to make a quick getaw&y because several plants near lhe back fence in Challet's yard were mutilated. Orange Coast lded on Lake McClure, knocking all ~ght occupants i'nlo the water and injuring six, officials ·said. Three of the injured were hoispitallzcd . • Mdrlposa COunty sheriff's ofncers said ·~~,-fligh performance jet boAt and an IS. , craft collided Sunday when one boat . ed the wake of the other. The jet ~t sank in 400 feet of waler about 200 Jait!S off Barrett Cove Marina. No Housing Board Wanted Insurance Check For Lake Forest flub Delivered An insurance check for $508,900 to rebuild the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club, destroyed by rare in ~farch, was delivered to the club 's community association recently. Weather .11.. - :rwo LINES SOLD . ' GLA.SP AR DING HY ' .. " ..... "'-Htte's an ad ptaced by a 11man of few words" In the Daily Pilot that really did Ill•""": . ,,,,., .. , 9' GLASPAR D!NGIN "'' , • $45. (Phone No.) .. ' The first caller bought the dinghy. You can get your advertising job done, too . wttb "a few v,.ords in the rig' place" In the classified aeclion of the Daily Pilot. Dtal the direct line to mul!S. Phone &12· 11671!' I lri•ine Pwn1iers Agree Wit1i Count.)· Enviro11ment Group By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. n.lfY ,..... ...., Irvtno .plannlng' commWlooers and a spokesman lot t h • EnV!ri>mn<ntAI C..lltion of Orange County agreed on one thing about housing this w""". Neither bod)' wan!S the Irvine City Council to set up a hou.!ing committee or commission. Dale Secord. member of an attorney tn.Hk force subcommittee u r g I n g lnvHUgation of the city ot Irvine and its housing pollcl"' appear«! at Thursday's plaMlng commission meeting w speak In opposition to the llouslng commission proposal. Sea>nl said cstabllshing a study l'llmmltl<e woold probably delay action the city might take w encourage provtslon of tow and moderate Income: housing. Planning commlssioners. meanwhile, said they believe any commiUee or commission wouJd merely duplicate funcllons that •rt best bandied by the planning commission. The city has bttn crttlciied for being slow in acting to approve low cost housing. Commissioners have lowered densities or virtually any residential developm<nt to he proposed lo lhe city, or have denied approvals of resi<k!ntlal development outright. citing lack of schools or other S4!:rvlces . Nevertheless, Commissioner G a r y Dalzell said 'MlurSday, "solving I.he bousing probl em in Irv ine ls really a function of density and !hat is our responsibility ... 1 suggest \V C urge the city council to lake consideration of a housing commUslon for six months or until such lime as we feel there Is a n~ I 't ' for a committee or commission." Other commissioners agreed. noting such a committee should report to the planning C"Ommi53lon., Commissioner Ro I a n d Schiniinger dis,IU'et!d and was the lone opponent or DafZell'1 motion to urge the council not to appoint a conmtis,,ion. Schlnz.inger, a professor at l..'C Irvine suggested there are housing needs to be sWdied which do not relate to planning acllons of the commission. He noted that no agency or city government Is responsible to [allow up plaMinp: decisions of the commission to see If those decisions actually result in developments which offer \\'hat planners Intended. All agreed the city p I a n n I n g comml.ssion bas not acted nn enougb 18te ROUSING, 1'1ge 11 ' On hand to receive the check. from the Fireman's F'l.lnd Insurance Company, were Sally Oleskiewicz. club affairs chalnnan; Don Vaughn, community association insurance broker ; and William Hatton , Paige Hoover. and Scotty McKnight of the association board of directors. David Young. contractor for rebuilding the structure near the intersection of ~1ulrlands and Ridge Route Road in El Toro, said the new clubhouse should be finished by Christmas. ... It will be rebullt exactly llkl! the original building, which was of a Spanish decor tind Included a restaurant and bar. a locker roon1, sauna 00.lh, exercise equipment, and homeowners association orn ... -es. Meanwhile. !he outdoor rtcttatlon raclllties or the association, adjacent to the stn9ll manmade lake, are in use-Including a pool and tennls cooru. ) . ~fostly sunny Tuesday. believe it or not, with warmer tempera- tures, to boot. Highs in the low 70S at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Overnight lows in the 503. IN~ llt: T OD/\ V Spiro Ague1v is in Athe111 thl.s week, allegedly lookf'l1g for o job wilf~ Greek shipow1te r1 . Greeks, w/10 cl1ce red liis ar- rival in 191 1. appear to tio& re~ ognize tl1t fornter U.S. vice pres- ident today. See $tory, Page 4. ... lltlt ,. .. ... l.HoHn '' l . M. ltY• t Moflt• trn 11 Ct1itt"'l1 S Mt¥lt1 It Cl•ttillttll ..U N•,...._I Nt"°' • cemtet IS or-CwnfT 1 Cl'MaW... U tyl"4• P'trt« It OMttrl l'ttt!Cff r ,...,., '"'' l.dfleri•I .. ,.. 6 lfKtl M1rtlth 1•11 l.11t1r1tlflmtt1! lt T...-1~ 11 ,,_., ,._II Tllur.r1 It , .... ,... lt«'trt ,. .. ,.tlttr • HtreN"" 1• ._....,,. ...... ,,.,. I• lllt s.r.k1 t Wwtif IMln ' I % DAI l Y_P_ll_O_T __ _:.IS _____ cM::::':.:'°:::"<:.'..'.M:::•:c• _:l.:cl•..:1::9::_:7 4 Nixon Home 'Luxm·ies' Assailed \\'ASltlNGTON (API -Rep. Robert E . . Jones (0.Ala.) or lh<' !louse committee probing use of tax revenues on presidential ho1ne5 has accused the <idminist ration or spending for "frivolous luxuries" at Pres ident Nixon's San Clemente and Key Biscayne homes. "The President's aides have sho\\Tl poor judgment in lhe excessive spendmg c;f tax doUars for improvement of presidential vacati on facil ities,'' said Jones. Jones said execuli\•e branch agencies have spent more than $17 million in connection "'ith three privately ov.-ned pi:operties and office c o m p l e x e s , including Nixon's homes at san.Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. A spokesman for Jones said the third property was the New York Ci1y cooperative apartment that Nixon sold _several months after beroming president. but the findings and recommendations of a House committee report listed the third property as a Bahamian retreat 0"11ed by a Nixon friend . The report's findin gs make no mention of the New York apartment. The final draft of a proposed report to be coosidcred by the House Government OperatioM Committee says that Nixon 's homes have cost $17.1 million in fed eral funds. The report also said the federal agencies should try to rceover any improper ell'.peodilures. Copies of 1he repcrt have been distributed to committee members. The Associated ~ was permitted. to take notes from one copy. - The report says the total includes $9 million for San Clemente. $8 million for Key Biscayne and $176.000 for a retreat on Grand Cay in the Bahamas which is o"ned by Nixon's friend, Robert H. Abplanalp. \Vhite House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Thursday night that the total includes such items as seeurity costs, the cost of paper, desks and typewriters and the fiv~year cumulative cost of maintaining presidential commu- nications. "An honest report woulll show that out of the $17.l million referred to. on1y approximately ~.482'v.·as spent on the President's homes," Ziegler said. In comparison to federal expenditures on Ni1:on'1 properties, Jones said, the ~t for protection and r e I a t e d i~ during President Johnlon's tenns WMi$5.9 million . And, he added, funds u~ in behalf of earlier presidents "was far less." "fn the desire to provide the'rnaximum protection possible for the nation's leaders. the Congress has pennitted the Secret Service to operate virtually free of restraint," sa id Jones. "The ab~ in expend itures of funds at vacation facilities indicate greater management guidance is needed to prevent such occurrences in the future ." "Secret Service officials, and other federal agencies acting with them , have abused lbe discretion given them by spending tax revenues for frivolous luxuries unrelated lo real seturity matters," Jones concl uded. From Page 1 STRIKE ... work at some companies. They refused to say, ho't\.·ever, how many compani{'S arc affected. "\Ve ,~·on't call it :1 strike until the pickets go up," J\lilh!r ~aid. "If the individual contractors pay the raise. v.·e stay on tile job. If they don't, \\·e'll stay av.-ay." This "·as the second labor dispute to idle a port ion of the Southern California building industry in a little more than a ""'eek. Bricklayers ""·ent on strike J\1ay 6. 11.e carpenters council co n t r a ct embraces the counties of Orange, l..o5 Angeles, San Diego, Ri\'ersidc, Imper}al, San Bernardino. Ventura, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo. Inyo, Kem and :\lono. 6lAMGI COAST DAILY PILOT ~A.M>n:He ............ ~ H lOO'I I<: ~l"G'd P ~Joi ........... ~Ulllv1 °""" C.-tfril-3.JIOwe.t&ly~ ....... N••_,Bl_»J.l_P-" IK..""'>l"!I l•'W"" ._,, m , ,_,, ........... "',,r,1•t><11on....,.. ,,.~e. .. _,.to.,...,.o !...~ c-"'e Xl!!'<Ol'.,llC-tlo>MPu. ,..._.17141,41·4J1 1 Clti11lf'-4 A""'"'M"'f '41-S,7t S• Ch1MMt Alt:hperilM11h: r ... ,.._. ••1·••10 ~'1"t ,,,. °"91'111 Cod ~ '°""' """' ""-·-,._.._ .... (ll\ol ... l!ar OI ,j __ ... 1 ... ~ ... , rot _ _, .......,.,. -.......-,-ot<4'¥'0N- ~claotll [(llt6qt '*' •. <Mii ..-e.. Otfo~· ... ----°"-t.)00....,,,..... l<I' ... ~ lt DG~, ..,_.,,.,otol,,.!~IJOO,,.,..,.., , Wake llp, Lazybones ••• Playful lio!1 . cub at the Denver Zoo growls with great ferocity and slaps a paw in effort to wake his lazy brother, clearly more interested in 40 \vinks than in frolic. 1\fale cubs were born to Holly at the zoo one month ago. Dead Gray Whale Gets Ne,vport Officers Clear Mexica11 Theft Suspects , Scientific Reception Three Ne"'·port Beach police detectives spent the wee kend in T i j u a n a investigating poo.siblc suspects i n Thursday's $111,950 Lido Isle burglary but decided the t-.lexican suspect s \VCre not the thieves. "\\'e virtually eliminated !hem as suspects," a police spoke.sn1an ~id today. He said that ~texican police assisted in locating the suspects. about 12 "green card" temporary v.·orkers. ~ Thursday'.~ burglary took place at the home of ?\1rs. Mauja Baldwin, 326 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. Politi! said someone smashed a side bedroom win do"', ransacked the premises and made off with strong boxes containing valuable coin collections and other item.c;. included in the loss ""·ere bars of gold and silver bullion valued at $20.000 each. The burglary v.•as discovered by Mrs. Baldwin. \\'idow of millionaire yachtsman Baldwin ?\I. Bald"•in, and a Companion when they arrived home Thursday night. Police said they 21re working on several other leads in the case. ' From Pagel KISSI NGE R . • • ·-the disenga gements negotiations w1th Syria is as "'ide as ever despite a report by Kissinger of some progress toward an agreement. l\1eanwhilc. Israeli v.'arplanes struck south Lebanon today, and eyewitnesses said the ancestral village of United States Sen. James G. Abourczk took the brunt of the attack. The Lebanese defense minis try sair:I ~our J>:Crsons "·ere killed in Kfeir village, 1nclud1ng a woman, her six-month-old son a nd ei ght-year-old daughter: five other children bcl\\'ee n 2 and 8 years old \\.'ere "·ounded. and r1\e houses we r c destroyed. A con1n1unique accused the Israells of aggression. Abourezk, South Dakota DemOcrat received a hero's \\'elcome home in Kfei; last year during a lour o( the !'.liddlc East. The Israeli military eominand said i'" air force made a 20-nunule attack on Arab guerrilla concentrations just north of the Israeli-Lebanese bord er near l\It. Hermon. Thl' command said all planes returned saielv. In DamascU~. the Syrian command reported that its troops engaged Israeli forces in tank and artillery battles on l\1t. 1Il1'rmon and along the 40-mile Golan Heights fron t for the 63rd day. Inflation H1irts State's Surplus In Ti ght; Budget S,\CRAJ\·IENTO (AP ) -Inflation i ~ gh ing state govc rnn1ent a $188.3 million shot in !he ar1n, state Finance Director \·eme Orr said today. But inflation also is partly responsible for a ne"' $78.8 million drain in the state's pocke1book ~ause or rising :\fedi-Cal costs. That. and other cost hikes, trims the nev.· budget surplus back to about $100 mill ion. Orr said prices in California have been increasing this year at the equivalent or an 8.8 percent annual inOation rate. Jn the. short run, that i! easing the fiscal pains in Gov . ltonald Reagan's tight $9.8 billion 1974·75 budge t proposal. The biggest Increase In st.a te incon1e is · an estimated $100 million hike in sales tax revenues, which is 11 direct resul t of innation. Personal Income taxes arc \Ip $70 million O\'er earlier estimates, and all ot!M!r income i\Ourcc.s nre up $18.3 million. Orr said. ';Spurred 1Jn by innallon, California's economy and that of tho nation are boom1ni:i:,'' Orr told a joint m!etlng of the ;\ssembly and Senate budgct·wriUng committees. B)' JOllN VALTERZA Of tM Oi1UY Pilot S111f Four Ions of dead and ripening California gray \\'hale came asho re at the San Clen1entc pier this morning amid fanfare and celebration. And an ex ultant crC\\' of scientists and student s fron1 the Los Angeles County l\Iuseum of Natural 11istory \1."ent to \\'Ork immediately to dissect the carcass of a young female leviathan v.'hich had been fl oating off the South Coast lhroughout the "·eekend. 'l'achtsmen first spotted the \l'hale on Saturday, said spokesmen for the harbor patrol at Dana Harbor and by Sundav night the ren1ains had drifted to the pic·r area. "\Ve had a fe\\' options." said San Clemenle Lifeguard Chief Dirk Hazard, 1'but this one is by far the best. because il creates the ie\\'CSt probl ems.'' The crev.· from the county museum. he said, is especially interested in saving the complete skeleton of the mammal. "They "·ere excilcd because this rlnd is so rare. J\lo.5t of the time the carcasses are only partial and much farther gone than this one," he added. Although the cre't\.·s worked undaunted amid jellyfi sh at the water's edge and a powerful aroma surrow1ded th e mammal, changing puffs of wind cau.sed lbe less hardy to scurry up the beach on occasion . Spokesmen for the crew termed the discovery "a real find." however because the animal had only been dead for several days and was perfect for scientific purposes. No U1eories were offered on the JXM)Sible cause of death of the young ""'hale. but Hazard said accidents with \"essels at sea are common during \\'hale migrations. Judging (rom the age of the IS-foot animal, sc ientists said it appeared she \\'as bom during the Sou t.l!,.w a r d n1igratio n of the California gray \\'hale herd. That jaunt ended early this year. The youngster died. apparently, during the Northward n1igration of the herd afler the females gave birth to their young in Scamrnon's Lagoon off Baja California. llazard said the scientific effort todav "·as a boon to hi s depanment and otherS. '·Usually, when these things v.·ash up "·e've got not hing but problems trying to ge t rid of them. !\lost of the time they'll stink up an entire section of beach before the problem gets solved," he said. "This "·ay \1•e're helping science along and someone .else \\'ill get rid of the problem for us ." he added. * fr' fr Tivo Live Wliales Take Spotliglit Although it was a dead v..·hale \Yhich caused a stir among bystanders on a San Clemente beach today. two live ones did a performance of their 0"11 downcoast this past weekend. At San Onofre State Park a pair of youngt California gray \\'hales cavorted near the surf line throughout most of the day while hundreds of guests watched in amazement. Park rangers said the baby mammals disappeared late in the afternoon. i "'" ,,. •. U,1 TtttplltHI Chtrrcfa·ill Honored Winston Churchfl~ grandson of the late British statesman, stands . l>S•ide a huge bust of Sir Winston Chur<hill while. attending a private viewing of tho Churchill Centenary Exhibition al Somerset l·louse In London. ' • .. , Dairy A1ulit-~ " • Did CQnnally Resolve Taxes? -•• -A ,_, Uy BROOKS JACKSON A11ocl•_, Prna Wrltw \\lASHlNGTON -Jonn D, Connally m~y have assisted the nation's btgge~ dairy cooperative in a tax ·:iudit t!rat failed to uncover the dairymen's mudve il!egal political donations and allejt'd kickbacks. the co-op's former lobb)li.sl is quotl'd as saying. Bob A. Lilly, fonner lobbyist [or Associated Milk Producers, Inc;., _j!!id Connally, then Treasury secretary aud in command of the Internal Revenue Service, "may have resolved" the~ tax n1atter according to notes taken by a la1vycr who interviewed Lilly. · Among the Items that the IRS didn 't find was $100.000 paid in cash lo Nixon fundraiser Herbert L, Kalmbrch of New· port Beach in 1969. The co-op n.-cently asserted th at this donation \\.'as an illegal use of corporate 1noney. The co--0p has asked for a refund. On the Connally question, co-op lawyer Jake Jacobsen once told the milk producers' leaders that Cornal11• had ""'ritlen about the matter directly to R. a,. Phin!'ley~ the l~S district director in Austin. Tex .. an informed source said. l"tlinney. a long -lime friend and fonner business partner of C o n n a 11 y , acknoy,•!edged that he had been involved in the 1971 audit, but denied that Connally or anyone in Washington had contacted him about the matter. Connally couldn't be reached and bis lawyer. Edward Bennett W i l Iiams, declined comment. Jacob.sen, once a friend of Connallj•, hired one of Connally's senior law partners, l\1 arvin K. CoUie of Houston , to handle the tax matter. Jacobsen has testified to Watergate investigators that he checked Connally in advance to "sec if it \•:as OK'' to hire Collie, several sources said. George L. Mehren, the milk producer<;' chief executive, is quoted in court papers as saying that Collie "got them off on that one but said he could not do it again." Collie, in a telephone interview, said hs role \\."SS to give legal advice Jo the co-op. Atehren and. Lilly were intervie\\·ed by lawyers conducling an independent probe of the milk producers' politic:' activities. The notes of those interviews were recently subpoenaed and made public in court records. Also rnade public was a Jetter that Lilly wrote to Jacobsen when the tax audit began. The Jetter \li'as dated Aug. 26. 1971 , a few month.s after Jacobsen had enlisted Connally ta help persuade President Nixon to raise milk prices. Lilly asked Jacobsen to help again. Lilly said Doyle Bond, an IRS ~ent from San Antonio , Tex., Ole milk produ_cers' headquarters, was asking questions about some suspicious checks. Lilly said. Bond bad indicated hi might gel a promotion If he could "raise an issue over our questionable expendi tur es:'' Those questionable expenditures may total several million dollars. recent disclosures indicate. 'But when the audit "'as over, nothing new had been uncovered. -and the milk producers o"·ed no t>xtra taxes. The IRS disallowed one deduction for fhe e11."J)Cnditure that Bond had discovered before the audit began. This was a $90,7 11.07 payment for a picture book of President Lyndon B. JoMson's messages to Congress. apparently printed at the request of someooe in the White House and intended for use al a Democratic party fupd-raising dinner in 1968. Although this expenditure · v.· as disallowed as a business expense. it cost lhe milk producers nothing at the time because the item merely was subtracted from the co-op's Joss carryforward, v.'hich is the sum of its unclaimed deductions reserved for future years. \\'hat the IRS didn't find includes: _ -$91,691 or more in oorporate money and services donated to Hubert H. Humphrey's 1968 presidential campaign. Although the IRS found none of this in its 1971 audit, another investigation by ms agents in Arkansas turned up $22,000 of it after Connally left office. As a result, two top co-op officials have pleaded guilty to federal charges and a third is under Indictment. From Pagel lIOllSING ... housing proposals to make it v,rorthwbile to appoint a body to check up oo the resuHs of their plarv\lrig decisions. "\Vc're not getting enough products on line right now to be concerned with monitoring," Conunissioncr Emil Benes said. "The markolpla« is totally distorted in Irvine because housing In efrect has been held off the market by actlom of the City and othen," Benes said. Dalzclt agreed, saying "We elm'! need more lnduslrtAI product in the city today. "Wbat we need now is hou!ies," the commJsaloncr rom Turtle Rock said. Seoord, al.so fonnaUon of a bowiag sston on the ground that more clti Input would slow approval of hous progra~. predict right nO\V your eitmins t low cost or moderatfl cost housing. orming a committee Is Just a way of "'Ing the buck. The buck stops her " Secord said. If there ts to be hotising for all lncOme levels in Irvine, he suggested the city offlclal1 will have to "bite the bullet" take actions to provide it. • \ tl•!ol" -1.14 .~ or more in oorporate monr,y , ror Humphrey's 1970 senatorial campa.i_i!\~ in ~1lnnesota. -Uncounted sums to other stale ~ federal C<tndidales, and to puy salari~ and expenses for fhc mil k produc~t~; political ~t. , '' In ~ddjtion to . the corporate 1X1liti.c~r: spending, there 1s recent evidence that the co-op.al~ \\'as paying huge sums as ' kickbacks lo dairies thn! were reJuct1tnt·1 to pay the high prices the <XMll> demanded for milk produced by ital member fanners. i olc; Federal law prohibits c orp or at:e1 spending in political campaigns and. a.ls> forbids kickbacks of the kind the milko , proiucers allegedly paid . Such illegal ~ expenditures cannot legally be dedu~ ; on tax returns but the IRS turned ..up none of this in its 1971 probe. · · · _,.:' Strike Call • .i •• .. ,,_ .i ... " l Br11shed Off " •11'. 1..;1, "rd By Truckers •n i' . " ,,..,, By -United Ptt11 tntemado111I ~1~ The country's independent tr u ct:~ drh1ers today all but Ignored a call for1a-.1 nationwide strike to force a rollback ln · fuel prices and an io:icrease in the 55-• miles-per·hour speed llmil The strike resulted in some violence ln Pennsylva~la ~ut had almost no effe¢ op: truck traffic 1n that state, regarde<I as th(' foCal point in the truckers' protest. Strike coordinators sakl truck trafflc: was "do"'n appreciably" in Uta h and' about 80 perce:nt effecti\'e in J\.fontana and Colorado. but elsewhere across me country the situation wa.s reported ntftl! mal . · The call for a nationwide truet'· shutdo"n. scheduled to have start~ Sunday midnight , \\'as issued by °".erdri\'e Jl.-fagazine, \\'hose editcilf l\hC'hat>l Parkhurst. predicted more that1' 90.000 drivers would take part. Overdrive is an ind~Jl;.Cnd~nt truckers' publication. • . In add1t1on to lower fuel prices In& higher speed limits. Parkhurst said, the truckers sought anpudit Qf oil compaty books and the right for small truckei-s~ haul manufactured goods in competition \I.1th the big trucking companies. • Pennsylvania Gov. Jl.1ilton Shapp, whl> doubt ed tbe strike ~·ould take hold in bi¥ st.ate, \li"amed the truckers: not to reflrt to violence, as occurred during ·•• widespread two-week walkout ln ea~ February. ·.:J In the February walkout. t'i''O trudd drivers were killed, scor,es injured, and vandalism was frequent. ~ • Despite Shapp's warning that the' National Guard would b e called ·tf needed, there v.·as spcradic violence fif' Pen nsl ylvania in the early hours 'ot today's strike. A sniptr oo a brtdge over ~ Pennsylvania Tumpike near Breeie\\·oOO•' a. major hfgh"·ay Intersection. fired~'~ bullet through the wlnd!hleld of a stitil Police patrol car. The bulle t missiil!' trooper Donald Cald\\·ell. 28, and. ~ brought his vehicle to a safe halt. .Pennsylvania State Police reported N 1~ 10 incidents of rock throwing aM slashing of air hoses. but there were no injuries and no arrests. In Utah . strong winds gusting up to ~iL miles per hour helped keep truckers oC( the road, but coordinators of the Utab shutdown said the strike would be -a percent efrective regardless of weathu conditions .. '" ". Lihbers Stage .. - Abortion Stand I . CINCINNATI (UP!) -Women' 1 lib~s here used f\fother's Day for a pr~ abortion demonstration outside a Catholic church. The group of about 35 wore masks ana feigned pregnancies -drawing the ire ·~ .some persons arriving for ~fass. ·· ~ Although there were no physical confrontations, there were jeers and one man slipped into the line Qf marchcl'I and tried to hand antl·abortion literaturl!' to the women. A. Catholic priest walked out of the church, spotted the marthers and shouted, "Butchers, skinners Fasctsts Communists -go home." ' ·· / Fro•Pagel ' JORDAN ..• ... ,~ ! I "'·'G ~· Ii • took every piece I own." n~"V Among the Items loot wm Jo~; ~fflink collectlon, vaw.d between and $450, and a diamond engage rlng Mrs. Jordan had been given by 1 mother. Abo taken were several , each valued at about llO. =., Mes. Jordan reported that the bur ~ also dilCOvered a amail coin purse she had sWl>ed about 1100. .• ~~ "0Ur bedroom .locSl<ed like a diSWI: area. 'llhey pulled everything out ofJM drawers. 11ley don't need ' to bolhu; coming beCk becauae they've taktia everyliling," she 11id. .w .... Pollet Jnvesllgollng the burglary ....,, they found no alp of forced entry - are operating on the thoory that ACC91t wu obtained through a patio door wllltll was not fully latdled. ' I I ' ' .. .. . - ·• n> Kuo ' -~ out poosi • - ol- -u;.i who • I· ,_ '· ' . ·, ~ ' r • ' ,, ! "• . ' ' r ' .. , Quntington Bea~h Fountain Valley '* * ;. OL. 67, NO. 133, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES .. . I Today's F inal N.Y. St ocks O!lANGE COU NTY._ CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 13, 1974 TEN CENTS . Daily Pilot Begins 'Secret Witne·ss' Program .S.~rting this week, the lluntlngton ~Fountain VaUey edition ol the pajl).'~ Pilot will offer a oew crime ('Shting feature titled "Secret Wi91~ss." J~ purpose is to elicit information on serioµs crimes which have baffled law enf«eement officials. This will be done tlmlugh the offer of cash rewards and the promi.$e of complete secrecy for "witnesses willing to tum in usable infor-· mation . 'lbe rewards will be offered through the newspaper. All infor1nation will be handled through the paper and. turned ovtr to the police department involved ... €TA Raps Huntington Unification By CANDACE PEARSON Of fht 0111, P'llot St11f :;nie five-wa y plan for unification in the Huutington Beach Union liigh School District is "illogical and ridiculous,'' the Catifornia Teachers Association (CTA ) sald today. The plan being supported by three area elementary dlstricts 'A'ill have "a serious deleterious effect on education in this area," said John Smith of the CTA's ~ta Ana regional office. Smith listed effects as: -~fas!I busing of high scho:. I students out of one district into another and possible overcro'A·ding al many schools. -:"Gross inequity" in the (·· 1tribution ot.the high school district assets. -Possible violatk>n ol the requirement ff:f. equitable financing of every student iite•ch district. :;. Tax rate increases without a vote of tlie-people. -Disenfranchisement of taxpayers who live and vote in one district but whose children would attend schools in onother district. : 'n1e CT A statement callf9 t h e unification plan politically motiVated and iujed residents in the hlg\l school dis- trict to object ot It at upcoming hear- ~ Orange C.ounty Committee on Sthool District Organi:z.ation will have its *°>IKt study session on the plan at 7: 30 p.rit Tuesday in the Orange Unified District board room, 370 N. II St., Orange. her public hearing by t h e ~ttee will be at 7 p.m. Thursday at \V)J.lis Warner Intennediate School, 14171 Newland St., Westminster. "The Huntington Beach City, Fountain Valley and Seat Beach elementary disiriru are backing the plan, which W>uld form five K-12 unified districts along existing elementary boundaries. Both the Ocean View and Westminster district have opposed the proposed plan, claiming they would be treated unfairly bJt·the diVision . -'Smith charged that the c o u n t y oori\mittee isn't "considering the effect. tlie plan will have on the quality of ~tion in the area." 1'fnstead,' he claimed, the committee is tiitlig pushed by proponents to "ignore . ~reducaUon concerns of the students by f.g this in~nceived plan." teachers In the elementary and school . districts have expressed that lhe plan may eliminate "Pi!!• of their jobs. -,.1'>e CTA is a statewide teachers • crganlutloll. :Oruge -· '· .t . "· ·· Weather C::.ast I . • 1 Mostly sunny Tuetd1y, be1leve .! lt or not, with wariner tempera· , : lure>, lo bool llighl In the low ' IQo at the beaches rising to 75 , Inland. O'/mllght lows Jn the 50s. • INSIDE TODAV . Spiro Agnew i# in Athens thi1 ' IDeek, •l!egedlu looking_ for a >:job wlth Greek shlpoth11ert. ~Gree le&, 10ho cheered his ar- ·; riwl in 19111 pppear to not re~ 6mifze th.e forrtW!r U.S. vice pres- r Jl!<nt todaJI. Set !torr/, Pagt f. .. . I IMtlflt 11 ·t.. M, lt)'.4 t l ~:= ..,: • ' c:.Mkt 11 ••• ~ 11 Dfftfl IW!m r I l.iteritl t'ttt ' .. "'""•!Mlel!lt ,, l'lMll'ltt lM I r ttw 1M It_. • ~-14 I IA tfM hn'la t ' • • for follow-up investigation. The identiti~ of witnesses supi)lytng information will never be known by police authorities, or anyone outside the newspaper. A system of anonymity wiU be established so that in most cases even the newspaper will not lcnow who is the "secret witness." Rewards wilrbe-pald in cash, check or whatever. system is requested by the person who has earned the re\•:ard. Cash amounts may range from $25 up to $1 ,000, or even more, depending on the nature of the crime involved. Details of how information and money ·- is to be exchanged will be explained \n Tuesday's Daily Pilot. It is the hope of this newspapei: that Secret Witness will become a useful tool fQ,r the solution of violent and major crime in the Huntington Beach-r~ountain Valley community. The system has !he support and encouragement of both the Huntington Beach and Fountain VaUey Chambers of Commerce. ~1ooey for the rewaJods h3S been donated through the chambers -0f various local business establishments and civic organizali9flS. \Vhile this will be the maiden voyage of Secrel Witness in the Daily Pilot. the concept, under the same and similar title, has been tested and proved successful by dozens of newspapers across the nation. The Detroit News was a pioneer in the fo rmat, launching its colwnn in 1967. After its first five months of use by the Sacramelito Bee in 1972, the paper"s column had helped with the arrest of 14 persons on felony charges. l\1ost Secret \Vitness co 1 um n s concentrate solely on the major, violent crimes which have apparently stumped local police resources. That will also be the primary emphasis of U1e Daily Pilot, but the Pilot's program also will establish an open reward system for v-o I u n t e e r e d ll1inti11gton Ordi1iance information on cri1nes which may nol h;i ve been reported in the Secret Witness coluntn. Information wh ich helps the police solve any crimes. even though not listed in Secret \Vitness , 1vUJ be eligible for cash rewards. Regular reports on the status of crimes, and explanations of how the sys te1n works, 1vill be furnished in this column . identified by the Secret \Vitness headline. Look for further details in Tuesday's Daily Pilot, and once again in th e \\1ednesday edition. ' • J . High Rise Looms I , •• Churchill Honored Winston Churchill, grandson of the late British statesman, stands beside-.a ~liuge. bust.. of Sir Winston Churchill while attending a priv~te viewing of the Churchill Centenary Exhibition at Somerset House in London. Library Closures Termed 'Unlikely' in Hu11tington City Administrator Dave Rowlands hali branded as unlikely the rumor that branch and annex libraries in Huntington Beach will have to be closed next year to help balance a shaky city budget. "All departments have been ;:asked to look at their budgets to find out what can be done if there are no additional funds for the city," Rowlands said today. "We are trying to develop poo;ible levels of service in all deparlments. "But I'm not going to recommend the closing of branch libraries. I don't thxnk It will be necessary if things come out all right." Rowtandi! admitted the city t:OUllcil will have to comlder ways to raise additional revenue, or how to cut back !O{Tle city services to balance the 1914-75 budget. Other possible cutbacks he noted could include ; ~ -Less tree trimming. -Sweep city streets once a week instead of twice. -Don't cut the grass in city parks as often. With 400 percent more park acreage in the city this year, that could be a substantial savings in manpower. ---0.t out the· police helicopter patrol. -Reduce the fired e par tme nt ' s paramec1ic service, thoix;h Rowlands doesn't consider that a likelihood . It's JX!SSjble no ¥,s will be hecessary If councilmen decide lo add such additional sources of revenue as a trash · fee, or higher oil taxes. Some or these decisions will come up during an all~y budget review session !See LIBRAIUES ,P1ge ZI By TERRY COVILLE Of tl'll Daltr l"llot SI•" Huntington Beach, after years of effort, is on tbe verge of producing a set of laws which will allow the construction of high rise office buildings. . City planners expect the new high rise ordinance tq_ be ready fOr public hearings within five months. It has already received preliminary approval from the city P I 'an n in g Commission and a citizens high rise study committee. That is more than any of the previous dozen drafts ever got. The ordinance creates a multi-story Prosecution Denies Deal For Reinecke WASHINGTON (AP) - A Watergate assistant prosecutor testified today that he never offered Califoinia LI. Gov. Ed Reinecke immunity from prosecution if he cooperated in the ITT investigation. Joseph J. Connolly made the statement during a hearing before U.S. District Court Judge Barrington Parker nn defense motions to dismiss the perjury case against Reinecke. 1r the case is not dismissed, the defense attorneys plaMed to argue that the trial should be moved t0-California.. One of Reinecke"s three attorneys, James E. Cox, contended that the defendant was "misled arid entrapped by agents of the government" durini;_:: interviell'S with the special Watergate prosecutor's .office. Connoliy, under cross-examination on the witness stand, denied that !here wa1 any discussion with Frank Pagliaro Jr .. Reinecke's attorney at that time, about possible immunity from prosecution if Reinecke told all he knew about an alleged offer from an ITT subsidiary to bring the 1972 Republican National Convention to San Diego. ' "I don't remember ~fr. Pagliaro making any suggestions that h e (Reinecke ) not be indicted," said Connolly. But Connolly said 0 il was clear to me that what Mr. Pagliaro wanted was th at his client wouldn't be charged." C.onnolly said he warned Pagliaro that Reinecke could be indicted In the case. "Did ')rou , tell Mr. Pagliaro that the investigation was proceeding rapidly and ir Reinecke wanted to cooperate he had better do it right away ?" C.onnolly was as ked. Tire 11"""'utor "'Piled that be did not ha ve any recolledton of making that remark. When Cox pressed for a yes or no answer. Connolly said, "1 didn't make a statement that it was a now or never (See REINECKE, Page %) • • • A rwmber of residents had phoned city hail alter hearing about the poosibility of closing branch libraries when the new central library opens in November. 1bere are two small anne,;es now operating. One on Graham Stre<t, behind Marina High School, which CO!lts about 153,000 a year to keep open. So111e Cateh The other lo on Banning Avenue. adjaetnt to Eader School, w~h "°'" tho city about 147,000 to <"10Mlte. When the central llimry opens, the old library at Fifth and . Main streets will be<ome a downtown branch. According to librarian Walter John.90n it would cost 1128,000 a year to operate as a brll/ICh. The library board has an idopted phllosophy or keeping branches and annexes open, but if the city Is in ae:rlous financial trouble, their ciosur• is one of many po6Sibllities. • Rowlanda, however, made It clear he doe> not feel thlt will be necessary and thlt it IJ \!Inly one ol many possible chan~ In ~Uy aerviee which are being considered • l Beach An.gler La1ids $1,0()V Cindy Rosene of Huntington !kach got a $1,000 boost In her college savings accounl over the weekend when Me caught the fu-st. ef four $1 ,000 trout In the June Lake ma near Bishop. Cindy, 12·Year'"°ld daughter of ~tr. And Mrs. Al Rosene. 16971 Concord Lane, caught the two and on&<!U•rter ,powid trout Friday in Cull Lake using yellow salmon eggs. _ The 11,000 1rout competition is being spon!Ored by the June Laka Cbambor of Commerce, which planted four trout with - 11,000 tags In four area iakts May 3. Cindy, a sixth grader at Rancho View School. bas been fishing about four years, according to Betfy J.1anes. cbalnnan or lhe trout project for the chamber. She said the Rosenes made !he weekend trip to celebrate the birthday or Cindy's younger brother. Mike. I I. clndy· said she pla"' to spend a sm•tl portion of the prile, then put the rest In her college saWigs account. Cindy will fonnaily re<elve the lt.000 pri1e and 1 plaque In ctmnnnlts Sunday in Jun< Lake VIiiage. ,. suffix zone which could be attached to any existing industrial or commercial (except C-1 ) zoaing. There are no provisions as yet for residential high rise. Planner Dave Eadie says the actual construction 'A'Ould be controlled by provisions in the ordinance itself, as well as a requirement for a specific plan of not only the lot where the building is proposed. but the surrounding area. The suffix multi-story designation could not be added to the property without the specific plan showing the impact on 'the surrounding properties. As proposed, the qrdinance has no Grand Ope11i11g Model Jane Seymour haS a novel way of showing a bottle opener or gold and blue and white diamonds, worth $2501 at a London show sponsored, ap- propriately enough, by De Beers Consolidated Limited. Huntington Girl Still ~er overin g 1\f ter Shoo ting A 13-yea r"old girl ~no. shot herself while at school Friday Is s t i 11 r~rating rrom her wounds today at Pacifica Hospital in Huntington Beach. Hospital oCficlals Sunday described her condition as "stable." The girl, whose name was not released by police. was at So'A·ers Inlennediatj!! School before noon Friday when she shot herself in the stomach, po11c~ said. The .22 caliber pistol she used belonged to her father, police reported. She \\•alked to the office at the .school ancr the shooting. Officials there ru!'h· ed her to the 00..pital. -1 Huntington Beach pollct S8id the young student apparently was despondent over some problems at school. Boy, 3, S\lffocates TRACY (UPI) -Three-year-old Raymond ~1ortno djed Sunday ~hen he clostd himself Into an old refrlgt.rator. The boy's body was found In the reftfguator five hbura after a IC:\rch began for him near hls home south of here. specific height limitation. It does prohibit a high rise structure from covering more than 20 percent of the lot it sits on. ~ "f.'lost high rise structures .• except in Los Angeles, cover a small percentage of the lot anyway," Eadie explained today. "'Mercury Savings on Edinger Avenue, covers much less than 20 percent of tl"K? lot." A high rise developer would also have lo landscape 25 percent or the property. A standard commercial development is only required to have six percent landscaping. A normal commercial (See WCH RISE, P_age Ii Police Probe New Robbery At Harbour Huntington Beach detectives were .. looking for clues today at the scene of the latest robbery to hit the exclusive community of Huntington Harbour. Police rep()rted Friday that two gunmen tied up Deborah Uniack and her male visitor at 3332 Bounty Cicle on Gilbert.Island at about 12:30 p.m. be.fore ransacking the house. The robbers fied with a wallet and about $33. The couple, unhurt, managed lo get free after half an hour. Detective Richard Nolan said today the latest robbery doesn 't appear to be colln<cted with· a-twO'hour -robbery- kldnaping incident involving four homes on Humboldt Island the week before. The description of the suspects in the latest crime doesn't match tha(if those men involved in the first lengthy escapade, he said. One of the gunfnen Friday had a receding ha irline, police said. The second is described as having a mustache. Nolan said he hopes to have more leads into the case after intervie'A':ing the victims and neighbors and searching the area today. The men forced their way inside the home in the chaMel·laced community after acting as if they were responding to a "for sale" sign outside and then pulling guns, police said. Gr eenhouse Va fi dals ' Hunted by Police Fountain Valley police today vtere investigating a weekend prank at Fountain Valley High School greenhouse that resulted in $550 damage. Police said someone entered the greenhouse Friday night or Saturday by Sicking in some plastic panels in the building, then smashed plants and shel\.ing inside the building. Damage to the building was estimated at $50. police reported, and to plants, shelving and pots at $500. T WO LINES SOLD GLASP AR DI NGHY Hert.'s an ad placed by a "man of re" words '' in the Daily Pilot tb;it really did th• job: 9' CLASPAR DINCllY 145. (Phone No.) The first caller bought the dlng~y. You can get yoor advertising job doof. too, with "a few ~~r<ls In the rig·. ~lace" In the classi fied section of the Daily Pilot. I Dial lhe dlrtet line to results. Phone M2-1 S678. I ' • • l '· • .. Olfly Pllet Stiff l'Mlt Covey of Eagles These seven scou'ts are t.he latest to reach Eagle status -scouting's highest pinnacle -in Hunting· ton Beach Troop 278. In front ~from left) are Bill Coopman, Richard J\•Ialoney and Dan Butler. Tn rear ffrom left) are Chris Zike, Doug Fukushima, Rob Castro and Robert \Valkcr. Kissinger Booed • Ill Israel GoUla Meir's Government Holcls Urgent Sessio1i JERUSALET\f (AP) -1srae1 i Emonstrators booed Secretary of Stale enry A. Kissinger today and Premier Ida Meir's government held an urger.t Cabinet session on Ki s singer 's Oetermined truce negotiatfons to end the war with Syria. Jerusalem sources said Israel would surrender no more captured Syrian land in exchange for the disengagement pact Kissinger seeks. but the cabinet kept ils deliberations se<:ret and a government "minister said only that negotiations \'ould continue. Frona Page 1 REINECKE ... siluation.'' Judge Parker has set the trial dat e for July 15, but Reinecke repeatedly said he wants lhe trial completed before voters decide on his bid for the IJOP nomination June 4. Reinecke has pleaded innocent to the perjury counts and charged that the nidlctment was politically motivatl'd. Reinecke, 50. contends that il would cost him at least $10.000 lo bring 20 defense witnesses to \\'ashington and th at he should be judged by his peers in California . Once vie,,..,ed as the leadi ng contend er in the California GCP primary. Reinecke 's standing in public opinion polls has slipped since he "'.'.' indicted April 3. Cit y Aide Quit s After Son Beaten SACRAf\fE~'TO (UPI) -Da\·is city pel"SOflnel manager Joe Owens has resigned to devote his tin1e to "reconstructing'' his relationship \.\'ilh his sons. Owens facts an assault charge in Sacramento Munlcipal Cou rt stemming ' from an incident invol ving his 16-year-old son. (hvens "'as arrested last month after he reportedly beat his son. Kevin. \1·1th a tv.·o-foot baseball bat after thl:' boy denied breaking into the house of O\.\·ens· eldest son. "I'm doing this for my s •:is." said Owens in announcing his resignation. "As their fath er, I'm ready to sricrifice my job. IJ ORAMGE COAST t.u DAILY PILOT Troe Or1nqe c.,.,, Oa!ly P.IOI .,..," _,." k ,...,.. II>....,!,_. "l•.-;·P'"'"'" oulllo......a ..... 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"'' Tti.,h ... 17141641·4111 Cl••Mfltd Act.erthl*J 641·567• l 1Qr'>NO<'l~()o.,.,.,..CA1""1~nl~ 540-1110 0oct.o pt ltrl Orl"IQrl' en,... l'ubl•"°'OQ Ce-_ l'ta,.,,...•~"""'"""""' ""'oo..i ... l!otf ... ·---...... _ ....... lot._ .... --..-..o-OIC..\Pf'l'9"'- ~tW."°"'-""""-'Criot1-r ... ..... -~-tl'tc."~•i..!00 .... .,,,,.,. ....... ~ ••eo-r•1 "'"':.,.-•300-Nr Kissinger is to fly back to Damascus Tuesday "'ith Israel's latest terms, 01 1~ indications were the Israelis were refusing to budge beyond the undisclosed truce offer they made three days ago. About 100 protesters -some of them pionee r settlers on the Golan 1-leights within sight of the daily arlillery war l\'ith Syria -shouted out the feelings of many Tsrae lis by yelling ;.Boo to Kissinger" as the secretary's car arrh•cd at ~"!rs. r•olcir's office for the morning talks. Dozens 1nore Israeli settlers defia ntly TO LEAD FISH FRY PARADE Grand Marshal Cowan Ranis' Tackle To Lead M esu Fi!i/1 Fry Parade • Los Angeles Ram.o:; tackle Charlie Co\\'an \\'ill ride at the head of the Costa ,\lesa Fi.Sh Fry Parade June I when the .'Je\•;port Harbor·Costa l\.1csa Lions Club celebrat<'s the 29th anniversary of 1hc charity c\'cnl. CO\\·an. 36, of Fullerton, has now playtd mon.> Ram games than any other iila~er in !he team's history. 1-fe started every one in 19i3 to bring his total to 179, 10 rnor(' than the nearc<;I teain n1embcr. '111c !hrce·n1ile pa rade \\'ill pass lhrough the do\vntown area of Cos1a ~lesa :ind 11 ill last <lbout t\1•0-and-onc half hours, acC'Ording to Parade Chairman Cliffor1I \\'es<lorf . 1\n estnnated J ,500 participant5 \\•ill be brought together for the 10:30 a.m. Sa!urd:iy parade . The Lions Clut rund raiser is scheduled lo begin at 5:30 p.m. May 31 at Costa ~lcsa City J>ark with the serving or Saturday parade. Club members hope fo gross $100,000 throu~ sales, a carnival, and other Fish Fry nt!ractions. lfnrbor Area mus.icians may regi.c;ter no,~ .. for a band l'Ontest scheduled June I . Applicallons are now available at R<!cili'!li'tosta f\.1csa Jewelry and Loan. 1838 Newport Ill\'d. Registration OIJf'nc; f\1ny 22 ::it Cal's Camera . 1780 Nc"·port Blvd .. for a bab y conl<'!JI schcdull'd :it the Fry June 2. Judging "'Ill be in two dfVisions for babies agf'd stx months tn 12 months nnd from 13 months lo 24 months. Girls 17 and oldtr "'ho "·ould like to ent~ !ht> ri.1is~ Mt'nnAld coolest and \\'in the OP1lOrtunJ1~· lo reign ovei-the f'1sh Fry shoulc;I <'Qn!a1..1 Dr. Bernard Simon, 540-1 lil or ~i-41 I l for applicallon fonns. .', mo\'ed into "'ar-blasted hOUS('S in the abandoned Golan capital of Quneitra tG prevent the govern m ent from relinquishing the ghost town for a truce treaty. Israel has reportedly offered to turn over half of Quneitra to U.N. forces as i buffer zone, and permit civilian Syrian residents to return to the town they ned during the 1967 Mideas( war. The exact official terms of the Israeli offer are still secret. ho\.\·ever. It was the I6lh day of Kissinger's l\.lideast mission. m a k in g the disengagement quest the Ion g est diplomatic effort he has made outside the United States since he became secretary of State. Israeli sources said earlier the gap in the disengagements negotiations with Syria is as wide as ever despite a report by Kissinger of some progress toward an agreement. f\tean 11+•hile, Israeli warplanes struck south Lebanon today, and eyewitnesses said the ancestral village of United , States Sen. James G. Abourez.k took the brunt of the attack. The Lebanese defense ministry said four persons \Vere killed in Kfeir village. including a woman, her six-month.old son and eight·year-old daughter ; rrve other children between 2 and 8 years old v.·ere wounded, and five houses were destroyed. A communique accused the Israelis of aggression. Abourezk, South Dakota Democrat, received a hero's welcome home in Kfeir last year during a tour of the Middle East. The Israeli military command said i•.s· ai r for:ce made a 2D-mlnute attack dtl · Arab guerrilla concentrations just north of the Israeli·Lebanese border near !\It. Hermon. The command said all planes returned safely. In Damascus, the Syrian command 1reported that its troops engaged lsrae!i forces in lank and artillery battles on Mt. Hermon and along the 40-mile Golan lleights front for the 63rd day. From POfle l HIGH RISE. •• project can also cover up to 50 percent 'of . the Jot surface. • • ._ Eadie said the ordinance will nc:Jw M submitted to the_ city's ·Envlr.onmental Review Board to determine if jt needs.a full environmental impact report (.EIR) or just a negative impact state'inent. If an EIR is not required, a J>lannfi:,g_ commiS!ion public bearing might be ~ ... on the ordinance in Jess than two tnQ.Dth1:. If a full report is required It max. !aike:: nearly five 'months. ;.: :- While the commerclal·lnduitrfal 'htgh. rise law goes through the environrri'entat. process, city planners will wofk ~OD: another ordinance for residentiaf ;Jiigt; rise. Eadie said. But he had no estiDJ•J'e~. on how long that migta ta'k~. ;. ... :.: From Pqe J ' ·-.. :!."'' .. -· LIBRAIUES ·• : :."·i~ . ..,._. with the cily council and mtfan'bers--'1ittil city staff May 22'. l" ;._;;a:;..": Councilmen wUI meet ooll<lde'lhe·-aw. on a one-day retreat to delve into tfiil lllll. financial picture for 1'74-7~ end ~ st.al( members direction for prepintJQ!t, of the budget. Public helrinllB .>fllt probably be held in Juot. . -· . •• Nixous Enjoy Vi it . Sl'JLLWATER, Okla. (AP) President NJ1on telephoned Oklahoma State University Prutdr.nl Robert Kamm Sunday to lbank him for tht reception tho President received at the &Ohoor• commcneemeot exercise• S 1 t. u rd a y night. Nlxoo told Dr. Kamm how he and Mrs. ·Nixon "enjoyt'd the warm, courteous reception they received ," in Stillwater . • , I -. . • • -• • • Findings :_on Tape Ga{>1 ' . • WiII ·'·''.Be Made Public · . ' . . . ' ... ) WASHll'(GTON (AP) -U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica said today be will make pubUc Jn aboRt.itwo we'eks the flqal report by a' panel of experts oft lhf fJin:- minute gap in a crucial~ White House Watergate tape. The gap Occurred in a tape recording of a conversation between President Nixon and then·White House chief of staff II. R. lialdeman on ,June 2;0, J972, Just three ·days after the break-in at lhe Democratic National headquarters in the \Vatergate office building in Washington. Sirica n1et for N·o hours today wilh representatives of the . White. House. special Waterg.ale prosecutor Leon but said the White llouse was '(fee to discuss It. Slrica said the report CQvcrl'd the tape ·with the 181h·mln ute gap but that the tape panel was continuing to work for lhe court on other tapes. lie declined to say how rpuch longer lbe panel would continue jts work . ri.-leany,·hiie, Nixon was quoted by a Cabinet member today as declaring "there isn't any chance ... whatever" that he will resign from the nation's highest office . Sec retary of llealth, Education and Dacress Cited I Weliare Caspar Wt'inberger said Nixon I mnde the d<.'elaralion in an Oval OfffCe ! meeting arter he raised \Vith the / President "the stt'adily i n c re as fli g : drumbeat of resignation talk.'' 1 \Veinbcrger said he expressed the hope the President would not resign. and 11he ; sai d, 'Don 't "'orry. There isn't il-i(IY chance Of that \\'hatcver.' •• 1 I ·n1e secretary's coinments were a 1 continuation or \Vhite House a,p d 1 Adn1lnistratlon denials that Nixon· 1ls i considering heeding increasing demands 4 for his resignation. .1 I .. RUMORS, RUMORS 'EVERYWHERE ON CAPITOL HILL, Page 4 WHAT SHAKES.PEARE 'SAID' ABOUT TRANSCRIPTS -Page 8 Hearst Says Blindfold Jaworski. and members of the expe rts panel. Then Sirica issued th is b r i e f Bolsters Convictions ~ •. , statement: . '·The final CQmprehensiv:e report of the court's advisory panel concerning the June 20, 1972 EOB (Executive Office Building) W111te House tape is to be printed as soon as possible for formal submission to the court. "Upon receipt of t.he report, it will be entered in the public record. "The court expects to re<:elve the report in approximately two weeks. "There are no plans to conduct hearings related to the report." J\.t e et in g with nporters aft.cir the conference, Sirica showed an inch·thick document which he said was the final report. He would not comment on its content. Just before the meeting, f\.1lchael Hecker, the Stanford University expert \\'orking on behalf of the White House , entered the court with papers he indicated were his report oo the same tape. Sirica would not comment on whether llecker submitted a report to the coun Valley's Human Services Agency Receives Funds . . Fouiilain Valley's nedgling humap services dePartment has '1 reeelved' 'a $~,000 push from the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The grant will be used to start an information referral service which will emphasize "putting people in touch With the right agen.cy," Coun.cilman Al Hollinden said. Hollinden heads the· council committee which is recOmmeoding duties for the new department. ~ grant is from community service project funds put up b'y the rederal governuient. ~ ' The city has alr,eady esta,blished lhe "citizens services desk'' at City Hall. It can be reaeh.ed by calling 962·2424, extension 205. liollinden said the city sta!f members a1so are at work on writing a comprehensive . human r, e s o u r c e s directory for' FoUtltal.n VaUey residents. A program detailing services for veterans, seaior citizens and those interested in Cdmmlinify bealth is f.ilso being developed, he said. Hollinden said his committee will funcLion until the appointment of a human services commission. He added he may have some ideas ·about the structure of that J)anel by JUtle. HILLSBOROUGH (AP) -Pa tr i r i a Hearst's father says the reponed discovery of a blindfold that may have been used on his daughter only confirms his belief she is ad.ing under duress. Cat B11rglars Strike Homes 111 W e.stclif f Newport Beach police are investigating a rash of cat burglaries whJch apparently took place early today in the Westclilf and Dover Shores areas. "We've had five reported this morning," a police spokesman said. He said the r1rst two cases U\vestigated v.·ere at the home of Jack Hanis, 1934 Highland Drive, and the home of ·Artyv Tisdail , 1808 Commodore Way. both in \V estcli!f. At the Harris home, a burglar had apparently entered through a rear porch· door and made off with $250 in cash while the residents were !let.ping. Tbe burglary took plal't bet¥1·een 2 a.m. and 5:30 a.m. A burglar entered through a den Ytindow at the'Ti!daiJ. home. police said. making off with $89 in cash and several credit cards, also while residents were sleeping. . J ~ •• ' · The lhiOI· hid . enf<t'li<I a.; Mme sometime between midnight and 7 a.m. Police said l;i.te f:bis :moming t~y are still investigatinf the o~diJ,ioaal ·three reported burglaries. They said so far they have QO clues as to whether the same person or perSOM were reeponsible for the thefts. Stunn1er Classes Attract 1,500 About 1,500 students already have registered for sumn'ler classes in the Huntington Beach City School District. and James M. l\tacon, airector of curriculum. today reminded parents that registration "·ill close ~tay 24. Classes will be held from June 17 through July 12 at Sowers Middle School for grades five through seven and at Kett1eti Smith and Burke schoOls for grades-~ne through four. ' Addiltonal information and enrollment forn1s have been given each child in the district.· Gover.lartetd:lf orJ~ Flow ''I've always kno"TI that she was taken against her "·ill fron1 lhe v e r Y beginning,'' nc\\'Sp.1prr ex e cu t i v e · Randolph A. ~!ears! told ne"'smefl ~ Sunday at his mansion in this San 1 Francisco suburb. ''J always felt she's 1 been coerced ." j f\liss liea rst. 20, has said in t"'O taped messages that she deci~ to join the terrorist Symbionese UtittaOon Army, "'hich lddnapeQ her Feb. 4. She is 30u~1 ' .... , by the J.'"Bt as a material v.itness to ~ SLA bank robbery. which l't'ilness to an joined in voluntarily. , Tht' blindfold is one or the items "'hicb The Chicago Tribune said Sunday wu found by federal investigators in a i!ltay 2. raid on a San Francisco apartment that" .. had """1 used by llle SLA. Huntington Trio .:" To Compete in Sc11ool Olympics ":' ,, 'Mlrce children from !he Ocean V!e..,,.. School District ha,·e qualified to CQmpetC .., in lhe California Special Olympics, Jun~'1 28 through 30 at. UCLA. The children qualified for the stale" contest at an area special olympics last month in Garden Grove. Results 0£ t~ meet ""ere just compiled. , ~· Those going to state are Kathy Lincolo.,., who placed SOO>lld in the girls' SO.yaiil dash at 7.9 seconds and first in the 1onr·· jump at four feet, four inches : aM . " Teresa Lyles. who placed third in UM=·. girls' penlalhlon. Both Teresa and Kathy ~ are from Nueva View School tn~· thmtington Beach. "II•• Also going to lhe state contest will bi11 Kathy Garrison, a spCcia1 educall0rtt0 student at Westmont School tlli'f' Westminste r. who v.·on firs t in the SOJ ,1 yard free style in swimming at 33!6 seconds and first in the 2$-yard back-4 stroke at 19.2 seconds. .:nl Several other Nueva View student.! Wfli'fJJ ribbons in the meet. Steven Linn came tit•· third in the boys' long jump and Jeffriy•.., Korver placed sixth in lhe boys' pentatfi1.' .. Ion . Sally Anaya was fourth In the glr~ pcnt.atblon, Robin Stapleton fifth an ' Julie Gonz3Jes sixth. John Batson plac fi~t in .his . heat in the 25-yard free sty~ sw1mm1ng. t ) .... ~ , .. "J0e did you turn on I/tat lire hydrant?" "Nah • i11m 'just standin' here watchin' it." "Aren't you afraid 11 will 'flood the street?" "N;h, it's not my department. l\:fy foreman 's over on the next s~eet." Thus was a slice of government life recently in old· J" Montreal, Canada. The water is clearly ~oin& through but the mail may be anollter question. • • A lo co an da al \' sa n to "'ll ' Pl\!lr or•; t presi Jone Jo have mi Iii ~~ type .,... nica r .. T .Al <Illy ama p disa '·· • I • •,.. DAIL( l"IL01 :J ' Truckers Brush Aside Call for Stril{e P l Ha111hurger Oli~ La.gurian Rnps 'Na tural Foods' F"rom Wlre Services .. ,..'"1 Ronald Deutsch, a Laguna Beach nutrition educator, thinks natural foods ~e nut llS healthy as some people claim and says a hamburger with every· : ing on it a.nd an order of Irles might be as nutritional as a school cafeteria \ID Ch. DEt.rrSCll OFFERED his theories over the weekend at the Texas A1edical Jissocialion's 107th annual meeting in Houston. . "As people push toward good nutrition they are misguided and they suffer for it," Deutsch said Saturday before ct gathering of pediatricians. "When "-'e consume our important foods vie choose badly." ' Ile said the obsession for natural foods has become a fad with a· boomer· ang effect. · "TllE WORD 'natural' is the most attractive word in [ood marketing to- day," he said. "Qu.ite often so called natural foods have no .additives, but they also have none of the needed vitamins and minerals." fie said a recent study of thm:! major fast food hamburger chains re- vealed a ju'rhbo hamburger, French fries and malted milk could have the same nutritiOnal value as the average school lunch -a meal he said is nutritionally lacking. But he said it is not the producers of foods who are to blame. "Marketing just re!ponds to the misguided wishes of consumers," he said. Use of Tax ltloney -Nixon H ol'ne 'Luxuries' .. Rapped by Investigator · .. : WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep. Robert E. Jooes (!>Ala.) of the !louse committee probing use of tax revenues on pr'~idential homes has aceused the adthinistration of spending for "frivolous luxuries" at Presi dent Nixon's San C.'Jefnente and Key Biscayne homes. ,"The Presidenl's aides have shown ~r judgment in the excessive spending of"'· tax dollars for improvement of presidential vacation facilities,'• said Jones. Jones said executi\·e branch agencies have spent more than $17 million in ronnection with thTee privately owned properties and office c o m p I e x e s , including Nixon's homes at San Clf;mente and Key Biscayne, Fla. A spokesman for Jones said the third propellly v;as the Xew York City cooperath•e apartment that Nixon sold several months after becoming president. bt4' the findings and recommendations of a l{ouse committee report listed the third pr~rty as a Bahamian retreat o"ned by' a Nixon friend. The report's findings make no mention o&the New York apartment. ;TI»e final draft o( a proposed report to. bq ._considered by the House Go\'emment ()fierations Committee says tha l i\ixon 's homes have cost $17.l million in federal funds. . O'he report also said the ' federal agencies should try to recover any ir9J>roper expenditures. Copies of the report have been distributed t o cOOunittee members. The Associated P~ was pennitted to take notes from OCjO copy. The report says the total includes $9 million for San Clemente, $8 mHlion for Kev Biscayne and $176.000 for a retreat ort:~rand Cay in the Bahamas \\'hich is o'#fled by Nixon's friend . Rohen H. Abplanalp. .White House Press Secretary Ronald W.Zlegler said Thursday night that the total includes such items as security ~. the cost of paper, desks and typewriters and the five.yea r cumulative ~.of maintaining presidential commu· nication.s. Two Live lf'liales • Take Spotliglit Although it was a dead whale which caused a stir among bystanders on a San Clemente beach today, two live ones dkt a performance or their own downcoast this pas\ w<!ekend. A\ San Onofre State Park a pair or yoang California gray "'hales cavorted nnr the surf line throughout most of the day while hundreds of guests watched in amazement. Park rangers said the baby mammals dt!appeared l&le in the afternoon. '· ··An honest report would show that out of the $17.l million referred to, only approximately $205.482 "'8.!I spent on the President's homes," Zie~er said. In comparison to federal expenditures on Nixon's propenies, Jones said, llM! cost for protection and r e I a t e d improvements during P r e s i d e n t Johnson's terms was $5.9 million. And. he 3dded. funds used in behalf of ea rlier presidents "~·as far less." "In the desire to provide the maximum protection possibl e for the naUon's leaders, the Congress has permitted the Secret Service to operate virtually free of restrain ti" said Jones. "The abuses in expenditures of funds at vacation facil ities . indicate greater management guidance is needed to prevent such occurrences in the future." "Secret Service officials. and other federal agencies acting with them. have abused the discretkln given them by spending tax i:_evenues for frivolOus luxuries unrelated to real security matters," Jones Olnduded. lli1islia ·w Puslies For Legislatio1t To Approve Gold Congressman Andrew Hinshaw (R· Newport Beach) is pushing a new law that would allow ~mi to buy, hold, sell or otherwise deal in raw go ld as do citizens of other ~ntries. "It should be the fwldamental r.ight of every American to invest his money in gold in and is in no way different from his right to invest in precious gems or grains," Hinshaw said. "The United states is almost unique among .rreev.11rld countries in prohibiting this Mght." he added. Hinshaw says f1is bill, which is in the CQmmittee process, would create a boom in the mining Industry, providing ll'lousands of new jobs and making the U.S. a major exporter of gold again thus reducing the country's balance of payments deficit. r "As the price of gold continues to rise .{Ind as confklence in the dollar erodes. it fs only fair tllat our citizens be allowed this investment as a hedge against inflation." Hinshaw said. He said the Tr:easury Department bas already permitted two A m e r i c a n companies to buy and sell gold out.side of the country to foreign natiooals. "American clUzens ll.'ho purchased $1.000 \\'orth of gold in 1971 would have had $3,293 in January of 1974, •· Hinshaw said. "During the same period, the pun:haslng power of $1.000 has declined to $853.17." Carpenters Jn County Study Strike • Representatives of the Carpenters District Council or Orange County met in Santa Ana this morning to discuss local acttoii in a planned strike ' which may 3ffect 40,000 carpenters throughout Southern Cllifomia. Council empk>yes rerused to give out any information pending the outt'Ome of the meeting. A stalement by the organization was expected late this artemoon. The action is being considered 'by carpenters over a :m-ceot·an-hour pay increase won last year, ·but eliminated later by the federal Pay Board. Negotiating witll contractors last year, the union won an 85 cmt an hour raise which the pay board suboequenUy reduced to SS cents. Terry Slauson, an administrative assistant for the Los Angeles County car,>enter"s council said thai the e:rect of strike action on loca1 contractors is hard to predict. ''It depends on how many individual contractors go along witll our position and how many go along with the contractors association's position," he said. Dan Peterson, chairman of the bargaining committee for four employers associations, Sunday termed the strike "clearly illegal." Contractors are expected t.o seek a court injunction to stop the wa lkout. The carpenter's contract does not expire until June 15, but, because the pay board and federal eronomk controls have been abolished, they want tbe raise immediately. Paul Aliller. head of the Southern California Carpenters Council, sakl, "tf the industry tries to bold out in a prolonged strike against just prop>Sal9. then "·e will have oo choice but to seek parity with the No'rthem California carpenters." Current wages for Southern California carpent~ are $7.05 an hour, with an additional $2.41 in fringe benefits. Northern California carpenters receive about $1.50 an hour more. According to union spokesmen, some carpenters have already refused to go to "'Ork at 30rne companies. They refused to say, however, how many companies '"' affected. "We woa't call It a strike lHltil the pickets go up," Miller said. "If the individual contracton pay the raise, we stay on the job. If they don't, we'll stay away." This '11.<LS the second labor dispute to idle a portion of the Southern '"'.alifomia building industry in a tittle more than a week. Bricilayers went on strike ~lay 6. The carpenters council co n t r a c t embraces the counUe& of Orange, Los Angeles. San Diego, Riverside, Ipiperial, San Bernardino, Ventura, Santa Barbara. San Luis Obispo, Inyo, Kern and Mono, Boy, 2, Struck By Cycle, Hurt A 2-yoor-oid boy injured whJe visiting San Onofre State Park ove the weekend "11s reported in guarded condition today alter being struck by a motorcycle, Park rangers said Kenneth Richard Prees suffered multiple injuries Saturday evening when he ran into a roadway near his family 's campsite and was struck by the cycle. The boy was taken·to Orange County ?1-tedlcal Center in a private car after the C1:1llision. 11ie cycle's . driver, Crunp Pend~ton A1arlne Larry Edward Dellinger, was not cited after the 8 p.m, mishap. The accident occurred only a few feet from the area where the bey's father, . Arnold Prees or El Monte had set up camp. · cience· Welcomes ' Whale Dead Levilltlian Comes AshQre iU:.S,an Clemente ' By JOUN VALTERZA Of "" °"" ...... ,, .. tons of dead and ripening ia iJ'IY whale came ashore at the emtnle pier this mornlng amid and celebration. :Ar:;d an exultant crew of scienUsts and s6tdents from the Los An&eles County ~um of Natural l111tory went to work l ately to dl-1 the .,,....,, or a female leviathan whJch had been off the south Coast throughout eek end. Yachtsmen first spotted the whale on ~turday, said spokesmen for the harbor J#>I at Dana 1-larbor and by S.unday nl~t. the remains had drifted to the pier nrea. "\Ve had B rew options,·· said San Clemente Ufegua rd Chief Dick Hazarn, ,..but' this one ts by tar the be!lt, beclu&e ' . I it creates the fewest problems." '!be crew fn>m tJfi county museum , he said. Is CSpedally 1n1e ... ted in saVlng the complete sktl•too of the mimmal. "They were excltOci bt<llllf lhls find Is so rare. Mo6l ot the· time the carcisses an only partial and"mucb farther gone than this cm," he added. • .i~1~:l:° .f~~ .:.·:-: powerful aroo>a' surt<>li!ld<d t h c imammal, changing pUl!s of wind <&used the lesa hardy 10 4CU\T)' up the beodl 011 occasion. SP<!l<esn>.eo for: the crow termlld the discoverx •'• ~al find,'' however because the animal had only been dead for several days and was perfect for sclcntirlc purposes. No the.<lrles were off~ on th• ]>08Slble cause of death ol the young whale. but Hazard 11id accidents with -" at ...... common daring whale m~. '·~-rn.. the ... ol the 18'!06t --~ M;lmtlita said It appeored .... WU "-born dmin&' the-S-o.u \ h WI rd mtgrallun ol the California· cray whale btnl. That Jluiit etl4od early thi3 year. The yoanpter died, apporenUy, during the Northward migration of the herd all•r the females gave birth to their youn1 In Scammool's Lagoon off Baja Calllomla. Hau\rd said the sctmtlftc effort today was a boon to hls department and others. "Usually, when thcoe thing• W11sh up we've gi>t nothing but problems trying to gel, Md of them. Most of the time they'll &link up an entire section of beach before the problem gets solvtd," he said. "Thir way we're helplrlg aclence alon Md 110meone •is• will got rid of t problem for us." be added. ' ' A: • • ' ' Standing Ovatioti • Singer Vikki Carr weeps as a crowd of 600 in San .t\ntonio, Texas, gives her a lO·minute standing ovation at Holy Cross ~li gh School. Vikki, a native of El Paso, is credited with savihg the school fron1 financial disaster with benefit performances since 1968. Martinis Probably IIar111 Stomach, Researcher s Say HOUSTON, Tex. (AP )'-Those two or three martinis you have before lunch or dinner may make you feel great. but they also, may be killing off part of your stoniach. according to two medical researchers. Dr. Llnda L. Shanbour. a University of Texas l>hysiologist , and Larry L. Tague . a resciarch associate, said studies of animals show that rapid consumption of cocktails causes tile lining or the stomach to erode and start bleeding. The researchers based their comments on laboratory studies done with dogs, but Dr. Shanbour said she felt the effect "probably occurs in humans also." The alcohol i~lf is not doing the mischief, the ~rchers said in an interview. The alcohol breaks down a Coiv Chip Toss Records N otclied ATLANTA (U PI) -Tu'O P.fercer University students claim the world's cow chip tOiSsing title for both men and women. · Sylvester Sekyere, • 19, of Ghana , Africa, tossed one of the deodorized and dehydrated chunks 229 feet and Debbie Strycula, 20, of nearby Decatur, heaved one 106 feet Saturday. Sponsors of the charity fund·raising affair Friday said the old records of 161.9 feet for men and 99 feet for women were at Beaver, Okla, where the annual cow chip throwing contest is held. complex transportation sys1em ·within cells which normally carry acids into the stornach. As a resu lt. the acids start acting on the gastric mucosa. or stomach lining. Within 30 minutes after consumptiorl of two or lhm:! martinis, they said. part o(' the stomach lining is rotted away by the acki and hemorrhaging occurs. "If it were not for the rapid regenerative capacity of the gastric mucosa ." said Tague, "the incidence of perforation and bleeding would probably cause ethanol (alcohol) to be classified as a poisonous material." The damage is healed within 48 to 72 hours, they said , but \\ill recur· with the next binge of drinking. Erosion or "the stomach membrane may be the primary cause of gastritis, an ailment she described as "one of the major symptoms of the daily drinkfr." A1oming-after habits or many drinkers merely aggravate the ailment. said Tague. A·lost drinkers suffering a hangover will reach for an aspirin-based drug. "Aspirin alter drinking heavily is actually the worst thing you could do," said Tague. "Here you 've got a mucosa (stomach lining) trying to. repair itself and aspirin aggravates the problem." -1-Ie l{ills Wife, Self SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A 59-year-old Sacramento man shot and killed his wife this morning and then killed himself, the coroner's office reported. Authorities identified the mas as Francis Hicok . FuelP1'ice Rolll1ack Seei1asAim By United Press tnternadoo1I The country's independent t rue k drivers toda y all bul ignored a call for a nalion\Vide strike to force a rollback in fuel prices and an increase in the SS.. n1iles·per-hour speed limit. The s1rike r('sulted In some vlolence in Pennsylvania but had almost no effee:t on truck traffic in that state, regarded as the focal point in the truckers' protest. Strike coordinators said truck traffic • \\'as "down appreciably" in Utah and about 80 percent effective in ~fontana and Colorado. but elsewhere across 1'1e country the situation "'as reported nor-mal. · · The call for a nation\vide !ruck shutdo,\n, scheduled to have sta rted Sunday midnight, was issued by Overdrive !\lagazine. whose editor. ~1ichael Parkhurst, predicted more than 90.000 drivers \~ould take part. Overdrive is an independent truckers' publication. In addition to lo"·er fuel prices and higher speed limits, Parkhurst said, the truckers sought an audit of oil company books and the ri ght for small truckers to haul manufactured goods in C1:1mpelition ''"ith the big trucking companies. Pennsylvania Gov. A1ilton Shapp. '''ho dou bted the strike would take hold in his state. "·arned the truckers not to resort to violence. as occurred during a widespread two-week walkout in early February. Jn fh.e February \\'alkout. two truck drivers ,,·ere killed, scores injured, and vandalism was frequent. Despite Shapp's "'aming thal the l'\ationa! Guard "·ould be called if needed, there was sporadic violence in Pennslylvania in the early hours of today·s strike. A sniper on a bridge --·over the Pennsylvania Turnpike near Breeze~'OOd. a major high>A•a y intersection, fired a bullet through the windshield of a state Police patrol car. The bullet missed trooper Donald Caldwell. 28. and he brought his vehicle to a safe halt. Pennsylvania State Police reported at least ~O incidents of rock throwing and slashing of ai r hoses, but there were no injuries and no arrests. In Utah, strong winds gusting up to 51 miles per hour helped keep truckers off the road, but coordinators of the Utah shutdown said the strike would be 75 percent effective regardless of weather conditions. Neiv Bus Service Bo<tsts Nearly Ca7J<tcity Loads New bus service by the Orange County Transit Di.strict to the Saddleback Valley. San Juan Capistrano, and San Clemente began today with "almost full" reports from early morning commuter run drivers. The heralded transit expansion, linking the Soutll County with Santa Ana and the beach Crom a new hub at the Laguna Hills Mall, has been made possible by the purchase of 63 new buses for the county neet. The new routes. number 85 and 91, will run on an hourly schedule Monday through Saturday from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. with free transfers and a 2.5 cent charge. "We expect ridership to pick up," said an ocrD operations d e p a r t m e n t spokesman. "A lot of information has not been distributed yet and we are taking every chance to do that."' -~--~~~~~~~~-'---~~~~~~~~- I • A birthday party is a cake. presents. an11 a Ruth of CarOlin.a dress from The Red Balloon. Ltd. Andrea Coal~s is wearing a party dress from !he Ruth's Orl91nar Couture Collection. Andrea is a student at Carden Country Day School and !he daugh ter or Mr. & Mrs. Norman Coates of Yorba Linda. THE RED BALLOON LTD. I fOM'.latou""''"' ~ tr1•1~ ~flNOTOl'<tM.,lli90Uft /114) ... 18'4 • • I ·I OAILV PILOT Monday May 13, 1q74 ~~~~~~...:==-=:....:..:.:..:~ Just i-'\ Coasting,~ J t.<f'. ~ ' 1 • ~)jf'l')I' with Tom orphine Chippi11g 111 For Caspers RICKY TICKY POUTIC: Some evidence exists today that ttie election race for our coastal Fifth District supervisorial scat is heating up. "1oney -the root of all politics -may be the cause or the warming up. Ju.<>t over this past Yo'eekend it was divulged in the public prints that the Fifth Disrtict incumbent, Rooald Gaspers of Lido Isle, \Vill be having a tittle 44th birthday party dov.•n in San Diego. It may be son1ething special. Gue st"i were invited by h av i n g dispatched unto them a dozen long· stemmed roses and a classy parchment paper invite. THE CHOSEN ONF.S will then be nown via chartered jet from Orange County Airport lo San Diego whereupon limousines will transport them to the \Vestgate Plaza llolel for a IiUle gourmet snack. Oh, yes, there ~·as one little item . Because of the lushooss or this whole afrair, the guests are going to be picking up the tab. The price of admission in this case is $1 ,000 per couple. At !hat going rate. it's a good lhing I ·~rasn't invited. On my pocketbook, l •couldn't even finger the.finger bowl. IF 1,000 CLAMS is the price of jetting to dinner. l couldn't park at the airport. ~ tn_ addition to the $1 ,000 in Ha ppy Birthdays to Ronald. rccennll!Ws ttport._· have indicated that an outf it named the "Friends of Ronald Caspers" has, so far , gathered some $124,000 tor use in getting their friend re~lected Fift:t District. Supervisor. • • Sketclay Evidetice Of that sum oollected by lhesc friends, it was also ieported lhal lhe treasury has a surplus or more than $80,000. HAVING FRIENDS like I-has to leave Supetvis« Caspers with a \'Cry warm feeling inside. If not in lUs heart , .. at least in hi! wallet pocket. Although injured by the hit and n1n auto that killed his companion. Ja1nes R. Seara 1top left) scratched the auto's license nun1ber into the guard rail (shown below) with his fishing knife Saturday. Bruce Bedell (top right\. 15. was killed as he and James walked on the shoulder of the highwa y near Chicago. A Ch icago y,•01nan was later arrested at her home. ----------------- With friends like these. you may never have to "·orry about you r enemies. As a malter of fact. you may not have any. Rumors Abound on Hill or course, Caspers does have some political opponents in tbis election who must look on all his campaign cash with considerabl e envy and di ~ may . ONE OF HIS PRIME C001petitors is l\Iarcia Bents of Newport Beach, the forn1cr grand jury foreman \Vho has said considerable in the past about excesses in spending of campaign funds. Tllle.~ Range Froni Resig1iation to Trir>le Splitups II has further been reported !bat l\1rs;. Bents has called a press conference lod ay to speak words upon the same subject. · . You have to suspect that some of l\frs. Bent's words will be dispatdled in I.he direction of the F'ri.ends of Ronald f caspers and y,•hat they've done with their • treasury. f TllE ANNOUNCED purpose of Mrs. Bents' press confab it to talk about campaign !!pending of her opponent. I don't know how much spending l\1r. Caspers h88 done so far in this campaign · but one thing is for sure. He'!! doing a great job of collecting. ~1agazinc Oyna1nitcd l\1 1All-1I (UPI) -The offices of Cuban e:cile magazine "Replica" "'' c re dynamited early today in what police sources said y,•as a continuation of political unrest in l\fi ami 's "Little Ha vana" section. Danlage to the door. a\\.11lng and the office inside "'as extensive. WASm NGTON (UPI) -\Vashington. a t0\\11 that thrives on rumor , is be set by apocryphal stories about President Nixon -he is about to resign: he is ill -and \Vhitc House denials that they arc "\1T011g, absolutely wrong.·· "There's no panic dov•n here ," one Locusts Drive F a1nilies Ou.t OLD FORT. ~.C. IUPll -A horde of locus!s s"·armed over a rural arra nl'ar here today, threateninf.! to pcst('r a fe\\' fAmilies 10 !hi' poi11t of leaving their hon1cs. ' '1· h e y · re just all over cverylhing." said retired sctlool teacher J\frs. George Grindsta ff. "You '.l.·ouldn't belil'\'e it unless you sa11.· it. .• She sald the locusts f i r s l appeared about l'l''O "'eeks ago and no~· cover a!mos! evE"rything abovr ground in Cl JOO-acre ~rea. \\'hile House official said. "Everyone is concerned. yes. I sense more panic outside than insidt." THE RESJGNAnON rumor built up last \/,Uk as a few Republican leaders began to suggest the president step aside. On three separate days this y,•eek, deputy press secretary c;erald L. \Varren responded to reporters by saying Nixon had no intention of resigning and e,·er;· intent ion of completing his term of office. One While · House aide said he y,•as getting exasperated. "I don't know ho"· I can emphasize that morale is high here and the President is continuing with the business of the people," he said. "''The President believes t ha l \\'ate rgate is a constituticnal problem ,,·hich "ill be settled in the I-louse, and if not there then in the Senate." Another widespread rumor "'as that James D. St. Clair. Nixon's chief \\rat c.rgate la\vyer. had become dis- enchanted and v.-anted to resign. It \l,'flS perhaps based cm a comment at the opening of impeachment proceedings Thursday when St. Clair said. "I'd rather be back in Boston practicing law." "ABSOLUTELY wrong," said a high \\'lUte House official. "St. Clair is North Continent's Wet Gule-strengtli. Wi1ids Siveep :.4cross Eastern Great Lakes .•111-11"" A!lt n!• l!0$1C<> Bu!!alo cnu1011t C/lltaoo clnc•n~ttl Ctevtl•'l<I 0.11 .. , Ot11~•· ~t·' w-111111 l(•n$•\ Cl!v Ltl Vll!Cl•I I · 1l~Y1llt Ml•ml ''"w~u•et Ml.,...•DOh' N1w Orit i"\ l•tllflUIMI DELIVERY SERVICE Oeilvery cl ill 0.111 Pilot is i~ranltt:d 11!°"'1y fr!Uy: II ,.. Ill 1111 Ul'1 1tur p11111 -, S:ll ' 1t ut Ml 1tlll' "" 'I':• ... II.pl II fMI ~ Mt lllltt flli 1;3' , .. SltlfMy Jl4 SallfJY M flt N llfl !Klf'lt yt1f Ctfl' ., t 1 llt $.llll'by, "' I ; t. ~": u1 "" 1 "'' •I " weocM ,,. YH C.il1 1t1 Vl;tl llli 11 111 I elC(ill!les fllnl DrJll(I CllOll!y Arvs , 542·'311 lltttnlll .....,,.1 .. ludl "" '""'"'"' uo. mo $.Ill ~t. '•"II ... IUCL $.Ill~ ~11-. Dw ,_t, ""''"" ·-.... lll·llll ' Ult WI A1tltJOIOC:43.t &\ ~tw Yon u ., ~l•!>Offl• (ll'f " ~,,.,·II• " ~~ ~·,.,., ~~·!r:1 ~ ~ !llldt Dll t 1&t ll Plloitllll! Pilhtll.lrth ~ "irll•nll, °"Ji· II cflmotld I . •• SKrtl'l'ft~f,, f ~'· ~' >•" t't Cltv " .. ~·n •t Pl<lWO tt • 4••11• " T""'"11 ll " wa.r1ttioror1 " S. Cnllfor11ln c ·,u•t! .... "'"'" .. , ' " " • 1; " "' 1l•t • tlOIND-----. ~IAIN r,~i!JS .. OW ~ ..._All ~SMOW'l •S , flOW CoMtnl WPnllt,,.,. CIOV¢V Wlffl 1 tlllfl(t of dl'lu!11. MOll!Y SUl'll'l'I' llltMllY. Hltlll In !tit 10\, Llfl'll Yl rltblt WI~ bttOnll"O w.st.,.lr tour to t'IOM ~1'111'11 I011!9'1!, Orte 10 '"'"" '°°' ""'""'¥ _., ,..,,,, wl"d Vt'IY41S I" lllt •fltr"'OOr\t, lnll'>d 11m11trtt11rt11 11. W~••r twinpw1tvr1 $f . S1111, /tloo11. Tide. MOHOa,Y $ecotld ,lll9'1 •• . S:U #.,.,.,, )i &econd IOW' • 10110 "·""· J, TUISOAY Fl"I hltl'I . • •• . l 1i1 1.1'!1. l.J Fir" low 10•40 "'""· 0 I Sf<ond 1ti9ll S·ft fl"' •.O StcOlld '°"" 11 d fl ""· ) I 51111 rl,11 j•~ • ""• ff!' f IJ ~ ""· MOOll rlUI 1;00 •It\• \Ill 11 IM JI"' representing the President. \Ve're hoping the true facts "''ill come. 'rhe official responded \\'ith the ansv.'er "absolutely wrong and totally "rong" lo !hcsc other rumors which have hit the \\fhite House in the past fe\v da ys: -That Nixon had suffered a slight stroke near his right eye. -That Senate and House Republican leaders had oome to the \\'hite House to urge Nixon to resign in order to save the Republican Party in the f a 11 congressional elections. -That Ni~on had summoned his cabinet to announce that he "'as quitting. -That Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger had been summoned back from his Middle East mission to be on band for an irnrrti nent resignation. -TilAT TIIE NIXON'S daughters and son.s·in-law, Julie and David Eisenhower and Tricia and Edward Cox. "·ere br<'aking up. The rumor about breaking up also spread to the President and his y,·ife. Julie responded to it Saturday in a ney,·s conference when she said her mother told her. "This "'ould be exciting if we could find a third pan.y." u ,1 TtltPMlt 'lle's n Talker' Dollv Saxbe. wire of outspoken Atto'rncy General William B. Saxbe, says It's awfully hard to shut him up. The attomey gen· eraJ's rc1narks have gotten him into repeated controversy and earned him U1e reP.utatlon as the new Martha M1tchcll. • • S11pretl1e Court -·~ ' . Wiretap Method' -· •• Termed 'Illegal' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ruled unaniously today that the Just.ice Department Wlder form e r attorney general John N. l\lhchfll coosi~iently violated the law in ils procedures for obtaining w i r et a p evidence. The 9 to o decision probabl y kills narcotics and gambling pro&ee\ltions invol ving hundred& of persons which have been pending ln various courts awaiting a ruling on v.'hether the evidence can be used . The department had argued that al y,·orst it had committed only "hannless e1Tor" which had not endangered anyone's privacy. . JUSTICE BRYON R. \li'hite v.T0tc opinion.'I in tv.'O highly complex cases on the dW'irt.ment's hand.ling or wiretaps. ln the ol.her the department was upheld by a 5-4 vote. The decision hinged on an inltrprctation · of the omnibus CrinlC Cont rol Act of 1968. which contai ns ve ry specific provisions for applying to a trial judge fOf' a v.·iretap order. Tornadoes Laslr By United Press International Tomadoo hit Jo'lorida, Georgia and South Carolina Sunday, killing at least !h ree persons and causing nearly $1 mil- lion ln damages. Georgia was hardest hit . All four \\'ho died resided therl'. At li!lst 18 others ~·ere injured "''hen a tornado struck trailer home parks in Glennville and Savannah. ONE PERSON was hurt in Florida and another in South Carolina. and the National Weather Service Issued tornado warnings for parts of North Carolina . Virginia , l\l aryland. Dela"·are, New Jersey, New York, Ve rmon t . f.lassachusct.ts and Connt-cticut Civil defeMC spokesmen estimated damage at $500.000 in South Carolina and at least $200,000 in Georgia. There was no immediate damage est.imale for the Florida area, but several frame houses and a number of mobile hool es \\'ere either destroyed or damaged . Antimissile Gun Aims i11 on Isle, Friendly Vessel \VASlllNGTON (AP) - A Gener.'ll Accounting Office report says the Navy's new Phalanx antim iss ile gun malfunctioned §o badly in its first test that it "threatened to sink" a Ca\ilomia island and a friendly sh ip. 'Ibe rep>rt. released Sunday by Rep . Les Aspin (0-Wi!I. ), said the radar- controlled, self-firing gun "trapped. locked on to and declared as a threat" the U.S. Navy sh ip USS Hollister. Also, the gun's electronic aimino: system zeroed in on Santa Barbara Island. off the Southern California coast. confusing the island for a fast-moving target. according to the GAO report. \Vhile the Phalanx is de!ligned mainly as a "last ditch dtfense" against enemy miss ile.!. It can also fire on planes and other ships, the GAO said . Aspin, a member of the House Armed Services Committee. said the initial tes's cast seriou!I doubt whether the Phalanx i!I worth any further funds "out of our already-bloated defense budget ." He added : "Certainly. we have no urgent requirements for an automatic gun that at~k! islands and frlend.ly ships." • 11\C statute requires authorization by the U.S. Attorney General himself or a "special assist.ant attorney gcnctaf!11 J\.fnnv of J\.1 ltchell 's au1horl:1Jtlions "''ere issued by his executive assistant, SOI Lindenbaum. A second issue focused on v.·hat have become kno'il.n as ''\Viii Wilson Letttts .. -"iretap pennissions to U.S. attorney,. in the field whic h former assib1ant attorney general \Viii Wilson v.·as oblig~ under lavo' to sign. Instead they w~rc signed by deputies. · 7 Da1igerous-; Me11 Souglit ,4 f ter Escape ' YPSILANTI , Mich. !UPI) -PiUCf c:irricd oul an intcnsi\'e manhw1t tcKtay in southC'rn r-.11chigan. serking S<'\'Cn C'Xlrl'mely dangerous ffi('n who ned .,We state's facility for the criminally insAAr in t11.·o .~paratc Sunday breakouts. Fi\'e other priwners "·ho est·apcd 1rr,rt recaptured \\'ilhin hours. Police "'nrnNI n1otori<i\S they shouW not stop for hitchhikers and said W ( IN SHORT ... ,) seven n1en al large y,·ere "extren1<'ly dangerous " Th;·ee of the1n were Detroit men being held on murder charges. e Ohio R iot ATHENS. Ohio (UPI ) -At lea.st45 pcr."-ons y,·e re arrested and 20 others, including three policemen . in j u r ed Sunday in the second day of confrontations bct'.l.·een youths and police near Ohio t.:niversity. Poli ce fought "·ith over I , 0 0 0 yoWJgste-rs after about 500 young people, including students , blocked a major do"''nlo"·n intt'rSCClion ntar campus. Sgt. Donald Atwell said police tried to k~ the cro11.·d on the campus and out of the city of 20.000. ecnpsi%ed l\11Al\11 (UPI) -Fifty.four persorV> and seven goats were rescued from tile. stormy Gul f Stream Sunday after a small freighter capsized on a rock 270 mile:ii southeast of Mian1i. ...., 'The 45 passenger!! and nine crew members aboard the nlO(or~hip San S<1lvador ~;xpress spent several hours clinging to the 10.by-20..foot rock after •e 112-foot niter-island freighter s;1nk .short- ly after sailing from Nas.<>au, Bahamas, early Sunday. ' e Galbrnlll1 Tnlk NOR~1 A.N , Okla. (AP! -Harvard economist John Kennl'lh Galbrallh'li cornmencement speech al the Univeniity of Oklahoma y,•as interrupted. several times by boos as he blasted President Nixon and his beleaguered i::dmin~ lion. Galbraith's Sunday address came ciie day after the President was warm11, greeted at Oklahoma State University ITT.'. StilJy,·ater, "'h<'re he delivered tha( school's rommencemcnl add re.s ~ Saturday night. ~ 1 e Chou Aill119 . ' PEKING (UPll -Chinese Premierl Chou En-lai. 11.·ho co1nplained ea rlicr-wl not feeling \Yell because of his aj(C) concele<t a round of talk., todav wn.hl Pakistani I)rime J\linister Zulfik.&r Al~ BhuUo, a Pakistani go\' er n m e.n e spokesman said. The spokesman said only !hat the 7:>- year--0ld Chou was oonva\escin~ following "a recent indisposition." When Bhutto and his delegation arrived Saturday for a four-day official vl9il , Chou told him : ''[ am not very "·ell because l am old." Agnew Who? I Ex-J'P U11.1ioticell i11 Athe1is ·' ATHENS (UPI) -The waiter at the Athens Hilton turned to the tall, tanned man sipping a drink at the hotel bar. ,• "The.re's a phone call for a Mr, Agnew." the wailer said. "You know who he i!I?'' .. "Yes." the man replied. putting down his drink. "ThRL's me." It was a far cry from 1971 when Spiro T. Agnew visited Greece as vice-< president, receiving a hero's welcome and a key to the city of Athens. Agnew, 800 ol a Greek barber, was virtually unnoUoed Sunday when he returned to hi!! ancestral homeland. There were no parades, no wreaths, none of the ceremon.i.al trappings of bis earlier vi.sil "I am on business," Agnew told a newsman who npproached him at the !Dlton bar. Asked to elaborate, he sa;d. "private" and abruptly ended the con- venaUon. Sourcts at the Hilton ~d he ls looking for employment with Creek shlpowners. "He is on his own," a U.S. emba!ISy spokesma n said . "lte did not make contact with us llnd we do nOt expect him to. Ile Is just like any other visitor." Agnew resigned as vice president last yc.ar. pleading no contest to a charge of lncomo lal evasion in a Maryland kickback Reandal. J{e checked into a single room at the Athen!I llilton, which assigned him a 'il.'hole noor three year~ before to accommodate scores of American and Greek .security guard~. · Agnew stlll has many relatives in Gargalia nol , where trls father. Ted Anag. nostapoulos, worked as a 'oorber before migrating to the United States. Wh<n Agnew visited the town In 1971 . br•ss bands played and children dressed In thel.r Sunday best held wreaths for him to walk undc.r, •ns Greek 't friend! and relatives expressed shock on hearin& of his rc.!lignatlon but said • th<y were stltl proud of him. · "He will alwAys be welcome here," Gargallanol mayor Dlonyslos Pana- ghopoulos 1tld al tile lime. I -- . ' WAS assist a he nev .Reinec ii lie Jose during Court defense case a u defense lbe tria One Jomes deknd ag<nls intervi p the wi afty di Reblec possibl ReiDec alleged bring C01wen "I JER demo Henry Golda cabinet <t,lerm war wi -Jeru surre in exc Kissin detiber minist would ·Kissi Tbesda mdfeat . . .. • t Toclny's F l11al N.Y . Stocks VOL. 67, NO. 133, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES -ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFOR NIA MONDA Y, MAY 13, 1974 N TEN CENTS t ;;Bus To Be Nanaed--Not for Aunt Helen ::1 · f . :•:'" .-. ; ~--By L. PETER KRIEG • 01 tl11 04lllY Piiot Sltfl ; .. iwport Beach councilmen will pick a bf~e tonight for the city's new bus line ~uled to begin service on a trial basis ~month. ... 1l?ey'll choose the name from a Hst·of MJ'inalists selected by a.committee late Ffiday altemoon . 1bere were 472 ent ries in the month-Jooi contesl co-sponsored by the Orange ~ League of Women Voter.s. . --"The names still in" the running are the . Perjtcry T1·ial Newport Navigator, Newport Sunshine Shultle. the Newtransporter, the New Portabout, the Harbor Hopper and the Orange Coaster. David Badger, 547 Santa Ana Avenue, probably has the best chance of winning because two of tbe six names he entered "'ere picked as finalist!. He thought up tbe Harbor Hopper and lhe Newport Navigator. The. Newtransporter Is tbe , entry of Doug Gotfried, 1133 E. Balboa Blvd. Mrs. George· Oclhers, 609 St. James Road, 'Immunity' Not ·Given Reinecke WASHfNGTO N (AP l -A Ylatergate assistant prosecutor test ified today th at be never orrered Callrornia Lt~Gov. Ed .Reinecke immunity rrom prosecution it 1Je cooperated in the 11T investigation. Joseph J. CoMOlly made the statement during a hearing berore U.S. District Court Jud ge Barrington Parker on delense motions to dismiss the perjury case against Reinecke. U the case is not dismissed . the defense attorneys planned to argue that the trial should be moved to California. One of Reinecke's three attorneys, James E.. Cox. contended that !he defendant v.·a.s "mis led and entrapped by agents of the government" during interviews with the special Wat~rgate prosecutor 's office. Connally, under cross.examinaLion on t!Je witness stand, denied that there was any discussion 'A·itb !'·rank Pagliaro Jr., Relbecke's attorney at that time, abo ut possible imrnuni1y from prosecution if Reinecke told all he knew about an alleged offer fro m an IT'T subsidiary to bring the 1972 Republican .Na'tional Convention to San Die go. ''I don't remember Mr. Pagliaro making any suggestions that h e (Reinecke) not be indicted ," said Connolly. But Connolly said "it was clear to me that what ~fr. Pagliaro wanted was that his client wouldn 't be charged." Connolly said he warned Pagliaro that Reinecke could be indicted in the case. "Did you tell ~1r. Pagliaro that the investigation was proceeding rapidly and if Reinecke wanted to cooperate he had better do it right away?" Connolly was asked. . The prosecutor replied that he did not have any recolleciton of making that remark. When Cox pressed for a yes or no answer. Connolly said, "I didn 't make a statement that it was a now or never situation." Judge Parker has set the trial date for July 15. but Reinecke repeatedly said he wants the tliaJ completed before voters decide on his bid for the '}OP nomination June 4. n.ineoke haa pleaded innocent to the perju\1)' coljlfts and charged that the nidlctmenl was ~~lcally motivated . Reinecke, 50, contend! that It would cost him at least $10,000 to bring 20 defense witnesses to Washington and that (See REINECKE, Page ZI ~Kissinger Booed submitted the name the Orange Coaster. New Portabout is the entry from Kristin Butcher, '112 Sapphire Ave . and the Newport SUnshine Shuttle was suggested by Kurt KJug, S:'l Harbor Island R<>ad. 'Ibe qame ~sen will earn ils author a free bus pass for the summer and a $25 gift certificf te from Fashion Island merchants. The second place wiMer will get a $10 ·gift. certl!lcate and the third place winner will receive a $5 gift certificate . Re-elected • \Veit NewPort rCouncilman Donald ti1clnnis was elected today lo his seCond consecutive term as the city's mayor. He was selected by his City coun· ell co lleagues to serve in the post for the next two years. Ill Israel Gol<la .lt>(eir's Gover1imen.t Holds Urgel'it Session JERUSALE~f (AP l -I s r a e 1 i About 100 protesters -some of them demonstrators booed Secretary oC State pioneer settlers on the Golan Heights Henry A. Kissinger today and Premier within sight of the daily artillery wa r Golda Meir's government held an urgent "'ith Syria -shouted out the feelings of cllbinet session on K i s s i n g e r ' s many T s r a e I i s by yelling "Boo to <191ermined truce n~gotiations to end the Kissinger" as the secretary's car arrived wa r with Syria . at Mrs. ~1eir's office for the morning 'J~salem sources said Israel would talks. · surrender no more captured Syrian land Dozens more Israeli seltlers defiantly in exchange for the disengagement pact moved into war-bl asted houses in th e Kini.nger seeks, but !be cabinet kept i!s abandoned Golan capital of Quneitra to deliberations secret and a government prevent lhe go vern men t from mtnister said only that negotiations relinquishing the ghost town for a truce would continue. treaty. ·Kissinger is to fly back to Damascus Israel has reportedly orfered to turn T\Jesday with Israel's latest terms, 011t over half of Quneitra to U.N. forces as a indications were the Israelis were buffer zone, and ·permit civilian Syrian reftising to budge beyond the undisclosed residents to return to the town th ey fted tiijte offer they made three days ago. during the 1967 Mideast w11r. The exact ....;..~~~--'-~.~~--'---"~~~--"~ .... ., e.v Food Emporitc111 official terms of the Israeli oHer arc still secret. however. It was the 16th day of Kissi nger's l\tideast mission, m a k i n g the disengagement quest the 1 on g est diplomatic effort he has made outside the United States since he became secretary of State. Israeli sources said earlier the gap in the disengagements negotiat ions with Syria is as wide as ever despite a report by Kissinger of some progress toward an agreement. Meanwhile, Israeli 'A'arplanes struck south Lebanon toda y. and eyewitnesses said the ancestral village of United States Sen: James G. Abourezk took the (See KISSINGER, Page %) Construction i.s under way on buildings tor Amelia's llestaurant and !he Winery on Coast l_lighway in Jiewport Beach. Site al 3300 W. Coast Hlgbway is former location ot Ward and Harrington Lumber yard. New buildings are scheduled tor completion by mid-September. j All five runners-up also will receive 10- ride coupons. Narrowing the field to st:< finalists from the nearly 500'entries was difficult, according to City ~1anager Robert L. Wynn. Names such as the "Screaming Yellow Honker" and the "Yellow Banana" \\-'ere entered by more than one person. And there were names like .. Nev,'J)On's Nosy Nayigator" and "I'm Newport, Ride Me." Other suggestions that drew comment fro1n the judges but missed making !he finalist list included "Bu1n Bus" and "l\1ass Gas" and "Summer Hummer." Another suggestion 1trat didn't fl y v.·as y,•as T.R.A.N.S.l.T. fTranspc 1tion Rap- idly and Nobody Stuck in Trarfic). It missed the honor roll along \lith names like Super Duper NeY.'J)Ort Beach Bus system. So did the appeaJ of Barbara Nesti. 885 Seagull Lane. Y.'ho v.•rote th e judges saying she v.·ould like the bus line named "£or a very spccia! person -my aunt." She told hO\\' her r1un t has never driven and has used buses (or more than 5-0 years as ht>r onl y tr;u1sport<Hion, to v.·ork and shopping ";1nd to all the li05C Bo\1 l parades.'' "As recenily as last year she v.'aS ta king l\l'O buses in the morning to get to 11·ork by IO am. 11•here she y,o rked at Fairvien· as a 'foste r grandmother' unt il breaking her leg 111 July. She's ready to go back to y,·ork any day and she's only 78. ··rncidcntally, her name is Aunt !Jelen:• Paramedics Eyed Operation Costs Set at $130,000 . Newport Beach's fire department could operate a paramedic program at a cost of $130.000 a year. City r.-1anager Robert L. \Vynn said tod ay. \\'ynn, in a report to councilmen delivered at today's study session. said it 111ould be cheaper to contract with a commercial ambulance company to operate the progran1 but he said private service would also have several major obstacles. lie said it \\'ould cost about $75.000 a year to hire an ambulance company. But. he said. it "'ould be difficult if not impossible for a private firm to get adequate training. "It appears unlikely, or in any event very time-eonsuming to resolve the problem of training and certifying private ambulance operators and equipping their ambulances y,rith Oran~e County communications gear essential 1n the telemetry of vital signs," he said. Wynn explained that Orange County Med ical Center, y,•hich does all the countfs paran1edlc training. is givirfg priority to Fire Department personnel and it would take at least two ·years befor'4l(ivate personnel could even start training. · As it is, Wynn said , the waiting list is so long that city fi remen could not enroll in cla~es until December. Wynn said there is still n o determination as lo which local hospita l y,rouJd serve as a base for the paramedic operation. Ile said it could be Hoag J\ofemorial HospitaJ, Costa Mesa Memorial ffQspital or even a hospital in Huntington Beach. Wynn said records show that -the paramedics would recei ve a minimum of 651 first-aid calls in the first year of operation. Tha~'s how many there were last year, he said. \Vynn also said Ney,•port Beach appears to have a definite need for paramedics beca use of its high rate of heart attacks Patie11t Leayina .. e> -~g.ai11st Orders Dies of Attack A heart patient y,•ho left Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach Sunday aga inst doctor's orders collapsed and died later that arternoon of an apparent heart attack. Cha rles Rogers, 52, of Costa Mesa, was give n emergency resuscitation by a Hoag Memorial Hospital physician about 5:30 p.m. in the Market Basket parking lot at """3100 Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. The victim was then moved to the emergency room at ffoag Hosoital. where efforts to revive him proved un- successful. A hospital spokesman s.::id oday that Rogers had been ad1nittcd at noon Saturday suffering from chest pains. He \vas taken to an intensive care unit where he spent the night. 1'te spokesm an sa id Rogers left the hospital against his physician's advice abc>ut noon on Sunday. say~ng he tell fine. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Baltz-Bergeron Funeral Home In Costa Mesa. TWO LINES SOLD GLASPAR DI NG HY Here's an ad placed by a· "man or few words'' Jn the Dally Pilot that really did the job: 9' Gl.ASPAR DINGHY $45. (Phone No. I The first caller bought the dinghy. You can get your &dvert \slng job done, too. with "a few words in the rig· place" }.1 the classified section of the Daily Pilot. Dial lhc direct line to results. Phone M2- !5678. and related medical emergencies. He said deaths tied to cardiovascular and coronary heart diseases in Ne'Al)Orl Beach in 1973 v.·cre 328 per 100.000 population. The Orange Cou::ty rate 'A'as only 598 per 100,000. Wynn 's written report to councilmen also included a proposal by one ambulance company outlining ho111 it '01a Tire Record' would operate under a contract with the city. Wynn said the company is not named because il \\'Ould have to · bid for the conlrac't with other firms. The proposal is only sketchy. hoy,·e vcr, and contains no specifics . It ·says the ambulance ,company "·ould do a very good job. • lrvi11e Heiress' Bid Fails In Special Stock Meeth1g Irvine heiress Joan Smith failed today to force fellow shareholder! to consider and act on items in an eight-pound agenda which ranged from the entire company budget and dividend projection to management salaries. Mrs. Smilh in a letter to company President Raymond Watson from her Virginia home 9n April 9 exercised her shareholder's rights to call the special stockholders meeting. Police Probing Cat Burg laries In ,~e 1 vport Area Newport Beach police are investigating a rash of cat burglaries which apparently took place early today in the Wesleliff and Dover Shores areas. "We've had fil'e reported l h is morning," a police spokesman said. l~e said the first two cases investigated v;ere at the home of Jack llarris, 1934 Highland Drive, and the home of Artyv Tisdail. 1808 Commodore Way. both in \Vest cliff. At the l·larr1 s home, a burglar had apparenlly en tered through a rear porch door and made off with S250 in cash while the residents were sleeping. The burglary took place between 2 a.m. and 5:30 a.m. A burglar entered through a den window at the Tisdail home. police said, making off with $89 in cash and several credit cards, also while residents were sleeping. The thief had entered the home sometime between midnight and 7 a.m. Police said la te this morning they are still investigating the additiona l three reported burglaries. They said so far they have no clues as to 1\'hether the same person or persons were responsible for the thefts. 1'hieYes Ra11sack . M.a v or Jor<lan's • House in l\'l csa Burglars ransacked !he home of form er Costa Mesa Mayor \Vl\lerd T. Jordan SUnday night, getting away with $2,000 woi'th of jewelry and cash and several prized family kee;sa~ s. Jorda n. ot 2269 Santa An3 Ave .• and his wife, Ruth, were at a i\1other's Day din- ner with ~fllyor and l\lrs. Robert ~1. \\'U-son y,.'hmt the burglary took place. "They came In whn only one thing in mlnd and that 1vas lo g(!t the jewelry nnd the cash." ~1rs. Jordan said. "They took every pit.-ce I own." - Among the items Jost were Jordan's cufnink collection. Va lued between $400 and $450, ?nd a dlAmoOO engo.gement ring ~1r1. Jordan had been gi \·en by her mother. AIJo taken were several plns, !See JORDA;>;, Page ll All sha r e ho 1 d er s or their representatives were present today vohen \\raison convened that meeting. By 12: 30 this afternoon all eight points had been either considered or rejected by majority votes of shareholders. A-1rs. Smith sa id her Intention was only to get "on the record" either the action or refusals to act of company management or stockholders. In an attempt to double the projected 1974-75 dividends, ~1rs. Smit h was overruled by a vote or 80 percent of company shares. Her attorney, Lyndol Young. in arguments in support or 3 resolution calling for dispersal of ,9.2 million. termed the Irvine Company to be liquidating company. He u r g e d stockholders to vote approval of an additional SI-cent per share dividend. suggesting !he corripany could meet that pay out demand by selling I,000 acres of land. Shareholders voted down t h e suggestion . T wo Speedboats Collide; 6 l l urt MARIPOSA IAPl -Two speedboats collided on Lake r.IcClure. knoc king all eight oCcupants into the \\<Jtcr and injuring six. officials said. 111ree or the injured were hospitalized. Mariposa County sheriff's officers said a high perfonnance jet boat and an 18- foot craft collided Sunday when one boat crossed th~ wake of the other. The jet boar sank 1n 400 reet of water abou1 200 · yards off Barrett Cove l\.1arina . A leg ~f fl.-fayna rd Odden, believed from lhc Mariposa area . was amputated later Merced Genera l ll~pital official§ said . ' Orange Coast ' Weather l\.lostly sunny Tuesday, believe it or not, 'A'ith 1va.nner tempera- tures. to boot. lligbs in the low 70s at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Overnight lows in the 50s. INS!!I" T OD/\Y Spiro Ague iv is ill A !liens this week. allegedly looking for a job 1ojtll Greek sl1ipo1"11ers. Greeks, 101!0 rlietred his ur· rival in 1971. apptar to not rec- Ofltli:t the former U.S. vice pres· iderti tcxfa11. Sl'e story, Paoe 4. 1 .. ,!Int " ilnn LMHMr• " l . M, to¥• ' MoMY Tr.. " C•llftnlll I Mov6-t " CU1tltlH ,..,. NtllOft.-·~· ' Ctfllltt " Or.i•tt Cou~ff ' '"'*'wOfll " IYl'lh ,wltr " ... ,, NotkK • 5.,.,, 1'·U l!llltorltl , ... • Sitt~ Mal'li•lt 1•11 Entltl'ttlnmMt " T'tlf .. ltioll " il'lnMKt 1•11 Tflttltn " ,.., !lie ._,,. M .w ......... • ...... _ " w.-·· ..... ,,.., In Ille Mnlc1 ' ·~· ·-• ) • • DAILY PILOT N "'--- Tape Gaps Report Set B y Sirica \\'ASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica said today he will make public In about tv;o Y.'l'eks the final report by a panel of experts on the 181hi· minute gap in a crucia l White House ~\1atergatc tape. The gap occurred in a tape recording o{ a conversation between Presi dent l\ixon and then-White House chief of staff 11. R. lialdeman on June 20, 1972. just three days after the break-in at the Dc1nocratic National headquarters In the \\l atergate office building in Washington. Sirica met for tv.·o hours today with representalives of the Whi~ House, special Watergate prosecutor Leon RUMORS, RUMORS EVERYWHERE ON CAPITOL HILL, Page 4 WHAT SHAK£SPEARE 'SAID' ABOUT TRANSCRIPTS -Page 8 Jaworski, and members of the experts panel. Then Sirica Issued this b r i e f statement: "The final comprehensive report of the court's advisory panel conce rn ing the June 20, 1972 EOB <Executive Office Building ) White 11ouse tape is to be printed as soon as possible for formal submission to the court. ' "Upon receipt of the report , it Will be entered in the public record. "The court expects to rece ive .the report in approximately two weeks. • ·Tilere arc no plans to conduct hearings related to the report." fl.f eet in g with reporters aflrr the conference, Sirica showed an inch-thick document Y!'hich he said was the final report. He would not comment on its content. Just before the meeting. fl.lichael llecker, the Stanford University expert \VOrking on behalf of the White House, entered the court with papers he indicated were his rf:'port on the same tape . Sirica would not comment on whether Hecker submitted a report to the court but said I.be \\'hite llouse was free to discuss it. Sirica said the report coverOO the tape with the 18~-minute gap but that the tape panel was continuing to v.·ork for the <..'Otlrt on other tapes. He declined to say hew much longe r the panel v.·ould continue its work. Meanwhile, Nixon was quoted by a Cabinet member today as de~laring "there isn't any chance ... v.·hatever" that he will resign from the nation's highest olrice. Newport Offie.ers .. Oear Mexican Theft Suspects Three Newport Beach police detectives spent the weekeod ln T i j u a n a investigating poosible suspects i n Thursday 's $111 ,950 Lido Isle burglary but decided the ~1exican suspects were not the thieves. "\\1e virtually elimlnated them as suspects," a police spokesman said today. lie said that Mexican police assisted in locating the suspects, about 12 "green card " temporary work ers. Thursday·~ 'burglary took place at the home of Mrs. Mauja Baldwin. 326 Via Lido Soud. Newport Beach. Police said son1cooe smashed a side bedroom \vindow. ransacked the prem ises and made of( with strong boxes containing valuable coin collecti ons and other item.s. Icluded in the loss \\'~ bars of gold and silver bullion valu,r at $20.000 each. The burglary was discovered by Mrs. Baldwin~·idow of mill iona ire yachtsman Baldwin M. Baldwin. and a companion wben tbey arrived home Thursday night. Police said they are ~rorking on se\·eral other leads in the case. OIAMGE COAST "' DAILY PILOT ll'O' 0-r>'l'I' f··•" Po···,,,,.,. ....... "<~ .. !;NI'• !.>....., 1r. "°'"'·"'~' "Nol"~ .. ., i;y !"" °''°'" C-.0.tl Pvt>•• ""<l Comp••• So>,..-•'• ed•llO"" ••• r1o1;1"r.~ """""~ '" , "~•• .,,., ('I"• "1•._, ''°'"~'<! ~K~ ... l"'91<1ft lkPocNfQ<J'I ••. ., ~., .... ~-'''"" 0.lt.h ...,,,,, 'l..,:llfol>.Or> 001 r'a" 0.""'"'" ~ ... ~ C.P"'""" ll .,.,~,• --.. :11'"'" ., -.. -s''"'°"'' .,,,, !':,, .... ~ ... ,,...:> .. "<~ ............ ..., ......... "'"'"''" B•1S1,71. Colli ~ C...~lo<"'i. &16Jt f~tlW .... ~ ,.,._... • ...,f>IN.~ }.y~ 11 ('""' \lu l'N-•"llV•-al "'•- Ch:.-1.n H loo1 Roeh:rd P. Ndl ...__ ... ...,,.,,.( ... ~ • Lf'"f .. ic,,.., N.-r>ll'1 °"',..., C..1 l Ollt'- N•wport IHc-h Offkt 1\))l~·f'>u1t1 ....... d ,l.\1;1f-i /'.kt .,f'"'lri..,,l•·.),·;:•J,1 OHi« Offic•• C.0.'•"'"" )ll)W~ 'fl•1':1·-• l•11~~· GP.,._" t.•, I ·~ P •..-- 1• '"'"'Ol"" II"«" t '11~ &too r ~·""" ~1•C..-0!t Dl<lot!~ll trwv>"'""' --~· ,.... ... j1919 PllC.0.I ...... Ca•'°" .... .,,_..,. ___ •)00...ifW ••""'' t•'JC-·, ...,~,,oo~··· c. Monday, May 13, 1974 D1llr ltllot SllU ltflot. TelepJaotae ExpflHSiota BB Girls Selec!ted • Sea King~ Name i New D.~ill . T-~~~ I Kathy Bulmer. adviser for the Corona del !\1ar tligh School Drill 1eam, todJ.y announced the names or the 88 girls se lected for the drill ~cam for the 197~-75 school vcar. The girls Y.'e~lO!len from a field of 192 who tried out for the learn Friday and Saturd ay. Of(iccrs for the school year v.1ill be !\1olly Keati ngs, major: Cy n t h I a DeBeawnonte. Nancy Englert a nd La urie Aostct ler. air captai ns. Girls selected for the learn arc; Carol Anderson, Kim Baker, Diana Bandel. Nany Bachtel, Cindy Bodrogi, Julia Brov.·n. Pam Butts, Lisa Cashion, Conn ie Calder, Jenny ChapiD. Pam Cheston. Carolyn Cirello.. T e dd i Converse. Julie Dietrich, Sbiela .Dcnigan, Tammy Farris. Kathy Davis, 'fammy Feldman, Joan Fitzpatrick. Jennifer Forr. Susan Forte. Dana Frcnch1 Karen Gallivan, Kath I e e :i. Gorrie, Dana Grabb. Bev Hampton, Stacy Ha\vkinson, Leslie II i g g i n s. Stephanie llostrt!f:'r. T:uni Johhnsen . 1'rrl JohansC''tl, Janice Johnson. Claudia Jeffs. I Peggy Jones. 1 <:heri Lall. Jt.:n La !\1oreu ux. J.iz Lovr, j All ison . J.,usk. Ka thy l .• lmbesk, .!\1ary Lynn, Kirn Lynam. Tracey ·t.ynan1, .Juli(' l\lnutoff, .!\lau recn .\'lalo11cy, J Julie ~l cCorkell, Curol l\!cGahan . J:.1.11 f\lcGaugh . Bonnie 1'11esse ngrr. t<.larrlc· ~filler, llobi n t<.llller. Gayle Morgah, Oebhlc !\\orris . Terry !\lorrison. Susan J\1uir. Nanty Norton, Kerry O'Connor. Judy Peter~n . Si1none Pike. Sue Reis. Dana Robe rtsor. B{'('ky ftohde. Lynda IWhrcr, KeUy Rutherford. Shii.ron Sadlclr. Leone Sanborne. T11n1i Snnbom. Lisa r Shalzcn, Pally Shaffer. Debbie Sha'!"'. Shirley Sloper, Joan Spe.llctic:h, Mon ico Stnti, Rose ann Sturn1, Cu1njlle Taf,e. !\1arjoric. Taylor , Laurel Travers, Jenny j Van Kirk, Sharo n \\lnds\vorth. !Jayna \Villiamsoo. ililurv \Vhitc. 1\1ichclle.J \\'ynn, Jackie \Vh1l1nan. Allison \\loods, 1 Aleen Zimbcroff. r. Pacific Telephone is expanding its facility on Ford phone ~ompany officials sa.y they need the space Road behind Urbanus Square. The $1 .5 mil:ttotl' proj-for equipment to handle growth in Newport Beach, 'J Poliee Streak ect is scheduled for comple~ion in November. Tele-Irvine and Costa ~lesa. ~~~~~~~-~-'-----'-----'----~~~~~--~ 'Different Bullets Used'. In LA Kennedy Slaying LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Re-opening an old controversy, a criminologist said today the bullet v.·hich killed Sen. Robert F. Kennedy had different characleristics from a bullet taken from the body of another man injured in a \'Olley of shots at the assassination scene. Herbert MacDonell , director of the Laboratory of Forensic Science in New York, testified at a hearing into the "second gun theory," that Jlll)re than one gun v.·as fired in the Ambassador l{otel kitche n v.·here Kennedy \\'as killed. The hearin g v.·as organized by Los An geles County Supervisor Baxter Ward . He says be is seeking to detennine \Vhether Sirhan B. Sirhan, l'Oll\'ictcd of the killing. acted alone. Because Ward.is running for governor. critics are calling the hearing a political move, v.·hicb the supervisor denies. Police and Dist. Atty. Joseph Busch ha\'C said the bullets used in the shooting were mislabeled and that Sirhan was the only gunman. Referring to photographs of lhe spent bullets, r.1acDonell noted that there was an app.arenl diUcrencc· between the angle of the rifling groove on a bullet taken from Kennedy 's nec k and one taken from the stoma ch of a television newsman, \Villiam \Veiscl. '\'Ounded in the shooti ng r-.tacDonell also said markings on both bul lets left by the manufacturer do not matc h aild sugges ted there is "a strong possibility'' the bullets .,.,•ere made by different firms . At the Si rhan trial, testimon y indi cated the bullets came from the same manufacturer. l\[acDonell told !he hearing the only "'ay to ma ke posilivc identi fication of the bulle ts would be to refire the weapon Sirhan used in the assassination. Also testify ing at the session was a San Jose forensic sc ientist. Lowell Bradford, "·ho said photographs reveal different manufacturer markings. Hov.·evcr, he said his examination of the photographs Pare11ts' Murder Charge Dropped SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Th< parents of a boy whose mummified body was found in their ba ckyard have pleaded no contest to charges of disposing of human remains within city limits. ' Daniel Harrington, 35, and his wife, l\taria Theresa , 33, originally were charged with murder. The body of their son Dean, 6, v.·as found ccn1enl.ed in a planter bo x with a teddy bear The charge \\'3S dropped because p<itho\ogists could not dctcr1nine cause of the boy's death. , Sentencing was set for June 25 in No rth District J\tunicipa\ Court here. The offense is punisha bJe by a $~ fine, six months in jail or both. • So111e did not reveal different rifl ing ang1es. Ward hopes to present evidence that \\'ill allow new testing of the weapon Sirhan used in the June 5, 1963 assassination. Sirhan is serving a life tenn. In 1971, an investigation was conducted by Busch and the police into allegations that the criminologist testifying for the prosecution in the Sirhan trial, DeWayne Wolfer. had not test-fired Sirhan·s gun and had not performed proper ballistics procedures. But after a five-month study, Busch announced Woller had been cleared of the allegations. A spokesman for Busch said. "It is the belief of Dist. Atty. Busch that the case is closed and this hearing i.s a publicity thing for Ward. Mr. Busch sees it as a \Vard campaign rally and there will be no participation by lhe district attorney's office." -\Vard. who is seeking the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, said today he wan ts to resolve questions that are •s!.j,11 hahging ovJ r the county in lhe matter. · l1iflation Hurts Stat,e' s Surplus In Tight Budget SACRAME~"fO (AP) -Inflation is giving state government a $188.3 million shot in the arm , state Finance Director Verne Orr said today. But inflation also is partly responsible for a new $78.8 million drain in the state's pocketbook because or rising J\.1edi-Cal costs. That, and other coSt hikes, trims the new budget surplus back to about $100 million. Orr said prices in California have been increasing this year at the equivalent of an 8.8 percent annual innation rate. In lhe short run, that is easing the fiscal pains in Gov. Ronald Reagan's tight $9.8 bill ion 1974-75 budget proposal. The biggest increase in state income is an estimated $100 million hike in sales tax revenues, which is a direet result of inflation. Personal income taxes are up $70 million over earlier estimates, and all other income sources are up $18.3 million, Orr said. "Spurred on by inflation, California's economy and that of the nation are booming," Orr told a joint meeting of the Assembly and Senate budget-writing committees. Younger at Newporter · California Attorney General Evelle J . Younger will speak at the Harbor Bar Association luncheon at the Newporter In at 1:30 13.m. Tuelday. Reservations are necessary and may be · made by C011Uictin1 Michael J. l11dstianson al 64~9190. Cateh Beacli A1igler Lands $1,0()[) Cindy Rosene or Htmtington :'.:e:ach got a $1.000 boost in her college SR\'in~ accoun t over the weekend when she caught the first of fou r $1 ,000 trout In the June Lake area near Bishop. Cindy, l~year-old daughter of 1'1r. and I\trs. Al Rosene, 16971 Concord Lane, caught the two and OllMl,Ullrter Po\lnd trout Friday in Cull J,.i kc using yellow salmon eggs. The Sl.000 trout c:ompetltion Is Ming sponsored by !he'.! June 1.ake Chamber of Commerce, v.·hich planted lour trout with $1 ,000 ta gs in fou r area laket May 3. Cindy, a sixth grt1der at Rancho View School. has been fishing about rour years, according to Betty Manes, cM1rmao or the trout proJecc for the chamber. She said the Rosencs made the. weekend !rip lo celebrate the blrtMiiy of Cindy'• younger brother, Mike, II .' Cindy said she plans lo spend a small portion of the pMzt, then puI lb< rest in htr college AA vlng.s account. Cindy will lonn•llY receive the 11,000 prize and a plaque In ctremonles SUnday Ill June(-ake Village . • From Page 1 JORDAN ... each valued at about $50. Mrs. Jordan reported that the burglars ulso discovered a small ooin purse wbere she had stashed aboot $100. "Our bedroom looked like a disaster area. They pulled everything out of the drawers. They don't need to bother coming back because they've taken everything," she said. Police investigating the burglary say they folmd no sigm of forced entry and are operating on the theory that access was obtained through a patio door which was not fully latched. From Pagel KISSINGER • • • .. brunt of the attack. The Lebanese defense ministry said four persons ~:ere killed in Kfeir village, inctudin g a v.·o man, her six-month-old son and eight-year-old daughter; five other children between 2 and 8 years old "·ere "·ounded. and five houses wer e destroyed. A communique accused the Israelis of aggression. Abourezk , South Dakota Democrat, recei ved a hero's welcome home in Kfeir la st year durin g a tour o( the r.Hddle East. The Israeli military command said i~s air force made a 20-minute attack on Arab guerrilla concentrations just north or the Israeli·Leba.nese border near J\tt. llermon. The command said all planes re turned safely. In Damascus, the Syrian command reported that its troops engaged Israeli forces in tank and artillefy batUcs on J\tt. Hermon and along the 40-mile Golan Heights front for the 63rd day . Davis Aide Quits . t\.f ter Son Beaten SACRA~@:!TO <UPI\ -Davis city personnel manager Joe Owens has resi gned to devote hls time t o "reconstructing" hls relationship with his sons. o .... ·ens faces an aMault charge in Sacramento filunicipal C.Ourt stemming from an incident invojving his 10.year-old son. Ch\1ens was arrested last montb after he reportedly beat bis son, Kevin, with a t\\·o-foot baseball bat after tbe boy denied breaking into lhe house of Owens' eldest ""'· "I'm doing this ror my s•:is," said Owens in announcing his resignation . "As their father, I'm ready to sacrifice my job." Lihbers Stage Abortion Stand CINCINNATI (UPI) -Women 's libbers here used fl.lather 's Day for a pro- abortkm dembnstration outaldc a catholic church. The group of about 3S wore mask> and feigned pregnancies -drawing the lre of some pertOM arriving for 1ilaas. Allbough there were no physical confronU.Ilons, there w.re jeen and one man slipped Into the line of marcher• and tried lo hand anti.abortion literature to the women. A CAlhollc priest walked oot of the church, spotted the marchers and shouted, ''Butchera, skinners, Faaciata, Communists -go home." Russ ians Tln·eateucd SPOKA~E. Wash. (AP) -Police ~vacualtd the Russian pavlllon Sllnday al Expo '74 after a telephoned bomb lhreal. Police and Soviet pavilion security agents ~arched the pavllton but found no. trace of e bomb, an Expo spokesman said. l 1ui Also Dania ged --0 ivner PORTSMOUTH, R.I. (AP) -A Portsmouth motel owner says a group of Boston policemen ran na:ked through his Ramada IM night club and took part in a disturbance that resulted in about $1,000 damage. Peter Stilphen said about two dozen of the 100 Boston policemen staying at the motel Friday night participated in the Rams' Tackle To Lead Mesa Fisli Fry Parade • Los Angeles Rams tackle Charlie Cov.·an Will ride at lhc tlead of the Costa ~1esa Fish Fry Parade June 1 v.·ben the Newport Harbor-Costa l\tesa Llons Club celebrates the 29th anniversary of the charity event. Co"''an , 36, of Fullerton, has now played more Ram games than any other player in the team's history . •le started every one in 1973 to bring his total to 179, 10 more than the nearest team member. The three-mile para.de v.·ill pass through the do~·ntown area of 'Costa l\Iesa and will last about t .... ·o-and-one half hours, according to Parade Chairman Clifford Wesdorf. An estimated 1,500 panicipants will be brought together for the IO:'JO a.m. Saturday parade • The Llons C1ut fund raiser is scheduled to begin at ~.;30 p.m. ~tay 31 at Costa J\1esa City Park with the serving of Saturday parade. Club members hope to gross $100,000 tbroug'h sales, a carnival, and other Fish Fry attractions. llarbor Area musicians may register now for a band co ntest scheduled June I . Applications are now available at Raciti 's Costa Mesa J ewelry and l..<>an, 1838 Newport Blvd. Registration opens May 22 at Cal 's Camera , 1780 Newport Blvd., for a baby con test sche<luled at the Fry June 2. Judging will be In two divisions for babies aged six months to 12 months and from 13 months to 24 months. Girls 17 and older who would like to enter the Min Mennaid contest and win the opportunity to reign ove1 the Fish Fry should contact Or. Bernard Simon, 540-1171 or 997-4111 for application forms. Alf.Attaerica alleged hlcideo£s. The polictmen came here to ma.rch in a police parade Saturday. Jean Lawler, motel manager, said sl'k called local police twice and state poli,~~ once about the matter, but no arreS~~ \\·ere made . :i., A spokesman for the Boston Polic.'t!J Oe partment. Frank Carpenit o, said todf{j ' the department Is looking into the. matter. ,.'L' Stilphen said he is coMlderlng filing 8"' complaint with The Boston poll~"7 commlssloner ·s o(fi.ce. " MrS. Lawler claimed at least half a dozen policemen stripped at the side jdr' the motel's swimming pool within sigtitr~ of the night cl ub audience and jumped l.Q.· Other police ran naked 1hrough the nigtµ' rlub, "·ith 60me going up on the sta&~1 and oth~rs jumping on tables, Mrf, .. 1...a .... ·ler and Stilphen charged. .. Three or four naked policemen atSo came in and stood in the motel lobby at ... the front desk, !\-lrs. Lawler said. · 1 • "That 's not streaking, that's indec~. ' . exposur e." she said . , fi1rs. Lav.•ler claimed that some of the police arrived al the motel tM• artemoon dnmk and continued drinli1g through the night. _ Pictures and other motel prope~ .... were tossed out of second story wlndo"s.~ and firecrackers \vere set off ."1.: hallv.·ays. Stilphen said. lr11>ulation '"s ripped from the ceilings and a sccurilX1 camera \Vas tom from its stand, MA.i1 Lawler said. A liquor. cabinet in the niabt club was broken and some liquor Yi'M stolen, she added. ... , "The only complaint v.·e bad v.·aa noise." Lt. Henry J. ~1iller of tb.e Portsmouth state police barracks said. · \llhen state troopers arrived at Uw motel around 3:30 a.m. Saturday, he said • there was no noise. just a few meR-• drinking' in their rooms. .. :" Five bottles of liquor were fitolen titOm the cabinet. he said. but investigation·of; the incident is a local p o 11 c e: responsibilily. • ~ Portsmouth Police Chief John "T. Pier ce said, '·There is going lo be something done aboti't th is matter." '·" From Page 1 l' REIN ECKE . • • . , . . ' he should be judged by his peers in eanrornla. 4 Once viewed as the leading contender• in the Callfomia GCP prlmm;.• Reinecke 's standing in public opinion. polls has slipped since he w~ inclict!d' April 3. u )fl• .. ..,, Keith Samuel s or Corona del Mar, a use yell leader, has been nam~' one or six All·Amerlca cheerleaders for 1974 by the lntcrnatio11.i\l.,., cheerleadlng Fellowship Inc. He Is lhe [irst USe cheerleader ev'lf.t •elected and lho only West Coast cheerleader ac<orded the honorlhls year. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jark Samuels, 310 Orchid Ave. ' ;yo D M .. 'WAS abista he: nev Reinec II be the tri One James defend agents inlervi p "I makln (Rein Oonnol But that w bb ell "Di investi ·u Re be Lt er asked. ;be llave f<!nar 1¥1: "e:tat situati Jud JUiy I wants "'° JW>e Re ~ Re i• Re . Polls April ·p. ·A J)i A . ••• 'He ' IWDrd! "8"' Tb ~ lhO • Dial WIS. Orange· Coast EDITION T oday's Final OL. 67, NO •. 133, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA MONDAY, MAY 13, 1974 c TEN CENTS Heinecke Deal Not Made-U.S. l WASHINGTON (AP ) -A Watergate: aSsistant prosCcutor testified today that he· never offered California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke imml.Vllty from prosecution It he oooperated in the ITT investigation. Joseph J. Connolly made the statement during a hearing before U.S. District Court Judge Barrington Parker nn defense motions to di!lmiss the perjury case against Reinecke. ... !f the case is not dismissed, the defense attorneys planned to argue that the trial should be moved to California. One of Reinecke's three attorneys, , James E. Cox. contended that the defendant was "misled and entrapped by agent! of the government" during interviews with the special Watergate prosecutor's office. Connally, tmder cnm-elllmination on the witness stand, denied that there was ahy discussion with Frank Pagliaro Jr .. ·Reinecke's a\lomey at that time, about possible immunity from prosecution if Reinecke told all he knew about a!l .allee~ offff from an IT"F subsidiary to 1S(ing '-the 1972 Republican National Convention to San Diego. "I don't remember J\lr. Pagliaro making any suggestions that h c (Reinecke) oot be indicted," said C..molly. But Connolly said "it "'as clear to me that what J\1r. Pagliaro wanted was that bi5 client v.·ouldn't be charged." Connolly said he warned Pagliaro that Reinecke could be indicted in the case. "Did you tell ~1r. Pagliaro that the investigation was proceeding rapidly and ll Reinecke wanted to cooperate he had better do it right i\\'ay?" ConooUy waJ asked. '';rbe prosecutor replied that he did not have any recolleclton or making that tepiark. When Cox pressed for a yes or ~answer. Connolly said. "I didn 't make a"6tatement that it \Vas a now or never situation.'' Judge Parker has set the trial date for JU1y 15. but Reinecke repeatedly said he wants the trial completed before voters lecide on his bid for the r;op nomination JWle 4. • Reinecke has pleaded innocent to the perjury COWlt! aod charged that the ntdictment was polilicail)' .motivated. Reinecke, 50, contends that it would cost him at least $10,000 to bring 20 defense witnesses to Washington and that ht! should be judged by his peers in Cllifornia. Once viewed as the Jeadlng contender ill ~ Clllfomia GCP primary, Reinecke's standing in public opinion . polls has slipped since he w: indicted April 3. 'Patie11t Leaving ·.4.gainst Order s J)ies of Attack A heart patient who left Hoag ,J.lemoriaJ Hospital in Newport Beach Sunday against doctor's orders collapsed and died later that arternoon of an -apparent heart attack. Olarles Rogers, 52, of Costa Pt1esa.twas gtveh emergency resuscitation by a Hoag Memorial Hospital physician about 5:30 -JJ;'m. in the 1i1arkel Basket parking lot at J tOO Balboa Blvd .• Newport Beach. ·. 'The victim was then moved lo the trnergency room at lloog Hosoilal. 1fllere efforts to revive him proved llll- •.uccessful. • r A hospital .spokes1nan s.--id oday thnt Rogers had been admitted at noon Saturday sufrering from chest pains. He ~ taken lo an intensive care unit · Where he spent the night. .--The spokesman sald Rogers left the •llOspital against his physician's advice 'about noon on Sunday, sa"ylng he felt fme . '. Funeral arrangements are pCnding at fhe Baltz.Bergeron Funeral Home in Q>sti Mesa. ·-. TWO LINES SOLD 'GL ASPAR DING HY •. t ·Here's an ad p1aced by a "man or few , 1•>rd!" In the Dally Piiot that really did 'die job: .. i' (lLASl'AR DINGHY • 145. I Phone No.> The first cnllcr bought the dinghy. Yo11 tan .get your edve.rtlslng job done, tno. wfth "a few words In the rig ' place" 1':1 the classified section or the Pally P.llot. Dial the dlrtct lln• to rtJUll>. Pilon• 612· ~- I .. 8:ign Co11ies Dow1a , . •• • • Plucked from its mooring at 1892 Harbor Blvd .. this \Valer Environ · me? ts sign. today becam ~ the · first casuaJty. or a strict new sign law "'hie~ forbids rooftop signs. Although non-conforming signs such as thi.s one J!l:a.Y ~ amortized over a _ period of time store manager Ch~k"Qmic!n"sayi he took hls shtifgf.-dowii-'tll"tomply with the ·-spir1f"'of the Ordinart?'e, which is to u1f:clutter Cost~ Mesa . Costa Mesa Councilman Jordan'sHomeRa11sacked Burglars ransacked the hon1c of former Costa J\1esa J\tayor Willard T. Jordan Sunday night, getting ay,·ay y,·ith $2.000 ~·orth of je.,..·elry and cash and several prized family kee;sal-s. Jordan. of %269 Santa Ana Ave., and his wife. Rutti. were at a Mother's Day din- ner with l\.1ayor and Mrs. Robert M. Wil- son \\'llen the burglary took place. "They came in with only one thing in mind and that v."as to get the jey,·elry and the cash."·l\.1rs. Jordan said. "They took every piece I own." Among the items Jost were Jordan's cu£flink collection, val ued bet\\•een $400 and $450, and a diamond engagement ring J\frs. Jordan had been given by her mother. Also taken were several pins, each valued al about $50. Mrs. Jordan reporled that the burglars also discovered a small coin purse where she had stashed about $100. ''Our bedroom looked like a disaster area. They pulled everything out of the drawers. They don 't need to bother coming back because they've taken everything," she said . Police investigating the burglary say they round no-signroHorced-entry-and are operating on the theory that access \\'as obtained through a patio door which \1-as not fully latched. Sec recy .S tfl y s Ou. JFK Fil es WASHI NG TON !UPI ) -The U.S. Supreme Court refused today to order the FBI to remove the secrecy label on its files on the John f . Kennedy assassination . The court declined to review a IO\\'er court ruling which held that the FBI has broad powers to determine v"hat it can supPff!SS under the freedom (lf Information Act. The legal action \\'as brought by Harold Weisberg, author of four. books on the assassination. l(issinger Booed ' Israel Holds 'Elnerge ncy Wa r Mee t JERUSALEM (AP) I s r a e 1 i demonstrators booed Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger today and Premier Golda l\fcir's government held an urgcfl.t cabinet session on Kis S inger 's determined truce negotiations to end the war with Syria. Jerusa lem sources said Israel would surrender no more captured Syrian land in exchange for the disenga gement pact Kissinger seeks, but the cabinet kept its deliberations secret and a government minister said only that negotiations would continue. Kissinger is lo fly back to Damascus Panel Report • On Tape Gaps ' ' Reu,dy Soo1i WASHINGTON (AP ) -U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica said today he will make public in about two weeks the final report by a panel of experts on the 18Yi· minute gap in a crucial \llh ite House Vatergate tape, The gap occurred in a tape recording of a conversation between President Nixon and then-White House chief of stare H. R. Haldeman on Jwie 20, 19n. just three days after the break·in at the Democratic National headquarters in .the \Vatergate office building in Washington. Sirica met for two hours today with representatives of the White House, ~poci41 alar~ pro,..~ .. RUMORS, RUMORS !VIR'YWmRE ON CAPITOL HILL, Page 4 WHAT SHAKESPEARE 'SAID' ABOUT TRANSCRIPTS -P•ge 8 /?worski, and members of the experts panel. Then Sirica issued this b r i e f statement: "The final comprehensive report of the court's advisory panel concerning the June 20. 1972 EOB (Executive Office Building ) \'i'hite House tape is, to be prinlP.d as soon as possible for form al submission to the court. "Upon receipt of the report, it \viii be entered in the public record. "The court expects to receive the report in approximately two weeks. "There are no plans to conduct hearings related to the report." 1\1 e et in g with reporters aftPr the conference, Sirica showed an inch-thi ck document which he said was the final report. He would not comment on its con lent. Just before the meeting, Michael J·lecker, the Stanford University expert v.·orking on behalf of the White House, en tered the court \\'ifh papers he indicated were his report on the same tape. Sirica would not comment on whether Hecker submitted a report to the court but said the \Vhite House was free to discuss ii. Sirica said the report covered the tape with the 181f.t-minute gap but that the (Se< TAPES, Page %) Tuesday with Israel's latest terms, u•tt indlc8tions \\'ere the Israelis \\•ere refusing to budge beyond the undisclosed truce offer. they made three days ago. About 100· protesters -some of them pioneer settlers on the Golun Heights within sight of the daily artillery \V~r \\'ilh Syria -shouted out the feeHngs of many I s r a e Ii s by yelling •·Boo to Kissinger" as the secretary's ca r arrived at l\1rs. t1eir's office for the n1orning talks. , Dozens more lsraeli settlers defiantlv moved into war-blasted houses in 1he abandoned Golan ca pital of Quneitra to Grand Ope11l119 Model Jane Seymour has a novel way of showing a bottle opener of gold and blue and white diamonds, worth $250, at a London show sponsored, ap- propMately enough, by De Beers Consolidated Litnited. Cat Burg lars Strike Homes I n W es tclif f Newport Beach polioe are investigating a rash of cat burglaries \vhich apparently took place early today in the Westcliff and Dover Shores areas. "We've had five reported thi s morning." a police spokesman said. He said the fir st tY.'O cases investigated were at the home of Jack Harris, 1934 Highland Drive, and the home of Artyv Tisdail. 1808 Commodore Way, both in West cliff. prevent the gov et: n men t from relinquishing the ghost. town for a truce treaty. ' Israel has reportedl y offered to tur n over ~alf .of QUncitra to _U.N. forces as a· buffer zone. and permit civi lian Syrian residents to return to the IO\\'n they Oed during the 1967 :\lidcas t \\'a r. The exact official terms or the Israeli offer are still secret. ho,1·ever. It \\'as the 16th day of Kissinger's ~lideast mission, m a k l n g the disengagement quest t h e I o n g e s t diplomatic effort he has made outside th e (See KISSINGER, Page %) Delci ys _4.sked For Two Mesa Rezo1ie I terns ro.'1en1bers or the Costa !\1esa Planning Commission \Yere prepared for a heated session at 6:30 in city council chambers ton ight, but it appears that the two most controversial items will be removet.I fron1 the calendar. Delays have been requested for a rezone petition on the N A R ~t CO chemical plan and the Garden-4 pre· school. The NAR~1CO case involves an effort by city planners to place the chemical plant at 600 N. Victoria St. under residential zoning. Meauwhile a "non-<x>nforming use " ordiftance is being dratted by the planning department which would allow city officlals to order the plant to wind down its operation and finally shut down. The NARMCO facility is surrounded on a11 sides by residential properties and the rezone to residential is seen as a means of eliminating spot zoning and potential hazards to residents from fumes or explosion. A delay has also been requested by ~-trs. Joyce Remsen for her zone exception application to reopen the pre· school at her home at 250 W. \Vil~n St. The school has been closed since last June when the city council terminated an earlier zone exception because of complaints from the neighborhood. l\f.rs. Remsen recently won permission from the city council to open another pre· school on l\1onte Vista Avenue. Davis Aide Quits After Son Beaten SACRAMENTO {UPI ) -Davis city personnel. manager Joe Owens has resigned to devote his time to "reconstructing" his relationship with his sons. Owens faces an assa ult charge in Sacramento 1.1uoicipal Court stemming from an incident involving his 16-year-0ld son . Gridder Will Lead Parade At the Harris home. a burglar had apparently entered through a rear porch door and made off with $250 in cash while the residents were sleeping. The burglary took place between 2 a.m. and 5!30 a .m. A buri:;lar entered through a den \\•indow at the Tisdail home. police said,• making off \vilh $89 in cash and several credil cards, also Y.'hlle residents ..,..·ere sleeping. Owens was arrested last n10nth artcr he reportedly beat his son, Kevin , with a two-foot baseball bat after the boy denied breaking into the house of Owens' eldest son. "I'm doing this for my s •:is." said Ow~ns_!fl announcing his resignation. "As their fatlier, I'm ready to sacrifice my job." Rarn s' Coivcut Grcntcl llf arslial Los Angeles Rams tackle Charlie Cowan will ride at the head of the Costa Mesa Fish Fry Parade June t when the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Lions Club celebrates the 129th aMiversary of the charity event. Cowan, 36, or Fullerton. has now played more Ram games than any other player In the team's history. He started every one in 1973 to bring his totel to 179, JO more than the neartsl team member. The th.-...mile parade will pass through the downtown area of Costa l\.1esa and will last about two-and-one half hours, according to Parade Chairman Boy, 3, Suffocates TRACY (UPI) -Three-year-old Raymond ~toreno died Sunday \\'hen he clost'd himself Into an old refrlge.rator. The boy's body was found fn the refrigerator five hours after a search began for him near his home south of here. ' ClifCord Wcsdorf. An esllmated 1,500 participants wil l be brought together for the 10:30 a.m. Saturday parade . The Lions Clut fund raiser is scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. 1i1ay 31 at C.OSta 111esa City Park with the serving of Saturday parade. Club members hope to gross $100,000 througti saJes, a carnival, and other Fish Jo~ry attractions. llarbor Area musicians may" register now for a band contest scheduled June t . AppllcaUoM are now available at Racitl's Costa Mesa Jewelry and Loan, 1838 N•wport Blvd. Registration opens h1a y 22 at Cal's Camera, 1780 Newport Blvd .• for a baby contest scheduled at the Fry June 2. Ju dging will be in two divisions for bnbles aged six months to 12 months and J;o1n 13 months to 24 months. Girls 17 and older who would like to enter the l\flss l\1ennaid contest and win the opportunity 10 reign ove; the Fish t'ry should contact Or. Bernard Simon. 5'0-1171 or 9!t7-411 1 for appliCAtion ronns. TO LEAD FISH FRY PARADE Grand M1rsh1I Cowan - The ~ thief had entered the home sometime between midnight and 7 a.m. Police said "late thi s morning they are still investigating the additional three reported burglaries. They said so far they have no clues as to whether the same person or persons were responsible for the thefts. Par ents' Murder Charge D1·opped SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The parents of a boy whose mummified bodv was found In their backyard have pleaded no contest to charges or disposing of hun1an rc1nai ns within city lim its. Daniel 11arrlngton, 35, and hls=-"'·ife. Marla Theresa. 33. originally:-.... ·ere charge.d "'Ith murder. The body of their son Dean. 6, \\'OS found ce11le.nted ln a planter box \\'ilh a teddy bear The charge .,..·ns dropped because pathologists could not determine cause of the boy's death. Orange Coast Weather ~1ostly sunny Tuesday, believe it or not, with warmer tempera- tures, to boot. fli ghs In the low 70s at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Overnight Jo.,.. s in the 50s. IN)>;l lO•: l'ODA \' Spiro Agnew is i11 Arhe11s this week, allegedly lookntg for a job witll Greek shipowners. Greeks, 111llo cheered liis ar- rival in 1971. appea r ro not rec· ogni:e 1he /<lrn1er U.S. vice pre:t· ident today. Ste :i:tory. Pa9e -1. to•H111 11 L. M, h~ll • C1u .. r11l1 ' Cl•t.illM M ll Col'lllt• Ii c.-.nworll 11 0.1111 Htfkn 1 llllt1r111 ..... , 11111110lfU'l'IOIU II ,llllMt 1 .. 11 "°" ll'to ·~,.. ,. .,._,.K_ I• 111 tfll s-1u t A1111 L1Mltr1 U Mlllt1 '"'" ,. Mo'lltl ,. N1ll011•1 N...-t 4 Oro11" (tllll" 1 SYIVll l"orltr If 4••"" , •. ., S•oc-M•l"llt1' 1 .. ll T"Jlt vll..,.. IJ '"'-•"" ,, Wtlflltr 4 W°""'I Ntwl 1).14 Wtrlll Ntwl • , • 2 DAILY PILOT c Dairy A 1ulit ' Mondi!)', May 13, }q74 ..... I 1 Heiress' Bid Did Connally Resolve Taxt;S? On h·vit1e Stock Nixed I ' Irvine heiress Joan Smith failed today I . By BROOKS JACKSO~ \\'AS•IINGT0:--4 -Jonn B. Connally may have assisled the nalion's bigge~ dairy coopcrJtive in a tax :tud il t!Tat failed to uncover the dairymen's massh'e il)egal political donation s and allcg1·d kickbacks, the c0-0p's forn1cr lobbyist is quoted as saying. Police Probe New Robbe.ry I At Harbour Huntington Beach detectives '\'ere looking for clues today at the scene of the latest robbery to hit the exclusive community of •luntington Harbour. Police reported Friday that tv;o gWlmen tied up Deborah Uniack and her male visitor at 3332 Bounty Cicle on Gilbert Island at about 12:30 p.m. before ransacking the house. The robbers fled with a "'allct and about $33. The couple, unhurt, managed to get free after half an hour. Detective Ri chard Nolan said today the latest robbery doesn't appear to be connected wi th a two-hour robberv· kidna'ping incident in,·olving four homes on 11umboldt Island the week before. The description of the suspects in the latest crime doesn 't match that or those men involved in the first lengthy escapade. he said. One of the gunmen F'r id3.y had a receding hairline, police said . The second js described as having a mustache. Nolan said he hopes to have more leads into the case after inlerviev.·ing the victims and neighbors and searching the area today. The men forced their v.·ay inside the home in the channel·laced community after acting as if they were responding to a "for sale" sign outside and then pulling guns. police said . Mood Hardening ;\gainst Nixon SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The mood of the California public has hardened against President Nixon in the y,•ake of the release of the \Vatergate tape transcripts, the Califomia Poll reported today. A statey,•ide survey of 738 adults showed that a majority ol the pulblic - 55 percent -said they believed Xixon knew and approved of the \Vatergate affair or that he took an active part in the planning. ~ Pollster ~1ervin Field said 32 percent felt the President had some idea of \vhat '"as going on, while only 8 percent believed he knew nothing at all about it. Lihhers Stage Ahortio11 Stand CINCINNATI (UPI ) -Women's libbers here used ~lothcr·s Day for a pro- abortion demonstration oulside <1 Catholic church. The group of about 35 \VOre n1asks and feigned pregnancies -dra .. ~:ing the ire of some persons arriving for Mass. Althoug~ there were no physical confrontations, the re were jeers and Oil(? man slipped in to the line of n1archers and tried to hand anti·aOOtlion literature to 1he women. I A Catholic priest walked out of the church, spotted the marchers and shouted. "Butchers, skinners, t~ascists Communists -go home.·• ' 01.t.t'Gt COAST C.,. DAILY PILOT ,..,. ()<1"90' C~••f 0;o,1, 1',°"1 .,,., "'"" , - bo-0 '"" "•'"' p,._ ,. ,·,1111 ........ 11" '""<>•"Cl" Co.If! "ul'"'~"'q '°""'~"" ..-,.. ...... , .•• , • '"' ••• r ""'""·~ uo~t•• '"'"-'II" 1 ,,,., ,,., ( ,, •'•'"' 'l••r<-·•1 £1ool"~ •lu"'·"f"" lli-1 • I , ·~~v"'~' L '0""'&oae~ ....,,,.,.,,,,.N •• 1 ··~· c-~1 .... s.... .A.flt c.r-.. '•"' -,.,. '"" ....., •• , .• ""' ... t) ,.,.., .... " ... ~,.. • ....., ' ~•r !•~IJ'•"C°""r>Jlli•• M ~ •' '•.!·~• • t11 ~"·~•.~·<'>I• Y9 4 (.o< I •" I '• •, • P·h-<-ll I/I•• I ,.,....,_,,....,F\.Mn...., J,.I 11 .,. ~I V<11>,..,°'.''" •...,0.-•AI ~•1'4•• T! 1 v~···l I'''>' 11... "' ~ '·' •r' .,. "'~"'£e•"' c._..,31..,H i-~ •-11dr r~.,1 ..._ ......... ~•'l90""G l ~ • '•l Codi MtM O+fic.t • ,., .\~ • '!lo" ' ... ~Offlttt l,.at,. 11)~, • IHl"• •'• , .... ,,.11~ ... '·'~· ·~ .. ... .. ·~··"': -'"f'•"" .•.. " ' ..... . !>i<' a,..~~·• )_' ,.,..... 4• n,., Ttkpit-171 41642·4121 Cl1\tiflf'Ci Acl•tf'tl\!..q 642·S6 71 1 • .t-. ,., '''' °''"9' c."'" r ~ ·~ ·.,,... \ 0 ··~-· -.... ,..~, ....... .., ........... ~ ... ' .,,,.... .. ....,., -·" ...... I>" ·~"·"" .. ··-...J:-·•.,...-fl .. , ......... - ... '1(.1 ..... ,... 'Oll"l>O'IO"" .,.,,y_ .. "" ' .. _rt'_,,.,~,1(1(1 .......... ,,,, ,..,,..~ ,. • ~ ..... ~ "111 Bob A. L.11ly. former lobbyist for Associa ted ~lll k f>roduCf'rs. Inc.. said Connally. thrn Tre usury secretary and in epmn1and or Ille Internal Revenue Ser\•ice. "mav ha\'e resolved" the tax n1atter :iccorChng to notes taken by a lawyer \Yho interviewed Lilly. Among the items that the JRS didn 't find \~·as $100,000 paid in cash to Nixon fundraisrr llerbrrt L. Kalmbrch of Ney,·. pori Brach in 1969. The co-op recently asserted that this donation y,•as an illegal use of corporate money. The co.op has asked for a refund. On the Connally question , co-op Jay,•yer Jake Jacobsen once told the milk producers' leaders that Cornal111 had y,•ritten about the n1a1ter directly to R . L. Phinney, the IRS district director in Austin. Tex., an informed source said. P'ninney, a long·limc friend and fonncr business partner of C o n n a 11 y , acknowlOOged that he had been involved in the 1971 audit, but denied that Connally or anyone in \Vashington had contacted hi1n about the matter. Gover1111ae1at ll' ork Flow to for1.-c fellow shHrcholdcrs to CQllSldcr 1 1 and act on ilen1s in an eight·p(lund age~a which ransed from the enti re company budgrt and di\'iclend proje<.1ion to I 1nunagcn1ent salaries. l filrs. S1nith In a letter to co1npany 1 Prcs.idcnt Ray1nond \Vatson from her \'lrginia home on April 9 exercised her , shnr£>holder's rights to call the special stockholders rnccting. ; All sh a re ho Ider s or thei r representatives "·ere present toda y when \Valson convened that meeting. ' 1 By 12:30 this afternoon all eight points had been either considered qr rejected by , majority \'otes of shareh'plders. Mrs. 1 Smith said her intention was only to get •·on the record'' either the action or 1 refusals to fl('l of company n1anagemenl or stockholdC'rs. I Tn an attempt to double the projected · 1974·75 dividends. ~frs. Smith waii overruled by a vote of 80 percent of con1pany shares. Connally couldn 't be reached and his lav.·yer, Edward Bennett \V 111 i a m s , declined comment. .Jacobsen, once a friend or ~naJI.i·. hired one of Connally's senior law partners. ~1a rvin K. Collie of Houston. to handle the tax matter. Jacobse n has testified to Watergate investigators that he checked Connally in advance to "sec if it was OK" to hire Collie, several sources said. "Joe, did you turn on that fire hydrant?" "Nah, 'J 'm just standjn' here watchin' it." "Aren't you afraid it will flood the street?" "Nah, it's not my department. l\.1y foreman's over on the next street." Thus was a slice of government life recently in old Montreal. Canada. The water is clearly goi ng- through but the mail may be another question. Her attorney. Lyndo\ Young , ir! argumcnls in support of a resolution calling for dispersal of $9.2 million. te rmed the Irvine Company to be liquidating company. lie urged stockholders to vote approval of an additio~al 51·ccnt per shar£> dividend, suggesting the con1pany could meet that pay out demand by selling J,000 acres of land. 'Different Bulwts Used' In LA l(ennedy Slaying George L. ~1ehren, the milk producer'i· chief executive, is quoted in court papers as saying that Collie ';got them off on tha t one but said he could not do it again." Collie, in a telephone interview. said hs role was to give legal advice to the ro-0p. ~fehren and Lilly "''ere interviewed by lawyers conducting an independent probe of the milk producers' politic:' activities. The notes of those interviews were rece ntly subpoenaed and made public in court records. Also made public y,·as a Jetter that Lilly wrote to Jacobsen when the tax audit began. The letter v.·as dated Aug. 26, 1971 , a few months after Jacobsen had -enlisted Connally to help persuade President Nixon to raise milk prices. Lilly asked Jacobsen to help again. LOS At;GELES (AP) -Re-opening an old controversy. a cri minologist. said today t.he bullet which killed Sen. Robert F. KeMedy had different characteristics from a bullet taken from lhe body of another man injured in a ,·o\ley of shots at the assassination scene. the bullets came from the same manufacturer. MacDooell told the hearing the ooly wa y to make positive identification of the bullets would be to retire the Vieapon Sirhan used in the assassination. Also testifying at the session was a San Jose forensic scientist, U:lwell Bradford , who sa id photographs reveal different manufacturer markings. Ho\vever. he said his examination of the photographs did not reveal diffl'rent rifl ing angles. Lilly said Doyle Bond, an IRS agent from San Antonio, Tex., the milk producers' headquarters, was askin g questions about some suspicious checks. Lilly said Bond had indicated he might get a promotioo if he could "raise an issue over our questionable expenditures." Those questionable expenditures may total several million dollars, recent diSC'losures indicate. But when the audit \\as ovcr, nothing new had bten uncovered -,and the milk produ cers O\\'Cd no extra taxes. The IRS disallowed one deduction for the expenditure that Bond had discovered b<'forc the audit began. This was a S00.711.07 payment for a picture boo k of President Lyndon B. Johnson's messages to Congress, apparently printed at the request of someone in the White House and intended for use at a Democratic party fund·rais~ dinner in 1968. Although this expenditure wa s disallov.•ed as a business expense. it cost lhe milk producers nothing at the time because the item merely V.'as subtracted from the co-op's loss carryf'ON'ard. ,,·hich is the sum of its unclaimed deductions reserved for future years. \\'hat the IRS didn 't find includes : -$91.691 or more in corporate money <r ittl services donated to Hubert H. llumphrey 's 1968 presidential campaign . Although the IRS found none of this in its 1971 audit. another inves tigation by IRS agents in Arkansas turned up $22.000 of it after Connally left office. Af, a result. tv.•o lop CO-Op officials ha\'e pleaded guilty to federal charges and a third i.s under indictment. -S34,500 or more in corporate money for 11umphrey's 1970 senatorial campaign in ~1inncsota. -Uncounted sums to other state and federal candidates, and to pay salaries ancl expenses for the milk producers' political trJSt. Threat of Dcatl1 J ails Santa Ana Suspec t in l\lesa Charges of assault "·ith a deadly \\'Capon are pending today against a 41 · rear-0ld Santa Ana man v.·ho police nllcgc thrl'atened to kill his ex-girl friend Sunday during a scufnc at her Costa i\IP~:I home . DonAld E. Baker. 1010 N. Gates St ., is being held in Costa Mesa city jail against SJ0,000 bail <lnd the gun he allegedly trained on Mrs. Dollee campbell was taken as evidence. Pollet' arrived at ?o.lrs. Campbell'!! home on 1121 El Camino Drive while I.he confrontation was still in progreM. They h::id ~ alerted by th e woman 's current .. boyfriend. Charles C. Twalte. who had been upstairs and overheard I he argument . ~\rs. C.an1pbcll told police office.rs that dur ng his visi t Baker had pulled the w~pon out of tu!I coat p()Cket, cocking the han1mc.r and announcing, "I'm going to kill you." She said ~he thought originally lhC weapon "'<IS unloadrd but I a t er £'~Am1ni'll1on or a ~\'olver police say was clf""ppcd t'ln a chest of dra .... ·m when they ord,.rrd Rakpr to ''drop the gun" rt\1.:alt·d ~I'< cartndgcs in the cylinder. . Herbert l\-lacDonell. director of the Llboratory of Forensic Science in Kew York . testified at a hearing into the "second gun theory," that more th"n Jne gWl v.·as fired _in the Ambassador Hotel kitchen ~·here Kennedy wa s killed. The hearing was organized by Los Angeles County Supervisor Baiter Ward. He says he is seeking to deterptlne whether Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted of the killing. acted alooe. Because Ward is rimning for governor, critics are calling the hearing a political move. v.•hich the supervisor denies. Police and Dist. Atty. Joseph Busch have sa id the bullets used in the shooting were mislabeled and that Sirhan was the only gunman. Referring to· photographs of the spent bullets. l\IacDonell noted that there wa s an apparent difference between the angle of the rifling groove on a bullet taken from Kennedy 's neck and one taken from the stomach of a tel evision nev.·sman 1 Will iam Weisel, 'vounded in the shooting ?o.-facDonell also sa id markings on both bullets left~the manufacturer do not match and ggestecl there is "a strong possibility" t bullets ·v.·ere made by different f . At the Sirhan trial. testimony indicated V.'ard hopes to present evidence that will allow new testing of. the v.·eapon Sirhan u.sed in the June 5, 1968 assasslnaUon. Sirhan is serving a life tcnn. In 1971, an in\•est~tion v.·as conducted by Busch and the police into allegat\cru that the criri'linologist testifying for the prosecution in the Sirhan trial, DeWayne Wolfer. had not test.fired SirhAn's gun and had not performed proper ballistics procedures. But after a five.month study. BuSC'h announced Wolfer had been cleared of the allegations. . A spokesman for Busch said, "It is the belief or Dist. Atty. BllSCh that the case is closed and this hearing is a publicity thing for Ylard. Mr. Busch sees it as a Ward campaign rally and there v.·ill be no participation by the district attorney'J office." Ward, ~·ho is seeking the Democratic gubematorial nomination, said today he wants to resolve questions that arc still hanging over the county in the matter. . ·-. ·. ·~-.. , ' ~~·-. ' ...... ' 1:-f "" • " .) . " t~·· ,, ~~,,, • ' . ' • • - ; Delly l'llflt Sttff l'llf" Splaslai11g Good Ti111e Kelly Horabin, 8, Oeft) and Lisa Morton, 7, get the ir first swimming lesson from Instructor Jim Kiani. The large pool at the central branch of the Boys Club of the Harbor Area will be used !or low<ost swi m· Ing lessons June 11 to August 30. LeS$ons are open to boys and [llrls of all ages and range in price .from $14 to S25 per two week sesmon. Parent< may sign up their children Tuesdays through Saturdays at the club, 594 Center St., Costa Mesa . ' I • Newport Officers Clear Mexican Theft Suspects Three Newport Beach police detectives spent the weekend in T I j u an a investigating possible suspects i n Thursday's lltt,950 Lido l~e burglary but decided the 1.1e1ican suspects were not the thie\·es. "We virtually eliminated them a.'i suspects," a police spokesman said today. He said that Mexican police asslstcd in locating the suspects. aOOut 12 "gr~n card" temporary worke rs. Thursday'i;. burglary took place at the hcune of l\.1rs. l\.lauja Baldwin , 326 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. Police said somC'One smashed a side bcdroon1 window. ransacked the premises and made off with strong boxes containing valuable coin collections and other itertl.11. lncludede in the loss were bars of gold and silver bullion valued at S20.000 each. The burglary v.•as diS('()\'ered bv l\.trs. Baldv.·in. widow of millionaire yachtsn1an Baldwin P.1. Baldwin: and a companion when they arri ved home Thursday night. Police said they are ~·orking on several other leads in the case. From Page I KISSINGER. •• Vnited States since he became secretary Sha reholdc'rs voted dov.'O t h c suggestion From Pagel TAPES ... .. tape panel was continuing to \\'Ork for the court on other tapes. He declined to sa~ how much longer lhc pane\.. wOuRt- continuc its \\'Ork. ?o.leanwhile. Nixon ·was quoted bv ·a Cabinet member today as declaring' "there isn't any cha.nee ... v.•hatevcr" thal he \vi11 resign from the nation's' highest office. ~. l1iflatio1i Hurts Suite's Surpliis In Ti g ht Budget r SACRA!\1Et\i'O (APl -Inflation J~ .. giving stale go vernment a $188.3 million shot in the arm, stale Finance Direct.or.• • \'cn1c Orr said today . '-' But innation also is partly responsible ror a new $78.8 million drain in th6 .. state's poc.ketbook because of risirii; ~1edi-Cal costs. That, and other cost hikes, lrims the new budget surplus back" to about 1100 m'illion. · • Orr said prices in California hll\'e been ' increasing this year at the equivalent o1 an 8.8 percent annual innation rate. lh' the short run. that is easing the fiscf.l pains in Gov. Ronald Reagan's tight $t.8 lsraeli sources said earlier the gap irl billion 1974.75 budget proposal. •: the disengagements negotiations witlt The biggest increase in state Income is' of State. Syria is as wide as ever despite 5 report an estimated $100 million hike in sales' tax revenues, which is a direct result of· by Ki~inger of some progress toward an inflation. Personal income taxes are op agreement. $70 mi llion over earlier estimates, and all ~leanwhile, Israeli warplanes struck othe r income sources are up $18.t south Lebanon today, and eyewitnesses million, Orr said . said the ancestral village of Uni.ltd "Spurred on by inflation, California~ e£C>nomy and that Of the na tion are·• St.ates Sen. James G. Abourezk took the booming," Orr told a joint meeting of 1rie· brunt of the attack. Assem.bly and Senate budget-writing The Lebanese defense ministry sairl oomm1ttees. )- foor persons v.·ere killed in Kfeir village, ~ including a woman, her six·month-old son }-' • T and eight-year-old daughter; five other ~uss 1 a us hreatene<h- children between 2 and 8 years old were SPOKANE. \\lash. <AP\ -Polle~ wounded. and five houses w c re evacuated the Russian pavilion Sundafat destroyed. ..r Expo '74 after a telephoned bomb threat. A communique accused the Israelis.of Police and Soviet pavilion security agents.. aggression. searched the pavilion but found no traCe of a bomb, an Expo spokesman S!Ud. Poli~e Streak " h " " /rut Also Damciged--OuJner " PORTSMOUTH. R.1. fAPl -A Portsmouth motel owner says a group or Bo.'iton policemen ran naked through hls Ramada Inn nig ht club and took part in a disturbance lhat resulted in about $1,000 damage. ,Peter Stilphen said abotlt two dottn of the 100 Bol!ton policemen staying at !he n1otel Friday night participated in the alleged incidents. The policemen came here to march ln a police parade Satun!ay. Jean-Lawler. motel manager, said she coiled local police twice and slllte pollco once about the matter, but no arrests were made. A spokesman for the lloslon Police Department, Frank COrpenito, said today the department Is looking into the matter. Slllphen said he Is coMlderi ng filing a complaint with the Boston police commissioner's office. ~1rs. Lawler clalmed at lea$t l;\alf a dozen policemen stripped at the side of the motel's swlmmina pool within alahl d tllc night club 11udlence and jurilped in. other polio< ran naked through the night club, with .some golng up on the stage and othera jumping on tables, Mrs. Lawler and Slllphen charged. 'Mvee or four naked policemen also ' . carnc in and stood in the 1notel lobby rt the front desk, Mrs. Lav.•ler said. "That's not streaking, that's indcceiit exposure." she said. Mrs. I..awler claimed that t.ome or lbe pohce arrived at the motel that afternoon drunk and continued drinking through the night Pictures and other motel property were tossed out of second story windoWA and firecrackers were set off ln halltiays, Stilphen said. Jrv;ulatlon was· ripped fron1 the ceilings and a security · camera was tom from Its stand, Mra.• Lowler said. A liquor cabinet In the nlgbt club was broken and some liquor wt11 stolen, Ille added. 111 0 '111e only complaint WP. had ,,_. noise," Lt. ltenry J, P.11licr of U....- Porumouth state pollL'C barracks said ... ~· When slate troopers arrived at 11t4t, motel uround 3:30 a.m. Saturday. he Mid there was no noise, just a few mC'fl drinking In their rooJM. · F1ve bottles of liquor were stoteo fr\)P.! U\e cabinet, he said, but Investigation 9f' lhe lncldent is a local p o 11 o ti re.sponsiblllty. Pon.mouth Police Chief John T. Pierce said, "There i.s going 10 bl something done about this matter." I l s pri tod he vol Ma cal Fr pr to- m fir ti pa