Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-05-17 - Orange Coast Pilot.. . . I -. ers . ~ j --. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 17, 1974 VOi.. '1, NO. 11', 4 llCTIOltl, • PAGO • • . • • -. '· . --... •• • • • • ~ -,. .. . .... • .. ' ~--1·n e , ee eace' .. . .. . -... . ~ -. . ----· --.. -... -. . €a_-..ntY ;~e..,t1 Plan Bites For .Massacred Students . . . ... I • • • • • • • • • • • Fiery El Toro Jet Crash ' Probed Stepson Held Russia Struggle Reaches Coast By 'JOJIS \1 AL TERZA Of ttlt Pally 1'1111 Sl•ff \\'hen 47-yror-old Dean Hoxsey fought · his v.·ay i.nto the U.S. Embassy in ~IoSCO\\' Wednesday and declared that his enchantment with communism had ended. the agony began for hi s stepmother in San Clemente. 1For ltlrs. Ell Hoxsey it goes far beyond the certainty of phone calls day and night and the nuisance of press queries. . Cllspers Asks Bonrd Sessio1i On JetNoise By L. PETER KRIEG Of ttlti Dally l"lllf Stlft Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers said today he v.·ill call for an executive session of the Orange County Board of Supervisors f\.1ay 28 to begin negotiations for a sctttement or the suit against Orange Ciounty Airport filed · Th~ay by Newport Beach. Qaspcrs also predicted that the nearly t .~ hotneO\\'ners, u•ho five ~ears ~go filed a $25 million damage suit against the airport. may drop their migalklc and instead supp>rt the city suil ti Newport Beach suit ·asks Orange Coullty Superior COurt to Impose strict opera!tng c:oodittoos on the a!rport. ca_. called the city effons "far mere apropos" than the damage claim and said he thinks It will "lead' the way to a settlement of tbe alrpon noise pn>Wem." Ajrport DlrectO.. Robert Bresnahan dlsqreed, lie aald the city's lawsuk is "~lUcally motivated''" lM"FJfth Disbict super v I aor i a I el~lon Is 1 ... than throe w.eks aw:f!'. In It, Q!apcn Is lacing chafl~eo by three otl)ei' candidates. , . ~f \lon't know why they flied It at&ls thQ. It would have been more aJJPRllrlate· to find out what the state i• f!Olni to do about our request for a vlriance tram the -noise lt.IOdards/' Bresnahan 11.Jcl. "If the vartance ls granted and the ~ Isn't .-IV«I lo their aalllflctloll, _ tbea they Oould · BUe," Bnlllahon said. A dedGaa by the Calllornla Doparlmoot • of Tra~ on wbilller ~ let tllt airport ...,uooe to _.ie •v1111 lhoulh 11.-· vlolale the alalt -II duo ead7 llolt lllOlllh. A 1l!!orlll 111 ti. nriat _.,JW"'l lakes piaolJ: ,....., ~ . a m ......-.--.. pa1tllll GO (S. JllT NOii&, ... I) She is seriously ill with cancer. "\\.'hen I picked up the paper this morning and read the account from correspondents in Moscow , the shock "-'as just the same as ll I had heard the news of an auto accident," she said from her home Thursday afternoon. Htr fondness for her stepson (whom she hrst met ooly after he was grown) Is obvious. But for Mrs. Hoxsey, the quiet , normal life she established over the past 10 )'.ean as a widow living modestly ln San Clemente ended when Hoxsey sought to return to America . Hoxsey was literally wrestled from the grip of two Russian security officers at the gates of the .(merican enclave in the Soviet capital. Accounts from two correspondents who witnessed the incident said the one-Ume defector was grabbed by the Russians as he tried to enter the bullding. Then, as he was being Jed to a Russian interrogation room, two U.S. embassy officers managed ·to grab HoUey from' his captors and s p i r i t him intO ·the embassy which is legally U.S. territory .. "No one knows what will happen now," Mrs. Hoxsey said. "I don't have any real hopes about the situation," she .~ed. . Tired. wea!P·:add 1n P41\1t the Sap Clemente ~ 'siicj, f~ · 1JA~e advised her tO • laave home 10 ' Spar.. herself any fll!')her _p/ooblems because of Wednesday's e v~ n ts -deemed an international incident in government circles. "The last time I oaw Dean was In 1959 and 1960 when his father wao still alive. We were in Eun>pe and lea111ed that Dean wu 1ertously W and would have delicate surgery In a M0&00w hospital. W• obtained pennlssion and went to visit. "His dod stayed an entire &UJ!Uller. while Dean re«>vered, Then his fllher left," she related. " 'lbe elder ·Honey, an a v o,;i e d OJmmunist whOoe career · In tbfr'tos Angeles tu aste110r'1 ·office · en(e4 in 1'49 because ol his political ~l• -• ........ .... Ill! ... apnl. lie ·'four !See DllftlCl'OR, Pqe I ' -TWO HOURS A.LL NUDES WILf., GET LA JOU.A !AP) -Ji 111" -I a Rllllao •I Black'• !Wadi, Wbefe Aud~ ts alloo!ed1 ,... muat get ~-wltle two hoqr,a' t&ne. ' • . A "'"°"' limit lp tbt porting lot 11 the llol¥o4 -wu' apprQ•td 'lllundQ.bJ lit Ian DU ~1 ea...U, e1recu-. • saanda)t anil sm.s.Jll. • -.. Cr&'.sh Vidim Burt Police and Orange County Fire Department person· nel assist victim Vickie...M. Lange, 21, of Orange, in her crumpled 1961 car following noon hour crash at Main Street and MacArlhur-Boulevard in Irvine . Thursday. Miss Lange w~s tre~ted al Tustin Com· Ollty ,lltl PllOIO by ll:lrNlrd KCMfll...- ffiUn.ity Hospital for minor injuries and released. Police said Elaine A. Kasper. 24, of 152000 Mag. nolia Ave., Westminster, wa s not inj.ured ·in the col- lision involving her van. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~~~~-~-~ -~ fh.ree Suspects 9f .S~A " Tr~ked ·n0wn, Escape been ZO..year-old Patricia." Hearst herself, Sullivan said, "There Is no evidence she was here."· ' J Two. o( the three per.sons were 1 tenta'uvety identified as William Taylor Harris, 29, ~.of the SLA founders, and h1s :Mfe, ~!ly, 2T. The third was ·d~\led ~· ")ver~ good lookil)g &lrl in her orly 20s1 tn a pule compt~n," ··, 'A~lti cm the trall·of ttlt·thr .. altif ml t 'II\ a st*tJng 'goods otoni ·1n wlllch the man believed !I' ~ Hims -lti>oPed tiy • store em~loye • ·(Soe' llKAllS1', Pa .. I) • . . He Wins R~ection Memorial Rites For Slai11 Je,visl1 Hostages SI.atetl A memorial service is scheduled tonight at a dozen congregations of the Jewish Federation of Orange County for tcenaged hostages murdered or maimed in an Arab terrorist attack on the Israeli town of Maa lot. Leonard Shane. president of the religious organization, empbasir.ed that non·Jews are invited . He said the observances at locations ~ut the county are co-sponsored 'by the Board of Rabbis. Spokesmen for the Jewish Federation ' of Orange County ~id services are set . •I var)'in( times and may be teamed by calling each congregational headquarters. 1be memorial services will be held at : -Harbor Reform Temple. Newport Beech. -Temple Bat Yahm, Corona dtl Mar. -Temple' Sharon, Costa Mesa. -1'"'°' Academy, Jrvlno. -'!'em.Pie Elalt, Mi"lon Vie)o. -Mlllklc Judea, Laguna Hills. -'l'<n1>1e Beth David, Westminster. I t . • Ni11e Hu1·t As T1·ah1e1~ ' Hits A11to By JAN \\'OHTll 01 !ht 01ily Pilot 511ft ,\ jl'I erac;hed i1110 lhrc•t• 1no\'in; 1·<·h1cles injuring ninl' pt•oplt• and sent a mu::;hroon1 cloud uf fkin1('S 100 feet into the air Thursday at the F:l Toro ~larine Corps Air Base. The pilot and cre\\·man. Capt. \Villian' 11aycs. 29. ilnd Cpl. Tcrencc Crawford . 20. both of Santa Ana. pnrachu1ed to saf('ly \\"ilh minor injuries. bas c spokesmen said. But fiery wreckage of the atlark trainer bounced 250 feel front the open field where it hit to Lam bert Road . "'here debris and flames cr<1shed into th e three \'Chiclrs. :\frs. P<iula Stop1K'r. \l'ifr of Sgt. \lil;r S!opp<•r. and lhrir infant son \1·cre no \\"11 lo tht' Long Jlcach \":1\·;11 llo.<;pi lal 1vi!h third degre~ burns ;.ir.d cul~. Tht•y 111'11· reported in gnod concll1111n !oda\·. Sgt Stopprr 11·:1s lrl':1t1·d for 1Ju111~ .11·d N'lcascd, but his l'l'hJCll' 11 as d1•rnol1shcd Passengers 1n lhl' oih~·r tuo \"l'hicles . .1t personal c.:ir and a \],;nnl' Corps base truck . were lrt'illl·d for ~hock .:ind ntinor burns and 11·crc rt•lt.~a!'t·d. Base spoke.<;n1en said the cause of the cr<ish is still not knO\\'ll and is under invcstigat1on. The I p. rn. crash produced a spcclacu!ar fire ball and a roar that jolted nearby neighbors . Jcrr J,.chman of Costa ri.lesa. a piano tuner on his way to an appointment nc:i r the base. said he had just turned south 0:1 Ir vine Boulevard when he saw lhc jct IS.. PLANE <;RASH. Page 21 Orange Coast Weather Considerable cloudiness through Saturday but parUy sunny Satur· day afternoon, according to the weather service. Slightly cooler days. Highs Saturda in the 1ower and middle 60s. Lows tonight in the 60s. IN"!llF. TOPI\ l' Hto1 ti11g101~ Beach rtt1.1n1s to tlie m"iddle f1ges Saturday for a1• al/~ay Renaissance Faire. Sec today's \Vttkeu4er for detaiZf. • • \ r • • • • • ( • ,i"__oAIL T PILU I rridd~. fl'!(IJ J/, 1 I• .. Israeli -Cornman.dos, ·Planes Hit Arab Bases By UD.ittd Press lnltrns1loo11I Israeli commando unit c.trrll'<I out I :rwt attack against an Arab &uerrill~ base a mile Ins.Ide Leb:uton today and Israeli planes struck guerrilla bases nl:'a:- the border in the second da\' or J:elaliatlon for the '-laalot 1nasSacrt, t,.rneli military spakesmen repartcd. · ~ Palestinian ne"·s agency \\'AFA ~.Id m Beirut the Israeli planes struck in '""Waves," hitting five s c par ate Palestinian refugee camps In southern Lebanon fron1 J :50 p.m. to 3: 15 p.n1. It sa1d antiaircraft batteries opened up on the planes but made 110 claims of hittin11 lprm. • Lt. Gen. ~1ord~Mi Gur. the Israeli armed · forces chief of staff, said of the raids he could not rule out the pos~ibi1il y that Israel \\'lls out to make southern Lebanon '·unlivablf'," a \1·urc' ·used t"wlo months ago by Defense l\Unlster :i.1oshl' Dayan. Damascus reported a dogfight over Lebanon bE>twetn Israeli and Syrian pl<inl'S bul Israe l dt'n ied the report. Tht• Lebanese m1htary eon1 ma11d said Israeli planes broke the sonic barrier O\'l•r UPI ltltPllOll Beiiut today and that tbe Lebanese Air Force scrnmbled but made no contact. A Syrian co1nm unJque issued , in Damascus said the Syrian aod Israeli warplanes fought an air battle over South Lebanon today and that an lsraell plane v.·as shql down in names. ··There was no conlact, there was no battle and there was no downing," an Israeli army spokesman said in Tel Aviv, however. The Lebanese government announced that 48 persons \\'ere killed and 184 v.·ow1ded in l\\'O Israeli ai r strikes into From Pagel DEFECTOR ... years after that Moscow summer. For the former defector, the 17 years in the Soviet Union v.·ere ca!Cl.lated to be repayment to a regime u•h'= hhad allov.'- cd Hoxse ythe chance to fulfill a dr:eam. .. He had always wanted to be a doctor, but after t"·o years of college in the United Stales he realized that without money, he could no longer study. "He was invited to travel to Russia as part of the youth fest ival "and then v.·Rs offered the chance lo stay and be trained," his stepmother explained. After six years of study, Hoxsey \1•rote home to say he plaru1ed never lo leave and that he fell an obligation to repay the Soviets for the training. Correspondence behreen the physician and his fantily in California -includuTg his natural mother v.·ho lives in the northern part of the state -was steady, but never abundant. "He would usually \\'rite at Christmas. but this past holiday he and I did not correspond. All the lime beCore, however, there was never an indication. of any disenchantment, and no feeling on my part that there v.·ere any problems," she s.1id. But there is a theory about Hoxsey·s reasons for disenchantment v.·ith the Soviet way of life. GRIEVING FAMILY WEEPS OVER KIN KILLED IN BLOODBATH Thirty Were Killed by Three Pal@stinian Guerrillas :·Son1e time ago he and his mother corresponded and she began to \1Tife to officials in hopes that Dean. ttis v.·ife and adopted daughter. \rho is 14 now, could ge t permission just to visit the United States.·• she said. --------------- From Pagel JET NOISE ... ajlat Caspers v.·ould do as a result of the city maneuver. The ?i.1ay 28 executive session Will rome one week before the June 4 supervisorial election. At that secret session, Caspers said he v.ill ask fellow supervisors to form a "technical" committee to begin the neBotiatlons with the city, He said he'll ask that they bring their recorrunendations to a two-man board committee whlch v.'ill be hlmself and ';_Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. ..., Caspe~ said he's especially hopeful ll\;lt the so-called preferential runv.·ay :"system <?fl be reinstated and that the existing runways can be expanded. He said he thinks he can get appro\"al for both after the upcoming election. lie pointed out lhat one of its past opponents, Supervisor Ralph Clark. is also running for re-e lect ioo in his district v.tlich. includes the city o{ Tustin . "It's election time in Tustin, too.'' he said. "Political decisions enter into 1l along with logic. After Clark .,..·ins the primary he ~·till be able to be con1p!etely objective." Caspers prcdictcrl there coiyd l>C agreement on the entire suit ""·ithin 60 to 90 days. He pointed oul tha t he had met Thursday, the day the suit .,..·as filed , v. ith Ncv.-port Beach cily officials and ttimeo"Mrs reprt'sc ntJ!i\'L'S. · He disclosed that for the first time he'd been told that the city \rould support the runway extension. "That was n e \\" s lo me,'· he said. "Before that thry·d opposed e\·er)1hn ig from new toileis to niorc parking.·• 01.ANGI COAST s1 DAILY PILOT TJ>e Orll"V' C:o•<t °'"'"°"""' ....., """"'~ "co"'" bl""<I !~ N~ws·l'f~,, "P<Jt,<·,I~ t' I,.. Clra<>Q~ eo..t Pvtll""'"U Comi>on~ i;..o.111p fKM•Ol'I> •'• .,t>lil .. ...a "'onllil• '"'ougn r ~~.; 1" C.,..1~ ,,......_ -tion S.K~ '""'"<>Q!nn S..arn r ·""' i.... V•lley. lr;iu~• lie...,. '""""''5-~ """ S..11 C!-111e.<S... .l\ltn C..P·IT••"" A ••"II"" r~I 9114'(111 ~ Oul"Orolle<l S••u•d111 •"'1 S...11· 01 .... 11 .. prtnc'f>tl ~~t>g p<111t n 11 lJl:I Wnl illfy Sb'WI. Co.11 Mew. C"•Mo·-91671> (~H lno1 P.,~lodP.Nolt "'°"""11111M ....... Edo1<A l...,.....(114t••_.,~JJI .c1nt1"'4...,...,.'4l·'''' •-c-ai1t..ao...v1~&11tdl 491 .... 410 ,._HMllO.."Ot~~ ... 140.1210 °"""'"' .. ,. °""" .c-~ ~ .,..,.. _____ ....,... __ . ..... ... _..,..., ............ ..... _....._,,.,.......,._ . a =' ::-.=;of=~C:--a::.:: • ll I A.00 ........ SlltALLEst.PU R HAS H6t DOWN Dt:RY ST. ED\IUNDS. England (\;Pl) -Tt-'Cl r-.tcCullan . a S-foo! 3-inch b.ar!cnder. h:.1s quit Britain's smallest pub because he wants room lo expand. 11\e Nutshell Pub measures 7 by 15 feet and is a local landmark. But fllcCullam says it can 't hold enough customers. · "The other day four American tourists walked in and filled the place." he said "And they didn 't even buy a drink ." From Pagel PLANE CRASH .. circling lo"' ove rh ead. "! "·as just thinking with all these planes and trainees out here ho\v rare it is to have a crash, wh en the jet came right do...,·n in front of me at a 45 degree angle and never pulled up," Lehman reported. ··There 11·as a huge ball of fire. like a mushroom cloud. maybe JOO feet high. It v.·as brilliant orange and black -and the jet just disintegrated when it hit the ground,'' he added. The crash spread debris over a quarter mile • wide area, and ·,.afiic on the perimeter roads and portions of Irvi ne Boul evard and Sand Canyon Road were blocked off to traffic for several hours afterwards. Regents to Cut Fees for Some LOS A~GELES fAPI -Part-time undergraduate students at the University of California 1n:iy pay less tuition next The t C Board of Regents was expected ~ to J;!Vl' ap)lroval today to a proposal 1•·h1l'h 11ould rt'duce tuition by s:-io 3 quarter for students taking eight w1its or ]('<:<;. The rnr<isurc \1·as passed by a rege nts' comrniltt·c T h u rs d a y with the endorsement of UC President Charles J. llitch and student and I a cu I t y rcp rrsentativt>s. The theory is that those letters may have sparked suspicio n bj' Soviet officials. Hoxsey told his benefactors at the embassy \Vednesday that he now rears for his safety v.·ere he to return to his home in Volgograd (formerly named Stalingrad until Stalin fell from grace in the USS R). Presumably, his Russian-born v.·lfe and their daughter v.·ould remain behind. * * * Protest Issued To Russ Leaders Over Defector MOSCOW (UPI) -The United Stales ha s protested to the Soviet government over police interference with a n America n defector who now "'·ants to leave the Soviet Union, t:.S. Embassy officials said today . They said !\·lark J. Garrison, the embassy political counselor. delivered a protest to the Fofeign !l.1ini stry O\"er police efforts Wednesday to block Dean C. Hoxsey from entering the Embassy. Hoxsey. 47, of Pico Rivera, Calif., defected to. the Soviet Union In 19S7 when he came here for a youth festival. He now lives in Volgograd, is married to a Russian and works as a doctor at a clinic. U.S. officia1s said Hoxsey got into the embassy \Vednesday only after a struggle with police guard ing the entrance and inter\'ention by U.S. diplomals v.·ho witn essed the incident. Hoxsey told--newsmen he "'·as formerly a Communist but had b e c o m e dfs i!lusioned v.·ith the Soviet Union . and Communism. He also said he has been harassed by colleagues at the clinic where he "'·orks. He told newsmen today he ...,·as. returning to Volgograd to apply for an exit visa and hopes to return to l\foSCO\Y soon for further discussions "'ith embas.oi;y officials. t:.S. officials said they still have not detcrtnined if Hoxsey is a U.S. citizen. At the time of his defection, he sa id, he turned in his American passport to Soviet authorities and acce pted a Soviet passport but never formally renounced 1 U.S. citizenship. One More Not~h (: Banks Hike Prime Rates to JJlh% ' NEW YORK (AP) -The nation's major banks pushed.the prime lending rate another notch higher today to 11 II pen:enL Leading the increase irom 114 percent were the big New York banks, including First National Clly, second largest nationally; Chase Manhattan, third largest; Cbemiea.I Bank, sixth; Banker's Trui~ seventh ; Irving Trust, 12th; Marine Midland, 16th; and Franklin National Bank, 20th. . The country's largest commercial bank, the Bank of America, followed quickly, as did the National Bank of 'Detroit and Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh , 13th largest. Major West coast banks also followed , including United Cali· fornia Bank, Crocker Bank and Security Pacific. The prime rate is the.rile banks charge biggest and best corpor· ale customers. While not direclly tled to the rates charged for con· sumer loans, the prime can eventually lead to changes In tllOle rates asw~ · • Lebanon Thursday. carried out in rt.tallallon· tor an Arab gUerrllla attack on the Israeli border village~ Maalot that left 30 persons dead. The Israeli air strikes broua:ht 11tarp criticism from Secretary of State llenry A. Kissinger who also denounced lhe Arab guerrilla attack. Egypt \Vamed Israel that there could ·be grave consequences from the air raids and the Egyptian war mlnlster spoke of a resumption of the war. Israel did not mention inflicting casualties in today's ground strike one 'Ont of Hand' mile across the Lebanese border in which the commandos bl ew up a hou5e belleYed used by Arab guerrUlas. A spokesman s.akt Israeli planes eight hours later fle,w atrikea on targets tneide ''Fatahland," the Israeli term for auerrtUa-dOminated areaa of southeaatem tebanon.oear the Syrian border. He ••ltt aa planes returned from tha hall·hoUt raid. Both Israel ·and· Syria~-hea vy flgbtlng on IJle,GoJan Hei a· aria around. Mt. llermc•i·loday1 the g th J'Oll!<CUlive day ol comliat · llitrt. A Syrian communlqoji !OponC<iiSyflan-lsl'fdl lank • . duets and that both sides were using iirtlllery and anti·lank weapons. The Palestine News Agency said ruring the raids on south Lebanon today Israeli plants attac.ied a PalesUne red crescent ambulaoo!. "The ambulance was burned and Its ~upan" ktntd," the agency cla imed. "This new ugly murder contradictll all international rules and principles .• , and we reiterate that the Pale~an Anny will know how to deal blow11 which will hurt the enemy wherever he Is," the agency said. From Page J Valley Drug Arrests HEARST • • • for shoplifting. He drew a gun but in a scuffle v.•ith the clerk. dropped the pistol to the sidewalk. Its registration v.·as traced to E1nily Harris. 'Won't Halt Traffic' llarris and one of the wo1nen ran to a v.·aiting red and }Vhite Volksv.·ogen van 11·hcre a third woman was at the wheel. Bv KATHY CLANC\' Los Amigos High School. ¥/a.; critical of ·rh · the 1· ~ bout 30 01 ,,.. o1u., P11et s11H e woman 1n van 1rl..,,. u police •for placing-an underco'l('r ·agent hot r h. b k l th Fountain \'alley police don't expect· . ho h dm s s rom a mac ine gun ac a e on campus wit ut t e a inistration·s building but no ooe v.·as injured. their mass arrest of high school drug knowiedge. •-•· b · ·d h It •A the "Police should do "'hale\'" ....... """"ssary They abandoned the Volksv.·agen and pusuc~ w ring a rapi a w ~· ..... ~.. commandeered a Pontiac. Then theu ·11 al -mpus narco11·cs trafro·c but to curb the problem ," said (;oyelle, "but .r 1 eg ..... -later forced another man to give the1n I v.·ould rather thev had let us know they think ii may scare a few people. bcfor.e they put soinConc on campus. his blue and ""hite Nova. "\Ve real!zc v.·e aren't going to stop l he Linda I-:nsley. 19. who lives next door "I can't sav if .,...c \\"ould or "·ouldn·r 1 th h. t th d r w 1trug pro blem by pulling a lot of people ha\'e allov.·ed ·it. That v.·outd be a district o c \\' 1tc iouse on e e gc o alts, in jail," says ·Sgt. \\'illian1 ne Nisi, decision." said she had seen t"·o \1·omen going in d. of ~·ect Lt h Bo " Administrators al both "'hoots ,,·a,·d and out of .the building the last several coor inntor ··r•uJ inc x ~ days. She said they usually did not wruch resulted in 58 arrests \\'ednesday !hey don't believe the drug prob!t•n1 ls rmerge until late in the day 811,1 night and Thursday . any worse on their ca1npuses than Oil appeared to be v.·earing wigs, ooe red "\\'c just want to warn them that others in the area. and one black. cverv third or fourth lime they make a Sullivan said he believed 1he trio would sale: they may be making it to an have returned to the buifding if it had not undercover agent.''. he cautioned. c:rz Clea e ,1 "The drug-problem is thorou~hly out of 11 • r U been for the sporting goods store incident hand, not only tn Fountain Valley but all Thursda y. over Southern California .,, I s r · Sullivan was asked why he thought the The ptassh·e Fountain \7alley area . ··'' fflll f!g L//g SI.A men1bers had CoJne to Lo.<: Angeles. sv.·et>p v.·as similar in nature to a late L · "Thl'Y got pressure fn lhc San April roWJdup in ln•ine -"Operation LONOON (AP )_ A British jury Francisco area and ix•rhap~ they Jn·ing .. • _ in v.tiich about 130 persons !oday cleared a young S:inta nalurally decided to chan ~e their scent• \rere arrested on suspicioo or various Barbara \i·oman o( all charges in of opt>rations .'' hr said. ··1rs the norm:il drug offenses. DeNisi took part in that an alleged kidnap and arins o(X'ration of a fugiti1·e under prl'ssurc ." """ration. llarris has been identified a.1) the "Y'"" smuggling plot. She bov.·ed her head T " t h RNclion to the arrcsts at Fountain and sobbed in relief. ·· eko of I 1e SLA ". o spoke on a tape Valley and Los Amigos High Schoolll v.·as rrrording rt'ceived after the April 15 varied but administrators agreed the :rhe jury returned guilty verdi<'!S rnbbery of a San franciSC() ban}( in narcotil'S problem is serious. •· against a ~loroccan and :i \\•hich ~tiss Hearst par1icipated. Pakistani arrested in the cJse. ti · d h. ·r h d •--"As many arrests as \''ere made ii \l'11S arqs an is v.1 e a ut.-,;n probably necessary," said George Bell. Allison Thonipson . an IS-year-old s"·rethearts <1t the l'ni\"ersitv of lndi:ina Assistant Principal at Fountain Valley former v.·aitrcss and part·tirnc 11·hcrc he w~s a speel·h major. In 1972. High School. model. v.·as arrested l\"ov. 'll as she they moved to the \~"est Coast and livt'd "As far as .Planting a studeflt arrived in London on a Oight from for a tin1e in Berkeley v.·ith Angela informant on campus, I think it 'ras Los AJ1gelcs. Cu l om s offic i<1ls r\t\\'ood who is also a suspected SL1\ probably a necessary thing. The found five pisiols and ~nn~n11nition nirmbcr. operatioo was obviously successful." , in a false botton1 of her trunk . It wns th!!! second close call for the SLA Fred Goyette. assistant principal at •-------------" ful!_1t1 ves in JS days. 1------···-----·---- DO:'\'T i\IISS OUR FABULOUS SOFA & CHAIR SALE . EMDS SATURDAY. MAY 18. I .. :1rgf'st invf'ntory in our ht:-:.tor'" to be redu('ed. Sto1> ·in now for best selection al terrific savings. Fanlastic selections of upholstered pi eces ;1\1 on sale noW. Names like Sherrill, l\1arge Carson and " .. oodmark all at special priC'Cs. ' ' Over 100 sofas and 250 chairs have been price·slashed come in and browse! DREXEL-+iERITAGE-+iENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN : WHllDAYS A SA TUlDAYS t:OO to 5:30 NEWPORrBEACH • 1727 WtSTGlLIFt' DR.. '42·2050 ' LAGUNA BEACH • 345 NORTH COAST HWY.. <9<-8$11 TORRANCE• 23141 HAWllfORNE BLVD . IOP<ll El\, tll t, Sun. tW:30J 1171-1211 • \ -\ I At Your. Service A &enday. Wednesday aod Frklay Feature Of lbe Dally Pllol Got a problem.1 'flie1t Pal Oun11 . Pat Sleer• Gel.ling Fatte1· DEAR PAT: On Feb. 2.8, 1973 1vc purchased 10 calves fron1 tile Andahl Callie Compa ny in Artesia for $1,200. Our ('ontract states that the calves should have been ready for marketing no later than l~<'b. 28. 1974, and •·if these calves have not reached 900 pounds by the dutc. "the seller will assume ownership of the. calves and pay the buyer the going 1narkct price for 900-pound Holstein steers ollf that day." \Ve ~ve nnl had a single official notice or a financial settlement, onl.y a s cc on d ·ha n d unsatisfactory explanation by p~onc a1~d oo con11nitn1ent as to Y.hen payn1ent .,.,•111 bP made. \Vould you look into this maUer for us'? Grant Anadhl, 011ner or the cattle company, sa)'S your cal\"t•S "'ill be ready to n1arket In approtlmately·60 days. The calves' "'eight y.·as rt•uched, but they C'Ould not have been se nt to market on 'Frb. 28 due to <4 combinatio n of tbe 'vai::e· Prlre frreze t•ffeets on the <'3llle markrt and the packers' strlli.e in Dece1uber. \\hlrh held 1111 1111· sla11ghltr for li\"C "'eeks. Anflahl says the slaughter h~us~s are •·hat"ked np ," causlnit his ftrm s (·:1 t1le !!laughter toc bedule to be backe'll' up too. No morwy is retel\'td by lite firm rnr cattle until tbty nre slaughtered. \'our sleers arl' rntin~ lhtlr "'·ay to a higher Y.tlit:ht and better market price in the meanti1ne , and Andahl Is paying for the fred . If you have further questions, Andahl requests you ("(Intact him by telephune. Books fo1· Brandeis I ; I ! , , ....... t • ·" . ' · Je1·e111i11l1 Was .4 Bullf1•og ~\s the annual Ju1nping Frog Jubilee of Calaveras County gal under \Vay today, Orange County frogs like Jere111iah (above) \Vere recovering fron1 a com· p~tition of their O\\'n Thursday at .. Sadd.lcback Cot: Jege. Norman Vollmer of Orange brought Jeremiah to Saddleback and de1nonstrates a ti.Jne-tested croaker poker: blo\ving on him to n1ake him jump. Jeremiah took second. r\ll-hov's Choir Director Cited For Sex Assa ult l.ITTLETON, Colo. ·1U Pl l -David G. l\leilstrup, the founder of an all·bo.vs choir, will be tried in Arapahoe County District Court Sept. 23 on cha rges of ·engaging in homosexual acts with choir members. District Judge Robert r·. Kelly ~et the trial date Thursday and tontlnu<-d ~leilstrup·s $10.000 bond. l\lcilstrup and J:>oo Jeroine Noonan. 31. director of the Bov choir of the Rocki es. are charged \\'ith felony counls of sexual assault on a child and deviate sexual intercourse. However. Noonan has not been locatrd since a warrant \\'ag issued for his arre~l nearly t1\'0 "'·eeks ago, a spokesman for the district altornev's office said. ,,Lickey ilf ouse • Tr1 e£l<li111{ Rites "j\fickey j\touse'" and "f.1innie 1\louse" were getting married in Anahein1 todav in a real·life ceremony pcrfOrmcd by a rabbi. Nine months ago c:ail Dissinger v.·l•n! to \vork at Disneyland. donned a 1\1innie f.'lousc cos1ume and was told to •·go find Mickey." Find t>.·Iickey she did. ··11 was love at !lrsl sight," said 22·vear·old Steve Berk, "'ho \\•orked :is ·the cartoon character "Mickey 1\1ouse'' al Disneyland. The couple plan to teave Disneyland after their n1arriage in a \Vedding chapel. '"This is the 1nost f..1ickey l\touge 1r('t!ding I've ever performed,"' said Rabbi Allen Secher. · Carpe11ter Bill ' eonnty's Dumps Open ~1111days In Cle.a11np 'Bid Orange County Supervisors ha v e agreed to . open the county dumps this Sunday and on ~l ay 26 to accommoda!c several major cominunity cleanup campaigns. They also strongly hinted they might reopen the dumps on Sundays perman· ently in action next "'eek. Sunday dump closures \\·ere ordcred starting Jan. I as part of an effort to conserve the diese l fuel used by fill· moving equipment \vhcn petroleum supplies 1vere short. The ~rd has asked for . n reassessment of the fuel situation next \reek and if supplies are back up to par. the tcrnporary Sunday durflp openings could be permanent. rrldav May 17 iq74 s DAILY PILOT :J l1itellige11ce Files C'1ief s Seeking Alternate Funds The poli ce chiefs \l'ho operate the controversial Orange County Intelligence Unit have given up ln their efforts to obtain county funding for the operation "'and will seek otht::r means of sup~rt. possibly from cities . La Palma Police Chief €lbrey Duke. president of the Orange County Police Chiefs Associauon. said tne c h i e f s are con\•inced that the County Board nf Supervisors led by Supcr\'isor R:ilpi1 Diedrich \viii never budge t the money .,.,•i1hout being assured the sec re t organization has son1c type. of civilian control. "\\'c belie\'(' \1·c Sl!c the h~1nrh1·riting on the wall." Duke said. "The ehiefs all agree that 11'e n1ust keep track of organized erin1e and such c1t1zen revic\V 1rould only harin this l'ffort.'' Tire intelligl'llCl' unit consists of secret files containu1g nan1cs or 5 .JOO criminals and their kno11 n associates. 1"hc six·n1a11 office also loans oul sophisticated s u r v c i 11 a n c e gear to police denartmenls. The intclllgencc organization is made up of county policr depnr:n1ents. the sheri ff and the district attorney, all of 1vhich feed informatipn into the files. Its operations ha\"e been funded by a rederal grant. hut that money 11•ill run out June 30. Duke already has promises of $52,000 fro1n cilies and 1vas seeking the other half or the o p e rat i n g expenses -about ~49,000 -from the countv "\vC·rc definitely going to explore added funding possibilities no\v thut .,.,.c h;:ive apparently lost county support,., Duke said. ''Y..1c have l1\'0 or three courses of action in n1incl including seeking I.he add1t1onril funds through anoth<.'r federal grant. ilSking the cities lo up their contributions or sticking \vilh a 1rin1n1ed do1vn version of OC IU." Duke said the organization \Vill be kept in operation even if it is less sophisti ca ted than I! is !101\'. T"·o city councils , in Garden Grove and Orange, already have passed resolutions of support for the unit and have told Duke they "'ould be 11·illing to cover their share of the additional costs . Duke said he hasn't soui::ht any ofrici;il support fron1 the cities hu t lh:l t n1;1y conic after the chiefs n1cet again ne'\t \\1ednesday. He said there are a nu m b e r' of problcn1s thr chiers will have td considl·r i~cluding lhc possibility ot gelling support from some cities and hone fron1 other~ "It Sl'<·m s unlikl'l y that 11e could turn our backs on fellow oHicl'rs Just bl't.«n1sc their cities didn't increase lhc ton1r1butions:· 11ukc said. .. hut this is one of the problc1ns we "'ill havt• to taec .. l)uke s<11cl he-is certain lhl' chief.;; "·ill dcn1a11d a formal vote h\ Suµer\'isor!: on OCJL' '·Just lo sec .vherl' thr~· stand." Duke ~aid the entire question of t.•1li~cn rcviev.• "'as never properly brought into the open. He said the chiefs arc against citizen revie\\' bccaust' thC'y \\·ere given no idea of "'bb the citi?.f'llS \\Otild be resp:>r1sible to., .. \Vh:i!t'\'l'r \\C do here could bc a land n·.ark dl'c1sion for la\V enforcement," lJukc said. Ill' said other police grants could be effcctt.'<i b_v the OCIU controversy. One of these i., the so-called narcotics index. a centralized file kept in the Santa Ana Police Depann1cnt. It contains information on the comings and goings of narcotics dealer~ in tbc (.''OUnty. .~ : Diedrich, OCIU"s bigges.t foe, d'!Clined lo con1mcnl. 'Hol£1 'eni' E1itry List Di.p .i; to 8 LAS \tEGAS. Nev . (UPI l -Defending tharnrion '\'.C. l Puggy \Yuggy) Pearson nnd Jin1rny IFury1 Casella have been t•liminatcd fron1 the ~160.000 finale of lhe \\"orld Series of Pokrr ;:it Binion"s Jlnrscshoc Club. That redutcd the orig1n:1I field of Jfi p!:1yers to & !nday \\"ith .John ~loss of Odcs~a. Tex. ho\dini; top .money or \31.8.\0. In ordt•r for a pla_vrr to enter the · hold'e1n"' por1ion of \he \\'Orld series. !he eonlcsl:tnl had to buy in for $10.000 .\ccnrding to the rules. he must play until he either has no money on the table or I ll nf 1hl' n1oncy On the table. DEAR PAT : Jn re~ponse to th€' pt"rson ,,ho y,·rot€' to \·011 rl<t:ellll\' about disposing o[ old 0 1nag:r1:1n<'S. and for anyone interested 1n dnnaling old bool-s lo a good cau~. may I suggest supporting the Brand111s hook sale. Hy calling SSl·'.?700, your readers can <1rrange home pick·up or all books. Don;itions are tax dcductibl!f.._!1n4 all proc~s fron1 the ran '31C \vOlltt!'i'~ti~se TH'\V books for th<" Br.11ndris Univers1ly Library and provide schola.rships for Noonan, also kno\•:n as Brother Francis Joachim. has a record of arrests ln <.:alifomia involving illegal sexual acts . ----------- l\lurclcr-f or-llire Suspect Guilty W oulcl Increase ·-Coveri1or's Pa)' ( students. C.:'lf .. Newport Btac b Types of books part\C'Ularly "'anted by the Ornnge Conat y chapter of the Brandeis Unl"ermty National Women·~ Commlttre Include paperback a n d harrlco1·er -fiction , non·flction, text s ... c!blldrrn's books. rrference books and !lpttial interes t m1l~azi nes. to 11ddilion to 551.r.oo, readers n1ay phone 639-9068 for book pick·Ufl. Seams Comi1111 Apart DEAR PAT: Shaw's Carpel Ser\.'ice iMtallcd carpeting in my home on i\pril 9. 1973. Th<' scan1s in the living room ,1·er<' quite obvious and l\tr. Shaw assured me that he would come back and fi:1: 1hcm . I t's been a Y<'Br 00\¥ of repeated telephone requests on my part. bu! no repair. Th e scams are be com 1 n g separated even more and l can't understand \1'h.V the prohle1n hasn't been cor rected by TIO\\', 1\1.C., Dana Point Shaw assures you be 'i\'ill make arTangements 'i\llh you to intpeet the carpetlng and complete any needed repairs Immediately. Stamp• Vahu1ble!' OAKLAND I AP\ -The operator of a topless bar in Pleasant ~!ill has drawn life imprisonment for the contract killing of his wife. ~telvin Dorthick. 42, v.:alnul Creek." wes fowid guilty of first • degr<'e murder in 1'.farch and sentenced this \\"eek by Alameda County Superior Court Judge Gordon Minder. " The defendant was charged with arranging for someone to strangle his "'"ife, Peggy, 36, then make it appear she dled in a fiery car crash. 1lle contract killer was not identified. Distaff I 1i111ates Chnrged in Riot SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Charges will be filed against six women irunates of the San Francisco County Jail in San Bruno after a Wednesday night rhubarb in which four trustys were beaten up and furniture tossed around. says• Sher1ff Richard Hongi sto. He said the .mini-riot \1•as set up \\'hen one of the inn1ales in the wo1nen's section fle\v into a screa1ning rage claiming her weekly phone call was cul short. SACRA?llENTO (VP1) -A bi!\ b.V Sen . Dennis Carpenter (R-Ne1\jl0rt Bcachl. increasiltg the Governor 's pay from $-19.000 to $60,000 a year and providing <1 similar 20 percent hooS'I for the state's other six constitutional officers has advanced in the Senate. The measure (S81745) y.·as .11ppro\•ed on a 7-1 vote of the governmental organization committee Thursday and "'as sent to the finance committee. Sjnce introducing -the measure in ntruary. Carpenter said he has ~i'.'.ed about too letters from voters -~g the increases . But he said the blfl .y,-as needed out of "logic and equity." Effective Jan. 6. 1975, the bill "·ould raite the . salary of Attorney Gener JI rrom $42,500 to $51.155. For Lieutenanl Gov.ernor, Controller, Trl!"asurer and s.ifrinteodmt of Public lnstruction . the salary \Vould go fr.om $35,000 to $42.500. . Q:i.rpenter said about 50 ap1X>inted state .offlti.als currently 1nake more m-0ney than the Governor. a situation ll'hich he ~~ed should be remedied. Oil Crah Planned C::ARACAS (UPI\ -A high·le1·el commission began \\"Orking out details today for taking over all foreign oil colnpanics after the govern n1 en t ~ounccd plans Thursday night for thr n~tionalization of Venezuela's pctroleuin industry. DEAR PAT : I have 100 German stamps brought from German~ after \\'orld \Var II . FiHy are bro"''" wttb a 10 in each rornl'r and 58 arc · dark green \\'\1..h a four in each romer. Both have a piClurr of Hiller. I think , and "!"ulsch~s Reich'' is 11Tillcn under the picture. Id like to sell these sta1nps and need the namrs anii addresses of collectors. R.S., Costa l\lesa Establish the \\'Orth of these stamps aod learn their proper Identity before you attempt to !'ell tbem. Some German 11tan1ps have value. but nthers ore worthlCss. Princeton Coln and Slemp Sttop, 18IMI Newport Blvd .. CO!ll8 Mesa, Plight of Foster Children Highlights Sri.11d~y Sectio11 "'Ill examlne th e stamps and give you an A mixed bag of topics are wrapped iQ estimate of their value. You should this week's Issue of the Sundny Daily handle the sale through ,,a dealer, Pilot , including such Issues as the penny new1'paper advertlstmenl, or trade pinch. the plight of foster children, and publlcaUon, 11u€'b as Ltnns Stamp News, the need for better trash disposal and Skloey, Ob&o 45365. · "" recycling. Park PassporlH FOSTER CHILDREN-Their plight is DEAR PAT: How old does a person examined by Staff Writer Arthur R. have to be to get a senior cltizell's pass Vinsel who found thal there are about 250 to the national parks? Where can t get such children in Orange County, children ooe of 'these passes. if I'm old enough, and what is its proper name? T.C., El Toro You can obtain a free Gelden Age Pat1po'1 II you are I! or older. It .. t)lk• \be btartr t•lrl' prMkgel to dtdplttd Ftdtrtl recrtltlOD Attal, plal I 50 'percent ,..du~lon In Federal aptclal rem1Uon cue Im ~ Oltffl 1rets.: Tlic • Golden Age Pat1porl Is avaUablt al uy first or Ot<Ond dau Pool Olflft and al Federal mrutton areat wbere entrance tees are charged. For )'Oll'ltt pefl<IDI, Ille Gtldta Ea1Ie Pa11port coat1 $11 and adllll!o Ille htanr •acl oil tMI• .... mpenytn1 lllm bi 1 1 h s I • .-mercltt \I ~le.le to tM umt Fedeftl ncrtallo!I aruo. I ( Sun~ay's 'Best J >triu.m permanml place andwo people to rully belong t9. The fealure leads the YOU Section. PENNY."PINCI! -The cenl 11 ~ IO i111lgnUle11n1 these dny1 with !he copper colni btlng In such s~rl' •~P~• Boni• are rationing them and It°"' are a~lng customers for lb• correct change. The story, by, Staff Writer Doilglas Fri1-ik. ,, tuia: w~k1s Sunday Special. TALltlNG TRASH-Whfcl1 isn't such a cbtap iUb)ect llDJll10"'· Dal• Secon1 of the Environmental Coalition di scusses the need for proper disposal or recycling of !he mounds of waste that are discarded daily-and of the rising profits from such activilies. On the Editorial Pages. INSANITY CRO\\tNEO -As 111ritcr Rusiel Lee of the Ne1v York Times carefully documents, unstable a n d demented men have come to positiol)s of power numerous times in histor)' and with tragic results. It is imperative, ho says, that tnodem candidates be judged sane by reasonable fllen-before they are elected.~ Also on the F.ditortal Pages. · -HOME ECoNOMICS -Some of I h e •1~les" practiced by celebrated p0l1Ucal figures are catalogued in light- touch Family Weekly cover story by Trdeos Spatz Lelgll~. SANFORDls SON-Demond Wilson of the Sanford & Son series reveals the fact his first rehearsal halt was the family l>atlltOM>-hll lap dancing would N>•• clellrvyt!d the linoleum In lbe rtst ol the' boule-u part ol TV WEEK'S cover ... ,,_ , ·. POP CORN PLANT Grow your own popcorn it's tun 59c STRAWBERRY PLANTS Rf9. S 1.19 POfly Poe STOLONS DICHONDRA 14!, SANTA ANA TIF GREEM ----•:HOUSE PLAMT DEflT.----- • •PLANT.RENTAL SERVICE 4 . For Weddilll)S I Grapd OpenillCJs-rcriies, etc. · HOUSE PLANTS I ldtal for PlaRhn or Tlf"'Nri• MARGUERITE DAISIES STRAWBERRY ., AMERICAN JUMBO DELUXE ELECTRIC BROILER You can't flnil.it anywhere for Ins -$59.00 • .... ss.oo ntE OHLT TAil! Tor GllU WITH IUH W'AIMIH~ TIAT AHD SAUCI PA~ Pl.US JUMIO §ltE COOKIMS AllA. s39•s •HOME 'OWMERS Ask About Our LANDSCAPE SERVICE I' ' • I • I , \ • ' 'I , • • .... ' ., ! ' •p(oJUbers Had No Orders~ Newport Has Go11e, Done It \\1LD BLUE ''ONDERS: After lots of tumult and shouting, fist-waving, teeth .. gnashing and car-plugging, Newport Beach has finally gone and done it. The city has sued noisy jet aeroplanes at Orange County Airport. \\'ell. they didn't exactly sue the jets. They sued Orange County government for allo\ving the jets. I \.Viii not bother you "'ith all the niceties ('(')ntaincd in Ne\~:port City Attorney De1U1is O'Nei1's legal tome. Suffice to say he covPrs such things as low-flying jct racket. air pollution, fuel rl'sidues which drift down upon the harbor community, disturbing the ecological balance of wildlife in and around the bay and such things as that. No"·· t h c legal action by Newport's mWlicipal government isn't calrulated to shut down the airport altogether. ALL THE CITY really v.·ants is to put some limits on !hose pesky jets \Yhich ha\'e allegedly caused life to become miserable for a scgmc~f the Nev.•port Beach pOpulacc. r.tcanv.·hilc as jct business continued to climb at the counly airstrip. few limit s were put on the businesses drav.·n to the place. .. These havr included a whole gaggle or fine restaurants, hotels, businessC's, banks and finan cial institutions, gas stations, bus lines. taxicabs. industrial buildings, office complexes and you name it. The place has gro...,·n faster than a gold rush camp. Every time you go out th ere by lhi? airport. you get lost because sorne new bulldings ha\'e popped up upon the landscape. J\tUCll OF TmS growth , of course. has been within the confines of ~ewPort Beach. And ttie city didn't put any lin1itations on this growth, whilst happily eyeing the tax tilt created thereby. Somebody may try to start one of those chicken-or-the-egg argument s a bout growth around Orange County Airport. Like. did the businesses all come because the jets v.'('re th ere. or did the jets co1ne because the businesses are there? Historv. hO\\•ever. v.•ill record that U1c jets got ihere first. ASSU~I E FOR A moment that :\ewport's jet suit is even more successful than is wildly dreamed. And they chase an the jcls av.·ay. Now we're going to ha ve this empty landing strip. empty terminal building and vacant parking lot lo deal \vith . Not to mention the fact that we have ;ill this business enterprise surrounding an airport that isn't going to be an airJXlr! any more. There is no need for panic. You simply havC' this giant complex built up that looks like the businesses which now :-;urroun0Jisncyland up in Anaheim . Only ftitng is, you don 't have any llisneyland. THE SOLUTION is obvious. After the airport shuts dO\\'ll, get the Disney people dov•n here, glve them the airstrip, 1reminal building and parking Jot, and tell thl'm to do something with it to keep I :ill thd surrounding businesses thriving. '--+M 1\ill sol\t' !he \\'hole problem i£ the 1>1~111·_1· pcoplt· ~ill just do one thin;,::: l\1:cp the place quiet. WASHINGTON IAPl -Not e,·en a dir~t order from )>resident 1'\i~oo v1ould have made lhe break-in of Danit•! Ellsberg's psychiatrtst's office legal. says Special \Vatergate l>rosecutor Leon Jaworski. And. be added. none ol the men t'harged with conspiracy in the ca!le have lx>en able to elniln they had anv such order or any authority other than "a general mandate to Investigate lt!aks." Jaworski made the assert ions Thursday in a 62-page memorandum asking U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell to turn down a demand bv the six defendants for a hu ge amOunt of "national .security" nialerial froni the Puget Sou11d Area J,>lted Bv Te1nhlor From Wire Services SEA ITLE -An earthquake has jolted the Puget Sound Area. seismologisls a) the Uni\'ersity of Washington reported. The quake registered 4.5 on the Richter Scale. Its epicenter was believed to have been just east of Port Townsend . There were oo reports of damage. It occurred at 6:04 a.m. Thursday. e Jtlall Cl1a11ges Urged \\'ASHINGTON -The cost or mailing a first-class letter would be trimmed bv a penny v.•hile rates for second, third and fourth-class mail v.·ould go up under a [ __ -'--I_N_S_H_OR_T_ .. _. _) proposal by the staff of the Postal Rate Commission. The rate for mailing a first-class letter• recenlly was raised by '"'o cents to .10 cents. The cominission staff nov• thinkS it should tx> nine cents. Post cards. which \1·ere raised two cents to eight cents in l\1arch , \\'OU!d be cut back to six cents under the prooosal. ~ut airman y,•ould retain its tv.·o-ccnt Increase to 13 cents. IA fl ••11th!>r AtOJlli,. Leak RICHLAND. Wash. -Another leak in lhe underground \vaste storage tanks at the Hanford atomic \\'orks has been disco\•ercd. and this one amounted to some 2.000 gallons of radioactive liquid. Officials said Thursday that monitorin g equipment al erted them that a ~year· old tank was leaking r.tay 4 but they 'vere unable to confirm il until nO\V. •!\'ems Bill Failed TRENTqN. N.J. -Lcg-islatioo giving assemblymen and senators the opportunity to respond to newspaP<'r editorials failed to pass the New Jersey Senate Thursday night. The hill was opposed by a number of senators who termed the measure. in one lawmaker's y:ords, •·a subtle inti1nidation of the press ... e Co11rls Get Pomer WASHINGTON -The Senate has voted to preserve largely inta ct the power or federal courts to order school busing deemed essential to end segregated schools. That 1Yas the final outcome of the latest renewal of the. bitter busing controversy on the Senate floor. It required eight roll calls and a lot of parliamentary tnaneuvering to reach that outcome Thursday. e Tra11sil ."ilri"e E11d.• CHICAGO (UP!-i -The Chicago Transit Authority and the Amalgamated Transit Union rrarhcd lent at i v e agreement early today that ended a 21'.! hour strike. the first complete transit --shutdown ever in the natioo'!I second largest city. The strike 1vas the first authorized agains! 1hc> l'TA in 55 years and ttv-eatcnC'd to cut off transportation for two milhon paying passengers per day. • • Whlw House to be used at their trial next month. That l~ue. and 9lhers raised by the defendants, \viii be argued in tour days of .court hearings next week. The proeecutor sakl "all tvklence of national ecurity motivation b Irrelevant" In a case involving interference with co nstitutional rights agairut WU'easonable search and seizure. "It was a carefully mea~ escalatklfl d govemment infonnation gathering that began with an unsuccessful Hfort to obtain the 'necessary• psychiatric data from Or. Fielding through an FBI interview," Ja\\'Of'Ski said. Dr. Lewis Fielding, a Beverly Hills psychiatrist, had been treating Ellsberg Kidnap \'lelhn l\trs. Ardis Graham, 48, a \\1av- erly; J\·tinn., bai1k o£ficer has been released after being kid· naped ft)r 36 hours. Her hus- band, also a bank officer, paid $50,000 ransom. President Flies To Key Biscayne Witl1 Wife, Aides KEY BISCAYt-.TE. Fla. (AP) -In a move reminiscent o! the late Lyndon B. Jo~n. J>residcnt Nixon is here for a long v•eekend stay that he kept secret Wllil t11.·o hours before departure. Nixon nev.· to his bayside compound Thursday afternoon with v.i!e Pat. daughter Tricia Cox, staff c h i e f Alexander 1'.\f. lfa ig Jr., Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler and Appointments Secretary Stephen B. Bull. He is expected to remain here until at least Sunday. l\tany \\'hite House reporte~ heard 1\iesday that the President v•ould make the trip. but aides did · not make the annotmeement until early Thursday afternoon. Johnron, as president. often kept his plans for travel to his native Texas secret until the last possible moment. agruing .lhat • if he made an early announcement and did not I e a v e \Vashington. newsmen ...,·ould speculate that a crisis had arisen'. 2 BOYS STREAK -BROTHERHOOD PROVIDENCE. R.L (AP) -T1vo male pupils, one black and one white. ran nude across a crowded plaza at Central High School in \\·hat they said \\·as a "brotherhood streak." "They said they did it to ilTiprove racial relations at ..Central High.•· said Principal Edmund P. r.l iley after the l\\O turned themselves in Thursday. ~liley said he '4-0uld lake "discipl inary ;1ction appropriate to the orfensr." 1-1hich he sa id might mean suspen,.ion. Tornadoes Hit 4 States Property Da1nagea; Resid,e1its Escape lnjur)' Ten111e1·11t 11res H•Of'I L~''' Pc~ Atlllf'IY " .. " Al!1nt1 " " Bos•on '' ,, " 8<1fllll1t " " " c n1rl1ttle •• " c n1c..,o " " ~ c nc ,,..n1!! ., ,. ~~vtl1na ., ' tllll " " Dfnvr• " • Or!ro•I " " " "~ulu ,, ,, " ICAn•i• (•!• ~ " ' " L1• Vl'!lll . " " . !1tll\J~ll11l DfLIVERY SfRVICE ~.:1.;r1 L'·tne 0,:11 Pilot is gJJranl eeJ lillilUy·fnbf II ,_ .. .., km JM ,,,er tt' S:JI J"-ull • Jiii c.rr d k •"IM If ,... Cah 1u tAt1 tlll~ l.:lf 'JI w ... , 11111 SiMly If JW .. llt rtetin ,_ t1p11 ... I 1.11. S.ttri1t. • I 1.• Sll!dty, cal d 1 u" *' • ntipl ti J• ~ 1U Ultel llllU II a.a. J eie.~oros ""' -"" """' "'" .... Ml~lll lw1lllltU 11111111111 IUCl .. -.... 141·122' la a.....e. ~-..... , i. .. -...... ,... ""'---·· 411~ '\ - 11 .S. Sum111nr11 " n " " " " ·" ,g " , . " .. Sin f'•l!!CIM:o ,.ss ,41 Sr11Ue ~ W11hlnlllClll N .. S. California " ·~ ... g Ii ~ II ·" g I " .. .. /; I -u..n Wider Indictment ror leaking the Penta.goo Papers -when White House agents entered his office the night of Sept. 3, t971 . The derendants Include Jolin D. Ehrt!chman, the former Nixon -le adviser who had charge ol tho White HJ'.UC investigative unit known as the "plumber!!," and Chariee W. ColBOn, former apec.la1 counsel to the Preaident. "1be COMpirators cbo6e to forego the necessary adhe'etfti!10-j·u d J c i a l processes and in!ltead decided for themselves that their Investigative needs out"\4-elghed Dr. Fleldin1's interests in lhe inttgrity of his professional office and his coofidential files," Ja'W-orski's brief &aid. Personal Use "Conceivably o judge or maglstnl1e might have agre<d;. but the point LI that the coosptraton maci. sure that no opportunity ror Judiclal considentton aroee. It la hanl to Imagine a 11\0re pa""t and culpable violation or the Fourth Amendment u.in this earehllly plot1'd ...,,..t nlgbttlme brull·ln." The prooecutor not<d that Pre6ident Nixon said "I did not autborlJe and had no lmowledgo of any lllegal means" IX> be uo<!d in gathering lnloimation and that he "would have d~ved had they b«n brought to my attention." Added Ja"""ki: "Not one or the derendanta has attempted to contradict the President" aaertloo ... Illinois Bar Approves ' Legalizing Marijuana C.,RBO~DALE, Ill. (AP\ -111' lllinois Stale Bar Association's outgoing president has announced. that the group's board of governors is recommending legalization for some marijuana use. Jn so doing he conceded that he once smok~ marijuana himself. \Villiam P. Sutter. of Chicago told a news conference Thursday that the board v.·as recommending legalization for personal USC' and for possession of. marijuana. He v.·as then asked if he had smoked the substance. "Yes, a number of years ago," Sutter replied . ''I DON'T S!\IOKE it as a matter or course," he said. "I tried it once on an experimental ba!lis and it didn't do an)1hing, plus. minus or at alt." But Sutter said he does not adl'ocale that everyone smoke marijuana. He said his IS.year-Old daughter and 16-year-old son told him they did not smoke marijuana and did not approve of its use. "I believe them and I'm glad /' he said. "l hope they don't smoke cigarettes. I don't, though I used to. "PERSONALLY, I DON'T think any of those things are good for you, and obviously, the fewer things like that you do, the better off you are," he said. The recommendation or the board to abolish simple possession and use prohibitions passed "b.v a wide margin ," Sutter said. He said that a second resolution to consider regulating marijuana use ..b.v licensing its distribution passed bY :i somewhat narrower margin. The resolutions approved by the 25-- member Board of Go\"emors now go to the Bar Association's 12{) • member Assembly, which meets June 16-19 ln Lake Geneva. Wis. The resolution .said th11t "because the individual and social costs res'ulling froin existing laws punishing personal use or simple possession substantially outweigh any benefits derived. federal, state and local laws punishing personal use or simple possession should be repealed ." , Ul'I T...,.,... }\'o Case A judge today disn1issed in· dictment charging Sen. Edward Gurney. a Republican mem- ber of the \Vatergatc commit- tee. with an election law viola· tion on qmpaign contribu- tions. Judge said indictment was based on law that was un- constitutional. Vteri11e Device Beii1g Recalled WASHINGTON !AP ) -Up to :100.000 recently approved copper intrauterine birth-control devi ces (IUDJ are bein~ withdrawn from the market because of concern over possible improper packaging. The Food and Drug Administralion said Thursday th.'.lt G.D. Searle & Co. of · Skokil', Ill .. has begun recalling its new CU-7 devices fo1lo~·ing complainls from physicians that packages appeared to ha\'e defecti\'C seals, and th11S . lacked assurance of sterility. Searle has 120.000 {lf thr de\•ices in its _.-i warehouses. but an estimated Bl.000 to 200.000 arr in the hands of doctors and medical supply houses, the F'DA said. t I, 1 -' ,I . ' ... . .. at Fashion Island Saturday ' , WORLD FOOTBALL LEAGUE STARS * Kermit Johnson (UCLA) * James McAlister (UCLA) Meet. greet. and receive :u~f:~~~o~:O:o~ra~2~~- ture of th,ese stars. Bring your camera and pose wit h the pros . Saturday between 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. On The Mall at Fashion Island. Island. Be sure to see the California Sun Wagon . FASHIONj ISLAND HllWPORT CllHTllll Pacific Coast Highway -Between Jamboree and MacArthur · \ • • • CALIFORNIA l111nate Will AttR1id Son '.s Final Rit.es • Quenti11 Violence Rampant · SAN, QUENTIN (UPI) San' Quentin'• 3,000 lmnales were kept locked in their celt. today in an effort to end a rash ol violence and insure the safety of the convicts. One convict was stabbed ·to death in a recrtatlon yard Thui'lday and a short time 1ater 13 inmates engaged in a knife fight in the adjustment center, a special facility for troublesome inmates. Just after the general lockup was ordered late in the day, another inmate was co~i~~~ gi;:~rmissio~ ( BRJEF'C' ) Thursday to attend the fllfK'ral ,,;;, of his 16-year-Old son, who .._ _______ _, died without knowing his father had pajd him a last visit. St.ate Correction Director naymond Proc:unier granted the furlough to P h i I i p f..tacchiarella, 35, to attend the funeral Saturday of his son Leonard, who died Tuesday of a rare kidney disease at the University of California Medical Center in S a n Francisco. The permission came from Procunicr after the v.·ardcn's office at the California training facility r c j e ct e d f.1acchiarc\la's appeal for the Lrip. B<'for<' Leonard dil'd. he tuld other re>lativcs ttmt he v1antt'<I to ~ his faUK'r. Prison officials grantl'd ·Ult• requc:-t, but bv U1e ti1nc t.1acrhiarella arrivt~ at his !ml·s bedside. the boy ba.d slipped into a <."Oma. Re\'. Simon R. Gagnon, the prison chaplain. volunteered to act as an escort to the fllf"l('T'al near San J osc. 4 lndic·t e<l 111 'Zebra ' Murders stabbed twi1..-e in the east block during_ the diMer movement. And in the same section a convict "fell or was pushed"' from the fourth-floor tier. a spokesman said . Both suffered only minor injuries. Officials said there have been 10 incidents of violence in the past 30 hours. e SI on ford S lrike STANFORD ( A P ) Stanford University President Richard Lyman says attorneys y,·i!J seek a court order todav limiting picketing by near!)' 1,000 campus workers y,·ho stl1K'k r.Jooday for higher \\':IJ!t'S. Lyman told ::i fa cu 1 t y meeting Thursday night !he deciSion to seek a temporary restraining order can1e af!er about 40 pickets delayed delivery of hot meals to Stanford University Medical Center patients for about an hour. e Rebel G11il111 SAN DIEGO !API Barbara p_ Jlutchinson. a self· styled ··tax rebel"' and author of the arguments against thfe.e bond ineasures that w i 11 appear on next month's state ballot, pleaded guilty to three criminal offenses commiUed over a 13-year period . It was disc!OS<'d Thursday that ~!rs. Hutchinson, 57, executive director of the Association of Con c C' rn e d SENT TO JAIL Peul Helverson T'\vo Friend1' Of SLA Girl Go to Jail SA~ FRANCISCO (UPI\ - T\\'O friends of a fugith·n member of the t c r r or is t Symbionese Liberation Army were sent to jail Thursday for refusing to answer Grand Jury questions in the Patricia Jle""t kidnaping. Paul H.alver.-on. 29. and Cynthia (;arvey, 26, faced .1 possible 34 months in jail for refusing to anS\\'er ! .1 questions re>!ated to th rir acquaintance> w i t h SL:\ me>mb<'r Ca1nilia Hall. onl' of the s 11 s p e c t e d l·learst kidnapers. The t"ederal Grand Jurv was C'Onvened after the SLA st:.igcd a $10,000 bank robbery in which :\liss II ea r s I appeared to lake part. ~1i~s llall also was identified as a participant 1.,, pictures taken by the bank's automatic cam- eras. t-.fiss Garvey charged thr Grand Jury y,·as a political body and Halverson said his refu sal to tes11ry Y•as a matter of consci ence. "I don·t look on the Gra~d Jury as a legal institution," Miss Garvey told U.S. District Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoli. who sent them both to jail. ''ft squashes people whose politics are opposed lo !he government. aoo, I y,·ill not cooperate with the Grand Jury." • '·' - 1State E1iergy Bill Awaits • • . ~ Sig·nature of Go v. Reagan SACffA!\1E'.'i'fO (AP l -The It bars persons from serving California Legislature ha " on the com1nission 1[ they given final approval to t~s work_ed ror a utility wilhin the • . previous two yea rs . ye~rs . ma1or _e ne.rgy Burke argued that the where there may be blackouts and broy,·nouts soon, \\rarren said. A Rand Co.r;poration study had estivialed that California's energy consum~ tion would gro1Y by 7 .S per-- cent annually if consumption were not curbed. leg1slallon -sending it lo provision blocked the "best Gov. Ronald Reagan, who says qualified '' from sitting: on the he will sign 11. commission. Thursday's 57-8 Assembly vote culrni.nated three years of negotiations on the power plant siting-energy conservation bill. The battle had involved e co Io g i st s , utilities and the R ca g ::i 11 adniinistration. Assemblymi'ln Ch a r I cs Warren !D-Los Angeles). told fellow legislators his bill would speed up the 'state's po\Yl'r pl:1nt siting process and help conserve needed en e r i; y resources. TllE ~11'~ASURE \I' o u I d create a f i v c . me m be r con1mission \vith the po11•rr to decide \vhcre plants would be located. If the plant were nuclear, the Atomic Energ~1 Commission also 11·ould need to approve it. By the time \Varren brought the bill up for cont'llrrence in St•natc admendmcnls, he had y,·on s upport of conservationists. the Reagan administration <ind the private utilitl l'S. liut not evcryOffC liked the final product. Assemblyman Hobert Burke ! R·Huntington Reach 1, blasted the bill's conflict-of-i ntC'rcst provisiun. 2 Sentenced In Sla vin o-•. el • \'A~ i\t:\'S i UPl J -A y,·om<1n and her boyfriend h.a\·c been sentenced to fj\·c years to life in prison after pleading guilty lo killing the Y.'Oman·s 3·ye>ar-<ild daughter and sci'lttering parts of Lhl' child's body over a wicij: area. !\iary Ann Vitale. 16. and \\1il!1am Perez. JI, \\"ho lived 1rith her. enterrd the gudty pleas to killing !\·!rs. Vit..1le·s daughter, Lisa. last November. Perez beat the girl t.o death. Ai\10NG l•'JVE 0th e r Republ icans again~t the measure \.la s Badham of N!'1vport Beach. Ken Cory ·of Gard!'n c:rove y,•as among 40 '"l>emocrats approving the bill. y,·hile John Briggs of Fullerton joined 18 Republicans in approring the measure. Floyd \\'::ikefield of Anaheun \\'as among 13 of lhe Assembly not \'Oling. Presently a utility applying to build a plant n1ust go through 33 agencies, and that h'as helped slow nuclear power plant cons1rutl1on to the point Warren said his' b i 11 ' s energy-saving prov is ion s would bring that rate down to about 3 percent. That would mean California 1\·ould only have to build 35 nc'v nuclear poy,•er plants • between now and the year 2000 -rather than the 120 Rand had estimated in its study. Warr en said. Under Warren's bill. a plant site within the coastline permit zone created by Prop. 20 in 1972 y,·ould also nr!'d approval by the Coasthnc C.Onimission . • ··-----. ~--~ 4 I ll'tl-~-4-ipiiifi!!Q;+ Presents the • 2nd Annual Southmr Calij1Jr11ia mc'ci1 home~ show • Singles, J oubles, triples: from 12' x 60'• 24' x 70'; to 34' x 70', ' • See latest mid·ye11r innovations by nation· ally 1ecognized manufacturers. G ~ • Professionally decorated, fu rnished, land· seeped homes rangi ng in price from $7500 to $49,500. • Representatives lo answer qutstions, help you make your choice • • Covered display.area for rel1ttd 1ttessories and services; park •nd site information. • Hundrtcfs of ideas for better liv ing. • Homes d isplayed in park·li ke sttti'"i for easy inspection, comparison. 1! ... "The We1f'1 only 1how e1clu1Wely detlgned for m•nulactuted hou11ng:• Door1 OPtn 11 -•H li.ll>ds I lil-'11 Orr: 1 P.U. 'lijff+.41,.a. Adml11oon: Sa.OO lldult1: SLOO youngll•rs 10 lo tt b•1L v Pt Lor 5 11818 roucan blllenln HOURS: Sot., Moy 11, 10.00 lo S:OO Sun., Moy 1q, 1.00 to S:OO Mon., Moy 20, 10:00 to S:JO WE URGE YOU TO TAKE ADVANTAGE BECAUSE .•• YOUR GAIN IS NOT OUR LOSS. This i~ o sole you con believe in, Here's why.We mu~t reduce our 1n~entory. Som~ nxxkh we over-bought, ~Qmo· d1sconl1nued rnodels, trade -n11. ren! reTurns, repossession\. Mos1ly HorTWn:>nds -o fc ... 01her mol..es. A few CAomple> a~ follows. Corona del Mar Store Ret/. SALE New Hammond VS JOO Sp;,..,, ""''hJ"htn ...• "' 795 New Hammond 3!81Mo•enc~ •.•. , ....• \JOO 1095 New Hammond 111)] Ph°"'n'' 0..1., ... Sri·n..·! 19lS 1595 Use-cl Hammond T }82 Top ol Sp,.~t l•n.: .... ""' 1995 Used Hammond R -1 95Con~~ . . . . . . . . . . 3740 '2599 Demo Hammond H 395 Co~>"I'" .••.. _ .• , 4 ~~5 3795 DemO Ha mmond 2 127 Conc:Qrdc· Top ol l'"" .. oJ•5 4q95 Santa Ana Store Rt9. SAL[ Used Ha mmond ,t.IOO Sp•"ei . 1720 665. Used Ha mmond 1-100 Sp•"<'' ""'~11'•"~'"'· 1720 995 Used Hammond T 2•) Sphot .. 1~,1,., ..... , 1]05 1295 Us~Hommond T-• 12 Sp."<'I •11hy1hm • , .• ""' 1795 Demo Hammond 7181Co...go• . ..... .... ::'0-45 1645 Demo Hammond R·l82 Coro..,,lt ... ' . " .. ' 3 740 31 95 Used Hammond Xb6Con\ole .... .. ' .. " .10.880 7995 A/s.o Mov!'rick5; Phocn•A & H·395 os in Cqrol'lo de/ Mor Something for everyone-So Ht..!rry for best selection! We don't advertise a so-called sole' every week when we hove o sole -it i5 reo!ly a SALE! ' Hammond Organ Studios 2854 E. Coast Hwy. . Corona del Mar 644-8930 Hammond Organ Studios 203311. Main St. Santa A!:'a 547-0351 Bonk Financing Avoiloble ,.. SAS FRA~CISCO ! UPI\ Four young Black t.1uslims '>'ere indicted for n1urrlcr and assault Thursdi'!y in the '·Zebra" killings that left 13 \.\'hlle victims dead. Ta>.1X1yers, entered g u i It y --------------~:,?i~~*ri~;~d~E:·~ A?Wallichs;i\ ~usic City~;~;~re·'~h:t~;~!~~il ;jy n ~~nt ed~ great' SOUl~d T he indictment~ Y.-ere handed up in San Francisco Superior Court rotlo,•:ing three days of testinl()(ly, including an appearance by an informer wm tied the killings to a rult called the "Death Angels." 1nse~~;~'.'i:u":1~fr:i:: f · l.Y~ ... great buys on th e world 's be st brand s! could be revoked and she ~·. Indicted Y.'ef'e ~I an u' 1 f\looce, 29, J.C. Simon. 29. and Larry C. Green, 22 , all of San F'randsco. The three "'·ere arresttd May t In a pre-dawn raid. Bail for each y,·as set at $300.000. Jessie Cooks. a I ready serving a murder tenn al San Quentin Prison, y,•as al'so indicted. Cooks had n ot previously appeared in court in connection Y.ith the •·Zebra" case. Assistant District AU.Orney \Yalte r Ciubiru told the court that police have the weapons used in 12 shootings and six gunshot assaults. The indictments charged one or two shooting murder counts aganist each ruspect. Two men, Green and Cooks, face charges for the hacking death of a daughter of a promlnent winery owner. This did not fit the random pattern of the dozen murders. , could be sent to prison ii she . is con\"icled of new charges involving preparing false tax returns for anolher member of her group. e J11dge• Told LOS ANGELES I UPI) Two mwticipal j u d g es , insisting they could not speak up earlier because of "gag omers." identified themselves Thursday as the ju r is ts accused by a colleagtie of interfering' with the Sylmar . Tunnel explosion trial. Municipal Judges Jo an Dempsey Klein and Vincent Erickson said the acrusation was "pateoUy absurd." • Protest Roll11 LOS ANGELES (UPI) NearlyS,OOOpersons conducted a rally a n d candlelight vigil in Hancock Park Thursday night protesting the Arab guerilla attack in North l s r a e I Wednesday. Police said the gathering of Jewish groups 'll'as oonducted peacefulfy and w i thou t incident. I --------------------- l I • J Fine Wine Fine Cheeses Fine' Bargains 70 Puligny Montrachet .......••• $37.80 cs '70 Estate Bottled Cotes Du Rhone S29.79 cs (limi!M Ouci11titi") We will of course deliver cases ' ROB ERT LAWRENCE BA LZER ~elect;ons ovoUoble for sampling along w;th fine imported cheese in our tasting room. SOUTH COAST PLAZA Lowe,r L ... I near Bullock's Costa Mesa • 557-2907 • ~,.~ . .. Nev~er Bef~re _At These Prices! t);Ji,jQ.NE«-ll.~ Stereo · Receivers ... ONE HALF OFF! ' I .~mi:!~d ·Time O~ly On These. Ori~inally Fair Traded Prices . . A; Once In A Life Time Offer! · c:·· -~.:- '• cl SX-424 . li ·'il ;•J> ••• ;·~-'· AM-FM Re:~:ei~v:'er:----.:...: .. ~11' 1\no)th.•1 <111Lon~: \',1luP 1n .! 'h'll'tl rt'l •"l\!"t. lh<' '-\ . I ' I 1 t1ll1lJtt"'' ,,1!ut ,1,ll•' 'I!< l'llfV ,11111 11111•! n11l1n~ ''I• ll•hl\ I" do 111"1 .u11plt• l """'I .ond "" t'ill •lll ! \1 """''!1111\ Jlw· """'"' ,,,up~!I .. 1 "·' •111.1 I tll.l'l•·llli• ... I' ••I<!• •n•I. lll•'h !"ii h1•· 1•I•11!1 "'' ! \\ 1d(• 11<.~~l'll<' ,, •1•nfl•«. \\ ',, I" •II> ' I' ,,,. 111 '1n1 ,.r1d h11~> ,l1:n.11 IP'1!1i<l"'!,1ho1 l Hf\111111"" !\\'.'. ll0\V1•rj,J)",1'!•, I'"'!' Ith• 1111>1·••''''1•!•" ,, rurn! ,hJ, .. t.•IJ!." ..101 "• J11d •l• .. ~, r ' Reg. s199, 95 $2i-2Z 2 speo""" ..:I tumtabM of fOW choic• lit iolcl ltporahty $149.951 Sa:ve $129.98 ·-·~·-~· ·--- (_.; • ;> '".· r·.;;. ,.. _, _,-; ,, '"······· ~1 ~ , ( l11er.n;: ,1 lin-i nl 11•'! un11 rx•11111n11n, I'. tfu• \\ 4• '" 1' <!lo.!1n);""'l"~I h1 •llP"!h \'"h,ll•l,11 ,uul 'ILl,l~,tv ")[od ,\,,To •• """!\ ~ "ll'·l"I"'" !.'.\,, p•>1«•·r h !.ll• ,I·" L.~h ·" I"·'"'• "' 11.,11,, '""'" Iii.on 1•nuu.;'1 I"•!•···· ,, ·•' "' I 1r •· 'f"'·'~'" 1"1)11"11 ""111cl •ri•t 'ti < •IP 1'1 111 11 hnn1.11>le'. 11,,, 1.1111· of,•~-.n,1 < !!II• IP)lloron•· • Reg . $339.95 $169.97 wi.. .. 1cNd with°"' 2 ""o"er• W hlnttaWe of yow thole• _ lif Mfd Mporftty $269.fSI The lJepartment Store of Music Since 1930 • • • 1 • COSTA MESA South Coast PICllG 540-2830 I BUEMAPARK Buena Park Ctnhr 827-9060 " 1 CONVENIENT TERMS BankAmericard .· OPEN FVENINGS & ~UNOAYS TA KE YEARS TO PAY Master Charge ., • l l I \ ' • • ' DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • Language Fogs Issue Until last week there has been no ..vocal opposi- sition to lhe June tax override election for the Laguna Beach Unified School Dislri cL But suddenly, doubts have been expressed. Two parents told the di!iilrict this w~k they were opposed to the tax override election. And while trustees did not waver from their pre-election position. they were apparently c..-onIUsed and divide\\ at certain points io the budget. Trustees need to direct the di strict staff to co1ne forth' with sin1ple. clear explanations for both the need for the election. and for the 1974·75 bud get requests. Educators are prone to use a special co1nplex language -often referred to as educationese -to de- :-:eribe facts that should be easily understood by the . public. If the election is to be succes~ful. educators n1 ust abandon their educationese and return to basic English. ln order for people to suppo1t the election -which asks an extra ..24 cents per $100 assessea \'aluation - they 1nust uncfPrstand the reaso ning behind the request. It would be sad for the election to fail only because it wasn't understood. Protec tion for Aliso Orange County Supervisors have virtually assured that all or most of scenic Aliso Creek and ii~ imn1ediatc surroundings will be preserved as open space. In action last week. the board applied special flood plain zoning to the creek near its origins in the Santa Ana n1ount.ain foo thills near Cook's Corner in Santiago Canyon. Similar zoni ng already had been applied to the rest of the creek from El Toro to the ocean in Laguna Beach. · to the develop!llenl itsoif. Much o! ~ fantl' within the fl ood plain i•!.rivately owned and rome alread.Y has been develope . In La· guna Hills, cfevelopoiin( has Cl,'lw!ejl up to the very edge of the creek tn some pl~••$, · Bui generally speakjng, tbe: crooi is a natural belt of green vegetation. ran·g1ng trorh 'grass and shrubs lo full-sized oak !rees. Wilh the l'()Unty's open spaee yielding so rapid l)' 10 the crush of development, each action like lhe 1\liso flood plain zoning iSanother assurance so1nc v.:ill be left for generations to come. The Ri1gJ1t to Speak San Juan Ca pistrano l\layor Roy Byrnes is reeog· nized for his tigh t.rein on council sessions. but a sla in of the gavel at a session early this week: appeared a bit too hea vy handed. The head of a development firm \Vhir h appears to have lost a project because or its potential strain on Ortega }Ji ghway \v as on hand l\londay to appea l the council derision to kill his projerl. Byrn es. ho\VC\'er. refused to <i ll ow the representa- tive the r ight to speak. The n1erits of the developn1ent are not the issue here, but the right to address a ci ty council on a valid topic is at stake. Wh en a-firn1 has worked so long on a project. ar- ranged for U1e purchase of a school site and n1ade con- cessions to save historic structures on its land. its ap· .. peal deserves a hearing. • -Councilmen in San Juan make no bones about their hard attitude toward growth. • • p , The flood plain zone adds another control the count:-r can exercise over de\lelop1nent. It pcrn1its the county to hold up potential development if it pof.:es a threat to the flood control aspects of the creek or a flood hazilrcl That attitude is understandable and. in 1nost in· stances, laudable. But there is a 1natter of propriety in dealing with citizens -be they developers or anyone else. ·ir e/I. so rnu .. h t<•r the Ten1pera11ce r'rusade. Two-w_ay Gap • Ill . Dear Gloo111 y ~· Gus Communication \rASl~INCTON -The stony barrier of noncommunication bel,\"ecn the \\"hite House and Republican leaders in Cong ress. an irnportant ingredient in lhe \\"atergate tragedy, \\"as raised high last \\'eek against an ele\•enth·hour effort. to confront President Nixon ,,·ith reality. Rep. John Anderson of Illinois. chairman of the I-louse Republican conference. \\'anted to discuss the brutal fa.rte; of lit·! at Thur!!· day's \\'hit(' !lo~~c meeting hct,rccn He· publican lt'acter~ n11d f\1r . Nixon. i\ndrr· son's pro po!!:. I: in· form the Prr.sidtnt lh at his denial of additional tapes lo lhc special prosecu· tor and the tlouse Judiciary Committee had no Repablican bac-ing and could only end in his des- truction. But no other Republican lead,•r back ed Anderson even though most agreed \\"ilh his i;:entiments. They took the position 1hat the President alone should set the agenda for \Vhite I-louse meetings -a vie.., held particularly strongly. b~· &-n. !!ugh Scott of Pennsyh·ania. Having '"fi red the gun that started the Republican stampede against t h c Jlresident" lin the "·ords of one bitter \\'hitc 11ousc aidel, Scott \\·anted no embarrassing personal encounter ,,·ith r.1r. Nixon. TllE llESULT \ras a surrealistic n1omlng in the Oval Office, Nobody mt·nt1oned the nation's great political rrisis. Although r.1r. Nixon in private has raged at Scott for his lethal criticisrn of the \\'hite l~ouse transcripts. the !110 men sat sidc-by-sidl' politely through a dreary eron9mic briefing. Allderson feels \\'atergtlle tnight \lt·ll ha\•e been avoided had ~Ir. i\ixl111 taken Republican leaders into his confiden<:r. But for their part, !he leaders· relurtanl'C lo <·onfront the President indicates ( EVANS ·NOVAK J noncommunication is a t\.\'0-"'3y street. Both sides can share the blame. MIDEAST PITFALL \\"hi\e Sec retary of State 11enry Kissinger strives for an Arab--lsra{'\i sC"lt\cment. a mov1~ is galhering force in 1he Senate to inake American aid to Egypt dependent on Cairo's openin g !lie Suez Cnna! lo all nations cqyally -meaning Israel. If such an an1cnclrncnt actually drnlcd future L'.S. aid to Egypt unless l'airo pledged to permit Jsrncli flagships to transverse the canal. Egypt ,,·ould never agree. That could sour the \V3shington- Cairo romance. Even talk of such an nmendmenl lno1\' acth·ely considered by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut and othcrsJ chills the S1ate Departn1ent. Actually. l sr~el has priv;itc\~· lolc! !he V.S. it·\\"ill accept Egyptinn ::igrC(•t11rnt t•• pern1it Israeli cargoes ! but not lsra(·ll ftagshipsl through the ran:iL E~\pti:111 president An~·a r Sadat h::is gi\'cn pri\"atc assurances of that. But If the strongly pro-lsrarl Congress atlached an arnendrnent dc1nanding free passage for Israeli flagships. the pcl\\'erful pro-Israeli lobby here \\·ould scarcely oppose it. To the ron1rar~·. \rhalever private agrccn1onts Israel has madr. \rilh Kissinger, a strong rote in Congress for Ribicoff's proposal would he vie\1'cd in Israel as a major gain in the high-stakes politics reaching a clin1ax in the ~liddlc East. \~lUTE llOL!SJ:: R E \'J::\l~E \·indictive politics of !he J\""ixon \\"hitc lloust• surfaced again in a gratuitou:-. groi:sly inaccurate altack bv ex-\\'hitl' !louse personn('I chief 11:-trr~ Fll·1111ni11g on a young Hepublir;u1 candid:1Le for Congress \rho commlth.'d the cardinal sin Does lt dishonor a la[ll'l Fl.:ig to hare someone \l"i!h quei:;tionablti ethical staI1dards 1rear it? O.J. GIOClmJ Gui commtnll 1r1 submllttd •1 ttH•l"I Ind do Ml nt<t1 ... r11Y rtlll<I ,... vrew1 o! rtie new11>1Pt!r. Semi r-ut pet HIV• lo GIHrn, Gul. 0111, Piiot. of not being blindly loyal to the President. Jol'Bl Robinson \Vest quit in disgust hl mid-1969 after several months as a minor \\.hite Hol.lSe aide. Returnipg to Pennsylvania. \~'est began preJiiring a Republican political career. T1\'Cl v.-eeks ago. \\'est at age 27 11·1.1s frontrunn er 1 lcading the regu!nr o r g a n i 7. a ti on candida1c 1 in !he Republican prin1ar~· elr,·tion for a congressional seat fron1 PhHnOelphia's RC1publicar\ subu rb s. But \\"cst's position \1·as unden11ine<J \1 hen Flr1nining attacked. hiln as a ··11alking dlsaster ... 1\·ho 11·as all out for glory and self-aggrandizement'' in \\"ashington. F!e1nn1i11g told the Philadelphia Inquirer that \\'est held '"iln unpaid position·· and did not1ttng at the \Yhite House. POLITICIA\S here \\"ere amazed that Flrrnn1ing. a political protege of John \lil!:hl'll. ~ould interlere in a Republican prin1ar~· election. Far 1nore serious. Flen1n1in~·s vengeful ass..1ult "·as based on \1·holrsale f'rrors or fact . \\'est. \1·as not •·unpaid" but on the payroll of the Hcpubllcan Xational Commil!ee and 11·ns :-assigned to the \\.hite House :-after i\lr. N i x on · s i11augura1ion. fi e \ras ·not ''fired '' in i\larch 1969 but resigned in June . lfis forrner boss. national cornn1itlcc political t•ducation director fla y Hu1nphrcys. described hinl to us <is a '·resourceful. energetic. a1nhitious young leadcr"1. 01 the lype needed to rebuild the shattcrtd .R~pub!\can party. Flemming's attack \ras onr n1on· example of the politics of \"('ll!l'';:1i"•·(• 1>layed by \\'hite tlouse in~1drr:-:t~;un:.t anyone \lho rtfl•SCd lo toe !ill' line Jn \Ill' prc-\\.atl"'rgate glory da~~ ol /\Ir. Nixon's all-po1vcrful \\"hite !louse !>laff. A Lite1·ary Ev~nt of Sign-ificance Unc or the most irnportant literary ('vents of this or any other S<'ason was the:> publication last week of a long- awailed work dramatically entitled ''Rerord cd Presidential Conversations'' (Government Printing Office ; 1303 pp; $12.25: Expu rgatedJ. \Vhilc some re,•ie"·ers "·lit see this as simply another oral history of the behind· the-stairs·al-lhe-\Vhite llouse variety and others '>'ill dis· miss it a~ a tau·dry mystery, to these tired old e~v~ it Is a v.'Ork of ma1or p:-o- rortlons (8 x 10 x :?l1: inches: 31)>1: popcr- back). ~ It is by'"tbe i"1me popular •uthor who ' rece11tly b<ooght us . the Instant beltaeller, "Presidential Tax. Returhl.'' to which thl5 is. in a Uil)°. a st>quel. But this. It cannot be gainsaid. Is his m•gnum opus. •"'or iHe discerning reader will find here a deeply p e n e I r a 11 n g psychologlcal drama thot gou to the very heart ol Ill human condiUoa. ll Is """ -llltould be ~·amed, light faro. Mal1Y a reader will be put off by Ille atJullMlf-•rntSI at y l'e. remtni....t ~ "~" Others will be I ~ hf1n as the most loyal of ~ll the aides. [ J ::illnost a son to P. But then he is ART HOPPE revealed lo have been one of !he plollers. Thus ,he makes the agonizing decision to _ • betray P to save his oY:n skin. In revenge, P attempts to make D lhe confused by the l3!1gled web of plots and scapegoat instead of J.M., a secondary s\lb-pJots.: BD.t tmse who pusist through · figure \\'born he had originally planned to to the unS\lrprising end will be rewarded blame or .. , :..· wmiindlh . fi.iW truths _that so enlighten the But Jet us not destroy the suspt!nse by revealing too many or the plots. Suffice it • Xlf.E 8ASJC pJot is 5 i m p J e · yet to say ttlat many, in!judlng double-Q:dapvatl\'e~ ~e i(:otago~ist, .a respeeted acr().<ltic fan s. will be ricnTy re.,·arded by nUddINCCd. e•ecullve iqentifled ooly as tile cliaU"1ges pr...,,ted, "P," Is 'stft'Jirlsed to dixover'hls loyal IF Tut; WORK suffers from any Oaw, · IWUlaotl d 'not plotllng agaiDsl him. it is Ille dialect of the characters. Typical !nlttad; !hey are plotting lt>r him. perhaps. Is p saying, "Brea use we can't Ills Jl)'oblem II how 10 protect bl• -J've got -Uthe U.S. Atlomey's Offlce a;ststanli fDd hlmoeK (rom tho v!Ilainoua. . ind, ah ... " • invellljaton "'1• are pOftU"'8Jhern 'all. · Clarity suffers. Yet much of the Event pJ!et~ event.' Wt 1 .. 1 the . authenticfty would be lo..i II the <nerny closfnt m from all aid... . chataetera spoke plain Engllsb. Slowly, ~adua4\y, ln one of the most '!'he author has also aeen fit lo delete hrlllla"YI( dis.11!1Ctfon# tjf a man's '°·u1 in expletives such as, presumably, "golly,." Engliah literiture, we aee P's noble .,,,~,. ind Hoh, fudge" ror fear, oddly charact~. en>d• before our VJTY eye& enough, of offending his readers. until fJnallyl kl one 'dramatk: llCefte, be ' BUt these are minor ctltlcl.sm1. There speaJfs de-nely of porjuyY, bribery ii. no question we have here an Impor· and olher ~ o1 obstructing jllltlce. · lint work by a bes~sellltlJ au!h>r. And Tai' •I/WI Dorlall Grayl we can't help letling he has a great ..... _ Ilea! more to ""l'· • 'l'llMU<lltyv. TllB work ...... Ihe .. Let U8 i-......... ~ llldl .l(ala ltaglt fiJllll'O Ill 1'!Gnfl D. At ftnt, wt ... _,_ j I s Lessons ot· 11' ate1·g11te Let's Look at Ourselves To !he Edi1or: I 11Tite these l\'Ords from a pC'rspectir(' "f 1>rejudice and pain. Pre1udicr ;11 hn1·ing ne\'er liked our President, Richard 1\1 : Xi~on: pain at enjoyirlf the prcse.nt plight of one 1 have never likrd . I {rel good about chickens "no 3Cem kl bt' <On1ing homt• to roost in connect.ion v. 11h ;\Ir. Nixon . I an1 pleased that justii:e is • slill being ~ervcd. Yet I ren1ain troubll•\t by a number of quesOons v.hich I address to myself. DOES l\Ir. Nixon's insensith·it•: ti) ot hers ju.stify my lack of scmitiviiy to him as a person? Does my pleasure at his seemingly justified plight render n1e son1eho"'· vicariously unaccountable for my ov1n secret and silent moral imµe rfections? Assuming I can c<lnvincc rn.vself of the justification for f'njo~·ing his ordeal. \\'hat happens to n1y hun1an11y if I allo"· such gloating to occur~ \\'e pride ourseh·cs on being a nation of J;i"·· order. and juslice. L.11\'S have bet>n broken: order has been shaken: justice has been obstructed. Persons have beef\ rreated as pawns, objects, things to be 1nanipulated and used 10· further r.lr. !\ixon's ends. ~tr. Nixon seemingly fails lo appreciate the !'leverity of theso bl un- ders in inlerpersonaJ relations. YET. I \vonder. ls-not the "'ay \l:e treat our wi\"es, our husbands, our children. our parents, our associates. and ·even our enemies of equivalent moral 11·orth to tht· underlying e\·ils of \V a te r g a 1 t' ., Qualitatively, if not quantitati,·cly. I believe that each of us shares mora llv in F'tlr. Nixon's human failings as re\"eillc·d in the tape transcripts. \Vhenever \1e tend to treat others as objecls to Uc manipulated in order to serve our 01111 need for self·aggrandizen1en t. tlle'n v.·e give up the privilege of self-righteous indignation and hypocritica l g~ating over any other person's failings ~ even i\lr. Nixon's. Justice n1usl be served, and I beUeve it •. ,ill be \\ith God"s help. Yet I also ~Heve th{lt the ultimate importancF of "'alergatc \\·111 not be tbe fact of -~ustice served. but the \\":..t~· \IC as indi•kiuals rc•ct to justice as it is being servt•'ll. The moral measure of us as a nation 1\ ill not ultima1cly be the successful adjudication of '.\1r. Nixon. but the lesson!' "·e learn from this experience about ourselves and the .manner in \\·hil'tl 11·c. t.:o. treat ethers. RABBI BERNARD P. Kl ~G Su1nn1er Dance To the Editor: · ln the interest of the OCC students and the conununity, a summer dance program is beginning to take form. In the past years, r should assume since the origin of the school, OCC has never offered any dance classes in its summet sessions.· So !hill' would lead you to believe thal there ls a lack of Interest, right? • EVE RY dance class ollertd !his !elTle&ter was completely filled. A few had to turn away as many as 20 ltudcnts per class. The evening classes, both at OCC and at Colden Wes!, had lo handle the same situation ··of an over-re.tpODSi\re student attendance. ~IAILBOX 1.l'lft'rs }roni readers ure welcome. 1Vor111u/ly, Wr1lers sliould convey their niessages i11 300 words or less. T/1e right to conde11se letters to fit space or e/imi11ate libel is reserred. 11ll let- ters must include signature and mail· 1ug address biit 11ames n1ay be tvit/1- lteld oii request if sufficient reaso11 i~ apparent. Poe!r11 1cill J1ot be pub- lished. round e\"rrl't~.~ ;ind ~11·c1c·ln11g lo ht'l'P in tune TI\'O OB~T,\Cl.ES ir, oppo<-11ion to the for1nillion of ;1 ~11111n1er d;111{·1· progra1n arc. first the lack uf ~uffiCll'llt fundS ;ind ~C'eond, the facr 1hat ii \\UUld not be listed in the summer session schedule . Certainly there is some validity 10 lhcsc concerns. lfo\\·e\·cr \\"C must not overlook the fact thnt the Slate pays the school ADA {average dail~· atrendanCT'1 in proportion lo the nurnber or ~1udt·nts a1lending lhnt spcc1f1c class. An t'~timaled AO,\ for a class of fifty studen ts in a ~umn1er session Is Sl.200. :\lost dance classes ha,·c a limit of 45 ~tudcn!s. '111E SECOND obstacle is easily o~·ercvine as it is not at all unusual for classes lo be added to the curriculun1 after a schedule is made. A qua}ified instructor is available to handle all the classe! proposed. including beginning ballet, beginning modern . intermediate modem and ballroo1n dancing. A tentative arrangement of the class times has already been "'·orked out. The s1udents at OCC have started a petit~on stating lhat there is a definite need for a summer dance program at OCC arid that they plan to attend if at all possihle. Thu s far over 100 students have si gned the petition. If you ~·ould like (() see a sumn1er dance program developed u1 your community for this summer, please e.ttprcss your concern by contacting Tom Blakely at.the St!_mmcr Session E\•ening School Administration ortice, or by calling 556-5880. RICK SYLVAIN Jtll#hale rppeted To the Editor: If Women's Lib needs yet another boring historical example, particularly Biblical, it at lea.st should not commit the sin of omtssioiJ. I refer to Ms. Berger's article, Churches Once R e c o g n i z e d Equality, May 13. The oil-quoted senlences of Ruth. (Whither tbou goest, I will go ... etc.I were not directed to her husband (who was dead) but to her mother-in-law. Naomi. However, in lhe article, ii oomes olf as being another put~ov.'Tl. ·• ... how a woman should be ... subrt1issive and dependent. . , " Unless Ms. ""Ber.l("er n1t'ant lhat this is an e~e of ho\v "'e shoold , acquiesce tq ou"r mothers--ln·law. •it Is most misleading In the context of the .at<i')'. • NAN KI.OSTERMAN With Ibis in mind it becomeS ltwlic that there have been no danct( ~ otrered In previous •ll!llmers IQCf 10mewhat unjustifiable lhat none · ale seheduled for this summer, ~ rn view of the fact ~hat da~ 'r ~·~' JtlotherlWod • '-•.1 ~(~ tho FAiior: Quotes ' Today Is a Happy Mother's Day. I '1 • didn't underatand the emphasb In the --, • MOthet'• Day feature in which I WIS llllmesh Arora, new Indbi """'11 qll04ed. The job deocrlptlon for "molher" 1enet:Jl, S.F. on ltl'OWdl ol ruru-led Diil be changtn1, bul the need W. meditation culls. in U.S. -"1 would Rive moiberlnl remalnl the eame. all' 1'!1111 Ille bl!Ddlt ., "" 41!111)1. 8"' • e'"" • bad....., C111 111 a pod ...,. u 111a Mcmuaaooo w poreothood 1a a !<llchlnp woril for you.!' , llap, not a pL Young women ' I ;1nl1ciµal!ng 1narr1<1J.!t' and fnmlly must be counsr!1'rl, not 11110 p;1rt·llllle ca rl'E'rs. but into c-:1 rrers in \1h1l'h lhl' option of part-!Ulll' \1ork t'>:ists. This rrprcsents oHc realistic option for "·on1cn in our prrscnt dav societ.v. Oilier n1other~. "·ho arc tuck~· enough to be gi\"en the cho1<:r. t·hoos~ to pursue full· ttme carel'rs. Husbands and other support s~ steins pitch in to share other respons1b1li11rs. Still othl'rS make the co~itivc choic<' lo be full-time mothers 1\·hitr their t·hildrl'n are youn g. \\'hat 1::. Ul'\I" ts eho1tt~. l'ar1•11ts \1lll al1\·ays ht \'IPs to thl·ir thildrt·11. LI \"ll.\ ALr..\ZI J 11s flt•«? To the Editor: lt is iron ical how ~nu1 \1.1y l3 is~uc hatl .lack Ander~on tr\·111g liL·be Hcbo10. and St'\'c ral olhcr p.•upl1·. 011 the llughes n1oney' through sel'r•·I 1ntonnation from secn.•t pcoph'. He turnt'd 11us supposed information Olier tu ~111ncone "'ith a subpoena"' with his !1~t of witnesses and the questions he s.1icl shquld be asked . \\"hile in the i><tlllt' 1:;~ur th(' burglars. dope peddlers an r! rnurdt•rers \\l'rc excused fron1 their trials because !ht• information against thl'JTI l\HS dccl :irl'd illega l by "ire-laps signed by the \'-TOng people. Yi'h:il C'l"Cr happened lo logical justice? GOLDIE JOSEPH Lire11si11g Cr1t s To the Editor: Your editorial of >lay 8 regarding licensing of cats touched only ur..on th e most su1X'rficial aspects of the problr1n. , It is S-O ea~y to pull lhe emotional ph1gs every timr n freedom must gi,'c "'ay lo !he inexorable aud irreversible fact of 01·crpopul~tion -both hun1an and animal. ntE EASY \.\'ay OU\. <is suggestl'd by your editorial. is lu 1rait -and hope ror n solution lh:it \1ill plci'l~P everyonr. l\-1any of w \1hii cherish our ft·line lriends and fee l that fair tre<1trnl'nt for cals is \\HY overdue. ha\"c concluded that IU;t.·11~n&,)s a first step in accordmg cats equal \lii[uc \\"ith dogs. 11 is a very small start lo\\'arcl reducing the pitiful flood of wiwanted kilh.'ns and cats constantly passing through the death chambers of our pounds. \Ve "·ould hope you r editorial policy \l'Ould hl•lp us to be stron}.: t•nough to face a hwnane problem and s1;1rt to SQ]vc it now; there is no more 11111(' tu "wait and sec''! nt1Tl l FRANKEL President. Anin1al Assistance League of Ora nge County OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. W,td, PubWhcir 1'homa1 Ktlvil, E<Uklr 8orbora Krtibich £rli101kil Pope Editor The edllorla.1 ~ of th!-Oa.Hy Pilot ~• to Inform and 11lln\ul&to rct.dcrs by Pttttfrllna on this l>l&'t dtvene•eommentuy 'an top!~ ot tn- ~ by O'ndfcattd colwnni1tl and cartooniltl, by pnrridtJw & loNtn tor readt.n' vkwt •nd by ~t~ thi1 -JI"'• aplnloN and -on C\qftnt, tOl'lcai The t!dUori&J opiniona .of Utt Dall>' Pilot appeu only In the t41torlal column a.~ the top ol tM ..... Opinions ...... -by ..... ®I· urnnlsti and C&11oonllta: •nd leUtt Wf'itm en thtlt own abd no tl!ndorte-- .,..t .. 1helr ...... by ""' Dail1 · Piiot -bo lnltll'ld. 'J'rtd17, M17 171 1~7§ ust rs. or nts our to ull- hcr her the ers \Zr sue /0, ht'S om scd " and l'rc 'thl' red ong ical .PH ing the m. lugs \'to i nf and I by for one . nds s is that cats all of ntly s of Hey lace e it and EL nee unty • j • - Friday, May 17, 1(174 DAIL V PIL4'F-> :f' ' ' Spaceritan , I Barry Gives Apology 2 Vinyl . Products Sl1elved I Se1iator Lost Temper at ~eporter ,' Aldri11 From Wire Services substililt• for ~ -1tai>d Miami, halted -.:00 w a• ~ TrOttbJ ."d Sen. Barry Goldwater, (R· appearance. • amstcd. - Ariz.,) issued a written The agency mi.intalns it ad~ What he didn't know was r · apology to the news media vanced nearly $300 000 to tlw • that Pepitone was o o I y w ASHING TON (UPI) after losing his temper at a sinoer from Jan. J 1971 't0 moonligt?th~ at the bank. His i'' Edwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin, the reporter who wanted Jilin to ·-.:. • • regular Job ts as a membtr d v ,__-.a the tDlk about Watergate. July 24, 1973, and i&0,408 .of it the police department's sti-eetl "31.u~ astronaut .on moon "Yesterday. at the Armed has not been paid back. r a1.me unlt. • 11-who l.! mw national mental Forces luncheon at 'f'llich · * * health chairman, caoceled a Adm . Elmo R. Z um w a I l ' ~1 -..i..-..auled Bank teller Vi ace at Good-natured country 'f DUlicu speech here because spoke, for the second time in · .:i. niy political career 1 became Pepitone, brother of former westem ' singer Tom T. Hur ..of recurring symptoms or angry 'at a re P 0 r 1 er, . . Yankee first baseman Joe came t.Jn-ough oo his promise mental depression that (;oldwater wrote. to Spokane and gave a benefit developed after his Ap>llo 11 ''To those oI vou v.·ho were ( J· concert at Expo '74. ~·· journey. there. l apologizC, for th.is was PEOPLE A~t two years ago, H . John Perry. director of not n1eant for you. This roan raised the hackles of the c Y communications for t h e was not an Arizona reporter. tattlers when he wrote apd National Association for but was an outsider who asked Pepitone, was at his post in a recorded· ''Spokane M 01' 1 Mental Health, said Thursday I. b'-' I Ma!Ulfacturers Hano" .. r Trust Blues,'' at a time v.'hen 1'>e th t Aid · · · said J would refuse to Co. branch in New York when iinage in preparation 'for· t e medication and undergoing n1e ques 10ns on a su I""" T.. city was trying to build ~ a rm \Vas receiving comment on. and I feel I was a man handed him a note w 0 r 1 d, s fair on therapy. vdthin niy rights in saying to demanding money~ hitn y.·hat l said," he added. Pepitone pulled a revolver . en~'.ill'11~=1~poll\O'ized. say~J g * <ind. as the would·be· robber ve Rep. Bob \\'ilson, (R-Ca!if..) s1arted to flee. he shouted, he Y.TOte the song ,n 1narTied Shirley Sarrett or t~:i "l)on 't make n1e shoot y00?" T~ank.sgsedivinhg day. He a Jolla, in ceremonies in the The man. later identified as promi e would rel I I f th fl f n.y o. Sharovatorf,,· 49, of during the fair and give a' free c inpc o e ouse o concert. Heprewn'nlivcs. lfhe bridr. 48. said :'ihe 'had ·~lll!!!!fll-.il!J!!ll!J!!lll!IJ!i!!~ O\\'Ilcd a bc-auty salon and res~urant in La Jolla but has sold them. It was the second ~~==~~~=;::::; 1narriage for Wilson, 58. He i; has three children. They were 1ved by the llouse chaplain. the Rev. Edward G. Latch, before some friends ""'"'iiOllA•tlltP:l~d':~ and relatives. * Singer Lorna Luft, daughter '+'"-'" of the late Judy Garland. is hl'ing sued Ly the theatrical agency which represents her. ~liss Luft v.·as ordered in !\'c\v York to show c.ause by ~lay 22 \\.'hy she should nor be ';'±l!lJ~ij~C~:::2 required to gire a deposition ::. ~ought by Artists Entcrtainnient Complex, Inc. ~~~itf~:n~~m SC:1~s -:;f~, ::;::'.' .;..;;,;..".-': ;;.~ ... ~,::_,~: .. ~==-~~,Ji;_+ \\·ho Jives in California. as a * Jeb Stuart l\tagruder, one 'or the e a r I y Administra.tibn casualties · of the Water~te scandal, will be one of the fitst persons to reCord h J s involvement in a book. " 1m "An Americ;i.n Life: One ~tan's Road to Watergate," to be published next month by Atheneum, l\fagrude.r says he was •·unprepared" for the pressures of the highest levels of American political life and that his u n swerving acceptance of President Nixon's standard of Political behavior had "tragic results.'' Magruder, who served as a special assistant to Nixon and later as deputy director of the Committee to Re-elect · the . President, pleaded guilty1 to ... one count of obstruction; of justice. · 25% savings and 3-week delivery on our collcccion of made-to-measure draperies :--.1 \ l" .:;:ir ;. on our very tomp!cte ished with 5-inch hems and 5-inch :.•-nrr ~(·nt of m:idc-10-ml':JS\lrC: pinch pleated hcJdings, y..·iih or ~lr.1J'tf1l'' 1\hlll }"lll! urJt·r ht·-\\·id1out lining.Selecr from :i full l\\tl'll 1\IJ\ ll .1nJ Jun<: l. O ur spl·(1ru1n of colors, Please bring ~upt·rh ,tJt·tt1u11 of d.intJ\k~. \\indo'v me~su reml·nts v:ith you, 01't·11 \l l.t\l'•, .1nciq1:l' ~.i ci11'. J)r.1plr le~ ,,·ill be JtlivcrcJ ,f1ccr•. l'l11H' .111,! llXl\lfL<! Jr.1-\\1:h1n ~ \\'(lk<: ,,f y011r order. l''fl J •• hr" \1 1;1 hl'(llf ()..11 .. rl\' fol s.l\l ~<;·,: llt J)pr(·.1.ls ro n1Jt(h 1., r 111n.!1 11 kn.L'!h .ind \1 idd1 11 1 111 .. n! f.1b ril:> .ind color ~. ) .... ; !.o!'fl( lhcilcl' \\1!1 bl· fi11-lJ:.q'lriL' . ' One week only! Buy Aireloom's Monarch I sleep sets at exceptionally low sale prices 5 9 .90 l\\·in t :llh pic~l'. Regul.1rly 89.9) \\lun.1r(h l ~ It's a "\\'inner :lt .l 10110, Jn\1· ~Jlc price. New "radial susptnsion:· .111 Aireloom cxclu· sive offered only ;it Bullock's, .';ivc:> ;1 tailored slcepinf: surf.ice. The double sti tched side walls bring double durability. An extra deelt quilted. cop layer lets you luscious con1forc "HE'S ON THE d0\\11 side of a depression cycle,'' Perry said. Aldrin "'as to speak to the District of Colwnbia Mental Health Association but decided Wednesday to remain home in Los Angeles. Aldrin, who Y.'alked on the moon five years ago with Neil Armstrong on the first lunar landing mission, developed the depression in 1971. He subsequently discussed it in a book "Return to Earth" and was named national mental health chairman !3st Noven1ber. PERRY SAID Aldrin has been treavling t\\'O or three tin1es a month since then on behalf of the mental health association. He spoke in ~1inneapolis last '~-eek. "I think tJie tiling Buzz wants to get out is, Hey, you c.3n't hide a mental illness," Perry said. "He tells his own story and how he 's coming out of it. l .. _ WASlllNGTON (UPI ) The Food and D r u g AdmirustJJ)tlon has announced the reea.11 ~of two more brands of haitl spray containing, \'irtyl chloride, a chemical linked to liver cancer. The agen<:y said Thursday the products y.·ere distributed nationwide from October 1971 until Jan. 1 of this year an1I it ..... •. ·,,.j'f90 AMERICAN CONSERVATOR""111EATRE wWillllJm Ball, General Director • In repertory Mir 20 through June 1. ... -, "No theater in lhe United SI ales, and few in the world, can match ACT 's range and flexibility! .. -DAN SULLIVAN. LA. Time~ "The best acting company in the country!" -CLIVE BARNES. N.Y'. Times had no way of knowing how I inany are still on store shel\'es , lll(T...-00f'Jllflllll(W r.tlf~.'1 I) U•l .. ,...,.()<!lf ,_,11•-•·-.toU•eUl(•I•""'' or in the hands of C«lSUmers, 1111e11f••a11e11-"•11••n .... ._.., , .. .....,. """''-~-H.:IO-f .. _°""' I ·-· ed . II -.................... ,. fORTICKt:TIHfOAMATIONll'HOHt:f714)12l""'U:ll nvvi.V in the reca are TICKETS HOW II IRIOG.CS AUO. 1oxon1c£. AU AGENCIES & IY MAIL .llosner Natural Hair Sheen GARRISON THEATE Cameramen Surrou1i<l Jacqueline ::;; ~an~x d:~~:~un~~ . ~~~i~-~-·-~-~~~--~R~20~1 ~E.ilOiittiSiT.~, CiLAiRiEM~OiNT~ii ~ Po&ler Lalx>ratories, Inc. of I WASHINGTON (AP\ Jacqueline Onassis f o u n d herself surrounded by a crush cl photographers vying for good camera angles when she made one of her rare public appearances here. Corona. N.Y., and "Gran1S Deluxe 11air Spray" in 16- ounce cans distributed bv \V.T. Grant Co .. r\ew York. · The Posner and produ cts v.·ere both manufactured bv the Chem Spray·Corp. diriSion of ,\Tl of Totowa. N".J. Mrs. Onassis attended a dinner Wednesday night for The FDA pre v i o u s I y former New York Gov. W. announced the recall of Averell Harriman. se~J other brands of hair Mrs. Onassis posed \\-'ith her sprays in which vinyl chloride escort Billy Walton, a was used as a propellent. The Wastungton sculptor. She said chemic.al has been linked to Walton ~·as an old fri<?nd. several cases of a rare form tti1 tunes: "l"ve g1ow11 1eeustOlftel!I 10 ll1r1 Itel." "Gel me 10 1111 be1ch 011 1i1111." "On tilt feel wti11e you live." DAILY $5.99 The former First Lady of liver cancer among v.·orkers "l seenied amused at the in plants v.·here \'inyl chloride shouting photographers. Asked 14•as pro c e s s e d . The ' ' . ,. -c .. 1vhether she missed the En v i romnental ProteC!tion American press. she grinned Agency has banned the saJe of and replied, ''Yes.'' all indoor pesticides containing 'I1le Democratic Study vinyl chloride in Aerosol forin. Group, a legislative research -·-_ _:_.:: and ~rdinating organization in the U.S. House of Represe.ntath-es. gave the banquet for Harriman. • .\ =;;' ........... . 2440 l/2 Priee ·Pkgs. . SALE OF SALES ' ~t?i~ NEVER AGAIN PRICES Quad Adaptor -Amp Marant.t 2440 Adapror·Amplifier pli..as twO speaker5 tran5-f.ol'm2""tlnV'stereo sys- tem with t1pe monitor circuits tO vibrant four-channel sound ... And it does the job with ample strength and precision. The discrete-ready 2440 drives out over 40 watts of RMS Marantz quality power., .and will serve as a stereo Ainplifier. DO IT NOW, DON'T LET THIS DEAL SLIP BY! OUANTrTIES ARE LIMITED. Marantz 2440 Originally Fair· Traded at $299.95. Three Year Pares & Labor Guarantee 4G PACKAG.E -SAVE $208.95 from Original Fair Trade Price Marantz lmper1114G Twc·Way Bookshelf Speaker Systems ... high power hand· ling capabilities. : .maximum e.fficiency .•. the 8" woofer and 1 %" tweeter produce super sound .•. with less rlistortion, more resonant music .• ,(4G's Fair· Trade: $59.CXJeachJ ltlarant:i; 2440 plus 4G's Lists: •4t7 ... Package Price ON.LY 8209. 5G PACKAGE -SAVE $248.98 from Original Fair Tr.cle Price Consumer best·rated Marantz lmp~ia/ 5G Two-Way Speakers._ .unbeatable at at the ~rice! 8" woofer and 1 %" tweeter sing out sweet and low ... expanded dynamic range assures crisp sounding high-efficiency across the full stretch of acoustic possibilities .•. (5G's Fair Trade: $99.00 each) · Maratat:i; 2440 Plus &G's Lis~: 8497.91 -so4s97 Package Price ONLY ~ • 6G PACKAGE -SAVE $290. fro.,; O•iginal Folr T•odt p,;., Imperial 6G's: Designed to meet-.any Cf'iallenge in sound ..• combining highly efficient 10" woofer and 1 %" tweeter in a unique system requiring less power to re1th high sound pressure· levels •.. allows your amplifier power to spare. {6G 's Fair Trade: $139.00 each) Marantz 2440 Plus 6G's Lists: •579,11 . sos99s Package PrlceONL:Y. ~ it SOUTH CQAST PLAZA • • Alreloom ha.-; a m1ttttU (ot e•tl'J reason . Stt our tntitc line, fn<ludin.c chc hamkrahtd lip Van Winkle. Vita.cenic • .... F' ... ht1b<d. • I I ' , j Shop _Munday thru Friday, tO:OO a.m. 10 9: 30 p:!". Saturday, 10:00 a.m. 10 6:00 p.m .. ' Bullock's Satilf. Ana, I Fashioo Sq\iarc, 2800 N. MliD S.-. San . Ana, T<lephonc:H7·721 I Bullock's South -Coast Plaza, San Diego f,......., at llristol, Cosra f.rcs; 'telephone: 556-061 I ( I • r .1 I • , • • • i ' 8 OAJLV PILOT FridiY, May 17, 1974 First Oppotaeiat's Son • Two Seeking Baker's Joh • • BY 0. C. llUSTINOS on the !act he probably hodn1 David Baker'!! t 2. ye a r spent m~re ~an a total or career as Orange County's $20.~ in his last thr~ Second District Supervisor has,. •• !tC..(hons. gone full circle. · Baker's 1970 opponent-the 111is year, one of his '""'O one \Vho gave him a good challengers is the .son of a scare was Larry Schmit. Last tnan he defeated the first time lime, Schmit_ waged a six· he ran for office. week, low-budget campaign Baker, a tall, SS-year-old that brou~t trim within 6,000 political veteran, is seeking votes of Baker. his fourth term on the board . °6C'cking to end that siring of successes are John T. Dean. 2i·ycar-old son of Baker's first oppon('nt and former Garden f;rove City co u n c i I ma n Laurence J. "Larry" Schmit, a 36-year-old parochial school tearher. llaker has never had lo fa ce a runoff election and he savs he is confident that string ·is secure despite his t "'o opponents. F'OUR ''1':A!1S AGU, 1hat {'(11np];.1cc ncy ga"e B<ikr r a good scurl' <ind he said he 1sn·1 going to let it happen ngain. .. I plan on running as hard this tin1e as I ever have," Baker has said. The size of his campaign war chest and the amount he has spent already tend to supJXlrt that claim. He had a total of $52,300 on hand tltis year and has already spent $39.000. 11e recently prided himself ·~-·--'"' SCHA11T CLA1A1S he has Jeamed a lot rrom that defeat and his loss of a city council seat after two terms. Dean. a la1v st u de n I , appears to be running last in the race. He is running a family campaign that has a total war cllest of about $1,000. He said his father. who ran a poor second to Baker in 1962, is ad vi sing him . The Second District includes parts of tluntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Seal Beach, \\l!'slminster. Garden Grove and other west-central county communities. tl-1ost city officials in the district appear to be behind Baker and an assessment of his major contributors incUcates that businessmen and developers are also h is supporters. Dean's major endorsement has come from the. Committe for Political Education, a labor organization. ORANGE COUNTY Schmit is running with the help of old political friend s such as former fellow Garden Grove councilman \Voodrow Butterfieid. He said n1ost of his support is coming "fron1 the gra ss roots." TIIERE ARE nearly 150 .000 registered voters in th c district, of which 71.300 arc Democrats and 67,300 arc Republicans. Baker is a Republican and Dean is a Democrat. Schmil is a registered Repulican but is known as a maverick. But the district is politically u n predictable, particularly votingfor a non-parlisan office. Baker has said in recent intcrViews that he is hoping the campaign will be low-key and Jow·cost. But he said be will spend the 1noney if he has Jo. Dean 's forces have estimated it could cost $15,000 to $20.000 to get their man into a Noven1ber runoff. Schmit Is keying h Is campaign to the conteatlon that Baker is not pushing tor enough regional park 1and in his densely-populated district. Baker, in tum, points to :-ilile Square Park in Fountain Valley, obtained only recently in negotiations \Yilh th e !'.tarine Coprs. SCHMIT ALSO says no man should have more than three terms iri office. but Baker says that tenure has helped the county because he has been named to many in1eortant state panels. ~hmit claims he wlll pound the pavement seeking support right up to election day because he doesn't like the r-.1aclison Avenue approach to politics. Dean says he is nmnlng to improve coordination between the cities and the county. The young politician has been a mem9er of the De mocratic Central Committee for nearly three years, but is seeking support from conservative Republicans. Deat hs $50 ~000 Gift Asked t Elsew li ere ~ roRoN1'0 1urn -L1. Gro up Gen. Goy Simonds. Canada's See ks I c a d i n g batUefield com- mander in \Yorld \Va r JI and later chief of the genera l staff. died \\'ednesday night after a long illness. Death Notices Gll.055 P D. (~te ) Grou, re1ldlnl ol Newoo•I 8e.tcll. 01te ot 0.111 /My IL 191•. S11rtlved by one son, Phil Grms; a<.e davgllr«, Norm11 Wiley, bo•h o! S11cremenro. C•lll., 1nd 11e11r lriend Josf'Ch Stl!1lllen1: tlve ar11ndcl\ll11re<i Mr. Gron w•~ ~ urer.me member or 111e "'•sonlt Looce. S•cramenrc, Cftl1r. A• per Ill~ wlshH,. no ~e•v1Cf$ will be held. Hi1 asllel. #Ill I:. pr1wll~IY b11ri~ al •fl. In lieu or flowers 11onallon1 m1~ be m&lle lo lM American C .. nc:er Socltl"(. 80YD Hallie N. Bovd. rtsl<1en1 ol CO!;ta Mtsa. Oa1~ o! de.i.rn Mav 15. 1974. Survlv.-11 11v t.er "'"'and 8 Knoii: Boyd; """daUQll1...-. Mrs. S.i.ran scroiros or (0!;!1 Me1a: one cr .. ndoauohrr r, Ceralvn N. S(roqc11, CosTd l.'e»; h""' .,,,.,~. Mrs. Lola arooln ot C.llOcaoo. !ll•r0•1 .i.nll Mr•. AlriYI F&aan ~t L !llM1h.•"'· II""°'~· Services will be l!eld ~I 10 JO AM, S11lurcu-. M•v 11. 191~. P-tc lfic View Cha~!. ln!ern,.,,en! p.,~;i :c v.ew /\ltn1n"1t ParK • Pacihc V•tW N'oorruarY. d<re<e:I01'5. RUSSON JoJlnn l'lu"on. was • re1ldtnl of 77111 J n~eso"'I L~nt. H11nllM1!0n Beacn. Calif , Mm .11. Dale or c:ie11111 Ma• 11. 107•. Survived bv ner hujlMnd Hlc hard, CM110Mer Cvnlhi1. p.,ren <, Mr. & Mr1. Le•ov Bia!>"•. lwo brolhtr~. ~"~hen ,.,,d J""n eraser; sisle•~. Lor., Blaser nnll d Norma Dutson ~~rvlte1 will be Mid l,londav. Mdv ?O. 191• el 1 00 PM. Church 0 1 Je•u• rnris! o r Lantr O•Y S•iM" . 111191·Hlh S!rtfl, Hunt1119ton Beach ,Cali!. Pe-r11; Family Coron;a1 F=untra fHMie di· recror1. Sl"•EL J~Dh 'J,nctn! S~I. Wl5 11 r~"Oent Of IJJ E U ln S!rtet. Co1ll /\\t•e (did Dale "' 11t'1n /it,~v I~. 191< ~~·.,c•i Balll·Be11111"'"'· "to..ra Mt'a Cna!>l'I. """"d•v, u~, ?O. 197• a• 1 oo P '.' loll!rnmtn! S~"·''tllt Nallonal Ceme111" Lns Al'>Qele:. c .. : I ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFf MORTUARY 4:27 E. 17111 51., Cos.to Meta 646-4888 -·-BALTZ·81RGllON FUNERAL HOME Corona dcl Mor Coiro Me10 '~·- 673.94 50 646.:2424 BELL •ROADWAY MORTUARY 110 S.oodwoy, Co1!0 Me10 548-3433 -·- M<CORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 log~no ConyOl'I l!d. 494.9415 -·-McCORMICK MISSION MORTUARY SANTA ANA -A group of Orange C,Ounty Mexican- An1erican businessmen and educators want to help disad- vantaged students 1\·ho want to attend college. They are seeking as much as SSO,OOJ in giits from major companies and corpor:itions in !he county to pay for scholar- shi ps to be given to ;:oungsWrs \rho might olher\\'ise never have a Chana! at higher edu- cation. The group called Advan- ced EdtJOBtional Opportunities Inc., is currenlly spor.soring l\\1> Mcxicaa-American stu· dents attending col!cg'! at C!aremoot and Cal State Ful- lerton. ''\Ve arc plaM1ng to sponsor at least three more next fall \1·ith funds already on hand. but if "·e get some big gifts, "'e "·ill be able to sponsor many more," said AE•) Vice Prcsi· dent Bernard Contreras. CONTRERAS SAID l h e group has just ,s t a r t e d appe aling to corporations for help in the past few weeks despite the fact it has existed for tiro years.' .. \\"l' just received our non · p"oltt corporalion status and rre no1v able to seek out these g;ri.'." Contreras said. "We <1re currently talking with ahout 10 companies and we ftt·I a donation of $5.000 each i~ not 100 1nuch to ask." Tl1r group's 16 officers are 11' 111<: to i;:i ve each student bi.::11t'L'll ;.,.;o<I and SJ.000 per ~e;1 r in sl·holarship money . "'Thi~ is not a loan progran1 so 11c neYcr i::-:pcct to be pnid bark ... Contreras : :.i•~. ' U\"TIL THE progran1 gct.i:.I on its ft>et niorc sohdl.1. u is1 being lin11t cd to students fro1n Santa Ana's fou r public and parochial high schools. "\\r(' arc not looking to help 2118JL Com.no (opo~rrooo so~ J~,~ (0,"1'0".J .: I ~ /I'> -·- the A students 11·ho are need~· 1 bt'<'nu.se they 11ill gcr he1p I ~n11,..·;1y." Contrera.~ !"a i d I "TJ11• Pili'-l\'f' \van! to hl·lp ;p·1· I \hi· >nir1•11, .. · .1de s!udcn1s 11 ho PACIFIC VIEW ME MOR IA L PARK , .. u:. I' · • v.~w O·, '" t.~ .. p-:·· b,.xfi Co·,ror· 6J4 ~/00 I arc h .1' • •: kcr'> ll"' 4·;,1·l1l11't maJ.i 1· 1. 1 •iidc !•Jr 11h1'• I -·-PEE ~ FAMILY COLON IAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolso A-#!l, WMlm•~~"' 893-35:25 -·- SMITHS' MORTUARY 027 Mo•n St H.nlo1\9IOn 6--?t~ 536-65)9 . PUBLIC NOTICE MOTl(a Oilf HOH·lf.SPON5111LITY NOfl(• II he<•ll'f gly•ll that !flt Vnclet"tlOniJCI will "°' 1111 '''P0~'1blt for • 1111 Ml• or tl1bltlll11 tonlr1ct.a by ~Ortf Cll'llltr .!11#11 rl'l'IMll, on or 11t•r 11111 D111t>O tllll lSlll CllrW of /Mr, lt1• J_. f Wllll•l'Pl-111>1 N"""*1 llYCI. C.N #19M1 G•llf0t11l1 ""' fl\/OllMllll Or""" CMtl O.lly P1191, IMv U. 11, .. WN 114.1-H ()"'" . I I , IC] a f'. f p: !'Ill ' I ,_. 48 '.IC ~ Ht ' rion<ild !<.:. r.raham, 48. of \\'h11ticr. chairn~an of the board of directors a n d member of the cl:ecutive committee of Smith Intema· lional Inc., Ne"1>0rt Beach, diL>d Wednesday. He relinquished the position of presldcnf&M chief execu· li\'e officer of Smith one year ago. A graduate or UCLA, he was . connected wllh JIJLRepubllc Supply Co. in 1.61 Angeles from 1950 Prior to joining Smllb In l912. He leaves his w I f e Charlotte: lllree daugblers, Trina, Gina and Mn. Diana Brandom; one mn, Steve; four 1blen and lhnle bn>tbers. Disadvantage d Student ,4 id assistance.'' The two students now being helped by t.Qe group arf' \lexi- can·Americans. Contreras said most of those who "ill be help- ed in the future will aisil be Mexican-Americ.:i.ns. '·But we "''ill help kids of all ethnic groups," he said. "It just so happens that 40 percent of the enrollment in the high schools is Spanish surnamed and these arc the ones who have the hardeht tin1e getting to college." TllE PROGRAl\.1 has an· other thrust, too. Contreras and o t b e r minority community members arc speaking to high school. students to encourage them to stick with their education. "There is a tremendous dropout rate among these kids and "'e "'ant to show then1 ii is possible to make a success of their lives despite the struggle," Contreras said. Contreras' organization is working closely with school counselors and other scholarship organirations but he makes no bones about his feeling that the schools are not doing a good job in helping the niost needy students. "! realize the job i s enormous but I personally think the schools aren't doing an adequate job of counseling lhese kids and if "'e can help in any 1vay. "'e \Viii,'' Contreras said. -- *FURNITURE *BEDDING * APPLIANCES *BICYCLES * OFFICE FURNITURE * GARDENJQ_UllMENT * AIR CONDITIONERS * MUCH, MUCH MORE! ITEMS ON A TAKE-WITH BASIS SLIGHT CHARGE FOR DELIVERY 7300 CHA,Md AVE., GAROlN GROVL ' 1/l Mlli WIST Of HACH BLVD. • ,,...,..,,., • < ' • ' Wallichs Music City s·PECT ACULAR SAVING.S! f)SAN quality color tv and stereo systems 19" di agon al colo r portable l n1oy 1n.1co.-10.life color O<l thi~ 1ar,i:.e !tC~'l'I !>t'I. A pu>h b.Jr .:l(ltV<il~ .:iutomJtic fiot> lurnng tk.:il 10(~) 1n the )h.:irpest, mo~t b1d l1Jnl poc1ure. U ,11:.o clim1natl'S the nt't'd for m.inu.ll .11d1u>linFI; t'Vl'n v•IK-n rh.lni;1ng irom thJnncl to chJnnc1. now $299.95 1 OO o/o solid-state 19" diagonal color tv Enjoy bi~ lt>CrK"n color in a \el tk<lt's fully 100'< 11a11~i1o1or1zl'd for yeai ~ of irouble-free perlorm.inc:t'. U le.ilUll'S S.inyo·~ excli.n"'t' T111Nlic au1ornJ11c colOf tuning. lhc mO\ot convt>n+ffl sy~I~ develOPt'd! Two puY, bunOf'I~ .:iutom.lhtally ~cl .il'ld m.i1n!J1n the mlhl n..iturJI color p1c1ure. now $J59~95 100% solid-state 19" diag. color remote control Ht·1e's t>vrrytking you v.·.in!rd in J hii-: •rit•t'fl ~1 - now .ii Jn unbe!1••1·.ib!" pr1cC'. Fully 100'": l1Jn~1stor11ed ~you r.in "l'llOY 11oobl1··lrt·•·. uuc·tu· lt1r co!Of. Suoer bo);hl. Su01•r"tle.i1. A J)l,•11n 1 p1c1urc 1) Julomal•C w1Jh S.invo'• nf•w T"n1.11" colOf 1u11mi; ~y~tt'l'l'I. 11'~ rhe m<hl convcn•""' 01 all! Plu~ VHF rh.,nr.t'I ~l1'ChOl'I, ~ouod 1olumi:·. Jnd Ol'l·Oli c.in Ix-itir.u!dled from at:fcn.~ rile roum ..,1111 .1 v.·11c~~ remote tonuol. now $J99.95 TWO YEARS SERVICE AND PARTS WARRANTY ON ALL SOLID ST ATE TV Surround Yo urse lf Wil h Music m Your Car~ 2/4 -Channel 8 track Cartridge player "l.1l<> ~r.11r r.1t •011od 1,;.,. .1 ro"r •·1I h.1!1 1.-h n 1 .. \r ... • I >1'!lfll!' t.1pr-s 111 '"lll ·1h \h•ro·o, '" •n h11•.11ht,1~+I"';'. ",,1, .. ,,, nl .i 'h,""'' I -.1111nd l.\Jl11~ • ''' .. :11 " I"''' ul•·1 I :,, ,f,., • 0 11• ·'"" ' 1 h .r'"' ~ ''•" o 1,.1•• 1nl11 J 1 h.1oorl ,., ,, n 11'" 'I ·I• ·'11 ,, ol• •. n• 't l'I 1• l'o ,,.,, 1~·11L~ tly t I 1·n .uh ' ~· ·"' tA ,,.,,.:1• !(IJ1!1 .in.J 1 •!lo flh• I< l'lljl•'l,110,11•'· Save $10.00 n O\V $39.95 You'll Never Pay Less For Such Quality Stereo Music Systems! stereo mus ic syste m 4 channel mu sic sys tem ,, 111"'' lr:Jnd of mu~lr h~rf'Tlim: r~•f"Tttt'. Vo1r'll ton101· .'<h.1nnl'I t.JIJI:\, 1t·(ord~. or ''""'" hro.1rlc."I~ pl,i11·d b,1r l.. lkrriu..:h ~1111•m'> m,1111\ rJ~·· od~t 111 1hc 1 ,.,:,,1h1~~1n~ fi·.1h1m ol J {h,1no1·I <Jr 1ou <~n hc.ir "().J 1 h.1n11rl d1<t 1 •n 'ufl'••lo 4-<:h.1no•·I. 4 <hi1111t'I •"" 1rlt• r,1pes d"' pl~)tod !hn111::h 11 ,u·m'" ·I .1mp!inf"t~. AM/F~11tt•u·o 1"<•'"'~' • .\ po111·r ,1m11!1111·r~ an<! m~lrtJ·~Q d{"(atJt·r . .'/~ 1 h.111111•! J\. t1,11 I.. !.11)1.' d"cl , 0('1u~r (,M1.i1d .1u1om,111r rt't <11d ("ii.111::r1, ,1orl 4 h1;V-i 11drl1!y J·\\,1y )pe.Jl(.'I'. ~~~lt'r11S. only $299.95 ' . Convenienl Terms-Take years 10 pay-BankAmericard or Masler Charge 7 Big Departmen.t Stores of Music HOLLYWOOD Sun1et & Vin• •62·2111 COSTA MESA BUENA PARK - 1 South Coast Ploza Bwenti ;ortc Cefll~r 540.28.3 0 827·9060 ~II ll,tn1 llfll lwll/1111 I• ll:H P111-l111t1y 11.f ·• , • ~ ,. :1 .-~,. i¥i < ~ :. ~:·l ~# • ; ' ( !l r ! • i ' ""~ f • ' ' 1l • \ I • \ I For. the Record .~t ~.~:1 ~ IJ11happ11 N01v Sammy Davis Jr., who inade fronl pages in 1972 when he· was pho- tographed h u g g 1 n g President Nixon, is dis- appointed with the Nix- on Administration now. Jle campaigned for Nix- on in 1972 and en1- bracecl hiln at rally. Martl1a Mitchell 1'o Write Dissolutions of Marriage Two popular upright varieties. lj""::;::t)· BUSH ZONAL and azalea·flowering .PELAAGONIUM ... in your ch oice of many brilliant hues. 4" POTS Ha~inq Bolita.) 8" imported terra cotta pots ... with three holes .. to hang it beautifully. I MARGUERITES CHRYSANTHEMUM FRUTESCENS Full, showy blossoms in lovely pastels. Chrysanthemum frutesctns 2.17 Value ANAHEIM LI 23_N_EUGLI D AT LA PALMA 635-8181 TUSTIN 1050 EDINGER AT NEWPORT-. 838-9000 :TUSTIN GERMAIN'S NAJ~1 SWG BUG KILLER 1 lb:.canister _-; 1.9s ~Zr'v 1.49 VALUE U PLANTS. for PLASTIC ••• FANTASTIC II 1 GAL .: .5' 2GAL. ••. 15' 5 GAL ... 25, 16 GAL. •• 50, Recyde your plastic "°'1tiiners for CREDIT .•• 1t eny one of our G1rtien Centers I I --- ur1elr gord~n center.r • ,, TIFDWARF HYBRID B£mA _SOD Now you can Pitch up bare spots in your lawn the easy way. Instant beautv overnight I It's simple 2.00 Value OPl!N7DAYSA WEEK on SALE MAii 1&TH 4!) THRU"MAV-2'RD ' ' \ • o~LY PILOT f. . HELP SA VE A ' LIFE! IMAYBE YOURSJ , THE HUNTINGTON BEACH BOARD OF REALTORS RUMMAGE SALE FOR THEIR PROJECT PARAMEDICS An Em!rqency Division Of The Fire Dept. SATURDAY & SUMDA Y -MAY 18-19 6 A.M.· TO DUSK Supporfed by: itS en an I., 1 ne.e Easy to apply with sprayer or watering can. • n Fast two-way absorption through foliage and roots assures immediate availability of nutriel)tS. GREENDL l.iqUid Iron ORTHO GREENOL~ LIQUID IRON l Jsc on lnv:n~. ros:c", c:amcllias. az:ilc:L' and :ill ornament.al shrubs lo correct. chlorosis (yellowing of leaves I. LAWN GREEN 11.0.0 OHT110 LA\\.'.\ lilU~EN li·O-U Vrrtili7.t'.~ :ind lmprovf•$ Sl>il c-ondition anrl Wi.1\i•r l'!·nt:!tra- lion. E:i~ily app!i,,d wi; Ii C)RTHO Lawn ~11r:iy1·r. DRTHO-GRO liquid Plant Food 11 •• flRTHO-(:Ro~ L!Qt:10 l'LA:\'T FOOll A eu1npl1·C1• an1I hnlanred h•rt ilizur 1or v~gl·ltihlt>s, l low<·r.~. ht1\.'n~. tree,; :.ind :-hruh.~. Evergreen & Azalea Food TO·l ·7 ORTHO E\"EHGHEE;o; & AZA·LEA FOOD For evergt£"ert"'. :iz:J.lca-<, r hododendT"Gns, ).!ardcnias and all acid !oving-planls. One gallon tn.rnts over 60 medium siwd shru bs. , ' TM's OR'THO. GREE NOL, ORTHO.CRO, C~IEVRON DESIGN- f!EG US P-AT OFF · AVOtO ACCIDENTS: FOR SAFETY READ ENTIRE LABEL INCLUDING C,\UTIONS ANO WARNINGS AND USE ALL CHEMICALS ONLY AS DIRECTED. ''°" •• ,.,. ..... ~ .. 0n1c ... your ... lwforourf,..,32..-e- OllTHO L•wn9nd 0w0en ...... See these ORTHO dealers for lawn and garden advice. AIU. WIDf ANG':l'S OQ.Ji.YOJRS8.P CTNTE'.; b Stae\ Se•v•r>g Sor>to Ano. Com"""1~!\ Norwollc, en.den Gove, H~n;Jon 6eodi ord W~11r~ ARROW H~...:0\V1'i\£. &'Y?I i.":.tthf"-iJd-Yert.~ L.~J.;1 821.l.J. T111i,n-Oorqe .. 20 \'if. Lintoln~ BUILOf~S EMPORRJM STOR~~ 8 S.ore• to ~" you on the Ocr.,.., Couniy Neu 8Ull0tn SAVE HOME lM~O~ CENIT~S ~q10 We~tm"'~'• M--G::rd.ln Gro~e ')'420 W, Lrncollt ·-Ardae;m 1!138 £. (hoprnM A .... --Ocrq!l OE NAU.T'S HARDWAAE 717N.ElCominOR~~ No. 20 a "'°"" ~;,,,, """' ~T OTY STORES l.ir(oln 111 S101n (~'lft!qtl.-~.,, 11.«W"';t (II i\d:rrit-li,irl!•rvtO., 6ocKh YO!to limo or e.odtoid-t. M.1:.,,1on JC PSNro.!EY ! , .. ;~ l·;a<'l':!-N...,,1'0I" ~-~, 1·_,7.;J 11·r,11.,,,od L:J!"~-\v~."'_.., l1''3ROQK HA.;,~-.·.I··· 21 41 IV L,~ ... .,._ . .\ " I l]Jj ';_ f,.,..,.,, ,,,. -·-· '"''' _i,n 'J'·~'f /,'0"~7(: ,,Vl'\Y WARD & CO'-'.f1'f'fT' '4 Lo.:ort(!n\ on !r>e h.ollerTon, ::,omo Ar(! ood H..n!"'-1001 Beo<;h A•e..•w foiAflONAL LUMBER & :,:JPf'l Y (QMPl\NY 11'1: 27 B<ookha;t -Hi.xi!tf!Qlon llcix;ll I ~! Volley View-4.o Mor()d.J Pa.Y LESS DRUGS 'rt.60 w~11 Ko1flilo-Arareim 119 l.c1 Cem1~-C.ril0!. TEN TEN NURSERY l4219C.0.. H.y.~ ..... ~l~I ChaporolO A.,.,-laqutla ~I TWO GUYS OIS(Ol.NT STOO<l' I l /l:IJ E.. .A.lonc7o &:..o. ~ > 1 21oo~bc,Bhd~G~~"' 96bll Adams lllvd.-~·fonirqon Suo.'.h COSTA MESA -HO.U'-lfr'. 1.J1 r~s;.~Y-F-LQR1.;r 2eAJ H.:11:,....• ~-;J CY,ltESS l "· :. ·'·i._ : 4 1 i 1: D.t.NA '°INT D1'..·\ r,:>1·.t r~ii;:\,~.,. -.! ); (,.-i,1 H"1 POUMTAIM VAWT FOJR SEASONS NRStRY 870:>W<:"1""1!A~ ' . . . " ' ""' LAGUHA llACH LAC·UN.a. IJi.111. Y ll /0 S. Coo11 rt..v. r LA PALMA KIT 1'N0 . Q.i.:C'N G \Jl t:R ~:;45 °'""'-lt:lho.-~-.,. ORANGE \.. ,:-.;_. '' ·;,-~ .......... SUPfrt.y '" " ,,, ~.t.N CLEMENTE SANTA AMA (-~.F~ '!"•I ~I -·h. I' .·u r< 'WHITTIER EiLUe n.LL~ t...d~ JY IM-11 E.. VJ~''~ b~J. 5,i.(KFTT & "'TF"t. 1 ')~1~~-1'-'""'''~ 4 T ~','I I':·': t~J:~ l i • < •• ,,. ~ J. ) I· ,; \ ' I \ • I I . I • • .. . ' J._0,._.;:.D;:_A:.:ll_:_Y_:_P:.:ll.:_DT:._ _______ ~F•:"-'ldill, M'I l7, 1974 Phil lnt erlandi "I kr1e\\' he \rasn·1 a gourmet ,,·hen he ordered Caesar ~ak1d ""ilh Roquefort dressing." L.M. Bo11rl Soal{ tl1e Feet, ""1 alk for Sleep •• A statistician na1ncd LC'\\·is F. Rich::irdson put together a book called .. st.atistics of Dcfldl~· Quvrrels." In it. he reports that 59 million proplc died violent dcafl1s \\'Orld- 1ride bC't1veen 1820 and 194.i By violent deaths. he dof'sn't mean traffic accidents. So on. ·only the ho1nicidcs or 1var l and crime. Those figures indicate somebody gets cut do"n in such a manner every 66 seconds. - I CHINESE CITY I}. "\Vh:it"s the correct na1ne of lhut CJ1incsc city, Peking or Peiping" A. The current name. Prking. 1ras nlso the original naint· . .\le;_1ns "north ern capital." Chiang Kai-shck changed the n~1n~ to Peiping in 1928. That means "northern peace:' lie dtdn t \rant 1? call that city a cnpi!al. because he prc- ferrl.'d to mn~e his he.idquarters at Chungking. Later \\"hen the Con1n1unists took over. they restored the Peking nanic. Sleep specialists recommend either of 11\"0 activities to prc\'cnt i11 son1nia. One. a 15-minule 1\·;1lk. 1\\'0. a 10- minut c soak111g of the feet in hot 11·atl•r. Either. just be- fore bc~ri~1c. Roth arc said to tease rhe blood <ll\'ay from the brain into tile !01\·cr extremitlc~. thus inhibi! thi' n1cn- tal action that n1 akcs for 1vakefulncss. SEVE~ SE AS l\"<1n1c thl' original Scren Sea:-. directs a client. '.\orth A!lantic. South .-\!lantic. r-.·orlh PaCilic. South Pacific. tn- dian. Arcti c ;-ind Antarctic Ocean s. J~n'! anv 1\nrnrc!ic Ck'e<1n an~·1norC'. thou.ch. lt"s just part of tl1c Sul1th ,\tlantic. South Pacific ;111d Jnd1<in Occ:1n" no\1". [,\RS A horse has 17 n1usl'lcs in each \"ear. You an<l 1 onlv ha\"(' nine n1uscles 111 i'<lC"h car. Th~t horse can cantrOI just about all of those 17 1nusC"lcs. 't'ou and I can't control many of the nine. ii rin~·. Those rernarkable souls can '¥riggle their cars usua l !~ do so 1rith their scalp n1usclcs. should be noted. The glass 1nakers of renicc centuries ago ~prl·ad the phony notion that contact ll'ith toxie substances 1rould cause !heir crystal gobl ets to sha1t cr. A rnight.1· 1ricky sales technique . that one. \\"orld11·idc hl.l1 particularly in Europe. scilrcd potentates. 11ho controlled enough n1oney tr1 n1ake a fflir n1'1rket. bough! up tbilt \1enl'lian glaSS\\'<lrc. !n the bclil'f 1! 11·011ld prOtt'Cl tht·1n fro1n poisuncrs. :\<lrir"P-•> 11111•/ 11, /. •. II port Bt'och 92ti60. I /;nutl. r. 0 /Joi 1875. ll/e1r- " so WflAT~ HEW ·w1rH · YOU? Only the Daily Pilot really tells y,ou what's n.!Y{in.yo.ur local coinmunlty ... every day · DAILY PILOT • / " START IN THE , SIZE! .1a·· LARGER SIZES COMPARABLY LOW PRICED! -. . ' ' GENERAL GENERAL GENERAL· GENERAL GENERAL JET AIR Ill JUMBO 780 SPRINT JET GRABB.ER 70 GRABBER 60 Blackwall Bias Ply Blackwall Sports Car Radial Wick 70 Series Wide 60 Series 650 x 13 A78·1l 145-SR·l l A70· 1 l A60·1 l $ $ $ 95$ 95 $ Plus S1 78 Fed Ex Tax Plu5 S1 80FPd E ~.Tax Plus S1 60 Fed Ex Tax teel Radial ·Blem ffer The General {Q)lUJ (A) lb= ! ~<e<elb ~(A){Q)ll~~ • Soecd1ed by Leading Car Makers • Two Steel Belts • Radial Ply Constru cti on • Duragen TreJd Rubber SAVE $$$ BR-70·13 ..............•....... 535 OFF THE REGULAR PRICE IF PERFECT! GR-78-15 s42 HR-78-14 s45 GR-70-15 s47 HR-78-15 s45 Plus S3 05 to S3 60 F(!deral Excise Ta~ EXPERT FRONT- END ALIGNMENT STANDARD & COMPACT AMERICAN CARS Only RAIN ,, COATS . s Incl ud es setting Cast er. Ca mbe r Toe-in. and T o e ou t 10 rna nula c ture r s specs Sal e ty Check & Road Tes! (Atra c nJ rye to r ~.l r g er o r a .it co n61li o ned c t1r ~. ~e!!1ng 1ors1on bars and part s i1 needed 95 ON·LY Don SwecH...-d's JR78·15 LR78-15 COAST 585 WEST 19th ST., COSTA M ' ' Plus S1 .95 Fed. Ex. Ta11 Plus S2 09 Fed [ ~ T a~ GLASS BEL TED • ~ENERAL INDIA !WHITEWALLS!\ Smooth Riding -LollCJ Mileage 4 + 2 Construction fits: Pinto, Datsun, Toyota, Mazda Capri • A 78-13 V/HITEWALL Plus s 1 89 Fed E:r. Ta:r. FITS: Ma•rric.k Comoro . C~•. M1nlanq C-71 -14 FITS : l11itk . Chr• .. Plymouth, Oodl)t. ChryJIPr H.71-14 Wlliltwolh FITS: Bui e.~. OoC:hJt. Ford. Plymouth, Chry\lrr J-78· 14 J-78-1 5 Not Blems -Not Retreods I SUPER SAVINGS QUALITY "INDIA" PASSENGER CAR TIRES MANUFACTURED BY GENERAL TIRE .. 4 PLY NYLON CORD WHITEWALLS 825·14-825-15 155.14 855·15 s19 885·15 900· I 5 Plus $2.3210 S2.80 f!ed . EJCc1se TaJ • I . • ' I ·1 . \ I l I • No Doubles· r Slie Likes Single Beds NEW YOHK IAPl -"fJress Joanne Woodward ' SUS she would like separate btds in her home at Wes tport, CGnn., but he r husband, actor PJul Nev.man, i'wlll hav~ none or it." ,''A double bed is fine for· rnaking love but not for sleeping," said !he 44·year-old actress. Newman's "'ire for 16 ~ars. "I like waking up alone, having time to fix my head and my hair before facing the man I love." Miss \\'oodward, in an i n lt!rview in Good liousckeeping ~tagaiine, also s,_id it · was "damn hard'' living l''ilh a star I i k e N'ev.1man. "This overpowering image, this idol-0f-n1illions business, is terrible to live with," she said. "You forget who he really is and ..,.·hat he's really like ." Ul"I felt~ LIVING WITH IDOL Joanne Woodward , • • • ' , .. • ,, 1 ... , ·'· 1:)74 * DAIL V PILOT Gay Film Prodt1cer Get~ Fine .-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,r~~~~~~~-,1 1 Sunday is 11 THE EARL'S Fl1DBAY In The Service in ihf:.l1tjlijij!{1)I l"l11~,MNt4 .. AlrC..._ Tl-ll•rh •• }199' ..... Navy Com mlssaryn1an Second Class Bruce E . ·;,l\1a1and , son or Mr. and Mrs. LOS ANGELES (UP!l _ Herb E. Maland of 2219 • at A1amcda. AJnnan James A. Rinehart, son or fi1r. and Mrs. Albert ~I. Ripehart of 4652 Prelude F'iesta, ,Newport Beach, is a The 29-ycar-0Jd son of actress crewmember of this attack Drive. Huntin~ton Beach has .Loretta YQUng has been finclj.: aircraft , carrier which just completed Air Force basic ' $500· and put on nve years. departed the Jn.dian Ocean. tl"atnlng at Lackland AFB, prObation for his role in a The ship will resume norn1al TCx. . . -.. operations with the u . s . The ?1r~n. 1~ rema1n1ng al film -n1aking ring w h i ch Seventh Fteet in the \Vestern !he Air 1 r~1n~ng Coi;n!llaf!d allegedly cocreed .young boys Pacific. -. ... base for ~pec1al~zed ~ra1rurtg in i.nto )lerforming homosexual . • the security police field . acl.S in movies. r.favy Seaman Davi d R. . . Christopher LeY .. is was also Totab, ·son of Mr. and !\irs. Airman Ken n..e th rit. "'arncd TI1ursday by Superior Raymond P. Totah of 31\G Sommerfield, son of Mr. ~nd' Court Judge !\1. Ross Rigclow Pierce Ave., Co!\ta ;\it>~. is a ritrs. Ronald .F . Som!11erf1eld that if he returned to court on' crewmembcr or lhi,s allal'k of ~01 Knight CI r cl e, similar ch!trgcs in thr future, aircraft carrier which just Hu~tington Beach, ha., been "I \\•ill most nrohably s!:!rirl yo11 departed the Indian Ocean. assigned to C1i:3nute :"-FB, l\L, rr I I I · •· after completmg Air Force 0 0 s a e prison. Navy FiremanUwrence D. basic training. Lewis and 13 men wert arrested last year. : Crookrlte, of 5082 Flamingo The airman has b c en B;gelow, who rulrd · thcit Ci rcle, Huntington Beach is·a assigned to the Technical crewmember of this attack Training Center at Chanute Lewis was not a mentally aircraft carrier which. just for specialized training in the disordered sex offender. said departed the Indian Ocean. a i r craft e q u i pm en t hL, decision not lo send Lcv.•is The shi p will resume norn1a l n1aintenance field. to state prison \Yas based in operations with the u . s . part on lhe \o,:ay inniates Seventh Fleet in the \Vcstcrn treated CQnvicted ch i Id Pacific. n1olesters. Ai rn1an Robert P. ri1cNeill, son of 1\1r. and Mrs. Robert L. ri1cNeill of 16437 Wimbledon, Lewis. a Beverly !!ills film producer. \\'OS iJccused of n1;iking "chicken gay'' filn1s in "·hich lx>ys ranging in age from 6 to 17 v.·ere used as "actors." Navy Seaman Lawrence D. Huntington Beach, has been Collins, son of Mr. and f\-1rs. assigned to Kirtland AFB. Donald Collins of 1600Q Villa N.M.: af!er completing Air Yorba, Huntington Beach, has Force basic training. I t__.:::_.:.::::!~!!!J Force Sysl.e1ns Command for ·---------••••••••Iii• Vturt $.odlfNdl A• OIMn · 495 ·0401 •4Z·l7SJ further training and duty in the transporlafion field . Techqical Sergeant Tho1nas \\'. l\1aynard, son of r..1r. and l\1rs . Kelton L. ~faynard, 330 Corsa1r Way, Se.'.ll Beach. hns received his scronrl :l\Vard of the U .S . Air Forc·e Commendation l\lcdal. Sergeant r.1aynard, an air traffic control technician. was cited for meritorious service I at Osan AB, Republic of 1 Korea . He now serves at Oiing Chuan Kang with a unit of the Air Force C •• 11nmunicatio11s Service. Canal to 011c11 . I SACRAMENTO (L'PI 1 - The U.S. B u r ca u or Reclamation and Sacra1ncnto County Dcparlmcnt of P;1rks and ·Re c r ca t i on have announced signing of a I temporary contract OJX'ning a I four-mile section of Fulso rn l South Canal to rocrention use. Knov.n as the Folsom South Canal Recreational Trail, !he canalside pathway "'ill be • • p..,a <'<''"'Cl' AO• ' VOTE FOR DON WOODINGTON FOR ORANGE COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS <, 1 r ·• B-, C'0"'"'·'',... T'> fl<"<! O.~" W(l(>(l«'{to<o r.•,.. •. 1tc n. C~'""'" 1001 l I 71, S! $..onl.o An.o • reported for duty aboard this The air1nan has b c en aircraft carrier, homeported assigned lo a unit of the Air ~~~~~~~~~---' ~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~ c~~~~~ open to hikers and bic}~·c~lis~ts~.~~~~~~~lltt~~~~~~ ... 11!'•••• .. ,, PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 18th 1 MAY 19th 1974 Save 60c Siphon Stopper Prevenfs·gas theft. Easy to in15toll . Reg. 1.59 Save 10.00 22• Deluxe lawn Mower 3.5 H.P. Briggs and Stratto" engine 74.99 HAVE A COFFEE BREAK f~l•1· creamy d1Hclov1 cherry cMeM coke and cof· fee. Cofeteria. r Save 69¢ , Men's Chambray Shirt Machine washable. 3.00 Reg. 3.69 Sav1t 99c Polyest~r Pillow 20x26" standard size 2 /3.s.o Reg. 2/$4.49 • Save 50¢ Boys Polo Shirt Save 2.89 6 Digit Calculator Ba ttery operated, fits in palm or pocket. (MM6) 16.99 Reg. 19.88 Booster Seat -Give your tot his-own comfortable choir,) Coloful print finyl.· 3.99 Reg. 4.97 Save 1.00 Womens Sandals Assorted colors & si zes. 2/$5.00 Reg. 3.00 JCPerrey . 123 456 189 0 9 .....,,"'°""' --c..-.--···--Qif.AGE IT at The Treasury Witt\ your JCPenney Charge Ci.rel II you don't ha~e a charge. · 1u:st see how last we can o~n UPYQur n."W account. ~~~--=---------~:___~~~~~-=.;__~~~~~_;__--. "UENA PARK ORANGE SANTA . ANA 8tach at Oringethorpe City Or. at Girden Grove Blvd. 3900 So. Bristol· Ho. of So. Coast Ptiza Optn Diiiy t ;301 to t :30 p.m. Sunday 10 to 1 Optn 10.t p.m. Dilly Sunday 10 to 6 Optn 1M p.m. O.lly Sunday 10 to ' • . I ' ' \ ,, j • ( • I I • I I J 2 DAIL Y PILOl' WHITE . ' '• I ' f"r lday, t.1ay 17 1q7q ·summer 'Fashion Knits • • • Color-Coordinated For Perfect Pairing • • • Price~ To Save You Plenty! SAVE 37% SHIRTS ... soli ds , td:: 5 prrnls ... in !00% ·polyester-, nylon and ·=111 -~ acelale ... pullove~ and button-fronts ... solids and spiffy combos of red , while and blue ' S11es S-M·L-Xl. reg. 7.99 SAVE 30% SLACKS ... polyesler Ill:: g doubleknit for no-wrinkle . shil\)e-:pi assuied e•cellence .. wrde waistband, . belt loop model with flare bottoms. l Solids , plards, checks .rn red, whrle reg. 12.99 ,.,....:::--.i•'\ or blue, s11es 30 to 40 Save 18 Men! Don't Miss , Our ExciUng New Line-up \ .;.,. ..._ , , of Fashion Sportcoats 0 ·.~-.. ! i! .·. ' •• ., • vj comp. • . ~ • I \ ::. .,.' .. _ )~ ff\ value ' ' . . ... ____ ) Hi & Low Basketball Family Sneakers RIG. 3.99 2 s5 for l - -.;-. • . '. ' '.:: ·,,j l ,'; ' ., ··, ~-~ s .-' ... .. ' I . . f I,.\\'•. Teens' & Women's Rope· Trimmed Sandals RIG. l.44 s2 Roiie lrumned sandat toMe~ 1n elegar1! white ta litsS up cwit casual-wear wardrOlle. Con:tl}lJD!e tu~roned "'"'sole. Sires ~ to. : ' "'· ,.. ,, $35 \ I H . . ' . \ I "' Solrd !men-looks' In woven blazers with con trast slrtchrng ' ~ . Polyester knits in stripes. plaids . checks' Two-bunon models ·::-......._.-·/ wrth wide lapet's. wrde llap pockets . deep verrts1 Handsomely detarted. Great Spring colors, h1ghl1ghtrng the very new lighter tones' Regulars and longs. Comfy Beach Sandals For all the Family . .,., s2 .... , ... , 150 & WOMllfS S .. 1 7.12 . • ...... REG. to 2.99 ~:1 11r.g tor the lash1on-ca.1sc1ous a! pr11 ~i tor !he cr,,t-cl'Jlsc1ous! The perlec t warm-weather foot- wc11r 1or casual Cah!om1ans. lo color Men's Comfortable Airy Mesh Casuals llG. 3.99 . 250 f« t>JOl~oo, P'ho ... .,y•ilo'e. Sui>er"""'' coot nrloo llilll'fs with a lull Sjl(lllge 111sote. S11fo pol for line frt. 1-11. In col~s. At Savings · Righi Nowl Ladies' Nylon · Sleepwear In Favorijt Styles reg. S.99 to 6.99 Pic_k from pretty peas- ant-look go1·ms, mini lengths . tonP styles & waltz-lengths .. rn the loveliest colors to flat- ter you. S-M-L Girls' Scooter-Skirts & Top·&·Sborts Sets ,.,. 1.99 3 '! ' 2.29 each for Group inch.lies 2-pc. sets. with so id or striped tops & coordinated -color sholts ... short scooter,skim in detailed styles ... cottons, nylons, bllillds. 7 to 14. CE ,__ ___ ___,=-==.,,,.......I ==~=-====' WHITE FRONT RE6A ·...-----:-. ----. STORE HOURS: Mow. thru frl I 0 to 9 Smrey lOAM to 7PM s.,,,lay llAM to JPM ' COSTA MES~ • • • • • Save Now ... Regularly 3.99 each 111Mly llelanciNyton KNIT TOPS IN SPllNG'S MOST WITl·IT UYlES i! •. . fo~7 l ean and baring tank-tops. u-neck shells , mock-turtlenecks ... at this lower-than-ever price , you'l l want each style and loads of colors' And. they're · Helanca® nylon-th~ better-q~~ty knit that won't sag, shrink, or lose its ~/'es, S-M-L · Uabell!!'Y llw·pricedl '"' Jans I lill711ze • ) Special ~Purchase! Ladies' conee Coats In Prints and Stripes comp. 4ee value 6.99 Cri sp dusters of JX!\yester-and-catton or 1ayon-and-cotton ... nicely styled wr~ •trool or snap-lasteners. Spr1ng-1est colors in fetching prints <rid neat stri ~s. S-M-L 25% OHi Short Sleeve Knit Shirts reg. 1.99 ... 2tor88 : IN SOLIDS, PRINTS-Pennanent press polyester and cotton knits I n Spring's wanted patterns and colors ... easy-fit-styl- lng. Sizes 4 to 7. • · . ,3088 BRISTOL ST. S. Difto "••OJ • lrhlJI Blazer Pl.l1nfts l1 · Polyester DllMeklills 15g.g Expe.nsive-quality fashion knits-they're jacquard· textured in checks, cable-stripes, and other k~it patterns in allover effects or contrast colO!S' Dashingly blazered for the season's newest look...easy-care pant- suits that you'll live in' S11es in group, 8to 18 , 1417 to 2417. SelUng N1U1nllly for 11. 99 Faded-blue Denim Jeans ... CeltP-fua Ellbrllldery _ on The ''fanq" Pickets egg iunior sizes SAVE $3 ... Cotlon denims with fashion's bleached ouf . beat-up look ..that washboard- scrubbed look. that young who-gives+ darn look' With belt-loop warslbdQd, front pockets, & zipper-fly Iron!. Pre- shrunk lwrce 5 to 13 Ladles' Mlle Acrylc Knit Fl'll-. SllaWI . Polyester Knit ble1d llZZlll' Dressas With Bikini P•lllll· ... 4.99 ea. Entire stock! Polyester iloobleknit dress flares In SDfidr, patterns and calll31 cot- .ton rleniin jeans with Western de/ails! 4 to 7. JUNIOI SIZIS . 11ea U$1,0Ult CltlDlf CAltD .. -....... • tMllll-1111 • .. ' . • .. • itione,.,. Hea-s Tell Tale By LAURIE KASPER Ot tilt oauw 'llot s1111 Contrary to the premise of some best aelllng books, "human destiny lies in heads, not In tails," according to Or. Estell~ Ramey, prore.ssor or physiology at Georgetown University M e d I c a t · ~I. . Using Information from. er.docrine studies. she struck down the claim of popular literature that male s-e x hormones make the man superior. Instead, she claimed during a talk on ··Sex llormon!?! a!'\51 Achievement" at UCI recently, the ce rebral cortex. the ·•jewel or evolution" which offers a · plasticity and bread th of options not · found in other animals. is the determinant of a person's life. She was objecting to books \Yhich clain1 ', ...... . ' . •. .. t ,. • I ., ... ,_ the male ls superior .becauae he has testoste['90e, 11the take charge hormone," as opposed to the female's estrogens , which lr1J>resented as'toxic to the brain. She alao rej~ted thii Idea that male hormones nu,ke men Into beasts while female honnones cause women to be rutrilled only )hp>ugh nurturing. .To disprove ~ theories of current authors, she referred to studies of girls born with abnormally high amounti of male hormon~s. DIFFERENCES EXPLAINED Although it Is now possible to correct this enzematic defect. she eXJ>lalned, in the past it was not. Girls were either told that they had tb.e defect and brought up as girls or brought up as boys since the horm9nes had "mascuHnized " them. , _ .. Psycbologlcal tests of girls brought up such a way they tend to run very much as girls proved lhey were submissive and harder for the roses and gold ring than passive, "just like the typical American women in CB!ecrs. 'L Going beyond that, woman.· .. even with all that take charge she said, ''men are conditioned to kill hormone," she sai4. themselves and die with a stiff upper If brought up as a male, however, thiA.,lip.:'-..::. would possess the tradltlonal n1ale They are programmed, she claimed . qualities. · ''to sell your own friend down the .... stream "So much for tbc hormones," Dr. ~o get to t~e top and sta~ there,'' to bl' Ramey said · interested m the selt while women arc · . conditidPied to be lntere.sted -in the. But to prove her po.int further•. she personalities of others. asked, "Does anyone m the audience belleve the endocrine system is any CONDITIONING different In Israeli Jews than American Jews? How rome Golda Meler got to be head of state?" Rather ,Lhan hormonal differences, Or. Ramey offered conditioning as the overrkting aspect of all behavior. l\.1en, she ex.plained, are conditioned ''in • ..... , ... ~ :;' .. ··we condition out of ·men the ability to reel. It has nothing to do with hormones." She coo tended, ··Things aren't very good for men and women.. They 1us1 aren't." In Chevy Chase, Md. \~1here many of Lesbians 1 I Want OWn Place • • ! • I • By JO (>I.SON Of ltll Df41f Plftol 11111 ' ' . . If~ ha\te !ny qpetllort'abotit what a b~il Is or does, you should have been a Cl during the wiiverslty:s ¥(omen 's M t!l. Five· Lesbians were there to tell all dutinl a meeting entitled Everything You Wanted to Know Abeu' Lesbianism But Were Afraid to Ask. . ln an inlormal session ln one of the classrooms, the women, who have all i "come out'1 (of the closet) first • discussed some of the myths ol l Lesbianism then opened themselves to ·1 any and all questions the mixed audience ! had ror them. I Torrey , Rachel, Sarah. Stephanie and '· riorot.hy were their names. They were all young -fro£9 lB to early 20s, and all but ~ one "ere ola~ Io jeans. , They were all wearing jewelry to • Indicate their status -the Lesbian'& double v.'Olllan's symbol, but other than that, there wu no outward indJcatlon of their W1Ulll81 sexuality. Someone Tlrst ,.;gg..ied thot the women l!st the myths about Lesbianism, ond they aJll'1!ed It would be a good Idea. "I had elf the 1ame myths before l became a Lesbfari/' Rachcl said. 0 f NOi ROLES . .. First they nld the role P,jayfng l! not f pirt of LoMllanltrn. "Sl!Q fum!nlsm has coin• al~ role playing has gane.'' "1ht 1111! iolaUon&l\lp means no .... bal Iii * out tht trash,~ ... 111llbollt An audience momher (about 25 """' JUld women bod gatbertd lor he meeting) asked what she should do if her child comes to her and says she is a Lesbian. "Just listen and ask questi'ons,'' was the advice. She was cautioned lhat the parent's first reaction wtll )>e the one remembered forever . The Lesbians belong to a group of about SO Orange County women called the Lesbian Femibists of Orange County, or "Thursday's Child ." They said tllat tlley and their fellow members are "slowly shoot.Ing down society's ideas of what V.'C are." 'llley said they are definitely not part · of the "tea room trade'' of hpmosexuals, where the meetings take place in such places .., park. bathrooms. (Ninety (lerrent of these mtn are mtinied. trey asse<te<I.) NOT SICK The ne.xt questk>n was, "What kind of role would you like to see mental heeltb proressionall·play In Lesblanisn\?" The wom<n said they nnt W<lllld !lice them to .. adtnlt we are not sick,'-' and then to help them beoomo coa\IUrtable In society. TheY then were asked when lhcy first rccQgnlzed their i.tsblon tendencleo and ~dmltled to UJemsel ... they ......, not bet<roscxuaI: 'nleflrat said ahe w11 always odnilrina """""11 u a dllld and had~ on her remalt teachen. Her rtllization i:81De when a t•Y irltnd lltlYed ownight '1!1th her. si. ,... dattnc but i.llld !bit men didn't aatisly her . 'l1Je DtXI laid abe ,... In love '1!1th her ... , -. best lriend when-she was 15. She didn 't show bet' true feelings in high school, but · can ~Int the date and hour when she adJnl!tld It to ~Ir. -'llll thin! had '''very heavy head tnps" "and went "lQ aod out of the closet" ....... 1 tlmeo"befure admlttlng it. She became einotlooally arn1· mentally 111 becaule of her gull! feelings . The"lourth ond tilth did not answer the question. . On\ said Ill delcrtblng her acceptance, "It waa Uke a real birth. An looredlble fury Wlds 'Up. Wiien you .... Leib!•• who's just "°""' oot, you11 lmow. She's j1ISI beamlllj)." LONllUNESS They all oa)d they bad I "feeling of loneilnesl" before their ~Ing oot. ., • The next question was, "How can ~·ou spot a Lesbian'?" "Look for a pink ie ring on her left hand ," was the first clue. ··You talk around it for months" i( you suspect a woman Is one, they said. -A good 'pla ce.-to look for-them is the PE department in college, they revealed , and at certain bars. 'The women said they like gay bars because it is the one place they can ''hang loose.'' An audience member wanted to know what their attitude toward having children is. "Some Lesbians want children." they said. If a Lesbian is serious about this, she will have artificial insemination, try to adopt a child or as k one of her gay male friends to father a child, they said. Asked abou.l their attitude toward men. they first sald that a Lesbian fs sirhply a woman who prefers women to men, and ls not necessarily a man-hater. "Men af&...irrelevant. J dof)'t need them," one said. REJECT MYmS h Getting back to the ytlls. they ·rejected the belief that ''a Lesbians are out to Jeduce every woman" and the statement ~t .. Lesbians look Jlke football players (Indeed, these women could hardly make a touchdown).u At last 90rneone was brave enough to ask how two Lesbian women havt sexual rt:lations, "This b "t1te Question,' " the five g1gled. "lt'I lft "'°""""" amoont of Mldd~. tllen )'OU ao rn.m there.'' Tbey µke wo~ they said. because " the country's "top braSs" live. -she said. the suickie rate for women from 45 lo 55 is three limes the national average. Among the men there is the highest rate of ak:oh61ism. She contended this "'mutuality in self· destruction." Is because the \Vomen are looking for more in life than shopping sp rees and men are seek ing relief fro1n their struggles. Noting that women have ··no plact' to go but up,'' she said it is n1uch more di(ficult for a man to step into a fe1nalc slot. Tell parents their daughter is a tomboy. she said , and ··they ~·111 bca1n nt you" but tell them their son 1s a sissy and '"they'll curl up and die.·· Although ii is difficult to bring about change, she said , changes arc here and renected in use or the birth control plll and rising employment rates among v.•omen. Charging •·complete lawle~ess in this society," she said if laws re la Ung to. \\'Omen \ve\-e enforced, at t It u d In 8 I changes would follow . "Equ;ility will come only when women don"! have lo be superwomen lo achieve," she sa id. It will be "when a female schlemiel moves ahead as fast as a male schlemiel." Calling wo1nen ~·ho can help but who don't help the great evil of our time, she urged \\"Omen lo bf.•come "our sister 's keeper" and l.'stablish an '·old biddy syste1n." She concluded her talk by paraphrasing John Dunn . and cliii ming. "No woman is an island entire in herself. . ."' eo e _, __ BEA ANDERSON, Editor Frld•Y· M•Y 17, 1'74 P•t• ll New Definition- Changes Myths. Black people tnust destroy the myths of the "oppressi\·e system "' <Ind define then1selves \\•i;h an intellectual and emotional considerati()n of the black experience before they can achieve liberation, according to Dr. Barbara Rhodes, a psychologist at California Stale University. Northridgc. Speaking on "Black \Vomen : Victims ()f J\il i.s und ersla ndin g and l\1isinterpretation" at UC! recently, she said the roles of black men and \~·on1cn can onl y be decided by them coming: together to decide the life Ibey y/ant. for themselves and their childr en. · Then. they must identify the obsl.acles \\•hich lay in the y,·ay of achieving that life and decide which or them. man ()r woman. is able to con[ronl the obstacles. "The role of black women and black men has to be defined in terms of liberation,'' she said. "It has to be something that transcends the indi vidual and becomes a group phenomenon." She objected to the definition s of the black woman as matriarch. dominant over the black male, which have resulted from studies by white men. The y,·hitC' male, feeling threatened when confronting a black female. interprets his ieelings by claiming that the black n1ale is emasculated, she charg~d. • J_ife \vo1ncn are ·•gentler and softer" than men and they are able to project their own desires to their p:irtner and better salisfv her needs. ThCy said sexual relations usually take flbout three h6urs. and they generally stick to one lover because there is a Jot of'"jcalousy among Lesbian women . They were asked about their feelings toward perfume. jewelry and pretty clothes . They all said women·s perfume doesn't mix well with their body chemistry so they wear men's cologne. 'l'h!!ir jewelry is an "individual" thing ~usually thclr Lesbian symbolsl and they don't feel comfortable in dresses. Equal pay is importanl to lhe Lesbian women beca1,1sc. "\Ve're 00( waiting for our Prince Charming to come along," they said, and they must, therefore. support themselves. They said they had no plans of ever getting married slnce they didn't think they would change their outlCKMI:, and they didn't anticipate any pennanent relatlonshlps with women . One of Lhe. last ouestions was about virginity. Do they like to "bring oot" virgin Lesbians (provide· t~m with their Initial sexual experience)? No, because the new ones are too nervous and become too p"ssessive, they said. Part or the problem, they expl•lned. ls that ao few Lelblans are op<n thal " ls bani for them to find women for lovers. "Our oril1 dllf....., ls oor preference for -· they .. pbasiJ.ed as they coacl\Jded, oearJy -bourl altu the dll!Cll&llOll llod begun. '"This is nothing more than a projection of the "'h1le 1nalc"s o"'n emasculation." OPPltESSIVE SYSTEl'it rvlalriarchial images, i;he said, arc supported by an "oppressive system .. \Vhich defines them in such a way lhat they will contribute to our oppression." She adn1itted concern because the definition has been effective amonl!" black people. They too, she said. havP. come to n1isunderstand and misinterpret their interaction with each other. But the matriarchial myth must t><' destroyed. she explained, "so we ca11 proceed to define ourselves in a positive way.·• Another assumption which must be rejected, Dr. Rhodes said, is that the system which currently e"xists is the best design for harmonious living among people. Rather, she said there shou1d be a critical examination of the American - society as the society in which black people want to be included. ~1ercly including Qlack people in it, she added. would not til? getting to the oppressive core of the structure. "Women 's liberation is not about the ~nd of liberation that black women. black people need." 3he said. _/ WHITE WOMAN After pointing out th 2t other women are "part of the oppressi ve system.'' the psychologist said the white woman w9s made weak and dependent and the man strong and aggressive so the man could get the power. -But the bl ack woman has never been allowed to be weak and dependent. "She has preserved the very qualities they twhite \\•omen) are trying to restore in their own life." I As a black woman. she explained, she has refused to relinquish the qualities because "If I relinquish those things. I will not survive In America." Until black people make their own definitions, she said, they won't strike the root cause of their problems. "We will continue to go arowxl and around in circles. continuing to debate the is.sue ()f the black matriarch." Instead. she said they should reflect upon what they have accompll~ed. "We have survived against odds that are unbelievable." But she also warned her audience, mostly black students '"and faculty members, "All of us are vulnerable to ~mTng projections of the white perspective." WHITE.PERSPECTIVE Noting that the media and education are "totally copswned . with the white perspective," she suggested one way or avoiding thls would ~ 'to have black people work out their own problems In their communitltl end have black teach<n teaching on black wbjects Pl the scllools. Time 1pe11t ~ problema, Ibo said, ls "a dlvmloo.. Every ellart ft !See DEFINE, ap II) ' • I \ I I I J4 DAILY PILOT Eyes of Whole World to Focus on Women By JO OLSO~ Of llM Dfllr ~Uot Slllf Though she doesn't have a large budget and her siaff ls tiny. Dr. H.uth Bacon has big ideos for 1975, International \Vomen's Year as proclainled by the United Nations. She shared her ideas and dreams for the year with womoo at Chapman College at the conclusion of a week·long ,·isit to the campus as .'.l \\'oodrow Wilson Se n 1 or Felio\.\'. Or. Bacon. director of the United States Center for International \\'01nen's ·year. hopes the year "'ill "not be n time of stock-laking. but a time "'hen programs arc launched y.•hich "'111 ha\'c an effect beyond 1975. "I hope nien 's grcurs \rill Ix-come in\'ol\'ed and I hope ll 'rill ha\'C an int<'rna11onal a"·arent•ss." she added. The year-long en\(lhasi!i on \\'OrrlC'n had Hs beginning 1n 19-18 v.·hcn the Unilcd l'\ation.s formed its Commission on the Status of \l.1cimcn. OLD WOMEN This conYnission. on which Dr. Bacon has served, heard a moving speech by a delegate from the Congo during a 1972 n1eeting in Geneva . She talked about hov.· the "·on1en 1her(' do hca\'Y \\Ork in the fields then gC' home to do more "'o:-i.. for lheir familiPs. Ry 30. the v.·omen arc old, the delegates \~.'CfC told. \\'omen front the developing countries said the san1c kinds of probleins existed in their countries. and e\·crvone asked 1\hat could be done." Dr. Ba(.'(ln sairl. \\'oml'n from de v e I op c d rountril'S added 1hat they wan!ed "better. opportunities 10 move into decision-making' capacities," and they wanted equal pay. "\\'e all agreed that despite the difference in our short· 1erm objectives, the situation of women was at a disadvjnt.agc with their male colleagues," Or. Bacon said. "We decided Jt would be helpful to set aside one year to concentrate on problems of the situation of women and ways to improve it.'' NO MONEY The concept or a 1\·oman's year was approved by the commission and then the general assembly of the U.N., but -no n1oney has been appropri<tted for its execution as yet. ··'t'hat is just a detail,., Dr. Bacon said. Three different themes have been suggested for the year: , . . , • • 1 , ·\." J:ihn Ciardi Nancy Dickerson SteVe Allen Town' Hall Series Speakers Announced Steve Allen. Dr. S. 1. Francis \\"i!l be featured during the 1975 SC'ason of To"'·n llall Celebrity Series sponsored by the Assistance League of Laguna Bea-ch. Hayakawa. John A. Ciardi, Nancy Dickerson u1id Arlene The 1nonthly series of speakers, begun as a n ambitious chari!Jblc f u n d • raising venture seven years ago. ,\·ill run frorn January 27 to ritay 19. 1975. Arlene Francis Dr. 5. I. Hayakawa NOW OPEN ON 00: BOARDWAlX-UOO VIUAGE Featuri119 The ~orl<s of: rn addilion to appearances on television. Steve AHen has \•:orked -0n Broad,1·ay and in movies. composed 400 songs and written 15 books. Dr. llayakawa, a u ·tho r • neY.-spaper columnist a n d authority on language and communications, \\'llS president of San Franci sco State College durtn~ the €Os student deinonstrations. Ciardi is a poet. litrrary critic and lcicturer "·ho "'as one of the three judges for the nc\.\•ly crcaled l\ational Book Award in Juvenile Literature. Miss Dickerson. <lne of the first television news "'Omen, nov.· does a nationwide syndicated news report. Inside Washington. A regular participant on \Vhat's ~Iv Line?, M i s s Francis is 'also the author of "That Certain Something; The f\1::igic of Chamr.'· '•Lenore Beran •Chas. Cochrane Proceeds from the series arc retumcd to the community t h r o u g h League-sponsored pro1ccts involving scr.ior citizens. the William Jl aincs f\1en1orial Scholarship, Doll Clinic and Jfomemakcr's Ser\' ice. •Huqh Duncan • Vi1'9inia Gentile •Julie Gregory •Al Miller • •Lil Parkinson FIEE OURIMG OPENING , 81/~rl I -4 COLOR PRINT -inls& t--' a 'nlings ART GALLERY T"·o lee!ures ,1,ill be offered on Mooclays at 10:30 a.n1. and 2:30 p.m. in the i\1guel Theatre, l\1onarch Bay Plaza. South Laguna. Since TO\\·n Hall is usually .'.l sell-out, applications r 0 r tickets should be made by June 1 by Y.Tihng to Town Hall. P.O. Box 856. Laguna Beach. California 92652. 3401 Ylo Oporto, Newport --673-3213 IOn 111< '-'dwalk In Udo Ylllogtl Tickets, which cost $30, will be mailed in January. ~ YOU •r• lnYiltd lo. PERSIAN RUG AUCTION NEWPORT BEACH An eJcep!•onaJ seleclion ol Quati!y rugs , all ~rhll&d for eulhenlicltyl Guaranteed sa1ista clion, or we'll exc.hange It tor equal value. ANTIQUE RUGS : A magn1f1cen1 coltecllon or KAZAK, SHIAVAN, CHI CHI, TABRIZ. and many more! , CONTEMPORARY RUGS: An e11:cellen1 collec11on of MESHKIN, KASHAN, HA.MADAN, ABADEH. KERMAN, BALOUCH, HEAIS. AFSHAR and more. FIN! SILK RUGS: An ou1s!and1ng group of SILK OUM, SILK KASHAN, NAIN (WOOL & SILKJ SILK BASE ISFAHAN, FINE PART SILK OUM Ind more. · SUNDAY, MAY 19th, NEWPORTER INN 1107 JambotH AoMI, N1wport BtKh • Prnlew: 1 p.m. • Auc:llon 2 p.m. • ' equality between men and women: insurance of full participation of women in all aspects of national a n d in t ernational development, and recognition of t h e contribution of women toward peace and the relations between women. "Each of the 135 member countries of the U.N. wiJI have a program and it Is hoped there will be a program at the U.N. level," Dr. Bacon ooted. TI1e con1mission asked the U.N. to suggest program ideas for a document to be issued lo participating countries. she continued. She suggested tile es!ablishmenl of w om c n ' s history centers. an idea which '''as \'etoed ~y the Soviet Union. The reason was, Dr. Bacon explained, that 1hc Soviets did not see any reason From Page 13 . ' . Define .. have must be geared to oor survival." Although one v.·oman in the audience objected that they should, instead, \\'Ork against the ('('Onom.ic system. which is "slave owners exploiting sla\'es," Dr. Rhodes replied. "!tie people arc never going to move to seek eQJnomic oi::. political control until !hey get· themsel\'eS together psycho- logically." \Vhen asked \littat being black is "in your mind. soul and spirit," she 59id, •·r am because J am ... It's difficult to divorce anything about me from that." Explaining that ·ifs something she doesn't ha1·e to explain to her black sisters and brothers. she said. "it's something I can't articulate in a way to conununicate it to you.'' Claiming the media is ''the most destructive"'' ea po n ' ' invading the home and the community with its r o l c definitions. she urged that \1·omcn be aware of this in their hoines, that ;:iltemath·e schools be established and that more forums be )1eld \1·hcrc black people could come together. devise s!rategies and acti\·ate rhetoric. for dl1tlngulsttlng men from women. SPIRITUAL V.U.VES Some groups asked for a reference lo religion, and Dr. Bacon's phrasing of ·'women's contribution to s p i r i t u a 1 values" was accepted. "The Soviets abstained from 1i>e document. So did the People's Republic of China. The European countries didn't exert themselves, but the developing countries were excitc-d," she said. "We now have a year. and a program of suggested activities." In. lhe United States. she said, "We've been moving along" willl plans for the yea r. President Nixon de-clared the year in January and the center has been established. The offices arc locatcrl in the basement of a French chateau, vintage 1920, in Washlng!on, D. C. Or. Baoon and her small st.a.ff are now structuring a "Friends '' group and thinking about .. tung up task forces . "Interest is growing," she ,.Id. COMPARE WAGES As a first step locally, she advocated that commwtities organize International. Women's Year committees and look at the women in their own area, comparing wages and defining I.he status o{ W<>men. In the United Slates, she said, the top priority for women is the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment. Beyond that, women want more infonnation about what is going on in the United States and abroad. "Here t,h ere is here a unique opPortunity lo do 90lllethlng of a r e a I I y con1tr u ctlve n11lure for women here and abroad," Dr, Bacon emphasized. A graduate of Radcliffe College with a major in po:litical scien~e and Jntematklnal law, Dr. Bacon went: "1tralght through" for her doctorate. She was acting ambassador to New Zealand in 1961 and was the second woman to reach the top level or the foreign senice in the U.S.A. Her career begAn on a slow note as she emeri.ted from the academic world during the Depression. "There was no demand for \li"Omen international lawyers ." she said. "I thought of changing careers." GOOD BREAK But she was talked into waiting by one of h e r professors, and It paid orf with a valuable post as an assistant to a Harvard professor. She remained his a.ulstant when he moved to a seat on the World Court at The Hague, then took the U. S. Civil Service exam for t h e Department of State alter working there five years. A vacancy Jn the Far Eastern Bureau opened up and . Or, Bacon was accepted. Then, she was told the decision was reversed. 1'wo months later, when they couldn't find a man for the job, she was asked again. After serving in N e w Z e.a I a nd-;>inch-hitting as an1bassador for a yf!ar-and "'<>rking in Africa. she came back to the states for an appointmenl to the President's Commission on the Reform of the United Nations. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Romance Revived for Taurus SATURDAY MAY 18 By SYDNEY O~tARR ARIES (1'.!arch 21-Ap ril 19): Young outlook is featured. Vitality returns; cycle is high and you can successfully initiate projects. Verb a I opposition comes from family member but should not be taken too seriously. TAURUS (April 20.May 201: Intrigue , cla ndestine: arrangements are likely to be· spotlighte d . Romantic inlcrests are revived. You feel new zest for life. Be grateful and doo't ask too manv question~. · GEi\fINI (~lay 21-June 2(1); Friendly advice now is sincere -and could prove profitable. Key is to be receptive. Trust hunch. Share knowledge. \·ou learn "'hile teaching. CAKCER (June 21-July 22 1 \·ou get action and possible promotion. Prestige is on ups\\'ing. Persons who "'ere in doubt now com<' over to vour \1·ay of thinking. Gcn.uine bargain· is a,·ailablC'. LEO (July 23·.l\.ug. 22): Tear dov.n for purpose of rebuilding. Break t hr o u g h restrictions. Ch i Id boo d CAPRICORN (Jan. 20 -Feb. memories h aunt_ Stop 18): Finish what you start - brooding a~t past. Your leave no loose ends. Partner, future _ will be more exciting mate is active and perhaps than might be a pparent on argumentative. Build bridges surface. of goodwill; be a\1·arc of public VIRGO (Aug. 2J.Sept. 22): relations. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are drawn to drama. law. You help people in trouble and are fascinated v.·ith the healing a r Is. Your attitude changes with AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb . regard to money, investn1ents 18): You may be pulled in two -nu· ff ELL'S and future. Key now is to directions. Key is to select area "'·hich enables. you lo make inquiries and obtain keep in touch y.·ith hOme base. it4R....OLSTERY answers. Find out the why of '1'"'" recent happenings. PISCES (Feb. 19-f\larch 20!: w... YM Wmt Consolidate efforts. Don't try n. ... LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 l: too mucll ~tone time. Follow 1t2J....., m.d. Those who promise quick c.... ,..,. -14M25t action, promotions may be through on hunch. Teach and 1~~~~~~~~~~"'!'!_ sincere but co u Id be . learn. Protect passessions.1-------· -- overlooking legal technicality. ·Don't give up St1mething for Know. it and do some nothing.· che<:king. Family situation. as it affects professional superior, could £igure i n ,-----------, in1portant way. I SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 l: Be aware of subtle nuances. fun trip on Study fine print; read bel\\"een the Hnes. Someone apparently Q gal. Of gas is trying to convey tnes68ge in Every Fri .. Sat. and Sun. quiet. unobst rusi\·~ manner. cmon's el"ljoy lree lam1ly SAGmARIU& \:'-l'o,·. 22· SPORTSWEAR en!erta1nment 1n the Dec. 21): Money, investments. Hunhngton Center Mall past efforts are spotlighted. Beach & Ed1noer off ttie You get results. You find what &In Diego Fwy. is nood, what '· an i'llusio· n. WESTQfFl'PlAZA . BALBOA ISi.Ai() Now lcatunng ~ .., ~ElrKl:h 216Mq>~Ave. Armed Forces Stick to practical course. Take 5'8-'121 67>19CW I Weck. cash and let credit go. L·-··---------"-11'----------' . .., . ., !, . '' . \ \ ' , ,(',. . ·~·~f'-·· ·4 ·~~( , THE METAPHYSICAL FEUOWSHIP CHURCH presents Post life and Trance Demonstrations t>v The Reverends Lucretia A!!1nson & Martha Hicks SATU RDAY -8 PM -MAY 18 10591 Flower St., ;$!anion. California S2.00 Donation NOW OPEN 30 LO Ve CouttcTJtr for Ac[n.c Sport.:iwtar .. Custom Fitted Tennis, Golf and Sun Dresses Also Ready !\:Jade Mesa Verde Cen!er F'·2 Harbor and Adams Cosra Mesa ------- Behind tee Caoades 557-7206 Originality Cultivated Limiting members to t.he use of only Lido grown vegetation never seems to inter- fere with creativitv for the woman's club's annual Hats in Bloom contest. This year was no excepiion. "Mad hatter" Mrs. Michael Shuchter captured top hon· ors in the originality category for her miniature garden. Other winners were !\1rs. A. J. Rome, most beautiful and Mrs. Ronald MacGregor , humorous. •WA.llrA.f'U SHOf'PUS •WEEtCEMD PAl"'1EltS WE ARE OPEN SUNDAY IOa .m. to4p.m. paint .. . paper .. . & things ... corona de! mar 2919 e. coast hwy. 673-2033 . • Leland Frederick Colley and - Avon Books !he U.C.I . Friends of !he library ond to !he Judges. ( CONTEMPORARY CLASSIC ..• the graceful sweep ol chrome and the lux- ury of soil leather create a comlortable resting place for thed_iscriminating. Now wllh a special prlca al Danica. Available In Olaek. dark t>rown, and tan leathers. Mastercharge and Bank· Alherlcard. Regular prlce ease ~8 Special Prioe i239.00 OHN ,!»•ILY10•t FAIOA, Uf.illt. t puNOAY 11 TO & ON 1"1 OOC!ll/IAN PID"O no ( t2ftel SI*' • (2131131•1230 •IYlllU,'f HILt;I tt.t.t Wlidll'f Blvd • (2U) 27.t•Otll • • • Bright Picture Painted Artist JoAnne Mix se- lects her contribution for the Women's Aux- iliary of the Arthritis Fouifdation, 0 ran g e County Branch. lier painting, accepted by Mrs. Anlhony Ottin~ . will be awarded as a prize during the auxil- iary's fund -raising sa- lute to Outstanding Persons luncheon, to begin at 11 :30 a.m. Wednesday, May 22, • in the Newporter Inn. Special guests will be J\·liss Jane Wy1nan. na- tional campaiRn chair- n1an and Miss Claire 1'revor, county can1- paign chairman, and hi ghli ghting the event will be a parade of fashions fron1 "J\'fame.'' co urtesy of \Varner Brothers Stuliio~. • Friday, May 17, iq74 PUBLIC NOTICE DAIL¥ PILOT IS PUBLIC NOTICE '" ))621 Publ1$llM Or111(11t coa't D•llv Pilot, M•V 11, 21 . lL •no June?, 1t11 1769·1'; PUBLIC NOTICE • ?2216 NOTICE TO C•EDITOltS SUl'Elt!Olt COUltT Of TKf 5TATI' OF CALIFOltNIA l'Olt THE COU NTY O" OltANOI' No. A·"7'• ----E11t•e o! MAOELEINE OSTRANDER, PUBLIC NOTICI'.: ~(e"''" ------NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEll 10 ,tt• SLP·7C21l '\ r•,..,1!0•• ol tlle dbOvr namPd <1•r fde•' NOT ICI! TO CREOITORS ln•I •ll pt!rsans IU•vln\'I cl•imt ilQ••n•I !ne SUPElt lOR COURT 0" TKE •••d oeceatn1 '"' requorM !O hlr It.em, STATE OF CALIFORKIA FOR ,,,.:t1> lt>e ne<tH~•y VOIKl>e" In t"e olllc• THE COUNTY OF ORANGE ot tne cler~ ot 11\e •bOVf enntlea <GUfl. or No. A·"'°4 to PffStn! ,.,.,.,, worn 1nr neces\.11.-Y E1tore of HELEN EJ\V,\A HUNTER, voucf\er.. lo 11\t 1m<1ersl9ned ii !tie office Doc:1,ued of Mr •ttorney, WILLIAM R ROUSH, JOO N0T4CE IS tlEREBY GIVEN IO lnr Newparl Center Orlvt. Ne.,.pert Beacl>, eredllort ot the al><lv~ n~mN decfllent C~ll!ornl1 91660. Wiiien Is 1ne pl~cr °' tnat all per'Kl<IS nav1n11 cl~im~ a11ainSI 11111 bu1I~•• DI 1ne uno-ertl9ned ln all md!lffl 11ld drcr<1ent &re fffiUHl'O lo File mem, per!aonlljfo ro rr.e eslat1 o• 1~1<1 attM""'· wllh Ille netf'nolry vovcne,., •~ !ne 01t1ce ..,;tni...-lour monlhs dfl" ine t"st ol thf' cl!rk o! lhf' accve ~n11!1l'<l courl, or put>ll co11on ot lflls nollCt to pre1ent 11'f'm, wo1n lne ""'"''a'~ Oated MdY H, 19/j vouct°'''' lu the uJ"<le"•9nt<1 ~t tr"! L~w SHARON SUE VIL' ~ Office ot MACDONALD, HALSTEO 1'. Adrn•nl••r&lri• o! lh< LAYSOURNE. 1200 WIL $Hll?.Eo BLVD ·1 esr.11e of tne abovt LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA w<111, n11me<1 d~edent whl~l1 ,, Ille pl~ce ot bu»neis ol tf\e WILLIAM II. ROUSH uode1,igned Jn all malle" f>l!'rl~inlno 10 }GO N1wporl Ct11!1r Drtv1. Sit •oo !he t Sldle DI lOid dec;i<i•nl wl•h•n tour Ntwpor! ••1ch, C1llfornl1 tH•t rno111ns at!tr !ht llrst p110l•~ai.on ol lfl•l Tel: 1114) •40·1011 no!ite. All~~ev for Aclmll'IJlr11rh Oaled May l. 19)•. PuOllt.flt<I Oflt\Qf co~•! !:• •y Pile! GENE A. HUNT~R l/<.a~ 17, 1•, 31. 1nd Ji;ne I, 19/~ 1i/6·H Admlnislrator of :fie E•!a!e ot • ·-------- !ne "l>Ovt nom~d dtteoenf PUBLIC NOTlCt: MACOONALD, HALSTED & ~. "'" ' "~ • 1,. -' • ., f;.,.' ' ~~ ~ ' Groups Offer Smor.gasbord of T epics L.t.YIOURNE 1100 Wlt•lllrl &Ivel., LM ""9oltS, C•lillH'nii ,0017 \lll) 411·12" All.,,..Y• fol' AOM1NISTllATOR Publlst>ed or .. nge co.ut Oa1tv Piiot, May 10, 17, 24. 31. 19/4 1...:i.14 . ""' NOTICE TO CltEOITOltS SU PERIOR COUllT OF THE STATE 01' CALl .. OllNIA l'OR THE COUMTY,..OP OltANG£ H1>.4·1t7'l , ES!o!e o! CALVIN J. RtO:E, Ct<e•~ NOTICE ts HE REllY GIVEN lo "" PUBLIC NOTlCI'.: <,._,llo•S of The I DOW nilmM oect<l~n! -----------llnol •II l'f!flon• Mvinrg d•lm, •q•ln11 tn~ ~r• Alice Ramsey No Brakes ·For Driver Alice llul~·cr Ramsey. holds !he record as the \\'ho first womnn lo cross 1hc c.· on l inc n 1 a I U.S. by automobile. v•ill be in Orange County Saturday, !\lay 18. to receive a plaque. Now ff/ yea rs old. :'llrs. fi.JlllS('y made her histor ic trip ln 1909. taking 41 days to dril'c froin New \·ork lo San Francisco, covering 3 8 O O miles. Still driving today, she is the only surviving pre-1910 transcontinen!al driver. and in recognition she v.·ill be h0r1ored during C<'r('monies 'ol'hi ch v.·ill precede the opening of the Movie World Cars of the Stars Automobile Au('l ion. The c eremonie s are scheduled at 10 a.m. in the :'lfo\'ic World muscu1n , Bu('na P3rk. ' _.>il/IJ!.,,,. Chapman Love Letters to an Ex-("riti c: \VIII be the topic of f>3u] Speegle. editor of the S..in Francisco J{ccordcr v.·hen he kcyno lcs Cha~}nlan C-01\egc's Town and Gov.·n ntf;mbcrship orient;ition. !£'he session is scheduled al II a.in. fo.1onday. ~lay 20, in !he Balboa Ba y Club. In addition 10 his duties as cd11or. Speegle serves as dtrl'l'!Or of !he Bohenuan Cluh, truster of Golden Ga t c t-Ollcgc. director of the Beller Business Bureau 3nd a n ad\·isor of Bayl'iew Federal S..1vrngs and Lo<1n. CHS ~frs. John Kas~rr v.-'ill be installed president of the Orange Counl y Council of Auxiliaries. Childrcn·s ll on1c Society during a lun("heon mcE'ting in hi!r lluntington Beach hon1e \lnnday. ~1ay 20. Al$0 on the board \\'ill Ix' the '.\1n1es. ltavmond G r re n . \\'illiam lllintcr, \Vi 11 i am ~it'rselis. Fred Dunn and \\'f"Slon Bowles. '.\lrs. Richard Se11·cl1 of Ncv.•port Beach \rill be nrnong honorees receiving JO-year pins. Mon day Club Past presidents \\'ill hr honored at the s c I' c n t h birthday C't'lebration or thf' !\londay :f\1ornin!! Club of Hlmtinglon Beach to take place at 10:30 a.n1 . i\1ay 20 in the Sheraton Beach Inn . Entertainment \\'ill be pro\·ided by Leona Roberts. soprano and member of the faculty at California State We give blondes a lift wJth We have a apeclal R®~~Htl[ CRIMI HAIR UBHTINIR BLEACH RETOUOI feeling for blondes ; thal's why we llke Rou)( White -end we think you wlll, tool Ila special creme 1300 formula works fast, yet Reg. 1500 conditions as It llghtena. And ii provides an Ideal " ba111orthe most dellcate color toning. Let ua "llft'' your hair colo(-ll may put a lilt Into yo1J'r whole outlook! ' HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER COSTA MESA for Appl. Ph: 549-0757 University at Fullerton. RV Wo men /\ discussion of the £lock 1narkct will be presented for the Rancho Viejo Won1an·s Club by Keith Ellis at IO a.m. Tuesday. f\lay 21. in !ht• J>c(lple!l F'cderal Savings and Loan, El Toro. Epilepsy l'arrnst of epileptic children an' inr11cd 10 hear a talk bv J)r. Clenn Fov.·lrr. pcdiatriC neurologisl . Trrat1nent and soc i a I 1nanage1nent of the child ..., ho has epilepsy 11•itl bf' discussed at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. '.\fay 21. in the F.pik•psy Society office. Santa Ana . Little Mermaids 1\cccpting the gal'el or the Li!lle ~lerrnaid (;u1\d v.·111 be Carolyn Hidenou r. Th\ 11untington Be a ch group. \lthich s u p p o r t s Childrcn·s Hospital of Orange County, 1vi\J meet at 11 a.m 1'uesday. ~lay 2!. in Francois. Also on the board 11·il\ be Linda Smith. Ad r i a n n c fo..1orrison, Janis \V h i t c . Suzanne' Loos and Shuron Re inhart. Pre miere An Orange Count}' premiere shov.·ing of .. 1776 " 1vill t<1kc place Tuesday. fo.·lay 21. in th" Fox Rossn1oor Theater. Seal Beach. The event v.•ill benefit the Kohn Schocil scholarshi;> fund. Hom e Ee Sc ho I a r s h i p s \\'ill be ;111·ardcd college student<: by the Orange District Home ~:conomics Association during the final meeting of the year. :-.tembers will meet for J. 6:30 p.1n. dinner Tuesday, rvtay 21. in the Saddleback Inn. fo.1rs. Roseanne B~ c 11·ill be installed president. • NB League ~1rs. Phelps fo.·lerickc! 1vill be insta !led president . or the Nc1,1,•port Beach A:;sistancc League at 10:30 a.m. Tucsda_y. ~lay 21. in the 8 a h i a Corinthian Yacht Club. Lunch v.il! be served at 12:30. p.m. Seated 1vith her v. ill l;lc the :O.lines. Hobert Lucas. \\.'yncttc Bcdull Jr.. Joh11 Shearer. Hich:ird Ferda. R i c h a r cl Stoddart. Jlenry Jones. Austin SturtevanL Joseph i\letcalL Rober! Hurtt. l-l arry Baker. Carl Scr1ice and l'\orman Sli\hvell Chapter grou ps also have named 11c11· <'h<lirmcn. \\'ho arc : Sustaining. Deaver; Las i\1rs. R3lph Rcinas. ).[rs. Robert Bacon : Vi r g 1 n in Castle . .\lrs. John Keating: .Junior Ausil1ary, '.\lrs. B}ron ·rarnutzer. nnd Assistcens. .\liss Karen Sch11·cit1.cr. NOW \\'oincn 3nd 1nen 1\'ho reside in Fountain Val!cy. Huntington Beach. Garden Grove and y,·estn1inster are invited to an --said Mee<lf'n! 1•e r_,lr!<I lo lile 1r>em.~ I llUt wlln Jl>e necessary vouchers, In !he oft!cr FICT ITIOUS I USI NESS ot tl'le ell<~ ol the ilbove t1l!llled CO\lft. oo'1 NAME STATEMENT la pre~nt ltl*m,. with Ille nectt•erY- Tho tot1owl11g perscns are dol"!I vDUChers, to the' undettf~ •I 1ne ofl k e busiM'll ,u: , ol he'r a!lorl'll'(I, JUGGEA.T, VoVl!!lt l(A TAHOE 7, 2711 E~st c::oast H1gr.w1~, & WAYMAN. IS55 Blkff ~lrfft, tos!il C0tona <111 Mar, Cohtorf!la. Me..,, Collloml1 92676, wt.kn \J n.e p1•c• 1. She'l•er }ndustrles. Inc., 2!U3 Wtsr. of bu1lnes1 ot !hf' u,,111,.111~ In 11r cliff Drive, Newport 6e.ach, Ci1llf0tnl1 ma!lers P«!Oi,,lng IO !he esta!e of <11!tl • ?. RLcllarcl V, Jord1~. ~3 Weltclltf <teCede<ll, wl11'11n fOtJr mooth, •fl•r the Drive, Newporl Beocn, Calllornlo l!rtt publltalion of !his noll<:e. l. He•!er rHveloprnent Compony, 2711 OlllCI May 15 1V1il E4~! Coast Highway, Cotona del Mir, SHIRLEY A II.ICE Cal•fornla ~ · ii. Lucas Devtt~rhenl Car~ .. ~711 Eds! Admlnl1tr1ttlx Co'"' Hi9hway, Corona del Mar, Cali· ol Ille H l&te of forn1a !he obove deceften! S, Maurer Ot.velOPmenJ Co., :US E. JUGGl!llT, V1Vl!ltKA & WAY,V.All Co~•I Higl>way. Coron• <lei M~r, Call· 8y; N-.n G. J111111rl tornla lHS 8•11,or 51'"1 6. C~meo Home•, ?111 Easl (o .. sl C11ta Mt51, C•tlfof'nll '2•1• Ocganization for \\'omen.'· Hl9nway, Coron~ del Mor, C•litornla Ttl: (1141 t1t-oen Tnl~ ouslness I~ conducted by an AtlonMYI for Aclmh1!1lr•trl• organizational n1eeting or a new chapter of NO\V ~National 'fhe session ll'i!I beg.in ti\ un!ncoroDrdled as1-0Cia1ion 01her 1han a Publl'l\eG Orange c.,.sl O•ily P•lo• p;irtner~hl1>. Ma~ 17, 2il, 31. and June 7, 1914 171'8·11 7:30 p.m. \\lednesday. f..lay 22. Richard v. Jordan ·-----, . d Tnos sta1enlent v.a1 flle<j v.•th 1ne 1n the Keystone Savings an county Cler~ 01 orange Count~ ~n Aon 1 Loan. \\'estn1instcr. 1'' 1~1• PUBLIC NOTICE Flll14 flARNES, SCHAG, JOHNSOK, I mu l(ENNEOY ANO CAALSOH NOTICE TO CREDITORS .ll1torney1 at L1w SUPERIOlt COURT OF THE OlS M•cArlnur flo~levircl STATI! OF CALIFOJINIA FOR lr1·i ne Terrace Philh3rmonic P. 0 . Bo~ 17N I THE COUMTY OF Oii.ANGiE Newport a11c11, C11iltrnl1 HM.l Mo. A·"1M Group 11•i1l conduct the annual Ttl: C1141 tJf.ttQO E•tate ol FREDERICK HOWARD Flea '.\larket from JI a.n1. 10 Publish~ Orange COil•t Daily Pl1Dt, PAYNE, Deceas.ec1 Aprol 26. and Moy l, 10. 17, 191~ 116&.J• NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN 1o 111~ 4:30 pn1 .. \\'ednesday, f..lay 22. cret1•rors ot 1ne atl<lve n,1med de~fapnl at 2000 Kcwam<'C Drii·c. PUBLIC /\:OTICE 1n1r 111 oer!<lf't1 111v<ng cl1im1 11111n,1 th! -----1ald aect<ltnl a•e reoi;lrPd 1o Ille tn,n1. Corona de\ '.\iar. Tickets 11·ill SL.P·l•:M2 w•th t~ neces~rv ~oi;cfle••· In tne oHloc be sold at the ·door. NOTICE TO CR£DITOlllS ot the clerk ot the abave tnllUea CO'ffl, OI SU PERIOR COURT OF THE 10 present 11\ern, wlln tne nKe•>t•V vovtl\ers, lo the under1l11ned I ! Flea Market ) STATE OF CALIFDRHIA FOii SECUll.1TY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK. TNE COUNTY OF ORANGE Trusl Dept,, Nowoort Ctnhor Office, )50'4 Feel th e Fit! HEADQUARTERS FOR ORANGE COUNTY SADDLE PANTS .. \ \~ pants, Jhe fit is everything. got Sa~le. Pants from the people who i vented fi t. Ditto of California,. In We 've Come on in and round up a pair. Pronto! • WOMEN'S ' JEANS c ""' QUICK DRAWERS Q_ui ck Dr awers. They pull on in a second and fit like a skin. Naturally. They're from Ditto's. And Dittos inve nted fit. Shorts • • • 7so Jeans 11°0 to 14so JCPenney • WE llMOW WHAT YOUR LOOlllMG FOR Fashion lsland Newport ·Beach • No. A·N504 Newparl (lflltr Drive, P. O. llox 1711G.- E•tale of GERARD F. MESSMER. Newport 8t1cn. C1llfornl1 '266J, whlcl'I ;..J Deceased. lhe place ol bll1ln•t• of tile 11nde<1ig,,ed 1._, NC?TICE IS HER E8'1' GIVEN lo ll>e all m~llers pertaining lo 11111 e1tate'ot !>111/1 cred110rl ol !Me allo~e n_nmed decedent decedent, wflhln fou< monl/\t atier n..- tnal a!I person• havlno;r c1,10m• again•! 11\e first pybllc~!lon of this notice ~aid d1cefte"r are reouirtd To file them. oatcd May l• 197• • wl!n lhe necrssarv voucner1. In the ollice SECURITY PACIFIC ot 1ne cle•k ~11i.e above rnti!led coun, o• NATIONAL BANI{ to present them, with 11\e neces•ary e . Geot\'le L Hollowell voocners. ID lhe under1i9nr<:t at tl'le oilier s:ii1or Trust cifflcer ol PATRICIA HER?OG, Allorney 11 Law, Execulor of the witl of JSOO E1st Coo~I HlftlWdf, Corona <tel M•r. the abc-. named dece<jr"' Calif, '26~S. wfliC~ Is tl\e,11lat e ol bu,lnes• PLUNKETT AND PLUNKl!TT ol Ille uoders.gne<I 1n all mallers 4U Olive Artnu. Pf'rlllning 10 the e1t11e of •aid deCMenl, P. o . So• Ut wltflln _lour months •!!er !he ""' Hunlintton 8t1ch, C•llfOl'llt1 '2"411 ,, publlcohon ol 1111, nouce. Tel' 11141 ~ fllf s:w-.t07• Dateft AQf•I 71, \971. ~ PATRICIA HERZOG AllDnMYI tor EXKVlor' .. . Publlshed Or•n<;10 CwJI Dally l"llol,, Executrox of !he Will of Mar 17 l• JI ond Junr 7 191• 11i9 l"w the •tiove n;1m..i deceoenl ' ' ' __ • __ _ PATRICIA HERZOG ---- AltWMY •' Law PUBLIC NOTICE • JSOll IE••I Coast Hl9llw1y --- CIH'onl tlel Mir, C11if0fnio n'lS FICTITIOUS 8 USINESS Ttl: 17141 '7J.1'24 N.t.MI' STATlMliiNT Publlihr<:t Ororl!lt Coust 01ilv PllDl. The lollowinv llf!•J.On• a11 dol~ 1 Apfil 26, Ind Moy J, 10, II, 1t74 USS.Ii bll5lntss as: PUBLIC NOTICE ----NOTICE TO CREDITOllS SUPElllOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOi: CHAPARRAL CATTLE FE~DEP.3 NO. 9. l6d Son Ml\'lllfl DrlYe, Nt~JP<;r! Bea~. CalUornl1 916'0 ' Con1in1ntol C1ltl• lnvnlmtnl1, I~ .• NeYade THIE COUNTY 01' OllAHGE Ho. A-71:1~9 E1ta!e of LLEWELLYN NOii.MAN CANFIELD, Decea1e<1. Thi• bu1lns1s 11 condu<led by 1 limit!<! paf!n.rs11lo J1mes H. OIU'gtllry Contl11e11!1I Ca111t Investments, Inc. This stale-men! was lllr<:t "'''" !~• NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ID the County Cltrk of Orange County on May 6 creftl1ors of tile "t>ove na~d decedent 1914 ' th&! all persons ha.v!rig clalm1 ogaln1t 1.ne JEff'REY T. Pl!llO decPdent ere reouorl!<:I to Ille them. w•!h O'MEL\IENY AND MYEltS tht nece$sary voucl>ers, In thr ottlee ol Ul Wtll Shrtfl """' 1ne clerk ol I~• obooe en!ltll!<:I cou•I, or to Loi Anteln. Clllloml• pre!.fnt them, wllh 1ne ne-ce••arv Tel 1113) uo-11• VGUCl\ers. to IM u11<1erslgned al !he otl\ce 101U , of lhrlr att<>r"ef RICHARD A. NEWELL. FJJ61t Attorney al Law. 209t 5.an Joa11uln Hill•. Put>llsned Oranv1 Cots! Oally p;1~1.• Road, Newporl Beach. Calito•nia 92660, Mav 11, :u , 31. end June 7, 191A 1755·7( whlth ls tile place of busine'~ 01 the undfnigned in oll matters pertolnlng to the eslotr of sa•d decederT. will'lin fOt'f PUBLIC NOTICE mon1ns alter lnr tirst puCtitatlon ot this -------------noticr NOTICE TO CREDITORS OalM AOfll 2A, 1914, SUPl!Jt:IOll COUltT 01'" THE SCOTT ANDREW CANFIELD STATE 01'" CALIFORNIA FOR LOIS P. CANFIELD THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Cg.E•f'C\llort o1 the \Viti of Mo. A·7'1lS the 1bove n1med dtcedenl E•late al JOHN L. ROM8EC~ RICHARO A. NEWELL DeceoWd. WOOLSEY, NIEWELL AND THATCHER NOTICE IS HERESY GtVEN la t~1 Allor""' " Law credit0ts ol tno ocove n.1mlld ctecr<:te'IJ 21tt Sin JHqvln Hlll1 llcl. !n.itl au plirKl<!5 1'11vln; cl1lms 09alnsl 1nt Ntwport 111ch, Catlfooll1 nu. said <1ecl'Cltnl 1r1 fl<IUIAd Ill tire thtm\. Ttl: (7U) ....._ will> the nece1urv voucher•, In trw offi(t Allo•fllY fW CD'E XK\llon ol the clerk of Ille lbOYe 11'1111ltd court,~ Publl1hed Orll<!QI Coast Dilly Pi1o1. lo presonl lltlfn, with lllO Ma.Ur Ap•ll 16, and Mav 3, 10, 17, \97~ 1~5)·71 vouchers. lo The unOtrslgnlld ti !ht of/Le 1------_ ot their 1ltO(lley, ARTHUR 0. GUY, Jrt PUBLIC NOTICE Allorl\ly at LIW, Ill Dovlr Orlv1. Svl!' I, Newport IHIKh. C1lltornl1 '2660, whlcfl -11 thl pl1ct of bullllOU ol 1111 und1H'1igj FICTITIOUS I USINESS In all mailers t)t:rl1lnl111t lo !hi "!tie N~Mlii STAT IEMliMT uld ~nl, wllhln follr rnonlll1 1/t The following persan Is dOlllQ bll1lnes1 the nrst publlcatlon of 11'111 nollc• , ill: ~ --D11ed AplU-l,,.__.lt1•--. > PACIFIC ISLAND VILLA G~E ALBERT C. ROMBECK REALTY; MONARCH S U MMIT CLEO R. ROMBECK RE~LTY 11552 M1cArth1Jr Blvd., S!lile Co.E~1<vfor1 of llMI' Wiil 415, lrvlno, Ctllfornl• 91707 ol rM •bow n•med lletodt~! Cre11IW PrQPlrty An1ly,1s, Inc., AllTNUll O. OUY, JR. Cotlfol'nla cors>or•!lon. 1650 Ulld1 VIII• Att ...... II Uw Drlw , Sult. 20'1, s.n Mdrco!, C..llfarni1 QI o.rw D"""' 11111" • '2069. • Nowporl lllKll. C1H'-""1 n"I Thl1 bl.lllMU Is biting conduCllCI by I T1h (n4) &G-1611 • (!ll'porl!lon. AtftrMY 1"r C:..SXlat1'1 I Jkt Yldt.i, Pruidonl PubHihld Ol'¥Ogt: Coast 0.llY l"llot, Tiiis Jllt91Tltnl "ltd wtlh '"' County Aprll ,,, •!Id "'4~ 3, 10. 11, 1'74 1.U,·IA Clerk of Or1119t County on: M•v 7. 191•. HIClt•Y, CAl"lllTJ: aM McDOIUILD PUBLIC NOTICE AllM'MYI 11 Lr# AJrpen T-r --Slllt. 41S IW1M~-•t'l'll. 1rv1111, C•Hltnl1 n111 IJ: J1"* T. Caffttl ··-SUPElllCla COUltT Of' TMI STAT• Of' CALl,.llllA POil TMI COUNTY OP ~MN 1'1*2 ........ ,,,. ' Pl,lblithed Qrlilft COHI 011ty Piiot HOTIC• Of' M•IJtt•• Of' Pftlltol>t M•Y 10, 17, '.If, Jt, 1f7il 1m.14 f'Oft N:OllAft OP Wtu. MO l'Oll " LOT.Ill TEITAM•MTAllY E1l•ll of lEO"A C. lltOllOAH. Otc••std. ------1-c.-.-,.-,,,-----1 MOTICE IS HEllOY Gl'llN tlllt PICT1T1ou1 1us1111tss !.tiE~~.:C,.,.T T ~= ~ ;"~ "': PUBIJC NOTICE NAMI STATIMliiMT ~llllon lot' .. .._ .... Wiii MM! .... TIMI lollowlnrg ~rson1 _,. dol!lf LlllWI Tlll•n'lllll.,Y rtf-.-ta •Ith bUslnt'' ai : I• ~• If.If lwlhef Plftlcui.rt. ~ ~t SUNEV, :mo HtlM'tiU 1"1., C01!1 fllt Hmt tl'ld pltc;t Of M ... 1111 t11t .._ -~------·-·~ J1nltt E. Htl!f'fCk. 2220 Nel>rtlkt l"I., •·'"" In 1r. cOllrlrOOlft 111 ~nt No, Cost• M1s1. Cl. f'lti'H . 3 of 11ht court, ti "N Cl'lk Cllftttf Drl<I• LtllMI !J.SM1r'f, 4'01 H11I Avt., Wnt, hi IPll City of 5aftta AM, C:.WOrftll, Huntl1111ton 11~1'1, C1 . .,.... Oltlll Mtoy 14; 1•1• ! • Tl'lll OUSln-11 conclllchd "" • ,_,., WILLIAM E. $1 JOHM I Mttn.r'111P c-iy c1er1o. 1 J1nlt1 E. ~k • MA.Ilk A. IMITM Tiii• sl1t1m1nt w" llttd wltll 1111 ..,., e..... .,....,. '"""' County Cltrll ot or.,... C:OV<llY ........ II " ..... ~ CA ... , •· '''" , .. , cn•J m.-ff"*l Al,..., flh Mt!M~ Pvtlllil!IO Orlnfl CNtl 011ly PllOI, '"'*ltl!M Ori• (oMt L1a1fJ ,,... Ml'f ,, 10. 11, ~·· 1t71 1W>o14 Mt"' p, , ..... ,,,. ,.,..1i • I I ' l \ I • ' I J6 DAILY PIL01 Friday, r.1a,r 17 , }q74 . • • I Dont Dilute Spirited Advice . ~ DEAR ANN LAt\TIERS: l th at freedom from :1 lo,·et~ss read someplace that you don't marriage can be "·ortlt plrnty drink and never hav~. I don't - and I am not talking 11bou1 care much for liquor. but I money. forefathers dJ.d v.·itM ut sugar unlll !he 13th cenlury. \\·ithout coal fires Wllll the 14th century. \\ithout tea or so.1p until the 17th cen l'Jry. g<1s or match<'S or electricity unt il the 191h tentury, ":111111•rl or frozen foods until the 20th ctntury. I think "·e'll make iL Even if drinking is the "in" thing in your crowd, il needn't cro\\-d you out . Learn the facts from Ann Landers' booklet, ··Booze and You -For Teenagers Only." Send ~ Ci!nls in coin and a long. scU 11ddressed. slamped envelope I.Cl Ann Landers. P.O. l'ox 3346, 222 W. Bank Dr , Chic· ago, Ill . 60054. '4-.t~ . ~· .. . .., , ah\·avs find myself ha ving one or t~\'O be<'ausc people keep C 0 N FI D E NT l 1\ I. T'> nisist in(!. Sonic hosts V.'on 'l \\'lll::RE \\'ILL IT END'.': Our t<ike no for an ansv.·cr. \\'hat do voo say \\'hen ~-~ ________ _ peop\C' prcs!'li rC' you t•I ··be socia ble '· or "have just onl'"'! Sign mt -A DRINKING DRY WHO'D RATHER !\OT OEA.R D.D.: 1 have a \'ery simple auwer for people "'~O loeep tTylng to shove a drink 1n my band. t say, "II I don 't mind YOUR drinking, you !'houldn't mind my N 0 T drinking. Please don 't ask mt again." IP.S. A.fter that little speech I have \·t ry IUtle lroublt. I STORE WIDE DEAR ANN L1\..\1DERS: l have read n1any letters in your column from \~'Omen who sav they arc al"•ays fighting of{ men. Jt seems these poor clears arc forever getting propositioned by the butcher. ihe druitgist. the doctor . bu s driver, lawyer, plumber, and meter reader. I know tv•O \\'00\en like that. Why don 't the simple~ realize what they are telhng about themselves? Don't they kno\v that when a man sees a ·FANTASTIC CLURANCE SALE! sign in the "indow that sa~s """::::',r--.....~ "welcome," it's an even bet that he \\'ill accept the invitation? \\'omen "'00 get all those propositions are han ging out little signs, whethe~ ~hE;Y know it or not. Usually 1t s m their eyes. Wizem up. Ann . - HIP IN HARRISBURG DEAR HIP: G en" r a 11 Y speaking, you are right. But some men don't look for invitations. They issue 'em. DEAR ANN LANDERSo I agree \vith your advice t9 the 55-year-old man v.ilo is stu~k in a marriage that has lost tts rneaning. ft wa s a...<rtute of you lo guess that his wife may be as unhappy as he and .wou ld probably be glad to end it. Our marriage is stone-eold dead. We speak only to argue. Mv husband thinks he'd be ha.ppier else\\•here. and I'd bC' glad to let him go -on fair terms. ' SPORTING GOODS I AMF BIKE TIRES Blk Walls -Manr Size~ I BAG O'BALLS Basketball ·f oolball-Volleyban I FATHER AND SON Bo1ing 61oYe Se! 1.69 REC. 2 99 4.91 • REC . lo 2.29 REC. 9.91 5.00 I BICYCLE MOTORCROSS KIT E•erylhinr You Need! RCC. 29.97 1600 GIFTWARE IDEAS • I ARTIFICIAL FLOWER ARRANGE· MENTS REC. Jo 11 00 M•Jll l(Jlts lo Choote from 3.9! . 1 I FOUR PACK PORCELAIN MUG SET REG. Rockincham P;ittern Handcrafted 1.J9 .89 I WINE FOUNT • REC. 4 00 Useful and Oec o1a liYe, Perfect Gilt 8.59 • I OIL LAMP 9 inches Tall wilh Oil 11£6. J.!9 .99 I PING. PONG BALLS Yellow or Orange-Pkg of 6 RE~i 2/1 00 I ~.~,~~ s~~.~QU!S " ~E;D 1 • 00 GIGANTIC .10USEHOLD HRPERS I 37 GALLON TRASH CANS REC. Heavy PJas11c Locking lrds 3.97 t KORDITE TRASH CAN LIN£RS Pkg. ol 11 R£C . 1.4! I "SUPER BOWL" AUTOMATIC • 21500 . 99 TOILET BOWL CLEANER RE.f9·3/, 97 4 01. Size. .. " REC. 2/100 to _99 I GADGET SALE M~ny Items for The l itche1 I TOILET SEAT REC. 1 99 3.49 • # 30 White·lll Olhers Reduced PRICES GOOD THRO MONDAY MAY 20 DRUGS & SUNDRIES I WHITE FRONT BRAND Shave • Cream . REG. _ Memhol .Formu!J .~ I RED CROSS COTTON BALLS 230 Pkg. REG . .99 I GLEEM TOOTHPASTE 1 01 . •ei~lu S11r t COUNCILABS SHAMPOO lemon. He1~al, Cream Rins1 ' 1 ~I. REG .!! 4/1 00 . 71 But f\'l' given 25 yrnrs, of n1v life to this man. I ve rilised his chi ldr en . entertained his bosses .and scrimped so he could have good clothes bc~ause he had to ··meet the public."' .. !\ow nty ''ge n e ro us. husband wants to s P 1 i I everything 50-50. This means I end up v.·ith $40,000. 1·~ 52. vo"ith no business cx pcr1Cflce. lie has a good job, medic~! insurance and a fantastic IX'nsion. FASHION DEPARTMENT. • • .~6 SHOE DEPT. I'm not arguing. Th e ma rri11ge is~ fraud .. But \1 hen ,·ou give advice> to middle-aged inen, please tell them to be fair. -WILTED ROSE DE AR R 0 SK: If your husband has a shred of dectncy, be will pro\'ide for you as best be can. A l'Ompetent lav.·yer \yours! will help him ....-cjeeide v.bjl. is honorable a n d fin ancially fea sible and see that he does it. In the meantime. yo11 can'1 get blood out of a turnip, la~\'. But please remen1her. \.\'h1le you are doing you r aritilmctic. June Date Selected ~Ir. and Mrs. \Villiam C. Luckow of Huntington Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Suzanne Alarie Lqckow to Gr.gory Alan Ho'l\nes... of Riverside. The (Xll.lple plan to marry June 29 in SIS. Simon and Ju<lc Catholic Chureh, H11111ingtoo Beach. Miss Luckow i.s a graduate or San Befnardioo High School end \he Unlverslly o r C.lifomla, Rlyerolde where her flance al.9o gr>dueted. Ho Is the "" of Mr. and r,tn. ~1yde II. Holmeo of Mlllbne ond Is an alumnus o/ C.puc:hino Hi&h S c h o o I , Millbrae. I . t I ~~~~~~--. ' ..--~~~~~--. SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S LADIES' BRAS LADIES' PANTS SPECIAL GROUP Bo ys' long s leeve sportshi rts in fancy patterns. COTTON KNIT & BRA BIKINIS REG. 5.99 ,300 BOYS SHIRTS REG. 2.50 ea. 2°0 oFF MISSES & WOMEN'S SIZES T·Shirts & Briefs SIZES 2/300 FROM 9.99 8· 18 -#•fl . 1 so Pkg. S!ZE S·M·L I:!:! ii 1H11:! ii « CABINET HARDWARE OUR REG. to 99' ea. 5/100 ENTIRE STOCK! I STEEL TOOL BOX ~· 400 111 inch wilh !ray s~~ I TROPICAL SEGO Dier Orin~ ( 01. 10 to ••• "i, 1.00 I MANDA RIN ORANGE SllCES 11 0/ c~n I STYROrOAM CUPS Ho! or Cold Dunks Packa~e ot 50 3 l'oclu e ROLLER AND TRAY ~1~1 89< I PAPER PLATIS ~IC. . II .69 1" S11e metal pan J.11 PAINT CLEARANCE! 50 01.0~~. 7c; PRICE INTERIOR ANO EXTERIOR, OUARTS AND GALLONS, SPRAY PAINT REG. to 1.88 68' CAN • 100 Count 9 lnth Sile OVAL TINE CHOCOLATE 1 FLAVOR DRINK OUR 49c REG. 79' 12 OZ. SIZE ALSO IN MALT FL AVOR SETS REG. 2. 29 2;300 LADIES' PANTIES, BIKINIS AND BRIEFS REG. 69' 3/1 00 METAL PICKET sac FENCE RIG. 1.49 WEB CHAISE LOUNGES REG. TO 11.97 600 14"x14" HIBACHI REG. ass 11.99 BAR·B.Q TOOLS REG. 3/1 00 69' Gl,LS' SPRING DRESSES AND PANTSUITS RIG. SOOl 10 12... i'OOFF SIZES 3-1 4 MEN'S ' CUFFED JEANS REG. 4.00 LADIES' TENNIS SHOES SUMMER FOR THE SANDALS FAMILY 200 . PR. PR. GIRLS' PANTIES 2~~ 200 IEG. TO S.99 VALUES TO 4.99 MEN'S, BOYS', REG. ASSORTED '" 5/1~~ PLAIO COLORS SIZES 4 -12 I SIZE 29·38 SIZES 5·10 I DOG SWIARIS & COA.,.. rt' C.•ly. •n cllltllrl ltr I•! • 111 49< I lolti-Pup1 DOG T11Al5 1111' n.; SJ 1 00 inti. ltJ1ors·lli1 • u tc•! ·" • PUllNA nNIMI YmUS...11:c 39< r or ln1r ,,11 1 ~bt h 1 11 I Ul·klN DOG FOOD c., 11 CllM•l' Itel Diftfltr·lMZ ,,1 I TmAMJN JISH FOOD c.... " 14 11.·lillC lltl I• IJIJl'Ull .II 29< 69< PET 'M 90 DAY FLEA COLLAR OUR REG. 69< 1.27 J MOS. PROTECTION FOR YOUR DOG OR CAT AQUARIUM FILTER WOOL or CARBON COMP. 2/1°0 At 99' SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL RADIO ~I AM POCKn UDIOS tilt' II' 296 W/(n~IHln11 l\I SONIC "A" Heod Phones ~l/f ri~ 200 '" lllCTllO llAND IM 900 Oi/I tfC PoiUbl' ~idl'J 10 OC 0"11li111 1111 BLANK cassmr TAPE '" 99< l l~es to n1 . Ill PHILCO RADIO AM-FM POCKO MODI L OUR 896 REG. 14· 97 LIMIT ONE LAKE AM/FM RADIO, AC/DC WITH 1an11Y llCHAIGll OUR REG. 19.97 ! $'° GIRLS', WOMEN'S SPECIAL ASSORTMENT BEAN BAG CHAIRS OURREG.108 12.88 e HEAVY VINYL IN AS· SORTED COLOR S PERMANEER FUR~ITURE SOOLO~~. 7c; PRICE OUR ENTIRE STOCK MU STGO !SOME ASSEMBLED PIECES TO CHOOSE FROM. AUTO AC SPARK PLUGS DOMESTICS DEPARTMENT GLASS SWAG LAMPS . Regular 94c 52( RESISTOR Limil 8 62( WHITE FRONT MOTOR Oil 30 WT. N.D. LIMIT 12 . STORE HOURS: Mo ... frL 10.9 Sllhlrdoy 10. 7 s...r.., 11·5 • K(NGo.QUEEN SIZE BLANKETS KING or QUEEN BED PILLOWS OUR 688 OUR SAVI . $ REG. REG. TO 2 for 5 - 10.99 3.99 & 50% MANY SOLID COLORS 4. 99 POL VESTER FIBER FILL TO CHOOSE FROM DECORATIVE TICKING - POLYESTER SHEETS BEDSPREADS ' . TWIN or FULL KING or QUEEN TWIN SIZE NO 2 $5 FLAT or FITIED IRON ass 12~o~P.S2S FOR REG. TO 16.99 OUR BEST SELLER! COMP. 3.49 QUILTED TO THE FLOOR! QUANTITIES LIMITED! SALE LIMITED Tf) STOCK"ON HAND -~(•A•Gf. COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. \ n • 10J~~-S• Dlt<JO Fntwoy ol lri1tol •• • J I .\ I REG. so 12.99 0 AMBER OR GREEN - TABLE LAMP REG. 22.97 s 0 14° AMBER or AVOCADO .... 43" TALL USf. YOUI CllDIT CAID WSllOllOI ~ ........ •llASftlllMllU. . '"'"zj ·I ••11-~tlll'lftln \ • r • High School .Seniors • • Beach. Is cdllor·ln-chlef of the the Most OuMstanding•Shtdtnt school year book and a stu~cnt nward from the Elks Club. in the AcetJerated English Sccretary·treasurcr of lhe She tulol's at SL Andrews senior clus and an Honor preschool and plans to .attend Thesplun In the 0 r a n1 a UC Santa Barbara next year. Associqtion. she ptuns to Friday, May 17, 1q74' nrttl ls curreotly Girts Lcagu{'- sccretnry and a member of the Madrigals ~oncert choir. ' . DAILY PILOT J7 chttrleadcr, Ptp Club of fleer :lnd scorekeeper for the football and basketball teams. She is IJ member or the S'W"lm tc111n and Synchrontlcd aw1m 'lhv"' Honored by Zontians • The Newport llarbor Zonta Club's gjrls-o!-thc n1onU1 arc Patrice Wahlstedt from Newport 1-larbor •High Schoof; Margo Alme Feinberg. Corona dcl Mar High School; Jaq_is Ortlieb, Costa ~1Csa High School and Jennifer Lowry of Estancia High School f\1iss '"1Vahlstcdt , \he daughter of ~fr. and ti.1rs. Arthur Wahlstedt of Ne\\·port 11'(!gram, attend t;C B<'rkelcy in the f:ill i\1iss Feinberg. the daughter to prepare for a career in hnv. 9r . ti1r. and Mrs. Charles f\-1is Ortlieb, daughte r of ~Ir Femberg ?f Corona de! i\tar. and i\1rs Richard Ortlieb or has received lhe Newport . Beach Chamber of Commerce 1.COSta ~1e!ii.1. has becon involved Accent on Youth award and in dran1a and gymnastics After visiting in Colon1hia with the foreign exchange student now 11\'tng With hrr. !\11ss Orthcb plans to attend college and beromc a· drama ll•arher. • ti1iss LoY:ry , daughter of Mrs Diane Lo"'TY ur Costa Mesa , is ~ Ya rs 1 t y ,\fll·r a1tcnclin1f <1 rs n r• Co:1st l'oltcge. ~he plans to ;1tlt·nd J four-}c<lr college to prl'pare herstlf as a teacher of , handicapped th1ldren or school 1 ' P::>}tholog1st. , --------- LI NDA MILL S September Rites Set Ronald J. Coyne of fl1id1vay Clty ~·ill clai1n Linda Anne ~lills as his bridc <luring Aug. 31 ceremonies in the first Christian Church of La Habra. ~he is the daughter of 'tr Charles rt ri.1Hls of Fullerton and the late l\.tr. ~tills. PMents of her f1ancr ,, r c ri.trs. Loretta Coyne, Canton. Ohio and the late Dr. Rudolph .Coyne. tvtisa ~1ills is a graduate of Sunny ~!Uts-· lligh School, atltcndcd Fullerton College and no1v is studying _at California State University. Fullerton majoring in earth ~c1cncc. The future br id cg roo m graduated with honors from California State University. Long Bl•ach :ind 1s <Ul flt,\ <:andidatc at CSUF. SUSAN BROWN Garden Ceremony Planned A garden wMding is. hcing planned for June 15 at the Huntington Beach home of the F'red M. Bro\vns for their daughter, Susan Brown and Patrick Daniel Hoover. Miss Brown, a student at Golden West College, is a graduate of Edison High School. Her fiance, son or the Robert Hoovers of L o n g Beach will graduate in May with 8.n engineering degree froro Ca l ifornia State University at Long Beach. Peering Around ESTANCIA High Schoo I eenklr Deirdre Jackson 1 recelted a lllO scltolarshlp ror creative wrttlni . from the WHITE FINAL WEEK • . FULLY QUILTED KING OR QUEEN BEDSPREADS SPECIAL PURCHASE COMPARE TO 29.99 1· 88 THICK, FURRY BATH RUGS 24136'" or 2~t21 ' ton1our ~99 11 pert .. 1.99 1 1 21l4B"' s11e ru~ 199 1! pe11. .•...• , .2.99 c C'l""J I · r .. • r · ··r, '' ,. 1 18x30" 1111 • ,\ 1. ..;, " I' 11., • 1,.~ .• • 2 99 ., dewM '"I !'" : I MATcH1Nc. TANK slr 399 perfect tompa1e at SS 99 . . . . . . . . . . , KING OR QUEEN PILLOWS REG. 3.99-4.99 2· -s•5 h···d,~ ·•-"1f t"' •Ii.·" .. / J :··· 1,,,". 1llr.r.:•:1 r , dJ '. n1otil &-r.1i1ot 11 ~rOl'I. ~ecorat1v" ti L :"~· g:.~.~~~~.~EO PnlOWS. 199 for i-:11 10. ·1 cf I: • ·, 'J •cu t \'.;'.; ., d a 1"!lla1k.-ih!1 lo.v r·11-:1 El~pJr'. r !I ~Jt'lei ~e1:orr~~) in imr'll1t ~1:dsar ·r •1~;i. uin1·. k ; cl d:l 1 .. ti·~ ·.~ptr1Gr qudiity. All 111!! · ., 1 Id ·1cu. r i".r :~ rr :~y ~~·'-~I-a-kind ~mples & r·, ror,J1r.~ed qylr TWIH OR FULL SIZE BEDS~R[IOS !Reg. 1699-22.9~ •••••. 8.88 S'.r.iy . t~;.rlile ·;,1'~ v1n1I p,.it10 l ;;.1 :J11: r~t"n~ 1'; btJ~!f & 11.~':1:lllf' ;~. Cu~!i;rtJ~I·: l: . .;1 ·! BUDDY-L 24" BBQ MOTORIZED COOKER f:._-.-.. 1 .,· .~ ."· ( 16'-~ r "d1r11 m~:, J ,\J br,-11cr 999 ·:. ···d prtr icdlur~s j I· ' <1~.tJ r · .n pi,s+i!.<llt1on tnt. I · ~' S' : • :.11! grid IEG. , J' J"• trm~<> •• .... 12.99 ·--·-tO~tREIE lllil8R(lll BAS( .••.•••••••.. 4.n G1.,.,.v l\11'· • 1·~1:-!.-t1r~ ~1P~1rr1 t .!fl ,11;~."I,.\ •I , , ;. I a~ii; ~·:.•\. ,~JI '. n,, in •b<u~«rue1 ... 331 lihers. PC'i valves, etc. clta~ in minutes. 01p N's· nG. kt!.. Be-JO. 4.•7 HIBACHI WITH 3 HANDY CASSETTE . Adjustable GRILLS TAPE RECORDER ~~··. ':b~; ~-111 n1t~•11 1oss 1 , "'ere ''"" ec. 1696 :•'"• :\rl'b~-f·~-Hi .. ~', G1-·~:P.l (11~L 1n-r 4-~\ I'; :hr: le ~.o:der : •1.r; ~vJIJ~•S . RlG. ' ' . 22.•1 ' J ' ' • ,, ' SAVE 48%·Hl·Power WhfdsNehl ~le• SAVE 41 %·1'1itioD All CYLINllUI KIT l!o.•'f{"" 'ti' t··'.'Yr~'fl!,•l \•j I •·Jjt, lut.1!:•'. •_:,-~·lki.t:olJ" '· f. lJ0I). ~ 1.J'" l'i J,~ AC/DC 5 BAND PORTABLE RADIO boe io AM/fM "" 1996 pol•ce a~d wea!her b3c~s. Pla1·s o~ b1t-R£G. lt11es N elect11c. 24.97 MODERN DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO · \', •'" ;,; n +, ,. '-p 1496 .-1 J ~I • "' ' .;;1 i" I . 't 513~! ~I.:/ I" J REG. 19.97 SAVE 37Y2~Ai ... JACK STAND R!G. 2 s5 3.99 ... for l~l l"O:~ ·l,f~ ~r~ '°'''Cl'~ II\ l', 4•1 <1ool t /IS'.l ."'.l~ 1' I 11 ~ •• ~·~~le).l1• ;:a.-J f'E~~ilCI t•·, {! • f •t ··~ e1:'1 • ' ' lt.fl:i1\•.:.~~~nt~~ !iHOP WITJI COl\IFIDEl\ICE ••• §ATl!iFACTIOl\l · liUARAIVTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK DELEG ATES at ,-~~.~:.:.::~1r.::..::..:..:.~:.=_.:.._.:.._~~~__:,~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~--,~,~U~Aiii&1RIG~£f'ruuYiiiittiiiiii7ff~ ExecuUvea' Secrotarie STO~MOUlll ' , ,p,.. OonventlOn In Toronto are Mo"4oy·friftr 10.f co Sf A MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. \1 ''"llMI'~"' Mn. Vivian campbell and Satwr4oy IOAM to 7PM ' tOD A... "'1111 t Mllll 1 MIJl10llll'lllloll,nipruen~ L .... ..:l•:••:·•~':':Nll::~~s=PM:.__jl ____ ~~'...:~.:::'.:..:_:__:_:.:_::_:'.:::::~:_::. __________ s=..,=·~D=ia90~&o==•~w~fl'f~n~lri~s~lal~---.J_l__~~~=·::'~!!..!!~~~~!!!!J~_J J111 'the Orange COU!\lY Qiap-IUIEIOltllrftllEO!CIE~llllil !« . • .J • • • ; I • Prelims Open; Denial to UCI • LOS ANGELES (AP l -Soulhom Cal coad:I Vem Wolfe says UCLA is the favorite; UCLA coach Ji1n Bush says Southern Cal Is the favorite ; and, it they keep looking only at each other, Oregon State may sneak In the back door. The two-day Pacific-I track and field champioa~lps opened this afternoon with the host Trojans an dthe ~-tov.-n Bruins listed as co-favorites. Of the 1 t defending champions who are returning, five are from coach Bernie \\'agner's OSU contingent , a team overlooked much of the season but laden \Yilh strength and depth. Former Newport Harbor High standout }l.1att Hogsett competed in ttae 440 intermediate hurdles trials for Stanford this afternoon. And another ex-Sailor ,UCLA's Jim Neidhart, was a doubtful entrant In the shot put although there y,·as a slight chance he would compete. Saturday's action begins at 9 a.m. with the decathlon. Jo·ie\d events start at I: 15 with the first running event getting under v.·ay at 2:05. e VCI Trier Again Appeal of a dooision to hold the NCAA District a baseball playoffs in Tacoma, Wash. has been denied by the selection committee and Dr. Ray Thornton 0£ UC Irvine has asked the Division 2 chainnan, John Winkin of Colby College, ot review the situation. Saturday on the final day of time trials for this year's holiday "'·eekend ri ce. AJ U..o.ser. a l\\'0-time 'Ainner of th e race, had the day 's fastest lap at 187.617 miles per hour. Former winner Mario Andretti was next at 184.577, foUo'l\'ed by de£ending cllampion Gortion Johncoc:k at 184.049. . The only other driver over 180 Thursday was Di<'k Simon, who had a lap of !83.37t. e Pae-8 Te11nls SEA1TLE -Four California teams !wept. to the semifinals Thursday in the opening day's play of the Pacific-8 Conference tennis championship at the University of \\'ashington. But Roger '-fcKee stole the sh>'I\' "''hen he \11'00 the only match for Oregoo State against Southern California 's John Andrt'l\'S, 4-6, 6-4 , 6-2 in a singles play upset. Wasbington's No. 5 player, :!iO'phomore Mike Schannan, dumped California's Steve Bartlett 7~. &.!, io another big viotory. Stanford and UCLA posted identical 9-0 scores over Washington State and Oregoo. And USC beat Oregon &-!. ev.s. Lead• NAPLES, Italy -The Unitt'd States and West Germany qualified Thursday for the semifinals oC the Federabon Cup World tennis tournament with victories over France and Romania. • Julie Hehiman defeated Gail Chanfreau 6-2, 6-2, and Jeanne Evert \11-tlipped Odile de Roubin 6-3, 6-4, giving the Americans an unbeatable 2-0 lead over France in !he besf..·of·three series. • • Fnday, M11 17, 1974 • • • • UPI TllfltflOll Thornton has asked Winkin 10 change the district verdict and .move the tournament to Southern California , possibly at" UCI. He made the appeal on behalf or UC Irvine and Cal State (Fullerton). Ir the appeal is denied the final step would be to take it to the NCAA offices in Ka.mu City direct. West Germany clinched its series 'l\i th Romania when Helga l\.tasthoff beat Virginia Ruzioi 6-3, 6-2 and Helga Hoesl defea!ed Afariana Simionescu 6-3, 6-3. THE FLYERS' BRUCE "COWICK (27) GOES SPRAWLING WHILE CHECKING BOBBY SCHMAUTZ. e BBC Teams Win KNOXVJLLE!', Tenn.-The Balboa Bay Club's senior and open men's volleyball teams rolled to victories Thlll'sday and this morning in the U.S. Volleyball Association national tournament at the University of Tennessee. The senior team knocked off the Dallas Athletic Club, 15-11. 15-10 Thursday and were scheduled to face Westside Y~tCA of New York in the semifinals today. In the other semifinal tilt, Outrigger Canoe Club of Hawaii tangled with San Diego Masters. The BBC's open team defeated El Camino College this morning. 15-11. JS.9 and race United Sporting Goods of Santa Monica tonight in quarterfinal action. e Riggs Compeler LAS VEGAS -Self-proclaimed male chauvinist hustler Bobby Riggs \\·ill probably try his strength against a 21· year-old woman Saturday. The sport? Wrist wrestling. Riggs has agrei.'d to play the \\inner of the woman's tournament at the U.S. Wrist Wrestling Championships here Saturday afternoon. The favorite is Jackie Allard, a 145-pound University of Nevada at Reno student who challenged Riggs 10 days ago. ''I will take on the champ and will have enough bets laid if I \\'in to make my guarantee." Riggs said. He asks to be guaranteed $5,000 for any personal appearance. e Rilh/ 1l'eh1 Dies HOUSTON -Funeral ser\'ices are planned Saturday for Billy Welu . 41. nationally kno\\oll professional bowler. He died Thursday . apparently of a heart attack. R\s tiod..v \11as found in bed at his home by a relative. v.·elu t\\·ice won the American Bo\l:ling Congress ~tasters and set records for four, five and six games including one 300 effort in the 1967 Firestone Tournament of Champions. After winning numerous honors on the Professional Bo"'·ling Association tour. he bec::ame a member of the American Broadcasting Co. sports staff to help cover bo"'·!ing tournaments. e Fast Indy Tln1es J~'DIANAPOLJS -Three fonner •·500·• \vinners set the pace Thursday at the Indianapolis Pvlotor Speed way ,- servjng not ice !hey are ready to qualify e Sporlr Comple.r SACRAMENTO -A bill designed to establish a $20 miUion sports stadium rompler on abandoned navy property in the Lois Angeles Harbor area has passed the assembly. Tt 'l\·ould authorize various Lo& Angeles officials to create a commission for the financing, oonstruction and operation of the all·purpose sports and recreational oomplex. The campier \lo'oold have t"·o stadiums. 10 tennis courts, a theater for drama and music. and space for dozens of other sports activities. It would be financed through re\·enue bonds. e Playoff• at SC LOS ANGELES -The University of Southern California Trojan.1, four-time def('nding national coUegiate baseball champions. seek their fiflh straight Pacific-8 title in a best-of-thrtt·garne series against Oregon this 'l\·eekend . 1be series starts at 4 p.ni. Saturdn.v and continues at noon Sunday. a doubleheader i[ necessary. All gam~ \\ill be at Dedeeux Field at the USC campus. Slumping Halos Tackle Mim1esota BL001tflNGTON, Afinn. (,\P1 -The California Angels have lost three of th eir last four games and are in fourti1 place" in the American League \Iles!. But \\'ith the division lead L'rs ;ilso A11gels Slate AU Gt"'" 111 ICMPC 11111 MeY 11 (,illt1rnl1 11 Mlfl"ISO!t M•y 11 c1111crnl1 11 Mfnne1Cll1 Mey 19 (11it0tni1 1! MlnllflCll 11) M'Y :>1 Ci11lcrni1 I! l(en"s (lfy .'' p.m. II; \0 1.m. 10 ;s 1.roi. 3 '15 o.m. -------------· unable to come up with a series of ,,·ins tile Angels are still only t\lo"O pan1es out of first place. The slumping Angets cont inu ed their road trip opening a four-game series tonigbt against the Minnesota Twins. Rookie Frank Tanana. 3-4. lakes the mound for the Angels and Vic Albury, l· I. Is scheduled to pitch for ~Unnesota. Jn Saturday 's game Bill SinRer is lo hurl against Joe Decker with Nolan Ryan and either Dick Lange or Bill Stoneman teaming for the Angels in a doubleheader Sunday. KC's Culp lnks With Sun Curly Culp. a regular Kansas City . Chief defensive tackle the last four Natk>nal Foot.ball League seasons. is the JateJl jumper to the Wor1d Football League, joininR the Southern California sun l{l tm. Contract terms 'A-ere not disclosed Thur>day bu! the fl.(oot-l, 270-pqlJild former Arizona State athlete Usted finances as the overwhelming factor in his decision. ''There comes a time in Hie when loyally to one·! family (financiaTiy) ovivrides loyalty to the Cttiefs .• "_he :'{8id. Culp said he" will leave 1t1msa1 City with regrets afttt completing his option year with the Cliiefs. He said bil decisfon won 't prevent him from giving .bis best effort this season. "l lhink !he Chier. can go all the way to the Super Bowl, and then I'll have the World Bowl to look rorward to with the Sun." said tbe veteran of Kansai City's 1970 Super Bowl triumph. --------- lrwir1 Leadi11g Colonial Ope11 FORT WOllf'"I -1Pl -r ,. ·)•~ ·ns Tllurwt•V In !~ 1H0.000 Cr•. 'OGI ' ~ •1 '""'"•men! on Ille 7,I C-~•rc, o•r JJ .JS-10 Cc•~n,al Co1mlry Club cour~e la-deno•t! a n;t~u•I Hale 1,....1n Hut>e<t Gr..., L1rrv HlnlOll Bert Y1ncey Biiiy CliPtt Cl!1rln COOdv BM>by Nk l>ols Frri fle1rd 81>11 Sl1ntor1 Bu1Cll B1l•d Plll1 11.odgtts Orvllle MOOCIY Ju!iu1 BO<oi Ltrrv NellOll BM cr .. 1111a w Tcm W1ls.k0Pf 0.vl StacUOtl Lll"rv Zlllllfr Cl\uck Ccurt~v llM Curl L•;n~ L~lt Ro•• ll~n~•I! o ;<• Rnv;,n Jim 'l'l!ec~rr· eiuce C.ra,-,.p"" u~n•I H~twrr l'iilty Zlebtl Tom Sn• ... D•n Si~•• Ke•ml• Z••I~ I J1ck Nl(~l1u~ B..o P1vr.r B'uce Dtv•in L'l'f Eldr r l'irH GrH no Ill~ l.\a.,enoal• J.rT Well P!I Fl•r•lmO<I! P.o Menn! o~~ Bit~ Rlc111rd Cr1wlord F"tflt Peirce G•[V )·'·~ Cl>I (hf RCdrlnuu G~v Bre;.:rr l(eri 511!1 Jahn Sthr~!'Co r Gene Ll!llrr Dill' Hill Lff Tte•1lna J.~dv N0<'h I.II~• K1111"' Slfv• Mttnv~ eo1> e.,~,,,cod Pete !lrc"'n Ml-e /ilorlrY Dl vid Gr1h1m Ras Aller> T"'" WllloOll Tom Klle Mor'llV Ka.er J1nv Hfffll' 1111:~ JtllcNd1 Mir~ Ht vr1 Ed Sneod Dair Oougl11$ Joe Inman DCU9 Ford George Arch'' Bruins Slap Flyers Brawling-Mars Action; Orr Sna1Js Out of SluntJJ BOS.TOK 1 APl -801hh,· Orr broke out O[ tl ~coring ~\un1p 11·11/J l'"O goals <ird 11·:0 n<.;3ists ;111d . 1h · R<·~ton Bru ins outmuscled Phil::idelph1;1 for a 5-1 vic1ory Thursday night . rema111ine al1\"e in the National Hockey Lrn;~ur pla~offs 11·i1h the Flyers. The Boston victor)' narroY:ed the Fl1·prs· lr3rl to ,1·2 in l h~ h"~l~f-<'r1·en .:.r.riL's. \l'ith tlif' si'\T!1 ganll' stht'clul<'d for Philadelp hia Sunda.v aftl'fliuJll. Smarting froin three <'•)!l~1'{Ut1•.e \o~ses after '!\'inning !he scrit·s ()penl'r: the Bn.iiils came out and beat ttic Flyers at lhe ir w •n game in a l"iMual bra'l\·I from start to fini sh at steam y Boston Garden. Referre Dave Newell was the busiest man on the ice, whistling a Iota! of 138 minutes of penalties. The 43 penalties included 12 majors, a misconduct and a game misconduct. The Bruins \\'ere frustrated by Philadelphia goalie Bernie Pa rent , despite outshooting the Flyers 17·8 in !he first periOO . Hov.·ever. Boston inched into a J.() lead on a short-handed goal by c:regg Sheppard. \Vho was set up by Orr at 8: 14. Then, at '16 :55 or the middle session, Orr made it 3· I on a long slap shot. The play 'l\"aS set up by defenseman Dallas Smith "'"ho carried down the left wingboards and then tied up t w o Philadelphia players to permit Ken Hodge to get a pass back to Orr. Hodge and Don 'Marrotte capped the .;;conn~ for 1hc Bruins near lhe end of the fin:il periOl"I. ThC' patrern w;is set in the oJ)<'ni ng seconds when Philadelphia's 0 ave Schu ltz, \\'ho holds virtually all NHL records for the most penalties. got into a brawl with Boston's Carol Vadnais just 2.J seco nds after the open ing facroff. /u1other bout in the opening perlod feo.t urrd Philadelphi a"s Andre Duponl. Jirn \\"atson and Boston";;; Terry O'Reilly and Andre Savard. In the second period. Schultz and 'Vayne Cashman or thC' Bruins made good on continued threats and squared off, each drawing major' In the third pc-~od. the game threatened lo tum into a free-for·aU as !he Bruins continued to dominate the action. Schult z and Vadnais laRgled. and Boston's Bobby Sctunautz joined In. Schultt \\'as given a minor and misconduct penalty, ""hile Schmautz drew a game misconduct and a roughing infraction . Vadnais got off \\'lth a single minor penalty. \Vilh 1: 13 remaining, Vadnais went after Bruce Cowick after the Philadelphia forward had flattened '-tarcotte:-Boston·s Richie LeDuc and Philadelphia's Tom' Bladon squared off in their own private heavyweighl event. \Vhen peace was restored, all four were given major penalties. · Marrotte, an innocent victim. then scored on a backhander for the rinal goal '"i th 61 seconds remaining. Lave1· Outlasts ·Stockton In Wind-lashed Tourney • LAS VEGAS ( APl -Tom Okker upheld his second seeding with a 6-4 , 6-7, 6-0 victory over Cliff Richey Thursday in gusty \\·inds up to 35 miles an hour to reach the quarter-finals of the $150.000 Alon King tennis tournament. J<"ourth.-~eded Rod Laver v.·as also extended to three sets before beating Dick Stockton 6-4. 3-6, 6-(). In other matches John Newcombe knocked off Paul Gerken , 6-3, 6-2; and Harold Solomoo defeated Eddie Dibbs, &- 4, 3-6, 6-2. The winner receives $30,000 and an automobile valued at $21.000 for the highest payoff in the three years of what is called the richest 32-man 1oumament ever. Laver said, "The winds 'l\·ere so strong that it nullifies your attacking game." He said, "I had to stay back most of the time because the ball Tioats around so much that volleying v.·as so difficult." Stockton agreed. "I really didn't expect to hit so many balls to end a point," said Stockton, 'vho returned here Thursday morn ing after playing a World Team Tennis match In Houston Wednesday night. Richey's third set shutout loss was Ironic because he had beaten Erik van Dillen by the identical score the day before for the Chance to race Oki: er. And in both matches, the loser faded in the third set after battling winds which made holding serves 4ifficult. The semirinals· and finals Saturday and Sunday will be natJonaJly televised. Olympie Champ Maintains A-average LOS ANGELES I AP l -S3ndy Neilson, • the eye-c:uching bfonde who won thl'ft Olr mpic gold medals. says that going to college provides as much excitement &1 aayfhin g she's done: ~o~· Ii, Sandy graduates from FJ Monte li!4?' School nm month with close • lo an "A ' in·erage and In the top five pol~ her graduating cl•ss d<:;p!Je tJJ, -ror swimming. tbree gold medals and return to high -· "I.8'1 sunm>er at the El Monte pool, I lauahl the handicapped. and I loond thet ~ mruding." .. ,. Sandy wtJo hope& to ODl)CfJltrate on helping the handicapped in her •tudleo Ill the Uni-.lty al Caltlomla al Santo Darbera. Olympics but ttilis not exactly tnie. r . -1d like to go to Montreal and see all the lctlvlttea I missed al Munich," she said. 1bunday ni,ht, Sand,Y received the ~· 1<holarshlp rrom the Seoretatlcs al Sp!!l In Los Angel ... but thal amount.! to fl~ !Or each o1 roor. years. She'll net<! '" mott lhan that. l!w pamito will help, but Miss Neilson helping the physl.,;ily ·hlndlcapped," the allm llioode ..Pained. "Worjdng with the )Wllpten In the 1unnner helped bulld 1fl1 cbarOCWr and lt ieadios you aell· dittjpilne. . "I think Ille yqunallel'I helped hie 8' much a. l h!lped theai." ' Sllltd;y will ""'"'tie --Jlllt ....,,.,. bdtrt •vlAs lor UC "Saitt. Bl~.~~ ti. tW ,-..,. Oliml'b. DAILY Pll>j)T J8 --. Sizzling , LA Tests AaP()n, LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ trades that brought Jim W)'IUI j11ij Mike Marshall to the Los Angeles DOdien Inst winter stand out as two of fihe best moves Al C&mpan.ls ever made. · And some of the players he didb't trade. as general manager ol the Dod1er1 are paying dividends ror the hottest learn in major league baseball. , .~ Wynn, who has slugged 12 Mme runs and driven in 35 runs, and ~1arshan. who Dodgers Slat~ All o-H KAIC U'ft) !:!! p.fl'I. , :JO p.m. . :io p.m, has already pitched in 20 of the Dodger1 36 games. are two prominent reasons for the Dodgers' sensational geta\.\·ay of 26-9. They led seeond-plaee San Francisco by 7"2 gatnes Thursday and take a nine- game winning streak into ton.igt)t's game against Atlanta at Dodger Stadium. Henry Aaron, Atlanta's home run star who wiped out Babe Ruth's career.homer record last month, will be honored in pre. game ceremonies. . Aaron is e11:pected to play in the Saturday aod Sunday tilts. · The maturity of soi.ne of thelr young players and the return of the stolen base to the Dodger attack which ~ts more power than any club in l>OS-Brooklrn Dodgers history are t"·o other reasons. •·These things arc part of anybody's job." he said, refusing to .!II.and in the spotlight for the trades that sent centcrfielder \Villie Davis to r.tontreal for Marshall and pitcher Claude Osteen to Houston for centerfielder Wynn. "A lot of people are involved." But "'·he n Campanis disrusses Dodgers power, infield stability, bench .strength, he also brings up names ol plaftn who wanted -or still want -to be traded but are ~till Dodgers. '·Last year, Steve Garvey and Tom Paciorek came to me and lndiqted U~y v.·ere not playing. In a geriUemanly fashion. they asked if I could find them better situations in other orgariizations. Our response '6'as, 'just be patient.' And sure enough, both started playing nlore and making contributions." ('atcher Steve Yeager also yearned for a place 10 play, but he has ceught 14 J:ames this season as Joe Ferguson fought.a batting slump. The Ood&era 1''on all 14. "This year Von Joshua. in a gentlemanly fashion , asked if we could make a move for him. I made inquiries 10 see v.·hat could be "'orked out, but "'-'hat \\"e could get in return "·as inadequate. Stri11gs at Home LOS ANGELES -The ~ 'Mgeles- Strings host Hawaii tonight at the Sports ArC'na. seeking to improve their 2·2 \\'orld Team Tennis record. It begins al 8. Dcm·er 14, Hanft !I \\'omen-Ziegefuss (H) beat Durr M ; Durr beat Zie~ 6-4. i\ten -Pattison {0) beat Case (H) CN, 0-4 . i\·lixed -Ralston-Ki~'Omura CH) beat, Roche-Kemmer (01 7-&: Roche-Kemmer beat Ralston-Kiyomura 6-f. A-1.148 at Den\·er. Boston 3f, Torona Buffa'° U \\romen -Melville (8) beat Overton fTBI 6-0: fl1elvHle beat O'Neill (TB) and Newberry ITB ) 6-4. Men -Taylor ( B) heal Fletc:her (TB) &-2 : E..lep (TI!) beat Taylor m1 ~id iTBl H. Mixed -Reid·NC"llwilerry (B) beat Es1'p-O'Neill ITB) H: Tlrta,,.Moeville I 8 ) beat Fletcher-Overion (TB) 6-3. A -00> (eslimated } at ~-. She M)lriled by wlnnfng !he ll)().mcter freeltyle II OlympTc r<a>nt lime ol lUll -· and tbeli ~lded !he USA to vtctotiof In the fO!!-meler free'1yl e and 400-meter uiedfey <rlay to finish wllh Sh< Isn 't plaMlng on contlnufnc her lntematlonal rompedttlve s w I m m I n g allhough she hopes to rwtm tor boi' eoll<ge during bet uodergreduate years. "Many have .a!d that I am looking f-Or'A·ard to 1wimmlng In the 1976 ttlll• boPes to. win more .ubolantlal ocholmhlps and ahe could ...n to help eom ar way through the unlvoroity. "I am going to study In the physical education field and then oone<ntrate on D ·AYI "!'. -lelil. "I t111n1J I •"9""'1'llahecl my ..., u lllr 411 that II o:incemed." . ' .. q .... lj, ,BOSTON'S GILLES OJ.LllllT HITS aoaaV' c~~~ • • I I ' , • 1· I • ~f) UAILV PILO f trlday , May 17, 1914 • N'ew·port Wraps Up • · ~anner Sports Yea~ l : .. ~ .. 'fiy ROGER CARLSON \.. 1 Ot "" o1111 Pl101 s1111 with a third plitce fini sh to ,. lluntington Beach and ~farina . fcred for decades \.,.ith on!~· an . Newport Harbor H i g h ' s athteftc program has resulted in Jhe. most sllCcessful si}tool year 'in the history o~ sch<d with championships virlp,flly a dime a dozt'n on the sauors campll'i. Vilrsity chainpionships in football. water polo a n d swlmming are already in ·' hand. Tei11'ls and track titles are in the bag and the bas~ball <ind golf . teams finished second with the baseball t e a m qualifying for the C I F playolfs. All this and in a league comldered the besl in Orange County. Here are -the highlights of Newport Harbor Hlgh's 1973--74 athleMc achievements: FOOTBAU.r-Sunset League co-champs and CIF 4 -A quarterfinalists before bowing to St. Paul. The JVs wer~ 7-1 champs, the freshmen 8-1 champs and the sophomores 7- 2. WATER POLO -.,..Sunset teagtie champions with a 15-4 record. The jUnior varsity and frosh-$1Jph° teams also won Sunset tlt1es with an overall 23-3 n\ark. BASKETBAlL-The v;lrsity earned a CJF 4.-A playoff spot Overall the cage progran1 occasional c.xception brea king finished 65-32. up a consistent so·so trend. TENNIS-TI1e Sail ors rolled to :,nother undefeated Sunset League season and the No. 2 seed in the 4-A eliminations. GOLF-The ...arsity finished second to ~1arlna for the Sunset League Crown and qualified for the CIF prclims. SWJM!\11NG -The varsity won the tvloore L e a g u e· Jnvl~tional title and the Sunset League championship. The frosh-soph won the Sunset and ClF' titll'. TllACK"-The var s i I y unseatep perennial power Santa Ana as the Sunse t League champion. Other tit les include the Beach Cities fnVitational and Newport· !\1esa District meet. BASEBALL -The Sailors finished second to Loara and are in the CIF 4-A playoffs 'A-'ith five a11-leaguc selections in the attack·. Newport Harbor ha s always been considered a pov.·er in aquatics and tennis. But the rest of the progra•n -football in particular - suf- So what makes Newport so tough? ' Several factors 111ust · bf' considered. An enrollment or 3,000, a solidified coach ing staff, a weight room with a solid progran1, i n v o I v e d parents and pride are all important. Track coach Bob llalley may have the most rea.Jistic answer, although there are several opinions on the Newport campus that make sense. Says Hailey : '·Some say it's a cycle, but I don't think so. ~ *' This thing has been coming to Y ._. a head ror several years and-J see it to continue for at least the !next two or three years. "We've got an athletic •"""' director (Jules Gage), the " 't community and the horses. ) i' .~ And it doesn't hur( to hav" 3,000 students to choO"~ from, either." 'iX Gage says he's never seen a _group of coaches put in thl'.? time and v.1ork that has been goin g on at Newport. "The athletes themselves have accepted this hard work and "'·hat the coaches arc demanding. They are doing it beca use they are finding the results of the work mean th_ey're going t-o win . District Final s To1ri ght; Vanguards ,,E ye Crown "It's a combination or coaches. kids. pa re n t s·. Football did so well aod that got things started ." Former football coach Do n I.cot puts it in th re r categories: "first are the parents .. They've raised their kid s v.·elt. RSDLANDS-Southi;rn California College of Costa 1-fesa will begin a quest of an NAIA track and fie Id championship here t h i s '1.'eekend in tbe District III finals" at the University of run in 1h<' sprin ts at the d~.,tr ict level bu"t only in the 440 in the nationals. He \Viii also run on the mile relay teanl in both meets. Don Turri. a second place finisher in the NCAA C<lllege "Second is the off se ason program and third is thr continuity ire arr rit'\·eJripin~ through the junior high. junior AH-American football an 1 light\.l"eights in rela tion to the varsity football progran1. "If you're stronger {due to the weight program) you're Redlands. division shot put a year ago, is ranked Ko. I in the NAIA in Action in the di s tri c t goi ng to he better. And the off- • • ..... ,,~ '· . ' .... .. , " ,. \-.;., "· ~·. ., ' .. ·- ' . . ......... •'\ ... ·.·· ; .• CIF Aces ' lit Spil{e Sho'tt'·down By STEVE-SRAND 01 I ... Piii~ P!IOI St.tf NO RWALK -When .Ed ison ll igh's Tom Lloy predicted 11\10 "'eeks ago it \.\'OUld take b('!ter than J ·52.0 to \vin the C'!F 4·A 880, there were few who believ ed ii. • Now th at tinle's a distinct possibility. \\"hen LJov heJds the 680 f1C'ld ill thP Comhi ned Ctl" 4·A :ind 3·A track and field finals tonight starling at 6:30 with th(' fil1ld C'vents al Cerrito s CollegP. an~·thing is pos,<;1ble . ·rhe Chargers JUnior lowered hi;; t11ne fron1 1:55 !o 1:54 and tht•n l :53 2 in th e \a5T three ll'Cl'kS l"urthrr. his \·;):12 la~t F rid:1~· night st"emt>U :-o easy it 1~ d1s1inrtly pos.s1hl·· \1 itn <1 lullt' prrssurc frfl ·ll :Vli~:.1rtn \"1eJo Junior Jon Couk (I :5:l.7) ~1 11d Burbank's J ohn Mu f'ie h 11:53.11,, that a I:j:l could be l".111 Llo1· is alw involved in the ral'e ihat is being billed as !he great rernatcb .. the 44fl, In . tha t even\, l"C\' p»rt ll a rbor·~ Brian Tb C'riot tackle:> tlluir's ,\\an Sheat s. The two pos!ed fas \ tin1f'S in the :-)ou tht•ni Counties rnl'l't earl y in the year in s~p3ral t• heal~ ;ind thrn Shents outspecl 1'hcriot in the _ n1ile relay ;inchor l('g. Tht•:·iot's -1 7.7 is just a tcn!b \,;·hind Shea ts' 47.f,. 11·hi le Lloy is tl11rd at 48.5, a 1nark he ran in qualifying for the finals last week. As has been the case the ta.s l fl•\\' years, the t~·o-mile :ind nlile-arc also glfl mour t·ven!s. along 11 ith the t\vo I urd le races in· the n1eet 11 here the first fi ve rini Shers ' ri ual ify for the ;>,·tasters. meet at the sa r.1e si te a week later. Corona de! r.lar's duo or Brian tlunnaker ·<11K1 Mikr- Messenger will have their hands full just 1nak1ng the r..1a~1e rs nleet Jn their pel e\·t·nt:;;. !Junsakcr. n junior. \V1:t be h.'.l tt!iilg suddt>nl y charging G;irv Blurne of r..tarina High •' aincing others in the l\vo-n1ilc. Blume Jed l'!ll qualifiers 1vith a !1:0j.6 last 1veek. \Vhile Hun. .. akcr hnd the fifth besl 1>1ilY Piiot 5!aH PtlQtos comRf!tilion begins with the the nation 1his season "'i th a season program keeps the kid" field ev<'nls tonight at 6:30 and best efforl of 58-tJ i.4. He won together. They don't drift off." the first running event at 7. the NATA indoor title. Baseball coa<·h :\ndv Srnilh STEVE BUKICH (14), MORGAN ABBOTT (20}, BRIAN O'FLAH ERTY 11\e ,decathlon · .eompetition Ed BouldiiL ha.5 the bcsl says his team is bolstered by a ------------- 110) AND BRI AN THERIOT LED TAR~. qu:•liltying tin1c. l\1cssengr-r faces a \oadcrl mile field whl•re Sunny lli\ls' /\ndy Clifford is fa\·ored. opened th~ morning and the' time for the lO ,OOO \Valk in the group that considers baseball hammer throw was at 5 COlUllr~· and "'.011 the indoor fir st. "'T'his isn't just a fill in o'clock. title in his Spl'ciaJ I~·. sport (or thenl. \\"e"ve got th(• Prdiminary races in all bot \\'hat tram:; arc expected to talent . additional coaching and the six mile run a n d battle Soc.al for th~ national an off-season pror,ran1." GY~INASTICS RESULTS steeRlechase will be held crown '.' \Valer ixilo coach Bi 11 tonight with the fin a I s "Tiwrc :iri• four trains Barnett credits the sopho1nore Girls Saturday eveni.t)g. capable of ~·inning the class "·ith much of his team's cor°"a oe1 Ma• ~~i;o1 <•1.:01 Dona success and like the rest of the Fi,.,: •• ':!.''1t.!•,~M,'3.'sd~~r'.:" ro(f,~M,\,}.· Coach Jim Crumpton \\•ill national meet." Cr u m p ton "'' ~· ... " have a representati\'e team in says. ''North Carolina Central. coaching staff. says next year u~~,., b~"-1. a~1e1win 1cC1Ml 1. 'A-'ill be as good-if .not better. J(lhnlOtl 1c0Ml J. wee1e1;e !Cd/\IJ the district meet but reels the Texas Sout,hern : Eastern New Avg: 8.). Tennis coach Pat \Vilson Bolonce ~eam-1 . Jo~ns°" ((ClMl 2. Vanguards chances of winning :'ltex.ico and us." Sprie! COH l 3. Baldwin 1ce1."11l Avg: h · 1 credits the lack of changeover 1.1s. are better in t e n!ltlOna S ~oCll Col~e Enlries • th h' t [ [ Vaull-1, Johnson (CdMl 1. Weddl' next weekend in Arkadelphia. HAIA 0;11n,1 111 Mfft in e roac 1ng s a s 1coM1 J. sorier !OHl AvQ. 1.1. 10().!.Mlke Slnalllarv (,.6). combined With OUlStand(Og Dini Hiii' C•l.70) !S1 .~S) To•lin Ark '/l0-Sinal•1•rv (21.7!. ,,_. '"''''~!. So•i•' 'f"' > · ...o-oannv Pres1..:1. athletes. ~· , .. "Wher · ts good 110-Gl•nn Rouv ll :'>l.1l. ~""'° ~O';"ln•el (QHI J. Ollinda { ) Av<1: e out porn are • L1ueatrCl (1 ~SI. Rora< Oovi• .1.-d b,0 5ketbaJJ -ach ~0J•. ,,l,. -d I ( .fJB ri.JI " '-V l.J'<I U~rve" M r<-1, MollnCll IT) 1. FeClCl~n they are very goo •' Mll~:_LoJ Patter•on (~ 10.~1. o~v·• Hagey says football started 1't <111· H"rmon IOH1 AvQ. 6·15 b [ ( 10 81 Balance be~m-1 Soriet lDH) ?. CrumpUln says y way 0 3·m~j...:.Li.wl\P1t1el"-.on. G••rv AClam•. all. Rooerl• {QHl and Jonn•on IT). Avo: explanation. "Occid~ntal is the t.!:~~_$~.;1,v~~v ountevie. "I've seen something lr'ke viv~~:...1. sor1e1 10H1 l 11;e1 Molind• delendin dist 'cl h · rT1 and Eaton (T g rt c amp1on ~~~~~:~~~,H~ar•" tsJ 1i. this once before \\'hen I was at Ell!'°" 01 . .01 co•t• Me,1 ca1 .l'O> and should be favored again s'":'m~~Y/'Y:,~4~~ Turri tSl·IP •l. J1t1 Santa Fe High," says Hagey. Newport 111rbGr <M.lSJ this year." --Dlocu•-yrrl (l&S·ll, MHle~ (160-4). "Th [ lb 11 t k d UneV1!n Bar•-1. or:enn .. n <NH) 1. HeMl'l1oer throw-Turri (15'-6l, Mlller e 00 a earn eye Fis~r (CM) J. HigMower (E) Avg.; Mike Singletary is ... o.ne (1SJ·7). everything and I think ~·e 7.ss. '-· pl of he 't hi Javrlln-Jim Fttllf"I !236·11 ran~ed 1nd FJOM, ~~erd•e -~ Fisher (CMl 1. exam e t swl c ng 111 NA IA. picked up some of that Keoh;;rt !NH ) J. Pitt !NHl Avu' 1.1s. Crum~• · d · bel Hioh lum1>-Jack C•use-t"tt11l . Vllu11>nQ l P"n !NH) 2 Keol\Oltl .,....n IS 01ng ween Pole vault-Fttnev. Steve AlexinCler momentum. (NH) J. fi;;n;., 1CM1 AvQ· 1."Bs. the tWo meets. Singleta"-' will !U-61 •·1v· · b ed · · " Floer E~••tlle-1. Fl•h•r tC M> 2. _______ _::.__c' '---'='~·""::·'.:'~-"-' -~~1~-ECl e o v 1 d='-"=· ___ ,_n_m_n=g_r_e __ s _w_r_n_ni_n=g .. __ _:'=ffi="="='='=""='c-3 Piu !NH\ Avo a.u. ' ATIN. TOYOTA OWNERS Month of ' May Special $l?c~HT ot1T_lf ..... 6,0'00 aod 12,000 mile -;~•-YOU CAN !.EA~E • I . . . ' '74 .V,OL VO· 1'64 ···4 DR. Automa'tlc, air cond., 6 eylinde.r, genuine leather ·,nterior ... ·steel radial tires. Sllfe!)'-Economy-4.uxury. fat.only s1 .39so .. ill Mo. ¢i!.L O."-~ • !WE HAVE ONLY . * 15 * 74 TOYQTASW. AT THE OlD PRltlSI • Baseball S tandings AMERICAN LEAGUE East ~filv:aukee Baltimore Detroit Cleveland Ne1v York Boston Chicago Oakland Kansas Cily California Texas. ~finnesota IV 15 16 16 t7 tS t6 L 14 15 15 t6 19 18 West Division 16 14 18 t7 t7 17 13 t6 t7 18 JG 16 Pct. .517 .516 .516 .51 !°) .486 .471 .533 .529 .500 .l86 .486 .448 I '~ 1'11und•Y'' c;1rnes ICll'l1i' (II"/ J; Tex.ls 3 Chie11110 .f; O•klllld Ji 7 lnnlnDs; c1lltd r;iln Onlv 01~ sc~vt.ad • Tod•Y'I 011me1 • TeM111 !e!l1t1y 5·5l 11 ICllnMs CUI' u=ntrnorrb 3.11 Calllorni• jT11Nn• lt-4 > 111 Mlnntlol• (Alburv 1·1l Oakluld II lue 1·0 111 Cl'llcago (IC••' 4--ll New Yor\ !MHlcll J.21 •I M!IWl!Jkte {Wrl9ht ~..il oei~ !l:IG~ W ) 11 ci.v111nd tPete'ri.on 1·1J Bo~IOll (L.ff .WI •I e11urrnor1 (Cuen1r 2-01 1·" S1lvrf.-.•s O.mt1 Te••• .;i; k1ns1s cny C1lltMiif1 11 M!11ne.ot1> O•k11nd ,fl Cbl(1go NtW Yor!( II' Mllauket a.troll 11 Clwti1od llotton •' 91itfltl<ft ... - • NATIO!\:AL l.EAGl1E East Division Montreal Philadelphia St. Louis New York ~ Chicago Pittsburgh Los Angeles Sao Francisco Cincinnati Houston AU an la San Diego IV II ts 17 15 " tt West " '° " 20 18 14 L 12 t6 16 \!) t7 2U ' 17 l.i 19 19 25 Prl. .5:18 .529 .a15 .i~ I .4:13 .355 .7~ifl .5~ [ .a:I I .5 l.1 .486 .359 GB 812 (."11 :.: 14 1 ~ Bast, Foes Ra ce Off Se~wood Co-lio11o~·ee 1 11 l rt,ine Lelcgi1e To11i ght Ed'ison lligh's ~ke Sefl.rood and Los AlamilO~ Aigh pitcher r.r'eg Harris ~hare player of the year honOrS' ·en ·· fPc · All - lrvi nc Le:igue ba seball tcan1 a s selected by the coaches. 4 i\1ike Bas t is a quiet. shy young n1an v.·hosc exploits on a mo torcycle have brought hlin fam e and fortune :;it the Orange Coast area players to cam first team honor S in age or 21. addition to Selwood a r e He isn"t bothered by a poor track surface. the psyching Fountain 'Valley pitcher f{ick \Voolard. Edison pitcher Da vt· effort s of opposing riders or Yi'hite and outfield~rs JeJf the pressures of professional Nichols and Steve Hines aad motore~-cle racing. Costa Mesa ·s. Dennis Delany. One thing that docs bothcr1 -~- :\like. hov.·evcr. is the boos and catcalls of a hostile cro\.\·d. Thev tend to tl1 ro\1' off hi~ tin1fug and concentr<1 tion. AU-lrvirtt Uagut ,.,,.., Te•m Poi. Pl,Yer ,sc~ool P-"'"'°',•r d. Fl/ P-fMrri~. Los Alal!'ltos ClilS Moirk ~~. ~ l Sr '7 P '"R•'e. E~;,~n "' ,.! C--Delany, C~t• Me•~ s' .Jill l 8 -0"Ro:1rk~. St\ v,,11cv S•. ·I~ 7~ ' •I ... 'A v -1:e; JC. l'' 38-Selwo<>el. ECli!-On Sr .. -161 S5-R~n~L 1\1~"'1oli8 Sr. 2n C" H;n!•. Ed•~n lr J.16 OF-'-Nl(J10IS. ECllSQ.n Sr_ .l)~ or -Whi!~. SA V•llev Jr .. 4\E Ulil-Hantuc h, Los Alamitos Sr .. J.I• • S.CO!'ld T'•m P-!s~~>et'. E•tanl".i& Sr P-Mo\I, C<>•<>nft del Md< S• P-Hube•. r.•oonoli« S<. C-F•e~ch. M•Qn<'i<a Sr 1.B-Carp!n1er, Lo> Alami10• sr". n>.-r·vori. Cost~ Me•~ Sr. J6-Fox. Founlani Vallev Jr. liS---~w•!I, Los Alamitos Sr. OF-V, a;ene•. FY Jr. OF-Low. Mao11oha Jr. UtH-Morioo. E$tancia Sr. :'llu ir Hig h. a so lid favorite to success(ully defend it.s team 111lt•. sends its two hurdle 11cc!'. Vrcd Shaw and Jirn !\us Lin, against. Estancia's Steve Adams. .who ha:;. the serond fa stest tin1e in the ]O\l'S. Newport Harbor liigh 1vill fin:;il)y send a 1vell-resled mil~ rt•lay tcan1 again st i\luir. Cumpton and Lo:ig Beach Poly and a close race is expected. In the field event s, \a~l )'ear'.<; CIF fr osh·soph high juriip rha1np and record holde r Ken Conner of Estancia f.1ces a tough task of having to duolicate his best of 6-8~~ agjinst ;i loaded field. Ne wport 's Skip -Franklin is r;:ited a solid choice to make the Ma sters fillills in the shot. It all came to a hea d last Friday night al 1hc Oran g£. Count y Fairgrbund'i du rinci thr 1 11·cekly short track progran1. I . Aman ·likes to come home ' to Black Velvet. He'll be back with the other top short I rack riders 1onigh1, at Orange County F'airgrourili.; in Costa Mesa with the first race starting at 8: 15. Free parking and progra?TIS await -cycling fan s. · With a crowd of over 9.000 in, attendance'. ~,like \\'a 1 k l' d, across the track to the public\ address system and the cro\vd st.a~ted booing when he ,began .Every nianWllJ'lts to~ the smooth,impblted Whisky ft um C.anada. AriQQVerywoman,too. to tal k. Bast made an impassioned plea to the fans. "Let's forget past problems ! -give me a chance to ride." The cro"'d becan1c quiet as he tried to convey his feelings , before choking up and turning the microphone back to the track announcer. Th ere 1vere few boos as he walked OOck to the pits. Bast con1e back after the intermission to win h.is scratch heat. He then~· defeated Bill Codr.:Dru!i>t Becker ~nd MiJ! Konle to win the semi. lo the scratch main . he won going away. ffom s o n n y Nutter, JeU Sexton and Dan·nf, 'Beeker. . As he came around for ore victory lap, the crowd stood •llll . applauded and Mil< turned . to . , Ille sJands ' _ lq 1urprl$e. . • .., it was the'flrst time tht.)974 national speedway champiol\ ·had been applaudo<I by a .rnniorlfy, ot" tir· 1 u, .. , l' ·~· rans since he too~ the UUe away from Rick Wood• or Huntington Beach. • ;• 81.AC~ YO.~ 11.0..0 CAiW>WI Wt41~Y. IO Pit® , l~~RTCD 1"1'0197i HlUDlttN, IMC,. 11Aftlf0tl0• COMl't. . . ' . ' \ . • l ' I • , . \ 2!!._ LJ,.1.,. t'1LV _'-----------'-''-"-'-'·-"--''-'-'-'-'-'- What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC Good yellowtail action is on tap for salt water anglers as the ga me rish have moved into \Vaters from Long Beach to lhc C.:oronado Islands. Even though fish counts vary rrom day to day, there arc lots of fish \VOrking in schools around the outer islands. kelp beds Jnd floating kelp patties in the channel. 13est nction is at Snn Diego where boats are-fishing at the islands and bringing in 1nixed·sized yellowtail. Yelolws arc 11lso bring cooperative, at tinlt:s. for Dana Wha rf, Art's Landing: .ind the Puvihon-run party boats. . Jn ad~illon lo yc!lowtai\ action inixed catches of ca!JCO. bass. bonito, "h1tr sra bass ~111 a fev.• barracuda arc being brought. to gaf(~ \Valer conditions arc good. as bait. v.atcr tc1upcratu re and currents arc ;:11J right for a continued good bite <1ccording 10 veteran skipper Frank LoPrcste of the char- ier boat Searcher. This \\·ritcr visited San Diego t.his past ,('eek to get :i first hand report of the catch being brought in10 F'isherman's L3nd- 1ng. ~1id week loads arc light, but reservations are mandatory on weekends. )'cllo"•ta1l 3r(' hilling n variety of jigs and bait, \\·ith the tnost ronsistcnt producer h<'ing squid. \\'hen the golden t:iils 11rsl n1ovc close f.o a p;irty boal initial hookups are 111adl' Uy ;inglers soaking ancho\'tes. iHt1rliu BilP Sizzh•s ~tarlin fishin1: swit cberl into high i;:ear this past "·rck oH Hancho Uucna Vista a.~ anglers ·were rewarded with very good hlllfish action. t\ \Varm \l'Uter trend and nr"' schools of bait fish in lhc se;1 arc r~sponsihlt' for the in crease in n1arlin action. Having just returned from Buena Vista this ""titer can re- port that the big i:::ame anglers \\'ho arc making plans l~ v~sit resort areas on Baja are in store for some excellent fi shing "·ell into July. Trolling fire-eyes or psycbobead jigs at around se\·en knots our group managed no less th an 10 hookups per day. Except for one fish kept for photos the remainder "·ere tagged and re leased to figbl again. ,\reroge H'eigf1I: 180 Po1111ds .\lost of the marlin broughl to boat 1verc big fish. \l'ith an average v.·cight in cxc:rss of 180 pounds and a fe\\' going over 200. Young John F'cschb<'ck of Tustin \\eighl'd·in the largc~t n1arlin to dale at Rancho Buena Visla -:i 213-poundcr on his first deep sra fishing experience. . Roosrrrfish. dolphin. an1bcrjack ;ind ~·cllo\1 tail \\"ere ntso lagged :ind released at 111.Jny resorts after being brought to boat. P.vcn though most resorts are booked there a!v.·ays seems to be roon1 in Baja. <•0•1tl Trf1ttf At•tiott · Good trout fi shing reports are roming in from all over Ca l· ifornia . Both the east and "·est sides o( the ijigh Sierras are reu·arding fishermen ll'ilh catches o( stocked_ and native rain· bo\\'S, brO\li'llS and brook trouL Cro\\·ley is fair for catrhable bo"·s and shou ld be great \\'hen J\lcGec Bay opens up. l'robably the best fishi ng on the casl side is coming from June Lake loop. With a little help from the \\'Cather man, Big Bear Lake Ci>Uld be the hot spot for ~lemorial Day c.ro"·ds as far as trout fishing gooo. \\1ind has kept many anglers off the lar~e lake. and with recent slocking adding to the excellent carryo\"er of last year's plants. fishing shou ld be good for both shore and boat anglers. Southland lakes continue lo stock heavilv and trouters arc fillini::: stringe rs al Anaheim, Sher"·ood, lrvide, Wbolford , Cuya- maca, Sil,·er"·ood and the San Diego lakes. As 600n as \\"ater temperatures near the 75 degree mark, lakes "ill begin to cut back on their regul ar "·eekly stocki ogs. Rn.<s. BfuP!fill Hilling ~ass and bluegill arc in the shallO\\'S at nll SouthC'rn Cal i- fornia lakes and <i re stri king rnost anything tossed their \lay. Bass arc high on the list of anglers and are being cooperarive at most lakes. 1vith Sn1itl11,·icks. Rebels and Bush Hogs takin g limits of buckctmouths. ;\lost of lhc bass being caught no1\• arl· rn the 3-lo l>-pound range. but bigger fish \\'ill begin lo fel'<l hea\"i!v as the sn1<1!ter 1nales mo\"c off nests. COiorado rt1ver action is SJXlll~' ar r.1ojave and Hava su du e lo cool 1\·;iter""'1!nd fluctuating 11·atcr le1·els. l.-Ower portions of 1he river are good for bass. catfish and crappie fi shed in or 1·c·ry close lo the tuli<'s. Girls Bad1ni11to11 V1rsiry "'•U•Oft Vieio 0 1 (Q) El Toro ~i"gles H•brf\ !M "'def ~llJ{~ 11 ~. 111 C"O"~ <'I I Orl M~u~~·' 11.;. 11 • (l~•Cll•C ~ IM) de! Jack'C" 11.J. 11.~ '-'<N.llan (MJ dtt. McC:ahst,.,.-11·6. l!·l. 1te1els IMI Oef. Fatvlal•C 11 1. 11·0 Oout1le5 e"~lol-B•IQMwell 1M! def Podf'· T!\n.,.,~' Jl.Q. 1\·S S"·C0~"1.s 1e•o~r 1111 del. Ro~c•1 ,~.1· "'''"'f' 15·J. \~.) No•"l·R~Q~n !I.II etc! Bvn•nr•·(orrcd I , j 1 \.1 t,~d~t-G""''~ I~·, O•! O•tnd,.1 ~,.,.,, . ., l',.; , i·C CO•!a MCSi (~t U) E1li!'IC1i S·n~IC1 f•,•I !C :l<'f G•uo~ol• ;.o. Jl.p 11 l~CU lfl ctnt '.'li1•16"'~ l\ ?. 11·) • ~.~~' .r' :i~• v.•n ,...o•n 11 :i, 11 J 11,,11 IC! dl•t. C1rg11t 111. 11.'.(. ~ """I(\ de! Rutn ll·~. 11.J. ••avi (Cl oc!. s•cola 11.9. 11...i. Ooun!n w,,,Jl(!'l·R~·•d j(\ de!. te~,,~ · ~·~'*"'' "3. 1<·11 ll ~!)<'•!•on·Vrn Ampri;Qrn H. Oet. .. ft.,. o~':u~•·tl·~ IS·l~. 1!11 l' .. 'l•·S<l>"r"" IC• Ocl. Me•enoerg. lrtm11">Cn 1~·~, l'·l /<rL~'ln H~rb1n IE l GP•. NVl1·Jl~,,df 11, 1, 9 \'an Gorden Chose11 l\f \i f> :'-lntt \'i'tn G ord en 11.:is nnn1C'd rnosl v a I u a b I c s.,.,iminer on the Edison lligh 1orsity \\'cdnesda~· night at the school"s spo1is <:n•:ard banqU C't. Specia l a"·ard \vinncrs: V•n1!y C. ot •. n C•rroe Buch i< I/ o llalua~IP "'•!! VJ., Go•~tn, tf.O•! l'•a.·•'r1 l/••1111 Ji."'· 1.•c.·! '''"' • S•r'"I P001f Jo~\ //.-.•! t lf 0•v• P•f •IOIO JuntlDf" V~r1;1y • ~re·• 711C•n"k no•t Valu~ble fi. ! v1n• "Ml c;1..,., P•c.vo•r. F~h·S•Ph l•r' • ~ G•rv Coo<hD": /.\ o ~I ~ .. 111.olp. Pt!er 1i•uhlhau1tr. .'lll•lt11-Va1 A m~rootn fE <l <'I •:.•og~n-B,111an~ JS.JC. l·l. 0 J v,.-11,.~o.flrc,·.n 1Cl 11•1. r.1-1oe~-'1~lll' i;.9, l~·S. V~n1tv Hu,.11ngron Ill (!lf New~rr Harbor Song le• c~~· IN ~·r Shou1e \1 ·~. 11.j Nocn~ll IN' OP! M1utn J.1J, J.•1, -.~. Fo""~· ("j oel GdOro•I 11-;. ll' r,·ewer IHI l:fpf PHll"on 11·~· 11 (~a•l~O \,_.I '10. Kl'kWOOC l·ll. J.!, 11· • V•/\CC/\I (Nl O•f. L~rsori 11 ·~. ll·J LoHe!I "I I oe1 Smot!\ 11·1. 11 2. (!er !HI O•f C•dcof 11-S '·0. i;,,_10/\ I 'll d•! /!cAI \If• 11 ~. 11'"\ Ec~er (HI o~r. Sedrl~s 11-l, 11·4 ..• ·1 ,,,..,, N Je• Bl"•on 0·7. 2 ~. 11 ·6. Coo» •r.J o·I Ben~nr 11·1, 1\ I Oculll•• F·~n-Q·Conncr (H) def. Dev-Burns IS· Q 20-~. 1~·11 Por'rcu,.S.,,11n 1 r, • d~• Mu•o/\Y· torof~ Pc~:.::.~~~"""~ '"' ~rf Ko!~ll 1 o·~ 111v " 1 ; s~•~,·c• c· .. ,. <N ~1• O•t.1·Robe•1~ 11-3. ·~ 1·: Pe"~·R"''"i;"; IN) c~I. DranO·Tebeni l' .~. I t KotoD-/\'.~'' (Jiii <H'. Jll'ln!on·Lorentt ' " C· I·~, 'I·" ll'·' iH• (•f. MPndr,tk!oOn· ·l~ ,. Aildn·S"e"'" (NI '"' C.orona·Crunk :1 S, 1 ,.1. v~""' M.irin~ f11l !61 tu•lln 51note• r.· ,, jfi ct•• L•~ 11·7. 11 • . •.~•'•o~ l/\•l oe•, M•r~e1<1~ 11·1, ll·l. l<•uoe II-Al ctet Wv•rt 11.4. 11-0 P trnoe ~/\'\ Cit!. Hwla"<f 11·4, 11-0. 1· .. 11,~"'' (Ml de! Hem•ns ll-1, 11·1. ~n~der {t ) def B•llmoln 11·!, H.J, G~ld•"a (M) Cle-I. McDon1'1d ll·J, 11·1. ' '"'"u" UJ\l d~!. Riadlt 11.J, 11·8. V.d•noc ~ (MJ woo by !orlei!. Ooub1t1 Bn·~er Youn9 !Ml de!. Smlth·Sch!hld1 : JS 1 TudtV-Tl.lrlty !Ml aet. Bittman·G•f•r '1. I\ 11 T•. ·"'O'OO·COulMtn I Ml dfl. Rus.ci!lo. ~t·••,.!I 11~, \l·ll r..~ .. ~ .. ., ITJ dtl S·t~l·Rilllen U·9, 1~· . R ,·~· ou~~•" (MJ oet G111wr1-tobl•1 1: ~. 1:1 l Sci wO~ AOdlfl (TI UtrWrOllf'l·Sm'lth lS. " !j ! Fabe•·"'•'"'' !Tl def H•m•l!on-O~ood H-6,7H. llt F •~t m•n·Lo•n er IMI de/. Balt...c;o.,,IM:rg IS.11. )..0. C.C1"1~1on·Ell9INlum !Tl ~·· Wtller· PtltrKltl 11-4, 1S·1. ---·---- MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS -MERCEDES BENZ - Sa/es -.service • Lea sing 21701 MARGUERITE PARKWAY 49!"1700 MISSION VIEJO ' 831·1740 S.. Di9p fwJ. to A•try "wy. ••It, fipt ... Mer,..ntt I • ; Area Briefs Gals Wi11 Figure Sl(ating ·Winners Kossler Gains At SAcc· Gir.ls . Swimming • Sowtllff11 C•lllorftl• Clla.,,.lonll!lh A1 E••I LA ) Btk•rtl11td 1·)1.61 GOIN• Witt l :U.•7. Olllttl: I ' 1"~"' s.c:oru -P~1"d•n• l:U. t l • Kin1 Skvarla of the Mesa \'erdc Figure Skating Club . \\"On the \~ervillc Meniorial Award for the best arlistic pqformaocc in free skating in the Santa l\lonica con1petition fecentl). Racquet Crown In a IO\V ball of (ourson1e rvenl fur !he women's club a foursome of Mary Bt1l.'nn111, Phyllis 'falnu1dgr. c; Io r i a F'len1ing and n blind drnw flni~hcd first "'ith 63. 290 11'\tClltV '"•• -1. LA V6lll!V 1 00 ~l 1 P•'-"" 1 .01 II J Ml ~AC I Ol J' 4 FU"Ue•ICJI 7.0l.121' S. OCC l ;t•.!I. Oltorr•: JC. GWC J: 11 ... 01vl11<1~l, Rln" {Lon11 lltac:lll 1~1 •S 1 M•Cllf'n IF•illt''""\ 11.5'11' 1 11•1•,, (11!1 C1mlr'IOI lll.U t. P1yll IGWC) 114..JM 5. lll•nct iMt. SACI !II.JO 01111!n: 6, H1rr\11tn COCCI JU.It. '· F'ufluton "lld Ml. SAC 2J2 .LA l/1lle1 16), OCC !U, \11nt~r• 11S. 0.U.• W•ll I .. , ll~lflfl1hl t7, S•nt1 MQl\ICI fj, E1sl LA 11, ,,. l.ono llaat!I ana e1 Cimino n. LA.CC 11. Somr 26 1nembers or the ~1cs.1 \'l'rde club co1npeted in thl' t'vC'nl \\i!h 17 of them w\1·1nn1ng 1rophlcs for top fini<>h1•s. K;1th \" J)1ngc r and Lori \!Jllrr · 1\0ll extra n1 c r it lrophtr" for ovcr.:ill excellence in their i:roup. \Vinning first pl<icr iu 1he prelimin:iry girl:: 01 L·ra!I c:i!t•gory \\'Cre Lynne Anne \\'il\1ams, Leu r a H r a d s h a \\' ;1nd Holly \·andrrlaa1i. .\le1nbt•f;; of the ~tesa Verde 1·lub prarlice an average of ihrer or four hours daily at lhi> --V·e Capades Chalet in 1·0,1a :'ll~sa 'fhey rHnµc in <igc fron1 fh·c to 25 and the club 11t1s r\•crnlly sanl'lioned by the L'n1tcd States Figure Skaling Associ:ition. There are 295 such clubs in the U.S. Orange Coast C o 11 e g e stud.,ent Rick Kosslei; won lhe B diVision title last Weekend in an oudoor singles racquetball touma111ent at OCC. Kassler defeated Bri a n Grupe, 21-17. 21·16. Tom l\1rn:rison downed W a y n e \\'hitney, 21-16, 21·18 for third place. Carl Damico captured the C cro11•n and Joy Koppel. als6 an OCC student , \\"On the women's title. Damiro topped J im Pool, 21- 18, 21-19 whlle Dave Duke edged Jim Sneclakcr, 21·18. 18 21, 21·5 for third place. Miss Kopi)eJ defeated Nancy Gick. ~3. 15-8 \\"ith l\1elindJ :P.fartin placing third. topping Kathy Schoen. 15·12. 6-15. 15-7. No Open con1p..:1 ilion \'·'" held. e C1111oe Rtu•p Four "'omen's teams fronl the Soul.hem Ca 1 i for n i a Outrigger Canoe association 'viii race from Dana Point to San Clemente beginning at 9 a.nl. Saturday. The race, 'vhich will go from Fullerton ' totaled 88 points. winning championshipg i n football, water polo, tra"ck, swimming and cross country. Mt. San Antonio was second with 77. followed by Cerritos (75), Orange Coast (67), Santa Ana (63) and San Diego ~1esa.. (16). e Net To11r11e11 The Laguna Niguel Tennis Club will host :i pro~essionai lenni.o; tournament under the direction of Nati on a I Cha mpionship Tennis t his \veekend at the club. Players will be competing for $~.200 in prize money with possible entries such as Rov Barth, f\1ike Machette. JerrV Van Linge , Ton1 Leonard and Sieve Foster. Gcnl'r:tl admission µrices :ire $2 fur today. $3 Saturday ;i11d $3.50 for Sunday ~essions. StudC'nt prices are ~I atl, ~2.00 and 52.50. Tickets for all three da ys arc S6.50 general :idn1iss1011 e1nd 5-1 .50 studenl s. A tie resulted between three teams at 64. On one squ:-.d w('re \ll innie \\'ebcr, Eda l\fillcr, L.1VC'lte Spiccuzza and \'irginia Hoagland: On anolhrr were J\1ary L'rar.v. lleverll' Ri1nl.'I. GraC'c ~1anlcy an(! Ginni &>nncll ; On tht' third 1v£>rc Ju11c Drttrl'. Fran C,arter, ldC'le Fason' and ~laric Lenk. Lois 1':des \\'On a stroke pt;iy to u r n a 111 en I [O\\' gros~ competition '"'ilh an 81. C0t1111t• Kinzie and l\fary F.1rtC'r tk•d for net honors "'ilh 74 °1\·ith Phoebe Conley nrxt at 76 Fran Schn1idl copped B flight gross honor:; \l'1!h 9:1 June Drury and C:irol Aun Ruorr tied for llt'I \1·1th 77 nnil four pla.vers finl~hcd \I ith 7:1 illC!Utfing La Riil' 1Jt1l"ri ~Pll. f\largucrilc Sc;1r!>. 1 11 e 1. Stansb11r.I' :.ind AliCL' 1[:11! Pan1 Shinn captured C flight gross \l'ith 102 and Su;:Jl' Stc\vart was tlic ncl 1'1t•lor "'ith 78. ll1Uu'd iGWC) ff.00. ~ 200 rrH ·-4. C11111~ I P•··~~n~) 2 QI 00 1 ll•1w1r rP.»~ll~n~\ 1 ll.•l l Ll•r~cn IM! SAC) 2;\J.19 •. GU"ll»•l ruh••!onj 1;14.21 !. Ka!~v•"'" (l.'I C•ml110) :lJ.63. Oih1f11: 11. Ferrell IGWC) 1:15.tl. SO ''•"e-1 l~"'ln !Po,~<"l~n~l ?II i.' Wllion !Mt. SAC! 16.•U J. FI0!'1 IL ... Viii~\') 11 04 4. Hiii !OCC) 11.J• ~ Mo"I$ IBa~~r1lleld) 11.SO 0th.,·~: t . "'IO~"c'r~ •. ,1.~c 1 u.1, 1•. p,.1mer 100 ln<ID m~Olev-1. ~c1111+1no ILA \l . .i1e11 I (Recornl 1 0240 1. l"lu~~rd ("""'<l•n~1 l :C4'1 .) Gl1?'1S IP~·.~uen~ l ·Oi.lol' t . Slov"nott IMI ~,I.Cl 1 r9 sa s. Gula•s~ (Full~no"l l:Ot .11. Otf\ero; I. 1.t•I"" IOCCJ 1:11 <ID 10. Yll•s (GWCI 1:11.11. )0 uv. 1 SrMllln" 11 " v,,.. l ~, '• !Mffl rn:ord) ? WllM>n (Mt SACl 19 )j l L~n••n (l"~o'O~n.•I 2• 16 • ~l•l!•"d IPt'•""llol\ 19"• S. +.,.-~,I !Fulte•lcnl J0.10 Olhet\: •· Y•te• IGWCI JO.IS J, Patmer !OCC/ ll.11 !<l ""rlo-J "•~h>o !I.Jo \l•\lhv )\ 'l • Lym;in lPaucM .... 1 JI Ill l H111101rd (Pa1ad•ne! ll JS t , +1111 IOCC) l J.•t S Rubnl CVenlUfdl Jl.<t.l. Olht'1: 10. 1tollm1n !OCC) JS.IN ll. Sliva IOCCI u.s• ''· Pi u1 (GWCJ "JJ. 100 !•et !. C:ocm (P~·-n~l II, 111 ' C•r'~r IVenl~··~l 1 00"" l K•"'" !Fullenon) 1.0011 '· Yll4t IGWCI 1 ~1 11 1 s~~"'·'•k n ......... 11 -~~1 l·Ol l1 Otllef1' :10. 8Gilmtr !GWCI 1:05.4' u . F1rreu IGWC) l :OS.SI. !Ill U••"l-1 r1,1~"• !r••t'•r!"'I 11~\ 7 W1!1on l MI .SA,(! Jt Ol l. LtYone lOCCI :14.10 t. Gu1a-.a IFull~rlonl 1}~~ ~ Slo··eno•1 (M• ~'.(I ])'9 ill"• lrre ••l<>v 1 L"' \l<>ll~v 1 18 r1 <'• • p~,n·~' ) nc;r 1:41 I' " Fu•l<•ll n :"} 4 P4!J<ltnd I '>I' \'O rea Calendar S"tura1y (Ml¥ U ) r .. ., • -~ou•n~rn (Jl•!O""·' JC lon~I< .11 CnMte~. Scum~,., Call!ornl~ (Ol!pg~ "t Ql>f!'CI F1n.lli •IT UC f'!lvl'<~lde. Cll ~·A ''~~I~ ~I Vale"< ,1 H>gn !6·Xt p m.l. Girl• lrdcl. -CI F Pr!"!lms ~I ROlhf>U H ~· H,q'< 010 J .m I 1'ennis T.eam Flrsl Team Seniors -Brian Platt 'i Anahri1n 1. Ilana Ohanesian 1 I, oar.:i \. Juniors-Walter f'larc (Santa Anal, Brad B11urnann (Ne wport llarbor l. Frank Sweeney (~larinul . , Sopho1norcs-i11ark Johnson ! \~'e s t m in sler). Steve l\1arosi t Newport Harbor\, Stcv£' Jones ( llunlington lil'ach 1. Secon,d Team Seniors-Cody Small (Newport Harbor \. Craig \Yi l c h er 1:\lannal. ~lark J\lonson t.'llarina1. Me1rk Jone s 1 Nrw~rt Harbor\, Stu Cook 1j\larina 1. Juniors -Mark Hoy tNew por l Harbor) Jay Wint rob tLoaral, Oave Oster (l.oaral. Sopho· rnores-Hick Yltritwer (New· 1xi1t ll:1rbor l. 'rla\"er of the year: Neil :-.ial\cy (Lonra). Included in the list of 11•innPrs at Sauta ~1onica were Ki1n Skvarla, Lucinda Hamill, 1-i:ellic l~artog. Kathy Dinger, Sonva ~1altby, ~tar i s s a :'-lcfarlanc. Patty Favero, \Jandy ~1aurar .. Jim ~Julle!l, Karen Parry. Lori ~Jilter. the Dana Point Harbor to the ir------::::=:---~---------------------------,:----. San Clemente pier. \I" i 11 fealurc teams from Ne.,.,1X1rt Beach. ~larina Del Jley. Redondo Heach and Balboa Leura Bradshaw. Ken d y \\'ilkinson. Lvnnc A n n e \!filllams. Shelly fl u g he s . Brenda \Vood nnd H o I I y \"anderlaan. The ultimate goal of the rn!irC' cast is a tryout for the LI.S. Olympic tean1. • Pri11r i }Jal Quits l\'ID ~lonsignor John J. Reill}' has been transfered Crom his position as principal of Mater Dei litgh School to a seminary in the San Fernando Vallev the Daily Pilot has learned exclus1vc!y. i\o successor has been named at the ~1 on a r ch s 1nstilution 11·hcrc 1\lsgr. Reilly has bt.>en principal since 196-1 . ~lsgr. Hc1lly prJ>ppcd at St. Boniface School in Anaheim ;ind continued his education at Lus 1\n;;etr~ Junior Se1ninary ;u1rl St .John"s Scminarv in C;1111:ir1l!o. · He \\"rl" ot·daincd in l!l.JR and St'f\'l'd ;is Principal al Bishop Conaty Migh School for girl<; fo r seven years prior to his stint at ~later Dci Prep Te1mis Sun1maries Sun5fl Le,.1111• Cn•mo1onlh<P• A! Loilril l-11qll $inql•• Tftird Round Ma!l~v !Loaral <1et I'/ I>' I 1 ~• f • <Ne.,:>arll 6·1 6·1 . S1o:~mdn !N~wPO•ll del Cidre (~~n•J 1''!1! O·I. 6·l Jon.,so" h'f"f.,"11~"'" oef P~·~·n 1 INewoor!I 6·1. ~ ~ Ma•csl INewoorl a~•. £1 "d ~•"I (Newoo'!I e·J 1·S Semit1nill• l~~llf~ !Loara) dP' S!CC~M~n !Newoorll l·6. 6-0. 6·1. /la•o~t 1Newoor1• <1uf. Jo~~•Cn <'Ne1 tmtn•le•1 ~-). f·I Ooubte1 Sfcond Ro11nd Rov·lla11man INewP<l'11 oe1 Fre~man· Wagner ISanM Ana! 6·2. 6·2. Co~k -Mon~on <M~rin.il O~! Coll1~r Vd"""'"~I (ll11n!·~olon llPi!thl ~·l, l· ~-/.~ Oll.1n~~·~n·WonfrO'I ILc~ri!I Oel L~.Jd l'on 1111e,.oor11 6·l. t·1 Jone•·$m~ll IN~"oo·t• oe! la~ /If<! 11'.l~rin•J ~-0. I·~ Semilln•I• Rov·B1uman <J11e.,por11 oer. (o~•· t.1on•on l'-'i!rini!l l·S. 6·J Jon~,.small <N!.,,·oor!l de!. Onon~S•fn· Wintroo (Loara) 6·), 6·l. Island . A mt~n·s race from San Clcmenll' back to Dana Point \\"ill folio\\' !he coinplction of the \\·on1en's c\·enL FrcShn1an Ron S1vanson v.·as occorded Pirate of !he Year J1onors at \\'cdnesday night's b.1nquct honoring tht' Orange Coast College baseball tcan1. L<'e r-.1cGov.1.:in \\'as named · the OCC golf tcam·s Pirate of the )'ear and tean11nate \\'alt Bro\\·n 1\·as selected captain. · e B1•ou-11 llouorerl -Golden \\'est College's Don Bro1,·n has been named to the All·Southem ('a I if or n i a Conference golf tca1n. picked by the circuit coaches. Bro'"11 is a freshman. Others on the team include P:it :'ll:itcer ~ B.10 llondo1, Bob Atdert'tc ·(Rio 1-Iondol, Ron Hinds 1 Sant:1 :\lonica 1. Boh '!'oJ.:01 1 Snnt;i \!,'n:1·,"' • .111d j /)o uiJ Ten g fe r ; <;;111\JI illon1ca 1.. 1 e GH'C Bn11q11el ' lroldcn \\.,cs! College "ill hl}nor its gymnastics 1can1 \r1th :i b;inqul't tonight at the l'rincC'ss Louise restaurant on ~crn1inal Island. lt begins all Cold1.·n \\'e st \\Oil t he Southern Cal ifornia! Confert'nee chan1pion~hip for the fourth !>traight sc:ison. e Burs .1111 Fullerton C.Ollegr h a ~ captured the South Coasl Conference's lrori i\101•1 trophy 11·11h Orange Coast finishing fourth . Prep Goff C•tll ~irw Lt ll)Ut tl\OiYi!IUll (nampoonl~•P •I Wt1!1rn Hlll1 CC ~nd Serl•• Country Club I I.I~•~ {.l'M~ra !l,'""on v1~,ol i.1, 1 Tom /i.ar1;n (Mis.~lon Vltio\ U9; 3 I Ted CummonQ r1A1nion Vl!1ol J>l; ' JOl>n 1,<oorto 1Tu111n) B3. ~-\l~nl H8•1P (Foo111;11) 1~.l A!I 1111•l1h !o• CfF <nctiv1du6I fin~I~ at Quad La~c June J Our shelves arc bul9in9 with a super complete selection of Lev i's and adidas! • COME IN TODAYI SEE FOR YOURSELF ' l 000 s Of Pil;$ In Many. Many Srv1~~ a S11<·5• PLUS c PLUS: 270 E. 17th, Costa Mtso, s4a.uu In H1llgren SQuaro ~ Houra: 9·3().6 Daily .. ----t\ND OPENING! A new B.F. Goodrich store in Costa Mesa to serve you! • OPEN SUNDAY MAY 19th I 0-6 for your convenience Save on the tire tno1 's l:ecn selected for so many of 1h1; year s ccv: ccrs BFG s Sdvertown Belied fco:ures tv.'O lough belts of fiberglass coc, I for strcng:h end stabili ty. Its polyester cord body con stru ction gives you a smoolh ride. Sale price good only through Soturday, April 20 . SATURDAY & SUNDAY SPECIAL • HOT DOG Both For Only and PEPSI Good OW)' AT Co•tcr Mt-ICI Stott • • These popular sizes: G78-15, F78-15, G78 -14, F78-l4, E78· 14, C7S-14, 878· 14 plus Fed. Ex. lox of $2.05 to $2.74 ond !rode. BLACKWALLS $I less. 537 for larger sizes: L78· 15, J78· 15. H78· 15. H78-14 plus Fed. Ex. tax of $2.92 to $3.19 and trade. BLACKWALLS $1 less. BF.G d ' h we're the other guys -.. STOP IN AND REGISTER ; IN COSTA MESA FOR FREE DRAWING B. F. Goodrich Store • Sot.Moy 11 .... ..... -. ·-Moy"· 10.5 •c.. .......... ""'. 2049 HARBOR BLVD. lat bayl COSTA MESA . . .. ---------.----ALSO A.T: • I. f . GOODRICH STOllE 6112 UMCOLM • CYPRESS 12~010 • I . f, GOOllRICH STORE 524 W. LIMCOLM , ANAHEIM 774-7578 • ' I . F. GOODllCH'STORE 200 SO. MAIM ST. SANTA ANA 547.7155 J PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBl.TC ~OrlCI- ''I R • • PUBLIC NOTICE rUBLIC NOTICE ., Co1n1cihna11 Arraigned In Thefts LOS ANCEi.ES l~Pll Long Beach counc1lm1:1n Wayne Sharp was arrau.!n('(J this \\'et!k on f'/'l'lVll"r'"' r! l'lHu ges of I t'C('l\ Ing '~?]!II property three venrs ago Sharp ~Ii \\ld" l':>:pcc trd tn enter a plc,1 .1rtc1 .1 Jun11 7 hearing \\hln his utto1 !1€'Y v..1" experted to argul' f o r chsm1ssal of !ht case· r1n grounds of 1ns""11fl1c1cnt cv1dencl' The consohclatt'd chargr.;; include the Grand I u r y 1nd1chncnl Iha\ Sharp sold .i stolen v.capon to a dlStr1tt <1lto1 ne\ " undcrco.,,cr 1grnt and co1nphunts 1h<1l h c r t:ce1vcd a stolrn \\!1 nchcst< r rifle .ind pu1chased stoll"l s\i>t L'O cqu1pn1cn1 Thl· kt \ \\iltlLSS aga1n..,1 Sh,1rp is Donald E u g e 11 " Stokes t u1 rent!\ on p.irnh' <1ft1 r sci\ 1ng .1 tcrn1 in fldC1 ii Jli 1'>011 fo1 l ll t l 1 <; t ;i I !r<1nspor!ntion of s lo It 11 'lCUI J!ICS PUBLIC 1\0TJCE FIC1'1TIOUS llUSl"IE SS "IOTICE OF T!l:USTEE S ~ALE FICTITIOUS IUSHWESS "IAME STATEM[NT Doll.'<! All"I 1' 191' NAME STATEMENT ' UNDEll. DEED OF TRU~T f\<[LYI, WEISllElfC T~e loUowlng i:ier~ Is den~ 01" nf"I TF '0S6t 1'11e fell°"' "Ill 11rr,011 ·~ ~·""0 Dv r.1 " E»euttl~ or 11\t Woll ol I > LOAN "10 l~lllO t~r dOOVP ndmfll Oe(Mtc! A&L FIREWOOD ;cs .. Ntwpllr! Btvo tJ~t ~ • l\e•ebv 1;11ven na• SCRRAtlO llll ~H~RO P.Ull.OIN(, ~ Im !M EUGENEiJ WEISS E•t b(O ( t>ar10\er!J'l1D "C'tSI lltoc~l\ll•! StrcM liJ?Oilnrm Avt (O\ldMtla C•hlon .. 1"2616 I ~ NVEYANCC 01/\Pfl.llY A .. vnl•"!llon fltdtl\ (lh1orn•d 91~ EncollO, C•lo'°'111a fUl• ll>O...,IS I.I f.0.h>O IS\6 Slltlden O•ove 1ca ''°'"'' c.,..1111r1lo0<1 •• l•u*t Of MAILING AOO!l:ESS p O Bc1 A Tri CJUI "1 lM.I f.\O<lt•IO C•lll::>rnoa •Utttl~or lrus!t't' er •ub•t•1u1•d 1ru,1et Hunl f'Qlon 8t..c:n Cil lorn•• 9164 l1i1toniev lor E1Kvltt• T"" bll>•l>l'~• •S condvctt'd by a~l"""Uilnt to !he-ol't!I ot fru >t e~ecule!I 1:1• D""ald 8 Af''' Jr ~ .... r~l J-ut:Jhihe<I Ori~e Cc1>l Daily P let "'>divdufl LOLA M CRALECO ,. w1d<1v and Partn01' ns VI• L•!IO 5-0ud Nrwpo•t Ap•ol lt. •n!I Mar J 10 11 1~1, U!b 1' Tt\!lma\ M Mmg 1 rr<oruec July 19 !911 n boctl< 9/13 pao• Seecr. (al !n•n a 9Z660 --------------I Tl!" S1•1t mtnt .,.,,., lolrd w•lh the au o! Olhc•al R.-c::>rO• •n 11\• orfoc~ ol l"f " C<"urly Cler~ ot OrJng.e Coun!I on May / ICov"T'f' R•co•der of O•~roe Coo,.tv Th" bo,lllntU " COl'ldll( '" by " llmdrd PUBLIC l\OTICE nl• f C"hfornoa !1\11 pursuart lo '"' Nol•te ot P••lner•l\lp Donal:! I\ liyrri Jr F JJH1 Oel<1ull and Elect on lo :.ell 1ne•eunde• T"•S ••'10W\<nl ..,,, l•led Y11T~ tllr "IOTICE TO CltEOt'JOltS PubllsMJ Or<1noe Coast Dally Polar rMOCdl'd FPb I 1914 '" l'CC~ 1!010 p&QP County Cltr~ o! Orange Counh on ~ ay ~ SUPEIUOR COUR T OF THE /\dv 10 11 ~· Jl 197' lt.\0 74 •5 or sad 0U<t1111 fl.Ptords 1'>111 SELL on i n • ' STATE OF CALIFOltHIA FOlt I June 7 191• .iT 9 00 am ~r Ille <ourr. >"E <OU''' 0 , OR •G ----___ It onll en!ranct 10 Ille 011 Counh F llll1 Ho. A nsn ... E nuBLIC NOTl''L' Cour!~OU$P '" the c !y of Santa Ana Pubh11\Pd 0-~~gt' Co.1 I OaolY Plot .... ,.,,. I ..,i;. 1c11[forno11 111 pubtoc 11u" on to lfle hlllfle•! N.•v II ?4 JI M'>l1 Jy~e 1 19/t 1170 /j d~~·:::d ot CHARLES E " " " ----toddt'r for ca•~ IP~Yllblr di one llmt' ot PUBLIC ~OTIU. NOTICE IS HER e 8y c; l V E N 8 11117 I 111le n lawful money 01 tile UnllP!I St~•esl NOTICE 1'0 CREDITOR S 11 "llM 1 11• •no lnT~re•1 convev!'d ro lo 1flt tred !ors O! lf!t ~bOV1! nam•d SUPERIOR COURT OF THE: ~a now held i,y 1 under 511 r1 deed on ri,e FICTITIOUS IUSINESS HAME STATEMENT rll'<:eridenl 111111 1111 Ptf\Of\S h11v "!I Clll•m~ STliTE OF CALI FORNIA FOR orQPe'1v "1ua1e~ on >ii a Cou Ty ind SIM" lloa nit Int ""d dtcede"t d•e •e11ulreo 10 THC COUNTY OF ORliNGE dt•<r bed 11• follow• lollow••Q per~on !\ doon~ bu !n~1s !•le 11\em will\ !he nece .... 1ry voucher• rn "lo A 1t4SS Lot 21! of Tract No 695) n 1ne C•tv ot lhe of!<• 01 lf!e Cler~ or tne llbOve E:•ldt~ or DOUGLAS (AR[Y TIP1'0N I" ne Counlv ot Or~n9~ State c! en1•tled court or 10 present them w11t1 the Deceased caiotorn•a ~• ,f)0, non d mar> reco•nf'(I COAS1'AL Pl-iOTO SCli N 71-15 Cardin~! Drive Casi~ MHll C1hl01"nl1 916'6 Ch•rles J Cullum 114S c~r!I nil O"ve CMlft Mew C1htorn1• 9'lo16 l~os l>Y~ n51 II (ondUC1t!I DV 111'1 l~dlv•dUll nece1111ry voucher' 1o •fie uno;ler• qned ~t NOTICE t~ HEREBY GIVE N to 1n~ on 6<>0~ li>l Paoei J9 lo •1 nclu• ve c• !fie otl Cf ol htr ll!larney FREOERICIC I FRISCHLING ES0 15910 Vent~f~ Dlvd tr!'dl1ors Cl rht 11>eve n~med <ll'cea~nt M >t•llar>eous /\l~OS rtcorOs o1 OranQ• $ullt 731 Encl"o Cal torn•• 91316 wnkh IM! 111 p('rwns l\11v1n9 clams d!l:a•n~I ll'le Cot.only C~I lorn~ ' wl!l d1PCfile11t i•e re-ouorcd !O hie !ht"' ~"' 3905 Cloremon• Sheet s.1r1~ s tnc place of bu••ne1s o! !M UnllttS oneo w•lh 111t ni:'<C<ssa•v voucl\tr! ,,. tnt otf cc Ana Call!orri a n all malltrs ptr!ll•nlng to lite t•lalf ol ol tnt cltr~ or lht above cnhlleO COU<I or Said s..olt w II be mM!r bu! .,.,,!Mu! Cnodri J Cullum 1'Mi 111ie,,...n1 w1 s !olrd wnn 1ne C'01JnlV Cler-ol Or•ngf County on May l~ 1'7' S<11d dee~! w1tl'lln tour mon!hs Iller to prewnl mrm ... o111 the nl'Ct••a•v cove"an! er wartJn, t•~'''' 1"5,~':J'J':'~l~ca:9r; of 111'' nolltt voucners !o tne und"''ll"Cd at !fie othre •mD!t!I rt<:•rdnO Ille PO\•es•en :• MAii:'!' ( HEATH of tier l!!ornev DALE C TIPTON Jill entumbranccs lo ••h"v !ht •n!!Cb!e<1<1t~• E~eculrl• 01 ll'lf W•ll !.<lulh Kon11•lcv Orovt Los An11ele• ~tired b~ •a•a Der<l onclu<llng rhe !e<' """ Publl1i.d Orftngt C0o11! Dao1v Polot Of 111e fbove nam!'d dect<ltnl C•lllorn•~ 90010 "'hfcll •S the 1'1a(t o• and e1o.pense of Int' 1rus1ee and of l ht FltEDEltlCK 1 FltlSCHLlt~G, CSQ OU1lness of tht unll~•••11ned on all mat•trs tru•h crtaled llY 1a1d !lel'(I fdv•nce< UtlO Vetilutl 11..cl P"tla•n no lo lllt tllalt of ~a•d dtc!'den1 lherrunoer w•l'1 •n1e•ts• as p•o~•Oed Sul!f 711 w•lhln rou~ months alltr 11\e 1 "' Jt>e•~•n end 11".e unpaod p1lnc p1I o• 1n~ MIY 11 26 )I ~n!I Ju ... 1 191• 11~1 ]4 Encll!O, ciH'°"'I• l1Jl' l>Ubllcahon ol tl\ls no!1ce note securf'd bv •d•d ottd 1<"-w•• Ttl (21J) n1-lt10 Oared APl •I .JO 191' ~?0 160 3? w1rn lnt~r ~I l~cr•cn Ire"' PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINf'SS 1it111or ... , tor E•ecutrb PAfSY II: TIPTON November ~ 191] •• P(?,,~"d on SI d NAME STATEMENT Ad.,,lnlllr1trl• ol 11'11 e•h•IP ~! [~" Tht lcllllWI"" person 1, dolno Dus•ntn Pubhstled Oran;e Coast 01lly Potot ll\e bo flt ed 1 0 ted 10 1974 "• Mav 10 17, '' 31 197• 1666-1, a Vt ni.m Gee tn a Md• IS OALE [ TIPTON I SEARA NO RECO IV"YA~ er VN!VEtlSAL PUNCH CO 3l4oO W JOI South Kl11ts1ef Drlvt COMPANY H1rv1rd S11nr11 Ana C•ll!or11l1 9'10-I PUBLIC NOTICE L11 Allfll" C•lll 90010 II~ sucn !1u•lte K.nne'1 Lk>yd Wl!ll•rt'\$ l060 COUontryl---------------TM l1ll) 311-Metl Sv J E Corn ~II Club Or, COSll MISll C•lllornlf 9l6l6 NOTICE TO CllEDITOltS Al!Ot',,_r for Allmlrll i!rflf'• Allll\or 1er. 011 Ctr Tllh bHlnllS 11 Conducted bY •n 5U,.Eltt01t COUllT OF THE Pubhsl'lcd Or1119e Coall 01 ly P1!ct Publlsned OrAnQ~ Co.i1t 0~ Iv r l~I lnalvldu•I STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOlt Mav 3 lO 17 l • 191' ISll ll May 17 1• J1 l~I~ !1;b I~ Th!t 1•1ement W8t flied with Int THE COUNTY OF OltAHGE Cnunty C~rk 01 Or•noe County on M1v No .._,,.,m U 1176 ESllll ol OEMA 0 LACY Deceevd PntOt NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo rhrr Publllhfd Or~nqe Co.ttl Dilly Pilot crec!Uors ot the iitlove named decedent M•Y 17 >t JI erid J-7 lf76 11'11' !!If,! I ll per'°"s l'lavlng cla!ms ag1ln51 lflt -----_ ---------said decfodenl ftre rtQulrtd IO Ille !Mm PUBLIC NOTICE wit"' the rtK.••\arv vouchers In 11\e olllte ol !hi clerk of ,..,. 1boYll tnUlled courr or 111 pre'-tnl them wl!n !l'>e fll'CtlSl t"I HOTICI! 01' PUILIC HfARINO IV THE voucl'lfrs lo !he uncMrs!gn!'d 11 Ille olllce D•PAlTMENT 01' H•ALTH OH THE OI ner inorney ROBERT L RliHl!tl\IAL 01' A P'lt•DAID HEALTH HUMPHREYS 1i11orr.ey al Law !SOC PL.AH CONTllACT NOl~ Is hl'r•b'I' given 11111 1111nuent 10 AdUT>l Ave Su!lt 20., Cost1 Mt•• lM 111!110rlty v .. !td by SKllOll lQ,19 Ctlllorl'lll n6?6 ""'f(h II !ht place of Sulldlvlllon l•I of Ille Well1rt Ind Ptlll!M!H ol the ~nlgntd In Ill m~1ltt1 11111U11tl:ion• com I•• .uct!'d by Cf\tpli r 111rt1lnlng to the estete Ol '~Id d«tdlnl • 1:>66 o1 1!'lfl Stit.>11 o1 1trJJ, lht wltllln lour montl\1 ar•er 11'111 first 0.0,,.tlfMl'll DI He.itn propo•1 10 con<lucl pWtl(1tlon ol ttrl1 notlce 1 public hl•rlnra. on tflt fftltwil o1 1 Oiied ~~ • 1'76 prt~ld lletll"' pl•" cwrtnoct, IUmm«!rM CATHEllLNE ... WURSTER ti followt EJ'.tclltrl• of the Woll Pit• (1lllornlt Ntllllf'lll HHtltt of tN lbo'l'I lllmed dee:edtnl Prlllelptl' W1lllf T MulUUn MO AOIEIT L HUMPHREYS EllfOllmtrrl M111lm11m IS,G()D Alt«M\t II U'# St1'1kl Artt Artt1lt Norw1Jk lWI AUIM A ..... -1111NI 2'I O.W.WV Pica lllvtf'I S1nl1 F1 S9r111g1 C.tt Mftl, Ct" ...... '264 Whllllll', La Mir~, lut{ll Ptrk,. TtlA...:...!!!.41~ •• -Flllle!ton, ~'-Alllllllm. G1nltl'I ,, .. ,_, ""' ......, ••• Grow Wetti.!IMIM'. H\l'llf~ton 8-..dl, Pubtf.ri.d Or•l'f(ll Coest Dtlly Piiot, Sttl Btacfl. Lo. Allmlio.. l.tktwOOd M,y 10, 17, 24 31, 1'14 "'6~74 ltllf....,., Ptrtmllllnl N"'e• !1 tlto 11...., ttltt .,,.,. Pl'l'IOn PUBLIC NOTICE lt11'tt'Ultd !Mil pl"ttt!'ll llt'-U Of' ---------------1 ,,,.._" .,. y er hi wrlllno rtlt¥1nt to PICTITIOUS tUS,NEIS '"'I °'"lrKI rtf'19'11AI ti t hffrl119 Wf\lth HAM• STATl!MINT tr. Olpfrlmeftt to! HHlllt Ol'Ol>Oll• to lht tollowll'!I ~.ont ,,.. doing eond!A:I ltl Ille An .. 11 COt"l'lmV!'lllV Ctnltt' 111/llMll •• et1k11111. COUMll (l'llmblrs. 111.90 PACIFIC COAST IN s u" AN c E i;lfl111c1Alt A•tl'llll. Af11t11, C1lllornl1 on l;XCHANGE', I.TO, 43 S41n hr11•nHno J-:I; 1t7f. tf 10 30 I l'l'I, AYI, Ntwp«I htCl'I. Ctlll t2..o Wrltttfl •t•t9flW!llt, 1roum1111a, tf' C E Tl'lornbuf9, •23 sen l1r111nlll'IO t\ll'lfffill-""'11 bf ~IYtcl llY fflt ,l\YI , NIW90rf a..c11 Cfllf 9'6t0 Ot!ttrtll'ltlll ot Httfftr. 11' (a Sit"' fhl1 b11tlnM1 Is (Ol'ldVC:ltcl by , llmttld Sacr1m11110. C1Utornl1 '~"' tt-, 4 41 ~ m l)trlnlrll\lp. on J\IM 10. lf14. C Ii lhOrntwro OtYill A. Sllnlon Tl\!1 lltte!Nlll WIS flit<! wllt\ thf '°'IVl"ll'ft Mtn..... C.IW!llY Cle,_ of Ort• County .. MIY 1, Hfflllt ,,,.'9mt '°fOOl'INTI \974 011"111 MIY L 1914 ~1.-or.,. (Ont Otll' "llfrt, l"Vb&lmtd OrMOt CDMt Mtt 17. 1914 _,JI 11$1..11 Ml'f 10. 17, 14. JJ, 1'74 ·-Dtlty ,.llot, 1 .... 1 • • THE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane ' "Yov can go in there lo talk lo Mommy. She's just changing her clothes" ' rrltlay, May 17, l !J74 DAILY PILOT z I U.S. F oocl Cost:. Over The Counter· NSDA Li1!11191 for Thunday, May 16, 1974 Th...,• Q""'M•On' D1"•1\ c,, 1 , 4 > ¥ ~f, • C II On tl1e Way Up?. \uPOl"d bY trw ,j. oo .. ''"' u • ll t ........ ' I t ('lll.•I Auoc•at on OI 0..,1 Oh '0 IQ • "",, "'' " .... ~r h • fl<r~•••• 0<1,n">n ll lol,. •,I ~'I '~II " O•O• <!"<I ~t< '' 0.,,n• n () l 1 )'o II! Q• I• "" t•<l Ii, O• • Ilk If"'""' ll ,. I""'"" M. '"'''" ClrA ,...., ro ,,..., t n u )• .¥n1 rn ~«" 01,,..r • ot1EO!>r t~,l!,"k <• 'I ,,~.. If tRr,., (l .J'~ l '0 ... ., • l1~lN't)u<'!l {ll<vl """"'""' :· i~~ ~g~ ·~ " ........ ~ " ltr I 'all I"" ... .. 11 l c. ,, ' '011 .. ~ .... ""•Id l , M•rt" " 1 ... ·111 ·~J> •1 II ... )I ll . ' ' ' ' • 1'. I• I Ii'• • • ' • l • H1 S\ l\ I\ 1'01-tTl..:H 'l'hrougln)ut !ht f:irtn ,ut'JS uf t!lt l " pric ls or \ht 111,IJOI (llJll1ll()(J1tllS \h,lt go 1rito ou1 brt.1d bucou p-OtiC lhOp' ~lt.ik-.; utht r kf'v food:. h.11 ( bct•n plun~111,.: and arc Ill!\\ SJltlt,JlU),UJ\ bt.'\011 th{'ll l9i3 7 l highs Tht• L.Hcst official rcpot t 011 \\holls 1!f' food prices sho\\S lhtn1 <!01111 1n April for the "ll(.lll(t llHJnllJ Ill a rOI\ -b\ ,! htll\ 3 7 p• lll'nl on top of :..i I 1 p1'l;11l[ 1t '! \itJ1• II \ 1 It 4 ' \t t h •I I 11 11-..rlt ul•ur 1! \jl( ! ~ Ill t , I 1t' ((111 ~· I II d1•_! l Ii 1 ! to11d p1 ''' ' ,q 111 ,.:r( tt11 (01111ttr 11111 end up l>tltl'nl h11-:l11r in Hll~ th<i11 ,n l'liJ thP\ ii Sil "•~\' !h )I rnn 1u1 propor11011 of this' l' 1r ~ ln(IO tu ice upsu1 gt J, 1!t t·c!l!\ b..:-h1nd us ('an 11 bt ' ls this pat t of !ht 1nfl:it1on n1gh1111arl' f 1 n a 11 \ l'On11ng lo :in l'nd" Th<' n 1ucldnt conclus1on 1nus1 bt• <1lmo<;l su1elv no Tiu" 1s th1 o.1tk!:1ound IT!-\I \\c do not 11.:t k11011 lht rc,11 1mp.irl of lhe hfllnt: of ull r1 JCt' (01111 ols nor do wc Ill lno11 ho1v the m1n1n1um ll<.1J:t' h1k1: JUSI granted lo ten~ of thou":.i nds of f:inn \I orkcrs 11111 :.iffc1.:t prices p.11 li(Ulo.ll h d U r I h £ tht• .sun11nc r fall )1ar1 est st•uson and !he p{'rtod ,tftcr 1h hai \ t'.'SIS \\hen f1 lilts and' \1 ,.:ct:-ibles ate canned and t 1 uzt'.'n But 11 t• cln know the p1 (SSUrl's on pl !Ct'.'S \\ti! bl st1ongh upv.Jrd ITE\1 Fuel ~hortngt'.'s su re lo resu1ne 1.1 !ht month~ d1rC'c1h ahct1d -.is \It' rrturn lo our sh;i!TIC'ful 11 .,~1 .. of full also l\ ill help push pr1ct'.'<; up\\nrd High priced fuel •s 1:ssrnt1al to run 1ratlor" n1 an u fa cl u re fertilizer rranspo1 t ,ind distribute [ood Fuel shortage.;; can and "111 C !USC 'Cl !OLIS h ;J r \' C: S l 1 11 " d1slocat1ons and d1:l;i\s too .., IT E\1 Thcrt' 1:. no nea1 term rcl1t'.'f 111 sight front 011r chronic railroad box c d 1 shortage -another source of cont1nutd up11a1d • pr 1c1 p re s s 111 c o n food ti onp~porta1 ion costs ITE\I \\ c arc struggling this \C',1r W!lh the \\Or~t short 1gcs or all key t}pcs nf fcrl1!tzer ~ince \\or!d \Var II Just since fertilizer price 1.:t•1l1ngs l\Crc IJftcd I as I Ot!obr1 prices to fJrmcrs ha\t' doubled \\h1le thC' big fci 111tzcr producers ha\ c pledged lo hold the lini.: on 111'1 OO nol 111ui,.trn" ""' 11 It ,, f J Hl~ol i!\M~up m.I'• ['11'11 • f I ~ I•'" p111,:cs u111 IC cnu o unto, 1""w" (• l '"""1£11~,1, ,, 1• 11 1• ., ,tft~r th.it prices mny doubl e :~':.•t •·~~~ ~t1::;~?,i'..,n ~1 ... , • 1, ~ ~;11 a).!a1n <1tcord1ng t o private 1 1~~ti~~~•uAts ,f :1 .. ~1/• ,' ~: 1 :::;.~"1 p1f'dt<'l10fl~ 0 f j.!OVCrnnil'lll li"ID UTILIYllS F " 'I • I, 1 I• •1 I• ""' • i "o" t I <• '' l lt"o'.. t'tvnorn1.;ts ~ l'rltl1it•1 priers M , 1~ ,, 1 1 , 01 1 r 1, •Nf'. '· on \\Orld n1nrkrls .drcady a1c.' ,. .,.~,1 ,H ~." ~ .~.~\ 1 "' ;1 ' 1 double ~U~ prices ;ind ,~~-~(~~: 1 lr 11 ,ll~u·~ , 1•:~ prodUCCrt:. <lrC \\3rnlll& lh\1 1 ~I : ~'i Ir I (i,t r,,,~ t, /1 qN tht'.'V cnn I and \\Oil I tuin "1 1 ... 1, 1, I' oJ r,, 1~ 1. I'' l>lntal1z1ng' export d c 1.1!s l:1 '/ ti'~: 1i 1: 1 .:~_i '.~ 1; • 1~ :i 1 1 down 1n an\ n1 or e 1 ' ' 1 ' 1' 1 "• ' • ... 1 , An JI~ I ) • ', 1 1-. M I" > ~ 1 1antali1.1n1,? cxpo1! dc.:il slA" r•r •' 1 ,, ·~'" Am I 111 1 I' •/ )', '"' I ,. n [ , Jfll'I lunt' 30 '' I " I• • I ~'t1t1l11tr lll\tntOtll'S ,ur 11 " 1 ,,, 1' ' l nca1 z1 ro F':.trmcrs arc llO\\ i ,;· r. ordering fcrt1l1zcr n1 o n I h s A ~ ahead but suppilcs arc being Ac .;;o!d out before the fe1llhzer 1~1 ~1 ' ,,.; 1 e\en produced ~· : '' 1 ' ITE \1 \lost ~1gn1ficant our ~· rt's('r\e~ of v1rtuallv all kc\ 1 1 ,1 / ' foods h,1\e all bti! vnn1shl'd -1 1 / 1 " . " " ' ' ' ' '" ' '. ' " "' ' , " •• <" " ' " " ' " ' " ~) 71 ,,.,.,.~ ... I' nu Jn 11 ~ ~ ~ r ,1 111 n 11 • • • " " W(..ol l'rl I ~ (nnr, ' ><flrl I"' ,. I> !•~ 'I '" 11 I I ' I ' ' " 1 ' " '' 1 .. 1" ,, Tr ' ' . • " I ' " • r• '> • ''"" ,. ' ' ' " " ., '" " \~ I~ l • ti , , ' ' " • ,, ,, . ' " • c ti •J " " ,, "' ' . ' ' ' "' /r ' t • ' " '" • " ' ' " ' • ' ' ' " " /"" ' " jt • "I ' ' , ' ' . I/ u ,1 " r<'~c.'rves \vh1ch fo1 \cars ha\ Cl: : , : ' 1 ser\ed ,1s a supply cushion 11:,?,"v.1 1 1 11 and a dctC'rrcnt lo shortages :; "· 1~ i' :• :~ , .. ' . ' ' ~ " .. ~ '' ' ' " ' " ' ' ,, . I•''" 11 .. n • ' • Hi • ' " ' . al'!d'" therefo1 c ,dso to sharp 1,', " • • " 'n price 1ncrt'.'a~e" h "v 0 r I '' •I I•! ur reser\C!I o ct're1i 1 , L M g1a1ns 1both food and feed :j1/'t \' gr.11ns1 are the lo~c~t 1n 20 1 •· 1 ' ' \cars \V,lrns D1 r-;ormn l 1 .. 11 •" B I I • I 1 or aug 1910 Nobel peace' f< , " ~ prizevnnncr as f.ither of thC' t~~,11 l ,~" green rC\Olution 1 throu~h :· !he d t'.'\ elopmcnt of nC\\ high '• '· '" I •<> ., l 11 pro1c1n h1gh·}1cld nHrdclc •, " ,., h 11 ..... \\ cal stra 1ns1 1n a tcrr1f\1ng "M. , nc\v h1ograph\', Fa c 1 n g ~, .. .'; ;11 Starvation ' to be publ11;,hed { 11 '' r "' ! ' next n1onth by the Reader s t ·~ n 1•1 " ' ' r "" ' ' Digest Press if \\C ha\e a cn\ltq R1 1 1 I b _. r n u1r-. 1 ~ sing e au gro~ 1ng season t n1•n 1• , ; .., ! rl I " 'I ( '" t t ''' lr!h ' "' " ' " ' '' "' " '"' ' ' 1· "' " I' ' • ' ' " ' Dolt ' bet\YCCn now a nd the end of ti~ cn11 11 1.. " (1'1"'0 l'I ~ ~ " ' r r; 1 1 ; (u,! J I"' , I Int 1' > M> l"<l 1975 not on!y \\11! 11e be cn~n• ~ 11 11 <n 1~1 r" •. ~ unable to export an\ r .. ' ru 11 ;.., .,, 1,,, vi I l r <" t1 r. ,, "' 1mpor an amount<; n \\heat t~• ,. •0~, Pr but 1\'c also tna) n81: be nble 'O r, , ,,, 1 " 1 1 • " Q,, 11 • .:u'!"I 1 r ' ' ' " " " " " ' ' " OJI. /fl ~ ' h ••• " "" n I I ~ 1 11 "wt 1"1 M I I< I 11 \ > yr' ' or Ht ,, ' ' "11 ! ' ' I r • 1 "' 1 l •h '" I ~ ' 4 ' \/ " ' . ' .. • • " . ,, • 1\ l • ,~ I< • I ' ' ' " ' . ,, • 1 ' " . ' ' ~ ' " I I ., ~· llfn' <I " " i1o ~t j,111r ,, Yolum• 6•d ,,, •• d '"" ,) ) l , .. " • • ' . ' t ' 'I op • 0"1" I/•' I< ! II\'~ Ir!! \ ' •I "• ,... ' I'' 1 en ,,... lt1>hY " " I I 1>.,,o ( 1, ': It t ''t~n Ntb• h NA SO Vnl 1mh r.a.1n~ , 1~, ' " 1C.• ' "'' • J " ""' ~ I ol o • " ' ,,., ~ ! ' ' "' . • ' '•l :li< ·~ ... 1,10 h 100 J, 100 " " . ' '" • ' l .. ....... " /9 • 1 11 •-I 4 • .. • 11 ·-'• (.u111t•1 • n11tl L1>scr~ GA!Nlll~ nieet our O\\n don1cst1c needs ~." u,',', •! 10 ILM 'd st 1• ·• ti ILAnt~-· t ' I Drnsllc food price rise5 '• 1 1 IL •nr~ "1 r 1 n1 !TIA ' J , • lJ::> ,, • UP 11 l Up ?Or \Jf' ? I n UD -II ~ Uu ' J Un 1• lJo 1 • l ~ ,~ ' lJll ,, ' Ull IJ • \!p 1 lJn 11 < lJn 11• !lo ~ I l~t• fl.I," I C ••I I'.< I ~ " ' ' l'•' k•" \'~J•I bE' the 1nt'.'\11rthll• 1tst1lt 1f ~ '"~ r- 1 I[~~.' 11,,~ this h.1ppen~ f o t ( ( .1 ~ ! ~ ,, 1 1 ~ ' ,~ I ' "" '"'{" -v. O l.looY. ~I '-•-I ' " ' llorlaug , , r1 11 I', '' • II I \\hat can \IC do' Ir, ~ 't•"~ l'" tll ' I 'd '' \Vhat 11e n1ust do JS dc\elop c .. """ • 1 I I I ,,,.~,, "' 1 r:.it onti nauonn [ood poll(\ , , ~ , \\hu~h CQuld assure sup1>l1cs of j ~.. ' ' '" " basic foods 1n the l\t'.'Ot of1: s ho 1 t a g cs st 1 ni ul<1!•' ' produe\1on 1n lime to n11•C't j ~ ,1 "' :int1c1patcd needs and nboit• L ',,', 1~11t d!l brake 100,1\ s vcarl\ IH tll 1 i 1 upsu1 ges I : ln June thP Sc n ;it t' 1. Con11n1ttcl' on \t11r1t1on and [: " llun1an Nctds \~Ill hold a n1a1or series or hearings 111 \\;ishington out of \\hu.:h should CQme a proposal for .1 national food po!1cy 1n time for ' ' 0<,<1 I I ("'' • I I\ '"' " " • '" " I I I ~' "" ' ' ' ,. ' ' I' " I ,.. " II '" ~ " ' ' • ii"' ' I"""""' l rh , ,, ' ' , t f r 11 ' . n ' I I t <Jo ~· "I• tV ! • I nQ 'h •I I~ Uln (<1n11 t I l 1'1 t Q, ' I\ I A •IO ,\ ~ • fil Inv "m " " 1." 11 .... ' '" " ' •, •Y " ' " 'J •II I ! { n" > I I 1.,1 •I • ; " ' ' t ~ ' " I , w " <)I ,. •} 1, ( u, 1 f 11 •~fl~• I • 1; , 1 Orn10~! Ur' 1 ,, . " • " ' .. ' l 1• ~ 1 ilu I I o" P.I I' 011 ' Ott '' (\If , (" I "" ... "" '• Otl ' ' " " " ' 1 ()11 '" "" (" ·~11 "' "" ' ' ' '" ' next NoYcmbcr's World Food lonference 111 Roine I MUTUAL FUNDS I This 1s a challenge of the n1ost urgent importance to all Or us The slakes have becon1c Now Vo·~ I QI ID• It ~ 1/ 81111,, ... l'und 6 11 ~111 v~~·'1 ~Ql q ,, l~'"'"l , I! 'IDllEY FUSGllP JP Gwin ~~~~'Ill••, f 1 rfl I I far too h !"h to -nlinuc wh'I 1, ~ mct "" ' m 1 .,. •' ' 1 • -< 1i Jdnu, rd 11 ~ i. 1 " ~ F ' " ~ 0 '-V ' ' on Mit"' f 11• fU •• l "J•l~n•iT~ • ' ·1~'' !q ~'fi) /•I \IC 1101\ ha\C lrl fhe Yitai areas f urd< d> Quot.~ bl i;,,, l' 1 IJ ! J .. 11 ">I 1 • ~' (n (, l \ lnr l<A~O i" r,.,1 l o\ Q lion" In 1• 11 IJ I ~CUDOEll FOS of food production f 0 0 d 0" " • ti KEYSTONE l~I• In~ n 1 1l d r T~u••d•¥ I '1 C 11 • ~ 1 c, , 1 1 r , n" on 11 J• ll • exports an ood prices -JI ",. , ,,,. f i.t M~ j cu•! •n 1 , (/\ '-""' B &i ~ ., polic\ \\h1ch Ken Schlossber;:: ,,,. c.,.., 8 ~ ~~l~Ato~'& ~;\ ;'~ , ~ '-'' ~~~c1'1 v ~;i: !~, staff director of the Sena/<' I A 1 .. 1 • c 111 J ~1 Mow.i.11 0 cu 1 ~, 1• ,, 1 b-•sEcu111rv Fos A1Hn , 1 1, 9dlnf<l "l •c ~I "'' l1uli lll J•J Comrtultee condenins as a ,.~. •, 4Jl c. .. 1n F ~-111 I t~'' ., 11vr 1 ~11 b -t I I r. I" I I I ~ • I 11 ln<rT"' • I I (, I ':..! J . \Ill<' J" ) 11 b J< ' C O!TipCtey d 1sorgan1zt'd r. ,,, 1,, 111111 • \1•ul F' l>(il b • f>r><>l'n 0 ..r SELECTEOFOS /lb cd h " r•ui,,r ~,.,,,,Sl<kfd'<l-llOl>Pt' )u'i A•n!>nr~"1o ''I scacrra1n approac r.Gl 1J ,J,, .. ufD1Fs111~1<q1b <li 1tn••• ,.,,.,101111•d '~"''' All" >~1lltfQr<IC.110 1Jl1 <!111tn•r t,l'I •IL~/J'ill\nr 11'11!< A•1>"•f! q~11r~1£•'.,nlrll?!~ Lnlm1i.. ~··1n""'n''"' 'Ir•.,.,, An<tnf J')O, l•J[m~•Q ]IJ £<!• 11 IJ'fJY>l•f ... 11 !I'll $5 ~1 illio11 F <.icility Pl£11111ed lJy lridia11s '"' Ii •It> ~ , !~ 11 E_n JV 10 li IO '~ LEX GROUP SHliREHLO GRP r ID• I I 'll ~"''ll 111 lll C11l•dr "'!IU c~·n•I 1.0 J /f Am fQIY 'l 4 /U ~"' !lu•P )II,,, G1 ... 1n , ., f n!•p• .... \•I .tt.M EllPR[S\ ; <I flll• bOfl RP"tl\ 111• \/~J fltl Id o~i 1 J~ FUNO\ l'•OELI TY 1u1~ 1n1.. ~ ", .. d•IJr I>~' 1 I~ (~pt" •I 6 lo GROUP L•n( ClO ~; r l Q•I t ~ •\ 6 >'I !n '"' ~1 ~ l~ Ei~~ ""'l ~ '~ "~'>'LOOMIS I P~t ""' 6 •'> 'Oto ll••!" ~ ~ l ~· ( •o " ,1 !u 'SAYLES SHEAll:SOH FOS \"' ' • '~ '• ''" • ·~1 l C'•P D• 111•01ni.r> A1111rt 10~11s11 \O ,. ' , i., (, ~ C ' I M.,Tv1I ll tclll..,.l' ln<O"l l\<1~11l4 A" ( T~ > 1 > & !' t I LORD A88 I l"""'t A "ll "11 ,..,l,~J ><1 1,f,; ~1 1 IAtll! ~1{)~11~~0<,~lll!U1! \m I ••I J J/ ll '""' 1 "! l•I Am !1!1~ 114 /Q~'•di! f<l 6~1 /Jb Spec1~1 tCI the J),nfv P1l11t LOS ANGELES -L t'.'ade1 ~ of a nt'.'1\' 1ntr1 tr1b.1J 3 Diret·tors Appoi11ted At Air Cal All prrsent b o.'lrd n1e1noer~ \\Cll' JCc]ccted and 1n :idr!1t1on thr1.:c nC'11 d1-.. r 10R 111 1(' scll•ctcd at the regularh schcdu!ed s h ,i r c ho 1 d r rs nH't'.'l111g of Air Cal1for111,1 held this 11 c~·k 111 NC\\ port Beach 1\ddc-d to the board \\C1l' C11r1111 [ Trone Jr COUit ,1ppo1nlcd trustee of the \V ,, s t i.: :-i ! c Ca I 1 for n 1:i Corpo1 1!1011 I1oward \\ Rathbun prC"stdcnt of First N,11!onal Bank o f San Jose :ind r Thoma~ T a 1 b o I ch.11rn1.u1 of !he board of Dunn P1opl•r11e~ .1 subsidiary .,f Pacific L1ghl1n@: Al the 00<1rd of directors rneellng 1 m m c d 1 a I e I v following all Air C.'lhfo1 n ia officers \l!ere elected for CQ11!1n111ng tcrn1s They are Robert Clifford president aJ P w Van Dordrcchl cxecuhve vi c e president, treasurer and secretary Frederick R DDvls vice presiden t· marketing, r..tanuel C Mello. v ice prcsldenl·ma1nte nance & engineering; C._L Banks, v •cc pre s1dcnt·speclal projects: .John R Er1csen, aSSi!tsnt vice presfd ent-ope:ratlomlf11ght con- trol. Joseph E Walker. assist~ ant vice prcsldcnt·sales, and Betty It Dowrung. asst.1l:>nl secretary. • org-rr111z<Jt1on of i\ n1e1 1 can lndinns ha\c fo11nrd Indian \Vorld Corp 10 build an 800- ncrt' $5 nullion cultural and t ec:rcation a l facll1f\ I ndian \\ orld -Land of the L iving Sp1r1t. 111 Soulhcrn California Plans \YCrc outltned at a nC\\ s CQnfc.'rence in Los Angeles .Thursda} I n d 1 a n \\ orld Corp said the sire for rile center \\'ill be announced t.,1 1,1 ! 1" <'~ I I I 111• I 11•1 "'D ~Oii <o~71 SIGMA FUHOS A .NI~· l ~"li Pu•ll ··•·L~•n o c~~·nC111Snr S~l~JJ A"I CHOR S•omF "1L,.,n 1,.~;1q Iv RJJ~/! GROUP T• ~d l~;IJ'll c M4 SSCO Ir' '~' IJ1 C.•wlfl ~ ti I n1 FINANCIAL r em ~ 11 I 1 v nlut & II 'J(J 1 .. ,,., ~ ~ 11 .,1 Pi!OGllAMS 1 1 ~1"1 , ~ 1 ~ .. n n R •1 ~)J "'""' 1J;1,1 fnlJ•• 1 ,,~, '-t,,f ~,,,iu •!\lfGr <111op Sp.;:tr l"..I J ]'I"'"" I J I M..tt.SS FN(L ~nC,.nl101~1 '~J I 1!1 Inv ~1> ~•> f n "' 'l l"I > ""-"'' l'IV ~lO ~•I \~,tj~ll 1, 111 ... v~r~ ' ?I N"" 11• !l•lf.'-WM•C. "0~ ,,~ "dU F ~~l bJ/ 1,1rr1 V<i ~ ,1i) II Mill 11 1 il "'"'In ~"'l1Ul!-I liXE Flll5T 1 ''"0 ,,,11i,l'>tJ<tl•d 1J/J~ HOUGHTON l"IVESTORS M!ll 1 1~111 1 ,'!o~P l"f) ~>J ~\I J un~ A J\1 111 D c f.<I •'~.I~ M Iv 1 0 I ST •TE IND GAP fu<>d lt ~J// l1G•I~~(! ~ll~"lo'tn• P• "" (.,11 1 40lJl> ~!nt -~ JJ ~ ~l In< om o • 1o• 1 An• J > J , (,. I • 1 J I> ,1., <,, ,,,01 \lo1 •F ~111 \Jv'oyf< , r 1• 1•1•• (ll C.•n "•~10 I•', Mui I J ""''b •a I , "~1 . I,,~ •O'I >1}11 ! bnn Q..j ~""ll"' Hr '-~M l ii"'• l • • ll I•{ 1~1 lo/ ~ FOll UM GROUP '.\IF 11 1 I " ~1 II "-" ll .~I ~ t , n "I I ~ 101 F'lj I \1 ~ /,fu"!'n , , 11 II•" 1<"1 1 t~ l~ ' ''" '"I Ill fei ·'•QI lo' r ('' '"STEADMAN FDS .., ~ ("'""" "•N,Om" ,.,.1<,tJ!!)..1•1 soon 1 • , " 11 1 ~'Id 1 ·l "'"' ~" • , 1 , '"· r ' 1 '" I ,, 11 1~u~~' l ~ll M!l l t• t ·~ ~01 ~01 Board Chairman l lenr\ ~ l IJl ~1, 'FOUNDEllS ~ t I~•· STEI N ROE fOS Rod , 1 ""ft -11 1 ~IGJIOUP "IAT SEC fO~ ii< inc !• '-I r1gucz said, The tnd1<1n n• ft•" ~,, 1 1 c ... 1n t •111 11. ·~ ~ r.~n ' '' \\orld Corp h' ... ~ .. _,,,, for1Ticd CALVI N FUHOS 1,,~,, •111 ~" !'>• , • I)~ .••• ,JI\ ,, .• ut•'-, 1t11~•llQ,.f,,.tu•I I""!~ S1~CROu ,1sanonprofitorga111Lat1onof ~,r;~~ ""1 '!1 ,~.,~~",'11 ~-1 11 r~~ ... ~·~ ~,;::~'i,:!: ,.1;" American I nd 1 ans Our t~ "' r '1, l'RliN1tL1N " • ~, '"'" 1 ., ~ 11 N'f' V n " I tn 1~ GROUP ~~I t < '(••"" 1 I rn"I '!J ~ >1 purpost' is 10 1n1provc the c , 1 , 1 ~ 1 '""I oti1c , ·~ 1~1 , •, ~ 1 ~ ... , r ei1 • ~ C nl51'1• ~Hl'~llGw!~~r ~l~~'I NEW[NGLF lmplG IOl•l cconon11r <:1h1~!1on Jllcl II\ 1ni,: (~d! t~v 1 J MI.I F• ln(m '" \"-'II r11u I• " l 1 ~ ,, "(1111 'I~ ' ~ di r A ICKA NNIHG tJSG~'> ~'~I~!/ G• .. tll ~"' V~l r .... 1 [1 81~' q con11011so rncr 1 c,1 nFuNos u11o1" ,,, .. ~i 1 1 .. ,m ,,,q1•~1u10f'>1v 1s•i.. Indians bv <leveloping srlf ~';'1 '1 ·~ ~~,E~~ ~~ ~!!,..';-0" ....,1 1/:,1i:~ '~:~~? ~:~ ~~; supporti ng prOJCC\S and !he 11n1 '' s" • .,f»L•t11 ·••I '·"~"'''"',, ·~\u~1 r1 1111 1~ fi••< •<l•O/F!lMldn'l~/IO["''"""™ 11,Un t11d 63066" tech n 1 ca I m .in 11 at 1 ~1, ', ' •}!01 Fu"'o~ INCP N'"'', 11 1 • 1~ uN•O,.. SE1t91CE: d I"'! A , "/~GROUP '"" ~· ! ' ••I' GAOUP1 a n11n1 st 1nt1 1c and (, .. 1 1••11c'"' 111,o•>.i .. ~1J 1 <110,1<r1;1 s1w11'JU '' l I kl rid Int"' .11,,~ lt11JAc ~•8''1 1'1~1 •o1r qo N1t11nv &116~1 en repreneur1,1 s 1 ls nee e s11,, 1 , 1 ,1 IN"" ir ... ~1 11&1i.~•• 1.1r 1J~1n~i 1.1 ... c~ut ,,, 111 losuccecdln I Vn1" /U1 oo!<>t 68.ll•~Om~• 6••11"&U"""'nl00111 <1J' our SOCl(' y (NASE Gt.~ s p 111q 0 "' "' ,~" 10 II UNITED FUND$ The principal Jllt'all" of BOSTON """ '.>< t 11 '. f()o~ "" I IJ 0 IJ lo "" ~m ) II 6 ~· I lni:l I';•, 619 • ..., Cl'I rA~, l' orPE:NHM FD l\'1d Fd 71S 7"' 3('h1eV1nJ.:'. our !!Oals w11l be 1.cn <p 6 •s ~ s• Grt~ I'll 1 • ·I l'.'1• A n ~ • , i1f 1 "1 qw 8•0 , 11 h ~.,,, '" 6. 6'>c~ .. 1 d IJJ Oto f"'1. ' .... (1ntln( ·~'I" I roul!h the <lc\C'lor1"ent of A i.,,,, 1 ,t,.i )l"' HliMILTOHGR I oo '"" ,ft, o ' •n 10-0 11 •ci r II I d I C~ 1•1 <~•q &/ Ol C'i.< •~1 l•1~ II< 57'16 l• unique ac1 s v n Jan \\ior d CNA MHG Fos r""" ,., ~ f'J• '"'I • '1ng0 '11 s 1• Lad flh L S t fL onv 41>16~1c.· .. 1n '"s"I ~ • ,,u~1i.11io101 1 01 -n n ' 1v1rig p1r1 M.lnnt l ~: 1 J'I •n<om \ ">.J 6 •• p.,ul R~~ • 11 ~ 01 I.IS G~•S , u •)I Indian \Vorld \\'111 be ari ~chu' r &111 6'' .. >r, G!n 1!1 ea1 1 P<1~•J• F 1~1 •'9 USLIFE FUNDS I ~""'"~' ~,,-i1•L~ 7Jlll.l!lflon"l.ll 1<11101ll~•F 401 •IO h1~1or1calcultura!rcolog1cnl iMr111 61'1~h "O<I" ~11 Ponn...:i •,0 6 10 t<Jlln<1 &'1<11~ .<A COLONIAL _,,t<f" I JJ ""•J J.it 5 I s I C•m sr~ 10 01111<frll L'\.IUl!altomll and ret rt'at1onnl FUNDS .,. " JS"°,~,~,-.. ( . ~\ 191 YALUI. LINE l'OS I dd d (n,, ~'" ~ ('!) l61~111 PtLGAIMGP U1ILl'le \"' }\ eener C 1cate lo the Fq1,,11 ·~· •''"Pv• 1•1 ~11 PotF•m', v•1 •n( J11 1l"> h •-, f /h ~ ~uil<I QI I 11 I" Aon 111)..111!• C>o!~t 1•' Jtl Lf''I' Ott> ~!It-~~ f'r1wcre o e ,,mcr1rnn c,,,.1,. ,1~ ,~4 1~ n.r,1 ~•)ti lntOf'I 1 ,. t9l v.,1 ->oc. :w J.,. Indians of nll tnbes and 11><"1'1 • ~ •v 1"d JO~"' 7\.1 Alo Fd •••~YANCE Vl'f\1u• 2 ~B 11 •l~CI<"' 111 I,. "<"I! SI ~,. • Jll SANOEltS n a! ions c ,1um c: ·n ., 1o •1 1 • 1n"''1 "1• 21 11 Pl" ,.,.. 1 ,, 1n~•t s "1 • '' 'The n11clcus ol lod1an COMMONWLTH '"'""'n G 1 ti u ,.,OHEElt FO 'J'S °''" • I •• , TAUSt lnv(,..~1l~l1\6P1tv1E~ ol'l6'8~0o \I •llt6' \\'orld Will be c 0 mp I cl e A .. H ~, ., 1"-Guod • Jl •• , Pion F<I IO•l 1117 'olnd•Oll Jr )6' C I )I 1 l' I-lr\OIC I tt PI011r II 1 1110 M \l,\"'<)tl'I I I) 1 7l rcpresenfat[on.sofdtstinc t como1tr ~("-1 •••1"~ Ao• •.01o••Pldl'lf\d 111tn\l•rrl10'0 )!I Como CP •Oii I" INVEST PLI G-110 '2"' 11., "•' d I J 1. J IJ (\l)E!S Of lr&dllJOna1 JndlO.n ~::::: ~ 1~ ii '~J ~~EL 1 nz 1 ~· ;~·IC.rnltOWr. 1 U ~l~~t ~ t !~ ~ :: \1\lages contrd 11.11;, 01111. ·,~ 1a:i G•f<Otn 1ote110M1 w1<J1Mu '6J1•1 1t '0th I cd I (On\ lrt¥ •OD •WI C~pll".11 •i+ i ll l>\CQl!I 9t0 •tOW.!"ll•<I ,., •• , er p ann c emcnts C:t1\ln t;tw ~00 )00 IN\I E.ST OAOUP Nw £•.'I 10•1 IOM Wf;LLIHGTOH I di H II r f O>ftMI In aw. 1>.M IQ$ t..\lo ' Nw Hor 1" 111 OllOUll'. nrc an TI an a o amo, COl'lt•v c. 1o~1111 10s NO ~10 l11 Pto fa ""' 100 E:-11ior 19~'l'~" Indian Ubrary, schools l:lnd an '"" 0.11 i 1, ~a~ 1osPt '1Q l .11 l"r~1d1 l so l a:i 1-. ..... 1 l \I • n '""" 01~ 191 Sl1 Mlll11AI 811 1'4 ~ll'VCI Gt I lj 1il Mtl•~ 9~1 l~U environmental stud1ea center. t>..111, , ,. • s1ot~ 1• u 11 •1 .Prud ~tP 1 ,~ , ,l l •uu ., 1110 II) , ( • 0•¥100 6 IS •IS $elK! e tit •,.\t l"UTHAM Wtl\ty 10 ~ 11 ~ a rt~ anu crB ts WOrkShops aftd O(t.AW.t.lt( Var PtV • n I lJ f1UNDS1 W.llln <t 40 10 JI • I > -"1 h ( GROU,., !n~R•t •i.t tll C01'! .... ,. 141\0l~ W\l~tt '51101) argc am.,...t eater or °""'' I~ ''l 1s1 tqwhv 111 '" w'"°" ,,. l<it pageants. U"adltional IndJan g:i: ~ 31! ::, 1 ~~ :: !!! t:,i 1!it :l:J ~:1111 1:e ,::: l!" ceremonies and dances ltl!'IHft ~.tt».is ..?.••I ut 11,".,,, •ncom 11• '"' Wi\Coni 6 ~ I • Drftf q. 1.S1 lt\ •~ ,._ lfl-.,t lilt IU l~ ttf celebrations and conventions 00<11ca ,,..,. 1J..1• ''"'' Flld .. .., 11.21 vi ... F a.12 a.u • ..,. ... 'l'ldl!ftll ' ' I \ . I • • 22 DAILY PILOT HOLLYWOOD lUPI) -MCA Inc .. \Vhich began as a one-man operation in Chicago and grew to becoine lhl' ntost influential entertainment J::iant in histor~'· celebrates its 50th anniversary this month. Dr. Jules Stein. the m<in Y•ho startL•d it all. is more remarkable than anything else about 1'1CA Y:hich is parent to Univ.ersal Pictures. Univt>rsal Tele\·ision. the tours, records and n dozen' other enterprises. SITTING BEltlND an antique dt•sk atop the Universal To\•ier. f)r. Stein ,,·as bright-eyed and as crisply alert as an.v man half his age. lie is 78 and still 1hc guiding lighl of the iVJCA c1npire. /' f .. The difference betv.•een n1e and the old n1ovlc n1oguls is <1n education."' he said. A graduate of Rush Medical College and a practicing ophthalmologist. Dr. Stein founded f\.iCA in 1924 to book bands in various cities in the nlid\vest. It wasn't long before his interest in shuw businl'SS and enormous profits t he re r r om ot11wcighrd his love of n1cdlrinc. .. \Vhen I \Yas in med school I \\'Orked ris a n1usician playing tht• sax and \'Jolin," he recalled . ··so I knc1v the rC'!':orls needed music in the su1nn1er and I 1houghl up the idea of n1oving bands froin one place lo (lnothf'r. Nruurally. I gnt a percentage of thl•Jr contracts. 11 11as the beginning of 011c·n1ght~rs.'' • • . ,_. WITHIN II YEARS Dr. Slein had more than 600 bands under cootract touring the country Qr playing in hotels. But he hnd seen the fading of the old brass band era of John Philip Sousa and he began to div.ersify. Dr. Stein's career is marked by dedication to reaching the top in every field MCA has entered. His co1npany began booking stage acts, nightclub and hotel singers, comedians and all the resL The next cycle was acting as agent for recording artists. Then radio. · He hired a young genius named Lew Wassern1an in 1936 and MCA became the biggest , richest and most erfective talent agency in the \\'Orld. l11flatio11 Up 11.5% 111 Qi1artt.'r \VASll lNGTON IAP! Prices rose -at an 11.5 percent rate in the first three months of the year. worse than 1)revious estimates. t ht" government reported todav. • -on the· ~op~/ In I93S Dr. Stein (opened olflces In Beverly Hills ·to crack the movie business. Two of hi! fli'st big clients were Bette Davis and Erroll Flynn. Eventually most of the big stars were handled "'by MCA. Early in the 1950s Dr. Stein explored television -but with a change. In addition to acting llS agent for writers. directors and stars. MCA became the top producer of television shows. when MCA bougl\t if. Last ye~ Universal Pictures outgrossed alt of them t the boxoflleti wlllt' "The Stln&." "American Grafittl," "Jesus Christ Superstar," and '"Day of the Jackal" among others. - '" • .... • "Then the government made us choose between being agents and producers." Dr. Stein said with a grin. "We bought Universal Studios and went full time into production of fil n1 and television shOYlS ... Hit" atudlo now produces m o r e television series than any o t h e r production company studio o r independent. The studio tour is a whopping · success as are other MCA operations. And the_biggest of all may be ~!CA Disco-Vision, movies on rec<Jrdings for home television. U,I T•l•l'Mlt ~ UNIVERSAL WAS a lightweight studio "\Ve're never satisfied wllil we're at the top al verything v•e do." said Or. Stein from the loftiest desk in Holl y\\'ood. MCA INC. MENTOR Or. Jules Stein Wo1n<ut In At Exxo1i LOS ANGELE'i 1 • .\P\ - ,\ \.\1>nlan \ras <'lrcte<l for the fir~t tinlP Tliursdav lo the 17·mernbcr hoard or directors of Exxon Coro,, the biggest U.S. oil (·0111· pany. Shr is ti.Tartha PetPrson. president of Barnar<! Col· ]('~e llnd a delln of Co\11m· r.;:1 University in Ne1r York· She ow'ls 10 sh~re'l or f.xxan sloe". Arrierican Express: Making Money From Your Money gi:.1111 insurance cornpanies Ar·tna Lif1• and Travele11s 1n:1kL' 1nore lllt)lll'Y th a n 1\111L·ril·an Express. The rate of inflatiori solidly in the double digit rntegory -was the v.•orst since a 13 percent inflatloll L------------' By ~IILTO~ ~IO~f\O"'ITZ ~laking money olf n1onf'y is rightly considered a prerogative of banks and insurance con1panies. \V h3t they do , in effect, is t<.1\;e your n1oney and in return for rendering Certain services· - protection of your n1oney. your life. your car -n1ake ~ven n1ore moneY. You buy your $100 \Vorth of rhccks but you 111::iy not ll~l' thern all up for two n1onths. three n1onths. six 111onths. 3 year. ~·lc<in\\'hile. your monev is b<.'ing used by An1~·rican Express to make n1ore money. Righi 110\\'. they n1ay he earninR 10 percent on the "float." The longer you hold those checks in your ,,·a!Jet. the more mon('y An1erican Express makes. Til l'.: LATt<:ST brainstorm Aincri l'an F:x1)rcss has is t~·pit.:il. It's planning to start a new 1nutual fund called the "Index Fund of An1erica.'' This is not a fund for people 1,1·ho \\•anl to beat Lhe ma rket. It 's a fund for people \Vho just \\'an t to stay even. UPI Ttltl'llolo Tl1at's " Big Ot·der \\'hat better wa\' to celebrate the start of the 27th International Pickle \Veek !han with this ·jun1bo hamburger topped \Vllh big pickles. Diana Petersen of New )·ork does the honorf':. E11d to OiJ Fir111-0'"'11cd Service Statio11s l frge(l SACRA~1E'.\TO 1l"Pl ! -To reduce gasoline p r i c c s . Attorney General Ev l' 1 Jc 'lounger's 1 a s k force oa energ~· has rL'COtnmendcd that oil cornpanies be r£'quircd to --~---.1 L.A. CALLS i 41/2c "'" I PriYaf• Linf5 -811Wnfss Stt"fiC.f Only -Call for br'oclwrr and lltOflttliy raft -Sc. f'l'onc.isco LiMs ,..,11ilablr - The Telephone Company Of California )001 Rfllhill, C.M. 17141979·1234 If YOU LIKE BEING A REGISTERED REPRESENTATIVE . I I cli\·est themselvC's of service stations. The task force. established b.\' 'Y<iunger in J a n u a r y . Thursday called for ll'gislation to ellrnina1c oil cn1npany· ol'-·ned stations. to !)lace the oil pipeline sys1em in California under control of the Public Utilities Comrnlssion nnd to abolish' tht' 22 ~crcent o i J dC'pletion .allo\\'ancc. A 3J·l'AGE task rorce report :.aid divesting of t he con1panies' relail marke!ing outle!s v,:ould · · c re at c cotnpetition It all refineries \\'ere con1pcling for the sale to retailers. presun1ably t he price to retailers 'should be lo11·ered. "Further. \1·i!hou1 the price supporl pre\·iously prO\"ided hy the 111ajors 4 n1 a j o r cornpanies ! 10 th eir own retailers... the report said, "the lo\rcst·priccd retailer should he able to capture his fciir share of the 1narket." ----'------=--., !lONNELLl!ASE 11111 ~OU 1l•Jll0l l1j.,\• Ill•' i:p· ;111d tJ.J\\'11:-,. llh• \IHI l"I•'.< 111<~ n:n.:c1n :.c pti.•• .. · .111d ·'"lJ 111·., 10 Ti"' ,,.,1:· .. 1·1 .11 , ·;1 •• \ l•U 11.1 I" .: I' It ·' lid. 11 11-.1 111•-.-. Iii.." ,q•r .. ··' .111• ,, ·'II d ·' I, ll•)ll I· d ' "I 111\>',frl.<•!11._, •.• 1111·1· I-,I I' I .t1•1• II 11t•1·1· \"< Jiii I, 1 I• I ii , .1 1"•· I>•:< dPd .111d Iii •' ' '• 'I l) I " 'Ii", 1 I I OJI I I:--; I ' · 11 t I >I". \-. I:•' l 1111.11 I I' I I I 1' .l!.1n:1·. o·r 1nr .1 111•11 l..10•>11 it r··,.,1 .. 1.il S.11111 :'> ,\ .... ,,. 'El ii ) 1 ""'--;c:iur focfory · A11thorlr1td Chevrol•r Leo1in9 D.oler • New '74 Ye90 H11tc.hboclr --~------ F<1 r111s Lo1v On Income Totent Pole WASHINGTON <UPI) illost Americans enjoyed a healthy increase in wages , salaries and other forms of inco1ne in April but farmers' earnings \vere down sharply for the fourth month in a row. !he Con1n1erce Department said Thursday. Persona l income.· a broad n1casure of co nsumer spending po.,.,·er. rose $7 billion or 0.6 percent. last month. compared to S6.6 billion. or 0.5 percent. in ~larch. Personal income is now at a seasonallv adjusted ratC of $1,108.4 billioO ($1.1 trillion1. Farm inco1ne dropped $3.4 billion. or 12 p e r c en I , "reflecting furl.her declines in prices received by farmers for bolh livestock and crops and increases in farm production expenses.'' the department said. This figure has now fallen $4.'1 billion s i nc e January. Wages and sa larie s advanced $4 .3 billion in April compared to $3.7 billion a month earlier. For the first four months of 1974. overall personal income was running 9.8 percent ahead of January-April , 1973, the department said. r:1tt' in the first quarter {lf 1951. T II E C0.\1~1 ERCE [k. p..1r1n1ent also reported t h a t the nation's econoinv -ns nrcasurl'd by the ·ti r o s" \lationnl Product -dcclint'd by a 6.3 percent rale in January through March. The department estin1aled last 111onth that first quarter niflation "'as at a 10.8 percent rate and the economy declined at a 5.8 percent rate. TlIE NEW FIGURES, based on m·ore complete infonnation. sh o "' e d the nation's econon1ic prob\erns \\·ere \\'Orse than experted. But there alread y \.\'ere !':igns the nation is re.covering from the first q u a r I er economic slu1np. Industrial output v.·as reported increased in Aprll for the first time i11 five months and housing starts also rose in April. T II E CO~IMERCE De- partment also r e p o r t e d today that the n a ti on '5 corporations recorded a 12 percent increase in after·lax profits ln the first quarter. increasing $8.6 billion to $80.2 billion at an annual rate. The · increase was a big Power's 011 111 Rockwell Bl Bomber . LOS ANGELES (UPI I The first Bl. I.he strategic jet bomber the Air Force sees as the replacement for the veteran B52, has "come to life" t\ith a fun ctlOning nerve system. Rockwell International Corp. s a id \\'rdnesday. The plane's electrical pG\\'l'r syste1n has been installed and turned on. and the fir st of four 30.000-pound thrust jet engines has been installed. I he company said. "\Vhe n \\'e \\'ent to power on. it \vas like giving life to the airplane." said Ed ~lin1s. director of checkout operations. Rockwe;ll is under contract to deliver three of the supe r sonic. swingy,·ing bombers to the Air Force for flight testing. y,·ith the first plane scheduled to make its rnaiden flight this fall. How \\"ell thev do -ho\\' much profit they inake - depends on ho\V t•frectivrlv they invest or loan the n1011cy you give thcn1. It 's a S\\'Cct and sin1ple business. ONE C0~1PANV thn! scen1s to have perfected this strntegy to almosl a science i s American Express. You n1igh1 think of American Express as a travel agent. It is. Hut that porlion of its business is penny ante compared to the money iL makes dealing in n1oney. American Express . is, of course. the 1rorld's lar- gpst seller rf tr<J\elers' cht'cks. For a ice oi SL they •.vi 11 srll you $.!00 \l'Orih of checks. \V h y thC.I' NIOSl(0WIT1 have to cha rge that $1 fet is a mystery -except that the se rvice seems \vorth it to the buyer. But the real profit in this business is the use of your money before you cash your checks. That's called the ''f!o<il. .. Ai\tERlCAN EXPRESS algo runs the V.'orld's largest travel and entertainment crl'dit card club. \\'ith n1orc th<in fi\'e 1nillion nlcn1bers. flcre. too. the compan y is gt•tting it both \l'ays. You pay $15 for a card allO\\ ing you to ch a r g e purchases. And then American r:xprcss collecLs a commission · fro n1 stores. restaurants and hotels \\'hich honor the card. • Ameiican Express has its fingers in many other money· rh<inging operations. It 0\1n~ \O\\'ns a n1ajor insuranee company. Firt·man's Fund. It runs a clutch of n1u1ual fund!':, It O\.\'OS \V.H. 1\torton. (f leading underv.'riler of ~tall' and municipal bonds. And it control s 25 pcrc~·nt of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenre\IP. one of the top institutional bro\;"eragc houses on \\'all Street.' · It adds up niccl~-. An1erican Express netted $150 million last ~·ear. That's a fi~urc topped by only the thret.• largest banks in the country - Citicorp. BankAmrrit:i and l"i1ase \l~nh:1!\;1n. Only l\1 o The "l11dl'X Fund.'' you sre. 11·il! invest all its monies in the 500 stocks \\'hich make up the St;indard & Poor's Composite Stock Price lnd(·X. Er~o. as the n1arket gOt.'S. so y,·ilJ the "lndcx Fund." For ti"M! privile~t' or allo\Ving Arneric;1n Express to invrst their funds in this role manner. ill\"C'S!Or!': will pay An1erican l::xpress n management fee lh.:it will a1nount. at the start. to about S2;)0,000 a vear. If the fund- grts beyond tile $100 minion rnark. the management frc \l'ill be con1putcd on the basis of on1'-quar1er of one percent of assets. In other .,.,-ords. the n1;111~1gt'mrnt of $200 n1 illion \viii brinR a fee of $500.000 a year. And all for seeing that the funds art• invested in the n1arkct avcragt'S. 0 11. \'t<:S, TIIERE'S one other proviso: The minimum purchase for an inve:;tor is $1 n1illion. This is the fund for lazy rnillionaires. lf there's a \.\·ay to n1ake n1(1leY off money. ,\nlt·rican ExprcSs \\1ll 1h1nk of it. improvement over the one-., ................................ ~~~~~~~~ .... ~ .... ~~ .... ~ ................................ .,. Complete Mid-day American Stock List tenth of l percent rise in after- tax earnings in the fourth quarter of 1973, but the profit figures also renected the higher cash receip!s resulting 1 ........ -.... --............................ -.................. ___ .. _ ...... -.. --.. -I from inflation. Prices Upped At Cl1rvsler ,I DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler Corp. said today it is raising prices on cars and trucks an average $46. The increase is Chrysler's second in a n1onth The auto maker said the increase includes a S 3 7 average lx>ost in the base price of ils vehicles. effective June I, and a $9 hike in shipping charges, beginning Monday. SJX!kesmen said the base vehicle increase is necessary to offset recent boosts in steel costs amounting to $35 a unit. 1 .. 11 II {,1J..1· 1•r1do· 111 J... Ii" II I I\ ~ I h ,1 1 \ "II!' 1 11,l·oi ll• r.-. l•LIJ" dt'pu.-.1l•1r~. t:.111"! 1. .. ~.·. Cc:ill Ch<WlfS Shryoc.k 121 31 62S.7l4 I at the Heod Oflic.•. se940 PER M0'4TH Plu> 1~x & "lie. O~ APPr. Credit ?~ Mo. O.E.l.. CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR ILVD. PlTC Eases Guideline I Wili;hirr. loi; AIMJfle S COSTA MESA !:46·1200 011 Electi·ical Uses A NEW INNOVATION IN LEASING ilRAND NEW 1974 260Z $J9P.!~ ;:~ ~ SAN FRANCISCO (UPII - California's Public Utilities Commission has eased its guidelines on elect r ical consumption, but warned that the energy crisis will be around for years. Commissioner's 'suggested a 10 percent conservation goal, instead of the previo~ 15 percent, from the electrical consumptiOn of a year ago. Under the new gui~elines, ,__ __ _ r-------------------------1 ! Free trip to Europe ! : LeasearcwMcrcedes (foraslillleas 2Q5.arro) and : 1 we·ll 8ive y('l.1 round·Lrip Licket.s !Or lm Lo~ pick 1 1 il up. Coll !Or rree brochure or mail lhis coupon I I . . I I 213 921-8588 714 523-7250 I I House of Imports 6862 Manch11lor Buena Park, 90620. I I NAM • . PHONE I I ADDRESS CITY . I , _________________________ J -· ' • • ' regulated fi rms now \\'ill be permitted to furnish power to operate de corative and ornamental fountains, but not to light them. In addition. electricity now may be suppHed to illuminate time and temperature signs and commercial displays, Colli1is Gets New Officer \ • . ' I • • Thursday's Cl oeing Prices ~·w YORK fU~I) -P0Uowl119 .,.. ptlc•• on tl'lll ,.._ YllR Slodl ••CN-11 CIOM • ...,... .. • 1974 s DAILY PllDT ---- , NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Y ear~s High-Lows Appear Every Saturday Stocks Battered In Late Trading NE\V YORK (UPI) -Stock prices slid lower Thursday afler a day of 1ndec1s1\enrss on lhc New York Stock Ex· change Trading \Vas qu1rl The Dow Jo~s 1ndustr1,d ,11 <'ragf' dechned 19 72 points to 835 34 The index had lxl'I\ 111or1: than three pomts ahead 1n the openmg hour, then v.avered unul weakening steadily m UJc..ijnaLtradmg hour Declmes narrowly oatnumbt:red .advances ot the more than I, 723 issues traded Volume at the close totaled .1pprox1mately 12 nulhon shares, compared with Wednesdays Il 240 000 shares The 1narket's O\er all lack of movement 1n the past few sessions tenects traders increasing unwillingness to make fresh ln\:estment decisions in hght of heightened tensions 1n the ?\11dcllc East \Vatergatc unC<'rta1nt1es and the pros· pect of further increases 111 \ar1ous interest rates Stocks on the American Exchange shd in light trading -.;.'I:.._£ Ameriea11 Sales VohaMe Fi11ance - Briefs eReserve OU LOS ANGELES (AP) Reserve 011 and Gas Co reported that earn111gs in the three months ended l\rf arch 3L increased 188 percent over the 1973 first quarter Earn111gs totaled 4 5 8 m11J1on or ':fl cet1ts a share, compa red with $1 59 m1lhon or 12 cents a share, a year earlier • l \ • Frlciay May 17 1974 Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY .... ~~. -. ' • .<:-' •• ,· OverpCH\'Cring or undcrpo'''ering, Those are the l\\'O greatest tendencies of outboard o~\·ners. , Since outboards co1ne as separate unil!'. it is possible to clamp almost anv motor on almost anv boat. In the" past. the tendency ·has been 10 O\'crpov;er 1n hopes of getting greater speed. BUT \VITTI TllE upshot of the enerf:~' crisis. n1;1n.v boat O\\·ners arc 1c1npted to inslall outboard motors that are too smal,I for the· job they are required 10 do. A rnotor of inadequate J>0"'er has to run at top speed to push the boa.I. Out 1he tran¥Jm goes the hoped-for fuel economy. \Vhen is a boal ovcrpo,,·ered or underpo\vcred? Ac- cording to the lo.lercury outboard boating experts. it is often true that each boat is an individual case, so a gen- eral rule-of-thumb \\'ould b(' misleading. The question of ho1~· much power a boat needs ~r can stand isn't one of size alone, streng1 h alone or any other single factor. IUOTOlt \\'EIGllT and thrus! pl~ice cons1Jerablc strcs.-. on the transom. so lr:inson1 strength is in propor11on to rcrommcndcd po1vcr. Striking 11·:ives 1>laCt'S a stress on 1he bott~m. hence boltorn strength isyroportional 10 s1>eed expectations. A hcavilv loadt.>d boat scttlrs in the \l'a!cr 11•hen <1\ rest and neci:ls plenty of power to boost it to 1>laning con- dition on the water's surface. A 11·ider transom and broad- er botto1n go 11•ilh increased motor po)l'er and 11·elghl. LENGTll ALONE has verv little to do 11·ith it. An 18- foot canoe is enlirely differeilt than an 18-foot runabout. Handling qualities at top speed are irnportanL A boat must steer ~·ell and handle safelv in share, turns. ,\ little too much po\ver might not overStrcss a srurdy boat. but might make it go faster than intended and bring on un- expected. undesirable handling problems. By studying the horsepo"·er and load capacity plaH•s affixed lo good boats by their manufacturers. and consult- ing your marine dealer you have a reliable guide as lo ho1v much po11·er to select for your boat. 011 . the Rebound Bocit l11dustr)' Okciy After Energ)' (_:risis The Sou I h c r n California marine industrv. "'hich 1ras hit by the cnci-gy crisis la 1't fall. is making n strong rebound, according · to Ed i\ichol!i. executh·e director of the Southern California '.>.larinc Association. Nichols reported the tcsu\Lc:; of a survey taken among Southland manufacturers. <listributors and r c t a i l e r s indicating that prospects for the remainder of 1974 look goOO among n1ost marine companies. Da\'e Goochnan. "·est!'rn distributor for ~f e r cur y oulboards. sa\'S he c)p]i\·crrd more outboard n1otors in April than in an\· 01hcr mon!h hp's been in buSiness. "It looks \ikt• there \\·ill be a short suorl~· ro · products in the rn o n t h s ahead." CrOOdman said. GOOD\1Al\-ADDED that people are no\\' reacting n1orr positi\·ely IO\\'ard boating and that 11s<u~e has b c e n sutist<intiall~ up 1n the Jasl 30 drn·s f1nul :\lhtt'l'hl. l'nirlitr 1·acht di.-1rihutor in Sou 1 her n C<1lifornia reports he is t>;ick- {lrrl1•ri''d until thl" n1iddl0 nf .Jul• for 111')S\ n1ocll'I~. He Srt\ ~ h '·~•\ ics r sales are in the 36-42 f()<lt boats. JJe also no!ed th .1t tht 28-31-foot ca!c~ory. \\"hit'h \\'3!' most affected by thf• p;;1soline crisis. is no\\' back in normal. i\lesa Boat Firm ,Pla11s To Expa11d Dt'i \\'alron. president or Ericson l'achts. Santa Ana . s<i~·s he expects a recortl year for sailboats. The Ericson plant in the Irvine Tndustri:il Con1plex is being expanded by 43.000 square [eel. iocrcasing capacity by 30 percent. ''11-IE ENERG\' crisis rrally didn't hurt sailbo:1ts.'" said \Vallon . adding th<1t snles arc good across the bo<Jrd in all sizes of craft. despite sizable rises in price b<'causc of the increased n1aterinl costs. 1 Stan 1\liller. Stan 1\liller Sailboats. Long Bench. sa\·s !he used boat market 1s "going era~-.·' "Brokers arc cr~·ing for used boats. T recent\\' had ml'1 hest ~·eekend in sales."' Thi.•I biggest traffic is in the 27-foot range y:hich carrie5 a nricc ta~ of about S15.000. \liller ~aid. He added that hu1·c~s art• no! balking at the price inf'rPases. "Th" \1·alk·1n tr:iffi<' h.'.T~ bren 1·er1· go1"I I f''l n s.--.IJ an1 boat I ra1 get :i !i~1inl:! on .. .\filler s;iid i ' Con.<lnl tl'rrill1t'r l.lo,Hy SU''"V in al•ernoon' wl!l>I cn~noe ot ~cotle•ed dr-llle' 1oniQl\l l and S•turdav morn.no Parh~I liea•·i ino Sa1ur<1av n·qhT NorTnwesl wind~ cf U 10 21 kno!' al '"""' wd n • !o ~ fool ,ea• o!I Pooni Conceo!;Ojl. wa-1 1e"-I lnla·d 1~mp!ra!l1res 1angP from S6 j ta ~}. coa~tol !fm~tdlure• :i4·61. '!ale• "moera•urf ,9 I S1111 •. Hoo11. Tide_ ':':no !>'ah I ll'I om '1 _n1 lo.'! !:.:Opm11 SATVROA'( r·~.~~ 36 "' •m ~'11~• OJ ' ,, a .n> r· rr1 mo~ 3 3 , om ;, -~ low ! • ' " om SUNDAY '··• "•O~ 6•1 ~"'·JI \\rillard Boat \\'oi:ks of Cost.1 F r•l 1~,, 7:;,, am ~ J :\lesa. a major builder of l;ir.ge ~~,.~~ hon ! 1J? 11 m s 9 fiberglaSS boa(S for SCient)fil'. ~e:(>(ld IQ"' Ii\ fl m ! ~ recreational and oommere1nl ·;u,:n ~·11!11 ;.~ :~. ~~~~ j·~ ~·:;::1 purposes. is exp1tnding lts 1 area of activity to othrrl -~;;========:1-1 product lines lhat use the ~ame or si milar technology and pli\.flt facilities. according ' to Bill Tighe. prt>sident As ;i rl'~ull of lht·~e cfforls, \rillarrl Rn:.it s h:.is rccth·NI I a1t\'~Ce no1Jce of ;l\rard of ll purl·hase order for! approx1m;iteh· $497 oon t o build molded fiberglass eurtain 1.rall panels for the nc~' 14 stors Grorge \\". llubbard Hospit;:il at t.fcharry t..fcdical College. Nash1·1He. Tenn . MAY SALE! We need )'OUr Trade! Premium prices paid EXCEUENT SElECTION lmmedial9 Delivery NABERS ~ ~"''~·· ,.. •• Cail 54<>-0100 2900 -Cosla M0$1 \ .......... ,......-.-... JIYC....,.,_..,. ... . •.urn .• ' ....•...•. .,. ....... $1.l.tl ........ """""' ........... , ... '°'""·· .. ' .. ' ............. :JA:ff' """ .................. ; ••• U.1-41 "" • 563 Boal E1itri es Get Ki1dos • • • • 11' eekend Calendar 6 Clubs .lfo~l;Open Day Fete· Six local yilcht clubs will hold Opening Day ceremonies Sulurday under the sponsorship of the Association of Or<lngc County Yacht Clubs. -.... Ya\:ht 'Qui!, JSoulh Shore Sailing Club and Lldo Yacht Club. Isle FOLLOWING 'n!E fonnal ceremonies, yachts of most of the clubs will join in a colorful "dressed ship" pa.cade 3.round the bay. (invitational) Sui>day. Sa n Diego SAN DIEGO YC, SILVERGAT.E YC, SOUTHWESTERN YC O~ening Day, Sunday. SAN DIEGO YACHT COOR -Jessop Trophy race, SDHF, Sunday. OCEANSIDE YACHT CLUB Spring Outside Series. • BOATING classes. Saturday. Sunday . L>ick Jenness. president of the Nrwport Ocean Sailing Associ<itiOfl. sponso r of the :'\e\\'l>Ort 10 ~nsrnada ract'. hns sent a congratulatory lettl.'r to rill 563 skippers in the l'l'Cent Cinco de i\tayo evf'nt 1·11HHlll·nding thcn1 for lhl'ir r:u.:1111-: skill and court<'SY ::ind rl'"JX'C1 to 1he1r .\Icx1c.:1n hosts tn EnSt'nadJ. /\ gw:iuinc Opening Day will be ·celebrated bY Shark Island Yacht Ctub, the Harbor .\rea's (lnl~· cxclusjvcly po\Yerboat cluh. as it 1\1111 be their fir st season oprning crreinonies in !ht• nr11· half-million dollar clubhouse on Bayside Drive. On the competitive side, Balboa Yacht Club w\11 send a fleet of ocean racing yachts on the.. i1untington 20--fathom race on Sunday. The race ls a PHRF, Sunday. Nort h artcl Inland SANTA BARBARA YACHT CLUB -Triangle races. all SA.!".J1'A BARBAllA Suiting club -Spring Sc r i l's , Saturday, Sunday. BECAUSE OF' !ht• S.1!urdav start. putting the flct'1 intO Ensrnarla on Sunday ;iftcrnoon. lhcrr \1·as \'irtually llO !ro11bll" in r:nsenada such as n1:1rrrd !;1st l'<'ar's raCl'. Thl• n1aJor1t~· of :irrt>sts n1adt1 111 EnSt•nada 11 a " Salurdny nft1•rnocn :t n d i.'\'t:n1ng 11·1111' raeing fll'Cl 11:is sll\I :ir ~1~:1. Shortl .1' :1f1t•r the ~·achts 1111shccl. thP non- .l'achting rro11·d had ]{•ft for honit" A do1.cn <lrrests ,1·ere rn~1dc S1111da~· af1ernoon \1·hcn ;1 n11nor di.,1urh;1nc1• drl'l'lo1>t"d :ir !hl' Bahin Hoiel. r<>re headquarters. ~onl' of !hose arrested 1\cre yatl·hsmcn. YACHTSMEN LAUDED NOSA's Dick Jenn ess cTc11s courll•sy an<t rcspert s'no1\·n to 011r ~lcxic;1n hosts displayed lhc true An1rr1cnn ~p1rit." .ll'nnrss said.· BALBOA ,. ACllT C I u b .. ~ccond oldest in lhr area, will l>r celebrating it.s 5 0th ann1\'ersary ;1t the clubhouse, 1611! ltiyside Drive. 1vhich is 1111dt'rgoing a S200.000 repair ;111d rt•n1odeling expected to tnke n1osl of rhe sununer. I li ghlii.;h1 of the d;1y \\'ill be tht• ouHloo1· cerernonies. the <lffitial flag: raising <ind the ya<·ht inspection and open hOUSl'. feature of the 66 Series. --------LEASE A '74 610 WAGON $99.89 mo. Other events on t h e Southern California Yachting Association calendar: Kids Like to tTl•:MmoOi..L Los Angeles-Long Beach ws ANGELES v Ac HT Ask A1Hly CLUB -Stewart Trophy Race ___ . _ _ _ COSTA MESA DATSUN 2145 HAllOl ILYD, C.M. 540.6410 \Whitney Series) Saturdav: llJE CAR OWIJERS Catalina Island race (Lillie rl n .... \Vhifney Series) Saturday: Catalina Island Race (Harris Series. PHRF) Saturday. Santa Monica Bay PALOS VERDES YACHT CLl'B -Sma11 keelboat regatta Saturday. KING HARBOR YACfIT CLUB -Snipe Jnvitational, DOES YOUR CAR IDLE ROUGH? WE START HARD? GIVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN HELP THE CARBURETOR SHOP .. ,·oun RA'.:1\G skills 11·('rc dr1nonstra1ed h\' this. one cf th1• faslrst raceS. 1'he skipper- .Jcnnl'SS sa1tl !he '\QS,\ ho:ird is tons1derin~ s1arting next ) car's race on a 11'l'Ckt•nd either bcforr or afler !ht' Cinco de \\a~·o ..,·eekcnd 10 u1·01d thl' large oon-vachlu~ cro,rds 11·111ch flock to the ll<iJa rrsor! nn 1 he holidr~. B;ihi;1 Corinthian Y a ch t Club. 1601 Bayside Drive will br starting its 16th year with colorful flag-raising and open house. Other clubs observing the annual rites are Vo:.'agers Sa\urd S nd 1..i1 llM-M.110~ tOU• MIU. •t1·111t ay. u ay. I J.._...,,,,._.,.,;·'~'-:::::'~-::·;·:•=:•~·~-;:·=·~-~·~·-::.:w:~::.,_...,,,,. __ 1 CA LI F 0 R N I A YACHT CLU~ -One Design Regatta ._..... ........ .., .. ,. Sale Prices Honored Through Sun., May 19 ngs for nd the house Rool -Top -.... TURBINE VENTILATOR "Get The Equivalent of One Ton COST-FREE Cooling!" • Tokes the heal oul of you1 ottic & is equal lo one Ion of cooling. • lowers the temperolure & saves you many dolla rs in elecfricol bills. REG. 131.95 • Complements you1 present oir conditioning • Jewel bea11n9s for no1sele~s operation ... \ sys rem ... ~okes ii m~re efficient & economical. $ 2 4 9 5 ___ t (_ ____ .---~ _____ Windbracedforslrenglh. , ..-..,,,.,,~~~~~~~--- ' ----,----I -··1-". -~------,-----, '" -~---· .·-. : -_--: ---:+=: = *:::...: ~ ----'--';5--'-~===== -~~ .. ..,l'J ----i:--:-----i . -----. ~ . -:.. __.i-"'""~ -~~-. _j:~.~-PRE ~ ._ c, • " :=~-=~~-2:_;:~~:-~:::1 SUMMER ~ 1. j,"1~"\. :. ~:--=~r~.~~,~::--=:l 'ii:r SAL" (11 \,' -.:::-;:---:=:::;!--'--:....:-r----====---,, c: ~ -'.lo ' -~~~_,.-----::C-=-..:~~, -,,_ ... _ __.:..-._ ___ ,___,. ----' . _:o----.... :.--.-.----_;._ _ .... , . ---....;:...-~~~.-..:--~--ti ( .... -===--G'~~=---==C-----..,• " :.=:-:.. ---J . -. _e--------,1 ,.,_--_:_ --r-"71 ·~ "--:°'.---....-'.'~o·•·J -r-_r-9.--' _,.._I CARRY ADOUT BATH FAUCET • \' l'<'?V< (~,-n TOILET • Moffrnuo w•th I~ 10"11 in bo1h1aam Ii •!Uf~\. --. -:.::::;.~5:s::--;:.;: I . 'I" -· -~~_.-:"--,--:::,::faj FAN PERSONAL I FAN • Re~lo<e Iha! aid laucol • Mode al ~·'•••~l 1h'"" lo 1r~o\I \f!Ohhe\. ---=~--·.:---:.:-:o -I ---:-. ~ ~ .· -------'._::.::;.-";;. ~ ..._ • P"'"l•On molded & bolon1'd pla,!H bind•. •ol•'• quo1d , ~~ ~-....-r::::-----".. ~--::;:I I -·--:-:-:-.---:--=;-· -----:~_;.--~ • l•Q~lwei~h! po1!oblP, U. l. l•~lod & opprO•~d I -~:-----~,--:::---_,:-...--~ -~~.~~c-::::i--C:_--,:=~ ~~r--::1"=.-w'-r:::;,.-,jllllf' ~~ I ~~·~::=~~a::::. ~==::::~:::::- "1072 $1499 :::::::~=--~ • I r 1---··1 J~- 1 r lllG. '15 '' STORAGE CABIN_iTS • Stuody, •~•~olile ... ideol t1l•O 1abo"'t lpOCf! • Smoo!My \ondod pt1f!1tle baord •01y lo •••tmblp ind ie1dy It l1ft1\~ GIANT STORAGE UNIT • 4 !!. i 7 It. 1 17" de1p ... 5 I" thic~ p1•tid•boo1d. • Fo1 goroge 1101og1, ~ardfft su~p!ies, 10011, h.._by. RlG. '1Q,9t s1588 QI q•fO! \Gv•nq1! • All b•al\ •o•,hu!lioo, • 1?' 01ollotonQ Ian. • li11aq~mlmolo1 , mod.,n hp·p•oot ba~~, • Glto"''~9 thromt hn11h. • U l.op~rovld, ,, 1110 RIG. '7.tt '"· $1299 '14 99 $699 ,,, HOME MUSIC CENTER • lulu1iwt Mllnul "Pnmontt••" l1ft!lh wt"'' ma• er stoift • lft1!udr1 1lidin~ ,Jwll !01 ll(tl~ ,laytr. Sjl'Olt fol IUftt• and 1pro•M~, 111• !01 1ostllr1, 1po1e lo1 •ttord1. • 1l"luQho IS11"cletp1 •7 ' 1" Ion~ ... 11ady lo ouemble. llG. '?t.tS REG. '41.tt ENCLOSED CABINET s249s • • f .,I! 5,,, Flah GROUND COVER • Flo11 ti ~11nlt1 ,., • ltltrfYI CO<jlfl. . , ... .,.,~, ..... ~ ... ,,. lltwtt H•1. I l(G. 'S.t• I I \1 • • ' ft Tu:tlt': Wox • CAR WAX • Kith"''' '1-.• Wll"fillhll. • OH111 & .iMMs. "'· 97• 'I.St Zip Wo-" CAR WASH • Aiirh lllfth WI• r.1t1:1Jteri •It'""'"- • ~lillf ... tftY 19 .,,.,, 111;. 77• 17' ( \ I -/ ' ,. 'I I --- ' _,__ , ' '. ; ' • r I • I . Arts/Dining Out - , \ Entertainment May17, 1974 Page2S . Hllltington · Beach Returns to Middle Ages lluntington Beach will turn back • the clock Saturday and take on the airs of the grand and glorious day::; or Elizabethan England. Lords, ladies. country squires and peasants will turn out in costume for the all·day, city-wide festivul in Afurdy )(ark. 1'w.ef h'bndrcd performers will pro\'idc continuous entertainment • .l\1orc than 70 service organizations, sehools. churches, clubs, and city. departments will participatO--"in the fifth annual city festival. ~ '-._ "The event is designed to· show (_·jtizcns the range or services and local resources availBblc through nonprofit organizations -.nd agencies.'' says Mrs. Laurie }fill, coordinator. l+callh scr\'ice information \viii also be available. Screening will be done. for ·blood pressure, vision and lung capacity tests. A pancake breakfast will be !iC'rvcd by the Lions Club, Nnrth from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the park. 'I'ickcts to the all.you-can-eat -affair "·ill be $1.25 for ·aclulls and 75 cents for children under 10. .. EnterlainmC'nl y.·ill take place orl three· stagc.•8. Among those participating \Viii he Orange Coast College's ja:r.7. cnsemhll', dircC'tcd by Dr. Charles lluthcrforcl; Go lden West College's J\tadrigal Singers, dir_cctcd bj' Gerry Schroeder; -Go!Oerl"WCS1t:'ollegc j3zz cn·semble, directed by David Anthony; Marina Jligh School Concert Choir and the Huntington Beach City Band, directed by John ~Jason. 'Other cnt('rtainmcnl \vill be presented by the Edison lligh School ?tladri~al Singers and the Edison Folk }o'esti\•<.il ~linstrcls. ~Iarin:i Jli gh School and G\VC: ~tudC'nls, "·caring medieval costumes. y.·ill mingle in the crowd llrovlding both color ant.I entertainment. Arca craft.smea ;ind artists v.·ill exhibit their y.·ork: iind dcmonstralc· tht•ir Ort. KOCE Channel 50 will film the evenL. "?t1iss Jeri Rapus wi ll appear as Lady Godi~ on her white hofsc. A t.c\vn council court trial 'will t ake place at noon. City fathers and· other notables ''"ill be tried for their crimes by Don JX>nfa city attorney. Jlop1n ;..: to gel l'\·cry one in thr' medieval mood, Larence Olivier's film ''llcnrv \1111" \\'ill be shown at 7 o'clock. tOn1ght in the ~Iurdy park center. • I I Medie val day£ of yo re beckon Hunting ton B each resid ents Mike Forne y and M ark Hill, 11 . above, and Shannon Davis, 4, Elaine Craft and her daugh ter Christina. 10. • l • • I / D1llf "'°' ""°'01 bf llllclll fil l(oe~let" • Students Off er ~story Theatre' Newport Harbor High School students take to the stage to per- form Paul Sills' award-winning "Story Theatre" Wednesday through Saturday, May 22-25, ln the Newport Harbor High School Auditorium, 600 Irvine A'·e .. Newport Beacli. The cast of 16 actors remains on slage throu~hout the performance. The pla~ ts based on fables updated to mclude modem social over· tones. Performances will begill at 8 p.m. • • f \ . • • • • • 26 DAILY PILOT ' Friday, May 17, 1974 : • • .. Susan Conway and Bob Kenson share lead roles in the GWC version of "The Fantasticks." 'The Fantasticks' Updated TilE ORIGlNAL production featured a boy, a girl, their fathers, and a wall. The stage was a wooden platform. the scenery a fragile cardboard moon. Designer Honored For Set -Fashion Island Newport Be.ch I I • STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR l • ' • • , -• • .•do.y, 1'.1;iy ••• i i i4 UAll.Y I'll.VI • 7 Festival Celebrates Ethnic Works I ~ ' ' • r • • I ' I , An 0 r a I lnterpreta.Uon Festival is taking place' at Saddleback College loday and Saturday and some of the nation's "giants" in t\le Cield are participating in the annual event. Highlighting the two-day festival will be lhe appearance of Pulitrer Prize-winning poet Gwendolyn Brooks, stage and screen actor Roscoe Lee Brown and some or the outstanding educators from top universities across the country. Among the 35 univer.sities and colleges participating are the University of Arizona. Northwestern University. the University of \Vashington . USC. Arizona State. North Texas State University, United Stateslnternational University, Southwest Missouri St at c University. Northwest State University of Ariwna. New l\.1exico School for Performing Arts, Whit<icr College. seven CaJ S t a I e Universities and· 14 California community colleges. The field totals over 35 institutions. "THE REASON people come here is we try to engage the giants in the field ," said Saddleback's Dr. Doy I e r-.IcKiMey, chainnan of the Division of Fine Arts and director of the fes tival. ~lcKinncy car n·e d his doctorate at Northwestern. considered the nation 's center for oral interpretation, and is himself respected as one of the country 's experts in the field . "Oral interpretation is one of the oldest disciplines and is now one of the fastesl growing.'' ~tcKinney explained. •·\Ve are currently experiencing a revival of oral interpretation .. and 1 remendous things are being done." 'fhe rcstival is dedicated to lvto of the country's outstanding educa)ors in the rield. Alethea Smith r-.tattingly of the Unive rsity of Arizona, and Charlotte I. Lee of Northwestern University. who arc both retiring this year. Dr. Mattingly and Dr. Lee \viii serve as critics during the fe sti val , along with Dr. Robert Breen of Northwestern. D~. l.A'slie Coger of Southwest !\'lissouri Stale. Or. \\'iHiam t\lcCoard of USC. Dr. Tt:'d D. Colson of North Texas State University. Dr. James Carlsen of the Univ er s it y of \\las hington , Di'. Alex Flett of Cal State University, San Francisco, and Dr. Virginia Pul itzer Prize-w inning • poeJ Gwendolyn Brooks ___ _ is pa rticipating in fest ival. at Saddleback College . Floyd of Arizona. "Thesc are the biggest names in the bus i n es s, '• s1niled t\\cKinney, look ing over the list. Tll ERE ts NO competition involved in the f es t i v a I . Participating colleges a n d universities will ~rform and have their work critiqued. Visiting students will have an opportunity to Vit;_W t h e readings of othe r students along \i:ith several special events during the two days. ~1rs. Brooks \\'ill read from her o>nn \.\'Ork at 1:15 p.m in 1 the college's tcle\'ision studio.I Her re ading and the ol ht'ri .. specii'll e\'ents" during llie 1 festival \.\'ill be filmed, and th2 tapes will be made availabt~ to participating colleg('s and to lOcal stud ent s. Other events arc a faculty reading h~1r al 2:45 p.ni. Friday, n ~t\flders Th eatre for I Children by Cal !:i I H I c University. Son l)icgo. at 9:30 \ ~Ln1. Saturday. "Sonic of th c1 \\'h vs and 1-IO\\'S for Chamber1 Tht!a tre" by the founder 0£1 charnber theatre. Dr. Breen at 1 10:45 a.Ill. Saturday and selected performances and ' reading by Dr. t\tattingly at 1 11 :45 a.n1. Satu rda y. F ou1~ 011e11ii1gs Alo11g Ora11ge Coast Costa Mesa Ari Lea<Jue ART GALLERY 206 W. Wilson Costa Mesa Paintings and crafts by local artist s Say you 'rr a dr;1n1:1 CTlllC' for a local 111'\\!ip;i1>1:r 1\·1 th a doz£•n or so pl:iyhousl's on your bt'al fou r or >n'hich are oprrung 1hrir Ill'\\' productions nrxt \\'C't'k. And say ~·ou're al5o !hr director of a con1mun1t~· thratcr group and ~.,,u·rl' n)1d11a y tnto rehearsal<> for ~our llt'Xt sho1v. \\'hlrh opens in thrl'C "'eeks. Th e last thing you 'd br doing- "·ould be tak ing off on \·;ic.1tion. nght'.' \\\•11. norn1ally that's !hr la st thin!-: your f r l en d 1 y n l' 1 g h ho r h o o d theatrr colun1n1st \\ou!d be doing too . but ;is 1t happen <:. yours truly is wing~ hr s \\'ay to i\11a1ni and thr Caribbean as you read th is. You 'll srr a review of Cl 1>reViC\\' performance o[ the Hun!ington Beach Playhouse 's ''1'1urd Best Sporl" in thi s space. next week. but to Orange Coast College. the San Clemente Community Theater, the Cosla t\1csa C i v i c Play house and the Fountain \'alley Community Theater - all opening next 1veek -we can say only, "Sorry about thal. '' · \Vhat \\'C can do. in this last column before so a r i n g eastward for· a week away from it all. is direct file playgoer's attention to next wee k's quartet of openings along the coast. They 're listed in order of their appearance. ORANGE COAST College starts the big week rolling on Wednesday wit h a revival of Ibaen's drama "A Doll's House." Like all OCC shows, even the big musicals, i~ runs- "four nights only, Wed~sday through Saturday. • Student director Rebecca Forstadt af Newport Beach is staging the play, w h I ch features Monica Macl.ean as Nora, Ibsen's womeo1s lib .heroine of 11 century ago. Les McDonough plays her chauvinistic husband. Torva\d. rh c theater. JB~q!l r,u. E<ildy Circ!e. Four.ta!n \'a !lry. = Intermission Tom Titus OS'E 01;-1'11E n1ost Uhll~Uol plays of the ~··asc111 ~hould• be ''l1.T.B.U." ::it the Costa r..1esa Ch·ic l'layhous~1 opening Sat- urday for 1hree \\·eekcnds. Pali Tambellini is direciing the slapstick comedy. \\•hich rounds out the ninth season of the Costa i\tesa group an;:I Pati's 34th directorial cf~t out of 47 Civic Playhouse pro· duc t ions. OPENING ON Thursdav :it the San Clemf!nlc Co1nn1U11i1v Theater \\'ill be a r ca ·i mouthful. title\':ise -"The Suddt•n and Acc1dfotal Ht'· education of 1-lorsc Johnson." It's an Orange County premiere and focuses on OicJ.; 1\ndersen. a Yet cran director n1aking a rare st 3 g e :.ippearancc, in the title role. ~fary l\1odiano and David Rebal top the suppor1ing player list, V>'ilh Bcvi Burrows. r.tich:icl ~1cr-.Jullt•n, J:'.ri r Suitter and J essica Dean completing the San Clemente cast. The comedy is being rlirected by ltazcl Burrows. who played the mother in the playhouse 's •·Butterflies Arc Free" last scasOn . Performances oi •' 11 o r s c Johnson" v.·ill be givf'n Thurs· d,iy s lhrough Sa•u~d:iy~ for thr"(' 11l'<'kends at 0:30 in tl~c Cabr11lo Pla}housc. 21'12 A1·c· n1da l'ahrillo. S;ln Clernrn1e. Hl'St·rv;it1ons 4~2-fl·Hi~. TllE FOL'\,TAl:'\i \/a lle y Co1nn1uruty ·rtif'ater is 1.r1n,;•r- ily kid stuff. bul e:Jch year the group put5 'lll one sh'J',\' \\1th gro11"nups in th .? co st. This year it's "Thf' PeacocJ.i Season.'' opening F'riday fur 1hr1•c 11'l'ekcnds unrl··r the di· rrcti on of Jay Clink?in. Billed as a '·farce for4hr v.•hole fam ily.'' the comedy m y s t err stars l\largaret l3oyer, Joseph Dam rot h , Svlvia Lcr anO Ken Smolka i11 the principal roles. Stanley \\'lasirk .. \nri:lbc!lc Quigley and Ron r.loeUrr headline the cast in the storv of an organiza!inn :lctlicated to exterminating all the un· pl<'asant people of the 1uryr\d lhence the title . Cnh c1!tJ1y :.I) He Unpleasant\. l'crformances or "l '· T.B. lJ." \l"iil ·~e c;i1·rr. Fridays ~·T'O Saturcln~'s 11fter the ont'nin" n•nht thron.~h .June 3 v.i!h 1011 8·30 rurtain ;it lh ! Ccm'T'uni1•1 Cf!riter auditorium. on t~r \\'CS! E'<lle Of the 0T"<'l1"'!(' Cou ntv Fair~rounds. R4"c;erva- tio')s · \veeJ,;days at 556-5'.100 "The Peacock Se;:i~Qn'' \\'ill play at 8 p.m. fr1da.v~ and Saturdays lh,.ough .June 8 at -------------------1 fro1n 8 to ~- • SiDDtEBACJC-'CllNrCS , · · · '11EDICA~""'C0NT/IOL · · '"r' OUI 11 .... , ... .:.;-~ ..... l,.Mf. Nl'W CLINK • • I ---+- lu.tl .... ""- 'hstllill• ... ................. -HEWPORT cos'fA MESA 1619 ~ .... ,.,. ..... l46-16JJ ... ANAHEIM 1664 w. .......... 771o414l S!-HTA AHA TUSTIN t1922 'f .......... 1474329 LA HAIR.A 750 W. LAI...,_ 11K 121116t1·17tl 1714117•9347 A smart~Of'whiteleather,ling.back, open tM, demi-plil tform, hi-heel dre5' shoe ••• .-rid w cxwnfy too. come-see ! E:xhibitinq in May: 019a Stearn ' Haney Downing Cec Cobum Clo1HI 111 oil end wci+ercolor. 8et.1lah Treadway Earlene Pochafko Wendy Dorchester H~: 1·5, MOl'tday·Fridoy "'-w: 541-1167 I ' SA TURD!-Y. MAY 11, 1:00 P .M. LAGUNA SU.CH HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM FLAMENCO - GUITARIST GINO D'AURI GENERAL ADMISSION $3.75 . 1Jdlel5 ot Th• Gu~cr 5lloppe I 027 N. Coast Highway, L•9"1'<i a .. ch, or •f fh.11.d0«. For1w+Mr infomiotfoncql 497.211 O TRANSCENDENT AL MEDITATION os taught by MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI Tra n seen d p nt,d t\.l<' d ti ,1ltr'I1 develops thL' 1...io.1c1ty 101 1. •! en1oymPnt o r Ide It 1:: prt1c1+Cf'{l " !ew m1nuti··-, m o rntrHI .in 1 evening. Dunno 1n 1<; llnl(! 111 .. body e~prir11·n~1·,, a pro10 l1ll<l deep Sldll" o! ,. • .,1 while !he f")ir1.1 rema1n1ng <hVo.11\f' e.1.pu11ds ro i.111 ::\\varen~,...,~ Thi ~ 1e4hn1q11·· improve·. Iii•' c 1,ir1ty o l 111•· Hl1!1~11l<J rJ!!)t,•s.; whilf! d•.,..,O l\11 'I tJccumulatt.•d lo·n~1011 and to1t 1q u• ~ \ •• .. \ • IHTRODU CTORY LECTURES HUMTl1'1GTOH BEA.CH Ci•1t Cttrirr NEWPORT BEA.CH EMii Club Rm. 306 2000 Moin SI. T1i1e1.,Moy21. • 8 P.M. SI 5 Yi. lolboo 81¥d. COST A. MESA Gle11dole ttcierol So•il'MJ' & loon Th1i1r\.., Moy 23 , Wed:, Moy 22 8 P.M. a l".M • . Presented by ltHERN ATIQNAl MEDITATION SOCIETY A No n·prol11 Educar1on..il O rg.1n1/ tuu n -0<1 :_> .. 1141 PUBLIC NOT ICE l'UBLIC NOT lt:t: FICTITIOUS llUSHIE SS NAME STATEMENT SLP·141fl SUPEIUOttl COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR fn(• IQll0,.,1ng ~r>0'1 •'> oo.n<J bu,.r: ~ THE COUNTY OF O~IHlCE "' No. 1!·19949 P>OAll•S INSULATION CO ,p/,N'(. NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION 1~19 /tonrc.,o.a A>~ C<>'I~ jl,,(, ... FOR PROBATE OF WILL ANO FOR C.~l<lornoa 91617 LETTERS TESTAMENTARY RD<lrc v Dale llt1<1,n1, 10"1! Hun•~ . E•iatc ot L...OUIS RQSi;o,N, Deceg,,ed. _ Huntlnq1on 6eJcn. {.dltforn''' 91~•~ NOTICE IS HEREBY CIVE'N l~d1 1"Tn,,-~~{fllt'U ,, (On!lu<IC~ bY ,,., BETH R lv'.ESNICK ~.a• tile:! nerein ·•i •ntll,.du~I petlhon tor Proca•e ot Woll and lnr Roonev OJll' flddm' ;i,~~ncc o! Le!ler• T.i,1;,rr•enMrv to tioe T~i• •tMenit·M wa1 i'led w1tn "'" pe1i!loner, reference 10 w~ocn ;, made'"' Cnuntv Cler~ ot Or~nqe Lou•i•v on M"r turther p1rticular• and 1n~1 •he tim• an11 • 1~. \91•. plJce of r.ea.,n9 111e 5ame ha• bl'en 'etl FJlt12 tor June •· 197• at •·'.;0 -1111 , on ·~e• Put>l,.n<'d Or11•"1r Cn~>t D~·IV p ,1, • c.ut!room of Depa•lment No. J ot 'd•U M~v 18. 11. ~n'1 June 1, 1. 191.1 1190,. tour1. 111 100 C1voc Center . t."v! We>!. inl 1~e <.II• pf Santa Ana. c~11torr\O~. Dated Ma~ u , 191• PUBLIC NOTICE WILLIAM E. St JOHN. (PUnty Cieri.. POl.STON SCHWARTZ & HA.".\•LTON PUBLIC HEAlllNGS WILL BE HELO 6Y '31e WU•hlre Bl~d. I TtiE COSTA NESA PLANNING L,; An'}t1e•, Caillorni~ 90(J.(I COMMISSION AT THE CITY HALL. 11 !11J) '51.(17Sl F.61R OlllVE. COSTA ME I A A11~'nev lo.: P•lilioner CALIFOllNtA, AT ,,JO p M .• O" J.\ PuOl15he<1 Or~nge Cna;t OG ly f'<lct SOON AS POSSIBLE THEllEAFTER Mo1 l7,l~.l•!91• 1.'oli •: ON TUESOA¥, MAY H, !ti• llEGAROING THE F 0 l. L 0 WIN {, Al"PLIC ATIONS: PUBLIC l\'OTICE I PUBLIC HEAlll NG BY THE: (O~TI\ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS -lloESA PLANNING COMMISSION !r• NAME STATEMENT C.ON51DEll THE AODPTION OF A T~e tollo,,.1ng peroa.i• are noing R ESOL UTION FOii THE 5PE<.•F!· buione•• as· PLAN FOii THE EXTENSION OF WE~I SMITH .AND TAY LOll , 181 Pr•nce\on 1/TH STREET BETWEEN SUPER ID~ 011\'1,, Cosfa Mt~a. ca1;1orn;11 910?0 AVENUE AND NEWPORT BOULEVAllO. Cilrl Smil!I, 1111 Pronceton Orive. (olld lFOR WHICH THE (ITV OF (OST\ l~esa C.al'lorni& 92626 MESA HAS CllANTED A NEGAT IVt ' ' r OECLARATION STAT ING IHl John "tavlor.r2!SI p lnce1on o .. ve, PROPOSEO PROJECT WILL NOi (o•ta Mesa. c.a i!orn" ,<n620 ICREATE ANY SIGNI FICA NT ADVERS<:. Till~ t>u•lness •s conduc :d CY a <Jeroer<,11 £~iVIRONME NTAL lf\l>PACTS par1n~rsnlp. · C~rl Smit~ 1 GE NERAL PLAN AMENDMENT !\I ''• Thi• slaiemenl was !iled wl1n 11w CP·l•--OS. FOR COSTA MESA PLANNlr<!', Coontv Clerk o! Orange Co~n!Y on MaylCOMMISSION, II FAlll DlllVC. C0~1~ l~. 1974 MESA, CALIFORNIA, 10 C0 tl51Vl Fll9\1 PR,OPOSED AM ENDMENT TO Tt'i PutiHsned Orange Coast Dady p1101.IGE;>,ERAL PLAN "~ THE. ARI. 1 May 17. ?4. 3\, ""d June 7, !91J lH?-74IBOUNDEO ON THE Ell.ST av _ __ WHITTIER AVENUE ON Tt1E NOii!•< f'UliLIC NOTICE BY THE OCEAN VIEW PARK HOME , '-------------!TRACT 11143) A"-0 ON TH[ v1esr AN<) 1-SOUTHWEST EIY THE CITY L!Mll SLP•741SI THE PllOPOSEO AMENOMENT l'IOUL 1 SUPERIOR COUllT OF THE CH ANGE THE LAN 0 US !. STATE OF CAL IFORNIA FOR DESIGNATION FROM LOW DENSll , THE c,,.ou~ti!.~. o:.,,°u~ANGE RE SIDENTIAL TO lv'ED•UM OENSIT r AMENDEO ORDER. TO SHOW CAUS" RE S I DI: N T~ AL AND L I G H f -INDUSTRIAL 1n 11-.e M11!1er or TIMOTHY JAMES, ] Rl:ZONE PlTlllON NO R-7,7l. GOTTFlllED ~l•o known ~· TONY IFOR LILLIAN W BUTLER 1 ANT HONY SIN For cnang~ pl Name ElllAEMAll WAY NEWPORT Br~t·/ \'IHEREA.S tne Pe•1t•or1er. a male ove•'._;..LIF FOR P[~'"''S IO 'I TO RL lfl~:, !he .age pt .•-nty-one. ~a• Iii"" ""!PROPERTY A~ DESCR16EO IN Ill a~pl1<dt.cn wo1h tne Cler-ot 1M•S Cou•llPETITIO .... AN D LOCATED AT '"• !or dn Otde• 'hang•n'< n1s nan1'1! from ANAHEIM A\IE"IUE co TA All:~' TIMOTHY JAMES GOTTFRIED 10 TONY {.ALIFOllNIA FRO"" •R1 Tri Rl ,, ANTHONY SI N. I 4 REZONE PETITION NO . II 1~ 7, . IT IS O~CERED THAT :•11 P~r\O~~ FOR ECKER POPE, 7SA9 WA 0 Y LAN[. m1er1s1e<1 •n !h~ above enT1tled a<llon CORONA DEL MAR CALIFOll"llA FOfi appear beto'e !h1~ (our! a! 10:00 AM. onl ' ' 1he 11 d~Y ol June. 191•. tn Oepar1men1 J PEllMISS!ON TD llEZONE PROPERTY ot the Supedcr Court of the SIJ!e o!IAS DESCRIBED IN THE PETIT!O~l (alltornia, and •how cau•e. 1! ~ny , wh~ :N~ LOCAT~O APPROJ!IMATELV '• lh~ dpplicallon tor ch~nqe ol name •ht>ul<ll C ES EAS SIOE OF BRI STOL be granTe~ STREET, JUST SOUTH OF RAN OOLPo.l IT IS FUllTHER OllDERED THAT A STREET SUBDl\llSION , FROM ~II t, conr or 111 .. oroer 10 snow c~use be lML. published ln 1he Daily Piiot 11 newso~oer ! ZONE E'XCEPTIQN PERMIT NO. ' ZE·l•·l2. FOR WILLIAfJI C RING 7~•1 put>hi;hed lrt tt,e CoUn!Y ot Orange, S!dtelE COAST HICHWAV, CORONA' D[I ot Ca,,!ornia. once. • "'ee~ •or 1~ur 1 MAR. CALIFORNIA. FDR PERMISSIO'• SUC[t••lve wee~s. prtor lo lhe oate •el I0•110 ALLOW Wfdl:l:HOUSE STOll:AGL ('• hea«~Q the ~policanon, LA N 0 SC A PE ANO '"'L0'"· Da•ed April 30. 191• E " FRANK OOMENICHINI .V\AINT NANCE SUPPLIES IN 11"1 ·"I' , ZONE. LOCAll:D AT Jl98·A AlllPO~ I IN PROJpd:~ O'I the Supero~r (Curl OlllVE. COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA TIMOTNY JAMES GOTTFRIED 6 PUBLIC HEAll:!NG FOii l 41 Publlt Altiln Office COSTA MESA PLANNING (0'>11.ll~~F)·'; MCAS, El Toro, Sillli An•, IT 0 0 IS CU SS TH [ D '1 A J T C•litornil fl70T Ef>I VIRONMENTAL IMPflCT REPOlil ' Publisnea Orange Coast Oaily Pilot FOR lHE WHITllEll AV£ N '' 1 M•V J, 11), 17. 2ii. \97• H41·14 GENERAL PLAN AMENDMENT (GP /1 _ _ _ OSI FOR THE GE"IEllAL Alll:A WLS1 PUBLIC NOTICE IO F WHITllER AVENUE ~OVfH C.J 19TH 51', AND EAST OF THE COSlr. ----!.\CSA CITY LIMITS NOTICE OF PUllLIC HEARING TO BE 1 PUBLIC H[,\RlNG FOii co~Tt.. HELO IY THE ORAN GE COUNTY MESA. PLANNING COMMISSION 11 PLANNING C 0 MM I~ 5 I 0 N ON FAIR DRIVE, COSTA M I; SA PROPOSED AMENOMENTS TO THEI CALIFOllNIA, RECAR 0 I NG A ORANGE C 0 U N T 'f SUBOIVtSION I ORDINANCE CONCEllNING T HE COOE 1coNTINUATjON OR AEIATEMENT 'OF Pur1u11n! IO the Plann;nll and Z""ing NON·C.ONFORMI NG USES LiiW, OS oml!'f(df'd. and order ot 1~e1 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ON Or1n11e County Pt11nnln11 Commlss\"", THE ABOVE A p p LI CAT IO N ::. !>01lce 11 herelly given l,h11! II ou~l«\TLLEPHONE 55'6·1?45 Oil: (ALL AT TH~ hel!rl!>Q wltl be ne\d bY said Comm1S.,on OFF!CE OF THE p LANN IN '· °" a propoU!i 1rMndmen1 !O lhe Orf'e.911 DEPARTMENl, ROOM' 100. 71 FAIR CPUnl¥ Sutld•vl1lor\ C<><;it, Ill amended, DRIVE, COST MESA, CALIFORNIA. O.~nge Ccuntv. Call!orn•a. COS TA MESA Said llrMndmeOI I• dtsl9na1P<I EXHIBIT PLANNING COMMISSION No. lJ..14 and pro~e• chal'IQ05 lo vari"u' H. J, WOOO. CHAIRMAN wct!on1 of 1hll Oronge Couotv ~ul>dlvlslon WIL LIAM L DUNN Codi' In order to; S(C•E<A•C A"O EC f"rou!dt "GradlnQ Sta!>Cl&rds" !o guide ' " DIR TOR design al hillside sutldi'<'islons and Publi•t•l'd Oran11e Coast Daily Pd t. r1q..,lr1 1uti1t11n!iol prellml"&ry gradl!'IQ May 11. l97• 179'..1·74 lnlorm1!1on !o t>e subml!I~ wl!n !he --- 1.nllll'<'tl map. . PUBLIC NOTICE lnl!l&ltd by: Orange C.wn!y Pl11nn.ng ------------ Commt1slot1 SUPEIUOll COURT OF CAl.IFORHIA. COUMTY OF ORANGE Mo. A"'2S OllOEll TO SHOW CAUSE FOR Said 111.>bllc heflrlng on tlW atiove ~GPOMCI amendml!'f(t wlll be t-.elO 11 l :)3 P.M .. (/If II l'IOll lherH!let' as possllllt. (Ill """"""/.• ~y 2', 197~. lo 11>1 Marlr>Q ll'IO !TIMI "'1 room ot llW Orengt COUl'!tv CHANOE OF NAMli Pl•!'ll'lfng Comm13slon. En 11 1 11 t er Ing In !ht Mat11r ol the Aophc11tons o• llulldlng. oll)(I Civic Cenlfr Orl..e West. JAMES <FRANCIS 8ROWN. Jll, 1nd Room"'· S!rnl& An&. Califorola, 11 whlth FRANCES VEllONICA BROWN !or lime and QIK• en persont .i1to11r 11vor!nt1 Crwin119 ot N•mt. t/lf ~Ing w ld prOPCt>ell ame..Omt.111 TIW &pPllt&llonl or JAMES Flli\NC'S '1'1111 bl 1111rd. If 11 "tQUfllP<I tn1t 11,.., llR:DWN, JR, and FRANCES VEllON1CA ·wr111en fflpons.I ro 11\11 po,1tilit nollco bl llROWN. I« cntn(ltt ol n~1. ri...t"<.i womltted lo !ht Plannk°'g Commission lllln fil«I In CPUrl. and It "°"'lrt"9 trom prior lo 'IM Miring 0.1•. <alO 1~pl1c~HCH'I tlwll JAMES FRANCIS For lur~ Clflt&lll '"'irdlllll said 8ROWlf. JR hil llled '" IPJlllCllloll ,...,, PrOPOHd 11Tllfldmtn1s, •II lnMrff!ed hll 1111mt ~e c!l&-nllf(I to JAMES persons are ln'<'lled to c411 •I !!II oflitt ot FORSYTHE BilllltlNGTOH l l'IO !!tat !hi Ofantt'C1111nly Pl11111lng Commlulon, FllANCES VEllDN!CA BROWN lwl1 flit 1 Eng!nttrlng Bulldlng, -00 ct .. k ClflltT •P'PllttllQ!I !NI lie!' ,,. .... be tll&~ lo Drlw Wfll, lloom lSl, S1nt1 Ana. FRANCES VERONICA 8ARIUNGfON. C•\llornl•, WMf'e talel p r 0 p G •• d Now. IMl'lfort. II ll herftw ordered l rld amet0rntr1! I• on Ille 11'1d avallabit' for dlrec:lea, thll •II 09!'~1 l11ttrl'lled !n putlllt lnlPftllon, tald m1t1tr 00 1~1r l!orlor• thl1 Court In Thl1 l)fojtcl 1111 bttn looJnd to h1w '"' Departmll'll S on TM lllh day ot June, t1111lflcant ..,...,.. 1~1 on lhl lt1A, at 10;00 o'ctotk A.M . ot N ld-ci.y kl l!Wll'OM'ltl'J lflO 1'111 blll'I QT&lltlcl & sfloW CIUMI W!l't' lhl "1)9ilCl11-for lltffllw c1ec:1ar1tlon. A eopy ot the cNntt of 111tml'I tl'lo\lld llOI bl 9r1n1tM1 1'1111&11W d1d1r111on win bl Of! 1!11 In ,,. II 11 •turllltr oroertd '""i' a COP'!' at !his oftkt: ol 11>1 CWl'llY Clwlb a t 115 Notll1 Onl.-' bl pllbllihld 111 IM Oi'&ngt COfo11 S'tCtfl'IOft St,,...,-k!lll M a, C&lliornl .. Dal~' ll'llOt/ I 1111""~ at qtflt•ll Rom1 iOI, uni!\ s:OO P.M .. Friday, Ma• ttrcv"lat!Ofti print.,. In said county; 11 le111 , .. ltt• • Oflel "'" ... .,, ,.. kM' lutU.91'ft ..... MY litrton m9" .-.r tt'lt lllldlnt of 1 Ol'lor It lht MY II, u ld ht.llrilig. "'"""* dKllrallon ~ ttllng "' .-,"4 el O.tld IN• May t, lt14, ""' tlll'lt orior to tt1t dtll tpttl*td F'lANIC OOMCNICHINI 1tiovt, TN C111111ty Clfflt, '#Ill ~ 111 ,........., JllOOI of ..id &pptal torm, sw,et1or C--1 Dol'ft! Mo0r1, Mncl~I l"ltllfttf' JAHl•S PUWOI •1tOWM. Jtt. •rid $Kr.11f"t' ~ "" ... , ........ om.. .... -Ofl:.-HOl' COUNTY ttUMHIMO ......-. .. aett. CliMw* .... t;OllW,IUION M '°""'"' ,.,._. M•tlW °'"* CMll Dtft't' PPol. II'~ Or"'9t c.it hll't Jl'tllol. ~ 11, H1A 1711.14 Mrf 3, 11). 17~ M, lfM . 1Ja.l4 ' j'. • \ . . ' . .. . . . . ·- 28 DAILY PILOT Fridil)', May 17, 1974 Blackbeard's for Buccaneers Restaurant Combines Pirate 's Lair," English Inn ' Ghosts, real or imagined. aren't likely to turn up as one's luncheon companions these days. Uut don 'l rule out the poss\ bility. llad Robert Louis StcvC'nson him: ~cir . been dining at a new Newport B<·ach rcst<iurant one day lasl weC'k.· he probably would have arknowlcdg('d ~it least a flcctin~ presence of the spirits oi Jim llawkins, Long John Sil,·er, l~c n (funn, Dr. Li\'CSl'\'. Bill Do nes and Blind Pew. - ··Treasure Is land" caml' lo mind 1 ('peatcdly during the midday rt•pn~t that '6C'r\·ed as an introdul'tion tu onl' of Orange County's fli.l sh.' Ill'\\" · ·1 heme" 'restaurants-BluckbL':1 rd ·:-. nn ~lartirigalc \\'uy, just 11ff !\lar.-\r 1hur lil\'d. and near the airport. BL ACKll EAR D'S is mc:lnl lo (·re<.itc an atmosphere invoking lhc "\\'ClSh_buekJing days o( buccaneers r;1\•ag1ng ships on the ('aribbt'an. It :-.uceeeds h<.indsonicly in that regard hut anot her dimen s ion :-.l'c ms t•qually evident ~that nf u r:.in1bhng: and rustic old English inn . . It's probably this con1bination, in laet, th.at brint.;s Slcvcnson·s classic.: so readily to mind. l\li.x the Joea1Lt1 es of England and the Spanish. i\lain . and you c;.isil.v come u1> \\'ilh a sci· ting reminiscent of the book's Ari· miral Benbow Inn. To grasp the full extent or Black· lH.•ard's decorative and construet1on ' features one needs a guided tour b.v ;i pract icing architect :u1d designer. Even then it would bl' in1possihlc to :1bsorb all the points of interest on .1ust one vi sit. llenry fl.1organ, $5.95 ; fi let mignon, P.1ilady, $6.25; stuffed Icelandic flounder. $4.95. Out 'n About Norman Stanley And there's a house specialt y Blackbea_rd's Caribbean porkchop: SS.SO. \\"h1ch marks a great depar- ture from the ordinary. Jt consists of a ful l pound chop taken from the heart of the Join, marina-IC'd and Jircplac·e thnt in\'ilcs ~·ou to tarry 1n- d('f1111IC'ly. Hlal·kb<':ird's luncheon n1cnu of· l"t•r.-. ~1 ~onictlung -for·c\·t.·r~ body sclcc· t1on uf s:.i nd\\"ll'hes. salads and hot t.•ntrc:cs. An\l for light e<.1tl•rs lhl'rt' 's a sin1plc soup and salad tombo, SI.95. Soup or salad beeomes a less sim- ple m;itter. ho\\'C\'CJ', \\·hen it conics to thoosing bet \\"l"('ll the I \\"O as an t•n lrcc accomp:1nimc.nt . Or .. for :i n additional ch:.irg<' of 60 cenls, \\'ith your sa nd"'ith st·lcction . ~laking: up your n1ind 1s d1ff1eull because you have to settle for one of l\\"O outstanding poss1l1iltlies ;1 kl'lll<' uf the g rC';.it house st;.indby, bluck bC':in :-.o up, or the othC'r rt•so urce of C'qual reliability, a tri11 to the Bounty salad bar. FortunatC'lv \\L' manage(] to sample hnth so 11 ··s suggested you contrive some \\'<.1Y tu do a bit of trading off too. lF YOU l'l\01-~RT.<\KJ·; lhC' long: journey dO\\'ll the 1n:1l-.l'·il·,\Ot1r~t·lf salad bar, you'll ha\c 10 <·oneludl' that thcrc·s nu otht•r :1round 10 l·qu:il it in s ize and scope. St(1pping :it ll·n or 12 ingredient :.. still lt":L\l'S aboul that m;.1ny Jllol"l" tn i.:o 111 thl· full r:1ngc of poss1hilit1l's. ' :-;hrl.'ddt'd frf'.s h horseradis h and ratf'd tnpart priasC' for being juic). ll'lldcr and !'i:t\'urv .. 1\ gc1\(']'0US tluantily Of J-'rencJf brc:id and buttcr \Va s still anolht'r \\·elcoml' pro\"1sion. Served piping hot. thc bread also v.·on fa\'or for its ehC\\"Y <.'l'llSt . Tll E SECOr\D F:NTRE1': selection \1·us eggs B:1 rhados, $2.65. Served \I Ith sour dough toast, in this ni(ty l'OHCOl'\ 1011 the t•ggs are blended \\'ith g round beef, 3p1naeh and onions. <Hher l'hoiecs of hol cntrcC's arc primt• rih holll'S, harbccu<'cl. S2.75; hroi h'cl <"hoppect sirloin stC'<.1k . S2.85 ; :-.1rluin 1cold1 ;ind i.:ruyerl' t•hc<'St'. S2.95; fluffy 01nell't (han1. chceSL' and frvsh saulel'd mushroom s) . S'.!.75: s:1nd·d:ihs. $2.!lS. Sand"·ich st'lC'Clions inc lude roast barbCC'lll' pork. Sl .95: the !'>mug~ll·r <sliced ha1n ~ turkey and mushrooms on grilled sour dough topped with suprc1ne sauce and n1elted cheddar t'hl·t•spL $2 .SO; barbccue beef ;n1tl l'ht•cld:ir. $~.15; han1hurgl.'r ('arih hl':in (toppl'd \1 ith lf.;r1yaki saul"l". frt·-.h . ..;;1\lll"ed p1n t·:q>p!t'. on a n qn1un rnl1 1. S'.!.:io: \"l•11· \'11rk stto;1k . $3 ;:. • baked sl<?wly until tender and juicy, glazed \Vllh a S'l''eet and sour sauce i.:arnished v•ith fresh pineapple and banaua, and simmered in butlered rum. BLAC KBEARD'S is lh<' ne\VCSl spot operating under the banner of the .s avvy team of restaurateur b.ro~her.s. John ~ind Chris Skoby. 1 heir h1 ghly -re ~arded places in Los Ang<'les County arc Sir i\lichael's and the Queens Arms. . Located ut 4250 l\l :irtinga le Way, JUSl off l\l<JcArthur Ulvd. and close by Orange County 1\irport Dlack- beard's is open seven dars' a \\"eC'k for lunch und dinner. On Sunday the n1idday meal t;.ikes the for m or bru~l. ser\·etl from u special menu bct\ve\:n 10 a .m. ;ind J p.m .\f',t ·~·.,.;, !\lodl'rn jazz is taking the mlisical spotlight at South Laguna·s No Exit Cafe, 31676 Pacific Coa st H\vy., J during a n engagement of Corridors. 1'he group p lays original jatx ar- rangements \Vcdncsday, Th ursday and Saturday nights from 9:30 p.m. to l :JOa .m. 1'he four-man group is led by Belgian-born Louis l\l ;1cCo n ne ll ~~oprann s ax flut el. 'rho. after spcn· din,g hi~ rluldhootl in EurOPl'. studicd T iii·: S l·:.\('0'.\llJl·:u . s:t ~J. 1-. .1 and \\Ofkl'd in thr Eastern and !\lid· sh<·llfish s;d;1d of 10-.~l"d J.;L"L'L"ll ='. l·r;il1 \\"l'Sl<·rn l "nitt'(t .Stall's. lit• last ap· 1nt·a\. ~hrin1p . h:tl'•Jn oin~t lurl-.L·:-pt·art•il in Southern California leadinl! "ith mu~t;ird dr1·:-. ..... 1ng. 1\r1d lhL'l"l"" his i.:roup. tht• J•'1 fth J{oon1, at thl· ~1 fruit s:dad. S~ 1:1. tons1:-.ti ng uf .1 Lii::hthouse and othC'r ju1.z cluhs. • J•iglf•t Tnl-.f•s n Bntl1 Beyond the nl<I pilings. ;.1 \\"C'athered c:.tnnon. t·arved rigurint's, ;ind the m;.issi\"C. tirne·honorcrl front <loors, the fort'mos t ohJt'Ct b.v tht.• t•n - trance is a jerry-built ~lui<.'L' box made of :-a lva~L·d s<·ra ps 11f old \\'ood and iron. eon11)Jctc Y>'ilh run ning wat{'r. · · Corridors <Jnd \\"a lk\Va\'S off the fuyer lead in all dire.ctions to v:irious dining and drinking areas. Th<'sc arf! situated on different lc\·els and each has the advantage of j!i\·ing the occupunl s :1 small inncr- \\'Orld of privuey. The focal point of onC' dining room i ..... thc hull of a ccnturv·old boat ~u ~pt'ndc:d fro1n the criJ1i1 g. In LhC' n1;.iin coc ktail lounge there's <t :..lalel.v <Jnd hon1cy old bri<.'k In addition to v:irinus-err;;]J j.!re<·ns lo form tlu• hed. ;ind ;1 numbl'I" of excellent prospct·ts for thl' ri n al ·d resSin g on top. you'll find ;1 lari.:e a nd unusual \·ariety or thing-s to go between. 'fhcsc include fresh C'hop -· JlC'd mushroom$, bacon bits. $pinat·h leaves, kidnf'~' and garbanzo beans , marinated cucumbers. rip<' oli\'t•s, fres h onion:;, brussels spruul$ :.ind Par1ncsa n cheese. Roast sirloin uf beef. rarc. $:! 95 . \l"il.S th!' rirst of our t\\'O entrt'f'S. and n1t_•mory falls to rccull n1eat nr hi,ghcr qualit y. 'J'hin and trL·sh!~ :-.Jl('t•d, it \\'a:-. :-.crv4i'd au jus \\'ilh half pinC':ipple hllL•d \1ilh fresh fruit~ Al !\lehaffey (h:issl is ;1 Canadian of the st•;1son. t11pp(•d \1·11h \\"h1pp1·1l 0 crC'am ;ind lo:i~ltd cot·onut. no1i;" living _in range ~ount~:· ~t ~rk J\lackbc·ird·:-. t•\'CninJ.: liill of f ·i re i\lotgan !piano) :tnd I au! Kre~bic h ha:; a Sl'~'it·s· of ni ght !~ ~Jlt'C't'::ir~.., <~r~~~). als~ Oran~c ~ounl1 ans, r;.in ging: fronl J.ondon broil. s 1 . .:,o. on hd\~ .1tt,enflld 1.ios ton s famed l\londay. 10 roast Long Is land Uerklee .coll~g<', ol l\l us1c .. :o.1o_rg_a n duckling. SS.!15. un Saturda\. also studied 111 _l•,uro.pt' :111d Krc1.b 1ch Standard l'nlrt·es 1neludt• ro:i ~!ed pla~·t'd and ~tud1C'd \\'J\h the t~ary Bur- pr1nll.' rib of ht•t'f. ;1u Jus . ~•i.:!l. tnn l-~llSL'n1bl(• in Boston l.~\·t· rs of:.\. 1\. ~I ti nc · s t· la:-!-. Ir r hi Id r{'n · s !-.l or~ . · · \\' 1 nn tl· the Pooh:' \\:111 rL~nlL'fllh(·r, as this Sl'l'ne sho\rs, tl1 c1t l<1k1ng a bath JS notonr or p1gll•t 's fa,·orltt.· acti ritics. Thl' :-il'l'lll' is fron1 a produl·lion of the play that \1 ill he prcsentrd al the fµu rth annual 1'"ullerton l'esli\'al 1Jf .<\~·ts ;.it thC' ~l urkcnthall'r Cultur~1l CcntC'I' Soturd~1y and Sunday. J>C'r forn1an tl'S bt'gin :i t-t p.111 . nn th!• ou tdoor stage. Th(' pl<.1\· \\ill be p,i·t1sentt.•d b~· J 'l"heatrc for Children ("on1p;111~ fro 1fl C~l Stille, I· ullerton. hrochplil· tJI hL'l'I 11'fi\ ;1ki. 5;; ;.·1. As <..I llC'\\·ly inilr:11cd ja1.z bi:-tro. i\o :,te:.i l\ :nH! :-.l·;1 n1p1 . Sl.\1.-;. \l'll \'i1rk Ex11 ·'l'f\"l':-. dinners night!.1 ;.ind brun· steak. Sfi.U.l: 1 (Jlll'lll'do.-. of hl'l'I. eht•s 011 Sundu~·~. Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560 OP*• YHr At••ff hl'r 12·12-,,I, alHI s.t. "tll J a .... In Laguna Beach ~ Bo.:lrd...,·alk ~peciali?.c• in strictly fresh seafood :-.1:r.l'd ;:unid hi,toric rrnlen1brances of turn-of-t he- l'"entur~ l.acun:i Beach . ·r hc choiresl and freshest scler- 1ions arc tiO\\O in daily from 1nany d istant po rts. Lh·c lobster; fron1 the coa~t of \f.1inr. Pacific Sat111on from \\'a,Jiini::-1011. Oy~ters fro1n Lon~ Island Sound and Red Snapper fro1n :\e\v Orlean~ .. \nd each i~ rushrd directly to 1ht· Hoard\,·alk's kitrhf'n ''here sc run1ptiou' entrrrs ~1 rl' rrrparrd O\ !"r -;:lO\•·in~ coal~ of ,,·cstl·rn 1nc~quitr :ind fn11t\,ood! 1·he Ho.Jrd\•·:tlk ..r~o offer.; choice beef and tendt'rchickf'n dinner'< rharcoal broiled to a drlcct- ~1ble turn. IJinncr; start at SJ.9"1 .. /)i~tributed tbrout;hout thr-Ro;irch\'alk .1rc hun- <lr l•d, of antiqul';;, ar1 if.-irt< ,1nd lii•torical photograph;;. An :iuthrntic player pi.1no \t:i.nds in the Pl,1) hou~e l..o unqe ,,hen: gue~t~ niay ~rl<'t l thr n1u)iC and operate. tJ1e old fa.<.hioned foot pedal. firing your famil r to the Bo.1rd,,·alk for clinnrr. ()pen dai!r f ro1n 4: 30 p.1n. Reservation~: 494-8j88 ENJOY A BIT OF OLD SAN FRANCISCO l·'(•aluring SEAFOOD • STEAKS • PRIME RIB lunch 11 30 lo 4 -01 r)ner 4.30 on [n1ena1nment & Dancing Tue.1nru ~n 8.30 !O 1 30 I 61 1~~~!.S,~~~ o.~~IVE NEWPORT BEACH RES: 645·5222 No\v Operating Gnder NE W OWNE RSH I P Fe.1turing J'he F"111cst Continental Cuisine J DAILY SPECJ ,\l-~ Dancing -Entertainment Lunch· Dinner i\lon. Ihm F'ri . Open 11 A.:-01. Diruter Srilurd:1y from 5 l'.:\I. Clo5~·d Sunday HA.'\'QUET & CATERl~G f.ACILITIES AVAILABB -tt{ ..... .;:i tfl1t The;//_ • '1{.;'11:~ ,_/.fl tal/autd ') "'>f'\ 642-8293 -7J . Newport Blvd. at 17!h St. in Costa Mesa Ml fllSEl . FAMILY MEXICAN RESTAURANT OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO "YOUR BIG PAR1Y IS OUR BIG PLEA.SURE" • 296 E. 17th STREET • HILLGREN SQ. COSTA MESA PHONE 645-7626 • • • COCKTAILS • Home of Cappuccino & Irish Coffee • STEAKS• PR/MR RIB • ITAllAN FOOD. DANCING -ENTERTAINMENT Now Ap,.ari1t9 ~reperie GOOD TIME COMPANY Lunch• Dinner• L1t1 Sup1Nr :, 7 ulfdoiu uart.tt.1 of c:rq. ...,,. •• , '11 uuerta Coclrt4illa • Wbu1 OPEtJOAILY11 :00 AM. Tel 556·122:> Mon.· Thur. 'Iii 10:00 P.M. Fri. & Sal. ·111 Midnight Sun 1119 PM Tuetdoy thrv Soturdor ·.IRBY AIRPORT 1262 S.E. IRISTOL Souttl CoM1 ltl&t1-Coet1 M ... l'l""'""'!-":"'11111--WIK_,) SA.MT.A AMA 546-1190 THE LUCKY LION Proudly Announces the Return of • • • ' With DOUG ALTMAN ON . DRUMS LARRY BROWN ON LEAD GUITAR Appearing . . . WED. thru SAT. NIGHTS SUN., MON., TUES. NIGHTS ~ SH ~A& • 1700 PLACENTIA , AYE.· COSTA MESA 548•9146 • THE HOME FOR LOMB. Y FRCKiS , 111 tl1e Galleries . Colkges Exhibit Student Work ORANGE CoAS;r COLLEGE -2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Library exhibit: Student photograohy 'Show, through June 10. Art G!1llef"¥: ''Directions •74f· is the ~tudent art. show which includes p,ilintings, drawings, ceramics, sculpture, jewelry and crafts. through Aug . 2. Gallery hours: Monday.Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE -15744 Golden West St., Hu~t1ng_ton Beach. Ar.t Gallery : Student art show, wh1c;h includes dr11w1ngs, .Painting, design, print n:iak1ng, photography, ceramics, two·and -lhree-dimen- s1onal art, SfUlpture and jewelry through June 6. !lours: llfondu y-Thursday, 10 a .m.-S p.m.: Wednesday 7-10 p.m . and Friday, 10 a.m .-3 p.m. ' t:C IRVll\'~ -Finl· Arts Village. Paintings dra\11ings and graphics hy l.·~· Irvine students, through ~tay 26'. !lours: Tuesd<1y-~r11Jay, noon ·4 p.m. and Sunday, l -5 p.m . COSTA MESA AHT 0 LF.AGUF. GALLERY -206 W. \Vilson, Cost3 ~11·~a. Olis by Olga Stearn and water- colors by lleulah 1'rcadway, through l\tay. MARY LIVINGSTON GALLERY -1211 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Se~1 -abstr<1ct mixed media and collage by Ne~ York artist Lo"•rcn \Vest, through May. Hours : Daily except Wednesday, 11 a.m.·5 p.m . CO~LECTO R'S CllOICE .-6~ N. Coast ltwy., Laguna Heac~. Abstract "'Ork 1n 011 µastels on paper and <1cry!1c, enamel and la cq uer on canvas bv Bruce J,aur1tzcn. throu~h June 8. llours: 10 a .m.-5-:30 p.m . Tuesday through Sunday. CHALLIS GALl.ERl~'.S -1390 S. Coast ll\\"y ., Laguna Beach. RecC'nt pa1nl1ngs by Dale Peche, through May 2-1. flours: \Vcdnesday through Sunday from 11 a.m.·S p.m. l.AGt:NA FEDF.RAL SAVINGS AND LOAN AS· SOCIATION -260 Ocean Ave .. Laguna Beach. Water- colors by Rex Brandt of Corona de! Mar "·ho was recently elected to the r-oational Academy of Design . THE PIZZA FROM THE EAST B•N•ll>I '~' o.n .. rr Coc•11111 E ntlf II inrntnl HAS COME WEST! 1 ~ ~o~ll-i-~,....-..-.;_ ltolillft Family FYn Re5fautont LUM CH & DIMHER DAILY (iA-~1 .~ ,• .... ~ Tues ·Sat from 11 am •Sunday 3 pm. , .. o•' · l_ .. ~· . RESERVATIONS i FOODTOGO cin' ; " PARTY ORDERS 548-3172 "" ! J•-1- 2574f':'l~wport11,d., Costa Mtsa i El Matador Announces Marcial Is Back Come In & Say Hello lfl lfAV[ R[MODll[O LUNCHEON SPECIAL 'Now Stt•in<J Bott and Wine ' Menudo, Sat. & Sun. Only 1768 NEmT BLVD., C.M.. 645-3520 NEWPORT BL VO.AT lit TH STREET -NOW IN SOUTH COAST VILLAGE- Welcome tQ the new Restaurant Horikawa-- a true g_ou~t expenencem apanese dining. ·ff you hrivc some ramiliarity with Japan· csc foods, you have an idea of what is in store for you in the new Restaurant Horikawa. A full selection of authentic Japane&e dishes ls yours to choose from, in our elegAnt dining room -including Uo-Suki, Japanese-style bouillabaisse. Or you mny have your steak, seafood and chicken grilled at your own tabletop, d la ieppan. Exotic libations are yo~rs from the Horikawa lounge, Come 1n soon. Newly opened in South Coast Village, ACTOS8 from South Coast Plaza Shopping Center, Costa Mesa. Open for llJnch and dinner. Call(714) 557·2531 fOf'dinner...,oatioM. 3800 Sooth Plaza Drive,San14 Ana. - I GALERIE CEZANNE -329 N. Coast Hwy .. Laguna Beach. Oregon landscapes in oil by Mike Campbell, through May. LAGUNA BEACH ~IUSEUM OF ART -307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Paintings, crafts and sculpture is being featured during the Spring Membership Sho\i.', through June 2. i'lours : Daily, IO a.m .-4 p.m. and weekends, 11 :30 a .m.·4 p.m. JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E . Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar. New paintings by Donald Kaufman. a Nrw York artist now living in San Francisco area. The exhibit is rrom his Pacific Sky series which is concer· ncd with changing and subtle variations of light on lhe California urban landscape. flours: Daily, 11 a .m .-5 p.m. t.:C IR\'lNE -Studrnt Health Center. T"·e nt y patch- work quilts, an American art form , are on exhibit. The quilts are from the collection of Alan and Ernestine Green of Laguna Beach NEWPORT SCHOOL OF PllOTOGRAPllY -3720 Campus Drive. Newport Beach. "Point of View," a one-man exhibition of photography by Robert Routh i?J· eludes 60 prints, through June 8. Hours: \\'edncsday· Saturday, 1·4 p.m. !'/F.\\'PORT BEACll CITY ll.-\LL-3300 Ne"·port Blvd., !\:c\\·porl BC'ach. \\'alcrculo rs hy Oea Riley and !\fickic ~,,·is. both of !\'e\vport Beach. llour~: Daily l\londay through I-'rid<.iy, 8 a.m .·5 p.m CllEZ ELLF. -1970 S. Coast H"'Y·· La~una Beach. Oil painting~ h y t:lysc ll arn1on and II ('Jen \Vin slo''" through June 15. !lours: !'i1onday-Saturday. IO a.m.-5 p.m . ~~~~~ W/18 "IHH·COMPARABLE" Drt & Nit• Oining-Doncing..:.Entertainment 111 Ali10 c..,._ ... _.,.tioM 499-2,6) 499·2271 l 1 I 06 c-1t Hwy. ... .._ SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M . to 2 P.M. LAN9UET FACILITIES Di1tHr S•rt•d From 5 l'.M. NOW FEATURING DAVID & LAURIE 117 l'AClflC COA~T HWY. HUNTINGTON IEACH l'la•o, G•ltar, Vocals folk. btk • Stallderd • De1tte T11eL "'11 Sot. 536-2555 or • butintt1 mMti"" or 1 w.odi"9 rK.-P· 1i011. BALBOA '-'VILION las IKililth for 500Jnd • swetP•"11 wiew ol Newpon H.,bot. M19n1lic:H1t ., • ., bo•I PAVILION QUEEN :. ~ l'l•i 150 pe..,.r c..,.ci1v. b•r. d•nc• floor. fromS2.50 EGGS BENEDICT OMELETTE CARUSO HANGTOWN FRY Fl LET MIGNON OSCAR PRIME RIBOF BEEF. AU JUS EGGS ORTEGA And Other Brunch Selections Choice of: ~ · Fresh Fruits in Champagn , Chilled Freshly Squeezed Oran e Juice, Iced Gazpacho, Basket of Assor~ Sweet Rolls & Muffins, Ho~ Fri«J Potatoes & Freshly Brewed Coffee Served with emy Entrte • ' OPEN DAILY 11:00 AM lunch Served to 5 PM Dinner Serv«i from 5 PM LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT NEWPORT BEACH 59 Fashion Island For RewWJtions Please C811 .1144-5313 • • " ' 01\ll Y ?ILOf ;t~ •.!. ('••••t·t•rf :'\lark Turnbull. singer, composer and guitarist. .,,·ill perform a one-man concC>rt o.it 81>.m. Sunday in the I'\e\\·port llarbor r\rl '.\lu scun1 .. c\dmisslon, S2 nnd Sl.50 for n1u.seun1 mt.>mber:;. ROYAL STEAK-0-101 c ....... ,...~ ....................... --.-'""'""' .... ..__ .... ........-.-. ....-... ~:'lfll, ......... AMONG 20 •• SILICT DINNll INT,llS VINA HARMER DUO · Ent1rt1inin9 Proudly Presenls A DIXIELAND JUBILEE \V1th Tt'ie BACK BAY JAZZ BAND r- 1 I I Friday & Saturday Niles Afffr 5 p.m.-C~ .... Mesic• D~ 1712 Plocentio -Costa Meso -548-9203 ---- lNDONESIA COCKT.-.!L8 -L.UNCH • DINNER I ·' I <jfef ;{e .J'i1el~e FRENCH CUISINE Ope ~ 7 O.,, ·It :10 ....... 1 L:OO P·"'· LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS 3800 S. Pla11 Drive South Coast Village 1 ,1rod 1 ,~1r1l lo So. Co••' Pl•11I l'T7" r:.-:' I .?/A'e ~ r11111f'1·y .Y/1.J!r1111'r111 ENTERT AINMENT _l ' NIGHTLY SUNDAY BRUNCH "110 Ofl Su~d~y JA.MAICAN STEEL SAND j1 .lf! ir1 CL:(r~y1 !Ir·, ./!t11jlr1·! .':Ylr·ar~' r:;.:·.; .. ;/.// TEMPLE GARDENS {JJIN{;S:G lllesta11ra111 RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE ~__!.'?•'\•Ji£_ Fcaturin::; Exotic 1·ropical 1'tinks luncheon & Dinner Da ily 1500 ADAMS fSt H11nbor1 COSTA MIM 540-1937 540-1923 Alld, lit Garde11 Gtovt 12201 IROOllHURST !At Chapman) 611°7020 •NOON(SIAN ...... o CMINll!:•ll!: CUIS l ... 11!: I I .. O\JA5 11 :30 .... M ,·!0.00 P .... h~;;;:;~;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;=~========~ 1'••··••1'. 11:30 A ,M .-11:00 P.M . co..o•t;O ... 0 .. 00~ 2su' 1:. COAST H WY. I t 17••1 973-03... CORON• Ot';I.. M•R o Pl ... NO l:NTElllT••NMENT • l'R• •• !< ... T. & SUN. O ~ L------------- lligh('.:.,\ Qu alit~· :\:.iti\'(' '.\le\:1ean l-"ood~ \Vee\: Dov·.'. \I 30 on' :J IZ ~~-. F: .. and SJ' 11 jJ ".!"'· to Ii 3J Open 7 D<l yS fobulc.i~ VIC GARCIA .1..-,:-r'w a! (or"or' Pu J~C' Arf .. 1," I Tl,u·, f,;. ' i•. COCKTAILS ' + + LUNCH ~---+.,+ lctolw= DINNER COCKTAILS DANCING ENTER TA INMENT NIGHTLY E•cept Sunoay CHOICE PRIME RIB I EASTERN STEAKS u\l SEAFOOD ' 9093 E. ADAMS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 7891 'WARNER AVENUE HUNT.INGTON BEACH 842·9060 496-5773 ' • NEW OUT1100R DINIHG PATIO FKilitin far pr1,-• pwHn Ml ti. GARDEN COURT ROOM ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY IRAHDIE BRANDON DUO T•.Mns.t. ' Authentic Ne"· Orleans Creole Food LAGNIAPPE SPJ::CIALS TillS Y.'l::l::K Tue Aoy 21-Mini Lob-.1 "1 Tu. SSOO Wed .. Moy 22-S.po t>d Jo. $·eaL S4 25 . Th11 .• Moy 23-Ha.but S1«:.'r.1 s• :.'.> -F". Moy 24-Siufled Srii,,.,.n \6 25 Sa•. ~1oy 25-Pnme R,o ib50 Si.>, Moy 20-Baled Ch.c~ "" & O.·~•~oq . \4 25 • ALSO SUHDAY PU.HTATIOH lli.t.•FAST -IO:lO •A to 2 '""' Z4l12 Del Pr1do D•n• Polnl GEORGE FOSTU S-aRdMOft. 32802 COAST HWY. 1-'tros• from Brook1lde \\'inery) Phone: 714·--411:1111 lot C..-,..., r.-.-1 LAGUNA NIGUEL rfioideaux French Cuisine Lunch 11 :30 to 2 Dinner From 6 Closed Sun. & Mon . 751 St. C .. lr, Co1ffl Mno (7141 540-3641 RM ERA llESTAUMNT Conllnenlal Cul1ln1 Coddall• Smnng Lunc4eon and Dinnct Mooda~ throM11h Saturdo~ Closed Sundays We are loc.at.cl next to tho Moy Co in South Coe1t Plau UUI---_. ... 1..-1.,, ... I c~••v••· • -c--i--' ~,; I' JI . . ' ;; .. "'~ ~t:iF.· .... 11111 all:OOKMVll:ST GAAOEN GAOVE ''• ~., ~] •• • . m 1·r1~<-1 t• ORANGE COUNTY Charbroiler • Food to Go Open 7 Days A Week •COCKTAILS e ENTERTAINMENT PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A'LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now M• 'n Ed's mobll• cwen1 tpetd delicious piplri&·hot piua1 to your~ In minutes. _ for orompt HNlco phono 646-7136 (N1wport 811th/C0&ta M1u-17thandTuaUn) or 847·1214 (HunUnaton B•t<lt--h end Hl!I). Get the Piua wlth Plmz ~ ~-?=:i ' r t • ' • ., • • ' • • • . . . ' ' ' 0 Daily TV Log WHAT TO DO Friday Evening Saturday Morning Legends of Jazz Perform at UCI KOCE TELEVISION LOG MAY 18 JAZZ CONCERT -The Legends of Jazz, Ne\v Orleans plUsicians whose backgrounds add up to more than 300 ye<1rs of jan activity, will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday in Craw· ford Hall, UC Iwine. Admisfilon, $1. THROUGH MAY RENAWANCE FAIRE -The 12th annual RenaiMance Faire and Springtime P.1ar);et takes place for sill: weekends at the Old Paramount Ranch. The Pleasure Faire Is a re- creation of England in the 16th Century y:ith pageantry, dance, song, mirth and plays. There will be merchants, arts and crafts. food and game booths. Admi~ion is $3. 75 gen- eral admission and children under 12, $1.50. !fours: 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. Take the Ventura rreey,·ay to the Kanan Road Exit and foll O\v signs. r.1A Y 18 ROCK CONCERT -Bridge and Roundhouse. both rock bands. will perfonn at midnight Saturday at South Coast Theatre, Laguna Beach. Admission , $3. l\1A Y tS.18 DRAJ\1A STUDENT -"Littl e Disappointments" directed by Stuart Duckworth. UC! graduate student in drama, wit! be presented in the Fine Arts Village Studio Theatre, UC Irvine, 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, t\ .. fay 16-18. Admission 75 cents. • J\IAY 19 RECITAL, ART FAIR -Nancy, Faith Khademi "''ill present an afternoon of fine arts at First Christian Chu rch, 792 Victoria St., Costa 1'-1esa. giving a piano recital at 2 p.m. Her oil paintings '.''ill be exhi,pitl'd until 5 p.m. It will be free. J\IAY t9 DRA!\.IA '\\'ORKSHOP -"Uncle Vanya" by Anton Che khov "ill be performed al 8 p.m. Sunday in Olive Grove. F ine Arts Village, UC Irvine. It is directed by drama major Bruce Smith. i'\1AY 24 \\'IND CONCERT -UC! student \\'ind ensemble under dire<:- tion of Charles i\1. Atki~n. UC! assistant professor of music. \rill be presented :.the Fine Arts \'illage Theatre. UC Irvine. 8 p.m. Friday, r-.tay 2·t ~ i\1AY 26 PIA!\'0 CONCERT -Senior recital bv Denise Vandevelde. \\'ill be presented in the Fine 1\rts Viliage Concert Hall. UC lr\'ine. 8 p.n1. Sunday. !\lay 26. MAY 18-JUNE I DRA~IA -'"The Relapse" by Sir John Vanbrugh. directed by Bre'l\·ster J\olason, member of Royal Shakespeare Com- pany and UCI visiting lecturer in drama. '!\'ill be presented in the Fine Arts Village Concert Hall. UC In•ine. 8 p.m. .tff;S t1 1884.Newport Costo Mtio S48-1SS2 BARGAIN MATINEE WEDNESDAY I :00,.J' .M. $1.00 NOW THRU TUESDA T 2 ACADEMY A.WARD WINNERS Geoi:ge Segal Glenda Jackson ••A M~lvin fnnk f "A 10uch Of Class plus RYAN O'NEAL ·TATUM O't<EAL "PAPER MOON" (PG ) ··························~···· • • • • : we figure you can use the : • laughs NOW more than ever! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • : ~ • • • • • • ........... • • • • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . ~ . • • • MllWIT•EllAHD•JIU."'OlfEM_;,,"WMOf"IUI' DOCrA""""'' It -.......,._ e 4:Df IOOK 1€AT ((J "(oll.c;t.d e ~K(~TM...,.t • ...u&fllill'INDl.rfON• IOMl:UllOOlfl! • M!CMAP."""'"°"' e Poomti 1'30-1911" .nd ''Mt t . SM"""l tiHr:I In. MeflNl4• • Allll~lilACllllNE~ ·~ty ...__,_°""'..._...... • Singing" -9'1' #My Snton wfMI • ~---•"""1tt'"-'1•• c<toeR ·~...,.,..._..,._11; ai'di • dlltVhff '* wor1I tlld ttlt e ~, .......... ._.,._...,to•i.i'*-c.._,. • dir*tlDll .. Mii ~-::: :=~.;~~ IC) : to/ SHOWING FOR A LIMITED : ,,. ,t,""'!;j..~"" 1.:::'.!!~1:! •. ENGAGEMENT. ONLY! • •nlf'OdllcflOn .. -l.e&IOrl ta • ,, •• WAIH!NOTOH COMNICTION • SAN CLEMENTE MIRAMAR •92·0056 • fC) "tto\ltl"I Crhlt wl"' ... ,I'd to • 1700 NORTH £L. CAMI NO RIAL. ~.,.. .. -A 11•1~1 -e "'-SANTA ANA PAULO ORtVE•IN 545-3313 : 1M 111TlOOU<1'10N TO PHYSICAL • NEWPORT FREEWAY; IAKI" CXIT .. otlAPMY fCJ "hll Hwrrltnit'' • SEAL BEACH ,BAV •31·6551 e -....... » • . Jll MAIN STAEf"T e , •• ,AMILY .,, .. MAHA••M•MT WESTMINSTER CINEMA WE • 4C) "'-l•I ln~•l'IC4!; An • t111 W£SJ¥i""ST!R AJT.-~ •• 892-4493 IMndlKtlan" -L-H • TM '~ .. v • 11.._ .,,., -'Dvoc.t.Tls tc> TP!f WES INSTER WESTBROOK 53o.440t e .. PIS" f1tM el fM Wffk. • 101"1 WlSTMINSflR AVtNVl e titl MMTIU'llCI THUTal IC) e LONG BEACH PLAZA 429-3012 • "u.tain. OIJioNIM" -f,... • -·p,.L.0 vc"oa AND 5"AING ::r..:,,;,~ ~ ~-;._; TM e. LONG llEACH STATE 437·2721 e J....-It. .._.,.~ in 9""' ,,_ e . OC~ ANO PINE STRtlfl : =--==~" .... kf ... r··················llftt··········· • \ • • I Tuesday through Sunday, May 28-June t. Tickets at ts avaJJ. able from Fine Arts Box Office. 1'"or lnlormatlon call F1ne Arts Box Office (714 ) ~17. MAY it "HAIR" -Los Angl!les High School Perfdrmlng Arts Work· shop will perfonn the rock musical "Hair" at noon and 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 29, in the Orange Coast College Au· ditorium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Admlssion1 $l. Tickets available at bookstore. • MAY 31 ORCHESTRA CONCERT -Philadelph.ia Orcheslra con· ducted by Eugene Ormandy, sponsored by Orange Cowity Philharmonic Society, will perform in Crawford Hall, UC [r \'ine, 8:30 p.m. Friday, May 31. For ticket infonnation call Orange County Philharmonic Society...(714) 646-6411. MAY 31 LECTURE -"La\v and the Environment," will be deJivered by U.S. Sen. John Tunney tD--Calif.), sponsored by UCI Student Affairs Committee on Lectures, in the Fine Arts Village Theatre, UC Irvine. I p.m. 1'Tiday, May 31. Tickets at $2 available from Student Affairs Corhmlttee on Le«ures . For information call Student Affairs Committee on Lictures (114 ) 1133-5588. JUN~ 1 !'11ASTER CHORALE The Irvine ?\faster Chorale will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday. June · 1. in the Newport Har- bor High School auditorium. 600 Irvine Ave .. Ne\vport Beach. The 100-voice chorale ~·ill sing William~' '"l\lass in G Minor," Brahms' "Liebeslieder Waltzes. Opus 65"' and Carl Orff's ··catulli Carmina." Tickets. $.1"4-5 and $1.50 students, are available at Coast ?\1usic. at the door or by writing to the chorale at P.O. Box 417-4, Irvine. lftdo .,_ .... _ .. -·-~-··-....... NOW THRU TUESDAY 673-8350 TWO GREAT MUSICALS! To ,, Life.:~ . ,, . J\>111r ~hia Jamus Olool< l.timn ""' (ocu d"'JIU ltM' lm~~t!i.•On-.uii in.in AnhurHillt.'flilm • . ..... l -· -·~ r.-:: -- EVES FROM 7 P.M. -SUNDAY FROM I :30 -------------·--- In Sunday's Family Weekly: You Will Find It Hard ta Believe:• · Our Political Leaders Economize, Too- Rere's Row ••• "Aly husband had tlte la.st Kai.scr auton1obile alant in the United Sta,tes. He couldn'l parl 1vi1/i. it. He ca11 never part wilf, any car." • Frances Spatz Leighton's cover story for Family Weekly reveals how 13 Washington heavyweights save. one thing or another in the interest of economy. Considering our own nationaleConomy -in which they also play a part -the contrast is extreme. Their ways of economizing are clever, pragmatic, and will· make you wish these political leaders tended our tax dollars with the same care and concern they lavish on old pieces of paper and pencils. • SOCCER PREACHER -Kyle Ro re J,_ is o spoits SIJOef'>tor w+-.o doesn't f; the mold. The center fOl'WOfd of the Oollas Tornodoe5 to\es his-money from 1he ployinq field 10 the 1ui1ion office to gay for educotion leoding to his be'ominq on ochined mftsaer. • PEANUT IUTTlll -The /\11-Ame•icon q,;ckie meof thot even o fumble-fingered bo<l*or c:on get loqefher is in fot the full 1reotmerfirom Foqd Editor Marilyn Han\en. • All. ~oming ·Su~day ~ith The . I DAILY PILOT I • • f'llOM Ht:W UH( CIH'CMA. -·IMl-Jo "JIM! l'U YS IMlll.IY" "THE LAST MERI CAM HERO" and ...... . . CLINT EASTWOOD "MAGNUM FORCE" Both in Cotor (RI Sl>'Ci:al "'le• 12:l0 to 2 :00 p.m. l••C•PI s~ ... &. Hoh.) SI .oo Oprn Doil~ 12 J O pm "I don't know when t li!st wn rrducr<I 10 helptts~ lavghler. Lucy has rtturne<I iriumohan!ly To 1ht Ktnf' ol her ti!rlitr haunts in the best role o! tier carttr." Ann ltrrill, Santi! Ana Reg1 s1er "A. oncf-in-t·lilelimt' mov .e !hill ma~es .,ou lt.tve ll'ft thtarrt w.tlk1119 on air 11 vov only see Oflt' movie rhos year, make it 'Mdmt'·" -Norma f,lcL.t•n, AHl'r Dark Ma~.tzone A girl wl1h a great lollowing, Every oop in the state was aller her . Ewrybody else was behind her . IXCLUSM ~ COUNTY INGAGEMENr l!lla/llllll! .. .. I/AWN . Tiil SIGAllAND ElPRE&S IMl'r 1 & 16'111 u.1..-.1111, 7, l•M J'ft;;'f ' PLUS 1~ TATUM O'HEAL IEST SUPl'OllTIHGo ACTltESS . "PAPER MOON" .. .. .. .. .· .. .. .. . .. /, .-: . • • .•.• . . ' ·~ : I . . . • "" . . .. . .,,,., .. ,; t :,~; '· ~-1,-;, . ~\';a_ •. '*'' " ~ : !4j ,,.,~:' • ~ ,~;.."' " .... -\__ Two Classi(•s • • ; Flctnie 11co Guitaris t I rt Lagu11 a Conce rt Gino P 'Auri , a weU·known Flamenco guitarist. w i 11 perfonn Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Lagunn Ueaeh l li3h School auditoriu1n. Before ron1ing to th e United States, J)'Auri s l u di c d classical guitar at the Conservatory in Rome and pl ayed in supoer clubs and -theaters throughout Italy. When he crune to thC U.S. in 191i8. he \\'a" selected first guitarist for the flamenco dance troupe, The .rose lircco ('on1pany. ~1orc r cce n t I y. O' Auri has played 111 the Los Angeles area. Tickets lo the r>crformancc can be purchased for s:J.75 ;it the Guitar Sl1oppe. 1027 N. Coast llighway, or at the door . FL AMENC O GU ITAR Gino D'Auri W 01ne11 the . S11bj ect Of One-wo111a11 Sho\r ·~ . Trying to n1aster ''The Tan1 ing of lhe Shrew" is an actor in the American Con· : •. servatory ·r1!eatre. '!'he. San J.'rancisco-based company will present the Shake· ·:::.speare elass1e along; with :\nton Chekhov 's "'fhe Cherry Orchard" in repertory __ M_oonday throu g~ ~1~:_~! Garri~~n Th ea ter of The Clairmont Co lleges. __ _ _ •·\\'ho rcs \Ve All Kntl\1' ;_ind Love." a onc-\1'on1an acting recital by graduate theater major Carolyn Gilwe'it. 1vill be prese nted Frid a y and Saturday at California St~~c L'nlversity, Fullerton. The performance, y.•hich f ca t u r es scenes from Shakespea re, O'Neill. Sha\v, Tennessee Willia ms, Euripides and others, will be presented in ·the Arena Tbeat1~r-Cu!'ta,n Sthoi11 in \\'hittier in addition to pursuing graduate 1~·ork. s<tld 1ha1 :::he t·hose the subiect she did bcc:iuse she found the treatinent of \1•horc:; by the 1najor play\Vrights to be n1orc fascinating than the depiction of the virtuous ...,·omen of thealcr. Directing thr performance is R. Kirk r-.Ict>. associate professor of thea ter_ :::: V ue-<l t1 ) · j~~~~Pri11 t .~nle The Bo\vcrs ~1 useum "'ill ~nsor ;in cxhihit and sale of (ipproximatcly LOOO original prints . from the f .1 rn c d . f'crd1nand Ro ten Galleries :Collection from 10 <1.111. lo 4:':!0 :p.n1. Frid:i~·. ~fay 2·4-Thi' :cvl'n! \\'ill be ht·!d at the ::1nust•un1. 2002 :-J. :\lain St .. ·.S.1n1 :1 Ana . :: \\"ork..<; s p :1 n n i n g si x .::crnturi(•S v.·ill be featured In ::.thr sho\\, \1hieh \\'ill include ;!: print.<; bv such n1a~11·rs <ts ::: Houault. .llog:irth. (;ov:i. :\liro. :~: und Picasso. and in:inv of ::; todav's :1r t1sts. fan1ous · and ::·not ·yet f;imou s. Jn addition. ::: lhiorc v.·ill be a collection of :~ \\'cstern ;ind 0 r i e n t a 1 !•: rnanus<.:ript p;igt·s. so m e :!; dallng to th(' JJth Ct'ntury. ::: Prices range fron1 $10 to the :;: thous:1nds. but n1ost prints. ::: including those of lhe 111astcrs. :·arc undf'r $100. ·-:~~-:: /"') fOIJNTAll\o \/Alt If ... f.11'~1 .;wv.;,,:;,~i·••·Dt;~ .. .....,...Hltu .. · Al 12.ll'I P,M. .,...c.....--• • "Harokl & Mmdt" IPGI ··14:nsn 1.is Sill l 9.ln. ;,, ~ S ... Y.Mc~ O.sthi Hoftmml .. Papilloll"' AllO _ trGI "Thi' Get.way" -,,__.,__. __ _ :: . : ' •• •• •• •• •' ;~ .. ~ Family Twin Cinemo 1 •111 !ll10<1K HURSTST Fo11,,tu r Votl~v -962-1248. CINE MA I :~ HEl.D OVER! ;~ IEST ACTllSS • :;;GLEMDA JACKSON . "A· TOUCH OF CLASS" .· . . -:-jnt s .. , 1"'9 Actress • T .... O'NNI ."PA.PER MOON" _,.-.i :• CINEMA II • • .• . • ' FAMILY EMTERTAIHMEHT Woody .... ''SI-" ';;,d" IPGI •'&Ktro-GU. in llut" a,.. w-,. .... l.t./s..-J:Jt :: MOVIERATINOS RJR PAREN1SAND WUNOPEDPU: 11-.. /Kf/W ,, ,,,. ,al,,,,. Ir lo...,.,.. ,. • ...u ~ ,,.~., _,,.c...,.. lor •ltfiMI tr,,..,,~ -------·~~~-11 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -··-··-----·~ 'l .... __ ,,, .... __ - . Bridge to Perfor111 time is 8 p.m. • Rese rvati o n s for the perfor1nancc\..should be made Also performing \\'i ll bl' e<irl~·-since sea1ing is lin1ited. Bl ac k Poe t A I (-;ulle;rc Bridge \Yill perform a n1idni~ht rock concert next Sat.urt!ay <'It tht_. South Coast Thea!er in Laguna Beach. The eight members of Bridi;c arc all Orange C.OU.nty resident s fron1 17 to 24. Most of thC'ir music is original or arrangt'd by 1ncn1bers of the -band. \rith b lu es pn.:doniina!ing. Round house. a four-man rock Ticket information may be band . obtained by telephonin i.:; the Tickets are s,1 and <l!'t' University Theater Box Office available at lhe box office and at (714}. 870-3371 wcekda)'S between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. Sound Spt""Ctrum in Laguna t.-lrs. Gilweit, who ;is an B&.ch. Jabber"'•ocky Rc\:ord'."< instructor at Pioneer High A11·a rd -111nnl11g Clack pot•t Frank ~J ;irshall J)av1s 11·ill speak <it Santa Ana loi!cgl' al J l a.m. \\'ed ne sdar in the raculty Study. The Program is free. in Orange, Licorice J.ljzz1. and!,.---.-.-;,~~-----.--· ___ ;;.-_-_______ ,.. Gary's Entertainment Scr\'icc in Costa ~lcsa . --~------~-. ''i ROBERT REDFORD,"ffil AfARROW STARS MAX ;tON SYl>OW • B.LIH li.tl5"M UHDA 11.A.lltd• JASON MIUH. LH J. con PllFO~MCES Mot1.• Tu•s.·Wtd.· n.n,. 7:00-9":30 Pri.-6:50.t-.20..11 :50 Sal.·2:00..4:20.6:SO 9:20.11 :50 s-..-2:00--4:20.6:50-t:20 ·1 haven't hod such a good time ata rewmovie . ~ " 1nyears. Pere< Oogdanov;ch. New Yo<\\ NogaZi'"oe HCHMICClOR'. pa11us BY Di WI(• STARS OLIVER REED • RA9UEI, WELCH RICHARD CHAMBRLAIM MICHAEL YORK • GERALDINE CHAPLIN · CHAllLTOM HESTON •ALSO• ACADEMY AWARD WINNING SHORT SUBJECT "FRAHK FILM" IN HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER EDWARDS ' ~ . ., .. HARB0Rc;m':A2 . . . HARBOR BLVD ~ AT WIJ.,SON-ST. COSTA MESA 646·0573 2 MILES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. T . . ST ..t.RS MAX TOI'! STOOM•ELL&l IURSTTM J..t.S OH MILLER•LEf J, COii ~ ...... ....._ .. • Mo• .. r ...... Wtd.. "'-"-o,..."' •:OO. si...-7:00.,:Jt k t t:~ll-,:lO.! l:lO W , 2:00.•:Jl).6:lO.t :Jl).l l:SO S-2:01).~J0-6)0.t:JO .... . .. IRI : ••• •QWA"O• ••• : •1 : ' . Ii::-\. .... \!;.. ,;:.-~ ·::~o ROBfRT . NtWlll.lN RtDfORD ~ RO.BtRT ~H.lW • ... _,for._,_ w:.'Y '1_Lf"!\I THt~TING ''"·-... -.. y.,.,_, Wt<i. '"'-•·· J:l \·t:10 Fri. ~4S-t;OO-l I :00 Sot .. I J:00-2: I S-4:lll-6:4~.t:OO-I I: IS IM TH• -·-•M•T1'" C1(NT1'fl '-:ff" (~2 .... t .00 ..... ":":':":':."::':'l'::" .. -··· ,_ v ............. ~. •T CO<<>O .. WOST lrTW[[" :::".:.:.1,~ 192·'41l WliSTMll'ISlH AT GOLDE"' WIST ·1t2-•4tl er rM"f•r ••" • U8• .,. ..... "'"°ah! I.I HOM THli l'IOP'LI WMO GA.Vii TOU H JAll Sllt!iolil" STA•ltltG MEl l lOOl S • HAl,lT •OllMAM MADlill"' KAH"' •Cl.AUD( fMl'llS STAUm. 'L -...._~itz/MattelProductions where the lilies bloom DAILY PILOT 3 1 • l'll1En BU1<K /COIT wuon /AfTI llllTER!Tat ...... l !!d ,.._,. MAN ON A SWING THE THREE MUSKETEERS ~TA ltSOUVli•l~fO 1 " Alt ALL STAI CAST •AA0U£L WliLCH 111""") l'ACJ THI .. fDAT RlCH..t.10 CHA.MIERU.tM OJ I UCllLI SW°ASH, MICH.t.fl.YORll THl l LLS . SPI LL S I CtiAILTOH HliSTO"' HAll.lllADTM ISCAJllS" GtARLDl"'1 CHArLl!ol ru. TI OY MA~.t.llloiL to"'""°',_.,. t KI,.•• 'DWA~Dll HARBOR,;:::. t ..,..., ..... " ....... if.' oru ~n• "'·°"* . HUMBER ONE SMASH HI~ ~'··~ RlCH..t.RO DREYOUSS AOMMIE H0 W.tJ1:0 l'&Ul lE MA1 CAtlDl ClA~Jo; JAMES G..t.RMER "SKIN GAME" * * * * * * * * ______ ,11 .. z...if--. ______ ., nE MOST FANTASTIC UNDERSEA OCWS5n EVU. FUED 11W1r..a.1 h• imni nE NEPTUllE FACTOR :'.ll>t:...r10 ~SllffAJ iOMllJSOO)J]IJlll 'Hf ~PflH_ f/J:Ull" S....llN!JllNJ. OOIIM~ WNJlRFIOO!JI ~li~J~l fffiJH,I!] ,., • • l··;,c·:R:· .. i'i'=·~·r . . . . . . . . . ·' CINI·\!.\ <:f~HR ~·r~c1 ,. ACAM. rOiTA '41•• • 97q•1U I ... ffATUl:I .. t •• I • • I , ' I • • • •• • • • • . . • • • ·: :J=!:_D_A:_JL_Y_Pl;;:LD:.T ________ _:Friday May 17, lq74 SCR to Close 'Philanthrop~st~ Four Plays At College Uve-theater along the Or- ange Coast this weekend in- cludes: · · "Third Beat' Sport" Opening tonight for fi \•e "'eekcnds is this comedy set at a convention, play ing Fridays and Saturdavs at 8:3:> in the lluntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St.. lluntuu~ton Beach. Reservations\842-5 421 . "The ·~·o of Us'' l,.ina! )>t'rfortnances will be "iven ton i2ht and Saturday of "'Thelwelve Chairs'is uproarious fun! Any true fan of r ! , 'J comedy has to se~ i~"~ ,. .......... ,., s~ ..... ...,_,tG! "Pity"· Da ily at 7-10:15 Sunday -3:45·7·10:15 ''Choiri" • Daily Cit 8:40 51H1day • 2 ·5:2~8:40 ri...1, o! ~,., P.0'""1 h0"'4 ''""''""' ........ .i ·-~- ~· ...... ,. 91••· 521·9980 ... _,. • • WIUI Mii WOQ. fl llAZ.ING SADOl.IS 11111 WHlll DOES IT HUIT • ---•tu.tUl 11- PACIP'IC THIEATAES D"IV&·IN SUPl:R SWAP llEETS HAAIOA ILVD.Driwe·ln s-p MMt & Mo Swop S•I.& 5..., ., • .., to•o"' OAANGI. Oriwe-ln 1 &. 2 Fn ... Sal. & Sw".· 8•"' to 'P"' .... k f111 s.......,., at ........... Sit••~,. Family Fun! Profits! B•P9ain1 Galore~ F•11way 91 1tl1mo<1 St. 5?5-]526 ~•n D"'' ,, ...... • -4 .. -~ ...... {!.o 1 962 2•e1 .... -llvd. I Ill<;::~ .. 531.1211 .... ~ l l•d. , S.. 1I Go•M n e1; .... ,, ...... !>:M -6212 DOUtU Tllllll5 t CMILL5 A llo..ICM UPUml! MA•K Of THI DEVIL 112 Ill DEVIL'S WEDDING NIGHT (tl $on,. Ano ,,_., . ..., II••• Cn"-11• 55a.7012 ' this tw<re haracler comedy at th e Lag una f\1oulton · Playhouse, 606 Laguna Can~on Road, Laguna Be.ach. ~·ith an 8:30 curtain. Rcs<•rvations 494· Oi-13. ''The. Philanthropist'' Closing out its engagen1cnt at South Coast Hepertory \\'ilh final perfonnanccs tonight through Sunday at 8 o'clock is !his nc1v British comedv· drama at tht' Third s1{:p Theater. 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa l\1esa. Reservations 646- 1363. ·'Tbe Owl and the Pussycat"· On stage at Seba stian's West !)inner Pla y h o u se, 140 Avenida P ico, San Cle1ncnll', is this t wo-eharacter comedy 11 hich plays at 8 : 4 0 \\"ednesdays through Sund.iys follo\\:ing dinnCr starting at 7 o'clock. Rc~ervations 492·9950. "1\ Uoll 's llouse" Orange Coast College 11·1!1 SENTRY ~ •. WATER HEATERS I 5 YEAI GUAIAMTEE 20 ·4900 GAL. 30 GAL. 59oo' 40 GAL. 69°0 50 GAL. 79oo -10 YEAB GUARANTEE 30GA!.. 79°0 40GAL. 99oo 50GAL. 99oo You have a choice ol guarantees. AH are lully glass lined, have -. - present lb6cn's classic drama \Vednesday through Saturday next week at 8 o'clock on the OCC auditorium. Admission is free. "U.T. 8. U." The Costa Mesa C i v i c Playhouse will open this unusual comedy next Saturday for three weekends,, i.~rideys and Saturdays. with an 8:30 curt<iin in the Community C\'nler auditorium on the Orangr Counly Fairgrounds. --· " ---: :-I -- the automatic shut-oH solely valve. and backed by on old line company (You should hear their old line.) 20 Gal. I 0 yr. nol available. KITCHEN COUNTER TOPS VINYL FACED PULLMAN Here's one !hot looks good and 1s sc easy to keep looking good. Just wipe splashis wi1h a damp cloth. one piece marble bowl a nd complete~y fini shed. Plastic laminate lop with choice of Pattern colors. Got the backsplash and the iron! knuckle to· keep the eggs from rolling oil. 8 It ...... --.. -.. 2660 10 It. .. -....... 3325 12 It. • ......... 3990 Cristal Tile Rese rvat i on s 556--5.KIO \veekdays until 5 p.m. "The sudden and Aecldental 'le--educaUon of B o r 1 e Jobnsoo" 1\nother new comedy makes ils <.'OUllty debut n e xt Thursday at the San Clen1ente Co1umunity Theater, 2 0 2 Avcnida C abr i llo , San Clemente, with performances Thursdays through Saturdays at s: 30 r or three weekends.__ Heservations 492-0465. NO ACID, .NO LYE, NO LIE • "Provocative Potpourri," a collectloii ot four short play11 will be presented IQ Phillips Hall Theat~ at Santa An~ College at 8 o'clock tonight and Saturday. General admission ts $2. Sludents and children under 12 well be admitted ror $1. Tickets can be obtained in advance by calling the College boxomce al dS-5971. - ~· -,,, C11 ! dC//!/ l/ • ~ "·--· StAOIUMo ,-,":;; L' ''•• D "THIGll!AT GA.fSIY" IPGI -.. '"SOMfflMIS A •HAT HOTIOM .. '"TUCHHJtll • "WllKIMD WITH A IAIYSITTH'" "THI STIMG" IPGI ... "CHARLll V•lllCC" l'GI "PAPIUON'' IP'GJ ... "AST FUU 0, DYHAMITl" 1_..l "THlf:f MUSllTlERS" "1 2°C-;:AllS" ---- DRAIN POWER They proved ii (at the AEC proving grounds?). No lluid.s. no lye. no acid. A one--ol-kiod invenlion lhat works. Gol the Good Housekeeping seal. (I thought he was still at the zoo?) 77 EA. Ty·D·BOL 3!!N PEERLESS BATH FAUCET 897 PEERLESS BATH FAUCET WITH DURALAC RANDLES Ty·Dbol ll>'t! bl:mil dlll'll' Keeps the bowl clean w ith !lush. (Is there anybody who doesn'I know about stuff . I can't go on.) Good price. Ii} ~ • .sr,~ltllt,' .. SOFTENER SALT ' Th e way prices have been going up this isn't a special you should !urn your nose up at. . ., All pre-finished and a choice of styles. Very well made. finished bocks. solid drawer boltoma with quides. Just good 1tuU like you'll see in cualom made. 4.S Sq. Ft. Sparkling. easy lo lay over old tile or new surface. color and pattern choice. Easy to keep clean too! CRISTAL TILE IN.STORE DEMONSTRATION AT EACH STORE SAT .. MAY 18. 10 to 3 TOILET TRIMS Put a set of these washable · slick--oos on your plain toilet seat and it looks like triple the price. Choice of colors. KITCHEN CABINETS REGULAR PRICE ' A basic faucet. but with triple chrome. I know you're going to replace it with a fancy one. but the thing may reluse to wear oul. PEERLESS KITCHEN FAUCET 1187 Did I lell you these valves are different? So easy to turn on and they tum olf with no big twist. no leak ever. PEERLESS llTCREN FAUCET WITH DURALAC RANDLES 1287 Again with the fortey knobs. They make you want to sing at the sink as you plunge your lovely hoods into the hot suds. {Scary) For the showerhead and the tub spout you.ho Ye a nifty dial you cau. s9' ;u·11 right for the temp you lib. Mcitchn lheJaucet1o PEERLESS SINGLE RAIBLE TUB &. SBOWEI VALVE 1777 997 Isn't lhis a fancy one. tho. And why shouldn'I you have something nice in the balh? You deserve it. PEERLESS SINGLE BANDLE KITCHEN FAUCET 1287 With one hand you tum on !he water and swing it right or letl for hot or cold and with the other hand you smock the kid tor stealing the cookies. PEEBLESS SINGLE BANDLE BATH FAUCET 1877 You can work it out so well you don't have lo try Jor live-minutes trying lo gel lemperature you can live with. PEERLESS WIDE SPIEAD FAUCET 21 4~~ 4 1 '!( ou can 1PQce the knobs up to 16 inches apart. duraJac knobs. and pop-up drain atop. Elegant laucel. but the 1Gme old wa.tw comes out. • • I • • ' . "Spring· has sprui.q, the grass has rii, ATLAS is . where the Savings is!" AH-out price slashing .makes it easy for you to swing into Spring. BRAND NEW 1974 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE SEBRING COUPE Automatic. power steering . power disc brakes. nld10. heater AIR CONDITIONING: wrute wall tires. va. vinyl top e1 c S er N o. AH23-G4G· l 58518 SPARKLING NEW 1974 PLYMOUTH FURY 1114 DOOR SEDAN THE PERFECT FAMILY CAR VB. auto1nahc. radio. h"eater, power steerini;i, power. disc brakes. AIR CONOlTIONlNG. v1ny1 top, vent w1rldows. while wa!ll1res Ser.No PH41-J4D-123094 NEW 197 4 PLYMOUTH CUSTOM SUBURBAN STATION WAGON BEST USED CAR BUY Of THE WEE\ 1973 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 DOOR HARDTOP TNJMDUlllD V-8. auto. trans .. radio. heater. power &leering. power brakes. white side walls, air cond . pawer windows, power seats. bucket seat console. (RGK416)$495 '71 CHEVY YIGA 4 speed lransmission, white wall hres, radial tires. rallye wheels. GT optton. aircond1tioning. (141771U307204) $1395\ '70FORD MAVHfCK 2 Door. 6 cylinder engine. 3 speed transmission, radio and heater. {399AOX) '995 SQUARHACKWAGOH Automatic transm1ss1on. AM/FM radio. heater, white side wall tires. (405G1T) $1695 '72 DODGE DAIT SW1HGEI 6 cylinder. automatic. radio. healer. ooWer steering, power brakes. WSW, air condihon1ng. v1nyle lop, custom interior & exterior. {320FNF) '2195 '71 FORD MAYElllClt ~ -2 Door, VB. automatic. radio. heatet. power steering. power brakes. white wall tires. vinyl top,_custom exten0<. (647DFZJ '1595' • HUGE SELECTION BEST PRICES! NEW 1974 ' I Ftldar. r.tar 11. 1974 INTERNATIONAL 1/2 TPN PICK-UP GET 'EM UP SCOUT NEW '74 SCOUT 4 WHEEL DRIVE, 6 cylinder. radio. heater. 3 speed. folding rear seat. etc. Ser. No ., i8SODGQ32276 .HERE IT IS ••• . VS. autom,alic. trailer lowing package, power steering. power brakes. AIR CONDITIONING. WSW. custom interior & e11.lerior, lilt wheel. cruise con1rol. AM/FM radio. luggage rack. Ser. No. 4HIHODHB34918 -~--'---#~= p~ ""'' !ill.,..,, --a<e •.lloci 1~ 10 pm, 11tav 19!1\ OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE V"'*'91 MltJt«l. IO-- • O>IL Y PILOT IJ;) Fully raclorv eou1 oocd. Ser Mo 4HICODH819308 • I f ' MIXED SINGLES • TUMBLEWEEDS llmt PIGWN: l'Vl' Of'fEP ID 5!01WIAVf VtJIJ. I mfff\ 1llAT ~OU A111'Mf'f 10 Kff P YOUR l'A55IOll5 IN OlUK, AND Rl'OV\IN fl\OM 5\IW'llNG UNfll AFIER MY RfNPlllON . f ,n(\,; ! .,. I~ •.... l . J ... . .. . . .. .. ... MUTT AND JEFF • • by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson • • 1 M SIC~ OF lliE~ ~LL1•G Alt, WAM1•G OAT!~. AS1<1•6 Mt TO PAin1£5, ALL 1ilt1~ De~tJOttJOI llAN6 ·LJ I';! / . ,. 81: ···:·. . . ~ ·~· .~~" . . . . _J:>ol . • • I I . " by Tam K. Ryan by Al Smith . -.. Ofl, 'I'r"1 SORRY'· I THOUGHT YOU WAS A FIRE NANCY ISN'T THIS FUN? ·~ ... ~ .. . ... ,. .. , .. .. LET'S GO OVER TO MY HOUSE AND PLAY THIS GAME ---IT'S MORE FUN OVER THERE 0 ([]. HYDRANT' by Ernie Bushmiller MYMtCEARESO \i,1_' SMART THEY ROLL I ·-- THE BALL BACK --1 TO ME,.-.,,-t;_;. '---'" ·- , PEANUTS TODAY'S CRDSSWDRD PUZZLE · Yesterdays Pullie So!~ed ACROSS 49 Some thing 1 Periods o1 soggy 50 Wrong: con!l1C! Prefix 5 Soulh 52 Ccnarn Amer1ca11 incomes weaoon~ 5.l Closes 10 Trca1y uo aQJ•n 14 f.A :ir s !JS Hebrew JUDGE PARKER name 1e11er DOOLEY'S WORLD wcw! Wt~vrniNi; UXll(5 ALL 8WllRY TJ.lJlOUGH 1llESE T\.l/NG5 I Dr. SMOCK " n 11 II GORDO MOON MULLINS I 7 i 1 • ::::i:. ~L· We LL, You1Re ' I ~I !'.ARLY ... ANIMAL CRACKERS· Ti-11'T 8ALL IS GOIN<.:; ... IT .\\Al(E; "IOU f\C..l.L r:£ Jli7T 1-tUl;J f.)..;:.{ !7" !'5 7J 5f.:.:1tr: .. .. WHOS~ f\JIE THEY. ANYWAY? by Harold Le Doux 15 Accusf!d persons de tense 1~ Fiber 59 Not heallny f,Q Ma~ure •.2' Rescind LEFTY $TR.AND "l\D Tl1E WARDEN GET IN TOUCH WITH THEDA.! HE 'S NOW READY TO TALK! ~-___.., ARE ,.. ARE YOU REALLY INNOCENT? sou•C(· tit> Tna.iard: 17 l•kew ~•.· !o•m•;r 18 Part QI,, '1J'1·•' 1G·rt ' f .:.. ... cent 19 s .... i:;o,,, Gree!\ WG'd O•dlec! 20 T elf abOJI t-3 Feed tne 22 T ONO\,i:i i.> ~•'if 24 Came ,·;:: C.rOJO c.' uoon 5u!f11 15 G1•ds:.1 71 Hea!l'I 21 K•ICl'len ge'l\JS •!E·ms 72 UK 29 R<'-!< 1nnab1tan! maker 13 Observed 32 Toc1 74 Falling 33 Art Lar n 34 Tnenose rapidly 75 Arabian S1a11g d1str1cr J6 De fied DO WN ~O Vlmd 1ns•·uMen· 1 Have 0" ~2 LIV(: 'J 7 Comoe1r!rl! aa,,c.".! "l .Answer~ 44 ~on 01 4. Pr•E:S Le<1n !i Engaging 45 ~undam~nl<il If\ f1gtli!. Al C,rard 6 l ittle ooe· \'Jt<:'l'"•n'.) Sut11~ n oun•a1n 7 Fuzz ' ) ' .r • • • ; ;< " " • N " " " " ,, \ ,, . ,. JO JI ll " ,, •• I'• ,, ., .. ~ • .. , I l. " I " " " " ' " -' ., ·1 •• ' l 8 Apnror1-41 Eng11sl'l 11!lc mately 43 Massive ice 9 8u1ned mass 2 superl1crauy words ·o Ones 46 Ananias, tor room ooe Slang 48 Renown 11 Mission 111 51 Coasts on Texas '" 12 Santas 53 Mear 1e1ndeer 54 Geis out of 13 Canvas bed s?ruclures 55 Cream or 21 Stu!ls !he crop 23 Alleged 56 L•st ol 16 Wea">~I candidates <'8 Carillon 57 Game ?9 Array 61 Nor!h .JO Cry~!all•ie Americal'l ">Ubs1ancl' tndlan J J Craler"> 63 lo!a 35 VJhoie 64 " ... ·Smile aua'1t·l y Se Your 37 Home Umbrella" Ja Baccanats· 66 The human '" race 39 Snort 68 Cake swims tros11ng ,~ 10 II " " " " 2l " l7 " IT!l l2 ' 1!' •• " I ¥ . " )1 " " •I I•• .. . •• .'Ii •• • " " "' ' " ~ .. ' '" • n • .. • I . . 1 ' I MISS PEACH Afl:THUFZ:, '50 M.ANV' l..AWYf,ltS SEEM TO ~ACE Di~EJAl<ME.NT Ti-ioSE OAY.,. W~AT At'tOIAT THAT ? DICK TRACY 'RaulNING TO THE SCENl?IN AN AIR CAR, fQl.cY ANO SAM Alie UNAWARE OF ReCiNT ' .. MUST. BE PJCJ(/NG UP THEIR ANTiiNNA TO STAAT A BR040CAST? "Tr~ eern;~ ro 1-iAVE. L..AWYER'fO ANO t..051, fj..jAN NEVEfl ro HAVEr L.AWYE.~E.O Af At..t...'1 by Mell -t I HINK THAT WAS ~ii.ID 6Y TfNNY-$DN1? ATTOl<NE.Y .... '\I 1' "-"·:.'~ . ' .. ' ,_)' -by Chester .. Gould NLl~Y.SAM. TMEIR R<m>RS DEAD. MOTtlR!s TURNIO OFF ... LET0S STAY CUT OF 'lllEIR SIGMT. EH, TILL we FIGURE THIS ON! OUT. • by R09er Bradfield DOOLEY'S MOlllJOR'5 •• ~-11 'Tll'VRt HtR DRllllNG GLASSES !HAT COULD EXl'LAIN A LOT OF TJ.llNG5 by Geor«Je Lemont HES SHOOt..P se:e M.Y ANNOAj... ~l t..t.. Fort Jet..i..Y 68.A.NS ! by Gus Arriola ···WHO • MAS A 6WtSS ~ANI".. 1 Au.olJNT. by Ferd Johnson ... HESHOWoD UP, AND WHEN YorJ DIDN'f ... !~ by Roger Bollen • ... GONE! • '.• c ,., ... , ......... ·-' . ..,_ .... ' ""..:"•"' ... . THE GIRLS 'f l 1 ,i i I l i • j j ! . -. "Oh, I mu<:h pre£er lhe calorie wall chArts lo the little booklets-you can't rarry them around \Yith you.." DENMIS THE MENACE 'C'MOH.~0 ••. HOW <XXJl.0 A ('(W ~IT Lf 111~ WtTHOUTA~syrTMA~atlCl1Hiil'?' l ' • . f • t-rid.,7, May 17, 1~74 ~eol Estate .•...... 1000-29'19 Ren1ols .......... Jooo..4699 Business , lnvostmen1 & Financial .......... 5000.5049 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AOS You Can Sell It, Find It, l & & ·· . ] One Call Service Trade It With a Want Ad 42 75 78 F9st Credit Approval Emplotmen1 & Prepora1ion ...... 7000.7199 Merchandise ...... 8000-8099 Boo1s & Ma(ine Announcements, Personals lost & Foulf<I .....• 5050-5499 Services & Repairs 6000-6099 ' Equipmen1 ........ 9000-9099 Au1omobiles & other Transportation .... 9100-9099 1002General R.E. 1002 ., General R.E. 1002 ':! 1!upl<'xC's on prin1;• Joo::4!111tJ or .(:lllf Nl\1\-..:f'. Jl l{(IVIDl·'.S E XCELLEN'r RETUHN. TN·n11·ndous v a J u <' 1n tnd:1y's 1nark•'I on I y SI07,000. Takt• <.11lvantagc ... call Xl:.!.-~1., THE REiil ESTJITERS Thl' fnsll•sl dra~· irt 1h1• \\\•.-.1. •. , a I >aily P1lol ('l;1,.!<>1l11•1I :\<I . C:11J C1:!-:itii8. associated BROK ERS-RE.AL TOltS 1025 W Balbae 61J·l6tl Classified INDEX Advertising I.___-_·_· .... __,!~ I ......... ._ I ~ BCK. DUPLEX/OWNER \'avant -.\IO\"f' nn1r ,\;,, 1·nllr1·1 SUll\1111'!° l'f'lllS! 1~,1rl1a!l~' fur11. :: do1111. 11 ~ upp•'l'. ln•<11nt·d 1..-illo l·~"· I; II 0 r ! y I l'uu· 1i..:uH·l1n:.: 1hr11 ou1. rr1.·sh !1;11111, nlf-sl n ·t•I prk'.!. I ·~ r:11-; ,,, n1·1•:111. Sil.!lOO.I I 1r11 ,. hy l:!l ::~11 h "!. :X.U. I c,..,.,.1 .... II•<• 8•¥ ....... . B•I-rOY"-•• 11.1-1•1>"'7 ll•ID<I• Prnonwl• ll••<'•ll . 8J~,.....-... 11 •• , .... t!•'I' •••. ll oo Con"n . , """''"•no llNO;n ..... ,. -Ct l •->f' ...... Co•~ d<j ,,,._ • . ·~ >OO> •oo> ·~ •oo• 1010 101) 101• 1010 101r .. .. "" IQ)• <~·· ,, .. ,,. 0~"" P ooni fl<-T"1 ~Mir~~ • r~,.~•uu £• 1?•0 • Fou•n•1n V•!lrv • 1071 •• !01• ... ltll 101• ~!MIKI< Ho;nl•nd< •• •• ••• ,. H•rl>Of' Y•r• Holh H..nh...:llO<I flrlM;'h ., ,. Hynt.nvtari H.11bo( •• • •• , ,,.1,.,., .. . .. . ''""~ , ... ,.~., ............ . L.o\/n~ fle•~h • • ..... , lo~""• It.II\ , ..... ,,,., ... ., L~~un • N>OU'C'I • • • • , • L•~e ~ 11'~'1 •• • •• • • , , L«la I·•~ ...... •• l.•O~ ~~nd~ •• ,., ... , ..... , .. l.•n<I• ,,.. • ........ . N••" arl M.ir •• , ...... . ~.-~ Yr•<ff-""'""'"¥ {<1¥ ...... . '''"'""" v .. ,,, .•... , .. ... l OtQ IOd 10'4 ... ·~· ... 10\) 101' ... 10\/ 10\> '"' ,., 1061 ••• 11.c'COll<'T •"'> Add·•·ll"""" ""1 .. 1dnQ !.,...~:•e "f'f'l••n'• ltep~., fl..O>loll,"'1 8•J<•""" !.~r••<• . ll•··•d~·~ ... .. , ~· ' 1£>1• -· ·~· '"10 Cot><net N •I•,.., ·- ("•renter C••ll"I ~r•vite •. C••e"~ '"' ••-H . .. •Oll . .. •"'" __ I LIDO NORD Ceo•·n~> . Crnwnt Cn""'"'" Cn11<1 C••• • ~:!'l.~J~t'. Su1~ I' ll1 u 1t111~IH1' I l{f-:i\LTOP.S 5 BR: .. 5 b:J . fJrize (il) r1 \\ill, i '.r 11:• :.1 l\t•a1·h h"llll' 1" sh;11·111.·r 111:111 , SINCI:: 19.J·I & float. ~375.UOU. l' I' loC.'~ t o<11 r,•<'"' Mill a 1nod,•l! ·: h('dnl01!l". 2 -673-4400 0oq '"""""""' ~'"1 b.1ths. rlos1' 111 ot'v:in.1._..,._..,_..,,....,..,.. 30x l 0:J I;l. Lido !\'01·d \ ll'I\ Lui .~lli.) (1t10 !)•Atr•n<1 ~O" • ~.s:7:::• .. EH -~~~'.1oin.1.,\:-T~ ( .. .it ;i·.:i -\ * * * * * 1 BILL GRUNDY, REALTCR i::;:,'.!.~ · ··· ::;~! 1 1 \\'ALTER PETTIT 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.8. 675·61ii l Frn<ln<> : :::: .o• 1 22973 Via Cerc·la ;;:;~'·" ·:.:·. :g~ CLASSIFIED '.\tis sioa Viejo 1 1 General R.E. Fu•"""'<" ...... 60>1 HOURS r.;.,<1(n•n<1 ••...... , ... 60•S Yrou ;1rt• !~f' 11·111111'r of ~nr•a1 wvic~ ·· ·· •·· 60·~ Advertise rs may pince TWO FREE TICKETS 1 GI~~' . . • 6il•1 -----------Hau!l1'11 .. ...... 1'()\1 thrir ads hy te\l"phonc !if rhr ~~~·1·.~c~w~., c""" • ~~; 8:00 a.n1. If) 5:30 p.n1. ·southern California HOUl(<lt~n•n1 601• i\londay thrU Jo"r\day MOBILE HOME SHOW inc ome la• •O.,. g to noon Saturd ay 1002 ·. r ~: t!.E . 1002 ::::::====1 COLLEGE PARK, C.M.: ASSUMABLE VA NEWPORT H "::;GHTS \'1[.\\' I l.oll\ h I •"I' I Hll.iil ., I, , • 1 II ' . I rw/i •1111·: I I'·'" :l .'I••··,\ h<ill ' 'I 11 °1 .••"l'·tl'ah' :: < I' • I • • '; l'!'"~l·rl f111' ;,pat 1•. I J, •I' i\J•1kt• nff1 ' ' I: 11 '1" ti:. I ·., :l0J J I\ Ill·~· I oi N•*P<>" ll~ocll ...... . Nr.ol>O'I '"•Qn., N<"WPotl l•I~..., ..... ,, , Nr•! o•I ~1'or~• O<ean""' • •• 1~10 ' 1011 101) 1~1' 1&16 1011 10•~ .• , lronlno lo019 :\J:t;> l.~1h lhl ll :\];.i~· 2ilh •, (hi Jlll Louuchl 11• ,I , "ill•'. ln•u•~nc('. "°"° COST1\ r.1F.SA .OFFICE , ti t:i;:.:~~~~..... :1 1 :~30 \v. n"Y ANAHe1'M Sr ADI UM BUY OF THE YEAR' 1 ~·11:;~u11::11'~:~~~;11r:11~11 d~~~~;; I 1 ~=:~1t~~.:.•;( . ~: 6·1:l,567S ~fl!~) :-\liJ1{' (f)lk·~:c 1311·11. • I ol!l·d. ],;1ri.::r p.1111). I I ..... ,, ...... .,,~ !.An Ju•ll {api11•- ~·"'" ....... . ""'""''v 60 io NE\VPORT BEACI{ ,\nnht'1111 1 194 Ft N th B 646-3928 Eves: 645-5253 HUGE & bc:tutiful townhon1e 1 ~:.~·.':!."~""'"' :g:; i 3333 r\l·11·port Blvd. Pll'l\"f' C"a l! 6-t ..1.:11J7S. t''t: :::::i . o~ or ay· I 1ca1urcs giant 1->izl' bonus P~·n•ong. 5,9., 6~11 Ci·l:.!-S6?S 1•.•1 ·l:11tn~nur1u·kl'IS. l:'\"r1h ! front with 2 bdrm.. i·ooin. lovl'ly prtva1r patio.I !.onl• An• H••gh!I •• • • !>--•I llh'f ~ ... !.DYi~ l ~ ..... ,. .• , .. ~YO!•I• Holl • •• ·~ ••• ~:,;;~,d!lhv ::;;~ I ~ "u''.~:v lull fn·r 11u1nh1.T 1... home + den; 2 frplc.s., • I spa c i 0 us g a r;i ~ l', j p1~,, •• Ro"~" 60'' JIU1'TINGTON BEACH .dll-J •• \J! hobby rm. Shared pier I I 1rco1e11dous 1· u n1 n1 u 11 i r y I ~un..,1 lira<!\ ..... ~"""ae .. Unov•"•ty P~•I,. .. • , ... l'l'e>tchll , .......... . ·-.. , IOI• '"' ~~,,,~~v"'e :~I 17:Si3 Bench Bl\'d. _ * -* -*-*-*· & slip. $215,000. Firm, facih11es. All for $.':O,CXXI!' R'"'°"~' I. RU•d" . !Oii 5-10-1220 --· - - -I ~17-6010 Ag!. I R'><IH"'l "°'' E R ''"'".'""' d > LAGUNA BEACH ' 5 B D OOMS + S_B_E _____ -~·n~·"'"''4"""" . ,,.,,.. I DROOMS \Put your oudgel back on •~·"~'"'"9 .. &Olis 222 Forest Ave. FAMILY ROOM 1 thl' !rat'k ... Sell idle il('nis \oan• ·•• &Giii 494-9466 J BATHS ' · h I D 'I P'I S!r•tO "...... •. •. ""' JI I ' . I \\'11 a 0\1'-COSt ;uy IOI Tdlladno • ~~ u~.-cnr Y 1 tncric:1 n .<;I) r , Clas.silied Ad 1 Call 61? 56-8 T~ltvl~cn lleoa1c l>O'>ll S A~ CLE:i\lE:--.:TE h<ll!lf' .<;iluatr•d nn 1.•nd 11[ REAL TY ,) h1•droo111.<;, baths. Pr<'~1i~l' ' · ' --' I 1<l<>t>tie H.....e~ !or ~It .... •• llllll l ole 6091 305 N. El Camino Real •·uJ-ilP-"-<ir :-.ll'•'•'! ,,. i ! ll at'•'<t Gi ct'nbrook. Largr ' !odn~·? l>tr~Aa~ lot ••l~.. 1100 l oP Soi! <\Otl ::J·, :\!1\f{!r\F: ,\VI::. f I ---------- A?••!m,nh !or ,,1e .. 1 ~ ,,,~ S•·~·c~ .en •192-4-120 l•\Tr,.;11,•d "1'11•-sh:if!t'rl" In!. 1:,\LBO,\ /:-;L,\Nll :1n1i Y rnn1n. \\'ct bar. I llu"""" ProPt•tv HOO l u•O'•n<I !('" :Xi'\\ di.•hii:1.~l\('1', Nl'\\' pallll, ) ('h<'('I)' fil'C'plaP(', Bri~h! f ·---------c~m•l~•y La!\ C•~P''· • lYXI up11a!••«• Nl'I• NORTH COU?\TY I * 67 -6900 * s111111,y k11chcn. Pr1va!C' sun .. {omm~.riol P•OPt••v >MIO W•nd""' c1,·.•~ono l>C9l \'v1·~ ~ 1,1q1, 1·r1·y UflllJll<'. C otl<lom•~·vm• to•'"" .. ,. 1100 I~ I dial free 540-1220 \:i ll Pill\'_ ~12-2.i:',j, .. , . ,.. . dl'i'k off llHL<;h't' bc-drvoni. Ouplt<t•·Unoh ••I~ • 11.00 I'm' Oi ~N ''L -}. /1$ F(IN TO BE t..ICff .':il I ~.ll .~I/\' ;! IOU 1111)~:'!<11).' C!ill lod;J\' -Hb.':-G767. I H"""'' 10"" ,,,ovtd ....... 1~ lnslruttio" ,.......--CLASSIFIED [ ~ r>;ii:1• ;111d !'\('all. Pln,ITOl•l\1 i .... OPf'J r1t 9 • 1rs FUN TOBE N/CEr ·--· ··-® ' lr>eamt ProPttlV ....... . ~ '--------DEADLINES I li:iO sqtlill'<' f!'l'1 h U .I.'.". 1 ~· ~;,.1;~~~·,,1, ;-,., • 1::oi sc11ooi~ &. 1"11'11t ''""• JOO.I Deadline for copy & ki!J!I E....;c-C'l!en1 lol'al1011. Sli,9j()! · ! MDYnt•in, Oe<,e<I. Re1o•I ..... 1IOCI l[Il]• j~ 5:30 p.m. the day be· I ' 817-•iOl(l A"f ' 1 ~'I D••nQe Co Pr-1t1 1)!)0 [ • .I. ~ ~. 00, 01 ~1~!e P•Ol>f'•IY ., ''°° mpioymrnt T fore publication, exc{'pt . , I i:i ... t~•1 r•rrn•Gra~•1 ••• 71llO for Sunday & J\.Tonday I General R.E. 1002 ~General R.E . 1002 ~=""=='""'""'""'""'""'"""'I "'~• r'1"'" E "h""tt •· • 71Dll Job w•nttd, M•I• m~ Editions when deadline , ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I HOUSES INSPELTEIJ lltdl E\I w.nt•d ....... 2f00 Job W•nttd. Fom~I~ ... • • JC~ ' s l nl 12 I JM!. W•n1e<1. M & F .. 10is IS a u ay, noon. Full v;ntreon report on ph~·s- Hf,lp WdntN. M & " 71tl ti CLASSIFIED 1 ital ('Otulirion of hou~:c hy Fler1lal1 I 1r~ l a qualifiC'd profrss1on11I in· .._ ______ _, ~ch1ndi$c V REGULATIONS I :-:1><-clurs. Be SUI'(' of eondi· 1 . ERROHS: Advertisers I c ldw II B 1 1... 1 lion hrfni~ •OU huv. c·all t<ou•r• ru .. ••lltlf i•oo Anhltuf'\ llllll should check their Rds 0 e anl\.er I •1111 537-~I~_. N:- 0 1i.o nat ~::;;~ .~~~u·;·1:~ •• ~ !.i:::::.."''~ .. ····· ····· ·::~:~I !lailY_ ... &, ',el'(>rl ('TITlofrsE "ESIDENTIAL B~KERAGE ccu PANY llo1ne fnspcr1Lnn S.'r\llt:C, 24 {""°°"'•nlurn• oWfl' .. •• J<O:l 8it¥dH llOXI 1mm~ .... 1a c y. 11 ICU ,... I h; ~cr.·ie{', 7 <!:iv \lk. C.Qfl<ia<n•"lu"'' U<llurn • J111 8lllklitw1 M11ttidl• . IOll DAILY PILOT assumes I -BEAT /j-f-GH 1,.T· >".RESf '· ~:.:=~ !":1':,,n .. ~~ C•,,,e<•• & EOY•P•nonl ttllCI liability ror the fi rst in -BAYFRONT CONDOMINIUM ouoto••• '"'" \\\C ~~ . :3~ correct htserlion only. 1 J\ssu1nf' 8'~ loan <)n Corona JllE REiil Dial Direct 642-4321 Call Collect · Subscribe to the newspaper that covers jour hometown best ... YOUR Hometown Daily Newspape{ DAILY PILOT Ou~I•••' unlu•n .. . }l,00 Fl(• l a You .. . 101~ La rge t \VO bedroon1. t\VO bath \rith double I de\ r.·J;:u-duple>., hek11v HI\)' . .t..p..,1men" '"'" JICO Furn11u't !~\O CANCELLATIONS: · R f b 138 000 2 l~I{ l''I · frpl' B ApMt,,,enls un!utn ll'OO G•rage 541t . 11111~ W k '\lj d be \\'a ter Vle\V, QOJTI 0 1' YOllf 031. $ 1 • ' . '., II l. y ' '----------' ;:;;.,~u•norunt !: ~:,~d Gt>o<I' :: su~nto 1m:~c a:·:1ecord Excellent tern1s a\·a il abtc . Ca ll for infor-'~l!_P_l._H_kr:__j,2_7·4~!l. Room & 11ot1;d 10i0 Jowrirv • tc11c n f lhe f.:ILL NUMBER 1nation. tto!th. Moltl• • •100 l.IVil•IOO:k ttll~ Gllflt1 1iome• 41~ NIM:hlnerv tall A'iven you by your ad 1 !.um,,,t• lltfl!•li • . •?OO NllKrll•neou• llCIO taker as receipl o( your v~c•!lon Rento!s •no .M~?,,,",'",~,,',~.!.~'," · "",-,' cancellation. This kill Renl•IS 10 .r .. re .•••• , 4JOO v• · ... _,,. "' G•••~ for re<11 •l~ Oftlce Furnlhir• lo Equip . . . .oin number must be pre· 01oc1 R..,1.1 •• Prt1 .. .. ............ •• •011 sented by the advertiser 11"'1~1 a ... 111 4"° Pl•-I. Orgons •·•• .......... MfO ! 1nc:1u•t•l•I R1nt1I .... , l!oOO s.t.-ln1 MKhlnn .............. clot) in Ca&C 0 A dispute. SlorMt •• •• . •UO SP01'11"9 Ooads ............... IOtl .Aeftt111 W•Rltd .. . •... • 4600 ilore,llr1t1u••~l,aat .......... til'ts CANCEu.ATION 0 R MIMelloneo1" M.,.•••~ •· l6lO SwopJ •• ......... IOti CORRffcraON OP NEW TY. R1clla, HiFi. Stereo . . lotl ~ AD BE ORE RUNNING: f I [ - ... _,.. , . JR Every t'.!ffort i!I made to fNntllf . . . 1' kill or correct a new ad L..------' that has ~n ordered, G4ntf•I .. . .. .010 bu 11 (»clor11,1!1lh' • • _, ao.1tt. M•ln1.Se•Yke . to7t t w e cannot guaran- ' 11 w.11~ i.cuo llt»h . ,..,1,,. Eciv•pr'l'I("' °'°-• tee to do so until the ad llath. POWff · ~ICI h ~a~ l \h e .It""'-'°""°'''• • !.Ill! at»15. Rtnt<ll.l•ltr teloll as ap,..,_ ,....... n ""'"'"""'' W•nled ... 50'tl 9Nll. S•H .. ~. p;lpcr. " 5011 9 t»IS. Sllps·Ooc~~ .., ~ •• L-•· .... ·• ae411,. s~., su '°" Dlil1lE-A·l.J NE ADS; ~· w.111twtt · · • • · · • loOJI BOits. s10<191 tcW These ads are strtctly ~· ''"'' °""'' ···· ~ I r~.._.11i0n . Ii•) ca~ lR_advance .by man Ir---~ ... _. or nt any one ot our or~ 1( ~ l ~ rtec?ll. NO Ihone orden. • (~='· ·.;.,11t111' .: ..• :. :/~!J<, C_!la411neM:csap.mo.ffFrfceldaf2 EIKi•k C111 .• • .......... tl)I ua ~'···· "''° Mobllrt HOIMi .•••••..•• t1.i noon -all branch ot· •1•a M'IOl'<~kootoft~ ....... • tl~ f/ 'Cir ,004 • .. ···• "' Motor \o S.lt!/ lt.1111 •• , tltO CCI. L ... I Nolte~ •• S200 Tr.iolMI•\, T••~I • , .•. tl1!1 l Tr•!ttn., U'lllltv ........... t1t11 THE DAILY PD..OT re.. Lt&tlftdF .... l[S) IAU~::~: ··11~i ~~~*~.i=~lt I . . And to <:hang~ Its rates .t: Nli\lllltlont without J>l'lor not.I~. . L,eil a..... •• , .. •• .... JlOO OfMHll . . ., ..... , ••• t SIO MllQVI'\ • (liUltt ........... '110 '..___[ _-___.!~ JltctNtl-* V"1\!Clf1 .,., ••••• t)'JO "'°"'' ,.., •. lt.od\ ............ t>4l a~Drlwtt .............. t$WI Trlltk.l 1. • .. , ••••••..•. t MI YMlt •• ···-····· •••. , t$l'I #ovtl l~I ""' ·•·• .. • "· '1111 ,...._.,. -•• •• ••••••'" Sl5I Avltt Wlf'I... •• ....... ••·· "" .. .MOI ~°'' I""""* •• ·•" .. •• • t10t loeclll c.. ........ ......... 11\l'IA, NtW .................... ... ,, .. .,.. .. .. ""° ""*' U$.ioli •• ••• • ... CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. a. Box l:/60, (Jolla Mosa 92626 I • PRICED TO SELL!! 4 Bedroom, 21h bath. family roo1n , cathed- ral ceiling and fireplace in master bed- room . Near pool and tennis area. overlook- ing goU course. $56,950-land inclu ded. NEWPORT COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE Lovely 4 bedroom wood floor' custom home. Li ght & airy, extra large lot. fruit trees & vie\\'S. At the end of a qu iet cul-de-sac. $92,500. BEAUTIFUL LINDA Elegant country English. 'varm woods, deep carpets, formal dining. 4 bedrooms with baiconies. den, 3 firepla ces. 21h baths. Boat sl ip, gated community & more! $250 ,000. PRESTIGE CORONA DEL MAR Panoramic ocean vle\v. 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, den and large panelled family room. Pri· vale beach. Call today to see . Only $114,500. Fee land. / DOVER SHORES VIEW Magnilicent Roman patio and gardens. Gorgeous day and night view. 3 large hed· rooms, 31h baths, lamlly and dining room s. Lots or mahogany and marble. $265,000. Dl~L 644-)766 2161 S.n Joaquin Hiiis Rd., N.B. A COLDWELL BANKER CO. ' • SEEK & FIND' H:i.ll c;:inw• T !, U L t; A ll S AUQTSTHJ 0 R A S E R E A 1 S K C I.) E n ,. s T I~ -l/L NCWICTNSKCAL U A IA I B A A N R L ~ R 0 A f: o\ I. I. C N J Q Cl 4; ~ R E 0 A Y t) C R I. \. \ 0 L A U i C ~ ll K II L L S Q K Q A H R II A I. S R 4: C L A U T U R I. C l: \ L S ·r 0 ,\ l. A 1 IG A M Jo: sl A R R N A j K ~I 1::. E P U W S R T S T B 0 I. U l) A J G K U 0 T Cl A A A Q Q U II L E ~ A f P Q M N N U K 8 U ~ U R A ~ L U S~G S A N N I C A Q F t A I, L N U A C 0 E H E E N F 0 L T J, 1. s L A L 0 G 0 T T T R U R 0 G L C ~ S I C I T 8 M E T C C C C A B 0 N A 11 A 0 0 C S C R to ordtt 1ny or all of tM upandtd "'Sftk A Find" boob, 11umbm l throup 7.1. •.od 60 crnts ror ach. nkinl dltCb l")ob~ 10 "SHI< I.,,.._. S1.,.T ....... Syndkaie. Addrm k:ttm in ewe ofdd• MWlplpa. t • I I COLLEGE PARK BEACH COTTAGE Cl -. c . -Ill •If! Fl f11Jnl:i~•· UI\ 1:-2 lot: :: QSSIC UStOm ••• ! i1 ... 11s tn ~nndy. lrf•·i.:uardNI J:a1nhliu~ : 1:1~ raneh st~l1•! 1 b1.••1,·h. l'~<' fur ?nil hon1~ & 1·111!'!t'l'~ !)\\II llonll' realuI't'.~ j J'1'hu1lll la•~·1·. Own!"r l0avm~ 1 , .;t1 ·ii~ nu, 3B.\: p!u-"h I :trf'a .• ~·~· , o'i•I ~· 1nnd(•n1 I; 1 1. ,. h,. Cal\: 6 13'.~1 t\i'.'.-.~086 Evl'S ,. associated 111;1~~1\l' l 11'f'[ll. l;11hl~·"il•' ~;"·d' '!"r:111~fl·1T1'd 0111 ·ll'I' ;1skini; ~1:!1,;,nn. Suhn1 il lu11 , <!01111 nr t r11rh• in your : pl'f'-'"11 li11•1lP'' \' . l:.'. . ' ~B~9KEJ\S-REAL TORS ?tU!S""W. Balboa 67]·]66] l!flli \i:IJ .'"CO. 1ii:1-:>lOO ---------r.~.,~rcil R.E. 1002 'G~neral R.E. 1002 - . I I I I Make an almost immediate move. Newport Crest is the exciting lownhome community that overlooks Newport Harbor and the ocean. Big, bold spacious homes. Residents' Swim and Tenn is Cenler. Exterior ma intenance provided. Come- let us show you how you can't afford not to live at Newport Crest. 2-3-4 bedroom residences ~Wom $63,0001•$93,000. g From Pacific Coaat 9'Qhway and &.ip•rior Avenue lnteraecllon, dtiv• up Superk>r to Newport Crflt entranc•. Sal• office: #12 Robon Court. Open dally 10 A.M. to SuM.t. (714} 645-6141 . • l. I TOWNHOMES - ' I ' r . . ' • • • • • ~:J6 DAILY PILOT Friday, r.1ay 17. 1974·~,..,,,..,,----,,=-,,--.,...,-.,,---,=,,...,,--_,..,~,...--=~--,.-,,~---.,,=,.-,,....--,~~--~~,..-':_,.... ___ ~=,..-.,,---:--n=----;;;;;;i ,.~G~t'-n-'.-,.-'1-'R"""'. ;;..'---~10~0·2~G"e_n_e_r_al~R~.E•.---"-~100'=2•.,•·-eneral R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 Gener1I R.E . .1002 Gentril P:.E. 1002 Coron1 di Mar . 1022Corona del Mar 1022 1 Co1ra Mesa 1014 *H * * *11 * * I T,:~~~~,~.N!~B' •. . -.. .-·. A REAL RARE OPPORTUNITY for boat Javers wanting a luxury home , with pier a;1d slip at the \Yater front. Main house: 3BR.. 2BA.. plus Gst. qtrs. with bath. 2 patios and n1uch n1ore. $129.500 . FEE! Don't lose thi s one by hesitating! O\\•ner 'vilI t rade tor Duplex or Triplex. ·--· $96,000-FEE \\'ith a vie\v of Fashion Island . Expensive i1nporte<l tile in entry. breeze \\'ay. kitchen & rear yard of this exquisite Portofino hon1e . Fee land'. 3 BI-l, 4 B.-\ + bonus roon1 A:\D many 1nore cu stom features, all for S96.GOO. ·--· $62,900 IN UNIVERSl'fY PARK? A reaJ greenbelt je\\1el ! 3 BR. 2 BA hon1e ~"= fan1 rm. Hi ghly upgrnded. Huge brick pa- tio. Jov.' 1naintenancc yard. See this~ ):"ou'll buy it for S62,900. . ·--· NEW RED CARPET RLTRS "FASHION ISLAND" 567 San Nicholas Or., Suit• 103 CALL'-72 LISTINGS NEEDED '~c LOOK WHAT'S HAPPENING • I Hug Homes has opened a branch o!fice 1n ~laucock Par~ to serve you better. , JUST llSTEO Large lot in Palin Desert on golf cout; ·e. Details on request. S18,500. JUST SOLD l1ur Bi g Canyon Jot -\\'C ha JUST BEGINNIN To th111k about s\vin11ning i11 yo r 0 \\'11 pool? \\'h.Y nol enjoy the \vhole 1-'aci · '. in this beautiful ocean.front 4 hdrn11ho1n e. 79,500 . JUST THE PRETTI EST Linda Isle ho1ne. Countrv modern 4 bdr1n .. :!-story, with pier & :-,li p, Asking $285,000. BUY OF THE CENTURY 3 l3drn1 . home on fair\\'av, 'fhundarbird Es- tates 111 Palm Springs. Ne\v air-conditioner ~ pool. \.'alued n1uch hi gher-asking only :;1100.000. Wlust sell inunedi<it ely 1 Just pick up the phone & call !lug llon1es 'l'°ou 'll be pleased you ll~lcd \\'Llh us Specializing in Homes of Distin'ction HUG HOMES, REALTORS •1 c · 1•o I (peJJng or pi lvacy lt'Oni tht· er1 age o ec 1 n 1 ~~r.;,:,'.~~.~~;_.::~~~:i:'.'. ON THE WATER NEWPORT BEACH~$00 .950--Dock & 2 BR, :!If.: ba, dining, quiet location. listed. Hurry CALL 541).1151. MESA VERDE'S BEST slip. Just JUST LISTED-~ecutive 2 story. 4 BR, 3 b~ ho1ne. Luxuriously appointed \vith expen- sive plush crpt~. beaut. drps, waJl paper, mirrored walls & rustic used brick patio. Lg pool size yal'd \Vith n1any trees. Best lo-- cation-on quiet street. Offered at $67,950. Jlurry, won't last at this price. CALL 546-5880 CORONA DEL MAR HOME WITH INCOME-Cozy 3 BR. 2 ba, \vith_ fireplace + ne\V 2 BR rental over ga- rage. For additional information CALL 541> 11 s l. STATELY STORY SUPERB SEASIDE CHALETll I -nesUed among trees. Open beams ; spec- tacular bar room; separate master bedroon1 suite: 2 nfassive fireplaces & a view from all 3 becfrooms. 1vith u11ti;h·r down•l!\iP-. Sf.•11a1·11lc duilng. I a r ~ 1· ru1 ni\y nJ0111. EI tr l r 1 r ~ara~e door upeuf'r. All lh\• iintl \'Cl°\' 1011· ya r o! n1111nlt•nan~·c ut S ij 1 , 4 5 0 l 646-TITI. GRUBB & ELLIS co. ' O"'"'"'"'"UNTOl£NCF'. 675-7080 ' lt ' REALTORS THE REAL ESTATERS· G!!!!!!!en"'e"r"a1"R"."E"."""""10"'0"2\!\ ~c"or"o"n"• "!d"e1"!M~a"r""~10!.2~2 ~ T HE M C:=·. ,:::.,=, =.V:::E:;:ll=:D:=o;F.=;;:2 ;;:;9 ::i Horse Ranches OP-0-T 1 RNlwood, "'" < "'" ' "" .. HILL I 15x ti cov. pul10 -t lan<il I in Riverside 1950 sq fl Sll,900 Qu1~k I e A \\'ilh a <lrnmatie 180 di'g I oct·11pnn1·v , euslC'lnl .\ Bd~ni, I plus ocean VtC\I', a to.IE.SA v1·:1trn: \Gl t Cors1(11 . ~11.utnl(ullyAllappoidntl'd ~IJ()'1)1 beuu1ifu!ly decorttlet.l 3 Bn htfl pool fn1•p1! 'l br. 2 b.1 · sq. • un i'r·groun( r D I BR ·t b It · ' .' 'I 1"J'f · · •-·d f · J . ·1, '" en or · CU!S on~ U• relurhishrtl, l1kt• n c. 11 • u ! 1 ws in QI; pat or. u;;t · home 1vlth ht•gc gan1e n101u s 15 500 v· .. t 1 11:~tcs lo -froe\lli'IY, 60. Full I fonnaldining andlu.xuriou~ -:>100' 1iNco'1Lt~·,,,,y 201!1' price onlv $4-4 500 }'i'ntun's · 'o 'd · ·• • •· ' · · ' \I 11 v i< 1 ·,. · 1 .· .', n1nster :.UJ!e. uts1 e Is ex-lilt ft , ch•,i;:ant .J hr, :! h;i, fnni , a e. c~tys l''<Cus11 l h'nslve "11\io decks big . ·bl r· l ·dr ·1 I LUil' yca1' s<·rivei' \li'arrautr. .• . . . '· , I rn1, 111.11 c 1pc .. C;ui; P~· Call roi· 1 . , . . . . · ll 1 ('S ,111cl a 1 .... 01 pond, All at 1 l-4_;!. l'\.>l'lll'l" lot. s 11.i,200 ui ll1111nfu1nt.'.l.t1Un. lhe end of a riui c t '21g,~ PUI·'N'J'F 1-JO · r• I• Custun1 <I Bdl'ln,:: 1·al' cul~e-sac : '. ,. '1 .~j. :JI s:t .1 I ga ra~('. Near 11('\\'. 'Full half . r I Co11h t 1111. ,J )! ' -l!l, ;)~ " I ooi·o l•t "· 1 r 1 ,\ top \alUc at I st•p ).:ll•'"' "r pla~hou"' "~ ' " . '-""-'i'l l'f ('OJ'(" 1•1 $}59 5(Xl -·, , ~-[J't'C\\ :IV M. Full prie~· or1l v ' . ~. .\~~11n11• lol lflllll. $2,,., r··i t · · · I Call &H-1211 !'"' -, .. 1 I" .. 1 '542.600, plus Vatlrv H1•;d1v ·~ I r11n, .. -..1 ,tJ< 11t,u1 Genera1-ii':-E. 1002IG8nerifR-:E.. 1002 l 567 San Nicolas Drive, Suite 102 $69,950--Sccluded 4 Bedroom. 2 Bath, Ne,v- port Beach vie\V .hon1e on quiet cul-de-sac. F'ealuring forn1al dining. Separate family . roon1 \\·ith large brick fireplace and lots of \rood. 4 large bedrooms, ne\vly decorated t!iruout. Beau! it'uJ fainily backyard. Com- r::lcte \rith padrllc tennis court and basket- oall & tennis back board. Ju~t listed, \von 't last. Call no'"! 546-5880. t'.'1.tlusiv~· one )~·ill· sct'\;K'C' ~ 1 Costa Mesa Realty f 1v<1r111111y. Call 5 1 Since 1958 * S48-771 I -I 1 ' _ Af!1•r ~P~l. CH~l :i..i7-Hil< ~=::==~==:=~:~' Photographer's ' PRICE REDUCED I * Newport Ceni., TO $89,500 · EXCLUSIVES * ~4o.4pso EASTSIDE OCEAN VIEW Bcautirullr 1tc1'Uratf'd , ; I Delight DREAM HOME hdrni. '!.. hath lw1111c. \\'1111 Just try du,Plieating 1hi~ 1 111.111112 BAYSIDE PL General R.E. 100~ Genera l R.E. ]arg(' illlfl hvablf' CUSIOlll i 0 rl\ .. I ' .J ' [ • I·.,·::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 1002 INCOME PROPERTY-ti shake roof beauties -8 gar<1ges. everything in excellent condi- tion. Big lot. close to everything. Call for n1ore inforr'nation. 540-1151. '&c this rorncr local!on 3 1 full din1111: l'{Knn, 1·hr!'~ =========I IX'rlroom, lanli.ly roo 1u I kih·h1•11 11ilh 1•v1•ryth1 11~ honlf' in Corona fie] :\Jar Dtl n P '1l l-O."lu. SPlf'. a,1.1 ar!• COMFY !orl ;i,··s tnill"kl'l ·1; ~ayfront s: pr 11-:1tr *MESA VERDE* 10°/o DOWN I honu .. · J·ligh\y upgracird. 1 t'arnil.v n1on1, l1ro•plu1·•• 81;2 0 1 INTEREST Enjoy _Ule plal'id µool or us1' T111, k-pil·· ,.n 1 JX'1". !!rap•·' lkdro(lnis, slu•iy. sp:lc:1ou~ !!nRJh'ing COZY CORONA familv rooni, ,.;c11-ur uc.-.111 1 OeEN SAT/SUN . 12-5 ULTIMATE IN Ir-------------------, 10 1h<' pl1\-:;t<' b•'ach. A SUJH'I' i $-li.:J()(J. Cnll ;,.10-17:'0 ~i~~n~·~.~IR~!~~t' 01.1~~~{"~ c;1;~~ ~-·021 BA -v:s1 DE,. DR ... -~l~~~i~1~I; i ~lN/l~ :.~~Si~-~' "111'!!;;:;;i;~~11'.1 1lu·~:::~:111 [;~11~1~~~ Id ' ("1i.,ion1 hrlrn · + J r u 11 111111 ;1 11 ''.I (' 1<1 1)1\' fururc. A o. r or appo1n11n('f1! r" · ,. 1 ~ · ~ '' 11lirt1\'1lUconsirh•r11h:1t\ot1 ERITAGE C D M hu-gc IOI. A truly best bu~ 1· • • ' 1 al $92.500. ElL L<~ k at I hos.:• !l'l'lll~'.: Tl1•·1·' """RB 111:.y I\•• hi~l01·y ;.oun :-ti d11n;t • 1 • 'f II ' insrrtt. 1·all 673-S5j(). 1:".1~1 .• ~c,u·:::nrai:;" ~-i-!ll••!. ;".<'I. i{.r,;trul lii·ini:: n.>;,111. 1!:11"1111·..: optn li.•:1n1 \"'l!:I\.:•" f)«I k11.~ _ Th<' 11 I! 1 Ill .1 I c frirnia! dinin!!. g 0 11 I'1111 , 1 "11 1:-:! !Jh'I" l'\~. Th•• 1no~d REALTORS ill''lli!lt'. I: \•1U 11,11\1 ;Ill I I~ t''l.11';1 ~h;11·~ 0 '1 Ult 2 ll.\ t J'tlOL ho.11<' ill COl~O:'\,\ l I >!<L \JAi: dll a h1g l~l . ...:llXJ ; 111 pr11·;1t·.1. n11 1111· kitt·h, l'IH'erful brkf~! l'ln. rt';1~011ald1• 11;11 111• knn1~ uf' II. ~ 11~t1•1·1n1nt 11·/llit'I' & fl,..:•!. qudy ll/[ll'('['ll. 4 P.H. 21: !o IPlfl C:dlh•1·n:a·~ :.:re:1le,;t l OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN TO BE NI([ r I OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 BA. 01·,·i·sitl'd ~ar. ~!'P .~1111111 1 .. 1111 Call 11 ~! • 903 N. BAY FRONT 11u1·k;:hnp, Ire: t"(lvered p:11 1n 11111111·d i:tl•·l.1 ,_1,''1' •• q u i.c 1,j Genera l R.E. 1002General R.E . 1002 ' ~ •. 1: Qu:i l 1 t y I'() llS! t"Ul ·t ion. 011 IH' I' fl'1''" "'-:O.l(J!J h ' ... -:-..). J(). \Ill\ ! ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I.':=~~;:;~~~==' : 2 Full lot~ II 1th l::t'. hOnll' -! h;is aln'.tfl.1 pUJ'('hased ulli<'I Ill\]) s:.s,;i00 I' THE REAL ESTATERS ]qt 11·,1:1 l'l'l\"11\• 1·un1111un11y , • ..,.. ____ ,....,....,_ h<",11·h :u-.·•"i~. OPEN HOUSE Onl~ Sti~.~,00 ... -oPEN SUN. 1-5 -DAll.:Y 1 TO s TWO STORY : r1·11·att' pit·I' 01n c·1•ntrr of1 h11111e ;1nil :011x1uus in n1,1l\c• 0"£NnL9 • •T'S f JNTOBENIC£• NEW DUPLEXES Cal! 1;.1-1-7211 3308 OCEAN &e-vo:-.,.~Hk'.·1.f It! -..S11·~10- -~1 1 & ('njov Ol..~an & jct•v 2744 GANNET Supcr ;~c~~~,~~}11\S Ill I 187e1tl ~UNOAY 12-5 ~1-:17:r\1~c~11;)('r~1~ 1:\~~:e 111\~ [ ~-. r • ·*~~ :1~·~1[· Baycr('st 11·ith forn1al dinin..: 1' 4'~o'o"'E1..1r7st•;_it e 'yoursF.OR All i , ----;-,··t·-room. P!us lai·g<' fainily , 1 1 rooni ttnd \vet bar. A 1 l~y \\'ar1nington -buy no\v & have your choice of colors on these duplexes no\v under construction. Take advantage of first O\\·n- ~r 's n1axin1u1n depreciation}:. \Ve have plans in our office. P!ca:-;e ca!J for information. ' 1 : \IP\\': ;:rx~cious roon1s .;. .\I ES.\ \'EltUE. l~a11t. ! ' I ~ 1· ll~llsual ~'tl<'~l hou:-.('; Ruman I Bdnu.. lul'1t1al 1i111. n11. I ______:_____:__ -!uh ;.., all ~ fan11ly r u1 : bra11d ti.•11 I OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-5 : ,·u11i1 . s:J7.~~~' l:l<'auty _ Call no\\· to see. C.M. AREAS Air Conditioned Irvine 1 966 SANDCASTLE -$34 450 Full Price : 4 Bn. r,11u1I:. 1n1. 11r>11 r..~·-:'~'~2~Y.>:;!~'~"•'._,,...., ' 01·aJ pool. ,\ lJ.11').!.on, i BAV BEACH .IS'l.,lf: rn.1 7' « SllO.IMlJ ~I ond "-~.'.P/.\Hi. I'.\\ :-.11-:~1'...; 67S·3000 616-7711 HARBOR VIEW HILLS REALTY ::1 :; :l lA!tl~E i\\1~. I 11.\\.BOA JSL.AXIJ --*-6-73-_6_9_00 .. * __ 1 ~ S26.~' Ln1v l<t'h 1" ,\..,,11111,• !Rl{/lB1\ hf)n1<'. h 11 in, OCEANFRONT Walker &Lee Jtt •l (J 1~1t Corona del Mar !\lost popula r ''Szindpipcr"-1. bdrms .. 2 bathfi -· po\rder r111. Lge. fan1il,y rn1 . ,~·1 frplc. & \\'Ct bar. Cathedral ceil's. This hon1e is ex- lrcn1ely sharp & up,t:r:lded. Priced at $102.500 Jn('I. 'cry \·a luable !and ! Tl\.; l~·~lll IJ\11 ]l'\'il11' IS :• · .\1us1 .-;, .. .--iur 1·\rr:-liHll"' 1'11.1 "' l!1•;1,1!1t11I .. h ;o ,_; \.II i•<'I" fl11'\!Hlll, l'o'll\i',d olll n•l1•.1ti .. 1ut1L;. 1iJu, ;ill u! 1111' .11h1•1· ;11n••n11 11• .. 1•1f1·rt'd I.\· a ASSUME 7°/o LOAN I $188 101<1 1 11~·~ Jlll'lll ~'' ( q11 .. [Ian) g, rib\ C:.I!". ,h,lk··1:... I'\:, I' ( ! I: T ~ [; !·. \ { I! I FHA . .Sh::rp :: hi•rh·rK•ni ,,11 !•~,f OPEN FH!/.:),\J" ~'~l J)ll LI:\ · J.111u1.I II•' I · 1 I II • J' i!ih ...:1 C \I \'•··;ft) ( u ... 11•111 !h',1t.:11,•d lU 1,1,,, ... Ol'l'rSIZ('f ul ll I I I ' . ·-· II . (11u· h:·li hl"<'k to f}('t'an. 1 ·11~ ••Ill ~· 1 .. •dlo>n•11 :.nd d!•11: 1·,,,1<!<011(·<' ~· 11 n\ JI I •' I t' I ? l'•l'tlJll••'" 1.111 l«'ll ()J). 1.·1 J OUR 25"; YEAR :!'c _1r ,,1,1 h••!111· l~1'it•'r (1111) \)'I' i"'I' nlPlllh · (Oii\ 11,, .. 11• .. •tP ll••ll lf' nn 1alual It:' I'..~ lo.' I Jr\) I $ :; '} , ~j :J l] '. Sli-fl!HI J\"I 011·nr/Hkr f>lh-1S:i 11,1,; 011r11.l1t,\ ! J,1'1h<"l<Jo11' I ~ --------,11111 d1•n ,, !.vd111\Jlll' ,1110I I~-_' ].,1 I lupl• \ ,u)d 1111111, f'-'::~:".~"'!==~;,IO-=~::-~~ ....... -"\ 11'111;.-.(-,1-.!, u' .1hull! l1~11ng ti Jo:. ~l~l . General R~E-:---1002 [General R.E. 1002 •H'n Lu'l.\11) ,u11l 11u.d1t~ 111 {'\'l'l'Y II 11y! Dt~1gned Id •·flnt Crl 10 !':lflgll' fa11111' 1[ dl'~irl011. ('1•111•1 11.'ll<' f;t!)l;o~l,1_· l1.1d•tl'I :ind <1l't·:11• 1 11"11 J. '"''Jl11nnal I 11 11 111•'JIL.: , ;,ll 1.. ·H't\111;.:•·•I ~··~1:.1·1n · BAY AND BEACH ,,. "'"'''" :3 WALKER & LEE DUPLEX nrr~ · Q-i:.<;1iir1TO f;INI(!• MACNAB IRVINE ~-~-~-~~-~··-~~---~- FINER HOMES BAYFRONT MANSION! AS NEW 136' I3a yfrontage '" IJsland-like seclu sion & privac:y. fJier & slip. Parquet floors. \\'alnut panelling by :\laster C'raftsn1e11 . Like a European J\Janor-landscaped by Beeson. Den. study, for1nal dining roon1 . 3 bedroo1ns , guest or servant 's quo.rtcrs. Priced under replacement cost. S-1.90.000_ Fee property. Appt. only, Gloden 1··ay 642-8235. lll'llt "VIEW BAY & OCEAN" Ne\\'pOrt !-!eights -overlooks beautiful park. In1111acu late 3 bedroonl , 2 bath - dining rootn. $85.000 fee si tnple. 1-l arriet Perry 1>42-8235. !Wl21 BIG CANYON- GOLF COURSE & PARK VIEW 40' pool & pull ing green. 4 bedroon1s. fan1- ily roo1n -r-dining roorn. Private dri\'e. 1\11 outstanding buy! Sl79.500. Ton1 Queen 644-6200. 111131 NEW DUPLEX-CdM Thick shag carpets. built-ins. \\'a!king dis- tance to oc:can. (;ood in c:on1e. $11""4.500_ Carol Berry fi~-l-U201J. t \\'l~J OWNER TRU~'li MOTIVATED TO SELL Attractive 3 bedroon1. :J bath hon1e \r 125' bayfrontage-pier ,~ float . Private nrea. fee land. Lg. n,·ing rooin. fornl a! dining roon1 . family roon1 . ...l patios. Id eal for in- doo r ~outdoor entertaining. ;\sking SlGJ.500. Gloden 1:ay 642-82J5. !Wl51 OVERLOOKING THE BAY One of Baycre:.t"s finest ! Superb quality 2 bedroom & c:onve rtil)le fa1nily roon1 . Beautiful \\'Ood s. marble & fixtures. Full security. 8175.000. Ken 1-l artley 642-8235 . i11'16J BAYFRONT COLLINS ISLAND French contemporary. l~g. roo ms. high ceilings, 5 Oedroo1ns-l iving room \V/pan- oratnic vie\\', Elevator lo roof ga rden area. 117' of bayfront -docks tor 2 or more yachts. Fee land . !385.000. C. Schweickert 642-82-15 . IW17) OCEANFRONT- SIDE-BY-SIOE DUPLEX 9000 sq. ft. of top qualily ltLxury cons1ruc- tlon. 4 BR & den + 3BR & den. Great opportunity _for joint ownership or part- ners or live in one & rent other. High in· come area. Subterranean garage for 6 lo 8 cars. Asking S365,000 . Glodrn ray 642-823q. (W18) (Irvine I 675-000 l:l-..\1. i:»l .ITE . SOUTH OF HIGHWAY ~i ' 2407 E CCAST'HWV CORONA OEL M A R 545-9491 PETE BARRETT 640 1120 ' ......... ._ ... ._ _ _...__ Co11111l•·I<!) r1·11111d1·!1•Jl • iGeneral R.E . 1002 G~ne;·a1-R~E . 1002 j o\1111·1·,. 111111 ~\,.i;.·rh1ni.: , .. -R EA l T Q R-----------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; L 00 K I NG F 0 R ll+ ·11 . \ ,, ' I 11d• ·ii d!" •il-«nd [~ THE REiil ESTATERS I ~ • -' EASTSIDE? s11·1 ··I lr1t·,,Jp111, llnni.:~ 1n 1 ~_4.:;_2! _____ ---------SEA VIEW VILLAS .11~1; r1111il~-f·11·:11n1 ri111111..:1:: s:1:~1 n11111th 1111·0 in " -lido's Best Buy s (Finished Unit Now Open ) 1'•>1•'!'1·11 p;1t 11•-fn111 11·l·1·.; nn [ l'.J:lll\'LD TO Si~l,:«~I \'·ii! *COLLEGE PARK * \:, •' f.,1111.\' llHll\1' ,!] <I!\(' I 11 l 01t~l.1 \!,•-.1 l•·•I ;!!<'.<•' ~ ; H·li !H' ..... •1"11 Pl';. t•li Ill" ' ~·" i, .. li!IC~ li'pl< I ~\'["' !H I , .. ,11•>; I:.:" h .... i,. ~ .. rd " •f>11n:,1t·rs .I. ht'ar u1.:! ll'llll I•<'<'~. ,\,•\\ tdl-11\ S[<i\• ' ,\ •Ii·! ,.,, 11 (1u:-t:1ndu1.:! I ;dt.l' 'Li '•-~I. HARBOR VIEW SPECIAL Open Fri/Sat/Sun. 1-5 \11•11 kt•p1 dc• .. 1ral.l1· ~ln'('t , 11• '1 •·' 1111•1·r .. .i~ .. 111ai.,· 128 Via Ithaca Lu .~ur1ous i\ledit. condominiun1s. l·:xpanst\'(' \I .di: 1,, seh•.ol:-.. Do )"u1· •1!h·i' ·~ :-;r~-11'1111'" h:t'. 1111. ~Hi~l.'111'11 11·h1te \1Jater ocean views. Ital ian fountains. ••\1 11 d"r0r:111nc:. i1s i111nh I I I l . 1<1 !Hfi1'" t"\l·lu'''" Ctol l for . . .1 .IL ''· . 111n;;ic._ "u n 1 1· -1 I cobblestone streets. 2 S.: 3 J:ll~. 21 ;! ba .. patios. 1·:11!.'li'-h. ·: BJ:. ~' ~ li,1, llJ r• r tll lhc· ;lJJP•1111l1111•nt I "" ~r" t'rplc:s .. hd\\'d firs .. stained L'iass \~·indO\\S, iol ,,~j,,,.}\J\) <J 1.\1:L·:....\ o('( .. 11111 ,-,111 !IY!) in1ported tile. Pool. j acu zzi & clubhouse-.Yu:t{,., S,11tt!: 7 .. .,,1,1.•t lll~l!OH~ B1. '! 1,;, ~· sundh:_ S81"1 .~J.ill g) Ill. ~6g, L.10 -S7l:.150. 52 L'ni t con1p!ex. abo\ ~ NEWPORT BEACH 1;1'!.-ll'lR 1\1 011arch l3ay in L aguna i\iouel on Crov.'n Val ley Pk\\·~· .. E . fron1 Coa~t l!\\'V. c~ \V. I . REAL TY 675-1642 Avocados on Jasmine? keep Uris ltaltdy directory wtttl you this wffllend • yow 90 hoUM-llu11tl119. All the locotloni listed below ore described in greater cletoll by odnrtblng else- where in todoy's Dally Pilot WANT ADS, Potrons showing OPff ltonH for sole or to retit ore urged to list tuch l•forincrrion In this cofi.rmn each Friday, Sor. urdoy & Sundcrv. HOUSES FOR SALE 2 BEDROOMS 71-1. J\larigold.Corona del Mar oi3-2408 (Sat & Sun 10-5 1 3 BR & FAMILY RM OR OEN ••=19 Balboa Coves (BalbQa Coves) NB !H0-86i2 $129,500 jSal & Sun 1-5) 29n Teakwood Pl. 1.\lesa Verde) C.M. 642-8550 S42.900 (Sun 1·51 4 BEDROOMS ;)16 Catalina Drive. Nev.rport l·lcights 642-8711 $77,500 !Sat & Sun 1-5) 4 BR & FAMILY RM OR OEN 128 Via Jthaca (Lido Isle) NB 642-1188 $109,900 (Fri/Sat/Sun. 1-5) 204-01 Ravenwood Lane, HWtlington Beach 963-6029 $63,500 · (Open Daily) •9822 Corner Brook, Huntington Beach • 962-5585 $62.500 !Sat 2-Sl CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE 3 BR 9564 Bickley (York/Villa) H.B. 968-2474 $28,900 (Sal & Sun DUPLEXES POR SALE I '8R EACH 403 Jasmine, Corona del Mar _ 675-4630 · (Sat & Sun I-Ii) 3 BR + FAM RM; I BR + FAM RM 122 39th St. Newport Beacb 645-2963 '~74,900 (S~t & Sun 1-5) 4 BR + DEN &·I BR 61i Carnation Ave., Corona def Mar 615-5631 · $99,500 , (Daily 1-5) ... 1 w .. -w ....... .... fron1 San J)iego F\1·y_ • Thu!'~ ni.:ht -·, p1··Jdu,·nio.: Eastridge 4 Bedroom rn·• ~ 1111h :! 111,..-1111" q 111t,; B••;1u1dul ~-~11•r.\ 11Jth ;.!:1 11 Presented by Nolan R.E. Inc., 714 /496-6551 Corona del Mar '--1022 tl11r11111 1n .. n thc dl'a!. South ~q. 11 1 ht11·111~. :. ha1 11~ ~:d1• Pf !(II\ ,\lll'H('!I\'(' J': ]·,,1'1Jl:1] •!1'1111:! !"f\H lil ------)I' iold 11\1pirx 111th <~•ut.11• ~'.1•1ul~ 1 ... 1~· .\ ~··111n General R.E. 1002 : General R.E"' 1002 : 1 .. 11liint. \\.dk1n·..: d1st:u11·1• 01 . i·u,,1 11 1··, I" p \ 1,·1· .. \\• ----------' Bu: C11r11t1.1 Onl,v $.'\:l.U.~!. lll•~lt•t'Jl i..tli'iJ('tl ~hHl\'S )1h• 1 11 ,,.,,,~~.~;,Y"~,~~ 11,,,1 ~$lSi~9.~~0WN .. ~EW LISTING! Omu°'2l ';[,"-;~;,i'"" s.·.;:""' "J'"1 I e)r~an! . 1 story hrini•'., ~l :lll'l _rlr 111n. ll:i.td to f111d ;i.t1 l11T1 dnlt houst's nn nnf' Int ~ T"RREll. :;;,.,,1nr: is hcll<'l'in~ 011,r ~-1!1.9,IO. ·1 hw.;c bc<lroon1~. 4 ()111• 1.~ furnisl1t'd ,011d 11oul1! ~ I I II • :lil~J ~q 11 whi('h llll'ludt•<; ii· halh~. L:Jr£!~l' kltchrn. !1<<"11 ' 111:1ke g1·cal s11n11111•r r•·ntul ' r;)R~ • rt! I '! fl :1 In I . l 0 r n l' I' I r\ r. l'rtva!f' pNliOS! C;1l1 tii:i-~1:t.'J Bl ·1:r~ \\'lllTE HF:ALTQf{ W\.SJJ0Ul.Q..uJ.~ SC'par. c. _amt y roonl ,\· f(Jl~Ht:ST OF TR FF,.; , '1!"11 NE \\'!'!lt~T. :'-"l'T llCI! f<1n11;~I rl1n 1ng roo111 . :'>1an1, , . • : -· , · ;\Ian.I .;U~tonl f(•atui·i:.~ Brl1~~.g;1t~. lati.1_ lJon t 1rn11 1 * i;;:rMi.:O * ....__ I PLL:.'i a f(•atu1'e u1 !11('-1 -~ .. -6ili1. i RETIRE HERE MESA VERDE GIANT ma .. irr twrlrooni ~·ou I\ fl!'\ i r ! OP£tJJIL 9 • IT'S FUN ro BE NIC£• 239 Heliotrope Ave, ~: .... C'1'. lln11i.". :-:u111•1· f'ka11 " gti•''~-Si'l 'IOO 'i"ou e<in 1 ~~, i , 174,500 hi:.:111) upg1·;1dPd ~' r.r. 3. J;,,, ! J t 1)0 h 11 I :! sin!). J:llUl'lllf'1 k11l'hl'll, :! {U[I ll'.J l' 11" .inyii f'IP ' 2 B:~ .. :! h,1. 1:u·:in! .'\: l'l';ul,v lrpl1·;., fn111 nil, rurni cl1t1 . COATS -------* * * * * * 1:.:.-('Ill'. lfJ1 in r>n'.~!U{t' 1•1• & _ _ 1 GOOD INVESTMENT 1 QUIET RETREAT l!fL\ll< l'~Lt:O..ll Tl-:1. · WALLACE ·-i \\;1fk tu 11!!,t<h IJ\\'l' C<olrlrn-2811 OCEAN LANE !)j;::-ti;:};. 1 • 11)(1 roo1 li1;d1~1' Thi~ d11J1lt':\ $112,SOO BY OWNER REAL TORS 3 Bedroom Home ( !11 quil'1 ;1rl'a n(';1r gr<1n1111a r Bay ,\ r i1/<1lioa I IC'\\. :i BR. Co1st;1 i\lt•sn. Op1.·n 11011-· I -54"-4141-~1·hl)OI. 4 !>1..•d .. den 1v 11·1·1 • _ Sat.-~un. :1 r.rt Fa111-1111 {Open Evenings) I $28,500 . I ha1', & ;; hatt1s duv•n:<la1rs.' 13n!h" hn1nC'.~ ;lf(' llllnlal'ul.11(' !'t)OI. si::.:(1(1, . Pn1u.:1roi1·:I ~ru1ciou.~. hc1+1l1 t'<'ihnJ:cd, ·~,\,~-•~!\ ·~ 111-11 be open fur l nnly. :!781 Ci lJUln A11' I ~~~~~~~~~~' An,vone l'<ln ass111nl' I his Vi\, 1 111.•11. ;qit. lll'l'r c:.rpori , Y u · 1! Kia) .l-.L 1 J:i7-::J08. 7'; lna11. ~1~1. :ironrh 101111 1 Con1rnrc valu<' il'ilh olhcr, Un1vers1ty Realty -;-.-· . . ! pr.yment. C;_iJI fnr del oiils. • Cd~! rtnrlc'l.<'s. : 3')()1 E. C'~"t HI\)'. 67J.-G:;10 ;lil'..i\U1JF'UL; .! hugl' Bi:-1 CENTURY 21*642-H71 ' PRICE$~ 500 i CHAH.i'll!Nc;f1_o_u s F: s-I 1.~a. "101'" tn shoppi11~. 77, I ~ • · S\'hools l'hu1·1·h<'s AssUl1 \" fill C!.rrna !ion 1\v('nur htaur g:1rdcn~. ~.of !111)'.1 t:l'l l;r 1 S'J?95o A·I Ch11rrn packed !mR, 281\, lln I Iln1k<'r G7:l-.J63t: GiJ-46:13 r1t1 l~c lt·2 Jot. $9:\,(XX), 0..1 n I -}1~7739 ''1 · · · · b · , l~tnlry-s1lc !N!'E' shadt.'fl lot. I FIX and savt·~ 11 u g c 1 8\' 011·tiC'1'. 673-4169 ' · --• - Cope Cod Cutie!!! C'rpl!:i. drps, 1111 n I ' g -r in • C':-il't·1111vl' ho111C'. Gi a nt CHARf.11NG 2 Bn JV,111c On I · -----1 ~1F:S,\ Vl':H.Df.. l1nmacu1at<' shal'Ji' llal'llQr School Dist '. ! cul-<k--~;u· Int. I + f~u11ily 40 · R-2 Jn! in old Corona dC'l l Costa Mesa 1024 ;; Bit, F:.ini._ 2 BA, Yl/rootn A~kini.: s:IB,9~.n. Sub ni it ' roon1 + f<'1·111 al dining.~ r.1ar. Cusioni !:ihult<'rs lhru I for hoat. Pi·in1c "~~ dc 11ac-. do11n-Dnn't ini~s !his!! V.i:.:. 1 CJo,;i.: lo ht•1,ch. $19:9.'iO~ Call I out. frpl c .. nc1v kilchen. $42,~.~gt. fi.l2-8550. 110\YAno .~CO. 6-15-8-100 847-6010 A;.:L .l'wfo1·c·ln "ond.. walk to * EASTS I DE * Dana Point 1026 ~--------beaeh. Delightful yard Charnung ranch style I - 1v/lge mature lree + patio l Bdrrns .. 2 baths, family I JOG TO MARlN,A, sparions C. il'l -O~}A f} ~ ~C. ~ \v/frplc. Ow11cr, 673-2408_ rm. & Iornlal duilng~room quality ho1nc •. l BR. fJIU<> • ~~ 1-'-;i -(,!) J.:,J(./" ~ OPE~ HOUSE 1..S SUN ONLY $38,900 den, plus formnl dining n i1, Th t I t . -w· d G -•th Ch 'I I HOME & INCOME Come •o l FERGUSON-HESTER, "'""'"· '"'"mablc 51 .... a n r1gu1ng or . ame w1 a uc,; e 7151,) Poppy. B~lld ne\V Realtors, Inc. 83~9781 loan $49,900. Open house, ------ldi1•4 "' ClAY a. rollAN ,. i 3BR, 200, home, w/oceon 1 • %llll Mnin.sail Dr. 49&-lOij . 0 ~eo"o~g" lell•1S cl 1li11 !ov• M:'O"'bll!d wo•d~ b<!- bw to lonn fo~r 1•mcle wo•ds SEYRUT I -h-T;---rl' I......,.../ -.-I ..,--1 NOOIN I i._,.....;I '"""I ' r-1 .--1/ , '. f. 1 viC\v. The front house is PUIET SECLUSION 8 NEW DUPLEXES ! rentcd. See this unus ual In Tree lined Exclusive area. OC('On viC'l\'S, $Gl,950-$ti.9j() Duplex loday! 3BR-2 Bath one story condo . 3.".861 Copper Lantern Lois Vogel, Renltor v..'ith lovely pool. Lush Agl, 496-3431 54R-~11G carpel<; & ci1·apes. New 3 BR, l 1 ~ BA, near Dal\R Pt. l'_IW & Disposal, 11\l!T)' at Hnrbor. f"rplc.. ~vood SOUTH OF HWY. . . .,;,ooo. Bkr. 61:1-4155 • patio, comm. pool. 136,<tJO. , Newly Redtcor1tod BLUE RIBBON 496-1408. 1 1 3 B<tnn. home with rental ShlU1> and clean 4BR/2BA, _E_l _T_o-ro _____ I0-32 unit. $69,500. "" !Q)lc il spAn elect bltln kitch. '· . ---------Balboe Bay t"roperti1s Prfmc locution nr. SO. Coast 1 BY Owner· 4 BR 2 ba 1.._1 ~ + 640 8484 * * Plaza $42 900 · ' • "l' C, .,,.'J t" ~; ~ "CALL ~ ' ma~ upgrades, coworod I I • , * C-_. R-lou palK>, close to schools & C Y K U L I Th bt' h 1 f. ~ 8 NEw J)IJPU:XES. IW>f ,.,,.., J shop. $36 500 or 6 r; ~J I J5 J:O: food e,,,;~su i~~ 1h:i 1 ;" pro;~~s.l ·~J:ftil>.~';' .. ~~n vu11 Monticello Condf ~"J1m:~lfin·S\~f~7"~ · · · -,.. 11\dke you hullliy bv1 lhe•r I Sa~ $30,00) '° $50,00> over 4 Bd?'m'll., dlnlng atts, '1 ba. C I P H U E I pticeri"make --,····· S·,1 . CoroM dt1 M&.r prices. . Now paint&: carP.tts-Move-Fountain Velley • Futrr Apprec~Oon. In rondlUon. 9,950. I I I 11 J O c,.,.1.,, .~. ''~".• •""" 6gf, 1'18il Cof)lt<I' Lantern Fl!RGUSDN•HESJER, L -'·-'---"-· ___, __ ,,__ -'· bv "''""' " ''' .iw'o ""''' 49&-3431, Ilona Pol"! Rt1ltor1, Inc. I»-"!!. EXEC. DRE• .. I if1oJ dty1lop ll'Olll iltP Nq, J below. ~·, =~~~=~==,,_..,.....,,._,,~·~~~~ DUPLEX •I 61\ CarnaUon, 5 DR, 2 Balh -· Coot• M11<nlllclent COW11'"1dJ wiltt fJ t~NT r.i!J'.1.~r,Eo lITTEllS , So. of hJgttw&J, prlC~ Mim. JS6 10lt0 . Wf'll J,p autbentlc Spa lah U l TH!iSf t UA.fl'ES $99,!llXJ. Broktr. ~il CM'fltll~ dra?a Call 8111 t0W1tJ;fn1 m3f\Y cltrut Ct C) 'i:ff:~:i\ l(Tl!IS 1$:i~ ":.cs~:".! R~ ~IS BR/Ir:. ~:~l :: f~n.;;:s,t'Ov.r I wllh a Pllol c ... l&ol hit .-1~, ..,.,, """'· a... t9flO "'I· It. 112,fl(IO, ll!ldrl La SCRAM-I.ITS Alt~ i1t Q111l11Mtlon IOIO • , t" 131.5(1). \<!'t"· w.M!1 Moro Cll'<'lt. 968-- 1 • J. ' . - :-,,.-.,.-..,,.-.,-..,.,,.,.,,~.,---,.,....,.---.,-,,,.,,-.,---.,,--,--·..,...,~---:-...,--_;:,.,=-:d---,-::--r---:"'1:r.'."."'".,-:7-n".~r--.-r.tlil/, 1,1ay "" l:;74 * OAflY PILOT :J7 ~ount1in Volley 1034 ] Huntington "Beach 1040 \ Hunt. Harbour 1042 ~ • L19un1 Be•c~ 1048L;,91,.1n1 Beach 10481..:..N:.:•:.:.;,:.ipo;:·::.;t:.. .. .:B;:•::•<:::;h::..._l:.:0:.:6::.9N:.:.::.•w;;.,,po.;.r:..t...;:;B.:;•;;,•<.;..h;_...;.Y'-06.;..9_1i.;.N;.;•..;.w~po~rt;...;;Be~~·~c5!h£.:::.:::J1o!Oi!J9~1~~-~5~-!"~-~~~,E~:i ASSUME GI LOAN , B, '3!~· MUS'l'.SEU.: Own 2homes,1 ,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,::;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;; * CHERRY LAKE * 1' _,.,,,. Ir.ii I l.s..'<'.filL•din Qindo, Nnv1•1');n.1 O O E ,, with tllp and pier . ~ ~.;.!llXI t'U.Sh 11\0\'{' in. I h!\:I' !.),,, e 11011 Pf!', 1t11lt', pu!lc,. ,\v1,1xs I . PEN H us .! Nlnty, J nn. '/. ha, l"I' ti SI. from beach. Pyrlll!I )ii.;(' 111111111{. 1.1:. f1u11llv 1,~,111 t'f'llL $ij,200. By O\vnci" 1 . 3085 MOUNTAIN VIEW DR . Newport Beach Mobile Hom es 11fH.'11• 01110 i-unlll';'k. L~ ~ f j 213.a1)2.;)2(12,:;92-laJO. SAT. & SUN. 1·S P .M . [ 'for s1le 1100 •'11Ullll)' klft•ht•n, \\lilk·in ea.· Spacious four bedroon\, 2 1~.i bath home , cozy New Ustlng 1141111~, si·pa~.,11, lndl'y i ni. Irvine 1044 . 1 ~ . 11972 IMPERl1\L, 2 br , 2 ba, 1111\.,"l' 101 2.STORY-$4T,SOO I -! living room with r ed brick fi replace, sit· 1ori \ nlue .-Top ~!ntto.n -1 roof n('ivly prilnted & sealed, BRASHEAR REAL TY lltiny (or thl!I! 3 Hll. 21'2 I UNIVERSITY PARK do,vn \Vet bar, large Tear patio, 2-car ga-Close to School~ . .ttho11JJ1nr.:. ncc.'f'Jy lnn<l~cpt·~I . 2 storage 841·7411 Eves 968-1178 '.~·~ ~' yrs . lll'1y. Indoor -~1AGNll"JCENT 4 bdrm., 2'~ rage, a s pic 'n s p a n property a t $68,500. Lihrat',v._ '1 IJC(lroc.i1i:111, ___ 2 1'hl-'<is, wash I dj'yr I port ".lll door ('/l! HI kJ!t'ht!n. I-lu~e ha. lo~·nhou~r. sltufttC'tl Oil M • I Bnlhi>. s:i7,500. ~II ti4G-(Ja:).J, I dshwshr. $'11,200. ,\dull Pk. AN (1~r'.\!l \\ IN NJ<H ~ ;on1-1·111, r11tht'<lral L'<'!lini:;, I extra !JI;{'. lot. liv. flllq fl1n . ar1on Milne Real Esate ;.. ' Con\{' Si'<': Sat or Sun 19'~1 i;o. !hti-'.l HH h11n11• <I!\ rnrr1«r ~llll ill'~·k oft nu1s!el' su111'. rn1., fa1nlly rn1. Bcrtulllully 618 S . Coa5t Hwy. I t~ J\1~111kht1l'1'l, Sp '..!ti, llunt. 1111 1··i11111ly ~1.'<' li1•111i_: 1•11 I <h•coratf!rl. "'-'llh upgl':irl•'11 [ Laguna Beach 494-8558 1 B(·h. ,~~==,----c l 11/Jh•<>I' 1.. , <'1!1nl! lqii<'~ r; /) curp:, drupe!S & 11'11!1papt·1·s. ' ?.· · : ~\1·r1-,,-,c-·r-IVI:: 20:\ 11, encL n•llt!lry 1'1,lk' k1tt•h1·11. o.1ipet I $62,!0l.Alx'stbuy'. --5-----~·------ -I ,, :~: ,. p:!lll'l ,\; t:la.,sl"nf' 1oom. 2 1'••\'<'"'•I 111\11•0 \!111•· 111 'Laguna Bolch 1048 L B h 1048 "' I'!\ •) ha f'\1t .. 1s l'r1n1e •·111111111011. l:n .. i1 11,1,i. r .. 0 l·:XQUISITF:.J tx.lrn1. :! ha. I : aguna ~~~--•o FRESH WATER LAKEFRONT, fis h . ducks, 1 ' ' • " · ':· 1 1 I OCE FRONT ___ I .1111111 '"'' pnri.;. 1',V. area, only s::~.~iOO. <':dl s. 1n"·nhnus(" inq.uil't Sl'('\lf('f OPEN SUN 1·S 'T h f N o 1 • s \vimming secluded c ul-de-sac. 3 BDRM, 2 AN s11.>:i'J Cl11111'r .. ;:.11-6-134 THE REAL ESTATE llll" 1-'rcslllv pa111IL'(J lnlc1'1l•I' • i ouc o ew r eans I -' • ' DUPLEX · tuam./'3 .~· lg~>. l·~·nus rni., ar•' 553 EMERALD BAY J111pl<",: 11r1\t1c:ht ilo11 ;: . .i <"s. 1 BA'J'H. Motivated ~ellc rs have reduced to \'l·',l<\. ''L l·.·vin1.1< ('.\.'1.,\Jl· I:' \'ill. \\'tl' rronl . FAIR "hilin;.: IOI' you. Duifl An (·~c~ting !t1n1lly ,{-li.11 11·1, 1'.il1,,~. 11a I kl 11: :;;IO;:i,000. Fl~.~:\l'{~i; l'h. fJl1!-111.i,., Z !le', like nu. 839-6133 or 536-2551 REALTORS . dl·lay, buy today! s:-:iG.500. Cnlt'J'lftllllll~ hnllll' II 11 h t11.';l:_•l1'(' '" IWiH'h .~ (IJ\111. 2233 Heather Lane (Off Irvine & 23rd St.) 1:·11« tiuy ·•l s 1 :; ,;100. -·--' r . ~ (Ou I .-\ti 01\'IX/f!. gl:1ss ,\ I'<<!' 1 .. 1:.-. .::~l. • s:,,ino PO\\'N 1,v h spHeiou$ ivuii; arl';•~. · '·", • OPEt·J FRI., SAT., SUN. FROM 10 A .M . ,, \ c ---~--1 l',\SI! ·ro Lil,\N , \'l'lu· narni· of Jhintin.t;°t"il i (' uvt· 11 (inc s~:;r~n nf lx!r1n. suite, h~1" 1uh:l1 Ge ntleman Rancher I RHODA MAGIL Rltr. * (71 4) 642_3600 ~·;~::r~~1"lfll~~~~.' .\~~;;~·)11 ~· '!,.N-·r1<_;:-1J~y-the-S eAa. l lii:.:•· '.! stcwv + 1 ~11111s 1111 1:1.,1rh nt th(• iurn of 'tilt· I ho1nc!i lt'o111 ~ to , Curnily rni. 11ith fll'11f{'s;;j,,11.•I 111 ,\(·n· ·I , uf chut1·c llnrs1·'----_ --'-______ ._ __ __ __ _ _ l'."il<'i'/.f', apl. stic. tr 1-:.si 111, .. Xint Jd..;i·r•t:. I'll. 1 1 _,_,.,_,1_1u~yl~fh>;-1;:~1_: i S\08,000 bur; lg.-·. outd;-"ll' Jiving ,,. 1'"''p1·11.1· 111 l1rsr Sa11 Ju;111 !;;;N;;;;•;;w:;po;;';';;;B;;•;;•;;c:;h;;;1t;l;;0~6~9;;N;;e;;w;;;po;;r;l;;;B,;;e,;;•;<;h;;;;;;;;1;0;6;9 Newport Heigh-ts 1070 1·n1K!. o. i~r<is:~' .. R.",'.ts, Rent , • entf'l'1<iining .u\·;1'. l':i1ii ... 1r:1110 r ;11\t'h11 ·-s>·~ 111 \ Sl~·'ll i:-i 11k1·11d~ ,\• 111! Ii ,;o Bl:1':.\Tll (l}'' sp,11.:•· llJI•. "·'"'' ·'' I S1\'Ct'plns OCC'<tfl I' It• II s. 1'•·~1dt•111111) :il't•:i. () •.• , ."1 11 1 • ------11 ;d.o~~. ~l .~MHi "JI·:\\' ENCL1\Nl1 $Jl' 000 LARGE HOME ON CORNER LOT •• ,,~ii' i\!<lBJL1': llo1i1~· t':lh,111n. .~ I .1, hrt..-~1·s. 111i~<.iou hl·l!s ,\· • -J ---! ·ri:ADITI ON ,\L 110~·1F:. OPEN SUN. J.s vn.ng•· :.:ro1•·.~. i11;1k•· ll~i" $69 SOO 00 , µ;100, h;i~ vu·11·. ,\1Jults, I Hunting on Beach 104 0 '"~1 "''1 111 qui<·t pn ·~tl).:t'[ 551 EMERALD BAY 11 <111 I 1 II ! I 40!S1·."1v Seco11·'St1·e'etN.IC\VP ORTSllORE·S '. ·J·l • 1 sinl pet. $.'\,'iOO. tiT:i--?:'i:-> -, 1 ;1r•·a. S11't'f'ping-s1:iil"IVHY •H ' 1 u• :"' ri•i t Y 1' H>lt'<' .~ u _ , __ Al th t 'f •· 11 1 11nr1·t·I~. 1i i1'1s1011 111.11 i\V t ·1· s · l\ ti f p ·r· Co t NEW LISTING' ,Acreageforsale 1200 Prl·ce Reduced , pas.-1 sky li~.ht 1vln<lo1v .'oj c vl•ry up u r.1ne1.1 r • es o uper1or, or 1 o ac1 1c as • l I Id T' t t Bay, \\Jth the best vtr11s , i11tt•rc"1 in1 ••s101«~. :..; I 111 ll'gl ) ~-2 400 I ~: 1~. rrn.s 1~111t· .. '~ ~ 1 c 1st \\'cstcrn Bank Bldg. L<a~una has to offer, is !hi~ I fl1•\ihl,. J11u1111:u1~ ;o 1 i< 1 I I 1 lway Sp:ici(IUS 4 IH''<h'fl()n1 hor)11• 111' LANO OPPORTUNITY ;) , • 1 ,.cup~L 11\ctl ~ · kite;}~~ Univcrsi1y Park, IrvinC' I 3 bdrnl ... <lcn, 31.~ hath hon1t' 1 u11~·r·"l :11 s1;~1.noo i.i bedroon1s & fa n1ily roon1 or 5 b cdroo111s'. :1 g1.,·11t l0<·n.11nn n ,. "r .\ppiYix 1;, 111 ·rcs \'isla are;1, 2 Bdrm + Pool I ''.11'11u1 ,f,ln " · unny ,, I D1y5 552-7000 Nighls j 11.1111 hilli;i•·d rni, 11·ith 11.,.1 VIC STUART fan11ly roon1 & oft ice. !J r ivale n1aslcr bed-s<'hool~ and park. l'rlc•·d 1.. $.'"!:M;J. n.·r :u·r··· coo f1 to~ • \\ INDO\\ S 111 fn1nl d1•ri. , , .. $22 600 l.:ori.:r J.!Ul'SI q 1111 I' t ,. I'~ ------l1:ir. n{'('ently ('()ll\[lll'!l'h Real Estate 1'00111 and bath dO\\'llSl'1irs. F'ive bcdroon1s. ·"<'11 [1( s;ii,:700. Call 67;J---7Z:?;1 I ll l'lt•\', !Jt •11·lt1p [il ;1vacflrlos • nnostC'r 011 l1'l tlr",1" :i hug<', OWNER SAYS 1 ~·,·l,'.~'.~}1~·1led & rt'dct'oratcd. 1:11 0: •. :1 dti-~1111 billh and fainily roon1 upstairs. 111· 1•1trt1:<. ()I' 21 ~ atr~ rru)•:h Y ·11 , .. ,11 pa y ~.'.·•HI 1n••1'1· 111:111 : hnths. l 'ri~·t• f11r 111" .Jr. 1 ., u.,. 11:1,-1 t::.·11nr.1·1·," L.o;un.. \ralk to b each . l:on1111unil.v pool ~11 '" 11 11s f<il' :1 rw 11 null .. 1· \"u 1.,·,,.,.. ,,,11.,.,151. 1.i:.1,.115.' GOTTA GO! OPEN SUN. 1.4 1 ·r . bl k Tl 1 ED RIDDLE Rea ltor · I "''" MMACULATE!! ·1 enn1s court ... one ot: <-l\Vay. 1rce 1 ., ·-·2 .. .-111 l•u.~ 1•i.111p:1'.11l•··l111111 Brio;, ~J(;2_:i_.,11 I 1611 ALLVJEW PLACE tJ11; .. ~s11n1; .. 1·l·&SunJ-i,,._tJ~1 r .. r,2.oo.11,,.1u11 l\')il:i«1.111,·nt , 111 one of Nonh LJt"utri·.,. 21 1·;1.i1·111 .. 1 :.! .ti1a111i h<>llH': patios ... l~r1ck, concrete. \\'Ood deck. '1,, U~::-;-\-t:_T_\~,.--;,ll'd :icrei-, on t'<J~t llt,<.'I.::: ~11111'. l ~J:11.. ·.1i.' JJtl(·kl' CUT THE PRICE ,,.,,,,", .. ,, •.. ,., •. , 11,,.,.,,0 ,.',,.,·, :ui. si·:ipt'L. 111•1 /!l'. ln'"·'I No yardwork. Lock up & travel if you want. l 11 '' "''' l·"l••·•l '''''' .. ,,... J '· ~ ,I.· l,,·i~ !, J1;i1io. Cl1lH' lo 11,.11 I 'I bl fj I d bl 1'f•tu\\y roa•i ,,. Ir i V C' r :! Bdnn 1•011«1 .. rl··~1ra 1 r I 1 ... , .~11 ". · :·,"I 00 EEK 1 -~tun11i11)..( 1:oastal & <":t11 i• ar e ·rep a ce . . ou e gara ge , . . rrontagl'. s:~.-~1 f'll't' <•\:, r 1i1u11d l!'l'••I r!<•H' pl;ih. Jl~ \l>ll1'' ~ l ~I! fl l•f 111''11 Y S5 A w l'l('I\'~ ft'O!ll lhls lgc. honl<'. ·:: 111•1~:~1.1;!·, l!urry nn !his \Ill~· copp er plu1nbing.' . 13uilt b y Ayres. Bright klNG SIZE--••lllll'r. r ... r .... so.1;11 ,,, .. ,11.._.111 .1,.1.·1.,~11 1, l':tilll•'d l l111ni.:, 111 ,llu1111ng11111 l. JI! 1 . ;tl~.,f-i .. •O. ------------, I , ( nns .. (!a{' l 11·11h l'" 01vn NEW CUSTOM cl1eery ready to 1nove 1·nto and Cll)·oy -11 11h 1;1._1,,r11111 p;iuilo·rl :.iiil llarb••ur .Kl on lhr WJ•lt'l'.'. I ,1-<L • • • • l ·H·"e ('u·1nn1 hit hl!lll" !'' 111 ,rnit«.,·i lil'ui .. 1 .,.11. 1ilusll ' 1'(•1111111 tub. 'I Bl:. 'l'~ ha . & SELL IT Jh;illh: !iu,gt~ nls,"·d .. suite ii·ith OCEAN VIEW GLENDAN REAL TY ...... -.548-2211 ;'.0!~11~· ~ hdrnis d~n l;U"•~ Commercial Prpty 1600 rp t'l'., orn1a 1n1ng 1·n1., · · · " · -~ · ·---~ i1:11lp:q ... 'J'Pri r•11\1Plt.;" .1r..1, Ontu I lgl'. !•unily 1111. i1•ith bnr ,\: L:ir.t.:•· '.i l>th·n1 .. ;ll~ h:1.I --J'l'\" tno111: :.! b.11h~; unL s, OWNER FINANCED !<Ii •t.: rarp•·t ~. " , 1hlf•n1 1 ~ If you dig red here's Ji·plc. $159,500 _ «11slon1 hon1r·: aln111sl rl'ady 1 Newport Beach 1069Newport Beach 1096 h111nd1·~: l!.(1'. 111·. n11 .• v. * 'fop Lv•"1,11111 til'.\Pl'S, OVl'rs11•·d p.1nlrv ( MONARCH BAY rnr 0.TUJlllll<'Y· ll <is l)~I'. ---~ --~ ---~ -h:itt·lL 11/all h!l-ll1S. i\l;tny f * ;1n ··1, 1·u~1 11u 111,. «0111111.r 21 I your chance. 3 Br li1·ing & frunily r111. 11·1111 ~~ t"\lras. Sil.000. Tax Sl;~·1 "·1· 1,,1,~. ~ll:d«· 1', .. ,r, 111," 1 I ~ ,\ spacious garden hornc 1ri1h ! IX':ini t:t•il & fr pl{', L,.;v. yru d IC * Capi1:il gains 2 B e I ~l'C<tl privacy. \Voodl'd lot · f I Vl ALL 0 lfi4 6 • l 414 * $"'' 000 Uo11 n ~··l1·~ols, i1·:i11;1n·..: d1•l:•1" ,. ln ' a s p. am rm. ·.•. roo1n or pon. i uttu'(· BLUFFS-LEASE OPTION ~· ' w. l! . (' ~ '.G l\:'S I . 111th 1·00111 for pool. n:i.li1·e IT'{,~. ,\ shor1 11·idk tn • Fully leaSl'd uniuu. "1 1' •1n1"1" ,",1 J1~ik-1 ~i:.li--1~~t! nt· _ ~~,,..._ s, i , in U.,iversity Park Hdrn1s., 2 bat:.~. diniu..: nu. tht' hf'al'h niakl's this an d 'clAW&.. 1:1·.:il ·10111\rs, Bk1·«. G75-6700 111111~ 1><111 :in• 11 1·.it ·'• I S97000 · · Walk to Tennis Courls, Pools. 1 ~----··--:in·,.~. !\1111· s::1~)t) l><·I, t\\' cnst v t 8 N . xlnt huy at S79,900. • REAL TY . I t.:ASTS/Dl:: {' 0 Jn !TI el'(' 1a 1 '""' ,,.,..,,, ''"''' '"''Y : e erans uy ow Open House Sat & Sun 'o EMER~LD BAY . i ~ ift.wb~ NucN<wpocl .... OU.«'""''"'.''''"""'"·· 3 ''°''" 1,:,"1~•1. 1·,.111 .. .i,11 \ nl'of. 1'.nii.iald l:tiys nv1~1 1 ,.,;.g '. ~ I:Jll»&ll~ BEAUTIFUL NEW ENO CONDOMINIUM San Clemente --Jo76 1 near N('11·port Blvd .. ..,.ilh 847-3095 Pnyn11•n1s rhf'aJX'r 1rir111 i·t·nl. 18212 Bayberry Way , ht·11u!llul .~tinw hon1t's; r·1·1~p : , 3 Bedroom s. 2•,·· !laths on la1·ge greenbelt. -~ \ hatllroon1s. Ass11mablf' loa.A. -5~ __ • 1 1 1 rontt'n1porat)' architcctut·t' I · ' "' I N 1 h p · • .,., '.ill\ !ll'a 1'tartp1· io1nt'. 1 Luxur·ous p .· t 1. U d d jJ 1 orr·:~ l!C)l'SJ-: 1-1 ~:11 ,\. ear l(','1(' • rice >NO .. IUI•. 5 BR H··iJ1v!01n.~. hr1•p!at'•', 1111:.:1· Today $58 950. ":11 h t·u~ntry eharnY .. Ii 1 <t94-S~7t 41/1/.2100 1 I !Va e p a IO. pgra e · res-S1111. 1~! Lu<·1;i. (h·f';in v1i·11' (all C.JS ltl'nl ... ;state fo1· all 0 0 Y ,.,,1·c·n•I paliu. Hurry fJn l111s I ' !><Inns., f, ~i<Hb~; den, n1u~1c I -·---tigious area. :.! Br ,\· ik·n. J;udd<'l's pl'idl' o llC'ta.ils, 518-1168. TW ST R onl·! S:l'.J.00/. 1 I rn1,, Ian1ily rn1 .. forn1al 1 N 11 .. ! 1 1.110 11 1 . .~ ·~=== J.oi ,,11. ho!Hi' 111 11 u 1 ,, 1 : PAT CANTRELL dining rni.: ovt·r .f).000 sf]. fl. 1 o Down-Brand New , ~ . ~' > .~up• r . · J)O \OU NF.l'.D l\f01~EY'! l' I · lin·:1t for :1 f<1n1ily! \\'t•lk 10 E.'l.1·iting t'flas1lln(' vH.'~-f1·on1 1 $3000 Down. By Ownef.b44-6483 1 1.' _'IX 11~ 5•11~ ~1;_,,.1.: <)\Ill( 1 11 111 llAVE: · s.-i0 (X"Xl C,\Sl l for I, I :h\1(11 l"~k! I" I I II I' I !1 :,; l!l llH'f' ' )I" hd·.id 111,,, ru~1,1111 dr 1~. REAL TOR 833-2224 1 6 pl'iv. tcnn1s ct~ .. pools & 1 ~u11dl·t'h:s off hu~" 11111stl'I' HANSCOM REAL T Y 4t o 1v n Pa Y n1 t' n 1 o 11 1 962·4471 ( ~,.',;) 546-8103 bl'al·h. S215,00'.I. I HH & f:nll l'IYlll\ 111th h<'a111 ... _______________ ,.-. . • 1·01111lll'l'C'ial 11·/spcndal>le, 1 11 'u -0111. ~··11 '-!11,.~1 1 r1L · I ec•ilin"s _ l'Xcf'lli'nl location ~~~~~ .12t·I Chap111:i11. l,_l, flroki>'r l!l-1-7260. 1· 11 11·11 11·1 · flpOr 10 •Tliln~ ENO UNIT I nnd i~1anting to n1a1rh )our Newport Beach 1069, Newport Beach 10691 r>a~s i~!)-7';'';'~ -~e fl~~l:!''~ BAYFRONT~S=IT=E~-:1.',1;:111:~;;' ''· 1i1'1~'.11~~l•T 1' .:'.1\1 1,'1~s: V .A. OFFERING ; 1'.'rc~h!y p:i1111ed .2 Lid1·11i. ;11~!1 hudgt't: Sii9.rio:J . 1~, $66.500. GRANO OPENING I San Juan Cpstrn. 1078 I . For l>oal rt'p;ur & sales ~.iu :d•'d .-.11 .in 11v1·r~1~1·d l<Jt. ::-1 IJ.1~!r,,11n honl<'S In!' sah•., .! lia. ;ond f<irnily L'•loll\, 111 Only 3 left, hull). 1 I l'l'ime Ne"'fJOl'I B<'aC'h loc·. S.•:!,:i!JO. 91;::..-i;1r1. ,\11~1111,. !';iii qualifv rnr . hi11·ly lrv_uu" ,\ ~tllxl IHI) c.t Red Carpet, Realtors Newport Bay Towers PF! I \I AT 1:: COl\l~lC:V lTY Rill c;rundy Rhr. G7:i-6\6l I h l' 1' (' I 'I II\ p j ,: t ('I,\ i only $',!:J,..>W ~\IU ll\.\'JI tile· 110 R~· 497-1761 . 1 & 2 BEJ?R00!\1 HO\IE: 2 1;1l .. 2 RA. I ----~------1 I 1:1•1111'l1;s)11•d l1'Jn\t'<; ll'ilh <I~ I l;111U? SN.Coa.srHwy.,Laguna ----------C..:ONDOi\IINJl1~1 l!Oi\1£S • • l1t'1.']ll.1c1>, b (' ;, u I Ir u 11. ~· Condominiums liHI•· a ~ ~7~~1, iln11·n. J,1,11· I CALL 552·7500 1· 494-1177 Panoramic Ocean View BayF~n.t Homes . New L1st1n9 l:uuls..:•iP<'d ar<'·" -tt·n111s. I f I c:au u~ f()fl AIR![ [f,11..U'I 00 ~Al.Ur 1700 VALLEY tiEALf\ l bl~G. EHTCRPIU&( . ·I . " " 1 · -,I) l , , I • VISION • l\ h 1 &at Shps golf pool ~hopp111" · 1 or sa e 'j .::sin., ,' "'. ~· · 1 ~ c· 1~"' , DISTIN-CTIVE 1 ." 1: . 0 ni c u n' e r Full Security lliglu·ise 1 In llnr~r llig-hlanrls: A VCl'Y ii·;ilking cli~t;i~cC'. S.'.l~ ;~'.(). T . h 111. ~'.~11~-.1~ t V~I\ ~ippt'C\C't! A (!i!ft·J't•n r 'l lldrrn., 2 b:1. I 1 on~tn1c11~~ 2100 sq. f~, ·l Stt'el & concrete eonsu·ul"lion : <1~1i:Hc1ive honic 11·1th rorrnnl l!l:{-lisif>. · 1 DY 01\'nl'r Tusr111, Luxul'ious :-:.d•·~ L:t 1k1 !. !llJJ . .4.~13. <ib~n!ult·ly lov{'!y hunie, llilh , betl1oon1, ~ 2 bath. All ~1ood [Pri\'ale BalC'Jnies I chn1n:::-roon1, Nl'nr all , Lg, con1!0,_ 2 BR, 2 BA. Air I . Red Hill Realty p<i n•waniic VK:"·s .t C'ity , ·~ .t'l'.1ss. ,c~r?lt'l' l~·'· :Z.1 _rt. 2 g.tragc spaces for n1ost stlif)l)[~. i\lariners 1~ni·k _,r_.•5 h L OB I conrl .. bll1ns, dsh~vsr. ·REALTY Hl::,\LTOllS liKhts /nnn all roonls. Tnp , l:r~dFC' ('flll;. dC'cks. C.11l uuJts. ! L1brn1.)I. \\';ilk .to \\estl'liff out aguna 1 6 s:".l1r1ty? ~.ate, JXX?_l'. clbhse, MOM & DAO SUITE 1 Univ. \'ark Cl'llter, lr\1nc qu;tlity enudition. ,\ n1u~1 11 &l6-i 7tt Roof !(Ip sunrlcrk I ~hopping & hustnC'ss C'Clllt•r I O\\'}-f{ ·• ,, .. ,, i--,. ·· ll lt • 1 g,1_1, $30,500. IO /, down, \\ k I ' I I .o· U -• 0 rt ·1 ( 1-7 '~1 C 'J 6-· 7•1'>" ' ' ._. J l )n ''' 'I 64rTI92 ,1 11 1t·. "1111 -1 11· 1<''1 ,· '11 1 S\.'l' nl ~1.:ii~l nus~";'. ,.P~ uni~ O J ,.,.~ · ru 1:J-...... a. !Ja II'~. Iii·. 1.111 • 1,·/Jrplc, _5 ._5 ·-------- .• MlA1(a11 STOCK ElCH&HGl eQt;P&N\' Hl 111< ... r;11 11 hl 11: '. r 1'1•·1! ~1 ~1·· BONUS $3000 1 A CHARMER!! ~urthase Ba~fro11t P1operty forn1aJ rlin rni. \\'/"·/vit'll' I .·n~· .. full 1i.1101 , ,\· 1.,1 ,; .,f • 1 . ,1 I 111 Ne1\'Jl0l't Beach n · Vacancies cost money! RA.'nt r . c "·11 I 1 t 1Ancw:t l11ln11 .. d1•11 ,_ha .. Walkerulee ··10 F 1 n ·I NB u ;.'Oll'J\l'l'499-l17!l your hon~.~ apt stor<> CAtl S f0H A <Hll lSl"IA'I Of •AlUl VALL~:'\· Rl :.\LI ' Ii:•~ .iii :1 ,n111.111!« ""1 RED TILE-ROOF--:dli 1w~UH'I' Sl'll•·r· luL'«\'d to ' ' ' ~E•l EST•Ti 675-8551 I Sell 11l!t' 1t{'n1s \l'lth a Daily bldg., etc. thru a Dally Pilot ··'.11·1·p--.11 "' ."'11rl11111,1·. l't•,,1 o •U>PrHs!1't'flraors l ·illlel'l·i hunie"'ilh•ic.·c·ui).i U " t'rnnnro ,1.,1.. . . . . 1· ....... , " . ···r•·l i·;,1,. 1•·;~1 1, ,,, hu 1·1>1 1n1nit·•li:11l'. s<ih·. Lill'''l· t l'f1 11~·'111 vie~·~. IJe'.1111 J· -Pilot Onssifil'<I ad. &12-56i8 Classified Ad. • i.:irni l:i•:d Sp;1111~h ho1nl' JUS1 ' sin.ry, ~;· ~n> :;. g,\ ;ondo ', ,",.',','.'i',',~,',·.· 11•·.','.~,· 1011','',',,~ b1•,·,·.~,·,h, •. ' I -OFFERED • , • • ,,I EXCLUSIVE • • • • I l'!UNTINGlDN HARBOl,JR ~lY bl,oi·k.~ 1 .. uvC":111. \':111!11·d l f 1 1 1 l " 1 .. hut prit·t·d ri~ht! Ont> of A ~ERG E"'>kPfiiS{ &Ml;l!ICAU SIOCK t ll:~-""G( CO,,.Pt"V ,.,.1li11'-!S, 1•11::: l·ilL1rd n~llll, ~'"1 1 ''~0~"r iu1un;..:. ~U.!.(l'f \\'ood1•<l area. !l's ;;rl'at a1 .· oy liuildC'r. Loi·t·y" Nell'por1 L:eat·h's finest ! !,!:1 nlt·11 k1t1 ·h1•n. 111:1n s11r• illlll Y & 11'-'f! :l!'l"~"' 0111 Sil.900 hdrllL .. i h;ith sullny hilnlt'; 1;u·u111 -1 01 1111• d J ate dran1;1!1c en1ry 10 SlC'IJ·UJI ar!':is, irhcrC' you 01111 lhc D • D .1.·11-l1!ir.ir.1 1•1th 111111.-1 . SI''-..-. y l;uid. Xlnlcond. Col'ner lot. ecorators ream , 1 t 1 pr1ssc~s1011 ->~.'.J.~1 . CL1Jl , Ji1·. \'111., Sfl'1<'. drck 1·11'-10111 I 1~·.i~ 11'1 \\'ll"d p.ou1·! 1n:..:. .~!rs. /!."!1111<1 ~.i:r.s.1~.J Soull1 ' ('('t'allHt' t1lr l\'0!'k. s.i.:i.;m. Fonnu! dining nn. & fa1nil1 Sl:>ns;\\ion;1I C'>.:{'('U1iVl" 4 1·, .( ' l'ru•· ,\l<''l.it·11n 1·1111n v.inl c· .. J I I J · ,· l"l•·•n " 1•0 11, !'on•" ... ,.,,, I~-'~ : t(f y., . .; r I)\\ \ <.:o., f{l•al!Ul'S. i Tl1{' b1:st hu.'-' Ill 111,ant 1ful nn . .::><'!'. ti( l'{ l'C'<Jr \';J.f( \I'll l n • .;. "' .._ ., -,· i --· i11 real' fur 11u1dnnr par.ltl'S'. 1 ·' I SJ b. · I ff\111ilv 1'0011 1 t fireplaet' . h-1 .~! ,., ~I:: ."1~12-:!•vl.-1 1 i~l~U~\D,\!001: Tt11·1!t• -I ~.<1gunn'.. for l u rt h {' r J'JO<'I. l0\\'11 y app l. , . ,. . 1----------.... _ ' ;\;;sunH' t let\\ intt'lf~[ ,lifll'. !'! --l I u l 1'~'/ck, 1 111fonna11011 .\ :o p Jl ' t . OllL'l'<'d al si;>l,500. Con1ple!rly 1~1ndf'rn kl1 ChC'll. RENT TIL YOURS! !><•n 11Jl l 11:1)!llf'n1 C'.ss l 1;111 , an , · J', p:111c t'• a1n shoii·ill,::, {':ill VIC STUART \\'0! hr1r. t11l1NI 1\·i11do1\'S. 1·1•n!, t;l-;1· '.ltt:!-:1;111. nn, fu1·n1;d l.J.IL ,\cros,, 1 * --l9l0~01 * Real Estate j E:xtC'nsivc UM' ol ~('(;king.~ A CONV(NlfNT SHO~!NG AND SEWINO-CUIO[ fOR THE GA.LON THE GO. Just ;o '. 1:111<· i.1 lh•· '"'<\Ill. II(•; I 1'1,1 JI< \\ :. I '.1! Io• •I Ill' DOLL-HOUSE--lrun1 park ,I!.; f)O(JL Dl'ror. I -. So. -."'.~'O,·~st 'l'al'if~.c Co.~r[l_:__ --l:ll-7:-i31 :>~G-iG7.1 1 rasy.r·are !;1ndscaµ1ng._ \~all-; ilrps. i\Jlnl c9ncl in S.: out. Dy . , 11,.-Glc L ; IC• s('hool .\: th!' pool. S1S,.j()(), ,1/l•:1~·· 1·•T11 ':ot1•011 r 111. r111y 111•11;•: nr:1 r rhe lll'a«h. ~ ul'.'nt'r. s::::.:-rs..ri. 1 1 .. xc1r1Nu Nr<11· 2BR. _ lt\. ..J 111~\~{'. ai;:ui~ _ • 1 C;ill fi.lhl\i.)(). !. 111:;o) 11111. ' .11h 1• d I' ;1 I ll1i.: HH :,, !Tackl 1ni.: J,1·1ck ---------5 PANORAMIC To11·nho111<'. Uni v Pr s i J y OPEN SAT/'SUN 1 5 ,., ili•,~:s 111 111 rn1 .\ h111.;v f1r1•11la<'<'. .~unny !''1tJJ1try i CUSTU:lllZJ<.:D llO~lE ill l'.1rk, Supr·r Lilt..'. Jn<ls(•ping, • • 1.111c]l ,,. lo· ki11·h··11 Yn11 f-11\'li\'ll lo:td~I 111th jC't ;n:<·d Turi]{' HU•-'"· prof. land,;rpd, OCEAN VIEW d!'ps .~· up,gr<ld<'d crpts l'illl 129 35th Street ' mftlll)ElL ,,11n 1!:1· l11ul ,,nl~ S:!li.~J.-~1 \'(!u1p11H·n1. Bil.'; h:1<·I-; ~:int.. ·I B1-, ::1 ~ b<i. ,\·al11ut :\••1·. ho1nt' u11•lcr he incld Bv 011·ner S1·1900Block to beach; hon1e and 1 l.ll;>-t 1:\..;T 1•r,..;s1·~:-:s111\1 ,\ 11i1h Lite:•· 1rrt"~ s, pri\';l(·~·-pane!ll..J (:un·r111 , 3 ca1· t·ons!111clio11 2100 sq. fL 'I Jnclud<'s Jaii<l 5.)2-{IT.::1; ' inL'Otnc. 2 BR .. :! bath,.,: ~® 1 l<l:\t...; l!i SL.IT'. J:k1·, 1~1ul1),, :.:ara';.!•' fnr d:ul'. I g:~r, _ S!2,~iOU ·By Cl 1\· n c r. 1 ll<J'(lr0t1n1, 2.'~ bath. All ~·ood ' OCEAN 1'~1'-r U ll N. bll-in~. frplc ., palio + sep. 1 !~i:-: •. ,11 (lnl~ S:?::'.I. fll'I' n1un1h 11hf'n , S'.IJ--l_.J!i,, I ·: .p-lass. ('nrnt'r lot 2,, It. O"·n-ur 01\·n 2 BR l ha ;q)1. gu,·:-t rrn. & hath; 2 BR., l I tiOO NC'11·port Center Driv<' REPOSSESSIONS '· ~1111 ;1~~un11• 11111· in11•res1 I UNIVERSITY PARK l.·r~d;.:r· entry dt>cks. C:iH I :\Int vii!\\', ~ecu ritv, POOL, b;11h r~n~:il over 2 ei~r. g11r . . ' .hian! _J:kl". !)(i'.!-~-.:,11.. .,,, "W ., BJ,' 1.0 .. ,,,, .. ,, •. ", ._, g,\., lit&-7711 1 Sii"trlt. f{(">lty 4,Jfl--~'OO) l 1'Cp. 111 11111n11c. conrhllon & I -. ·~.. -n .., .,.. ' _· __ ' __ • ( '' 5"_·5·--all unit;; lurutshl·rt. l·"r 111 f,,r:n:'•'1''11 ;'11.'1 '11' i!inn . tn•t:'.'\ hi>11~e Su11 1-:i, 1 In•. 1 , (l"·n land. Sµ:.ieiuus, p1ivntt'' I $39,:iOO. SPECTACUL1\R (']if{ John Klose Realtor I '" I!:•"· l·!L\ .\ \,\ 11"f'·"·~. i)f)nll» rni. atnun1 1•nt rv !O • rntio. Nr. l'l't" fal'il. L:Y i l.clri\'e ronstlinc vic11·. 01\·nG~~i:\22 61::>-&'l.SG J{cs. '"111 'K"A· SABIAN l !, 111·111~. nn. 011•r!no~111~' l)\\'NE\t. s1:.i.0111. ;,:,'J-ii'i:.:i. I Walker u Lee \OU\' Q\\'11 npt. \\'allace L. --OCE ---1 .... 11'1{'11 pdtio "1:, h:' 011·1 [Turt7rLt~i{OCI"· :: u1G I .,., •• ,~, I _~c ff_:._!_~~~9~-!1318 .~ . AN VIE~ :!t," Real Estate 962-6644 _llH) ~1[ (! $1 ... lll(l filf.Lrl\ r ,1ni-rn1. :! !1,1~. l1111n.1l' j\;J', SPFCT\CULAR l'ff <l •'' 1'1 0111 (!\Cl)' rill. of this lbl' ... 1 I :1'.11!~ C.dl .11111 !~1.!-Sl \!I ; ll'IUllS ,\.: I s·s :-itx) I -5 -------• ' -.' • c 1 t )\(! Bl{ .. 2 ba. fain. )'Ill. honte. 11.:--111 \lo111<l:ur Ln. l!L~T 1 ~i"-;·~17 poo .)(, I INCOME-$ $ j' i·oa~l hne ~:ll'_''" Oii·n you.I' !luge kiL' 11·/brkfsL arC'a: !'CH • ___: '.:.'....."__ -, .. u · r , · . , . nivn apt. S .. .l/iOO. \Vallacc } · dbl. <loor cntrv. Pri\·. beach . , 5. ---55--5----UV 011·11,,r .1 BR,:.! 1><1, frpl1'. f "-n11s o1 nll.01nt. A i::rr.1t :-;err. Rltr. ·19·1-931S GE. M s:.i::(Jjl, ,\S:-it':'llES 7'' 1.0.\N . I crp!S dq)s lndscpd l'C\'. l!l\'C'S!111en1. Shol'1 l\'fllk 1o I L N ' I 10-52 1--- . <')-pa IO. . J;• •. ivt n W'S ' Cohhl!'s\onr & h n 11 J! i n g . " ,. "' 1·· '~·.' "12";6,_.~ I, l· 1\•'I', I B!l. ~1tiii-~1 ui,": P.1-;r. 1 ' ., ... ,' 11 . ., ·11 .1 I !h1· bc;1ch & 101r11.! aguna 1gue 1.,J)."' T""l A·• N" 1 Ll'i·~--~•.J. P•'r ino. PIT! -,jJ--0261 l:'11cs alt fip111 I k 1· N ' : T 0 \V N JI 0 US F N1g1tl'l"cRc>'o'\~Lc1o'O~l<cSc_ __ _:":.:::-.='· ---· ~ " · J<lS ,. s. , eY('l' a \'O.t·a;icy. ~ • · -1 '.lti.!-... 1s:, ·Hunt. Harbour 1042 . Si!J,jOO. I ~horf's. 3 ~1{1 2 s,~. S~i~.900. By O\rNER: r.lust sacrifice I ()\\'NE!! l.E .\\-~:s. v 1 11 a -• L-aguna Beach 1048 1 ...Jfl/. ~{'1r1'll !'LI::. 4!'l-l-6.)!l4 iny J~v~ly t'O~~.o in Bluffs ?ll I Pai•ifu· Condo. I 1;..Jrn1 ~ .. :', * PEG ALLEN * O "'ff Lido Isle 1056 quick sale b.1s1s. 3-BR. dln. l'01 1·11+·1 J'.r·•·"k. L, i ·11~·~11 ""''II ;\I 1~IH 1" .~il:irp, 2 :-.t nr.~ 1111h l:1!"~t' Fil:. L>/1;, ., 1·:1r {;;11". ,\'. l'r•1I. Lind:1 J\;1r1111,1n, Dk r h;i. 1Ji11111i.: rin. rlu•f'!< I ~ • &4116,1 l'OO!n, custo1n cork & Vnn- ki ll'li••n. \\:dk 10 !ht• "''''an. HH Ei\ll::RALD BAY, sp11c1ou~ l REAL ESTATE BETTER BUILT Lui! pap<'l'S, hugl" deck BUY A WARRANTY HOME OUTSTANDING VALUE Supcr Shnrp Conrlon1lniun1. HC'dron111s nr :: ;11111 Den, :: . Ba1hs. Brick Fir('rla1•r· En<l Unit. OHrt'('d for S78,900. Call 64&--0J:'l.i s::'l .9~i0. Bkr. l':ill 9(1'1-"i:-:r;:). ~ J Bit, J ba .. dt'n. rl1n. r1n., I Drsi~ncd by Richal'd. L. overlooking canyon & bay. --------, -ri.layrn1.; lge. l1'1·el J>?OI-1190 Glcnneyrc St. ~ I Nf'tllra. \\'ide, s!rl'Cf to Pr1n. only. &I~ nHer BEACH HOME-- 0\\'N F.P. A<\:\. S:l. 1!G 1)111\'n. I s1zrd lot · I 1dC' I pa 1 1 o I 41).\ !»7:~ 5'L1 0 16 · 5 30 I ., I' 1 , . I OCEAN VIEW . , !<l'l' l ( . . -. . . -, I l'lre{'t, '.l lxlrn1s .. fainily rm. : pnt. PLUS INCOME " ><rn1i;., J1i.:-:1111 ro11n1.1 u11·111·r.1r;1usfer.rt'd.. TEMPLE HILLS tl' S136000 . 1.; j l (' h c n h 11 i 11 -ins. \\',~,\' 11111 chini;: !nun your $]J!) tM)') • .Suhuut I + nlRI s rnl · ' MONTEGO MODEL 2-Sl;o. hon1<' on l"Xlta lgc ln! ' ' For an ad in Call Mary Beth f)rco1·:\lii·I' hrh·k 11·oJ'l-;.j d•11i11L: rtMllll. (;i1·I 11·:1!{'hing. ' BEAUTY NEAR EVERYTHING [only M ft. to ht'.1Ch. Gi'C'ill SJ 1 !);iO. Ukr Call ii 1:!-~s.-, !. 1 fr .. 111 _vo1u· dt·l'k. :ll;1;!it·:1l E:IJ~:rL\LD BA,., r C' u I four tw.>droo111s 21 2 hall1s on 2 Rdrrn~.. f;in1ily rn1.. 2 4 Bcdroomll, 2 Bath oc<"an \"i<'~·! 3 Brll'tns., 21 · ------1n111111•nts 111arrri:~lzit· lR>fn1\' cll<1rnicr! Spel'l:ll'Ul:i r eoa~! a cul-dC'-i;ac. Sui){'r clran bi!.1hs: beautiful hnnd lnid Lgc lot next to grl"enhclt. I h;i!hs; bri!·k pa110 fer ~ O\l'NEfl i\lVS. ·rrl'nH'nth111« 1 ., ·1 · k. 1 & HARBOR VIEW --~ th" 1111· 111 >our 111:11·\ini pit vil'ivs, bright & ehcC'i·y 4 assun1ahlc \I,\ Joan s1,r; .. 11uan·y 11 c 111 ·1te1cn · privaey. Al~o includl's a '""-\--.l'""'tl.J hdrnis., :l ba, honif'. Q(•n, 1 1·11t1\l'J'~.i!l!1n ;11'1';1\ All 1hl1' Ull ., ;1 ha., unique cntl"-' Ocean vi('11·s La"una Beach. f;ih1ih· rn1. $88,500. HOMES I cnzy :..'-hdrni., 1 b:llh, srp. \ ·1 ~ Fnn1 rnoni. Drcan\ kitehC'n. • S'' · · ~ "' -li lit•' :.Olj,.)()11. 11i1h pay111t'11ts hnll \l'/a1riuni: <It'll, 11·,·t I Call s.JG-7711. REALTY 833-0780 hou~-r fol' 1'1'11ti1l i111·on1!'. All 11 1,, ProfC'ss1nnally l:ind.;c·ap\'f! I • t l' JI I ? ,,.._,, 1 : Stili.!IOO. Bkr. tnll !X;2-~i.-,fiti. i"'' i'l'n . ,rttl'r iuTy. llao1" 2 rrµL, :l platio~. SIS:i.000 , I llN1isEJow•· p"'oil)R. STJ.,;B.,111E<A. CH ' ' 13\'-0\VNT~R--3 En~1.1 , RA HUNTINGTON HARBOUR i ivnt'r iv1hc ll finanec NEWPO-RTS-HOR-ES i REALTY 675-1642 ~· l:' J cnnno. 11('111cct ,){)111. rrl't' R£AL1Y : 01lAi\TA~1c v1i;;\r: rrf'nC'h Walker u lee 'aw son 3 ndrms & uen --lfJ Utlg'.radl'S. S'.lS,9:>0 F II A.: il 1. )141i-t:l8~ & •J13. ,19.)_2815 rn1 .. spac. liv., din. rni.; lllAl tlT&Tl Ue<:ich, pools & l('nnis ll1'rl''S a sn<.rzzy Do10t'('$: 1 Woman's V'~orld 642·S678. oxl. 330 Garden of Dahlias '·-- laundry. priv. 1111 t , n, liZl·I COAST il\\'Y , Provh1c1;1I, 3 llR. -t bunk-U 1. \Valk to * DOLORES * 1' i 9fiS-2474. · · ~ · · · -hcuut. h<hvd. Flrs.. frpL, --Catalina View--1 PRICE REDUCED $46,500 i\Iodcl. fi1-i;t l'lass conrl. J " .. -I -dee.I<, pntio; lush lndscpd.I .. 107 VIA EBOLI CAYWOOD REALTY C:pnciritis bdrn1s 21 ~ bath· 9484 :llERF.DTTl-1 GnrdC'ns 4 B~" · Don't gi\'e up the shlp! yo rd, North "nd. 1125.~. Shwtp<"n~ous horne ."1th :i 1 4.000 Sq. l.t. ol t'le"alllX' : .. ' 1 · 1 "& d. ' "-' ' ll1·iQ1t ~unshinc into a bt>d· 21ri Ba, d<'n. Nc;\r bt•Hch. l{y I "List" it in classified, Shi p REALTOR ' 40-::'7578 , 5 ecp1ng Ca ta 1 .1 na .t , 4 Bdrnis., 4 halhs, di~ing rni. * 548-1290 * , ..... ·au, · lodarpc 5 ' I rap<'St ·; lOY2.1B Y1 \ room \\Ith bold, vivid dahlh•~. 011·nl"r. S6:t500. 963-6029 to Shore Results! 642-5678. ;ri 1n Oun ta i ----nvc y scpg., w pr v · "INthlllL Garden" qullt ill .t ~====~::::===============~ 109S N Coast L.'lguna n. v 1 P. \Y • • 3 Car garage. On 45 ft. lot. HARBOR VIEW I pnlio ove1·Jooking one of the ,,., -<IT,.·,._ -ffl"(,:-f'f~. brilliant be:t11lJ' ln rou\U-ccilor · • Luxury-appointed floor plan \ 5145 ~ L 1 lllw. ........ 111~1 ...... i OPEN SUN. J.S 111ith 3 bilvms. 2 . balhs. ,\IV\/ rg. ec lot acros$: r 1· o rn loveliest grt'enbclts. Cull i-rrl't1•s or your f~vor11u ~~STAR GA,..,E"K>'1t ,,.._-.... i 21521 ANN'S LANE. Rurnl ra~1ily i'001n. fil"eplaC<'. howaAb lawson j'1. pool/grC'Cnht'lt. ·I BH./2BA. noMwOIORG'"'A'N REALTY ~~~n1~~~t':r~· "1~~\c11~n:,.;i~: )~1~/f 11\ ~ &I .I'-1' 1 setting, ocean view . Dining room. \Vorkshop & . 12ealfor:a lam. rni. SB2.500. By oi\ncr. ~1 DF;.S\\'E1'1' b1n101111 :.r· patch patterns Included. 1i•its By Cl.A\' R l\ll.L~N LlllA spl\cious, newer 2 bdrm. 2 offltc. 1-feated ,t._ Fiitered 314 Via Lido 67:>-4."J62 MO-Sl40 673-6642 67.s.6459 l'f'nt lh\! r;Jeek Jinr>~. Sew ih!~ 7S CENTS for eal'h pattern . . Af:: ,.,.., 11 ~ Y<>11• 91!,f1 "'1''"'1 G11•d" J:>. sin. 11 ·i._ oo ., irplc .• dining r ni.; {'~sy swim pool. pntio. Private URGENT sale! R c du c e d Nl;\V POHTOFINO honie in ~.~:~1::~g codn11fr;';t:"rr1;~,1.\:~~~:; Add 25 cents for each pattern .. :1.--...~,.,, Auord·~~,~,~~~'~" ocT.11~{_, flnanc. Tnke Tl'lnpl<" l'lills l bench \\'Biking. }{('Crelltion 'I N 8 h 1069 $6,000 II bo y · r ! !' 1 · Ch 11 1 for fir.>l·Classmailand spel'i~I )1A·Ji •8 lo d-ewlopm~-~O(l(•foi __.orurdoy, J.~.J·6IA' Dr &fll ... s•o•rft facilities includln~ t~nnis. ewport eac Ouplex nf'aroccan&bay fir I' -i ew. an II" IC r~rnr,lnt(l()•dsel'Rnrc~:~~ti·,1:~,1 : h.andlinR ; other•lse 1111s.79111 •..od w01ds co«l'\f'l'"'lll"'9 10 num~1~ '((,, · 0 0\\ signs. .....,, liN · \'ie\Y lo ocean. '.I or 4 Br• 31 ~ ~ thirdcloss delivery will U ke . "'~111JrZod1cc b1tth•••:;p1 1_.:..!~ $84.~)(X). Call 4.!).t-~J '1 BCH. DUPLEX/OWNER see a l: ]()Jj \V. Balboa : B11., family rrn, din rnt, llalt 8 l1,oe11 10%. t 2~Jr. l ·P~. thrtt weeks or more. Send 10 - 1 r 'h J't..i" 62T•oh" oc1 nt(41,, I frplc., bellnls, fclH .. 'ed )'rl. 9AABELI Vncant -ove now & col ~t -· . 1 1 1 1 1 0 111k"~ :!~ y11rd!I 60·1n.-h, , 1-: .-~, 1~ ],...,,1~ JlT•""' 6l ~.. ,.o( n~ 2 Blks 10 the bench: on n.2 11001 '-' sumn1cr renlS! Pnrrlallv 3 BR. 211 ba, & Fnm1ly :llvn. ¥e ce o · Y 01\•n('r ~n $1.00 ror each P•llern. Pilot. Needll"Cran De?\,, Rot · ·,(.· '~~·~: 1 )'ov 31 c~ 60 Yo.. 11 KO~"O : 276 FAlRVIE\\'; :l lxlrn1., [ ] . • M. l f\.llCI-IAEL Hllr. 67:H>S.S0 honus rni. L ll n d s I' a pc d 1r.1k. Ill Vi. Slze l•~-!i lhu~l ~IJ .Alice Rrooks, l05, the D•llY :-.112.21.23. ~~ ..... 1 ~~~·""'<! :~~ 01 .34..u,, lot Great ~uni~u·i· rt•nlnl I ~ . fui•n, ~i down, t \15 uppcf, Rooni. Nf'\1' L'rp1 s & pnint G4~94ZJ __ Add 25 cents ror each pattern ~!'J·ko~ ~hi~~ ~~-:nN:i:w -C:·JJ.J9.sa_S6 "C:"'"""'" .ltiP.,.1·~· 66Co~'""''" 58.6\.S.S . ~U'9AMCJ ll<'~ntcd celling~: Knotty lhru-out, ~'.16 Comn,ooo~.I BAYSHORES forfir~l·chissmailand spttial Add~e SS. 'i1P. Pat~•r"r\ "I c;t1o11M• ,'~~·" J,',w'~.··,..... .,"'11.r.::., urea. $59,~. 'l'!:,.,r.1 i Pine panellnn thru out. Oay~rest, $6.1,fJOO. 673-!MOJ 0 W N t:· r~ o~:SPERATJ<:-h .an d 11 n g; other w I 11 I.' N"m"-c. '" ·-~... ....... "liN-"" " 833-3985 i;. third·class delivery will t11kf ....., 9F-"Q• J'MG~~ 690\itd...., \000 N. Coast H"'Y" Lu.guna 1920 S. Coul Hwy., L.B. F1't':11h paint. oU-slrccl prkg, or · LEAVING ARE~\. 4 BR, three week~ or more. Send to N•wl 150 DI°"~ l'l(ltlUlar,n,. :o, ~~·b :~~ ~~~le TEMPLE HILLS-Vs . Blk to ocean. $74,900. BEACH HOUSE $51,500 3BA + den .• S 6 5. O 0 0. r.larlen Martin, 442. the Daily ehr:t1.• in our 1974 Needl.cr:itt 12~ •1r:"' T1Clfl:i9 BEAUTY I Drive by L2'2 39th St, N.B. Prlv11.cy. Ou1ractcr. CALL .64:.:::.2-34~!11:::.·~~~--~-I l'ilot. C.ta.log! All era.tu! TUH F:F. <t.J~u4tv JJf 64 2963 Pr nly -1 Free d'~lgua ln&ld'.I ... ~-·-·i5t J!~:';!;1e"" ~4 r"' ,.,:;:1tt. Four bedrooms 2~ baths 00 5" • in. o • =4info & nppl. ~8914. POPULAR flarbor Vu ~~'.l~~ ... o~p~;·k~3~.'~::~\010ili~ Ne~·1 Sew+ Knit Bocik -1~f·•"'11rig ~50ff 7S O. a cul-de--iac. Super clean F1RST SHOMNG-Dover or (n4) 3'28-3233. 1-lomes, Palciiuo, 4BR, wel Prh•t NAME. ADDRESS. ZIP, J10.11Da!lcTl111uer11.ttt:roll.2! :~~ ~~~!!~ .... ;;:::, assumable VA loan &~'.~. Shores 1447 Galaxy. OPEN POOL&: Roses In back yrd bar, 2 trplcs, lovely low SIZE :u1d $TVl.E NUMBER. ~::; ~l~~~:'C::h~.\ft.: 1av1111·11 -Att,..11-• -ntMok• llave an (!;(tfa $p8.CO heater Ocean view1i Laguna Beach. HOUSE Sat. &:.Sun. 14 p.m. North -Blurt.a condo, ProC. maint. yard, side boat ONt·:·i.·1t~:t: l'A1"l'RU'.\ o'll •n<u· Hilrpln Cl'oe"hit &oolt_..,,,.00 " 1'X°". !!~· ~~-kttl now with a Dally Pilot I Call ~17ll. Gt at lou s home w/new decor, 4 BR, l ha, lo $70's, storage. 6#-474.t. c-holf'n 1" 8"011 fnr nn<' ·,,.,,, lntt•nt Croc.htt 8cok _.t1.llO ~-· CJ '" ••~ hi · d d """J"A 1.u.ll<r'11 inJid"N~;\\'~l'Hl;>:1;. 1 t •M •• k . ·•-21 ~ l l vn.~r.:•td •1 Now ilSSlllcd Adi '1'U-5Gi8. s OP· 11 t l C ll t e ccor . "'""""' ,,.., Harbor View H.omc, 2 BR & Nl·M:.11·:1t \'.\'fTJ-:UX ('.\'I".\· n• an •er•"" 00 _.,_ il~::.7' ~~-.:J~~:' l!t&ut. lndscpd ltl'dehS, HARBOit VlE\V J-lOMES , den. Nlccly lndscp'd. Lease 1.0<:. IU!! 111y1Nt. ~11 111~, "· 1r.~1 :;'01!1,~!t!'Q'i;:' a~:tk~::f\:: i~ ~ i;'t:z:: :; }';.~ c~ -. ' w lk a l I !~ onrmft~ nD/R,21-' B~·rmB • 4BR, frunrm. 1¥1(1vC..11wx11xl. OpUon. 0 w ll 0 I' I B k t . p.oltl>I n r1iu1~n. i"ll'nd i '.f 11011. Compl•t• Af;ftami a1<t -M.00 i.6Goed ~ lodfl~ U~t.t• Yew can nurg• a er· u ee I r I • <I r, /'I a., y ~1.500. Bh.'R. ~1120 673-4899. $£)\1 ,t-l<NIT Dool: 'll'\lh h1>•lll 1i ,,1,. "'•"•• 1!1t-~· I Yl1GO 21 ~lntd ~~~I ~~: DAILY PILOT •t•l •••• ,. Owner. &14-4t 40 \~D LF..ASE OM'lON DUPLE>;. Ste~ to Oct!an. 3 ~·:~:l~t ';~~;:~~ '1:.'ink :.:.J::~! ~°w°!:~ 1!~rt11:,: ;;::~ l ·r:•A~rl~·~: ~~·1 "!:~ ltM011'n> Cfos&lffed Adi AJl)I day is the: BEST DAY to on house. or condo, 4 Br, BR, 2 ba. & 2 B~ 1 ba. lnttant1S•wlno UoOk ,,..,$1/10 15 Q11lh• forToclay '2 -lflf ~:"'1. t::!\ /(.<\ 1t'°';r: 111e !astettt dr.w in the \Vi!!t~ run M Id! Don't t~lo.Y. , Newport Area. 613-2392 $87,500. Owner 646-:uo3 Sook •t tt .llff1 "~• -· ... ~~:It" ~~t;oe.,1 ~v~'J~t1..: .._ 1N~~uo1 642•5671 ... a t>oDy Pilnt OastdRed Dlllly Pilot Claslillied Ada Sell idle Items with a Dally Oasstcled Adt C&ll Ji'.ii7i · Ad. C.11 ~ .J42.!611. Pll6t Cl\\l!!Oed ad. ~ ~today~t!_! ____ r-~-~-------·--... il!lll•••lllll I ..., ~" " fJ ; . - • ' '• ' ' ' ' ' •• • ' ' ' ' ~ I • • • • • • DA.ILY PILOI Frid,,~. Mf.J 17 , 191_. Oup exe1/Unlts 1 Income Property-2000-H-ou-,-,-,"'F"'u-,-n-;•'"'h-e"'d-:-"Hc-o-u-,.-,...,.,U'"n"'fu-,-n"'isTh_ed..,...-11 ""1,-v"'ln-,-----~3~244--1 C~on-d~.-.-F==u-,-n---=34"'00""""'&"""1\iOO...--.,-la ... i•-nd-,---3"'7"'06""'B-1"lbo-1""l"'sl'"1-nd..,----=3"70"'6""1--:A-p-•r""t_m1_._n°"11-='U'"n""f-ur-n-.-.. for 5ale 1800 l '_.;...:;.;.., ______ _ 1;;;;;:;:;;;:;;;;:;;:;:;;:;::1 * * * * * Costil Mesa 3124 Cost• Mes.a 3224 , . . 1nF:Aln'IFULLY runushed 2 ~~~ Huntington BHch 3140 I~ l 2 bdnll., 2 b.t • · · ·• • $300 300' BR 2 bi1 1.1\'Cl'looking l..tigun· 3 UNITS -G'ORGE l'ENOLETO.~ E-SIOE 2 BR FURN llUIUl\'! ' liR, Sl'1l. '-'!:, ;1 1K11;m ... "' ~' """" ~ Nlgwl Gill Couno". -2 LOCATIONS-.-CHILDREN I An"~ llr'li, ~-oii·nC'r Ulli! 1 :68 \: E. 18th St. J \\Jlt'r & ga1\IL'11i'I' 111oul ?:1~U. 1-i:n.lt'd tur klcll). ~ l>lh.ni .. 21ba ...... $29$1~ CI u b II o us c, TENNIS, ~ Si l 1 ,. 1 ,h lt·nt·i'(I yrl ;\I!'«> 111 , 11 Costa l\tcsa s29.-, ~~IZ'~ cu:sro~1 t Bi\ s100. l.J·c 1 .1 txhm., ~ ~ h~ ........ $'1.~ Bt-;11,.iu.~. 11 llll r.ic. ;ivuil. f" "f and pArent1 love the 1 oar~! dl'"IX'ilr. Oh: sl:O\'C & L'd 11 3156 yurd. 1-Cnl'.l'(I for pot. I" IJdrni., ~~ bll •• 1. S.'ll0t4.2.l full)' «tulPued·WP <.'Olor iXeCU ttle Ut e6 IJr;e, 1p1clou1 1pert·1 ~lnt' \ Sj 9 , 950 . B;\RitE·r-r , \'nu RI'<' 1h1· 111nn1·1 \JI 1 1 0 s e \l/tl~"f Lttst 'l ~R, 2 BA. CALL 552-7500 TV, 01c. 11 .. fcvCi:ything for ;t mentt 1t 8 1 n bu r y 1 'P'~LTY. G42.-4l\i. TWO FREE TICKETS 1.1uo LIVING.~ Ba.~ U.\. Sil'i:i. TC'ahou.;c. JC'tok I • VISION • ~a('ious, htip11y 1tv lng. Mot~l-Apartm1nts Compl. Furnishtd · t'ETE BARRETT I lo the , , I ,\1,111 su,11n11,1 ~ .. l'i'l:-. Homefinders * 642·9900 Lcetse $375/n\O. ll'K'ludet .,c';~'d:·en 6 & .,,..un ...... I Southern California , c .111 1.Al:l! 79~1~17 DESJRABLE • ' )..'l'Ount1 cm. Ptto.-..s l.OW WEEKLY RATES "" ,. ... .-REALTOR-'MOBILE HOME SHOW New ortBeach---lt69 HOM~ Red Hill Realty 49,._,l.'"6 , (l) o S•• 1 • 11 "'>t«I "'" achl 642-5200 t.la,y lSth Uiru May :ti 1h p -'i UN, l l::Sa. J.>t,:-n, {'t'J)Cd, d.rps, 1u-:A1.:ry REAL'J'ORS c'°o"'n"'d"o"'a~U~nt~u-r-n-. -~J4~2~SI l 727 Yorktown Blvd., Huntington Beach : f!!~·e~s &P 1 jY 8~0!pti. ~ 111 1hc o:-.· 1 •• ,1. 1o1i•.i1hu11~r· ·; Bl!, IorL'Cd air ht•at, L:urtHl1s1i, 1 U111\". t>1h'k C<'nler, lrvu1c 1 Comer of Beach Blvd. • 2 "dull rec. centt'l'B COST -ANAHEIM STADIUM '!'. li.1. ~ (·11r ::::1r .hn11t slip ll1t-1rys, 1~1,110 . ;;-arugt>.,1Ya tl•1·1 ..,,...,.,__.,._..,..,.,_ 1 536-0411 e E11sy ac<.oelis to most em·: A MESA j 2000 State Collcgo l:Shd 'l r l•l' ,\1·;1!l i 1 :Sl.ifij tll rll . Adul!s uni~', no pets, ! 2 llR Cond1i .... s2:-:atn10 LM· * * * * * . 1 ploy1ne11t n1eas DUPLEX An1o1hrun 1; 1•;.:.::1111 . n.A'I i::. i\l:.J\~JNA~Lr.: 1 :.i J~ll t.:unit!lb .••. ,$265 &: $:li5 f>'RANK PEDERSEN (i) '2080 ·Newport Blvd., Costa ~lesa • Ni" lihoppliij' 1& ln\'ya. , Pl<.'asc ,.,II "1:.'.-.:-;s. •"I ,·t,, ---A•:ros.' f1-on1 l"ourit1y Clul1 I :l HH Co11dos ..... $265 & $27j 1 642-2611 e c •1"' C -·' v "" ....... Hou~es Unturn1shed ;7 \ u 1 ·1° •·1 ~ 2%2 Sapphire I ruin.,"-'· .ule "'"' pnvatl'. Gond 10 cJ;1u11 your ill"kl'IS. 1:-,:,,111, -----. J lt 'S<l J". * ~11. ,)-.,....._, llu ~Lit Jhinics. s:ioo. S325, s:[;J ! 1nron1e IJI a rloiw"-tn IU'('.I I (0'1\1111) !t)ll h\~ ll(Ut1lil·L IS General 3202 ~iL\liLl-.. ..; ·" :'ludent;:-:: l!I . :.: B it HtulU.'JI. $~.s;;1~. s::~~.j Balboa Island STUDIOS & 1 BEDROOMS I BANBURY CROSS .$lS.7:""l(). RC'd ca r pr t ' :.1u.J2'201 ·~ I ,_111. 1-n1.\I 11 ,: 1,1d!>l lX'L~ I BH 11(1111<'"· .. SJ:l.J,5.~%. $·1l.i I 'i'ou url' the u·inner or * K 'l h A _., t Ao'r Condo'to'oned tNear Beach Blvd le Wamerl fflvt'.!~m<'nl o 1v1 ~1o11 ALA REN TA S I' .... ,1..J.\l _ 1,1. ~~w r.r,; li.\~S~' _ 1:E,\LT'l' TWO FREE TICKETS 1 c en~ :iau· lG7liI v1r:\v POINT LANI:: :1 7 9 -2 3;, o . u JI ~· u 1 * * * * * L . 11<1. l· 1u·,1 hid~ .i. 11,.1~ , *. aat-2\Jou. • • , * Phone .service Free Linens • 842-6604 • ''°''rkr11£ls. __ _ w1 11'lc••l•i1 1 .. s1•v>e1 1 i ,,!\".\l·y· "! J~r. s~2.-,. :-iu~J,., \.,\.\iQ.1 .. rtl-.,\Ll \ 1 to lhl' . * Heated Pool * }<"ree Utilities NE\Y DUPLEX. B'' 0\\-;\l·J : ! 48 UNITS 1•'IH't'<i fill' kid,.\: 1~:1 s. *: .~Jh-~ * . Southern California * rwlaid & TV Avail * Alnple Parking Lgc 2 BR. :.! ba" ... \"r.1r i ASSUME 51/ o1 t f!il MOUSES IHomefind'ers * 642-9900 TU;T~ ~~~·i'\LTY I MOBILE HOME SHOW * Laundry Facilities * 5 l\1in. to Ocean \Vl'.,.lt'l1ff CA:>Rk'r. ~i!.fJ ,1 _I 2 10 I I l "'lS I ..; , _, , , , ·. ____ """~ * __ !\lay 18th thru )"lay 17th ON BEACH! •1· ooo o t "'"' 1 ou•t \ti:.. •. \ \ l-.ltLll~ • \,t .. 2 !..\. BRANO NEW at the ------------------------------~ '· 1\. 1 '0 " .. ~171·lJ'""I 11r.1'l1i-: LOt:\"rH)\ ~ .• • -s 1 .• 111 1.11, 11 1,lt'. lr111 e.. dips, · "I' ., 1 · I ANAHEIM STADIUM -A~-~U ,~~~-..-. ronstMJt•t oan .. 11 ~ ~ 1>1·1. · . · · • NEwP011r 1. IAY c M 042.,,,, , •• , .. .,, l ''''·".,, 1, ,, 1,, ·• ·1 ~. .. 1.1. i,;n1v. Pk, . p1rtments n urn. Apartmenti. Unfurn. 2 Bit Unlum. Fr. $269. Cov~rl'tl Parking. La r g e H1·atcd Pool, Saunas and HccreRtlon Roo1n l'""I' !'"II ,. 18 (,Jnh•n t1r11 •.• 1_,,11111 ... .. ..., 1 I II I lk •~ Sl t C 1 Bl ''"""' ""· pl'r 1110. 1.11 .,, T D l ._.11 _..;!l:\l"'I\\ l(,•Jri..: ~·ri~·d iid · 1\l' 1;11'."l'·l·noll'll,11 .1 . .;IJIJV aC' 01.cge vd. R.E.1\gts. plCaS(') 612-12G I I :>~' i·u.<;•., l"<'( rll I • i l· ·l \ I J l. ,., ., 1 .. U).l1·11,,1v1· ll'l'. t;11·1hly.! 1\oahe.n1 Balbo1 l1l1nd 3806 Costa Me5a 3824 OceanfronJDuPl;x-;~:1;;1C'~~·.1l;~11~s1-111:~ t;~~\'· i,-1 : ::·~~~~ 1~~1,11.~·r.~11111'.,','111~'..i;~ ;.;,,:1,111;l.~1nl• _,."11~ .. ik.; ~ti.~ i~.llJ~ I f\11 _yard i101·I. Clt~'l' iu ' f>Jca~('. i·all &l2-_56i8, ext. 3331---:....:_c;..: __ _;:.= -;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;; HUNTINGTON PACIFIC I _ · 1 . 1 -~ln>p ~ ~ ~1·lil' ~ .. ;..,/~\U.1 l<Jt·l-.1nivour11ekl'ls.!Noz·1h NEW 2 BR garage apt on • Dotuxr. Spac1011s, hy 011·111•r u111t. F.a l' 1~ )7.: U jH'I' •11• ., 1 • l'{k ~J. I !:• ~t .. ' I. I '\1 ~" ,II,;--u, • toll-li:i!I:.:. Coun1y t'ull Jree nuntller 15 yrly lease al U6~J Topai:. NEW' S187.~~ 6-r>-OSt.1, O-l:!-3lii?. .. \skill!< \IHI~ ~·-1,(K~.· j 'I • Ln\·_1 .LY 1_ t I' 1111•''' .~1 '·' ,, i:ti1:.\J ll<IU-•' Eas1,1.t.· i\1:-\\'-COo;:;:\~l '~rk "BH I ~10·12201 OPEN llOUSE, Sw1 .. l\tn~ 1 &ID--163'1 c_t'•lli». (0111·1.1"! •I :-.1h Ci' • ~l.l ~ ·!··. I [,J_~ I ,'"'I·"· ~-~ H.! J\\.,il Juln' .;id. ~2~t1. 1\IU. "t'· ,. I ., I ' b'l , 1' I 19, 12:30 to 5. 1 -21:1 -• 2 & 3 BEDROOM I 111 o,CEn"IANI "~vlc..,;,11 ·8• Income Property ,., ·.· BERG INVITES YOU BOOTH 72 APARTMENT ASSOCIATION YRADE SHOW Sat.· Sun. M•y 18 & 19 AAaheim Conv. Center Call for complimentary • Tickets 1714) 639-1501 , (2131 629-1688 The B8rg Co. Realtors 1:-.v1::sT.\1~r-.:T 1>1v1..;lf):'\ TRIPLEX NEWPORT · Just orr Ncwporl [;l\d. C110ll <1tt'l'!'..'> tu i\l'll.JYll'! C-os!a r.l!':s;1 -S.:in Dl•''c:" ~-i.i.·y. c.·cntral ;\lc'a loc;11l1111 ' 01\Zlf'I~ unit has 3 hednJ0111" .. ~. dinini:: ruun1 -fan1il~ roon1 -or,.hirl l"l}f)m -~ fi1·C'pla1·('S -u1'1001· BCQ. :;1;· pau .. l:ll't'l«l In llTOLt~hl '"'11 -?nri pa110 -rht!'> gor::;rnu.~ /U(JJ_'I'! Bolh o11)1:r unils ar1• 2 RH -pa110..:: -i'netoi-:t>tl j.!ilra~""' ,\II 1h1s for onl~ 10'.: r1n1111 -a"k1111:; S7·l.!K"~l hdl pr l('C'. T:1kC' aUvo1l11t1'(C' - CJ11! T.12.1-; 10. (iMENI DIVISIO) DANA POINT DUPLEXES Fflht:\,,11-: ()f'•':111 \'10 •11<. 8 .\,·t• l'lt•au11ful nup1,,,, .. S61 !i~.O 1.1 ~7::.!l:iO )t'<Ul1 ,,,:(!WI l.J<1,1 I Uf'1r• Oprn [);ul\ 1.:, \\(·t'k1 n11~ 111-n a1 lak<' #d\';1111 ,1 ., .. , .: :-1.\LJ.,\!, .-.IJ.\l,\ll· I 1·ii1I(' ibJ1•.iii·c Jciclu' -J,t, rps, tl'l1''. iui', * * * * * ·ll.i.).-.M92 Split Level Apts Unf. J.)IJ""'t<I -· ·-.., • ·1I1· ~11,(I ' lll' \ ('\1 • ' <> • "' • "· hlk lo t•l!'nl. ::-vhoJI ,\'.' I . I url .. opo.'n 10 Ulli~pm D~ily 1.1:.'-liDO, e ~ 1'.r· ~1 7.> 7;;1'·d. ~.:: ('\1 I ':IL'.l'.'.t.u n1-. ili,•I'·' .v l"\111!",· p .. ul, .\11:11l li/l.1. -~·~'° u1u NO. BAYFl'lONT J Sr, 2 bi1.1 • UC~UP,\NCY J UNE l I \\'lLLIAJ\'l \\!ALTERS CO . el ' ' THE REAL ESTATERS A PAIR OF FOURS \\1111°1 ,j,. lllUo'li Ill ii poi;.T ;.;;111'•' bul 1111~ ptur rot }'1 )\ ·i: l'Lt:Xl·:.i l"<l.JJ du ;, lot /ur ~OLU p!.Ul!.< fur " "l'l'lll<:' 11nanc1;1I f\Hurr. P<'l"lf"l'f'1 'lllh'ti f•ll' 11111\t'f ~liTUp:1u.·· 01' l!ll•'Slllll'lll Sil.:~IO •':ll'li lu11 111e111u<·~ th.ti can l'll-.:' 111: ra1~c•l 10 sr;u/111<.1. !t "1', loan posi;iblr or"~ SLlld lo•;.:t·!hl'r or ~i'Ji<LralC'h . Call 611-7:!11 . mm ELEGA-NT·4-UNIT \\ rnt !'>Tl"l1[0 Al'T:-;. . Jnea!t•d h10 hlncl; ... !rorn 111.,·;01, lltu1ttni_:t,1n B<':ich. Ui l·m·a1or l111e1·101·s 1ne ludc fll<'l)l,1t't'~. ~i1;1g c:or[>t'I~. t••llljil~·ll' d1'Cijll'!>, (~'l.llllll' file kllC!t!'n l'Cl\111/f'r l'. !!lotlt"l"ll bu.111 p LI J l Il l .i 11-.. I l.Ju<ihty /misti i n l" I u d t' ~ l'l'd11 (!l){l I< nt·<', ··nelu~··d t;.ll<lk"·'· J ;1 11 Cl ,_,·;1/Jl11 J.:. 1JPl·,.'li llLILS~; :•-.i J•.1;. S.\T/:'C~ .. :J:!2-l01h :'<1•·1·1 ~1:;.:,00. i'il~• 5::ti-!L.i1 4 PLEX • , 1 1 1 1 • 1 :•• · ,.,., (<1 • 1• l':lll-.~41~ ·,_Condos Unfurn. 3425 Cl"!Jl/driis, fl'plc , rr11.r, fe.a1u.~·1.n~: 1..JJft hdr11111~ _ _ _ ->111111"'·'1·':1.i '1·-llli~,,,.,1,",;-<.Hi,1. I " lfLllk C:('l'tllllll.' ti!· ·-• .! 1,, 1 . ., 1 . i,,1, S:!110 o':ll•' H . -U -1-:-i:-d--1\ash/tll'y1•. $·)00, AJuhs , ~. . , . l llltA.1'\D NE\\' $:.!j(}.:l La1-g~ •'.!.II• \ i1 (11.\l. ~.!•/111, I ME:iA Vt.KDE ouses n urn1sne BAY FRONT o~~y. &16-7213 I ~1L_l·!\t.''.1s , ~~~~~~.D ~.a111 I flt!luxe Udrms., 2 full hnth!'l, ·r 1 l!l \\ \,\ l ·1 v l.i.-. 1 J br, 2 ba, lop 1ocdtion Laguna Bea en 3248 CONDOMINIUM LARGE :?BR, 2lJa, lt1nl---of ~~Jing~ 1nany 0 ~~;1~~1'.' 1 1.~·r;~i·,!~~txi' k.1tehen~'6-ll6'J • :: 1:1 " -·1· 111.·,J, .:.!-•I l "\l 1 \.'later & Gardener P a id . B<lll.>11a. Boat :;;lips availalllC' un1u1·11, $:i75 1110 .• yearly, 2L6 I lvnve111t'n1·es. 1 tiJ us •.ns :SL • :' lir·:I·.• '-'~' r.pJ. .:: 42 :; Les 545 _ 0228 , Sl.1U i\JC'I·: I Gl~ .\u. 1·11d . up I 10. 1 1 ,, bed CrystRI ill,·72li·27·19 . 283 A d I 1 11r. Huu11n1:,'1on Harbour I • : 1;1:11 ,,,1 ;,:; , "·II' r.1~ ""' a e. 11,1 11-; ll.J t11..u 11 '" 11.1111 -0 10:1 · • iwni, 1 voca 0 • 'B --,.-, -I G -d--A -:l baih -niarl'elous B<iy ·"Capistrano Beach 3818 1 Co5ta MeJa eau 1 u ar en pts. 1".11· 'Ji.\l:l '. l 1;1:," HJ\. !\! .. ,;i s2:;1.L:rll. l'd Ii~ 1 I.ii{. ~C'p U1.:ea11 \'1c11·s. ~lino. Toni ti Pools. Tcnnls. Saw-ia , e , 1:1·/2' _ 1>.1 1,·:~, 1: !:.11 1 '"I ,11,,1 h<1n1<· l.1us1' i.1 d.11 nn, Ulrns . til'l"h I Qlk'C'll 6-14-l:i200. l\\'191 OCEAN VIEW 3 BR, 2 BA, I Off Jh B h Priv1.1ry. Fl'pll·. Individual • ;;, ;11111 ., !11 fl: ~ ;~.11 11 I 'I! !~hlU!,. .. 11.ul 11011' s ... lll_ S:!"Af.2 t;J!, ::i 8.1. frp[(', lni:d I bal1..'0ny, crpts, d1·ps, bltru. e eaten Pat patios. f\'J'. UCt!U.n. TcrrUic \•,,. .~1r111•1· .dl JI:·· 1" ••11 ; 1·:_·, l'u•r'.1:,1 ;.u!o~~ ~-u1k·11~·r ,11•l. D;1u.1 P1111U ! \\'asht'i'/d.ryer. &12-11..:>:i. 1 ])(!al. 8~&-13~. 1·1111·<o. ,\ lnl.uul (J1 .111.;1· l"" 1 _L.ill l .. 1n~ i lh::,>"'~O ____ S~::1.CIL\l{\!l;\l; ~ Rr. frpl, -.----· · -1· .. 11.11•· \l11h 1 .. l'1 1 ,.,". 1 COLLEGE PARK hl1n,.,so. l.;1:.:11n;1. ltt>alty Conip1tny CoronadelMar 3822 ~pat·1ous.\tlu11r;arc!cn Ap1s.I WALK-TO BEACH f1,•nl. '1:1:. ~ti.I. ""tl'l', .••ardt·111T s.:1.1.:: 1;r, ~ B.1. l rj)]. dbl g:or, 642.8235 -644-6200 Cli 11'\ll''G 2 nn I 1 · ,1 * LlL~W'IUlC; shug r;1rpt.•ls l Bl\Hl1l lll'I\ rtclu.\.t' l, 2, J Br LANOLO S I ,., I ! l '.'.. \' -I ~ I~ XI * Bll·ins 1n1·I U1sh11·ash1 •1' I c ll I I -,-RO . 11 ,,, ~-:-, ,·,-n_~~-lie• 111. ,11,.,.1<u1 11'JC1. 1 1,·, 1 & ,:1 1., I .. •iits, .1t·111s.,rpl·_.,gu_r ... r S • I l'I' I I -11'11 0 s 1ppng . .,.·1. ,\\,U • L1~· Pool .I.: Gtis BBQ s ., "I II" ,. ·=1 l!·t ~l:!·I' •".illt·~rn.t·,1 t;,>.'.:l.:'.\\t.!:~Lll-il::Lt:.\ .~ ..... '" 1P1(" purfl.i \\'J::Sl"t\cv.•JlOrtBc-ach, J unt' 1. Lsc $:.!60. 1110 :11r1\'atcPaliQs "·""· ''·· "'· '" 1 ··""' ui· ALA R entals 642-8383 l •• •II, .ii. I "'"1.l.t;•l1· 11.•\\ ,\l.it'lllflll'lll II lllC 11·•1•'r '.\,('<,\ :: Sty, J HH., ti,.~ Uas., ;i:.t--032/i. I 1 ,\· 2 sn·s. Sl7ll-Sl9J I ~~1~9•· ------ ' I It'll' l j Cllf-:7. 01'.0 ,\l"I'" 'IVE UE"RE'. i1,J .d'i-»~• NU -VIEW RENTALS rp<' .. i.:l' 11r1v. 11auo. K.1r. L1FLlixr , . ·1 b· ., b ·l! Ga:. & \\"11t1•r Pd. J .. n ---dL:-[\11.-.hl', '.\(';"\\. h u i.: l' ,,· ·, -lllt:\I 'lk I. "1 ·'· ·l._ I I' I G ll'.:ll-1 Allunra EASTSIDE -. I · .... 1-.1 S''O rns, rp1·,11o.1 t1>s111p~.,. ,tll'· <ll'<•i:;C'. !''<"'Ill< l'i I • t.i ..... ,1,.,,; 01 :II .;.!i~ ,.,L~'l 11;"' l., .j ;i ". . iuu'. bt.•at·h. $3i::i & $3,95. 67:1-bl.~ LA MANCHA APTS. ·-,. .. · 'tY jjllr .. pou' ~ h• \I ,, .;: ·"I \hr ('d\I . ~ h1'. l" 1111 I' 11 i; , lH ('.1\l .: l•r !!.I I h•'I \' L (',1,1 ,.,. 1 -Gi:, "·ii···,\ ;.. .• 1 •. ·11•·1 pd * $350-MONTH-~*-.i.J1-,111U. t:Xl :.!~~ tl,1~s. oi _. __ __ _ _ · I v..i~h~·1·, tlr)•'I'. l:tu~: tu ,;-: .. 11• ~-' f. L••,!_, .. ·~-·fl~-·.~ IJ•.;-u,1.!l1 l'l ~'S 11kn,1~. HIL\:\U !'\Cl\', Su uf IJ11y. :! 'i7S Scot.I }:.l:u~l'. l'.)J, : ! .. ,1<·11. ;,:~.,30 . :-:i1n ,~ountai n vai1ey JLJ4 ("u~lnlll 1111111 ~ lxlr n1. hVll1(', '.\ i:3-:-H,\\'t-'P.0NT-:-r·i1:irnu11g ~.15· :l BA._Frp.lr.-s~_1'?1't:l\.1-:-.-' . Lil--~~~ 2 ba --$1492BR-Cl_>TS--~ .n -~~~-~ \\ /\\ t·:,rp\'IS, ILrepliit:t". l lrg: i HI', 2 Ba, pll~~ll tTjl!g: S.,:Jll~J-ll i ~l4--0~i I. _ 1 t.;l~t.;~li.-\L q' ' dr,1pt·,-., g:ilr, pool. ."lpil<.:LUU!'l ~ \' 11 t "'11tl ·~1;1:. i '. 11.1, h-111u~ l;.:t• 11cl·k 111111UCl'dn111•11 :!l ,1,: dqis, 2 t'Rl' 11rki,:, ou11J. i\E.\H NE\\' 1 RH., IJll .111 Pn\on_unnui'. IJl('t 1\ BIL •Sl!J':L ;...l:l-U.:.'I~ or ~ hr :.; l•r l Ill'. 11,, l'IHH" \ 10'\\ ! hi· L1d~1. 1;,,_1fi··,.'I C1dl ll'i .... 7::.!·, 'tl1 'I "\''' ii . •l"l·I~.· L,1r ~:u·,1!.l'-t A-J Contl.1 \\':11ll1 lht• bufllS <>iiil lly! k11chl'n, hghl ,<., air' .i honlt like, \1/:;p:Je. hv nn, ~l"-1.iUI ~·._,. ... 1 .-. LJJ!,n::.. ;.1<'..il ,\ h'ill~I~, 11111coo1 Slip oi\·ail. S5";":i/nio. ,\sk !ur ti4+-167~ • I fpde, & p1·t pallo. Nr bf>aut ·-~ --------1 lii:11 .. t•« 1,1i.i, .:;_,.,, .~:·l--.\:1 -. '.\ll::i."ltl'.\ RE1\L'rY 1'l1-1l7:~1 1 '"/{ll~!y", 6r~1;i 1 Costa Mesa pool area, 11·/club housl'. 1 Irvine 3844 ; RENT.LEASE :! u..:. "! J..,.\ ~.,,111 l:.-;;-d. Clus1' ;-~l.\\-POftT r:En.n.\C£ IU' 38241 ~~1,1s. ~;lj{l, &t!-63-19 aft I PARK WEST LAND!.ORDS! l . , l \ Ill IJ1·d~I\, I.Hi-,,\: :.l 1l!jlµ1ni,,. lll•.i.: l!u~p. QC}::\:-; \'!l::\V. CAHEFHI::I:.: t<J1111hOlC;C liv.1- 1 ', I I ~·l.\~\' .. : .. ··;·,!1.1 ':':.1.1::":i;1~:~~', l .. 111.,.1-.u•• l;l:.\'.\lJ !\E\V rnd llllll, :: \!lL; :l BH, 21:.:. n,1, panld l l Bl. Ill qun•t ·l·J!l~·x I APTS. '"' i •• ,1·7 __ ,,_ .L_aguna Niguel 3252 c.-. ;:;~ Ua, upgrttde:J:, on JJ d•·n. IH~11·, "'1'1 s & llptg rour1)arrls1~1~~1V1111K1'· I ll'oo\i I Fam1'ly Apartment• -----, .i.e . i,,l"Cl'nbclt. $375. fit.:t-l~SO. ~wun poo. c uhhse f..· rt't' Jill'UZlL ·"' ( n<.: c ~ .1 , r1J11ri1191011 t::.each 324U , i>l~ 2 1,.i \"JJ·,\\". J;i 1,11_ --, _-----·-ia1·tl 's. C.Onvcnit'nt. 6JJ.o:;Q:; utiJ ,., ri•Jng ..1: f'n<'l g:ir. ".:! l.:P.., I Bath DUW avallabh• dir .-1(<:'.L, ll pl1' !1!1111~. 01 Efl; Sa! ,I;, Sun. <1:ao or ti-'6-3.lXi ~ ,\dl!s. nu f'K'IS. :: 9 3 h~•!ll sm. On (\liver Drive, ._, :'p1ridr1l1. 3 Hr. :t·~ b.i, nu. --~ . l!,tllHhOll. ti-1~~1\l. l 1 !I S; D ·-,,. '· i!'J•· ,,,r l'.·1r · pnt .'I.: •'Pl. frpl, puul. S..Jo. LP.G·REDl::C. 2 BR, 2 B,\ I-----. -------· 11~ " •· 1 n 11·~!) ,.,.oy. ,; .• LI, Tll L· .•.ii' .: 1;1\. b.!~I '-It .• ~. kid~ .. r''I' I , , i. -~ 1 :-. ...... ,u~ll"~· 1 on -"".i.1,.,•' ,u·<'n 1ra1ll·r & i~.11. t>.1l-lli'78. Sl"lfUIO. \\alk lo sliops & Dana Point 3826 3b83 Parkv1ev.· Ln. a52-9200 n1111 1 rr1 1111t 1nt II ' C I --.-. --. . . ---~-s" 1 s. . r. !:oll. st l'l.1.i:;1 . . _ . • Laguna Beach 3848 11'1· ~flt"l,11·1<· .111 ,;,.,.pr:" 'd•ilt• !ivHlt'. ~•-l. ,\,._, B···1 ·11 e (n1,ir·1 rir1 \!,q C z.i_ .. L1..1' : .. , •. -LI:. S--·> .\ La~t111<.1 1·.• !: .. ,• .. I ~.1 ,,,1 ~lll~lulvrl,u.~1 1_11-.~ l11un;1,·ular1•. $.,~)/11111. 1~1 r . .\~lBLltt (on1llJ, :!HILi i'\o pets. Sl'i::. '.\10 . ;o.;E\\ large 2 Br <1pL oc·can 1 -''--..;__.c.. __ :.:_,;.;; 111-1 & .• ~1,•pos1L .\l',ul . .Jun~· ~U.1. <.·rpls, drp~. ,_llll1ns, 54~3j24or;,.~ 11e11 . v.er bar dou~l_L'!2 RR oceanfront apt in o11JI 1 l.IJ-•• i-11. h:r1.1ee ~ pool, SJ.JO ph '.1-. -. ---i;a ragt>. Bll·U•S. S 2ti.1 Sru.n1sh Villa Beam t · -SEA E-----1 ;.\~l!'l 1 _ bit Ucils ptl.. Ctuldrcn -l~l'J;!l • r¥ · tti,I T RRACE -'." --:-. ~. .. , i\·clrome. no flt'L". 1•111s. ___ _ h:1i1c.' flrl\'. beach. ltta.n~ ,_ .,Ll:lu1_;-,1,_; ,hr.~ha. l :''r1k111..: 11.-<"111 11l·11. '.\r11 :i Bi..Ll-J-;>,_ "UH. I" U.1-' .. drps. µ;itin .. \lg:r. 1%0 2 BR. crpts, drp~_.1 llL>eS. Prefer ~uplc 01 '"ll•Jt\. 11o.:.;1· ll\l' Ill'" l~!: S l~I.> 11'.1~1·. 1·,111 n1•11 c!l'tVr ~ L'pl., 110 lll'tS,t \\'all•~· aplti &.12-73&1 r11sh,rasher, thsvasal. 1J1i.1 inngle adull. S·l ;iU/mo. i• . 1'11 .. :·~ ;r..1:.: .~.111 ~1c·1 '"• '·', .'iit'9 hor I' 1•»• 1111 u -.~'l'\11"-\ ,;:.. ~nu. i:>ays __ 1.ol 1-j;'iJ 2Dri r,--·-. i n.10. -~k fur Jeff H)d<', _!'l'.lr~~u.sc. 1~1-1791. t ', 1, , .. r./h~u .... 1 1y •.:u•irdcd ~Hit·. 1·vc~/\\.knds &14-:.!rl:i I · l oJ. Crpts, drp.,, S:.:8-2'"....10 :l IH'l d ., _ba_P __ ···"•· \J .. ·' ~1.,. 1" ----. -. -. -. --slo\·c, l'1'1t'Li;. single ,.\.Y _ , -• C'n, -cnth!.e .. 1· <'t· 1" I 1::· E , y ... f ! ·• .. Ho mefinders * 642·9900 '.\'11-\·1 11·' NU-VIEW RENTAl.S 11;.:.~11 .o "" . !ti_.\ l I .I:..;·' y,.U (~,·I \Ii I•,, 1 I•, . ·' ,., , 1 ,. 1 ,,.,.,. 111 ,,.,,,.I Mesa Verde 3263 L ~I. 2 Hr. 'l 8;1 , 1rl't ba.1 ,1 beaut l't·ll. ::il:lt'Clcd '"'l 0~ SUPE,lt 2 Ur, ,\pl~. Grc.11 fantasllt: 0t.·t•an \'u, dcek,1 :1\ ui.11,\,• 1 •: n ··1 ,:• '1' , "II I ~ ' 'I c· I S 00 I <.:.ir. u ·ins. J!l••. p,1!1",l 6-Jti--~ZI_, or &ltr~~2 .. anai.:cn1rnr orr• .. n:,.:, nu 1·pL~ I sc.I Lots forsale 2200 Bl·J,I,~.:!"\ ·1 11 ".J' 11 ;''1 ·,.)n1:1.1.''. .~., -' ·1' P.H. 2 B,\ 10111 rn1. 11'"" 11<'111) 11pt 'rl .1.: urp<I. -----·19:\-0l·ll. 4'~1-S:-"J.~1.l'l'l'S~1 97. ---------= 11un·, "'"'I.... •-"-•" _ .i •• :d t;.-uovn••r.v \\.at•, )Iii' •l.:H.•'l)lj l.Jl•lu:'l.i!: lBR apt. Unrurn. 2-, · :-. . . , -... -·------' Homefinders * 642-990:.l oio'il1:1.:-.; ' 1;1: ~ i .. \. I .11ld1't'll, pt.I ~"'' s.:.~1 :\[\). l -J-.---, -.. -----t.:piier. i\l'I\" c·pt. Bl!·LllS. I LI~. 0 ct,:'!"'\ ! foj \\ J\l°\\liti:: 1 ><.·i-;u1 \"1('11 !llir :lilu , 1 ._i .i·'l, .. I \J 1 ,, 1 ,,,., \·,. 1 ,, 11 . ~11 ~1 - 1 , .SL 1u.1 I ~.LJJ:.o.r.1-1<•Ji Ternl<.:C'.· Quii•t $l jU <-iunr~.0{1t'l1 lC'd ~!ll'l'lll~ .. J·, ·'LLA:',...._,t:li\TJ::S, /li;::h .1s-.ur11al,l1· ";' 1 l·l.lP \!.JU lll4Jr\tu -. P<' II d" h I• l)__..I !ll-'l' )\"lh l'O"I'~ :.'1 d S1:;,:;u() fur !-"! !Ni\ 111 Utll '· vhly ·I Yt'<ll"S l•il.l. l~l·d L':•l J ,.1 i ll\"t''lll"'rH [>I '." I"." 11 ~J7!J-"2:1:~1 Ll;it II 1•1, - l!On~•l!':fll'~ ;1n1nn::~1 :i,l.1"11 ·"'1 -" .... 111<· ... }~ .. ~1 ur.1</ \\~lJ. S:."iO. "'.-!·•·• d1st111;1,.he1. ·I';. i-~:!.':.!. 4~1~ ' I I "· k.·1-tp1·!... U1 ,. " •l<'ll'' ••l •11 .. ·n 111p,1o1011' .\· Fl~i-~i i I Miss ion Vie1'0 3267 1.•.1-!i.oh• .tit" p111 ---· Ol'''\' VI E\V J "R ,11tul l.'.I . '1 I ,\ ! , ... 1· 1;;:. _,.:,~1 . -. . ~·( •' ·1 ~ S'",\>U\' .\l'f'' I E bl ff '-·' . . ,J . ·' ~r··1 ·111·ulhni..:l1d!,.;nf's11,·d 1 11 e !11"rll· '1··11•: .. ·11.··• , I S'kl L Dl 3B :\! r"' "-... ast u 3830 ii I \ 111,• . ..;"'111,1 .\n;,. \1uun1,11n~. *LANDLORDS* 1 "111 " •l•h ,v pi·i, "1•~·~ ;\l.\1-,, 1.:r. :! (: 1 l"'l'llh't, -· i;t -x, 1: · 111 1'1'~· 2 BH,l\~ 1A1 'fu11·11hou~C' Apr. '-."' 11 Sn a~:• \";1 ~" L.:1i;una \\,,Lid 1;11111111 <(]HC"'-llil•ll · \\••:'\I' L\~I' 1 Iii ;-,,, · l'l•l. !ILJ''· <>11 l\J11d. 1\'l' J.u-. art•;J. i\r ::;,_.C:t 1 i 1'11•1-.\IC, 1'1'11' PallO, Pool, $1i.J. :-.:o • DELUXE e i,.·,,~·h $!/l.i 1 Homef1nder s * 642-9900 t .• 1 , t.1 , .· 111 \ 1, 1,d , .,,,. ,1 I '"l llUUI. l'\c. b 4.i-•lllM. 1 •·I,". "'"-I"" L'd I I <lllll'r: Ctu!J11•1u"" 1.,,1 1111·!> '"l•tl~ :,. .... 1 1.11 1 ::J "'' ,.-~ "'"'....... ~Bl'" B\ I l I • o • 3856 l. 1•f•u 1"' I •·~··:' 1Homefinders * 642-9900 · -· ·-•--.:::....:.._· ·· " " -' .iJJ or ca~<' ·.;.;:.:.....:.:•::.... ____ ::.:::;: e .-•.. 1 .,.i , · e 1 ~ewport Beach 3269 Duplexes Unfurn 3600 !\e1\' 2 BR. Quiet niahire ' 1neld ~pal". 1na!>l<'r suite, ti1n - COTO OE CAZA ",'..'Jtil Cuppt.1 L.11lJ1·rn 1'1~111---·:1.1 .\,.:1. lll~-1~·.n:, 'lll.1n• !\.1t'hor ln•-.1rt.l' H ri·11r• ~'.lliHIUHr..:. !("11111~. -.;u1111:.-1 d111u1,;. CUl'klt1i1 l IJ U II:.,• , l1u111 11 ..: .. 11d 11u1t·n 111 " •• 111111111 ~ 11~11.! .. , l.11-..;1•1 t.ltl'.. .. COIU fit' l",1 1..1 IS a pn\ 1' "«tu-.·rl :111 ••• c .. 11 h;· \'t>1111·..:, ,\,.,.,-.._., J ! • r h • , I \\'(ll:l,]\,l;-·('r')t"l'LI." :,l :'!,i ,,,, 1,'l.[1 -'~ 1 I 1:1~. !; . .ii1 l'tiuflh' Sl!J3.. bl & l~st. ;\o ' r rn & dbl g;.1111g<'. Auto doul' LIDO ISL~:· D ra rn at i {" ,·,1·~1," 1"«11•1 ...... ~,· 11 Si~-, .! 1::: lit':l•h io!l;ti.:•'. ~81 t F.'.a~rs1rle C:'ll, 111· bus children, pets. 6!j.-bi:t0 ;tll up1.•ue1• a\all. Pool .1. 111'1\·\\'ar1•rlro1ulBltCondo. h1 1: '.1 ('oi11· \,. ··· 11. !.i; :.•, •. ~'. 11,.,1, ,,11111 ,1. (:iu.J, ,111t pt•t .,k U.'111•,, .. I & stores. oldt'f cou p!..: or <1. r::ccreation ari:a. Ar1ults 011· 1\1)1 SJ7:1/n101n1'. util's. Hy C 11 l .. , 'I.!'. 2J-, I II . · ''""'" 11-,11n "I''-,~~' -1 I'll 'I''"''' 11111u·r. tii---1:~1~ • 'I 1.. ·•"• .; 'i~ I 1 1:1{. hrh·I; lrplc, hi 111~. .. ..... ,., u _-.Juvv l'.\1:\1,\C. 2 llf't Tn-plC:'I., hlt ~. 110 vets. '. v-............. ., . _____ , i ' ""]!' ; ·• • 1 .. 1.· !-• '~·I _1,, .i:; 1~··•' J1 t ti\! A F . h d 1 · e $307 e .::UH 2B.\l.o;. li1•/rn1 w/ t .. 1 1 .. 1.· 11·d1t .. 11 .. ,, 1.1 , -' partments urn1s e 111s, ge s,;arage, pr 11. :_. .. ,., '•-·•1tJ.1 S...JJL.Tll. 1~1 IJ<•~.1nfrnn1 1 lndry-nn, ~lb5. 1>-1~1~0 t•r sti::i /11nigoi; \Vay, 1\B Ju't.•pl,1t:e. !'I.I" shops .r.. bch. 'I VA 4 PLEX ll1z!1 11!-~U~n,d>IC' ;c, 1 ... 1 I ~li'l 111un111 ~ ;11•111! ·.1 h I•· Q11rll'!'" 11111 l'Hf\ :!1.d I Si\.'..'l.~I l•)f !-".:! t'l!irn.1 lHll!', onl) I )•'Jrs old. l:l·d C,11·pll !111:c~t1nent U 1 1· 1 .... 1 o 11 . 97!:1-~.).-i(), =-,--7,C'--1 LOT ZO:\ED !01 19 itpt. IUlll~ . 1 . c:ornp!C'!l' 11·/ .di hld~. pl:n1-.. I "Jll'('", h!dg. Jl'l'fll\11,.. 1_'1f) .ipp1••.11I'< Rci-1dy t•> hu1l1I. ."J.ljiJ<<1"d 111:11rd ]~I I IJ Hll l,1nti. .\1tr:1c;li11 t ,. 1 n1' P.<('1>,I,.!<' f!l'IC •' S12.UOO. (;.ill !J;!J..-9111.1. t: • ,I l I t< I ~ \. 1!. 1,,,\,~I!. 1 ·~·I 11 .1,.c ..... :.,u 11111. p.111u Cost.:iMesa 3724 5i~-238 1 r.lanaged h) A1h1hs-Hcls. il4-7~i.1--0i19 ., 1 " 1 i;,t. 1; 1 \1·11·11(,11. ?J'I' 28A ' \rll.LIJ\~I \\".\LTLH...'\ co Sltin. 1 u1{°;1Q;t._n.:Ir• .... .'..~~ng.'c·=~~---1 .. uoi~~ l'r11· ri ,, l 1", '·· ,_·: ;-;H, 11 Pi· ::,ir. f10ilil•, $30 WEEK & UP -LJsj;11 shr. 'rcJr~~'iu:. r ;i~·~·: I .ELt-:t;,\l\T-2 81{. 2 ba~ S•·p~ (.J111('t t'lllplo}rr1 u111h.lle.ag~ l ·-1 11\.-\TJ'.\(_, IV\ l:i-.. \l 11 Balboa Isla nd 3206 1 • .i .... 11~, -.h,1.: , 1 pl ... , l1J;.u1~. 'ii1ld ,., !i·v111•' l'.i'.\I a Stud1u & l EJt 1\pts. dq)~. S:.!:':J ll3f!1ill,\, :ill ' 1)111. rrn. frp!e, !'001 . S~t.J. l\1o sn1ok<" HH-aioJ. u.1.1100 ~q. 11. 101. :-;;,1·111.; 1.tl• :;c.ce,:::,:__;:.::,:;;._ __ _: 1~.,1 t ,,~· r 1. ~~\,;). 1uo ,,,1 NlJ-VIEW RENTALS e 'I\' .1: i\lauJ S...:fvlll' ,\i·ail. upiil s. SlbO. 9i9'j()'J'l I, 1'1b An1ib'OS \\':1y. ·1~1-1977 "r M -V -d -__ 3_8_6_3 ; I , '' Ii r· .' .-;1 j ':u-:12.-. "' I I ii. _: '') 1 .• , I'' \, : \ J 1 , I \'. '''I' I rl1 J'' I: ' ~I ' I-' " .Y.\l d!lhl.FUll.v11J1',Jll!l•·I, •l,',\l.t,'>1.\l<l •. l'.'I'• I . ,,.-... ''" l'I' .,. •l'I -. 'Id I "''"'""' es.a ere !'.1'''-j.l•,~ ,~, " · • • · ~· •-~ lOllC ::it•r\ ICC -.-I . poo ,--B-l' b-lll"> , .. I. -tl-'" ~'~ ho1 i<l'eH, r .. ady 1 .. >fl ' .. , rh:o1·,1111i:,• , .. ,,,_.,.,,_ ·_• ,.,11 "' ----e l 'I 11 p '-'-·· • " I P~ rps ::::_:_ _____ _ ' \I ~ ..,., ,, !'\ J·\'l''ll''L" L'IJ'IXJ '"'I' l!{L't'll& l'l~eliun Id. 'C ' .. --1 e 110,,lE 'T\,IOSPllER'' p1 c ~q lLUllllLl°;,.,y_,11.:.!,1 i,,..11, ii/frpl·· :• •· LI dl"l«, .,1 .. _ ... · •· u. rr · • .,,u,, ?·-t> \' 1 Bl 1 C:\! l'UCS gar, ul'. lrplc,l F . II 3 " "' .::1J1J9:!-:U.;~ p:ill'• Y··.irlv <;.·,-;-·, :'ll" 1.i:11 1n1 . (q I(·, ~.t:> n i;i..J -1'·L. • 1·pr-. drp~. h!tu1~. -"'\>'18~~~r &r"'·~?' ,\dlr~/no pt.•ls. Sl9J. n10. ounta1n Va ey 834 Deluxe 2 ,f.t l Bf{. ill'ntal Ole .. p Tl IV ,\ T_L_J_:""f.:-:\ l , I I \'. •n. 11·1111r,11 !: J. 1 ~: · j ':1 ~rill:.. ,,,,,ii,., lvn111-, I• 11.i• • " ;1.~il. ~:;·~ phu:le ~·-~O~. :>-J -6i'l-:.:~l*I. ! 31J<Jj Mou·c 111'1'. ;-,16-1034 -----1,1:,,, lr;iil l:i·i-, 1,qt! .\i,.i: •-11.1 FlJP..N large 2 hr apt. Close !lOO·' 8 1, Ba SI"'' I PH.lt'>lf': lll"C'H, '.!HI<. 2 b:1~ li0.\!2<J' 1 .. 1 Cyp.11 ~ 1'11·11 •'' ;C;;o;r;;o;;";';d;;•;;l;M;;;;';';;;;;;;3;;l;;2;;2 1 • ~ \J 1·• -----to shops. Adl!s/ no pets. ·u· -.:· '~ · ...i-0W.:1~· in deluxe ·1-ple_x. S:.!UO. I Newport Beach 3869 u1 S;111 llc111~·11c,·. 1J1111•·• 1,. -.,11!!. 'J ~(,_-,,~·11 l '.\L~.l:.\IU l Ii"' R h ips, c1pts, patio.=·' ~le. I 968-133!1 c~:..::.<:::.:.:..::::.:;::__ _ _:::::,: 11111~1 ~·11 ['l"li•' ~"i~-•~>il. (l".ln•r ll•ll•IJI' \11 l!•1111r". 1 IUt, :iq. vz ocestrr,!rtdl"! AdJ. ~hop'(:. 548-87 11; . l-T1·rn1~. IJl'nkf'I"". r.~·t--::_., LEASE 1 :;;1;. ~· 1·1. 1p:. r,1•1~·11~1~, r 1111 tu1. ~·~ 1.11. 11·vr 1'.·!1 _£.~!~ . . .. 21:~5~n-:-i22~. Huntington Beach 3840 i PARK NEWPORT . -----\ HI 1 .. ·dro'""I ~".! : !'. :111 ',pl· .-. rlr.I''• l.1ll'l"'.".· fl'Jl•I l!l'll'h.:s s.i::.U.' 1 l~!-t. lu.111:. I.ii;: 1_~1 1CtJa(_'{', Nl\V 'J'O\Vnhse $210. Lrg :: APARTMENTS Real Estate Exchge 2800 !l •:.:ii.,,11.i~ , 1"11 • , : harclll'••>d llut'r'. In 1· "l v 1 • • · 1_. -· ____ r lrit.~1 1 f~i .. B:u h~~~1 ·"'.: ,\J~~~-1-~. Br, pool, J\/C, clubhSt', f'IC. I $1 l~ t'>loV(' 1n spac. 1 br. no 1 BcH~CUPLEX /OWNER \•'(•">' l•I 1•·\1 .ilo I• 11• t\t'l:.'l1'~1l'll"";,l;:d ... ·pd.'·'·" ·1 ],Jlj i-;J :-. k1d~/p.·ts 11k. __ s.11.o0!!.,Cl~~.J·;: r-..r.S.CstPla.za.675-7812. deposits, kids I pets ok l on the bay Vacant_ '.\l,, 11 , Ill/II' & i ~ll c···1 USE A TD lo111ta·.!111r ·11 1 11 I' • 11' .' 1 11J. :'II 01 ~11 I•• 111un1h 01 !·" ),·-, _\I~" Jlur"e J":.dnt"h, :1 Sl~U' . · .'"'.·ld1n:: util, lti62 LHG 2 br, :lba, dui rni, Pool _ gar. t' p Is Id r ps. J.uxury apanine"I llv•'•a ·r ' d sr.0011110. ,,,,,.,,,,., ,, ,, .. ,,,, ,,,.' · 1•11 • ·,I'.-," 111 N "°'' I I ti 'dull> I 0 •2 '""'I " " suu11ul1' r•·nts! F'.1rl1 1ll) t'dl1'1'1Tc '"'n··r 11rl l 1.>i\•' " I· '"' '·-•.,-.,. ., '· lll1upu~ r111, al:rt:.il!•'.I l\\ ,,,•: .. : 1·" ·no C'Jlt/drp, stv/ret, pool .. .,..-.........-. ovrr!ooklng the water. En- Lui n. :: dt1\\ll, J l ~ Uilj1t:l'. :'nd "i lJ. t .. J.11 UI ':u11r1• I' ,I'> I 6·l:l-:-<:!:'J. l \\":,'l.)I l1H:\1'. IT-l•JI. : u1:~2-~. '· ~~.'1! S,\ C,lll)'IJll 1\j;t. fol'<'. _1~·1 ~· 6!"":9:l.C. Adlls, 110 pcts.$110. 61~8965. i J\'E\V ,\PTS -\\",\LI.: T{I : joy Si50,000 heallh spa 7 b1a 11u.•tl e1•1!1n~~-k11od,Y pinr CI0".111 r•,1~1111 .. u 1 h I,, I· 1•t'. dri''· : (",.II ;,Jl. 1,1•.n :•i·•-,1 :11 Sl'.kJ. Hr:DECORA'.ED :~I-JR, IBR. pool. S\4-0. S<'t' art. I H1£ACH. 1 & _2 B~·~ fror~ I S"'ln_inilng pools, 1 lighted p;111ch11~ 111111 out. Frc~h '1;u·J111 .JBl-t 1'1:111 I hn:11"! 1 ~.1r1~·· ,.., .. 1,·11 :S.!1;11. n1u \-e; :;1:;:, 11-,.1 .! .. tury /rpll-. ~ha~ 2 li1\, no pets. l\r. Su. Ch! 1-U\L\I; 32J J, 17th JJl. of/ S\1.1 tv $.l3J. I::XTRi\.'.'.). l~nnis t'Otlrtl, plus miles ol pa111t. off-,,lr!'t1 prk~ 1 _ :·1pt~. oh11', 1.1 .. n .... r·11·pl , f{!•:ihy Cornpan~ "1 1 II.ill .. 1.:,-t1:11J •'n 11111.:. 1.no! ,\· ll·nnis pri\I, P\.aa. 979-9272. Santa Ana Av. 67~ ~::ti-2:"179. I blC)Tle lra!I:;, putting, ahuf-~b".,H•,.~~ ~J(~~ar,2,.~:~l~i~~~J~.(: ~~~.~~li1~~;~~:11111~:;,~. ;', .. ',~.l,'.~7 642-823S 644-6200 • i1:I ~ h"H\i', 1 'L.1. ch-.ir~-... ,.:.,,,. Lu beach S\25 )fl). Dana Point 3726 LGE. l BR ouPlex, Part. :luR:-2-ba, like O{'Y,'~ Pnv. ~~~~.i94~mo"'n'·lh1Ju~a1·r .. l'•1 Prl:.' ~ll),.c_ __ ~ ., ,. I·.. llO\\'.\F-:lJ · .l. L-0. • J'lll'. f"P l'i, ll'111·"d ,.-re:. 11!" ,,.ti·r•'.:t. 1 -furn., Utili pd., $19j. nio. rn rd back yr-d , 2 blk." be:il·h. and l ·bed.., )', __ __ _ ltl·:nECROt\TEn.-nf'" .:rp'·' t· •1 :·1.111< 1· ..... 11001. Ll·:•~" l!~\·J.\I·: ·1 t~RltACE, :lBJ:,, OELt;.\'.L, n<'ll' Studio 2 BR, '.'.:f'J c 21 ist SL, ;,.i8-S94J j No pets. I ch~~d. A1•\ 6{6. Z·story 1 roo~ plana Eland . HOUSE + TWO lil.rMOO. erpl .\· 1,a1111 1:1 ~· ,.,.1. ~"" -, ~'-:!'.i."1 ~ ll. <ln l ~Hr, µ ,1 1 1 o. 1 '-~ bas, oi:can view, priv. NR N 1 8 blt 1 S:.!'.ll/mo. 968-0;i.52 alt 4: \.J, trlc kltch~ prlu1e~ ~ 1-3 BH. :! U/I !louse plul' ·'/. Bit, :.! BA Apls. 1';1110..;, fl-pies. yard'i. I u u n d r ~ , . .p.rag(')>. 6-lti-l<ll ~- ...WAl.K TO-BEACH ··stiort·•·!irt" ·; + Br~.:: 1:.\ 1 HR <'••nd'l-:-Lrri~, --;-, ;.-., 1·n1·J .. <~;1, )_re.I. J I.JI,;-front patio~. bit-ins incl 1vash~r & 1 ih'PS. ~~I. fl~i, g~~·,,~':ii~'. I 2BR v.•/gar, new. dee. $160. or balcoiucs.'car~~ini:padra· \'rl~ t. ·1". ::J,, '.\!Qrr:11;: 1'"'11. r luhhuo~r. Jl:1t1<1. :\_:;Q "·•\ '"->-···...ti I <l.1?i:r. cpl~, ~rps, J: ron1 no JlCI!!. 376 \Y. Bay, CM ! Fncd yd, water pd. 2710 peril!S: Subter'TUM!an 'par1c. f'an.1·<1n 1:.t_ c.11 1 !ol' ;.pp!. pr1· 1.10 ,~l'-!111:1. II\' d~rl'nl Hornes. 4Bll, $2:i0:. up, t\812 La Pai, $l60 U 2 8 3 8 1~ 8 "A" Delaware. Pl! bet 1-:-i.1 in1 with elevaton. Opdonal .'\•·<ir !k..;r·r 1;,11 Spi·in..:!'. t!J.ii -1:~-IJli li__ ___ I, \(',\'.\-T fr·r:•·C'd :I Bi, $".!H!-'.!t .. \ .. '1iee1acular vu, palto • 49J-1040 p00l P·1 ~ .r1 drp~· 6J6..4.120. 1 n1aid service. Jlllt ::'Orth of • 1vnp!o·l(·I~ I u r 11 1 _, 11 ,.r1 • SJ;>.:CLJ : ll•1u~1··:;1:1~. d•"ll., ~ 1->H. $16·, ,r.; :! Br's {..\! 1.111 1'~.1.)lt spruiklei·'>. S l7J. l Huntington Be1ch 3740 2'112 'c~1ri' e N~. ~.p ~.' EX'THA lrg 2 br 2 ha delu.xc ! Fashlf.in I!land at Jamboree DESERT HIDE-AWAY I I NEW duplC':..cs. 3BR each • 1 AU dchu.c features. JU:.1 ' being con1plcted. Ll !~ I: . !'1111<-i~l'. ~lre1~s .~ • l'ncC' & 2ha hlins. 11/1!. l/l'l.·I ~151:1. ,\:,:~1-·('1:'_:__9i!h"l::1J. _ j~J1-, .. lt g poolside apt nr beach, $1Sj, andSanJoaqulnHllLIRoad s1.-.,flll0. 01' 11 111 l''.!.J1 .. n:.:1 . IV~~;\r. 11t1.,lk t_? ~hopi.: -'~ ~ RlJH\1. 2 lt \, !ll'llr ht·:1•l1, 'f0\\7\!10~1t.:J.UXURY,2llf!. 1 BR. $15.S.$165 3 BR, 2 ba., All d~"' decor. 2320 i-1orida. 5JG...5882. Tt'lephone (TI4) ik-1900 . i ~·1 1-r.v Ph»ll'1'. l' J·. l' J. hr h A11r ,--fi,.i-2~.~1. .J()11I l)o!t' )ai•d, like ncii . s:~JO. ·rn-lcvcl ;r1·plc, en1:loscd dbl I' NEW DECOR. Priv garage lrple., pallo, b c _ g~. CtlILDREN & Pets ok. 2 BR. for rental 1nlormatlon ;;,\r:RJ:Tf HE,\L "J Y.! l...ork"p111~ .... 1nlf• j:.;6-(X]S(i ~·1r. til.J.6!11 days. eves Lndry rm. Nc\1·cr Spnnish Wesl!Ulf, Adults., 642 1.l5.l 3 $26:> 6002 L 1,1.;-.i.1:13 . $.1o:i. 2 UR 2 BA-+ ""!J 1 B!{ H __ H_b_ ----~1:111-JJ:;i Adull Complex. l mi. So. of 1 & 2 Br. pool, dshwhr:. util ~~75( 1~~i 1 ynn CHANNELFRONT -I I31\. l1lt·;d lor ic•1·11 or 111-urit. ar our 3242 :iHP.~ Iha, i07 s t J nrncs Hd. 1 Sf'I' Diego Frwy. 17301 r?· A<l~lts, no pets. $1~ up. __:____· a · 2 BR,, 1 ha. Room for boat ~l •·A.PI' L·nit,; <tn 19,600 s11 ~1 ~()\ -z,.,,, d l.'-2 '.\1°1'.p·•.1'! Blvd .. C. .• ! <;j ltJ 1110 111t \ll1 ,. Good for r·~n1n1e r e1 .. I ctcvelopn1ent S 6 5, 0 11 u. {J~cr-Brok1·r. 6-12-059!.i. Real Estate Exchge 1800 I la11. Gilr<ii;:t" J··~IJP, t1ltin $.IJO include~ gardener. No Keelson Ln, HB. 842'-7848 _E:1 E. 'lOlh Sl!'f645--476 · 2 BR, 1 ba. $195. 2 Blks I $375 Uni., yenrly, · ----r r.1n~e .\1a1I Junt· l 01:;.";'!!'ll ELl·Xi1\NT I BH fan1 rn1 _dog.; 'ii~57<IO \l\nahcim_I _ Beautiful Garden Aptl, L~Grpo.-2 rtat~rp-28 ~ 2 5~ 2 O<:ean. Awil 6 /l, Idetil 1 or 1 WALK TO BEACH $100,000 EQUITY r 2-BR-1 h1t -\\'alk 10-lx·h-..,_l f•Jrn1til d1nn1g roc:nn hu1n1· BLUl-'FS. tennis Villa. 3 HR, 6 Pool' Tennis. Sa~na. ....., .. _ • k 995' va1' la • 2 ..1dulls. M&m>. 3 Bdrtns .. 2 baths. •1 .;ix 1111•1 comm!'i'c 1at 1 · s ' Nr~· 1·1 pis, xlnt l·incll)ta11111~. 1~ 1 • cnuw-.::n o enc Cotti Mell 3824 Yearly le•·• .• ,~ u. store~ . u11ny tcn·ai:-e :-.o 1... S ,-,, 1 '.!r.s ba. an1 rm, $•1ti5. n10. Privacy. Frplc, Indivl t,;lll ;;;;;;;;;:·;;;:;;;:;';:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 --.,_ hu1ld1ng. \\'ill trade for lalt' pets Ill' rhild. r.tri 67J..7':3i. dlant 1-·l n10 rs M' !-1•_ H-10.lil7 . patios. Nr. Ocean. Territic!1 10 UNITS ~~~;;~ :;~~~1• dit'sel s po r 1 1 '.\'AN"ILu HUNTINCiTOl'l t-WlSOUR 4 BR .. 21 i ba.: 2200 sq . ff., J.)eul. 846-132.t NEW! l~OU~, 3 BR, ff. ba, ~ $145.000 G-\LL ~,g_.144-1 I • L.SED BRICKS * R.EAL1Y l Near· bt;_ach . Avail. approx. Lig-una a ... 1ch 3748 M r y~:; um. I * C t R lty t-70.tJG~ L 1. S.Jti."J Yrly. Ai.;1 548-1290. ~ ontn. •-.ny. ~rgl-'OUs c:ardC'n !'('Ill!'!!, res ea ., DOI"! J I I 1 li21.t CQ,\::,"T H\\;:,._~,., 'IO."'Tll o•-· JUNl~ffi''-E EFFICIENCY Ap!S from $57 associated ' and 10 sharJI l.lnH!'i f-lr,,,1 ! ,, "', rl) (',. i;:t' 1v1ng 714: 846-13$4 & 211: ""' U"W " ·' r .c. .c. SPACIOUS 1 lookJ 1 .. I' ori lhc l-I"' 1 . VTE\V -... l'n1. rl1n mt. l"'n fll'l"i or Nt'w :t Br. 2 ba, fam-rm, \Veek. Pool, m~d. ph, lndry. \ 'Tv.ii ngO~c~l urill bulldll''' ~ !1"rir0flm hi.dc'-.;)-\\;JY nn 40 1 f'h1l1lr!'n. $285. fi73-fi9i~ Irvine 3244 1 $1 10.1110. ti4.J-'Jti3a. 64-l-1TJ9_ Village Inn, 4.94-9436. !IAJl(fA'i -Qf,\l~• ~<; !rl~ W lolb~.-• 11 1/-t I I Glnrome SJ 0 <M:1 f!('I' n1•.,;'i1~· ;1: .... 1~~~11:,;:~~~~117.1~;~11;~~ EXC~~'f'J'IO:--SALLY nice _ I San Clemente 3276 Newport Beach 3769 11r:1.:t'~. \\rJl"f I ... flnXllJ\l~ r• ~1rlC'nl1al Orani,:c Cou11r v Crll\1 h1J1n(', "Ulk !o bc.u'h, ~NE\\' '1 hr 2 ha l·ntv f'k s:lZi. 1 E EXCITING! Pr1n1" loc1111on. Cflll nrH1 BARRETT' REAL TY BJl.. s::oo. rno 6'13-1649 NE\\' 2 hr 2 ba Univ Pk s;sr.,1 GREAT' OCEAN VIEW • LA PARISIENN e I ' ril-li'IJO. c--M 3224 3 Bl' 3 Ba + liOllUll Rm 2 sty :m Calle Doredo I 2 BR Furn. $2-15 iNVESTMli~li\~ ·.. 642-4353 ; osta esa Ml· fl . t:niv Pk , $t50. 3 BR. $350., 49~7?17 All elecU1c. Fireplace. I { ~ I 11 I Real Estate Wntd. 2900 VACANT 2 Br, S I f> o, Own•'r 644i.S8l3. San Juan Hl!ated Pool. Adults. 1 ' l \ kitt<i/rc'lll Al~ '.\ BR JIB, NF.\\' Tunlerock horut, 2 C • 32 m...1268 I ~! ! RESPONSIBLE pariy "'""" $210. Ag!. "'"' m-8430, Bil. 2 BA, don. Gold 'shag epollrlno 78 A~ from Soll COAurse. I _ i::::::::==•-!!!:· 111 buy hom~e !~r lov.· t1011•n 48n., 2 hn, eul·de-sac, Pfl-llO, ('t'pt, t'OrT\pactor. 2 c1tr gar, NEW z BR, d~n · condo, ~ Se.nta-Ana ve. J Jl'"Yll\ent. 61:l-1ti79 rrplc, rnc'fl yrd, So Co&lit self cle.ln oven• t 3 7 S. ct(rpcted, )'ti., 2-car gar. $.U/WK UP,. 1 Br, 2 Ba A : 2.4,: • TW~ BR , UNITS, Plu1.a no 1~r:s, $400, 557-1'.Wl 67S-5847, pool a: rec. ~ell. 493-4808. Bach. Color: TV, maid tetv, J AN.be.ii.a ~ .. u 11 -I I~ " BR 2 bfl AOme LEASE or lP.a~ oj>tion So h I 3286 pool. 'mt MESA, 415 N. ,..-:\I. S4I,OOJ. do1vn. 1J<7~ .._.. & . 1, ' $.T/5/n)o llf"W TurUe ROck: 2 ut ,.aguna . Newport 81, 'NB. 646-9881 r.sa..nd1tbll' Broktr 9fi0.l2·1il I ,,,. ,_ Avail, 6'17. JJOO. n10. • d .. di land !:r... . . 'J . · , ~L'i--~ 49..i--0.m· h. '°009 ~ , su. OCEAN VIEW 3 BR home, BAYJ'R.ONT-Bl!acon 8 a y. ;!'l~C.: 4·Pl~cs. I: r <' 1:1 I DIG 2· Bil \bl ' or 551 .. 1 prlv. comm. W&lJt heath. Lri l BR. Prl. beh. Tmnll. kii=alioo, 1.uvJcr n1Jirt.f>1. Houstt Furnished conit'r • '1 gar, TURTI.EROCK, tut 4-Plan R1..1t. Cent,r. ltnml'lf .. po48. Boat '!Plltt· $ 375 /M 0 . 167.<XX!. '"· 1 v.•/V,\ loon 1 yiu'(I, fJLIJlof. l!lOVt;. no 5n_f:fil, 11.vpll 18741 ?a!MKI t"'ortE'l for $475/rno Lf'aae 493-S227 675-6999. PrJn.•only. Agt., !'>$6-':'rn. C.ner1I 310'2 1 baby~$~.~~~'.___-£4!'1>f 644·46&t m.«r.m - • By 01.~'!·'l .;;.i: l !:tw1; TllOSE App LE 21• '"' "l9' ' H111 Furn/Unfum 3lCIO Son Cl""""to V76 -... ,~ :..i $!"' 1 an h.~ util pd. C~I . I pr;E1~1NGS and bOll Ill " -.. ' --' • "n~~ Uni!~ ~pt BR ?.JoJ>jh.•, Sl051ino. JIB -nJumJ\lu ni pon1 Artd pnta. TIU;: Tt'ni&C'.'t Olnhrf NE\\"PORT JlEACH-5 ~ l'fEW2 BR CONDO ~.,!~1mE~ k>n. hmilf.' $150 uril Jill. l.nl:'WKi TOOy .. w kJ~blcn lhe Mon-I~ 2 Hr, 2 lk. $333. rno. Launa , clKUful, avtb. Lovtly living. Pool, rv. gipU !~~~~,,._,.._ , Sfa(fl rn"-'1'imk:11 11 t•,. ~ n, / ('Q~ltJOn. Hi~ -an)'thing t Ctlll 557-99..'"~ J\UW! 2>lh1 I '1f' lcalao AW\.. ~rwt. S250.. tQ2..1SU • 'Thf' ,_, t dntw In the \\'1·~1~ I Sl!JO. SB y,·3JI\ l'l \\al!'.'r $l6·11 mt'tnl lo ll "ll~nrwtt ruRTLER.OCK Jovtly s BR. ~ J BR4i!ib mo. a,Kl/dl"lpte. --~ •• Dail\' POot CJUli(led~ tldslp!.'U. 1\;I. r l' ~' ...ell~ UIC 8 D«llY rflot 2 BA hnmt, 1ennl.~ ' pool OauUJed Adl CID ~ Near CCntl!r ol 10Wn. CID Ad OIJJ ~~ ' \ ·' 9i!+ttcl I Cius/ ""'Ad CnU &42 m. prl\1-1.,~ Jtl>/Mn J6T'~ !oda)'l -r. 492.-612!. ' See these unbeliev~bly elegant, new and spacious 1, 2, a. ~ IJO<lroorn apti;1 just one mile from the ocean. Enjoy luxunous built- .ins and the most exciting recr~atlon Caclll· ties around! Heat.ea pool, saunas, billiard room, bobby room, gym, !OUJtge & Bar·B- Ques. •. . Come today to New Port Villa where ahop-ping1,em~loyment and evuythlng you need for we GOOD LIFE" 11 nearby. Choo,a your new apt today wbU~ a fllll selection Is avallablef ""°"' ... 19 ws. · Dftllftll 1541' PLACINTIA /INS, AT 11111 IT. LJJ.r c.M 11141•• ••..a••••m•iiMMt CIOlCE location ln \Vestclltt. t.ae 1 hr wt bak. Cpu, drpt. pool. Ad1U, no pets. lloo-A Bedford '.,,..__, -· COTTAGE ON CANAt Small 2 Br, ...... bl ... ttvlc. 1ge ded<-WOik-in ,._, Ideal tor cpl. ldlJI, m Jill&. ~· I Ill', J Bl. Nr. 11.,o. ~ bitll· Adul!J, lll!hm Trl7, ""'4711. • ' rrioay, May 17, .l'l/4 DAILY Pn.01 ~" Apirllntnts Unfurn~. }A~p~t~s !P~u~rn~/~U~n~lu~r~n}!~~~lc~•JR~'~n~t1~tC::=~4400~ij}nd~u~1t~r~11~IR~1n~t~1~l ~4500~D·gos~t ~&~F~ou~n~d=~SlOO~f~Po~r~1~on1~11C==~~~T·:ff! "•u~l~t!'!i:===j40S~lt(!H~o~lp~W~a~nt~od~,~M&~~jl'~7~1~00~1~H~o~lp~~W~a~n~hd;~~Mi~f~7l~JO!i Newport Bnch 3869 • • NEW OFFICES • Mtso lnduOriil P1rk ANIAL\l. ASSlST. LEAGUE Want to be a l'l1olotnJ)btr1 YARD, llAl'I&' cl•anup1, ACCOUNTING $12K BABYSITl'ER II> homo, 5 3R" 2ba b IN LAGUNA NIGUEL Rapidly .,.p.,.ilni ~CALIF. ANIMAL roNTROL WHY N<Yr BE TIIE llEST! "'""!""' ....... dlrl, Ivy, Degree-2 ,.,. "P '""' T~ • ti.,.. wee!<, Cocta .,_ 2 ••' st'e~. tu' 11~~tyr:ari:oo~· 1 ;vie Only 41c per sq. ft. comn1unity. lJle lndtAlrtal Hunti"Kfon Beach ShPlter Work with noted pro·, like d r Ive w a Y 1, 1 t llhlpll.1 PAL' .. EDP Irvine boys, 6 I: 8, cw.ll ah 6:30, • Prope:rly Hou&e 64z..3850 ' <COO rt. A UP. All ulll incl. Unlt8. 2(XX) sq. fl. & up. 8S21 Edison St. 536-2511 Sir ~1ichael Phllll~. Lea111 847-2666. 133-9770 * 1004'!. FREE l ii642-iiii1ii«l2iiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..... ..,I Otfi<-e space avail. l~sq. llial'k or llwnane. Soclel)'l by doing, the art of full LOCAL movtna:" baullna: by Cuti Pf:l'iOMtl ~ncy S1nOCNlomLYtntAt FEW3876 ' 81G' ~·cJ!r;r~~~~ ~,:11~~ ft. Jmpm·rov.emtnlll io csull neu~!'1~~nr::~1~~13 ptholud°",."""',.Y· F\llly ~ui~ :!~~~1.531t..ar&e ~.;,,.. ~:f" 4019 Westerly. N.B. No. 201 Bank ., ., '' r ' San Dlt(iO Jo~rwy to , tenant. • ~V. 17th St, .M. ANIMALS ll\1POUNOED 11 . • e sses "' 1_>i-iv. .._.,,,, ll-123:5 or_.,._, Please Call ~·or D\rectloM Avery • arkway ,urn off, • Lcami.t Office &t3-9397 . .,. Gcnn. S/11 pointer, B. fem . ~n;'· Call for inro. ~10VING? Local fum. or ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR-Part Time 2 BDRM 2 BATH·~· I 831-1600 OW Terrlec mJx, BIS. tem. ! •'"· hawtng. 32 "· Iuro. >><per. prof'd. >·111me. Comm•rclal T•ller 3 BDfl~t. 2 BATit 1\uts, • 1-:-:--:--:--...;.;.;...___ N LEASING Terrier mix. B/\V, nlale VASECTOMY van. &l2--0SJS. Conv. Jtospita.I 6'124>98 QUI~!'. NOil TU s AN • Huntlftghtft Btae~ Scottie Blk, 1nale Confidentl11l iJ1 f Or n1a ti on llAULING &: rttOVING. fast * * * * * ,..CLk~MENTE AREA. l-"ll'ln At O<ikwood Garden Apart· : 1 NlW ~1 'fe1Tlel mix. \Vht, m. pup <.'Ounsell11g &1 refen·o.I. N IO\Y CO!it &crvice. Ellt 617. "Jl05 • 940 $( Ft & lJP Poodle ml:ic, Cry, male. APCARE. ncorp. A on-49'1-1003, 56-0487. GLEN Tho1~psoc~,~~~~~~'~1tllt C-01·p ~~~~:,. RECRE/·TION · SWl'11· Hamilton 1& Newland Sl. ~~~·l"B~T~~l~e Profit Agency .. 642-4436. HAULINLGOC &L or:? 0 v I NG 1353 r::~:INr:. rn111g, &<iunas, i1eJ:1,, clubs, 960-1970 TeTrtpoo, Bk>nde/Blk, M. A "' 't Corona del !\.1Yr $2'L~/l\10. Coo,.tal surf vlf'\\'. I :>hDJJ, gr.If dr<ving ft.In::;~. P'1ily INDUSTRIAL TeiT/Dach. mix, Brown, 1\.1. ..._ .,....,.. 1Cen. Hauling·Movtng·Trash You are the winner of UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 201 Avonld1 del Mar Sen Clemente (7141 492-5123 OCl!~\Nf'HON'flllufr Apt. b1lliar<1s, ienn1~. f''O & 010 S/H Pointer mix. B/\V, 1-l. I I~ &4S.S49a 2 BR, 2 BA. Arlulis. 15391 room otc. COMMERCIAL tab Blk male . . Tree & shrub trim or TWO FREl TICKETS Bu<'M Villlll. {11 !18G-:i6·11. ' FUN ACTIVITIES: Full·tlmo *Deluxe Offices* OFFICE SPACE SheP m~. B/\V, fem . pup ren10val. Est. 543-9453 to the An Equal Opportunity • NF.\V , ~x~ra !n r'i!•' 2RR-;2 i' director, :ree Sund«y bruncn. 1 for lease in choice 1'l~lon Cocker mix, pup, B/\V, 1\1. Bebyslttl!'I, 600I -MoYJng end-Hauling 1 Southern California E~ployer ' s,\ pool, E~l·i1i11g e1ty & aeu·s.1"''·'''''"''""m"'"'· • I Vie.to area. Good hwy Turr/Dobie mtx. BIT. 1'1. 11u •. * -· . '2 MOBILE HOME SHOW •-========~I CK'i'an vlf'\\'. S240 . .\96-0tilli. " " "" " ~ For U>ase. 381 sq. . Ft .. access at Avery Prkway. Cock-a-poo, \Vhite, !em. * * * "" UJt. ~"" 1 ii S.nt. An. 388 - 0 I BEAUTIFUL APARTWENTS· como1/buslness. (2 0U1<.-es ·\ Re a Ito rs participaUon St. Bernard, Btwn \Vht, fem * * Hou1ecleanin9 6U54 May 18th thru May 21th 'f BANK ~lnwil"s, t & ~ l":droc!lls.. plus ' reception area & solicited, 831-1400 Cock-fl·poo, QTY, male CHRJS ~EN ·-~~-·· ---· at lhe • PART TIME ~urn.~ 11nrcrn 'A1•h 111! rhr· stor!tge.~. Adjacent to Storage 4550 Cocker mix, Blk, male t7Dt Autlea Cir. IS U1c sun out? Let u.s clean ANAHEIM STADIUM t"lf3'.;. 1Aope1s. ovr n do:ul1' 10 Orange County Airport. "-im Shep, G'""/Blk, male your w1ndo1vs &. scn.'t'ns so 2000 State College Bl\'d. , , .... ~,,,..,. vc ·J Fountain Valley u 1 · A "·' ·" ~ ......... ,.nopersoccn1ldreo. Call 546·8801 FENCED YARD AREA. Terrier m!J<. Blk, Jeni. JOU can le . Car sons na11.,1m % acres from $150/mo. Rec. T~r:ner mlX, Blonde, l\f. You arc the "'inner or Cleaning 537-6lt!S Please call &11·5678, ext. 333 1501 We1tcliff Dr. Veh., SIO/mo. Ulil. avail. Y.ellllaraner, Cray, fen1. TWO FREE TICKETS &XPEIUENCEED lady will tocl<1imyourtickets. tNor~h N E \\I po R ~ >·INrnCIAL N g 0 L._. 1 Eu I'd F' v Cock-a-poo, Brwn, fem. to the do h 0 u 5 e c 1 ean in•, County toll free nuniber 1s ' CEN,1'ER .,.., .r . .,;~ ·39~u' a kdc 1 ' ;,,.. ' Doxie mix. Blk/Blwn. J\.1. So h C 1·1 I H.t.•ferenccs. Call 543-10-tt 540-1220!. ' • BEAUTIFUL i !IUITOllndlnll:ll .Ii. Cili'1"rllll· I spactouli 11;11.~. e J\1\ul\!1 Duly NEW ACCOUNTS CLERK • e 2 ))!ks frn111 ~ (' Pla111 e Rec f11r1l '" <'luhhousc e 2 le 3 BR.Sorry, .no pt·!~ e FROJ\.t S1!1lll\-10. Oakwood Garden Apartments ...,,..... wee ays. \V /H Terrier, Tan, male ut ern a 1 orn • ____ ::..=:::.::.:::_:::._:-::... leasing office 1pace Rentals Wanted 4600 Lab niix puppies, {6) MOBILE HOME SHOW Janitorial 6063 * * * * * ) UNITED Newport Beach North CALL171 ?~,;:,sI_:rE MANAGER l\talamute/Husky, Tri, r.1. l\tay 18th thru l\tay 27th · -----AD~tlNISTRATIVE Asst. for ' CALI FORNI A BANK Irvine and !6th ~ hn...-.,lll Ext. 2·16 LA. atty needs pert time CATS at the AHE You paying high prices chain of private montesorri 805 \V. Sll'Vl.'11s 645·0550 OFFICE SPACE r 0 R off.ice. in law or bus~ness \Vhi!C', short hair ANAHEIM STADIUM tor low qua11ty oll.acc n1a1ntf pre-schools. Expcr. in 2301 South l\1ain ( Olf Sunflower l I RentsfromS14S RENT. Costa Mesa. ffarbor suite ln N.B. fJ?r occas1?~1<1\ Tabby, male 2000 State College Bh•d. 'l'ry our /ugh qualLtY 10"'-cr dealing \V/ public & gen 'l {7~~1~~~ PARK PLAZA II &1nta Ana ;~1~)-ll~l 1 Newpert Beach SDUth al Adanis. Be au t If u 1-cor.ference. Write Class1f1ed AND OTHERS. 53&-2513 Anaheim fi1~ci~ ~~a.r c~ ~ ~ r ~·~ business req'd. Xtn't oppor. An Equal !6th at Irvine 111odern. Air, 111 us i c, Ad No. 125. Daily Pilot, P.O. LOST: J::ngllsh Bu 11 dog • 1 Please call 642-5678, ext. 3.U for highly ni o t i \'ate d I 0 Apts Furn/Unfurn 3900 , 642·8170 J11nitorial, Class A. Walker Bo."< 1560, Costa MC!ia, Ca. bi·indle & wht. Ans ID to claim your tickets. (North Lleaning, aa7~· 1nd1v1dual \\'/the Jeachng co. l :::""°:::":::"":':'':E:":":'0:":":=tl j Rentsfrorn$160 & Lee Bldg. Call Gene J-lill , 9?626. • "Pugsley". SERIOUS County toll tree number is Paintin~/Papering 6073 tn this h<>ld For 1nte1v1e1v 1 BRANO NEW -----~---5l7--0136 or 642-0200. RELIABLE RENTER ALLERGIES. Vic. Dana 540-1220). l)\INTING & R . 35 call 546-4641. Bhnk ' I Room' 4000 ~XECUTIVE SUITE BUSINESS man, no children, Hills llischL RE\l/ARD. * * * * * I \~'orknlanslup e~~'. T~ APT. M~AGER .for 12·2 br OverlOOking N.B. Harbor, 600 no pets, wanl unf hse. Up 4!)6....73.Jl eves d anla e f g e I furn units. No rhildren·pcts. VERSAILLES 'COZY l'OOl1i in iny house. sq fl. also 01hrrs 600 to 1300 to S200. mo. Bet 6/15, H~ntg FOUND-St. Bernard, male, CHRIS"_rIAN mother w i 11 ' ~:i:_10fJti~ 0 iuy x P Liv~ in. $70 off rent. l\li.n. Outside enlrance. Young sq fl. CentLnf'la Bank Bldg.. Bch, C.t-.1. P.O. Box 162, approx. 10 months old. babysit. Fenced yd. hl'lt -~ , duties. Pref~r mat u 1 e ON THE LAJ\:E ruan 2i 01, older. ?llrs. ~~vdCOai.;t lh\-y & Nev>'po1·t Htng. Bch. 92648/548·1915. Daily Pilot office, Bay & meal~, naps, call Joanne FIRST CL:ASS EXT./IN1_'. '>''Oman 642.9521) alt 5 PM. A1 Sculh Cor1~1 Plu;.a 11Klma.!i 642-9144. WANTED, Furnished lBR Thurin, 5/16. Inquire 2219 96()-1531 '· r:~N}lNli,E PAPr..RliAAli· APA:RT!\IENT ?>lanagers, 98 Pool -J\l'~pul.~'O ,\qu:, Bar HOO.\IS $20 wk up, ·lh &12-4644 trailer, to rent May thru Santa Ana, Cl\1. l\1ATURE wonian \\•ill care • ~1 ~~ales Units, Garden Grove, expd S.: Jacut.z1 Spl'cr:•(·ular. 8 I kitch"n; S30 wk up wit DESK space n.v1tilable $50 Sept, call Liz Evans, Ba!~ FND : dog . small \\'ith I for children, my home. $18 ~ -couple, 7 1 4 -8 4 6 -3 121. ,~l'rl! . Lak<' 11 . fo1vt•r1n..: 1 j !S-!17::.;) or 64~3967. up· n10. \Viii provide furniture ~Y Club "'~days 9. J bro"''TI head w/black & \\'eek. 546-5272 PROF. painter, honest work, I ~8~32~-~9~136~====== l'oun1n1ns. '~ l\hlhon T"lolli\r ' at $5. n10. Answer in I 645--5(X)J, ex. 185 white body. ?.lale. Vic. LICENSED, loving care. reas. 1111, .. .<~ .• Cree es1un11Le. Clubhoust', G)'nl, s.1uJJa,, S 1 4200 se1vice available. 1787 5 8 YR Cd'! 'd i·u · 1 •1 1. & SI ter r v Feoed yard ••ar South H.efs. 54~l7a!!, 6\12·J:H3. • Experienced Proof Operator U'!ITED CALIFORNIA BANK 222 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach (714) 494-6546 To!al St_-...,,, .. ,1,. I um mer Renfa s Beach Blvd.. Huntington . " res1 en e!.ires "agno ta · a , · · '"' __ ~• I 1:1e I &12-1321 BR ground floor apt w/ 962-463-1 • Coast Plaza, C.1\1. 557-7270 Pll01''. y.•allcovering, state ll)'ltlll'<lih!" Oc·,..up:iney Ll{G furni.Vied house. July 1. ae 1· · gar., Cdto.I. Reason~ble. Losl • Snl. hrown dog w 0 Carpenter 6015 he. No. 279514. Insur, all AOUL TS AU& 12, S:GO inl'ludcs all * 1 ?.10. F1l.EE RENT_* Eves 673-0734 or 2J.3.071·5312: ta~s. Blk chin. Terrier type, types paper. 714/!Hi-4~. An Equal Opportunuy ASSEMBLERS _ _ Ec..ploye< Sorry, No Pl·I-. I ur il. College Park ar~a. Cl\1, Nor lea: rcq. 011~· ~ru~ days 213-678-4242 l\1r. Backus curly tail. Vic l\1ile Sq. & PATIO-Covers & Decks. FR E-E-ES T-.-p R 0 F . Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br's. 1 :l!Q..3.171 ~c J. 11'Pf:'l1Cr ole · '"""' RELI,\BLE party to lease 4 Los Amigos Hi. 839·5632 aft. Custom designed expertly P1\lN'flNG. lNT ·EXT. I $175 • -· :>IJ. ft. incl A/C, full !xi ho ~. d I ~··11 F · t • '51-121 ' • rom per mo. pt;N. Point_ 2 Br, 1 Ha. }Jlk SCl"Viccs. 2172 DuPont rm. 8 rm. use, ....... rona r 6 ' vuL . rce esuma es 'I Santa Ana ,,, Ra.\'/Bch/pk. S200 \\'k. 833.3223 (9 tit noon) ltf!U' or Irvine Terr. LOST leznale Kees h 0 n d ~7J98 &46-9495 PROf'~SSfONAL l'aint1ng. 3100 Plaza Dr. ' tiE-916!:1 or 61J-ll9'1 NE\V OFFICE _ Two rooms Sal.isbu!'Y. AJ,'1. 67.l-6900 vi~inity o.c. airport or c .r-1. GENF.RAL c ,.\RPE!\'TRY Cal! for lJ'l.'e estiniale. 714 6 I 2 UH. frplC', 2 l::t\. Nr. park. 15 x 1.i and lO x tl. AU M1scellan Rentals 4650 Re\\•arcl. 6 4 2 -7 11 7 01· CUSTOM FINISH WORK llJ:>-OtiO':I Anytime 1 ---·5~6-~~ __ 1 l1t·uch ,t;: b;1y. S200 i1k. 360ti uLilitil's 11aid. SlOO per I L'OR LEASE g, .. ,,·o;,,~,k-&16-2113 . . Small jobs ok. SM-4858 ... -Wallpaper Hanger* 1----------i Park Ln. 67::-!H7:\. ,. "' " CUSfO \" od 1."r." -. • ~lC/'~ j !,llOnth. Cost11 Me1;a area. shop 650 sq. ft. N. Coast lhvy LOST: White long hau""Cd cat, M ,yoodwork. rem ., L'. IlebJW 11'l\i-2'l'l:;I .N 1~"'TI11.JCl.~·Utl ilJ'f · Rentals to share 4300 .)4,11...7729 or 642-8372 $250/nio. Call 494·6904 after l Tr" e~e. 15~~'f :ise.Hr~a ~~f si.84~r.1r· Vlnce INT/ EXT PAINTING Oc,11,', tllW COMo"fPT'. ' NEW 1 pn1 co ar. un · a • All Oran"e Co Jun 61 Ja 9 " I \1.1.\NT aUr..ic., r('~ponsihlc. Pl !-;I off'c Bid 2 t 6 I{ • ing:, Balboa. Re'>''ard. Call I · a-· J _ ADULr LA~lSIDf UVlllC t·mplovl'd i;irl lu shan· u. 1 • e g., o m STS.2'JlS. Carpet Service 6016 1 i 5M•U rtu' #ICCIPllD . • n B I SUllt'S. Conf('rencc rm. l lil 'Plaster/ D1p11'r 6077 i.:ori;L'IJU~ "L Bit ho~ne on . a · '{,~zu .... rnplf'r. r-;ear O.C. alr-I • FOUND: Fein. Husky & JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery " • 8ochelors I,::_l.l•. $~JO. 1110 uu·l Urils. port. l'll:l·:'J\10. t'1n1ncial Shr-p. Blk & ~·hite, Vic. Ori Sh amp o o, (Soil PATCH PLASTERING • l BR , 2 BR _u~:Kllti *WATERFRONT ~~esa !lei ?>tar area C.1\1. Retardants). Degreasers & All types. Jo'ree est.ima~s e2 BR & Oen \\';,nlt<{l f••n1;1!f· roo1n111~l l.' !O .· , . * 557--097:> all cdlor brighteners & 10 Call ~ .. .~hai~· :11:1~ hoU:.l" ~uiall Pnme Ne'>'por_t Beach toe:. Busine1s Oppor 5005 LOST· 3 yr old Siberian minute bleach for white From $l1 5 ·S485 eliilil l'Ollsid<"l'l"'d. J,argc Execut.J\·c ?ffll'l'S \\/lrplc., * * * llusk)i. Vic l\1ain s1. &. carpets: Save your mo!"ey Pool Service 6079 _J fi•nccO )d fnq ·>-119 Sa111·1 \1ct ha.r, pn\·;11c bath * * d HS Sill. 673--5882 by ~vmg me extra trips. :_::::.;.;;:.:..:...c:: __ _:;::.:. Mesa Verue Eas t & Adams ; 1,: ,.~1 ·°""."J;"': ' Bill Gl'undy Rlt1'. 6i:J.6161 A an1 6s, · Will dean living rm., dining 1' QUALITY ~t se-···--e 540-1800 -'-11· '::. ·-"'~:...:"''! ___ . ~. . SllELLY 1t10RSE aft. · & hall 5 ..-•• "'"• "" QUlr:t' fcni. l\/sharc 2BR ,SIN(.LE ~fficc spa~'C. Ideal 1212 W. Balboa FOUND: Cat, f('male, long V~50, couch $1~~ 0i:frYS5~ est.i~tes, cleaning only dup ,,·/same. C . .\I. $Si.j() + U.Cnly n1rport/lrvn'le art'll. Ne~·port Beach hair blk & wht. H.B. 1'1orida yrs. exp. is what counts not re 11 ~bl e '>''Ofkrnans:h1p. '·~ ga:-. .-.: ci('t:., ~:.ir, i-nil lncd Tf'!ex. Z~1·ox :J<'l'CSS. $60. & O'>'·ens. 961}.Zl13 aft. 5, method. I do '>''Ork myself. Nelsons pool s er v Ice ~.., yrl. Sorry, no children/pc1s. S3..1-<rll3 r.;01Hmokers prrd. You 11re the \\"inner Clf FOUND female Siamese cat. Good ref. 531--0101. "W-::':..::1""=L _____ _ I BANKING Four doy work week, 10 UNION BANK hours per cL'f:h. 6J\.l'd to 4:30PM. Experience helpful, but not necessary. S2.00 per hour. Good company bcnl'fits. Paid health, life inslu·ancc, vacations &. sick leave. , . A::,~::" I PRODUCTS CO. I 2620 S. Susan Santa Ana, Calli. {Bern·~n Harbor & Fairvie'>'', South of Warner) An equal opportunity Employer m/f llas An Open!~ For A PROOF OPERATOR Exper. iJ desirable, ho\Vf'\'rl'. if you haw had related exper. operating machines "·e would like to talk ID you. Pleue Apply In Pt'rson To Dori1 Mitchell 610 Newport Ctr Dr., NB Lqual Oppor. Employer BARMAID top salary. Open day, nite11 & \vknd shift~. Call betwn ll am & 6 pn1.\ r..ton·Frl, 646-9935. BEAUTY OPERATOR Must be licensed. Assistants, and alao 1 Shampoo gtrl for bll.5)' salon, 1610 \V. Coast Hwy. N.B. 642·3970. BOAT BUILDERS r-Sl v 5.l&-77t7J:>l~--96."il NE\V OFFICES TWO FREE TICKETS Vic. \Valnut sq. ca 11 L..~R Crpt anrs. Hse $24.95. 608l I " ~ ~·~::\'f,\LE Room n1ate 1 120C Q~1ail St. 1'Pi\·po1·t"ne11l·h to the 5..il-a.H9. I Rm $4. Stm hse $39.95. Sof.a Roofing '--::::=c:::z::: I "''idt)!hl. rel'ponsihl(' & Con1n1 I Brokl'r.l ~3-R393 Sou.tbern California , . . 1'tale Sl4.95. Guar. '776-5170 •SAVE MONEY• • · 2 r:l!. To1rnhoui::(', frplc, t·h:1111.::iliare hou~.srl{).n1oorr1ci:: :-;J>,\CE unique 150 MOBn..E HOME SHOW ~D . Oia~evta~brighl d Ceilings 6018 CAI.J.. Tll\l. WEST COAST Boat company·ha.s openings lrfl!n ST.IC. ! 13fl. !fl.Jill Sl!l:l. & 1 ~ U1ils. !'hone &l~2114 si1. rr. ~PIH't' doy,11!'l1\1t ?.lay llHh thru \\lay 27th 0~~n;I~ne N1~: ~74;1 ROOFING, lNC. 66-5096 I ASSEMBLERS for expcr. 1 n 1 eri 0 r l'r-.•I, h~rull'. ("111l1n1•rl~al aft. 5:30. t..ai;;una Bc;it·h '1!1:!--0160 I at lhc . * WILLARD PAINTING * installers, carpenters, deck •i~r.1kf:1,;t. ,..;, ]"'U'd(t• l:un1ly I \\ii\f'.TFU f('J\l'lil' roon11natc I ANAHEIM STADIUM LMt/Basset fem ._ tn·color, New Acoustical Ceilings + Rf~!:-rr!;t. aric~a~~s~e~~~ I Permanent full·time positions a !I !I em bl er s. engine .'>l'l'~l'ln. Clo-.r 111 ,.hoppuig: I 10 ~a;<' 2 bdr~ art in D11n:i. Business Rental 4450 I 2000 State Cv!lege Blvd. \\'ht t~iosl pronunent. San repairs. DJ'y\\'all & \.\'all Walt. 541-3308 830-;,oio. open for assemblers of med· :n1:'el:rs& g~~~~~~r~elb:!i & f.:"h' t">riirh &1•1-·'IB'l.1 1'0\111. Sl15. nio. Call after 5 Anahcini Jose g. ~-11 text. patch plastering. No. S ndbl t' ' 60B3 ical devices. Exper. desir· i pin, 4~7 e .STORE SPACE e Please t•all 64.2·5618, ext. l33 L~S'T, BLACK female ,2 Lab. 2810~. &12-5775. . a Al tng able, but not mandatory. conipany benefits. Sto.:k CAL ESPANA . Sll,IBE apt \\'/ nude, $00 Jn (O!o,I U l\IC'sa nl'.'ar South to clflin1 your tickets. !North . Great DAne, puppy, 4 n10 Cement/Concrete 6019 \VOOD Text., Bldgs, houses, Excellent fring(' benefits in· ~:::J~~caf.rolit sharing, NEW APARTMENTS I n10. \V;irn('r & Golden \\lr!o,l, Coast Pla1::· SOl-~. ~akrt: foun,ty toll free number is old. I! found call 557-1247 boats, pat.ios, swim pools. eluding proflt sharing. Apply l::.qual Opportunity En1plo}'CI' . . .\r. G.\V. t'Ollt'gc, ll.B. SL 2 b1k~ \\.of 611sto1, ~t .>lCl-12201. F'OUND: 3mo. old l\fixl'd CONCRETE Patios. Patio Shop for sn-ia.ller Items. in person, 1·5 pm \\'eekdays. Apply (rn1rul ]!.,·;,Hun ro SJ) S.· 81., ''!"' foot . 2100 sq. II., curnpleh•rl j Collie on Hamilton in C.rtl. Covers. Quality \\'Ork. Reas. Q"'•k Sa"d ~.'"" ·~. "'" r. G I 11· lk I I ~ ~ &" • I * * * * * 2 3281 ~-" cu -~ SHILEY LABS INC. Passagem•kec Trow!"· D"·· '' r11~·s. :1 fn "1np·,-ll'VJNE N 2 BR "'" rcanv lo 1(0, atJaCCnt to ! 6.f-Llcensed. &12-8514. W 18th St C Mesa ' JENSEN MARINE ping. L11rrly J.':!"i'Pn l')~lt , ~ ' ; ' C'>'' · " u<• \'!?tjo tlyna~1iC' st o r t' s, · ' · lan1f<;;~·a 111111.(. '.! pr!Ol!>, ja-1 l O\\'llho~sc. se1n1-1t11·n. $1~0. includ<'~ signs. Call Bob i RESTAURANT CEl\IENT & Block Work. Sewin9/Alteration16084 176((1 Gillelle Ave. 235 Fischer, 'Costa Mesa i·uz~i. i•l\ihhou~e. \'Olli'ylmtl. 010., _ ~ ~~11ale only. Call Wi(.h, :i.ir~2i:n. I II•) '\Valls, patios, si<ewalks, I~-~plex I-S: 2 arr~ Furn. & Unr . I K\2-3019/552-9606 --RUSTIC Ptnonal1 I etc. By hr. or job. 646-6'915. MARU.YN'S Custom Clothes <'7"VJU.> BOAT RIGGER. Expd only. Adllll<: l~l'..'OO :\lagnoh<1 SL I RESP. Employed rem. "·ill NEW LEA~ING Exciting, chamtlng, profil· . CEl\1ENT: Pat!O, drives, Clinic. Design or redesiin. Equal Opportunity Employer must have o"'·n' tooJ.s. Juli & t"<illnlliin \';ill<'\' s9J.O:il~ I share dpt w/same. Fount. VIE\\/. I.>el Obispo Road, able. Beer·\Vine lie., Prime walks-Repairs, saw Ii 60"7'-12.66<-'='-· ----~= pa.rt time, 673-3077 1,,..,.,. __ .,-__ ...,..,.. Vly prefd DRna Point. 2 story, olfi n.>s. Ne\\'1x111 Bch. area. s:>.i.000. remove. Free est. 5*-8998 =T'I 6091 HS BOOKKEEPER F/C $1 "S -& UP I ""l•'~ 0, ~ •. 9.,.,!1 suit11.1>le fnr . rloc to N: , Col<" of Ne\\·port Personal1 5350 Contractor ·..:'""'------...::::.; ASSEl>U!LE '> u.;;v-"' {>;N """ R 6021 ¥ Pr e c i s j o n electrc>mech. l\lin 5 yn manuf. ex per. . {i('nt1sts. architects. l'IC'. 1 ealtors CERAMIC TILE NEW & bl XI • · I CIGAST!C 1 .~· 2 BH YOU1\C. \\'Orking girl \l'al'l!S Slurcs, bou11qU<'S. Ext:lusi\·e II STa-5511 Housesitters assem y. n t starting .!i a a r )'. Tl . 1. 1 1, 1 1 111 sharr 2 BR apt \l'/saml'. 00 n c oni Pe ti ti\·e aN'a. ELECTRICAL Contractor remodel. l-'rl!C •~sumates. Requires: Strong me eh. Advancement potential. Co. ll'\ n· "' •·1·pr11"~ · "''~ 0 l ·30 \\' l A t z-: available for any.size job, 24 Sm jobs, \\·clco me. 536·2Ub aptitude. Assembly or paid benelits. Please c<1ll ~l .. 1'11 l;r·n Cn1crC'fl c"" ", 6P~ISO/l, p 'Ot•cupancy ,.rnd of I9i-L Cl~I SHOP, Laguna . . I hour servl-, ,,.,,,,.,, h' \"Hl'll'"'<: \'lulls '.\:o p<'1<:1 l\l :1t " . 0 11· ner I Broker, Choicest loc. S20000 incJui;t Sold our House. 837-9517 ..... Top Soil 6092 mac me shOp exper. 892-6691forappt. 2071 F ·ll,..rr .,1 i\\'f' (1 h!k l\l.\TliRE prof str a1 ghl !71.\16 12-0j!JO. $9,000. invent. Ne\\:ell R.E. l\1?J'.icd couple .in ea.rly -"""=°'°"~~--~~ helpful. C.~1.'642-8081). ~· Equal Oppor. Employer h k I k 0 49, ""n' lh1n1es, no eh 1 I rl re n. JACK Taulane patios * ~ ·so1L OOMPOST BOOKKEEPER f"'I I 1-:. 11f '\i•" ,~,1 1 1:11'•1. & I 1 · n1a c Se<' s sanic. ~an \'II, DO\VNTQ\\'N Lngun<1 Geach . .,..""· Husband Stockbroker. \\'ill • • ~.. * ASSEMBLERS Male & w ciarge. ! ':".·,.,_,.',;,'lfl Ba:.' C'osi:1 i\IC'sa. ~',g;,,.,.,., Bch. l!H-2461 or sl?~· 1650 sq. ft. Parking lnveit Opport'y 5015 babysit your house for ~~;~.;.ya~: i:t:f:.r~~ 269072 * 1\-IULCH +-RED\\IOOD l'"emale, New plant in Costa New corp. requires ~ .. ,,.......,...~ ~!-.\\:PORT .t 17th S1., Costa summer or \i·ha te\'er . .. . call 586-.ffiJO Mesa, Very good working mini.mum se rvic es, LAS BRISAS APTS I FJ::i'viALF.. ~-.'{, lo ~hare !'.lcsa; 1100 sq. fr. stot'e, ATTENTION • plant lover:;;, References. 633.4876 or ll~~m Ad.d1t1ions, A1terat1ons. Window Cleaning 6098 conditions. Apply Stanford moonlight, convenient foi' !n1C"Ct 2 Br House or Apt. 111 pk!!. I interior designers. hair 558.7202. L1_, Rehab e. Free Est. Jay Applied Engineering, 3080 both parties. Ne\~1port area, 5515 River Ave. NB 1 Ne1vpo11 aL'1•a Vt'1 san1e. CORONA [)('I Mar deluxe stylists, etc... Preslige I Johnston 642-1403 *SUNSHINE* Airway, CM 673--0830 after 7 pm. 642-2566 · 646··1212 afl. 6 p.n1 . suitl', 325_ SI.I. fl. __ location. For more info, call INCREASE your busUine. 1·3 Electrical 6032 \Vindow Service, free est ASST. BOOKKEEPER BOOKKEEPER/ Fnrn. r: -11 ~215 10 $2'~i PROFESS. \\'on1 i:111 wlsh('s to Rerilonomics, Bkrs. 6i:>-6700 64B-13i0 fi'Om 10 to 5 Cl" sizes In 2 \\'ks, no -~~__,.::'=al::.1 .:642'6:::._::!m:::·:_ __ lfor construction office. Part TYPIST t-n111pt. 1 '1'1i1·n. \\';il k·lhru I ~h'fll'C' lovely 4BR hoinc NOW LEASING Sundays call 6~&-5063. exercises, pads or gin1mic~ ELECTRICIAN · License Schools & time, hrs flexible. start Busy 1 girl office. Rapidly l'I''"'''~ !J '""~·, 1·1n h:11h . I \\'/same, in S.E. flun t. Bch. Mesa Verde Dr Plaza 1 t W ted 5020 ALSO CUs1om "fitting. ~~int ~3~Pa,i;,m~5~~s, __ l;:•;;•c;t•;;•:.:<::t;;io::n:__~7005 immed. Ph: 64>1260. growing food company. Call ~·un; t !i<•1h·11;. SJIO ~r){'('a11. PH: ~914 . 1523 J\lcsa Verde Dt'. E;ist. nves an h,alll'r~/s\\'im\\·ear. Juanita. -A • M I t)45..2444. Adu!ls·Nn 1 LI ~. \ rly Lcai;<' \\'ANTED n1nturc stra1g~1t J(leal for Restaurant. Liooor. \\'ANTED Dental practicc:oi 832-12i2. Gardening 6045 ORGAN LESSONS FOR utomotlY• ar nt =BOO"'occKK:=E=EP=ER~, ~fu~l~I -,h~,-o-.;(', n1ale lo :;hr I br hsc & 1111~. Urug StOI'(', Servic:e Shops, in Orange Co. An1l'rican SPIRITUAL READE!l Beginnen. at my home. Part5 Warthou5~men '(Uu'U trial Balance}, .\11~.I Tllf. F'XCl'J'lNG Cl 10 bch, 1113. Sl{I.> . .".: Deluxe Office Space. Dental Sales 557-26 86 or-Open 10 Al\t to 10 Pl\lt ~:;;,LfsGpEro~:i~(1h~ar.:~Yr 642-2936 Kim Clark. to work l~ fast growing bus· Co. exp helplul. Salary PALM MESA APTS. 9ti2-S66S. C::tll :>.13-4123 &l:>-7:-ill Advice on au mattPl'S. ~ lness Wllh opportwilty for onon. can for appl. . BCH ~ \\·ork. Complete maint. or ~ advance e t ~1 t be ~ I i\IINUTES TO f'jf"T. · f'El\li\LJ:: wanted to !>hare 2 * TWO MONTHS * M L 5025 312 N. F~l Camino Real I & ed I 1 I l[Il]~ m n · "us ex· TI4-:>U-~ I 2 RR I 11•7 oney to oan mow. ge · c eanups • vy pen'e0 ced 'lh good t I B;1l·h. ,\· • . tum .> 1 BR. I Ba house. &l2-672-l or San Clen1ente. For appt. ......,"_ " \VI e e-Arl1il!s, No Pet s. fii-,._5290 ask for l\larsha. FREE RENT 9JIL OI Call 492-9034 492-9136 g'~'.;{1c!E f>49-20l5 phone personality. Xlnt med· BOOKKEEPER for n1c111l 1:i61 J\fesa Dr. · ' . Excellent 01fice localion!'i in 14 10 * PALM & CARD ===~----"== lea! &. group benefits. In-fabrication sOOp, Exp·ll, (j l>lks from NC\\'port Blvd.) ROOl\lMATE to sh arc NC'>''port nC'ar Hoag & Hav. Professional Japanese terviev•ing between 4 pm & 1 ='2SC:C~~S".=B=roa='=d'=w~·a,_y,_, °'S.=A7. ~-I 5-1&-9860 mod('rn 2 BR apt. 2 blks 2.j().1150 sq. ft. Ple3se ctilll M9NEY AVAILABLE! RE"AOER * Gardener. George Ibushi. JobWanted,Fmaie7050 6 pm. BOOKKEE.PERlocCPAofe. NE\\' 1. l BR Utils fron1 bcat:h 49-t-6868/494·48:17 497·1215. , . Spec. readings St. w/ad 7322 zm Bluebird Cir. CM. -··--·-COAST DISTIUBUTORS in LagWl8. Beach. Full tilnc, . ' .irge ' · · G f R 4350 , For 2nd T.D. s on Single \\'es t nl Inst er Ave . , 54.5-7072 Lady Jooldng for Nursi~ 1375 Logan, Unit L, 01 Ex req'd 4912850 inl'i., pool. \Valk to beach. arages or ent NR. N pt. Post ofc. Store. family Duplexes units up \\' . 1 7 d =E"u"R~O:::Pc::E~AN~~G~a-,-d~,-"-.-r. employment Caring tor AUTO SALESMEN p. · • · ~en1ente St85. 496-0616 <lfc. & lg. stor'1_~e All 2,980 to 16 .• U4-83.1-1909. 89;.s~~i.ns er, open ays elderly sick or 2 aduJU 5 ~~ BOOKKEEPER-fullcharge. '- Apts furn/Unfurn 3900 MINI WAREHOUSES i;q. n. for S1i;"J per n10, M t T t D--.1 5035 ...-:oo;.>1. . l\laintenance -Landscaping. da,r-s. Good rers. Live in Need for one of <>range Available for \\wk at hon1c. l·-'-::;;jj;;;;;;;;;;;mj I STORAGE lease. Agt. 64&-2414. ____ or • rus ._!.___ Grand Opening of Adams Tree rem 0 v 8 I · Very santa Ana. 557·1939. Betty. County's leading Pontiac 67J.-22'14. Pl Fri 17 h 7Ph1 reasonable. 642-5329 eves. Deal N I -~==~~-~-- 1 / No l\tove·lll or ~1ove-0ut 600 SQ. FT. C .M. $155 LOANS UP TO 900;0 aymiiu.•s._ . · 1 · ' · NEED help al home? We ers. ew or Used ear BOUTIQUE Sales G i r I, char~cs. :rrom S7.50 per ,v12 prl. mis. 646-2130 1 T Nude & Bikini models for l\lOW & EDGE expert + have aides, nurses, hlkpr9f' sales. Excellent fringe exper. bikinis, sports'>'·ear. ' tnonlh. ·-• - . st D Loans your· pleasure. Camei:as dependable. Call for prompt companlon1'. Ho1nemakers benefits. Experience MWlt be 21·30. 673-7569. Jlanul ton & N•'\v]ancl Sf., llB Industrial Rental 4500 I ~allabll'. P discount '>''llh free est. John 54&-3446 Upjonn 547-6681 necessary, Asb for Ray ~ ~ l ALLSP~CE NEW BLDG M-1. 1200 "1· (I. 2 d TD L ~~1~2257' TJll E. K•lella, MOW & EDGE. Expert & Jobs Waniad MlF 7075 D:~T~~s Newa!~s t,~LS Miu. I;[]/ 9~1970 S176. 2400 sq. fl. $355. 220-.1 n oans -g --Dependable. Call for prompt I ·-·-age 10. Lido Isle, Balboa STORAGE Garoge for Rent ph. front Office, crpts, llll'ge MASSAGE & SAUNA free est. John, 546-3446. I NEAT, alert exp'd eple In 2480 Harbor Blvd. Peninsula &: Balboa Point. LAKE-SIDE LIVING • EXC~TING VALUE • Adolt1·Smoll l'eb Bachelor. 1 0:.: .... a.R. l!rJ9 Maple Ave, No. 5 rear doors. Anoheim & low•st r•tes Orang• Co. Clean rooms, p I ea s ant! ExPER. + L PENDABLE 00'1 for MiJUent of 18-40 Costa Mesa 546-SOlT. Contact Mr. Baclcstronl· nl Costa ~,esa . Terminal Way, C.1\-1. Dflys Sattler Mtg. Co, atmosphere, TV & lounge, REASONABLE PR 1 CE S adult units In nice area. AlJl'O PARTS 0 U ls id e the DAILY PILOT or call lOX22' GARAGE. $Z7, nlo. 64&-5033 or evC'S 64&-0081. 642·2171 54$.0611 Call Donna at 963-1247 CALL DOUG, ~7654 Dependable I pleasant J ~~:~f"~ 6'2-021 & leave application. 2176 P\acenlla Ave, C. M. M-1 BLDG. 4800 sq. ft. Serving Harbor area 24 yrs. 8839 Adams Ave, Hntg. Bch. EXPERIENCED Japanese bunciaple,.546-3717 . aggresal~, have good BUSBOY lrearl 6.,., At.a'I betwn 1•5 lit-Bay, good 16th St. PREGNANT? gardener yard, maintenance Help Want.ct, M&F 7100 .... ----"IY • ~·-10 ~ Pref Ame cit' · ,_.... Newport Besch location. Caring, confident\ a 1 and clean up 963--1020 r-•""'iau 111: .....,...,"' ~per. er r. izen. Office Rental 4400 ift'. ~l:i~'."" yard. Avail I Lostlltd,_ l[g) ='0:.':" ~d~~\~~~·'.; Xard ~~..=E Se<Vice Accounting ~.~ .. ';"Jl.~""',:i $: F,:,;r~~,._ I, * * * * * CITY OF ORANGE ~'\ 00-4436 l:teanupo/Haullng, ~ GENERAL & 4o30 pm H•mburget., ' New l,000 sq. fl. uoits lost & Found 5300 •-ar DEArn· Let -·· YARD CLEANUPS OFRCE I AVON Hamlet, tJ;tS Adam>, Cid VIRGIL '-IORF SPRINKLED: 3 air-eond. Wl' r. , ..,.... Ask for Mr. Hagen, 881Q Via Mendota office~. \\'ood \YOrking O.K. FOUND black mlniature ba.btes live. For alternatives le r'\'OmPIMe maint. 645-0309 Aslc.1 •• ·• 11 CHEF Lagana BUIS \\'M. Winton R,.E. 6'rr>-3.131 Poodle, male, North Costa to ABOR'f!ON call LIFE l•wnc.re by ''2 G1l1'' We have &JI opening for a PRICES ARE GOING UP, . RENT M l lD-2!640 MeSlll. 546-8115 LINE 541-5522. 24 bn. \Ykly aerv/clnupt 642·9907 bri&ht, imer. tic go-iretter SU OU L D N · T YOUR l I You Ill'!' the wmncr ol new · • Ml · Nude I: Costwnt model& to handle accounts payable FAMILY INCOMEJ You 1 1'"\111 chat"Ke -.~ng Chcl ! TWO FREE TICKETS ft. $170-$360 n10nth w/ofc. FND: Srnall brown male doe 1 t in Ad MOW &:' EIXiE expert + asaiatance, switchboard can btlp by earnm.; ex~ \\'anted. Bentfita~ Toti 1 toUle 2950\Y.Centtal,S.A. w/fita collar Vic Vif&inla P~r ~22ST !..:mt' dependable.CaJ~rompt n:llef and miacellaneous money u u AVO Selaey, Pak1 Vacntion • Southern Callfoml• Rohm Mullu R.E. 673-7039 J>.l,, C.M. l)t&..963:2 Eve. a es. l or frff est. John typJna Md fiUne. Must .be R E.P Jt.ES ENT Arn Hos-pltal It Ufe Insure.net. MOBILEHOMESHow !iEW>M140fl.!000oqhshop LOST, Gray Pet Rabbit ln*PALM&CARDREADER Gen•ralS.rvf<M -an aceun.to typlll, Flexible houri. t•n train App1ytnpenoo.Mon.M&j' May 18th thru May 27th It atflC<!ll. Ampl prka. Zl8 3 O>rooa. del Mar, AD!Rl:DUcrJON. HOM£ NEEDS WOIU<! &nd have l year'1 previoul )'OU. Interested'! Ca 11 1 U. It the phue pwNnsll ,...., xlnt • 673-J.293 10831 BEACH BLVD All ~ o1 It< in ii<neral ofllce experience. ~11>4L • SAM'S SEAFOOD ANAHEIM STADIUM Joe,"'· S.D. !JwY. M&-125l. FOUND, female lo"i haired STAN'ION 527-3406. Smsll JOl>o ...-~ Pl..,. apply: ' :l:IJO.st>.to C.Utge Bl;d. 112' UP, S11>m, Olftceo, Dachshund, Pm Ave.' MARRIAGE • F II """" Ht!O\t RopolfMM~ 'Standarct BABYS!Tn:R needed Jllon 1'171 PICKie CoHt HwY •Anaheim lndlvtdual air cond Ir: Mth, lqw\a lkach, ~ problem" fl'Jlved q,:c~ l PLUMBiNO: EL!:t'I'RICAL. thN Fri. lO:J>.3:30, 2 Huntington BeKh, CA. p1 ..... CRU fKl.5678, ""'· 333 11301 ,Beach, HS, 84:1-2ll:l4 FOUND-Pair of Bifocal -ponn•n<ntly HO-OH CAJU>EN'IRY. No Job too Memories, Inc, chlldrm. 2 • 4 I"'-11 hr. CHILDCARFJ Ute -. to tlilm yOur: tkketa. (Norlh WESTMINSTER M·l 4100 "I black rimmed glaues. Vlc: 1!!}'tinlt:. • tmall. l' AB Home Repalr, A suhlildial')' ot C.14. aree.. MJ.J630. 'M)rlt from it;, 5 da)tl. Slttn- County toll fl'oe number II f( units. 10< up. Ckllllde Fublon lalud, 613-7316. B&ST MASSAGE lN I< B 64H403: APPUED MAG ttET IC S BABYS!Tl'ER n<..i.d 4 lo 5 mer full tlm&, 2 Jlrl1, T I< le H).)2201. ~Ol'l&f. 841-63311. FND: ~ mo. mixed Oo111t 3400 ll'lllne Avo., &l!te uns: HOME REPAIR mt CORP. I nJcbll ~ Vic "-II, El To,., 8:M1%3, llf>.lilf\l l 4U * * * * * *UOl'TILT-UP pup. Vic Homilt"", CM. ()penl~,Wtd,Fri., Carocotry,1'lumbbw S.Annest. -.2 -· i.,;"":,:,..::;.·---=~ • wfytlrd, -m.)!15 -Ann. !!il . EltctrlcOI. -&411>1!111 Santa ....... c.iu. 97104 aruRQI ORGANIST ..... _.._ ... _ ~=-====.-:=-\iMif--I1JSP~ACEiii_lCOST~f.AVM~F.$A~ FtiALS-Lil> j,,,ppyWORRY •FEARellmlnoltd HANDYl!WHlth truck, An oq..i .!.~tunt11 •n;!:',..°!:'0:~ expcrionc<. Pt,.. '!!111 1· 175 540~1100 1617 WliSTCl.IFl'-NI l2lfloq. IL LOGAN ST Moolorey SL Soulb Lqwll -wtantly. Call -IOOls. ISHIOO pordo)I. '"' -----16-'11111 clays or ·-I ~==========:!..' SU_oq 11 It UP 5C!-I03i OW-S.U!D 144 ms 48MDi. 11ty1Jmo. 540 4144 Coll <nil m4122. ~ '-'-',...-=-==--=' 4 ' ,, ~ I I \ •' ' ' , ' ' -fO DAIL V PILOT Friday, May 17, 1~74 , Help •unted, -F 7100Help wonted, M&F 7hx1t"tlp Wonted, Ml.F 7100 • Delivery Sunday Only OF 'DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE- QUIRES THE"USE OF A MRGE STA· TION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. BENTON WILLIAMS, 330 WEST BAY STREET, COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE 642-4321 FOR APPOINTMENT. An Equ•I De.portunity Employer Htlp Wonted, Ml.F 7100 Halp Wonted, M&F 7100 oF.:NTAL recep!ionliit, offi{~ CHIQUITA 01H11a){~r. Spectalty oflit't!, F1bergl•h IMMmlATE OPENINGS FOR PRODUCTION WORKERS WAREHOUSE WORKERS WANTS YOU ' Fr o nt des k . X ·ra y. Otiquita Brands, Inc., A sub-I in!lu1•1.1nce <'XP. a n1u11t. Good Pfn11anen! first a~d :seco:1d sidilU)' of tJnltl'<t Brond!! sa.la1·y, frln,qe .bencfil~. Send shift positions wit~ ma.)Or Co., \\'ol'ld \\'idc .l\tarkcting resun.'l'.-ht•ld in conliden~e. 1nr111ufacturcr of fiberypass lf'adf'r, hH s an opening for Cl.a.ssth<'d Ad No.~1y. Daily tub and sho~r units. Fiber· •n Order Desk Salesi-.e~n . Ptlot, P. q:-aox I~. Costa glass CXpt'J'lt'O<-'t' preferred. 0 · r d ~Iusa, Calif 92626 pportun1ty or a va11<;e-. Union sl10p \\'ith full bencflls. n1en1 .. ron1pn'hen~ive train· DENT A .L ,\ s s •,~la n ~ . ~lininium S3.00 sllln rat<', in.i:, liberal bl'nehls. A"soc· 0rth?®nlic ofc .. \\ill !rain g-<X's to $3.45 after 90 days lair College Degree or \\'/nun. l yr dental exp.. · ~111i\'alC'nt experience help· Send resun1e to ~h-s. Ferris, Pl<'nse apply Jn Pf'rson be· fuJ. 1737;) ~rookhurst, No. 71, tv.·een 9 and 11 A.r.t . AN EQUAL 1-·ountain Valley, Ca . 9270S . OPPORTUNITY DENTAL C II A 1H EMPLOYER ASSISTANT ExperienCl'd. for c.'Onfide:ntial inter\"ic11· Nf'"'POrt &ach location. 646--1801 . LASCO INDUSTRIES (_•:ill ?tts. Crist. 1lA·614·7740 --~-----­\V('ekdavs behveen 9 an1 & DENTAL Assist an I., 3 pm. ·ol' wl'ite, Chiquita 'i ch airs id e , X -Ra Y . 3261 F,:. Miro LoNlr Bl'ands Inc.. 6..?Q Ne\\•port Nonsmoker. Preferably un-Anahein1, Calif. CenteJ' Dr .. Nc"·port BeaL·h. der 30, &M-0611. 17141 993·12'20 Calif. 92660. DENTAL assistant Laguna an equal opportunity Hills. El 1·aro aren. Exper. en1ployer m/f Salary open. Rep l iesl-:========== CLE,RICAL confidential 830-1130 I•,. P /time 9am-3pm, .l\1on thru · • · i-1bergfas'S r,ri. Assistant J\IPavable. I DEi\'TAL 1' ront U es k, REPAIR PEOPLE Payroll. Lite lypin{: j(J I tnsu!a~1ce, x -ray ,vp1n., operate lO key , enthus1asht· & cheer! u l add by touch. Rea1 E~tate Ne\vport Center, 644-2-155 investment otc, S. D. free-DESK CLERK sonic night \l'<IY Lag-una Niguel, ?tfission \1-ork. Apply Surf & Sand Viejo area. Phone 831·1600. Hotel, 15.iS S. Coast H"'Y·· Lagillla Beaf'h 494-6574. To repair gel-coated fiber· 1 DISH MACHINE OPR gl~s reinlon.-ed polyester CLERICAL I F/tinie l0;30 ani·7 pm. Must re~1~ bathtubs and sho~·ers: . -• • t • • • I .' (\ Htlp Wantid, M&F 7100 I Help Wonit.l, Mi'1 Jloo ilefp ·~,.nl-, -· 11wl Help Wonted, MlF7tocr RtlpW1ntOd, M&F 1uiO 'Help W•nttcl, M&F 1160' ·--.INSURANCE Exper'd ~.:;;;;;::;:; HARDWARE SALES property A ea1""lty .. ency Ma...-nrTratn..a REA 5 S S<cretaey Reg. ~· !or saJ., & ·atoek """'"" Good l4lary & ; PffOJOGRAPHERS L ESTATE ALE SENIOR. ch~king., Should h I\ v e ~etU1. .Ol:d emblished "'m• e.per. tn plumbing Laguoo B'"'°" Agency. Call INQUIRE ABOUT OUR SECRETAJlY .uppll.,, eleetricol 1upplle1 Roy Marcum AK•••Y & LICENSl~G & SALES TRAININq PRoORAM or too~~ Mmt ht.vt out.aoinx 4!»--75ll "'"°""'ty !or meellng pub-..::.:...=:......____ BALIOA BAY PROPERTIES lie & "' In. good health. Job lf!Y1NE ~ MARKETING REPS 1nay require son1e heuvy c:Cmiv-cc., 1 (s-t.octil Offfct ..... We'N OrOwlntl) 1u1111g. Wagr11co111mensura1e <AIV"'-1.-1 GEORGE WILLIAMSON, RE"'TOR "'Jexper, & nbllity. Apply 1 $175 WHk S.li1ry + · /'lU in pttrson only. No phone SEE OUR c I Ion E I PersoMel Director ooUs. H.W. Wright Co. U'6 SUNDAY LISTING omm H orn "91 , Rochester. C.OSta Mesa. 488 E. J71h St. Cat Jrvthel 0 1 $21S4300 Per Wffk 1505-A Meta Verde Dr. East ""'""'""''""""'""'""'""''I Suitt 224 642·1470 Th• nation'• leading & Cotto Mt10 5$6.llOO HEALTII S•"• is hiring young : It •t•st w1 d rtm t people thal""want to learn & I JANITORIAL 1"'" gro ng epa en ~ are '"illin~ to ~'Ork. (TI4) Dependable \YOntan 1 or, ~~~ .. P~~:ra~'!>'d ~~~~~ Hel' Wanted, M&P. 71~ 'Help Wtnted, M&F 7100 1 879-~'vkd~s,s.5~ ~;'::i1%a1 b1~~1.1 N.8~1~ ~~j people ~·ho like ~ard workORNA M ENTAL IRON RN-LVN·AIDE 11·7 & ~·k . Benefits. Ph IH-l--0606 & profns. Expenence not WORKER. we Ider & others. Countywktr. Top pvt HELP JAPANESE Lady v.•anted for ncce\f,E~ILL TRAIN lru!:laller. Exp. preferred dulY pay, ltnmed pay for · · ho 1 d 4~76 staff. lntervw Mon thru Sat 11'0.n1ng, pvt me. ay Positions are now open in PAINTER 9.5, Lescoulle N ursea every 2 wks. 673-6519. the Los Angeles area. Registry 351 Hospital Rd . WDTED Leiding Yflvo Manufacturer Need1 \\'HAT ABOUT YOUR Exper. Only Apply N a Lobby Park Udo Med FUTURE! See Penonnel M~er Bl. d, .:: .. .., """'"-" r:"" ........ WE PROMOTE FROM Balbo1 8i1y Club v ' ..._."....., or ~~· WITHlN 1221 w. Coast Hwy, NB I RN, perm. relief. Mon & Part time driver for slreet sales deliveries, af!C'mOOns. l<.1ust have California drivers license'. Call Mr. lian:ling at &12-4321 for intervie'\'- DRARSMAN Benefits Include company TLM?s nightl 11·7. 18811 paid life, health, major PART·TIME I Florida St, H.B. 847-3515. Exper. in vfllve design, 1 pl'oduction tooling. to!cr- 1 lHl(.'CS & fits. !.lake detail medical & profit sharing. PHONE FOR CLERICAL ROBINSONS I ch·nwin~s direclly from lay· * * * outs. Xln 't benefits. HOUSEKEEPER, Jive-in. CLA-VAL <;O. N.B. Salary open. Clean, laundry, lite cooking for 2 17th & Placentia, CM s nw JI children/childcare. xln't l!enefils .. }'rce l ife & Ph: &W-7J&t 1111.'d .ins. Paid 11.bscnC\ & OF • 1 \'acallons. Prolt sharing. AMERICA HOUSEKEEPER I Cook for Equal Oppor. employer couplt'. Llvc·in. ~lu~t be APPOINTMENT TODAY PHOTO CORPORATION Good eletical skills + Ille typing. 'I Hours per duy. l<.'londay thru Friday. Apply In Personnel ()(>pt 9 AM-11 AM Alon·F'n PACIFIC MUTUAL 700 Ne"'J>Orl Ctr. Dr., NB t-;qua.I Uppor 1'.:mployer . unon1run1bct'C'~. Beautiful LEGAL o-·ty·, N • w por t I WESTCOAST · ho "' ""' "";"' ~.... .. PART T ll\1E office & drivin,. 111~ · <;l'U-;iuvu. Center, :E..'xp'd p e r son a 11 position. No exp. neces~ lfOUSEKEEPER, Lido Isle, injuries, 640-8051 (714) 8lJa8752 ti-15'-0-172 Liw in or out. Local refs. · <:' 673-911"9 LINDSEY Nurses Registry & PRE.SCHOOL He Ip er, HOUSEKEEPER, part tin1e, E~ I NI D S EtYAg M 'dNI ~ l mature p<'rson Y•/exper. to over 40. Lite invalid care. I nip oyn1cn ency, "'""'s assist us. l-ll-s 7-12, U-6. Call RN's, LVN's & Practicals. 546-1647. Ne~-po11, 675-7363 Male & fem. For pvt duty, MAST 1-"""-:::;;"-o--~--- HOUSEKEEPER June 3-staff IT'lief & other niedical I Rell Estett Si1les Hth. N"™" exper. "'lpllll. tioltJ,. 646-4316, Costa M"a. ASSEMBLER $49 Good pay. 546-9358 LIVE-IN {'On1pa.nion f o r BOAT MASI' ASSEMBLER. Licensing School FHhlon blond ltas OpenJ.na For FURNITURE SALES MAH 1\Iust Be Experienced Apply Personnel Office 1:.:-a PM, Mon thru Fri No , 2 F'a!hloti J!lland, NB Equal Oppor, ~mployer ROdlHSONS FHhlon lalond Has Openin& For we are a dynamic, youna oomptU\Y located n e• r Warner Blvd. and Harbor Blvd. Good J~es and aaJary c<>1umensurate wiU1 e.1Cperlrnce. Send resume °' apply: I Standard Memories, Inc • A SubllMUary oJ APPLIED MAGNETICS CORP. ?221 S. Anne St. Santa Ana, Callt. 927tK An equal opport.Wl.lty employer SiCIU.,-ARY. 60 WP~t niln., accurate, dictaphone & 10 key add, responsible po1ition In busy .Costa Me.a Clliropractor otfiC<', medical tCnnlnolog)', insurance ''exp, SH pref. Salary according to exp & refs, Slti-0516 M·F 9-6. StcrtlUY· Typltt to $500. General J{. • .C:. office '\'Ork. Chri11lana ~alty Inc. Good company boMtita. Call Janet, 846-0641. SECURir-v"'--I ' GUARDS Need p/tlme guard• for Orange Co. area. For Interview Call ( Z I 3 ) 4 35-8959.Lawrence Security, Inc. Lona Beach. Immcd. Assignments. T'lp be respon~ibte. X 1 n , 1 l\hn1;num 1 )'.ear expenence .$.$$. Long or short tern1. employt'e benefi!s. Apply requ~rerl-Fiberglass boat Call 540--4450. Costa Mei:a r.l em 0 r i a 1 repaU' acet;p!able. N_ew mod· NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Hospital JOI \l'ictoria C ?tt ern plant 1n A,flahe1n1 area. TEl\WO Tem!>Orary Help Equa i' Opportu'ni·ty Uruon shop wtth full benc· CONSTRUCTION LABOR.En En1ploycr. fll s. HOUSEWIVES. Part/time elderly lady, vision limited. PR I 0 R EX P E R . in public relations 10am.2'pm. f.lust drive, oo smoking. 2 PREFERRED, BUT NOO Huntington Bt•ch S2 hr +bonus. Ages 35-45 days a \Vk off. ~2198 REQUIRED. PERMANENT 16l I I •-och Blvd. SECRETARY Sr. Buyer UlQWl. to $llK \ '"'anted, part time, Laguna DON UT Sh 1 · · l'lca•e apply ,·,, -&> h 192--0160 I op, ull-hrne n1tei:. ..~rson : ac atta · · p/ti1ne days & nitcs. No LASCO COOKS expcr. necess. Age 23-45. ·WAITRESSES Apply, Mr. ponut, 135 E. BUSBOYS -1~1~mc;S~t,_.CM~'""-~~--- DISHWASHERS ELECTRICAL ASSEMBLERS INDUSTRIES l.?61 E. f\liro Lorna ,\naheim, Cali!. (714~ 993-1220 ·& HOSTESSES Exper. Only Need Apply Apply In Person Denver Mining Co. 719 W. 19th St, CM an equal opponunity URGENTI..Y Needed. en1ployer m/f · Exp. in mobile Home\-=====- • COOKS e I t'Onstruction rcq'd, I• iiiiiiiiiiiiiii £ DISHWASifERS to work Apply in person at FOOD 1n fdt food restaurant open· 1 GOLDEN WEST PREPARATION ;il1g soon in Nev•port Beach. MOBILE HOMES MALE WANTED Call 752--02~ a~ 0241 or apply 1929 E .Sc A11drC'\' Pl. .iii person · : Santa Ana 835-090!) VICTORIA STATION 1 RESTAURANT ELECTRONIC 6 Days, 6 am-2: 30 pn1 Call ~0--7066 990 Dove St., Newport COOK-TRAINEE ASSEMBLER FRY COOK Salary a ccording to exp. Prefer experience bu! will Exper. Full, p1.t1n1e ' · S all Co ·11 Surf & Sirloin Prefer no students. Exper. rain. n1 mpany \VI 1 pref'd., but will train. Apply pleasant SUITOUndings. Near 5930 \V. Coast ll"·y., ~B bet"'ecn 2:30 I 4:30 pm. lh~ Ocean, in Ne\\o·port GAL FRIDAY Hamburger Hamlet, lJ.-1.i Beach. Apply at NEWPORT & PRIVATE SECY Aclan1s, Cl!I. ,\sk for l<.1r I MARINE, lO a.m.-4 p.m. tor busy executive. Age !S--Zl. Hagen. · 1 507 Superior. 548-ai22· 1''ree to travel when COOK-CHEF 1 ~ necessary. Sh o u Id be interested in 1 e a r n i n g apparel. business. i\i r. Hohmann, 213-430-79-lS. ESCROW OFFICER pref. 831-93~0. LUBE !llA..~. exper. Brown's JOB, .l\lANY EENEFITS. -c Sh 1 ~ • Fast Start Training IF YOU LIKE PEOPLE Newport eoter 'I, LE f1ELL • (:J0>ed Circuit TV WE'D LIKE YOU I E.:~l~~~~ N~~RS i Mf:G. CO. ; ~1~~~~1c;;~~~~rals To consich.>r a caN\('r v.·lth the f or lite manu(. ~·ark. No · 13700 }'irestone Blvd. Santa • MaMgc1nc:11 Progran1s ,\·orlds fin<'s1 Ren.I Estate t"Xpf't'. necess. }'ull or Fe Springs, Ca. Carmenlta • fre~ . 3 \\·ttk 111 [)(>pth ' Company. You supply the p/rin1e days <>r eves. $2 per CUt·Oli S.1\. }'rwy, Equal Trrurung .Progran1 desire and v.·e 'll supply the hr + bonus. Xln't eonds & Oppor1W1ity Employer M/F • Earn While You Learn training. Together, \Ve'\I ! beocfils. Ci1ll . Bill Flory 132.5440 earn yo~ s.1soo7 mo. I CORT EC, INC. MEDICAL .l\londay thru Friday icommis,.on). Foc i ' 642-1877 • TARBEl.L inforn1ation concerning our FEE PAID licensing program please Back Oftlce $500 REAL ESTATE SALES call Jack Ayers at 54~~91 * * * LVN F/Bck ofc $500-$7~ (NEW Licensee) Salary + WALKER & LEE Bek ofc bi lin Span to $650 bonus .. Village Real Estate, REAL EST TE lns bi Jin Span to $650 ln\'~stm('nt Company, Call A MACHINISTS Front office f'X P $500-$7001-'iiMiir.iiSiii.miiiib"'iiii' .96iiii:<-456iiiiii7.iiHBiiii.ii DL\IEDIATE Openings For I Med &><'y exp to l1001 • Following p 0 s i t i 0 n s : MediSearch I-tcceplionist 1\lachinist/ L:.athe Opr, 2 )Ts WHY NOT?. ,\Professional Agency Sr. Project engineer Indus prod. develop $19K Girl Friday posit.ion. A1ust Legal Secy, probale $700 have good secretarial skills. F1C Bkkpr, CoMtr $850 Xln't benefits &: liberal Bkkpr, Sec'y/Coll8tr to $700 tllscounts. i General Oilh:c to $470 Apply Pf'nonnel Otf'ice , ~eceptionisl Sec'y S600 12-3 PM Mon lhru 1'Ti (Jerk Typist to S500 , .• 2 F·'·~-Island NB RecepUSec'y, H.B. $550 ,..... ..,..,...,., ' Medical trnl ofc to $700 Equal Oppor. Employer Sec'y 10 pres. $650 To Store Man"ltr ROUTE SALES RE p • Lrt!al l\eC corp RE !900 Vacation relief. Ma J·o r I Secretary/Le&al $700 Baking Co. ·Exp pref. Xlnt Sl'e'y to &rn mgr 10 S:.OO benefits:. Mr. Suro w le c , Recept Typl.&1 . to $500 558-9819 Mr. \\'a 1 i ck, L:all Jeaimle Staco 541S<-900'l EOE & Sid Hoilman ROUTE MAN, 1111 m, NEWPORT indus!rial laundry. Great Pertonntl Agency opportunity f o r U3 Dover Or., N.&. ;u1vance1nenL Salary + 6424170 comm. 979-7381. """" -d. Se•·up & sui" :m IS662 "•cAl'•hur Personnel "" h'noo 833-ms j * * * * * operat<'. Quality Control CHECK OUR RATES Inspe.t"tor, ele c tro AND BENEFITS 111EDIC\L .ASST. b ack R t" • 1 SERVICE Sta. Attendant. full & p/Ume. 990 E. Coast Hv.y , N.B. inl:'Chanical romponents. Jn ofiict', .exp. V.'/injections, ecep 1on1st process & finished pnxlucts. * * Experienced EKG, lite Xray & Lab. Exper. pref'd. Electronic I Good hours. Call 497-1786. DEBORAH MERCER &1st Wffimiukr Ave. Weslm.lmter A~sembler. exp e r in ' MACHINISTS Merchandise Handler Large Ol'a.!1ge. County ass em b 1 y of small F./tin C • ~-•· manufacl1J,rrng tinn has an i"ou are lh~ v.·ilu1(r of electronic components. Xln't 1.e. on~ct "tr . .........,,.., opening for All lndividual as TWO FREE TICKETS \\/Ql·king conds & benl'iits. & 'MACHINE BeaJ s Funuture, 64241262 a receptionist '°" a btay Ale bldg. Full med & t.IOTEL ?ii aid~. ~·tll train. e1nployment person n e I dental plan. EOE. Disc OPERATO. RS Apply in person. Costa ?tlesa office. The success f u J Instruments, 102 E. Baker ltm, 3205 Harbor Bl., L'\1. applicant v.'ill be required lo to the Southern Collfornlo MOBILE HOME SHOW !llay 18th thru May 27th SERVICE Sta. Attendant full & p/lime. ,\pply da)'l. Unkin 76, 1&15 Adams, 01 SHAMPCKl girls & ~sistant1 &. general help. Apply in peraon, Halr Hwit.en:, No. 70, }~as.hion Island. Qualified n1an for ~mall dinner house. I .1\1 an kitchen. N. B. 673-7722. COOK · Sf!ORT ORDER, s I days a "'ff'k. Mu.'it be rr·!iable. Apply in pt">rson, 4215 Campus Dr .. Irvine. COLlNTER llt~lp. Penn. pru1 time days. Apply St, Costa ?tlesa. 979-j3Q(). !110TI1EI-t'S J1ELPE:I{, Live pass a typing te.St at f;(I Experienced, f/tim<' * GARDENER * 2nd Shif t 3-11 Pl\t in, lovely home in Newport "'Pm, shorthand is also SECURITY PACIFIC Be your <Mn boss! Part.or INSTALLATION MEN I lOc Shift Premiwn . Beach. Childrens <1gcs 12 & p re ferr e d but Mt at the ANAHEIM STADIUM ShffttiMet•I Worker Exper. Full or p/time. Call 64>-3180. BURGER. KL'lG Wl'l llarbor Blvd C.M. COULL> you use extra $35-$50 \1k '.' Pi t eves & Sa.ts, Pref. ".._mpl'd. Jlilr. Levi ~55. NATIONAL BANK f/tin1c. Your own area. & I ta. 641•7S!S:l. ma" ll a t 0 r Y · Position um State College Bl\'d. SHIPPING CLERK I 3rd Shilt 11·7 ,\:-Of requires 1,1·e1J-organized 4\nahl'!m 550 Newport Ctr Dr, NB High Income. Cuaranteed BRAKE & FRONT END 30c Shilt Premiuni I NEEDED, ~tale Experienced lndlvidual to handle heavy I Please call 642·5678, ext. 333 Responsible for o rder 644--0113, ext 265 CUston1ers. Earn Now. Pay Desk Clerk Jamaica Inn ' 1 cl · "ck " IN nh ---Uon, botU• till•~. " E al 0 I 67~ "'"" activity and applicants, new I 0 '8.lm your u e...,.. 0 , ... ~r--u•a • qu ppor-~Emp oyer Later. Immediate openings. Xlnl * \Vork 71,~ Hours .;i-o......, hire processing, telephonC!I Coun1y loll tree number 1S fr el a: b t Io & d In a: of 5J4..7187 or 534-3144 Sa I a r y & \\'or king Pa.id }'or 8 Hours NEW FACTORY and a full range of clerical 54().1220). pharm&ceutlcal producu. ~"'!·~~~~~~~~-conditions. Opportunity for • B h • I · · ''r1··-~nen•· D • ,,. rr EXECUTIVE SECTY GARMENT CUTfER ror advancement. Libera J * Ml LLS ranc out ets JUSt opening activities. An outstanding * " .... ~ '''' ..,.. .. 1 1 d ENGINE & in area needs the following: package of wages, benefits * * * * mature individual only, Mag card exper req., typing \\'el Suit ~lfg. p r e f e r emp oyee benelits inc u e: * 1\-lgmt T"ne $185 ~·k and working conditions is Apply In PCrson 80-90 ~rpm,sh100wpm,must experience or will train. Paid Hospital InsW'llnce, & TURRET LATHE ll Servmeii t2) $3hr provided. I nterested 'SALES I 8AM·9:30AM be able to assume respons. i2.j() hr, 5 day ~'k. Apply 8 Pension Fund. Apply in * GRINDERS Salesmt!n Open applicants please call for • EXPERIENCE Mon, Wed, Thurs Or Fri COUNSELOR Sa I a r y ope n. Se 11 d an1·l2 noon. 8Z5 \V. ISth St. person nt PEP BOYS, 15221 * HONES All benefits. career positlons. appointment: 1 -NOT NEEDED Linwilco Lab• lmn1ed. opening in our type~Tiltcn resun1c listing Costa Mesa. Bt•ach Blvd, Westrninsle1·. CKERS , 494-1064 Z148 Newport Blvd, 0.t bt>autiful ofc tor a sales prev exper, job respon.l,;;i;iiiiii;iiiiiiii ............ ..-EOE * CHU • Carol Dearborn $82S .!\fin. to $2400 monthly ~ mi nd<'d. self mot ivated salary level, and refs to GENERAL OFFICE l::::;=======zl * N/C DRILLS NITE AUDITOR 537-1700, ext-21M guaranteed. Comml!si<>n If SHIP&RECF.IV!NG individual. Sal<U.'Y gunruntPe l CO~tPREH~SJVE CARE Sparkle Plenty in this ! & Ml LLS Hotel or club expel'. reqd. ;\n equal o pp 0 rt u n 1 t y qualified. Company vehlcle, CLERK + ('Oflllll +-bonus. E.-.:per.! CORP.~ Ne"'JlOrt Center jewelers office. Never a dull INSPECTOR I Kno"·ledge of NCR 421JO. ernployer repeat busine1ls, weekly & Experienced, Ln tlllin& pref'd . Good location & · Dr., Suite . 222. Newport inoment. Your day \viii be I j P/Tiine & Swnmer Openings F/time. See Person n e I monthly bonuses. Daytime orders: Packing, receivin& traffic. Beach, Cahf. 92'660. Attn: , .• n·od do'•g gen•ral ollicc . . I !llgr. I v.•ork. No eves. lDcal meat " shipping. Oean Ute Jason Best Agency P I all &.io-8950 ... " I \\e are. a '\·ell establ:shed 1 Balbo• Bay Club RECEPTIONIST "·holesaJer. V.'Clght products. Xlnt ersoru1e •or c · duties & lite selling. Averagt: DETAIL non union eompany '"1th a • 1221 \\' ,.._R~• H NB I Mr ., in 21,17,. or:.•.. employee bene:fils. 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly. typini; & ability lo handle hi:;tory of r-.;o LAYOFFS. ! · VJ<1:.l wy., sharp girl needed for main ... art • .,.. o.r-o.n.> Klopley Ml& Compeny SUite 213 963-6'/T;i EXEC. SECRETARY figures. Xl n't advanL'f'mcnt NIGi-IT AUDITOR wanted. lobby of manuf. finn in FACT IS ~...:u l tia -~ice Pres. of corp nef!ds potential & great starling MACHINE EXCELLENT COl\IPANY Apply Suri' & Sarni Hotel Irvine Indus. Complex area. Everyone Ei1ts MNt ~ p aoen Avo., Ot. DELIVERY MA N: Ear 1 y efficient .sea'l'tary w/good salary. \1 PAID BENEFITS 15.55 S. Coast H""}'., L&guna Must have good typing SALESLA h SHOE SALE& Some sales mor1ung L.A. Ti1nes c~r ! skills ~ recf'nt exec. Jason Best Agency Beach 494-6574. sldlls, front ofc appear &: DY, Fa 5 I on exper. nee. Re\va.rdini job route. Tustin area. No secretanal . exper. Able to Ii.WO Brookhurst, F. Vly PARTS I Apply in Person pleasant per~na.llty. Will =~·wn~~p·~iau~~ for career minded male/ eollecling. 838-TI48. Ji.andle v1s1lors w/grace & Suite Z13 96.HiTI5 Monday thru Fridi1y NOTE CLERK operate PBX·Dial console, fem. Gd aal8.J')"/Xln't bent. finesse. Great salary & 8:30AM 'til 4 :30PM greet frequent incoming Ad oo. s.t, c/o Daily Pilot. w/pjee.a: oonds. Childrens outstanding benefits. Call GE-NERAL 0 . FFICE 1st Shift 7-3:30 We presently have an visitors&: applicants. Min of PC.Oil! &~1560, C.O.ta Mesa, Bootery, Fash lat 644-24&4 Coaslal Personnel Agency, . SATURDAY opening in our Note Dept., 2 yrs related exper. a , ~-. Mr. Milter. 540-6055, 2i90 J-larbor Blvd, 111us~ have g~ lyp1ng skills 2nd Shift 3-ll ?tlust be good with figures & Apply In Person SALES, Must be experienced STORE CLERKS Nf'1v d<tta processing instal· QI & figure aptllude, to handle (10c Shift Premium) like detail work. Prior Edler Industries, Inc 1n Ladies Ready to Wear Cashlen, Stock Clerlcs, floor DATA PROCESSING Jntion in Ne\vport ,Beach EXPERIENCED.l\vaH:resscs. orders and billing, on INTERVIEWS exper. helpful, but not ZlOl Dove St, N. B. Fashlo. ~. Apply in person Cerks. Good future. Xln't fl('('rls key nian "'ith ANS F1iden/Singer Computer. 3rd Shift 11·7 neccss. CEPT ONIST TY Hanis &: Frank, Lagun& beneUtl. })f)rma.nent f/timc. COBOL e:-:n. &!fen'! knO\\'· ~~~:ru:~nt~, ~fonA~iwco". Small office, • C <30c Shift Premium)P c're!'g'NCoew~landtact RREe c e P tl/ Front PolUST1·ce Hills Mall, Laguna Hills. Over 21. No f It i me ledge of 360 '3•0 operating Tapmat1c orp. May 18th, 9AM-12 noon .. Equal opportunity employer ~ysteir.s. Life insurance ~SC~·--------I 1851 Kellering, Irvine Inspect ~fanifolds, Pistons, Bank of America prestigious company. We student.a. Apply In peraon, background & some systems EXPER. Service Station man Sleeves, Cranks & f\fachine BERTEA Nc,vport Center OUice need a young, b r I g b t' SALESPERSON, exper. tor PIC N SAVE ,,,_, Sal for nite ~hifl. !\cat a•oea1._ 979..6080 . Parts To Blueprints & Final r·ashto' n l!!land attractive aell·ltarter with UP.;"1.Jfixture ro. Contact ,=.1J;=.:EC'.='=7t"h,"Coo""'"ta'-M=''":::..-;n1alysis l'CQWJ.'-"· • ary lo " In · ood ~•-kl! ood hting F '--Co ance. 2800 \V. Coast H\vy., GENERAL CLEANUP spectJOO Reports. Uses All Call 83&--3505 g .,., .. ,. s ls & g 1.A\w-.: • STUDENTS work p/t now, Sl6(.000l. 4 )CalBIJJDeBp4t.SO!l9 a! N.B. ,\pprox. 1 week, temporary. Inspection Hand Tools, Sur-• Equal Oppor. Employer personality who 11ke1 2031 S.. E. Main, Irvine. flt SUmmer. Ne•t. ttllable. 7 ~ i }-:XPERIENCED lady 'viii do Boat Bldr needs men for face Plate, Sine Bar & ~take CORPORATION I """"""""""""""""""°I peoplleb.I FullPI be n e f i '1'~1 Lsj546-ii':j2901~~·m',ej(j;'d.C');;:e.; .l\lr, Rkhardl, 846-54$. I bou~ctleaninf!'. References. general cleanup of planl <N.·n Set-Ups To Check • avru a e. ease ca ~ LADY, exp'd. One eve TECHNICIAN to Q.C: R.F. I..,..,,.....,..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,..;' ,, CalL~3-lOl3 after <."Ompany move. Parti:;.ChoinlnspectlonToolsj NU RS ES A ID ES, 546--6682forappolntment. ii_ SUn. WHIMSEY line•r amplifiers. o,E,L,t\'EL,R\Y MTa n for hearly FAJ3P..!CATOl'tS & SHEET $2start50ing !wionbr MAay I alt~. ~l'1i.red. {Rate range $4.10. 1aor~v~~~ ~:1~f.an I ~~R~E'b.I fi1 Ns~fJ RFECEPaldPTll~ISFT .. Jmobs I~?~:"·~· fo;o !~' ~~. Ptlonsal El:_xlropnlecsr ,· , ·. "· imes onie ME.'T1\L men needed for · per · PP Y in Beverly Manor 24452 Via ee · ~ · 0 556-1692 I ·----, " rl_el1very. route. Adu~ts only: lii;:-ht inu fL-.:turc cumpan)'. pe~n. 940 W. 17th St, C.T\f. Good Co. Benefits 833-1424, ext 294 E tr d La ~ Hills Beautiiul-girl loolung ll820 Westem, Ga rd en ~~~~n1~alN~ar~Jdl~l~g~ h1':,j E :< P ~ r i c.n c e <:I a n.d GE~ERAL OFFIC~·Bkk~r. Xl(l't Working Conds or 833-1425 N~~· Aid~, ;/lime .. 1·3, for ~~u=ices s;1hlfi: • .l\:~hin:p • &: Swt~ Grove, Call Atr. Sacks' c o I YI e c t i ll g. i n o.n e x perienced·"·e ivrll lyptst prefer 1 yr min. office Equal Oppor. Employer m/f l--ll. Mature w I exp er WESTCLIFF Bechler, New shop, new _894-__ 330_1. _____ _ \\'es 1 minster/f.lnTg Bch 1 train. Cont?~ \VO O D exper. Small General Real Apply In Person -::::::;c:Z:z::!::m==: I pref'd. Xln'l c 0 n d 1 , Pel'SOM('l Agency machine•, very g 0 0 d a rea 638-2924 ! LIGHTING FIXTURE CO., Estate office in Newport ~Ion thru Fri, 8-4:30 i 642-2410. !Mark III C.enter) woridng cond, App J y . • · · . 2031 S. E ~lain St, Irvine, Center. $550-SfiO(}. per mo. MECHANICAL DELI1f'.'ERY tt!A.'J for OUtce Calif. ~JY,O ask: for Peggy, SATURDAY NURSES Aide-Strong, Care 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Stan ford Applied Supphes. C.M . -N.B. area. s·Jl).S m INTERVIEWS ASSEMBLERS for elderly bed ridden 542-8836 Engtncmng, 3lJro Alrway, Full-time. Must be neat FACTORY · P · May J81h, 9AM·l2 Noon woman In hn" home . RECEPTIONIST ~°":;;;;.:ta;:,;:;M::e::sa:,._ __ ~-a pp ea r ing. BE Ac 1-1 GENERAL Office, pa.rt time, To assemble new products &W-2515. No typing or sborthand, work SEAMSTRESS, exp. run or Telephone Sales Cost• Meu ...... Work.From Y-Htm. Top Commlultnt • 568-'13ll • :; TA TIONERS, 645--8300, H • in Huntington Beach. Hvy BERTEA I &: existing product lines. NURSES AJdet, 11 • 7 : 3 0 days or nlebt. In a kwely part time. Patti.Ion Sall de-!803 Newport. c .ttf. ousew1ve1 typing, some d1ctaphone, I·nmed. openings. lg rd l881l •-•--No 11 ..... SSC-1757 I ca I c u I at l n g, filing, Contact Tlm Ross n ht•. Expel' pre • a .... ..._.1""""'• ~ x P • .,.. • DELJVEl{Y n1e~, over 23 l \Vould you like 10 \\'Ork close telephone. 847-3563 COROTEK CORP. Florid.s St, H.B. 847-3.5'15. neceuary, we traln. Apply SEAMSTRESS, ex P • 4 =====-.,..--~-I yrs. Pern1. p/tune. Early I to hon1e in rhe JJ·\ine Jn· ~ . CORPORATION tn penon aftemoont or trainees. Da\~ Carro 11 TELEPHONE AM. Serv. mom. ne~splll)('r dehv. to dustrial Complex as a lestor GENERAL ottice "'Ork for 12812 Knott Street 2 OFFICE GIRLS • eves. 21.U Harbor Blvd., S&ilmnken, C.M. 642-8565 open.ton ,wanted. Expel' NB homf's. $200 per nio. + j of el{'Ctronic CQn1ooncnt!I. sales. dept. on the ~y. Garden Grove 898-1389 NEEDED Costa Mesa. • See.,tary pref but DOt ntc. 4~ bonus. 642-4800. i\o r.-.:pcrirnr r 11ettsi;ary. Yachting Assoc. Corp. 250'5 18001 VOf'I Karman Radio telephone dl-"tch RECEPTIONIST-ASSNT for $6-.. TELLER DELIVERY I I · llt>ut-s · 7·30 to 4'00 Call· \V. c::ot..st I-fwy., N.B. Call I I Ill MAINTENANCE ' ·~ . I I N ·-~ ~ , par 1 n1 {', l . · • . · · · &1&-0551 afternoon. rv ne, Ca • 1'>1ll8t be 25, able to drive animal Hos Pota. • ewport. We presently have a podtlon i:M10oet'· P"ffen'td. F.arly momin.t: paper rnu1 r, 1 Ul:·bbie at .Yl6-55.>1. 8JJ..1424, ext 294 Must be .Jam 11 i a r Apply in PCTIOfl .Full or part,J~~e. Eves. till tor secretary steno, muit Call Mn. ~~. 673-3130. ' Tustin & lrvinf', Pref. " GIRL for mat 1 ~o? m. or •••1-ir-w IP J umbing. electrical, YELLOW CAB CO. IOpm, or "WKends-Write have _. -~·-" •/b Impertal SaVln,as & t ....... n ,••-'-'. L.A. T 1 m 0 ,. nn equal opportunity Ope.n, claMIJy N. .. distr:ibut~ -,..,. Clauitl«I Ad No J02 Dall ...,.,... ..,., .. ,. t.1--__.,. ,_ .. ,~ employer 'I ndJ 1 r,n'l carpentry. See. ,_ E. 16~ ~,. Meaa • , Y .. 1..1111.· ·-~' Stach "1 -J m, nia1I, hll e nuu mg equip.. ~ .. ., """"' PUot, P.O Box 1560. O»ta --.. c--... 1 n--.,._ --· "'! G . " la1 / EqlNll Opp. Empl-• ers•11niel Manager, M.,. ~-"• -~ PLEASE· CONTACT. ""'-v,,.., -"'°1tr' ' DENTAL RECEPT. ~tion'.°~ ·= -, B•lboo Bay Club ORDER DESK <U:RK ru.x:&.tro~· ·-Gres N"'!Md TRAINIE, $400 E>cper • ..U phases ot Iron! FACTORY WORK cood & COJllPIUtY benetibs. 1221 w. Coast Hwy, NB. Lool<lnc lot gal to "°"' "" .t 10 bl1 lor buoY -ex a.nk,Gf America 10 Kor.' Eltdl!o& Youthl!ll dc&lc .l take X-l'a)•. Mission Small growing company neor Apply 500 Newport Center INSURANCE SALES MGMT Tme, xln't Mure ordtr duk. l'rtvlous -· ~ olc. Dp.r IOO Nawl>o<t Cale' Dr. otmooio6en. -VleJo. Otll Sll).J.39;;. So. Coast PllUll. 12.50 hr. 10 Dr, suttr 600 w~ >'f.old co. a.Ila, 21-46. wor!dng wllh . ..-,..,. Jftl'd. Dr y d ' • Fulilon ltland WISTCLIFF DE'Nr'AL ASST Exp or D.A. 5tart. Ph. ~.J..7101 a!k for GIRLS 2l4S for actvert1Jlng. Ht cua.nt mitn/Jady w/CM, 'nteea58tY· ~OCtll 6*-0514 • arwoo ' --PtnJMei Aaeocy ,&ttl. ~. Wlmds Ken!. r~or tennJs: aocea, Player No~ nee., eam while you _M::::,;•·c;Levt~.:!'..:8'16-=;'55.:;,;;::::___ =~follow-up.'M~ =~for doc!tor't Equal OpPal' Ql\pkl)'ll' (Ma$ m Center) -l().U /loon. FEMALE :i;-;;, P · t; me needed also 66.o329 =· :i1 ~~h.~':J MASSEUSE, pd hn., good wllh Jlatlm, anti bo a!ftce, Mual lype. WU1 tntn. *Stc'ya, l11k....,.,I ll&I E,~, S.A. DDITAL A•lotant. cpx'd, as!embly ••ri: tor IITTlall HAIR STYLIST !lod Huntington lloach. ablo to ·operate 10 Key IC-IZ'I • Ha .. too mt11t11 ll1t l:===,....=:=---1 ecaerpllc l! c b e c r f n I . mfgr near o.c airport. 4·6 • · 963--1247 Calculator. AllO inUM be ' . UI ReindU• ~ ' 1 ,..,sr, mutt have ~ N""""1 Ctnter. 614-2455 br"S day wk .. 5.11-1283 Riobard Oucllollo I• now In Farmen Insurance Group MAIDS F/TIME accunte f M>lst. XI n t l}il STA U RANT Male, «llO Blrcli St., SWto JOI comtlpllQdence A vll'led . DENTAL ASST.. _.FOREMEN ~!'~~~~,l"·1~1~ E<lU.nl * 5!0-~ Seel'<!ftomel~· worldnr conilftlons In -1!,\!'t1< \:,m"'1'1'ERdo.YIG« Newportlleadl J133oll90 typlns •'I I l~•i ' "••-Ex 1 d •• ,. B 1•--"· c " Bids. all fringe """'°"'· n ... -~·-lc!N ' Di1I A JH al •II "°""'pond<nt:t ac va ..... ,.,,..._, Jl<I'. pr e · Expeneneed. Prtftr Spanish Stylis" w/lollowlnJ. 1610 of o_. -Y ind~ profit lharlna. llS.f.~ •• !h•Cb Bl•d. Hor•-T y ,..,1 olo cluUoo In -'I 'WU1Jlstotraln.ft3..ll78 & Englbh ~Pt•idftg, 2nd W. Cout HwY, N .B . H ptheaOOrtlgeproblem! WlW.0.1tHW)'.,N.B. Applybipei>n,9am-3pm. HUl'IUJ19wu8elda. .,.~~-· _. dept, ol financial .__...'AL JtECIPl10NJST 'lhift. Top w1,at1. ~2-3970 ~ ldl~wi~ ~ Kave wt.ntt.r ...r C hive -GWroR.NlA tNmcTrON the ,..,r draw in the West ~ ::.l MluU.. ~ E>Qlil~~.B. ..... ~~~ir~~~ g~rp ~'1"'1 AOI Call ~ ~ :-=~~IW "1:11 ~/:!~ Brllll A ... A.i.' ~~a...-~ ": :.:~.:~.~ .... i::~- " ~ l ,f • I ,, • '· • \ • • • DAILY PILOT d • Friday, May 17, 1974 IOIQMi1cella ntou1 1U1U1P lanos & Ort••• .,.-I ;Ht4l~pSW~a~nEled~·~· 1'i~&~'~F·~7~ioo~-, j'~Ail~,t~lq~ue~:-,~-~--i--i~~IOOi~5~An~'"1~"'1quo~-!i'~~~~i--~-=eoos~!in'" /~"'F~u~rn~""i~tu~r-e~-;;;~-;:-;o;-~I050;-~I Ga rage Sala eOIS Gara ge Sale aoss j Mlicella neou• I TOOL MAKER f'riday & Saturday. i0-3r~1. * * FURNITURE AUCTION * * Excdle11t Drexel o l I e d ANTIQUE AUCTION • walnUI lumltu,.. Round )YAREHOUSE SALE .... G 0 B * * * TONITE 7 :30 P .M. * * * e PIANOS e ORGANS Rentals fr $5 TOOL ROOM MACHINISTS • 1st and 2nd Mitts. Paid ~and life lnsural'\.--e. EVENING & SAT. INTERVIEWS IAM • 6PM, Monday thru Frld&y 9AM. -12 Noon, Satuntay After hourw call Plllnl Supt at l 714) M&-3131. LEAR SIEGLER TRANSPORT DYNAMICS 3131 W. Sqe~lr'Onl Near ltarbor &: \\'arner Santa Ana MONDAY NIGHT : MAY 20th 7:00 P .M. AT GRANO HOTEL BALLROOM (Ofl Harbor Blvd., Anahe im, Calif. opposite main gate to Dl6neyland) We have been commJSsioned by Mitchell An- tique Gallery ol Beverly Hills to sell at auc tlon a big new shipment of W1e European antiques. As you all know Mr. Mitchell's antiques a re most all recon<litioned and restored and are the highest ol q11ality. Doors open at 5:00 P.M. sale night All purch.,., mu1t be paid for & romovtd from pr•ml111 on night of 1ele, HOTEL RULES ...... NO EXCEPTIONS Cockt•il1 Avallabl• WEST COAST AUCTION & WHOLESALE COMPANY dining ut, China cabincr, l Unclaimed storage, small est-ate, consign· ltutch-dt!lk, Tables, chest, 3 ments. Sealed storage boxes, color tvs eye lampe. 8' pillowback !IO!a, Table sa\v, of!ice furniture, S~·( copier, pool el · h d • oft-white. blu/gm loWlltc level stove, r rigs , was ers, ryers, desks , chair. Bullock's Cl'lho-coil table, sander, floor coverings, ne\V 9 ft. office chrs, L/R sets, BI R se~, occ chrs., ()ptn Nights 'tll t tll-1n "beds, oomplete. Power stereo, couches, 1973 Chevy Van J,{a, 1973 Butcher block tbl w/6, dinelt4'S, bar stools, Set: 'tll 5:30, Sun. 12..5 l?lO'Ner SIO. 2 sets Ottn:i. Chev P.U. !IA, much miscell. cor. group. sofa day Bed. Picnlc tbl w/ *Planot & Grand•* COior TV $75. Mac. aalore . benches, bbq , sew machine, Lamps , Many flaldv.1n • Cable • Ollckerlng Estate lW:gaina! 286 JOAnn . · 1.. • FlllChtr · Ka.wnl • Kimball (Wi1119n-f'al.rvicw area > SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY items too numerous to mention. Items sui.r ·KnabiJ.~Ta:onkllam'ln· Costa Me11a 1 ject to presale, BofA & ~1aster Charge hon-l\.1u11sett • Sohmer . Stein- DINING Set, Brown. 1116 So. Wright, Santa Ana ored. Food available. "'/tY ·Storey & Clark. \\.'In· Saltman, solld waloul, 48" MASTERS AUCTION 1" • 11"''11"" • Yomoha J'O'"'d ~·-·-• tbl w/2 !'" New Spinets u .•.•..•• •~ .... .,....u.cuu ~--~---~~--.------=-20751f.:i Nevt1port Blvd ., Costa Mesa Used lron1 ............ $95 ~ac~es~lu~irs~Wo~\Va~:i Ga rag• Sale ~SS M1scellaneou~ 8080 I ()3chind 'l'ony's Bldg . ]\'lat' ls.) Pluy1 rs " .......... S895 I ~'all unit, 64" wide, $100. 101 FAMILY 4 AP \\'ire nings & tires $:!2\).1 646-8686 *-_~_8J!-962S _Grands " ........... $.'l9S 644-2196. GARAGE SALE Traller hitch · '7 l · '7 3 M i1cellantou1 8080 Musica l lnst rum't1 8083 ?"ORGANS* OLD Vlctorian. dres:icr $175. Reconditioned ColOt' & B/\V J\lustang $30. Third n1embt'r B:ild" 11 • Conn · lla1nmond · Jo"rench tapestry $85. P<l!!or T. V.'s; Ph ono graph,.; PositracUon W'lil fl Is MINK COAT DA VINCI cu·conllnn tiO t\uy,·01 · Kunb<i!l • ~Tt'Y •• table $85. Uphols. tniJ Sten."Os; Bicycles Teak Din l\lustang·Torino $60. Ba"s \\'/!'ll'ln<l ,\.: 11111.,1,. ltc.~Jhl'CS ·Thomas· ·_·J.nl• bench $75. Hat Rack $45. Tb! & Chl'S. Beds, clothes, Pana..soni.c S·trllck Al\1/Fi\l shK'ts and caSI.'. ()rii.: flha · \\'urliller. _ Old chandelier $77>. Antique lamps, toys, kitchen appl, slereo with turn table SIIO. P.lulti Color. Checker board Si300.1$ij() or l~l vlr Opcigun ................ $150 " Banjo $75. Plus nlOre, :;,i73 lawn nlO"'l't'S, crpts, books, Belo~ 3 pm 991-2748; after design. Knee len~th. Ranl h 96.i-5'171 LoY.N'y Spinet ........ $19;> 1''1Ul'Way Dr, CJ.t ~lSti:l records, much, much moi'E'. 997-7976. \\'hilt• & arJ:enta intnk 1 LUDWIG _ d .. 1 \\'urhlLer Spinet. ni'W • , S~99 1 --squ:u'f''i. \\'hill" n1Ink 1 ° pc. runi ,SCl "}11 * WIN FREE * MoVJNG, must sell. Enll')' Sat. r.ray IS, 9-1. No '71 Toyota 1600 kn..•tc·hed tlbl fur ,,11tflr, J zilg;? rymbals, $3JO. C111J ORGAN LESSONS hall set· 2 lge shag n&,'li' p I' e -b&les. UNITARIAN IKU,.rh [lN'k£'lS. dbl brc•a,.h'(I c'::"::.·:::-"°=·-------1 black ~ug. cou~h & conto~ ~Nl~"EltSAL.IST Ot~.RCl-1. Kc\\' brakes. tires & batt. l '•.'t.!n Pai I $3500 Bo f' d Of F & E I 8QBS FULLERTON MUSIC chall' . .Fri«c. log", d•••"ttc 1259 V1c1oru1, C.1\1. l::asl of Koni shocks. Dyna-tuned. t ts"' · t • ni 1'' c. um. qu P• -Li ... --n1-, & a--.1-...11 " "' .., kl appr:Hi;Hl '52000. N £' v L' r 1 --181!111:.uclid fountain Valltv TYPIST/RECEPT. -WU """"""" sc>t & uuscel. 1t c1ns. uroo \W'Sl. Low n1ilea:;e. j\lany cx:tru!I. \\Orn. An xln't.buy.at SlOOOlBE.\trr. 7· ('Ql'lfl'l'o..'ncc th), 6 557-4836 " Some expelrence llt.'C. GI\)\\" Appra ise rs Liquidators Auction•ers _<iJ!.:_3bll. , 4 POSTER, dble bed ~~~· ~~~~~· :r\, _~~Yi or ~!'ol ofr. t-or info C11ll I l~rhL . chrs; Perft>cl {~111d l'l2 ,..., HRrbor Fullt!rton F.qual opportunity cniployl'r 1t1/F lng lrvine Co. $•l50. 1110. (714) 992.-1190 (714) 992-1191 KING!llZE be<'I, xtra ftrn1 iv/matcn. dresser &! Anytime. 8.12-6121. :-..:1crthcc $300, \\'kday.~ ~k,, 8711805 556-4170 . ~ ~c~, Incl. n1attress, bo_~ ~~~r.G~"J1~e'.a~p~kc\~ BARTLETT I lf7:-l'"(}2JO or e\es 67l-7&-l'.l. --~G~l~b:_·.:..o::.:.. ___ , ~ ~piings ~ frame. Slb.i. ilcck, Jols of campiui:; llEXCEL Skis, 190, "/i\lark-1 FLOOR COVERING I DKS $1J up. Exec. S\1·\'I rhrs u r ansen URGENTLY Antiques f aoos-Cats 8035 1 \.WOl'lJ\ $:J5 0.J. QueenSLZI! equ1p111'1, 70Xlt lLl'CS, t'l' Toct l!CC'I, Ski clothmg,i 788 w. 19th St., C.M . ~.i.112.1, ~~·y l'_hl''! ~~~',/\ Spinet Piano 1=========1 ·-~1-IJ. J~c. delJvcry. Usually Refr1g, & Misc. 'iterns. Sat. hkc ne1v, ~z 8·10, KingSILC Quallly 1·ustn111 flo o r J 1.•l'.'.'l' Oli7 \\ l9, C:\I, s.:~.<1. 5-IS-9583 FREE TO YOU! I -~me 1132-241!8. only, J-t.l Jtochester, C.1'.l. eornforter, 1'.1ade in Ger· covcri11i:;. f'e1tturin.t: Naf1·0, 1 Lll-_,_IOS ~'1' n1exlcrn de, i iO' n, NEEDED I , * ~~~TION., * ~ Vciy hontcly clght·"·cek old 17' SOFA, Green & Gold $60 CARJ\(.;£ SALE· Steel Bunk nu1ny, Ladies Schick Hood Ar111strong & Con,i.:oleuni. I \\'flLNUT Se~rc:tary d~·sk, \\Jlnut finish, beaut i f u I 1 C~flHf1\~J.,S & ,\N flQUES kitten. 1 1,'ablc/ocsk 'ol.'llh ~tool 1ur Beds $:JO., Couch, $20. lluu· d1yc1', call eves, Gu;tntn!l'crl 1nstul!:dinn $.·' R1~·1vel t•hatr & filing '~ablll•'I l"Olld. $._'IOO •• 1g.1R'.t!'i8 a-7 pn1 . ... I Sal '°" sw1, ~h•y 18 & 19, 519.4118 al!t'r :l. s.1n.gcr sew .maciim.e, $25, T\\'tn: $lj. Credenza, Sia.'. 675-;)()35. ·Pf'1·fo1'1Harll'I!. Ovl'r 30 ~·rs: I Sl 7.J. ·1~1054 <iftl'r ti:IKJ 10 i\:11 > . I Gt>.: \\asher $20, 557-a:i42 aH Typc\i•rilcr, ~2.i t-'r1zc, S25 CABINETS for Kitchen & f'xpc'r. p.ni. Sporting Goods 8094 121050slJo111eSl., ~'l"ITENS • I ers1an, 1 !'iusht:hrs ~:I $l5 S50 & Bath FREE ESTIMATES DESl'\S, dr.:ifling 1able. fil (' ·---'---- l'aN'lima. <'a. ~~~~:1~ ~ ~Yb r 1 1 d • DL:AL King Bed, dresser, & odds and' c~s. ' •1,1.6 11 Unfinished Prehnlshed I c·<d l ..li46·1442 C'arn-.. chairs, etc. Priv. SKI."· Lange \T-t· l 7 . 213-89'-4969 a-iG-9003 ac · ~nta e.I nilc stana, 5 pc scct1onaJ, \Yyngatc Circle, Irvin e. Counter Tops also EURAUTO pa1·1y. Sal. & Sun, Salan1on bmdil\hS, 191 c.m. ASSEMBURS & lrt~PN"~IOn dny llf Auct ion rocker & loot stool, hke ne\.,, 5.'l:l-~l Jor umc .\: 111\RDEN ENTERPRISES ,l!l:~Olti 492-G-1·12 tffll & cheap, aft '.'>, only. POSSIBLY THE Dogs 8040 mens golf clubs. 9 6 4 :'I dirccuons. 815 \V. 18th St. C. r.1. STUDF.NTS! . TE~Ctf~RS: T Draiil'l' stet!! filing cabinet 53&-{}cl.10c.oc~--~~-~T~t1i Lt~i~Fr00r ~T~ Gardenia, FV, 53l-25ffi STUPEND,\BLE Sec It To &JZ..1.&12 y~Ar-tPUS 1oN1 .\~11.l::LS I 10 dra"·er sieel plan_ filins GOL~· Clubs, n1a1t·hed scL._, llJ::LD. Extensive collect ion • PUPPY WORLD e DBL bed "'/nu hdbrd & lichC\C It Sale~! Ne"" ,\10VI~G. Player piano ur O\l'll ""' iec s. r(cr any , l';1binel. Sp<>e dee printer. lll.ln's & ladies, complete, \\'atch dogs -German Shep. tran1e, t\\'n bed cotnp. used & a bused Junuturc Rolls, \\'asher & Dryer, Eu 1'.0 P f'an 1·;11· v..i!h ; l\fakc offcl' 673-11:1.1. b.1i;. caddie, nc1v ~:1 cost. PACKERS VOLT ol carriaga;, buggies, b rd ,~·h ah T . 1 .... 1 • • coo11hna1ed rnn·11I ~l udy • . _ __ o·31 """· b k"--d -·"k' · e s, ...,,, u uas, 1 n y 11• / ram e. t"" st. appliances, tv's, tovs, bikes, pallo tum, dining rm set, · PED S s I • ~ I Ul' UU«f' s, ~ Jes, surr!C'S, Poodles, Pit Bulls, Cocka-I' U bed B&\V TV " 1 b lam 2 itenf'rary. F:ar11 un I v . I L·SllA -d~sk !J. : y,·1ve .,=o.::=-~~----= neti11nt Personnel wagons, road i·arts, JXlllY :.o -a~·~y • go lanips. books, picturt:>s, suit e ec roont, ps, chrs & ct-edits as you go. Phair S25. Side chairs $2. SURF' OOARU & flack, $1.J. Alajor Medit·al 1-'lan f'd.t'l s. l.ady Victoria coacll poo, Old Engl ish, Samoyed, i·ond. 673-496-l. cases dishes clothes bric· c1xl tbls, sofa bed EURAtrro Gi3-l~ \Vork desk $20. 4!1~;,()25 Dcy,·e}·-\\'ebcr prolcssionaJ Now Avallahlr-& ~ltllcr's Coach. ~~~~~b H~Uki~t ~~ J SHHH! FURNITURE a·bra~. all kiods 01' Used ~~-~~~~~:!~ p;~~. 6if.Z~1~~ Biiy Lido Bldg, Suite 102 OFJ.'ICE fiu·n: <Jesk, chairs, nlOdcl. $TJ. S.16-5131 Ten1porary Sl!rv1c11 · xi . . Sc AT WHOLESALE I Usables. 2560 New Po r I 3700 Ne1\'JXlrt Ne1vport Beach 1nisc., metal "·ork table :n CAL model 39-A l\larlin, 3848 Campu.~ Dr. Su ite JOO I Bnu ing irons, an l 1 q·u e rvice lt1ost Breeds. Open , Hlvd., CM, Jla1n·5p_m. ~ll~K COAT. full lf'nmh, ' "· 8'" o= N-.. pon ""n<·i • <-"'1711 • sadrlll!~, ;1nru1uc trunks, E\·es 5315027 89'2020 •· SCRAM LETS I 'ol.'/u."'vrs. ~ f'VC. ncvc1· fired $80. Sat & SWl. '"Equ·" O~ppo t ,. 1 »ru-liorn chaiC'S, longhorn h(irns, . . . .,.. 'l'll!NKLTS, TllEASUH.ES nal.I blk cross niink \V/ • _'!. r-.IAROIANT Calculato~. 1378 E. Loi;an /l.ve, C:\!. ... r . .i:..mp uyf'r I 11agon & buggy \\•ht'f'IS, ~st..e.~~~~J·c:: •. c1~U1c GREEN Satin Sofa Bed, 6 i\i'(O 1'1ll.FLES s,\LL 111•.11ch Pill . Box ~at. Cust -r-.ldl S·m Ef,\, TRlOFA, siO. POOL T,\BLE 7x3!2'. slate ha.t'l'J{'SS('s, horse co 11 a r '""'" Gold chrome dinette chrs Sal., !\lay Ill, 91.1m·'1pn1 ui.idc. 1 7.t Pl'.'rf l'Otirl. ANSWERS · & SZO. Offer/trade. a4S-9832 ood nd $1 7 · VERY SPECIAL SITUATION 1111n'l.)r.;, new & used tack. ~::":~~'l. I Irvine area. Call wh.ite antirnre \\'ormv.·ood . l4l9 Si\NTIAGO Dill~!'-: $:!225. appl'sl, s.1.c $U!OO. I . to~, .!?. co ' J. tor gentttl lady ~·,s~·hool I AL.SO ANTIQUL ~.,,.., Occasional ~hr 6,10-441:.i r>;c11 po1t Beach, Dover ~heres ~2-1227 afl. 6 p.m. ' . I Pets 8087 _&_lo-_= _______ _ tee daughter. Top salt1ry . 1''UR;.;ITUltE SPITZ puppk-8. Regi:t.1.ered. -· ' J~LYMUUTl-1 RO,YAL Syste. m -Drop Surct.y -_Onion -. l,.11.t'ky -ll'OU LD YOU ADO~ ,1 Swap1 8096 f-ch-n··• """ -n-' "" ~r 0 ·11 ll•tl Id • ,·,, .. .,,.,.. N~ flufJ" all '"'" •·· DRESSER, triple, Jrarned CON"ll'-''',\'flUNAL P C I c • .. ... ..... ....,..ce .. "°'' ,.....r· ,. r. 1 1c , ,~uc tu........ ..... .3 \1rr .... c pe..; v c.v 1' runt Desk, like ne1v. JI.lake u1111ce -YOU SI h l"'T' A"'"''' 10, .. ,, O"I . llOll BusineM kill · rv>rfeel for b;_ .. _._ •-mirror, 2 nite stands, · t:HUl<Cl·l ' ~~ · " " " ,., "Y TR \DE 13 I bot . s 111nlle1Lr· .....-uu ...... y gu"". Dani.sh oiled \\'alnut.. otter. Antiques, posture !'he lrou~!e 111.lth l1cal!h J.)og's, 540-().')83 . Cats. 1 •• • rac ng sa. • b)': oUice in AM. Lile home-ANTIQUES Call 96S--7Wl Ka-8660 i 1:1. SHOP items & mal.Crials 6" pectic King mattress, ~m food s!Ol'(IS 1s, their produc~s I ~?.-HJ3G • ' ccrt1f1~ l~A. fully eq. ~nt makin dutie11 in Pl\f, Bus· Excellent srlectJon. Furniture GREAT DANI:: Puppies. benl'h gnndcr, macb rools, binoculars, 3 wheel bike, make you hl'a!thy but I heir • L-Ond. 1'or VW, gd runrung incss OOJple W/girls 6 & 10 .;. Al'Cl'SSOrit>s. Rcar.o nahlc to good home. KJNGSIZE lxlrm set, xlnt 'l'l. cal rtlle, guitar & amps. J\lisl'. ~2-7654. I pril'es n1ake YOU SICK. Pianos & Organs 8090 t'Oncl. no denl!i. :>57~. "''ill provide private quar· HOUSE OF STUART 1\ft J pni, 83&-55:J2 cond, t'Orner unit dbl bed, !.>rill press, bench sa1v, ATTJC SALE by Calif. I CARPET H-QUSE 1 1 WE'RE DIFFERENT TRADE Ne~ OB 1notor for tl'n>, food,. In lov~·ly hon1f' I 3..,,; M. atn St., H.t:I. • ,\fGJt1\N Puppies, ;\KC, Ch4!1'S, lamps & misc. r.lany Cllhcrs, like IJC\V. Sat B . . C ll G 'Id 8a i.i ton pick up. Phone w pool, .. PllUKI,. car, and I Tucsuay·:s.atun.lay, ll<1in·Jf)m I show qualily. Mil,. kitchen items. 640--0872 6: sun on1y. lJi'li i:;, Logan aptis! 0 ege w .. 'I 2073 Ne\\'JXlrt Bl, C.M. RC'gardless of the ··fantastic 6-12-S:Zi. Mare c. h1ld·w11tch1ng, t'OOk· Sunil•Y 111,01_, 1 ,,,1 G-. 2552 6= ,911 <-v-.Fi\ bed l l50,· 'laytag A c 1\t J\1ay 18th 10 am to 5 prn. o-. "-~-' · __ , 1 i~r1ccs" that one reads :'."==------·I 1 XI .. ...... ,......, """' " ve, .. · 2201 Heather Ln Newport ••""e.<"""' openmg ..... e, aw· 1 · TV R dio HIFI St 809I d~~~n~r 0~~~~1~~ :J::~ 1 AppliaMel --8010 l\1UST Sacr1!1re Lo v ab I c ~1Ts~j~;~ici~~dlc~l,c:oi~ RUl\l:\IAGh SALJ..: Beach t23rd & Irvine 1. ~~~;; ~:::~~-;ri~; rc;r~1;.11:1~ ~~u~titi~~ ~ec~tps is p~~!! ' a 1 ' Juan Dlpistriino, clol>c to -· -·-· -· -Cl11huahu;1, 2 yrs. Adult Ct!I 5-la-46..'H. * THE BIG ONE * SUPER CARPET SPEC1.\L~ iJisralk'CI~ \\'c hor~r Bank about the same \Vhcrc ever SfEREO CLO~EOUT·Bl>low 81.'hools. ·196-l!JI ,\,l\I or SAVE TIME, hun1e only. $20. :..la-O?LS. 'UPEf S..\LE F . St. John's LpJsc. CllWTh, 90 yds, _an!lque. gold nylon Amcril·:.ird. I )~OU .shop. \\'e: lose very_ le~· ('OSI l~annon Kardon. SColt 400-31'.62 P.M. MONEY & ENERGY I lYr-! old Samoyed. All shots. 1 Santiqu~s · lanlP~ d~~t~ ~3 O~a~et; A~c., C.Jl.I . Sal., plush. 1;)() yds sea foam g1.1.1 t-'RI::E ESTJ~IAl'ES I !;~~~ by bl"rng undersold. Sa1,1.~u1, i:nany more. ~.LL at W AITERS SllOP UUNLAl''S for l'C(.'On-Very hi t•ndly. CaJ I JcH, etc ... FM. 5 to •7 PM 609 1 ay , t , : 10 4. 'pn1. plush. Pub llllrrors. &l2-2'l.1J (i.ll-ISll2 \\r 1c difll'l'C'nt bf"Cau~e our '.\1untz Stereo-Pak, ~ W. d1uo~~• appli"",....i., U'l'l"hl """-· "°"" 10 Ai\1 6 P'1 'I Id Cdl'l MOVING mu•! ..... ll "'asher 54846:>4 . . . I siill•sn1cn listen hard to Coa~t Hwy., Npt. Bch. WAITRESSES "''"" ......... "' ...,.,..~. : . : . •• arigo • " ' """ ' NE'\\' PO\\'ER 1\1 O \VER. \1·h,11 you say. thry'r(' 6T:rli87 'l 8 tu", t b damaged & 11('\'o' Hoor IRlS!i SE'ITER Puppies, J1,10VING, no junk. Den & !iv ~'IC.dryer $rdU>., powc~~~·;~ CARPET; Priv. Pty. Like l\Iumy 2'l_. S,19.50. sensitive to 1\·hat you really RC 1 COLOR Co---• TV " mus e l'Wlmplcs. AKC. re<>"'d Chanipiori "m 1 .. rn, 6 ~ ~~-set, col -.· ret-o Payer ~· ~· new, 70 yds of Gold ~ylon "' R '"'"I 1 & 1 t th , ·~• ... ..._.ricrx·M fast f 0 T ! DUN'IP APPLI \"CE' co ... . " Y"' Llt'UlUI T11 n bed set etc .,., ~" Pl h 12 99 d M Ba ... ll·i.n:• wan t iey iave e ,·,.: 'n ti --' _ _. ttll;.. -•-• ' · 1 '--"' ' " • lines. 6 \Vks old ~ & d tbls la · ' · -.r""""' us · · Y · rs. ca, • inventory to make the ·. e1..-en Y seiv•I..~ • .....,, =n~1~6;.~i5F.Jrn~S ,I 11115 /'O•c'ol.;;;:~~h~., C."i\I IIAR~!AUIN ~rcat Dane TV:nTustin.' ~i4 rrurror, = ~ Dr Turtle 6·16-7121 or ~1521. Misc. Wanted 8081 , [J('rfect n1atch bet\\' e en ~96cc2'--=2'25cc3'=,._=~~~=I WEST, 110 \Vest Pi1..'0, San puppies. Xlnt tcmpcrment, TURQUOISE. individual L'Ol· \\'ANT TO BUY: 01"gan & Organist, Piano & 21" i\L\GNAVOX Color TV Clemente. rREICHT D.~~1,\Gl!: S1u.E, A1'l:. 5'17-3161. WANTED GARAGE SALE, SAT.10 -2. lcction. Sacrifice. Squash PLAT!-: BURNER iind P ianist. If you are thinking console . Very good <:Olldi· l-'===------1 nc1v !lot l-'Ou1l Re!r1g· *USED BRICKS * Weber BBQ, l!tereo, 10 spd Blossom ne<:klace $27 3. about a keyboard tion. $90. 543·8703. WAITRESS I ~·111ton<, \Vashers, Dryers & GREAT DANE Puppies. 870-4564 Boy's Bike. 20811 Skimmer 968-IOiO MU;T~1.~1:~~j~·{0;1dJ. I instrumen1. give us a 11'y. "!~~~~ Must be weU ·groonted & Dishwashers, Nciv \'.'ar-Rt-asonablc 10 good home. Lane, lat Endeavor) ll.B. \\'e thi nk you'll agrel· that ~ ~ bl E I .. ~-" 8 A ""2.J Afl l pm, 836--5532 962_9480. \VATERBED. Queen sz. \VA~T TO BUY: \\e·re dllfcrC'nt. l ...,,... I~ relia e. XP<'T he prw. ranty, ..,-.,_..__.n, of , :..., •WVESEAT & sofa cusrom \\'/fnn & hdbrd. s~tbf>st co·~1· MUSIC _r ... ,,,.,. ...... .. ,,..,. ..-~ .i:.. " "'" n1a e very ou qua, never or.ses QVVV offer. Bookcase & Ln1ps. l\ilULTI 1 11 N rt t H bn C :\I · S .... , & S'•lo••I 1 . \V,'11'"-er, 0 ·nta ,\na, n"ar SCl lN,\UZ'"llS, 'Jiniat"-, d e ~ I H anLll PLAT!:: BUHNE:K 111111 , .. .., _.,._. 5930 \V. Coast Hv.·)', NB ll11rbor. 979·29'11. AKC. 9 \Vk ~. Chainp sire, used, usually hm 968-7910. _, • ,,.71~on nny t'Oll< · 'e\\·po a6,.a;2_1t"' " · •-~~=~ -----' f al "W-&in·I ' .~ • """'' * ;,.i4.3,117 * "tQ'"V \VAITRESS & hea!.I gil'L I •• REBLT Y.'ashrr, dryers, t·in e, ;> "' . 12 Custom corner cabinets REG. Appy ~tare spirited Brookhw·st al Tall>crt, f'V Genral · 9010 E.1.pd & over 21. Apply 1n I d~h/wsh. $j(} & up 10 l yr 'f\.\'O Black Toy Jloodlcs. with 4 studio beds & spreads , bifl g~ntle $150. days/eves. . E51'ATE SALE \VANT ED: Cheap, used 96.'Hi711 _ pl'I'!lOll bet 3 &: 5 pm. ga!'. 5'16-a218 or ~1620. ~ys, 7 ~ks _old. &IS-0142 or comp. $ZJO. 675-3311 963-7132. . ;.!:';,1Sa'46l:;11·•81, Upstairs, chlldrf'n's swini.: set L'IELD'S wa"•ho""' ,. '•, 400 CALIF. Leisure Boat Clu.b C.Olonlal Kitchen, 512 \.\' · 1---- . c: • """l aft 11 '·J O R G A N G Id ""-' Phone -'19."i-O;;i3-I r .... ""' '"'" If 19th St.£.M. R1nt0 Walh•rs/Dryers .,..;)-.«JV .). XI t 4 M pl t • BR 7' ·" e 1 ng Nl'\l'flOrl pianos & ol'gans. ne\v & 0 cr:s a new concept !0 S2 \\'k Full mainL PUG PUPPIES, Ah'.C, I blk s~, a.~t n:w ~~ & 96Gy2~7900khano~· 89s~:'13:.ual. $300. KING O'Lawn forv,-ard thro11• \'.'ANTED: s.~crctary <!csk & used Spinet!!, grands, boating. You can now be in WAITRESS wanted, fuU/part · · · male l (a'ol.n rnalc (2131 ho . ·~ 557 ~7 • ......, ""· chair, C'..oorl t-on<lition & pla)·e-. Go'-out for a position tu become .• time. El lttatadot, 1768New·1 * 639-~ * ' ' x spnng _,, -oo.;i reel type oom'I P'J\\·er RealiOnablc. 642-3293 ... ,..:.:,. n.0-t·al•s w/opuo· 0 chancr m. ember or thi1' • \'T G f • 676-57W Lam n-__ _,, hold \VESI'ERN saddle, xlnt cond. mower 175 lirn1 rice '"'" '""' port Blvd, Costa Mesa. Ap-,.L\ r\ · ~ Kf'nmore auto , p.°"a.ss ............ e er. Sacrifice $50. P · \\'A.~TED: 10.12" table saw, to buy, Kawai. Stein\\'ay, mos~ unique otJcr n ply in penon between 2 &: 5. ~·a.sher, $.'JC) each, Gu a r' ltL\LE Shetland Sheep dog Black step table 12131592-5080 831-1728 alt 6 pn1. 6 inch jointer, drill press. BaJdv.·ln, Ch; ck er in g, boo.tuig. ~e off~ . year WAITRESS _ i-'ood & tree delivery, 5-MHS61'2. :{+~Jf.rs. 7 mos. $1.25. Call I TRUN6~W29~E:~329~ be TE.'\ T~-&\DDLE, x.lnt SPRING SPECIAL ~ii off Reasonable 5'16-1652 Yamaha, Kimball, \\fur .. etc. round boat~g 1acil.1Ucs .at Cocktail. No dummies. Sirl':. NE\\/ Litton ~Ii c r ow ave COCKER SPANIEL Pups. l UM!d a.a twins. Modern. Xlnt cond, $150. -normal price on Stearn WANTEO:BAND SAW GARDEN GROVE your conven1en«i7 with rruJJ. Blue Beet. 10'1 21.st PL , N.B. ~r~~i ~'!.caJ75.d~~~cL blonde n1ale. l blk & tan cond. $49.50. 557-2691 Ca LI 552-Gl90. ~~5~ your car Pet 9-19-2620 FIELD'S (n41 638-2770 involvement. f\o upkeep, WELDERS . len1. 8 \\'ks, &b--0829 QUEENSIZE md bed I . lai72 Brookhurst St. G.C. payments, C1?5ts et.c. t~t OVEN Rang ink fri.a: , .. e-a· , Household Goods 8065 FISH tank.sand fish for sale. ' boat O'ol.'tlership entails. Joor AND 1 • · e, s ' ' TOY POODLE Pupp ies, Llke ne"·· Cost $325. Ask ing 1_10 gal. 2_10 gal & 1_5 gal. Musical lnstrum'ts 8083 more details contact us a.I GENERAL S HOP I combtnahoo 67 ., u;!i 1 t; CONT I N U 0 VS FREE our Otfice 2815 Newport ~.. fl). ('aC'h &16-5;;5:> $19;). or Best ofter. 6'Trl8·U Jl.lED. furniture, 1/3 cost; I ~ftt---0861 or 5i&-Si60. FENDER Rhodes pinno ·73· ORGA:~ CLASSES FOR Trail Rite Trader lt1fg. 3t~I ADMIR,\L REi-"RICERAT-I 23" TV .. Scars b es t.: 9' CALIFORNIA Pepper Stage model. good cond. ADULTS. Every Tuesday Hl\'d. (Nr. \\'oodys WharfJ W. Central, Santa Ana. !No OR, lrostfree. Gold, 1-1 cu fl. Free To You 8045 Garage Sale 8055 \\'3.She r/dner co111bo, sllH tree. $40. Fountain \'alley. ,\sking si:;o. Gar9. ::1s-7136 7:30pm. Start any v.·eek. N.B., 675-8866 or hlarbut., phone call11 please) Likl' N('v.·. $125. 557-4062. u/v.·arr. 963-1157 aft i. Tom Dieterich in charge. 1111 Back Bay Dr. !Behind r RF.: E. 6 mo n i h o Id \rflc s1\·prs, elcc nr scrubber, Much more. Sat/Sun. -Coasl Music Costa Mess. Newport.er InnJ Newport \\'HO WANTS TO WOH.K? f~REE PICK UP. REFS. GERlllAN S!lEPllERD to reel h\'n m1\T, 10 key add, 493-4016 492--04t2 Buy a new 'i-1? Your older \ ~11\RTlN D-18 \v rcn~e S475. Ne1vport IDvd. a l Harbor. Dune!!, &io-4540. DRIVE A CAB1 APPL. & SCRAP J\IETAL good hoinl'. sm appl, crys chandelier, model car i!I in big demand I Xln't cond. Wurlitz('r elec. 6~2851 CHOOSE you.r hours. work * GT:i-5258 * * 54g.og79 * 10xl8 t t St ufter vibr . . . Sell it fast with a piano, $2-15. 673-0636 for youneU, be your O\VJl • · en · a · Machinery 8078 boa. Men or 11.·omen. Can I SE,\R'S Kenmore washing Darling 8 wk old kittens.. 5 111-19. 416 Printtton, CM. be alightly band1copped. machine, $70. Grea t Box ll'ained. GARAGE Sale, Boys & girl!! B JAY Winch, 12 volt DC, Neat • Cle11n Appearance. working condition. 646-9264. }o'l"("C to goc:xi hom<'S. · c 1 o thing, Poker table, Proof Coil Chain \Vildcat, Vts .. retired. Age 25 lo 70. Auction 8015 67I>-1J.l5 evenings. 1·:ir1>et ends & cut squares & & Cat hcnd, $200 firm, Supplement your l1'(xime. FREE KITTENS, l grey & ml.SC Fri & Sal. 50&i 536-3520 Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a AUCTION v.·hitc, 1 hlack v.•/whl P8""S· Pearce. Huntington Bch. l-'~.-"----.---- day. Apply ln ocrson, AI~lEfUCAN JNDlAN "I ' 8 k H b k GARAGE Sale by Youth Miscellaneous 8080 Y.llow Cab Co .• 186 E. 16lh "a e. ~· s. s r n. ARTIFACT 557-2737 Group. Zil6 Francisco . -:-- St., Costa Metia. Will iam H. Price Collection Drtvc, NB. (Just oU Irvine 4 AP "'U"e .mags~ t~s $220. WOMAN to take care or Approx 500 items. 70 pieces GER.,IAN SHEP. Puppy, U Blvd.l Sat. 9 arn-5:30 pm Trailer hitch ·. TI· 73 l\1us· ln·-"d F~ In to l SIOUX be d work "e. "''ks, to gel home. •. ' tang $30. Third member ~':°1e~. ~ll ~1;:, ~ pn1 ~ASKETS, nu:;,Y APA6.JE; ~ Sun. noon·:>.30 pm. Positrachon unit fits r.tus- Sun., any time during ~·k. 50 OLD BLANI;E'J'S & GER.'1AN SHEP. Puppy, 11 I i-~ URt:llruRE, appliances, tang·Torino $60. Panasonic * 493-9252 • RUGS, sizes up to 10x15 ft. wks. to gd home. I clothing, much, much more. 8-track Ai\l/Fl\l stereo with WOMAN .,,.anted for full time POTTERY-~ pc:s. signed ~6634 1118 Ch a r I est on, nr. tum table $110, Before 3 pm work in sportSMa.r shop. ?-larie. 185 pcs. in all FREE TO YOU _ Very t "airvicw & Paularino, C.fl.1. 997-2748, after 997-7976. Exp'd only. ~ In eluding pre-O>l.umblan. homely eight-v.-eek old kitten t'ri-Sat·Sun Balboa Peninsula Point :=.!;Y;A;.C;;?.H°'T~R'.'IG~G==E"'R-1 Old pa'ol.·n je~·elry, paintings ~!}.>1.138 JUter 5 GARAGE sale:. Port . ESTATE SALE by famous Indian artists. dishwasher, braided oval . C · I Progre!lsive Marine Hanf· Effigy. bird & ~ocr * WANTED * rug, misc. furniture. Cheap! r 8u.r1n11ure.,.,_.hln8a. Cryslal1, ware ~1lg. has opmlna11 for stones. DALMATION PUPPY 119 39th St NB Sat only. I \'er, . UM!. y appo1n . , Call: 998-5037 !Anaheim) ' · · ' n1('nt only! \ ambltious serious, prod uc· Prc\'ic\v Sun .. ~fay 19 AN1'Q Desk, & Tb!. Lge Gn-5984 9-12 I\oon Uon ..wrker tn Yacht Rig· '-'·I JM1·7 Pl'o&[)Tu T\\'O 1-IEALTHY LONG HAIR Oak DIR Tb!, 42" Thi Lmp, BLACK .....,.1; .. •r. '"•-a Ii d atng, Splicing, Swaging. Ex· ... 1 e, on. · cs.. BLACK MALE KITTENS. Bar & StooJa Sofa Bed .,..,,. ... ... per pref. Apply In penon. fl.lay 20 & 21 &t&-0046 G1'5--0922 ' ' \l.'alker, cushion Niagar-d 770 W. 17t h. Costa Mesa. Eves: 7:30 PM P,\SADENA F'REE TO YOO: Lab & cycle masMge chair. CIV IC AUDITORlUtif Husky mix, 1 weeks old. GARAGE sale: stove, ~ llreplace screen. Lawn **'*** WALTER McQUINN US Ledroll ~guna Beach You 11,re the winner of TWO l'REE TICKETS to the S...them Callfomla MOBILI! HOM6 SHOW Ma)! 18th lhnl ~-at the ANAHEIM STADl\JM llXIO l!J•1' Q>ll'lt Blvd. - DON AlcLEOD, Phone !>IO-l69'1 dcyen , washer, homi & car mower, clothes 548-4310 . AUCTIONEER , items 9-6 Sat, Sun. 8081 AR11IRJTIS!!?! Maybe we I (213) 447..sG20 ST. Bernard, female. 4 yn Sterling, H.B. can help. Contact Carl at * Col R f B-ly * old. -· O b ed I'° t. All Week tll Soldl Stove, the Orange CowOy Mental • ' • 1-· Loveti chlldreri, 548-5579. refrig, dressers, b dnn si:t, Health in Newport Beach & ~~lf'1~ FREE doc to approved treettr, stereos & much 645-7410. NATIONWIDE home. Rhodesian Ridgebck more. 1022 W. Wil'son, CM.J _O::H:,N""'SO;:N~3~hs-p_oo_t~board~. LICENSED. B 0 ND ED, Hound, AKC. 494-1'1&3 eves 16 FT. boat, car, all kinds of $75. Johnson 51.i hap, "°"il' INSURED FREE: 6 wks old Kittens, goodies. Sal & Sun. 1550 shalt. $165. 54$-4934 MEMBER OF NATIONAL !!,~~;'*,.en, C\Jle &: health,)i Miramar Dr in al I e y, PLACER gold in natural AUCTIONEERS ASSOC. ~ B&lboa Penln. form. For ln1onnalion call 610 So. Broadway S.A. FREE KJJTENS GARAGE & House Sale. ~Th48. ssg.,.2399 ' 54.l-2915 CUTE Everything must go, Sat &.TRAMPQ co::,.,:.:,::;.UNES==-. -lor--lhe-I Bicycles 8020 6'.>{i6?4 Sun, :ll9 16th Place, Costa home. •all sizes', From $1'8. . Calico Kitten, I wk1. 1tlesa 8:!M-9:li8 or """' Ul24 RAU:IGR 26" 10 I pd . ~ Al. ~ &4~5107 GARAGE SALE, Sat. "°" TWO Good Used BARBER · most oow • ..,-J. -PEKINGESE, white ftmale. 18, 10 am-5 pm.. 234 Hafd ams. Wort perfectly. $100. Call ~l.390. Hu bad .mt& 64&--1497 er Dr. Corona Del Mar. ea. 846-1187 Cameras & Equip. ~ 518-'152l SAT. ...; IBih. Eastbluu."G"'lRL~';;S-.;SttnaraY~-~Blk~•~llS.~ BLACK Minolta. SRT 101, FOUND, c.n•t keep, Fem Btnedt B.$. Troop 333. 8U med. Ne 0oJt HOUM, flO. cue, 58 mm. J.4 MC whit< .,._, Old Elwlloh 8llon Ave .. N.B. Call 83l-3'29 Sal, SUn. I • • . Each DAILY PILOT Winner Gets T-wo $2 Value Tickets 2nd Annual Southern California MOBILE HOME SHOW .. < .::> . MAY18 MAY 27 ANAHEIM STADIUM "The West 's only show exclusively designed for manufactured housing ." . ' Doors· open 12 no<in weekend s & Memorial' Day; 2 p .M. wee kdays .. Admission $2.00 adults; $1.00 .youngsters 10 to 16 LEARN BOATING SAFETY SAIL OR POWER FREE a.ASSES By Balboa Power Squadron start J\ton., June 3, 6:30 pm Ne11'J'l0rt Harbor Yacht Club 720 \\'. B11y St. Call ~9978 !or details. NEED Crew-Female prefd. So. Pacillc cruise July '7+ July '75. ~ expell5e • .JO' l'ulter. 54>3110. KLEPPER AERIUS Ka)'a.k· Sailboat. 17' Dacron ~lam & Jib, seats 2. Tip. Top 5hape. UX). 557-1'126 WIU.. TRADE l9lJ l\10DEL A, mtth restored for sail or harbor boat. 673-6JiJ Boall, Malnt/Sar. 9010 Salvage ship repair, hull cleaning, iru!pection repair, prop1, zinc, etc. 548-125.i. EXPER. Call George Chilson. Repair Refi niat\ing etc. 675-1516 or 642-4~ Bolts, Marin• Eq. 9030 WARNER. velvet d r I ve , marine trans. Uke ..... 327 Chevy, Also, Olrysltr M48S Royal marine, xlnt repl11cement engine. BeSI otr. &H-L.?ilj GREY martrM' t n 2 ,i n t . w/trans., 1011 of eAtraS. 7l 4-889-61J.U aft 6 CROY."N MARI1''E ENGINE 3 10 I tr.1n.s. 110 HP. Makt oUer i141$46-S569. Trailer, 1972 Amer ic a n / Tandem-»Z' tio.1, all .,,,.._ $6Z. OHl6l5. ,.,. SWORD nsH PLANK. st&lnlea 1tetl bu c It et. m-zm«~ PIH• all -!Ill 333 to claim J'!NI' UcalL (North OMmb' ~I ~ nwnber ll 151().!llO). RA>lcllor' !ena, UV lllttr, mix! T 12 wb, -GARAGE SALE. All di.)' Sal ROLL Top De1I<. S' IOfo, ' tocl!U1ee.bl• Nlced X I ffiEE t0 --· Mole • 8lln. lBl5 'l)nlln Ave. lrtl Potted F""' PlanU, $21.5. MC Jtokkor 135 mm, Sette:r-/Sbep., 6 mos. tlad O:wta Mta Mlsc ltem.-a, 833-°'6'1'. Ttio DA\LY PILOT ma kes It eaay. Just chectc Bolts, Pow•r ~ 1.JI Tello $6il 21 mm 3.5 "'°"'· IW2-<l260 GARAGE SALE, 3:ll airat. BELT.s.uIOEll throughout the cluslfled section for "•d•" Mating .,fn-22 rr. Eddy Crall cabln i'J'~ qle S70. Phoflfl 6 WEfK old calJco tmna.le Ba1boa ltland. ~. sat 4" lnclud belts. Used ners' nemes. If you find yo ur name i~•t c~ll ~2-.567&. crut.-r. Xlnt TUM.Ina CObd. Nl~N ~ 12 ~.., liltten. IU, Sun lU. •bout 1 hr.~ llJ&..:!EI E•t 314 •-twee n g am a nd 1 pm I • 12.000. C.11' (213) - ijlffiQui: oak ca r N•d •m ~;n Leat'h'er 641rmG ' HOUSEHOLD &.#a ard en DATSUN cam~r. &lttp1 4, "· 'uw • • • • • 0 JN .. e ,,. pwtNSXL19'1llboud.wttll eldebolrd. 8n&rUfull CllRI, Xlnt 1 conr:l.. Dtll rn.EE• beautiful PIPPB. 9 Ilana. lSll4 Nuaau Lane, like new, lncludes boot. r1ngemant1 to pick JJ P yoor licket1 et 1ny conwen .. ftt triuk.'t, Ntw ·~· Xb:lli ta.,$14t on.r. m..nzr wkl ollL l'lmalo, small Hunt. Belt, MKl67 16!0. -DAILY PILOT office. <Olld., 6lWM3 Tiie ""=&:J:i ~AR~l3Sm,,: tell :" :i;:: 'lllb • OollY 11.=ci:., ~a:'=~ 120~ ~~ . •·.11..!""'-----------------...i ·n srAllCRAf"r. 1r1. lr.llL n A;,' &a ~ ollp --Plloc a.~ Id. -• RldhJlL !lat· -1 'Aroldla --•• ~ .~~~~=~=============~=====~j~["~oi;JJ.l~·~r.~1~~.P~--~1tr-t~~~- * * * * * • ' I • ' . • \ I ' ' • • • • • • .. DAILY PILOr ~rida~, May l/, l~/4 .~~~--~ 1;8~o~a~t1~,.:.p~-:";;"~'-;;;:--:;~9040:;;:l ;Af,i~rc~r~a ;;t:;;;;~-;:-;-;9~1~10;J;R;•;;<;V;;•h;l;cl;••;;;;;;;;;;;;;5;30;;R;••;;V;•h~l;<l;•;•;;;;;;;;;;;9:f30;l Trucks 9560 1 Autos Wanted 9590 BMW f7 \i Capri IREAOY to go. 25' Trojltn H'ANG \GLIDER. rag a 11 o I ' CADl'LACS ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11:;;~~;;"";;;;"-;"::;~:; ~ CAbln Cr u Iser type, ~'-$300 or best offer. '71 lnlL'rMtional trav~lall nir M 72 COLT w/swlm 5'ep. ~hrs on tlf'\I.' Call 645-1878. RV SPECIALS eonct P"'I'. brks P"'r . f'i!r Large1t SelKtlon M1l Mllll '" eng A: trans.· 12!1 gal. furl ttuto trans rndln.1 t!1'<'1i In Orange County eapactcy, l5 gal. '''"l~r C1mfMrs, Sile/ . h1·11vy dUI)'. 1rollor , hit ch 1 Coupe DeVIU~ • Sed•n Oe-M & capecity. SleePt 5 l'Qzy Rent 9120 69-lFTH $1995.00 Villes • E! Dorado& • Cot.·" O '' , Stand up head, galley, , I 0.R. HAAN, Inc. vertiWes, Also n1ru1y other 2 dinette. Boat lnVt?nlory ln<'l. 8 Cau1per s.twll \Yllh cargo '71 VW CAMPER •1..A.· o/c T~n Dodge ro20 E, 1st 5-11-44TI I ""lect Cud:llac Trade·irul. comapfl&, dual batterie.!i, 2.1 _.dool', xlnt t.'Ond, gd lile.e~r. "7 ~.., watt VHF SIS, 2 Oanforths '7l lacL 48" cabinets, 110 v., h:c Box Pickup 11''Carnpcr. Po\\•· 1 '74 F'250 4.'t<l. Auto., aU', I ,~·iiiiii'CiiiiiJ!i{ with lines, sea anthor. bait intel'i.'On1. $250. s.t5-M9J, rr S1ee1·ing, Po1vcr 10,370 rnl. t00856SI S·1999 tanks outrlggen; & b'I-Lo MU<'s. Brakes, Ail', 8' Can1J>E'r, I SUNSET FORD • • 1 b~ S' ;;i:oPtCANA S I e e per l I '"" c,,-•0n G-'" Bl"d. pumps $3000 or best offer 1 Good nd SAVE dua gas tunks. lo 1ni es. .,.,.,., u •v•... v T:".--• , 00· "•" .,,,. · she · CO " boot, ice , $1 SS \Vestn1lns1t'1' 636-<lOlO .:.V>:I! "'-"k s J'tl.r<.'JQ'14 box, water sink, $:»!. or 6 I 20' GULF STREAr.'1', "'all · bt.'St oiler. :i8I-19a9 aft 5 '72 OOOGE Adv e n tu l' e stroll&', trlr. 120 .H.P. ~lerc. FOR sale; \Vards tent trailer Series. ~~ Ton Pit'k-up., TOP DOLLAR PAID I/O, S/S radio, !'Ill'~: gocxt r...'Ond. 1974 Jict'nsc $39a. OPEN ROAD ' Fiberglass i11ell. V-8, R/H, 1 ~ lMMEDIATELY EXCELLENT ~~~:,nar~Y~~pa~~. Phone 847-5217. ~(~·ays,p~:·S3Jt~ ~~:s 8218: ~~~E}l~N ~~~; :~2EB':!r~E-~ !~~~~ $' ISCJbol.eOC1d< I$ dull elect. & pwr sys .. 2 gas Motorcycles/ ''knds. e •n zoo . At.Ito. & pis rW""ll I L%\I tanks, $3400. Nancy, Scooters 9150 HU·NTINGTON 'BEACH '73 ln!ernauon1tl ·4 ton pi('k • '70Bavatlas-3instock Jr~~QJ, fl'.lC.. 541>-1066 days. & 644-6333 UJl auto 1runs !o\v n1ilcagc at ry<tu1..'ed pn<-es I':.: eves/v.•knds. e SPRING e 02354R S:Z:f.'5 '--""-----'----' n BELL Boy 22' Sip!' 4. 6'6" LJC;1 1T \1c.IGHT I O.R. HAAN, Inc. t==: I Cabin "'/galley & Din. 213 •SALE • 18801 Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch. 842-2504 I 2020 r~. l ~t 5-11-4471, 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. rV"'lll.a,,. HP ~1ercrusier I IO . \\'c ~l'l'Vlce 11·n1tt \\'I' sell. I ~L CAi\li:\O, 'ti-1, vc1y . 642-9405 ~ ?.:n,r;~ Ca~~:fJ,!i-tr;i~c~~: ~? s~~;"' a~~1!~11~11;t'~J ~Jcction Antiques & Classic 9520 4 Wheel Drives 9550 ~~~~· ~::;ri'.;t~~111.~~~~~ll so~!~; I Ru~~~; 0;~!t~ \~~ftN~D ~ ~ fDc. EXlra.s. l\.1usl Sell, 5-48-6390 HARLEY-DAVIDSON 1964 lnl'l S.·out JeC>p 4 \rhl auto, air, 1i13-ll7J up 10 $65 _ oos...329.~ ~402 M3;tguente. i:"nrlnvay aft.3 01 \1csuruuster AUCTION ' s,10 .. 7 V 1--.j rt11ssion VH.'JO ,69 CONCORD 2?. fbr. gls., 9306 liolsa, \1estnu11s1cr. CARS OF STARS dr. ~~OO. :4C,d rond. -;Xii ans 9570 AUTOS IMPORTED , USE AVERY PWY EXIT. TIS 225, fuel 120, fa!ho., Beh~~J Brookhnrst & ;o.1:1gnoha SC>C"ond annual antique & aft. ;, Pl\1. 9560 G I 970-1 831-2040 • 4!15-49·19 tabs, VHF. out-rigs, bl. .S~J-6:.llt -i~ ·I !0 rlassit' rar au('lion C'On· Trucks '74 Ply \'o.va,;rr SfX!rls \'an ' enera I lank, 1un1-log. Immac.. Pr_ AWARD ducted hy Don Bdlt. l\lay 3W .s eyl auto 11·a ns 11111r d 1 pty. $1 3 ,800 . Qa~s MOTORCYCLES 18111 & l91h, 10 Anl. Aut:tion '7:-ICOURIEH, Tnron1a \\'hls, glass 111r ('Ond gaugf's p11r ' HUGE fTI4l523-3874, evC' & 11.·knd , , eatalog is Sl:JO. Chan1pag11c Special !:iuspcnsion, 1 5 · ' sir 1rhitr ~itlt' w al ls 49~19) Honcla, lr1un1ph~ Yan1aha previel\' 1''1i., ~1ay 17U1, 6·!1 th-es. A!\1/t''.\1 Tap c. BB.\1\TUXU\i2:IOO s:i4R7.00 SELECTION 20 · '· 16.SO Nc1Yport Blvd, Cos ta pn1. Adniission free 11·ith f'i.bt'1~lass Tonncau. 21 O.R. HAA{ll, Inc. OF ' DORY C'Onvei·led !o 1\1csa · catalog or $2.50. For n10l'C ntpg. 646-078.~ 2020 E. Isl 511-1-111 cocktail lx»ll. Diesel en~ine, 642-4345 in(o1·n1at10"" call i\1 o ,. i c o · FINE IMPORTS top, \\'indo\\·s, carved titlrr. '" 1973 illAZ A P1l'k Up. Slil'k ·71 I>ODGE \'nn. s!O\'l' ,'(I SJjOO, invested. Best oUer 11)() YAt\l,\llA, Elt:ctnc, \\'orld. 6900 .. 0ran~ethot~pr, Shif1 . 15.000 rnilcs. $2,300. iccbo\, onl,v $1000. e 73 DATSUN 240Z ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST or trade. 645-2200 days, s:l50. Lik_~, llCY:'.-Jneludc~ Buena Bark, !!0620, :>23-1.1~ 11:~~~86.~. I 5·1S-7306 (QJ:!GNNl 96'2-2301 eveningS /\\'e<'k<'n<ls. hclrnct, .J:.16-!Hl.J ask (or ·~11 F'OHD \\.'OODY. .Nor 1 TH,\DJ:: Nl'\\' out . lxtard ·1-1 Ply \'o~<tgt'I' Van :ns \'~ e 73 PORSCHE 9144 1974 BMW's 18, TRI·HULL. all glass, Ch1·1s 1111nr1 .. 71~g,T k~ccd1s, l'f'Sloring. I ~iotor for 1 :! ton pick up. t au!n trans \luted gla.~s 50 I 1No. 26251 in stock r('ady for ininiediate \\'alk thru bo\\', 60 h.p. QSS,~·Pioneer. 'il nl o d c .. l . st ,., a es I. 6-16·13'16. I bone fi 12...S323. arnp at·trr !·LI?. ~prings '. 73 OPEL GT de!1vrry. E.xcellent savings John9on, full canv{\s. skis, }.In l con.~!. ·~act ual n11,~. Rec Vehicles 9530 197:.; Chevy ~1 T. 4 \Vhcel ~r. g-~i~ges A~I .,Jad10 ~t'~r ~tr I Auto. 1617JES\ , on rcrna1n1ng 1973 models. bail tank, big \\:heel trailer. 111KC. '.i,nlet. ,\lie Slt.'~l Chcycn!ll'. Load~d. Xlnt BB2 AE·IX06-:l'.JO. $4i.l.>.OO. e 72 SAAB SONNETT I SALF.S..SERVICE !...EASING $1993. 5.:>t--0932 ~J_s}:_!-l!lc11on. Holds a bikes. DUNE BUGGY 48 hsp '6j l'ond. S:>.000. fl'cl·l-26.\ll. O:R., HAAN, l ~c. , I (79'7F'LY1 OVERSEAS DELIVERY ·i ' "· VIV toe & · d.. 1' 'l9. FORD. 1 ton . "'P You. imo L 1" '414 e 71 ALFA BERLINA '.ROY CARVER I 3 SI\1P Jack 20. Open ~71'" CZ 250 s ·I .. ' ' 1110 . . 11ve rain. S600 or offrr I I I nc. cruiser, lo\\' hrs. Sale 'p;irt-d c ' u~r. ~ 1e11) Xlnt running <.'Ond. thru-out. . s·r ·-102 '6."i FORD \:an, 6 t'Y , stic~ \6-l8EHB1 ROLLS ROYCE Brtt\\' nership or trade do11'n. con ·• inany exit as,-.~· Fre~h n101or. All exterior of .r;:i SGOO. 1 e 69 ALFA BERL INA Zl.\ F.;. 17th St. 1•493.9188. spati.·s. !lilusl sell, Saln. n1otor & rear s cc t 1 on .7~ rvt \ZD\ p u Bl ;i.IS-9S97 ZH:s-7S56 c hronied. !\l atellic an1/fn~. s2iq;i .. Pr.i'va~el: ed I 104;,11SE1 Costa Mesa • MG-4 444 2n' SC?UTHC01\ST In~ard. 1972 SUZUKI 400 T ,1 , C:rt'('n . $1300. 67:J-9JZ2. Al 6 ..... ,309 Autos Want 9590 1 & MANY , MANY 1973 Bf\1\\'. Driving this cnr1 , /trailer good c n · party. 1 ·a.,.-.. · OTHERS TO v . ' g 1 n e' superclean, n1ust s c e ~ \\'JJ J... BUY YOUR RECRE· tf'lls the "·ol'ld vou'rc a extenor needs \1·ork. best .sacrrti<.·c for bes\ o!ler. ATIONAL VElllCLE PAID I\lORE for youJ' foreign car. TOP C.\~!! fnr el~nn u.S<'d CHOOSE FROM pcrft>ctionist \Vhc1i you. S<'(> offer over .. .,j{) 842 3163 runnini: or 110L lndcpendent I · II •-----~-·---~--.\~3--'lti.).'I. F"OR OR NOT. CALL us l:.'.ll'S and trucks _ •T l1 you· kno1v \1·hy. This 1·ar ,. pays n1ore. Call fi7:l-3465 -"' t 10' FIBERGLASS -i n hr d '7:ZNORTO:\ COMi\t.\.NDO, FOR BES .. PRICE. OPEN Howard Chevrolet i<ts a sunroof and onlv .')800 yacht tender . SlZ). ::i97 Park 750 cc niusl see before ROAD, I! u NT I NG ·;-0 N ·1~ TOYOTA Pi ck u P 1 n1i. and \I c are still i;iving Dr, corner Ana.heini & Park Uuying: 'nciv. 5-l:>-3134 Bcsl B.EAOI, lSSCl Beach Blvd., 11·/fihcrglnss can1pcr shell. l\lacAr1htll' and ,Jantborcc it a sp('(·i;il ]01\' pricf', this Dr, CTII OfJE!l'. 842-:?JO.I. E.'\tl'as. $2'9:;{1. 49-1-78~6. :\e1\·~~~~earh V.'l"1.'k only. Call and a~k 17' GLASSPAR 1971. 12(1 HO:'>lDA :JJ() CV. 19i 3, -1.000 GAS TANKS installed bv 1!'.lfi.1 ~'ORD PICKUP ~~.uj~.!'..\~;1-~. lt'ase pl an. :'llerc 1/0, 12~ hrs. Full n1i, S.SOO. or take over pynits '.\liijor,1·ay. Trucks, ilnportS. F:XCELL~:NT i\IO'f?~· \YE HUY Audi ·9707 canvas., An1rnc~1n _ Tr Ir . at S.J.0.11 n10., 962-iO:fi 8.'>8 \\'. 18th, C.ill. S·lOO. 962·,il!'i:I T'.\1PORTED AUTOS CREVIER BMW S3~./offer. &t-1-309::> lira Pren1j(.f"1-;-C11111"ts. lgc, I '68 CHEVY. 6 cyl. __ long .u.l:'~· '1 B~ST rRr~E~ PAID I I 1 9 7 3 Al' 0 [ Th I s I Sales • Se:vice • Leasin$.;' DIVERS boat -PO\\'er Ca1 hl:te nc11·. S::'j ca·. Call Buy a ne\v '14? Your older I hca\'y ~uty sho.~~,..A -~ tiiL:;., r _ean ewis m~rts ~ 1 rt!<'t·ccdes-Benz look-alike is , :ZOS \\I. 1st, s A SJ.'>.:llil 13' 65 JIP ;\le~·· ~!nl rond. tif5-8I'i\i n1oclel car i.s in big de.n1and s~. 6~1.J-SO.W: tilJ--IO:l9 aft 611 6!> Hr.rOOr. C.l\1. ti-16·!130~ '~'".11 lahle :i1 a ha1.:ain_ price. r USED BMWs \\'/an{'hor Sl.G:'iO 1nel trlr. -~ .. f\.,\\\'\S\KJ ,A2 .1 t •.• Sell 11 fas! with al 61 FALCON Ranchct'O. (',\S!I FOR lh1s \\'IX'\\ only Illus r nt·I ./ '71200" 49t-32i8 5-i pm. 'con~'.-Call' ;lie!' ~ ,7 ;~~. Dail? Pilot Classified Ad: I ~ !300 • I t qt ~-~,\R i :u1119 bC' lca~cd) 0 11·. ./ "(0 200.! Boats, Rent/Char .. 9050 ;tts-l:\89 6~2-5678. . 6-trl117 a!1 6 ;i~t.-1010 I ,1.J-.123-7'!:)(1. { .69 2-1()() ·13 HONDA Trall io H 4-spd Fl~oa~tmmmmm;;;9;72;5;;F~1;a;t;;;;;;;;;;;;;97;2;5.;F;i;•;';;;;;;;;;;;;9;7;2;S~,~F;i;•t;;;;;;;;;;;;;9;7;2;5;1 ;/~'7;l ~B;';v;oc;i';;~~~~I 42' NE\\' Clnis-Craft NO SKIPPER IF !1.'SS than .ll(I nules, $2~, trlli-3.10.S. YOU'RE QUALIFIED 'i3 AT3 Yamaha 125 Endu.ro Ff:v·Brid~e Sport Fisherman. :J61 actual 1111. l\lL'ST St:LL Plush. Full electronics, fu11 1 ~!~500=. ~"~'--~11~'~'~ .. ~J~OLp~m~·--· gal!ev .. ~hov.•er, etc. ror 1~9 r,\.'\I,\llA 12.J Enduro, chart.er Uy day or \l'ef'k. 6 xllil cond. $32j. prople 1n:ix. Fish. cruise J1a.-0726 cocktail, ~tc· .. 6.J.5-~ ~ays, ·11 i\Qf{TON_Coc>_l_illi_\_N-'D0-.1 962·2301 e\enings/v.eek_nd.~. all nei\', "0" niiles, t'Omply Boats, Sail 9060 chOJlf!Cd, sharp. Jjl-6628 I SABOT : fihcrglass, ra i·r, ·7~ Honda 350 CB. Ex. cond.1 rcn!cr OOarrl, glass inasf. i::~~·as. 0~11.' 01\'n(•f. i\lov1ng ned, \\'ht & Blue ~ail. Super E';i._&.\6-1661 _____ ,j fas1 . SulX'r rond. $·100. '71 KAWASAKI 500 51\BOT: \\'ootl, crntcr hrfl. ,\SKJ:'\li S~. ti·ll-8133 Red sail, oars. \'<'ry ~oorl -HONDA 750 Kl-- cond. S,100. ~i:ib-60.sC , I=---------. --J111n1ac. Laguna. ~~·l·l6.l6 OLD South Coast Sa1l111i:-.~.) ,, .. "_L HOND' E . II Dinghy. Nc\1· sail 11·i!h !~ "'"'~ . ' "'.·~ ."<ce ent !railer. $300. 597 Park Dr.. t:ondttJon. :\!ust st:H. corner Anaheim & Park Dr. • 6.J.~SO.I • C'.\I ·7~ SGZU KI 380 GT, 3000 mi., AQ L'ARJL:s 23. 0\\n 1,., for like nc\v, mu~t se!l. • 536·5123 •' $825 + $43.21 per mo. Xln1 ____ c==~--- cond. Trlr. 9 HP mtr, galley '6!1 HON DA 350 CL. Good & head, slps 5. 830-4656 or runner, $400. Ca!! anyun1c S:ID-1807. l-'1·_:<::9'_:"·0c.7::58c.. ~--~-- 18 ' . CAT A il l AR A N , '74 Hondas i5!J & 55() "Unicom" \\'lth t r Ir . Xtras. $1950 & $1100 Extras, Good condition, 49,S-lli39 ssoo. 832-i'OJO FINN Pearson Bros. hul!. Seahorse sail, Collar Stars. 11:i th trailer, like ne"'·· SS50. 49~fi657. ·72 350 YA:'llA!IA :Hrce!, :o;lrit Cond. $j.j{). or Oest offer. 892-07·1~ '72 SUZUKI, i:JO CC , Superior st. machine. RANGER 33, race or ('l'ui~e. cuslon1 extras, 83!1-11.\-1-0 ~xtensive sail. & eJC('troni<' ·12 SUZUKI Blazer 90. 35:2 inventory: Price~ to sell 1o1al nu's. Peli cond. $300. no\\'! 644-5662 aft . .J A.ft 7 Pill, 5·1!1··72SS. $1500. OFF, New Columbia Motor Homes, 1 Z3'' fully equip. 553-9292 Sale/ Rent 9160 ,vkdays, 499-27n eves &1 _ _;._;c__;__ __ _;._;_: \vkends e VACATION e SABOT. \\'ilson \Y/ doHey, AT YOUR O\\'N PACE .•. glass & teak, Dacron sail, Choose from So. Calif. {'Q\'Cr, oars, 3 H~ Johnson "Largest Selection." mtr. $300. * 673-5839. (Over 40 !\.finis & ill.H.'s). BASIC Sailing, Docking & DALJ::S Boat Handling. A must for ~IOTOR HOl\lE new boat owners. 6T.>-8990 RENTt\LS 21' SLOOP, \\'000/fg. Redhill .f.: San Ju:1n, Tustin r.1us1 sell, $1500. {7!·11 .S3S-0900 D•vid. >l~ SHARE WINNEBAGO SUNFISH .~ii boat c','i"t 20~; 1nteres1, use 10 \\-eeks a w/~il:-r. Best offer. . year. Phone 6-IQ-o.IB2, 96S-65l6-, 1973 27' \YIN~EBAGO n1otor· ISLANDER 30 Sloop. ~i;ar hon1c. has e,·erything. Reas. new. \Vhl steer, extras, , .. 1 .. , "''"· •;>1-$19,750. 675-7376. .. ~ .. ·"'~ '"'" HOBIE 16 \\'/trlr., 2 masls 2 SJ-I,\STA i\lotor Hotn<' Sl('('ps 6 booms, sail tube. S1300. :,1 l Call 979-0319 ~.~h:.o::&~.~H~·~B~·..,..,..---=-~==~~::::..~~I -BOAT MAST Trailers, Travel 9170 ASSEMBLER 16' SAl'\TA FE lrailcr, gocxi see ad under class No. 7100 cond. Bulane rcfrig. Alt. CAL _ 20, No. 952. oulhoard encl. a\rning. $950. 968-8670 motor. sail cover, S2.i93. Auto Ser. & Parts 9400 644-('!M Ol'-3 HOBIE Cat 14'. 19 I 3 CHEVY 90 Brand spanking w/traller, many xtras, likt· ne11·, complele s mall V-8 new, $1200. ~.287-7262 niotors. Fits all Chevy's, BEAUTJTUL 12' Catamaran. $495. ea. deli~·cred free. 213 earlies on car. ~. Good 1 ~"'~'>-_c.17~19c.· _______ 1 t"Onditk>n. •1398 U.S. i\lag K1ms ~ 5 lugs. trailer, xlnt eond. E,\'rellPnt cond, 14". Asking 6'1J.859,1 SlOO. Call j,1().6340, Boats 511-/Dockt f070 '6< SQCAR,E back parts very t P"'"' -rct1l>l)n<1blc . * M111LY RENTALS $60. * '"1·1:?69 Ba1boa Coves. 36' under. 1962 t·l\LCON auto. trans. 546-0788 $10. Ca.rb. $.'} 968-4971 after Boatt, Spoecl A. Ski • <PM. 1961 ECONOUNE 3 spd JS' 1970 ~ =r. trans. S2Q. S!arter $5. 250 h.p. Xlnt 0330 ce 968-4971 after <IP~t. !ale IJSOO. 616 General 1913-18'6" SOIJTHWDllD Jet •. 1~=='----= 12 tor<, 4515 Oldlt A lalld'm1--------1 trlr. s.1&--Cll3 iillllillll~~ '71 TOYOTA ii la» tnglne. New brakes, l1rCa & bait. Konl ~IJQCka, Dyooootu&<h Low mile<tg"e • !llANY F.XTI\A& 0 r I g . Airer.ti tltl awoer. Private party. Befl. 1::::.::.;;;;.----~1 olltr. tlOl'IANZA S llotlOI. ll3 '45-2342 Jhatt, ~ o. C. anylime i ' I • THE LATEST REASONS WHY EUROPEANS BUY MORE FIATS THAN ANY OTHER CARARENOW · IN ·OUR SHOWROOMS. , I \\'hrn a Eur0µ('an bu1 -,:i I''·' r.ir h •·'!og(J! a 1111 ol prubl<'r'110 hi: h,1.; to con,.1drr Th"~'", r:ll.'" Eur1·r~·;,11 i;.1~ prirt·1~9:k i1 o;:.illon :i.!.1111 .:1111 ~ ;\ft' m1 •TC' DI «f<'fl •II c), .• ; I h,in : h·· \1or:,.t th~·!_' 5 h;1 ~tO••~!c t . .:\nd mo~t hn•h1·. ;i1 >. c,;n t h;n r ;1r -.· s111·rd 11~111'. -· l U ;,dd 1u;; Eurnpc.111\ prr1h- ]l'm~. th"rt';; re 01, ~ ;~1 u1 r:t r• 1: 1 cars 1och0<1~ irr1n1 1\nd fro1n ;ill th1,. tl1c L ·1r Eu1 •1· pcan~ choo:.t rno-: 1, F1<1\. \\ '11th F 1at ? \\'ell. H dt~nc! "n "h<:t thei r particular rfr1\'1n.1: nit d-.. r,·_ Som .. hur t!it.' F1;11 I 28 A c.1 r thar~ s1nall1·r 011 tli• · nL1t-1r!.• 1)1;111 a \1olks11 a~cn Supt r Bertie' 11·1 h1~glT in ,1rlc 1h:1n ;;11 Eldi·r~do~ lt ;;l--0 offr;r,,, ;iJ no 1·:"1 ttJ ch;;r~. th111p.s . n1ost c:ir~ dun'c <'It'll ofTf r :11 an extr;i chari::l' Front·ll'lll-tl rlr11 "· rack and p1ninn :o\t.'trrng, tront·disc brak es and rarl1al 1 1rt·~. Other Europeans nL"ed a little ~ hwgrr r:i r. "Cl thry huy :i Fiat 12•1. ,\ f.111111} 1:;1r l''hf><.t' hanrllin g ;ind !l•'rlnrn1:inrt: :ir•· 1notr hke that ol ;i ,,iJ('rt~far. ()f c1•Lir-e.1f tht·\··rc look 111g 1"r , , rt;i I "fl< >rt' c.ir. '1 c ha 1·1· t h1: l-iat 124 Sr11rl«r. l1 h<.tSJ har1d pnl:sh('d bod1· li\' l'1n111fann:i." I ~~16·cc rnp.HU' Jnd fron1 whi:tl i11d1•pcndcnL ~u~pens1on. Arid 1f a Euro['lt'.1n h:ipprns tfJ Ue;i fa1n1\y n1:in lr.ook1n(! for a sport:i l J t, 1\c l')rQbabl v hai·t the onl\' ~c1fu t1on 10 his problc1n-.. "f"hr. Fiat ]:!~~port Coup<·. It ha-tverxilunJ.! tl1e l.!·1 Spirkr ha~ bu11t alw ha::, roon1 fnr J f;im1ly of four. \'011· 1f yr1u'\'e lx·cn<nn~i{krinP. buyini; a small c.1r th1~ ye;tr. it 1n<1y Ue because 1·ou 0l't: rcaliJ.1·d it·~ lht ans11·er to the ),(.1S sliort;ip.e, tht· overcrowded cities and the l'l't:t • 1ncrc;isin11 car co~t~ you 're currently facing . The san1c problC'n1s F1als ha1·c been the answer to for yl.'ars. aaaa The rngge~elling car in Europe. Overseas defivery arranged through you r dealer. READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY -- ~·· ....... MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS ' -FACTORY .AUTHORIIED SALES & SERVICE - 2870 I MC11"91!!'ite Parkway, ~isslon Viejo . 495.1100. 831·1740 t -• I .. • AUTHORl1ED DEALER FOR BAVARIAN MOTOR WORKS • 1974s IN STOCK 2002s. 2002s IAutomatlcsl BAVARIAS, 3.0SA's & 3.0CSAs • OVERSEAS DELIVERY CENTER "')ORDER YOUR CAR FOR EUROPE NOW! • 5 year or 50,000 mile Warranty Available on All NEW BMWs • • 73 3.0 CSA ..... ·"'•' "·''' ,,,,,., ,,~ ,, , A~' > M >le "'" ,.,11, lo"' Excellent pre-owned BMWs .'66 1800 Tll 72 BAVARIA ~ <<'<'~~ & • >l<l 1-o t~rf".l 1o ~rt"'-1 ... n• ALSO : • 7 1 BAVARI A • '73 200Z Tll See our xlnt choice of pre-owned MERCEDES '70 280SL ROADSTER '60 190SL ROADSTER Almo.,,t Concouc~u1 & MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM • '52 300B LIMO • '58 300D LIMO • '58 2JOS SEDAN • '59 190Sl ROADSTER • 'b6 250SE COUPE • 70 250 SEDAN • 71 250 SEDAN ~ .. ""' ... '""' . ,. ~,., f • .. ·~· ! ... ~0,,.,1 ,6.wn A ~• r ~. :;.,, """' A•''' "·•~. '1111 ------·------ Xtra clean trade-ins 73 TOYOTA CELI CA ""'°"""1.,; t"'", ~rwool &A ..... 1FM •• 72 AUDI lOOLS .-,~10 , lancnu toD ;i" .Ii - & a few mare examples: • '69 ALFA ROMEO BERLINA • 72 MAZDA RX-3 WAGON • '69 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER • 73MAZDARX-3 • 71 MAZDA RX-2 "69 OPEL RAl.lYE • ' A<flo .!. .-.:,. -O,EH SUNDAY - 28402 MARGUBl'll PAllCWAY MISSIOH VIEJO • 11 1 I I I • I I. • • • • ' r~d1y, May 17, 1974 DAILY PILOT .'i-3 , t770 Vol kswogen tno AMC tto5 , -;::Co::.:11;_ ____ ..;9:.:.7~17 Subaru '73 Doda:e Colt S la t I o n \\'nson, &ood n1 l I ca gr , Superb cond, 16,900 mi. !\lust Sell. 67S-1597 97'2luiloru Toyo!• 97i5~!-" 9765 Toyo!• ''76.l l'Volkswtgon< ~":&~ :~ ~ OE.AN LEWIS BEST SELECTION '69 VW DEAN LEWIS-f ·10 GREMl.lN Ah'. rack, sharp. 142'JRMLl $1599 USEAllLE CARS SUNSET FORD TOP DOLLAR PAID· FOR SPORT CARS '•• for only $61 .2'1 oer mo. 36 W'SEAILE CARS £VER 1 S.nroo!<:E~rlleoi:e. OIOO. open "'l" leue. , .,, tCorOila Wtgon SINCE JANUARY 0 $1195 '61 VW 5440 Carden Grove fllvd . 2 Dr, 4 Spd, Radio (LTD762) \Vestmln!ttr 636-tOlO D1t1un 9720 • '73 Datsun 240% w.""' ........ P'"" .. _... SH US FIR BILL MAX EY lOYOTA '" , .. Tl:arul. aadlo. "''"" 1 OVER n R aC'k, £tonoD)f' & Utility ! 60 11 UOOCTl. . srm 33375 CAMINO WISllAHO $677 Buick 9910 ALL BRAND NEW " l • '74 OPELS •' ,1 I• W ~JIWIC&lftftMIO BRAND NE .... ...,--•"-- 1974 TOYOTAS 4U-1J75 w n1.U7S . ~.~ l•n.:a IN STOCK-tJ"lftoiA"' REAH~U~soo '73 V,W. LANDAU. Orange & blilck. fT1SG?i.fE) $2499 SUNSET FORD - f.Oll tlN SALE PRICED TOYOTA TERRY BUICK ~th & \Valnut '1.966 Harbor, C.M. 64&-9303 llunt. Bch. 536.6588 EXEC. CARS ron. LEASE. Oloose from 4 fully equip- ped low n1ileage' 450 SE ::6 Mo lease $215.78 per n10. OEL + Tax Lie. Serial OPEN SUNDAY No. 00-116. Take your car inl "'=-""'~c="~~== I "·•ct• '73 LANDCRUISER Jim SJemons Imports 1301 Quall Ne"'Jlnrt Beach 833-9300 Soft top. Oronge. Warn hubs, radio. 22,0:'.1 miles. (~ HOEi $3999 TOI fOTA '10 CROWN Dix.. '-dr. iami.ly sedan, tac Ill ry .air «mdttioning, aut•o. tra.EI$.. m.lti&l. heater, ra<' WI tJ.reii . LoGb .and runs lik• ~ new . .:445EllQ). $14" CEUCA STs CEUCA GTs MARK lls CORONAs COROLLAs 5'l40 C11.rden G1vve Blvd. \\'ci;lmiru;te1· 636-4010 '73 V.Yi'. Squareback Squire. Ornnge v.•/rack. (543HPM) Sml SUNSET FORD 5"1-W Garden Gro\'e Blvd. \\'estminster 636-4010 ALL C~LORS . 71 VW GOOD SELECTION OF i SUPERBEETLE LOWER PRICED 'I Yellow wi1n bl"k Interior. TOYOTAS uir conditioning & IO\\' 1uiles I (200DLF>. 1 STILL IN STOCK Sl:fARP! V. \V, Pop-top, 56,000 ml, nc11· p.'lint, E..'xcel. roOO. 2'1 MPG. $2400. 979-4240 Volvo 9772 '74 VOLVO Best Deal Anywhere! LEASE OR BUY 0Vt::R8EAS DELIVF-llY SPECIALISTS ~Ut.lewi& '72 DATSUN 1600 pickup with •72 :VTAZDA R t n'X3 A' ENTER FROM MacARTHUR tonnrnu ll1700T) $2599 I 1 o ary n... · 1r BILL MAXEY TOYOTA "'16 TOYOTA .c~ BILL MAXEY TOYOTA W YOLYO I SUNSET FORD conrl .. 4 dr. (5:J2FUBl $1799 1973 450 SL This n1etalllc . , SUNSET FORD silver Mercedes 2-seater ,,, 1,1·1 ,\l• ,,7,·;, II~ '\.j'\\,:(J\ J,' .\(11 ~--..... -.. -1· ' I t<.!!;";';,:',....~;,.•"-;:;<;:;L..;"';,;""~· '~ 1966 Harbor, C.:\J. 646.!l:t03 1 .~40 ~ardcn Grove Blvd. 5440 Garden Grove Blvd. sports car is only one of the \,,stm111ster S:~S-4010 \\'cstminster 636-1010 I fabulous 450SL's we have 1888 I Beo'h Bl•d, 114 7 .J ~5 ~ HUt~Tlf'<4G TON BEACH 4 D<ll)!" ~c miss Ion • ('I1D1'ill'). trans· = '72 VOLVO ISO() E SI --------,--1 ·72 \'.\V. \BUG Jlcd/lllRck. j Sportwagon, ..\ s(}(l10D, At\!' :.'GOZ. _2;oo n1i, air, stick, ,72 l\lAZD \ C H.X~ 1 available. Call to find out, --:=-====-,-- Al\1/f r.1-:-s\rL·co, t n p e C" .1, : 1r.;,·,..MDJ.$!~ ho\v you can buy or leasc1-•1· " 1· · ·to 1 v I\ s .utp . ..,.,,,._,1 0"" 11 · I I 1"· k 70 TOYOTA $799 •73 CORONA ItnmaC"ulatf' 1008EID! $2199 1 f 'M, AIC, IX'liccL $1800. SUNSET FORD 1 673-8001. Station WaCJOft 5440 Garden Grove Blvd. 1973 voi.•-v-o~,-G4~. P 1S,P/B, ,; it·n. 1rei;, n~,1v;s, <'ll_S n ·SUNSET FORD us spec a car u1s wee . p11\11t, t'us1on1 1 n t e r 1 o r . Dir. TI4--523-7'250. MKI I 4 OR '1.. ~1 AXEY .. . Westminster 636-4010 AiC, A 'T, sunroof, $62~:i0. Orig. owner, 673-&>10 .a.J•IO ~;:irden Grove ~!vd . • 260 I .1 \I ('S\1n1nslt'I' 636-4010 OVER Auto mat I c transmission, 0 .. .._ •. I T '-"' """ 4 '1""" tdral !18'!1issioBn, factory' ' 'T H t NG , , 1500 mi AM/r~f. radials, Jo n1ilcs ·74 Z. o n11 es, xtras, 1, . , . uh· ronditioning. 1502DRKl. $6600 I " MAZO,\, RX2. ""' ""''" 35 USED SUPER SHARP a r CQJI bonmg. ro\vn ex-· " 675-ES terior. (0";>4HEUl. ' A1'1/F1tt, custom A\\-ning ~:..::::'=7=~~=~~ 675-3~18 lra1hcr, vinyl roof, elcc. DATSUN 2W z.:;,ooo nii. nntPnna 8.19-0·140. MERCEDES $3199 top. cu.~t. seat, fh· covel~ng. '72 VOLVO P-1800 ES. cus!.. co~1mand. \\·hi~. t~rcs I Call fi73--0-113 i::xtrns. Hcst orrer. Pll: .'71 P ... 'X2 Rotary, xlnt ro1td. 4 54&-3341 ct' """ ON DISPLAY DEJ '" LEWIS . & p;ont JOb. $3230. 673"'5.10 '70 VOLV01&1---:-Ti:>_R_s_od_1_m 67 V\V BUS, hon1e-madc 4 sp stick, all'. Xln! cond. -• • f' ' -, .......... _ .... , ...... _, - R47-6:~ If 1;;;;"ao::;;;; 'Ms-::6.!. USE~ \ILE CARS <:(Imper, i-blt eng. 4 mo or 493-9337. 1970 DATSUN 240Z, Orange, air, mags, 4spd, $3,·150 '72 RX-2. nir, stereo, xtras. 837-9334 U<'low \\'holesalc. 0 rig . House of Imports 523-7250 DEAN LEWIS USEABLE CARS 169 T· .,ata Corolla 4000 nii "'arr. 72.r-i:~l 7:30 --"'-"A"--U~T~O~s-u~S~E~D~- 2 Dr, 4 l iad. Radio. Realer, AM to 4:30 PM, Duffy. '73 DATSUN Stn. \\'ai;:. A1C, ! _owner. 58&-2084 au!o., 16,000 1ni. :·.11. eonct. Mercedes Benz 9740 ' MG 9742 (XliL34l 1_ '72 V.\\'., radial ti1&,s. ne1v Geniral 9901 Sm Triumph 9767 brakes, new exhnusl sys. ---------'67 Cortina Wagon c.......c=----.-:..;;.;. Very good <'ond., Best 'l Aulo Trans Radio Heater offer., 9 6 8 -8 8 0 1 Call ~ $3.)j(J 531-2<J1)9 "n 1·10Z . S!i{'k, Ail', ~tags, 2:1.000 n1i, lmrnac, $46:-:iO. 83.~-:'.891 or 5-11-14-10 '7:.i Dillsun 1•lOZ, 4 sr. 1n,1gs, \"t'HO"' * l\J1nt eon1lil1011 5-16-!l\:18 afll'l' 5Pl\l Fiat 9725 73 FIAT 850 SPIDER 2 tops & only 16,000 miles, (269HOOI. : ' ' ...... -,. ...... -......... ;--· .. ··---"111111UllOlk'll.C.I. WS-M.L '70, f'IAT. !60 Spider., ne\\' steel radials, tnp. Al\.! t"~! V<'ry sh11rp. $1 •1JO, G16-22ti~. 1 Honda 9727 1 1911 i!Ol'\DA Sedan, Good cond, 35:\tPG. 5-IS-1'.lfl'J 1973 ·l~JOSLC. This 2-searei· XLi~T GAS 1'.tlLEi\GE, 0 ' ' '67. TR-4A. Excel. cond, · "' ~11dgc\, 0 ••• n•i., new !VA\V799). anytime. GAS SAVER sports car is tae lx>sl 1·ar •• ~ • $677 t ~ ltOO' •67·i.~·e017w018 s, ne1v uphols, $995. r.terccdrs makes. It 's !he radial-;, new shocks, .r-o GOING overseas, n1ust sell 1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER Std. trans .. great gas mile· Rge .(over 22 l\tPG) Only 14,000 1niles. $11!>5. Prirute purty. t<Jp of lhe line. Only 2,00J Al\.1l}o'~l. xlnl cond. $1100. ' TA 1969 TR6 XI I C nd Xlnt '72 V.W. Campr., tent, Aincn{'all!L \\'Ill be Able to 6-10-1897 a ll. a • TUYO e sU.8593" 0 & extras. $3,800./Best oiler. buy this years model. This 1900 twtGA, ncv• tires. n1otor -"·.,• l•nwa ~~--===--~= ~3-5320 hard to find car is 'available & paint. $7a<l. or besl otter. LUWA UllW . l966 H .. W.: ir, CM. 64&-9302 Volktwagen 9nO !95.'; V\\I Bug 2000cc engine, f sal I ·r o 646-1-'" TOYOTA -~ ·I----"-----dun\ \\1ebt>r cnrb.. new "or De~ 0~,:~a,,~e .,,;_,, Y u s.':. ' 1 ·72 TOYci f°A r.fK II Wagon uphlstry, VOO instrun1ent uurry. ,,r, .u.r•~· l;~J;.;B;._ ____ _c9c.744..C:.ll!l66 Harbo• CM 64G-9303 .... ,.,. (:0 IFNCI $2799 64 V\V Bu~. Engine, trans & ~? I .. ,.... p1lnel. 960-lJ-3 e1·es ... =~ 1973 JOO SEL This extra-ong •• · · S' .....:er FORD clutch reh!t. 1000 n1i. ngo. ~ -" I --" f I 1·k '--"... '73 SUPER BEETLE ~l-u1111 ooks ''"" ce s 1 ·e a '67 ~1GB, 67,000 nii. Gd mcch. '73 TOYOTA· 5440 Cai u en Grov~ Blvd. New radials $1000 or lx'st l\1e'rccdes Lin ci us i n c . nds sonic body work. CORONA 1v··sln1•··,I· ti . ·~ ••10 offer. 494-6930 sunroof. 13,000 n1i. $2j00, ,, • .. --~..:~:::..= """"'~~~~-~-Xlnt condition. ). c 11 o Y.' • Elri,::ant is the only 11·ord for f":i.ntily exµand1ng. l>.lUv'T -'68 V\V CAMPER, ice box, 642-78.22. * 551-5151 * E0.5EL Citation, full po1ver, air. i\-take reasonable oiler. Call 673-41'i6. AMC 9905 H. Call to S('C ho\\' you can SELL. $995. fA6.-S607 4 Dr, Auto Trans, Air Cond, '74 1f OYOTA sink, cam, headers, xtra il'g buy or lease chis lu.xurious Porsche 9750 Vinyl Top. (2tSHSOJ. tires, $l8.=;Q. 646-379'1 1969 BUG, needs son1e CLEAN '68 RA r..t BL ER ear for a speciRI price this 52899 \\'Ork. Pvt. pty. $8JO. Amer. 2 dr, 6 cyl, stick. \\ct!k. Dlr. 714-52l-i2;il. '71 914 PORSCHE. xlnt cond, Be I D I ·~ BUG CLF.AN Ar-l/Fi\l 979-:i138 .R/H, MOO) mir, · nr ne\\' 1973 2XOC. This is the i asking $-i,OiXl, days 673-3071, ,.S .~ ea * ~~9 * '66 VW XLNT CONO lh'<'S, runs beaut., xlnt care. Mercl'dcs Cou1>e. Fron1 it's• ·c:v.::":..o-61.::3--..:2590=---=~I A•"#here1 Sl 000 644-7315 .$6= 75 o.· c:.96:::2..:-=:==----= ·-1 t: • VOLKS\VAGEN eng. parts. ' .,.., sporty. pi?stripin)'.:. 10 i~s Toyota 9765 LEASE! OR BUY good .69 \1'\V campt'r in good cond 'GR Ar..1BASSAOOR \VGN. lu~h 1nter1or, this car ts --=---------1 l 40 hp. Used, but cond. · a c p/b rack Jo n1ile All '/V,odelst 545-2442. 821 Cortez St. y.•ilh nc1v lires & fact. reblt • · " · gor~rous! Special price ·--------•I [ · $l900 "ls-5211 ttge. ne1v tirt's, brakes duru1f: the running: of this ~ . l , ·73 BUG, en1::. · .r & trans. Xl:nt t-ond. Call lot :td. !his ear l'OUl<I be '71 Toyota 1600 I=~=~~-=~-~ I -e~A ....... l900J . new dials 'G6 \l\V Squareback. Good test drive. 84?-81B3 'TI :\L\RK It. A/T, Fai:. <:iii-,. WUI nii, '6"'64'" 2 · condition. !\.lust see. 6·16-333'1 le1:1se<l. Olr. 711-52'.i-72.)(). New brakes, tires & bait. like l'lC'\\'. 14:;o) mi. One I JO\'OTA u-'73 HORNET llatchback, '6 1 J\1ERCEDES 220. Body & Koni shol'ks. Oyno-tuned. owner. $2130. ~9662 '68 V\\I Sedan, good cond. .:: 0 :..' .::67:::~-'1c::63::1:..· ~~~--Immac. t'Ond. Ecooon1y 6 • 9UICK • 1969 WILDCAT Z·dr. hal'dtop. t:xtl'a nice & loaded Incl . J)O\\'('I' \•:lndo\\·s. 1St·r. 1182861. $1088 5th & \Va.lnut I lunt . Sch. 53&.-6:h~S '73 BUICK Century 11.T. Cp<'. Air, 23,00J nti. 169SGX.\1 $3399 SUNSET FORD J.110 Garden Gro\'C B\1·d. \Vr;;L1nlnster 63&-4010 ALL BRAND NEW '74 BUICKS SALE PRICED TERRY BUICK 5th & Wu.lnul Hunt. Bch. 5.16·6588. 1963 BUICK Skylark, auto, radio & heater. nC\Y brakes, runs good. nn . 962-5716 1969 LeS,\BRE. 2 rlr hardtop, t'ull P'l'l'. air. Bt>st ofter. Crill aft. !i: 6-1·1-047'2. Cadillac 9915 CADIUACS Larg11t Selection In Orange County Cpe. De Villes · Sod. Dt Vllles El ·oorados-Converts +PLUS+ Many Other Select Cadillac Trad•ln1 I • 'i-0 J!O~D.A Sedan. Clran, i::rl cnt::. good. Necd:;1 n1inor U:11v mil('a~e. Many exlras. · I \Vith ski rack S900. or best 69 VW BUG cyl, R/H, 642·0880 or wk· COND. Reasonable. 963-\.t09 \\'Ork. $1.iO firrn. 67'.i-:!2-16. Orig. O\\'ncr. Pri. PRrty. ~Ct.Ass SEl.l.S -642-5678 1966 HarOOr. £:!'!•_ 646-':1'.:.l03 offer. 557-9117. ' Oean, $1200, 546-[)396 days, 839-4190 eves It \1•knds. OPEN SUNDAY a.ft 6pn1. 11.R:... ~--T\\'Cl Mercedes Benz. 1959 Best . off<'r. 6 4 5-2 3 4 2 Autos New 9800 Autos, New !.. 9800 Autos, New • , 9800', Auto51 New 9800 Autos, New 9800 Autos, New 9800 Clas.o;;ifierl 1\d! Call 6~2-5678 · 11\tl(]CI lf;OB, 1960 2205. 81H6 Anytime. ·:::::· ===========:==========================~======::::==::::::::==~1 .::'od='''-''-------1-'\'ild'>''()()d Dr_, H.B, 900-217?_ r - Mercedes Benz: 9740 Mercedes Senz 9740 . Mercedes Benz: 9740 ''Thank!• Folks, 3-YEAR RESALE VALUE 50% 25'.4 0% Source: Rcrail rrices in the Arri! 1974 i5SUe of rhC NA.0.A. Ust..J CarGuiJl'. Mercedes-Benz has a better resale value than any luxury.car · made in America. · Anyone According to the automobile industry's most authoritative sources, all domestic cars de• predate faster than a Mercedes-Benz. ' Even after fi ve years; the average Mercedes• Benz retains over 50 percent of its init¥1 price. Isn't this the year you should buy a Mercedes· Benz1 Call us today. Seethe Mercedes-Bem- MISSION VIE.JO 'IMPORTS • • FACTORY AUlHOllDD U 1 IS, SBVICI A I •ASD• .._28101 MARGUERITE PARXWAY 495-1700 MISSION-., 831-1740 ......... ., , • ...., .... 4 ...... o.Wu; .. I for 21 yearSi . of . serving your automoi ~ive needs here in t.he b~ ~ach area. In appreciati1 on, we' re declaring a l 1ig· Sale! " ~. CL YD£ JOHNSOH President DICK JOHHSOH Yice ..... lidont COl~llNENIAL~S ·TO CAPRI'S EVERY CAR IN STOCK,t SPECIALLY DISCOUNT PRICED \fO SELL! Choose from Ov~r 200 NEW -USED .-~ DEMOS -ENTIRE MONTH OF MAY! Home of the New Gar "Golden Touch" '-Home of the New (or "Golden Touch" • CoSta Mesa 540-5630 '· 2626 Hm bor: Blvd. of Cars '-~~~~ .... .---'~~~--~~~~~-~· .... ~~~~~~~~~ ..... ~--~~~~~~~~ .. ~~~~~~~.ri I • I • . I I J , . i ,, y i , V I 1 1 ., • • . . " rJ j Uk1L 1-:ll'I Cadillac 9915 C a di l la-c----~99~1~5~C-oJdif~ • 69 Coupe de Ville ------ CADILLAC FLEET'NOODS 1968 BROUGHAM VS. :1ur1,n1:1r1e·, \ \1 I!· \I !<h'n "I, fl'.)ll't'I' ·" I ,. 1· I' I 11 Jlf!lll'I \\lllli"ll", p11•11 I "l',11". l1 ·;1lh1'l' Ill!•' I' I u I , l;1ndo1u hlll f u·!nJ~ .ill' 1 ·" '· 1 •I C'<'H\/!1!1011h1~ 1::1,1 i.:1.1.... I'·''' I ;,, I 1li" i 11• t lii.:111 lil111• 11lth 11)1111• t"p "1":·•·' "' "1 I'' •. 11.1 1zn1..;~1 (j 1 11l·-··:· .. ~: •• ·1~u 1• $1995 '"'j96;"~~0~GHAM 1c .. , ;, l I ,I :1· !' id I'" ------Cad. '73 El Oor<1do Luxurious Cabriolet >lllllUI l\11t1·I S11•n11 1 11 lh \ l!i•!U•· ... ,.i.11.• \Ill.I I 1 ... I 'I(•' • •111lrvl. I I I• '" ' • -•'I f11ll 1""'11 + ' ( o\111101'! "!';!I, )!'.'II. II lt11io111 oi"i"C..:l:•'I', I 1'11111\ )p1·l1, ,] "•I 1·11"'"· ~h·n·u 111t\i I •I" T1 ,•. Ii '.,•,1,11';1· ~I. \'I U' '. ,, I d1 ' I'.<' \I! I~ ,\• \' " ' I "' 1,,., 11111•'" 11 ... IJl, 11: ~ Ca d. '72 Cpc. de Ville ' '1!' 1 I. I• I I " I \\ 11 , • I un I 1· 'I' ,\ Ii .tit' I' ..J11• I II IL ,, '" l><l\l I, I 1° • ' I '. • I "I I ' , l.11.0 I 'llo' "' r •II• 1 111 •• $4699 " II"'" C.:id. '71 Cpe. De Ville Lc~s tha n 35,000 miles • • '.111!1 i'I, ~~t ·•1 ! CHEV. '70 IMPALA ·1 • -nli J 1 n • L • • I I [ Custom Coupe with ,•I \,I,. \ ,11 -,,, I} I • 1 3 , , "'' '' ~ .•. :!•.1 1;1,i-l ii 1 ,111 1; Le ss thon 4,000 Miles \ /,I ,1 ,1li1•I, l {'•1loHi1:1l 1t•)htll 1!11~11011,\· -• 11.d 1:111•· I II\\ l 11111"1'1•11 _Chcvr~i ___ _!!~:f! J· .11 1.,, 1 ~ air r"'"'. .1111" ~-ll'lll\•, 111')\l•'I' ~!··1·1·1111.:. 1,, (1 11:\\U·~ •Hiid !:i•hh (01q'/.,I. "'•ii 1•111•1 t.r:il;1·~. H II. \r~\\' ' " I' ( •• 11 •(. ~'II\' '.•kl II" ~.I~ I . .1+ 111 11\Lll ~l'. ll /'f \•It" I'/~. l'/li, 1://1. "d !ll\'"• VI!' Nal11•1.'i C'adlll,u• !1;1dl·. c~l"1ACV1 $1999 ·1,, t 111:,·-:1.1..i : 11.,C•r\! 1 ..... 1i cl. ~·uu 1~•11"1 \'.\l' 1 'lf\l:\ ~f'l '!~l \I C'.•t••d 1 .. 1 •11\<'0' -!11'\I, .1 Ill jf~;:; Ill' h~fi-fl'ii!i I '{ii l'l !HY..;l.~;1 t-l:ur11·1·1.1! \ 0t'n\\!l ('11lllK'. ;Ill d), \II'·" I \.~NI i.1·:-'f!t:t ~h11\\" I'\('< llt•P I 4'.0I'•• LJ.:\.'i.jlj I I '•'I '~.!~J!f,I SUNSET FORD $J299 I _·J iiii 1;;1nh•11 l;1011• 1:11 11. 6J "jl\1 .~1Hll11"!< I' t>:1, !Ulil jBoBLoNGPRE(: :i.;~::'.::: . .'::''""~· ''. .. ' Cad. 1972 El Dorado \ Id '"' 1:110 -i(I' , 1·11\ I. , .J:T!! .1 ! " ~ U."I lll1U.1 i 'I NABERS CADIUAC 2-tOO Hnrbo"' !fvd ,Costa ~Aeto 540·~ 100 ' c.1d. '73 Sed. de Ville 1·1:'\ 'll .... T.\1\C l '111t\ .\111·· V11r·ll1r1;•1r 1·11nd, 111i1I I"~'·•'''· loll""l"hill· 1\:!)i.l,.'1 Comet 9927 all 1,,nilhT 1111<·11111, 1 i11 $!~.i·i ---------!M•11• r. 11:1 , 1"11-,, ~··· SUNSET FORD l::GQO Bt·:11 h Bl . \\ .. ~1 111111~11'1' S!l:!--66~11 i. Ji-:!'d~l I '74 SEDAN OE VILLE l•1·111,.n.-.11•I"·' Vi•ll• •·quopp• d Lil h "' 1 "" l l"l'· I 1<·1,,1 • ''" J1ll lo I 1111!'<'1 •. \\l/F\l .. 1. I ,, l~•\\1 ·1 dH•T '"'-'·'· 11\lh 'IOI .. ,'1l!!lh'1, H'lllt.1, 111, , lo"'''· t'I<', o'ii· L'>u•·" t•J !. !l !'." , ( 1191'~!1\! L \11 l'Hll II IH'\ .II .,ii I ]; \\ : .+, NABERS CADll LA( 26CO HD:1>.J r Ktvd Costa Me:. a 54Q-Y l l.N \ 1\ '!• \ "l \, 1 I\ , '71 Coupe de Ville .~1· I •l'_\ I• 1!lwr 1,11 ,\ 'I< ,., ~· , «111n·I. o:t ., II"". I •'•"1"1-. I.Lil I"" 11 ', ,, < "Id<' I\'<" "'•II" 1 .... i.~ I h•• \1! .I I .;, 1-'" I Jl ·-''· • 55899 NA8ERS CADILLAC 2.biOO Harb.or Elv. (Qsta M11 .. \l .540·'ii: ·, '' \, ' •\ ' ,. - I •!I, 1·1111' \"'I '111\d 1;. :• ! I\.' •' l'.11 '".I.'. I! 1 •'"•I> "ill". ·I• I I •. ,;, ..,, , I 1111,\, ::,. '{"I! .. \ 1:1. I. ~' ' ,II \1:11 •ii I -. I '". , I 1: 11 \ . " "11·1 1;: •II tll'l•:!'I: Sl \II,\) :11 \t I\ \ I 1111t1u l'jW \'S, tUio•, i'-,(1'"' 1Y\ Y' i • ':'.111!11 SUNSET FORD :.! Iii c::1rd II \;1'H\t' Hl\11 \I ' : llll'l'lt 'I ·~.: l ltt•\ I '.•l•l 11' :! di 11.i ·d I·•" !1>11 •11111·, .. ,. l.•!1.f,,, I••• \!l<IH' !().\.11·.I' ·-;-;, ,,.,~1 , .. ,,, I.. \·I I" _:~• \i l • , I: 11,.1 [;.Pl\ II, :' ,,. o\ + ,\ ,\ "i1:11 j 1' ( lit\ .. 1, • , '-'.ru, . ' :~ ' , , (<\JI I 1\ 1., .. 1,r I j,, '! " ll•i1l •H I \'"I ... ,,' , , I I 1.\Ji . ' ..... 1,,. ,• II "''" I' ' "' ' ! ,111+ \o:of'!h•ll c;n•\!' •:11·.1 ."h •Tl'I\!, "111 "• iJ._11' 11• "' 1·t'1!1~1 · , 1,1111, I, 1,1.1•1 • 'l'f, 111\ • ii '·' ll.+·1 I·'~ 1111'1'•<1 1' \\I ·llolllbl•'I 1. ,,, hdll .. ~f:t .\\,1 ,. ,.,.,11 1'111"' .... 1 \.,1 ~•1111 55799 -.ilid ! '.J~ -'~'II I tt O.R. HAAN, Inc. : Cad. '68 Sed. de Ville _.i.!i' 1"1 .i. 11 •1· 1 ' '""·' .t11' •'"ll'li:1Plll'I • I , I I ' ''I .ILo\ < 1 I• h I> 1 'I , 11 1 l"p. :1:il p 1>l1<'0' ;;...:11,11 (11'•,1.1.I · 1 1,·,11_, 1111t1 1o+r, 1111 ,\ U.R. HAAN, Inc . [ lo·h ~'"I"'' •lo·• I 111•·. \ '1/'-''I , "II 1 II 1!:1 . \\l/l·\I -.10·'"" 1 od $7199 I 1 " Ii I. 'i"' pl.o 11·1 I" •II "I ~l".d '· IH"\ 0·1 'I I .I ,I" II ·''"I "I l•OI'. l.o< \"I ..; \ \.' I )I '1 \ -.1 \ 11 \ '. "I' \I ·1 II 11 I 68 Cadillac Sed. DeVille I I \'' 4 1•1 I I ' I.I, I .\\11'\'1 'I I "· 01\< I. l.o\\ LI I< ' t 'lf 1, \ I .: I ' ,-, { '1 l I"\ ! ·'I" ". I-'''" \!. 1 .. 1 \ I' 11 i . ~.~·.~· <II ,·,111•1 ,,,:. • 11'.oll ,jo.o ., I 11 ' • 11 :1 II,' t:!. 'I ' ll') . 0.R. HAAN , In c. " 1 I· ..... 11:1r11 p!!i I __ 99?0 "' 1\'1;$·11;·9~ ) ' 1•1·. \ ... Continental )•.II. i) ( Ii.ii• , •. 1 ' I'' , 1 ... , 1 ..... ,1.11 "11''' ol l'\l!I\ .ii'.' NAllERS CADILLAC 260C! Horbor Btvo. 1 " 11 d I " 11 11 1 "I -'1( )\ I\:( ' I•', " I ' !• I ,, I I ..'11 _' I : . ',f I; ,.,,i' 0 SUNSET FORD l'•UUhllOl l' 1!~1 iM "\' .\ ,I ~.1,--. ol "llu I fo '" I:. 1 •• 11 ' +: I' ;, \l\l'!:l • 1·1 111 I ' Pi:" 111 \\ 1 ,, 'I dlo •, h<11 "I Ill., .\/ I-I: 111. I 1 "I" 1• •• '1' ,, ~·•I (,ld. . ,; I '74 Scd. de Ville Demonstrator 111, ' .. l!'•h'll (•I••\' ,:11 ·! I "'~'''"'"'' 1.,, .. 111111 Costa Mew 540·9\CU 1:ri I lit r l1P• I \•"I SI 588 TERR '/ BUICK 1 ~1.-111 I'·,, '"· ! r, \ \~. ii , < 11 1' '• 111'1;~. 11<'1\ Iii"' '\I 11 I 9933 11 <1111 '<l'ill'l"'d 'II,. I •Id I'. 1111;l:\1i : .. .i1.111. ,,. I .. ,,1 1 1:· ~~·" ,,,,,.,. "i'" ,. "' 1 ,. !I''".' 1 ·•liit! ~ '(I ~' /'' I ol I I ,. I 11 r,I \,I' 1 ''' I Ii 1,·I· Gr-I into 1111• , 1,111~ ['i!,.1 ('];11'<-ifiP1\ ,\d :.uJI<' .1 11'! '<'fl • ,j I " I '" oil 1 " I ~ • • I '" ~.'!l-~I! :: Ill ~·ll •1_...:1., .1~1. t" \[1· \\ hi11' \ I, I : " , '• 11" ·I, \J I • SUN.>E r 1-uRD 'I I • " I! ' I ! II I • I 'II. I I. \ ,, I ' ,,,, I 1-01nu·1h111:.: ·""' n" .1··11·~···· 1·~·a~1 1: • .,1,·i1 1:1 1 .1 ' .. 1 ,., 1 nl'l'd\ll'l!-.(''l";1ll1t;~-.~;:-.: '\:1:.!-1~;:,1 :1; 11 1 ... 1' 1' \ • i" 1·:.: ,, 1' Ir• \1'" I \ 1 '< ••.ol ' , i I , (' 11 I I • ' '" -\', , •• , 111• ,. 'l'I f ·i1 .. 1 ('I. '.•I olo' I ·"I ' ,_· ). ' I' '!Autos, New 9800 Autos, New 9800 ..:..1 :,os. New 980'.) Au1os, N?w 9300 A.•Jro;, New 9800 Autos, New 9800 . .:·~, ll.ie\1 O!J.:J --------iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii-~~~--~-·~~~-~~~~~~mm.m-..... GMC LIGHT DUTY DEALER IN ALL OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BRAND HEW '74 GMC YAN 53377 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • CALIFORNIA'S ONLY GMC 4 WHEEL DRIVE CENTER "Home of the GROUND HOG" CUSTOM YAN SELL-OFF ') c.u··om Surter Vao<; Som;-· ;;u''~ Vi'' •,om<;> I'.•'" c1r'{"1 ri•n: '10 m.,'J5 Rf'd·E·K;1mo-1-1v1 ,:J,,, \'/•, 11-, 1021~9;;, ,.,17'.iJ'd ,r.()13011 12<:4'.Ji1 (233311 • ·----... ~1 HONDA CAR DEALER IN ORANGE COUNT'{ Sc le s-Service-Ports READY TODAY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Brand New 1974 OMEGA 6 Cylinder Economy ORDER YOURS IUM~ER 1 USED CAI IUVS THIS ·tVEEK~tJ~! " '72 TOROHADO 1 '~· 7:~ ,. ~ \' ,1 .rJ. it' ' ·" ' ",'. ... '71 DELTA 88 CPE. $ra9lW., ii .. e; a i-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ' 69 PONTIAC FIRE~lRD '' p .$1. 5: 77· i'J ' " ~ : . . r--~~~~~~~~~~~~~-· ~ .~-'.~~oDAr ~. '68 MERCURY COUGAt! X~7 -· -,.._~;~-;-.:;~:i."/ ~ ~. ''" ' $JiJ.7 ~ ' ( _.!~,~-·!!.-:::::I < I'! ..., --=--; -"'" . 71-----------·-------------'I/ZJ!I... ~ --:.::' -.....,., I '73 OLDS 98 LU XURY Cl'E. 11<1• I ,,.,. ' Ill" ' .. ·" ' •. 11,1 ' . " I• I " 1 I I' , • " , ' I, < 11 .. . ,, 57 199 .....,,,.~t; t t-uRD '·' '. '"' i Cad. '72 Scd. de Ville 11, '"' ,., II ! .. I ' ' I.,,. • "Id I• I "• I '' , I I• '• $4599 "' l•.1,1 I I .. .. C.id. '70 Scd. de Ville Ltss th~1 n 39,000 niiles '· '. ' '"'"' 1.11.I '11 .. .i ' J• ' :.1 • .i ... ':>ET FUl<O l" " ':." .! I"' ' I "' " • ;. . ,,:, I < • •1 (r.'A~!:}-!c;·c~\OiltA{ '\ .~ .. iVt.flCk ·~ i'.6 0,1 '1,Jrbt.\' ~;.,.~-·I t Co! tti /v'ti '':: S-i~~ ~ • r_. ../ ........... I -• ' . ' ,/ ' 99J5 ,,,, .. ,_., .. SUNSET FORD >UNSET FORD " " ',,•I•'' I, " ' .. Io • \ ' Fo re! 9940 ' " " ' "' •''- " SU1\i5El FUF<Ll " ' I : ; ' SUl<S::O T FORD ... ·.· '· ·~ t .... y 9Y50 SUN!:t.:T ro .~u \. ' . •. TAKE YOUR $4777 CHOICE 197 4 GMC % TON Th~ little @ids ~::::;,;.~:~~.~:;: ;;::. $48 77 BIG GAS SA Vtf/: $,4~~ '!2:7 ,. " ~ Aulo>. N•,w ~ ,~.· f.1 i"< : t .... 1 l~ 9300 9952 '73 HONDA CIVI C 1974GMC%TON4x4 $2 11' ' ' . ' .. ' I' '.I • ! \'1 .'I' ' '""' '" l ...... '!h"•" " ' "' ' . ! • $3477 '69BUICKELECTRA ~ '"i1r1 ' 5. ~··"J'J ~· e;' . N ~~ZJi;Z; ~-.. :":'. "· . $I 1974 GMC CARGO YA ... ~1,:;;:.~.:-..-~1 :~-·· '"·· $ -~ 1' llll ' . ' ~ i)J;P"f>4ll ~t-.... 7-1 "'"FO~RD~G~A~LA_X_l_E _____ ;;;;.._ -~'.':12;~~~~~:T~c~~~~~7.~~ 5677 . -~ 1 1~.;4UQ'·1 $ "'' p,,_,..,,.,,~IJ I •. "' 1974 GMC 4x4 LOADED 1 ~~.i~~~E ··'<"""·· .. ,_. if~·:;."~~:.'?·: .. ~,::: .. '..: $ 5 2 77 s 147 •I '74 CHEV. MALIBU CLASSIC OFF ~~· ~ ON~EMPO VAN CONVERSIONS •1 /11 -~A~UT~HORIZED SALES & SERVICE • :• V· ., • VI fl •·•• on II I •' • '3 r 5799 '6:' CHEVY IMPA.l A CPE. 5899 '63 CHEVY STATION WAGOM 5799 '64 POMTIAC en. 5399 '6J G'1EE"'8RIAR S899 J\JNSE T FORD .:11..J1\t SE T FORD " " - '' .. "" '.1 " " •I ." j" :\I , ,I ,~ ' " I,,• • \, .., . " . :.1~, /, , ~ I' ( Oidsmobil~ ~· f,:c;.-1jt' OLDSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS ., ' " ,,, 9955 UN!YER~l7Y OLDS .: 11 .• , .. ~ nh~- :~B ~ 1 1'11 lror ! i r 1 ,i.o:• l''J··1 U !:'ll I 1;,:.·,_~, JI C.R. HAAN, Inc. ZOl f' !... ·"'' I\, ---Ol.11 ... ~.1 ;,\ C-FK' J.t roJ )1 I I 1\.•1lJ'IJ1 $.~ ' SUNSET FORD -'ti C r 11 n GrJ\ Bh·•I "t~tmll'll.1' , r .. mo U\"-t)\iN;J:, i.t ,_, 'I'\ r.1'\'Al.L. :M llOO n «•1 olf•'T' "1 all l ~ly bti !Yl'.n ._ - lfll"'° !> f'ltrc )'10 •AUi If'! ,,.n .. n.a.-itr.,;t n. do '' •f'n • A \0\\ Mf ~ - ,_ • .. HAQERS ~lllAC 2-HarborllYd. COstilM01a "f0;9100 '72 PINTO \·111~1 !!•H, full <ll111n· 111-:ul1· ,\ "lll. ;1t1!•1111ath· rr:u1s111is- :-1nn ,1, 11111 nui.·~ l![.OF\"l'1. Only $1995 BARWICK DATSUN '"•ot!\ '~' 33375 CAMINO CAPISTRANO .\II l..mult•1! lS1•r. :.i::0:!'.(1f Y! fl H CllOJ('~; \\'hil•• Thi•.\ La:.!! S4288 -l""· : ·..:::~~~-· --:. ;;,,, • I . • ,If·~ .. " ............ , " . ' . '.'~~· ' "': ' ,. ' .., lo •. -;;.'.~· -• ~.l.N JU...,. C.\l"ll TIA .. 0 ,;i.iJ7s ~;';.;,:;37 5 LEASE .~i:! l'l\T!I At11H . I :1«h . dl'''()l I '74 FIRE Bl RD ESPR ITI gqi ':i7~1h: \LI' ~1:;-1·1. · Vinyl 1op. nir L'fllldit1oning, SUNSET FORD I au1nm111u·. rally II 1>hf'c!s, 1)(1111'!' ~11·rru1:,:. On!t1r To- •l;i~. ~.i111 1: .• rd111 1:r .. 1•' Bhd. 1 \\T·~1 1 11 111-.11 ·1 li'.~G-11110 :7·; 1'1:-..J't> J:~ir-4~1~1 d!TPI" i.:ri1. I ,'j\(,\J:'• Slf~I'.!. SUNSET FORO :111r11 ;;1rd1•n L;1\ll'1' Bl1 1! \\"1•-.1111u1~1o·r ti:~1;..1010 G,!\S SAVER l'.17' l'LY,IOl Tll n1·:.;Tv :: :->td 1 r 111-. . ~l'l'i1 1 '..:·•'- 1111 ll' t.i;1· Hl\'t"I' '.!°J ).IJ>(;1 f hll~ \ l.f~Ml 11111!•-. ~2.1~1:1 l'r11 ·1t<' 11.111~ .•. -.1 \)~1 \ 'i! !'l'\T!I S1, \\~11 ;<111". ,\!!' '1>11•1 1 ... h,1. 111·.11• I. t! 1'-1 · I I I..... I 1 11.1 ! I 11"1 ' \Ji' t 1\1nd f\,•-.1 11!t1 •r 10i:',-lh1,, l~lil l'I.'\ ['\!. .iUT•l1\i.1ll•. lllf, 11•'11 111·1•-.. J •>llll1T. Ii, .OJ 1111 111, 1·11u1p. S!.i:1\ • 1.1.:-~-:::11 • "i.~ l'l;'\ !'fl nunaboul. :iuln. !{.~·II. ]n11· 1111li.·~. \1111 nllld S:!·l:i:i. 1; 11-72ti I ~t:P1 \ro-:-;-ir !<.pd. £.-~·re;. .si:c.o. or ofl<"r. J. l!li·'.11'" ~1-PJNTO:-<I Sp(!, Jt.~H. J.!"''l p11lt';1i,:1•. ,i.:ond t'Ond, ~I ~Ill :-:JS-1~11 fi.\.'J.l:i.."17. Plymouth 9960 'ii S1•11 •lu.-.t1•1 auto lr:in-. ;111· !~Hid 1'.l:J<.:JIJ 6 l]l t'O,.: 11n1rd i:lass bu1n pi•r f::'\lartl~ vinyl s1dC' n1ould1111.: 1·11qll'l~ \\"h;1(' :<l<ll:l1alls \"J.29 CY{; I 21.~ 1::2 s:: 1·1~1.(lll C.R. HAAN, Inc. 202{) 1::. l:<t ,j.11-14J1 ;7-1 DUSTER 11.T. CJ>l'. Sn1al! V8. t'139KLK I $'?.t!J'.J SUNSET FORD ~~l.J(J Garden Gro\"1' lil\'d. I \\'C'.~lrnins1L·r (i:llT-IUlll $84.99 MO. ph1-. ta\ ::t; 1110. OEI.. •74 GRAND PRI X Bu. k•·I ~1 ·~. 1un~11!•·. ;11r ,-..n,l1tionu1.: \ 1~1.1 I \'lf). 1~·"• r ~t····rull!. po1\C'l" 111 ..... ,. tw 1k<"'· ;1uh 1111ii l l\0 tra11:.1111s· ~11111. Jin1ut"h .ft' 11t·l1very. $98.12 MO. •74 VENTURA II i\11!1•,1•.1!1<'. llrlh"•I t:la.''· 1i1'- ht\!' hu1nJK'r.<. air 1-ondi- 11c•n111!.'.. ln11111•rliaTC' rh•h\"<'l). $76.66 MO. 1.lu <. It\ :,1; 1t111 !J!.1. • DAVE ROSS PONTIAC :.! 1.~11 llarhnr Bh·d f(lSI:+ ),\,•,.; ~. '.'i-:-:017 • ---(8.~l --i 1973 PONTI ACS LEFT OVER 30% DISCOUNT ·7·1 Nev• Val\an! 4Dr .1 spd 1 trnns 2'24CID cng-6 r·yl 1·inyl Choice of Models ~f'a1.~ c1111X'ls VL41 -CY J:. Color' & Equipment 2~,.-J611 . $:!-n.-,.m I C.R. HAAN. Inc. 2020 I::. Isl :.41-4li1 ~ Ply _Dus1t'I" G ~yl s~irk I .~3 milrs 11).'[FL\ SlG.%.00 O.R. HAAN. Inc. :ill-Iii!' 'l:C"'-==--Oc-'-----9800 I Autos, • .. , .. • ' ' ' * * 9800 Autos, New -----* -·· NABflS ~UAC . 2~ .... ..,... Co.tiollliiola940.tt OPl-:N SU~DA \' ---'70 ·r-n!rd. A111-Fn1 slcroo. Hn)•10,:h<1111. Till 11•h£'£'l. Air. Full p .. 11•'1" SJ!J."oll. 817-:.fi16. !I 11•· ,111 •''\Ira !':f)lH'C heater! )HU !HI lnnr;:t•r 11'1'~ Sr-11 ii nn\1 1111h ;1 I! 111~ Pilot ----9800 Autos, New 9800 Get CADILLAC LUXURY • Ill A CHEVROLET . 197 4 CAPRICE 4 Door Brand New & Loaded (186768) (1048) 1000 Below Manu fa cturers Retail Sticker Pnce .::11 . ,. WE'RE DEALIN' ON VEGAS s 1186768)(1 048) TAKE YOUR CHOICE (279488) 1907) LEASE A BRAND NEW 197 4 MONTE CARLO LANDAU radio, heater,. brakes, Air Conditioning, lease the "CONNELLEASE" LOADED: A\,ltomatic power stee'~ing, power vinyl Landau roof. transmission, (699) Way. $ 83 • PER MONTH 36 Mo. 0.E.L-0.A.C. BUY WHERE THE LOW MILEAGE CARS ARE! '73 VEGA WA.GOH 8111 miles. aulo. trans .. radio. air cond , nice. rema1n1ng lacto1v warranty. {629JEP) $2899 '72 CHEVY I MOYA Cpe . VS. 28.000 miles. air cond., power steering, vinyl rool Ser ff3043 $2599 '73 CHEVROLET 1...,0~ Cntoe c~ Vinyl roof. auto. trans .. V-8 (regular gas). air cond .. power sleer1ng. power brakes. radio. weekend special. {1 49GIHI $2999 '73 DATSUN l'tCIUP Ra dio. 4 spd .. 15.491 miles. J1ke new (83566UI $2799 '70 DATSUN """"" Radio, 4 spd., 2Q, 760 miles. ~ice. (54281 5) $1 '699 '72 MONTE CARLO court Gold ca1. auto. trans . V-8, air cond , power steering , power brakes. beaut11ul .29,000mlles !819EIF I $3099 '72 CHEVY II . HOVACOUPE V·8. au10 !rans . power steering. 27 000 miles. radio nice .car new tires (152EXEl $2399 '71 FORD l/4 TON Cnto.RbM Von Special wheels and ltres {Y46303 J $2995 '72 <;HEVROLET lrnpa&a Cpe. C..11°"' Vinyl roof. air cond. power steenng. power brakes. auto. !rans .. V·B. 32.000 miles. n1ce.1565FFBI $2699 '72 CHEVROLET IMrAU 4 Or., hardtop, aJr oond .• V-8. 22.000 miles, power steenng. power brakes, virryl roof. sure nice. (86BEOWJ $2799 2828 HA ... BLVD. • 15 WAGONS WITH GOOD MILES -6 AND 9 PASSENGER LARGE AND MEDIUM SIZE -WITH LOW MILES '72 CORVETTE STIMGRA Y CPL Air cond oower steering, powe1 brakes AM/FM. auto trans, 350 Cu In. engine. tremendous car. (Ser ~77641 $5399 '72 FORD LTD IROUGHAM 4 Dr H.T cruise conlrol. e!ec windows. spill !rt. seals vinyl roar P S . P.B air cone!. This is a super car. V-8 (regular gas). (737EXO) $2999 '72 FORD MUSTAHG- Sportsroof cpe. 23.000 miles. auto !rans .. air cond .. vinyl roor. P.S. V-8 , nice ( lOOFFY). (Sure a Jewell $2999 '7 3 PLYMOUTH DUSTER Coe .. V·8. (small). Auto. lrans .. air cond .. power steering. hke new. (215HEW). (20.000 miles). $3099 '73 CHEVROLET ILAZER 4 wheel drive, radio. auto trans. power steeruig. low. low price {96717N) $4199 '70CHEVY flCAMIHO New 11res. V-8. PS. au!o. lran5 .. au cond nice good miles (Ser =8930) $2199 '72 IMPALA 4 d1 hardlop, low miles. vinyl roof. power sleenng. power brakes. vs. (reg gas). air cond. Nice car {552ESAl $2799 '73 CHEVROLET ¥•TOH '1CIUr V·B. auto trans .. pawer steering. power brakes. 17,000 miles. (37590H) $3099 '70 DODGE CHIJ.llHGER Cpe, low miles. VB, vinyl roof. air l::ond .. power steering, aulo trans. f7 79ACZ) $1999 ·COSTA MESA '72 CHEVROLET 11, TOH PICICUr Air cond PS .. V-8, auto. trans.. radio. special [10960LJ $2399 '71 PONTIAC LEMA.HS en. Low m1!es. radio, auto lrans .. power steenng, air cond (563CPNJ -$2499 '72 FORD li4 TOMV.A.H V-8 auto trans., PS. radio (96686Jl $3099 '72 TOYOTA CWCA CJ'f. <4 spct .• radio, flke, S.... #7217 $2499 121 I TON Cab & Chassis LOllCJ whool base for 12 • 14 ft. bodies, come iee. • • '. • • rf J Ui...L ¥ l«Y J/, l "------~~~...,,,.,-------,=:--=-...,.,c' Cadillac 991S CadilL1c 9915 Cadillac 991S Cadillac 9915 Cddill~ .. -~ -99·f5'~rolet 9920 -------------------+----_.,.-~--------·----- '69 Cnupe de Ville \'!\ .• 1u1<1n11!•1· \,,I I· \I 1->l<'r• "· 11'.ll\l'l' ,. j \ 1 I l J1 ~ Ptllll'L \\l!ld.,11~ I'" I' I ~•'.ii~, J,-dt.1·1· 1•1 I 1 , • l,111tl.1u h•p f 11·1u11 .111 ('f1nci1r101111, · 1· :11 ·I ... , la:hl 111111· 111111 1,1111<· 1 .. p •f.l:!\S!li• 51995 1;:ri{)(} H••o11·h 1\1. \\1·~111110~11 r ~J:!-4if>.'1l i ... 1•<.''.il I '74 SEDAN DE VILLE ! ~ < • 11 l " 11 ~ l , I , I . 1 •II' •<1111ppo d 111 I 1 1· I '"I" t,q I• ,, ' l\jH.,•I, \\lif·\J ,o, i'""' I d·• I' " "''llll!lo·I. " u,1. I ·I< , t•!1 { . >I 1 \• I '' I 1l~l«•1p1 I 11 ~ I· $7199 NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor ttvti, CostaMesu 540-9lCU CADILLAC FLE:::T'NOO DS 1966 BROUGHAM ' ' 11 , 1.I I u ! I J' I· I It" q 1! • I l'rl' q, 1•11,,,•,'l'I,\ Ii I• ,, • ·,• • "1111 J, r t P l1 I.>'• 1\'. '-1•',,·,t• 1967 BROUGHAM ,,,1 n•nd 1"11'' I" >\I ' , 1 'I\ I l1•p, I 11 I I !. I• ·11, I "•I .111 1111 •·• II,\• \I • '"' I·· ,or ~111"' ,..,.,111• .< \ .ii • j , \\ 7~1.,' NABERS CADll LAC 2600 Hr.i:-b:ir blvd Costa tAeia 540~9 l llU ' IL'!-" ..;1 '·' ' I '71 Coupe de Ville \\[1~·.\1 ,;,·11·" r .. i. 1·!11' " t, l.1 "'' 1.J" "'' I""" 1 ,, o1 I" '\,.I \\ ! I " •!"'. ''"' 1 ... " < '' 11 ol I "'I I' \ dlHlllll)ll: II.Ii <ti 'r .\ Cad, '73 El Dorado Cad. '72 Cpe. de Ville ,·: ,t • · 11 ·\'ill• -t'l,:kJO 1u;I CHEV. 'JO IMPALA Luxurious (Abr1olet ··11~1 1.i. 11..-1 1 •I' !1 l\ith ,. "1 1·"11 " 111 ' 1 • ;, 1 'I Custom Coupe with 'I I I'.\ ! .111 I ""I "'I •II i,1' ' lr;1'i, fl I I!-: L • 34 ~ M'I 1:. •UllllJI 1111111 '"'"I'",, •111"-'I. :. ... :•1 , li11--lili.1 .111 .. esst11an .\Al ... ICS \ . 111 I 1 I' '1"'1 ' 1 1· 1"' ' "'1 " ( I I 1U1q111· ''''" ,,,,_, 11 1 ,,11 ,,,. \1 .. 1,,, •.· .. 1,.rua \o1'llt11• 1111~ 11111 k ,! ... ,, 1, 11 l, I" " · I !'1•11·• ,,,1111 •• 1 1. .. ·1•1.' · 11111 h1n·· 1111.11 inl1·1·1o11 I I II I \•I 'I .. :.·1···· ,.,,,11""" Chevrolet 99''1 ) · ' 1 1·1°111 'I I'!"'+, < ' 4. }-',11 \1H,\ 1111' !'t)lll., ,L\1(U I l!IH l•l<f .1..... ·---t'll!l\(111\ ... ,·;1! !""II' 111111 I\\ -·-• I 1 1'1111~. 1~1111•r "'I,." r !n i.:' 1, 1 , ,l1l" ,,.111.in t lr1111I, 11<•111:_;'..;1·1'. !11111~ l<><li. •b ••t l•• ('llJ:\ /\II•~ l'11r;.,1. 1'.u ,.1 • l"'"1t·1 h1':1!u•s, H II. \\~\\ I .1 , !. 1 1 •I oi 'Ith I ; "'"'· ""1•·" 11111, 1,p,. .,1 $4699 •••n•! l:l'h/"1 c111: _\,k 1110..:1 I H'l'~. l'ft' Naht·t·~ C'ndllla<' ... !1 1.'"'••1111· :-!11•1111·· ,1'1 I ,:·,. 1:,1r'r. -.1~ ' .. i. ~!1 ln-ltk'. l~ACJ-'I do iii\" \!1,IS ,I• \''I ' II \) •)'\I $1999 J.,., 1 .. , nHI,.~. 11,:1:!1.J" Cad. '71 Cpe. De Ville • Less tlian 35,000 miles Cad. 1972 El Dorado ···1>11, l\111,.:;1" .. ,.old "'1 I IJ.\\r.l'Tll.1 ! I· I• I 11'1 .•II ·:l<'lll"I' 'I 1 ... 111,1 r l 1'1 'I• •I I 111 I''" !. ii ,\ Ii • ,, o ·I"•' ! I., -1 • ,. " ' I· •· "• ' 1 ,. ..,, '\" I 'I • '• • ' S5899 NAHERS CADILLAC "'> 24'10 Hat·bor 81v.., C->sta Me~a 540-~; 1. ltf•t\'\\!l\'. \\' 'l'\1'1 \\!I J \ \JI I\ l.\t, " 11 I 'I' )l.J '' I• • 'I o•lh•·I tr· I .:1. ' 111 " , .i • l"T11-. ;.,,1o·I r· I '" 1 ) "ii "I 'i"""' >II t •o• JI' I'" "I'' ",.,,I 1 •j!. •"Id I, , I ,I I, ,; ,111 11<11 I i, '! "I\\ ' , l'I i ,..' ' I ii ,\ ' ' 'I OI \ ., I 1 • I• r NA~ER~ c:AOILLA C" I ::600 !-(c.1bol' B'•1t} ' '(~'! ~' s~-~40-91 ~ ll .. J.\ ..;1 \ll\Y '68 Cadillac Sed. De Ville I ·I I'. I\\ , I 11' t ·,.11,j ) ' 1 'llh'1 ' \ 1: 1 I !: •·I ·'' ·I:, -· . 'IHI_\ '-1111 1111. 51588 TERR Y BUICK 1.i .11..\1.l~l1. 1trr ,,;,.1 ... ! ---------, ,,, .. 1·1<. 1'11;, 1:111, "" NABERS CADIUAC < •11d s U'.11) I 11ui.1 l'I i : ,, . iti-, I 2t00 Harbo"' !lvd . · ... \(•\ •. 11•111 ,.11111 : ;,.11,1 ClstafAoto S40~9lOO ., "·' ,,, \l.• 0 \I • nnd. 1: •.• ,1 SS I I ·I.' I' , .,.It , i ·1, I' !\11'.".l..\ 1! 11·ili1•11 't.I l.'l1f p/,, ' d[l'I- \: 1:, ( 111 Id l r;·,7 ;: t'll :.\ !1.l.110·1· 1.1 d•, <. 'l111 , .. n.i, I "I Ii "1' ll«ol 1;·,11 \ "I \ ,(I :'.1IUI,\ li';'' H!(.i, , • 1 I, C,\,\11:\(l 1'1:' II!' 1 ,\IJtl. J1/\\ 1111 ~. I 'II 1>1·1-.::!l.1 ,; I l '1 IE\" I '.110 ll'\ I .\{·1·: \]ooloH 1\11 ! : " -,in \.ui\ +,i1: I ' ~· ' •I I '/I;, ~.~ .. ~} I Ill' 1·011d Jljl l'.11..\. Iii''\ llro"<, 11PE'.\ Sl-.'\t),\Y ill ;\\)\',\ l.aod:ou •'Pl' \ S. :n1H•, P-~lt'<'1' tY\ .\:::.11 ::Ol l!l:J SUNSET FORD ~o-lhl t'.'1nl.11 t;1~1\'t' Hl11! j,! ( IJt'I ( ',qJI lt'O ;_I dL j1,11d 1"" h111 11111 ... 1-:" l.1111L,.1 1•1" .111· ,. •i!d 1UIH l!-.111• ~i1<to";1 l t1 • •1i•Jl(,I t~'."l1t~) C.R. HAAN, Inc. Chrysler -992s'"Cadf11 ac -9915F0rd _ 9~t ~11r~ ,.,., 11 & 101~1·111' -;;, Cad . .:11 Ced O~ Vitt;\;-~~-, M 1 '· 111' · 'I I I ' I i f ' I 1111" " \1.1· •. •I I,..\ t'lllillJl~• l l".111 fttl'hlll ;111· 1,11111. ~1111 . .i1u,ii ' ', '"'\'°\'llWl•I · I I'' 1-· .. 1•111•~"~1 l·:it·-· . ., ... 11,)Y,\·r, 11n1l 1 .. 1, 11111 ·· ' -·0 ( 0.R. HAAN , Inc. t"ath•'r 1n1',.r11•i, 0 1111 t· SUNSC:T FOR 1 ~'II'.~! J'. l,f :111 1171 l1·h•""l1•pl1' ~h'•'fll!j.(, d•"l :ilhl !;.111h11 (;ll•ll' ,1;ll< IOI ·1,\ c·111:rS1-=-1.r. \\\Gll'\\ lu<·I.:~. r1111~· ,,,ulrul. J :•111 \\,·~1111111,t•·r ti.~• 111 !J•'T<t.11. rull !M11ii·•'. \ \(',\ s.·1111111'1, llf'ad 1t1:h1 d11n1111•1·, .• ·~ \I \\'!.HU 1, l 'I", t'. ,·,\;I 'Ill\" :->1'1'.('\!\I .. (';11·1•1! fa1 1nn..;t •'lt'l'I ill\ 1•\lr1 ,\ ·1ulu. l'-1>!1•1•1111),! •)l,,.lll\ 1 .~11~1.,. 111•11 , .-1 Hl-700:: ,11• i.ho11 ~ ,.,,., 111'1•! r.1n· 1 ·.;,·1 s.:!l~n ,;11; ,,,,; • 1::38;u• SU NSET FORD I ------$3299 I ~1 111) ~;11nl1 •11 l:t1•I•' l:h•I f.l ('lil{\.S!.l•J( [Jl\IH'l'l:il i) ·•1 1111'1 I\\ 1•,.1 111111,l<'f !>,,' I ('1~11111 <'1•up1·, alt rtl ' :-;11·;1,., Cad. '73 Sed. de Ville . ~~111 ti!li-;..'111:1 1;o.; \l\';-.T.\f\t: !'11n1 .\111 I _ _ _ ~":u·h11T :'\!.' f'1Hlf!., 1·1n1i ""'· ;o,1, l•l1w/11l11h· 1'\\ll •'•''I Comet 9927 :ill l«f1lh1•r ~1t1·1·1n1'. 1,111 .~l2:i!l 1~111 .. r, 11h , l··li-.;1·"P" SU NSET FORD \ll·:t((" {'(l.\110:1' ·-;:, 1; 1·11, -I" I., !•I "I :!:! \If 'l •. I :11.I l:•,,1\ll. ,-.:;••lll ,\ ~h:.111' (llB ,11•••t'l11•~, "h'l 'IJ, d<KJI' ""''·' ,., I I 'i 111 \ ::11'd1•ll (;!UI o' • \'I 1·r11iM· 1i1nl1•1 I, 11111~1 ~·1 l'>'·, , 1 i( \\ ,.:.111 Olli"'' ·1· !, ... , ·'' 11!\ • : ,.,, ,1· fl,,,, lo.,., I liro1u11' !'\\I" • ~~.i~·' 'l ~ !>;;:'\ I ' .'! .111.1 II· I!\' ' ' (I '.\Jl-'T 1 ·1. j,,..,, liT, l\l.'<:t,;\\1 I $5799 .. Cad. '68 Sed. de Vill e ( i••• I !"li•i1l"•11 ~ .• •J , ,,. ,,1 .. r,v ;i11· rond1!11•111•1 1 l~oj ' \ .01.\ I 1•1jJ, f• .ii I' •' II \' 1· . \• i (I J.\li" I ... : 111<1 I \'. , .. ,,.. 1 .. , ... , .. 11._, 111h•nn1, 1111 !\· I' 111·0 lu " J• .. ,1· ,. 1 1 .. 1, "''~'J•\1· ,,,.,.l'l11t:, \\1/1·'\I ~ 'll'll. ~,, ".~I• ~"""'" ·11:11n 11!h··t' I. Continental 99301 '"1 • i\·r :"1:1••1 '' ,-.1 ___ -I 11199 I; ~·d tJ " ,, l,01\\ " ' '' "1L :-. 1 .• 1 Cad. '74 Sed. de Ville "I' 0 .. : I Demonstr ator , : I· "" I j • 111 . ., So.' 1. •. 1 " 11 o..11 J •! I ~.},:; o •1<1 O.R. HAAN, Inc. ~.t! 1 r ,,1 .o I: 11, I ,\ l·•"I ,1L111111f.. lo ;,.,l)i•l ~11',o,,I I O.R. HAAN, Inc. _,'.~I I 1·1 11 11; ·-)·•11:11 ('h.111·.1.i ' I'' , I,, , II o1,.Pll , "ll•" • \ \ \11 ll 'IJ'.' I SUNSET FORD I I ti• I ull'd•'ll lt1 '" ,. I :h .I I \, ..... 1,,.,,1 ... ll'L f, •. 1-11111 Cougar 99J3 1 1 .i~>•ql'il'!""l:11•·l1rl re: i!Jl;I\() L.•i!•l.ill •I• I I "1_.I lo I'. 1,,..• ,,1· 1 It I 1- (;1'f int•l 111, , I "l.1 I'.'. I ('!,t~'<1[11•d ,\d '.-"·" •II " " •1 1 ' " , I" I• ,,111 1 11, h I' ·" >I,.'. l.,,l 1.,1 .11:1 1:,·J1 ,: 1 ,\\, I ] "" • '• I \:! .. II. '·1· h• l Hll I' . di I .111 ·I '\I l'\11'\I.\ .~/~ '\, ,. ,, :!11: I E '-1 . ! I I \7! ~·: \l\l'J:l. :.' 111 i!'I ,\/1', .\II'. 1:.111. i1t1111 .11~. j,1·k,., lh 11 111'1'.-. \I 11 t t'<ltld \:Uhl /+1 I "11 o' r \'.:O-!ll :i IJl' ·'cl l-'l,.;11; ;1,k 1 ... ,\11· \\lui.· ( I 1 , \ " \ .. ,q, 1,~,. ·I, , qd·'\I .. I< I, i 1.,' • '1q.1 ..... ,;.,.,!' .1 ... 1. '' 111 'I • . ' SUN.lE r t-URD ,, ; I < o, , ,oil 1 "' , • I ,iul \., {' .. 1 1, :: ,1;7-. I !'>!•ll\•·111111~ I II·• • ' ' ' l\1'1'd [I\' 11"" l .1!l 1',.' ~i~· "'.'-Llul l 'I \~'-~ ;-;: I I.~ ''. ' . ·-. I. '' < I II.· ) .. "I "111'1 ( . ' , I "" 11 1 , : I >< ', Autos, New 9800 Autos, New 9800 ; 11 ·.,s, New 1 GMC LIGHT DUTY ·DEALER IN ALL OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BRAND NEW '74 GMC VAN • • ~1 HONDA CAR DEALER IN ORANGE COUNT'f ,, ,, ''" ['d<>I CJ, '-'-'Ii:., I .111 , .. ·-' ' " I ' ' ' llJMIER 1 USED CAI BUY S THIS tVEEK ~~~! I " ~ ' :, . " I. ,, ,1, \ '"'' '"" .1 I I ' ~ , '•' '\\ • • \, I " • " I ' , , ,, , t,I S7199 ll '\'' • '" I• I" •" l>I I 'i Cad. '72 Scd. de Ville \\ • '. " " "' , !.I 11.111 1. P. '. ' ' ,., . d." '' 'I I, I· ' j.'' ,,, I I•" I I :f" H\I' ')U1 .. ::il::. ( t=URD ,1 I,,. • I 1.I• • ·H' ! .. I I • ' '" ' I 1 '· •• ' : .. , .. , ,., ' 14599 ~ Ctld. '70 Scd. de Ville Less 1han 391000 miles ... ,. ' I \I ,. " ' . ... " lo• • ·I •• • ' I ' \!! I• •1.1, ,a .. t,•I · ''::I;< /I Cadge-99J5 ,, ,_'I . • SUNSE T FORD .I I' ,. lo l (,i ' '· • ' ' • ' .~ .... 1 ..... 1 ' ' ,.( :1 J • ' I .:.v1,.:,E T FOR.O ,, '"' .... 11!11 '.I 1 1, J, " ; I ' ~·: , 11 "'' ,' '" 111! . ' .... u1,._.c 1 ~ORD "' " ... ·''"'I l.J'i41 ' ::iUN::iE r 1-UKD ,,,.,1, " ' I '"'. 1 ... 1 •• •· >UNSET FORD "1,_11,,,' I " .. 11 d ' ii• .1. -\ '· "'· Sales-Service-Parts RE ADY TODAY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '72 TORONADO Focc .~ 9940 ::ilJ 1"::it:: T FORD " I ~ r: 53377 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CALIFORNIA'S ONLY GMC 4 WHEEL DRIVE CENTER "Home of the GROUND HOG" CUSTOM VAN SELL-OFF ! 1·· r-i ~. ,.•rr v . .i• Som· \/,.. 'lrr.e 1·.l''l t•1 · M r.••'li ''1 f~l.'l f. 1·1-K·•"P-M ,_;:., \', ••, i021:qc, 0•11/JJ!J i~l<~~~g~IR $4777 !-~~--------~~--~~-~~~··· . Bran d New 1974 OMEGA 197 4 GMC ¥4 TON Th~ Little Olds .. :, ,',:'.:·:· . , $48 77 BIG GAS SAVE£/: ~977 ' " ,1 • ,, . '71 DELTA 88 CPE. "' $1977 '69 PONTIAC FIRE~lRD . . --~ , ... ',$1577~ ' .. ,, ;' '68 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 h • ' , I $777 ' . ' ' " 1974GMC¥4TON4x4 528 71' .';.'· ,',.'' $5177 '70PONTIACGRANDPRIX 1~74GMCSPRINT BRAND NEW ~:;:.:.:·'"'' ~477 $3477 1974 98 ~,.$ '69BUICKELECTRA cg~~, · , ~ .. '':;::·'.::,: ', ·,.' .. , s 1177 .,., , ..... ' 4 ; .. ,,,,,.,-1[) I!. 1: I' I~ t· I""'" U O"'IV<·r, 197 4 GMC 4x4 LOADED 1~~.i~~iE .. , ·:~,'~ $5277 I CO~TEMPOVANCONVERSIOHS s 147•1.• AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE • J OFF I . \ /\11 P1~:,.er11'Q r> 1>r1•es, ~· tJd•o wswi"~' :i.r.ic.iov 1 '74 CHEV. MA!:IBU CLASSIC Y1.,~I •{•, \'J';;,YI '"' ,1 I' l""''"'l f· N "' ",'1'> ~ 77 SU.'lSE:. T FORD I 11 • I SUNSET FORD • 1 .. ,. l SU N S~T FORD SUNSET FORD " I , I -: I' \' .. ,, '' . I \I/~ '1 111. " .... ,,1'.1 ·I,, I '.·I SU~SET FURL> . . " .1 ... ·1, 1 .. 1 • I. ·~ ,, ' " '• 11 ',, '" '· " ,. '· ' I" ... ,, .I 1,( I, 'I' )I I 'I ::iJ1.,.':>t:. r fORO ' '"" '· • .. ,.,-I 11l 1 I' i • .: " ' 'I ,1/ 0. R. HAAN, l nc. " • ,; 1 " ' .1. -, '" ,., .. , 'l•"t' I ''"' · • •1"' t.,1 ~· .:.1 •1111,1. ~ '·-·' ••. !-1! .'"'"I\ I. , " ., I• ,\.] j l . ' ( ' .. \' . ' .. , . 1 J;i- Autos, New 9800 -------- '67 Pl YMOUTH CPE. . ' $799 '69 CHEVY IMPALA CPE. ;, I $899 '68 CHEVY STATION WAGON '· .. ' ''"""\' I·~"''" '1,.•· I ii I~ l $799 '64 PONTIAC CPE. v l ~ ·1 t IOPGll") $399 '63 GREEMIQIAR r-t-. ;'\ 0 Ir.)., IL"' IJ', II $899, ' 'I ,\ " " ' .. '" j• "" \ .... '''"I ' . ! .1 .. :1.1 11 •.•. 1 l1h;,1 Muslilng I. . " \ " 9952 '.II', "· "'"' • , i1.i Ii!• I 1 >UNSET FORD I 1 ., , "' d I ", , I ' , :1111 •I ·' ,,, I 1\!1 ~Jtt•1.-l••>I.' • I I" 11 / 11 I 1 ,. l • 1 1;!, '.~[•HJ ' >UNSET FOR D ",;;11 !i11nh·11 l.01•1\•' Ul\.J \\,•,!1111n~1t·r 11::1r-J~\() •>.\:\ l'l-.1> 1:~h.'\ .\lu,t11n~. l ~!" <·d. ;••of~I lln'<·h 1·0111! (all ,,1\-]t.j ;Llh'J' J !l';t\'f 1tl•"-~:1~:1< l.hi1; i\JL'S l'.\i\l; 1·\1'1)1111111.; 111·11 .di 1~1111·1', ltll' t.:l'Cat .~ .. 1_,. lJ4)u"' < 11· 1;;1rgai11 ~ 1J.1, \'\I''> (j 12-jl 17 J•.1,.; .\1l'!"'l.\\ti, \"-~. 1rd. \·,I',\ 1:1111d 1· H n d I Ii 1111 (Jr11~•n,1I 11,111,•1'. SliOU 612-~;>i.17. ·1:: ;\\UST.\:\\ i, l•~i's, xln'I 1 1'1l111I. ,\111/f111 ~1c1·t~1. Good n11 ~as. S.!'l\.(I. 1~1:1-{}2()7. I 'Li6 (_;'[' fon1·Prl1hJ,.,-~J. V-S. , Sl't'~·i: 1"1.1-:,\.\' '\1000. ( · .. 11 .JJ,;....~~·16 Oldsmobile S.i.lr ! & ~Vh:e OLDSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS I HONDA CARS 9955 I UN!VERSITV OLDS ~~~) llacbur Blvd. Cost,1 l\f, ·!,a 54Q.96t0 ''f.'. Olrt~ Onu•ga outo tran~ n1 r c.·0110. lo\\' rnicla"c 13368 Lit'. 224GM I $2:i'):J.OO 0. R. HAAN, Inc. 20al E. 1st 5414171 '73 OLDS OMEGA CJ><. 11,<XXl mi. f41tllfrOJ $3200 SUNSET FORD 5110 Gnrdtn Crov~ Blvd. we1tmln11trr F.:l6-401o BYOWNE~-DBLTA' ROYALE, $4,000 nil. Ikst otter. 96H380 o.ft. ~ IJaJJ..y bet noon ~n. ' lfow • tncthm, you wnnt to I'bc fulttt df'.9W .ta the West. •ll! Cmlfied ndJ do tl ••• a U..ll\\' Pilot Cl~aalft«I well • CILll NOW 642-$71, I. " I I I 1111 I '' I ' I •'11 1 I'" ''>I 1 •1<,, ' . '" ···!· 4/' '.11 . . ' , I '" .. ' 111 I '· ,,, 'L '" I, 'r I lil1 ,, 171 ,, ,, \·I 52 )</> '.1 ' 1· I,, I I "'' I ';Ill \'I' Ill;.: Cal <tin 'C'd " 0 ln' I """ V-8. 55 n •• It , MA~S CAl»~LAC 2600 '""""°" 11w1 •. C•lhlMaM S40l9100 OPEN SUND A \' Pinto 9957 PINTO '71 2-DOOR Less than 21 ,000 Miles Auto tratii.., ra1l1u, hC'ater, I roof raek, dC'hl'\<' black vin) l 1nlC'rior. !)I\. l"<:lt·rlor & s1J01h·~s ili~11IC' & oul. 1 ('/jJCV\V1. $1999 HA•EllS CADll.lAC 2600 "'""' llwt. c.it•Mo .. 540·9100 •PONTIAC• GRAND PRIX HEADQUARTERS ONLY 14) 1973, MODELS LEFT All l.o1Ht1•d !Sl"I'. :.i:;o-~1.i1 Y(ll""I: Cl\0!("~: \\"lulf' Thi') Las1' 84288 -·--OPLN SUNDAY 1 411 "'l":.! r.nAN!1 l'!:!X L.~n~r""1N"°'IU Hunal:ioul. Air. 1 Vl'r.v !011 1nilca~1· -~ 11.a1:1·d r;1rk, 4 spd., red. (j~2Dl\!LI ] 1Si1r. 1450~.l\1 , $1 :1~1!1 $3088 SUNSET FORD i11 '71 r.t{A\'D l'H!X '.d !IJ (;ardt•11 t.:1·01(· Blvd 1 \'o•r1 low 1n1i(•:i;.:r !·"ull.v \Vcsl1n111~\1·r (iJl.i-101 0 !1•.ul<"'d. !,'io·1· 11;!_1:!:1:.~. 19-1'1:\ l·o \' ll /bl -k· $2988 .;-. ' . ~· 011 ac·. jll 'G9 GHi\l\l) PRl:\ ~ldP 1>1[)1'~ ~-S ll"l lJ l'S . ,. . 1· II J\1!1llll 'S1 Sll~I 1 ·.xtr11 n1<'r ·u ~1'>1:c1·. SUNSET FORD !.-r:_u1hrr u11rr1or, etc. 1:-;e1·. ,,(J.~~181 . ~~100 Ga:-dt:n Gro\1' Blv1l $1888 \\71•,t1n11ht•'I" fi.~;....l1lHl '72 PINTO \'111~ I n1o.\f. l ull ill'1~1r in,id1• ,\ "ul, aurn111.1tu· tr~n~111i~· I ~uin ,\ ]011 ntil1 ·~. j~J."Jl)F\"CI . Only $1995 I BARWICK DATSUN '""""' '~c 33375 CAMINO WISTRANO 'AM JUA.M C•l'll-flAMO '· .• ' •. '' s.. •. - 493.3375 or 831 ·1375 ("h1•1·k (}ur 12-:\Jl1\Tll -\ti .\llLEAGE \\AIO~A:\·ry LEASE ~:_i-1 11\TtJ i\111 .... 1;,.·k. th·1·<n '74 FIREBIRO ESPRIT ~rp •~17!11\ \\J '· Sl:."1!1. I Vinyl top, 11ir 1'flnll ili011ing, SUNSEI FORD 11utoma1u·, rnlly JI 11ht•cls, 'ollu 1;;11·.i, 11 l;r .. 11· Bhd. po11cr ~t•·rring;. 01'rll'r To- \\,·,1 111111,11·1 li::li-llJJO I da.1 . · ·7:: l'I:\ ["{1 1 :11·~·'.'~·U~'1 !-.~cl, .1 $84. 99 MO •. ch•vnr ~rp. 1 1,,(,\J:-.1 Sli\l.J. pl11s t:i\ ;:G lllCl. 01::1.. SUNSET FORD :1 141l Ganh·n <.;rove Bl\11 , '74 GRAND PRIX \\"1•,tn11n~h'I" G§.-lll!O Bu. t.1•t '"'· -., 111J\'1•lo·. air GAS SAVER J!'\;; l'LY\!Ot Tl! lH-~TEJ: Sid It" 111-.. i.;n';tt '...:·•· 1111lt't1:1· l<•\"t'I" Z:! \ll'fi l ()nly 11.!XW) t111)t•, ~.!.1~1.i I '1"11 'Ill' 11.ll I~ :i·ol ~,].",[ '7:! l'l'\T! 1 S1 1 \\ ..:n 'n1:" ,\11• • •111tl. 1.u1I '· 111·.1!0 O. d i,!' I 11-.•. I' o )1,11 Ill"!' \J1d l"Ulld l\1 •'1 P llt'I l,~::-H• ,, Jffj l !'l:"\Ti\. a11l••1!1 • .i11 ill!_ lh'\\ Ill\'>,. [ H\\11\"!, li,..00 n11 l )I\ 1qt11p ~1.:;~1 • l:+.;-,;.:11 * l~c-7.~~. ----"i.~ l'l:\l(J llu11a!xi11T. ;+Ulo\. l' .. t ll. )1111· 1111h'~. \!111 n>ll'! $Z·l~(1. 1; 11-7'..11:i I - --------"T: Pl:'\TO. 4 ~pd. :!:, :'>IPC, S23:10. •)r (Jfl••r 1·1!"1"~·\!J~>\ 'il PIN l"O, 4 :-ipJ. JtSrll, :.:""I n11lrai.::••, J.:C""t t~irul. SI•~! :(l.'l..1!111 &i~1 :r17. Plymouth 9960 '71 ;..: ... 1 •tu-1• t .1u10 1r;t1h ,, r r"nll :!U.'JJ 1 G 1 1 I ··n~ 1.nlNI i:::las~ hu1n ~·1: i::uant~ v1nvl suit' n1ould1111.: ··:il"JIC'1" ,1·hltr -.1rh·11 .ills \.1 .'..."J CY\; 21:: 1:::! s.: l'l:J.1•1 0 .R. HAAN, Inc. :!020 ~--l ~l .)11 -11;1 :7.1 OU:ITF.R 11.T. rpc. Sn1.1ll Vil. t-139KLK1 $2!tl~J SUNSET FORD ~·1-IO (i;11'd~·11 <.;ru\·" Bl\·d. 1 \\"rs11n lns1lT G:~IUIO ·; 1 Ne"· Vali ~ont 4flr ~ sp.I I rnns 22·1CID eng 6 • yl ,·1111 I I ~1·rtt s Cill"Jl("I'< VLll-CYl '.--: :r1:l(i11 ~~l':r, ('(I ) O.R. HAAN, Inc. 2020 J·:. 1st ;lll-l·1il ,,,nd1linn111". 1i11~1 l•1f1, r-•111·r ~1,..·,·1nt:. po11t•r 111~,· hr •• k .... ~. autn1n11111· tt;111i.1111-.- ~1n11 li11111t'•il .ft' 1h·l11'l'ry. $98, 12 MO. '74 VENTURA 11 i\1<tP.11;0 !11-, fllll•·d t.:la-•. dt'· hi\•· hu1npl'rs, au· 1'()nrh- ll••llll!t: [111u1,·rli;o!{' rh·h\"f'l). $76.66 MO. pl\I~ I !\ ;,ii Iii" I Jl·J. • DAVE ROSS PONTIAC :.!\;.;11 11arh1r Bh·tl l·o~1.1 :'1\1·~. : :.sf)\7 • -----------(8) 1973 . PONTI ACS LEFT OVER 30% DISCOUNT Choice of Models Colors & Equipment ~'.! Ply l>u.~t+'r r; c·yl ~!1ck 1 f :n2.'I~ milrs 1~1'-1.'i' SH~'l:l.00 O.R. HAAN , Inc. • • • 2929 llarb:.r Rlvtl ., I· 'I OPEN SUN DA'{ Cosl<t r.·!1$11 OPEN SUNDAY BP.:\ND NE\\' 1974 Pon!lac 546• 1934 _ ·~ FIREBIRD, fornlula -lOO, j \lrn~uru .t:.1Y~70.1,Ll2j28l1 Sugar Bo11·I, Cotton P..<111·1, I '" SJ~ ""•I•• 89• oo 1 Ora11gr.·.Bo11•l or any kind '61 VA L I ANT c:oc:MI full P~'l'. 1'.:xcel. ro1KI . Orii:t. j-"'"" ..... -i '" · • ~-uuJ of bowl will sell \\'ith a 'J'ra!1~Pt>raLion, s22:;, _ j o "' n . e r, 6 1 :l -8 8 9 6 Srill ullr Items wirh ,, D:u\y I Daily Pilot Classified 1\ri~ 1 li73-51ll!J a~k for Jun E\•es/\\lmds. Pili1t Clnss1f1rd ad. 6l2-567X 6-12-:·£78. Autos, New 9800 '. A utos, New 9800 Autos, N ew 9900 A~trs, Ne;-9800 A ~lo.>, N~w • ' * ' • OPf..:N SU~I),\ Y ·7n T-1'11r(L l\111-rn1 stereo. Ht\111.:hn1n. Tll1 1vhN"I. Air . ~ 1111 f\'•111-r S\!(111. 811-:Ai16. 11 n•· ,111 P\tra spsit•e healer y1•11 /Ml lon~rr u~,..,. S;>ll ii n111' "11h ;1 r1 +11~ Pilot 9800 Autos, New ___ 9800 Ill Get CADILLAC LUXURY • A CHEVROLET 197 4 CAPRICE 4 Door Brand New & Loaded ( 186768) (1048) • loooBelow M anufacturers Retail Sticker Pnce • ·~l¥E'R-E DEALIN·' ON VEGAS ··~ . ..,~. ~ ----$ TAKE YOUR CHOICE (279488) (9071 LEASE A BRAND,NEW 1974 MONTE CARLO LANDAU LOADED: A1,1tomatic transmission, radio, heater, power stee~ing, power brakes, .. Air Conditioning, vinyl Landau roof. (699) Lease the "CONNELLEASE" Way. $ 83 PER MONTH 36 Mo. 0 .E.l.·0.A.C. BUY WHERE THE LOW MILEAGE .CARS ARE! '73 VEGA WA.GOM 8111 miles, auto. !rans., rad io air cond .. nice. rema1n1ng fa ctory warranly. (629JEPJ $2899 '72 CHEVY II NOVA Cpe . VS . 28.0C>O miles. air cond .. power steenng. vinyl roar Ser. '113043 $2599 '73 CHEVROLET h~pala Cn!OWI C~ Vinyl roof. auto. trans .. V-8 {regular gas ). ai r cond., pewer steeriog. oower brakes. radio. weekend special. 1149GIHI $2999 '73 DATSUN PICKUP' Radio. 4 spd . 15,491 miles. l1k,e new (83565U) $2799 '70 DATSUN PICKUP Radio. 4 spd., 29, 780 miles. Nioe. 1542815) $1 '699 '72 MONTE CA.RLOCO\Wf Gold car. auto. trans . V-8. air cond. power steering. power brakes. beau !iful 29.000miles f8 19EIFI $3099 '72 CHEVY II MOYA COUPE V-8, auto trans. power steer1og. 27 000 miles radi o. 01ce c:ir riew tires [ 152EXE) $2399 '71 FORD 3/4 TOM C1nfoftDM Von Special wheels and hres (Y46303) $2995 '72 CHEVROLET '"''• c,..~~"-v1ny1 roof. air cond , pewer steering. power brakes. auto. !rans .. V·S. 32,000 miles. nice. (56SFFB I $2699 '72 CHEVROLET IMftA.lA 4 Dr.. hardlop. alr cond., V-8. 22 .000 miles. p0wer steering, power brakes. vinyl rool, sure nloe. (869EOWJ $2799 2128 HAllOI BLVD. • IS WAGONS WITH GOOD MILES -6 AHO 9 PASSENGER LARGE AND MEDIUM SIZE-WITH LOW MILES '72 CORVETTE STIMGR.A. Y CPE. A•r cond oowei s!eenng. power brakes. AM/FM. auto trans. 350 Cu In engine. tremendous car. (S er •l7G•I $5399 -/ '72 FORD LTD IROUGHAM 4 Dr H T cw1 se control elec • windows. split Th seat s v1nY1 roof. P S. P.B air cond. This is a super car. V·B (regular gas). (737EXOJ $2999 '72FORD MUSTANG Soortsrool cpe . 23.000 miles. auto trans .. air cond. vinyl root. PS . V-8 . nice (100FFY).(SureaJewet ) $2999 '73 PLYMOUTH DUS TU Cpe . V·B, (small), Auto. trans .• air cond., power steenng, like new, {2 15HEWJ. (20.000 miles). $3099 '73 CHEVROLET IL.AZER 4 wheel drive, radio. auto trans. power steenrlg. low. low price (967 17N ) $4199 '70 CHEVY ElCA.MIMO New !ires, V-8, PS. auto trans. au cond nice. good miles (Ser :;8930) $2199 '72 IMPALA 4 dr hardtop. low miles. vinyl rool. power sleenng. power brakes, vs . (reg gas). air cond. N ice car (552ESA) $2799 '73 CHEVROLET I/• TON PICKUP' V-8 . auto. trans .. p0wer steering. p ower brakes. 17.000 mdes. (37590HJ ,, $3099 '70 DODGE CHAUIHGEI 'Cpe. low miles. VS, v1ny1 rool, air tond., power steenng, auto trans .. f779ACZJ $1999 -COSTA MESA • '72 CHEVROLET 'I-TOM fttCkUP Aor cond PS . V-8. auto. lraos... radio. spec.id I ( 10960l) $2399 '71 PONTIAC LEMANS Cl'l. Low miles. radio, auto. trans .. pewer steering, au cond (563CPN J $2499 '72 FORD It.TOMVA.H V-8. auto trans.. PS . radio 196686JJ $3099 '72 TOYOTA CWCA.Cf>I. 4 ,pd., radio, Mee. Ser. #7237 $2499 121 I TON Cab & Chassis Long whHI boM for 12 • 14 fl. bodies, COrM SH. • 546-1200 • I I . ' • _16 DAILY PILOT Friday, llay li" l 1 NEW '7 4 PINTO 2 . DOOR SEDAN ONLYS2399 lnciudes all·vinyt blJcil:el seats. manual. lronl di6c brakes, medium brown metallic/SH/, California emissions eQuipment, 4·1~ manual transmission, live 6.00x13 BSW tires. front bumper guards. rear bumper guards.. . Slk . #·1613 Ser , W4R1 0X185726 NEW '74 PINTO STATION WAGON ~!~! m,,,id~~ _ . CY fold-down rear seat. cargo & passenge~ /--;, ,£ \ ,.... area carpeting, all-vinyl ,bucket seats. __..-/~__,~ rear quarter flrpper windows, mechum t' Qo -:----=.. brown melall1c /SH/, 2300 cc 2V .__,,_, 4-cyhnder engine. California emissions equipment, 4 -speed manual transmi ssion. five A78x13 SSW tires . lront bumper guards, rear bumpe; guards. Stk l!-1582 Ser. ;;4R12Yt85723 NEW '7 4 MA YERICK 2 DR. SED • • l 4 MUSTANG II HARDTOP ONLY S2995 Includes manual lronl disc brakes, 4-speed transmis&on, alt-vi nyl bu cket seats, I achometer /i nstru me nlation. wheel covers, cut-pile carpet, 2.3 liter, 2V 4-cyllnder engine. medium copper me!alhc /SM/,' Califo r nia emissions equipment, five 878x13 BSW !ires. front and rear bumper guards. Stk. #1576 Ser • t 4R02Y186018 '7 4 GRAN TORINO PILLARE D 4 DR • • • • • NEW '74 FORD BRONCO Station Wagon ., ONLY $4785 V-8. Cruise-O·Matic Trans. Ranger Package. Limited Slip A11:le. Mud & Snow Tires. Aux Fuel Tank. Power Steering. Extra Cooling Rad iator • Stki.339. Sef#U 15GLS8321 O. NEW '74 BUBBLE TOP YAN With CRUISAIRE Mal ibu Van Conversion, Includes 105" Wheel Base. V-8 Engine. Auto Trans. plus many other options, Stkli 1543. Ser1t E14GHS90496 NEW '74 FORD FlOO CUSTOM STYLESID E PU ONLY 53399 Chrome yellow, engille 360 Va. knilled v1nvt seat, ammeter & 011 pressure gauges. special engrrie emissions. sohd state ign111on, tran s, Cru 1s-o-mabc 3-soeed. optiqnal ratio rear axle, power ~leering , reduced sound level exhaust, tinted glass. 1650 lb. rear spnng, 5 ~. '. r "~ :·,·~ •~'""''~, ·~· & ••·. ~J9t9 10 llelcnr<I p41me111 Pr..:• $4a99 ~4 l9:13J ""' 1~1 43 ""'~'~"· ANNUAL G 78x 15 B 4PR Pt. Stk. #920 Ser. r,~•·r,T A,~ofAIE\26r #F10YRT645 19 • NEW 4 '74 DR. FORD LTD HDTP NEW '74 THU NDERB IRD Inell.Ides at no extra cost: Selectaire air condit i oner, Cruise·o-matic transmission, power steering/brakes/windows. sleet-belted radlal WSW lirfl. opera -'ndows and vinyl roof, AM rad lo1 dctluxe belts, wheel covers. tinted glass. autoniatic seat back release. many olher 1u.11ury features. Silver blue fire patnl /:U./. leather !rim. blue vinyl roof. Ca.Hf4'nia em.iss1ons eQuipment, duel eicha\lst. convenience group, till steering W ... I. 11nger1ip speed Control, power aeatef-6 way driver and 1)8S$enger seat&. i:lelflxe bumper group. air condJaUlo tetnp control, AM/FM stereo radl6, liOhl group, Power lock grouii. dekJ11e wheet covers. Stk. #1 4 t Ser. f4J87A 111988 NEW '74 FOR D RANCHERO 50 0 '65 '68 70 72 71 MUSTANG Cpe. A·H-3 spd., air. OSJ810 MUSTANG Coe. R-H-AT-6 cyt. 666DCT MAVERICK: Cpe. R-H-AT, 6 cyl. 1'1907 FORD Gran Torino Spt, R-H-AT, air, PS-PB. 143EOF CHEVY Vega , R-H, 4 SPd. 650DBC 72 ~~~~~Is . 631EGR arr. 70MUSTANG Fastback vs. R-tt-.PS, .. 1i1r, V roof. 414CBZ 73 PINTO Wagon, R-H·AT, rack. 213JES ONLY s41 99 . Includes Cru•se·.,·MJI•~ p.-)wf-r 51,,.f'rir,q. Power Fronl Disc Brakf>'-AIR CONDITtONING Radio . Rear Sear Soeaker-. T1n1ed Gla-;c: Hea1er. L1qht Grouo. Whef'I CovPrS. rao1al vvh1re s10.:i 1·1al!s. .emore control m11roro.;. Vinyl Roof. St..;=023. Ser= 4J64S 1 08682 s5995 ONLY $3669 Includes cruisornolic Irani.., wsw !ires, power ~leering, diK brakes, AM rodio, tinted glos~. leh hand mirror, wheel covers & heoYy duty handling -.uspension . Stk .# 1065 , Ser.#4A47Hl 60526 VISIT OUR LEASE DEPT. VOLUME SAVINGS ON ALL POPULAR MAKE CARS & . TRU(KS! s12sa 51388 70 s~~Yr.,,o cpe , R-H-AT. air, PS-PB. 806AEW 73 CHEVY Nova cust, air. 260GIV R-H-AT. '66 ~.~!,Y~-H-AT, • pass. ;;3636 5888 s 488 72 ~~.EYg~. A-H-~T. 5"088 71 r~,~~T~. d,: s1888 11 2FYW ',6. R-tt-.AT. eir. 68200A 70 ~9d~Pvan6 cyl,3 Sfl088 spd, htr. 280BST • 6. s s·1aa S2 588 S21 88 73CHEVY 53488 Camaro VS, A-H-AT-PS·PB, air, VRF.929GXJ 73coUGAR si988 S2588 XR7, AM/FM ~~x~T-V roof. 7. 2 fr~~~ pass sa;,e Slt988 400 eng . .AM/FM ...-,6. R-H-PS-PB. air. FORD . SAVE LTD Br'ghm VS, FM 7 3 R;H·AT. "'-VAJ, P . windows ' 72'.;~~!~T;~a-SAJ. 52488 72 E . 72 t~~~ PU. A·H. 4 52288 spd. ga2GNM · . FORD 73 Vann E200. 6 cyl 52988 R-H-AT. 028705. 4 others to choose from. !I! - ... , San Clemente Ca isirano VOL. 67, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES • ,. . -I -• Today's Finni EDITION N.Y. Stocks . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1974 TEN CENTS San Clfme11te Woman's Ago~y ' • I USS Ia --·---------------· ·-Guards Battled Nine B111•t El Toro Jet At U.S. Embassy Crash Probed By JOHN VAL TERZA Of ltlt Oililv Ptlol s1111 \Vhen 47-year.old Dean Hoxscy fought his way into the U.S. Embassy in !\.1oscow \\rednesday and declared thal his enchantment wilh communism had ended, the agony began for his 1 stepmother in San Clemente. \rhile 11ean reCQvered. Then his father left .·· she related. The elder Hoxsey. an .'.I \' o \\' e d Communist whose career in the Los (See DEFECTOR, Page ZJ By JAN WORTll Ot lht Dilly Pllol Sltll :\ jrl crashed into three n1oving vehicles, injuring nine people. and senl a 1nushroon1 cloud of flan1rs JOO feel inl.o the air Thursday at the El Toro f\.1arine Cdrps Air Base. The pilot and cre\\"man, Capt. \Villinm Hayes. 29. and Cpl. Terence Crawford, 20. both of Santa Ana. parachuted to saff"ty \\o'ilh minor injuries, b a s e spokesmen said. But fiery v.Tcckagc of the attack SLA Me111 .bers Evade Police LOS ANGELES <UPI l -Police and FBI agents tracked dov.·n three suspected mCmbers of the Symbioncse t .. ihcration An11y . kidnapt.•rs of Patrici:1 Hearst. lo a small house in a black district lodav bu! 1\1hen they broke into the structure the trio had already fled. A n1an and t\1·0 womC'n, an 11·hife. \\'ere reported 'hol<'d up in the building \1•hich 11·as !;urroundC'd by more than 75 t.'BJ agents and scores of officers arinC'd 1vilh guns and tear gas. (Related Story Picture Page 5) Canisters of the tear gas \llere fired through the building and, when there v.•as no 1novemcnt or reaction from inside. agents entered the hou.c;e and found that it v.·as empty. \llil\iam Sullivan. head of the L06 Angeles FBI office. said they found ammunitioit. food , suitcases, 11·igs and clothing. "It indicated the people had left very hurriedly," be said. Suilivan said he believed the suspecis 1night still be in the Los Angeles area. Asked if one of the women might h3ve been 20-year-old Patricia liearst herself. Sullivan said, "There is no evidence she v•as here." Two of the three persons were tentatively identified as \Vllliam T<tylor 11arris, 29, one of the SLA founders, and his "'ife. Emily, 27. The third was described as a "very good looking girl in her early 20s with a pale complexion." Authorities got on the trail of the thrte after an incident in a sporting goods store in which the man believer! to be Hnrr\S was stopped by a store empluyc for shoptlfting. He drew a gun but in a scuffle with the clerk, dropped the pistol to the sidewalk. Its registration was traced to Emily Harris. Harris 11nd one of the \\'omen ran to a (See SLA CHASE, Page ! I Oraage Coast Weii.ther Cooslderable cloudiness through· 8aturday but parUy SWUtY 8atur· day allernoon, according to the weather service. Slightly cooler days. Highs saturday In the lower and middle !Os. Lowo tonight In the !Os.' INSIDE TOH.\ l' l/untjnglon Beach returns to th<_ middle agfS Saturdav for an olklar RmoUIOftCt Faire. See lodat!'• Wtek<!)!lq fl>!' detoUs. ' . trainer bounced 250 reel from the open field \vhcre it hit to Lamhcrt Roart . \\'here debris and flames crashed into the three vehicles. :\lrs. Paula Stopper. wife of Sgt. ~Eke S1opper. flnd their infant son \\'ere OO\\'!I to the Long Beach Naval Hospital v.•lth third degree burns and cuts. They were reported in good condition today. Sgt. Stopper v.·as treated for burns and released, but his vehicle \Vas demolishl'd. Passengers in the other tv.•o vehicles, :1 personal ear and a Marine Corps base truck, were treated for shock and minor burns and v.·ere released. Base spokesmen said the cause of the cra sh Is still not known and is under investigation. The l p.m. crash produced a spectacular fire ball and a roar that JOited nearby ,neighbors. Jeff Lchn'l.1.n of Costa Mesa, a piano luner on his way lo an appointment ne.!lr lhc bast.!. said he had just turned south on lrvine Boulevard when be saw the jet circling low overhead. "I was just thinking Yiith all these planes and trainees out here how rare it is to have a crash, v.•hcn the jet came right dov.·n in front of me at a 45 degree angle and never pulled up,.. Lchrnan reported . .. There was a huge ball of fire. like a mushroom cloud. maybe-100 feel high . It \\•as brilliant orange and black -and the jct jusl disintegrated when it hit the ground.·· he added. The crash spread debris over a quarter mile · wide area, and .. affic on the perimeter roads and portions of Irvine Boule\•ard and Sand Canyon Road were blockea off lo traffic fof several hours afterwards. Israel Strikes JT1 itli Co111n1cuidos l1i Retaliati.01i By United Press International Diii)' P'lltt Sllfl P'tlt .. No Princess? • Clark .faJrett's frog Adam's Rib didn't turn into a princess when be ki ssed her Thursday, but that \vasn't the point anyway. She had just \\'On the Saddleback <_::ollege frog ju1nping contest, along with two either frogs on the United Frogs of America, Ltd. team. She Jeaped a total of 18 feet. 9 inches in a series of nine jumps, eight inches short of the 'vorld·s frog leap record. Jarrett, team captain, is a history 1najor at Saddlebac.:k. Related piCture 'on page 3. ,Capo Trustees to Air Student Sliift,s Monday Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School Dist r i ct once again will come to grips l\1onday with shifts in students to cope v,.·ith runaway gro\l.'lh and elementary school changes are tops on the list. si~1h graders from CrO\\'n Valley are expected to attend along with 95 from nearby San Juan Elementary and another 125 from the same grade level at !See smFTS, Page ZJ For Mrs. Ella Hoxsey it goes far beyond the certamty of phone calls day and night and the nuisance of press queries. She is.seriously ill \\'ith cancer. "When I picked up the paper this morning and read the account fro1n correspondents in Moscow. the shock \Vas just the same as if I had heard the ney,·s of an auto accident," she saiJ from her home Thursday afternoon. Her fondness for her stepson (who1n she first met only after he \\'3S gro\\oTI ~ is obvious. But for Mrs. lloxscy. the quiet , normal life she established over the past IO yea rs as a widow Jiving modestly in San Clemente ended when Hoxscy sought to return to America. Hoxsey wa.s literally wrestled from the grip of two Russian security offlcen at the gates of the American.enclave in the Soviet capital. Accounts from t\VO correspondents \vho witnessed the incident said the one-time defector was grabbed by the Russians as he tried to enter the building. Then, as he was being led to a Russian interrogation room, l\~o U.S. embassy officers managed to grab Hoxsey from his captors and spirit him into the embassy which is legally U.S. territory. "No one knows what ""ill happen no\v," ~!rs. Hoxsey said. "l don't have any real hopes about the situation," she added. 'Tired, weary and in pain. the San Clemente widow said friends h(/.ve advised her to leave home to spare herself any further problems because of Wednesday's even ts -deemed an international incident in government circles. "The last time I saw Dean was in 1959 and 1960 when his father was still alive. \Ve were in Europe and learned that Dean was seriously ill and would have delicate surgery in a Moscow hospital. \Ile obtained permission and Vient to visit. "His dad stayed an entire summer, •lJ1iq11alified Staccess' u u -{:;: Dea11 Hoxsey Action Drctivs U.S. Protest :\lOSCO\V 1\.,'Pl l -The t.:nitcd State.;; has protested lo the Soviet gov('rnment o\'er pollce interferC'nce \\'ilh a n An1crican defector who no\v wants to leave the Soviet Union, U.S. En1bassv officials said today. · • Th<'~' said l\lark J. (~arrison, lhl· en1bassy poli1ica\ counselor. delivered a protest to the Foreign ~1inistry over police efforts Wednesday to block Dean 'C. Hoxsey from entering the Embassy. Hoxsey. '17, of Pico Rivera. Calif., defected lo the Soviet Union in 1957 when he came here for a youth festival. He no\Y Jives in Volgograd, is married lo a Rus sian and \\'Orks as a doctor at a clinic. U.S. officials said Hoxsey got into the emba~sy \Vednesday only after :i struggle with police guarding thr. entrance and intervention bv t:.S. diplomats \vho witnes sed the incident. lioxsey told newsmen he was formerly a Con1munist but had be co me disillusioned with the Soviet Union and Con1munism. He also said he has been harassed by colleagues al the clinic v.•!!.cJ:c he works. ·I-le" told nc\vsmen tOOay he v.·.1s returning to Volgograd lo apply for an exit visa and hopes to return to Mosco1v soon for further discussions with emba!)sy officials. U.S. officials said they still have not determined if Hoxsey is a U.S. citizen. Al the time of his defection , he said, be turned in his American passpart lo Soviet authorities and accepted a Soviet passport but never fonnalty renow1ccd U.S. citizenship. An Israeli commando unit carried out a hit·run attack against an Arab guerrilla base a mile inside Leb:i.non today and Israeli planes struck guerrilla bases near the border in the second day of retaliation for the J\1aalot massacre, Israeli mitilary spokesmen reported. Monday's session starting at 7:30 p.m. "ill include major actions relating lo shifting some elementary classes to other campuses to cope with so a ring enrollments, primarily in the f\.1ission Viejo area. Besides the shifts in elementary pupils, trustees will deal with yet another appeal from city officials in San Juan Capistrano to revise a recent decision v.'hich places current eighth graders e~l of the freeway in San Juan into classes at San Clemente High School. Coast Bus Service Lauded The Palestinian news agency WAFA said in.Beirut the Israeli planes struck in •·waves," hitting rive separate Palestinian refugee camps in southern Lebanon from 1:50 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. It said antiaircraft batteries opened up on the planes but made no claims of hitting them. Lt. Gen. Mordechal Gur, the Israeli armed forces chief of staff, said of the raids he could not rule out the possibility lhat Israel was out to make southern Lebanon "unlivable," a won' used two months ago by Defense ~tinister Moshe Dayan. Damascus reported a dogfight over Lebanon between Israeli and Syrian planes but Israel denied the report. The Lebanese military command said lsrae1i planes broke the sonic barrier over Beirut today and that the Lebanese Air Force scrambled b\lt made no contact. Councilmen last week resolved to ask the board to reconsider the action which as.sertedly splits the city's school children. Two major plans for elementary campuses are included in a staff report. At Capistrano Elementary School, 140 Jaycees Offer Heart Checkup For Half-price A Syrian communique issued in Damascus said the Syrian and Israeli warplanes fought an alr battle over So~"'--,...:'.:South Coast residents interested in Lebanon today and that an Israeli ane iviog an examinaUoa.·for ·poaslble · was shot down in nantes. future heart problems have ~bffn "There was no contact. there as no welcomed to take a batt!cy of \ellls at a battle and there was no ctowntng/' an baU~prlce tee SUnday In a .Jaycee-- Israeli army spokesman sald 1n Tel Avi v, 'l?"""''ed program et san Clemente however. · Gt.neral HospJtal. . The Lebanese government announced 1lle 110peratloo Heartbeat" activity that 48 pmo1111 were killed and IM wm IMrbtld by ••PPOlntment only frot?>7 wounded In two Israel! air 1trike1 Into to 1:311 a.m. In lhe hospital cafeteria. Lebanon Tllunclly, carried oul In Appoinimenta wm still ht available by r<taltatlon for an Arab «Uenilla a\taclc phone lhroogh Satw.iay by calling 4p. on the l•radl bonier vlliap ol Mulot 2641. lhal lelt 311 penon• dead. fersons plannll1& to take.the lalla,ore 'Tbt Iaraell air strikes bfOOiht sharp uked no! to eat anylhlng alt.,. 7 p.m. criticism !tom Secretary of Stale Henry Saturdly, bul they may drink water, A. Kissinger who also clenounc<d the spok .. men !or lbe,acllvll} advllod. Arab guerrilla attack. 'Egypt wamecl Tiie Ice, d .. med .... lnftle:IJ DOrollial" i.....x lhtl lh8-e COll1d be ivave by Jaycee apo¥smeo, ~ Ill about <OOS<qUeias 1-the air raids and the ball Ulal nonnall)' chirpd !« lhe ,(Sea RAIDS, Pip ti batlef)' o! lestL The first "'eek of Ile\V hourly bus service along the south Orange Coast was heralded as an unqualified success by city and transit district officials today. Despite some fears expressed by San Clemente city aides last week that the I sudden emrergeace o[ buses and stops would spark complaints, only a few calls came in through the first week of service. "We've only had about seven calls all week and only two could be considered serious romplaints," said City Engineer Phil Peter. He said the two strongest complaints related to red curbing and passengers waiting for buses. "But we convinced the callers to hold off a month and promised that we'd study the problem with them . Changes \\'Ould be pretty simple in each case.'' headded. Peter said that he views the small number of l'Omplaints as especially significant, because there arc dozens of new stops in the city. As for the impact on traffic, Peter said One More Noieh 't ~Banks Hik~ Prime Rat.es to IIV2% , ; ' 'rmw YORK (AP):_ The nation's major banks pushed the prime • ~g nte anoth41".-n0\Ch blgher today to 111> percent. -. , Leading the tnerease trom--t\4)>ercent.were the big New York banlts, Jnclndf4g, Firlit National City, se<ond largest nationally; Chase M&llhattan, thtid targest; Chemical Bank, sixth; Banker's Trust, .eventh; IMni'. Trus~ 12th; Marine Midland, 16th; and Franklin Na{(onal llank, '20th, • '!'he coun!J1's largest commertial bank, the Bank. o! Arnertca, followed 4u1cilj;· u did the ,National Bank of Detroit and Mellon Bank In Pltt.b'tu'ib, 13th largest. Major We~t coast banks al.lo followed, Including United Call· !omla tank. Crocker Banlt and Securtly Pacific. ~ prime rate I.I the rate banks cbaree biggest and best corpor· ate customers. While not dlrectly lied to lhe riles charged for con· aumer loans, lbe prime can eventually lead to clwlges In those rates uwtll it is minimal. because the buses actually only appear in tov.11 once an hour. The city had little time to properly notify residents and businessmen of the emergence of bus stops and red curbs, and that uncertainty prompted some uneasiness al city hall in the first days of the plan. ,.., From the point of view of the Orange County Transit Dist rict, the inaugural week of the South County's first bus service u·as deemed "a great success." Marketing Analyst Rick Bustamante said that ridership figures will not be compiled and evaluated { o r perhaps another week. but head counts and estimates have proven the success oC the (Ste COAST BUS, Page %) 2 Capo Runner$ Collide in Field ,• Two Capilllrano Beadi yoongsten• zeal !or Babe Ruth baseball sent them .. ch to the hospital for a checkup during an evening game In San Clemente Thuraday. George Gargus o! 26llt Vi• Sacramf'..nto, and George Warner of 3417S Camino El Molino, both 14, c:olllded dur- ing a game at the S.n Clemtnte field at 6:08 p.m., firemen said, and each was knocked 1111conaclous. f'iremcn were summoned. and by the time they arrived, each younpttr had rog•;a,d .,,,,..io"81lesa. They loOlt a r'Ge In the city ambulance, not1<lllele$s, !or a checkup , at San Ci<menle Gnenl llolpltal. Each ~·as nleosed a(la wwa., flrtmtnaald. & "' • • • • • • 2 OAILV PILOl SC Frldar, Mar 17, l<J74 I -- Frorn Page l DEFECTOR. •• Angeles tax aSSt'Ssor's office ended in 1949 because of his political beliefs never saw 'rli!\ son aga nl. He died four years arter that t-.loSC"ow swnn1er. For the rormer defector, the 17 years in lhe SovlE>t llnion 11·t•tf' calci l:ill'd to be repa,1•n1cn1 to :i rrg11nr 11·1' hhad n!lo\\· rd HoxtW,• vttr1• chant·t• lo f•;Hdl a drean1. •·11r h:i.d ah\'avs 11·an1rd to b1~ a doctor. bu! :ifh•r twn \·cars of colli'gc in th(' United States ti,~ reali1.c'<I that without mon ey, he rould no lnng1•r stud1· "He "'a~ lnvitf'd to travel lo Russia as part of th1' yotith f1·~111·:ll ilnd 1hen 11·ns offered the chancr to st.11· and be trninl'll. ·· his Sll'prnothf'r rxplninrd. After si x )'l'ilt !' nr stu111·. lloxs1·~· \\TOlt' ho111c to sav hi.' plannl'd n1'1·rr to lt>ave and that he .felt an obtiga!i11n to rep:\Y lht! Soviets for thl' t r:un1n~. Correspondence bt~t\\CCll the physician and his family in Califnmia -including his natur.'.11 1nothcr \\ho lives in the northem part of thl' state -\las steady, but never abund.1n!. "lie would usua!l~· 1\ritc al Christmas, but this past holiday he and I did not correspond. 1\tl the 1in1c· before. hO\\'Cver. there ,\·as nrver :in indication of any disenchantm1·nt. :ind no feeling on n1y part that there \rcre any problems," she said. But rherc is ;1 theory about lloxsey's reasons for disenchantment wllh the Soviet \vav of life. '·Sonic 'tin1e ;igo ]\(' and !1i:t n1other corresponded :ind !>he began to \\Tite to tfflcia!s in ho1)('s that Dean , his \\·ife and Jidopted daughter, who is 14 nov.'. could get permission just to visit the United States." she said. The theory is that those letters ma~· have sparked suspicion · by Soviet officials. Hoxsey told his benefactors at the embassy \Vedncsday that he now fea rs for his safety were he to return to tus home in Volgograd /formerly n.imed Stalingrad until Stalin fell rronl grace in the USSRl . Prcsu mablv. his Russian-born wire and their daughter v.•ould rernain behind. Sources in the embassy said 1-loxscy first felt the need tn leave :ibou t a year ag-o. but \\'as quoted ns sayin.g ~c once thought the desi re \vould pass in time. The dilemma no\v for officials at thr cmbassv is what to do \.\'i th thl'ir "guest" pendini an official decision on his demands to reenter thr country. Reports said the original plan \\·as lo send him back ho1ne until a decision had been reached. Fro1n Page 1 SL .I\. CHA SE . . • y..·aiting red and \\'hite Volkswagen \'J'l t1-·here a third t1·on1an t1·as at the \\'heel. The woman in the van ftred about 30 shot s from a machine gun back at the building but no one \Yas injured. They abandoned the Volkswagen and commandeered a P,ontiac. Then they J.,,ter forctd another man to giYe them his blue and white Nova. Linda Ensley. 19. who lives next door to the white house on the edge of \l.'atts. said she had seen t\1'0 \\'On1cn going in and out of the building the last :>.everal days . She said they usually did nut emerge until late in the day and appeared to be t1-·ear1ng .,.,.igs. one red and one black. Sullivan said he believed the trio \\'Ou!d have retulTl('d to the building if it had nut IX!<'n for the sporting goods store incident Thursday. Sullivan t1-·as asked ...,.ey he thought the SLA men1bers had come to 1_,\1.5 Angele s. "They got pressure in the S;1n Francisco area and perhnps lhl'y ·naturally decided to change their scene of operations," he said. '·lt'i: thl· no~rrial operation of a fu gitive under pre.ssurr " 1-farris has bee n identified a.<> !lie . '·Trko" or the SLA 11·ho s)X>ke on a ta pe recording rcccil'ed ;1fter the April lii robbrrv or a S<1n Fr;1ncisco bank in v_],1hich ·J\1iss lle.ir~! participated. llarris nnU hi~ 11ifc had been s11·ecthcarts at the l'nil'l'r-;1t\' of Indiana \\-here hC' \\'3S a ~J)CF'Lh n1ajor In 1972. 'they mo1 ed to the \\'e~t Coast ;ind lived for a tlme 1n 13erkelf'y \1·i1h Angf'la i\l\~ooc'I 11·ho is t1bu a suspected SL.\ n1cn1ht.·r. lt 11 as the S(·confl clu:;.r t·•1lt f.1r thc..,')L.\ fugili\·es 111 15 day s. OIAHG>E COAST '>C DAILY PILOT ,,...ll••""~1"''·1n,,1 ,,..,,,, "'''·"' I '••Jl,,.11"" ,.,, I·"' '1>>>1.,,.,.r •.. ·" (.. .. , ""~'>'·•"a r ""''"'"' ·"'"'n''' ~ .. , .. ,,, •" f'''''''"•r. fl'\n .. t>>Lo,~r '•·O•· I r• .<> U• .. t1 A!•><' ~~.• " l•uo' "Q'· ·•· IJ•··< " f '" , • .,v,·~· L•~""·ll>··-~ '"'"" · .•. ,., .. ,,,,., 1·1 &.• ('""'en•• ·>•• .Jo,,.• c., •'•II' I '"~ ~ ''"'"" •0•'"'" •\ O"l' -"''<l '·"11'JO" .~1 ',11n <!01 lt•~""'rH'~~'~""'''•"'"•·no .•,,, 6., :>u .... 1 ,..,,,,. ..,...,. t..i•"· ••·• ~;· '~ ~ \, ., !l •· .... ! p,.,.._,..,..i,,,,,.,,,,..., J11l fl" I .1'r1 V"'•"'~''°"rd .,.,c,_ .. Moo.-," jh. .... f " '.'~·1 .. ..., ... _..""l(~"' Ov.:rles H l<Y ~ 1-.:7 JP r i.. 1 .,,..,,,..,.,,.,.._La~n S.. C""*"k-Offre t 'Cf.>N:.111(.'(,~I\....,, °""' Offk•• c,,.,,i.1 ... .o..(,w.,,, .. ,<;,,,..,, "°""'M" llf'IOC'fo b,'"""""'"lt.:l\ll•>'tllt H""''""'""8tlot• 1111~ .. ~BD.it""o'lt uuun1 g.,..,. ~'''atW""""t"I Tt~l7141641"4J21 Cs-lf&.4A ......... 64:t.S671 5-C .......... AllD•,.lawRb: T ........ 492-4421 ~ ''''· 0..,. c:.... ~ca.... -,...-...... ~·-fll'lfll"""" fll ......... ,., .. -...... ~ """'°" ..... .-of..,.,...., "-'llldott ........... "'~ ..... c:.t:lt-,.. ... l)ltMl'...,CllWl300~11fllll• MC0...,...,~ .. 11 •o•\UO-.. • ~ ~ • .... • • • i;· 'I I •( do." I 1r1 I j ' I I ! I ! I , I 1/ I ' I I .. i f· t 1 ·.1t. I \:·I ' I -· 1.. rrr1 1 r11, 1l ~ I i _. • ~: • • . :-, 6,000 Me111oors County Union Vo\es Walkout . Orange County retail clerks have voted to stop work June 6, bricklayers are still on strike and carpenters have gone back to work, but 8-.re still negotiating, In three votes Thursday. 6 . 0 0 0 members or Retail C\erk's local 324 in Orange County tallied 90 percent in favor of joining eight·other locals representing 54,000 clerks across Southern California in a \11alkout June 6 . The strike, according to Judy Schmahl at the local will occur unless labor and management reach a~n!i!ment on a contract to replace the one that expired Aprll !. Journeyman clerks currently cam $4.86 an hour. The initial union request for 89 cents an hour to bring "·ages to the level of Northern California clerks ,.,.as countered by a f.lanage1nent offer of 30 cents . over a »ecol raise which was similarly cut by the Pay Board, are negotiating ror a new contract !O replace the one thaL expires June 15. The ~ent raise, retroactive to ~1ay 1. °"''ill be given the carpenters when the ne1v agreement is reached. the Wlion s~id, briru:iIJ& ttie pre-negotiation v.·age to $7.35 an hour. San Onofre To Flip On After Repair J'o ~· Vice P1·eside11ts The clerks trimmed their de1nand to 77 cents an hour , \\'hich Ttobe11 K. Fox . president of !he Food Employers Council. termed a l6.4 percent incrcasr "\\•hil'h \\'OU!d, if met. have an immediate and tretnCfldous inlpact on food pric~." The San Onofre Nuc lear Generating Station is set to resume its oormal operations Sunday after more than three \\'eeks out of service for major repairs. Officials of the two utilities operating the complex a few miles south of !he \\'estem White House said repairs to fan blades of a hydrogen-gas cooling systen1 serving con\•cntional steam generator! t1·ere completed on schedule . Senate has voted to provide 81-year"old mansion as servatory in a fashionable part of northwest \V.a~h- pern1anent home of future vice presidents. The irtgton, D.C. For past 40 years it has been off1c1al ~lean'"•hile. hricklayers are considering ~ n1anagemcnt offer of a $2.05 an hour hike in \\'ages and fringe benefits o"er the next t\ro years. The IO percent increase offer. according to Wlion officials. may end !he 1\·atkout \\"hich has idled· 4,000 · bricklayers and 8 . O O 0 members of the Laborers Union 5ince ~1ay 6. house is located on the grounds of the Naval Ob-residence of Chief of Naval Operations. Girl Cl ear ed l1i S111u ggliu g LONDON (AP) -A British jury today . cleared a young Santa Barbara \11oman of all charges in an alleged kidnap and arms smuggling plot. She bowed her hcad and sobbed in relief. The jury returned guilty \·erdicts against a l\1oroccan and a Pakistani arrested in the case. Allison Thompson , an 18-year-old forn1er t1•aitress and part-time model, was arrested Nov. 27 as she arrived in London on a flight from Los Angeles. Cu st or e officials found five pistols and ammunition in a false bottom of her trunk. Fro1n Page I SHIFT S • • • \"ieio Elementary School. At San Juan School the children in i!s normal attendance zone will be housed in grades from Kindergarten through five along with 140 fifth and sixth graders from the zone served by the Castille temporary school in t<.1t;sion Viejo. The board's agenda for the regu!:ir session also has several other major policy items including: -Adoption of revised goals for the • dis trict's educational program. -A \..-rittcn request from t he Capistrano Unified Federation of Teachers which has declined to continue bargaining ,,.,·1th a district committee and instead wants direct sessions with trust.ees. -Consideration of revisions to the fee s 11·hich the district l'harges for use of school facilities by groups in the &mmuni!y. -Hearing a report on the results of thr district's latest parent information survey conducted at all d is t r i ct campuses. Questionaires ·were sent hoinc \\tth each youngster. · Frona Page 1 RAIDS • • • I·:gyptian war minister spoke of a rc~un1ption of the l\'ar. Israel did not mention inflicting casualties in today's ground strike one mile across the Lebanese border in which the commandos hie\\· up a house believed nscd by Arab guerrillas. A spokesman said Israeli planes eight hours later fle\v strikes on targets inside "Falahland," the Israeli lr>rm for. guerrilla-dominated ;irc<is of sou1beas1cm Leba11on near the S\'rian border. He said all planes rC1 urncd from the half·hour raid. Both lsracl and Syria reported heavy fit:hl 1ng on the Golan Heights and around )lt lll·rn1011 torlay. the li7th consecutive da,\ (Jf combat there. A Syrian (''llllnn111iquc· reported Syrian·lsracH lank clu1·ls and that lxlth sides were using arnllcry and anti ·tank v:eapons. The Palestine News Agency said ruring the raids on south Lcbanen today Israeli planes attacked a Palestine red crescent an1 bulance. "The ambulance was burned and Its occupants killed." the agency claimed. "This nC\\' ugly murder contradicts all international rules and principles ... and we reiterate that the Palestinian Armv will know how to deal blows which \\'ill hurt the enemy wherever he is," the agency said. Rescues .Stall ed SAIGON IUP!i -A combination of monsoon rains and a Communist shelling attack against a government air base loday blocked elforts to •kl 670 government lroops . and 3,200 ciVillans mls•lng behind Commwilst Iii> .. In the Central Highlands. Low bonging clouds 3nd heavy rain preventad govemmmt air strikes and oencllng tn I r o o p reinforcement& to lhe bontt:r ran1er camp at oat Ptk, • ......,,..., spol<esman llld. •• ----·------- • Capistrano Draws $9,545 h1 Sanitation 'Bacl{ Pay' If the offl'r is accepted. t he bricklayers' current \\·age of $8.35 an hour plus $1.35 in fringe benefits will also be increased by a previously negotiated .. 30 cent raise which v.·as struck dov.'tl by the nov.· defunct federal Pay ~oard. Leaks in other svste1ns on th<' non-nuclear side of the Con1plex also 11·ere fixed during the shutdown, de<>med routine by spokesmen for Southeni California Edison and San Diego Gas and Electric co1npanies . Leaks in sereral systems 1verc detected soon after the reactor \\·as reactivated early this year following a long stiutdo\vn for major repairs. Chadges in federal law relating to old sanitation grant projects ~ave spav.'tled a second windfall to a South ·Coast city this week. San Juan Capistrano has received a check for $9,545 as the first chunk of extra cash which ultimately will total $36,769. That sum has been regard ed as "back pay" from the Environmental Protection Agency \.\'hich originally granted San Juan about $700.000 for expansion of its waste-treatment plant. Earlier this week the city of San Clemente received a much larger check -the largest U.S. draft in city history - for $300.000 which amounts to half the cash the govenunent admitted that ii owed. San Clemente reeeived the extra Memorial Rites I For Slain Je,visl1 : . I Ho stages Slate<l I ' A memorial service is scbcduled I tonight at a dozen congregations of the ' Jewish Federation of Orange Coonty for teenaged hostages murdered or maimed in an Arab terrorist attack on the Israeli town of Maalot. Leonard Shane. president of the religious organization, emphasized that non-Je\\·s are inrited. 1 He said the observances at locations 1 throughout the county are ro-s)X>nsored by the Board of Rabbis . Spokesmen for the Je\1·ish Federation of Orange County said services are set 3t varying tin1es and may be leai:ncd by calling each con gr e g a t 1 on a 1 headquarters. The memorial services \\'ill be held at : 1 -HarOOr Reform Tetnple, Ne11•porl j Beach. -Temple Bat Yahm, Coron;i dcl J\tar. -Temple Sharon, Costa .)-lesa . -Israel Academy, Irvine. -Temple Elait, Mission Viejo. -)-fission Judea . Laguna Hi!Js. -Temple Beth David, \Vcstminster. Fro111 Page 1 COAST BlJS • • • t'"·o routes serving the area. "\\1e've beeo swamped \\1th phone inquiries from the area, even though ii 's a toll call for most people along the routes: that says something about their interest in the service,'' he said. Uni formed customer -se rvice· representatives have been riding the roaches daily throughout the week , and · Bustamante said that they have lx.'Cn deluged with requests for schedules, maps and other information. "That's very encouraging,'' he said. Actual marketing analyses, he said. would be made within a t1•cek or so. The theoJFY calls for a slight slump in ridership for only a brief perjOO. "Once people begin to form their solid habits, t1-·e expect the figures to just keep rising. Summer will really tell the full s!Orf," he said. SMALLEST PUB HAS HIM DOWN - BURY ST.·EDMUNDS, England (UPI) ~ Ted Mc:Cullon, o ~foot 3-inch borteoder, bos quit Britain's 1mallest pub ~·""' he wants rwrn w expand. The Nutthell Pub mwuret 7 by 15 foe! and 11 a local landmark. But Mc:Cullam 11)'1 ii can't bold enough cuslomerl. "The olher day four American tourlstl walkod tn Ind llliod lilt pllce." be aald "Alld tl>ey dldll.-b<tf a.4llntJ' . I money as part of a grant v.·hich paid the major costs for construction of a cily ·reclamation plant. At the time of the San Juan expansion. tbe citv still owned the treatment facilit v near the mouth of San Juan Creek. bUt since has sold it to a regional treaUnent entity ol whicti San Juan is a member. The city not1-· shares tbe plant \\'ith several other sanitation districts along the South County. City officials in San Clemente credited California legislators, especially U.S. Rep. Andrew Hinshaw, with battling for the new interpretation of the law which set up the original grant program. The new interpretation set a higher percentage for the Federal Go\·emment's sha re . • --------------- Carpenters. \\'ho returned to \\'Ork Thursday fol\o\Ving a tJirce-day s1rike Sarnpson to Address Dana Poitit Cha111h er Kenneth Sampson. the co u n I y' s director of •!arbors. Beaches and Parks. 11·ill addrt·~s members of the Drama Point Chamber of Commerce l\.lay 21 at a membership luncheon at the Castat1-·ay. The noon buffet \rill feature a discussion on Dana Point Harbor's past. present and future by the count~· official \\'ho coordinated its cons t ruction . Reservations to the event are available for $1.95 per person by calling 496-6l9i The previous layoff proved cootly, because it hit the utilities in the middle of the energy shortage. It '"'as caused by a series of problems \\'hich started when a. blade from a turbine was thrown from its place and caused vibrations which activated the plant's safety system. Eight !\lcn ltulicled TRENTON. N.J. (UP !l -The state of ~cw JerS('y Thursday indicted eight former California insurance executives on charges of attempting to st rip a Nc1v Jt•rsey firm of assets as part of a $2.5 billion fraud scheme. Thr ei!!'hl ...,.en· former offictrs of Equity Funding Corp. of America . a California·based insurance firm. ---------------------·· ------" -" ----- DO.\i'T iVlISS OUR FABU LOUS . ' SOFA & CHAIR SALE ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 18. ' Largest inventory' in our hi story to be red uced. Stop in no\v for best selection at terrific savings. Fantastic selections of upholstered pieces all on sale no\v. Names'kke Sherrill. l\large Carson and Woodmark a ll a~ special prices. Over 100 sofas and 250 chairs hav e been price-slashed come in and browse! OR EXEL-HERIT AG E-HENREOON-WOOOMARK--l<ARASTAN ; WHKDA YS A S• TUaD• TS t:OO lo l:lO • ; • NEWPORT BEACH • 1727 WESTCUfF DR., • 642·20il0 ~AGUNA BEACH • 34.1 NORTH COAST HWY-494~1 ! ! TORRANCE• U649 HAWTHORNE BLVD. <Open F~. UI ~~n . 114:IOI :n .... ,., . . 11 I I I I I I " ' \ ' • ' r I f Today's Closing Priyes New York lJps and _r_"_'·~y~M·~1_1_1_:_1_97_4~~~~~s~c'-'-~~-o-•_IL_Y_P_IL_OT~-=>3 • • NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE \ ' ' -Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday Stocl{s Battered By Developments NEW \ORK 1UPI) -A further mcrease in the lending rate to anothc1 1ecord high and gloomy econon11c stallstics fro1n the government sent stocks into a ta1lsl11n on the New York Stock Exchange today 'I rad1ng was moderate The Dow Jones 1ndustr1al average of 30 stocks lost 16 50 pomts to 818 84 \V1th sizable losers to be found throughout the list declines led advances by SJx to.one of the 111ore than 1 762 iss ues t1 aded fhc Co111merce Department reporte lhe Gross National Product fell at a revised 6 3 percent an nual rate 1n the first three months of the year the largc~t plu11ge. since the 1958 recession Inflation clunl>ed al an annual 1 ate of 11 5 percent Pru.:es on the Amer1{an Exchange also sagged 1n stepped up trading ' 2-1 DAILY PILOT Friday, May 17, iq74 "'-"~~~~~~~~~~~ Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY 'I Ovcrpo\vering or undt>rpcl\v('ring. Those are the t11-o greatest tendencies of outboard 0"11rrs. Since outboards co1ne as separate units . it is possible to clamp a]mOf;t anv moror on almost anv boat. Jn lht' 1>ast. the tendency ·has bt'en to overpo1vCr in hopes of ge tting greater speed. BUT \VlTll TllE up.<:hot of the energy crisis, many bo<lt 01vners are lcmpled to install outboard motors thal ::ire too small for the job they are required to do. A motor of inadequate JX>"'er has to run at top speed to push the boat. Out the transom goes the hoped-for fuel economy. When is a boat overµo~·ered or underpowered ? Ac- cording to the i\.lrrcur~· outboard boating expt'rts, it is often true thnt each boat is an individual case, so a gcn- (•ral rule-of-thumb "·ould be misleading. The question of ho1v much power a boat needs or can stand isn't one of sizr alone, strength alOnc or any other single factor. l\tO'fOR \\'EH;!IT and thrust plHce consider:Jblc stress on the transon1 , so transorn strength is in proportion to rcco1nmended 1>01l'l'r. Srriking "·aves places a stress on the botlom, henc:c botlOm strength is proportional to speed expcctalions. A hrnvilv loadf'd boat settles in the 1vatcr y,•hcn al rest and nrcds pleniy of poy,•er to boost it to planing con- dition on the ""llrr's surface. A "ider transom and broad- er bottom go \Vi!h increased motor JX>"'er and \\•eight. LENGTlf Al..ONE 0has very little to do \l'ilh it. An 18- foot canoe is entirely different than an 18-foot runabout. Handling qu;ilities <1! top speed are imporlant. A boat must strer 1\·elJ and handle safely in sharp turns. A little too much po11•er n1ighl not overstress a sturdy boat, but might make it go faster than intended and bring on un- expected. undesirable handling problems. By studying the horscpo1vcr and load capacity plates <1ffixed to good boats by their manufacturers, and consult- ing your marine dealer you havf" a reliable guide as to ho11• much power to select for your boat. On the Rebou11d Boat Industry Okay After E11erg)' (_:risis The Sou t h c r n California ni:irine indus1ry. \Vhich 11·a.s hit by the 1•ncrgy crisis last fall. is makinJ! a strong rebound. ac('()rding-to Ed \'ichols. e~ecut1\·r director of the Southern r a l i f 0 r n i :l :'lfarinc Associa tion. Nichols repor!t'd rhe results (If a s11rvr~· t:1ken among ~ o u t hland n1:1nufat·turers. Oistribu!ors and r c I n i \ l' r s \ndicaring that pros1~c\s fnr 1he remainder of 197-1 look ~oocl arnong n1ost rnarinc corapanies. Dave Goodman . \restrm distribu1or for :'11 C' r cu r ~· outboards. savs ht• dc!i' rrrrl morr ourboard inotors 111 Apr il lh::r.n in an'' othrr 1non!h hr's been in bu;int'SS. '"I! looks tike there \1•iH be a shor' sunpl~· ro · products 1n lhC' rn on 1 h s ahead." r.oodtnan said r.OOD.\IAl\ .\llOEO that pt.'<lple are nn1\· reacting: n1ore po~i!il"e[~· ro1r:1rd boating and !hill 11~:i_gc has b r l' n suhslan1i:ill~· up in the l:ist 30 d:iys. Paul Albrecht. l"n1fl1te 1·aci1! di.~tributor 111 Sn 11 t h.r r n C::ilifon11;1. l'l'por1" ht• is hack- or<lerrd until th1· tnidrlle or .Jul.1· for rno~t n10<l1•ls. l!r s;i~··' heaviest s.:ilrs arr in the 36-~2 foot boats lie al:.o notrd tha t the 28·31-fool cat<'gory. 1\·hich 1\·a.c: most affected h\· the gasolinr crisis. is no\r h;:rck to nonnal. ~Iesa Boat Firm Plans To Expa11d Del 'raHon. president of Ericson ''achts. Santa Ana . says he expects a record year for sailboats. The Ericson plant in the Irvine Industrial Complex is being expanded by ~:l.000 square fet't. increasing capacity by 30 percent. "THE ENERGY c r i s is rr<illy didn't hurt sai\bo;its." said '\'allon. adding that sales are good across the board in all sizes of craft. despite sizable rises in price because of the inrretiscd material costs. Stan '.\·liller, S111n 'tiller S.1ilboals. Long Beach. says the used boat n'1lrket is ··going craz.v.'' I "Bro kers art' cr1·in~ for i used boats. I rcr<'ntlv had mr l hest \1·eeken<l in sales." The biggest traffic is in thr 27-foot range 11•hich carries a oricr l<ig of ahout .!15,000. :'lliller, said. lie added th;.11 hurcr,;;; arr not balking at thl' prier 1 tncre:ises. I '·Thr 11·aJk-1n 1raffiC' h;:rs brrn 1·er~ g()(ld I 1•;in •rll ~n\· Jxi;11 I (';111 get a li.<=t111g on."! :'lli!ler snirl 1 Cot1stnl \1'e11thrr 1 •.1o<t1~ \U~~v In al!•rnoon~ wlth l tn~nc!! ol ~c&t1e•!!d "''"'"~ 1cniahl and 5dTu•ddy o'f\orning P&rtial cle~r· lnq Sawraav ~!gM Narthwest wincl'I o! 16 !O 12 kr">l)!S ~t !omei wi!h • ta I lOQI 1-e•s oil PD;nr Ccnteptwn w•· '~"· I Inland lef""MfiTures ranQe from "61 ·~ h.i. Cn.1s!d! Tempe.•!Uf!!.I Sl-.6!. ..... d'"-,.,.,,:>e,•lur" s~ I .lii1111 •. lloo11. Tide:, I FRIDAY 5...:V"a r c~ 1·f11 p.m S l ~~co~o to." 11.0 p.m. 1.21 SATURDAY F rst n.Qto ~·"I lcN Srco<id ~.gn Sl'C<>nd law r <rlt ~·an Fir!! low S~0t1d ~'"~ Stt00d low SUNDAY ~·Oii ...... 36' IS1•m.Ol 7cl8 p.m. S.S 1:15 p.m. 1.• ~:H •m. 31 2 36 a.m . .O.l 8.!l<I pm. S9 1.51 p.m. 1 S Su~ RiHS S.SO ~"' Sfh 7·•~ p.m. Moon RiMS 2 ~5 •.m. Sth J:J.0 p.n•. \Villard Boat \Vorks or Cost.1 l\1esa. a major builder of largr fiberglass bo~1ts for scientific. recreational and cornmercial purposes. is expanding its area of activity lo other 1-rr========:;-I product lines that use the f same or similar technology and plant facilities. according to Bill Tighe. ptesident. As a result of these efforts. Willard Boats has recei \'cd advance notice of award of a purch ase order tor approximately $497.000 to build molded fibergla ss curtain wall panels for the new 14 story George \\'. Hubbard lfospital al i\1eharrv ~fedical College, I'\ashvitlr. Tenn. MAY SALE ! we ne&d YoUr Trader Premium prices paui. EXQUENT SELECTION lmmedlalt Delivery NABERS ~ c.£Jll1 DA'IW ~ ... c.11 $4°'9100 HOO HtirbOr Co1t1 Me• -.... ,.w. ..... ""'-t nc."'"1-w .... • ,....,.,,, ............... ,,,.,tJl.Jt ~ .................. ,,,,JU.It '°""""·.'''.' ............... lltfl" "'",,.,,,,,,., •• .,,., •• ,,WAI lf•iolklllt! 563 Bo;it Entries Get Kt1dos Dick Jenness, president of the Newport Ocean Sailing Association, sponsor of the Nev.·port to Ensenada raec. h;Js sent a congratulatory lt•ller to :ill 563 skippers in the recent Cinco de 1'.1ayo event commending them for their racing skill and courtesy and respect to their rvtcxican hosts in Ensenada. BECAUSE OF the Saturday start, putting the fleet into Ensenada on Sunday afternoon. there Y.'as virtually no trouble in Ensenada soch ns marred lasl year's race. The majority of arrests made in Ensenada ~· a s S..'lturday afternoon an <l evening \\'hile the racing fleet \\'a s still at sea. Shortly after the yachts finished. the non- _vac hting crowd had left for horne. A dozen arrests 1rere n1nde Sunday afternoon when a minor disturbance de1·elopcd ;1t the Bahia Hotel. race hr,1dquarters. Non(' of those arrested ,,·ere yatchsmen. .. \'OUR RAtlNG skills \l'crc den1onstrated by this. one of the fa stest races. The skipper· • / ( 1J' eeketad. Calendar 6 Clubs Host Open Day F ete Six local yacht clubs will ' hold Opening Day cerentonies Saturday under the sponsorship of the Association of Orange Cowity Yacht Clubs. Yacht Club, South Shore Sailing C\Db and Udo Isle Yacht Club. FOLLOWING THE formal ceremonJes, yachts or moat of the clubs will join in a colorful 0 dressed ship" parade around the bay. flnvitatlonal ) Saturday, SWlday. . 8'a Diego SAN DIEGO YC, SILVERGATE YC. SOUTHWESTERN YC OpenJng Day, Sunday. SAN DIEGO. Y /\CHT CLUR -Jess<ip Trophy race, SDllF, Swlday. . , OCEANSIDE YACHT CLUB -Spring Outside Series. PHRF, Swl<lay. BOATING classes. Saturda y. Sunday. A genuine Opening Day will be celebrated by Shark Island \'acht Oub, the Harbor Area's only exclusively powerboat club. as it will be th~ir first season opening ceremonies in the new half·million dollar elubOOuse on Bayside Drive. On the competitive side, Balboa Yacht Club wUI Send a neet of ocean racing yachts on the Huntington 20-fathom race on Sunday. The race is a feature of the li6 Series. North and Inland SANTA BARBARA YACHT CLUB -Triangle races. all SANTA BARBARA Sailing club -Spring Serles, Saturday, Sunday. BALBOA YACHT CI u b, second oldest in the area, will be celebrating its S 0th anniversary at the clubhouse, 1801 Bayside Drive. which is undergoing a $200,000 repair and re1nodeling expected to tnkc most of the summer. Jlighlight o( the day will be !he outdoor ceremonies. the offici:Jl flag raising and the yacht inspection and open house. Other events on t h e Southern California Yachting Association calendar: Kids Like 10 LEASE A '74 610 WAGON $99.19 mo. + T113l-O.E.L Y 4CHTSMEN LAUDED NOSA's; Dick Jenness; Los Angeles-Long Beach LOS ANGELES YACHT Ask Andy COST A MESA DA TSUM 2145 HAllOllLYD. C.M. 540.64'10 CLUB -Stewart Trophy Race -:::::::=;.;·;,;--_____ _ (Whitney Series) Saturday· r llo..IE CAR OWlo..IERS Catalina Island race (Little l"'I 1"'1 ' r1 LEATHER crews courtesy and respect toown to our Mexican hosis displayed the true American spirit." Jenness said. Whitney Series) Saturday Catalina Island Race (~larrl Series, PHRF) Saturday. ; s lJFE Wortd'a fillHt """-'I Ylllyl c1r#111r ••rl•h .t _.. ....... or c .. 121JI 59 .. 199) Santa ~tonJea Bay PALOS VERDES YACHT --. .. ------ DOES YOUR CAR tDil ROUGH? ----. WE Jenness said the t\OSA board is considering starting next year's race on a weekend either before or after the Cinco de ~1ayo weekend to avoid the large non-yachting crowds y,'flich flock to the Baja resort on the holiday. Bahia Corinthian Ya ch t Club. 1601 Bayside Drive will be st~1rting its 16th year with colorful nag-raising and open house. CLUB -Small keelboa regatta Saturday. I START HARD? GIVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN HELP I KING HARBOR YACITT CLUB -Snipe Inv itational Saturday, Sunday. ' THE CARBURETOR SHOP IN, "°'IM)ll ii.VO_ (OITA MtU. U1 .. 1M Altw .. ;, ·--•.-11110 .. ---Other clubs observing the annual rites are Voyagers CALIFORNIA YACHT CLUI! -One Design Regatta ----·---- Sale Prices Honored Thro119h Sun., May 19 f ' gs for nd the house Roof·Top TURBINE VENTILATOR • Pte1i1ion molded & bolonctd plo11i1 blodt ... 1alrly guard . • I iqhlwriq~l. p•u lo hit, U.l. l.sltd & oppfOYtd, 111011 • 17" 01!illo1in9 fon, • l •ho q~irr moto1, modtrn lip·proof bo1t. • U.l. DPJllOWtd. #1170 BATH FAUCET • Rtplo<t thorold !ouirt ol qrtol 1owinq1! • All b1ou 1on1!1U<lion. • Cilu11'iirMJ 1h1orn1 finish. lllG. 'IS.tt 51499 .::;; $1299 Eo,y lo A1<emblr STORAGE CABINETS • S1urd1. •tr51lilt ... iHoJ rlf•o (l\tffM!l 1JICICt! • S-11illr .1111~td p-1r1it11 IM111I ... tllJ to osi.eMlllt 11Ni 1todr 11 li11i1h. GIANT STORAGE UNIT • 4ft.17ft.1 17"dt•p .. ,Sll"t1M1• ,01tid1i...14. • for ga•• 110199•, !'It den 1•pplirs, !Mb, llM•y. «EG. '10.H s15as ~~ LJ -.·~ -.., ENCLOSED CABINET ' " ' '' Comooc• HOME MUSIC CENTER • (uloniv1-tlllll "Pu.,.""r" fllli1lit wt11'I -t11loi11, • IMkMlts dilillf 1'1111 fir ftc.r4 pl.y1r, spo11 1., h!Mr oM 1f!eMM1, 1C11• l.r ui11tt11, ''"' '" r111uls. 1, • :1l"loi9'11 IS'1"dtop1 { 41 1)" 11111 ... rtliy 11 1111il!bl1. ;i~ l(G. '2t.tS $2495 • J0~1M"1lS''llttpwitlidl•int sis•• tlH11. RlG. • MU.t1•11p41111or1. '21.H fl.Ill Si1r Flo11 GROUND COVER • JJ.ta 1l 111N1 I"• 1eltiM ,.,.,. O ftt pr41, ,.,.Wl'f', ftewtl'M4s, llG, 'tH ' . s .... GARAGE FLOOR CLEANER • • .... .ii. ffttlt ' .1 .. 1t ... "....,'' --· • .. """' tr.ckilt tH ....... • TOILET • Mfft111iu wi1h the lott11 in ba1h100111 '···~ffl. • M<Mlr ol wilr!!O~I 1hino lo .. silt . ,no11ht1. ll(Ci. '41.tt l ,\ \ , , • • - 1 ~ ' ' l I j ( r I . . ' r I I' ' I i l J I' • • ~h Laguna Be Tod'!y's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 67, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS , 40 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1974 TEN CENTS -Coast Mani ~s Kin See/as to Flee Bussia l By JOHN VAL TERZA Of 1'111 D•U, l"llat 11111 \Vhen 47.year-old Dean }loxsey fought his \Yay into the v.s. En1bassy in ~ioscow \Yednesday and declared that his enchantment v.•ith communism had ended, the agony began for his stepmother in San Clemente. For ?\.1rs. Ella Hoxsey ii goes far beyond the certamty of phone calls day and night and lhe nuisance of press queries. She is seriously ilJ \vith canCE>r. .. When I picked up the paper this morning and read the acCQUnt from correspondents in Moscow. the shock was just the same as if I had heard the news of an auto accident," she sa:J from her home Thursday afternoon. Her fondness for her stepson ! \Vhom she fi rst met only arter he was grown l is obvious. But for Mrs. Hoxse y, the quiet. normal life she established over the past 10 years as a widow living modestly In San Clemente ended when l~oxsey sought to return to America. Ho11:sey was literally wrestled from the grip of two Russian security officers at the gates of the American enclave in the Soviet capital. Accounts from two corrCSJ>Ondents v.•ho v.•itnessed the incident said the one-lime defector was grabbed by the Russians as he tried to enter the building. Then. as he was · being led to • a Russian interrogation room , hvo U.S. cn1bassy . officers managed to grab Ho:<Sey from his captors and s pi r it him into the embassy which is legally U.S. territory. "No one knows what will happen now," Mrs. Hoxsey said "J don't 'have aoy real hopes about the situation," she added. Tired, weary and in pain, the San Clemente widow said friends have advised her !o leave home to spare herself any further problems because or \Vednesday's even I s -deemed an international incident in government circles. "The last time I saw Dean v.'aS in 1959 and 1960 when his father was still alive . We were in Europe and learnrcl that Dean was seriously ill and ~·ould have delicate surgery in a Mosco,~· hos1l1lat. We obtained permission and \1·1•nt to visit. "His dad stayed an rntirr s11n1n1c r. \\'hi le Dean recovered . Then hi s fa1her left," she related. The elder Hoxsey. an a v o \v e cl Communist whose career in the Lo.<t Angeles tax assessor's office--ended ln 1949 because of his po11Hca1 beliefs - never saw '1is son agan i. He died four yL•ars afler that ~loscow summer. For the fOTmer defector. the Ii years in !he Soviet Union were ca lc• l:itcd to be repayment to a regime V•h' hhad allo\1- ed lioxse ytlTe chance to fulri!l :i drcarn '"lie had ahvays wanted lo Ix' a doc1or. tSee DEFECTOR, raµ.e t/ Toro Jet Crash Probed One More Not~h Cops Chas e SL A Trio; Bnnks /like Prime Rotes Lo 11112% i'\E\V YORK <AP) -The nation's major banks pushed the prime lending rate another notch lligher today to 11 12 percent. Leading the increase from 114 percent were the big New York banks, including First National Ci ty. seconrl largest nati onally ; Chase Afanhattan. third largest: Chen1iral Bank. sixth; Bank,er's Trust, seventh: Irving Trust. 12th; Marine ~1idland, 16th: and Franklin Nat ional Bank. 20th. The country's largest coinm ercial bank. the Bank of America. followed quickly, as did the National Bank of Detroit and l\1ellon Bank in Pittsburgh, 13th largest. A1ajor West coast banks also foll owed, including Uni ted Cali- fornia Bank, Crocker Bank, Security Paci fic , Bank of CaLifornia and Wells Fargo Bank. The prime rate is the rate banks charge biggest and best corpor- ate customers. \Vhile not directly tied to the rates charged for con· su mer loans, the prime can eventually lead to changes in those rates as wel l. They Fl ee LOS ANGELES (l:Pll -Police and FBI agents tracked down three suspected members of tile Symbionese Liberation Army . kidnapcrs of Patricia Hearst. to a small house in a black district today but when they broke into the structure the trio had already fleet A man and two women , all white , v.•ere reported holed up in the building which l\'as surrounded by more than 75 l;'BI agents and scores of officers armed with guns and tear gas. Israeli Co1n11iando Unit 1Related Story, Picture Page 5) Caniste rs of the tea r ga;; \Vere fired through the building and. when tbcre was no movement or reaction from inside. agents entered ·the how;e and found that Hits Arab Gu errillas ll was em ply. \Yilliam Sullivan. head or the Los Angeles FBI office . said thC'y found <1mmunition food. suitcases. \l'igs and clflthing. By Unlied Press lntematlonal An Israeli co1nmando unit carried out a hit-run attack against an Arab guerrilla base a mile inside Lcb:inon today and Israeli planes struck guerrilla bases near the border in the second day of retaliation for the Maalot massacre, Orief of Maride Safety P osition Filled hv Baird • Laguna Beach lifeguard captain Bruce Baird has been named to the newly created post ol Chief of Marine Safety by the Laguna Beach City Council. Baird's appointment to the position came Wednesday after the council abolished the city's old post of Director of Marine Environments, a job once held by Skip Conner, who resigned recently due to personnel management difficulties. - Baird, a former A r m y annored officer, has been a member of the LaglD\8 Beach lifeguard staff for nea rly three years. The captain's pruiition vacated by Baird will be retained and staffed. however a replacement has not yet been named. Baird, 40, and his wife, have four children. He has previously been a lifeguard in Newport Beach. A gourmet cook. he once owned a Dana Point restuarant. He has taught a special cooking class for the Laguna Beach Recreation Department . Israrli nlilitary spokcs~cn reported. ··tt indicated the people had left very 1'1c Palestinian nev.·s agency \VAFA hurriedly," he sa id . said in Beirut the Israeli planes struck jn Suilivan said he believed lhc suspects '"waves."· hilting five separate might still be in the Los Angeles area. Palest inian refugee ca mps in southern Asked if one of the \Vomen might have Lebanon from 1:50 p.ni . to 3:15 p.m. It bee n 20-year-old Patricia Hearst herself. said antiaircraft batteries opened up on Sullivan ~id, "There is no evidence she the planes but made no clalms of hitting waTws here. he h them. o or t t rec persons v.·erc -U.-Gen. ---Mordechai-Gur,. the Israeli..-tenta!ively Identified as \\'illiam Taylor armed rOrces chief of staf£. said of the ~arr1s~ 29, one . of th e SLA foun~ers, and raids he could not rule out the possibilitv his 'Y1fe, Em~~y, 27. 'fhe t~1rd . w~s that Israel was out to make southerTI . described as a very good looking girl 1n Lebanon "unlivable.'' a V>'orr' used two her early 20s with a pale complexion." months ago by Defense '-1inister '-1oshe Authorities got on th e trail of the three Dayan. alter ~ ln~ident in a sporting goods Damascus reported a dogfight over store. in which the 1nan behcverl lei ~ 4'banon between Israeli and Syrian Harris w_as_ stopped by a store e'l1plu) e planes but Israel denici:I the report. The for shopt1ft1ng. . .· Lebanese military command said Israeli He drew a gun but_ in a scuffle .v.1th the planes broke the sonic barrier over clerk. d~oppe_d the pistol to the s1dev.·a~k. Beirut today and that the Lebanese Air Its ~eg1strat1on was traced to Emily Force scrAmbled but made no contact. Harris .. A Syrian communique issued in ~a.rr1s and one of ~he ':~~en ran to a Damascus said the Syrian and Israeli waiting r~ and white Vo!.:sv.·agcn van wArplanes fought an air battle over South where a th1r~ woman wa.s . at the v.•heel. Lebanon today and that an Israeli plane The woman 1n the . van hred about 30 was shot down in flames. s~ts. from a machine ~~ back at the "There was no contact there was no building but no one was injured. battle and there was rJ downing," an They abandoned the Volkswagen and Israeli army spokes man sald in Tel Aviv, (See SLA CHASE, Page Z) however. The Lebanese government announced that 48 persons were killed and 184 wounded. in two Israeli air strikes into Lebanon Thursday, carried out in retaliation for an Arab guerrilla attack on the Israeli border village of Maalot that left SO persons dead. The Israeli air strikes brought sbarp criticism from Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger who also denounced. the Arab guerrilla attack. Egypt warned Israel that there could be grave consequences from the air raids and the (See RAIDS, Page ZI 2 Mesa Labor ers Held in Potter y • Shack Theft Trv • Laguna Beach Poliec ar. ~sled two Costa Mesa laborers today assertedly sPoiling an attempted burglary of the Art Colony's Pottery Shack, 1212 S. coast Highway. Robert G. Walters, 20, and John M. Laguna Planners to View Zoni11g of Sy~amore Hills Kampmeyer, 18, both listing an address of 20IM> Newport Boulevard, were booked on suspicion of burglary. The men were apprehended by police following a footchase from the business, police.said. Inside the PotterY Shack, officen roun<h'86 worJh or platters. bowls and dishes stacked UP, (or removal, Sgt. Norm Babcock said. . Laguna Beach Planning O>mmlaaiOMl'I wlll lake another look al density llandanls In the R·2, IW and C-l ...... and rurther .... ld<r zoning of tho Syeomore Hll11 area, In a study aeal-On at '''° p.m. Moaday In the council cbamberl. The planners hive held the pibll• beerlnp and IOVenl study oeui-Ons on bow IO r e d u • e density in llghl and inedlllm re1ld<nllal, and 11 g h t CXllllJlltltlll, -The l"'opooed new standards resulted """' 1G -~ ordinln<a lrapl Ille city •.....U detl&ftOd IO -llmH consirllctlon In ' the Art Colony until density decisions are ..reached. Alter loud, voc:al M!ronlal!Ons with some propei;ty owners at publlc b,.rlngs and study Rsslonl, planners formed cos:nmltttts lO further research some of the UM.JlSWmd questions In the propo!led standards. ·11ifte commltleta on clen!lty and bulk standards, hotel• and motels In Ro!, and relaUng tno standards to the open apa;u element of the general plan will report to the full comm lsl!Gn Mooday night eomm-. will decide bow ind il lo lncarpit•te Ulelr IJnd!pp, lnlO lhl (Set ZONES, l"lt1e 11 r' Two police officers eating at a nearby eolre< shop were alerted by a citizen to the tJtert In progress . . ,. Ce remonies Se t At Heisler P ark Tho LalJUl)a Beach city council has IJll!rOYed use of Heisler Park as the site for the Lapna Beach High • School baccalaur .. te ceremonies. CeremoolOI wlll bo bela at I p.m. June II !or the odlool '• groduallng clasa .• -1 .. .,,_ .. ., . . \. ·i No Princess? Clark Jarrett's frog Adam's Rib didn't turn into a princess when he kissed her Thursday, but that \Vasn't the point anyway. She had just won the Saddleback College fi:_og jumping contest, along with two other frogs on the United F'rogs of America, Ltd. team . She leaped a total of 18 feet, 9 inches in a series of nine jumps, eight inches s hort of the "rorld's frog leap record. Jarrett. team captain, -is a history n1ajor at Saddleback. Related picture on page 3. ·---··---------·--------- 27-year Legend Lngun n flig h's Poige E1ids Co rP.e r -.._. ....... , ......... -»TER:2t YEARS Rollrln9 ~r l'llgo ·~· By IIILARY KAYE Of lltto D11Uy Plklt Sl•ff "One morning, soon after I began at Laguna Beach High School, I looked out my classroom window and saw Catalina ls1and." recalls veteran teacher Bob Paige. "I said to myself, 'Man, this is the place to be.' " he saJd. And now, 'l:l years later. Paige is still at the high scbool, even though the view from his present room is not lhe spnrkling Pacific . Although Paige was aiming ror 30 years at the school, this trimester is his last. But only because of his ailing health, he quickly adds. "Believe you me. I hate to leave this place," Paige said. his deep blue eyes reflecting his reluctance to retire. At the moment, Paige is teaching English literature, but he's what he proudly calls, "a utility man." "I've taught history, math, general education, English grammar, and now English literature," be says. "I've loved it all, but my favorites were history and EngJim literature," he added. After 27 years, Paige Is a living legend at Laguna High. Many parent$ and lheir children hive all been taught by the utility man. "ll'• a good reeling lo have tbe opportunity to teach lbe children of your former students," Paige said. And Paige definitely reels Lagwia High students cannot be matched. "The tld.s here are more grown-up, more matun. You can ,commwlicate wllh them easily,·~ he said. "w.od kids, lhouCb. are $0mtlhlng elte. It shows up at lllJno lil<e basielball games, when! ~ other ldda are o!lal noioy, obnolloua Ind just youngeNtctioc aa the wbole," Pall• noted. Allotletller, Pili«• bu, taught 31 yt~ -senn In his ooli•• 9feclln, too In San • (See PAIGE:'Pop. I) • Ni11 e Hurt As T1·ainer Hits A11to By JAN \VORTH 01 lhe O•ilY Pilol 5t•ll A 0jct crashed into three moving vehicles. injuring nine people. and sent a mushroom cloud of flames JOO feel into the air Thursday at the El Toro ~1arine Corps Air Base. The pilot and crewman. Capt. \Villiam 11aycs, 29. and Cpl. Ter ence Crawford. 20. both of Santa Ana. parachuted to safety with minor injuries. b a s e spokesmen s<1id. But fiery "'reckage of the attark trainer bounced 250 ieet from the open field where it hit to Lambert Roar! .w?ete d.e.~ti.s..and,,llames crasM9 \~tp the -three vefncles. -· r-.1 rs. Paula Stopper. wife of Sgt. M!ke Stopper. and their infant son were nown to the Long Beach Naval Hospital with third degree burns and cuts. They were reported in good condition today. Sgt. Stopper was trealed for burns and released, but his vehicle v.•as demolished . Passengers in the other two vehicles. :l persona! car and a Marine Corps base truck. were !rested for shock and minor bums and were released. Base spo kesmen said the cause of the crash is still not known and is uQder investigation. The I p.rn. crash produced a spectacular fire ball and a roar that jolted nearby neighbors. Jeff Lehman of Costa Mesa.-a pl!nlf tuner on his way to an appo intment near the base. said he had just tur ned south on (See PLANE CRASH, Page%). Nixon Jf'ill K ee p Prese nts Privnte WASHINGTON (API -The White House continues to consider its records of foreign gifts to President Nixon and his lamily a matter for confidentiality and will not open the records to public or press view. Deputy Press Secrotary Gerald L. WarTen said Thursday the \Vhite House view is that publicizing such gifts might cause embarrassment in diplomatic deallngs with other countries. Attention has been focused on presidential gifts since d i s c I o s u r e Tuesday by the Washingtoo. Post's Maxine Cheshire that the Nixon famil y received gifts of three sets oC expensive jewels in five years from the Saudi Arabian royal family. Orange Coast Weather Considerable cloudiness througb Saturday but partly sunny Satur· ~ay afternoon, according to the weather service. Slightly cooler ddy-s. Higm Saturday in the lower and middle 60s. Lows tonight in the 50s. INSllU' TODJ\ \' Hu ntington Bt'a ch returns lo the middle aaes Saturday for an atf..da11 Re-nobsance 'Faire. See today's Wee kender for details. ... I • t ' • I 2 DAILY PJLO I LB Alta Lagu11a Extension Off Map? T\\'O yl'ars n~o. !hr Laguna fil'tith C'i!v COuncil scrC1pcd a plan lo C'Xlrnd Alt :i l~aguna llouli•\-ard fron1 Top of thl' \\'rir!d lo Arch Ileach J-leights. Unfortuna!cl~'. no one ever ordered the connection t'rascd from the city's official rOad map. ils s<'ll'ct systcn1 of streets. Council\\'oman Ph.vllis Swccnev told fellow council members m c ~ t in g Wednesdav. 'The pfoposcd extension has sine(' appeared in numerous proposals for land development in the area, and on public documents such as the Realtors' listing books. The road \\'as deleted "'hen he<ivv eiti1.en opposition surfaced to thi:- ('nvironmental in1pact of massi\'c cut and fill grading. Top of thr \\'orid residents angrily oppn~d thl' C'Onn1~rtion.. !O Arch Beach lfeight s rharging !hf' road \\·ould ht'.'comC' H SJ>Cl'dwa~· through a rcsidl'ntlal comn1uni1\·. T;,·o inajor developments. t h r Chapman plan for developincnt of the 10.000·acr<> l\·loulton Ranch lands behind Lnguna Reach and the South Laguna (:encr:il Plan ha\·c en\ i5ioncd extension of Alta Laguna. In action \Vedne sdav. the council orCl.ercd the city planning commission to begin proceedings necessary to expungr the road from the city's select system o( streets. From Page 1 DEFECTOR. •• but after t\\"O yrars of college in the Upitrd Sintl'S hl' rralizrd rli:it \1itl1out n1on•'.\'. lie could no longer s!u<l.v. "lie \\as in\·it.ed to tr;n·r! to Russia as part of ihc you!h fc:;;ti'l·n1· and then \r.1s oHrred the chance to stay and be trained.'' his stcpmothc-r cxplainffi. After six yr;:irs of studv. Hoxsev v.Tn!c home to say he plannNi never t~ leave and that he felt :in obligation to repay the Soviets for the training. Correspondence between the physician a~d his family in California -including hts natural mother \rho lives in the northern parL of 1hr s!atr -\\"OS steadv but never abundant. · ' "He 1\'0Uld usua!ly \\'fitc at Chri:::tmas. but this past holiday he and I did not rnrrespond. All the tim" b<>fore. h(lv.·c\'Cr. there \v11s nr\"er nn indication of anv disenchantment. :.ind no feeling on n1~' part that !here v.·cre any problems ·• she said.· . · ' Rut there is ;1 thcor_v about Hoxsev·s reasons for disenchantment "'ilh ihe Soviet "''a.v of life. '·Some time ago he and his mother corresponded and she began to write to officials in hopes lhat Dean. his v.·ife and adopted daughter. ,,·ho is 14 now. could get pennission just to visit the L"nited States." she said. The theory is that those letters mav have sparked suspicion by SoviCt officials. Hoxsey told his benefactors at the emoassy weoneSOay thaf he TIO\V rears for his safety were he to return to his home in Volgograd (formerly named Stalingrad until Stalin fell fron1 grace in the USSR). Presumably. his Russian-OOrn "·ife and !heir daugh!cr \\•ould ren1aln behind. Sources in the cmb.:issv said Hoxsrv first felt the n~ed to leave about a ycilr ago. but 1\·as quotl'd as sa.\·[ng he onrc thought the desire \\'OUld pass in time. The dilemn1;\ no\r for officials at thf' embass~· is \1hat to do 11ith their .. guest"' pending an official decision on his demands to reenter the country. Reports said the original plan was to send him back hon1c until a decision had been reached. · ·'I ho[X' that 'rhat h0 did on \\'ednesday hasn't made his condition (th c predicament \1ith the So\ciet offialdoml ~·orse. and that his chances for returning tJaven"t been damaged.·' snid ri.trs. lloxsey. ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT ' "' ·, .. ~, ., " ... , ... '. . ... r. .. 1 .• •. J [, "" ,-~. 1~ '·'•··· """ 0 • i" I e •. ··~· · l '· .... ~ .. .. , .. , .. : -.•··· . '"' .,, f. •11•• ., '·" ,.~ .• ,.,,~ ..... t ,,,.,,.,,.. .. , ·~ ,,,. "' ...... .,.~ .. ··~'.'." f· ,,..., . J V.•~ ""• '°''' •'1 Put ·•'f 1 ... -1 ~ r ,,,,,, ~··~ P•~l"1N,. ..... ~ .... •II ....... ~ Tr_,_ •1.'" ,~ "''"'''"'ll1"• Le,..IMchOffkt 222f'"1!A'ffl-v. M<l•~l'IQ ~: P,0 , !lo• bM. qi(i.!J( ~OfflcH Cot1• ,..,.. ))!IW<Mt t11v!it••~ Nrwr.or!6"1C" 3»)M~blh'••1 l<ufll"'11!<111 h-1nil~bNe<>llclti<,.,11t1 $111 Clt'N!'lt ,l0& N<lrl'1t El'""""" At11 ,....,...17141642°4121 ctaeff6t4 .W•trll .. 642·1671 a...pM"ttec1t.UD1pal1....i.: • T4kJlil t tt~t466 ~ ,,, •. Ot.,... Cot.r ,._.,,,..,. ()cm. """'/' ,..,_......_ 11111111.-.-..i .... """ llf ~_,.,, ........... t .. ~ ......... ..-ot_..._ .................. ..ioo.i.~o.""' -~J;{.t,'+• tlOO~ O.IN• HOii_..,, ........ JOOlllOIOINY, .. "ft'~ * ·""li: ~, '\. #, '"* .,,. 'If \ ~\! UPI T•lepho!o GRIEVING FAMltY WEEPS OVER KIN KILLED IN BLOODBATH Thirty Were Killed by Three Palestinian Guerrillas Fro1n Page 1 RAIDS • • • Egyptian war minister SJX>ke of a resumption of the war. lsrae\ did not mention inflicting casualties in today's ground · strike one mile across the Lebanese border in \\"hich the CQmmandos ble1v up a house believed us~d by Arab guerrillas. A spbkesman said Israeli planes eight hours later fle\v !'trikes on t;irgcts inside "Fatahland. '' the Israeli term for gucrrilla·dominatcd areas of southeastern Lebanon near the s~·rian border. l~e said all planes rcturped fro111 the half·hour raid . . Bo!* Israel and Syria reported heavy fighting on the Golan Heights and around Mt. Hermon today . the 67th consecutive day of combat there. A Syrian Ninmunique reported Syrian-Israeli tank duels and that both sides were using artillery and anti·tank weaJXlnS. The _Palestine News Agency, said ruring the raids on south Lebanon today Israeli planes attacked a Palestine red crescent ambulance. "The ambulance was burned and its occupants killed," the agency claimed. "This new ugly murder cootradicts all international rules and principles ... and v,·r reiterate that the Palestinian Army will knO\V how to deal blov.'s which \Viii hurt ~e enemy v.·hcrcvcr he is," the agency said. ' "{:( ~1en1orial Rites For Slai11 Je,vish llostages Slated Lagu11a Be.acl1 Sumn1er Scl1ool Signups Start Signups are now being taken for summer school in the La.gun& Brach L'nificd School District. Students n1av fill out registration cards at their · 0\1·n school. the district Office or the publir library. The summer session begins June 2.f and continues through Aug. 2 for bot!i elementary and high school student~. Classes v.·ill be both remedial and enrichment. For elementary school children. there arc about 50 enrichment c l asses suggested, such as arts and crafts. German, jazz, logic·math. m a r i n f' science and photojournalism. If '..JO children sign up tor any particular class it will be offered. There will also be seven remedinl classes if 15 students sign up for eacfi one. These include arts pnd crafts for re1nedial readers, math. social studi..cs and several others. At the high school. classes offered v.'ill be in th¢ •reas of art. business. driver ~rainin~. English, foreign \anr;:uage. 1nduslr1al arts, math, mu.sic . physical 1 education, science, social science, \\·ork , experience and others. Ninth through 12th graders \Vill attend i the high sc:hool classes at Laguna Beach 1 ll~gh. The elementary school prOgram I will be at Thurston In.ediate if there f are more than 280 sigll!tfs, and at the i' high school if there are less. There will be no bus transportation, 1 unless Thurston School is used. In that I event, students will be bused from the 1 high school to Thurston and back. I A memorial _ .ser11.ice ..is _ ~.hJ!!luled tonight at a dozen congregations of th"e· "---~-· -----·--·--- .Je\rish Federation of orange County for 0 30 K 'll l ~eenaged hostage~ murdered or maimed ver i ec -I I 111 an Arab terrorist attack on the Israeli to1\11 of :-.Ia<ilot. L<'onard Shane. president of the religious orga111zalion, c1nphasizcd 1hat non ·.le\.\'S are i11vl1rrl. fi e sa1cl the observances at locations throughout the county are co-sponsored bi-the Board of Rabbis. ·sookcsmen for the .Je1\'iSh F~cration of Orange County said services are set at \_'arying fin1es and may be l~amcd by calling rach co 11 g reg a t ion a 1 h<>ndquarters. The memorial services will be held at : -Harbor Reform Temple. l\"ev.'POrt Beach. -Temple Bat Ya.hm, Corona dcl !\tar. -Temple Sharon, Costa .Mesa. -l~rael A.cademy , Irvine. -Temple Elait. J\tission \1iejo. -;'l.tission Judea. Laguna Hills. -Tcn1plc Beth David, Westminster. f'roin Page 1 J.>_-\IGE ..• Juan Cnpistrano and the rest in Laguna. ··Jt's quite a life." Paige said. leaning back in his chair v.·ith an air of contentement. "Y...'orking v.•ith youngsters keeps you yolthg -or· keeps a young outlook, any\.\·ay." he said. ''Lots of kids came to me and said thev didn't want me to leave,'' Paige said. "But when I was out or school for a !ew months _at tfie end of last year, and 1n the hospital, they realized that my health is poor." "My doctor is tickled to death I'm retiring," he added. When fall rolls around again this year Paige plans to be far away £rom Lagun~" -probably in Oregon. "ll would drive me out of my mind to be here and not head for school in the rMrnin~s," Paige said. "After all the years I ve been teaching, J just wouldn't know what to do come September." The teacher plan~ to take it easy for about a year -mainly golfing and travtllng throughoot the country -and then de<ide what to do with the r-t of his life. -• "I know I'm the kind of penon who baa to keep bu.!y, and l want to work ,with kids. But l Just can't be under the ~ all the lime ol a toaclilnl " Paige said. 1 • As Dublin ,4 u to I Bornbs Exploded I DLlBLJ;\. Ireland 1,\P1 -Bon1b." planted in cars exploded at the height of 1 the eon11nutcr rush hour in Cf'n!ral llub!in today. Fire department officials said at least 30 persons \\'ere killed a'nd scores more wounded. T~e explo~ions c_ame w~thin a half.mile I radius of this cap1tal'1;. big Amien Street 1 railroad terminal. The blasts went off on I O'Connell Street, one of the main I thoroughfares; Parnell Street, Granville I Street and Talbot Street. Po~ice ~aid there was no advance I warning given. Fire officials said the charges \rE;rc placed in parked cars and detonated one by one over a period of about 20 minutt·~. Dub\ln has not had a major terror ~~t bombing since Dec. I. 1972. Y.'hen tv.·o bus drivers v.·ere killed and 120 persons wounded. Those blasts coincided with a debate in the Dail, Ireland's parliament. on legislation to crush the outlawed. Irish 1 !lepublican Army. a movement fi ghting '. 1n Northe~ Ireland to o~5t the_ Briti~h I and to unite that provinc·e with !his southern republic. From Pagel PLANE CRASH .. Irvine Boulevard when he saw the jet circling low overhead. "I was just thinking with an these planes and trainees out here how fare it is to hlive a crash, when the jet came 1 right down in front of me st a 45 degr~c I angle {Ind nev.er pulled up," Lehman 1 reported. . r "There was a huge bell of fire, like n mushroom cloud, maybe 11111 feet high. It wu brilliant orange and bleck • and the jtt jutt disintegrated whtn it hit the I growid," he edded. · Tiie crash spread debris 9'1er a quarter mile ~ wide area, a n d ".tffJc on the perimeter .roadJ and portlone of Irvine Boulevard and Sand Canyon ,Road were blocked oft to ltefllc for HYeral bou11 altennnlJ. ' • Ft-om Page I Ordi11011ee Extended ZONES ... proposed ordinances. ~ The planning commilslon will then tum !ta: attenUon to th!!" lirigering question of Sycamore HUis, wblch Is a 522-acre parcel ln Laguna canyon between Laguna canyon aJ1d El Toro Roads. Lagµna Council Commiasionen will be studying a recent directive by the city council to place the land ln one of three zones. Eases 'Burdens' On Aprll 22, COmmiasioners voted :?·2 to consider rezon ing the land from residential-h.illside (R·H) to agriculture-tn three actions. th.e Laguna Beach recreational (A-Rl. But on lt.1ay 1 the cilv City Council has continued an interim council rejected their ruling and asked ~rg~ncy Arch. Beach Heigh.ts building commissioners to consider the matter ordinance. furthered passage of , a again -this time taking three plans into specific plan fo r the h.ill top community consideration. and cased the financial burden lo( some landowners. · One option \vould develop a s~1·1,·c .,. ... Th 't' ' plan for the area. calling for a low-e in erim urgency ordinance· was intensity, resort·rccreation development. extended for 60 days during which. a This could include a lodge, golf course. specific plan for the area should have riding stable and trails _ all at low cleared Ute council and become law. In allowing the exemp!lon. council members said they do not believe it ,~·ould wea,ken the specific .plan, !\·like Easley, as~iated plaooey, said Moody was the only one caught in the changing law situation and sub~t to the lot combination. Cyclist, Female density. 1'he specific plan which would have the 'J'he second option \\'Ould rezone the wieght of a zoning Jaw provides for p ll land to agricullure-reereatlon (A·R). an:hilectural control of new building, assenger Urf 1s wou Oallow arming-ana-sorneio;;;w:;..-'reqw.res slngle-owners...oLadjacenots._to__ int.ensity recreational uses. combine them to create a single building J L . C h The third plan would be for purthase of site . and PI 8 c es other bu i Id in g I) agtJil3 1•as the land for public open space and requirement on contractors. limited rec reation uses. These uses could · The speci rlc plan and the inter i n1 include picnicking:, hiking: and hofseback ordinance are similar in the i r riding . requirements. The council's act i 0 n A. 1nassive residential development \\'cdncsdily night came fol!o\ving years of prOJl'Ct \Vas turned dO\Vll bv the citv in controvefsy and Juror O\:fr building in Decen1ber. on the basis that it \\'Ould the heights ivhich had been subdivided in have resulted in complex traffic, flood 1913 into a grid of 25 foot by IOO·foot lots. and se\v<1ge disposal problemsrfhat plan \l'ould have built 2,016 housing units over 1'he council snipped 3\\•ay so1ne rC'd 10 years. tape snarling at least one owner of several lots. I le had home drav.•ings in the city planning hopprr since June. 1!173, From Pagel SLA CHASE. • • commandeered a Pontiac. Then !hey later forced another man to give them his blue and white Nova. Linda Ensley. 19. who lives next door to the v.•hite house on the edge of \Vatts, said she had ~en t\\'O ,\·omen going in and out of the building the last several da~·s. She .said they usually did not en1crge tin!il late in the dav and appl•ared to be wearing \'ttgs. one rt!d and one black. Sullivan satd hC' believed !he trio v.·ould have returnt'd to the building if it had not been for the S!Xlrling goods store incident Thursdav . Sul!ivcin \1·as asked \~·try he thought the SLA members had con1e to Loo Angeles. •·Tuey got pressure in the San Francisco area and perhaPs they naturally decided to change their scene of operations." he said. "It's the norrna! operation of a fugitive· under pressure." but ~<id been caught in the changing laws applied to Arch Beach !!eights. Joe Moody told the council that by the time he's modified his plan"s to fit one l~w, the law had changed and by the tnne he had changed the plans again, the la\v had changed again. ~le v.·as hit by the lots combination section of the urgency ordinance effective April 17. The city council exen1pted from the lot combination provision any lot for v,·hich a valid permit was pending prior to April 17, ,La g11 ni1 ' !' • r.sitors Can 'Trani It' Su1nmer visitors to Laguna Beach \\"ill be bombarded v,·ith invitntions to "tram it"'. Posters and buttons bearing the latest catch-phrase in t0\\"11 \\"ill be ain1ed at the annual influx of thousands of automobile-toting tourists. Originators of the "tram it'' campaign are hopeful that it \.\'111 encourage car dri\•ers to aban®n their vehicles in the Art Colony in fa,·or of the local trams shuuling throughout Lai::una Bcac·h. A motorcyclist and his passenger are in Orange County !\iedical Center today following a collision on South Coast Htgh1vay Thursday in South Laguna. The injured motorcyclist hit a parked ear at 6:45 p.m., causing a second syclist to st rike his motorcycle in the rear. Michael David Kirk. 29, of Anaheim, is listed today in fair cooditioo 1vith internal injuries. tlis passenger. Patric:ia Issac. 23. is in satisfactory condilion suffering head injuries, according to nurses. Both were transferred fro1n South Coast CommWlily troepital · The second motorcycle v,·as driven by John Lawrence Matyjasek, 35. of Paramount. His passenger y,·as tfary Burke, 18, also of Paramount. Neither was injured. Kirk's vehicle, an older model Indian motorcycle. V.'aS moderately damaged in the accident, according to the California Highway Patrol. Matyjasek v.·as driving a Harley Davidson motorcycle. wh ich "'a.<i not damaged. The automobile. which v.·as parked on !he highv.•ay just soulh of \\'est Street. ~·as also not damaged. according to lht' C"!IP. Eight ~Jen Indicted TRENTON. N.J. (UPI) -The !ible or New Jersey Thursday indicted eight former California insuranCi! executives on charges of attempting to st rip a New Jersey firm of assets as part or a S~.5 billion fraud scheme. The ei(!ht v.·erl' former officers of Equity Funding Corp. of America . n California·based insurance fir111. i·larris has been identified as the '·Teko'' of the SLA wh·o spoke on a tape recording received after the April 15 robbery of a San Francisco bank in \rhich 1\1iss Hearst participated. . ---. ··---·· . ------- 00\"T .\I !SS OCH. F,\BCLOCS SOFA & CHAIR SALE ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 18. .. s , L<.1r gr:-;t 1nventorv in our histor~' to h~ reduced. Stop in nb\v for hest sc lcclion at terrific :;uvings. F'antastic selections of uphol5tcred pieces all on sale nO'I\'. Names like Sherrill. .\large Carson and \Voodmark 1.111 at special prices. Over 100 sofas and 250 chairs have been price-slashed ... come in and browse! DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN ; WHllDATS & SATUIDATS 9:00 lo l ;JO • NEWPORT BEACH• !127 WESTCLft'F DR.. 1142.205() LAGUNA BEACH • 34$ NORTH COAST HWY., 494'6Ml , TORRANCE• ~· HAWl'llOR!'IE BLVD • <Open Fri. tll 9, Sun.12·.5:30) 378-1319 • I I I I • • • Toclay's Finni ·-EDITION N.Y. Stocks ' VOL. 67, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS," 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1974 TEN CENTS B~lector~s Stepn1other Waits on Coast By JOHN-VALTERZA 01 "" DlllW f'llfl lllff \Vhen 47-yeaMld Dean Hozsey fought his way into the U.S. Embassy in Moscow Wednesday and declare<! that his enchantment with communism had ended, the agony began ror his stepmother in San Clemente. For Mrs. Ella Hoxsey it goes far beyond the certamty of phone calls day and night and the nuisance of press qut:ries. She is seriously ill 'n'il h cancer. "When I picked up the paper th is morning aod read the account fro1n correspondents in Moscow. the shock was just the same as if r had heard the news of an aulo accident," she sz: l from her home Thursday afternoon. Her fondness for her stepson (.,.,,horn she first met only after he was grown l is obvious. But for Mrs. Hoxscy, the quiet, normal life she established over the past 10 years as a widow living modestly in San Clemente ~ded when Hoxscy sought ~cers managed to grab Hoxsey from to return to America. his caplors and s pi r i t him into the Hoxsey was literally wrestled from the embassy which is legally U.S. territory. grip or two Russian security officers at · "No one knows what will happen nOYl," the gates of the An1erican enclave in the ~trs. Hoxsey said. Soviet capital. "I don't have any real hopes about the Actountsirom two correspondents Who Silt.iation," she added. witnessed the incident said the one-timr Tired , weary and in pain, the San defector was grabbed by the Russians as Clemente widow said friends have he tried to enter the building. Then. as advised her to leave home to spare he was being !!!Ci to a l~ussian herself any further problems because of interrogation room , l\110 U.S. en1bassy \Vt"<.lnesday's events -deemed an intematiOllal incident 1n go\'ernn1enl circles. '"The last lin1e I saw Dean \la s in 1959 and 1960 \\"hen his father \\'as stlll alh·r. \Ve v.·ere in Europe and leanied that !Jean was seriously ill and \vouJd ha\·e delicate surgery in a Moscow hospital.. \Ile obtained permission and 1\~nt to visit. · '•His dad s~1yed an entire su1iin1e1". 11•hile Dean recovered. Then his f:i1h cr left." she related. ThC' elder lloxscv. an .1 1 IJ 1v 1• tJ Communist 11•hose Caret.:r 111 !he Los Angeles tax assessor's offict• C"ndrd 111 1949 because of his political bt·licfs -- ne\'er saw t1is son aga111. lie died four vears after that J\.'loscow sun1ml'r. · For the for1ner defector. the 17 rear~ in the Soviet Union Were rate· 1:-nt•d 10 b.· rt:'payment ton regime \\.'h ' hhad ;d!o11- ed Hoxse yUl'l.' chance to h.lfiil a dre<1n1. "fie had al\l.'avs wanted to bl' <i doc1ur. \See l)E~'ECTOlt, l':JMC 2) Fiery El Toro Jet Crash Probed • Officer Hurt Ill Me lee Irvine Fr<icas Erupts While You,tli Aidecl One policeman was Injured Thursday in an Irvine melee in which a simmering cro\l.·d of teenagers and adults reportedly shouted obscenities and booed a trio of officers trying to hel p an WlCODSCious teenaged boy. The incident in v.'hich the officers finally carried the victim about a half- mile across a field to a patrol a car to get him to a hospital ended v.•ith his companion arrested. Investigators lodged the 17-year-old in Orange County Juvenile Han on suspicion of being drunk in public and interfering v•ilh a police officer. His buddy, also 17, and allegedly intoxicated to the point of unconsciousness. was taken to Tustin Community Hospital for medic a l treatment. He later \l.'as released to his parents pending follo\vup action by authorities. Irvine patrolman Dennis ~fcNeely "as reportedly butted in the ston1ach by the One More Not~h NE\V YORK ( . .\.P) • ......:.. "t'he nation's major banks pushed the prime lending rate another notch higher tctlay to 11 1,z perc.ent. Leading the increase. from 11 1/.a percent were the b1~ New York banks. including First National City. second largest nationally; Chase A1anhattan, third largest; Chen1ical Bank. sixth: Banker's· Tru~t, seventh: Irving Trust, 12th; ~tarine Midland, 16th; and Frankhn National Bank. 20th. The country's largest commercial bank. the Ban~ of America. followed quickly, as did the National Bank of Detroit and itellon Bank in Pittsburgh, 13th largest. . . . . . r..1ajor \Vest coast banks also followed, 1nclud1ng United Cali- fornia Bank, Crocker Bank, Security Pacific, Bank of California and \Veli s Fargo Bank. . The prime rate is the rate banks charge b1gg~st and best corpor- ate customers. While not directly tied to the rates charged for con- sumer loans, the prime can eventually lead to changes in those rates as v,.·ell. Three Suspects of SLA Tracked Down, Escape LOS ANGELF.S (UPI) -Police and FBI agents tracked down three suspected members of the SymbK>nese Liberation Am1y. kidnapers of Patricia Hearst. to a small house in a black district today but when thev broke into the structure the trio had a1ready nec1. A man and two women. all v.'hile. \l,'ere reported holed up in the building which \vas surrounded by m~re than 75 l<_Bl agents and scores of officers armed \\·tth guns and tear gas. (Related Story, Picture Page 5) Canisters of the tear gas \\'ere fired through the building and, when there \Vas no movement or reaction fron1 inside. agents entered the house and found that Jt was empty. William Sullivan, head of the Los Angeles FBI office, said the~ found ammunition, rood, suitcases, wigs and clothing. "It Indicated the people had left very Animal Hospital Cash Box Rifled A Ihle! clean<d ool lhe "'1b bo1 al an Itvlne animal holpllal Thursday, laklTig advantage of the rtceptlooist'a absence to tile back }'OO!Tl, ""' she was $Citing "P. a !able for pel surgery. . SU. PUllarinc, 27, of the Unlversily Park Animal Hospllal, 111186 Culver Dr1ve1 Cold lnve1tlgalors the clinic lciot llO, 10Chxllng ~ash a,.i an "1dorsed check. Polke ImmediAtely checked with a cltrk nm door at McNully'1 Ice Cream Parlor, llut be lllld be IUld _, no one al'Olllld Ibo clinic •dlnJ lllllllct<MIY or !leelna, hurriedly," he said. Suilivan said he believed the suspec!R might still be in the Los Angeles area. Asked if one or the women might have been 20-year-old Patricia Hearst herself. Sullivan said, "There is no evidence she "·as here." Randolph A. Hearst, father of kidnaped Patricia, said today she may be in great- er danger because of ttle discovery of the SLA hideout in Los Angeles . "I think she may be in more danger now than site has been in quite a while." said Hearst. president and ec!l~or of the San Francisco Examiner. He talked to newsmen at the famil y residence in Hillsborough after learning of the rald. "I just hope to God notlri:1g happens to Patty," Hearst s::.ld. "We love her and we want tier baek.'' Two of the three . persons were tentatively identified as William .T11ylor Harris, 29, one of the SLA IOWJders, and his wife. Emily, 27. "Mle third was described as a "very.good looking girl in her e&rly 20s with a pal'-complexion." Authorities got on the trail of th'-three a(ter an incident in a sporting goods store in which the man believed to be Harris WBS 1lapped by a store employ• for sbopllltln1. He drew a gun but In a IClllOe with the clerk, dropped the pistol to lhe sidewalk. Its registrallon was traced to Emily Harris. Harris and Ml of the women ran to, a "'itin8 rte! and while Volklw~gen vari Where: a third woman wM at the wbtt!I. The wmnan In lhe vao rirod aboul 30 shota lrom a machine gun back al the building but l1C ont WU lnju"'4. They abandoned the Volkswagen and commandeered 1 Pontiac, '1'httl they lalar fo<ced .MOCber ma11 to give tb<m <Set au atuE, race u • other vouth during the incident in ~ field bet\veen the Culverda!e tract and the Siln Diego fo~reeway. Patrol Sgt. Cary Shull said Officer f\fcNeely-11·ho was treated at Costa A1esa l\Iemorial Hospital and ordered home. to recuperate-\\·as able lo dri\c himself to the emergency room. Once en route from the scene. hO\\"C\·er. Officer r..lcNeely had to stop and assist Patrolman Don Del...amatcr. ISee l\IELEE, Page 2) l\1en1orial Rites For Slain J e1visl1 Hostagc1' Sl.atctl A memorial service is scheduled tonight at a dozen congregations of the Je\\'ish Federation of Orange County for ll'fnaged hostages murdcrC'd or maimt>d in an Arab terrori'St at1 :1ck on the Israeli 101\'ll of l\.1aalot. l..ronard Shane. prl'5iden1 of 1hc religious organization, emphasized lha1 non-Je\rS are invited. lie said the obscr\·anccs at locations throughout the county are co-sponsored hy the Board of RabOis. Spokesmen for the .Jc\11sh Federation or Orange County said sC'r\ lees are sc i at varying tin1es and may be ler1rncd by calling each con g r c g a t i o n a t headquarters. The memorial sen·iccs \\ill be held at: -Harbor Rt'for1n Ten1plc. i'\e11•port Beach. -Temple Bat Yahm. Coroni.l dcl r..tar. -Temple Sharon. Costa \lL·s;i. -Israel Academy, Irvine. -Temple Elait, l\1ission Vi t:>jo. -i\-lission Judea. Laguna Hilb •. -Temple Beth Da,1id. \Vesllninsll'r. * -;.? 1,{ Israel Strike.s Tr1itli Co1n111l11ttlos Iu Retaliution By United Press International An Israeli commando unit carried out a hit-run attack against an Arab guerrilla base a mile inside Lcb~non today and Israeli planes struck guerrilla bases near the border in the second day or retaliation for the Maalot massacre. Israeli military spokesmen reported . The Palestinian news agency \VAF'A sald in"8eirut lhe Israeli planes struck in "waves," hitting five s e par at c Palestinian refugee camps in southern Lebanon from 1:50 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. It said antiaircraft batteries opened up on the planes but made no claims or hitting them. Lt. Gen. Mordechai Gur, the Israeli armed forces chief of staff. said of the raids he could not rule out the possibility thal Israel. was out to make southern Lebanon "unlivable," a wort' used two months ago by Oefe,flse Minister ~1oshr Dayan. Damascos repqrted a dogfight over Lebanon between Israeli and Syrian planes but Israel denied the report. The Lebanese military command said lsrae11 planes broke: the sonic barrier over Beirul loday and that th• Lebaneso Air Force scrarnbled but made no contact. A Syrian. communique issued In Damascus said the Syrian and Israeli warplanes fought an air battle over South Lebo~ today and that an Israeli plane was sbot down in fiamH. "There was no contact, there wat no bltUe and there was no downing," 1n (Set RAJDS, Page I) " , • -. D1il~ ~Hot Staff J>h1lo No Pritacess?· Clark Jarrett's frog Adam's Rib didn't turn into a princess \rhen he kissed her Thursday, but that 1vasn't the point any\\'ay. She had just 1von the Saddleback College frog ju1nping contest, along with t\\'O either frogs on the United Frogs of America, Ltd. team. She leaped a total of 18 feet. 9 inches in a series of nine ju1nps, eight inches short of the 1\·orld·s frog leap record. Jarrett. team captain, is a history ina,ior at Saddleback. Related picture on page 3. l1·vi11e Pla1111e1·s ' Actio11 To Allow T1·act s to Start lrvif'l' Planning Com 111 is s ion t' r s Thur!'day adopted \\•ilh fe\v re1·isions a re,·ised l:1nd use plan for the central and northern portions of the city. The precise plan is expectt'Ci to be considered by the city council in n1id- Junc. \Vhen finally appro\·ed. !he document "'ill guide development of homes for as many as 4l ,l:15 on 2.711 acres lying north of Moulton Parkv;"<ly between Culver Drive and Jcffrfey Road to Hicks Canycn \Vash. Adjustmen ts to the plan prepared b~· \Vilsey and Ham of South Pasadena centered on resid.ential densities, use permit restrictions for developn1ent in airport noise zones and equitable sharini;: or cost!" for road construction by the numerous owners of parcels in the area. Unlike the rest of the City of Irvine. most of the land included in the North Irvine Revised Land Use Plari is not O\vncd by !he Irvine Company. 11le ''window areas" appear as holes in the land use plan prepared by the Irvine Company and have been cause or much concern on the part of re.ciidents since before incorporation. Rebels Plan Meeting DAKAR; Senegal (AP) -Rebels In Portugu.,. Guinea . will me.et with Portuguese authoritie' in London May 25 lo dlscu,. a cease-llrt In Ibo African colony, the r<IJOI radio s1*tloo ,.Id ttiday. Th,e bro3dcast l1l0\lllortd here said agreement on the talka ceme at a m.,Ung In Dakar Tbllrl!day between Porl111Uose Fmign Minister Marlo Soarea and Aristcdes P<rtira, leader or the ~lean Party !or lhe lndependenct ol Guniea • Bissau and the Cape Verde Islands. • I Appro ral of !he prcrise land U~C' plan means dcvelopC'rs \\"ho have been wailing nearly three years lor approvais may no1v plan de\·clopmenls 11•hich meet the crilcria of the city precise plan. Cllspers Asks Boltrd Session On Jet Noise By L, PETER KRIEG Ot tllt D11!f ~Ito! Stiff Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers said today he will eall for an C'xecutivc session of the Orange County Board of Supervisors May 28 to begin negotiations for a settlement of the suit against Oran11:e County Airport filed Thursday by Newport. Beach. Caspers also predicted that the nearly I ,000 homeowners, who five years ago filed a $25 million damage: suit against the airport, may drop their litlgation and instead support the city irult. The Newport Beach suit ask! Orang'- County Superior Court to impOSe stri~t ~rating ron<litlons on the airport. Caspers called lhe city efforts "far more apropos" ·than the damage claim and said he thinks it wlll "lead the woy to a iettlcment of the airport noise problem.'' Airport Director Robert Bresnahan dlsa,~. He Mid the city's lawsuk Is "polltically motivated" · The Finh Olstt1ct supervisorial election Is less than th,.. weeks away. In i~. C..peno Is facing challensee by tlllte olher candldatea. ") don't know wby !hey filed it at this (S.. JET OISE, Pago !) Ni11e Hurt As T1·aii1er Hits Autos Hv J1\N \VOHTll 01' tilt D1ity Polo! Sl1lt A Jet crashed into thrl'(' .nO\'lll'..! vehicles. injuring nine !>(..~pie. and sent a n1ushroon1 c!ouct of fl<ttnl:'!' 100 rcct inf<• the air Thursday at the El Toro ~larine Corps ,\ir Base. The pilot and cre\l,·mnn. Cnpt. \Villi :un Hayes, 29. :ind Cpl. Tr'rcncc Cra\\·ford. 20. both of Santa Ana . parachuted to safet:i-\l'ith n1inor injuries. b a s c spokesmen said. But fiery \vreckage of !he attacl; trainer bounced 2.50 leet from the open field where it hit to Lambert Roarl . where debris and flames cr~hed into the three vehic\t'S. '- Mrs. Paula Stopper. wife of Sgl. 11:ke ~)topper. and their infant son were no\1"!1 -to the Long Beach Naval Hospila! 1vi lh third degree burns and ruts. 1'hcy 11·ere r('ported in good condilion !od:iy. Sgt. Stopprr was treated for burns ;1nU released, but his vehicle 111as dcmolishL-'d. Passengers in the other two vehir'les .. 1 pr"rsonal car and a J\l ari nc Corps basr truck. \1·erc lr('ated for shoc k and 1ninO!' burns and 11·ere released . Base spokesinen said the cause or 1he crash is sli!I not known and is under in\"estigation. The I )l.Jn. erash produced a spet!acular fire ball and a roar thti! jolted nearby neighbors. Jeff Lehn1an of Costa ~1esa. ,i piano 1uner on his way to an appointment nc:i~ the base. sai d he haO just turned south o:i (See PLANE CRASH, Page 21 Nixon W'ill J(ee11 Prese1it;s Pri'vate \VASlllNl~TON ~.<\P l -'fhe \\'hitr Ilousc continues !o considl'r its records of foreign gifts to !>resident Nixon and his fan1ily a maU cr for ronfidentialHy and \1•ill not open the records to public or pres.5 vie\v. Deputy Press Secreta ry <~crald L \\'arren said Thursdav lht1 \\'hilc •tousc vie\\' is that publicizirig such i:ifts might cause en1barrassn1ent in diplomatic dealings with olher countries. Attention has heen focused on pres1dential gifts since d i s c Io s u re Tuesday by the Washington Post's Maxine Cheshire that the Nixon family rereived gifts of three sets of expensive jewels in five years from the Saudi 1\rabian royal family. Orange Coast Weather Considerable cloudiness through Saturday but partly SUMy Satur- day aftemooo, according to the \\'Cather service. Slightly cooler days. Highs Saturday in the lower and middle 60s. Lows tonight in the 50s. INSIDE TODAl' 11 untington Btach. Tttt'rns to t.11e mfddlt agt1 Saturday for rni all-day Renaissance Fatrt. See tOday·s \Veeke1tder for detaUs. I.. ' 2 DAil Y PILOl IS Fro111 Pnge l DEFEC1'0R. • • but after two rears of college in the United States he realized that ll'ithout money, he could no longer studv. "Ht;._ was invited to travel lo Russia as par( Of the yolllh Ce!tlval Md then was offered the chance to stay :ind be trained," his stepmolhcr explained. After six years nf study, lloxsf'v \\TOl(• hon1c to say he planned nrvrr to le;tr l' ;ind that he felt an obti~:iliori 10 repay 1h1· So"iets for the tr:i.ioing:. Corrcspon~nce lx>I "'cen the ph,vs1eian and his fa1nil y in {'aliforn1<1 -including his natural molhi:r \\ho !i\'tS in !he nor1hern part of 1hl' :;t;ilc -11as steady, but never abundanL "lie y.•ould usuullv write at Christmas, but this past hol1d~\' ht' ;u1d I did not rorrcspond. All th1• 11n11• bt>fnrr. ho11crrr. there \vas ne\'c·r <tn indication of any disenchantmcnL :ind no feeling on n1y part thal there "·ert' any problems," she said. But there is n theory about •loxscy·s reasons for discnchantn1ent voith the SoVfef way or lil'i.>. •·Some lime ago he and his n1othrr corresponded and she began 10 \\·rite 10 offici<1ls in hopes that !)can, his \\'ift• and adopted dnugh!cr. ''ho is 14 now. could Jl'et permission jllst to visit the Unitrd Stales." she s;iid. The thC'or~· is that those letters rnay have sp;irkrd suspicion by So\'il't officials. Hoxsey told his benefactors at the embassy \Vcdnesd::iy that he no\v fears for his s:Jfl'IY were he lo return lo his home in Vo!go,l!rad rformerly named Stalingrad un!il Stalin fell froin grace in the USSH\. ~ Presumably, his Russian-born \1·ife and their daughter \\'Ould ren1ain behind. Protes t Iss ued To Russ Lead ers Over Def C<'tor ~!OSCO\\' 1l'P\l -The L'nitcd Sta!co; has protrsted to the Soviet governn1cnt O\'C"r police interference 1.1 Hh a n American defector \\'ho nO\\' \\·ants to leave lhe Soviet Union, L1.S. Embass~ officials said today. They said ~lark J. Garrison. the embassy political counsPlor. dcli\'ered a protest to th e Foreign !\tinistry orcr police efforts \Vcdnesday to block Dc01n C. Hoxsey from entering the Embassy. 11oxsey. 47, of Pico Rivera, Calif.. defected to the Soviet 1;nion in 1957 "'hen he came here for a youth festival. Ile no\v li\'es in Volgograd. is n1arried to a Russian and works as a doctor at a clinic. U.S. officia\s s;1id l!oxsc:; got into the embassy Wednesday only after a struggle with police guarding the entrance. and intervention by t:.S. diplomats who witnessed the incident. J1oxsey told newsmen he \vas formerlv a Communist but had be com 'e disillusioned "'ith the Soviet t:nion and Communism. He also said he has becr1 h11rnssed by colleagues .it the clinic 1\·herc he "·orks. lie told ne"·smcn tod Jv he \\'lS returning to Volgograd to a'pply for an exit visa and hopes to return to ,\loS<'O\v soon for further discussions \.\"~th emba~sy officials. t:.S. ofric:la\s said they stilt have not determined if Hoxse\' is a U.S. citizen, _'\t lhe time of his de.fection . he said, he turned in ~s American passport to SQvif't authorities and accepted a Soviet passport bul never forn1a!ly renounced U.S. e1t1zenship. S.~IA LLEST 1~v n llAS Hl1\l DO W.I\/ BLTRV ST. ED.,lt.:.,DS. r:ngl;i nd ! L'l'l 1 -Ted ~ltCu!l;in . :1 ~-foot 3-inch bartcndl'r, has quit Rritain s smallest pub bec~uc;e he 111u1 ~ roiom to expand. The :\ul ~hc!I Puh llH':l"Urf'<; 7 by 15 fe<·t and is a lo<"al landmark. Bu t ~1 cCullam sa~s ii can't hotd t'!1r111gh eust{l!ncrs. "The 01 her rL1\ four . .\rnPrican tourist<: \1·alked in and fill ed the place." he said "And they did n't t'\l'll hu\ a di ink." Ol.t.HGECOAST 1s DAILY PILOT '"" °'""~~ c ... t 01 ., p .. ' "'" '""''" '"°"'" I .,,.., T"~ 'I""'' j·.,, • , v .~•1 ~I I"~()<•"?" U:>"" Piit••• "'"9 rsror,, ' .. ,,,, " ~~ "?"' ~·~ p.,!Ji,.~e~ ~,,,, .. 1 .,, "'' ''' r.·, c,,,,. M""" rit .. ou ! r ... ,' •• ·~ . .,~"b<!••MFw"" '''" v.ir .. , 1.g .. n ' IJ. -' ...... --··~.,. •"" f1•" (.~ .... ,,, .... ~ .i,,"" :-· .. ,,, • ""l" •"')1onol ""'''~" •• ""°'' '•'1 ~ 1'·1'~/r" o'>d ',,J'l c., • ,,._ "''"'•n•I '"""''' ""r , 1 •T J.lCI w,,~ W1!)1ee1. C•111• ~ '"' ·'"'""' "'''" p,r,..,,., .·., ... J p,.,_,, • ...,f'l.ol>,.,,.. .b:I F' r ,'.., "~,...._.r0c;...-..,.,,~.1"' l)v?..: '1"'•1 l ,J.:.o ~H Lr>,; ~.-•.,.dP •..v.:,, f'.SOlilanl~[llU1l!> °""" Coo;!f "'-l30W... Ba., !':•.-i N-r""'1 Btauo mJ~&_,..,....., l"'Jun1 !lffC'! 2n Fono11 ..... ......., »tini"9on h""' 1 r111Se.1<~ &,,,.,1·d S...C-1 Xl&NOli~EIC-"'ll ~ffl Tfft'"""" 17141642°4121 ct...tiflflt Ad•wt!Wfit 642·1671 S-C~ Alt Dtpu toncutt: T ....... 492-44:10 + I • DlllV Pilol Plloto by ltlch,ud K9'lll1r Irvine C1•,.sli l1aj11res Otte I ' UC Irvine 'Advisory' . . . Repo1·t Due By GEORGE LEIDAL • Of tllt Dally f"ltof"S11lf UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. has not yet seen a report of his advisory committee on minori~ affairs . which reportedly charges Pim with "personal rtspansibility" for campus hiring and promotion bias against women and 1ninorities. A complete report of the chancellor's advisory body ''as not to be made public until June 1 or 15. Dr. George O. Roberts said today. He is a professor of comparative culture and Dr. Aldridl's liaison to the committee w h i ch is studying UCI hiring and promoUon policies. Roberts and another c a m p u s spokesn1an agreed the report had not yet been sent to Dr. Aldrich . The chancellor ,\•as not available for comment t<x:lay ... e is attending a Regents meeting in Los Angeles. t'rona Page J JET NOISE ... time: it would have been more appropriate to rind. out w~t the state ls going to do about our request ror a ..varia\iot .lrol1) the. •till< no 1 s e lltandarda, •• Brooilabab said. 111~ the variance ls ~f!'nlcd and the problem Isn't resolved to the J r satisfaction, then they eoold sue," Bresnahan said. •, A decision by the California Department of Transportation o n whether to let the airport continue to operate even though it doel violate the state standards ls due earty next month . A hearing on the variance request takes place ln February, 1975. Bresnahan declined to speculate on what Caspers \\'OU!d do as a result of the city maneuver. The ~lay 28 execu1ive session "'ill come one week before the June 4 supervisorial election. At thal secret session, Caspers said he will ask fellow supervisors to tonn a "technical" committee to begin the negotiations with the city. He said he'll ask that they bring their recommendalions to n two-man board committee which will be himself and Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. Caspers said he's especially hopeful that the so-called preferential runway system can be reinstated and tha t the existing runv.·ays can be expanded. Police and Orange County Fire Department person- nel assist \'ictin1 Vickie J\1. Lange. 21. of Orange. in her C'run1pled 1961 car following noon hour crash at >la in Street and !llac:\rthur Boulevard in Irvine 'l'hursday. ~liss Lange \l.•as treated -at Tustin Com- 1nunity llospital for 1ninor inju ries and released. Police said Elaine 1\. Ka sper. 24, of 152000 Mag- nolia :\\·e .. \restminster. wa s not injured in the col- li sio n involYing her \'an. Dr. Roberts said portions of th·~ com1nittee report dBta which have been released to da!e do not appear to be an "atten1pt to di stort reality." \Vhile he agreed the chancellor as head of the institution is "accountable for e\'erything" he necessarily delegJtes responsibilily. "I! is not all'l•ays easy to say \\'ho is to blame." He said he thinks he can get approval for both after the upcoming election . He pointed out that one of its past opponents, Supervisor Ralph Clark. is also running for re-election in his district v.\iich includes the city of Tustin. Mission Vicjo's Barbec ue Eve11t Slated Saturda)' The annual field day and deep-pit barbecue of the t-.1ission \'iejo ll igh School agriculture departn1ent is set to kick off at 11 :30 a.m. Saturday. - Judging of the students' projects for the year. including steer. rabbits, ducks. · and hoTietullural projeets. \1' i 11 continue through 2:30 p.m .. \\'ith each student displaying at least fi\'e projects. The deep pit barbecue. \1•hich annually dra"·s 500 to 700 people for the \1·ood- smoked sides of beef. begins at 4 p.n1. and continues to 7:30 p.m. Tickets will be available at the door. All events ·will be at the agriculture department section of the high school under the La Paz Road bridge, except the barbecue ""hich will be served in the high school cafeteria. Frona Pnge·l MELEE ... \vho said he \\'llS forced to pull to the free\\•ay shoulder by his prisoner. The lone patrolman said that' e\'en though the youth had been strapped into a seat in the squad car that he repeatedly kicked at his ca pt or , threatening injury or an acc ident. Jn1·estigators said today that Office r Doug!as St()('nner. plus pa tr o I n1 c n IJcLamatcr and 1'.1cNecly had responded about 5 p.m. to a medical aid report involving an injurl>d motorcyclist in the field. Indications \1·ere that due to his unconscious condition that the ,·outh ~hould be hospitalized immcdiate!Y and due to difficult vehicle access it \vas dcciril'd to li ft and earrv hi1n across the field to the frc c11·a.\·. - The offi cers saicl. ho1.1·cyer. that a crovod from the tract began to gather ;ind that they joined in the booing and . 1clling. stirred up emotionally by the ln1oxicatcd youth 1\·ho had been ai:rcsted and locked in a patrol car. '·The officers were onl~' doi ng \\'hat they thought might s.1ve the other kid's lite." Police Capt. Bob Green commented today in revil!\1·ing reports of the incident. He said further investigation revealed that '' ilhin momen!s of the attempted restue. a rumor had spread throughout the surrounding area that the officers hticl clubbed the youth wiconscious. "This \1·as completely false." said Sgt. Shull. noting the men \1·cre dispa tched on a n1cdical aid ca11 and came upon "·hat appeared to be a potentially fatal situation. Fro1n Pagel SL~i\ CHASE • • • his blue and white Nova. Linda Ensley, 19, "'ho lives next door to the white house on the edge of \Vatts, said she had seen t'vo \\.1>men going in and out of the building the last se.v.eraJ days. She said they usually did not emerge until late in the day and appeared to' be ""'earing wigs, one red ti od one black, Sullivan said he believed the trio would ha\·e returned to the buHding if it had not been for the sporting goods store incident Thur$day. Sullivan was asked why he thought the SLA members had ('()me to Los Angeles. "They got pressure in lhe San Francis('() area and perhaps they naturally decided to change their scene of operations," he aald . "It's the normal operation of a fugitive under pressure." Harris hos bc<n identified .. the "Teko" of the SLA who spoke on a tape r""rdlng .....,;...i after tho April 15 -robbery of a ·San Francisco bank In which Mils Hearst participated . ~ I Capo Trustees to Air Student Sliifts }lf'Onday The eon1n11trce study draft reportedly holds [)r. Aldrich ··persona 11 y responsible" for permitting subordinates to adh('re to policies that allegedly discriminate a&ainst the hiring of "'omrn <ind minoriues in both acaden1ic and :;iaff positions. Among finding s s;1id to be included in the rt'!JOrt arC' th e following : "It's election time in Tustin. too.'' he said. "Political deci sions enter into it along with lORic. After Clark "'ins the primary he v.·ill be able to be completely objective." Caspers predicted there could be agreement on the entire suit "ithin 60 to 90 days. ~re pointed out that he had met Thursday, the day the suit was filed, "'ilh Ne"lXlrt Beach rity officials and homeowners representatives. Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School Dis t r i ct once again 11·i\I come to grips \londay v.·ith shifts in students to cope \\'ith runaway gro\1'tl1 and elementary school changes are top~ on the list. \1onday·s session starting at i:30 p n1 . \\'i ll include major actions relat ing tu shifting some elementary classes to other Campuses to cope with so a r i n g enrollments, primarily in the ~11 ssion Viejo area. Besides the shifts in elementary pupil'\. tntstees will deal v.·ith yet anothrr appeal from city officials in San Juan Capistrano to revise' a recent decision . which places current e1ghlh graders ea~t of the freeway in San Juan inlo classes at \ San Clemente High School. Councilmen last week resolved to a ~k the board to reconsider the . action l\'h ich assertedly splits the city's school children. Two major. plans for elementar.v campuS{'S are included in a staff repor l At Capistrano Elementary School. 140 sixth graders from Crown Va!J f"y arc expected to attend along .,,,.ith 95 fron1 nearby San Juan Elementar,\· an:i another 125 from the same grade h·1·cJ at \'iejo Elementary School. At San Juan School the childrf'n in ils nonnal atlendance zone "ill be ho11s1'd in grades from Kindergarten through fi,·e along "'ith 140 fifth and sixth grader<; from the zone served by the Castille temporary school in ~Tission \'icjo. The board's agenda for the regul ar Fro1n Pnge 1 RAIDS • • • Israeli army spokesman said in ·rel Av1\', ho"·ever. The Lebanese government announced that 48 persons were killed and 18.J v.:ounded in t"·o Israeli air strikes into Lebanon Thursday, carried out in retaliation for an Arab guerrilla attal'k on the Israeli border village of 1'.la:ilot that left 30 persons dead. The Israeli air strikes brought sharp criticism from Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger who 'also denounced !he ! Arab guerrilla attack. Egypt warned ' Israel that there could be grave consequences from the air raids and the Egyptian war minister spoke of a resumption of the war. · Israel did not mention inflicting casualties in today's ground strike one mile across the Lebanese border in "'hich th~ commandos blew up a house believed used by Arab guerrillas. A spokesman said Israeli planes eight hours later new strikes on targets inside "Fatahland," the Israeli term for guerrilla-dominated 3.reas of southeastern Lebanon near the Syrian border. He said all planes returned from the half-hour raid . From Pagel PLANE CRASH .. Jrvlne Boulevard when he saw the jet circling low overhead. "I was just thinking with alt these planes and trainees out here how rare it is to have a crash, when the jet came right down in front of me at a 45 degree angle and never pulled up," Lehman reported. "There was a huge bell of fire, like a mushroom cloud, maybe 100 feet high. It WH brilliant orange and black -and tbe jet Ju•I dialntcgreted when It hit the SJ'Ound," he added. The crash •pread debr11 over a quarter mile -wide area, a n d ·otnc on the perimeter roads and portiona of Irvine llouin'ard and Sand CID)'on &a4 were blocked olr to traffic for ..,,era! hours allenfanla. ' .Sl'~'ion also has se\·eral other major µolic\· l!cn1s including: -:\ct oµtio n of revised goals for th(' dlstrict's educational program. -A "T11ten request fron1 th f' Capistrano L'nifie<I Federation of TL•acher.s \1·hich has declined to continue h..1rgaining 1\·ith a district committee and instead 1\an ts direct sessions with trusrccs. -Con~idcrat ion of revisions lo the fees 11hich the district Charges for use of school fac ilities by groups in the cornmunit\'. -ll l'ar1rlg a-report on the results of !hr> d1slril't's latest parent information ~ur1 ey conduct1.·d at all d i s t r i c t t·ampuscs. Quest iona1res 11·ere sent home 11 ah each youngster. ---------- -That \.\'omen and 1ninorities are underrepresented in higher pay in g professional posilio11s. -That uni\'crsity cmµloy111cnt data i.~ misleading in that the majority of 33 ~lexican-Anicticans and 28 b 1 a ck ' holding so-cal1cd "academic positions" are graduate !t•<iching assistants. Onl~· six blacks <1nd si x ~lexican-Aml•ricans classed In academic positions are actually fulll irne faculty . -Ha lf the 1ninority faculty are in one sub-department -lhe program in coinparallvc tulturC'. -Only four of the n11nority professors are lcnurcd . -tn all but one ernployn1t>nt ca teg-ory -as:oociatc prufe:;~or -minorities doin(! the samr JOh that \1 hitl'S do arc paid less. He disclosed that for the first lime.he'd been told that the city 1\·ould support the nunYay extension. "That "·as n e \\' s to me ." he saiP. "Before U1at they 'd oppose<! everythnig from new toilets to 1nore parking." E ight .:lle n ludicled TRENTON. N.J . fUPf ) -The !ta~ of New Jersey Thursday indicted eight former California insurance executives on charges of altempting lo strip a NC\\' Jersey flrm of ,is.sets as part of a S2.S billion fraud scheme. The eie:ht 1.1·ere former officers of Equity F'unding Corp. of America, a Ca!ifornia-basl'<I insurance firm. -----------------·-· -------· ----- 0 0:-i''T :\lISS OCR FABULOUS SOFA & CHAIR SALE ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 18. Largest inventory' in our hi story to be reduced. Stop in no'v for best selection at terrific ~avings. Fantastic selections of u phols tered pieces all on sale now. Names like S herrill, l\Iarge Carson and Woodmark all al speciaf prices. Over 100 sofas and 250 <!hairs hav e been price-slashed come in and browse! DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-l<ARASTAN ; Wff!IDAY5 & SA TUIDA YS t:OO t. 5:l0 • NEWPORT BEACH • 1727 WES~CUFF DR., "2·20!0 ' . LAGUNA BEACH • 31$ NOl\Tll COAST HWY., 48'-'501 ,, TORRANCE • 236'9 HAWTH0RRE BLVD. (Open F'rl. tn t, Siln. 12-5:30) :111-IJlt I l I I I I • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Irvine Youth ·Needs Every teen center ever ·sou&ht or built in cities !rom ••• to shining sea has beelf Ju.tlfled by the argu· ment "teens in our city have no place to go." Jn developin~ new cities suc:J! u Irvine, the argu- ment somehow rings truer than it does for older con1· munities which offer retreation opportunlties idle teens often overlook. In Irvine, parks and school provide the only places where youth may freely spend time. There are limits to the availabilit)'of these facilities. Community association recreation facilities n1ust !ierve all age levels and by definition may not be the exclusive reserve of teens. Greenbelts -because µiey provide close-to-home open spaces -are less than ideal turf for teen activi- ties. The argument that Irvine lacks places for youth to go is fortified by the obvious absence of a. movie theater, bowling alley1 or other commercial recreation amenity older cities orrer. Action by the city to aid teens in creation of their own center may be necessary and tim ely. Protection for Aliso Orange County Supervisors have virtually assured that all or n1ost of scenic Aliso Creek and its immediate surroundings will be preserved as open space. In action last week, the board applied special flood plain zoning to the creek near its ongins in the Santa Ana n1 ountain foothills near Cook's Corner in Santiago Canyon. Sin1ilar zon ing already bad been applied to the rest of the creek from El Toro to the ocean in Laguna Beat h. The flood plain zone adds another control the county can exercise over development. It pern1ils the county to hold up •(!Ol~tial development if it poses •a threat lo the flood control aspects of the creek or a flood hazard to the deyelQllJllent itself. Muth of'ihe land within the flood plain is privately owned and some already has been developed. In La· guna Hills, develop1nent has crawled up to the very edge of th~ ~reek in son1~ places. Bui, generally speaking. the creek is a natural belt of green vegetation, rangi ng from grass and shrubs to fuU.-sized oak trees. With the county's open space yieldin~ so rapidly to the crush of development. each action like the Aliso flood plain zoning is another assurance so1ne will be left for generations to con1e_ ' A \~' cl(·on1c Gift The 11ission Viejo c:on1pany's recent gift of $70,000 to the Saddleback Vallcv Unified School District is an example of how a deve!Oper can go beyond the caU of duty to help a community. The Mission Viejo Co1npany. like other developers. has been criticized for pl ating an undue burden on the school di stricl by putting: qp housing develop1ne'\ts faster than the district can put up schools. \ The ?istrict has faced increasi ng pressures and has experienced phenon1enal growth pangs. including double sessions at the high school and at one elemen- tary school. The A1ission \"ie.io Con1pany has tried to help ease the pressure by periodi c gifts of land, cash and facil- ities. The latest gift is for landscaping two schools in the latest fi.1ission Viejo developments a nd for interior furnishings for one of them. .. The gift is generous and indicates a sensi ble recog- n1t10~ by the compan.Y that its develop1nents create con1- mun1ty needs. • ' SB '\\"ell. so 111u ch fl•r che Temperance Crusade.· Two-way Gap Lessons of lfnte1·9ate • Ill Communication \VASHINCTON -The stony barrier of nonromnlunication between the \\'hite !louse and Republican leaders m ('.(Ingress. an important ingredient in the \Vatergate tragedy. was ra ised high last 11·eck against an eleventh-hour effort to tonfront President l\ixon v:i th reality. Rep. John Anderson of Illinois , chairman of the •louse J{epublica n conference. v.·anted to discuss the brulill facrs of l1f•! ;Lt 111urs- day·s \\'hill' l!ou~c n1eeting hf'!11l'1·11 ll C"- public;in lc:1cter~ ;:ind r-.lr ;'l;ixnn. ·\ndt•r- son's prop..1s;:il : in- forn1 the l'rr•s1<le11t that his drni:il of addition;.il tapes lo the special prClseru-I tor <1nd the Hou.~<' ,Jud iciary Committee had no llepoblican backing and could only end in his dcs- lruct1on. l~ut no other Republican leader backed Anderson even though most agret!d "·ith his sentiments. They took th.e position that the Prt•sidcnt alone should set the agenda for \Vhile House meetings -a view held particularl y strongly by Sen. llu~h &:oil of Pennsylvania. Having "rirt>d the gun that started the Republican stampede against the Presiden1 " 1 in the word~ of one bitter \\'h ite llousc aide1. Scott 1ranted no rmbarrassini; personal encounter 11·ith r-.tr. Nixon. Tift~ RESUl.'f 11·as ;1 surrealistic n1orning in lhc Ov al Office . Nobody n1entioncd the nation's great political crisis. AHhou gh ~Ir. Nixon in private has raged at Scott for his lethal criticism of the White House transcripts. the two men sat side-by-side pol itely through a dreary economic briefing. Anderson feels \\'atergate might "·ell have been avoided had ~Ir . Nixon taken fiepublican leaders into his confidence. But for their part, the leaders' reluctance to confront the President indicates ( EVANS·NOVAK J noncommunicalion is a tv.·o-v.·ay street. Both sides can share the blame. MIDEAST PITFALL , \Vhile Secretary of State Henry Kissinger strives for an Arab-Israel i set tlement. a 1nove is gathering force in the Senate 10 111ake An1cric<1n aid !o . Egypt dependent flll Cairo's opening the Suer. Canal to all na tions equally -meaning Israel. If such an amendn1rnt actunlly dC'nicd future U.S. aid to Egypt unless Cairo pledged to perm it Israeli flagships to transverse the canal, Egypt would nc\·cr agree. That could !Our the \Vashington- Cairo romance. Even talk or such an amendment (now actively considered by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut and olhersl chills the State Dcpartn1ent. Actually. Israel has priva1<.ly told the t:.S. it will accept Egyptian ;igreen1ent to pern1it Israeli cargoes t bu1 not Israeli flagships) through the canal. E;,::vp1i;u1 president An"·ar Sadat has given priratc assurances of that. But if the strongly pro-Israel Congress attached an amendment demaudiug frl'e passage for Israeli flagships. the powerful pro-Israel i lobby here would scarcely oppose it. To the contrar~·. \\·hatever private agrec1nents Israel has made with Kissinger. a strong vote in Congress for Ribicoff's proposal '>''ou\cl be viewed in Israel as a 1najor gain in the high-stakes politics reaching a cliin;ix in the Middle East. \VHITE HOUSE RE\''El\GI': Vindictive politics of the Nixon \\"hilc J1ouse surfaced again in a gra tuitou!'. grossly inaccurate attack by ex-\\ hih· House personnel chief lfarry Flcn1n1ing on a young Republi can candidate for Congress who committed the cardinal sin Dear Cloo111Y , (; llS Does it dishonor a !a!>'-'1 Fl<'g 10· ha11e someone 11·ith que'>tionable ethical standards \1·ear it'! f).J . Gloomy Gus commtnl1 1rt wbrnitttd bY re,aers Ind oo root f!Ktswrl!y rtllKI lflt Yle110 o! 11'e ne•Ht1P1t. St"d your pet PlfYt IO GIOOfl'I~ Gus, D11I~ PilOt. of not being blindly luyal to the President . John Robinson \\lest quit in disgust in mid-1969 after several months as a minor \Vhi1c House aide. Return ing to Pennsylvania, \\'esr bega n preparing a Republican political career. T\\·o 1vceks ago, \\lest at age 27 11·as [rontrunner 1 leading !he regulnr or g ;1 n i z a lion c;1ndidatc1 in the Republican prirnary t•lt1<"tion for a cong ressional s1•;1t. frorn Philactelphia·s Republic an suburbs. But \\"t's!'s position \\'as undcrn1i11C'd v. hen Flt-n1n1ing attacked hin1 as a ··11alking disaster ... v.·ho v.-·as all out for glory 11nd sc-lf-agg1·a nd izemcn1'· 1 n \\'ashini.,<ton. Flemming told t h c Philadcl1>hia Inquirer thal \I/est held .. an unpaid position" and did nothing at !he \\"hite House. POLITICIANS ht·re l''ere arnazed that Fl emrning. a political 1>rotegc of John ~litrhell, 11·ould interfere in a Republican prin1ary election. Far n1ore SL'rious. Ftcnnning's 1·cngeful assault \l'as basl'd on 11·holesale t"rrors of fa r!. \Vest "·as nol "unpaid " bu! on the payroll of lhc Republican Natinna\ Comn1itt ce and 11•as assigned to the \rhite House after ~tr. N ix on ' s inauguration. He 11'as not '·fired" In !\larch 1969 but resigned in June. His fonuer boss. national comn1i!lce political education director Ruy Humphreys. described hi n1 to us as a "resourceful. energetic. arnbitious youn!! lcadrr·· of the type nl'edt.'Ci to rebuild the shattcrc1I H.cpublican party. Flemming's attacJ.; \1as on•' 11uJ"l' exan1ple or the polit it:s, 1)r Y1···~4·.11 11·c 1>layed b~' \Vhile Hous1• in,.id1·1·s .1,.;:1i,1~1 anvonc 11ho rl'':.!Sl'd 1u t1..1· iht• 1!111• i:1 !ia• prlo.\\'aleri.:atC" i.:lory da .1 s 11f \Ir. l\i.\on's ;ill-1)()11 crful \\'hltc llute.e st n:r A Literary Event of · Significance ' One of the most important .Uterary evenls of this or any other season was the publication last week of a long- awailed work dramatically entitled "Recorded Prellidentlal Conversations'' (Goverfimi!nt Printing Office; 1308 pp; $t2.25 ; Expurgated ). While some reviewers will see this as simply another oral history of the behind- the-stalrs-at-tbe-While House variety and othe!'! will di~ mlss tt as a tawdry m,ys1ery, to these tlrtd old eyes It la a "''Ork. of major pro- portloN, (I • 10 X z-. lncbOI; 3 lbs; papor- bock), It Is by the .. me a. popular aulh>r who ~ reconUy brought us • • tile Instant bestaeller, "Preoldential Tu Re.tum1 )t to which this ls, in a way, a sequel. But thl1, It <arUlOl be ,gainsaid,, ls his magnum opus. 1 For the dlocemlng reader will find bera a deeply p e n o t r a t I n g paycbological drama that""" to ti>< very bwt_ol,lhe. human condltlm. ' It Is DC(, one lhould bo warned, llIIht fare. Many a ....Ser will lie JIQt oll by the ---1ty\e, r<tlllnllClltt ol "lily-.,. Olhenl wUI be (...__AR_T_H_O_PP_E_J confused by the tangled web of plots and •ub-plots. But those who persist through to the unsurprising end will be rewarded with new truths that so enlighten the rnind. THI! BASIC ' plot ;, •Im p 1 e yet lrmo"8tlve. The protaaonlot, a roipect.d llliddle-Bllld. executive i\lefttill<d eUY a!J "J>,•_.11 llll'Pt'\te<!l to d~r. hi& loyal ~ .... aot piottblt aplnll blm. lnslMd, 1Jrei are 'plotllol !or 1ll!il. !Iii · prtblem Is how • te , prolfet bi> li*btac~ blmoell ~ tllll vOialnou• lnvestip · .Wlio ·ue RUnirJ!ig IJ1en\.all. Event pnes upon even~ wo feel the -Closlng In from au Ilda.. -slowly, lflldu•lly, In one ol the most brIIIIant dlaectlona of a man'• IOul In Englllb ... Uterature, we eee P'a noble character e!<lde before our very e)'tl lllllil llDall,y, In one dramaUc """'' he speUJ tlesportlely of perjury, bribery aM othor mtlll<!!• ol obslructlng jultlce. Talk aboul Dorian Gnyl TIDIOOGllOVr '.1'1111 work mom the Ingle ~ of )'Olllll D. At llrst, "" ... ' hiln as the most loyal of all the aides, ahnost a son to P. But then he is revealed to have been one of the plotters. Thus he makes the agonizing decision to betray P to save his 0"11 skin. In revenge, P attempts to make D the scapegoat instead of J.M., a secondary figure whom he had originally planned to blame or ... But let us not destroy the suspense by revealing too many or the plots. Suffice it to say that many, including double- acrostic rans, will be richly rewarded by the challenges presented., IF THE WORK sulfers from any naw, it is the dialect of U1e cb~ters. Typical perhaps, is P saying, "MeaUJe we can't -I've gol-Uthe U.S. Attorney's OfClce and, alt ' ." Clarity suffers. Yet much or the autheollcity would be lost II the characters spoke plain English. The author has also seen fit to delete expletlvea such as, precumably, "goltr,1' 0 gte" aiid "oh, fudge'' for fear. oddly enough, oi offending hl>',.adera. Bui the.le .,.. minor crltlolsma. There Is oo question we ha~e here art Impor- tant work by a belt.lelllntf author. And we can't help !eellng be Ms a grut de4J more IO 11y. ~ Let us bope we bear fn>m him again --" \' I Let's Look at Ourselves To the Editor: I \.\Ti!e these "·ords from a pcrspci.:til·e or prejudice and pain. Prej11dicc :1\ having never liked our President, n:chard ~I. Nixon: pain at enjoying thl' present plight of one I have never liked. I feel good about chickens .,...no seem to be mming home lo roost in mnncction '>''i1h !'<Ir. Nixon. I a1n pleased th<JI ju-;'i~l' is still being served. Yet I renlain lruuhl e'I b~· a nun1ber of questions 11hich 1 address to myseli. OOES ~tr . Nixon's in~ensitirilv tu others justify my lack of sensitil'ii.y ro him as a person? Does my pleasurl' at his seemingly justified plight renrler me 1'ornehow vicariously unacrount ablc for mv 0111n secret and silent moral lniperfections? ,\ssuming I can con\'ince mysel f of the justification for enjoying his ordt•al, 1,1·hat happens to my hwnaniiy if I allow such gloating to occur? \\'e pride ourselves on being a nation of la1v. order. and justice. l..a,vs hare been broken; order has been shaken: justi ce has been obstructed. Persons have been treated as pawns, objects, things to be manipulated and used to further f.1r. Nixon's ends. l\-lr. Nixon seemingly fail s 10 appreci ate the severity of these blun- ders in interpersonal relations. ,.ET. I wonder. Is not the 1vay 11·e \rl•ar our v.·ives, our husbands, our chitc\rl'll. our parents. our associates. and el'en our enemies of equivalent moral 1,1·orlh to thl' underlying evils ot \\'ate r g a t e '.' Qualitatively. if not quantitativel.v, I believe that each of us shares n1ora l!v in io.lr. Nixon's human failings as revl·ille:I in the tape transcripts. \\'henel'cr 11·c tend to treat others as objects to he nlanipulated in order to serve our 01111 need for self-aggrandizen1ent. then 11e give up ihe privilege of sclf·rir;h1co11s indignation and hypocril ical gloating over any other person's lai!ings -crcn illr. Nixon's. Justice n1ust be served. and I believe it 11111 be v.·ith God 's help. Yet I also be\leve 1hal the ul!imate importance 0 f \\ atergare will not be the fart of justice St rved. but the \\'ay 11·e as in<ii1 iduals rt•act lo justice as it is being i1er1···d. The 111ora1 n1easure of us as a nation 1vill not 1•lii matcly be the successful ndj ud ira1iu11 tif \·Ir. Nixon, but the lessons \1·e learn from this experience about our~clves and the n1anner in \\hich 11·e. tco, treat cl hers. RABBI BERNARD P. 11:1:\'G lr.,h1e Goofs To the Editor; On June .f we will all ha ve 1he opportwtlty to vote for or against at least a portion of the city most of us have dreamed about. We said we wanted parks, we said we wanted bicycle trails. How we will react now that we see the price tag will determine whether or not we truly desire these goals. I BECAME active in Irvine be<:ause I felt that there must be a better tile s.tyle than that which is produced by rows of single-family lots COll!le<'led by asphalt conveyors and separated f r o m commercial shopping facilities by walls and from employment by concrete Jl.ned rivers. The city bas planned fOr a community which provides paalNe and active recreation opportunlUes, at !wt some employment within walting Mid bicycle di•tance. '!be -plan of par kl aod the pie ~ 'bleyde tr.U. are Integral parts ol lhla [llao. Thef'bolb attempt to &trike a balanoe In types of facilities provlded; ·In. & an gt a p b \ c location, iD providing ~Wes !lrst lor those are., where -'" Uv. now. Whal Is at 1take II not a !ew plots of green grasa In a ""1ple of 1ocau...._ Wbat Is at llat. 11 belW .facWUeo for Lltlle League and Bobb!' SOX. Ille land !or a pa&lble !O,!Xlkquan.loot llbrary olle, ( MAILBOX ) Le!ters fro111 readers are welcome. Notuw.l/y, writers sl1ould convey tlieir niessages in 300 words or less. The r1gl1t to condense letters to fit space or c/imi11ate libel is reseri;ed. All let· rers nu1st include sirynatnre aud mail· i11 (1 address but 11an1es nwy be with· held on req11p.~t if sufficient reason 1~ apparent. Pu<'l r!J 1rill 11ut be pub· lislted. teen-centel' sitr..;. n ~l'1uor t·11i.ll'n~· center. <J c11 ~l!1 1 ~1I CPl11l"' 11hith 11t' h11;11· 1vill n1ark thl' \)\•:;inning in rnaking Irvine the eultur:il hub of till' are~i, These ;-ire all places for people -places for then1 to e.,crcisc and read, act and react. pl;,iy or just contemplate. PARKS and birvclc trails cannot solve :ill o roblcn1s but they ran provide the facilitie. to help solve many. \\le hare planned ; ow it is lin1e to make a rea! tomn1itm nt. On.ly !hen can 11·c move ahead. Because !he benefits far out"·eigh the t o..:;ts. ~cuuse the tin1ing 11·ill never be better. and because v.•e must now decide l\'hl'!llt't" or not we \.\'i"h to build a better ne\\.' to1,1·n. I (as an individual! strongly urge a YES vote for both the Irvine Park Bond (proposition D) and Bicycle Trails Bon<l \proposition E). ROBERT J . WEST Councilman City of Irvine Clli:e11s Should Vole To the Editor: .. , don 't sec any over1,1•helming support for this", said Irvine School Board Chair1nan Wlr. Chuck Boulanger as the board pas sed the 45 15 sy!.ten1 for University Park School. Site 1a. The pathetically low percentages shol'·ed litlle interest in the system and ~Ir. Boulanger so stated to the board . in asking them not to pass lhe year-round school action. A STATE BILL AB 3193 has passed the Assembly and is now in the Senate 1,1·hich v.•ill stop just such railroading. It requires that a vote be taken of the citizens or the area before any school can be put on 45/15. We suggt;:st that all 'vho \Vant the citizen~ to decide on this issue in the future lnst~ad of the board write immediately to Senator Albert S. Rodda, Senate Education Committee Chairman, State Cap(tol, Sacramento. CA 95814 and tell him or your wishes. The school board can hardly object to open debate oh the subject. RICHARD LYON CLARK Lke11si119 C111• To the Editor : Your editorial of ~tay 8 regarding Jiceoslng or cats touched only upon the most supcrfichtl aspects of the problem. It ls 110 easy to pull the emoti9"11l plugs every time a fr(!tdom must give way to lhc Inexorable and Irreversible ract of overpopulation -both human and anlm.al. · mE EASY way oul. as suggested by )'lllJ1 edllorlal, Is t<J wait -aod hope for a IOlutlon that will please evtl')'one. illany of us wlv> cherish our leline frltods and feel lbat lair treatment for cats ls way overdue. baV<> concluded that Uce>Sng Is 1 firtt It<!> In 1cconlb1f <119 equal value with clop. ll 1' a very,1l1)311 s1:irt to11ard rcrlucin.c: lhl' pitiful nood of tu111an1l'd kiuens and ca ts CQnstanlly pr1ssing through the dea th chambers or our pounds. \Ve \.\'OU!d hope your editorial policy 11·ould help us to be. S'lrong enough to fa ce a humane problem and sta rt lo solve it no"·: there is no more t1111e to ""'ait and see"! l\UTH FRANKEL President, Animal Assistance LC'ague of Orange County Burglar11 i ·;,.1im To the Edit.or: I'n1 one of the "poor" burglary vlcti111s of University Park in Irvine. \\le just had our third burglary \Vith in three months. But we "'ere fortw1atc because they only robbed us twice. The second time they \vere unable to gain t'ntry through the back yard because or the locks and do"·Jings on our sliding doors . l\IONEV is the only thing taken -one of my neighbors lost some wine and chewing gu1n. ho11·c1 l'r. Hence. 11·e havt• now irn:;tatled over S350 of new locks. la!ches. bolls and padlocks. \\'ithout floaters on insurancr. v.·e have so far -including the robber ies, lost or paid out over $1,600. I now must unlock 1nyself to go to '>'·ork and then be sure all my other locks are re-set. This 1nakts n1e feel I live in a $60.000 prison :ind no one cares. The poli ce just hal'e rnore paper work and I have a fear you wouldn't believe. Next time they v.·on't fmd money - then what? IMPRISONED '" i.d 11 ler p1·1•l r!lf To the Editor: If \\lonlen's Lib needs ~et anotht•r boring historical exan11>lc. p;.1rticularly Biblical, it at least should not commit lhe sin of omissi on. I reft•r to ~Is. Berger's article, Churches Once H c r o g n i zed Equality, May 13. Th.e oft-quoted sentences of Ruth , 1Whither thou gocst , I 1,1·ill go ... etc.) \l'ere not directed to hl•r husband I who 1\'as dead ) but to her mother-in-law, Naomi. Ho"·ever. in the article, it comes off as being another put-down . " ... how a woman should be ... subnlisslve and dependent. .. " Unless Ms. Berger meant that this is an example of ho1v we should acquieset! to our mothers-in·law, it is mo.st misleading in the co'ntcxt of the story. NAN KLOSTERMAN OIAH•l COAST DAILY PILOT Robe rt N. 'Vf.ed, PubUsher Tlion1w Keevil, Editor Barbara Kreibich Editorial Pope Editor The Edi lortal pull'.~ or lht Da ily P1iol 11ttkli to lnfomt and stimulate, ~~ers by p~lirtc: Ol'I tl1ls pqe dh~rM!•a:Jmmefltat)''on loplcs ol ln- ltttfl by l)Tldic:ated colwnnlsta and cartoonists. by ptOrictlnr a torum for rttden' vinrs arid b)' pn!Mnlln8' lhl• newffl'Ptf'• opinlom and idtu on curttnt toplcs.. ~ ed11()1fltl opbtlont Of the Dally Piiot aweilr only in U1• edltorW cdumn a1 the top at the pqe. Oplnm ~P1'H3t'd by the l'Of. umnists and carloOnina •nd lelttt wrlttn are tbtlr own Ind no~ fl'\tll.t al 1hrlr "'"' br lht 1>'111 Pilot-~-Frlday, May 17, 1974 • ' DAILY Pll,Of $ CALIFORNIA l 11111ate Will Attend Son's Fi11al Rit.es Quentin . Violence Rampant SAN QUENTIN (UPI) - San Quentin's 3.000 inmates were kept locked in their cells today in an eUort to eM. a rash or violence and insure the safety of the convicts. One convict was slabbed to death in a recreation yard Thursday and a short time later 13 inmates engaged iR a knife fight in the adj~tment center, a special facility for troublesome inmates. Just after the general lock"Up was ordered late in the day, another inmate \\'as SENT TO JAIL Paul HalYer•on Stare En~r.gy Bill Awaits Signatur~ of Gov. Reagan SACRAME~'1'0 (API -The California Legislature has given final approval to this year's ma for ene r gy legislation -sending it to f..ov. Ronald Reagan, who says he will sign it. Thursday's 57·8 Assen1bly vote culminated three years of negotiations on the power plant siting-ene rgy conservation bill. The battle had involved e co 1 og Is ts, utilities and the R e a g a n administration. Assemblyman Ch a r I es ft bars perso1\S front serving on the commission if they worked for a utility within the prevlbus two years. Burke argued that the provision blocked the "best qualified" fron1 sitting on the commission. AMONG FIVE other Repub1icans against the where there may be b1ackouts and brownouts soon, Warren said. A Rand Corporation study had esti1nated that CaH!omia's energy consump- tion would gfO\v by 7.5 per- (.'ent annually if consumption were not curbed. Warren said his b i 11' s energy-saving prov is ions would bring that rate down to about 3 percent. That would mean Cali fornia y,·ould only have to build 35 new nuclear power plants between now and the year 2000 -rather than the 120 Rand had estimated in its study, Warren satd. •• ....... 118118'8 In HOURS: S.t., May 11, 10!00ta 5:00 Sun., May 19, 1 !00 fo 5:00 Mon.,Moy20, I0100ta5:30 WE URGE YOU TO TAKE ADVANTAGE BECAUSE ••• YOUR GAIN IS SOLEDAD (UP]) A convict was given permission (., __ ~-~-~~~--'J Thursday to attend the funeral of his 1S..year-0ld soo. v.·ho 1',vo Friends Of SLA Girl Go to Jail \Varren (D-Los Angeles ), told fellow legislators his bill v.·ould speed up the state's pov.·er p!i1nt siting process and help conserve needed e n e r ~ y resources. measure was Badham of Newport Beach. Ken Cory of Garden Grove was among 40 Democrats approving the bill, \vhile John Briggs of FUilerton joined 18 Republicans in approving the measure. Floyd \\'akefield of Anaheim was among 13 of the Assembly not voting. Presently a utility applying to build a plant must go through 33 agencies, and that has helped slow nuclear power plant construction to the point Under \Varren's bill, a plant site \\'ithin the coas tlin e permit zone crealed by Prop. 2Q in 1972 wou1d also need approval by the Coastline Commission. NOT OUR LOSS. Thi1 is. a sale you can believe in. Here'1 why.We must reduce our invenlory. Some model~ we o..,er·bovght, s.ome di~conlinued model~. trode-ins, renf reluc_ns, repo5sessions. i\-\ostly Hommonds -a few other mokes. A fe w exomple' as follows : died v.·ithout knov.·ing his father had paid hirn a last visit. State Correction Director Rayn1ond Procunier granted the furlough to P h i l i p fllacchiarella. 35, to attend the funeral Saturday of his soo Leonard, who died Tuesday of a rare kidney disease at the University of California f\.1edic.al Center in S a n Francisco. 'I'hc permission came from Procunier after the v.·ardeo's office at the Cali fo rnia trainin~ facility rejected hlacchiarella 's appeal for the trip. Before Leonard died. he told other relatives ti-rat he v.•anted to see his father. Prison officials granted th<! rcque~t. but bv the time-Macchiarella arrived at his son's bedside. the boy had slipped into a coma. Rev. Simon R. Gagoon. the prison chaplain, \'O\untcered to act as an esroft to 1he funeral riear San Jose. 4 lndicte<l 111 'Zebra' Murders SA\' FRA:\CIS(!) I t.:PJ I - Four young B!a<'k J\fuslims 11·ere indicted for n1t1rdcr and assault Thursday in the ''Zebra" killings that left 13 v.·hite victin1s <lead . Th c indlclnlen1s v.-ere handed up in San Francisco Superior Court fol\011·ing tlirec days of lestiniony, including an appearant-c by an informer y,'h) tied the kiHin,c;s to a cult called the "Death Angels:' lndicted \\'etc \I an u e I J\1oore. 29, J.C. Sinion . 29, and Larry C. Green. 22, all of S.1n Francisco. The three 11·cre arrested ti.lay 1 in a prc-d~11rn raid. Bail for each v.·a.s set al $300,000. Jessie Cooks, a I ready serving a murder tenn at San Quentin I>risoo. "'·as also indicted. Cooks had not previously appeared in court in connection 11·ith the "Zebra'' case. Assistant District Allorney \Valter Giubini told the court th.at police have the \\'capons used in 12 shootings and six gunshot assaults. The indictmcnls charged one or t"·o shooting murd('r.("()unts aganist eartl suspect . Two men. Green, and Cooks. face charges for th" hacking death of a dau~htcr of a prominent winerv 01\ncr. This did not fit the random p31ll'rO Of the dozen murders. stabbed twice in the east block during the dinner movement. And in the same section a convict "fell or 1vas pushed " from the fourth-Ooor tier. a spokesman said. Both su ffered only n1inor injuries. Officia.ls said · there have been 10 incidents of violence in the past 36 hours. e S1011ford Slril<e STANFORD ( AP l Stanford University President l~ichard Lyman sa)·s attorneys v.·ill seek a court order today limiting picketing by nearly l,000 campus v.•orkers who struck h1ooday for higher wages . SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - T\110 fr iend!' or a fugitiv" member of the terrorist Symbionese Liberation Army were S<'nt to jail Thursday for refusing to ansv•er Grand Jury questions in the Patricia llearst kidnaping. Pnul 11a!verfon. 29. and Cynthia C:arvev. 26. fact'd a possible 34. mofiths in jail for refusing to anS\\·cr l 3 questions related to their acquaintance v.·1 t h SLA member Camilia llall . one of the suspected Hearst kidnapers. T11E h1EASURE w o u l d - create a five-member eon1mission with the po\ver In decide where plants would be located. If the planl were nuclear. the Atomic Energy Commission also v.·ould need to approve it. By the time \Varren brought the bill up for concurrence in Senate admeodments. he had \YOO support of conservationists. the Reagan administration and the private utilities. But not everyone Jiked the final product. Assemblyman Robert Burke I R·Hw1tington Beach l. blastl'd the b1lt"s conflict-of-inlerest provision. The Federal Grand Jurv was convened after the SLA staged a $10,000 bank robbery in which ~liss H earst 2 Scnte11ce<I appeared to take parL fl1i ss Hall also was id entified as 3 ... Presents the 2nd Annual Southtrn Califorriia mcib.11 home shew • Singler, doubles, triples: from 12' x 60'; 24' x 70'; to 34' x 70'. • See latest mid.year innovations by nation· • -.....,. all y recogni zed manufactur,rt. G l_.I Corona del Mar Store .... New Hammond VS-300 Spi~t wf.+,yt"'°'. . . • 9JS New Hammond .5181Mo...n,k .......... ·1390 New Hammond l182PhoenuDeluoeSp<"" 197S U1ed Hammond T -SB1 Top of Spircl lone.. • • :l!i~ Us.ed Hammond R-19SConi.ole ......... 3740 0.ma Hammond H·39SConi.ole , ." .......• • • .. ~s Demo Hammond 1127Concorde-Topolli.,. •• 6J.4S Santa Ana Store .... Used Hammond · l-1005pinel .. 1710 I Used Hammond T-1 00Spi~1.........,. pe"''"· 1710 Us ed Hammond T 1J3 '>P•"~' w'te•l•"'... 199!i Used Hammond 1 -•l25po~1 w,rh11hm . 7S)() Demo Hammond 7182 CO<Jllo<...... . . . 1<M!i Demo Hammond R 182Coni.ok .......... 37•0 Used Hammond .«.66 co~wloc ...... , .... 10,860 "'" 79S 109S 1595 1995 2S99 3795 4995 SAlE 66S 99S 1295 1795 .... 3195 799S Lyman told a faculty n1eeting Thursday night the decision to seek a temporary restrainin~ order came after aOOut 40 pickets delayed delivery of hot meals ·to Stanford University Medical Center patients for about an hour. parlicipant in pictures taken 111 SI n ,,1·n" • Professionally decorated, furnished, land- scaped homes ranging in price from $7500 to ~$49.500. Aho Movenclu; Phoen•J( & H-395 os in Corono del Mor by the bank's -automatic cam· , '" . .; ~ eras. • ri.·liss Garvey char'gcd 1!1r \'A~ Xl.i"YS !UPI 1 -A e 1tebel Gttil•y Grand J ury was a political \1·on1an and her bovfriend SAN DIEGO (API body and J{aJverson said his have been sentenced io fi l'c Barbara P. Hutchinson, a self· refusal to testify was a matter ~-ears to life in prison after siyled '"tax rebel" and author of c_onscience. pleading guilty to killing !he of the arguments against three "I don't look on the Grand Yt'Oman·s 3-year-0!d daugh1er bond measures that w i 11 Jury as a legal institution,"' and scattC'ring pans of the appear on next month's state J\.1iss Garvey told U.S. District child's lxxh· over a·\~·ide area. ballot. pleaded guilty to three Judge Alfonso J . Zirpoli, 1vho r.fary Aiin Vitale, 26. and criminal offenses committed sent them both to jail. "It William Perez. 31. 11·ho lived over a 13-year period. squashes people \\'hose politics 1\ith her. entered the ~u :U~· It v.·as d~losed 'Mlunday are oppo sed to the pleas to killing ~frs. Vitale's that ~!rs. Hutchinson, 57, government. and f \'.'ill not daughter. Lisa. last executive director or !he cooperate with the Grand November. Perez beat the girl Association or Co n c e r n e d Jury." to death. • Representatives 10 answer que11ions, help you make your choice. • Covered display area for related accessories and service•; park and site information. • Hundred1 of ideas for better living. • Homes displayed in park-like setting for easy inspection, comparison. Something foreveryone-5o Hurry for best selection! We don't od~ertise o so-coiled sole every week when we hove o sole -ii is really o SALE! Hammond Organ Studios 2854 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar 644-8930 Hammond Organ Studios 2033 N. Main St. Santa Ana 547-0351 Bonk Financing Available Taxpayers. entered g u i I t y ---------------------:::~i~~~~~:ii~:d~E·~. ' .. ~' 'i];..11ichs 1\ K,usie City "'fh~~ stor e 'th~t ;;~,;; ::!nted·;:.11 ;;;~t;''~~ ·::"'~ She was placed on probation r ''(Ill l. y ~ b h Id b b d . ineachcase.buttheprobation ~d · ... great uys on t e wor 's est ran s! ,, could be revoked and she « ~ ~ could be sent to prison if ~e ~;P~ ,. is convicted of new charges '· "· ~1 ... i;,~~~~~o;~~~~:,g~~:~;·:i · Never Before At These Prices! her group. e Judges Told LOS ANGELES (UPI) Tu·o municipal j u d g e s , insisting they could not speak up earlier because of "gag omers." identified themseh·es Thursday as the jurists accused by a colleague oJ interfering v.·ith the Sylmar Tunnel explosion trial. flfunicipal Judges Jo an Dempsey Klein and Vincent Erickson said the accusation v•as •·patently absurd." e Protest Rall11 LOS ANGELES (UPI ) NearlyS,OOOpersons conducted a rally a n d candlelight vigil in Hancock Park Thursday night protesting I.he Arab guerilla a11ack in North I s r a e I \Vednesday . Police said the gathering of Jev.·ish groups v.·as conducted peacefully and w i I ho u t incident. ' ' ; ® PIONE•~ ltJ\ Stereo Receivers . ONE · HALF OFF! • Limited Time Only On These Originally Fair Traded Prices \ A Once In A Life Time Offer! \ ---..:c ... ----· ---Save $99.98 11 lliil .•• ,,., •• ., ••• ~ ·~~ SX-424 ~ .-1J .. ~ ;;; ;J AM-FM Re::c:ei::'.v:'.er:-:.....~:..:: .... ,\nntht•t .111 ~1n:.: 1.1h"· 1n ,1 -t• r.-ri h"<'11~r. t~" ~\ .: 'l 'or11l11rn-... •ol·d ,1.110• t '" U•trv ,md nu!•l,1ncl1n\' ,, ,,,,r•!1t1101!"!"''' ,1n111I·· II'''".' ,,n•I •·" •. u .. n1 !,\I ~· 0"111111· l h1• 110'" r ,11np.il"'' ,, ,, , •. ,·I Reg. 1199. 95 $99.97 'Wheft add with..,. Save $169.98 SX-626 AM-FM Receiver 0111·11n1: .1 ho,1 ui h1)! 11n1t pt·1t<11•n.1tllf'. lh(' "'<- h!h "d"11ni.:11••h1·d h\ •lll>l.'lh l !'l',1!•1011· .ind 'I' .,i1,r1 'nl,,j ,1,,1f' ' ''' U•!ll l ont•nuo11\ R\I') P"•'' r ''· 1.!l•d ,,, lu~h ·" !U \\,Ill•• .'II \\.l!I', I""""!!• on • n<>u;•h Ill d""' .1 "'t •JI l,ui.:•· 'l"·.11. .•. 1, 11•lh 11111,uund .. ,n,j ,,1," li'l" up lo 11111 111tn• 1hlt''· 11111 l,1pt! UL'!~' .u1d ..i Reg. $339.95 $169.97 WMasoldwttti_, \ ' Fine Wine Fine Cheeses · ni.1'-IL''P'"' l' HI •h·~u.n. µ1.i-h p1oll ti I··· i '"In' •• r ! 111d1 lr•i1u•·f1< \" Jt">llllM'"· 1-..d1· I""''·! t• tlld.\ rt.ii .1n1I 1111;,h ''""·'I tu nut"• r.i!1" ( .,u1.r ... , ... , R\I'> pow••r 1\ l ! \\,111 ' + 12 "''II' 11 h.", .. ·on"r"'"' 1 .. , .i 1ur,,t,1U/r. IJU1: tk'll.. .• ind 'l"'••k• 1" 2 1~1111.n ...... ntcma. of y_.dlake lif laid .. ,.,...,. $149.951 ltlU l!IPl•rJll{' 2 ipHten a twwt-.. ofyowdwlk• lif Mid Mp•llhty S26•.t51 Fine Bargains '70 Puligny Montrachet ......•••• $37 .80 cs '70 Estate Bottled Cotes Du Rhone $29.79 cs (limiled Cuantitiel) We will of cour~e deliver coses ROBERT LAWRENCE BALZER se/ecf;ons omUoble for sampling along with fine imported cheese in our tasting room. SOUTH COAST PLAZA lower leW!I near Bullock's Costa Me'a • 557-2907 • • _Save $129.98 • r\, , ----. °G •L .-r- •••••. (j ~ The iJepartment Store of Music Since 19,3.0 COSTA MESA Sauth Coast l'laza 540-2830 ... • I BUEN.A PARK a-Perk Center 827-9060 ' . ' OPEN E,VENINGS & SUN DAYS CONVENIENT TERMS TAKE YEARS TO PAY BankAmericard -Master Charge • I. 7 Huntington. Beaeh Fountain \r alle • • Totlay's Final N.Y. Stocl{s VOL. 67, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS. 40 PAGES ORANG.E COUNTY. CALIFORNIA FRI DAY, MAY 17, 1q74 TEN C~NTS • Seal Beach Wants Out; Lamhaste·s 'Huge Tax' A charge that Seal Beach taxpayers have been paying Tiugc property taxes for years to support the llunlint!lOtl Beach Union lligh School District was leveled Thursday at the public hearing in Seal Beach on the rive-' ay unification plan. "\Ve want out," said Marx Dressler, Seal Beach School District superinten- dent .. _rl~ sai~ taxpayers in his district pay $2 m1ll1on in revenue to the high school district each year, "'hile tirat district's cost to educate Seal Beach children has been $560.000. "We are making an overpayment of "'ell over $1.400,000 a year," Dressler said, adding that for that amount there isn't even a high srt\ool facility within the City of Seal Beach. Two hearings were held Thursday nighl by the Orange County Committee on School District Organization . The fir "t "'as ln Westn1inster and the second in Seal Beach. Hearings "ill be held Monday in the Ocean View and F'ountaln Valley dis1ricts and Tuesday i 11 Huntington Beach City. The plan being CQnsiderc-d is to form five new, K-12 school districts along current elementary school boundaries. Under the plari, ~al Beach taxpayers would get an estifllatcd t<ix decrease of $2.10 while tax rates in the other four di stricts would rise. Those supporting 'the plan are Se:.il 58 J7 alley Drug Arrests -'Just By KATHY CLANCY or •h• D•llY P11o1 si.11 Fountain \'alley police don'L cxpt:cl their mas~ arrest or high school drug pushers to bri ; a rapid haJt to the illegal can1pus narcotics trarfic -but they think it may scare a re\V people. ··we realize \\'C aren't i;:oing to stop the drug problem by putting a lot . or pe<>plc in jail,., says Sgt. William De Ni si. 1oord1nator or .. Projl'ct Lunch Box .' .... Co11do111i11iw11s Soi1ght B)7 Beach Con1plex O"mers of the Huntington Pacific Apartments -the only housing comple:.: on the beach in Hunling1on Beach -\Viii seek city council approval J\looda.v night to convert the ap..1rtments t o condon1iniums . City planning commissioners turned ciO"wn the request April 16. An appeal on that decision "·as filed "'ilh the city council and is now scheduled as a public hearing during the council's 7 p.n1 . n1l'eting. f\·londay. The 106-unit apartment complex is ov.111.'d by 11unlington Pacific Corp .. a coalition of Southern Pacific Railroad and the ~luntinb'1on lkach Company. Plannnig Commissioners issued three basic reasons for their denial o! the use change : . -No rcquC'St for a conditional use permit \\•as filed v.·ith the city. -The 106 apartments do not have a 10.000..suare-foot central open space area. they arc 2Q parking spaces short of the code, and they don't have any ground level patios . -'The devc\opc-r did not file a r~qucst ror a zone change (from C-1 commercial 10 R4 high densi1y residential). \Vhen the apartments north of the city pier "'ere built in 1966, C-1 zones allowed them. Recent planning changes have C'liminatcd apartments from commercial zones. A condominium. which is O'>'-'ned. rathcr than rented. falls under a PRO (planned residential district) zone. Jerry Shea. attorney for t he Huntington Beach Co., contends that state law does not make a zoning distinction just for a change in the (See PACIFIC, Page %1 a Warning' \\hich resulted in 58 arrests \\'ednesday night and Thursday. "\Ve just v.'ant to 1varn them that every third or folll"th time they make a saJe. they nir1y be making it to an undL'T'CO\'Cr agent.·· he cautioned . "The drug probleill is thoroughly out of hand, not l')n)y in Fountain \1a11£'y but ;ill ov<'r Southern California ." The massive fountain \7a!ley ;irea sv:l.'f'p '''as si milar in nature to a late April roundup in Inrine -''Operatiori Girl Clearetl In S111u[!:gling LO:-JOON IAP ) -A British jury today cleared a young Santa Barbara v.•oman of all charges in an alle~ed kidg.ap and arms smuggling plot. She lxlwed her head and sobbed in relief. The jury returned guilty· verdicts aga inst a ~1oroccan and a JJakistani arrested in the case. 1\llison Thon1pson , an 18-yl';:ir-<ild former wa itress and part-li1lle model. was arrested Nov. 'n JS she arrived in London on a flight from l.J>s Angeles. Cu st or e officials found five pistols and ammunition in a f:ilsc bottom of her trunk . Israel Strikes !.. Jf1itli Co1111nan.dos In Retaliat.ion By United Press Intema1ional An Israeli CQmmando unit carried out a hit-run attack against an Arab guerril!a base a mile inside Leb~non today and Israeli planes struck guerrilla bases near the border in the second day of retaliation for the Maalot massacre , Israeli military spokesmen reported. The Palestinian nev.·s agency \VAF'A said in Beirut the Israeli planes struck in "v.·avcs," hitting five s c par a I e Palestinian refugee camps in southern Lebanon from 1:50 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. tt said antiaircraft batteries opened up on the planes but made no claims of hilling them. Lt. Gen. Mordechai Gur, the Israeli armed forces chief of staff, said of the raids he could not rule out the possibility that Israel was out to make southern Lebanon "unlivable," a won' used two months ago by Defense Minister f\.toshe (See RAIDS, Page %) Irving" -in \\'hich about 130 person s \\·ere arrested on suspicion of various drug offenSC's . DeNisi took part in that operation. i Reaction to the arrests al Fountain Valley and Los Amigos 11igh Schools "'as varied but administrators '16reed lhe narcoti('s problen1 is serious. "As.many arrests as were made it was probahly nccessary." said Grorge Bell , Assistant Principal at Fountain Valley !See DRUG SALE, Page Z) Police List T'we11ty Adult Suspects Fountain Valley police have released names of the 20 ad u 1 t s :irrcsted \\'ednesday and Thursday during their 1llassive roundup of alleged narcotics pushers. AU are charged \1•ith selling narcotics . The suspects are. Ronald B. Burnside. l8, of l 1256 SnO\\·drop A\·e .. Fountain Valley : .James A. Carlisle, 18, of 4080 \\f. F'irst St .. Apt. 12. Santa Ana: Cheryl A. Delmoffico. 18, of 11098 Camellia Ave., Fountain Valley : Sandra Marie Gardner. 19. of 4610 Morningside Ave .. Santa Ana : David Napouaklani Kamohalli. 18. of 5101 Lehnhardt Ave.. Santa Ana ; Joseph 'Sa muel Kujawsky, 18. of SJ2 S. Corta Drive. Santa Ana: James Madison Anderson, 29, or 4610 W. Morningside Ave., Santa Ana: Doran Edward Green e. 19. of 1021 ~-Harmon St., Santa Ana; Gerald Richard Greene. 25, of 1021 S. Hannon St., Santa Ana : Richard Alan Monce. 19, of 10430 La Cebra Ave .. Fountain Valle~: f\.1aurecn Nov at r i I, 18. or 16.591 Ross Lane, Huntington Beach; Gary Kay Schultze, 21, of 6601 Vanguard Ave .. Garden Grove; Ricky L. Stewart, 18, of 16741 Ross Lane. Hunting'ton Beach: Donald Marvin \Vebster. 21 . or 8858 La Roca Ave.; Jefirey Lee Davis, 19. of IJ.152 Palomar St., West1T1i:1ster: Barry Sha"n Gann, 20, of 403 N. Baker St.. Santa Ana; Steven Harold Keller. 18. of 6800 Shannon Drive ,Huntnigton Beach. Jim E. Minchinton, 18, of 5252 Caliente Drive. Huntnigton Beach : Kenne I h Wayne Anderson. 23, of 14122 Rancho Road, Westminster; Deborah Jean Anderson, 20, of 14122 Rancho Road , Westminster. S'tep1nother • Ill Beach. Huntington Beach City a n d Fountain Valley, while West1llinster. Ocean View and the high school districls are opposed . The Westminsler hearing earlier in 1h1• evening drew a charge lrom Westminster Trustee Rod Cruse that the five-way plan might be racially imbalanced. He presented figures showing thaL under the plan, .Westminster would.have. about 14 percent minority enrollment. while Ocean View would have e l ~ h t .... ~ .... Teucfaers Picket percenl. Fountain Valley Jnc! ltu11\111:.!t11n Beach Ci1y seven percent . 11 1lh S l' ;1 J Beach five . Cruse accused the con'.milh'{' ol rail in~ to 1ake this i1llbalance into cons1d1•r;111un. The committet: mso hearccl a rl'~olut 1on passed by the Westn1 instcr Cit~ ('011n"i1 in opposition 10 the unlrication pt:111. <tnd a representative of A ss c n1 \l l .1· in :1 n Kenneth Cory iD ·Ga rd 1~1 <:n.1\'1·1 reaffirmed the Legislator 's oppost\1011 111 it. T\\·cnty pcoplt• ~pokl' .1' 111(' t11., l1carings -18 in oppo~it11111 .ind 111..i 111 favo r. ;'\inc organlzanon-. n•:.:t~i. n d their oppostion: Goldt'rl \\'1·~1 llu111en1v1H:1·-; Bt•ach League of \\!111\•'!l \'otl'r~ \\'t'stininster 'l'L·achers :\••u4 1.1t1,,n ~ii: School PT,\ in \\'l'~Lmuis>t·r \.\'estminstcr Co u 11 r 1 l 11! PT.\. :;pringd:ile PTA in \\\·~t 111i11,1rr. \\'est L)rangl" Count~· l'nitcd '!'<·:h nL·r~ ;11ul l,'111lcy PTA in \\'cstnllu~li·r 0.Uf Piiot Sl•rl Pllolo :\bout 40 teachers from ~Iuntln gton Reach's Ocean View School District vented their feelings on wa ges 'I'hursday as contract negotiations were going 011 in- side offices of the \Vest Orange County United Teachers Association . 1\~nthcrs \Vednc~da.\' l'l'Jectrd a five percent pay hike proposed by th e d 1.~tr irt Jur 1!174-75 and said Liley 1,vou!d take nothing le.~~ than 14 percent. Hu11ti11gto11 Trustees Eye $36 1'fillio11 Budget Pla11 l·luntington Beach Union liigh School Di strict trustees Saturday will study a $36 inillion preliminary budge! for 1974·75 that enl'isions a five cent drop in the district's tax rat<'. llo\\·evcr the budget so far is tllisslng: any menlion of teacher salary increases. Teachers are asking for a 9.6 percent llCross-the-board increase in pay; p!tl5 occasional cost-cf-living boosts. District officials have offered a fi ve percent increase and lrustees Tucsda~ told teachers they'll have to v.·ait until after the budget study for further action . A total of $6.5 miillon in beginning balance reserves is in the proposed budget. which has $29.5 in empenditures a 14 percent hike over this year. The tax rate in the draft document is $2.77 per $100 assessed valuation. co111- p.1red lo this year's $2.82. District adn'linistretors caution thllt the budget will probably change many times before the date for finaJ adoption by the lxlard in August. Agony The Saturday study sessio n \l'ill begin at 9 a.Ill . in the district administrative ('(Inference trailer, 1902 17th St .. lluntington Beach. As the budget r\O\\' stands, slightly more than $13 million of 1he total villi go for teachers salaries. Several of the larges! perc<'ntagf' increases budge1ed sho1v the cffeets of the fu el shortages. Gasoline to run distrirt bu ses is estimated ' to cost $60.000 next year, as opposed to $37.163 this year. Oil shov.·s a 100 percent inrre:isc. ,\ total of $840 is budgeted. This year. the (See BUDGET. Page 2l Re11tzel of Rams (;ets OK to Pia y Again Tl:tis Year NEW YORK IAP) -National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozell e reilt!lated wide receiver Lance Rentzcl of the Los Angeles Rams today. The reinstatement came after Rozelle Fo1111fai11 Jlallr.r Schr<lules Fair 1'his Suturllav Ar!11·ork . entertainn1ent :ind food \1ill be featured rron1 10 ;Lrll. to 4 p.n1 . Saturd<ty at Fountau1 \'alley's Ari and Cr~f\ T··ri ir. The all-day event pl;u111(.'d ~'" part of the city's Cultural Ar1 s ~lunlh 11111 bl' <ti the Comn1unity Cc·nter. IH:!llO Slnte1· Avt" It is sponsored by !ht" ('l!y eul 1ural art-. cn1lln1itlC'c anct thc 11 or11t'n·s d1vis1on nl the cha1llb<'r of ton11lll'rl'1'. Cl!y officials say !h;1 t rno rc !h~u1 ,'ill local artists \viii h<t vc the ir crl':itions on display for sale. Fountain Vnltcy I l1 gh School :irt students also \viii parl ieipate Oil paintings, ma c r a tll e. Jl'\1elr~ pottery. custom made c!olhcs and cake decorating v.·ill be exhibit('(!. c1tv officials S<lid. • The free entertainment schcdulL• is : -10:30 a.m.: children 's danrc recital bv Charles Bakers Studios. · -1 p.m.: Jo r g c Lcnares :O.la r1:1chi Band. -2 p.tll .: l\lflgic sfio,1· hy Fount ain tSee Fi\llt, Page ZI Orange ~ Coast (::;1.a (~ ~fen1orial Rites For Slain Jewisl1 Hostages Slated A memorial service is scheduled tonight at a dozen congregations of the Jewish Federation of Orange County for teenaged hostages murdered or m~imcd in an Arab terrorist attack on the Israeli town or Maalot. Defector Fights Way Into Emb<t.sS)', W a1its to Leave · met w1th Rentzel in Los Agne!es Thursday. The rommissioner issued a statemenl, saying that I.he veteran NFL receiver had been active in v.•orthwhilc vclunteer work during the year he. was out of football. Weather Considerable cloudiness through Saturday but partly sunny Satur· day afternoon. according to the v.·eather servi("C. Sijghtly cooler days. Highs Saturday in-tJ1e lower and middle 60s. Lows tonight in the 505. Leonard Shane, president of the religious organization, emphasized that non.Jews are invited. He said the observances at locations throqhout lhe county are co-sponsored by the Board of Robbb. Spokesmen for the Jewish Ft'dcntlon of Orange County said 8Cl'Vices are set at varying Umea and may be learned by calling each congregattonal headquarters. The melll<lrl&I 1<rvfc., will be held 'al: -Harbor lleform Temple, Newport Beaeh. -Temple Bat Yalun. Corona del Mar. -.,.Temple Sharon, Costa Mesa. ....Jlra<I ACldemf, lrvlne. -Tellll>la Elalt, Minion Vlejj>. -Jllaloii J ...... Lqlma Hills. • -Ttmpl• Beth na.ia. Weslminster. ' \ l By JOHN VAL TERZA Of fM Dllty ,.flit ltaff When 47-year--old l>efln Hoxsey fought his way into the U.S. Embaaly ln Moscow Wednesday and declared that his enchantment with commurUsm had ended, the agony began for his stepmother ln San Clemente. FOr Mn. Ella ttoxsey It goes far beyood lhe certa.ity o/ .pbooe ealls day and night and the. nulsabce o( press queries. Sh• Is seriously Ul With eaneer. "When I picked up the paper this morning and read the aC<:OO!lt ll'om. correspoodents In Moocow, the shocl< was just the same as If I hid beon! the new• of an auto allCident," 1lle se:~ from her bom• Thuraday aftemom. Her fondnCIS for ber at._ (whom she Dl'll met mly ~ter he was i!J'O\Vll) I• obvious. But for Mr1. Houey, the quiet, normalllle she ealahll-over the ~ 10 yws 11 1 widow llvlnc modesily ht • • • • San Clemente ended when Hoxsey sought to return to America. Hoi:sey wa.s literally wrestled from the grip of two Russian security officers at the gates of the American enclave in the Soviet capital. ACCOWlls from two correspondents who wibtessed the lnciclenl aaid the on .. tlme •defector was grabbed bi the l\1111$1alts as he tried to enter the J;loj~ 1'!lan. as ,he was,. being ,led , .!At · 1\usslan \llterroP\IOn l'OOm, llf~ v.s. emba!IY ottlcen mJna&ed to g)'llb Houey from bis caplo!s and 1 p J r rt hlm Into the embassy which Is l•&•llY ,JJ.S. terr!~. "No one knows wi\al lfllj happen now," Mrs. Houey said. • • · '1 don't havt any rell.hDpe11 abollt the alll\ltlon,',' she •dded· . Tfttd, w..ry and Ill ~. the. San Clernint~ widow ll8ld frleods have adv""" ber to 1.,v• home to ""''" henell ~ further problellll -. ... of Wednetdat'• e rent1 -deemed an international incident in government circles. "1be last time I saw Dean was in 1959 and 1960 when his father was still alive. We were in Europe and leJkmed that Dean wu seriously ill and would have delicate surgery in a Moscow hospital. We obtained permission 'and went to vblt "His dad stayed an entire summer, while.. Dean recovered. Then hls !attfet left,111 she rtlated. ~, The elder Roxaey, an avowed Communist whose career' in the Loa Angeles· tei assessor'• office ended in .,!1149 liecauae ·of hi! pollUcat h<llefs - ... ever 1aw hi! aoo agll)I. He died four years afttr !bal Moocow SUl!>."1•r. Fl'f.l~ /onlier di!ectqr, !be.17 ~· ~.. t l,Tpigb ,_ ca!o,Jolid~. .. , lo a iq!me wh' bhad allOw- ed oue ytt1e chance to 1t;lfm a c!lffm. "lie had always wanlfl\f to be a dOctor, (See DEl'ECl'Oll, "°P II Rozelle suspended Rentzel July 2-1. 1973, citing ''conduct detrimental 10 the NFL after the player had violated tern1s of the probationary status that ha~ been Imposed oo him in 1971." Rentz.cl, 30, had been placed on probation by Rozelle origfnally after being Indicted ror indecent exposure, and was suspended fQr possession o f marijuana two years later. Rcntzel, then with Danas. wa! arrested Nov. 30, 1971 for indecent exposure ·involving a 10-ycar...ald girl. He wali i.nllicte~ and , after pleading guilty, r~elved a five-year probated sentence. On Jan. ll, 19'7S. be was arrested for inv1$tlgallon for poasessing marijuana for sale In Im Angeles. He pleaded guilty and 00 May 22 of last yw. he. was oeoienc<d to iO diys in jail and fined $2.llOO. • Ile wu plactd on three yean p!Watton and the NFL SUllPC!lslDD lollowed. ' ' I - IN"llll-: 'l'ODi\ l' f(u.ntington Beach rttur11s to the mic/dle~ages Saturdav for un oil-day Re11a1ssat1ce r airc. Sec today's iveekendcr for details. Me'flt• .._,, MlllPI l'WS U H•llMl•I Nsws • Or•n"C:-ty I Rnt•11r111t• n.'2t S\lil'fle ,..,..,, 11 Sperft 11·1t Sfodl M1rt1... tt•U Ttl••ltl"' • TI! .. ,." ,...,, WNI~" • Wtk.mtAi,..rl M w""'.,,'' ...... 1~11 ,,., .. "'""' . w ......... n-9 • -• • ' 2 OAll Y Pll 01 H -Friday, Ma,y 17, 1974 Huntillgtoii Renaissance Faire ,Set . Saturday SLA Heude<l For Spo1•<11ie? OLY~IPIA , Wash . IAP\ -State Pa!rol Ch ief Will Bachofner said today the patrol has been put on special alert after re rt1iv1ng a report that three n1e1nbcrs of the Symbionese Liberation Arn1y may be on the way to Spokane. The a1ert came after rl'ccipt of an FBI message. The identities of th"c three alleged SLA meinbers were not knov.·n. Expo '7~. an environmental \i.'Orld's f~ir, opened in Spokane this month. County Ret<1il v Clerks Vote To Wulk Out ' Orange County retail clerks have voted to stop v,:ork June 6, bricklayers are still on strike and carpenters have-gone back to work. but arc still nego1iating_ Jn three votes Thursda~·. 6. 0 0 O members of Retail Clerk 's local 324 in Orange County tallied 90 percent in favor of joining eight other locals re presenting 54,000 clerks across Southcn1 California in a v•alkout June 6. The strike, according to Judy Schmahl at 'the local will occur unless labor and inanagcment reach agreement on a contract to replace the one th<1t expired .April I. Journeyman clerks currently earn S4.86 an hour. The initial nnion req ue st for 89 cents an hour to bring \\'ages to the level of Xorthem California clerks \\'a S countered by a management offer of 30 cen1s. The clerks trimmC'd their demand to i7 cents an hour, .,.,.hich, Robert K. Fox. president of the Food Emplo~1er;; Coun~il. termed a 16-4 percent increase "1rh1ch ,1·ould, if met. hnvc an imn1cdiate and tremendou s impact on food prices." .r.1ean11·hile. bricklavers are considering a management offer. of a S2.05 an hour hike in wages and fringe benefits over 1he next t11·0 years. The JO percent increase offer. according to union officials. ma} end the 11a!kout ''hich has idled 4,000 brickla,·crs and 8 . u U O members of the l aborers l'nioo ~incc l\lay 6. If !he offer is accepted. t h e bricklayers' current \1 age of ~s.:r1 an hour plu s Si.35 in fringe henefi!s ,,·ill also be increased by a pr e1'iously ne gntia t(·d 30 CC"nt raise "'hich \1 as st ruL"k do11n Uy the now defuncr federal Pav Board . Carpenters. \1ho returiiC'd to 11orl; Thursday following a three-day ~trike over a 30-cenL raise 1'fhich \\'as similarl) cut by th(' Pny Board. are negotiating for a nl'IV CQ{ltracl !o replace Jhe one tha1 expires June 15. The 30-ccnt raise . retro<1cti\·e to \1 a_,,. 1. 11•ill be given the ca rpe nt ers \\hen the 11,·w ag reement is re<J thect. the union !'~1id. bringing the pre-negotiation 11·a~e to :-;?.:>;:.an hour. Six V.S. Fir11ts lJI a rn J a 1unicu NE\V YORK /UP! I -Six An1er1cJn aluminun1 con1pan1cs hri1·e l'·<lrnt'd tht· .Ja1naic<in go1·ernn1ent that it is risking its hu ge b<1uxit<' r1re nuirkL·t b1 unilat er<illy increasing the cxpol't tax anct roval\1· on b;111xitr :ind :.ilun1i11a. L.:i11~·crs lor thl' tornpanit.:S said Thu rsday that doubling the export tax could m.'.lrk lh(' start of confrontation over n1oney bt>t1vecn 1najor bauxill' producing L11Untrie s ;111d thr L"Onsun1ing countries shnilar lo lhe 1t•tt·nt nil pri ce t·onfrontJtioH . ORAHG-f COAST "a DAILY PILOT T•~ °'""Q" c~a·.1 o,"1 I'll•>• • ·~ .. ~.·• 1·r-11""'""'·P" ,,, .. "• 't '"• (',,, ,<• (r..-·• Pu~'" t ,~7 I~-,.., ' ".o•r ,,_,,,. ,..., .. ,. ( .,,,, ··~ '-' •1~ .. N-: •'b•"' ~ .,,,.,LI••'', I•·~~•'"" , . ' 1 !>•• • '''''·"''• • • 1 . . . ..... " ,, "" '•. " ·~· " • ·'" •·1' . ,. " •• '". .• ' • ..,, 1••· 1· , .. rt'r"t>" ,-,, ti >l~We·t [),), .. ,,, ... , ···~~:,;1(..1 ·~·· .. , '""' ~ l"" .. · •. ' ' Pp~""'"" O"ll ""~'"·"'~ 1r-..,..,..,."' /J .. , ,.,,.,. Mu...,.ngEo.•, (·.r·~1 H l' ~-~·lr-iPr*'° "'""'"'•nl •'-''""oQ•flll LO'I"'~ lerryC.,..,.!1'1 WftVO. .. Ccu~I~ (Oo!(lr H.t...,_hedlOffitt I /!17S e.och 8Wov07d Mo-"'<J ,.\,,.kftn. f'l.O 1k.o 17J '12>r; Ott.rOffittt l•tulll lh-mr-tot ... #o"'ftu• eoti•,,....., »ewwa..s ...... • N.-i 111•.CO »» ~,,_, ll!)v....-.. <f 6M °""""''• XI~ NQrlft ~· c..~ • ..., ~•al ' ~ 1tr•. Or.-.. c.i ~ e,o,.,,. .-rl "".,.....,.., .. w.1o•-""-""'" .. .. ~~·Ii· IW-.n IN~ bl -CIO-...,.___...,_.....,..OI~_. ..... a. ........... " c.ia ~. <:Mdot> ..,. ~ .,,_ »OO°"'Or!l"'r;" ,,.., ••00"""'*""· ._,,..._,300_,..,. ' For the past two ,.,.eeks, from 7:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., Laurie Hill's phone has been busy almost coostanUy. After Saturday, it will be semi·si1ent again, which makes her a lltUe sad, though r~ieved. Mrs. Hill is rhairn1an of the Huntington Beach Renaissance Faire \\'hich happens Saturday in ~1urdy Park. Under her leadCrship, the fif!h annual citywide festival will h<ne 70 booths, di splays and exhibits : threl' stages filled \vi th bourly en terta1n rnen!; spec i a I parades and lots of colorful costumes. But she's a modest lad y "'ho prefers to l " credit her committees, / friends and neighbors. She says the e fqrt .bu beeA more fun than work1 e"° t)iouglf"lt has hardly given her a IUU bOuf's~t <luring the day for the past two ween:.. ''I'll he sorry to )le It OYtt " ahe admits. ''l\e met all 'ktndS ·or·p.;opte T never 1nct before and probably won't see again. "U 's no longer a small town, but I never k11ew there were that many organizations in town trying to do good for ttw p<.'t1ple in their own way." That's what Sa turday's Faire is all about -the people and organizations For Medl·Cal who ma.ke up lluntingt.on Beach. They'll au be on display from 9 a.m. to dusk in the park on Golden West Streot, noi:th o! . "Warner Avenue. , "Here la 1 schedule of stage events for SatUrdU's Renaissance Faire: STAGE ONE : (center of park\ 10 a.m.: Flag raising and nalional anthem. 10:05 a.m.: Music Man Band. I 1 n.nt: Edison High gymnastics tea1n. Noon: Music ~18Jl ·Band. l p.m.: Orange Coast College Jazz Ensemble. 2 p.m.: Ye Olde Grande Marche and Costwne Awarda. s!J:m:: H1111Un'!°", Beach_ Communil~ I p.m.: Campfire dltll Folk Dancers. STAGE TWO :· (hear the booths) 10 a.m.: Exchange Club tal ~nt show. Il a.m.: Edison Folk Festival Minstrels. Noon: Edit100 Hilb_ Ma<t_rigal SingerS. 12 :30 p.m.: Town. Council Court Trials and Miss Huntington Beach presentation. 1:30 p.m.: Golden West College Madrigal Singers. 2:30 p.m.: Golden West College Jazz Ensemble. · S.~IALLEST PVR HAS HIM DOWN 3:30 p.m.: Voices of Huntington Valley. 4:15 p.m.: Marina Higb Concert.Choir. STAGE THREE: (inside communlly centerr • 10 a.m.: Huntington Beach North Art Association -demonstration in oils. 11 a.m.: Society for Creuti.ve Anachronism-Medieval lashiryn show. 1 p.m.: F.dison Folk Festlva1 Minstrels. 2 p.m.: Huntington Beach North Art Association .. 3 ~.m.: The Mariners, Marina Hlgtl chorale group. 4 p.m.: Society for Creative Anachronism -Medieval fashion show. f 'ron1 Page l Protest Issued To Russ Leaders Over Defector Health Plan Battling BURY ST. ED.\IUNDS, England (UPI] 1 -Ted 1.fcCullan. a 5-foot 3-inch bartender, has quit Britain's smallest pub because he wants room to expand. DRUG SALE • • • High School. "As far as planting a student Wormanl on campus, I think it was probably a necessary th ing. Th e operation was obviously successful." i\10SCO\V (l"PI 1 -'I'hc \J nitcd S!:ite.; ha s pro!C'Stcd to thC' Soviet go1•ernmcn t over poli ce intcrfel'cnce "'i lh a n A1ncrica n dcfi:c1or 1rho !lO\\' wants to leJve the Soviet Union. l'.S. En1basS~' officials said todny. To Stay in Operation The Nulshe\1 Pub measures 7 by 15 f~t and is a local landmark. But McCullam says it can't hold enough customers. "The other day four American tourists \valked in and filled the place." he 9aid "And they didn't even buy a drink." Fred Goyette, assistant principal at Los Amigos High School. \\'Rs critical of police for placing an undercove r agent on campus without the administration's knO'>''iedge. Thrv suid \lark J. G:1rrison. the c1nbaSsy politic:.il counselor. delivered a protest to the Poreign .r.Iinistry over police efforts \Vcdnesday to block Dea n C. Hoxscy fron1 entering the Emb:issy. lloxsey, 47. of Pico f{ivera. Calif., dcfect.cd to the Sol'ict Union in 1957-when he came here for a youth festival. He now lives in Volgograd, is 1narried to a Russian and 11•orks as a doctor at a clinic. U.S. officials said Jloxsey got into the en1ba ssy \Vednesday only after a strugglu 1rith police guarding the cn!rance and intervention by U.S. diplomats who witnessed the incident. lloxsey told ne1vsmcn he was formerly a Coinmunist but had be co n1 c disill usioned v.·ith the Soviet Union and Co1nn1u11ism. Ile also said he has been harassed by colleagues at the clinic \~'ht're he "'arks. He told ne"·s1nen 1oday he \\'JS returning to Volgograd to apply for an exit visa and hopes to return to ritosco1v soon for further discussions "·llh en1ba!isy officials. L".S. officials said they still have not determined if Hoxsey is a U.S. citi zen. At lhe lime of his defection. he said. he tu rned in his American passport to Soriet authorities and accepted a Soviet passpor! but never formally renounced L'.S. citizenship. From Pnge l DEFECTOR. • • hut after f\\'O years af college in the L1n1tcd States he realized rhat 1vithout n1oney, he could no longer study. · "lie v.·as invited to tra~·el to Russia 'dS. p;1rt of lhe youth festival and thrn 11·as offt,red the chance to stay and be trained." his stepmother explained. Ailer six years of study. Hoxsey 11·rote ho1nr 10 say he planned ne\"er to leare and !hal he J'ell an obli gation to rrpay !he Sot·icts for the training. Correspondence bet\\"Cen the physician ~u1d his t'arnily in Ca!1fon1ia -includina " his n;1turnl mother 1rho lives in the northern part of the state -1\·as steady, but never abundant. ··He 1rould usu:-illy 1vrite at Chrlst1nas. but this past holiday he and I did not eorrespond. All the lime before. ho\1·evc r. th ere was never an indication of an\' discnc hantn1ent. and no feeling on m)1 p<1rl that there "·ere any problems ," she :-;CJ id. But there is a theorv about Hoxse\'·s reasons for discnchaiitmcnt with ihe Soviet 11·ay of life. "Some time ago he and his mother corrl'sponded and she began to '>'Tite to uf/1cials in hopes that Dean , his v.·ife and adopt ed daughter, 1rho is 14 no"'· could get perrnission just to visit the United St<ites," she said. The theory is that those letters may hil1·c spa rked suspicion by Soviet ol!icia/s. l!ox sl'Y told his bfnefactors at the vmba~sY \\'ednesday (hat he no\v fears for his safetv \\'ere he to return to his hoine in \rOlgograd (formerly named !'llalini::-rnd until Stalin fell fron1 grace in thl' L'SSR l. Prl'sumab!v. his Rassian·bom wife and their daughtCr would remain behind. Sou rces in the embassy said Hoxsey firs! felt the neL'd to leave about a year <igo. but was quoted as saying he once 1hought the desire would pass in time. The dilemma now for officials at the em bassy is \\"hat. to do with their "gue9t" pending an official decision on hi s <lC'mands to reenter the country. r Reports said the original plan was to send him back home until a decision had hC'en reached. Fro11a Pagel FAIR ... By DOUGLAS FRIT7.~CHE The Orange Coun1y foundation Prr- Pald Hea lth Plan , a medical treatn1ent program for Medi-Cal recipients, today i~ in the n1idst of a last ditch attempt to avoid closing its doors, its assistant executive director said. Bil!s i11curred by its more than 6,000 n1embers are going unpaid as the group, a subsidiary of the Orange County r-.1edical Association, tries to contact the State Health Department for additional funds. The crisis for the group, which contracts with Medi-Cal reC'ipients 11) provide care 1\·ith private physicians who might other1\·ise not accept patients o:i state aid, "'as reached M o n d a v . according to Dale Shirk, the assist.int executive director. Follov.·ing a detailed analysis of th-:o group's financial position. he said. an emergency meeting of the board of directors "'as called. resulting in a vote to freeze a~J its assets. .111 There v.·1\l be no break in n1edicnl treatn1cnt for the enrollees, Shirk said. beca use their treatment v.il! "automatically revert to ~fedi-Cal." The financial disaster •·in retrospect 1ras glaring ly clea r," Shirk said ... but 1rf' \\·ere so convinced it would \i.'Ork and 11·ould be a benefit to the patients, th at "'e decided to go ahead." Last year when the organization was founded. he said, the state strifted the ground rules. "Like any insurance organization." hC' said. "~re opcratt' on the thcorv that \'OU spread the risks." · · From Pagel RAIDS • • • D11~·an. Darnascus reported a dogfight 01·er Lebanon between lsraeli and Syrian planes but Israel denied the report. The Lebanese military command sald Israeli planes broke the sonic barrier over Beirut today and that the Lebanese ,\ir : Force. scrambled but made no contact. .: ~ srrian communique issued in 1 !Jan1ascus sa id the Syrian and Israeli I 1ratplancs fought an air battle over South ' Lebano n today and that an Israeli plane 11·<1s shot do1vn in flames. "There \Vas no contact, there \Vas no bottle and there was no downing." an Israeli army spokesman said in Tel Aviv, ho11·rver. ... The Lebanese gol'ernn1ent announced that 48 persons 1vcre killed and 184 1rounded in two Jsraeli air strikes into Lebanon Thursday, carried out in retaliation for an Arah guerrilla auack on the Israeli border \'illage of ~laalo1 that left 30 persons dead . j The Israeli air strikes brought sharp , criticism from Secretary of State Henry 1 A. Kissinger who al so denounced the 1\rab guerrilla attack. Egypt warned Israel that there could be grave consequences from the air raids and the Egyptian "·ar minister spoke of a resumption of the \var. From Pagel BUDGET. • • district spent about $420. By subject, the program boasting the largest proposed in percentage increase is girls .1thletics. In 1973·74. $21,445 "'as budgeted for teachers' sa laries. equipment and aper· ating expenses in ~iris sports. ln 197+.75, the district is proPQSing to spend $104.999, an increase of 390 percent. District officials credited the increased emphasis on equalizing opportunities. A total of $270,657 -an increase of 60 per· ~.cent over last year-is plaMed in boys athletics. But district officials said some of the expenses there-like repairing the gyn1· nasiums and tennis courts-will benefit sports programs for both sexes. Other features of the preliminary draft , budget arc: Valley High School magic club. million 1n reserves. -2:30 p.m.: Songs from the "Sound of -A 190 percent lncreate-from 16.371 -A beginning balance of more than !C.5 ~ Music;'' by l'ounlltin Valley HJgh School to $47,iro..:in the money spent on qri-, cast. culture classes: It includes one new Originally, the plan was to be set up on a ··negative enrollment" arrangement in which the sta te ·would provide a financial cushio n for !he group based on the expected number of enrollees. he said. Instead, a "positive enrolln1ent" plan 11·as final\y agreed upon in \Vhieh the group v.·as rein1burscd orily for -those patients "'ho actually cnro!led. / Coupled with that. two s i m i I a r ori;anizations were chartered in Orange County. providing u n expected co1npctition. • Also. he said. "bad press" resulting fro1n th e practices of one of !he other organizations, rest1Hcd in a !ower than expected enrollment rate. Frona Pnge l PACIFIC • • • O\\nership style. "There Is no ph ysical structure change," says Shea. "!~stead .or having a one. 10 or 20-year lease. you 0\1·n it." The city attornl·y·s office. however. says city la\v is very specific on the subject and that law is the controlling factor in procedµre . The 2.5 n1i!es of beach surrounding the apartments is no"' in escrow for sale to the state for $8.1 million. \\'hen the sale "Police should do whatever necessary to curb the problem," said Goyette. "but I would rather they had Jct us kno\v before they put someone on campus. "T can't say if we "·ould or 1vouldn't have allowed it. Thal would be a dislrict decision." Administrators at both schools said they don't believe the drug prob!('m is any worse on their campuses than mi others in the area. Dairy Official Admits Consent Only patients \\"ho "·ere undergoing n1cdi cal treatn1rnt and v.•ere referred by their doctors enrol!ed, making i t im possible for the foundation to spread the costs over those being treated and is completed, the apartment prov.crty \\' . .\SHJNGTO:-.' iAP\ -T he former president of a Pfnnsylvania dairy coopera tive. Richard J,. Allison . pleaded guilty today to consenting: to an illegal $50,000 corporate contribo1ion Io President Nixon's 1972 ~lcc!ion cam- pa ign. th usc no!. will be the only prll'ate property along ··Enrolln1en! has continued to go up.·· ........ nine 1niles of Hu.1tington 3each coastline. Shirk said. "Unfortunatelv, it has onlv \. been sick people. \~'e hav·e been hoping and hoping to make this thing go but the rnoncv fina!lv ran out." Toclav he Said state official s he needs to coniact to a1·en 1.:losi ng the plan arc "0111 of the offiee" or "in meetings a!I d ci1·." \\'ithouL additional state aid. he sa id. .. \Ve don't kno•r \1·hat 11·1Jl happen. Right nov.•. it looks pretty grim . "If "'ego under. mat 1ncans it 's back to the sta!e system for the reciplt>nls "ith all its red !ape and so forth.·· Eight l\len Indicted TRENTON. N.J . 1UPI ) -The state of Nc1v J('rsey Thu~r&!ay indict ed eight forn1rr Cal ifornia insurance executives 1111 t'haq::es of attem pting to s!rip a Ne\\' .h·rsey firm of assets as part of a $2.5 billion fraud schen1e_ The eie"ht 11·ere forn1er officers of Equity Funding Corp. 'of A1nerica, a California·basrd insurance firm . After his la1,·ycr plradNI that Alli son had IOS1 his job as head of LC'high Val!('Y Cooperative Farmers or J\Hento1\·n, t'a. because of the contribution, U.S. District Judge George L. liart Jr .. ~uspendcd a $1.000 fine and p!aecd Allison on a n1onth's unsupervised protxi1io11 . 11 v.·as the first time in lO illegal eorporate conlribu!ions casl's that a defendant has gotten off \\ilhout paying a fine. ----·· -------· ~-~------. ----- • DO:\'T '.\'JISS OUR FABCLOGS SOFA & CHAIR SALE ( ' ENDS SA!URDAY, MAY 18. Largest inventory· in our history to be reduced. Stop in OO\v for btst selection at terrific s~\·lngs. f''antastic selections or upholstered pieces Jil on :-ale nuv;, Names like Sherrill . l\large Car:o;on and \Vood n1 ark all rit special prices. Over 100 sofas and 250 chairs have been price-slashed ... come in and browse! . . DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK--KARASTAN • NEWP0RT BEACH • 1127 WESTCLIFF DR.. &42·2050 LAGUNA BEACH • -3 p.m.: Mime players from the IA!acher. Fountain Valley Com'munlty Theatre, -A 25 pereent increue.ln expenditures 1, 34$ NORTH COAST HWY., 49 .. GSS! -3:30 p.m.: Japanese Dancers from fur readmg prognuru, from 1150,339·this the Madame Hanayagl Ro k um I •~ llOhool year to a propoeed ll!'l,995. Dancing Croup, -A 114,700 program in affirmative ac· Food boolhs will be sponsored by the_ tlon to hire minority persoonel. Fountain Valley Boys aliG FoutttolD -A 47 perc<!ll d!lll' In -1te btHIJ<led Volley Girls Clubs. which teaches pregnant atudents outside llot dogs, drinlts and~· will be told. tbe reGUIAr cla01room. '\ I WIBOAYS 6 SA TUaDA YS t~OO lo 5:30 • f 1 I I . TORRANCE• 23649 HAWTHORNE BLVD. (Open Fri. UI t,S..n.12-5 :30) 17S.Jm • • ' • ' • ' ·At Your Service A Suaday, Wednesday aipd Fridey Feature Of lb< Dally PU01 S1eer• Gellltafl f'11ller DEAR PAT: On Feb. 28, 1973 we purchased 10 cnlvrs from the Andahl Cattle Company in Artesia for $1 ,200. Our contract states that the calves should have been ready .. for marketing no later than Feb. 28, 1974. and "if these calves have not reached 900 pounds by the dale, the seller \Viii assume ownership or the calves and pay the buyer the going 1narkct price for 900-pound J-lolstein steers on I hat day." \Ve have not had a single official notice or a financial settlement, only a sec ond-hand unsatisfactory explanation by phone and no con1milmcnt as to v.·hen payment \v ill be n1adc. \Vould you look into this n1atlcr for us~ E.\Y., Costa !\fesa Grant Anadbl. ou•ncr of lbe callle company. says your ca l\'cS "i ll be ready to markel In approximately 60 days. The ca h es' "t ight "'llS reached, but they could not have bet'n s~nt to market on Feb. 28 due to ;t co1nbiuaHon or the "'age· price freeze effects on the catlle m;irket and the packers' strike in Deeember. "·hich held up :ill slaugh ttr !or fi\'e \\Crks. Andahl says lhe slau ghter houses arc "bac~ed up,'' canslo~ his firm's ruttlt slaughter schedu.le tf) be backed up too. No mooty Is recei \•ed by the-firm for callle until they are slaughtered. \'our slel'rS art eatinJl: tbt>ir way lo a hinher "'eight and better mnrkel price in th; meonthne, and Andabl ls payini;t: fur 1he feed. II you have further questions, Andahl requests you contact blm by lelt'phone, Book• for B~nt1dei8 DEAR PAT: In ITSponse to the person "'ho "'rol e to you recently about disposing of old n1agazincs, and for an\'one intrrested in donating old books 10 · a gocxi cauS<'. may I suggest supporting the Brandeis book sale. lly cnllini:: 551·2700, ~·nur readers can nrrang<' home pic k-u p of all books. Donntions arc tax deductible and all procced5 from the ran sale---Will ~se new books for th<> Brandeis Universily Library and provide scholarships ror '.':tudcnts. C .. \I., Newport Beach T)·pn:· of books particularly wanted by the Oran~e County chapter of the Rrandel~ Urd.vcrnty Notlonal Women 's Co mmittte include paperback a n d hardcover -fiction, non-fiction, texts. rhildren's books, reJer'ence books and sperial interest mn~azines. In addition to 551·2i00, readers may phone 639-9068 for book pick-up. Sen111• C11111i11g Apnrt DEAR PAT: Shav;'s Carpet Service installed carpeting in my home on April 9. 1973. The scams in the Jiving room ,~·ere quite obvious and !\tr. Shaw assured n1e that he "'Ou1d come back end fix !hem. It's bttn a yt'ar oow of repeated telephone requests on my part, but no repair. The sc<1ms are becomin~ s<'parated even more and I can't understand v•hY the problem hasn't been correct<'d by now. 1\1.C., Dana Point Shaw assures you he will make arrangements "·Ith you to inspe<!l the carpeting and complete any needed repairs immediately. Sl11111p< V11li111ble? DEAR PAT : I have 100 Ciern1an stamps brough1 frorn Germany aJter \Vorld \Var JI . Fifty art' brown \\'ith a 10 in each corner and 50 :ire da rk green \rith a four in each l'Omcr. Both hQve a picture of Hitler. I think , and "Dcutsches Reich" is "T1llen under the piclurc. I'd like to sell th<'se sta1nps and need the names and addresses of collectors. R.S., Costa J\1esa Establish the "'Orth or these stamps and learn their proper Identity before ynu attempt to sell them. Some f'.erman - stamps ha ve value, but othen are worthless. rrtnceton Coin and Stamp Shop, 181M! Nt!wport 81\·d .. Costa Mesa, will examine the stamps and j!'.ive you an estimate of lhctr value. Ynu should bandJe the sale through a dealer, newspaper advertlstment, nr trade publication, such as Llnas Stamp Nev.·5, Sidney, Ohio 45361. P11rk Pas11porls DEAR PAT: Jlow old does a person have to be to get a SNJior citizen's pass to the national parks'! Where can I get one of these passes, if I'm old enough. and what is its proper name1 T.C., El Toro You can obtain a frtt Golden Age 1•as1port If you ire 12 or older. It entttle• the. beartr e11try prlvlltges to de1lgt11ted Feder1I rematioa 1re11, ph11 1 SO perttot redaction in Federal special rec:rtatlon DH ''" Ip thMe 1re11. The Gokltn Ap Panporl 11 1vollable 11 lnY first · or ffcond tl1"8 Pott Office and at Federal recreadon areas where ~Wance ~eea •« cb1rged. For younger peno'IUI, lb< Gold.a El.ie 1'111port ...,, 111 ind admllJ IN 11e1.... and au !Ml• -.Pl•Yl•r blm la 1 1 I a 1·1 e DIMDDlmettlll vebkle to the wne FMuaJ rteteallon 1ma1. • F'rldiiy, May 17, 1q74 H OAIL \I PILOT :J Toro Crash Injures UC Irvine 'Advisory' Report Due By GEORG E LEIDAL Of lfle D•llf ~Uot 5!11f UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. AldriCh Jr. has not yet seen a report or his advisory committee on minority affairs which reportedly charges him \vilh "personal responsibility" for can1pus hiring and pmmolion bias against women and minorities. A complete rcpoft of the chancellor's advisory body was not to be made public unti l June l or 15. Dr. George 0 . Roberts said today. He is a professor of comparati ve culture and Dr. Aldridl's liaison to the committee 1v hi c h Is studying uc r hiring and promotion policies. Roberts and another ca m p u s spokesman agreed the report had not ye t been sent to Dr. Aldrich. The chancellor was not available for comment today. He is attending a Regents meeting in Los Angeles. Dr. Roberts said portions of th·~ committee report data which have been released to date do not appear to be an "attempt to distort reality." \Vhile he agreed the chancellor as head of the institution is •·ac,countablc for everything" he necessarily delegates responsibility. "It is not alw ays easy to say "'ho is to blame.·· Tiie committee study draft rrportedly holds J)r. Aldrich • ' p e rs on a 11 y responsible" for permitting suboriiinatcs to adhere to policies · th at allegediy discriminate againsl the hiring or wo1ncn and minorities in both academic and staff positions. . Among findings said to be included i'l lhe report are !he following: -That women and minorities are underrepresented in higher p a y i n g professional positioos. -That university employment data is misleading in that th e majority OT 33 ~··lexican·Amcricans and 28 b I a c k 'i holding so-called "academic positions" are graduate teaching assistants. Only six blacks and six ~1exican·Americans classed in academic positions arc actually rulltime faculty. ~ HaJ! th e minority faculty are in one sub-department -the program in comparative culture. -Only four of the minority professors are tenured . -In all but one employment category -associate professor -rninorities doing the same job that u•hite s do are paid less. -VCI's affirmative action program lacks specific goals and n1eans of enforcement. The l&-1nemb<>r committee ls reported lo be demanding a new vice chancellor be appointed kl oversee affirmative action. The group is said to believe at least 50 percr'nt or new faculty hired nex-t year should be from minoi-ity groups. To improYC promotion opporluilities for the minorities already employed in service positions. the committee is expected to urge training progra ms. Of the Spanish surnan1ed staff presently employed at UCI, 70 percent are .secretaries, operators or s c r v i c e Wcii'kers. About 60 percent of blacks employed by the university arc in similar positions. Oil Grab Plauucd CARACAS fUP l l -A high-level commission began working out details today for taking over all foreign oil <..'Ompanies after the govern m e n t announced plans Thursday night for the nationalization of Venezuela's pclroleu1n industry. ~lic'krfj· Mou.~e Court Order T1~ainer Hit · W eddi1it{ Rites < "Mickey Mouse" and "~1iru1ie Mouse" were getting n'arried in Anaheim today in a real-life ceremony performed by a rabbi. Nine months ago Gail Dissin~er went to work at Disneyland . donned a Minnie Mouse costume and v.·as told to "go find ~1ickey." F'ind Mickey she did. Inspection of Battin Honie to Have to Wait 3 Velticles On 'Bo11nce' .. It was love at first s1~ht." said 22-year-old Steve Berk . who \vorked ls !he cartoon character "Mickey Mouse" at Disneyland. The couple plan to leave Disneyland after their marriage in a wedding chapel. "This is the most Mickey l\1ouse wedding I've ever pl'rforn1ed, ·· said Rabbi Allen Secher SLA Me1'1'1.bers Evade Police In LA Cliase LOS ANGELES (LIP! I -Police and FBI agents tracked down three suspected members of the Symbionese JJibcration Army. kidnapers of Patricia •Iearst. to a small house in " black district today but 11•hcn thev br0kl' into the structure the trio had aiready. fled. A man and 11110 \1·on1en. a!l whit<'. "'ere reported holed up in the building "'hich 1\'as surrounded by more than 75 l.'E! ugc nls and scores of officers armed 1vil!1 guns and tear gas. !Related Story. ·Picture Page SJ Canisters of !he tear ga" 111ere r!rci.I through !he building and. 11•hen there w:.is no n1ovement or reaction fro1n inside. agents <'n!ered the ho1~~e and found lh21t it "'as ctnpty. \\'illian1 Sullivan. head of the Los Angeles FBI offic<'. sa id they fou'ld a mmunition . food , suitcases. \vigs and clothing. '"It indicated the people h21d left \'Cry hurriedly," he said. Suilivan sai.d he believed the suspect.'i might still be in the Los Angeles area. Asked if one or the women might ha\"c bc:ocn 20--vear-0ld Patricia llearst herself. Su Hi van· said. ''There is no evidence she "·as here." Randolph A. Hearst, father of kidnapcd Patricja, said loday she may be in great- er danger because of !tie discove ry of the SLA hideout in Los Angeles . Carpenter Bill Would l11crease Governor's Pav SACRM1ENTO <UPJ I -A bill by &-n. Santa Ana city officials who 1vant ,1 court order to inspect the oflicl'- residence of Supervisor Robert Battin for building code violations will have to \\'alt al least a week. Superior Court Judge Mark Soden said building inspectors never properly asked to inspect the structure at 82.5 N. Ross St "'hen they were turned away by BaUiu <issociate Larry Kirk last week. He said inspecto rs should try again to st udy the dwelling and if they are again turned away. return to his court next week for action. · Assistant Ci ty Attorney James Conkey said the building department will contact Uattin or Kirk sometime today for permission. Ballin held a press confercncl" Thursday afternoon during which he leveled s\vccping charges that the entire episode is an example of persecution n! 1>rominenl county 2;mocrats b ~· Hepublicans. Battin is <1 Dcmocral and the three key city officials involved in l h c affair-building inspector \Yendell Bril. city ·attorney James \Vit hers and fir e c hief Eugene Judd-arc all Republicans. Conkey said Battin's comments are "absolutely unfounded." . He said the mayor of Santa Ana is ;1 Oen1ocrat as is the city 111anagcr and they have more power than any or thl' other city officials invoivf<;I. Bullin, a candidate fo r \,t. (;ovcroor, said much of what he alleged is a 1>!01 against hin1 is connected to his opposition to President Nixon. The supervisor is still figh1ing a court battle to get the assessment on Nixon's San Cle mrntc estate increased. .. J really don't think anyone e\'en knC\\' or cared , about ~Ir. Battin·s actions invol\'ing the President. .. Conkey said. Ballin said he might be willing to allO\\' the ins!X-'(:tion of his property, but \\'Ould -- Dennis Carpenter IR-Nc11•rort Beach ). increasing the Go\'('rnor's pay from $49.000 lo 560.000 a year and providing a simila r 20 perrent boost for the state's other six constitutional officers has -"" advanced in the Senate. The measure ~SB1745 \ "·as approved on a 7·1 vote of the gove rnmental organization committee Thursday and \1·as sent to the finance comrni!tec. Since introducing the measure in February, Carpenter said he has received a bout 200 letl ers from voters opposing the increases. But he sa id the bill was needed out of "logic and equity .. , Effective Jan. 6, 1975. the bill would raise the salary of Attorney Gene ral from $-12.500 to $51.155. r,or Lieutenant Governor, Controller, Treasurer and Superintendent of Public Instruction, the sa lary would go from $35.000 to $42.500. Carpenter said about 50 appointed state officials currently make more snoncy tht1n th e Governor. a situation "'hich he argued should be remedied. challenge in court any cffort by the city 10 force correction of v1ola11on~. \\'hen Battin purchased lhe 0111 ruon11ng hot1sc last year to COfl\'Ct"t it 1ato offices arrd a campaign ht'adquarte rs. it \1·as routinely inspected. Since then hr has moved into the house. The city claims there arl' n111r violations "·hich must be correrlrd for ihe residential use and anotht>r 2ti shuuld bl' corrected before office USt' is legnl. Battin contends the d\velling 1s a k·~a\ nonconforming use and ha s been u~ed i11 1hc past as both a buSiness ancl rt·s1- dcncc. County's D111nps Ope11 Su11cla) s I11 Cleanup Bid Orang<' County Super\'isors ha 1 e <t~recd to open th<' county dumps !his Sunday and on »:lay '.!6 to accornmodalf' s<'vcra\ major community e I ea n u p t·;i rnpaigns. They also strongly hinted they n1ight reopen the dumps on Su~days perman- ently in ac1 ion next 1•:ef'k. !iiunday dump closures 11·rre ordered starting Jan. J as part of an effort to conserve the diesel fuel used by fill: moving eqtttpmcnl 11·hcn pclrolcun1 supplies were short. Th e bon rd has asked for ;1 reassessment of th<' fuel situation next 11·cek and if supplies are back up to par. th e te1n pora ry Sunday du1np openings could be pern1anent. Officials had estirna tcd closure on Sundays saved 17 percent of the fuel normally used by !he equip1n<'nl. In lhc meantin1e . the dump 11 ill be npcn !his Sunday fron1 8 a.m. to 5 p.rn . lor use by the co1nmuni1y cleanup cainpaigns. Blooming MARIGOLDS By JA~' \\'ORTH or 1'111 O•il~ ~llOI 51•11 :\ Jet crashrd 11110 thret' ;novini:: \'Chicles, injuring nine peopk•. 'Ind sent a rnushroom cloud of fl<in1r., 100 frcl into the ai r Thursday at th.;. El Toro ~1arinr­ Corps Air Basf'. The pilot and cre1\•rnan, rapt. \\lil11an1 !l<.1~ cs. 29. and CJll. Ter1·nc<' C'ra\vford 20. bolh of Snnta Ana. parachuted to safely \\•ith minor 1niur1c~. b a ~ r spokcs1ncn said. But fiery '''rcckagc of the att;1ck trainer bounced 250 ice! fron1 1he op<'n field where it hit lo Lan1brrt Road 1\·herc debris nnd flames crashed i!llo th e tl1ree vehicles. :\!rs. Paula Stopper. \\•ife of S~t. ;\l'.ke Stop1)cr. and their infant son \\'ere no""l 10 the Long lieach Naval llospital v.•ith third degree burns and cuts. ThC>y "'er" reported in good condition tod<1y. Sg1. Stoppt.>r 1\•as treatl·d for burns and rtl<'ased. but his ve hicle \1·as demolished. Passengers in the other l\10 vehicles. ~ personal car and a io.larinc Corps base trut'k. "'ere treated for shock and minor burns and 111cre rel('ased. Base spokesmen said the cause of the crash is still not kno1vn and is under in,·estigation. The I p.ni. crash produced 11 spectacular firL' ball and a roar tha 1 jolted n<"arby lll'1ghbors. Jeff Lchn1nn of Costo.1 ~l t•sa. ,, piano . .t\11lei· ('II his v.·ay to an ap1)()i11tn1cnt nc~r the ba sr. said he h:-td just 1urned south 0•1 Jrvinc Boull'\'ard 1vhcn hr sa1v the ji.:t ci r<"ling \01v o\·erhead . .. I l\'.'.lS just lhin king with all thest• planrs and tr;1inces out here how ra re it i5 to have a crash. "'hen the jet came right do1vn in fron1 of me at a ~5 degree ;111gle and 11cver pullL'<i up ,·· Leh1nan reported. .. Thcrt.• \1as :i hug<' ball of fire . like a n111shroom cloud. maybe 100 feet high . II 11'as brilliant orange and black -and the Jt'I just d1s1ntegratL>d when ii hit lht' ground ." he added . Loads of colo r. Ideal.for gardens or flower pols 39~ POP CORN PLANT Grow your own popcorn it's fun STRAWBERRY PLANTS Rf9.. SI.I• .. ,•} INSTANTLAWN ' ·, '/__ , ·',., & b-1 .'61111L , -1/ 1-:" 1rom ~·-.,- : • \J _f / 'r'· .. I Roll out the qeen c:orpet jf' /' ~ ' \ ·"h 1.,,, -00. ~ :('' I . . . . \ '. ~::-Ge;;::• 99¢ ~ 1~0 RoU STOLONS DICHONDRA 14!, SANT A ANA TIF GREEN Plight of Foster . Children ----•HOUSE PLANT DEPT.----.. ~~S,!!,~~.. 4 ,_ $100 Highlights Sunday Sectio11 A mixed bag of topics are wrapped in this week 's issue of the Sunday Daily Pilot. including such issues as the penny pinch, the plight of foste r children, and the need for better trash disposal and recycling. FOSTER ClllLDREN-Their plight is examined by Staff Writer Arthur R. Vinsel who found that there are about 250 such children in .Orange County. children ( Sunday's Best) with no permanent place and no people to really belong to. The feature teads the YOU Section. ' . PENNY PINCll -'111e cent lo nol oo Insignificant lhcle days "llh lho coptjer ·coins being · hi tlUCb ahott 1Upply: Bal\kl are rallonlng i6em and llorea are aoklng cuslomen for lb< corro<I change. The story, by Stall Writer Douglas Frllzoche, It this week 01 SUndlly Special · TAWNG ~Which lm'I such a ~~p llllbi.<I anymore. Dalo s.cDrd al .. \ the Environmental Coalition discusses the need for proper disposaJ or recycling of the rilounds of waste that arc discarded daily-and of the rising profits from such activities. On the Editorial Pages. INSANITY CROWNED - As writer Russel Lee of the New York Times carefuJly documE!nts, unstable and demented men have come to positions of power numerous .times in history and with tragic results. Jl is im()erative, he says, that modern candidates be judged sune by reasonable men-before they are ~ elected. Also an the F.ditorial Pages. HOME ECONOMICS -Some of I h e "ecooomle1" practic:ed by celebrnted political figures are catalogued in ' light• touch Family Weekly cover slory by Frances Spat> Lelghlon. SANFORD'S SON-,J>emood WUson ol the Sanford & Son !!<fies reveals the facl his first rehearsal ball was lb< lamlly balhroom-1111 tap dancing would have dttlroyed the llnoleum In the rest of lilt bow1e-u part ' of TV WEEK'S C<>Yll' •tWY. •PLAMT REMT AL SERVICE For Wedcllncp Grand OpenlllCJs-Partles. etc. I I MARGUERITt DAISIES STRAWIERRY BEGONIA SUPER SPECIAL BUY! AMERICAN JUMBO DELUXE ELECTRI~ BROILER You co111'tfWJt ooywhtn for ltu -SSf.00 THE OHLY TAii.i TOP GIW. WITH IUM WAIMIMS TIAT AMO SAUC'fA ... PW$ JU..-0 sa1 coo•1HG AUA. s39's . •HOME OWNERS Ask About Our LANDSCAPE SERVICE • • ) • 4 J.llf. \ ' . """"• ,,,.., '" • •p1u111hers Bad ~~No Oraers~ Newport Has Gone, Done It ' \VILD BLUE YONDERS: After lots of tumult and shouting, fist-waving, teeth- b'Tlasbing and ear-plugging, Newport Beach has £inally gone and done it. The city has sued noisy jet aeroplanes at Orange County Airport. Well, they didn't e.xactly sue the jets. They sued Orange County government for allo\';ing the jets. I Will not bother you \1·Hh all the niceties contained in Ne\l'port City Attorney Dennis O'Neil's legal ton1e. Suffice to say he covers such things as lov.·-flying jet rackl.'t, air pollution. fuel residues which drift do"·n upon the harbor community, disturbing the ecological balanee of wildlife in and • around the bay and such things as that. Now, the legal action by Newport's municipal government isn't calculated to shut down the airport altogether. AU. THE CITY really ·wanls is to put sorne limits on those pesky jets 11·hi ch have allegedly caused life to become miserable for a segment of the Ne11'port Beach populace. ~1ean\\·hile as jet busif\('ss continued to climb at the county airstrip. fe1v limits \1·er:.e p~t on the businesses dra1vn to the p1.1ce. ' These ha\·e inC'luded a ';\·hole gaggle of finr reetaurants. hotels, busines.sc~. banks and financial institutions. gJs stations, bus Jines. taxica bs. industrial buildings, office CQn1p!exes and you name it. The place has gro1\·n faster than a gold rush can1p. Every time ~·ou go out there by the airport. you get lost because some ne1v buildings have popped up uj)(\n !he landscape. rt1UCH OF TlflS grO\\'th, of CQUTSe , has been within the con fines of Newport Beach. And r~1c city didn 't put any lim itations on this growth. whilst ha ppily l'Yeing the tax 111\ created thereby. Sornebody may try to start one of those chicken-0r-the-egg arguments a b o u t ~row1h around Orange Coun!y 1\irport. Like. did the businesses all come because the jets v•ere there. or did the jets come because the businesses are there? History, ho1,·evrr, ,,·i ll record th ul the jets got there first: ASSUME FOR A moment that Ne l't'port's jct suit is e1·e n more successful than ls \\•i!dly dreamed. And they chase all the jets a1\·ay. Nol'r' we're going to have !his en1pty landing strip. empty ter1n inal building an d vacant parking lot to deal with . Nor to mention the fact that we have vii 1his business enterprise surrounding :in <iirport that isn't going to be an •1l rr10rt any more. There ls no need for panic. 'You simpl y have this giant complex built up that looks like !he businesses \vhich no\v surround Disneyla nd up in ArH1heinL Only th ing is. you don't have anv f)isneyland. · TIJE SOLUTION is obvious. After t!'>c airport shuts down. gt'! the llisney people do1\'ll here, give them the airstrip. ·treminal buUding and parking lot, and !ell them to do something 1vith it to keep utl the surrounding businesses thriving. Tllis 1vill sol\'e the \\'hole problem if the Disney people \\'ill just do one thin;;: Keep the pJ;_ice <iuiet. ~'AS~IINGTON IAPI -Not eve11 a direct order from President Nixon \\·ould ha ve made the break-in of Daniel Ellsberg's p~chiatrist's office legal. says Special Watergate Prosecutor Leon Jaworski. And, -he added, none of the ml·n c~rged With ronsplra<')' in the case have been able to claim they had any sueh order or any authority other than "a general mandate to tnvestigate-Jeaks." Jaworski made the assertions Thursday in a 62-page memorandu1n asking U.S. District Judge Gerhard 1\. Gesell to tuni down a dernand by lhe l'liX defendants for a hugl' amount of "national security" n1ateriat f1Unl the Puget So1111d Area Jolted Bv Te111bJor • From \\'irr Servl<'tS SEAiTLE -An earthriuake has jolted the Puget Sound Area. seismologists at the University of \Vashington reported. The quake registered 4.5 on the Richter Scale. It s epicenter \\'as belir\'ed to ha\'e been just east of Port To"11send. There \\'ere no reports of damage. It occurred at 6:04 a.01. Thursday. e /Hail C/1a11ges l 'rget/ \\' ASHTNGTON -Th'C cost of ma Hing a first-class letter ...,·ould be trinuned bv a penny \\·hile rates for S<'CO!ld, third and fourth-class mail would go up under a [ ...... _1N_s_H_o_R_T_ .. _· ~) proposal by the staff of the Post.al Rate Con1n1ission. The rate for n1ailing a first-class letter recenll y was raised by t\1·0 cents to JO centoh 1:hc _CQJ.J101is~ian.s;tBfr flQ'\V-1.hio.ks il _ should · !>e nine cents. Post catds. v.·hich l't'ere raised tv•o cents to eight cents in March, \\'Ould be cut back to six cents undf'r the prooosal. but airmail "'ould retain its l\\'o-ccnt increase lo 13 cents. I' ·"••nth~r 1ltn111i1• Leak RICHLAND. \Vash. -Another leak in !he undergroillld 1~·asl e storage tank s a1 the Hanford ato1nic \\'Orks has been discovered . and this one amounted to some 2.000 ga!lons of radioactire liquid. Officials said Thursday that monitorin g equipment alerted them that a 2~·ear· old tank v.·as leaking May MUt they lrere unable to confirm it until no\\·. • ,\.e1cs Bi/I Foiled TRENTON. N.J. -Lcgislt1tion gi\·ing assemblymen and senators t h e op1:mtunity to resPQnd to ne\\·spaper editorials failed to pass the New Jersey Senate Thursday night. The bill \l'as opposed by a number of senators \\•ho termed the measure. in one la\vmaker's 11·ords. "a su btle intimidation of the press." e Conrls Gel 1•01cer \\'ASI-IJ NG TO!\ -The Senate has voted lo preserve largely intact !he power of federal courts to order school busing deemed essential to end segregated schools. That \\'as the final outcome of the latest renev.'al or the bitter busing controversy on the Senate floor. It required eight roll calls and a lot of parliamentary n1aneuvering to reach that outcon1e Thursday. e TroJ1sit Slrike Ends CH ICAGO (UP!l -The Chicago Transit Authority and the Amalgamated Transit Union rea<;hed tent at i v e agreement earl.v today that ended a 21 ~ hour strike. the first complete transit shutdo"'n ever in the nation's second largest city. The strike was the first authorized against the CTA in 55 years and threatened to cut off transportation for two 1nillion paying passengers per day. \\'hitc H~ to be used at their trial next n1onth. That issue. and others raised by the clefendant:1. v.111 be argued in four days of court hearings next y.•eek. The prosecutor said "all evidence of national ecurity motivation is lrrtlevant" Jn a case involving interference with cons~tu tional rights against uhreasonable search and seizure. "lt was a carefully mooSIJ'ed escalation of government infonnation gathering that began with an unsuccessful effort 10 obiain the ·necessary' psychiatric data rrom Dr. Fielding through an FBI interview," Jaworskl said. Dr. Le\\is Fielding, a Beverly Hills psychiatrist. had be~"'fl treating Ellsberg VPt T.i ..... 010 Ii id nap l'iclhn i\lrs. Ardis Graham, 48. a \Vav- erly, ~linn., bank officer has been released after being kid- naped for 36 hours. Her bus· ba..."'l(1 .. 2!£(" ~~ban~~.!).f;f.ice!I>: .paid.. $5 0.000 ranson1. President Flies To Key Biscayne ~'ith Wife, Aides KEY BISCATh"E. Fla. (AP \ -Tn a mo\-e rezniniscent of the late Lyndon B. Johnson . President" Nixoo is here for a loog v1eekend stay that he kept secret untll f\\l> hours before departure. Nixon new to his bayside compound Thursday aflemoon with 'Aife Pat, daughter Tricia Cox. staff c h i e r Alexander i'f. ~laig Jr., Press Secretary RonaJd L. Ziegler and Appointments Secretary Stephen B. BuH. He is exp<'C!e<! to remain here until at least Sunday. ~1any \\7hite House reporters heard Tuesday that the President \\·or.lid make the trip, but aides did not make the announcement until early 11lursday afternoon. .JohM>o, as president, often kept his plans for travel tD his native Texas secret until the last possible moinent, agJiling t.hat if he made an early announcement and did net I e a v e Washington. ne\\'Smen \\'OUld speculate that a crisis had arisen. 2 BOYS STREAK -BROTHERHOOD PROVIDEi\CE , R.I. (AP) -Two male pupils, one black and one white, ran nude across a crowded plaza at Central Jiigh School in y.·hat they said v.'as a ''brotherhood streak." "They said they did il to imp rove racial relations at Central High." sa id Principal Edmund P. ~1 iley after the hl'O tu med ,themselve~ Thursday. il<I iley said he would take "disciplinary action appropriate to the offense,'' which he said might mean suspension. Tornadoes ·Hit 4 States Pro11erL)' D<11naged; Residents Escape l11jur)' Tet11pe1·11111re .. l\lhi•\Y A!l•ntd 6 0,ton BvlfflO C~ar!otlt (hiCIQO ~n~inn11H ~,e111ne1 •11111 DM~~' De!'O•I 1-lnnorvru Kanws (>!~ Li s V<tC11• Hio'i LOW P(O I~ !• _;1 ~J 6~ · 1. .., .11 , ~~ ~1 e~ ti " .,, ,~ ~~ ~ i> 11 0£t'1W~~r~Jrct 11€11''1y ol toe Oa ly p,fot is gu.irar1tt~d tlorUr.fr~r: 11 ,.. • 1111 hn 1111 ,.. ~ S·.11 ,.11. al anf yow tth wfl lit 11r.p1 11 r• taai are UkH ~nlll l 31, .. S,,twNy Jlld ~. It y• • Ill rtttin yOll t"7 'Y 9 1.a ~lll'dly. • I '-~ •. tJI ... "" ... ·~ tD r• Cats m tllirii 1•~ !1111. Trlt::times Mos! Orlf!JI CNlltr llu1 .•. 642·'321 ""~"'st llllrtitttaf llKt ... """""" • ""' 140·1220 So Cllltllt. ~Ir-llK~ $111 Jll .. C.tr• DIM '•L kl•-t""' .... " 412-4420 " n " .. " " n ,, " . " " ~ " " u .. i!' » .. u .. !I H ~ " ·" . " ' = ,..,..,., ~1.-,JN l!...!....!JSHOW '7"';'l ~ "' ~~1tOW1•s ·~ 11 ow inland valle.,,, In lhe ~ In the movntalns and In 11\t UO(lltr 70s fO fhe low '10s In Ille dt .. rll. o~ernioht tows w111 ra"!ll from 1n.e ias at th~ be1clle& lo !ht JOs and ..OS In !r>e m1Wnlfins. IJ.S. Summar!# ' . I ' • -then under Indictment (Qr teal!ing the Pentagon Papers -when White House agents. entered his office the night of Sept. 3, 1971. The defendants lndude John D. Ehrllclunan, the former Nixon domestic adviser who had charge of the White House investigative unit known as the "ptumhers," and Charies W. OlllllJI, former special counsel to the President. ·"The coospirators cho6e lo forego the necessary adherence to j u d i c i a I processes and instead decided for themselves that their lnv..tlgative needs outv.>tighed Dr. Fielding's interests in the integrity of his-p<ofesslonal office and bis coofldentlal files," Jaworski's brief said. Personal Use , "Conceivably a judge or magistrate might have agreed: but the point is that the conspirators nwde sure that nn oppor1unity for judicial consideration · arose. lt ls hard to in\3gine a ITIQre patent and culpable violation of the Foorth Amendment than this care!uliy plotted oecret nlghttlmo brealt-m.'• The Prosecutor nol<!d that President Nlxon said "I did not authorize and had no knowledge of any illegal means" to be wed in gatl>erlni lnfonnation and that he "would have disapproved had they been brought to my attention." Added Jaworski : "Not one of the defendarb has attempted to contr'!dicl the President's assertion." Illinois Bar Approves Legalizing Marijuana CARBONDA LE, Ill. (API -The Illinois State Bar Association's outgoing president has announced that the group's board of governors is recommending legalization for son1e marijuana use. 1•1 so doing he conceded that he once sinoked 1narijuana himself . \Villiam P. Sutter of cliicago told a ne\\'S conference Thursday that the board \Vas recommending legalization for personal use and for possession or marijuana. He was then asked if he had smoked the substance. .. Yes, a number of years ago," Sutter replied. ' "f DON'T SMOKE it as a matter or course," he said. "I tried it once on an r ~xper~mentai basis and i,t didn't do ah} thing, plus, minus or at all." But Sutter said he does not ildvocate that everyone smoke marijuana. He said his IS-year-old da1J8hter and 16-year-<>ld son told him they did not sinoke marijuana and did not approve of its use. "I believe Ulem and I'm glad," he said. "I hope they don 't smoke cigarettes. I don 't, though l used to. ''PERSON.ui\', I DON'T think any of those things are good for you, and obviously, the fewer things like that you do. the better off you are," he said. The recommendation of the board to abolish simple possession and use prohibitions passed "b,y a \\'ide margin," Sutter said. He said that a second resolution to consider regulating marijuana use by licensing its distribution passed by a so1newhat narrower margin. The resolutions approved by the 26- member Board of Governors now go to the Bar Association's: 120 -member Assembly, which meets Jwie 16-19 in Lake Geneva, Wis: The resolutiOO said tnat ··bealu~rtne individual and social costs resulting from existing laws punishing personal use or simple pos·session substantially ouru·eigh any benefits derived, federal, state and local lav.·s punishing personal use or si mple possession should be repealed ." --.; ~ Ul'I TtltPhott No Case A judge today dismissed in- dictnient charging Sen. Edward Gurney. a, Republican men1- ber of the \Vatergate commit- tee. with an election law Viola· tion on campaign contribu· tions. Judge said indictment was based on law that was un- constitutional. Vte1i11e Device Being Recalled WASHJNGTON (API -Up lo 200.000 recently approved copper intrauterine blrth-contro! devices <IUD) are being ';\-'ithdra\\'Il from the market because of concern over possible i m p r o p e r packaging. TI1r Food and Drug Admini stration said Thursday that G.D. Searle & Co. of Skokie, Ill .. has begun recalling its new CU-7 devices fo1lowing complaints from physicians that parkages appeared to" have-~eciive" seois : wlU ti1ic Wt(:i\r:t: assurance of sterility. Searle has 120,000 of the devices in ilo; ov.·n y.·arehouses, but an estimated 150,000 to 200.000 are in the hands of doctors and medical supply .houses, the FD.<\ said. " • at Fashion Island Saturday WORLD FOOTBALL LEAGUE STARS * Kermit Johnson (UCLA} I * James McAlister (UCLA) * Booker Brown (USC} Meet, greet. and receive your free personallY autographed pic- ture of th.ese stars. Br.ing your camera and pose with the pros. Saturday between· 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. On The Mall at Fashion Island. Island . Be sure to see the California Sun Wagon. FASHION j ISLAND ' NllWPOJlT CllNTl:Jl • Paciflc Coast Highway -Behw8" Jamboree and MacArthur • • • . ' ,, ' ·~· " • • .. , • r ff • r --- DAO;y PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE ' Listened ·to· Reas ·on · What could have been a serioua block to passage of a 17~nt high school tall increase liu b<en avoided by cooperative clialollJO ~Wte!I; Assem~lyman Kenneth Cory (D-O,~n OtoY!ltAAd·J11nes ~ell, Ocean View School D!s~ct supetil)it!ndent.• · ,., The l.sSue Involve! wu Ulliflcat.il!!l'and a vow Cory had made•to oppose all legiS1ation dealing with the cur- rent five-way plan, a •flan he bell~vea ls nol beneficial to Ocean View and Westmln~ Sl:hool Dislricts. This pledge of opposition would have' affected a bill introduced b'y Assemblyman Robert Burke (R· Huntington Beach) to ensure tbaAit the 17<ent lax is approved by voters in June, it w~d be legally binding on all districts when unification occurs. This is legislation needed no matter what unifica· lion plan is adopted. Without it, Ocean "View voters would have been reluctant to support the badly needed lax. Cory listened to a reasoned plea from <:;arvell and reversed his position on this legislation, prob.ably ensur- ing its passage. It was a good move on his part. Crime-fighting Tool We call it Secret Witness, a name that identifies the purpose of a new crime-fighting feature launched this week in the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley edi- tions of the Daily Pilot. Through guaranteed anonymity for informants, we hope to elicit information on certain major crimes in this area which so far have baffled local police. That in - formation . supplied in total secrecy, may help police fol· low new leads they might not ordinarily find. Cash re· wards may sfur individuals to volunteer lnformaUon they woOld no otherwise offer. . ' Wllbout tho help O! the HunUngton Beach and Foun- tain Valley Chamberl.of Colllll\erce, w<i could not offer this program. They fiave given full support and ralsod the mo or the cash awards. And local poHce depart· ments e giving excellent cooperation In providing in· fo tion for the Secret Witness stories. -Secret Witness-has-proved to-be an effective crime- lighting tool In other cities. \Ve hope it will become a valuable community service here. Home for Seniors Huntington Beach councilmen took swift action last week to. give local senior citizens a headquarters for their various activities. They turned over the rec- reation center at 17Lh Street ,and Orange Avenue as a temporary home, and vowed to try to build a new $600,· 0.00 senior citizens hall. The council action ended months of city staff waf· Tiing over the issue. Councilmen. exasperated by innoc- uous staff reports. finally decided to put an end to all the debate over the potential use of Me1norial I-lall. It won't be used because it isn't safe. For once the council gave the proper e1nphasis to its leadership role, refusing to be put off by lhe con- tention of the recreation and parks department that half the hall would be enough for a temporary seniors' fa· ciHty. ' Senior citizens have been given the swift, positive action they deserve. And the council impressed a good many observers with its no-nonsense decision. !\-lore problen1s sho uld be resolved in such a refreshing and positive manner. J• H 'H'ell, so much for the Temperance Crusade. Two-way Gap • Ill Lessons of Wate1·9ate ·· Co111111unieation \VASHINGTON -The stony barrier o( noncommunication between the White House and Republican leaders in Congress, an irilportanl Ingredient in tbe· \Vatcrgate tragedy, 'A'as raised high last \Vl!Ck against an eleventh-hour effort to confront President Nixon "'ith reality. Rrp. John .Anderson of Illinois, chairman of the House Republican conference , wanted to discuss the brutal facl s of lif·! at 111urs· day's \\'hite l~oui;,. mret1ng hctwc,.n BL·· public::in lc~Hlc:-~ und r-.tr, ~ix1111. '\ndrr- .wn's prnpus;il· 1n· forn1 th:: !'rr•s1dc11l Iha! h1" t1 cni:il nf addi1tonal ta;>t:!S to lhe spc1.:1:i l prnse1..u- 1or and 111'' Houst> Jutl iciarv Committee had no Republican backing· :ind eoutd only end in his des· !ruction. Hut no othc'r Republican leader bar.ked Anderson cvf'n thou gh most agreed with his senlin1ents. They took the position that the President alone should set lhe agenda for White liouse meetings -a \'iew held particularly st rongly bv Sen. Hugh ·&oil o• Pennsylvania. Having ··fired the gun that started the Republican stampede against ~ h e· President" fi n the "'Ords or ooe biller White llouse aide l. Seott Yi"anted no embarrassing personal encounter with f\.tr. Nixon. mE RESULT \\'as a surrealistic rnoming in the Oval Office. Nobody n1enlioned the nation's great poliUcal eris.is. Although Mr. Nixon in private has raged at Scott for his lethal criticism of the White House transcripts, the two men sat side-by-side politely through a dreary economic briefing. . Anderson feels Wat ergate might well ha ve been avoided had ~tr. Nixon taken Republican leaders into his conridence. But fpr their part, the leaders' reluctance to confront the President iildicates ( EVANS ·NOVAK J noncommunication is a t~way street. Both sides can share the blame. MIDEAST PITFALL \\'hlle Secretary of State llenry Kissinger strives for an Arab-I srarli settlement. a move is gathering force in the Senate to make American aid 10 Egy pt dcipcndent oo Cairo·s opening the Suez Canal lo al l nations equally -meaning lsr;,ie\. If such an a11H·11dn,ent actuall~· denied future U.S. aid to fo~g-ypl unless CairOf plOOged to permit Israeli flasships to lransver!':e thi; canal. Egypt would never agree. That could sour the Washington· Cairo romance. Even talk of suc h an ament.hncnt 1 no\Y actively considered b~· Sen. Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut and others I chills the state Deparllnenl. 1\etually. Israel has privaltl~· told ll)e t:.S. it 11·ill acce pt Egyptian <1greemcnl to permit ISraeli cargoes !but not Israeli nagship.s) through the canal. Egypliun president An1\·ar Sadat \fa~ given private assuranCi!s of that. But if the strongly prJsrael Congress attached an· amend1B:~t emaoding free passage for Israeli agships, the powerful pro-Israeli lo here . \VOuld scarcely oppose it. To the Contrary. whatever private agree111ents I11rael has made with Kissinger. a !t1rong vole in Congress for Ribicoff 's pro~sal "'ould be viewed in Israel as a major gain in the high-stakes politics reaching a climax in the Middle East. WlllTE HOUSE REVENGE Vindictive politics of the Nixon White House surfaced again in a gratuitous. gro.ssly inaccurate attack by ex-\Vhile House personnel chief Harry Flemming on a young Republican candidate for Congress who ct>mmitted the cardinal sin Dea r Gloon1y , .. Crll.O--·· _..,_,,_ Does it dishonor a lapel flag to have someone 'o\'ith questionabl e ethical standards "·ear it? O.J. CilOOmJ Gui tOmm•nh ••• Wbmlrted by rQde" 11id CIO •• ~rlty re/I.ct I'll• .-1ews of '"' -i.p-r. S.nd 'Mr "' itttV• lo Gloom' 0111. OfllY PllOI, of not being blindly loyal to the President. • John Robinson West qu.it in disgust in mid-1969 after severti months as 11 mioor \\'hite House ai de. Returning to Pennsylvania. West began preparing a Republic<1 n politica l career. T \VO weeks <J'~n. ! \\"cs1 ;11 age '!'I ··••as frontninncr ; 1 lretclit1J.! tht rt''{U\ar or~ an i ! a t (on C'<Hl<lidalc • in !hf' Republican prinrJry .. 1\'1·1ion fo:· a co:1f!'ressional seat from Philadelphia's Rt•ptiblican suburbs. Rut \\'es t"s pos ition was undernlined \1·hen Flcmn1ing attacke<t hiri:i as a ··1\'alking disaster ... who was all out for glory and self-aggrandizement" in \\"ashingtbn. Fle1nming told l h c Philadelphia Inquirer tbat West held "an unpa id position·· and did nothing at the \\'hite House. POLITICIANS here 1verc arnazed that Flemming, a political protegc of John r-.litchell. "·ould interfere in a Republican primar~· election. rar more serious. f'lemming's vengeful assault was based on 1vholesalc errors of fact . West was not "unpaid'' but on the payroll of the Republican Nalion;il Committee and was assigned to the \\"hite House after Mr. N ix on 's inauguration. He was not "fi red '" in r-..1arch 1969 but resigned in June. Ii i:; former boss. national comn1ittee politil'al education director Ray Hu1nphre~1s, described him to us as a "resourceful , enrrgetic, ambitious yount,C leader'' of the type needed to rebuild the shattered Republican party. Flemming's attack 1\'DS one 111orc exa mple of the polities of 1•eugeancc played by \Vhite House insiders against an\'onc ""ho refused to toe the line in the pre.Watergate glory days of ~lr. Nixon's all-powe rfu l White House staff. A Literary Event of Sig·nifican<;e One of the n1ost important literary ~------------ events of this or any other season was ( J the pub tica tioo last week of a toog-ART •HOPPE awaited work dramatically entitled "Recorded Presidential Conversations" (Government Printing Office; 1308 pp; 11 $12.25: Expurgated). confused by the tangled u•eb of plqts and While some reviewers will see this as sub-plots. But those who persist through simply another oral history or the OOhind~ to the unsurprising end will be rewardud the-stairs-at-tt>e'..Whtte House variety. with new truths that SO enlighten tRe and others will , dis-mind. miss lt a~ a t1wd11 THlii BASIC plot Is s I m ~J t yet myttery, ~ to theSe innovative. The protagonist, a ted tired old eyes It is a mlddl04&ed ueci>Uve klentlfied oo as work ol major pro-"P,".is surprla!>d to dJscover his al portlom (8 x tO • %~ assistlnts are not plottlnjJ agatns\ . lnobeo; I !bl ; paper-11111<Ad, UMi)' are ploUfni lor hl0>.~ bac\1. n' 11 by the S&mc .I. 1111 p..,.,,, is how to protect : is popular author who " asilslanl'I and blmJelf from the viii s r«t11tly bl0<ight "' hwastltlaton. wbo are purauJng them I. the Jnstanl bestseller, "PresldenUal Tu Event piles upoo evenl We feel lhe Returns .• , to which th is Is. in a way, a enemy closing in from all sides. ' .equel. But thl1. It cannot be galnsekl, .Sli>wly, gradually, In one of; the l?IOl!t I! his magnum opus. brilliant dl111eCtlon1 of a man•, ICRJI In For the discerning reader will find here EnglW> literature, we ,.. P ' ~j 1 dee~ly pen u r a ti n g psychological • cha ra cter erode before our very .eY'!i: drama that l!Ol!S io the verf beart ol lbe. ' tmlU lbialiy, 1" ooe drall\lltle ecene, ~ human conllltlOQ. kpealta desperat.iy ol perJ1111, btlberf'· II la not, one lllould be warnlod, light and other method• of obstruttlllg justlcei I fare. Many a.~er will be pot ol! 1\1' Talk.aboU~OOrlan Gray! the llrean>Okonlclouaness s t y I e, TI!RPIJGHOIJT TI!f; 111ort movtt lhe remlnlsctnt, ol "lJl1aes." Olhcra wilt be tragic figure ol )'OUDI D. Al first, e.,. • hitn as the 111ost )o,val of all the aide s. ahnosl a son to P. But then he is revealed to have been one of the plotters. Thus he makes the agoni7.ing decision to bt.llray P to save hi s ov.•n skin . ln revenge, P atte1npts to n1akc IJ the scapegoat inslead of J.M .. a sei.:ondar.v figurl' whom he had originally pi;.1nned lo blunie or. : . But let us not destroy th<; suspense by rcrculing loo many of the plots. Suffice it to say that many, incibding doubl~ uc:rosllc fans. will be richly rewarded by the challenges presented. IF THE WORK suffers-(rom anv fl<.l\v, it is the dialect of the cburactcrs. Typica l perhaps, is P saying. "Because \l'e can't -f've got -if the U.S. Attcmey's Office and. ah. , . " Clarity suffers. Vet much or the authenUclty would be lost II 'the chara¢ters spoke plain English. . '1:'he author has also seen flt to delete expletives such as, 'PY!$umabl)', •lgolly," "gee'' and "oh1 fudge" for fear, Oddly enough, of olfendlnJ hlSJ•adtrs. IM these are mlnqf crJlie)sms. 'l'h<re is DO que.stion we hive here in lrn.por• tint work by a best-sellinf .. uthor. And ... can't help feeling he has a veat deal more to -say, ~..,, Let .. hope we hear from him again _.. " • I Let's ·Look at Ourselves .;..----· -~··-~-·-~ ... ~---.....;.,.-----,,.... ---------------.,,,~ devl·!~i'i;;1c~· 01i li1;~ciiQ01s,"Uie· necT:~ To the Editor: I \\Tile these words from a perspective cf prejudice and pain. Prejudice at having ne\'er liked our President, fUchard r-.-i. ~ixon : pain a.t enjoying lhe present plight of one J have never liked . I feel good about chickens wbo seem to be coming hotne to roost in connection \\'ilh r-.tr . Nixon. I am pleased that justice i3 still being se rved. Yet I remain troubled by a numbPr of questions 1\·h:ch I address lO mysel f. DOES Mi::. NiJ:on's insensitivity to others justify my lack of sensiti1·ity to him, as a person? Does my pleasure 11t his seemingly justined plight render me somehow vicariously unaccountable for my O\li'll secret and silent moral imperfections'! Assuming l can convince nlyself of the justification for enjoying his ordeal. what happen s to my humanity if I allow such gloating ·to occur? \Ve pride ourselves on being a nation of la1v, order. and justice. La1vs have been broken; order has been shaken: justice has been obstructed. Persons have been treated as pawri;s, objects, things to be manipulated and, used to further Mr. .Nixon's ends. Mr. Nixon seemingly fails lo appreciate the severity of these blun- ders in interpersonal relations. YET, I v.'onder. Is not the v.•ay "'e t,.eat our wives, our husbands. cur children, our parents, our associates, and even our enemies of equivalent moral "'Orth to !he underlying evils of \\I a te r g a t e ? Qualitatively, if n:it quantit.atively. I bel ieve that each of U5 ~hares 1nora1ly in ~lr. Nixon 's hwn an f:i ilings as revealed in the tape transcripts. \\fhenever we lend to treat others as objeels lo be 1nanipulatPd in order to serve our O\~ll nf'ed f1>r self-aggrandizen)ent. l.i1cn \IC give up the privilege of self-righteous .indignation and hypocritical gloating over any oUier person's failings -e\.·en ~I r. Nixon's. .Justicu n1u:.! I e served, and I believe it 1ri\I be v.·ith God's help. Yet I also believe that !he ultimate importance 0 r Watergate l\'il\ not be the fact of justice served . l111l the \\'ay ~ as inJividuals rc11ct to justice as it is being served. Thr 1noral measure of us as a nation will not ullima tuly be the succcssrul adjudication or .~Ir. Nixon, but the lesson" 11·e learn from this experience aboul our ... tl\·es and the m;.inner in \\'hich \\'C, t'a. lreat ethers. RABBI BERNARD P. Kl~G Nur s i11g lina ge To the Editor: It was with a great deal ol interest that I read the front page of your paper date(j i\l:iy 9. It included a picture of a young nurse in uniform from llunlington Beach IJ1tercornmunity l~ospital. She. was posed, olJviously so111ewhat uncomfortably, on lho Jo.nee of> a sports figure, and was purported to suggest that the p\lhllc should come in for blood pressure checks. THt-: CO~CEPT of the reporter and plt0tographer with respect to the image or nursing "·ns qui1:· clear. I would question their judgn1ent in doinl{ their slOry in this ma1mer. I would •lso quealion the judgntcnt of the edilon in llk.'Orporatlng ma~crial as deprecatinr of the nursing profession ~to 1 be newspaper. I fL'CI, as a Professional nurse, lhat the Dally fllot owes nursing a J>Jbllc apology . You may wonder why I don't advocate 1.-CMure for the nurse lnvolv~. when her cooperation ls appa~t. Sbe ls obviously ypung and unlnfonn~ u fo profes•lonal behavior. and was quit• apparently acting under the direction of your news team. ---W.E In nuralng have worked d111tent1~ over the years to devaie the standards MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Normally, writers sliould co1lvey their 111essages in 300 words or less. Tlte right ro conde11.se letters to fit space ur eliminate libel is reserved. All let- rers must include sig11ature and mail- i11(1 (l(ldress but nnn1es may be wit/1- lield on request if sitfflcient reason is apparent. Poetry will 110£ be pub- lished. of practice and the qu<ility of nurses. Undignifying CO\'erage s11ch as yours dOC'sn't clo rnuch to enhance either our public image or reward us ln our effort<; to serve the people in the prevention or treatment of illnesses. GRAYCE M. ROESSLER. R.N., M.A. Instructor, Professional Nursin~ Golden West College 1Uisi11terp re1ed To the Ed II or : rr Women's Lib needs yet another boring hi storical example , particularly Biblical, it at least should not commit the sin of omission. J refer lo Ms. Berger's article, Churches Once R e c o g n i z e d Equality, May 13. The oft-quoted se ntences of Ruth, l\Vhither thou goest, I will go ... etc.) were not directed to her husband I who 1vas dead) but to her rnother-in-law, Naomi. However, in the article. it comes off as being another put-down, " ... how a woman should be ... submissive and dependent. •• " Unless Ms. Berger meant that this is an lxample of how we sijould acquiesce to our mothers-in-law. it is most nlisleading in the context of the story. NAN KLOSTERMAN Build Oceall View To the Editor: Yile put oor heads in the sand and refu sed to see the need to pass bonds to build Ocean View High in 1967 and in 1963 \\'hen it could have been built for approximately $8 million . Even 1vith the 1970 bond the price was only S8.5 million. By 1973, we recognized our need but the bond was for $27 million to build two high schools, at $13.5 million each. NOW, we have the opportunit.v lo build one school. However, inflation has pushed the 1974 construction cost (we own the site) to $14.S million. We can't afford to gamble on solving our overcrowding problems with a November unificaUon issue which, at this time, appears to be doomed to failure. It's questionable that It will even appear on the ballot. Let's build Ocean View High now! Vote YES on Proposition 11. School MARll.YN A. McLAIN PAUL E. McLAIN P ia1111lng Is K ey To the Edit•" Recent concern about development in Hunl.lngt.on Harbour has called public aUenUon IO the planning tools that con be Uled by the city to manage growth in "'ch a way that Huntington Beach will continue to be a desirable place ln which to live. Cl11ZEN8 are asldna that the city take Into ,.consideraUoo 1he tmpact of • I l'\Jnsidcr :-.1·1 srn1c a11d other stand i-l rds >1·hcn n1ak.i11g planning decisions: the possibility of ~u si ng downzon in,g. rezoning. op<>n-space zoning and pcrtincr:t $!\11ation~. Concurrl'nl with this intt'rest in using the planning p<>\\·e rs or our cily to manage growth, we arc hearing ru1nors of an impending change in our planni n~ romn1i~on. The planning commissionrrs threalt'ncd \\'ilh teinoval are the 1 rry ones \\ Ji,1 have shO\\'TI concern and niade rv<·ry t•florl to use this planning po"·er 10 mitigate the impact of gTO\\o'th on our ciLy. Citizens have every right to ask if this impending change represents a change in the philosophy of our city. The next ,,,.o years '''iii call for decisions that \\'ill have irretrievable effect on Huntington Beach. Such issues as the redevelopment of the downtown and development of adjacent areas: ordinances detennining the use of high rise: aMexation and pl;ins for Bolsa Chica will be di scussed and resoh'ed. \Ve have an adopted gro"1h policy which is meaningless \1'ithout implementing action . rnE PHILOSOPJIY of our city \\•ilh regard to planning decisions during these crucial years wilt be the key to the future of our city. We have the ri~ht to know "·hat that philosophy will be. RE. FINLEY Llce11si11g Cuts To the F.ditor : Your editorial of May 8 regarding licensing of cats touched only upon the nlost superficial aspects of the problem. It is so easy to pull the emotional plugs every time a freedom must give way to the inexorable and irreversible fact of overpopulation -both human and animal. TIIE EASY \\'a,v out. as sugges ted by your editorial. i<; t:> \.,,ail -and hope for a solu1ion tl1at 11 ill please everyone. 1\-lany of us \l'h'l ei1rrish our feline friends and reel that fair treatment for cats is 11a.v O\'erlluc . have concluded that licensing is a lir~t step in according cats equal value 11ilh dogs . It is a very small start lo1rard fl'ducing the pitiful noocl or un1~antcd kittens and cats constantly pas.<;inc: tl)rough the death chambers of our pouncis. '''e \Yould hope you r ediloria1 policy \\'ould help us to be strong eooug.h to face a humane problem and start to solve it now: there is no more time to "wait alld see''! RUTH FRANKEL Presidenl, Animal Assistance League of Orange CoWlty OIANGl COAST nAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vttd, hl>Uth~ Thomas K eevil, Editor Barbara Krtibith EditorioL Page Ed itur Thf' edilorial paire of the Daily Pik>l &<.'cits to _i,[lform Md 11tlmu.late readers b)' ptfienUrw on th ls pq:e dfVerte •commentary'on tople1 of i~ lft'Ht by l)'!Klicatfd oolumniatt and cll"loonlsa, by providina-a forum for readtta' vlew1 •nd by ptf!ftltlng thls TifWIP&ptt't op1nlocur and Ideas on current topb. :¥ ertllorlll oplnlont ot lhe Dally Pilot appear only ln 1he tdltorl&l oolumn ac !he. lop ot lhc J>lle. Optnton. e~pmsed by the ca. unutist:s and cartoonh1ll! 11tll.1 ltllf't wrlten att thrir .JWn anJ no ~too tntnt of their vin'I by ,h~ OallJ Pilot ~ be lnl<md. Friday, lay 17, 1974 • I --· •• • .. oU/. ffl!Q' J.I, J.'f/4 DAILY PILOT IS CALIFORNIA l 11 n1ate Will Attend Son.' s Final Rit.es Quenti11 Violence Rain pant SAN QUENTIN (UPI) - San Quentin's 3,000 inmates were kept locked In their cells today in an effort to end a rash of violence and insure Ule safety of the convicts. One convict. was stabbed to death in a recreation yard Thursday and a short time later 13 inmates engaged in a knife fight in the adjustment center, a special facility for troublesome inmates. Just after the general lockup \\-dS ordered late in the day, another inmate was SOLEDAD !UPI I A convict was given permission ( BRIEFS ) Thursday to atlend the funeral of his 16-.vear-old son, \\ho ._ ________ _. died "'ilhout kno"'ing his father had paid him a last visit. State Correction Director Raymond ProcU11icr grantOO the furlough to Ph i I i p ri.1acchiarella , 35, to atU!nd the funeral Saturday of his son Leonard, who died Tuesday of a rare kidney disease at the University of California Medical Center in S a n .t-Tancisco. The permission came fron1 Procunier after the ,,,.arden 's office at the California training facility re j cc led 1·1acchiarella's appeal for the trip. Before Leonard died. he told other relatives that he "·anted to see his father. Prison officials granted the request. but by the time J\ .. 1acchiarella arrived at h!s son's bedside . the boy had slipped into a coma. Rev. Simon R. Gagnon, the , -r~ !'~~i.I). ;:nl•lnl~rJ>rl 10 act as an escort to the funeral near Sau J~. ._ 4 Indicted In 'Zebra' Murde1-s stabbed twice in the east bl9Ck during the dinner movement. 1\nd in the same section a convict "fell or was pushed" from the fourth-Ooor tier. a spokesman said. Both suffered only minor injuries. Officials said there have been 10 incidents of \'iolence in !he past 36 hours. e Slo11ford Stril<e STA~FOHD (AP\ Stanford· University President Richard Lyman says attorneys will seek a cow-t order today limiting picketing by nearly 1,000 ca1npus workers \\·00 struck Monday for higher \t.'ages. Lyman told a (acuity meeting Thur.iday night the decision to seek a temporary restraining order came after about 40 pickets delayed delivery of hot meaJs to Stanford University f>.1edical Center· patients for about an ·nour .. --.. .,, .. " ... e Rebel Guilly SAN DIEGO (AP) Barbara P. Hutchinson, a self~ styled "tax rebel " and author of the arguments against three bond measures that w i l l appear on next month's st.ate ballot. pleaded guilty to three crimin1ll offenses committed over a IJ.year period. It was disclosed Thursday that ~!rs. Hutchinson, 57, executive director of the Association of Concerned SENT TO JAIL Paul Halverson T\\'O Friends Of SLA Girl Go to Jail SA~ FRANCISCO tUP!l - 1\~·o friends of a fugitiv~ n1cn1ber of the I c r r o r is t Symbionesl' Liberation Army were sent to jail Thursday for refusing to ans,ver Grand Jury qul'stions in the Patricia Hearst kidnaping. Paul Ha!verron. 29. an<l Cynthia Garvey. 26. faced ;i possible 34 n1onths in jail for refu sing to ans"'l'r J 3 questions related to their acquaintance w i th SLA member Camilia Hall, one of the suspected Hearst kidnapers. The rederal Grand Jurv was convened arter th e SL.~ staged a $10,000 bank robbl'ry in which ~liss II ea rs t rippeared to take par!. f>.li ss 11all also was identified as a participant •in pictures taken -"" +i..., oo .. i..• .... ,.•~~~•;,. -·-~ -, ·-----···--~ .... , .... .., ......... ~ .. ,-eras. ~1iss Garvey charged 1hr Grand Jury was a political bcx:ly and Halverson said his refusal to testify \\'as a matter .of conscience . "! don't look on the Grant! Jury as a legal institution." liliss Garvey told U.S. District Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoli. \\"ho sent them both 10 jail. ··Jt squashes people \\•hose politics are oppo sed to lhe government. and I 1\•ill not cooperate with !he Grand Jury.·· State. E~rgy Bill Awaits Sig·natur~ of Gov. Reagan SACR~)lENTO (AP I -The California Legislature has gil·en final approval to this year's 111 a j o r energy legislation -sending It to Gov. Ronald Reagan , who says hl' \Viii sign it.' Thursday's Sf-8 Assembly vote culminated three years of negotiations on the power plant siting-energy conservation bill. The battle had involved eco I og is ts, utilities and the R ea g a n adn1 inistration. 1\ssen1blyman Ch a r I es \\'arren (0-U>s Angeles), told fello"' legislators his bill wouldi speed up the state's power plant siting process and help ronservc needed. e n c r g y resources. THE r.IEASURE would - create a five-member con1mission with the power to decide where plants v.·ould be' located. lf the plant \Vere nuclear, the Aton1ic Energy Comn1ission also \\'ould aeed to approve it. By the time \Varren brought the bill ui> for concurrence in Senate adinendments. he had \von su pport of conservationists,· the Reagan administration and" the private utilities. But not everyone liked the final product. Assembl~·rnan Robert Burke t R-Huntington BC'ach 1, blasted the htll"s conflict-of ·interest pro\' is ion. 2 Sc11tc11ced l '' Sl:i v i 1111 'j -o It bars per1ons from serving on the commission if they worked for a uttlltf within the previous two years. Burke argued that the provisl"on blocked the "best qualified" from sitting on the commission. AMONG FIVE o.t her Republicans against the n1easure was Badham of Newport Beach. Ken Cory of Garden Grove was among 40 Democrats approving the bill, while John Briggs or Fullerton joined 18 Republicans in approving the measure. Floyd \Vakefield of Anaheim was among 13 or the Assembly not voting. ~ Presently a utility applying to build a plant must go lhrou$h a3 agencies, and that has Helped slow nuclear power plant construction to the point where there may be blackouts and brownouts soon, Warren said . >....I.law! Corporatioll 1tudy had estimated that CllifomJa's energy consump- tion would gro\v by 7.5 per- cent annually it consumPtton were not curbed. Warren said hi! b I It's energy-'l!aving prov Isl on s would bring that rate down to about 3 percent. That would mean California would only have to build 3.5 new nuclear power plants between now and the year 2000 -rather than the 120 Rand had estimated in its study, \Varren said. Under Warren's bill, a plant site within the coastline permit zone created by Prop. 20 in 1972 would also need approval by the Coastline Commission. \ 2nd Ann11a/ So11tbtrn Calijort1ia mcbll1 heme show • Singles, Joobles, triples: from 24' x 70'; to 34' x 70'. 12' x 60'; • See latest rrii~-year in now1tion1 by nation-,...- ally recognized manufacturers. '-J • Professionally decorated, furnished, land- scaped hom es ranging-in price from $7500 to $49,500. -. RepresentatiVis-t~ answer que1ti~t,s, help- you make your choice, • Covered display area for related .ccessories and str'!'ices; park and site information. • Hundreds of ideas for better living. • Homes displayed in park-like Jetting for easy inspection, comparison. ;:::> .•.. ....- \'A:\ l\'1JYS !UPl1 -A 1~·01nan and her bo\'frirnd I have been scnlenced to fh ·e years to life in prison ;ifter pleading guilt~· to killing !he \1•01nan's J-yca.r-0!d daugh!l•r and scattering par!s of !he/ child's txx!y O\l'r .'.l \l'ide arc:i. • .\lary Ann Vitale. 26, and "Gll:l. ~ ~ \\'illiam Perez. 31. 11•ho lil·l'd 13 5! -4B'J4 \\ilh her. entered the gu:11~· "Ttt. W••I'• onlr 1how •rclu1lr1ly pJc<.1s to killing .\!rs. \'italc's IM•lfMd lor m•nu111CfuNd housing." d a ugh t c r. Lisa. !:1~t1 o-1 0,_., i2 ,_,. •Hkltftd• a .. _.., Dey: 2 P.M . ......,6'YL 1\'01·cmber. t'crez beat the girl •••••i"ii"iii'"ii'~iiiii' "iii'"iii""iii"'iiii"ii"ii"ii"'iiiii"'iii';;;";;;",;';;';;'•ll'0.'••-.1 to death. HOURS: Sot.,M~1•, IO!OOtoSrOO -sun., MOY 1'9, 1:00toJ:OO Mon., Ma'f 20, I 0:00 let J ::tO WE URGE YOU TO TAKE ADVANTAGE BECAUSE ••• YOUR GAIN IS ' NOT OUR LOSS. This is a sale yau can believe in. Here's why.We must reduce our inventory. Some models we O'lflr-bought, l9'M disconlinued models, !rode-ins. rent returns, reposse11lons. Mostly Horn-nonds -o few other makes. A few exomples as follows: Corona del Mar Store Rrg. SALE New Hammond VS-JOOSpinetw/.+.ythm. .•• 93.S 7'9S New Hammond 5!82Mov.<ick .•.......• 1390 l09S NewHammond 11B?Pkoeni~°'"" .. Spillet 1975 1595 UsedHammond T-582Topo1Spinetl.ine .••• 2.s~ 1995 Used Hammond 11.19SConMJle •••••••••• 37.&0 2599 Demo Hammond H-J95COl'liole ••••••••• , 4S4.S 3795 Demo Hammond 2127Coroi:ordt-Topol Line .. ~ 4995 Santa Ana Store .... SAU Used Hammond l·lOOSpinet •••.••.•••• , 1720 66S Uied Hammond T · 100 Spinel """'Y fl""'"''· •no 995 Used Hammond T ·7"3 Sp.nee w/l..,loe , .. , •• "" 1295 u,ed Hammond T-412 Spi...,1 •/•hy!tvn .... mo 1795 Demo Hanwnond 7182Co..gor .....•... , .• 20" 1645 Demo Hammond R-1 87 Con>0!e ·········· :17•0 3195 Used Hammond X66Con.ole ••.•.••.•••• 10,&80 7995 Something for everyone-So Hurry for best selection! · We don't advertise a so-called sale every week when we hove o sole -it i~lly o SALE ! Hammond Organ Studios 2854 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar 644-8930 Hammond Organ Studios 2033 N. Main St. Santa Ana 547-0351 Bonk Financing Available SAN FRANCISCO !UP!l - Four }ix.mg Black 1-1uslims were indicted for murder and assau1t Thursday in t h e "1.ebra" killings that left 13 v.·hite victims dead. Taxpayers. entered g u i I t y• ------ r:~t:~~~~d~; Wc 11ichs l\ /f..usie Ci!Y·"~;rs,ore fh~~~J:~,~~~vi;:c~~:~.':~r=:r :m:-, --------------------·--------- 'Th e i~ctments v;ere handed up W San Francisco Superior couft fol\ov. inp; tltree days of testimony, including an appearant>e by an informer who tied the killings to a cult called the "Deatll Angels." Shewaspl.acedonprobation • i:lll ...l.Y~ t b th Id' b:.:. ... b d I ineachcase,buttheprol>ation ' •• 'greJ uys on e wor s .,. ran s. " could be revoked and she } fi ~ could tX' sent to prison if she !#{ . is cdnvicted or ne\Y charges l .":! ~~. i~~~~~1of'.!"o'::;~,g~::be:·:r Never Before · At These Prices! her group. IndictOO were r.1 a n u e I hfoore, 29, J.C. Simon, 29. and Larry C. Green, 22, all of San Francisco. The three were arrested May I in a pre-dav.'O raid. Bail for each v.·as set al $300,000. Jessie Cooks, a Ire ad y serving a murder term at San Q r Prison, W~S al.so . Ox>ks had n o t JOUSly appeared in court connection Y.'ith the ' case. Assistant District Attorney Walter Giubini told the rourt that police have the weapons used in 12 shootings (Ind six gunshot assaults. The indictments charged one or tv•o shooling murder counts aganist ea Ch SUSJX'C!. T "'' o men, Green and Cooks, face charges for !he hacking death of a daughter of a prominent \VinCry ov.'Iler. This did not fil the random pattern or the dozen murders. e Judges Told LOS ANGELES (UPI) 1\~'0 municipal ju d g cs . insisting they could not speak up earlier because of "gag omers." identified themselves Thursday as the j u r i s t s accused by a colleague of interfering with the Sylmar Tunnel explosion trial. 1.tunicipal Judges Jo an Dempsey Klein and VinceJlt Erickson said the accusation \Vas "patently absurd." e Prolest Rally LOS ANGELES (UPI\ Ne::irly5,00 0person s conducted a raJJy a n d candlelight vigil in Hancock Park Thursday night protesting !he Arab guerilla attack in North I s r a e I Wednesday. Police said the gathering of Jewish groups was conducted peacefully and w i t h o u t incident. Fine Wine Fine Cheeses Fine Bargains '70 Puligny Montrachet .......••• $37.80 cs '70 Estate Bottled Cotes Du Rhone $29.79 cs {limited Qvantitie1) 'we will of course deliver coses ROBERT LAWRENCE BALZER se/edions ovoi/oble for sampling along with fine imparted cheese in our tosfing room. · SOUTH COAST PLAZA lower level !\ear Bullock's Costa Mesa • 557-2907 ®·Pldl\IEl-1¥{® Stereo Receivers . . ONE HAL·F .OFF! ' ' Limited Time Only On These brigin~Uy Fair Tra~ed. Pr~ces A Once In A Life Time Offer! · · Save $99.98 • '·! ------. -----~- SX-424 ~ .-,> • .;. :'; .+ ••• ,,,. · AM-FM Re;~:ei;::v~er;--...:.:,...;·-' " \nn11i"f'1!11.Ul~\.d•.•·H1.1 .1 ..... ,.~ •••. , I' \ l .'-1 , ron1hu1o..,, "'Id •1.11", '" l.<l!\I .• nd ",, '.•1•1~.11~: \1·r•.'11l1t\ h~ •!<'!"''/,Off•[''" 1•1'.\• • did•·•• •"!I.\\ •1·11"ll\1h 1111" I"""·• r .1n•1• h· t • , 111 1'1~'!1.JI' • o• 111 rl• "~:. P· .. ,, p ·" : • ' ' , .. I 1"d1• u,1111• fl• 1· h 'IJ"ll". \" t• r~ I • ! · "h ,Hod ho).:l'I ".:n.1!-10 rlt.i''" 1.1'" r 'r '' f \1', 1••1vr-r" !:; 'IJll' , 1: \\.1:1, 11 1 '•" I••• ., !11rn1 .. hlo·, t.11"' 11• •, ""'! ··!·•· •' .-- -·- Reg. ~199. 95 $99.97 Wlttft soW ~ 11ftf 2 ,,..11," -....... of yowdtoict !if 501cf 1tpor'9hfy S 149.951 Save $129.98 . -. -~.,. ---~-I I '.I' • ';-(Y! (•fl '.~.;.~ ••••• r :'J ~ Save $169.98 SX-626 AM-FM Receiver 011• ""~ ,1 ho~• ul 111~ 111111 111·1lu1111,1nr "· llo" <;'( 1>~1, "1h,r1n1:u"l•lrl hy '!Hll'rh '' ".ild•lv .ond l'J'*•lld\I "(Jlul •1,L!<• •or< Ullf\" (on•onuOIJ\ II.-.\'> I""" r 1· 1.11>·d ,,, tn.:h '" .'IJ 11.111'. '111• 1n'. 0110!•· 1h.•n 1·11Hu.:h '" 1!r,.;· ,, ,, I"' l.n.:1• ,,,..,,~,.,, '"'h t<dl '""nd •• l'1'1 .,1,0 ti-l• uu 10 hilt t11,,11.1h l••,, l,;u '·•P•: Jt'(~) .111d ,\ nuc rophr111f'. Reg. s339,95 $169.97 Wi..t..WwtHI_, .z.,....,.. ....... ... .. , ... cWca tlf tofd M?•~ S.Z69.9SJ _The i.Jepartment Store of Music Since 193.0 • • COSTA MESA South Coast Pima 540-2830 ' r I BUENA PARK luena r.tc Ctnltr 827·f060 OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAYS CONVENIENT TERMS TAKE YEARS TO PAY , BankAinericard - M.asler Charge • ' , tf .. ~ " -~--- v ' t • ' • • ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 67, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS, ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1974 N TEN CENTS • Delector~s Stepnaother Waits on Coast By dOJ!N VALTERZA Of Hit D•llW f'll•t St1H \Yhen 47·year-old Dean H9xsey fought his way into the U.S. Embassy in Moscow Wednesday and decl@red that his enchantment with communism had ended, the agony began for his stepmother in San Clemente. For Mrs. Ella Hoxsey it goes far beyond the certamty of phone calls day and night and the nuisance of press queries. -------- She is seriously ill with cancer. "Whm I picked 6p the paper this morning and read the account from correspondents in Moscow , the shock was just the same as if I had heard the news of an auto accident," she ~'.l l'.rom her home Thursday afternoon. Her fondness for her stepson (whom she first met only after he was grown I is obvious. But for Mrs. Hoxsey, the quiet. normal life she established over the past JO yea rs as· a widow living modestly in Diiiy P'lt.t P'l!ott eJ l"llrldl O'DMIMll GLENN POWMAN EYES 'UNIDENTIFIED FLOATING OBJECT' He Found O'ut What It Is and How Much If Is Worth • Walk Profitable Boy Aivaiting Reward for Device Gl('nn Bowman's early morning walk on a Balboa beach today should prove very profitable for both himself and a Los Angeles electronics company. He stands to make about $100 for apparently saving the firm $50,000. Bov>man. a 16-ycar-old junior at Newport 1-larbor ~ligh School, was walking~n the 8th Street beach about 7 a.m. wh en he spotted something floating near shore. "f got a rope and pulled it in then got the beach tractor to help me drag it up ....on lhe beach," Bowman said. On the bulky. JOO.pound strange-looking piece of equipment was a telephone number and the word "reward." Glenn said he called what turned out to be the Bendix Corporation's Etectrodynamics Division in Sylmar. He said they told him the funny-looking thing was a SS0,000 transponder that the U.S. Air Force had anchored ofi Santa Cruz island and which had broken loose last month. "They told mt to watch it carefully and they'd send lomeone down to pick it up," Glenn said. ·ue said when the men arrived to haul the transponder away, he was left empl)banded but with a promise that he'd get "about $100" from the company. "They said they'd have to discuss the amount of the reward with their supervisor. Bendix Corporation officials contacted by telephone today promised they woutH have a $100 check in the mail to Bowman, who lives at 201 8th St., the first of next week. · They uplalned that the transponder which is now~. Air Force property was used by enberg Air Force Base to keep track f Its target missiles. ''It's sort ti. a missile scoreteeper,'' BendiX olficOOs said. · They said the underwater acoustic device Was developed under an A.Ir Force contract. .. . San Clemente ended \\'hen lfoxscy sought to return to America. Hoxsey was literally wrestled from the grip of two Russian security officers at the gates oJ the American enclave in the Soviet capital. Accounts from tv.'O correspondents who witnessed the incident said the one-time defector was grabbed by the Russians as he tried to enter the building. Then, as he was being led to a Russian interrogation room, l\\'O U.S. ernbassy orficers managed to grab Hoxsey from his ca~ and s_ pi r i t him into the embassy .... ~egally U.S. territory. "No one knows what will happen now,·· ~1rs. Hoxsey said. "l don 't have any real hopes about the situation," she aaded. Tired , weary and in pain, the San Clemente widow said friends have advised her to leave home to spare herself any further.problems because of \Vednesday's e vents -deemed an international incident in govemn1ent ci rcles. "The last time I saw Dean 1\·as in 1959 and 1960 when his father was still alive. \\1e were in Europe and lea\fled that Dean was seriously Ill and .,..·ould have delicate surgery in a Mosco1I' hospital. \Ve obtained permission and 1\'ent to visit •·•!is dad stayed an entire summer. 1\'hile Dean recovered. Then his fa!her left," slfe related . The cider Hoxse\', an av o 1\' e cl Communist \l'hose Career in the Los Angeles tax assessor's offi ce ended 1n 19.a9 because of his political beliefs - never saw ti is son agani. lie died four yea rs after that f\Ioscow su1nn1er. For the former defector. the 17 years in the Soviet Uni on \\"ere ca lci lated to be repayment to a regime wh' hhad allo.,..·- ed Hoxse ythe chance to fulfill a dream. ''fi e> had al.,..•ays 11•anted to be a doctor. ~See DEFECTOR, rage 21 Jet ' Noise Move Looms Casp~rs to Seek Session Over Ne ,wport Suit By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tM Dilly f'llot SllU Fifth District Supervisor Ron ald \V. Caspers said today he will call for an executive session of lhe Oran,ge County Board of Supervisors ti-Jay 28 to begin . negot1.iUons lor··a set.t!Cment of the suit against Orange County Airport filed Thursday by NeWJJOrt Beach. Caspers also predicted that the--nearly 1.000 homrowners. who five ye<irs ago filed a ~'25 milllon damage suit against Con1n1andos Fro111 Israel Attack Arabs By United Pres!! lntematlonal An Israeli commando unit carried 011! n hit-run alta('k against an Arab guerril!:i base a mile inside Lcb"non !oday and Israeli plilnes struck guerrilla bases nea~ thr border in the second dny of retaliation for !he Maa!ot 1nassacrc, Israeli military spokesmen reported. The Palc>stinian nev.·s agency \VA F' A said in Beirut the Israeli planes struck in ··"·aves." hi tting five s e par ale Palestinian refugee cam ps in southern Lebanon from 1:50 p.m. to 3: 15 p.m. II said antiaircraft batteries opened up on the planes but made no claims of hitting lllem. Lt. Gen. Mordecha i Gur, the Israeli armed forces chief of staff. said of the raids he could not rule out the possibility that Israel was out to make southern Lebanon "unlivable," a '>''urr' used t11•0 months ·ago by Defense 1'.linister Moshr Dayan. Damascus reported a dogfight over Lebanon between Israeli and Syrian planes but Israel denied the report. The Lebanese military command sa id Israeli planes broke the sonic barrier over Beirut today and that th e Lebanese A'ir Force scrambled but made no contact. A Syrian communique issued in Damascus said the Syrian and lsraeli warplanes fought an air battle over South Lebanon today and that an lsrae!i plane was shot down in flames. "There was no contact, there was no battle and there was no do\\'ning," an Israeli army spokesman said in Tel Aviv. however. The Lebanese government announ~d that 48 persons were killed and 184 '>'·ounded in two Israeli air strikes into Lebanon Thursday, carried out In retaliation for an Arab guerri!la attack on the lsJjiieli border village of Maalot that left 'fO persons dead. The Israeli air strikes brought sharp criticism from Secretary of State Henry (See RAIDS, Page %) ' the airport , may drop their litigation and instead support the city suit. The Ney,•port Beach suit asks Orange County Superior Court to impose st rict ope rating cxinditions on the airport. Caspers f.Jllled the city efforts "far n1ore apropos" than fhe damage claim and said he thinks it '>''ill "lead the \1·ay to a settlement of the airport noise 1>roblem." A•1rport Director Robert Bresna,han disagreed. He said the city's la.,..·s~it is ,;politically motivated " The Fifth District s u per v is or i a I election is less than three "·eeks a"·ay. In it. Caspers is facing challenges by three other candidates. "I don't lrnow v•hy they filed it at this ~ lfme. ll . 'o\'OUlO na\f(!' neen 'more appropriate to find out what the stalC is going to do about our rec1uest for a variance from the state no i s e standards," Bresnahan said. "If the variance is granted and the 011e More Not~h Banks Hike ·Prime Rates lo 11 V2 % NEW YORK (AP) -The nation's major banks pushed the prime lending rate another notch higher today to 111h percent. Leading the increase from Ill.A percent were the bi~ New York banks, including First National City, second largest nationally; Chase l\1anhattan. third largest; Chernj cal Bank, sixth; Banker's Trust, seventh; Irving Trust, 12th; Marine Midland , 16th; and Franklin National Bank, 20th. 1'he country's largest commercial bank, the Bank of America, followed quickly, as did the National Bank of Detroit and Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh. 13th largest. Major We st coast banks also followed, including United Cali· fornia Bank. Crocker Bank, Security Pacific, Barik of California and \Veils Fargo Bank. The prime rate is the rate banks charge biggest and best corpor· ate customers. \\'hile not directly tied to the rates charged for con- "sumer loa ns. the prime can eventually lead to changes in those rates as well. - Man's Ties to Do11 Nixon Cited in Firing by Maheu LOS ANGELES (API -Robert A. Maheu has testified he fired John H. Mei er from 11oward Hughes' Nevada operations after C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo requestc>d a breakup of Meier's close relationship wilh the President's brother. F. Don ald Nixon of Newport Beach. The form er Hughes aide, taking the stand here Thursday in his $17.5 million defamation suit against Hughes , said Rebozo made the request in 1969 to Richard Danner. who had just become a Hughes ht>tel executive in Las Vegas. "Over a period of several months we had been requested by the White House to break up what they called a 'romance ' between Mr. Meier and Mr . Donald Nixon." Maheu told a federal court jury. Meier, former Hughes science.. adviser. has been indicted on charges or conspiracy and tax eva~n _i_n cohnection 1vith mining claims sold IO"flUghes. The Hughes organization has also sued him ~for $9 million. ~1aheu said Rebozo told Danner it did not look good that 1tfeier and Donald Nixon traveled extensively together, ''one representing Hughes and the other with the name of the Presi dent." Rebozo asked DaMer to g e t cooperation from the H u g h e s organization to end the travels, Maheu said. Reutzel of Rams , Gets OK to Pia r Again This Year problem isn't resolved to their satisfaction, then they could sue," Bresnahan said. A decision by the C alifornia Department of Transportation on u·helher to Jct the airport continue to openiit! t!Vt!n tiJOui;ii -rt cl~ viVlfl.i.t:-C1c.; .. - stale standards-is due early next month . A hearing on the variance request tak.es pla ce in February, 1975. Bresnahan declined to speculate on (Su JET NOISE. Page %1 Noise Cm·h Ordinance Gets Tabled The Newport Beach P 1 a n n i n g Commission Thursday voted to tabJe the proposed noise control ordinR~e after one commission member s t r o n g l y objected to it. "! think this ordinance is a fu rther encroadlment on people's right s to do as they wish as Jong as they don't bother others," commissione r James Parker said. "We already have la"'S against creating a public nuisance to deal with exceS.91vely loud noises ,'' he said. "Moreover, the exemptions in this ordinance cover all the real noise sources." Parker said. The propased ordinance does not restrict noise from airplanes. automobiles, special events or daytime construction work. "The ordinance reminds me of the. state laws against usury," Parker said. "No one can charge usurious rate! of interest except those who lend money." "I don't think we need this ordinance," he said. The proposed ordinance, which is modeled on one adopted recently by Orange County, calls for maximum perimiss.ible decibel levels which vary depending on the time or day and duration of the noise. Automobile and airplane noises are not covered because they are governed by state and federal codes. acrording to Senior Planner Tim Co'>'·ell of the Community Development Department. The ordinance also exempts school bands and events. sporting a n d entertainment events which h a v c received a crowd control permit from NewJK>rt Beach police. and· public playground and park activities. It also exempts air conditioning and refrigeration nolses !or i five-year period after the adoption o! the ordinance. Following Parker's remarks. t h e (See NOISE. Page %) • Memorial Rites For Slain Jewisl1 Hostages Slatet{ Sheraton Parking Bid OK NEW YORK (AP ) -National Football League COmmissioner Pete Rozelle reinstated wide receiver Lance Rentzel of the Los Angeles Rams today. The reinstatement came alter Rozelle met with Rentzel lo Los AgneJes Thursday. The commissioner issued a statement, saying that the veteran NFL receiver had been active in worthwhile._ volunteer work during the year he was out of <ootball. Weather A inemorial service ls scheduled toolght at 'a dozA!n congregations of the Jewish Federation of Orange County ror teenaged hostages murdered or maimed in ai1 Arab terrorist attack on lbe Israeli town o! Maalol. Leonard Shane, pre3ident of the rellglou.s organtµtioo, empllasized that non-Jews are invited. He aaia the observances at locations tbrouihoul the <00nlf are e<>tponaorod by the Board ol Rabbll. ' Spot._. for the Jewish Federallon of Orange County sald aervlces are act at varying time& and may' be leamod by c.Dlng each ~ougregatlonal headquarter1. Tbe memorlll 1e1Vlces win be held at: -Jlarbor Reform Temple, Newport Beach. -Ttmple l!at Yahm, Corlllll de! Mat. -Temple Shal'Oll, CIJstl .M..a. -IJnd AcadealY. ln'me. -Teaoi>fe Rial~ M!Jskll Viejo. -~ Jlldoo. ~ 111111. -'l'emplo Both David, Westminster. ' ·' Pla1iners Approve Plan Despite Crou,di1ig Probwms By JACKIE RYMAN Of ""' ~Hy P!Mt 'tiff Newpo rl Beach planning co1m1w1sloners 'l'hunday said t h e Shcratcn Newport Hotel near Orange County Airport will not have to provide as much parktn& for !ta two re.stauranta as dty codeo reqgtre. Th& action came deaplta !harp crltfclsm of mating olandmls because of masatve parking problem• at a nearby complex of tliroe blghly llll<CeUful reatturants, B11ckbeard'1, Harry's Bar and El Torlto. Cll)I <..lea baaed on tho number of holeJ room1 and occupancy or dining and banquet flldlltles would require 1411 parldng ..... -· af~ hearing an eovflwtal lmpoot ropor\ from an indeplltdeol C<ltlUitant Oll a llludy done at lbe Newporter lnn, the planning commission voted S-0 to allow the hotel to provide only 799 spaces. The seven-story hotel, with 434 rooms. Is expected to open in the (all. The original requirement of '948 spaces was based on a formula of one space for each of the 431 rooms. It would alao have requi~ 109 spaces · ror the dining facll!Ues, wlllch can accommodate 326 people, 330 apace1 for the convention tacillUea with an occupruicy of 1,660, and • T5 spoces (or the Ktlmai<d 83 employ.s. The unanlm®t vote came even though commlsslooCl'I crfllcll<d the environ- mental Impact re:r.rt itoell. Commlsalmior am .. J'arker ponlled DUI !hat 'llllioasli the rtpor1 assumes moot people using a restaurant cop>e about tWo people to a car, 11 nclg!lborlng El Torlto tbo popularity GI the bar at-tracca manr !lnCJe people wbo come ooo -l' • person per car. Commissioner Hall Seely pointed out that the Sheraton's proimlty to t h e commission hat a cOmparison study of Newporter IM dlfficult. He-said the Sheraton nay attract more tn!onnal busln ... meetinp in individual rooms and ftl'Ound restaunnt tables becaUJe. Jt ls convenieat to the airport. Community Development l)tpartment senior planne• William Folq told the commission that a comparlaon stmity of the Alrporter IM, located llCl'08IJ the •tree! from the airport. had not been possible. "It's not within the Newport )leach city llmlta and the management dta not ... m eaaer to discuss thc!lr pa r k i n g pr9blem1," he .ut. The Altporter ,.., deolglled under Orange CcNnl)I -md ls now In (SH PARXING, p,,. I) • Rozelle suspended Rentzel July 24. 1973, citing uconduct detrimental to the NFL after the player had violated tenm of tbe 'probationary status that had been lnlpooed on him In I97t." lltntzel, !O, had been placod oo pnibotlon by Rozelle ortglDally after being Indicted for Indecent exposure, and was suspended for possdSlon • o I marijuana two year• Later. R<!ntzd, lheft with Dallas. was arrested Nov. 30, 11171 for Indecent exposure lnV11Mng a 10.yeeMlld girl. He wu Indicted and, alter plead!~ gull\)', recelyed a live-year probated eentenoe. On Jan: If, 11113, he wu lllT09ted b>t lnvntlgedon r... -~..:J'ju ... for sale In Los Anc•I•" He gullty and an May l2 of last year, be 'l'U ... -to IO cllya In jail llld llned 12,0DO. • Considerable cloudiness through Saturday but partly sunny Satur- day alternoon, according ~ the weather service. Slightly Cooler days. Highs Saturday in the lower and middle 60s. Lows tonight In the 50s. INSI PF. TODA l' fliin&mgton Stach r1tunis to the middle aot• Saturda1' for on all-da11 Rmai.t3aNce Fairt. Set todoy'i W<el«~ for detolu. --~--n NaltlMI"-.i _,_,, . ........ --n :::: ........ = ,_ . --... -. __ .. ............ ,."' --. W • IF -1NI • • • • % O'JLY PILOT N f'ro11a Page l JET NOISE ... v.·hat Caspers: \vould do as a result of the cl.t» maneuver. "l'he May 28 exe<:u tive sesslo11 "'ill come one week before the June 4 supc.rv1soMa1 election. At that secret session, Caspers said he \\"ill ask fello~· supervisors to forn1 a "technical" committee to begin the negotiations with the city. lie said he'll ask that they bring th(lir recommendations to a two-man board rommittee Yi'hich will be himself and Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. Caspers said he's especially hopeful that the so-called preferential runway system can be reinstated and that the existing runways ca n· be expanded. Ile said he thinks he can get appro\"al for both after the upcoming election. He pointed out that one of its past opponents, Supervisor Ralph Clark . L<; also running for re-election in his district v.bich includes the city of Tustin. "It's election time; in Tustin, too," he said. "Political decisions enter into it a:long With logic. After Clark wins the primary he will be ·able to be completely objective." Caspers predicted there could be agreement on the entire sui t "·ithin 60 to 90 days. He pointed out that he had met Thursday, the day the suit "'as filed, "'ilh Ne"-port Beach city officials and home-O"'ners represenllttives. He· disclosed ti1at for the first time he'd been told that the city \\'ould suppor t the run"·ay extension. . "That was news lo me,'' he said. "Before that they'd opµosed-~rythnig from ne"' toilet s to more parking." The Ne"'POrl Beach suit is asking : -The court to order Orange Coun!y to close the airport to all jet aircraft unless and until the state granl'i the ~ise variance. -The airport be closed from 10 p.m. tQ... 7 _ a.m. eici,:pt for n1ercy nd emergency flights·. • -· • -- -The court order the county to abate the public nuisance crcared by jet aircraft o~·erflights and · to conduct studies under the supen·ision of the court to e:tplore all means to reduce noise damage and physicial pol!u!ion damage to Newport Beach. ~- -To implement all such measures as are fou nd to be feasible based upon such studies and that a dt'lcm1ination of !hi'.' ultimate solution to the county air traMportation problem be made by the end of 1975. ~ -That the court order the rounty to enter into negotiations ''~th the Federal Aviation Administration for the pt1rpose of seeking the cooperation of the FAA in eatablishing and enforcing protective noise abatement measures. -Th.it the county fCinstate the preferential runy,·ay program. -A limit on the type o( jel'i permitted that are not louder than the Boeing 737 or the Douglas DC-9 and thet do not exceed 95,CKXl pounds gross "'~ght. -Alimi t on the permitted number of daily flights to the maximum flown in Janliary. 1974. - A Court order that the n o i s e abatement approach and departW'C flight procedures used by Air California be required for Hughes Airwest. -An order than any remodeling or expan.<;ion of the terminal or parking racilities be prohibi!ed and that all coont y funds appropria ted for the airport be used for noise abatement. -'That the court order that no terminal access privileges be granted to any new air carrier using jets or "·ho receives authority to scn·e distances more than 500 miles away. -That two additional noise monitoring stations seaward of Pacific Coast Highlllay be installed. Caspers has said that he thinks the ultimate solution to the county air transportation problem resL~ w i t h e:rpansion of Ontario Airport . He said he has come to the conclusion that there is no"·here in Orange County than another jetport could be built. Caspers also said that he's opposed 10 renewing Ain\·est 's lease at the flirport but the airline has lhreatened to sue. "I'd blow them out of the airport but the issue is more complicated than that." he said. He said threats ha\·e apparently coovinced other supervisor!' th a t tenninating Air.1-cst v.·ou!d not be a \\'iSC thing to do. " DAILY PILOT r-. 1>1~ c.o..i °"'''' "'~ ,.,,~ "'''"" , ~ b,nf'<I ,.,.. i'<•.,l·I'<~ "r...111 '.'"'11>< 1•0 ('lo-•·•" CbHt l'\ltl'•O"•Oq r......,.."1 S.0f>.t'J"O ~ !' ,,~. •• IJU~l,, ... O "'::tn~,\, !r• f' ~ > I , ( •, Mftw. N'""""' Bf...-~ 1 ''"'>'00 6ett• lt:>llf !1•• '/1U•~ ll~''"• °""'~ le,~~ •,1<>'Jl~1>0·• ,. 1 S•• C..lt>"'•n•• 5.,, JJ1n C..c•'''i""" ~ ··"'>·" ... ,. .. , ... .,.,.,.,. •\ DVI>" ...... ~"~''"~ ..... , . """' Tn~ pone'~ gwbl.,~,..., I"•"' ,, a• • J('. ,, • • 811Slrttt.Cosio"'9!.I C.hlorn.a 9;~,. ~ni:-ri w..-1 Pre•..,........,Put><•~·e- J.Y.I P (11loo¥ ... "'" Pr•--c. ..... 11 "-1•'·•1"' I~ A. M'-"T}-. ~t<J;1or (~~H.loo• ~.-'"adP t<;I A.-ll'f~[Otlcn ~-,,,. a--to.'I ~ °°"" .,..,., No-•-....... _~"'""" (It .,.., ... """" .............. lit ~"' ~---,.._.. .. ,llCJl'lltfll ... .,., ~ntlt~,_..,_.Ollltl,""""" r~ "'II kt• 11!111t1•1J~l)OO~•-~ MOO~ . ......,-QDO_.~ f • • ' • llf'I Ttltl'hDIO SOLDIER CARRIES OFF BODY OF PALESTINIAN VICTIM Israeli Air Raid on Nabatiyeh Termed 'Military' Protest Issued To Russ Leaders Over Defector Fro11a Page J RAIDS • • • A. f\issing<'r \1·ho also denounced the Aral> guerrilla attack. Egypt warned Israel that there could be grave 1.:onst.'qucnccs from the air raids and the l\10SCO\V (liPl l _ The United State~ Egyptia~ v,·ar minister spoke of a . · resumption of the war. has pro;ei!_.cd I? the Soviet gov.ernmcnt Israel ~ not mention inflicting ~-..er-. ,,.::-.. ~~~ ·tntfff&:"::.:;~ ·.riiit--tt-tt -·· C'aSuanles 1n today's groUiict "SlriKe one' Ameri can dcf~ctor i.1·ho no1v i1•ant s lo n1ile a.cross the Lebanese border in which \cay~ the .Soviet Union, U.S1 Embass~' th{' commandos blc\.\· up a house believed off1c1als sai.d today. . used by Arab guerrillas. A spokesman They said_. ~lark J. Gnrr1s.on, !hi' said Israeli planes eight hours later nevi embassy pohtical cou:ise!or .. d_rl1vcrcd a st rikes on targels inside ''Fatahland," protest to the Forei gn M1n1!>try ovt·r the Israeli term for guerrilla-dominated police effort s \Vednesday to block De.1n ;ireas of southeastern Lebanon near !he C. Hox.sey from en!cring the Embas~~· Syrian border. He said all planes Hoxsey. 47. of Pico Rivera. Calif.. returned from the half-hour raid. defected to the Soviet T;nion in 1957 \vhen Bolh Israel and Syria reported heavy he came her!'.' for a vouth festi\'al. He fighting on the Golan Heights and around now lh·es ln Volgograd. is rnarricd to a '.\II. llcrmon today, the 67th consccuti\"e Russian and "'orks as a doctor at a day of combat there. A Syrian clinic. communique reported Syrian-Jsra rli tank U.S. officia1s said Hoxsey got into the du~ls and that _both sides ~·ere using embassy WC'dnesday only after a arllllery and_ anti;ta?k weapons.. . 6,000 lfle11afJers County Union . Votes Walkout Orange County retail clerks have voted to stop work June 6, bricklayers are still . on strike and carpenters have gone back to ~·ork. but arc still negotiating. In three votes Thursday, 6 , 0 0 0 members of Retail Clerk's local 324 in Orange County tallied 90 percent in favor of joining eight other locals representing 54,000 clerks across Sout hern California in a walkout June 6. The strike. acrording to Judy Schm.1hl at th e local "ill occur unless labor and management. reach 'agreement on a contract to replace the one that expired April L Journeyman clerks ('UTTently earn $4.86 an hour. The initial union request for 89 t•ents an hour to bring \vages to the level of Northern California clerks was countered by a management offer of 30 cents. The clerks trimmed their demand to 77 cents an hour. \l'hich Robert K. Fo>.:, president of the Food Employers Council. termed a 16.4 percent increase "\vhich \\'Ould. if met. have an immediate--and tre1nendous in1pact on food prices.'' il lean\vhile. bricklayers ar~ considt>ring ;i n1a nagement offer of a S2.05 an hour hike in \\'ages and k.inge benefits ovt'r !ht~ next l\\O years. The IO percent increase offt>r. according to union officials. may end the walkout v.·hich has id led 4,000 bricklayers and 8. O 0 0 n1emhers of the Laborers Union since !\lay 6. a new contract to replace the -one that expires June 15. The :ID-cent raise, retroactive to May l, will be given the carpenters v.·hen the new agreement is reached , the unicn said, bringing lhe pre-negoliation v.·age to $7.35 an hour. Neivport Cof C Honors 50 Top Scliool Grads The Newport }farbor Chamber of Commerce today honored the 50 top graduating seniors at Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor lligh Schools ;it the Commodores Scholarship Brea kfas t. At the br~kfas\, the $50 Agnes Blomquist Award was ·given to Jennifer \Vall of Corona del Mar High School. !\1iss \\1alt has a 4.0 grade point average and is valedictorian of her class. She said she plans to study law at Stanford University. Students who "'ere honored each had maintained at least a 3.0 average throughout high school. f\1ost said they plan to go into law, medicine or engineering . Girl Clearecl If 1he offer is aro:'pled. t h e hricklayers' currf'nt v.·age of S8.35 an hour plus $1.35 in fringe benefits will also Qc increased by a previously negotiated ~~e~~~~:ih;~e;rsP!~~3.wn by f 11, S11111g litig Carpente~:-.... ~no re!ur'1ed ~~If .. ,...-.·. -~·-·--. ~ S -... Thursday follov.·i.ng a _t.hree-da)'. ~rike LONDON (AP) - A British jury over a 30-<.'ent rai se \\'hich was _s11!11larly today cleared a young Santa cut by the Pay Board. are negot1at1ng for Barbara .woman of all charges in an alleged kidnap and arms Fro11a Page l NOISE ... com1n1ssion \'Oled to table the proposed ~"1nance until it can be considered in conjunction l\'ith the Noise Element of the c:ene ral Plan. C"on1munity Development D i rec I o r Richard Hogan told the committee that the :\oise Element \viii probably be a1 ailable for action in July. smuggling plot. She bowed her head anrl sobbed in relief. The jury returned guilty verdicts against a )·loroccan and a Pakislani arrrsted in the case. Allison Thompson. an 18-year-old former "·ai tress and part-lime model, y,·as arrested f'Oov. 27 as she arrived in London on a fiight from Los Angeles. Cu:; tor e officials found five pistols and ammunition in a false bottom of her trunk. • From Page J PARKING ••• Irvine. Altbough the comp&riSO!l with the Newporter lnn was questioned, R. Henry Mohle, p re s i d e n tol Governmental Pn>l ... tonal servi.... which prepared the environmental Impact report, stood by his report's recommendation that 736 spaces would be adequate. A report by the city staff had recommended a similar flgµre, 749. Commiss.ioners concluded that the 799 spaces proposed by the Sheraton would provide a safely margin of about eight percent over the con au I tan t' s recommendatlons. In addition to allowing the rcducC'd number of parking spaces for the Sheraton. commissioners also voted to establish a parking requirement for hotels and motels base<l on a formula . The formula, which has not ·-et been detennined, v1ould take into account the "mixed use " !actor, that some people use several hotel facilities w h i I C' occupying only one parking space. The two commissioners who did not vote were chairman Willi am Agee. absent because of illness, and William Hazewinkel, who disqunlified himself because he said his firtn had been involved in negotiations for possbile sale ' of the property. Commissioner Jackie !leather acted as chairman. Stylist Guilty 111 Two Slayi11gs .OAKLAND (AP ) -A hair stylist has been convicted of the execution-style slayings of a wealthy Piedmont sociallte and her 4-1-year-old son. An AJameda Cot_y;ity Superior COllrt jury W e ci n e d""a y found Leroy Breckenridge, 26, of Oakland.· guilty of two counts of first-degree murder in the .kidnaping-deaths of Ellen E cc I e S Jlarrison, 57, and her son Warren f\.1errill. =---1he.ir.bl;wJ.ie.s...W!!.re.lound in tt)e ~~of her powder.blue Cadillac near fhe Richmmd Golf and Counlry Club here ' Feb. I. 1973. De tectives said ranson1 apparently "'as the molive for the crime . Eight !\Jen Iudictccl TRE!\'TON. N.J. (UPI~ -The stale of New Jersey Thur.9day ind icted eight former California Insurance executives on charges of attempting to st rip a Nev.• J ersey !inn of assets as part of a $2.5 billion fraud scheme. The eil!ht v.·erc former officers of Equity Funding Corp. of America. a California-based insurance firm. struggle "'ilh police guarding the The _Palest me Ne"s Agency said rurtn[! entrance and intervention by U.S. the raids on south Leban.on today Israeli diplomats "'ho witnessed the incident. planes attacked a Palestine red cresccnl ambulance. i----~ ---· Hox:sey to!~ newsmen he was formerly "The ambulance was burned and its a_ . Co1!1mun1st. but ha~ b.e come occupints killed.'' the agency claimed. dis1\lus1o~ed with the So_v1et lin1on and "This new ugly murder contradicts all C.Ommun1sm. He also said he has b~~11 intemational:rulcs and principles ... harassed by colleagues Ht the cl1n1c and we reiterate that the l)alestinian v.·here he \v orks. Army will know how to deal blo"'s v.•h1ch He told newsmen toda y he "·as \\'!Ii hurt the enemy wherever he is," the returning lo Volgograd to apply for an agency said. e>.:lt visa" and hopes lo rel urn to ri.toS<'o1v soon for further discussions v.·!th emba~sy officials. C.S. officials said they still have not det('rn1incd if itoxsey is a U.S. citizen . :\l the ti1ne of his defection . he sai d. he turned in his Amer ican passport to So\·ict authorities and accepted a So\·1ct passport but never forma lly renounced U.S. citizenship. From Pagel DEFECTOR. • • but after lv•o years of college in the L"nitcd St<1tes he realized that \Vithout money. he could no longer study. "He was Invited lo travel to Russia as part of the youth festival and then 1\·as offered thio chance lo stay and bt trained,'' his stepmother explained. After six years ol study , lloxsey wrote home to say he planned never lo leave and that he felt an obligation :o repay the So\'iets for the training. Correspondence bet\\'een the physician and his family in California -in.eludin g his natural mother "'ho lives in the nort hern part or the state -\\'as steady, but never abundant. "He would usually \\Tile at Christmas. but this past holiday he and I did not correspond. All the timl! before. ho"·ever. !here ~·as never an indication of any disenchantment. and no feeling on my part that there l\'Cre any problems," she said. But there is a theorv about Hoxscv's rea sons for disencbaOtmen! with ihc So\'iet "'ay of life. '·Some time ago he and his mother corresponded and she began to write to officials in hopes that Dean. his "'ife and adopted daughter. who is 14 now. could get pennission just •lo \'isit the United States." she said. The th eory is that those letters may have sparked suspicion by Soviet officials. lfoxsey !old his benefactors at the embassy Wednesday that he now fears for his safet y ,were he to return to his home in Volgograd (fonnerly named Stalingrad until Stalin fell from grace in lhe USSR!. Presumably. his Russian-born wife and their daughter would remain behind . Sources in the embassy said Hoxscy first felt the need to leave about a year ago, but Was quoted as saying he once ~-.t~ght the deslr.e would pass In t1me. The dilemma now for officials at the embassy i.1 wha1 to do with their "guest." pending an official decision on hla demand• to reenter the country. Reports said the original plan waa 14 Aencl him back home uoUI a deci&loD had been reached Coroner's Aides l11vestigatc Tl1ree 1 Coast Suicides Coroner's deputies today v.·ere probing , three Harbor Arca suicide ca s c s I discovered in a 12-hour period, t\10 by shotgun and one by drugs. The ,·ictim in the latt<'r case annOtJnccd his intentions in a nole mailed to police. Another vjc1im 1\·as disCQvC'red inside a parked camper truck near South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa by a p<ttrolman \\·ho had noticed il parked there for se,·eral da~·s. Newport Beach Police Deteclive Satn , Amburgey said Kenyon .Jo~an~. 25. of • 1 no knov.n address. took his hfe "'ith a shotgun blast about 7:30 a.m. tod ay I \vhile visiting at 5001 'f.! Neptune Ave., in \Vest Ne~·port John Brewer, 19, of 115 16 26th St., "'as round by police later in the morning , after a letter mailed Thursday was received by detectives at headquarters. Investigators s<1id in it the 'victim outlined intentions to take his life and added that l\\"O notes "·ere found in his apartment when they arrived. Rosi'! J\1arie Reynolds. 31, of 432 S. Harbor Blvd .. Santa Ana. \vas found shorlly before midnighl Thursday In the parked truck near South Coast Plaza. Police said J\1rs. Reynolds. named in a recent missing persons report filed by her husband \Vith Santa A n a invl'.'stigato rs, had shot herself in the face v.ith a 20 gauge shotgun. San Diego OK 's Park Spraying SAN DIEGO tAP) -Wllh lhe City Council deciding not to intervene, the controversial spraying of Balboa Park against Japane_!e beetles will go on Tuesday as scheduled. The council, in a 5-2 vote Thursday, turned down a recommendation of Its public raclllties committee to seek a a>url Injunction. C.unty supervisors earlier approved the apraylo1 as mpt b)' a11in17 ind state agrleulture olflclal1. Last summer 17 live beetles wm found In the park. A alSlt olflcW told lhe I couocl1 that "we have to mwne" othen , are thett. • DON'T i\TISS OUR FABULOUS SOFA & CHAIR SALE . ... ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 18. ,....,,..N ~ Largest inventory in our history to be reduced . Stop in now for best selection at terrific savings. Fantastic selections nf upholstered pieces all on s•le no\v. Na mes like Sherrill, .\l<1rge Carson and Woodmark all al special prices. Over 100 sofas and 250 chairs have been price-s lashed ... ·come in and browse! DREXEL-+-iERITAGE-+-iENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN ; . WllllDAYS I UTUIOAVS tlOO to l<JO -• NEWPORT BEACH• 1727 WESTCUFF DR., 1<2·2050 LAGUNA BEACH • 345 NORTH C0"5f HWY., 494-SSSI f • TORRANCE• 23649 HAwrHORNE BLVD. (Open Fri .1119, 5"n. 12-5,30) 378-tm ...... ., " ... " • • I I f \ .. , ' ,. ; ; • • I • DAILY PILOT EDITOIUAL PA.GK. a.nd the Law The ranks of Orange Coast bicyclists are growing. Within Newport Beach, which )las a population of 65,000 there are !8,550' licensM bicycles. There's also an influx of bikes frorn surroundlng areas on weekends and during the surnmer. The problem ls tbal a lot or cyclists don't seem lo "'"'lze that a bicycle is legally a moving vehicle just like an automobile or motorcycle . ' It is illegal to ride a bike on a sidewalk or on the Je~·ide of the stteef, to run Stop signs or weave across th;; ;\;eet, to ride at night without a light or to fail to yie ld the right or way. It's also extremely dangerous. Newport Beach police have predicted there may be as many as 60 bike accidents this summer if cyclists continue to violate traffic laws. They've also warned they'll be giving traffic tickets to violators. These tickets go on driving records and can a!fect auto insurance rates. With the number of bicycles in the area growing steadily, it's extremely important that cyclists obey trat· fie laws for their own safety. . ~ Way witl1 Words \Vhen Newport Beach residents hop aboard the new intra..city bus line beginning next month, 11-year-old David Badger will be very l)lUCh a part 0£ the picture. For they will be climbing aboard the "Harbor Hop· per," which is the name the sixth grade Newport Heights student entered in the city's "Name the Bus'' Contest. ' Llltk~, you say, that an ll·year-old boy should think up the wililling name. AppafenUy not so. You see. you ng Mr. Badger had suggested a couple of other names. Another entry, "The Newport Navigator," won second prize as councilmen voted on t.be wjnning name Monday night. And, aerording to City Manager Robert I ... \Vynn, at least two of David's other suggestions ahnost 1nade the list of six finalists. Besides winning both the first and second place gift certificates from Fashion Island. David also gets a free pass on his Harbor I-lopper for the entire surnmer. Now his only problem would seen1 to be \\1hether his parents will let him use it to go to the beach as often as he wants to. Dedicated to Y outl1 This year for the first time the Orange Coast Y~1CA didn't name a \Voman of the Year. Instead they named a \Von1an, of the Decade. ri1rs. Alice F'ox was selected for the unusual honor because she's retiring after working at the YMCA for '20 year~s, serving in almost every position on the staff. Durillg those 20 years, she's had a tren1e nd ous in· fluence on the n1any yo ung people involved in the YMCA activities. The fact that her influence has been an out- standing one is attested to by her being selected for this honor. ~{rs. F'ox deserves the highest praise for her dedi· cation to helping youth and for her many hours of de· voted work at the Yf\.1CA . I N 'H 'ell. 'o 1~uch for r he Temperance C'r usade. · ' Two-way Gap • Ill Dear Gloo111y Lesso11s of ll'atergate • Communication---- \\"AS!i l~CTON -The stony barrier of nonco1nn1unication . between the \\'hHe I louse ~nd Republican leader&: in Congress. an important ingredient in the \Vatergate tragedy. y,·as raised high last week againsl an eleventh-hour effort to confront President Nixon \\'ith real ity. Rep. John Anderson of Illinois. chairman of the House Republican conference, y,·anted to discuss the brutal facts of !if·~ al Thurs· · day's \llhite l·lou~t ml'etin~ betwePll Hl'- publican lt>a<lcrc; and l\1r. l\'ixon . \nder· :son's propo~fl I: in· forrn thi.: Prf'sitlC'nt tho! his denial of additional tapes to ·-U.)C..spccial_prosccu· ... ---· tor and !he ~louse Judiciary Committee had no Republican backing and could only end in his des- truction. Hui no other Republican leader barked Anderson even though most agreed with his sentiments. They look the position that the President alone should set the agend3 for \Vhite l1ouse meetings -a \·ie\v held particularly strongly by Sen. llugt.i Scott of PennsylvaniA. Having •·firl'd the gu n that · started the Republican stampede against t he President'' (in the words of one bitter \Vhite 11ouse aide\, Scott wanted no embarra ssing personal encounter with Alr. Nixon. TllE RESULT '''as a surrealistic morning in the Oval Office. Nobody mentioned the nation 's great political crisis. Although Mr . Nixon in private has raged al Scott for his lethal criticism of the White •louse transcripts. the two men sat side-by-side politely through a dreary economic briefing. Anderson feels Watergate might "'ell have been avoided had f\'lr. Nixon taken Republican leaders into his confidence. But for their part, the leaders' reluctance to confront the President indicates G!i~ANS·NOVAK J noncommunication is a two-way street. Both sides can share the blame. MIDEAST PITFALL \.\'hile Secretary of State 11enry Kissinger strives for an Arab-Israeli settlement. a move is gathering force in the Senate to n1ake American aid to Egypt dependent on Cairo's opening the Suez Canal Lo all nations equally -meaning Israel. If such an amendrnent actually dl'nied future U.S. aid to Egypt unl ess Cairo pledged to permit Israeli flagships to transverse the canal. Egypt would nevCr agree. That could sour the Wa shington· Cairo ro111ance. Even talk of such an amendment cnow actively conside red bv Sen. Abrah am Ribicoff or cOnnecticUt and others) cbl\1:!1 the Stale Department. ActuallY. Israel has privalt·ly told the t'.S. it y,·ill .accept Egyptian agre1•111cnt to permit Israeli cargoes ~but no! Israeli nagshipsl through the cannl. E~.> pti:i n president Anwar Sadat has given private assurances of that. But If the strongly pro-Israel Congress attached an amendment demanding free passage for Israeli · flagshipS1 the powerful pro-Israeli lobby .here·· :would scarcely oppose it. To I~ cootrary; whatever private agreetnents Jsrael has made with Kissinger, a strong vote in Congress for Ribicoff's proposal \\·ould be viewed in lsrael as a ma jor gain in the high-stakes polilics reaching a climax in the Middle East. WIDTE HOUSE REVEr<GE Vindictive politics of the Nixon \\'hilc House su rfaced again in "'i gratuitous. grossly inaccurate attack by ex-\Vhit£' House personnel chief Hal'ry Flt"n11ning on a young ltepublican candidate for Congress y,•ho committed the cardinal sin Does it dishonor a lariel fl:>g lo have someone \l'ith question<ib!f" ethical standards 11ear it'.' G~mY Gu• commtnlt lrt s.ubmilltd b1 rt<ldtr$ ""' dO not n~••••rll' r10ec1 !h• views of !ht n1w•P1Ptr. S11'111 your ofl PHYt ~ Gloomy Gw .. Otilf PllOI. of not being blindly loyal to the President. John Robinson \Vest quit in disgust in mid-1.969 after several months as a minor \\'hite House aide. Returning to Pennsylvania. \Vest began preparing a Republican political career. T\\O weeks ago. \\lest at age ·27 1\•as frontrunner 1 leading the regular or g n n i z a I i on candidate 1 in the Republican primary elrc1 ion for a congressional sc:it fro1n Philadelphia's Hcpublican su burbs. But \\'cst's posilion y,•as undernuncd 11 hen Flt"ntn1ing attacked hin1 as a "11·aJk lng disaster ... y,·ho \11as all out for glory and self-aggrandizement " in \\"ashington. Flemming told t he Philadelphia Inquirer that West held "an un1)aid position" and did nothing at the \\'hite House. POLITICIANS ht're y,·ere amazed Iha! l-'lcmming. a political protege of John J\litchell. \\"Ou\d interfere in a Republican primary election. Far more se rious. Flemming·s vengetul -0ssault "'as based on 11·hclesale errors of fact.. \Vest \\·as not "unpaid" but on the payroll of the Republican National Comm ittee and \\·as assigned to the \\'hite House after l\-lr. N ix on · s inauguration. J~e \\•as not •·fired.. in ;\larch 1969 but resigned in June. His fo1·mer boss, national co1nmiltee political ' education dit:ector Ray Humphreys. • described hin1 to us as a "resourceful. energetic, a1nbitious young leader" of the type needed to rebuild the shattered liepublican party. Flemming's attack \\'as on"-n1o!·c example of the politics of vc•11 gcanef' played by White House in-;ider " :i'!:1111s1 anyone y,•ho rcfusecl to toe lhi· line in the pre.Yi'atcrgate glory days of ;\Jr Nixon's <ill-powerful \\'hite !louse stafr. A Literary Event of Significance One of the most in1portant literary events of this or any other season was the publication last week of a long· awaited work draml\,tlcally entitled ''Recorded Presidential Conversations'' (Government Printing Office; 13()8 pp : 112.~; Expurgated). ' While some reviewers will see this as simply another oral history of the behind· the-slail'Hl·the-White House variety and olhera. wil1 di• miss lt as a ta"''dry mystery, to 't'- llred old eyes it Is a work of Ill!' Jor P"'" . portions (Ix.I~ x a•\ inches; 3 lbl; paper· book). It la by the .. ,.. ~ popular author who ' re<ently broiiahl ll!I • lhe instant beSlsellcr, 1'Preslderi'tla1 'Tu • Return•/' io ffhlcb this is, ln a waJ1 a -uct. But thla, It cannot be galosald, .• la hla magnum oP.,s .. ' ' For the di..,.mlng reader will rind here a deeply p • n e t r a 11 n g psychological dnirna !hit aoea to the very heart of )he human coodillon. . 1 • It la not, ooo' lhould be warned, ll&ht far.. Maey a ruder will be put. oil by the~-1tyle, rcmlnilcont of "tn.Y-." Othera will be him as the most loyal of all the aides, almost a son to P. But then he is revealed to have been one of the plotters. Thus he. n1akes the agonizing decision to betray P to save his own skin. In reven_ge, P attempts to make D the confused by the tangled web of plots and s~goat instead of J.?\1 .. a secondary su~plots. But those who persist through figure whom he 'had originally planned to to the unsurprising end will be rewarded blame or ... with new truths lhat so enlighten the But let us not destroy the suspense by mind. revealing too many of the plots. SUUice il THE BASIC plot Is s 1 mp le yet to say that many, Including dcuble- innovatlve. The protagonist, 8 respected acrostic fans, will be richly rewarded by mtddl&.a(ed executive ldentllled only•as th< challenges pre90Dted. '.'P," ls .IW'ptiaed .to dl9cover 'hil loyal JF THE WORK suffers from any flaw, • llliltanli are not plottmg aplnst bfm, ·iii! the dialect ol the characters. Typical IAstead, they are plottlila: fQl' ~· t j>erhlps, is P saying, "Because we can't , Hit problem la ho" jo ~ l.>fs -I've got -if the U.S. Attorney's Office osslSlanli and blmseU !rom tho vWllniNs ·and, ah ... " • ln•~ton wi.i are'pcll'lulnf ~au, Glarity surlers. Yet much o[ tho E>tq,t pllel upon eveel We feel Iha authenticity would be lost if tho en<my ct.otng In lrom all 1kt•~ · characters spoke plain English. Slowly sradually In one ol the mO'll The author has also seen ru to delete brlillanl • dt•ecttona' of 1 man's soul •In ' expl1tlvea such as, Pt'Wlmably. "golly," Englllh Uterat\lfe we see P'a noble'. · .. gee•• and "oh, fudge" for fear, oddly character trode be.rare our very eyei ·: eno'Wh, of offending his readers. 111W Mal!y, in oo• dranllUc eoene , hO ~ Bui lhe.oe are minor crlticlam11 There fP01kt d~tely of perjury bribery ts no question we have here an lmpor- and other methods of obalructtng jusUC6. ta~t work by a i.eat ... lltng author. And Talk about Dorian Grayl 1!•1 can't help feeling he hss a great • ddl .more lo say. TRROOGUOUT Tim Wol'k ..,... the Lei us hope we hear from him again lrag!C fillue ol JOUD& D. Al llrtl. fie ... soon. Let's Look at Ourselves -. -.._ To the Editor: I 11THe these \\'Ords from a pcrspecth·e r f prejudice and pain . Pr ejudice nt h<1\'1ng never liked our President. /l (chard !\ii. Nixon; pain at enjoying the present plight of one I have never liked. I feel good about chickens Y.rho seem to be toming home !o roost.-in connection 'A'ith ~·Ir. Nixon. I am pleased that justice is still being served. Yet J remain tr11uhl;:id by a number of questions \1 hich I address to myself. DOES l\lr. Nixon's insensith'il \· to others justify nty lack of sensitivity to him as a person? Does my pleasure al his seemingly justified plight render me somcho\v vica riously unaccountable for 1ny 0111n secret and silent moral 1111perfec!ions? A.ssuming I can convince rriyself of the iustification for enjoying hi s ordeal. y,·hat happens to niy hutnanity 1f •J allo1\' such gloating to occur? \Ve pride ourseh•es on being a nation of law, order. and jllS1icc. Laws have been broken: order has been shaken; justice has been obstructed . Persons have befn treated as pa'ATIS, ~jects. things to be manipulated and u ed to further Mr. .r\ixon's ends. Mr. ixon seemingly fails to appreciate the severity bf these blun- ders in interpersonal relations. YET, I wonder. Is not the way y,·e treat our wi\'es, our husbands, our children. our parents, our associates. and even our enemies of equivalent moral worth to the underlying evils of \V a le r g a I c ·• Qualitatively, if not quantitatively, I believe that each of us shares morally in !\-Ir. Nixon's human failings as revealed in the tape transcripls. Whenever \\'e tend to treat others as objects to be manipulated in order to serve our oy,·n need for self-aggrandiZen1ent. then \\'e give up the privilege of se\f-ri!!hteous indignation and hypocrit ical g\oaling o\'er any other person's failings -even t.lr. Nixon's. Justice must be served. and I believe it 11·ill be \\'ith Cod's help. Yet J also believe that the ultimate importance o f \\'atergate 11·ill not be the fact of just ice served, bul the \\1ay we as individuals rract to justice as it is being !'=Prved. The n1oral measure of us as a nation 1vitl not 111\imalely l>e the successful adjudication of ?.1r. Nixon. but the lessons \\·e learn from this experien ce about ourselves and the manner in \\"hich \\'e. tco, treat ethers. RABBI BERNARD P. KING Sununer Danee To the Editor: In the interest of the OCC stl!dents and lhe commtmity, a summer dance program is beginning to take fonn . In the past years, l should assume since the origin of the school. OCC has never offered any dance classes in its summer sessions. So this would lead you to believe thal there is a lack of interest, right? EVERY dance class offered this semester was completely filled A few had to turn away .as many as 20 students per class. The evening cla!ises, both at OCC and Bl Golden West, had to handle the same situation of an over.responsive student attendance. With Ibis In mind it beoomes Ironic thsl there have been no dance claaes offered In previous summers a11d somewhat un1ustifiable that none are scheduled for um summer, especially In vtew of ·the fact that dapcers need year Quotes lllme1h Arora. new India consul general. S.F. on growth of auru-led meditation culls In U.S. -"I would gl•• all gurus ,the benefit ol the doullt. But even a bad guru can be ~ p>d guna 11 his teacblnga work for you." -.. ---~··~ . -~·-----·· ------~...ct. • ..,-(~------------] ::intici\l~ti1lg l narriage and family O\US't be counseled, not into part-time careers. l'tlAILBOX. bul into ca reers in \\'hich t'he option of -part-lime work exists. This represents Letters froni readers are welcome. Norntally, writers should convey tlieir messages in 300 words or tess. The right to condense letters to fit space or etimi11ate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include sig11aturi and mail· ing address but ·names may be wi th- held on request if sufficient reason ;5 apparent. Poet ry u·ill not be p11b- lis1ted. round exercise •111d !>.lrl'trhing to kt'Cp in lune . TI\'O OBSTACLES in oppc:i.o;•-!o the form<iticn of a sum1ner dance progr::in1 ;Jrc . lirst the lack of sufficient funds and second . the fact that ii \\'ou!d no! be listed in the summer session schedule. Certainly there is some validity to these concerns. llowever we must not overlook the fact that the State pays the school ADA (average daily attendance) in proportion to !he number of students attending that specific class. A n estimated ADA !or a class of filly studenls in a summer session is $1.200. !I.lost dance classes ha\'e a limit of 45 students. TifF. SECOND obstacle is easily overcome as it is not at all unusual for classes to be added to the curriculum after a schedule is made. A qualified instructor is available to handle all the classes proposed, including beginning ballet, beginning modern . intermediate modem and ballroom dancing. A tentative arrangement of the class times ha,, already been worked out. The students at pee have started a petition stating that there is a definite need for a summer dance program at OCC and that they plan to attend if at all possible. Thus far over 100 students have signed the petition. If \'OU would like to see a sumn1er dance program developed in your community for this summer, please express yOur concern by contacting Tom Blakely at the Summer Session Evening School Administration office, or by calling 5.56-5880. RICK SYLVAJN 1Ulslnterpreted To the Editor: If Women's Lib needs yet another boring historical example. particularly Biblica1, It at least should not commit the sin of omission. I refer to Ms. Berger's article, Churches Once Rec o g n i zed Equality, May 13. The oft-quoted sentences of Ruth . (Whither thou goest, I y,•ill go ... etc.) were not directed to her husband I who was dead) but to her mother-in-law. Naomi. However, in the article; it comes off as being another put-down, ", .. how a woman should be ... st.:bmissive and dependent .. " Unless ?\1s. Berger meant that this is an example or ho\Y we should ~cqWesce to oui: mothers-ln·law .. It is moot misleading In the coi!I•xl of the story. ' NAN KLOSTERMAN Motherhoocl To·the F.dltor : .Todoy Is a Happy Mother's Day. I dldjil Wlderstand the emphasis in the Mother's Day feature In which l was quoted. The job descrlpUon for "mother" rnay be changin1, but the need !or mothering remains the same. · M0111ERllOOD or parealhood It a slap. not 1 tll)ll, Young women one realislic option for women in our present day society. Other mothers, \\'ho arc lucky enough lo be given the choice. choose to pursue full- time careers. Husbands and other support systems pitch in to share other responsi bilities. Still others/ make !he cognith•e choice to be full-time mothers \rhile their children are young. \\1hat is new is choice. Parents "·ill ah\·ays be VIPs to their children. LINDA ALGAZI J1csf iee? "To the Edilor: It is ironical how \Our f\1ay 13 issue had Jack Anderson trying Bebe Rebozo, and several other 1>enple. on the Hu ghes money through secrt'l information from secret people. He turned this supposed information over to "someone with a subpoena" with his list of witnesses and the questions he saicl should be asked. While in the same issue lhe burglars. dope peddlers and n1urderers \\'ere , excused from !heir trials because the information against them was declared illegal by wire-laps signed by the \vrong people. What ever happened to logical justice? GOLDIE JOSEPH Llee11si11g Cols To the Editor: Your editorial of May 8 regarding licensing of cats touched only upon the most superficial aspects of the problem. It is so easy to pull the emotional plugs every time a freedom must give y,•ay to the inexorable and irreversible fact of overpopulation -both hun1an and nnimal. THE EASY \\'ay out. ;1s suggested by your editorial. is to \rail -and hope fo r a solution that \\'ill plca~c everyone. Many of us whn cherlsh our feline friends and feel that fair trcatn1cnt for cats is \\·ay overdue. ha1·t concluded that licensing is a first step in according cats equal value with dogs. 1t is a very small slart toward reducing the pitiful flood of unwanted killens and cats constantly passing through the death chambers of our pounds. \Ve y,·ould hope your editorial policy \\'OUld help us to be strong enough to face a humane problem and start to solve it now: there is no more tune to "wait and see"! RLTH ~-RANKEL President. Animal Assistance U!ague of Orange County OlANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. Wr.td, Publishtr Thoma$ Kteuil, Edit<n' Barbara Kreibich Eliiloriat Pape Editor The t<ditorlal p~e of !ht> Daily Piiot ~kl: to Inform and 1timu1ate ~ad~rs by 'pf't'SCfltint( oii this pqe diver. ~n~ntacy ·on topl¢1 o{ 1n.. t~lt tot t)'l'td4cated colwnnilts and c&rtoon:itta, by provktinc a forum tor tte,den' •lew• and by lftlet\tl'W thls newt:Pt0tr'1 opinlona and ideu on cvm!:flt top6ca. ne tdl!orlal op(nlons of Ute-O.lly Piiot awear only In th• editorial coJW'l'ln at the lop of the Jll.t:e. Opiftlonl Olftned 6y the col- umnists arid ~I tnd kll~ writers ah tbtir own ahd oo ~ .,,. mmt ol htr vWwt t!)t 1ht Dalb PUot tlliaWct .... , ..... Friday; May 17, 1974 • • ' fr1d.tly, May lf, 1974 DAILY PILOT , 5 . ' ( Quentin Violence Rampant State Energy Bill Awaits 11118 IOUClft 11811Mln ... ' CALIFORNIA li11nate Will Atte1id Son's Final R it.es SAN QUENTIN (UPI) - San Quentin's 3,000 inmates were kept locked In their cells today in an effort to end a rash of violence and insure the safety of the convicts. One convict was stabbed lo death bt a recreation yard Thursday and a short time later 13 inmates engaged in a knife fight in the adjustment center, a sp;eci.al facility for troublesome inmates. Just after the genera I lockup was ordered late in the day, another inmate was -A ( .. ___ ___,,) convict was given permission BRIEFS Thursday to attend the funeral of his 16-year-old son, who SOLEDAD (UPI) died without knowing his father-had paid him a last visit. stabbed lwi~ in the east block during the diMer movement. And in the same section a convict ''fell or was pushed" from the fourth-Ooor tier, a spokesman said. Both suffered only minor injuries. Officials said there ·have been 10 incidents of violence in the past 36 hours. SENT TO JAIL Paul Halverson 1'wo Friends Of SLA Girl Go to Jail SAN rnANCISCO (UPI) - Two friends of a fugitive member of the terrorist Symbjonese Liberation Army "·ere sent lo jail Thursday for refusing to ans~·cr Grand Jury questions rn the Patricia ' Sig·nature of Gov. Reagan SACRAMENTO IAPI -The California Legislalurt! h a s given final approval to this year's major energy legislation -sending it to Gov. Ronald Reagan, who says he will sign it. 'Thursday's 57-3 Assembly vote culminated three years of negotiations on the power plant siting-energy conservation bin. The battle had involved eco 1 og is ts, utilities and the Re a g a n adtninistration. Assemblyman Ch a r I es \Varren (0-Los Angeles), told fellow legislators his bill would speed up the state's .power plant siting process and help conserve needed e n e r g y resources. TllE l\1EASURE w o u Id create a f i v e -m embe r C-On1mission with the power to decide where plants would be located. If the plant were nuclear. the Atomic Energy Commission also v.·ould need to approve it. It bars persons from serving on the commission if they worked for a utility within the previous two years. Burke argued that the provision blocked the "best qualified" from sitting on the commission. where there may be blackout! and brownouts soon, Warren sald. A Rand Corporation sludy had estimate d t hat Oalifomla's energy """"""I'" lioo would grow by 7.5 por- cent .annually it consumption ~ere not curbed. AMONG F1VE other Wanen said his bi 11 '! Republicans against the energy-saving prov is Ions; measw·e was Badham or would btlng that rate down to Newport Beach. Ken Cory of about 3 percent. Garden Grove was among 40 .-That would mean Callfomia Democrats approving the bill, "'Ould onJy· have to build 35 while John Briggs of Fullerton new nuclear power plants joined 18 Republicans in between now and the year 2000 app roving the measure. Floyd -rather tKan the 120 Rand \Vakefield of Anaheim was had estimated in Its study, among 13 of the Assembly not Warren said. voting. Under Warren 's bill, a plant PresenUy a utility appl ying site within the coas t I in e to build a plant must go permit zone created by Prop. through 33 agencies, and that 20 in 1972 would alSQ... need has helped slow nuclear power approval by the Coastline plant construction to the point Commission. • HOURS: S.t., Mey 11, 10:00to5:00 Sun., Moy 19, ltOO to S:OO Morl., fl'o .. 201 10:00 lo 5:J O WE URGE YOU TO TAKE ADVANTAGE BECAUSE .•• YOUR GAIN IS NOT OUR LOSS. Th is is a sale you can believe in. Hen's why.We must reduce OUf ifTll'ef'ltory. Some models we O'lef"-bought, W>me diKonlinued models, trade-i ns, rent retums. repauesiions. Mostly Hanmonds -a few other makes. A few eicomples as fallows , Corona del Mar Store .... State Correction Director Raymond Procun ier granted the furlough to P h l I i p ri.tacchiarella, 35. to attend the funeral Saturday or his son Leonard, who died Tuesday" or a rare kidney disease at the University of California Medical Center in S a n ~Tancisco. e Stot1ford Stril~t~ Hea rst kidnaping. Paul fTalver~on. 29. and Cynthia Garvey. 26. faced a possi ble 3~ months in jail for refusing to ans"•er I 3 questions related to their acquaintance IA' i th SLA member Camilia llall, one of the suspecte d Hearst By !he time \Varr<'n brought the bill up for concurrence in Senate adrnendments. he had won s u pport of conservationists. the Rea~an administration and the private utilities. 2nd .An1111a/ So111J,,,.,, Calij01'1lia mobl1 home E:'"""' .. ~la imY27 New Hammond vs.Joo Spinet w/~"· , , . . 93.S N e w Hammond .5182 Mcn-~idr. •....• , ..• 1390 New Hammond 1 18'2~·0elv-Spjnet 197S UMdHamrnond T·S8'2Topo1Sp;.,.,.L#os .• ~. '2.SSO SAL( 79S 109S 1595 1995 2S99 3795 •99S The permission came from Procunier after the ,,·ardcn's office at the California training facility rej ected Macchiarella's appeal for the trip. STANFORD ( A P \ Stanford Universi1y President Richard Lyman says attorneys will seek a court order today limiting picketing ·by nearly 1,000 campus wor kers who struck ·i1onday for higher .. U1ed Ha11w11ond R·19.5Cornole .......... 3740 Demo Hanwnond H-39.S c~ ........ _. 4S4S Demo Hammond '2!27Coni;o.-c:le·lopoll•f>e •. 63115 Santa Ana Store . .,. Before Leonard died. he told other relatives that he wanted to see his father. Prison officials granted the request. but by the time ~1acchiarella arrived at his son's bedside. the boy . had slipped into a wages. kidnapers. Lyman told a fa c u I t Y The Federal Grand Jury But not everyone liked the final product. Assembly1nan Robert Burke (R·llunlington Beach)... blasted the bill 's conflict-of-interest provision . • Singles, doubles, triples: from 12' x 60 .. 24' x 70'; to 34' x 70'. • Used Hammond l-1005P:ne! •..••..••••• 1710 UH!d Hammond 1·1005pinel"""')'pe.,;""-1710 Used Hammond l·2•3 5p"""'lw/le1l.e .....• 1995 Used Hammond T ... 12 Spinet W1.+.,.i+... • • • • 1550 De-mo Hommond 7182C0\9" .........•.• 2045 .... 66S 99S 1295 179S 1645 . 3195 7995 meeting Thursday night t.he was convened after the SLA decisi?n. to seek a temporary staged a $10,000 bank-robbery restraining order came after in which Miss Hea r s{ 2 Se11te •e<l • See latest mi d-ye1r innove~ans by nation- ally recognized ma nufecturen. G a~ut 40 pickets delayed appeared lo take part. l\tiss llC deli very of hot meals to . . . • Professionally decorated, furnished, lend· scaped homes ranging in price from 57500 IO $49,500. Demo Hammond 11·182Conlole .......... 37•0 Used Hommond X66 CD"10le •.... , , , , •.. 11).880 coma. ., P.'.:!·.•~ SiP'iro R r:.;i&lUQ. the prison chaplain. volunteered. to act as an escort to the funeral Stanford University Medical Hall. a_lso w~s 1d.ent1f1ed as a lu_ SJ , eent~r-~;Jlfs-f{::' ...!!~·~ ~rt~~nt !~ pi<:tu.,!!S taken ti V l 11 er ho · 6y ~ O<rmt s-i!rn01unt~ca10-=--· ,>.. ~:'!:ii.er Aha Mavericks, Phoeni11. & H·39S ot in Corona def Mor ...... -... ~-·-·,, ........ _..... .. .__.-, ...... -....... ""'r-··--""'"' .... ~.~ .... .,-:-··...,... • Jr" .. .. Sumething :ur'f!V!rryune-So Hurry--• ur. el"8s. you make your choice. -·- near San Jose. 4 l11dicte<l In 'Zebra' e R e b<'I l>11illy SA:-I DIEGO (AP\ Barbara P. Hutchinson, a ~e!f­ siylf!'.I "ta~ rebel" and author of the arguments againSt three bond measures that w i 11 appear on next month's state ballot, pleaded guilty to three criminal offenses committed Murd ers •over a 13-year period. II was disclosed 'Jlntr!day thal ~frs. Hutchinson, 57, executive director of the Association of C o n c e r n e d Taxpayers. entered g u i I t y pleas in a 1961 visa fraud case. a 1967 insurance qise and a 197l income tax evasion case. _ SAN FRANCISCO iUPl l Four young Black ri.1uslims ,.,.ere indicted for n1urder and assault Thursday in the •·Zebra" killings th<1t lr!t 13 ~ hite victims deri<l . The indictments v.-crc handed up in San Francisco She ~·as placed on pffibation in each case. but the probation could be revoked and she Superior Court follo~·ing three could be sent to prison if she days of testimony. including is convicted of new charges an appearance by an infonner -involving preparing false tax who tied the killings to a cult returns for another member of called the "Death Angels." her group. Tndicted '~-ere 1\1 an u e 1 ~Ioore, 29. J .C. Simon. 29. and Larry C. Green, 22. all of San Francisco. The three were arrested l.1ay I in a pre-da~·n raid. Bail for each "·as set at $300.000. Jessie Cooks. a 1 read y serving a murder term at San Quentin J>rison. was also indicted. Cooks had n o t previously appeared in court in connection v.·ith t h e "l.ebra" case. Assistant District AttomCyl• \\ralter Giubini told the court that police have the '"'capons used in 12 shootings and six b'llllShot assaults. The indictn1ents charged one or t":o shooUng murder counts aganist cact"I suspect. T \I,' o men, Green and Cooks. face charges for the hacking death of a daughter of a prominent \\'inery 01.1'nt'r. This did not lit th e randon1 pattern of the dozen murders. e Judges T old LOS ANGELES <UPI) T~·o mwticipal j u d g e s , insisting they could not speak up earlier because of "gag omers." identified themselves Thursday as the jurist~ accused by a colic-ague of interfering v.'ith the Sylmar Tunnel explosion trlaL J\·luniclpal J udges Jo.an Dempsey Klein aad Vincent Erickson said the accusalioa was "patenUy absurd." e Protest Rally LOS ANGELES IUPll Nearly 5,000 p ersons conducted a rally and candlelight vigil in--Hancock Park Thursday night protcsling lhe Arab guerilla auack in 1\or1h I s r <1c1 \\'ednesdav. Police said the gathering of Je"•ish groups "·as conducted peacefully and w i I ho u t incident. Fine Wine Fine Cheeses Fine Bargains '70 Puligny Montrachet ........•. $37 .80 cs '70 Estate Bottled Cotes Du Rhone ·$29.79 ,, (limiJed Quonlitiet) We will of course deliver coses. ROBERT LAWRENCE BALZER select;ons ava;Jable for sompling along wifh fine im porled cheese in our tosling room. SOUTH COAST PLAZA lower Lewi neor Bullock's Costa Mesa • 557-2907 I, •• :\liss Garvey charged lhE' VAl' 1\U\'S I UPI ! A Grand Jury was a political v.·oman and her boyfr1~nd body and Halverson said his have been sentenced to five refusal to lestify was a matter years to life in prison after of conscience. pleading guilty to killing the "I don't look on the Granrl 1voman's 3·year-old daughter Jury as a legal institution." and scattering par!s of t.he Miss Ga;vey told U.S. District child 's body o~·er a "'ide area. Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoli. who l\·lary Ann Vitale. 26. and sent them both to jail. •·it William Perez. 31, ~·ho lived squashes people whose politics \1·ith her, entered the gu:lt y are opposed to lhe pleas to killing f\1rs •. \1it.1le's government, and r will not daughter, Lisa. last cooperate with the Grand l\'ovember. Perez beat the girl Jury." to death. • Covered di~play ere• for releted eccessories end services; park and site information. • Hundreds of itteas for better livi ng. • Homes displayed in perk·likt 1etting for easy inspection, comparisan. for best seleciion ! We don't advertise o so•colled sole every week when we have o sole -it is really a SALE! c Hammond Organ Studios 2854 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar 644-8930 Hammond Organ Studios 2033 N. Main St 1 Santa Ana 547-0351 Bonk Financing Available ·---------------------------r Wallichs Music Ci1' ;~;~'~re ,~~:·:;il~~~~ll y i~~nl ~~ · gre!f ~~t~;r-· ~ ·'&Y .. ·. greal bu ys on th e world 's be st brands! ~. A • ' Never Before At These Prices! @·P·IONEl~·l'I® Ster~.o Rec~ivers ONE HALF _O.fF! .. · .. ., Limited Time Only On These. Ori~i,n~!1¥· F~ir .Traded Prices -A Once In A Life T 1me Offer! · ' . . ., Save $99.98 .\ " ··~;.:.. __ _ SX-424 ~ ;1) .A- AM-F M Re::~::ei;:';ve~r;----.:..r ;." \"•llh'" <tro:...,1.: \ ,!1,1• l!l d -tf'r!•f") If•< f'll ''I, th••'-\ . < I r ,,mli,P"' 'nl•d ,i,111 rl'rwU\' .lf1rl oul•I •nd111..: \••·.•I 1\' !" •H "" r ,1Jl>1•I•· Jtll\\!'I ,u1d ,.,, l.JI, nt ! \\ "I 11 do .(\ I/.,' l'•!•I • I ·•"!1jll·!u·r ,, ,1 '11,o.I 01 1 ~,'I"'••' 10! (I•·"~' I'll h p1ill I\ i"' •'"lid ,1n1I \\111( IU'!;U• rl• \ 11''(""1'1'. 11••11' l""''·r l• ... lf1\1«1~tl ,uid hoi:h ••i;n.,l ro no"'' r.11.0 f"nnl>tH ••o: li\l.., I~""''' 1• 1~ \\ olh l.' \\,\II !I h1 •••rll\1·1t1<1t,< Ir,, ,, lill!HJ!'i<'. !JIJl'. d~·l ~, ..rnti :,µ • .,,_,.,,• t Reg. 5199. 95 $99.97 Wlwl'l..WwMt.-r 2 ... .,.. .......... of yow dlelee lif lold ,.,......,s14'·''' Save 5129.98 SX-525 m . ~--'-"-'°'~ . • .. . '" .r • I -' (·~ ---._._ -- ••••• ·(_j - AM-FM • C)111·oni.: ,1 hn•I 01 I m.~ pn1t f)f'Tlf1u11,mrl', th•·~'(. 1,,!I, I\ d1•t1ni.:111•i-wd bv •u1*1"h "·1•.irilorv .inti qL1.ll1t1· '"'I'd •I.•'"'"' iulr~ I om1or11 ,"'" 11\1.., 1""'''' "1.!ff'(j ,)~ lui.;li ,,, ,'!I \\,II!• I .'IJ \\,lth, ""''''th.in .. ,, .. u~h tn dtt1•· .1 "'I uT l.11-:1· •1•·.1~,.,~ 1111h 11ill "llmtl .. 1nd .1l•o 11-.: uµ 10 l\\f/ l11111t.1hll'>, lllU l,!j)t' til.'{.l:O .inJ ,l 11•1c•nnl11l!•e. Reg . $JJ9.95 $169.97 wt.•MWwftlr_, 2.,... ....... _ ...... efy...cWc. llf toW .. ,.......,. $269.,11 The lJepartment Store of Music Since 193.0 • COS'fAMESA South Cont Piao 540.2830 ' I " BUENA PARK 9-Park Ctnltr 827-9060 OPE N EVEN INGS & SUN DAYS CONVENIENT TERMS TAKE YEARS TO PAY BankAinericard -Master Charge I '.,,, ti • ' ' ' ' • • • " • ' Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks • ' VOL. 67, NO. 137, 4 ·SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1974 c TEN CENTS IJelector!!Js Step~aothege W~"its on Coast By JOHN VAL TERZA 01 Ill• Otlty ,Hot lt1fl When 47-year~Jd Dean Hoxsey fought his way intq the U.S. Embassy in Moscow \Vednesday and declared that his enchantment with communism had ended, the agony began for his stepmother· in San Clemente. For Mrs. Ella Hoxsey it goes far beyond th~ certainty of phone calls day and night and the nU'Lsance of press queries. She is seriously ill with cancer. "When I picked up the paper this morning and read the account from correspondents ln Moscow, the shock was just the same as if I had heard the news or an auto accident," she 52:~ from her home Tbµrsday afternoon. Her fondness for her stepson (whom she first met only after he was grown) is obvious. But for Mrs. Hoxsey, the quiet. normal life she established over the past IO years as a widow Jiving modestly in San Clemente ended v.•hen Hoxscy sought to return to Ai;nerica. Hoxsey was literally wrestled rrom the grip of two Russian security officers at the gates of the American enclave in the Soviet capital. Accoonts from two correspc)ndents who witnessed the incident said the one-time defector was grabbed by the Russians as he tried to enter the building. Then. as he was being led lo a Russian interrogation room, two U.S. embassy officers managed to grab Hoxsey from his captors and s pi r it hi.n into the embassy which is legally U.S. territory. "No one knows what will happen now," r.trs. Hoxsey said. "I don 't have any real hopes about the situation," she added. Tired. weary and In pain, the San Clemente widow said friends have advised her to leave home to spare herself any further problems because or \\'cdnesday's c ,. en ts -deemed· an international incident in governn1cnt circles. "The last time I sa\v Dean \\'il.S in 1959 and 1960 when his father '''as still alive. \Ve were in Euro~ and learned that Dean was seriously ill and would have delicate surgery in a t\losco\v hospital. We obtained ~rmission and \\!ent to visit. ..His dad stayed an entire swnmer, \\'h.ile Dean recovered. Then his father left," she related. The elder Hoxsey, an a v o \\. e d Communist "'hose career in th<' Lo!I Angeles tax assessor's office roded in 1949 because of his political beliefs - never saw nis son agani. He died four years after that ?-.1osco\v summer. For the former defector. the 17 years in the Sovicl Union were calc1.lated to be repayment lo a regime wh ' hhad a!lO\\"· cd Hox se ythc chance to fulfill a drcan1 . "He had al u•ays wanted to be a doctor. !See DEFECTOR, r age 2l Jet Noise Move Looms • ' ' ' ' Caspers to Seek Session O·ver Ne,wport Suit t -~· -' ' 0.llY 1"1191 f'lloll Ii, "•trldl O'DIMell By L. PETER KRIEG the airport. may drop their litigation and •·politicall y 11101ivated" 01 1111 0.11.,. "ilot s1.11 instead .sJ.lllport the city suit. The Fifth District s u per v is or i a I Fifth District Supe rvisor Ronald \\". The Newport Beach suit asks Orange clectM:ln is less than three weeks away. Jn Caspers said tcxfay he u·i!l call for an County Superior Court to impose strict it, Caspers is facing challenges l>y three executive session of the Orange County operating t'onditions on the airport. other·candidates. Board of Suptrvisors !\lay 2~ to begin -Caspers called the city efforts "far "I don't know why they flied it at this ·negot iations for a settlement of the su1l more apropos" than the damage claim time. It would have been more agair~t ·G1ange-· -.C::::~-.~i~r!.. 1~1-"'~--aAd-sa~ J.hm..iJ... wiU "~ \t<\Y appro_priate to find out v.•hat the state is Thursday by Neu·port Beach. to a settlement or the airport noise .,,._going~~ trd"'<foou1 -m:rt 1~q\l:1."S\ ;\/~""a Caspers also predicted that the nearly problem.'' \'ariance from the state no 1 s e t.000 hon1eou•ners, who fi\'c years ago Airport Oireclor Robert Bresnahan standards," Bresnahan said. filed a $25 million damage suit against disagreed. He said the city's la\\·s:.oit is "If th& variance is granted and the Co111n1ando8 Fro111 Israel Attacl{ Arabs By United Press International An Israeli com111ando un1l carried 0111 a hit-run attack against an Arab guerrilla base a mile inside Leb -non tcday and Israeli planes struck guerrilla base.S nca:· the bcirder in the second d;iv of retaliation for the r-.·taalot n1asSacrc. Israeli military spokesmen reported. More Not~h NEW YORK (AP) -The ation'k--O>a banks pushed the prime lending rate another notch h her t a o 11 lf.1: per~ent. Le.ading the increase from I/4 pe nt were the b1~ New York banks. including First National City, second largest nationally; Chase /\-lanhattan, third largest; Chemical Bank, sixth: Banker's Tru ~t. seventh; Irving Trust, 12th; Marine Midland, 16th; and Franklin National Bank. 20th. . 'fhe country's largest commerc ial bank, the Ban~ of America. followed quickly. as did the National Bank of Delro1t and Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh. 13th largest. . . . . ~ GLENN BOWMAN EYES 'UNIOEl'ITIFIEO FLOATING OBJECT' He Found Out What II Is and How Much It Is Worth The Palestinian neu•s agency \VAFA said in Beirut !he Israeli planes struck in '·waves," hilling five s eparate Major \Vest coast banks al s~ !ollo~e.d. including U_n1te~ Cail· fornia Bank, Crocker Bank, Security Pac1!1c, Bank of Cah forn1a and \Veils Fargo Bank. . The prime rate is the rate banks charge biggest and best corpor· ate custo1ners. \Vhile not directly tied to the rates charged !or con· surner loans, the prime can eventually lead to changes in those rates 2s well. Palestinian refugee camps 1n sourhcrn Walk Profitable. Lebanon from I :50 p.m. to 3: 15. p.m. If said antiaircraft batteries opened up on the planei bili. made no claims of hitting thj!m. Boy _4waiti1ig Reward for Device LI. Gen. Mordechai Gur. the lsrarli armed forces chief of staff. said of the raids he could not rule out !he possibility that Israel was out to make southern Lebanon "unlivable," a \\'urr' used t\vo months ago by Defense Minister J\fosht> Dayan. . Glenn Bowman's early morning walk • on a Balboa beach today should prove very profitable for OOth himself and a Los Angeles electronics company. He stands to make about $100 ror apparently saving the firm $50,000. Bowman, a IS-year-old junior at Newport Harbor High School, was u•alking on !he 8th Street beach about 7 a.in. when he spotted something floating near shore. • "I got a ~ and pulled it in then got the beach tractor ff> help me drag it up on the beach,'' Bowman said. On the bulky, 300-pound strange-looking piece of equipment was a telephone number and the word "reward." Glenn said he called what turned out to be the Bendis: Co rpo ration's Electrodynamlt!s Division in Sylmar. He said they told him the funny-looking thing was a $50,000 transponder that the U.S. Air Force hacf anchored off Santa Cru i.!land and which had broken loose last month. "They told me 10 watch it carefull y and they'd seDd someone down to pick it Damascus reported a dogfight over Lebanon between Israeli and Syrian planes but Israel denied the report. The up," GleM said. Lebanese military command said Israeli He said when the men arrived to haul -planes broke the sonic barrier over .... the transponder away, he was left Beirut today and that the Lebanese Air emptyhaoded but with a promise th t Force scr~bled but m.ade no _ contact. , .. ,, a A Syrian communique issued 111 he,~ get a~ut $11?0 from the company. Damascus said the Syrian and Israeli They said they d have to d~cuss ~e warplanes fought an air battle over South amowi~ of the reyard with their Lebanon today and that an Israeli plane supervisor. was shot down in flames. Bel)dix Corporation off!cials contacted "There was no con!act, there u•as no by tclephone today proi:nised they ~ould battlf and there was no downing," an have a $100 check 1n the mall lo Israeli army spokesman said in Tel Aviv Bowman, who lives at 201 8th St., the hou•ever. · first of neit week. The Lebanese go,·ernn1ent announced They explained that the transponder that 43 persons were killed and 184 which la now U.S. Air Force property wounded in two Israeli air strikes into was used by Vandenberg Air Force Base Lebanon Thursday. carried out in ~ keep track of"lts target missiles. retaliation for an Arab guerrilla attack "It's sort of a ~le scorekeeper," on the Israeli border village of r-.Iaalot Bendis: officials aaid. that left 30 persons dead." 1bey said the underwater acoustic The Israeli air strikes brought sharp device was developed under an Air Force criticism from Secretary of State Henry contract. {See RAIDS, Page Zl F ou11tain Valley Arrests: I 'Drugs Get Out of Hand' Bv KATHY CLA~CY 01 lh• Dill~ "llot $1111 Fountain \'alley police don·1 expect lhC'ir mass arrest of high ... school drug pushCfS to bring a rapid hall to the illegal campus narcotics traffic -but they .think it may scare a fe\V people. "We realize we aren't going to stop the drug problem by putting a lot of people in jail." says Sgt. William De Nisi. coordinator of "Project Lunch Box" \\'hich resulted in S8 arrests Wednesday ni ght and Thursday . "\Ve just want to warn the1n that every third or fourth. time thr.y make a sale. they may be making it to an undercover agent." he cautioned. "The drug problem is thoroughly out of hand, not only in Fountain Valley but ail over Southern California." The massive fountain Valley area sweep was similar in nature to a !ale April roundup in Irvine -"OperJlion Irving" -in \\tlich about 130 person<; u·e re arresled on suspicion of various drug offenses. DeNisi took part in that operation. Reaction lo the arrests at Fountain Valley and Los Amigos High Schools was varied but administrators agreed the narrotics problem is serious. "As many arrests as were made it was !See DRUG SALE, Page 21 Reutzel of Rams Gets OK to Play Agai11 This Year Memorial Rites For Slain Jewish Hostages Slated A memorial service ls scheduled tonight at a dozen congregations of the Jewish Fed~atlon of Orange County for teenaged hollla&., murdered .co llUllmed 1n an Arab terrorist attack on the Israeli town of Maalol. Bus Passengers T~lkative NEW YORK (AP) -National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle reinstated wide receiver Lance Rentzel of the Los An geles Ram,, today. The reinstatement came after RO'lelle met with Rentie! in Los Agnt:les Thursday. The commissioner issued a statement, saying that tile veteran NFL receiver llad been active in worthwhile volunteer work during the year he was out of football. Leonard Shane, presldezrt ol the religious organization, empl>aslzed that non-Jews are lnvited. lie said the -rvances at locations lhrGulJioUt 1be C11W1ty are co-sponsored by the Mn! al Rabbis. Spokesmen for the Jewish Federation cif'Orao(e Co1m1J said 10rvlc., arl set 11 varytoa times 11111..., be-learned by calliog eacb cougregatlonal headquarter-. r The -111 aervtcu will be held at: -Harbor Relorm Temple, Newpart Beotb. . -TemP!e Bot Yahm, C.mu dtl Mar, -Temple 81Joron, Costa Mesa. -lmtl Academy, Irvine. -Tf'mPie Elli~ Mlao1oo Viejo. -Ml!ollin Jadoo, 1-HJns. -Temple Bolll Dav141, WeslmiNtcr. \ I Reporter Tries 'Two-bit' RU.le--Slie Likes It By JAi'j WORm Of .... Dlltr ,... .. atf Three thlnp you need when you rid e the l'two-bit" bua line: ume, a good paii of walking shoes, and lood humor. Time, bocauae U may tale you an hour and 1, ball lo get wbete you 're going; waJlinC lihoes becau1e you may have lo walk 1 wa)'I to a bus .top; and good humor btca111e the buses ire full and the pallOllfera talkative •. If )'OU have an 0-, you'll probably !Ind rldb>c on the Orange Coonty 'flaMlt Dtalrlcl buses Is I IOCiable, Jll......U.g, and a"9'1e Ill cheap WO)' to get where you 're going. 1'le OCl'D advertlaementa call ~ the "two-bit" bua Une becau.e It costs a q1111rter lo ride ooe way anywhere along the Une. All tramfen are ~. and cblklten under II ride free with a far .. paying adult. Monday was the first day !or four new routes and 63 new buses to· serve the Saddleback Valley, Laguna Beach. San Clemente, Cnpistrano Beach, and Laguna Niguel. So I decided to make my first trip on an OCTD bus from the ()ally Pilot orflce In Coota Mesa lo th< 2:M p.m. lnauguraUm ceremonies at Laguna HUis Mall. It's about 15 miles. On the advice of the OCro people. f left the office at 12:40 p.m. f walked brevely by my parked Volksw11Ke• bug, fortllled 111)'1<11 wlth-'1 maguine and a hondf\JI of quarter> at the llquor sto~ and walked to the neamt bus stop - aboUt four blocks away on Orange Avenue. lo llhort, I made It to th<\ ceremony an hour and $0 minutes after I left the , • office. I was only slightly late. rushing In during Supervisor Ronald Ca s p er s ' remarks. -The ceremony lasted a scant· 20 minutes, and I then llad to wait 45 minutes for the ride back, which took an hour and 20 minutes. t was back in lhe o!fice by 5:10 p.m. Not exactly jet-age timing. But I bad run. I made it to my assignment, and 1 saw a whole new side of ()range County. As H turoed out , l onty netded two quarters: one for the trip to the Mall and one for the trip home. l never used the magazine, either. The conversation along the WO)' was too intriguing. The mosl strlklnl! tblng, In fact, was loo affable loquaciousness of everybqdy on the l>U!<I. J'm su~ that must be a big reason IS.. TWO.Brr, Pop II ,, ( Rozelle suspended Rentzel July 24. 1973, ciUng "conduct detrimental to the NEL aner the player had violated terms or the probationary status that had bee• imposed oo him in 1971." Ren12<1, 30, bad been plB<:ed on probation by Rozelle originally alter being indicted for indecent .exposure, and was suspended for poasesslon o I marijuana two year1 later. Rentz.el, then with Dallws1 was arrested Nov. 30, 1971 for indecent exposure lnvolvina a 10.year-old girl. He was Indicted and, alter pleadl"1! guilty, received a five-year inbated .- On Jan. 11, 1m1 be wu arrested for lnveslif!ation Mr _..1ng mati)uana for sale In Los A"1!•1es. Jlb,pl,.ded (IU!lty and oo May 22 ol last year, he waa sentenced to 80 \al" lo Jail and llJJed $Z,OllO. ' I problem isn·l resolved lo their satisfaction, then they could sue," Bresnahan said. A ·decision flby the Ca l ifornia Departmenl of Transportation o n ""'hcthcr to let the airport continue to operate even though it does violate the slate standards is due ea.rly next month . · A· hc<:uin,S'or\"1he''Vd1"id!1i:'t:-1ci'JUL~~""icli..cS' - place ._., ·February" 1975. Bresnahan dechned to speculate on (See JET NOISE, Page 21 Clerks Vote To Walk Out 011 June 6 Orange County retail clerks have voted to stop \\'Ork June 6, bricklayers are still on strike and carpenters have gone back to work. but are still negotiating. In three votes Thursday, 6, 0 0 0 members of Retail Cle rk 's local 324 in Orange County tallied 90 percent in favor of joining eight other locals representing 54.000 clerks across Southern California in a walkout June 6. The strike. according to Judy Schmahl at the local \Yill occur unless labor and management reach aRreement on a contract to replace the one that expired April I. Journeyman clerks currently earn $4.86 an hour. The initial union request for 89 cents an hour to bring u·ages to the level of Northern Cali fornia cler ks was countered by a management offer of ~o cents. The clerks trimmed their demand to 77 cents an hour. which Robert K. Fox, president of the Food Employers Council , termed a 16.4 percent increase "which \VOU!d, i! met, have an immediate and tremendous impact on food prices." Meanwhile. bricklayers ar~ considering a management offer of a S2.05 an hour hike in wages and fringe benefits over the next l\vo years. The IO percent increase offer, according to union officials. may end the v.·alkout which has idled 4,000 bricklayers and 8 , O O O members of the I..aborers Union since ~fay 6. If the offer is accepted, the bricklayers' current ,,·age of $8.35 an hour plus $1.35 in fri nge be nefits \\'ill also be increased by a previously negotiated 3-0 cent raise wh.ich was struck down by the now defunct federal Pay Board. Carpenters. who returned to work Thursday following a three-day strike 01/er a 3()..cent raise which was similarly cut by the Pay Board, are negotiating for a new contract to replace the one that expires June IS. Orange Coast Weather Considerable cloudiness through Saturday but partly sunny Satur- day afternoon, according to the weather service. Slightly cooler days. Highs Saturday in the lower and middle fiOs. l.Alws tonight in the 50s. INSIDE TODA\' Huntington Beach returns to thf middle ages Saturckly for aia alt-da.f. Renaissa11ce Faire. See todav 4 Weeke11der for detaiLs. .. ·-- ' \ _2 DAILY PILOT c 20 Adults hi Roun(lup Revealed Fountain Valley police ha\'e released names or the 20' ad u I ts arrested Wednesday and Thursday during their massive roundup or alleged nnrrotics push<!rs. All are charged v>'ith se!Ung narcotics. The suspects arc: Ronald B. Burnside, 18, of 11256 Snov.'drop A\'e .. }o"'ountain VAiley: James A. Carlisle, 18, of 4-080 \Y. First SI., Apt. 12, Santa Ana: Cheryl A. De\n1onico. 18, of 11098 Camellia A .. ·e .. Fountain Valley : Sandra Marie Gardner, 19, of 4610 Morningside Ave., Santa Ana: David Napouaklani Kamohalli, 18, of 5101 ~rdt Ave., Santa Ana; Joseph S'amuel Kujawsky, 18, of 8'2 S. Corta Drive, Santa Ana; James Madison Anderson, 29, o( 4610 W. Morningside Ave., Santa Ana; Doran Edward Greene, 19, of 1021 -;_ Harmon St., Santa~Ana; ~raid Richard Greene, 25, of 1021 S. Hannon St., Santa Ana; -~ . Frida)", May 17, 1974 From Pagel JET NOISE ..• v.·hal Caspers would do as a ruult of the city maneu,1er. The tttay 28 executive session will come one "·eek before th!> June 4 ~upervisorlaJ. election. At that secret session, Caspers said he \'>ill ask fellow super-Ylsora to form a ··1echnical" committee to begin the ne~olia1ions \1ith the city . lie said he'll ask that they bring their recommendations to a two-man board con1millce \1•hich will be tumsell and Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. Caspers said he 's especially -hopeful that the so-called preferential runway system can be reinstated and that the l'Xisting r11n1\·ays can be expanded. !Ir s.:oid ht.' think s he can get approval for both after the upcoming election. He pointt.'d out that one of its past opponents , Supervisor Ralph Clark, is also n1nning for re.eleclion in his district 1\tlich includes the city of Tustin. "It 's election lime in Tustin, loo,'' he said. "Political decisions enter into lt along \\'ilh logic. After Clark wins the primary he \\"ill be able to be completely objccl!vc." Caspers predicted there could be agreement on the cnlire suit \\'ilhin 60 to r 90 days. lie pointed out that he had met Thursd.3y, the day the suit ~·as filed, \\"ith i\"e11.'port Beach city officials and homeowners representatives. • I ' " ' lif<' " :.: . --UPI Ttl•l>ilole • Fro111 Page 1 'TWO-BIT' BlTS RIDE • • • many people ~Ide. They can be 81.lre ol finding eomebody to talk to -about almost anything. Most ol them! talked to don't seem to . care how long it takes to get where theY:re going. They ju..t enjoy the ride. "I lost a job because I . got on the wrong bu.'I this morning." one woman told me. "So I just decided, what the heck, I'll take the bus to the end of the line and sec \Vhnt this place hflS to offer." She'd been riding around since 8:30 a.m .. chatting with people and taking in the scenery -which along good portions of the route I took is marvelous coast::il view:s, surf. rocks. and sky. "I think this bus service is great," one old man told me. "I don't have a car so I never go any\i.•hcre. But .1 do take !he bus. !L's great ... v.·alking to the bus stops is lhe best exercise I gel. "That's the trouble with old people." he added. "They never i::ct any exercise. That's \\'hy so many of them end up hobbling around on canes." You don't sec maey handsome executives riding the l:usrs. You don't see many teachers, d9Clors, attorneys, or bureaucrats. \\'hat you do sec is an abundance of cheerful older folks and young people with skateboards and surfboards. "Hey, isn't tbls bus air conditioned?" one lady hooted when the bu11 was getting crowded and at!clty. "The advertisements say all the ·buses are ulr conditioned!'' They are, but the equipment on some of the spanking new o n e s was unconnected Monday, the d r I v c r e~ained. .. ' Driving an OCTD bus is always fun ." said Dino Barber. an OCTD chauffeur assigned one or the new Santa Ana . Laguna Beach-La;guha Hills routes. ... Most or the passengers are elthf'r young or old. But they're friendly and they like the service," he sakl. Barber spends a lot of time t.allt.ing to lh~· passengers, walking to the back of the bus during layovers and making friends. "I've never seen a bus service that wa« so accommodating," one \Yo nl a n rcn1arked . "The drivers arc alwayc; really polite and helpful." OCTD spokesmen hope they can become even more accommodating in the years to come. Though the south county rout.es now run only once an hour from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m ., Afonday througfi Saturday, plans call for moving to once a half-hour and experimenting \. · .h Sunday ~service beginning in July. The ocro also tries to work with the Spanish speall.1ng population that makes frequent use or the service. Signs on th(' bus are printed in bo!h English and Spanish, and many of the drivers arc lttexican-Americans. Richard Alan !\foncc. 19. of 10430 La Cebra Ave., Fountain Vallev: Maureen Nov at r i J, 18, of 16591 ·Ross Lanl'. Huntington Beach: Cary Kay Schultze. 21, of 6601 Vanguard Ave., Garden Grove: llicky L. Stewart, 18. of 16741 Ross Lane. Huntington Beach; Donald Marvin \Yebster, 21, of 8858 La Roca Ave.; Jeffrey Lee Davis, 19. of 13452 Palomar St.. \\:est1T'•:tsler: Barry Sha\\'Tl Gann, 20, of 403 N. Bak('r St.. Santa Ana: Steven lfarold Ktller. 18. of 6802 Shannon Drive, Huntington Beach . lie disclosed tl1at for the first lime he'd been told that the city would support the run"·ay exten sion. SOLDIER CARRIES OFF BODY OF PALESTINIAN VICTIM Israeli Air Raid on Nabat iyeh Termed 'Mil ita ry' You see men getting up lo give womE'n !heir seats -a nice touch which makes sense. Many of the women Vlho ride the bus are housekeeJ)('rs v.·ho have spent the entire day on their fett. Except for the first bus I rode. nearly all v.•ere full. The route home from the l\lall had standing room only between -fashion Island and Orange Avenue in Co5t..i Ptfesa. The new bus service has been a long- awaited addition to the south county: To the harried professionals who must race back and forth to "'Ork on minutc-bv - minute schedules. the addition of the ne\v routes may go unnoticed. Jim E. !\1inchinton. 18 , ol 5252 Caliente Drive. fluntington Beach : Kenneth Wayne Anderson. 23. of 14122 Rancho Road, \Vcstminst.er; Deborah Jean Anderson, 20, of 14122 Rancho Road, \Vestn1inster. From Page 1 ---._,,. DRUG SALE. • • probably necessa ry,'' said George Bell. Assi stant Principal at Fountain Valley High School. '"As far as planting a student informant on campus. I think it "'as probably a necessary thing. Th c operation \ras obviously successful." Fred Goyette, assistant principal at Los Amigos High School. \1·as critical of police for placing an undercover agent on campus ""ilhout lhe admlnistration"s kno"·lcdgc. "Police should do "'hatl'ver necessary lo curb the problem," said Goyette, '·but l v.·ou!d \rather tht:y had let us know before they put someone on campus. "I can't say if \\'e \1·ould or \1·ouldn't ha\·e allov.cd it. 1'hat would be a district decision .'' Administrators at both schools said they don't believe the drug problem is any \\'Orse on their campuses than on others in the area. Neighbor Douses Trailer Blaze Set h}· Arsonist A neighbor arri\'ing home I a t e Thursday ~ved another Costa Mesa man's costly camping trailer from serious damage in attempted arson involving a Molotov rocktail. Scott Weaver. of 2780 Tern Circle. in the f\fesa Verde District, was credited with immediately extinguishing !he flames in the 1973 trailer. Police Officer Tom Boylan said damage 'A'as limitrd to only about $25 due lo quick work. \Veaver lives across the strl'i!t from trailer owner Edward r.f. Parson, o( 2779 Tern Circle. Investigators said the sodapop OOt!lc filled with kerosene and a cloth wick must have hccn hurled at Parson's camping \"Chicle only seconds before Wea\rer ·arrived. The bottle shattered ag:i.in st the trailer. which is worth several thousand dollars and which was allached at the time to a towing vehicle Ythich could have burned. ORAfrolG.ICOA.ST DAILY PILOT 1r. 0.•"911 eo • .i °"'" P,..,. ... 1h """""" ,.,..... b>necl •nt ,.ew~ P•f " ' ""~' '""" 1"'11"• Oun;• Coll! Pobo\~<nQ r,,,,.. .. ~. '"'r•••I• "(l,•OQn• l 'f PIJ.ttl''M<I "'<>n<11y '"'"'"'~ f ""°' fol rn,i. l.leuo "'""'r""" s .. .c;n -<~no.n,l' ,., a. '. " f '' 1.,n von .. 1 ... qun• BfK• 1,.,,n~ C-...a1•11"'' • •'~ S10 O eotoentt iS.., .Jl.,,!i Cir"''""'' A •; • r90f0n• .,,.,,....., " Ill.It!'<......, !.••u•O•;• ~-., • ~I" r,_. P<•nt•oal pu!>l"~'"'l ~""' , . ., l~O ,,...,, .' 1111 !M• .... C<>91• ....... c.''"""'• '121>;'1> F .• ~ ...... t, 1.11 •• ,_ 1 ..... _lll•Ml>utM•Y"<I Oo1e,H loo: ~ 'o.::IP !J~' ""'".,. ~._ r °''"'• '"That v•as I\ c 1v s to me." he said. ""Before that they 'd opiJOsed everytlmig from ne\\" toilet s to n1ore par~ing." The Ne\\ port Beach suit is asking : -The court to order Orange County to close the airport.,.to all jet aircraft unless and until the state grants the noise \"ariance. -The airport be closed from 10 p.1n. to 7 a.m. except for mercy nd emergency flights. Protest Iss ued To Ru ss Leaders Over Defector -The court order the county to abate • ' the public nuisance created by jet t10SCOW (UPI I -The United States airCJ_"aft overflights a!1<! to conduct has protested to the Soviet government studies~under .t.he superv1.s1on of the co~rt . over police in!erfereJlce 1vith ~ n tO--t'Av1urc <111 m.e~ns lV t~uce notSe ~ American defector who no1v v.·ants to damage and phys1c1al pollullon damage JeaVe the Soviet · Union, U.S. Embassv to Ne~rt Beach. offiCials said today. ' -To implement all such measures as . . are found to be feasible based upon such They said .. !\lark J. Garris_o_n. !he studies and that a determination of the emb~ssy pohtica\ cou_nselor._ d_eh\ercd 3 ultimate solution 10 the countv air pro.test to the Foreign ~·1tn1stry O\"er transportation problein be n1ade by the police efforts \Vednes_day to block De:in end of 1975. C. Hoxsey from entering the Embassy. -That the court order the county lo Hoxsey, 47. of Pi~e · Rivera. Calif.. enter into negotiatioos \\•ith the ff'der;il defected to !he Soviet Union in 1957 \\"hen Aviation Administration for the purpose of he came here for a youth festiva l. He seeking<the cooperation of the F'AA in no"' Jives in Volgograd . is married lo a establisHing and enforcing protective Russian and worfs as a doctor al a noise aba1ement mea sures . clinic. -That the county reinstate the U.S. officials sa id Hoxscy got into the preferential runway program. embassy \Yednesday only ailcr a -A limit on lhe type of jets permitted struggle with police guarding rhc that are not louder than the Boeing 737 or entrance and intervention by t: s . the Douglas DC-9 and !hat do not exceed diplomats \vho witnessed !ht.' incident. 95JKKI poun~ gross v.·eight. -Alimi t on the pennitted number of • 11oxsey told newsmen he \~·os forn1crly daily nights lo the maxi1num no1.1·n in a Communist but had b cc 0 Ill c January, 1974 . dlsin!Jsioned with the Soviet Un1nn and -A Court order ttuit the n 0 i s c Communism. He also said he has bet't1 I abatement approach and departure night harassed bj colleagues at the cl inic 1 procedures used by Air California be where he works. i {cquired for Hughes Air\\·csl. He told newsmen today he v.·:is 1 -An order than any remodeling or returning lo Volgograd to apply (or an ! expansion of the tenninal or parking exit visa and hopes to return to MOSCO\\" I county funds appropriated fur the airport officials. facilities be prohibited and that all soon for further discussions v•ith ernba.:.~y I be used for noise abatement. U.S. officials said they still have not -That the rourl order thal no determined if Hoxsey is a U.S. citizen . .\t terminal access privili;ges be granted to the lime of his defection . he said. he any ne\\' air carrier using jets or v.•ho turned in. his American passport to Sorie t receives aulhority lo sen·e distances authorities and a'ccpled a Sovie t I more than 500 miles away. passport bul never formally renounced I -That l\VO additional noise monitoring U.S. citizenship. stations seaward of Pacific Coast Highway be installed. Coroner's Aides Investigate Three Coast Suicides Coroner's deputies today were probing three Harbor Area suicide ca s c s diSCO\'ered in a 12-hour period, t\\"O ~ Shotgun and one by drugs. The victim in the latter case arinounced his intentions in a note mailed to police. Anotht·r \'ictim 11·as discovered inside a parked camper truck near South C'.oast Plaza in Costa P.1esa by a patrolman 1\hO hacl noticed it parked there for se\·eral days. Ne;rJ)Orl Beach Police Detective San1 r\1nburgey st1id Kenyon Johanson, 2~. of no knov.11 address, look his life with a shotgun hlast about 7:30 :i.1n. today 11·hile visiting at 5001 1.2 Neptune Ave .. in \\lest Newport. John Brewer. 19. of 115~ 26th St .• "'as found by police lat er in the morning, after a letter mailed Thursday \\'35 received by deteclives at headquarters. Investigators said in it the victitn outlined il'ltentions to take his life and added that two notes were found in his apartment when they <'lrrived. Rose Marie Reynolds, 31, of 432 S. Harbor Blvd.. Santa Ana, was fowid shortly before midnight Thursday in the parked lruck near South Cioa::t Plaza. Police said Mrs. Reynolds, named in a recent missing persons report flied by her husband with Santa An a investigators, had shot herself In the face "·ith a 2t> gauge shotgun. From Page 1 DEFECTOR. • • bul after two years of college in the United States he realized thal 11·1thout money. he could no longer studr. "He was. invited to travel to Russia as 1 part of the youth festival and lhoo 1-1•as offered the chance to stay and be 1 r' trained,., his stepmother explained. I ~ter six years ol study, Hoxsey ''-'rote home to say he planned never to leave and that he felt an obligation to repa y the Soviets for the training. Correspondence between the physician and his family in California -includ ing his natural mother who lives in the northern part of the state -was steady. but nEWer abundant. \ " "~le would usually write at Christmas. , but this past holiday he and I did no! correspond. All the time before. hov.•ever, there \Vas never an indication of anv disenchantment, and no feeling on mY part that there \Vere any problems," ~he .. said. Bul there is a theory about Hoxscy's : reasons for disenchantment \\'ilh the I Soviet way of life. "Some lime ago he and his mother corresponded and she began to 1vrite to officials in hopes that Dean, his wift.' and adopted daughter. who is 14 now. could get permission just to visit the United 1 Si<Mcs." she said. The theory is that those letters may have sparked suspicion by Soviet officials. r ... ,11 .. 111•• 142·•l21 CltlNflt4 Atl"'"'"'-! 442·1671 )o.uple in Custodv MILPITAS (UPI) -A youig -;,,ln .. e c o u p I e were In custody today In Hoxsey told his benefactors at the embassy Wednesday that be now fears for his safety were he to return to his home in Volgograd {formerly named Stalingrad until Stalin fell from grace in the USSR). Prcsumably1 his Russian-born wife and 1 their daughter wpuld remaJn behind. Sources In t~e embassy said Hoxsey first felt .the need to leave about a year ago, but was quoted as saying he once • connection \Vlth the torture-death of a San Francisco Chlnatown gang member. thought the desire would I>"'• In time. I The dilemma. now for officials at the John Paul Wong, 24, and his wife. Diana, embassy fs what to do with their "gue•t" II, were taken Into custody al their pending an omclat decisioo on his apartm@t where, accord Ing to •· demands to l'ffrtter the country. investigators, Uncoln Louie, IS, of San Reports said the original plan was to Francisco, was' tor1ured before he was ,.nd him back home unUI a declsloo had slain. been reached. Fro111 Page 1 RAIDS • • • A. Kissinger v.•ho also denounced the ,\rab guerrilla attack. Egypt warned lsz·ael that there could be grave consequences from the air raids and the Egyptian "'ar minister spoke of a resumption of the war. lsra'l .::;~~ not mention innictlng casualties in today's ground strike one n1de across the Lebanese border in which the co1nmandos blew up a house believed used by Arab guerrillas. A spokesman ~aid Israeli planes eight hours later fle\i.' st rikes on targets inside "F'atahland." !he Israeli tern1 for guerrilla.dominated areas of southeastern Lebanon near the $\·rian border. He said all planes returned fro1n the half-hour r3id. Both Israel and Syria reported hca\'y fight ing on tlle Golan Heights and around .\11 . Hermon 1oday. the 67th consecutive day of combat there. A Syrian CfJn1n1uniquc reported Syrian-Israeli tank dut ls and thal both sides were using artilltry and anti-tank weapons. "This is the greatest thing that's ever hawencd in OranRe County," said one v.-oman from Leisure \\1orld. "It's a godsend. Once they get the litlle things ironed out it's going to be fabulous ." Pointing out that many residents of Leisure World don): have cars or no longec.. drive, she added "People in Leisure World have had a large pa.rt in promoting this. It's so convenient and enjoyable." One fellow \1·as riding the bus Isl court. He was trying lo get to the Laguna Niguel Civic Ccn!cr. and his \1ife had their only car. He had a hard time gelling where he \\'ilS going. After tv.·o calls to the judge he gave up on n1aking ii on time, and the last I saw him he v.·as buying candy at the !\tall -\railing o u l a half hour layover. But he appeared to hal'c fun telling all the other'passcngers hi s story , about 1,1,·hy he was going to court Before he got off. one lady even said she'd \"otc for him for President. The riders "·ere full of advice to each other about how lo get v.ht.'re and about lhe comforts of the new 35-foot 36· passenger coaches . But to the thousands of older pcopll', students, and unskilled laborers whose economic status or physical health makes a car untenable, the new routes mean greater independence and a step away from loneliness. Mesa C of C F etes Coiitrnunity Pair Daily Pilot Circulation Director ,\1ilan LeaviU and Girls Club .Prestdenl F'ar<'l Walker "'ere honored for th c i r conk"ibutions Lo the community Thursday by directors of the Costa J\lcsa Chan1bcr of Commerce. l.A!avilt was presented "·ith a plaque citing his dedicated servict and for providing an employment opportunity for 1.000 Orange Coast youngsters "'ho v.·ork as Daily Pilot delivery boys. A similar plaque \i.'aS presented lo t.lrs Walker honoring the Girls Club of lhf' Harbor Area for havinR ser\"cd the you1h of the ro'mmunily during the past 20 years. DON'T iVIISS OUR FABULOUS SOFA & CHAIR SALE I ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 18. Largest inventory in our history to be reduced. Stop in 110\V ror best selection at terrific ~<J\·ings. Fantastic selections of upholste red pieces all on sale no .... -. Names like Sherrill, 1\large C<.1rson <.ind Woodmark all at special prices. • Over 100 sofas and 250 chairs have been price-s lashed ... come in and browse! DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDt3N-WOODMARK-KARASTAN · WHKDAYS • SA TUUAYS t:OO lo 1'30 ' - NEWPORT BEACH• tm WESTCLIFP DR .. 642•2050 LAGUNA BEAC!'i • 345 NORTH COAST llWY., 494·MSI I TORRANCE• 23649 HAWTHORNE BLVD. (O!><n Fri. UI '·SW!. u .. :30) 37f.127t • t I l • I ' ' t ' • l ! I i • I • • ! l i l • : • • I ! I I I ' ' • I • .. ' t:· '· ' f l. l· ~iJ ~i!. "' , ' • I s DAO,y PILGT EDITORIAL PAGE Fieh Fry No .·stalgia For 28 coniecutlve years the Costa Mesa-Newport H'rbor Lions Club 1114 given the community a weekend of fun and relax~tlon wbUe at the &anle time .Injecting life Into Harbor Area cbarities from money raised dur- ing th&Fish Fry. ' Hopes for a financially rewJrdlng· event are 'high again this year after a somewhat disappointing Fl$h Fry turnout In 1973. The goal this year Is to sell between 12,000 and 14,000 fish dinners and to raise a ~ross of $100,000 for charity from dinner sales, a carnival and the operation of booths. One of the events geared lo attract all those hun· gry customers is a three·mile parade June l featuring an expected 1,500 participants who will compete for prizes and trophies. Los An_geles Rams star Charlie Cowan will' be the grand marshal. This year's May 31-June 1 Fish Fry will rely also on the tried and proved formula. of combining food with fun and nostalgia. · • Ap.d those fish dinners remain . the biggest reason of all for taking in the ~ffair. They're as good as they are famous. Dedicated to Y outl1 This year for the fi~st time the Orange Coast YMCA didn't name a Woman of the Yea.r. ' In stead they named a Woman of the Decade. 1t1rs. Alice F'ox was selected for the unusual honor because she's retiring after working at the YMCA for 20 years. serving in almost every position on the staff. During those 20 yea.rs, she's had a tre1nendous in- fluence on_ the many young people involved in the YMCA activitie.s. The facl that her .Jn!luence has been an out- standing on~ Is attested to by her being selected for this honor. ,Mrs. Fox desenel the highest praise--for her dedi· cation to helping youth and for her many hours of de· voted work at the YMCA . Police Cadets A new law enforcen1ent program that was perhaps long-overdue in two different ways has been instituted in Costa ~l.esa and will be expanded in weeks ahead. Tom \Vinter and John Sussman. each 19. have joined the police department as the first two cadets in the 20· year history of a force charged with protecting life and property in an increasingly bustling city of 1nore than 75,000. Spokesmen for the department's resources bureau hope to add five or six n1ore cadets from the Golden \Vest College law enforce1nent a.nd police science pro- gram by June. The young men, paid $2.50 p~r hour for 20 hours per week, are assigned to headquarters clerical or sta· tistical duty that will free other more-experienced sworn officers for assignments there or in the field. And the so1netimes-heavy burden of work on the 165 sworn and non-badge-carrying personnel in the de· partment will thus be st re an1lined, lightened and made more efficient. College students such as the new Cl\·tPD cadets will also find the $2.50 per hour salary helpful, but the work experience gaiqed in preparation for a police career is perhaps incalculable. · I • ' c '\Vell. so much for the Temperance Cri1sade . Two-w~y Gap ·• Ill Lesso1is of lJ'atergate Communication ' " \\'ASHINGTON -The stony barrier of noncommunication between the White !louse and Republican leaders in Congress. an important ingredient in the \Vatergate tragedy, "'as raised high last week aga inst an eleventh-hour erfort to confront President Nixon "·ith reality. Hep. John Anderson of Illinois. chairman of lhe House Republican conference. wanted IQ discuss the brutal facls of IH·: at Thurs· day's \\"hilc llil'..!~• meeting her\1l't'n lte- publican !c:lrlt·~~ and fi.\r. :\i.~11'1. \ndcr- son·s pn1pu~il . in· fornl th:• I 'r1·~.1t:l·111 th;!! h:~ dt•111,1I of additional tapes to !he special prC1sctu- 1or and rhe Hr.us" Judicia ry Committee hnd no Republican backing nnd rould only end in his des- truction . But no other Republican leader barked Anderson even though most agreed "·ith his senlirnents. Thcv took the position that the President alone should set the agenda for White House meetings - a \'iew held particularly strongly b~· Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania. Hav ing ··fired the gun that stafted the Hepublican stampede against th c eresident" tin the y:ords of one biller \Vhile House aidci. Scott y;•anted no embarrassing personal encounter with Mr. Nixon.""' TllE RJ<.:SULT was a surrealistic n1orning in the Oval Office. Nobody n1enlioned the nation's great political crisis. Although Mr. rfixon in private has raged at Scott for his lethal criticism of the White House transcripts, the two men sat side-by-side politely through a dreary economic briefing. Anderson feels \Vatergate might y;·el\ have been avoided bad Mr. Nixon taken Hepublican leaders into his confidence. But for their part, the leaders' reluctance to confront the President indicates ( EV~S-NOVAK J noncommunication is a two-way street. Both sides can share the blame. r.·TJDEAST PITFALL \Vh1\e Secretary of State Henry Kissinger strives for an Arab-Israeli settlement. a mo,·e is galhering force in the Senate to n1akc 1\merican aid to Egypt dependent u11 Cairo's opening the Suet Canal lo all nations equally -n1coning lsrocl. If such nn arnendn1ent actually denied future U.S. aid to Egypt unless Cairo\ pledged to pern1il Israeli Oagships to transverse the canal. Egypt "·ould never agrtt. Thal could sour the Washington- Cairo roman ce. Even talk of such an amendment 1now actively considered by Sen. Abraham. Ribicoff of Connecticut and others) chills the State Department. Actually. Israel has privflt<-1~· told !he t:.S. it \\ill Bccept Egyptian agrcen1ent to pern1it Israeli cargoes (but not Israeli flagships) lhrough the canal. Egyptian president An\\'ar Sadat has given private assurances of that. But if the strongly pn>-lsrael Congress attached an amendment demanding free passage for Israeli flagships , the JXJWefful pro-Israeli lobby here \\'OU!d scarcely oppose it. To the contrary. v•hatever private agreement! Israel has ma~e with Kissinger. a strong vote in Congress for Ribicoff's proposal would be viewed in Israel as a major gain in the high-stakes politics reaching a ·climax In the Middle East. WHITE HOUSE REVENGE Vindictive politics of the Nixon White House surfaced again in a gratuitous. grossly inaccurate attack by ex-\Vhite House personnel chief Harry Flemn1ing on a young Republican candidate for Congress who committed the cardinal sin Dear Gloo1ny (;ns Do~s it dishonor a lapel F!.'.lg to have someone \1'1\~ questionab!c ethical standards \1•car it'! O.J. GIDomr Gu1 commtfth; ''' 1ubmllltd br rt1oen 1nd 1111 no! n.u1wrilr i"tfltc! Tll• vltwi. of tr. -WI•"'· 5tlld rtur .. , pettYI IO Gloomr Gus. DlllY li'llol. of not being blindly loyal to the President. John Robinson \Vest quit in disgusl in mid-1969 after several months as a minor \Vhite House aide. Returning to Pennsylvania, West began preparing a Rrpubliel.ln political career. 'f\vo weeks 111.!"o. \\'cs1 at age 'll \Vas frontrunner ~ li•ad1ng thl' regul<ir or g a n i z a Ii on cand idale • in the Republican primary election for a congressional seat rro1n Philadelphia's Rcp:.iblican suburbs. But West's position '"'as undermined \\·hen Fle1nn1ing atlacked him as a "y;·alking disaster ... \\'ho \Vas all out for glory and self-aggrandizement" in \\'ashinglon. Flemming told t h c Philadelphia Inquirer thal \Vest held "an unpaid position·· and did nothing· at thi: \\"hite House. POLITICIANS here \1·ere an1azcd that Flemming. a political protege of John ~titchelL would interfere in a Republican primary election. Far n1ore serious. Flemming's vengeful assault '"'as based on \\'ho!esale errors of fact. \Vest was not "unpaid" but on the payroll of the Republican National Committee and "'as assigned to the \\'hile House after Mr. N i x on ' s inauguration. ~le was not •·fired" in March 1969 but resigned in June . His former boss, natioaal comn1itlee political education director Ray l·lumphreys. described him lo us as a "resourceful , energetic, ambitious young lcad~r·· of the type needed to rebuild the shattered Republican party. Flemming's attack \\•as one n1orc exan1ple of the politics of \'cngeancc played by \Vhile House insiders against anyone \\•ho refused to toe the line in the pre.Watergate glory days of Mr. Nixon 's al\-po"'erful \Vhite House staff. A Literary Event of Sig·nificance One of the most important literary events of thi.1 or any other season was the publication last week of a long- a,vaited work dramatically entitled ''Recorded Presidential Conversations" (Govemmenl Printing Office ; 1308 pp: $12.25; Expurgated). While some reviewers will see lhis as simply another oral hlstory of the behind· the-stairs-at-the-White House variety r ..... _A_R_T_H_o_PP_E_J confused by lhc t.aflgled web of plots and su~plots. But those who persist through to the unsurprising end will be rewarded with new truths that 90 enlighten the mind. bnd others will dit- misa ll as a tawdry mystery ,., to these tired old eyes it Is • • work of major pro- portions (8 x 10 x I'> inches; 3 lbs: paper· bock). \-... , THE· BASIC plot Is s imp l,e yet -.' -..........innovative._ The prolagon.Jst, a respected • m¥!dJNged uecuUve ldentHled only as '!P,'1 ls surprlRd to discover bis loyal a88islanll are not plotting against him. Insteld, they ~rt plotting for him. t It is by the same 1. popul•r author who ' : recently brought 115 the-Instant beslleller, "Presldel\Ual Tu Returns.'' to which this i.s. Jn • way, a sequel. But this , It cannot be gainsaid, . is his magnum opus. For the discerning rooder'wlll llnd hen> a deeply pen et rat Ing psychological dram• that 1!oeJ1 to the very heart ol the· human conclftloo. It i. not, on& tlhould be warned, ll&hl fare. Mloy a reader wlll be J!lll off by the atr&am«-cooaclou1ne" 11 y I e • ,.mlnlactnt ol "Uly-." Others 'wfd be " HIS problem , ii how lo protect hi• utllton11"11dlllm5ell lrom the •lllalnous invOllfCNora wbo ire J)lll'8Uit>g them"all. EYerit piles upoo ev"1t. We feel the enemy closblg In from all aides. SlowJy, gradually, in one of the moot brilliant dl9'«llon• of a man's 10ol Jn Englilh llteratm, we aee P's noble"' character erode befqn oilr ver/ eyes llolQ 1Jnall1, In .one ctramaUc ....,., he 8pelU dt1perate\i' of perJury, bribery and other mtlhocls of obltruct1ng )ustlce. Talk ibout Dorjoo Groyt • 'lllllOUGllOUT THE llfO'I< moves the tragic llaure of 10UJ1g D. At Orsi, we ... • hin1 as the n1ost loyal of all the aides. almost a son to P. But then he is rc.veulcd to have been one of the plotters. Thus he makes the agonizing decision to betray P to save his own skin. In revenge. P attempts to 111<1ke 0 the scapegoat in.stead or J.f\1.. a secondRry figure whom he had originally planned lo blan1e or ... But let us not destroy the suspense by re.,,·ea!ing too many of the plots. Sufflce it to say that· many, including doublc- acrostic fans, will be richly rewarded by the challenges presented. IF THE WORK sutlers rrom any n::iw. It is the dialect of the characters.. Typical perhaps, is P saying, '48ecause we can't -I've got -if the U.S. Attorney's Office and. ah ... " Clarity suffers. Yet much of the authenUclty would be lost If the ' characters spoke plain English. The author has also seen fit to delete expletives such as, presumably, "golly,'' ''gee" and "oh, !udj:e., ror re¥, oddly enough, of offending hlJ rtad•IL But these are mJnof crltlellms. There ia no question we have hut an lmpor-- tanl work by a best-oetltng author. And ,we can't help feeling he haa a gr<al ' deal more to say\' Let us hope we hear from him again ..... ' • • Let's Look at Ourselves . . ·~··· . ~ . ~ To the Editor: J y;•rile these words fro1n a prrspecti\"c of prejudice and pain. Prejudice at having never liked our President. Richard l\.t i\ii-..:on: pain at enjoying the present plight of one I have never liked. I feel good about chickens \\ilO set>m to be coming home 10 roost in connection y;•ilh Mr. Nixon. I cim pleased that justice is still being serv~ Yet I remain troubled by a number of questions "·hich I address to myself. • · DOES l\·fr. Nixon's insf'nsilivity lo others justify my lack of scnsiti,·ity to him as a person? Does my pleasure at his seen1ing!y justified plight render 111e somehow vicariously unaccountable for rn.v o"'n secret and silent moral imperfections? .-\ssuming I can convince 1nyself of the justification ror enjoying his ordeal. what happens to my humanity if I allo1\' such gloating to or.cur?... \Ve pride ourselves on being a nation ol la1v, order. and justice. Laws have been broken; order has been shaken: justice has been obstructed. Persons have been treated as pawns, objects, things to be 1nanipulated and used to further l\.lr. 1'\ixon's ends. f\1r. Nixon seemingly fails to appreciate the severity of these bh.ln· dcrs in interpersonal relations. YE'T, I wonder. Is not the way we treat our wives, our husbands, our children. our parents. our associates, and £'\1en our enemies of equivalent moral \\'Orth to the underlying evils of \rate r ~a t e ~ Qualitatively. if not quanlitatively. I believe that each of us shares mora!ly in \\:Ir. Nixon's human failings a~ revealed in the tape transcripts. \\'henever we tend to treat others as objects to be manipulated in order to sen·e our 01vn need for self-aggrandizement. then \1·c ~ive up the privilege of self-righteous indignation and hypocfitical gloating over any other person's faillngs -even ~·Ir. Nixon's. Justice n1ust he served, and I believe it 1\·ill be "'ith Gocl's help. Yet I also believe !hat the ultimate importance o f \\'atergate "'ill not be the fact of justice served. t:ul the \vay we as indh·idlJ:ils react tn justice as it is being served. The morat measure of us as a nation will not ullimately be the successful adjudication of Mr. Nixon. but the lessons \Ve learn from this experience about ourselves and the manner in which '-"C. tco. treat ethers. RABBI BERNARD P. KJNG S1ttt1n1er Danre To the Editor: In the interest of the OCC students and the commWlity, a sumn1er dance program is beginning to take form. In the past years,· I should assume _ since the ori(?in er the school. ace has nl'ver offered any dance classes in its summer sessions. So this would lead you to believe that there is a lack of interest, right? EVERY dance c1asl!I offered this !i't:mester was completely filled. A few had 10 turn away as many as 20 students per clnss. The evening classes. both at OCC and at Golden We.t. had to handle the same situation of an 01·er·responsivt student attendance. With this In mlhd It bcromes ironic that there have been no dance ciassu· crrered In previo~s tummen and somewhat unjustillable thlt none are scheduled for thb summer, especially in view of the fact that dancen need year Qu~tes Rame1b Arora, new India consul general, S.F. on growth of guru-led meditation cutts in U.S. -"I would Rive all 1uru• the benefit of tile doubt. But even a bod guru can be 1 gooil guru U bis 1cachlnp work for you.." l\lAILBOX Letters froni readers are welcome. Normally, writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let- ters must incltuie signature and mai/- iH{I address but nnmes may be witlt- lzeld 011 request if sufficient reason i.~ apparent Poe try zrill not be pub· lisl!cd. round excrl:1 sc and s1rctrhi11g to kl'l'\l 111 tune. T\VO OBSTACLES in oppo~1tion to the formation of a surnmer dance progran1 are. first the lack of suffi cient funds and ~erond, the fact that it y;:ould not be listed in the summer session schedule. Certainly there is some validity to these concerns. However we must not overlook the.fact that the State pays the school ADA (a\'erage daily attendancel in proportion to the number of students attending that specific class. An estimated ADA for a class of fifty students in a summer session is $1,200. ~1ost dance classes have a limit of -45 students. ntE SECOND obstacle is ·easily overcome as it is not at all unusual for classes to be ai:lded to the curriculum after a schedule is made. A qualified instructor is available to handle all the classes proposed,, including beginning ballet, beginning modern, intermediate modern and ballroom dancing. A tentative arrangement of the class times has already been worked out. The students at ·occ have starled a petition stating that there is a definite need for a summer dance program at OCC 11nd that !hey plan to attend if at all possible. Thus far over 100 students have signed the petition. If you would like Ul see a summer dance program developed in your community for this summer, please express your concern by contacting Ton1 Blakely at the Summer SessKm Evening School Administration office, or by calling 556-5880. RICK SYLVAIN iUlshaterpreted To the Editor: If Women 's Lib needs yet another boring historical e1ample, particularly Biblical, It at least should not commit the sin of omission. I ;efer to Ms. Berger's article. Churches Once Rec o g n ii e d Equality, May 13. The oft-quoted sentences of Ruth, (Whither thou goest, 1 will go ... etc.) were not directed to .her husband (who was dead) but to her mother-in-law, Naotni. However, In the article,Jt comes off as being another put-down. " ... how a v.'Oman shouJd be .•. submissive and dependent. .. '' Unless M.s. Berger meant that thil ts an eiample of bow we should w acqUiesce to our mothers-in-law, it Is moot mbleading in the conten of the story. • NAN KLOSTERMAN iUotherhood To the Editor: • Today la a Happy Mother's Day. 1 d(dn'I understand the emphasis in the Mother's Day feature 1n which t was quot..t. The joO -.1ptlon for "mother" may be changblg, bul the need for mothering remalnl the same. MOTHERHOOD or pmol-Is • lll4p, nol 11 pl, Y-women nnlieipaling nu1rri;1~c ;'11\d farnily 111u;;t be counseled. not into purt-tin1e carcl'rS, but into careers in which the option of part-tin1e v.•ork exists. This rcprescn1s one rf'olistir option ror \vomen in our present dav socictv. Other mothers. '~·ho arc lucky enough to be given the choice. choose to pursue full- timc careers. Husbands and other support systems pitch in to share other responsibilities. Still others make the cognitf\·e choice to be full-time mothers 1l"hile lhl'ir children are young. \\"hat is ney;• is choice . Parents y;·ill always be VIPs to their children. LINDA ALGAZl J lfS( it•e? To the Editor : It is ironical how your May 13 issue haU Jack Anderson tr ying Bebe Rebo1.o, and several oth~r people. on the Hughes 1noney through secret information from secret people. He turned this supposed i.Qformation over to '"someone \Vilh a sUbpoena·· \vith his list of witnesses and the questions he said should be asked. \Vhile in the sa1ne issue the burglars, dope peddlers and murd~rers \Vere excused from their trials because the information against them was declared illegal by wire-taps signed by the 'vrong people. Whal ever happened to logical justice? GOLDIE JOSEPH Llce11sl11g Cuts To the Editor: Your ,editorial of May 8 regarding licensing of cats touched only upon the most superficial aspects of the problem. It is so easy to pull the emotional plugs every time a freedom must give way to the inexorable and irreversible fact ;of overpopulation -both human and animal. TifE EASY \1 ny out. as suggested by your edllori<tl. i•· 11 "'ait -and hope for a solution t hnt 11 i!l please everyone. Many of us 1vho <·h,,rish our feline friencb and feC'I that ia1r treatment for cats is \\"ay overdue. have concluded that licensing is a fir~t s!ep in according cats equal value y;·ith dogs. It is a very small start fo"•ard reducing the pitiful flood of unwanted kittens and cats COllStantly pas.sing through the death chambers of our pounds. We y;·ould hope your editorial policy would help us to be strong enough to lace a humane problem and start to solve It oow; there is no more tim~ to "wait and see''! RUTH FRANKEL President, Animal AMistance League of Orange Count1 OIAN&I COAST DAILY PILOT Robtri N. Wied, hbU..htr ThomM KuvU, Editor BarOOra Krtibich Editorial Page Editor The editorial :~ ol 1he-Dtll,y PiJot SeeM lo lnlona and atimulate readers by ptttm~ on this pac- dlvt!~·~entary' on lop6cs ol ln- lehlt b)' s)'ndlcated colWMl.lts and -cartoonl1ts, by providing a forum tor ttadtts' view• llnd by Jftffntln(r ttu. newspaper'• opll\klrw aM klieu oa curn:nt top\cl. The edllorial oplnionl ot I.he Dally Pilot appear only ln (he tdltorW column at the fOP 0( !hi J*Ct!. Oplnklns ti<Pf"ll'd by the ('d. wnnilt:I and cartooollt• and i.tttr wrlttrs 1tt lhtlr QWn and no~ mt!nt of their "vkrwa by tti. Dau, Piiot -Id be lni'!ft'L Friday, May 17, 1974 ) • '• CALIFORNIA .111 rnat'~ Will Attend Son,' s Fi11c1l Rit-es Quenti11 - Vi~lencc Rampant SAN QUENTIN (UPI) San Quenlin's 3.000 inmates were kept locked In their cell! today in an effort to end a rash of violence and insure the safety of the convicts. One convict was stabbed to death In a recreation yard Thursday and a short time later 13 inmates engaged in a knife fight in !Qe adjustment center, a specia l facility for troublesome inmates. SENT TO JAIL P•ul H•lvet1on • . . .. • State Energy Bill A-wa,its Signature of Gov. Reagan SACRAMENTO IAP) -The California Legislature h a s given final approval to this year·s major energy legislation -sending it to Gov. Ronald Reagan, who says he will sign it Thursday's 57·6 Asse1nbly vote culminated three years of negotiations on the power plarit siting·energy conservation bi ll . The battle had involved ecologists, utilities and the Re a g a n adrninlstration. It b<irs ·~sons fron1 serving oil the commisSion 1f they v.•orke<I for a utility within the previous two years. Burke argued that the provision blocked the "best qualified" from sitting on the commission. A/'i10NG FIVE other Republicans against t he where there may be btackouts and brownouts soon, Warren said. A Rand Corporation study had estimated that California's energy consump- tion would gro'v by 7 .5 per. cent annually if consumption were not oorbed. Warren said his bi 11 1 s energy-saving p r o v i s i o n s would bring that rate down to about 3 percent. That would mean California \\'OU!d only have to build 35 new nuclear power plants betv.'een now and the year 2000 -rather than the 120 Rand had estimated in its study, \Varren said. Friday, Mar 17, 1~74- 1·1111 ' JOUClll ne11m1n OAJL V PILOT 5 HOURS: Sot., Moy 11r 10;00toS:OO Sun., MoY 19, 1100 to S:OO Mon,. Mo1 20, 1o:Oo Jo 5:30 SOLEDAD CUP!) Just after the g e n e r a I lockup \\'as ordered late in the day, another inmate v.:as A ( J , T,VO ~'riendS convict was given permission BRIEFS ThursdaY, to attend the funeral ~-------' Of SLA Gi"r} or his 16-year-old son. v<ho _ Assemblyman Ch a r l cs \\'arren (0-Los Angeles), told fellow legisla tors his bill would speed up the state's powt>r plant siting process and help conserve needed e n e r g y resources. measure was Badham of Newport Beach. Ken Cory of Garden c;rove was among 40 Democrats approving the bill. \Vhile John Briggs of Fullerton joined 18 Republicans in approving the measure. l<~loyd \Vakefield of Anaheim v.•as among 13 of the Assembly not voting. Presently a utility applying lo build a plant must go through 33 agencies, and that has helped slow nuclear power plant construction to the point Under Warren's bilL a plant site within the coas tline permit zone created by Prop. 20 in 1972 wou1d also need approval by the Coastline Commission. WE URGE YOU TO TAKE ADVANTAGE BECAUSE • , • YOUR GAIN IS NOT OUR LOSS. • This is o sale you con believe in. Here's why.We mvit redvce ovr invrentory. Some modeli we ow:r-bought, some discontinued models , trade-ins, rent returns, repossessions. JY.ost1y Hor1'l'T'IOl'lds -o few other makes. A few exomple5 as. follows: died without kno\ving his father had paid him a lasl visit. State Correction Director Raymond Procunier granted the furlough to P h 11 i p Macchiarella, 35, to attend the funeral Saturday of his son Leonard, who died Tuesday of a rare kidney disease at the University of Ca I i for n i a Medical Center in Sa n t'rancisco. The pern1ission can•t' !ro1n Procunier after 1hc 'rarden's ofrice at the California 1 raining facility r e j e c t e d ~tacchiarella's appeal for the trip. Before Leonard died, he told other relatives that he '••:anted to see his father. Prison officials granted the request, but by the ti.me J\o1acchiarella arrived at his ron's bedsi~. the boy had slipped into a coma. · Rev. Simon R. Gainon, the prison ch11plain. ,·olunteered to act as an escort to the funeral near San Jose. 4 l11di(·ted In 'Zebra' Murders SAN FRANCISCO fUPll - Four young Black Muslims \Vere indicted for murder and assault niursday in th e "ZC'bra" killings that left 13 \\'hilc Yicl\n1s dt·ad. The indictn1ent.s \\'<:'re handed up in San l-'rancisco Superior Court follO\\'ing three days of tcstin1ony. in('\uding an appearance by an infonner \\'ho tied the killings Lo a cult called the "Death Angels." Indicted \\'ere Man u e I \loore. 29. J .C. Si.moo. 29. and Larry C. Green, 22. all of San Francisco. lbe three \\'ere arrested J\1ay 1 in a,)pre-da,\11 raid. Bail for each \\'as set at $300.000. J essie Cooks. a I read r serving a murder term at San Quentin Prison. \\·as also indicted. Cooks had n o t previously appeared in court in connection \\'ith-I he •·Zebra'' case. Assi5tant Dislrict Attorney '\\'aJter Giubini told the court th.at ~Lice have the Y.'eapons used in 12 shootings and six gwlshot as.saults. The indictments charged one or two shooting murder counts aganist eac\1 suspect.. T .,.,, o men. Green and Cooks. face charges for the hacking death of a daughter of a promifl('nt '1•inerv 0\1-'Tlcr. This did not fit the random pattern of the dozen muPders. stabbed twice in the eaSt block during the dinner movement. And in the same section a mnvict "fell or was pushed'' from the fou rth-floor tie-r, a spokesman said. Both suffered on ly minor injuries. Officials said there have been 10 incidents of violence in the past 36 hO\J rs. e S1011ford Slrike STANFOH D (AP) Stanford Uni\'crsity President H.ichard Lyman says attorneys will seek a court order today limiting picketing by nearly 1,000 campus workers who struck Mooday for higher wages. Lyman told a faculty m«!ting Thursday night the decision to seek a temporary restraining order came after about 40 pickets delayed delivery of hot meals to Stanford University r-.1edical Ce-nte r patients for about an hour. Go to Jail SAN FRANCISCO (UPll - Tv10 friends of a fugifive member of the t er r or is t Symbionese Liberation Army were sent to jail Thursday for refusing to anS\\'er Grand Jurv questions in the Patricia Hearst kidnaping. Paul Halverron. 29. and Cynthia (iarvey. '.l6. facrd a possible 34 months in jail for refusing to answer l 3 questions related to their acquaintance w i t h SLA men1ber camiJia Hall, one of the suspected Hearst kidnapers. The Federal Grand Jury was convened after the SLA staged a $10.000 bank robbery in which r-.1iss 11 ea r s t appeared to take par!. r-.tiss Hall also was identified as a participant in pictures ta ken by the bank's automalie cam- ~ras. \liss c;arvey charged lhl' e Hebel Gtailty Grand Jury was a political SAN DIEGO (AP ) body and llalvcrson said his Barbara· P. Hutchinson. a self-refusal lo testify \\'as a matter styled .. tax rebel" and {IU!hor of conscience. of the arguments ai::ainst three "f don 't look on the Granrl bond n1casures that w i 11 Jury as a legal institution ... appear on next month's state Miss Garvey told U.S. District ballot. pleaded guilty to three Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoli. .,.,·ho criminal offenses committed sent them both to jall. "It over a 13-year period. squashes people v.·hose polities It was disclosed Thursday are opposed to the that !llrs, Hutchinson, 57, government. and I \\'ill not executive director of the cooperate \1-'ith the Grand , TllE ritEASURE w o u Id create a five·n1ember commission with the power to decide where plants would be located. If the plant were nuclear. the Aton1ic Energy Commission also \\'ould 11ced to approve it. By the time \V11rren brought lhc bill up for concurrence in Scuatc adn1rndn1ents. he hJd l\iOn s upport of conservationists, the Hca gan adn1inistration and the private utilities. But not everyone liked !he final producl. Assen1bl~'tnan Robert Burke I R-Hunlington Beach), blasted the bil!'s conflict-of-interest provision. 2 Se1ite11ee<l l11 Slayi11g \·r\;.; J\'U\.S l UPI 1 -A 1ro1nan and lier boyfri('nd I hare been sentenced to fh·t· years to life in prison afrer pleading gllll!y 10 killing tht.• ' \\'Oman·s 3-year-old dnughtt'r and scat!ering parts of thc l child's bodv O\'C'r a \l'ide nrca. r-.lary Ann Vit;ile. 26. and 'Villiam Perez. 31. 11·ho \i\"t'd \1·i 1h her. entered th(' gu:iry pl('as to killing :'llrs. \'it.ile's daughter, Lisa. J:ist Xo\·ember. Perez beat the girl to death . ·------- - 2nd A111111a/ Southmt Ca/if,,,.,,ia mobile • Singlet, doubles, triples: from 12' x 60'; 24' x 70'; to 34' x 70'. • See latest mid·ye11r innovations by nation-G ally recognized manufacturers. • Professionally decorattd, furnished, land- scaped homes ranging in price. from S7500 to $49,500. • Representatives· to answer questions, help you m.ake your choice. · • Covered display area for related accessories and services; park and 1ite information. • Hundreds of ideas for be"•' living. • Homes displayed in park-like setting for easy inspection, comparison. --------- Corona del Mar Store . .,.. New Hammond VS·300Sp<~w/thyi"'",... 935 NewHommond Sl82 Mo~t~ ........•• 1390 New Hammond 1181 Phoe"i• Oe!u;ce Spine! 197) Used Hammond l·582 TopolSpine1 li,...,... 2SSO Used Hammond 11-195 (onM>le , . _ ...... _ J7-'0 Demo HQmmond H·395 ConM>le . . . . . . . . . • -'5"5 Demo Hammond 1117 Conc.ordi:·lopolline •. 63A~ Santa Ana Store Used Hammond Used Hammond Used Hammond Used Hammond Demo Hammond Demo Hammond Used Hammond l ·IOOSpinel ........... . T · I 00 Spinel many pe•cvu. T ·2-'3 Sp•nel wJle•h• .. , , , , T--' 11 Spinel w/rhy!llm , ,. , 7l81Cougor ..•..•••.•.• ll-IB~C0<>.ole ......... . .... 1720 "'" 1995 "'" ""' J7-'0 X66C°"wle , ........... 10,880 '"' 79S 1095 1595 199$ 2599 3795 4995 SAU 66S 99S 129$ 1795 160 " 3f95 799S Aho Maven'cks, Phoeni• & tJ.~~ os in Corona def Mor Something for everyone-So Hurry for best selection! We don't advertise a so-called sale every week when we hove a sole -ii is really a SALE! Hammond Organ Studios 2854 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar 644-8930 Hammond Organ Studios 2033 N. Main St Santa Ana 547-0351 Bonk f inancing Available Association of Concerned Jury." TaAl><lyers. entered g u i It y•--'----f:r~~~~~:{i5d~~·~.-··'-,,, ''r-..11ichs l\K.usie City '1~h;, st~re that ~~act~~\iy i ~~ni~d -g~:~t,s;~~~< ::, She '\'IJS placed on probati')n I' 'lClll .l. Y ~ b f fd' b b d I ~ incachcasc.buttheprobation 1Jil . . great uys on t le wor s est ran S. ' could be revoked and she =,~, .. :i'' could be sent to prison if she ~ is convicted of new charges ,.,.,,::;,: in\'olving preparing false tax returns for another meinber of her group. e Judges Told LOS ANGELES (UPT\ Two municipal j u d g es, insisting they could not speak up earlier because of "gag orners.'' identified themselves Thursday as the j u r is ts nceused by a colleague of interfering with the Sylma.r Tunnel explosion trial. ~1unicipal Judges Jo an Dempsey Klein and Vincent Erickson said the accusation was "patently absurd." e Protest Rally LOS ANGELES (UPI) Nearly 5,000 persons conducted a rally a n d candlelight vigil in Hancock Park Thursday night protesting the Arab guerilla attack in North I s r a e I \Vednesday. Police said the gathering or Jev.'i sh groups was conducted peacefully and without incident. ~f.t .··.;.·., • ' .•. -,.;r Never Before At These Prices! @.pl·o ·NEl-It® Stereo Receivers • ONE HALF OFF! Limited Time Only On These Originally Fair Traded Pri~es A Once In A Life Time Offer! Save $99.98 --i'" -: ___ "' ~----,-~--~ • ·! . ·• . " .. ~ .·_" _. _. . -~ SX-424 1i ·'il • .• :;. :;; ;+ ••• Jf AM-FM R~=c=ei::-'.v:'.er:---....:...:. ''rio!h!'r ~1,,l1ri'.: \,ilu!' 111 ,1 <I• iiu ,,., • '·'•,Ii" '\ .·l .'.t 'nn1l•llli -•nl .. ) -1.11<· i rP 11.r1v "' d <1t;!" 1nd:nl.' '""·11.l,t\ IP d•'l1\• < •''111•1•· 1'<11'.''I .11ld ''"<·II• rq \ \1 "n ,,,,.r1 Iii•· 1""1' r ''"'l';,i .. ' '' ·' ··i:.,Ji 111."Tt'J!l"' •' IJI <l•"'l:n, pi.,11 IJll:l 1,1"'' "' \nl ,1'1•1 Reg. 5199. 95 $99.97 Wlwt11 sold with '1!lff Reg. $JJ~.95 $169.97 $; Fine Wine Fine Cheeses \\ ull• l!f~jl)\'!l' ,. ll''ll<1Tl'•'' II 1rl•' I". ' r I• ,,,.i,, 111111 ,1nd h1i;h ~!)!Jltll ·!O·flQ+<P f,J!u• l••O'Ulll<••·· l-:\r·, f11J1YPI il 1 :!. \1,tl1l ·• 1:. \\.Ill• II I 1. < •111'1• • l>'orl'. 11,f .i turn\,1bk". t.11J1.• ·f·~ :.., .>'1d 'I",, .. • • 2 speoll.n ........... of yow choke lif sokt upanrhff $14f,f51 < l11i·1111i.; ,1 hu,f r1i h•··~ uml fl''fiorm.1nrf', th<'('(. h.'I• '' rJi-1,.11;111,h<~l hv 'IJl'lf'•h v1•r-,11il1I\' .ind q,.,,111v ,u:1d -t,111• '11< lnHY. Co1111nu<Jir> f.!~I'> l"h'' r •~ «H•·d .i•. l"1;lo ,1, .'ll \\,,Ill 7 .'ll \\dll', n1H1•· 1h,,., f'~ ho dr1\t· .1 'n 01 l,t1i:1· •\K·.•~'''' ''''"lull ,..,l,nr! .. >nd .il-o u'e llP l!J 1wo t<1rn•.1lllt•,, r .~t.o 1.1r~ Uc-d .. s ~nd J 1n•t 1opi1nne. Wht• sold with.,, 2.,.-................ ........... lit sold ........ , $26t.t51 Fine Bargains '70 Puligny Montrachet .......••. $37.80 cs '70 Estate Bottled Cotes Ou Rhone $29.79 cs (limit11d O..anti1ie1) We will of course deliver coses ROBERT LAWRENCE BALZER seled;ons avo;foble 'for sampling along with fine imported cheese in 01Jr tasting room. -c --- r;;;~~-~-·---- •••••. tj • The Uepartment Store of Music Since 193_0 COSTA MESA BUEMAPARK OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAYS SOUTH COAST PLAZA Lower Lewi near Bullock'• ' Costa Mesa • 557-2907 South Coast Pkao 540°2830 I luenaPcrkCl!ller 827°9060 CONVENIENT ltRMS TAKE YEARS TO PAY BankAmericard -Master Charge I ' -\ ' ' J , ' ' \ •'I I